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· Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, July 6, 1993

Independence Day celebration continues
.

-

'

Ohio Lottery.

Indians
•

Pick 3:

over
Athletics

WID

~

Hog heaven: Twinkies, Snickers and
Big Macs from your owri kitchen
.
.

842

Pick 4:
9980

Buckeye 5:
2-4-S-16-17

Page7

Low toDIJht I• 701. Thursday,

bot ond bumld. Hlgb bt I"! 90s.

.

HERE THEY COME - Despite the hot, hazy
11nd humid weather, one Racine firefighter
described the viUage's Fourth of July parade as
the largest iloe yet. Here, people line Third
~eet as the parade, led by ViUage Marshal Don

SECOND·PLACE FLOAT - The second·
place noat in the Racine Fourtb of July parade

Dn followed by Mayor Fraok Cleland aod
Meigs Couoty Sheriff James M. Soulsby,
approaches. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freem an)

•

was the entry by Racine First Baptlsi Church
featuring its children's choir.

By MARV MacVEAN
AP Food Writer
. NEW YORK (AP) - . As a true·
blue American given lh.e chance to
get in on just one top-secret secret,
you would choose lhe recipe for lhe
special sauce on a Big Mac, right?
Or maybe for Snickers bars? ·
Sit back. Hog Heaven is here.
In " Top Secret Recipes," Todd
Wilbur speaks to tile cravings of
the masses who have inade wealtlly
the mlikers of Big Macs, Snickers
and 40 olher 'yummies, including
Reese's Peanut Butter Cups,
Kahlua. Coffee Liqueur, Aunt
Jemima Maple Syrup and
Kentucky Fried Chicken Original
Recipe Fried Chicken.
It lake$ work, of course, to make
lhis food at home. But it took five
long years for Wilbur to figure out
recipes tllat imitate the taste and
appearance of popular brand-name
foods.
The hardest item to nail down for
the 29-year-old Wilbur, who's not
a professional but says he's been
cookin~ since age 9, was tile filling
for h1s version of Hostess
Twinlties. (He provides a detailed
drawing for getting lhe cream into
tile cake.)
"I did a lot of the sleuthing for
til is bY reading ingredient labels,"
Wilbur says, adding that on
Twinkies tile listing for natural and
artificial flavors didn't leave him
many clues.
"Obviously it had vanilla, but
tllere was something else," which
turned out to be lemon flavoring,
he says.
·
To fmd the key to WendY's chili,
he bought some, dumped it in a
sieve and rinsed off tile sauce. The
surprise ingredient was celery.
His biggest disappoinbnent? He
couldn't perfect Oreos. The white
filling was satisfactory, he says, but
tile fudgy, slightly bornt taste of tile
· cookies eluded h1m.
He considers his best recipe his
Mrs. Fields Chocolate Chip
Cookies. They are made, he says
wid! all due iinmodesty, from " the
best chocolate chip cookie recipe
ever put to paper."
He thought the base of Mrs.
Fields Peanut Butter Dream Bars
tasted like a cookie, so he called a
store and asked. Sure enough, an
emp!oyee told him, crumbled
cookies.
Otherwise, he says, he contacJed
no companies , ·and none has
contacted him.
".1 did not swipe, heist, bribe or

Vol. 44, NO. 41

EQUESTRIANS • This group of equestrians
were featured in the annual Fourth of July
celebration in Middleport on Sunday evening.

Lisa and Cassandra Smith, won the division
trophy for bes.t equestrian unit.

THIRD·PLACE FLOAT Third place in the Racine
Fourth of July parade wnet to
the Racine American Legion
Post with ~Ill entry foUowlng
the thetoe of I'For God and
Country.", As the noat wound
Its way through the village,
occupants would occaslonaUy
a bJank round. (Sendnel
photo by Jbn Freeman)

Autllorities are investigating a
fatal car ftre which occurred tllis
morning in U:banon Township.
One person was kiJied when tile
vehicle apparently struck a ditch on
State Route 338, lost control and
overturned before coming to rest in
thy nortllbound lane.
.
According to a spokesman for the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, tile crash appears
to have caused tbe ftre, which was
aggravated when the burning
vehicle was struck by a nortllbound
truck driven by Charles D.
Kinnaird, 24, 18776 Buckslake ·
Road, Guysville.
The identity of tile deceased has
yet to be determined. The body· has
been turned over to the Meigs
County Coroner's Office for
identification by dental records.
Kinnaird was not injured in the
- accident. Botll vehicles sustained
heavy, disabling damage and were
towed from tile scene.
The post spokesman said the
accident wiU be under investigation
for at least two days.

HOMEMADE TWINKlES • Todd Wilbur, author of "Top
secret Recipes," shows orr his version of Hostess Twinkles in New
york Thursday, July 1. Wilbur, wbo spent five years figuring out
the recipes for the more than 40 popular foods included in his
book, says the hardest item to nail down was the filling for his
version ofHostessTwinkis. (AP Photo/Wyatt Couots)
otherwise obtain any formulas
through coercion or illegal
meaos," he writes in his foreword.
In fact, he says, the companies
should be flattered.
Burger King spokeswoman Cori
Zywotow agrees.
" There are I ,023 ways for a
customer to order a Whopper," she
says. "Hats off to Todd for (Tying
to re-create one of tile ways. ' '
Witll 700 million Whoppers sold
a year, tile company isn't exactly
worried lhat home cooks will lake
over tile business.
Neither do candy companies
need worry: They sell 3 billion
pounds of candy a year to sweet·
toothed Americans.
Still, Wilbur is climbing some

close to home, being successful in
an urban environment,"..,ldid 15·
year-old Carl Johitson.
He and his classmat~s in a
summer science class at the
Cleveland Museum of Natural
History came downtown· Monday
to see tile proud parents and tlleir
new chick. Another egg in the nest
was expected to hatch by Tllursday.
Wildlife officials had been
~orried that Friday night's
frreworks, laser show and concert
on ~blic Square would disturb lhe nesung.

best-seller lists witll bis $10 Plume
papedlack and having a great time
m tile process, even fdOiing Regis
Philbin in a televised taste
comP.arison.
Wilbur quit his job as a television
reporter in Allentown, Pa, about a
year and a half ago to work on the
bonk. He may never go back.
"Top Secret Recipes: The
St;quel" ?
.
·· .
' That mighl be a possibility.
That might very well be a
possibility," be says. ·
,
After all, this ts a man whose
eyes go dreamy when he recalls
eating frozen Ding Dongs as a
child, picking off the chocolate
icing.
···oh. man ... "

r.,..

-----------...1

Mike and Tania Nesselroad,
Penray Road, Delaware, announce
the btrth of their second child, a
son, Andrew Caylor, on June 24 at
Grant Hospital in Coli.unbus. · .
The infant weighed nihe pounds
and two ounces.
M'luemal grandparents are Lana
Biebel, Hillsboro, and Timothy
· Bichel,.Jackson.
·
Paternal grandparents are· George
and Lena Nesselroad, Pomeroy.
They also have a daughter; Coree
Rae, age three.

A Minersville man sitting on his
porch was struck Tuesday by a
stray bullet apparently ftred from
the West Virginia side of the Ohio
River.
Ted Russell, age unavailable,
was · struck in the le.g by a .22caliber bullet, according to Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsbr.
Two individuals were seen
shooting on the West Virginia ·side
of tile river, Soulsby said. Mason
County, W.Va., authorities were
notified and located two sub1'ects,
Ralph Greene, age unavailab e, of
Hartford, W.Va., and Charles R.
Oliver, 32, of Columbus.
The two said they had been target
practicing but were unaware if any
bullets had crossed the river,
Soulsby said . Oliver had a .22·

COOL FUN -Smile people stay inside on bot
days taking advantage or central air
conditioning... wjlile others prefer to have a little.
fun ~ Here, an unidentified person tak'es

advantage or Tuesday's sun for a little fun on an ·
intertube puUed behind a pontoon boat on the ·
Ohio River near l'omeroy. (Sentinel photo by
Jim Freemao)
·

~

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Sialf

A former Middleport woman
who has achieved naltonal acclaim
. in lheater arts, was recently given
special recognition for · her
accomrlishments at the 63rd
Annua Mid-Western Regional
Conference of Alpha Kappa Alpha
.Sorority, Inc.
·
Jo Bunton-Keel, co-founder and
executive director of Eulipions,
Inc., organized in 1983, was one of
six individuals and two proups
honored at a banquet held recently
at the Stouffer Concourse Hotel in
Denver.
In addition she was honored at a
Food for Thought breakfast hosted
by the Downtown Denver
Partnership, Inc., Denve(, Colo. in
cooperauon with the · Denver
Busmess Journal. That program is
designed to give special
recognition to outstanding women

It didn't. Neither chick stirred
until Monday when the mother
falcon brought home a meal of
what appeared to be another bird.
The new chick opened its beak
widi for a taste, then bobbed
around the nest to get its bearings.
'f.he peregrine falcon is an
endangered species. Wildlife
officials have been releasing
falcons born in captivity to increase
tllepopulation.

Davl· s' visit
California

caliber rifle which was taken by the
sheriff's department for ballistics
testing.
SQulsby and Prosecutor 's
Investigator Gary Wolfe took a
boat to the West Virginia side of
the river. In additiOn, Game
Protector Keith Wood took the
Deparbnent of Wildlife's boat to
the scene.
The Syracuse unit of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Service transported Russell to
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy where he was treated and
released.
Any criminal charges against
Greene and Oliver will have to be
filed in West Virginia, Soulsby
said.

Perot supporters
remain strongly loyal

•
,ldl
.
.
t
.
•
d'
. l.Ui ' epor. woma..n ·re.c.ognzze
F'Orm. e. r .M
fior her accomp·lishments in the theater

r .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis,
represents the Great Plains, the Rutland,
have returned from a 10
heanland, and people on the coasts
day
visit
to Sacramento, Calif.,
expect us to uphold everything
where
tlley
went for a visit with her
that' s decent and good in
sister,
the
fonner
Betty Keller and
America," Keillor said durin·g a · her son, David, Columbus.
While
visit to Livingston this weekend.
there
they
visited
the
Red
. He left tile weekly variety show Forest Lake Tahoe and Wood
other
m 1987, and after living briefly in interesting places.
Denmark and New York City
revived it under the current name. '
KeiUor also just finished another
bonk, " The Book of Guys," which
wtll be released in November.

GREp FALLS, Mont. (AP) Leonard Nimoy insists his new
movie "Holy Matrimony" will be
a "funny, touching story."
LIVINGSTON, Mont. (AP) - · Rehearsals for the movie begin
Garrison Keillor's weekly public this week in lhe Great Falls area.
mdio program will return this fall
to its original name, "A Prairie
Home Companion.''
The show will shed its current
title, "The American Radio
Company," to rekindle the
tradition it established under the
original, name from 1974 to 1987,
Keillor said.
·
.
"Prairie Home Compa11ion

Nesselroad
birth announced-

A Mulllmec.. lnc. "-P....,

Man sitting on porch
struck by stray bullet

Person
killed~ in
·c ar fire

Names in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A new
award named after Ric!lard Pryor
will be given to Arsenio Hall at the
debut of the Soul Train Comedy
Awards.
·
Hall was chosen for tile Richard
Pryor Entertainer of the Year
Award because he is "a great
entertainer at the zenith of 'his
career and is currently the most
visible example of success in
African-American comedy,"
producer Don Cornelius said
Monday in a statement.
The show will be taped Aug . 3
for broadcast on syndicated TV at
an undecided date tllat montll.

2 Sectlo.... 14 P"'l• 35 c.,ta

Ohio, Wednesday, July 7, 1993
•

Faleon egg hatches atop terminal tower
CLEVELAND (AP) - It .took
more titan a serenade. It took more
titan f~teworks. ·
,
It wasn't until Mom brought
home lunch that a baby falcon
finally emerged from its egg.
The chick hatched Monday in the
nest on a 12th floor ledge of the
city's Terminal Tower. Closedcircuit television allowed bird
watchers, tourists and shoppers to
watch on monitors set up in the
Tower City shopping mall.
·
•. "It's fun to see one of the rarest
species, especially in Cleveland so

Pome~oy7Middleport,

Mulllmedl•lnc.

in the 'Denver area.
when she left her Middleport home
Bunton-Keel is tile daughter of for Ohio University . .The first'
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards of member of her family to go for the
Middlepoit and a graduate of parc~ent, she was a science major
Middleport High School and Ohio at Ohto. Her plan was to become
University.
the world's greatest chemist.. Tha~
She works in Colorado with the dream took her ftrst to Cmcmnau
National Endowment for the Arts where she worked witll Proctor and
in addition to Eulipions which is a !Jamble and from there to .Denver
multi-cultural theatre company m 1974 to work for tile Oil Shale
whose goals are to foster, promote Corp.
and preserve tile artistic expression
Then came the oil bust along
of Denver's diverse communities with some personal upheavals
witll an emphasis on the African- which caused Bunton-Keel to re·
American heritage and lifestyle.
examine bow she spent her time. It
At the recognition breal\fast. was tllen that she met Cleo Parker
Bunton-Keel
shared
her Robinson and her interest in dance
entrepreneurial philosophy as weU perfonnance blossomed. She took a
as her experiences and challenges JOb at Colorado State Umverstty
in developing a s~ccessful developing arts programs for
business. Besides her duties as Denver's inner city schools. Then
executive director of Eulipions, in 1982 went out on her own and
Inc., she also enjoys dancing and became co-founder ofEulipions.
producing.
Eulipions presents plays not only
Community arts was not what to lhe black community but to all
Bunton-Keel expected to-embrace of Denver. Tbe company tours the

metro school systems and always
presents the works of African·
American writers about AfricanAmerican lifestyles.
In addition to her work with
Eulipions, Inc., Bunion-Keel has
served on numerous community
boards and task forces. Currently
she is a board member of the
Colorado Symphony Orchestra,
Community Resources Center, and
tile Western States Art Federation.
Bunton-Keel has two sons. Brett
Bunt.on who learned dance under
tile tutelage of his motller has been
performing for seveml years on Las ~
Vegas stages while continuing his
college studies there. Her s~cond
son, Miles Keel, graduated this
spring from George Washington
High School and will be altending
Western State University on a
football scholarship. He plans to
major in mathematics or computer
science.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross · party's traditional liberal ideology.
Perot's supporters are ignoring
Using Greenberg's research, the
entreaties from tile major pdlitical DLC said Clinton's proposals to
parties to form a powerful "radical streamline and
"reinvent
middle" in American politics government," limit most welfare
anchored .by a deeg,alienation from recipients to two years' benefits
government, according to a sludy and allow students to repay coll,ege
·released today.
loans witll·national service had u.~
The national survey of 1,200 collective potential to win over
Perot voters showed strong many Perot backers by proving to
,allegiance to Perot .despite dQubts them Clinton can make government

