<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10223" 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/10223?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T22:38:10+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20663">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/331e3e93d7862cbea17453df3f994590.pdf</src>
      <authentication>52941dc8b78d97007f893c496c84814a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32648">
                  <text>.
Ohio

Reds
defeat _
Rockies

Beat. of the .Bend...

Family
Medicine

by Bob Haeflich

Jolm C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor ·
of Family Medicine

~~:; w•,lio. .&amp;..nee

the
canperacure may reach
ol F..U, Medkllle
lOS to 107 degrees and cause saiOIIIo alftniiJ Collqeai'Oiteo- ous damqe 10 the liver,lddncys,
patblc Meclldae
brain and heart. This is called heat
.
stroke, and it may be falal without
Question: Last summer a friend immediate medical inrtzvention.
of mine became seriously ill on the
Question: What can I do If I
golf COUi'se and had to be rushed to swt having any of these sympthc· hospital. The doctors said he toms?
Answer: Mild
had heat stroke. J'rn concerned that · heat-related illness is fairly comI might overdo golfing Ibis surnrncr mon. I think most people have
and develop beat stroke. How can I wQrked or played in the hot sumteD if I'm in dangeJ'I
mer sun until they were so hot and
Answer: Our organs operate tired that they didn't feel well. This
efficiently in a very narrow range is mild heal exhaustion. The beatof internal body temperatures, mcnt fa- this is simple. Rest in the
about98 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit. shade while drinking plenty of liqThe reason we can funclion well in uids. An equally effeclive alterna'
rnany enVironments - with a wide ti ve is to have a bit of water to
variety of external remperallltes drink, then take a quick dip in a
is m.t the human body has effec- swimming pool or lake. This lowtive methods for controlling the ers your body temperature and
temperature of the organs in the replenishes the warcr you've lost
head, chest and abdomen.
throu~h perspiration. You will be
In a warm enVIronment, the back m action fast
body generates rnore 1\eat than it
The most serious form of heatneeds to keel? the organs at their related illness is heal slloke. One
optimal working temperature. The inrcresling - but not always prebody deals with this situation _by sent- symptom in heat stroke is a
pumping the warmed blood to lack of perspiration even though
areas where its heat can be released the person is very, vety bot. A perto the environment. This is why on son Wilh heat stroke will be weak
a hoi day you become "flushed" as and confused He or she may even
the circulalion in the blood vessels become unconscious. Immediate
close to the surface of the skin is. medical attention is necessary to
increased. Not only is the blood save the person's life.
close to the surface; bUt- as I'm · If you think someone has heat
sure you know - the tl:mperature stroke, caD emergency medical setexchange is augmented by the vices immediately. While waiting
cooling effect of evaporation of for the ambuance 10 arrive, move
sweat from the skin.
the viclim into the shade. It will
Normally these and other tern- help lower the body tempellllUre if
perature-control mechanisms, you spray his or her bare head,
including air exchange in the lungs, chest and abdomen with cool but
do a satisfactory job. In some situa- not cold water. Offer liquids to
lions, however, such as prolonged drink if the person is able, but
· exercise while in bright sunlight on abOve all else, call for emergency
a bot summer day, these methods medical services .
may not be sufficient to keep the
I'd suggest that you have a good
body temperature down where it time playing golf this summer. Just
belongs.
be aware of the symptoms of heatIf the internal temperature of the related illness. If you stan getting
body increases above the optimal hot and tired, bead for the club
level, the body' s organs start to house. Don't wait until you develwork less efficiently, and this can op the full symptoms of one of
produce teUtale symptoms. A mild these disorders.
·
elevation;· say to a temperature of
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
101 or 102, causes some general column. To submit questioas,
muscle weakness, nausea, write to Jobn C. Wolf, D.O.,
headaches, dizziness, muscle Oblo University College or
cramps and clammy skin. This Osteopatnic
Medicine,
milder form of heat-related iUness Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio
is called heat exhaustion. In the 45701.
most extreme cases of heat illness,

James Bircbfield who operates by the Meigs County Historical
the Birchfield Funeral Home in Society, the Mei~s County ~~k
Rutland received a fractlll'ed leg in District, the Oh10 Humamt1es
a four•wheeler accident ilJ the Rut- Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities plus some
land area Tuesday.
James was taken into Grant other locallll'ganizations.
ActuaUy, over that weekend you
Hospital, Columbus, !ly helicopter
and is expected to be confined ·can be cruising down or up the
there for lhe next week to 10 days. river which is kind of neat at variMeantime, his family has made ous times. The P, A. Denny will
arrangements for full coverage at arrive at the old historical Portland
the funeral home during his landing at4:30 .p.m. on Fri&lt;lay and
absence so operalions will continue from 7 to 8:30 p.m. there will be a
dance on the small excursion bOat.
there.
.
The camp of the enactors will
You might want to send James a
word of encouragement. His roorn open at 9 a.m. Saturday and you
number is 727-A, and lhe hospital are invited to visit the camp site
and meet some of lhe participants;
is located on Town St.
Demonstrations will be featured all
It seems impossible bUt ready or morning. ln. the afternoon Ray
not the Meigs County Fair wiU be Swick will present material on
opening for its first full day of Buffmfton Island and there will be
a Civi 'War sing-a-long followed
activilies on Monday, Aug. 16.
If you are one of our residents by a skirmish by the troops. The P.
who takes part in the senior fair A. Denny will bC doing an aftercompetition, then you 'II want to noon cruise and at 4 p.m. Mike
make sure you h\lve your exhibits Gerlach will tell the audience all
entered into the judging. Closing . about Morgan's Raid. The Denny
lim.e for open class entries is 4 p.m. will do a twilight cruise al 7 p.m.
_. on Thllfllday, .j\ug. 12, and the Fair and a wiener roast will be held at
Board Office located on the fair 8:30p.m.
·
grounds will be open frorn 10 a;m.
By the way, Mary Powell of the
to 4 p.m. on both Wednesday and Park District, says that there has
Thursday,
Aug. 11 and 12, so that been a lot of worli: done in Ponland
MARKO THE CLOWN
you can complete the necessary in order to provide easier access to
paper work to get logged in.
the river and to provide a better
You must fill out your own traffic flow.
en-try blanks and you m•ke the
On Sunday, the camp will again
decision on the ·classes you enter open ti&gt;.the public at9:30 a.m. and
.your items. However, board per- at 12:30 p.m. a. b~ball game will
sonnel will be on hand to accept be lhe highlight with another skiryour entries during the designated . mish demonstration takmg place at
"Marco the Magic Clown" will in g_rad~· school, learning mo~e hours on both days.
~: 30 p.m. The camp will ,break up
be performing at the Meigs County mag1c tricks fiom books at his local .
at 3:'45 p.m. and at 4 p.m. the
library. As a fulllime entertainer,
Public Library Thursday at 7 p.m.
Of &lt;;outse, just preceding the Denny will be doing a one-way
Described as one of the "liottest Marko performs at hundreds of fair will be the enactment of the cruise downriver so you if you take
acts in the midwest", Marko com- county fairs, feslivals, schools and Battle of Buffington Island, Ohio's that one you really can be "cruising
bines his fast-paced magic and libraries. Recent performances only Civil War major battle, being down the river on a Sunday afteraudience participation to create were at Ameriflora, Circleville · held at Portland, Aug. 13, 14 and noon", just like in the song.
entenainmcnt fill' lhe entire family. Pumpkin Show, Charleston Stern- 15. It's something like 130 years
. Behind the magic and makeup wheel Regatta and many television since the battle took place' and
With so mucll.coming up, if
of Marko is Mark Wood of Jack- shows.
Morgan moved through Meigs you're one of those people who
son. His interest in magic star1Cd in
He is a member of the Interna- County.
wants to do i( all, I su!lgest you
I966 when he ordered his first tional Brothethpod of Mag-icians
The observanCe is co-sponsored double up on the vitamm tablets.
magic kit from the back of a cereal ~d recently taught magic/clownAnd do keep smiling. ·
box.
mg workshops fer Ohio University.
He conlinued 10 perform while and the University of Rio Grande.

"Marco the Magic Clown'
to perfonn at library

--News policy-In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Senlinel
will not accept weddings after 60
days from the date of the event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees meet Thursday
at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestiy Building.

RACINE- Racine Post 602 will
meet Thursday. Dinner will be at
6:30 p.m. with meeting at 7 p.m.
Boys State delegates will give their
REEDSVILLE - Fellowship reports.
Church of the Nazarene, vacation
bible school through Friday from
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup6-8:30 p.m . across form Forked pers Plains VFW Ladies Auxil~
Run State Park. For more informa- will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
lion caii378-617S.
the post home.
CHESTER - The New Life
Covenant Church of God will hold
a camprneeling 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 Southern Baptist Church will have_vacalion bible school through Friday.
6:30-9 p.m. Call 992 -6378 for
transportation.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Hickory
Hills Church of Christ will hold
vacation bible school through Friday, 7-8:30 p.m. Ages two through
junior high . Call 667-6973 for
delails.

POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church will be having vacation
bible school through Friday from 6
to 8:30 p.m . This year's theme is
"Digging for God's Truth and the
Great Dinosaur Hunt." Dr. Digger
wiU be lhCre 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
information.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. at the horne of the clerk,
Patty Calaway.
CHESTER - Tuberculosis skin

Members of the Rock Springs
Better Health Club and the United
Methodist Women enjoyed a picnic
recently at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
Lenora Leifheit had prayer
before the dinner attended by Phyllis Skinner, Agnes Dixon, Dorothy
Jeffers, Frances Goeglein, Barbara

must be submitted within 30 days
of occun:ence. AU birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence..•·
·
All material submitted for publication is subject to edining.

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 70

.Meigs Commissioners support pumping project
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Slall'
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners took a stand in support of Southern Ohio.Coal Company' s pumping of the flooded
Meigs Mine 31 during its regular
meeting Wednesday.
In a letter faxed to the office of
·Governor George V. Voinovich
concerning a threatened U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-order
to stop the pumping, commissiQners wrote:
''This would be a devastaling act
against not only the coal miners but
.also against the complete county of
Meigs. We would hope that you
would be able to somehow inter-

vene in this mattel.
'
" Anything that we, as a board of
county commissioners, _can do _to
stop this order from bemg dehv- .
ered and shutting this pumping
down please advise."
~commission also sent a similar letter to Congressman Ted
Strickland (D-LucasviUe).
(For more information concernin$ the situation at the flooded
mme see related story El'A buller ·
dodg~d in pumping operation.)
Afterwards the commission met
with Gregg Richard, representing
Buckeye Employee Benefit Services. Inc., a health care consortium representing several Ohio
coumies.

Richard extended an invitation
to the commission to join the consortium saying _the consortium
offers the benefits of lower cost
and more stability.
.
Commissioners accepted literature from Richard, but made no
decisions on the matter.
New tecbnology, casements
Jerry Six of Pomeroy, who has
been investigating the feasibility of
an area industrial park utilizing a
concept he termed "energy ecosysterns,' approached the commiSSion
asking for a letter of support and
furthermore asked them to apply
for a federal grant so he could further examine the proposed technology.

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange meets Thursday, 8
p.m. Annual inspection. All members attend.
·

Fry , Michael Leifheit, Louise

Bearhs, Helen and Amber Blackston, Fern Morris, Mary Showalter;
Sharon Folmer, Norma Baker, Nettie Moore, Pandora Collins. Iris
Collins, Virginia Wears, Harriet
Sinclair, Tracy Beaver and Nancy
Morris.
·

• rSPN Si'OltiS CFNTER • CNN 24-IIOUR WORLil NlWS • ULUI: IU ON I\' ON 1180

0

;:

~

....
G

:j

POMEROY - Salisbury Town- -;:
ship Trustees meet Thursday at •
7:30p.m. at the hall.
;

....
"·

RUTLAND - The Star Garden
Club will rneet at I p.m. .Thursday
at the borne of Mrs. Virgil Atkins.
Mrs. Robert Jewell wiU be co-hostess.

~

CALL TODAY!
WATCH TONIGHT!

~

~. CALL BY NOON

.

m

~

~

•

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church,
Pearl Street, wiU have a missionary 8.._'""
service, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m.
with the Rev. and Mrs. Phillip ~
Knisley of Mission, S. D. Rev. •
John Neville, pastor, invites the "'
public.

~

L\UrKING

I=
·+

MAN TROUBLE

U.S. OPEN HNNIS .0

"""
'L

;...

s..,!E

.

t:

~
,...,

&lt;.:&gt;

POMEROY - PERI will meet ~
Thursday at I p.m. at the Senior -;;
Citizens Center. All members ~
urged to attend.
~

PORTLAND - The Portland
FRIDAY
First Church of the Nazarene will
RACINE - Racine Fireman
hold vacation bible school Thurs- Ladies Auxiliary, ice cream social,
day through Sunday from 6:30-8 Friday at S p.m. at the the f~rehouse
p.m. wilh program Sunday at 10:30 · annex. Hotdogs, slopp:,: joes, pies,
a.m. For ages up to 12 years. Call cake, tea and coffee available.
843-5154.
1UPPERS PLAINS - There will
LOTI'RIOOE - Lottridge Com- be a round and square dance Friday
munity Center Association meets from 8-11 :30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Thursday ai 7 p.m.
Plains VFW Hall with music by the
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public
TUPPERS PLAINS - The invited.
Meigs County Health Department
will offer afree community immuLONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
nization clinic at the Tuppers •Gospel Church in Long Bottom
Plains Fire Deparlrnent on Thurswill have preaching and singing
day from 9-11 a.m. for !lges two Friday
at 7:30 p.m. with Pastor
months through kinder~n age. Steve Reed and local singers. PubBring Child's immunizallon record. lie invited. FeUowship will foUow.
ROCK SPRINGS - Eastern AthREEDS VILLE - The Mei¥.s letic Boosters meet Friday at 6:30
County Health Department will p.m. at the fairgrounds.
offer a free community immunization clinic at the Reedsville Fire
SATURDAY
Department on Thursday from 1-3
POMEROY - Bedford Town· p.m. for ages two months through ship Volunteer Fire Department
kinder~arten age. Bring child's
Committee will sponsor a square
immwuzation record.
dance Saturday frorn 7:30-11 p.m.
at ·the Meigs County Senior CitiPOMEROY - Pomeroy Group zens Center. Admission is $2 single
of AA and Al-Anon will meet or $3 couple. Music will be by Out
Thursday at 7 p.rn. at Sacred Heart of the Blue. There will be a caiCe
Calholic Churth. Call992-5763 for walk and other contests.
information. HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville
Lodge meets Sarurday at
RUTLAND - The Rutland
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments will folTownship Trustees will meet
low.
All
master
masons welcome.
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut-

~

AND GET CABLE INSTALLED BY TONIGHT. FREE! ~

~

.....
...
~

-~

·~

'

-"'...
0

..

&lt;:i

g;

~

&lt;::&gt;
-:

-

HB8

'-'

.....
""

--

USA

1:::::11""1 I

VALID AUGUST 3-4-5 ONLY!

~

•:::

r-:

"'
::::
... FREEE INSTALLATION (REGULARL\' 139.95) F1RST MONTH OF SERVICE' ONLY '9.95 ':

"·•
:!J
il5

"'
,:
...,

YOU SAVE OVER sso.oo

0

.o

~ - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - -- ~

•
:!J
5

rLUS! ADD Hl8 OR ImBfjjJ[fJ[J AND GET YOUR SECOND MONTH FREE!

o - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - -- -- - - - - - - - - --

.I!!
~

~

~

!::::

CALL NOW!
1-800-766-0553
•

· ·?::
.,-;
C&gt;

•

5l
'"'
n

r::

'"
~·

n

"'

•

=:;

••

0

•••

••

•

•

II'E

CAREl

CdrleVISion
~

.

;;

-

IF \'OU ALREADY SUBSCRIBE TO CABLE, CALL TO SEE HOW YOU CAN GET ONE MONTH FREE. ~

§

Q

•

~

-'·

8

•

•Oiftlt.BXPNSJMl AND IS SUBIBCI'TO ALL Alft.ICABLBFiiiiJ ANDTAXIIS. APPUBSTOCABLBVISIOH SERVIOi ONLY
•

ANDUV.ALIDPDRSUISOUIERS INWIRID SDYQARIASONLY.

RBroi...AJt MOJrmLY RWI APPl.Y IORSIOOND MONTH OF SERVIQ. OffiBI APPLES TO STANDARD INITAU.ATJON IN WIDBimAL UNrTs

AltO ON JIRIWAJI.YOOTUITONLY. UilD.USTRJC110NS MAY Al'ft.Y.

*

*

•·

M,AN TROUBLE
THE LARRY SANDERS SHOW
MO' MONEY
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
STAY TUNED
CLASS ACT

*

•

' "

*

Bank, Racilie. Pictured bere accepting tbe
plaque for the bank is Roma Sayre, Syracuse
Branch manager, and Tom Wolfe, president of
Home National. In lieu of a planned pool party,
bank employees and their families will be admitled to the pool tree anytime next week.

. APPRECIATION PLAQUE • For a contribution or $1,000 wbich played a signifant role
in getting Londoo Pool ope11bis.sammer, Tom
Lowery, pool manager, right; on behalf ot Syracuse VIllage wbicb operates tbe pool, presenteclj
an appreciation plaque to the Home National

,,-,

r1l

A"
'11'

Q

1!l

B~ically an industrial park. Six
explamed the proposed facility
could be used to pre{'l!fe material
for.recyclmg along w•!h other purposes..
. .
Usmg a h1gh -sulfur coal furnace, sulfur emissions would be
controll_ed _by ~senlially di_slilling
the. emiSSIOns mto s~lfunc .acid
wh1ch could be sold, Sa explained.
Later, commissioners met with
Brent Bolin, manager of Leading
Creek Conservancy District, along
with County Engineer Robert
Eason ~nd Highway Department
AdmmiStrator Dave Spencer, to
disc~s the possibility of lhe county
!lrantmg .an easem~nt for water
lines leading to the Site of the pro-

posed Meigs Motel near the intersection of U.S. 33 and Ohio 7 at
RockSp~~·
.
CommiSsioners S&amp;ld lhey would
be willing to grant an easement
pending a survey of the site at the
conservancy district's expense.
Otber business...
. In other matters, the commiss10n:
-Announced a meeting of the .
Meigs County Budget Commission
will be held Aug. 17 at \' a.m. in
the auditor's office to discuss the
county's 19?4 budget;
- Rece1ved a letter from Ferrellg~s indic_
ating the company is
ter;nunaf:in~ 1ts lease c;m the county s bulldmg on Umon Avenue

near State Route 7 effective Aug.
31;
- Considered a request by
County Recorder Emogene Hamilton to start a new equipment
account. Recently passed legislation allows county .recorders to
start funds to purchase new equipment;

- Approved a resolution 10 prepare a grant application for a New
Horizons fair housing grant;
.- Approved weekly bills of
$37,240.90.
"·
Present were Commission PreSl'?
dent Robert Hartenbach, Vice President Janet Howard, Commissione&lt;
Manning Roush and Acting-Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

EPA dodges bullet in pumping operation

f'.

"'
;:;:)

AMultimedia Inc. Newapaper
I

:::

land Fire Siation. Public invited.

2 S.Ciiona. 12 PIIJM 35 c•ta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 5, 1993

MulUrnecllalnc.

JlKl'AM ON • Ml iKlli'K\111. WKOii'. • M.\ XOl!l

•

Low tonJcbt Ill 601. Friday,
partly cloudy, blgb Ia 70s.

•

'

'

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Church of God will hold vacation
bible school for children ages two
to teens through Friday frorn 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. The title of the program is "Celebration Park-Proclaiming Jesus Throughout the
Year!" For more information call
742-2060.

Pick 3:
310 "
Pick 4:
0530
Super Lotto:
7-14-22-28-34-36
Kicker:
582638

Rock Springs Health club meets

I,

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items testing cards issued Wednesday, 5appear two days before an event 6 p.m., Chester Fire Stalion.
and the day ot tbat event. Items
MIDDLEPORT - Missionary
must be received In advance to
·service,
Middleport Wesleyan
assure publication in tbe calenBible
Holiness
Church, Wednesdar.
day, 7:30p.m. wilh Rev. and Mrs.
Philip Knisley, Mission, S.D.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
POMEROY - The· Pomerov
School, First Southern Baptist
Church , through Friday, 6:30-9 Masonic Lodge No. 164 will meet
p.m. Call 992-6328 for transporta- Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Middleport Masonic building.
tion.

Ohio Lottery

. -meet with them to present our plan,
By JIM FREEMAN
and address any concerns they
Sentinel News StaiT
.
Southern Ohio Coal Company's have," Smith said.
"We initiated the water removal
efforts to pump water from its
flooded Meigs Mine 31 will contin- plan under lhe conditions imposed
ue despite a recent attempt from the by order of the Ohio EPA. It is a
U.S . Environmental Protection plan Which meets the dual needs of
removing the water quickly with
Agency to halt the operation.
U.S . . District Judge Sandra the least environmental effect.
Beckwith on Wednesday placed a OEPA, ecological experts and
I0-day restraining order against the (American Electric Power - parent
EPA saying its actions were based comnanv of Southern Ohio Coal
on grounds earlier considered and Company) envirnnmental specialaddressed by the Ohio Environ- ists are continuously monitoring
mental Protection Agency which the streams," she added.
The latest salvo froin the federal
has approved the company's plans
government
came five days after
to pump water from the flooded
the
company
received permission
mine.
to
pump
the
Hooded
mine.
Company officials were notified
Friday, Beckwith ruled the U.S.
Tuesi:lay that the EPA planned to
Department
or the Interior's Office
issue an administrative order to
stop the water remqval operation at of Surface Mining overstepped its
Mei11s Mine 3I. •ait1 lU . Smith. jurisdiction when it issued an order
prohibiting the company from
company swkeswoman. .
A heanng qn the company's pumping water from the flooded
motion for a preliminarY injunction mine.
will be held August 11 at I p.m. in
Operations were suspended at
the United States Courthouse in the mine after it was flooded by an
Columbus.
estimated billion gallons of water
"We took this legal action so during the weekend of July 11. The
that we could continue the water water broke through a bulkhead
removal process without interrup- connecting Meigs Mine 31 and the
tion. We are in contact with U.S. closed Raccoon Mine 3, coiT!;;a.~;·
EPA officials and have offered to officials reooned.

Voters approve 9 of 42 money issues

Trooper says:' feds likely
to prosecute York's killer
.

l

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Federal authorities are considering civil rights, consi)iracy and
mcketeering charges in lhe.piCketline slaying of a nonunion contractor, a newspaper reported.Thc charges would be filed if
investigators could not prove the
shooting of Eddie York was premeditated, the Charleston Daily
Mail reported Wednesday, citing
unidentified police sources.
York, 39, was killed July 22
while crossing a United Mine
Workers picket line at Arch of
West Virginia's Ruffner mine near
Yolyn, Logan County.
Arch ·of West Virginia's parent
company, Apogee Coal Co., last
week filed a federal lawsuit accusing the UMW of racketeering
through strilce violence.
No one has been arrested, but
state police said 14-UMW members who were on the picket line
that night are .suspects. Col. Thorn
Kirk, state police superintendent,
said earlier this week !loopers are
waiting to collect more evidence

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) lo~:Yer i~ special elections th~ in
Light voter turnout in the special . pnman~s or _general elecuon~.
elections to raise taxes for school Tavakohan SBid. Voter turnout 1s
money issues was not unusual, the · light because there are fewer issues
Ohio Department of Education on the ballot
said.
·"The people that tend to make
But passage of the issues on the effort to ®me out are the ones
August ballots has traditionally who really feel strongly. And usubeen higher, Susan Tavakolian ally the one~ who really..feel
(pronounced tah-vab-KOH' -lee- su:ongly are gomg to vote no, she
uhn), director of school fmance for said.
.
.
the department, said Wednesday.
She wd tax me~ propose!l
Voters approved 21.4 percent of to help _reduce f!ie nauonal def1c1t
the school money issues in Tues- may have co,nvmced some voters
day's special elections - below they couldn t afford more local
average for August balloling.
taxes.
Voters. approved only nine of
Voters on T~esday _ approved
the 42 issues on the ballot in 37 of eig~L of 2? operaung lev1es and.one
Ohio's 6I2 school districts.
of SIX caprtal1mproveme~ts lev1es.
On average , Ohioans have . They defeated all -~•ght bond
approved 27 percent of school 1ssues proposed for new construeissues in August elections over the uon or renovauon and a I perc~nt
past nine years.
·~come taX for the R1verdale disThe passage rate usually is mctofHardinCoun.ty.
Forty-one of the 1ssues had been

•

before ihey make any arrests.
- The UMW said it had nothing
The UMW has denied any to do wi.th fires that damaged supports on a Pond River railroad
involvement in York's death. .
Federal prosecutors from bridge in DrakesborO, Ky.
Charleston joined the investigation
UMW international representaMonday . U.S. Attorney Mike tive Steve Earle said the union was
Carey has declined .to comment
not responsible .
Sgt. Glenn Ables of the state
police detachment in Logan said
the U.S. attorney~ s office is likely
to handle the case if arrests are
made.
"There's a wide range of
charges available (at the federal
level). We're goin~ to open every
door possible to us, • Ables said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
More than I 7,000 union miners assistant Ohio attorney general said
are on strilce in seven stateS, includ- today he was fired from his job for
ing Ohio, against members of th_e refusing to abandon his campaign ·
Bituminous Coal Operators Ass~l­
Congress.
ation over job security. The strilce for Bill
Damsel, 37, of Worthingstarted May 10.
ton,
said
he was fired on Friday by
In other developments:
Attorney
General Lee Fisher. Fish-NegotiatOrS for both sides
er
told
Damsel
he would have to
·said they met separately with federquit
his
job
if
he
planned to run in
al mediators Wednesday. But coal
the
Democratic
primary against
associacion representatives left
U.S.
Rep.
Douglas
Applegate of
Washington, D.C., without plans to
SteubenviUe.
resume talks with the union.
Damsel said he received a·onesentence notice infonning him he
was fired from the job he had held
for six years. He was paid $40,227
a year.
Damsel said eatly today when a
than analysts had been expecting member of Congress can get away
although they cautioned against with applying pressure to try to
reading 100 rnuch into a one-week force a challenger to withdraw,
movement.
"the system is probably more
Claims had been expected to messed up,· than most of us even
recede slightly given the fact that imagined. '
·
the previous week's figure was
Fisher and Kate O'Malley, his
inflated by a two-week layoff of chief of staff, said they determined
267 000 workers by General Damsel could not campaign and do
Motors Corp. in order to retool his job as an assistant attorney genplants for 1994 models.
eral at the same time.
The total national figure
Damsel said Fisher and O'Maldeclined even though Labor ley told l!irn he had to give up his
Department anal ys!s said that the campaign because they were getflooding
in the Midwest was con- ling pressure from Applegate, a fel·
tinuing to ·be felt in increased num- low Democrat
bers of people showing up at unemFisher and O'MaUey denied any
political molivalion.
ployment offices.

Assistant
state attorney
general fired

.

~--:-----:-----:-;----'--:-:=:::----·-:=------~-------·

..'

!
'

----- -- -

---~--

presented to voters at least once
before. Two were on a ballot for
the lOth time.
The closest race occurred in the •
district that requested the most millage, 17.9 percent Voters in Galion
in Crawford County approved a
continuing operating levy by eight
votes, 1,580 to I ,572, according to
unofficial results.
The county elections board said
the total did not ioclude voters who
may have moved and voted at the
board offices.
Five of the 37 districts had
obtained state-backed loans 10 stay
open, Ms. Tavakolian said,
Voters passed issues in two of
the five, Midview Local in Lorain
County and North Baltimore in
Wood County. The other three districts are Big Walnut Local in
Delaware County and Brooklyn
City and Warrensville Heights in
Cuyahoga County.

