<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10220" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/10220?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:45:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20660">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c5f21a65d8732945926b93580800ece6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>08ff00ff27f52dfa51f6d397a4b9a070</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32639">
                  <text>Page

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaiHpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

DB Sunday nmn Sentinel

Mi~west

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone. calls will be accepted. ~II
contest entries should be turned in to the newsr
paper ofr~ee by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the wln•er will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be featured by the Meigs Soil a•d Water Conservation
District.

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate in the weekly contest may do so by .guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St .,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize fr,om the

PVH radiology techs are
registered in mammograp~y
POINT PLEASANT • Two
members· of the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Radiology Services staff
have become registered in mammography, according to Jeff Ham·
lin, Director of Radiology Services.
Lori Fox, R.T. (M) and Marissa
. Marchi, R.T.(M) recently passed
the board examination to become
registered in mammography tech·
nology by the American Registry
of Radiologic Technologists.
Fox has been associated with
PVH for the past two-and-a-half
years. A Gallip6iis resident, she is
a graduate of the King's Daughters
Medical Center School of Radaologic Technology. The daughter of
Stewart Fox of Alliance, Ohio and
Wilma G. Fox of Ironton, she is a

member of the American Registry
of Radiologic Technologists.
Marchi, a graduate of the Good
Samaritan School of Radiologic
Technology, has worked at PVH
for two years. She is a member of
the American Registry of Radio·
logic TechnologiSts and the Gallia
County Animal Welfare League,
and resides in Gallipolis with her
husband. David Durbin.
"We are extremely proud of
Lori and Marissa for reaching this
level of professional achievement,"
Hamlin says. ''Their designation as
rc:gis~ ~~mography techno~o­

gasts as an andacator of the quahty
services PVH provides to the
,women of our community."

Marissa Marchi, R.T (M)

Retail
...
Continued from D-1
tx-.er.

"As cattle slaughter and
weights increase tnore than seasonally this summer, larger supplies
will lead to record meat supplies
and continued ~e pressure on the
meat complex, ' it said.
The report said weekly hog
slaughter this month is lower than a
year ago, but dressed weights are
averaging three to four pounds
, above last July.
Total frozen po!X stocks on lune
30 were about II percent above .
last July at 355 miUion pounds.
Bellies were down 10 percent,
but stoct;s of most other cuts
increased, the report said. Hams
were up 62 percent, loins 58 percent and ribs 26 percent
Hog prices averaged around $46
per hundred pounds in July and are
expected to average near that during the summer quarter. Retail pork
prices in lune, at $1.97 per pound,
continued riSing following a jump
in May.
·
,
Wholes;Jie broiler prices held
firm at 55 cents a pound in July in
12 _cities where they were tallied,
the repon said. That was fractionally below a year ago despite larger
production.
"Continued production growth
of about 5 percent is expected in
August, yet wholesale prices will
likely continue in the mid-50s," it
said.
"Uncertainties over the impacts
of the Midwest floods on grain and
especially soybean meal prices
cloud the net returns picture for
later in the year," the repon added.
'

August 1, 1993

rains .slow crops

WA:SHlNOTON (AP) - · Heavy
rains in the Midwestern Slates have
slowed crop development, and
retail prices for processed vegeta·
bles may rise, the Agriculture
Department says.
The states of Minnesota, Illinois
and Wisconsin produce 54 percent
of all U.S: snap beans, sweet coin
and green peas for processing ,
USDA's Economic Research Service noted in a repon on vegetables
and wecialty crops.
"In Wisconsin, the harvest of
green peas was delayed due to
flooded fields," it said. "Also
sweet corn development has been
slower than normal. Snap bean production is expected to be less
affected because the crop is grown
mostly in northern, sandy -soil
areas.''

and output are not expected to be
as large this year," it said.
Production of green peas for
processing is estimated to be down
35 percent, while contract acreage
of snap beans is down 2 percent
and sweet corn down 9 percent. the
repon said.
In 1992, U.S. vege~le production declined 7 percent from the
previous year, it'said. Reduced pro·
duction of potatoes, down I percent, processing vegetables, down
II perceJ\1, and dry edible beans,
down 35 percent, outweighed a 3
percent increase in fresh-market
vegetables.
Fresh-maalc:et tomato production
rose 8 percent in 1992 as did onion
production, which hit a record 54.7
million hundredweight (100
pounds).
·
"However, onion prices
remained fmn because of shrinkage
and loss were higher in many
states, largely offsetting the usual
price-depressing effect of record
output,'' the repon said.

It said less damage is el\pected
in lllinois, "where only a fow vegetable fields are reported to be
flooded. "
The repon said retail prices for
processed vegetables "may
increase during the second half of
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
the 1993-94 crop season as output
commercial red meat production
falls and supply tightens.''
During the severe Midwestern totaled 3.48 billion pounds during
drought in 1988, it said, the retail June, 2 percent above the previous
price index rose 5 percent as the record high for the month set a year
output of processing vegetables earlier.
Beef production totaled 2.05 bilwas cut 17 peroent
" However, changes in prices lion pounds, up 1 per~ent from

June 1992 according to a report by
the Natio~ Agricultural Statistics
Service.
Veal production was 22 million
pounds, down II percent from the
record low set in June 1992.
Pork production came to 1.38
billion pounds, up 3 percent from
the record high set in June 1992.
And lamb and mutton production ,
ai 31 million pounds, was up 14
percent from a year earlier.

1990 Chevy Carslca CT_sl26"• Dr., Low Miles! Auto .. Air

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED
-24-Hr. cns.IS lnteNenuon

SerYICeS - Adu~s. Children
&amp; Mote9C810S

•24 Hr. Emergency s.rvoMantage &amp; FaiTWiy Counsetng

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

~rahenstve Adolascerr

COU1198IIng &amp; Therapy
oCtildraris Rasldontlal
and/or Clut·Palier! Treatment
•VIctim's .&amp;.sslotaroce Program

.Pattl-SeMoa for lhe Homeless
.Psycllolherapy
offTIIIoyeos Asst Programs
oGalla Meigs Headstart
oCase M.,_mont

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS
•senior 5e1Yices
•Evaluation &amp; Tasting

•AduK Cominunlty Tranlng
•Supervised Housing tor
Emotlonaly ptsablod

MEDICAREoMEDICAI[)tTITLE XX•SLIDING FEE SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE dF OHIOoEVENING APPTS. AVAILABLE

JACKSON

24 HOUR

200 MAIN·ST.

CRISIS LINE
OUTSIDE OF

uru.LIPOLIS
412 VINION PIKE

GAWPOUS
CALUNGAREA
TOLl FREE DIAL t
I THEN

LOCAL CRISIS UNE

446-5554 "
TOO AVAILABLE

POMEROY
MUI.,aERRY HEIGHTS

800·252·5564~~...:;;~99;;2;;;·2;;19;;2;;;;;;;;;;'fj

2927
Super Lotto:
8-9-1()..28-30-38
Kicker:
471160

Page4

a1
Vol. 44, NO. 67

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 2, 1993

1988 Chevy( ~:t&amp;flall-s 184"-

'

6 Cyt.. woS~"TpPedl

.

1990 Jeep Cherokee 4x4.5184"-·
Auto .• 6 Cyl. ..Air. Redl

1988BultkRegat-l__SJ84•o...
6 Cyl., Woll Equipped!

1988 Chevso\4.~ssiL5171 "....
V-8, l.oade.:;, Sharp!

,

1991 ChevyCorslcaLT_ SJ2601. . .
4 Dr.. Auto .. Air. Clean I

1985 Chevy C·IO P.U~19901..,.
Auto .. Air. 6 Cyt., Sharp!

1990 Dodge Ram ISO PU.s 177"...
Auto .• Air, 6 Qyl.. Clean I

Monthly Payments Based
Upon '1 ,000.00 Down Or
Equal Value In Trade-In
and Balance Financed Thru
Lending lnstHutlons.
Taxes &amp; Fees Not Included

•Air Conditioning •Tilt Wheel
•Controlled Cycle Wipers
•Anti·lock Brakes •AMIFMICis·
sette w/Auto Reverse •Electric
Rear Defogger •Power Door
Locks oS-Speed Transmission
Rebate to Dealer

•Drivers Sldt Airblg •Power Windows
"Delay Wipers •Rear Defogger
•Cruise Control•3.3 Uter V-' Engine
•Tilt Wheel •Cas ..tte Tape Player
•Power Door Loeks •Storage Arm
Rest •Visor Vanity Mirrors •36f36 BPR
to BPR Warranty

"Wlln• Snllfe•

Belgium, where he did a bit part on
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Belgium television's version of
Sentinel News Staff
Saturday
night Jive, and to GerMike Albert of Columbus, an
many,
Australia,
and New Zealand
Elvis impersonator, and the Big E
for
concerts.
Band will be performing at the
In 1991 , he captured the crown
Meigs County Fair as the grandas
the
world's finest Elvis imperstand attraction on Aug. 18.
.
sonator
in international competition
The man, describe&lt;~ in reviews
at
the
Biue
Hawaii in Kaua convenfollowing performances as " the
world's fmest llivis impersonator", tion
Alben has been described as a
will take the ·stage for two perfor·
mances on the Wednesday of fair "refreshing exception to the Elvis
week, the rarst at 7, the second at 9 impersonator norm.'" He clearly
resembles Presley, according to a
p,m.
The native of Canton has an Columbus entertainment writer,
impressive performance back- once he dons the wig, sideburns,
and shades.
ground.
It ail began about eight years
Besides numerous music videos
ago
when Albert, a real estate broas the King, he has been featured as
ker
and
auctioneer in Columbus,
an Elvis impersonator on A Current
went
into
one those recording
Affair, ABC World News, Inside
booths
at
the
Ohio State Fair and
Edition, and the Ophra Winfrey
sang
an
Elvis
song, Presley style,
Show.
He performed with the Jor- over a taped backing track. People
danaires, Elvis' backup group for heard and were impressed.
After that he dressed as Elvis in
15 years, last year at the Palace
sequins and sunglasses for a realTheater in Columbus.
Over the past year besides music tors' party and a woman there hired
videos and performances in the him 1to perform at a party. At that
United States, he has traveled to

$
I
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

M•••• TM Dfffnate•"

1 Section t 0 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

party two others hired him and his
career as an impersonator was off
and running.
It was after one of those parties
that Steve Cantin of Extravaganza
Productions talked Albert into a
promotional video. That was the
beginning of LTL (Larger than
Life) Productions, Inc.
His next stop was in Memphis
where the was first runner-up in the
international Ei vis Impersonator
Contest That appearance led to an
offer to produce six music videos
for A Current Affair. Since the
release of those videos. Alben has
release his first single ''I' II Be the
King for You", which is a tribute to
llivis. He now has an album in the
works.
For the past four years, Albert
has worked lots of Elvis gigs,
going from backyard parties to
fairs and festivals, to concens and
television performances.
A full concert performance, a
Las Vegas-style show, will be
given at the Meigs County Faif,
according to Dan Smith, president
of the Meigs County Fair Boart;~ .

Mississippi River
crests; thousands are
evacuated inr" St. Louis
ST. LOUIS (AP) ·_ Floodwa- wall, straining a soggy levee in the
ters submerged a rurallilinois town city 's south end and overwhelming
today and thousands of St. Louis farmlands. Thousands of people are
residents were evacuated out of without drinking water JU~t to the
fears of a propane gas explosion. east in rural Illinois.
But forecasters delivered unexpectSt. Louis police ordered the
ed good news: the area may have evacuation of about 2,500 people in
already seen its highest river levels. a 30-square block ·area where the
The Mississippi River was mea- River Des Peres empties into the
sured at 48.6 feet this morning in Mississippi. Officials are worried
St. Louis.~low Sunday:s high of · that 50 propane tanks, floating in
49.4 feet and well short of the floodwaters at a Phillips Pipeline
record 49.7-foot crest previously Co, site, could explode.
forecast for today.
"This has the potential for a
"The current thinking may be truly major disaster," said police
that the highest point it reached Chief Clarence Harmon. "This is a
may have been yesterday morn- mandatory, forced evacuation."
ing," said National Weather SerBuses were being rounded up tO
vice forecaster Ted Schroeder. "It take residents to an emergency
may be steadily and slowly shelter as the city shut off utilities
falling."
in the area. Efforts to stabilize the
But the relief in St. Louis came tanks were halted Sunday night by
at the expense of people down- a flash fire. It burned itself out in
stream. Officials said .the Missis- less than a minute.
sippi level dropped because of
In St. Charles, ju~t nonhwest of
levee breaks that flooded tens of St. Louis, several sections of a
thousands of acres of Illinois farm- levee along the Missouri gave way
lanu just to the southeast
early today, forcing the evacuation
The latest levee collapse came of about 200 homes. Less than an
early today in Monroe County, Ill., hour after the break, water was
when a barrier burst and brown already six feel deep in some areas.
''It's coming through good,"
floodwaters covered the small town
of Valmeyer. With nothing to stop police Sgt. Mike Powell said. "It
the water's flow, farms and small finally just blew through."
communities for 20 miles were
Some I ;ooo residents in the
threatened,
already soggy area left theif homes
Since Friday, waters have Sunday after river water poured
anacked the St. Louis area from ali over a levee. ·
sides, testing the St. Louis flood

near Blacksville on Saturday that
The union Saturday moved the
had begun about 20 hours earlier.
vehicles and sent all but six of the
Vehicles and up to 500 United pickets home, said Carlo Tarley,
Mine Workers pickets blocked the international executive board mementrance to the Eastern Associated ber for UMW District 31.
Corp. coal mine in Monongalia
No injuries or violence were
County, Kirk said.
• reponed, Kirk said. There were no
Seven trucks were unable to arrests, but traffic citations were
enter the mine and -an undeter- issued to some of the pickets and
mined number of workers were company workers, Kirk said.
·
' As it turned out, nobody was
. unable to leave, authorities said.
hurt, there was no propeny damage
and the traffic violations were
issued," Kirk said. "Any time we
have a situation like that where we
have no injuries, no property damage, and can resolve the issue, I
consider that a success, a complete
success.''
In a fare run Sunday, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department
But a spokesman for the Bitumiassisted the Middlepon Volunter Fire Department in putting out a
nous
Coal Operators Association
brush fire.
was
critical.
Occuring around 7:30 p.m., the fire was on Grover Road in
"To me it's just inexcusable
Cheshire Township. One truck was used and 17 farefaghters
that
a group of people could block
responded. It was the 163rd alarm of the year.
a public road for 20 hours," said
Tom Hoffman, spokesman for coal
association.
"Surely the governor's got the
Two people were cited recently for driving under the influence,
ability to order the state police to
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
take action," Hoffman said.
Kimberly C. Shamblin, 53879 Oak Grove Road, Racine:.; was
"Apparently the state, whether it
cited early this morning for D.U.I., no operator's license and no seat
was at the governor's level or the
belt and Alan K. Partlow, 29, 42936 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, was
state police level, decided this was
cited early Saturday morning for D.U.I. and speeding.
a negotiating situation instead of an
· unlawful act"
Union members believe the
·courts have been unfair in granting
The annual Vinton Bean Dinner Parade will form in the Vinton
two temporary restraining orders
Elementary School parking lot at I 0 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 7. The
limiting the number of pickets to
parade will leave the school at 10:30 and follow its normal route,
12 at CONSOL Inc. mines in
except that it will end at the Vinton Community Park, the new site
northern
West Virginia, Tarley
for this year's dinner.
The dinner was established more than 120 years ago by Civil
said.
"We're getting a real bad rap on
War v~terans.
violence,"
Tarley said. "All the
Anyone interested in paaticipatjng in the parade should be at the
testimony and reports of violence
school by 10 a.m. Saturday. For more inforg~ation, contact Mayor
are coming from these hired thugs
'-'Donna Lynn DeWitt at 388-8~27.
.
(the companies) have.

Bean dinner, parade set at Vinton

II,

walls."

Nearly two months of flooding
in nine Midwestern states has contributed to 45 deaths and caused at
· least $10 billion in damage to crops
Continued on page 3

•

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
_: Gov. Gaston Caperton has asked
the head of West Virginia's state
police to investigate allegations by
the United Mine Workers that
injunctions against the union have
been unfairly granted.
Caperton's agreement to h~ve
Col. Thorn Kirk began mvesugaung
the allegations today ended a disruption at the Federal No. 2 mane

.---Local briefs--

Nerves remained taut as forecasters predicted the rivers would
reach their highest levels ever
today when they collide just nonh
of the city.
Forecasters estimated the river
crests would collide overnight
nonh of the city where they converge. Ofl1cials said the Mississippi would reach 49.7 feet, 19.7 feet
above the flood level. The Missouri
was expected to crest at 39 feet this
afternoon, 14 feet above flood
stage, said National Weather Service meteorologist Dan Ferry in St
Louis.
Even after the crest; the threat of
damage won't be over, The Missis·
sippi is expected to drop only a few
inches a day.
.
A key unknown was the city's
52-foot floodwall, which never has
been tested by such relentless pressure. Workers have been reinforcing it since it sprang a leak recently
in an industrial area,north of downtown.
'~You have to worry ," said
Delores Suda, director of the city's
Emergency Management Agency.
"We've seen what happened in
other towns with levees and flood-

r------Poker·run------,

State police superin~endent
to probe UMW allegations

Two cited for D.U.I.

BUICK·POrrnAC.

1900 EASTERN AVE.

J. D. Summer and the Stamps, Elvis' backup
group ror his last seven years. From left to right,
Ed Enoch, Ed Hill, Mike Albert, J. D. Sumner,
and Steven Warren.

Brush fire extingiushed

1993 BUICK
CENTURY
SPECIAL

·s

ELVIS COMING TO MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR • Elvis impersonator Mike Albert wiD be
the Wednesday night grandstand attraction at
the Meies County Fair. He's pictured here with

Elvis impersonator, band will
perform at Meigs Fair Aug. 18

NOW OPEN • L!iri's Happy Hair Bfl!uly Salon recently opened
.on Main Street in Thurman. Owned and operated by Lori Chan~e,
a graduate ot Paramount Beauty college in PortslJouth, hours are
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday and 8 afn. to 2 p.m. Sat·
urday. After hours appointments are available.

$

Low tonight ln 60s. Tuesday,
In mid-80s.

partly cloudy blgh

••

2 Dr., 4 Cyt .• low Miles I

"

Woodlond Contonlo lundod In port by tho Goltlo-Jockoon-Molge llolrd of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction ond Mentol Heolth -

Pick 4:

1990 Chevy Lumlna_SJ3801...

I

ONE OF THE ~ST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUlHEASTERN OHO

957

6 Cyt.. Lo9ded! 2 Dr.

1993 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
2 DR. ·

Wootf{and Centers, Inc.

Pick 3:

199~MercuryCaugar_sl61"-

•

owned heifer honors at the 1993 national Junior
Angus Show in Wichita, Kan. (Photo by Ameri·
can Angus Association)

Padres
defeat
Reds

Muttimedlalhc.

Smith Buick-Pontiac Celebrates
The Gallia County Jr. Fair
With These FAIR SPECIALS!

RESERVE LATE JUNIOR CHAMPION· SAV Cheyenne 2213, exhibited by Neenah HiU
or Bidwell, won reserve late junior chamipion·

Ohio Lottery

Sunday's annual poker run
sponsored by the Meags County
Bikers attracted m.ore than 200
area riders and raised several
hundred dollars for the Meigs
County Senior Citizens and tbe
Meigs County Infirmary.
Winners in the run, pictured
above, were Dana .Gall, Albany,
presented here with a $100 bill
by Brenda Davis, program
emcee, and Renee Thomsen,
Athens, right, with a ace high
rtush, and Leletta Ottman,
Long Bottom, with a run house.
Thomsen and Ottman received
plaques.
Court Street In Pomeroy was
blocked orr ror the afternoon
and evening for a bikers party.
Bad Habit provided music ror
the party. Several games were
in operation, some sales tables
were in place, and rel'reshments
were sold. Door prizes were
awarded.
Several local businessmen
took the seat of lhe dilly dunker
-during the evening. Here Joe
Clark goes into the water. (Photos by Charlene HoenichJ

�I

Monda~August2,1993

COmmentary

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel •
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Monday, August 2, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo

OHIO Weather

Fair weather expected rest of week

Tuesday, Aua. 3
Ac:aa-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel

.

··

DEVO'BD TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~ARGARET LEHEW

Generai~81Ulger

Controller

LETlllRS OF OPINION ..-e welcome. They should be less ~ 300
words. All letters are s.ubject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good !Ute, addressing issues, not personalities.

A quarter-century of efforts .
and lots of big hurdles
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
..wASHINGTON - Five years ago, Ronald Reagan signed a welfare
reform act he said would promote work instead of dependency and
praised Democrats BiU Clinton among them, for help in getting it done.
President Oint~n 's quest for refonn is.about to overtake that one.
;'That has been a pattern, one the Clinton administration is detennined
to~~ with real change. .
. ·
,.
Jimmy Carter aied and failed to wm an overhaul he S3Jd wool~ have
moved tWO million people off welfare and put them 10 work, With tax
breaks to help the working poor.
. .
.
.Jn his time Richard Nixon called welfare a colossal fa1Iure and sa1d
the system shOuld be ·scrapped for one that would have provided direct
payments to welfare families and needy people with jobs.
'The 1988 welfare refonn act still is being phased in; a community ser·
viae work for welfare provision is to take effect next year, along wtth
indreased job training. Clinton worked on that measure as governor of
Arkansas.
Cliiuoo now promises more basic changes to "end welfare as we know
it" As a candidate, Clinton said his rule would be "two years and out,"
.to make.welfare a transition to work, not a way of life.
.
That's still the aim, although the people trying to draft the program are
not quite so f11111 on the precise time limit. To make it_ work, ~re wiU
have. to be jobs to be filled, private or pubhc. along wtth educanon and
job training, and the money to pay for them.
.
tbe record of welfare reform efforts over the past 25 years pomts up
the challenge.
Even the language spans political parties and philosophies. "We ll!USt
expect people to. work," ~ys Secretary of Heal_th and Human Semces
Donna Shalala. ''We must tell healthy people -m no uncer1aln termsthat cash assistance can't go on forever." Reagan said so, too.
Clinton said Thursday that "a major down payment on welfare
reform" is built into'his tax and budget bill, up for congressional action
this week. . .
That's the earned income tax credit, which aids the working poor with
govenunent payments ~ they're entitled !'&gt; get more in cr~~ than the_y .
owe in taxes. He and Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared wtth three f!llm·
lies that benefit from the prognun. "People who can work should work,
but if they do work, their families at borne shouldn't be poor," Clinton
said.
.
•
Clinion is trying to expand the use of the tax code to encourage work
over weifare by more than doubling the maximum tax credit low income
worlcers can get.back from the government. The syslem dales back 18

y~ president said the Internal Revenue Service is going to sl!lll trying

to reach the vast numbers of people who are entitled to the benefit but
don't apply.
.
th
.
.. id D "d T
'';.. It is essentially a pay 1'31se for e worlcing poor, . sa
avt .
EUwood an assistant secretary of health and human semces and one of
the people in charge of drafting the welfare refonn plan. "If you don't
work, you don't get anything. It encourages wor~. " .
·.
Ellwood also said that health care reform IS a ptece of the welfare
reform effort. As it is now, he said, vast numbers of people stay on welfare because that's the only way they can get health coverage.
A Clinton administration tuk force is at work on a welfare overhaul
plan that is 10 be ready by fall; 27 officials, from eight agencies and the
White House, are on the working group. They plan public hearings,
beginning Aug. II in Chicago.
EUwood said at a White House briefing that there's a concensus the
welfare system isn't working. "Conservatives talk about illegitimacy Wld
dependency," he said. "Liberals talk about low benefits and the way tt
treats people. .
·
.
"But more importantly, the people that hate 11 the most are the people
in the system, the welfare reciptents who talk about the isolation, the stigma the humiliation, a system that seems designed to hold them back .... ''
The-complaints are familiar. The Clinton ~le say that this time, the
answCI'S won't be, that they will not tinker w1th the old ways but fmd new
ones.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.
Today's Birthdays: Ac1ress Myrna Loy is 88. Actress Beaaice Straight
is 75. Fonner Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., is 71. Actor Carroll O'Connor is
69. Actor Peter O'Toole is 61. Actress Joanna Cassidy is 48.
Thought for Today: "Everyone is necessarily the hero of his own life
story." -John Barth, American author (1930- ). ·

Berris World
Achilles and Ajax
ft!@i~:l!!i!:

\

:::J

ij

rot-l'T IEL\...

I

'

WASHINGTON - Den Teeple
works one of the loneliest graveyard shifts in gQvernmenL
During our trip to · the Rio
Grande Valley in Texas last year,
we found Teeple worlcing out of a
green Wld black camouflaged Bronco and keeping his eyes trained oo
a television monitor for signs of
trouble: black dots of heat glowing
against a white monitor that can
sometimes represent nothing ·more
than a rabbit. But usually it is a
sign of illegal immigrants or armed
dnig smugglers.
Teeple's job was to operate the
$2.5 million Improved Image
Enhancement Vehicle. Until
recently, he said he was the only
Border Patrol agent to masler this
bundle of high-tech, manhunting
equipment. Teeple is only one solmer, manning one battle station in
the Border Patrol' s increasingly
unwinnable war against illegal
immigration B!ld dnigs.

111 Court Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio

While patrolling the bordcl has
f11111ly entered the computer age, a
1991 report by the General

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Accounting Office found that more
than half of the Border Patrol ' s
3,100 vehicles, many of which are
used along t.he Rio Grande in
Texas, are in dite need of replacement. The General Accounting
Office says that shoddy equipment
has cut dramatically into enforcement time: The total work time
border agents spend enforcing
immigration and drug laws has
decreased from 71 percent in 1987
10 about 60 percent last year.
President Clinton last week

turned decidedly hawkish on
regaining control of the b6rders,
and has proposed spending an addi·
tiona! $172.5 minion to battle ille·
gal immigration. ''We CWlnot and
will not surrender our border to
those who wish to exploit our his·
tory of compassion and justice.'' he
saJUd.

.

Clinton vowed to escalate the
war against illegal immigration, but
he's relying on a police force ~t
will remain understaffed, underpaid
and overwhelmed no matter how
much is added to the budget Even
if Ointon lives up to his promise of
adding 600 new border guards, it
can hardlY. plug a hole in a nearly
2,000 mtle border. The Border
Patrol deals with armed smugglers,
dnig lords and poor mignu.tt fami. lies seeking a better life. Part of the
·sense of futility flows from the
kaleidoscope of scenes and situa·
lions, and the intenningling of ille·
gal trafficking ofaliens and dnigs.

"Red ink! Red ink!"

