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I

Page

10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 27, 1993 ·

Sex, jobs and TV take priority over education Do
Dear ADD LaDders: All the

Leno Letterman have
StUiff oif [ate .nz-·ght legendS 'J

of violence, with weapons all

Ann
Landers

'

IIICIIlbersorourramilyaretonglime
falll of yours, but we have come
to die eonclusion that you must gCI
out of your apanmcnt in Chicago
ANN LANDERS
llldfmdoutwhatisrtal/ygoingon.
My husband and I have a toUII of
"1993, LMAncol.. .
6S )'CIUS of leaChing between us. Our
nm .. Syndkote
experience extends from New York
Creaton S)'ldical&lt;''
City to Miami. Your recent column
h
convey lhe message promptly.
made us bolh hoUer, "B uII"
• w en
Sc · b d
· ·
you pleade4 with that teacher in
xed
, JO s. an 'TV take pndonty
CiJifomia to hang in lhere because over ucauon .or most Stu ents
today. And last. but not least, drug
she was nceded· Ha• ha • ha·
·
use by both parents an d ch1'ldren rs
Teac h ers are bl arne d when producing
a generation of numskulls.
students do poorly allhough the.fault
lies in the home. A motivated child
My husband.and I are hanging on
will do well even with a lousy by our firtgernails unlil we can
· · lhree
God bel this
teachcr. The cIassroom has become reure
m
years.
P
such a stressful place that most countryifwedon'twakeupandstop
teachers want to move up the ladder trying new programs that waste the
into non-teaching positions. The taxpayers' money, Our society is in
poli.tical maneuveri~g lhat goes on deep trouble, and ooe need only look
behmd the scenes IS somethmg to at lhe classroom to understand why.
behold..
··MR. AND MRS. IN MIAMI,
· Parents have relin9ui.shed to FLA.
schools aU the responstbilt~es lhat
DEAR MIAMI; I can understand
are !heirs, except the abthty to your frustration, but your not-sopunish. While students behave in an subtle message is that teachers
. bl ·
· te ann
should be permitted to h't
1 students·
unbel teva Y mappropna m er,
teachers have lost the right to Sorry. I don't agree. Aside from the
discipline them in a way lhat would . moral question, in today's climate

·.•

around.
could
be four-square
extremely
dangerous.it and
1 am
I
•
against iL Expel, yes. Hit, no. .
.
.
•
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
·
just received a•painling of himself,
LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ What "I don't care how big the (guest) seems to be dogged. by a stodgidone from a photograph. It is a gift becomes 8 legend most in late· is; if people don't like you, they ness, a lack of ease.
from his grown children, my · night televisioo?
·
don't watch your program."
Leno- who, along witlf Letterstepchildren, in honor of his
Steve Allen ,. Jack Paar 3nd
In a rare news cooference since man, spoke to reporters at the
retirement
Johnny Carson can lay claim to that announcing he was jumping ship at annual summer press toilr to showThe problem is lh t th'
· u·
title. Les Crane and Alan Thicke NBC for an 11:35 p.at NBC for an case faU Programs- admiued lhat
a ts pam ng
c
his show needs to be more unpreis very large (and poorly done), and cannot
11:35 p.m. gig at BS, l:etterman dictable, more than monologue and
there is only one place in the house
Maybe a host can no longer was masterful.
h 11· ·u fi If h
·11 Ill
establish a 30-year reign . But it
It remains 10 be seen if the bad guests.
w
ere
wt tL the
we ang·
ere, seems I"·
1y t hat Jay Leno an d boy of late night TV ·can translate
't
ill
lAC
1 w overpower
enure room. David Letterman have dreams of his act to an hour-earlier time slot,
Elsewhere in television ...
•
What's even more upsetting is lhat dominance, not just a ratings edge. but there's no question he clicked
ELVIS SIGHTING: "AmeriCalhe colOrs are not compatible wilh
So who's got lhe right sruff, and with TV critics at 7:30 p.m. in a Comes to Graceland" is a syndithe rugs or·furnishings.
· 1 h · ·
?
CBS studio in Los Angeles.
cated special ·highlighting fans '
M h b d d
,
JUS w at 1s 11, anyway
Y us an
oesn I want
Allen, "The Tontght Show's"
He was, first and foremost, annual pilgrimage to the Presley
to oHend the children. I'm in original host, makes the format funny. No surprise. He was also estate to commemorate his death.
the middle. Any suggestions? he's credited wilh devising back il1 g&amp;:acious 31!d graceful, ingratiating Lisa Hartman Black and Mac
Davis are featured in the show that
··CHESTNUT HILL, PA.
1954 sound ridiculously simple
and, well, likeable.
DEAR CHESTNUT: Hang the
"I think a million years 'ago
. " I'm certai.~ly not worth that takes viewers on a tour of the.
picture for three monlhs, and then there was some ~uy sitting on a k!nd of dough, Let.ter;man S81d·of Memphis, Tenn ., house . Elton
.send it out "to be re-framed," This tree stump in !he Jungle someplace hts reported $14 m1lhon contract John, Richard Harrison and othe .
could take a very long time, during and two olher guys probably were • with .CBS. His show debuts Aug. musicians tell of Presley's impact'
on them .
'
which you could replace it sitting on lhe faUen log to his right, 30.
Presley
died
Aug.
16,
1977,
at
"temporarily".•• which can tum into making smaU talk.
Asked if he feared his newfoul\d
forever.
"And I don't mean this as a wealth would estrange htm from uge 42. " Graceland" is the first of
La d
bo
J. alee or a wisecrack. that is literally his audience, he said he hoped not a series of TV specials originating
Dear Ann n ers: 1 am a Y aU there is to the taik show" Allen ''If that h~ppens , I'll just buy a from his home, a collaboration
who just turned 14. I make stupid .said recently. "The esse~ce of a new audience," he then quipped. ,
between Raycom and Elvis Presley
remarks because if I am quiet all the . talk show is just some guy heading
Leno's own sharp wit and clever Enterprises, Inc . The show airs ·
time, people will lhink I'm a dummy. up a conversation."
standup routines have not duUed in Aug. 7-14; check local lisiings for
Afler I mouth off, I wish I had kept
But who the guy is clearly mat- his year on "Toni~ht," but he date and time.
•
quiet
ters.
·'
My feet are too big, and my face
"I don'tthink 'The Tonight
The family of the late J. Doyle Miller Smith, Pam Smith, Wanda,
and Gertrude Russell Miller gath· Jeff, John, Jason and Mary Lou breaks out just before I go Show" or the Letterman show is
ered for their 13th annual reunion Abshire, Jim, Mary Ann, Danielle somewhere and want to look decent about guests,'' Leno said last week.
recently at the Miller homeplacc in and Brittany Smilh, Ronald Miller, Am I a freak or what? •• KEN·
Middleport
Janice Miller, Rich and Ronda TIJCKY
Dale Miller served as emcee and Ayres, David and Wally and
DEAR KEN1UCKY: Cheer up,
Mire Gerlach had the blessing pre- Steven Miller and April Coate; aU son. You sound pretty normal to me.
ceding the meal.
of Columbus.
What you need is time. About three
The day was spent reminiscing,
Dorothy Miller Roach, Ray- years will do it.
taking movies and swimming.
mond and Pam Roach, Tntdy
An a/coho!problem? How call you
Two marriages noted in lhe past Williams, Carla Roach and Darin help yourself or someone you love?
year were Randy Roach to Tina and Jacob Roach; all of Pomeroy; "Alcoholism: How ro Recognize Jr,
CoUins and Loraine Miller to Bill Tom, Fay and Brandon Roach, How ro Deal Wirh Jr, How ro ConMoine. There was one bi(th in the Racine; Joe Anthony, Floradell .
Families of Charles and Mar·
past year, Tyler Shellnut, son of Grueser and Mike, Debbie, Tara quer lr" will give you rhe answers. garet . Murray recently held a
Bruce and Connie Miller Shcllnut and Alison Gerlach, all of Middle- Send a self-addressed, long, busi- reunion at Chuck Murray's camp
and grandson of Elmer and Paula port; Elmer and Paula Miller, ness-sizt envelope and a check or area in Albany.
Miller. The family was saddened LaGrange, Ga. ; Willard and Judy money order for $3.65 (lhis includes
The family enjoyed camping,
by the dcalhs of Carl (Tom) Roach, Miller, Loraine and BiD Moine, all posrage and handling) 10: Alcohol, hayrides, soft ball, volleyball,
Carl Brennad and Edythe Jay.
of Wooster and Dale Miller and c/o Ann /.Qnders, P.O. Box 11562, water balloon tosses, egg tosses,
Attending were Jack Miller, Sandy and Julie Boriar, Marysville. Chicago, Ill. 6061/..()562. (In C(Jil· fishing , swimming, attending
church at the Murrays' family
Johnnie Miller and Tiffany, Jason Tenn.
ada, send $4.45.) ·
church on Sunday morning, and
Davis, Kenny Owens and Mike
Next year's reunion wiD be beld
games and fellowship around
Richardson , Jackie, Mike and the second Sunday in July at the
5
campfires
during four days.
Kevin Lenox, Vickie, Annette, same place.
991
CHEVY
CORSIDA
...................
8495
Charles
and
Margaret
Murray·
s
Shawn and Brent Lacey, Mary
Automatic trans., air con d., stereo, white.
Best-seUing singles of the week:
55th wedding anniversary was eel·
5
ebrated on July 3.
1991
BUICK
SKYlARK
...................
Q495
I. "Weak," SWV
Attending were Charles and
·. Blue, automatic trans., air cond., stereo.
2. "Can't Help Falling In Margaret Murray. Pomeroy; Anna
5
and Abe RusseU and Chey Brodie,
Love," UB40
4198&amp;HONDA
PRELUDE.
................
7995
Shirley Wolfe and Donna Jacks · fruit basket.
3. "Whomp! There It Is," Tag Tyler, Texas; David, Julia, Joel,
4 wheel siJleri., blue, 5 sp., air cond., stereo,
received charms for losing lhe most
Members voted lhat gainers will Team
Abbie and Calob Kautt, McKen·
•
in June at a recent meeting of Tops no longer have to sing "All We
sunroof.
4 "That's The Way Love ney, Texas; Jill, Maurice, Dustin,
OH570, Pomeroy Chapter, held at Etta." Plans were discussed for Goes," Janet Jaclcson
Tyler and 'Andre White, Coloney,
1989 HONDA CIVIL.................... 54995
fund raisers for the next Area
the Carpenter's ha\1 in Pomeroy.
5. "I'm Gonna Be (500 Texas; Charlotte and Wilbur, Jr.,
Jacks also received a charm Recognition Day and International MILES)(From Benny &amp; Joan),'.' Rowley , Ironton; Mike, Denise,
Hatchback, 4 speed trans, stereo, cream.
bracelet for being half way to goal. Recognition Days. Nancy Manley The Proclaimers
Heather, Benjamin and Ashley
1991 FORD BRONCO .....................S2895
The meeting opened with prayer suggested a penny march and Amy
6. "l'U Never Get Over You," Rowley, Columbus; Keith, Angie,
by Linnie Bell Aleshire, the Tops Cleland suggested a )llallc-a-lhon.
4x4, automatic trans., air cond., local trade.
Expose
.
Amber, Jordon and Seth Kettel,
New secret pals were drawn,
fellowship song led by Sharon
7. "Show Me Love,'' RobinS.
Ironton; Minada, Jack, Eddie and
1991 GEO METRO ......................... 53995
Matson, the Tops pledge and roll and Debbie Hill read an article
8. "Have I Told You Lately," Brent Simms, Gallipolis; David,
call by Debbie Hill, and recogni- entitled "Diet Personality."
5 speed lransmission, stereo.
Natalie, Calob and Stacey Fooce,
Rod Stewan
Meetings arc every Tuesday at
tion of lhe best loser, Jacks, and the
9. "Knockin' Da Boots ," H- Gallipolis, and I he host family,
1986 FORD ESCORT..............:........ ..S995
Carpenters Local 650. Weigh-in is Town
runner-up, Jeannette McDonald.
Charles 0., Debbie, Mary Ellen
The Kops pledge and roll call from 5 to 6 p.m., and the meeting is
Automatic trans., stereo, good work car.
10. "Lately," Jodeci
and David Murray, Albany.
were Jed by Virginia Smith .. The from 6 to 7 p.m. Additional infor·
(Source: Cashbox magazine)
1989 MAZDA SE.. ..........................53995. ,
best Kops loser was Linnie Bell mation may be obtained Debbie
Aleshire. The gadget gift was won Hill at 949-2763 or Wanda Faulk at
door hatchbask, stereo, automatic
by Peggy Vining who also won the 992-5638.
transmission.

Miller family holds reunion

Murray family
has reunion in
Albany

Ohio Lottery

Boston

Pick 3:
122
Pick 4:
0216
Buckeye 5:
2-3-10-13·18

eager
·dies
Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 64

It:s your world

Meigs County

Hello Middleport!
Welcome To Hundreds ol'
Gold Chains.

GOLD BRACELETS &amp; EARRINGS

Special to The Daily Sentinel

SAVE
The Meigs County Office of
Education assists local and state
agencies in fulfilling the imponant
responsibility of educatingchildren
and increasing opport'Umues for
adult learning. The primary responsibility of the County Office IS to
provide adminigtrative, supervisory, and educational support services for the 4,320,students, 264
teachers, and. 19 administrators in
Eastern Meigs, and Southern Local
School DistrictS. Services provided
by County Office personne! arc
designed to strengthen educauonal
pregrams in local school d1stncts m
areas that cannot be fund·ed or
gtaffed independently.
Personnel from the County
Superintendent's Office. cooperate
with local gchool d1strrcts to: (I)
adopt textbooks; (2) develop courses of study that describe what is to
be taught in all subjects and at aU
gr~de levels; (3) issue work permils; (4) rece1ve and preserve
school enrollment records; (S)
nominate principals, teachers, and
local superintendents for employment; (6) cenify the accuracy of
rcpons that are generated by local
school districts; (7) provide speech
aitd hearing evaluations and therapy; (8) evaluate the ability and
achievement of students; (9) coordinate a work-study program; (10)
coordinate talented and gifted· services; {II) provide preschool se!·
vices to eligible chil~n and ~~:Jell'
families; and (12) provtde techmcal
assistance and support in efforts to
improve curriculum and instruction.
Another important function of
lhe Meigs County Office of Educa- .
tion is to coordinate and serve as
the f'iscal agent for Meigs Cowity'~
three Adult Basic and Literacy
Educalion Programs. These pro-

•

grams are designed to help indlviduals who did not complete high
school to prepare for the General
Educational Development Test
(GED). Monthly enrollment figures
. indicate that approximately 200
residents participate in classes that
are offered lhroughout the year.
The County Office also assists
local, regional and state agencies in
planning, implementing, and evaluating cooperative educational programs at local and regional levels.
Cooperating agencies include.·the
Ohio Department of Educat10~,
Ohio University, Rio Grande Umversity and other service agencies
that have been described in other
.IT's YOUR WORLD columns.
Although it is not possible to list
the numerous locally sponsored
educational·programs, it is important to recognize lhat many enrichment programs enhance_ stud~nt
learning in Eastern , Metgs, and
Southern Local Schools . Some
examples of regional programs that
use state or federal educational
funds include The Ohio Depart·
ment of Education's
Regional Teacher Training Center, Ohio University's Lead Teach er Program, and The Universily of
Rio Grande's Rural Demonstration
Project.
.
We hope that this article has
improved your understanding of
how the Meigs Count)' Office of
Education suppom educa1ional
programs that are offered in our
schools. If you would like to learn
more about the programs described
in this anicle, please contact us at
992-3883. If you would like to visit
our offices, they are located on the
second floor of the Pomeroy
Municipal Building and are open
from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.

50% TO 70%*

1989 VW FOX .............:................. 13995
5 speed transmiwssion, air cond., stereo, gray.
5

1988 FORD MUSTANG ................... 349

5 speed transmission, black, stereo cassette.

1985 HONDA ACCORD .......,.......... 53495
Hatchback, 5 speed transmission, stereo.

1988 PONTIAC GRAND AM ............•12995

AUtomatic transmission, air conditioning, white.

1987 MERCURY LYNX WAGONA ..... 12095
Nice, 5 speed transmission. stereo,

At

Ylcquisitions ~ine Jewe{ry

wh~e.

986 FORD MUSTANG ...................S1995
Aut:omatic transmission, stereo, silver.

-HUGE DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY- .

*From Suggested Retail Prices
1989 FORD ESCORT... ....................14995
1989 FORD TEMPO ....................... 14495
4 Door, wh~e.

automatic, air.

1976CADILlAC ELDORADO ........... 16995
1989 DODGE CARAVAN ................. 14495
1988 FORD TEMPO ....................... 13395
GSL 2 Door, burgundy, air.

1991 HONDA CIVIC... ...................;15995
Hatchback, wh~e. 5 speed.

Used Car Department594·2114
,.

LAYAWAY WITH ONLY 10% DOWN!

ATHENS HONDA CARS

.YlcquiSitions :Fine Jewe{ry

THE HAI'I'Y HONDA I'EOI'LE

.91 MIll Street
'
Middleport
992-6250
· (N..t Ia Big Bend FltneoiJ Center)

Also at 151 Second Ave,

Gallipolis ~2842
(Next Ia Tope FurnitUre)

•VIsa ·
oM/C
•Discover

.

Jiv JIM FREEMAN
!"entinel News Staff
With the nick of a switch, the
Southern O~io Coal Company
(SOCCO)·c31t implement ·its plan
to drain Meigs Mine 31, company
officials said Tuesday afternoon at
a press conference at company
offices in Meigs County's
Columbia Township.
However, the company faces a
cessation order from the U.S.
Office of. Surface Mining if it
begins pumping.
The OSM has indicated il may
issue it cessation order 10 stop the
pumping, Jim Tompkins, SOCCO

vice-president and general manager
said.
Meigs Mine No . 31 and 240
mining jobs were idled July 11
after water from an adj_pining, ·
closed mine penetrated a bulkhead
and flooded the mine.
The plan involves!umping
water from the floode mine to
nearby receiving streams for about
30 days, notifying area residents,
monitoring the streams and
includes a comf!litment to mitigate
any temporary effects on the
streams.
The water removal process has
been approved by the Ohio Envi-

ronmental Protection Agency wilh · Reclamation Board of Review.
"We appreciate the Ohio EPA's
monitoring of the receiving streams
to be performed by ecological prompt response to lhis emergency
experts and reponed to the OEPA, situation,'' said Jim Tompkins,
according to company spokeswom- SOCCO vice-president and general
manager. "OEPA officials have put
an BJ. Smith.
Oiher agencies that have been forlh diligent efforts to ensure lhat
involved are the Ohio Department the plan will have the least environ·
of Natural Resources, the U.S . mental effect upon the streams. We
Office of Surface Mining and the can now remove the water from lhe
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
mine and move toward getting our
The ODNR Division of Recla- people back to work.
mation on Monday issued a cessa"OEPA and olherstate and fedtion order to stop the water eral agencies have helped us identiremoval, Smith said. SOCCO fy the likely short-term environ·
appealed the order .and was granted mental effects. In addition, we are
temporary relief by the state's continuin.~t to seek ways to minimize the en·vironmental effects of
our release.''
Envirqnmental impact
Efforts have begun to notify residents along the streams before
pumping, which is scheduled to
begin this week and continue for
about a month, begins. The water
levels in the streams will rise somewhat but will not overflow their
banks, Smilh said.
Streams that will receive the
water include Leading Creek and

Eastern
board OKs
contracts ·
Action on peiSonnel and several
, projects geared 10 getting schools
of the Eastern Local School District ready for opening ·day was
_ taken at a recent meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education.
Supplemental contracts were
Firefighters from four departments ballled the
FIRE SCENE - A bystander watches from
awarded to Pam Doulhiu as alhletic
blaze, which was apparently caused by .an elec· director, and Bill HaD as marching
the city park as smoke pours.l'rom the HaskinsTanner Clothier Company on Second Avenue.
trical short. (OVP photo by James Long)
band director. The resignations of
Kimberly Conidi as junior high and
high school art teacher, and Ruth
A. Masters as a bus driver were
accepted. Special recognition was
given Richard Roberts who served
as interim superintendent after the
resignation of Richard Smith and
before the hiring of Richa(d D.
Minard.
The board approved the contracl
extension
of the local chapter of lhe
"!looked up at the ceiling of the wall.
A fire apparently started by an
Ohio
Association
of Public School
The GVFD responded with five
electrical shon caused heavy dam- utility room and smoke was comEmployees
through
Aug. 31. ·
age to a downtown Gallipolis busi· ing down through .the vent and trucks and 35 fll'efighters and were
Membership
in
the Ohio High
ness and upstairs apartment Tues- that's when I called (firefighter) on the scene for more than four school Athletic Association, the
hours.
day afternoon, in what Fire Chief Ray Bush," he said.
Trucks and fire(ighters from Coalition of Rural and Appalachian
Hamilton said the first GVFD
Silas Hamiltort called one of the
Schools which is seeking more
city's most serious blazes in sever- truck arrived at lhe Haskins-Tanner three other fire departments also equity in school funding, and the
building within two minutes after assis'ted the GVFD. The Point
al years.
Educational Technology Services
The fue, located in the Haskins- the alarm was sounded at 4:28p.m. Pleasant VFD aided with three
approved.
.
"It was a good stop," he said. trucks and 10 firefighters, Middle- wereThe
Tanner Clolhier Company building,
energy
conservation
pro·
332 Second Ave., was contained "We could have lost half a block pan VFD supplied one truck and ject proposed by the district was
five men and the Rio Grande VFD
mostly to the second and third easy."
assisted
with one truck and eight approved by the state supermten·
Scores
of
bystanders
watched
floors. although light smoke damdent of schools and a letter on that
.
age extended 10 Sideline Sports, the building smolder from across firefighters.
Once the additional fue depan • was read at the meeting. Contracts
the street at lhe city park.
334 Second Ave.
work were awarded to Fox
Until firefighters broke out win· ments arrived, the area of Second for
· According to a repon from the
Mechanical
Co., Inc., Columbus, .
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depart· dows on the third floor of the Avenue in front of Haskins-Tanner Tri-State Roofing and Sheet Metal
ment, lhe fire originated in a crawl building, the only visible sign of swarmed with emergency person- Company, Parkersburg, and .
nel and children carrying cups of
space between the second and lhird the fire was lhe now of smoke.
Columbus Heating and Ventilating
Thiele in front of the building at water tO·relieve firefighters.
floor of the structure. An upstairs
The building is owned by Mor- of Columbus, all pending funding
apartment, the residence of Bob · first, the smoke declined to a
ris
Haskins, 1 Vine Street, Gallipo- availability.
Hood, 332 1/2 Second Ave., sus- steady now, becoming heavy once
The board also approved "conlis,
and Roger Hood, 304 Fourt.h
more as trapped smoke gushed out .
tained heavy damage.
ditionally"
Life Touch Studio 's
Ave.
,
Gallipolis.
A
damage
esuHood, manager at Haskins-Tan- of lhe broken windows.
proposal
to
handle
school pictures
mate
was
not
available
at
press
Damage was mor.e apparent in
ner and Chaplain of the GVFD,
for
the
1993-94
year.
.
lived above the store and was at the rear of the building where fli'C· time.
Restructuring
of
cafeLCria
opera:
The
fire
was
the
!59th
call
of
home when the blaze started. He fighters could be seen through a
tions in the district was discussed
charred and gaping hole in lhe back the year.
called it in to the fire department
during the meeting.
Supt. Minard advised the board
that tanks and pumps have been
delivered to the Tuppers Plains bus
garage and will be placed into permanent positions as soon as excavation is completed.
Next meeting was set for Aug.
11 at 6;30 p.m. in lhe high school
library. Attending were J1m Smith,
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Presi- ton said.
demanded that the U.N. Security vice president. and members, ~on
dent Clinton said today the United
The re~ular meeting of Clio- Council put into immediate effeet a Eastman, Bill Hannum, and Mtke
States would "seriously consider" ton's fore1gn policy team took on resolution providing for such cover Martin..
using air power in Bosnia if asked increased importance today and that NATO, which offered
to defend besieged United Nations because the French government has planes, begin flying missions. Cliosignaled its desire for the United ton said a request has not been forpeacekeepers.
· Clinton, whose senior foreign Nations and NATO to speed up mally made of the United States.
policy advisers will meet on the plans to provide air cover filr U.N. • Asked if the United States
would definitely provide air power
subject today, said the French gov- ground forces in Bosnia.
Frenc.h peacekeepers came if asked, Clinton said, "The United
A vehicle received heavy dam·
ernment has not formally requested
under fire for lhe second time in States has always had the llublic age in a one car accident early
the air strikes . .
Wednesday morning.
"The position of the United three days Tuesday when a build· position and lhe private posiuon Bobby J. Rupe, 21, Pomeroy,
States has long been that if the ing in Sarajevo, Bosnia's capital, we made if very clear- that if the
United Nations troops were. was hit by at least seven Serb United Nations operation in Bosnia was on Butternut Ave. when he
was under attack, we would be pre- dropped a_cig~eue on lh~ floor.~
attacked there, we would do our . artillery shells.
"I'm very upset by. the shelling pared to defend them with air tried to ptck tt up. He htt a uultty
part to protect th.em by making
pool and a parking meter.
available air power. We have not in Sarajevo," Clinton said during a power" Clinton told reporters.
"We have not been asked yet. If
He was cited for DUI and fail ·
yet been asked to do that If we are picutre-tak:ing session with Democratic
lawmalc~;CS
.
we
are
asked,
that's
somelhing
we
.
ure
to control. The car was towed
askeil, that's something we will
The French government . 'will seriously consider,'' he said.
from the scene.
give some consideration to," Clio-

ofree Gilt
Wrapping

•
.,

its tributary, Parker Run and Raccoon Creek and its tributaries,
Sugar Run, Strong 's Run and Flat
Lick Run, Smilh said.
The streams do not contain
potable water and are not used for

public drinking supplies. However,
the company recommends that during the pumping period residents
along the creelc;s and their tribu'
taries refrain from using the water
Continued on page 3 ,

DRAINAGE SITES David Wright, supervisor of environment
and land for Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division,
points out drainage sites and channels that wiD be affected when
SOCCO begins draining the Rooded Meigs No. 31 mine. Watching
Wright are, frnm left, Jim Tompkins, Meigs Division general manager, and George Thacker, pr.esident or UMWA Local 1857 at
Meigs Mine 31. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

Fire damages Gallipolis
business,.apartment

Vehicle.damaged
in accident

810 E. STATE ST. • (614) 594·8555

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

SOC CO officials outline plan to
drain riline
.