0
~~~~d~i:t
wa~~bil~~~~sep~fi~ w~~poU,whichwasconductedin
differences within the . Perot late April and with· the focus

constituency.
groups in May, said alienation from
More tl]an loyalty to Perot, the government was tile glue holding
research auributed tllis solidarity to togelher tile diverse coalition tllat
a distinct reluctance of these gave Perot nearly 20 percent of the
independent-minded voters to align vi&gt;te last November.
themselves with lhe Democratic or "That scilidarity defies the history
Republican parties.
of past independent and lhird·party
The study was commissioned by candidacies, whose supporters
tile Democratic Leadership Council began trickling back to tile major
to help it map a strategy for Clinton parties soon after elections.
to court Perot supporters.
"The Perot bloc is radical in its
The poll and a series of alienation from the established
sub sequent "focus group" parties - fonningakindotmdical
discussions witll Perot supporters middle bloc - divided evenly
in California, Ohio and Maine between conservatives and liberal·
show~d many shared Clinton's modemtes," Greenberg wrote.
policy goals and were open to
Below the shared anti·
supporting him - if he delivered establishment sentiment. however,
on deficit-reduction, welfare Green.J!erg found considerable
refonn and otller major promises.
divisions within the Perot bloc.
But it also showed .Perot
This group split evenly, for
supporters are skeptical that example, when asked whetller the
Chnton can produce, that tlley are Democrats or Republicans were
full of doubts about his leadership best suited to run lhe economy, cut
abilities and -experience and also wasteful government spending and
deeply pessimistic that any improve family values.
president can tame Washington.
Republicans had an edge among
"They fully expect a corrupt , Perot voters on tile issue of taxes,
gridlocked system to keep any and among Perot supporters who
leader from succeeding and helping believe the middle class gets a mw
and 19 percent were "not so plan, 35 percent said it would get people," said Stanley Greenberg, deal from its government
satisfied."
better and 13 percent said it would who conducted tile research for tile
But despite a largely Republican
-50 percent were somewhat stay about the same.
DLC and who also works as voting history, most Perot voters
satisfied with the quality of their
Most of tile figures come from a Clinton's pollster.
shari Clinton's support of abortion
care and 30 percent very satisfied;. national telephone poll of 1,008
The DLC, a maverick, moderate rights and are "worried about a
7 percent were ' ' not at all adults conducted June 25-29. The party organization Clinton led Republican Party preoccupied witll
satisfied" and 10 percent were question about whetller Clinton has before entering the presidential abortion and the Christian right,"
"not so satisfied."
moved too slow or two fast was · race, is often at odds with the Greenberg wrote.
- 56 percent believe they will asked separately of 1,514 adults
pay more for healtll care under a between June 25·28. The margin of
Clinton plan, 25 percent less and 6 error was plus or minus 3
percent aoout the same.
percentage points for each of the
-43 percent said the·quality they questions.
receive will get worse under the
A meeting of the Pomeroy Village Council was canceled Tuesday
night due to lack of a quorum when only two. council members
showed.
Mayor Bruce Reed scheduled a special meeting for 7 p.m.
a result of his statewide campaign the vote last November when he
Monday: Reed said the SJl!lCial meeting is for appropriating the
against Glenn.
lost to Glenn, who had 51 percent.
vtllage budget
.
·
''While some of the people A third candida'le, Martha Grevatt,
Council regularly meets on Monday nights but was to meet
across tile state may not be tllrilled won 7 percent
·
Tuesday due to the Fourtll of July holiday. Present Tuesday night
with Mike's candidacy, it stems
"To some degree w)len you try
were council members Larry Wehrung and Thomas Werry, Reed
from one lhing. It stems from his trrkill tile king and you only wound
and Clert/I'reasurer Kalhy Hysell.
mce against John Glenn," Kasich him, tllen it leaves some scars. But
said Tuesday.
frankly, Mike ran an aggressive
De Wine captured 42 percent of
Continued on A·3
S ubjeciS in a Jeep-type vehicle reportedly ftred 25 to 30 shots into
a Racine man's saiYfllill between Friday and Tuesday, damaging
seveml pieces of equipment.
·
. (&amp;cii.MayJtard reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's
sites;"Colorado, tllree; FlOrida, one;
Clean Air Act of 1970.
Department tllat a Jotm Deere btilldozer received six shots to tile
Georgia,
one; Illinois, three; ·
It is ''a statistically significant
mdiator and oil filter while a power unit was shot eight times. In
decrease ... at the stations in this Maine, one; Michigan, three ;
addition the following items were also damaged: a Case endloader,
network, " William Baier, the ·Minnesota:, two; Nebraska, one;
four shots to lhe radiator; a 1979 Ford truck, I 0 shots 10' doors,
report's senior author, said in a New Hampshire, one; New York,
windows and hood; a boomloader, tllree shots to tile mdiator.
statement accompanying the report. two; North Carolina. five; Ohio,
Overall, nine stations showed lhree:. Oregon, one; Pennsylvania,
substantial decreased levels oJ two; · West Virginia, one ;
·
·acidity, while most others showed Wisconsin, one.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherirf's Department are
There are 200 acid rain·
insignificant clianges.
investigating a hit-skip accident tllat occurred Tuesday between 4
Twenty-four of the 33 sites used measuring stations nationwide, but
and 6:30p.m. on Happy Hollow Road near Rutland.
in the study were east of the the governm~nt used. the stations
Accordimt to a sheriff's department report, an unidelttified
witll tile longest and most complete
MlssissipP.i River.
Continued on A-3
In .Caltfornia, there were two recordS for the study.

Poll shows most doubt Clinton health plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - Most
Americans doubt a Clinton
administration health care program
will eltller lower costs or improve
. quality, according to a new poD. ·
A Washington Post-ABC News
sur"ey released Tuesday· night
found 44 percent of Americans
approved of the way President
Cltnton is handling health care,
down from 56 percent two months
ago.
Other fmdings:
-46 percent said Clinton was

·-

moving ioo slowly on tile issue and
23 percent said he was going too
fast.
- 47 percent expect minor
improvements as a result of
Clinton's efforts, 30 percent expect
no improvements and 17 percent
expect major improvements.,-36 percent said they were
somewhat satisfied with their
health care costs and 19 percent
said they were very· satisfied; 22
percent were " not at all'' satisfied

..----Local briefs-council meeting rescheduled

Kasich backs DeWine, says some not.thrilled by.candidacy

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
. · and home with tile State
Auto Companies.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - U.S.
Rep . John Kasich endorsed Lt.
Gov. Mite DeWine in the
Republican U.S. Senate primary
next year, but added that some in
the party may not be .tllrilled witll
DeWine's candidacy.
. DeWine, who lost a bid to unseat
Democmtic U.S. Sen. John Glenn

Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

in November, is seeking tile GOP
nomination for the seat opening
when U.S. Sen . Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, retires. ·
DeWine was elecied Iieuienant
gQvernor in 1990 as Gov. George
Voioo~ich 's running mate.
Kasich, R-Ohio, said DeWine
has significant name recognition as

Sawmill shooting examined

Chemicals linked to acid rain down at easter·n sites
~

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
.' 99~·6687

...,l!j S~.,. Auto
.

.I

lnsur•nce eo,, .•nlttl

•

WASHINGTON (AP) ...:.. Good measuring sites.
- Nitrate levels declined
news about acid rain: There may be
significantly
at three sites, and
less of it titan tllere used to be, a
were down slightly at 24 others.
government study suggests.
"This should not be interpreted
Scientists were able to gather
to
mean tllat we have solved tile
information from just .33 locations,
· but tlley said tile results show tllat acid rain problem," cautioned
concentrations of two chemicals Timothy Cohn, a hydrologist a1 the
linked to acid rain have fallen geological survey and co-author of
lhe swdy.
significantly over a 12-year span.
But Cohn said Tuesday lhe data
Focusing on the eastern United
States, tile U.S. Geological Survey . suggest a declin~ in .the level of
chemical sulfate m rrun. Reducmg
found tllat from I980 to 199I:
-Sulfate levels were .down tllat level was an objective of the
substantially at 26 of the 33

..

Officials investigate hit-skip

,,

.,'

�'
•

Commentary

OH IO Wea th er

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 7, 1993

More damage forecas-t from swollen Mississippi

1bunday, July 8
Accu-Weather• forecast for

conditions and

MICH.

T~e

Daily Sentinel
ARE YOU KlOOING ?! 1:0 YOU KMJW
WhAT'S SPRAYED ON THOSE THINGS"?

111 Court Street
Pomeroy Ohio

DEVOTBD TO THE INTitRESTS ()p THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

IMansfield !so• I•
IND. '

'' '•I Columbus! so· I

'

ROBERT L. WJNGETI
Publisher
CIL\RLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

.MARGAREI' LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letren are subje&lt;:t to ed1ting and must be signed w1th name,
address and lelephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters

W. VA

should be in good rasre, nd~sing issues. not personaliues.

With someone else to blame,
Congress wo~'t touch bases
AP News Analysis
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Conespondent
With political safety nets in place, Congress doesn't have to risk
touching the bases. There's somebody else to blame for shutdown orders
that will close 27 major military bases and 102 smaller outposts in the
United States.
'
1
That way, House members and senators~ "do what they have to do,"
opposing shutdowns they cannot prevent, S81d I ames Courter, head of the
commission that puts together the hit lists of bases to be shut. Courter
understands the political necessity because he served six terms a:s a
Republican member of the House.
·
While Courter's bipartisan base closure coml)lission can ~nly
recommend. subject to approval at the Wh11e House and to congressiOnal
veto, as a pmctical matler its word is final. The alremative is worse.
Before the commission system was set up in 1988, Pentagon atlempts 10
shut down military bases were blocked in Congress. Bases mean jo~s and
money no politician can afford to see lost w1thout a fight. But w1th the
end of the Cold War and the shrinking Pentagon budget, base cuts are
inevitable, not only now but in the future.
For as Courter notes, the closings President Clinton approved on Friday
are in line with the defense policies of lhe old Republican adminisuation
and do not yet reflect the reductions the Democmts plan. Congress has 45
days to say no, but it won't.
Even so the shutdown process will take years. The Pentagon has to get
starled wiirun two years, and some of the closings will take as long as six,
until mid-1999.'
Under the commiss1on syslem, nobody who rups for office has to JXII
their fingerprints on the shutdowns. The seven-member panel does that, m
take it or leave it fmdings that can bnly be vef.Oed, not revised.
On a TV call-in program afler the report was issued, Courter said, yes,
Congress was elecied to make decisions lik~ those. ·:But Con~ess in its
'wiSdom, if you want to use the term, recogniZed that 11 was msutuuonally
paralyzed .... ·
• , 1,.:'There was always a member that would block the_wh~le thing in order
to mal&lt;e -sure that their own home town or ... diStriCt or state was
protected."
Courter .a New Jersey House member before he ran for governor and
lost m'1WO, said neither politics nor pressures figured in the decisions h'/is
panel made. "We didn't cave in to anybody," he said, but dealt wi
numbers and defense needs, 1empered at times by the economic impact o
shutdo'l'n-cities. .
While he has called the responsibility horrible , he also said it is
satisfying to run a government operation that really docs what it is
supposed to do: Courter has been cbainnan of the commission twice now,
and he sounds mterested m domg 11 agam m 1995.
c
That round will be even more difficult, he said, because the obvious
shutdown choices were made earlier, and " the decisions become a closer
call" w1th each set.
• Cities and states are organizing to defend th~tr bases, deploying
lawyers accountants and public relations operations, with congressional
allies td help. "They're planing and planning right now 10 do things so
their bases arc not chosen in 1995;" Courter said.
In the meanuine, the political task is 10 ease the pain of the closin~s
already set, seeking to put old military bases w new c1vilian uses that w1ll
save jobs.
Clinton set about that task by announctng a $5 billion, five-year
program to help offset the_ impact of ba~7 closmgs. ~nvironment~!
cleanups will cost about $2 b1lhon, he S8ld, because that s a huge deal
and a major obstacle in trymg to put Conner bases 10 ~o~merctal use . .
The president acknowledged a week ago that he d1dn t have "a senous
program for defense conversion," bui said he was working on it. On a fast
tmelc, apparen~y. since the base closing pan of hi&amp;plan was ready when
he signed off Fnday on the shutdown list.
Then again, it may not be as striking as the number sounds. ''The whole
- $5 billion that lhe president talked about IS already m some proposal or
another," Defense Secretary Les Aspin said. "So lhis is not an addition."

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1993Aceu-Westher, lne.

-----Weather---South-Central Ohio
- Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the low 70s. Chalice of rain 20
.percent. Thursday, partly sunny,
hot and humid. High, 90-95.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

LONDON (AP)
The
unprecedented growth in migration
"could become the human crisis of
our age," the U.N. Population
Fund said today.
.
People are moving from rural
areas to Cities on a scale unknown
in history, and more than ' 100 .,.
million migrants have left their
home countries in search of a better
hfe, the fund's annual State of
World Population repon said.
"Migration has always been a
feature of development," the report
said, "b.{lhoday's migrants are
· pushing into territory occupied by
others."
ln world uade, the $66 billion in
remittances sent each year from
workers overseas to their families
at home are second in value only to
oil exports, the report said.
Yet the movement of millions of
people annually is now straining

Letters to the editor
Say No to Drugs
Ed1tor,
I started experimenting WIth drugs and staying alcohol and drug free
and alcohol when I was in my early isnt' hard because I enjoy being in
teens. I was the 1970s and I began to control. I only wish I know then what
live a care-free life only to have it I know now. In almost every case
catch up wilh me in ways I never where .someone is arrested or even
1magined. Soon I found myself los- sent to prison drug$ and/or alcohol
mg control so I quickly sought pro- were in someway involved. The body
fessional help . .1 spent the next 12 and mind are too precious to abuse.
years in and out of psychiatriC hospi- Just say no becau,sc it isn't worth iL
tals and clinics. I spent the last three
Very truly yours,
years in prison. Last ~ummer, after
Inmate
Jose' Scott
years of unneccessary suffering that
Fonnerly of Pomeroy
could have been avmded,l decided to
Age 36
take control of my life. It wasn't easy

All gays are not weirdoes

.

i'

Editor,
On June 29 two counties and four
cities in Oregon voted to forbid
c1vil ·rights protection for gay
people . It sent a message to
employers , landlords and others
that it's legal to fire, evict or
otherwise discriminate against gays
for no other reason.
Who can blame people for voting
this way, when the press coverage
of Gay Pride Week always shows
men sashaying around in wigs,
dresses, chaps and harnesses? The
press ignores 99 percent of the
crowd that is respectable and
nonnal and focuses on the strange.
I'm a 40-year-old gay
,, professional
wbo has been in a
monogamous relationship for 12
years. I ~ringe when '- se~ the
bizarre anucs of a small mmonty of
• the homosexual community shown
on television.
I refer to the effeminate, limp-

hotli industrialized and developing
With an estimated 100 million
international migrants worldwide,
countries, the fund concluded.
"Concern with migration extends the proportion of people living
from developing countries, faced outside their country of birth
with bursting cities and a neglected approaches 2 percent of the world's
rural sector, to industrialized population and will grow, the fund
countries, faced with the potential said.
That total includes an estimated
for an uncontrollable tide of people
from poorer countries,'' the report 37 million people who have fled
violence, drought, en!ltironmenial
said.
deslruction
and Olhef disasters, the
But pressures encouraging
report
said.
_
migration are growing.
Global
media
also
continue
to
According to the United Nations,
lure
migrants
to
richer
countries.
rural poverty, high fertility and
environmental deterioration the fund said,
continue to drive 20 million to 30 · As these pressures increase,
million of the world's poorest however, it said "the options for
people annually to towns and cities. migrants become more limited"
By the year 2000, the repon said, because cities in their owp .
90 percent of the poorest in Lati_n countries are bulging, and' many
America and the Canbbean will be indusb1ahzed nations are shutting
city -dwellers, along with 40 their gates.
The. result is .an "atmosphere of
percent in Africa and 45 percent in
crisis," the fund said.
Asia.

•

Fed meets to plan
monetary . strategy ,
By DAVE SKIDMORE

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal
Reserve policy makers once keen
to hike interest rates probably will
hold off in the face of new
evidence that economic growth
paused in June, analysts say.
The Fed· s key policy making
group, the Federal Open Market
Committee, was to meet behind
closed doors today and Wednesday
to shape its monetary strategy for
the rest of the year.
At its last meeting on May 18,
the committee shifted from a
"neutral" policy stance to one
biased toward nudgmg rates h1gher,
according to published reports.
However, it never actually raised
rates, and now many economists
believe that won't happen unul the
end of lhis year at the earliest.
Recent statistical reports show
inflation pressures abating and
suggest the economy entered a bit
of a lull in June -conditions that
do not argue for higher rates.
"There is nothing on the
immediate horizon. meaning the
next month or two, that would
cause the Fed !O tighten ," said
economist Stuart G. Hoffman of
PNC Bank Corp. in Pittsburgh.
"But .. . there will be upward
pressure on short-term rates
developing sometime in the fourth
quarter."
Consumer prices rose just 0.1
percent in May , a third of "the
average monthly increase during
the ftrsl four months of the year.
In June, unemployment edged up
to 7 percent from 6.9 percent.
Consumer confidence, according to
a Conference Boar~ sw:vey, shpped

wristed . .nasal-vmced queens who
jump in front of the camera and
make a spectacle of themselves.
Those weirdoes do not represent
me or my gay friends. Moreover,
they are the reason homosexuals
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) - The
are considered freaks and "queers"
mystery of an electrician's lead
and must hide thetr sexuality.
poisoning was solved when he
~ll)all won!!_er averag!l_ Jl!lQple ar~
reluctant to give gay people their revealed he liked to ch-ew tlfe
nghts. They don't want men who plastic coaung stripped from wires.
"It's just a nervous habit, like
wear wigs, dresses and high heels
teaching their kids and joining the chewing gum or somethin~. It's
. common among electricians. ' said
Army. Who can blame them?
Every minority has its lunatic Elmer Galbraith, 48, who lives near
fringe, extremists and· nut cases Johnstown.
His case was unusual enough to
who impede progress and make life
be
documented in the June 25 issue
hard for everybody. They deny
of
Morbidijy
and Mortality Weekly
ordinary gay people the
Repon,
a
publication
of the federal
opportunity to be accepted as
Centers
for
Disease
Control and
decent conslructive members of the
Prevention
that
details
emerging
community - which we are.
health
problems.
Sincerely,
•
A routine job-related blood test
William Stosine
Iowa City, Iowa in 1991 determined the electrician

to a 10-montn tow. And
manufacturing activity, as gauged
by the Nat1onal Association of
Purchasing, suffered a third straight
decline, falling back into
recess10nary lerritory.
Meanwhile, a cut in German
interest rates last week took some
pressure off U.S. rates.
Short-term rates - which the
Fed has the most influence over have been remarkably stable. The
federal funds rate, the interest
charged between banks on
~might loans. has been 3 percent
for 10 months, and the discount
mte, wh1ch the Fed charges on 1ts
own loans, has been 3 percent for a
year.
Meanwhile, long-term rates,
wh1ch key off the bond market, ar&amp;
falling again after a temporary
increase in May. Mortgage rates
arc cheaper now than at any time in
the past 21 years.
In the face of .f@stcr growth and
an accompanying increase' in loan
demand, which economists predict
for the second half of this year,
there could be upward pressure on
both long- and short-lerm rales.
But the Fed probably will be
cautious for now because there are
too many factors that could cause
growth to fall short of expectations,
mcludmg the weak economies o(
key trading partners, Japan and
Gennany; and expected federal tax
mcreases to reduce the deficit and
expand health coverage.
· "There's an underlying impulse
for expansion in the economy but
1t's frozen and stopped in its lrncks
by all of the tax increase talk in
Washington," said economist
Qavid Jones of Aubrey G. Lanston
&amp; Co. in New York.

Electrician·gets lead poisoning
with nearly ~wo decades iQ the
trade had a lead level more than 10
times nonnal .
The--usual sources-...:... lead paint
or lead in water pipes - were
ruled out. Galbraith's wife and
child both tested normal.
Galbraith, bothered by tingling in
his fingers, had mild memory loss
and diminished mathematics skills.
After answerinj! a long list of
questions about h1s personal habits,
he mentioned his frequent chewing
of the plastic coating.
"They told me to bring in a
sample and when they tested it, it
drove the meier off the scale," he
said m a recent interview .
I

•

, Easing the pressures that drive
migrants into big cities and across
international boundaries should
become a top international priority,
it said.
"The only effective means to
reduce migration pressure over the
long term are to slow population
growth; to stim"utate economic
growth and job creatiow,at ,home, "
and promote the development of
the mdividual and the family as the
basic economic and social unit," it
said.
The world will add a re~ord­
breaking 98 million people per year
this decade, the vast majority in
Africa, Asia and Latin Amenca, it
said.
The 1993 global population of
5.57 billion is projected to increase
·to 6.25 billion in 2000, 8.5 billi. ~
in 2025 and 10 billion in 2050, the
fund said.

By The Associated Press
Hot and humid weather will
remain in the stale for the next few
days. However, showers and
thunderstorms will bring periodic
relief beginning tonight.
High temperatures will' range
from the mid-80s in the north to
around 90 far south . It will be
muggy again tonight, with lows
from 70 10 75.
Thursday will be hot and humid,

Charles Griffith
Charles E. Griffith, 69, of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, July 6,
1993, at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born on Aug. 10, 1923 in
1 Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
Rev. Edward J. and Helen Pearson
Griffith.
He was a World War II veleran
who served with the U. S. Army at
the Battle of· the Bulge in an antiaircraft battalion. He was a retired
heavy equipment operator with
1
·Mack Energy, a member of the
Shade River Lodge, F&amp;AM, and of
Hope Baptist Church in
Middleport, and an avid Ohio River
boater.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a brother,
Kenneth E. Griffith.
He is survived by his wife of 45
years, Maxine Ogdin Griffith, a
daughter, Karen Lynn Griffith,
both of Pomeroy. a brother and
sister-in-law, Gary and Juanita
Griffith of Long Bottom'; a sisterin-law and brother-in-law, Janet
" and Herbert Jones, Dublin; two
nephews, D_avid Griffith, Bodlcins,
and Keith Jones, Dublin, a niece,
Connie Doss, Plain City; two great
nieces,.-.d one great-nephew.
• Funeral services will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Hope Baptist
Church. The Rev. David Bryan will
officiate and burial will be in
Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the Fisher
· Funeral Home in Middleport
Thursday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m., and at the church one hour
prior to services. Masonic rites will
be held at the funeral home
Thursday,at 8:30p.m.

~~~U((,
~~
C 11M Dr MIA. tnc.

Ap_1.,(e announces 2,500 layoffs
popular Mactntosh pe'rsonal
computers to multimedia and
handheld machines.
The company will account for the
restructuring costs in its third
quarter, which ended on June 25.
It currently employs about
16,000 people.
In the second quarter that ended
March 26, Apple's revenue was up
15 percent compared with the
previous year but profit was down
17 percent because of lower pricing
for its personal compulers.

The Daily S~ntinel
CUSPS11J....)

P\Jblllhed e.,cry af&amp;eraoon, Monday lhtouah
Fnday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohto by the
otuo Valley PubhJhlna CompanytMultlmeclla
Inc .• Pomeroy, Ohio .45169, Pb . 992·~156.

Ohioans support limits ·on smoking
CINCINNATI (AP)'- Eightyfive percent of Ohioans contacted
for a statewide survey supported
restrictions on smoking in public
places, the Ohio Poll reported.
The result was an increase from
the 78 percent who favored
smoking restrictions in February
1986, the poll reponed Monday.
F1fteen percent of those surveyed
said lhl\t smokers have the right to
smoke without restrictions in
public if they desire.
The University of Cincinnati's
Institute for Policy Research
interviewed 816 adults by
telephone May 3-14. The
university and The Cincinnati Post
sponsored the poll.
Among sm,•'cers, 71 percent
favored restrictions on smoking in
public. But their support was ,less
than among former smokers (90
percent) and those who never
smoked (90 percent).

'I

Sceood cl• polbaC paid at Pomeroy. Ohto
Memb«: Tbe AUoclated Preu, ud lhe Ohio

In 95 of 100 cases, the poll has
an error margin of plus or minus
3.4 percentage points.
Brown County tobacco grower
Bill Preffer said he supports
smoking restrictions in public
places, but not an outright ban.
"I don't think there should be a
ban on smoking in any public
buil~ng,:• he said. "The smoking
secuons m restaurants are working
out just line."
·
Ahron l..eichtman, a Cincinnati
anti-smoking activist,' said he was
surprised that Ohioans were not
united against smoking in public
places.
"I'm surprised that 15 percent
feel that smokers have a right to
pollute the air with toxic
chemicals," Leichtman said.
The U.S . Environmental
Protection •Agenc y this year
concluded that second-hand smoke
emitted. by smokers and breathed
by others, could cause cancer.
I

- - Aaodotion, Notlonot AdwrtloiiiJ

RepreteDW.ive, Braabam N'ew1paper S1le1,

733 Third Avenue, New York. New YO
10017.
POSnt:ASttll. Send r.ddreu chantel to The

Daily Sentinel. 111 Cowt St., Pomeroy, OhiO

•m9.
SUISCIIIP'I10N RATES
" 87 CAlli• or Motor Roule
Ooe Wee~ -- ... ... .. .. .. ......... ... •·· ...$1.~

One Morllb................... ··· ... ·· · · ....$6
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Subleriben tot deliriq to pay the Cltfier may
remit io advance direct to The Daily Sea.tl!w:l
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No aubacriptioDI by mall permitted in •eu
where hOIDI c:II'Ti« M'Yiol ~ ~~~- ,
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13 Weeb ..................... ....................... ~23.40

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26 W.oka...... ..... .... ...... ........ . .. .. .$-45.50
52Woeka.......................................$88.40

..
- __

ORCHARD FARM, Mo. (AP)
- Bob Story takes the same road
to town he:s driven hundreds of
times, only these days he's at the
wheel of a motorboat instead of a
Ford Escort.
From the pack of his pickup,
Tom Fairchild is casting lures for
catfish weaving past submerged
street signs and cabins up to their
windows in water some threequarters of a mile inland from the
Mississippi River's usual course.
VVeeks of heavy rains have
pushed the upper Mississippi and
1ts tributaries far out of their
normal channels, replacing
livestock and crops with fish and
silt and flooding hundreds of.
homes.
The water isn't likely to recede
soon. So much water is still rolling
down the river towou:d Missouri
that the Mississippi hit record
· levels Tuesday at some Iowa
towns, and kept right ou rising.
All commercial and recreational
traffic remained indefmitely ued up
on a 436-m•le stretch from East
Dubuque, Ill., at the southern edge
of W1sconsin, to near Lock and
Dam No. 26 just norlh of SL Louis.
Hundreds of National Guardsmen
were on duty in Iowa, Illinois and.

I

- ·--- _... -.-- .
~· .

..

'

Missouri 10 help with sandbagging
and evacuations.
Story is accustomed to being
around water since his home is a
houseboat moored at Lake Center
Marina near Orchard Farm , so
unlike many people who live on
land he decided to stay put when
the river rose.
But since Saturday, he's had to
use his motorboat whenever he
leaves home.
Early Tuesday, he ferried his
wife up Washeon Road so she
could get to her job as a secretary.
He' s on vacation from his job with
a suburban St. Louis school
district.
He has seen snakes swimming by
and the carcasses of deer and cat~e
floating pasL
"The only concern tl.tat I have is
water supply," said Story, as he
loaded jugs of water into his boat.
The marina's water pumps were
shut off because of the high waler.
Fairchild, an unemployed
construction worker from St.
Charles , said "it looked like the
fish were moving so I thought I'd
come down here one day and try iL
I figured they 'd be up.here in the
ditches feeding."
Alongside him, fingers of water

from the ever-expanding ri ~er
reas:hed into soybean fields and
spilled out of roadside drainage
ditches. Around a big bend in the
river, near Peruque, Mo., rising
water on Monday broke through a
levee four miles from the
Mississippi •s normal channel.
·
Some of the worst flooding was
in Davenport, Iowa, which has no
levees or flood walls.
·
The Mississippi appeared 10 have
crested there Monday at 22 feet and
was down slightly Tuesday, But

.

Middleport court news

Fees for ·recording arid other
serv1ces at the -office of Meigs
County Recorder )i:mmogene
Hamilton have beeft increased
effective immediat,ely.
Ham1lton said that she received
notice from the Ohio Recorders
Association that the fee "for
record1ng one to two page
documents -is now $14 with $4 for

Kasich ...