Increasingly , drug smugglers
rope illegal aliens into doing runs
across the border, making it diffi.
cult to distinguish between hardened smugglers and poor immigrants. " It' s an easy way for the
dopers to get narcotics across without getting caught," Joe De La
Cruz head of the Laredo Border
Patroi anti·smuggling unit, told our
associate Dean lloyd. Organiza.
lions that once sniuggled only peo.
pie for profit are e~panding into
narcotics smuggling. Called
I" mules, " these illegals .usually
have no notion who provided the
cargo and thus are little threat to
the s~ugglers if they are apprehended by authorities.
Although the Border Patrol will ;
make more arrests this year than .'
any other law-enforcement agency ·
in the United States, stemming ille- ,
gal immigration re9uires internal
changes within Mextco as much as •
beefing up border enforcement
For Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas,
the answers lies less · in .law
enforcement than in economics. •·
"We could put a million border
patrolmen standing side by side
along the border and still not solve .
the immigration problem," Gramm ..
says. "Solving the immigration
problem on America's southern
border depends on crealing an economic environment in Mexico in
which people ~an afford to stay ··
home. There is no force on earl.h
that's going to stop a starving ·Mex· :
ican from coming across our border
if here in the U.S. he can get a job
and support his family."
·
Gramm is one of Clinton's ::
strongest allies on the passage of
the North American Free Trade
Agreement , which supp01ters
believe will breathe life into the
Mexican economy. Ultimately, the
success of Clinton's recent get- '
tough message on immigration may
turn not on agetlts such as Don
Teeple and the Improved Image
Enhancement Vehicles- but on
giving Mexicans an incentive to
stay home.
Jack Anderson anll ~ichael . .
Binstein are writers for United :
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'

Unified Europe relies on United. States
Secretary of State Warren
Christopher has been winging back
and forth across the globe with
unflagging energy if meager
results. His apparent object has
been to demonstrate by motion and
word what he has not yet been able
to prove with sustained deed,
which is that the· United States is
and intends to remain totally
engaged in the world. Now here is
the need for such pr09f more evident than in Europe, which is
unraveling almost as quickly as
U.S. forces are coming home from
their fanner NA10 ramparts.
The evidence is readily avail·
able in the daily newspapers and
evening network reports, but it was
emphatically driven home for me
in a recent aip to Europe. A central
theme, repeated at several stops
and from widely disparate sources,
was -that Europe without active
American participation is a Europe
bound for disintegration.
The pessimism I encountered
was as remarkable for its overnight
emergence. as it was for its depth
and breadth. Less than two years
ago, it was widely predicted that
1993 would usher in a mighty new .

a

·'

By The Associated Press
A weak high pressure system
will halt to the stormy weather in
Ohio on Tuesday. Fair weather is
also expected the rest of the week
after a brief relapse Tuesday night
Wld early Wedoesday, forecasters
said.
Highs on Tuesday wiU be 80-85,
while lows tonight iviU fall into the
upper 50s and
60s, according
to the National Weather Savice.
The record-hW! temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1991
while the record low was 50 in
1976. SWiset tonight will be at 8:45
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:32
a.m.
Around the nation

lAICH.

No one solution to better. patrol U.S. ·border

Europe with a unified c11rrenc~, racy troubles. It will take Wlother
vast common market and coordi- g~nemtion before the former Comnated foreign policy. Instead, this munist-run territories are fully
year seems to be the harbinger of a absorbed and integrated: In the
meantime, Germany dreams no big
dreams of a pan-European era.
France has never been fond of
real European union and even less
modern version of the old Europe entranced with the AUantic Partnerof ethnic hatreds, petty provincial- ship. Its foreign policy has been
ism, and the cyclical settling of old built upon the twin pillars of close
scores:
association with Germany on the
Everyone is daily made aware of Continent and independent action
the problems of the Balkans. What everywhere else. With a divided
is less fully appreciated is .how · gov,ritment and lame duck presimuch events there have evolved in dent, France today is a sodden,
their present form precisely sullen lump of grievances. When it
because Western Europe has itself takes a hand in current events, it is
detoured into the swamp of nation- as often to play Puck's bad boy as
alism.
to offer constructive solutions.
Germany, once the engine of
Great Britain has always looked
European unity, has turned inward, fiist toward the "special connecdrawn there by the economic, psy- tion" with Washington and 'Only
chological and political conse- then, quite reluctantly; across the
quences of reunification. Its trou- English Channel. Parliament's
bles are a reminder that you should recent brush with de facto rejection
be careful about what{ou wish for. of the treaty of European unity is
Two generations o passionate evidence not only of Prime Minishunger for reuniftcation and a few ter John ~ajar's political imposhort years of exhilaration after the tence but of Britain's fundamental
fall of the Berlin Wall !lave been ambivalence about Europe. In Lonsubsumed by a sea of contempo- don, Yugoslavia is seen as a "dis·

HoddingCarter Ill

tallt" land, though Iraq, much far • .:
ther away, was considered a fit ,
subject for military action two :
years ago.
,,
All of this is being played out
against the background of American withdrawal from its forward
military position in E~pe. What "
was once aNATO"comm1tted force
of 500,000 will soon be less than
one-third that number. Congress- ,
men Wld commentators alike fre- ;
quently warn Europeans that the '
day is not far distant when 50,000
men will be the outside limit of our
force level there.
Much of this is the nonnal result ·.~
of the collapse of the Soviet Union. ::
Much is driven by America's bud· ;;
getary difficulties. Whatever the "
reason, the American presence is 1;
shrinking rapidly, and with it, !:
American influence. As we pull ::
back, we are viewed le8s and less ,,''
as protector and ally, more and ..
more as competitor and distant :;
scold.
: ;:
"You have to understand that ·•
without the United States, there is i:
no Europe," a distinguished politi- . 11
cal-military analyst advised me in ::
Denmark. "The Ailantic Alliance : ''
is central to the exercise of Euro· , ::
pean unity. If you do not lead, if -.::
you do not maintain a vigorous : ::
presence here, 'Europe' docs not , ~~
exist.''
. '
Louisiana's public colleges. He
His
comments
were
in
reply
to
a
:
::
was also president of the Student
question
about
the
failure
of
the
::
Government Association, and the
issue of the paper !.hat disappeared major European powers to take . ::
included an article critical of that decisive action in the former . ''
· Yugoslavia. As he, and at least :;
organization.
Dori Colona insists, however, three other people with whom I : !l
that "a wrong was commiued bere. .talked, saw it, the United State.s ; 11
Not just to my staff but to the entire was being unrealistic when it _:
looked to' Paris, Berlin and London · ~
university community.''
for
leadership. Europe has never
At Peimsylvania State, in mid·
been
able to forge a common front
April, 6,000 copies of a conservain
the
absence of American prestive paper, The Lionhearted, were
sure,
Jllll1icipation
and ideas. Take :
taken from distribution sites, and
away
the
United
States,
they said, ,
200 of them were found that
evening - set on fire - on the an~ you undermine European : '!
•
lawn of Ben Novak, a Penn State umty.
The answer is not American : •
trustee who is a supporter of the .
rhetoric, but sustained American :
paper.
This was hardly the ftrst theft of policy. The Clinton administration · :
The Lionhearted. Its publisher, should not have asked Europe to : :
Joseph Ames, told the Centre Daily tell it what should be done in the · 1
Times that the paper "has been Balkans, for instance. It should :
plagued by thefts stnce it began in have devised a policy and then . I
1989." And during the last two forcefully sold it, refusing to take · j
•
,
years, it has "lost thousands of dol- no for an answer.
That
won't
work
if
WashingiOn
•
lars in papers and racks.''
The Lionhearted has often been seems to be Sprinting .toward the · :
highly disrespectful of women; s · nearest exit. The secretary of stale :
programs on campus as well as of as perpetual motion machine is no · ;
gay, lesbian and bisexual groups. A answer either. If we do not remain , :
women:s studies ·professor, without politically, economically Wld mili- •
naming anyone, said that the tarily involved in some successor . !
women's community protested form of the Atlantic Alliance, it is : :
defamatOf¥ articles in the paper probable that we can kiss the dream · :
"by removmg copies of it from the of a stable, peaceful Europe good- •
bye.
·
·
;
.campus."
Hoddlng Carter III, former :
Stale Department spokesman ;
Nat Hentorr Is a nationally
and award-winning reporter, edl- . •
renowned autborith on the First" -tor
and publisher, is president or :
A
d
d
r
men ment aa t e rest o the
MalnStreet, a Washington, D.C.· . l
Bill or Rights and a syndicated
based television production com&lt; :
writer for· Newspllper Enterprise
pany and a syndicated writer foi · :
Association.
Newspaer Enteprise Asociation. ~

Stealing the First Amendment
Student journalists are used to
defending themselves against
threats of censorship from college
administrators, but they have been
unprepared for a new fonn of prior
restraint.
In recent months, according to
the Student Press Low Center in
Washington, newspapers on at least
16 campuses have been stolen
before they could get 10 their read,
ers. Two thousand copies of the
Yale Daily News Magazine disap·
peared.in February. Its cover story,
says the Law Center, was about the
status of women in Yale's "Party
of the Right," a debating society.
There were no witnesses, and no
evidence was left behind.
During three weeks at the begin·
ning of April, the Dartmouth
Review was taken from residen.ce
halls by members of the Dartmouth
Afro-American society and the
Black Freshmen Forum. Those
thought police were objecting to
what they, called the Review's
racist content.
A spokesman for Dartmouth
College blithely said that everyone
has a right to distribute publications in the residence halls, but
Dartmouth has 1!0 responsibility to
protect those materials. Besides,
said a college official, the Dartmouth Review is "Utter."
In the regular college daily, The
Dartmouth, Will Griffin, a junior,
·wrote that the dispute "makes it
clear that neither the black race nor
while race has a monopoly on
fools. Ignorance transcends race
and bridges the genef!ltion gap."
As happened at Yale, in the
majority of .thefts and destruction

of newspapers, there has not been
evidence on which to base a prosecution. And sometimes, the prosecutor isn't interested.

NatHentoff
L11-st October, for instance, at
Trenton State College in New Jersey, 5,000 copies of The. Signal
were stolen . As reported ·by the
Student Press Law Center, "The
papers were taken ·by suppOrters of
a student representative on the
board of trustees, who had been the
target of a front-page campus
investigation when she used a relative's ID to get into a campus pub.
When the campus police questioned the county prosecutor's
office, they were told that no one
had broken any laws - the newspapers were free."
Yet the First Amendment does
not say that freedom of the press is
guaranteed only if you have to pay
for the newspaper.
At Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, La, the local
prosecutor did become interested
when, in March, 2,000 copies of
The Lion's Roar were stolen. The
alleged planner of the raid, ~ark
Morice, has been indicted for
"criminal mischief."
Dori Colona, editor of the paper,
tells me that the president of the
university and members of the
·h
·ed
board 0 f
trustees ave 111 10 persuade her to drop the charges.
The person mdicted is the student member :Or the Board of
Trustees of Slate CoUeges and Uni- ·
versities. which runs most of
I

•

The oafly Sentinel-Page 3

low

IND.

Another day of recad high tern·
peratures was expected today from
Texas to the West Coast in a continuing heat wave, while cooler,
drier air was ·moving from Canada
into the northern Plains and Great
Lakes swes.
Foitr women in their 80s and
90s died from heat stroke over the
weekend in riOrthern Texas, authorities said. Temperatures have crept
into the 100s there for more than a
week.
On Sunday, Dallas. tied its 13·
year-old record of 104, while San
Francisco reached 100 - 11
degrees above the record set in
1975. New Orleans· also broke its
record of 96, set in 1958, with a
markof98.

Malone, Long announce grants

W. VA.

Meigs County will receive near- Resevoir in Pomeroy.
ly a quarter of a million dollars in
A breakdown of the projects,
infrastructure capital improvement grant allocations and total project
grants, according to State Sena~r costs are as follows:
Jan Long and Stale Represenranve . - Middleport Park Street Road
Mark Malone.
Improvement • grant amount,
Sunny Pt. Clourly Cloudy
$27,681,
total costs, $31,108;
The grants are part of the ongo~iddleport
North Second
ing $fi&gt;Wth stimulated by the State
C1993 Accu·Weather, Inc.
Avenue
Road
Improvement
grant
Capttal Improvements Program amount, $62,467, total •costs,
and/or the Local Trans- $70,184;
.
------Weather~---- (SCIP)
portation Improvement Program
- Syracuse Culvert ReplaceWednesday through Fri!lay:
(LTIP) . .
South-Central Obio
ment· grant amoun~ $17,600, total
Fair
through
the
period.
Lows
The four projects cove.red by the costs, $20,000;
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
· ·
the low 60s. Tuesday, partly from the mid-50 to low 60s. Highs grants will provide the necessary
- Pomeroy Lincoln Heights
from the upper 70s to mid-80 on money to improve roadways in Resevoir • grant amount, $83.000.
cloudy. High in the mid-80s.
Wednesday, then in mid to upper Middleport and upgrade culverts in total costs, $94,000.
Extended forecast:
·
70s Thursday and Friday.
Syracuse and the Lincoln Heights
Regarding the grants, Sen. Long
said,
"I am very pleased that our
'
Issue 2 money is being put·IO good
use for our local economy."
"These grants will certainly help
Isabella R. Powell
Joseph E. Cropka
Richard F. Kesterson
us compete with the rest of the
Joseph E. "Gene" Cropka Sr.,
Richard F. Kesterson, 63,
Isabella R. Powell, 79, Middle- state. We obviously wanted more
58, Racine, formerly of Rayland, wqtard, died Saturday afternoon, port, died Sunday, Aug. 1, 1993, in money for our area, but this is a
died Sunday, Au~ . I, 1993, at Ohio July 31, 1993, due to an apparent Cape Coral, Fla., foUowing a brief step in the right direction," Malone
said.
State Universtty Hospital in heart attack 'while driving an auto- illness.
Born in Pomeroy, Dec. 27,
Columbus.
mobile.
.
Born Nov. 13, 1929, in Pomeroy 1913, daughter of the late Arthur
He was born Nov. 17, 1934, in
to
the
late Benjamin Wld Pearl Sul- and Chloe Clarke Fick, she was a
Smithfield, son of Evelyn Whittak·
livan
Kesterson, he was a truck homemaker and a graduate of
er Cropka of Rayland and the late
driver
and retired from W.L. Mead, Pomeroy High School. She was a
Joseph A. Cropka.
A Catholic by faith, he was an Norwalk, where he had worked for member of the Trinity Church in
Air Force veteran of the Korean more than 30 years. In addition, he Pomeroy where she was an organ·
was a member of the Willard Con- ist for 15 years.
Conflict.
Michael J. K:nilans, Rotary
In addition 'to his mother, he is servation League and the National
Survivors.include a daughter, International, Disaict 6690 Goversurvived by his wife, Sheri Stewart Rifle Association.
Ruth Ann Dowler of cape Coral; a nor will be guest speaker at the
He is survived by his wife, grandson, David Dowler of Mid· Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Cropka; three sons, Josefh E.
"Gene" Jr. and Bill, both o Ash- Edith Eberly Kesterson, to whom dleport; a granddaughler, Dianna Monday at 6 .p.m.
land, and Brent of Mayport, Fla.; he was married in 1984; two sons, Lucas of Athens; great-grandchilPresident Gene Triplett urges
three daughters, Sandra Lengyel of Dennis and Danny, both of ~le· dren Terra. and Taylor Dowler of all Rotarians to attend this annual
Adena, Debbie Dombroski of head; a daughter, Darla Keslerson Middleport and Jeremy and Joshua club assembly and hear the Disaict
Cadiz and Andrea Cropka of New of Norwalk and eight grandchil· Lucas of Athens; two stepgreat- Governor's message.
Haven, W.Va; one. sister, Louise dren.
grandchildren, Michelle and ~elis­
I&lt;nilans had a career span,ni!lg
Other survivors include three sa Williams of Middleport; a stster· 47 years with the Big Bear Stores
"Sis" Dowdell of Adena; five
brothers, Walter and Terry, both of stepsons, Bob and Bill Breyman, in-law, Geneva Fick of California, · headquarted in Columbus. He is
Rayland, Jack of Wintersville, both of Willard, and Jim Breyman and several cousins and nieces.
actively serving on the Soards of
Larry of Tiltonsville and Roger of of Bellevue; five step-grandchil·
She was preceded in death by Eagle Food Centers, Milan, Ill.,
Mason, W.Va.; and six grandchil· dren; two sisters, Beulah Dodder of her husbWld, Neiss Powell, and a Price Chopper Supermarkets, SchSwanton and Gladys Fife of brother, Arthur Fick ~r.
dren.
. enectday, N.Y., The ·cardinal
Pomeroy,
and several nieces and .
Friends may call Tuesday from
Services will be held 11 a.m . Group of Funds of the Ohio Com·
.
..
. Thursday at Fisher Funeral Home PB!lY, Columbus, and ~ chainnWl
2-4 and 7·9 p.m. at J.E. Foster nephews.
He was preceded tn death by hts · in Middleport with the Rev. Roland of the board of the Ohio Bureau of
Funeral Home in Smithfield wher~
services will be held Wednesday at first wife, Virginia Kesterson; a Wildman officiating. Burial will Workers Corppensation.
10 a.m. with the Rev. Randy son David Kesterson, who dted m follow in Riverview Cemetery in
A Rotarian since 1976, Knilans
Cetorelli officiatin$. Burial will \JC Vietnam; a daughter, Dea Louise Middleport.
is a member and past president of
Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. the Rotary Club of Upp_er Arling·
in Holly Memonal Gardens m Kesterson, and a sister, Audrey Jeffers.
Wednesday at the fWieral home.
Pleasant Grove.
ton. Both he and his wtfe are Paul
Frie.nds may call ~onday from
Harris FeUows. He
the recipi·
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Secor Erma Mae Roush
ent of Upper Arlington Rotary
Funeral Hom~ in Willard where
Erma Mae Roush, 85, Racine, Club's Service Above-Self award
services will be held Tuesday, .' died Aug. 2, 1993, at Veterans in 1992.
p.m ., with Father Paul Perry offiCI· Memorial Hospital.
At last Monday night's meeting
ating. Burial will follow at Sackett
A retired drug store clerk, she of the club, it was announced that
Cemetery in Marblehead where was born Oct 20, 1907, in Bremen, Adam Sheets, son of ~- and Mrs.
Rev. Edwin Crawford wiU conduct Ky. She was a member of the For- John Sheets, will be going to Italy
Am Ele Power................... .38 3!8
graveside
services.
Ashland Oil... ..................... 29
est Run United ~ethodist Church in September for a year's experi·
The
family
requests memorial and the United Methodist Women, ence as a Rotary exchange student.
AT&amp;T........... ...................... 63 5/8
contributions be made to the the Forest Run United ·Methodist
Bank One...........................54 118
The women of Heath Methodist
Renaissance House, 149 W. Main Church Quitters, Meigs County Church served the dinner.
Bob Evans ........................ .18 5/8
Strce~ Norwalk, OH 44857.
Channing Shop.................. 12 112
Senior Citizens and the retail clerks
Champion Ind.................. 13 3/4
union. ·City Holding...................... 27 3/4
Survivors include two daughters
Federal Mogul... .................22
and sons-in-law. Barbara and Wal·
Zoning commission to meet
GoodyearY&amp;R ................. .421!8
ter
Goodrich·
,
Gahanna,
·
and
The
Olive Township Zoning
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Lands End..........................29 1/4
Frances
and
Bob
Weber,
Bexley;
July ;JO discharges -Mrs.
· Commission meets the first and
Limited Inc.................. .......20 1/2
two sons and daughters-in-law,
third Tuesday of each month at 8
William
Ellis
and
d;~ughter, Mrs.
Multimedia Inc ..................33 114 Darrell Cox and daughter, Sharon Thomas and Laurie Roush, Lake
p.m . at the Olive Township Fire
Point Bancorp............. ....... 14
Station. The meetings are open to
Zerkle, Hoyt Mullins, Mary Roush, Park Fla ., and Charles Roush,
Rax Restaurant .................. l/16
Colu~bus; seven grandchildren
the public.
·
Mrs.
Richard
Perkins
and
daughter,
Reliance Eleeaic...... .......... l7 12
and seven great-grandchildren; a
Mrs.
David
Bass
and
son
and
Robbins&amp;Myers................. 18
sister, Emma Pasquale of Danville,
Eblen reunion
Eileen Smith.
Shooey's Inc ............... ....... l9 1!8
Ill., and a brother, Charlie King of
The Sam.uel A. Eblen reunion
July
;JO
births
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Star Bank................ ..... .. .... .36
Danville.
will be held Aug. 14 at the south·
Wendy Int'l.. ..................... .l4 5/8 Paul Facemire, daughter, Galhpo·
She
was
preceded
by
her
hus·
side
roadside rest on Route 33 near
lis. ~.and Mrs. Nathan Powell ,
Worthington Ind ................. 30
band,
Frank
G.
Roush,
three
sisters
Darwin.
Dinner will be at 6 p.m.
Stock reports are the lO:;JO daughter, Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs.
and
five
brothers.
Bring
your
choice of food includ·
a.m. quotes provided by Steven Strausbaugh, Athens.
Graveside
services
will
be
held
ing
meat
and
table service.
July Jl discharges -Linda
Kemper Secunlies, Inc., ol
11
a.m.
Wednesday
at
Gilmore
'
Wilson, Floyd Smith, Leah Atkin·
Gallipolis.
Barbecue planned
son, Mrs. Bryan Kirby.and sori, and Cemetery with -the Rev. Deroo
Newman
officiating.
No
calling
The
Scipio Fire Department will
Gus Thevenir.
hours
wiU
be
held.
·
have
a
chicken barbecue Saturday
July Ubirths - Mr. amd Mrs.
In
lieu
of
flowers,
donations
from
II
am. to 5 p.m. The cost is
Eric' Halley, son, Crown City. Mr.
may
be
made
to
the
Forest
Ru.
n
$4
for
adults
or $2.50 for children.
and ~rs. Floyd Stuart, daughter
The Daily Sentinel
United
Methodist
Church
Memon·
A
tractor
pull
with weigh-in at 5
Point Pleasant, W. Vti . Mr. and
(USPS 213-Ht)
al
Fund
and
the
Meigs
County
Can·
p.m.
and
pull
at
6 p.m. will be held
Mrs. Dale Zinn, daughter,
Published every lfterDoom, Monday through
with a 50 percent payback.
cer Society.
McArthur.
friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley PllbliJhlnJ CoqtaDyiMullimodla
Au$· 1 discharges - Shari
lac .. Pomoooy, Ollio 4!769. Ph. !192·21l6.
Facemue, Brian Keams, Lyronda
Scc:ond clall poJllle paid 11. Pomeroy, otuo.
news---~Delgado, Mrs. Steven Strausbaugh
Membft': The Auocilled Prea. ud lhc Ohio
and daughter, Beulah Humphrey
Sunday admissions - Edwin
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Newapl!pU Auoci.tioa, Natioaal AdvertiJiDi
and Jollie Cantor.
Rtpreaeatallve; Brll'lhlm Newap1per Salea,
Cozart,
Racine.
Saturday admissions - · Alice
733 Third Avenue, New York, New York
Au11. 1 births - MI. Wld Mrs. Nease, Pomeroy.
Sunday
discharges - Larry
. .
10017.
Henry Bartels, son, Patn'llt. Mr. and
Cummins,
Racine.
Saturday discharges - Wtlham
Mrs. Shirl Campbell, daughter, Ward, Middleport.
POSTMASTER: Send addrcu chaaaea to The
Daily Se.at.ioel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
GaUipolis Ferry, W. Va.

&amp;A

-----Area deaths--------:--

The nation's high temperature
Sunday was 126 at Death Valley,
Calif.
Sunny , hot weather was expect·
ed to continue today throughout
Texas, the Southwest, West and
Northwest.
Scattered thunderstorms and
high humidity were expected over
much of the Northeast and South-

M is sissippi...

east , from ~aine to Alabama.
Thunderstorms also were foreclll ·
for parts of the wesran Plains IIlii
Rockies.
Today' s temperatures were forecast in the 80s and 90s for m~ ot:
the nation with some IOOs in Tcus
and parts of the Southwest, and
some 70s in the Northeast and
northern Plains.

Continued from page l

and property.
into one sprawling lake.
The focus now is on St Louis.
There were other levee breaks,
B-racing for· the high water, as well.
.
.
thousands of volunteers labored in
In Ste. Gene~teve, 60 mtles
heat and humidity - and on south of St Louts , a !~vee gave
throUgh the night - to hoist sand· way on the htstonc town s southern
bags on leaky, makeshift levees ~ge, !'Ueatenm!! a!Jout 50 homes,
protecting south St. Louis homes mcluding two bu1lt1n the 1700s.
along the River Des Peres, which
F!Qodwaters also swept through
feeds the Mississippi.
a sanclbag lev~ protectmg a water
Sandbaggers were aided by an treatment plant_m Al~n •.Ill., n~rth- '
unexpected drop in the River Des east of _St. Louts, cutung the drinkPeres and the Mississippi.
!"g water supply for ?3.000 peopl_e
But the respite came at the ~the y&gt;wn and outlymg commuruexpense of people elsewhere: lev- nes.
.
.
·
ees burst downstream, flooding
And m St. Charles, a pre-Revo15 000 acres of Illinois fannland. IuttOnar_y W~ tow~ norl.hwest of
Th~
muddy Mississippi swallowed
.
St. f:outs , Mtssoun Rtver walers
pounng over a levee flooded hous
large farmhouse.s and turned fields es and mobile homes
•

Tuesday,.Aug. 3
"Religious &amp; Senior Citizen Night"
Time
9a.m.
·9a.m.
9a.m.
I p.m.
5 p.m .
6p.m.
7p.m.
7p.m,
7:30p.m.
9 p.m.

Event
Activity Building Judging
Dog Care &amp; D~g Showmanship
4-HCatShow
Beef Breeding &amp; Beef Showmanship
Sheep Breeding.&amp; Showmanship
Girl Seoul Awards
Market Lamb Judging
Heaven Bound
Big Time Wrestling
Heaven Bound

Place
Activities Bldg.
Show Arena
Main Srage
Show Arena
Show Alena
Main Stage
Show Arena
Main Srase
Pulling Tntck
Main Stage

District governor
will address
Rotarians tonight

was

Stocks

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

-.......----Hospital

4l769.

SUBSCIUPTION RATES

11 c.ni• w Motor Roule

ODe Week................................................. .$1.60

Ooe MonUl.::.;............. ..............................$6.9S
ODe Yeot.......................................... - ..$83.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Daily.........................................- -3S Ccota

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

No aubacriptioDI by mail perrnJtted lD areu
where homli ewrier service ia available.
Moll SubocrlpOlono

John A. Wade, .D.

13 Weeb............. ................................... .$23.4G

26W-...................... ...................$-t5.50
52 Weeka.........................................$88.40

,................ .

. suite 111 ., • ..., 1r1n

inlldtMclatCouniJ'
13 Woeu................................................ $21 .84

26 w.eu.................................................$43.16
52 Weeb......................................... ... .....$84.76
. , OuiMe Melli &lt;=-IJ

.

