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                  <text>•••

PWQa 10-The Deliy Sentinel
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Monday, August 30, 1993 :"'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Autherson
celebrates
15th birthday

At the movies with 'El Cid'

Scott Autherson observed his
lSth birthday recently wilh a party
at lhe home of his aunt and uncle,
Rebecca Autherson and Kurtis
Lemley, Pomeroy.
Cake and ice cream were served
and gifts were presented to the honored guest.
· Attending were his mOlher and
stepfather, Amanda and Matt Lemley, brolhcrs, Jason AULherson and
Mike Warenckc, his grandmolhers,
Laura Autherson and Doris Lemley, and Tyler and Amber Mintz,
Jessica and Amanda Commer, Kim
and Crista! Lemley, and Joshua
Lemley.

SCOTT AUTHERSON

By BOB THOMAS
the huge task of'searching for the
AssoCiated Press Writer
original material and restoring lhe
BoJII in Romania and educated film to its original condition.
at !he Sorbonne, Samuel Bronston Ardent conservationist Martin
played a high-sfllt;es game of film· Scorsese supervised the digital
making in the 1960s. He built a stu- sound. ·
dio outside Madrid, attracted U.S.
"EI Cid" is a glorious reminder
stars and directorS wilh big salaries, of lhe kind of epic filmmaking that
employed the Spanish army as no longer exists. No battle scene
extras and (ilmed such epics as has·surpassed the lhrilling sweep of
"King of Kings," "El Cid," "55 the siege of Valencia. Even Cecil
Days at Pekin$," "The Fall of lhe B. De MiUe in his prime could not
Roman Empue'' and ''Circus match lhe opulence of lhe costumes
World."
· and Sets.
·
Like many gamblers, Bronston
Roderigo Diaz de Bivar, called
roUed !he dice 109 many times, and El Cid (great and compassionate
by the mid- 1960s, he sank into warrior) by admiring Moors, led
debt. Now a new generation can bolh Christian and Moorish king·
see his greatest achievement, "El doms in repelling an 11th-century
Cid."
'
invasion from North Africa.
Over !he years, the movie had
Anthony Mann was a curious
fallen into disrepair. Color had choice to direct !he epic story. A
faded, sound became tinny and journeyman Hollywood hand, he
there were pieces missing. In 1990, was best known for Jimmy Stewart
two French companies undertook Westerns,

The real bern of "El Cid" was

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music. Moviegoing had class in
!hose years.
Mira max Films ·and Martin
Scorsese present "El Cid." Running time: 182 m.inutes. Not rated,
but probably merits a PG for battle
excirt:ment

probably Yakima Canuu, listed as
second-unit director. The most
noted stunt man and stunt director
in films (he doubied for John
Wayne in "Stagecoach" and
staged the chariot race in "BenHur"), he performs mira:les wilh
his movement of horsemen and
Motion Picture Association of
foot soldiers. The jousting scene America rating definitions:
and broadsword fights also bear hiS
G -General audiences . All
stamp.
ages admitted.
The dialogue by Frederic M.
PG -. Parental guidance sugFrank and Philip Yordan is stan· gested. Some material may not be
dard for spectacles. Laurence suitable for children.
Olivier couldn't have breathed life
PG-13 -Special parental guidinto such lines as, "Even all these ance strongly suggested for chilmonths in lhe dungeon bave not dren under 13. Some material may
marred your beauty." But Charlton be inappropriate for young chil·
Heston, then in his mid-30s, per- dren.
fectly fitted the classic hero's
R - Restricted. Under 17
armor. The gorgeOus Sophia Loren requires accompanying parent or
blended ideally as (bimene.
adult guardian.
''EI Cid'' is shown with an
NC-1 7 -No one under 17
intermission, overture and entr'acte admitted.

Ohio Lottery

Reds
humble
Cardinals

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Pick 3:
621
Pick 4:
9097
Buckeye 5:
3-9-18-25-32

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Vol. 44, NO. 81

Boosters, Monday, 7 p.m., high
school music room. All parents
attend.

.£

PORTLAND • The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at !he township build·
in g.

POMEROY • Hunter education
course Monday, Pomeroy Municipal Building. Call 992-6311 for
information or to register.

REEDSVILLE • Eastern Local
OAPSE will meet Monday at the
cafeteria at 7:30p.m.
'

POMEROY • Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission,
Monday, 7:30p.m.. VSC office,
Pomeroy.

TUESDAY
RACINE • Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Southern Junior

urged to attend.
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District meetsTuesday at 5 p.m. at the office. Public
invited.
POMEROY • The Big Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at !he Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy. Public invit·
ed.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge No. 164 F&amp;AM

Consultants rule out
one Mason County site
for .regional airport

masters' night on Wednesday at the 1
Middleport Masonic Lodge with ;·
refreshments at 6:30 p.m. and •
meeting at 7:30p.m. There will be !
work in the fcllowcraft degree. All ~
Pomeroy members are urged to ~
attend and all master masons are ~
invited.
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TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers :'
Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary will :
meet at 7:30p.m. at post home. All .
members urged to attend. The \
meeting takes the place of lhe regu- :
tar Thursday meenng.
:

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By AP and staff reporters

sites, and closest to the Ohio lhe state Department of Transporta·
matkets. Its potential for future tion, said of the assessment, "We
A consultant hired to assess sites development was less, however, lhought that one site, after all the
for a proposed J:egionai airport due 10 the terrain of the area.
studies, would come out well ahel!4
serving the "Golden Triangle" of
"We knew lhe site was close 10 of others, that there would be a
CharlesiOn•Huntingron-Parkersburg the river and may have had fog clear, undisputed leader. That didn ~t
has recommended that one of two problems," said C])arles Lanham, occur."
'
Mason County sites be thopped president of the Mason County
Sites remaining for the $250 miifroin consideration.
l;lconomic Development Aulhority. . lion airpM are one near Mount
Four sites were being considered "Mason County doesn't want to Olive in soulhem Mason County,
for !he airport, which is still in make waves, but we do want 10 another three miles northeast of
preliminary stageS. Two of the four make inquiries on the criteria con- Winfield in Putnam County, and
sites were in Mason County, and sidered by the consultant"
one in Pliny, Puawn County.
two in Puawn County.
. Llu!ham said he will ask what the . Preliminary studies showed lhe
HDR Engineering. Inc. of considerations of the sites were that remaining Mason County sire, Mt:
Omaha. Neb. has recommended eli_minated one in M~n County Olive, has land for future developthat a- site in the Pleasant Ridge poor ~ !he .C?!Dplenon of t!Je ment and provides lhe mosi
area of Mason County be ruled out economiC feas1b11ity study. "Wh1~e flexibility on site layout The site
as it is too inaccessible for Charles· we are pleased ~ ~unty snll lies along a propose4 aligrunent for
ton residents.
has one stte bemg constdered, we the new Rt. 35 and is good for easy
The Pleasant Ridge site was one are exploring the criteria that access 10 both 'charleston and Hunmile northel8t of Ben Lolnand, and eliminated the site. I can see that tingron.
soulheast of Gallipolis FCI_J{'. it's not as convenient to Charleston
Jim Rossi presideni of lhe
Preliminary studies indicated th1s as some of lhe other sites, but I'm Mason Couniy Area Chamber of
was the closest to the geographic not sure ~ should be. th~ sole Commerce. was in a meeting this
center of lhe study area of all lhe reason for ruling out lhe stte.
morning and could not be reached
Randall Biller, spokesman for for comment.

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Site of women's rights convention added to historic park ;
PLANTING A MASTERPIECE • Wendy
Inspects
leaves of plants at the FLOOD hydroponic garden Saturday, Aug.,
28 in Chicago. The garden Is funded through a Culture iu Action
grant that allows the greens to be raised for people with AIDS and
at the same time Is viewed as art. (AP Photo/Tim Boyle)

By illLARY APPELMAN
Associated Press Writer
SENECA FALLS, N.Y, (AP)Over the past 150 years, the former
Wesleyan Melhddist Chapel - !he
site of the First' Women's Rights
Convention - has served as an
opera house, a theater, a garage
and, in a fmal irpnic incamatiop, a

lau0~;a; small plaque told
passers-by that the red brick build·
ing was once the site of the
Women's Rights Convention.
Under its sloping eaves in July of
1848, 68 women and 32 men
signed a revolutionary declaration
that "all men and women are crealed

~----

Gordon and Margie West, Tyler
and Weston Roberts, C.T., Tammy,
Rachel and Ryan Chapman,
Racine; Deb West and Karen
Miller, Jackson.
Also atlending were Tom and
Irene Quick, Stuart, Fla.; Don
Quick, Gahanna; Joe and Anita
Wesney, Cas Cob. Conn .; Margaret, Sharon. Craig, Crystal and
Rachel Cottrill, Syracuse; and
Ci corge and Clara Alexander and
sisters, Blue Rock area.

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PAPER MATE
WRITE BROS.

by Bob Hoeflich

PENS-

99'

TRAPPER XL
PORTFOLIO

BLUE OR BLACK-10 PACK

1 SUBJECT SPIRAL

Beth Wagner, daughter of
George Wagner who hailed from
Meigs County, is having problems
getting lhe limbs on her family 1ree
in order and would like your help.
Beth is having difficulty locating living relatives in Meigs County who might have helpful information . The female relatives have
married and she has no married
names of lhese people.
Beth recently visited Miles
Cemetery in Rutland and found
there flowers had been recently
placed on lhe grave of a distant rei·
alive. The relative's name is Rhuel
Phillips and Beth figures lhe person
placing the flowers on the grave
should have information she needs.
She also visited the Letart Falls
Cemetery and found a grave with a
relatively new stone on it compared
to the olhers around. The names on
the stone are Adam Wagner and
Loretta Nease whom Belh believes
to be her great-great-uncle and
aunt.
Beth has questions on other
names but wiD get into those when
she gets word on lhe above problems. Belh's address is 1316 West
Mulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio
43130. Her phone number is I·
6534855 and she can be reached
easier between 8 and 9 a.m. mornings.
She looks forward to hearing

~~-~~:..~~!&lt;

from you.
Mary Lambert Little arranged a
pleasant reunion for Mary K. Davis
Holter of Bashan this monlh at her
home in Alhens.
For lhe fust time in many years,
Mary K. had a chance to visit with
Donald Johnston, who was a classmate over 50 years ago.
The Johnston family formerly
lived between Langsville and
Salem Center in Meigs County.
Donald had a twin brolher, Ronald.
Many years ago, Mary K. was a 4H club member in lhe Dexter com·
munity, the club being known as
lhe Jolly Sunbeams 4-H Club. The
club held ice cream socials as fund
raisers with club members making
the ice cream in the early afternoon
and packing it for the social !hat
evening held at the Star Grange
Hall.
Dances were a part of the
socials and the Johnston Brolhers
played with the band. Mary K.
recalls that sometimes she got to
square dance with Donald if he
could get excused from the band
long enough.
Ronald, Donald and their sister,
Mary. along with Mary K. were all
freshmen at Rutland High School
in 1937. However, the Johnston
family moved to McArthur early
on in the year and that was the end
of the association until the recent
reunion 56 years later.
Donald and his wife, Jo Ann ,
live in the state of Washington and
Ronald and his wife, Edilh, are living in Portland, Oregon. Two other
Johnston brolhers, Lewis and Mac,
are deceased,
At any rate, it was a great
reunion for Mary K. and Donald.
Say it isn't so. Still like Will, I
noted in the newspaper a report that
President Clinton spent $27,000 for
gold·embossed playing cards
aboard Air Force One. ThiS from a
President who stre§ses the need for
economy on our part. If the card
bit is true then I suspect again we
are at the mercy of one of those
"don't do as I do; do as I say" people. Oh, Great! Do keep smiling.
1

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Prosecutor explains claims
process -ror seized items

Beat of the Bend...
Betty Donovan of Syracuse has
received word of lhe death of for·
mer Middleport resident, William
R. (Bill) Reynolds. in Kalamazoo.
Michigan.
The son of the late William and
Helen Reynolds of Middleport, Bill
was born June 14, 1917 in Middleport and graduated from Middleport High School in the early
1930's. Bill, a veteran of the U.S.
Navy serving in World War II, died
on Aug. S and services were held
on Aug. 9.
Bill visited here over the years
and among his survivors is his siS·
ter, Mary E. Reynolds King whom
many of you will also remember.
Mary resides in Lansing, Mich., in
the summers and does winters in
Florida.

tion of the chapel to the Women's
Rights National Historical Park.
~
Justwestofthechapel,isDecla- ·.
ration Park: beside a grl!SSy slope, a •.
138-foot fountain runs over a blue ·.•
stone wall inscribed wilh the Dec· ,..
·
laratioQ of Sentiments, listing the :
rights denied to 19th·century •
American women.
:'

S&lt;~II&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;I I&gt;i~S

Chapman faniily gathers
The annual Chapman reunion
was held recently at lhe Chapman
L!1nding in Syracuse.
Altending were Ed and Chris
Chapman, Floyd and Kenda Chap·
man, Pickerington; Eddie and
Andrea Chapman, Newark; Jake,
Shelley and Madeline Carter, Baltimore; Wayne and Kim Stephens,
Abby West, Melody and Dalton
Jewell, Columbus; Eddie, Connie
und Anesa VanMatre, Tom and
B:1rbara Chapman, Mason, W.Va.;

Now, in 1993, the chapel bas
been officially recognize? .a~ the
birthplace of the women s nghts
movement. The washers and dryers
are gone, the floor npped up, and
the roof restored to its original
h· h
e•g t .
.
A nbbon-cuttmg ceremon.y
recently commemorated lhe add•·

1 Section. 10 P..- 35 cenla ~
A Multlmeci!Jino. ,....• ......, ;

Pometoy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 31, 1993

MIIIU,neclalnc.

--------------------------~-------------------------MONDAY
RACINE · Southern Choir High building. All parents are will honor its masters with a past·:RUTI..AND . The Rutland Garden Club will hold its open meeting
and guest night Monday at 7:30
p.m. ·at the Rutland United
Methodist Church. Hal Kneen will
present a program. All clubs welcome.

80.

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Community Calendar

Law tonlpt mld-'8s, cbaact of
rata. Wednesday, blgb IIJ'OIInd

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6-

First winds felt on shore
as Emily gets stronger

EXTRA STRENGTH

TYLENOL
CAPLETS
100'5

HATTERAS, N.C. (AP) Winds from Hurricane Emily
brushed over Norlh Carolina· s bar·
ricr islands today as ·!he storm grew
stronger and headed for the East
Coast
Wilh hurricane warnings posted
from the central North Carolina
coast to Virginia, thousands of people - mostly vacationers - left
the !ow-lying Outer Banks island
chain. Olhers stayed put, waiting to
see exactly where lhe zig-zagging
SIOrffi- wilh WindS·Of 100 mphwould blow ashore.
"It's like playing checkers,"
said Troy Lapetina, emergency services coordinator for Norfolk, Va.

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Photo Center I
_______
.J

"We wait for lhe storm to make a
move, and !hen we make ours."
Wind began 10 pick up over lhe
Outer Banks late Monday. reaching
about 20 mph. It was expected to
reach gale force by midday and
hurric.ane force by tonight, when
the eye was expected to make land·
fall .
Fears mounted that Emily would
grow stronger as it moved over lhe
warm Gulf Stream. where hurricanes Hugo and ' Andrew became
giants.
Radio announcers used apocalyptic terms in iSsuing a steady bar·
rage of warnings. Tie down shovels ·
and olher yard equipment, one said,

Woodland Centers, Serenity
House to receive grants

Choose KODALUX

Processing for optimwn
color and sharper images.

Shelly Company or Thornville Is to repair the
bridge deck by Sept. 30. Here, inspecton~ examine the span. (Seotinel photo by Jim Freeman)

BRIDGE INSPECTION - Traffic on tbe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was reduced to one lane
Monday as state-contracted engineers gave the
bridlte Its annual Inspection. In addition, the

For the Rite Aid·Pharmacy near you...call 1-800-4-DRUGSTOAES
...
&gt;
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make referrals to olher community
agencies.
Serenity House will receive
$1 S,291 to serve domestic violence
victims from the three counties .
This project will provide crisis
intervention. safe shelter, legal
advocacy, education and community referrals.
"These grants will help local
agencies and law enforcement to
work together to keep drugs and
crime out of our communities,"
said Mohr.
Administration.~
The office of Criminal Justice
Woodland Centers will receive
Services
awards these grants
$49,214 for providing .assistance. to .
lhrough
the
Byrne Memorial Drug
mral victims of cnme Galha,
Control
and
System Improvement
Meigs and Jackson counties. The
Act
administered
by the U.S.
program will help !nform victims
of their rightS: provl(le ·support and Department of Justice.

Lieutenant Governor Mike
DeWine and Gary C Mohr,IIU'ector
of the Office of· Criminal Justice
Services. recently announced. lhe
awarding of drug connol grants for
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs coun' ties.
"We are pleased 10 award these
grants to assist local communities
in promoting !heir criminal justice
efforts," said DeWine. "Reducing.
· crime and drug offenses are major
priorities of lhe Voinovich/DeWine .

I

Individuals who have made
claims against items seized from
Robert Fife of Middleport will
have an opportunity to present
those claims before Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow III in October.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John R. Lentes reported
that approximately 275 written
claims have been filed at his office
and at the sheriff's department.
However, no property can be
released until an order iS issued by
Crow.
·
The order to release lhe property
is not anticipated before Oct. 15
when the forfeiture proceeding is
setro take place in lhe court.
At a hearing on the forfeiture
held last week, Crow placed the
propeny in lhe protective custody
of the prosecutor's office, Lentes
said. Crow has also ordered that a
notification be mailed 10 all individuals who have made claims to
the property. That notification,
which will also .be published as a
legal notice in The Daily Sentin~l.

to keep them from becoming "missiles of destruction."
Some 70,000 of the 100,000
people in Dare County, which
includes most of lhe Outer Banks,
moved inland Monday, according
to Ray Sturza, a county emergency
management spokesman. The rest
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
prepared to stick it out.
U.S. economy grew at a modest 1.8
"!ain't gonna leave," said percent annual rate in the AprilBilly Beasley, 51, a lifelong Outer June quarter, slightly better than
Banks resident and owner of the government's initial estimate
seafood restaurant in Colington. last month.
"I'm going to do the best I can."
Second-quarter growth in the
At 2 a.m., Emily's center was gross domestic product - the sum,
about 190 miles soulheast of Cape of all goods and services produced
Hatteras, near latitude 32.8 degrees in U.S. borders- still was far
north and longitude 74 degrees below what economists anticipated
at the start of lhe year. But it was a
west.
Emily was moving west-norlh- bit stronger !han lhc seasonally and
west at near 9 mph and was expect· inflation-adjusted 1.6 percent
ed to turn north ward today, the growth rate first reponed by the
·National Hurricane Center in Coral government
. With today's report, the ComGables, Fla., said.
If it turns norlhward before or merce Department also revised its
shortly after hitting the Outer figures going back to the start of
Banks, Emily would head back out 1990. The growlh pace in the fust
to sea and would be expected to quarter of !his year was an anemic
stay offshore, said forecaster Tony 0.8 percent, only little changed
Z'aleski. That could cause large from the previous estimate of 0.7
swells and 40•50 mph wind along percenL
However, revisions for the
the coastline from Virgirtia to New
York's Long Island.
1990-91 recession and the recovery
If Emily moves inland before in 1992 were dramatic. The growth
veering north, it might weaken to rate in the fourth quarter of last
tropical storm status but could year, for instance, now is shown as
bring heavy raiu and high wind up 5.7 percent, up.from 4.7'percent.
The department now says the
lhe East Coast, Zaleski said.
· economy grew at a 2.4 percent
There also was the question of annual rate from the end of the
timing -. whelher lhc storm would recession in the second quarter of
hit near high tides at around 8 p.m.
1991 through June of !his year.
today and 9 a.m. Wednesday. A Previously, the department had put
full moon wiD make !he tides even the growth rate· for the period at 2
higher.
•
percent.

Economic growth
stronger than
first estimated

sets lhe forfeiture hearing for Oct.
IS at 10 a.m. and notifies !hose
affected that a complete inventory
is available at the office of the
Clerk of Courts.
According to the notification,
property rights may only be determined at lhe Oct. 15 hearing before
Judge Crow. Those making claims
against lhe seized property arc also
advised in the letter to contact and
retain a private attorney to repre·
sent their interests in the case.
"You are advised !hat !he Ohio
Revised Code requires you to
establish your claim in that proceeding or your interest, if any,
shall be lost, " the notification
states.
Further complicating the. process of determming ownership,
according to Lentes. is lhe procedure in which Roben Fife operated
his Middleport business.
"While individuals who
received cash in return for guns,
electronic equipment and other
items believed that they were
pawning !heir merchandiSe, thiS is

not the case, at least according 10
Mr. Fife," Lentes said.

"Instead, Mr. Fife's standard
receipt stated that the money ·
received by his customers was full
payment for the sale of the merchandise, and customers were not
guaranteed the opportunity to
redeem their gOods at any set
price."
·
"Put simply," Lentes said. "Mr.
Fife has told the prosecuting attorney's office and the court !hat he
was purchasing the merchandise:
not operating a pawn shop as most
of his customers believed."
"This office will comply with
lhe orders of Judge Crow." Lentes.
said. "However, my office has ·DO
aulhority to release any merchandise until we are ordered to do so.
rr those individuals making claims
against the seizure are seriously
interested in receiving their property, they should contact a private
attorney for representation, and not,
the proSecutor's office. This office
cannot and does not represent !hemas individuals."
·

,__-Local briefs--..
Three indicted by grand jury
The Meigs County Grarid Jury Thursday indicted lhree men on
felony charges.
·
According to Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes, !hose indicted were:
• Chris Capehart, Middleport, on one count of trafficking in
marijuana. Lentes said Capehart was lhe subject of an undercover
purchase of marijuana and the execution of a search warrant on
August25.
• Elmer Parsons, Racine, on one count of failure 10 comply wilh
an order or signal from a police officer. Parsons was arrested by the
Ohio State Highway Patrol after a high-speed chase in rural Meigs
County;
.
• Nalhaniel Pettery Jr., for breaking and entering into a structure
in Middlepon on July 2.

Schools receive subsidies_
School Districts in Meigs County received $746,601.65 in
August State School Foundation Subsidy payments, State Auditor
Tbomas E. Ferguson reported recently.
.
Meigs Local School District received $410,791.48. Eastern
Local School District received $150,985.08. Soulhern Local School
District received $133,485,80 and the Meigs County Board of Education received $51,339.29.
These amounts represent lhe rota! of two payments made to the
districts in lhe month of August. The amounts were taken from total
payments of $192,854,053.35 made to 611 Ohio city, exempted village and local school districts and $12,008,342.50 to 88 county
boards of education.

Woman cited in wreck

-1

A Gallipolis woman was cited Monday afternoon for failure 10
yield half of lhe roadway, the Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State High·
way Patrol reported.
Teresa L. Elliot, 31, 5088 Bulavillc Pike, was eastbound on
(Addison Township Road 297) when she went left of center in a
curve and struck a vehicle driven by Jenny D. Adkins, 20, 7917
- ·
Continued on page 3
I

\i

, .. ... ;...t ,.