Clinton suggests possible
use of air power in Bosnia

Automatic, air cond~ioning.

2 Sectlona. 12 Pog• 35 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 28, 1993 .

Multlmecblnc.

Wolfe, Jacks receive top honors

.'

mid-80s.

•

The top ten

•

Low tonight In upper~­
partly cloudy blgh In

Thursday,

,.

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

'

--~---

.

'f

INSTALLING PUMP SHAFT· While Southern Ohio Coal
Company officials await the green light to begin pumping water
from the Rooded Meigs Mine 31, workers are preparing the sites
for pumping. Here, workers from North American Drillers, Morgantown, W.Va., sink a 30-inch shaft for a 5,000 gallons-perminute pump at the mine site near Salem Center. (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman)

---Local briefs--Man arrested on theft charge
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Shawn
Spurlock was arrested in Athens County over the weekend on a
chaTge of theft involving a pickup truck belonging to Roger HolTman. He appeared in Meigs County Court of Common Pleas where
he entered a plea of not guilty. Bond was set at $5,000.

Items reported stolen
. The Ohio Pallet Company, 34606 Rocksprings Road, reported
Monday that sometime over the weekend I 7 nail guns were stolen
from the business. Lanny Lester reported lhe value of JJailguns at
oyer $12,000. Investigation by the Meigs County Sheriff's Office is
continuing.

Charges filed against youth
Charges have been filed against a Pomeroy area youth for stealing a check at the Katherine Deskins residence on June 25 and for
taking a check from the Tony Perry residence during the weekend
of July 10.
.
The juvenile will appear this week in .Meigs County Juvenile
Court, Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby said.

Police probe q.ccident
Pomeroy Police responded to .an accident on July 23 at 12:12 '
a.m. in the Pomeroy parking lot near Lynn Street.
' Involved were Opal Kauff, 63, Pomeroy, and Dlmald Roush, 57,
Syracuse.
:
Kauli was backing out of a parking space on lhe river side, failed
to see Roush and struck his. car. Bolh cars ~eived light damage.
Roush was ctted for drivmg under the mnuence, no insurance •
and no operators licenSI).
..1'

�Wednesday, July 28, 1993

.commentary
· Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE lNTER£8TS OP THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
C~LENE'HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Ma,!lage~

.,

' ....... !'

.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words, Ml letter's are subject 10 editing and must he signed with name,
acldres! and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By Tbe Associated Press
Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
The (Elyria) Chronicle Telegram, July 22
Clinton's decision on gays in lhe military clearly is common sense. Its
short title is "Don't ask, don't telL"
·u
·
What a mil· itary gay does in private w1 not be actionable as long as it
remains private.
·
Restrictive? Yes, but First Amendment proaections do not apply to military personnel in the way lhey do 10 civilians. Homosexuals have served
honootbly in lhe U.S. armed forces throQgh our nation's history. Generally !hey have "not told," to avoid discrimination.
One former commander-in-chief, Thomas Jefferson, held the extreme
belief lhat "sodomites," as he caUed homosexuals, should be neutered.
The armed forces' priority is lhe opposite of the old hippie slogan, "Make
love, not war."
The military.exists to make war, not love.
Springfield News-Sun, July 21
As a candidate for president, Bill Clinton promised to lift the ban on
homosexuals serving in lhe military. He has since discovered lhat Some
lhings are beyond even the power of the president.
In promismg 10 end lhe military ban on homosexuals, Clinton made a
basic commitment 10 fight for gay Americans. As things have turned out,
Clinton could not keep his promise. However, he can still honor ltis commitment to fight.
Gen. (Colin) Powell calls Clinton's executive order "an honorable
compromise." If the president's opponents try to remove lhe proaection
against witch hunts, if they refuse 10 allow him even that small, 'face-saving victory, Clinton has no choice but to fighL
He must be ready to srand with !hose who stood ,with him.

WASHINGTON (NEA) "-Major ·
changes are occurring lhat could alter
the American political landscape well
in advance of the next presidential
election in 1996. In unrelated but mterconnected mQve~.lhere~giousright
is attempting 10 broaden its appeal;
the Republican Party is looking for
more lhan a few good )"Omen; and
women's political organizations are
asking if !hey should put ideology
ahead of gender.
Since the November elections, virtually every political organization has
been polling extensively, trying 10
figure out exactly what the·electorate
wants and how 10 put togclher some
kiild of majority. All the results are
strikingly similar, There is no doubt
lhat lhe politician wilh lhe momentum today is Ross Perot, and lhat his
movement is taking voters away from
both the GOP and lhe religious right.
• Ralph Reed Jr., executive director of Pat Robertson ' s Christian Coalition, was frank during a recent news
conference. In a major poll of Christian fundamentalists-both Protestant
and Catholic--!he coalition was surprised to find that "!heir top five issues were the same as everybody
else's-lhe economy and jobs, welfare, the'budgetdcficit and crime." As
for the traditional social issues that
have been !he coalition's main focus,
"abortion ranked eighlh as an issue;
gay rights, 12111 or 13th," admiued
Reed.
In other words, the Christian
Coali lion' sseeming core constituency
was finding its major concerns most
directly addressed by Ross Perot, and
his new movement. As Reed put it to
a reporter: "Our message has been
directed too much 10 our activists and
donors, not to our voters."
So the coalition is going to respond
by trying to broaden its appeal., Its
first attempt will be a to organize a
massive camP.aiin to defeat the
Clinton budget' on iii'¢ basis tha't the
president has gone baek on his campaign promise of helping the middle
class through a tax break aild that the
Clinton energy tax "is a jobs killer."
Then. in lhe future, lhe coalition
wiU push its own version of welfare
reform - raising lhe tax exemption
for dependent children-ru~d, wilh
somewhat twisted logic, will support
passage of the Norlh American Free
Trade Agreement On lhatscore,Reed
says, lhe coalition is supporting the
troubled pact because it will create
jobs. A better reason may well be that
opposition to the treaty is now a cenlral Perot position. The coalition will
also, for the ftrSt time, open a Washi.ngton office and teach out 10 other
conservative organizations 10 work
wilh lhem on economic and non-social political issues. • Meeting in Chi·
.

I ,

.J

cago, the Republican National Committee spent an inordinate amount of
time and energy talldng about how the
party might be ahle 10 recruit stronger
.candidates for the 1994 congressional
elections. The GOP's polling has
showed lhat a majority of voters still
want more change, and lhat change in
many voters' minds is equated with
sending more women to Congress. A
record number of women were elected
to lhe House of Representaties in
1992-24 were newly elected, but 21
of lhese were Democrnts. The GOP
knows that, while it needs to put forward more women candidates, they
must have broad appeal.
That means, several speakers told
the RNC meeting, GOP candidates
must avoid campaigning on conservative social issues.
Several at lhe Republican meeting
pointed to Colorado state Rep. Michelle Lawrence--who will try 10 unseat Democratic incumbent Rep.
David Skaggs-as a model potential
GOP candidate. The state legislator is
a fiscal conservative who owns a small
business. But she is also pro-choice,
and is generally liberal on social issues.
• Paradoxically, while the GOP
met in Chicago to talk about finding
more• pro-choice, socially liberal
women to run for office, lhe National
Women' sPolitical Caucus met in Los
Angeles to face the question of
whelher it really supports its oft-stated
goal of electing more womer.to public office or only supports electing
women who fit into a narrow, femi nist-liberal mold.
The NWPC, and several other
groups supporting women candidates,
are becoming fractured over !he question of whether any woman in office
is beuer than her male opponen~ or
whelher it is only doctrinaire fcmi-.
nists lhal these organizations should
support.
In some ways, NWPC's president,
fonner Missouri Lt Gov. Harriett
Woods, is very much like lhe Christian Coalition's Ralph Reed. Bolh are
reaching out in an attempt to lead !heir
respective organizations to broader
acceprance. It could cause lhe American political landscape to look very
different by the time voters go 10 the
polls in November 1994.

17 was introduced as the f&amp;rsthandgun manufactured mostly of plastic, sparking fears that it might
escape lhe notice of metal detectors. That year, we were lhe fll'st to
report that Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi was attempting to buy
100 of these pistols for possible terrorist means.
Also in 1986, we reported on a
Pentagon security expert, who
systems,- Voere officials believe decided to test the new Glock pistol
by carrying it through airport secutheir product will eventually rity. By stripping the gun down and
replace traditional ammunition in disguising its few metal parts in his
the
. same way that compact discs hand-held luggage, this official was
d1splaced vinyl records,
able to slip by security at Washing. "In fmyh'opinion, with lhe addi· ton National Airport twice without
yt10n o rifla ) •&amp;h-tech design, (the detection. Security measures were
nere ark e could
do for lhe long- promptly strengthened as a result.
h
gun m et w at (lhe Glock plastic
pistol) did for the handgun marAfter heated battles between
advocates from bolh sides of the
ket," reads a review in a recent issue, Congress passed laws ,·n
issue of American Firearms Indus- 1988 mandating that plastic
try magazine.
firearms meet minimum
. detection
· But lhe new rifle is also likely4o srandards. Glock met the standards,
spark the kind of fiery debate and went on to become one of. the
between
... fi gun-contri&gt;l advocates and most popular handguns in America.
me &amp;rearms industry lhat erupted
Experts believe that in lhe near
the last timeh an Austrian gunmaker future the high price tag of the
f~\~~~:::e ~~~~a~~:~em~~~ Voere rifle will prevent it from

US ARMV

,

ORPS

..:;::::::::=:

S llltes to date, Schumer believes
it's never too early 10 look into the
issue. "Why wait for it 10 become
a problem if it's a potential problem right now," he says.
Jack Anderson and Michael
1..-----~-----------------------------;......a Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Rais~ng

taxes ·On rich· may damage .economy

Iq hiking taxes on lhe rich, the According to lhe House War.s and

tax, whlch formerly stopped at lhrough sales taxes, wh1ch cost t!)e. - ·
$13S,OOO, now will be applied 10 economy 26 cents per doUar ofhiv-

Today in history

,,

Morton Kondracke

Berry's World

r

B The Associated Press
Rehef from lhe recent hot and
humid wealher is on lhe way.
A cold front' will move lhrough
Ohio tonight. Thunderstorms will
end as skies become partly cloudy.

forecast for daytime conditions and high
MICH.

,,,,,

By Jack Anderson
and
Micha'el Binstein

Clinton administration and con- Means Committee's latest ' Green
all income. Corporations will pay enue, and p_roperty taxes, which
gressional Democrats are satisfying Book" on federal taxes, lhe top )
1.45 percent and employees 1.45 cost only 17.6 cents. He favors
lhemselves ideologically and scor- percent of income earners made 9.4
percent
regardless of income. A devolving more government'
ing poli.~cal J?Oints wi~ lhe public.
successful
self-employed business responsibilities from Washington
There's a senous quesuon, !hough,
person
will
have 10 pay 2.9 percent to lhe states and localities lhat rely
whelher !hey are doing lhe econoon
every
cent
he or she earns.
on !hose tax sources - or enacting
my any good.
percent of all pre-tax income in
Even
though
this
$29
billion
a federal value-added tax.
From the current top income tax 1980 and 12.8 percent in 1990.
There is evidence that Jorgenson
rate of 31 percent, lhe Democrats After taxes, they pocketed 8.3 per- provision will clobber businesses
are almost cerlain to raise lhe top cent of all income in 1980 and 12.2 small and large, a House Ways and and the Republicans· are right in
rate to 44.5 percent. Officially, the percent in 1990. The effective tax Means Committee aide said, "No their predictions. After all, during_
top individual rate will go .[o 36 rate for the top 1 percent was 31.9 one has said 'boo' about it. People lhc Reagan era, when marginal tax·
percent, but the "millionaire's" percent in 1980 and 28 percent in say there's no painless way to raise rates for lhe rich went down, revlllxes, but politically this is th e enues from the rich went up.
surtax will push it up to 39.6 per- 1990.
closest you get to it.' '
In 1981, the richest 5 percent of
cent, lifting the income cap on
In sum, they made more
rich
Americans
paid 35.4 percent of all
Unfortunately,
soaking
the
Medicare premiums will hike it to income, pocketed more of it after
may actually not ,be so painless in income taxes, and in 1990, they
42.5 percent, and limiting itemized taxes, and were subject to a 'lower
the long run. "The rich," Jorgen- paid 44.1 percent. In 1986, those
deductions for the very rich will tax rate.
son
said in an interview, "manage making over $100.000 per year
send it up ·to 44.5 percent.
That wasn't true for the rest of the capital resources of this econo, paid $106 billion in income taxes,
According to Harvard eco- the country. Largely because of
my" and to protect their incomes while in 1990 lhey Qaid $159 bilnomics professor Dale Jorgenson, i~creased payroll taxes, lowerlhey
will hire lawyers and accoun- lion.
taxing the rich is the least efficient income Americans had their effectants
10 find them ways of doing so,
If lhe 1980s'were a decade when
of all ways to raise revenue tive tax rates fall only slightly disc~ura~ing straightforward, job- rich people's tax rates went down,
because it dampens invesunent and from 15.6 percent to 15.1 percent
creaung mvestment.
but revenues went up, the danger is
consumption by more than $1 for for the second-poorest fifth of all
The 1993 tax bill creates new that the 1990s will be a decade
every $1 it brings in. Jorgenson is Americans (!hose making around
loopholes in tax law - notably an when tax rates go way up, and revpredicting lhal Democratic tax poli- $30,000 for a family of four) and
11 percent gap between lhe top rate enues go down.
cy will have a " ·d evastating" from 22.9 percent to 22.1 percent
on
ordinary income and lhe top tax
If that's the case, Bill Clinton
impact on the economy.
for the next-richest fiflh (making
rate on capiUll gains. Rich people cannot narrow the budget deficit as
Republicans have been trying 10 around $45,000 a year).
w1ll be encouraged to find tax she!- he promises. Interest rates will not
make this case, but they arc disBefore taxes, the poorest fifth
ters -:- investments that arc unpro- stay down . And the economy will
missed as "the party of the rich." made 10.3 percent of all income in
duct&amp;ve as far as the economy •s falter. The good news is that we
In any event, they have been frozen lhe country in 1980 and 9.2 percent
'concerned
- to turn ordinary ought to have this straight by 1996.
out of the formation of 1993 tax in 1990. After taxes, it pocketed
income
into
eapital
gains.
(Morton Kondracke is a
policy. And no Democrat, it.seems, 11.4 percent in 1980 and 10 perJorgenson
says
the
most
effisenior
editor ror Roll Call, the
is making lhc case lhat soaking the cent in 1990. The next -richest ·
to
raise
_
revenue
is
newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)
cient
way
rich will sock it to the economy,
,group earned 15.5 percent pre-tax
It's gospel among Democrats in 1980 and 14.5 percent in 1990,
that lhe rich received a wirldfall in and kept 16.2 percent in 1980 and
the 1980s, that lhe federal deficit IS. I percent in 1990.
ballooned as a resul ~ and lhat bolh
This is the basis for the
fairness and economic good sense Democrats' determination to
demand lhat top-bracket taxpayers reverse lhe policies of the Reagannow bear the burden of narrowing Bush years - to soak lhe rich as
fOR HOW L0~6
lhe deficit
the primary means of narrowing
PO YOU fiGURE
The charts that President Clin- the budget deficit. All polls show
ton is fond of using to illustrate the lhat taxing lhe rich is -wildly popuYoU'IJE. 6E~~
impact of his economic plan show lar wilh most of lhe electorate.
I~(:)Es·ntKs
lhal "the wealthy" will pay 70 perThe exlllnt to which lhe admincent of new taxes. On average, istration and congressional
IJOVJ~€
!hose earning over $200,000 a year Democrats have tried to narrow the
G~Ou.lTt\
will pay about $23,700 more per defiCit at the expense of the rich
year, whereas middle-income fami- has expanded since lhe campaign
1-\oRMot-E?
lies will have their taxes increase and lhe beginning of 1993 budget
only slightly, and the poor will deliberations.
experience a reduction.
· Clinton once vowed t~at
It '.s true that during the 1980s,
increases in the top rate wobld ,
the nch got richer than anybody apply only to people making over
else in America, and kept more of $250,000. But as lhe House-Senate
their earnings than anyone else. conference works on a budge~
package, lhe income at which lhe
top rate kicks in has come down 10
$110,000 for an individual and
$140,000 for a couple, The 10 perBy Tbe Associated Press
cent " millionaire's" surtax will
Today is Wednesday, July 28, the 209111 day of ·1993. There are 156 . apply 10 incomes over $200,000.
days left in the year.
'
.
As part of lhe 1990 budget deal,
Today's Highlight in History:
'
,
premiums for SOcia!; Security and
Fifty years ago, on July 28, 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt MedicR were sep11111ted. The 12.4
announced lhe end of coffee rationing in lhe United States.
percent Social Security rax applies
On Ibis date:
. .
10 incomes up to $55,000 and !hat's
In 1540, King Henry VIII's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, was unlikely to change Ibis year. But ,
e;tecuty&lt;~th~ 2.9 percent Medicare payroll

·'

Thursday, July 29

Voe~e rifle and its caselt:Ss ammo
may be the wave of the future.
Because it's-safer for lhe shooter
and far more accurate than other

catching on as quickly as the
Glock. But gun-control advocates
are already voicing complaints.
" As with plastic handguns, caseless ammo may be an example of
technology outpacing common
sense," read a recent report by the
Washington-based Violence Policy
Center.
In this case, "common sense"
could mean depriving police of an
investigative tool lhat has proved
key to cases lilce lhe Jan. 25 shooting outside CIA headquarters in
v·•rgm&amp;a.
· · 1n that ·mc1'dent, w h'1c h
1e ft t wo peop 1e dead an d th ree
·
'tOund. at th e
woun ded , shell casmgs
· helped au th onues
· · obtam
· a fimSite
·
f
•"
d
gerpnnt o ute suspect an t'de nu·rY
th e 1ype o f weapon use d tn
· I he
.
cnme.
''At this point, !he only reason a
· · 1 wou ld buy ....
' ...
cnmma
utiS ·•s· tOr
ute
·c·
f
J'
·
·
spec&amp; 1c purpose o e •m•natmg
some evidence," said Rex Davis,
'
head of ·",ormer
u"' Bureau of AI cohoi, Tobacco and Firearms.
ReP· Ch
1 s chumer,
·
D· N·y ·•
· ares
a gun •control advocate who ch a&amp;rs
·
lhe Hcouse subcommittee on Crime
and riminal Justice, takes a simiJar view. "It might present some
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - · - - - - - - - - • - - - - - - - - - . potential problems for law enforcement. If you get somebody looking
to get rid of evidence and commit
some high-level crimes, this could
present some problems (for
police)," he told our associate
Dean Boyd.
1
c
· :
Robert Fancher, a spokesman
for the American company that
imports the Voere products, calls
s"ch criticism a "bunch of crap."
Regardless of the type of ammuni·
lion, Fancher says lhat police can
still gather evidence from markings
left on lhe actual bullet. He adds
-, that few police investigations use
shell casmgs as major evidence.
The Voere rifle is not a handgun,
nor a semiautomatic weapon.
"What we have is a classic sporting rifle with added safety and
increased accuracy." · ·
. Although the prohibitively high
price - upwards of $2,000 - of
the have
Voerebeen
rifle sold
is why
onlyUnited
about
;;__.,;;,...___._. _______. •
;c.,_-.,'11 30
in the

.,Changes -may rock
· election landscape

WASHlNGTON - The country that brought us lhe "terrorist.
s(lC!Cial" handgun seven years ago
is at it again, Ibis time wilh a high·
tech bullet that some be~eve could
$pell serious trouble.
About six months ago, the
Voere company of Austria be$an
marketing to lhe pub~c a new rifle
technology that critics believe
could derail an imporrant investigative tool used by police in criminal
probes. It's called caseless ammunition. And while it has been avail·
, decade s, the
able to lhe military 10r
·
Voere company IS the f'trst to
develop a commercial rifle lhat can
fire the spec·ialized cartn'dge.
.
Unlike
standard ammunition,
these cartridges wou Id leave no
· d f
b ·
shell casing behm a tet emg
fired. Gun-control advocates
believe this could make life
increasingly difficult for police
investigators, who often depend on
spent shells left behind at cvime
scenes to trace weapons used by
criminals.
·
To those who market n'fl es 10
the United States and have watched
sales plummet in recent years, the

as·

''''

•

•

f'A _

•'~---,---.
IColumbusl84• I

as·

---~--Weather----South-Ceopoal Obio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Scattered thunderstorms early. Low in
lhe upper 60s. Chailce of rain is 50
percent. Thursday, partly cloudy.
Cooler and less humid with the
high in lhe mid-80s. Chance of rain
is 20 percent.

Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:
· Fair on Friday and Saturday.
Lows in upper 50s to mid-60s.
Highs from lhe upper 70s to low
80s. Fair on Sunday. Lows in lhe
60s. Highs in the low 10 mid-80s.

---Area deaths--Robbie Brown

Reatha Clonch

Robbie Lee Brown, 79, of
Columbus, former resident of
Pomeroy, died Tuesday, July 27,
1993 at Manor Care Nursing Home
in.Westerville.
Born on April4, 1914, she was
the daughter of the late Minus and .
Minnie Morris Moss. Besides her
parents she was preceded in dealh
by her husband, Robert (Bob)
Brown, and two brothers, Minus
Moss, Jr. and Waid Dewey Moss. '
She is survived by two daughters, Willa Samuel Russell and
Helen Michael Harrison, hoth of
Columbus; five grandchildren,
Antonio Lewis LeRoy, Derrick
Eugene Russell, Helen Renee Russell, Michelle Lee Harrison, all of
Columbus; and LeMichael Eugene
Harrison of Canton; and one greatgrandson,
Montel
Azeem
Schiruinger of Canton; a special
friend, Barbara James of Pomeroy;
one sister, Margaret White of Kentucky, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
I pm. Friday at lhe Ewing FuneralHome, Pomeroy. The Rev. Leroy
Trout will offic&amp;ate and burial will
be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home one hour prior to the services.
In lhe case of Robert Venoy and
Grange Mutual Casualty Company
versus Calhy Jo Manley a recent
decision in lhe Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas ordered that
Manley, pay $4,548 plus costs and
interest.
Rhonda Curtis recently pled
guilty in the Meigs County Court
of, Common Pleas to forgery. She
received a sentence of 18 monlhs in
prison which was suspended for
five years probation. She was also
ordered to pay $500 to cover the
cost of the prosecution, $417 in
restitution and spend two days in
jail.

Realha V. Clonch, 61 ; of Hysell
Run Road, Pomeroy, died Wednes•
day, July 28, 1993 8l her residence
following an extended illness.
Born on July 23, 1932 in
Stiversville, sbe was the daughter
of the late George Willford apd
Irene Hilton Willford Hupp. . ~·
She was"a homemaker an -' a
member of the Hysell Run Ho i·
ness Church.
She is survived by her husband,
Leland (Bill) Clonch, Pomeroy;
two sons and daughters-in- law,
Dwaine and Sonia Allen and John
and Amanda Clonch, all of
Pomeroy; lhree daughters and sonsin-law, Joyce and Michael Hlad of
Platlca, Fla.; Lori Tucker of
Greensboro, N. C.; aild Krista ancj
Ted Smith, Racine; lhree ' brothers
and sisters-in-law, Charles and
Mary Hilton of Thurman, Roger
and Violet Willford of Tuppers
Plains, and Theodore and Nancy
Willford of Long Bottom; two sisters and a brother-in-law, Joann
and Roy Proffitt of Lewisburg, and
Odessa Proffitt of Portland; two
step-sisters. Mary Coogle of Frederickstown and Emogene Rutleage
of Shelbyville, Tenn.; a step-brolher and sister-in-law, Harold and
Betty Willford, Youngstown; nine
grandchildren, two special friends,
Paul and Mary Stanley of
Snowville, and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in dealh by a granddaughter, Tamra Dawn Vance, two step·
brolhers, Harry and George Will ford, Jr.; and a step-sister, Helen
Eastman.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Hysell Run
Holiness Church, Pomeroy. The
Rev. Robert Manley and lhe Rev.
Robert Smilh will officiate. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery, HarrisonviUe.
Friends may call at the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 Thursday,

Licenses issued

Mark Grueser

Meigs Court news

Mark W. Grueser, 85, of Rainbow Lake Road, Shade , died
Wednesday, July 28, 1993 at his
residence. Arrangements will be
announced later by the £wi'ng
Funeral Home.
,

Marriage licenses have been
issued by Meigs County Probate
Court ,to Christopher M. Stewart,
20, Middleport and April L. Hudson, 19, Pomeroy; Earl W.
Thomas, 73, Mason, W.Va. and
Sarah M. Smilh, 75, Mason, W.Va. Calculators arrive
and Donald R. Lauderrnilt, 21, RutGraphing calculators are in at
land and Jennifer L. King, 21, Rut- Southern High School, Carla
Shuler, math teacher. announced
land.
today. She said lhat students may
call her at home, 949-2814, if lhey
The Daily Sentinel
want to pick lhem up before classes
start in August.
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OHIO Weather

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The Daily Sentinel
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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 28,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Stocks
Am Ele Power......... ....... ....38

Ashland Oil... .....................28 1{2
AT&amp;T................................. 64
Barik One........................... S4 1/4
Bob Evans ......................... 18 7/8
Charming Shop.................. l2 3/4
Champion Ind.... .............. 14
City Holding......................26 1/2
Federal Mogul.................... 21 1{2
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 40 7/8
Lands End.......................... 29 3!8
Limited Inc......................... 20
Multimedia Inc .................. 33 1{2
Point Bancorp....................14
Rax Restaurant. .................. l/16
Reliance Electric............... .18
RoW!iMAMycn ........" ...... .l8 3/4
l9 1/4
Sllr a.t ...........................35 1/2
Wendy lnt'l... .................... .14 3/4
Worlhington Ind.................28 5!8
Stock reports arll tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securtties, Inc., o
GaUl poDs.

s· ••, .• r.c. .....................

Lows will be from 65 to 70.
It will be variably cloudy on
Thursday wilh a chance of showers
north. Highs will range from
around 80 north to the mid-80s
along lhe Ohio River. .

Squads respond to eight calls

. The record high temperature for
th1s date at the Columbus wealher
station was 100 in 1952. The record
low was 50 in 1962.
Sunset today ,will be at 8:50
p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
6:27 a.m.
..·
-~

Around the nation
Much of the flood -ravaged Mid·
west got a break today from days of
torrential rain , while stifling heat
continued in the South.
Heat .advisories were posted
today over much of the South and
parts of Ohio and Indiana.

SOCC0 •••

Continued from page 1
for purposes such as drinking, fish- SOCCO's Meigs No. 2 mine coning, swimming and for livestock tinues 10 operate.
watering or irrigation.
At this time, company officials
SOCCO employees, including cannot predict when the mine will
United Mine Workers of America resume full production. They are
members and salaried worlcers, will meeting wilh local representatives
notify residents along lhe streams of lhe UMWA 10 develop a course
about the pumping and will post of action to bring the mine back
nouces.
into operation.
SOCCO has employed-«ologiTompkins said lhe current plan
cal experts who are assessing base- calls for water to be pumped at four
line data on aquatic life and exist- sites through multiple pump shafts.
ing habitat in lhe receiving streams. So far, seven shafts have been
The experts will monitor the installed, be added.
streams during the pumping period
While pumping is uoderway ,
and report the data regularly to special workers, trained to enter
appropriate government agencies. mines under adverse conditions,
The t:nonitoring will help SOCCO . will begin re-entering the mine
and agencies select lhe best meth- from !he drained west end 10 liegin
ods to restore lhe aquatic life and assessing damage, he added.
habitat.
Once ventilation and power are
Gre11 Seegert, senior aquatic • re-established, we will start bringbiologist for EA Engineering, ing poople back to work, he said.
Chicago, said the company has
The bulk of lhe water is in the
identified 35-40 species of fish that Parker Run area, Tompkins said.
live in lhe streams.
However other areas, critical for
"All are common species, fish ventilation, are also flooded.
.we would normally expect,"
To prevent similar incidents in
Seegert explained.
lhe future, lhe company will begin
"The habitat is just kind of fair, draining both mines, Tompkins
not great or PQOI'," be added.
said.
When pumping begins, the
The bulkhead which failed was
released water is expected ·to unique in lhe Meigs Division syschange the streams' water quality tem, Tompkins said. No olher bulktemporarily. Some fish, aquatic heads of its sort are beinll used.
insects and mussels will not surTo obtain the mass• ve pumps
vive lhe change in water quality, needed for lhe operation, SOCCO
. primarily due to high iron levels, purchased lhem from a company in
lmv. oxygen and slightly higher Texas.
POINTS LEADER • Jeremy Stone of Dexter is leading the
aculity.
·
One company official said it ·
Ohio State Tractor Pullers Association points standings with his
Water will appear cloudy or dis- was difficult to oblain lhe I,JUmps
4450 John Deere ''Hyper Johnny". Stone is in the Super Stock
colored, most noticeably at the due to the current floods m lhe
class and has three_ rrrst.place wins and one second place finish.
release points.
Midwest.
In addition, some of the iron
Tompkins said the whole minwill settle out of the water onto ing operation, which employs 815
creek bottoms . However, those people, could be jeopardized if lhe
.effects will be temporary and company is unable to restore Meigs
aquatic species should begin No. 31 10 operation.
returning to affected portions of the
''We want to pump"
streams
within
a
few
days
after
the
George
Thacker, ·president of
Jeremy Stone of Dexter is cur- Super Stock class, but the Stone
pumping
ends.
UMWA
Local
1857 at Meigs No.
rently leading the Super Stock class family, has been around pulling
SOCCO
will
work
with
appro31,
praised
lhe
miners while criti- \
of the Ohio State Tractor Pullers tractors for many years. In lhe mid
priate
federal
and
state
agencies
to
·
cizing
the
Office
of Surface Min Association (O.S.T.P.A.) points 1980's and early 1990's, Jeremy,
standings with his 4450 John his,falher .Elmer, and brolher Tim, restore the streams to !heir original ing.
"We need 10 get lhe water out of
Deere, "Hyper-Johnny", Tractor were involved in pulling Natural condition.
the
Plan
of
action
mine," Thacker said. "We need
pullers gain O.S.T.P.A. points by Aspirated and Pro Stock tractors.
to
rehabilitate
lhe mine. I know we
Meigs
No,
31
was
idled
after
an
placing in the .top fifteen. In his
Local farmers might remember estimated I billion gallons of water can do it.
first four pulls, he and his tractor, their tractor "Stoney's Deere",
"Everyday they (OSM) hold us
"Hyper Johnny", are blowing the
After taking a break to attend from the adjoining Raccoon works,
up
makes it worse for lhe miners.
which
was
closed
)
n
1991,
poured
competition away by placing first college, the local puller, with lhe
lhrough
a
bulkhead
connecting
the
We
want to pump. People want to
three times and second once.
support of his family, is back in the
two
mines.
get
back
10 work."
Super Stock tractors are highly pulling circuit. He is now pulling
The
water,
according
to
TompThe
Meigs
mines supply Ohio
popular because they maintain a longer and harder that before.
kins,
flowed
east
from
the
old
mine
coal
the
General
James M. Gavin
conservative look, but can put on
Many fellow Meigs Countians, into the eastern portion of Mei·gs
Plant
in
Cheshire.
an explosive show. The Super including both close friends and
Smith said coal supplies at the
Stock class allows tractors 10 have family, follow Jeremy wherever he No.3 !.
.
The
excess
water
overwhelmed
Gavin
plant are sufficient.
· four turbos, boosting lhe horsepow- gnes 10 pull. T)lis summer, he has
the
existing
pump
system
and
made
"We
had a good year to this
er in excess of 2000 h.p. Super already pulled in Indiana and Ohio
the
mine
inoperable,
idling
point,"
Smith
said. In addition,
Stocks are also highly popular and will be pulling in Kentucky
employees
who
work
underground.
Meigs No. 2 supplies coal to
because of their quietness and their before the pulling season is over.
Employees
at
lhe
office
and
surface
Gavin.
ability to move quickly, yet pull a He plans to pull locally at Marietta
large amount of weight
·
in September and at the Gallia operations remain on the job.
This is Jeremy's first year in lhe County Fair on August 6.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded to eight
calls for assistance Tuesday and
early Wednesday morning.
TUESDAY Q 11:58 a.m.
Pomeroy squad and fire to State
Route 33 at Darwin for a motor
vehicle accident where Mike Bolin,
Sr. and Mike Bolin, Jr. were transported 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital; 3:53p.m. Syracuse 10 Second
Stree.t in Syracuse for Thelma
Miller who was transported to
VMH; 4:59 p.m. Middleport fife to
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, to
assist in working structure fire at
Haskin Tanner and 5:36 p.m.

Pomeroy met party at station and
transported Robert White 10 Holzer
Medical Center.
WEDNESDAY Q 1:14 a.m.
Pomeroy to Collins Road for
Howard Searles who was transport·
ed to VMH; 1:16 a.m. Rutland 10
Hysell Run Road for Aretha
Clonch who was dead on arrival;
4:31 a.m. Tuppers Plains 10 State
Route 124 for Hope Decker who
was transported 10 Camden Clark
Memorial Hospillll and 5:34 a.m.
Pomeroy 10 Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilillltion Center for Victor
Neutzling who was transported to
VMH ..

Jeremy Slone current Super·
Stocks Class points leader ·

Meigs bikers to stage
-Meigs announcements-annual Poker Run Sunday
including adults. Family night is
Augustl5.

Kindergarten orientation
meetings
K:indergarten orientation meetings will take place at 9:30a.m. at
Chester Elementary and at noon at
Tuppers Plains Elementary on
August 13 . If lhe child is not preregistered plan to be in attendance
a half hour early.

Lifeguard training offered
London Pool will be offering
lifeguard training starting August 2
at 7 p.m. Class fee is $25. 'Class
members must be at least IS years
old. To resister call 992-9909.

Racine social to be held
The Racine Fireman Ladies
Auxiliary will have an ice cream
social on Friday August6 at5 p.m.
at the firehouse annex. Hot dogs,
sloppy joes, pies, coke, tea and coffee will be available.

Hunter sarety course offered
Scipio VFD is sponsering a
hunter safety course August 26-28
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the f&amp;re depanment. The course is lii,Tiited to 50
people. To register call 742-3013
or 742-2302.

Bible school
Hillside Baptist Church will be
having vacation bible school the
week of August 2 through 6 from 6
to 8:30 ,p.m. This year's !heme is
"digging for God's truth." Dr, Digger will be present every evening
and there wi II be a great dinosaur
egg hunt on the last event. Bible
School ages are 3 to 13 years.

Bible School
Hickory Hills Church of Christ,
Tuppers Plains, will hold vacation
Bible school for all age groups
from ages 2 to Jr. high the week of
August 2 through 6 from 7 to 8:30
p.m. Call 667-6973 for further
mformation.

'

Letart Township meeting
Letart Township trustees will
meet on August 2 at 7 p.m. in lhe
office building.
Bible school
"Summershine" vacation Bible
school will be held at 1he Hope
Baptist Church the week of August
9 lhrough 13 from 6 to 8:30 p.m.
Classes will be held for all ages

Grave prices increased
Trustees of Sand Hill Cemetary,
Long Bottom, have increased the
prices of grave lots 10 $75 effective
·
Augustl.
Bible school
First Southern Baptist Church,
on Pomeroy Pike, vacation Bible
school will be held the week of
August 2 through 6 from 6:30 to 9
p.m. Call 992-6328 for transportaion.

AD PH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday
No admissions.
.~
Discharges: Adrian Carson Lou,:;ia Mitchell, both of Middleport.
Holzer Medical Center
July 27 discharges: Edna Neigler, Lacy Barton, Shirlene Davis,
Mrs. Casey Hart and son, Lera
Walters, James Fillinger, Amber
Howell, Beverly Guinther and
Nancy Anderson. .

SPRJN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

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August 15, 1993.
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Hospital news

This Week's Speefal:

FISH SQUARE

Food and beverages will be ror sale
and music will be provided from 5
to 9 p.m . by Bad Habit. There will
also be a dunking machine and several businessmen have volunteered
to take the scat.
Crafts will be for sale with 10
percent of the price to go into lhe
benefit pot.

The Meigs County Bikes will
sUlge their third annual Poker Run
Sunday.
Proceeds will go to benefit the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center and the Meigs County Infirmary .
Signup to take part in the run
will be held from noon 10 I p.m. at
Kelly's Corner . There is a $5
sign up fee, The run will go upriver·
and there will be several ~tops
where the bikers wiU get their cards
marked. When they return they will
pull playing cards and whoever has
the best hand will be lhe winner.
Top prize is $100. Plaques will be
awarded to the second and third
place winners. Bilcers have until 5
p.m. 10 complete the run.
For the run party Court Street
will be blocked off.
There will be a $5 cover charge
for those who do not participate in
the run but want to attend the party.
The party is open to all adults.

THE FIRM

•.o.wn . 111 -r•• 1~1

7100 t;t5 tan.r 1M' INI 1111.1:00 l:f5 IRI

· POMEROY·

�•

The

_Wednelday, July 28, 1993

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NL action,

Sports

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

.

Bass's bat heips Astros defeat Reds 6-5; Giants, Braves win

HOUSTON (AP) :- Houston wasn't sharp, either," Reds mana~- two-run double, and Jacob Brum- themselves."
~ ~dielder Kevm. Bass.can't er Davey Johnson said. "He didn 1 freld lind Jack Daugherty each douSince McGrifrs ~val, Atlanla
e~taio his.success lglUllSt C_mcm- have good pop. He's been real con- bled in a run.
·
has scored 81 runs in eight games.

nau Reds pitcher Tom Browrung.

sistent this year, but he was miss-

~don t d!mk 11 has anytl!mg to
do With the .(lltcher. For.me, 11 only
has &amp;OI!let!tmg to do With whether
I'm swmgm~ the bat well, and I'm
d~i~g that f!ght now. In. my rrund,
huung .agam~t ~row_mn~. d•dn't
play~ ~Igpan mIt tomght. .
Its a mystery to Brownmg as
well.
"! made a mistake against Bass
andh~.got the ~cod P~ o/,' the ~t
on 11, Brownmg said. · I don t
know why. He's been around a
while, so he knows what he's
doil_lg. He's hit ll!e baD pretty good
a~1nst me. But 1f I make the nght
p~tch~s, I can get hi~ out. I .iust
d1d.n t make the nght P•tch
tomght".
·
Brownmg (7-6) last only 2 1/3
i~ngs, giving up six runs on eight ·
hits.
.
•'He got ~me bad breaks but he

pitches, but a couple of pitches, I
left up. 1 gave 100 pen:ent. 1 just
made some bad pitches.•
Houston took a 1.0 lead in the
second inning when Luis Gonzalez
reached on a fielder's choice
grounder and scored ona double by
Scott Servais.
·
.
The Astros increased their lead
to 6-0 in the third. Singles by
Williams, Craig Biggio a~ Rick
Parker loaded the bases with no
outs
After Jeff Bagwell"s grounder
forced Williams at the plate, Ken
Caminiti hit a two-run single and
Bass hit his three-run homer. ·.
Cincinnati made it 6-1 m the
fifth when Reggie Sander's led off
with his 15th home run.
• The Reds scored four runs in !he
sixth to make it close. Sanders hit a
·

"~! h!1pena. I don't kn&lt;!w ingaliuletonighl''
why, StU Bass, was f·for-2 With
Astr_os starter Brian Williams
~~-run hom~ ~amst B,rown- (4-3) allowed five ruos and seven
mg m Tuesday rught s 6-5 VJCtay. hits in 5 213 innings. Doug Jones
"! ~ow, I'v_e made plenty of outs · got the final three outs for his 21st
&amp;g&amp;lnst him~ well.
.
. .
save.
·
. Bass, a ~r .269 hitte~. IS hit"The guys scored a lot of
ling .32~ With four ~omers m 79 at- runs," WiU.iams said. "That's the
~.agam~tB~~g.
.
good thing. I made some good

Elsewhere in the NL it was
"! got off to a bad start in San
Adanta 10. Colorado 5; San fran. Diego," said McGrif~ who has 24
cisco 3, Los Angeles 2; Phitadel- . homers. "Then I~ to swing
. phia 10, St. Louis 7; San Diego 8, the bat I'd be gewng the same hits
Chicago 0; New York 4 Florida 3· in San Diego."
and 1\ofuntrea\8. PiUsburlih 6,
'
John Smeltz (9-8) pitched four_ ' ·- Braves 10, Rockies 5 .
hit ball over eight innings for the
Fred McGriff and the Atlanta · victory.
Braves are doing their very best to
Rockies starter Armando
keep up with the San Francisco Reynoso (7-6) worked 4 2/3
Giants m the NL West
· innin~s. allowing eight four runs
McGriff hit twa home runs, and eight hits.
including an inside-the-park shot
Giants 3, Dodgers 2
and drove in four runs as the
John Burlcett became the NL's
Braves heat the Colorado Roclcies first 15-game winner with eight
10·5 .Tuesday night at Mile High innings of three-hit ball in pitching
Stadium. The Brave1 are 9-0 San Francisco~~ Los Angeles 111
against the Rockies this season, Candlestick Park. Burkett (15-4)
averaging 8.1 runs a ·fl"!C·
_
held the Dodgers hipess for five
Since being ticqiured from sll, ' innings. ' .
Diego, McGriff has six hornell!' in
Burke.tt gave up no ~alks and
35 at-bats and the Braves have won fanned s1x. Rod Beck pitched the
seven of eight. Atlanla, despite the ninth for his 29th save.
streak, is eight games behind San
The Giants reached starter
Francisco \D the NL West
"McGriff has meant a Jot to the
club,'' ml\ftager Bobby Cox said.
"He really added that energy in our
hatting order. He's hitting and it's
really rubbed off on the other hitters. He's taken a lot.of pressure off
every player .trying to do it all by

Kevin Gross (7·9) for tl)ree runs
and eight hits in the first four
innings, but twice left the bases
loaded.
PbUUeslO,Cardlaals7
Joh.n Kruk went 5-for-5 ,an.d
drove m three runs as PhlladelplUa
started its ker series against St.
Louis by heaung the Cardinals at
Vetcf81!5 Stadium.
Reliever Roger Mason (2- 7)
~ar~ed the. victo!y. with 2 2/3
mmngs. M•tch Williams got the
last three O';JIS for his 27th save.
St. LouiS .starter Joe M_agrane
(8-9) lasted JUSt one·plus mnmg,
allowing live hits and five runs.
Padres 8, Cubs 0
Andy Benes pitched afiv~-hitter
and Tony Gwynn had five hits and
drove in three runs, leading San
Diego over Chicago at Wrigley
Field.
It was the second shutout and
fourth complete_game of the season
for Benes (11-7), who struck out
eight and walked none.