Prospects improve for
Clinton's -deficit-cutting plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
Democratic leaders hurried President Clinton 's budget bill toward
final judgment after prospects for
passage brightened when key legislators came over to the president's
side.
•'This agreement is lhe firSt step
toward getting our fiSCal house in
order," Rep. Martin Sabo, DMinn., chairman of the House Budget Committee, said Wednesday
night while preparing the plan for
House action today.
A final version - 1,800 leUersize, typed pages - wasn '.t submitled to-the House by Sabo until Sen.
Dennis DeConcini, who opposed
the original Senate version,
announced his support Wednesday.
DeConcini, D-Ariz., had ·been
heavily wooed by the White House.
He said lie won concessions on
deficit reduction and Social Security taxes, and Ointon had persuaded
him to support it.
"Bolh my arms feel twisted, I'd

Jobless-claims down
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans filing firsttime claims for jobless benefits feU
sharply last weelc even though
more flood victims showed up at
unemployment offices.
The Labor Department said
today that new claims for unem,
ployment benefits dropped by
60 000 to '336,000.
It was .the
.
biggest one-week 1mprovernentm a
year.
This irnprovem~nt folloWed ~o
straight weeks of mcrcases, wh1ch
had driven ihe weekly claims level
up to 396,000, the highest point in
10 months.
the improvement was bigger

Biolo~iSts hired by the·company
have indicated the water, which is
high in irnn and slightly acidic. wiU
disrupt aquatic life in the streams
into which it is being dumped.
However, they maintain the damage don11 to .the environment is
reversible within several months
after lhe cessation of pumping.
. ·:The company has pledgeJ to ·
m1Ugate any short-term effects on
the streams to speed up their natural restoration," Smith said.
"The streams are expected to
recover rapidly beginning within a
few days after pumping is completed. Ecologists predict no long-term
environmental effects," she added.
The company began--:pumping
water from the mine Friday about 1
1/2 hour after Beckwith ruled
against the Office of Surface Mining._Company spokeswoman BJ.
Smith satd pumping operations
were not halted at any time
Wednesday.
Lo~ally, the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners penned
several letters to state and federal
officials, including Gov. George v
Voinovich and Congressman Ted
Strickland, urging them to support
the company in its bid to drain the
mine . .

-·- --~-- -~ - . "·
•

I'

¥uess you'd. say," said DeConcini.
·And maybe his do, I don't
know.''

·

· Down Pennsylvania Avenue,
applause broke out in the •White
House when DeConcini made his
statement at a news conference.
But with the bill's fate hinging on a
single vote, the administration was
wailing for a waverin~ Sen. Bob
Kerrey, D-Neb., to say if he would
stick by Clinton.
The plan claims to cut the
deficit by $496 billion over ~e
next five years through $241 b~l­
lion in tax increases and $255 billion in spending restnlints. CliniOn
and top Dem~ll!ts portray ~t aS the
only live or.uon for slowmg the
government s flow of red ink.
Votes in both the House. expected late today, ~ in the Senate as
early as Friday, would be close, as
they were whe~ the two c~bers
originaUy cons1dere&lt;! the btll. The
original House versiOn passed by
only six votes, and the Senate's

cleared only after Vice President
AI Gore broke a 49-49 tie.
DeConcini 's vole was crucial
because one lawmaker who supported it before, Sen. David Boren
D~lcla., said he would vote "no•:
this lime.
In the House, Rep .. Charles
Stenholm, D-Texas, a leader of
Southern conservatives, said be
would no longer support the bill
because of the gasoline-tax
increase and because he wanted
more spending cuts.
But Reps. Charles Wilson, DTexas, Carolyn Maloney, D-N. Y.,
Paul McHale, D-Pa., and Tim
Johnson, D-S.D., announced they
would support the bill after having
opposed it the first time.
Republicans have been unanimous in their opposition. However.
Sen. Mark Hatfield. R-Ore., said
Wednesday he sliD had not decided
defmitely to vote against the biU.

�...

&gt;

:Th::u~::::·A:ug::u:~:5:·=1&amp;w.:=3:::::=============~-----------P~o~m~e~~~y~·~•=AI=dd~l~epo~rt~,=O~hl~o--------------------------~~~!D~m~ly~~~nt~ln~e~l~~~g~•~f · ~

. Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
D,ttVOTED TO THB IIO'ZRESTS Of THE MEIGS-MASON ARBA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~ARGARET

LEHEW
Controller

General~anager

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welCome. They should be less than 300
words. All letleiS are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be io good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

"

Excerpts
from
other
"
:Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
Akron Beacon Journal, Aug. 2
How does a nation of immigrants deal with the issue of illegal immi·gralion?
Many thought the question had been answered successfully in the
1980s. Congress approved immigration-reform legislation. It became illegal for employers to hire undocumented workers.
In practice. the changes have made little difference.
Thus, President Clinton last week asked Congress for more money and
new laws to tighten the borders.
Illegal immigrants often have a positive impact.
Yes. they take jobs, although the number is often exaggerated. They
also add vitality to the economy, staning businesses, buying goods, creating opportunities for others. They pay sales taxes. They rarely seek welfare.
Clearly, illegal immigration sl\ould be discouraged, if only because
others wait years to enter legally'. But, in recopizing how difficult it is to
halt, Americans shouldn't despair entirely. Thts is a nation of immigrants,
a country that, for all its problems, remains a beacon of hope and promise.

Chillicothe Gazette, July 19
Tbe House passed a measure tO send $3 billion in aid to Midweslern
flood victims. The vote canle only after a week of pllrtisan congressional
wrangling in which Republicans sought to block the package unless it
included enough budget cuts to pay for the aid.
Not that DernocraJs were completel)r setness. Some of them attached
an unrelated rider 111111 would give a $100 a week stipend to participants in
a job-training pro~ for disadvantaged youths. ·
We're disappomted in both parties. This isn't a time for partisan bick·
ering.
When an area falls victim to an extensive disaster like the floods, all
taxpayers should pitch in to help. It shouldn 'I come out of the hides of
Medicaid patients, Social Secunty recipients or military employees just
because Congress needs somewhere to cut
This also shouldn't be an opportunity for pork-barreling. The job-training addendum doesn't belong m a bill about flood aid. This sort of thing is
the best argument we've heard for giving the president the line-item veto.
The Lima News, July 29
. The 40th anniversary of Cuba's communist revolution was a quiet,
grim affaii'. Missing for the second consecutive year were the marches
and parades. Fidel Castro spoke, as always, but his tone and words were
somber and revealing.
He admitted his Workers' Paradise cannot survive without embracing
capitalism.
Moreover, Cuba will welcome foreign investment, encourage tourism
and allow Cubans to travel abroad.
·uow it must gall Castro to admit that his 40-year rule has led Cuba to
beggar status.
Maybe he finally realizes his ideal Marxist world never existed. Or
maybe he fears .the next Cu!Jan revolution will Jarget him unless Cubans'
lot improves w1th the help of democracy and free markets. E1ther way,
Cuba benefits.

Berry•s World

•

"Get away from me, boy -· Ya bother me!"

.

.

Robert]. Wagman

T!iiS oNe's FaR

asKif'4G ... TJfiS
li,R NoT
...

Confederate flag makes me shiver
During Ruth Bader Ginsburg's
confll'mation hearings, I thought
Sen. Carol Moseley Braun was
really reaching to fmd Sen. Orrin
Hatch •s comparison of the Dred
Scott and Roe v. Wade decisions
"too painful" to hear, being the
deseendent of a slave. I wondered
about her powers of reason.
But a few days later when sbe
slapped senators awake and
stopped Congress from conferring
prestige on the United Daughters of
the Confederacy's Confederate flag
insignia, I understood exactly wbat
she meanL Since the advent of CSpan, I've heard a few great pleas
on the Hill, but none better made
nor more moving than Moseley
Braun' s.
"It is absolutely unacceptable to
me and to millions of Americans,
black or white, thai we would put
the imprimatur of the United StateS
Senate on a symbol of this kind of
idea," she alternately cried and
shouted. For the first time that
morning several of the senators
snapped to and paid attention to the
issue, which Sen. Jesse Helms was

trying to sneak through by auaching it to the national service bill. .
The "idea" Moseley Braun
shouted aboot, of course, represents

Sarah Overstreet
the acceptance of slavery. Paint it
any way you like -and I've heard
a variety of colorful renditions of
history to downplay the part slav·
ery played in the Civil War - the
Confederate States of America
believed in the right of one group
of people to enslave another. ·
The South may have fought for
the ideal of states' rights and the
natural pride most· of us have for
our cultures and ways of life, but a
linchpin of that culture was a belief
in slavery to preserve its economy
and social structure.
I am the daughter of a family
that has lived in Alabama for several generations, the descendant of
Confederate soldiers. I've always
done a balancing act to reconcile
my family's pride in our Confederate ancestors and my own discomfort with the hallowing of Confed-

crate symbol.s. When I see a Con·
federat\l belt buckle, flag or
license-plate holder, I always wonder what kind of message the
owner is trying to convey: Pride in
heritage? An affinity with rebels?
A wish to once again owii black
people?
Some very vocal and.demonstrative white supremacists are
using Jhe Confederate nag as their
symbol today, and they don't make
any bones about why they're using
it. They want blacks back in Africa
preferably. but failing that, at least
out of the United States.
I've lried to be respectful of my
family's reverenee foc Confederate
forebears. Honorable people appreciate the sacrifiCe and work of our
ancestors, and often the philosophies they held don ' t jibe with ours
today. My nephew is a Civil War
re-enactor, a member of a Confederate unit. He is fascinated with the
stories of Confederate soldiers and
their feelings about their homes
and the baules they fought Perhaps
his study will someday help me to
understand how those young men
could fight so bravely, and with

such honor and compassion for
eaeh other, for a way· of life that
included slavery.
But it will be a long time before
I can look at a Confederate symbol
and not have to suppress a shiver.
Just the thought of slavery still
affecJS me so physically that I can
barely stand to watch a drama
about the American slave experience. I kid people in my office who
take soap :'lJ'CfBS so seriously, yet
the television mini-series ""Queen"
upset me for days. I can't imagine
anything worse: a lifetime spent
without the basic right of determining one's own movements, never
being sure that a spouse or child
will not be sold away, and in many
instances being beaten, raped and
killed with no hope of recour.;e.
Confederate symbols, for whatever good qualities of the people
who wore them they might represent, also stand for the mighty evil
of slavery. The U.S. Congress has
no business endorsing them in any
way.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

A death row inmate asks for dignity
David Edwin Mason wants to
die. But foes of the death penalty
are determined to deny the convicted lciller his final request
Mason has been on California' s
death row for nine years. The
drifter from San Lorenzo committed the most unspeakable crimes:
Preying on four elderly people,
aged 71 to 83, robbing them of the
little cash and jewelry they had in
their possessi~. savagely beating
them , then str'all'gling them to
death.
Mason has an appointment with
the executioner on Aug. 24. He will
be the first death row 'inmate in
California history to voluntarily
march into theJas chamber without exhausting I possible appeals.
In a prison interview this week,
the convicted killer said that one of
ihe reasons he is waiving further
appeals is that he does not want a
repeat of the spectacle that anended
the April1992 execution of Roben
Alton Harris.
After a night of several appeals
and delays, including one that came
after Harris actually had been
strapped into his gas chamber
chair, the killer was fmally - and
mercifully- put to death.
Mason has another, even more
important, reason for eschewing·
fW'Iher appeals. In paying the for·
feit for his horrible crimes, he feels
lhat in some way he may fmd sJiiri· .
tual redemption. Voluntary accep·
tance of his punishment has given

•

him a "pool of peace," he said.
"I have desperately tried to the wiser.
But death penalty foes don ' t keep ... the ACLU out of my life,"
In a given year, 3,000 men
·
care about Mason's ~mption, or the lciller said.
women and children are killed i~
whether he is at peace w•th himWhat ~n seeks in death is CalifOJ1!ia. Only 10 percent of their
the dignity he did not evince kiUers will be tried on charges that
through much of his life. Thus, his could result in the death penally.
harshest words in the weeks lead- And only 10 percent or that tO pering up to his executioo are reserved cent - those, like Mason who
not for those who would send him
self. "We feel !hill the issue as a to his deaih, but for the industry of have committed the most ~bom­
whole really goes beyond David's defense attorneys who gin up all inable murders.- actually will be
situation,'' said Pat Clark, a manner of death penalty appeals to sentenced to death row.
spokeswoma11 for Death Penalty detar. executions.
.
With a scant I percent chance of
Focus, which OJlllOses capital pun' I accept responsibility for my going to the gas chamber for laking
ishment
actions," Mason said. "! believe in
Clark's outfit organized a letter- the death penalty. I believe in the a life, there is little wonder that
wriling campaign to try to persuade most serious r,enalty for the most criminals like Mason think little of
killing vulnerable old ladies and
Mason to change his mind, inun- serious crime. •
dating the killer with more than
But the foes of capital punish- gents. The killers know that the
200 pleading missives. Mason was ment do not see it that way. They scales of justice are weighted in "
their favor.
·
not dissuaded.
will auest that they find Mason •s
If the scales were better balHe was similarly unswayed by crimes revolting, but they believe
the remonstrations ofhis anti-death his life should be preserved ahced, if killers knew that murder
penalty altorney, Charles Marson, nonetheless - even over his objec- almost certainty would lead to the
who challenged the killer's deci- tion . They would have killers like gas chamber, maybe 3,000 innocents would not be snuffed out
sion to drop appeals of his cxecil· Mason serve life terms.
every year. Maybe the four seni(lfS
tion. Marson wanted to base an
But justice hardly would be
appeal on the argument that Mason served. 'J'here is a reason that more • whom Mason strangled to death
was mentally incompetentowing to than three· qUarters of Americans would have had a peaceful rather
abuse he suffered as a child
strongly support the death penalty. than violent exit
David Edwin Mason has a better
"I don't want to be
accom- They know-that life sentences don'l
plice to that," ~ said. He ftred necessarily mean "life.'.' So-called sense of justice than those who
his laWyer.
·
lifers do get set free sometil'les. would inten)linably stay his execu'
tion. 'Fht; killer should be granted
Meanwhile, the American Civil Murderers do get paroled.· .
Liberties Union insinuated itself
In fact, in Qilifomia, I ,500 COD· his fmal request.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
into Mason's case, filing an victed killers have· been turned out
for
Tbe San Diego Union-Triunwanted appeal on his behalf on of the stale's prisons. They are are
bune
and a writer tor Newspaper
grounds lhat Califmtia's use of the living in communities throughout
Enterprise
Association.
gas chamber amounted to cruel and the Slate. Their neighbas are none
unusual punishment.
'•

Joseph Perkins

an

Fri-.,, A:ua.
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytifi\C conditions and

charge.

very effectivel~. against the giants try: computer "hackers."
financial consultant to start-up ;
in our industry. •
"I looked at the way most long- busineSses . One day, while in ·
That was early in 1989, when distance companies charge, and it Chicago on a consulting assign- :
Thrifty Tel had about 2,200 Cali· · was bewildering," says Bigley. ment, she and a colleague lamented :
"So .much off for this, so much off the lack of a computer program that ·
for calling at certain times or to would allow them to&lt;easily keep ·
certain places. No wonder most track of, and uansfer, flies between .
businesses did not have any real their office desktop computers and
idea
what they were paying for the laptops they traveled with .
fornia subscribers, grossed
They did the logical thing: They ;
long-distance
service or why."
$500,000 annualtr. and was in
What
Bigley
instituted
at
Thrifty
wrote such a program for them- .
Chapter 11 reorgamzatioq. Today,
'
after 14 Straight quaru:rs of prof· Tel was a flat-rate policy in which selves.
·
They
knew
they
were
onto
itability, it has increased its Cali- all calls within the United States,
fornia customer base tenfold, .is no matter the time of day or desti· something. So they founded MBS '
abo.ut to go nationwide, and will nation, are billed at the same per- Technologies Inc., of which Strom :
minute rate - a rate lower than is now president and CEO. The
gross $24 million this year;
program she developed, called ,
"We don't have any corporate that charged by the competition.
Also, over the last several years Fileiunner, has already established :
jets, executives makin$; seven-figure salaries or multimillion-dollar Thriftr Tel has become an industry itself as an industry standard. and is ;
ad camp;Ugns," says Bigley. "Our mode by developing better elec- a major seller to the 25 million ·
costs are low and we are able to tronic means ofkeeping hackers notebook-computer users looking
pass along .our savings to our cus- out of its computer system and off for a better way to manage their :
tomers. We can provide the same its long-distance lines. It has office and road computers.
SJrom says the filc-uansfer pro- .
quality of service as the big three at aggressively prosecuted hackers.
Another
female
technology
gram
is only a starting point for her
a rate usually about 30 percent
is
Bemee.D.L.
Strom.
innovator
new
software
company. "It's my .
lower and still tum a healthy profHer
entry
into
the
high-tech
wodd
view,"
says
Strom,
"that more and
il"
was·
the
direct
result
of
necessity
more
regular
computer
users today
Where Bigley has become an
becoming
the
mother-of-invention.
are less and less sophisticated.
industry innovator is in the areas of
A former college math profes- Most software companies are
billing and fighting against the
scourge of the long-distance indus- sor, Strom eventually became a always trying to push the envelope
of technology, and their programs
are becoming simply too complex
for the avernge user.
"We want to reverse this cycle.
We want to develop fully functionNoi
al products that meet the needs of ·
the average business user while
ONe'S
keeping them simple enough so
they can be .understood. This is the
~L~il'tG
niche we are goin_g to service.''
As for the future of women in .
technology, both Bigley and Strom
are optimistic and enthusiastic.
"As in most industries, most ·
executives in the computer industry ·
are men," says Strom. "The barri- '
ers of entry are coming down, ·
women are startinf to make ·
inroads, but it is slow.'
·
"For women in the telecommunications industry its much like it is
at the executive suite level anywhere," says Bigley. "You have to
work harder to prove you 'rc equal.
But that acceptance is coming, and ·
I look for more women to be where .
I am in the future. Tbere is still a
crystal ceiling, but it is starting to
show a few cracks."
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

WASHINGTON (NBA) - A
few years ago, a ·meeiing of all
female senior executives of tech·
nology and telecommunications
companies would have fit comfortably in a siJUIII conference room.
Nowadays, while women are stiU
underrepresented in the top eche·
Ions of high-tech companies, their
numbers are starting to grow.
Rebecca Bigley is one example.
The California native and mother
of two, with a third due, was well
. on her way to a prestigious career
in corporate finance when she was
called to help a struggling, small,
long-distance company. TOday as execQtive vice president and
CEO of the Garden Grove, Calif.,
headquartered Thrifty Tel Inc. Bigley is an acknowledged
telecommunications innovator, and
her company has beCome a trendsetter among smaller long-distanCe
providers.
"When I started this I knew
nothing about the telephone industry," Bigley admits. "But after I
too1c the company public, I saw that
there were new ways this company.
could do business and compete

MICH.

•
,,,,,
•
IND.

,,,,,

' ' '

.....
·' ' • I....----...-Columbusl7o• I
...;,;,;~
· .;;;.;;I•.;.;~.

By The Associated Press
Dry weather will continue
across Ohio unlil just before daybreak Friday morning, when scattered showers become possible.
Lows !onight will range from
the mid-50s northwest to around 60
over th_e remainder of the state.
Highs Friday will be in the lower to
mid-70s, with a chance of thunderstorms developing by afternOon.
The record high lernperature for
this date at the Columbus wea~r
station was 103 in 1918. The record
·low was 46 in·1951.

Sunset today will be at 8:42
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
6:35am.
•
Around the nation
Cooler weather and mostly clear
skies moycd into the East today as
clouds spread across much or the
rest of the natioo.
A cold front along the Atlantic
Coast reduced temperaurcs
th.roughout the Nonheast, the
Southeast and the Great Lakes
states. Despite sunshine, temperatures as much as 10 degrees cooler

UN working on plan

to bomb Serb forces

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, increasing cloudiness.
•A chance of showers by daybreak.
' Low around 60. Chance of rain 40
; percent. Friday, showers and thun; derstorms likely. High 70-75 .
'- Chance of rain 70 percent.
c

, Extended forecast:
· Saturday tbrougb Monday:
Fair and increasingly warmer.
Lows in 50s Saturday and Sunday
and low 60s Monday. Highs 75-80
Saturday, 80-85 Sunday and 85-90
Monday.

---Area.deaths--

· Ralph E. Carr

Richard A. Finlaw

SARAJEVO, Bosnia,Herzegov. ina (AP) - NATO and U.N. commanders, are working on plans to
bomb Serb forces following Serb
advances on a strategic mountain
overlooking Sarajevo.
A U.N. slatement, released in
zagreb today after a NATO-U.N.
meeting in the Croatian capital
Wednesday, reflected increasing
international resolve to J?i'event the
Serb capture of the Bosman capital.
Gen. Jean Cot of France, com·
mander of roughly 27,000 U.N.
peacekeepers in Bosnia and other
former Yugoslav republics, met
with Adm. Jeremy M. Boorda of
the United States, the United
Nations said.
The two "focused on defining
close coordination mechanism
between the U.N. and NATO. Both
agreed that precise coordination
was the essential element in the
operation."
· They agreed that any airborne
NATO attack on Serb positions
around Sarajevo would be preceded
.by Cot's assessment or its effects
on the safety of U.N. peacekeepers

than normal were forecas t from
Boston Ill Wash'ington, D.C.
Clouds over much of the Mid·
west, South, Southwest and western Plains w~ expected to bring
showers and seven:, scattered !hun·
demonns. The West Coast was
forecast to be mostly sunny and
warm.
'
On Wednesday, scauered !hunderstorms and ~ownpours ~altered
much !&gt;f ~ llll!on·
:
Hail,lightenmg and wtnds up to
~I mph downed trees and power
lines across .parts of ~husetts,
South Carolma and Florida. ·
~~rs of an inch ofrain
feU m 13 mmutes near Searchlight,

Ncv ., and storms droppe,d more

thalt 2 inches of rain in .. hour 11
Oak Grove, La.
·
Heat Stifled some areas or the
country. New York City broke its
nine-yea- record of 90 for the day
when the mercury climbed to 91.
Olympia, Wash., broke its record
of 94 set in 1952 with a mart of 98.
..The nation's high temperature
. Wednesday was 116 in Bullhead
City, Ariz.
Today' s highs were forecast
mostly in the 80s for pans of the
Southeast and Northwest, with 70s
in some areas of the Midwest
Northeast and northern Plains and
90s in the Southwest and West

U you reaDy beUeve

on the grollnd.
· . The meeting was described as
" open, amicable and highly productive,'' .despite apparent differ·
ences between the United States.
which has pressed for NATO
action , and U.N. chief Boutros
Bouuos-Ghali about who has the
authority to order air strikes.
· NATO agreed Tuesdar to a U.S.
pro_posal to launch ate strikes
agamst Bosnian Serb forces if they
dn not lift their siege of the capital,
Sarajevo. .
The United StateS says the deci·
sion of when and where to attack
should be NATO's. But BoutrosGhali says he should be the one to
decide.
.
U.S. Secretary of SU\IC Warren
Christopher,.who was on an official
trip in the Middle East, told
reporters today that the U.S.
planned to continue efforts with
NATO counlries to end the siege.of
Sarajevo.
Iz.etbegovic met Joday with
mediators in Geneva, but he has
refused to meet formally .with the
leaders of Bosnia's militant Serbs

Cable's Shopping Channel
has the lowest prices on
jewelry•••••

': Word has been received locally
Richard A. Finlaw, 75,
• of the death of Ralph E. Carr, 73, Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Aug. 4,
• of Virginia Beach, Va .. who died 1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospi·
• July 24, 1993.
. tal in Pomeroy.
~
A retired Navy Chief Petty OffiFormer owner and operator of
' cer, he was born in Pomeroy SOD of Gravely .Tractor Sales in Pomeroy
~ the late John and Jessie Heilman for 27 years, he was born Apri115,
; Cart. He was a 1939 graduate of 1918, in Pomeroy to the late Elmer
~ Pomeroy High School and retired and Carrie Allensworth Finlaw.
• from the Navy after 31 years.
A member of the Drew Webster
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 75.25; select 63.00-68.00.
- He was one of only 13 enlisted Post of the American Legion and a ·
Direct
livestock
prices
and
receipts
Cows: 1.00 lower; all cows
lOW I LOCAftOIS!
~ pilots in the Navy in 1971. He sur· U.S. A.rmy Air Cerp veteran of
buying
poinJS
Thursday
at
selected
54.25
and down.
~. vivcd the attack on Pearl Harbor World War II, he serYed as a fi!St
91 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT
by the Ohio Department of AgriBulls: steady; choice 64.75 and
·~ and new anti-submarine patrol dur- lieutenant and a navigator with the
culture:
down."
• ing World Wr~~ II in Jhe PacifiC.
151 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS
459th Bomber Group. He was a
Barrows
and
gilts:
fully
steady;
Sheep
and
lambs:
4.00
to
5.00
.
' He wa, qualified in more than member of the Rock Springs Unitdemand moderate.
·
higher; choice wools 52.00-55.75;
50 diffen;nt !¥JlCS of airc~ during ed Methodist Church.
choice
clips 54.00-58.00; feeder
_
u
.s.
1·
3,
230~260
lbs
..
country
his career. Hts accomplishments
He is survived by his wife, pomts 44.50-45.25; plants 45.75- lambs 58.00 and down; aged sheep
inclnde \)iloting the fi!St transconti· Gertrude Grueser Finlaw of
34.50 and.down.
·
nental 01ght by an all-enljsted crew Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in- 46.75, a few 47.50.
Sorted
U.S.
1·2,
230-260
lbs.,
in a P-3 anti-submarine aircraft in law, Tamara and Greg Wight
1967. He was decorated with the Brookfield of Vennont; a SOD and counuy points 45.50-46.25.
Receipts Wj:dnesday 8,100.
Navy Commendation Medal at dallghter·in·law, Stephen and DebCLEVELAND (AP) ~ A single
Estimated
receipts Thursday 7 ,500.
:retirement. He was a member of bie Finlaw of Pomeroy; and five
Super
Lotto game ticket showed
Prices from The Producers Live. the Silver Eagles Oub, a group of grandchildren.
the
six
numbers in Wednesday
tormcr enlisted pilots.
Other survivors include: two sis- stock Association:
night's
$8
million drawing, the
Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 hi~er.
Survivors include his wife, Eva ters, Joan Sorden of Rutland, and
Ohio
Lottery
said.
Slaughter steers: cho1ce 69.00Carr; a son, Ralph E. Carr Jr. of Alice Cappel of Sioux Lookout,
The
winning
ticket was pur·
-HU.E SAVINGS ON All JEWELRY AT.Virginia Beach; a sister, Marie Ontario, Canada; and ·a brother. 75.50; select 64.00-69.00.
chaSed
in
Solon,
a
Cleveland subheifers:
choice
68.00Slaughter
Williams of Portamouth; two broth· Elmer Finlaw of HarrisonviUe.
urb. 'The lump-sum discount option
· ers, Paul Carr of Akron and
He Wll$ precected in .death by a
was chosen, and.. it . is worth
William Carr of Menomonie Falls, brother, Bob Finlaw.
1 $3,592,239 - the amount.the lot·
Wise.; one granddaughter, Melissa
Memorial 'services will be
tery would have invested expecting
'H~ J'E/WEI./~
Carr of Radford, Va.; two aunts, announced at a later dace. Arrangeto pay the advertised jackpot
HOURS: Man. thru Thurs. 9·5; Fri. 9-8; Sat. 9-5
' Neva King of Pomeroy and Myrtle ments are being handled by Ewing
amount. of $8. million
over
26
I
Carman of Columbus.
Wednesday - 10:04 a.m.
•fREE PARKING
Funeral Home. Pomeroy.
years.
'
.
•FREE 90 DAY ANANCING
Pomeroy to Liberty Lane for
He was preceded in death by a
The Super Lotto jackpot drops
•FREE GIFT WRAPPING
Avanelle Bass who was uansponed back to $4 million for 'Saturday's
brother, George T. Carr.
Oscar Imboden
Services were held July 28 in.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; drawing.
Oscar Imboden of Columbus
Hollomon Brown Funeral Home, died
3:30
p.m. Tuppers Plains to Slate
Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1993, in
Great Neck Road Chapel, in Vir- Columbus. Arrangements will be Route 7 for Robert Whitsel who
ginia Beach. Burial followed in announced by Ewing Funeral
was uansponed to VMH; 6:11 p.m.
Pomeroy to West Main Street for
WOOdlawn Memorial Gardens, Vir- Home, Pomeroy.
Palricia Hysell; 8:00 p.m. Syracuse
ginia Beach. Military honors were
to State Route 124 for Ronald
performed at the grave.
Perry
who was transported to
Memorial donations may be sent ·
~
VMH;
9:48 p.m. Middleport to
to Tidewater Lost Chord Club of
~
Veterans Memorial
Pearl
Street
for
Debbie
Cremeans
the American Cancer Society, 2730
Wednesday admissions
985-3350
985-3350
who was uansponed to VMH. ·
EUsmere Ave., Norfolk, VA 23513. None.
Thursday- 5:35 a.m. Pomeroy
Wednesday discharges
Dennis Searles
to
Hartinger Road for Rufus
Dennis Searles, Rutland, died William Catron, Racine, ·
Browning who was uansported to
Holzer Medical Center .
Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1993, at HolzVMH.
August 6-7th
. er MediCal Center in Gallipolis.
Aug. 4 discharges: Mrs. Clifton li'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""'=;t
Route 7 South, Chester, Ohio
will
be Bowyer and son, Morgan Wolfe,-····
Arrangements
announced by Fisher Funeral Thomas Lambert, Goldie Muse,
Kristina Lamb, Anthony Lindsey,
Home.
Terry Miracle, Mrs. Henry Bartels
Am Ele Power....................37 718
and son, Eileen Cochran, Donna
1Ashland Oil... .....................29 518
' The address published Tuesday Sheline, Mrs. Emil Hart and daugh·
AT&amp;T.................................62 718
for CV.rles Michael Jr., who ter, Dayton Williams, Derrick
Bank One........................... 53 1/2
.reccntlf pleaded guilty to a charge Shadwick and Lori Mollett ·
Bob Evans ......................... 18 7/8
Aug. 4 births - Mr. and Mrs.
;of cndang!ll'ing children, is incorCharming S.hop.................. 12 718
Larry Caner, daughter, Thurman.
rect.
Champion Ind ................... 14
He now lives on Bucktown Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stewart, son,
C~ Holding.......... ;.. ......... 27 5/8
Road, Racine.
.
Oak Hill.
I' eral Mog_ul.. .... .............. 21 518
The Daily Sentinel apologizes
Goodyear T&amp;R.................. 42
Lands End ...... .................... 29 3/8
for the error.
Limited lnq......................... 20 1/8
Boos.ters to meet
Multimedia lnc ................... 33
The Daily Sen,U.el
The Eastern Band Boosters will
Point Bancorp........... :........ 14
meet Tuesday at 7 p,m, at the high
(USPS 2J.l.Mt)
Rax Restaurant .................. l/16
school
band room. All bane! .parents
PwbUibecS every .ctuDoo1, MoDell)' throu&amp;h
Reliance Eleclric................ 17 71$
Friday, Ill COUll St.. Pomeroy. Oblo by the
and students are urged to attend to
25&lt;
Robbins&amp;Myers ................. 19 th
Obio Valley PublilbiD&amp; CoqtanyiMuturlled\a
discuss
the
marching
band
prolac., Pomervy, Ohio •l769, PI!. 9!1l-21S6.
Shoney's Inc..................... .19 3/6
25&lt;
Seeoad clMI pollJie paklM Pomeroy, Oblo.
· gram.
Star Bank ........................... .35 3/4
Wendy Int'l... ..................... I4 3/4
Mtrilb&lt;r. The Aalocllled l'nll, aad the Ohio
ENJOY!
Bible school
NewtJ)IIp« Auodatipn , Natioaal Advertillq
Worthington Ind................. 29 3/4
Vacation Bible School at Silver
RcprOHDtatlve, Braahlm Newsp~~p• Sllu,
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
733 Third Anaue, New York. New York
Run Baptist Church will be Mon1.m. quotes provided by
10017.
day through Aug. 13 from 6-8 p.m.
Kemper Secur1ties, Inc., o
mghtly. A wiener roast will be held
POSTMASTEiloSead ....,,.. clwiJ" 10 The
Galllpolls.
Doily S.ntinel, Ill Court SL. Po.,..y, Ohio
Friday to conclude the event.
.!169.

