<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10213" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10213?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T17:24:34+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20653">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/92b6ec76ea7e062fb5f7c9bb00d9f102.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1ad5c58eea61ffebc8a9b424861b3fee</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32618">
                  <text>•
'·

-

'

Pomerov •cldlepor"., Ohio

.

.

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

the lOll YICaled
AI Gore.

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

a.._

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

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

EN VOGUE

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

I

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

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

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

in finals

'

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

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

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

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

~ a designer venion, be pre-

pared to pay top dollar. Richard

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

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

TEEN DANCE

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

•

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

•
Vol. 44, NO. II
Mulllmedi•Jnc.

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

•
•

~

'

.•
•'

19th Snyder
reunion held

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

Poet's comer

Earthen Vessels

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

by Myrtle L. Bennett

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

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

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

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

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

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

••

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

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

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

Coal strike turns deadly

.

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

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

~-Local

briefs----,

Charges to be filed

.

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

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

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

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

Accident reported

•

.-1-·

,.

..

~

~

'1;:

-

.. ..

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

~

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

$5495"

.

'

EMS responds to seven calls

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

,

,.,

-"

.'.'

\~

'

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

•

r,

j

1-7-15-22-24

Page3

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

BuckeyeS:

stteel. ••

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

945
Pick 4:
1248

0

Adventurers swim Bering Strait

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

Pick 3:

f:&amp;t:l.

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

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

Rockies,
Kyger Creek

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

Modern ..Woodmen discuss · incinerator

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

Ohio Lottery

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

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

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

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

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

.

(

�. _e_

-

·

~The

o.mm_e.ntary

Friday, July 23, 1993

Indian A:ffairs loses tri~es' .~oney

111 Coart Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily _Sentinel
Friday, July 23, 1993
Page 3 •

••

Rockies, Kyger Creek #2 earn .

•••

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publ!aller
CHARLENE HOEFLicH
Geoeral Mauger