Loser Mike Harkey (7-5) gave
ur. five runs and 10 hits in tlhreepus innings.
Mets 4, MarUos 3
Jeff Kent's ~nd home run of
!f!e.ga"!e leadmg off the sevent~
mnmg lifted N~w York over Flonda at Shea Stadium.
Dwigh~ Gooden (10-10) pitched
seven inmngs for the vic~ry, givmg up three runs and five hits.
Ken.t, who has 12 home. runs,
also h1t a three-run shot m the
fourth off loser P~t Rapp ( 1· 3).
Rapp pitched 7 2(3 u;mngs, allow·
mg four runs on SIX h1ts.
Expos 8, Pirates 6
. Pinch·hitter. Lou Fr~ier singled
~the ~eb~ealcing run •n a two-run
e•ghth mmng off rookie Joel J&lt;!hll·
stan (0-1) as Mon'!eal beat Pmsburgh at Three Rivers Stadium
after blowing a 4-0 lead.
.
. T1m Scott (3-1). g~t the victory
With two scoreless 10mngs of relief,
and John Wetteland finished for his
22nd ~vein 26 opponunities.
··

Reds would benefit from new playoff
format if put into effect this season

could wind up playing for tbe pen- expected to vote on that aspect of
nant. The league's highest-paid the playoffs.in S~ptember.
lineup got ~ff ~ a poor s~ and
One op~on IS to ~a.v~ the top
has been mired lR fifth place 10 the twa teams m ~ach dJVISI~n play.
division since late May, in part Bowden, wbo IS represenu~g Reds
because of injuries.
.
.
owner Marge S~hott dunng ~er
"Those teams that are penalized ~e-year suspension, favors havmg
with injuries for a good portion of first-place teams cro~s over and
the ~· once they ~t everyone P!Jiy .the No. 2 teams 10 the other
healthy, 1f !hey g&amp;. thCU' act togeth- di~~1on.
. ..
er, they really m:fhl be the ~st
, For the !"tegnty of~ game,
~m in base!'&amp;ll, ~ow_den S81d. I m sur,pon1v~ o_~,the cnsscroili
But they might fi~1~ !n ~ond theory. he Slid. Us~ly at !)le
place because of the IDJune~. .
end of the ~n. you re P.la&gt;'~ng
The owners ~idn't d_ec•cte how mostly clubs m your o~ diviSI&lt;!n
playoff teams will be paired for the and you can make a diffe~ence m
hest-of-~ve flfSt round. Owners are · who the second-place club IS.
·Miami cage prospects... (Continued from page 4)
·
homesick.
around here, but I just didn't get
"It's going to be an adjust- involved in it. A lot of times I
ment," Miami Senior coach Mar· could have. A ghetto? Not my
cos Rodriguez said. "It's going to neighborhood."
be different from what they JU:e
Rodriguez, whose teams have
used to, no question about it."
won five of f1orida's last seven big
Davis and Farquharson say they Sc:hoot'titles, is particularly high on
are fond of their neighborhoods. · Davis. .
"! stay in the ghetto," Davis
"Devin lives in the gym,"
said. "I really-have no problems ·· Rodriguez said.. "He's a hardwith ii.' Mom and dad have done nosed lcid. Ill fact, I would be suralso hope it increases interest in what they could for me. ·I've prised if Devin doesn't have a
late-season games because more always gotten what 1 wanted, most- major impact immediately/'
teams would be in contention for
the playoffs. ,
Jy."
· Davis averaged 16.2 points and
"Your attendance would be a
Farquharson said his neighbor· 10.7 rebounds last season while
lot betfer during the summer, espe· hood is "pretty peaceful."'
averaging just under 17 minutes
cially in September," Bowden said
"There are a lot of ol~er and per game. Farquharson, .a jump
in a recent interview.
retired people here," he Slid. "Up shooter,.averaged 14.8 pomts, 4.2
Bowden also lilces the idea that to the park there is a lot of gam- rebounds, 2.2 assists and 2.1 steals
a team with the Reds' recOrd still bling ... a lot of trouble. I grew up in 18 minutes a game.

By JOE KAy
CINCINNATI (AP) _If baseball's expanded playoff format was
in effect this year the .Cincinrrati
Reds wouldn't jus't be in turmoil
'The also would be in playoff con:
tentfon
·
Thai's reason enough for Reds
general manager Jim Bowden to
support it.
Instead of having to make up a
double-digit deficit with San Francisco; the fifth-place Reds would
have a chance to ca\ch secondplace Atlanla in the National
League West and make the playoffs. All the talk about next year
would tum to present tense.
"Now you're in the pennant
race," Bowden said.
Baseball owners voted last
month to expand the playoffs for
the firsttime in 25 years, adding
two more teams from each league
beginning in 1994. Only the Detroit
Tigers and Texas .Rangers opposed
the move.
The format will mean more tetevision revenues for owners, who

LEWIS DEAD - Boston Celtics forward and team captain Reggie Lewis (center), sbown witb teammate Dee Brown (left) and an
unidentified player during practice, died Tuesday after collapsing at
tbe Celtics' practice facility in Waltbam, Mass. He was 27. (AP)

Lewis dies following
collapse in practice
By JOSE MARTINEZ
when he resumed workouts, but
WALTHAM, Mass. (AP) that apparently wasn't the case
Reggie Lewis, the Boston Celtics .Tuesday.
star who agonized for the past three
His death raised several quesmonths over a heart ailment that tions: Was Lewis cleared to play
threatened not only his career, but basketball of any kind? Was he lakalso his life, died after collapsing at ing medication? How often had he
the team's practice facility. He was been medically checked?
27.
The Celtics wouldn't say; they
Lewis, the team captain respect- were not taking questions at a news
ed as much for his quiet and gentle- conference Tuesday night
manly way as for his scoring abiliNews of Lewis' collapse
ty, was shooting baskets and gear- shocked the dozen players who
ing up for a pickup game at Bran- showed up late for the planned
deis University on Tuesday after- workout. When Danny Delgardo,
noon when he fell to the gym floor. Deo Djossou and others arrived at
W ith'in hours, he was dead , Red Auerbach Arena, they were
leaving behind a grief-suicken bas- greeted not by their friend and
ketball community that was expect- mentor Lewis, but by reporters asking a comeback, as well as a divid- ing about him.
•
ed group of medical specialists
"It just numbed all of us,"
whose worst forecasts came true in Djossou, a senior on Northeastern's
an instant.
.
basketball team, said.
"Reggie's infectious smile and
Lewis, the Celtics' top scorer
joyous love of basketball were the past two seasons, went to the
always evident to all of us who gym about 4 p.m. Brandeis senior
were fortunate to have seen him Daniel Royzman said minutes after
play," said Celtics president Red he walked into the gym he saw
Auerbach, who is recovering from Lewis fall to the floor.
.
heart bypass surgery. "Those of us
Lewi s had not participated in
who knew him well knew a warm, any team practices since the day of
kind. gentle and generous man. "
his collapse against Charlotte .
Paramedics found Lewis in After that episode, he said he was
" complete cardiac arrest ," said scared and "started having flashWaltham-Weston Hospital emer- backs to that Hank Gathers thing."
gency room physician Dr. Mary Gathers, a star at Loyola MaryAnne McGinn. He was admitted in mount, died of a heart problem
critical condition at 5:41 p.m.
after collapsing during a game
For the next hour and 50 min- March 4, 1990.
utes, doctors worked in vain to
Lewis did not participate in the
revive Lewis. He was pronounced Celtics rookie-free agent camp eardead at 7:30p.m. and his body was lier this month, although he attendto be turned over to a state medical ed some sessions. Nor did he join
examiner.
the Celtics group that played in a
Lew is first collapsed April 29 summer league that 'ended Sunday
during a playoff' game again st in New York.
Charlotte. According to the original
Lewis, a native of Baltimore
diagnosis, Lewis had a career- who was a first-round draft pick
threatening heart disorder.
out of Northeastern in 1987, averThe 6-foot-7 swingman sought a aged 20.8 points a game in each of
second opinion, however, and was . the past two seasons .. He had 17 ·· .
told by Dr. Gilbert Mudge of points in the playoff game a~ainst
Bri gham and Women's Hospital Charlotte before collapsing m the
that he had a nerve ailment that rust quarter.
confused his heart. He was told he
Lewis is survived by his wife,
might be able to resume his career.
Donna Harris Lewi s, and a son,
Lew is had said he would be Reggie Jr.
under close medical supervision

MU cage prospects find Oxford
campus, Miami to be worlds apart

lb.

1/:J.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE CI?AIN FED BEEF,
BONELESS SHOULD£!? STEAK 01?

!?ED, WHITE 01? BLUE

Boneless English Roast

.Thompson seedless Grapes

Both students visited Miami in
Oxford for two days in April,
shortly after Herb Sendelc replaced
Joby Wright as head coach. They
liked what they saw.
"! thought it was nice and
quiet," Farquharson said. "It's
peaceful, a good place to study.
That's real imj)onant because that's
how I like my surroundings, I don •t
like too much noise."
Farquharson said he chose
Miami because he likes Sendelc.
Davis said he picked the school
because Farquharson did.
The change from life in urban
Miami to life in rural Oxford might
not be as simple as going from a
noisy environment to a quiet one.
The players' high school coach
believes they might get bored and
(See PROSPECTS oo paee 5)

- • Baseball • -

TOllai,Kmou CHyO

S..uteiO, Minn"""' 8

Woolford, cometback, to a threo-yeu

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Cllifomil IS, O*land I

COfttllCl

Euiem ·or.~~~on

Ten

WL

PhiWielfiUa ...........63

38

aw8o. ...•••.....••... .so

49

S&lt; r....a ............... .S7 42
MooiiO.II ...•••...•.•.. ..S3 47

Pit......, ............. .45 55

Florid. •.... ............ ..42 57
New Y.U ..............34 6S

PeL

'

20-Pack ·
12-oz. cans
'

Pkg.

serve .'n' _Save Wieners

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DE~ DIET PEPSI OR

. Peps/ Cola

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

RVOOIO

~rraFt

Miracle Whip
·

~2-oz.

Jar
,,.

;,;,

I

.62A
.576
.530

.sos
.450
.424
.343

s

9.5

12

17.5
2D

28

:~.~"\~... . . b

I1 ,

~~lXJM4Q

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0::::~: ~.

· 'ADDITIONAl
,
l2·0Z 51.99

48
48
51

.520
.!520
.:lOS

16.5

63
64

.382
.360

29
31

lS
15

. San Dig;ok(Broeail 2-6) 1t Chie&amp;&amp;o •·
(llibbud 8-7), ~20 p.m.
lAI An&amp;e.le&amp; (C1ndioU.i !5-!5) 1t San

SL Louia (Otbom.c 9-4) at ptilladel·
phio (Schillina 9-6), I2:35 p.m.
Florida (HouJ,h 4-11) 11 New Yolk
(Sclt.....,J-IO),I :&lt;Wp.m.

ldonuoll (Foaero 6-t) " Pitwborah
(Z. Smitl1 0-4), 7:35p.m.
Atlanl.ll (Olninc 12·4) at Ho\llton
(Onbok 7-11), 1:05 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

IIIIALI

Kroger
Meals

Eutem DMIIon
Twn
WL PeL
GB
Toronto ..................!S7 44 .564
Now Yea ......•....•..57_ 45 .SS9
.S
B.........................55 45 .5so
1.5
Boltinun...............54 46 .540
~5
Ddmlt. ..................52 49 .m ·
5
10
ct.EVEU!iD .....:A7 54 . .465
Mii....................41 57 .411 14.5

Kroger
orange
Juice
·
· Gallon

~--9.25-oz.

WM&amp;.erll DI•Woll
OUcaao ..................S4 45 .545
K.ouU A!y .......... .52 41 .520
T.,. .................... .SO 49 .505

~::::::::::::~~ ~

.

Mlnnaoau ...•••...•..•.42' 55
Ookiood •................41 S6

Friday, July 30th.
4:00pm - 12:00 Midnight •
i

I .
'

Watch for our special Thursday ad with
~COOL" Moonlight Savings!
·I

Tuesday's scores
NnrYcal,O...U2
Toronto6, Baltimore S
Odcaao 7. CLEVELAND •
Mil••ube3,Boooon2

.,

•

lS
4

:m 4~
.433
.423

Thursday's games

f.'"·

II
t2

LOS ANGELES RAIDER~: Si1J!od
Brian lonct, lineNcter. Rdcaod Tu.inci
AlipaWI, Unobaci.or. Placed Damon. Baldwin and Sean RuueU, defonRve linemen.
on injund ftiHI'II&amp;

MIAMI DOLPIUNS: Sill"od Louio
OliYa",safely, ~ 1 one-year contrKt.
NEW YORK GIANTS : Waivod Ed
Reynoldl,linablc:kc.

SAN DIEGO CHA~GERS : Sianod
ti&amp;ht end. RdeaiCid ShiMon
Ccmcliua, dcfCNi'lle tack'lc.
AI Oolden,

Hockey
FLORIDA PANTHERS : Sisncd

Dutiel Gauthier, left wing.

LOS ANOBU!S KINGS: N. .od Sol
Lambudi llliltant eglli_pmc~~tm~n~aor.

NEW YORK ISLANDERS : An-

nounced a lhrco-ycu wodin&amp; agreement
with the Salt Lake Ooldan ElaJ.• of 'lbe
Intcmatinnal HocJu:y Luauc. Named
Dave Furilh eo~ch and Chril Pryor ...Utant coach ri Salt I...akc..

WASHINGTON

CAPITALS :

M.tchod the San J01e Sham~' off'• ahoa.

- • Transactions • -

wift&amp;.

10 K.eUy Millt~t, let\
Sipe.d
A~. caatar. to a onc-yeuemtna.

Keith

BuebaU
American Lea..•
DETROIT nGERS: AMounced the
raipaliex1 cl Ozea Shea, 111illlnt din:lc·
lor public rolationl, to become !.he
•porta infoan11ion dirccwt f« Nor1hwat·

or

em UnivcnDty.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Activat·
cd Dickiop.on, Wielder, fmn the ISday diublCd liat. Sent Mike Ianuillk,
pilehcr, to New Orlcar. rA the American
Aaaociation.

TEXAS RANOERS: Placed David

· Thursday's games

wido nleeiv&amp;

National HockeJ Leque

(Sondalon7-IO), 10:05 p.m.

Today's gamos

Atlanta (A'IIcry I t-3) at Colorado
tl'1mlt 3-3~ 9:0!1 p.m.

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"
CHILLED APPLE JUICE OR

·

Oakland c:-1111 P-0.2) at Cllif.,_
... (Lanaltoo 9-5), 10:05 p.m.

Oa.k.land (We ch 7-7) at California

York (Saberh11a1 6-7), 7:40 _p.m.
CINCINNATI (Pugh 6-9) 01 H"""""
tl'onugll 1-4), 1:05 p.m.

-----------

r. .·

(IMI)'H). t0:05

s..

St. Loui1 (Tewksbury 10-7) at
P!Uiodclphio (Muthou.nd 9-8), 7o3S p.m.
Montreal (Hill 7-2) 1t Piuahurgh
(BIIWd 1.0), 7 :~ p.m.
F1orid1 (AnnatronJ 7-10} It New

liMil ONE COI.ItQN PIR Dltl RUI PliJICH.\111

(Doheny 9-S~ 1:35 e_.m.
Cl.llVELAND tL&lt;&gt;poz :Z.O) at Oticaao (Bc:re 4-3). 1:35 p.ltl.
Baltimce (ValCJnzucla 6-1) at Toroaoo (Stocdanyno 5. 7). 7:35
Botton ~•on 7-S at Milwaukee
(Minnd. 0.1). 1:05 p.m.
Tc111 (Pavlik 3-S} 11 Kanua Chy
(Pidwdo5-6~ 1:3S p.m.
Minne~ota (Banta 6-1) at Seattle
(Johnlm 1().6), lO:M pm.

CJ.tcnlion.:

nounc:cd the rdirlmcnt d Ha.uan Janes,

New York (HuttOft 1-0) at Detroit

Boaton (Scle 4-0) at Milwaukee
(Bone. 6--6), 2:05 p.m.
Tu.u ([Aibnndt 9-5) at Kanau City
(Oo"'on 5-2), 2:35p.m.
Detroit (Moore 6·5) at Toronto
(S~wan 6-4), 7:3!5 p.m.
Minne~ota (Erickaon 6-11) at Se.lttlc

Francilco (Brummett 1-)), 4:05p.m.

1
I
I
I
I
I
I

60

H""""" ................ .52
Loa Angclet ....•......52
CINCINNATI ....... .52
San Di.eao---··-·······-39
Colondo ................36

8

M...,..J l.l'luol&gt;wY&gt; 6
New Yodt 4, Floddl3
HOUIUIII. 6, CINClNNA11!5
AUantl 10, Colorado S
Pranc:Uco 3. Loo Anaoi• 2

i!

.

VG

.667
.588

San Dicao 8, Otieago 0
Phibdcl~a 10, SL Louis 7

1

~:=.,"""

Son Pranc:Uco ••••••.•68 34
Atlanta ...................60 42

Tuesday's scores

I

REGULAR OR LIGHT

5

FI?OZEN FI?IED CHICKEN,
TURKEY OR SALISBURY STEAK

THE 1993

CLEVELAND BR'OWNS: An·

Today•s gamos

GB

W.tern Dlvillon

12-oz

League game In Houston, wbere-tbe Astros woo
6·5 despite Biggio's railed steal attempt of tblrd,
wbich got this play started. (AP)

Scoreboard

\

OX FORD , Ohio (AP) Miami, Fla. , is more than 1,000
miles from Miami (Ohio) University in Oxford. For Devin Davis and
Edmond "Poncho"
quharson,
· it's a ja
· to a world they
hardly kn w.
Davis nd Farquharson are
recruits for
iami basketball
team. Fonner stars of Miami Senior
High School'~ J992 - 93big- sch~l
state champmnship tearrl, they w•ll
be arriving in the fall from two of
the city's "lbua/"'lt neighborhoods
to the tranquil setting of the Oxford
campus . .
Davis a 6-foot-6 1/2 forward, is
from Ov~wn, where riots threate~ed the 1989 Super Bowl.
Farquharson, a 6-5 shooting
guard, is from Liberty City1 !'flother
of Miami s toullh commumues.
.
'

,

OUT ON IDS KNEES -After slipping to bis
knees, Houstoa's Craig Biggio (left) ~ecomes the
victim or a Cbris Saba lllg play for tbe out In tbe
second Ionlo1 or Tuesday nl&amp;bt's National

HWac, oul.fi.elder, an lhc 1.5-dty cUMbled
U.n. Recalled ButCh DIVil, outfielder,
han Oldoh""' City &lt;I tho Amelicon Ao&amp;Oeiltim.
Naltonot Leaau•

MONTREAL EXPOS:

a...u..t 1oe

Siddall, catchm-, and Oil Heredia, pitcher,
han Qaawo tho In......... LuDe&amp;ipaled Tirh Mclntoth, catcher, f« •

or

.._... Oplionod MibCludio.-, pitcher, 1o Ottawa. Sent Ore&amp; Colbrunn, ru.t
biiCiftan, ~ Oaaw1 an an injury Rlhabilitation au·
ern.
SAN'1'Ji'Eoo PADRES : Acqoi,.d
Andy Athhy, pit.chcr, fran ll!.e Colonda

ar.,;

R~i• to ~plcu the vade for
Harril md Bruce HunL Pllrchuod \he
.contnct ~ ltriil Brown, oudiddcr, from
Lu Vea11 of lhe Par.itic C011t Lupo.
w•ived Kwt Stillwell, infleJAar, far the
purpan al pvq; him hit wsccaliliOMl
........ lleaan""" ~... Coren, .........
for ulipnan,.;o

BasketbaD
N - I l lulletboll-lbt
CHICAGO BULLS : Si.aned Corie

Blown. forward.

NEW JERSilY NETS: Signed llovid

Wuy,.,.....

'

JlootbaU
NadonalF'""""U'-..
BUPFALO BILLS ; Slpod Broce
Smilh, deftnliye end, 10.1 fCIW"year oaalnCL

'

CHICAOO BI!AIIS: Sipod llonnitll

Pressure
Cooker
Canners,
Pressure
Cooker Rings,
and other
Canning
·Supplies,
all at•••

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 13, 1993.
Advertising D
ne Is
August 5, 1.993.

PICKENS

CALL DAVE or P.J •.TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

HARDWARE

992·2155.

MASON, WV.

�•

•

•

Thomas helps ChiS ox notch·7-4
victory over Tribe; Jays win
j

'.

..

CHICAGO (AP) - Frank
Thomas was ready 10 play.and he
gave some teammates a wakeup
cl!ll.
"We seemed a little down
tonight for some reason. I don't
think some guys came to play
tonight," said Thomas, who went
4-for-4 with two home runs and
five RBis Tuesday night to lead lhe
Chicago White Sox to a 7-4 win
over lhe Cleveland Indians.
"I was reaily fired up about
tonight's game. It's imponant for
us to win at home. If you're going
to win the peooant. you have to win
at home. I wanted to step it up a
notch, and I did."
Thomas is 11-for-18 (.611) wilh
four homers and nine RBis in his
last five games.
Jack McDowell becalne the first
16-game winner in baseball as lhe
White Sox came from behind to
win for the secpnd straight nighl
"Winning is all that matters,"
McDowell said. "It doesn't matter
if we blow teams out or come from
behind in the ninth. As long as we
win.' '
"Once you start winning late in
ball .games, it starts catching on,"
White Sox manager Gene Lamont
said. "HopefuUy we won't always
have to wait so long."
Chicago lrailed 4-2 entering lhe
seventh, but Ozzie GuiUen reached
on a fielder's choice, Steve Sax had
a bunt single and Craig Grebeck hit
an RBI double, knocking Jeff
Mutis (2-4) out of lhe game.
Thomas, who had hit his 25th
homer an inning earlier, then greet·
ed Jeremy Hernandez with a three·
run homer to center, sending the
.White Sox to their I Oth victory in
14 ~ames.
'We expect (Thomas) to do that
in that situation, but I guess (the
Indians) didn't," McDowell said.
"I know I wouldn't have been
throwing him too many strikes in
that situation."
Hernandez missed on a close
pitch before Thomas homered on a
2-2 count.
"We thought we had him struck
out," Indians manager Mike Hargrove said. ·" I'm sure (the White
Sox) thought it was a ball. (Her·
nandez) is just not hitting the
spots.''
McDowell (I!Ki) won his fourth
straight start. He pitched seven
innings and g_ave up four ru~s _on
10 hits, walking two and stnlcing
out five. Roberto Hernandez got
the last two outs for his 21st save.
"Jack didn't have his best stuff
tonight." Lamont said. "He got the
ball up. It was not his best stuff, but
he's 16-6."
"In order for us to win this

thing, I need to win over 20
games," McDowell said. ···y know
that sounds bad, but that's the truth.
Where I'm at right now, .if I don't
win 20, we won't win iL''
The Indians took a 2-0 leadjn
the first when Kenny Lofton and
Carlos Baerga singled, Albert Belle
walked and Paul Sorrento followed
wilh a two-run single:
Chicago made it 2-1 in the third
when Sax doubled and scored on
Thomas' single.
Cleveland added a run in the
fifth when Lofton singled and
scored on Wayne Kirby's double,
and the Indians scored again in lhe
sixth on singles by Reggie Jefferson, Felix Fermin and Junior Ortiz
that made it 4-1.
Chicago's .Ellis Burks hit his
14th homer leading off the eighth
for the fmal run.
Elsewhere Tuesday, Toronto
slipped past Baltimore 6-5, Seattle
beat Miooesota I 0.8; Texas edged
Kansas City 1-0; New York beat
Detroit 5-2; Milwaukee topped
Boston 3·2; and California routed
Oakland 15-8. .
Blue Jays6, Orioles 5
It was biUed us a clash of bitter
AL East rivals with a simmering
subplot hatched at the All-Star
game.
·
.
It turned out to be something a
bit more timid; a game where the
brouhaha was quelled beforehand
and lhe caliber of play was not up
to October standards.
First, the Mike Mussina-Cito
Gaston feud died.
The Orioles' starter apologized
for voluntarily wanning up during
the All-Star game, and the Toronto
manager spent all day denying any
bad blood exis.ted. ·
·
Then, ·~Toronto went out and
secured a 6-5 victory on Pat Borders' h"ustling infield hit in the
eighlh iMing.
The so-called Gaston-Mussina
feud came about when the Toronto
manager neglected to use Mussina
in the All Star game at Camden
Yards. Baltimore fans took it as a
slight, but it later became known
that Mussina warmed up in the
ninth inning without Gaston's
approval.
"I don't hold grudges and I
expect our guys don't either," said
Gaston, who met with Mussina earlier in the day.
The Blue Jays led 3.-2 in the
eighth when closer Duane Ward .
came on to face Cal Ripken with
two on and two out. Ward, who
had 26 saves in 30 chances, gave
up a three-run homer, Ripken's
15th of the season.
In the bottom of the eighth, Bal- ·
timore manager Johnny Oates

In NFL camps,

'.

called on Greg Olson, who also had
26 saves in 30 chances, after John
Olerud - 2-for-3, .403 - singled
of Jim Poole (1·1) to load the bases
with one out.
Olson fanned Tony Fernandez
for the second ou~ but Ed Sprague
followed with a double down lhe
left field line that tied "the game.
Border~ then hit a sharp
grounder to shortstop, and Ripken
made a diving stab. But his throw
was too late to get Borders, who
slid head-first into the bag as
Olerud scored the game-winning
run. Ward (2-2) ended up a thank·
ful winner.
Mariners 10, Twins 8
Ken Griffey Jr. extended his
home run streak to seven games .one shy of the major-league record
shared by Dale Long and Don Mattingly- with a 441-foot grand
·slam, and Seattle held on after vis·
iting Minnesota rallied from 7·0
and 8-3 deficits.
Griffey's fifth career slam highlighted a seven-run second, but it
was Tino Martinez's sixth-inning
single off George Tsamis (1·2) that
won it for Rich DeLucia (3·5).
Rangers 1, Royals 0
Texas' only hit was Rafael
Palmeiro's home run in the seventh
inning, which broke up Kevin
Appier's no-hit bid and made
Kenny Rogers (8-6) lhe winner.
Appier (11-5), who struck out a
career-high II in his third complete
game, had retired 16 straight when
Palmeiro hit a 1·0 pitch for his 21st
homer.
Yankees 5, Tigers 2
Danny Tartabull's homer in
New York's four-run second gave
Jim Abbott all the support he needed to win at Detroit for the first
time in four years.
· Abboll (8·8) got help from
Steve Parr, who pitched the ninth
for his 21st save. Bill Gullickson
(6-6) was the loser.
Brewers 3,.Red Sox 2
Jaime Navarro snapped a fivegame losing streak with his first
win .since June 16 and Robin Yount
hit his 250th career homer for Mil·
waukee.
Navarro (6·8) was hurt only by
Mo Vaughn's 15th home run, a
solo shot in the seventh. Danny
Darwin (9-8) took the loss.
Angels 15, Alhletics 8
Tim Salmon homered twice and
drove in four runs and Chad-Curtis
had four hits and four RBis.
The Angels also got a three-run
homer and three runs from Eduardo
Perez, Tony Perez's son, in his
major league debut.
Bobby Witt (8-8) lasted onethird of an inning. Joe Grahe (3-1)
won, and Ken Patterson got his
rust save.