Stocks

Mez"gs .announceme·nts

Hospital news

L 0ttery DUm berS

Deputies probe thefts

Divorces and
dissolutions ·

·Deputy coroner appointed

•

,,
'

7

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Local briefs---,

•

•

Eight were fined and 10 others $17 and costs, speeding; Nathaniel
forfeited bonds in the court of Pettery, Cleveland, $10 and costs,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman failure to tmnsfer registration and
Tuesday nighL
$!00 and costs, operating under
Fined were Jack F. King, Jr., suspension; Paul A. Miller,
Pomeroy. $425 and costs, w1th Rutland, $425 and costs, and three
three days in jail, physical control days in jail, physical control of a
of a motor vehicle while under the motor vehicle while under the
influence of alcohol or drugs; influence of alcohol or drugs.
Kenneth
Dwight
Jordan,
Forfeiting bonds were Marlin D.
Middleport, $25 and costs, Griffin, Gallipolis, $60, running a
disorderly manner; Greg Richards, stop sign; Melan1e Simpson,
Middleport, $25 and costs, open Racine, $52, speedmg; Milford· I .
container; Charles R. Stewart, Frederick, Racine, $51, speeding;
Bidwell, $25 and costs, open Sharon C. Werry; Hemlock Grove,
container.
$53, speedmg; Sharon L. Smith,
Shawn M. Games, Langsville, Langsville, $50, speeding; Howard
$10 and costs, litlering; Mark A. · Lee Keyser, Point Pleasant, $52,
Haley, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, speeding; Brad E. Friend, Long
driving under suspension, and $10 Bottom, $110, open containe{;
each additional page. Financial and costs, no motorcycle helmet; Mary E. Pickens, Syracuse, $60,
statement recording fees have been Rebecca Jean Terry, Middleport, running a red light; Patricia A.
Roush, Gallipolis, $50, speeding;
increased to $9, marginal notations
Charles
R. McCloud, Middleport,
to $2 and copies made in the office
$110, disorderly manner.
to $1 a sheet. ·
Continued from A-1
Other fee changes are also going camJllign and he came pretty dam
into effect and will be announced clo~ . " Kasich said.
once the schedule is received from
He pred1cted that any 'Republican
the Secretary of State.
disenchantment would fade.
Am Ele Power....... ............ JB/4
"I can remember when George
Ashland 011... ..... .... ............25 5/8
Voinovich ran against Metzenbaum
AT&amp;T.......................... .......613/4
and losL There was nobody thrilled
Bank
One........................... 56 1/8
with · George
Voinovich's
Bob
Evans
.. ....................... 18
candidacy after he lost to
Charming Shop................. .12 3/8
have a hymn sing Thursday at 7 Metzenhaum, but the pure numbers
Chmp Industries................ .13 1/2
p.m. Featured groups include The end up making it work out,"
City Holding ...................... 25 1/2
Believers, Happy Praise Singers, Kasich said.
Federal Mogul....................203/4
Conley Family, Glory Bound
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................. 41 1/2
Republican State Chairman
Singers and other groups. Pastor
Lands
End
..........................27 7/8
Margaret J. Robinson invites the Robert Bennett said he was ' Limiled Inc ....................... 20 1/8
public. Call 992·2463 for unaware of any dissatisfaction over
Multimedia Inc ................. .34 1/2
DeWine's candidacy after the loss
information.
Point Barlcorp.................... l4
to Glenn.
Dance planned
Rax RestaumnL ............... ... l/32
"I haven't heard that," Bennett
There will be a square dance
Reliance Electric ............... .l8 1/2
said. "I don't think that's going to
Fnday from !!-11 p.m. at Skateland have any bearing on their suppon.''
Robbins&amp;M yers ................. 17
in Ripley, W.Va., featuring music
Shoney's Inc ...................... IS 5/8
De Wine faces the prospect of a
by Out of the Blue.
Star Bank ........................... 35 3/4
comested primary. State Sen.
Carsbow
Wendy Inl'l... .....................14 3/8
Eugene Watts of Galloway and
The Ole Car Club of Gallipolis Bernadine Healy of Cleveland,
Worlhington Ind. ............... 29 1/4
will hold a cruise·m Saturday at former director of the National
Stock reports are tbe lO:jj
Brown's IGA and Hardware in Institutes of Health, also are
a.m. quotes provided by
Bidwell from 5-9 p.m. The top 10 considering a run.
Kemper Secunties, Inc., ol
cars or 1rucks will receive an award
Gallipolis.
•
from the management learn ofiGA.
Senate President Stanley Aronoff
Regtstration fee is $2. Top prize is of Cincinnati led half the
a set of golf clubs and bag.
Republicans in the Ohio House and
Meeting
Senale last week m backing Watts
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post for the nommation.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
No. 9053 will meet Thursday al
July 6 discharges - Thomas
7:30p.m. Members urged to atlend.
Daniel, Hershel, Maloney, Mary
Night swimming
Moore, Dorothy Carter, Reta
Night swimming will be offered
Oliver, William Parsons, Minnie
CLEVELAND (AP) - There Martin , Lucy Reeves , Kenneth
at the Middlepon Pool on Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday from 7-9 were two tickets sold naming all Knox, Joseph Johnson, Donna
p.m.
·
hve numbers drawn in Tuesday Guinther, Connie Johnson, Rose
Lodge to meet
.
night's Buckeye 5 game, and each Husk and Carl Barnett.
Pomeroy Lodge F&amp;AM Will . winning ticket is worth $100,000,
July 6 births - Mr. and Mrs .
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. al the the Ohio Lottery said.
·
Jeffrey Sanders, daughter,
Middleport Masonic Hall for work
The winning tickets were sold at Gallipolis.
in the E.A. degree. Refreshments Dairy Mart in Canfield and Baileys
w1ll be served.
Lakes General Store in Baileys
VEI'ERANS MEMORIAL
Passes available
Laices.
HOSPITAL
Middleport Pool announces
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
Tuesday admissions - Elsie
single passes for $20; family passes $696,387.
Crouser, Rutland; Luvinia
for $30. Pool parties are available.
There were 275 Buckeye 5 Hayman, Long Bouom, and Hilda
Call992-7999 for informatiol).
tickets with four of the numbers, Weber, Middlepon.
Recycle day
and each is woi'lh $250. The 8,307
Tuesday discharges - Renee
The Meigs County Litter Control tickets showing three of the Russell, Racine.
Program will hold a recycle day numbers are each worth $10, and
Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at the the 80,761 tickets showing two of
rear of lhe former Pomeroy Junior the numbers are each worlh $1.
SPRIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
High School building. Items which
446 ·4524
can be donated are newspapers,
INIGAIN
glass containers, cardboard, all
kinds of cans. No. I and No . 2
plastic; and aluminum mixed. Call '
The following marriage licenses
992-6360 for infonnation.
were reeenily issued in the Meigs
Services set
Weekend services at Danville County Probate Court of Judge
Church of Christ 'l'ill be Saturday Robert Buck.
Receiving a license were: Todd
at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, Alexander Ackerman, 22, and
W.Va., will be speakeL Public · Lorena Faye Ackerman, 23, both of
Pomeroy_; Mark Anthony Mayes,
invited.
26, and April Denise Cund1ff, 25,
Dance planned
There will be a dance at the both of Middleport; Shawn Allen
Durst, 20, and Jennifer Lynn
Ru~and American Legion Hall on
Saturday from 9 p.m. to ·1 a.m. Werry, 19, both of Pomeroy; Bruce
Music will be provided by Pure Larry Rey, 31, and Kathy Jean
Clonch, 25, both of Richmond,
County. Public
. invited.
Mich.

and scattered thunderstorms will ..
develop again. Highs will range
from 85 10 90 in the norlh and 90 10
95, soulh.
Meeting to be beld
The record high temperature for
The DAY and Ladies Auxiliary
this dale at the Columbus weather will a meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at
station was 100 in 1988. The the hall, 124 Butternut Avenue,
record low was 48 in 1983.
Pomeroy. Dinner will be served
Sunset today will be at 9:03 p.m.
following the meeting.
Sunrise Thursday will be at 6:11
Swimming party
a.m.
Southern Local varsity and
reserve softball and baseball
players and family members will
have a swimming party at London
Pool, Symcuse, Friday from 7:30 to
9:30p.m.
Robert Harbrecht
Hymn sing
A hymn sing will be held
Saturday night at 7 p.m. at the
Robert F. Harbrecht, 71, of
Clifton Tabernacle in WestWorlhington, died Monday, July 5,
Virginia. Gospel singers are
1993 in Columbus.
invited. A free will offering will be
Born in Pomeroy, he was the son
of the late Raymond and Louise
taken.
Dance
Harbrechl of Mulberry Avenue,
A dance will be held at the
Pomeroy.
Rutland American Legion hall
He is survived by his wife,
Saturday from 9 p.m. to I a.m .
Margaret E. McCallum Harbrecht;
Music will be by Pure Country and
sons, Robert M. (Sandra) and
Then Some. the public is mvited to
Thom~s 1 A. all of Worthington;
daughter, Mary Louise (Robert)
attend.
To meet
Harman, grandsons, Robert
The Southern High Athletic
Thomas and Benjamin Eddy, all of
Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7
Perrysburg; brother, Dr. Phil
p.m. at the high school. New
(Terry) Harbrecht of Louisville,
Ky.; nephews, Dr. Jeffrey (Mary)
officers will be elected.
Reunion to be held
Harbrecht, Dr. Brian (Kathryn)
The
Cundiff
family reunion will
Harbrecht and Grant Harbrech t;
be
held
July
17
at Tar Hollow State
nieces
Valerie
(Dean)
Park
beginning
at 9 a.m. All
McNaughton, Barbara (Mitchell)
Cundiff
descendants
are invited to
Gruerian, and Carol Leonard.
atlend. Further information may be
He was a decomted World War II
obtained from Charlie Cundiff,
Army Air Corps veteran and
614-367-7001.
former prisoner of war. He
Family reunion
graduated from Pomeroy High
The Theiss {amity reunion will
School in 1940 and from The Ohio
be held Sunday at Star Mill Park,
Stale University in 1947. At Ohio
State he was a member of Beta Racine . There will be potluck
dinner at 12:30 p.m.; pictures,
Gamma Sigma and Beta Alpha Psi
awards and family reports at I :30
honoraries, the OSU .Yarsity
p.m.; the Don Ewing band at 2:30
Tennis Team, and Varsjty 0. He
p.m. along with gtrls and boys ball
retired ·from Battelle afler 37 years
as a financial executive. A certified games. Those attending are asked
to take ball gloves, food, and lawn
public accountant, he was awarded
chairs.
the Gold Medal for the highest
Picnic planned
score in Ohio on the CPA
Modern
Woodmen of America
examination.
Camp
7230
is sponsoring a
His numerous professional
community
serv1ce
recogmtion
associations included Financial
picnic
on
Sunday
'
at
12:30
p.m. at
Executives Institute (president,
the
northbound
park
on
Route
33
Central Ohio Chapter and National
Committee on government near Darwin. Mrs. Sara Cullums,
business), National Association of Mrs. Helen M. Quivey and J.
Accountants (president, Columbus Hilber Quivey will be recoginized
Chapter and National Director), for their service to the community.
Nauonal Security Industrial Games will be played and there
Association, Columbus Controllers will be music.
Hymn sing
Club and the Management Training
The
Believers
Fellowship
Program instructor at Capital
Ministry,
Mechamc
Street, will
University. He also served on the
first Liltle Hoover Commission for
the state of Qhio.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and r - - - - 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday at the
Continued from page 1
Rutherford Corbin Chapel, 5)5
High St., Worthington. Private
porlhbound vehi~lc was lrnvelin!l at an apparent high rale of speed
memorial services will be held
and lost control as it crested a h1ll. The vehicle skidded off the left
Friday. In lieu of flowe_rs, the
side of the roadway, knocked down a small tree and struck the
family requests contnbuuons be
right-front edge of a parked 1978 Ford truck owned by Randy
made to the Arthur G. James
Arnold, causing moderate damage. and then continued on.
Cancer Hospital and Research
Center, The Ohio State U1.1iversity,
2500 Kenny Road, Columbus.
Deputies o'r the Meigs County Sh"c riff's Department are
investigating two reponed thefts.
,
Paula Abel, Dexter, reported Tuesday mght that sometime
between noon and 8 p.m. her trailer was entered and several ilems
were ·stolen. Accordmg to the repon, Abel claimed a television,
. videocassetle recorder, boom box, Nintendo, fans, hair dryer, BB
guns and fiShing poles were stolen.
Tuesday morning, the sheriffs of{ice was notified that the Pick
In the Meigs County Court of
and Shovel carry out near Salem Center had been entered the
Common Pleas, Larry Sherman
previous night and 200 cartons of cigarettes, seven 10 12 packs of
,Heidllr - gta11ted ~ divorce on
beer and 20 sandwiches were stolen.
.
· ,....lit ·frOm Stephanie L.
Hoschar.
In addition, the following were
granted dissolutions: Royce A.
Dr. James Witherell M.D., Pomeroy, was appointed deputy
Bissell and Amy Jo Bissell, and
coroner June 30 in the Mj:igs County Court of Common Pleas by
Carolyn Elaine Gilkerson and
Judge Fred W. Crow ill.
&gt;·
Charles Edward Gilkerson.
•

because of more heavy rain in
Iowa, WiscQnsin and Minnesota. it
was expected to rise again, cresting
even hrgher Wednesday at 22.4
feet, just short of the record 22.5
feet set in 1965.
Downstream from Davenport, the
river hit a record 22.5 feet Tuesday
at Burlington, l.ilwa, and was
expected to climb another foot by
Friday. It also hit a record 23.8 feet
at Keokuk, Iowa, with an
additional 2.7 feet expected by
Friday.

Recording fees to increase

--Area deaths

Berry's World

CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) Apple Computer Inc. plans to lay
off about 2,500 people, or· more
than 15 percent of its worldwide
work force.
The reduction will take place
over the next 12 months, the
company said today. Most layoffs
will" occur this month.
The layoffs of workers. including
some temporary employees, are
pan of a long awaited restructuring
Apple says is aimed at maintaining
profitability as it broadens from its

Extended foretast
Friday through Sun~y: .
Continued hot and huiDld With a
daily chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows 70-75. Highs
from lhe upper 80s to mid-90s.

Heat and humidity
to stick around

People migrating on unprecedented scale,- report_says

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 7, 1993

I\

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!~~D!•~·~the~~~~~!!S~en~t~lne~I--~--~--~----------------.!P~om~~~Y=!M~Idp~le~po~rt~,O~h~~------------~----------------~W~ed~ne~~~
- ~t~-u~~l7~-·~1!~~ "

Rioters battle security forces; at leaSt 11 deaths
LAGOS, Niaega ~AP) balancing refrigerators and
of a truck and drove away.
Rioters foualrot pohce and
Other wilnesses satd five people
cookers on wheelbarrows, and
soldietJ n-lly lllld at least II
pushing supennarlret carts filled
died.
people were reported killed as
In other incidents, witnesses
withfood.
r
tens of thousandS of people set
The protesta were the first
and journalista said a mob
fires and blocked· ro11ds to
burned a taxi driver to deatll
serious unrest since June 16,
demaod an end to military
after he tried to crash through a
when Babangida abruptly
dict$nhip.
human chain and killed a youth;
- voided ICIUits of the election.
't It was the first report of deaths
police fatally shot a man as
Babangida met with leaders of ·
since residents of Nigeria's
people looted a supermarket; a
the country's two political .
largest citY began demonstrating . soldier shot a man to death at a
parties late Moodily, but they
M(!nday to pressure the
blocked bridge; and JfOiice
were unable to agree on how to
killed a man in a stone-tbrowing
government to recognize the
resolve the crisis in this nation
annulled June 12 presidential
crowd.
of 88 .5 million peopl~. the
At least one policeman was
election. that was to end a ·
world's most populous black
-·clubbed to death Tuesday,
decade of miliwy rule;
· countty.
·
witnesses said. In addition, a
The man widely believed to
On Tuesday, Abiola said
police sergeant beaten by
have won the election,
Babangida gave them an
protesters Monday died T~y
businessman Moshood K.O.
ullimatum to accept new
Abiola, appealed to people to
elections on July 31 , or he
at Lagos General Hospital.
Crowds of demonstrators
would dissolve all the
resist the dictatorship of Gen.
gathered at bus terminals .
democratic institutions set up
Ibrahim Babangida and, ignore
chanting, "The military is
last year, including the senate
an ultimatum threatening to
dead!" Other protesters built
and national assembly, and ·
dissolve the national assembly.
barricades of buses. cars and
repl~c.e th~m with an !nterim .
"Ignore this ll)test threat by
tires and set them on fire -to
admm1strauon to orgaruze new
the outgoing miliwy .president
block all bridges leading from · elections,
'
.
... and damn the consequences,"
Lagos' three main residential
Nduka Irabor, a spokesman
Abiola said in a statement.
islands to the commercial
for the government, said the
The Pan-African News
idea was just an option
district on the mainland.
Agency said soldiers killed
All major markets, shops,
Baban~da put to the politicians.
several rioters who set a truck
Criucs said it was another
banks and businesses were
on fire in Ikoyi, a well-to-do
closed and shuttered, but looters
ploy in a series of Babangida' s
neighborhood of Lagos. The
broke into dozens of stores for a
maneuvers to hold on to power.
agency, set up by the
He has scrapped timetables for a
second day. People hurried
Organization of African Unity,
return to civilian rule several
through streets
hefting
quoted witnesses as saying the
on
their
heads,
televisions
times the past few years.
troops piled bodies in the back

•

'

"

surveillance cameras at two
''But if dialogue goes on in
missile-testing sites. The
· vain, we have to take another
departure of the U.N. team has
stand," Saleh said throu~h an
increased fears in Baghdad that
int~:~rpreter . "Dealing w11I be
the Gulf War allies might
difficult between us and the
launch a punitive auack to force
United Nations because there
Iraq to comply.
will be a feeling inside us of
Speaking to The Associated
cruel U.N. injustice."
Press on the eve of an
After the Gulf War coalition
emergency meeting of the
drove Iraq from Kuwait in 1991,
National Assembly, Speaker
the U.N. Security Council
Saadi Mehdi Saleh said; "It is
ordered · the destruction of
not in. our interest, or in the . Saddam Hussein's ballistic
interest of the United Nations,
missiles, chemical and
or in the interest of the region to
biological arsenals and nuclear
make the matter reach the slage
weapons program.
The council also ordered longof clashes."

...

that.negotiators must flCSt decide
the type o( government to
replace white rule. The ANC, without offering
evidence, claimed that the recent
violence was orchestrated by
forces opposed to the multiracial
elections.
"It is an attempt to blackmail
the countty, with the blood of
our people, into delaying the
advent of democracy," the ANC
said. .
But Katlehong and Tokoza
have often descended into

I

,,

now.''

'•

"

.. ''

.

.." ,
.~ i

TuesdaJ. Rl8tJ.1 cOatiaaed far a IKODd daJ, Ia
protest or last moath'a presldeatlal electloa .
renlta bJ aUitary Gea. Ibrahim Baban1lda.

emergency session Wednesday.
The speaker, wearing the
ruling Baath Party's olive green
uniform, said Iraq was reaching
a point where it may bave no
choice but to react.
''The members of the
National Assembly Me angry,"
he said. "They are saying they
have sacrificed everything,· but
we have gained nothing in .
relllm.
"The t)nited Nations should
not be angry with Iraq, but in
fact Iraq should be angry with
the U.N," be ·said, echoing the
feeling of many Iraqis.

term monitoring to prevent Iraq
from reviving iu weapons
programs. But Iraq has not
agreed to the monitoring plan,
insisting that a trade embargo,
imposed after the August 1990
invasion of Kuwait, be lifted
flfSt
The Security Council adopted
a resolution last month saying
there would be "senous
consequences" for Iraq if it
continued to reject the
monitoring.
.After the U.N. inspectors left
Monday, Saleh summoned the
250-member house to an

violence, and it was not clear
whether the election date had
any role in igniting the latest
eruption.
·
Inkatha spokesman Themba
Khoza on Tuesday said ANC
supporters had attacked Inkatha
supporters, and that Zulu
speakers were being targeted
e~l'n if they were not'' affiliated
With Inkatha.
With the current level of
violence, it would be difficult, if
not impossible,' to hold fair
elections. In areas controlled by

'

.•..
•. I

Aslccd wbat Iraq might do, he
said: "To begin with, we can
stop dealing with the United
Nations and ils commission." . . ,
The reference was to the U.N.
Special Commission that Is J
supervising the elimination of
Iraq's ·weapons of mass
· destruction.
.,
The standoff with the United
Nations follows close upon a
U.S. missile allact on Baahdad,
ordered in retaliation for an
alleged Iraqi plot to ldll former
President Bush duriJig his visit
to Kuwait in April. Iraq has
denie~ t~e exist~nce_ of an . ·.J
a!ISBSStnaliOn consptraey.

Death toll passes 125 _in latest wave of street fighting
KATLEHONG, South Africa
when black and white
(AP) - An outburst of political
negotiators set April 27, 1994,
fighting in two black toWliships
as the date for South Africa's
·• killed dozens of people
first elections fncluding the
black majority.
.Tuesday, a $rim reminder of
how difficult 11 wiU be for South
Most of the township fighting
Africa to hold democratic
involved supporters of the
elections.
African National Congress and
After overnight baules, police
the Zulu-dominated Inkatha
said at least 45 people had been
Freedom Party, the nation's two
killed in Tokoza and Katklhong, - - leading black groups and bitter
two impoverished townships
rivals for power.
southeast of Johannesburg.
·
lnkatha was one of six groups
Nationwide, more than 125
that opposed setting the election
blacks have died since Friday,
date at Friday's talks, arguing

By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) -'-·Drew Bledsoe
needs time to ~et used to his
overnight rise to nches, just as he'D
need patience before New England
Patriots coach Bill Parcells lets him
quarterback the .team.
He hopes the secorili adjusbnent
comes sooner than the flfSt
"Money doesn't bring status,"
the top choice in April's NFL draft
said Tuesday after signing a six·
rear contracL "A big goal of mine
1S to chan~e as little as possible
because I m pretty happy right

•'

V FOR VICTOR'f - A Nigerln pollee
offiCer in aa armored car returu the ''V'' 'sip
givea by protesters _on the atreets of Lagos

·

either the ANC or Inkatha
17. ·'That is why we are
suffering."
supporters, opponents would
risk attack if they tried to
The fiercest fighting took
campaign on a rival's turf. .
place overnight, and the
Law and Order Minister
townships were relatively calm
Hernus Kriel said the two
Tuesday. Remnants of street
groups must ~ urgent ste~ to
barricades lllld burned-out hullcs
of cars· lliid trucks indicated the
control their followers.
unrest of JireVIOus days. ' ;
·,.
said ,criminal gan'g's were ·'
expiOifing the situation ·to rob
Groups of youths, some
and loot.
holding Molotov cocktails,
· demanded identification from
Angry youths in Katlehong
strangets in passing vehicles.
· blamed the fighting on ~dent
F.W. de Klerk, aca•sing him of ·
Tui vans that usually clog
township streets were out. of
pitting blacks against each
other. ·
sight, and police and soldiers
"De Klerk is ruling to
patrolled in armored vehicles.
divide," said Samuel Nhlapo,

antso

''
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Mail ~ombsfeared, ~.-·
but universities don't :
..
want to--overreact
-- - ..