•
•

.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
second, Michael Rodgers was sent Rockies ........ ;_.. ..... 112 OOx" 4-3-1
OVP Stair Writer
in tQ pincli run for ..Mathews before
WP '- Cook
. L~ :,_ Haynes
Victories by the Gallipolis ~cab Kolcun srepped to lhe plate.
Rockies and -Kyger Creek 112 in After Kolcun struck out, Justin
Thursday nigl!l's Kyger Creek Lit- Jones reached on an error by the
Kyaer Creek n-!1
tie League Tournament double- center fieJder. Then Jerrod Ball
Middleport Mile Sox 4
••
header gave both teams a date with doullled on a ~-2 pileh from starter
It was a seesaw battle for four
eac~ other in Saturday's 6 p:in. JustinCook to score Rodgers'to cut innings, but lhe White Sox, despite
semtfmal game, insuring that ihere the Rockies' lead to 4-3. But AJ. surviving Kyger Clllek hurler Brian
•
will be at least one Gallia County Johnson grounded out to second to Bradbury's command of the strike
representative in Sunday's consola· end the game.
zone -. his complete game resulted
•'
tion and champion$hip g1111es.
Cook. who got his second com- in IS Ks and four walks- by c:rasGal6polls Rockies 4
plele game 'in as many starts in lhe "ing two Bobcat leads, couldn't
'
Ga!Upolls YIDkeet3
tournament, struck out seven, overeome the Bobcats' fourth-in·
So close; yet so far away_
walked three and gave up three hits ning rebellion, which eventually
The Gallipolis Yankees, held :_ Jerem~ Ball (2-3, double) and sank them.
sc~ess for jfie first three inniii$S . Johnson (1-3) got them. The Yan·
In ~he bottom of the first, a
v,:htle the Rockie~ scored four tn kees ' pitching relay - losing walk, a hit (a single 10 left by Mike
those frames, inched back into con- pile her Ronald Haynes, Johnson Mollohan), two wild pitches and a
tention by denting the plite in each , and Cody Lane- struck out seven no-throw by. thi{d basenutn Adam
of their lastlhree innings.
and walked four.
Williams on a grounder by D.J.
The Yankees, down 4-2 in the
The Rockies' attaclt: was fueled Fife with runners 11n second and
top of the sixth and outhit3-2. got by Ian Fenderbosch (1 · 1, double), third resulted· in Mollohan's scor·
things started when Robby Kuhn Dusty Cox '(1-2) and Kevin Walker ing the game's ftrst run. But with
,..as hit by a ,PilCh. After TJ. Math- (1-3).
·
. ·
Bradbury on third, Jason Veith
ews' fielder s-choice grounder re· Inning totals
short-circuited the budding rally by
••;
'"'
"'"M '!;,_
suited in Kuhn ' ~ bein~ retired at Yankees ............... _OOO 111 = 3-3·2 strilring out swinging.
LEACH SI;:ORES - The Middleport White
Creek Little League Tounameat's quarterrinal
Middleport took the lead away
Sox's Shane Lt;ach (center) kicks up some dust
game at tbe Kyger Creek Employees Club field.
from Kyger Creek in tbe lOp of the
to score on a wrld pitch by Kyger Creek pitcher
Leach's laDy tied the game at 1-1 before tbe Sox
second when Shane Leach, who
Brian Bradburl. (rigbt) who_loses the handle on
look lhe first of their two leads, but tile Bobcats
reached on a single to left, made it
catcher D.J. Ftre•s relay throw to lhe plate, in
came trom bebil!d to win !1-4. (OVP pboto by G.
to second on an error in ,left fteld
the second inning or Tbursday night'&amp;· Kyger
Spencer ,Osborne)
, .and got to third on 1 wild pitch,
scored on a wild pitch during John
Davidson •s at-bat. After Davidson
walked and Zach Meadows got an
infield single, Bradbury fanned
third in the last three games.
since April 27. He broke his left
Eric Toops and Austin Carr to give
By CHUCK MEIA'IN
Valle homered with two outs in
lhe Bobcats a sigh rJ relief before
CLEVELAND (AP) - ·Lou collarbone in a first-base collision
the Sox's Pat Martin cracked an 0- Piniella was making so many uips · with Cleveland's Jeff Treadway in the ftfth, his ninth, and Vizquel hit
2 pileh to center field for a triple to the mound, he quit keeping that game and had won only once an RBI single in the seventh after
since, beating the Indians in relief Tino Martinez singled and Valle
that sent Davidson and Meadows count.
, ,
was hit by a pitch, all with two on July 10.
home. Then Bradbury claimed
"They all pitched very weD Dennis Powell and Jeff Nelson outs.
Chuckie Munay on three swings to Bosio, and how many others?' :
"That's a liale bit or Jeff relax- ·
end the rally.
- ·
Piniella said riJursday night after held the Indians scoreless for the
In the bottom of the second, KC the Seattle Mariners held off the seventh and eighth innings, and ing a little before lhe inning is over "
Piniella inserted rookie Mike letting his mind wander a littl~
.·came right back against Sox starter Cleveland Indians 3-2.
Rusty Stewart- he had eight
Ken Griffey Jr. and Dave Valle Hampton to face pinch-hitter bit," Indians manager Mike Harstrilreouts and five walks iri a com- homered, and _omar Vizquel sin- Thomas Howard leading off the grove said.
The Indians scored a run in the
plete-game effort - when the gled home the winning run in the Cleveland ninth.
Howard
walked
.
.Jesse
Levis
sec!&gt;rid
on a dou~Ie by Alvaro
· Hoods - Adam and LJ. - began seventh inning for Sestde, which
then
bunted
into
a
Jorceout,
and
Espmoza
and RBI smgle by Junior
to give him trouble (Adam with a has won eight of nine meetings
Kenny
Lofton
gro~nded
into
a
walk, LJ. with a popup that feU be· with Cleveland.
Oniz. They tied it 2·2 in the sixth
'
when Carlos Baerga singled, took
tween Stewart and the armored
But with closer Norm Charlton forceout.
Brad Holman, Seattle's fifth second on a wild pitch, moved to
Murray}. The Hoods moved up a on the disabled list because of a
- base on a wild pitch during Andrew sore left arm, Piniella used four pitcher, ended it by geuing pinch- third on Alberi'Belle's bunt and "
Parsons' at-bat, and Adam Hood relievers - including a pair of hitter Carlos Maninez to ground scored on Valle's passed ball.
scored on a ,wild strike to Trevor roolties in the ninth inning - to out. It was Holman's first career
The sacrifice bunt was Belle's
ftrst this year and the second of his "
Kerns_before Kerns strucl!: out. nail it down. Charlton, who hun his save.
"I defmitely dido ' t think I was career. He did it on liis own, not on
Then L.J. Hood came home with arm Tuesday in New York and
the the lying run on a wild pitch . went on the DL Thursday, has 17 going to get the opportunity orders from the dugout. ·
tonight," Holman saici "There are
during Mollohan's at-bat before of the Mariners' 21 saves.
"I'd prefer to have him swinll
other
guys
with
more
time
here
the
bat m a situation like that '"'
Mollohan reached on an error in
"They got the job done. We're
right field. But KC's chance to_take goin~ to need that type of conlribu· who are more established in theii Hargrove said. "But there m~y
roles. It's a very nice feeling. "
come a point in time liner in the
the lead in that frame was washed tion, .' Piniella said.
Cleveland
starter
Jeff
Mutis
(2·
DOMINATOR- Kyger Creek fl Oamethrower Brian Brad·
season
or the postseason when ·we
away when Bradbury popped out to
Chris Bosio (4·5) allowed two 3) retired the Mariners' ftrstll batbury ra~ned 15, gave up nve hi15 and walked rour in pusbing hili
ne~d
Albert
to advance a runner _.
Stewan.
runs and ei~ht hits in six-plus ters until Griffey homered with two
crew to a !1·4 victory over th Micldltpo_rt Wblte Sox Thursday
like that. It shows he's thinking "
Had L.J. Hood, KC's second innings for hts ftrst win as a starter
outs in the fourth. II was his 25th aboutlhe learn ."
night In the Kyger C~k Little League Tournament's quar~.(!pal
sacker, thrown to ftrst on Martin's
home run of the season, and his
round. On olrense, be bad a-double and scored In tbe B~ts· pivtwo-out grounder instead of throw-·
.Meigs
Football
Camp
otal rourth. (OVP pboto by G. Spencer Osborne)
.ing home in an attempt to retire a
Meadqws sprinting to the plate slated for July 26
.
from third (LJ. was about six feet
from fll'St when he made his deciThe. fourth annual Meigs FootWellston scored four runs In the Andy Grueser was the starter and
-sion), Middlepott would have gone ball Camp will be held at Meigs fli'St inning and rolled 10 a 15.0 vic· loser for Meigs. J T. Northrup . ,
scoreless in the founh. But after High School from Monday, July 26 I tory over Meigs in 8th District came on in the ftfth_
Meadows scored the run. that gave to Friday, July 30.
American Legion Tournament
Clint Houser had the big bat for
the Sox a 4-3 lead, Bradbury
All boys entering grades 4·8 this action Wednesday evening.
the winners with a triple and three ..
The decision eliminated Meigs singles and four RB!s. Seven playDana Winebrenner of Syracuse that this could be a problem since played fireman once again and faD are eligible to attend the camp,
stranded
Martin
by
striking
out
from
the tournament and dropped ers had a single each for Meigs.
which
runs,
from
8;30
10
11;30
a.m.
is the leading point scorer for the Roy hits his woods from any dis Munay
on
five
pilehes.
its
overall
record to 2-17.
Fundamentals will be taught
1993 Senior Golf League at River- tance_
In other tournament action
,
LJ.
Hood,
who
had
tasted
disWellston
increased the lead to 9- McArthur and Lancaster remained
during lhe camp dealing with every
side Golf Club in Mason. WineA total o£.63 differeqt players
brenner has total of 104 points to have no.w taken part in the 1993 appoinlment earlier in the Middle- aspect of foolhall. All boys will be 0 after three innings scoring three the only two unbeaten teams.
lead Don Wilson of Middleport senior league with a lot of time left pan fourth when Meadows beat his timed in a 40-yard dash and agility runs in the second-and two more in McArthur pounded GIouster 20-4
who has 98 points for the year.
for others to join the "Over lhe hill throw to fll'St for an infield single, drill. Campers will also visit the the third. The JackSon County team while Lancaster defeated Picker~
didn't miss his chance for atone· weight room, where Meigs High closed out the scoring by plating ington 124. Athens also picked up
A total of 39 players took part in guys" ror the rest or the year.
Tuesday's play with the team of
The league and its players ment when the Bobcats came call- School varsity players will demon· four more runs in the fifth and two a win, 13-3 over Gallipolis:
Inning totals
Keith Woods of Bradbury, Milt always welcome new players to ing in the fourth. He, the first of strate correct weightlifting exercis- in lhe sixth.
Three
pitchers
saw
mound
duty
nine
hitters
to
be
seen
bY
Stewart
in
es.
Maxwell of Chester, Sonny Chan- their fun and gmes as the league
Wellston: 432-042-000 = 15-14-1
The special guest speaker this for Wellston. with Jeff Rouse pick- Meigs: 000-000-000 = 0-7-4
dler of Gallipolfs and Roy Craw- continues until the last Tuesday in the frame, walked on four straight
,,
WP-Rouse
ford of Millwood taking ftrst place September. The guys will have pitches and eventually scored KC's year will be Tom Ellswonh, new' ing up the win. Bryan Molihan and
Mat
Fox
also
saw
piiChing
action.
second
tying
run
of
the
game
on
offensive
coordinator
at
Marietta
LP-Grueser
at eight under par.
lheiJI annual picnic and fun day at
College.
The closest to the pin winners that time: The fellows will take Kerns' groundoutto second.
Parsons, who reached on a sinTo be guaranteed a camp T•
were Bill Hannum of Chester and Au~st)O off to let the ladies have
gle
to
right
that
got
L.J.
Hood
to
shirt,
registration must be received
Frank Boggess of Ripley on holes · thetr annual "Mary Roush" Bud
UIIGAIN MATINUS SAT, &amp; SUN.
third,
•
scored
the
eventual
wiMing
by
Friday.
However, students may
IARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
seven·and 14 respectively.
Light Invitational at Riverside.
Ctrr CUTlF lCATES ,YAJl.\11&amp;1
run
on
Mollohan's
double
to
left
register
up
to
the
fli'St
dax._
of
camp.
. Ch_uckie Lester of E~ans play~
The top ~0 point men follow: I.
Registration forms can be
tn pam on Tuesday wtth a wnst
Dana Winebrenner 104· 2. Don celtter. Two balls later, Bradbury
doubled
to
the_
same
area
to
get
picked up' at the high scl1ool.
injury. "Whispering Roy" Craw- Wilson, 98; 3. Ciark GrWw, 95.5;
ford ts reJ?Orted~y playing the ~st ' 4. Jim Wikoff, Shade, 85.5; 5. Car- Mollohan home. After Jeremiah
golf of hu sentor career desptte roll Norris Syracuse, 80.5; 6. Donnell walked, Fife's fielder's
Sports brief
developing a dreaded "duck hook" Harold LohSe, Pomeroy, 79.5; 7. choice grounder to third set the
stage
for
Bradbury
to
beat
with his woods. Clarke Greene Said Milt Maxwell; Chester, 79; 8. Lew
throw to the plate to
Basketball
Gilland, Mason, 77 .1; 9. C~uckie Williams'
score
an
insurance
run.
Then
StewEUGENE,
Ore. (AP) - Fonner
Lester', Evans, 77.5; and 10. Earl
The Daily Sentinel
art
got
Jason
Veith
and
Adam
Oregon
coach
Dori Monson was
Johnson. Mason, 72.5.
Hood
to
strike
out
to
end
the
riot.
~warded
$292,000
by a jury in a
(VSPS 21J.Ht)
The next 20 in order are Harold
In the n~xt two frames, Brad- breach of contract lawsutt agitinst
Published evrzy ··aflernooa, Mooday lbrou&amp;h
Clark; Ralph Sayre, Elmer Click,
Friday. 111 CoW't St., Pomeroy, Ohio by tbe
bury
fanned four of the last seven the university. Monson siled the
Bill Winebrenner, Bill Hannum,
Ohio Valley PublilhiD&amp; CompuyiMultlJ:nedil.
batters
he faced. and he got two fly university and the stat!) over his
loc., Po11101oy, Ohio 4S769, Pb. 992·2156.
Luther Tucker, Keith Woods, Hllr-.
outs
in
the sixth - one to Jeremy removal as coach in March 1992,
Sec:ood CIUI pott•e paid Ml'bmei'Of, Ohio.
· vey Rice, George Bums, Lawrence
Drummond
in right by Meadows claiming he was wrongly reas Scarberry and Jack Young.
Member: The A11ociated Pre11, and the Ohio
an,d
the
game-coder
to Adam Hood signed as men's golf coach and
Ne'tlnpaper Al&amp;ocillllon,.Nit.IODII Advertillq
later NCAA compliance officer.
in left by Martin.
Representative, Branham Newspaper Salu, .
Sports. briefs
733 Third Avenue, New York, New Yort
KC's
hiuers
were
Donneu,
Mol.
10017.
Teams
lohan, Parsons (all 2-3), Bradbury
WASHING10N (AP) - Aaron and L.J. Hood (both 1-2). MiddlePOSTMASTER: Sead addrtM chi.D101 to 1bc
' Dally Seotioel, Ill' Court SL , Pomeroy, Ohio
Krickstein upset sixth-seeded port's hitters were Leach, Mead4S769.
Andre Agassi 4-6, 6-3, 6-4 to ows (both 2·3) and Martin (1-3).
:J~~~=!"i~.
advance to .the q_uanerfinals of the Innln1 totals
.
ooe w.. t ................................................. .st.60
Newsweek Classtc.
. White SOX-............030 100 .. 4-5-2
ooeMoollt. ............................................$6.95 ,.
In other third-round matches, KygerCreekH2 .... 120 42x" 9·8· 1
0 "" y..,,........miii'L'i:'oovr"'"-..SI3.l!l
sei:ond-seeded Petr. Korda of the
WP ..-.Bradbury
.
PRICE
Czech Republic beat Jlkob Hluek
LP-Stewart
Ooity ........... :.....................,......-~ c....
of Switzerland 7-6 (7·3), 7-6 (7-3)
subleriben aot deoiri,."' poy lhe corri« 1111y
and third-seeded Mal iVai ·washTonight's agenda will have
remil ia odvoncc direct to Tho Illlly Sellllllel
;ngton'_ defeated ~eff Tarango 6-31 , Point Pleasant FOP against Bidwell
OD a three, Ill 01 t.2 JDi)Dib bull. Credit WiU be
6-J
Jivea carrier each Week.
• ·•
•
· ·~:...
Ill - ·the latter is the only bye team ,
Tennis
No JUb~&lt;riptiooo by llllll permiaed ill ..STUTIGART, Germany (AP) still in lhe tournament - at 6 p.m. ,
· where homo carrier lln'itel• av!Ulable.
These teams ~ve mercy-rule vtcto.PER MONTH*
MatlS.boa-Second-seeded Michael Stich of ries in each of their \bree tournament games.
·
. "10%
;3 Woekl -~~-~~-~~ ...... .$21.84
~~~
r~t~~~S
~-~~
The
nightcap,
set
for
7:30
p.m.,
-26 w.eu.............................. ,................. .$13't6
ed Andrei Medvedev of Ukraine
• SlWeekJ............ ................. ,:..... ........... .$14.76
will pit the Gallipolis White Sox
tOCATEDAT THE JUNCTION CF RT.'33 a 585
·
o.uwe Melp c:-11
.
defC~~ted . Bernd Karbacher ,o f Ger· . against lhe 'I'upper's Plains Tigers.
BElWEEN t.OOAN a NELSONVll.U;
!lw.eta............. _.... ..............:..............SllAQ
many 6-3, 6-4 to advance 10 the . The victors of these games \viii
CIP£N IIONOAY~AIOAY 1:»4:00
26 weoa...................:.....................$1 5.50
f' I f h M
d
,........ ....!......,.........................saeAO ~~~er tna s ~'-· 1 _e erce es play SaltiRiay at 7:30p.m.

--

MARGAREJ' I.EIIEW
Controller

,

By M.R. KROPKO
Associated Pres&amp; Writer
- CLEVELAND - The city and state have closed 500 suspec!ed drug
houses in Cleveland. but drug dealing persist$ and the solulion is beyond
the scope or law enforcement, the police chief says.
On Tuesday, Mayor Michael R. White, City CQuncil President Jay
Westbroolc and Ohio Attorney General Lee F'!Sber posted a red, white and
blue No. 500 on an apartment building where the Drug House Task Force
boarded up an apartment It was another closing of a residence police say
was used to sell drugs, primarily ClliCk cocaine.
·
Plllit;:c Chief Ed Kovacic, a law enforcement offiCer for 34 years, said
boatding up places where drugs are sold is a means only to Slem the tide.
"There is still a drug problem in this city; It is a major problem. But
it's one dial exists in every city in this country," he said.
"I see the neighborhoods improving as _we close the drug houses
down. The price of cocaine t.. gone up in the city. In my opinion, we've
probably kept it out of the hands or some younger children.' '
He said drug dealers are taking more of their business out onto the
streets, which at fli'St impression would seem to be a negative result
" But it's easier for us to deal with them on the street," Kovacic said.
While said each time a drua house gets boarded up, worried residents
take hope dial drug traffiC can 6e reduced.
·
"Every enforcement step we take is a positive," Kovacic said. "But I
don't think enforcement is the answer. We're just holding society in place
until !he correct solutions come along.
· "The solution is in education, in getting people jobs and decent places
to live. It's a socielal problem that the police department was never geared
to address.''
Lo:i Zehe, direc~Dr of lhe Substance Abuse Initiative of Greater Cleveland, said residents want offiCials to keep boarding up drug houses.
The organization is composed mainly of neighborhood groups and vol·
unteers seeking to improve community awareness about drug dealing. ·
"They want safe neighborhoods, but until they blind together they are
afraid and rightly so," she said. "Anything that makes it harder for the
drug traffiCker to seU and for the buyer to buy is a help."
She said some drug abusen are difficult to reach. _
"We /)ave not come up with the right strategy to get at that popula·
tion," she said. "We've got to focus on the educational and social issues
and on demand reduction."

6

ceming public employment or lhe
terins and conditions of public
employmenL
·
" Use of the prohibi!ed criteria

William A. Rusher
in any or the foregoing ways shall
constitute a violation of the California Constitution and shall be
actionable in any 'court of compe·
tent jurisdiction.
"Nothing in this section shall be
construed as prohibiting the
enforcement of, or conflicting with,
federal statutes ·or the United States
Constitution.
" If any part or parts of this sec·
tion are found to be in conflict with
federal Jaw, the amendment shall
be implemented to the maximum
extent permitted by federal Jaw.
Any provision held mvalid sluill be
severable from the remaining portions or this section...
At 'first, the casual reader may
see nothing controversial about this

Today in history
•
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, July 23, the 204th day of 1993. There are 161 days
lefl in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 23, 1886, New York saloonkeeper Steve Brodie supposedly
made a daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East River,
although doubts were raised about his claim.
On this date:
In 1829, William Austin Burt of Mount Vernon, Mich., received a
patent for his typographer, a forerunner of lhe typewriter.
In 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, lhe 18th president of lhe United States, died
in Mount McGregor, N.Y:; at age 63 .
In 1892, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia was born.
.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary iss.1ed 31! ultimatum to Serbia following the
ki lling of Archduke Francis Ferdinand by a Serb as.assi_q; the dispute led
10 World War I.
In 1942, Harry James and his Orchestra recorded ".I Had the Craziest
Dream'' in Hollywood for Columbia Records.
In 1952, Egyptian military officers led by Gamal Abdel Nasser overthrew King Farouk I.
:In 1967, rioting lcilled 43 people in Detroit after police raided a black··
owned nightspot.
In 1977, a jury in Washington, D.C., convic!ed 12 Hanafi Muslims of
charges stemming from the hostage siege at three buildings the previous
·

In 1984, Vanessa Williams became the fll'st Miss America to resign her
title, because of nude photographs of her that were published in "Pent·
house" magazine.
.
.
· In 1986 1 Brilain's Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at Westminster Abbey in U&gt;ndon. The couple has since separated.
:ren yerus ago: President Reagan appealed in his weekly radio address
for a donor liver to save the life C&gt;f Ashley Bailey, an 11-month-old girl at
a Minneapolis hospital. A donor could not be found; Ashley died the following November.
_ •
Five years ago: In his weekly radio address, President Reagan responded-.10 the just-completed Democratic National Convention by accUsing the
n . ...•,.,.,. nf ~ 'sini'i"&lt;r, Jhe same sad
son2 thev san2 four vears.J u6."
.

•

•

•

•

Mariners post 3-2 win over Indians

Public Notice

Will voters support affirmative action?
My adopted home state of Cali·
fo rnia seems destined to be the
lead-dog of the American sled in
everything from cuisine to tax and
__term limitations_ So it is no great
cause for surprise that what may
well prove the nel\t great battle
over the future of American society
is taking the fonn of a popular initiative designed to appear oh the
Cali fornia ballot in November
1994.
It is called lhe California Civil
Rights Initiative, and the current
proposed form of the full text reads
as follows:
_"The People of the State of California find and declare that race,
ethnicity , national origin, sex, or
religion are not legitimate criteria
for conferring or d~nying preferential treatment to any student or
prospective student in any matter in
this StalC· s public educational system; any individual or fmn in any
matter concerning public contract·
ing; or any employee or prospective employee in any matter con-

•

to square off in sem.ifinal~
'

r

\-

~

In Kyger Creek LL Tournament twinbill,

ri~ht

DIIVOT'Itq TO TilE II'I'1'EIIJ:81' OJ' THE IRIGS-IIASON AJmA

March .

... . .

Sports

Dally Sentinel
Pon.oy-Middleport, Ohio

r-----------~-------------------,--~----------------~.----~------~~~~~--------~~~~~~~----- ,

The Daily -Sentinel

'

•

•

proposal. After all, it just outlaws
lhe commonest types of discrimination in public education , public
contracting and public employment, doesn 't it? Who could 'object
to that?
But in recent decades radical
liberals in the White · House,
Congress, the stale Iegislarures and
the.courts have been edgip$ us ever
closer to discrimination m all of
these categories. In its most blatant
form, this process has resul!ed in
fixed quolaS for various minorities,
and is rightly called "reverse dis·crimination." More subtly, it is
promoted under the rubric of
" affll'ID3tive action."
Whatever it is called, however,
the AmeriGan people are over·
whelmingly against it. Most Amer·
icans favor genuinely non-discrimi·
natory policies - which, yt&gt;u will
note, are exactly what the CCRI
mandates. But virtu.illy every sci·
entific survey or public opinion
shows that less than 30 percent or
Americans suppon racial and sexual preferences, which the CCRI
would outlaw. What' s more, the
opposition is remarkably bipartisan: A 1987 Gallup Times-Mirror
poll found that, nationwide, two·
thirds of identified DemocratS and
o.ver four -fifths of identified
, Republicans are opposed to prefer·
ences.
And yet, political and judicial
ideologues have kept right on shoving "affmnative action" down the
throats of lhe American people. At
last, v01ers in California will get a
chance to have a say in lhe matter.
If the CCRI wins, we can expect
similar drives in the 22 other states
that allow voters to express their
will directly, through the initiative
piocess.
··
We must expect that the CCRI
will be fought tooth and claw by
the entrenched interests that are
busy imposing reverse diacrirninl-'
lion on ever wider areas of American society. But they are vastly
outnumbered, and they know it.
The CCRI will strike,. something
very like terror in their hearts.
The small group of Californians
who have draf!ed and are promoting the CCR1 need all the help and
advice they can get: It wilf take
61~,958 valid signawres just to put
the initiative on the ballot. Their
address is P.O. Box 11795, Berkeley. ei!Iif. ,94701 ·2795, or mes•
sages will be taken at 510·644,
4256. Don't be deceived by that
Berkeley address! This is a mainstream proposaJ,-and will have
tremendous conservative supporl.
William ltusher II a 1yadleat·
ed 'writer ror Newspaper Enterprlle Alloclldon.

'
ADVERTISEMENT
FORBIDS -·
ISSUE 2 PROJECT
Sealed bldo will bo
received by Ill• VIllage of
Middleport at the offi~• of
the lbyor, 237 RKe Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760 unlll
3:00 o'clock .p.m. Monday,
July 26, 1193 and then al
the office ol the lbyor the
bid. will be publicly opened
and read aloud for the
loll-Ing:
Park Street · Road
lm provomant. The project
in~luclta povement planing
•• n.c:H•ary, widening ol
the elrHI 11 ln~h•• on
~h tide, Md the laying of
3 inchM of 301 aophalt on
lhe widened portion and 2
112 inchoo of 404 aaphalt
on the lobo! new width ollhe
olreet from lha ln..,.ectlon
of Bro"""'ay St eaatto the
lnteru~lion
ol Gen.
Hertlnger _
Pkwy.
Englneorlng Eotimole:

Public Notice

Public Notice

pro fo ct.
Adcltionally,
contr-. compll.,ce with
tho Equal Employment
Opporlunlty ·requlrernanta
of Ohio Amniniltr.dve Coda
Choptar 123, the Go-nor'a
Executive Order of 1!172,
and Governor•• Executive
Order 84-11 ohall be
r
irf&lt;(.
' ·
·
must comply wilh
lha prevailing WllfiO rata on
public llnprovomonll in
Meigo County, Ohio, aa
datiorrnliled by Tho Ohio
Deportment of Industrial

dlopc;oeil of.
Any peroon intaraoted
may ftle wrtltan exception•
to aaid accounts or to
11111ero pertaining to the
axeculion of the truol, not
.... than Hve ctaya prior 10
the data Mtlor heerlng.
Robort _Buck, JUDGE
Common Pteao Court,
Probata Dlvlolon Melao
County, Ohio
(7) 23; 1TC

"tid'.:.

IWIIIiona.

.

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Angle Lorle Apperson,
ea.. No. 112·
Plaln!lll,
DR-324
·V • Dwight 0 . A-oon,
Defendant.
NOTICE· BY PUBLICATION
To Dwight 0. Apperoon,
Jr., whoae laat known
addreao woo c/o Linda
Look, 1230 4th Slreet NW,
Waohlnglon, D.C. 20001;
you ore hortby notified that
PUblic Ncftlce
ou bean named delandanl
n a legal action entitled
PUBUC NOTICE
Angle Loria Apperson, vo,
On Ju'- a- &amp;,, lltl, ol Dwight 0. Apporoon,
approxiMately 1:00 A.M., , delendanl. Thla action hao
the MIY lt.A . V•lal bean llolgned CaM No. 82·
acclct.nlally dlooharged an DR-324 ond lo pending In