--Livestock report---

Stop at ACQUISITIONS
FINE JEWELRY and rand
out why you are wrong!

Lottery numbers

.9/.CQf[JJSI'IIC»[S

EMS responds
to six calls

...........
'A5hlanil.

Hospital news

'

CHESTER
·QUI·K STOP

"Customer Appreciation Days"

Stocks

Correction

II

II 12oz. Mug

with $10.00
Gasoline Purchase

Meigs announcements

SlliSCIUPTION RATES

.,.c........ M-·a....
ODe Woek, ................................................ $1.60
ODe -th. ............................................. .$6.95

Oao Yw... ....................................... -

SINGLE COPY
I'IUCB
OoUy......................................... _

---

..113.20

l$ Ceala

llubo&lt;ribtn ... dellriqiO poy the corri«remit 11 ldvace ~t lo tbe Dlil)' S.atlael
oa albree. ail or 12 moath buls. Credit wm be

,...

air

No IUb~eriptiou by Jrulil permitted In areu

wbeto home carrier ll!fVice ilaYaillble.

Moll SabocrlodOM

looldeMtlpl:MniJ
13 Woelti............................................... .$21 .U

26 Weob.........................................,...... .$43.16
Sl W..a ................................................. SU.76
Ootoid• Molp c-.,
I)Weob ................................................ .$23.40

:!IW-.........................................t-15.50
5 2 -.........................................188.40

..

Time
IOa.m.

Event
Place
Prelly Baby Contest
Main Stage
(Sponsored by the Gallipolis Junior Women's Club)
10:30 a.m·. Dairy Sweepstakes
·
·
Show Arena
Noon , 42nd An-' ~t Steer Sale
Sh\)w Arena
1:30 p.m. 11111 Am~~*. T~ Sale ·
Show Arena
1:45 p.m. 35tll Allllilll Ma•-.umb Sate,
Show Arena
33rd Annual ~t Hog Sale
Show Arena
3 p.m.
7 p.m.
Shady River Shufficrs ·
Main Stage
7:30p.m. OSTPA·ianctioned Tractor.P.uU
Pulling Track
8 p.m.
Tiny Wellman .
Main Stage
10 p.m. ,Tiny Wellman
Main Stage

----1

•

e~ecs t~ke

..-.... __....__. .~. . . _fnrecast_for_ OhinErida~f------

OHIO W('Jthct

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel .
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. August 5, 1993

High-tech female

The Cincinnati Enquirer, Aug.l
The Department of Defense is a chamber of fiscal horrors, based on
findings of Sen. John Glenn's Government Operations Committee.
The ghastliest nightmare turned up was the Pentagon's dispatch of
$751 million in overpaymeilts to contractors in a recent six -month period.
•• And $480 million of it was returned from contractors who said they'd
not even sent in bills,'' Glenn said.
With its vast budgeJS, the Pentagon has long been a source of waste,
occasional fraud and abuse. Some contractors have exploited its rapid
iumov!ll' in procurement officers and otherwise managed to defraud tax·
payers. But Judging from Jhe returned checks,.most contractors want only
what they're rightfully due.
·
The Senate commitJee investigation must see that that happens, and
that aceounting is drum-tight. And, if laws have been broken, offenders
should be brought to trial swiftly.

,

•

\

.

'I

••

I

...........
A5h/and.

�•

..

•

•

The, DailY Sentinel

Sports

Thursday. ·Auguit's, 1993
Page-4

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- John
oper was showing how well he's
learned to say no comment
After he came off the disabled
Jist and beat Colorado 9-3 Wednes·
day night, reporters wanted to
know whether he realized how
badly ,the Rockies wanted to
embarrass him.
The rookie bruised some feelings May 16 by beating the explin·
sion club in his major-league debut
and then saying he'd seen better
lineups in the minor leagues.
Roper, who evidently has
learned from the mistake, waved
his hand and dodged the questions.
"That stuff's in the past," he
said.
Not quite. Just then, first base·
man Randy Milligan poked his
head into the interview and said,
"He said, 'American Legion team.'

..

HARRISONVILLE BOBCATS- The Har·
rison ville Bobcats T -Ball team, sponsored by
Dan's Boot Shop or Middleport, recently com·
pleted a rme season. Pictured are (front row, L·
R) Sarah Lantz, Jenirer Haaing, Lucas Fackler,
Joey Haning, Justin Harper and April Butcher.

In the second row are Corey Deel, Derik Brick·
les, Branden Fackler, Travis Butcher, Roger
Davidson, Carl Noel and Joshua Williams. In
the third row are coach Jeff Haning and Jim
Haning. Not pictured Is Mike Haning.

..

"
'"

NA TIONAL

TRACK &amp; FI£L D
CHA

S

"' ' .'1..'

'·

•

TO RUN FOR RIO GRANDE - Meigs High
School running athlete PJ, Chadwell (center)
will join the University or Rio Grande cross
country program this fall as a distance runner.
Chadwell is seen signin• a letter or intent with

•

Redmen cross country coach Bob Willey (left)
and Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, president or Rip
' Grande. The SOD or Paul and Kathy Chadwell or
Middleport, Chadwell plans to major in biology.

Scoreboard
Eutrrn DlwlskMt

-*Baseball*-

65
10

T....
WLP&lt;LGB
Toronto ..... .. ........63 46 .S78
BOI\on ....................60 47 .561
2
New York .............61 4S .560
2
Baltunorc ......... 58 49 .542
4
Detroit. ............. ....S4 S4 .500
85
CI.IlVELAND ..... 50 57 ,%7
12
Milwaukoc .......... 42 64 .396 19.5

13
19

Wedern Dlvlalon

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaaltm Dlwlalon
Tum
W L PeL
Philadelphtl .. .. .. 68 40
630
StLouis ...... .. ..... 61 46 .570
Montn:al ..... ....... .58 50 .!537
Chicago
. . .S4 52 .509
PiuahUigh . .. . 49 59
454
f1onda .. ......... .. 45 62 421
New York .. ,.... .. 37 70 .346

GB

Z15
305

Wulern Oivl&amp;ion
San Fnncuco .
72 36
Atllnll ... .. . ...... 65 44
LotAncelea ... . .55 51
Houstm
...... .SS 52

CINCINNATI
56 54
San Dieio ....... . 42 66
Colorado .............36 71

667
.596
.519
.514

7S
16
16 S
.509
17
.3119
30
.336 ' 3S.S

Wednesday's scores
Pitu~ugh

6, Otiellgo 5
Monuul 3, New Yo~ 1
ONCINNA119. Colon do 3
Atlanta 9, Philadelphia 8
Loll AnJclCS -1, Hounon 2
St. L.ou11 lO, Flonda 2
San Diego II , San Fra nc11co 10 (12

\M,)

T&lt;Jday•s games
Colorado (Bottenfield 3-1) at CINCIN NATI (Rijo 9-5), 12 35 p m
Loc Anaela (A.Ncto 7-6) at Houlton
(Dnbclt 7·12), 1:35pm
New York (Hillman I·S) at Montrc.al
(Manincz 10-7), I 35 pm
Piluburgh (fombn 3-8) at Ch1cago
(Moraan 7-1 0}, 2:20p.m
San Funci1c0 (Sw ift 15 ·5) 1\ San
Diego (Aahby 0-5 ), 4:05pm.
Philadelphia (RI'u:ra 9-6) at Allanta
(G. Maddu. 12-8), 7 40 p m.
Florida (Hammond 10-6) at St. Looil.
(Aro&lt;h• 8-ll, 8:3S p.m

Friday's games

Ptulade.lph11 (iieLCOn 3-0) at florida
(lbpp 1·3), 7:35p.m.
Montreal {Rueter 1-0) at Atl anta
(Smolu: 10-8), 7:40p.m.
Pittabu.J&amp;h {Conke 5-7) at New York
(Gooden 11-10), 7:40 pm
Colondo (R.eyn060 7-7 and Leabmc
1·5) at San Oiego (Benes 12· 7 and Whitc-hLHil 3--6), 2, 11.05 p m
Chicaao (Ou.zman 10-7) at St 1Au1a
(Conruet 5-6), 1:35_l).m.
CINONNATI (Browning 7-7) at l.ol
An ...,. (R. MottmeZ8·6), 10·35 P"'·.
HOUlton (K.Ue 11-3) at San Fnncuco
(Butbll 16-4), 10 ·3.5 p.m.

' AMERICAN LEAGUE

Chicago....... ... ,.. 59 47
Kanau City .. .... ... 55 52
Teua . . ..

.SSi
.514
.SOS
486
462
.433
433

. ...54 .53

Suule.. . .. . .
.52
Caliiomia ....... .......49
Minneoolo ........... .AS
Odtlond ... ..........45

•

55
57
S9
S9

4.5
S.S
7.5
10
13
13

Wednesday's scores
OoklondS,Se011le4
Deuoit 8, a.EVELAND 3
New Yolk 6, Toronto 2
Baltim~ 8, Milwaukee 6

Boston 5, Minncaou 4
Texaa S, C..icago 2
Kanaas City 3, California 2

Today's games
Toronto (Guzman 7-3) at New York
(Key 12·4), I p.m.
Bo.tcn (V100i 6-8) at Minnc.~• (De-.
1haica 11-1) , 1.15 p.m.
Detroit (Wello 10-7) ot a.EVElJ\Nil
(Knmor4-2), 1:35 p.m.
(flcrruna 6-1) at Oakland (W1tt
8-9), 3· p m
K.arwaa Ctty (GOfdon 6-2) at California
(Hathaway 2-1), 4;()5 p.m.
Milwaukee (Novoa ().0) at Baltimore
(McDonold 8-9). 7:3S p.m.
ChtCIJO (Alvarez &amp;-6) at T uu
(Brown 11-7), 8.35 p.m.

Friday's games
(~ani'TI)

7·1) at Toronto

(Morna 6-10), 7:35 ~.m.
CLHVEUND (Mutls 2-4) u Balti·
more (SULCliffc 8-1}, 7:35 p.m.
·
New York (Wickman 10-3) at Min·
newt~ (fapmi S·ll). 8·05 p.m.
Caliromia (Finley 12-8) at Chicaao

(Alvarez 1-6),1:0.'! pm.

National Luaue
CINCINNATI REDS: Acuvated John
Roper, pitcher, from the I 5-day diu bled
llll Phced Bip Roberti, second bucman,
on the iS-day diaabled liat. Deaipatcd
Guy Vusho, outfielder, for anignmenl.
Called up Tommy ~g. infielder-outfielder, ftoo1 lndllltlpolis or the American
Aaaociation.
NEW YORK METS : Placed le.lJ,n
Franco, pllchcr, on the IS-day disabled
lilt., rclmlctive to AuJ. 3. Gnnted Vince
Coleman, outfielder, a leave of abtcnco
w11hout pay. Roe11lod Dave Tclpcder,
from Norfolk of the lntemational

£:her,

lfm-soURGH PIRATES: Signed Don
SlauJht, catcher, to

1

two-year conlract

cxl.a!.aon

Basketball
Nollunal BQkelball ANoclallon
Cl!ARJ..OTTE HORNIITS: Namod Gil
McOqor aUla\anl to 1hc p.utdcmt and
Gil Shuman director ol broadcubng.
HOUSTON ROCKETS: Fiml Colvin
Mu~y. comnwnity relatiQU liaiaon wi
spoctal·auianmaua COich.
NEW JERSEY NETS: Named Jon
chief opentins of.
ficer. R.uaiJ,llOd J'i!lr)' Cohen, paidcnt.
to vice chailman.
SEATrLE SUPERSONlCS : StJned
Ervin Johnltln, crnu:r, to a three-year cmtn&lt;:t.
s~ pruldenl and

BOI&amp;On (C1emezu 9· 7) at Deuoit (Oullickoon ~).7:05p.m .
,
Milwaukoe

CLEVELAND INDIANS : Traded
Dave Etland, pitcher, to lhe Teua
R•ngcrs for Gerald Alcunder and Allan
Andcnon, pitcben. Aaianed Aleundcr
to Canton-Akron of the Eutcm League
and An&amp;non to Oaarlouc C'l tho lntema·
tiooall...eague Pbccd Cllfi' Youns, pi.tch·
er, oo the: lS-day diu.blcd lin, mroacUve
to July 26. Opcionccl Dave Mlic.ki, pitcher,
w Camon-Al.ron.
SEATTLE MARINERS : Sent Brad
Holman, pitcher, to Calaacy of the Pacific
Coaat l..bgue. Rccalledbann Howm, an·
fielde:r, frum Calaary.

a-

Scaulo (Bolio 4-6) •• TCJW atoacn
7), 8·35pm
. Od:land (Van PCOPd 1·3) at Karu-11

Cny (lhney 1·3), 8:1Ip.m.

- * Transactions • BasebaU ·
AmerkM l.aJ'H
AL: Reduced the au1pcnlion of Ed
Spnguo, Toronto Blue Jay• third base·
man, from lhree Ul two pmra bcsimin&amp;
Aupt6.

FootbaU
Nallonal Focoboll Leque
ATI.ANTA FALCONS· Sipocl Keath
Janet, nmnin&amp; back, lo a on•~ear con·
t ract. Ailrced "to term• wilh Jcno
Solomon, linebacker. Waived limes
RCI.IK. runninl Net.
DENVER BRONCOS: Waived Travia
SUN, ........ bod&lt;.
GREEN "BAY PACKERS : Sianed
Shawn Collina, wide receiver, 1nd Paul
Lana. cerner. Waivod Mill Tutk, pwuc:r.
Aoquirecl Dan Pike, offonatve lineman,
from the Cleveland Browna far an 1lr1IJil.
clooocl dzall picl:.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : St&amp;fted
Derrick Failon, wido receiver. Waived
QuiriUII Mdlonald.lil1cbacker.

Funny? Not to the Rockies.
They came out determined to get
revenge against Roper on Wednes·
day, but wound up losing their lOth
straight
The Roclcies now have the worst
record in the majors (36·7 I) after
losing I7 of 20 since the All-Star
break and have matched California
and Detroit for longest losing
streak of the season.
Worst of all, they couldn~t
defend their honor against a 2 I·
year-old roolcie who had been on
the disabled list for more than a
month.
••At leas~ he held up his end of
the bargain," Rockies manager
Don Baylor said.
For their part, the Rockies
played like the team Roper was led
to unintentionally ridicule last
May. Roper (2-1) allowed just four
hits and one run over six innings,
strilcing out a career-high six, and
Chris Sabo hit his third grand slam
of the season as the Reds once
again made the Rockies' pitching
staff look overmatched.
"It never gets easy for us,"
Baylor said. "It's never easy when
you're in the offensive drought, the
pitching drout~ht, and the scoring
drought we're m now."
The Rockies thought they'd
improved the pitching by acquiring
Greg Harris and Bruce Hurst from
San Diego on July 26. Instead, Har·
ris (10-11) has blended into the
mediocrity, getting hit hard in his
two Colorado starts.
The Reds scored ei~ht runs on
10 hits in just 4 2/3 Innings off
Harris. They scored four times in
the fourth and Sabo hit his third
grand slam of the season, tying the
club record, in the fifth inning for
an 8- I lead.
Four other Reds have hit three
slams in a season, most recently
Eric Davis in 1987. Sabo is an
unlikely addition.
"Before this year, I never had
one at any level of my career," he
said. "It's just one of those fluky
things. It's not really a big deal to
me. I've had a lot of OpPOrtunities
with the bases loaded thiS year."
Sabo added a sacrifice fly in the
seventh to match his career high
with 5 RB!s - just another stinging footnote to one of the Roelcies'
most painful losses.
They had tallced openly of want·

''
ing revenge against Roper, who
hadn't pill;hed since pulling mus·
cles in his side June 18. They
hadn't forgotten his quote after
beating them iq his debut: "I've
seen better lineups than that Buffalo and maybe the Nashville
Sounds. Both of them have pretty
good lineups."
"I don't blame Colorado, "
Sabo said. "If I was Colorado and
somebody said that about me, I'd
feel(that way),too."
Roper ended all the talk by
holding the Rockies hitless through
the first four innings. They went
from fuming to fretting.
"To me, it looked like early he
was overpowering guys left and
right," Baylor said. "After a while,
I was worrying about a no-hitter.
He cwne right at us. He dido' t back
off, that's for sure."
That was the most impressive
thing to manager Davey Johnson,
who spoke to Roper about his public statements.
"The best thing to do is to forget about it," Johnson said. "All I
said to him was stay healthy and
throw the ball the way I know you
can for five or six innings. He
doesn't rattle. He has great composure. He has the malcings of a fme ·
major-league pitcher."
He doesn't yet have the Rockies' respect, however.
"He's ~ot to do it a few more
years firSt, 'Baylor said.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 9, Philadelphia 8; San
Diego II , San Francisco I0 in I2
innings; St. Louis 10, Florida 2;
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 5; Montreal
3, New York I; and Los Angeles 4,
Houston 2.
Braves win, Giants lose
No matter how weU .the Atlanta
Braves played, it seemed they
couldn't make up any substantial
ground on the San Francisco
Giants.
They fmally got some help from
an unexpected source Wednesday
night when the San Diego Padres
rallied to beat the visiting Giants
11-10 in 12 innings.
Atlanta won in dramatic fashion
as Greg Olson capped a four-run
rally in the eighth inning with a
three-run homer, giving the Braves
a 9-8 victory over the visiting
Philadelphia Phillies.
The Braves have won 10 of 12
games, but have gained little in the
standings on first-place San Francisco in the NL West and now trail
the Giants by 7 1(2.
The Giants blew a 7-I lead and
the Padres tied the score I0-10
when Phil Plantier hit a three-run
homer off relief ace Rod Beck.
Tony Gwynn tied a Padres club
record with six hits.
Fred McGriff led off the eighth
with a single off reliever David
West (3·3) before David Justice
walked. West struck out Terry
Pendleton and pinch-hitter Francisco Cabrera, but allowed an RBI
single to Mark Lemke.
Olson, who hit a 419-foot tworun homer in Atlanta's 5-3 loss
against the Phillies on Tuesday,
then hit his fourth homer, a 421foot shot.
"Did you notice the distance on
the home runs?'' Olson joked.
'The light-hitting Olson, who

..

came into the game in the sixth
inning' as a part of a double switch,
raised his average to .222 with four.
homers.
"I wanted the pitch to Olson tQ
be down and in, but I got it up,"
West said. "I was in coiUrol until
then. But I put the pitch to Olson in
a spot where I didn' t want to put
it!
Jay Howell (2-3) earned the victory with 1 1/3 scoreless innings,
and Greg McMichael picked up hi&amp;~
fourth save with a scoreless ninth. ·
Pete Incaviglia hit a three-run
homer for the Phillies , his.fifth
home run in four games.
Padres 11, Giants 10
(121nn.)
Rookie pitcher Pedro Martinez :
(2-0) drove in the winning run with.,
a bases-loaded squeeze bunt as San..
Diego rallied from a 7· I deficit to,
beat San Francisco. .
Rickey Gutierrez Jed off with a
single and advanced to third one'
out later on Gwynn's sixth hit, also
a single. After Plantier was walked
intentionally to load the bases,
Martinez bunted to pitcher Bryan
Hickerson (5·3).
:
It was also a big game for Barry
Bonds, who scored five runs.
Cardinals 10, Marlins 2
Luis Alicea hit a grand slam in a
sloppy six-run third inning as Si:
LouiS routed Florida at Busch Sta·
dium.
The Marlins gave the Cards
plenty of help by walking six bat·
ters in the inning.
.··
Rookie Allen Watson (4-0) ·
remained undefeated after his fifth .
major league game. He allowed .
seven hits and one run in six ·
innings.
Loser Ryan Bowen (6-11)•
walked five batters in the third.
Pirates 6, Cubs 5
Orlando Merced's two-run . ·
homer in the eighth inqing lifted "
Pittsburgh over Chicago at Wrigley
Field in a game in which both managers were ejected.
With Pittsburgh trailing 54, Jay
Bell singled with one out and ,
Merced followed with a homer off.
Shawn Boslcie (3·2).
. .; ,
Jeff Ballard (2-0) got the win ·
and Denny Neagle earned his first.
save.
Expos 3, Mets 1
Chris Nabholz pitched three-hit.. ,
ball for eight innings and Larry :·
Walker hit a home run as Montreal••
defeated New York at Olympic
Stadium. Nabholz (7·7) allowe!l
Jus~ an infield hit through five
mrungs.
,~
John Wetteland got the last..
three outs for his 24th save, allow- ·
ing one hit
·
Walker's 14th homer, a two-o~
solo shot in the fourth off Sid Fer, . .
nandez (I ·2), gave the Expos a 3-0 ··
lead.
Dodgers !&amp;, Astros 2
Dave Hansen's two-run homer
in the seventh inning off Pete Harnisch (10-8) helped Los Angeles
snap an 11-gwne Astrodome losing
streak.
Tom Candiotti (7-5) pitched ·
seven innings for his fourth straight
win, allowing one run and seven
hits. Jim Gott recorded the final
three outs for his 19th save despite
giving up an RBI single to Craig
Biggio.
. .

Mets grant Coleman leave of absence
NEW YORK (AP)- Vince ety in a positive way."
Coleman expressed remorse
Coleman, who faces a felony
charge for throwing an explosive over the episode during a news
device outside Dodger Stadium on conference last week, and again 1n
July 24, has been granted an unpaid a statement released by the Mets on
leave of absence by the New York Tuesday after the charges were
Mets. ·
·
filed.
"I lake full responsibility for a
Coleman, in the third year of a
four-year, $11.95 million contract, very childish act for which I am
left the Mets in Montreal on Tues- suffering greatly," the statement
day after the charge was filed by said. "It was never my intent to
Los Angeles prosecutors. The team hurt anyone. My main concern is
said the leave of absence will for thqse injured.''
Mels officials tried to keep the
extend until two days after the
court hearing.
club out of the issue.
The charge of unlawful posses"He is an employee," said
Gerry
Hunsicker, the Mets' vice
sion of an explosive device carries
a penalty of 16 months to three president of baseball operations.
years in prison and a maximum "This incident didn't happen durfine of$10,000. Coleman, expected , ing his working hours. It didn't
to surrender to authorities in Los happen on the field. It didn't har,Angeles next Monday or Tuesday, pen in the clubhouse. It on y
will not contest the charge or seek mvolves the Mets becauSe he is an
a trial, according to his lawyer, employee of the Mets. This is
Robert Shapiro.
Vince Coleman~s incident. This is
"He is very stressed by the situ- Vince Coleman's problem."
Coleman has been a problem for
ation," Shapiro said. "He hasn't
been able to sleep and he is very, the Mets almost from the time he
very concerned for those wh9 have signed as a free agent on Dec. 5,
been hurt and for himself.
(See COLEMAN on Paae 5)
"It is not his desire to contest
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
the charge brought by the district
attorney. It is his desire to compenF.AI., BAT., IUN.
sate those who have reported
.JANET JACKSON
injuries and to pay his debt to sociIN
. POETIC JUSTICE R
COLONY THEATRE

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

Fryman's ho·mers ltelp Tigers
get-8-J-triumph
ov~uwttl·
H.I"O
•

If Lofton cannot play, Howard
ByCHUCKMELVIN
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
a rhythm now."
CLEVELAND (AP)- For sill
probably
would replace him in cen·
In his last four starts, Moore is said. "I though 101e threw the ball
,.,eeks, the Detroit Tigers have 3~ with a 2.25 ERA. He's lasted at well until he Wliked the two hitters ter, with Wayne Kirby moving into
I&gt;CCn proving the naysayers right least seven innings in each of those before I took him out (in the fifth). the kadoff spot and Howard taking
Pood as your offense might be, .games, lnc:luding a onc·hil shutout He pitched to 22 hitters. and he was Kirby's No. 2 spot in the order,
Hargrove said.
you cannot win without pitching.
of Kansas City on July 25 and ahead of 17 of tbml."
In other games, Texas beat
· But that doesn't mean the Tigers Wednesday night's complete game
Fryman hit a solO bomer in the
bave given up on 1993.
againsl Oeveland.
third, and the Tigers finished Mesa Chicago 5·2, New York beat
' "In my book. until you're math·
The turnaround has lowered his .with two runs in the fifth on an RBI Toronto 6-2, Boston edged Minematically eliminated, you're still ERA from 6.95 10 5.83.
single by Lou Whitaker and a run· nesota S-4, Kansas City defeated
California 3-2, Baltimore downed
He limited the Indians to three scoring forceout by Kirk Gibson.
in it," Travis Fryman said Wcdnes·
day night after he homered twice in runs, one of them unearned, and
Fryman hit a two-run shot, his Milwaukee 8-6 and Oakland rallied
support of Mike Moore as the nine hits, wallting two and strilcing I 5th, off Matt Young in the sev- past Seattle 54.
Rangers 5, White Sox 2
Tigers beat the Cleveland Indians out none. He had a comfortable enth.
In
this season of baseball
most
of
the
way.
lead
Cleveland
scored
a
run
in
the
8' 3.
"You have 't o pitch and get third when Kenny Lofton doubled, brawls, even Nolan Ryan isn't
Although .it was only Detroit's
II th win in the last 40 games, Fry- three outs an inning, no matter took third on a groundout and came immune.
Ryan. baseball's elder states·
man saw reason for hope in the what the score," Moore said. "I home on an error by Fielder, who
man,
found himself holding RoQin
don't
approach
the
game
any
difpitching or Moore, who seems to
dropped TrammeD's low throw on
Ventura
of the Chicago White Sox
ferently
until!
get
a
big
lead.
When
be pulling out of the slump that left
a two-out grounder by Carlos Baerin
a
headlock
Wednesday night
I
get
a
big
lead,
I
get
more
aggreshim with an ERA near 7.00 mid·
Ventura
charged
the mound in
after
sive and try to get people out on the ga.Lofton strained clirtilage in his
way through the season.
the
third
inning
of
Texas'
5-2 win.
The Tigers signed the 33-year· first or second pitch with fast· right rib cage while- rounding first
Ryan
reeled
off
six
quick
old Moore to a three-year, $10 mil· balls."
on the double and was reDiaced the
punches
two
of
which
landed
on
·
The Tigers took a 3-0 lead next inning by Thomas lfoward. In
lion contract in December. He won
Ventura's
face,
four
of
which
land17 games each of the past two sea- against Jose Mesa (9-8) on five sin· the seventh, Howard hit his third
gles in the second inning, getting home run, and Baerga hit an RBI ed on the top of his head - before
sons in Oalcland.
players from both teams joined the
' "We've counted on him this RBis from Alan Trammell, Scott single.
year to be a big boost to our ball· Livingstone and Chad Kreuter. , Hargrove was unsure whether fracas,
Ventura and Chicago manager
club," Fryman said. "He's 'been a Cecil Fielder started the rally with Lofton would be able to play today.
Gene
Lamont were ejected, but
"When he ducked around Field·
great pitcher for a lot of years, a &lt;a line-drive single over the head of
Ryan
was
allowed to remain in the
,er at frrst and took off for second
solid guy, 15 wins or more. He shortstop Felix Fermin.
gwne.
From
that point on, he was
"Fielder hit the ball hard, but base. he felt something in his
really struggled in the ftrst half. He
virtually
unhittable.
was upset about it No explanation the rest of them were jam shots," side," Hargrove said.
''I've had a couple of confronta·
fOr it But it seems that he's found
lions in my career, but nothing of
that nature," the 46-year-old Ryan
said. "I'm not a big believer in
fights. Usually even the w.inner
gets hurt.''
,
Ryan hadn't been one of the
principles in a brawl since 1980,
when Dave Winfield charged him
in a San Diego Padres-Houston

