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Beat of the Bend...
~patitis B~~;:~~

further,
also required, are being given free
at the community clinics to children born after Oct. I, 1992. However, children born prior to Ocl I,
1992 can receive the Hepatitis B
vaccine-only at the offices of the
health department in Pomeroy and
parents of these children will be
required to pay for !hat vaccine.
Residents of Overbrook in Mid·
dleport did a ballOOn lift on July 2
and some were amazed at how far
their helium-filled balloons traveled. Tom Turner's balloon was
found in Richmond, Va., and Mae
Cleland's was found at Sutton, W.
Va.
Rollie Hemsley and son, Jay,
and Jim Davis kept lraffic moving
and telephone service going the
other day when a tall vehicle
knocked down a telephone line
near the Jean Grueser home in lhe
Minersville area. Usipg a piece of
excavating equipment, the line,
through the use of zip ties, was
fastened up high out of the path of
other vehicles until the phone corn·
pany arrived to do the permanent
repairs. Service was not disrupted
at all due to the efforts of the trio.

'I:

!: '
CHUNG AND RATHERS

NEW YOR K (AP ) - Th e
" CBS Evening News" has
dropped to last place in the ratings
· six weeks after Conn ie Chun g
joined Dan Rather.
The ratings are down 2 perc.ent
from the same period last year,
while NBC's are up I percent and
ABC's are up 7 percent.
For July 5·9, ABC was No. I,
NBC second and CBS last: The ratings marked the third time since
October that NBC climbed out of

American Legion
unit 263 congregates

American Legion Lewis-Manley who attended the 12th . Annual
Auxiliary Unit No. 263 met recent· awareness Assembly held m Wa~h­
ly at the home of Helen Culmer, ingiOn, D.C. she spoke of Lrn: assiS·
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
tance needed m erecung a ~1etnam
The meeting opened in ritualis· women's memorial honon~g t~e
tic form with Mrs. Culmer, v1ce . women who served and d1ed m
president, in charge. Annual dues Vietnam. It will be located on the
were paid; Margaret Bowles was mall near the V1etnam Veterans
acting chaplain in the absence of Memorial. She also talked of the
Annette Johnson . Florence closing of the military bases.
Richards was acting secretary in
A salad cour.se was se.~ved b.Y
the absence of Dorothy Casey.
Miss Culmer. Smgmg of Am~n' Lula Hampton, legiSlative chair- . ca," prayer for peace and closmg
man stated the condition of the remarks by the pres1dent ended the
hom~less veterans and America' s meeting.
.
.
position in a changing world were
The next meeung w!ll !&gt;e at the
some of the perplexing issues home of Ada Frankhn m Pomt
addressed by auxiliary members PleasanL

4-H demonstration
contest scheduled

LIFESTYLE FURNITURE SHOWCASE
END OF SEASON PATIO SALE!

LOS ANGELES {AP) - Former " Oesigning Women" star
Meshach Taylor is joining the east
of "Dave's World," a new CBS
sitcom based on the work of humor
columnist Dave Barry.
Taylor will play Shel, a single
father and an overworked plastic
surgeon, when the series makes its
debut in the fall, CBS announced
Monday.
·
..
"Designing Women" ended its
seven-year run this year.

'

"'

,
4

~

...,.

~

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'

COOL PEANUT • Planters trademark char~cter, Mr. Peanut,
is getting an update. The new Mr. Peanut shown here on a package
of Caribbean Crunch Snack Mix bas a less stlidgy image than the
old Mr. Peanut. (AP PholoTfhe Winston-Salem Journal)

350/to OFF
SALE '422.50
Reg. $650.00
Save 35% to 50% Off All Pool, Patld &amp;Lawn Furniture.

•••orled colore.

probably better If you don't hear
the deacriplion.
• ••
Thoae who think they know it all
sure upset those of ua who really
do.

Remaining stock only-No special orde~s at sale price.

1

.Chaises
.Chairs
•Tables
-Gliders

•Umbrellas
•Lamps
•Park Benches
•Many other Items

\

•FrH Delivery
•FrH Parking

Lifestvle

VISA

MASTERCARD

FURNITURE SHOWCASE

DISCOVER

'

3rd &amp; Olive St. 446-3045

Y2 PRICE

~PRICE

Grasshoppers

All Connie and
Dexters

·-: ....

~-

;~

'

,

·~

.

ia , by the time we reach greener
pasturea, we can't clim.b the

'

•••
Doctor told our friends to cut
down on red meaL So he atopped
putting ketchup on hio
·

•• •

One thing to le•n from your mis -

takes

how to blame them on

Is

someone else.
..... * •

At Rutland Furniture we have
New Shipments arriving
daily. Shop Now and Save.

...

'

Shop The Rest Then
Come and Shop The Best!
7 SHOWROOMS , II WAREHOUSES

Rutland, Oh.
742·2211

'

..

Gro•p Mea's
Dexter ind
H1s~ Puppies

30%oFF 20%oFF' $10.00

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
An environmentally friendly use
Genevieve, Mo. The levee in this
town
of Meigs County and other highGUARD ON DUTY · Missouri National
is
holding
the
47
foot
Mississippi
River
floodwa·
sulfur coal is the goal of a Pomeroy
Guards111an Delbert Nichols, Ironton, Mo., tries
ters back, but requires a 24-bour watch and con·
man who is currently seeking fundto start a water pump on a sandbag levee that
slant maintenance. (AP)
ing to research and develop a conruns directly next to a bouse Tuesday~ in Sts.
cept he calls "energy ecosystems."
Energy ecosystems is a term
coined by Jerry L. Six of Kings·
bury Road to describe dealing with
, many energy and environmental
problems in a combined manner.
Six proposes to study the ceonomic and ecological feasibility of
the energy ecosystem, a system he
stretch Tuesday night.
manager
of
the
city's
water
plant.
says
functions like a natural
By STEPHANIE NANO
"Pretty soon, they were up to
Some
250,000
people
have
been
Associated Press Writer
ecosystem.
without tap water since a river their necks in water," said David
A quarter-miltion people in Des
"In natural ecosystem s, nature
Weman, a fire battalion chief. The
Moines, Iowa, had to make do overran the water plant 10 days workers were rescued by boat.
selects and combines diverse
ago. Dorrian said there was "a
without tap water agam today. In
Police Lt. Steven Mueller said organisms so that space, energy
St. Louis , workers trying to shore major drop in water pressure" authorities helped several people and resources are shared in an enviup a levee were rescued after flood· overnight as residents saughtto get leave their homes, but he couldn't ronmentally clean and efficient
waters broke through and washed a jump on water service.
manner," Six said.
The Mississippi River bulged to say how many.
over a soggy neighborhood.
"The study will endeavor to
The neighborhood had been
Residents hoping 10 start turning its second crest Tuesday in as many under evacuation orders since the select a combination of recycling
on faucets and flushin~ toilets in days, reaching a record 47.1 feet at weekend, when sandbags washed and agricultural industries that will
St. Louis , ·Or more than 17 feet
·pa'rt5 of Des Moines th1s morning above
be able to share land, buildings,
flood stage . The river hit off the earthen levee. Earlier Tues· equipment, energy, products, bygot bad news, and the blame, from
emergency workers with bull·
Mayor John Dorrian, who said ~&gt;CO· 46.9 feet Sunday night then day,
horns drove through, pleading with products, maintenance and labor in
dropped
slightly.
pie were failing to heed wammgs
an environmentally clean and cost·
Workers were shoring up a holdouts to flee.
to " leave their taps off."
efficient
manner," he said
"We' re floating on this block. It
The earliest that water could breach along south St. Louis \ R1ver went
"For
example,
steam from an
real fast," Melanie Bartnick
begin flowing again would be Des Peres when sandbags atop the told the
electric
generator
is
used in con·
St. Louis Post-Dispatch. verting grain into ethanol.
Thursday, said L.D . McMullen, levee gave way along a one-mile The flooding
The
did not reach her mash is fed to fish or livestock,
house.
At ni)thtfall. some residents sat
on their porches in darkness on
streets thai were still dry. Power
and water had been cut to the area.
A few blocks away. workers
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
pumped water from streets covered
Keith H. Petrie, 37, 114 1/2 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, was cited
White
House auoi'ney who was
with 8 to 10 inches of water.
early Tuesday morning for driving under the influence, the GalliaPresident
Clinton's friend for mdre
The River Deg Peres is a con·
Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. He was also cited
than
40
years
was found dead in a
crete-lined storm drain that has
for driving under suspension, no seat belt and failure to drive within
park
overlooking
the Potomac
been flood ed by Mississippi backmarked lanes.
·
River
from
an
apparently
self·
1
wash.
inDicted
gunshot
wound.
SL Louis was hit with drenching
Vincent Foster Jr., 48, the father
rains Tuesday , and thunderstorms
A co.uple vacationing from Michig~ reported the place they
of
three, was tiJe No. 2 attoiney in
were expected to soak parts of the
were staying in was ~ntered and seve~al1tems stolen Tuesday.
the
White House counsel's office.
Midwest today.
According to Me1gs·County Shen~f James M. Soulsby. Mr. and
About 900 households in the Hi s body was found Tuesday
Mrs Homer Pullins of Waterford, Mich., were vacauomng at Mrs.
Manhattan, Kan., area were urged evening in a Virginia suburb. ~f
Pultlns: hom~place on Coolville Road in Olive Township when the
to get out Tuesday because of Washington at Fort Marcy, a C1v11
building was entered between 10 a.m. and 3:45p.m.
.
water releases from swollen lakes War-era fort preserved as a park.
A 12-inch black and white television, a leather shaving kit ~d a
Park Service investigators said
and reservoirs upstream . Sandbagpair of shoes were reported stolen. Entry was made by removmg a
gers were hard at work around · the death was an apparent suicide.
screen on the front door. ·
town. " It's us against Mother Police declined to say whether they
Nature, and Mama is $Ding to win found a note.
Stunni:d White House officials
sometimes," said Chris LaR,ose, a
said
they were unaware of anything
volunteer at a church.
T.amrhy Marcinko, Tuppers Plains, reported Monday that a 10·
that
would have caused Foster to
Elsewhere, lhe cleanup continspeed bicycle was taken from her front yard.
take
his
own life.
ued.
.
A
native
of the president's
"It smells like fish, and there's
hometown
of
Hope, Ark., Foster
only one way to get rid of the
was
a
former
law partner with
siDell: bleach, Pine-Sol and loiS of
Kelly Thomas, Painter Ridge Road, Salem Center, n:~ that
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton in a Liule
elbow grease," said Dorothy MeK·
Friday night or Saturday morning someone en.rered !hell' res1dence
.
inzie, owner of an auto repair shop Roekfirm.
and took a videocassette recorder, a compact disc player and a Nm·
. The president went to Foster's
in
Davenport,
Iowa.
Her
business
tendo video game system.
·
. .
. .
was coated wilh about a quarter- home Tuesc1ay night to visit wi~h
The Meigs County Sherifrs Department 1s mvesugabng.
his widow, Lisa, and children. His
inch of Mississippi River bottom.

Des Moines residents still
waiting for tap water

.'

---Local Briefs-__,

Al~REMAINING

BUSTER BROWN
CHILDREN'S SHOES

$10.00! ~

Couple reports B&amp;E

rJfie

9to 5
Friday
9to8

MIDDLEPORT

·

Deputies probe theft of items

992-5627

·.

_

..

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..... .... .....
•

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week. Regular football practice
starts on Au~. 9.

The poSIIion cannot be filled
until the require,J three day posting
and three day waiting period have
passed. In view of th~t time ele·
men~ lhe board voted to change the
regular Tuesday meeting to July 29
at 7 p.m.
.
Meigs has three assistant coaches, Greg Deel, Daryl Owens, and
Jeff Baker.
.
Attending last night's meeting
were Larry Rupe, president, Bob
Barton, who gave the opening
prayer, Randy Humphreys and
Roger AbbotL
·

while the ethanol is used in the system 's vehicles to promote its.use in
private vehicles."
·
The proposed facility would
consist primarily of a laige coalburning furnace. However, instead
of sending waste heat up a chimney, all the heat produced is used
for other purposes.
"The goal," Six said, "is for
nothing to' leave the system beyond
ambient temperature . All 'heat is
ysed for something else."
The facility, he explains, could
be used for melting metals of all
sorts or to melt glass into construction blocks. The target, Six said, is
to make the process cheap enough
to deter simply burying the gl~ss in
landfills.
Furlhermore, the heat given off
by molten glass and metal could be
used to convert plastic chips into
plastic pellets or plastic milk-type
jugs into plastic lumber.
Olher possibilities include melt·
ing old tires into oil and gas or
heating water for steam to generate
electricity. The remaining hot
water could be cooled and transferred to fish farming ponds.
High-s11lfur coal could be usc:ct
in the furnace because, as SIX
explains, the sulfur would · be
removed by a distilling process and
sold as sulfuric acid.

One of Six' goals is to contact
and establish communication with
experts in certain fields.
The following industries have
been selected by Six for initial consideration because they have several things in 'common; me need to be
more cost competitive, willingness
to share information and work with
others , and each has a product
and/or by-product. !hat two or more
of the others can use: A11 scrap
metals, clean coal, sulfuric acid,
P}"'Oiysis of tires, all scrap paper,
b1omass fuels (ethanol, methane,
etc.), hy.droponics, all scrap glass,
sulfur dioxide, waste incinell!tion,
steam-generated electric power, all
scrap plastics and plant or animal
aquaculture.
Six' target is to acquire a total of
abQut 200 people from these fields
to form a pool of expenise. I want
to use their brains and knowledge,
Six said.
So far, Six says the largest\
obstacle he has found consists of an
inflexible bureaucracy with no provisions for combining rechnologies.
Six has contacted several agencies
seeking funding for his study, but
has not received much feedback in
return.
"I would be happy to go into
detail with anybody to discuss the
proposed plant," Six said.

White House attorney found dead

Man cited for D.U.l.

.

billion-a-year system.
The joint committee had agreed
earlier on numerous other changes
that are designed to end waste in
the system and eliminate lengthy
delays in the payment of benefits.
While the employers went along
with the removal of benefit reductions, Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima,
won approval of an amendment
establishing a special task force
that will study benefits and issue a
report with recommendations for
the Legislature no later than Dec.
31 , 1993.

Meigs man seeks de-velopment
of safe 'energy ecosystems'

r

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124

and the elim ination of regional
r~view boards lhat allegedly have
needlessly log jammed the system
in the pasl
The bill includes a two-year
freeze on rates paid by employers
to fund the system, which operates
without taxes from the general public.
The House and Senate, which
had been re cessed since July I ,
returned Tuesday for a one-day
session to vote on the bill. There
had been talk of another interim
budget for the bureau and commission, which jointly operate the $3-

The resignation of Mike Sta~s sian . in executive session,
as head football coach at Me1gs employed Mike Chancey, assistant
High School, effective immediate· coach at Ohio University for the
ly, was accepted by the Meigs past two years, as interim head
Local Board of Education at a spe- football coach.
Chancey, who started on the job
cial meeting Tuesday night.
Staggs, who has been at Meigs today, played football at Meig s
for the past four years, also . High and Ohio State University. He
resigned his positions as field care is the son of longtime Meigs coach,
director and occupational work Charles Chanc ey, and Mary
adjustment coordinator. He has . Chancey, Pomeroy.
accepted a coaching position in · Supt. Bill Buckley said that it
Norwayne High School in Wayne was necessary to fill the position on
County .
an interim basis because football '
Since the football training pro- camp for high school boys started
gram at the high school is already this week and the camp for elemenunderway, the board after a discus- tary school athletes will begin next

..

fence.

islative leaders - to make important concessions.
Employers agreed to an amendment deleting provisions that
reduced workers' benefits. The
unions went along with an employ·
er plan for a managed health-care .
system limiting workers' physician
choices, in some instances.
Other provisions expedite
schedules for hearing claims, provide for immediale payment of
benefits for claims approved after
an initial hearing - subject to
deduction from future claims if the
initial claim is later disallowed -

Coach Staggs resigns

;

' Theft of bicycle reported

Hours Dally

analogy. called the bill a triple. fie
said it was not a home run because
other reforms are needed. He hopes .
they will be addressed at the next
legislative session, he said.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D·
Wheelersburg, who has been at
odds with the governor on some of
the bill's provisions, said the bill is
fair, although no one got everything he or she wanted.
Passage came after a long day of
hard negotiations during which
both labor unions and employer
representatives agreed - at the
insistence of the governor and leg·

One problem with gelling older

End of Season BLOWOUT!
All

,.

A Multimodlalnc. Newapaper

,, .

send workers comp bil.I to governor

...-~-

•••

992·5627

ALL
PURSES

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 21, 1993

/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Voinovich, who has often criti·
Lawmakers seeking reform s in cized the system for high costs and
Ohio's embattled workers' com - slow payment of claims, praised
pensatiori system sent Gov. George the package.
Voinovich a hard-fought comproHe said it will solve some of the
mise that they said will help get the system's most critical problems.
.
He saisl he will sign it when it
job done.
The House approved the propos· reaches his desk, possibly today.
al 76-20 just before midnight Tues·
The bill includes two-year bud·
day and the Senate added its gets for the Bureau of Workers
approval 18-13 a few minutes later. Compensation and the Ohio Indus·
Party lines virtually collapsed in · trial Commission. Their old bud·
the House but mi~ritr Dem~ts gets exJ!ired at midnight, but offim the Senate, cla1mmg the b1ll cials satd they saw no legal prob·
penalizes workers, voted against terns with a few hours' delay.
the bill.
Voinovich, using a baseball

When a atrangar identifiea you
from a friend'• description, it'•

0 o OFF ALL ATHLETIC SHOES

All CONNIE a~d
AUDinONS
SUMMER SHOES

2 S.Ctiona. 16 Pogea 35 c•Ua

Multimedia Inc.

Rutland
Furniture

hamburgers.

Low lonlgbt In 60s, clear.
Tbursday, blgb In upper 80s.

.a 1

Vol. 44, NO. 5!1

of

219 N. SECOND AVE.
~ .•

Pick 4:
9143 .
Buckeye 5:
19-21-32-33-36

.·

Grate

n·s time to ptav:

•ARlELLE 5 PC. DINING PATIO GROUP

745

•

Dave

r.~aabok

Includes 42" round glasa top table and 4 arm dining chair• In

Pick 3:

PageS

By

NOW THRU SATURDAY, JULY 24TH
THIS SALE WILL NOT BE REPEATED

ALSO:

..

·.Law~akers

Baell to Sehool Sale

'

Ohio Lottery

KC teams
eliminated
'

MINNEAPOLIS {AP) - Prince
plans to peddle potions and posters ·
at a store he's opening in his hometown.
.
Customers also will be able to
see and hear unreleased music and
videos at New !&gt;ower Generation,
named after Prince's soon-to-beformer band . Last month , he
announced he will split with the
band after a European tour that·
opens this month.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.~. (AP)
- After standing stiff and formal
for nearly eight decades , Mr;
Peanut is finally becoming a '90s
kind of a guy.
The Planters' trademark will
still have the top hat, monocle and
cane. But the packaging for new
nut products being introduced this
year shows Mr. Peanut sporting
cowboy boots, or kicking back on a
, beach wearing a lei.
Mr. Peanut dates back 10 1916,
when a 14-year-old boy won a
design contest with a drawing of a
peanut with arms and legs. A commercial artist added the now-familiar top hat, monocle and cane.
Mr. Peanut is one of the world's
best-known corporate trademarks,
say officials at Nabisco Foods'
Planters division, based in Winston-Salem.
But the old image appeate11
more to older consumers than to
younger people.
"We have contemporized him ,"
said Thomas Barbitta, the compa·
ny's group-product manager for
new products.

Reg. $89.95---"SllE $69.00
HIKE AIR RAID
Reg. $89.95.---MNOW $69.00
HIKE AIR BOUND lw~ile)
HIKE AIR DYNAMIC FLIGHT
Reg. S124.95...;.__ "NOW $95.00
HIKE WOMEN'S AIR X-TRAINERS Reg. $64.95"---.NOW $48.00

Two more

founder of the Fox network.
Chao might develop the network's programming, the magazine
said.
Diller spokes man Mic hael
Rourke on Monday called the article "specul&amp;tive."
Best 1V would mix home-shopping segments with conventional
TV programm ing, the magazine
said. No lau nch date was men·
tioned in the article.
Chao served as Fox News president and head of seven Fox stations
before being fired in !992.

NEW YORK (AP) - TV executive Stephen Chao, fired by Fox
Broadcasting Co. for hiring a male
stripper for a company conference,
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
is reportedly joining an effort to
David Duke' s contract at a radio launch a fifth network.
station js up , but the politicianCiting un identified sources,
Newsweek said in its current issue
that Chao next monlh will join the
tentatively named Be'st TV. The
network is being launched by
.., Chao's former mentor Barry Diller,

Mr. Peanut
gets a hip
makeover

The Meigs COI!nty 4-H Demon- and Jeanne Braun, senior citizens
stration Contest is scheduled for center.
Coordinators of the contest arc
Wednesday at I :30 p.m. at the
Cindy
Chadwell, summer 4-H proMeigs County Extension Office.
gram
assistant,
and David "Chip"
Participants will have an opporHaggerty,
4-H
agent.
tunity 10 share !heir project knowlWinners from this contest will
edge by demonstration or illustrat·
be
eligible to participate in the
ed talk. Contest guidelines include
State
4-H Demonstration Contest to
the following: there is a junior and
be
held
at the Ohio State Fair in
senior division and entries can be
August.
individual or team and the time
Preregistration for all entries is
limits are not less than lhree min·
by Tuesday. For addirequested
utes or over 12 minutes.
Judges for the contest at John tional information and contest
Costanzo, Meigs County Schools, guidelines contact the Meigs County Extension Office at 992-6696.

Lading Quality al C/o~eoul Prie11

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Opryla nd USA is following the
lead ·of country-music center Branson, Mo., in boolting top acts like
Tammy Wynette and Tanya Tucker
for extended stays.
The theme park will feature
three country artists a night for !50days next year, executives said
Monday. Previously, the park did
not book top-RliJDe performers for
extended stays.
Branson, a small Ozark Mountain town, has,.turned into a tourist
mecca, with country artists opening
theaters. Country singer George
Jones said some artists wouldn ' t
have gone to Branson if they could
have done longer gigs at Opryland.
Other acts that will perform at
·opryland from May to October
1994 are Alabama, Marty Stuart
and the Oilk Ridge Boys.

will

turned-talk show host
stay on
the air- as long as he can pay for
the time.
WASO-AM manager Robert
Namer said the former Ku Klux
Klan leader will buy air ti me on
"Conservative Ho tline ," which
runs each weekday morning.
Duke's contrac t ran out las t
week and was not renewed.
" Our preliminary ratings have
shown an improvem ent, but we·
don't know if it's due to· David
Duke," Namer said. And he said
the improvement was not enough
to justify another contract

-+

If you're a retiree , doesn't it
Mrs. Glenna Riebel, RN, who is really thrill you w~en someone valdoing all of those community clin· unteers _your semces for some .of
ics about the county on behalf of the triVIal tasks that abound w1th
the Meigs County Health Depart· · lhe,;omment:
, .
.
ment to provide immunizations for
Joh.n can do, that. It II giVe him
young children, up to kindergarten somethmg to.do .
.
age, advises that an fllB immuniza·
Where d1d the theory wh1ch
tion which protects children against says that reured people have nolhmeningitis is among the required mg to do come from? It may take
immunizations for children. The us longer, but we do haye plenty .to
HIB is being given to youngsters at do, thank you. And do keep sm1l·
the cpmmunity clinics. The com· mg.
munity clinics are free of charge.

•

in the .n ews---- - -

last P,lacc.
·
' I'd rather be in the water and
finish third, than to be high and dry
playing some ot~er role," .said
Rather, .who was m Des Momes,
Iowa, to cover the MidjVesl Doods. ·
The program's ~xet:u t!-:e producer, Erik Sorenson, s&amp;d '1t takes
a while to iron out the kinks" when
there's a change in a newscast

by Bob Hoeflich
July may be getting a liule hum·
drum but y011 can look forward to
August for a pickup in activities.
A lhR:e day event wiU be held at
the Buffmg10n Island State Park on
· Aug. 13, 14, and 15 by the Meigs
County Historical Soc1ety and the
Meigs County Park District in
cooperation with other organiza·
tions. The only Civil War battle
fought north of lhe Ohio River will
be reenacted as a part of the observance.
And, of course, that weekend
wiU be a busy one for DU!DY Meigs
Countians who wiU be setting up at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds for
lhe annual Meigs County Fair. The
fair will Oj!Cn for its fust full day of
activities on Moodily, Aug. 16, and
will run through the following Saturday ..
And, by the way, if you are. a
native Meigs Countian aqd are into
genealogy you are apt to be inter·
ested in three new pu'blicatio.ns
which the Meigs County Historical
Society is preparing. They are
Meigs County Birth . Records,
1867-1908; Meigs County Death
Records, 1867-1908, and Meigs
County Marriage Records, 18191918. These publications are in
various stages towards completion.
We·' II let yo.u know when they are
ready and lhe price.

•

Ohio

SenUnel

.·-

wife and daughter Chelsea were in
Little Rock at the time.
In a wriuen statement, Clinton
expressed "deep sadness" and said
Foster had " served ably and with
distinction as deputy White House
counsel, and was my friend for
over 40 years." .
As deputy White House attar·
ney, Foster served under Bernard
Nu ssbaum , a New York City

lawyer who is one of Clinton's
closest advisers. Foster kept a low
profile, which is common for
White House attorneys.
He was a player in the White
House's controversial firing of
seven White House travel office
employees but he was not singled
out for criticism in an iniP.rnol
review of the case.