unknown quantity of the Court of Common Ple11
nurnM 2 claMI fUel at mila Court of Melgo County, Ohio
poat237.5 of the Ohio Alvw. 45768.
th• eflaclld • - Include
The ob(ecl of · tho
mle 237.5 k&gt; lillie :ZU.S of complain! lo 1 divorce and
the Oh"' River. Campbell lho prayer lo !hat plaintiff
Tronaportatlon Company begrontod a divorce from
Inc. IIi
of tho
!he defendant, a oeparate
A.A. V•tol, wJalch Ia the parenling order and for an
d•lgnalod aource of the equlta~le diotrlbution of
aplll purauant ' lo the 011 partiM property,
You are required to
Pollution Acl, of 11110.
Claimo erlalng out of lhla •n•- the complaint within
oplll may be aubmllted to 21 dayo alter the last
Cernpball , T.....,_tion publication of thlo notice
Company, Inc., P. 0. Box. which will be publlohed
124, Chorlerol, P~$15022, :nco a weak lor oi1
uceeoolva wnka. The laot
Attn.· Don Orlmm or ·b v
'
C
' publication will be mede on
I
call ng
ampbelt' Trona· Auguot 27, 11193 and the 28
-=~~ 1~ doyo lor · onawer will
4·30 PM, Monday th
h comm- on that data.
roug
In CIM of your failure to Fridav
f '
·
anawar or otherwlae
I lor any reaaon raor:nd ao required by the
Campbell T,_,.,.Uon Oh o · Rulea of Civil
Company,.lnc.lalla k&gt; aclon Procedure judgment be
your claim wilhln 10 daya; der.ult wlif ba rendered
=l~ll
agalnat you for the relief
NaUonal PotluUon Fu'::o [ demanded In 'the complaint
Canllt 420(. Wllaon Blvd
.
Lerry E. Spa'"'"'
'
·•
of Courta
Bulla 1000, Arlington, VA
· Clerk
MoL. co
2221JS.1104.
,
,
Com
~ unty
(7) S. I, 7• I, I, 12. 13, 14,
By Marlene 'i:frtaon ~~
15, 11,11, 20, 21, 22, 23, H, (7) 23 30 (8). 8 13 20 27
27,21,21,30;(1)2,3,4,
' •
' ' •
5, 6, I, 10, 11, 12, 13, 30tc

No bidder may withdraw
hla bid !Jithln oixty j60)
dayo ..,... lhe actual data of
Opening thereof.
All bida ohaM be pr~
oigned by on au'thoriied
rop-llllva of the blddir.
All bid. oholl be Malad
and plainly marked ~Park
SlrMt Road Improvement
Projac~ Midtloport, Ohio.
The owner rnerv• the
$2a,280
right to rtofaet MY 01 au· bid.
A bid guaranty, aa aubmltted, and waive any
required by Section 153.54 inegul,oriU...
·
of the ReviHd Codo of Ohio
Fred Hollman,
oh •II accompany each
May01 Village of Midtltport
propooal oubmitted, ••' (1) I, 16, 23; 3TC
loll-•:
1) A Cor tilled Cha~k,
Cnhiar'o Cha~k, or Letter
of Creel( aquollo 10 r-~-t
Public Notice
of the bid. A La- o Cracllt
mey be ravocobla only by
lhe owner. Upon entering
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Into a contra~! wilh the COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
ownor the ~ontract01 muet
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
than fifo a bond for tho
IN THE MAnER OF
amount of the i:onlriiCI, ond
SETTLEMENT OF
the ~haclc or Letter of Credit
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
will thM be returo\ed to lhe
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
IU~~IIIfUI
and
OHIO
unauccnatul biddtf11 when , Account• ond vouchero
the eonlr~~et ill uecuted.
of the following named
or
ftduclarlet have ....., filed
2) A Bond lor the lull In lhe Probate Court, Moiga
amounl of this bid. Tho County, Ohio, for opprovol
owner will retain lhe bond of ond oeltlern•t:
the iuccaooflii bidder but - ESTATE NO. 27047 - Final
the owner will return tho ond Dttilrlbutlva Account of
bond of ...,h unoucca. .tul Nllncy Bean R..S, Erecutrlr
blcldor altar a contract hao of !he Eotate of Theodore T.
been uecuted.
,
Reed Jr. Dece111ed.
. "''
Biddaro aro required to - EStATE NO. 27801 • Anal
~amply with the Minority ond Dtolrlbutlve AccoUnt of
Buainuo Entorprioo ~MBE) Albert Dale Rouoh and 1-'--::-~----requlromonta oat forth In Roger Woyne Rouoh, ea.
Public Notice
Section 164.07 of tho Ohio executors of tho Eotata of 1-----:--.;.;..__
Revioed Code, and Rulo Voloa· M. Rouah, oka Volola
PROBATE COURT OF
1641-32 of the Ohio M.Rouoh,Deceued.
IEIGSCOiiNTY,OHlO
Admlnlotrativa Coda. In
ESTATE NO. 27334 ·Anal
Eatall of Rhode R. Hall,
part, lhli' illeana that any .,d Dtatrlbutlva Account of
Dn
ad
blddor,lotheaxtent ,t llatlt Edna
FHarmon,
CouNo.Z7114,Dockat
oubcontracll work, a hall Admlnlatratrlx ol the Eataie
Nl13, ~ 4111442
award oubcontracl• to of Harry R_ Harmon, NOllCE OF APPOINTMENT
Certified Minority ,Bualneoo .Deceaaed.
OF FIDUCIARY
Entarprloa In.., aggrogota
ESTATE NO. 21235 • Rwiled Coda, Sea. 2113-01
cloHar value of no Ina lhan Fourth Currant Accounl of
"On July 7, 111113, In the
five percarlt ~5%) of the Shirley A. Stephanaon, Malgo Co11nty Probate
prima contract. Bidder Guardian of the P"""n .,d Court, ca.. No- 27tl4,
procurement activiUao, to Eo tate of Donald . G. u-.1ng KJoee, za Aulland
the extent thai II procqrM S t e p h a n 1 o n , ,
a n · ltrMI, .M iddleport, Ohio
· 41710, woo appointed
molorlola antr or oorv1Co1, lncompet.,l Pen!&gt;n.. ,
ohall T110ultln the award of
ESTATE NO. 21521 - Final ·exaautor of the •lela of
proouroment contracta to and Dtotrlbutlva Account of Rhoda A. Hill, danued,
Certified Minority Buorneeo · Jennifer
L. Sheeta, late of Uf 8. Second,
Entarprtaea In., aggtogn Admlnlatrotrlx DBN, of the Middleport, Ohio 45710."
·cloUar value of no Ina lhM Eatata of Thomaa Balloy
llaiMrt E. Buck,
two percent ~2%) of the Huntar, II, DoD rued.
. PI hlr .luCiga
prima oonlrecL
- Unleu nHptlona are
Uno K. N1111l1road, Clefk
All conlractora and , flllciiiiNeto, aald llooounta: (7) I, 11, 23; IT~
subcontractor• Involved will be · for hMrlng before
wllh the projacl will, to th• aald Court on the 21th day
ulan! pracUcabla; uaa Ohio, of AUgUat, 1111, el which
product•,
matorlala, time aold eooounta will be
a..Vlc.., and llibor In tho oon•_lderod and, oontlnued
l"'olomont•llon of their fro111 !fay to day unUI finally

the--

~COURT OF

r.

We,lston hands Meigs 15-0 loss -

Winebrenner point leader
in Senior Golf L~agoe action

flill

r.;:

-:l::'.J":t:

"'J

WANT ADS bring

~

.

1

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

'

'

'

.

'
'

'

.'
I

'

WMII'Iahe Priddy
All full of whlta
NowShe'a
40
Ain't lh.t1he pita

I:I•P':r!,:!d•v,

vae~ ~!lillY . ~_ ._~F'"'~'~m-t""!'tt.--.....~.

.

WHY RENT? ..

.

Make Your Dreain Home
A
At Riverdale!

l

NEW

1-800-466-76 71

$122.00

5217

•

�•

'

PIQ• 4

:n. o.lly Sentinel

Friday, July 23, 1993

. Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio '

•.

The..- Daily Sentinel ·

Homers by Samuel, Sanders help Reds post 7-3 win over Marlins

~DAN SEWELL
lllillb .......
Brownia&amp;

"I lried,IO tell them all along
lhat I just need 10 gd out there and
"""
-Reds IIWIIgc- lhrow. l'm glad I was able 10 tum it
·~•t for1ot bis pall, and be's around before IIIey re• rd me."
~ 10 ""0
lbat.
He noted lbal for eight sasons,
'·~ 1bey ~ l want me 10 have he was one of the Reds' most rclianyhe.:~.!~!!"• lbcy'n: c:razy," able starters. His career was in
. • ..... .- ~ behind the doubt Iller a midJtuon knee injury
pncb1ng of. B.rown1ng (7-S) and last year, and be said the Reds
home 1111! h1llml of Juan Sam~l management was ready 10 end it
andda1 Re~ Sanders. beat~ Flori· and was close to releasing him
. ~ 7-3 Thursday rught
twice Ibis year.
Browrung has aUowed only nine
Browning has also accused
earned ru~ "! h,is last five s!MIS, . lllllllllgelricnt of intenliooally limit·
and he sa1d .h1s woeful early sea· ing his innings to negate a clause in
son, when his eanled run average his.four-year contract lhat calls for
~ 6, can be blamed on erratic a fifth option year a1 $3.S inillion if
handling.
he pirches 200 innings Ibis year or
·
" They knew I just need 10 get DCKL
~ feel of die ball out there," he
"It's too late now," Browning
said.
replied when asked _if that spurred

J:&gt;- :rom
'"!"'

hiin 10 flip the rosin baS into ihe air
when manager Davey Johnson
yanked him wilh two outs in the
bouom of die ICVCIIlh. He l&amp;id he
simply lost his temper W""e he
hoped to complete die inning.
Jolwou declined 10 commenL·
With the Reds far' behind the
San FranciJCO Giants, 1118118gcment
is eKpected 10 start slashing lbeir
leaaue-leading payroU. Browning
said he hadn't given much thought .
10 being traded himself.
"If I get ~ 10 a coutender.
hell, I'll ~et a chance 10 win another ring,' he said, referring 10 the
Reds' 1990 World Series victory.
But he added quickly that he
would like 10 stay where he is hoping that tl)e Reds don't get
stripped down.

. "I hope they don 'I tear apart ·out into the locker room to ask
th1s team. We' ve stillgor a good Sheffteld if it were true he said he
nucleus," be said. .
could play the oudield, where he· s
There was also tension in the never played as a major-lea~uer.
Marlins' locker room.
Sheffield denied it, then disapManager Rene Lacbemann bris- peared.
tled when a rqxtrter mentioned lhat
'Uie Sheffield error may have
third baseman Gary Sheffield rattled J.:k Armstrong (7-10), who
~hose latesl bout o_f shakcy field: beat the Reds and Browning last
mg bei!Jed the Reds.to a five-run week and was trying 10 win three
fourlb mning, had said he could straight decisions for the fust time
play the outfteld.
since May 1991, when he was a
.
Sheffield had been quoted that Red.
way when he arrived here last
"Jack had one bad inning,"
m!&gt;nth after his trade from San Lachemann said. ''We made an
Diego, and the Marlins were won- error, but you ' ve got to pitch
dering whal 10 do with lhird base· around it.. ... he got a pitch up in a
man Dave Magadan. The Marlins bad locabon and we couldn 'I catcb
..
llllded Magadan 10 Seattle, leaving up!'
Sheffteld at lhird. ·
Chris Sabo started the fourth
Lachemann le1f the press corps wilh a single, then beat Sheffield's

throw after he couldn ' I handle Reggie Sanders' hard grounder. Ulche,
mann described Sanden' shot as a
double-play ball, questionable
because of Sanders' speed but
when Hal Morris followed wiih an
RBI single, Samuel ~ted Armstrong's neKt pitch with a 429-foot
home run over the center field
fence.
"I have no idea the last .time 1
hit one this far. Not this year," Said
Samuel, who . started his fifth
straight game in his most regular
play all season.
·
· Bip Roberts, making his first
s~art since June 29, showed no
s1gns of his sore lhumb. He made a
diving catch in left field on the
Marlins' first hit~r. doubled, singled, walked and stole a base.

Around the NFL,

Elway happier i~rDenver; Perry, Smith among no-shows at camps
ByFRANKELTMAN
.Jol\11 Elway is happy thai he's in
Denver and Dan Reeves is in New
York. Bill Belichick is in Cleveland, which makes Michael Dean
Perry want to be elsewhere.
Elway, the NFL's highest paid
player at $4.6 million Ibis season,
said playing for Reeves was hell,
and he wouldn ' t be at training
camp if his former boss was still
around. Reeves now coaches the
New York Giants after 10 years
with Denver.
Perry, meanwhile, wasn 'I at
training camp on Thursday, boyconing practice in a feud with
Belichick, who fmed the three-lime
Pro Bowl defensive lineman
$4,000.
Perry, who has, chafed under

maybe one or these days he 'U gniw
up and mature a little.'' ·
Colts
Quarterback Jeff George
remams a no-show, with accumulated, fin~s totali~~&amp; $32.000, and
lhere s sun no full eKplanation why
he's boycotting training cainp. The
Colts signed Don Majkowski on
Tuesday and began giving him a
crash course on the team's offense
in case George's uneKplained
absence continues.
49ers
Ricky Wauers may skip training
camp unless the 49ers improve a .
contract offer. Watters -al$1 is considering whether to accept the
49ers' minimum contract tender
which wol!ld allow him 10 !worn~
a restricted free agent in 1~94 .

Belichlck's defensive schemes,
wasn't taking calls from reporters.
The 28-year-old l'er!r· whQ has
one year remaining on Jus contract,
has said he would like 10 leave the
Browns.
"He'll be fined, according to
the schedule for players leaving
camp under contract," die coach
said.
Elway _said in Thursday's editions of the Rocky Mountain News:
'·' ... I woukiiiDI have been back
here if Dan Reeves had been here.
It wasn't worlh it to me. I didn't
enjoy it. It wasn't any fun, and I
got tired of worlting with him.' '
Reeves had a terse reply when
infotm_C{d of Elway's remarlcs.
"Let's just say it wasn't heaven
Co~ me either," he said. "I hope

Scoreboard
~ •.....• ......41

- • Baseball • -

Ollllond ................ .40

NATiONAL LEAGUE .
WLMGB
PllilodolpiUI ........... 61 36 .629
5I. Laulo ............... .55 4() .l79
5
~ ............... .50 46 .521
10.5
oo..,o..................47 47
12.5
Pillfbwah ..•...•...•...45 Sl .469 • .IS.S
Florldo ................ ..4~ Sl .421
20
NewYad&lt; .............. 32 63 .337
21

:soo

WaleriiiHVIIIoe
SIR FnnciJc:o ........ 65 32 .670
42.

.567

10

Houlwm .... "''""''".so 45

.526
.516
.510
.311
.368

15
IS.5
21
29

LooAn- ...........49 46
CINCIJilNATI...... .50 41

Son o.,.o .............. 37 63

COOndo ................3S 63

Son-

t.t

Tbunday's scores
4. Philoddf&gt;!lio 1
CINCINNATI 7, F1orido 1
PidlbwJh I, Alluno7
HouiUJn 9, aucaao'4

1

Col...... 7' $4.1.0ui16
Manual10, Son 1JieF S
New YotkiO, 1...-·Anp 5

· ToaJcbt's games
(llouaJi 4-11), 7:3S p.m.

Allinll (Avay 1().3) II Pi1lobw-gj&gt; {1..
Smith 04), 7:35p.m.
Chicaao (Hibbard 8-6) " Houlton
(Po...1at7-4), 1:05 p.m.
S\. Louis (W1Uon 1-0) 11 Colondo
(l'uta13-3~ 9:05p.m.
MonliU.I (fa~ 5-1) at San Oieao
(Brooaii2-S), 10:35 p.m.
New York (fanana 5-8) 111M Atlaoleo (Condioai4-5), 10:3S p.m.
Philade_!phi• (Schillina 9-6) at San
Franciaeo (Bnnmea.l-3), 10:35 p.m.

~],CIJrVELA1&lt;U2

New Yam 12. Coliiomio 1
-Minn-I.BolliincR4
'· Ollllond 7

C!ieiF 7, Milwlllkoe 2 ·
T~8 , Tcua7

New York (Sc:hourck 3-10) tt

Jc.k::l (A.ctacio 7-5), 3 p.m.

~·(Rivera 9-4)

Conllnnt.l Bukellli&amp;U ~IIOd·•ton
ROCHESTER RI!NI!OADE: Nomed
Bill M1WC1m&amp;n CDidl and vice Prsidad.
o(beekftbeD opcncionl.

(llohcly 9-5). 7:05p.m.
Scttlle (Johnton 10-5) at CLEVE-

u.ND ~ 1-0), 7:05p.m.
CalifOOUI (l&amp;nptm 9-4) at New York
(Hutton G-0), 7:30p.m.
Ollllond (ldoh1er I· 2) II Boolon (DopJllll 7-5). 7:35p.m.
Baltimore (Valt11Zuela S-7) at Min·
neiOC.II (Oulrdado 1-3),1:05 p.m.
MilwaU.ce (M.irand• 0-l) at Oricaao
(B..., 4-3), I :OS p.m.
Toronto (Hentaen 12-4) at Teu•
(Pavlill5·5), 8:35pm.

Football
NollooiiF..... ULu&amp;ue
NFL: Nunod Thoma S!""" dUel fi·
nandal officer tnd Bill Pollan vice prr.ai·
- o f !oalboll do¥-L
An.A1'li'A FALCONS: Sipod R.....
llupor,u!Oly.
HOUSTON OILERS : Nomed DUly
JohftiOft w.inina camp wide receivers
&lt;Oic:h. .
LOS ANGELES RAMS : A&amp;""" 10
1emu with Jercmc Bcu.il. tunnina bu:lt,
on a Hn· re.u contracl. Siancd Don
Brtckcn, plllltcr; Anthony Thompson,
NMinl - · ond Loan While, IUleblck-

3·0). I :05 p.m.
Kanaaa City (R11rrnl1Kt\ G-2) at Douoil (Beqmon 1·2),1 :1S p.m.
Calitomia (Sanderson 7-10) at New
Yod! (IWnialioc;lli (4-3), 2 p.m.

cisco (Burt.7-2), 3 p.m.

Todd Rucci, cifmaivc lineman, to a tbn:oycar conUIC\, Waived A1 Ciolclc:a, ti&amp;ht

ald.
NEW YORK I!ITS: Agteed 1o !Cmlo
with Brownina Naale, quancrbl~k, and

(Bollon 1·6). 7:0l p.m.
Seattle (Leary -7--4) at CLEVELAND
(Clil!Y"""'2-3~ 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Stewttt 5-4) at Te.u•
(Loibnndl9-5), 1:35 p.m.

Adrian Murrcl.l., Nmin&amp; blck.

PHOENIX CARDINALS: Sipd LuiJ
Sharpe. uckle and Rob Moore, runnin&amp;

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS : Sianed
"''*·
linebo&lt;:ker,

Sunday's games

, .... Kidd, - . Sun .......
Royd Fielck, llmnJ ufdy; Guy PlWD-

O&amp;k.land at B0110n, 1:05 p.m.
Ca.lifomi.lat New YOlk, 1:30 p.m.

mcr, linebacker, and Duane Youna.
lineblckcr. .
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Sisned
Oren Rlll:octy,auard . Wti':" Kevin

Komu City llllettoil. I :3l p.m.
Sot~ a CLEVELAND, 1:3S p.m.
Baltimore at Minnclcu., 2:·0:5 p.m.
Milwaubc It O!iCIJO, 2:3S p.m.
Toronto at Teau, 8:0S p.~

t.o. An·

at San Fran·

"'·NEW ENOI.\Nll PATRIOTS : Sipd

Baltimore (Mo)'Ct 6-4) ·~ Minnuota
(EriWm 6-10), 3 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bonu 6-6) at Chica&amp;o

(Cattillo 3· 6) al Hou1tan

·-

Atlanll. (P. Smilh 3 -8) 11 Piuaburgh
(Woll: 10-7), 7:0l p.m.
SL l.wil (O.bome 9-3) at Colondo

(llollalfiold 2·6), 9:0l p.m.
Montrc&amp;l (Nabholt.r: S-6)
(T. Wondl 0-3),

11

San Diego

IO:Ol p.m.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS : Sianed
Orun Feud, cmtcr. Robb Thoma&amp;, wide
tt.eeiver: Dedrick Dod&amp;e, nfety; Tony
Woodt, defensive end; Rod S1ephcna,
linebacker, and Carlton Cirly, comcrbac.k.
Releued Tcrrenec William, pard; Paul
Lons, center, Mike McKinley, running

• Transactions • -

BaseboU
Amerkan Luau•
SEATn.J! MARINERS : PlaCEd Norm

btdr:, and Ken Bwn:a, c:omerblck.

Charhm, pik:hcr, on tho U-day di.ubled
liat . Activated Rich Delucia, pitcher,
(rem \be 15--day disabled liat

Hockey
Nathlnll Hockey Lucue
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS :
S i~ned Puer Douria, k!t wina; Myl.kcs
0 Connor, defenac:man, •nd Shaun V•n

TEXAS RANGERS : Tnded Todd
Bumt, pii-Chc:r, to the St. LouD Cudinall
for 1 plt)'Cl' t.o be named la\Cl'.

Sunday's games
A\lanu 11 P!.tuburaJI, 1:35 p.m.
Olicaeo" IWusuln. 2:35 p.m.
St Louil•t Colcndo, 3:0S p.m.
New York at U. Anaelel. 4m p.m.

.
CHICAGO CUBS: Agreed to 1enns

Philadelphia at San Franc!tco. 4:05
p.m.

Wlrdl.

Rcdskins .
· S~rling Palmer,' a fourlb-round
pick from Florida State, has shown
enough consistent pass-rush pressure 10 almost certainly make the
final roster.
. "His potential is unlimited,"
coach Richie Petitbon said.

COLONY THEATRE
FAI THAU THUAS

MICHAEL J. F.OX
IN

LIFE·.WITH MIKEY PG
SHOW TIMES
FRI
SAT
1:30

7:30

SUN THAU THUAS
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

ADMISSION Sl.liO 441.Qi23

Tum
W
Toronto ..................54
B01tm1 .....................Sl
New Yor1c ..... ......... S3
Baltimore ................S2
Detroit................... .SO
CLEVEu.N0 .......• 5

L
43
43
44
44
46
51

Pd.
.557

GB

.S47
.S46
.542
.S21
.469

l

I
l.S
3.5
8.5

Milwnkcc ............. 37

56

.391

IS

Walrrn DhilkHI
43 .Sill
Te1u .....................4! 4S ..S16

2.S

ChiCI£0 ..... ............. 51

Kan.&amp;a O ty ........ , ..48
Seatlle .................. ..41
Callfomia .............. ;44

46

.Sll

3

41

.SOO
.~1

7

SO

4

Stocks
Am Ele Power.................... 37 3/4
Ashland Oil........................28 1/8
AT&amp;T.................................64
Bank One........................... 54 7/8
Bob Evans .........................18
Channing Shop..-................12 7/8
Champion Ind.................. 13 1/2
City'Holding ......................25 1/2
Federal Mogul....................20 S/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ..41 3/4
Lands End .......................... 29 114
Limited hie ......:... ..............20 1!8
Multimedia Inc.................. 32 3/4
Point Bancorp .................... l4
Ralt RestauranL .................. I/16
Reliance Electric................ I8 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers.................l7 3/4
Shoney's Inc ......................l9 1/4
Star Bank .......................... .35 314
Wendy lnt'I.. ..................... .I4 3/4
WorlhingiOII Ind~ ...............28 314
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes l'rovided by
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
GaUl pol~

1993

1993 CUTLASS
SUPREME

DELTA 88

$16,995

$13,995

1993.CHEVY
LUMINA EURO

$13,995
4 Door, LOilded. Hurry!

$10I 988

.

..

$7 777

WHIL,THEY LAST/

1

SEDAN DeVILLE CHECK OUT
ASLOWAS$22,495 OUR USED
.VEHICLES.

•·-·'*·

1

1990
4Hoi..... 5990 1991 Toyota ·Comry 2l•lhNMfrttn..........._. __ ._ "'990
1991 Mercur(Topazso,eoo
&lt;h (ay I
'
ev. aier ~~~~t.,.r, 2Ill........................ 16999 1991 Ponliac lirand Am ......................... 17830
1986 ~ Ranger Pkkup tow milos, d.n'1 bt lalo.-.13990 1992 &lt;hev. Cavalier 11111.,-. 4or..............;........ s7799
16990
1984 UJe'lf S.10 Pickup-. toppor,,... ... lnd.12990 .1988 Olds 98 Regeacy.,.., •
1989 ~~~~Size PU .t,IS,(lhi,IWI,._,.t_._18999 1987 Olds Delta 88 .-., 4Dt,IIUII•...•.•.•.•:•.. ~499s
1990 OIUliiJIIIile Colo~-. .......
\6850 1984 OldsmoiJile Delta 88 tow'• ---.. ·-·--~· 13699
15995 - 1988 Oldsmalile Toro
16799
1990 Fanl
.......

-.om.-...

4..., ___

IN JUST 2 SHORT YEARS OUR SALES AND SERVICE HAVE DOUBLED!
STOP BY AND SEE WHYI - Hours: Mon.·Frl 9am-a pm, Sat. 9am-4 pm, Sun 1 pm-5 pm
Tax • Title , _ not Included.

.. . POMEROY

'

lllwiDII ,.171

992-3785
. .JJ

I

,_

' ' ..

..

·'

.

Acade~ic e~ccllence, communi-

~

$5,000 in educational bonds, prizes
and awards.
.
Monica is sponsored by Middleport American· Legion; Mr. Moriah
.Baptist Church, Middleport; Dr.
Danny Westmoreland, Mason ,
W.Va. ; Fisher's Funeral Home,
Middleport; Johnson's Variety
Swre, Middleport;
.
H &amp; R Block, Pom~y; Ann Harris, Middleport;.
.
The National Headquarters for
the Pre-Teen America Scholarship
and Re&lt;:ognition Progiam is located
in Batpn Rouge, La. Patricia
Daniel is the Founder and National
Director.
For further information write
Pre-Teen America, Regional
Office, P.O. Box 2146, Baton
Rouge, L.A..708221 or call (504)
275-5497.

ty involvement and personal exu·
berance are a few of the attributes
lhat have placed a local student as a
finalist in a scholarship competition.
,
Monica LeAnne Moon, ·daughter of Stanford and Jane Moun &lt;if
Middleport, has been selected as a
finalist in the 1993 Pre-Teen Ohio
Scholarship and Recognition Pro·
gram 10 be held July 23, 24, 25 at
the Hyatt Regency in Columbus.
Pre-Teen Ohio is a selective
Scholarship and Recos/lition competition involving young ladies 7 10
12 years or age ranking in the top
10 percent of the state academical·
ly..Additionally, young ladies are
mv1red who have been recognized
publicly for lheir outstanding per·
sonal achievements, leadership
abilities or creative taiCnts.
MONICA~OON
Monica is rune year5 old and is
currently attending school at Mid·
dlepon Elementary. where she will Service 10 Church and Community;
School Honors and Activities;
enter the fourth grade this fall.
Monies was ranked second in her Development of Personal Skills
third grade class and had a 4.0 _ and Abilities; ComJ?rehensive Cre- .
grade a~erage die entire year. She ativity; Communicative Ability
and On' Stage Poise and Personali·
has receiVed numerous awards for
ty.
.
her excellence in readin,, math,
Pre-Teen Ohio will award over
and spelling throughout IbiS school
year and previOIIS years.
Candidates will be judged on
Academic Achievement; Volunteer

COLONY THEATRE
FAI THFIU THUAS

MICHAEL J. FOX
IN

,

LIFE WITH MIKEY Po
SHOW TIMES
' SAT

fAI

11:30

7:30

suN THRU THUAS
ONE EVENING IHOW 7:10
ADMISIION t1.60 441 01123

SPECIAL

Orientation set

SUNDAY, ~ULY 25, 1993

'

The Railroad Club of Southeast
Ohio, Meigs Division, will present
a model train show the week of
July 26 at die Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy, ·
Hours for the show will be
Monday through Friday, noon 10 9
p.m.; Salurday. noon 10 5 p.m.; and
Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
Fives scales of trains will be .displayed including Garden, Lionel,
American Flyer, HO and N, as well
as olher trains and other displays.
There will be pictures, books and
i~ms from old railroads.
The public is invited.

HOMEMADE NOODLES &amp; CHICKEN
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans with Mushrooms
Hot Buttered Roll
Small Drink or Coffee
TRY OUT HOMEMADE PIES '
NEW HOURS: OPEN 10 A.IIII.·II:3CI

$449

o~u honor roll

KANAUGA · Liberty Moun·
Seven Meigs Countians were
tainecrs will perform Saturday at
listed
on the Ohio State Universi·
the DA V Center in Kanauga.
ty's honor roll for the spring quarROCK SPRINGS · Kerr's Run ter. Those honored reecived a grade
Reunion, Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 point average of at least 3.5 and
p.m., Rock Springs Fair Grounds. were enrolled for at least 12 credit
hours.
,
Bring picnic baskeL
In the group we~ Andrea Leigh
POMEROY - Rock Springs Cleland, Long Bottom; Barbara
United Methodist Church, ice loan Anderson, Jared Andrew
cream social, Saturday, 6 p.m., by Sheets, Pomeroy; Carol Lynn Fishthe dip or pint. Peach, banana, er, Racine; David Eugene Rice,
pineapple, lemon, chocolate and Reedsville: and Douglas Scott
vaniUa. Homemade pies and cake. McPhail, Syracuse.
Public invited.
•

TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
• be a round and square dance a1 the
. _Tuppers Plains VFW Post Home
:,Friday from 8-11 :3.0 p.m. with
·;music by Smoky Mountain
Drifters. Public invited.
LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church will have preaching
by Pastor Steve .Reed and local
singers 7 p;m. Public invited. Fel.lowship will follow.
SATURDAY
RACINE
Circle-Zirkle
: reunion, Saturday, noon, Star Mill
: Park, potluck dinner. Bring recipe
. for dish you provide.
.
· BARLOW - Mid-Ohio Valley
: 'Steam Engine .and Antique Power

: pri~~~ group enjoyed a picnic.
: Erma Cleland had the blessing,
· Mrs. Nice read from Psalm Ill,
:·and the! Lord's Prayer and pledge 10
::O....nag were given in unison.
·: Members attendmg were Leda
.. Mae Kraeuter, Pauline Ridenour,
;.Mary Jo Barringer, Belt~ Roush,
&lt;Betty Young, Thelma Wh1te, Mary
&gt;K. Holter, Lora Damew91)d, Ella
;:Osborne, Ada Bissell, Maze
'McPeck, Erma Cleland, Ethel Orr,
.:Inzy Newell, Marcia Keller, Opal
·.Hollon, .Jo Ann Baum, Goldie
:):rcderick, Faye Kirkhan. Laura
.,Mae Nice.
,

THE 1993

·'

ROCK SPRINGS • The.Kerr's
Run ' reu·nion will be held at the · 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Carmel
Meigs County Fairgrounds grange Church at the intetsection of
hall Saturday from 9 a.m. 10 6 p.m. Carmel and Pleasant View roads
Bring your own picnic basket. just off Bashan Road.
Viola Brown Hunt and Helen
Brown Harrison, Columbus, are coGRAVELY TRACTOR
chaitpersons.
'
SALES &amp; SERVICE
RACINE - CanneVSutton Unit·
204 Condor SL
P~meroy, OH.
ed Methodist Church will have
SPRml UD su••11
generosity day ·~fre&amp; clothing" from
lOURS
Mon.-Fri. 9:00·5:00

elect' officers

• Installation of officers highlight·
: .ed a recent meeting of Past Coun: cilors Club of Chesler Council 323,
: Daughters of America, hcld.at
home of Beuy Young with Ada
Bissell as co-hostess.
Installed by Laura Mae Nice,
: were Opal Hollon, prcsidcn.t; Faye
' Kirkhart, vice president: Thelma
· White, secretary; Mary Jo Bar&gt;ringer, treasurer; Erma Cleland,
: flower commiuee, Betty Osborne
: and Mary K. Holter, sentinel.
• . Ella Osborne thanked the club
; .for a gift while she was hospital·
• .ized. Alta Ballard and Ruth Smith
• 'were reponed home from the hospital.
. Poems read were "How Old Are
You?" by Erma Cleland, and "No
• Excuse Sunday" by Goldie Freder·
ick. Games were conducted by
: Betly Roush and Mary J~ Bar. )'inger. Mrs. Hollon, Mrs. NICe and
:-Mrs. Barringer won the door

•Ill

.

An essay contest on ances10rs
enough you' 0 hear a nostalgic train
who
ser.ved in the Civil War is
whistle making its way to you
ins;
sponsored · by the Meigs
be
across die Ohio from nearby West
County
Historical Stx:iety in con·
Virginia.
junction
with the cel.~bration to
Since we don't have much of
commemora1e
the Bailie of Buffin·
the real McCoy .these days, you
gton
Island
near
Ponland, Aug. 13·
probably will enjqy a taste of the
next best thing and that is a model 15.
There will be two categories in
train show 10 bC held at the Meigs
the
essay contest with two age
County Public Library in Pomeroy
groups
in·each ca~gory.
the week of July 26 through Aug:
.
The
fast Caltgory will deal wilh
1.
The show is being staged by Morgan's Raid across Meigs Coonmembers of the Railroad Club of ty 130 years ago and die ensuing