LOS ANGELES (AP) - When . r.olice ' Sgt. David Isley. ~
Professor Ju'an Enrique ·Luco
'Obviously, there's a bomber out'"
received a heavily padded brown there hurting people, and we never ,
envelope with an unfamiliar return tell anybody not to call tis.''
address in his mail, he immediately
Campus police have warned · '
telephoned police. They called in employees to .screen mail more ' r'
the bomb squad.
.
carefully. And nervous worker~ · ·
The package was taken to a have reported suspicious packages
soccer f~eld and X-rayed.
that turn out to contain books, 1No bomb was found, just a school re)XIU and videos.
'
videotape from one of Luco's
Nobody wants 10 oveneact
en$ineerinf . students at the
"I guess I'm one of those all-too- '
" 'd _ P. .AIIman, .,·
Umversity o California, San Diego , calm people,S81
as pari of a project
a computer pro~rammcr at the ,•
The scare wu one of four at the University of California, Berkeley. '
school since June, when two "If the pac~ is tickinlfi'm not •
researchers at other -universities going to open 1t"
'
were maimed by mail bombs.
The FBI linbd the eJI.plosions to
a suspect believed responsible for
12.other bombs since 1978, most at
universities and .computer stores.
One perSon wu killed and 21 were
injured in the 12 eJ~.plosions.
For university ot1i'cials, the June
.,
explosions signaled the return of
.,
tb~ bomber they thought had
di~appeared six years ago, when
the string_ of unsolved auacks
stopped,
''there's just a heightened sense
of awareness,'' said UC San Diego

By MIKE HARRIS
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
Much to NASCAR's
disappointment, driver Ken
Schrader and car owner Joe
Hendrick have dodged a bullet.
.
A three-member panel lifted their'
,four-race suspensions Tuesday,
deciding instead to fine Schrader
and Hendrick $5,000 each for using
an illegal carburetor during
qualifying last weekend's Pepsi

Need Relief
From The
Heat?

way

Mississippi River crested In Muscatine late Sunday and Is bow·
slowly receding. (AP)
·
.

Australian pageant organizers
say men can enter but not win
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) The organizers of a national
beauty pageant said ruesday
that men can enter the contest
but won't be allowed to win,
Miss Australia contest
officials changed the rules after
a man, Damian Taylor, 24, won
a local contest last month and
applied to enter the national

pageanL

Organizers of the' contest. in
Taylor's hometown of Tweeds

Heads, 370 miles north of
Sydney, welcomed his entry and
even changed the event's name
from the Miss Wintersun Quest
to the Wintersun Quest
But the Spastic Center, which
has run the Miss Australil) Quest
for 40 years io raillC funds for its
work with disabled people, was
less accommodating.
"There will be no male
entrant~ awarded the title
oLMiss Australili," the center

said in a statement
As part of the contest's
conditions, entranta .are obli(!ed
to raise money for the chanty.
"It is not a matter of equal
opportunity. -but what will serve
the ~t interests of the Spastic
Center and its clienta in the long
term," the statement said.
;· The statement said Taylor and '
other males will be allowed 'to
enter in a special category that
will permit them to take part in
fund-raising.

DAIRY VALLEY
FISH TAIL

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MON.·SUN. 10:00 AM-10:00 PM •

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'

The contract ''is the heaviest
commitment that a team has ever
made" to a draft choice, said Leigh
Steinberg, Bledsoe's agent
Sfeinberg said the d~I. signed
nine days before training camp, 1$
. worth an average of $2.48 million
per year, placing its value at $14.88 ,
million, with a $4.5 million signing
bonus was paid up front.
.
P~~~tells,
who
was
not
at
the
news
,. conference, has said he "won't
thiuw him to the wolves" by using
Bledsoe before he is reiuly.
The quarterback, who left
Washington State .after his junior
year, said he wants to make a
speedy transition to the pro game,
then leave it up to Parcells and
offensive coordinator Ray Perkins
to decide "when I'm ready to make
a contribution."
After attending camps with other
Patriots rookies, Bledsoe said,
"I'm pretty comfortable (with the
offense). ·rt•s not mine yet . I
haven't gotten to the point where I
think about the language of the
offense."
Nor does he speak the language
of affluence.
Before the news conference, he
bought a red and blue tie for his.
powder blue shirt. But the jeans he
wore showed his recent status as a ·
21-year-old college student.
·So did his plans for the rest of the
day.
· rBledsoe ·had been driving his
Chevrolet Suburban across country
from Washington state with three
friends when he was interrupted in
South Dakota with word the
agreement was near.
He flew to Boston Monday night,
but was eager to rejoin his friends
in Chicago 10 complete the journey
to his new hometown.
"I'll meet them there, probably
find the wreckage (of the truck) on
the side of the road,'' he jOked.
"There's no way I can say
(wealth) dQesn' t change you as. a
person, because there is a great
/ ' deal of responsibility to young
people," he said. "I'm still going
to be the same guy" to his parents .
and friends.
Bledsoe said he plans to set up ·a
scholarship at Washington State
and help pay for a new track at his
_high school. Bledsoe also intends
to contribute $5,000 for each
Patriot win -to a Boston charity,
Steinberg said.
"This gives me the opportunity
to give something back. It's a
unique position for someone who is
21 years old to be in," he said.
New England was 2-14 last year
and had four different starting
quarterbacks - Hugh Millen,
Tommy Hodson, Scott Zolak, and .
Jeff Carlson. After drafting
Bledsoe, New England traded .
Millen to Dallas.
·
Bledsoe's ' strong arm and
intelligence swayed Parcells to
· draft him over Notre Dame
quarterback Rick Mirer, taken by
Seattle with the second pick.
-

Independent
panel reverses
suspension for
owner, driver

E
. ri
•c

FLOODED STREETS - Two people make their
by boat
down nooded Mississippi Drive Tuesday in Muscatjne, Iowa. Tbe

"

•

••

,

The Dally Senti

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio

Bledsoe signs
•
.szx-year
pact
.with Patriots

.

Iraq could stop dealing with -U.N., parliament speaker says
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) Thespeljkeroflraq'sparliament
said Tuesday that Baghdad may
stop cooperating with the United
Nations on weapons destruction
unless a dispute over monitoring
missile sites is resolved soon.
If the Iraqi govemment acts
on that threat, it would be
blatantly violating Gulf War
cease-fire accords requiring
·or
Iraq's
elimination
nonconveittional weapons.
A team of U.N. inspectors
pulled out of Iraq on Monday to
protest Baghdad's refusal to
permit
installation
of

Wedneeday, July 7, 1993

-

The suspensions were scheduled
to start with Sunday's race at
Loudon, N.H .. but a National Stock
Car Racing Commission panel
reversed·the ruling after listening to
arguments from Winston C.up
director Gary Nelson, who Iev1ed
the suspensions, as well as
Schrader and other team
representatives.
"We feel NASCAR was fair and
just, and we look forward to
focusing on the remamder of the
Winston Cup season," Schrader
said.
NASCAR officials . were not as
pleased.
.
"We worked pretty hard to make
this one stick," spokesman-Ch1p
Williams said. "This is pretty
disappointing."
. ··
''The National Stock Car Racing
Commission is totally autonomous.
In this case, we really would bave
liked it if it wasn't."
·

•

-------.
-...

Capta1n Smith's
Crunch
Ice
Pork
Cereal
Cream
Chops.

Your Choice of Flavors

Sirloin Cutlets
BONELESS

SCOOP UP THE

15 to

SAVINGS 1/Z

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16 oz. Box

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SpaghettiOs
Maxwell
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With Cheese ·ln
House
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Limit 6 Cans Per Customer

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Big ~ear Wiener or

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act.

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Ultra Cuddles Diapers ••

Chi Chi Salsas
16 ....

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Fried Chicken

8 Pieces
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16 Pieces · 24 Pieces

1179
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..

~··

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Wednelday, July 7, .199a

Wec:tnelday, July 7, 1893

11

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••

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Specials

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UMIT 1 WITH COUPON AND $10 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
OFFER VAUD 7/4193 thru

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SEALTEST

OUNGE
JUICE_

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W1

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PLASTIC .
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GALLON

FOODI_Arm SPEC IAL COUPON

"I've .l!ev~r had this many ~rcak: that game open a c~ple of
OP,P.Ortumues m the pasl," Myers umes. I ~~ sorry to seed uhanzman
sa,id..
·
go. Bautista s fork~ an c ge
As for the possibility of making had_~eryone off~-"
hi .
the All-Star team, Myers !!Ud. "l'!f!
RiJ&lt;? was taggc:d •!"' seven ts m
not a sta~ man. U I ~ake 1t, It ':':'ill the ft.rst three .mmngs, but only
be a credit to our entire buUpen.
three m the last four.
.
"I ~ad~. a.. cha.ng~. m "!Y
The .iame didn't ~uirt out. as if it mechamcs, RtJO, srud. ~ly m
would be a low-scormt aff811'.
the game I oouldn t get my )lltches
Jacob Brumfield hit his second w~ere I .wante~. I made s~!"e
homer in the Cincinnati second and' adJUSUilents, but.It was too late.
Derrick May hit his eighth in the
Maybe not 1f the Reds had
boUomofthesealllll. ·
capi!alizedontheirchances. they
Kevin Mitchell singled in the stran~ed 13 runners. Larkm had
third, got around to third and four smg~ and a walk but ~as not
scored on a wild pitch by swter mvolved_m any of the sconng. He
JoseGuzmanfora2-11ead.
THe Cubs took the lead in the
bottom. of the second when Jose
Vizcaino dodbled home a run and
then score on single by Ryne
Sandberg. _ · .,

By JOE MOOSHIL o
• ; cHICAGO (AP) - It is almost
tllat time of year - time for the
' :4:ll·Star game and the politicking
· !l,at goes with it.
_
· .
/'Manager Jim Lefebvre of the
• ithicago Cubs casts his vote for
~ ~lief ace Randy Myers.
' '.,,'Myers is absolutely an All·
~&gt;· Lefebvre said Tuesday night
¥ei Myers came in to save a 3·2
~iitctory that broke the Cincinnati
~· four-game winning strealc ·
' at was Myers' 26th save in.28
~rtunities, as he quickly made
: !rends for a_ blown save at
:t!Oiorado .last Saturday night.
'Jf 'He's No. 1, he's having a
'tlntastic season," Lefebvre said.
:, e had a lillie. trouble in
lorado the other mght but those
.' '· gs_happen."
.
-~ f he stays healthy, Myers should
' ass his career high of 38 saves
_~tdrlasest. season with the San Diego
_~
·
· :Myers appeared especially
jll)mped up in his first ouiUlg since
.. liis loss at Colorado. He took over
!_'$)r Bob Scanlan with runners on
. fttst and third and struck out lW
- ~orris to end the eighth inning.
~hen he fanned two of the ll'st
': tlltee batters in the ninth.
• :·"I let my team down the other
;:-JVght," Myers said. "Scan got in a
: Ur,tle trouble tonight' and I had to
:~il him out. That's my job."
. How come all the success so
. ~ickly this season?

2 LITER

aonn

-

I

Teim

I

J

1

I

WITH THIS COUPON AND THE PURCHASE OF

: 5 LB. Armour

Euttrn DMtkMI
W L Pd.

' Atiladclpltia .......... .Sl
St. Louil ............... .48
Monueal ,,..,,, .. ., .....4f.3
' Chielao....................O

1.9
34

-·

.6/15
.585

4$0

.511

40

.SOO

. Pilubiit&amp;h . 1............ 3~ ..

:

Star Canned Ham
--------- ---------- . --·-----

• Baseball • -

NATIONAL LEAGUE

I

:TURK~Y .

c

·~

I

SPRITE . . DIET or REG. :BUTTERBALL
1 •

6

ll.l
I!

.470

· IS.S

Florida ................... 36 &lt;WI . .439
New Yadr: ........ ......25 56 .309

U.l

Wlllern 01\'lllon
So.n FnncUco ........56 u ,(,{,1
Atlanta ...................4B 36 .S71
Lot AnJCieo ...........43 38 .lll
"""""" .................42 39 .519
CINCINNATI ........42 43 .494
S.n Di'lo ..............32 52 .311
' Cdondo ................2~ 53 .354

I

GB

•

I!

8

ll.l
12.5
14.5

:14

26

Tuaday's scores

San Francilco 13, Montrea15
Lot Anael" 7, Pltilaclclphial
New YOlk 9, SI.!!_I&gt;!_CF: 7

'

•

MEADOW GOLD

ICE
CREAM

1

$

PAPER
TOWELS

5 QUART PAIL

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The 1993 William "Bill"
Hubbard Memorial Little lelgue
Toumamcnt ~t underway Tuesday
evening at King Field ln Syracuse.
In the evening's first game the

Gallipolis White Solt used a big
sixth inning to defeat the
Middleport White Sox 11-6, In the
nightcap, Chester defeated the
Pomeroy Blue Jays 16-0 in a game
called after four Innings due to the
15-nm rule.
Gallipolis scored live runs on one
hit in the sixth to break: a 6-6 tie
and defeat Middleport. Gallipolis
jumped out to an early 4-0 lead in
the middle of the second. But
Middleport scored single runs in
the bottom of the secood and third
But that was all the scoring as
innings
to cut the lead to 4-2.
loser Jose Rijo (6-5) settled down.
Gallipolis
made it a 6-2 game in
Guzman was knocked out in the
fourth when Barry Larkin's single
the fourth inning on a walk, a
hit him under the left kneecap. Jose
double by Cory Pezroud aild a base
hit by Timmy Siders.
Baulista (4·2) came in and allowed
four hits in 3 113 innings.
But Middleport came storming
back to ti~ the game in the bottom
of the fourth. Rusty Stewart got the
Rijo basn 'I won since May 22
_ inning started when he launched a
and has four losses and five no·
long home run over the left field
decisions in his last nine starts.
fence. A hit batter, a walk and a
"Jose pitched good," Reds
single by Eric Toops and a
manager Davey Johnson said, ''but ·
..
Gallipolis error plated three more
he •s just pitching in tough luck. He
,, · -· runs to tie the game at.6.
hasn't won since I've been here
. In the siltth, Gallipolis took
and it's frustrating. I thought we'd
advantage of a single by Siders,
two hit batters, a walk and two
Middleport errors to break the
game open.
Siders led the winners at the plate
·with two singles. TeajDmate Bo
w....... m,~~~on
cm.a,...................42 39 . 51~
Shirley added a double and Perroud
Kontu C!ly ......... ..42 39 . .51~
added a single for the Gallipolis
2
TIP• ...........~ .....~ ...40 41 .494
Clllllomia ........ ,.... ,3~ -42 .411
3
hits. Siders was the winning pitcher
3.5
Sooale ....................40 oM .476
three hits, striking out
scattering
Ooklond .................36 43 .-4.16
s
walking
five and hit two
12,
~ , .,,. ........35 -4.1
.431
6.5
FANS 12- Middle~ White Sox pitcher Rusty Stew~ ranued
batters.
12 and tossed a rour·bltter In Tuesday night's. William (Bill)
Tlltldlly'a aeons
Rusty "Big Stew" Stewart led...
Tcnnw 5, c.'biolao 1
Hubbard Little Uape :roomament opener against tbe GaUipolis
Middleport
Douoli4,MU.-.l
with a single and an
White Sox, but tbe Galllans moved into tbe next round with an 11-6
Toa• 11, Milwwlr.eel
home
run.
Toops
added a single.
victory • (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
~ .. Kano.oi C!ly 0
Stewart. the losing pitcher, gave up
Ctlilomla 3 , - 2
Soolllo 12. New Yodt 4
four hilS, struck out 12, walked five
~ll,Otldlndl
and hit three.
In the nightcap, Chester scored
1ama
Dooniit
. . 4-4)
.. ~
nine runs in the second inning and
(l)ethaieo P·SJ, US ~.m.
rolled to a 16-0 win over the
Tcua (Brown 6-6) at Mllw~oo (Bl·
Pomeroy
.Blue Jays. The game was
- 9-1), :Z:O:'lp.m.
.
~ (Mop I·SJ ot OUI..d
called after four innings due to the
(B. Wlul-5), 3:15pm.
15 run rule. The game was played
N. . Yolk (Widtmta 1·2)' at Seattle

c

co.- N), 7:35p.m.

Pitu~ (Wakefield 4-8) 11 }bmqn

.. '
Florida (Hammond 10-4) at ColC!Odo
,
1' (Shepherd 1·3), 9:05p.m.
'

~,.'

Tbursday's games

CINCINNATI (Luebbers 1·0). at

Florida (R•PP: 0·0) at Colorado
' ~ (Loaltanie 0.1), l~ p.m.
I
Lao Aftpl• (Onta 6-7 and N'w:holt ().
~: ·· 0) at New Y edt (Telahoder 3·0 and Hill•
'"' man 0.0) (DII), l 'lOp.m.
; "'
San IJie&amp;o ((me lWril 1-1) at Man·
I . tnolll (!). - - ~-l), 7&lt;35 2"'·
, ,..
San F.randlco (Swilll~')at Phil.ldel.1 1U

. ROLL

~

O•cbon 7-S), 7:35 p.m.
Pitubul'lh (Z. Smith 0-2) It HOUIIGn
1
~ (K.Ue 9· 1), 1:05 p.m.
:~
Allanta (P. Smith 3-7) 1\ S\. Loui1 ·

I!
~

-.,•'

WASHING·TON STATE

~

(Cormier S-4), 8:35 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dlwllloft

·

BING CHERRIES

j

Tum
WLPcLGD
Toronto ..... ........... ..49 3.5 .513
NcwY ... .. ...........47 37 .560
2
...&amp;. ~it. ...................45 31 .542
3..5

t\:

:;c.- Baltun .................44 39

: a..........................42

40

.530

.s12

CLEVELAND .......40 44 . .416
Milwaukee .............33 d
.4(11

-=F~
, O::_:O::..:D=-=L==A-==N:.....:...:D=--- anct

T~unday's&amp;allltl
Oaklatd (Vm
,· ().0), 4:11\1 p.m.
't...,
S-6) 11 T"""l!o (Mom.
l · l),7:3l pJll,
OtiooF (JI. . 3-3) u Bal...... CS•t·
clitre J.3), 7:3~"'·
Mimtlall (fapud 3-10) it Milwa\lk.IIC
(B""" 5·5), ~~p.m.
Detroit (Moo~ .5-.5) at Kann• City
6-1), 1:35J''"'·
New Yodl. ~llftll !-7) u Cllitotnia ·
, (}lathiWI)' 1·1), 10:()5 p.m.

a - (l)opooa 6&lt;1) •

&lt;R.P..

cc...

A mixed golf scramble to bene"t
Joe Hill viill be held on Saturday,
July 24 at the Meigs County Golf
Cowse.
- HIU; The llf-year old son of Pat "'
and Nancy Hill of Pomeroy, is
suffering from a very rare fonn of
cancer. The tournament wiU -be a
mixed scramble with a blind draw,
The cost is $40 per golfer, which
includes cart, steak dinner and
beverages~ For mo.re information
call the Meigs County Golf Course
at 992-6312. Tee off will be at 9
a.m.

- • Transactions • Basebau

,

I

'~

Benefit golf tourney
slated for July 24

4,5
6
9
141.5

Notice is given that Cincinnati Bell Lo'ng Distance, Inc .. has filed a complaint with
the Commission seeking approval to eliminate the provision of. its larirf whi&lt;:h
provides its customers in every county in Ohio, with two free direclory assistance
call• per billing period. Any interested pcnon.r.n:n. rorporalion, or entity "who can
show good cause wby this application should not be granted should file with lbe
CommiiSion a written slatement detailing the reasons by July 26, 1993 . Unless
lhe Commis!iiion receives a written statement to that effect and an accompanying
requesl for a oral hearing in this malter,.the case will be decided on the basis of
the inronnalion contained in the application and affidavits submitted by lhe
appli&lt;:anl. Further infonnationmay be oblained byconlacting the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, 180 llasl Broad Slree~ Columbus, Ohio 43266 -0573

Baltimaro (Mouilla 9-4) It Kanan
City (Pidoanlo ...), !:35p.t!l-

l':lticaso (CuUDo 2-l), 2:20p.m.

1• ,

under threatening skies and wa5'
delayed about 20 min:utes in tbe
second innir)g because of rain.
Erie Smith fired a one-hitter to
pick up the win while w,allcing only
two. The only hit Smith gave up
was a third inning single off the bat
of C.D. Ellis. Smith was so
overpowering that all 12 out .
registered by the right bander wae
by strilre outs.
Chester jumped out to a 2.,0 lead
after one and blew it open in the
second with nine big runs. The
Raiders closed o.yt the scoring in
the third with five more runs.
Wes Crow and Smith · led a 10
hit attack for Chester with two
singles each, Matt King also had a
good game· with a double and a
single, Jason Mora and Adam
Sanders added a double each and
Mau Edwards and Dustin Huffman
· added a single each.
Shawn White was the starter and
loser for Pomeroy.
Today's .action will have
Syracuse and Pyles Wholesale
Meats from Gallipoli10 in the first
game at 6 p.m . In Wednesday's
seeond game it wiD be a battle of
the Rockies as Gallipolis and •
Racine will meer.

EGALNOTICE

Chl.clao (Fcmanlfez 9-4) at Toronto

Today'•·&amp;•ma

.1!• ,

=r•,

Botton (Viola !5·7) at Califomb

• (Ponuaa16-3), I~ p.m.
•
Athnta (Maddux 7-7) at St. Louia
• (Mtgruoo 7-7), 1'35 pm.

~

equat'ed his career high set last
season.

Gallipolis White Sox, Chester
win.in Hubbard LL Tournament

cs........ 7-1~4:0\5 p.m.

: San Dioao (B1n01 t -6) at Now YcG
, CYowoa0.11),1,40p.m,
•
• CINCINNATI (Pio&amp;h 4-9) tt Chictso
· (llibbotd H), J,l11_p.m.
• San Francilco (Brummca. 1·1) at Mon·
' llel1 (R..... Q.O), 7:35p.m.
; Los Anaelel (R. Martinez 7-4) at
1 Pltllaclelphia (Mulho11and 9-6), 7&lt;3l p.m.

HI DRI

May elttended his hitting streak
to 12 games. and his eighth homer

. ··

(Lea)' 6-3),3:35 p.m.