Sports Probe

Wheeler queen of the rise in auto
racing coverage on cable TV

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world
ofspons:
• Who's behind the increasing
TV coverage of auto racing?
Patti Whccler, a rising 29-yearold TV executive, is the motorsports director of TNN: The
Nashville ~etwork, which is a
nationwide cable channel. She is
televising !I'Ore hours of programming on auto racing in 1993 than
all of the other networks com·
biDed- basic, pay and broadcast
"We're in around 60 million
homes," says Wheeler about the
potential reach of TNN, .l"bich is
known for its country music programming. "We're in as many
places as ESPN and CNN- we're '
also in Canada.' • ·
· With a focus on stock car rac·
ing; TNN has more than 800 bours
of motorsports programming on
this year's schedule. That includes
over I00 hours of live coverageled by eight NASCAR Winston
Cup races.
The next live event on 1NN will
be the New England Chevy Dealers
250, a NA:SCAR Busch Grand
National race on Sunday, Aug. 22,
at the New Hampshire International
Speedway.
·
"The last 2 1/2 years we've
gone from no events to 50-plus live
events," says Wheeler, who.is both
an administrator and a field produc·
er.
Her big events? ... The Winston
Cup races, by far," she says.
"Sometimes they are the highestrated cable event of the week."
Also being seen Jive on TNN

sue what she calls her real "first
Jove"- sports televi8011.
As a teen-~er, Wheeler got to
know the leadmg auto racers and
their teams. She used to help CBS
and NBC coordinate various tele- ·
caSts. "I knew the people and who
Ill lllk to about what," she says.
After graduating from Belmont
Abbey College in North Carolina,
Wheeler began her full-time TV
sports career. Her auto racing work
' has been seen on TBS, Prime Net·
work and ESPN. She's been with
TNN for more than two years.
• Is auto racing the most difficult sport to televise?
It sure is, according to Patti
sport.
Wheeler, who produces live cable
"Ten years ago, you had a cou- coverage for The Nashville Net·
ple of events on ABC's 'Wide work. She claims: "Motorspons is
World of,S)lOOs.' Daytona on CBS singularly the most challenging
was 1979- that was their frrst-cver sport to put on television. Period."
live event NBC with their 'Sports
It's not like a game where
World' did a couple of events.
there's only one ball 10 follow.
"So you had literally a handful
of stoek car events. Thev, did the
"ln ·motorsports," Wheeler
Indy 500- and ABC used to do says, ''there are 40 baijs on the
Monaco (Formula One grand prix). track. Any one of those cars can do
That was it. ,
anything in an instant. Once the
"Since then, I couldn't even tell green flag falls, you can predict
you the aiVount of motorsports absolutely nothing."
across the board on TV.''
Other worries: There are no
• How 'did Patti Wheeler become time-outs. Covering a 2.5-mile
a key television sports executive?
track is an expensive technical
It's taken hard work and a life- problem. And the commentary
long interest in auto racing.
must be interesting.
TNN's motorsports director is
"There's a Jot of depth to
the daughter of H.A. "Humpy"
Wheeler, the president and general mOtorSports that a first-time viewer
manager of Charlotte Motor Speed- wouldn't realize," says Wheeler.
"The history, the people, the cars,
way in North Carolina.
She took advantage of her early the sti'ategy- it's a story-telling
exposure to stoclc car racing to pur- business.''

By BARRV WILNER
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)There was no wheelchair, no
crutches, not even a cane. When
Dennis Byrd returned to training
camp Wednesday, there barely was
a limp.
·
Byrd, retired defensive end of
tbe New York Jets, easily could
have been mistaken for any of the
cUm:nt linemen. He looked fit and
ready to hit a ballcarrier. Maybe it
was just a pulled groin muscle or a
hamstring thai caused him to
slightly drag his left leg.
· 'Sadly it was much more than a
nwscle or tendon that took Byrd
away rrom pro football. II was a
broken neck suffered just over
eight months ago in a collision with
a ' teammate that ended Byrd's
flOUrishing career.
• The injuty did not lake away his
rtiSolve, his faith, his pride. Today,
By:rd even has begun. ~ogging
al!!!in. confounding physicians and
inspiring fans.

"I'd like to attain the strengths I
had before the injury," Byrd said
before joining his former teammates on the practice field. "Some
are sentimental goals and a last act
of defiance, I guess, toward Ibis
injuiy, to get better than I was.
"I have a mixture of emotions.
I'm shocked I'm able to walk in
here as easily as I did, but at the
same time I knew these things
would come to me. From the frrst
day I moved my toe, I knew I had
to press to make it happen.''
Ever since that scary scene at
Giants Stadium last Nov. 29, when
he ran full speed into the chest of
teammate Scott Mersereau and was
wheeled off the field, Byrd has
been a major story throughout the
country.
When he attended a New York
Knicks game, seated in a
wheelchair, and received a warm,
standing· ovation, it was news.
When he appeared at the New York
Mets' opening day and walked

(Continued from Page 4)

him and simply paying off the
guaranteed
final year of his conRepeated hamstrinll injuries
limited his playing ume to 72 tract, but the team so far has been
games in I991 and 71 last season. unwilling to do that.
Now the felony charge opens
He ·was one of three Mets players
named in a rape investigation in other possibilities.
Every player contract includes a
1992, and later there w~e on-the·
field confrontations with coach "loyalty provision" that r~ujres
Mike Cubbage and ex-manager Jeff. good conduct. It is a sort of good
Torborg. This season, he acciden- citizenship, high morals clause.
tally struclc pitcher Dwight Gooden The Mets could argue that being
in !he shoulder with a golf club charged with a felony violates that
while practicing in the !!lubhouse, - clause and frees them from any further obligation to Coleman.
causing the pitcher to.miss a start.
The Chicago White Sox did the
'J'he Mets tried to trade Coleman
same
thin' when pitcher LaMarr
Jast winter,leavinR him available to Hoyt got
mvolved in drug prob·
~ and Colorado in the expan·
lems
some
years ago. The matter
1io0 draft and then offering him in
went
to
arbitration
and Hoyt won
'rade talks. They found 1'10 takers.
There had been talk of releasing the case.

199&lt;1.

~-

Astros game.
.
"I decided then I wasn't gomg
to take it the next time it happened.
I decided I would be the aggressor," Ryan said.
After the game, Ventura refused
to admit any wrongdoing.
"It's no secret that he was
throwing al me and I have to do
what I have to do to protect myself,
and I don't care who it is," Ventu·
ra said. " I'm all right. He gave me
a couple of noogies, but that was
about it."
As for Ryan, he looked to put
the incident behind him.
"I have nothing against Robin
Ventura. The next time I face him,
it won't even cross my mind."
Ryan (3 ·3) dido ' t allow a hit
after the third-inning bray;!, setting
down 12 of 13 batters as he pitched
into the seventh inning. He got
relief help from Tom Henke, who
pitched the final I 1/3 innings for
his 23rd save.
Rafael Palmeiro homered in the
Rangers' five -run fifth, his 281h,
against Alex F~dez (12·6).
Yankees 6, Blue Jays 2
At New York, the Yankees
moved back within two games of
first ph\ce behind the strOng pitch·
ing of Scott Karnienieclci (7-3).
The right-hander didn't allow a
runner to reach second base for
seven innings. By the time he did
in the eighth, the Yankecs had a 60 lead.
Paul O'Neill drove in th;o_e runs.
Dave Stewart (6-6) took the loss.
Red Sox 5, Twins 4
At Minneapolis, Aaron Sele
continued to be a major factor in

the Red Sox pennant hopes.
Sele improved to 6-0 - the
most victories without a loss by
Boston J,litcher since Dave Ferriss
was 8-0 m 194S and George Winter
went 7-0 in 1901 - by scaltering
nine hits in 6 2/3 innings.
Scott Erickson (6-13) set a
career high for losses.
Royals 3, Angels 2
At Anaheim, Calif.. David Cone
(8-10) ended a personal four-game
winless streak on tbe road while
again overcoming lackluster offen·
sive support. Th~ Royals have
scored three runs or less in 17 of
his 24 starts.
Jose Lind hit a tie-brealcing sin·
gle in the seventh inning off Phil
Leftwich (0-2).
Orioles 8, Brewers 6
At Baltimore, Mark McLemore
and Mike Devereaux homered and
Arthur Rhodes survived a bout
with wildness in his frrst start since
May9.
Rhodes (2·2), sidelined for nearly three months with a knee injury,
walked six of the frrst seven batters
and threw 91 pitches in five
innings.
Cal Eldred (11·12) was the
loser.
Atbletics 5, Marlaers 4
At Oakland, Calif., Mike Bordiclc was hit by a piiCh from Gene
NelsOn (3·3) with the bases loaded
in the bottom of the ninth, forcing
in the winning run as Oakland
came back from a 4-2 deficit in the
inning.
Kelly Downs (3-5) worked four
scoreless innings in relief for ·the
win.

this season are events in the Ameri·
can Spee'il' Association AC/Delco
Challenge Series and National Hot
Rod Association races.
Beyond her live coverage,
Wheeler also Sl~Jl!:MSCS 10 regular·
Jy scheduled TNN series on motor·
spats.
"We have a show called 'Inside
Winston Cup Racing'- a halfhour every week," she says.
"We're goin~ 10 swt doing the
first segment hve, so that it's up to
the minute news."
According to Wheeler, the rise
in the coverage of auto racing in
the 1990s marks a buge change in
the way TV has been following the

Byrd's recovery from broke~ neck
injury -noth.ing less than remarkable

(';ole man •••

ALADDIN PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50

· ~--~~~----~ - -

7

In theAL,

•.

TONIGHT THRU THURS.
WALT DISNEY'S

·~

. . ....
., ' ,

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

In the NL,

Reds beat Rockies 9-3 to push
Colorado to lOth straight loss

l

Thursd8y. Auguat'5, 1893,

·uw

ARK III

'

CONVERSION VANS!

QUALITY AT THE TURNPIKE BEST PRICE/
ONLY

onto the field using a cane, it was
news.

Nothing can compare to seeing
him drive a golf cart onto the practice field Wednesday, a cup of iced
tea clutched in his left hand. As he
stopped and got out to shake hands
with coach Bruce Coslet, the rest of
the players scurried over from all
areas.
Fans behind barriers clapped,
then shouted, "Dennis, Dennis.''
He talked to the huddled players
for five minutes, then exchanged a
hug and kiss with Marvin Wash·
ington, Byrd's closest friend on the
team. He faked a short race with
Mario Johnson, a defensive tackle
sporting a cast for a sprained ankle.
He smiled and laughed, and moved
smoothly.
.
"Coming here, the flavor and
atmosphere and everything, it is
difficult," said Byrd, 26. "That
makes it harder to deal with. Many
people would like to be in the
sboes I'm in and I'm very luclcy to
be in those sboes.
·
"In the beginning, I focused so
much on my recovery, I dido ' t
worry so much about (football). It
was not an aspect I had to deal
with. Now it is and it~ s extremely
difficult.
"Coming here today is harder
than preparing for any games. I
have more butterflies ...
"I bad to let things go natural
and meet things head on . I've
looked forward so much to seeing
all these guys.''
Although he doesn't consider
himself particularly articulate, Byrd
will be working as an analyst on
NFL games Ibis season. The right
words for the Jets were tough to
find.
"I wanted what I said to them to
flow and come from the heart,"
Byrd said.

STOCK # 30408

STOCK II 30558

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
'12,802.00

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
'17,794.00

YOUR PRICE ONlY

YOUR PRICE ONlY

$9,651.10*

$14,627.30*

�•

•

~P~•!g~I:!B:!The~~~~ly~5e~n~Une~I----------------------------_!P~o~m~~~y~l!ll!d~~l~epo~-~rt~,~O~h~lo~----------~----~----------_JTh~u~~d!8Y~-~A~ug~us~t!5,~1~99!3~\

By The Bend

In preparation for Hambletonian,

Giant Chill gets acupunctu~re treatment for back problems

By ED SCHUYLER JR.
The horse has been able to win
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. only three of 10 srarts Ibis year and
(AP) -Trainer Per Eriksson~ has a three-race losing streak.
an unusual treatment will have
"We've concentrated on this
Giant (;hill in good enough shape race, and I think he's ready," said
to make Hambletonian history Sat- Eriksson, a native of Sweden who
urday at the Meadowlands.
could become the first trainer to
The two-.yCIU'-old cluimpion trot· win three straight Hambletonians.
ter of tm, bolhered by back probErilcsson won the race in 1991
lems, has undergone acupuncture with Giant Victory and last year
over the last three or four weeks. with Alf Paterna. He also became

..Magic's candor starting
to wear thin on appeal
ByJIMUTKE
AP Sports Writer
Magic Johnson is that rare commodity in sports today: a celebrity
who likes to talk as much as he
likes to be talked about. But the
candor that used to be one of his
most appealing qualities is becoming one of his more annoying.
Every time Johnson breaks a
sweat in a game where at least one
other person is keeping score and a
few others are looldng on, the
question of his rewrn to pro basketball comes up. Considering the way
Magic's leave-taldng has gone so
far - very noble, very public
retirement; very messy, very public
re-retirement - just asking IS bad
enough. But he compounds the
problem with non-denial denials
lilce these:
"I didn't say I was coming
back, I just said the door was
open."
"I would come back for a halfseason, but I don't want to play a
whole season.''
"It will upset what the Lakers
want to do with youth. (General
manager) Jerry West has his hands
full and I'll leave it to him to make
lhe decision.''
Magic said all this Sunday after
- what else? - scoring lhe gamewinning basket in his annual charity game, "A Mid-Summer Night's
Magic." to benefit the United
Negro College Fund.
Playing alongside Michael Jor·
dan, Alon.zo Mourning and
Dominique Wilkins, he more t)lan
held his own, scoring 10 points and
handing out 13 assists in 28 minutes. And· so it becomes easy to
imagine Magic, ever lhe competitor, taking inventory in that
moment before someone stuck a
microphone in his face - stills,
undiminished; heallh, good as ever:
adrenaline, way up -and thinking
out loud, "Why not?"
As it turned out, he had to
answer "why not" several times
over the next two days. In followup interviews, Magic conceded lhat
being a husband, a father and
somelhing of a crusader trying to
inform people about lhe mv were
plentY. enough other things to do.
Still, there must be some part of
"no" lbat Magic does not understand. Even while backpedaling

the youngest winning trainer Qf the
race, at age 24, with. Prakas in
1983.
Giant Chill was made the fifth
betting choice in the second heat,
by far the tougher ol the two elimination heats. Eacb J1eat drew seven
three-year-old trotters, and the first
five fmishers in each will qualify
for lhe final.
Each heat is worth $100,000 ,
and the final is worth $1 million.
· Pine Chip was made the evenmoney favorite, followed by ~erican Winner, 6·5; Capital Stat, 8-t;
Toss Out 12-1· Giant Chill 15·1
and Golden Goal and Promising
Catch, 30-1.

through it, Johnson would not - as
he likes to say - close the door
behind him.
~
"And he won't," Lon Rosen,
.his longtime agent, tri.ed to explain
Tuesday while standing in for his
client. "He's never going to tell
everybody that he's not going to
play.
"I'll grant you, it's confusing.
But he talks li.li;e that all the time.
The trulh is he'd love to play, and
if circumstances were different,
he'd come back in a minute.
"He and Michael were joking
around in the locker room just Sunday - what would happen if the
Bulls called him and he could get
out of his Lakers' deal? And if lhe
Lakers asked," Rosen said, "he
would have to consider it.''
For the record, the Lakers
haven't And he hasn't asked lhem
for anylhing, either. Not yet, any·
way.
"I think if he felt he really
wanted to come back, he would
come to us and there hasn't been
anything yet," West said. "But
Magic holds a very special place in
our hearts. Obviously, we'd listen
to what he had to say."
Say what you want about the
potential impact of any of lhe highprofile draftees, Chris Webber,
· Shawn Bradley or Jamal Mash·
bum; even though he hasn't played
in an NBA game that counted for
two seasons now, with Magic
we're talting immediate impact
If he returned tomorrow, it
would be lilce some god in Greek
mylh who was bored wilh Mount
Olympus coming down to mix it up
with the mortals. But the chances
of it happening in this real time and
place are probably just as remote.
Johnson said no way after he
walked away from the NBA the
first time in November, 1991.
Then, after stealing the show at the
1992 All-Star game, he said not
likely. Then, after Barcelona and
the Dream Team, maybe, then definitely before the 1992-93 season,
then no again. Now he is back to
saying migtit Iinder the ri'ght conditions; then again, might not.
This verbal sleight-of-hand must
seem amusing to a guy whose nickname. is Ma~ic. But 1t's becoming
an awfully tired act for lhe rest of
us to follow.

King
was the
2-1 iiipick,
wilh
DryLavec
Wine next
at 5-2,
lhe•
second heat:' Also entered are Hi
Noon Star, Baltic Baby, Turbo
Thrust, Dylan Lobell and Collier
St. Joey.
Erilcsson admits to being superstitious, and he has plenty to be
superstitious about.
Giant ChiD faces. three jinxes as
the champion two-year-old trotter
and winner of lhe Breeders Crown
two-year-old ·Trot and the Peter
Haughton Memorial. The only two-

Tuesday Morning
Ladies League results .
Winners in lhe Tuesday Morning Ladies Golf League at the
Meigs County Golf Course were:
low gross, JoAnn Childs; low net,
Velma Rue; and Margaret Follrod
and Norma Custer,Iow putts.

' YCIU'·Old champion to go on to win
the Hambletonian since it moved to
the Meadowlands from Du Quoin,
Ill., in 1981 was Mack Lobell in
1987.
Since 1984, the only Breeders
Crown winner to win the race v.:as
Mack Lobell. None of the 13 wmners bef~~e Giant Chill won a
Hambleton1an.
Pine Chip did,not race as a tw&lt;&gt;year-old because of a left. knee
InJury and wo~ only two of h1s first
sev~n starts lh1s year. .
.. .
They need exper!ence, SBid
Chuck Sylvester, teamer and coowner of Pine Chip. "1\'s hard to
win and educate them at the same

time.''
"In the last six weeks be's really come on," driver John Campbell
said of Pine Chip. The colt finiShed
second to American Winner on
June 12 at lhe Meadows. lhen won
his next five starts, including' the
Beacon Course ' final by 1 length.
over American Winner last Satur·
day at the Meadowlands. Pine Chip
also beat American Winner in lheir
only other meeting earlier in lhe
year.
If American Winner prevails in
lhe Hambletonian on the Meadowland's one-mile track, he will be in
line to become the sevenlh winner
of the Trotting Triple Crown and

•,

The Triple Crown finale is the
Kentucky Futurity on Oct. 8 at the
Red Mile in Lexington, Ky.

Delr AM l•l'den: Willi do you

tlliDt of a 'MlQIIII wbo ..._. tluit
her buabaod be prctcnt In tbe ·
delivery 100111, CVCII thougb be
doesn't WMt to be Ibm?
I made it perfectly clear It lbC
beginning of Ibis pregnancy t111t
being in · the delivery room was
sometbing I deftnitely did 1101 want
to do. My wife acemed 10 accept
this It lhe time, but DOW she bas
ChaJJAed her mind ud insists that I
beJn8CIII.
I say if a man feels lb'OIIgly about
Ibis, his wife should ~espect his
wisbes. rm aware, Ann, that 10111e
men wouldn't.miss it for the world.
but it's just not for me. ,
I restAJt being preasUred and mn
llllgl}' that my wife is going back
on her word. And what about
!be medical staff being hindered
by a husband who is tbcrc under
JllliCSl'l Shouldn't they be consulted?
I Clll't be lhc only guy in the world
who feels this way. What do your
male readen say? PleMC ask them.
Sign Ibis letter - IU. BE IN THE
WAITING ROOM IN CALIFOR-

' indianapolis held its first longdistance auto race in 1911.

~---------------------------------•

Ira You ftred of Watching fte Same
Channels U fte ,.baa?
Than have your own personal cable system!
Choose from premiums such as: HBO • CINEMAX • FLIX •
MOVIE CHANNEL and many pay per view movies.
Also great basics: TBS • NETWORKS • TNT •USA •
COUNTRY MUSIC TV • ESPN and much more!
OVER 150 CHANNELS TO CHOOSE FROM!!

STARTING AS LOW AS $40.00 PER MONTH COMPLnELY INSTALLED

BEST RECEPTION
280 MULBERRY AVE., POMEROY, OH.

992-2903

NIA

DEAR WAITING ROOM: You
sound Iilcc 1 man who is afraid he
might pass oUt If he has 10 watch
the binh of a cbild. I can undentaild
your 81J!Rbension, but your wife is
the one who has been carrying Ibis
lllld for nine months. You should
make CV«'J eft'ort 10 belp bel' in Illy
way you Clll.
You did not make It clear whetber
you WJIIIIIO lit out the Clllire ewut,
lllbor ud aD, in the Wilting room or if it is just !be clellyery you don't
wan110 witne8l. If it's the ICtUal birtb
you don't want 10 ICC, I say, OK.
you're excused. You'd probably faint
and get in the way. But I do belie~
you should make lhe effort to be at
your wife's side during labor. Not
only will it give her the support she
needs, it will give you 1 good idea
of what a w0111111 goes through 10
ii~ birth. Too many men don't have
il clue.
Dar Aa• Lallden: I have been
dating "Malk," ege 22, for about two
yean. He doean't drink or 11111cke,
has never hit me ud rarely even
raises his voice. So what's my

1

Umit 4

liWllll•
lOWiill
MDIII' Ill

--·-

--~--

....

.

07

'

11061618, •••••

.

SZDff : .

By JOHN NOLAN
BLUE ASH, Ohio (AP) - Pete
Rose says he is a good-will ambassador for baseball because he talks
positively about the game wherever
he goes.
He said Sunday night he is con:.
fident he will make it into lhe Hall
of Fame and is in no hurry to ask
baseball to reinstate him from his
lifetime banishment for gambling.
Rose, 52, told reporters he
would wait until baseball appoints
a commissioner before applying for
reinstatement. Baseball's all-time
hit leader said the possibility of a
players' slrike in September makes
this an inopportune time to pursue
a retul'n to the game.
.
"There's no·hurry," Rose SBid.
"I'm more interested in baseball
getting their house in order .... I
think it would be bad for baseball1f
they had a work stoppage.
"I'm lhe best ambassador base·
ball has,'' he said. "That's because
I'm always tallcing up the game."
The late Bart Giamatti, then
commissioner, threw Rose out of
baseball in' August 1989. His successor, Fay Vincent, was ousted in
Septeni.ber 1992 and .th~ gam~ has
been w1thout a comm1sS1oner smce.
Rose played Sunday night in an
old-timers' game sponsored by this
Cincinnati suburb. The appearance
did not violate his ban because the
old-timers' game had no conncc·
tion with major league baseball,
baseball spokesman Jim Small
said.
Rose served five months in federal prison after pleading guilty in
1990 for having cheated on his
income taxes.
He' left his native Cincinnati for
Boca Raton, Fla., in July 1991. He
is tending to his businesses and
syndicated radio sports talk show,
and hopes to market a frozen pizza
in his name.
"I believe that every day in my
life that goes by is anolher day in
my column," Rose said of his wait
to ask baseball for reinstatement.
"I'm taking the high road. I'm
doing alllhe right thin,s."
Rose said baseball s next commissioner should have a background in public relations and

should try to market the sport as
the NBA has done wilh baskelball.
"You've got enou~h stars in the
game," Rose said. ' Sell them to
the public, get lheir faces before
the young fans."
Rose said Reggie Jackson had
invited him to attend his Hall of
Fame induction Sunday. Bur Rose
said he declined because of the
Blue Ash commiunent, his his first
old-timers' game since leaving
baseball.
The Major League Baseball
Players Alumni Association, which
helped arrange lhe 'arne, had its
players wear alumm unifo~s to
avoid potenti:!l problems with Rose
wearing a big-league uniform.
Rose played for the National
League team against former Ameri·
can League players at a Crosley
Field replica built to resemble the
Cincinnati ballpark that was home
to the Reds until it closed in 1970.
The replica, part of lhe Blue Ash
Sports Complex, has· some of
Crosley's old seats and one of its
ticket booths.
Cincinnati radio station WLW· ·
AM, which broadcasts Reds games,
was a sponsor and flew Rose to lhe
ballpark in lhe station's traffic helicopter. Fans stood and cheered as
Rose, pounding his glove, alighted
from the copter behind second base
and jogged to the infield, where
city offiCials gave him a key to lhe
city and a plaque.
"We wanted a grand entrance/'
said Jenny Ramsey, assistant to the
city treasurer.
Rose was cheered again when
he led off the bottom of lhe first
inning with a double to left-center
and scored lhe game's first run on a
single by Ed Bailey.
It was lhe first of two Rose hits.
He later was thrown out at the plate
while trying to score. The American League won 8· 3.
. Rose, addressing fans from a
field microphone before the game,
said he considers it a shame his former Reds teammate, Tony Perez, is
not in the Hall of Fame.
"Don't worry, I'll get there,"
Rose told the fans. "Don't worry
about me."

Umit 12

Community Caleadar Items
appear two days before an eveat
and the day ot that eveaL Items
must be received In advance to
assure publkatloa Ia the caleadar.
THliRSDAY
POMEROY - Vacatio!l. Bible
School, First .Southern Baptist
Church, through Friday, 6:30-9
p.m. Call 992-6328 for transportation.

ANN LANDERS
"1993, Lot An1tl"
Tim.. Syndicate
Creaton Syndicate"

problem?
On Mark's 11th birthday, his
fatber gave him a~ 8hephenl
puppy. "Ben." Last week, the vet
told Mark that Ben had cancer.
RathCr than let Ben suffer, Milk
told the vet 10 put bim to sleep. Malk
held Ben while the vet gave him
the shot, and he rix:kcd him
gently until !IC diccl When we got
home, Malk cried opealy and has
been very quiet for the past several
days.
My father insists that any man
who would get that emotional over
•lllimll has lllllllal poblems. Ann,
BeD was Malk's belt friend for 11
yean and I don't tbinlc his behavior
is unusual. Is my father being too
critical, or could Mark really have a
problem? Should I be ooncemed? RU~vn.LE, VA.
DBAR VA.: Your father has
probably never had a pet and does
not undersland Mark's strong
emotional aa.achment to Ben • .
Mark's response to the death of
his "beet friend" and his lingering
sadneas are not abnormal. Sometimea it takes lllODtbs 10 get over the
grief. I suggest thal you get him a
puppy to fill the hole in his heart.
Don't discuss it - just surprise him,
ni bet a dog biscuit to a doughnut,
he will be lhrilled.
Gem of the Day: Love your
friends; practice on your enemies.
Whlll's t~ truJit abouJ pot, CO·
caiM, LSD, PCP, crack, spud aNi
downers? 'T~ Lowdowrt on Dope"
lias up-IO·t~-mblr~U iltformtUion ort
drugs. Send a self-oddrtued, lo11g.
busiMu-size envelope aNi a chl!ck
or 11f0MY order for $3.65 (tltis illeludes postJJge aNi llatldling) to:
Lowdown, c/o .AM I..mtders. P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Iii: 606110562. (In Canada. send $4.45.)

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center needs volunteers on a
scheduled trip to Blennerhassett
Island, August 6. The group is
scheduled to begin loading up at
8:30a.m. and leave at 9 a.m. to
return around 4 p.m. A picnic lunch
will be provided. To sign up contact Jamie Gillispie, Activities
Director, 992-6606 between 7:30
a.m.-3:30p.m.

per qt.