Southeast Ohio and these people battle that took place at Ponland.
really have an outlay of eKcellent Stories may be about an ancestor or
modelS which you'D sec in all their relative ilivolved in die Battle of
glory at die show. King pins of the Buffingll~n Island in attempts to
club for die local show are David halt the fl1ght of Morgan's Raiders
Robinette, Richard Freeman, Ger- as IIley crossed Meigs County or
ald Shuster, Nathait Robineue, Eric olher incidents with the raiders.
Graham, Brian Justice, Mike
Margaret Parker in announcing
Haley, Keith Weaver, and Kirk the contest said Jhat the essays
Kress.
might come from stories handed
Hours of the show are from 12 down by relatives, either docu·
noon to 9 p.m . beginning next menred or undocumented.
Monday, July 26, through the fol·
The second category v.:m be for
lowing Friday; 12 noon 10 5 p.m. ancest~rs or ot~er relauv~s t~at
on Saturday, and from 1 10 s p.m. · served m any Cml War, un1t WI~
on Sunday, the closing day. _As docu~entauon IO be c~ted, Th~s
you can :;ee. you will have ample . co~ld ~elude, l'arl:er S&amp;ld, Jl!II:IICI·
opponumty to drop by the library pa11on 10 battles; p~. military
during the week 10 view the ex~n- occupaupns, mus1c1an and color
sive snow:
bearers.
Last year, as I recall, some 500
There will be. two divisions in
residents visited a similar show die judging wilh award winners in
held here by the club and club eighth grade and under and ninth
members this year are hoping for at grade through adull First prize in
least 600 people 10 attend. By the each category ."! the ~ighth grade
way, did I mcnuon that the show is and under diVISIOn w11l be a $50
free of charge? Now you can't savings bond, sponsored by a local
beat that.
business, and McDonald's and
Pizza Hut gift certificates.
First prize in each category in
Ninety"year-old CO!IIedian, Bob,
die
ninth grade through adult diviHope, has signed another one year
sion
wiD be a $50 savings bond and
television contracl .What an entera
Saturday
evening twilight cruise
tainer .a~ well as an optimist.
on
the
P.A.
Denny. Gift certificates
Maybe 1t II be an easy year for him
awarded
to second place
will
.be
since it does seem that some of us
do ''get funnier" as we get older. winners.
Entries must be received by
Do keep smiling.
Aug. 3 and must have the author's
name, address and phone number.
They may be mailed 10 the Meigs
County Historical Society, ·BoK
145, Pomeroy, 45769, or brought 10
the Meigs County Museum during
open hours.
Sh·o w;Saturday, Barlow Fairgrounds, Saturday and Sunday.·

Moon to compete in
scholarship program

Community Calendar

~.·councilors

1993 CHEVROLET 1992 CHEVROLET
CORSICA
CORSICA

I

. Everyone !bought it was a good
Idea for Anme and Ches~r Kni$ht
of Pomeroy to have a fam1ly
reun10n.
However, with die family scat·
tered hither and yon, the family just
couldn't go 10 the nearest roadside
park so their son, Terry of Marion
selected a spot which would be ~
bit more "centralized" for evetyOne
attending. He picked Chattanooga,
Tenn., and reservations were 'made
at the Ramada Inn there.
Last Thursday, everyone rounded in at Chattanooga for a long
w~kend reunion. Jerry and his
w1fe p1cked up Anme and Chet in
Pomeroy aJid took diem down. Bill
Matlack and Marie Hauck of
Pomeroy also made the trip. Others on hand were Mr. and Mrs.
_Willard Ashworth of Niceville,
: Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Knight
, and daughter, Amanda, of
Riverview, Fla., and Corinne Bray
· and Terry .Williams of Con·
nersville, Ind. Many of you, of
course, recall that Richard is ihe
other son of Annie and Chet.
Willard Ashworth, many of you
wiD remember liS ''Wid" who lived
in Pomeroy many inoons ago.
The group had an absolute baD.
Everyone took along golf clubs for
·a turn or two on the greens but the
· gOOd limes rolled and no one ever
got around 10 j!Olfing. IncidentaUy,
•would you beheve lbat the Knights
.encountered ~arolyn and Bil)l
McDaniel of Pomeroy at a rest SUJp
in Kentucky? I don't just keep
· telling you it's a small world, I
.prove it.

MIDDLEPORT • Dance, Fri·
day, 7-11 p.m. at the Middleport
Legion An,neK on Mill Street.
George Hall will play the organ.

,

Your fine jewelry is designed to last a lifetime ....,
with the proper care.
That's why we offer a complete range of jewelry
services. We sell,
design, restring,
olean, polish, ,
repair and check
for loose stones
· _and parts. And
when we're
through, all your
jewelry will look
brand new.
So come visit us.
And ask for the
works. We care.

by Bob Hoeflich

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - Dance, London
- · P~ol, Friday, 8:30 p.m. to mid: ntght. MUSIC by H&amp;K Sounds.
; Admission is $2.50 per person.

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

Historical
society sets
contest

Beat of the Bend...

.;

308 E. MAIN ST. - POMEROY, OHIO

•

Page-S

"

:.

LOS ANGELES KINGS: Signed Dave
ThomliJIIOII,Iell wina·

GIVE 'EM.
THE WORKS

E~DI•WM ·

-

·.

ONClNNATIII Floridt, 6 :05p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

, .

.' Wi~h so many of us having
expenenced the railroad background that we did years ago in
Meigs County, sma)l 'wonder tha~
we have such an interest in trains.
..For the most part, the trains are
: ·basically gone now, but occasional: :ty late at night if you listen hard

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.~CAD.·GEO

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS : Re·
leased Bn.d Llua and Rob Brown, for·

whh DrooP KiCIIChnic:k, wd'ielder.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Plac~ Gre1
Co\bruM, ftnt buanm. on the 15-day

from Penn State, signed a three·
year contract and reported to training camp.
"It's a big relief 10 just get die
numbers game over with and do
what I do - strap the helmet on
and hit someone,•• Rucei said.
Bears
Defensive ends Alonzo Spell·
man and Richard Dent are ballling
for a starting job. Spellman is 21,
with only one NFL season under
his belt; Dent is a 10-year pro who
holds the Bears' all-time sack
record with 112.
,
Rams
Running back Jero!lle Bettis
agreed 10 terms, becomiug the last
oflhe team's draft picks 10 sign.

We're·
Celebrcitin
Our

Allen. cemer.

Nllklnal Lupt:

Mcntrulat Sin Diqo, 4:05 _p.m.

is seeking a two-year deal
worth $2.4 million.
·
Eagles
Owner Norman Braman said his
revamped team is be~ than it was
last year.
"If you look at this club position by position- which very few
people have taken the time 10 do we·~ much stronger than we were
last year," Braman said.
The Eagles lost 11 players
through free agency.
Chargers
Linebacker Gary Plummer, tight
end D!IBDC Young and safety Floyd
F1eld agreed 10 one-year contracts.
That-leaves defensive end Leslie
O'Neal, running beck Ronnie Har·
mon, cornerback Gill Byrd and
backbp offensive lineman Mike
Zandofsky as the only Chargers
veterans without contracts.
Buccaneers
Tampa Bay is counting on veteran left tackle Anthony Munoz 10
shore up its offensive line. Munoz,
who turns 35 in August, was
enticed out of retirement and
signed as a free agenl
Buccaneers coach Sam Wyche
stiU believes Munoz could be a Pro
Bowl performer.
Pabiots
Tocld Rucci, an offensive tackle

Evans, wide rccc:i.vcr.

ON&lt;lNNA'I1 (Luebbetl 2-1) at Aori·

da (Bowen S-9), 7:05 p.m.

io luly 12. J'lu.

BasketbaU

Toaltlbl's aames
Kar..t City ?Pichardo 4-6) •t Octrait

Saturday's IIDies

lis&lt;. -

.... - o f llaridl While. ...
ficl4cr, rrorn Ouawa of1hc lntcmaLioall
~- Auipd Butch llemy, p;l&lt;hcr,
ouui&amp;ht LO OW:wa.
JIHlU,DELPIIlA PIIIWES: Apod
"'~with Wayne Gamel, pi\Cha, ud
u~ him \0 Bau.via of «he New Yolk·
Penn IMIU~ Sipd Scou Kola\, lhird
bueinin, and a11ianed him to Mar tinovi!le of lite Appclachion i.oai""-

Saturday's aames

CINCINNATI (PuJh 6--9) al Floridt

(Harrusch 9-6), _3 p.m. _

10

Qokt.nd (llownl 2-4) II 801lllll (Sole

'

C~ica1_o

. diJI!olood

9.5

KoMMCily 1_2.~_J;

T-

ss

.441
.435

Thursday's scores

E.ula'lllMvllloa

AdanLI ...................

52

51

Wat~rs

· Friday, July 23, 1993

Guests were Charlene Griffin, ·
sister of Lora Damewood visiting
here from Florida, Judy Holter,
Long Bottom, and Sandra White,
Bashan.

Sat. 9:00-12:00

~ -,..1

GURLY

IYS,.EM

o~ooooo~o~oo~oo~

:
0
0

g
0

0

0

0
~
0
0

0·

0
0
0
0

OPEN HOUSE
DEDICATION
SERVICE
AT HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH

SUNDAY JULY '25th AT 4:00P.M.
GUEST SPEAKER WILL BE

DR. MARTY HOLMAN
THERE WILL BE
. SPECIAL SINGING
AND REFRESHMENTS SERVED.

g
~-

0

g

.0

0

0

i
y

·0

REV. JAMES R. ACREE SR. · 0
INVITES EVERYONETO COME 0
AND HELP US CELEBRATE!
-l;)
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH IS
LOCATED ON S.R. 143
JUST OFF RT. 7 POMEROY

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
Augu,st 13, 1993.
Advertising Deadline Is
. , August 5, 19~3.
CALL DAVE or

P.J: TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

0
0
0

..

0000000000000000

992·2155.
\'.

••
.

·'

�•

·-

..

Pomeroy Ml~dleport, Ohio

Frlcley, July 23, 1893
. I

___
....

r-:o....Nnma
~~-­

Church of Chr rst

ApostOliC

- . , Qoorcll

"Clortlt

212 w. Maia St.
Paator: Aaohw Miloa
!!ilnday Sc:bool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedooaday Scnicea -7 p.m.
.

33226 Cbildnm'• -Rd.
Sunday Sc:boo1 • II a.m.
· Worship - lOLm .. 6 p.m.
Wedooaday Servicea -7 p.m.

Mlddltporl a . - "Cllrlll
Sib and Main
Putor. AI Haruan

q..,. BaDIIol a...a (Sooo-.o)

YouthMiniaa:BiiiPnzl&lt;r
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip-1!15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
. W~y Servicea • 7 p.m.

5'10 01'11!1 St.. Mi4dloport
Putor. Rev. O.vid Bryan

Suncloy oc:bool • ~:45 a.m.
Wonbip - 11 Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Service· 7 p.m.

Froe WUIIbl&gt;lllt Churdl

Koao Cburdl of Cbrlllt
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.

Ash Stroet, Middleport
Putor: Milt Monow
S.Uunlay SeiVice • 7;30 p.m.
Sunday SchOol - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., . .
Wcdneoday Service-7;30 p.m.

B-Ilow Rlcl&amp;t Cllurch ol c.rt.l
Putor: J... Coloarove
Sunday School-9:30 ......
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:;!0 p.m.
Wedncaday ServiClel - 6:30p.m.

,

Rullandl'lnt Baptlll Churdl
' Sunclay School - 9:39a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
Pum1!1'11J Fnt Boplllt
l!a1tMain St.
Saaday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · !0:30a.m.
Flnt Soulllern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putcr: E. I..marO'Bryant
Suncloy School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wodaelday Services -7:00p.m.
P1nl Baptist c•urdl
6th and Palmer St.
Pallor: Rev. l11111e1 A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip. lO;IS un., 7:00p.m.
. ·
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.

ZICOI Cllurth rl Cllrlot
Pom"")',-HuriJ&lt;DYille Rd. (RL143)
Putor. R01er Wauon
.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servic:U -7 p.m.
Brlldbuf')' Church rl Chrlll
Panor : TOm Rlllyon '
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Tuppen Plain Church ol Chrlll
Putor: Bill Wines
Sunday Sehoul - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.
Dater Cburcb ol Cbrlllt
Pastor: Ouil Stewllt
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm.
Wcdnelday Servioes • 7 p.m.

Lord's Supper tat Sunday of every month.

Wea.ielday Service-7:00p.m.

Rullaod Church rl Chrlll
Putor: Eus- B. Underwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - IQ-30 a.nL, 7 p.m.

Racine Flnt Baptist
Pastor. S1eve Fuller
Youth Putor Rid&lt; Harris.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wodnaday Services - 7:00pm.

Bradford C~on:h of Cllrlst
SL RL 124 &amp; Co. Rd. S
PUior. Derelt Stump
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday.ServiClel· 7:30p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Putor: Bill LiUle
Sunday School · IOLm.
Worship- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvice•- 7:30 p.m.

Hl&lt;kOf')' Hilla Church of Chrill
Pastor: Jooeph B. Hoakino
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

ML Unloo Boplllt
Pa1tor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening • 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviw • 6:30p.m.
Bethlellem Bapllll
Pastor : Rev. F.ad Stuller
Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Wonhip -.9:30a.m.
Thunday s...;.,... 7:30p.m.

Dexter
Pastor: Woody CaU
Sunday ll~ • 6:30p.m.
Thunda_y Service - 6:30 p.m.

'

w•

LanpvlUe Chrbllan Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioe 7:30p.m.
Hcmlock Grove Cllll....
Pu\Or. Oaarlea Domigan

Sunday u:hool · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Hlllllde Bapllll Church
SL RL 143jwtcffRL 7
Sundar School - 10 a.m.
· Wonhip - 11Lm., 6p.m.
Wednesday Servigcs -7 p.m.
VIctory Baptbllndependant
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Pasi.Or. J~mes E. Keesee
Wonhip • IOLm., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services- 7 p.m.

Rtedmllt Chun:h r1 Chrlll
Putor: Philip SWmi
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Soudy, Wcdneaday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
H-.. Chord! oiCbrllllo
Chrllllaa Union
Putor. Theron Durhllri
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Sr., Muon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
wo .. hip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Hartford Church of Chrllltln
Chrllllan Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor. Rev. O.vid McManis
Sunday School· II a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncaday ServiClel- 7:30p.m.

Foi"'OIt Run Boptlsl
Pas10r: Ariu1 Hun
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m.
ML Moriah Baptist
Fowth &amp; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S ,a.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah C~urdl rl Ged
Racine
Putor: Rev. Jamea Sauerfield
Sllllday School - 9:45 a.m.
Bvonina -7p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Antiquity Bopllll

Pastor. Kerineah Smilh

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wqnhip -10:45 Lm.
Thunday Scni,a" · 7:30p.m.

....

RuUand Free Will BaptUI
' ·
Salem St.
Pu1or: Rev, Paul Ta)'lor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
BYCning • 7 p.m.
Wednelday SCJYicea - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart Calllollc: C~urch
161 Mulberry A~.• Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waloer H. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:45-S:ISp.m.; Mau- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15a.m.,
Sun. Mus · 9:30a.m.
Qailey Mus - 8:30 Lm.

~·'

RuUUd Cll.-clt t1 Ged
PallOr: Jolm F. Con:onn
Sund_ar School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 o.m., 7 p.m.
.Wcdneoday Servica -7 p.m.
S7nc... Churdo oiGed
Apple and SeaJnd Sll.

Pastor: Rev. David Rwsell
Suqday School and Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Evenin&amp; Servicca· 7 p.m 1
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m. ·
Chllrdl ol God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. elf St. RL 160
Putar: Pat Henson
Sunday School - 10 L,..
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
, Wcdneaday Servicp - 7 p.m.

-Rev. Hcobcrt Clnte
Sonday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wanhip -11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnoldiy S. O'lcea - 7 p.m.

R-(lt«l•,....)

hll!uol Q.a otlloe N - •

:C'
. ita.. ,.Clllrdl
..,

..

Hoi mess

.

R-o/8-Jial mOoNow Uma ~. Rmlmd
Pua:Rn.DoweyKil!l •.
. Sunday odaool' 9:30a.m.
Sunday '!"~'~hip -7 p.m. .
Wodooaday prayer mootin&amp;- 7 p.m.

Wtlltyu Blblt Hoi._ CHrdl
7S Pearl St., Middleport.
Putor. Rev. Jolm NeYille
Sunday school - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:3Q p.m.
Wcdnelday Service-7:30p.m.

Latter-Day S31nts

"'J- c•

Roorpalloc! a..rc~o
Ill La-DaJS.IIIII
. Ponland-RacincRd.
Pa-sJ,:r Collifto
Sunday
• 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30a.m.
Wedooadays.m...-7:30p.m.

Wonbip · 91.1Q.
WedoeaclayScnicea·IOa.m.

'

p_, kemclh Baker
Sunday Sebool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip ·10:45 1.111. 1,2nd .l 4th Sun)

St. J... Los-.. a..rdo

Pineo-

Oooqe Weirick

Our s.-.IM-.oo Cllurch
Walnut and Hcnry Sll., Ra...,.wood, W.Va.
Co-puton: Rnr. Richanl &amp;
'Patri&lt;ia &amp;nds-Knla
SuDday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
SL l'luliM-., CliComer SyCanlooe &amp; Second SL, Pomeroy
Pastor: Gcorao Wciiridc
.
Sunday Sch~ - 9:4S a.m.
.
Worship - 11 a.m. ·

United MethodiSt
G - Uott.d M-lllt

\Yonhip • 9:30 Lm. (ht A.2nd Som~

a: 4th s...&gt;

Wcdnelday SeMce -7:30p.m.
ML Olive United Molhodlll
Off 124 behind Wilbavillc
Pastor. Cbarlco .Joooo
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday ServiClel- 7 p.m.

Cb...,
PaalDr: Shum Hauanan
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday ServiClel - 7 p.m.

J...pa

B=da Weber
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SeiVice• -1:30 p.m.

Eall LeiUt
PuiUr. Roaer 01100
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonbip- 9 a.m.

Laoc_~

RadM

Tuppen l'laln1 Sl. Paul .
Putor: Sharon Hauii11WI
Sunday School- 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Tueaday Services · 7:30p.m.

Pentecostal

Cbrllllan Fellowllolp Center
Salem SL, Rudand
Putor. Rollett E. Musser
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 :IS Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe - 7 p.m.

Peri-l A-blf
Sl RL 124, Racine
Pallor: Willi1111 Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services ' 7 p.m.
Middleport Penlec-1
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wedioolday SeiVicea -7:00p.m.

Loog lloaom

J

Harrl-vllle , . _ , _ . C~urch
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
·
Sunday School • 9:45 Lm.

ML Oll¥e CommunltJ Churcll

Middleport Prabylerllln
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd .l 4th Sun.)
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 4 p.m. (ht &amp; 3rd Sun.)

Seventh -Day Adventist
Savtniii•D17 Advlllllllt

Mulberry Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy i&lt;"winsky
Sarurday Servioes:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wonhip- 3 p.m.

l'ull Gaopal JJchthouOO
33045 llilmd Road, Pcxneroy
Padilr: Roy Hunler
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evonina7:30p.m.
Tuesday A Thunday • 7:30p.m.

Cllarch If lilt N......,
Thonw L .o..... n
School - 9:30 ..... .

Soulll Belllel New T-ent
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydtnltricker
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
· ·Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesdiy Service -7 p.m.

v.;:=~-10:30a.m.,6p.m.

Servicea -7 p.m.

\1

Middleport Church ottlll Nazar-

CentralaAIIIMI\J.~na.)

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - lla.m.
Wcdneaday Servicea ·7:30p.m.

Jllo-

P

~Schooi-IOa.m .

BEEGLE REUNION .
1993 SQUARE DANCE
When: July 31, 8:00P.M.
W~ere: Ronnie Beegle's
Bring: Snacks, Beverages,
Family &amp; Friends
FAMILY REUNION
When: Aug; 1, 1:00 P.M.
Where: Star Mill Park
Bring: Covered Dish

;

'

l

i'

~~i~t2t~?:~~:·H=t.~L~~

More
Classifieds
and Legals
onPage2

·"'
~
tl:~

601 EAST MAIN

l'OMEIOY, OHIO
992-2259

... .

'·

204 Condor St.

p~=01
Pomeroy

'SAlES &amp; SEIYIU
992·7075
172 North S.COIMI Au.
Mid..aort, Ohta
•,

GRAVELY TRACTOR -SALES

J. MarcUa Funz

SNOUFFfR
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

992-6669

s.......
Mkl.nfport,
ow. .

··

u\-}

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
271 Nortlo

-.MEIGS liRE
\ CENTER, INC. .

PQnllroy, Olt.

USED ~AILROAD TIES
1

B&amp;f ·

Truck1ng

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

IEIEMY UY IUIITHII
ON HIS16Tll
BIRTHDAY

992-2975

tmlfn

think of you In

alienee

make no outward
lhow,
· )Vhat H munt to

2

In Memory

IAWUNGS.(OAn

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

264 South 21111

'

•

.

MiddlttM!rt

r--~.~

Gravel

· 992·7878

•,,,

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

•"'

PoME~o~~~~~;!92-6:·n

: FURNITURE

a

SHELLEY MAXINE
SMI11:4
Shelley,
we . would
bring rou home today
If only we could.
We'd Ill be together
11111 ilke a family
ahould. ·
AftM;W~~rda we'd lit you
go back to your own

Homehle Saws

~
-··

· "Fu~tt"' Kutlllf Ffhl C6llk••"
· 221 W. Main St~ Pomeroy

~

ON liS 16TH
BIRTHDAY

We mi.. you, Jeremy
We Mild you our love.
We know you are happy
with the S..vlour above.
We wilt Join you one
ct.y

live and love ·

more day.

fi.hl

FUNER~l HOME
"niFII it.Y and St•r,:if'~ .4/u'a.v.- ••
Established 1913

EWING

992-2121
1 106 Mulotrry Ave.
I .
I

.

P-roy

'\27

I

Veterans

Memorial tlospiJtal
·

11 S E. Memorial Dr.

992-2104 '

Pneroy

••
,

i

3-16-93-lfn

HAPPY 18th
BIRTHDAY,

SHELLEY!
Loved and mlaaed by
•nd Pany, Mom
and Dad; SIR and

....,rl

Bud, brolh1111;
Pauline Snciwdln,
G111ndme.

1112-- SituatioDI Waaled
1,_ Ia.va~~ee
14- &amp;uineu Traiaiat:
15- Schools .t lnooructioo
16-- lladici, TV &amp; CB Repair.
17- Miacella-IU
18.-- Waated To Do

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER I SEWER
i· LINES

. .~SEMENTS &amp;
. §HOME SITES

'*'liUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSEDandBONDED

PH. 614-992·5591
12-5-tfn
I~~...,.,..,..;.;,.;;..;;;;.~

PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

· Windows
VInyl Siding
Roofing
Call ua for
Special PrieM on
Siding and Wlndowa

r:::====992-2772 .
Jeme• Keeaee, owner

~

SNODG.h SS'
UPHOLSTERY
IACINE, OHIO

WI hold on to

"precloua
m-iea" lhlrt linger

lnourh•rt•.

Happy Birthday Jed,
we love you,.
Gr.nny I PaPa

r!~~.1plng

•

j
~

31904 Lea•l•l

Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

614·992·7144

POMEROY• Pleaaenl Ridge- Looking for a rei\tal or an
IICOf'lotnk:al place to live? T~i' is fOr yu. Haa 1 1/2 ttorio.; 3
bedroom•, large utilily room and hot walor basaboaod heat.
JU ST$9,000
o

ENtERPRISES

MINERI!VILLE- The worl&lt;s all done in this 3 bedroom one
bath home with all new wiring, roof, furnace, jnsulalon
hoi water tank. Make your !'Ppoinlment today. $35,000.

ROCKI~INGI! ROAD- An older horne wilh the dowristaire
completely renovated. Has ah anormoue living 1'00111 wltl 2
bay winc:lowo and a nice otono ftrep'-. Tho boauiiiUI kil:hen
haa new cabineto with an leland, and 3 becliiiOfllt, with lllfVII
walk-In cloaeta, dining room, WfllpMDUnd pordl, and many
oulbuildlngo, !lilting on 1 1!2 acru. $55,000.
MIDDLEPORT· S Silo· Hao 8·9 roqms, 4 bedrocima, and 2
full balha. Look at tho extras· has mainllnanee free lidlng,
hoat pUmp, fenced backyard, open otalrway,'lormal dining,
room wilh bay windows, full basamont, and ~ is cloae 1D the
odooola.
$48,~
.
.

.

DOTTIE TURNER, Broltar ..................................-112-1112
BRENDA JEFFER8 .................................................2 3011
DARLINE STEWART •••••,,,_;__ ........................... 112-1111

8Afi)Y BUTcttEA•••••••• " .......:...................--.-·182-1371
JERRY BPRAOUNG ..................................... (304J 112-3411

,....

PI..I.... AHaatias
E.........

51- Houoloold Coodo
52-S........ Coodo

Eloeulcal A a.r,.....,atlo~

53-Anliq~---.
55- Buildiatl SuppU•

c..-IHaulhsc

..........

lloloilo Hoae Repair

UpMiotary

. 4/29/93 tfn

I•P:aintinc Service's
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painl Mobile Hornesl
and AlumiDUm Siding
Washing

' Fill ESTIMATES
50734 •••••, lltlt• lrl.

Lon1 lotto•, Oh. 45743

985·4181

.

.UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

$25.00

Stone

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

.SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992· :
6637

FOREVER
BRONZE

lac..r.Oie ld.
laclne

. St. If. 7 •

949~2826

c....w...;.oH.

6-17·93-1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY

. EAGLES
.· CLUB
. IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special &amp;rly Bird
'
$100 Payoff .
Thi• Ml good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0061·32

6Nt211

HAULING
htes
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·'2138

MIDDLEPORT N. Second- Hare's a chance to own your own
buaineaa. A bar that ia ·wall equipped and stocked. A 05
liquor licanae, wilh 2 apartments and 1 ol118ping room.
Buying builcing and ficonae. Phone .now. We will be happy to
give you all the facia. DRASTICALLY REDUCED $38,900.

POMEROY· Vale St. Need a lot for a mobile home or a new
houae? At 1111 tlld of u1e slnlet is a large lot jual waiting lor
you wilh all Ulilitiils available. $7 ,000.
·

111--JI-f.. !U
41- Ho- for !I112-- Tr.... for Sale
42- Moh;lo a._ for R•t
A 4 W'D'o
43-- F.... lor ROlli
llo&amp;oNJOlao ·
44f.. a...,
A ....... f.. sa1o
'-&gt;--- F..aial.ed R....,
Paroa .t A.,_,~
46-- Spaoe for Real
Rapalr
47- .......... Rent
Eqwl-~
48- F.qui,-t for R...t
4,_Fort-

RIVER VALLEY
CARPENTER SERVICE · CONTUCTORS
Adcltton.

YOUNG'S

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guan~ntud.
Low Coat
Inside, Outalde, Top
to BOttom

Reasonable

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
HYSEU RUN ROAD:- Not Jar out of town 11 a ranch-style
home wilh a large kitchen that'haalota of nico cabinets. Nice
lhady yard and a patio for cooking out 3 bedrooms, and all
on 3/4 acra. $29,900. .
·

h.

~ I I 'j

3$-. Loll"' k -

992-3838

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

Recover Your

Middleport: OH

,..,I

~S..IMM~

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
Mel TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS;
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SrTES,
LAII&gt;CLEARIHG,
DRIVEWAYS IN6TALLED
UMESTONE-TAUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

Replacement

''Helplag You To

205 North Second Ave.

I\

3:tH - for Solo
33- Fa... fo.r .Salo .

EXCAVATING

FreciEatlmatea

3-4-93- 1

WANT ADS

I

.HOWARD

J&amp;L INSULATION

'SUMMER HOURS•
Sun.-Thur 6-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Real Estate General

.

· H only we could hold
1nd ld.. your prllty
little r- for 1u1t one

214 E , Main
992·5130'Pomeroy

u•·rES
FREE ESTi""'
949
. • 2168.

(304) ns-5585

SMALL

1\

c...-.

Help Wuted'

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOStON
EXCAVADNG
(614)
667·6628

t:xt.rlor
Palndl!ll

(FREE ESnMATESJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6.215

PH. 742·2217

Potneroy, Ohio

1-30-1 1110. pd.

·ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REP~CEMENT nRES
205-75R15" Tlgor Paw XTM RWL
205-75R14w
Paw XTM AWL
215-75R15" ,._.tone OWL
235-75R15" Flrutone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING "EXHAUST SALE NOW .. PROGRE88' . , _

ngor

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEALI
1304) 773·5533
ASK FO R CHRIS

wllhldnoone

a.,..:fllplace.

992-5432

,

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Maso0, WI/

III'IWII

memortwlll
alway• lat.

Memory of

HARDWARE

DownaJ)outs

lnvellmeni "

aiEMY UY GUIImiEI

Crow's Fq,mily Restaurant

Pt:tARUCY . - .

Dl~

Dirt

· Gutters

614·742·2996 ,

Heppy Birthday
RNkll, I love you.

SWISHER .&amp;UltSE'

WMJADS 80
. . ' RfaJS
DIE

GENERAL.
·HAULING

onewlllever

But to thou ofUI
who love you dlllrly ·

..'

I. \

"nus

· 4126/tfn

love you

peat.

~~

Pomeroy

614-698·3290
or
614-698·6500

you maybe
forgotten
other• 1 part of the

'!.II...·

w•Fiii:Oodors' .
Preunphon\

949·2104

know.

'

;:~;:~:~~~:v

Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair Cenler