�Tuesday, August 31 , 1993

111 COurt Stleet

Pomeroy, Ohlo
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OF 111E MEIOS·IL\SON AREA

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
wollls. All tellers are subject to editing and must be signed with name, .
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Area rejects new industry
Dear Editor,
I would lilce to express concern
about our area and the way people
here in the three-county area reject
new industry.
Take Mason County. For one,
they have had many reasons to be
happy. but for a few people to push.
out hundreds of good jobs, well it
doesn 'I make sense.
.
Now we hear of another business trying to move into Mason
County: a race track. What harm
could a race tniCk bring but a little
noise? Well just guess, people are
used to the lnJCks up on U.S. 35.
Well enough about Mason
County.
Now there is Meigs County. We
are in a different boat, we can't get
anything here.
But I was stunned the other day
to see our new Meigs Motel at

Rock Springs couldn't get a water
supply line to it. When our county
commissioners say they want jobs,
well this means or I thought it did.
Maybe that changed too with politics the way it is.
I guess they make or break a
ne w business coming in, who
know s, but as a voter in Meigs
County they lost my vote not to
have money for a water line to new.
jobs here.
So how about Gallia County?
Well just a few words. They have
water just about everywhere you go
on back roads, and for jobs I'd say
they at least try and push for them.
So for our area, to say "no" to
new business or industry, wait tiD
the old plants here now close then
we· Ugo back 40 years again.
Floyd Cleland,
Rutland

Rutland sewer system woes
Dear Editor,

We would like to voice a com plaint about the operation of the
Rutland village sewer system.
This station was installed in
April of 1992. Within two weeks
our bOobies began.
We still have this original problem. Our line becomes clogged and
this in turn causes the pump to
come on. II will continue to run
until the village employees answer
our call.

We have had to call four times
in the past two weeks. This sum- .
mer, the village's solution has been
to bring out the ftre truck and pump
some water through the lines.
When will the village make a
real effort and do whatever is necessary to get this station working
properly? Every senior needs this
lcind Of headache dumped on them
by their nearby city fathers.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Johnson,

Dear Editor
The Racine Emergency Squad
';tnd the Fire Department would like
:10 extend a special thanks to the
'people of the community and surrounding areas for their assistance
:;n our efforts ilJ the recent water
rescue of Todd Grindsraff.

Your support with boats,
refreshments, and manpower made
our efforts in the rescue smoother
and enabled us to continue longer.
Thanks again
John Holman, fire chief
George Cummins, squad chief

~Cable

TV rate changes to
:take effect Wednesday
WASHINGTON - It's a confusing time for cable TV viewers.
Starting Wednesday, new regulations will make cable television cheap·
cr for most viewers. But not for everyone. As many as a thrrd of the
nation 's 58 million cable customers will pay more.
· And at many cable companies, a complicated shakeup in rates will be
accompanied by other changes, such as itemized billings, altered channel
·l ineups and revamped cable packages.
· "Almost everybody is going to see a change," said Briana Gowing,
~pokes woman for the Federal Communications Commission. The changes
come as the FCC begins enforcing the 1992 Cable Act, intended to make
cable rates more fair.
: Who wins and who loses? It depends on which of the 11,000 cable
operations a customer subscribes to - and what services that customer
uses.
The FCC estimates that two-thirds to three-fourths of subscribers will
see their monthly bill drop an average of 10 percent, for an estimated
nationwide savings of more than$ I billion.
, In most cases - but not all - cable customers with the most gadgets
jlnd TVs will get the biggest windfall; subscribers who get the minimum
Jlackages are more likely to receive higher bills.
• So far there has been more head-scratching than hand-wringing as sub·
'!;c ribers receive their September biJls, said Tom Basinger, vice president
p f Post-Newsweek Cable in Phoenix, which serves 15 states.
• " The phones have been busy," Basinger said. "Most people were
confused more than anyth ing else. Most were not angry."
• Channel surfing should be cheaper - cable operators will be allowed
to charge only the actual cost of providing a remote control. In Pouca
_city, Okla., people pay Post-Newsweek Cable $3 a mooth to use a remote
oeontrol; on Wednesday, the price drops to48 cents a month.
· People who have turned their homes into electronic castles also should
penefit. Cable companies must provide cable to additional TVs in the
~arne home at the actual cost to the company - which mean many will do
it for free after installation.
~ One multi-TV owner in the Chicago suburb.of Hickory Hills will save
523.99 a monl/1, said Jill Kinsella of MebOvision Inc. But a majority of
~ ustomers in the same area will pay more because of a $1.32 hike in basic
~crvice.

'

WASHINGTON - Surgeon
As we previously reported, AID called bCicilguered as opposed to they did not have the spare parts or
Ge neral-designate Dr. Joycelyn auditors discoveR(~ that during the troubled . Maybe that's a sign of anyone skilled enough to fix the
Elders, who has been vilified for 1980s, the federal Contraceptive progress."
computers.
her support of condom distribution Procurement Project lost more than
According to the agency's own
"If the availabili ty of spare
internal investigations, signs of parts locally was considered ...
to teen-agers, might feel more
appreciated at the Agency for Inletprogress are hard to find. Consider other types of (computer equtp·
national DevelopmenL
the f~t that AID has spent $4 mil· ment) for which spare parts and
ilbe federal government spends
han m Kenya on contraception maintenance would hav e been
about $60 million a year on 18
alone since 1989. With 66 million readily available locally would
varieties, two sizes and five colors
condoms and 300,000 Inaauterine have been procured in stead,"
of condoms, and six brands of birth
Contraceptive Elevices (IUCD), the according to the report reviewed by
conbOI pills. AID is in the forefront
agency !igured to curb population our associate A'ndrew Conte.
of family planning.
growth m Kenya. AID neglected to
A phone system that AID spent
The agency has published comic $2 million worth of birth-control ensure that the necessary surgical $787,157 to inStall at the university
books fo r prostitutes in the devices and drugs, and has had to gloves, lotions and disinfectants is also in disrepair. Univ!lfSity offiDominican Republic emphasizing desbOy at least another $2 million were purchased by the l{enyans. .As cials told the AID investigators that
the use of condoms, while in Mexi- worth. In Mexico, 1.6 million con- a result, at least 11,390 IUCDs "a number" of the phones had bro·
co it produced a pop record pro- doms and 3.6 million cycles of pills went. bad sitting in storage while ken down and were not being used
moting sexual abstinence among valued at S I million were another 125,771 will go unused in because the university did not have
teen-agers. It has also lost 750,000 destroyed a few years ago because the next year because the other sup· spare parts or anyone with enough
plies were never acquired.
condoms at sea.
their shelf life expired.
skills to repair the system.
The history of AID is replete
Brian Atwood, the new reform.
Meanwhile, more than $150,000
In Sri Lanka, at the Sllllle time
with examples of waste, fraud and minded administrator of AID, worth of laboratory equipment lan- the International Monetary Fund
abuse in areas ranging from contra· recently told the Senate Foreign guished in storage in Kenya for two was pressuring that country to trim
ception to compu~. construction Relations Committee: "I think we years because the equipment was its bloated government payroll ,
and communications equipment. have acquired a new name. We're shtpped before the laboratories AID spent 10 years constructing 60
Though AID is in the vanguard of now called the (beleaguered) Agen- were even constructed. When 51
buildings for new employees. U.S.
the effon known as. "nation build· cy for International Development. computers and 34 printers that AID
taxpayers wound up losing $1.1
ing," its own .jnternal audits sug- In fact, we had a debate in our installed at Egenon University in
million because the buildings are
office the other day as to whether it Kenya broke down, university offi.
~ est s that the agency needs to
unoccupied " The staffing problem
tmport better management.
was really positive that we're DOW cials told AID investigators that
has persisted throughout the life of
the project -10 years- and DOW,
the buildings have been completed,
the project is over, and the staff'has
still not been provided," states the
audit.
·
John Sewell, president of the
Overseas Development Council, a
research organization advocating
'the restructuring of AID, told us,
"There is wide-spread agreement
that AID is urgently in need of
reform," he said. "AID has been
very badly managed over the years.
The task that fa ces Atwood is
retooling the management of an
agency that is not very well run."
One chagrined AID staffer told
us that past shipments of aid to
•
Third World countries 8!DOunted to
~ ~·
"sending refrigerators to the Eski•
mos and heat lamps to people in
the Sahara because of poor coordination."
0
This agency staffer was not
exaggerating. Over the years, AID
has handed out electric sewing
machines to Egyptians with no
electricity - and ice-qeam makers
to desen inhllbitants with no freezers.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are sriters for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

'
I

. . u.

W\U, ~ou &amp;lOP

;QMteoP'r •.~--- - - . ;,. _ _ _ ___.

Often the changes hit the poor or thrifty customers hardest In Omaha,
Neb., minimal " antennae service" - local broadcast and public access
channels only - is provided free to about 2.400 people. This month Cox
Cable will begin charging $12.30 a month for it.
~ The FCC says only about 6 percent of aU subscribers receive such minimaj service, and the Jaw doesn't require the cable companies to raise
lh~rates.
·
Small·time cable buyers face increases because in the past, some companies subs idized lower prices for service by charging more for the equipment, such as remote controls. They can 't do that anymore.
• The new rules are specific about how much companies can charge for
pasic cable service - local stations and educational, government and
public-access cable channels.
The formulas for figuring those rates are based on the number of sub·
scribers; there is no single, nationwide charge for basic cable.
• Additional channels, such as CNN and the Weather Channel, though
not as stric ~ y regulated, must be reasonably priced.
·
Premium channels, such as HBO and Showtime, arc not regulated by
the law.
'

'

NEW YORK -Credibility,
corporate and governmental, is destined to get a workout over the next
year or so. Seems a lot of people
see a big gap between what they're
promised and what they get.
The believability of industry
chiefs is questi()ned by sharehold·
ers, workers. and directors. Why
not? Profits have fallen below forecasts, riling investors. Promises to
" empower" workers have been
followed by massive layoffs.
In government, credibility is
strained by rhetoric about the need
for more jobs, less spending and
greater economic growth, followed
by pas sage of a tax plan that,
according to some analyses, will
accomplish the exact opposite.
The stakes are high. "Crediblity
is hard to gain, easy to lose and
very difficult to recapture," Harry

Henshel, chairman of the Bulova
states in " CEO Credibility,' subtitled "The Management
of Reputation."
Co~ . ,

John Cunlff
The book, written by consultant
John F. Budd Jr., is one of two new
ones scheduled to cash in this faD
on growing doubts about leadership. The other, called simply
"Credibility" and subtitled "How
Leaders Gain and Lose It, Why
People Demand It," is by behaviorisls Barry Posner and James
Kouzes.
But, while credibility is an issue
in corporate life - heads of mM,
Kodak, General Motors and a
dozen other large companies lost
their jobs after losing credibility-

the problem is minor compared to
those in the public sector.
The words of public-sector leaders
subject to analysis by many
more critics than the promises of
corporate leaders, and it may be
especially true this year because,
somehow, actions seem conirary to
.
'
prom1ses.
Moreover, almost all the big
issues involved the pocketbook,
and cautious Americans in the past
· half-decade or so have been warily
saving their pennies in jar. They
are in no mood for false promises
or harsher times.
Consider these three expressions
heard from the lips of almost every
candidate for public office: We
must have more jobs; we must
lower spending; we need to spur
econom1c !p'OWth.
The acuons that followed, how·
ever, will raise government spend-

are

.ing, may slow economic growth
and could, in the opinion of many
analysts, lower job growth by perhaps hundreds of thousands of jobs
over the next few years.
While the credibilily, of elected
officials may never have been'high '
- Roman citizens tended to make
the same comments heard in America today- today's issues may
raise popular cynicism to a level
not reached in years.
Seldom, that is, have the issues
been more critically important to
the well-being of households. Feelings become intense, attitudes
harden and memories become permanent when a voter 's castle is
attacked or attached.
Credibility might become a
household word.
Joba CuaiiT is a business writer for Associatred Press

Promoting Ohio: 1-800- Buckeye
The word "vacation;, conjures
up many images for many different
people. AlthouRh in the minds of
most, "vacation 'brings thoughts of
Disney World, Yellowstone
National Park, and other far off
destinations. However, ,Ohioans, as
well as aavellers from other states,
are beginning to discover that Ohio
itself has a great deal to offer. Studies have uncovered a new travel
trend that bodes well for Ohio's
$7.8 billion a year travel industry.
More and more people are travelling closerto home.
.,
Recognizing this 'trend, the Ohio
Department of Development's
Division of Travel and..InduStry has
focu sed its attention not only on
attracting outside visitors to Ohio,
but more importantly, offering
Ohioans themselves a multitude of
vacation options within the state.
Centralto the Division's promotion
of Ohio is their taU-free, 24 hour,
l -8()()..BUCKEYE number.
Callers dialin~ this number can
speak with an mdividual travel
counselor and, by indicating the
areas in which they w~uld lilce 16 ,

travel, or activiltes they might
enjoy, access the over 7,000 attractions, events, and lodging listings
stored within the 1-800-BUCK-

Sen.]an M. Long ·
EYE database. The travel counselor can also help plan the best
route to one's intended destination.
In addition, over 1,000 different·
brochures, maps, and travel guides
are available through 1-800
BUCKEYE free of charge.
Last year, 1-800-BUCKEYE
ex perienc ed a record number
979 ,588 calls . A recent survey
completed by Market Vision
research, Inc., an independent marketing firm located in Cincinnati ,
showed that 66% of 1-SOOBUCKEYE callers later traveled in Ohio
and spent over $308 million.
.
Tourist attractions, lodging
establishments, restaurants, and
other travel -related businesses
interested in being entered into the
1-800-BUCKEYE database are

encouraged to call (614) 4624992
to request a questionnaire. There is
no charge involved for this service.
Businesses are also encouraged to
send brochures, and other promotional material for distribution to
the Division's various statewide
distribution centers.

If you would like more information about 1-800-BUCKEYE,· or
· have any questions or suggestions
regarding the state's role in tourism
promotion, please feel free to write
me at the Statehouse, Columbus,
Ohio 43215, or call me at (614)
466-8156.

BerrY's World
MR. f'RE~19ENT, WE S!i.OIJLt&gt; SE
f!lEf'AR~ TO f\61'\1' IN T~ ftE',6I~AL

1\-\~~~ """'1'\\E SI&gt;.M'fi'tME.

conditions and

Accu-Wcather• forecast for

By The Associated Press
A cold front will bring showers
and thunderstorms to ·ohio tonight,
but also cooler temperatures.
The National Weather Service
said skies will be partly clo udy
with a few lingeri ng showers on
Wednesday and temperatures will
be about 10 degrees cooler, in the
70s to low 80s.
Lower humidities will also
make cond itions more comfortable.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 !legrees in 195 3
whtle the record low was 43 in
19 15. Sunset tonighi will beat 8:06.

MICH .

•

IToledo I 80" I

AID .finds ways to squander money

Testing 'credibility, public and ·private

Appreciates support

Wecla•••YI Sept. 1

Tuesda~Augu~t31 , 1993

By Jatk Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ROBERI' L. WINGETI
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

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

IND.

·• IColumbus! so~ I

so•

•

r'

W. VA.

..
Ice

Sunny
~

Via Associated Press GrapRCINtt

C1993 Accu·Weather, Inc

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight , mostly cloudy with
scattered showers and thunderstorm s. Low in the mid -60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday, partly cloudy with a
c hance of showers or thunderstorms. High around 80. Chance of
rain 40 pe~n}.

Extended l'orecast
Thursday through Saturday:
· Chance of showers or thundersssrrns Thursday and Friday. Lows
jn ihe 60s. Highs 80-85 Thursday
and mid· 70s to low 80s Fdday .
Fair on Saturday . Lows 55-60 .
Highs 80-85.
,

Meigs announcements
Labor llay celebration
Chester Volunteer Fire Department will hold its annual Labor
Day celebration on September 6,
1993. Chicken, ribs and ice cream
will be served. Anyone wishing to
participate in the parade should
contact a Chester Volunteer Fire
Department member.

to noon.

Silver Run Reunion
The Silver Run Grade School
Reunion will once again be held on
the school playgroun.d on Sunday
from I to 5 p.m. Former students,
teachers, family and friends are
urged tQ attend: Come with your
memories, lawn chairs and cameras. A photographer will be present for group pictures. Soft drinks
will be provided.

Rutland bake contest
The Rutland Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary will sponsqr a pie
baking and cake decorating contest
in conjunction with the annual Scipio trustees
Street Festival on Saturday at the · Scipio Township Trustees will
Rutland Fire Station . For more hold their regular monthly meeting
information, caD Margaret Edwards on Tuesday, September 7 at 6:30
m 742-2509. Other events sched- p.m. at the Pageville Town Hall.
uled for the day include a fish fry ,
.
craft tables, kids games, bingo , Bedford bake sale
The Bedford Township Volunkiddy tractor pull and much more.
To register for a craft table contact teer Fire Depanment Committee
Joan Stewart at 742-2421 in the will hold a bake sale on Saturday
~ vening or Kimberly Willford at
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.ll). at Kroger.
742-2103. Entertainment will be
Wetzei·Rousb reunion
provided by Dee and Dallas. ·..,,
The family of George Wetzel
and Susanna Roush will hold a
Racine bake sale
The Southern Charge United reunion on Sunday at the Zion
Methodist Churches will sponsor a Lutheran Church on Broad Run
bake sale at Home National Bank ncar New Haven; There will be a
in Racine on Saturday from 8 a.m. covered dish dinner at I p .m.
Friends and family are welcome.
trustees
School says TV .. Salisbury
The Salisbury Township
will meet Thursday at
report is false 'Trustees
7:30p.m. in the township garage in
Rock Springs.
The rcpon on a television news
program Monday evening that several students had been sent home
from Gallia Academy High School
for heat related illnesses is not true,
Principal James Pope said Tuesday.
Television station WSAZ aired
the repon on its 5 p.m. news broadcast.
Pope said the misunderstanding
may have originated in a nurse's
comments that students who went
home complaining of an upset
stomach may have been affected by
the heat.
However, according to Pope, the
school did not tell the TV station
that Monday's heat had definitely
made the students sick.
GaUia Academy sent its students
home at 1:30 Monday afternoon to
get them out of the building's sweltering afternoon climate. He said
when temperatures reach into the
90s ami humidity also soars, the
school becomes very uncomfonable.
"The problem is that when rou
have the heat we've been havmg,
the building never gets cool," he
said. "Then you put 2,000 bodies in
there and it's just hot."
Pope said .the school let its students out early mostly to avoid the
heat's extreme discomfort. The
high school will dismiss its students early again today, at I :20
p.m.

.

Preaching and singing
Faith Full Gospel' Church, Long
Bottom will have preaching and
singing at 7 p.m. Friday. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.
Masons to meet
Harrisonville 411 slated mee tin g
on Saturday at 7:30p.m. All master
masons are welcome. Refreshments
will be served. Work in FC degree.
'

Smorgasbord dinner
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner at the Lottridge Community
Center, Athens County Road 53, on
Suday from noon until I :30. Cost is
$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12. Evetyone is welcome. ·

.

.

'

Lottridge Community Center
The re~ular monthly meeting of
the Lottrtdge Community Center·
will be on Thursday at 7 p.m .
Every one is welcome. •· ·

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
August 31 discharges • Fond
Duty, Mrs. Jeffrey Arnold and son,
Amanda Molihan, Janie Ward. ·
Pamela Bonecuner, Brenda Myers,
Mark Pope, Bobbie Waugh, Geral·
dine Burchan, Irene Hanson, Shelton Huffman and Mrs. ·Donald
Hudson and daughter.

Producers have until March 4
to apply for disaster crops

\

Today in history
By The Associated Press
· ~oday is TueSday , Aug. 31, the 243rd day of 1993. There are 122 days
left m the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 31~ 19801 Poland' s Solidarity labor movement was born with
an agree':"ent Signed m Gdansk that ended a 17-day strike.
On thiS date:
In 1881, the fm i U.S. tennis championships were played, in Newpon,
. R.I. .
In 1886, an earthquake rocked Charleston, S.C., killing up to 110 ,.,.,_
pie.
·
.. I

The Dall y Sentlnei- Page-3

Cooler weather to follow' tonight's rain

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The · Daily Sent.inel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Plesident .Clinton has signed
legislation authorizing disaster payments on 1993 crops affected by
adverse weather conditions. Producers will have until March 4,
1994 to apply.
.
.
David Fox. execubve director of
the Meigs County Agricultural Sta·
bilization and Conservation Service said that producers wiJl have
to r~port their crops if they have
not already filed a crop certification repon at the office. Proof of
production will have to be supplied.
.
All details have not amved at

the ASCS Qftice yet, but Fox stated they they have been informed
that the loss level to qualify is ·40
percent without FCIC, the payment
rate will be 65 percent of•the crop
rate and the payments will not be
reduced further by a factor.
•
Fox stressed that if a grain crop
will not be harvested for grain and
the producer feels he has ~ 40 percent loss (35 percent wiht FCIC) he
needs to talk to either their federal
crop agent or the ACSC Office to
discuss an appraisal while the crop
is standing.For more information
call the Meigs ASCS at 992-6646.

p.m. and sunri se Wednesday at
6:59a.m.
Around the nation
Hurricane Emily headed for the
East Coast today with maximum
sustained winds of 100 mph. Warnings covering the centra l North
Carolina coast were extended this
morning 10 Cape Henlopen, Del.
Thousands of people, mainly
vacationers, fle d coastal areas as
forecasters predicted the storm
would make landfall tonight, probably along North Carolina's Outer
B;mks island chain, before turning
northward.
·
Elsewhere, a cold fron t moved

Livestock
_ report

across the Midwest, bringing showers and .thunderstorms to the Ohio
Valley.
Some Ohio schools planned to
shonen their hours again today if
temperatures hit the mid-90s again
as they have over the past several
days.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms were also developing over
northern and western New England
and some storms could 'be accompanied by strong wi nds and heavy
dow npours.
High temperatures in New Engla nd today were ex pected to be
mostly in the 80s. The cold front

a:

.t! '
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A:P) Direct livestock price~ and 1eceipis
at selected buying points Tuesday
by the.Ohio Department of Ago culture: ·
.
.Barrows and gilts : 50 cents
lower; demand light to moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 46.25-47 .25; plants 47 .5048.50, a few 49.25.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs..
. country points 47.25-48.25.
.
Receipts Monday 7,800. Estimated ~ipts Tuesday 8,500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady to 50 cents higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 65.00·
73.00; select60.()()..69.00,
Slaughter heifers: choice 63.5072.00; select 61.00-68.50.
Cows: steady to 1.00 lower; all
cows 55.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to 25 cents lower;
all bulls 67.50 and down.
Sheep and lambs: 1.00 to 3.00
higher: choice wools 63.00 and
down ; choice clips 59.00-65 .00;
feeder Jambs 53.50 and down; aged
sheep 28.00 and down.

na 's Outer Banks Moaday, directing traffic off
the .banks as tbey prepare for a possible strike
from Hurricane Emily. (AP)

PREPARE FOR EMILY • Police officers
stall a roadblock in Nags Head on North Caroli-

___._. .·Local briefs - - .
Continued from pge 1
l:lulaville Pike, Gallipolis.
No injuries were reported. Elliot's vehicle sustained light damage and was driven from the scene. Adkins' vehicle sustained mod,
crate, disabling damage and was towed away.
Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reports.

Nation honoring WWI
veterans one last time
by tlie Chicago-based McCormick
Tribune Foundation, the medal is
being presented to veteran ~ under
the auspices of the Departments of
Defense and Veterans Affairs.
The ftrst medals were presented
at ceremonies in Chicago on Monday during the annual convention
of the Veterans of World War I of
the U.S.A. Ross said a local pre·
scntation is und er con sideration .
VA wiU distribute the medal to veterans beginning September 1. Ross
said they hope to have the bulk of
the medals distributed by Veterans
Day, November 11 , 1993, the 75th
anniversary of the Armistice that
ended World War I.
To rece ived the medal, World
war I veterans or lheir representatives can obtain an application
from the VA Regional Office or
call toll free 1-800-827-1000, Ross
said.
Secretary of Veterans Affairs
Jesse Brown said, "It is fitting that
we honor these World War I veterans whose service and sacrifice had
such a profound effect on world
history. But it is particularly
anniversary of that war's end."