Rose in no hurry to make
case for return to baseball

Augutt 5,1993
Page-7

Community Calendar

Ann
Landers

Volunteers needed

79--

3

:.11

Delivery room
against his will

American Winner, driven by
Ron Pierce, won the ftrst race in
Triple Crown by setting a world
record of 1:56 2-5 for lhree·yCIU'·
old trotters on a half-mile track in
lhe Yonkers Trot on July 10. Pine
Chip was not in that race.

Vour COiilt
after rebate'

Umll12

Thu~ay.

the first since his sire Super Bowl
did it in 1972.
.

59

per qt.

The Daily .Sentinel

RUTLAND • The Rutland
Church of God will hold vacation
bible school for children ages two
to teens through Friday from 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. The title of the pro·
gram is "Celebration Park-Proclaiming Jesus Throughout .the
Year!" For more information call
742•2060. .

day through Sunday from 6:30-8
p.m. with program Sunday at 10:30
a.m; For ages up to 12 years. Call
843-5154.

from 8-11:30 p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW Hall with music by lhe
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public
invited.

LOTIRIDGE - Lottridge Community Center Association meets
Thursday at? p.m.

LONG B01TOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long .Bottom
SCIPIO • Scipio Volunle!lr Fire
will have preaching and singing . Department will have a chicken
Friday at 7:30 p.m. with Pastor barbecue Saturday from 11 a.m. to
Steve Reed and local singers. Pub- S p.m. Costs are $4 for adults and
lic invited. Fellowship will fpllow.
$2.50 for children. A tractor pull
will be held with weigh in at 5 p.m.
and
pull at6 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS • Eastern Athletic Boosters meet Friday at 6:30
BASHAN - Services at the Red
p.m. at the fairgrounds.
Brush Church of Christ will be SatREEDSVILLE - Helmet fitting urday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 6
at Eastern Junior and Senior High p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
School will be Friday at 5 p.m. in will be tbe speaker. Public invited.
the locker room.
SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange
and Star Junior Grange will
SATURDAY
POMEROY • Bedford Town- meet Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
ship Volunteer Fire Department grange halt located on County
Committee will sponsor a square Road I near Salem Center. Final
dance Saturday from 7:30-11 p.m. plans will be made for the display
at the Meigs County Senior Citi- at the Meigs County Fair. Hemlock
zens Center. Admission is $2 single Grange will be guests. Potluck
or $3 couple. Music will be by Out refreshments. All members urged
of the Blue. There will be a cake to attend.
walk and other contests.
CLIFTON, W.VA. - There will
HARRISONVILLE
Har- be a lienefit hymn sing at the .
risonville Lodge meets Saturday at Clifton Tabernacle on Saturday at 7
.
7:30 p.m. Refreshments will fol - p.m. Gospel singers welcome.
low. All master masons welcome.
SUNDAY
RACINE - The Smith-Stobart
WILKESVD...LE • Green, Odgin
reunion will be Saturday at the and Caster reunion will be held
Racine American Legion Hall. Sunday, at the Columbia Chapel
Covered dish dinner at noon with Christian Church on Route 689
meat and table service provided. between Albany and Wilkesville.
Entertainment at 2 p.m. with music, There will be a basket dinner at
games and prizes. Square dance at 12:30 and relatives and friends are
6 p.m. with CJ and the Country welcome.
Gentlemen.,
RUTI.AND - The 75th reunion
ELEANOR, W.Va.· Liberty for descendants of Orlando and
Mountaineers perform Saturday at Kalherine (Sheline) Davis will be
Sunday at the American Legion Eli
Eleanor City Park.
Dennison Post Home in Rutland.
MIDDLEPORT - Community Dinner will be at noon. Everyone
.
wide yard sale, Hartinger Park, weleome.
Middleport, Saturday, 8 a.m. to
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
dark
by Middleport Recreation
Kootaga
Indians will dance at the
Committee. Call Arnold Johnson at
992·6589 for information. Provide 10 a.m. service at the Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ. The event
·your own table. No charge.
is coordinated by lhe Boy Scouts
LONG BOTIOM • Smorgas- and lhe public is invited. There will
bord and dance, Long Bottom be a covered dish dinner at noon.
Community Center on •Saturday.
REEDSVILLE • ReedsviUe FelSmorgasbord at 5 p.m. at $5 for
adults and $2.50 for those under lowship Church of the Nazarene
12. At 8 p.m. there will be country will have vacation bible school
and rock-a-billy· music by White's closing program Sunday at 7 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Meigs County Health Department
will offer a free community immunization clinic at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department on Thursday from 9·11 a.m. for ages two
months through kindergarten age.
Bring child's immunization record.

REEDSVILLE • The Meigs
County Health Department will
offer a free community immuniza-.
tion clinic at the Reedsville Fire
Department on Thursday from 1-3
p.m. for ages two monlhs through
REEDSVILLE - Fellowship kindergarten age. Bring child's
Church of lhe Nazarene, vacation · immunizatiQn record.
bible school through Friday from
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
6•8:30 p.m. across form Forked
of
AA and At-Anon will meet
Run State Park. For more informaThursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
tion call378-6175.
Catholic Church. Call 992-5763 for
CHESTER - The New Life information.
Covenant Church of God will hold
RUTLAND • The Rutland
a campmeeting through Friday at 7
p.m. nightly. There will be three Township Trustees will . meet
speakers and special music by Gary Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at lhe Rut·
Turner and the New Life Covenant land Fire Station. Public invited.
Singers.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
ROCK SPRINGS - First Soulh- Springs Grange meets Thursday, 8
ern Baptist Church will have vaca- p.m . Annual inspection. All memtion bible school through Friday, bers attend.
6:30-9 p.m. Call 992-6378 for
POMEROY - S.alisbury Town·
transportation.
ship Trustees meet Thursday at
TUPPERS PLAINS - Hickory 7:30p.m. at the hall.
Hills Church of Christ will hold
RU'ILAND • The Star Garden
vacation bible school through Friday, 7-8:30 P·ID· Ages two through Club will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday
junior high. Call 667-6973 for at lhe honie of Mrs. Virgil Atkins.
Mrs. Roben Jewell will be c&lt;&gt;-hostdetails.
ess.
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church will be having vacation ' POMEROY • PERI will meet
bible school through Friday from 6 Thursday at I p.m. at the Senior
to 8:30p.m. This yCIU''S theme is Citizens Center. All members
"Digging for God's Trulh and lhe urged to attend.
Great Dinosaur Hunt." Dr. Digger
will be lhere every night and lhcre
FRIDAY
will be a great dinosaur egg hunt
RACINE • Racine Fireman
on the last evening. Ages are 3 to Ladies Auxiliary, ice cream social,
13 years. Call 992-6768 for more Friday at5 p.m, at the the fii'Chouse
information.
annex. Hotdogs, sloppy joes, pies,
cake, tea an.d coffee available.
REEDSVILLE - Th.e Olive
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
Tow'nship Trustees meet Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River be a round and square dance Friday
State Forestry Building.

Grange elects
new officers

Hilt Band. Square and round dancing, line dancing and clogging.
Charge is $3 for singles, $5 for
couples,, $1 lhose under 12 and free
for those under three .

RACINE • Racine Post 602 will
meet Thursd!IY. Din'!er will be at
6:30 p.m. w1th meeung at 7 p.m.
Boys State delegates will give their
reports..

New officers were elected and
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup·
several contributions were made
pers
Ptairis VFW Ladies Auxiliary
when lhe Rock Springs Grange met
will
meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
recently at the hall on the fairthe
post
home.
·
grounds.
William Radford was elected
PORTLAND · The Portland
master, Rollin Radford, overseer; First Church of the Nazarene will
P:at Holter, lecturer; R:oy Holter, hold vacation .bible school Thurssteward; Roy Grueser, assistant
sreward; Opal Grueser, lady assis----- -tant steward; Nancy Radford, chaplain; James Fry, treasurer, and
Recent guests of Margaret Par· Frances Goe.Jtlein, secretary. ·
Olher officers elected were Barsons, Rutland, were her niece, Carolyn Wells Dreas, her husband, bara Fry, Ceres; Helen Blackston,
Bill, and daughter Ashley, of Cali· Pomona; Sarah Caldwell, Flora;
Roy Grueser, executive committee
fornia.
LISA BUTCHER-FARMER
and. Louise Radford, pianist. ·
Marine Lance Cpl. Lisa L.
Donations were made to both Butcher-Farmer, whose former
lhe Pomeroy and the Chester Fire guardians are Ronald and Cheryl
Deparunents, an an appeal for md D. Butcher of 39007 Mud Fork
from anolher grange was answered Rd., Pomeroy was recently·promot·
with a conb'ibUtion.
ed to her present rank while serving
Annual inspection will be held with 3rd Maintenance Battalion,
on Aug. 5 and a practice for that 3rd Foree Service Suppon Group,
was set for 8 p.m. on Aug. 3 at the Okinawa, Japan.
hall.
By LYNN ELBER
She joined lhe Marine Corps in
Bunny Kuhl, lecturer, gave a July 1989.
AP Televlsioo Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A history of the founding of the
Clint Eastwood movie, a rerun of a Meigs County Library and of the
ROBERT ROBERTS
Farrah Fawcett miniseries and Bar- various programs available there.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert E.
bara Walters' interview with lhe Mrs. Holter, a member of the Roberts, son of Robert H. and
switched·at-binh girl helped ABC . board, talked briefly about the Sherry L. Robens of Gallipolis,
win the ratings for the last full library, its development plans, and recently reported for duty at Naval
the activities which are offered as a Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. ·
week of the July sweeps.
to lhe c6inmunity.
service
So far, CBS and ABC are tied in
The 1988 graduate of Gallia
Refreshment
were served by Mr. Academy High School joined lhe
the ratings for the July sweeps,
which began July 7 and. ended a~d Mrs. Fry and Mrs. Goeglem.
Marine Corps in October 1991.
today. The sweeps are one of four
month-long periods per year during
which the ratings are used by Sta·
lions 10 set advertising rates.
For the week of July 26-Aug. 1,
ABC received a 9.7 rating,lhe A.C.
Nielsen Co. reported Tuesday. CBS
had an 8.6, NBC a 7.8 and Fox
Broadcasting a 5.3. One ratings
point equals 931,000 households.
ABC had seven of the top 10
shows, including lhe most-watched
program, pan two of the fact-based
"Small Sacrifices,". starring Ms.
Fawcett as a woman who shot her
'
children.
Open
To
All
5th
&amp;
6
th
Graders
In Meigs or
The Eastwood movie "The
Dead Pool" tied with "60 MinMason Counties
utes" at No. 2.
Wishing To Play Football or Be A
"Turning Point," a special in
which Walters interviewed KimCheerleader.
berly Mays,lhe 14-year-old Florida
(Cannot Be Age 13 Prior To September 1)
girl who was switched at birth in a
hospital, was No. 4.
Any Adult Who Is Interested In Coaching Can
In the evening news ralings,
ABC won with a 9.7. CBS
Turn In Resume At The Sign Up
squeezed into second place with an
· 8.2. NBC had an 8.1.

Parsons guests

.......

Glllll.Mn

In the service

Bllllilli

Price good
w11h exchange

ABC C0 meS

in strong

.3.

~.~
$10ff

1'111111tllr
..
flltll'l
foreign or dOmestic

"2.• 477~
$2 Off

liiWIII'II .....

WE ACCEPr

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

c7t=··

S1ore Houre: 8:30a.m. to 8 p.m. Mond1y through Frtdly
8:~ a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 81.m. to 5 p.m. Sundl~

UIU Ill

GALLIPOliS

•

. 209 Upper River Road

446-3807

A

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL .
9:oo A.M. ·NOON
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7TH
BIG BEND HEALTH &amp; FITNESS CENTER

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT

MILL STREET MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

...... - - -

----·--------·~·~

'

.

ASpecial Edition-In
The D~ily Sentinel.
Wednesday, September 1, 19·93

.L --·

__;_

NOW BY CALLING:

ASK FOR DAVE ·or P.J.
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25,_1993

�•

, , .. 8 The Deily Sentinel

Calendar of-eve-nt-s-iR--Qhio~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is a list of curn:nt IIIJd upcom·
ing Ohio festivals and ev!'nts as
provided by tbe Ohio Division of
Travel and Tourism:
Through Aug. 31, Portrait of the
Iron Hone, Depot Museum, Denni-

son.

Through Aug. 11, Hayes Pres\·
dential Cenler Concerts, Premont
Through Sept 12, John Thomas
Art Exhibit, J.i!. Reeves ViciiJI'\Bn
Home&amp;: Museum, Dover.
Throush Sept. 6, "It's All in
Your Hesd: An Exhibition About
Your Bnrln," COSI, Columbus.
• Throush Aug. 26, Poetry in the
Park. Park of Roses, Columbus.
Through Sept 6, Quilt National
'93, Dairy Bam Cul!W'al Arts Center, Athens.
• Through Sept 30, Summer Art
Show, Johnson-Humrickhouse
Museum, CoshociOII.
Through Sept 5. Summer Music
Festival, Hudson.
.
Through Aug. 31, "Greenhouse
Earth," Cincinnati Museum of
Natural History, Cincinnati.
.
Through Aug. 31, "Remembering Greene Countr," Greene
County Museum, Xerua.
Through Aug. 28, Antique Doll
&amp; Marionette Exhibit, Victorian
.Perambulator Musemn, Jefferson.
Throush Aug. 26, Downtown at
Dusk Concert Series, Akron Art
Museum, Akron.
Through Sept. 6, Music in the
Air, Columbus.
, Through Aug. 8, Ohio Light '
Opera, College of Woosrer, Wooster.
Through Sept. 5, "The May
Show," Cleveland Art Museum,
Cleveland.
Through Sept. 4, "Tecumseh!"
Outdoor Drama, Sugarloaf Mountain Amphithealre, Chillicothe.
Through Sept 5, "Bluejacket"
Outdoor Drama, Caesar s Ford
Park Amphithealre. Xenia.
Through Sept. 5, ~ic Waters
Summer Theatre, Bainbndge.
Through Aug. 29, "Trumpet in
the Land" Outdoor Drama,
Schoenbrunn Amphitheatre, New
Philadelphia. .
·
·· Through Aug. 31, Concerts in
the Park, Austintown.
Through Aug. 19, Magical
Musical Mornings, Columbus.
Through Sept 4, "The Living
Word" Outdoor Drama, Cambridge.
Through Sept. 19, Summer F1oral Show, Krohn Conservatory,
Cincinnati.
Through Aug. 29, "Focus
Fiber," Cleveland Museum of Art,
·' Cleveland.
Through Nov. 30, "Circus of
Circles" Exhibit, Cleveland Chil·
dren's Museum, Cleveland.
Through Aug. 8, "Athena Society's 90th Anniversary Exhibition," . Toledo
. Museum of An,
Toledo.
Through Sept. I, "Bridges &amp;
Boundaries: African-Americans &amp;
American Jews," National AfroAmerican Museum, Wilberforce.
Through Aug. 15, National Rifle
&amp; Pistol Matches, Camp Perry,
Port Clinton.
Through Oct 17, "Ohio Metals:
A Legacy - Ohio Designing
Craftsman," Miami University Art
Museum, Oxford
Through Aug. 8, "Shooting
Star," West Liberty.
Through Aug. 15, Jungle Trails
Opening, Cincinnati Zoo, Cincinnati.
Through Aug. 8, U.S. National
Hot-Air Balloon Championship,
Smith ParkHook Field Airport,
Middletown.
Through Sept. 3, "Art in the
Garden," ArtSpaceLima, Lima.
Through Aug. 7, Preble County
Fair, Preble County Fairgrounds,
Eaton.
Through Aug. 7, Greene County
Fair, Greene County Fairgrounds,
Xenia.
Through Aug . 31, "The
Wardrobe Chest: 19th Century
Dress," Milan Historical Museum,
Milan.
Through Aug. 7, Gallia County
Junior Fair, Gallia County Fair·
grounds, Gallipolis.
Through Aug. 7, Pike County
Fair, Pike County Fairgrounds,
Piketon.
Through Aug. 7, Vinton County
Junior Fair, Vinton County Fairgrounds, McArthur.
Through Aug. 8, Medina County Fair, Medina County Fairgrounds, Medina.
Through Aug. 15, Thriftway
ATP Championship, Jaclt Nicklaus
Spons Ctr., Mason.
Aug.' 3-31, WildlHe Prints
Exhibit by John Ruthven, French
Art Colony, Gallipolis.
Aug. 4-7, Silver King Festival,
Plymouth.
·
Aug. 4-8. Hamilton County
Fair, Hamilton County Fairgrounds, Cincinnati.
Aug. 4-Sepl. 26, "Gypsy ,"
Carousel Dinner Theatre, Aleron.
Aug. 5·8, Dressage '93, Chagrin
Valley Farms, Chagrin Falls.
Aug. 5-11 , Wood County Fair,
Wood County Fairgrounds, Bowl·
ins Green.
Aug. 6, Craft Show, Courthouse
Square, Warren.
Aug. 6, "Romeo &amp; Juliet,"
Cleveland Orchestra, Blossom
Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls.
Aug. 6-8, Camel Super Cycle
Weekend, Mid-Ohio Sports Car
Course, LexingiOII.
Aug. 6-8, Silver Crik Turkey

l'

Thuraday. AugU8t 5, 1993

pomeroy_ llddleport, Ohio

Daze, 0.-rettsvillc.
Aug. 6-8, SqWR Fair '93, Town
Square. Lima.
Aug. 6-8, Twins Days Festivals,
Chamberlin Park. 1'winsburJ:.
· Aug. 6-12, Auglaize County
Fair, A~laize County Fairgrounds.
Wapatronct.a.
A;fti:::' Carnation City Festival,
.
.
Aug. 6-22, Ohio State Fair,
Ohio Stale Fairgrounds. Columbus.
Aug. 7, AU American Soap Box
Derby, Deroy Downs, Aleron.
Aug. 7, Antique Car Show &amp;
F1ea Market, Hocking County Faitgrounds, Logan.
Aug. 7, Arts Festival, Lakewood.
Aug. 7, Di!blin Cycling Challenge, Dublin.
Aug. 7, Festival of the Arts,
Harvey Firestone Recreation Park,
Columbiana.
Aug. 7, Fifties Fest, Shopping
Plaza, Fostoria.
Aug. 7, Fine Art &amp; Crafts Fair,
Courthouse Lawn, Bellefontaine.
Aug. 7, Polklife Celebration,
Village Green, Worthington.
Aug. 7, Ohio Mennonite Relief
Sale, Central Christian H.S. ,
Kidron.
Aug. 7-8, Arts &amp; Crafts Festival, The Continent, Columbus.
Aug. 7-8, Arts in the Park, City
Park, Port Clinton.
Aug. 7-8, Atwood Lake Beach
Party, Atwood Lake Park, Mineral
City.
Aug. 7-8, Basket Festival,
Berlin Heights.
Aug. 7-8, Doll Show &amp; Sale,
Sauder Farm &amp; Craft Festival,
Archbold.
Aug. 7-8, Eagles V Air Show,
Lorain County Regional Airport,
Elyria.
Aug. 7-8, Flax Scrutehing Festi. val, Hall Park, Winona.
Aug. 7-8, French &amp; Indian War
Re-enactors, Gov. Bebb Preserve,
Ross.
Aug. 7-8, Happy Piece Makers
Quilt Show, Gilmour Cenrer, Tiffin
University, Tiffin.
Aug. 7-8, Harvest Festival, Zoar
Village Srare Memorial, Zoar.
Aug. 7-8, Kaleidoscope of
Quilts, high school, Perrysburg.
A!lg. 7-8, Plain &amp; Fancy Fair,
Whispering Hills Campground,
Shreve.
Aug. 7·8, Pymatuning Lake Festival, Pymatuning State Park,
Andover.
Aug. 7-8, Summer Garden Tour,
Mount Pleasant.
Aug. 7-13, Champaign County
Fair, Champaign County Fairgrounds, Urbana.
Aujl. 7-26, Miniature Quilt
Exhibuion, Sauder Farm &amp; Craft
Village, Archbold
Aug. 7-29, Antique &amp; Conremporary Cookie Jars Exhibit, Spirit
. of '76 Museum, Wellington.
Aug. 7-Sept. 4, Kite Exhibit,
U.S. Air Force Museum, WPAFB,
Dayton.
Aug. 8, All-Beethoven Concert,
Cleveland Orchestra, Blossom
Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls.
Aug. 8, Buckeye Lake Tour of
Homes, Millet'S(XXt.
Aug. 8, Central Ohio Farm Toy
Collectors Show, Clark County
Fairgrounds, Springfield.
Au!!. 8, Folk Music Festival,
Histone Shannon Woods Village,
Sharonville.
Aug. 8, Tiffin Lions F1y-ln &amp;
Drive-In Breakfast, Seneca County
Airport, Tiffin.
.
Aug. 8-14, Clinton County Fair,
Clinton County Fairgrounds,
Wilmington. · 1
Aug. 8-14, Ross County Fair,
Ross County Fairgrounds, Chillicothe.
Aug. 8-15, Richland County
Fair, Richland County Fairgrounds,
Mansfield.
Aug. 9-14, Athens County Fair,
Athens County Fairgrounds,
Athens.
Aug. 9-14 , Hartford Independent Fair, Croton.
Aug. 9-14, Scioto County Fair,
Scioto County Fairgrounds,
Lucasville.
Aug. 9-15, Cuyahoga County
Fair, Cuyahoga County Fair·
grounds, Berea.
Aug. 9-15, 75th PGA Championship, Inverness Club, Toledo.
Aug. 10-15, Ashtabula County
Fair, Ashtabula County Fairgrounds, Jefferson.
Aug. 10-15, Erie County Fair,
Erie County Fairgrounds, San dusky.
Aug. 11 -15, Attica Independent
Fair, fairgrounds, Attica.
Aug. 12-14, Baltimore Festival,
Baltimore.
Aug. 12-15, " Dynamic Limita. tions, " Closson Art Gallery,
Cincinnati.
Aug. 13, U.S. Drum &amp; Bugle
Corps Championship, Harding
High School Stadium, Marion.
Aug. 13-14, Point Amusement,
Russells PoinL
Aug. 13-1S, Auto Swap Meet,
fairgroiDids, Randolph. ·
Aug. 13-15, Bach Brandenburgs, Cleveland Orchestra, Blossom Music Cenrer, Cuyahoga Falls.
Aug. 13-15, Czech Days, Co-op
Grounds, Dillionvale. · ·
Aug. 13-15, Corn Festival,
North Ridgeville.
Aug. 13-15, Dan Emmet Music
&amp; Arts Festival, Mount Vcmon.
Aug. 13-15, French Art &amp;
(;:rafts Festival, City Park, Gallipolis.
Aug. 13-1 5, German Picnic ,

,

CarillOn Park. D$yton.
Aug. 13-15, Hot Air Affair, Van
Wert County Fairgrounds, Van
Wert
Aug. 13-15, Italian-American
Heritage Festival. Wam:n. '
Aug. 13-15, Salt Fork Arts &amp;
Crafts Festival, City Park, Cambridge.
· Aug. 13-15, Steam Engine &amp;
Antique Power Show, Olenford.
Aug. 13-15, Summerfest,
Memorial Palt, St Marys.
Aug. 13-15,TappantakcBeach
Party, Tappan Lake Park,
Deersville.
Aug. 13·15, Henry County Fair,
Henry · County Fairgrounds,
Napoleon.
Aug . 13-19, Mercer County
Fair, - ~ercer County Fairgrounds,
Celiria.
Aug. 13-Sepl. '26, " Still Life
Still" Exhibit, Southern Ohio
Museum, Portsmouth.
Aug. 14, Art on the Lawn, Mills
Lawn School, YeUow S~gs.
Aug. 14, Irish Fesuval on the
Green, Municipal Boat Basin,
Huron.
Aug. 14, Moonlight on the
Canal , Piqua Historical Area,
Piqua.
Aug. 14, Ole Car Club Show,
City Park, Gallipolis.
• Aug. 14, Raymond Rally Day,
Raymond.
Aug. 14, Rio Grande Bean Din·
ner, Bob Evans Farm Shelterhouse,
Rio Grande.
Aug. 14, Sand Drag, Hill Climb
&amp; Obstacle Course, Mohican
Waterslide, Loudonville.
Aug. 14, Schoenbrunn Village
Candlelight Tours, New Philadel·
phia.
'
Aug. 14, Starving' Artist Craft
Show, Allen County Fairgrounds,
Lima.
Aug. 14, Summer Art Festival,
Akron Art Museum, 'Akron.
Aug. 14, Su~ Clievy Saturday,
National Tratl Raceway, Kirkersville.
Aug. 14, Zoar Winetasting &amp;
Tour, Zoar Village State Memorial,

Zoar.

Aug. 14-15, Fremont F1es Mar·
ket, Sandusky County Fairgrounds,
Fremont.
Aug. 14-15, Rug&amp;: Craft Show,
Century Village, Burton.
Aug. 14-15, Sandy &amp; Beaver
Canal Days, Magnolia.
Au~. 14-19, Miami County Fair,
Miam1 County Fairgrounds, Troy.
Aug. 14-15,21-22, 28-29, Shaker Woods Festival, Columbiana.
Aug. 15, Antique Wholesale
Man, Medina County Fairgrounds,
Medina.
Aug .. 15, Art on the Commons,
Civic Commons, Kettering.
Aug. IS, Birmingham Ethnic
Festival, Toledo.
Aug. 15, "Bounties' from Your
Flower Gard·en, " John Hauck
House, Qncinnati.
Aug. 15, Mohican Mud Bog,
Mohican Warerslide, Loudonville.
Aug. 15, Oat Threshing, Carriage HiU Farm, Dayton.
Aug. 15, Victoriim Lawn Party,
The Inn on Kelleys Island, Kelleys
Island.
Aug. 15-21, Muskingmn COIDity
Fair, Muskingum County Fairgrounds, Zanesville.
Aug. 15-21, Parade of the.Hills,
Nelsonville.
Aug. 16-21, Huron County Fair,
Huron County Fairgrounds, Norwalk.
Aug. 16-21, Meigs County Fair,
Meigs County Fairgrounds,
Pomeroy.
Aug. 17-21, Holmes County
Fair, Holmes County Fairgrounds,
Millersburg.
Aug. 17-22, Jefferson County
Fair, Jefferson County FairgroiDids,
· Smithfield.

-~sk-PcLA-het&gt;-1
.

fashions
showcased at revue

"Fashion Goes to School" was
the tl)eme of the 1993 Meigs County 4-H Style Revue held Wednesday cvetting at Meigs High School.
Sixlecn categories were prcsen·
· tee during the revue with partie·
pants as follows:
Spectator Sportswear • Kelley
Grueser, grand champion; Crystal
Vaughan, reserve champion; Cynthia Cotterill, Melissa Dempsey
and Crystal Smith , all honorable
mention.
Sewing for Others • Elizabeth
Downie and Ryan Beegle, grand
champion; Andrea Neutzling and
Regan Shuler, reserve champion.
Fun With Clothes • Tiffany
Hensley, grand champion; Nancy
Pickens, reserve champion; Melissa
Francis, Ashley Hamilton and
Stacey, Kimes, all honorable mention; and Stephanie Burdette and
Chelsea Montgomery, participants.
Adventures in Clothing • Shannon Enright, grand; Whitney Ashley, reserve; Alyson Patrerson and
Rebekah Smith, both honorable
mention; and Rebekah Karr and
Tammy Wolfe, particpants.
Topping Your Ot~tfit - Pamela
Neece, grand; Bridget Vaughan,
reserve; and Beverly Burdette and
Nancy Pickens, honorable mention.
Joyful Jumper • Jamie Drake,
grand; Kristina Lodwick, reserve;
Amanda Wheeler and Rebekah
!Carr, honorable mention.
Active Sportswear • Noelle
Pickens, grand; Melissa Neutzling,
reserve; Sarah Lodwick, honorable
mention. BiUie Butcher was absent.
Clothes for Middle School Anna Wolf, grand; ChriSiy Drake,
reserve; Tara Grueser, Rebekah
!Carr, Patty Nally, honorable mention; amd Sarah Grucser, Andrea
Neutzling and Bil!ee Pooler, participants.
Clothes for High School and
Beyond - Ginger Holcomb, grand;
Elizabeth Downie, reserve; Mary
Grueser, honorable mention.
Coats and Jackets • Heather
Well, grand; Crystal Smith,
reserve; and Dorothy Leifheit, honorable mention.
Loungewear - Jennifer Mora,
grand; Amy Smith, reserve.
Time Out for Clothing I - Rainy
Walker, grand; Rebekah Karr,
reserve; Jessica Hamilton, honorable mention: Christy Neece,
Linzie Nottingham, Rusty Robinson, participants.
Ttme Out for Clothing II - Jill
Lemley, grand; Lisa ·Hoffman,
reserve.
•
Time Out for Clothing ill · Erin
Smith was absent.