Carjackers hit Cincinnati area

•

CINCINNATI {AP) - Carjack- said Tuesday that AAA members
ing - a word associated with big say they feel less safe in their cars.
"We're selling mace now, and
cities, dangerous downtowns and
street gangs - has· entered Cincin- we're selling it really well," Ms.
Wooten said.
nati's vocabulary.
Since November 1992, when a · Police said they don't keep
law made the th~ft of an occupied statistics on carjackings, but local
vehicle a fedora! crime, reported newspapers have said 44 carjackcarjackings in the city have ings·were reported last year. So far
incre;ISed slightly. But drivers and this year, 30 have been reported, '
A carjacking by any other name
newspapers have picked up on the
would be .as dangerous, but
word and the threat.
Joyce Wooten, safety coordina- wouldn't inspire such fear, said Ed
tor for the Cincinnati office of the . Boldt, a spokesman for the FBI's
American Automobile Association, Cincinnati office ..
••
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'

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court StJeet
Pomei'O)', Ohio
D£1!0DD TO 111&amp; INTERE8TS OF 111&amp; Mlt108-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETffiRS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than :100
words All letters are subject to ed1ting and must be s1gned W!th name.
oddress and telephone numbu No unsigned letters will be publisbed Letters
should be in good taste, addressmg 1ssues, not personaliues

A hearing with no serious
opposition or abortion test
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Nominate the Lord Almighty to the Supreme
Court, the senator sighed, and somebody would try to d1g up din at confrrmallon lime.
While that habll has been a recurnng headache for Sen. Joseph R.
B1den and the Jud1ciary Committee he ch31fS, there may at last be a relatively smOOCh court confrrmauon at hand for Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
As her heanngs opened today, there was no Significant opposiuon, no
replay of the old arguments about aboruon as a linn us test issue. She's on
record as a supporter of the constitutional nghtiO abortion.
Not since the rejected Robert H. Bork, who now calls Ginsburg about
the best chmce conservatives could hope to get from President Clinton,
has a nominee gone before the Senate with so clear a posillon on abortion
rights. His was no.
.
.
Hers is yes, although on conslltullonal grounds diffenng from those the
court used m its 1973 Roe v. Wade decisiOn.
·
For more than a decade, the abortion question was a fixture at confrrmallon heanngs, the answers purposefully vague.
The norrunees were chosen by two Republican presidents who were
pledged to overturn the abortion nghts ruling. But the Senate, Democratic
since 1987, favored aboruon nghts, and wasn't going 10 confrrm JUSilces
openly com mined to reversmg the dec1sion.
That led to a sort of semanuc standoff, in wh1ch success1ve nominees
avoided answers to the abortion question, J usbce Clarence Thomas going
so far as to deny that he even had a personal opmion.
President Clinton supports the aboruon rights decision, and won't be
nominating JUStices who do not, although he demes -just as Bush
denied - that it1s a litmus test.
Looking back, Biden said thai as abortion became a dominant single
1SSue in court confrrmations, Democrats and moderate Republicans played
into right-wing hands by letting it happen.
Then thin(IS got worse in 1991 with the sexual harassment accusation
that forced B1den's panel to reopen hearings on Thomas. That episode led
to his latest effort to reform the process. The Judiciary Committee will
hold a closed session with Gmsbur~ on Friday to deal with any investigative or personal matters. Biden said that will be standard from now on,
whether or not any questions have been raised.
"I can assure my collC!I&amp;ues that we could have the_Lord Almighty_ be
nominated and someone m thiS country w1ll commumcate ... somethmg
negative," Biden told the Senate last Thursday.
The Delaware Democrat said anyone who does so should know thai it
will be made available to every senator, not JUSt to committee members,
as the bp against Thomas was at fJrSL
That deals with the scrt of problem that erupted at the last confrrmation. But there are more basic questions, unanswered· and probably unan•werable.
There are, for e~ample, no precedents to seule clearly whether confirmation should be based on fibless and expenence alone, or should delve
mto philosophy and so 10to politics. It is a quesuon argued both ways,
sometimes by the same senators m altered pohucal circumstances.
At the harassment hearing, Thomas said the accusation by a former
a1de was engineered by his opponents, and added that it would have been
OK w1th him if they'd tried instead to block confrrmation because of his
views and conservative philosophy.
But his sponsors had insiSted earher that qualifi tions, not philosophy,
should be the basis of confrrmation.
Bork denied Senate confirmation to th curt in 1987, says the entire
process 'has become politicized and_t.b distorted. Biden insists that the
system worked properly when B)lrKwas "defeated by the extreme nature
of his VIews, as fully docum_ented in his pubhc record before any heanng
was ever held."
/
Biden said confirmauon hearings aren't supposed to be "a dramatiC
spectacle" or a trial, but a look at the nominee and the record.
Testimony by court nominees has been standard only smce 1955;
before that It was sporadic, depending on circumstances, and before 1925,
there was none. Smce 1981, Supreme Court confrrmll,tion hearings have
been televised; Bork says that has made them ''drawn-out photo opportunities.''
"Nothing Judge Ginsburg says at her hearing will be nearly so important as what she has done the past 30 years," Biden said.
That wouldn' t make 11 much of a TV show, wh1ch would be fine w1th
Biden.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

Letter to the Editor
A dedicated person
A spec1al thanks to a spec1al
. person, Roger Manuel.
Twenty years ago this year th1s
person was a frrst string catcher on
my team. This year, knowing of my
101 ury and health problems, and
knowing that I would be of little or
no help 10 him, he msisted on me
helpmg him w1th the team,
I don' t think he knew what that
meant to me and how much I
enJOyed doing it. The Racme

Wh1rlwmds arc a very fine group
of young lad1es who display a lot
of sportsmanship and talent. To top
evcrythmg off one of our players,
Jody Hupp, 1s my granddaughter
who I am proud of m many ways
A dedicated person to sports and
to h1s commun1ty, thanks agam
Roger M.
Donald Hupp
Racme, Oh1o

Today in history
B'fTbe Associated Press
Today 1s Wednesday, ~uly 21, the 202nd day of 1993. There are 163
days left m the year.
·
Today 's Highlight in History:
On July 21, 1961, Capt. Vrrgtl "Gus" Gnssom became the second
Amencan to ~ocket 1010 a sub-orbital pattern around the Earth, flying
aboard the "L•berty Bell Seven."
On th•s date:
In 1816, Paul Julius Reuter, founder of the Bribsh news agency bearmg h1s name, was born in Hesse, Germany.
In 1831, Belgmm became independent as Leopold I was proclaimed
King of the Belg1ans.
In 1861, the first Battle of Bull Run was fought at Manassas, Va.,
resulting in a Confederate victory.
In 1899, author Ernest Hemingway was born in Oalc Park, ru.
In 1925, the so-c:al1ed "Monkey Trial" ended in Dayton, Tenn., w1th
John T- Scopes foundjllilly of violating state law for ldlching Darwm's
Theory of .Evolution. (The conv1ction was later overturned.)

'

•

. ·co~gress

•

Page-2-The Dally sentinel • .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ;
Wednesday, July 21,1993
:

WASHINGTON - As Bill
Clinton's economic plan hangs in
the balance, and health care is
looming in the near future, the
plight of rape victims has squeeZed
mto the spotlight on Capitol Hill.
A year after women ·made
unprecedented gains in national
politics, members of Congress are
lining up to support some of the
most far-reaching federal eff911S to
empower rape vJcllms . There are
two major b1lls now pend10g 10
Congress seeking to bolster the
rights of women to fight back
against rape and violence. One the Violence Aga10st Women Act
of 1993 - has already passed the
Senate Judiciary Committee and
has enough co-sponsors to pass a
vote on the Senate floor. The other
- the Sexual Assault Prevention
Act of 1993 - IS a Republican
alternative wlth sim1lar aims,
wh1ch is not likely to make 11 for a
floor vote
Perhaps the most extraordinary
aspect of the two bills is that they
actul!)l¥ exist at all. For the first
tim{." lawmakers on both sides of
the aisle, and from both genders,
are confronting through lcglslauon·
what women have been fac10g on

their own for years.
While a spate of high -profile
rape cases has helped focus attention on the issue, most rapes mere-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ly live on 10 the privacy of 1ts vicurns ' nightmares. The public was
outraged recently when three teenagers 10 Glen R1dge, N.J., were
allowed their freedom pending
appeal of their convicuon for raplOg a p1entally retarded grrl. But to
those who see the aftermath of rape
every day, rape 1s far more than
that.
Maureen Jones-Ryan 1s the
founder of the Sexual Assault
Recovery In stitute in Phoenix,
Ariz., and she has seen what violence can do to 11s VJctims. This
week, she w1ll test1fy before the
Women's Issues Task Force, led by
Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and Susan Mollnan, R-N.Y., co-sponsors of the
Sexual Assault Prevention Act
"Rape is a 6-year-old boy anal-

--

--~

- -;-_.-

.'

t,..,..

IIV~M€@11\l ··~ w•l!:t• s;,~·"Ec&amp;&lt;AA .............

ly penetrated by four teen-aged thitn Sen. Ornn Hatch, R-Utah,
boys 1n an upper-middle class who two years ago enraged milneighborhood 10 Paradise Valley, boos of Amencan women with his
Ariz.," Jones-Ryan says. "Rape is questioning of Anita Hill.
"In the past, most women's lega 67- year-old woman terronzed
and repeatedly penetrated for over islatiOn has been mostly Bandfour hours 10 her own home by a Aids " said Sally Goldfarb, senior
stranger who simply knocked at her cou..;el for the National Organizadoor. Rape 1s a 32-year-old Hispan- uon for Women Legal Defense and
ic woman brutally beaten and vagi- Education Fund, a leading supportnally penetrated by her drunken er of the Violence Against Wom~n ,
husband in poverty inflicted South Act. "The breakthrough now IS •
Phoenix."
that we're looking at th1s compre- :
Jones-Ryan says FBI statisucs hensively, as an issue of equal1ty." .!
BeSJdes strengthening legal pro- :
indicate that one of every four
girls, and one of every su boys are tections, the V1olence Agamst :
sexually abused before age 18. A Women Act boosts fundmg for
woman in America is sexually women's shelters, campus rape '
abused every seven mmutes. prevention programs and training ~
Accordin~ to the American Medi- for local officmls about rape and •
,
cal Assoc18tion, 30,000 women per domesllc VIOlence.
the
law
is
failing
·~
Stallstically,
year are treated in emergency
rooms and 40,000 are treated by b1tterly as an effective hne of
phys1cians as a direct result of defense against rape and violence, ~
A recent study done by the staff of
domestic violence.
Senate Judiciary Committee . :.
the
These are the kinds of statistics
shows
only about 16 percent of
that make lawmakers take notice,
rape
VICtims
report the crime to the
and they have. After years on the
pohce.
liberal fringes, women's issues
In reported cases, arrest occurs
have h1t the political mamstream.
On the Senate side, one of the chief in only about 38 percent of cases.
co-sponsors of the V1olence Of those, almost half (48 percent)
Against Women Act is none other are dismissed before trial. When a
tnal does take place, only 16 per·
cent are convicted of any cnme,
while only 2.5 percent are convicted for rape. A rapist is 50 percent
,
___..._......._
more likel~ to receive probauon
--.....
than a conVIcted robber.
While Congress suddenly has
hundreds of cheerleaders for
women's rights, at least one former
prosecutor 1s taking a cymcal v1ew
of the situation. "This is Simply ·
another political ploy (for mem- ·
bers) to say they're getting tough -:
on crime. It's a cosmetic
approach," says Robert Tannenbaum, a former Manhattan prosecutor and Senate Judiciary Committee counsel who now sits on the
city council m Beverly Hills, Calif.
"If you want to help the prosecution of rape cases, then help the
DAs around the country. Stop the
...
plea bargaining.''
Fortunately, both measures
pending m Congress would do that.
The sooner Congress can get one
:: :::.: .• _
passed, the sooner half our popula~ ••
non will be one step closer to fcelmg safe.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers rot United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

-.-.;:--.

Board, which 1ssued a report on
arrline deregulation in 1991 under
the ausp1ces of the •-respected
Nauonal Research Counc1l.

Joseph Perkins
The TRB found that smce
Congress hfted federal controls on
a1rhne fares and routes, market
compeuuon has been s•gn•ficantly
strengthened, services have
expanded, fares have risen at a
slower rate than mdustry costs and
both fatal and non-fatal acc1dent
rates have declined.
Pnor to 1978, only 17 percent of
au travelers could choose among
three or morr carriers on a particular route By 1991, 65 percent of
passengers enJoyed such a choice
And while maJor earners now
serve fewer rural areas than they
d1d before deregulauon, serv1ce on
such routes generally has been
p1cked up by regional or commuter
aulmes.
Not only are more carriers flying more routes today, they also are
flying them at cheaper prices m
real terms than before deregulation.
Indeed, an analysis by the
Brookmgs Institution, a Washington-based think tanll:, estimated that

fares have averaged !8 percent less
than they otherwise would have
without deregulation. Over the last
15 years, this has saved the airtraveling public more than $100
b1lhon.
The long and short of 11 is that
more people are flymg today more
safely and at a lower cost than
before deregulation. That explams
the tremendous boom in air traffic
since 1978 - from 275 million
passengers to 500 m1lhon today.
To be sure, air travelers would
be better served by a more stable,
profitable airline mdustry. But reregulation is hardly the answer. In
fact, government interference actually ts prolonging the airline industry's P&lt;unful shakeout.
A report issued earlier this year
by the General Accounting Office
suggested as much. It urged
Congress to take a close look at the
pncmg pract1ces of bankrupt airlines. Such earners are taking
advantage of the court's protecbon
- renegmg on labor contracts.
holdmg off credllors, even sumg
nvals - to cont1nue depriv1ng
stronger competitors of a b1gger
market share.
In a recent published mtemcw,
Amencan Arrlines semor v1ce president and ch1ef fmanc1al officer
M1chael J. Durnham cited federal

bankruptcy rules as the pnmary '
reason that the a1rlmc mdustry "
remams unsettled and msolvent.
,
"We failed to foresee a situa· ·
uon," he sa1d, "m wh1ch fa1led
carriers would be art1ficmlly kept .
ahve, thus perpetuatmg capaclly
excess to the market's needs. Arr- '
hnes that have ojlv1ously fruled and
arc being sustamed only by the lifesupport system of the U.S.
bankruptcy code are 1mpenhng the
future of U.S. carriers."
,
Thus, the very best way for the . ·
federal government to help the rurline industry IS to let market forces
take their natural course. If a carrier cannot survive without protection of the bankruptcy court, let it
go under.
There are some who fret that if
the government does not keep the
weaker airline aloft, the mdustry
eventually will be dommated by a
handful of carriers.
But that would not necessarily
be such a bad thmg. It would be far
better to have, let us say, five
strong and profitable airlines than
to have 10 weak and msolvent earners.
..
"
Joseph Perkms•1s a columnist
for The San D1ego Umon-Tnbune
and a writer for Newspaper Enterprise Associauon.

In the State of Oh1o las t year,

dnvcrs license effecuve immediately upon the driver's refusal to

per•nn comm1tted the OMVI
offense, (2) whether the person was
related automob1le acc1dents, and
arrested, (3) whether the of officer
in addit10n, another 20,000 were
asked the person to submit to the
inJured In all too many cases, these
chenucal test of alcohol concentraaccidents were caused by repeat
tion m the body, (4) whether the of
offenders who were perm1tted to submn to a chemical test to deter- officer mformed the person of the
continue drivmg even after a DUI mme the concentrallon of alcohol consequences of submitting or
conviction. Oh1o's new drunk driv- m h1s breath, blood, or urine, or 1f a refusing 10 submit to the test, and
ing law, stated 10 Senate B1ll 62, L~ test ts g1ven and shows an alcohol (S) either whether the person
designed to change th1s dangerous concentration of .10 percent or refused to submit to the test or
more of the blood. The license will whether the person submitted to the
situation.
Under the current DUI provi- be suspended until the dnver test and failed it
sions in Oh10, loopholes allow makes an millal appearance in
If the suspension is upheld or
drivers with one, 1w0, and even court on the charge. This initial the person does not appeal the susthree convictions to retain lheu appearance must be withm f1ve pension at the initial court appearlicenses and remain on the road. In days of the a nest, at which 11me · ance, the suspension continues
fact, more than 12,000 Oh1o drivers the driver may appeal the suspen- until the charge is judicially deterhave five or more DUf CODVICbODS. sion. However, the suspensiOn mined on the merits.
Numerous or~anizauons, such as remai~s in effect while the appeal
Under the new law, arrested
Mothers Agamst Drunk Driving, 1s pending, and no court \vould be drivers who have already been conmake the pomt that m states where permitted to grant a stay of the sus- VICted of drunk drivmg or are drivtougher drunk drivmg laws have pension. Under Ohio's old law, the mg with a suspended licence can
been enacted, the number of alco- driver would be permitted to retain have the1r hcence plates impoundhol related acc1dents and deaths has the license pending an in1tial court ed an~! their cars immobilized. The
decreased. Oh1o's new law goes appearance.
tmmob1hza11on and· impoundment
mto effect September I and is
For an appeal or. the hcense sus- would last for 90 days f6r secondbeing called one of the toughest in pension to be meL it must be limit- time offenders, and 180 days for
the country.
ed to these five issues: (I) whether third-time offenders. In addition to
This law will perm11 a police of the arresting of officer had reason- any other penalty the court chooses
officer to confiscate and suspend a able ground to belie~ the arrested to impose, fourth..Ume offenders
510 people were killed 10 alcohol

Sen.]an M. Long

Accu-Wealher• forecast for

conditions and h1gh

IToledo I 80" I
PA

•

WVA

(f
Ice

•

Sunny Pr Cloudy Cloudy
Cl1 993 Accu-Weather, Inc

Via Assoc1ated Press GraphcsNet

Weathe,r
South-Central Ohio
Tomght, clear. Low 60-65 .
Thursday, sunny High m the upper
80s.
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:

Farr on Friilay. Lows m the mid50s to low 60s. Highs m the m1d to
upper 80s . Chance of thunderstorms Saturday and Sunday. Lows
m the m1d-60s to low 70s. Highs in
the m1d-80s to low 90s.

Area deaths
Cecil Gillogly

Stella Frank

Cec1l Gillogly, 60, of State
Route 689, Albany, died Monday
afternoon at University Hospital m
Columbus.
Son of the late Fern R. and
Goldie Bonng Gillogly, he was
born in Albany.
A former employee of the Oh10
State Highway Testing Lab, he
retired from the lab after 33 years
and was the owner and operator of
Gillogly's Apple Bam ·smce 1974.
In addition, he did contract mowing
for the Athens County Engmeers'
Depot.
He was a rnember and deacon of
the Frrst Christian Church, Disciples of Christ, of Athens. A 1950
graduate of Colurnb1a High School,
he was a member of the Pararnuthia
Lodge 25, F &amp; AM, Athens Chapter 39 Royal Arch Masons, Athens
Council 15 Royal and Select Masters, Athens Commandery 15
Kmghts Templar, a member of the
Oh10 State Apple Marketing CoOp, the Oh10 State Co-Op Extension Support Committee and the
Fruit Growers Assoc1aUon.
He is survived by h1s w1fe of 35
years, JoAnn Lambert Gillogly, a
daughter and son-in-law, A11sa Ann
and Wilham Ashcraft of Albany,
two sons and daughter-m-law,
Steven G. G1llogly of Atl8.JI.t.?., Ga.,
and Jeffrey A. and Sharon 'Gillogly
of Albany; two grandchildren,
Matthew and Jacob Ashcraft of
Albany; four sisters, Westina Crabtree of Albany, Bermce Rutan of
Columbus, Dorothy Frazier of Gallipolis and Margaret Gaston of
Albany, two brothers, Harold
G1llogly and John Gillogly of
Albany, and several nieces and
hephews.
He was preceded in death by an
mfant daughter, Carla Jo, in 1964.
Serv1ces will be held I p.m.
Thursday at the F1rst Chnsuan
Church, Athens, wnh the Rev.
Frank Hibbard officiating. Burial
will follow in Temple Cemetery.
Fnends may call at Jagers
Funeral Home 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. and
at the church one hour before serVIceS. Paramuthia Lodge w11l conduct Masomc serv1ces Wednesday
at6: 30 p m at the funeral home.
Memonal contnbutions may be
made to the Frrst Chnstian Church,
DISCiples of Chnst, at the comer of
W. State and N. Congress streets in
Athens.

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By Tht Associated Press
Iowa and M1ssoun . Showers also central Texas, where the mercury
No rain is in the forecast were forecast m the Northwest
was expected to clunb past 100.
through Thursday and it may stay
Severe weather Tuesday brought
Highs were forecast tn the 60s
dry most of the weekend. Skies tornadoes to paris of Wyoming, • in northern New England and parts
w1ll clear tonight and remam clear Alabama and North Carolina; of Montana, Idaho and the Norththrough Thursday.
strong winds to Missouri, Georgia west coast; and in the 70s and 80s
. High temperatures on Thursday and Florida; and hail to Alabama, in the rest of the nation.
w1ll be in the 80s.
Colorado, Vennont and Montana.
Around the nation
Oppressive heat and hum1dity
More rain fell today on the were to continue today m the
I
already soaked Midwest, where the Southeast, with afternoon thunderMiss•ss1ppi R1ver has reached its storms expected 10 cool thmgs off a
second crest m as many days and a little.
record level at St. LouiS.
Heat advisories for this afterJet stream disturbances and a noon were posted over Mississippi
moist flow of arr from the Gulf of and most of Arkansas. A critical
Mexico were expected to cause heat alert has been posted through
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Wean
heavy rain and other severe weath- Thursday afternoon over most of Inc., which produces steel-making
er across parts of the Plains and Alabama,
equipment, has asked a federal
central Mississippi Valley.
Highs across the Southeast and bankruptcy judge 10 protect it from
Thunderstorms were expected to Southwest were forecast in the 90s, Its creditors.
reach from Nebraska and Kansas to except in the desert Southwest and
The Plltsburgh-based company
filed the request Tuesday in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court and asked to sell
1ts 264,000-square-foot factory m
suburban Youngstown, Qhio, to the
Veal calves: steal!y to 5.00 American subs1diary of Dan1ell &amp;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) C. SpA ofitaly.
Direct livestock pnces and receipts lower; choice 105.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to 4.00
Wean makes equipment used to
at selected buymg pomts Wednesday by the Ohio Department of higher; choice wools 45.00-50.25; process flat rolled steel, while
choice clips 45.00-47.00; feeder Danieli makes equipment used to
Agnculture:
Barrows and gilts· mostly I 00 lambs 51.00 and down; aged sheep make bars, rods and structural
31.00 and down.
steel.
lower; demand moderate.
US . 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
pomts 42.25-43.00, plants 43.5044.50, a few 45.25.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-;260 lbs ..
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
country pomts 43.25-44.00.
Rece1pts Tuesday 7,400. Esti- Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
The JudiCial Fellows Commisselections:
mated receipts Wednesday 7,000.
SIOn
1s acceptmg applicatiOns for
Prices from The Producers LIVe- Pick 3 Numbers
the 1994-95 Judic1al Fellows Pro7-4-5
stock Associallon:
gram,
Con. Ted Stnckland
(seven, four, five)
Cattle: 1.50 lower to 50 cents
announced
today.
Pick 4 Numbers
h1gher.
Outstandmg
mdividuals who
9-1-4-3
Slaughter steers: choice 68.00have
an
interest
in
the administra(nine, one, four, three)
74.50; select63.50-69.50.
tiOn
of
justice
and
show potenllal
,
Slaughter heifers: choice 66.00- Buckeye 5
of
makmg
a
contribution
to the
19-21-32-33-36
74.10; selecc 63.00-69.50.
to
judiciary
system
are
invited
(mneteen, twenty-one, thirtyCows: steady to 3.00 higher; all
apply
for
the
program.
two, thirty-three, thirty-SIX)
cows 58.25 and down.
Fellows spend one calendar
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower;
The Super Lotto Jackpot IS $24
year,
normally September through
choice 52.50-66.25.
million.
August in Washing10n D. C. at the
Supreme Court of the United
States, the Federal Judicial Center,
the Administrative Office of the
United States Courts or the United
Rock-a-billy cancelled
•
VFW meeting slated
States
Sentencing Commission
Long Bottom Community CenTuppers Plains Post 9053 of the
working
on projects concerning the
Veterans of Foreign Wars w1ll hold ter has cancelled the Rock-a-b1lly
its regular meetmg Thursday at event scheduled for Saturday. The federal court system and jud1cial
7:30 p.m. All members urged to event will be rescheduled for administrauon.
Candidates must be familiar
August.
attend.
with the judicial system, have at
least one post graduate degree, and
Church plans "Generosity Day"
Carmel/Sutton United Method1st two or more ears of professional
Church wil l have generos1ty day experience w1th a record of h1gh
"free clothing" Saturday from 9 achievement. Multi-disc1pllnary
a m. to I p.m. at the Carmel traming and experience IS preThe followmg couples were Church at the Intersection of ferred. Acade!JliC backgrounds of
recently granted mamage licenses
Carmel and Pleasant View roads former Fellows include political
science, public and business
in the Meigs County Probate Court JUSt off Bashan Road.
administration, economics, the
of Judge Robert Buck.
behavioral sciences, systems analy·
Receiving licenses were: Orland
s1s, journalism, and law.
Junior Laudermilt, 47, and Leta
Add1Uonal information can be
Lynn Goodwin, 43, both of
obtained by writing to Vanessa M.
Pomeroy; M•chael "Bums, 33, and
Yarnell, admmistrative director,
Lela Mae R1ffle, 21, both of
Jud1cial Fellows Program, Supreme
Pomeroy; Jon Frederick Musick,
Court of lhe United States, Wash24, Ravenswood, •W.Va., and Lee
mgton, D. C., 20545. Application
Anna Weddie, 26, Portland; Robert
Units of the Meigs County
Lloyd Brooks, 25, and Katnma Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce deadlme 1sNov. 19.
Mane Specht, 23, both of responded to s1x calls for ass1stance
Coolville.
overmght. U01ts respondmg were:
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
Tuesday - 8· 12 a.m. Pomeroy
446 ·4524
to State Route 248 for Zelda Weber
who was transported to St Joseph's
Hospital; II :07 a.m. Syracuse to
Classes for lifeguards w1ll be Third Street for Helen Jeffers who
held at the Middleport Pool next was transported to Veterans Memonat Hosp1tal; 11:20 a.m. Middleweek.
port
to' Middleport Police Depart·
Leah Do1dge will be the mstrucmcnt
for Donnie Stone who was
tor and those enrolled must be at
transported
to VMH;
least 15 years of age. The classes
·
Wednesday1:05 a.m. Rutw1ll be held from 6 to 9 p m. the
land
to
Beech
Grove
Road for
evenmg of July 27,28 and 29, Aug.
M1chacl
Sigler
to
VMH;
3:25 a.m.
3,4and 5.
Middleport
to
Overbrook
Nursing
Add11lonal mformallon on the
Center
for
W
11
ham
Sorden
who
classes may be obtamed by callmg
to
VMH;
6:51
a,.m.
was
taken
992-7991
Pomeroy to Forest Run Road for
Janet Oiler who was transported to
VMH.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Losh1a
Mitchell, Middleport.
Tuesday discharges -None.