The nation is mustering its
World War I Veterans ope last time
to honor them with a special medal
commemorationg their 'wartime
service on the 75th anniversary of
the armistice that ended "the war to
end all wars."
The medal is intended for every
living U.S. veteran of World War I,
es timated by the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) at between
30,000 and 40,000.
Phillip J. Ross, Director of the
VA Regional Office in Cleveland,
said an estimated 2,700 World War
I veterans live in Ohio.
Designed by the U.S. Army
Institute of Heraldry and sponsored

Lottery numbers
CJ,.EVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all five
numbers selected in Monday 's
Buckeye 5 drawing, the Ohio Lot·
tery said
·
Here are Monday night's Ohio
Lottery ~lections:
Pick J Numbers
6-2-1
(six, two, one)
Pick 4 Numbers
9-0-9-7
(nine, zero, nine, seven)
BuckeyeS
. 3-9-18-25-32
(three, nine, eighteen , twentyfive, tliirty-two)

EMS responds
to·eight calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance overnight. Units responding
include:
Monday - 6:44 a.m. Middleport to Cheshire for Juanita Harrison who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 8:36a.m. Middleport to Main Street for Walter
Green who wa s transported to
PVH; 4:14 p.m. Tuppers Plains to
Arbaugh Addition for Clifford
McCartney who was transported to
St. Joseph' s Hospital; 5:49p.m.
Pomeroy to Village Green Apartments for Nancy Ackerman who
was transported to PVH; 8:04 p.m.
Rutland to Meigs Mine Z for
Lawrence Boyer who was transported to Holzer Medical Center;
9:53 p.m Middleport to Overbrook
Center for Lola Bohlen who was
transported to VMH; 11:09 p.m .
Middlepon to Page Street for Elizabeth Morning who was transportcdtoVMH.
Tuesday- 12:59 a.m. Pomeroy
to Mulberry Avenue for Juanita
Lane who was .transported to
VMH.

IAIIGAIN MAnNil5 SAT. A IUN.
IMGAIN Nll:itfl TiJIE5DAY

Five were fined and three others
I'O rfeited bond Monday in the coun
of Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed:
Fined were: Ronald Vincent,
Akron, $53 plus costs, speed; Gregory Mark Tyree, Middleport, $113
plus costs, public intoxication ;
Henry L. Hensley, Long Bottom,
$500 plus costs, selling intoxicating liquor to a person under age 21 ;
Virginia Green, Pomeroy , $100
plus costs, menacing threats; Gregory Doheny, Sharpsburg, $63 plus
costs, failure to comply.
James Graves, Racine, $83 ,
open container; Richard Dugan,
RaCine, $83, open container; James
E. Moss, Hurricane, W.Va., $65,
speed.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Della
Norton, Pomeroy.
•Monday discharges - Emerson
Houdashelt, Pomeroy; Todd
Grover, Middleport.

Stocks

Divorces and
dissolutions
The following divorces and dissolutions were filed recently in the'
Meigs County Common Pleas
CoUrt of Judge Fred W. Crow III:
A dissolution was filed Aug. 26
by Ephriam Von Herdman ~
Pomeroy, and Sherry Sue Herdman, Middleport; a divorce was
filed Aug. 27 by Serena Robinson'
from Brad K. Robinson , both ot
Pomeroy; a divorce was filed Aug~
27 by Kathy A. Davis, Belpre,
from Robert G. Davis, Pomeroy.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS JtJ.J161)
Pub lished every afternoon. Monday through
Friday, I II Court S t., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Compa.Dy!Multimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21 56. ·
Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio. '
Member: The Assoclaled Press, aad the Ohio

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Pomeroy court

Hospital news

Am Ele Power.. ...... ............ 38 3/4
Ashland Oil.. ........ .... ...... .. ..32 518
AT&amp;T.............. ...................62 3/4
Bank One................. .......... 52 118
Bob Evans ........:................18 3/8
Charming Shop.............. .... l2 118
Champion Ind ................... .12 3/4
City Holding...................... 29 518
Federal Mogul.................. .. 24 718
Goodyear i&amp;R ..... .............41 7/8
Lands End .. .... ....................34
Limited lnc... ..... .... :.......... .. 23 318
Multimedia Inc ...................32 114
Point Bancorp.................. .. 14
Rax Restaurant .. ..... ..... ...... l/16
Reliance Electric ...... .....:....20
Robbins&amp;Myers................. 18 3/4
Shoney's Inc ......................2l 1/8
Star Bank ..................... ...... .34 1/4
Wendy Int'l..... ..:................ l4 5/8
Worthington Ind .................30
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemp~r Securities, Inc., of
GaUipolls.
·

across the middle of the country
meant highs only in the 70s in the
Midwest and in the chill y 60s in
eastern New Mexico and westen1
Texas.
•
The South was still hot, wi th;
highs expected to be in the 90S:
across most of the Southeast. In thC:
w~ s t , high temperat ures were
miXture of 80s and 90s, with tem-'
peratures in the 70s along the 'Cali ·
fornia coast and in the IOOs around.
Phoenix. .
,
The htgh temperature for the•
nation Monday was I 02 degrees•
recorded at Laredo, Texas.
'

Mall SuhKrlpUons

ln1hle Melp Counly
13 Wet.ks ................................. ...... .........$21.14
26 Weeki .................. ............................... $43.16
52 Weeks .................................................$84.76
Oul~ d e Melt• County
13 Woeks .......... .. ........... ..........................$2J.IIj.()

26 Weeks ............. ............................$45.50
52 Weeks ........ .................................$88.40

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�•
Page

Tuesday,August31,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Dally Sentinel

Giants win, begin crucial series with Braves
a solo homer left-banded against
By Tbe Associated Press
The San Francisco Giants have a Jack Armstrong (7-14) and hit a
little momentum going into two-run shot right-handed against
Rich Rodriguez,
Atlanta, !hanks to Todd Benzinger.
.
"Todd has done a great job for
Benzinger hit home runs from
us
all
season when Will was hurt,"
both sides of the plate .and Scott
manager
Dusty Bilker said.
Sanderson pitched six strong
has four home runs
Benzinger
innings Monday night to help San
Lhree in Lhe
.
this
season,
including
Francisco beat Florida 5- t at Joe
two
games
bolh
San Franpast
Robbie Stadium.
cisco
victories.
The NL West leaders increased
"I can't imagine feeling any
their margin over the idle Braves to
heuer
at Lhe plate than I do now,"
4 1/2 games going into a threecame series beginning tonight. The he said. "But I'll have to keep my
Braves swept a three-game series coot and not tty to hit two home
runs in every game. It won't hapin San Francisco last week.
Benzinger, filling in for the pen again this season."
Sanderson allowed six hits, no
injured Will Clark at flrst base, hit

walks and one run to improve to 2- Cubs 10, PhiUies 6 (11 innings)
1 since being acquired by San
Rick Wilkins' grand slam with
Francisco on Aug. 3. Rod Beck two outs in the lith inning powpitched the ninth inning.
ered . Chicago over first-place
"I'm feeling more comfortable Philadelphia at Veterans Stadium.
every time I'm out !here," SanderLoser Roger Mason (4-11)
son said. "With a team like this, all .struck out the first two batters in
you have to do is keep them in the the lith when Mark Grace, who
game. That's what I'm trying to earlier had a pair ·or run-scoring
do."
doubles, walked for the Lhird time.
Greg Maddux (15-9) will open Derrick May singled off o~ first
the series for the Braves tonight baseman John Kruk's glove, and
against Bill Swift (17-6).
Sammy Sosa walked to load the
Elsewhere Monday, it was bases before Wilkins hit his 25th
Chicago !0, Philadelphia 6 in II homer.
·
innings; New York 5, tlouston 4;
Dan Plesac (2-1) pitched one
Cincinnati !0, St. Louis 3; and · inning for the victory in a
Montreal 6, Colorado I.

delayed by rain for one hour in the
· fourth inning.
Mets5,Astros4
Bobby Bonilla hit his 30th
homer and Joe Orsulak's leadoff
home run in the eighth inning off
Xavier Hernandez (3-4) broke a 4·
4 tie as New York sent visiting
Houston to its fifth straight loss. .
Mike Maddux (3-6) was the
winner.
Reds 10, CardiDals 3
Thomas Howard hit a two-run
homer off Rene Arocha (10-5) and
singled twice, and Jose Rijo survived a shaky start as Cincinnati
beat St. Louis at Busch Stadium.

Rijo (12-7) allowed 10 hits and
walked. five, but gave up just two
runs in six innings. He struck: out
five to raise his NL-leading total to
!89.
Expos 6, Rockies 1.
Jeff Fassero (10-3) pitched fourhit ball for 7 2-3 innings as Montreal beat Colorado. The Rockies
set a single-season NL attendance
record with a total of 3,617,863,
breaking Lhe previous mark of Lhe
Los Angeles Dodgers in 1982.
Darrin Fletcher drov e m three
runs for Lhe
Mo Sanford (1was Lhe
pitcher, allowing ·
innings.

Bartrum waived by Chiefs;
Troy Brown makes cut
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
As· quickly as NFL teams cut
their 1rosters, they start building
them up again.
After paring down from 60 10 47
players on Monday, teams started
at noon today to rebuild !heir rosrers. In many cases, the players
they add will be the same players
Lhey cut on Monday.
Marshall's Troy Brown survived Lhe final cut at New England.
Former Meigs and MU s.tandout
Mike Bartrum was waived by
Kansas City.
Or as safety Bill Bates of Dallas
said Monday after being told he
was getting a 24-hour pass: "It just
gives me a day to play golf.''
It was a strange day - Lhc first
"final" cut under the new labor
contrac~ which allows players with
more than four NFL seasons to
become free agents wilhout going
through waivers.
Despite protests by Lhe lilces of
Buffalo coach Marv Levy that it
could hun Lhe good teams, it seems
designed to preserve the status quo.
Like Bates, few veterans seemed
inclined to negotiate new contracts
with new teams in new locales.
For Example:
The Washington Redskins cut
seven veterans, including !heir only
punter, Kelly Goodburn. But generat manager Charley Casserly said
six would be re-signed today and
the seventh' would probably come
back next week.
The biggest waves were made
by Dan Reeves, the new coach of
the New York Giants. He did what
Casserly did- dumped a group of
veterans for recall- but he also
waived talented linebacker Pepper
Johnson, primarily because he
didn'tlike Johnson's ego.
On Monday, after cutting two
other starters from last year, defen-

·,

But it was' certainly clear Lhat a
sive end Eric Dorsey and strong
lot of the name players released
safety Lamar McGriggs, Reeves
Monday would have one day off
said:
"In order to.move forward, we and be back in pads.
In fact, Bates was called into
have to make some of these type
Johnson's office, told he was being
decisions."
Ariolhcr of these type decisions cut for a day, then asked to spread
the word among teammates who .
was made by AI Davis of the Los
also·
were getting a 24-hour vacaAngeles Raiders, who has always
tion,
lilce backup fullback Tommie
prided himself on picking up trouAgee
and long snapper Dale
bled players.
This time he got rid of one- Hellesttae.
Among Lhe othe.rs who may be
quarterback Todd Marinovich, on
in Lhat category: three of Johnson's
whom Lhc Raiders used !heir firstround draft pick just two years ago. Giants teammates - center Bart
· Marinovich has had problems wilh Oates, kicker Matt Bahr and run drugs both before and after enter- ning back Ortis Anderson, MVP in
ing Lhe NFL.
.the 1991 Super Bowl. ''I had a talk
He also didn't shine on Lhe fleld.
with them and t liked what I
heard,' ' Oates said.
He completed 49 percent of his
passes with five touchdowns and
Olhers. expected to re-sign t(J(jay
nine interceptions last year.
are kicker.Jeff Jaeger and punter
This year, he fell to fourth string Jeff Gossett of Lhe Raiders; kicker
behind Jeff Hostetler, 37-ycar-old Mike Cofer, cornerback Don GrifVince Evans and rookie Billy Joe fin and linebacker Milce Walter of
Hobert. His father, Marv Mari· San Francisco; Kelly· Good burn,
novich, was a one-time Raiders the only punter on Washington's
assistant, a close friend of Davis , roster; tackle Keilh Van Horne of
and had groomed his son from birth Chicago; center Jim Sweeney of
the New York Jets; running back
to play quarterback in the NFL.
But while the Raiders were los- Roger Craig of Minnesota; defening a quarterback, they were gain- sive linemen Jason Buck and Eric
ing a receiver - Rocket Ismail. Williams of Washington and 37·
Ismail's agent, Bob Woolf, said the year-old wide receiver James
former Notre Dame star who spent Lofton of the Raiders.
Philadelphia coach Rich Kotite
two years in Canada had agreed on
a two-year deal for what sources said that safety Erik McMillan ,
linebacker Ken Rose and defensive
said was $3 million.
There was yet another category, tackle Gerald Nichols would be
among the six restored to the rostoo: limbo.
One player there was Hugh ter. The Eagles also waived quarMillen, Dallas' backup quarter- terback Casey Weldon, runner-up
back, who lost Lhe No. 2 job lO free for the Heisman Trophy in I 991.
Among the younger players
agent Jason Garrett.
placed
on waivers was Keith
"Jason Garrett just outperMcCants,
Lhe fourth overall pick in
formed him . We'll have to see,"
1990,
who
was picked up by New
coach Jimmy Johnson said of
England
last
week after being
Millen, whose equipment remained
in his locker next to starter Troy waived by Tampa Bay. McCants
Aikman's.
now can be claimed by any team. ""

Florida State remains on top in AP poll
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Fresno State keeps taking
advantage of Soulhem Cal.
The Bulldogs, who upset the
Trojans 24-7 in the Freedom Bowl
last year, moved into college foot·
ball's Top 25 Monday because of
anolher Soulhern Cat defeat.
Soulhem Cal, which started Lhc
season at No. 18, dropped out of
The Associated Press poll following a 31-9 loss to Norlh Carolina in
the Pigskin Classic. That allowed
Fresno State, unranked in th e preseason poll, to climb to No. 25
even.!hough the Bulldogs have yet
to play a game.
"It's a quantum leap from
where we were to the Top 25,"

coach Jim Sweeney said. ''I'm
rieased that people see us hk e
that."
The Bulldogs went9-4 last season, ued for .the Western Alhtcuc
Co~ference Litle and fmtshed No.
24m the poll. Led by All-WAC
quarterback Trent Dllfer, Lhey open
therr l 993 season Saturday at Baylor... .
.
. I JUSt hope Lhat we c~ m31~tam that momentum ,
satd
Sweeney. whose team has been
ranked at least one week every year
smce 1989.
.
Flonda State stren~thened tts
gnp on No. 1. by rouung Kansas
42-0 m the Ktckoff Classtc. The
Scmtnoles recetved 1,531 pomts
and 47 ftrst·place votes, five more

Scoreboard
Major Leaaue Baseball

nia (Holzcma 0-1), 10:05 p.m

AlA Glance

OJ The Associated Pras
All Timts EDT
~MERIC~N LEAGUE
East Dlvi.llon
.........
Toronto
.......
New Yor:k
...........
D&lt;troil
B~1on
. ········
........
Baltimore
Cleveland
········
Milwaukee
······

W L

Pet.

76 ~ 7
75 57
71 62
69 61

571
.568 1(l
.534
s
.5 31 5 lfl
S2'l
6
.473
13
.429
19

69

62

62 69
l7 76

GB

West Olvl8lon

Chicago
.........
Teus
...........
Kansas City .......
Seattle
...........
California
.........

Minru:soi.J
Oallind

W L
73 57
68 6)
68 64
64 66
59 71

....... 55 75
......... l2 78

Pet. GB
.l62
.519 s In
.5 1.5
6
.492
9
.4S4
14
.423

18

.400

21

Monday'• Games
B01t.on 7, Tcu.s 3
Chicago 4, Minne.sotll I
MilwaW:ee 2, Kansas City I
Toronto 4, Oakland 2
Detroit 13, Se~ ttle 2

Only games

~eheci uled

Tuesday'• Gamet
Chicago (Alvarez 9-&amp;) at New York
'Hil.chcoclt 1.0), 7:30p.m.
Texu (Rogen 13-7) at Borum

(Qemcna!G.IO), 7:3.5 p.m.
Cleveland (Mesa 9-10) at Minn ~ ota

8-9), 1,05 p.m.
Kansu City ( M•g~antc 1-1) at Mil waukee (bfin,nda 3-3), S:OS p.m.
(Banis

Dcuoit (Wella 10-7) at Sc.llttle (John:soo.

14-8), 10,0l p.m.

Toronto (Stcwlt\ S-8) u Oakland

(B.Win 9· 12), 10:05 p.m.
BaltimOR (Mullin&amp; 12-5) at California
(l...cf\wich 1-3), I 0:30p.m.
W~tsday '• Game.
Kan111 City (HJ.ne~ . 9-6) 11 Milwulkee

(Navarro 8-9), l :OS p.m.
Toronto (Gumw! 10..3) a\ Oakland
(Van Poppel4·5 or Mohler 1-5), 3:15
p.m.
Detroit (Moore 11 -6) at Seattle (Fleming 9- 2~ 3,35 p.m.

Chicaa;o (McDowclll0-7) 11 New York

tJWni&lt;ni&lt;W 9-4), 7'30p.m.

Texu (P&amp;vlik 9·6) at Dorton {Sclc 6-2}.

NATJONAL LEAGUE
Eul Division
W L
PeL GO
Philadelphia ....... 81 SO .6 18
Montreal
......... 72 60 .54l 9 IJ2
.542
10
St. Louis
.......... 71 60
Chicago
......... 64 67
.489
17
Pittsburgh

......... 6 1

70

Aorida
....... .... 54 76
New York
....... 46 85
West Division

20

.466

.415 261!2
.351
35

W

L

Pel.

GO

S1m fr&amp;ncisco ...... 85

45

.654

-

At.lana

........... II

50

.618 4 1/2

HouslOn

......... 68

63

...... 66

6)

.519 17 112
..512 Hl ! f2

lot Ange\CI

.496 201{2
Cincinn&amp;ti ....... .. 66 67
.397 33112
San Diego
........ 52 79
36
Colondo
........ 50 82 .379
Monday'• Gamu
San Fnmci.Jco 5, Plorida I
New YorkS, Houston 4
Cincinnati 10, St. Lou ill 3
Montte.t16, Col0111do I
Chic.~go 10, Phihdelphia 6, 11 inning5
Onl)' gamesachedu1ed

Tuesday's Gamet
Philadelphia (Riven 11-7) 11 OUcago
(Morson 8-t2), 3:20p.m .

San Diego (Worrdl 1-3) at Florida
(Hough 7-14), 7:35p.m.
l..ol An ides (~• 9-11) at Piusburgh
(W•gno. S-6), 7.35 p.m.
Housi..M (Harnilch 11 -8) 11 New York
!Ooodon 12·14), NO p.m.
San Fn.ncilco (Swift 17-6) at AtlantJ.
(Maddult 15-9), 7:40p.m.
Cincinnati (Lucbbeft 2-3) at SL Lou!&amp;
(0.bomol~7). 8,35 p.=
Mon11C11 (Hcted.ial-2) at Colorado
(ll"ris t l-13), 9,05 p.m.
Wedne5da)''ll Gaml!.ll
Houil.on (Drabek 7-15) 11 New York

(Fernandez 3-4), I :40 p.m.
~ddphia (MulhoUand 11 ·9) n
Chicago (Harll:ey 8· 7), 2:20p.m.
San Dieso (Benea14-1 0) at Florida
(Bowen 3-11), 7:35p.m.
Los AngCJ.e~ (Candioai 8-S) 11 Pins·
burgh (Cooke 8-1), 7:3.5 p.m.
San Frmcisc:o (Hicken:on 6-S or Delh&amp;iCI 0-0) 11 Atlantl (Smaltz 13·9), 7:40
p.m.
CinciMati (Roper2-3) 11 SL louis (Ur-

bani 0-2), 8:0.5 p.m.

B5p.m.

Cleveland (Grimsley I-I) at Minnesota

s.:n.

(Trombley
8:05p.m.
Baltimore (McDona ld 9-11) at Califur-

than Lhey got in the preseason poll.
Defending national champion
Alabama, which opens Saturday
against Tulane, remained No. 2
wilh t 1 first-place. votes and 1,469
points. Michigan, which plays
Washington State next week,
stayed No. 3 with two first-place
votes and 1,415 points.
Miami moved up one notch to
No.4, edging No.5 Texas A&amp;M
by four points . The Hurricanes
meet No. 20 Boston College Saturday, while the Aggies open against
LSU.
Rounding out the Top 10 are
Syracuse, Notre Dame, Florida,
Nebraska and Tennessee. Syracuse
nnd No. 15 Stanford each received
one-first place vote.
Colorado is t lth, followed by
Washington, Arizona, Georgia,
Stanford, North Carolina, Penn
State, Ohio State, BYU, Boston
College, Oklahoma, Clemson, Mississippi State, North Carolina State
and Fresno State.
North Carolina rose four spots
to No. 16.

Montmal (Martinez 12-8) at Colorado
(Bottenfield 4-9), 9:05 p.m.

Douglas cut
by Browns
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - After
overcoming a knee injury Lhat side! ined him aU of last year, fullback
Derrick Douglas has been cut by
the Cleveland Browns.
Douglas led Cleveland in rush ing and played well on special
teams during Lhe preseason, but he
· was waived Monday as Lhe Browns
reduced Lheir roster to the NFL's
47-player limit. Teams were permitted to expand !heir rosters 10 53
beginning at noon today.
Coach Bill Belichick said the
team would wait until today to
reveal its final regular season roster.
Waived along with Douglas
were cornerbacks Everson Wall s
and Tim Jacobs, defensive tackle
Travis Davis, tight end Dave Jones,
safety Harton Barnett, kicker Mau ·
Stover, linebacker Richard Brown,
quarterback Todd Philcox, punter
Brian Hansen and fullback Ron
Wollley.
Team owner Art Modell said Lhe
Browns would re-sign Stover and
most of the olher waived players
today.

Tuesday, August 31

Blue Jays defeat Oakland 4-2
By Tbe Associated Press
Who says you can't go home
again? Rickey Henderson actually
aid- rwice- in his first .visit to
the Oakland Coliseum since being
traded by Lhc Athletics.
·'Coming back here, I had a
good time," said Henderson, who
hit his 18th homer of the season
and scored two runs to help the
Toronto Blue Jays beat Oakland 42 on Monday nighL
Henderson, dealt to Toronto a
month ago, received a mostly positive welcome back from Lhe crowd
of 24,371. After driving a 1-0 pitch
from Ron Darling into the left field
scats in the fifth inning, Henderson
drew hearty applause from Lhe fans
as he rounded Lhe bases in Lhe stadium where he spent 10 seasons.
He also singled and s.cored on a
wild pitch in Lhe thin! inning.
Wilh Lhe victory, Lhe Blue Jays
broke a tie wilh Lhe idle New York
Yankees for first place in the AL
East.
''That's Lhe reason he's a good
player," Toronto manager Cito
Gaston said of Henderson. ''He can
rise to Lhe occision and play under
pressure."
Elsewhere in the AL, it was
Chicago 4, Minnesota 1; Boston 7,
Texas 3; Milwaukee 2, Kansas City
I; and Detroit 13, Seattle 2.
Henderson's first run of the
game gave Lhe Athletics a 1-0 lead
in Lhe third. His homer off Darling
(5-7) made it 3-0 and provided
Oakland wilh Lhe eventual winning
run.
Pat Hentgen (16-7) scattered six

hits in seven-plus innings as the
Blue Jays moved a .half-game
ahead of Lhe Yankees in Lhe hottest
race in baseball.
But John Olerud's chances of
becoming baseball's ftrst .400 hit·
1er since Ted Williams faded further as his hitless streak stretched
to 12 at-bats. The Toronto first
baseman's batting average fell to
.382.
Duane Ward got Lhe final Lhree
outs for his 37Lh save after giving
up a leadoff homer in the ninlh 10 ·
Mike Aldrete, his eighlh.
White Sox 4, Twins 1
Alex Fernandez pi~ched seven
innings of Lhree-hit ball as Chicago
continued its domination of Min- ·
nesota.
Fernandez ( 16-6) won for the
fourth time in five starts. Robeno
Hernandez pi~ched the ninth for
Chicago to record his 30Lh save in
his 34Lh attempt.
Robin Ventura drove in two
runs with a single WJd sacrifice fly
as Scott Erickson (8-16) lost.
Red Sox 7, Rangers 3
Boston's switch to a four-man
rotation worked as Frank Viola
won his fiflh straight decision as
the Red Sox beat Texas.
Reacting to a six-game losing
streak that Viola ended last Thursday at Arlington, Boston manager
Butch Hobson decided to use four
starters in hopes of getting back
into the AL East race. Viola (10-8)
is Lhe frrst of Lhe four to pitch on
three days rest, beating Kevin
Brown ( 10-11) for the second time
in five days.