Dress Up Daywear - Kristi
Warner, grand; Pamela Neece,
reserve.
Press Up Evening Wear •
Denise Shenefield, grand ; and
Debra Frost, reserve.
The 4-H Fashion Board also
modeled outfits available from
Elder Beerman of Athens. Board
members are Denise Shenefield,
Elizabeth Downie, Cynthia Cotter·
ill, Melissa Dempsey, Kelley
Grueser, Tara Grueser, Pamela
Neece, Crystal Y.aughan and Jen- .

,

niferMora.
Selecred as Ohio State Fair participants were: Elizabeth Downie
and Ryan Beagle, Tiffany Hensley,
Jill Lemley, Shannon Enright,
Debra Frost, Pamela Neece, Denise
Shenefield, Jamie Drake, Hesther
Well, Anna Wolf, Kelley Grucser,
Noelle Pickens, Christi Drake and .
Jennifer Mora. Alternates to the :
stale fair are Bridgette Vaughan, :
Christina Kennedy and Patty Nally . .
The Fair Style Revue will be .
Wednesday, Aug. 18 at 2 p.m. at
the Hillsrage.
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Former Home State Savings, Bank
owner Marvin Warner will be
released early from prison this
month because of good behavior, a
prisO!Is spokesman said.
Warner, 74, will serve 2 1/2
years of his 3 1/2-year sen renee for
his role in the collapse of Home
State Savings Banlc. He began serving the senrencc April24, 1991.
The collapse of the Cincinnati
savings and loan in March 1985 led.
former Gov . Richard Celeste to
close the state's other 69 thrifts
until they obtained federal insurance or were bOught by banks or
S&amp;Ls with federal insurance-.
Warner's official release date
from the Madison Correctional
Institution in London is Aug. 21, a
Saturday, Joe Andrews, a
spokesman for the Ohio Depart·
ment of Rehabilitation and Correc·
lions, said Tuesday. However,

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

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

• Ad. out.ide tl. eowat7 your •d nuu mutt be prepaid
• RtiCfliw dieeout lor ada paid ia adwuce.
• Fn~~~ Ad.: Ci..-w&amp;J aad Fouad. ~de uader 15 worde will be
rua 3 d:aJI•l DO eharp.
• Prie. of"ad for aU ca~ leta.n ill double pr ice of .d coet
•
• 1 pololliDo lype oaly ....!
• S..llaol io .....,... ~te for"""" oller r.... clay (cltec:k
for errwo (~nl day ad,.... ill peper). CaD belon.2:00 p.m.
clay aflor publlealloa 10 make correedoo
• ..W. that autt be peid iD: iulvuee are:
Card of Tlwlu
Happy Acb

case.

Ia M-oria•

Warner, who was U.S. ambassador to Switzedand under President Carter, was convicred in 1987
in Hamilton Countr Common Pleas
Court in Cincinnati on six counts of
unauthorized acts and three counts
of securities law violations.
Home Stare closed afrer it lost
more than $144 million in dealings
with ESM Government Securities
Inc. of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Home State was the largest
!"ember of Ohio's private deposit
msurance fund. Its loss and a run
by depositors jeopardized insurance coverage of the Other 69
S&amp;Ls.

367...a...hlre

992- MI.wlepol'l/
Pomeroy

388-VinlOn

985~Choaler

245-lllo Grande
256-G..,. •• Dlol.
643-Aralola Dlol.
379-'ll'alnul

843-Portlond
247~Lelan F.U.
949-Racillo
742-Rutlaod
667-Cooi.Wo

446-GalllpoUa

Mowll's • Chain Saws

SAVERS....

Authorized: Brtaga &amp;

Stratton MTD, Fryan,

I. D.C. Rapalr Canter
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M·F 9-3 Sat.

CW.ed Sunday
949·2104

992-2156

· 4126/lfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING &lt;

ClllPDIIA

Will

Remodell=IIICid

BULLDoZER, BACKHOE
and TllACKHOE WORK

Rlpllr

. •FIREWOOD

992-2269
•

A public t&lt;'rvice of I h is newspaper

·' I I I I ' I I

Limestone
Dirt
G.ravel

,.'

-EMPIRE FU
WILL BE CLOSED
FRIDAY, AUGUST 6
AT 5:00 TO ATIEND
THE FAIR.

Auction

Tn/1

(former Mason Lanes)

3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV

4.1- Ho111e1 for Real

48--- Equip•eat for Rent

Buy

4~ForL...

51- Houobold Goodt
52- SportiDc Goodt
$~Aullq1101

54- Mlle. Mereluoodioe
55- BuildiDI Suppli•

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

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
. 992·7878
Tn/1 mo.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
' New Garages • Replacement Windows , .
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

EVERY THUfiSDAY

. EAGLeS
CLUB
. . IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ed good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

614·992·7643
INo S1nday Calls)
2/12/92/tfn

Q

DAVIDSON'S •.
PLUMBING

Shade River Saddle Shop.,_
CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

~
"Ad Specialtie•"

36358 SR7

446-7812
Fax/Voice 446-7612

l

..

J

.

.;aj
......
.
Plumbing

Announcements

;;.;:.o

3 Announcements

38904 Leading
· CntkRoad
Mlddltport, Ohio

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406 '· ·

Clllld- Cllrtollan Couple
W.rta So Much To lwaame
l.a¥11111 Po-. Ta Yo•"
Chorllhed Nowbom Wo Havo
So Much Lon To Oln l y..,
Ha.. 8o lluoh Life To Uvo. Wo
PromiM To 01.. Yo•n BabV A
Brlaht l HappJ Fut... In Our

614·992·7144

. 4/29/93 tfn

3/8/lln

LaYing Our
- ..
Anowir
Praywo
By Colllng
Bonnie • Bill 1.a00.334 1011.
llodlcoi/Logll E J - t. Paid.
GIRLS UYE\11

:Mhra., 1 on 1, 1-100-288-2882

4-FAMILY YARD SALE
August·6 &amp; 7

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

35707 Loop Road
Rutland, Ohio - 742·2790

U1. 1444, $3.111· por mllh 111Uol
be 11 yno .. PIOCCIII Co. 0&lt;12-GI·
0111.

Stone

205-75R15"1lg. PttW XTM AWL
205-75R14"1la- PttW XTM AWL
215-75R15" Flr•IDne OWL
z3S-75R15" Flr•IDne OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 112M3 .

Nice clean clolhes,
household Hems, tools.

IN THE

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992· 6637

c•••llire,

Beginning Sunday,
August 16th
['

THIS SPACE
$16.00

THIS SPACE
$8.00

CALL 446·2342
OR

992·2156
FOR' MORE INFORMATION

Call Now For Sunday, August 16th

The life expectancy at birth in the
West African country of GuineaBissau is 45 years for men and 48
years for women.

·Call To.., for

Yourlrfl

1pplloation.

llelgi County
Commlaalo...,.
Mory Hoba-, Clerk

x ......,...
Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy
892-5082
Sandy Henderson
892·3647

12

PubUc Notice
PIJBUC NOllCE

On Ju..-. I, . t HJ, at
approxlmalaly 1:00 A.M.
lha MIV lt.A. VaoW

rocelden!IIIIJ tllacharged
unknown qulntlty
n111111Mr 2 ...... fuel Ill
poet m .5 olthe Ohio River.
Ill• alltoled • • • lnolucle
mu, tJ7.5 "' ... 242.5 ol
lhe Oh'o River. C.lllfbell
Tr•ll•portatlon Co111pany,
Ina.
'II llle ow- oltheii/V
Tl! public Ia Invited to
FREE ESTIMATES
A.A. Yaolal, wllloh I• lila
dNigiUited IOUrOI of tile All work .guaranteed.
5- HappyAds
aplll r.ur•uant 'ID the -on
Low Cost
Poilu Jon Act of 1110•
Cl•lma .rl1lng oUI of IIIIa
Inside, Outside, Top
•pill ml)' be lltlbmllled te
to Bottom
camRb•ll · T.-pr.nation
Comp..,, lno., P. o. 11!11·.
124, Ch•lerol, Pa. 110U,
Attn.: Don Qrlml!l or by
6-30-1 mo. pd.
==;Calllpball·
eorr.,...y •• 1412) ,._ _.................,..._....

RIVER VALLEY
CONTUCTORS

Happy 21st,.
Birthday,

etd.t.,n.N.

PH. 742·2217

T,_·

i

from 1:00 AM "' ' '
llont!IJ' lllro. .h 1

II

for any r . .aon
campb•ll Tr•eporlallon
eo.,...y,lnc.,...,aoton '
JOU! Olllm Wlltln
lhen JOU may auiiMII II
.
Un111d lla... C:O.I
N•llonal Po•l~rllon ,_,.
Canllr, 420C. Wllllon lllvcl.,

ArllngiDn, VA

171 .... 7,1, .. 1.. tl, ,...

ii, 11,1t,IO, 21,11, D, H,

.-

t

•

EICAYAnll ·
(614)
667·6628

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NewHo•s
•Gara..s

•

I'll Toll Your Futuro, -11·i00-

288-f440 Ext. 4517, 13.111 Plr
llln. lluat Ia 11 Yra. P..,...l Co.
102-f31415.
OHIO'S CONNECliON ALTER·

........ ..

•Complete

;

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESnMATES

915-4473
7122183

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION

446·4514
1·100·766-40 13

"MIIIhemllllc:a I• the

wllh which
· God hu written lha
Unlveree. •-Gal//110
By Topic
By Appointment
elphabM

St•l Wood Grained TexluNd Ral•ed Pan•l
Garage Doore Complete With Tl'llek, Loek,
Spring •nd Hardw. ..
GARAGE DOORS
1Bx7
8117
8x7
BEST RYal111 6.5
$675.00 S350.00 S34&amp;.oO
ID I'll Wlrllnty, wllftt anty.

BETTER lneulllad RValue 4 $475.00 . $281.110

949-2814

"-00

7/D/1 mo.

ID I'll worllnty, 1111\tt 01 .......

8&amp;9

Truck•ng

We Haul Gravel,
· Coal, Trash, etc.

GOOD Non-iniUIItod, 241111. $357.00 $255.110
~D

$250.00

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,

All Prlcea Include tnaulation.

'.4i~iiiy.i-;ijW.ioD't Piad A 8etar Val. .!

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

614--698·3290
or

992·3470

614·698--6500

OWNER: Jolf Wld.trsham
5/10193

7f7/tln

U.~

min 18+/all 1\lootyloe dolollne
. - 100'o of olngfaol-- In

your oru todoy. CCI BOCA FL
THE GAY CONNECTION 1-I00-

111o-3337

$2. ~mln.

11• meet

100'• of ucttlng men In your
ara tonl;ht. Got phano l'a. CCI
BOCA FL.
Wonted: L.ody Compenlon 40 To
eo ~-or To s.,_
• · Ono Clllkl Weloome

Ell-

(Counll'f Homol, P.O. Box 1112,
Cal\lpollo, OH 45e:n.

Whlto Mote Ago 23 Loolllng For •
Single WhHo Fomate Ponpel
Ago: 17 112 -23, Prelor - .
oriookor &amp; Alcohol Froe Send
Rooponoo To: P.O. BOll Sa, Oa~
llpalt., OH 4!1m.

4

Giveaway

112

black Lob I German
m•l• I ,....., beiUI~
lui dogo, 114·1HII-300J, 114-112•
Shept~rd,

71172.
2 Dop • 1 Puppy •• • good
home 114-3711-2340 ~

10 Wool! Old Puppies, llootly
ChOWj I'M-381-M41.
Black Lib &amp; Garman S'-rtl
= ··lwkaold,l ...... -

IOI:Itth II. 4 11-11212.
F-, fuM lila molo Collie. 17111111.
Color con"": ~ can be _ ,

R&amp;C EXCAVATING . :'.."':.:.:,~:to. :::J
BULLDOZING .

. Guttara
'oowMjMiuts
Gutter Cleaning

PONDS
·
. SEPTIC SYSTEMS

We have • lerge etaok ol •-al Rittle br•nd tiree and
II we don't .httva, we Nn •Ill ·
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERA11!D B\' CHRIS NEAL

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
· ·' UNES
,eASEMENTS &amp;
I HOME SITES
fMUUNG: LIIIIMton.,
0111, Gr1111el and C:O.I

304-n3-SS33
2nd Laoation call Lon Neal

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

Hencliraon, W. Ya. :IOH'II-3331

949-2168

M11tercard and VIlA .-epted.

1-1-ttn

LICENIED ond BONDED

PH. 614-992·5591

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

12· 5-lfn

'-'!'-----""-""··"-""
' -·"'-;.....t

•

".I

pd.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

ye1r w•rranty, whit• only.

Y. hp Opener wltlectronlc eye, 2trlntmlllera............$235.00
% hp opener, 2 trantnlltterL........................................uoo.ao

3·1&amp;-93-tln

17, 21, lt,IO; (I) 2, , ...
5, 1, .. 10, 11, 12, 11,101o

1

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
TRUCKING

lOa· D. 1. IOSTOI
1

=~=·

102.f31411.

NATIVE 1-i00--3337

•tlend · lhla hNrlng on
Augual 11, 11113 to provide
their ln)IUt on Ill• County'&amp;

............

•

THIS SPACE
$12.00

NOllCE OF PUBUC
HEARING
' The llelga County
Comml..tonera Intend to
apply · lo the ohio
'o .p.rtment of Development
.for funding under the
~m111unlty Development
BlOck Gr•l (CDBQ) Small
·CIIIM Progr•m, • federally
funded
program
admlr"-.... by the ...... .
The ·County will be
lllglllle lo ilpply lor a ·New
HorJ-GrMl
011 Auguat 11, tlln, Ill•
eecond of two public
hNrlnga will be held al
1D:OO • .m. at llle llelge
County Courthouae to
provide clllzene with
perllnenllnformation lbout

OIRLSIII UVE\11 24 HAS ltlAYIII

· TALK ONE ON ONEI HIOO Z.
2182 Ext. 1004 13.11811111n . .....
Ia 11 Yra. PJO.oil C..peny

St. Rt. 7

Man 'executed in Texas
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) An inmate was execured by injection early today for stabbmg and
shooting to death a 75-year-old
man who came upon a burglary.
Joseph Paul Jernigan, 39, went
to his death after two state appeals
courts Wednesday turned him away
and afrer a judge refused to force
the Board of Pardons and Paroles
to hold a hearing on whether his
senrence should be commured.
His lawyers had argued that the
former mechanic had been' rehabilirared behind bars.
Jernigan nodded to his brother,
who was in the death chamber as a
witness, but had no final statement.
Jernigan signed a confession in
which he said he killed Edward
Hale after a 1981 break-in at the
man's house because he feared
Hale could identify him.
· Jernigan said that Hale came
home during the burglary, surprising Jernigan and an accomplice,
Roy Lamb. 'Jernigan said that he
and Lamb ran out the back door of
the home in Dawson, 60 miles
south of Dallas, but that he
· returned and killed Hale, stabbing
him repeatedly and blasting him
three times with a shotgun.
Lamb, who was 17 at the time,
plesded guilty as an accomplice
and received a 30-year prison term.
He was paroled two years ago.

po
Plwabins ol HNtint
Exe•••liDI
Eleolricol ol Relripn•llo~
General HoulintJ
Mcobllo Home Repair
UphololerJ

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

HAULING

l-4~fn

186--

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK ·

(304) 773-5585
' SUMMER HOURS•
Sun.· Thur 5·1 0 pm
·Fri-Sat 5: 11 pm
QLOSED WEDNESDAY

.m Jay Drive, GllllpOIII, Oh.
mo.

I,

1: I \ I I I '

AMERICAN GENERAL liFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPAN-Y

RICHARD ROBERTS

992-7878

"

32- Mobile Ho- lor Sole
11'on!M loS..,.
33- F111ftl for Sa1e
u .......k
Bu'-a Bu;ldillp
1.,._- 1111Y ol Craia
35- Loll ... "" .....
Seed ol FortiliMr
,.__ R•l Eua.. woat.c~

11- Help 11' anted
12- Situatio• Wanted
13-- IDtvance
14- 8Wiiaete TraiDias
IS- Schoob &amp;:: IDitruelioa
111- RacLo, TV &amp;: CB RepaD17- Mllcelta......
lSo- Wonted To Do

3-4-93-1

GENERAL
HAULING.

I \I:\ I 'I l'1 ' I II ,

47- 11'uted to Real

2- Ia Me•ory
3-- Auouac:ement.
4-- Giveaway
5- HappyAdo
6-- Loo1 and FoUIId
7- i.Ool oad FoUIId
8- PuLIH: Sale&amp;:

614·742·2138

USED RAILROAD

For Solo or Trodo

Pro'-loul,.,.....

15

~Wonted to

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

BILL SlACK

T

2~

46--- Space for Real.

c..,..

Reasonable ·
Rates

•UGHT n~•UL.II'IIt.:

F..,iloolVoplaloloo

42- Mobile HoiHI for Real.
43--- Far. . for Rent
44-- Apartmeal for Reill
45- Fun.Yh.ed Room•

675-1'1.. ft.,, ..
458-Leon
576-Apple
713-Muon
882-New H.ven
895:-l.etarl
937-Bulfolo

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

M•lcal l011n110...,

y

21-M-yt.oLo..

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Parts and Service

TIME

CALL

rake~
TSSAViNGs ~
~~';(~, .BONDS -~~

15
15

0,....

-----l

WilKER AllEY
Wttdealers

614-446-8568

IS

P... r.. saJo

I I\ \\I I \I

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60

$1.30/day
$.05/day · Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Busln•n Card- ...$17.00/lncll per momth
Bulletin Board~-.$6.00/lncll per day

UCINE '
MOWER CUNIC

~EfiL

FrH EetilllltM

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

'

CLASSIFIEDS

P1lntlng,

15

Over 15 Worde

Muon

•••r

Take the first step to your child's higher education.
Ask your employer or·bank for the free booklet,
"U.S. Savings Bonds for Educat1on."
Or write: U.S. Savings Bonds for Education
Department of the Treasury
Washington, DC 20226.

1
3
6
10

Rate

GalUa County Meigl! County
CQ., WV
Area COOe 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Y.nrSal.

GROW AlMOST AS fAST AS KIDS DO.

·Words

, . Claaaified page• c011er the
foUouing telepho.ne esch.angea ....

• A cl...illod ad.....,...., placocl ill doo The DeUy Sealloel
(unpl Ct...lrtocl Dioplay, B.. u.- Card or Lepl
Nollceo) willaloo.appear illlhe Poillt Pleuoat Hepler oad
doo CalllpoU. Doily T..U. ... e, -.hiDI
18,000 hemeo

u.s. S!VIMGS BOHD5 fOR HKJUTIOH.

NOW
AVAILABLE

DAY BEIORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Moru:lay
1:00p.m. Tuesday
t :OOp.m. Wednesday
!OOp.m. Thunday
t :00 p.ll\. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
FridAy Paper
Sunday Paper

Call992-2156
POLICIES

Days

Monthly

To place an ad.

inmares generally are .not relessed
on Saturdays, so Warner may be
freed Aug. 20, Andrews said.
He will be on probation for five
years and must pay $12.8 million
in restitution, said Lawrence Kane,
the state's Special prosecutor in the

BULLETIN BOARD

The

RATES

Warner to be released

\

'

Ohio

;

\

7110

'

KlttOMtalovlng home only, wtll

=:-"...:S.";.- .111"

-nee,
onnae neutoracl torn ca~ ·mixed

tom.•te """· 114-1'1241111.
...,.

t&gt;ort c - ' ~r.'pploo,

:104-e711-1173Z or

·

Pupploo, Colllo l Huolly, To
Good 11ot!1e. IIW7HIA.
ImaM liNd Pupplee, · -

em.

·

.Whlto Bcw Rabbit a~. 2 a s
Y~ro Old', 114-441-0118.

�Ohio
Peg1

1G-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy · Middleport, Ohio.
31

42 Mobile Homas
for Rent

'

'

6

Loat&amp;Found

~--{
. -... ··'- . . .

'

I

·v-·· ..

For-.-

-a-

no ullltlao,
-.thly, 114-tl2o3114t.

44

~£... 112

knowing'&gt;' acoopt

~~'!.'o=;:!~":'"

I VIcinity

=·i·

1

i!::.,.,a
T.V. Stondo a
lioN, 51h,
IMh, 'llh. 71 Dr., Rodney 8-1
41117 Slota Routo 850, lldwel
lth, 7111,1:00 Till 7

~ 111111,

57 Bll!llngton Rood In .....,..
vHio
aThru Sol, M, Baby
n..,..- Mloc.
ALL Ytr'd Sllolllull a. Patel In
Ad
DEADLINE 2 oo
tilt":"",:,...,. tilt
P·"'·
... _._~ ~ion • 2 :00.1o ~....·
-·-• -·
Frldo¥: Monday tdnlon • :00
p.m. Sotunll~.
Garage Silo: Thuroday 51h,

~..!.

,.d .;

~::!:L'"'·==~71~~~

~I

Dooher Chum,
Kind 01
T-. Dolto, Bee Htvo Old
~, Clcrlhoo. Slrlkl- Ctcrck
Porto • Caa•, Woot.,;,~Booko,
2 Fono, 111 Houet On Llnla
Kyger R~r Which Lood!r To Rlvor
Vottty · 11lgh School, AcrFrom Kyger CtMk Plant.
G,.t Ctothol For School,
Booko Gu Grill, Wlrllpopor
Unor, Wotor Flnero, Much IIOro:
Friday
a
Sltunla~,
171
G-.brter (011 Sl. 111. 1601.
lnoklo Tog So to: From Bedroom
To KHchan Thuro, ..frl .Sol, 10.7
10 GropoSI, GalllpoNo.
Moving Solo: Slturday_ Only,
&amp;uguol 'llh, AI. 564, Bidwell,
HoUMhold ltema, Fumilure,
Bikao, Etc.

Mldd~aRArt
-..-

-------.1

~ryl=

3~;:'::":

4
:::,''I'..::':'/.!111:
'5,Don~

11'1~4~4~-~01~71!:_·....,;--,-.,,.-,,.

.,._....,_ a
llovInv 'a.•,_, ..,..,
1
tF!!''a'
aoH-c-,
-•-· - ·
,lite
llovtng S.~ Thway, Friday,
M SUmner Rd (old Al.7) Iii
~... ·:..- roin or
Mlno.

~· 1111" ••

•·-uot

llunl ~11y ~~
lth
"'iloc!;;;:-''F "i:lt'o,
B~,-·~w no. umn..,.,
c
ron•-•ng.llllac.
WPollo,tlo
A-·•
U.?, 111
• .,.. ..,.

'i''

~

-·tr

c'-1, 4th Grodallotorlal.
Wtd .s.~ Chlldroni etOiha
.21,, Aduho: .so,o Toyai Mloe,
lngollo Rd. 1121111o Off 21, .

Pt. Pleasant
I VIcinity

ol ... I'Ufll, cor·
poling. large anti 111111t op.

td~ 1 ':'L,

.,:

r:.~o::::..tr::.';'=:.."::;

llartlng ot 1:1101111.

8

Public Sale
I AuctiOn

~,..,--.,......,..;....,..--

Rick Pea_, Auction Cornpon~.
full time MICtlonMr, complete
ouotion
oorvloo.
Llconeod
&amp;
Wut
VJ...O•Jo,
77:J..5785. l
'Ill"'' .304o

-.Cillo

3 Fomlly Oarogo Solo, Fri ..SII.,'
• a 7, 1304 Mlllllowbrook Dr., 9
Wanted to Buy
twin bod conrpltto, mloc.
.,.--,.--...,.......,,.,......,.:._
·_
Antlquoo and UMd lurnnuro, no
Oa!Mqwn Rd •1111 rood u Jor. Htm too .., . or too email, wll
don S.ptlot Church, about 1141!11 buy crne pi- or complllo
South -ol Chinch,O.IIIpollo hoUHhold, colt Ooby Martin,
Forry, Aut· 4-11.6-7.
814-11112·11141.
AI. 2. Qalllpollo ForTY, loft bo1ow o.cor.ted M:onewara, Wll , ....
Poll Offici, l&lt;lltow ligna, Aug. ...,_, old lirmpo, old thor·
4-5:8-7. 1:01).4:00, Jowotry,
- old etocka, ... lqut
IN,., •--•· ~ rldloe, fumnuro. Rt_,,. Anttquee.
MH.ete,
wlndmllle, ••.,.. RUN Moore, own.. 114-182·
ClalbiU, IIC.
2521. w. buy .......
Yard Solo 8 mlloo out AI. 2 Oon, Junk Ml Sell Uo Your Nontoward Rlpll~. Thura &amp; Frl, Aug Wortdng Major ApplloiiCM,
Ul.
Color
TY'o,
Rohlgorotoro,
Yard Bolo, 120 Perk Dr, Frl, 7:00. FrMDn VCR'a, Mlci••VM..
4:00 Pll. HOllie lnttrlor, chlidron Air CondKtonoro, Gunor Ampo,
Etc. IM-258-1238.
a Iorge womeno clothing.
Yard sa...1 112 mUH out J &amp; D's Auto PaiU and Salv-o-,
Sorrclhlll Rd., Fri. &amp; Sot.
allo bll~lng junk cora lo trucko.
304·7'73-5343.

•or•.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
1 VIcinity

Junk c1r1, 1ny condttlon, 81411112-7553.
.
· W1nled To BUy:

3-famlly gar11p ••• o.nv.r

W - rHidlnCt, Roodovllto,
Auguot 11-1, I:IIOirn-? Toyo, furnn..-o, ontiquM, goll oqulp.
mant, jewolry, laundry tub,
clolhlng, baby oqulpmont.

McOon.ld't~~

~- Whlto Flau~-. Grumpy,
- • , Boohfuf, 114-441-0353.
Top Paid: All Old U.S.
Ccitno, Gold Rln'o, Sltvor Colno,
Gold Colno. II. .S. Coin Shop,
1St Socond Avonue, Gallpollo.

Wo- to buy: IIMd mobllo
AU Vard S.lao It Pold In hom.. 114-44141'11
lo.dvonce. Doarllne: 1:OOpm tho
doy bolorw t'- td II to run, Employment Services
S..ndoy ldKion- 1 :OOplll Frlde~,
~y
edit~
tO:OGa.m.
Slturdo~.

11

HalpWanted

Auciull W, S~rocueo,- ol
FIHh and College, fumH&amp;n, AVON! All II'Nt. Need olllro
brtby &amp; chlklron ctolha, brtby money or Wlnt 1 c1rwr, either
tumlture, toya, miiC. 8:301rn-- way-colt lla~tyn. ~21145
or 1-aOO.I!IZ-8311.
5:00pm.
-de

BoMan

. FlrehoUM, furnl1uN, nice dorh-

tng Including large oluo, mile.
HO!tn Hill Nrildenoe.
&amp;uguot 8-7, Lourll Cltll Rd.,
nerct to
more·realdanpe,

:•wP:-·
.

~o.utuot

Gil-

1 &amp; 7, Moln Strool1 Rut·
Janil, 15" old IIYio Rolly wneelt,
tocrlo, r - hhch por11, 01'-r
wheels .... tlret.J. ~ ....
knick-llnocka, 114-,.2
.

•

AVON I All Arooo I Bhl~oy

I to

118-

Hac: --------Wort&amp; Ro-coo, p Por Hour, 32 Mobile Homas
HcMwo Mull

lOr Sale

E_,lna Poteon, At: Duka
Ctoonero, Ill 8ocond Avenue,
Oalllpollo.
.

tr85.114 C:,.month, now 14' wide
, lncludee delivery,
COIIIplalo Ml..,p, okl~lnv. :
and I montho tcrl ronl, 1
.
83'1-1125.
Notional 211&lt; 8e5
1o.eo
L~
,
., 1
, Move,
'""
or,
wl. AC,
ownrng., aocrd cond.l. .~u to bo
~thoohi.O, UH, $2500.
1
3lhr 30wn.2330.
12rrlltrallorw/12110oddnion,3

...J:.:!!
do oif"

: ....
~L.:~':.\.:00

FHA
Hou
~ Refun
ro. 1
-14fi.4S03
24 Hour&amp;

Ex1.11:.

~~U'~~~~=: II
Toka

Advlllll~

Fill

un11r For.,

Tnlnlng.
Ad..,__,., ..t Bo WI"'"" To
Wort&amp; Hard. Aooulll8 R";.';onolbllnlao, Tlllnk For Y And Bo CUolorMr Borvlco
Oriented. For lmiM!flatt Conoldorltlon Conloct Guy_ .. . _
At ._liclal 114-2715, An
Equel Opportunity Elllptoyao 11F·O.V. Srriokt Free &amp; Drug ·Free
Environment.

282. ary.