'

•

INVESTIGATING FIRE- No injuries were reported resulting
from a structure fire at the corner or South Firth Ave~ue and
Palmer Street in ~iddleport Saturday around 9:20 a.m. Ftrenght·
ers from the Middleport and Pomeroy volunteer fire departments
responded to the blaz~ at the residence owne~ by Alex Marcum
and Joyce Elliott. (Sentmel photo by Dave Hams)
.

EMS·responds to 13 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 13 caDs fm assistance
during the weekend. Uruts respond·
ing included:
·
Saturday - 9:20 a.m. Middle·
port Fire Department and ·Squad
and Pomeroy Fire Department to
Palmer Street in Middleport for a
structure fire at a residence owned
by Alex ~cum and Joyce Ellion;
9:59 a.m. Syracuse to Chester Road
for Allison Lee who was transport·
ed 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital;
II :26 a.m. Syracuse to corner of
Karr and Dusky streets for Marsha
Karr who was transported to VMH;
5:57 p.m. Pomeror to Brown's
Trailer Park 10 Mtnersvtlle for
Robert Fry who was treated at the
scene; 8:02p.m. Syracuse to Apple
Grove-Dorcas Road Joseph Cropka
who was tninsported to VMH prior
to being transported to Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus
via Sky Med;
·
· 9:09 p.m. Syracuse .to London
Pool for Scott Mitch who was
transported to VMH; 9:43 p.m.
Racine Fire Department and Squad

along with Syracuse Squad to State
Route 338 for a mOtor vehicle accident; Racine transported Kelly
Hensler and Andrea Moore to
VMH while Syracuse transported
Mildred Milihron to VMH; 11:28
p.m. Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department and Squad along with
Syracu ~ e Squad responded to a
motor vehicle accident on State
Route 338; Pomeroy transported •
Ann. Bishop to VMH while Syracuse transported Palma Wiles to
VMH.
· Sunday-7:43p.m . Syracuse ·
to College Road· for Margaret .
Winebrenner who was transported '
to VMH; 9:04 p.m. Pomeroy and
Tuppers Plains squads to State
Route 7 for Dustin Riggs who was
transported to Camden-Clark Hospital by the Tuppers Plains Squad;
10:33 p.m. Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department and Squad to
Grover Road for a brush ftre at the
McFann residence.
·
Monday - 7:30 a.m. Racine to
Portland Road for Winter Cole who
was transported to VMH.

-SIGN- UPBIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL
9:00 A.M. ·NOON
SATURDAY, AUGUST ?TH ·

BIG BEND HEALTH.&amp;·\ fiiN~,-~ ~.E,!E~
MILL STREET MIDDLEPORT ·:-·- _,:;;:;,·
o~n To All 5th &amp; 6.th Gra~ers ·111 Meigs or · · ·

Sublaiben aot deiirioa to pay the carritt may
remit ia advuee dlru:t to The Daily ScDlincl
o.a a three, ail or l211'1011th b•ia. Credit WlU be
&amp;hen CIITicr cacll week.

IAJMIAIN MAT1,..S lAT. a ~UN.
aMCIAIN fiMHfTUIIDAY

.

C•U 304-1711-1144 f,.r llpt. or lnb•..ln

. ..miter of Aet11 PPO &amp; l•Hral Motul PPO

•

Ma·son Counties
·
· Wishing To Play Football or Be A
Cheerleader.
(Cannot Be Age 13 Prior To September 1)
Any Adult Who Is Interested In Coaching Can
Turn In Resume At The Sign Up

,,

�•

The Daily S'e ntinel·

Sports

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

llonda~August2,1993

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

•

Adams, Bailey, Bond among Skyline Speedway race victors ·

Monday, Augus.t 2, 1993

Page-4

By SCOIT WOLFE
Sentinel Corl'ftJIOIIdtnt
Dubbed the "Battle of the Burgers", eventual winner Andy Bond
of Coolville and Racine's Scott
Wolfe played nip-and-tuck for lhe
last half of the race as the two cars
sponsored by McDonald's of Gallipolis, Nelsonville, Athens ·and
Henderson, W.Va. raced furiously
in the "Big Mac Classic" Late
Model race at Skyline Speedway
Friday night.
Bond went on to ed~e Wolfe in
the Late Models, wh1le another
Racine driver Bob Adams Jr.
claimed the Sunoco Race of Champions qualifier for UMP Modifieds.
Don Ross of Albany claimed the
Pure Street main, Kirk Isner of
Marietta grabbed the Limited
Lates, and Bob Bailey of
ReedsviUe claimed the Pure Stock
4-Cylinder main.
Adams win in the UMP Modified main and Ross's Pure Street
win give them a berth in the Suno·
co Race of Champions qualifying
heats at the fast Flemington, New
Jersey, half-mile asphalt National
Parts Peddler Qualifying Series on
October 23, 1993.
· For his winning efforts, Adams
was presented with a brass bowl
and Ross was given a trophy com-

pliments of tlie Sunoco· Race of
·
Champions.
Several yellows slowed the
action, but Adams proved to be the
cream of the crop beating a hardcharging Doug Henry to the line.
Rounding out the top five were
· Dave Landrum, B~ Jacobs and
Mark Dickson of Galhpolis.
Following Ross across the line
in the Pure Stock V-8 feature was
Ginny Adkins, Jeff Russell, George
Adkms of Middleport and
Pomeroy's Todd Smith, up to fifth
in a great charge all the way from
the rear of the field. Smith had to
start at thereat: after losing a wheel
in his heat: The 1NT crew repaired
the car in time for Smith's great
run.
A near packed house saw another close, competitive Late Model
race, the third in a row that saw the
top five cars speed under the
checkered in a blanket finish.
Jay Jenkins of Jackson jumped
into an early lead, but soon Bob
Adams, Jr. and Andy Bond slipped
into the picture. As Adams began
to fade with a leaking front tire,
Bond's York Construction A-10
pressured Jenkins for the top spot.
An accident involving Mike
McDaniel on the backchute
allowed
Wolfe's

McDonald's/Eber's Citgo/Mark's
Auto Sales, Inc. 1114 to move into
third spot, where he nailed Jenkins
on the start to salvage second.
As Bond proved to be the class
of the field near the midway point,
Wolfe's car befan to get faster.
The McDonald s sponsored cars
then waged a great battle for the
top spot. Wolfe's Precision Auto·
motive/Anderson's Furniture car
was faster going into lhe 111rns, but
Bond held a slight edge coming
·
011 t.
Wolfe pulled•alongside Bond on
the last lap, but scrubbed off some
speed coming out of two, _allowing
Bond to take the win. McDaniel
was third, followed by Jenkins,
Eric Otto, Jim Porter,'Kevm Smith
and Bob Adams. Jenkins won the
dash and. the heat
Bobby Bailey in the Barber
Auto Parts car from Reedsville
proved to be the best in the Pure
Stock 4-Cylinders , making it a
· good night for the Meigs County
boys. Bailey grabbed an easy win
over Earl Reeves , Jeff Braley ,
Keith Zimmerman and Charles
Lantz. Heats were won by Cliff
Whitley, Ginny Adkins and Scott
McClain.
Between races, Nationally
known performer "Speedo the

Clown" ·and his "Jet Car" entertained the huge crowd on hand for
lhe event. Promoter Darrell Willie
and staff thanked the crowd for
their suppon in essence of another
big race that was going on in the
area.
In other racing action on fea·
lures held over from last week, Bob
Adams, Jr. claimed a big win in the
McDonald's of Pomeroy/Morrison ·
Motorsports/C.J. Rayburn #A-55.
Ad;~ms, starting on the outside
pole, jumped into an early lead and
was pressured by Andy Bond in yet
another McDonald's car. Larry
Bond pulled into the frey and
another great three wide battle
developed.
.
Racine's Scott Wolfe in the
Baum Lumber/McDonald's of Gal·
lipolis car pulled into the action ,
where he and the elder Bond bat·
tied for third spot. Bond's Whaley's Auto Parts car held on for
third ahead of Wolfe' s Mark.'s
Auto Sales #14, while Bond held
off a high-flying Andy Bond at the
finish.
In the Modified main, Bruce
Dennis withstood the constantchallenges of Bob Adams. Jr. Dennis
went on for the win, while Adams
had to settle for second.

In Jhe Street Stocks, Pomeroy's
Todd Smith finished fifth behind
Ross. Dwi~ht Henry, Ed House and
TomMomson.
SUMMARY
Late Models
Fast Time: Andy Bond 13:87,
Wolfe 13:94, Adams 14:01
Dash: Jay Jenkins, Bob Adams,
J,. Mike McDaniel, Andy Bond
Heat: Jay Jenkins, Adams,
McDaniel
,
·
Feature: Andy Bond, .Scott
Wolfe, Mike McDaniel, Jav Jenkins, Eric. Otto, Jim Porter, Kevin
Smith, Bob Adams.
Delayed event: Dash-Antly
Bond, Bob Adams, Bill Childers,
Scott Wolfe
Heat: Rod Conley, Larry Bond,
McDaniel, Buck Lamb.
Heat: Ken Riddle, Ed Shuman,
Lou Hubbard, Dave Willoughby.
Feature: Adams, A. Bond, L.
Bond, Wolfe, Mike McDaniel,
Childers, Benny Thieman, Rod
Conley, Ken Riddle, Buck Lamb.
UMP Modifieds
Dash: Dewey Scott, Henry,
Adams, Kemp Kelly
Heat: Mike Whitworth, Bob
Mapes, Mark Dickson, Hibbard.
Heat: Barry Jacobs, Randy Hen. derhan, John Burdeue, Dave Lan·

drum
Sunoco Race of Champions
Feature: Adams, Henry, Landrum
Jacobs, Mark Dickson, Andy Bond,
Kemp Kelly, Rod Plac~. John Bur·
dette.
.
Dash: Adams, Henry, Robbie
Evans, Bitl Bocook
Heat: Jim Pertuset, Allen Rib·
bard . Archie Burdette, Chris
Fordyce.
Feature: Dennis, Adams, Henry,
Bocook, Chiis Dicksoh.
Limited Lates
Heat: Kirk Isner, Willard Barber, Aaron Aeming, Ed Venham.
Feature: Isner, Fleming, Yenham, Kevin Haught, Rick Hudnall.
Pure Stock:
Heat: Ron Nutter, Ed House,
Rick Cooper, John Byers.
Heat: Ginny Adkins, Ross, Russell, Mitch Gitlian.
Feature: Ross, Adkins, Russell,
George Adkins, Todd Smith.
Four-cylinders
Heat: Cliff Whitley. Tony
Roush, Earl Reeves
Heat: George Adkins, Bob Bai·
ley, Jeff Braley,
Heat: Scott McClain, Roger
Mayle, Doug Boudinot
Feature: Bailey, Reeves, Braley,
Keith Zimmennan, Roger Mayle.

Throckmorton wins top prize to stand with K-C Raceway victors

' FIRES ·TO FIRST- Cincinnati second baseman Bip Roberts
(10) fires to rll'st base after retirinll San Diego'~ T~ Teufel at se~­
ond on a fielder•s:clloice play In the seventh mnmg or Sunday s
National Leape aame in Cincinnati, wbic:!1 the Padres won 3·1.

Scoreboard
OUc.~ao

- • Baseball • -

Tuesday's games

NATIONAL LEAGUE

·

EutenDI""'"'
Tum
W L PtL
l'bilaclclploia ...........67 39 .632
~~ IAtW ................l9 4l .l67
.:..............s6 49 .m
Chictao.................. 53 50 .SIS
PitUibuqb ..............47 .51 ,448
Florida ...................44 60 .423
New )'odL ............. 36 68 .346
Welkrn DMaion
San Fnncil&lt;;o ........ 7 1 35 .670
Atlant1 ... ................64 43 .598
LooAnpco ...........l4 SO .ll9
Houat.on ................. 54 51 .S14
ClNCINNATI. .......!3 l4 .49l
San Diego ..............4i 6S .387

Colondo ............... 36 68

.346

Ootroh (Bergman 1-2) at CLEVE-

I.'.Nil (Lopez 2-l), 7:0! p.m.

GB

Toronto (HelttSM 12-3) 1t New York
(Hutton l-0),7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee (Bona: 6-7) at Baltimore

7

1o.5
12.5
19.5
22
30

(Moyor 7-l), 7:3l p.m.

IJoslOn, (Dopson 7-5) at Minne1o11
(Banko 7-7), 8:0! p.m.
ChictJO (Bohon 2· 6) at l'eu1
(Ldbmtdt 9- 7~ 1:3l p.m.
Scaulc (Johmon 10·7) 11 Oakland
(Wclclt 8-7), lOoO! pm.
Kanlaa City (Pichardo 5· 7) at Cllifornit (l...anaatoo IO.S), 10:05 p.m.

7.5
16
16.5
18.5
30
34

NL leaders
BATilNG: GalamJa, Colondo, .392;
Merced, Pi.wburah, .3S4; KNk., Philadelphia, .3SI ; Boni!a, San Fnncisco, .343;
Jefferies, St. Louis, .339; GwyM, San

Saturday's StOres
ONCINNATI 6, San Dieao 3

ffi&lt;co, .332; Gnooc, auc.1o, .322 •.

Allanu 4, HOUIIM 3

too~ 7, Oticago2 (13 inn .)

PhiJa

.• 10, Pi..bwWt 2

Mon
6. Florida 5
Stl.ouia4, New Yort 3

San Franciaco4, Colcndo 3

Sunday's scores
Florida S, Mon1Ji:.al4

Philadelphia 5, Piwbura.h 4

San J)ieao3, CINC1NNATI 1
Atlanta~. HOUitoo 2

Otic.ao 10, L:. AnaeJ.et 4

New Yolk 10, St. Lcu.is 3

San Francisco 6, Colorado .5

Today's games
Piu.sbur.Jh (W1gner 5-6) 11 Chicago
(Hukey 7-5), 2:20p.m.
Colorado (Blair 4-7) It CINCINNATI

RUNS : Dykatra, Ph1ladelph1a, 97;
Bonds, San Fnnciaco, 13; Kruk, Ptuladel·
phil, 72.; Gam. Atlan~a, 70; Biggio, Ho~ ·
ton , 69; Blau1cr, Allanta, 69;. D. LeWll,
San FrancUco, 68.
RBI : Bo!'lda, San Franci1co, 82;
Dtuhon., Philadelphia, 78; Matt William•.
San Francilc:o, 14: Justice, Atlan11, 73;
Mumy, Ne~ Yolk, 71; Cillamga, Colorado, 70; Piu.u, Lm Anaclca , 69; Baa-u. HOUitm, 69; Gant, Atlanta , lB.
HITS : Oyknn, Philadelphia, 129 ;
Baswell, Hounon. 127; J. Bell, PhtlburJh , 12.5; Jcffcriea, St Louis, 123;
Gwy~n, San Dicso. 123; Honda, San
FnnNCo, 122; BuLier,l..ol Anaelea, 122.
DOUBLES : Bicheue, Cofondo, 33;
Dy.lutra, Phil~d~lphi1, Jl : Gwynn. San
D1eao. 29; B1wo, Houston, 28; Gnct,
Chic;aao, 'II; ZQle, SL I..ouil, 26; Hayea,

(Puah 6-10), 7:35p.m.
fllew Ycxk (Sabcrhagm 6-.7) 11 Mon treal (K. Hill7· 2), Bl p.m.
florida (Annllrong 7-10) at SL Looia
(fewlubu.ry 10-7), 8:35p.m.

Colondo, 26.
TRlPLES: Coleman, New Yod::, 8; E.
Yount, Colorado, 7: Finley, Houston, 7;
Butler, Los Anaelea, 7 ; Caatilla, Col-

Tuesday's games

buJah, 6.
HOME RUNS: Bonds. San Franc:ilco,

Pituburah (Z. Smith 0.4) at Chicaa;o

nubba nl 8-1), 2:20p.m.
.

(Bcre 5·3) at Tc:w (Pavlik 6-

l), 8o3l p.m.

Colondo (Sanford 0-0) at CINCINNA 11 (Luebl&gt;cft :/..2), 7:3l p.m.
New York (Tanana 5-10) at Monttea1
{Faaaero 6-1), 7 :3~ .P:m.
. Pbiladelptlia (Mulholland 10.8) 11 Atllnll (A't'CI)' 11·3), 7:40p.m.
U. Anadea (Gr011 7-9) u Houlton
(Pvotupl9 ..), HIS p.m.
.
Florida (Houah S-11) at SL l.ouia (0.bcxne9-4),8:35 p.m.
San Fnncl1co (Black 8-2) at San
fficco (B....U :/..7), !O:Ol p.m .

New York ..............60 46

.S66

Bmton ...................-59 46

..562

BalLimtR .............. .ss 49
Dotroit.................. ..S3 53

.529

CLEVELAND .... ...49 l6

.500
.467

Milwallkcc .......... .. .42 61

.401

Wtatern 01-vlllon
Chicaao .................. .58 45 .563
'Karuu City ...........54 51 .514
Tens ..................... .52 S2 .SOO
Seaule .................... .51 S4 .416
Califomia ...............41 S6 A6l

Minnesota ........ ......44 58

.431

Oakland .................44

.431

58

31; Ju.tic:e, Allanla, 25; Gant, AllanLI, 25;
McGriff, Atlanta, 25; Matt WilliamJ, San
Fru~ci.c:o, l4; Boo.illa, New York, 22; Piau.a,l...ol An&amp;cla, 21; S011, Chicago, 21.
STOLEN" BASES : Coleinan , New
Yodr., 31; D. Lcwi.a, San Frr.nciaco, 34;
Carr, florida, 31; DcShidds, MonUUl,
31 ; Jefferies, St. Loui1, ll ; E. Youna,

Colondo, 27; Roberta, ClNCINNA11, 26:
Dyutn, Philadelpltia, 26; E. O.vil, Lot
An&amp;doo, l6.
.
PITCHING (11 dcciaiona)o T. a.-..:
Philadelphia, 12-3, .BOO, 3.38; Burkett,
San Francisco, 16-4, .800, 3.30; Kile,
Houston, 11 ·3, .786, 3.01; Avery, Atlanta,
11 -3, .716, 3.0S; Glavine, Atlant1, 13-4,
.765, 2.11; Swift, S1n Fr1nci1co, 1S-5,

.7!0, 2.6l: Arooha. Sc LoWs, S-3 • .727.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
E•slwm Dlvl1loo
Tum
W L I'd.
Toronto .................. 61 45 .S75

orado, 6; Mcnndini, Philldelphia, 6; D.
Lewis, S111 Francisco, 6; J. Bell, Pitll·

GB
1

1.5
!

•

11.5
17.5

5
6.5
8
lO.l
13.l
13.5

Saturday's scores
Toronto 3, Dctm.t I
New York 5, Milwaui.oc4
Te.aa1 B, Oakland 2
Baltimore 4, BOlton 0

CLEVELAND 6, Xanau City_4
0\iCIJO 13, SCiule 10

Califomia 4, Minne~ou 3

Sunday's li':Ores
Toronto l, Detroit t

Milwallkce9, New YOlk 2
Booton 2. Baltimmc I
a.EVI!I.'NI&gt; 9, Kmw City l

Mim111101.19, California 2
0Ulan4 9. Teua 5 • ,
auc...,4, ScaW.O

Tonlabt's eames
Toronto {Stoulcmyre 5· 7) at New
Yodt ( A - 8-1), 7o30 p.m.
Milwaukee (Miranda 0.2) II Ba.ltimare
(Val..,.,.P 6-'1). 7o3l p.m.

3.49.
STRJKEOliTS: Rijo, CINCINNA Tl,
14;9; Smaltz, Atlanta, 144; Benet, San
Oj,.ea~. 131; 0. Maddux, Atlanta, 1,29;

J-IIJIUICh, HOUltOn, 124; Guzman, Ollc.-

JO, 115; Goodell, N~w York. 1~4 .
SAVES: Lee Snulh, Sl Lou.is, 36; My·
en, Chic.ao, 32.; Dc:cl., San Fflllciloo, 31;
Harvey, Florida, 31; Mitch Williama,
Philadelphia, 29; Stanton, Atlantt, 27;
Wcaeland. Mm...t, 22.

AL leaders
BAITINO : Olcr~~d , Toronto, .4 02 ;
Gonuloz. Te11.11, .332; O'Neill, New
York, .3Tl; R. HMdcnm, Oakland, .327;
Molitor, Toronto, .326; Hamilton, Mil·
waukee, .324; M. Vaupm , BOltOn, .320;
Ptlmeiro, Texu, .320.
'
RUNS: MoliLor, Tmonto, 8.5; White,
Tormto, 80; Palmdto, Tcus, 79; R. AI~
mar. Torooto, 78; Lol\on, CLEVELAND,
77; R . Hendcnon, Oakland, 77: Griffey
Jr., Selule, 76.
RBI : Belle, a.EVELAND. 89; Fielder, Detroit, 19; Thomaa, Chicaao. 8S;
Olerud, Tormlo, 84; Gonzalez, Te1.11,i1;
Carter, Toronto, 81 ; Griffey Jr., Scanle,
78· Tettlcton, Delroi.t, 78.
'HITS : Olcrud, Toronto, 145; Molitor,
Tc.onto, 135; McRae, Kan111 City, 130;
Bacqa, CLEVEU.ND, 127; Griffe~ Jr.,
Seattle, 125; Palmeiro. Tua1, 125; R .
Alcmar, Toronto, 124.
·
DOUBLES : Olerud , Toronto, 4l;
Palmeim,~TcJ.u, T1; Joyner, Kanus City ,
V; O'Neill, New Yodl, 27; White, Tcron·
to, 27; Cuta', Toronto. 27; Puckett. Min·
neiC)I.I,

'lb.

TRIPLES: L. Johruon , Chicago, l l;

Hullo, Tuu. 10; Cora, Chic•ao, B;
Lofton, CLEVELAND, 7 ; Cuyler, De·

ttoit, 7; McRae. K&amp;nJU City, 7; Baeraa,

C!.EVEU.ND, 6.
HOME RUNS : Gonzalez, Teltu , 31;
Griffey Jr., Se~nle, 30; Belle, CLEVELAND, 29; Thomu, Chicaao. 27;
P.lmci.ro, Texu, 26; Fielder, Dwoit, 26;
Tetlletm, Dcsroit, 26.

STOLEN BASES : Lofton. ctEVE-

LAND, 42; Curti&amp;, Califomia, 37; R. Alomar, Tormto, 34; Polonia , CttlfOJ:nia, 33;
R. Hencki"IOII, Otkllfid, 31; L. Jobn•oo,

Ol.icago,28; White, Tororuo, 22.
PITCHING (II deciaiona): Wickman,
New Yor:lr., 10-3, .769, 4 ..58: Key, New
Yorlr., l2-4, .7SO, 2.62; McDowell, Chicago, 17-6, .739, 3.64; MuKina, Baltimon:,
l l-4, .733, 4AS ; Hentgcn, Toronto, 12-.5,
.706, 3.78; Fernandez, Chictao, 12-.5 ,
.706, 2.99; ·Lana•ton , C.lifomia, 10-.5 ,
.667,2.88; Leary, Seattle, 8-4, .667,4 .63.

STRJKEOtrrS: R. Johnson, Suule,
187: Appier, Kan~u City, 125: Guzman,
Toronto, 12A; Langston, CaliforrUa, 124;
Futley, California, 123; Clemens; Boston ,
121; Cone, Kansas CiLy, l l9.
SAVES : Momgomery, Kan•u City,
31; D. Wud , Toronto, 28: Ru u ell,
Bom.on, 28: Asuilcra , Mmneaota, Tl ; OltOn, Baltimon, 26; Eckerlley, Oaldand,
23; R. Hernandez , Chicago, 22; Henke,

Teus, 22.

- • Transactions • BasebaU
American Lapt ·
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Placed
MUte Mu~~:ina, pitcher, on the IS-day da·

abled lid, nltOaClive to July 22. Acti¥ai.Od
Arthur Rhode~, pitcher, from die 15-day
disabled ~l
BOSTON REO SOX: Activated Bob
Melvin, catcher, fmn the IS-day diublod
lial Optioned John Raheny, c:au:hcr, to
Pawwctcc of the lmcmttiont1 Leaauc.
CAllFORNIA ANGELS: Signed Kurt
Stillwell, infielder. Placed Damion
Euley, infieJder, on the 15-dty diublcd
lilt, recro.cUve lO July 2!. Rectllod Vicwr
Silverio, pitcher, from Palm Sprin11 of
the Califcwnia Lea c.
NEW YORK ~ANKEES : gptioned

Hau;ley Meulc:na, outfielder, to Columbua
of the lntanaLionall..elp.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS : T01ded
Rickey Hcnderaon, Olllfielder, to the
Toronto Blue hya for Ste-ve Kauay ,
pilcltcr, and a player to be named Uter.
SEATil£ MARINERSoRooolled B""
Bomr.e, second baseman, from Calpry of
lhe Pacific Coast Leaaue. Purchuod the
contnc\ of Erik Plan&amp;a!.berJ,, pitcher, from
Jacbonville ol the Saulhcm l.cap. 9pLioned R.ich DeLucia, piteher, and Lee
Tindey, oudiddcr, to CalJuy. Optioned
Mike Hamp10n, pilcher, to Jac:Uonvillc.
Activtled Dwtync HCI'lly, pitcher, from
the 15-day dillblcd tilL
TEXAS llANGERS : Nam~ Nonnan
D. Lyau vice precidmt of canmunity development.

National Leaaue
CINCINNATI REDS : Trt4cd Tim
Reicher, pitcher, to the Chica&amp;o WhiLe
So1. for Johnny Ruffin and Jeff Pierce,
pitchen. Allipcd Ruffin 10 lndianapoUa
of the AmcriCVL Auociation and Piette lO
Chauanooa• of the Southern Leap. Roctllod &lt;Jrea Tubbt, outfielder, from lndi ·
anapolia.
NEW YORK METS : Named John
Baa d.irector of acoWna.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES ' Traded
S\ln Belinda, plt.chc:r, \o the Kamas City
Roylla for John Lieber and Dan Miceli,
pitc.hen. Recalled Ma.dt Dewey, pitcher,
from Buft'do of the Arnerictn Auocit-

lion. Fiml Jack Zdllri.eacUt, IOOUWII 4i.n:.ctor. Named PaW T'anncll aeoutinJ eli-

....,..,

SAN DIEGO PADRES : Reauia;ned
Pedro l..opez. c.tcher, fnn Rancho CUcJ.
mooa• a/ the California U.p to Wkthit.a ll" the Teua Lelpo, and l..cc Hmderscn, catcher, from Widtit.l to RancOO Cu·

HaUoiFame
VETERANS COMMITTEEo An·
nwnced lhat Yost Ban, Poe Woe Rec~c
and DiU While have been lclc:ctcd to the
.....,;..,._

FootbaU
Nlllonal Footbollt.uaue
NEW ENGI.'.Nil PA TRiat'So Signod

Vincent Brilby. wide receiver, to a on~

yur contnct.