Seahawks' Kennedy ends holdout;
Colts' George still bucking offers
By The Associated Press
Cortez Kennedy is back, Jeff
George is still missing.
Kennedy, the NFL Defensive
Player of the Year in 1992, reported to the Seattle Seahawks' training camp Tuesday after a six-day
holdout in a contract dispute.
"They're going to start tallcing
about a contract extension now that
he's in camp," Seahawks
spokesmanGaryWrightsaid.
Kennedy passed a physical
examination and should be ready to
begin workouts _toda_y, assistant
trainer John Kas1k S8ld. Kennedy
said he had made his point and
didn't want to let liis teammates
down.
" It was a business decision
(concerning) the contract and some
other things, but hopefully we can
work it out," he said.
Kennedy, a rare bright spot for
the Seahawks in a 2-14 season last
year has two years left on a fiveyea;, $6.75 million contract he
signed in 1990. Scheduled to earn
$975,000 this season, he was
thought to he upset because of the
$17 million, four-year contract free
agent defensive lineman Reggie
White signed with Green Bay.
Kennedy was fined $4,000 a day
for a total of $24,000. Th!ll's a lot,
but .it's still far behind the total of
George's fines so far.
The Indianapolis Colts' quarter·
back, who reportedly wants to be
traded, has so far lost $52,000 for

missing trainin~. But there was still
no sign of him m.camp.
"I've had no contact from him
at all," Colts coach Ted Marchi·
broda said. "I haven't heard a
word from him."
The Colts' exhibition opener is
Aug. 7 lit Seattle.
"The more time he misses, it
certainly can't help him," Marchi·
broda said.
George hasn ' t commented on
his situation, but he apparently is
unhappy with the fans in lndianapolis, who turned on the former
hometown hero last season.
"We need him back out here,
but we need him to come back with
a positive attitude,"linebacker Jeff
Herrod said.
Bills
Defensive end Bruce Smith
signed a four-year, $13.5-million
coritract
·
''I'm not complaining, put it
lhat way," said Smith, the NFL's
defensive player of the year in
1990. "I'm very happy. I'm a
wealthy person."
Bears
Cornerback Donnell Woolford,
who led the Bears with seven inter·
. ceptions last year, signed a three·
year contract extension estimated at
more lhan $7 million.
Dolphins
Safety Louis Oliver signed a
one-year contract, giving him a
shot at the free-agent market n~xt
year. The strategy is risky for Ohv·

Prosecutors to wait for tests
On explosl'veS be,J'.orefilz'ng
'J •
charges
againstdistrict
(;_olem,a~
By BETH HARRIS
attorney s othce gets
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Prose·
cutors said Tuesday they will wait
for results on explosives tests
before deciding whether to file
char,ges against New York Mets
outfielder Vince Coleman, who
auegedly tossed a lighted fuecracker that injured three people.
··we have not made a decision
and probably won't until the end of
the week, probably Thursday,"
said Michael Botula, spokesman
for tile Los Angeles district attor·
ney's office. "We are waiting word
from_explosives lab to see what
kind of explosive it was."
. If a felony chargl? _is filed, the
,)

t~e .
case. If a misdemeanor charg~ 1s
filed, the c1ty attorney's off1ce
woul~ h_andle tL
. W:llham Hodgman, th_e deputy
d1stnct auorney, met w1th Cole·
man's l~wyer Tuesda~. The attor·
ney,_M1c_hael ~asall_r of Santa ·
Momca, did not1mmed18t.ely return
a telephone call. .
Coleman was~~ New Y~rk for a
gam.e Tues'!ay mght agamst the
Flonda Marlins. .
"The Mets w1l! have no ~~m­
ment on the case sm~ no deciSion
has been,rorthcomlDg from Los
Angeles.

er because the NFL is expected to
have a salary cap in place for the
1994 season.
Cowboys
Tight end Alfredo Roberts
underwent surgery for a foot frac·
ture and the team said he would
miss at least two months. Roberts
was hurt Monday during a practice
session.
"We 're short at that position
and we're looking around the
league for help," Dallas coach
Jimmy Johnson said.
The second-string tight end, FatIon Wacasey, is out indefinitely
wilh a shoulder separation.
Raiders
Quarterback Jeff Hostetler
returned to practice one day after
getting poked in the eye by a DaJ.
las Cowboys lineman.
Hostetler participated in both
sessions of the joint practice with
the Cowboys and pronounced himself fit. He said the injury was just
a bruise, and there was no scratch
on the eyeball.
Chargers
Cornerback Gill Byrd left praclice after twisting his left knee in a
non-conlact drill.
"We don't know how bad it is
right now,'' said Chargers coach
Bobby Ross. "He made a plant and
just kind of twisted it."
Anthony Miller, the only.receiver in the AFC to Sl!rpass ;1,000
yards last year, also had to leave
practice because of an eye injury.
Browns

Music stars honored
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Evans.
Dennis Weaver was at the reins for
"It was great to be part of such
a cable TV special that featured a an historic everit," said Weaver,
gathering of legendary country known for his TV roles in "Gunmus1c stars.
smoke" and "McCloud."
"A Tribute to the Singing CowThe program scheduled for ·
boy," m"ade for the Nashville Net· broadcast Mondar mixes vintage
work, features appearances by film clips, nostalgic anecdotes and
Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and Dale perfonnances.

24 PAK ·
12 OZ. CANS

25"°FF Berkline Recliners...Storting At On~ 5194
25" 0f Metal Cabinets: ·
· Utililies, Wardrobes, Bases lind Chinas

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS
12 PAK
12 OZ. CANS
TEARING DOWN • ne tbree-ronm but with thatch roof and
walls where the native preacher and his family lived was torn
down by the mission team.

.

'

WHITNEY

PINK
SALMON
14.7 oz.

s

59

CAMPBELL'S

Bananas•••••••

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75 oz.

3lBt

~WAWAWAWAP•••••~AWAWAW~

COUPON

11I

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5399 390Z.

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onw Good July, July 25thru July 31,1993
Umitl Per Cuolomw

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II
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6·6.5

Good Only

1

oz~

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GREAT LAKES SUGAR . ~

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Good Only AI Powell'a Super Volu
Oflw Good July, July 25thru July 31, 1993

TOASTER
PASTRIES
11 oz.
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II

MERICO

c

P-ell'a Super Valu
Offer Good July, July 25 thru July 31, 1993
LimitS Per Cuolomer .

11

1

'

Wednesday, July 28, 1993
Page-7

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

::

.

c

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES 1---....ioo!---1
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JULY 31, 1993

Cleveland as a free agent after
seven years with Minnesota"

The Athens Assoeiation of Foot·
ball Officials will be conducting an
adult education class for any indi·
viduals interested in officiating
foolbau.
The fU"St class will be Thursday
at 6:30 pm at Mei$S High School.
Successful complenon of the classes will enable the applicants to satisfy the Ohio fli$h School Athletic
Association reqwrements to officiate high school football.
For more information, contact
Dave Jenkins or any other local ~
football offiCial.

The Daily Sentinel

Mission team returns from
Dominican Republic

2
LmR

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•:

class Thursday

COCA·COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10 PM

wi:ea~~~:i!~~e~h~ ;~·::r~~:~

;:tban officiating

By The Bend

MEULUR'S

ELBO
MACARONI
1 LB. BOX

s

~

fJ

11 ____________ l;!m11_! !'"! !?'!.'~.!"!!"! __________ -'1

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•:

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11
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Offer Good July, July 251hru July 31,1993
Umil1 Pw Cuatomer

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MEULLER'S

SPAGHETTI
I LB. BOX

s

Seven members of the Middle·
port Church of Christ have returned
IP Meigs County after participating
in a short term· missions team pro·
gram in the Dominican Republic.
The group from here joined
eight others from Ohio and Indiana
to form a 15-member work team
which was sponsored by Teen Mission USA of Leltington Ky. . .
The main project carried out by
the group was removing an existirlg
hut and constructing in its place a
modem concrete block building. A
native Dominican preacher and his
family lived in the three room hut
which had a thatch roof and walls.
Thanks to the work of the mission
team they now enjoy a small block
home which according to the team
members, must "seem like a mansionn.
While in the Dominican Repub·
lie, the team members also worked
with veteran missionaries, Rick and
Susanne York. They also assisted
in distribution of material concern·
ing a local church and Christian
School along with opportunities to
teach, preach and share.
Another area of service was in
the medical field where they had
the opportunity to assist medical
missionary, Gary Klein, in a local
clinic. He travels to different villages throughout the Dominican
and sees as maily as 120 patients a
day.
.
The missions team had taken
with them a great amount. of
medicine and used eye glasses to
be distributed among the Domini·
cans by the medical missionary.
The local team members agreed
that the trip was most educational.
They said that the conditions in
which the people live is almost
beyond belief, with dirt, pests,
rodents and unsanitary living and
health conditions as a way of life.
The local group saiil they returned
with a new sense of awareness as
well as thankfulness for the blessings enjoyed in America.
·
Sunday evening the missions
team will be sharing their experiences at lhe Middleport Church of
Christ, Fifth and Main . The program will begin at 7 p.m. and the
public is invited to attend.

DIGGING THE FOOTER • Local mis5ion team members, from
the left, James White, Do11,na Hartson, and April Hudson, ~e!ped
di~ the rooter for a new concrete block home for the Domm1can
mmister and his family.

THE MISSION TEAM • These Middleport
Church of Christ niembers were part or a lS
member.missions team to the Dominican Repub·
lie. Sunday night at 7 p.m. at the church they
will telllhe story ol tbe1r experiences in lhe mis·

sion field. L.;cal te.am members ,were from tb~
len, front, Marie Snyder, Donna Hartson, April
Hudson, and back, James White, Dodger
Vaughan, Bill ·Frazier, and Jeremy Hartson.

25" 011 Sectionals ............................. As Low As 5823
25" off Occasional Tables ................ Many New Styles
25" off Bedroom Suites................ From On~ 5444
.25x 011 Dining Tobles &amp;Choirs ..... 3pt set 5186
25" off ·Sofos and Loveseats........... Huge Seledion
25" off Desks..................,...................As Low Ass 171

Anderson's
992·3671

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

VISA
M/C
ANDERSON
CHARGE

'

UP GOES THE BLOCK BUILDING • Laying block was a new
exp.erience tor most of those on the missions team.

Third Theiss reunion held
The third annual Theiss reunion
was held at Star Mill Park, Racine,
on July 11, wilh 119 people regis·
tering.
President Tom Theiss caDed lhe
· family to order and extending

greetings. Invocation and benedi·
tion were given by Tammy Theiss.
Dave Kucsma served as master of
ceremonies. Secretary Mary K.
. ost reported on activities of the
' . ?2 reunion.

Community calendar
~

. Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calen·
dar.
·
WEDNESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Past Matrons will hold a
picnic at 7 p.m. at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Nelson, Flatswoods
Road.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • All Eastern
Athletes grade 7-12 wishing to play
sports may pick up athletic packets
in the athletic office today from 9
a.m. to noon and from 6 to 9 p.m.
POMEROY • The Beli~ver's
Fellowship Ministry; located in the
former Locomotion building on
Mechanic Street will hold a
I

·-~-~

------------ - --

revivial starting Thursday and runnin!l through Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
nightly with evangelist Jeff Cottrill.
There will be a ventriliquist, Patty
and Lenny, on Thursday. Rev .
Margaret J. Robingson invites lhe
public for more information call
992-2463.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • Rev. Ralph
Simpson will be preaching at the
Faith Full of Gospel Church at 7
p.m. There will be local singers.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub·
lie. Fellowship will follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS • A round
and square dance will be held at the
Tuppers Plains VFW from 8 to
11:30 p.m. C.J. and the Country
Gentlemen will perform. Melvin
Cross will be cl!ller.

.

..

'

Pictures of the lhird generation
decendants and their spouses of
Rev. Lubert and Marie Louise Hille
Theiss were taken and family
reports made. Group pictures as
well as those attending for the fU"St
time were also taken. It was report·
ed that Alice Hill is now in a nursing home. The death of Roger
Grueser was also noted.
Awards of caps or mugs with
the Theiss crest and "Theiss
Reunion 1993" were presented to
Blythe Theiss, oldest man present; •
Louise Ewing, oldest woman present; Simon Meyers, youngest boy;
Rachelle Davis, youngest girl; Avis
Theiss Harrison, Carolyn Yost
Kucsma, Angel Dolan and Michael
Kucsma, ·traveling the farthest and
Ethel Orr with .four generations,
largest family present.
Don Ewing, Zanesville, with
local help from Ron Grimm, Ivan
. Powell and .Dennis Wolfe, entertained with country music.
Out-of-state folks were from
Florida, Maine, South Carolina and
West Virginia. Others were from
RQseville, Zanesville, Columbus,
Grove City, Mi(!dleport, Pomeroy,
Kirkersville, Syracuse, Bidwell,
· Gallipolis and Racine.
'

.

.,

"'

'·'

�-

'

•

Ohio

Wednesday,

Ohio

.

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

811 IIR Quality!
81niR Servlcel
81 I IIR Selection I

•

.

DESTINY HANING

RATES
Rate
Over 15 Words
$ 4.00
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!5
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6
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$ 9.00
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10
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$ .60 .
$1.30/day
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Monthly 15
Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged lor each day as separate ads.
Busineso Cud-.. .$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board.-.$6.00/inch per day

Days
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Call 992-2156

Haning birth

MON.

thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

announced

POLICIES
• A3a oull,ide th.e county 19ur ad nmt muat be prep~
• Receive dilcout for ada paid iaadvaJW:e,
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Fouad ad. uDder 15 word. will he

Warren (Buster) Haninjt and
Reva Mullen announce the birth of
their daughter, Destiny Jo Haning,
on June 21 at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
She weighed six pounds and
two ounces and was I 9 inches

rua 3 day• al DO charp.

Grandparents are Brian and
.Nancy Mullen, Middlepon: Shirley
Wise, Middlepon and Ronald Haning, Harrisonville. Great-grandparents are Don and Barb Mullen,
Middleport.

'

GaiDa County

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Meig&amp; County Mu.oon Co., WV

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
2-ln Me ..ory

.

4%-GalUpollo
367-Cheobire
388-ViDtoo
24~Rlo

Yard Salt~~

· Ia Memoriam

, - - - - --1

Classified pages cover lhe
foUowing lelephone exchanges ...

• Price of ad for all capiLalleUen il double' priee of ad COli.
• 7 poialliae type only uled
• Sentinel il DOl reepoDilble for error. after (ttll day (cbeck
for errora ftrll day ad rune in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
d&amp;y .Ctcr publication to make correction
• Ad. that mutt be paid ln ad:wance are:
Card ol Thank..
Happy Ad.

long.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
UJO p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
l:OOp.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThUJ&gt;day
1:00 p.m. Friday

675-Pl. Plea.. nl

992-Middloponl
Pomeroy
985-Cbee\er
843-Portland
247-Letart Fallo
949-Raclne
742-Rudond

Grande

2S~uyan

Diet.

643-Aralol• Dlot.
379-Walnut

458-Leoa
576-Apple Gro&gt;e

773-Muon
882-New Haven
895-Letort
937-Bu/ralo

3-- Auouncemcntl
4- Giveaway

II- Help Waaled
12- Situatiolll Wanted

:&gt;--- Happy Ado
6- Loat and Found

13-- ln•uraoce
14-- Buelnee1 Training
15- School• &amp; ln~Lrucdon
1&amp;- Radio, TV &amp; CD Repair
17- Miaeellaneoue
18- Waaled To Do

7- Lottand Found
8- Puhlk Sole &amp;
Auction
9- Wanted to Buy

667 -CooJ.IUe

446·4514
1·800·766·4013

Carolyn McCoy
m-5082
' Sandy Henderoon
1192-3647 ll

Free Estimates
446-2845

-

10 yurwarnnty, white cnly.

makeover.

BETTER Insulated RValue 4 $475.00
10 VHf w1rranty1 whitI or brawn.

Howard L Writesel

EMPLOYEE OF THE

N~~~~~E~~R 1
Sweet
FRESH

HOMIGROWN

Crispy Fresh
HOME GROWN

Reel Ripe
INDIANA 18 to 20 lb, Avg.

term
SYDNEY HYSELL

Hysell birthday
Sydney Hope Hysell, daughter
of Grant and Drema Owens HyseU,
recently celebrated her frrsl birthday with a "Barney and Baby Bop"
theine,
Friends and family members
were in auendance. Prize winners
were Joey Nottingham and Myra
Halfhill. The party was held ac
General i-Iartinger Parle in Middle-

port.

FRESH Portions

Chicken
Dru111sticks
5 lb. Pkg. or More

PUBUC NOTICE
On Ju• -• 6, 1H3, 11
epproxlmately 6:00 A.IL,
the M/V lt.A. V•tal
eccldentally diachargecl en
unknown quentlty of
number 2 dfeeal fuel at mile
post 237.5 ol Ute Ohio Rlvw.
tit. eHecled ar•• Include
mHe 237.5 1o mAe 242.5 of
the Ohio River. Campbell
Tranoporlatlon Compeny,
Inc. fa 11M owner or the MIV
A.A. V•tal, Wlllch Ia the
cleelgnaled oource or 11M
oplll purotlllnl·lo the ou
Pollution Aot or 11110.
Clelmo erlolng out ol thlo
eplll may be oubmltted to
Campbell · Trar....-tlon
Company, Inc., P. 0. Box.
124, Charleroi, Pa. 15022,
Attn.: Don Grimm or by
calling C•mpbefl · TraM·
portatlon Corr.:N!IIY at 1412)
4a.e551 from i:OO AM 1o
4:30 PM, Monday Utrouoh
Frldlry.
If lor any reaeon
Campbell Trana,-tlon
Inc.
to 101 on
your
m wllhfn 10 dayo,
lh., pu IIIII)' aubmlt It to:
Unfleil ltatea C:O.t Gt111rd
National Pollution Fund•
eenw, 42Ut Wllaon Blvd.,
lull• 1000, Allington, VA
22201-11114.
(7) .... 7, !1. .. 12, 13, 14, .

Co""':J

f•

15, 11, 11,10, 21, 22, 23, 21,
27, 21, 21, 30; (f) 2, 3, ...
5, I, t, 10, 11, t2, 13, 30tc
('

In Memory of
our dear son,
MICHAEL
PATRICK
BISSELL,
on his 6th
birthday.
Sadly missed by

Cheese Food

Food Club
A111erican Singles

12 Pack

I miss you, Mom,
with all my heart.
Daughter
Debbie
Poem wrilten by
B"anddous/oter,
De11on Hire

Pepsi

Wrapped Slices
111. WANT TO
How about buying
rental pmparty. These 4 apartments could make your
house payment and hava extra spending money.
Each apartment has a bathroom, kitchon and living
room. Soma 1 bedrooms, soma 2 bad100ms. Beat of
all, irs on LAND CONTRACT. Call for mora

B

Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
Free Estimates

(former Mason Lanes)

614-446-8568 ~~~

3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV.
(304) :n3-55a5
·suMMER HOURs·
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Sliced Bacon

14 oz. Box

Big Bear's
Famous
• Pu.
Fried Chicken
2 Brecsts, 2 Thighs, 2 Drumsticks, 2 Wings

One loll "'•· • 90

Sparkle
Towels

lhaeta
4

110. SYRACUS~
- - This
ft. frame houoa used
J) rty. Can be usad for
residential puopo
50x100 lol Nat. gas
circulator. Cily w
ONLY $5,750 t::l

to be used lor

99

09\02200

One lb. Pkg.

..~

Lucky Charms
Cereal

~

soL

R&amp;( EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
B~SEMENTS&amp;
':HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

883'5

~

Dozen Ctn.

Peotl Clult • 64 oz. Ctn.

:a6-:a9 oz. c1111

Orange
JUiCe

Maxwell House

Ground ·
Coffee

From cor&lt;:enlrat•

Food ctult • 16 oz.

110 IIAI'I • 8 Ct. Plt:t•

Wiener or ,
Sandwi.ch Buns

=

99

114. MIDDLEPORT - Older 3 bedroom, 1 bath 0
~
home. LA, DR, kit, fully carpeted. Cmwl space, front (II
and back porch, cellar, tool shad, nat. gas F.A.
furnace. Excellont kitchen cabinet space. 2 extra
lots Beautiful yard and a channing house.
'
ONLY $35,000

.~

113. SYRACUSE- Nice 3 bedroom, 1 beth home
with lull basamont. Stonn doors and otorm Windows. t::l
Heat pump wilh electric heat, Vinyl siding, 1'/, car I:J
garage city walar and city sewer. Good shelter homo. c::
'
ASKING $42,500
•
'"'I
Do you iteed oomeone t~ handle all the til
tflob..-oomenlll lho conlllcta, .,d lhe worrieo that
come with ulring your houoe? We'll do Ill We'•• (II
her• ...-vlng your,.., eo181a _ . I

c-

~

Pork and
Beans

=

.

· 12· 5-tfn

Fatten your Wclllet
with aWant Rd

BRUCE 1EAFORD

BROKER
HOllE PHONE:

.'
i

.
'

.