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M-F 9-3 Sal
Cloaed Sunday

Coal, Trash, etc.

uoy Cllurdo lillie N - e
p_, Rev. Thonw M&lt;:Ciuaa
•Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
10:30 ..... and 6 p.m.
w~ Servicea - 7 p.m.

Nationwide Ins. Co.

Mowers • Cludl Saws

ROOFINg

We Haul Gravel,

•

93 Mill Street ·

.NEW- REPA R

Bill SLACK
992-2269

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

0\\;fl S,.w .(B.;.r.1

·Ports and Service

WALKER ALLEY

•FIREWOOD

'

w.,.... .

Worship - lla.m.,6p.m.
Thunday Servi.col - 7 p.m.

-~""' REMOVAL

Auction

Howald L Wrltesel

Limestone

SHRUB
TRIM
· and

4-GiYMway
$-Happy Ad.
6- Loot and Fo1111d
7-l..eotandFolllld
8- Public Sale &amp; ·

UCINE
MOWER CliNIC

evenuld

Sunday Scl!ool· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m., 6p.m.
W....aday,Strvicea -7 p.m.

Pastor: 'Kcilb Rader

OWNER: Jeff Wickersham

675 ~7115

-:

~

s,.._
Cli- oflllo N-.-.e
Pastor: Rlov. Rick SmiJill ·

-~Putor:
Kcilb Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.; 6 p.m.
TueldayServi.coi-Tp.m.

.··992,;3470

3- A.a.noUDCelllOD\1

,_ Wuted,. Buy

667-Cool.We

GRAVEL, SAND,
liMESTONE, TOP SOIL
I. FILL DIRT

SINK or SWIM
FRIDAYNITE
AND
WET &amp; WILD .
WETT-SHIRT
GRAND FINALS
SATURDAY NITE

R-lllt F...olllolp
c•urm rllllt N...,..e
PallOr: J... w. !)oqalu
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
WO&lt;klcsday Servicea - 7 p.m.

Newman

379-Walnul

36970 Ball Run Road
. Pomeroy, Ohio

SUMMER BLAST '93'

Eden United Brtlllr•la Cllrla
2 1/2 miles IIOith d RecdoYille
on State Route 124
Putor: Rev. Rohen Markley
Sunday School - 10 .....
Wonhip -7:30p.m.
Wednelday S'ervices - 7:30p.m.

. Pulor.'G...ory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 9:30 un.
Wonhip ·'10:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdneadly Servicu • 7 p.m.

241-l..e...rt Falla
949-llaelac
742-Ratland

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

446-2845

Ml Hermon United Dr-..
In Chrill Cllurdl
Tcx11 Community cff CR' 12
Pastor: Robert Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sunday Wonhip -- 2:30p.m.;
Thunday ..mcco ·7:30p.m.

98S~er

843-Portland

245-Rio Graade
2S6.G."l'•• DioL
643-Anillla Dlol.

Authorized; Briggs I

Free Estimates

United Brethren

Neue Settle•ent Cllurda

2- IaM-ory

675-l'l. Pleu.•nt
4S8-I..eoa
S7C•-,I.pple Gro•e
773-M..oa
882-New Bavm
895-l..elart
937-Bulralo

992-Mlddlepon/
Pomeroy

I I ' \I , I • 1 I I I ,

A,.,.._,,.

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
4-46-Gallipolla

I

1:1\111•

Muon CO., WV

Wllllleaters

Young's Chain Link
Fencing

Syncu10 Flrll United Presbyterian

Uolted Fallh Church
Rl. 7 on Porneooy By-Pall
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Melp County

•LIGHT HAULING . '-----m-l1_rno_...J

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedncaday 7:30iJ.m.
Puoor: Lawtm~oe Bulb
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
EveninJ - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

GaDia COIUity

11-.1 I I
I
FnlloAV.....lao
Fot s.Jo or TNIIo

f-----~:::-":-:=====:----;__ 36- R~l Ltao. Waatod

Clauified poBe• cor~er the
· follouJinB telephone escho"'le••••

Remodeling and Repair
· Painting, Experienced
Free Estimates

Presbyterian

.

D!lY BEK&gt;RE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
l:OOp.m. Tllttday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
,I 00 p.m. Thlll!day
I :00 p.m. Friday

CUPD'l'll
WORK

CllftCOI Tabtmacle Churdl
Clifton, W.Va.
•
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thundly Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday Schocl - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

COPY· DEADLINE
Mcilday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Th~y Paper
Friday Paper
Scmday Paper

367--Cheohl....
388-VIaton

I• M~ria•
Yard Sal•
• A clauif'oed ad...ru..-t placed ill the GalllpoU.!¥1y
Triha110 (•cOp&lt; Cluoif'oed Diopl•r. Buailleu Card or Lepl
N~lio•) willaloo appoer ill lbe Poilll Pleaaet Reptor ed
the Dally S..tiael, naeloiatr .,.. 18,000 1oo-

Churdl of J..., Clarlol,
Apclllollc Fallb
1/4 mile put Fon M•i&amp;• on New Lima Rd.
Putor: William Vau Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m. ,
Wednead.ay-700 p.m.
Fnday-7:00 p.m.

Filllo Gotpol a..-do

T-CIICo.Rd. 63

·-lilt

Rejolcln1 Ufe Church
500 N. 2rul Ave., Middleport
Puwr: Lawrence Foranan
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wcdnelday SeMces - 7 p.m.

M..._ Chapel Churdo
Panor.: MilceMouon
Sunday Khool · 10 a.m.
Wonbip- 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Servioe - 7 p.m.

CoaMIIe Untt.d Mtlllodlll PariJII
Pastor: Hdm Kline
CoohllltCIIorch
Main a: Fifth St.
, Sun&lt;!ay School • 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ - 9 a.m.
Tuclday Services • 7 p.m.
BtllloiCllurdl
TOWillhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
·wQflbip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday S'crvicco • 10 a.m.
Hoddnaiort Cllllrdl .
GrandStrea
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - lla.m.
Wednllday Servi.., - 8 p.m.

Pastor: Rev: Phillip Scarberry
Wonhip -9:30a.m.
Ill &amp; 3rd SW~day - 7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneoday Services ·-7:30p.m.

dar aflel' publiudoli'&amp;o . . . . correclioa

• Ad. tb.t ••• be paid 1a adnac• are:
Card ol Thaau
Happy Acb

~ c ....munltJ Church

PuiUr. Ropr O!IIZ
s...day Scllool-'10 a.m.
Wonbip • lla.m.
Laurel CUff Fret Mttllodlll a.....
.
PutDr: Pet&lt;r T...,blay
S~mday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship ·I 0:30a.m., 7p.m . .
Wccblday Scnicea - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rcv.l'l1illip Scarberry
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7:30p.m.

FallhT.......,acl&lt; Chum
Bailey Run Road
Pua: Rev. Emmell Rawsan
Sunday ~ool- 10:00 a.m.
. ~v~a7p.m.
Thunday SeiVicc • 7 p.m.

H - Community Cllurdl
OffRL 124
Paator. Edoel Hort
.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Ru-BibleMtlhodlll
PuiUr. Rn. lvan Myon
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
·
Evonina-7p.m.
Wednelday Services -7 p:m.

Molp COOptll'lldft Parilll
NortheuiClull&lt;r
. A1fnd
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

SUverntlle Word GI'Fallll
Pastor: David Dailey
·Somday Sch0ol9:30 a.m.
Bvening • 7 p.m.

1411 Bridp:nwt SL, Syracuse
· Putor: RDy (Mike) Th........, .
Suncloy Schocl - 10 a.m.
Hvcniu1 - 6p.m.
Wednesday Servioe •7 p.m.

SuPutor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sebool - 9:30 Lm.
Worship • 10:45 a.m. (Ill .l 3nl Sun)
.·-

Sunday SchoollO a.m.
. Bvenina - 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday SeiVic:e • 7:30p.m.

s1nm•Ml-

M..-.... Siar
PuiUr. kemclh-..
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
Wonbip -10:30 Lm.
Thunday SOrvicea - 7:30p.m.

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Paalor.

-..,

.

rPut.cr. ~ Bakar
~unday Sebool- 10 a.m.

. CanMI

Lutheran

Pu1or: Sam Andmon

Wonhlp • 9 a.m.

for erron rana day ad nuu ia. paper). CaD Lefore 2:00 P·•·

Cal•lf'l' Pll11i• Cbaptl
HarriaonYille Road
Putor: Rev. Vic:~or Rnulh
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioe - ?:30 p.m.

Middleport Cciin•unliJ Chord!
57$ Pearl St., Middlopon

CLOSED SIJNDAY

• Adt eutoide the couaty your o.d f!11U ,.... b. p&lt;epald
• Recti" dilcouat for ada paid la adn.ace. :
•FreeAolo: Gi--JaadF...... adouod.-15-rdawUlbe
ru 3 daya aliM&gt; eloarp.
• Price of ad for all capitalleUen il double prW:e of ad cOil
• 1 poiatliao typo ooly aaed
• S.at.iael il DOl n~pouible for GTOn al&amp;ar f~r1t clay (cheek

Fallll Fol~ Cru- for C1or111
Pas~ Rev, Franklin Dickens
SeMce: Friday, 7 p.m.

Tloe Salvaliolo Anny
liS Buaemut A~e., Pomeroy.
Sunday School -10:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:00 Lm., 7:30p.m.

· Putor: Flo!alcc Smilb
Sunday Sebool· 10 .....

MoN. thrn FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.S-12

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd:
·Pastor: Rev. BW:kwood
. Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm.; 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semcc - 7:30p.m.

· O.urdt - 9:1S a.m.
Wonhil&gt; c 10:30 a.m.

~

Call 992-2156
POUCIES

Rale Over 15 Wonlo .
$4.00
$ 10
$6.00
$ .30
$ 9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rataare for consecutive runs, 6rolcen up days' will be
cl1arged for each day u separate ads.
Bu•ln- Card-...$17.001 Inch per momth
Bulletin BoUd,....$6.00/lnch per day
Wold.
IS
3
15
6
15
10
15
Monthly 15

To place an ad

c•••..,. Bible Chllrdl

TrlioiiJ c..,.,........,.. Churdo ·
Putor. Rev. Roland Wildmao

SundaY Scbool-'9:30 Lm.
Wonbip ; 1~:30 Lm.
' Thunday SeM&lt;:eo -7 p.m.
Sai• •C.Iw
Pua:ltoa Ficnle
Sunday Stbool • 9:1S a.m.
WooihJP, -JO:U Lm.

R,..UR•K_C._
Pastor: Robert Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship,- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Servi.co - 7:30p.m.

Pu~&lt;&gt;r:

'-H-o/Pnyw
(llllurtinaham churdt cff a-. 33)
Putor: Rollett Vance
Sunday wanbip - 10 a.m.
Wllllncoday service · 6:30p.m.

.Plltor: Adlllr

· Days
1

Falnlew Bible CliLctart, W.Va. RL I
Putor: J_, l..ewil
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
W&lt;dneaday Service - 7:30p.m,

Other Churches

..........emu..

---

RATES

Sunday Sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. ·
Wedooaday Seivicc - 7 p.m.

w........,-.

, R~SpriDp
" Pui«:Kcilb Rader
SundaY School- 9:., a.m.
V(.onbip - 10 a.m.
Wccll&gt;clcky Services • 6 p.m.

Q-

Pua:Rn.Phillip~

"'

Euabae (Grace) Koe
Sunday Schooj-9:15 a.m.
Wonblp - 111'.30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi.col - 7:30p.m.

.........

Whlta'o ChaPel Wt11ty111
Coolville Rood

'N"' Ha- a..... ollloo l"anMM
Pua: Glmdoo Stroud
· SomdaySt:hocl - 9:30a.m.
WonlliP ·- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
7p.m.

........,

-

Plat Grovtlllbla Roll...; C....
l/2 mile df RL 325
Putor. Rev. O'Doll Manloy
Sunday School - 9:30 LBL
Worship - 10:30a.m.. 7:30p.m.
W~y Service - 7:30p.m.

7:~ p.m. (3nt

-CIIapol
...-. Flonmoo !lmith
Sonday Sdlool· 9 Lm.
WO&lt;!IIip - IOa.m.
.

..

...,.'l,..=-=~=r. Sunday- - 9:30 Llil.
Wonbip - 10:40 un., 7 p.m.
WcdDoodOy Servicea • 7 p.m.

\
I

l'reodcn Goopll Mlaotoo
Bald Knob, ... Co. Rd. 31
Puoor: Rev. R.oterWillford
Sunda,Y Sclaool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednci4ay SeiYico - 7 p.m.

Solliday Sc:lloal - 9:30a.m.
W4111hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedn0sday5enicea -7 p.m.

Pua:DeronNewntlll
.. Sunday Sc:bool - 9 a.m.
Wonhip -- 10 a.m.

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

BYIIIiioa·7p.m.
•
Wedooaday SeiYice -7 p.m.

, _ , S..ucl Bllf"

-. ~

Holy l!udwilt nl Sunday Sc:boolllLm.
Coli'• -lallowliii .

..

Kiouburv Road
Pa.-. C!Ycle W. llmdcnon
Sunday Scloool - 9:30 Ll•

•e

Solliday Schooi-IOa.m.
Wonbip - 9UL
Thunday s.. ricoa - 6:30p.m.

- F r . 8ill Lylo

-

C.......a...-di~llleNe•

. Solliday Sc:lloal - 9:30a.m.
.
Wanbip - IQ-.30 a.m.
Wednolclay S..•iooa- 6p.m.

Ullerty Chrllllan Chu ....

Old Bethel Free
Bopllllt a.un:h
28601 St. Itt-7. Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Services • 7:30

Putor: Rev. Iamea R. Acree, Sr.

Go-Me
326 B.

·

cai-lolo., ..ta

r-:JI'nakSiaidi

Eprscop31

,__.,, w- Curch fiO.rill

. , .·

.

..

Ohio

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992·7878

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anll
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer ·· Fire • Health
• Accidenl• Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •igent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
mo.

PRIVATE
MAtHEMATICS
INSTRUCtiON
"Mithematlca Ia the
alphabet with which
God haa written the

Unlveree."-Gel/leo
By Topic
By ~polntment

9119-281'4

(614) 843·5264

BISS~ll

...

BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages.• Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERClAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No S.nday Cell•l

712211 mo. pd.

J&amp;THOME
Fro• Foundatio• to

RoOf

lnsidefllciOut
Free Eattrnal..,
Loi!W Cotta.
Work Cuaranteed

· , 6J4·949·2911or
614·593·50 I 0
. l-2t-1

ROBERT BISSELL
.~ONSTIUCTION

...........
•G•r•l'•

~o.,tote

•••••u••

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915·:4473
7l'l'JI'IJ

Shad_e River Saddle ShOp ·
CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406 1

�•

s

Annourbments .

Cl X 7

ClwloiiM

.... a.

Couple

......_

ACROSI

Bualnea

21

Opportunity .

MIIDh To' -.
..H .. To Your

PHILLIP

Clwliltrlll ............ w. ....
...
-.._to
01wo a
. . llluGII IJio To U.O. We
You

ALDER

Rentals

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

Po

Too .._ Yaur lllll!i A

'

.. ...... " " " ' ""'" In Our .
........ Our ........ I! Clllkla

._ a •

41 Houeea for Rent

Doolllo Ooonl, • looood, '
~~ --1-$1,100, ·~ .•
""'" Or 1144-11H.
•

1IINI4 101c:

-JLotoi' I

wll""ld.
DOl1C LADID UVI1.a Ill
.,_. 'r min. IIIC-VIBA 1 -

-1111.-_1...
I'IDIIdll lion Ul!!!lll In Control
I'IDIIdll · llliioor Weotld,
I
"1-loOiooC:OO.
ruundenoe With , Country
Weirwt - - Nood Holp: Smell
Ntrn.y; Crab,- Roloooto
~ llooEJtponoa. Loo Mlllor,

.A

Real Estate

•

+2

.Q5
.K6543Z

"I worked a ll week to get t his s o it'll ma ke
perfe ct toast. Touch it, ·you d ie I"

(IOI)ol3!4115.

OIRLSIII
UVEIII
N HAS
IOAYIII
TOAK
ONE
ON ONEI
1-21112112 Ext, 11104 13.1111/Mtn. Muot
~.:,,:rti. Proooll Company,
Oliytl To Tolk?1-21112112 Ext. 728t l:.l.tt Per Min.
llo11,Yl'l. PrOcoll Co. 802131.o111.
I'IToiY- Filion, -111MI 1440 .... 4517. $3.88 P.r
llln. Be 11 Yro. PIOCIII Co.
IOI.at411.

IIISTREBt MADONNA UVE 1·
--1111 t2 min. 1.aQ0.685.
-..c-'IISo\1...
OHIO'I CONNECTION ALTER·
NATM 1-IQO.'JII0.3337 $2:110mln ,..,..1 ~ datollnl
moo1 100.. o4 olnglellcou-ln
-IIMioday.CCI BOCAFL
THE GAY CQHNECTION 1 , 'JIIO II 17 t2.JO.&lt;nln. 11+ mool
100'a o4 uall_lng mon In your
tonight. oor p11ono t '1. CCI
BOCA R.:

Wanted: llmolo, 18-lOyro. old, ·
to Uvo lni light houookloplng,
- - -· 304-1175·7101.
- o 11o11 Ago 23 I.AalcJng For
Slngto Whh1 Fomolo Ponpol
Atei rT 112 -23, Prolor Non-

I1-:==:;:=::::====-r-==:::======~
'
Pomeroy,
11 Help Wal)tecl
MiddlepOrt

AvWiue1 Mkldlllport, Ohio.

!!loVInfl .... Mondor, Jutr :ze
~. July 27, 3 mlloo will ;I

Tupper8; Plaine en Rt. 181.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

4

9

ond !l'llhom, 114-84e-26gs,
4 1..ong Hair Klttono, Gr1y Wlth
-~

Fool, I Wookl Old0 .Jo
Good Onlyll14 441 .... 7.
Benoty clllckon1 I oomo boby
ohloko. 304-1571~1111 .
Elkllound, g.d wbh 'kkll, 114371-e34t.
Flwl niiKod collie pupploo, moll
ond fomolo, to good homo, 8141115 3431.
0 1 - : To Good Honwo, 5
llonlho Old Lob Mix, Hal Hod
All Shalo, 114-MII-32t2.
Mother col ond 3 klttono to gOod
home. 114-VI2.e88'7.
Snow WhKo Kit!-, 114-44114207.

.

6

Lost &amp; Found
Found: Fomoll Port Oormon
Shophord, Appooro To Ill AppovK. 1 l(oor Old. Forni AI Ex·
1on Stotlon, St Ri. 180 /At. 35,
Vwy F~ondly~ P - Clolld'1
Doa. Found un Wod li2VI3. II
No ~wer Leave U..NQe: 61"'"
24UI533

Rick Pooraon Auction Company,
full limo ouct-r, complotl
auction
eerv~a.
UctnMCI

tl88,0hlo &amp; WMt Vlrglnll, 304-

.

Wanted to Buy

Antique• and .-d furnltur .. no
Item too Luge « too amall, will

buy one piece or compiMe

houo1hold, coli Ool!r Morlln,
114-tt2·11141.
DKoral..:l aton.ware, oil lamp~~,
antlqu. furniture, m1ll pouch
therritom.t.,., genarat .,....

qu•.
lloorll

RI~~Wine

Antlqu._ Au•

own.,, We do ap.
proloolo, 1.14-8112-2526.,
Dan' Junlt HI Sill Uo Your NonWorldng Mljor Applloncoo,
Color
TV1,
Allfrlger1tcn,
FrMurt\ VCR'a, MICf!MIMI,

Air Conchlonoro, Gullor Ampo,
Etc. 514-2541-1238.

J &amp; 0'1 Auto Part8 and Sllvage,

1100 buying lunft coro I frucko.

304-773-5343.

Junk. carw, anr condhkHI, 61411112·7553.
Small dirt bike, 50 MriM, caH

114-1182·3172 looYo m-go.
Top Prlaoo P11d : All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, SIIYir Colno,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 s-ut Avonuo, O,lllpoll1.

Employmen1 Services

11

Found: young El-..t, SA
181, Rlldovllle;l14-371oa348.
Loot: bo-.. Sundry, lllcf.
dloport ond H"""' Eirtortolnineitt Center, POIMI'"'· •mall
groy torr1or dog, IM-t4e-2'11N5.

=

a.o.t: carpenter ~UI,., ~

uoo ond Autl!lnd, II fOund
coli 814·1112·22flt
Loot: Dog (Bo) Bllo:ll I Wloho,
Lorgo Doa Whh Rod Collor,
Fomlly Po£, Vlolnhy: Chlralolo
Lake, PI••• C.ll If Found: 114-

441·11135.
Loot: Ski lloolor.wotor alol, noor
~ on te.n~wM Rlv.. If
found plooo1 coli~-.

Yard Sale

Help Wanted
•AVON" ALL AREAS! Shiro your
limo whh uo. You'll lo.. tho
oompony. HI00.1182.e351.
.A. por Arllolo I Tronoloro ond
v-ncloo, Sooffc,;; B, Pootlog,
of tho Noaotlollool Agroomont
botwoon tho MLTA ond tho
Boord of Eduoollon, tho Molg~
Loool School Olotrlo1 1o pootlng
the toltowtng vacenciM tor Ita
rogulor ._fling otoff: Ooou,...
tlonol Work Adjuotmont o1
llolgo Hlato School, Ooou,...
tlon11 W"'ortc A~ultment It
Molr. Junior HI (now pool. tlon , Vocal MUI TMOMr at
1111111 Hlah ond Mllgo Junior
Hlgfi Sohoolo, HOld Footboll
COioh Of Moog~ High School
and Field Care Director.
AVON I AI· Al80o I Shlrtor
Spool1, :IOW'n-1429.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
2 Fomlly: Solurdoy, July 24th,

178 Church St, lklw.. l, Ohio,
i :IJ0.5:00 P.M. Loto Of Nloo

COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRIJC.
TORS WANTED: Two llv•ln In·

ltructora (WNkdaWIIWMklindJ)
nMded to tAch community and

poroonol oklllo to ono oduM with
dlvotopmontol dloobllhloo In
llolgo County. Houro: (1) 40
hrw/Wk: momfngt.-lng hOuro,

Clothll, Crofto, Slzo 3 Forrnolt. M·F:
....P"'ver
r.qulr.d:
Llkl New HouMhold llem•,
houro oil: (2) 32 hl1iwk:
Fumh,.l And Much Moro, Con- dovtlmo
Sat/Sun· .a.ep OYir~ulrw:l:
coiled II Roln.
lntO&lt;mol -t"'l. v - oklllo
4 Fomlly Yonl Solo: 5 Mll11 ond I I - nNiltd. High oohool
North On 180 Pill HMC UgrM, valid drlv.,.• lictnM,
Thondoj, Frlcfoy, Solurdoy, July · aoOd driving 1100rd, throo"yworo
22nd, 23rd, ~th. Clothing'"Bolly ariYing oxportenc:o, ond Roms, Hou11hold Qoodo; , r - .
Lotio Of Mlool 111 Put

quate automobile lnaurance
COVIf'agt
r.qulrad.
Salary:

SS.OMor. to 01111. It lntorootod
coli 1-81J0.131·2302 no lllor thin
7127/H; ook '"' Chrloly. Equol
CM1r11, S.VWIII Tablel, KMchen Opportunhy Emptoy.r.
Tobit, 2 Cloolro, Entort.Exporfonced A0&lt;1l Doilgnor lor
~. Smoll PuU Clml"!'j
Flower Shop. Bond
TOO!,, .La. Ping l'onJI Tobie, T.Y. focal
Allumo:
olo Bol C.20 200 Moln
Sot. ..7!ox11l Ply. Tlroo, . R-po II!IUnlod on I Lua St., Point Pflloont, W'J, 21550.
Budd W - Now Will Cooil Exporlonood
Phl-omlot,
Mlrrora, w;;Gd Double. Of au- Mutt Have Recent Experiet 1011 an
Size 1100, Bloyol• Cnltto, All .A.pooto Of Phl-omy.
Clolhlna All Still, 3 MlleO Out
EKporflnct II A Pluo.
Stole liGule 211 Jol Wlllllmo Gorlotrlc
Early Morning Hou'!'; Componr
. .Hollow Rd. l.g. Ylllow Building Cor;
Approx. 20 Hro IWHk M.f.
Friday I Saluidoy, I Tlll Dorll.
Tiolo II Not A Job For R-..
Friday, Juty 23nl, llturdoy 24th. Groduot• Of Boglnnoro. We
4tf Clecwgoo crooll Rood, Mite. Aro I.AalcJng For Soo1wono Who
Fum., Haiod HonMo M!lcfo Croftl, II Rolloblll And . Con Work
Supervlelon. Bond
Dl"*!, Lomp, Clolhoo, Toyo, Wtthooll
R_,. To: P.O. Bo• 33, Go~
Muoh10or1l
tloplto, Ohio-·
-Iring Aldlll, South 01 Got· Fui•Tlmo Olllao -Bolio Pooltlon,
11-. lruntoa, Top~.
ddw MIIIC. tl.,., Hll.l'da)' With llonello, Somo Trovol A•
qultool. Sind Rooumo To: CI.A
1:004:00
Ooltlpollo DollY Trlbune
t25 Third AveniHI, Oolllpollo, OH
Pomeroy,
45131.
Hourfr
Clinic Afdl Noodod PortMiddlepOrt
limo To Work In Fomlly ~
VIcinity
nina Olllaoo In~ Mtlgo, Oolllo
And Low...- Counlloo. lluot
Flwl - y - July 23, 2~ 25, Havo High Sofoool Dl.....,. ·ar
C&amp;MAuloPort-.
5 Foml~ Yonl Solo: 3 llolao, I

:r-,

- .C/o

a.

rain

or

10:00-7:00,

ehlne,

EquiYI!MCJ't Good Communk:a-

SkfHo; Acouoooy With
-nd, Ohio oil SA 124 on tlon
Flgolno; llodloot Olfloo Ex·
l~ Rd. 131, BoiiOro ...,..... Holplul· Witt Troln MaRlclgo,
no wKh wtll
bo
,hlndmodo Dulolmor, lura lndlvkfuol WhO lo Sonollln
lloul- rooklr, ook """"!. T9 Roprodiac:tlvo Nood1 01
Cilento. Looking For ..
-:.-~ wftfo
old rodlo,
• Who II Soii-Mollvotoof And Con
.......
too
odopltr,
o.- 1nPoohlon
Tho Poolttooo ,. IOtoot=••·n-ol Arf-.
Roqulr11 Rol~
boollo.
' old gtooo ... oble Tronoportotlon.
Wookdty,
IYonlna And llot.,.r Hour1o
- hlah )lcMI,
oloolr, Aro To lo Expootod. Trovol Pold
.......,,
, ·
mDflarcrcle
To 0111 01 C&lt;&gt;uniY Olllooo. Bond
IGio 2 -ho. ofolll, L.Mt.r Of lnt...t, A...._ And
......, Clot/ling, 0 ,.,. l'ooo Eonptoymont R.-no~~ To
Hull
Mitquo ........ - , Plannecf - N•llfl a ad
Of
- oM
f 'd- lt..,..,• 'too;d
.,.,.OondtSoul- Ohio, 311 Rlohllnd
. ttoew
A -, Alhlno, Ohio 45701, By
tiDn and fill= r-bll prtcee, ..... r, July 21, 1tt3.

,
.
,
.
_
,
--o.
=

I-

......

'

'

paot-

llmo to -.11 In lomlly oloMina
offlol In llolgo, Golllo onil
Low- Couri\!M. MUll hovo
high 11"1'!!1 dlplomo or oq•lvolonoy; g.d oommunlootlon
lfdllo; _......, with flgYroo;
niodlool oltlao upo- holpo
lui; wtll troln moturo lndlvldlllf
who It -lvo to ropnodlfCIIve
noodo of OlloniL LooiJinO lor
Who It oofi.-!Yolod
ond con .,_ In tho pooltlon 01
nood ort-. Poontooo roqulroo
rol.tranoportotlon.
Wlllocfoy, ovonlng ond SotiO'dly
houro or11o bo upootod. Travel
paid to ou1 o4 county ollaoL
Sond llltor of fnt11111. rooumo
1nd lwo 'imployment rwr.r.nc•

..,,_11

to

Ol!lo, 311 Rlohltnd
....... Ohio 451VI, br
Wodnoodoy, July 21, 1tt3.

+KJ2

llolgo Coornly Ieoni of· -

2170.

42 Mobile Homes
Tli$ newspaper wll not
knowingly accept

12x110, 2 bHI DDiea. ... hMt,
ond olryor hoolt..,p,

advettlsemem for real estate
which loin 'lfolatlon ot lha
·law. Our readers are hereby

remad1l1d lnttlf'loi', 2 mille out
Umo llol. In ' Rut.....,,
$250/rno, 114-1112·2101 or 8141112-2421.

Informed thai alldwellngs
~ertlsed

In 1hls newspaper
· 818 avalable on an equal
opportunity basts.

SWAIN

w-

- - - - IIM4WI51.

Wa- /Otyor $2110; I.Mn(l

1

~.!" ~o:..raa; ~ ~~

Room

Suitt ~i VICWOOO

Cloonor .,001 _lloo fir"'*"
-Rood, UOAipoliL

3l'fl.l310, 114-311'17S4.

l'ooo
-l o·n,fllmlolood.
one ohllol',_f!l!
oltonpolo, 1bovo whh
wot•,
onytlrno.

Haven, ~
-·2481

· Apartment
torRent

4431.

':l::'Ji

53

dryor,

m.

~11-

oddts

LM•.

AA=r

~=

Cuunp'rt·

llaiM

llln~

or ·1:ooorn- . ;..,;;;•;;;;;-~-;;':-"-;;lltl:;;:ra;;;.;-;:===­ Houro: 11o1 tot, N. I
o -11. Pol- IEVERAL l' ACRE PARCEU: (!322,_1 mUll ou1 BulovRII Rei.
...... County, Twp., , _ Dlllvory.
Wilt Do llobyolttlna In My . . . ..... . _ o, boautllul
Anvtlmo, QOocl Roforoncoo, ' - lind; ., ~'::oJ rluro ond hlllt.
Rofo
Coli lor
.,. •11152' ·
1145,
Atlolno,OH.mop. ~

Collie, Blue Point Himalayan kh·
•-· lllno llod. l14-441.o404.
DoiiOrrnon AKC lloglollorod
Pupploo, All Sholl, ,.,,_ On

-:;:::-:::-:::-::::::::::::-=::::;:::::Buy « Ill. A I - Anllquoo,
1124 E. Motn IIINot, on Ill 124,
Pomeroy. Holn: II.T.W. 10 '00

a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlr 1:00

1o 1:00 p.m. IM-1112·2528.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
2 Elootrlt Fryoro, Hot Food
Tobit. s-o o..rct. Solod a..
Roaloto; Uahlod lllgn, 114-1112751J, 114-IG..7121.

Cutler Pull Tyrw
Hojj,
Condlllcin,
114-211
.
. . .- . . . 1201

bulklla::

uoo- condition;

pool·

1PI Cloov. 4a4, True~ Engine, 1111 Gnaham 8
Aoad1

obit CO ployor wlht AC odopler,
hlldphOUII, two !0 'MOtl Golllpollo.
;=.koro, oubwoolor; 61+tt2·

PEANUTS

SO HERE I AM LEFT TO

AN't'ONE WHO COMES NEAR
THIS VEI-IICLE' WILL MEET
A SNARLING TORNADO !

GUARD, TI-!E CAR WH ILE
THE FAMIL't' GOES SHOPPING ..

ON THE OTHER HAND,
FOR TWO COOKIES T~EV
CAN ~AVE THE CAR ..

111T7 ChiVy 4 -

58

FRANK AND ERNEST'

.

..... -

., ,;

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables ·

74

5536.

..' ·
:·-'
,.
,.
,.

.~

18111 IQ[80, """' oood, -

lion, 17,000 mlloo, looolocl, ·
chromo ond tlghlo, motohlna •
e~rgo
tr•ller,

140; Dlnoito .With 3 Tomo Bloc-. •2.71 Cluorl,
Wo Plolc --Col . _ You
Como, 114-317o0115 (Cioulolro).
AJ1t
TroflonJ TIIH I Rlmo,
For sale
Bolh 120; llotal Tobie 59
Wlth Unobrolo $38; I14-3111L7243
or Trade
Allor I P.M.
Wilt lrodlo 1tt3 Ford Y-1 (~
enp.
A INUIU I I n tor Y-4
Couch
•
Lovo
ColbOO; ledeawee lull' Full IMI,
a·-~
304-411
Drollor, Cl!oot l!'!!i Soorolltolr
llLU, Exltdu
IIIlo $30, 114-31M212.

~='·~

",.

::

441-1'JI4l

I.

1117 lnt.,.c..., excellent condl-

- ...

BORN LOSER .

114-14..._,

... iolngo.

,. WI\Y DO YOU ~~~T
00 w.uc.JHG. ..r-;~
llEI\IHD /#£ ?

v

,..YOO'R£ TI\EWT
51\~

•
y

5POT'

00 Tfl£ I'£)QI !

William Hazlltt claimed t)lat wben
great thoughts are reduced to prar.·
lice, they become great acts. Well, this
might be oversbttillg matters In a field
of endeavor like bridge, but the Idea is
reaaonable.
On today's deal, North's two-heart
cue-bid showed a good hand with at
least thi'ee spadl!$.
When West Jed the heart six, South
assessed the situation. Why hadD't
West led the heart kiDg? l'resuf1lably
because be dldD't have both the king
and the queen. Mentally, South placed
oae of these cards in the East band.
Why hadD't West Jed a top diamond?
Clearly because he didn't have the ace
and king. South gave a diamond honor
to East.
Yet East had passed over his part·
ner's openinC bid. Tbe mist was clear·
ing, .If East had two red-suit honors,
West had to have the black queens.
South won the first trlc~th dum·
my's heart ace, played a .s~e Ia his
ace and Jed a low spade, fiDeising
dummy's nine when West followed
with the six. After cashing dummy's
spade k!IIJ!, South paused again. West
was known to have three spades and
five hearts. One diamond and four
clubs was surely imposaible. With
eight diamonds, ~ would have bid. ,.
West had to have at moet three
clubs. Tl\erefore, South played a club
to his king and Jed the club two. When
the queen appeared, South won with
dummy's ace, played J club to his
r •••crt. returned to dummy with a trump
and
a red·suit loser on durn
my's club 10.
. What an opponent doesn't do - in
the bidding or the play - may be
more revealing than what be does do.

;;&amp;'."

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock

75 Boats &amp; Motors

••

1tlt TX17, trockor, 71Jhp
Fann Equipment
Evonrudl, ~~ ::.""· w1 trollof,
oftor 4:10. •
111111 Jolon Dure Tlootor 150, 18200. 304-17
Good Condition, 114 441 !1210
76 Auto Parte &amp;
Hrolnullo oil $14.50 buollot or 50
Accessories
1111 $125. Sldoro E............
Rc&amp;w., WV. IQ.WTI..JW.

61

· 1 &lt;.JUST DID.. .
"Wf.\oli.T5 A

YOU ro-i'T KNOll

FRONG":r '

HUH~

S:ITHS:R,

11MI'II r .oo . .rrs -lUST
TOil6\l Cl!'EN ING lJP'T\\E.

Motor Homes

1tll lldord !'flglol L - ·
2111. " " " ' - -. . . . Evonruolo, zn. SomoMitt Rilly.

PAPI:R 1J.I~SE

.J04.4'7N030 or l'lfl.11431.

1 KN0\'1 ...
1 KNOVL

~'(S ...

\'lt::ll, I&gt;,PW\11E!'ITLY, SPIDER-MAN ·
COM?li;.ToLY LDST HIS

~'{ l1A~

WEB· €&gt;E~EAATING ~APAetltTtES ...

1J.IERE'S SO Mll~f\ 131\'D
N~IIIS E~~R'(I'jHERE ...

Very

Goad Condldon, U,700, IM-

NW811.

Strow, $1.1Giboll, llold.lll'N7U.

_

...

Servtces

Tr anspo rtatton

~:;!"-:::!':''"it~:."":=

!'tome

- - - - - - - 1 81

n

Autos for sale

1220w, lotoz. Hattloa ~ "',-="'c='.-a-ero-~No-..,Moi,_.,;.O&lt;-Of::::-l
...
•
Folr ft---1on
oo10r dlcela, ?r'x11'".
•rWUWIOI 1 n,
,
counter cfoop fryor, 2 boo
$1100, 114-256-1314.
- · ~z;::z oftor · lmpo'=.u:
~ ~dl
7llloo
30pjoo
·:
·
flltoornloolot~c
bo
·or
!troll•, bolry bod, wklr, high :,:~~· 514-lll2or

Hat=

atNm bun warmw, 88, . . ,..,

--

lm,rovaments
--'jl;aA:;IEo;M;;;ENT:;;;---w:··~