Firm files
bankruptcy
papers

• IColumbusl84• I

84°

The Daily Sentinel

w1ll be rcqulfed .to forfeit thclf ,
vehicles to the state
' '
This bill does not effect the cur- ·
rent law 's provisions for occupauonal drivmg pnv1leges. Courts are ,
permllted to grant these privileges • ,
as they see fit, However, the sus- - '
pcnded driver must always com- ' ;
plete the other prov1s1ons of the :
suspension before the privileges are , ,
granted.
. . , ',
Those who are in favor of the '
new law say there are too many
loopholes which allow drunk , ,
drivers to remain on the road. They ' ·
feel the new law will serve as a suffiCient deterrent to both first-time
and multiple-offenders. The new '
law also has the advantage of all ,,
offenders receiving a consistent
penalty, regardless of the sentence ' ·
imposed by the court.
' i
As always, pleas• fee) free to , :
call or wnte me, Stale Senator Jan
M1ch.ael Long, if you have any
questiOns or comments about this •
or any other issues. My number is ' :
(614) 466-8156, and my address is , :
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio : · •
43215. .
'
. '

'

More dry weather forecast for Ohio

Thursday, July 22

Ohio cracks down on drunk drivers

•

Ohio

MICH

Regulating airlines is not the answer
People Express. New York Air.
Eastern. Bramff. Midway . Pan
American . Trump. Texas A1r.
These are some of the tombstones
that may be found in the great
graveyard in the sky. All were
casualues of the arrlines war of the
past tlccade.
The shakeout within the U.S.
airline industry is far from over.
All of the major earners are losing
money- a collective $10 bilhon
in red mk 10 ju5t the last three
years Two airlmes - TWA and
Amenca West- remain aloft only
under the protecllon of bankruptcy
courts
To many mmds, the conunuing
turbulence within the rurhne industry 1s an 10d1chnent of 15 years of
deregulatiOn. Pres1dent Chnton
recently appointed an auhnes commission to cons1der, among other
options, whether the government
should exerc1se a stronger hand
over the affairs of the nauon's carriers.
But the we1ght of ev1dence suggests that, notwith standing the
upheaval w1thin the arrhne mdustry, the benefitS of government
deregulation have far outwe1ghed
the drawbacks.
At least that was the conclusion
of the Transportation Research

1993

OHIO Weather

finally moves to help rape victims

L

I

Wednesday, July

.Stella Rosella Frank, 93, of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, July 20,
1993 at Overbrook Center- m Middleport.
Born on July 7, 1900 at Chester,
she was the daugh,ler of the late
John Myers and Barbara Meager
Myers. She was a retired employee
of Swisher and Lohse Drug Store.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home, Pomeroy.

Alesia Well
Ales1a D. Well, 28, of Indian
Mills, N. J. d1ed Tuesday, July 20,
1993 at the University of Pennsylvania Hosp1tal following a long illness.
Born 10 Athens, she was the
daughter of Rose M. Gardner of
lnd1an Mills, and Larry M. Well of
Darwm.
Bes1des her parents, she is survived by her stepfather, Bob Gardner, a daughter, Rachael Well, and
brothers, Charley LuiS; Todd Gard·
ner and Gable Gardner, all of Indian Mills, N. J.; maternal grandparents, MarJOrie and W1lham
Sfak1anos of Shade; stepmother,
Judy Well, half-SISters, Amanda
Well and Jody Custer; paternal
grandmother, Audra Well, all of
Darwm.
Funeral serv1ces will be held
Saturday at 10 am at the Mathis
Funeral Home, 58 North Main St.,
Medford, J. J. Burial w1ll be in
Mecha~•cs Cemetery, Tabernacle,
N. J Fnends may call Fnday from
7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Memonal contributiOns may be
made to the Amcncan Liver FoundatiOn, 1425 Pompton Ave., Cedar
Grove, N. J 07009.

Betty Martin
Betty J. Marun, 70, Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
July 20, 1993 at Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal.
Born on Sept. 11, 1922 at Syracuse, she was the daughter of the
late Hershel Diddle and Belle
Bahram Diddle. She was a housewife and a member of of the Umted
Methodist Church.
She is survived by her husband,
Herman Martin, Pomeroy; two sisters and brothers-in-law, Carol and
Paul Osborne, Lancaster, and Mary
and Wilham Cundiff, Syracuse;
and two brothers, David D1ddle and
Kenneth Diddle, both of Syracuse.
Graves1de services will be held
Fnday at I p.m . at the Rock
Spnngs Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home Thursday
from 7 to 9 p.m.

Livestock report

Meigs announcements
Couples issued
marriage licenses

EMS responds
to six calls

Lifeguard classes
set next week

Name contest winner
Scott Colwell of 30815
Edmundson Road, Vinton, was the
wmner of a recent mystery farm
contest He correctly Identified the
farm pictured m the July 11 Sunday
T1mes-Sentmel as that of Curt•s
Balthaser, Route I, Langsville. H1s
name as w10ner was selected m a
drawing from four who correctly
idenllfied the farm He will rece1ve
$5 from the Ohio Valley Publishmg Co. as wmner of the contest
sponsored in cooperallon w1 th the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
Distnct
·'

'I
Arl&lt;.~~ PIK!
IOC'UTt " ..'tSl

7

Hospital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
July 20 discharges- Olive
Kemper, Bernadean Mcelhaney,
Eva Leach, Carolyn Retherford,
Lon Birchfield, Ashley Woods,
Mary V1a, Takara Kay, Beulah
Morgan, R1chard McGuue and
Amanda Brewer.
July 20 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Shank, son, Gall1pohs. Mr
and Mrs . Timothy Tucker, son,
Mason, W.Va.

Road work begins
Paving work on County Road
18, KingsbUry, by the Me1gs County Highway Department began th1s
morning and Will continue for several days . The secuon to be paved
goes from Route 33 to County
Road 20 and a spokesman of the
department said that secuons of the
road may be closed •for penods of
t1me. The work on County Road
8.2. Texas Road, has been completed.

Group accepting
applications

Lottery

Stocks
Am Ele Power... ... ... .. ..... 37 7/8
Ashland 011........................ 27 3/8
AT&amp;T.......... ,.....................64 518
Bank One ................. ......... .54 3/8
Bob Evans ......................... 18 1/4
Charming Shop.................. 13 1/4
Chmp lndustnes ................. l J.l/2
City Holding...................... 25 1/2
Federal Mogul... .................21 1/4
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. . ..41 5/8
Lands End.... .. ...............29 3/4
Limited Inc. ...... .. .......... 20 1/8
Multimed1a Inc ................. 32 1/4
Pomt Bancorp .... ..... ........ 14
Rax RestauranL ....... ........... l/16
Reliance Electric ...... ... ......17 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .17 3/4
Shoney's Inc .. ..... ............. 19 3/8
Star Bank ..........................35 12
Wendy Int'l... .................... .l4 S/8
WOJ1/Iington Ind............... .30 1/4
Stock reports ar.nbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, Int., o
Gallipolis.

Nestle®.'Sweet Success
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call for more.
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the UPC bar code number of ,..
your favorile navor, and
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FREE Variety Pack ,box of
Nestle.. Sweet Success..
Weight Loss P.lan. Limit one
per family or address. Offer
good to the first 15,000 calle~rs
or until July 26, 1993. Good only in
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�•

Wednesday, July 21, 1993

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

In Kyger Creek LL Tournamenttwinbill

Point Pleasant FOP, Bidwell #1 win mercy-rule decisions

Wednesday, July 21,1993

Page-4

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
QVP Starr Writer
Point Pleasant Fraternal Order
of Police and Bidwell #1 recorded
wins over Point Pleasant Home
Care Medical and Point Pleasant
Village Pizza Inn, respectively, in
T~Wsday night's Kyger Creek Little
League Tournament doubleheader
)Oearn the right to face each other
m the quarterfinals Thursday night.

In NL action,

Reds down Cubs 8-3; Braves
beat Cards after stadium fire.

in Ci·ncinnati, where the Reds won 8-3. The
throw to first wasn't in time to get ~elT Branson
going to first. (AP)

FORCED OUT -Chicago shortstop Jose
.Vizcaino (lert) fires to first base after retiring
Cincinnati's Tim Belcher at second in the third
inning or Tuesday night's National League game

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -Tim
Belcher's locker is down to the
nece~sities - uniforms, jackets,
only what's needed to get through
the day.
Every day, his Cincinnati Reds
teammates ask whether he's heard
anything new about the trade that
has appeared alternately inevitable
and elusive for the last two weeks.•
He hasn't.
He has managed to keep winning through the uncertainty,
although it's getting more difficult.
Belcher faltered in the seventh
inning but came up a winner again
as the Reds beat the Chicago Cubs
8-3 Tuesday night.
.
"Subconsciously, it might be a
little tiring," said Belcher (9·5),
who has won eight of his last nine
decisions. "You keep tallting about
it on a daily basis, wondering
whether it will happen today or
tomorrow, when, where and who."
The trade talk was swirling
Tuesday as he warmed up to pitch
against the Cubs, who had won a
season, high five in a row. General

Mike Morgan (7 -10) made mismanager Ji10 Bowden said he was
wiUing to trade Belcher, a prospec- . take after mistake 10 epd the Cubs'
tivt: free agent, to the Chicago longest winning streak of the seaWh1te Sox for one minor-league son. The right-hander laSted just 2
2/3 innings, giving up four runs on
pitcher.
.
Belcher .made himself look good seven hits.
Morgan started the winning
for six innings, allowing just a solo
homer to Steve Buechele as the streak by shutting out Colorado last
Reds built a 7-1 lead. But he Thursday. The pitching has been
spaced out in the seventh, when excellent, allowing just nine earned
Buechele opened with a single and runs in the five games.
The Reds sent eight bailers to
came around on Jose· Vizcaino's
the
plate in the third for .a 4-0 lead
double. Ryne Sandberg followed
with a single that made it 7-3, and a that decided the game and ended
walk to Mark Grace .started Belcher the streak of impressive pitching.
"That wasn't like Mike," manwalking to the clubhouse.
.
"I got a little bit brain dead in ager Jim Lefebvre said. "He just
the seventh. I made mental mis- had a bad night. He just couldn't
takes I shouldn '1 have," he said "I find that groove. He was all over
started Buechele off with an off. tbc place. I tried to say with him as
speed pitch. AI 7 -I , I ought to long as I could, but it just wasn't
· there tonight.
tx&gt;und the fastball."
"The starting pitching is the
It's been like that lately for
Belcher, who leads the team in key, obviously. We had gotten on a
wins but has watched his ERA rise roll there. Believe me, this was just
to 4.16'. The uade talk might be one of those games for Mike."
Joe Oliver hit a solo homer in
getting to him a little.
"I've made mental mistakes my the second, and Chris Sabo hit a
last couple of starts that I didn't broken-bat, .opposite-field single
make earlier in the year," he said.
(See NL on Page S)

By CHUCK MELVIN
least two or three pitchers per
CLEVELAND (AP) - The game, limiting each to about 50
Oakland Athletics' game of musi- piiCheS.
cal pitchers dido 't ruffle Carlos
The plan backfired quickly on
Baerga in the least.
Tuesday. Cleveland scored a pair
Baerga drove in five runs with of unearned runs in the first off
three hilS, including his fll'st career Mike Mohler (1·2) because of a
grand slam, as the Cleveland Indi- throwing error by third baseman
ans beat the skidding A's 9-5 Tues- Craig Paqueue, and La Russa
day night The hilS came off three pulled Mohler after the Indians
different pitchers.
loaded the bases on a single and
It was the Indians' fourth two walks with two ou!S in the secstraight win, and their 11th in the ond.
last I2 at home. Oakland has lost
. ''The first inning, I thought I
five iii a row and 10 of 13 to fall 10 threw OK," Mohler .said. "In the
games out of first place for the fll'st 'second, I couldn't
a strike. I
time since 1986.
WI\S rushing or something.'·
··
The A's were in the second
Baerga then hit reliever Joe
game of a multiple-pitcher experi- Soever's second pitch over the
ment installed by manager Tony La fence in right for his 16th home
Russa because nothing else was run, putting the Indians ahead 6-1.
workin~. La Russa plans to use at
"It was a palm ball, kind of like

throw

.~l~'!'

GREAT CONTACT!- Point Pleasant FOP manager Bobby
Pyles (left) congratulates Aaron Williamson after t~e hitter's solo
homer olT Home Care Medical hurler Trent Tolliver in the fourth
, .inning of Tuesday night's Kyger Cree.k Little League Tournament
. contest at the Kyger Creek Employees Club field, where FOP :won
. 12·2 to earn a spot opposite Bidwell #I on the Friday quarterfinal
schedule. (OVP pboto by G. Spencer Osborne)

a change-up;" Baerg a said. "He
laid it right in there, and I just
tlu:ew the bat at it. I was thinking
about going up the middle, but it
was inside and up."
The five-run lead, however, was
far trom comfortable, given the
way the A's were hitting Cleveland
starter Jose Mesa (9·6).
"When it was 6-1, I felt there
was no way this was going to stand
up," Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said. "We needed to

.A L games .. .

score some more.' •
The A's eventually closed to 6-5
on Jerry Browne's solo home run
off Bill Wertz in the sixth, but the
Indians scored twice off Bobby
Will in the seventh, geuin~t RBI
singles by Baerga and Regg•e Jefferson. Cleveland added a run ·on
(See AL on Page Sf

THE .l993
PAQUETTE SCORES -Oakland's Craig
Paquette slides behind Cleveland backstop
Junior Ortiz to score from third on a grounder

in the fourth inning of Tuesday night's Ameri·
can League game in Cleveland, where the Jodi·
ans won 9·5. (AP) ·

Scoreboard
Deuoit... .. ........ .. 50 44 .532
CLEVELAND ... 4S 49 .479
Milwaukee ........ .37 SS .402

- • Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastem Division
Team
W L Pet.
Philadolphia ....... 60 35 .632
St.Lcuis ............ 55 38 .591
MootreaL ..... ...... 49 45 .521
Chicago ............. 46 46 .500
Pittsburgh .......... 44 50 .468
Florida ............ . J 9 54 .419
New Yorl( .......... 30 63 .323

GB
4
10.5
12.5
15.5
20
29

Western Dl"lsion
San Francisoo .... 63 32 .663
Manta ............... 54 41 .568
Los Angeles ..... .49 44 .527
Hou ston .. .......... .48 45 .516
CINCIN'NATI ... 49 47 .510
San Diego ........ .. 37 58 .389
Colorado ........... ~4 59 .366

Western Division
Chicago ......... .. :.50 42 .543
Texas ................. 48 44 .522
Kansas City ...... .46 46 .500
Seattle ................ 46 48 .489
California ......... .44 48 .478
Oakland ............. 39 51 .433
Minncsota ..........39 52 .429

2
7
14

2
4 ·

5
6
10
10.5

Tuesday's scores
9
13
14
14.5
26
28

MiMesota 4, Detroit 3
CLEVELAND 9, Ookland 5
Seanle 9, New YorkS
Baltimore 7, Kansas City 0
Boston 2, California 1
Chicago 2, Toronto 1
Texas 5, Milwaukee I

Today's games

Tuesday's scores
San Francsico 8, MomreaJ 3
Colorado 6 , Florida 3
CJNCIN'N ATI 8, Chicago 3
Pittsbllrgh 2, HoUston 1
Atlanta 8, St. Louis. 5
San Diego 4, New York 1
Philadelphia 8, Los Angeles 2

T&lt;Jday's games
New York (Gooden 8-10) at San
Diego (Whitchurst 3-5), 4:05p.m.
Montrea l (Ru eter 1·0 ) at San
Francisco (HickeNon 4-l), 4:05p.m.
Colorado (Leskanic 1·2) at F-lori da (Rapp 0-2), 7:35 p.m.
Chicago . (G .~ z man 8-7) at
CJNCINNA TI {RiJo 7-5), 7o35 p.m.
Houston (Kile 10-1) at Pittsburgh
(Cooke 5·5), D S p.m.
St. Loui s (Magrane 8-7) at At·
[anta (G. Maddux 9-8), 7:40p.m.
Philad~lphia (Greene II ·3) at Los
Angeles (Hershiser 7-8), 10:35 p.m.

J'hursday's games

Philadelphia (Mulholland 9-7) at
San Francisco (Burkett 13·4), 4:05
p.m.
CJNCIN'N ATI (Browning 6-5) at
Florida (Amntroog 7-9), 7:35p.m.
Atlanta (Smaltz 8-8) at Pinsbo.ngh
(Wagner S-6), 7 :35p.m.
Chicago (Harkey 7-3) at Houston
(Williams 2-3), 8:05p.m.
St. Louis {Tewksbury 10· 7) at
C&lt;llorado (Re)"'.oso 7-5), 9:05 p.m.
Montreal (Hill 6~2) at San Diego
(Benet t ().6 ), I Q;QS p.m.
New York (Saherhagen .5~7 ) at
Los Angeles (Gross 7-7), 10;35 p.m.

Kansas City (Haney 6-2) at B&lt;thimorc (Mussina 11-4), 12 :35 p.m.
Seattle (Han!ion ?-7 ) at New YorX
(Key 12-2), I e.m.
California (Fudey 11 -6) at Bo~ton
(Clemens 8-6), 1:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Tapan i 4 ~ 11) at Detroit (Wells 9-5), l :35 p.m.
Oakland (Downs 2-4) at CLEVELAND (Kramer 3-2), 7;05 p.m.
· Toronto (Morris 5-10) at Chicago
(Alvarez 8-5), 8:05p.m.

Baltimore (Sulelifle 8·5) at Minnesota (Guardado 1·3), 8:05p.m. ·
Milwaukee (Navarro 5-7) at
(McDowelll4-6), 8:05p.m.
Toronlo (S1oulemyre S- 7) at
Texas (Rogen Hi), 8:35p.m.

ChiCJ~go

- • Transactions • Baseball
American League
CLEVELAND INDIANS : Sent
Dennis Cook, pitcher, to Charlotte of
the [n~emational League. Activated
Tommy Kramer, pilcher, from the·
15-day disabled lin.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Sent
Shawn Hillegas, pitcher, to Tacoma
of the Pacific Coast League. ·Re ~
called Kevin Campbell, pitcher,
from Taooma.
SEATTLE MARINERS ; Sent
M&amp;Jc Newfield, outfielder, to JacksonviUe of the Southern League. Re~
called Lee Tinsley, outfielder, from
.Calgary of Lhe Paclfic Coast League.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Signed
Matthew Pamer, outfielder.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES : Optioned
Brian Hunter, fmt baseman, to Rich ·
mood of the International League.
CINCINNATI REDS : Waived
Cecil Espy and Gerald Young, oulficlders.

.Thursday's games
Kansas City (Appier 10-4) at De ·
trail (Gullickson 6-4), 7;05 p.m,
Seattle (Bosjo 3·5) at CLEVELAND (Mutis 2·2), 7o05 p.m.
California (Springer 1-4) at New
Yori&lt; (Abbolt 6·8), 7:30p.m.
Oakland (Van Poppet 0 -2) at
Bo&lt;ton (Darwin 9-7), 7:35p.m.

National Basketball Association
NEW JERSEY NETS ; Waived
J(: ny Walker and Jayson WiUiams,
forward s, and Sleve Worthy and
Charles Thomas, guards .
. UTAH JAZZ: Agreed to terms
with Luther Wright , center.

The Meigs County ·Fair Tab Is Coming
A!Jgust 13, 1993.•
Advertising Dea
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August 5, 1993.
'

l'his Wee•'• Special:

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S
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New York .......... 52 43 .547
Torooto..............52 43 .547
Bo.noo ...............50 43 .538

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I

'

FOP U, llome Care Mecl. 2
that retired Kelvington at second Police to up the a.nte in die third ·
Things didn't always look so . while Tolliver got to third and when it got two in the third - that
easy for FOP, as Home Care Bryant reached fm;t. Then with the nudged the FOP braintrust 10 bring ·
proved ,in the fm;t inning when the count even 2-2 io Robby Neal, on Zack McCoy to the hill and
Iauer's first two hillers - Trent Neal grounded ouno second base send Thomas to third - to cut
Tolliver and Brian Kelvington · FOP's lead to 7-2.
to end the.HCM fITS I.
got walks off FOP starter Cully
After FOP scored one in the
FOP re~'j)Onded 10 its defensive
Thomas.
success by tapping Tolliver fer four third 10 take a six-run lead, McCoy,
But Thomas came back to strike runs in the boaom of the fm;t and backed up. by solid defensive play,
out Charles Clark and get Adam .three in the second to come closer kept HCM off the basepaths in the
Bryant to ground into a force play to ending the contest in · four following two frames. Meanwhile,
· frames. But Home Care forced the the Police tapped three more runs .

out of Tolliver in the fourth, including a solo shot by Aaron
Williamson. It would have been
four and the end of the game had
John Norman, who reached on an
infield single he earned by eluding
ftrs.t baseman Bryant's tag following a grounder to first, not been
tagged at the plate for the inningending out by catcher Matt Tarbell
following the latter's recovery of a

In AL affairs,

Indians beat ·slumping A's .9-5;
Orioles,
White
·Sox
also
win
..

':~

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag.....S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

' ,,

r

JAMES SCORES - Bidwell #l's Joey James
slides in from third base to score one of the
Pirates' five first-inning runs in the nightcap of
Tuesday night's Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament doubleheader, which saw Bidwell

blank the West Virginians 10-0 to move into the
quarterfinllls opposite Point Pleasant FOP.
James, who got aboard on an infield single,
would later double !A the second. (OVP photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)'

NL Contests · · · · - -P~g:-4) - - - - - (Continued from

_cc_o_ntt_
·n_ue_d_fr_o_m_P_ag_e_4_&gt;_ __

second baseman llrent Gates' error
in the eighth.
.
. · . Witt was making his first relief
appearan~~ since 1991, and only
h1s fourth lil211 career games.
"I felt like I accepted the role,"
· he said. "I got loose and came into
the game throwing stron~. You iust
. Uy to keep the game as close as
you can there."
Mesa got the win despite yielding four runs and eight hits in five
innings.
"Jose had good velocity on his
fastball, but he had poor location,"
Hargrove said. "He left a couple of
split-fingers and curveballs up. Of
the eight hits, only one was a softhit ball. The rest were rockets."
In all, Oakland used five pitchers, to Cleveland's four. ·
"There's no blueprint for this
• stuff, because nobody knows how
the game's going to go," LaRussa
• said. "You be flexible. You watch
the game. The point is, we lost."
La Russa was asked if the A's
: : slide is wearing on him personally.
:
"I don't want to be rude or
- · crude; but I don't think very many
: people care how I'm holding up,"
: he said. "I believe I'm a pro, so I
: · come every day.' '
Elsewhere in the AL it was Baltimore 7, Kansas City 0; Chicago 2,
Toronto I; .Seattle 9, New York 5;
Boston 2; California I; Minnesota
4, Detroit 3; and Texas 5, Milwaukee I.
Orioles 7, Royals 0
There's a new leader in the
American League East- for now.
The Baltimore Orioles beat the
Kansas City Royals 7-0 Tuesday
night at Camden Yards to slip into
&gt; the top spot by one-half game
· ahead of New York and Toronto.
Boston is only I lf211ames out and
fifth-place Detroit trails by two.
It's close in the West, too .
; · Chicago l'lt'ds second-place Texas
by two games and Kansas City by
. four.
Ben McDonald pitched his first
career one-hiUer and Harold Baines
:. hom'ered and drove in three runs
· · for the Orioles. The Orioles' sev: . enth victory in their last nine games
:- moved them a season-high 10
; games over .500.
-.
"The iQiportant thing is not so
· much the standings, but how well
: · the ballclub has been playing, ('
-: manager Johnny Oates said. "To
: · me, first place on July 20 means
·: absolutely nothing. What means
:: something is winning 32 of 45
: . games."
. The lone hit off McDonald (7-8)
:: came in the fourth· inning when
: : Gary Gaetti lined a clean single to
· - left.
• . "I'm happy with it," McDonald
: . said. • 'Gaeui hit a pretty good
: : pitch. I threw a fastball on the out•: side part of the plate and he
:.. guessed right and took it to left"
· David Cone (6-9) was the loser.
&gt;, "That's the to_ughest
opposing
·
:- pitcher to throw against us all
:: year," Cone said . "Without a ·
, ' doubt, he was extremely sharp. He
: just did nOJ give us much to hiL"
i White Sox 2, Blue Jays 1
Ft!lnk Thomas hit a two-run
. ' bomer i'n the sixth inning and Alex ·
, .Fernandez (12-4) pitched a four~hitter at Comiskey Park.
•. With; the White Sox. trailing 1·0
: :OtJ Johil Oleru.d's 18th homer in the

second inning, Joey Cora looped a
one-out double 10 center and
Thomas hit Juan Guzman's next
pitch for his 22nd homer into the
left-field bleachers. Guzman is 7-3.
Mariners 9, Yankees s
Ken Griffey Jr. hit a two-run
single off Steve Howe (3-4) during
a six-run rally in the seventh inning
and also homered; sending Seanle
overNewYorkatYankceStadium.
Mike Stanley's second grand
sl;lm in three days helped the Yankees take a 5-0 lead after five
innings.
.
Dave Fleming (6-1) won his
sixth straight decision.
Red Sox 2, Angels I
Tpe Red Sox won their fifth
straight game as Scott Cooper
scored from third on Scott Fletcher's grounder over the mound in
the ninth inning at Fen way Park.
Cooper started the inning .with a
double off Gene Nelson (0-3) and
went to third oti John Valentin •s
sacrifice. Pinch-hitter Mo Vaughn
was walked intentionally before
FleiCher hit the fm;t pitch over Nelson's head. It was scored a fielder's
choice.
Tony Fossas (1-0) was the winncr in relief.
Twins 4, Tigers 3
Shane Mack's two-run homer in
the eighth inning off Mark Leiter
(6-6) broke a tie and lifted Minnesota over Deti'oit at Tiger Stadiurn. Cecil Fielder hit a 465-foot
homer off reliever Rick Aguilera.
Jim Deshaies (10-7) allowed
two runs on three hits through the
first seven innings, Carl W,illis
pitched a perfect eighth and Aguilera finished up for his 26th save,
allowing Fielder's 25th homer.
Rangers 5, Brewers 1
Juan Gonzalez hit his 26th
homer to tie Barry Bonds for the
major-league lead, a three-run shot
in a four-run fifth inning as Texas
beat Milwaukee at Arlington .
Kevin Brown (7-6) pitched a fivehitter and struck out a career-high
10.
Gonzalez's 434-foot homer
came off Cal Eldred (10-10), giving the Rangers their eighth victory
in their last 10 games.

Sports briefs ·
Hockey
ST. PETERSBURG , Fla. (AP)
_ The Tampa Bay Lightning.
which played its fiiSt season in the
Hall the F1 ·
l0,4 00-seat Expo
at
onda State Fairgrounds in Tampa,
announced it will play in the
28,000-seat Florida Suncoast Dome
this season.
Tennis
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)
_ Nicole Provis beat Wimbledon
champion Steffi Grilf 6-4, 1-6, 6-1
as Ausualia upset second-seeded
· fi
f
Germany 2-1 in the trst round o
the Federation Cup. Lindsay Davenport beat Christelle Fauche 6-4,
6-3 and Lori McNeil defeateil
Emanuela Zardo 1-6, 6-3, 6~3 in
the fifth-seeded United States' 3.()
s · land
_vicUJry oYer t!:'~a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Seventh-seeded Todd Martin beat
Mauricio Hadad of Colombia· 6-3,
6•3 and Ioao Cunha-Silva of Portugal defeated ninth-seeded Brad
Gilbert 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 iu the first
round of the Newsweek Classic.