OtictJO 3.CINONNATI 2
Piu.butah IO, IUwton 3
ColoradO 8, Rodda 3
s. LoWJ l, lllllllll 4

.

elttended his hilling streak to 14
games.

Scorcboat"d

~

: 3 LB. SWIFT BONELESS

·cOCA·COLA

sii'Uek out Paquette before walking the fmal results wae in.
Mike Bordick-to load the bases.
"It was almost like the g•me
Rickey Henderson then hit 1 wouldn't die," Cleveland ,JIIIIll&amp;«
potential iming-ending double. play Mike Hargrove said. "The_A'1
ball to short, but second baseman kept coming back. But we deserved
Clrlos Baerga's relay throw to first to win iL '"
was a one-hopper in the dirt,
Bob Welch, terrorized by .the
scoring two runs.
Indians
thetE two seasons, lasled
Brent Gates' RBI single .o ff only three·
us innings. He $1Ye up
Derek Lilliquist pulled the A's · six runs, 1ve Clrned, on liJDC hits.
within a run.
and two wallcs. After wiMing his
The Indians upped the lea4to 8·5 first seven career decisions over
in the eighth on Paul Sorrento's Cleveland, Welch is 1-3 with a·
two-out, two-run single · off 7.19 ERA against the Iridians since
Gossage.
1991.
After trading three-run homers,

.

~

..

innings, Clevellnd rookie Albie
Felix Fennin started the winning
Lopez put tog~ a nice effort in rally with a leadoff sinsle off
his first m¥Jr Jeaaue 11ar1. He left Goose Gouase (4-4), who retire!!
with a 6·2 lead, and got a no· just two of five batters he faced: ,
decision.
,
Honman gave up an infield single
''The first thing I saw this to Kenny Loflon to set the smge lor
moming WaS Rickey Henderson's Martinez's heroics.
picture on the cover of the paper,
The A's rallied for folD' runs off
saying be's hot," LOpez said. "My Lopez and two relievers to cut the
first thought was to shut Rickey lead to 6·5 in the seventh.
down."
· Steinbach and MiJc.e Aldrete started
Henderson was hitless in five the ra.lly ·with singles. and
trips to the plate , three against Cleveland left fielder Alben BeUe
Lopez. Most of the A's were · lost Dave Henderson's line drive in
~elpless until th~ final. frenzied , the lights few an RBI double.
mrungs.
Jerry Dipoto relieved Lopez and

)Myers' relief spells 3-2 .victory for Cubs in contest vs. Reds

nas.
226Kg

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

•

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - The to come back, eomethin1 to be
&lt;iakland
Athletics played proud of," OalrJw! 111111qer Tony
tlemselves back into the AL,'Weat L1 Rossa said. "But gettin1
the hlrd way, b)' coming from behind, the other lide of il, is Jl9l
hl~d In 13 of their last IS IOIIIetbin~tobeJX1?11dof." .
lllnes.
·
The A s· tied tt in the eighth on
. r
·
e
cmetimes, getting that Clttrl run CraiJ PaQuette's three-run homer
, asking too much. On Tueaday off Jaric: Plunk (4·2), who wound
I, the A's trailed the Clevellnd !II' the wi1111e1 when Martinez hit
·
6-1 in the seventh and 8-S his fifth homer of the season with
ill the eighth and came back to tie one out in the ninth.
·
ille game, only to lose 11·8 when
"Well, we won," Plunk said.
J.inch·hitter Carlos Martinez drillcd .''This is my first blown uve. It
·It three-run homer off' Vince would be nice if it was the liSt."
. Horsman in the ninth. ,
_
Lons before the tums COIIIbined
.: "It's a spec~ mark of this team to seen 12 rims in the 1fmal' threc

~

iiiPotl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

J\'fartinez's
cJutch three-run blast helps Tribe beat A's 11-8
•

.YOU'LL IGftCI til 1111111!.
FUODL AN D SP~c IM

'

.

YOU

A-Loquo

CIDCAOO WIUTI! SOX: Activated
Ran K•±'ttJol; Clld., from die 1.5-day
diubl.. lilt. DolipaiOd Rick Wrona,
eatdtcl', few ...;.,....'"'"
CJ!VELA1'Ib INDIANS: Placed r ...

Knmc, pUcher, oa the IS-day diublod
1itt. RoeolW Alhiel.Gpez, pitdw, fnnt

Contat·Alaon olthe-'Leap
DETROIT TIOERS : Ptor&lt;llued the
canLtKt af Sean Berpnan, pileher, from
Toledo of tho International Lcaauc.
Placed Bill Kluoaer, pitdtor, '"'the 15day dilabled lilt. rctro«:tive loJuly 4.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS &lt;Placed
c~ 'YOiln&amp;o pitcher, en the 1.5-day dU·
abl8d lilt. Rec:aUod Kevin Campbell, ·
fnom T....,.. ol t1oc Pacffic c...

TUNING UP -Chester's Wes Crow may have fouled this pitch

off during the second game of the William (Bill) Hubbard Little

League Tournament in Syracuse Tuesday night against the
P0111eroy Dodgers, but be was tuning up for a two-hit evening that
~elped his team win 16-0. (Stbtinel photo by Dave Harris)

f!..tdtcr·

lMTTLB MAIUNI!RS: Ptorchoaeol.

the cont:nct of Marc Ne:wfield, fiilt .,.._
man, !rom IacboevWo ollho Soulhcrn
LNpo. OJK!aaed Bret Boone, ncond
........... 10 CtJpy ol the Padlll: C..a

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NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

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Page

8

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Wednesday, July 7, 1993

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Wednesday, J

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The Dally

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J'lyrd, defensive tackle, was_
hurt in November ~arne when he
accidentally c_o lhded with a
teammate.

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· ·. ~ruesaay.
!· ~- The Daily Express published a
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Come and Shop With the Clowns July 8th &amp;-.9th ·- 10 a.m. -4 p.m. ,
Join the Big Bend (loggers
on Vaughan's side parking
lot July 8th at 7:00 p.m.
(Thu~sday)

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Check out the Dunking Booth In
front of Vaughan's and dunk a
V~ughan's Manager or Video
Clerk July 6th and 7th, 13th and
14th, and the 17t~ from.12 noon
to 2 p.m. A man~ger will be there
from 12 noon-1 p.m. each day
and Video Clerk will be there
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Video Rental. Dunking Booth is
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Paleontologists working to
uncover dinosaur skeleton
By BOB MOEN
said 'T-sex,"' Pearson said.
Associated Press Writer
"Everrbody's pretty excited
RHAME, N.D. (AP) -While about it,' he 'added. "The stuff is
millions pack air-conditioned pretty well-preserved,"
'·
theaters to watch fictional
The desolate site, kept secret by
dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park," lhe gtoup, is surrounded by a snow
amateur fossil hunters are braving fence and posted only wilh a sign
the elements in North Dakota's warning "No Admittance."
' ·
badlands to'lind the real lhing.
"We: re not trying to hide
Merle Clark, 55, a rancher, and anything," Pearson said. ".We're
Dean Pearson, 36, a feed mill trying to preserve lhe security of
operator, are part of a group of lhe site and prevent damage."
Bowman County volunteers
It's hard to imagine anyone
working carefully to unearth a moseying by. The site is threeTyrannosaurus rex skeleton. They quaners of, a mile off a little-used
may be amateurs, but they've had gravel road, shielded by the
special training and get guidance badlands' jagged buttes, towering
from Daieontologists.
.
hills and deep gullies.
Onfy 13 other specimens of lhe _ "We're as.suming the site was
meat-eating giant have been found. not scavenged, but until we get
This particular Tyrannosaurus, more uncovered we won't know
which· died some 65 million years for sure," Pearson said.
ago, is entombed in part of lhe Hell
The Denvef Museum of Natural
Creek· rock formation in North History and the North Dakota
Dakota's southwest corner. The Geological Survey have been ·"
adult Tyrannosaurus was usually providing expert advice. Thirty-six
20 to 23 feet tall and 40 to 45 feet residents have gone through hours
long.
of paleontology training on their
The group began digging last own time.
fall, after Pearson found a single
Whatever bones are uncovered at
- fossilized bone sticking out of·a lhe site are destined for the new
; :Steep hillside . He took it to the Pioneer Trails Museum, a small
f\:!useum of the Rockies at volunteer-run operation in nearby .
Bozeman; Mont.. to find out what Bowman wilh an undinosaur-like
it was. ' .
annual budget of $750 and plenty.
. "We thought we had a le~ bone, · of space for new exhibits.
; 6'ut it was nothing like wed ever · Clark said about 15 volunteers
seen," Clart said.
make up the core of lhe group and
He showed it to John Horner, a others help when lhey can. No one
well-known paleontologist at lhe is paid.
museum and a technical adviser to
"A lot of people do it for money.
the hit movie "Jurassic Park."
There's more to it lhan that," said
Homer "took one look at it and Laurie Oalcland.

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Actor apologizes for joke

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NEW YORK (AP) - Dennis
Byrd, lhe New York Jets lineman
who brolce his neck -in a game last
season, will work as a football
analyst for CBS Sports, the
network said Tuesday.
Byrd, initially pamlyzed.from lhe
neck down but·now able to walk,
was hired for six games by Rick
Gentile. a CBS vice president
"It was Rick's idea, after seeing
him on the air a lot this past
season," said Susan Kerr, a
network spokeswoman. "He's so
poised and inspirational, Rick
decided to cal(tiis agent and see if
he'd he interested."

• I

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LONDO.N (AP) - Queen
Elizahelh II unveiled ornate new
steel gates Tuesday at lhe enttailce
to Hyde ·Part.
There was only one snag: huge
pink drape$ lhat covered lhe gates
caught on lhe elaborate metalwork
and ri~ as !hey were lifted by a
· crane in a shower of 93,000 rose
petals,
.
The .120·foot-wide gates were
built with public donations to
honor the monarch's mother,
Queen Mother Elizabeth. The 93year-old widow of King George VI
strolled through the gates, minu.s
the walking stick she has been
using while recovering from
surgery in May,
The Queen Mother's nephew,
Prince Michael, launched a fundraising drive to build the gates, at a
cost of $3.5 million, in 1991.
''This was a chance for lhe man
in the street to show his
appreciation to you for a long
lifetime in the service of the
community and the response has
been as spontaneous as I ·had
expected,'' lhe prince said at the
opening.ceremony .

HONG KONG (AP) - Michael
Jackson will ship more lhan 1,000
tons of equipment to Hong Kong to
: i:': LA CROSSE, Wis. (AP) - Ted launch a six-country Asian tour, a
: · ~ Turner and Jane Fonda are promoter said Tuesday.
. .' : speaking their minds on yet another
Promoter Alan Zeman said the
· . - matter: buffalo.
pop superstar would be the most
: ·; The media mogul and lhe movie expensive performer ever to play
. · • star are to be.featured speakers at Hong Kong, although he refused to
:-: the first International Bison say how much Jackson was being
·: :-,Confe_rence anll T!llde Show.
· ·. paid for lhe shows. Tickets prices
::,. Fonda is to address a July 30 rangefrom$36to$205.
·
• !JOCheon on lhe health benefits of
Jackson will perform for two
: ·llating buffalo meat, known for its nights in August m Hong Kong. He
·, :-relatively low fat content. Turner also was scheduled to perform in
~ .. «livers a dinner speech lhe same South Korea, Thailand, Singapore,
• ~ ·ifay on lhe inside workings of lhe Taiwan, and Japan.
· Sison industry.
• · : The couple own about 4,500
bison on ranches in New Mexico
and Montana. Bison growers
·ll!lvocate raising lhe native buffalo
as a hardier, healthier alternative to
beef cattle. •

'FRIED

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1993

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_People in the news

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. BALTIMORE (AP) - A sketch
aboUt Chelsea Clinton was cut out
of a recent rerun or "Saturday
!'fight Live,'' and ali actor involved
l]xllogized to lhe White HOiisefor
remarks about the 13-year-old's
looks. a newspaper reported today,
In a "Wayne's World" sketch,
•cbaracters G11rth and Wayne
sOggested Chelsea . isn't as
auracti've as Vice President AI
GOre's daughters.
·
:;Mike Myer, who plays ·lhe pan of
Wayne, wrote an apology letter to
the Cintons, The (Baltimore) ·Sun
~~·

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"We felt, upon reflection, lhat if
it was in any way hurtful, it wasn't
worth it," executive. producer
Lome Michaels said. "Siie's a kid,
a kid who didn't choose to be in
poblic life." ·
The moves reflect how zealously
the Clintons guard Chelsea's
private Ji.fe. President Clinton
decided against taking Chelsea and
her friends with him to a summit
meeting in Japan this weelc.
.
"She didn't want to be ·a big
object of public interest," he said
at a luncheon Friday.

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By The Bend·

'fhe Daily_Sentinel
Wednesday, July 7, 1993

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RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

Page-1Q

No treatment cat;J. restore -sight
lo~~,..~?.w?ia~~!_c.!i:~m~i~~~~- ... ,..

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DAR OFFICERS VISIT BLENNERHASSET ·
• The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the ·-, American Revolution
concfuded their 1992-93 year with a meeting at
Blennerhasset lslaad. New officers were
installed pictured are left Clotine Blackwood,

'

Librarian; Abby Stratton, Historian; Rae
Reynolds Registrar; Phyllis Skinner, Treasurer;
Margaret Weber, Corresponding Secretary;
Anna Cleland, Recording Secretary; Pauline
Atkins, Chaplain; Nancy V11n Meter, Vice
Regent; and Eleanor smith, Regent.

Return Jonathon Meigs DAR
.officers installed at Blennerhasset

'

Blennerhasset Island was the site
for the )teturn Jon athan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution's, final
meeting for the 1992-93 year.
Concluding the years business
the group attended to general
concerns. Rev. Deroo S. Newman
began the meeting with an
invocation.
Retiring regent, Mrs. Anna
Circle Cleland, thanked members
for service to the chapter and
encouraged members to assist
prospective DAR members in
completing their applications and
documents for membership in the
DAR. She encouraged mem bees to
recruit junior members to carry on
the ttaditions, dedication and work
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution.
A picnic lunch was held at the
Rotary Shelterhouse and followed
by installation of new officers for
the 1993-95 administration. Mrs.
Ronald E. Reynolds State
Organizing Secretary and a
member of the National Speakers·
Staff installed the officer, Regent,
. · Miss Eleanor Smith; Vice Regent,
:-=Ms. Na.ncy Van ~eter; Chapl~in.
- · Mrs . Virgil Atkms; Recordtng
~ Secretary. Mrs . Wendell E.
Cleland: Corresponding Secretary.
• Mrs. Vernon Weber; Treasurer,
• Mrs. George Skinner; Registrar,
Mrs. Ronald E. Reynolds;
Historian, Mrs. Clarence Stratton;
- and, Librarian, Mrs. Cecil
- Blackwood.
: : Miss Eleanor Smith, the newly
- : installed Regent, was presented a
. copy of the book, "A Century oE
. Service: The Story of the DAR
dedicated to her for her service to
the Chapter and in honor of her

mother, ·Mrs. Florence Smith, a fopt wings. One wing provided
charter member of the Return space for the ~ummer kitchen and
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
servants' quarters; the other wing
Attending the meeting at the provided Harman Blennerhasset's
Blennerhai&gt;set Island were guests library, office and laboraiDry. Most
Rev . Deroo S. Newman , Miss of the furnishings were purchased
Michelle Caine, Mr. Robert in London Baltimore and
Ashley, Whitney and Rachel Philadelphia.
One of the Blennerhasset's elite
Ashley, Amy Lynn Bohner, Mr.
Ronald E. Reynolds, Ms. Virginia guests was Vice President Aaron
Carson, Mrs. Bess Grace, Mrs. Burr: Visiting the island changed
Gerald Reed, Gabriel and Sara!) the course of his life.
Dawn Jenkins, and Cheryl ]ewell.
Aaron · Burr
convinced
Members attending the meeting Blennerhasset to join him in a plot
were Emma Ashley, June Ashley, to establish a new world empire.
Pauline · Atkins,
Clotine Burr wanted to create in what is
Blackwood, Linda Bohner, Anna now the State of Texas. News of
Cleland, Grace Eich, Donna the venture reached President
Jenkins, Sharon Jewell, Rae Thomas Jefferson, who ordered !he
Reynolds, Frances Roberts, PhyUis arrest of Aaron Burr and Harman
Skinner, Eleanor Smith, Abbey BlennerhasseL
Stratton, Nancy Van Meter, and
They escaped the island, were
Margaret Weber.
finally caught, arrested, tried and
To reach Blennerhasset Island acquiued. Blennerhasset lost most
the members rode a stemwheeler of his fortune in the Aaron Burr
up the Ohio River. The islands venture.
•
attractions are Blennerhasset
Trying to regain his status
Mansion, a tour of the is land Blennerhasset tried working a
aboard a mule pulled wagon and cotton plantation, and .a law
numerous craft hou ses. The practice . both without success. In
island's rich historical background 1824, Harman's sister invited them
attracted the DAR.
to make their home with her in
According to DAR in 1798, Bath, England. They remained
Harman Blennerhasset brought.his there until 1826 when they moved
young bride, Margaret Agnew to to the Chan111!1 Islands off the coast
America from Ireland and settled in of Frimce. Harman died in 1831 .
the wilderness of the Ohio River
While out of the country the
Valley.
island was farmed with hemp by
Upon discovering the large island • Blennerhasset' s creditors. On
they immediately purchased the March 3, 1811 , coils of dried hemp
upper half and began construction stored in the wine cellar of the
of a home. in 1798. It took two mansion were accidentally ignited.
years to build thetr home. Lrud out The hemp quickly blazed out of
roughly tn the shape of a control and the palatial manor
horseshoe, the mansion's center is burned to the ground.
a twe.!ve room two J torY "m~in
In 1840, Margaret Blennerhasset
house connectmg two.twenty-stx· returned to America and attempted
to gain compensation from the U.
S. Congress for the damages
rendered to their home on
Blennerhasset
Island. Granted the
Ryan VanMatre recently celecompensation,
Margaret died in
brated his second birthday at the
1842.
home of his parents, Kevin and
Today, the island is owned by the
Ann VanMatre. A "Thomas the
DuPont
Company and is leased to
· Tank" theme was carried ouL
the
State
of West Virginia for
Attending or sending gifts were
development
as a state park. In
Carolyn and Ross ·Roush, George
1984
the
Blennerhasset
Historical
and Joanie Hoffman, Ray Redman
Park
Commission
began
and Mandy Russell, Brian, Melinda
reconsb'Uction
of
the
mansion.
By
and Jordon Decker, George, Bar1991
the
interior
of
most
of
the
bara and April VanMatre, Brian
and Tina Manning, Bob and Jonetta areas of the man sion were
Davis, Pauline Cunningham, Eulah fllfnished and open to the public;
Redman, Steve, Tammy and Bran· this year the entire mansion was
don Bachner, Don and Carol Did- opened for public tours.
The island is believed to have
dl e, Benny and Pal Dent, Greg,
been
inhabited by Indians as long
Cathy anll Katlyn Sauvage, Bill
ago
as
9,000 B.C.
and Jean Sim, Ray and Joyce RedThe
next meeting of the Return
man, June VanMatre, Kim Dent,
Tim and Christy Durst, Nancy and Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
Crystal Mullins, Sonia and Zachary of the American Revolution, will
Parsons, Brian, Sharon and Amber be held in September, 1993.
Kearns, Lori and Jamie Bailey.

·

'

D.O•.Associate Prof~r or
Fii!mlly Medlclne
Oblo University College 11 •
Osteopathic Medldne
Question: Irecendy heard the last
few minutes of a mdio prog_ram
about an eye disease they called
diabetic retinopathy. My uncle has
diabeteS, so I asked him about tliis
condition. Hedidn'tknow anything
about. What is · diabetic
retinopathy?
•
Answer: Diabetic retinopathy is a
disease of the small blood vessels
known as capillaries that supply the
retina- the light sensitive part of
the eye - with oxygen and other
n·utrients. It is a serious
complication of diabetes and is a
common cause of blindness in
diabetics.
I've always found the blood
vessels in the eye especially
interesting to study because they
are the only ones that ean be easily
observed. Your doctor observes
these blood vessels when he or she
looks through your ptijiil with that
lighted instrument called an
ophthalmoscope. During such an
examination, changes suggestive of
diabetic eye disease - abnormal
blood vessels and small leaks that
show up as tiny areas of red
bleeding - can be seen.
While the observation of these
changes is quite direct and
relatively easy, the explanation of
the exact mechanism that causes
them is not. Metabolic change&amp;
that lead to a relative lack of
oxygen in the ret;ina seem to play a

Dear An L•nders: You have
printed many lcaen on the active
sex lives of peq&gt;le over 70. There
his been so mucb lying on this
subject thlll'tn sick to death ri iL
Let's faoe iL People get arthritis,
bad knees· and bum bacb. The
testosterone level begins to
diminish after age 4S, so what's the
big deal? Why all the subtafuge?
Let's have a liUle more truth in
advertising, please. -- DAVIS,

CALIF.
DEAR DAVIS: I guess "denile"
is mtre than just a river in· Egypt.
·Keep reading for another pa spi'C·
live £rom British Columbia:
Dear Ami ••nden: One II your
.female correspondents from
Hwllsville, Ala., Slllled, with the ring
of ·authority, that when a man's
battery runs. down, the reason is
abnost always "psychological." She
then added saR:BSiically, "This is the
line you've been peddling fll' years,
Ann. Oive me a bleak.•
OK. Here's her break:
A great many women are
dumping impotent panners these
days 1101 becNtse their batteries are
run dowt1 tiut because they won\ do
a darned thing 10 re-charge them.
Ptlhaps too many non-perfl)'llling
males think nothing can be done
about iL They are wrong.
When a man retains his desire but
loses his ability 10 perform, it's not
all in bis head. It's a. malfunction of
llime son. Age alone does not CIWIC
impoleDCe.
If a man is otherwiae healthy, his
impotence ean be remedied in a
variety of ways. Please, Ann, teD
these males to go see a really good

Dinosaur hunt

Stegasaurus ,
Triceratops,
Diplodicus, BrontDsaurus and other
unusual creatureswill be prominent
• during vacation Bible school at the
Antiquity Baptist Church. The
VBS program, "The Great
Dinosaur Hunt" will feature 11
immunization clinic Thursday 9-11 fascinatin~ dinosaur theme kids are
a.m.• Rutland Fire Department, for sure to enJoy.
Bible school will be held July 15children ages two months through
18.
Those enrolled will start their
kindergarten age . Bring child's
hunt
at 9:30a.m. each morning and
immunization r~rd.
conclude at noon. T!Je kids will
SALEM CENTER - Free . enjoy "digging for God's truth"
community immunization clinic through the Bible lessons, singing,
Thursday 1-3 p.m., Salem crafts, scripture memorization.
Township Fire Departmen~. for recreation, contests, puppets, and a
children ages two months through daily visit from Dr. Digger, the
kindergarten age . Bring child 's archaeologisL
Children six years ID high school
· immunization record.
age are invited to attend by Pastor
EAST MEIGS
Class Ken Goecke. Further information
rcgismftion for Eastern Local's may be obtained from Terry Shain
community education classes will at 949-2864.
..
be held Thursday from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m . at the high school. Nancy
Larkins may be contacted for
further information at 667-3085.