•

lUNCH

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

GRAVEL, SAND,

..

•
1'9
Plumbins &amp; Heating
Excavalins
Relri«••ratio~
Gateral Haulins
Mobile Home Repair
Upbobtery

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

2112/92/tfn

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

~~~~~;A~ddltiono
Work

205-75R15" liger Pow XTM RWL
205-75R14" liger Pow XTM RWL
215-75R15" Flreotone OWL
235-75R15" Firestone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING•EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGREss• 61:i8193

end Plumbing

C. YOUNG
992-6215

•

'

1

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773-5533

Ohio

'===::::::9·:1=~
~

RACINE

MOWER CLINIC
WAllER AllEY
Parts and Service
Mowers ·Chain Saws
Weedealers
Authorized: Briggs &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
·Hours 96- M-F 9·3 Sat.
Closed Sunday

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Oh~o 45760
(614) 843·5264

~14/Uitfn

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
318/tfn

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

.j
r!~~!~lng

38984 Lic:ding

Creek Road
Middleport, ~hio
614·992·7144
. 4/29/9'i.

Tr:~fng

· •TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6628
4-19-93-tfn

BIN
EVERY THURSDAY
,·
EAGLES

CLUB

We Haul Gravel,
or

•BACKHOE

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

36358 SR 7

992-3470

-c

FOR CHRIS

Life • Medicare • Cancer a Fire • H·ealth
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

4126/tfn

Coal, Trash, etc.

•DOZERS

ASK

AMERICAN GENERAL liFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

949·2804

614·698-3290
614·6~8-6500
7f7/lfn

5/10/93

"

S l·. ll\ I( I·:S

INo Sunday Call~)

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT
OWNER: Jefl Wld10rsham

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH t 0.
Nol Relponsble lor at;dden11 or lou of property
licenMd and Bonded in
&amp; WHI

Va1111 &amp; 4 WD'•
Moton:ycle.
Boatl &amp; Moton for Sale
Auto Parb &amp; Accuoon ..l
Auto Repair
Campi.as Equipment

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1

n3-5785

AulOI for Sale
Trucl11 for Sale

992-7878

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·99 2· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

..--;, n

imimt£(814)
Mf.2540
HEADQUARTERS

MASON, WV

55- Buildibf! Suppliea

· Quality
Stone Co.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

Jill HU
SALES ASSOCIATE SALES ASSOCIATE
HOllE PHONE:
HOME PHONE:

51- Hou•ebold Good.
52- Sporting Good.
53- An liq uee
~ Miac. Mel'chandiae

~JAY,MAR

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUC110N CONDUCTED BY

SHERRY RFFLE

\11 .- 1{1:11 \\lli :' E

__

WILL BE SELLING THE ESTATE OF
DOROTHY FAIRES OF POINT PLEASANT, WV, AND
lrrFu.•:FRf)M THE JOHN LEWIS ESTATE IN MASON, WV.
BOTH ESTATES WILL BE MOVED TO THE YOUTH
CENTER ON CAMDEN AVE. IN POINT PLEASANT, WV
Mahogany secretary bookcase, dresser, cherry sideboard,
sman gate leg table, Chippendale style daw and ball fool
• ••&gt;•if• Crosley grandfather clock wilh radio, Victonan walnut
she~lw· ilh bird, carved Victorian towel soolfwith candleholdors,
.. onedrawerwashstandwilh 1owel holders, sewing stand,
' back chair and other Vic1orian chairs, 4 pressback oak
~~~:~, ''~!· swivel rocker, 3 pc. bedroom suite, Jewel Tea
•
Jewel Tea bowl, Blue Willow dishes, 3 footed Pink
bepressiion bowl, Blue Danube cream. and sugar, Bavarian
bowl, 3 hand painlod Nippon cups and saucers, beaulilul
vases, hull basket, sUvor platter, brass-candlesticks, teapol,
Waterberry man\le clock, old quills, bedspreads, linens, old
pin cushions, mahogany mirror, gifted mirror, oil lamps, floor
lamp, bedroom lamps, colonial lamps, costume jewelry, ooflee grinder, old ship door slop, oak plale rack, cruel sel, sails,
sloneware, pols and pans, books and more Verypartiallisting
Lots of Gorxl Collectibles in 'this Auction.
Plan To Be With Us/

WI N1E0 YOUR LJ8UIQII
CALL NOW, AN'fTIME OF THI! DA'I'I

49-- For Loue

liMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3-4-93- 1 mo.
.....__ __
.__ ...

.

=
t

41- Howe~ lor Rent
42- Mobile Homu for Beat
43--- Fum• for Rent 44- Apartment for RCDt
45- Furniahed Room•
46- Space lor Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
4.&amp;- Equipment for Real

HAULING

PH. 614·992-5591

\1. ~

614·992·76'43

6/81'9211 mo.

JULY 31, 1993- 10:00 A.M.

122. RACINE "'~ £
possibly 4, one
bath home on .
5,.._.._,G\YI siding, 2 car
garage gas fuma p£ND~ ~ice location ..
'
ONLY $35,000 ;:.-!
:1:1
103. MOBILE HOME- 1975 14x70 3 _bedroom, 1 (II
bath mobile.home. Carpelad, total alectnc, good SiZe
rooms. Foont pon:h 8x8 and back porch 8•3. Prioad
_to fit your budget.
ONLY $7,000

Ill· \'1

Hay &amp; Grain
Seocl&amp; Fertilizer

Gravel

Pomeroy,

992-3838

SATVRDAY,

I:J

3&amp;-- Reel Ulale Waalod

~

Dirt

•

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and T~¢£~g~~ORK .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

E TATE
AUCTION

116. UNION AVENUE 4 bedroom, 1 bath
home is prioad t
• f t man's spacial, wilh 0
a lot of promisi SO...., space haatar, two ~
ornamental flrepl
or, city sewer. $7,500

3:'&gt;- Lo" 8t A•re&amp;8•

q

Wanled. to Buy
Lh'utoek

COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

WORK .

.

in(onnation.

::

33-- FarJU for Sale
34-- BUiiaea~ Buildinp

CARPEN'I'ER

EAGLE LANES

In Memory

32- Mobile H0111ea for S.Ie

CARPENTER SERVICE .

All Prlcealnclude lnoulation.

~

"'l i&gt;l'lll . ~
,\ I I\ I· ~Tou,

I \lnl

YOUNG'S

11 hp opener, 2 tranamittera ..............,......: ...................s2oo.oo

dear.

16 Individually

$250.00

v, hp Opener w/elee!Jonlc eye, 21Janamittera............$235.00

:.,_~\

In Memory of
ETHEL S.
McMILLAN
who passed away
twenty-five years
ago, July 28, 1968.
It's hard to believe
It's bean twentyfive years.
It
seems
like
yesterday your
laughter rang In
my ears.
I Y(ish you were
hera to share the
memories I hold

his mother, father
&amp; sisters.

$255.00

Fruiu 8t v.,..ubleo
59- For S..le or Traae

1n11 mo.

•

~ ~~~
~: · __.,_'

3·16-93-tfn

Green
Diet Pepsi, Caffeine Free ·Diet
Pepsi, Mt. Dew or

10 y11rwarranty, whU. only.

)if

949-2168
2

$285.00

Pell for Sale
57- MU1ical la.llr'WIIuU

•

GOOD Non-lnaulated, 24 ga. $357.00

FREE ESTIMATES

Real Estate General

12 oz. Cans

Smithfield
Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Blda will be accepted by
Cheater Townohlp until
Auguot 1, 1903 for the
conotructlon of a line fonce
between lhe pooperty of
Karr Conotructlon and
Mulne &amp; Karon Griffith.
Appro•. 750' of horae fence.
Anyone lntereoled In
oubmltllng • bid on thlo
project contact Cheater
Townohlp Truoteeo or clerk.
985-4274,. 1185·4168, 949·
2588 or 985-3582.
(7) 21 ,28,30, 3tc

Yellow

aaclluiiCY':;::-:-----.l

$289.00

~==Y.~o=u~W=on;':t:Fi:n~dJrA.:B:•~tte;r;Vi~a~lu~e~!;~::

Gutters
DownsJ)outs
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

2

Limestone

Steel Wood Grained Textured Railed Panel
Garage Door&amp; Complete With Track, Lock,
Spring and Hardware.
GARAGE DOORS
16x7
9x7
8x7
BEST R Value 6.5
$575.00 $350.00 $345.00

.,

Coli today for
your

Public Notice

GENERAL
HAULING

Mary Kay Beauty
Consultants

Young's Chain Link
Fencing

MONTH • Sally Fowler was
recently seleeted ·'employee of
tbe montb at Pomeroy NursIng and RebabiHtatloa Center.
Fowler bas beea employed as
a nursing asslstaat for one and
balr years. Sbe was selected by
ber peers ror her pleasant
personality and her dedication
to providing excellent care to
tbe residents. Sbe resides in
Middleport Wltb Iter husband

Words
15

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
•

12-lo-92-rm

.

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

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Gara111
eCo•plete
Remodeling

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION
"Mathematics ia the
alphabet with which
God has wr11ten the
Un iverae. "- Ga/ileo
By Topic
By Appointment

949-2814
71'r11'1

mo. pd.

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

PH. 742·2217
6-30-t mo. pd.

RESIDENTIAL
CON(RETE .
WORK

· Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

985·4473

992-7878

1ri.2NJ

•
'

••

�-··
28,1993

OhiQ
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

35 Lota &amp; Acreage
1 ..,. loll, A1 2, Aoltton. Clydo
a-, Jr 104-171-2331.
Lata a acr~aga tar home eon-otNC11on on lllybwn Rd,
reaeonab&amp;e Nlllr~loM. county
wtt•, lntormat~ :nailed on ,.
qUOit, 304-f7H25S, ploooo no
olnglo wldo trollorl,

3 Announcements

a.t••

ChlW...
Couple
Wal'll8 So lluolt To lncnn.
i.o¥ln!l · , _ To Your
CMrtihld fkwbw;o.a:- Hlw
So Much Law To
• You
Have so Life To LIM. Wo

T:.:-..:.-.:.

Rentals

• 'I ll ·~lOIS:
M•dv.t!Lepl•sr ... • Paid.
EJtanc LAD&amp; LIVE ,_&amp;as.
78tO
IIC-VIII-' , _
11111-1 us u-. ,...

bedroom In Rutlond,
d~H and referwncea ,..
~ulr'ld, no pata, call 114-742·
2611 aft• Spm or anytime
wookondo. · ·
·
Unlurnlohod 2 ltodroom houoa
In Pomeroy, . depoeh required,
no 1 . - polo, 114-892-3080.

...1101......

Min. Uuot 1o 11 Yro. p,._ll eo.
1102-631-4615.
MISTRESS MADONNA LIVE 1·
1100·745-1115 12 min. 1&lt;100-685"~vi• • 18
,._..._. •·
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·
NATIVE 1·1100--3337 u.so.
min 1B+Iall llteatr,l" dltellne
mill 100'• of al~lllcou£1oo In
your"'" todoy. I BOC FL
REDUCE; Bum Off Fot Whllo
You SIN~ Take OPAL Avalllbll
At: Fruth hlrrnacy.
A •~DUCE i a urn o H 1.. whl It rou
eleep. Take .OPAL, tnllablt at
Fruth Pharmacy.

•

TH£ 0-'Y CONNECTION 1-100·
1110.3337 12.50-mlil. 18+ moot
mon In your
100'1 of oxc"lng
"
ar•• tonight. Get phone, •._ CCI
BO&lt;:.l FL.
.
Wanted: ,.mala, 18-40y,., old,
to llvo lnl light houHkooplng,
Conv.r..t On · 304~•75•7108 ·
Whlto Mole Ago 23 Looking For
Slnglo Whho F-111 Ponpol
Age: 17 112 ·23, Preft;r Non•
amoker I Alcohol FrM, Send
RHpoRM To: P.O. Box 55, Gal·
llpolio, OH 45831.
Giveaway

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12150, 2 Mdroom, at• hMI,
waaMr and dryer hook-up,
'--------•a•t•t•h•e•oTp·e-ra_._.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _-!,..rnodtlecl Interior, 2 mllta out
rNew Lima Rd . In Rutland,
1250/mo., IM·742·2BG3 or 6141112-2421.
9 Wanted tO Buy
:-2-:-ba-,d,-r-..--:lu-m-,l'"'oh:-od..,..--m-o'"'bl-lo
homo, 304-675-6812.
Decor~ted 8tonewa,., oil lamps,
tntlq'-- furniture, maU pouch
2 bdrm. trailer, 3 miiM out Rio
thonnomotoro, gonoral ·oro~ .21
BUSiness
Orondo. 614-245-G227.
quoo. Rlvorlno Anllquoo, Riloa
OpponunHy
3 Bodroomo 1 2 Bothe, On
Moo111, owner. We do apo
11 Cor 1 1c A
prtiult, 814-1112.-2528.
c m c Old, 114-448-9(181.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 3br trollor lor roro, central hoot·
Don't Junk hi Sell Ut Your Non- recommandl that you do bull- lng &amp; cooling, Sandhill Rd. e/o
Working Mojor Appllonao,
Polnt Pleoaont Aoglotor Bo• R·
Color
TVt
Alfrlger•ton, n... with people rou know~ and 22, 200 Main Sl., Point Pleaunt,
Ff'81zen, VCR'1; Mlcruwl¥11, ~ ~ri.~
~~~;:n ':: WV, 25550.
Air Condltlonera, Guitar Ampa,
,_
...igal
Etc. 614-256-1238.
the offering.
•
For rant, nMd roommate to
share 3 bedroom trallar, no
J &amp; D'a Auto Partt and Salvage, L.oc.at V.ndlng Route: $1,200 A dtpoalt, no utilities, $150
•lao buying )Ynk Cl,. &amp; tNCit. WMk Polentlal. Muel Sell. 1~
thl 614-1112 •114
304-773-53u
553.a363.
mon y,
~ 8.
::---::---:::--:---.,.,-,,- Nl
J un k c1rs, any cond"l
H•me Vow
Own II'ICOIIIIJ
Make 18x80
ct mobile
home Iota for up to
" on, 814- F
A H
OW Bull
homn bltwHn. Athans &amp;
H2-7553.
orlune ' oma,
n
• Pomerov, 185(mon., 814-192-2167.
non, ProiMo Dollr, Oourontood.
•
Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S. F,.. Dotollo, 212·26U100, Ext. ANI Nl&lt;;o MX70 2 Bedrooms,
Colne, Gold Rlnga, Sllvw Colna, 2117.
Garden Tub, Private Setting,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop, V dl
A
For 811
Jwot e Mllu From Golllpollo, On
151 Socond ~vonuo,
•
Galli poII 1·
on ng Solidouto:
o.
Cooh Buolnooo. SR 218jiHUD Wolcomo, 1275/Mo.
Strong,
Wonted to bur: UMd mobllo High lroHic, Local Locotlono. Wotor old, 614-256-1:.93.
· 614-448-017!
Now Equipment. 1-f0().214- ~ 1 , Vend.
.ra llr ..- For Rent, Call 814"Excuse me, we don 't do 'waves'

n:::

446--2811.
Two bedroom trailer liT R1clne

Employment Services

lrN, 814-112·5858.

Real Estate
11

Help Wanted

.July

1983

Ohio

:ALLEYOOP

71 AutOI tor Sale

r.o.11-1't.E~ ·.

ACROSS ·

PHILLIP
ALDER

1112 a.w, cau:=o. -. ath
_......., Ed.loft, . . _
wtthT-Tapa.tM 211 CIA.

ltodrooin . .In
IOWf!c_-loci, 12S0lmonth,
114-on-5333.
·

NORTH
.AQJIO

rr's BI· PART15A/J,.. IT
CUTS~~ R£011'\Ft ...

-'C, omllm c - I nH llroo,

cond., 11000 firm. :104-112·

Aoomt tor rent - . .k or month.
Sto rtlng It $120'-, Oalllo Hotol.
114-446-11680.
.

Wanting to 111nt• 2 or 3 tMdroom

houaa, In cltan and good condition, prefer private 1ettlng, 114-

112-2428, II no onow. ploooa
l..ve m. .age on mechlne.

Merchand ise
51

Household
Goods

VI'AA FURNITURE
114-446-3158 Or 114-446-4428
'90 DAY SAllE All CASH
OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Tabla W/4 Chalraj
Fon Bock Rocking Chair 558;
Garden Arch W.,-'t $128.00
Bedding ·TWin MoH S.t $H, Full
$99 Siit, OuMn $149 Sllj 4
Drawer Cheat $44.15; Car Bed'1,
Bunk led's, Potter Bedt. Full
Line Of Southweattm VatM
Startl"!! AI $20.00; lndlons Mony
Shtpt I &amp; SlzN Starting Al
15.00. 2 I.Dcollono · lnldo J.ulo
Auctlon Or 4" Mllea 0'-': .,.1,
Opan 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Mon -Sal.
GOOD USED -'PPUANCES
Waah.,.L.. dry.,., refrlgeraton,
rangn. ::illlggl Appllancu 76
Vlnf Sl-, Coli 614-446·73N, I·

l

'77W'IJI5.
r,. &gt;

Wanted to Buy

IT R.Jr5 LJM!l'5 00 '5011~

Q 1083

1Er:?MS

••ble

•175-NM.

Stoclunatlc Stove, 11t tte 0521.
81rollor, baby bod, wollior, high
choir, ploy pon, cor -•· owing,
droaolng tobl!, ~~~ oofo

32,000 m11., air, cru{M, 19000,

614 ua 8584 ohor 7 p. 614-441·
15&amp;1.
1181 Cht~Y" Novt dr1g car, roll
cage and tubbed chattla, weld
.., .. 2T, 3T, 41.3
••
- . , brtgltt rod, 13500 n&gt;l~
lng, atrange axiM, apool and
55
pro gooro, 614-982.a407.
Building
11170 Cho..llo Coli For Dotollo:
Supplies
114-251-1411 or 114-2511-1058.
Block, btlek, olpoo, windaM, Hnttlt, ate. Ciauda Wln- 187'1 Culla• Suprema, 455 Y-8,
loro, Alo Orondo, OH Coli 114- 1U1o., $2300. 304-11711-21141.
2ota-IIU
1873 Mtrcedll Benz, 450 SL,
convertible, hlrd lop, new paint,
56 Pets for Sale
tlru, bnk11, aN11, carpet,
==--=;-::=::-::=~ $1000. 114-1149-2055 ., !IOU75Groom ond
~Pot 11041.
~~~ ~1111~~ 02~1' 11175 Lincoln Town Cor, Runo
o ...t, -'11 Power, 11100. 114-4467 W..: Old Rod Pupo, 150 4553, Evonlngo: 304-111M427.
EJtch, 114-381-11!80.
Mlnlalurw Plnoc~ AAC, 3 1m lulok Now Tronomloalon,
.
main, blk &amp; tan, POO. etch, Auno Ooodll-1841.
304.a711..2444.
1m Chi¥¥ 11-r 4WD; '88
AKC ·Old Englloh Shoop Dog, Plymouth Tourllma, both Nn,
Poodloo, DaChohund, Booton $11100 tor both 080 514-112·
T....-Jer, Mfnaturw Greyhound, 3001 during do,Umo ho'Vro, no
Colllo1,Biuo Point Hlmaloron kit• Wookondo.
tons, Mlftl Bird. 114-141.o404.
1980 Chi¥¥ Corio, turbo
(vory
AKC Aog. Blltorlan Huoky Pwp- chorgod 231cu.ln..
plool Vory Colm And lntolllgont, roro), PI, PB, .1~1... cruloo1
Ate, 42.0W ICIUOJ
Wol Grey Or Black • Whho, out-lo,
tl75, 114~41 1827.
. mloo, oaoollonloondllloft lnoldo
I out, prloo
oortouo
AKC
Aoglotorod
Cocker lnqulrloo only,l14...2-3612.
Sponlolo, 2 -'duHo, 1 Moll 1
Fomolo, With 2 Pupo, Chain Llnk 1880 VOiknoaon RabbH, dlooot,
Fanct, All For 1500, ,......_ 11100, 114-112-'!087.
.
4110.
19tt ClrMor Lebaron, 4 dr. ono
rl,OOO miiM, gooCI coft.
AKC Scotlloh Tonlar pupttloo, owner,
dhlon 114-44H431.

BARNEY
LUKEY SAYS PAY UP
WHAT YOU OWE
HtM OR HE'LL

HE DON'T ·
SCARE ME
.. NONE

Buef.:

v•
-lablo.

.mall,

nofto.ShMidl~,

OM tMII,

ono hlmolo, hoolh guo........,,
Athono, 114-594-417T.
Dobamton AAC Roglotorod
Pupp..., All Shota, Parenti On
Promlooo, 114-2511-1480.

1lllll c-un. 11 1'1. Open-Bow,
Tri-Htul, 181 HP MercruiHr, 114-25&amp;-61110.

MOP UP

PEANUTS

He was tough .

They called him
" Macho Beagle."

He wa s mean .

''

I'

~.

7-

. FRANK AND ERNEST

BORN LOSER
"t!A m1~¥&gt; ~ ~ e:~~
Dle:T.. : ~T Tlo£!-liV POJt.li:)S

.., "wow ! r H.&amp;.VEt-l'r ~ N?~:~Jr...
THI&gt;.T ~ ... HOW "'-UUI [)QEt) IT
C.OSi TO C.O QH

· MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

tructt

:~72-a~:lhr 1

.

79

WOULD "'r::U \OlE IN FA'-OR
OF 6TRICI'ER 6WN CONTROL£)~

WHY NOT :? I'LL
TAKEA6HOT
AT IT.

rodlalaro- mato,
R-.J:~:~· 304-

·

campers&amp;
¥otorHoll'lll

Weol

2 NT

Pass

Norlb
It
3 NT

17 T11dr
111 ExUqctiiiiJhl·
1188 bird
22 A Euro~lft
23 Overtul'lll
24 F11ahlli1ler
porpoiH
26 It followa
Aug.
27 Eyi Infection
28 Ctrtll tplkt
28 Wldtthoe

Eaot

Pass

All pass

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: J ean Ba p·
1'- - : - - - - - - . ,1,.---,mmnnrw:-:-:'1 t ist e Camille Corot 11796· 18751. ar tist:
Gerard Manley .Hopkin s 11844· 1889&gt;.
poet. Rudy Vallee 11901 · 1986 1. Singer:
J acqueli ne Kennedy Onassi&gt; 11929 · &gt;.
form er first lady. is 64 : Bill Bradlt-y
1194·&gt;·1. U.S . politi c~a n . is '&gt;0 : Sall.1·
Stru thers 111148· •. ac tress. is &lt;5.

••

31 Vanilla-- 35 RtlllOn

38 W. Coni col.
40 - Hln
42 Attltlt
43 Oldwomanlah
44 Aroblln
...port
45 Obacene
47 Future
.
LL.BI.' eXIIII
48 Square
column
49 Blrd'l holllt
50 AciiiH
Clllrt
51 LltlltUir

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·a w

PXXJP

WCLOXH
W K X

11187 Prowler, lleak b 11froom~
AC, owning. 304-7ft.Mo.
.
27 Fl. Holldoy llamblor Com~
$7110; Colll1(.2lf.jlll4.
I

WK'X

NXLR

MTPW

UROGUTI

VOLIH

K'TP

UROGUTI

RXTL

TADCW

TOH
T

! DW

prt~tnt.

GO

a

T J

DY

WKGOSP.
ALCUX
HTNGPDO.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " You just have to dive Into lite really hard and
explore every vein of lt." .- (Singer) Kat Bjelland.