The Red Sox increased a 1-0
lead to 5-0 in the fifth with Lhe help
of Brown's balk, third baseman
Jeff Huson's error and Scott Cooper's two-run double. Milce Greenwell singled in a run in the sixth,
and Tony Pena hit his Lhird homer
of the year in the seven !h.
Brewers·2, Royals 1
Cal Eldred pitched a four-hitter
and John Jaha doubled home the
winning run in the ninth to lead
Mil waukee over visiting -Kansas
City.
Wjlh one out in the ninlh, Kevin
Reimer singled off the glove of
fmt baseman Wally Joyner. Darryl
Hamilton ran for Reimer and Jaha
hit a line drive off Tom Gordon (86).

'J'he ball skidded past shortstop
Greg Gagne inio shallow left.
Hamilton came around from frrst,
beating Lhe.Lhrow to the plate.
Eldred (15-12) took a two-hit
shutout into the ninth before allowing Joyner's one-out home run, his
14th, which tied it 1-1.
Tigers 13, Mariners 2
Bill Gullickson won his sixth
straight start and improved his
career record against Seattle to 100 as Detroit beat the Mariners.
Gullickson (12-6) allowed five
hits and two earned runs in six
innings, and tied a season high by
striking out five.
Alan Trammell drove in three
runs wilh two singles as Lhe Tigers
lashed 16 hits. Seven Tigers
recorded at least one RBI in the
game.

Attack has changed tennis star.'s ·life

OLIVER SCORES - CinciDnati 's Joe Oliver
slides home safely as St. Louis CardiDals catcher
Tom Pal(nozzi catches late throw in fourth

inning ofMonday night's game in St. Louis. The
Reds won, 10-3. (AP)

Play resumes in U. S. Open
NEW YORK {AP) - Now Lhat
tennis royillty has had its moment
in Lhe spotlight, the U.S. Open is
awash today in a flood of seeds.
Stefan Edberg;who has won Lhe
men's title here Lhe last two years
and is ,seeded No. 3 Lhis time, got
things started on Stadium Court
when he took on Frenchman Olivier Delaitre. ·

No. I Jim Courier, No . 7
Michael Chang and No. 16 Andre
Agassi .made !heir 1993 debuts on
the hardcourts of Lhe National Tennis Center, while tonight's program
includes Wimbledon champion
Pete Sampras, who is seeded second, and Mary Joe Fernandez, Lhe
women's No. 6 seed.
It is the bustling type of day

New Yorkers are used to - and
co mpletely different from Day
One.
On Monday, the last three
women to be ranked No. I in the
world held coun. Top-seeded Stern
Graf and No. 3 Martina Navratilova played first-round matches and .
Monica Seles closed out a brief
by holding a news con-

NEW YORK (AP) - Four
months to the day after she ·was
slabbed in Lhe back, Monica Setes
remained away from the tennis
courts Monday, instead talking of
her recovery and how the attack
has changed her life.
Seles spoke Lhoughtfully on Lhe
first day of Lhe U.S. Open, a tournament she won each of the past
two years.
This was a different Seles, not
rushing her replies, ralher Lhinking
through her answers, trying to
explain her emotions and her hopes
for a comeback. It will be almost,
she said,li!&gt;c starting from scratch.
"I have had to miss Lhree Grand
Slams," she said. "It was not my
fuult at all. I lost the (No. I) ranking wilhout playing a match. When
I start practicing , I am going to
have to practice for quite a long
time to be at a form that I was
when I left the tour. And in every
sense, I feet that I have to start
frbm Lhe beginhing, (Lhe) beginning
of my career in a sense."
Setes said she still was a long
way from playing tournament tenriis.

BULLETIN BOARD

"I only tested my stroke one
time," she said, "and I couldn't do
t'he whole stroke and it hun very

much. I am not at that point yet Lhat
1can hit a few strokes wilhout huning or even having Lhe full motion.
1 do hope I am going to be able to
hit a ball very soon.
"The frrst step would be to be
able to hit a ball wilh my full swing
as I swung Lhe racket before, wilh .
absolutely no pain. And if I am
holding the grip for a long time, not .
feeling any numbness in my last
three fingers. After Lhat, it is just
going to be a matter of practicing."
When she was asked to show
how much motion she had regained
in her arm, her manager, Bob Kain
of IMG, stopped her with a firm
"No!"

Seles said she has no way of
knowing whether she can be the
dominating player she was before
the episode at Hamburg, Germany.
" I don't think any of us know,"
she said, "but I have full confidence in myself and I think if I
work hard, I will be. Whatever way
I try to lbok at this, it's ' going to
make me stronger in every sense."
She expressed diS8pllOintment at
losing the No. 1 rankmg, saying,
''The person who did this to me,
stabbed me for Lhat reason, and he
got his wish in Lhat sense."
Her attacker described himself

NOW
AVAILABLE

IN THE

court.''

Cooper tells team not to take Rice lightly
.

' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Slate coach John Cooper says
he's been cautioning his team
against taking Rice lightly in Satur(lay's season opener.
· But first-year starting quarterback Bob Hoying said he won't be
satisfied just wtth a victory. He
wants a convincing victory.
· "We have 10 dominate them for
ourselves, not to show anybody
else," Hoying said.
"We all know Rice has some
good people and is capable of beating us. We know that, but we
~hould beat .Rice and beat them
bad. That's the bottom tine right
t'hcre," he said.
· Asked if Lhe Buckeyes could be
I'ooking past Rice to a showdown

wilh Washington Lhe following Saturday, Cooper said, "I don't Lhink
there's any chance of that at all.
We've done everything we can to
keep that from happening."
Ohio State, coming off an 8-3-1
season and second-place finish in
the Big Ten, is a 15-point favorite
over Rice of the Southwest Conference. The Owls were 6-5 last season - their first winning record
since 1963.
There's good reason to not overlook Rice. In Ben Emmanuel, the
Owls boast a quarterback who can
create havoc with the best of
defenses. A year ago, the 5-foot-11,
180-pounder rushed for 680 yards
and was fourth in the country in

passing efficiencl.
"From al.t o the films we've
seen on him, he's an outstanding
athlete," Cooper said. "But more.
than an athlete, he's a polished
quarterback."
Emmanuel signed with UCLA
but drifted back to Rice when he
came out on the short end of a
quarterback duet with Tommy
Maddox. He has flourished at the
2,600-student campus in Houston.
Rice ran mostly a single-back
set last year, but that was when it
had tailback Trevor Cobb, who
rushed for 1,386 yards a year ago.
Wilhout Cobb as a safety valve,
Emmanuel will be given even more
responsibility.

'

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NOW
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Call By 2:00P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition

off the field after Hamilton scored in the ninth
on a double by John Jaha to win the game Z-1 in
Milwaukee. (AP)

Hot teams lure sports collectors
Howard SiDer
Today 's questions in Lhe world
of sports:
Why are sports cards and collectibles popular right now?
For one thing, it'·s the current
rotential for dynasties in each of
the big four professional sports baseball, football, basketball and
hockey.
Roderick Malloy, editor of the
monthly magazine Malloy's Sports ·
Cards and Collectibles, cites the
influence of today's powerhouse
franchises.
Malloy points to Lhe success of
the Atlanta Braves (bas~ball), Lhe
Dallas Cowboys (football), the
Chicago Butts (basketball) and the
Piusburgh Penguins (hockey) .
Those clubs have had a key impact
on sports merchandising.
The hot teams are helping to
lead a revival in Lhe popularity of
sports cards following somewhat of
a glut in Lhat market. Also, they are
boosting the continued expansion
into the field of non-card collectibles- including such items as
:iutographs, equipment, pennants,
programs and pins.
· "Dominant teams always help
spur the popularity of professional
spo&lt;ts," notes Malloy in "Matloy ' s Sports Collectibles ~alue
Guide." The book was published
recently by Wallace-Homestead,
which is a Chilton imprint.
''The Atlanta Braves have plenty of big-league talent and even

more awaiting their big-teague
call," explains ·Malloy. "Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, Ken Nonon Jr.
und their youthful (Dallas) teammates could be on !heir way to a
handful of Super Bowls. Tony
Kukoc may be the ingredient Lhat
pmpels Lhe Chicago Bulls to a few
more championship triumphs.''
Malloy adds: "Mario Lemieux,
Kevin Stevens, Jaromir Jagr &amp; Co.
(of Pittsburgh) arc well on their
way to the next hockey dynasty."
How broad is the market for
sports cards and collectibles?
It 's really a big business,
according to Roderick Malloy, who
reports on Lhe industry. He says Lhe
U.S. sports market is still growing.
"Enough collectors have
entered Lhe market to temporarily
suppon more Lhan I 5 card companies, uncountable sports collectible
magazines and Lhousands of. dealers," Malloy notes.
Despite the recession in Arnericu and what was a flooded market
in sports cards, Malloy believes
that Lhe future of sports colleetibles
is bright.
"The big card companies, such
as Upper Deck, Topps and Fleer,
have the money and the know-how
to champion the next surge in Lhe
sports card market," Malloy predicts,
Baseball cards still dominate.
But the growlh of.basketball, football and hockey cards indicates the
depth of the markeL

"Now Lhat !here are more than
20 football card sets, 10 basketball
and 10 hockey sets produced each
year," says Malloy, "collectors
have begun to dabble in the few
auto racing, boxing, golf and olher
sports cards."
In Lhe non-card collectibles market, there is also a rise in interest.
And it goes beyond the big four
sports.
Malloy says that the 1994
World Cup in the United States
could spark the emergence of soccer collectibles. The 1996 Summer
Garnes in Atlanta may lead to the
. resurgence of Olympic collectibles,
headds.
·
Elsewhere, rare boxing items
and tennis collectibles have also
been in demand, as the non-card
market becomes more of a national
factor.
What really fuels the sports collectibles industry?
Sports fans, of course. It's that
simple, says Roderick Malloy.
"Through sports collectibles,"
he notes, " people feel an intimate
attachment to the athletes they
admire." Malloy adds: "This is Lhc
primary reason behind the popularity of sports collectibles."
He asks: "If you lilce sports or a
particular alhlete, how could you
not appreciate a token of that
attachment to Lhe player or spon?''
Malloy says memories and passions are driving forces in the
trade.

'
'

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

as a Steffi Graf fan and said he
wuntcd to help Graf regain Lhe top
ranking. Graf, winner of the French
Open and Wimbledon, has done
that. Monday, she and won her frrst
match at the Open, 6-3, 6-0 over
Robin White.
Setes said she and Graf have
talked only onc;e, immediately after
the stabbing incident while she was
in the hospital. "It would have
been nice of her (to send) a letter or
somelhing after that," Seles said.
"She could have asked how ·am I
doing."
Seles did not say that in an
angry tone, just a Lhoughtful one.
Suppose she cannot come back
to No. I? Would No. 15 or No. 20
satisfy her?
"That is a tough question,"
Seles said. "I am always a perfec·
tionist in tennis. Wilh me, honestly,
no. t probably want to do better,
but I would try to work harder and
at leas) be a top 10 player. Life .
would goon .
"But I think as long as I practice and mentally always be strong,
I will be rme. It is going to take a
few tournaments for Lhe match play
to come in and I am sure I will be
very nervous when I first go on Lhe

HAMILTON SCORES- Milwaukee's Darryl Hamilton, right, and Dave Nilsson embrace
as Royals' catcher Mike MacFarlane, left, walks

MORRISON WINS • Tommy Morrison,
left, faces Tim Tomashek In the fourth round
Monday In Kansas City, Mo. Morrlson's ·first
defense of his WBO heavyweight title was to be
against Mike Williams, but Williams withdrew
an hour before the 12-round bout after refusing

to take a drug test. Toinashek, 28, rrom Green
Bay, Wis., stepped In to face Morrison, but was
unable to come cout of bis corner for the fifth
round and Morrison was dec:lared a winner by
TKO. (AP)

Monday's sports transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX-Placed
Jeff Russell, pitcher, on Lhe 15-day
disabled list. Recalled Luis Ortiz,
third baseman, from Pawtucket of
the International League.
MINNESOTA
TWINSRecalled Brett Merriman, pitcher,
from Portland of the Pacific Coast
League.
OAKLAND ATHLETICSPlaced Goose Gossage, pitcher, on
the 15-day disabled list. Recalled
.Roger Smithberg, pitcher, from
Tacoma of the Pacific Coast
League.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
DALLAS MAVERICKSSigned Lucious Harris, guard, to a
two-year contract.
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-Signed Jay Goodman,
guard, to a one-year contract.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
BUFFALO BILLS-Cut Mark
Kelso, safety; Adam Lingner, center; Rob Awalt and Pat Akos, tight
ends; Phil Bryant, running back;
Corben Lacina, Sean Love, and
Tom Myslinski, offensive linemen;
James Patton and Mark Pike,
defensive linemen; David White,
linebacker; and Darryl Wren,
defensive back. Placed Keith McKeller, tight end, on the reservephysically-unable-to-perform list.
CINCINNATI BENGALSCut Eddie Brown, Reggie Thornton, Allen DeGraffenreid and Brian
Stablein, wide receivers; Mike Dingle, running back; Lamar Rogers
and Artis Ford, defensive linemen;
Karmeeleyah McGill and Brad
· Smith, linebackers; Mark Staten
and Dan Jones, offensive linemen;
Mitchell Price, defensive back; and
Jeff Thomason, tiglit end.
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Cut
Tim Jacobs, cornerback; Derrick
Douglas, running back; Travis
Davis, defensive tackle; and Dave
Jones, tight end. Placed Tim Watson, safety, on the ·reserve nonfootball injury list, an4 Orlando
Brown, taclcle, on injured resel'l/e.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Tmded Barry Word, running back,
to the Minnesota Vikings for a
1994 flflh-round draft choice, and

Rich Baldinger, tackle, to Lhe New
England Patriots for an undisclosed
1994 draft choice.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERSCut James Lofton and Olanda Truitt, wide receivers; Todd Marinovich, quarterback; Jeff Jaeger,
placekicker; Jeff Gossett, punter;
David Fulcher, defensive backlinebacker; Willie Broughton,
defensive lineman; Dan Land, cornerback; Napoleon McCallum, running back; Todd Peat, offensive
lineman; John Duff, tight end; Tom
Roth, center; and Keith Traylor,
linebacker.
LOS ANGELES RAMS-Cut
Bill Hawkins, defensive end ;
Damone Johnson, tight end; Sam
Graddy, Jeff Chadwick, Tony Hacgain and Richard Buchanan, wide
receivers; Thomas Homco,
lin ebacker; R.J. Kors, safety;
Courtney Griffin, cornerback;
Chuck Belin and Brad Ficht~I .
offensive linemen; Warren Pqwers,
defensive lineman; and Jeff Buf·
faloe, punter.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS- Signed Bobby Harden, safety. Cut Bill Lewis, center; Keith
McCants, linebacker-defensive
end; Eugene Lockhart .and Eddie
Sutter, linebackers; John Washington, Milce Pitts, Aaron Jones, Chris
Gannon and George Williams,
defensive linemen; Tim Gordon
and Adrian White, safeties; Reggie
Dwight, tight end; Corey Croom
and Burnie Leggette, running
backs; and Chris Perez, offensive
lineman. Placed Mike Farr, wide
receiver, on the waived-injured list.
NEW YORK JETS-Cut Jim
Sweeney, center; Paul Frase, Bill
Pickel and Karl Wilson, defensive
lineman; Mario Bail~y, Date
Dawkins and David Daniels, wide
receivers; Dennis Price, David
Tate, Marcus Turner, Victor Green
and Damon Pieri, defensive backs;
and Ken Whisenhun~ tight end.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLESCut Erik McMillan, defensive
back; Mark Duper and Orlando
McKay, wide receivers; Casey
Weldon, quanerback; Ken Rose,
Ephesians Bartley, Ivan Caesar and
Scott Kowalkowski, linebackers;
Gerald Nichols, defensive taclcle;
Tony Brooks and Siran Slacy, running backs; Joey Mickey, tight end;
and Doug Skene, offensive .line- _

man.
PITTSBURGH STEELERSCut Rick Strom and Alex Van Pelt,
quarterbacks; Bryan Hinkle, Greg
Clark and Marc Woodard,
linebackers; Dwight Stone, wide
receiver; Larry Griffin and
Solomon Wilcots, safeties; Kendall
Gammon, John Fisher and Rickie
Shaw, offensive linemen; Sammy
Walker, cornerback; and Warren
Williams, running back.

By
Dave

Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
Never give up. Remember that
the mighty ook waa one• juot o
lillie nulthot held Ita tii'Ound.

•••

PadMtrion' oomiiCIIIe whoae kldo
beat her to the gor-v-.

•••

Many ol uo had to work our woy
through college. We're condnulng the tradition with our klda we have tow work their way
through college, too.
.

•••

Overweight Ia hereditary,
ohowo in your jeana.

It

•••

Opportunlot' aomeone who goeo
ahead and doeo the thing you
alwayo lnt.,ded to do • ooon 11
you had the opportunity.

•••

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for All of Your Horne
Furnishing Needa.

Everything lrom Appllancaa
to Living Room, We're the
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Rl. 124, R•ll.t..Oh.

742-2211

�•
'

Th~ Daily Sentm:el

By The Bend

Ohio

-

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

'

Tuesda~August31,1993

Page--0

Scouts score well/at Meigs fair

More than 100 girl scouts from Taylor, Ashlee Vaughan, ca,sie
16 troops exhibited projects at the Vaughan, Stacey Brewer, Chasity
130th Meigs County F81f.
.
Fowler, D~bby S~arles, Shauna
In the group projects the o,ym· M~nuel, Cmda Clifford, Amanda
ners were World of Well Bemg, Mtller, Melissa Houser, Sarah
Pomeroy Brownies 1271, Middle- Houser, Shelly Cummins, Tara
port Brownies 1254; Pomeroy Norman, and Jennifer Morris,
Junior 1309, Letart Juniors 1290, juniors, and Michelle Bissell and
Middleport Juniors 1276, and Big Bethany Cook, eadettes. . /
Bend Cadettes 1115.
Taking the top indi.vidual
In the World of People, the win- awards in the World of P~ople,
ners were Letart Brownies 1004 were Aja Blackwell, grand, with
and Middleport Juniors 1039.
Sara Mansfield, reserve; iryBrownIn the World of Today and ies; Rachel Taylor, gr;md, with
Tomorrow, Middleport Brownies Shelly Cummins, reserve, in
1254, Rutland Brownies 1308, and juniors; and Bethany Cooke, grand,
Middleport Juniors 1276 were the and Michelle Bissell, reserve in
winners. Pomeroy Brownies 1371, Cadettes.
Pomeroy Jumors, 1309, Rutl~nd
World of Today and Tomorrow:
Brownies, ~308, Tuppe_rs Plams Angela Wilson, Crystal Lemley,
1316,lllld MiddleportJumors 1276, Chelsey WO\XI, Stacy Smith, HoUy
and I!tg Be~d Cadettes 1115 were Broderick, Brittany Hauber, Becky
thewmnersmtheWorldofArts.
Taylor, Amanda Fetty, Shauna
In the World of Out-of-Doors Davis, Joanna Bowersock, Christiprojects, the winners were Mid'!Je· na Miller, Beth Russell, Heather
port Juniors 127~; Letart Brow~1es, Riffle, Kimberly Johnson, Ashley,
Rutland Browme~, Le~ Jumors, Payne, Nicole Phillips, brownies;
Pomeroy Browmes, Middleport Jennifer Sayre, Heather Dailey,
Brownies, and Middleport Jum&lt;?rs. Jennifer Norman, Shelly Cummins,
Winning in the World of Scouung Rachel Taylor, Julie Bailey, Cindy
category were the Pomeroy Brown- Clifford, Misty Hart, Melissa Hoties and the Middle~rtJuniors.
man, Stephanie Roberts, Andrea
Scouts w1th two or more Neuttling, Melissa Houser, juniors;
projects receiving blue ribbons on and Bethy Cooke, and Michelle
all projects were Nicole Phillips, Bissell, cadettes.
Sarah Mansfield, Jamitha Willford,
In the World of Today and
Misty Clay and Michelle Stahl, Tomorrow the champions \YCrc

HEART WALK • Bank One and Whaley's Auto Parts will
sponsor'lbe 1993 American Heart Walk to be held Saturday, Sept.
25 at the Meigs High School Track. He.re Steve Duufee o_r Bank
One Pomeroy displays a poster promotmg the Walk. Dav1d Harris ;bows the plaque which his church, Trinity, won as the first
place winners in the 1992 walk.

Meigs participates
in heart benefit

brownies, Nicole Phillips, grand,
~n~ Beth ~ussell, reserve; and
JUDIOr, Mehssa Holman, grand.
. World or Arts: Ashley Payne,
N1cole Phllltps, Angel Stone,
Stephanie Story. Schwak, Billie Jo
Welsh, Nancy Pickens, Lisa Smith,
Danielle Thomas, Michelle
Thomas, Sara Mansfield, Amanda
Fetty, Holly Broderick, Brittany
Gard, Michelle Stahl, Crystal Lemley, Kimberly Lemley, Beth Russell, Tinah Dodson, Joanna Bowersock, Brook Bolin, Jamitha WiUford, Stephanie Wilson, brownies:
Misty Hart, Brooke Hart, Melissa
Holman, Leeann Dill, Anna Story,
Jennifer Sarre, Mia Bass, E_ri n
Suuble, Jennifer Norman, Jenmfer
Morris, Bridget Johnson, Britini
Beven, Rachel 'Taylor, Sabra
Davidson, BrlllldY Stevens, De~bie
Sears, Chaslly Fowler, Melissa
Brewer, Amanda Miller, Melissa
Houser, and T. J. Moore, juniors;
Melissa Bissell, Ginger Darst,
Kelly Dalton, and Bethany Cooke,
cadettes; and Sherry Johnson ,
Linda Chapman and Brooke
Coates, seniors.
Grand and reserve champions,
listed respectively, were Billie Jo
Welsh and Holly Broderick,
brownies; T. J. Moore and Jennifer
Sayre, juniors; Ginger Darst and
Bethany Coulee, cadette s; and
Brook Coa~. senior.

Meigs County is one of over Meigs County to join thousands of
700 communities nationwide to others across the country to help
participate in a ben~fit for the . fight cardiovascular disease, the
number one lciUer of Americans, to
American Hean AssocJatJOn.
The Meigs County Divis!on_ of get some exercise and to have fun."
the American Heart Association
"Our fJtSt step in organizing the
has announced the 1993 Amencan event is to have our recruitment
Heart Walk to be held Saturday, commiuee meet face-to-face with
September 25 from 10 a.m. to 2 potential team captains and explain
p.m. at the Meigs High ~chool how their business or organization
could be involved in the walk,"
uack.
.
.
The :;econd year for th1s nauona1 Midkiff explained. "If anyone i~
event it is sponsored by Lederle interested in participating and has
Laboratories with local corporate not yet been contaCted, please caU
sponsors of Bank One and Wha· me or one of the other recruitJnent
ley 's Auto Parts. Millie Midlcirf leaders."
chairman of the event has already
Members of the recruitment
begun ·coordinat!ng volunteers to commillee are Donna Carr, Texanrecruit teams. wh1ch will take plac.e na WeU, Amy Perrin, Linda Warnnationwide in over 700 commum- er, Sandy Lannarelli, Denver and
Nora Rice, Debbie Haptonstall,
ties.
.
"I'm very excited to be chatr· Jane Frymyer, Dana Kessinger, and
man of this event again for 1993. MidlcifL
Last year's wallc was quite successAlthough the event is based on
ful and the commillee is .working team participation, individuals are
hard to plan another postllve com- also welcome to walk. For more
munity activity," Midkiff com- information contact Midlciff at 992mented. "The American Heart 5728.
Walk is a chance for the people of

RATES

World of Out of Doors: Misty
Clay, Kimberly Lemley, Crystal
Lemley, Rebecca Houser, Megan
Roseberry, Michelle Stahl,, Angela
Wilson, Ashley Payne,'K1mberly
Johnson, Angel Stone, Nicole
Philips, Bee ley Taylor, Carrie
Crow, Chelsey Wood, Amy Norman, and Joanna Bowersock ,
brownies; Debbie Searls, Sabra
Davidson, Brittany Johnson, Emily
Stivers, T. J. Moore, Melissa Hotman, Heather Dailey, Jennifer Norman, Melissa Houser, and Andrea
Neutzling, junors; Kelly Dalton.
Michelle Bissell, Bethany· Cooke,
cadeues.
The grand and reserve champsions, listed respect• vely, were
Ktmbcrly Johnson, Nitole Phillips,
brownies; Emily Stivers and Bnttany Johnson, juniors; 'and Melissa
Bisse ll and Bethany Cook,
cadcttes.
World or Girl Scouts: Cry sta l
Lemley, Rebecca Houser, Nicole
Phillips and Angel Stone, brownies, Brittany Johnson, juniors; and
Bethany Cook, cadettcs. The grand
and reserve champiOns were
Rebecca Houser and Angel. Stone,
brownies; Brittany John soD',
juniors, and Bethany Cooke,
cadettes.
,;.;;.;.;.... .-·~··-...__ ____..,..._ _.._..,.