•

covoreo """"';;;....,
and
vory aood --•
-~-:.=.
.. -~ 304-811f4311 ~., .....,.
080.
4311.
1184 Fairmont, M•711 with 18X18
lddKion. 3 Bldr001111, 1 Both,
12114 outblltldlng. Tolal otoctrlc,
rurol wotar, On 11:1 ..,., tta,ooo
Finn. 114-218-114l

1185 14•711, 3br1 crothlrclnrl col~
Ina, lolarrcl klcnen, 1111 deck,
c.(, outblllldlng, ftO,OOO 080.
304-17W211.
1W Holly Port&amp;, M•72, 3br., 2
lull bot'-, total lloctrlc, t14,000.
304_.7W218 oner 4pm.
1113 1'11111 Harbour, 21x53, total

J

E&amp; R TREE SERVICE. TOIIPing,
Trl-lng, Tr• -··~ Hedge
Free Elllmlrtool 114:!Ill.
Aftor "P·"'·
Gonerol lloinllnenco Pal,.lng
Yllld Wort&amp; Wlnrtowi woohi':l
GUll.,. Ctotntd , ,_111 Haull~,
Corn-"'ol, -~nttol, ~:
I" .••• 1•••
~ -·
Gro gee p - Slwmlll, _ ,
hOUI yow 1oao to thlr mrll juol
..11 304-171-1117.

Trl~.

-

crorolol your lovtd ono In
~~oro holnt In lllddlaporl,
I
-8042.

drywall, Thtm:opiM wtndOWII,
ool-up lind clot Ivery, muot eeo to

opproclllt, 1.afl0.837'8825.
1184 Rodlnon Ma711, 3bdnn., Includa oklrtlng .,.po, btoclco,
5yr. WlrTOnty, homoouunaro Inouranco, lnd 1 veer ol free lot
rwnl, oil. lor only t17lllno., colt 1·

c.IOO:..::..,:.al'-::.;--3:::238=.-:-::--~~~

:3 Bedroom HouM At: Rio
Granda. On Lind Contract,
ft,OOO D-n, $225/lllo. tnlo InterMt, $1B,IOO. IJ4.38NMI.
llountlon Stoto Holllto, 3411
.Joc:koon Ave, PI Pit. Heel Wovo
Spoclal. Free cro•rat olr with
~ olnglo wldt hOIIII In otock.
_.75'1400.
Two Bodr00111 11184 llanolon
With AC, Good Condition, 814-1340.

IIIIo Paula'o Day Carw Canter 1
Btoclc Will 01 HIIC On Jockoon
Pika 11-F I A.M. 4:30 P.M. H
Ou.IIRy And Elporla,_ II The
11 c:or-m FOr Ybll' Chlld'o
c-. Colt Uo For A vton. lnllnt
IToddtoro 114-44M227. p,_ 33 Fanns for Sale
ohootoro /School Age 114-448- 30 terw linn With 3 bdrm.
1224.
houto, 1 112 mltoo out Rio
Gronda.l14-245-11227.

::o'
.::':;.•,:,o.c:..~~~::.:::r,
..., ..- . 010100, ana

Acroo, 2 Story Form
hoepltal. Loto ol TLC to thare. Houot, Lg.
2 llttao From
llanronrltlir, Mile. Out Building
304..7UII2 onfll...
$31,000, 1514-211-1178•
R - .... board lor handicap- I ;;;;:7-;:-'::--::::..:,..=::...,.-pod ond -~ with lower In- Mini lann 23 oc- 10 room 2
whcrllka c=l~ In llory houeoL email b,;rn, 1 milo
2
:z. out Jorrlco t&lt;d, ovorlooka Perini
lomlly coro holnt, .
P11111nt, $35,000. 304-4'11-48111.

41.71

••m.

'Business
Buildings

Wo,.td to do- lllbvolttlnaln my
holnt,
114-Jit:Z.:m&amp;
boron Cornrrron:lot Building For Solo
Frtdo~, 114-lll2·3101oftor ,rldoy. Or lMM, 331 Second Avenue,
Will baby ol your chltdlclllldron Phone: 118-441-2522, 10 A. II. To
In my holM, on~ hourldo~, low I P.M.
,.. ., ha'ltl r.tarenc., 304-87535 Lots &amp; Acreaga
7280.
'
~...:~.:.,;;:.:,::;:.;I•
Will do bol&gt;yllttlng In my holnt, 1 ocrw loto, AI !!,..Aahton. Clyde
rouonablt prt-. 30W75- Iowen, Jr 304.fi~~&gt;-2331l.
17114.
·~- No Ht
3· w ven. 304-7'73-5801
Wilt do typl-rd procMIIng oftor 4pm.
In m~ horToo. 11"14-11112-3181.

.:.::,......_

5• ecrea on JwrJ'• Run Rd, epprox. lml out. 3Q4.5711-212Q.
Financial
Lott a ac:r..p for home con=======~~~ lotructlon en Ro~burn Rd
reaaonab.. I'Mtrlctlorw. countj
21
Business

Opportunity
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocom1111nclo that you do buol, _ with people you know, lnd
NOT to Mnd rnonoy III'OU(Ih the
mall u•l you have tnvllltgaltd
the offering.
·

water, lnformltlon m1lled on , .
quill, 304.fi'IIH253, ptooee no
olnglo wtdlr troltoro.

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent

1 Bodroom Houot Fumlohad
BIG $13 Gov'L Auction lnloil Located 735 Reer,)'hlrd Avenue'
GoiHI&gt;OIIs. · Stoo
4053C Totoo Crook Rd, Dopl. SIIOillo.
114-448-387Q.

Dlpollt:

Sorrel Sl2 Chock 111:0. To: BC

144, lAX, KY 40817.

Avon wont lrrcllviduelo Intoltd In -~trDihr. No door
lo door, 1
~840.
Bobyalttor wantod tar 17 mo•h
~· II ... 1 I!IA
old nd 3
year -roqulrwd,
· ~. 514,_
4:30.• Roloronceo

~- Jot

-·1

,

~
=.:..:..:...:...
______
~
-

• •

SpuN, 304-675-1421.

lii:;:.;;.Z..:2187.1"-.---::-::--=---::--:Caoo llanogor Fut~Time Polllion Wor1dng With Emotto..tly
Dlotrubod "AI Rltk" Uoo In T'Ccmmunlty, Tho Homo a
Augull 1·7. nlco ctoon clothlro, Sc'-11.
Mull Hovo Rotlolrlo
houoohold Me1111, locrfo, Loop
Tron-lllex~
Teaohor ear.
Ad., Rutland, I'M-JII2-2710.
llllootlon And M•••t Htolth Ex·
Yord HI• Augull 7, 1:00.5:00, Dorlonco Or Training · Dolirod,
1rom Chaoior tokl Hope lloclltlorl OIQreo Roqutrod,
Rd. 1 milo, Sponc.,., upright S.nd ~•aume "l'o: AcCMII To
plana, TV, .,..,. choir, clolhlror Hu1110n Raoourco DivotMWing roeker, dnlpM, CD'a lnG P.O. Box 1110, Oatttootlo, OH
llptl, 614-185-3tml.
45631, Aftllllion: Carol a Cho~et lloLIIn roo._, 9R [! J For Tilt Adell_, Club,
124, Racine, Augult 5-f, 1~ P I - Call, 114-448-4711.
p111ncea,
ci0111M,
booka,
O.nt1l Hypnl•• to work In
jlwelry, mille.
... ._. blood Dontat SHiont
Clifton Tobtmlclo In W.Va., Program, lull or po~ time, llllgo
Chun:h ~ard oalo, Friday, ond Atlrono Count~~::; IMrve
&amp;uguotlt~.
Ohio lice-, can
Fulka,
lor rnoro lonnaFlrll 111111 llrlo year- 2 llm!ly, 114-5112·3112
lion.
Frida~, A~ lth, Salurdo~, Aug.
11:h, t-4, Piul 1.., rMid1nce on· Elm extra mone~ tor echool
AI. 7 ~~ H~-y Garage, clothee a ChMtmae glfto. Avon
woman • a boy a ctothfna, twin rapr...ntiiiYM Mm an·~
~~· c:~~nopr bed, Alarl w7tapea, ol $8/hr.. Sian up now a ricolvo
bed - - · · d l -. loyo, , _ gift. 1:111 1-1110-71~11
Rain cronceto.
coda 11'4:12.
.
Friday, 104pm, 103 Wright Sl.
Clork-full 111111
Lea ot chUdren'a okJthlng, aduN Dolillon. Roconl
evening Mill ·Mon.
clolhlng. mloc. n.....
ihru Tfrul., dej Mil .. ~ril
Friday, lo.uauot I ln&gt;m lorn-4pm. lu-'tdgo ol ........
Or.g E~Tn rMidence, 31110 oyatom roqulrtd. . _ lo Bill S.rllor, - n t Vall~
- h Forti Rd. '
Hoopltol, 21120 V.lloy Orlve, Pl.
Friday· 133 Buttomut Avenue; PI-nt, WV 211150 lo.A.£OE
heater, lirmpe, dolll, coblnolo,
HVAC, S.rYice Tochnlclan, 13 To
mlrtonlr • tdvortlolng tin ••""· Sl2 Ptrr Hour Boeed On Er&lt;·
DDIIeciiDIN, riluch more.
Dorlonct, And Pockogo
lo.DDIY. Moll ,._.,.
~ ..... SR 124, Llngrrvltla. OnlY llod)i Shope Equl-nt, Oddo &amp; A A•fwence' 'TO:• Dan lnm~n,
Indo. Frtdoy, Saturday, S..ncloy. Eloctric Inc., 1241 Rodlcrd Rd,
Athlrnt, OH 46Nt.
..15pm.

-••-do.

pr

oomplllte M1

·lnlonta - r , ollillzie;lncludl"'
nu.....,.. ...,. oulto orrcl Joe~·
111, olio 12 Talllnd oitroollrge;
Routo 7, Choohlro (North 01 onotoro, tklrlor olnpwow,
Marathon StationI A~UII lth, d - - orrcl ol- crlolhli':81
llo..ll. -81'.11. Ausluot h, IA.II. 001111 cnl •- 1111 ,__
·1P.II.
·-·
'-•·
10.2,-..134 BullvUie Pike, p,..

-Do

r.:::S.:"':.d"":...

Kodne~

Teechtnr Yonl Solo: Augull 71h,

aa-..

er,
.
ThurOdoy- Frldoy, 1 1/21111. notlh
ol Chlllor,- houet on !aft on
S..mnor Rd. Lorge clothing ond
mloo
'
Vonl- -o~, High Stroot,
-3-lomlly (Annlo Clio-, lluoto
A - , lnd Cllorteno Hoeflich) Tomato plckora wanted; popper
rd and movtng E:J:: J::~'" wtnlod. Harrlo Far1111,
1r ~~ •1 oa1
land arlo 814-843-8113
R-::~ nlco .
'
'
·
1
.boclroom 11 bed 18 Wanted to Do
-•••, -~... -•-,_ -~
- . . _,_,
M~
,
uN
Bt'-lll
·
~ocl"! __auii-IIM In ,nullllr .,;,''i~'- ~ Chootar

=ng
Clotha, _ ,
35 At
!1M Juncr1ion, Autuot &amp;th, llh.

cpportunllybasis.

""!:: . =~~iFIIIa, .1~ ~..;""·• d\2:~?

pllanolminl!''-~-!_~
loll
·
~hu:::'1:"'1on "!Oidl,_,

QrMft,

advertised
In this
1119 avllllble
onnewspaper
an equal

=.=::~:~~·~~ .:.~~- Ano.

Hugo lour lamlly yard •lt.
Frida• Bllunlll~ Don 111•L"
•
•R
s -.
Ulland,

y:;;~q~~: r:;~~~:: ~:;::..,,
4

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

I VIcinity

-r
w111 outoo, build':&amp;85,
on
onothlrr lotwlhpll, bldg
two ext,. Iota, 2 bedroons home
on another lot. Owner witt linlncll WfNUOMba. down PlY.
ment. 1-1114-384_.435 or 3CJ4.482.
3752
·
· Local Po~ Phono R-: $1,200
A Weak Potontlol, Pr1ctd To
Soli. UOO 418 '1132 Ercl 327.

2 bedroom houoo, 2324 Lincoln
Avo, 304-475-31171.
2 Bodroomo Romodolad Aportmont WMh Rolrlgerotor And
Stove, Ct- To Gattlpollo, 1144454717.

2 Btdi'OOIIII, 1 Both HoUII 71
Hubbrtld Slroot, $300/llo. isM4-44~1~0~48~8!:_._ _:__ __:__:_~

:::

1112 St.,
1250/IIIO.,
lelee,
aopoon,
rolor-. 304112-2221.
3 .Bodroomo, 1 Both, Family
Room, Largo 2 Car Garage a
Yanl211tlea From Golllpollo AI.
141, 114-441-4824.
•

2llr

homa,

Local V.ndlng Roulo: t1.200 A
W•k Polllllilit.lluot Soli, 1.80fl.
W.03I4.
Na1111 Your Own Income llakl
F~une At Homa, Own Bullnea, Pronta Dilly; GluraniMd.
F,.. Delolto, 2t:Z.21W100, Ext.
2117.
7R ~ lroueo Chondlar Ridge
Old, Gtonwoocl, WV. 304.fl'l8-

2301.

Real Estate

Pol.. . - n t..xc. neJ,___

~....,. room,
3br., 1-.lltooao.
112 brtth,
-~----------~-·
largo lomtl~
31 Homes for Sate
114-441 01121.
:a-:.~,-=::.~~:;.1.:,112~.;:.::;~h=:.-1 Rio Granclo, 3 ltdroorno,
.... " - ··
-· ' car $4101Mo. Depo~l &amp; Aef. .ncM
aarott, lpJIIDX. 2 - - 3Q4. RoquiNCI, 114-448-4ZI2.

2

1~27111-15pm.

_:.._..;;:_;...;_;.;.;...=;_--

l&lt;tl2ibbrt!Oii;:h~:i.:-lllii1Chodid;ici 142 MobilI Homes

i31b;
...........rr;;;:r,11

c::
'~Pill= ~= iiidG.:Tilo~r;R;a~nt~;-'h;;;L
=~~..~~~1~==··~---------1

:
_ . , Ilona · ranolt llylo
........ 4 bodrooon, a llltlltllho,
Iorge LR, don Wlolont lllepiaco,
large kitchen, 1ot11 or Cllblnela,

121:50, 2 bidroom, Ill heat,
w - and dryer ,_..,p,
rolllodolod lntorto;, 2 mllel ....
Lillla Rd. In Ruttond
$210/mo., 114-Jt2·2103.
· '

"ml-

-2.1·lovol
30'k40'
-~_.7Hit:Z.
mobile
ling
on
- -~~~blaul~ 2
homo,
fullr I• •ctped, on New UN
Rood Rut-. Orlo, t.c1- 2 bodroom, ~VIII, aclrpla a 1
lng Creek Wlior lnd oalrlo oval~ crhlld • • - . Radman. Ridge
-~21/mo., 1200 lllpooll, ·
able, t14-lll2·2721.
. . w 11000, roohy let. Irick
lrouH, 3br., k_n"' dlnlngroorn,
llvlngroonr, 1 110 bath, llmlly
Alrdorwl-,
room,
..,.... room ~ 2 011 ,
- · outiiUIIding~ i0.1 ......
•77,1100. :lml. lrarii loirn. 304o

I?W210.

r -

From

Oavln

2bdpl,_.!.'!.'.: opllfu.,

~~~~!'-"lrlcla•,:;

304·..-.~010.

ot:

Vlll1o

311 IMIII.

2 bdrm. lnltork3 mllel out Rio

t' ..

..;'.. ,~

~~=rii.J..Ell~

Oreon~•·

,.,.~_,.
PI-nt,

15pm.

tar ron! In Pl.
114-f1112.S1511 ofttr

~BE~AUT~:::IF"'U,...L
~A!~Imom.

Mr&amp;r•

53

Antlquu

s
a-,-

::.•;:....~at.~';:
~·
PM 1
-

=

~.

.. =:·'·

Din

Corn'":'!.~--~'!!"

:;:~•::: :"£7-lt~

•a

O.~nrclla, ;T,l
-~~~- ~"':14.':.=:•,

·~~ BARNEY

=..To;~~~ -=~ 72 Tlu...... for Sate
lull line Tropicol llohr lrlnlo,
..,..
omallonlmolaorrcloupplreo.
1fllll Ford~
·=
·
-·-· ·....!..
-~ ~
.~-

FER

F.ul bloddtd
Hound
304..

Horwolgn Elk
Old
lwka
' $50.

·..-

-r•

-~

~

_,.,.,

dovloo conll'!lll llooaln lhlr
homo wn- c!Mimlooto. Pollfl.

-:.:~~ =~~ .::"'...:'~

rrlght.RaOFEEDliUJ&gt;PLY.

............, lllnloturw
Nro, IM-448-4780.

lion

T"'

-toney.

120 Fourth Ave., Oalllpclll.
utlnlel potd, 114 441 1411 ohar
7 pm.

4pe. - - wnh if "'""Vegetables
oolo bod, 111ulll ~ tlahlton
~::::...,,.....-,-=----,-- 1yr. old, olldng ttOOO; 11171 FOijl Canning 1011111- lor oato. pick
Fumllhtd
Elllctoncy
t1155 F150~._. 4WD, lllvor, ucoltont ·rour -n. bring_,. conlalnonr,
IJIHIIIM Paidl Sharo loth, 107
1111- liking Clone Dovlo, ft4.247-32113.
Socond. Galt pella, 114 Ul 1418 84500 1
.aJ117 ollef ..._
..
A::ha::rr,::..:
7P..::II::,
, ...,.-----~
'
.,.....
Canning -looio lor eelt,
bl esaad1n ..~ bullcllnaa. bring own cont._., 114-247Groctoue living. 1 ond 2 bfd. hilS, doll... ~ a 111up, · Me. 211f.
.
~ lpt~- ot Vlttoao Olhor tVollablt. SidoN E~
00
Hondonon. 304-47&amp;21
1202. Call 114-M2....._ EOH.
·
S.ha~~~e CruiM, 1 ~4 nlslhlo. Folio, 11444ll.20511.
·
Mlddtoport,. Ohio, 8Heh St., 11 Underbcokodl
MUll
11111
~
enlcloncy
furqlohlrd 1271-111•. Llmltod tickllo. Cannlnv 1011111-, W blllhot,
apo~_,., utlllllol poid, rol. a 40li.'III'Hill0 err!. lilt. lion Sot, II reedy- Dlcrkod.i. colt 114-1112da-•. 304~12 ?5ee.
1·.-•u -10:00PII.
1581111, Wllllo1111 ..rm, s-·~·
,.....,
~
Ohio.
•·--~
Nice , 2 1111*- opartlllllll lor Buell - . wry little,
ra,. In
114-112·111151, mull 1011, etklnt UOO, olll 114- Canning 1011111-.
plckod
anw 5pm or WHiilandL
112-1111, .._. 7 31
f4.001 ~...... r:!:I.our own •~
· bring
114Complllly Fumlohod Smol OOHCRm SPETIC TANKS 247-42112
onyt11118, ......
Ro~mond
HouM, 1275irno. + UIUhloo, 11!JOO Gallon, f325;- JET a.i R-.
Porlllng. No Polo. Call Boloro 7 (flo 8ond Rner , Roqulrtd)
P.M. ~~ 448 0338.
.,,411; Ron
Entorarh II' :.t'.\:r .,_.,....,.,... qUMn
Ono
bodroom
opo~rnento, Jocrkoon, Ohio 1-.,J.il52t.
Th ..
~~
12211/rno. lnetudal utlllllel, ttoo Fl-ood p , _ .
riornapt, 1000'1 ol douno,
MC:urtty ~·~ no pellj 114- Will Be 1111vned wt.n
~. Eattem Star Farm,
11124211.
,
Weather 1o.ntveo Do._, 114- MUiwood, Ill. 2.
e--Jouo 2 bodroorn 11111 , cor· illll-1311, a144i'i-70:is Eoonlr . .. _ . _ • Pick 'lour OWn 110
..,....
'"•
BuaMI. lr'~ Own Contal,_.,
22ft., . - 114 441 4807.
monogor. EOit 304-882-3711 ot
co1110 b¥ tocloy, LluMnd Apto,
Oo K•~• 2 HP • up, _ . . . on '
lth 91, Now Haven, WV.
I . HP, In otoek, l l - Equip.
Farm Supplies
rnent, 118-lii:Z.24155 or 114-lllz. '
Unlurnlollod,_ ~l!!ll_to btdi'OCIIII, 2110.
&amp; ltvestock

-"\'t :::

=

::.":nom. ~~n:.lddlo.,:.,~

~1-nt,

Conn~ ~ .':J ~~

r.l".,.."":Marol.'!f.'Ailom.':\:o~

Poinoroy,

a•.

.fr=,..,.....,;,!""

e....

For wl8!:1

r:'m1~

..::r........:-

n

0 - NAPA. ~2211.

45

Furnished
Rooms

:....~~;'a..

GOI.OEN
PRIDEIIIAWLEIOH,
lormutoo tar '-Mh. Dote a
WIIIIIO WoodM'::~nBee ue e1 our
booth ot ""'
County Fair.
304..7&amp;-1010.

61 Fann Equipment
Cuba: 1 Slda - • ~~ 1
Merion, 11,250 loch, 114-381-

Roo1111lor ront · - o r - h .
S11!f1lna ot ft201mo. Gottlo Hotll.
814 4141'11180.

'Hullr 1:! s~, ,a Sorioo,
Bilek a Whho, ...... $50,

lliroplng
- " "·
Aloo trallor- ·with
All _,...,pt.
Call olor 2:110 p.111., 304-7J'3.

" - Cornlllll!r1 lo.ppla COlli-. 350 John Door.Doar, d-len-

1111,MieonWV.

-mont.

Houoo, ""· 2 bltha,
out ol town, In PPHS dlllrlcl.
304_.75-4046 Darrnlo.
Wlrnllng to ront· 2 or 3 btdrDOIII
hoult, ln c...n and good condf.
lion, ..,.,., prlvoto Hltlng, 11411112-2421, H no .._., jroleaoo
INve
on rnac:IIN.

m•••a•

Merchandtse

'*

--~223.

CUttlvalon +Side DniNr, ,....

1311.

1*...._ With ...,.,..,., 1'14-446- glne, I

117154.
·
l.ftn
ut llka
mower. - c '
new,
$78. 3CioW82-2211.
·
........... 3 Ton Air - e r . With
11 KW Etoctrle Hoot, Approx. 7
y_,. Old, 31,000 Llnnax Hud
- p . IU 411 48111.

WIY tMn.. l ' biede,

wonch, - - conopy. 304o
11241117:
1100 golion luoltonk wllh 113 HP
otoctric pump whh metar, $500,
114-112·2128.
·
Com PickoraL 1 l 2 Row Nl 2
Row 12 Roll Hrrd; 352 NH Qrlndor lllur; Squoro Botoro;
Rokao; Mow.,.; NH 471 Hay
Bind; e N Ford Troctor,

Uncoln w - . 221 amp with
Onon engine, 11000, 114-1123Nt.
• ~111hrai ou_. FleW A~
Equl-t,
Howo'o
Form
Ohio
Orlgtnol
Colrrthouet Dook, llochlnory
Jockoon
~T. Solid Ook, 110, 114-441· Prr-. etoi-218-1144. '
'

vans 1 4 WD'a

1m Ford - - 4•4 :102 v.a.
aut-Uc, 114-lii2..ZSS~.

1W s.-.m.n $3,300. nine
. - . - -ko, . - tlroo (2
-~ 304.fl7t.2101.
1181 Ford E150 CUIIOIII Von,
loaded, ISK mllw, ••c. eond.,
11200. :tiiM.fl724534 llon-Fri ·~
torlpm, ........ onwtl~~~e.
.,.
Motorcycles
, ..
'11 Suzuki ~;ad ohape,• 11000. Happy ·
Hollow Rd., RutiOnd.
·

,,,.., ....

~. rune WIN.

1183 -

1W Hondo

ap.,.

For SOlo: Honda Fou~rn 2110 4

w.._, Good
175-4112.

Condition, -

OUTSIQE
FURNISHINGS:
Wroulhl Iron Tobit W/4 C'-lro;
F1n .ck Rockl!'fl Chr.lr IMi
Oardon.Arcll Wlry'o $121.110

au- Sin

ltd Aaklng:
1250 OBC?,P.II 114-251-1772, Or
114-211-1uoo.
.

Solid Bor, Fryar, P~oblo
Llghlod Sign, Dolll, Choir; LIVIng R - S..Mo, •ondord
Bidding -Twin irlott Sal Sll, Full Wotar - . - o p Olnlng
Chllnr, IM-112·-.
Ill s.l, Queen $141 SMj 4' T~l':b 47128.
'
. Dro-r Chill 844.15: Car Bld'o •
S.loll"e
.
DllhWnh
D111t
Bunk Btd'o, Pooler Bodo. Full
Line 01 S o u l - Vuoa lcnlllblor, Double Ovon a
Storti~ All20.110; lndlonollony
Elocrtrlc Ronga, I14-245C5104·; ·
Shope o a Slzee Sta~lng At
U.OO. 2 Locattono ·lealde Joulo SinH. Commad••· Tube. UMd
Auction Or 4 llllao OUI M1. Ellor ._llul ll!lge, o.-,
Whlto; - l n g T - Rodo,
Opon I A.M. To I P.M. lion .aot.
Elc. Soyo 1 BUNDLE On Mimi
Ellolrle Ovon t150; Rolrlgorotor, That Uouotly lloka R-llng
~. 114-441&lt;0453.
QOOO

USED APPLIANCES
WIMonr~. dry.,., rtlrtgll'll"'.!,
rang• ""agtt Apptl- "'
Vlno St-, Coti114-441·M, 1·
fl00.411f1.3411.
Konrnoro Wuhor a Drvor, Qood
CondiiJon, $100, 114-44&amp;.fi412.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compiato homo fumlllrlnga.
Houra: Mon-Sat, w . •~
0322, J mllel out Bulirvlllo Rd.
FrM Dlllvory.
·
Mollohan

'i:rc· Rt. 7 H. 814-

~~S,:kt4~1~.

110. All

-·-"'·-Zonlth - · TV, oouch, wur.
(1011, 114-llt2..-;'~' ' ·--··

55

Building
Supplies

Antiquo troaclto - n g chino, rtdlo Oland, •M otllnd,
- . fllo box, tar lnlcnnotlcrn
ollll14-4112·2414 .

Ltvastock

:'3bo=by-goii--':"'L~iOti""""'1IHII=""=a.-Boautllul . Arrglalorld 2 yr old
Thoroughbred Filly, Uta Boy
_.h Wftlt1 Btocklnaa., broke 1:
roerly to ll"o 12.000~ J .H. (Jokat
Som.vllolloroo Farm, Pl. Pl.
~ 3CJ4.I75.3030 ovenlnga
_ ..
_71-4_...;2:12....;_;_ _ _ __

Hay &amp; Grein ·

-:r,

,.

;· · H~~E:

'tru

,
~~a.¥. ~oour

. 1\0'tl \liE'/ CAA OOtl ~

4.

Nf\ ... KEEP THE FAITH,
TI\O~l.E....

YE5 ... 'WHEN HC:

DOES 'lOUR DA.D

MY DAD e.A'I'S

REW\EM~TO

HAVCALOTOF

HAIRINE65
RWN6 IN 01..11&lt;.
M&lt;'oMILY.

WEAR HISlU.lPE6 .

HAIR~

1 - Fcrril Tompo 4*. lor ptrll,
30,000 mltoo; Cl Ford1ro....,..
olon; 114-112-2111.

. •,

~- tonka, one ton lruek
rorloton, floOr ......
llc. D i R A"!:::lptoy, WV. 304o
372-3133 or 1
zn.;mt. 1

w

dlncl

2o&amp;--2.1 hllow

I

27 Grilli - ol
28 lncllln - y
211 Pill ol
hMimlr
31 Pl1ld

33

Culflyllfor

40 Tendon
42

Llwyer-

llllrd
o&amp;3 Pllnl

i:011......,..

44 Zoiiiiii'Oinl

... loMitlull
47Singer-

Ulnl
48 Group Ol
ICion

sozu:
52

Totem pole

53 AlrUn
nolhte

--.-'""

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.,_,., "-"'"'.........
the--..-.................
·bch ~~tt•ln

VXPG

'X

N J S,

_.for~ . T,.,.,.'ICIW.' II~ W.

JXCGOII

GLJXIG

YTGIC'I

MNIJK .'

IT

Z TTY.

011

X 1·

IKNS

ST

08JK

W Q E II

..-.

OG

· ONEJGVVT

ONISETXNCCX.
PREViOUS SOLUTION: "I ne- mind crying. An adult II nothing but a
child with layers on." - Woody Harrelson.

r::~:~;~' S@\t&lt;i\llA-~~t~ts·
CLAY I. POLLAN

-------Edited

0

---

~y

...

harrange letters of th1
four scramb led words be·

low to form four simple words.

II

.v 0 T c E A

I

CANKK

I

C H 1 WH

I

::::

I

After looking at his pay
check one fellow sighed II:! his
co-worker, "The good old days
L--'-..L-L.-Jc__.l ~
are the days you looked for.--------:....., ward to earning the salary you
R AB L E Z
can't posstbly -···on --·."
~.,.--...,::...:r,,..:...,~,_-1
5
~

I

I 1I I

I

I

L-.1..__..L.-J.._..J.L-..J.L-..1.

doy of 1993 and the
46th doy of summer.
TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1864, Union warships under Adm .
David G. Farragut won the Battle
Mobile Bay against the Cm&gt;le&lt;ler~•te
ironclad Tennessee and other, wooden
ships .

8

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERs
IN THE SE SQUARES

I

. , UNSCRAMBlE lETTER S
FOR ANSWER
•

I

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Guy de Maupassant 0850· 18931, writer; Cortra&lt;ll
Aiken 11889-1973 ). poel-novelist-crilic:

Complere rhe ch uc kle q uorod
by filling tn the misst ng words
you develop from step No . 3 below .

I'

12

3

I I I

1'4

Is

I'

I I

g.,
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Bullet - Droll • Local • Elicit - COLLECTOR
"What's your occupation?" the beauty asked her blind
date. "Well," he mumbled sl:!mewhat embarrassed, "it's
more of a purs~it. I'm a bill COLLECTOR ."

-

~:.
ROBOTMAN•
~ -"
ro--===-------=;._-.,-~ -

Home
Improvements

-

18 Spike of

31 NIIM

,

ANDvnNTUROP~~------~~~~--~

11181 Ford TomJIO 4*· lor po~.
30,000 - ; Cl Ford~
olon; 114-112.-.
·.

81

23Haw11M

Ultrery

...-1-+-+-+-1-t

After •a lang pause of 20 or 30 sec• Beauviliain switched to the
I·Sp.aae king. DeClarer won with dum·
my's ace, cashed the A·K of hearts and
AT AL&amp;. MY
claimed when hearts split 2-2.
Beauvillain said in embarrassment:
BOUNCING C.ttec~S!
"I'm sorry, partner. I lhought'lbat the
declarer would have two spades In addition to his five hearts, four diamonds
'
8·5
and three clubs."
'
When you have taken all pouible
tricks outside trumps, it is often belt
'
to give the declarer a ruff-and-dlscard.'Here a club lead at trick lour
11"5 OOl..'l f\ MA.TTER Of n~
promotes a trump trick far the
BEFORE THEY'LL eE ABLE. TO defense.
DO THEIR 6AAIN~
Beauvillain's team play~ the next
match at l!!!ie 17:. _ ".. _... _ ..-

,..

·

''

'

e

1993 by NEA . Inc.

IIASEMEHT

WATERPAOORNQ
u.-.ucrn.r 1111111111 guoroi••· Local - n o • tum-.
Call 1.80f1.217-G171 Or 118-23J.

0:::.::V"'11111.
" w.t..,_llng. q.,

I

CU~Io

Homo""- No

Jo1i Toe lla Or &amp;mol, Y•rii

Ell·

1ln Oldor
~~~Mojo
' -. Addtttono,
FC1181d11Joni,
Rooflna, Klchlrno l1lotho. ln-

-·

'

____

___.:..__

."