NEW YORK OIANTS : Waived
OcorJ.o Roob, noee ~acklc.
SEATILE SEAHAWKS: A&amp;rted to
lenni with Rick Mirer, quutc:rback.

JACKSON INDUCTED- Former American League slug~er ·
Reggie Jackson listens to the introductory speech prior to his bemg
inducted into tbe Baseball Hall or Fame Sunday in Cooperstown,
N.Y. Jackson was the only player so honored this year. (AP)

Jackson 1993's sole inductee
into Baseball Hall of Fame
By JIM DONAGHY
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)
- Thousands of baseball fans and
38 members of the Hall of Fame
came to see Reggie 'Jackson have
another great moment.
In his induction speech Sunday
on a packed school field about 1
1/2 miles from the Hall of Fame
complex, Jackson tried to link all
eras of baseball.
He eloquently pointed out the
good and bad things about baseball.
He told each current player how
they must carry on the great traditions of the game.
But more than anything, Reggie
gave the players of the old Negro
Leagues a say they were so often
denied and a rightful place in baseball history with him in the Hall of
Fame.
"My dad struggled with being
treated as a second-class citizen,
but did his best to climb the latter
of equality," Jackson said. "He
had the ability to express himself at
a time when it was not always
acceptable. He was a good father
who became a great friend."
In a low-key. reflective speech,
Jackson spent a lot of time showing
his appreciation to players who
were denied a chance at the major
leagues because of the color of
. their skin. He also praised the civil
rights movement led by Martin
Luther King.
In -21 years, Jackson played with
11 division winners, six AL cham·
pions and five World Series winners, missing the 1972 Series for
Oakland with an injury. He was
selected to 14 All-Star games and
played in 12.
Reggie hit .357 with 10 home
runs and 24 RBis in 27 World
Series games. For all this, he was
given the ni ck name "Mr. October."
Jackson ·helped the A's. '(Vin
three straight World Series titles,
was traded to Baltimore and then
signed as a free agent with the

DOWNING CHILDS

MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St. Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn
SINCE 1868

Yankees in 1977 for $2.96 million
over five years.
He wanted Yankee Stadium as
his stage and New York for his
playground.
"Some came to see him and
some came to boo him ," former
Yankees second baseman Willie
Randolph said, "but he left an
impression on all of them in some

way."

N071C£
THE OHIO EPA HAS APPROVED PUMPING
OPERATIONS TO REMOVE WATER FROM
MEIGS NO. 31 MINE. THE WATER QUALITY .
AND FLOW OF NEARBY CRI;EKS WILL BE
CHANGED, ESPECIALLY NEAR THE PUMPING
RELEASE .POINTS. THE CREEKS AFFECTED
ARE LEADING CREEK, RACCOON CREEK AND
SOME TRIBUTARIES OF RACCOON CREEK.
THESE STREAMS ARE NOT NORMALLY
SUITABLE FOR DRINKING. YOU WILL SEE A
DISCOLORATION OF THE WATER DUE TO ITS
IRON CONTENT WHILE PUMPING IS
UNDERWAY. PEOPLE SHOULD REFRAIN
FROM USING CREEK WATER .FOR DRINKING,
SWIMMING, USE BY LIVESTOCK, IRRIGATION
AND SIMILAR USES DURING THIS TIME.

B-Main: Rob Dean, Rob Smith,
Richard Johnson, Tommy Moss· ·
barger, Chico Coleman, Robert
Taylor, Darnell Beasely, Terry
Hudnell, Rick Owing.
Feature: Osborne, Carl Coleman, Hemming, Dean, Reeser,
Brisker, Lemaster, Stev!l Bobo,
Johnson, Mossbarger.

Vinton Raceway results announced
Reedsville's Rick Blake edged
Pomeroy's Todd Smith in last
week's Pure Stock action at Vinton
Raceway. Tony Jacks claimed the
Road Hog main, while Scott
McClain won the four cylinders
and Doris Maynard the Powder
Puff.
The track was dry and dusty. but
the action was fast and furious. The
drivers were especially aggressive
in their effort to' sweep the double
points day in the run for a champi·
onship at the track. Vinton races
each Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m.
Blake claimed a clean sweep by
winning the first heat and the feature in the Pure Street Stocks. Each
time Todd Smith wljS right on his
bumper. Randy Brumfield was
third in the heat while Delmas Goff

took third in the feature.
Kevin Saunders took the first
heat in lhe Road Hog division over
Leroy Dunnaway, and Bill Harden.
Jimmy Gibbs took the second heat
over Tony Jacks, and Charles
Riegel.
·
Jacks claimed the 'feature over
Harden and Jeremy Blake.
Reedsville's !lobby Bailey
claimed the fU'St four-cylinder heat .
over two anolher Meigs Countians,
Rocky Blake and Delbert Roush.
McClain took the second heat over
Reedsville's Jeremy Barber and
Donny Yost.
McClain swept the feature
ahead of Bailey and Rocky Blake.
Doris Maynard took the Powder
Puff over Connie Saunders and
Sharon MuncY:

THE 1993

'

N L gameS. . .

Roger Mason (3-7) · won in .
relief.
Mets 10, Cardinals 3
Eddie Murray had a two-run
homer amon~ his three hits including a ue-breaking double
during a five-run eighth inningand New York got a &amp;trong performance from Dwight Gooden..
Gooden (11-10) allowed six hits
in seven innings. He struck ou.t
, three, passing Jerry Koosman for
second place on the Mets' career
list with 1,800.
Murray hit his 16th homer the 430th of his. career -. in t~e
sixth, and got lhe game wmner m
lhe ei~hth against Todd Bums (02).
.
Marlins 5, Expos 4
Chuck Carr' s.bunt hit scored

PUMPING IS EXPECTED TO CONTIMUE UNTIL
LATE AUGUST 1993: ECOLOGICAL EXPERTS.
WILL BE MONITORING WATER QUALITY AND
STREAM BIOLOGY DURING THIS PERIOD AND
AFTER PUMPING IS COMPLETED.
QUESTIONS CAN BE DIRECTED TO
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL C()MPANY
• AT (614) 286-~.

•

been

.

Darrell Whitmore -who sin~led
home the tying run in the s1xth
inning and led off the ninth with a
double - with the game-winning

!~~~·~~ri:~1s~le~u~;: :Si!

regular at Lernerville.
Blaney drives the Casey Luna
Ford, sponsored by Vivarin, whi~h
houses its corporate headquaners m
run.
.
.
ivt!tt Turner (2·3) won m rehef. · nearby Pittsburj!h. gi-:ing Blaney
an a"dditional mcenuve to beat
Bryan Harvey got his 31st save.
After Whitmore started the ninth Kinser and the other outlaws in
against Brian Barnes (2-5), Jeff front of the hometown crowd and
Shaw relieved and Bob Natal sacri· sponsors.
ficed. With two outs, Carr surOther contenders are Jac "Wild
prised the Expos by laying down a Child" Haudenschild, Bobby Davis
Jr. Stevie Smith, Johnny Hererra,
drag bunt to fU'St.
K~nriy Jacobs, and Jeff Swindell.
Cubs 10, Dodgers 4
The leaders of the Pennsylvania
Sammy Sosa and Ryne Sand·
berg homered and drove in three Posse, Penn·sylvania's top sprint
runs apiece, and Sosa made two car drivers, are also slaled to he on
fine catches that saved about' four hand to challenge the outlaws,
Qualifying begins at 7 p.m. and
runs.
The Cubs scoied five runs in the
racing
at 8 p.m. Lel;verville is north
Pittsburgh.
fU'St inning against brei Hershiser of

'
J

..

Landrum, Jerry Bragg, Bapst,
Carter, Mike Huntley, Pertuset,
Thacker, Mapes. Buck.
Super Street Stocks
Heat: John Remy. Rob LeMas·
ter, Barry Brisker, Bill McElfresh
Heat: Dean Osborne, Steve Day,
Carl Coleman, John Reeser,
Heat: Jerry Hemming, Steve
Bobo, Butch Owing, Tracy Ross.

Winebrenner still leading
Riverside Senior League field

;

•

Allen coaxed his competitor's
wild ride over the turn three
SUMMARY
By S~OIT WOLFE
into
the
local
shark's
tank,
then
embankment.
Jenkins
inherited
the
Late
Model
Invitational
Sentinel Corr~spondent
slowly.
but
meticulously
made
lead,
but
·on
the
stan
Throckmorton
Heat:
Jackie
Boggs , Tony
Chillicothe's Tony Throckmorthem
his
prey
.
Allen,
who
had
pulled
alongside,
setting
the
stage
Throckmorton,
Jay
Jenkins, Paul
ton took the lead from Jay Jenkins
started
.outside
for
an
all
out
shoot
out
to
the
fmpole
faded
to
fifth
Coy an.
on the 27th lap en route to claiming
before making his move.
Heato Charlie Seymour. Scon
a popular win over some of south- ish.
Allen explained, "The car just Wolfe, Mark Frazier, Jon Osman.
Jenkins and Throckmorton ttad·
ern Ohio's best stock cars in the
Feature: Throckmorton, Jenkins,
30-lap, $1,500 to win Late Model ed paint going dow11 the .baekchute never ran right in hot laps or in the
invitational at K-C Raceway Satur- of the white flag round, allowing heat. We were fast, but not fast Wolfe, Donnie Kinnison, Ron
third place Scott Wolfe, up from enough to win. Between ·races Adams, Mike Wilson, Coyan,
day night
.
Another newcomer to vtctory lllh to move up alongside. ·everything checked. out, bu! at the Osman, Boggs, Clark VanHooten,
lane this season at K·C was the Wolfe's McDonald's of Gallipo· start of the feature it still ran a little Don Clark, Charlie Seymour, Mark
"Original Outlaw" Bobby Allen of · lis/Precision Automotive/Baum flat. Then about the sixth lap it Frazier, Chick Clark, Gary Krug ,
Hanover, Pennsylvania, who Lumber #14 closed in on the leader really started running. I guess it Ralph Arthur, Jason Adams.
Super Sprints
claimed the 25-lap sprint main over several times. Throckmorton toOk just needed a good warming up."
"Warming up" indeed, The well
Heat: Charlie Fisher, Tracy
Mark Goodfleisch and Charlie over and had more momentum
coming off the rums to edge Jenk- traveled veteran sunk his jaws into Hoover, Bobby Allen, Dave DickFisher.
Two familiar faces graced the ins and Wolfe in an exciting finish. a hard-charging Mark Goodfleish
son.
q,.
The win was quite a thrill for on the fourth circuit then after a
Heat: Joey Allelf, Mark Good·
victory circle in the UMP modified
fleisch, Mike Adkins, Wayne
and Super Streel Stock divisions as ' the local driver after a long dry side-by side baule with Fisher took
over
on
the
ninth
circuit.
Good·
spell
from
victory
lane
and
a
string
McPeak.
Bob Crace Jr. and Dean Osborne
of bad luck. Throckmonon pulled fleish passed Fisher and momenHeat:· David Snell, Rick Holley,
brought hOme feature wins.
tarily
closed
in
on
Allen
in
traffic,
Roger Mossbarger,C.J. Holley.
Chillicothe's Charlie Seymour his #73 Baker Engines powered
Feature: Bobby Allen, Mark
jumped i~to the early lead of the Rayburn into a victory circle of . but Allen later pulled away. Behind
third place Fisher were Joey Allen,
Goodfleisch, Charlie Fisher, Joey
late mOdel main from his pole start· cheerin$ fans.
Allen Rick Holley, David Snell,
ing posiiion, but second-generation
Placmg fourth thru I Oth were Rick Holley, David Snell, Tracy
Tracy'Hoover, Dave Dickson, CJ.
hot shoe Jackie Boggs of Grayson, Do11nie Kennison, Ron Adams in a Hoover; Dave Diclcson, CJ. Holley
Holley, Roger Mossbarger.
Ky. rode Seymour'.s ta~ in ho! pur· great driver from 15th, Wilson, and Roger Mossbarger.
Heats were won by Charlie
UMP Modifieds
suit. An early skum1sh claimed Coyan, Osman, Boggs and Clark
Fisher, Joey Allen and David Snell,
Heat: Mike Whitworth, Dave
point's leader Mark Frazier after he VanHooten. ·
Thacker, Ron Caner, Jim Pertuset.
had blasted from 12th to the top
Heat winners were Charlie Sey• who were warming up for next
week's
big
$2,000
to
win
sprint
Heat: Bob Crace, Jr. ,Aaron
mour
over
Wolfe
and
Boggs
over
five in just a few laps.
invitational and increased purse.
Bapst Dave Landrum, Bob Mapes.
Back in the pack Paul Coyan, Throckmorton.
In the UMP Modifieds, Bob
Fe~ture: Crace Jr., Whitworth,
When the white semi-ttactor
Jay Jenkins, Throckmorton, Mike.
Crace
Jr.
(Chillicothe)
and
Tulsa,
Wilson, Scott Wolfe and Jon ttailer rig of "Old Scruffy" Bobby
Osman were battling for a top five Allen and brother Joey pulled into Oklahoma's Mike Whitworth
spot as Seymour and Boggs pulled the K-C pit area, the sprint pilots engaged in a torrid battle for the
slightly ah~d of the. pack. On the knew they had their hands full . top spot. Whitwqrth led ~e frrst six
12th circuit Bogg's left rear ure Area race fans knew they would circuits, but Crace was nght along··
exploded in turn three, but he see a whale of a race, as red-hot side. On the seventh lap, Crace
maintained control and coasted to a Charlie Fisher and the rest of the took over, but the race was not any
stop on the infield apron. Six laps powerful K-C hard-hitters would less dramatic, as Whitworth kept
later, Seymour's bid for a win have the pedal to the metal for the his nose ·beside Crace for the next
few rounds.
ended when his oil pump belt $1,200 payo()ff.
Finally, Crace took a two -car
After literally running away to a ·
popped off, thus handing the lead
half-track victory in a heat that length advantage ar the checkered
to a high-flying Paul Coyan.
The yellow allov.:ed .Boggs .to included Bobby Allen, Charlie flag. Third was Dave Landrum,
rejoin the field, but h1s b1d for VIC· Fisher bolted into a comfortable Jerry Bragg, Aaron Bapst, Ron
tory had faded dramatically. lead from his start on the point. Carter, Mike Huntley, Jim Pcnuset,
AI though several laps down Boggs Allen, sporting an uncharacteristic Dave Thacker and Bob Mapes.
Whitworth and Crace were the .
was well of the pace and never a shiny new paint job, sporting a new
heat
winners.
set of shark's teeth and glaring
factor.
No
matter where he starts, Dean
Coyan led the 19.t~·26th _laps shark's eyes with the words "Feed·
Osborne
is always in the hunt. This
until he too fell to aunuon, losmg a ing Frenzy" painted on the side,
time
he
came
from ninth 10 claim
steering rod which sent him for a began his anack.
his third feature of the year over
Carl Coleman and Jerry Hemming.
Rob Dean came all the way from
thirteenth to fourth , fol)owed byn
John Reeser, Barry Brisker, Rob
LeMaster, Steve Bobo, Richard
Dana Winebrenner of Syracuse lipolis on number founeen.
Johnson and Tommy Mossbarger.
still maintains the top spot in the
The crew was glad to see Sonny
Heats went to John Remy, Dean
Riverside Senior men's league, back in action after a brief illness Osborne and Jerry Hemming, with
totaling 107 points, a lead of four had sidelined him.
the B-Main going to. Bob Dean
over Don Wilson of Middleport.
A club spokesman quoted over Rob Smith.
There· are only nine more Toes· Chuckie Lester as saying, "It was
K-C will host a $2,000 to win
days left on the Riverside Seniot so hot on the course today that sprint invitational Saturday along
Golf League circuit, markin~ the Luther "Cool Hand Luke" Tucker with all other four classes, then
time when final tabulations w11l be was sweating. Several of us used to lake fair week off, Aug. 14. A regmade to detennine the winner.
work with Luther and never ever ular show is slated for Aug. 21,
A total of 32 brave, seniors saw him sweat at work, so it must then on Aug. 28 the USAC sprints
fought the muggy 96-plus degree have
hot!"
come to town.
heat to shoot some really good
The club reports that there is
scores in last week's action. The still time to get on ·out and join the Sarver track's 26th
league record .of 13 under par was action as there are nine more weeks
anniversary Tuesday
tied by the team of Luther Tucker to go.
of Mason, Herman Knapp of New
The top 20 golfers are Dana
Don Martin's Lervervillc SpeedHaven, and Bill Hannum and Pete Winebrenner, Don Wilson, Clark
way
in Sarver, Pa. will celebrate its
Carnahan of Lo11g Bottom. Tucker Greene, Jim Wikoff, Milt Maxwell.
attributed the record score to Pete Chuckie Lester, Carroll Norris, 26th anniversary Tuesday mght
of
Carnahan's "Lucky Socks".
· Harold Lohse, Lew GiUand, Harold with a $26 I000 to win World
f
.
Scores of II and 10 under par Clark, Earl Johnson, Bill Hannum, Outlaw spnnt car race, eaturmg
were also turned in for the day. The Elmer Click, Luther Tucker, Bill the nation's top open wheel pilots.
Going into the action, percnniel
closest to the pin .winners were Winebrenner, Ralph Sayre, Harley
Harley Rice of Reedsville on num- Rice, Keith Woods, George Burns champion Steve Kinser leads the
points chase with a slim lead over
ber seven: Sonny Chandler of Gal- and John Ferguson.
Kings Royal winner Dave Blaney.
Blaney
known as the "Buckeye
(Continued from Page 4)

'\

The Meig
· s County Fair Tab ·Is Coming .
A. ug ust 131 1993• .
•
Advertt•s·•ng Deadltne Is
.
.
August $1 1993.
CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLAC'EYOUR. AD IN THIS
·.YEAR'S ·EDITION .

• S·S.
99 2 21

' •~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••IIIIi••••~
,,

I

�Monda~August2,1993

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

JFK's heroism recalled in 50th
anniversary of PT-1 09 sinking
BOSTON {AP) - A Japanese
destroyer sank Patrol Torpedo boat
No. 109 m the Pacific on a moonless night 50 years ago, but the
. hero1sm of the boat •s captain - LL
John F. Kennedy - has kept the
memory bnght for many Amencans.
Although Kennedy's reputation
has taken some hits in recent years,
the story of his role in saving I0
men on PT -109 still shines, especially for Gerard Zinser, the only
surviving crew member.
"He had us all behind him 100
percent," sa1d Zinser, 75, from his
Naples, Fla., home Thursday. "We
thought he was a great leader. He
had plenty of guts and charisma ...
He just had everything."
Kennedy gathered his crew to
the floaung remains of the ship,
then led them as they swam from
1sland to island. He towed Patnck
"Pappy" McMahon, who had been

Plan Aug. 27 event
Basham ladies auxiliary held
their July meeting and made plans
to hold an have an ice cream social
on August27.

Riverview Garden Club meets
Whitehead. A thank you notw was
read from Opal Harris family for
flowers and a monetary gift to the
garden club was donated by daughter Sylvia Webb. Also, a note from
Kila Frank stating her request to
withdraw membership due to the
distance to drive since her marriage.
Appointed to the nommatmg
committe were Ruth Anne Balderson, Mary Alice Bise and Betty
Boggs. The program committe will
be chairperson, Francis Reed,
Delores Frank, Janet Connolly and
Gladys Thomas.
Members made tentative plans
to auend Kingwood Center dunng
Debbie Hill led the Tops prayer the latter pan of July. Program sugand fellowship song. The Tops gestions for the coming year were
loser was Peggy V ming with Mary given by members. A game with all
Roush ahd Sharon Older as runners members participating was
up. The best KOPS loser was Julia enJoyed.
Hysell. The gadget gift was won by
Wendy Wmdon. The fruit basket
was won by Cori Payne who was
also the stork loser.
Three names were omitted from
Plans were discussed for the
Tops Homecommg m September. the Mtller family reunion which
Nancy Manley took up peMys for was pnnted on July 27. They are
the Area Recognition Day fund. Clyda Allensworth, Jessa Mae
Members sang to the best losers Brannan and BIll Grueser, all of
Middleport.
and were dismissed.
The R1verview Garden Club
picnic was held recently at Nola
Young's lawn.
Members attending were Mary
Alice Bise, Janet Connolly, Delores
Frank, Margaret Grossmckle,
Gladys Thomas, Grace Weber,
Maxine Whitehead, Janice Young,
K1la Frank, Pauline Myers and
Nola's guest, Sam Riel.
A bnef business meeung was
conducted by President Maxme

Pomeroy Tops Club
meets recently

Correction

~ll'Rill

Pr- Fm. . . I Looa of
AIMia-.-.....___ .,000.00

..,.of

Pro 1 II from
Nollo .................. 123,1100.00
Opwtating

y,_,.,..., .....- .. 23,01&amp;.11
Machmist Mate. •'There was very Adv-tn ........... 40,175.62
httle anyone could see, even their Refund of Prior
y. . . Expend........1,353.52,
hand in front of !hell' eyes.''
Operllling
Trenofaro·
The stern of the boat exploded out ....................
(21,n5.08)
and sank. Two men were killed Advonceo • Out... (40,171.62)
instantly. Zinser was flung into the Flt!lund of Prior Yura
water, where he floated uncon- ~lpla .. _ ..........(1,415.01)
scious for about 20 minutes.
Total Othw Rn.
Sourca(Uooe) .• 111,813.11
When he came to, he heard the
ExRecelpii/Sourceo/
men shouting to each other and saw
Ovlfi(Under)
Dlobura.
Kennedy flashing a lantern. They
&amp;OtherUaeo/
clung to the boat's wooden bow,
Net..............- .... (20,1 05.57)
some 40 miles behind enemy lines, Beginning Fund Cuh
until dawn. They knew they had to
Bltenc•-........... 252,139.04
hide if they were going to survive, Enclng Fund C.ah
a...nce .............. 322,833.47
so Kennedy suggested they swinl
Reeervod
for
for a nearby 1sland.
Eneumbronceo ..... 72,374.46
The swim tool:: four hours. But Reeervod for Suboequent
the only food they found was green Year ........................ 80,000.00
coconuts, which made them all Unrooervod Fund
sick. The next day, they swam Balance ...- ........ 160,459.01
another four hours to a larger
EXPENDABLE TRUST
ISland.
FUNDS
At night, Kennedy and George
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Ross took turns swimmmg out with tntermecliel8
Sour-...................3,000.00
the lantern, with no luck.
Total
Recelpi8On the seventh day, they ran
mto some native scouts workmg ~0d8ujll$l~E'NTS•••3,000.00
for the Australians.
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS
Supporting
Public Notice
Servlceo ................... 2,223.01
Totel
Dloburoomenb·
STATEMENTS
(Operallng)......_,_.2,223.08
Combined Flnonc•l Report
Exc. Rcp1o. Ovre/(Under)
olthe Bon of Education
Diab ............................. n6.91
For the Fitlcal Y- Ended
OTHER FINANCING
June 30, 111113
SOURCES (USES)
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
Dloburoemenla l Other
RECEIPTS:
uaeoJNet..................... n6.t1
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Enclng C:.Oh
Tuoe ................. 2,188,108.48
Fund Bile nee ............ n&amp;.D1
Tuition .................... 54,520.85
Unr•ervod
Fund
Eamlngaon
llalanae .............._,_ .. n&amp;.l1
lDYNtmenta ......... 26,115.66
PROPmETARY FUNDS
Extrocurrlcul•
RECEIPTS:
Activiliee .............. 80,382.63
OPERATING RECEIPTS
c•u Materlata
Faods.rvtcea
&amp; F- ..................... 7,611.00
S.leo .................... 193,968.74
Mile. Receopta
Cl•a
Mllterllio
Gronda In Ald ..... ,.75,017.81
• I'Mo ................... 41,124.48
Stata Sourca ... l,537,422.27
Mioc. Rocelpta
Federol SourCH .. 770,401.20
Grenla In Ald ...... 964,085.03
Total Recolpta Total
Rocelpta(Opereting)......8,747,579.90
(Opereting)
....... 1,199,178.25
DISBURSEMENTS:
DISBURSEMENTS:
EXPENDITURE
OPERATlNG
DISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENTS
lnatruction.........5,711 ,615.71
Employ- S.larl•
Supporting
l Wegoo .............. 1t7,433.99
Servicoe ..... _ ..3,645,664.82
Employ- Retirement
Community
Beneflta ............... 116,571.20
Servicee ................... t,751.91
Extrac:urricul•
Activltlea ............ 148,Sn.se
Debt Servlceo ...... 426,838.56
Total Dloburaementa(Operoting)......8,934,548.58
Exc. Rcpta. Over/
(Under) Dlab.... (186,968.68)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES
•
Contribution• l
Donatio no .............. 6,932.81

badly burned, by ~pping the laces
of McMahon's hfe Jacket in his
teeth.
Several nights he swam for
hours with a lantern, hoping to flag
down a passing PT boat. They
finally were rescued after Kennedy
gave a message carved on a
coconut to some native scouts, who
took it to their Ausbalian COI)Iacts.
Zinser and W11liam F. Liebenow,
captain of the PT boat that picked
up the sumvors from PT-109, were
to join other PT boat veterans today
to mark the 50th anniversary of the
smking.
•
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, 0Mass., the former president's
brother, and his son, Rep. Patrick
Joseph Kennedy , D-R.!., were
expected to attend the ceremony on
the U.S.S. Massachusetts at Battleship Cove in Fall River, said orgamzer Guy A. Archambault
PT -I 09 collided with the
destroyer Amagm shortly after I
a.m. on Aug. 2, 1943. A squadron
of four PT boats had gone out that
mght, hopmg to torpedo a group of
Japanese destroyers.
"It was the dark of the moon,"
said Zinser, a 1st Class Motor

llRL\M ON •

PubliC Notice

PUblic Notice

PubliC Notice

"'-:o

~
~
c.:&gt;

/

~

~

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

Public Notice

.........