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
• Adt oullide the eounty your ad run1 m.wt be prepaid
• Rec:ehe diaeoUDt {or adJ paid in ad-vance.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found adt under IS word• will be
ru 3 day• at no eharge.
• Price of ad for aU capilalleu.er• i1 douhle priee o( ad COil
• 7 point liae type only u1ed
• Sentinelll nolre~poDJible for erron after fiJ'It day (cbeek
for error• f~r~t d:ty ad runi in paper). Call hefo~ 2:00p. m.
day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that mull be paid in advance are:
Cord ol Th ..lu
Happy Ad.o
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A clutif'l6d adverlilement placed in the The Daily Sentinel
(except Cl.utified Oi.play, Bu1ineu Card or l...ep.l
Notic:ca) will abo appear in the Point Ple11ant Regi.ter and
the Gallipolil Daily Tribune~ reachill8 over 18,000 homet

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
·and home with the State
Auto Companies:,
Let us tell you just •
how much your savings
can·be.
'

•

.ROGAN .: ~ '
~ ..NER
,
1nsuraDee service(
214 EAST MArN
POMEROY
992-6687

. 1&lt;J StateA~to,
1nsurance C~mpa!'i~s

....
,

(Continued from Pagal)
, and Handicapped Tranolt

that: ·
SECTION 1. The Mayor of
the VIllage of Middleport Ia
hereby authorlred to aubmlt
an application lo, and anter
Into contract with, thtt Ohio
Deparlment ol Trana·
portatlon for ·a granI under
tha Ohio Elderly and
Handicapped Tranoit Fare
Aialatance Program on
behalf of lhe Village ol
Pomeroy.
SECTION 2. The Village of
PornJiroy doea nol intend to
apply for grant lunda within

~ Fare

' WHEREAS, the VIllage of
" Poma~oy h.. determined
:thai II would be more
•economically 1..oible lor
:tho
elderly
and
1handicapped to uaa the tul
!iervlco within the Vlllagu
lof Middleport and Pomeroy
lwhen "''" •• reduced. _
NOW, THEREFORE, BElT
!RESOLVED by the Council
of the Village of Pomeroy,
ttha majority of all membero
~ elected thereto concurring,

:1 Card of Thanks

j

. The family of Todd
Grindstaff would like
lo thank the people
who helped us during
our time grief.
We want to give
special thank• to the
reacue workers, all
the people who ·
brought In food, and
all the people whose
prayara gave ua
alrength In our time of
deepest aorrow.
Dave and Kay
Grindstaff
The Maynard Faintly
The John Murphy
Family

ALL

:

ufrft- .. 'WI-~

0D0G _,.'llfti.G/ItJfo'M

I

~--.., ... 011_

I
I

_,_., llrlo'OioQriiiVR

..,.,_e..~

... COUIIOI'I.

I
I

0011111'1 ~ltt.ltl

268 I S1N».OJ5

o

: s~

269

1 S11.ct.alfi

16 OZ. BOX

:

• Cherry Pie Filling : Flavarlte Saltines

1~

UIN'I-1fiiiiM1fll~

-tl'llirYOUCt't,119J

1

I

-·Ill~...,,,..._

I

U11"ft---~
0811111H!I_,.nt1'1,,..l

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OOOIIJI~I,.,VM

I

1

992-3838

U'Nt-'ll'la'IIJIII~
' - l l ' l _...,.,,.,..._

10~ !§11~.

IIDOOtn~t.n1"'l

1

lM«-~ . . __.,

1

I

0.011'1._.,1"',_1

I

Can
teacher's
Kindergarten
Clma count
thil high?
Happy 40th

l _ _ _ . . .....,..

-M~M1 ....

•---------------~----------------•----------------,----------------T·---------------r----------------r---------------·
~]S
1

rSH.ot·011

:

10 75 OZ ·FLAVORITE

'

Tomato Soup

:

276 1

S1H)t.(IJJ

16 OZ.·FLAVOR!Tt

2n

517fi.OM

I S1HIIHI15

: 4 PACK-SHOPPERS VALUE 1
• fromn Veptables :
Batlt Tissue
:

:12~~ 13~i 14~:

I
I

,___

_..-...n.

,___ .,__

~~_.,,..IAI

I

I

00111111""2~1~

ll'l'ft-tiiiii'INCOO&lt;OOI'I.
_
..

I
I

,._..tl'tt.,.J.

COLDEN RIPE
B•n•as

278 I S17.0!).()1)1
1

8 OZ. FLAVORITE

:

Tomlto Sauce

15!i

11m11-111--~

~,,._,_.,.,......

I
I

27t I S1?.(1t·QM

1

2 PACK·BAICERY PET

:

Choc. Cupcakes

2110

I S11 ·0f-oo7
t

28!

16 OZ.·CHATEAU

: Hydropn Pwoxlde

Mr.. Davil!

1&amp;~: o.oawu...,............
11~: 18~
.._ _ _ _ IJ!Io\4IM.
Ollltllill'lll........,l..,....._

I
I

•

L------.

I
I

Enlllsh Mtlfflns

•

~ 19~'

Chat.., Aspirin

•

2 Uler Pup

•

Claat.., Bleach

• Flft..tte Lemonade •

Ylnllil War..

•

Porches,
Patio~~

Sidewalks
992-7878
7nl

Ul'lllt.,...e91'1111__.

oo.!ll'll!Mio4fl..,.,.l.

i

EAGLE
LANES

..,..,.._..tiHIW. I
I
Llllll- ..............
_..,......._lnMl
~,.. ~"'"""·
I~-S17-Gf.C»5
ze;, I S17.ot-Otl
117-Gt-oal
2V\ I S17.ot•_,
282 I 11Hit.azs
21.1 I
'
----- ----- ---~--------------- I ----------------~----------------~----------------~----------------~---------------·

I

-...on..
_,,.,..,_....,..,._.,

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J

....,.,.._.,...,... l

I

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I

211)

:

2 LB.·FLAVORITE

:

64 OZ.·SHOPPERS VAI.UE

:

2 LB.-FLAVOR!Tt

:

10 LB. BAC

:

Gr..,. JeiJ

:

Ice Crelm

:

LoQ Gnlln Rice

:

White Potatoes

!

:

1 LB. PKC.

:

: Flftlllfte Wlefters :

Ll'llt_ ....... .._.....

L_ _ _.. . . __.,.
...............,...,...

I

..

~1'1111-...,
-..r\
Otiiiiii'JI .......... II'IIIH

(Former Mason Lanes)

LIMIT ONE ON ALL

Good Gerdy

NS WITH ADD'L.

Look Who .~ 30!

rapJ,Y Birthday
Sjndi!

i

ill'llt_...,..
~
~---------------~----------------J----------------~----------------~---------------~
I
I

1 ·

I

_...,._._..........

011111 . . . . . . . . . ~

1

1

LIM_..,_-...n
...................

I

l

Love, Mom, D1Jdl

.1

'

I

675-PI. Plea.. nl
458-Loon

576-Apple Gro11e
773-Muon

882-New Hnen
895-Letart
937-Bulfolo

&amp;:

,,
'

0

and Pome,.y Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773·5585
WIN,TER HOURS
Sun.-Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; sat., 4

10

IS

R.ite Over 15 Wonls
$4.00
$ 20
$ 6.00
$ .30
$ 9.00
$ .42
$13.00

1'1\\\( 1\1
21- Bu•lD•• Opport.uaily
22- Money 1o Loaa
23-- Prof..ioul s..,W:..

$ .60

Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

32- ttfoblle Home. for Sale

Business c•rd-...$17.00/ inch per momth
Bulletin Boanl .....$6.00/inch per day

35- lA,. &amp; A....ge

GET RESULTS • FAST!

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING
r!~~-tplng

.~
38904 Leeding

Creek load
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

4/29/931..

33-- Farnta for Sale
34-. BW1iD1111 Buildinp

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

PH. 742·2217

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

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

2- lb Memory
3-- Announeemen.,
4-- G~veaway
5-- Hoppy Ado
6- I..o.t aad Found
7- Lo.t aod Found
8- Publ;e Sal. &amp;

r,..;,.

59- For Sale or Trodo

1: \i:\t "I 1'1'111'
,\ I I\ I " I I II ),
61
qu p
62- Wanted to Buy
63- Liveatock
64- Hoy &amp; Crola
6:;.... Seed &amp; Fertillzu

Hl\1'\1:--;
41- HoUMI for Reot

11- Help Wanted
49- For Lc.1e
12- Siluatiou Wanted
13- Jnturance
14- BU1iDe11 Traa.ning
51- HouHbold Good.
15-- School• &amp; lnttruction
52- Sporting Good.
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair·
5~ Antique.
] 7- Miacellaneaw
54- Mi~e. Merchandiae
18- Wontod To Do

Auction

55- BuH&lt;liD8 Suppll.o

WHALEY'S AUIO
PARIS

Howard L Writesel

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

NEW -REPAIR

IIW &amp; 1111 NilS Nl
Ill ..... &amp; IIOtiU

992-7011 or
992·5551
or tOll fREE
1·100..141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7131/91/lln

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION.
•New Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7/22193

3/4/931 mo.

36- R .. J Ea1a1e Wonll&gt;d

~ Peufor Sale

57.- Muicalla•truaea'58&amp; VesetobiM

42- Mobile Home~ for Re'nt 17 ~43-- Farm• for Rent
44-- Apartracat for Rent
45-- FurnUbed Room•
46-- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
43- Equipment (or Rent

9- Waated lo Buy '

667-Cooi.We

' '""'

po
PlwnblDI &amp;: Heating

:Excnating
E leetrieal &amp; Relr;geraiO&gt;~
General H.uling
Mobile Hom-; Repair
Upbololery

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cle1nlng
P1lntlng

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

3-16-93-tfn

We have a large alock of eeveral Mime brand tire1 and
If we don't have, we 011n gat it
.

OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W, VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-n:l-5533
2nd Location call Lon Neal
Henderoon, W. Va. 304-675-3331
Mulercard and VISA accepted.
8-6-lln

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
-Gutter Work
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing

-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
. (FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
!1-10.92-lln

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

Announcements

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

3 Announcements

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road

Pomeroy, Ohio

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
Pomeroy, Oh1o

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
71711100.

B&amp;G
Trucking
We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290
or
614-698·6500

LINDA'S
PAINTING
UlTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Taka the pain out of
painting. Let me do lt
forzou.
VERY RE SONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·915·4180
81121!1311 mo. pel

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
fREE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley Rlllt• Rd.
Lon1 lettoM, 011. 45743
8-4-93-lfn

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC
WALICEI AlLEY
Parts attd Service

Mowers • Chaltt Saws
Wttdtotlt'S

Authorlrecl: Brlpga &amp;
StraHon MTD; Ryan,
J.D.C. Repair Cantar
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 96- M-F W Sat.
Closed SUndiiY
949·2104

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-3().92-tfn

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11/24/921tfn

4 Family: 48 Hubbard Avt,
Dat•ll 111..1 Guyo l Golo ln. Kanauga,
111 2nd Only,
Your Aru. 1-li00-288-!5010 Ex- Homo lnl, Kl o, Aduh
Clothing,
tenalon 4005, $2.H Ptr Min.
Mull a. 11 Yro. Procall Co. 802· Toya, Other HouHhold tttml, 1-5

s.:r.

@

D54-'M20.

NOTICE-any motorcyciM or 4
wh ...•ra c.ught or ...n on the

'lel'DOD
RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Specialtie•"
622 J1y Drive, Gallipolia, Oh.
446-7612
FaxNolce 446·7612
B-4•1n

:ZOS.75R15" Tiger Paw XTM AWL
205-75R14" Tiger Paw xm RWL
215-7515" Fir..toneOWL
235-75R15" Fleratone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING"EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS• 612&amp;'931

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
INo Sunday Calls)
2/12/92/tfn

Shade River Saddle Shop

Gill pr-'f on Gill Rldgo or Sunday odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
lllorgon Rd will be rroMCuted Friday. Monday edhlon • 2:00
to tht fulll&amp;l extent o the law.
.~P:::·m::.·:;SII::u::rdi::;_:Y·=....,.,....,=,...
4
Giveaway
· · 'Btg Solo: sip!··111:1 FloiM 1n1n
Baby Fumllur.. Fum &amp; loti
112 Pit Bull puppy, lo good "'-1 s llllloo On Addlaon Plko
home, 700 North Main St., Pt. :.:Al:.:M:.:oo='"c.::'•-,__ _ __
Pleasant.
Flrlt llmt
16 n. of rod Iron l'lllllng can :J04.. Everything!

675-2854 tor dllallo.

Clothing, 8-? 140 Lariol Drive,

803 Brownell Ave., Mlddloport,
2mull
yoartlndoldgood
Gorman
Shopard,
:O::.:hl::o.:___c:-c--::::-:--=--=:-:ho..,, 614-9927573.
Garoga Salo: Wed, ThFuro1• Frl,
911
912,
9!3193
umnure
3 Yaor Old Black Lab, Spade, Chlldron'a
Clothing, Bid
Qood Watch pog, V.ry Lo-w. Spreads, Antique Player Plano,
ablol614-4411-3llle.
Clarinet.
4 playful gray and white kittens,
1 tiger alrlp.&amp; weeks old to
caring ownera 614-446-0317.
Full blooded Collie, nice dog to
a aood homt, t.malt, 114-992-

In Eureka Sept. 1· 3. Several
tamllin. Rain c:anc:elltd until

:w=
oo=k::
•nd
=...,--,--::c---::-c:--~

Large: 3- South Rio, 325, 2nd
House LAH Past S.W. School.
54'76.
Hom•: Janet Runyon, 1st, 2nd,
Gutter &amp; Downspout. 304-675- lrd.
1602 .
Moving Sale : Friday Sept 3r,S, 8K itten~~ack, black • white, 6 P.M. King Woodbumer Stove,

$125; TWin lllzo Canopy Bod SOt
gray.
75-10961
$150; Upright F,....or, $125, 814Mothor cat 1o oLkllleno, long 256-9363.
halrod. 304-875-B224.
Rummogo Solo: F~day, Sep-

Ta good home, pupplea, &amp;wka ttmbtr "1rd, 8-3, Grac. Unhlld

old, part ChoW, part Booglo. Molhodlll Clturch, Ell,.belh
304-ll75-5361.
Clrcla.
Thuroday, lnloroootlon Whho
6
Lost &amp; Found
Oak &amp; 554, Baby, AduH Cloth:--:--.,-~:-:=::-~ lng, Books Baby, HouHhold
112

ml

173-5654.

Rt.21B;baby apring,balh tub,

1360.
7

bomol

toola,lampt,mla
rocking
Loat: 2 Black Ub pup8, male 6 Ghalr,clotha.
·
female, Sal1m C.ntar!Palnttra
Rldgearu, 814--11t2-2219.
Two Family: 8-? S.pt 1.t, 2nd,
Rain Or Shine, 4110 Mile Off 211
La.. : wallet containing lmpor. On Krln1r Road, Croea Bow,
t•nt papt,., Forked R"un Like Couch, Ch•lr, Bid, Dolle,
ar11, 614--~3528, 614-37&amp;. Movies, Gun1, Many More

Yard Sate

Y•rd Sail Roush Lint Ad, In

Choshlro, Sopt 1-4th. !Ala ot
Evorythlng Choapl l..oolt For

Sign•, e.s:

LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
318/tfn

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 189

Thla .Year: Late
Loti Children'•

911, 9/2193.
2 email yellow female c:ata, appror. 5 monthl old, 614-992- Gal'llgt Salt, Wtd. 8:3Q..3:00,
&amp;358.
Clothlng, Coats • Mite. tt-.na.

CUSTOM SADDLES,

36358 SR 7

ALL Yard Salts Must Bt Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day btfore the ad Is to run.

Found : mala Irish Setter. ap- h.,.,.,
proximately 1·2 yura old,
Rlvarsldt Golf Cour'll arM, 3()4. Thursday Friday

614-992·7643

7nllln

985·4181

a..t... Foil

20!! 21~ ~ 22! ~ 23! 24~ 125~
· 26¢ 27¢ 28~_n 129~
t--.. . . . !..30¢ 1c~~rrs~~~~~~~u&lt;. )

379-Wa.lnul

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

'
-- ----------~--------------~S~;-:o;;;
• • • -------~----------------~----------------~----------------·----------------~---282 I 517 -ot-OSO
213 : SU-GI.az5
2U I 517-ot.Q!l
285 I S17.ot-mO
211 I
-olotiiM
217 I SU-OI ·02I
2811 ·
517
o
12 OZ -FLAVORITE
:
100 COUNT
SHOPPERS VALUE
:
CAlldN JUG
:
REC. OR PINK-12 OZ. :
12 OZ.·FLAVORITE
:
25FT. ROLL
1

:

388-Vinton
24S-Rio Grande
25c.-Guyan Duo.
643-Aubia DI.t.

992-M;ddleportl
Pomeror
985-Cbe•ler
843-Portlond
247-Letarl FaU1
949-Racine
7 42-Rullond

EXCAVATING

:

273 I 517 ..,..
272 I SU-ot·OOI
27•
OZ. SQUEEZE
: 6 OZ.·ASSOR'TED FLAVORS : 15·17020
Ot·SHOPPERSVALUE
Flavortte Mustard
Flnwlle Yogurt :lleptables

III'Nt- .... WI~

446-GoiUpoUo
367-Cheobire

992·3470

l'8rk &amp; Bellis

15
15
15

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

GRAVE~ SAND,
after lhe earliest period
allowed by law.
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
'
BrucoR&amp; . FILL DIRT
Mayor
Passed: Aug. 16,1993
Att..t; Kathy Hyoell
I do hereby certify that thia
OWNER: Jeff Wldtersha111
Ia a lrue copy of Aeoolution
816.93 paned by Pomeroy '-----.:5;..;./10/93
VIllage Council on Aug.16,1.---------,
1993.
Kathy Hyaell
Clerk·Treaaurer Village of
Pomeroy
(8) 30, 31 2 tc

FREE ESTIMATES

8

9~

and be in force from and

I

1 $11 1».020

: 100 COUNT-SHOPPERS VALUE '
Paper Plates

Lunch Box Pie

s~

umn-wttri-CIIIYCIOf'l

2?0 I S17-oi·071

4 OZ. BAkERY FRESH

oide taxi program aervlce
eclminloterecl by the Village
of Middleport
SECTION 3. That thio
Reaolution ahall take eflect

15 OZ.CAIHLAVORI'IE

Happy Ads

••··---~----------------,-·•••••••••••·--~----------------~---·-••••••••••·~--•••••••••••··-L·-••••••••••••••

:"21 OZ. CAN·FLAVOR!Tt

I

t

1~ i 2~ i EA.3~ i 4~

1

MONTH!

SHOPPERS VAI.UE·12 OZ.
&amp;Inned Pup

the area aarved by the uaer-

BULU&gt;OZEA,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

~----------------~----------------~--------------- r-----------~---,
2&amp;4 I S1NJt·OSO
M5 1 $11-ot-!101
21' I 517-otOBI
2'G1 I

G
i • ·.;,;; • .. ""

Aaaletance Program;

' and

Wonls

1
3
6

Melgo County Maoon Co., WV

4-19·93-lfn

Public Notice

15

7.25 OZ. FLAVORITE
' SINGLE ROLL SHOPPERS VALUE I
: Macaroni &amp; Cheese : . Paper Towels
:

GalUa County

Days

f-------:;:::--:=-:======-----1

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchange&amp; .••

(614)
667-6628

Public Notice

POMEROY, OH.

t

t:OO p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thwsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

i

298 SECOND ST.

SAVINGS

1:00 p.m. Tuesday

6-30.1100.pd.

STORE HOURS
Mondaythru
Sunday
SAM-10 PM

Chateau

p.m.

1:00 p.m. Monday

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

Garage Sale
Sept. 2 &amp; 3 8-3
Ewing Residence
300 4th St. Pomeroy

'

I 517-ot-017

DAY BEJQRE PUBLICATION
1:00
Saturday .

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Piper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

I)I

brownies;
Story, Erin
Stru- r-=========--T------~===--1
ble, SabraAnna
Davidson,
Chasity
Public, Notice
·CLASSIFIEDS
Fowler, Brandy Stevens, Jennifer
Norman, and Amanda Miller,
PUBUC NOTICE
. DIOrS
.
.
JU
.. . Thi s Way
·
Tha Uelgo County Board
Other scout with blue ribbon
of Revlalon ha completed
projects were as follows:
it. work and tha book• are
World of Well Being: Allisoh
now open lor public
Story, Jessica Howell, Nicole
lnapectlon.
Public Notice
Phillips, Rebecca Houser, Liza
·
Mel118 County
RESOLUTION 816.93
Zahron, Misty Clay, Kimberly
BoordofAevlalon
A
RESOLUTION
Lemley, Jarnitha Willford, Christi·
\':1.!7,29,30,31A9) 1,2,3,5,7,8
MANIFESTING
THE INTENT
na Miller, Erin Taylor, Chelsey '
OF THE VILLAGE OF
Wood, Stephanie Wilson, Vickie
POMEROY, OH 10 TO
Public Notice
Norman, and Jennifer Roberts,
COOPERATE WITH ANO
brownies; Erin Struble, Tammy
AUTHORIZING • THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT,
Fryar, Brandy Stevens, Sabra
ESTATE
OF
JUANITA
J.
OHIO
TO PREPARE AND
Davidson, Rachael Taylor, Chasity
SUBMIT AN APPLICATION
JENKINS, DECEASED
Fowler, Bridget Johnson, Emily ·
ea.. No. 27980 Docket13
TO, AND EXECUTING A
Stivers, Angela Cogar, Andrea
Paga43f
CONTRACT WITH, THE
Neutzling, Amanda Miller, Julie
NOTICE OF APPOIN'IMENT
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
Bailey, Kanndies Lee, and Jennifer
OF FIDUCIARY
TRANSPORTATION FOR
Revlaecl Code, Sec. 2113.08
FUNDI AVAILABLE FROM
Norman, juniors; and Michelle Bis"On July 26, 1993, In tha
THE OHIO ELDERLY AND
sell, eadette.
Melga County Probate
HANDIC,.PPED TRANSIT
In that category, the champions
Court,
c
..
e
.
No.
27980,
FA A E
ASSISTANCE
were Rebecca Houser, grand, and
Linda R. W•nar, 111 1/2
PROGRAM.
Kimberlyn Lemley, reserve, in
Second St., P. 0. Box 723, '
WHEREAS, tha Vllbtge of
brownies; Jennifer Norman, grand,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 waa
MldclaP91't Ia ldminlateflng
appointed
Anchlary
and Brandy Stevens, reserve in
thtt uaa;·•lcle texl program
Admlnlatratrlx
of
the
ntate
11rvlng tha VIllage of
juniors; and Michelle Bissell,
of Juanita J. Jenklna,
Middleport Mid P-aroy on
grand, cadelle.
deceaoed, late of Mt. Juliet
behall.of both Vlllagaa; and
World of People: Shauna Davis,
Wiloon County Tenneaoaa,
WHEREAS, tha Vlllagaa of
Nicole McDaniels, Jamitha Will37122."
Middleport and Pomeroy
ford, Christina Miller, Ashley
Robert E. Buck,
ara alealble to recleve lunda
Probate Judge
through tha Ohio Elderly
Payne, Angel Stone, Emily Story,
Lena K. Neuelroed, Clerk
Aja Blackwell, Sara Mansfield, and
(Continued on Paga 7)
(8) 27, 30,31
Becky Alley, brownies; Rachel

The Dally

··

Middleport, Olllo 45760
(614) 143~5264 5/!4.'93/lfn

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
3 Mllao Bolow Euroks Rt.