·

~·

••

.
with the bases loaded to make ii 3- eighth to defeat St. Louis 8-5.
"With the fll'e and driving from
0 in the third.
Tampa
- what a day - I need
"That' was a good pitch," Morsleep,"
said McGriff, who
some
gan said. " If I get a ground-ball
double play, I get out of that had arrived in Atlanta earlier in the
day.
inning. But he hits it to right."
The Braves became the benefiReggie Sanders followed with
an RBI single that ended Morgan's ciaries of San Diego's salary purge
performance, and the Reds added a when they acquired McGriff Suncouple of runs in the fifth on RBI day for three minor leaguers .
doubles by Jack Daugherty and Thou~h Atlanta still trails San
Francisco by nine games in the NL
Sabo off Shawn Boskie.
Belcher lost his concenuation West, St Louis manager Joe Torre
after Daugherty's RBI single in the feels the newest Brave will have an
sj,xth of(Dan Ples~c. but Jerry effect on the race.
"I think he 'II (McGriff) make a
Spradlin blanked the Cubs on one
big
difference," Torre said. "His
hit over the final 2 1{3 innings for
presence
wiU take a lot of pressure
his second save.
. Also in the NL, Atlanta knocked .off everybody trying to carry the
off St. Louis 8-5, San Francisco load. They won't have the pressure
defeated Montreal 8-3, Colorado of thinking they'll ha-,:e to do it
defeated Florida 6-3, Pinsburgh all."
David Justice scored the gobeat Houston 2-1. San Diego beat
New York 4. 1 and Philadelphia ahead run in the eighth from second when Rheal Cormier (5-6)
beai Los Angeles 8-2.
bobbled Terry Pendleton's sacrifice
Braves 8, Cardinals S
First there was a lire. Then there bunt and threw wildly to first. Juswas a blast So went the Atlanta tice had opened the inning with a
single and took second when rightdebut of Fred McGriff.
McGriff's first appearance in a fielder Mark Whiten fumbled the
Braves jersey was delayed Tuesday ball.
·Mark Wohlers (4-0) earned the
when a fire broke out in AtlantaFullon County Stadium 90 minutes victory with one scoreless inning of
before the Braves were to play the • relief and Mike Stanton pitched a
St. Louis Cardinals. The fire was perfect ninth for his 26th save.
Giants 8, Expos 3
put out 45 minutes after it began
The
hitting
of Darren Lewis and
.
but the 7:40 p.m. EDT start was
the
pitching
of
Bill Swift helped
pushed back to 9:38p.m.
San
Francisco
extend
Montreal's
McGriff. wearing No. 27, playlosing
streak
to
three
games.
Lewis
ing first base and balling fourth,
hit
a
two-run
homer,
had
three
hits
homered in his third at-bat, sending
Rene Arocha's first pitch of the and scored rour runs as host San
sixth inning 407 feet over the cen- Franciso's lead in the NL West
stayed at nine games_
ter-field wall.
Swift (13-5) held the Expos hit·
The homer - his 19th of the
year - capped a five-run rally and less until the fifth inning when he
the Braves added three runs in the allowed singles to Moises Alou and

Sean Berry . Swift worked 6 2/3
innings, allowing seven hits and
three runs. Expos starter Dennis
Martinez (10- 7) pitched 5 1/3
innings, allowing nine hits and
seven runs.
Pirates 2, Astros l
Doug Drabek returned to Pittsburgh and pitched well - but lost.
Drabek (7-11), pitching in Pitts·
burgh against the Pirates for the
ftrst time in his career, gave up two
runs in seven innings.
· Randy Tomlin (3-6) threw a
four-hiller 'for his first complete
game in more than a year in outpitching his former teammate.
Padres 4, Mets I
Rookie Jeff Gardner's first
major-league home run and Greg
Harris' career-best lOth win halted
visiting New York's longest winning streak ·of the season at three
games. Harris (10-9) pitched a
four-hitter and had a shutout until
Howard Johnson's homer with one
out in the ninth.
Gardner led off the first with his
home run, tripled and singled.
Phillies 8, Dodgers 2
Lenny Dykstra homered leading
off the seventh to break a 2-all tie
in ·Los Angeles and help Danny
Jackson win.
Dykstra drove a pitch from
Ramon Martinez (8-5) deep into
the right-field pavilion for his 12th
'homer.
Jackson (8· 7) went seven
innings and allowed two runs on
five hits . He walked four and
struck out five. .
Rockies~. Marlins 3
Home runs by Andres Galarraga
and Dante Bicheue helped the visiting Rockies break their five-game
losing streak.

wild pitCh during Scqtt Connley's
at-bat.
But after HCM failed to get
Neal home after his two-out double
into the right 'field comer in the
fifth, Williamson hit a one-out single to center, got 10 second on a
wild pitch during McCoy's at-bat,
made it to third on McCoy's backto-the-pitcher grountlout and
scored on on Tarbell's errant tossback to Tolliver.
Thomas and McCoy combined
to strike out eight and walk seven.
Tolliver, who pitched the entire
game, struck out two and walked
five.
FOP, which posted its second .
straight mercy-rule decision, gOJ its
hits from Williamson (3·3), Grant
Mathney (2·2), Joe Marcum (2-3),
Norman (1 -1), Jason Pyles (1-2)
and Connley (1-4). HCM's hitters . ·
were Bryant, Tarbet! (both 1-2) and
Neal (1-3).
Inning totals
Home Care Med. 002 00 = 2-3-4
FOP ..................... 431 31= 12"10-2
WP-Thom as
LP- Tolliver
Bidwell #1-10
Village Pizza Inn 0
Never mind that it took three innings for Bidwell to score as many
runs as it did in the first.
Bidwell flamethrower Joey
James fanned nine and walked two
in his four-inning no-hiuer. That
was the third gem of the holiday
and the second solely owned by an
individual (the Gallipolis Rockies'
Justin Cook pitched the first one on
July 16).
The Pirates pounded five runs in
the first off VPI starter Don Ashworth by virtue of sending all their
.hillers, who got three hits and took
advan·tage of three wild pitches, an
error, a hit baisman and a stolen
base in the process, to the plate.
The Innkeepers, who sent 14
batters against James in the affair,
never got past first. Ashworth, who
struck out four and walked none,
was succeeded by Shad Roberts,
whose one-pitcH stint iri the fourth
may stand as the shortest in this
year's tournament. His pitch was
rocketed beyond the center field
fence by CJ. Johnson, the Pirates'
No. 3 hiller who shared the distinction with Williamson .Qf hitting
solo homers in the fourth inning
and doing so on the first pitch,
The Pirates' hitters were James
(2-2), Johnson (2-3), Michael
Stephens, Michael Shaw (1-1) ,
Craig Swisher (all 1-2) and Aaron
Sullivan (1-3).
Inning totals
Village Pizza Inn ..... .0000 = 0-0-3
Bidwell #1 ................5221 = 10-8-0
WP-James
LP- Ashworth

'

••'

The future
Tonight- Gallipolis White
Sox vs. Green #I, 6 p.m.; Tuppers
Plains Tigers v~ Vinton, 7:30p.m.
Thursday -Gallipolis Rockies
vs ...Qallipolis Yankees, 6 p.m.;
KyJ!Cr Creek #2 vs. Middleport
Whne Sox, 7:30p.m.
Friday - Point Pleasant FOP
vs. Bidwell #I, 6 p.m .; tonight's
victors, 7:30p.m.
.

DOWNING CHilDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second S1., Pomeroy
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AGENTS SERVING
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SINCE 1868

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PIQI 8 The Dally Sentinel

Lewis declines.
to battle Bowe
for heavyweight
boxing belt

•

weanesday, July 21, 1993 i.

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

By JOSEPH WHITE
LONDON (AP) - Lennox
Lewis, the WBC heavyweight
champion, has rejectCII a deal to
fight Riddick Bowe for the undispuled title.
"The deal was $21 million for
Bowe and a SO.SO split if the final
purse went above $32 million,"
Frank Maloney, who represents
Lewis, said . Tuesday. "We
declined that, and the Bowe ligllt
won 'I happen until the summer of
1994."
Lewis was awarded the WBC
title last yea:r after Bowe was
suipped for.failing to make his first
defense against the British fighter.
Bowe retained the IBF .and WBA
crowns.
Dan Duva, who has promOtional
ties with both champions, said from
his office at. West Paterson, NJ.,
Tuesday that Rock New111an.
Bowe's manager, made the offer to
Lewis' management group, headed
by Panos Eliades.
"Their response was, 'we've
made commitments for two fights, '
"Duva said.
•
The fights wilt be against Frank
Bruno, also of Britain, iii London
in October and again'st Tommy
Morrison at Las Vegas in March.
acccrding to Duva.
With a Lewis-Morrison fight set
back to March becauSe a site deal
could not be made in Las Vegas,
Maloney said, "Now we are able
to give the Ilritish public what they
want. I have alway~ kept negotiations with Frank Bruno alive. It is
the fight Lemox wanted, and as far
as I'm concerned the deal is struck.
Both sides have compromised."
Mickey Duff, Bruno's promoter,
said Tuesday that Duva told him
"the fight was on a.s far as he's
concerned." Duff, however, said
he alsO was expecting an offer from
Newman for a Bowe-Bruno match.
Duff scoffed at the repon of a
Newman offer.
After Lewis defeated Tony
Tucker to retain· his crown May 8
at Las Vegas, Maloney said the
next defense would be against .
aruno on Sept. 25 in Cardiff,
Wales. But the bout was called off
after a dispute over how the toral
purse would be split
Lewis was th@l "signed, sealed
and delivered" to meet Morrison
this fall, Maloney announced last
week. It was to be the first in a
two-fight, $20 million deal for
Lewis that would march the fighter
against former champion Evander
Holyfield next spring, with an eye
on a unification bout with Bowe
foUowing in the summer.
But Snags in finding a date and
venue for the Morrison fight led to
a postponement.
The Lewis camp was unable to
reach agreement with Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas for a possible
Nov. 5 bout, and a proposal from
the newly-built MGM Grand was
turned down.
"They gave us a Dec. 30 date
for Lewis and Morrison, but that
wasn't acceplllble,' ' Maloney said.
"But their offer of the last week in
February and first week in March
was OK for Lennox.''

-'
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A mixed golf scramble to bene-

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Golf Course.
Hill, the t4:year-old son or former Meigs County businessman
Pat and Nancy Hill or Pomeroy, is
suffering from a very rare form of
cancer. The tournament will be a
mixed scramble with a blind draw.
Price is $45 per golfer, not $40 as
reported earlier. That includes cart,
steak dinner and beverages.
For more information or to sign
up call the Meigs County Golf
Course at 992-6312. -'fee off will be '
at 9 a.m. The entry fee can be paid
anytime at the Meigs County Golf
Course.

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partially paralyzed 18ainst Kan~
City last season.
"YO!J aiW11ys think about that,"
said tight end Jonathan Hayes.
"It's always scary at first. But
Mike is going to be all righL He
wanled to try to get up, but they
wanted him to rake it easy. just in

case."

Dolphins
Mi11mi, so loaded at wide
receiver it released Madt Duper last
weekend, lost ils second wideout in
three days Tuesday when Irving
Fryar went down with a suained
knee. On Sunday, Mike Williams
broke a finger in a bicycle accidenL
Redsltins
Carl Banks may not like it. but
he's seen as the replacement for
Wilber Marshall in the Redsltins'
defense.
.
"! don't think I'm replacing
Wilber Marsball," Banks said. "I
don't think of it as shoes to fill. I
can only do what my abilities allow
me to do-- and that's going to be
quite a bit."
Signings
Running back Dalton Hilliard
agreed to a contract with New
Orleans under which he could earn
$1 million if he meets all the performance incentives.
The Pittsburgh Steelers and
defensive back Deon Figures
agreed to a four-year, $2.8 million
contract. Figures, from Colorado,
was the 23rd pick overall.
. The Cincinnati Bengals signed
tight end Tony McGee from Michigan, the 37th player picked overall.
The Los Angeles Rams agreed
to a three-year contract with Troy
Drayton, the tight end chosen with
the 39th pick from PeM State.

••

By ALAN ROBINSON LATROBE, Pa. (AP)- His last
name is Greene - yes, just like
Mean Joe, the most popular Pitts. burgh Steelers defender of all time.
" And the Steeli!rs are paying him a
lot of green: $5.3 million over three
years to improve an almost invisible pass rush.
·
· So why isn't Kevin Greene, the
former Pro Bowl linebacker for the
Los Angeles Rams, getting any
respect in training camp?
He's got a big repuration and a
big salary, and, at least in Los
Angeles, he had a 'big fan following. Rams' fans were so sorry to
see him depan that he rode around
Anaheim Stadium following his
last game there, shaking hands and
accepting good wishes.
Apparently, Greg Lloyd, the
Steelers' Pro Bowl outside
linebacker, wasn 'I among the
crowd.
Lloyd. himself a newly minted
$7 million man thanks to his own
new contract, obviously wasn't
impressed by Greene's repuration,
his 72 1/2 sacks in eight seasons
with the Rams or his financial panfolio.
Asked if Greene's saclting ability improves what already was a
good Steelers' defense, Lloyd's
face cantoned with the ·same sneer
he reserves for what he considers
witless questions from the media.
"Let's wait and see what Kevin
does on the field," said Lloyd,
obviously in no mood to discuss a
teammate he'd not yet seen in com-

managed only 3b sacks last season,
I 0 of them in one game against
Cincinnati rookie quarterback
David Klingler. They also faced a
serious talent shonfall at linebacker, especially after leading laclder
Hardy Nickerson signed with
TamJI4Bay.
.
Whoa.
If
anything,
Lloyd
said,
Greene
. Lloyd's remark wasn't reaUy a
dig at Greene, though it certainty will help tie up opposing linemen
came across soundiiftf"like one. It and blocking backs, which should
also further heightened the impres- • inflate Lloyd's own sack stats.
sion that while this -isn't the most Lloyd has 14 1{2 sacks the last two
news-filled Steeler~ training camp seasons, including a team-high 6
of all time, it's quickly becoming 1/2 in 1992, while the 6-foot-3,
2SO.pound Greene had a team-high
the most candid
If Merril Hoge isn't ripping 10 last year for the Rams.
Greene was the Rams' sack
holdout running back Barry Foster,
leader
the last six seasons, includthen Lloyd is candidly critiquing a
ing
career
highs of 16 1{2 in both
player he's not yet seen in person.
191!11
and
1989.
.
So much for the Steelers filling
"When
you
have
guys
keying
their roster with the strong, silent
types- it's almost as if. Terry on him, hopefuUy it rakes the presBradshaw had secretly put on a sure off me," said Lloyd, a Pro
Steelers' uniform again and been Bowler the last two seasons. "Let
him lake some of the bumps and
asked his opinion of Chuck NoU.
Actually, if Lloyd's remarks dis- bruises.''
He already has.
tressed his teammate, Greene
"It doesn't rake a rocket scien,
hasn't told anyone. In fact, he
couldn't have been more unre- tist to figure out why I'm here,"
strained in his praise of Lloyd if Greene said .. "The reason I'm here
he'd been named the president of is to sack the quarterback. How _
Lloyd's fan club.
many will I get? That's a good
"!think we're going to be a question and it's tough to predict. If
great tandem," Greene said. "Greg I have a good year here, you'll
and I are bOth among the dominant know it. I mean, you can read the
pass rushers in the NFL and I think statistics. If I have a lot of sacks,
we're going to make each other I'm having a good year."
And what does a good year.
better."
The Steelers signed Greene mean to Kevin Greene?
"It means I'll put a lot of
because they thought it was imperative to invigo~te a pass rush that cheeseburgers on the table and a lot
of coconuts in the bank," be said.
bat. "It's like a meteor fatting out
of the sky. If it doesn't hit anything, it doesn't mean a damn.
"What he did in L.A. doesn't
mean (anything) here. ... You have
10 do it out here and you have to do
it for the Steelers."

With new knee, Bates plans.comeback
to Cowboys for 11th consecutive season

0
'0

Great On
The Grill

Meigs Football Camp
·slated for July 26
The fourth annual Meigs Football Camp will be held at Meigs
High School from M,onday, July 26
lO F(iday, July 30.
All boys entering grades 4-8 this
fall are eligible 10 attend the camp,
which runs from 8:30 to II :30 a.m.
Fundamentals will be tatight
during the camp dealing with every
aspect of footbaU. All' boys will be
· timed in a 40-yard dash and agility
drill. Campers will also visit the
weight room, where Meigs High
School varsity players will demon- .
strate correct weightlifting exercises. ·
The special guest speaker this
year will be Tom Ellsworth, new
offensive coordinator at Marietra
College.
To be guaranteed a camp Tshirt, regi~uatJon must be received
by Friday. HoW!:ver, studenls may
register up to the first day of camp.
Registration forms can be
picked up at the.high school.

By HANK KURZ Jr.
Viklnp
Associated Prall Writer
Qadry
"The
MISSile" Ismail,
A "Missile" landed in Min- ·the younger brother
of Raghib
nesota, a Majik act reappeared in "Rocket" Ismail, signed
i threeIndianapolis and a Cardinal said he year contract with Minnesota.
wan!! to be a cowboy.
Missile is fueled afw this
S1gnings and injuries once again long"The
layoff,
and the high ocl8ne is
'brovided the bulk of the news ready to burst,"
said the second- .
Tuesday from training camps, but round draft pick, who is expected
the surprising story of Timm
return kicks and play backup
Rosenbach's apparent retirement to
wide receiver.
.
·
was easily the most interesting
.
Colts
NFL tidbit so far this summer. .
Don Majkowski, a Pro Bowl
Rosenbach, once one of the
in 1989 and a question
most promising quanerbacks in the quarterback
mark
since,
signed a one-re- con·
league, apparently intends to quit tract with Indianapolis, which
the Phoenix Cardinals 10 raise bulls doesn't know when or if holdout
and cattle and .work pan-time as a Jeff George plans on reponing.
calf-roper on the pro rodeo circuit.
"Majik" threw for 4,318 yards
"He likes the dust of the rodeo and 'P touchdowns for Green Bay
arena, the camaraderie," Rosen1989, but suffered a shoulder
bach's agent, Gary Wichard, ·said in
injury and lost his job to Brett
Tuesday. .
·
Favre last season.
RoS;Cn~h took every snap for
GiantS
Phoemx 1ft 1990, then missed the
Lawrence Taylor. who canceled
1991 season with a tOm knee liga- his retirement plans when an
men~ ~e returned last season, bu\
~chilies' tendon injury cut shon
was IRJUled twice and lost the job h1s season ~ year, said he was a
to Chris Chandler.
bit apprehensive in his comeback.
The Cardinals also added quar"I' !II just getting niy timing
terback Steve Beuerlein in the off- back down, remembering how to
season.
;
~lay blocks and getting out that iniPhoenix coach Joe Bugel said he tial fear of the guy coming at you,"
hasn't heard froni Rosenbach since the I 0-time Pro Bowl linebacker
'the end of last season, so the quar- said.
·
terback's exact plans were news to
Chiers
him.
The
Chiefs
got a scare when
Rosenbach was to earn $1.1 mil- tight end Mike Dyal
and linebacker
lion this season, and Wichard also Percy Snow collided, leaving Dyal
told him he could get as much as lying nearly motionless for almost
$1 S million over four years as a 20 minutes. He was placed on a
free agent in 1994.
.
stretcher _and taken to a hospital as
"He walked away from money a precauuonary measure.
that we aU ltind of envy," Wichard ' Dyal was fine, but the Chiefs
said, "simply because that isn't the were left thinking about Dennis
world where he feels comforrable." Byrd, the New York Jets' lineman

HOME WINNERS - Local winners in the

Meig~ County Ladies' Gotr Invitational held

Tuesday at the Meigs County Gotr Course were
(front row, L·R) Becky Anderson, Joan Childs,

i.elle Wrlghi and Margaret Follrod. In the back
row are Diana Ash, Karen Facemyer and Jean
Powell.
'
·
G

Steelers paying ex-Ram Greene
$5.3 million to improve pass rush

Fresh
Fresh
Red Ripe
Green
I
Peaches
err1es Pep ers

Benefit golf tourney
slated for July 24

7

lands in Vikings' camp;·
'Majik·' act comes to Indianapolis

··'

Sweet

The Dally Sentinel

'Missi~e'

.....

CALIFORNIA
Well Pict

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Around the NFL,

..'

-.

Wedne*«iay, July 21, 1913

By DENNE H. FREEMAN
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - You
just can't get rid of Bill Bates.
You can bring on younger,
faster, muscular players out of the
college football factories.
You can tear up his knee and put
him in the hospital.
You can tell him his playing
days over.
Bates won't listen and be won't
quit.
Expect him to make the roster-of
the world champion Dallas Cow- · ·
boys for the 11th consecutive Season.
The 32-year-old Bates missed
the final II regular season games,
the playoffs and the CojVboys'
Super Bowl victory over Buffalo
when he tore the anterior cruciate
ligament in his left knee last year.
It happelled while he was covering a kickoff against the Seattle
Seahawks. And it cost him
$125,000 in bonus money.
"I didn'rthink it was that bad, a
sr,:ain or something," Bates said.
' Until that injury,! had been btunate to never miss many games. I
was mad. I wasn't going 10 let them
cut on me."
But reason prevailed liS Bates,
who has battled to make the Cowboys rost~r every ~ning camp,
ctecided he wasn't going down
without a fight.
· .
aates began workout schedules
that would have maimed a lesser
L

athlete. The Cowboys' road games
were hard for him to watch.
"I'd sit on the couch and say
'OK, they're lacing up their shoes
right now and just about to walk
down the tunnel,"' Bates said. "I
could just .visualize what was happening in the lockerroom before the
game . It almost drove me crazy
watching those games on television."

way up. I ran aU those wishes i9.the
heat and didn't even get tired." .
Bates got a Super Bowl ring but
he still hasn't played in one. He
vows to be around this year if the
Cowboys make it again.
"II drives me," Bates said. "It
drives me. I'm not bitter because I
did_n 't get to play in the Super
Bowl. I earned my ring for all the
hard years I put in. I just want to be
sure I play in the next one."

Bates got to go to the Super
Bowl as a specrator.
It made him even more deterSports briefs
mined ~o come back.
FootbaU
Bates'Jhysical improvement
IRVING, Texas (AP) - . Tom
has stunn most of the team.
Landry accepled a spot in the DalHis 40-yard dash time increaSed
las
Cowboys' Ring of Honor in
and had coaches double-checking
Texas
Stadium, an honor he had
their stop warches.
shunned
si!lce being ftred as coach
"! ran a 4.58 in tbe 40 and the
in
1989.
Landry, who guided the
best I had ever done was 4.6,"
Cowboys
to two Super Bowl chamBates said. "For some reason I can
pionships
in 29 years, left the franrun faster.ll has ama.ied even me."
chise
on
bitter
terms when Jerry
Bates' body fat lev.el has
Jones
fired
him
only hours· after
dropped and he can still vertical
buying
the
team.
Jones said that
jump 30 inches. -'
Landry
bad
agreed
to be enshrined
"! trained hard for nine months
during
a
Nov.
7
game
with the New
to be ready for testing day because
York
Giants.
I knew that would mean so much,"
,
Basketball
Bates said.
SALT
l.AKE
(AP)Until training camp Bates Former Seton HallCITY
center
Luther
wasn't sure how. his knee would Wright, the 18th player selected
in
hold up.
.
the
NBA
draft,
agreed to contract
"! g01 hit and looked around to · terms with the t.ftah Jazz. The 7see if I still had all the pieces," foot-2 Wright is expecled :to sign
Bates said. "The knee fell great It the contJact in Salt Lake City on
felt good til hit and be hit again.
Thursday afw undergoing a physi"I'm back. My confidence is cal exam.
·

.,

'

I

•
•
,'

}

AWAY WINNERS - Visiting winners in the
Meigs County Ladies' Gotr Invitational held
Tuesday at the Meigs County Gotr Course were
(front row, L-R) Joaa Ward, Fairgreens County
Club, Jackson; Peggy Gardner, Hidden Valley
or PoilltPieasant, W.Va.; Rita Slavin, Rlversi!le

Golf Course .or !"ason, W.Va.; and Carolyn
Anderson, Ch1Ts1de Gotr Course or Gallipolis.
Behind them are Sue Goldcamp, South Hills,
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Opal Casto, Hidden Valley; Betty Douthett, Fairgreens; and Garren
Snyder, CliiTside,
I.

. CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Snbsldlarles)

The Peoples Banking &amp;
Trust Company
State Bank No. 176
of Marietta, Washington County, State or Ohio 45750, at tbe close or business June 30, 1993.
ASSETS
Casb and balances due from depo!iiitory 'institutions:
a. Noninterest-bearing blilances and currency and coin ........ ...... .................................. ......... ........ 12,090,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances .. .... .. .............. ................ .................. ............... ....................... ................ .3,995,000.00
Sec\lrities ....... ............................ .. .................. ....... ......... .................................... ... .............................. 91,927,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements
to reseU in domestic offices of the bank &amp; of its
-~
Edge &amp; Agr_eement subsidiuries &amp; in ffiFs:
Federal funds sold ...... ........... ... -............................... ............ .................. ...... ........ ........ -.... ....... -.... 7.000,000.00
Loans and lease financing ~ceivables:
Loans and leas~s. net of unearned income .............................. .. .. : .. .... ............... ..... .. 270,402,000
LESS : Allowance for loan and lease losses ................. ........... ........... .................. _.. :.... .5,083,000
Loans an.d leases, net of unearned income.
.
aUowance, and reserve ............ .................................... ............ ... ...... ........... ... .................. ........ ...... 265 ,319,000.00
Premises and fiXed as8,Giaincluding capitalized leases) ... ........... ... ................................ ... ....... ~-- ........ 8,893,000.00
Other real estate ownell ~: .... ...... .. ... ................ ........ ..... ... ..... ...................... ......... .... .. ... ...... ..... ................. 25,000.00
Intangible assets ............................................. ............................... ................................................. .. ........ 204,000.00
Other assets .......... ........................................................... ..... ..... ,........................................ .. .................5,527,000.00
Total assets ......... .................... -............... -..................... .......... , ........ ................... ........................... .. 394.980,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred ursuant to 12 U.S.C .
1823(j) (sum of items 12.a and 12.b) ................ ._................................................. .. ........................ 394.980,000.00
LIABU..ITIES
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ...... .. ...... .. .............. .................. ................... ... ................. .~ , ... .......... ........ .... 338 ,076,000.00
(I) Noninterest·bearing ......... ............ ..................... _............... ............ ........ ....... 35,559,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ...................................... ....... .......................... ................. 302,517,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements
to repurchase in domestic offices of the bank &amp; of its
. Edge&amp;. Agreement subsidiaries, &amp; in ffiFs:
a. Federal funds purchased............................. ................ .................. ................. .. .... ___ ...... .................. 310,000.00
b. Securities sold under agreements to repurci:Jase ............ ............. .... ............. ......................... ........ 7 ,606,000.00
Other bom.Jwed money .. ...... .......... ........... ....... .. .. ............ ................, ............................................ ... 14,108,000.00
Other liabilities ........................................... -·· ........................ .... ............................................. ............... 2,731,000.00
Total liabilities ........ ...... ......... ... ........... ..................................... ...... ........ ..................... ..................... 362,831,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Comn!Qn stock (No . of Shares a. Authorized ................. JOO,OOO ............... ...............~...................... 1,875.000.00
Surplus (exclude all SU!plus related to preferred stock) .................... _................................ _..... :........... 7.346,000.00
a. Undivided profits and capital reserves .................. -.................................................................... 22,928,000.00
· Total equity capitaL ..... ........................ ........................ ................................. ........................... ........... 32,149,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
,
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j)............... ............................ .... .. ............. .. ................... ....................... 32,149,000.00
Thtalliabilities, limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital ,
and losses defemd pursuant to 12 U.S.C . 1&amp;23(j) .................. ................ ..................................... .394,980,000.00
MEMORANDA; Amounts outstanding as or Report Date:
Standby letters of credit. Total... .......................... .. .................................................... ..... ................... 3,730,000.00

•

..