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the
calendar.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVll.LE - Scipio Township
Trustees will mee t Wednesday at
. 6:30p.m. at the Pageville Town
. Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
Free
community immunization clinic
Wednesday at Dep~rtment of
Human Services in Middleport
from 10 a.m. to noo on third floor
conference room for children ages
two months through kindergarten
age. Bring child's immunization
record.

..

.••,
•

•• ,•

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees ,will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of the clerk, Patty Calaway.
SYRACUSE- London Pool will
"havenight swimming Wednesday
. ·from 8 ID 10 p.m.

'

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS .- T h e
Tuppers Plain s VFW Post No.
9053 will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m . at the post home. All members
urged to attend.
·
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group_of AA and AI Anon will
meet Thursday at· 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Hean Catholic Church. Call
992-5763 for information.
POMEROY - Th ere will be a
dinner Thursday at 5:30p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Citi zens
Center in Pomeroy. Cost is $4 per
person. Menu includes baked steak,
mashed potatoes and gravy, cole
slas, roU, beverage and cake. Music
will be provided by The Classics
and a free will offering will be
taken for the mu sicians. Public
invited.
REEDSVll.LE · Eastern Athletic
Boosters meet Thursday at 8:30
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
RlJTLAND'.. - Free
community
(
'

..

DOWNING CHILDS
MULlEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

POMERO'I' - Regular meeting of
the Shade River Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM. will be held Thrusday at .8
~mse~!e hall. RefreshmentS will

·I ll Second St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENU SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

POMEROY - the Rock Springs
Grange will meet Thursday at 8
p.m. at the ·hall. New officers will
be elected.
I -----------'
•

determined the .small leaks take
place in between the cells that form
t.he walls of the. vessel. Exacdy
how this occurs ts not clear. It ~s
clear that_the end result of thts
process as a p~or supply of
nutrients to the reuna and also the
development of new and
ineffective small blo~d ~es sels .
~ rtew ves.sel f~auon ts called
"neovascularizauon for those fans
of doct~r l~g~.
.
. · .
The mdtvtdual wllh .d •abeuc
ret,nopathy ll!ay exp~nence n~
problems wtth . vtston ~nul
suddenly losing hts .o~ her stght.
Ho~ev.er, loss of vtston us~ally
begms m a small area of the v~ual
field in one eye and can raptdly
expand to damage most or all of
the vision of that eye. In the worst
pases, total bl~ndness develops. .
· The hkeh~ood of d~abeuc
retmopathy mcreases wllh the
length of time the person has
diabetes and with the need for
insulin to control the blood sugar.
Studies have shown that
somewhe~e .b~tween . 20 to 50
percent of mdiVJduals wtth ~be~
for. 10 years wtll have dtabeuc
retinopathy. Those who develop
the disease before age. 30 or !hose
~ho must use insulin are at greatest

nsk.

.

,

Up to 20 percent of the diabeuc
population in the U~tel! States fa!!
to seek care for thelf disease unul
reunopathy has developed. :'-nd, a
study from the UntvefSlty of
Cahfornta, Los Angeles, showed
42.8 percent. of black and ~ispan!c
newly . dtagnosed
dtabeuc

Porches,

Patios,
Sidewalks .

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M. ~
SAT.8-12
POLICIES

t

'

··,·

' ·

Ann
Landers

BULLETIN BOARD

Box of 100

$4

of 10 S) 55

PAIN BUST•R II Spedal Cream for Arthritis
ONLY$3

POP

27

$

REACH TOOTHBRUSHES

$1 79
CANDY iARS Reg. soc ..NOW 3/51°0
Getl

SALE IN EFFECT JULY 7th lHROUGH JULY 12th

Swisher &amp;·Lohse Pharmacy.
112 East Main St.

COPY

DEADLINE

J&amp;L INSULATION

DAY BEFORE Pl!BLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturclay
t :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday

Monday Paper
Tu...tay Paper '
Wednesday Paper .
Thwoday Paper

Free Estimates
Replacement
Windows
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Call us for
Special Prices on
Siding and Windows

1:00 p.m. Wedn...tay
I00 p.m. Thwoday
I :00 p.m. Friday

Friclay,Paper
5\mday Paper

Clossi,fied pages

c011er ehe

foUoUJing telephone eschanges ...
Gallia County Melp Co~y Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614. Area Code 304
44(i..G.tli..,U.

367..q,..l.ire
388-VIaloa

245-Rio Gnode
256-C"J'•• DioL
643-Ar.Wo Dlol.
379-'IV.Joul

992-Middleport/
Pomere7
98S Q ler
843-Pordaad
247-Letort F.Uo
949-Roelao
7 42-R.IIaad
66 7-4:oohllle

675-P\. 1'1-al
45!1-Looa
57~pplo G..... o
773-M-•
882-New o...ea
895-ta...
937-Bull'olo

Public Notice

Public Notice

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

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

James Keeaee, owner

992-3838 .

6181'92/1 mo.

51201!13

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Reasonable
Rates

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE
614·742·2138

HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992-3470
OWNER: loll Wi&lt;llorsham .

3-4-93- 1

I HD-92·1fo .

·:

Dirt

Qua

SIZED LIMESTONE
Call 614·992· ·
6637

""' Rtrec

CHECI&lt; WITH 1.0.

St. Rt; 7

Ch_e shirer

INTERIOR

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE ,

-Rc&gt;om Additions
-Gutter Work

-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing

614·985·41 80
6/1M13/t mo.

-lnlerjor &amp; Exterior

Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

EVERY THU'RSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

Pomeroy, Ohio

Inside and Out

6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 PayoH .
This ad good for 1
. FREE card.
Lie. No. 005t-32

Free Estimates,
Low Costs.
Work Guar11nleed

Howard L Wrillesel

614·949·2988 or
614-593-5010

NEW- REPAIR

ROOF IN~

Gutters
DownsJ)outs
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

3·1f&gt;.fl3.1fn

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

.

Stop &amp; Compare
'

FlEE ESTIIUTIS

Q5·4473
667·6179

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

$25.00
WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

.... lOr~ «lOll ol ~
llaododln Olio, Konlucky, &amp; W.O VloglniUM

~and

FREE ESTiMATES
Take the pain out ol
painting. Let medon
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

949-2168

Remodeling

.

liNDA'S
PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES

FOREVER
BRONZE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

!E~S : CMH OR

7nl1 mo.

FOR SALE

5-24·1

•Garages
•Complete

LUNCH
MASON, WV
n3-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
ADM.: ./OHN W. CULLEN, JR •

Gravel
992-7878

Stone

Roof

· •New Homes

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

HAULING ·Limestone

From Foundation to

PUBUC NOTICE
On Jl!ne &amp;, 1993, 11
_approximately 6:00 A.M.,
lh a MIV A.A. Y•lal
·accidentally discharged an
·unknown quantlly of
numbar 2 dl,_.. fuel al mile
poat237.5 of the Ohio River.
.the aHected areaa Include
mile 237.5 to mile 242.5 ol
lhe Ohio River. Campbell
Tranaporlallon Company,
Inc. 11 tho owner of th;, MiY
·A.A. Vella!, which 11 lha
dealgnalad oource ol the
'oplll purouanl to lhe 011
Pollution Act of 1990.
• 'Cialmo arlolng out or lhio
: oplll may be 1ubmllled lo
· Campbell Tranoportation
• Company, Inc., P. 0. Box

•
'
•

GENEUL

USED RAILROAD TIES

J&amp;T HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

. BISSELL &amp;
· CONSTRUCTION

LOCATED FROM NEW HAVEN, WV,
6 MILES OUT UNON CAMPGROUND ROAD.
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE JOSEPH ALLEN KAY SR.
WiLL BE SOLD.
Ea~y American style hide-a·bed, like new. loveseat, end
tables, La-Z-Boy reclinor, Sylvania calor console TV, maple
table &amp; 6 chairs, spool type dropleal table, chairs , Harvest
Gold relrigerator. Hot Point 30' range. klt&lt;:hen appliances.
metal cabinol,comer cabinet, corner shelves,aak lamp table,
old reeker. 3 pc. French bedroom suite, early 2 drawer night
stand, poster bed, blanket chest. chests. ceuilr chest. metal
bed, tredle sewing machine, chest type deeP ~eeze. Maytag
auto washer, Kenmore dryer. Selll Thomas clock. coo-coo
clock. goodseleelionantiqueglassware, Rose~ lie pitcher, set
olchina.lris Herringbone pitcher. Knoles China turl\ey plaller,
Depression dishes. Virginia Rose bowls. old pitchers. Pink
Depression pitcher. several old quihs, Lone Star, etc.. Avon
bonles. old radio, pictures, ooloniallarr)ps, floor lamp, several
books, doilies, linens, washboard, Eureka sweeper. carpet
steamer, Wann Morning coalstove.large swing, tools, Crahsman grinder, vice, saws. axes, cords, 5 HP generator Briggs
&amp; Stratton, ladders, alum. e•t. ladcler, wheelbarrow. dusk lo
dawn ighl, 20" lawn mower, garden tiller with anachments,
.Grawly 5260 Sulky &amp; Mower plus more.
I'EHICLE·WILL sELL AT f2 NOON
VEHICLE: 1989 Chevy S10 Durango 4 wheel drive. auto ..
17.155 actual miles.
AfiCTION CONDUCTED BY

614-446-8568 r""

.IN POMEROY

Public Notice

~

Free E1ti1N11H

9· , 0-92-11n

TaHooing, Friday Night,
Watering Hole, At 7.
ProfessionaltaHoo artists,
Speedy and Judy
Auto clave sterilization, new
needle everytime.

SATURDAY,
JULY 10, 1993-10:00 A.M.

Remodeling IIIII Rlplii
Painting, Experienced

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Meigs Jr. High Auditorium
Sal.,July 17th, 2 P.M.
Evangelist Michael Vance
Special Music

ESTATE
; AUCTION

ClaJUIII
WIU

. •LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

'

FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772

. -SHIJ,UB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REIIfOVAl

MIRACLE CRUSADE

•
:

CHARLIE ALL OVER BODY SPRAY ·

.

Free Estimates
Call 446-2845

4

Y2 PRICE

(614)

YOUNG'S CHAIN
LINK FENCING

99

CAN
SUNGLASSES COMPLrn STOCK

EXCAVATING

BULLETIN 'BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE I
PUBLICATION

•

99

••t
•ad•

.

.I

•

BECTON DICKINSON DISPOSABLE INSULIN
SYRINGE &amp; NEEDLES

.

bo••

ana

"Benny" SDMks inro my room
reads my diary. He also qJeiiS mY
mail with a ~er he uses for ~
I
asthma. Mom has said money has
beCn missing from her purse these
last several months, and rm afrai4
ANN LANDERS
"t!l93, Loo ADcdos
Benny has been stealing from he(:
Timf!'ll Syndicate
His grades last year were terrible:
Cruton Synd,icate''. ·
He bad to take two exams over
becl!'tse one IaCher mtspt"Cteclhi., ~
urologist who is up on the latest. If · of copying- ~ else's paper anc!
they want help, they ean get iL
~ accused him of buying tho
And P.S.: A man whose wife an.\vm 1rorn a kid who ·root 1111
1
has died and wbo has been celibale elUIIIIS Ja.st year,
for a period of time will almost
My parents keep Siying he is II
certainly fail the fust time he Jries an awkward age and will grow_out
with another woman. This of iL Meanwhile, I see real troubl~
zcoodition is temporwy and calls fll' &amp;head. What do you advise? ••
patience and encoungement. -- NERVOUS IN NEWARK
VANCOUVER
DEAR NEWARK: Benny needs .
DEAR VAN.: rve told readers for counseling, and he needs it fasL
years that impolelll:e ean he treated, Overeating, lying; stealing and
but once more won't hurt. Thanks cheating should not be ovmooted.
for the opportunity.
This is serious anti-social behavior
Dear Ann Landers: My kid that could lead 10 crimirtal behavior
brother is 13 years old and at least if not· checked. Please show . thiS
30 pounds overweighL He insists on column to your pareniS, and urge
two desserts with every meal, and them 10 take it seriouily.
my mother has spoiled him t;Otten,
Gem of the Day: If you want to
bec•use he is her "baby" -- the last shoclc the socks off people, simply
of five children. I am 17.
tell them the b'Uth.

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Ada oauMie the eounty your ad~
be pr paid
• Recti•• diicout for ad. paid in advaace.
• Free Ad.: CiftAway aad FouDd ad.
15 worde will be·
rua 3 day• at DO ebarp.
·
• Price of ad for aU eapkalletten il dDullle price o1 ad ea.t
• 7 poiatliao type oaly UMd
• Sealillel il DOl retpoDfil.le for error. after (al'll clay ·(clleck
forerron f1r11 day ad rwu iA paper). CaD loelore z,oo P·•·
day af.. r publicalloa lo ..ake correc:tioa
• Ada that lllllll he paid ia .dvuaee ue:
Cud of n.aau
H•ppy Ado
Ia Memoria•
Yard Sal•
• A cluairted adwertilem.ent pl.eed ia the Gallipolil Daily
Trlhu110 (acept Clua;t...t DMpl•y, BuoiA- C.rd or Lopl
Nolie•) will aloo appear iA tloe PoiAt Pleuaat Ropier aad
the Daily Sealin:el, r&lt;eacbios oYer 18,4)00

.

'

D. A. BOSTON

7nl1 mo.

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions;
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.i
Ohio University College or
Osteopathic
Medicine;
Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio

45701.

•BACKHOE
LOADER
•TRUCKING

66,7~6628

992-7878

dis.case long enough 10. devel~p
reunopathy ~f~re th~ dt.agnosiS.
The . del.a~ m. tden..ufymg ~ntJ
trC~~;Ung dtabeuc reunopathy •s a
ser~o.us problem for t~ese
mdtvtduals. and an equally se~ous
and exJl!lnstve problem for soctety.:
Quesuon: What ean be done for
diabetic retinopathy?
•
.
Answer:. There are r~ally. on~y
two effecuve treatments for tht$
condition. Good control of ~he
blood sugar- ~d conl!'Ol !If. big~
blood press~re, tf t!J~ mdmd~a;l
also has thts condtuon - ~all
reduqe the risk of new reunai
damage. Laser treatments to sea;!
off those leaky small vessels
supplying !he ~eli~ is the second
treatment, and u will help preservC&gt;
sight at its present level. No
treatment is effective at restoring
stght that has aJJ:eady been lost. ·
If you have diabetes, you should
strive tD,keep your blood sugat
within the normal range at all
times. This reduces, but doesn'.t
eli'!linate, the chance of developing
retmopathy. Further, yo~ should
also h~ve ~ yearly professiOnal ey~
exa!"ma.uon to ~ear~h for the
earliest stgns of dtabeuc damage;
since early laser treatment helps
preserve good eyesighL
~
•

Impotence not necessarily psychologica(

Van Matre birthday celebrated

RYAN VANMATRE ,

'

•

..

I

Tackerwllle Rd •
Racine

949·2826
6-17-93-t

~

205 North Second Ave.

Middleport, OH
ADDISON - Honeyouckle Drive - Could

be used 1or a
rental or a nice starter home. Two bedrooms, , bath, new

SNODGRASS'
UPHOLSTERY

septic, and new wiring, Was $.24,500
NOW DRASTICALLY REDUCED $18,000
'
COMMERCIAL LOT - Pom•oy- At the oamar o1 Main
Slreal and Spring Ava. A great location for almost any
good business. Approx. 88 faat1rontage on Main Street
and 182 feat on Spring Streat. All utilitias availabla.
$65,000
CHESTER - Take over an ongoing restaurant business

with potantial1or expansion. Seats 38 people, and comes
fully equipped. Great location, at Stiite "Route 248 and
Roula 7. Large paved car parking lot plus axtra parl&lt;ing
for trucks. Full hook-up for mobile horne as a residence
or extra income as rental. Concrete block building lor
storage.
REDUCED TO $75,000
MIDDLEPORT- Hudoon SL - FBBI right at home in any
room of this l '/1 story house, from the kitchlkl has baauti -

IUI tongue and groove walls, to lha light and airy living
room, dining room area. Setting on 2 lots, it has 3 bed·
rooms, 1'/, baths. and FANG lumaee.
'
PRICED AT $37,900
POMEROY- Old. Union Av•. - Two big lots willl a li111a
ovar •/, acre. AT lha and of the road sits a 1983 Claytor&lt;
cbublewi&lt;M with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lamily room, dining
room, and a IMIW lront porch. Kitchen Is equipped, inc:lud·
lng a naw dishwasher. Has central air, and a water sol·
tan or. All in good condition.
$34,000
MINERSVILLE :.. One story home with 2 bedrooms, 1'/,
baths, FANG lumaea, TPC watar, situated on approx.
1.16 acres. Also includad is a small older home altha
samalocation.
ALL FOR $23,000

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ..................................... 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ......................................, ........ 992·3058
DARLINE STEWART.............................,..........:....992-6385
SANDY BUTCHER.................................................992·5371
JERRY SPRADLING .................................... (304) 882-3498
.'

RACINE, OHIO

"'Helping You To
Recover Your

'

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~K~t

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

RECLAMATION
SERVICE
Work

B&amp;(i
Truck1ng
We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614·698·3290
or

Home~

i

lc s

PUBUC NOTICE
The ,.Surd of Truat- of
o,.,ge Townlhip will hold •
public hNrlng ·July 14 at
7:00p.m. at the home of the
clerk, Pal{lcla Calaway, lor
the Budget of Orenge
Tow no hlp for t 813.
Plllrlcla Calltwoy, Clerk
46686 Guthrie RCNKI
Coolville, Ohio 45723
&amp;14-1185-3860

(7) 2, 4, 5, &amp;, 1, a, t , 11,
12, f3, tOto;

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843:5264 511~1111 . .

Po ncb

Scrd1ng &amp; MlJiching
Tree Removal

Phone Evenings

614-985·3373
2/15irJ/t1n

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS
FREE ESTIMATES
All work guarantaad.
Low Cost
lnsida, Outside, Top
to Bottom

PH. 742·2217
R&amp;C EXCAVATING .
.BULLDOZING

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, ·•
LEATHER REPAIR
. and BALl GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

·~~g~~~~l~s&amp;

HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

PH. 614·992·5591

LAWN CARE .
Middleport,
Pomeroy, Racine,

Rutland, Mason
Areas

CALL 992·6123
Reasonable Rates

· Dependable
Service

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406
3/8/tfn

BISSELL BUILDER.S, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES

7nllfn
Public Notice

Box 189

DriVL'VhlY~

UCENSEO and BONDEO

614·698·6500

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

Sc·p11C Systems

&amp;-30. 1 mo. pd.

~

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

GREEN·UP

Dolcr &amp; Bnckhoc

205-75Rt5" Tiger Pow XTM RWL
205-75R14" Tiger Pow XTM RWL
215-75R15" Flreotone OWL
235-75R15': FireoloiMI OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'ElfiiAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 6121113

INo Sunday Calls)
21121921tfn

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
WAYNE
DALTON

DO IT YOURSELF
&amp;CONTRACTOR

WAYNE
DALTON

SPE~IAL

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
WHILE THEY LAST!

These Sizes Only!
8x7 ........... $17
9x7 ........... $1
16x7 •••••_•••• $296
You Won't Find A Better

�. . - ·-.... --·'

..... ...

-

~

2-The

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:1

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'

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•

•

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)

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... ...

Ohio

WIH bo:3_ all In my homo, Link
~ppro•

Wll

304 Ill 31St.

caro

lly -

...... .... llyro. old,
_MOC*'' 102 D1 Oltl.

,=.-_
.....
"-*'
=·Ext.
. ........ _._
..
.:m,.-;JU.111Sia-. , ...
~­
,,..,.
.......

111ft

.

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·Pomeroy-Mddleport, Ohio

\

1993

J'

KIT 'N ' CARL YJ.E® b)' Larry Wright

Mobile Homes
lor sale

18 Wanted to Do

.~ -Announcemlflls
-CALL '101111 Do\TI ,_
·Ill' n• ..._ - . 11.11 por

71

NEA Cros·s word Puzzle

..

ACROU

AutOS fOr S.le

- -·- ·

Sunohlne14•10

1181 , _ -

hcMM. to&amp;ll ~~~e. 3 badrooma.

AC, 81! -

CldoriY Pooplo In lull balha,loundry ...... """'
Nt -parll
· Sti,IOO.
_ ..
21:'8
lrollor
Pl. Ptt, :J04.871· 114-21f.lt2S.
S711 aftor 1::10 Pll.
For

· -

PHILLIP
ALDER

• ••

·· ........... "'!.~·

..........
~,;att-•

Fmanctal

•uanc.I.AIJIP

·-

..

Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

•

~

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•

· · - IIIC-YIIA

Cell1.--

m•-·

, Business
Opponimlty

21

NORTH

7·7·11

• io 9
1187 Ford T"""':'t : CYlinder, 5
ap.cl. 12.200. ·~ 41~
.
1111 Pontloc Bonno¥!!!!', _!11•
cond. 304.fl'll-2122 Of 11o-01n. ·
1111 Hyunclol I lpood, $1,411;-

INOllCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.

.11 Y--. - • CcMnponJ 102·
·01-GIII.