7,
Thurlday, Frld•y, Furniture,
Curt•lns, Shltt1 1 Clothing,
Miac, Several Famln..t

4 Famlll•: Sept 1st, 2nd, 3rd,
4th, 142 Lower Garfield, Clothla,
Bike, Ster.o, Home Interior, Dog
HouM, Lot• Mlec:, Yard L.lme
Spreaaer.

Yard Sola: 1-4, Boby Clothoo,

Trinkets &amp; New heme Dally, 1
lillie Out 01 Golllpollt On 110
Right On Woodland Drivo.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Aohlon Upland Rd, Sopl. Z I

:S,

over 150 boxN of old ..uft, rain
or .talne. 304-11'6-2218.

Yard Salt earner 111 &amp; ...,_,
4 Family Garogo Silo: 180 Hlldo lllooon,
Sept. 2 l s, t:Oo-3:0o,
Dr, Gallipolis, OH, 112183, QI3./'D3. rolnorohlno.

I family ya'rd ult wedneaday
lhw. Friday and Sot. Jay Or.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
2 tamffy yard 0110, ~mbar
1st·?, ~uttlc Hille, ·srr-c'--•,
8 Mil• At. 218, Baby hem1, 0.24 Ohio. 1:0Cio4:00pm,
Mo. 'Kids Cloth•, 2T And Up 31 Rfyarvlow Orho, llllddloport
S.pt1-3.
S.PI, 2 I 3. Roln c-.to.
'
8-? 311 SR 513, Boooball Canl 4 tamlly, lllolgo/ Alho,. Co. line
Collection, Cabbago Patch outaldO Tuppoia Plolno, Rt. l
Dolle, Stlhl Saw, Mene, Women•
S I 4. Mlcr-vo, K-i
Clothing, Loto ot Oddo And S.IO.
waterbed, lg. tan, 8.fl.
Endo, Sipt 3rd, 4th, 5th, 5th.
8 t.mlly ..... Sept. 1-4i 5 miiH
on 218 ott SA l Lot• of men,
wom~na, boya &amp; glrla clothn
all elzn. DlahH, . pane, 2 bedl
and drw ...r, waahlng m~chlne,
toyl, loti more.

�•
TUesda~

31 1993

Pomeroy-M.I ddleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

1180 Pontiac lunblnl L1, outo,
amlfmlcauett•, till, one
- r. $47110, 1114-8112-3314 al1ar

ACROSS

ak',

1:00pm.

1110 Plymouth

u ..,

PHILLIP
ALDER

10,000

Millo, Exc:otllnt Condition,
$8300, 114-44e.a754.
1H1 Pontiac Flroblrd, llntod T·
!::l
loldod, low mu.., oac
. 304-671-7111.
NORTH
+ AJ 8 3

EEKANDMEEK

1885 Dodgo Rim 1ruck 50 000
octual mllil, body raug~, iiooo
DBO, tl4-tfl2-3142 or 114-816-

,.

4233.

01

Musical
Instruments

Dining room auhe, 1 chalrl, Llko now Bundy Trumpet $175
&amp;14--1.
chino &amp; butlot, 304-675-2717.
SUM • SUMII • SUMMER
SA LEI
Hummingbird Muolc Contor
53
Antiques
Jackoon, Ohio
114-26U88t
Antique api~~J wheel, large
gmt WhHI,
J5.7118.
Buy or aell. Rlnrlne Antlquea, 58
Fruits &amp;
1124 E. Moln S1reot, on A1. 124,
Po...,.y. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
Vegetables
Lm. to 1:00 p.m., Sundly 1:00
Conning Toma1-: $4 Bu-.
to 1:00 p.m. 614-11112·2528.
814-318 101.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

2 Comploto Solo OI .HarMoo Fot
A Large HorH. Plua Extre
Plocoo, $850, 114-532·1203.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,

full tlma auc1ionHr, c:omplata
auction
service.
Uc.nsed
t66,0hio I Wast Virginia, 304-

Wanted to Buy

Anliq~J~~s and used furniture, no

ham too large or too email, will
buy one piece or complete
household, call O.by Mar11n,
614-992·...41.
Caah tor firm tr~ctor•, garden
tt'lcto,., lawn tractors and
mowers, any cond. 304-6752592.
Decorahtd atoneware, wall tel•
phones, old '"'mpa old thermometers, old clocks, antique
furniture. Riverine Antiques.
Russ Moore, owner. 614-992·
2526. Wt buy 11tates.
Don't Junk II! Sell Us Your NonWorking Major Appliances,
Color
TV'a,
Retrigerators,
FrHzer&amp;, VCR's, Microwav11,
Air Conditioners, Guitar Ampii,
Etc. 614·2511-1238.

2 bedroom hou .., private

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON! All arMS. N..cl extra

money or want a ClrMr, thher
way-call Marilyn. 304-182-2645
or HIQ0-992-6356.
Application• are now being
taken at Pomeroy Nursing and
RehabllltaUon Center for Certified Nursing A11istants. Apply
at 36159 Rockspringa Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohia 45769. No phone
calls please. EOE.
Are you Interested In helplnp
others make the moat of the•r
natural beauty? consider being
a cosmetologist . Laam the
latest In hair c•r• styling, and
teehniquH 11 wen aa giving
manicures. Oponlngs .till availabla In Oct. 11th clan. Only anrollmont 1hlo yNr. Contact Tho
Adult Education Center, 1-800637-6508 or 614-753-3511.

•t-

tlng, PoJMroy, $250/mo., 614185-425e.

Ook Hill Trucking Compony
Sooklng Exporioncod O.or Tho
Road Semi Trtctor !Tn1ller
Drivors, Ea~lent Poy, 114-6821613.
Outalde ute 1r1pe n~~ldld tor
IMpandlng rural cable TV
programm.,, no experience
needed, wiH lnln, deptnd•bla
car raqulrlld, aver~ga $400.
$700 por -k, Clll i~G-1142·
2378, llon-Frl.
J • D's AU1o Parts and Salvar., ROfJIItorod MLT For A Fully E·
elto buying junll cal'li &amp; true 1.
qu1pped Lab, No Shih Wor~ ott
304·713-5343.
Hollday1. Apply In Parson At
Junll Cars And Trucks, Running Medical Plaza, 836 Slate Aoule
160, Gallipolis
Or Not, 614-256-1058.
Junk cars, any condition, 614992·7553.
Wanted standing limber, top
prices paid, fru es11matas,
licensed &amp; cert!lied logging,
304-89S.3055 or 895-3838.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Av1nu., Gallipolla.
Wanted to buy: uHd mobile
hames. 614-446-0175 - Windshield and hood tor 'BO
Toyota 4WO truck or will trade
Toyota for Chavrolet truck of ..
qual value, 514-"'2·3011 after
Spm.

i

1m Ford Rangor XLT. · 4 ely, 5

15 000 ., 080• 2IU271
opel. •

~

"'·

78 Ford F250 4WD. 114-4411-11243

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.It

•.

Conver11Gn
Van.
V8,lolded,ral11d roof dura
alrz.color tv, 32,ooo m\111. 81438/.o657
::
11::8:-9-:F:-o-rd=Ao=-ro-ota=r-=x"Lr=,--:fu:-1::ly · ,:
~aded, 4 captain chalre, high
1•
milage, 15,500. 304-676-2827.
,,
1189

J·3 1

_ _ _

i

__;_~ o

Pass

••

BARNEY
WHAT ARE
YOU LAFFIN'
ABOUT?

PAW HAD HIM A
BAD HUNTIN'
ACCIDENT!!

111iKJ Dodge Caravan Ercalltnl
Condlllon /Fog Llghto Bug
Shlold IWhHo Wllh Wood Groin,
Low MilAge, 1 Ownar, $12,500,
614-3BH290.

74

Routine maintenance and minor
mechanical work on truck1
pold vacation 6 holldoyo, Hnd
quallflt:atlona to Boll: ~27, c/o
Pt. Plaaunl Register, 200 Main
St., Pt. Ploooont WV 25550
S.8klng pluunt, mature &amp; experienCed lns;urance oHice ataft
person. Must be willing lo ac·
capt work load l be 1 tum
player, Computer typing l lnauranca axperlance nec:HUry.
Sand resume Box C.24 % Pt.
Pll. Roglotor, 200 Moln St, Point
Plnsant, WV 25550.
Train In muHiplt areal auch 11
elec:triclty, plumbing, wilding,
machining, amall englnt reparr.
Enroll now in lndu11rlal
Malnt1nance. Class bealna Oc1.
11. Contact The Adun Cducatlon
Conlor, 614-75:1-3511 or 1.-.
637-6508.
Truck Drinrl, paid VICIItlon &amp;
holidays, home WHkenda 1:
aome during w•k, Hnd
qualiUcatlona to Polnl PINSinl
R~lster, Box C-11, 200 Main
StrMt, Point Pleasant, WV
25550.
Want to be Job ,.ady In 1111
than one year? Night ctann
are not convenlentrTry one of
our daytime program~- DJy.,.
siflad Medical OccupatiOM and
OHica Services. Openings IIIII
available. C.ll now. The AduH
Education Center, 1-800-1376509 .. 614-753-3511.

17 Miscellaneous
Wood bunk bed Mt $'100 call

116~1~4~44~6=8~8~6~0·~----­

1·
18

Wanted to Do
.,--..,,---:-:--:--:-:-Attention: Parente of el•mantar; aged children. le your child
having diHicuny 1111ding? I'm 1
qualified teacher avalrable lo
tutor your child 114-446-8228.
C.rtltled child care provider will
lake care of children In m7.
home, fyll time or part Ume, 1 ter ~ehool , reter-.ncll, Chel1er
aru, pluM call 614-98s..4282,
Mary.

AVON I· All Araaa I Shii1ay
Sporl, 304-675-1420.
Babysitter needed for 2 chlldran
agee 4 &amp;10. My home or youra
In GallipoHt '« Point area.
Ref~rancn
and Experience
noodod 614-441·1032.
Sabysht., nHded tor 8yr. old,
Saturday momlngs and some
· wMkendl, Racine/ Syracuu E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Tooolng,
arN, 614 ~192-6930 .
Trimming, TrM Removal, f.i~g•
FrM Estlmatatl 6t4-Be Job ready in g months. Tnaln Trimming.
In vartoua tonns of weldlng- 367·795rAfter 4p.m.
oxyantylen~ braze, melallie, Genel'fll Maintenance, Palnt!ng
MIG, TIG. '-'lass bla ins OCt. 'f'ard Work Wlndowa WltMG1
1tlh. Call Tho Aduh EducaUon Guttera Cleaned light Hauling,
center, 1-aoo-637-6508 or 114- Commerical, Anldeintlal, Steve:
75:1-3511.
. 614-4411-1658.
Csrdinal Freight C.rrlei'I..O.T.R. Georg" Portable Slwmlll, don't
Drlvere wanted tor I new ,.,. heul~..t' loge to th• mill )Uit
minal In Hurrlcene, WV, muat call
75-1857.
have1yr. O.T.R. experience pull· 1:7-----:-::---~:::-:::-::-:-::
lng • van trailer, good atar1ing Home care tor your lo'Hd one In
pay, late modal tqulpm.,t , Blue family care home In Middleport,
Cross Blue Shield, Inc., 81op ort 614-892-5042.
pay, lay over p1y, br.. kdown I ;:;.;._;.:::.,::,;..:.:;:.,,.---:::-:::-- -.
pay, company paid penaion, 401 I do chlldcare In my Pl. PINIInt
K plan, home mo.t wMkanda. home on Main St, $50/wk full
C. II Boyd Adklnl, 800-t2N222. Umo or boforolaftor ochool . 304675-6730.
Domino'• Pizza In Pomeroy Ia
now accepting applkatlona.
Mltl Paula'a Day care Center 1
Block Wost Of HMC On Jockoon
Eam Fuii·Timo Poy For Pa~· Plko M·F 6 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. If
Tlmo Work AI A Chrlotmoo Ouolll~ And Exporlonci lo Tho
Around
Tho
World. 11 Concern For Your Child's
O.mon .. rator. Frw $500 Kh No Care. Call U. For A Vlalt. Infant
Collecting Or O.Uverlng, Also !Toddlers 614-446--6227. Pre•Booklng Portloo, Coli 614·245- choolore /School Ago 614-4465039.
8224.

2 Bedrooms Furnished, Oepoah
&amp; Rahtrence Required, No Peta,

814-446-4871.
2 BR. houM for Nnt Mill C,..ek
Rd. 614-446-17&amp;5
All real &amp;Stale aaven&amp;Sing In
this newspaper Is subled to

45

Furnished
Rooms

Roome tor rent - weak or manlh.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
614-446-9580.
Sluplng rooms with -king.
Alao traller apace. All hook-ups.
Call after 2.00 p.m., 304·773-5651, Mason WV.

the Federal Falr Housing Ad
of t968 which makes II Mlogal
to advertise ·any preference,

limitation or dlscnnllnallon
based on raca, colOr, relg\on,
sex lamlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitatiOn or disalmlnallon:
This newspaper will not
knowingty accept
adller11sements for real estate
whldlls

1n violation olthe

law. OUr readers are hereby
lnlormed that all dwellings
acNertiSCd In this newspaper
are available on an eQual

opportunity basis.

31

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom house, full bas•
menl. 304-675-1486.
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, garage,
equipped kitchen, tun baa•
ment, rural water, 2.49 acrea, 10
mllas from town, State Routt
141, $31,900. No land contracts.
614·379-2252 anytime; (3N-2620
or 379-2274 evenings)
3 bedroom, 2 112 blthl, living
room, dining room 1nd famll_.
room
wlih
woodbumlng
flr~plact, 2 car attached garage,
central air' on a llrga 11ve1 Jot
614·388·9735.
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 Car At·
tached Garaga, Outbuilding,
Bklwell Porter -sthool Area, 614·
367-7504.

5 bedroom brick home, 1 112
bath,
finished
basement,
electric heat and air, 2 car
garage, nice neighborhood on
nice lent lot. For appt. 11~46-9387.
539 Fourth Avenue, 5 Rm., Near
Schools, Central Heating Fen·
cad Yard, Starter Homa !Rental
$35,500, 24 Hr. Notice, 614-4451478, 614-446-0365, 614-4466590.
COUNTRY HOMES /ACREAGE
EMtra large Contempory Home
On 17.8 Acr" MIL With 2 Barns,
Pool, 2 Ponds, $110,000; 4 Bed·
room Home, 2 112 Baths, Largs
Party Room, All On 4' Aerts MIL
$140,000; 110 Acre MIL Farm
W11h Barn· 30 1111oblo. $110,000;
80 Aero MIL $30,000; All Of The
Above Within 3 Mil" Of Rio
Grande • Please Call Bill Con·
nell At Donna Summer• Realty
For Mora Information. 614-3846250.
Houaa By Owners: 521 Fourth
Avenue, 3 Bedroom•, VInyl,
NHr School , Cantrtl Heating,
With
Apar1ment,
Garaga
$49,900. 614-446-1478, 614-44fi.
03U, 814-44H500.
Houoo For Solo Or Rent, 2 bod·
room 15 Mlln Down State Route
7. 114-44Ht17 af1er 5 p.m.
Like
New
2
Bodroom
Homal811ement.
$38,500.
$4,000,DP. 1360.28 Mon1hly
Poymonto, 614-446-1157, 9-5, Or
614·1114-4501 AHor 7 P.M.
Ranch atyle brick, 13 acre1,
largo llvlngroom &amp; kllchon, 3br.
1 1T2 bat hi, anachld garage, tul 1
basement, a1orage ~ulldrng, sboy pole barnjl At 2, rlploy Ad,
4ml from Pt. leaunt. 304-6753594.

~ Wanted to Rent

Two

bedroom

unfumlshod I :S:;I-ng-:1,-.M:-a"."lo--::Co~llog""'""o~Pr=-ot:-n-oor--­

house In Middleport, $250/mo.,
$150/dep., utlllUn nol Included,

no peta, r.t.rencn required,
614-a92-3457 atler 3pm.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

$160.47 per month, new 14' wlda

mobile home, Includes d11iwery,
complete Htup, skirting, stepa,
5 year warranty and 6 months
lot rent, l..SOG-837-6625.
10l60 mobile home, 2 bedroom,
920 Fourth Avo, Gallipolis. $325
watar and tr11sh paid 614-446441&amp; attar 7 p.m.
2 bedroom mobil• home, GrHn
School Dlatr1ct $225/monlh +
depash 614-367.0632.
2 Bltdrooms, CA, Rentor Sale
On Land Contract. 2 Blocks
From Big Bur. 614-446-1409 Afler 4 P.M.
2 BA unfurished all electric.
wHh woodburnor. At. 588
Private lot 614-446-2602
2bdrm. trailer, Condor St.,
Pomeroy, $210/mo., $100/dep.,
614...667-3083 after 5pm.
2br, you pay doposlt &amp; u111Hios.
304-675-2535.
3 Bodroom Double Wldo Mobile
Home, One 12x60 Moblla Home
2 Bodroomo, 614-4411-2003.
Excapllonal 2 bedroom ll'lliler In
Porter area 614--388-8000.
Nice ciNn mobile home, good
rtfe,rence required, will conslMr
construction wortf.ars for ren·
tera. 614~4&amp;-0508 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

(2) 2bdrm. apartment• In
Pomeroy, $225- $250; trailer lot
tor rent, clost to town, $75/mo.;
614·992-5333.
lbdrm. apartmtnt In Pomeroy
for rent, 614·992..SSS8.
1bdrm.
apartment,
Spring
Avenue, Pomeroy. $175/mo.,
$100/dop., no poto, 614-667-3083
efter!5pm .
·
1bdrm., furnished apartmant,
very clean $235/mo., plus
depoalt, M1ddl1porl, 614·992·
5225.
2bdrm. apts., tatal electric, appliance• fumiahed, laundry
room tacllltl•, clou to school
In town. Application• available
at Village GrHn Apta. 149 or
call 814-992-37'11. EOH.

Wanta To

Rln\ 1 o-r 2

Bedroom

Apartment In The Gllllpolll
A111, 614--245-7284 L.Mve

w...

sage.

Wanting lo rent· 2 or 3 bedroom
hou.., ln clun and good cond.J..
tlon, profor prlvato oottlng, 614992-2428, If no answer plu~:ot

leave menage on macNne.

Merchandise
51

Household
Goods

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158 Or 614-446-4428
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrou ght Iron Table W/4 Chairs;
Fan Back Rocking Chair $58;
Gardon Arch Way's $129.00
·

Rainbow SwHper, 2 Yea,. Old;
ExceUent Condition, $550, 8143117-7146 After 6 P.M.
Rullstlc ar atereo power amp,
80 watta, like new, ·$45, 814·192·
2354.
Sol Of Goll Clubs, 614-446-11484.
SIGNS: Portable llgh1od orn11o
sign, $329, lighted' non..arrow,
$:&amp;9, non-llgfitld changeable
letter algn, $269, .-yment pltn,
lr8o lolloro 6 dollvory. 1.-.
533-3453 anytime.
Sofa, Reclln.,, 8 Chai,., Dinette
Tablo &amp; Desk, Corbin -Snyder
Furniture, 614-446--1171.
Thl~y

ohlmnoy blockl, 814-11411-

Bedding -Twin Matt Set $89, Full
$99 Set Ouoon $149 Sol; 4
Crawer Chosl $44 .95; Car Bod's,
Bunk Bad's , Poster Bada. Full
Line Of Southwestern Vases
Start! n~ At $20.00; Indiana Many
Shape • &amp; Size• Starting At
$5.00. 2 Locations -Baalda Auto
Auction Or 4 Mil.. Out 141.
Open 9 AM. To 6 P.M. Mon ·Sat.
Brand new Whirlpool elec stove
wfblk glass oven door, $200.
Child 's swing. can 111 Lot 40,
K&amp;K Moblla Roma Park.

2288.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
200 PSI $19.95; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.50; Ron Evan1 EntarpriHI,
Jackson, OhiO. 1.S00.53N1528.
WATER
STORAGE TANKS
Abovw And Balow Ground FDA
Approved For POI.able Walw.
Ron Evens Enterpr!Ma, Jack·
eon, Ohio, 1-800..S:f7-SI528.
Wedding dreu, hat, and acceaoorloo, aoklng 1300, pold $800.
304-57&amp;-IO()g.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, relrtgarator.,
ranges . Ska,ggs Appliances, 76
VIne Slr..t, Call 114·441-7398, 1·
800499-3499.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complala homa furnishings.
Hou rs; Mon-Sat, ' 9-5. 614-446-0322, 3 mllea out Bulavllla Rd.
Free D•llvary.
Like New 3 Cus hion 86" Corduroy Couch By Rowe Buff
$225; Racliner, Blue $70; Rocker
Recliner, Rust $75; Lavoratory
ond Cablnol $35 614-446-2890.
Moliohan Carpels, Rt. 7 N. 614446·7444, 9x12 Corpot $60, Vln~l
$4.49 Yd.

Wood Bumw Stov~ Wl1h Triple
lnoulalod Plpo, 614-245-0227.

New Oak Furnhura: Tab\" &amp;
Chairs, Curios, Cwvld Gtess
China Etc. River Vplley Oak
Furniture, Georges CrHk Road,
Golllpollo, Ohio 614-4411-4316.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NewiUSid
Houuhold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Plaasanl, WV,
ca\1304-675-1450.

2 Bedroom apt tdupulexllarge
LR. Fully equipment k tchen.
Dining area, full both WID hook·
up, garago, AC.n 112 mi. woot
RT. 588. 514-4411-2602

Ou11n aize 4/oster,watar bad.
wooden hea board, w/rost
llochlng. Sldo pods, llko now.
614·367·b652
evanings
or
w•kend1.

Fumlohod
Efflcloncy:
107
Second, Galllpolll, Share Bath,
Utlll11oo Paid, $165/Mo. 814-4464416 AHor 7 P.M.
Fumlohod Efflcloncy 7 112 Noll,
Gallipolis, Utllltloo Paid, $165,
814-44fl.4416 AHor 7 P.M.
Fumlahod 1 Br Apt., 701 Fourth,
Gallipollt, Share Bath, $200
Ulllltl.. Paid, 814 446 U11 After
7P.M.
Apo~mont
for rent In Pt
Pl....nt, 114-992·5858 ahor
5pm.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Ollvt St., Galllpolla. New I UHd
furn\tur1, hNierw, W..ttm &amp;
Work boolo. f14.448.3159.
Wuher Dryer, Ref~erator,
Color T
.v. FrHzar, Air Con.
dltloner,
Camper
Sin
Refrigerator, Microwave, 614256·1238.
Waahar·Dryer, matched HI,
gold, heavy duty, arc. ehllpe.
Saari Llfaatyle treadmill MXT
2000, ou1o. Incline. 304-6752922.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, - • plpoo, win.
dowa, llntela, etc. Claude Winters, Rio Grande, OH Ctll 614245-5121.