T~~~:~:~' S©RJ:llA-~t.trs~
Edi11d by CU. T R. fiiOlLAN
O four
Rear range letters of '~'~"e
scrambled words be-

lliORO
GAM I

low fo form four simple words

I
2

SCEXUE

I I I II I
(

i)

1
L1

i

I

A commuter missed her
train and asked the station

S A0 I U
1 5 ~.

I I I I" I

master if she tould catch it if
she ran . Laughin~ he replied.
"Lady, that train 1s so slow if
L AT ZE0
you run you'll ...... !"
Complele lhe chuckl e quo1ed
J
.
.
-.L.
-J..-...L.-...1.-...1.
bv tdlmg in the missing words
L.
you develop from :steP No. 3 below
.

.

.

.

.

.

I

I1--rl::._;:,;I-'-TI.::.....:;I_:,I.,.6-l 0

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Modest • Zippy · Venom • Doting • IDIOT
"I feel like such a fool. " s 1ghed the disillusioned leenager to his dad. "During my lifetime ." laughed the dad
"I've made a fool of myself many times just trying to
prove I wasn 't an IDIOT."

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

~~ -====- -··

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

JULY 28l

HP&lt;. 1 W~S TI1\NKIN6
ABOIJT OON\IiS .

OONUTS! YOU'Re
THI!&lt;IKIN&lt;5
,AOO\JT PONUiS I

1::./~~fllon,Compor
--.I,
114-36l'OIU

.

Celebrity Cipher eryptogruna .,. orMted from quotltiOnl by fMious peopM , put Mel
Etch tet1erln tt. dpher 1tanct. for tnOtt.. T«Jay-. '*-: R equa11 Y.

IWEDNESDAY

1171 llounlo-, I 11211. tructt

Se rv 1ces

Pomoronlon Pupploo, 7 W•kl
Old, Fully lloglot-, 3
Fomolol, 114-245-5091.
11181
Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

ASTRO·GRAPH
Fl,.bl~,

V.a, T·Topo, -'C.
CruiH, Low MU.., 141100, 080,

114-4441-1458.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

stamped envelope to Ma1ch maker P 0
Box 4465 New Yorlc. . N Y. 10163.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl . 22) Gua rd against
lllCiinatlons today to do th1ngs rhat make
you 1ook good at th e e~epe n se of someone
else Untorluna tely . If you do tall 1nto lh1s
panern you m1ght not even be aware of 11.· .

you shou:n go tor ·cons truct1 ye busmess
adv1se today Talk to someOne. who understands mailers as well·as you d~
PISCES (F eb . 20- M.a rc h 20) Noteworthy
achievements w111 not be den1ed you tOday
11 you have the lo rt1 tude and te nac1ty to
a!lam them 11 a1 f1rst you don t succeed.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) Usually you are 1egmuo and cna•ge aga'n
a very d1ploma11c •nd•v1dua1. bulloday lhis . ARIES (March 21 -April 19)

'

-~
, ~our
i 'Birthday

with a pal such as golf . tennis or handball.

. don'l make w1nn1ng lao importanl. Tryinglo

p~ l ch up 'a broken romance? The Astra -

'

12 Anoint

and World War I began .

com~, .=.H.

Srr~ve

tactful tod?Y 1f you re subrected to an awkwar(! pOSII IOn where you m1ght have to
,ake a dec1S10n tnat w1 11 affecl tnends w1tn

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24· Nov. 22) Cond1110ns

opposong op.n•ons . Wher e

that have an 1nlluer:ce on ·your material

when he 's needed?

sec ur~ly

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) In order lor a

cou ld be a

lr~lle

unse1111ng loday

IS

1

10 be

sp1eno1d quahty rrughl deser1 you and you
mlght e1tner use excess1ve Hattery or 1rea1
others arrogan tly

Solomon

Be alert lor unCer1a1nt1eS and be protective · jo1nt endeavor to work at th1s time. the re
of your 1n1erests at all tu-nes.
; must be panty belween the pnncipals. If
mtght nat tu rn out to be such a nilty day if

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In an importanl
partnershiP arrangem.ent today , you and
your counterpart mu st slrlve to be ob}ective

be

self-defeat·

ing and make easy ma ilers compleK.

Feslival llivel

could be a no-go.

playmate s 10 spe nd the day w1 th. Don 't
make th1s something too difficult to resolve.
pattern s today whiCh could

O~m~c

I one conlrlbules and lhe olhe• doesn'l, 11

you and your male canl agree upon WhiCh

mvolved m a lnendly. compe1 i11ve game CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Be wal'/ ol

•(

I'M NOT 6LJR5 He H,6Q
THE RIGHT ATTITUD5.

111111 Tlton homo, .Dodat
.aener.eor,
to,GDOrril.,
18800. S04.a71-21141.

Antlquea and uMd rurn!Wre, no
Item too ltrge or too small, wiH
bu~ one p~ or eompllte
houaehold, ctll Olby Mtrtln,
814·992-)141.

·(

Soalll

~~~~~~"~ HISTORY: On t hi s day in
r------------,1 · 1914
. Austria declared war on Serb ia.

440,

P.wt.

1883 Coman&gt; With T]~· I!Jt.
collonl CondHion, 114
112811.

ornamant

Today i,, the 209th . .
r w.
r '.
1
day of 1993 and lhe
.
38th day of summer,

GOft!alnod, t1215.
Olde N, New Molor, nrwt, 304471-:,.,

111'1
Brokoo, Shooka, Full P $11~, 114-446-6890 Boloro 1:00

33 Spirt

1

Auto Pan.&amp;

Now~ ....., .,. ton

w
otc. D

5 PoaiUv• vote
6 ThrMfold
7 Pitt
8 Pitcher
9 Ruttlan newt
agency
10 BIHar Vtlch

1 Sand forth
2 Blglnner
3 Spok•n
4 Figure of
tpe•ch

32 Airline Info

July 28, 1993

In me year ahead you mighl resurrect an . SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 21) This

·

ownfelt pen .

-~

Thursday. July 29, 1993

"No walt! Tlr•t's not Uncle Floyd I Who Is that?
... Crlmony, I think It's just an air bubble I" •

He carried his

- - 1 I I ·P.M.; I~
1949 Attorl P.U.

w-Ill ... *-, flo Ponlloo
Nat~. 104-1171-1711.
811. IMk 1 - , US. 304-11~
1710.
.

DOWN

28 German for

30 Biblical king

Voltaire, in "Zadig," suggested that
"the opportunity for doing miSchief is
found a hundred .t imes a day, and for
doing good once in a year." Well, at the
bridge table, It would be disappointing
if we could make a good play only
once • year. However. when opportu-1
nity knocks, it would be&gt;even more disappointing not to know how to open
'the door.
South's response of two no-trump
showed a balanced hand with 13-15
points. Yes, there are some tradition·
alists left. (In the modern game, most
treat this response as invitational,
showing only 10·12 points.)
West led his fourth-highest heart.
South saw that if the diamond finesse
was working, be was in clover. But in
case East had the diamond king, South
started by applying the Rule of Seven.
He bad five hearts between his hand
and the dummy. Deducting five from
seven told South to hold up his heart
ace for two rounds.
After winning the third heart Irick,
South took the diamond finesse. It lost,
and East defended well by returning a
low club.
Now South's nerve failed him. See· ·
ing several undertricks in his future,
South played the club six. West gratefully scooped up the trick with his
queen, casbed two heart tricks and led
anotberclub to his partner's ace: three
down.
.South, of course, should have realized that be had to try to keep West off
the lead. He should have risen with the
club king. True, if West bad the ace
without the queen, this would cost a lot
of extra undertricks. But they would
be a small
for. South to pay for
the
of making his

cJot- • Forti F.a Cl- 88.100. 114-2118-112t

•Chovo-.

-25 Aclull
~~=being
"one"

1981 Bo)ll 17 Fl. Open-Bow V.·
Haul, 140 HP, lolanJruloor1 _UltO
Now Condhlonl 114-2511-11ou.

2 15118112" -llno ... -

20 Comnc1o1e
21 LIHithort
23 Fabric·

By Plillllp Alder .

usoo.

AcceiiOrlel

IItie t•rm•
52 Anglo-Saxon
IIIYe
53 Recent
64 Entreaty
55 Rodllllt
56 In lddiHon
57 ~ppNr
58 lftkl l•co

The rise and fall
of a.contract

MOP!!

TH' FLOOR
WtTH YOU

1171t ltarcraft, 11ft. runabout.
t40hp, 1-0,
304-882-3717.

76

50SetlnuntU~

Opening lead: • · 7

AN' HE
BROUGHT
ALONG HIS

HarloJ O..ldoon -otor1 ~00
mlloo, tlnn, ....112...52;
Suz~o~ld DR210, 1110; luzuld
AMBO, 18110; Hondo CR80, $1550;
OICollont oontlllon, 114-11412249.

75 Boata &amp; Motors
for Sale

~rmld

confliCt
15 lllkldlt Eatl·
. 11n country
16 Ukt 1ll1na

• Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: North

•••.
•'!!1'!, . -. »&gt;.a711-463tl
orf7S·r....

'82 Iuick Alvlorw, good condl·
tlon, high mlloogo, $1200, 614892-6280.
'10 Gr~fld Am, 2 dr., ..:c. cond.,

.873 2
.QI09
t K2
. A954
SOUTH
.K54
.A62
tQJIOS
.K76

pld ende,avor !hat almosl got ollthe ground
bul didO 1., ¥our chances lor making 11 work
With what you kno\.\- now are very good .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today 11 you get

.

•u .

~~~;;~~~~==~~~~~~~~==~:i1~Chw~~T~rod

310 v.a, &amp;olltl, - tnlloo. 1W
Conwo Z2t, rod, T'"' outo.,
very low 3114.a75-2140.
54 Miscellaneous
58
Fruits &amp;
1 FL Pl~p loti For Chovn&gt;iot
Merchandise
Vegetables
1m To 1171 ~nl Cond~
tlon, -'1~'-Cho..- Wrocllor,
:::114-:--'21-"1:,.-:,:.::;..·-:--:--:--...,,.,.-500 board fool plalnod mlxod Oroon
boono,
SIO!buohol, Clhowoiol, Forti, ~ pickup
lumbar, oak, -ry. wolnut. 304o tomal-, SSibuohot, rou pick or long. NO ruot.
882-2181.
thom, 114-1112·2110.
304-t7M2111.
AAC Aoglal- Mlnlaluro Rod Homt grown tomato.., Harry
· · 73 Vana &amp; 4 WD's
DachohUnd pupplao malo tind ·Ahod•. 3414-175-11181. .
hlmolo; motcHna oola,love-, Tame llackbarrl•. 12.75 O•rt, '71 ChovJ 4WD, $1100 080, 114chlllr and ottomtni chroma Ina Wo Pick PIIIM Coli _,.You 247-!011.
llltOka gltM top
whh • Como, 114-317-0415 (Chooltlro).
cholro; 6M.a112-5824.
11177 Chivy 4 - 1 - · · 41)0
'!ftlllno, r 1111 ltll, nw rims •
Bohoma Cruloo, 5 dlys/4 nlghto.
II,...
304-171-aiiiO
UndorbookHI
Mt111
Mill
Farm
Supplies
$27V/00UIIIo. LlmHod tic-.
1111 Ford - - . r XLT, luli,
&amp; L1vestock
407-7117-atOO oxt. 5581. lloo 811,
loadod, 4 cllflhlln cholra.._ high
1:110-'M- 10;0GPM.
mlllgo, ISIVG. 3114.a75-2t••·
Bljllnnor drum Ill, baby bod,
11111ulloloo XLT._rod I
white, arnltm GMa., PS. P11, PW,
bob)' woi~L overythlng llko 61 Farm Equipment
now. 304-6m-&lt;rr35.
POL, 302 v.a, oun roof, high
mlloo, $81100. 114-141-2011. ·
David
BIOWtl
1200
Traclor
Whh
Clnclnnotl Vo. Atlont• Tlckolo Plow, Dloc, Sproyor $4~1150; 354
-'lig. 131h, Blue SICIIon R. 13
lnlomatlonol, Pl"!f,_ uloc••-~ II 112 Nloalon 4a4 kina cob, " "
Slot 101 I 102 114-3574841.
cond.!to..~'4317.
exlraa, mutt
Com Plontor S4,oou, &amp;14-.... good
Mil, 13200.
Couch I Lovo 8011 MUlti Colon, 5522. .
1300; Bedroom Suho, Full Bod, 2 Fonnall Culto, 1 Sldo Mowor, 1 74
Motorcycles
DrwiMI', Ctt.l . , Saara Stair Cuhlvaror, New MOiort, Both:
Stopll.!'! Now $150, Elton:IM 83.000 Firm. 114-388-11363.
1180 Suwkl IIIOCC, approx.
Blka ...,,114--2.
20
•000!."'...o... ~ oond., Nftl
Hydntutlc oll$14.50 buc:klt oriiO
o.non.t eo watt ....-. gol .S121. Sldoro Equipment, good, ...,._ T13-5221.
Korooko alnglna ond - n a - . . , WV. 304-675-11121.
11181 Sutukl M~o;".r= For
oystom whh ti1J Shurw ,....,_.
II.
1ionlil mlcruphDnl and 3D J.D. 45 Comblno Late -~~ S.lo, SIOO OBO, I
goopol oong trocto, oniJ UMd With 234 Com Hoodo, Really 11M -lng, Low
fwlce In chUrch, han $1200 ln- Good Condhlon, 1114-245-5524.
Mil•, Exool- Concltlorl, 114-tod, but will toke S?SO lor Ill
441-67114.
or loa whhoul tho topu. Mt~ Ferguaon 111 Tractor,
Bought from tho Top In Sound $4,850; 135 MF With Loader, 1887 lmll'lltl.., exe~~l~nt condl17,550; 180 Alllo Cholmoro With llon, 17,000 mlloo, loodod,
Con'ipany, 114--MA-2543.
Vermeer Round Baler, $7,950; cit.- ond lighto, motchlna
Ou Hot Wat• Hutll', 40 Gal. 614-288-11522.
corgo troller,
114-941-2587
'
.l.O. Smith, Good Shopo, 5110,
evanlngt.
614-441-1111.
63
Livestock
19&amp;7 Yomaho Bonohoa 350, fllr
Horton CroeaboW, 150 Lb. Pull,
npo,
tlsoo, 1114.a411-3010.
2 Vuro Clef, Featuring Oulvor Four YNr Old Belgium Mare,
Sling, ~ghta, Arrowa, IJke New, Al10 John Dtlre HOr'll Dr.wn 18H Yomaho · VlroJIII . 750,
Riding Plow, 114-371-2338.
Coli After 9 P.M. 814-892-6535.
llo\!tlht Now 'tt lllnl Condlllon
LoW MI~.•Lato 01 Extroof
Luor Computor, -'pplo Com· Good ... of alnglo homooo, 83,000 Finn. 1114-44&amp;-7104.
~lar, wark bridal w/
pollblo Whh P~ntor, 114-416- *'lher
llnoo, Ukl now. 304-ei'll-4317.
1910 Yomot. Tomr-P"' 4
1754.
whollor wHh U" _ . , dock.
&amp;Colloro -ion, uood very
Transportation
lltllo. I14-441-01A
1892 Suzuki OSX·A 1100, 3000ml,

~-

(LRSSIFIED RDS

en 11tar
44 Woody ole Type Of COli

r:at

EAST

(0/JGR.ESSI()IJAL

$100 Cosh For Information LoadIng To Pun::MM Of JUKEBQX,
Any Condition, Wortllng Or Nol.
615-368-7722.
.

Commorclol Building For S.lo
Or LNH, 336 Second Avenue,
Phono: 614-446·2522, 10 -'.M. To
5P.M.

WEST

KJ 871
9S

lf.J Qff{(€ .. .

,_,.,.po.

Common:lol Office Space For
Aont: Routo 7, Nonh, Near Pondorooa Slukhouoo, (Gallitlollo).
ldoal For Physlclono, llontlal
OHico Or BooU1y Salon Phono:
514-441-24111'
47 Wanted tQ Ren.t

:'~tect -

18 Ohio city

.J2

1111 ton Chotly 1rudt _ . ,
U111HJ bod, 1110 Ill 4op, PI, PI,

Rooma

'1-11·11

•u
tABnl

11111 ~ flam, .. '"""
O¥or*i~.£.:. oond., leOO
080.

Fumlahed

Space for Rent

8 Suitomtr (Fr.)

11- Brtckln-

14

72 Tnlcka for S...
1 m , . . . , - wo, lloroo,

.

Unlurnlshod, . olnglo bedroom,
.
over NAPA. 30t-l1a-2211.

~

38
of llthl
37 Brollltr ol
Jacob
38 Fill with Gil
41 Art1 around

lluftnen

$1,2011, 11,4-4*71U.

Slooplna rooms whh -lng.
Also trollor apoco. All
Coli oftor. 2:00 p.m., 304·7738851, Uaaon WV.

uJi

1 WWIIItl
4 LlllftCI

13

A..wlf' to Paaalr ur ,_..

34 Non-profit

'

lth St, frlaw Haven, WY.

45

NEA Croaawo_.,:d- Puzzle

BRIDO.E

2·hi• ...... car-

*

9

•

polirlg, rlllfllt_ rolrlgoo)ltor,
lomlij .._,....., on ...
EOH. -47111
or
como-·
1w todoJ,
~ Aplo,