35 School org.
35 Knock
1 Peter, - end · 37 AllirMIIIOno
Mery.
3811Mb1Htr
5 Stndplpar
Noiln 8 JIVI't
40 COiorlell
neighbor
41 SYftiiiOI tor
12 AuthOr cllclurn
Ftrlltr
43 Prlnter'o
13 WWHartl
14811mt
44 S.parelt
15 GI'Hk lttttr
45 - riCIIO .
16 Brtld In·
47 Cordtcl clOth
· arltdltnt
41Ptlltcl
. 11 Fortify
51 Brtdge of S1n
11 ColltQt dtg.
Lull- ·
20 Sentlor Clfi.
52 Sillier borne Htldeft
21 Blblt dlv.
54 Aclrtll 23 loiSp.l
Arthur
24 Oe¥1111111
55 Unadorned
26 Sing SWill·
56 VDIIIII
atylt
57 Autllor 28 Shouto
Rend
•
21 Rodtnt
56 Rllllt' Mlltl
30 Froo

recomrnendl thlt ~ do buslo

noeo wHh I&gt;OOIM you know and

NOT to oend monoy throujlh lho
m•ll untU you hiVI lnvllltglttd
the qfttrlng.
·

• 32

EEKANDMEEK
10"0 1.1»6 IT
IJJHt) SAlt&gt; .. .

:.'t~t~~,.;:. ~~.~~: od,j
~ Jt,tlli 1111 llorcury
Lynx SSpood, $1,111t; 1111 Ford

Eocort Wag~n, Auto, t1,tllts:h
Thlo Ad. """n'o "u10
o,
Holiday Inn, Konougo.
1818 PonUac llolwlltVIIIo, ....,_.
lint oondltfon, 15500, •14-1121132.

I K J4
+ Q J 108 52

' MERE IA.ORDS AAE
kXJT EJ..XXJGH TO .
OEFI~E liiE UMii$
OF l.AIVGOI&gt;G£ ''

EAST
1 543
•Kt0 75
1Q t0 762

+3

SOUTH
+A KQ 72

32 Actreu -

• A9
I A3

DOWN

Bencroll

+K 9 7 4

331order

1 French lOr
tither

~Jab

Vulnerable: North..South
Dealer: West
W..ot

Renlals
ALL Yord Solo lluet Bo Pold In
Amnco. OEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
lho day belono tho ad It to run.
toMII-3117. Sundoy odltlon - 2:GO p.m.
Friday. - y odHion • 2:00
ot110'8 CONNECTION ALTER· p.m. Stturdly.
·
NATlVE ~--7 .2.110- Flrot OliO ol tho ooaoon, 4
mln tt.loll Nlool- dolollno
. meo1 1GO'o otolngfMI=• In lamllloo, July 8th ond lith. St1rt·
lng ot tO o.m.•?. 12 Solor Dr.,
yooa'IIMtodoy. CCII
FL
Plonly Subdlwtolon, Sullwlllo
REDUCE; loom oil tOt while you Plko.
· Tau OPAL, nolloblo at
Fnoth-cy.
.
THE QAY ~NECTlOH 1 · 1111).3337 12.JG.mln. 11+ moet
100'a o1 ••cMina lll!ln In .~ur
or• tonight. Qofphono l'o. CCI
BOCA fl.,;
•
. . .
IIYAT~

AAIIADA:
OcMn Front 1 lr., Lux. Coftclo,
110 Pool, . . . _ 4 To I. M~
lEACH

w-.Col-.

Dtvorced, ............. ~ . . . .
- l p wHh lloncle!,
ohorl oi toN lodr. Who llkoe
oolftlllng, tloo ritorkito, and
oountry mualo.
drlniiOr a
....-. Col 1o:OOAIII u~ 2:oo
Pll, - - anytime 30417W111.

-1

Junk c:.ra:, eny condhkHI, 814·
-·7113.
Old WV l Ohio hunting l
llahlng llconco, l tulkOJ
pomlfo, old lllh tacklo, duck &amp;
crow calli. 304-17S.343'1.

Uaocl Gordin Tractor, 11 HP Or

More, Any Kind Qo.od Shape,

114-251-1431.
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
eotne, GOld Ringe, Sliver Colne,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
1!11 Socond A-ua, Golllpollo.
Wanlod lo buy: uood mobllo

Employment Serv1ces

&amp; Auction

2 otorJ houM, PomoroJ, mutt
t•• oil IKIIIdlng matorltll and

P.O.

Rick Pooraon , . _ 011 Compony,

285,

full . time 1uotlonMr, compiMe

Syrac-.
2 Cute K11tano, 8 WNIII Old, 1
Biocll, 1 Yall-, Noar'Woodlond
Drive, 114 •• 1281 After 4:30

auction
III'Yk:a.
Ueonood
III,Ohlo &amp; - t VIrginia, :104-

fiKturM,

P.II.

Box

Tn-5785.
:

-:::---:--:-:-7--

9

·

3112 -onlan Pupploa,
1!4-441-41770.

Wanted lo Buy

Antlqwo and lurnMun, no
lern too '-'•. tor too 11m16, wiH
buy ono pllc:o or complolo
houoohold, call Ooby llirtln,
114-112-11141.
Buy Slondlng Timber, Pine,
Poporwood, &amp; Sow Tlmbor lt4113·7311:
Decor1ted etonew1re, ~~ lampe,
1ntlque furnh~o~re, mill pouch

calico klnan, to good thermom....., IJIMNI lniJ.
- · 304..7$-7171.
Rlvwlne Antique~, Run
re, owner. We do epFIM Pupploo To~ Homo, 10
Will. Old Part Bird Dog, 2 praloalo, 114'112-21211.
llortlod Lfko Spudo llcKonzlo,
Good Whh Chllclrwn, 114-379-

C·

2134.

Pl. Pleasant

Part Oermon Shopord, blk a ton,

&amp; VIcinity

1 mo old, :1104-773-54113.

-II black 'puppte~whHo otraak
on face, heele "olllna, 304-

Yard SolO, 1DV-D Jonoo Sl, July
8,1,10.

Two pupploo• 1 malo ond 1

Y1id 'Solo, 21105 J-raon Avo,
Sot, July 10, e:oo-1 :oo. Boyo a
glrta CIOthel IIZI1...11.

~-11110.

lomolo, 114-llo-3383.
Wlllto Lona Holrad Cat, WHh
Bluo Eyoo, )loutorodc.!!•lo, Ut·
tor Trolilacl, 1~-GO&lt;OO.

6

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Sot 01 Kayo, At Rlco'o
Fumlturo, Gollipollo, 64-44611523.
l..olt; 2 doat, P•b, tan WI hair
culL 4yra ofcl; Doohund miX, oldo
kk:., 4 mo. otcl. Dooploroto to
Unci, tuMtan11al ..ward. PIHH
call 30W75-S!M6 or 614-2451133.

7

AH Yord Soloo Mutt Bo Pold In
Advonco. O,Ocllne: 1:OCII&gt;m tho
day bofora tho lid Ia io run,
SUnday odHion- 1:OOpm Frldly,
Monday
odHion
10:00o.m.
Saturdoy.
Garage Sal• OOLong raoldonco,
Frldly a Saturday, July 91h &amp;
10th, Stet• Route 143.
OlriQI ull- July 8 I
t,
dra,......, lodloo clolhlng In
email Jr. elz.., mlec. WhltehHd
raoldanca, Roodovlllo.
Hll1nd Road, July 8, I , 10; old

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

2 Femlly Garage Sate: S1turday,
7110,

t-5 Only. Fumhurt, ClothMile. 1115 Slit• Routt 850.

dishes, what note, something
tor everyone, t.m-5pm.
Yard HI• Thur1dl1 and Friday,
Main Sti'Ht, Rutland.

Read
the
(;lasslfieds!

All realestale adver11slng In ·
this newspaper is Sllbjed lo
the Federal Fair H.ouslng Ad
ol1968 whiCh makes it Illegal
to adver1lse "any preference.
Mmllallon or discrimination
based on race , color, r811glon,
sew: tamilal status or national
ortgln, or any lntenUon to
make any such prelerence,
Nmllallon or

di salm lna\iofl , ~

This newspaper will not

lcr)owlngly occopt
advenJsements tot real eSiate
whiCh 1s In violation ot Ill&amp;
law. Our readers 818 heraby
Informed that all dwellngs

adver11sed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
·
oppo~unlly basis.

Spacloui 2 bodnlom 1D1o, car·

1125/mo., poling, '""ll!t. rolngorotor, Bohama Cruloo 5 Doyo 14
temlly ltmoepnere, on elte Nlgh1o , _ _, Mutt Sal~
$125 · batoro
OliO yoor ......
!h3-254.aoatl
t :ooom or monagor. EOH. 304-182·3718 or 1271· Par Couple. Umftod Tk;~­
oftort:30pm.

come by lod1y, Laurtand Apt1,
l~h IC, N1w H1ven, WY.

42 . Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Two bedroom In Middleport,

10x40 llobllo Homo 2 Bod·
,_,., Furnithod 1221/Mo.
Wete-r, Traah Paid. no Fourth,
Galllpolll,

11t Ul 4418

Attar

clorlcol Jobo

IVIIIabll now, for Information

Nnd $1 pl .. SASE to KPI, 11615
P. Homaltoad, N.E., Alllanco,
Ohio 441501.
AVON I All Aroao ! Shl~oy
Spolro, 30U75-1429.
BUSINESS SERVICES OFFICER

46 Space for Rent

Aolorancoo 6 DopooM. 114-4413413.
2 bodroom, p~v111, couplo fo 1
child oliowod, Rodman Aldgo.

-oom.

3 ledroom1, Full BaHmMI,
New Andar111n Wfndotn, He•t
Pt.lmp. Ca~, Family Room, AI·

teched. Gar•,

Urge

Lot,

94-go Building, 114-317·7300.

3.48 ecrH, 44x24, 3bdrm., 2 112

batho, lull basomonl, wHh olld·
lng gl11o iouloldlo onlronca, por·
tlllllr tuml•hecl, front .porch,
tlrga redwood d~~ek overlooking
ravlne Iron horat 50'x32' bullet:.
Flocal
loft , wh!t. comont...n-, -10'112'
ComiMIItr Oporatlona 01 Tho · Iii hr, building, loc1tod McGrath
IOIIrd. DegrH Or EquiVIIent Rd., ~ue_! ott fffi33, t mil•• No11h
Experience Required In Ac· of omeroy, Home National
counting·
Comprehenalvt Bank, AKine, .Ohio 45771.

Computer Skill• E•••ntlal.
Compotllivo Salory And Exco~
lont Fringe Bonoll Pocklgo
Avalllbla. ~ Completa Poaltlon
Profile II Available Upon R•
·
~or
Conoldoration1
PI- Submh Rnuma Ana
Aaterance LAtttl'l To

G1lllo .J. ckoon ·llilgo Board 01
Alcohol,
Drug A~lction And Uant1l
Health Slrvfc11
.
414 Sacond Avonuo; P.O. Bo•
514.

bo •vollablo July 15th. 304-

C.bla, OVIrloc*lng Ohio Rlvar
In
Kanaug1,
Dlpoeft
&amp;
Reference Requlrwd, Fotrter'1

3
1 112 bolh" allachod
gorogo, 183 MIHon Hd, Camp
Conlty, 1ppll1ncn Included.
304.e75-1836.

Phone 114-94~2210.
4 room &amp; bath, lull booomont, 71

Burdotto Addition. Coil tor op.
polnlrnent 304-175-1488.

5 bedroom lwlck homo, 1 112
bolh, aloctrlc hut and 1ir,
family room wtth llrtpllct, nice
lovollol. 614-446-1387.
:
5 Room With Acr•g• Under
~ooo Roulo 7, South, 114-256·
1t~.

Galllpolll, Ohio 45831

For Salt On Land Conlrlcl: 3
Bedroom Rench Style, 1 a.th,
LA, KH, FA&lt; UR, With Lg. Daek

For Addltolnallnfonn1tlon, Con·
tact Ronald Adklno, E•acutlvo
Dlreetor, AI ' 814-448-3022. Ap-

1150, 3 MIIM From HMC, 114·245-

On .B1ck, 5ilddmore Road , Ott

~··

llobllo Homo Parle, 114-446-1102.
3·bodroom trallor tor ront, 12e01
mo.,
dopooH, Counlry
llk:bllo
o Pork, 114-112·211l
For Rent• 2 .Of' 3bdrm. traUtr In
Middleport, 114-lla2-A58.
Nlco mobile homo lolo lor . ~p to
16x80 homoo batwoan Athol&gt;• &amp;
Pomoroy, Wimlln., f14-llt2-2117.

'It'=.

2 tHtdroom trailer tar rent,

O.ldllna:

July

14,

w-

Porntroy1 c101:1 to counhouae,

MCond l100r, about 1100 aq, n., Truck topper, email pick up
truck, 1!10; f1WI2-3314 aftor
114-llt2..S71,
lpm.
V·:IO OHch WHch Tronchor WHh
Dozor Blodl lo 4 Ft. Boom E•·
Wanllna to rwrt- 2 or 3 bedroom collonl
Condlllon, 114-11114-7842.
houH, ln cloon and aood condl·
tlon, p;.11r prl¥ato .oo1tlng, 114Building
112..Z428, If no enner piN• 55
leavt rMMAIJI on machine.
Supplies

retrlg1rator,
neer
Holzer
HoopHol. J24!11Jnonth, dop. ,..
qulrwd. 114-441-2t57.
1 -room; Oulol l Prlvalo, Air
Conditioning 1250111o. 114-441Ga65, 30W7J.1550.
1br1 ~ovo, roll(a., 11111. lur·
nlanoa. 30W75-Itl1.
2~rtmente In Pomeroy· ona
~..:Jiitod~4.f~::i3. -ly
2bdrm. epta., tot1l aftctrlc, IPpllancoo lumlohod, loundry
room facllftlM, ctou to tchool
in t-n. "ppllcotlono ovoiloblo
at: Village Qrean A~e. " ' ' or
calll14-1112-3711. EOH.

:."E8H'

;Aid;;~ib;;i;;;:;;;;;;;:2 ~':, ~';....~~~-585&amp;,
Mdraom

aliartmtnte,

2 11110 wu~.. 1 dry&lt;~r, oN In
good cond, 3
95-3348.
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-448-3158 or 814-441-4421
'110 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO OEPOSIT)

'

OIITSIOE

FURNISHINGS:

Wrought Iron Table W/4 CMirli

Fan Bock Aocklna Chair J58;
Gordon Arch Woy'o $121.00
Boddlna ·lWin Man Sot $89, full
' " Sol auooh $10 Sol; 4
Drawor Choot JU.IS; Cor Bod'o,
Bunk Bod'o, _ . , Bodo. Full
Line Of Soutt.w.elem Va111
Storti")) At 120.00; lndlono Manr
Shape• &amp; Slz• Starting At
15.00. 2 Location• ·lootdo ~lAo
Auction Dr 4 Mlloo Out 141.
Opon ·g A.ll. To I P.M. Mon ·Sat.
Dlboon uprlghl froozar, 114·9112·

7758.

.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
WOOhoro dryoro, rotrlgoratoro,
rangoo. Ska9111 Appllan-, 71
Vlno
Colll14-441·7318, 1·
800-4-llt.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comp!Me horn. fumlshlnge.
Hours: Mon-SII, 0-5. 814-4460322, 3 mlln out Bulovlllo Rd.
Frao Dollvory.
Living Room Suite, 2 Piece,
Novor Ulld, .275; E·Z Bo•

St-.

Recliner Rocker, 1105, G14-886-

137:1.
Mo1ioh1n ea,...;o, AI. 7 N. 114·
441·11144, t112 Corpot NO, All
VInyl In Stock 14.48 Yd.
Now OOk FumRuto: Tabloo I
Cholro, Hutchoo, C..rvod Gtooo
Chlnl

Cabin~~•,

~t,~,!~g.

1/2 mi.
.lorrlcho Ad. Ph Pt-nt, WV,
CIII304-875-M50.

Houoohold

SWAIN

&amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo Sl ., D1Uipollo. Now &amp; Ulld

By GARY LARSON

~;:',:'b'!,,h:,'::.,:;:.om l

6t4-

Port limo c .. todlon -Y t :OO.
12:00AII, Mor&gt;Frl, Pt. ·Pit. Prao·

t

Antiques

-31.

Ford Moclol Sll M - Excll·
1ont Condhlon, 3 Slckloo •no,
. l14-37i-2718.
Hydraulic oil $14.10 buckol or !10
gal $125. Sldora ,Equl-.
Hondoroon, WV. 304-17$-11121.
lnlornollonal 300 Tractor WHh
Cultlvatori Com Pllntll' 12,350;
B414 lnt.,.Uonal WHh Loader
ta,e~ :"' lntornallonal M,HO,
11•·2
522.

Conlo
Houllna: . Anyllmo,
Anywhoro. Hnr-.. Ohio,
Evory Monday. Chuck Wllllomo,
=~ Crook Truckln;,. 114-2411-

t187 GIIC Truck 4•4, Lbw Milot,
Eleollonl CondMion· • 12 Ft.
Storcnft WHh Troy Molor
l Trollor; 11 Fl. BonHo Boot,
Whh 15 HP Evlnrudo llotor,
Daplh Flndor lo Tnllor; Approx.
1-ball Cordo, 114-4411- '
Ahorl P.M.
.

Georg•• Por1able Sawmill, don't
h1ul your logs to tha mill )utt
call 304..071~ 1957...

ra'r

JohnttOn'e Tr• Sarvlct, trim·
ml~ a. removal, ti'IH, ehrubl,
h -,'lroo ootlmatn, 304-!1811:mlf or 1.etl0-427-7371.
Ml81 Paula'• Day Care Ctnter 1
Bkl&lt;ii'Woot 01 HMC On Jockoon
Plko M·F 6 A.M. ·5'30 P.M. It
Quollty And Exporlonco 11 Tho
11 concern For Your Chlld'a
Caro. Call Us For A Vloh. lnlant
!Toddler~

814oo44~227.

Pre1~

Polod Horolonl ilull, 2 · Yoaro
Old, 114-251-t4M.
llaglttorfd~n w Bullol 1&amp;-20

Mpac·
'

Amorlcon 518ft
111cla11d ~lttr . tr1ller, gmt
'ooncl, 304-IIH341.

Transportation

2 Eloctrlc - Fry-. Hoi Food
Tobie, Snaozo Guard, Soled Bor,
Aoglolor. Uahtlld Sign, 6-2·
7SA, 11....0·7121. .

71 - Autos lor Sale

111L. -

drlvo, 3800 mlloo, llko ,_, 114112·7711.
Hondo CR125A. 1800, 114-3711- '

:

.-

By JeiTrey McQuain
· OOSSIL &lt;:'DAH·sil"! is a plug or
wad of cloth to cover a w9und. Here's
·a tip for spelling thi s old noun :
DOSSIL ends like FOSSIL.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
~ME
JOeH~ E.DMN RON.4LD
KELLE~.

and

&amp;yracuM are11,

have tx•

~-11630.

1

614·

"Ah, ye1, Mr. Frlach~rg, Jthought you'd
eo~ but which of u• Is the I'N/ duCk, ..
Mr. Frlachberg, and ttDt just an Illusion?"

...

..

I GUE551H4.T WA-5
LE'ARNED
Aeot.JT ACRCIN'(M"f!&gt;.

MY Roi.RENTS

ee~ 1l-IBY

I

;
'

:
•
•
•
·

OUR LANGUAGE AD ·VICE:. The
latest Ad· Vice Award for pronuncia·
lion trouble goes to a bank whos e
spokesman talks aboul every CUS·
tamer's "per·AH .guh·tiv." The noun
PREROGATIVE, meaning "speCial
right or privilege." starts with PRE·
and should always be prcnounced
"preh·RAH·guh ·tiv." Some dictionar·
ies have started to include the mis·
. pronunciation, but PREROGATIVE,
like LIBRARY and FEBRUARY, con·
tains more than one R. Using this
word is your prerogative, but pro··
nouncing it correctly is. your obliga·
tion.

mi11ll11 :~

f11tener

50 Arabian

I.
'

I

,.

'

oermtnl ••
51 Uncooktcl
53 ctlium
Symbol '""
.. ,

55Ltlll -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

l

~

l

c.t.tty CipMr cryptogrlml . . ~from quot1Hona by t.rnoua .-opa.. paat and present.
Ed! ""-In 1M dpMf 1tand1for ~ . Todq'• dW: L ~ U.

· .

'OJSA
ETANP

X

OJNX

XTSTVVTB

T P A

KLX

'

Z X

OTVAFAV

X T E J C

lAVA

Z X ' N

11"

WV~JX,

Z N

J p

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'

'

NTDAZD

STTP

OVCA .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A musical is tho hardest kind ol movie lo do,
lhe most dllflcult genre to conquer." - Gene Kelly.
W.DaD
'AMI

.
.'
CRENTH

I

TAGOL

rl
I

..

"'

~;:~=;::;:::;=;:=;;:.......,
.....,.Nr.-E-r-C""TB_H-rr....,l ;,,

s 1 1 Is. ..
.I .
. .

The cutie and her much
older boyfriend had an argu ment: 'You're so mean," she
pouted, "I just bet you 're the
one who invented the -··---··· !"

I

·.

GR0 0 F T
1--T,:;;.,..:;I...::..,,r-.,,roe~T&lt;~g;-1 G)

I

. ..-J
L-.1.-.J._.J.L.....J.L-...L.
A

PRINT NUMBFRED 11

A
V

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

Compie1e lhe chuc~le ouoled
~ V !.ll,ng in the missing word1
you develop from step No J be low.

~ LETTERS

FORI

SCltAM·LE1'S ANSWERS
Damage - Scald ' Youth • L~vity • HE'S TOLD

A teen and his friend were talking about the.r ~arent~ .
' My folks never argue," lhe teen announced, but 11. s
not an ideal marriage. My dad JUSt does whal HE S
TOLD I"

~~W~E~DN~E~SD~A~Y~--------------~JU~LY~7~1

..
Vll\tiT ARE Ttlt.
COLl~TEO

SI\ORT STORIES
Of YUKIO

MIS~IM~?

p.m.

~Ai;lm=r..
::m=-:31
;;;-,::roo=r•.ba:::
..:-:,.::;1;:11 .