Purchued
S.wlc• .. - ....... 1,017,772.33

~~t;:''''"'"" ...II,7U.W Aleeii-·--"'..... JI,OOO.OO
Praando._ . . of
Nolle--·----Molorl.............. 257,326.67 o-~:.~14 . - - - . -.......1U.IIID.00
21,123.11
ou.. Objecta ............. 287.00
Feel. .... _ .... - 340,511.01
RECEIPTS
Total Dlallu.-ta·
(DISBUASEIIEHTI)
(Oper~ .............. 1,131,401.11
u,m.•
Contrillu11onal
Exc. Rcpllo. Ov•/ ·
Doollllo11L. ............ .2,10U2 Adw- -ln .....- 40,571.G
(Unclor) Dlab.-.(44(),222.14) oper1111ng T,...•'-!'1
Refund of Prior Y...
NON-OPERATING
• Out......................(2,000.00) Expend ..................... 1,353.52
RECEIPTS
o,..llng Trenoftra
S - Sourcoe........ 21,123.11 Total Other Rn. Sour.304.52 • Out._........ - .... 123,775.08)
Foderli Sourc•.. 340,512.01 E - Recelpllo/Souroa
Adv-. Out ... 40,575.12)
()p«eUng
0../(Unclor)
Refund
of Prior v...
TroMforo - In .............. 758.21 Dlobwoementa l Olhor
"-eipllo ---·-~1,415.01)
Total Other Fin.
................(1,488.42) Total Olhor Fin.
Sour- (U-) ... 3&amp;3,114.11 Ueeo1Net.
lllglnnlng Fund C.h
lourceoj~Jeea~.I40,31U1)
Excoea Rocoipto/Sour-.1
Belonce.
...............
.28,&amp;M.73
ExcRocelptalllourceo/
Owr/(Under) Dlaburo.
Ending
Fund
C.h
OV•I(Under)
Dloburo.
&amp;OihorUoeo/
................. 27,111.31
IOU..Uoeol
Nlll ....................... (77,028.76) Blllence.
UnrNirVIII Fund
Net--..............(13,443.24)
Beginning Fund C.oh
Bolonce.
...............
.27,118.31
lleglmlna
Fund C:.Oh
Bit-............... 282,6111.83
Ballnc•-·-..·--·14,230.31
Ending Fund C.ah
Ending Fund C:.Oh
Balence .............. 205,571.17 RECEIPTS:TOTALS
lllllnc•-·-·--620.717.14
UnrMitVed Fund
TaM ................. 2,1M,108.48
a.tance ................ 205,671.17 Tuition ..:................. 54,520.95 Ae.ervodlor
Eneumbren--.72,374.4&amp;
NON-EXPENDABLE
E•ntnga
on
lor Sub.......,t
Relervld
TRUST FUNDS
lnvoetmenta ........... 30,52&amp;.26 y.......................... 90,000.00
RECEIPTS
Food Serv. 1111•.183,1168.74 Un....rvod Fund
OPERATING RECEIPTS
ExtriiCurrtcu•r
Bodance........- .• 458,412.68
Earnlngoon
ActlviU.. ............ 135,335.66 C.htna.nko
tnvoetmenta ............ 4,410.60 Cteu Meterlelo I
(Net) ....................620,717.14
Total RecelptaF-...................... 48, 735.48
(Operoting)..............4,410.60 Mloc.Recelpta
Total Fund
DISBURSEMENTS
Grenda
In
Ald .. 1,C)38,102.M a.~e=~·iiAiio:g'.~T·1•
OPERATING
lntermedlel8
DISBURSEMENTS
Sourceo .................... a,ooo.oo AI-Md
Exc. Rcpta. Over/(Under)
Sourcoe ... 6,537,422.27 Volllllllorl........-118,381,845
Dlob.......................... 4,410.60 State
Federal Sourcee.. n0,401.20 PrOjM&lt;Iy Tu I..HIN
NON-OPERATING
lnalde 10 Mllt.............3.8000
Total ReceiptaRECEIPTS
Outalde
10 Mllt ........ 11.2000
(OpwaUng) .... 11,008,121.78
(DISBURSEMENTS)
ADII.
.........
_,, .........2,538.00
DISBURSEMENTS:
ContrlbuUono &amp;
Numbw of Non-Celt.
EXPENDITURE
Donationo ............. 10,000.00
DISBURSEMENTS &lt; Emptoy-..................82.00
Tolli Other Fin. Sour.........5,711,615.7.1 Number of C.rL
(Uoeo) ..................... 10,000.00 1Mtruction
Emptoy-...............166.00
Supporting
Dloburoementa l Other
SUMMARY
INDEBTEDNESS
S.rvi-.......... 3,6C7,887.D1
Uaeo/Net ................. 14,410.60 Community
BONDS
Beginning Fund C.oh
Servicoe ................... 1,751.111 a.•nc• Beglmlng of
Bolance .................. 48,11116.68 Extrecurrlcular
Perlod..-......- ....225,000.00
Ending Fund C01h
Rodnmod- During Fl..,..
ActivtU..
............
148,577.58
Bal.,ce ................. 64,307.28 Debt Servl- ...... 426,838.56 Perlod..-.........-.225,000.00
UnroeervedFund
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS
Emptoyea S.lerloe
Bet.,ce ...- ........-64,307.28
NOTES LONG I SHORT
l Wageo ............. 197,902.74
AGENCY FUNDS
TERM
Emptoyeoe Flt!tlre.
OPERATING RECEIPTS
llelence
Beginning
of
llanefita .............. 116,655.07
Extracur. Act ......... $4,953.03 PurchaPerlod..................52D,OOO.OO
To111Reeeipl8·
Serv....................1,06t,21t.4$ New laiiUN· During Flocli
(Operatlng)...........54,953.03 Suppl l Meter..... 307,088.11 P•lod..................123,111D.OO
OPERATING DISBURSE.
Capital OuUay .......... t,025.118 Rodumod- During Flocli
Employ..o S.lori• l
Perlod.................404,000.00
Capilli Outlay·
Wogoe .......................... 468.75 Roplocament ...............644.11 llalence 6-3().93... 248,800.00
Employaeo Retirement
Other Objocta .......... 3,608.74
Benefita,,,_,,,•••.•.•••••••••.• 83.87 Total DlabureementaPurchooed
(Opereting) .... 11,632,92&amp;.83 I certlfll the following report
Servlca ................... 1,447.12 Exc. Rcpto. Ov•l
to be correct and true, to
Supp. &amp; Mat. ......... 49,n1.52
(Under) Diab. ... (623,805.05) the boat of my knowledge:
Capilli OuUay.......... 1,025.98
JoneFry
OTHER RNANCING
Tr...urer of the Board of
Cept•l Outlay·
SOURCES
Education of Melgo Local
Roplllcement, ..............644.99 ContrlbuUon• l
School Dlolrlc1
Other Objecto...........3,311.74
Dolllltiono ............ tt,237.33
(8)21tc
Total DloburaementoProc. Fm. Sale I Lou of

oc;::..ln .......

RATES

(u-,. . . . . . . . -.. . .

To place an ad

Call 992-2156
.
MoN.

thru

FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDA~

POLICIES
• Ada out.ide the coun ty your ad run• auut be prepaid
• Receive dl.lc:ount for ada pa.td m advance

or

• Sentmel 1.1 not reepomihle for errors after firu day (eheck
for error; fint day ad runs w paper) Call before 2 00 p m
day after pubhcatJon to makt! correction
• Ada th~tt mwl be pa1d 10 advance are
Card of Thank.
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~

~

~
~

• A cla.mHed advert11ement placed ID the The Daily Sentinel
(exc ept Clau1fteJ. D••play, Bu11nea1 Card or Lesal
No tJCct) will a!..o appear tn the Potnl Pleannl Regwter and

U.S OPEN HNNIS

·~

"BIRTH RITE"
Ch1ld Beanng Education
Classes will begtn
Tuesday, Aug. 3, 6 till 8
p.m. PVH Downstatrs
Conference Room .
304-675·4340 ext. 230

for informalion or to

FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR ............................... $78
FlAM ........... ... ........................ $88
. ........ ............ $98

.::::
....

KING SIZE SETS. .. ..$350 &amp; Up
QUEEN SIZE SETS....... $275 l Up
BUNK MATIRESS ...... $58 l$89
BED FRAMES........ ...$25-$36·$50

...~.::::

'-

MON. THRU SAT. 0.5-PHONE 448-0322
3 MILES OUT OULAVII.LE PIKE

•

USA
..........

~ FREEE I~STALLA TION (REGULARLY '39.95) FIRST MONTH OF SERVICE" ONLy 59.95

•

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

.....

PLUS! ADD HDe OR [jOfj}[:Jfjj]f!)CJ AND GET YOUR SECOND MONTH FREE!

•

_,

Q

~

7

YOU SAVE OVER $50.00

~
&gt;=.
~

~ ------------------------~-----------------------------.....
~

~

0

;;:'

CALL NOW! 1-800-766-0553

t:::

=

•

¢

II IOU ALREADY SUBSCRIBE TO CABLE, CALL TO SEE HOW YOU CAN GET ONE MONTH FRrE. ,,..
9
•QRlEA F..KPIRF....'l BMJ AND IS SUBJECT TO AU. APPlJCABI.E FEES AND TAXES APPLIES 1U CABLBVISfON SERVICE ONLy
AND IS VALID FOR SUBSCRIBERS IN WIRED SERVICB AR8AS ONLY
REOt.n..AR MO!'m-n. Y fEES APPLY FOR SEq::&gt;ND MON'll-1 OP SERVICS OI'&lt;PER Aftll.IES TO STANDARD INSTALLATION IN RE51DIDmAL UNJTS
AND ON PRJMAAY OUlLETONL Y 011ffiRRB511tiCTJON$ MAY APPLY

*

MAN TROUBLE ~ THE LARRY SANDERS SHOW
MO' MONEY
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
STAY TUNED
CLASS ACT

*

*

S-HoppyAdo
6-- Loat and Found
7- Lo.t11nd Found
8-- Publ1c Sale &amp;

13- lneurance
14-- Bw1neea Tram1ng
15- Schoolm &amp; lnatruct!on
16- Rad1o, TV &amp; CB Repa•r

Auct1on
9-- W~~onled to Buy

17- M~tcellanl'!ow
18- Wanted To Do

"',..

-f!i
~

0

Wanted, one good
hearted woman to forgive imperfection in
the man that she
loves.
Wanted, just
chance to tell how
much he still loves
her. He can't be sorry
enough .
I love you with all my
heart.
Your One and Only

773-Muon

247-Letart FaD•
949-Racioe
742-Rudand
667-CoolvtUe

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

PH. 742·2217
6-30.1 mo.

882-New Haven
895-Letarl
937-Buffalo

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992-3470
OWNER: Jeff Wickersham
5/10/93

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

· Public Notice

WANT
ADS
iWORK!

•FJRewooo
BILL SLACK

2:

;
In Memory

In Memory

. JACK L. CLARK
'who passed away
: on Aug. 2, 1987
Missing You
I miss you more &amp;
n;ore each day. Life
is so lonesome
while
you are
gbne.Yo ur memory
s Itill lingers in my
mind.
'
·Because
you were
so sweet, loving and
klnd. I miss your
smile and tender
t6uch . I love you
very much now that
you are gone it is
'difficult for me to go
on. But I know you
would want me to go
on and that life must
go on. •
Sadly missed by
wife Grace1 Children
Jim, John, &amp; Shalla
&amp; Grandchildren

!

992-2269

USED RAILROAD
2

In Memory of

FRED M.ADAMS
August 10, 1992
It has been a year
smce you left us
Never a day goes by
that we don't lhink of
you, You will always
be 1n our hearts, We
Will always Love
you
Our lives has been
much sadder, since
you went away but
we know your With
Jesus, and Will meat
you some .sweel
day.
Sadly missed by, Mother,
Hester Adams; Sister
Kathy Adams; Aunt,
Pauline Davis; special
cousin.
Marty Nelson, and other
family members

22- Money to Loaa
"
23- Profe11ioDill Servicu

1.' \Jl\1 ~11'1'111·:-­
,, i, I\ L:-TOU,
q p
Wanted to Buy

32- Mobile Home• for Sa1e

LIVUtoek
Hay &amp; Gra!D
Seed &amp; Ferlil•zer

HEllo 'I' \I.~

Aut.oa for Sale
Truckt for Sale
Vam &amp; 4 WD'•
Motorcycle;·
Boala &amp; Mo tora for Sale

41- Hou.e. for Rent
42- MohiJe Homea for Rent
43-- Farm• for Rent
44-- Apartment for Renl
4S- Furnuhed Rooma
46- Space for Renl

Auto Repatr
Campmg Eqwpmenl

47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equ1pmen1 for Rflnt
49- For Leau

\11-:lltll \\IJI:o-1-:
51- Houaehold Goocb
52- Sporting Good.
53-- Anhquea

54- M11c Merchandile
55- Ru•lding Suppliea

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Shade River Saddle Shop
446·4514
1·800·766·40 13

WAYNE
DALTON
Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised Panel
Garage Doors Complete With Track, Lock,
Spring and Hardware.
GARAGE DOORS.
16x7
9x7
Bx7
BEST RValue 6.5
$575.00 $350 00 $345.00

CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

10yNrWimnty, whitt onlr

Chester,,Oh. 45720
985·3406

$285 00

3/8/lfn

GOOD Non~naulated)4 ga. $357.00 $255 00 $250 00
1o year warranty, white only
y, hp Opener wlelectronic eye, 21ransmiiiers. ......$235.00
Y. hp Opener, 2 transmitters ... . .
. . ..$200.00

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

BETTER Insulated R Value 4 $475.00

$289.00

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

992-3838

6181'9211 mo.

10 yurwtrnnty, whitt Of brown

Fatten your

......

VALID AUGUST 3-4-5 ONLY!
......
;:;;
......

985-Che•ler
843-Pordond

Pomeroy, Ohio

IIi loving Memory of

~

11- Help Wanted
12- S1tuatione Wanted

SHRUB
E
TRIM and
REMOVAL

MATIRESSOR
BOX SPRINGS

0

/

4--- G1veaway

388-Vinton

458-Leon
S76-Apple Grove

36970 Ball Run Road

LAYNE FURNITURE

•
...."'....,

- -

Pom~eroy

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS

.g*

~
s:;.....

c~r-11

3-- Announcemenll

643-Anhia Obt.
379-Wolnul

With awant Rd

~

Mae

675-Pa. Pleuanl

the Gn lhpoiUI Da1ly Tnbune, reaching over 18,000 homea

~

M,\N IRUUBLl

992-Middlepo,..r

PUBUC NOTICE
124, Charleroi, Pe. 15022,
Paris and Servile
On Ju• • 6, 1913, el Attn.: Don Grimm or by
Mowers
• Chain Saws
approximately 6:00 A.M., calling Cempbell Tra,. •
Weedealers
Ihe M/V A:. A. Valal portation Corr.,..ny 11 (412)
Authorized· Briggs &amp;
acictdentally dlocharged an 483·6556 from 8:00 AM to
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
uRknown quantity of 4:30 PM, Mondly through
I.D.C. Repair Center
n!fmber 2 dleeelluel at mile Friday.
PICKUP and DELIVERY
poat237.5 of the Ohio River.
If for eny reeoon
Hours 96- M-F 9-3 Sat
th~ affected areeo Include Campbell TraMpoi'IIUon
Closed Sunday
mOe 237.5 to mile 242.5 of Company, Inc. lalla to acton
949·2104
the Ohio River. Campbell your claim wl:hln 110 dayo,
Tranaportation Company, then you may oubmlt It to: ~~~~;;::;:;;;;
InC. Ia the owner of the MN United Staloa Coaot Guard
A.ll. Veotal, wljjch Ia the National Pollution Funda
deOignaled aourco of the Canter, 420' Wilaon Blvd.,
&amp;
sp)U purouent to tho Oil Suite 1000, Arlington, VA
Pollution Act of 1810. 22203-1804.
Cl~lma arloing out of lhlo (7) 5, 6, 7, I, I, 12, 13, 14,
spill may be aubmilled to 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26,
Cainpbolt Tranoportation 27, 28, 29, 30; (e) 2, 3, 4,
' •LIGHT HAULING
Company, Inc., P. 0. Box t-:::-'--'--'-1....;1,_1_2,':-1:-3''-:3;-01-:c---1

Huge Garage Sale
Friday 4th 9-4
179 Oak Dr.

GET RESULTS • FAST!

446-Golllpollo
367-Chesblre

245-Rio Gunde
25~uyan Diat.

MwicallnttrumenLI
Fru1LI &amp; Vetelabie:.a
For Sale or Trade

21- Bu•m•• Opporlumty

33- Farm• for Sale
34-- Bu.une.. Bu1ldmp
35- l.Du &amp; Acreage
[-------:=;-;-;::;-=====~----j 3(&gt;..... Real Eotate Wanled

GalUa County Meigt~ County M.... n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

WALKER ALLEY

"'
....

KINL

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p m Saturday
1:00 p m. Monday
1 00 p m Tuesday
I 00 p m Wedneoday
\00 p m Thur.lday
1:00pm Fnday

Days
Words Rate Over lS Words
1
15
$400
$ ~
3
15
$600
$ .30
6
15
$9 00
$ 42
10
IS
$13 00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$ 05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as sepa&lt;ate ads.
Business Card ..... .$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board.... .$6.00/inch per day

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

• Free Ada: Gn•eaway and Found ada under 15 worda will he
run 3 d11.ya at no charge.
• Prtce ad for all cap•talletlerl •• douhle prace of ad COil
• 7 pomt !me type only uaed

- Public Notice -

~CALL BY NOON AND GET CABLE INSTALLED BY TONlGHT. FREE!~,.,
L\RRl

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedn..day Paper
Thursday Paper
Fnday Paper
Sunday Paper

YARD SALE
MON &amp; TUES . AUG 2 &amp; 3
s 00 A.M.-4:00PM.
Ke1th Oiler Residence
S R 325, Langsvlllle
742-2076

II \Ill II ROll • !1.\\ Ol 1 1

CALL TODAY!
WATCH TONIGHT!

~

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-1

r--------------------------------------------,

llondi~Auguat2,1993"

• I ~PN WORIS (I Nil It • ( ~N lHIOUR 1\0RIIJ Nl II'S • DLUI Ill ONLI UN 1180

,•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1

11·3111-"!-t"

Card of Thanks

The Bedford Twp Vol.
F1re Dept. Committee
would like to thank
everyone who donated
money &amp; worked
r our Benefit. The
Daily Sentinel lor their
press coverage &amp;
Congressman
Ted
Stnckland. We would
like to thank I he
llowing
bandsMiddlebranch Bluegrass,
Stonycreek, Out of the
Blue &amp; Born Aga1n
Believers &amp; J1m
nchester of Gem
would like to thanK 1
lollow1ng business's
for their donat1ons
Whaley's Auto Parts.
Whaley's
Grocery.
Precision AutomotiVe,
Warner Ins , Mullens
Musser Downing Childs
In s . ,
Anderson's,
Powell's,
Krogers,
McDonald's of Pomeroy,
McDonald's of Athens,
Baum Lumber. Ohio
Valley
Christian
Assembly.
'
Tha1nks again lor making
Benefit such a
The Bedford
Vol Fire Dept.

All Prices Include Insulation.

You Won't Find A Better Value!

Call roda31 for
Your free
Makeover
Independent Mary

Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy

992-5082
Sandy Henderson

992-3647

.r---,
Howard L Wrh'esel

ROOFING

NEW - REPA,IR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
3-16-93-lfn

0
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB

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

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Speclollzing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS
992·7013 or

EAGLE LANES
(forme r Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun -Thur5-10 pm
Fn-Sat 5·1 1 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

or TOLL FREE

DARWIN, OHIO
~~~---7·~-1.f~9~1/~Un~

Ltfe • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
° ACCI'd en t ° Annut'Iy, 1RA 0 MOr1gage

992·5553

H00·841·0070

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAl

Reasonable
Rates

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE ·TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3-4-93- 1 mo.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling

Truck1ng
We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698·3290
or

614·698·6500
7fl/Un

Roc ky R. Hupp, D•C•U• • Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 457 60

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks

Announcements
3 Announcements