&gt;

•
•
&gt;

I, tbe undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condition has been prepared in conformance
with official instructions and is true and corre&lt;:l to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John W. Conlon,
Chief Financial Officer &amp; Treasurer, July 14, t993 - (614) 374-6112
We, tbe undersigned directors,. attest th_e correctness of tbe Report of Condition and declare ·that il bas· been
namined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief and bas been prepared in conformance with official
instructions and is true and correct
•

Robert E. Evans

"'

Rex E. Maiden :. Directors
_
Harold Laugblin •
State of Ohio, County of Washington, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 14th day of July, 1993 and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or ·
director or this bank.
Lisa M. Pf&amp;ff, Notary Public
My commission expires October 26, 1995

I

tl

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'

�Pag1 8

·1

I

:The Dally Sentinel

wednesday, ~uly 21 , 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

KENMOi=tE~

By The Bend

.

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

At11erica's favorite brand!

Page

9

Weight problem goes both ways
63751

23751

Dear Alia I.aDden: May I give
·
you a gentle rap on the kn!ICides for
your response to "L.T.D.," the
ovm4'eight WOIII8II who wrore lnd
said, • All women want to be loved
lnd accepted for who they are. •
ANN LANDERS
I didn't scc much love and
"!993, LotAnaoleo
IIXepWICe in your rd"e.ence to tho8e
Thna Syncli&lt;ate
thin women you · described •s
co..ton S)'Ddkate"
looking"conswnptive."I.spentyears
being painfully underweiglll. and it's laSt year.
conttactor indicated
no fun. A Jot of women w!lo are that it was impo£1,ant 10 him that we
now pleading for sensitivity are the. be completely satisfied.
very
who called Twiggy "The
During construction, whenever we
Toothpick. •
criticized anything, he'd give us a
This preoccupation with weight is long-winded excuse. Our complaints
a pain in the neck. I wi$11 they'd bag w~ not wueasonable.. One invalved
iL -·CANADIAN READER ,
· · improper venting in the balbroom.
. DEAR C.R.: I 8CCepl your.gentle Another was an uneven kitchen
rap on the knuckles for my counter. Although he .agreed to fix ·
insensitivity to lbe underweight things, it was always a lUSh job,
sisters. Describing them as io(lking polrly done.
consumptive didn't s~ow much
Unfqrtunately, we arc still
compassion.
working out lbe kinks that Ibis
I agree that entirely too much conttactar should have taken care
attention is paid these days to who of. It is proving to be very
is fat and who is thin. I, too, wish , inconvenient as well as expensi~.
they would bag iL
I hope others who are planning to
Dear Aaa Landers: I need to build homes or additions will
blow off some steam, so get ready. remember that the contractor works
My husband and I built our home for the customer, and it is his

Ann

I
IKenmorej

ones

SPEAKER : The story of Facemyer Lumber Co., its four facili·
ties and 52 employees, was told by Robert Facemyer at Monday
night's meeting or the Mjddleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.

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13

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the form of finished product~,
Facemyer said. The ti_mber used IS
piincipally oak, especially red oak,
the speaker said, although there is
some maple and walnut in limjled
quantities.
· Susan Oliver, executive director
of the Meigs County Council on
Aging, was introduced as a new
member. Gene Triplett, president,
announced that District 6690 of
Rotary will be sponsoring a new
member contest for 1993-94 with
the winners to receive free expense
paid trips to the district conference
m the spring.
Hal Kneen discussed the Meigs
County Showcase which will be
held in October at the fairgrounds.
The club voted to assist in sponsor·
ing the full page, color advertisement of Meigs County wh1ch w1U
appear in the August issue of the
Ohio Magazine .. The club agreed to
assist in sponsoring the Showcase
promotion.
Women of Heath €hurch served
the dinner.

Robert Facemyer ·talked about
Facemyer Lumber Co., its four
mills and yards with 52 employees,
at Monday night's meeting of lbe
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
held at Heat!\ United Methodist
Church.
· Howard Frank, program chairman introduced Facemyer who
told of the operations below Mid·
dleport, on Bailey Run Road, near
the airpon at Albany, and at Ripley, W. Va. Most of the logs for the
Meigs County mills com~ from
Meigs and Athens Counties, he
said.
·
· .
In addition to the producuon of
lumber, the company produces speciality products such as veneer and
floonng, Facemyer said. He point·
ed out that as many as 42 cuts of
veneer can be made in timber an
inch thick.
Some of lbe company's lumber
is exported overseas and of this .
lumber, a considerable .amount
comes back to the United States in

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ICRAFTSMAN I

799 11

now

You know I'm always near.
So hold me in your arms Lord
And r I! thank you as ·I pray
That the day I found my Jesus
·
Wasn't justanother day.
Vicki 8050
Jan. 5,1986

---·~ - .

FINAL CLEAN UP ON
ALL SALE SHOES
Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.

BUY ONE PAIR
. OF SALE SHOES

YOUR SPIRIT GROWS
Lord, you ' ve filled me with
your spirit .
.
Time and 1110e agam.
You've showed me how to
fight, Lord,
So I wiU always win.
I am so unworthy, Lord,
()f praising your sweet name. .
But as long as I am filled With
you,
.
I know I'll try agam
To testify for you, my God,
About your love for me
And why you sent sweet Jesus
To die on Calvary.
Maybe I'll touch someone's.

.

.

AT

.

- . . . _...._ ___. .:. . : __

interviewed for the book.

people waiting for two hours in a
downpour at an outdoor concen
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Linda Friday night, then never went on.
Purl, whose best-lcnow~ on-screen
"At least he could walk out and
love was the Fonz , will marry a say, 'I'm sorry,"' Mary Lanlcford
man with a different kind of title said.
this week.
Instead of refunds, fans were
The 37-year-old actress will offered tickets to a concert by
wed screenwriter Lucius Alexander Kenny G.
Pllintagenet Cary, 30, in Florence,
"What kind of self-respecting
Jt~ly, on Friday ; spokeswoman country music lover is going to see ·
Pam Rosenbaum said.
a jazz artist?" fumed Susan FaunCary is a British peer, with the lain, who paid $106 for two tickets.
title Master of Falkland, Ms.
Promoter Allen Corbett did not
Rosenbaum said. He is the eldest return calls.
son of the Viscount Falkland.
Black's publicist issued a stateMiss Purl's TV roles include ment saying Black "sincerely
Fonzie's girlfriend on "Happy regrets any inconvenience to his
Days" and Andy Griffith's lawyer- fans."
daughter on "Madock."
"The severe weather crealed a
very unsafe and dangerQus electriHIL TON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. cal situation on stage," the state(AP) - Clint Black ha~ several- ment said, "and Clint was advised
thousand fans who are as mad as by the production manager not to
wet hens. And liS we~ too.
go on stage, even to mak_e a public
After an openmg show by · ·adtlress."
Wynonna Judd, Black left 7,500

.

PICKE"S
HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

Get ready. ••

for 17 days of•..

absolutely
everything to do!
•
It's live top; name entertainment, thrilling rides,
blue ribbon competitions, fabulous food, and non-stop fun!
This summer, whatever you do, don't miss the Ohio State Fair.
It's everything for everyone!. Caii1·800·1UCKEYE for State Fair information.

'V2 PRICE

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Chapman Shoes

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Aug. 6-22, 1993

-

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POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

~--

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AND RECEIVE THE
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-~--~Ll --·?--"-- -·-.

Mrs. Virgil King had surge~y
Thursday at Riverside Hosp1tal m
Colun:tbus and wiD be there for two
weeks.
Lola Clark attended a binhday
pany Saturday for her great-grandson at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Lyons, Racine.
Mrs. Norma Lee visited a w~k
with Mr. and Mrs. Richard McKnight, Westerville.

CLEAN SWEEP
CLEARANCE SALE

,

With what I have to say.
Then I will lead them home to
you
· .
As earneStly I pray
...:..--

· That your spirit grows within
me
More and more each day,
So I can touch somebody' s heart
With what I have to say.
Vicki Boso
Jan. 12,1986

JUST ANOTHER DAY
The day I found my Jesus
Was just another day.
I wasn't out to find Him
I wasn'i out to pray.
But then He came and took my
heart
And held it in His hands.
I lcnew at last I'd found the love
Of the only perfect man.
He held me and He loved me
And He told me not to fear.
He said "You 'II never be alone

heart

••

"I'm disturbed and.l've sent
what I have to my lawyers,"
Manchester told The Washington
Post.
Neither McGinniss nor Manchester returned calls for comment.
McGinniss' publisher, Simon &amp;
Schus1er, said he has done nothing
wrong.
"The Last Brother," due out.in
August, already has been criticized
for McGinniss' "biographer's
license" -writing what Kennedy
might have been thinking at certain
points. Kennedy refused to be

Alkire.

Poet's comer

43706/43606
( ~ !I , t1KV21TS27)

TV screen sizes measured diagonally . reception simu.tated.

too:

Harrisonville
news

SearsCharge

399~99

NEW YORK (AP) - Joe
McGinniss and his soon-to-bereleased biography of Edward
Kennedy are under attack again,
this time over whether the author
plagiarized another book.
William Manchester, author of
"The Death of a President," told
New York magazine that he compared an excerpt of McGinniss '
book, "The Last Brother," with
his own and found McGinniss had
lifted 1Sr passages.
McGinniss maintained that he
used only facts from Manchester's
1967 book that are in the public
domain.
But Manchester said McGinniss
copied words, structure and ideas,

Angela Sharp was honor~d as
Miss Summertime and Tern H1ll
was best weekly loser at the recent
meeting of Ohio TOPS Club No.
570. Sharp lost 17 and one-h_alf
pounds. Runners-up were Tnna
Faulk and Debbie Hill. Best KOPS
loser was Linnie Bell Aleshire. ·
The fruit basket was won by
Wanda Faulk and the gadget gift
was won by Amy Cleland.
Norma. Torres, Meigs County
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Health Depanment, spoke on dia- Bob Mahr were Mr. and Mrs. Franbeles mellitus and the diabetic diet. . cis Foley, Columbus; Debbie Foley
Secret pais will be drawn at the and sons, Columbus; and Mr. and
next meeung.
Mrs. Gary Foley and grandson of
Further information may be Syracuse.
obtained by calling Debbie Hill at
Lisa Riggs, Kenwcky, and Mrs.
949-2763 or Wanda Faulk at 992- Gloria Kloes. Syracuse, were
5638. The group meets every Tu~­ recent visitors of SteUa Atkins and
day at the Carpenters Hall 1n Ruby Diehl.
.
Pomeroy with weigh-in from 5-6
Bob Gibson and Ray Alk1re.
p.m. and meeting from 6· 7 p.m. Columbus, spent the weekend with
New members are we)come.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob

229.99

per month• on
SearsCharge PLUS

NEED PAINTING
SUPPLIES?

Facemyer delivers
lumber lecture
---Names in the news---

Miss Summertime named

'

MTS BROADCAST
STEREO TV

responsibility to satisfy his clients. said a dog uses its nose to identify
Don't back down. or you'll pay bit everything -- including animal
later.
droppings. The _nose is aaachcd 10
I also hope building conttactars the mouth.
learn that the customer always has
Since a dog cannot WISh its face
the _last ~ord. I can assure you that or brush its ·teeth, it is unwise 10
when our friends ask for a building
share 1 drinking fountain with a dog.
contractor refemi, our reply will be,
Although it's a fact that a humiMI
"Don't call him!': •• NORTH. JER- bite contains 1110re bacteria than a
SEY,NJ. .
dog's, that doesn't make the dog's
DEAR NJ.: Almost everyone Who
bite less dangerous. Rabies, for
has built a home has some laic to example, is transmitted solely
tell. Thanks for yours. I'll bet there · through saliva. I wonder how many
will be a load of horror stories in
people knew that. I didn'L
the upcoming inaiJ about experiences
Is lift passing you by? Wa111 to
with contractors. I'm ready.
impro~ your social skills? Write for
Dear Aaa Landers: I just read in Ann Landers' new book.ltt, "How 10
the newspaper that a pOlice dog in
Make Friends and Stop Being
Virginia was drinking at a public
Lonely.• Send a self-addressed, long,
school water fountain. Parents who
business-siu tnW!Iopt and a check
complained were told by health
or money ortkr for $4.15 (this inexperts that a dog's mouth is cleaner
cllltks postage and ltaniiUng) to:
than 1 human's.
Fr&lt;ends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
Is this ali old wives' iale? Do dogs
11562. Chiwgo,/11. 60611.@62 . (In
have gmn killers in their Saliva or Canada, send $5.05.)
what?rmsuremillionsoCyourreaders would like 10 know.- MIKE IN
OMAHA
DEAR MIKE: We spate to Peter
Poholik, director of Animal Care lnd
Control for the city of Chicago. He

'
(~

�The Dally Sentinel

Masons scholarship-awarded

Ohio University
Colleg~ of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

::J

Question: M)"'on W..
by · him. ·Trying to brush it off or swat- ,
a bee last summer. It ca
his ting at it will just increase the
arm to swell tremendously. Does chances of being stung.
this mean that he is allergic to bee
The immediate treatment for a
stings, and should we get a bee local allergic reaction- one which
sting kit tor him?
produces considerable swelling at
Answer: Bee stings arc quite · the sting site Ulcc your son hap last
common, so your question is an year -,is to apply ice to the bite
important one. Most bee, wasp or and to also take an oral antihishornet stings produce a small tamine such as Bcnildryl. More
amount of rednesS and swelling at severe gysternic reactions, in which
the sting site. There is usually a ·the individual experiences breathdegree of itching and disc01;nfort ing or circulatory difficulties,
with this reaction. Unfortunately, require the medication epinephrine
up to 3 percent of the population of in shot form and immediate care at
the United ·States have more seri- the nearest hospit,al.
ous allergic reactions to stings that
I think' the most effective way
require immediate medical allen- for most individuals to give somelion. These reactions involve exten- one this life-saving shot of
sive swelling at the site of the sting, epinephrine is with a special predifficulty breathing and a collapse loaded syringe called an EpiPen for
of the circulatory system you prob- adults or EpiPen Jr. for children.
ably know as shock. About 40 of The epinephrine and antihistamine
the unfortunate individuals who a~e comp~nents of all bee sting
have this type of severe reaction ktts, IndlVlduals who have severe
die each year as a result of stings.
allergic reactions to bee stings are
The reaction your son experi- very likely to have a subsequent
ei)Ced is somewhat less than a life- bad reaction to the next sting.
threatening allergic reaction, but it These unlucky individuals should
clearly was an aller$ic reaction. I see an allergist to begin bee sting
could find no scienufic study that desensitization shots. These are
measured the risk to a person who allergy shots against bee sting
has hap a local allergic reaction to venont. The shots arc quite suea bee sting of later experiencing a cessful at preventing further reacsevere allergic reaction. However, tions. About 99 percent of those
based on my experience, I'd say his who continue the shots for three
risk of a more severe reaction to .a years will be safe if they are stung.
later bee sting would be minimal.
There is some variability in the
Even though his risk of a life- length of time these shotS, provide
threa,tening reaction is small, I protection after the three-year
thinlc it is still a good idea to tal1c series is over. Most individuals wiU
with him about avoiding bees and be protected for at least two more
bee stings. Children often provoke years, and others may be protected
bees or wasps by wildly swatting at for a lifetime.
them if they come within an arm's
I think you should tallc to your
reach. This action certainly makes son's doctor about bee slings, bee
it lilcely that a person wiU be stung. sting ltiiS and perhaps about desenThe proper response is to sit still sitization shots.
and let the insect pass on by. If several are circling around, as they "Family Medicine" is a weekly
often do at picnic sites, just slowly column. To submit questions,
move away to another location. write to John C. Wolr, D.O.,
Also, I'd recommend that you Ohio University CollegeorOsteospecifically instruct your son to pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
hold still if a bee or wasp Jl!nds on . Athens, Ohin 45701.

•

; WOMAN QF THE YEAR- Linda Bates, center, was honored
as Woman or ~e Year at theBig Bend Service Unit mother-daugh·
ter ba~quet. Ptctured with be~ are Dee Lawrence, field director,
a~d Sbtrley Cogar, unit adnilnistrator.

. OUTSTANDING LEADERS- Terrie Houser, left, and Brenda Neutzllng, rlpt, were honored as outstanding Girl Scout lead-·
ers at the recent mother-dau~bter banquet ror the Big Bend Service Unit. Pictured witb them IS Shirley Cogar, unit administrator.

Mother daughter
banquet held
iRL SCOU
ARE
.

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FIVE YEAR AWARDS- Five year pins were ~w~rded to Cathy
Clifford or Chester Junior Troop 1051, and Pally Pickens or Tuppers Plains Brownie troop 1316 at the Bi'g Bend Service Unit
Mother-Daughter banquet ror area Girl Scouts held recently at
Eastern High School. Absent ror the photo was Jackie Frost or
Southern Seniors 1208 who alsO received a pin.

The -1993 Girl Scout motherdaughter ~a~quet was held recently
at Eastern High School.
The program began with dinner
followed by awards, entertainment
by the Gallia Academy High
School Madrigals and door prizes,
,. consisting of homemade crafls and
· other prizes donated by area businesses.
. This year's Girl Scout "Woman
of the Year" award was presented
to Mrs. Linda Bates for her contribution to the youth of Meigs County.
.
Five year pins were awarded to
Cathy Clifford of Chester Junior

WEDNESDAY
High School, 7 p.m. Call Don JackMIDDLEPORT - Revival at ' son, 667-6530 or Paul Brannon,
Victory Baptist Church in Middle- 378-6161 for more information.
port will be through Wednesday
with Dr. Kenny McComas. Doug
LONG BOTTOM • Mount
McComas is music evangelist and Olive Community Church wiU host
will present a concen on Sunday at - Bill Villers from Anna Moriah,
6p.m.
W.Va. Wednesday at 7 p.m. Public
invited.
MIDDLEPORT · Vacation
Bible School will be throu~h Fri'SYRACUSE -Night swimming,
day from 6:30-9 p.m. at ReJoicing London Pool, Wednesday, 7:30Life Church in Middlepon for ages 9:30 p.m.
3-18. Public invited.
POMEROY - A three hour
SYRACUSE - Vacation Bible sportS medicine clinic wiU he held
School, Asbury United Methodist on Wednesday at 5 p.m. at Meigs
Church, 9-11 :30 a.m. through Fri- High School. The clinic will be
day, classes age two through junior presented by Grant Hospital's
high. Nursery provided. Everyone SportS Medicine staff and meet
welcome.
requirements for school coaches
and advisors for .the Ohio DepanSOUTH BETHEL · Vacation ment of Education. For more inforBible School at the South Bethel mation call Rick Edwards, Meigs
New Testament Church, through High School Athletic Director at
Friday, 6:30·8 p'.m.
. 992-2158 or 992-6174.

· CHESTER • There will be a
Holy Ghost Tent Revival today
through July 31 at 7 p.m. nightly
on Lick Skillet Road near Chester
on Route 248· with David Dailey,
evangelist, and Jerry Cotterill and
Bob Cromer. Public invited.

REEDSVILLE - Girls volleyball meting, Wednesday, Eastern

"