Faclory ·r a l u - In 1Nt.
Gorogo _,., Hklna . -. 114- ·
441-817.
•

Serv1ces
81

Home ·
Improvements

ASTRO · GRAPH

Hornoo. AddHiono, Foundaliono,
Roofing, Khcho,. /Bttho. lnIUIWd, l'rao Eotl . .too 114-317~ '
0111.
Vacuum Cleaner Repair, Free
Aalc.Up W Dlllvwy, Our..-

.

Aon'a TV Sarvtoa, -"'11zlna ·
In lMIMh OliO - · ' : mooi1
olhor ~ndl. ...,_
, aloo

Thuroday, July 8, 1993

.There's a possi bitil y you co uld make a
ma jor cha nge in bolh your poli tica l a nd
phltosophlca l altit ude in the year ahead.
These aile rations wi ll be good tor you bus i·
nesswise and make you a stronger person.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you attempt
to tmpose your ideas and opinion' on othe rs today. you're likely to dra w an ~hfriend­
ly reactiO n. However. if you use teachi ng
e xamples . what you say will be more palata bl e . Trying to pa1C h up a bro ke n
ro mance? The Astra-G raph Matchmake r

~~~ ·
~~TV:..~"'""'aan1o
.loa".011
R SES,

......,

·

.

vtde d tl s not a one stded a 11atr.

..

~

'71 M..,ury Couaor, runo aood, Wilt build polio - . clocko,'
good condlllon, $1100 or o~ ... - rooma, ..,.. .. YlnYI
lor, good AC, 6i+ll2·123t. •
~ traitor lklrtlng. .11141m BW Robbll Dallal 258-1414.

I·

w~ll

tor

11 their thoughts are superior 10 yours . don't
1e 1 your pn·de or ego compel you to re1·eCI
them .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A 101nt endeavor
co.uld work
out very we ll for you
.
. today;
E h pro-

rath er

Davto Sawing llochlno And

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..!an. 19) Be obiec·

I tive in evaluating ideas of associates today ..

ac must

be able to contribute that which the other
1 k5
ac ·
,VIRGO tAug. 23-Se.p t. 22) Involvements
wtth.groups or,commtttees should work out

.toll Too I~ Small, Yaara £1.
,.,.,_
Oldor IN-r

CIMII Rood, 114-441-G:IM.

can help you to
.
. to do lo .
make the re latiOnship w_ork. ¥all $2 and a
long. self·addressed. stamped envelope to ·
Matchmake r. P.O. Box 4465, New York,
N y 10163
.
· ·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

8224.

eM't:nct end '.'''rtncH

.

.

Strlkt with.

36 Stopa
37· Piay 1111 - .
39 Como all ,.
faUhful
40 Hymn ot l~
41 Algonquian
Indian
.·
42 Of llrcrall ..
44 VIctim
·~
45 W11
:~
46 Unpllyed ••
golf hOitl '•
48 Melli
.,:

OUR LANGUAGE

choolt,.. /Sc:hool Age 614.-t46·
Wanting to do houHcltlnlng,
Pomoroy· Middleport· A1clno

REMEM6ER ME?

1181 Hondo 1100 Cuotom many
.......... cond, 304-Ti::-5424·
tftM; I :GO Pll.
1181 ICaw-kl 454 LTD, boft ·

cun11 Home lmprow•nantL No

Livestock

inontho,
upon
t!on, 114· N033.

DO 'r'OU HAVE AN't'
IDENTIFICA"(ION?

FRANK AND ERNEST

N- Hollnd 7ft. hOJI!Ind, AC,
no till com pllnttr, Dierbom
BASEMENT
•
toraao harvoolor WI com a hoy
WATIAPAOOFING
haacf, Oohl grt-l•or, all Unoonclltlonll , llflllma guaran~ cond. 304-2n-4211.
••- L.Oal ,.. . . .a.. tu~
Col .,~- Or 114-2»-'
l'(ant to buy' ttt'clor, prolor .
--w..-~Ea4 drlvo « oinall " - · lobllahoi
1171.
304..75-2112. '

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandlaa

"'

1m Norton Combal 850 -or·
eye .., 11000i 21 Point Lane
(Lineoln Hill), Pomeroy.

61 Fann Equipment

63

1;/

1

1M YOUR BROTHER ...

Motorcycles

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

18
//

WHO WANtS
TO KNOW ?

1flll ChiY. 4x4 Flatbed Good
Englno, $1,000, il14 t4l &amp;ibii.
1111. SU&amp;Ukl Samaria, 414, ,_
cllllch, _ . , . plot,, th,_ .
out
boartngo,
lncludoo
olumlnlum dlroctlonal rlmo and
blklnl lop, liking $3200. 304175-1111.

11' Mark TWain Trt Hull, 140 hp/ -;,.
lnbo-boord wlopaN wlnior -~ bulft In Alln'lll a ;
topo clock, aull wlloal lrollor ~
2 Realeterecl Hlm1layan Klttent, oparo,
roconFamliioo, Roady To !i01114-4411- dftlorwd,, com..-,
oood .ahorp, - ;
1032, 114-t41o0200.
141100. Call !o4-e711-S418.'
:
Roglttorod AKC Cockor Spaniol
11113
Alu~
:lo•
!
•.
All
·
Puj)pleo For Solo,.614-3711-2728.
Wlldod Alumlnuill Ulollrna war-:
· a · Wllh Molor .
lllnlalurw Plnochor AKC, 4 rontf. ~
Molora a
m•... &amp; 1 temala, blk &amp; tan, Guido T
t.-ra- floh
Powilrad
1200. oach,,:104-5711-2444.
By llarcury Outboardo, Full
AKC Roglotorwd Bloglo Pupa, Une Parti I AI: 111 rill, 1113
Tri-Color MaiM $50; Sllvt Voyager Jon - · On Solo JS
Stoploton Dlyo: 11-1-4172; Mo~no Slrvlco 3021 Bladon
Anytlmo: 114-251-1118,
Road, 114-21M110.
AKC Roglltorad SIW Molo Col· 76
Auto Parts &amp;
llo, Show Ou1IHy, 304-73tl-t1t2.
Acceuorles
Fl•h Tenk, 2413 Jackson AW't.
Point PIIINnl, 304-17$..20&amp;3, Budaol Tranamloalorw, UIOd l
lull llno Troplcol lloh, blrdo, robulll, aiiiJpoo, ttartlna ot $911;
e1111111 •nlmale end euppU•.
ownor 114-245-5177, ~14-3711'
KK Pol Land Now Oponod, All 2213.
Rogul1r
Anlmalo, . Exotk:
Anfmale, Fish I Atpllln, 1!114387-0117.
lllnlalurw Dochohund, Will 1111
10 lbe. Roady Juno 20th, .Sholo, '19
WOf!!IOCI, To 1..0¥1ng Ownon
campers&amp;
~~. Loavo IIMoogo, IM-2411-.
Motor Homes

luy ar 1111. Riverine Antlquea,
1124 E. lloln Sl_,, on AI. 124,
PomorOJ. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
toi:OO p.m. 114·112·2521.

/

As W.S. Gilbert pointed out in
"H.M.S. Pinafore," "Things a re
dom what they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream." The art of suc·
cess in bridge is seeing through the
masquerade and spotting the best line
of play.
·
Today's deal occurred during. The
Sunday Times / Macallan Pairs Cham·
piohship, held in London last January .
Three declarers had to play in six
clubs against a heart lead. How should
they have tried to make their slam•
As you can see, declarer cannot lead
a trump immediately as the defenders
will cash a heart trick. So~th must discard his heart loser from one hand or
the other before playing a trump.
There are two chances to attain the
heart discard: take a successful dia·
mond !inesse or play on spades. Superficially, the diamond !inesse is more
attractive. A finesse is a 50·percent
proposition, whereas a 3·3 spade
break will happen only just over one·
third of the time.
However, as the three declarers re·
alized, they had extra strings to their
bow by playing on spades. Maybe a de·
fender with two low spades would
have a singleton club ace. Or, if West
ruffed the third spade low, declarer
could overruff and then try the dia·
mond finesse .
So, Enri Leulkens from the Nether·
lands, Henry Mansell from South Afri·
and P.O. Sundelin from Sweden
played spades from the top and made
their contract.
Avoid relying on superficial analy·
sis. Always look below the surface for
that vital extra chance.

PEANUTS

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

lor 5ale

53

E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Tr• Rtmovel, Hedge
Trimming. Fr1t Eedmatta! 614317·7157 Aftor 4p.m.
General Meintenanct, Palntlng1
Y1rd Work Wlndowa W11haa·
Gunaro Cloanod Light Hauling,
COmmerlcal, Rnldtntlll, Stevt:
614-4411-1158.

vory aciOd oond, 1(134 mlloo,
13,0oll: tlmt -2..32311.
.
1M 1-10,
auto., ·ao0c1 CCiftoo ;
dHion, $3200, 114-10124142.
•;
11117 !!!&gt;dgllon dual - 1 121f
1111,. · Raar Uno rolo dtlor. coli
""""lngo 304-111111-1441.
Chovrolot, Ford, Oodgo- pick. .·
bod._ Short or long. NO ruol.
•3Q4.87H281.
·

--·

Pass

Eall
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Appearances
may be deceptive

440 engine, auto, aood tlr11, 1

Roglttorod
AKC
Gormon 1m Star craft-,. camopor,
Shophord wldog houao, $100. 1~ "~ 1800. 304-812-2112 11111
304..75-71117.
5.00 .....
1m Southwind 2T 440 11oc1ao
59
For Sale
21,000 Mil• Original Prloo W"oo
$10,100. Want SOld Firat 15,100
or Trade
Tokoe. 201 Glan Drtvo, Fondor Jozz Baoa S!&gt;tclal 1 From - a l PloZII On Aouto
YNr Old, Uko Now, liCk, 114-

~·
5+

te

~

::1117l';;
. ;::ton::-;:D::,:::dll::,.-::d;:-:li::ol::o~.c::':lu::;b:-:c::o'tb, ~

2718.

1 NT

IOAtMmbMnQ
on old
.
tlrlntltd ;
lnetrumenl
11 Doctrlnta .:
Lonttngo ~
17 Whlltlt .
eound
20 Mound •
22 Foolblll ;
ICOrtllblir.)
25 Of erm boott
26 SwHt pottto
27 Worn 1wl y
28 Bell&lt;
"
29 Teer
~
31 - Molnti'

33 Raced

72 Trucks for Sail

74

Nor I~
Pass

8 Oltho UK -I DriYert' o(g.

Opening lead: • Q

75 Boats &amp; MOtors

Pets for Sale

bytlri1n Church, ah I Jilin St,

Point Pl..... nt. 30W75-2170.

111a2 Ponftlc Grond Am 4 c.tln·'
dor, ...... 22,000 llllao, 4 0"!'!'_!,
Uko Now, Aoklll!l t10,ouu,
: 111 441 11271 ~ftar I P.ll.

Groom and S-ly Shop-Pol
Grooming. All broedo, alytao.
Julio Wobb. Coll614 44111231.

aoo11. ea....

Etc._Alv• Valey Celt Fumhure,
38113 GiiiraM C.ook Rood Gal•
llpollo, Ofilo Phono: 114-44i4311. .
PICKENS FURNITURE

415-IHS, 304-01-2647.

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

56

Household

oocutHy
no poto; $100~
114l~~~~~~~~~~~~~22~51~.
m~o~.~dopoah,
ln~c~lu~d~nut~illt~iln~,~
lli2·2218.
AUCTION

THE FAR SIDE

Classifieds

245-6121.

Goods

1 bedroom, air concl., .tov1 and

One

Block, brick, HWtr Dlptl, wtndow., llntlll, IIC. Clludt Wln111"11 Rio Grande, OH Cell 8,...

Merchandise
51

GlhlpoU• Ferry, nNr Bille
School, 4br ranch, 2 112 bath,

Nol To Lito To Moko Extra l ·l;g:OOPiia'.jjjM;;.
lloneyl Soli Avonl M..t Llvo In 1.
Gelllopllt Cl_ty Llmha Or South
FraoAI.F0&lt;35"1 G1Mio
LlmhodCounty.
Tlmo, 1-10001
Ston
551-4101.
Poramodlco- Doolrablo ochodulo
and poy r1to, mony bonollto In·
eluding """ houolng, maJor
mldlc1l provldld, moving tx~
pen111 provl~, call Gtnerll
Ambul1nco, Oak Hill, WV. 304·

PhNNntl, $3Jta.j .. n abiMt,
M5; boy's bicycle, •7!i largo
w•t•leleclrlc avattable, 11.-.m- oxhouol fin, $115; 614-102-2715
5851 u1r. tor JoAnn.
oftor 4:30pm.
Ofllco ·opoca ., omoll buolnooo two Dttch Witch Trtnchlr w/
I~ · IVIIIIbll, ISC location
duo!&amp; d-1 onglno, lOw houri,
JocUoll Avo. ~J'tl.2758 bot· I way blodo. l14-1114-7142.
?:30 I 5:00PM.
Solo--tlex exeftl• machine, 114otflct
epac8 ,
downtown 112 .. 67l
'

dor Slreet, Pomlf'OY, no pete,

Apanment
for Rent

Kllltl FI-ll Buy Enf&lt;lr._ Floo
KllloN lor polo, homo • yard ..
Cluarontood olloctlvoll Avollablo
Point Plo1oan1 Co-op, 1S18
KonowhoSL
N- Hall Slon packlgo olr con•
dHionor $1,2t5.1no1allicl, 1:.u..cl
2112ton air oond. •715.00 lnolallod. el4-444.e301

Fomily-IYI&gt;a rlvor campoHo tor
rwnt, .-u rented but one,

con~

2br, kitchen turnllhld, no pete,
2208 JoH-on. 304..7$-13S7.
llr111 Nl·ln kllchon, LA, laundry Fumilhod t Bodroom Apart·
Thll Board lo An Equol Oppor. room, central air, 1 . 112 1111 "!.!I!'J. ..Share Bath, UUittl• Paid
tuntty Employer.
gorar., patio, vinyl aiding, 'l...wMo. 101 Fourth, Gollipolli,
eitua eel on comer lot • comn 11t 441 4418 Afl• 7P.U.
oxtro 1Q0x100 lol, 588,1100.
I UOJ Womon Nlido Holp, &amp;14· wl _.
~partmonl lor rant In Pt.
304 75-2183 .
2~5-12711.
.•
PINNnt, 114·112·5851 oftor
Domlno't Pizzi In Pomeroy 11 HouH for sale $48,500. 26~8 5pm.
·
now occopllna appllcatlono tor Lincoln Avo, Pt Pit :J04.882• BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
3863
drlvora only.
·
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
odic 1
EMT1 Nlco 2 bedroom whh lull booo- ESTATES, 536 Jacklon Plko
E.M.S. : needed
pt~ram tor •naw am·• ment, on RldR:e Avenue, Rio trom $206/mo. W.lk to
drtvtrw
bul•nc• Hr~lct. If Jou ar• 1 Gl'lnd•, 1 bloc from cempua, movlee. Call 814-441-2HI. E •
114-742·3033.
earlng &amp; profn on11 InFumlahed Apartment, 1br next
dlvldual, pllalt call 304-511- Vary nice 3 Mdroom, 2 bath to Ubrary, pt~rtl.lng, central heat,
2788 tor appointment.
homt. 13 ecrea, above ground eir, relertntlf. 114 4410338,
Auto
Body oool, 2 c1r go raga, 171,000. Bolora 7p.m.
Exporlancad
RtpaIrman S 1nd Anuma ....o: Watson Ae•hy, 304-175-3433.
Fumlthed
EH~Iency
$185
CLA 277, c/o Golllpollo Dally
Utllltln P1id, Shon Both, 107
Trlbuno~25 Third Avonuo, G1~ 32 Mobile Homes
Socond, Gallipolis, 114 ·ue 4411
llpollo,
411131.
for Sale
Aftor 7PM.
·
Notionoi .Publlohlng Firm Noodo
Gnic:louo living. 1 ond 2 bedPoOIIII To LobO! Pootcardt 10&gt;155 good condHion, havo tQ room aportmonto it Vlltaao
From Homo. 1800 /Wk. Sot Your to opprocllto h. 814·:JN. Maond
A:~¥1votM1rolaall&lt;ll
OWn Houra Call 1·1100-74C).7371, 1318.
Aportmonto In Middloporl From
(1.41 Min 118 Yrl+) Or Wrlto: 1811 Holly Pont 14•112• 3 Bod- J202. Colll14...2-$19. EDII.
PAASE -33F, 111 S. Llncolnwoy, roomo, 2 Sotho, UtiiHy Room,
N. AutoraiL 150542.
AC, Eioctrlc, 814-251·1121 Aftor Nica 2 badroom •:=rtmont lor
pUctUon

11113.

Slartl~

$100 dopoalt, 1210/mo., 114-617·
3083 aftor Spm.

44

day ThN Saturday, I A.M. To 10
P.ll.

Fumlshed
Rooms

2 Bedroom Tral..,, State Route
588, Tolol Electric, 1250/Mo.

2 Bedroom• FumlthN, Air,

31 ·Homes for Sale

45

Aooma for rent .. week or month.
It $120/mo. GaAIII Haiti.
IM 4 IU~.
BIMplng room• whh cooking.
Aloo troller opaca. All hook-upo.
Coli .... 2:00 p.m., 304·TnIISI, Maeon WV.

1137· 2010.

Real Estale

Mon·

WHAR YOU
BEEN?

DOWN TO LIMONA'S
BEAUTY
·sHOP

v..,

7P.M.
2 btclroom turnlahld motlll•
homo, 304.e7$-lll12.
2 l•droom Trailer For Rant On
Nolghborhood
Rood.
Coli
·~wtlmo, 114-448.f755. .

will

ltl, 407-717-8100· Ext. 118,

Ohio, 114... 2·7171.

aru S225fmo., $200 cltpoalt,

•AVON' ALL.AREASI Shoro your
lime whh u.. You'll love the
company. 1.all(l.992.e356.
A-mbling . l

1....,...-4824.

Two bedroom houR,

Help Wanted

11

Public Sale

Retar~ne~~,

Etc. 114-2111-1238.

- · 114-441-0171

Giveaway

4

~ TV'~R'o, ~~:."0::::

4 Bodroonw Brick, Country
Homo, 1425/Mo. La- llopooh,

Air CondMiorwro, Guitar Ampo,

304·77W343.

Mlrchandlae

41 Houses fOr Rent

Don't Junk hi Sill Uo Your Non·
Working llojor Applloncao,

J a D'o Auto ond Salvage,
alao buying Junk caro &amp; trucio.

.BARNEY
MAW!!

54 Miscellaneous

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

·.

2 .f ollower
3 Numero 41rma Douet
5 Slaggtra
8 Andothoro
12 Wdl.)
7 btwn
goddtOI

~ou toda y . H?w.eve r,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 19) You mighl
be a b'l• 1ortunate in material wa ,us todau, .
b 1
· not likely Ia get something lor
uthyou rw
e hat IJ(\u receive you'll trulv have
no 1ng.
,~
,
to earn.
PISCES iFeb. 20-March 201 You ma y
l'lave 10 d e al wi th someon e today who

th@ !akes a position diametrica lly opposed to

mtghl no,. hbe as gral!fytng when yours., Th's
could be a no·win situation , so
1 result
· d .
t
' you re .ea 1tng wtt persons on a one-to· instead of arguing, look for 8 compromise.
one basts.
ARIES (March 21·Aprii1S) There's a pos.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23) A llh~ugh you sibtlily you might nol accomplish all you're
mtghl not re hsh 1t al !he ltme . you re apl !o capable of doing today owing loa depi81ion
1pe rl orm e1cep11onally we ll .when c hal · of your energy and drlve by making your
lenged or pressured loday. Th•s fact will be work more diHiculllhan il is .
ev1dem to others . as well as yours•"·
i i'ER IS (April 20· May 20) Be care lul
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) To your cr•
. . _.,....,..Clue! yourse lf today, o r else
yo u II be a ble 10 handle moody and lem· you~...., on , 00 assenive ly with

b:~::: n:~~~:.:o~l ~e~~n;'~:~~i:~~=~: lri~;!";.;,~

you' ll know how 10 bring them up lo yours .·
SAG ITT ARIUS.·(Nov . 23; Dtc. 21) An
a~so ctat e who 1S m a ~os 1hon to do so
m1ghl lry to pul obstructiOns on your path
today, bul ~omeone wilh greate r aulhorily
who is your ally will have them removed.

··'

sd

" t ; r liHie hoi spots

~EMINI (M8y 21-June

· 'l 'llrcttul lactics
lhal could prove successful lor you today In
the workaday workJ aren't apt lo go over
equally as well if you try' to ~se them on
lamil members .
V

.
.•
'

.
•

!Pan

'
I

at lhe lmpr.V

-

\

Mrs.

'·

' •'

�......

'

..

.

~~ 14-The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 7,1993

'

'
..

PEPSI·COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
· Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

20

·

PA~K,

12 OZ. CANS

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD JULY 4 THRU JULY 10, 1993 ·

ROYAL
CROWN COLA
.
PRODUCTS
· 2 LITER BOnLES ·

79c ·.

.. USDA CHOICE ~ BONELESS BEEF BOnOM

$ 29

· Round Steak.....................LB. · 2
.

'

..

BALLARD'S SLAW, BAKED BEANS, MACARONI or

Potato Salad. . .~·····~······LB.

$199

MUELLER'S

. ElBOW·
MACARONI
. POUND BOX · ..·

s

$ 69·

WEAVER BAnER Dl! CHICKEN WINGS . .

3
9·
(
Leg Quarters..............La. · · .

CHICKEN

PORK BUTT

Steak/Roast.............La.
COUNTRY STYLE .

Spare Ribs. '"...........La.
S LB~ TUB

•

.

Ch1cken L1ver·s......·...ruB
.

.

2.
99(

Legs &amp; T.h•ghs...26-~a oz. .
. MOUNTAINEER 1 LB. ROL~ or 10 OZ. LINK

Sau

$ 169

e

.

MUELLER.
SPAGHETTI
POUND BOX

·

$ 169

$279

REYNOLDS

ALUMINUM
FOIL
25 SQ. FT.

.

(
REG.
or BLEACH
.

·TIDE ULTRA
DETERGENT
•

42 OZ. BOX

GROUND '

·BEEF
10 POUNDS

GROUND ·

CHUCK
10 POUNDS

s
J

'

90 ,

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