~~~::~··;. ~~:'"fo ~~~:
Loving
Paren1s
To
Your
Ch.,lshod NowbornJ. Wo Hovo
So Much Love To ulve I You
Havo So Much Lifo To Ll•• we
PromiH To Give Your Baby A
Brlghl &amp; Happy Fuluro In Our
Lovlng Shore Home Pleue

~~~~~ ~"'El:~"':.lt~I~~~~

Medtcal fl.egal ExpenH Ia Paid.

(614) 843•5264
J...-----------:-----------..
.
.
,
,--------------------------.,1
SIII/03/Hn

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

JAY,MAR

r--------,[

be 10 yrs

Procall Co. 602-631-

0615
GIRLS'II LIVElli 24 HRS /OAYIII
ONE ON ONE! 1-900.2882692 Ext 6004 $3.99/Min. Mu11
Ba 18 Vrs Procall Companr,
602-631-0615

TALK

MISTRESS MADONNA LIVE t·
900·745-1115 $2 min 1-«&lt;0-68S.
7890-MC-VISA 18+.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·
NATIVE 1-900-740-3337 S2 50min 18+/all lllastyln dateline
mHI 100'a of ainglaa/couptn In
your arta today CCI BOCA FL

Diuretic AI Fruth Pharmacy
THE GAY CONNECTION 1·9007t$0-3337 S2 50-min 18+ mHI
100'1 ot exclllng man In your
area tonight Get phone I'• CCI

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

80CAFL

Call 614·992·
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

GIRLS LIVElli

24hrs , 1 on 1, 1·9~288-2692
ext 1444, $3 99 por min , must

Reduce Safe And Faat Whh
GoBtse Caplets And E-Vap

Quality
Stone Co.
. 6637 '

EXOTIC l.AOIES LIVE 1-«&lt;D-6857890 $3.50.mln MC·VISA 1·1100i'IS..1115 $2-mln 18+

I'll Tall Your Future, Nowii1~9QO..
286-5440 Exl. 4597, $3.99 Per
Mm Must Ba 18 Vrs Proc111 Co
602-631-0615

FREE ESTIMATES

2/12/92/tfn

White Mala Age 23 Looking For
Slngl1 Wh ite Female PenPII

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
g.,

Age 17 112 -23, Prefer Nonsmoker &amp; Alcohol FrH, Send
Responsa To· P 0 Box 55, Gallipolis, OH 45631

4

Giveaway

2 Eight Wa&amp;k Old Kiltans To

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

992-7878
7n/1 mo.

. 8&amp;9

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and ,
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

7122193

~\l(

205-75RI5" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
205-75R14" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
215-75R15" Fireatone OWL
235-75R15" Fireotono OWL
.. CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 61211/N

Plumbing
......
,.

.~

~.

•DOZERS

38904 Lead1ng

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

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

614·992·71'44
4/29/93 lin

GENERAL
HAULING
Dirt

Remodeling and Repair
Pamting, Experienced •
Free Estimates
614·446·8568

r.:::

"M,atho!rNitic• ia the
alphabet wilh which
God haa written the
Universe."-Ga/i/eo
By Topic
By Appointment
949-2814
7f1211 mo

5 Month Old Male Puppy, Mother
112 Garman Shephard, Father
Full Chow, Femafe 2 1/2 Y11n1
Old, 1/2 German Shephard Call
614-446-7049, Leava M. . uge

6 wnk old Collie/Lab puppln

to

glweaway,

614-742·2153

evening•

FrH to good home, ' 112
Auatraillan Shepard puppie1.
304-675-3646.

Klttena, 614·388-9858.
Old upright plano, very heavy,
needs hmed, must do own haul·
ln9 304-675-6118 or 67S.24JII.

Part
German
Shephard,
Little
Bit
Pomeranian, 4 Femal.. , 1 Male,

Pupplas

Limestone

CARPEti'I'ER
WORK

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION

Good Homo, 614-446-1765

Gravel

992-7878
1nJ1 mo

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES

·M8~~~~J~s&amp;
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

Coli Aftor 5 PM 614-446-&amp;67

Th,... t.mate pupa 1 Great Danet
Shophord mix, 614-1112-3133

U81d lumbar 2XB'a and 2x4'a,
odda and enda mU81 take all.
Apply at 11V5 Chootnut S1., Gol·
II polio.

Young, beautifully m.rbd eli to
good nomo, 814-982-32n.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Loat

2 b..gtea. trl-eolor, 1·

iwka mala 1·adun r.male, s R
143/Hyaoll Run vlclnlly, 614·9927691

'

�i

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel
6

LoS1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VlclnHy: Second Avan1111, LOlli:

Mondar 11~
&amp;14-441oC500.

\

~-\Or

Fu t l 34144, 2 ~r Gorsgs.
. . _ Otound Pool, 1.1 - . .
SR 110 VInton, Oltlo, I~
U02.

')
/

Yard Sale
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Six blautllul tolling scrw

new 3 t

day befor. the ad Ia to n,m,
.dltlon

Saturdar.
Auguat 2
sv.raeuaa,
and adult
10-spud

10:00a.m.

and 3, RuatJc Hille,
9:00.5:00, chlldron
clothing, toye, boye
blk11 gl~ l blko
dishes, .something for ev.ryonel
614·992·7612.
August 5th ~~ · &amp;th, 9--4pm, Crew
Rd ., behind talrgrounda. Lota of
nic• clothing, some FlaMr Price
&amp; litlle Tikas toya, home lntar.
Iori curtai ns, bed •prudt , gas
gri I. Something for everyon~~ .

carport sal• August 2·3 ttart·

lng 9:00am. In Bradbury at Hilr-

bert Hoover's.
mlsc. llema.

and

Clotnrng

Garage sale- 7130-8f3, 9:00.?,
782 1-tigh Str"t, Middleport,
many nTca it111m1 for anryona,
baby clothes as wall aa stout

sizes.

Gal'l!lge Sal.., Rain or ahlne.

'

j.oJ

Help Wanted

'AVON' ALL AREASI Shors your
i lme wl1h us. You'll Jove the
company. 1-800.H2.fo358.

psr Anlete 11 Tronofol'l and

of tho NogoUotsd Ag-ment
between the MLTA and th~
Boord of Education, ths llolgo
Locot School Dlatrlct Ia pooling
th• following w.canc'- for ha

Yard
St~ l..
Pall
Matrone of Harrisonville, Chap-.
tar O.E.S., Friday, Aug.&amp;, 9a m5pm, SaturdayJ. Aug.7, 9am~5pm ,
Larkin StrHt, Hut land.
•

July 31· August 2&amp;3; Roclno,
Rout&amp; 124, one mile past
Southern High School. Baby,
chil dren, ad1.1lt c lothing, home
lntarior, tOye, furniture, organ,
kitchen Items, much more, 10-

·

Yard sale- July 31- Aug, 3, 9:00.
4:00, tools, furnit ure, mise.
ltams, Bo:l 8, Salem Slreet, ·Rut·
land.

Porch Sale- Aug. 2-6. Dolls, craft
items, material, womens and
ch lldrens short M IS , small to
tuH size, hand plow, many other
items, 315 Condof 51., Pomeroy.

Pt. Pleas a nt
&amp; VIcinity

Yact~ ncin ,

Seclton B Poetlng,

2311·B Monro. Ave, Aug 2 Ill 3.
Moving I Yard Sale, 5 Maple St.,
Mason, WV. Aug. 3 • 4, rain
cl!lne•le.

R1 2 North, Longhollow Rd.,
1982 suzuki MC, rrilsc;:., Frl, Sat,
Sun.
Yard Sale, 1st house on right
above voc ational school, Aug 1
&amp; 2, 9:00.??.

201 N. Park Dr, Tue. &amp; Wed. Aug.
3 6 4, baby cloth••, tHns ani:t
adults , lots of misc.

In Bldwlll. Call Before i P.M.

'614-388--1788.
~M Manager Fuii-TI"" Position Working With Emotionally

Dlstrubsd "AI Alak" Uss In Tho

Communhy, Th• Home &amp;
Schools. Muat Have R•llable
Transportation laacher Cer-

tlflcitlon And Montol H11tth El•
perience Or Training Dealrtd,

o.g,..

Required,
Send Reaume lo: Ace... To
Human Reaowca O.velopment,
Bachelors

Dental Hygenlll• to wo.rk In
school ,baosd Dsntal S11lant

Program, full or part time, M11lge
and Athens County:, must hn•

Oltlo lleonss, call Dobby Fulko,
614-592·3672 for mora Inform•·

tion.
Work · And
Counter Saln, Computer Elperi•nca Helpful, Send R"ume:
P.O. Box 278, Galllpolla, OH

General

Otnce

45631.

HYAC, Service Technician, $8 To
$12 12er Hour BaNd On Experience, And Benefit Package

Only Nosd Apply. Mall R"uma

I Reference To: Dan Inman,
Electric Inc., 6246 Radtord Ad,

Items. Tu es. and Wed. 9-5.

3 Family

1 Day A Wk R~later Now, Cll ..
HI Begin In Siptember. Regl•
tor At :

Sale: 633 Fourth
Avan ua, 2nd &amp; 3rd, 10·? Mans, DanTax, Inc. Galllpolil On Each

Womens, Chl! drens Clolhes,
Dishes, Toys, What-Nots, Campar Top, Sewing Machine,
Rafrigeral or, Air Conditioner
And Lots Moral

4 Familias: Adult,

Childrens
Clothes, Ho~t.~seho ld Items,
Sa turday, -Tuesday, 9·5, Main
Sueet, Vinton.

Baby
/lnfant ltttms, Toys, Household,
Co!l&amp;etab!os,
Etc. Monday
!iOO Bl oc k Fou rth Avttnut,

-Tuesday, 9-4.
ALL Yard Salas Must Ba Paid In
Ad vanr.e. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the day bafora the ad is to run.
Sunday ed ition - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday &amp;dillon • 2:00
p.ITI Salur day.

Mo~-i,;g$31-a : 46 Lincoln, Furnilure &amp;

Antiques, Call 614-446-

!)769.

Sat urday : .fl JYS Clothing 0-21,
Toys, Like i&gt;l ew Ca r Saat, Hl~h·

chair, Home Interior, Lad1es
Ciolhing, Med 9110, 2 112" Conduit, Mise, Trailer Park , Bob
McCorm l c~.

8

&amp; Auction
Ritk Pearson Auction Company,
fu ll time auctionaar, complato
JUC I!on
service.
Uc ansed
.:iifi6,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304r73·5785.

Tuaaday And W1dnallday 10

A.M. · 4 P.ll.

Medical Record Clark-full time
po1itlonl •v•nlng ehlft Mon.
thN Tnur., day ehlft Sat.,
knowledge of medical riCOrd
s ys tem required. Send resume
to Bill Barker, Ple..ant Valley
Hospital, 2520 Valley Drive, Pl.

Ploasant,•WV 25550 AAIEOE
MENTAL HEALTH
PROFESSIONALS
GROUP HOllE MANAGEA~n·
dlvldual needed to manage

Mason County group home fOr
chronically mentally . Ill adulte.
Maste r's DagrH In Human Services field pret.rr1d; will consider BA level candidate wJ 2ye.
exparJance. Experience provldlng etse managtment MrvlcM
and some supervision experience
helpful. THE RAPISTbranch office faeated In Point
Plea11nf" Ia INking a Mal11f's
Degree level theraplat to
provide outpatient clinical Nr•
vices, perform ISH . .menta
and provide Individual and

therapy. Master's OegrM
1n Human Services field ,.
qulred ; 1yr. clinical exc:rl•nc.
prafer red.Excellent
nellte.
Apply In poeraon or Nnd
reaume to:Uaaon County Supv.

PRESTEAA CENTER
Plasant Valley
Hos pital
One Valley Drive
Suite 213
j)t , Pleasant , WV

Wa nted to Buy

$100 Cas h For tnlormallon Lead·
lng To Pu rc hase ot JUt&lt;E BOX,
1\n y Condition, Working Or Not.

615-358-7722.

A.n liques and used furnilur•, no
loo la rga or too &amp;mall, will
buy one piece or comp lete
tli')U:lehold, call Osby Martin,

1\Qm

6 ;4-9 92-~ 41.
- -- - ; : - ; - i:ffl~o;aled stoneware , oil lamps,
•nlique fu rniture, mall pouch
!hermomot ens,
ge ooral anti·

quos Riverin• Antiques, Russ

owner. We do appraisnls, 614-992·2:...5_26_. -c----cMoore,

Oon't Junk ltl Sell
Wo•k•ng
Majo"r
Color
TV's,
Fr&amp;&amp;lOrs, VCR's,
lm Conditioners,
Etc. •:11 4-256-1238.

Us Your NonAppliances,
Refrigerators,
Microwaves,
Guitar Amps,

J'&amp;0·. Aulo Parts and Salvage,

also bu)'ing junk cars &amp; trucli.a.
:ID4 ·77'3-5343.
Junk cafS,
992-7553.

--:--~

any con dition, 614-

Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.

Coins, Gold Ri ngs, Silver Coins,
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

Want ed to buy: uud mobil•
homes. 614·446-o175

Employment Services

25550

EOEIMIFIV/ADA

NHded: Data Collector, no IX•
pt~r ten ce n..:: nu ry, aood p.y,
will train you. Call ~on., Tua,

w•

Wsd., 9:01J..5 :00, 614-2B2·m4.
No Experience! $500 To $900
Weekly !Potential

Processing

FHA Mo~gags Rotundo. Own
Hou rs. 1-501~6-0503 Ert .118.
24 Houre.

OPPORTUNITY PLUS

A Prolnslonal Saln Poaltlon,
Leading To Management Tr~ln·
lng E•1sits Now ln Our local
Bra nch. We Offer Comptall FullTime BeneiHa, A 4 WMk Cor·
porate Training Program And An
Excepetlonel
Retirement
Program.

PR EVIOUS
SALES
EX·
PERIENCE NOT NECESSARY.

Car•r And Sport• Minded
People • Ambftlou• And Ag~
grasslva, • Only Thoea Wtio
Sincerely Want To G.. AhNd
Need ApDiy. For Perwonal Interview Cal( Chuck Marqueee, 814286·7581, Or Walk In At Comfort
In n, 605 Ealt Main Sti'HI: Jack-

son Otllo, MONIJAY /T UESDAY
10 A.M. To 6 P.M. No Taloohona
lntervlewe PIIIH, (HOI Afflliltttd

With ComloriiMI.

OVerbrook Center hu p.lrt-Ume1
3-11, C.NA poehiona anllable,

for more Information 81•11

contact Robyn H1non, A. .O.N.,
61 4- ~2-6472.

11

Do

BobyeHIIng, mr homl, ~or
ar-. 114-181--4282, Mary.
Ch~otlon wlfl babraH In thllr
h01t11, - s d 3 mll11 out SR
143, Y.F, Clll 814o-M2.&amp;27'1.
E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrM Removal, Hedge
Trimming. Frw Eatlmat11l 11438~7157 AftII'

Help Wanted

AVON ! All Areas I Shlrl•y

Spo&gt;rs, 304-675-1429.

Wa nted: Good manal)lr/UIH
person to aollcn busrnan Jo.
cally, In person andfor by tel•
phone, good pay for good
raautte, nelda to atart lm·
madlately. Write P.O. Bow 408,

AVON! AU areas. Need ntn
money or want a caretr? Either

Pomoror, Ohio 4571lt giving
quallflcollono. lntsrvfaw wlll bi

way-call Marilyn. 304-882·2645

arranged:

or HlOG-992-6356.
Avor1 want individual• Internled In a.arnlng $6-$"10/hr. No door

to door, 1-600-627-4640.

17 Miscellaneous
Garden tiller $100, atr cornpree-

oor t150. 1toH4&amp;-t2111.

I

11Jl11 Fl'lldom 121&lt;60 2 -Badroomo, CA, 114-44e-o&amp;85.
11Jl11
12xea
Totol
Eloe.,
CA, 1Kirkwood
H11t, Two
Add
Qna.
112
....... 11/l Country ~ling, 614388-8700
·
1184 14x55 2 Bsdf001!1~, AC,
$7,900, Phone: 614-446-1....
1985 14x70, 3br cathldrol clfl· ·
lng, lslond khehOn, Bx11 dock,
CA, outbuilding, tto,ooo oao.

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEHTI AT
I IJDCIET PRICES AT .tACK-

zser. e .

llountlon ·Stall HomH, 3411
Block Will 01 HMC 011 olackoon Jackeon Ave, PI Ph. Heat Wave
Plko 11-F 6 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. If S-1•1. Frso control olr whh
Oualhy And Exps~oncs lo The 1ny •Ingle wide home In etoek.
t1 COncern For Your Chlld'l 304-87&amp;-1400.
Core. Coli Uo For A VlaH. lnfont
!Toddtora 614-441-622'1. p,... 33 Fanns lor Sale
ehoolera ISchool Age 614-44130 acre farm with 3 bdrm.
1224.
house, 1 112 miles out Rio
Mother wanta to do babyeHtlng Gno.ndo. 6M-245-92Z7.
In hor homo In Point Plsa11nf1
naar IChool,
lto,..a, ana 41.7t Acm 2 Story Farm
hoophal. L&lt;lto ol TLC to lhlro. Hou•, Lg. 6arn, 2 111111 From
30.t"75-6953 1n)'llnw.
llen:srvllfs, llloe, Out Building
$35,000, 61+25&amp;-1675.
ROOI!I end boord for hlndlcoppld and elderly with lower ln- Mini form 23 ICI'OI 10 r-. 2
comn who like country living In atory hoUIIc amoll bOrn, I mils
family ca,. home, S14--Gi2-6042. out Jarrleo Hd, owertooka Point
Pillllnl, $35,000. 30-W75-411'!1.
TrM etu~;~~p tt~moval , complete
d•pendabla l!lrvlee, Naaon1bll 34'
Business
rates. 304475-3731.
Buildings
Will do babyshllng In my home,
Mles Paula'• Day C.re c.n.t•r 1

reasoneble

prlc...

304-675-

6'1114.

Commercial Building For Slle
Or luH, 338 . Second Avenue,

Will do odd jobs, br hour or )ob, Phone: lt~-2522, 10 A.M. To
5P.II.
614-247-3125.
Win do trptn~rd proc-lng

mmy home. lf14-892-3981.

35

.Lots &amp; Acreage

1 acN lote, Rt 2, Ashton. Clyde
Bowen, Jr 304--57'6-2336.

3 1011, New Havan. 304-7TJ-5808
after 4pm.

Financial
21

5+ acrtt on Jarry'a Run Rd, approx. 5ml out. 304-576-2029.

Business
OpportunHy

For Sale: O..nor Finane'!!, 6
Aero, $7,900j 6 Acm, well,
Ssf'tc, And E!ectnc, $11,900; on
!NOTICE!
32 On Edga Of DanviUe, 614OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 384.Sm
recommend• thll you do buslnue wtlh people you know, and
NOT to eend money through the
m111 until you hav• lnYHtrglled
tha offering.

BIG I$$ Gov't. Auction I~
Sond t12 Chock IM.O. To: BCo
4053C Tates Cl'llk Ad, Dspt.
144, l.x, KY 40517.
Cor lot, building wr.i lpla, bldg
401110, IWO IIIII loti, 2 bid·
room home on linothlr lot.
Owner will finance wtr.aaonab•
down payment. 1-814·384-6435
or 304-882~3752 .

Lola. &amp; acn~aga for home conlltrut:tlon on . Rayburn Ad,

41 Houses lor Rent
1 Bedroom Houu Fumlehed,

Located 735 RNr, Third Avonuo,
Galllpolle.
$150
Deposit,
$160/llo. 614-44&amp;-3870.
3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Family
Room, Llrge 2 Car Gar~ge &amp;
Yard 2 Mllu From Gallipolle, At.
141, 614-446-4824.

114'448-01127.

42

This newspaper wmnot
knowingly accept
adYertisemenls lor real eSiale
which Is In violation of the
law. Our readers are henihy
lntormed that all dwellings
!idVertlsed In this newspaper
are· available on an equal·
opportunity basls.

Real

31

Estate

Homes for Sale

2

Mobile Homes
lor Rent
bedroom furnlehed mobile

homo, 304-675-6512.
2 bedroom, 14x70 mobile hom•.
Good condition, $275/mon.,
S150idap. Graham School Rd.
614-446-8323 .
2 bdrm. trallar, 3 mlln out Rio

Grondo. 6M-245·i227.
For rant, nMd roommate to
ahare 3 bedroom trailer, no
deposh, no Ulllltles, $150
manlhly, 814·992..:J94i.

Real Nice 14)110 2 Bedrooms,

Gorden Tub,

P~vots

Ssnlng,

3.46 acr.., 44124, 3bdrm., 2 1f2 1
baths1 full bu am•nt , with slid·· 1 Bedroom NNr Holzer, Stov1,
lng gllla,outtlde entrance, par· R•trlaaralor
Fumllhed, Air

Conditioned,

$245/Mo.

Plua

51_4-44&amp;~
--::-:295
-7._ _-:-:--:--,-,Bedrooms,

Untumlthed

Apal1manl, Stove, Refrigerator,

Miscellaneous
Mer!=handlse

!i7

(Leave M.ag•).

Bx8 woodsn lforage bulldlngo,
$395, dsllvsry &amp; IIIUP, 855.
Othlr .._ IYIIilbts. Sldlra E·
qulpmsnt, Hlndsrson. - - .
"' 21·
AKC Aoglllorsd lllnllluN Asd
Daefl4hund pupplss mall and
· font1lsi . .toltfng iiOI.,
chllr ond Oltomon; chromo ono

to-,

MuSical
Instruments

Furnished
Rooms

Roome for rent ·week or month.

Starting a1 $120/mo. Qallla Hotal.
614-446--9580.
SIHplng 100m1 whh cooking.
Also traller space. All hook•upe.

Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·7735651, Ma.an WY.

46

Space for Rent

Commorelol Offlel Spoe~ For
Rent: Route 7, North, Naar Pondarou Staakhouu, (Galllpolle,.
ldul For Phytlclane, O.ntlet

OHI.. Or B11uty Solon Phons:
614-44&amp;-2491.

if1 Wanted to Rent
HOUII, 3br, 2 batha, ba11mont,
out of town; In PPKS dlll~ct.
304-875-4046 Donnlo.
Wanting to rent· 2 or 3 bedroom
houat, ln clean a,acl good condl·
Uon, prefer private eattlng, 614992·2428, It no anewar Pl1181
INv• m. . jg• on machlri1.

Merchandise
HouseholcJ
Goods

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158 Or &amp;1.....,.6-4428
. '90 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2-0WN tNO DEPOSI"f)

watt·

attrwol

Ho~on Croubow, 150 Lb. Puil,
2 Y11ro Old, Fsatu~ng OUivor
Sling, Slghta, Arrowi, IJII.I New,
Coli After g P.M. 614-etl!-&amp;35.
l.uer Computer, Appll Com~~~ With P~ntor, 814-44&amp;-

l.own mower, 22" eut, Ilks now,
$75. 304-112·2218.
Lincoln weldlr, 225 amp with
Onan qlne, $1000, -614-Dt23!181.

'

Man's lrr.gular JNne. 111 slzaa,
$6.00/pr., Saturday only, i :OO..

3:00, 132 Buttomut, Pomsror.
Nintendo, gsrM O.nl, 8 r· mee,
wholo HI $150, wll 1111
llp.trotlly. 304-675-443G.
Old plano and dlrWna 111:, call
614-tlfiS-38113.
Ono boye lnd ons glrlo blks,
$20111.; upright doop ~rwoz.,,
$75; 814-992·5042.
Prlcsd To Ssll: 2 Axle Trollor In
Good Condhlon, 61+245-6515.

OUHn ball el)rtnga, 13• Quuar

OUTSIDE

FURNISHINGS: TV, combination atalr etep I akl
Wrought Iron Tebll W/4 C.hlll"'i mochlna. 814-992-31181.
Fan Baek Rocking Choir $58;
Slnkl, Cornmodel, Tube, UMd
Gardsn Arch War'• $129.00
Eller BNutlfuf Bslga, Gt11n,
Bidding ·Twin Molt Sst $$11-; Full Whfts: llatehlng Towel Rode,
S!le Sli!._ CU..n $141 SOl; 4 Ete. Sova 1 BUNDLE On homa
Drawor &lt;.;hill $44.95; Cor Bad'o That UeuaUy Make Remodeling
Bunk Bsd'o; Pastor Bodo. Full Or Building Cooto SKYROCKET.
Line Of Southwlll11'11 V••• 61+44&amp;-77f1, 614-446-2582, 114Starting At $20.00; Indiana Many 441·7120.
Shaps'o &amp; Sl111 Stanlna At Stockmatlc Stowe, 614-448.0527.
$5.00. 2 Locotlona · BHido 'llouto
Auction Or 4 Mll11 Out 141. Zenith coneole TV, couch. WurOpsn 9 A.M. To 8 P.M. lion -lilt. lltzer conaole plano, nanny
GOOD USED APPLIANCES goot, 614·7112-2416.
Walhlre!... dryere, ·rlfrlg«atora,
Elulldlng
r~ngn. ::tKag91 Appliances, 71 55
Vine Stf'Ht, Call 81'-"'46·7388, 1•
Supplies
800-4119-34et.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complata home fumls~l~f:·
Hour~ : Mon--Sat. i-!5. 81
0322, 3 mlln out Bulaville Rd.
Fr.. Delivery.
llollohon C.rpsts, At. 7 N. 5M446·7444 9112 Carpet 180, Atf
Vlnrtln Stock $4.41Vd.
PICKENS FURNITURE
New!Uted
HouHhold fumlahlng. 112 mi.
Jarrlcha Rd. Pt. PleaNnt, WV,
call 304-875·1450.

Refrigerator Like New 1

v..r

Block, brick, aewer pipee, wlndoWII, llnt•le, •tc. Claude Wlnlefll, Rio Orenda, OH Cart 814-

245o512t

56

Pets lor Sale

Groom ond Su~ Shop-Pot
Grooming. AN
a, strtea.
C.ll614-44fi.02:t1.
Jutte
lllnlaiiNI Plnochlr AKC, 3
matH.~., blk &amp; ton, $200. aach,
304"111·2444.
AKC Reg. Slblrlan Hulkr Pup.
tlf"l Vory C.lm And lntlfllglnl,
Wol Grey Or Black ol Wltho,

w-.

$150, 614 4411 8«127.

Antiques

St-.

Produce, Ad1m11 Rd., Reclfte.:

., •

DID JUGHAID
HIDE HIS

PEANUTS
DO 'r'OI.I THINK IT'S POSSIBLE
TO RIDE CLEAR. ACROSS Ti4 E
LAKE ON A BEACH BALL,

I DOUBT

I WAS JUS T

IT. WH'f'?

WONDERI NG..

1N5 Handa Ooldwlng, Law
MII-~ICIIIsnt ConcltiOn, 114-

44W .
ltf71nt-, IICIIilntCtlon, 17,000 mltH, - .
ehroms ond lights. matohlng
catF traltar, 114-041-2117

8· 1

----------1 =...

FRANK AND ERNEST
~E.INC,A~NATION

p~;:- 'l:]
'·

BORN LOSER
,.IJAAT'5 lfo,CJio\

,.I-IE.H,HE.Joi ... DOOT Wcttf.

~~
JU5T PULLIN6 OUT H£R G:¥)..'{

DOII-I'?

2 Springing Hollllns Hslloro,
wlll -cotl 10011, no Sundly calte,
814-... 2·34Qe.
Four Y11r Old Bofglum Mare,
Also John DMN HOtos Drawn
Riding - . 114-37V-2338.

0

~

P' ~ TI-11\T lo.IAAT

~ED TO

'{OU1

!-INRS

Welt

3NT

Pus

Eut

Pass

Pass

11 R1cket-olrlng
mllsrlol
17 Oozoo
18 HypothiiiCII
force
20 Metal
f11toner
21 Poole
22 Actroaa Worth
24 Thorough-

cutero

10CaH- -

I. 1.
Nortb

diY

Skinner
7 Food ftlh
8 Shipping
abbr.
(I UK brood-

plcturo

4 Waterlogged
5 Tore

25

If you would like to mix a vacation
with bridge, think about going over·
seas. One of the most popular tournaments is held in Tel Aviv every February. Today's deal won tbislear's prize
for the best-defended han .
The deal occurred during the Open
Teams and featured the Israeli inter·
national player Eliakim Shaufel
(West) and the American professional
Michael Polowan (East).
' The bidding wasn't by the book.
Polowan's one-spade overcall was
very thin; he was trading on the favor·
able vulnerability. South's jump to
three no-trump was an overbid.
Shaufel, holding nine points, knew
East had made a light overcall. And
judging that South was ready for a
spade attack, Shaufei led his lourth·
highest diamond.
Declarer decided to retain his options in the ·suit by calling lor dum·
my's ace. Polowan smoothly un·
blocked the kipg.
South played on clubs, West winning
the third round. ~Realizing that if decl$rer had the diamond 10 be would
have played low from the dummy at
trick one, Shaufel continued with the
diamond jsck. Now the defenders
couldn't be stopped from wiDnlnR six
tricks: three aces and three diamonds.
1
' If East doesn't make the spectacular unblQ~:k at trick one, declarer still
has a view to take when West leads a
second diamond. But why give declar·
era chance to get it right?
Also, il West had continued with a
low diamond at trick five, declarer
would have ducked the trick to East's
10 and made his game.
It was 'a very pretty defense, lolly
deservln~ the award.
·-· -

- -- - · - " " · " " •

• 1

r·

Two, - - old roglatSNd pollld
Chl~lls bulla. 8ino. old raala1 - Umoualn bull. 304-fU.
2123.

47 Actreu

Thurman
48 Tho oun
49 Wild ahoep
50 Soulh·
western
Indian
52 Edge
53 Draft a gcy.
55 Father ol Jr.

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryplogrllma an ctMttd Jrom qootatlona by famous people, past and· present.
E.lch II«• In thl dphet ltanda ror another. Tod•J'I Clue: N «iuaJS L.

BEWGJTB

WNA

· XUTAUHWEV
WIHJWTUN .
I B U

Aua . 2. 1993

1---~:--.....:::::.'-~---IITUIDAY'S HISTORY: On thi s day in

llold. .....,._2733, or 1?1.2107.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Transport a tton

MY MOM HATES MY

5HE' e.A'&lt;6 5HE O:Ut...D

DAD!S NEW lOU PeE .

HAVE GOTTeN HIM
A 6ETTER OJe ...

Autos lor sale

11170 Chlvsls Coil For Dilallo: 79
campers&amp;
&amp;M-25&amp;-1481 Or 114-25&amp;-1058.
Motor
Homes
1m Mil'- Bsnz, 450 Sl,
convortlbll, hlrd top, now paffll,
tlr., brak•, ....., c...., 1185 Poo.U!&gt; Csmpsr ~= 1,
$9000. IM-tl411-a155 or 31144?1. Good Ctindftlon, •

l.

11041.

11111 Cobro If F.., llullong,
$$00, 814-etl!-3411 altar 4pm or :t1 Fl. AlNtrNm Cimpor, Vorv
anrtlms wllklnda.
Good Condhlon, $5,700, IM1877 Buick New Trlinemlaalon, 245-8115.
Rune Goodi.,......1MI.

1990, Pres ident Saddam Hu ssein of

ordered the in vasion of Kuwait.
BIRTHDAYS: John TynIN 'THe MOP DEPAAl"MENT
(1 82 0· 1893 ), Briti s h nat ural
AT ll-4e HARDWARE 510Re. phitl osoplter;, Myrna Loy (1905- J, act-- - - -.., , - -- -- --111trEoss, is 88; Beatrice Straight 0 918-1,
actress, is 75; Carroll O'Connor 0924·
l, actor, is 69 ; James Baldwin 0 925·
1987), novelist: Peter O'Toole 0932·1,
actor, is 61
TODAV'S SPORTS: On this day in
1864, Saratoga Racetrack ope ned in
upstate New York.

H W R E

GJTTLEI

'~:~;~:~' S©~~lA-r!Gt-trs~ GAM I
- - - - -- - lditod by CLAY R. POLLAN - - ' - - -- 0. four
Reorro, ge letters of th8
scra mbled word s beWORD

low to form four simple words.

I

EVMULO

I

1--r"--Tr.-'-r--T-'-i·~:.

I I I" I ·I :.

IO

r-- - - - - -$;...,
0 L WE F L

I

Two wome.n · were
outside a divorce court.
ex-husband is complaining
about the money he has to pay
me. He says that alimony is
giving comfort to the ...... "
Complere the d lUckle quoted

1--T~i-s~~r"--rl;;_TI......:;,Ir--1

by filli ng in fh e mi ssing wo rds

'--L--'--'--L-..l-......1 you develop from 5fep No. 3 below .

8
f)

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETIER S
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

t_,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-...,.._-Ito;

whal you wan t today . bul it co uld carry a

rathe r he fty price la g. Don't lu llill yo ur
am b itious ex pecta tions at the cos t of
another.

LIBRA (Sept 23· 0 c!. 22) Put you r besl

sao.-

--··-lnaAncl

and a long. sell-addressed . stamped enve·
lope Ia Matchm aker . c/o this newspaper.

P.O. Box 4465. New York . N.Y. 10163.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You m1ght gel

.,.......lzlna

.tsc.._,

-··

ASTRO · GRAPH

~
.
'Your
W'Birthday
.

Tuosdar, Aug. 3, 1993
Your -s~ i ll s and lalents tor be1ng able to ·
m anage or being able to supervise things

for others may be utilized exlensively in the
yea r ahead . Persona:r gains cou ld result
through persons you help.

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Turn aboul•s lai r
play. Today you might have.a n oppMunity
to do something nice for a frien·d who has
,frequently assisled rou. Make an ellort to
eve n the score . Know where to looK lor
romance and you'll find ii. T ~ e Astra-Graph
Malch maker inslantly revea ls Y;lhich signs

loot forward today' if you have an opportu ·
nity to make new social co ntacls w1lhin a
rather influential group These will be pea·

AOUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) Don 'l be
discouraged today if something imporlant
isn't achieved on lhe fi rs! try. Fire and fall
back to reg rOup your forces and' try aga1n.
Repeat this procedure until victorious.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Upon occa s ion you so mel imes get emotiona l and
worry over things that may never happen.
Don't let these thought pallerns dominate
your l1le today .
ARIES' (March 21 -Aprll 19) Until a mis un-

derstanding with a friend is totally resolved.
it might be bes) not to confide in himfher at
this time. Ammunition 10 use again sl you
pie who can do what ,they say they can do
SCORPIO (Oc!. 24·Nov. 22) Condilions . could be an irresistible temptation.
are favorable today for resolvmg an old . TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Your ab1hty to
serio us l am11y problem . Get everyo ne achieve you r objectives could be impaired
together and keep at it until matters are today owing lo both s elf-created obstacles
cleared up.
and opposilion from others. Don't be too

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 21) Thmk
carefully before speaking today. There is a
possibility you fTliQht express yourself in a
manner olhers will fi nd offensive and then
not be ab le to convi nce them 1! wasn 't
intended.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Use your
common sense regardmg !tie management
of your resources today . 11 you hope to

acquire something big. base your abili!y to
do so upon what yo u have, not wha t you
hope to gel.

demanding ol yourself.
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) You might have
a touchy situation with which to contend
today similar to one th at caused yo u discomfon ln the past. Don't make the same
mistakes twice.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) Busi ness or
llna ncia l matters s hould not be lreated
indifferently today. Be cautious and pru dent, and make sure all or your moves are
founded upon logi~ l assum ptions .

l·Jo

Runner· Young· Manly· Meddle - LOUDER
"This car makes so much noise," the fellow told the
mechanic, '1hat I can't hear my wife talking . Is there
something you can do to make it LOUDER?"

E ~posu re

a re romantically perfect for yo u. Mail $2

z

GUEBW.
PREVIOUS . SOLUTION: "This Is a very excnlng time for me. I'm getting
used to mlklng people upset." - Michael Crichton.

· Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
U_,IUonal llfotlms guallll11!0· Local nflnncss fumlahld. '
Or · 1110 Chivy Chotlon, Good Colt·
0481 I__,-GI7e
" - Woi-flng.
bBody, Rlbulft Englnl, MOO, IM- tabtllhsd' 1175.
3~33.
CUnkl Home lmP&lt;O- No
1 - Chevy Corio, l•rllo Job Too Bla Or &amp;man, Y11ra &amp;·
ehltgsd 231 cu.ln., V.f (vsry
raNI, ,PI, PI, tl!!...._ ' -. Addftlona,
FOUidltlono,
bn Older
·
autom~tlc, AfC. Q,vuu ICtual
Roollna. Kftchlno /laths. lno
"'1111, aaoalllnt condition h1lldl sutW, l'rws latlltlllsa. IM-M?ol out prlos nsgotlabll 11rlow 0811.
lnqulr\M ontr, 111441124812.
-lng Ilea- And
,.., Hands Clvlo, Runs Good, Dsvlo
Vaauum Clllnsr Ropafr, , , .
Chllpl 6M-256-1733.
Plcii-Uo And Dstlvo!Y. (II . . .
~
1180 Monte Carlo, a aood oar a1 CrHII: Raed, 114 ...oaK.
olow Pries, 0111 1144112·7712.
Ron'o TV lsnlos,
Yalkowogsn Aobblt, d,_, In Zenith also III'Yiclng moil
1-500, 114-MI-lV87.
othlr brondo. -~ ­
wv
111811 Votklwsgsn 4dr., 1/o, low 304of114SII Ohio 114-441 3414.
mll~a~. 11C10ent ronnlna conlllptlo Tank Pumping
dftton; 12900, ~-.-.
Co. RON IVA,_ ENTERPIII-r-.
11187 !IYundal · 4 dr. suto
OH 1-.a1.-n.
ernlfmlnlpe, tow mileage, Idea~1
for atu~'i:cstlsnl COnctnton Will build plllo - .... ~

J

HWX

Wllklncfo,

1Wl' otda CutiHih BA, 2 door,
air, erul11, tt300 rm. :10-W?I.
1131.

R I

tZLTJWE

NDAY

ROBOTMAN~

Services
1m Chevy Bfazor 4WD; '81 .
Pl~h fourlarns, both run,
$tll00 lor both 080 1 114--9tla· - : - : - - - - , : - - - - - - 300e during dsytlms noura, no 81
Home

z

BEWQJTB

'---'--.J...-L-.---'-·- - '

Strow•Y!-~te. hom w-In

J

~

Today is the 214th day of 1993 and the
43rd dn y of summer.

'

bra~
Plg~on

aholtor
26 MUll ol
PQIII'Y
27 Het material
29 Log joint
31 Le•li• tub
33 Protocllvo
covering
37 Obtain
3B Smoker' a
llomo
42 Collogo dog.
45 Pari Of I IOVe
46 Local movie
thtalor (II.!

R TTy S ,

&amp; Grain

6 CorneHo -

1 Barret (abbr.)
2 Anpr
3 lltdlcal

By Phillip Alder

Futl bloddsd Norwlfgn Elk
Hound puppfll, llwkl old sao.
~38;:'5:G.':;-;;::;:-;;-:::--'-:;:::;
1_304;;::-8=G5o
-t241 ....rlpm. ' oofMI1sd , _ , put ,. Yin
1Gorman Short Hair PolnlorL AJ&lt;C 13500,.1
Born IJI21W3, Chlmofon Dlood 11187 Mustang connl11bts, ~ traitor lkltllnlU~ 1200, 114-2~)1.
4cr'c., aullo-. ~. red wl
1;:;;;;;;;;;--';;;;;;;--;;;== =o:- whlta
top, MIIOO. 304-471-1221.
.82 Plumbing &amp;
HAPPY .tACK FLEAIIEJCOH:
N- dovlas controto fila tn thl 1e110 Chrvotar lA Baron, sa,500.
Heating
hams without a.nlcola, Potlfto 304-6'J'I.1'Na or ·2307.
tsd dlllgn onat• bunt of light
nsu esn, roalst. Allulto ovw- 19GO Plymouth La- 41,000 .inlllllltlon ~
........
1110 .•
111111, ex.. tlsnl Condition, IMnlgftt. AolG FEED ol SUPPLY.
c.u~~~c~. • r••ntlll, eonwn..
44W714,
.
PurobNcl Bfue Heolar puppfos,
lltl Pvntlaa Grind Prbr, blus ~·~'·..;.'14-&lt;;.;.~··=lt'l;;;l::...- - - - ,,
IM-.,.24112.
tour door losdld 33,000 mllso, 84
Electrical &amp;
Aoglstorsd Rot Tsrrler, whlta .w/ -Y ~ ..,..u.;;, - 111'11,
Relrlgerstlon
bloQk,
5yra. old, hO. 304- 11\ildll '-oao, 114412·2001,
882-221 .
.
•
Schnsuzor mlnlaturoo, puppl11
arMI sdufta, oflo Poodla Plsa. ell. bi&lt;&gt;Odllnso, ball IIIIH,
Coolville, &amp;14-667-3404.

•f'••

DOWN

The unblock
and the pin

PIGGY
BANK?

SulUid
motoreycll ,
0S4101., lolo ol chro. ., , _ ·
;roo\ oM-~-30e5 or II •
sugar Run llta.
61 Fann Equipment
=.,~v.:-:mo=hs~B=-•:-:n-:•h-•-:=350::-,11-:+lr
lhlps, 11500, 1114-t4G-3010.
Dovld BroWn 1200 Troctor Wfth 11188 fiUIUid Sovags LoW lllfll.
Pl ..., Dloc, Sprayot $4,950; 354 Show R - Coiidltlon, ·fntamotlonaf, Ptow,_ DlsekL-~ Sslll114-31?ont3.
Com Planter $4,8ou, 114-~
em.
1M3 Kail1111d Bayou 220 4
Good 14 Ft. Goos.,sck Cottle w - , 1111 thon 10 houra rur;..
Trotter, 5 Y•l'l otd, $2,000; 114- nlng tlml, IM-1192-8277. ·
I
388-.
11113 lllluld Katono .600, 400
:-:
Hy:-:d:r-a-:111-.:lc.,.--,ol"'l$14=.::50:-;b:-uc-kol:-.--:
or-:50~ MUM, Ukl - · $4,600. 1~
got _$125. Sldeno Equlpmsnt, ttoe.
Hlndll'lon, WV. ~71121.
11113 Yomahl VZ 250, uoaflanl '
ooncfhlon, $3200, 814-992-8111:"5' .
J.D. 4e Cornblns Lato llodaf
With 234 Com Huds, Alllly Sululd 011250, $150; Sui~ :
GODCI CondHion, 81+2415-11824.
Rll80, MilO; Hondo CAIO, tiM;· .
o1cllllnt ooncfiUon, &amp;14-114G- .
Plutk: tanka. 215 pi, 2"" valve, 2241.
'
ponabfo &amp; d..-ablio. Gr11t for
watu or ony liquid. fllO. 30475 Boats &amp; Motors I·
525-f301 or 304-.,.3-48311,
fOr Sale
LlveS1ock
63

71

5(1 R1YW In
Germany

Opening lead: t 6

-nga.

Hay

S..tb

WHAR IN THUNDER

1187

64

17 - - Carll
HTurt

Vulnerable: Nor th-South
Dealer: North

•1!1!11\l llilllil\illlli ll·

:n=

OH., 14.001 bu-, 114-247...322.
G
·-~-~ ..- '
rwn
-n•,
••WIIuu
~--• •••"o•-•
..o..•
- - . you ,._
thlm, 114-7112·2110.

31F-ooclor
311 Vlllor3(1 Sclted. obbr.

.K l09 75

"=:::-:=::-:==-=--===-

O.nonlt

eo

30 liofl
32 llockllllt
34 Y-glttr

t?52

minor 'mlr, mo;w.ea"'uat Mil, =.'~~~, good
5• 814liking
55.
1187 T~ l'lc:koUp Wfth
58
Fruits ·&amp;
Flilllglllo C.mpor Tap, 514-3f7.
0142.
Vegetables
Conning tomll- for lllal pick =..D~~.:.\'le ~~•:."r:
your own, bring owncontanera. bid WI llnlr, 2tli0001nl, teooo.
Qons Davl8, eM-247'3263_
080. -421 .
·
--~ F.., ........._ canning IO....ton lor ..,... _._.,UII . .I
I - - . - - ~ ruet.•
b~ng own oontolnsra, IM-24~ bids. or long. No
·'
296L
_304_-&amp;_7N211
_ _ _• --~-:--Co I
y~npre\. ::'::'~,
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
lslnlnt, llarohall ....ma,..,all 1f7;1~4x~~-vyHoll, ,
Falla, 1114-247·2015.
~?I.ZlUO
• -·
.
' .
'
Conning tonat-, $41 ltulhsl, iNti Ford ,..,_r XLT, fully '
olrudr lllcflodi call e - . losdld, 4 eopt.aln ohalro, hlgll .
51160hl6o., Wli!lamo •srm, Syrac..., m11ogo, 85700. 30oW75-a:z'/.
.

114 N411t to Sun.
II Gukle
H Twice

21 lloalt'l boll

.Q.

,

Korooks alnglng and ..-ding
oyotam wnh t1'15 ShUN 1!&lt;0slonal mlc-""101-,. and 30
goopsl ..,g·-~
trocta, qnty ulld
twleo In dlurdt, hlvs t1200 InYlltod, but wilt takl $750 klr ••
or .... whhout the tlpae.
Bought hom ths Top In Sound
Company, 51+11411-2543.
DP Air Sirldor, Wolkor, Stappsr,
Joggsr, Pul11 Monitor, $170 Or
0110, 614-245o5988.
Go Kana- 3 HP &amp; up, opselol on
9 HP, In otock, llor~a Equipmont, 11+... 2-2455 or 614-742·
2580.

23 Till (Ger.)
24 Frqme~ll

SOUTH

;:;::-:-:--;-:~:--.;:::-;:'::"'-::=I ~::=,;-=:--..,..,.----,:-=---::Plano, I.Mtor Splnat; 11187 S-10 plc~up, AC. -

Unturnlshtd..r. single bedroom,

ovar NAPA. &gt;04-67!-2218.

term

.KQ9

rangoL rsltlgorotor,
atmOipnlriL, on alta
manager. EOII. 304-882·3711 or
- ..• and Apt ••
COnti b'Y toda r. ,~u
61h St, New Haven, WV.
Two bedroom apartment In
town, romodolod, $250/month,
614·n2·5333.
·

t&gt;OIIng,

tamlly

45

.A l081 5

•••• ~ :':':;
10
1
- - Upl,
-01
; 1lffll ..
frallsr wfth IMIIHin, 11200; 114MWIIII.

..,.,.t

20 HellriW litter
21 llllltlmaUCit

.10864
• K 10 ·
., 2

(obllr.)

51 IAH.,. of

IUMIIIICt

EAST

fOr saJe

111811 luH- • - XLT, rod I .
Clnnlng tomatoee, U • buaktll whlt.l, amlhn. cue.. PS, PI, PW,
Bahont1 Crul11,l doya/4 nlghta. ~5 gallon~ ~ng _, buckll, POL, :102 V.f, sun =~ high
Underbookedl
Mu•
Mill =*=-·tll-;-'-11-.:;2411-:-':.e_~:---,.,.~I mllll, $1500.1S.....a48•
$279/eoupts. Llmnsd tlcklla. Conning , tomatooa. pic•~
407·787-8100
111. we. Mon·S.t, $4.00/ bushll, pl.::,r.our own -$3/ .,A
Motorcycles
9:00AM
· 10:00PII.
r..
bulhal, ·bring
lnera, iSM- =~~::::--:::-::;--:;~~=
Buck Stove, u.d very ltttll, 247-4292 anytime, Raymond 1m Honda 710, E.C., ~
mull ..u• I lklng $500o Cl Ill....
Row..
new tii'M, chlcln and eprocue,
~
1710,
614-n2•7312 oftltl' Sptn,
n2-6855, INve ms~.
Conning . tomll-.
S.yro

Spaclow 2 bedroom 1pt 11 car-

chllll,i414-9i2olll24.

WoN

. QJS

tmoke _il•n • • 111M with 4

m -2218.

AC, V2 Mils From Govln Buy or 1111. Alvl!'lno Antlqusa,
on .At. 12_~
S2751Mo. t250 O.poalt, 114-367· 1124 E. llaln
0438.
· Pomoroy. Houra: II.T.W. 10:uu
a.m. lo 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
2bdnn. apte., t~al electric, ap- to e :oo p.m. 514-m-2521.
ptloncn lumlohsd, !sundry
54 Miscellaneous
familY room with lireP'ael, nie4i lllddloport1_ Ohio, Bosch St., t
room
an~IMCy ...-tumlahed
lev~ lot. eM ... 46-1381.
Merchandise
apartment, utllitile Hid, ref. &amp;.
HouM For Sale: 2 Bldroome, dopoaft. 304-882·256ll.
2 Tqtor Soft Slrvo lcs cr..m
Family Room, Full laHmant
mocfilnss, 1 hll lhlks maWith Flrapt.cs, 11.._-aen.
_ , flclhilll1 oloss to ochool chlns, 3 plt111. Hat tabll w/
In town. ~~c.~ttona available sn-• guord. lMQI llllhlng.,..
Slvs 15000, roohr los. B~ck II: Vlllogo -~~...., Apta. .ce or ,_ olgn wl lattaro. 1 llsetronlc
ho..• , 3br., kit., dlnlngroom, cill 814~82-3711. EOH.
caoh raglatoro. Ellc:trlc grfll' on
llvlngroom,. 1 112 bath, family , :;--;;:-:::-;--;:-,,'-----,,-- whllla. 3 oh•• or lfngls
room,
Andttreon window•, 4
Aocme,
Bath,
Newly ph-. 814-114~.
scrson room pond, 2 car Dscorotsd Fum- Hoot, Rangs,
gorags, outbuilding, 10.5 ocras, Rolrlgor1tor, No Pill, Newly 24 Ft. Round Pool (Nssdo S77,ibO. 3ml. trom town. 304- Decorated, Dlpoelt Required, ' Linor) Comptato W\th All Ac-.
sori11, $500. IM-361'7123,
.
675-1210.
614-4441o11113.

------

0

&amp;.Ollsnl Csndhlonl Loolto •
Good - g: 14.715. 6...... '
4223 11111' 5:00 .......
~

2

:::f. I

g:go. 183 Mlhon Rd, c 1
Oopoalt, Utllltlll 614·38&amp;-9080.
lay, appllanc• lnclud . 11 Bedroom Apartment In Gal·
304 -6 7&amp;-1636·
' llpollo, 614-146-11221.

17 Sllool
110•tt.rn-·

~

43 S:or Jilin
44 . . . ..
41 Cltttrch
tnltntmtnt
47 liowtelUnlon

110 Part of tile
tYI

14 Hut unit

- . -lie. AII/AI
Control
LDclt8,
. . . .- c.. !
......
.._1
Ons o.n-1 ;
-"1-Car. -Tohl ,

53

Apartment
lor Rent

+AQt

.,..,.

1.. Ofdomoblle Dslta ...
IM'' ......, PI, Pl1 PW, p...r i

O.poelt, Available Auguat 111:,

Juat 8 MIIH From Gallipolis, On

SA 218" HUD Wotcomo, 1275/Mo.
Wotor "old, 614-25&amp;-1393.
Two 2 bedroom trailers. O.posh
and Ralerrenc:n required. 614446·1104.

.J 7U
.K J5

c.rot -

osr- ' '

.,......___

Wal'l'lnty 1298; AoMgslltor AKC
A~tglllorsd
Coeksr
Froat FrH $150i...Aolrlgslltor 2 Spanlota __2 Aduno, 1 Mateil 1
Door White, tl25; Ho4polnt flm~ll. 1wnh 2 Pupa, Chain nk
Washer llkl New1 1 v.., War- Fence, All For 1500, 114-448ronty S205· Whlnpool W11hsr 4110.
t150; G.E. W11hsr $125; Clothll
Dryer Sts; 30" Elsctrfc Rongs AKC 8cottllh Tsrrlor pupplss,
$95; T.V. Conoote $1l5; lllrt"'l em1ll, norHMddlng, OM mate,
Wringer Waeher $150; Skagge one ftmale, hMnh .au-r~nteect,
Appllanc11, 1114oo44&amp;-73N, Oi I· Athono, 114-5114-487T.
800-4K-34et.
Doblnnan AKC , Rogillsrod
SWAIN
Puppl .., All Shoto, Porlnlo On
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Pramt.., 61W. .1450.
Olivo St., Galllpolla. Now 1 UMd
furniture, hut.,., Wntern &amp; Famalo Dalmatian 12 Mcntho
Old, Good With Chlldrsn, . 114Work 114-44&amp;-3158.
441-2075.
W11hlr~ Drvor, Rofrlg~r~tor,
Color t.V. ~f'Mzer, Air c.on.;. Flah Tonk, 2413 Jscklon Avs.
dltloner,
Camper
Size Point PINsaJO, 304-675o20U
Aefrlgarator1 Mlerow•ve, 814- lull llns Tl9pleat lllh blrda'
1
256·1238.
amall enlmale and •uppltM.
'

44

lront poreh
large r.dwaocl d~k Overlooking
ravlns Iron hor11 50'132' buildlng with cement tloor, 10'x12'
ulnil~ building, loc1lld McGrath
Ad., lilt oft SA33, I mlloa North
of omeroy, Home Nlltlonal
Bonk, Rael~o.L. Ohio 45771.
Phone 61+114,....10.
5 bedroom brick home, 1 112
bath, alsctrlc hill ond olr

Parking. No Palo. Coli Bafc.-a ~
~ 11 11'1-44&amp;-0338
' ·'
'
.
Ono bsdroom apsrtmento,
1225/mo. lnclud,o utllftfll, ttoo
MeurHy dopooh, no psto; 614-

Hie• mobile home lOla tor up to
16x80 hom" bltwMn Athens 6
Pomeroy, $85/mon., 614-H:ii!-2167. OuMn IIZI, braq bed, brand
now, 1250. 304-882·238l

~--:--------- . 1 1!2 Bedrooms, 2 Mllu, North
3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath onoctlld Of Vinton $275/Mo. + 1 Month

tlolly fumlohod