Gallon

.,

1

LOWFAT

U.S. GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

springdale 2% Milk

Chicken Breast Ouarters

~~~

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Sponaor a mile In memory of your Clitll War enceator/relllllita.
.

apon-·------

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Sponaor IIKi lddreH
.
.
$10.00 donlllon per relative per mle. AmOunt encloHd

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..
. SUSAN J&lt;:: HOUCHINS
"

the nation's oldest and most presti- ::
gious private-sector Schizophrenia
Research Program along with the , .
Scottish Rite Masonic Museum in
Lexington, Mass.

TALMON LIPSCOMB
Marine Pvt. Talmon S. Upscomb, son of David A. and
Georgina R. Lipscomb of Star
Route 124, Pomeroy, recently completed recruit training.
He is a 1991 graduale of Meigs

Special guests attending were
field director Dee Lawrence, Big
Bend Service Unit Administrator
Shirley Cogar, cluster 41 training
coordinator, Dottie Jean Bond and
cookie cluster chairwoman,
Gertrude Casto and Pat Thoma.

High School.
MARK TOLES
Marine Lance Cpl. Mark A.
Toles, son of James A. Toles of
1423 Ohio St., Point Pleasant is
currently deployed and has completed the ftrst half of a six-month ·'
Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean "
deployment with 24th marine
Expeditionary Unit, camp Lejeune,
N.C. embarked aboard ships .,
asstgned to the USSD Wasp
Amphibious Ready Group.
.
The 1991 graduate of Point
Pleasant Senior High School joined
the Marine Corps in November
1991.
0

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ALADDIN .

BUBBLE BATH

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REG.
$1.69

.

Evety lovable bear figurine in the Cheris hec'
Teddies collection has its own namc ... its own
personality .. .its own heart wannin g message
of friend ship . Beautifully sculpted and
ha nd painted .. Cherished Teddie s figurin es
lovingly re ach out to you with their innocent
expressions and softly ask. "Is there
room in yoUr heart for me?"
Adopt a Teddy... If your an swer is "yes!" your
reward will be a charming ... loving figurine
from the Cherished Teddies collection that
belongs to you alone! We invite you to adopt
your favorite Cherished Teddy. Each figurine
includes a certificate of adoption and
registration number.

6

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6

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ARRID.
.
XX

EXTRA
EXTRA DRY•

SPORT OR
MUSK SCENT
REG. $2.53 ·

-•"

$1 .29

N

SALE

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coca Cola Classic

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Kroger Chunk
Light Tuna
6.12-oz.

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Fresh
Blueberries

"•"
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.FULL CASE ... 52.00

!SAVE .. . 52.001

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ALL REMAINING f ...:.,,
SUMMER
MERCHANDISE \, 1i ,
.

25
.

Prices Good ·
Wednesday, July
21 through
Sunday, July 25
at Point Pleasant,
Middleport and
Gallipolis.

rR·AVE

.Cheris}Jeq
,.,:,.'; Teddies~
;

'

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0/
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SELECTION MAY VARY
PER .STORE

.,

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Cube steak

"

7.5 oz•

. . . 6 ..

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. CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
DIET COKE. SPRITE OR

24 oz.

•• ,

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U.S. O.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
WHOLE BONELESS ROUND STEAK OF/

on

COOL·IT
AFTER
SUN LOTION

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lb.

'

REG. $8.54

JOO Count ,

8.5 oz.

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12-Pack
12-oz. cans

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tl' :- polcl(c..'

liopl.! :1~HI u 1C l'()o~ in~ fo• ..' OIH C.•HI C lo j'., ,'c :pu t
(l1nd .'tl fll ~O ill' H:ut :J o.Hl .:on e. M 1"-. lo u !

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Payable to Melga County Hlatorlcal Society end mailed lo Box .
146, Pomeroy, Ohio 45761.
. .
I
I Donellone will be placed In a apeclal fund lo mark delignated I
I Chill War ell• In Melge l;ounty.
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July 23-25, a union aoldler will walk the routa of John Hunt I
1 Morgan and hla raider• (u near •• determined) fro111 VInton, 1
1 aero•• Melga County to Portland, a dlatance of .,proximately 46 1

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r

RACINE · Racine American
Legion Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at lhe post home.

'CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL MILE

'

AQUA NET EXCEDRIN IB .TABLETS
HAIR
$ 99

·,

r·······················~

I

"

AT YOUR 3 AR.EA
FRUTH PHARMACY
LOCATIONS

THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church . Call 9925763 for infonnation.

ELEANOR, W.VA. · Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Thursday at the Putnam County Fair in
EJ eanor, W.Va.

•

~----------------~--~ ••~

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a round and square dance at the
American Legion Annex, Mill
MIDDLEPORT • Middleport Street, Middleport, on Thursday
Pool swimming lessons, through with music by CJ and the Country
July 30, 8-9 a.m., swimmer; 9-10 Gentlemen with Frank Boles, stale
a.m., advanced swimmers; 10-11 . champion, on fiddle. Admission is
a.m., intermediate swimming; II $3 couple or $2 single. Everyone
a.m. to noon, beginners.
welcome.
POMEROY - MSWCD Board
of Trustees will meet Wednesday
at 8 p.m. Public invited.

Susan E. Houchins, Middlepon,
has been awarded a Scotti~h Rite
Masons scholarship.
"The Scottish Rite Masonic
Scholarships are given to qualified
studems in recognition of scholastic llld al1·around achievements "
stated George W. Stevens, schol~- ·
ship c.hairman. "Our goal is to help
yt&gt;ung people fulfill their career
goals by assisting them financially
as they further their education
beyond high school."
Houchins is attending Ohio University. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen Houchins.
Scottish Rite scholarships are
given to the children of Scottish
Rite Masonic families or to young
people who have been active in
Masonic-related organizations such
as DeMolay, Rainbow and Job's
Daughters.
Funding for the growing scholarship program comes from the
Supreme Council Education and
Charity Fund established through·
the generous legacy of former
S!)vereign Grand Commander Leon
M. Abbott
The Scottish Rite Masons of the
Northern Jurisdiction also support

In the service

Troop 1051, Patty Pickens of Tuppers Plains Qrownie troop 1316,
and Jackie Frost of Southern
Seniors 1208.
Outstanding leader awards were
presented to Terrie Houser of
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271 and
Brenda Neu[zling of Pomeroy
Junior Troop 1309.
Meigs Seniors 1261-and two
girls graduate this year, Sherry
Johnson and Linda Chapman. Special recognition was also given to
the leaders of the troop. Sarah
Johnson and Marge Chapman, who
have been with these girls as leaders for 12 years.

Community Calendar

POMEROY · Vacation Bible
School, Carleton Church, through
Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m., "Victory
Station." Call 992-7350, 992-3996,
992-7690 for information.

Page-11 •

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REG. $1.69
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CLOSE·UP
TOOTHPASTE

$ 49

SPRITZ
c

REG. $1.99

6.4 oz.

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•

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9.6 oz.
REG. $1.49

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2501 JACKSON AVE~-~T. PLEASANT
786 N~ SECOND-MIDDLEPORT
364., JACKSON PIKE-GALLIPOLIS

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~·
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�The Dally

Ohio

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

PEPSI
COLA
PRODUCTS

R.&amp;C IICIYITING
BUUDOZING

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

$

PRICES GOOD .THRU SATURDAY 24, 1993I

•
R.C.

99

•·The Area's Number I
Marketplace,

SOLDIERS BOARD PLANE - German soldiers line up to board the plane for their departure at the Cologne/Bonn military airport
Weclnesday morning to fly to Somalia as part or

in the east-African nation and 250 Democrats want Germany to pull
more are to go Wednesday, the · out of Somalia, where 35 U.N.
Defense Ministry said. The fresh peacekeepers have been killed and
troops are to fly first to Mogadishu more than 100 wounded since June
before joining ·the other German 5 in attacks by rebel militiamen in
soldiers at their base in Belet Huen, Mogadishu.
about 180 miles northwest of
Last week, four reporters were
Mogadishu. The rem~ning German killed by an angry mob in the
troops are to be sent to Samaha Somali capital investigating a U.N.
over the next several weeks.
helicopter attack. One of them was
Lt. Col. Gerhard Sontheim, an Hansjoerg Krauss, a German phoarmy spokesman in Mogadishu, tographer who worked for The
said the German contmgenl IS the Associated Press.
only member of the 27-nation U.N.
German media devoted considcoalition not authorized to engage erable attention 10 Krauss' death in
in offensive combat. The troops reports that raised questions about
will mainly provfde water supplies whether U.N. troops sent to Somaand humanitaria~ assistance _and lia to keep the peace and rest!lre
order were instead becommg
repall' roads and rurfields, he S3ld.
The
opposition
Social impartial combatants.

humanita~an ~id

is thfr'only step
the admmiSLrallon IS corllemplallng
at lh1s lime. He added ~~ he was
not aware of any adm!mstrauon
plan to ~k U.N. Secunty Council
actton agrunst the Serbian fighters.
The Serb anack on Mount
Igman, overlooking Sarajevo's
U.N.-controlled airport, is the
fiercest in the area since the Serb
siege of the eapital began in April
1992 soon after the outbreak of the
war.
Maj. Luuk Niessen, a
spokesman for U.N. peacekeepers,
said Tuesday that sketchy reports
from Mount Igman indicated night
attacks by troops of Bosnia's Muslim-led government were recapturing positions seized by Serb fighters during the day.
Heavy fighting also was report, ed Tuesday between government
forces and Bosnian Croats in several areas of central Bosnia, where
the former allies are hauling for
territory. Fighting was especially
fierce in the towns ofGomji Vakuf
and Bugojno, Niessen said.
Croats initially allied with Muslims after Bosnia seceded from
Serb-dominated Yugoslavia 16
months ago, but recently began
cooperating with Serbs to push a
partition plan and gain territory.
That relationship could be
undermined by the determination
O f Serb extrem1' sts to create a
"Greater Serbia" from all lands
controlled by ethnic Serbs, including the one-third ·of Craatia they ·

hold. .
·The Idea als~ could ~reck the
attemp~ b~ Serbian President S_Iobod~n Milosevtc a~d Croat1an
President FranJO Tud)man to conelude a peace agreement embracmg
both Croatia and Bosnia. Last
month, they agreed on a plan to
divide Bosnia into three ethnic
states.
Bosnian Muslims reject the
plan, fearing it would leave them in
landlocked pockets squeezed
between hostile Serb and Croat
regions that eventually would unite
with Serbia and Croatia.
In a radio interview Tuesday,
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic said Serb-Croat relations
were improving daily in Bosnia.
"Now the Serbs and the Croats
are in favor of a confederation and
if the Muslims don't want to Jose
everyth1'ng • they wi'll have 10 qut'ckly come to the negotiating table,"
he told a Serb radio station 10
Bosnia.
But his announcement Tuesday
that Bosnian and Croatian Serbs
were ready to unite showed hardl•'ne Serb nat ''o na 1·1s ts wou Id no1
allow any bargaining over territorjes controlled by Serbs in Bosnia
and Croatia.
Croatia's government is trying
to restore 11s authority over areas
controlled by Serb militias since
the s1'x -month war o ver C roa t'1a •s
seccss1'on from Yug osIav13
· m
· 1991 .
Serbs say they will never submitiO
that.

Jobless rate in wealthy
nations to reach postwar peak
PARIS (AP) - Unemployment
in the world's 24 wealthiest
democracies may near a postwar
peak this year with 35.1 million

people, or 8.5 percent of workers.
out of jobs.
The annual report on employ.
ment released Tuesday by the

Ohio veterans home
director to be fired
SANDUSKY, Oh·io (A P) Trustees planned today 10 fire Ohio
Veterans Home Director John
Weeks - three days before he
receives .a national award for outstanding service, a newspaper
reported.
Former state Rep. Frederick H.
Deering told The Col~mbus Dispatch in a story pubh shed today
that Week's firing would come t.he
day after Senate confirmation of
Duane Goodridge of Canal Winchester, a Gov. George Voinovich
appointee, to the board of trustees.
Goodridge would provide the
fourth vote needed to fire Weeks,
said Deering. There are seven '
members on the board.
Weeks said trustees told him
they had the necessary.votes to _fire
him but would allow him to res1gn. ·
••

..

Weeks said he had no intention of
resigning and would defend himself today at today's special board
meeting in Columbus.
"I want to be able to respond to
·any comments that they have ,"
Weeks said early today. " It seems
sort of ridiculous to me that three
weeks ago they gave me a rliise."
Weeks , director of the home
si nce 1981, was being fired
because he was headstrong and
would not take direction, said
adminisLration sources the newspa·
per did not identify.
Deering, a supporter of the
home, said Weeks helped rejuvenate the facility, which offers nursing care and rooms for about 500
veterans. He said the state does not
want to fund the home the way
Weeks has suggested.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development projected
an even bleaker )994, when the
jobless rate could reach 35.7 million, or 8.6 percent.
Th at would nearly equal the
postwar high of 8.75 percent.
Though the worldwide recession
took so me blame, the report
attributed part of the outlook to discouragement among long-term
unemployed whose failure to find
work leads to an erosion of skills
and eventual withdrawal from the
labor market.
The piclllre is fairly positive for
the United States. The organization
estimated unemployment will
decline from 7.4 percent in 1992 10
7 percent this year and 6.5 percent
in 1994.
But in Europe, ~here long-tenn
unemployment has -proven more
stubborn and many economies
remain mired in recession, the
overall. jobless rate will rise from 9.9 percent in 1992 to 11.4
percent this year and 11.9 percent
in 1994.
Japan's relatively low unemployment rate will show a steady
eli mb, from 2.2 percent in I 992 to
2.5 percent this year and 2.6 percent in 1994.

1

15

3
6

15

15
15
15

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

$ .20
$ .30

n-o..-.. Oppon.aity
211- MoMy to Loaa

Prof-toul s.......

$ .42
$ .60

$1.30/day

.'

n1-: \T \ 1.:-;
41- Houee for Real
42- Mobile Ho•• lor Reat
43- Fanu fDr Rat
44- ApartMent lor Real
45- Fumllbed Roo,..
46- Space' (or Real
47- Waaled. to R~t
48- Eq:uip~HDI for Reat

2-lo Memory
Auouacemeata
4- Civeaway

5-HappyAdo
6- Loot and Found
7- Lo.t aad Found

9.9(

8- Puhlie Sale &amp;
AucLion

9- Wanted to Buy

11- Help WoaiAICI

..

46a.

69C
SUNSHINE
DOG
PRINGLES ............ 9 ~ 99
FOOD
20LB.:
.,:· GREAT LAKES SUGAR .:
6·7.5

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UMIT 1 PER «;:USTOMER

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••
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$2.''

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ARMOUR
TREET
LUNCH
MEAT

99¢
GROUND
BEEF
10 POUNDS

s· 9o
GROUND
CHUCK
10 POUNDS

s

90
I

~11-:HCII

\I'WISJ-:

Sl- Ho...hotd Coodo

s2- Sportia1 Coodo

53-Ant;q....
54- Mix. Merchaa.dile

18- Wanted To Do

SS- Buildi"' SuppU•

lnveatmenta ......... 11,287.21
Food Serv. s.Ju ... 83,955.91
Extr8Currlcular
Acllvltiea ............ 105, 198.69
Cia.. Matorlala &amp;
F..a...................... 15,661.50
llec. A...lpta
Gronclo In Ald .......31,629.55
Stat. Sourc• ... 2,235,750.54
F..aral Sourcea .. 295,537.03
Young's Chain Link
Total A...lpta (0perating)...... 4,2t 8,668.98
·Fencing
DISBURSEMENTS:
EXPENDITURE
Free Estimates
DISBURSEMENTS
446-2845
lnatrucUon ........ 2,360,077.90
Supporting
Servlcu .......... 1,628,795.67
Extr8Currlcular
Activltiu .............. 92,959.31
FOUR FAMILY
Debt Serviceo ........ 26,187.52
Employeoa Salariea
. YARD SALE
&amp; Wagea ............. 105,516.37
Employeoa Retire.
On Broadway in Racine
' lleneftta ................ 55,652.14
PurchaHd Serv....... 2,454.97
Thursday &amp; Friday
Suppt. &amp;Malor..... 140,173.17
Capital Ouday .......... 1,773.00
Other Objecta ..........3,463.02
Total Diaburaementa·
(Operating) ...... 4,417,053.07
Exc. Acpta. Over/
(Undtor) Dtab.... (198,384.09)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES
Contribullona &amp;
Donallona ............ 18,290.44
State
Sourc• .......... 8,198.49
•
Public
Notice
Public Notice
Fed. Sourc• ....... 146,647.64
Operating
OPERATING
STATEMENTS
'TrMafera - In ....... 21,713.41
DISBURSEMENTS
Combined Financiiii Raport
Adv11ncea
........... 4,200.00
Employeea
Sal'~!!•
· 9f the Board of Education &amp;Wagea ............ ~. 105,516.37 Oparating -ln
Tranalera
For the Fiacal Year Ended Employees Reti[e:riient
Out
.....................
(21,713.41)
Juno 30, 1993
Advancaa- Out ..... (4,200.00)
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS Benefita .................. 55,652.14 Refund
of Prior Yearo
Purcha•ed
RECEIPTS:
· Servicea ................... 1,983.52 Receipta ••••••••••••••••••••f178.60)
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Total Other Fin.
Taxea ................. 1,439,6:48.55 Supplieo &amp;
Sourcea(Uaea) ... 172,347.97
Matariala
...............
115,790.25
Earnings on
Olhor Objecta ............. 198.00 Exceu Recalpto/Sourc•l
, lnvt~tlmenta ......... 11,287.21
Over/(Unclor) Dioburt.
Total Ditburaementa·
Extracurricular
&amp;OlherUua/
(Oper)
...................
279,140.28
'.Ac tivitie• ..........•••. 83,000.80
Net ........................ 26,036.12
Exc. Rcpla. Over/
Mite. Recaipto
Beginning
Fund Caah
(Undar)
Dlob
.....
(178,806.57)
'Granda in Aid ....... 30,913.25
Balance
..............
184,620.12
NON-OPERATING
State Sourcea ... 2,235,750.54
Ending
Fund
Caah
RECEIPTS
Federal Sourcea .. 295,537.03
s·o urc• .......... 8,188.49 Balance ............. ~ 158,584.00
total Receipt. · Slate
Fedora!
Sourcea .. 146,647.64 R•ervodlor
·(Operating) ...... 4,096, 137.38
Advanc•
• ln ........... 4,200.00 Encumbrancaa .... 19,861.04
DISBURSEMENTS:
Unreurved Fund
·
Tolal
Olher
Fin.
EXPENDITURE
Sourcao
(Uaet)
...
159,036.13
Balance
..............
138,722.96
DISBURSEMENTS
Caah In Banko
Recaipta/Sourcea/
IDatruction ........ 2,360,077.90 Ex•••
(Net).................... 158,584.00
Over/(Under)
Dlabura.
Supporting
·
&amp;OtherUteal
:S...Vicas .......... 1,628,795.67 Net ......................... 19,770.44 Total Fund Bat ..... 158,584.00
Extracurricular
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
}lctivitiH .............. 92,959.31 Beginning Fund Cath
Debl Sorvicea :.......26, 187.52 Balance ................. 20,635.31 BONDS
Bel. Beginning
Ending Fund Cash
• Total Diaburtementaof Period ............ 100,000.00
Balance
.....................
1164.87
~Operating) ...... 4,10ir,020.40
Red•mttd-During
Unr•orved Fund
Exc. Rcpta. Over/
Flacal ·Perlod .... .... 20,000.00
.(Under) Ditb...... (11,983.021 Balanca.......................864.87 Bal.
6-30-93 ............ 80,000.00
AGENCY
FUNDS
• OTHER FINANCING
MEMORANDA
DATA
OPERATING
RECEIPTS
SOURCES
Aaaea1ed.
Val
......
59,633,090
Extracur.
AcL
.........
22,197.89
Contributions &amp;
Prop.
Tax
Lavlea
Total
Recaipla
Oonationt ............ 13,259.30
(Operating)........... 22,197.89 In tide 10 Mill .............3,5000
Operating
Outalde 10 Mill ........ 24,0000
OPERATING DISBURSE.
· Ttanaler•ln ........... 21,713.41
ADM
............................. 928.00
Purchaoed
Qperating
Servic
........................
471.45
No.
of
Non-Cert
T&lt;antfers- Dul ..... (21,713.41
Emptoy•a
SUPP.·
lo
Mat
.........
24,382.92
Advancet- Oul ..... (4,200.001 Capital Ouday .......... 1,773.00 No. of Cart ................. 38.00
Refund of Prior
..Year• Raceipta ...... (778.60) . Other Objecla .......... 3,265.02 Employeea .................. sa.oo
'Total DtaburaemenlaI certify tho following
Total Other Fin .
Sourcea(Ua•) .......8,280.70 (Operatlng)...........29,892.39 report lo be correct ond
Exc. Rcpla. Over/
true, to the beat of my
Excett Receipltr/Sourc•l
(Undtor)
Ditb
..........
7,694.50
knowledge:
Ovori(Under) Diaburo .
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS
Dennie E. Hill
lo Other Uaea/
DISBURSEMENTS
Treaaurer of the Board of
Net ........................ (3,602.32)
Contribution&amp;
Eclucotlon of Southern
S.ginning Fund Caah
Local School Dlttrlct
Balance .............. 149,967.~8 &amp;Donationa ............. 5,031.14
Total Other Fin.
(7) 21 11c
Ending Fund Cull
Sourc•(Useo) ....... 5,031.14
Balince .............. 146,364.95 Exc
..a Recaipta/Sourc••
Reurvedlor
Over/(Under)
• ·
!Oncumbr~~ncn ..... 19,477.59
Dlabur
..
menta
&amp;
Other
Public
Nollce
Unreaorved Fund
NOTICE BY
Batance ............... 126,887.37 Uaea/NeL ................2,1i63.34i
Beginning Fund
PUBLICATION
- PROPRiETARY FUNDS
Cull llltlance ...... l 4'017 "53
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
RECEIPTS:
Enrlng
Fund
C..h
COURT OF ,
• OPEAATIIG RECEIPTS
17
B
'
-...........
ll,-.,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Peod lerW'IoM
Reaent«&lt;b
lor
•
•.
4S
RICHARD
A.'RADFORD,
· illl·--·~·················13.155.91 Encum ranc• ......... 383.
Clae Motarlait
Unreaerved Fund
Plaintiff
" FeN ................... 15,1161.50
vs
970
72
10
BoiMce ................ • •
ALTA MAY MORGAN, 'at al.,
' ..... Aecelpta
.
TOTALS
Delendanto
~ranta tn Ald ............ .'71&amp;.3o
REcEIPTS:
Can NO. 93-CV-154 .
•Total Aeceipta(.Oparllling) .......... 100,333.71 Taas ................. 1,438,641.55 To: Evelvn Botton, formEornlnga on
erly known at Evelyn
DISBURSEMENTS:
•

'•.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

Aulol for Sale
Truclu for Sa&amp;e

Vau&amp;4WD'•
Motoreyclee
Boa.ta &amp; Moton lor Sale
Auto Por.. &amp; Ace....,ri.. j
Auto Repair
Cam pills Equipment

'·

Home l•porvemCilll
PlumbU.s &amp; HeatiD1
E:unatins

Eleetricol &amp; Refriserali&lt;&gt;~
General Hauliq
Mobile Horne Repair
UphoJ.tery

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

~

~!~~,tplng

;a~
389G4 L~ding
Creek Road
.Middleport, Ohio

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
ll•~lew

Ho•••

985-4473

Evelyn Joseph Heise; Waller
Wilt;
Lawrence
Will;and
Larry
Wilt; Jo
Ann O'Neil;
the

I'~=====2-:H:2:·"::!"

unknown heirs, devisees,
legatees, administrators, ex-

HAULING

ecutors, personal representatives, spouses and
LIMESTONE 1
assigns of Alva C. Will, Ida
Ola Radford, Ola Ida GRAVEL &amp; COAl
Joseph , Evelyn Boston, aka
Reasonable
Evelyn Heise, aka Evelyn
Joseph, Mary Margaret Wilt,
Rates
Margaret M. Wilt, Helene
JOE
N, SAYRE
Elizabeth Sayre, Lena
Holtman, Walter Will, SAYRE TRUCKING
Lawrence Will, Larry Wilt
and JoAnn O'Neil, whose 614•742•2138
last addresseS are
unknown:
3•4-93- 1
You are hereby notified .__ _ _ _ _
that you have been named
Defendants in a legal action
GREEN· UP
ontille Richard A. Radford
vs. Alta May Morgan, et al.
RECLAMATION
This action has been
SERVICE
assigned Case No. 93·CV·
154 and is pending in the Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
Common Pleas Court of
SPptic Systems
Meigs County, Ohio, Co1urt l
Driv~wilys
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Homcsites
- Ponds
45769.
Seeding
&amp;
Mulching
The object of the
Complaint is to det1orminej
Tree Removal
the interests of Plaintiff and
Phone
Evenings
the Defendants In 78.16
acres, more or less, of real

..,.._..I

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
On June 6, 1993, at
approximately 6:00 A.M.,
the M/V A.A. Veatal
accidentally discharged an
unknown qua~tity of
number 2 dieselluerat mile
post 237.5 of the Ohio River.
the affected areai include
mile 237.5 to mila 242.5 of
the Ohio River. Campbell
Traneportation Company,

Inc. 11 the owner of the MIV
A.A. Vaatal, which It tho
deaignated oource of the
aplll purouant to tho. Oil
Pollution Act of '1,880.
Ctalma ariaing oul ol'thit
aplll may be oubmiHed to
Campbell Tranaportation
Company, Inc., P. 0. Box
124, Charleroi, Pa. 15022,
Attn.: Don Grimm or by
calling •Campbell Tran•portalion Cam pony at (412)
483-6556 from' 8:00 AM to
4:30 PM, Monday through
Friday.

(No Sunday Calls)
2112/92/tfn

Shade Rive.r

Shop

CUSTOM SADDlES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh.

45720

985-3406
. 318/lln

SNODGbSS'
UPHOLSTERY
RACINE, OHIO

"Helping You To
Recover Your

205-_75RIS" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
205-75R14" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
215-75R15" Flrutone OWL
235-75R15" Firealone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 11211113
SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773-5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

4/29/93 tin

Joseph, formerly known as

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts
By Marlene Harrison
(6) 16, 23, 30;
(7) 7, 14, 21, 6tc

614·992·7643

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

614·992·7144

Public Notice

June, 1993.

COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

'

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

estate
located
in Chester
Townsi;Jip,
Meigs
County,
Ohio, and in section 34,
Town 3 and Range 12 of the
Ohio Company's Purchase
and Section · 35, Town 3,
Range 12 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase (some
reference deeds being
Volume 334, Page 113;
Volume 252, Page 717; and
Volume 174, Page 333,
Meigs County Deed
Records) and that the real
estate be partitioned or
Ordered sold if it cannot be
partitioned, plus attorney
fees, costs and such other
relief as may be necessary
and proper.
You are hereby required
'to answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight (28)
days after the last
publif.ation of this notice
which will be published
once a week for six (6)
successive weeks. The last
Publication will be made on
the 21st day of July, t993,
and the twenty-eight (28)
davs for answering will
demanded in the Complaint.
Dated this 10th day ot

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

7nl1 mo.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

Til\ \SPOIITATIO\

BUILDERS, INC.

6-30.1 mo. pd.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
-WORK

Qua

IISS~Ll

PH. 742-2217

4~Forr-..

12- SituatioM Wa a ted
13-- ln1W"ance
14-- 8UiiDeU TraiaiDf
15- Schoola &amp; IDitruetioa
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- MilcellaoeoUI

Public Notice

STOKELY
TOMATO
JUICE

1-'\1\\1 :O.li'I'I.IES
1.1\'I'.ST OCI~
61- Fann Equipment
62- Wanted to Buy
63- Li-.utock
64-- Hay·&amp; Graia
6S- Seed &amp; Fertlliaer

J-'~ard o(Tiu~lu

~

56- Peta for Sal.
57- Mwicalla•trwneall
58- Fnai .. &amp; V"'!etahleo
59-- For Sale or Trade

,'\

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32g

BU-CKET CUBED
ST K••••

Words

10
Monthly

JELLY

Bosnia's presiden( seeks help
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina· (AP) _ Bosnia's president is
pleading for help 10 save his capital, but there was no sign the United Nations would take decisive
action.
Bosnian President Alija lzetbegovic, facing a strong Serb offensive on the outs!Grts of SaraJevo,
appealed for international help
Tuesday in a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Boutros BoutrosGhali and other officials.
"The Serb aggressor has
launched a heavy offensive toward
the Sarajevo 'safe zone.' now coming from two directions, southeast
and southwest, aiming to cut up the
city," said Izctbegoyic.
·'There are signs that the Serbian forces plan a general attack on
the town itself," he wrote. "I call
on you to intervene and stop this
act of aggression."
The U.N. Security Council designated Sarajevo and five other
cities as "safe areas" for Bosnian
Muslim s, but it has provided no
troops 10 guard the zones.
In Washington Tuesday. State
Department s pokesma n Mike
McCurry sa id the United States
continued to favor lifting the arms
embargo so that Bosnia's Muslimdominated government would be
better able 10 defend itself, but that
no such action is planned because
or European opposition.
McCurry
indicated that
improvement in th e delivery of

2LITER

KRAFT
GRAPE

More troops headed for Somalia
BONN. Gennany (AP)- The
government decided Tuesday to
forge ahead with plans to deploy
I,700 soldiers in volatile Somalia.
resisting calls to halt what many
Gcnnans oppose as a risky mission.
The Cabinet agreed that shirking
a commitment to the United
Nations would badly damage Germany 's international image, chief
government spokesman Dieter
Vogel said.
Chancellor Helmut Kohl's decision to send peacekeepers to help
distribute food and medicine in
Somalia marks the latest step by
the Gennan leader to play a bigger
role in international security -and
possibly secure a seat on the U.N.
Security Council.
Gennany has about 270 soldiers

Days

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

12-5-Hn

Stone

RATES

79C

the U.N. peacekeeping forces in the east African
nation. There are already about 250 German
soldiers in Somalia and another 1,300 wiU follow
over the next few weeks. (AP)

PH. 614·992-5591

'.

COLA
PRODUCTS
'

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
,BASEMENTS &amp;
&lt;HOME SITES
HAUUNG; Limestone,
Dirt, Greve! and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

VALLEY
CONTUCTORS

3

r-----===-.,
CARPENTER
WGRK

Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
Free Estimates

614 _44 6-SSGSII2,m1J

PUbliC Notice
--------11 for any rea a on
Campbell Tranoportatlon

Company, Inc. fails to act on
your claim within 90 days,
then you may submit It to:

WHALEY'S AUTO
. PARTS
Speclalzlng In Cuslom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

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

992·7013 or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE

Box 189

ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

ENTERPRISES
i
Services
Interior &amp;· EX1erior
Paint Mobile Hnmesl
and Aluminum Siding
I•P&lt;lWei Washing

FREE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley Ridge Rd.
Bollom, Oh. 45743

I

I

I

I

I

Middleport,.Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

J&amp;T HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

From Foundation '
Roof

Inside and Out

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

.

992·3838
·

992-7878
1n11

mo.

\

v

~~
-;

!Mil-

1

:).\ ·~

''

EVERY THURSDAY·

EAGLE LANES

EAGLES

(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

CLUB

(614)
667·6628
~~~=======~. llr---------.
UNLIMITED ONE
HOWARD
MONTH TANNING
EXCAVATING
$25.80 BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTICSYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER-SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTI!IATES

Gravel

5-24·1 mo.

'

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Limestone
Dirt

614·949·2918 or
-614-593·501 0

.. .IJ.;

•DOZERS

GENERAL
HAULING

Free Estimates,
Low Costs.
Work i:uaranteed

985·4'181

IN POMEROY
6:45 p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
Additions
Work
and Plumbing

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

FOREVER
BRONZE

.c.

Tackervllle Rd.
R 1
acne

992-6215

949•2826

Pomeroy, Ohio

6-17-93-1 mo.

9-1 0-9~'-lm I

6181' 9211

·-

I

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

h800·848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

United Statet Coaal Guard
National Pollution Fund•
Center, 4200 Wilson Blvd.,
Public Notice
Suite 1000, Arlington, VA
22203-1804.
(7) 5 6 7f 8 9 12 13 14
PUBLIC NOTICE
15, 16,19,20,21,22,23, 26,
Bldt wilt be accepted by
27, 28; 29, 30; (8) 2. 3, 4,
Chester Township unlll
5I 6I 9I 10I 11 I 12I 13t 3otc
Auguol 1, 1993 lor the
construction of a line fence
between the properly of
Public Notice
Kerr Conotruclion and
Maxine &amp; Karen Grillllh .
'LEGAL NOTICE
Approx. 750" of horae fence.
Buckeye Hilts-Hocking Anyon-. lntereated in
Valley
Regional oubmltllng a bid on '1hla
Development District, Route projoct contact Cheoter
1, Box 299D, Marietta, Ohio Township Trualeet or clerk.
Ia requeaclng profetolonal 985-4274, 985-4168, 949servlcea for preventive 2586 or 985-3582 .
health promotion In Athena, (71 21 ,28,30, 3tc
Hocking, Melge, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Wathlngton Countln. Older
Americana Act funde are
avotlable lor the following
Public Notice
aarvlcea:
reglalered
dlellllana to perform
nutrition acreanlng and
PUBLIC NOTICE
counaeling with In-home
EQUIPMENT BID NOTICE
elden and caregiver•:
The Gallla Met go
pharmaclato • lo review Community Action Agency,
medlcallon review recorda P.O. Box 272, Chaohlre,
lor drug lnteracllono and Ohio, 45620, haa lor iol• to
correct uoe; and reglotered tho hlghnl blddar threa (3)
nurae1 to counsel ln~home window
unit
1lr
cllenta on medlcallon uoe. condlllonera. Two 121 are
Intent to porllclpate end 7,500 BTU and ona (1) 11 on
credenllato muat be 18,000 BTU . lntere1ted
received by July 30, 1993 at parlie1 ahould oubmlt
Buckeye Hilla.
elated bldo to the Gallia
Contractt lor the Hnlor Malgo C.A.A. office at lha ·
oervlce1 will be lor the aloremenlloned sddre...
period of September 1 to Blda will be accepted until 4
O.Cember 31, 1993.
p.m. on July 30, 1993. The
Specific amounto of lunda C.A.A. hot the right to
for e1ch aervlce In each raluoa any and oil bldo.
oounty oro available.
Mark on the ~utaldo ol the
For further Information envalope "AC BID".
contact Cindy L. Faroon EEO/AA.
•
(614) 374-9436.
(7)21,252tc '
(7) 21; 1TC
I

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

Howard L Wriiesel

ROOFIN(.;
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
DownsJ)outs
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
3·16-93-Un

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

WALKER ALLEY
Parts and Service
Mowers - Chain Saws
Weedealen

Authorlz~: Br~gs &amp;

Stratton TO, yan,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M-F 9-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday
949·2804
4/26/tln

-SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
. '

SERVICE
36970 Boll Run Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470
OWNER: Jeff Widtersham
5/1

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

614·698-6500
7nltln

J&amp;L
. INSULATION
.
'
Free Estimates

992-2269

Replacement
Windows
VInyl Siding
Roofing .
Call u• for
Special Prlcae on
Siding •nc:t Wlndowa

USED RAILROAD TIES

James Kee1ea, owner

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

.BILL SLACK
'

992-2772

I

'·

�.,

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

21

Business
-Opf!Onunlty
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PIJBUSHING CO.
iwcom- lhal you do bull, _ with poop1o You k-t 11\d
NOT
monoylhrough lhl
moH unlll you have ln-lgllld
lha olflrlng.