~~~~APAOOFINQ

Uncondlllonol Hltllnw FIOrtrr
1•.
Loool - n o • tumlolood. •
Call 1.eQ0.21l'o0571 Of 114-231' •
04::.:::J"o Wot-'liog. &amp;- }
to
1m.
•
&lt;
-·~~,cor-~~
COHIIOHonwo
- - - • · ""'" """"
1m Cloovoll1 Coli For Oot1lto: Job Too Bla
ozT; IT, 4 · :IOW711-4848.
114-2fll.1411 Aft• I P.M.
lloo OidoW •;_;
T11r00 Clotr Orllt $50 lumpor -::
m="'Do:-:d
;p
-::Poloro=-,
tltt
-:::7
1
na
..,o
--=
n
1
~.
Addftlono,
ForMotlono ·
1
4
Oounf For Plok.IJp tiiO, 514-2411- dri.. - · now 31 louto. Rooting, Kllc;hlno llotho. · in!
M41.
mo1oo: 3fiW7I.ala.
-.t, l ' - Eotlmo- 1 - l ' ·

ASTRO-GRAPB

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

c:"r.:.;.'"r•o. f:

VCR ~--

A---

•~-U~
Onlv.For Copytoogl100, . . _
217t
Whl1 Flboiatowo Truo:ll "'~
,... 7 1'1. lod .,.,_,
WlndQon. Rollld Root,
114-4411-1117.