Transportation

1181 Hartay Davidson, MiJ..
waukoo LlmHod Edition, good
ahepe, dual dlac brakoe, liking
13000 Firm, 814-843-5110.
1881 Hondo lntorolalo nllldo
crab. work. $1,0001 OBO. 814448-G208.

1!1711 Chryotor Cordoba V-6,
good condlllon, 1575 OBb, &amp;14·
8112-5333.
1112 Iuick Rlverta, no ruat, no
body 11111r, Meda heater cor•,
$1800 firm, low ~~ milage,
•orr good cond. 3
5-1888.
1013 Olda Cutla• B~m,
2dr, good cond., $2000.
717881.

Motor Homes

"

PEANUTS
'' ' WHAT ACURIOUS
FEELING.' SAID ALICE

'' S~E WAS NOW
ONLV TEN
E5 f-1161-l ..''

'' NOW SHE WAS
MORE THAN NINE
FEET f.IIGH ... "

'"~OW CAN I

'" l MUST BE

~AVE DONET~IS,,?'
S~E TflOUGf.lT "

6ETIIN6 SMALL

AGMC'

FRANK AND ERNEST

"'

'
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TONIGHT'S
L'£CTUR£
'"ECONOMICS"
"--

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31 Numlllro

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33 King-

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8 Follower ol
(tull.l
I tyjle oiiiii'YI

2 AcctlltDnted
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Pass

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THAT DAILY

PUZZLER 0~
- - - - - - - ldltod by

Reorronge letters of
0 four
scrambled words
low to form four words

I
I

GENETA

I .I 1 I
2

C N I WH

I I I 1·

i

TODAY'S HISTORY: On th is day in :
1980, the trade union Solidarity, led by ,
Lech Walesa , was forme d at Gdansk, :
Poland.

MORTY MEEKLE
I GUE:£6 HEiS RL.lN
AWAY FfJQio. HOMc

T DONTSL.lPFPSS'l'Q.JVE
SEEN WALLACE, MY

AG-Aii'-1 .

PE:T FROG&lt;'

r-! _,. . .,. . .
I ·::l ~hl•-'
~~
........., ,

,.

,.
·'•'

LAST TIM5 l-\5 OlD, WE
F(NAL.LY ~ED HIM
COWN AT "SeA WORL.D-"

~-~.1 ,---c~,. . _

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Arthur God·
frey (1 903· 1983), broadcaster; Willia m
Sa royan 0908-1981 ), playwright-nov·
e list; Buddy Ha cke tt (1924-l , come di·
an, is 69; James Coburn 0928·) , actor,
is 65; Fra nk Robins on (1935-l, baseba ll s tar, i,s 58; Van Morrison (1945-) ,
singer, is 48 ; ltzhak Perlman (1945·),
violinis t, is 48: Richard Ge re (1949·! ,
actor, is 44: Edwin Moses (1955-J, hur·
dling great, is 38.

•'

I
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I
5

.

6

.

.

.

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1.

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J ATSU0

I

The third
done
on
career
choices.
youngster wrote
that he would never be a sur·
geon because he found out

If,7,-.;.18:-,,-:--i-l_:....,g..;__lr--1 o· ~~~i[,~;~--:n.
.
.
.
L...-L-..L.-

.
.
1-...J.-

chvc kle qvoted

_
.
by !il ltng tn the mo n ong words
..L.....J you de¥e lop from 5tep No. J below

.:.. P~INT NUMBE~ED
'l:l' LET TERS

I r7.;:"

how many times they have to

I'

I 1. L_l

lrH~IRI

I I III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Social • Peony • April • Keeper • PEOPLE
The job my son had applied for didn 't materialize .
He was upset because his friends would make fun of
him . He claims that if at first you don't succeed you'll
be told why by a lot of PEOPLE.

-·

ITUESDAY

.,

1983 Pop-Up Campor, Sloopo I • ' ·
For Sale, 114-388-1803.

KOO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I 'm the world record· holder In lhe ahol pu1 and
I'm sllll living at home wl1h my parents." - Randy Barnes.

DATE BOOK:
31, 1993

XZ EI ZG8

SKAAIG ."

KHSUY

Aug .

UKX

F U Z
UBAM

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UKX

F U Z

xz

XLKGJX

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XLZZMIJ

@ , - . NEWIPAP!R ENTERPIIII! AUH.

/

1979 Yollow Stone Counlry Club
Compor 32 Ft. Elcollonl Condl·
lion, Aoklng: $6,500, Call Ahor 5
P.M. 814-446·737'1.

Eight teams qualified lor this year's
world championships from the Gene r·
ali European Championship9, held last
June in Menton, a small town on the
French Rivie ra between Monaco and
Italy.
Pola nd won the Open Series, sur·
prising no one, and Swede n won the
Women's, surprising everyone - in·
eluding, perhaps, themselves. Poland
is joined by Denmark, Norway and·the
Netherlands in the NEC Bermuda
Bowl. France, Italy and Ge rmany also
qualified lor the NEC Venice Culf.
One ol Poland's best players,. Piotr
Gawrys, found a simple yet ell.,.,tive
line on today's deal from the m a tch
against Great Britatn.
The British North-South pair ftn·
ished in hve diamonds, which died
when the spade finesse lost.
Three no-trump makes because
West has no entry to his club winners ,
but that IS tough to judge. And four
hearts isn't such a bad spot. How
would you have planned the play
against the club-king le ad?
Opening three clubs in the third position would be the choice ol most
players, especially at the prevailing
vulnerabtlity . But if the opponents buy
contract, which they rate to do, it
a revealing bid .
Gawrys won the first trick with the
club ace and unblocked dummy's top
hearts. Then Gawrys simply led a low
spade from the dummy .
How could East defend' If be won
with the king, eventually declarer's
two diamond losers would disappear
on dummy's A·J ol spades. But when
East ducked, South no longer had a
spade loser. He lost one trick in each
ol the other suits .

t-Il)~

7:00am-

1172 Bonnaza Pull Traylor, 35 Fl.
Air, Now Condlllon, Nice, $1,600
Firm. 114-446-4256.

-

••

LOSER
r'

16 A. Freeway truck camper,
fully eelf-contaln.ct, .,...,. 5-6,

AUGUST31I

.

614-114~71.

10$4 Toyolo Collca GT, PW, POL,
PM, s.pd, air, cnd11, tltl, new
paint, new while 111tt1r tim,
oharp car, 12200. 304-675-2113.
1981 Chryolor Now Yorltor, 4
Door, Turbo, All Poww, Fully
L.oodod, Excollonl Condhlon, In
l Ou1 Now Front Tlreo Won
KoDI R,800, Aftor 5 P.M. 1143N·21123.

Pets for Sale

FUI bloodod Cockor Sponlot 11111 Ford Tompo GL, 4 ·
_ . .to. go,
-med
• flnot - · · 13,500. IXC ohlpo. 304-611-1711.
,....,
304-5711-2222.
1188 Muotong GT, Nd ln1orlor
lklllnaUUir mlnlotureo, JKippf• and utertor, PW, Pl•'!utM,
lftd edulla, ajeo Poodle pup- ~·pood ...cotlont
ion,
piN. ch. bloodUnn, bell lin.,
• 114 8412217.
Coolwllle, 114.ai7.:&amp;4G4.
,_
Pl,-h • Horl-.,
Aulomallc,
Air, ~000 Millo,
01
Musical
Goad Condlllon, ~.200; 1...
Dodge Alta, MR:OIMtlc, Air,
Instruments
12,000 Mlloo, Goad Condftlon,
Bundy Clorinot fvr 1250. t'I,UO. 114 44e 1172, IJ4..2111281.
ullld only 2 ~oor.l14-446-7t38

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Nt.tlm• guaranloo. Local rolononc• lumlahod.
Coli 1.a00.217-0576 Or 614-2370488 Rogera Waterproofing. &amp;tobllshod 1075.
Curtla Home lmpravemtntl. No
Job Too Big Or Small, YNra Ex·
perienca "On Older IN.wer
Homos. AddiUono, Foundotlono,
Roollng, Kllohono /Bitha. In·
lUred, ~rH Elllmaltl. 814-3670511.

i

,

•

ASTRO · GRAPH

Dovlo Sowing MachiM And
Vacuum CINnllr Repllr, FrM
Pick-Up And Dotlvory, Qoorgn
Crook Road, &amp;14-448-o:!M.
Ron'a TV Service, apaclalltlng
In Zonhh aloo oorvlclng motil
othllr brlnds. HouM calls, 1leo
eome appliance ~f:';:· WV
304.,71-2318 Ohlot
2454.
Soptlc Tank Puml&gt;lng S&amp;O~Qollla _.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jackoon, OH 1.6Q0.&amp;37-8521.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-

Wlll build polio ..,..no, dockll
acrHI'Ied rooma, put up Ylny1
oldlng or trallor oklr11ng. 114241.f112.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

·,

Freomon'o HooUng And Cooling.
lnatalllltlon And S•rvlca. RSES •· 1
Cor11flod. Rooldontlal, Commor· ··
elel. 114-2111-1111.
:-84:---:E::-Iect_.;_r.:...lc-a-1&amp; - - r' .
Refrigeration
RHI.nt181 ., commercial
wiring, new ..,... or FIDII,.,
Maotor l..lcanood oloctriclan.l
Rldono~r Eloctrlcal, WV000301 '
304.a711-1781.
•

(CC)

:
•

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, ,r

••
..
1 •1~

I

57 r.:.rt'bom

1114 Mercury Topaa, A..o, ·
Trana, PS, PI, AC, ...,, 114446-2117.
Services
"
1g14 Oldo Royole, PS, PI, AC,
oruloo, - r wl-0/loeko, ---------~ ;:
oupor cor, oall 114-MII-2045 ., 81
Home

1881 HOnda LX. t2,300. good
cond, 304-458-1072.
10x10x6 Dog Kennel, $150. 304Oklo
Ill
Rogoncy
675-71167.
. 1gea
Brougham, 2 Span Coupo
Groom and Supply Shop-Pot whh moon roof, llkl new condi-Groomln:g. All brHdo, otyloo. tion. every optlon available, 3.8
V-6, 130115, 114-8112-67'18.
Julio Wobb. Coll814-446-02:11.
AKC Cocker Sponlol, 2 Pupo, 1981 Olclomobllo Dol1a II,
With Young Mothlr, $300, 114- Broughtm, PI, PI, PW, Power
446-4110.
Soato, Climate Cornrol, - r
Loc:ko, Etc. AMIRI Storoo Ca•
AKC Roglotorod CockorSponlot
·· Loododl
0no To
owpuppl11, 4 mataa. 2 .. malea, Bought
Now Cor, HOld
Sotll
ohoto, wormod._lallo bobbod, E&lt;c:Ollont CondHionl ~
ready Sop1 8. &gt;U4-882·2087 or Good, Asking: S;t,?M. 114-4411162·2831.
4223 """ 5:110 P.ro.
AKC Roglolorod Molino P,';:J, 1988 Plyft)OIIIh HIB Twlomo,
~mole, 11 Wooko Old, Wa
, good condhlon, 1500, 114-8112·
Flrot
Shoto,
114-246-11177, 5017.
Sorlouolnqulrioo Only.
1188 Fiero GT, blacll. tKtll'lor,
Fish Tank, 2413 Jacklon Ave. gray Inter~, •lr, PI, PI, PW,
Point Ploooont, 304-675-2013, POL; ounrool, 5 lplld, novor
lui llno Tropical 11oh, blrdo, dri- In wlntor, Sunday *lvor,
$10,500, 114-MI-2217.
email animal• and auppll•.

56

Ill Lendld

An octet
of Europeans

;,

2263.

$1500, 814·9112·57'10
9;00pm, Oanwll.

Coco -

24 Oo IIY
UArt118301 tiYIIII
27 ~dlt

By Phillip Alder

Lund vlaor; buah wacktr; er·
71 Autos for Sale
tend ..·tender H1rn; bug ahield;
window venia; a~uere lube
1954 Ford 2 Dr, H.T. Vlctorlo; buritpor: Tllyt&gt;1o HiM·; ill\
1047 Plymouth Coupo, No fit 1981 Toyota or new.r; Jensen
RNaonabll Offer RetuRd, 114- box opoakors; 614-"'2·21112.
25e·1058.
New g11 tankl, one lon truck
1965 Buick Spolcal Covortlable. whHII, radiatora, floor mate,
Rnroreable,needa
etc. D &amp; A Auto, Ripley, WV. 304motor,palnt,and new top, aaklng 37:1·3033 or 1.-.;!n:0329.
1900.00 614-446-4754
.
TIRE EXPRESS: Ouoll1y UNCI
1972 Monle C.rto 350, newly 11rn, Guarantied, Thousand•
rwbUitl angl111, Interior &amp; body To Choose From Our 28th Y1ar, - ·
very good oond. 304-875-2231.
Wa Want To Ramra You Bet· ·
1873 Plymouth Barracuda 340 w.n Millar &amp; Athllll, OH.
,.
auto wtconaole &amp; ,.uey da•h,
79 ·campers &amp;
304.a82-2428.
1877 Ford 0111neda, 4dr. Mdan,
mint condition, 55,000 aclual
miiH, ntw tlrea, all opllona,
$1800, 114-982-6711.

W..1

Opening lead·

HE WAS HUNTIN' FER MY
BUTTER AN' EGG MONEY
AN' FELL OUT OF 1(
TH' HAYLOFT!!

Motorcycles

2 Ton Tr\JCk Lood Of Flrowood
Grovol Houlod Up To 10 Ton A 61 Farm Equipment
~d. 614-245-9227.
240 lntemaUonal tr.ctor with
8 ft. truck topperi 2 circulating plow, com planter and gr~ln
g..
hlltara;
ont amaH drill $2895; 9 N Ford wHh ~lado 1086 Hondo Goldwlng, Low
woodbumtri uaed doorw and ond buollhog 12350; 1200 David Mil", Excellent COndhlon,
Brown with lot~dar SSDIO 114-- 13000 114-448-6754.
wlndowo; 114-985-3839.
2811-6522.
8x8 wooden Ito~• bulldlr:Jgl,
1187 Harloy Spo~ltor, 1100
$395, dollvory l ootup 1155. 280 Whitt Tractor $1150; 180 Evolution engine, beh drive,
MF
13,650;
601
Ford
Workm
...
Olhor olzoo available. slcloro E·
lseoo OBO, 1~-11112-3142 or 814qulpmont, Hondoroon. 304-675- tar ,3,6!50. Track Loader, $2,UO, 185-4233.
114-266-6522.
"'21.
1811 Kowaookl KX125, good
2112ton Electric G.E. Hool pump. Farmall Cub tractor wl 5ft. belty condition, call lor more Informamower, fall hllch wl carry all.
• white wooden lx7 g:r:~• 304-458-1727.
tion, 614-tll2-1422 aftor 5 p.m.
door1. Tn.cklaprlnga. 11
1·
0225&amp;
Now Hollond 717 Fonogo Harvo• 1813 Yamaha Banahee 4 '·
wl both hlodo Now Holland wMel•, nHd payoff, $41)0
'·
tor
Applt llaa Computer With Z-3.5
7ft.
ho~blnd, 3 sl1igo wagono, . only riddon opproxl1111toly i2
Orivu, Color MonHor, I Meg ExUmn,
&amp;14·192·20n.
pansion Card, Sterwo Sound Burcat grlndlrlmlxer AC, no
Cord, lmogowr1tor II Burgo tilt, comptanter, 1211. 'r,.nsport 75 Boats &amp; Motors
·
Protector, Several Af"pllc.!tiOn Oloc. 304-273-4215.
And Programming Softw.,.;
tor Sale
Alao Runt Apple Ill Software, 63
Livestock
Boet Oftor. 814·3117.0545•.
12 Ft. Aluminum Boet With Btt·
11 Umo~lne calvn, 250-450, tory, Troy Motor, Ooro, 1325,
Baby Cockatiel, Ludwig Snare Mora1n'1 Farm, At 35. 304·i37- 614-245-5152 Aftor 6 P.M.
Drum Wfclle. 304~312.
2018:
17 1/2 Ft. Rinker, 17V HP
:-:-:-ln"•'"'•'"H"o~
r. 1083
Choet Typo Doop FrooUir 16 1/2 ::22:-:-m-o-.o~c~=-=B:-u::-11-:-U-cm-ooo
More., Eacollent Condition, 814- ,.
Cu. Ft. Deep Well Water Pump, ford crDU, e•. w.lght 13001bl, 25e.a110.
·'
Llko Now, 614-388-8318.
,.
$650. 304-675-2231.
4 Wlnna Froodom 17V Ski
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS, 21 UmoaiM cowa, 1 bull, Mor- 1989
Boat,
3.0 L 1128 HP 110, Opon
1,000 Gallon, 5325; Now JET Bat gan'• Form, A1 311. 304-937-2018.
Bow, Tnll.,, Top. Marini Radio,
(No Sand Flhor RoquiNCII
Depth Finder, El'lra Clean, Low
Hauling:
An~lme,
$1,495; Ron Ev1n1 En1erprfHI, Canle
Anywhor9. PLA Rllloboro Ohio, Hours. Aoklng 17,0115, 814-4411- •.
Jacltaon, Ohio 1-800-53'f.8528.
EVIfY Monday. Chuck Wllllamo, 0364.
DP Chairman exerciR machine Trlpto Crook Trucking, 114-245wHh lnotructlon booldot and 50H.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
video tapa, ucellent condition,
Acces$0rles
614-992·5053.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Flrowood Preporo For Wln1or1 800 lbo. bllu ol hoy, $71 bolo, 1981 V-8 2.8 Ctmero engine lor
porto, $75, 114-1192·2438.
Will Bo Soooonod Whon Cola
Waath1r Arrlvu, Delivered, 61C.. wllll,..t, 114-M8-2201,
Bft.
full IIH 1ruck toppor. 304·
256·1318, 614-367·7025 EverUng1. Alfalfo gron, hoy rouo,. $21
713-5e38.
Go Kart• 3 HP l up, opoclal on Nch. Mo~an'1 Fllrm, ta 35.
Budget Tnnamllalona, UMd &amp; "'
. ~
g HP, In olook, Uotril Equlp- 304-937-201 •
rabullt, 111 typea, atartlng 11 $99;
mtnl, 614-7112·2455 or &amp;14-NZ·
ownar 114·245-5677, "&amp;1+37f..
2580.
Older Sura 18 HP Lawn Tractor
• Wood Swing sot, 5 R swing,
614-446-8568.
Plalllc lattars lcr portable
changaable latter tlgn, $55/box.
Socond box lroo. 1-600.53:1-3453
anytime.

23 s - t polllo

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

....

713-5785.

9

... .

,.

48 'liMp to Ill
doM
51 FOOIIth
54 WltMtand
550Migner

111mx

+Q7
.Q 6532
IK !087

"'-

IVtrllll

olphlbet

SOUTH

•''

47 -

21' Son of Jlcoll

+K I0 92
. J 984
I H2
+ to3

i;
11on,
AUOI,
114.a51-1016.
L::::::=======r§==~~=~=:!:~
1981 No
QMC
Pick-Up
ao. CondlHousehold
GoOds

17 100 eq.
l1lllet'l

EAST

true-. :110 w

CliiJI3 by NEA. Inc

51

••aet

41 - tlefrenc•
43 Cruclllx
45 Yount dot
45 AclreM
Chert lit

18 Tottered
datil
20 Letter ot

t A964
+98,5

:::.C~omao:'~,fC:."'A.~:"" :.":0

w (?.1.,.,.

l ·ll·tJ

.A K

1rodo for small truck or 15,500.
oaoh firm. 304·713-5054.

' ·It
i. •~ '"\

COUI'M

13 Not reedY lor
Hlllll
14 ldNI plllco

rrucks for Sale

11170 GMC lhow

r-

1 - powlt
7 Cllenglna

15- pit
II Dllcover

1H1 Pontiac Grond Pria, blue
tow- door, ~ 33,000 miiH.
vwy good condllloil, now tlreo,
$1\0011 OBO, 114-8112·2001,
ovonlrigo.
·

72

34 Pulvertul
37 llue muddy
4011tdlter•

'

There's a cha nce you might be invited to
participate in a very un1qUe endeavor in the
ye a r a head 11 may be proposed by two
triends with whom yo u were associated pre·
vtously
'
VIRGO IAug. 23-Sepl. 22) Slrive I~ lull1 ll
your social obligat!ons today, espec1a!ly 1f
they are·events where you have a chance of
mee1ing new people . Fresh contacts could
usher 1n eMCitlng circumstances. Y1rgo. treal
yoursell 10 a btr1hday g111. Send lor your
Astro·Graph prediclions for lhe year ahead

'.

by ma1 hng $1.25 and a long, sell-addressed.
s1a mped envelope to ASiro·Graph , clo 1hts
ne wspaper. P 0 Box 4465. New, York. N Y
10163. Be sure to stale your zod1ac s1gn.
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0C1. 231 Try lo d1 vesl
you rself of rout1ne proce du res today and
ex periment with new lechmques. whether
your task be a cnt1ca1one at wo rk or simply
a household ch ore.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) ll's 1 mpo~an1
today you talk with people whose minds you
respect, espec 1ally 11 you're toying wllh a
new idea or concept. Yo u m1ght learn some·
th1ng of enormous value
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23·Dec. 211 This is a
good day 10 go to lhal specia l sho p you like
so much which always has un ique merchan·
d1se. There is a good chance you may find
somelhmg you'll really like.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Someone
you 've been hopmg would notice you . but
lhus lar has failed 1o do so m1ght provide
yo u w1lh a pleasant s urprise tqday when
he/she singles you out
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 191 Your charl
indicates you could be rather ingenious at
this _time in devising ways to make or save
money if you put your m1nd to It Give ir a
serious try
PISCES (Fob . 20· Morch 20) Allhough
••

you re nat apt to fee l inclinattons to exerctse
your leadersht p quali ttes today. you r peers
w111 still look to you to r guidance tf an yth tng
unexpected occurs
ARIES (Maroh 21·April 19) Pe rsons who
are best eq uipped to help yo u achteve your
goals today wtll be those who are w1ll1ng to
take a cha nce . pravtded they 'll see some·
thing tn 11 for them tf you succeed
TAURUS (April 20·May 201 Do nol Ileal
wtth mdttference today un1que tnlormatton
passed onto you by a rel1able tne nd What
he/she has to say could be of considerable
wo rth
GEMINI (May 21 · June 20) Some th ing
you've been wantin g ro change but have
been unable to do so looks hke it will be
facilitated by anolher loday. The reason is
because 11 affects his/he r interests as well.
CANCER (June 21 -July 221 The resulls
from end eavors of an Independent nature
migh t n o t be tao impress1ve today .
Co nver se ly, however, s itu ations which
require teamwork could be very substantiaL
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You could be more
adroit than usual in grasping the essence of
complicated finanCial situa1io ns today. While
asso&lt;:iates are 1ry10g 10 defi ne lhe problem.
you may already have lhe solulion.

Open1n9 Rounds fUYe) (CC)

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Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Affair turns An
into a thriving ·medical practice~
0.. AD• IA~i)den: This may not
be the ~lipping thai most people
carry IIOUIId iD their walleu. but its
the one I have canied iD mine for

TAMMIJONES

n

Landers

10 years. I take it out to read
whalever I need a good laugh. How
ANN LANDERS
. . .
.
1 fmiiURI
"199•
Lot.
about p1ntlllg1llg&amp;III.ADII
Tim
..s~
your .eadc:n will set a kick out of iL
c,..aton Symdkale''
- ARLINGTON, 'JliXAS
DEAR TEXAS: Thanks for
on us one
sending on th8t oolumn.l remember afternoon in their apartment.
it .cic:arJy and~ that it's. ~ Fonunately, I had my clothes on.
pnnung a second umc. Here IllS:
(MQSt of 'Rick's" were off.) He is a
Dear ADD LaDd~rs: I atn an very fast thinker, intmd~ed me as
18-year-old single mother of twiDs. a chiropracUJr and Slid I was pviDg
My parents threw me out of the him a11 adjlislmenL She then told
house when I told them I was me she was having II'Ouble with her
pregnanL Three months afler the back and askec1 me to give her 111
twills wen: born, I got herpes from a adjustment, too.
magazine salesman. 1be guy lied to
I faked it as best I could. She was
me and said he had eczema. None very pleased, said 1 had helped her
of this has anything to do with my more than any chilopractor who had
problem, but I thought I'd give you · ever worked on her and asked for
some background.
an appointment the next day. ADII, I
Tl_le n:aJ II'Ouble. is.! atn hav~g an have been going over there
affau w1th a married man. He IS 26 regularly. Yesterday was her sixth
and unc:mptoyed, and his wi~e is a adjusllllenL She pays me $20a visiL
professiOnal wrestler. She IS one
Can I get in DOUble Cor practicing
tough lady, and I don't want to tangle medicine without a license? Please

-el..