•

1o-

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Lsrry Wright

Rentals

64

~

,

ACROSS

Transportation

O..illpolio.
8150
.,._.,
811Wo. &amp;M-448-3170.

PHILLIP
ALDER

Autos for Sale
•
1 Ton 1a11 ChavroJit, 350, 4 ;
Spaod, With Stock Bad ·a,.....;
11~, 614-44HI637 Anytlmo After~
5P.M.

NORTH

Tranamlnlon, Fair Condition, •
$600, 814·25&amp;-13114.

1175 Cha-olll Capri, 454
motor, turbo transmlaalon, good
motor • body. 304-t'IS-5314.

EEKANDMEEK

EAST
t98 S2

•ui

• 10 8 3

1181 D•taun 310 Nlaun, 41p.,

32-35 mpg, $800, 1114·882-3997.
1881 llonlo carlo, oharp car, I'!IJ
PB, V.., $1350, call 614-Ht-20 ..

.982
SOUTH
t7643
.K 7 2

or 114-D4D 2878. ·

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1982 Buick Par1&lt; Ava, axe . concl.,
$1500. 30H7H158 anar 5pm or

, . '-- .

""ll.• ~.o-.-.1

2 t.droom furnlehed mobile

SCXJP

1884 EGort, good cond., $1500.

~ho=m:::::•·~304:::.e.:.:.:75-Ut2:..::=·---,I .!:;;;;;;;;;;;;::===;;;;;=;::;:::;;;;::==;"';';";';";;":,.:·;;"";·~~ 304-'75-4435.
2 - - Fumlahad, Air, I"
198&lt;1 Otda Royall,
Cable Avollable1 01P91ff a
Aat.rMce ~llrwd, Fo.ter'a
Mobil• H - Park, BM-448-11102. 51
Nlco mobile honio loll lor up to
1&amp;180 horn• ba-n Athono a
Pomeroy, $85/mon,, .,...112--2187.
Rantala, 114--441-2115.

min 11+1111 llfMiyiM. dat•llne
mMI 100'1 of elnglo~~le•ln
your lrNiocboy. CCI
FL

44

AEDUCEi Bum Ott F.t Whi'-

1br lpirtment, Point Plauant,
tuml•h.t, e11an, no pe18. 304-

-p,

You
Tllb OPAL Available
. At: Fruth PhaiiiiiC)'.
REDUCE; Bum oH fat while you
·
- · Toke OPAl., avollable al
FrulhPhlnnlcy.
THE GAY CONNECTION f.IIOC).
JII0.3337 12.110-mln. 11+ moot

100"1 of exctllng man In your
..... tonight. Gil phonu·o. CCI

675-1381.
2bdrm. apta., lOIII llecirlc, IP"
pllan~
tvmlthld, laundry
room flc:llltl• clou to achool

Employment Services

BOCA FL.

11 . Help Wanted
_...;.._;..:.,__;..
____

4

NAME YOUR OWN INCOME No

Giveaway

1 CUt1 Bilek Kltttn. F1m111 10

Selling. Work Home. Profhl
Dally. Gt010 Big _fall. Loam Tha
Stcroto Now. ,J5 (212) ZIW1DO
Ext. 2117.

Call anor 4:30, 61444t.e281.
.
1 German Shlphlrd, Chow 'AVON' ALL AAEASI Shal'l your
Prolwnbly Country Homo, 114- tlma with ue. You'll love thl
company. t.eoo-m-t35S.
441·1521.
ATTENTION
2 -II call, 1 tiger otrlppad, 1
.,.,._ &amp; whim, very good hun· Due To Expt~n1lon Llrge Na·
,... ~75-24t8.
tlonal CDnCIITI Now H11 5
.
Position• Opantd,
2 long Mlrwd kinena, approx.
lmmedl1talyll
8wke. old, to good homo. 304- llull Ia NNI And Dapondabla.
675-11116 or 675-11258.
No Exporllnco - a r y. Sac·
retlry, W.ltr... , Or Olhar Public
Black &amp; lan German Shl:"oo"'.J Ralatod Jobl Holpful, But Nol
lpptOX. 2yra. old, IO
Aoqul111d. 11200 To SliGO A Weok
home. 31M·t73o5C83.
To St1rt. Bonu~ Pl1n1 And Paid
Holldayl. No Phone Call1tlll Few
Kin-, 3 Monlhl, 114-446-3897.
Interview SM...... Mr. M1ple,
Kilt.,., All COlore, Nlod Homo Frtday..July 23rd From 9:00A.M.
· lmmadlalely, 1114-441-0811.
To ~ rtoon AI Tho Employment
45 Oliva Sti'Mt, Ga~
¥'1rd Sale H•m• to any one Just Office,
llpollt, 011.
coiii14.Z45-1064
AVON I All Al'llll I Shlrtay
Splal'l, 304-11~142!1.
6
Lost &amp; Found
Found: Black Lab BI'Qwn COllar, COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC.
Vary Friendly. Sulaville Pillo, TORS WANTED: Two live-In ln- · Old

...... 814-317..0543.

"'

L.oat:- batw11n Sundry, llld·
d•rt and Home .E nt•rtaln·
ment Clnt•, Pom•oy· •m~ll
g111y Ienior dog, &amp;14.e4t-m5.

ltructof'8 (WMI«&lt;IIyiiWMkands)
needed to tACh community and
p.tr~~onal akllll to one adutt wt~h

=·

dovolopmonlal
llollil
hf"'IWk:
U..f;

diNbliHIII In
Hou111: (1) 40
ngtevenlng hOuri,

l&amp;llp-ovtr

Nqull'ld;

Loat: OOg (So) Black &amp; Whho,

daytlmo houre oH: (2) 3:1-hralwk:

446--.

Sat/SUn; 1l1ap onr.gqufrad;
Informal utllng. V1rtaa. •kill•
and tallnta nMdlld. High tehooi
degrM, velld driver'• llcan~a,

Largo OOg . WHh Aad Collar,
Family Pol', VlclnHy: Charolalo
Llk~~!uaa Call II Found: 614Loat: Fomlly Dog Dark Gorman

Shophard, t Yur Old, DoG Col·
lar, N..cta Medication. FamllwPal, Yiclnhy: At. 160, Pewter

Area. P - Call lf4.36U521.
Lo.l:: Sklllast• w111r aid, nur
'--on on Kan1wha River. It

found piNII cai1304-t75-1090.

7

Yard Sale

goOd driving rwcord, thl'ltl y"rl

Clrtvlng ••periance, and ad•
quata tutomoblla ·ln•uranca
cov.rage
requiNd. Salary:

$5.00/hr. lo alert. II lnlll'ntld
call 1-800-531·2302 no liter than
7127193; aak for Chrilly. Equal
Opportuntty Employer.

Expartencad Aoral O..lgMr for
locll FIOWir Shop.
Send
Reaume: c:/o Bo.x C:~ 1 200 Main
St., Point Pleasant, wv, 25550.
Experienced
Phlaboloml ...
Mull Have Racent Experience In

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
t Dal only.l friday July 23rd. Rt.
Ml 1: Spor1&lt;1a Supply. Fuml·
ture, Ctolhlng, Glaeeware, &amp;

All Aspacta Of Phlabotomy.

Geriatric: Experianca Ia A Plua.
Earty Momlng Hour.; Company
Car; Approx:. 20 Hrs !Weak M..f.
This I• Not A Job For Recant
Graduatn Or Beglnnere. Wa
Ar. Looking For Someon• Who
Ia Reliable And Can Work
. Without
Supervision. Sand
Rnume To: P.O. Box 33, Gal·
lloplla, Ohio 45631.

National Publishing Arm Nl&amp;ds
Paopla To Label POitcard•

From Homa. $600 !Wk. Sot Your
Own Houre Call 1-900-740.7377,
(1.49 Min /18 Yro.) Or Write:
PAASE -33A, 161 9. LincOinway,
N. AuroraiL 110542.
NOw l•klrM~ Application• At:
Domlnoo PIZ"!t_.Galllpolio, &amp;
Point Pl .... nt, wv.

Chalra, Several Tabl••· Kltc:htn tlon of on the Job uperiance
planned . lnlt:RIC·
Tablel, 2 Chairl, Entertainment and
Center, Small Pull Camper, tlontdamonltratlon. Succnatul
will have the paten·
Toola, Lg. Pin, Pong Tabla, T.V. eandidatn
tlal
of
placement
In an eul1tan1
S.l, •·750x16 Ply.. TtrH, New
managtr or manager eapacHy
RICipl llountad on I Lug baHCf
upon Mura need. Prior
Budd WhHII Ntw Wast Coati
rat1ll experl•nc• 1ndlor c:ollaga
Mlrrore• w;o;l Ooubla Or OuHn or
unlvarahy training helpful.
Sl.. Dad, Blcyclu, C\11~1, RnumN
thould be tubmltted
Clothing All Slzn, 3 MIIH Out no later than
~ 11 to Director
Stele Route 211, Jet. WilHam•
Hum1n Ruourcea, Fruth
HolloW Rd. Lg. Yellow Building of
Pharmacy, Route 1, 8oJ( 332,
Frtdly &amp; Saturday, I Till Dark.
Point PIN.. nt, WV 2&amp;550. No
calla
pluaa.
ALL Yard S.lll lluat 81 Paid In talephona
Advo""". OEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. EEO/ADA employer.
lha day bolD,. tho ad lo lo run. Full-Time Office .s. ... Poeltlon,
Sunday adhlon • 2:00 p.m. With
Ban•llta, Some Traval fll.
Frklar. Mondty edition • 2:00 quii'ICI.
Sand Rnuma To: CLA
p.m. Saturday.
280, elo G111ipoli1 Dally Tribun~ 1
Frtdl~uly 23rd, Saturday 241h. 825 Third Avenua, OalliROIII, Ott
4D1
rge• CrNk Aotd, Misc. 45631,
Fum., Hand Home Made Ct11ft1, Hour1y Clinic Aide NMdtd PartDlohn, Limp, Clothn, Toyo, Time To Work In Family Plan·
Muc::h Mewel
nlng OffiCII In M•lg•. Glltia
And Lawrence Count111. Must

Have High School Dlplo,.. Or

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepor.t
&amp; VIcinity-

Equivalency; Good Communlcl·
lion Skllla; Aecuracr. WHh
Figurn; Medical Ott ce Ex·

117 Vala StreM, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Thuradoy &amp; Friday, July 22 &amp; 23,
clothing, furniture, miK.

ture Individual Who I• S.nahlva
To AaprCJductlva Naada ot
Clients. Looking For Someone

All Yard Saill llull Ia Paid In
Adva ..... Daacllno ; 1:00pm tht

Grow In Tha Poaltlon AI: NMd
Art .... Position Aaqulrll Rail·
able Tranapgrlatlon. W11kday,
Evanlna And Salurclay Houre
A" To '81 Expected. Tra.vl4
Out
OHicn.

dly before lhe ad Ia to run,
Mcnelly

edition

10:00a.m.

Saturday.
Moving .. .._ 31290 SA 325,
LlngoviU., Ohio, Friday l
Salurday, July 23 &amp; 2A.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Poaroon Aucllon Company,
full time euctlonHr, complett
8uctlon
aervlca.
Uc•nHd
IH,Ohlo a WHI Vlrglnlo, 30477W785.

9

wanted to Buy

Antlqun •nd ueed·t...,ntture, no
Item 1oo lar• Of too amall, will
buy one piece or compltta

hoUaohold, call Qoby llartln,
114-1112-1'141.
Buy Standing Tlmbar1 Plna,
Plporwood, &amp; Sow Tim- 814182·7311.
Top PrieM Paid: All Old U.S.
Colnl, Gold Ringo su- Colno,
Gold i!Oino. II.T,S. Coln Shop,
151-Avonuo,O..IIIpolll.

porlenct Holplul; Will T111ln M•

Who Ia S.ll-llofivolad And Can

HouM I land for ·••1•, 3.75
acrn, 2ml o~ Chanclara Aldg•

~ Glonwood, WV, $20,000 flrm.
.e764321 aftw 4pm.
Hou11 tor 10!0, hoe 2 lumlohtd .

apertmant1, lmmtdlate poe .....

olon, pho,.·l14-9112·293l

HouM For S.lll: 2 Bedrooma,

Family Room, Full BaMftllnl

With Fireplace, 81~-86DG,

PHP Nat-k Ia oHarlng you an 32

opportunity to , glt ahead In

Mobile Homes

th... hard tim... lnttrntad
~,.ona Np0tt

In tOJWn. Appilcitlona available
at: Village GINA AFIL 141 or
call 1114-9112·3711. EOH.
.
Fumlohad 1 lodroom Apal1·
mont, Sha,. Bllh, UtiiHIII Paid
$200/llo. 101 Fourth, O..lllpolll,
514 446 4416 AHor 7P.II.
Apert1111nt lor rent In Pt.
Pl....nt, 614-!1112o$858 . aftor
Spm.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 631 .lacltaon Pika
IYom $206/mo. Walle to •
movill. Call614-4464568. EOH.
Fumlahld Apartment, 1 br, nert
to Ubrary, pe~lng, central hell,
1ir, Nferencn. 114 441 0338,

for Sale

to the Pomeroy

Municipal Building, Thuraday, 14170 T111lltr 10x28 AddiUon Balo,.7p.m.
July 22.
doocrlplton baalno Largo LA, Kllchon, FA, 3-4 BA, 1
11 8:00pm to bl. lollowoa by Bllh 2 Wooden Dicke, Covarod Fumlllttd oHidoncy, $185/mo.,
quolltlld lntorvl-1. No tx· Pore~, "Good Shlpal" .,1,500, 1120 Fourth Ava., O..lllpolla.
pari•tJC• neceUI~.

61~2454111.

Sal-. naw flwelry •tore In Mkl·
dlaport, full time, atart lm·

141t72 Hollypark 3 Btdrooms 2
Bat hi, Utility Room. EIKtric, Air

,

madlatoly. Appliclllono lokon Condlllonlng, 114 441 8607.

between
10:001m· noon,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Acqulaltfons Fine Ja-.lry, 91

1973 12x85 2 BedrOCHn Tr11llar; 1
Bath, Window Air Conclllonar,

IIIII SlrMt, lllddloport, Ohio.
$6,800, 080, 114-441-4528.
Somaono To Llvaln Frot Board; 1!177, 8135 lroilor, $2000 OBD.
For Salt: 5,000 BTU AC; 80 Oldo 304..75-2851.
CutiiU, 61~6-3418 .
1982 Fairmont Townhouu 14170
Truck
Drlvar CombinatiOn All Ellclrlc, Caniral Air, 2 Bod·
Vohlcle COL Aaqulrad, P!I!J~liO room, Balh Hu Gardon Tub,
To $350 Par WMk, Yory Fow Good Condition, 614-38fi.IIIS3.
Ovtmlghta. Rnpond To!"~P.O.

Box 805, Gallipollo, OH 45631.

WANTED: Fulj..tlma employment
In your home 11 1 Home Sar·
vk::n • Worbr with Buc:keya
Communhy
Servlcn.
Wa
provide ulary plu• banafha and
1 dally room 1nd board rat•.
YOu provide 1 home, guldenc:a

1988 Holly Parit, Ml721 3br, 2
bath, uklng f14,DOO.. •OH'IS5218 •Iter 4pm.

·

118D Sunahine14x80 mobl~
home, total elac, 3 Mdrooma, 2
full bMM,Ieunclry room, etcwe,
ret dllhwa•h•, $16,800. located
2C1• trailer park Pt. PH, 304-6~

and lrlondohlp In 1 family It· 37t6afttr 5:30 Pll.

·

mosphare. Aequii'Mi lbillty to
tuch personal living akllla 1nd

19SM A1dm11n 14170, 3bdrm., In·

and development of two Indlvlduala with manta! ratardi·
tlon. Homa muet be In Melgt

5yr. wertanty, nornaowner1 In·
IIUF'IU1CI, 1nd 1 ~r of frM lot
renl, all for only $1771'mo., call 1·

1 commhmonl lo tho growlh cludao aklrtlng1 lltpa, bloch,

County. Contoct Christy 11 I· SDO.e37-3238.
800-5!1-2302 or write P.O. Sox
004, Jackson, Oh 456 4o; no 1111 r 2 trall1ra buill into doubla wkla,
h
Eq
3 bedroom., 11!2 batha, many
t an 712J1'93.
uti Opportunity axtraa, prtcld on lnepectlon,
Employar.
304.,12.3317.

12

Situation
Wanted

34

Want to do: drvwall &amp; block
wor1&lt;. 304~5-15ti3 .

18

Wanted to Do

E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
llloc.H11111.
Trimming, TrH Ramovll, Hedge
Trimming. FrH Eatim1te1! 6144 Family Yard Silo: 5 lllln
367·785r After •p.m.
Noflh On 100 Pul HMC
Thuradoy, Friday, Salurday, July
22nd, 23rd, 24th. Clothing, Boby Fruth Pharmacy, a regional drug .Ganaral Malntananca, Painting,
lttml, HouHhold Goods, Tools, choln In Ohio &amp; Wnt Virginia, 11 Yard Work Wlndowa Wa1had
Gun.,. Cloanad Llghl Hauling,
Loti Of IMIICI 11t HouH Pa- INking
candldatn
for Commerical, AHidlntlal, Steva:
CAII Aodo Porto.
management
trainee.
Our 614~1658 .
5 Fomlly Yard Solo: 3 Solao, 6 program c:on... ll or • combine·

Sunday adHion· 1:OOpm Frldoy,

Apanment
for Rent

Georgn Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your log1 to the mill jult

Business
Buildings

Building. -to Stalt Of Ohio
Fl111 And HoaHh Cod01 And ADA

Standardl For SChool, Oftk:11,
Etc. Could Be Converted Into

Homo. '!,_752 Sq. Fl. 8 Aoorno, 3
Balha "''n Bo Aalocatad. Alklng: $30,000. For llorolnform•·
lion Call: 304.e75·1735.
Comm1rc111 Houat For l.aa11
ldNI For OffiCII, Etc. loti Of
Parking Area. Located Upper
Route 7, BetwMn Tht 2 Shop-

ping Canl1111,

446 ..865.

61~46-6188,

614-

Johnson '• Trea S.rvlea, trim·
ming 6 removal, tr... , 1hrubs,
hedgn, trw ntlmatu, 304·586-

1 acre 1011, At 2. Ashton. Clyde
Bowan, Jr 304-57'6-2336.

Miss Paula'• Day Care Center 1
Block Woll Of HMC On Jackaon

Ad., Gallla County, 814-423-1253.

Quality And Expartenca I• The
tl Conc:em For Your Child's
Cart. Call Us For A Visit. lntant
IToddlera 614-446-6227. Prnc:hoolara /School Aa• 614-446-

mila out Neighborhood "oad.
614-441-3438 ror mora lntorma~
tlon.

Lots &amp; Acreage

40 AcrM Mora Or Ltu Jamu T.
McGuire F1nn, Mercerville, Cell

Pika M·F 6 A.M. ·5:30 P.ll . II Appro•lmataly 1 acre lolL. 4110

Or Your Home. Exparltnced
Ratertncaa. &amp;1o\-446·26.c6.

a

Financial

Lots &amp; a&lt;:raaga tor home c:onatructlon on Rayburn Ad,
re11onable rutrlctlone, county
w.,tar, Information mailed on ,..
qunt, 30H75-5253, piiiH no

olnglo wldotn~lletw.
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
llolgo Counly, Salom Twp.,
$6501 acre. Remote, beautiful

land; wooda, p11ture. and hl/11.

2

1

Business
Opponunlly

Call lor good map. 1..14-51138545, Alhono,DH.

EHicloncy

$185

Utllltl• P1ld, Share 81thi 107
Second, 0111ipolla, 114 4tl 4411

Aftor 7P.II.
Fumlahad · EHicloncy
$185
Utllhl• Pold1 Sha,. 8oth, 107
S.cond, Gall1pollo, 114 441 4416
Aftar7P.M.
G111clouo living. 1 and 2 room

aputmanta at , VIUage

Nice 2 bedroom apartmant for
,.,. In Pomaror, 814-1182-5858,
Iller Spm or waaikande.

One

bedroom

aJMiftmente,

$225/mo. lncludal utllltill, "DO
-urhy dopoolt, no polo; 1149112-2218.

One bedroom 1pt, Maeon, WV.
$11~~1 piul utfllllaa, r.ferenc.
raqulrea, 304·773-5054.

Furnished
Rooms

Accomodatlona tor thrM man,
ahowar, cable TV, mlc:rowave,
rwfrlg.,.tor, off 1treet parklna,
vary
re11pnablel,
prlvafa
•ntranca, 11v1 mlnut11 tbove

·-1

4 place BA ouHoluiVq-. lizo,
INH,.,.-bo1
mlcrowav• olll'ingil.
ttoo. Konmora
eoneoa.
coiiM '"ill!.~ table
IIIIIch ng, 114-446-1..,.
VI'AA FURNITURE

114-4CI4158 Or 114 441 4421
-tQ DAV SAME AS CASH
OR RENT.Z.OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

DUTSIOE
FURNISHINGS:
Wroyght Iron Table W/4 Chlll'l;
Fen Bock Rocking Chair $58;
Garden Arch Wily'• $128.00
B-Ing ·Twin llall Sat $11, Full
S99 Sat Ouion $141 Sll; 4
0111wor ChMI S44.111; Car lod'o
Bunk Bad'a, ·- . , Bedl. Full
Llno Of Sout-llltm VI••
Startlna At SZO.OO; lndla'1" llany
Shapo'o l Siua Starting AI
$6.00. 2 i.ocltlonl ·BaoidiJIUIO
Auction Or 4 111111 Out 141.
Opan I A.ll. To 8 P.ll. lion -Sat.
Chllrw,

£xcellllll

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
eomplato homo tum~~~~u·
Hou,.: Mon-Sat, •a. I
0322, 3 mlioa out Bultvlllo Ad.

Fr. Delivery.

Living Room Suha, 2 Pilei,

Navar UIOd, 1275; E.Z Box
Aaclinor Aockor, 81111, ,,..._
8373.
'
O..k Fumftwo: Ta- 1
Chalr11, Hulch01, CUrved Olta
Chino C.blntlo, Book Caoaa,
Etc. River Valley O.k Fum•we,
3883 a-gn c - Road, 0..1·
llpollo, Olilo Phone: 114-4464316.
PICKENS FURNITURE

fumllure, hllt1111, WHtern &amp;
Work booll. 11t 441 3151.

Wlohar ·/Otyw 1200; Uvlng
Room

Suite

$100;

vacuum

Claanor tiOO.i 1511 Clrahtm
School Road, &lt;iOIIIpolla.
.
Whirlpool dryor, S75. 3~754435.

53

Antiques

Buy or oall Alv.,lno Anllquao,
1124 E. llaln
on At. 124,
Pomoror. Hou..: M.tw. to:oo

91-.

a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00

IO 5:00 p.m. 514-9112·2526.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
dlnlngroom

eulta,

axe.

rounCI bal a claw labitl,
at $120/mo. Gallla Hotot • cond.,
lido bolrd, coor 12300 will take
81100. 304-17H184 anor 5pm.
SI. . Ping rooma with cooking.
AIIO trailer 8piCI. All hook-ups. 3 112x15" -a, compllla with
C1ll 1tter 2 :00 p.m., :JOC ..rr.J.. llddarh flhar, eoll!f cov•,
ovaryt lng to&lt; 1250, 114-HZ·
5651, llaaon WV.
71141.
4 Fl. King CUitor Pull Tr.po
Brush Hog, Good Condtt CNt,
47 Wanted to Rent
lf4.256-11301,114-266-a205
Wanted To Rant Lot For Campor, 4 R. King KUitor Brulh !:loll
CioN To Galllpolla, WHh 1200; Largo Portabtt llool Doi
Eloctrlc a Wator Hook.Op, IM- C1111a m, lf4.37t-2218.
·
388-111186.
lx8 -.ian atorago buUdlnga,
Wanting to nnt, 2 or 3 bedroom $385, dttlvary l MIUP, 1155.
ho-., ln clean and good cond~ Olhll' aluo IVIIIabll. Slda\11 E•
tlon, prater plvat1 aetting, 114- qui~&gt;~Mnl, Hondtrlon. 304-e'IS992·2428, If no IRWIII' p4MM 11121.
Ieiiia meuage on ITMK:hlna.
Antiquo Duncon Phvla Bulitlt,
Chain Cabinlt, lf4.24l.at81.
Merchandise
Bar Stool• S40; Olnollo WHh 3
Cholr~t.t40; lllcrOJWovoliOO Wan
11580.

Household
GOOds

Mollohan CarJIIII, At. 7 N. 8t4446·74« 91t2 Carpal $60, All
Vinyl in Slock S4.41 Yd.
·

Estate

knowingly accop1
adverllsements for real eState
whiCh Is In violation ol the
law. Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that all dWellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opporlunily basis.

like

MW'.

7:30pm.

304-57f5..2t32

,,

TOO

MUCH TIME

LOOKIN' AT HIM

I1405E ARE BVTTONS ..THE'f
KEEP Tf.IE WATERMELON
FROM FALLING APART.