..,. .
11018ulck Pori&lt; Ave,-·-· Doovlo 80!'fng Mo 1•• And
~ -llpm 04' Yoouirm Cloo,.. ..._ ,,..
11, , _ - - .
-.up And Dlll¥wi oic 111
CNo1o Rood, IM ~14.
1114 ~Onont, 1100,
111 1-.Mio
Ron'o TY ISoMoo, l!fiOO(ollzlna
Eoc
In ofoo -wtna mooil
ort, u-d - · 11100. olhor bnndo. Hotwo ..... Win do 111
Nrv•
- · llolry
-304-~:111
IFDII.tnoo
lwlno.
Ooodlloool
eor. - ·
0111o
--~wv
....
!IIi. k . .... Beg, 114- 1114 Dl4fa lloyolo, PI, PI, AC,
-~
44111211
.
~ ~,.~ro:;-rv:.~~,
55
lid I
•
Jookoon, OH 1-.al7..1121.
BU
ng
liih:;jj;;;-::;;:-:::~'i.:::;;::- ,., ·
-Ford
LTD CraM! Ylo. ....
Will build ......,. oo...,
Supplle I
...
lon
:o_-_- ~~ _....., Olll , - - roomo; 'put up ¥fn~o· ,,,,..

::o::..::r::

- . ........ _

.... -

-toro, ...- !IntQrando,
........ OH
Cloiodo'
""'"
CoS 1143tiiGL

56

Pltl tor Sale

=• -..,

$24110, .,..

=~r

=
..
M-- . . . . . "'. . ,
~~ .

••

instanti; 7a-;eals which sign s are romanli·
cally pertect for you. Mail $2 and a long·,
se lf ·add re s sed , stamped e nvelope to
Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O. ~ox
4465, New York. N.Y. 10163
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22) Be e•tremely
ca1eful end prudent in the management of

AQUAR.IUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 19jllo . not
anempt to squirm out of your responsiblli·
ties today and pass them on to others. It
could end up creating additional complica·
lions , plus a lot ot e•tra work.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) Your intuitive
perceptions upon which you can usually

your resources tod ay. Be sure to keep rely might be temporarily out of order today.
proper records using traditional procedures, Use your logic and common sense to pr~·
because mistakes could be costly.
vide you with feedback.

:.:="''..::.=.:..:=:....---1-.

-=

HNLYZX
NY

~'Your

LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 22) Shoving your

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Under most

weight around in order to get others to do

conditions you strive to be an agreeable

your bidding today is methodology lhat ind ividual, but this splendid quality m1ghl
could backfire. Forego using intimidation, not be operative todey and you could easily
lry saying "please" instead.
. rub others the wrong way.
SCORPIO(~. 24-Nov. 22) Don't be per· TAURUS (April 20.May 20) If you're in a
ceived as a laun finder today who looks for negative fra me of mind today, you'll not
Saturday, July 24, 1993
the negative instead ol the positive side of only resent doing things for others, but yqu
things. II you start searching for tr.quble, ;, could also resent having to dO things for
In the year ahead you should experience you'll find rt.
•
! 'yourself as Well.
many improvements whe•e your achieve· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,Dec. 21) A friend QEMINI (May 21.June 20) Counting on
ments a•e concerned. You've taken some of long llandlnil miV~tt make 80IIl8 unrea· l flna~clal factors that are not evident or
hara koocks and you'll now knOW how 10 • IIIII lllllllia ., ,_. . . ,. .H )'Oil fell whlt:h aren't p-Hy In the palm or your
avOi&lt;l old mistakes.
.
t1tf¥ •...,, jull(lletl, "'"k up, bill·Clo ao.ln hand ia like belllll9 In I)W ~rl&lt; !Odi!Y· wtth
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) c;o·workers could a way that wonl teopardlzethe relationship. the odds stacked against you.
•equire krd glove treatmen\ today. Be m1nd- CAPRICORN (O.C. 22.Jan. 19) You might CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Be on your
lui of your comments or remarks ~nd don.l be caught 1n a situation today wher'e your ~~ behavior today In your important one·
participate in anything thai smacks of pen•- · pnde Is wounded However, tnstead of mek· to· on&amp; dea lings, e specially II you' re
ness. Know where to look for romance 8f!d 1 ing a big issue of it, bind your wound and' involved with an individual who previously !
you'll find it. The Asllo·Graph Matchmaker shake 1t oil.
caused you headaches.

W'Birthday

I.

•

S N P

ONHZX

H S

ONDRJJS

0 N H H z ·T 0 Y R

D L

y I

X Z Z

J

NPD

X

I

(BYTZODNT)

TYBJZS
XOND ·D .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don't really feel I've done television . I don't

know what televi sion is. I only know wh at Cheers is." -

Ted Danson.

1f

I ' ./

L
TIIAT DAllY
PIULII

I -:BYCLAI1

"Ir-.,--1s -,;-1y ~~ u I
K

3 -..,-.,----~ :;:

I

R A W A 0 ""'~.

j '1

.

•

I' 1
.

.

IG Com~l~te

AL UB B E
t"·-'tli'.T~-,~-,~~6-,lr---1

I
.

•

•

•

•

•

Boss to
clerk.
"You've got to
big if you
want to be, a success." The
son·in·law clerk replies, "Oh
yea, so how about doubling
my •••••• ? "

.

'----L:--'---'-..L..--''-..1

.the ckud le quoted

bv ftlltng tn the miss1ng words
you develop lrorn srep No. 3 below.

~ PRINI NUMBERED LETTERS IN

~

On this day in

Fa rouk and changed Egypt from a
monarchy to a republic.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Raymond
Chandler OB88·1959l , mystery novelist:
Michael Wilding (1912 · 1979) , actor;
Gloria DeHaven (1925-1; actress, is 68;
Don Drysdale &lt;1 936·19931, baseb~ ll star;
Anth ony Kenn edy &lt;1936·1, Supreme
Court justice. is 57; Bert Convy (193919911, actor-TV game·show host.

I FRIDAY

campers&amp;

Compor,

~~~

ov'"'' " HISTORY:

·~

31 Fl. -

KERDZLZT

THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET AN SWE R

1952 , army offi cers overthrew King

....... lol
lorrnorl"oo.
A vond
- ...
- t t y ot Rllo Aid Ploorrnooy.
Tho oolo woy to-·
Hoopllll Sod Cronk-Typo, 114-

· 111- Fora..on 181 T - .
14,550; 131 MF With Loodor,
$7,550; 180 Allll Choln*O With 79
Venneer Round Ballr, $7.110:
11+21111122.

23, 1993

of o~.~~mmer.

-_........· Amino
Nutrttlon Acid
. Proclucto
-,

•••n.

Each letter in the cipl'ter stands l or another . Tods)l 'r clue: K IOIJ• fs W.

··= . . . I
TE B

Todny is the 204th day
1993 and the 33rd

•

CELEBRITY CIPHERpeope, put and priiHflt.

CeleDri1y CiPriBf cryptograms ~re C11!1all!ld from quotations by famous

. ®.-. . . . .....,.

July
for sale

Flbofaiooo Truck T -, Uko
- . lllldlng G11oo Fh Rongw,
XLT, 7Ft. Bid, 114-371--.
Flllll oil otovo • 111111. 304-773'11531.

CA'L SA6AN/

'·

Sor

Cltofrw~ OWIWIIIOO Wal

~Ali !JOf'4'T CONTACT THi'M/ THtY'1-L
MAfei' ll.f TA~~ "m

.....

Motorcycles

,.__,_

Olhorr:r.-111, --·-.
St-

-·ulll

f

.~.
r Hft ""·""'
...... &amp; ,~:: .
tlroo. 3f14.!1l!o6:1110
or l'lfl.ll85.
•.

- · 1430, 114-Ml-6481.
11111 Y1moho 4 -lor Pvlood .'
To Boll, Coli Allor 1:00 P.M. 114-

St-. -

therefore I play

;n ::&amp;:s.

GGdln ~
Connlno Tornat- For Solo.
1355, - ... ; ....... ' • 1:.1.00 lluollll, Plak OWnl
llonden«l. 304-l'nE- Irina Corololners. Don II. H11
Fomo, L.otort Fallo, Ohio, Coli
114·2117·2532 For 0111011ono.

:::Wall

~'1) · I think,
By Plillllp .Alder

:t.l

'83 y...,.hl M1xlri111'ehaft drive,
Tornat- • ......., 110 CC, $100; IM.ao:l-84110.
~k.d.,._ Irina Orwo-~ Hondo 4 whoolor. 300.
.................. Bouatomon Good condMion. $2,800. 3041100 ·
- ....."""
plolnod
- 304- Fonn, 7 112 MUll Stoto Ailulo 7 l'lfi.Z417.
dwiy,
Wllnut.
South Of Ootlpolo, 114-Zfll.
112-!1111.

Kina

ld

.,.,. .

SITTIN'

..

••
utility bod, :1110 wl PS, PB,
AC,- c-o. If Jiow 11Pr-....., ~1450.
ua. aand., 11000 .,., 304 182· _.3801.
Ffoh Tonk, 2413 Jocttoon Av1.
Paint P-nt. 30M'II-2003, ctoovy 11100 pickup, 112 ton, ._,
lull llno Troplaol lllh blrdo, looolocl, 11,000 mlloo. 3f14,.a82.
- - l o o n d 10ljllilll.
3121.
K.K... -nd, 7 fll. ...... 1• Fl. 111t2 Cloov- ......... TM-"
Rolloufalod Python
:1110 Y-1, Jopd, 'j;'mt'.;;:"
.......,_ -ltyon Kill- Cornoro Z2l, rod, T-lop, outo.,
CoCbr ~ Slounk,
3f14.fl1.2140.
=14-IIN1117......... Muc I Fl. Plok-IJD Bed For Cloov·
rafotlo 1m To 11111 E x - - " ' - · 7 - k l COndltlonil Aloe&gt;, Cloo-1
Old, ~ Fully Jlogltlorod,
3 Wrookor, 14-21f.1011.
Fomoloo, 114 241 11015.
I :Cf1:::~
.,-..,-.
u
11:-:
11:-,::-Ford-:-,-:Do:-d:-g-o~plo77=
110
ST
Musical
or long.
·
7
Instruments
Beoh Sll'lllntl.. 811Yor T"""" 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
pot,

4 Fl.

Opening lead: • 6

YORE BABY
AIN'T LET ME SIT
ONE DADBURN
SECONT!!

BABY-

-·

11111 5-10, Runo OOod, High
MINgl, $2,000. 114-2111341.
11111 ton ~ truck wlllohl

=_,low-·

AU pus

..

Antiques

•:

Qo-

POOd.... o.at.hund, · . . .on
Torrlor, Mlnoton Oroyhound,

-~·tnt:•d
OBO.
.
2221.oond., ..., 1112 1-10 Soort with '83 V-1 111glne, .duti exhaUit, crager
- . U200, IM-..37.

D;'i..;...

~

oo-.

7:ooom4:oopm

Mlnltlurw Plnochlr AKC, 3
' ·mol'!!r:. i!fk a 11n, . - ooch,
~ -!olng. 112 mi.
Jerrlaho Rd. Pt. PI• ram w
304.."""Cllll 304471-1410..
I
t
AKC
Old ~h 8 ' - Dog
Now/Uoocl

•

IU-

::r:na.• .,.

PICKENS FURIITURE

AUCTION a I'IIRHITURE. 12
Olivo St., -polio.- • Uood
tumll-. - - ·
a

2Badroorna.
Stcioy Loa
f Blitha,
9- ·
rnem4

THANKY FER
BABY· SITTIN'
WIF TATER,
ELVINEY

ctoovy 414 8-ldo. 350
outo., drMi troln porloot, $2200.
304.an.aaoe.
1111 Doolgo Rom, alont e, 3opc1

for Rent

Pus

BARNEY

Joopg-\
CJ5, l:.ltt5.
·•1119
runo
~-n.

1br lporimont, Point - n t .
fumlohod, elton, no polo. 3043.41 .c;,..., 44124, 3bdnn., 2 112
1
botho, tuu b o - . wlh otldo 175- 311.
Ina ..... -do lntronoo, por- - · oplo., tarot - . optlolly fumlohod, ...... poi'o/1,
flof'l.
I
llrat rwofwood dock OV0&lt;1ooklng r!.""T:.ttftl::''::'i to
L - Boolll Worloor: Port· rovlno.. lraoi horoo 110'1132' build' In lawn. Applatlone IVIIIable
·o.- AAIL Mt or
Tlmo 120 Hro. Per Wool!. LA&gt;ng Ina wnh cornont lloor, 10'x12' of: Tonn eo,., Exporfonoo Pr.W· IIIIR~ building, looolod lloOl'llh oolll14.ft2.3711. EOH.
,.d, Ploooo CIU Admlnlolrotor, Ad., UOI ott SR33, II mllto North
Soonloi Hlllo Nurolng Contor, of ornoroy, HOfOI Notlo~ol Fumw.d 1 I d uam Apt~rt·
Benk, Roolne, Ohio 45771. ~1 .Shlro loth, UtUhloo Polcl
114-4411-71&amp;0, Thonlt You.
-1-e-2210.
. - - 101 Fourth, Oolllpollo,
114 441111dAftor7P.M.
4 room • both,. 1111 ~~~-. 71
lu-1 Addnlon. Colt tor oppol"""""' 11044"n-1411.
5 bOcl-n. brlolc h-. 1 112
bolhfl.:ollc:frlc hoot ond olr, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
loml room whh ,..,_, nloo BUDGET PRICES AT ~ACKSON
ESTA'IES, 531 Joo:lloon Plloo
tovll .IM-4411-131t
frvm saw-. Walk ID lhop I
NAME YOUR OWN INCOME liD
Soling. Work Homo. PVolft1 Oollpollo Ftlny, oomor lot, oil tnoVIM. calll14 Ul IIA. EOH.
Do
. lly.llrow Ita Fat. Loom Tho brio~. 3br, kltohon wl ook Fum-~,1b&lt;nut
aablnllla. •nsment • CIUPOft.
Sooiwtl - · S5 (212) 28U100 - I l l 'Rootty. ~75-3030 lo Ubmy, portdn(l, - r o l - .
Ext. 2117.
al_r, ........,,.. IU. Ul 0"',
Dl' 1714431.
I
Sotoro 7p.m.
Notlonol Pubtllhlna Firm N •• ltnd lor . . . 3.75
l'ooplo To Lobol Pootoordo ocroo 2ml out Chonclorw Rldgo Fumlolood olflc:lorocy. $185/ooOo.,
From
·
1800
IWIL
Sot
Your
Fourth A.... Oolllpatlt.
OWn Houro Coli 1-tofi·'IJIO.T377, ~!', olonwood; wv, 120,000 firm . t20
lhllh• j)ald, 11• 448 1111 After
(1.41 Min 111 Yra+) Or Wrlo: ouo-1571~321 oftor 4pm.
7pm.
PAASE -33R, 181 S. Unoolnwoy,
N. Auroro IL 10542.
Fumlllood Efflolono:Y $155
Utllhloo Plld, Shira loth, 807
Now Toldng Appllcotlono AI:
Second. O.lllpolia. IU Ul 4111
Domlnoo fllzzl! 1_,0olllpollt, •
For Solo: 2 Sod-, Ahor7P.II.
PofniPI-nt,wv.
FamilY Room, Full I l l Fumlllood
Efflclono:Y 1111
Solll- now ]lwolry otora In Mldo With Fltoplooo, 114o448.atlfll.
UtiiHioo Pofd lhora 8oth, 807
dllporl, full limo, oflrl lrns.-ocr. Ooll1polto, 111 118 1411
modlollly. Appllcotlono tlkon 32 Mobile Homes
Allor 7P.II.
behUIIR
10~"l0011 1
for Sale
Th"""or, Frldoy ond Soturdoy.
Orocl- living. 1 ond 2 bocf.
Acqulo"lono Flioo Jowtlry, 11
room aiii'IIMID It~­
$155.84
por
month,
now
14'
wldo
Mill Slrwt, Mkldlap1nt, Ohio.
ond
RIMVIIII!'rwiCioolilo
mobile home, lncl~ delivery, llonor
Apartrnonto
In llldd..__ From
cornplol1
ool-up,
oklrtlng,
ot1po
.Someone To Uve In Fr. 801rd;
For 8111: 5,000 BTU AC;; 80 Oklo and I monthl kit rent, 1-800- 1202. CIII114-112-51H. EOH.
834 112S.
.
CUtluo, 114 441 ~~.
lllddloport.l.. Ohio, St.. 1
Tolomorkllor /lleooptlonlol ond 10150 Trolltr, Awning. Undor· eoom msc:le:nor futallahed
Oulolcfo Solllomon Pooltlon. pinning, And Porch, 114o4411-1117. ~3M':~·,.,, .
Sond R1ourno To: CI.A 211, olo
Oolllooll1 Dolly Tribune, 125
Ha"", 1br, fumlohld
Third Av.,u.-, Clalllpolla, OH ~~.~lr,"R:.!..,"::,.\~ ;crtrnont, clop. • rot. - - CondiUonJng,l14 ... 8107.
45131. •
8.
.
.
Tho Molg1 I.Dcll School Dltlrlcl 1m 12d5 2 - - Trollor, 1 - l y r - l o d 2 Ml curr•tly ..-lng 1p. Blth, Window Air CondiUoner, opt, Eootom Avo, lar;utpolll. Rot
pllootlono 11om cortiiiOd op- $8,800, 080, 111 1•• 1521.
&amp; 1-Y dip I muot. 11044'n~=nfl lor Hood Footboll 1t77, 11x31 lrollor, $2000 OBO. 1451.
h ot llolgo High School.
At&gt;PIIconto muot hold 1 volld 1104475-all.
Nlao 2 bodroorn ollorlmonl tor
Ohio t..ching o.rllflutlancllor 1112 Fllrmonl Townhou.14x70 r.nl In Ponwoy, 8M-082 11GB,
cooohlng poOitlono niuot moo1 All [loolrlc, Control Air, z Bocf. oftorlpm " ' oortlflcotlon rwqul'"""'nto of room, loth Hoi Oo- Tub, 0no bedroom ..=llrnonto
Ohio lor oport1' modlclno ond Oood Condftlon, 114-3111-81113.
-~~~- lncluoloo hloo, ..iii!
CPR. ,.,..,. l n t - ohould
••
contoot. Bill Buckley, Suoorln- 1114 Folnnonl, 14x70 with 11x11 -~ dopool, no polo; 114tondlnt of M1lgo Loco! Sofooolo, 1ddhlon. 3. Bodroc&gt;mol 1 both, ._llt2
_ _e_
.------P.O. Bo• :m; 320 Eut lloln 121114 oo"lrorldlng. Tota olootrlo,
Furnished
Stroot, - o r. Ohio.
noralwotor. On 112 001'1. •zo.ooo. 45
WANTED: FuiHimo 1mptoymont &amp;14-2111-1147.
I
Rooms
In your homo oo • Homo Sor· 1111 HollY ""rk, 14•72~::L..z
vlooo Worklr wtth Buc:looro bolh, uld"' $14,000.
,.. Roomolor rwnl ·-"'month.
S12rtl~ ot $120/noo. OIIHo Hatll.
Communhy
Sol olooo.
W1
6
_
21;;;;olo_ho
;::r4pfto::;;;::
'
::=.:=--:=;:
11 • 1810
provldo ooltry ptuo blnotho ond
.,
.
0
11111 Sunolllno14x80 mobile
1 dilly room ond boord 1111.
You provkfo 0 homo, guloloMo homo, lOIII OIOC, 3 - - · 2 Stooping loomo with CO!Ifdntl.
ond - l p In 1 foimlty ot• lull bolho,follndoy ,_, otcw1i Alootrollor-AIIhoolt-upo.
moo........ Roqulroo oblllly to ~d-. tti,IOO. locoloa Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304-'773INCh poroonol living ololllo 1nd · ...,.o frollor porlll't. Pn, :IOW'Ifl. 5181, -WV.
1 oommHmont to tho g-h · 3711ollor 1:30 PM.
·
ond - - d of In- 1114 Aoclmorf 141111, 3brlnn., ln- ~ Wanted to Rent
dlvlduolo with .-11 lllorofo. -lng otopo, bfooko,
to rwnl· 2 or I bodroam ·
tion. Home mUll b1 In M . Syr. w....mY, f.uawnww 1ft. Wonting
houlo,m-nmotg.dCouniY. Conloot ctonoty "' . 1·
ono1 1 ,... of lot
IIOO.a:h·2302 or P.O. Bol ,.nt, oH lor only ttnr-, ooU 1·' ~H"'.:'.:.":!"r•
104, Jttckllon, Oh 41140, reo later IOQ..U7-3231.
'P on.MICNnit.
thon llnll3. •Equol Opportunity =::::;;:::-;::::;;;== = = ;:;:- a.n r
Emptoyor.
21roltoro buMIInto double wldo,
1 bod,_, 1112 bolho, monr
Merchandise
snuatlon
.......
Drlood on lnopoollori,
12
304-112 brr.
'
wanted
Eno Aroo: Skytlno 14170, 51
Household
Wont to do: clmooll l btoolt 24130 ao-. 1 112 Acre,
f2I.OOO: 1112 8oh•n 14•70
work. 30W711-1156'3 .
Goods
\000~ 1170 Robot WR~ 121&lt;24
I":::-~:-":-7.:""':::-'-­ $1Addhlon
On
112
Aero
$11,000
18 Wanted tO Do
1 2yr. old, Frlgldorw Jotolgaotor,
RMfod Ttv.w Hua oil whho, _, g.d cariol. 304I-;:;-;;--:;:;;:::-:;--:;:;;:~-;::::~ CY"'"!!IJ
t27Uio
.•
,.
118
1373.
E6 A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
l"fS.5153.
Trimming, Tr11 llomoval, H11fgo l!obllo homo, 10150, $2800, 114o
Trimming. F..O Eotlmofltl 114- tt2o6732 1ftorlpm.
311'711TARor 4p.m.
I;:::=~:;:;:::::::-==
Gonorol Molntenonce, Polnt!ng 1 33 Fanne tor Sale
Yord Worlo Wllidowo w Oulloro Cloonod • '"'hi HauH~, Mini farm 23
10 2
Com--~--· Aoolcloi-. 1o1
·~
FURNIII MIIQI:
otory - . 111m, 1 milo OUTSIDE
"-'iii
nt
•
Stovo:
out .1orJ1co Act, ovorl- Point Wrougltl ~non· Tobit W/4 Chon;
114-4411-1 ·
•
Pl. . .m,.-,ooo.~. Fon 1oc1t ~ Choir 111·
Arah "'""''o $121.00
•
~Port- Sowmlll don'
....
houl loao lo tho mill luot 34
Bual11111
a.II3Q4.171.1tal ~
B
·Twin llotl SIISII, F..
Buildings
HI
loi:t.. a._-n 1141 . . ; 4
JohMOn't T,_ llrvloe, trimming • remov11, tf811, otorubo, Conomoralol Building For Solo Dtawor ....._ M4.11; Cor llod'o,
hlcklle, rr.. ...lmltM, 30• !II
Or
Ul 8tcaiid Ann~ lunk Sod'o, - · - . F,.
3311'• 1..eoo.-4~~.
Phone: 114 441 zsn 10 A.ll. To Uno 01 Soulhwoolom Slortlng AIa 120.00;
lnolwwlllony
IIIIo Poult'• Dov Ooro Contor 1 1 P.M.
· '
Shopoo'i
lholllna Ai
ti.IID.
2
L.ooellono
·
-'1ulo
BIOOit Will 01 HIIC On
35
Lot
•
Pfloo ll.fl I A.M. -1::10 P.ll. II
a -n~~~ge
Auatlon Or • 0111 •
QuoiRy And Exportonco 1o Tho
~
' Opon t A.M. To I P.M.IIon -Bet.
11 Corloom For y.,.. Clolld'o 1 ocro ·
Aohtort. ctrdo 0000 UBID APPUANCEI
Coro. Coli Uo For A 'llln. lnlanl a-, Jr
·
oolo
/Toddle,. 114 ... 1227. , . . . ..... • - I Ifill lor home con- ra ·...- 71
lllohool Ago 1 - otructloln on Rorbum Ad, !!.no..!~~-~. ·-~,.
1234.
.
-rlallilno, county
-~ ~ 1n rour homo, wotor, lnlortnottooo moHod on,.. ~LAYNE'I FURIITURE
... ••perlelsald, wtA work freni ...... .........a, liiM• no

Jo-

4 VIking
5 Yorkohlre
river
6 Faotonod
(tho..)
.
7 South Amer~
c1n 1nlm11

Pua

12 Trucka tor sa1e

ma1&lt;e any • Uc:ll pnoterence,
limitation or dlsatmlnallon."

Dlllbllftloo
School oae lnotNOior to fiOCit
ol Clrlllon School. MUll hovo
aurnnt votld Ohio Dtportmont
of Eduallon T-hing Clrllflo
01to, ond hovo or bo tllglble to
obtoln Ohio OOpoJimint of
Eduootlon llut....,ndlooPPICI
CortHiaotlon. Bond rooumo · by
July 27 to: Corlotooo School,
1310 .Corloton StrMI, PO Box
307, Syroc-, Ohio 45711. AHn
. :
K.r O.vla, Dlr.ctor ot Educe.

. bilking ~o rae
(2 Wdl.)
2 floooonne Arnold
3 Ac:r... B1nciofl

Eut

otlgln, "' any lnonllon to

Aetardi!Uon and Dew I gpmental

1 TY'I

Vulnerable: Neither
D!!aler: West

basad on.race, color, relglon,
au: farNial status or national

.

DOWN

28 Acireu
Farrow
30FemiiiGII
32 Grlln
33 River In
Qerm.,y
34 Knotaln

•u

All 1101 estalo odvorllNlQ In
this new1paper Is subfed lo
tho Focloral Fllr Housing Ac:l
ol 1968 wfllch makes Hllogal
to adYeitlee "any pre1arance,
lmltallon or dlscrftllnallon

37
. .. 39 PreiHd .
41 ::.tile
44 Crrlbt~
conbtlnlng
llonl
4f Degraded
50 Replied
52 Woman
53 WhMI track
54 Chrlatnuoe 55 CoameUc
company
58 lllo - tung
57 Prophet
58 Unclt

Roger -

SOUTH
··I.J8 75
.J82

PlanMd · Par8ntt111aJI of· 31 Homes for Sale

JOB'OPENING NOTICE

773-5785.

3 'MIUirium uttl•h, mult corfie

·

- . _ uto- 31210 SA 32S,
~~~~ Ohio, Friday •
Soturdoy, ;)..1y 23 I 24.