Two bedroom, tumlthld l.ood
c::lean condl11on, on. chll , no
pel1, above New Haven, 1250
112 Himalayan Kltt1rw To Good
31
Homes
for
Sale
wllh
wolor,
304-682-2466
Homee Only, 614-446-4922 AHer 'AVON' ALL AAEASI Shore your
time with ua. You'll loYI lhe 2br hOUM , on Ul acret, anyllma.
6P.U.
comJU~ny. 1-800.992-6358.
,.modolod, city wotor I garbago
Mothar Cat &amp; 3 Klttana, 614-256·
pickup, .lml ott Rt 2 on Thom11
-'VON
1
.
-'11
-'roao
I
Shl~oy
1560.
Ridge, $24,000. 304-815-3080
Spears, 3Q.t-.875--1428.
44
Apanment
lelvam...age.
Mother cat and 6 klnana, half
-'VON! All orooo. Nood oxtro
Hlmal1yan, 614-367-7847.
for Rent
rrioney or want a car..,.., Ehhlr 3 Bedroom Hou.., Fun B•One Walker coon doa, not way-call Marltyn. 304-a82-2145 rnent 24x44, 2 . C.r Garage, 1 Bedroom Apartment In Gal- 1100-11111-3491.
Abovt Ground Pool, 1.1 Acr•
tr~lned, 10 good home, 614--892· or 1-800-Qa-6356.
•
L-'YNE'S FURNITURE
SA 110 Vlnton, Ohio, ti14-31J8. llpollo, 614-446-6221.
7043.
Q502.
.
C111 Manager Fuii·Time PotlComplete
home fum~~~~=·
1 Bedroom Naar Holzer, StC!ve, Houra: Mon-Stl,
H. 6
Truckload Of Mhle. Yard S.lo tlon Working WRh Emotlonolly
Aehig•ralor
Fumlahed,
Air
3
bedroom,
1
112
beth
at•aehed
0322, 3 mllw out Bula•lll• Rd.
Hams, Must Taka All, Call 614- Dlotrubod "AI Alok" Uoa In Tha
Condlllonod,
1245/Mo.
Pluo
Communltr, The Horne 1 gorogo, 183 Mlhon Ref, ~= O.poah, Available Auguat 1st, Froo Dallvory.
379-2258.
.
Schoolt.- Must Havt Reliable Conloy, opplloncoo Inc
614-446-2157.
304.a7i&gt;-1631.
Tranaportltlon Teacher Cer·
Lost &amp; Found
6
tlllcollon And Monlol Hoollh EJt.
unfurnished,
upstairs
3.41 ~'"· 44x24, 3bdrm., 2 112 1br,
Found: coon d~ , vicinity of perl1nc. Or Training DaiNd,
bolho,
lull
ltooamant,
w~h olld· apartment, ovarlooklng Ohio
Nobi•Summit Road, 614-H:Z· Bocholoro Doa,.. Aoqulrod,
Ina glau outside entnnce, par- River, utllltl11 . pald, CA,
S.nd Raaumt ~o: Accea To tially lumlohocl, fronl pon:h, $350/mo., dep. &amp; ref. required.
-n;s3 to ldontlfy.
Human RMOUrce O.valoprnent
largo rodwood dock overlooking 614-446.-369 or 304-675-2330.
Found: mala Collla, k1 good P.O. Box 1110, Galllpollo, OH · n'4lne Iron horwt 50'x3.2' buildB~rooma,
Unfurnished
cond., near lrafflc clrtca area. 45631, Anenllon: Clrol Bowers.
Ina wh~ oomont noor._10'J12' 2Apartment,
Slove,
Refrtger~tor,
304-67U595.
U1nh~ building, locolod McGroth AC, 112
Do . you want to work 1 few
Milt From Gavin
Ad., wat oft SR33, I mila• North
Found: purse In Uiddlaport, hourt each WMk tnd rn~k• $100
$250 Dopooh, 614-367·
omeroy, Home National 1275/Mo.
must call to 10, 814--992·2120.
ar mora??? Pick your own llmt: cf
0438.
Bank,
Raclne,
Ohio
45m.
9am·1 pm or 5pm-tpm. It thla. la
kays found at Ch. .hlr. Park you, and you have a pluunt
Phona 614-11411-2210.
2bdnn. apta., tot11 aloe:1rle, 1p.
neir ahaltar. 61...367·7026.
pel'lonaltty &amp; wtnl to work In 3br., oountry houM, new fur· plllncat furnished, laundry
Lost: Black &amp; Whhl Mala Klnan my office with ol:her piNHnl
nace, largt blthlutlllty room room ttcllitlea, ciOH to -=hool
4 Or 5 Month• Old, VIcinity: 500 P~Ronalltlta, call me at 304combo., approx 1 acre land, In lawn. Application• avallabla
Block Third Avanue, Gallipolis, 675-7196 tor mor-. Information.
Sale $18,000 or Rent $175 . :J04. at: VIllage ·o....n Aplt. 149 or Oueen slza, bras1 bad, brsnd
EOEMIF
new, $250. 304-882-2367.
coll614·982-371t. EOH.
614-446-8017.
367-7107.
Eooy
Workl
Excollont
Poyl
AI4 room a tmh, tun b11emenl, 71 Apartment &amp; trailor for ~nt. Rofrigoralor Llko Now, •1 Voor
Lol1 : black and whit• Fox·
Warranty .S215; Romgorolor
hound, star on hHd, very shy, Mmblt Procfucla At Horne. Clll
Burdolto -'ddhlon. Coli lor op- 304-676-11709.
Frool Froo 1150; Aatrlgorolor 2
Toll F,.., 1.aG0-4&amp;7-155&amp;, ~
614-247-2541.
-:-Apo_n_m-on-:t--:tor;---r-o-:nt---:1-n-=Pt-. Door
polmment 30W75--1486.
Whllo, 1125; ~otpolnl
313.
5 bedroom brick homo, 1 112 PI-nt,' 614-892-5858 ohor Waaher Llka New, 1 Yur War·
Yard Sale
7
Elderly Lody Noodo Coro In Hor IMth, electric hHI and 1lr, 5pm.
ronty 1205· Whirlpool Waohor
Horne,
WMicenda,
Light
fomlly room wHh llropl-, nlco BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 1150; G.E. Waot.r $125; Clothoa
Ho~o~HkMplng And Hulth Caire,
Dryer 195; 30" Eloclrlc Aongo
lovoiiOI. l14-146-11387.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 196;
614-3711-2604.
T.V. Conoolo IIIIi; Moytljl
For
Sole1
aero
lond,
1
bdrm.
ESTATES,
536
Jackson
Plkl
Gallipolis
Experienced Carpenter 7 To 10 houn, 2bdnn. trallor, loto ox· from $206/mo. Wolk to ohop I Wringor Woohor $150; Sluiggs
Yeara Ex~rlenee In Roofing, tn1, country llv~~g b~ mlnutM moviM. Call 814-446-2568. EOH . -'PPifoncn, 114-448-7396, or 1·
&amp; VIcinity
Siding &amp; Remodeling, Muat
800-41111-:141111.
111 6
Fumlohod Duplox. Uppor, 1br,
1109 SunHI Drive, Thursday, Have Truck 6 Too18, 814-446- ~~n, $1&amp;,000 tor •
SWAIN
$225 pluatlectrlc. Ground floor, AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Friday,
Sl1urday,
School 4514.
Grut fllmlty homt, 11one, 3 1br, 1215 pl1.1t elactrtc. Mt. Ver·
ClothH, O.mH, Baby Items,
Sl., Galllpolla. New &amp; UMd
Help Wanted«Jmeone to help bedroom, 2 bl1h, detacned non Ava, Nf. &amp; dep., no Hud, no Olive
Spruda, Dish-.
furniture, heater~, Wnttm 6
mille cow1, lull time. Someone ~.I;· 2 Iota, Mlddloport, 114- polo. 304-6711-2651.
Wort&lt; booto. 614-448-3158.
4 Family Yard Sale: Wed, Thura, to help par1·llme on wMktndl.
n&amp;.
·
Fumlthed eHiclancy, $195/mo.,
Frl 1036 Vanco Aotd, 8 A.M. -5 S.nd namt, addr..., pho,.
W11har Dryer, R•~lor,
number, experience, 1nd expec- Houoo For S.lo: 2 Bodroomo, 1120 Founh Avo., Galllpollo. Color 'r.v. Freezer, Air eon,;.
P.M.
Fomlly
Room,
Full
loMmOn1
Utllltloa
pold,
614
44&amp;
4416
ohar
lod ulory to: P.O. Boa 312, Handltloner,
Camper
Size
ALL: Yard Sale1 l4u11t Be Paid In den:on, WV, 25106.
Whh Flroploeo, &amp;14-44e-MII.
7 pm.
Refrigerator, Microwave, 814Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
Efflcloncy
$165 258·1238.
the day bttore the ad Ia to run. No E1porlonco! 1500 To 1800 Siva &amp;5000, raatt~ IM. Brick Fumlohod
Ulllhl•
Pold,
Shoro
Bolh,
1107
Sundoy odHion • 2:00 p.m. WHkly_ !Potential Proce~~lng hoUH, 3br., kit., dlnlngroom,
A_ntlques
Friday. Monday ecUtlon • 2:00 FHA Mortg1ga Rttunda. Own llvlngroom, 1 112 bath, flmlly Slcond, 0o111pollo, 614-446-4416 53
.,-,--,;-,.....:~_;__,,...,.Hourw. 1·S01-640-0503 Ext.213. room, Andereon Wlndowt, Ahor 7P.M.
p.m. S.lurc:t.y.
Antiquo Dining Room Suho,
24 Houn.
ecr•n room pand, 2 car
Moving Sale: 784 St1te Route
ll'llgt, outbuilding, 10:5 ~1'111, Gi'8clout living. 1 and :Z bed· B~o~fflt, China C.blnat, Tabla, 4
588, July 30th, &amp; 3111. 1:00 ·3:00 Telemarkater IRec.pllonlst and
77,100. 3ml. from town. 304- room aparlmtnll at Vlllagt Chalrt, $200, After 5 P.M. 114Mtnor
and
Alvar~~lde
3'1V·2t23.
HouHhold ltame, Toya, Cloth- Outaldl Salttmtn Poaitlon. 175-52110.
Aptrtmanta ln .MidcUaport. From
Ing, Swing Sot, Everything Mull Send Raaumt To: CLA 281, cio
Buy or 1111. Riverine An1lqUia,
Goll:rll• Dolly Tribune, 825' Sl• booU1IIul n&gt;lllng ooroa with $202. Coli 814-912·5851. EOH.
Gol Rain or Shlno.
1124 E. Main suwt, on Rt. 124,
Thlr Avanue, Galllpolla, OH new 3 bedroom home, kw:ludH
45831.
docko I wolkl, outbulldlngo &amp; Mlddlapon1_Ohio, Booch St., 1 Pomeroy. Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00
Pt. Pleasant
tmcitncy
fumlahed o.m. to &amp;:00 P.'!!,_Sundoy 1:00
pondo, loootod Sml. !rom room
TRUCK
DRIVERS
Llmllod R•ventWOOd Bridge on AI. 124, oponmo~tLullllllu pold, rol. &amp; to 6:00 p.m. 614·..-... 2121.
&amp; VIcinity
Oponlngo Wllh Jocklon County Portland, Otdo. Will oonaidtr dopooH . ....aaz-2566.
504 HIIIOWIIY 81:., Henderson, Trucking Company. No Over· uud mobile home at p.arlltl New Haven, 1br, furnished 54 Miscellaneous
WV, Fri. l SOt. July' 30 &amp; 31, night Trlvtl. An Excellent Op- trodo, 304·273-5270.
opartmont, dop. l rol. 304-882·
ponunlty
For
Long~tnn
Merchandise
Mon. &amp; Tuo. -'UU· 2 &amp; 3.
2568.
Employmonl For Quollllocl 32 Mobile Homes
R1 . 2, ami North of Krodll Pork, Drlvtrw. Banl1he Available.
Nice 2 Bodroomo, 4 112 Mila 2 Eloclric Fryoro, Hoi. Food
Frt-5at·Sun, Tlarl GIUI, Tup- Sond Aooumo To' DRIVER~,
for sale
From Gallipolis, Centenary, Tabl1, Sn11z1 Glard, Salad Bar,
peiware, hOYHhold fie~e.
P.O. Box 109, Jocklon, OM
Stova, Refrigerator; &amp; Water RogiSior Ughlod Sign, 614-882·
45640.
$185.&amp;4 per monlh, MW 14' wkM Fumlthad, N"o PIIA, $250/Mo. 7556, 814-882-7525.
mobilt horM, lndudH dliivery, 614-446-8038.
2 Taylor Soft Serva k:a crNm
Pomeroy,
complete tel•UP. Hlrtlng, t11pa
18 Wanted to Do
machlnn , 1 haa ftkl m•
Nice
2
bedroom
ap1u1ment
tor
and
6
months
lofl
rent,
1..SOO..
Middleport
rent In Pomeroy, 114-H2-5858, chine, 3 phne. Hot tab~ wl
Baby1lnlng In my home 834-6525.
tnaell guard. Large tlaahlng arahar 5pm or weektnda.
&amp; VIcinity
anytime,
experllnced and
row tlgn wl ftftlrt. 6 electronic
'73
Schultz,
recently
ramodtlld,
rtfirtncet, 614-992-5305..
"
Complatly Fuml1hed Small coah roglototw. El-lc grill on
12165, 81+843-5286.
7131, 812, bMidll CorMr Bar on
HouM. $2751mo. + Ulllltlat, whMio. 3 phloo or olnglo
Spring Avenue, Pomeroy, rain Chrlotlon will babysit In tholr
12x55 trail• w/ 12x10 tddhlon, Parking. No Polo. Coli Boloro 7 phoN. 114-1141-2055.
hom~1 IOCIIod 3 miiH Out SA
cancala, 10:00..'?
3-4br, big
LA,
khcho~n
P.M. 61'1-446-41331.
143, M·F, coii614-892·52Tt.
dlnlngroom 1 8X24 cova.-.a1
All Yartl Sal• Muat 81 Paid In
bedroom apartments,
Advance. Dudll,.: 1:OOpm the E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. T-lng, porch, 1mtll deck, and more, Ona
day blto111 the ad Ia to run, Trimming, Tr11 Removal, Htdgt ••ry good cond., 11100~ tor 111, $225/mo. lnclud• ut1Utln 1 StOO
tee:urlly dapaeil, no peta; 614Sunday edition-- 1:00pm Friday, Trimming. Free Eatimal•tt 8f4- mutt move. 304-882·33vr.
1192·2218.
Monday
lldltlon
10:00a.m. 367·7957 -'ftor 4p.m.
196i Buddy, 12x50 1 gOOIIIhape,
Saturday.
General Malnl•nance, Palnllng 1 14500, 614-892·7077.
First Tlme-2 flmlly- 1 mila UJ! Yard Work Window• W1th.a
Balloy Run Ad. from SAI24, Gutt.,. Cltanld Llghl H•ullng, 1984 Folnnonl, Mx70 with lh18
aomethlng tor everyone, Friday, Commarlcal, Rnldtintlal, Stave: addition. 3 a.drooma, 1 bath,
12xt4 oU1bulldlng. Tolal oloctrlc,
3CMh, Saturday, 31 at.
614-448-1658.
Nrll water. On 112 acre. 120,000.
MelntyrH' m~tga HI• Follow Gaorgn POI1able S.wmlll don'1 614-256-1147.
pink tlgna from Memory Gar- haul your logo lo tho mill luot
1994 Redman 14x70, 3bdrm., 1...
dena or Flvt Points, 91m-4pm, call 304-675·1957.
. cludM lklrtlhg, alepa, blocks,
July 31·Auguo13rd.
lntarlor/eXIerlor painting, roof 5yr. warramy, homaownera In·
painting, handwaah hoUIH 6 eurtnce, and 1 r•r of fr• lot
mobil Ito-, odd lobo. 15yro ~nt . all for only S171Jmo., call 1·
Public Sale
8
exp., exc. refs. FrM ..umete._ 800-637-3238.
&amp; Auction
304-675-11133.
2 Bedroom Mobile Horne 1 8W.
446-6731.
Rick Pearson Al.lellon Company,
full time auctioneer, complata
auction
service.
l.k:ensGd
166 Ohio &amp; WHt Virginia, 304-

4

ft€C:: &lt;&gt;C.~11.E

Houses for Rent

Two

F - ..., U'!!!&gt;e In Control
IIIMoy World,
'Occche No•
IWw ...,_ Cor·
Wllh Country
w-n
Nu,..ry,22-31.
Crob,-llol:;,.:~:ll
Soloo.
to

I'll T•ll Your Future, Nowii1-IOQ.
288~440 Ext 4511, $3.SJI Per

Sp.cHM..

EA&lt;:.\1 .;&gt;T~~~ A1

'

41

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131-5.

~oW C.A"T I"EOI"L E

Apanment
for Rem

Two

:;;,.~
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Lo•lng- ...... "'-i&lt; ow ,.,.,_ 1y Colllna

Flor1doE.-·
6034
Auowl
tad Loe
St. Mlllor,
H•·
nondo, FL 34442, 1104-137~.
Ouyal W.nl To Tolk? 1~
:zetl2 Eitt, 72811 13.11 Por Min.
Muot Bo 11 Yra. Procoll Co. 102·

44

•.

and nollo deli beralely 'velo whallhe olher

lhe lmprov

has to ptter .

CANCER (June 21 -July .22) Don'l·e•pecl

Figure oul ellective short.cuts'. not frustrat- · co -workers to do th ings l or yo u toda y

Graph Malchn\ake r can help you Ia under· ing delours. ,
sland wMI 10 d6 10 make lhe •elationshlp AOU-'RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 19) A well inten·
work. Mall S2 and a long . sell-addressed. honed lnend m1ght not be the one to whom

•'

you're capable of doing lor yoursell. This is
a very lender spol and it could ign11e a con·
fl ict

J,

•'

�.•
M

I

••

Ohio

0 hio Lottery

Astros
hand Reds
4-2 setback

•••

SHOHOODLAND

Pick 3:
080
Pick 4:
3555

Low toalgbt Ia 60s. Friday,
partly cloudy high our 80• .

Super Lotto:
7-9-17-24-32-36

PageS

Kicker:
324432

•

LEAN

a1

•

GROUND BEEF·
Vol. 44, NO. 65

1 Section. 10 Pagee 35 ...11
Alllultlmtcla Inc. New8paper

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 29, 1993

lllulllmeclalnc.

SOC CO se~king relief in federal court
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stafl'
Officials from Southern Ohio
Coal Company will appear in federal court in Columbus, possibly
today, seeking relief to start pump- ·
ing water from the flooded Meigs
31 mine, a company spokeswoman
said this morning.
The company received notice
this morning at 12:04 from the U.S.
Department of !he Interior's Office
of Surface Mining (OSM) that it
will not be allowed to pump water
from the mine into area streams,
company spokeswoman BJ. Smith

5 LIS. OR MORE

LB.

'

ALL VARIETIES

I
I
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I
I

Coca·Cola
12 PACK
12 OZ. CANS

I
I
I

1

I
I

HEINER'S

1135"
:Breads

Limit One with Coupon and $10.00 Additional Purchase

Interior or any of the Ohio ogencies of the situation," Smith noted.
came on the heels of a meeting
that question the fact that the
"Everyday this becomes more Wednesday. in Washington , D.C ..
streams where water would be critical to the future of Meigs 31 between Stnckland, company offi.
pumped, and the surrounding envi- and meanwhile our employees sit cials and Biologist Greg Seegen.
ronmental habitat, can be com- home wondering what wiU happen
"We laid out all the facts,
pletely restored.
next.
answered all the questions raised
"This decision is an example of
"I hope our employees realize · and asked the OSM to consider !he
·
d
·
'
we
are dot'ng all we can to resolve emergency nature of the situation.
ngid, absur thinking, 11 s an
example of what's wrong with gov- this and get on with removing
"The company has explored and
ernment - it's the kind of action water and getting the mine back explained to OSM the alternative
which convinces people that gov- into operation."
plans- nearly all 'of which had to
enunent bureaucrats are totally out
Stressing the critical time ele- be rejected because of envtronmenof touch with the real world," ment involved, Smith said, "We tal or time constraints.
Strickland said.
need to get going, all this invest"We have approval from the
"OSM appems to have a lack of mentis sitting underwater."
Ohio Environmental Protection
appreciation for the urgent nature
Smith pointed out the ruling Agency (OEPA) to proceed with

LOAF

I
I

EAGLE 13.5·14.5 OZ. BAGS
RIPPLES

-POTATO
CHIPS

••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••1
•

$

99

NORTHERN 12 ROLL

BATH
TISSUE

SEALTEST

Orange
JUiCe PLASTIC

GALLON

MINIATURE TRAINS •
. Richard Freeman and Nath11n
Robinette (above) discuss
model train parts at the Meigs
County Public Library Model
Train Show Wednesday afternoon. (Bottom) Gerald Shuster
stands next to h~ display or
nterns that bave been used
a
time to guide trains. 'The
mode train show features displays by tbe Meigs/Mason Division or the Rail~oad Club or
Southeast Ohio aod will run
through Sunday. Hours for the
show are nooa to 9 p.m. until
Friday, noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. to S p.m. on
Sunday. On display are five
train sets or different sizes or
gauges. In the model train
industry there are aiae size
ranging from the smallest or z
gauge to the standard antique.
Also on display are a number ol
books that are available from
the library about trains, a video
and various other train memorabilia. Club members wbo
have displays are Richard
Freemen, David Robinette,
Nathan Robinette and Brian
Justice. (Sentinel photos by
Cheryl Kulaga)

1
2

MARDI GRAS
GEESE DESIGN

$

TOWELS

FOR

FOOD LAND
~-1

.A,•"

toODI.AND

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentiael News Stafl'
The courthouse air conditioner
was once again a "hot" topic of discussion at Wednesday's regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners.
Commissioner Manning Roush,
after talking with employees of
Johnson Control Inc. of Charleston,
W.Va., reported the air conditioner
arrived m Oklahoma Tuesday
where it will be rebuilt by the manufacture
Roush said it will take approximalely two days to rebuild the unit
which will arrive back in Meigs
County by Monday at the earliest.
Repairs on the unit are proceedinjl on schedule, commissioners
sa1d.
Commissioners were critical of
the decision by courthouse office- .

Demjanjuk's
conviction
overturned

SEVEN f!ILLS, Ohio (AP) Netghbors of John Demjanjuk who
supported him during his 16-year
battle against charges he was a
Nazi death camp guard celebrated
today.
Israel's Supreme Court today
ruled unanimously that Demjanjuk
was not the cruel death camp guard
" Ivan the Terrible," and overturned his conviction and death
sentence.
Although the judges said they
still believe Demjanjuk worked in
the concentration camps, they
found. him innocent of any other
warcnmes•
. "It's a happy day," DemjanJuk's daughter, Lydia, said at the
Demjanjuk home in sub11rban
Cleveland today. "We're just wait. • ing for him to come borne."
. Demjanjuk's wife, Vera, 67, and
h1s other daughter, Irene were in
seclusion. John Demjanjuk Jr. and
son-in-law Ed Nishnic were with
Demjanjuk in Israel.
Neighbors said they were satisfied with the decision.
same on both sides and $1,275 tf
the text is different on each side.
The price is increased if a smaller
type is used. This cost is paid
directly to the manufacturer and
must be paid in full by the organization requesting the stgn.
It is for this reason that the
Meigs County Historical Society is
inviting the public to sponsor for
$10 per relativ~ per mile a mile. or
more in melj:ibry of any relattve
that servef,i during the war years
from 1861-1865.
An group or individual incerestContioued on page 3
..

Margarine
Quarters

LB. BOXES

Meigs Historical Society to receive
grant to help fund '93 celebration
••

99l
5 QT.

PAIL

JUMBO

Southern Peaches
0

EA.

LB.

We R... rve the Righi to Umit quantltlee • Prlcee Effective thru Set., July 31, 1993 • USDA Food
(

'

'

pumping followmg a set of strict
requirements and we are fully prepared to meet those standards.
"It is our belief !hat OEPA has
the jurisdiction here," she said.
Suickland, 0-Lucasville, said
the ruling came abou! because lncerior's Office of Surface Mining did
not want to set a precedent involving a regulation which says it must
issue a cessation order against
actions that will cause "significant,
imminent environmental harm to
land, air or water resources."
Biol01rlsts studying the si!Wition
Continued on pa~e 3

Air conditioner 'hot' topic during
Meigs Commissioners' meeting

(

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·$ 99

said.
Meanwhile, U.S. Representative
Ted Strickland and Senator John
Glenn are planning to discuss the
ruling today with Department of
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt.
Strickland criticized the ruling
as "an absurd decision."
"It seems they have decided it is
more important to prevent a completely reversible disturbance of !he
physical environment, than to protect the well-being of hundreds of
southern Ohio families," he commented.
"There is absolutely no one at

and WlC Coupon• Accepted • Not Reeponelble for

-

'
--·

By CHERYL KULAGA
Sentinel News Stafl'
Another pan of recognizing historical sites in Meigs County took
part on Wednesday at the Meigs
County·Museum where a presentation was given on historical markers.
The marldng of several sices in '
the county will culminate in a celebration on August 13-15 at Portland to commemorate !he Battle of
Buffington Island that took place
there 130 years ago.
President of the Meigs County
Historical Society Margaret Parker
said she had just received word that
the historical society is receiving a
$600 grant to help fund the celebration.
A previous event, for the same
purpose, was this past weekend
~hen Dave Gloeckner, dressed as a
an Ohio Union soldier from the
Civil War, walked the determined
rouce which John Morgan and his
raiders took from Vinton. to Portland.
Gloeckner reported on his trip at
the presentation Wednesday. He
said thai after bearing about the trip
on
the radio' several people; were
1
interested in what he was doing
rather than fearing him because he
was carrying a gun.

!f.-

"One difference between my
walk and theirs was that they didn't
have hot pavement to walk on," he
said mentioning the ,blisters on his
feet.
His resolve for raising awareness of historical sites in Meigs
County never wavered, though, and
he said, "We got a lot of sices that
need to be marked •and need to be
protected."
One of the those is an old cemetery in Meigs County that is
unmarked and unprotected where
there may be Civil War soldiers
buried. Gloeckner didn't disclose
•
the location because he fears people would dig up the graves for the
old buttons and belt buckles.
The main presentation was
given by Tricia Valentine of the
Tax dollars in tbe form of
Ohio Historical Society Local His- $85,000 in Issue D funds went to
tory Office on .the requirements and work in Syracuse Tllursday wben
cost of official Ohio Historical site the pa'rin1 or several streets and
alleys got underway,
markers.
She gave a brief history of hisThe pmnework Is beiq doae
. torical site markers and what tbe by the Tom Mayle and Sons Co.,
a subsidiary ol the Shelly Co.
present process is to get one.
The Ohio Historical Society lets
Motorists are requested by
individuals or groups [liO(lOSC sites Mayor James Pape not to drive
for markers because "who knows over any or tbe newly paved
better than the people who live areu for at least oae bour after
tbe work Is completed. Th
there."
The cost of manufacturing a pavla&amp; will coatlaue throueh
marker is $1,200 if the text is the Monday.

holders to change their business
hours due to the lack of air conditioning.
Tuesday, officeholders tem porarily changed their business
hours to 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. with the
exception of common pleas coun
and juvenile!probace court which
will have people working until4:30
p.m.
Commissioners said offices
under their control, including
courthouse janitors and the county
tax map office, will remain open
during regular business hours from
8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.

County employees need to work
during re~ular hours to better serve
the pubhc, commissioners said
while occasionally fanning or dabbing themselves due to the heat in
the commissioners' office.
"I!'s not fair to the people that
elected them," Roush said.
Discuss bousing
Sid Edwards of the GalliaMeigs Community Action A~ency
met with the commission to discuss
progress on the county's Community Housing Improvement Strategy (CHIS).
Continued on page 3

,.---- L-ocal briefs-=:
- =--~
·Water hydrants being flushed
The Racine Water Depanment will be flushmg the hydrants m
the village for the next two weeks. Flushing started Wednesday.

Theft probed by deputies
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repons that !he depan·
ment is investigating the theft of headlights and wiring from a new
Craftsman riding mower. Dale Laudermilt, P1ne Grove Road,
reported Wednesday that the icems were taken sometime between
the 24th and the 28th.

Items reported stolen
An air stapler and two air driven nail guns reportedly stolen from
Ohio Pallet Co., Rocksprings Road, over the weekend have been
recovered, Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby reported this morning. He said that the investigation is continuing and charges are
expected to be filed upon completion of the investigation.

No one hurt in accident
One vehicle received moderate damage and another light damage
in an accident occurring on Mason-Pomeroy Bridge underpass near
West Main Street, Pomeroy, Wednesday afternoon.
John Lisle, 46, Syracuse, was stopped at the stop ~ign from the
underpass onto Main Street when he was h1t from behmd by Lester
Stewan, 23, Middleport.
.
No citations were reported. Both cars were dnven from the
scene.

Police probe B &amp; E
Beverly Fetty, 106 Union Ave., Pomeroy, reported to Pomeroy
Police early Thursday morning that her home had been broken into.
The suspect or suspects entered through the kitchen window
sometime between II p.m. Wednesday and 5 a.m. Thursday.
Fetty told police that a VCR, ·a Nmte~do and two games were
stolen. The estimated value of the VCR 1s $325 and Ole Nmtendo
and games is $150. An investigation is continuing.

Paving !JDderway

PREPARING BRIDGE SITE - Workers of
tbe Meies Couaty Hl&amp;bway Department were
busy Tuesday preparin&amp; a wOO!,Ien form for a
coacrete bridae abutment on Oak Grove Road

near Radne. The old 12-foot bridge at the site
ws removed Moaday and Is l!elne replaced with
an 18·foot span prior to pavin1 operations next
summer. (Sentlael photo by Jim Freeman)
~

lit
I

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