1-lE NEVER BELIEVE?
ANYTHING I TELL f.IIM

G::l/:·

CFA Aagl•..,.ed Hlmll•yan Kit·

Chevy 1500 pickup, 112 lon, .!
llfll, 2 I'IINin, Firat Sholl, 1Q80
loldld, 18,000 mn... - 304-112....
Sail Po~.1200, 1)4-446-1032, 3128.
•'

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

Ford, Ooda-- pickup- :
3 Chavrotat,
beds. Short or tong . No ruat.
miiN, bill &amp; tln 1 $200. IICh, 304.fJ75-6286.
.:
304..76-2444.
AKC Aaglatorad BNgla Pupa,
llall . 150• Shoto, Steve
Stapleton
614-441-4t72, 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Anytime: 614-251-1618.
1V14 Chav. •xc, Truck. Good En·
Fllh Tank, 2413 Jackaon Ava. gino, 1619 Graham School Rood
'
PcMnt PIIIIMI'II, 3Q4..G75-2063, Galllpollo.
lull linl · Tropical fllh blrda,
email anlmala and ·~pplln.
74 , Motorcycles
lllnlolu\11

Musical
Instruments

7- 2.1

&lt;fl 1tl3 llJ NEA Inc

BORN LOSER

..,....,--...,

pet, ax:oall1nt condition; port·
ab&amp;l CO Jt'ayer wlht AC adapter,
headphoMe, two 50 watt
ap~~ken, subwootari 814-992·

75 Boats &amp; Motors

58

Evenrude, lh~

Fruits &amp;
VegetabiBs

telne,.t $6 Buahaf, B1~hm1n
F1rm, 112 Mil• State Route 7

Squth Of Galllpolla, 814-256-

76

:;ror,
wl trallar,6 """' 4:30:

New ga• links, one ton truck
whMII, ndlalora, floor mat•,

Early Cooking AppiH, 614-256lOIS.

79

ate. 0 l A Auto, Rlplly, WV. 304372·3833 or 1.S00.273-S321.
campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1981 Holiday motor horna, good

59

11...388-0803

I

450 &amp; 3li0 John o - Dozore,
di ... l engine, 8 waY m•nu.l
blade. wench, rollov1r cenopy.

UEAADHH

L G

E S

-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1861. Confederate forces defeated the
Union army at the First Battle of Bull
Run. the first major engagement
the Civil War .
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS : Ern e s t
Hemingway 11899-1961&gt;, author; Hart
Crane 11899· 193 2!, poet ; Mars ha ll
McLuhan 11911 - t980l. author: Isaa c
Sl e rn 11920-l , violini st, is 73 : Don
Knott s 11924·), acto r. is 69 : Norma n
J ewison 11926-l, producer-director. is
67 ; Robin Williams 11952·1, comedi a nactor, is 41 ; Jon Lovilz 11957-l, co median . is 36; Tom Chambers !1959· 1,
bas ketball

WD

WDZEDA

H E

MVJHA

FRYTZ

E J D

MWVHDODZ

VE,

T

L D

H D A A

I C A H

TA

V L

WD

HWOZO .

M W D J

CJVOZMEEV.

PREVIOUS SOL.UTION : " You have to focu s in on what you want to
achieve . .The martial arts instilled that in me." - Chuck Norris .

I
I

,~~;t:~'

S©l'.Q{}lA- ~ ~!rs·

-~~---- E~hed ~y

0 Rearrange
four scramb led

~tters

of

WOlD

GAM I

CLAY l . POLLAN

ttl a

'

words be·
low to form four words

I ~1IGINE
I' I

I

I I

t

BYNOE

I

IJ•·
I 1 1 1 1' "
I0
I
""

Last summer while on vaca·
lion I saw lhis sign at a gas
3
station on the edge Qi the de·
--L.-l...--1.-.L.--1
sert: "Don 't Ask Us For lnfor..-------.....,
· mation. II We Knew Anythino
T R E E R lj
DoYouThink We Would ...... '? "
Comp lete 1he chuck le quoted

lc-:-r.....:.r-r-r----1

L..

1-...,.I:,.S_;,;I,...;;;-rl;...;.,l..,";_;rl--1
.

.

.

.

.

by hl l.ng in the m•nmg wo rds

L...I.-...L..-.I-.....1-...L--1 yo u de~elop from step N0 ., 3 below.

RS IN

SCRAM·LETS

Sorrow · Knack • Mange - Fabric • BROKE
Son to mom, "You know that vase thaC's been handed
down from generation to generation?" ·s,:~e. what
about it?" the mom answers. 'Well." frowns the son,
'1his
BROKE it! "

L1M\TS ~

GE~TURES ...

ruda" :ISH. Somorvllla ANhy!

304175-3030 or 675-3431.

:

Services
Home
Improvements

Unconditional IHitlma gu1r1n·
Ita. Local referenc• tumlahld.
Call 1.e00.287-o576 Or 814-237-

0488 Aogal'l Watorproollng. Eotlbilahec:J 1975.

Curtl1 Home Improvement•. NO'

.lob Too Bla Or Small, YNro Ex·
parlance

bn

Older

/Newer

cluolvoly II Alht Aid Pharmacy.
The 11111 way IO dill.
Hlllortc Call .. on . lath Tub
From 0 .0 . llclniYN - In O..HIIIOiitl, Extl'l -vy Cllw.
fo!"..t. Oatad llarch 1901- S3DO
ODV, 114-44..1122 Allttr Dark.
hlf' lad Cril k....
'P'
n ' •,po, lf4.

Balli,., Now Holland Rakaat
Hatland 241 Hayblnd, Ano
Othar EquiPINnl AI Howe'a
Fann Machinery, .lackaon, Ohio,
114-211-1144.
llinMy Fwguoon 185 T111Ctor;
14,850; 135 MF With L.oodtr,
$7,850; 190 Allla Chllmora With
y.,.,_ Round Bolar, '7,150·,

1103.
1:::::-::::=~~~.,...-~
KUla Flouil Buy E n - Flaa
Kille,. tor pato, 11omo &amp; yard
Guaront...r allttcllnll AvalllbiO I;-2~'-;::;~;;:::::=;;:;;::=::::;:...;,,.­
Polnt PiottNnt Co-op, 1!11
Kan.-haSt.

' A E C

RN-IGE. OF Ht-.ND

1988 M1ll1rd Flight L c:ampar,
29t'l. Pc;mtoon boat, IOhp Evln·

HomM. Addhlon•, FoundaUon•
304-e&amp;Z-2117.
Rooting, Khchana JBatha. In~
Hyd111ullc oll 814 .50 buckll or 50 · lUrid, "Free Eltlmataa. 114-317·
gal .St25. Sldoro Equlpmant, 0516.
lltndaroon, WV. 304-175-7421.
Davl• Sawing Machine And •
J.D. 45 Combl,. Lalo Model V1cuum Cleaner Repair, FrM
With 234 Corn Ha-, A10lly Pick·Up And Dallvary, Glorgn
C,.ek Rold, 114-441..02SM.
Good CondHion, 614-245-5124.
llarar,. S-dar, FortiUur Ron'• TV Sanlca, lpecilllzing
SPrlldotkFORI Plow &amp; Dloko, In Z.nhh AIIO Untieing moll
H.r

~OSTUME

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

8522

Eac h letter In the cip hfor stands l or ano the1 . Todsy 's c llltf. r equals;/

UNfORTUN~TEL't ~IS

•

1983 Stan:111ft Campa• IIMpo B.

81

1·36 IIF Troctor 13,168, IS IIF
S3,150, 21!1 MF 115.750. 275 MF
115,7li0,2110 MF S8,750 614-286-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ge le br~ ty Cipher c rypt ogr!lms ate created from quota tions by fam ous people. past an&lt;l presen t.

304.e75-2'162.

cond. 304~75~62.

Fann Equipment

-

48 Mldwe.t lern
coUege .
51 Poellc toot
53 Row
54 Concerning
(2 Wdl.)
56 Aoner end
Sulllvon
57 GoH mound
58 Dulch lown

1975 motor home, 21ft., elun,
low milage, rudy tor the road.

We Pick PINM Call Bolorl You
Come, 114-367-(1415 (ChMhlra).

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

e.-\N~:=.:...·~"1

New Four Barrel Clrburator·
1m ·1986 302, To 3!h V.a Ford,

C.nnlng tomatHII, $4J bUahllj
treah com•. $1.61 dozen; c111
614-li2·5866, Wllllama F1rm,
SyracuM, Ohio.

For Sale
or Trade
Will troda 1883 FORI Y.a (302)

llHOIJeHTIT
W.Pe O"t OJE.L

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

S185, 814-388-9261.

Tame Slaeltberrln. $2.00 Ou1rt

..

~~~~~--~~----1989 TX17, ban tracker, 70hp ·~

11535.

Hllf Runner Baan1, pick your
oWn
Ulbuahal,
l)icked
$'11/buthll, 3ml abova Mender..
101:1 on right.

Today i s th e 202nd

day o( 1993 and the
31st day of summer.

IUIIIX

11 Ple1ted
caner
18 Norml22 MIP tbbr.
24 SUcky
25 AuthorFleming
26 Aclor - .
,
Kr!oloHeraon
27 Roof edge '
28 Prying dev(ce
30 Harvard,
Yele, etc.
(2 Wdl.)
31 hther
32 Uelen lo
35 Aclreu Derek
38 Author Umberto ~
311 College dog.
41 Addict ·
.
43 Germen tor

"one"

Dummy's spade 10 was ~~:~a~=~
West 'cl!Scarded a heart. Now
played a club to his ace
club jack: queen, king. Wb1eenn-d~ia~~~
played a club to his 10, both opponents
followed. So a diamond to dummy's
ace allowed South to cash dummy's
club six for his ninth trick.
The more chances you have to make
contract, the better.

21, 1993

10 Anolo-Silon ·
lleve
11 Feminine

45 Fol!owlng
47 Peace
oymbot
48 Once- a

AJ R HA

•

for Sale

$6200. 304-67

Canning Tomal- Alrudy
Plckad llu\11 Bring OWn Con·

Squere

Seeing double
is twice as good

July

650 cc, $600; 614.ji43-5480.
'
~
1980 Harlty Davldaoh 183, Now •
Bacti Stradlvartua Sliver Tr';,;;: Condlllon, &amp;IA-446-7907.
'

61

Paso

'83 Yamahll Maxim1, !Shaft drtva, :.

ohlrlo; lf4.112..U,
For Solo: King a Coal
Stove With Small Ami Wood
And Coal, lloka An OHtrl Call
514 445 61117 Batoro 2 P.ll. Wad
Or After 5 P.ll. ThrUiday.
0-11 NutrHion Pnlducto
flllurtng Amino Acid Body
Building,. walght lOla and fat

...

"\.-1AvlO,S

Plnachtr AKC,

""YI'

gOoCI condhlon, purch1HCI new

3.

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

In 'The Faerie Queene," Edlmtlild
Spenser wrote, 'So double was
pains, so double be bis prai$1!."
This is only fair, and it can apply in
a bridge deal - like today's. How
·should South plan the play In three notrump, West leading the heart queen?
South had a tough decision. after his
parlner's ta~eout ~ouble. He was a lit·
tie strong for one no-trump and a little
weak
two no-trump. He compromised
'
to two spades,
and at least four
spades.
cue-bid ollhree hearts
wils game-forcing and expressing
doubt about direction. The bid is usual·
ly made )Oith three spades. With four
spades, nonnally North would raise.
South showed bis heart stopper; North
was happy to pass.
·
,
South bad six top tricks: one spade,
two hearts, one · diamond and two
clubs. From the bidding, it was likely
that West held the K·Q of spades and
the club queen. But were the spades or
the clubs breaking· 3-3? Declarer
found a line that allowed him to
both suits.
After winning the first trick in
with the heart king, South led a spade:
queen, ace. Dummy's spade jack
won with West's king; back came a
heart to dummy's ace.

1171 Ford Bronco Auto, Stereo,

,,_,

Paso
Pass

Nortb
DbI.

Pbllllp Alder

PEANUTS

low mlln. 3Q4..875-N88.

West

1Sketched
2 Actruallerrl!l
3 Wrote off by

I DIDN'T SPEND

81,200, 114-44..7132.
11111 Jotp C.l5, modltlad, lookl
rune 911101, $3885. :JO.WTSBlock, brick, IIWar plpoo, wln- &amp;
2670.
.
cloww, llnlale, •lc:. Claud• Win·
tll'8, Rio Grende, OH C.ll 614- 1980 Chavy 414 Sllvarodo, 350
245.et21.
a\flo., drive lrt~ln porfKI, $2200.
304..75-6815.
56 .Pets for Sale
15181 S-10 1 axe. cond., 1289$ ·~
·
10xtOxlft dog kennal, paid szoo OBO. 304-882-2221.
MW, $'150. Alao, aJI'Ira Large doQ
5-10, Runo Good, High "
hoUaa wl hlngacl root, S50. 3()4: 1896
Mlluge, $2,000, 114-256 6348.
~
17H537 iftor 5pm.
G_,. and Supply Shop-Pil 1199 5-10 4 Cylinder 5 SDMCI; ':
Black Ext.
Auna Good,
Grooming. AU &amp;iNdo, llylao. $3,300.,
• .,..
72 Dap. I ..... \
Julitl Wotib. Call614-446-0231.
448..&amp;421 Evening•.
~

3&amp;8-11113.
5M-211-t522. .
Pump, 2
Jonltrot 2 112 Ton 112 Air Halor 1m f400; lf4.21t- 63
Livestock

Professor Feldman, traveling beck In time, gradually
succ!lmbs to the early lieges ol non-culture shoqk.

I CAN'T RIGHTLY
SAY, SNUFFY

WHAT DOES
CALEB'S NEW
DOG LOOK LIKE,
LUKEY ?

1b~ White, Autom~~Uc, Ca8Mt1a

Ployor, S7,200, 614-25&amp;-1618.
1981 Fl111blrd, loaded, T~opo,_

I.

DOWN

Opening lead: • Q

1f11t

Building
Supplies

burner tormuf11. Avellabll ••· Com · P ker1,

This newspaper will not

BARNEY

Color docalo, 28"116". Hotpolnt 111111
count1r dlap try•, 2 balakltl, four

Both S20; Round 111111 Table
Wllh Umbrlila $35; 614-367-7243
Afttr 5 P.ll.
B.royhlll living room aUita In

llzH tadl11 Jeane 1nd men'•

All real eslale a~er1 1s lng In
this newspaper Is subjeelto
the Federa l Fair Housing ACI
ol1 968 which makes It Ulegal
to advert ise ~an y preference.
limitation or di S:Crlmlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial statu s or.national
origin, or any lntenllon to
make any such prelerence,
limitation or discrimination:

2814.
Po~ machlna, ss, llka n-,
28 118", color dacalo, t20V,
1220w, 60hz. Hotdog machine,
ateam bun wannar, SS,IIka new,

$50i window Air CondiUoner, engine ,, tranamiaslon lor V-6
$40; Wan Air ContiRionar •so; 2 engine I trensmlaslon. 304-458·
HouM Trall~r~ Tim &amp; Alm1, 1085.

fn 1687 'tor 81620, ••king 8350,
514·11112·2114 daytlmo, Jf4.186.
4382 ~vonlnga. ·
Early Amorlcan COuch, Good
CondHion, Extro SUp Covor Ineluded, One Recliner, Two Light
Flxtu1111, (One Early A. .rlcln)
IM-44&amp;-tiiBI.
For ule- 15' round pool with
new pump and motat; euortecll

Local Vtndlng Route: S1,200 A

3NT

•Iii•·

31157.

O.k

51

"""'· ovory ...
-.- ion,
lllagnnox TV, 25" remolo,
now I 1111, 302 v.e. $2400, 614- ·
VCR S..re L.lll Nf101, -..mota, m.e7t9.
.,..,; 614.ft2·!5347.
1986 G111nd Am SE, aaldn• ·
••
New Hell 3 ton package elr con· ~~~oo. 304-t75-5n7 laav. rn-.
dhloner $'1,215. ln.. all•d. Gaa
F....._, 114-44U308
1188 Aero Star, $3500. 30H75- ·
Oa.k Wagon WhHI Bunk Bodo, 3100 or ll'5-i1501i.
llan'"- Included, -8150. 614- 181111 Oodgo Omnl, 5 SDMCI;
::,446;;;..:-e.::m:::,.
. ......,.--.,.~--.,.,- 55,ooo 111101, St,liOO, et&lt;t-256Ptt.•n•• for ule; completl 1'704 Or 114-2~1131.
"' ~
IUpor lingle Wllorbod; 614-Ht- 1881 Oodge ShadoW Convert··

55

Roome for rent ... weak or monlh.
s::~~~

iillli;81;.;a.;orv.2S;;;:;;;;;;;;;;-iiSO: IIOdan1 Ilk•

2t

7 -Z. f

Condition,

$t75, 114--441-1124.

Gavin, 614-11112·71111.
6

King wood 1nd coal 1tov1 whh
blower, good condlllon, 614-11112·

houl1, ICI'al from Co. .t .
Guard Sl:allon, Hend•.on.
1885 Ford LTD Crown Vic. 4dr.

Soath

Chrome Gla~a Dlnene Sel, With
4 Aull Col- O.W Slutltd

1850 Ford Van • 1m lion·
tlcarlo, NOON. or 81400-h.

WHk P9t1ntlil. Muat Sail. 1-8000S3·Vend.

Real

Merchandise

llanor.
and
Alvo,.lao
Apartmanta In Mlddloport. From
$202. Call 114-9112·6859. EOH.
lllddllportlt Ohio, IIHch St., 1
room e lcloncy lumlahad
Naw/IJIM
apartment, utllhloa paid, 1111. &amp; ·tumllhlng. 112 mL
dopoaft. 304.e12-2561.
olorrlcho Rd. Pl. PINNnl, WV,
coll304-175-1450.
Now Haven, tbr, lumitlhad
ap1rtm.nt, dap. • rat. 304.-8B2·
SWAIN
2516.
'
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 62
Olivo st., Galllpolitl. Now &amp; Ullld

66'x72' Cedar Sided Modular

35

8224.
Will Do BabyaiUing In My Home

Fumlohad

45

coll304-1175·1~57.

3316 or 1-800-427-7376.

Utllltl• paid, 8U Ufl 4418 altar
7pm.

Goods

10

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: West

·

PS, PI, AC,
cruloa, - r wlndoWIIIoclll, .
euper .car, call 014-94g..2045 or
614-Ht-2i1l.
1985 Chryeiar Slh Avenue, 11186
FORI F·1SO pickup, g111y bricK

54 Miscellaneous

Household

•.u

pro(oUng
4 Afflrmel!ve
5 ArtU83Da otyle)
6Germen
eubmlf!ne
7 Companion
of'llh
8 ObiiiVI
g Flbt

name

28 Sluptd end
clllmay
33 Tur down
34 Bilek
36 Compete
37- Got a
Secret

• Q s4

·· BLUE.
COLLAR

anrume weekanda.

i A ~rt.~

1-11-n

I A762
tKU3

4

MISTRESS MADONNA UVE 1·
100-.,..._1115 12 min. HIO~
781G-MC-VISA 18+.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER,•
NATIVE 1·100-1110-3337 $2.150·

Remick
12 Frotl
13 Troplcel tree
14 Follower of
(ouH.)
15 Adem'•
grendaon
1111nlellltlble
18- end
PIICe
18 Brown kiwi
20 PlllnUH
21 Singing
IYI!Ible
23 Weekend·
welcoming
abbr.
26 Aclor Harvey

.A4

1961 Camara No llotor Or ·

3CI NortMrll contletlltlon
40 Entice
42 Shouler
44 ll1rlh lllrd
411 FrHhwlter
ltlh
47 DuchH&amp;'a
hutblnd
50 Flth plrt
520ne- Ume
55 IIUIICII work
58 ProtecUon
(nr.)
Wernher -'
Breun
Con elder
111 Song lor two
62 Noun IUffil
63 A Europeen
64 Flnnloh lira!

5 Pllrt
II Actreu -

tAJ 10

·:

38 Revelers' cry .

I WWIItvent

71

,..._ raqulrad. 304475-11172 aftor
5f1111,
2. I d wm R1nch. 21 Evans
Helghta, $300/llo. S30o DlpMh,

42

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'

•

1 ls*wm ttou. Furna.t.d,
I oeiHd 735 -·Third A -

The Dally

BRIDGE

)

3 locnwn 15 lllln. From
O..lllpolll. f400 Rant f400
.,._., Call 1114445-15443.
'
2 story Loa Sldad Houao, 4 For Rant : 3 I.R. 1 112 Balh,
BHroom1, f lllhl, BaNmtnl, 24124 O..regaL Edge 01 a.~
Ooubll Car G0111ge on u llpolll Nice •uH CorPII, No
Ac- ANoonably ortcad. 114- Polo, Uuat Hevo Cradlblo Rat.
311-9390, 614-367-7734.
$350111o., Socurlly Dapoaft. Inquire AI: 1127 S.Cond Avenue,
Galllpollo Ohio.

11034
91.
34442,~
..MS.
nanclo, FL -

..

ALLEYOOP

&amp; Grain

flold. o76-2733.

41 Hou... for Rent

114 441 .01117. .

NurMry, Crafta,.....: R.toc.t•
~ No-Expo-. LM lllllor,

Hay

Ohio

Straw, f1.50/bale, from w - In '

2 lndroom hone In HMldiNOn,
AI!Wir IWIICidllld, depgell &amp;

Rear Estate
Florida lion U'!!nfl In Control
Floriclo DIOnoy Worid,
Luuhe Rl.,.. 1Mb co;.
,.,, MIINw. With Country
w-2241. - HoiJ&gt;: s..il

21 1993

.•

Ohio

Sentinel

o1har brand•. Hou .. Clll•, 1110·
eome appliance rapalre. WV

304-676.Z3tltl Ohio 114-445-2454.
Saptlc Tank Pumping 180, O..iila
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
.lackoon, OH t~-637-9528.
'.
Will build polio COVIN, dacka
ocrMnad rooma, put up vinyl ·
aiding « lrallor aklrtlng. lf4.
2&gt;15-Gl52.

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Aoaldanllal or com...,.lal
wiring, new or "'palro •
Maeta;r UeenMd elaatrlclan:.
Aldanour Ellclrlcal WV00030•
304.e75-t711.
•
••.

ASTRO·GRAPH

Aslro-Graph Malchmaker can help you to
- - · - - - - - - '· understand whallo do to make lhe relation- ·
s hip work. Mail $2 and a long . self·
a ddre ss ed , stamped enve lope to
Malchmaker . P.O. Box 4465 , New York,
BERNICE
N.Y. 10163.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 Because ot your ·
BEDE OSOL intense desires regarding things you want
lor yourself and loved ones. you will be well
molivaled today lo llgure oul ways lo gel
them .
V!RGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Substanlial
steps can be"made ioday lo advance your
self· inleresls, provided you do not delegate !
assignments lo olhers you're boner able lo
lake ol yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Keep an eye
Thursday, July 22, 1993
peeled for bargains today, because your
commercial instincts are well tuned and, if
A number of cha nc e s within your field of anyon e is going to lind a goo4 deal, il is
endeavor could work out advantageo~sl y likely 10 be you .
tor you in lhe year ahead. Each evenl mlghl SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) You have lhEi
he lp you move up lhe ladder a few sieps abi li ty to da y to arouse a n interest in and
ahead or others.
.
~ gain lhe s upport ol others lor lhings that are
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) II you don t ol personal Importance to you , You'll know

o~

ha ve a ctive outlets to occupy you me nta lly how to use ttl is giH constructive ly.

and physically loday. you mighl get very SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) Oihers
restless and d•sorgan•zed. This could .tum a might lhink and lalk about ways to improve
productive day in to a M ·hu m e,;pe nence . their 101 in lile. but you'll be the guy/gal who
Trying to pa tch up a oroken romance? The w111 actually do somelhing aboul il today.

'' '

CAiPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 19) There
could be ·some interesting developments

loday that mighl have a lavorable effect on
your future. 11 all ties into something you put
logether a short while back.
AQUARIUS. (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) Success is
probable in your endeavoiS today, whether
it is focusing on .your own interest or man·
aging something lor anolher. It looks like all
your bases are covered .

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) II you do
everything in accordance with your highesl
standards today, you'll lind persons with
who.m you are directly deahng will begin to
lreal you as you're traallng lhem.
ARIES (Merch 21·April 19) Strive lo be as
imaginative as possible today, even when
handling mundane assignments. Using your
menial facullies will help you lind bailer
melhods and syslems.
TAURUS (April 20-lley 20) Try lo' gello
know better over lho next lew days IWo per·
sons you recently met who you fe el are
potenlial friends , Your ins!gh ts regarding
relalionships are prelly good.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)1n order 10 gel
some key mailers finalized loday , don'l be

..

."
..

afra id to be a bit more assertive tl'lan. usual.
You're working agam st ti me and pushing

'

c:ould be required.

I

.,

�Poineroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio

Wednesday, July 21, 1 •

/

Vou'l otice the
Sailings •••
•

1m

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

PURE CANE ·

:

FOODLAND SUGAR :
I
I
I
I
I
I

FROZEN
FOODLAND
•

FRIED CHICKEN
1m

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

COCA·COLA PRODUCTS :
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

2
LITER
BOTTLES

9

oz.

BOX

FOODLAND

Good thru 1
7/24/93

1
1

25

VEGE.TABLES

I
I
1

Limit 2 With Coupon &amp; $10.00 Additional Purchase

·····························•I

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

99

RETAit.ER MAll TO ()JAI(ER OATS COMPANY

&amp;18 SPA INGER OAIVE lOMBARD IlLINOIS 60U!
CUll ll~ut OOic • 199J 00C

With
Coupon

Only at FOODLAND

15116 oz.

I

.

.

CEREAL

16 oz.
CANS

Good WHk of 7/18-7124

.

lf&amp;£·:&gt;

..

.

3000

5

76

10 oz.

c

oz.

c

4 ROLL

c

ULTRA
RINSO

9

L------------------------------~

BOX

FOODLAND FROZEN

EXPIRES 7·24·93

OUNGE
JUICE

·'

BACON

12

CAN

HOME BEST
To lhe relaller: Oscar Mayer Foods Corporallon
(OMFC) wiN reimburse you lor lhe value ollhls oou·
pon plus 8¢ • submmed In compliance wllh OMFC
Redempllon Polley C· 1. lncorporaled herein by ral·
erenoe. Valid only H redeemed by relall dlslrlbulors
ol our merchandise or anyone spec•lcalry aulhor·
lzed by OMFC. Vold where !axed, reslrlaed or prohlbled. Cash value 1120¢.
Mill lo Oac1r M1y1r Food• Corpor•llon, P.O.

Box 8500,

BATH
TISSUE
•

I
I
I
I

IL 60802

FOOD LAND

WITH THIS COUPON

I
OFFER CODE 1563001350 I

·ICE
CREAM

•••••••••••••••

OLLY FARMS

TENDERBEST LEAN
USDA CHOICE

18 Piece
Chicken

~

$

GAL.

Cubed Steak

99
LB.

\.
l

LB. ,

I

'

l•l

VELVET
SUGAR FREE

$ 49

ICE CREAM

~GAL.

VELVET ICE CREAM SANDWICH•••••• Box

EASTMAN'S

BIG BEND

EAGLE THINS

POTATO CHIPS

$

99
13.5·
14.5 oz.

SJ99

.

.

•

ODLAND

17 1993 • USDA Food

I

.

I

.'

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