MCHOLASALEXANDER

75th Davis reunion held
The 75th reunion of the descendants of Orlando and Katherine
Sheline Davis was held recently at
the Eli Denison Post 467, American Legion, Rutland.
A basket dinner was held at
noon with Gary White giving the
blessing. AI the business meeting
conductecl by White, the 1994
reunion plans were discussed. It
will be held at the same location
with the same officers to serve.
They are White, president; Janet
Miller, vice president; Sharon Rif·
ne, secre1ary, and Mary Kathryn
Holter, treasurer.
Gifts were presented to G!ada
Davis. the oldest woman attending;
Clyde Davis, the oldest man;
Samuel Evans, the youngest boy;
Pam White Grimm, who traveled
the farthest; and Gary White, the
one with the most family present.
Mnrtie Holter and Mary Kathryn
Holter conducted games.

1Uelda~Auguat31,1993 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo

Third birthday
celebrated .
Nicholas Williatn Alexander,
soli of Bradley W. and Stephanie
Alexander, Vinton, cetebrBted his
third birthday recently with a
swimming party at his home. The
cake carried out a fisherman tlleme.
Attending besides his parents
and sisters, Katharine, Carol Ann
and Jessica were Victor Casto and
AnnabeUe, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Houchins, Mrs. Jan Alexander, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Eason and Aman·
da, Ms. Judy Goetter and Stacie
Alexander, Huey Eason and Susan
Houchins. Unable to attend but
sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Perkins, Jim Alexander, Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Yonaley, Brian and Julie,
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Fogany, Brianne
and Ryan.
·

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Attending were Gary R, Holter,
Stiversville; Sharon Riffle, Greta
Riffle, Evereu Grant, Charlotte
Grant, Shayne Davis, Debbie and
Samuel Evans, Eagle Ridge Road;
Brenda Holter, Roger Lemley,
Parkersburg, W. V a.; Gary and
Anita White, Middleport; Clyde
and Alice Davis, Jim Davis, Rut·
land; Janet Miller, Derek Miller,
Roger and Anthony Carpenter,
Rutland; Allen Maynard, Racine;
Kim and B. J. Shine, Vera and
Michelle Smith, Sharke, Fla.; Pam
White, Robby and Samantha
Grimm, Pacifico, Calif.; Amanda
White, Scott Davis and Jamie
Davis, Heath; Kathryn Holter, Gar·
don, Jill, Martie Holter, Bashan;
Rebecca Evans, Tuppers Plains,
and Glada Davis, Middleport.

Jones accepted
into Midwestern
Baptist College
Hillside Baptist Church is very
proud to announce that Tammi
Jones, daughter of Linda Jones,
P~meroy, has been accepted to
Mtdwestern Baptist College in
Pontiac, Mich. Jones received her
General Equivalence Diploma from
Nelsonville and then when straight
10 Michigan to be accepted at Midwestern.
Jones was an important part of
Hillside Baptist Church. She was a ·
member of one of th e singing
groups, God's Little Lambs. She
also taught Sunday school, was a
team member for Children ' s
Church and a young soul winner.

pve me 110111e lldvice ri&amp;lu away. I
Clll't . . anybody • for help, IIIII
I sure do need iL - DBP£NDING
ONYOUINCORNING,N.Y.
DEAR CORNING: 1be kind of
DOUble you are wonied about is
-~·- ~pared to what might
IIOuuul
happen if the lady Wlaller learns
the truth. Stop seems Rick at once
and !ell your "patient' you have
Biven up your practice.
• Dear.\DIILIDdera:Myh~
Theo,' walked out on Christmas
Eve and hasn't returned. He didn't
even come back Cor his clothes.
Theo won't tell me where he's
living. I must get iD touch with him
through his business. He makes the
house payments and pays the bills,
but that's iL
Ann,wehavetwoyoungchildren
who haven't seen their father in
months. Whenever I talk to Theo,
he says he wants to rome home -but only for the right reasons. When
I ask what the right Je8IIOIIS are, he
won't tell me, and I have 110 idea.
I find Ibis aueL Theo knows I
love him and want him back. I don't

Reds
lose to
Cardinals

illldenllnd why he is doin&amp; Ibis. '

I How lana IIMluld I Wild II 'l1le4
bavinc a midlife criliJ? He is 46

andbalbldamajor-.unrt.HB
-lllluoundonme.ldoa'Ubink
!here is 11101ber WOIIJIII, What ..._.,..
I do? - DESPERA'Jli IN L0N0
BEACH, CAUF.

·-

gious and moral !raining and guidMrs. Parker announced that the
ance are-essential.
new date for visitiDg the Pomeroy
Prayer by Sarah Caldwell · UMW is Sept. 14 at 6:30p.m. She
opened the business meeting with also announced that the nominating
Martha Poole and Osie Mae Foll- oommittee report and election will
rod g!ving the secretary and trea· be 81 the next meeting. Serving on
surer s reports. Bill for funeral the nominating committee are
flowers and materials for a Festival Martha Elliott, chairman, Florence
of Sharing kit were paid. The soci- Ann Spencer, and Nina Robinson.
ety voted to send money for two
Mrs. Robinson had the prayer
blankets to the Festival of Sharing.
calen&lt;!ar and chose Marla Legleiter

Pick 3:
985
Pick 4:
8561
Buckeye 5:
4-10-20-25-36

Page4

DliAJl LONG BEACH: 'Ibis i,i
eliiiiOrdlnarily odd behavior to ray'
the leasL Contact IIOIIIeOIIC' at bis

man

and ask for guidance. The
sounds mentally ill. This must
be very han! for you. Good lucie,
dear

·

wi.t,. pltJNJi11g a wedding

fHlY3

'

whd

for wltal? Wllo SflUids ~lwre?

"TheAMLiwlersGIIideforBridu'l
lias all w IJIIIWers ~lid a self-ad:· .
drWtd, lo11g, b·ss-siu etM/ope
tw1 a check or JIIOM)I ortkr for
$3.65 (this iiiCiudes postage 11114
lriwlllllg) to· Brides clo AMIAIItkrs, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill..

606/1-0562. (In Canada, sertd
$4.45.)
.

VOl. 44, NO. 81

Feds to investigate mine pumping sit~ .
By JIM FREEMAN
,
Sentinel News Starr
Theus Environmental Protcction Ag~n~y is investigating the
pumping of water from the flooded
Meigs 31 mine near Salem Center
following a 6th Circuit u s Court
of Appeals decision in Cin~i~natli.
The decision is a double-edged
sword for the Southern Ohio Coal
company which hils been pumping
water from the flooded mine into
Leading and Raccoon Creeks since
July 30.

in laity work 81 LaVeme, Calif. A.
birthday card was signed for her. .
Mrs. Follrod had the blessing'
with Mrs. Robinson serving.;
refreshments 10 Florence Ann~
Spencer, Osie Mae Follnid, Martha
Poole, Charlolle Van Meter, Sarali~
CaldweU, and NeUie Parker.
·
Next meetiDg will be Sept. 21 at·
the church. Gertrude Robinson will:
lead the pledge program, and Mrs.

The ruling Monday by a threejudge panel partially reverses a
decision by Judge Sandra S. Beck·
with who issued a preliminary
injunction proJeCting the pumping
operation. The EPA may issue an
order to stop the pumping, however
they cannot stop the pumping until
an investigation is completed.
During its investigation, the
EPA will be looking for violations
of Jhe Clean Water Act.
The Office of Surface Mining
was denied a stay in the injunction.

An EPA official said inspecf:Ors
from Chicago are already takmg
samples from the pumping site. In
addition, the State Reclamation
Board of Review began a heanng
yesJerday on the pumping.
"We .are prepared to offer our
run eD?pe~tio~. wit~ U.S. EPA's
1nvesttgauon, sa1d com~.any
spokeswoman B.J. Smtth . We
have repeatedly s~ted that we are
willing to meet wtth them regard·
ing any aspect of the water removal
plan.

POMEROY • The Big Bend

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge No. 164 F&amp;AM
will honor its masters with a past
masters' night on Wednesday at the
Middleport Masonic Lodge with
refreshments at 6:30 p.m. and
meeting at 7:30 p.m. There will be
work in the fellowcrafl degree. All
Pomeroy members are urged 10
attend and all master masons are
invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

T .. ~~,.rs

Plirlns VFW Ladies Auxiliary will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at post home. All
members urged lo attend. The
meeting talc:es the place of the regular Thursday meenng •.

Township Trustees will be at 7:30,
at the home of Clerk Pauy. Callaway.

MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Community Association will meet
at 8 a.m. at People's Bank in MiddleporL Everyone is welcome.

THURSDAY
POMEROY • Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Church for more
information call992-5762.
•

SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene invites the
public to the Children's Ministry of
Caravan for grades oile through six.
The frrst meetiDg will be at 7 p.m.

REEDSVILLE • Olive Township Trustees will meet at6:30 p.m .
at Shade River State Forestry
Building on Joppa Road.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The regu-

RACINE • Racine Legion Post
11602 will meet at 7 p.m. Dinner
wiU be served at 6:30p.m.

lar monthly meetiDg of the Orange

"We would hope that the U.S.
EPA would recognize and take into
account !Ill the improvements
made, the current minimal environ·
mental effects and the safety
aspects of ~ntinued water removal
to keep ventilation established.
"S&lt;!uthern Ohio Coal is now
rc!easmg o~ly 3,000 gallons per
mmute that IS 1101 fully treated. The
water removed that portion of the
mine~ less en-:li'Onmental eff~t
bcca~se tt has a h~gher water qual1ty wtth a lower 1ron con ten I and

TOO HOT TO STUDY • Students at Rutland Elementary leave school an hour early
Tuesday because or tbe extrememly high tern-

...;.~-~~l'

I

Items are
recovered from
church break-ins

perature. The high was iD the mid-90s. The students will also get out an hour early today.

$319,000 to put in a command
vehicle, you 've got some sellin~ io
do to justify that to me. So selltt,"
Corbin said.
Major Thomas Charles, operations commander, said the pauol ,
began considering the purchase
after rioting in Los Angeles that
followed the verdict in the Rodney
King beating case.
"We met with a number of the
large cities in Ohio, Columbus in
particular. Who would do what
should we have a ·problem in, the
city? Who has a command vehtcl.e?
Nobody has anything that could
coordinate all the services that we
would need," Charles said.
Theory gave way to reality in
April when inmates r!oted at ~he
SouJhem Oh.i(} Correcuonal FacihLy. Nine prisoners and a guard died.

days.
..
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Violators
could
face
addtttOnal
Gov. George Voinovich said
Ohioans who drink and drive charges, such as fines and jail time,
should be prepared for sure and and vehicles could be impounded.
Voinovich said Ohioans support
swift punishment.
tough
taws and that drivers who
His warning came Tuesday at a
ignore
them arc headed for II'Ouble.
news conference with other state
"If
they
continue to drink and
officials, Mothers Against Drunk
Driving and others who praised the drive, the new laws will remove
them from the highway immediatestate's newest - and toughest • h 'd
nnti·drunkcn driving law.
ly,' e sal .
The governor, ~ublic Safety
As of todar, motorists stopped
upon suspic1on can lose their Director Charles Shtpley, Nauon·
I iccnse at the scene if they regis1er wide Insurance Co. and the Centu0.10 percent or more on a blood· ry Council announced a $22p,OOO
alcohol test or refuse 10 take the campaign to publicize the new law.
John Gavin, fonner ambassador
test.
to
Mexico and spokesman for the
The driver's licenses of first
council.
a national anti-OWl group,
offenders will be suspended for up
rreviewed
radio and television
to 90 days unless they can prove
spots
to
be
broadcast during the
that police violated procedures or
next
two
weeks.
the test was defective. A court
The TV ads will be shown 920
hearing must be held within five
times on 27 statipns and 30 cable

S\4.55
S'l.l .S)

s'l\.s&gt;

51 4.55
&lt;;\4.55

Jackson County sheriff's
deputies recovered several thousand doUars worth of items stolen
from more than 10 churches in
three oounties early Saturday morning after chasing the suspec.ts fro~
an attempted break-m, an mvesugator for the Gallia County Sher·
ifr s Department reported.
Two suspects are being ques·
channels, while the radio spots will
tioned in the burglaries, which
be aired 875 times on 58 stations.
The council contributed occurred in Gallia, Lawrence and
5200,000 and Nationwide provided Jackson counties. They were
reportedly attempting to break into
520,000.
Shipley said the department a Jackson County church when
.
established a toU-free hot line (800· deputies began pursuing them.
"We do have suspects and are
462-2269) to provide information
progressing on this," the Gallia
aboutthc law.
He said that since 1986 Ohio County investigator said. He added
has reduced fatalities and injuries that arrests are expected "in the
I h I . paired dri
caused by a co o -un
vers. very near future."
He would not release the names
Last year, 510 persons died in
of
the suspects, but said ther are
alcohol· related accidents in Ohio,
Hilliard
residents and one 1s on ·
compared with 809 in 1986, he
parole
for
breaking and entering.
said.
The
investigator
said Jackson
"But we still have a serious
County deputies were in pursuit of
problem in this area." he said.
Mary Jo Chilar, MADD's Ohio the suspects when they s.truck a
chairwoman, said the new law is ditch abandoned thetr veh1cle and
ned ;,.. foot The vehicle, a station
one of the toughest in the country.
"It is· our hope that aU Ohioans wagon, belongs to the father of a
will understand this strong mes- suspect's girlfriend.
The stolen items reco,vered
sage," she said.
.
from the vehicle were mostly
sound equipment such as speaker~.
amplifiers and microphones.
Some of the items have been
Despite the evacuauon orders,
Joyce ~escoat and her husban~. identified as belonging to Gallia
Jeff, wa1ted out the storm at thw County churches, the investigator
wckle shop m ~uxton, N.C., near said. Locally, Cadmus Cross Roads
Hatteras. She satd she never would Church, Mt. Olive Church and
Flagspring Church were all reporttry that agam.
.
.A 15-.year-old swtmmer was ed broken into.
The Galli a County and Jackson
miSSing m heavy surf k•c~ed ~p
ahead of the sto~ Tuesday m VJ!· County sheri~f~' d~partments l!fe
gima. The ~nly mJurY reported m conducting a JOIRt mvesuganon of
North Carolina was a woman who · the matter.
broke her htp.

Emily peels ·away from Atlantic Coast

s'll -s&gt;
S'J.9.\0

By BRENT LAYMON
. Associated Press Writer
Hurricane Emily peeled away
from the Atlantic Coast today after
swamping roads, smashing a hand·
ful of buildings and uprooting trees
on North Carolina's Outer Banks.
The storm ' packing 115 mph
winds and churning up IS-foot
waves, spared the island chain its
full fury. Its eye came no closer to

s,l9.l 0

land tlian 20 miles east of Cape
•Hatteras before a oold front pushed
the hurricane oul to sea on a northnortheasterly path.
" Dear Emily, Sorry We Missed
You . Thanx for the Waves. Smccrely, Your Locals," read a sign
spray-painted on a sheet of plywood nailed to a window on North
Carolina's Bogue Banks, south of
Cape Hatteras on the Outer Banks.

Petitioners fil~ arguments for new Demjanjuk trial

~

Your SEPTEMBER Cable Bill May Be A Few Days ·Late
Due To These Changes. We Apologize For Any Inconvenience.
f·

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JERUSALEM (AP)- The Nazi
hunters, Holocaust survivors and
others seeking a new trial for John
Oemjanjuk on war crimes charges
filed a formal request with the
Supreme Court on Wednesday to
further delay his deponation.
"' the appeal addressed· to Chief
JusJice Meir Shamgar listed 10
mosJiy technical, legal reasons why
a higher panel of Supreme Court
justices should weigh a·new trial. ,
Demjanjuk, a 73-year-old retired
Ohio autoworker, was acquitted

July 29 of his 1988 conviction for
being "Ivan the Terrible," the
notorious guard at Trebllnka death
camp where 850,000 Jews died
during World War II.
But his deportation has been
delayed four umes due to appeals
for a new trial.
·, The three main arguments in the
petition filed Wednesday were:
-The coun had concluded that
Demjanjuk was a Wachmann, the
German term Cor a guard, attached
to the special unit whose training

The Justice Ministry said that a
concentrated on ldUing Jews.
decision
whether to call a further
- That the court, in say.ing
panel
of
judges
to weigh a new trial
Demjanjuk had not had the chance
to defend himself on the char~e of should be forthcoming from Shambeing a Wachmann, was effecbvely gar by Thursday, the deadline he
set two weeks ago.
saying that he would not face douThe lawyers for the Wiesenthal
ble jeopardy.
- That all the evidence li~Jking Center that tracks Nazis and the .
Demjanjuk to Nazi units, including Sobibor death camp survivors coman identity card, would not have to . bined their petitiOI} Wednesday.
be reauthenticated in a new trial as The six other groups who appealed
initially postpOned their filing to try
Attorney General Yosef Harish
to get tbe 5,000 shekel (about
said in arguing agamst a new trtal.
$1,700) guarantee for coun costs
said.
waived.
~ ~-

.....

Troopers had to rely on commuc
ni cations and other equipment
available through the Ohio Depart-.
ment of Rehabilitation and Correction.
''The possibility existed thai we
could have lost that entire prison,"
Charles said, leaving troopers to set
up shop in a tent or nearby school.
· He said the vehicle could have
been used during the Shadyside
flood. the Miamisburg train derailment-evacuations. and a storm in
Cleveland that cut power and
phone lines. .
"This vehicle wiU have a generator, and phones. It'll have a satellite sys(cm," Charles said. Pictures .
from Lucasville could have been
beamed to authorities at a Columbus command center.

,.--Local briefs----.

Voinovich says Ohio's new
DUI law will be enforced

•• • •

'

If the pump!"g stops, it W?~ld
severer comp~cate the re!Jal&gt;lltta·
liOn o the mme, accordm~ to a
company fact sheet The comp~ny
~mp o6s 815 people, 300 of wh1ch
ave een out of work since the
mme flooded on July II.
An esttmated 700 million gal~
1fans~ w~ter ~as been pumped
rom emu~ s•~ce July30. Wh1le
~11 a:tc .hfe m Leadt~g Creek
~s .
ktlled by the ~tscharge,
t e discharge has had lntle effect
on Raccoon Creek.

.~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Riots in Los Angeles set the State
Highway Patrol wondering about
the need for a mobile command
post in Ohio. The prison riot at
Lucasville rer·1oved any doubt.
The state Controlling Board
Tu esday approved the patrol's
request to use $319,962 taken from
drug dealers to buy a vehicle full of
clecJrot\ics that can respond
sllltcwide to riots, natural disasters
or even outdoor concerts.
Rep. Robert Corbin, R·Dayton,
complained that the rolling patrol
post was an exotic, expensive toy.
The vehicle, which resembles a
melior home, will be bought from
Lynch Display Vans. Burlington,
Wis.
"When you come to ask us for

Important Notice C~leVisioli Customers
. ·1

nearly neutral acidity levels.
"'All the remaining water is
hcing fully processed in the Meigs
31 mine water treatment facility
which was recently upgraded."
Acoording to the oompany, it is
necessary to continue pumping at
Sugar Run beca.use it is locat~d
closest to the acbve long~all mming am.. Water mustconttnue to be
removed there so ventilation can be
maintained for the safe rehabilita·
tion of the entire mine.

Patrol uses drug money ,
for ffiobile command post .

v_an_Mete-rw_m_be_hos-tess_
. __,

Sternwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy. Public invited.

3 Section. 21 Pagee 35 cenl8
A Multlmedlo Inc. Newepoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, $eptember 1, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

-------Community Calendar __
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.
TUESDAY
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Soulhem Jumor
High building. All parents are
urged to attend.
•
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Conservancy District meets Tues·
day at 5 p.m. at the office. Public
invited.

Low toalpl mld-601, tban&lt;e ol

raiD. Tbunday, blgb In mid-80s.

•

placeofemploymentllldfindcuif

his behavior is scr.nge at MJ1t. lOCi
Clll your clcrBYman and doctor

Methodist women meet for child program ~
Nellie Parker led the program.
"A Child Shall Lead" when Alfred
United Methodist Women met at
·the home of Nina Robinson and
Clara Follrod recently.
All those attending took' part
with readings and discussion.
Scriptures were from Proverbs,
Luke, Mark, Mauhew and Joel.
Members told of ways they relate
to children and all agreed that reli-

0 hio Lottery

_....

Man cited in wreck
A Vinton youth was cited Monday morning for failure to mainwin an assured clear distance ahead. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Stutc Highway Patrol reported.
Brian E. Wright, 16, Route I Edmondson Road, was eastbound
on State Route 124 in Rutland Township following a vehicle driven
by Nellie M. Myers, 67, 31429 S.R. 325, Langsville.
.
Myers report.ed.ly hit her brakes to avoid hitting a dog which ran
into the road. Wri~ht applied his brakes and slid sideways into the
rear of Myers' veh1cle.
No injuries were reponed. Both vehicles sustained light damage
and were driven from the scene.

Ruiland awards contracts
Rutland Village Council met in special session Tuesday to
award the bids for their water project.
The total project cost is $573,000. Part of this cost is being paid
by an Ohio Public Works, Issue 2, Round 6, grant. Construction on
the water line should start in between 30 and 45 days.
One contract wa:&gt; awarded to Fields Excavating, Kitts Hill, and
the other two oonttacts were awarded to Rose Excavating, Racine.

Deputies probe thefts, vandalism
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs _Departmem .are investi·
gating two repQrt.ed thefts and one act of ma1lbox vandalism.
According i.o a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Brady Knotts •. Pomeroy •. rcported his 1978 For~ Pinto was
·entered while parked m the Metgs Htgh School parking lot and
money was taken from his billfold that was in the vehicle. It was
rcJlOrted the top of the door was pried open. A small crowbar was
found in the·vehicle.
Toby Curtis, Tuppers Plains, reported Mon'!3y that a Mossberg
pump shotgun and a Bear compound bow wnh stx arrows were
stolen from his residence Friday.
Mike Warner, Forest Run Road, reported Monday evening that
his mailbox had been damaged during the weekend. 'Fhis is the third
time in recent weeks that the box has been damaged.

Man a"ested on warrants
Mike Hem)., Portland, was arrested Tuesday night by deputies of
the Meigs CounJy Sheriff's ~panment on three wlii!BIIts issued by
the Meigs County Court for failure to comply and failure to pay old
fines.

Meigs ACS unit to close .
Tbe Meigs County Unit or !be American Cancer Society wiU
close its doors by the end or this month.
.
Director Ferman Moore said area representatives ban had
to I~ at it from a business aspect. Tbe Meigs County unit
, doesn't bring in enough money each year to justify keeping it
open.
As an example, Moore pointed out that in one recent year tbe
unit only recefved $9,000 in donations while spending between
$15,000 and $16,000.
Moore said that based on the information be bas nnw, tbe
respODSibllities or the Meigs Unit wiU be taken over by the Gallia County Unit.
·
"I haven't gotten a definitive a~swer, liut they're leaning
towards GaiUa CouDty," Moore said.
The derinltlve answer will be glveD at tbe Sept. 14 board
meeting in wblcb new omcers will be asslped aDd the closing
will be rinalized. Tbe meeting will start •t 7 p.m. at Veterana
Memorial Hospital in the conference ronm.

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