~~~~ 1kt::_1 ~ ut:n'l:~1

51

Loco! Vending Route: t1,200 A
Wnk Potont111. Muot Soli. I-80G955.0354.
'
Name Your Own lnc:ome Make
Fortune At Home, OWn Dual·
nns, Prollla Dally, Gaurantlld.
Fr11 Detalle, 212-265-fl100, Ext. 5 Roome And Bath, GoOd Loca·
lion, Inquire At e16 Slcond
2117.
Avonuo, Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;3373.
Point Pluaant-exc. neighbor·
hood, roung, 3br., 1 .112 bath,
large family roam, rantJ1MSI . .

All real estate advertising In
this newspapar Is subJed lo
the Federal Fair Housing Ad
of 1968 which makes II Illegal "
lo advert ise "any pref ere~ .
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
58)( familial stalus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitati on or Qiscriminatlon.'

-~

reaeonable rntrlctlor., county
water, Information mailed an ,..
qUill, :JCM.675-52!53, pi•..• no
alngle wide tn~U.ra. ·

Renlals

Y4. T:1~
c.-. L.-w .........

ll.argl

12 lt'l cOidl
13 Autltor Jove•

1. . - .

54

din llldlrbecke
4 Plodl

11=•
11 Sour

ALDER

..

out. 1-10111. ... lila 2117.

out-

f8nt In Pomorvy, 114-ee2-8868,
ahor 5pm or wook--•o.

II(

er-orm

NORTH

lllrtfnlo,

IIU!o.,

Fumllhsd sfflci~~&gt;CY, S11l5/mo.. l
no
Fourth
Ava.,
Utllhl11
paid, 514
441 Oalllpotla.
4411 ohor
7 pm.

tor

PHILLIP

..........
"••IIH
I,....

40 Appeared
41

-111--..-.
--.c
1.. -,.-rp
- .....-

L-:===::::;=====1---------172 TI'UCJcs

plio. 30+675-2Ut.

Nice 2 bedroom apartment

800-837-3238.

NEA Croeeword Puzzle
ACIIOU
1 Juz mUll-

Teplla Coloa tiT,
1
1
111M. 111 1
_·
, 121011.IIOW7NIIa.

Fumllhed
Efflelsney
t165
UtiiHioo Pold Sltel'l Bath, 0117 4 Plsos BadiOGm Sulta, $150,
~':'7'1\3.-ll(polla, 114 4,46 4411 114 441 1127.
:;--;---;,--;--;~--;-::--:--:- 4'x5' llgn frlmo Wilt' poll. GT
Oraoloua living. 1 ond 2 bsd· II Arrowlllld IIOtlon Alarm
room 1ps11mon11 at Vlllogs l)'ltam oomptsts w/1111-, ~~7•~2291
MlrM&gt;r
and
Rlvsralde Nil of contscts,
alton,
-~ ~
·
Apal1monta In Mlddloport. Frvm Ulld vory 111111. 2, 2 !r.:O:•:~r~:~o:.'t'oc~~: $20 2. Coli 814'"2-5115&amp;. EOII. ~~i,i.~blnsto, II"- MW. 3045yr. w•rranty,
eawnare In- New Haven, 1br, fumleh~
ouranco, ond 1 yNr 01 lrll lot opartmont, dep. &amp; rsf. :104-&amp;82- . 5 Plsce llopto Dlnatto Sit, Good
ront, oil for only $1771mo., coll1· 2566·
CondiUon, t150, 814-446-1000,

2 Bsdroom Mobllo Homo, 614446-6731
.
Eno Aru: 11ae Skylln• 14170,
241 30 Clarogs, 1 112 Aero,
$26,000; 11182 Schuh 14x70
$t 1,000; 11170 Rabat With 121&lt;24
Home care tor your kwed 008 In Addhlon On 1/2 Aero t15,000
fomlly core homo In lllddtoport, Currsntly Rontsd Th- Hud
$275/Mo. 614-44&amp;-6373.
614-ft2·5042.

~ roup

Public Sal.e

3

Wanted to

Athono, OH 45701.

Ya rd Sale, Mason AUio Glass
Building, Rt. 33, Mason, WV., lntarnted In Workl~ During
Tue. Aug 3, 9:00am.
The Winter Monthl To Pay Oft
Those S.aeonal 81117
Galli polis
Preparing Income Tax:• Ia Your
Answerl "DanTax Is Looking For
&amp; VIcin ity
EmP'oy••• In The Huntington,
:1: miles north o f Holzer Hospital WV, Gallipolis, OH Areu We
on Rt. 160. Adult and teen age Will Train. Book Fss $70.00
clothing, j:lollad plants, lh.lwer Comprehensive 13 WK Ccuraa,
stand, books, dis hes , and· misc .

18

4p.m.
regular leaching ataft: LD · Gsnsrot Molntononcs, Polntlng1
T11chor at Molgo High School Yard Work Wlndowe Waahea
and Selene-' MathJPhyalcal Outtora Clo1nsd Light Houllng,
Education Teacher at Meigs Comm~"!~ AHidoJOiol, SIIVI:
Ju nior High (E.. mentary c.r- 614-44&amp;-teoo.
llllcatlon).
Gsorg11 Portable Slwmlll don't
haul your loGo to ths mfll lull
Babrotner N11dsd, In Mr Homo, colt 304-875·1lll7.

P.O. Box !110, Galllpollo, OH
45631, Anenllon: Carol Bowel'l.

2 tamlly yard sale, 1 V4ml below
Ashton Railroad, Mon-Wed,
9:00-5:00.

(l./ "''&lt;11

r-

else bike, horae taek, lmlf. ..
Hys•ll Run Rd., 2 miles on right.
Gigantic

"

'-------- --""T-- -------;
Aa

2nd-6th, Bam till ?.
Womans . clothll, ahoes, llfl r·

.......

G) lla3 b) NEA, 1~ .

11

--

"-nt,
- · 114112"11
lor In . ...
Pl.

IIIOVIM. Cell 111111

·Pomeroy-Middleport,

1la Cluwtla, ..._ ......

u-.

'-l'lll-1~"1

Aug.