r=-

2 Pupplol, To Glvoowor. 614.3111'71115, 114-311'0293.

Hourly Cllnla Aldo -

&amp; VIcinity
All Yord Soloo Mllti Bo Pold In
Adva,_, llooollno: 1:00pm tho
doy bolol1 tho od II~
· n, .
Sundoy odltlon- 1:OOpm Fr y,
IIOndoy . odhlon 10:001. •
So-y.
Frldri ond Soturdoy, Lona
Streoi In Rutllnd, turn right oil
grodlo oohool, oltolronlo 11or·
clio ...... Honwolnt•""'· clol~
ond mloo. Roln oonoolo.
July 23 ond 24, 15t North Fifth

- a - . , . F r o o Sond
To: P.O. Box U, Go~
H
,OH45e31.
Giveaway ·

1 Col ag• tleg.
4 - llld vofil
8 Food lddlilve
(lbbr.J
11 - ltld riVe
113 Kind Of teat
14 ,_(Sp.J '
15 S.aH(IIe
16 Withdrew
· obttemenl
18 Feara •
20 Overact
21 Type of
CheeH ·
231ft-··
relkllnce
(2 wda.J
25 TV new1rr11n

+8764

~'::'~1 ml!:;:

::.:.,•.::

It
.Q 7
+A 10 IS

EAST

nonoto, FL 14442, - -·
OlrllliVe.
- uoo
Olrlo.. ~
.,.. ....Min

3$=

AnawwtoPtMIIllePulle

COltOn ftber

1•

NORTH
+K IOH

1014 l. AIIOWIJ If 81. ......

7

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

rU1JilCidl

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Archer - Fancy - Taupe · Offend - ANOTHER
.

"Life is like golf," the man tried to explain lo his teen·
age son. "You no sooner get out of one hole when you ·
start heading for. ANOTHER. "
'

..,: . -;i '

JULY 23l

�.,

P~~ge

1~1M Dally Sentinel
'

75 cmts

StiiHLI _\

Pomeroy-Middlepc:irt, Ohio

.

....... t

•

Forked
Run Park
recreation
-haven

·'

Major ·League baseball results- C-1
Vinton first to have electric
clippers • James Sands • Page B-4

'
• . -BU.Y· NOW AT
SPECIAL LOW
'II'JTRODUCTORY
PRICES! - - . -- -·

----

90 DAYS-

'

,I~·

"

-SAME AS CASH

FAIR PLAIN EXIT 132,·RIPLEY

'

Rt. 21 South, . Fairplain,
WV.
.
.

WITH APPROVED
•
CREDIT

~··-

..

Vol. 2i, No. 23
Copyrlghlld 11113

Entertainment ..................8-6

Deaths ............................ ...A·7
Editoral.- ..................,. .•.•.A6
Sports ..... - ...................... Cl-8

Hot, ~umld . HIRII around '10.
Chance II rain, 60 percenL

Weather ............................A-2

•
tm.es-

•

t

•

'

Along the river ............ Bl-7
Business/Farm ......• _,, ...Dl-8
-Classified. •••.-...........~....... 03-7

Some Syracuse kids swimming
in Ohio River· Hoeflich· Page B-5

Page B-1

C:A

· Inside

14 Sec:Uon 122 PIQM

Mlddleport-Pomeroy.-GaiUpc:ill._:polnt Pleasant, July 25, 1993

A llulllmldlo Inc. .-opoper

AEP,
agency
still
pondering
drainage
plan
Legislators push
.

:I'OT SWi~'t1 SO[UtiOn
J' .
t/

By The T.s Starr
POMEROY_ Discussions are
continuing between ihe Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and
American Electric Power on an
environmentally-safe way of
removing excess water from Meigs
Mine 31 and preventing a possible
operational shutdown !here.
. EPA spokesman Rob Berger
Said Friday he doesn't expect any
decision to be made before Monda
· y.Officials of the OEPA and

AEP, which operates Southern
Ohio Coal Co., met in Columbus 1
for several hours Friday. ,
The mine was flooded on July
II when the' seal on an adjacent old
mine wmb failed. Since !hen 230
underground miners have been off
the job.
·
Jim Tompkins, Southern Ohio
Coal vice president and general
manager, said Friday that a pian
has been developed to remove the
water from Mine 31 once the envirom:nental issues are settled.
The plan, according to Berger,
calls for. pumping about 50 million
gallons of water a day over a peri·
od of_several weeks into three

streams- Leading Creek, Raecoon and Campaign. A cQDCem of
lhe EPA is the iron and other minera! content of !hat mine water, and
lhe shon- and long-term environ•
mental impact it could have on
!hose streams.
The discussions, Berger said,
include the possibility of treating
the water before it goes into the
streams.
Meanwhile, area legislators
have swung into action, seeking a
quick resolution to the ~blem, but
are similarly coping w1th what one
called "the army 'hul')'y up and
wait'."
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D-Cir-

cleville, and.Rep. Mark A. Malone,
D-Soulh Porn~ requested by letter
Fr!daY the assis~nce. of President
Clmton, Gov. Vomovtch, U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland and Sens . John ·
Glenn and Howard Metzenbaum in
expediting the situation.
"The Interior Department's
insistence of legal action on the
mine issue has led to the problems
we face, and the subsequent action
Rep. Malone and I have taken,"
Long said. "This is yet another setback Ibis area cannot afford. It is a
very sad day for !hose of us who
live and work will) those who are
in th!l mining industry. I hope we
can find a speedy solution to this

problem. We haven 't Slopped trying."

"I cannot tell you how frustrating this situation lias been," Malone added. "We have hundreds of
mining jobs at stake on this one
issue. I hope we can find a solution
to this very disappointing situation .
"Jan and I have been working
on a resolution to .the problem with
the folks who have been affected,
but so far, we have had to swallow
hard," he· continued. "In a lot of
ways, it has been like the army
'hlirry up and waiL' Unfortunately,
I don't thinl&lt;'we caJI wait too much
longer. But we cannot give up
hope."

According to OEPA, initial
analysis of the discharge into the
creeks showed elevated content
(I SO to 380 ppm) and an acidic ,pH
(5 .8 to 6.0). The proposed discharge, OEPA claims, would fill
the creeks to capacity and likely
have a short-term impact on fish
and invenebrates.
SOCCO has indicated that due
to economic and mine safety
issues, removal of the water must
be done swiftly. If the mine isn't
recovered, the company maintains,
the operation may be shut down.
Southern Ohio Coal's entire
operation provides 800 jobs to the

area.

Annou·nce program for
Aug. 13-15 Portland event
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
according to David Gloeckner, a
Times-sentinel Starr
member of ihe 91st Ohio Volunteer
POMEROY - Cruises on the P. Infantry, Co. B. and ihe' commemoA. Denny, skinnishes on the Ohio rative planning committee.
River bank, and Civil War era
-Tickets for the five hour Friday
lifestyle demonstrations and games, cruise with a luncheon for passenwiU be features of a celebration in gers hoarding at Gallipolis at II
Portland, Aug.l3-1S, to eommem- a.m. is S25;.for ~. three hour cruise
orate the" t30tli anniversary of the for passengers boarding . at
•Battie Qf;Buffm~ton ~sland. .
. Pomeroy at 1 p,m. :with snacks and
Taking a lnaJO.r. rote in the cele- a drink is $2&lt;1; for those boar~mg !II
bratioJl wlll·be' Civil 'War.re•enac' · ·· 3-'p..W.:'at. thd~.acine levee for a two
tors, some of whom will be arriv- hour cruise, snack and drink, $18.
ing in full costume from
The tickets are available at the
Charleston, W. Va. on the p. A. Meigs County Museum or at the
Denny's Friday cruise upriver. On office of Meigs County Park Dis·
the sternwheeler for that trip upriv- trict on Second St., Pomeroy. The
er will be the Saxton's Cornet deadline for purchasing ticke\S for
Band , the nation's most historically ihe Friday cruise is Aug. 7.
accurate Civil War era brass 'band,
The P. A. Denny wiU arrive at

langa_

CARPET

PADDING ATTACHED
~.
.j

'

• '

\

.

'

$6.5Q SQ . YD.
CUT ORDER $7.50 SQ. YO

FUI:." ROI:.L

.

.10 COLORS IN Sl01CK_..

I

COMME['.fORATIVE
PROGRAM
PLANJ'!ED_ - ~ary Powell, lett, Meigs County
Park D1str1ct d~rector, David Gloeckner of the
91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry, 'Co. B, and Mar~aret Parker, Meigs County Pioneer and HistorICal Society president, discuss plans for the
130th anniversary celebration of the Civil War

' the old Ponland'landing.
4:30 at
Passengers are reminded that all
cruises are one way and those making the trip to Portland on Friday
will have 10 make arrangements for
someone to meet them !here.
The Saturday , Aug. 14, cruises
will depart at 2:30 p.m. for a one
hour afternoon trip on the river,
and at 7 p.m..for a twiUgln cruise
on the Ohio. Both will leave from
and return 'ID the POitlanlltlanding.
Cost is $10.
On Sunday the P.. A. Denny will
begin the cruise down river at 4
p.m. The two hour cruise from
Portland to Racine wiU be $18 and
for those remaining on the boat to
come to the Pomeroy levee the cost
Continued on A-2

,

Battle of Bumngton Island, Aug. 13,~5. Gloetk·
ner as a Union soldier will complete tbe walk
today from Vinton to Portland, the trail. taken
130 years ago by Confederate General John
Morgan in his raid tbrough Meigs County.
Funds raised from tbe walk will go toward purchasing Civil War site markers.

A new site for an ·area .tradition
VINTON - The tradition of
this community's annual bean dinner - established more than 120
years ago by Civil War veterans will continue this year, but in a dif·
ferent location.
Due to a variety of problems
wiih the site where the dinner was
held for the past SO y.ears, it will be
moved to the Vinton Community
Parle.
The action was taken following
discussions betw~n Vinton Amcri·
can Legion Post No. 161, the
event's spon sor, Mayor Donna
DeWitt"and village counciL This
year's dinner is set for Saturday,
,Aug . 7, starti·ng with the Old

AREA RUGS
BOUND ALL AROUND
. ·.
$
00
3X5 .,........,..,...... 19
'
0
SxB' .......... :~...:... : $29°

Timers' Parade from Vinton Ele·
mentary School to the park at 10:30
a.m.
"Mo..:ing the location of the
bean dinner 10 ihe Community Park
will create more desirable condi·
tions and provide an opportuJ!ity
for the dinner to expand." Post
Commander John Holcomb, speak·
ing on behalf of ihe post member·
ship, told the Ti~s..Senlill£1.
"First of all, larger and better
parking space is available," Holcomb continued . "The new ball
field located directly across from
the park will be reserved for parking purposes on Bean Dinner Day.'
The flat-mowed surface of this

Strike tensions
escalate·over,
shooting death

'

Op~n

Monday-Friday

9:00 to 9:00
Saturday 9:90·7:00.
Sunday 1:00-5:00

large and open field will make it
easier for people to enter and leave
or park their cars in an orderly
fashion."
Secondly, lhe park is maintained
by tfie village and offers water,
electricity and· shelterhouses.
Recreation is available thanks to
the field and swing set, and due to
the park's location across from lhe
old mill darn and swinging bri~ge
on State Route 325, swimming and
fishing are possible under adult
supervision.
The dinner had been held in the
Legion Grove, atop a hill on 325
near Vinton next to the Glenn and
Continued on A-2

•.

........

..,

we Got The --ta~

.

.

,...,

.

. w _, va. Contractor's License #WV006198

'

'

pendlna criminal cases. Here, Alison Tromm,
seated, and Connie Dodson train Friday afternoon under the guidance or William Verna or
Text &amp; Data Technologie_s, Inc., Akron. (T -S
photo by Charlene Hoenich)

Prosecutor gets new docket control system
POMEROY - Installation a new
docket control system has been
completed at the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney's Office.
The system, called COPS II, is
licensed by the Ohio Prosecutihg
Attof'!lcy's Association, which also
provided ihe grant funds necessary
forinstallation.
·
·
The local office rece ived a
$15,00!l grant for the_installation,
accordmg 10 Prosecutmg Attorney
John R. Lentes. Har.dware PU!· .
chased by _the county m 1992 will
be used w1th the new system and

By MATT tfARVEY
Associated Press Writer
LUNDALE, W.Va. - A coal
operator offered a $100,000 reward
Friday for information in the .fatal
shoobng of a nonunion subcontractor as he drove past a picket line in
southern Wesr. 'lirginia.
It marked the first death related
to the United Mine Workers' 10'
week strilce against members of the
BARBERTON - Passersby the
Bituminous COli! OperaiOrs Associ· banks of the Ohio River between
ation.
.July 26 and Aug. I might catch a
"This is barbarous," said Blair glimpse of an unusual sight -. an
Gardner, vice president for St. unusually large sighL
Louis-based Arch Mineral Corp.,
Five 80-ton scrubber tower
parent of Arch of West Virginia, at modules, designed and built by
whose mine the shooting occurred.
Babcock &amp; Wilcox, of Barbenon,
"The circumstances of this will be loaded onto a 2SO-foot-long
tragedy poin! to a conspiracy to bar:ge at .B&amp;W's Mt Venwn, Ind.
commtt murder conceived m a manufacturing facility.
UMWA picket shack," he said.
The barge will travel along the
"This ends lhe pretense of a peace- Ohio River en route to American ·
ful UMWA strike."
Eiectric Power's Gavin plant,
Eddie York, 35, was shot in the where the scrubbers will be
back of the head Thursday night as installed on two I ,300 megawatt
Continued on A-2

served as the county's lOcal match
for the granL No local funds were
used to pun:hase the system,Lentes
·d
sai The program allows slllff al the
prosecutor's office to electronically
maintain records of all pending
criminal cases, as well as to network with the association's office
in Columbus, where a database of
cases is maintained. To daie, only
eight other prosecutors in the state
use the program, along with other
public agencies . .

According to Lenles, the new
system will allow his staff to automate many of the manual functions
now performed in the office, thus
expe~itin~ service to crime victim3
who mqmre about pendmg cases.
InstallatioQ of the system was
completed'Thursday and Friday,
and mitial training was completed
FridAy.
Installation and training was
pe~formed by Text &amp; Data TeCh·
nologies. Inc., of Akron, under the
direction of William J. Vema.

Barge
will carry huge shipment to Gavin
.

/.

~

TRAINING SESSION- Employees of the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's Omce
received training on a new computer program
called COPS II which will maintain records of

I

••
NEW LOCATION- The annual Vlnlllil Bean Dlnnr, a tradition stretchln&amp; back to polt·CivU War days, will be beld t•is year
at the Vinton Community Park. The dinner'ssponsort have decld·
eel to move It from the old Amerkan Lepon Grove after SO years
In the same site. (T·S photo)

.i

•

.

coal-fired utility boilers. The mod- amendments.
ules are 42 feet in diameter by 40
B&amp;W was awarded the contract,
feet high.
.
which calls for the supply of 12
Scrubbers, kliown technically as scrubbers, from AEP in DeUmber.
flue gas desulfurization systems,
The project represents the
have become the dominant world· largest scrubber installation in
wide technology for the conbOl of North America. The shipment
Sulfur Dioxide from lltility IX?Wer scheduled for July 26 is a ponion
plants . These systems m1x lime- of the entire trip, which is estimatstone with power plant gases to ed to take 250 days to complete. .
"scrub" Sulfur Dioxide from the
Two barges will be used
gas leaving a power plant's slacks
throughout the project. The last
The Gavin scrubbers are barge shipment will depart from
designed to achieve 95 percent sul- B&amp;W's Mt. Vernon plant in midfur dioxide removal and will enable October and is scheduled to arrive
AEP to achieve emissions reduc- · at lhe Gavin plant site near ihe end
tions mandate!l by Clean Air Act of October.

'I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="350">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9662">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32620">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32619">
              <text>July 23, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