6pm.

dm0111 haiM, lncludM

2, 1993

71

· - sBridal
d Sml.
Firat - Codlr Apalt-1
Firat
ltavo..on At.1ntnt
124, And
St, Clalllpolla.
Porttsnd, Ohio. 'Mil COfllkfor Slnl~, Dlwblld, l Hlndlcoi&gt;'
uaed mobfls hams 11 ·pa~lal Did, F01HA lncoms Alllrlctld,
trads, 304-2n-5270.
· llonto llu4d On 30% 01
=;;:..;.:..;..;;;;;,..;;;;..;;._ _,._ Ho\lllhold lncoma. AppfllncOo;
32 Mobile Homes
c::r:~ On-slta Laundry, AJC.
A doni Paye Elletrlc utiiRr
for Sale
Only. Firat HoQar Apln...,. . O!llnsd For ()c..
S'185.M per month, new 14' wide ~- For (ntonn•Uon Or To .
mobl'- ftcttM, lncludll dlllvery, Requ..t An Apptlcation call
complllo llt·up, oklrtlng, 111!11 814-44t-1aOO, Or Wrne 111 Holar
and I months lot rsnt; t-aoo- Aportmonta. • 553
Sscond
834..e825.
Avenue, Ganlpolle, OH 45131 E'n Schultz, r~tly rMnodaled, qual Houelng ~'-'nhy.'
12xM, $5000, 814-843-5286. ·
Fum- Duptu.
1br,
$225 phil llsetrfc. Ground lloor,
11t11 Buctdr, 12ic50, good ohaps, 1br, s:zes 111 . . lfsctrfc. 111 • v.r.
$4500, 814-n2·70n
non Avs, rot. &amp; dop., no Hud, no

I

Sund•V lldlti9n· 1 :OOpm Friday,

Aplrtlllent
for Rent

..,h ~A~w.":':"'"i..":

doe"- • walks, outbulldlnge I

All Yard SaiH Mu!Jt Be Pakl In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the
Monday

44

31 Homes for Sale

Lost: EyeGias- In Grey Cass,

7

3--

&amp; Found

Monday, August 2, 1~

tpaJt 1 o13i

�PIQI 1G-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy native celebrates
50 years religious life

Dar Au h-chn: An furmao
B·.S2 bomber naviplor IIIII DOW 1
pliwaee piloC, I love DyiJ!a. Ia Clllly
1~, I heud of an ::t':izetign
called AirLifeLine. 1bil I 1f0UP .
or volunteer piloiJ from II"OUIId the
ANN LANDERS
nalion who donale their lime, skills,
"1993, Lo. Ancel eo
planes and fuel to provide free
Tim.. Syadkote
Cre111ton Syndicate''
air transportation to ambulatory
medical patients.
I received the fust call from
AirLifeLine two months after ~ him to help me by l~pg up
. placing myself on its roster. A r~dto frequencies and _taxiway
17-year-old cancer patient's coadi· Signposts, He stopped being an
lion had worsened, and he had to ambulance ll8SSCIIRcr and became a
go to San FranciscQ for ueaunent crew member.
immediately. "Jack" lived in an
Although the Dying was preuy
~laled pan of Northern California.
routine, I felt diffc:m~L Ia fact, I fell
He was too sick to lake an eight- terrifiC. I have never experienced
hour bus ride and couldn't afford an such an overwhelming aense of
airline ticket
accanpliahmcnt is I did that day.
Nothing prepared me for what ran
AirLifeLine and I saved Jack 8nd
· through my head when I saw this hiJ family -a lot of anxiety and
kid. My fii'St thought was, "How in expense.
•
the world am I going 10 fit that
Ann, I hope your column will
wheelchair into my plane?" 1 was direct alletllion to 'this incredible
also a little aniloye4 because Jack public-service organization. We
seemed to have an "attiiUde" and desperately need donations and
made some belittling comments more volunleer pilots. I also want
about my "bug-smasher."
to put out a call to patienls, their
I finally realized that Jack didn't families, pbysicians and social
have an attilllde - he was just plain · workers: fl.se KS. If the airlines or
scared. I gave him a headset so we
other ll'8IIS)IOrlalion companies.won't
could talk without shouting and take you b«•nse of your condition
or if the cost of transponalion f~
treatment is beyond _your means,
call AirLifeLine. The toll-free
number is 1·8()()..4.46.1231. We go
strictly on the basis of need, and we
fly on your schedule, not ours. ••
POMEROY - The Meigs
DALE F. BROWN, PILOT,
County Bookmobile will observe
AIRLIFELINE
.
the following schedule this week:
"(uesday - Am-ericare, 11:30DEAR DALE BROWN: We
12:30 p.m.; Darwin, 1-2 p.m.;
checked out AirLifeLine, and it
Burlingham, 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Wildcame up with a 100 percent,
wood Estates, 5-6 p.m., and Baum
five-star rating for competence,
Addition, 6: 15·7:30 p.m.
compassion and generosity. AirLifeWednesday - Racine, 12·4
p.m., and Letart Falls, 5-7 p.m.
Thursday - Tuppers Plains, 2-4
p.m.; Reedsyille, 5-7 p.m.1 Long
Bottom Post Office, 7:15-8:15 p.m.
Family members of Helen GrinFriday- Maples, 12:30-2 p.m.;
stead of Letart, W.Va., ask cards be
Overbrook, 2:30-3 p.m.; Pomeroy
sent to her in honor of her birthday
Pike, 3:30-4:30 p.m., and Chesler
on Augustl4. Her address is:
(Keebaugh's), 5-6 p.m.
Helen Grinstead, Arthur James
Saturday - Rutland, 9-1 p.m.;
Cancer Hospital, Room 1030, 300
Danville, 2-3 p.m., and Salem CenW. Tenth Avenue, Columbus, OH
43210.
•
ter, 3:30-5:30 p.m.

Ann

Landers

KYLE JOHNSON

Announce birth

SISTER GRACE GARBER

James and Betty Johnson of
Middleport announce the birth of
their lOth grandchild, a grandson,
Kyle Gregqry . .
The son of Kay Johnson, he was
born on June 25 at O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. He weighed nine
potmds, six ounces and was 20

Cincinnati, and has also served as a
part-time music instructor at St.
Vincent de Paul in Cincinnati. ·

Bank account titles
affect SSI eligibility
By Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in
Athens
Having your name on someorie
else's bank account could keep you
from getting Supplemental Security
Income (SSI)," says Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in Athens.
"If you are listed as a co-owner of a
bank account, Peters.on says, we
must count the money as yours
even if your name is there merely
as a convenience to the account
holder."
Mr. Peterson explained that people cannot get SSI if they have
assets (including bank accounts)
worth more than $2,000 ($3,000
for a couple).
Here's an example. Janice
Jones, applies for SSI. Her daughter, Stephanie, has $3,000 in a sav·
ings account. Stephanie lists Janice
as a joint owner of the accountprimarily so that Janice will have
access to the money in case some·
thing happens to Stephanie.
Although Janice doesn't consider
the account hers, Social Security
does. Janice could be found ineligi ~
ble for SSI because she is over the
$2,000 resource limit.

If none or only some of the
funds in the account belong 10 Jan·
ice, she can retitle the account to
restrict her access to the funds or
reflect a situation where Janice is
acting solely on behalf of
Stephanie. Janice could also
remove her name from the account
or move any funds belonging to her
to another account.
Proper titling is also important
when community, civic, or social
groups collect money for a special
reason, such as to assist an SSI
recipient pay medical expenses.
"For the money to satisfy ils
intended purpose." Peterson says,
"the donors must place restrictions
on the use of the money and title
the bank account in which the
money is placed to show these
restrictions. As long as the account
title shows the money cannot be
used for food, clothing, and shelter,
the account is not considered a
resource." If you would like more
information on helping to set up
bank accounts involving SSI recipi·
cots, contact the Athens Social
Security office at 592-4448, or call
Social Security's toll-free number,
1-800-772-1213, (business days
between 7 a.m. and 7·p.m.)

'

AirLifeLine receives five-star rating

When the sisters of Charity of
Cincinnati celetinued 1993 Jubilee
Week at their Mount St. Joseph
Motherhouse outside Cincinnati
Pomeroy native Sister Grace
Graber was there.
She joined 29 olher celebrillors
for a special mass and dinner on
July 18 to celebrate their 50 years
in religious life.
Sister of Charity Grace Graber
has devot~ her life to the ministries of teaching and music. For
34 years she taught in grade
~chool.s in Michigan and Ollio,
mcludmg St. Mary, Greenville,
Sacred Heart, Dayton, St. Mary,
Marion, SL Patrick, Cincinnati, St.
Bernard, Spiingfield, SL Charles,
Kettering.
.While at St. Charles she coordinated the parish ceo program
(1976·1981). Since 1982 she has
been the parish organist at St.
Aloysius-on·the·Ohio outside of

2,1993

Meigs Bookmobile
schedule posted
TIMOTHY STONE

Stones announce
birth of son
· Tim and Kelly Hamilton Stone
announce the birth of their son,
Timothy Cole, on June 16, 1993.
Cole was born at Mount Carmel
Hospital, Columbus. He weigh~
ntne pounds, four ounces and was
21 1/2 inches long.
Maternal' grandparents are Tiny
and Bonnie Whittington of Har~
risonville, and Paul and Brenda
Hamilton ·of Athens. Paternal
grandparents are Elmer and Sarah
Stone, Dexter.

Card shower

Every

Line is a brilliant, hUllllllillrian con- cq11. and I am delighted to tell the •
world about iL
'
My rtadm should also know that
patients are pennitted to take a
companion along for emotional
1UpJ101L Also, in Qrder to qualify for ·
AirLileLine, patients must have a
letter from their doctor or social ·
worker indicating the diagnosis and ·
the reason for the trip. They
also have some evidence that ~
is a financial need for this service.
AirLileLine provides transportalion from airpM to airporL Patients
muSt be able to get 10 and from the
airports on their own.
I don't usually pitch my readers
for contributions, but if anyone out
there would like to send a few
dollars 10 this ttuly great group, I .
think it would be mighty nice. My
check for $100 goes in the mail
today. The address is: Air(.ifeLine,
1716 X St., Sacramento, Calif.
95818.
Gem of the Day: A liypocrire is a
person who is not himself on
Sunday.
Wh.!n planning a wedding, who
pays for what? Who stands where?
'Tit.! Ann Landers Guide f9r Brides"
has all the answers. Senla self-ad·
dresud, long, business-size envelope
and a check or mDMY order for
$3.65 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send .
$4.45.)

Ohio Lottery

Baseball

Pick 3:
870
Pick 4:
7855
Buckeye 5:

roundup
..
Page4

19 ~20-24-26-31

Property transfers
Beulah Udvarty, dec'd, cert, to
Tony L Udvarty. Columbia.
Tony J. Udvarty. parcel.to Kathy
L. Spencer and Gary E. Spencer, Columbia.
John Krawsczyn, Sr., certoftrans,
to Billie Jo Krawsczyn, Middleport
Village.
John Krawsczyn, Jr., Celia R.
McCoy, William David Krawsczyn,
Jennifer Krawsczyn, Mary Virginia
Pri~. David Price, Martha Jo l)nrein
and Donald Unrein,Lor3JO, to Billie
Jo Krawsczyn, Middleport Village.

a
Vol 44, NO. 68
MuiUmodlalnc.

Community Calendar itel!ls
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calen·
dar.

Pomeroy Council approves truck purchase
·By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
In a meeting marked by the
absence of long-time Councilwoman Betty Baronick, who is currently
listed in serious condition in the
intensive care unit at Grant Medi·
cal Center in Columbus after suffering a fall, Pomeroy Village
Council Monday night approved
the purchase of a new pumper-rescue truck for the village's volunteer
ftre department.
The new truck will replace a 25year-old truck and represents a
major upgrade in the village's ftrc
fighting capability, Councilman
John Blaettnar said.
. Compared to the old truck,
which features a 750-gallon water

tanil:, a 750 gallon$-per-minute
pump and 2 1/2-inch hoses, the
new truck has a I ,000-gallon water
tank, a I ,500 gallons-per-minute
pump and four-inch hoses, Blaet·
tnar,said.
The old truck has served the vii·
!age well and was state-of-the-art
25 years ago, Blaettnar said. However, it is now obsolete, he added.
The new truck is powered by a
Cummins diesel engine which is
more reliable than the older truck's
gasoline engine .. The new truck
also feawres a built-in air compressor with air lines to power air-driv·
en rescue equipment, Blaettnar
said.
WiU serve dual role
In addition to its role as a

pumper truck, the new truck will
also carry all the rescue equipment,
including the Jaws of Life and air
bags, now carried in a separate
vehicle, Blaettnar added.
This means firefighters can take
one vehicle to accident scenes,
instead of two separate vehicles,
Blaettnar commented. Less person·
net will be needed to respond to
accident scenes.
Plans are underway to convert
the current rescue truck iniO a haz·
ardous material truck which will be
used in situations involving haz-_
ardous materials.
"Most people don't realize the
amount of hazardous material that
comes through this area by truck
and rail," Blaettnar said.

---u.-H food judging

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in council chambers.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School, First Southern Bapti st
Church, Monday through Fnday,
6:30-9 p.m. Call 992-6328 for
transportation.
CHESTER - Connie Karschnik,
R.N., Meigs County Tuberculosis
Nurse will conduct a skin testing
clinic at the Chester Fire Station
from 5 w 7 p.m. All food handlers
are required w have yearly tuberculin slrin tests. The public is welcome. All firemen, EMS ·personel,
church workers, fair workers, col·
lege bound students and children
entering kindergarten are urged to
take advantage of this free service.
For more information contact the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Office
at 992-3722.
RUTLAND · The Rutland
Church of God will hold v;)Ction
bible school for children ages two
to teens the week of August 2·6
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. The title of.
the program is "Celebration ParkProclaiming Jesus Thoughout the
Year!" For more information call
742-2060.
REE DSVILLE - Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, vaction
bible sc hool Monday through Friday from 6-8:30 p.m . across form
Forked Run State Park. For more
information call378·6175.
RACINE - The Racine Chapter
134 Order of the Eastern Star will
hold its regular meeting at 7:30
p.m.
SYRACUSE - Suuon Township
Trustees will meet at the Syracuse
Municipal Building at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet in the Meigs
High School Band Room at 7 p.m.
TB testing will not be done al the
meeting. Help is still needed for the
fair.
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly m ~eting at the
Page ville Town Hall at6:30 p.m.

l

I

(

CHESTER · The New Life
Covenent Church of God will hold

TUPPERS PLAINS · Hickory
Hills Church of Christ will hold
vacation bible school Monday
through Friday, 7-8:30 p.m. Ages
two through junior high. Call 6fJ76973 for details.
SYRACUSE · London Pool will
offer lifeguard training starting at 7
p.m. Class fee is $25 . Students
must he at least 15 years old . To
register call 992-9909.
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
will be having vaction
bible school Mo~day through Fri·
day from 6 to 8:30 p.m. This year's
theme is "Digging for God's Truth
and the Great Dinosaur Hunt." Dr.
Digger will be there every night
and there will be a great dinosaur
egg hunt on the last evening. Ages
are 3 to 13 years. Call 992-6768 for
more infonnalion.
Churc~

Food/Drink

Rite Aid

MIDDLEPORT • Skin testing
clinic, Tuesday, 5-7 p.m ., Middle·
port Fire Station. Cards issued
Thursday 6-7 p.m.
POMEROY • F.O.E. Auxiliary
#2171 will hold a meeting at 7:30
p.m. there will not be a potluck
dinner. New members will be initiated.
MIDDLEPORT .· Middleport
Lodge #363 will have a meeting at
the Masonic Lodge at 7:30.
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee meets Tuesday at
the Burlingham Modern Woodman
Hall at 7:30p.m. Public invited.
· WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Ora]lge
Township Trustees, Wednesday,
7:30p.m. at the home of the clerk,
Patty.Calaway.

EXTRA STRENGTH

199.

70Z. OR
TARTAR CONTROL
OR GEL 6.4 OZ.

Coke

D•leI c0ke

12PI.
120Z. CANS

~~LCAPS

479

.RITE AID
12 HOUR
NASAL SPRAY
1 oz

299
.

Coke &amp;
Diet Coke ~:~·z. "II 259

GILLETTE SERIES
MEN'S
TOILETRIES
2 .25

Mr. Bee 6.75 oL
Potato Chips

TYLENOL

299

12 Pit.
12 OL CANS

MAXIMUM STRENGTH

OZ. TO 9 OZ.

NEOSPORIN PLUS
OINTMENT
1/2 oz.

BIC
BUTANE
LIGHTER

PHILLIPS'
MILK OF MAGNESIA

LADY SPEED STICK

c

99

Photo Center
KODAK GOLD PLUS
COLOR FILM

LET ART • The Letart Township
Trustees will meet at the office
building al 7 p.m.
TUE:SDAY
CHESTER • The Pomeroy
Chapter #186 of the Order of Eastern Star will meet al 7:30p.m. at
the Chester Masonic Temple. 25
year pins will be presented.

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

35 MM-100 SPEED OR
110FILM- 200SPEED
24 EXPOSURES

299

1.5 OZ .. CLEAR 1.3 OZ. OR

120Z.

TEEN SPIRIT
SOLID 1.5 oz.
BY MENNEN

159

FREE
Set

I

0. B.
TAMPONS
27'S

yol~r

precious me mo~,., to the expcns!

F

.

NICE'N EASY
HAIRCOLOR
ASST.
· BY
SHADES
CLAIAOL

Free 2r&lt;j Set of 3 1!2" OA 4" P1001ium Film
l'nlcessin&lt;J Prints wilfl OVOfY rtJI Pf'OCI!S$Odl
Choose Kodalux Processin&lt;J fa finer detail.
shaope&lt; images and optimum color.

Tn1st

tu/l

PANTENE
SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER

499

70Z.
TO
13 OZ.

299

VELCRO
PRO CATCH
GAME

499 .

s ,,,,(,\ hm ... HACK-TO-SCHOOL

Services
Rn'E AID PHARMACY
ACCEPTS MOST MAJOR
PRESCRIPTION PLANS.

PAPER MATE
FLEXGRIP PEN
FINEQR
.
MED. POINT

ASST. COLORS

RITE Alq ACCJPTS ALL
MANUFACTUUR'S
COUPONS.
.

A summer or work on 4·H
projects ends with judging and
the weekend was a time where·
hundreds or boys and girls
brought in their "best" for
review by specialists in their
respective fields or expertise.
Friday it was food at the
Senior Citizens Center, Satur·
day it was miscellaneous pro·
jects at the Rutland Civic Ceo·
ter.
Interviews is an important
part or all judging and above
J'ssica Hamilton tells Athens
nutrition education, Joyce
Brown, about her ."Tricks ror
Treats" project. She brought In
ham and cheese kabobs for the
taste test and then talked about
planning a menu, setting up a
recipe file, and basic nutrition.
Ldt, Kelly Canan of Kid
Connection 4-H Club arranges
her first year project, Let's
Begin Cookin{'· She prepared
a rruit t~ay wttb a strawberry
yogurt dip. (Photos by Char·
lene Hoenich)

deparunent, Reed said. I just want
council to explore the idea.
Offi cers servi ng as auxil1ary
officers must have police training,
Reed said.
In addition, council di scussed
revisillg the existing loiLCring ordinance to extend beyond the parking
lot and iniO the downtown area.
In more routine matters, council
approved the mayor ' s report of
$4,714 and gave a second reading
to a resolution approvi ng the place·
ment of a renewal of a five-year,
one mill fire prolCction lev y on the
November ballot.
Prese nt were Reed , co un cil
members Blaettnar, Sco tt Dill on,
Bill Young and Larry Wchru ng,
and Clerk Kathy Hysell .

ODNR evaluates safety
of Vinton County dam
authority over the dam, was not waler divi sion. which ha s no
conclusive.
. Bonny Arthur-Huffman, secretary· ·
Reed said the division was tak· treasurer of Sands Hill . "We do
ing core samples to test the strength not like to be the subject of these
of the dam's material and was plan- kinds of allegations that would lead
ning to hire another consultant. The our neighbors to feel that they are
U.S . Office of Surface Mining also in some kind of danger. It's commay investigate the safety .of the pletely unlrue."
dam.
David C. Cowherd, president of
The dam was made mostly of Bowser·Morner, said the dam is
shale, a thin rock formed by hard- similar to aboui 100 other dam s his
ening clay. There are no other rock · firm has designed in other states.
dams -of this size in Ohio, Reed He said there is nothing wrong with
said. State engineers believe. that the shale, the filtration system or
shale is too weak unless it is· com· the surface materiaL
pacted. which is not the case in the
The division of reClamation,
Sands Hill dam. ·
under ODNR during former Gov .
Reed said there also were con- Richard Celeste's administration,
cerns about the unusual design of approved the con struction of th e
the dam's filtration layer and about dam and its modification in 1988,
whether the outer layer of the dam
although some division engineers
was properly constructed.
safety concerns.
Sands Hill officials and Bowser- hadWarren
he was trying to
Morner Associates, the Dayton find out whysaid
the
diviengineering firm that designed the sion overrode thereclamation
concerns
of
its
dam, said the dam is safe.
own
staff
and
other
engineers
in
"We do things right here," said
approving design modifications.

Willis _enters plea, gets delay
Maj. Bernard Doyle, the lead
SUMTER, S.C. (AP) - Senior
;·defense
attorney, said he could start
Airman Jeremy "J.J." Willis has
the
coun-martial
thewcek of Sept.
said publicly that he is guilty of
27.
killing his esuanged wife, but he
Willis, 23, formerly of Ironton,
hasn't yet entered a plea on the
Ohio,
faces death-penalty murder
charges he faces.
and
other
charges for the Jan . 4
Willis was arraigned Monday on
shooting
of
his 30-year-old wife,
20 charges, including premeditated
Marie
"Mary
Ann" Willis: at the
'
murder, four counts of attempted
Myrtle
Beach
Air
Force Base legal
murder, two counts of assault and
office.
two counts of desertion. He was
given until Sept. 13 to enter a plea " She was shot after returning
so that defense lawyers could pre· from Rhode Island to press abuse
pare pretrial motions, The (Myrtle charges against her husband.
''I'm guilty as sin, and I did it
Beach) Sun News.reported today.
because I Iov~ her," Willis told

reponers Monday as he was led to
the hearing at Shaw Air For ce
Base. "It's the only reason ," he
said.
Some of the charges :Will is faces
relate to his June 6 escape from a ·
Navy brig in Charleston . He was
recaptured in Fort Worth, Texas.
The military judge, CoL J.
Jerem1ah Mahoney, ordered WJihs
and lawyers not to talk about the
case and asked reporters not to
question Willis. If his orders are
disobeyed, Mahoney could close
the trl31 to the pubhc, Shaw offi·
cials said.

State board approves package
deal for new jobs in southern Ohio

2nd

Premiwn
Quality Prints

The new truck will be purchased
. Mayor Bruce Reed said he disfrom Dills Fire and Safety in cussed the problem with village
Ravenswood, W.Va., for approxi· . police officers and plans were
mately $196,000 if financing can · made to take action to remove old
be approved.
furniture and trash, and enforce leiCouncil kicked off its meetin~ tering and trespassing laws.
with several residents of the Spring
In addition, Reed said he plans
Avenue area who are concerned to contact some property owners
about people loitering in the road and force them to remove trash
and problems related 10 the loiter- from their buildings.
ing, including trash being deposited
In a related matter, one option
and stored in and around area presented to council by Reed was
buildings.
the formation of an unpaid auxilOne man, who displayed pholds iary police force to assist regular
showing trash around a neighbor- officers on· weekend evenings.
hood building, commented that
"We do have a problem late at
people are loitering in the streets night in Pomeroy," Reed said .
and added that it's just a marter of "They come out at night."
time until somebody gets hit by a
I have no idea what it would
vehicle.
·
cost to form an auxiliary police

COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)State officials are trying to deter·
mine th~ long-term structural
soundness of a Vinton County dam
that was approved despite the con·cerns of some engineers, an official
said Monday.
The Ohio De,Pat?.Oent of Natural
Resources said Its division of water
has classified the long-term opemtion of the Sands Hill Coal dam as
highly hazardous, according to a
report in The eolumbus Dispatch.
ODNR Deputy Director Wayne
Warren said the dam - 100 feet
high and 300 feet deep - is
expected to operate for 20 years.
The reservoir has water and sediment about 15 feet deep, about half
of what is permitted.
Division unit Supervisor Jerry
C. Reed said that a complete col·
lapse of the dam would release
enough water and sediment to
swamp parts of Lake Alma State
Park and Wellston.
'
But the classification by the

a campmeeting Monday through
Friday at 7 p.m. nightly. There will
be three speakers and special music
by Gary Turner and the New Life
Covavent Singers.
ROCK SPRINGS - First South·
em Baptist Church will have vaction bible school Monday through
Friday, 6:30·9 p.m. Call 992-6378
for transportation.

1 Section. 12 Pages 35 cents
AMultimedia inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday August 3, 1993

Community calendar
•

•

I

must

Low tonight In mid-60s.
Wednesday, partly cloudy, high
In 80s.
·

79·
•

PEN-TAB I
POLY
•
BINDER
112 INCH WIDE

---

.

99

«1:

For~ Rite Aid Pharmacy nearest you...caii1·800·4·DRUGSTORES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state Controlling Board
approved development financing
packages designed 10 create almost
1.400 new jobs and save 1,000
more, most of them in southern
Ohio.
The Department of Development also won approval Mondny of
a $75,000 road im~vement for an
expansion that Airborne Express
said it would retain 4,500 jobs and
add 1,338 others in Clinton County.
In other business, the board
released $11.9 million in school
building assistanCe for three school
districts in Scioto County and
OK'd two contracts for services at
the Ohio Staie Fair, which opens
Friday and runs through Au~. 22.
· Mills Pride Inc. received state
backing for an $11.4 minion bond
' package to expand its kill;hen and
bathroom cabinet business in

Waverly.
posed .to retain 106 jobs and create
T)le department said the $29.4 119 o~er three years.
.
.
million project will help the comAtrborne Exl'ress received tls ,
pany retain 610 employees and add grant 1_0 help ~tth a $6.1 mtlhon
945 by mid-1996.
rel~uon of Airport Roa4, part of
Lincoln Electric Co. of Cleve- a maJor _expanston that mcludcs
land which makes electric motors . constructton of a new runway at the
and 'welding machines, received a old Clinton County Air ~orce Base.
$4 million, low-interest loan and a
The l~g~st of the_S~IOto.County
$304,085 grant as part of a $19.8 sc~~l dtstrl~ts receiVIng 81~ for a
million.expansion project.
butldtng _proJect w~s. Washtngton
George Kaitsa, development Local, with $6.5 million ..The. oth·
department finance director, said ers were Valley Local, $1.9 '!''!lion
the assistance will enable Lincoln . and Northwest Local, $3.5 mi~IC?n.
to retain 200 jobs and add 300 over
Pet~r Ktng, state J?xposttton
three years in an area hun by Gen· CommiSSion finance dtrector, got
era! Motors Corp. cutbacks.
board a~proval of a $193,244 c~n·
Royal Ice Cream Co. of Cleve- ·tract wnh K~S Inc. to provtde
land received a $1 million loan for "'!eats for. ~xhtbtlc;&gt;rs and othe~.eli·
a distribution and office center to gtble parttcipants m the 1993 fatr.
retain 84 jobs and create 15.
He asked to watve btddmg
ABS Industries Inc. of Carroll becaus~ KFS illready has~ contract
County received $6;46 million in to pro_v•de food at non-fm events.
bond fmancing to expand its forg- He sard It would cost too much 10
ing operation. That project is sup- . move someone else m for only 17
days.

PAVING CONTINUES- Tom

~tayle

and

Sons Construction, Bartlett, Ohio, ls continuing
paving operations in the viUage of Syracuse. The
paving, funded by Issue 2 grant runds, is expect·

ed to be completed Wednesday. Here, the paving

crew rinishes a portion or road in the Rustic
Hills area. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

I.

.1

(

.,,

I'

"

'\1

·'

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="351">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9666">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32641">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32640">
              <text>August 2, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6408">
      <name>cropka</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2234">
      <name>fick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="963">
      <name>kesterson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="32">
      <name>powell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