:· . . : . . :

ourod, -,,. Elllmot•. 114-317-

ASTRO-GRAPH

'

-

'

~=-=~-,,.-.:-,..;.,.;__
117'1 Cobra 11 Ford lluatang,

uoo,

114-112-3411 llltar 4pm "'
onytrllll - - ·
.
1177 Olda CUll- 2 door, 310,
AIC, 45,000 ..... body ruottd, Soptlc Ton~ Pu~ NO.._&lt;l!rliJ.o
$500, 114-IIM431.
Co. 11011 EVAIIII EHTIRP""""'
Joc"-,OH ~37.ea21. '
1177 Oklo CUIIall BR, 2 door,
llr,_crulea, ft300 lirm, 304ol75Willc
- - rocrno,
polio 1101.
o
pill·
, .......
v1ii;l

r:&amp;r ·- oklr1fnv. 114-

C!lt-.

Pass
All pass

Today is the 217th

Auto Parts &amp;
"--ssortes
,......,

Services

molllurl
13- UndeR

~--'T~6;.;._:,1:....::,1..=..-T,I7,.::.rl_,. 0

7112..a&amp;o
.;.,;,;;=;;;;..·
-----=

82

Pllftlblng &amp;
Heating

n,....

84 .

E14!ctrlcsl a.
Refrigeration

q'our

'Birthday
'

'
, Friday, Aug. 6, I 993

A somanlic interest fro m·the. past might
reenter your life In the year ahead and
attempt to revita lize sleeping embers . If
·you're an unanached Leo, the year ahead
.could be interesting.
tEO (July 23·Aug. 22) 11 you allow your ,
jjmotions and leelings to gain the upper ,
hand today, lhey could seriously affect your
. ability lo evaluate situations effecl1vely: Get
jump on life by understanding the rn llu·
'·e ljces which are goveming you in the year .
~head . Send lor your Astro·Graph predic·

.a

·~--~--or

Qroorn and S..PPIY
Pol
Q~tng. All bioOdo, ......
Julio Wolib. Calllt4 441 02f:t.

- P'

11 Autos lor Sate

- ,Btttory,-

Pets for Sale

~-;BORN LOSER

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

1tml Contt.-ot ...... v Front
End Do~ lllolor 0.1(. 11441111732 CON Altar IP.M.

Eaol

Pass

..,

''

•

••

11 EvlnNdo 11' trl l'loul
IOHP Evtnrude ond traitor, 114-

76

~=...
22

now1

Ac.r,ve 1"....

••

Transportation

1tml Oldo
1100 Finn.
114 441 111411. Hu New
Pocko, Ru..
Good,
Enalne
Bmoklo,
But Do
llook. lrrlok,
. -.
win- ' Have All Eictro Engtnt And
,..,.
- · Untoll,lla.
wtn- I'OOIToOoWithR.
·
~ ClrOnde, OH COil ~
1114 Oldo Rojoll, PI, PI, AC,
cruiM,
pawu wlndowlllaakl,
56

CCC".:

Antiques

63

T - Unlt: llkl now WIIUppiiM.
Portoblt _ . . . . . Enerpoc
p l p o -..............
:IIJH7Ht3S.

WaaOumer, Suburban Wood a
NowiUHd
Coa! Chlof - l o - r
Holuos1rolltlr&lt;rold"" fumltl~ 112 mi. ttoo. Dining oot. ocrlid wooc1 a
Jorrleho Rd. Pt. -.om, WY, country llitnt. 4 • ._.,. a
coii30W75-1450.
...........'II. 304.17&amp;-'1111. . .

53

Troctor, ~ Ford Worlllllootor,
Dllnt, 2 ...,. ,.., tll'll, $2150.
304-117114117.

Stoolunatic Stove, 111-441.0527.

PICKENS FURNITURE

BWAIN '
AUCTION a FURNITURE. U
otlw St., Galllpolla. How • ~
lurnlturo, ....,.,., .. a
Worfl bootL 114-448-311111.

Now Holland No. 481 Dyno
Balance Moww, 114-31'1-2272.

~\IS MY 8ANIC AG(.OIJNT
~'LL
S' AY! JUS'T &amp;.OOIC

-

John 0... MocMI ; IO, 2 new
rw•r tlrM, $toll or trade. 3045-7.
.

-·7120.

••••Iii!

BANI&lt;

Good Condition, -24WI24.

~4 ~~~~1~~~l::,:~W: 64

w.ictd: Good liMd Lumbo&lt;
2114, 211~ 4•4 Etc. 114-211 1514
Lava
II No Anaww,
Lllvo Nu111blri Twice.
WATER LIHE IPECIAL: 3/4 Inch
200 PSI ftl.ll; 1 ·Inch 200 PSI
132.50; Ron Evana Enterpl1wa,
......_,Ohio, 1_,1'1121.

..

·.

au- bole oprlnp, 11" Ou-r
TV, comblnllfon atalr atep 1 aki
llllchlno. 114-112-31111.
.

Nortb

1 NT

E.,.,r-.,

ed 4tlttn.

12 ChYI

JICob

11 llnlchnd -

ICtlon
II Wipe oul (II.)
7 Fregrtnl

3tl ·lnoecl
37 lndlcale

11184 0... 21' Cabin Crut..
V..
221 HP Atklnai
II OCIO ...,., '*"*'7112 Or

Good a

311-.

Wuwlck

1i R. Sllcrl Croft, 50 HP Evlnnnlo, !)crlllplllo 1\r....Up KM tnOiolltd, 1114-441-G271.

VI'RA FURNITURE
518-441-3158 Or 1114-4411-4428
'10 OAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT4.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

Cwtalna,

FRANK AND ERNEST'

/&gt;.~e€1~?

J.D. 45 Cornlrlne Loto Modtl
- lor Dlcrk up, rod
With 234 COm Halllltr, Reetty T
ftborgloM, $1211, 114·1112·2117.

B1dap,....,

,.

13AB(X)N'~ LN6R i~TO

Tobit Cov~~urtalno, VolonCM,I~
.

CoM,

·..

75 Bolts &amp; Motors
for Sale

Good 14 Fl. o - - k Clltlo
Tr1ller, S YNN Old, $2,000i 114-

Household

35 Singer -

GiUes Queran publishes a free
bridge magazine in the Loire region of
France. I was amused by the comment
of one of his writen, Olivier Beauvlllain, in summing up the deal in today's
diagram.
In team tournaments played under
the SwiSs system, at table one the tap
two teams play against each other.
Teams three and four meet at table
two, and so on.
This deal arose at a tournament in
Ostend, Belgium. Beauvillain's team
bad just reached table one, where they
were playing against a strang Dutch
team. On this first board of the match,
BeauvUiain opened one no-trumo.
debatable choice in my view .
two passes, South bid two hearts,
which North explained as showlnl flve
hearts and a four-card minor. North
raised his partner to game.
Beauvillain started by cashing three
club tricks, his pariner discarding the
diamond two at Irick three. .
What sbould Beauvillain have led

11D LIKE TO SPEAK TO
Ti-lE MANAGER , PLEASE _

ON Ti-lE OTHER l-IAND, JF
YOU NEVER EVER GET EVEN
ONE LOVE LETTER. THEN YOU
5140ULD GET YOUR SEVENTEEN
DOLLARS BACK ...

IF YOU PAID SEVENTEEN
DOLLARS FOR A MAILBOX .
AND YOU ONLY 60T ONE
LOVE LETTER. IT WOIJLD
STILL BE WORTI4 IT .. .

~~

1W Suzuki a.v..o ~ Mt!Oo,
-9oiii1WI7-7113.
Condition, .....
'
1113 lkrzukl Ktto.. 1110 400
MIIM Uke 84 1100 .~• o..
1101.'
' '
' ....._

..

,

8 Verno hero
II Brallier of

3 WMitmdef ...HOIV·
4 An exploiiVI
5 Bl'lnt court

IIIIWood

. By Phillip Alder

\

Condlt!Oil,

\ Fit of 111111'
fAtlllllnllver

Free magazine,
expensive play

Goldwtna. LOw

~~-

27 Circuli
300vertume
32 Frullllpener

(vor.)

11171..Hartov
~-·
304
7H2MDovlclaon
.... 4:30pln.
'

--·-trior

DOWN

41 F-Rut.... ruler

..,.,.,

Plcturee, Dn...,_, Medicine
~. London Fog Coli, Blue

5I

' THAT'S FER ·

:::
1 - 1-10 ~foo-geratt kopl,
; 1111 1!r44
tnllor wkh adoJ.on, ~:ICIO,• - ·
11411-2113.
••
·~
1 - Chny 1-10 8pM truck,
fully--...~. ue. eonil.,
304 112
- ·
. ·.
lapCI.
1 - ~10-rcr. cond. 127111

73

delerlorllt

Opening lead: + K

SNUFFY I!

r,:. =-:::::--::-:-=:--::::--,-'fail.=,
--uRI.
'

'toor

Go--:

ownen' org.

3o&amp;

Weot
PB!8

WITH

Ootntd For Qc. wetalllt •-~-·• tk a ,_
080.
.:1221.
cuponcy. For lnlcnnotlon Dr To l14-lta' _.., Rrrgl-td Rot Tonlor, whno wl
Roq- An Al&gt;l&gt;tlootion Call
-1214 obr I :OOprL
. bloCk .,.... l~ro. old, 150, 304- 1117 T..,.... Plolt.Up W)th
114-441-1100, Or Wrtto 111 HtitJM 24 R. Round Pool. (NHch 112~218.
· .
FllrtlgloU Calllpor Top, 114-.,._
Aptrtrnonto,
1553
Stcond Unor)
With All Schiro
· I Ia
0142.
Avenue, Oaiii!M)IIo. OH 41831 _...,
.
uzor m n turM, pupploo
Vouclltra ond Cartlllcota, Hud
and tduno, oloo Poocllo
11181 Dcrclgt pic~, VI, outo. 1
Appnwtd. Equal Houolng ap. :II"L II 24"W X24"H - - . DIM. c1h. - I n n , boot lnoo, ~'!':'"'will= 21
wtt000mo
a1
portunlt~.
Fotdlna •101 Doa Crole With Coolv Ill, 8M-167-3404.
uou
, _,.,
,
•••
Pon l'll, 1144N080.
Fumlohod
ftllllmo., 2211.
58
Fruits &amp;

Anr -

7

57

'

IN'

~·
}=•"'~
~C:~,!!ck.Up
.-.
~... •
~8n0111
Short~:"c~m~!r-: 1114 - Plolt.Up Tnocll, ~.
""
IOO. l14-2 •~ i:"'' 111~4~4~11~1~17Z~=~-.;._~;
Blood Une 1200, I
4U4 .
H · - ••- FLE"BE•~..

23· llucllllrger
211Fn-

f::"ltlt'

CARDS

•

~N. -

diM58

Vulnerable: Bath
Dealer: West

~~~eo, •'.""'"' Condition, ~~
111111 -loo Grotld Prix, !!tl'o

Hl111tlayan all, llonto
114-441'0404ar304,._,

12 wdl.)

.109752
tAKQ4
.J93

'

Ylleddol'a

11 Pllt ol

+8

1uyej.(i;jl.
LIM&lt; 48,000

~:;.-r 13.000 rn110o,

18 llr. Zlltfeld
17 DIM

SOUTH

.

11 Tile 11111111
M Group of 111M

ci'Mitn

+J8132

~

AKC ~L~~~~-; Collla,
btlan ....,._,., DoCIMrhund,

= =.

=
=IllIIWIJ-7123. ,

Utlllt~ -rlx

Pats for Sale

56

Ant'-·- Wood Cook 1.,.., With
w.;;:.'i;;g C
:o: ta4
Cornlorl,

at:;.:

- • • Povlr Etoctrlc
Only. Fll'll Rotzor Ap.trnento

~rnairth

-

· ·
'"'A"'P"'A"'RT=II"'E""HTS=-"",."'J Ivy or ..... R -.. lo.ntiquH,
BUDQET PRICES AT JACKSON 1124 E. Main 81-, on Ill. 1:!4
WJaoct
.k.....,to
10:00
"~" __
·Llll. to ·e:OOHouro:
P.'!4-II.T.W.
Iunday 1:00
•- ~-I 114 141 2568
loi:IIOp.III.IM-..-..21121.
mov-. ~•
·E ·
Country Sldo ,.,.rt_,., AI. 54 MIIICeii81110US
188~1pcllo, 2 lied-, CA.,
$33
• OopOoli!Wquirtd. 114Mai'Chandl18
441-4222.
F
1117 Honda FMCII 200, E lrot Holler Apartmonto Ftrot 11n1 Condnion, SSOOJ· 10rc14 Loa
1
And Cadlr St, OalllocrUt.
B~'J llcrlortd olnto, etC:
Stnlon, Dloabltd, a HanclcoL 3
LAlit E - 1 ~· FIIHA Income Roolrlcl'8,
·-· ...-·
·
H:::'~"r.:..:.' ,.:lancoo, ~~ut!.:-'
cod
Carpot, OM!ha Laundry, AIC. S.lq'-ADV8,....,..41C,

'

2 Bldroonro Stovo, Rolrtgntor,
Wlrtar a TrMh Paldd ~~ North
o.n~ &amp;200 Pluo
n, 814-

Gronda. · - -11227.

U No• .,alii TV
4f Cos llftlc•

12=··

.J8

1

:=.lhrtltt ar, """·

s.'

11, -_.......
ro:;..-t!c.,tt..:''d::
~ ·~~e~-~"'~"""~·~"'~·~~==:r::=::=====~~ 111..,~
,.
In
town. Appt{cOitono toovollablt
~ •--

141 or
,J
_ . .. III
.
l=...
='"":.:::..:::i:l-371~.::1::.
:::.:.:::..·- 4 lo.ptrtlllenl For R....
Alao, Chomrlot lkrtrurbon 1iiil
31o*-• 2 Bllllt, 2 Car rll- Moc1t1 4•4, 114-258-6180, 10.10.
tocllod
OUfllulldlng,

Expo- carp.r..r 7 To 10
Y-. Er&lt;pootouoo In Roallng,
Slclng I - l n g , 1111111
How 1lucll a T - , I*'*'

421'uo1110llldllll

20=k•l

+tu
•tut

~~d',:l~ot...-=, ~
;·

8~ P...,ow. ·

=-;_lllo. 1250 Dopoolt, 114-:MJ.

' law o.rreaderurehotoby
lnl-thallltclwellngo

&amp;ull·l":=========:-r===:;:=====::oi
Pomeroy,
11 Hefp Wanted

1•
Huge1110,
Sale:
UOJ Rocf.
noy 111M
P~I.R:
Bldwel~
llh-7111. 7
'F..,.ulee: 104 s-nc~ A - ,
Friolay, Salunla~, 8-5, Rad!M,
Dlahie, Vory N!Co Young MClcrlhlng.

IIIIo

..,.

EAST
tJI042

=

hd,_,.,
Unfumlahtd
Apartmant, Ston, Re~tar,

2

._

NORTH
+A96S
.AK43

.-

.EEKAND MEEK

This ne""'aper wil not

"I am not too intense! This is
my light summer readin g!"

' 40 llronur

11 Ploltlllostc

boNd on roco. COlOr, relglon,
MX tamiMaJ Stilus or naDonal
origin, or any lrientlon to
makeltrf sud1 preJerenc:e,
lmllstton or ~lnatlon.'

Gallipolis

,g=

Llch1o&amp; PulwelgiiiOII

All reoleotote lldvertlolng n
IIlii no_.,IIIUblod to
tho Fedo!ll Fllr Houshg -'&lt;I
ol1968 which ....... k llegal
to adVtrlloe 'any prelero~.
lmllaiiOn or diS\:IImlnltlon

Yard Sala

8-7

PHILLIP
ALDER

t150

').

1.0111': lila CAT ..ncrv colored,
•
ra lo SANDY, rt HM or
-84110. ... ~ortll'

. . . . . nt
atllirtol
loi..CIIID I

•1 lllrcllll lor

•

-\0

clopooll,

F-.1: Sol 01 Koya, AI. 124 a
AI. 1, At Port&amp; &amp; Rldo Slt1doy. .
118-317o7112.

Auguot

AaiOII

WOUlDN'T HUirf

TO-. HIM!

.._. 3 In ~room ,,...,, no

" - : Bot 01 Kt,_.. At R!M'o
Fumlt1n, Golllpoila, I*'*'
1123.
.

~=

IT C'litTAIHI.Y

Autol for Sale :

Sf'I

' .~

t10II " - :
Tlkln
S.turdoy Hlaht From Yard At 7
And On:ih.ni"HII, IM ttl 1375.

7

NEA Crouword Puzzle

1181 112 food - . I door,

tsons today by mailing $1 .25 and a long .

sell -addressed, stamped envelo pe to

Astro· Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O. Box might not be operating at its higher leve l
4465. New York, N. Y. 10163. Be sure to today .
state your zodiac s ign .
PISCES (Feb. 2U.March 20) Be sure your
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It's nol like you purse can withstand your ex tra vagant
to nurse grudges. but today_you may have splurges today. II you empty it .now. it might
difficulty in warming up to an individual you take quite awhile to get it filled up again.
!eel treated you shabbily recently.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) You're likely to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) Be cog nizant ol be placed in a highly visible role today. so
your behavior today o'r else you may unin· be very careful how you conduct yoursell.
tent1onally. through words or act10n. slight Antisocial behavior could damage your
someone who is trying very llard to be your image.
lriend.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be content
SCQRPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) Comments with where you are and those with whom
which you 'll !eel are helpful suggestion s you spend your time today. II will be evi·
might be considered unsolicited criticism by dent to them ~ you desire to be elsewhere
a friend today . This is a thin lrne . Be care· and will ellect the way they think about
lui.
you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 2t) Lending .- GEMINI (May 21-Ju. . 20) Don't put a lock
money or something of value. to a person · on your wallet today if you're involved with
who hasn't yet. returned what hels~e previ- friends who are generous and considerate.
ously borrowed could prove to be unsound. The contrast will mako you look like a big
Don't double your losses.
, ' lightwad.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan, 19) Someone ' CANCER (June 21·July 22) AVO id all
who holds you in high . esteem will be lorms ol pretense today., because it co uld
severely disappointed today il you break a produce a negative effect opposite ol that
promise ·you made to !lim/her. Even it it is wh ich you hope to achieve . For best
inconvenient, stand by your word.
'
results, just be yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb: 19) Strtve to be .

••

~onclttd wl AC. 304.en:atll.
'

J

discerning if you're working on an artistic
endeavor . Your normally sp lendid taste

't

at~

improv

.

�.'

Thursday. August 5, 1!191

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-Names in the news----:
LAS VEGAS (AP) -"Casino
executive. Steve Wynn is taking the
name of British hero - and slave
trader- Sir Francis Drake off a ·
replica English warship because of
complaints from black activists.
The man-of-war is one of two
ship~ ai the Treasure Island reson
opening in October on the Las
Vegas Strip ~ The $430 million
horcl will feature simula!ed sea battles lietw~n the ships in a lag0011.
Complaints came from the
Black Cultural Awareness Society
in Las Vegas and a chaprcr of the
Black Panther Pany.
Alan Feldman, a spokesman for
Wynn's Mirage Reso~ Inc., said
the name was chosen "to reflect
the time period and to give it a very
British feel."
A possible new name is Royal
Britannia.

Beaver Springs, Pa., July 28. ''Some people go
bunting. Some people go fishing. We do this,"
said one ran. Welcome to smaU town U.S.A. (AP
Photo/George Widman)

HOT ENTER:r AINMENT - Under a heavy
downpour, Doug Rose fires up the jet engineequipped "Green Mamba" dragster to burn a
school bus at the end or a night or racing in

Hot time in the old town:
small town plays with fire
'

By KELLY P. KISS~L
Associated Press Wnter
BEAVER SPRINGS, Pa. (AP)
-In the same week that the I~
newspapers began adverttstng
back-to-school sales, Doug Rose
torched a school bus with a jet
. engine-equipped race car.
Welcome to Small Town,
U.S.A. .
. .
• ·Some people go hunung.
Some people go fishing. We do
this,'' said Joe Clark, one of hundreds who packed the Beaver
Springs Dragway recently for
Wednesday Night Thunder.
The four-hour show of speed,
fire and explosions was different
only in magnitude and variety from
ihe drag racing that captivates this
community and scores of others
across the country on Sundays during the summer.
·
With rubber burning and wheels
a-turning, and clouds of acrid
smoke engulfing the pit area, drag
racers went up against sprint cars
and jet cars faced off in six-second
sprints at the quarter-mile track that
juts out from State Route 253.
Even 10- and 13-year-old girls
- too young to have driver's
licenses - faced off at speeds up
to47 mph.
·
"Evenrually I'd like to $0 50,"
13-ye~r-old Missy O'.Netll.said ·
before putting on a fare suu of
black jeans and a: blue windbreaker.
She lost to 10-year-old Valerie
Geiger in the junior dragster finals.
"I ran .go-carts when I was
small, but nothing like this," said
Valerie's stepfather and chief
mechanic, Rick Martin.
Could it have been the event of
the year in t11ese pans?
"There'd be no doubt about
that," said Bob "Beaver Bob"
McCardle.
Local drivers on t11e card included mechanics, McDonald's
employees, a forklift operator! a
coal miner, a tax collector, a pohce
officer and an Environmental Protection Agency inspector.
.
But the bi~ draws of the night
were Rose's 'Green Mamba" jet
car brought in to burn t11e bus, and
Benny "Boom Boom" Koske,
who blew up a late 1970s Thunderbird with him inside.
Koske, a Palm Bay, Fla., man
who says he never owned a chemistry set, wired small sticks of powder 1o a handful of ignitors. ·
"I'm a daredevil, a stunt man. I
have to work again next week, so I
have to make sure it's safe," said
Keske, who lists the following
among his essential safety equipment: leather suit, helmet, fire
mask, gloves, boots and cape.

o ·

16
· h' 'ncendi
unnKg sk
::}~ ~ b keary art, 0 e as s e
ro n
legs twice. has received score~. of
cuiS and cracked n~s and .~ 17
sbtches where my ~tllfold 18• • •
~o~, meanw~tle, fiUed his Jet
engme s tanks ~·th SO gallons of
kerosene, c~amed .the car to a
school bus ftlled wtth old no.tebooks, reJ!!&gt;rt cards and anythmg
else educational he could fmd, and
ftred away. (He used~ race the Jet
.car but lost both Ie~~:s m an July 4,

YF

1966 accident at Richlands, Va.)
"it's a demonstration of the
f th'
·
d the heat It
~~::WX e g~~=gh steel,', the
Milwauke/man said. He's burned
throu h t;rucks and tractor-ttailers,
but eg iall likes torching smaU
spec Y
.
c,he tracks where he perfonns
rovide the vehicles.
. P "I just roll up and burn 'em,"
he said "I sit up front, just having
ood time ..
ag
·

SCHWA~ENEGGER
Although the book has appeared
on some best-seller lists, that
appears to be largely a function of
its very large first printing: nlore
than 260,000 copies.

Reds post
triumphs

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
guessing game is going on in Hollywood over which celebrities ate'
on the client list ·of alleged
movieland madam Heidi Fleiss.
Billy Idol and ~ top Columbia
Pictures executive, Michael
Nathanson, carne forward to deny
industry rumors that they used
Fie iss' alleged services.
"And God knows I don't need.
to," Idol said in a statement Tues•
day. A photo in Sunday's Los.
Angeles Times showed the rock
star with Fleiss.
Fleiss, 27, was arresrcd June 9
for investigation of pimping, pandering and narcotics offenses :
Police allege she ran an exclusive
prostitution ring that catered to the
entenainment industry. And that's
given rise to rumors about exactly
who is on her list of clieniS.

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 71
Multimedia Inc.

like to energize a line laid some- would be melerC!i if the extension
time ago and extend it from the is made. Approxtmate.cost to take
corporation upriver to serve resi- the hne to the Cund1ff pr?perty
dents on the right hand side of the would be about $4,000, II was
board, tie into the . T~ppers reported.
· .
Plains/Chesler. Water D1stnct sysEbersbach also sa1d that the
tern, then cross the highway and board P~ 0 P,Oses t~at meters be
serviceJim Cundiff's propeny, for- placed wtth!fi the vtUage at a cost
merly Maplew?od Lake. Ebersbach of approxtmately $70,000 10 '
said that Cundiff would funush and $100,000.
lay pipe from his property to the . He noted tha_t water usage has
point of supply, and that all of Cun- ·mcreased constderably over th.e
diff's water would be metered.
past year· He ob~erved t~at tf
It was pointed out that at the ll!eters are not put 10 place 10 tl_te
present time there are 25 residents vtUage, eventuaUy a new ~ell will
on the right hand side of the road have. to _be driUed and II wtU affect
who are no't metered, but they the quality of th~ .~ater.

By CHERYL KULAGA
Sentinel News Starr
Starting next week sbldents will
have a new place. to go in Meigs
County for additional help with
their studies.
The Freedom Road Foundation,
a non-profit organization based in
Springfield will be opening a tutor·
ing center at 210 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, on August 9.
The Freedom Road Foundation
is a charitable educational affiliate
of Freedom Road Ministries which
was established in 1976 for the 'purpose of providing funding for
Christian based educational programs directed primarily to the
young, President Lindy L. Douglas
said in a handoui.
Coordinator of the facility,
Roben Crook said the center will at
first offer tutoring to grade school
students and that Roger Reed will
be teaching basic wood working
skills. A program that will be
added later is adult GED preparation.
Due to high demand, proficiency test preparation for high school
students will be available beginning Monday. This preparation will
also be available when school stanS
from 5-8 p.m. every Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Since the Freedom Road Foundation, as part of its philosophy,
seeks to help children who may not
have the resources to develop their

TUTOR CENTER TO OPEN - The Freedom Road Foundation, a non-profit organization based in Springfield will be opening
a tutoring center at 210 E. Main St., Pomeroy, on Monday. The
foundation is a charitable educational affiliate or Freedom Road
Ministries established for the purpose or providing funding for
Christian based educational programs directed primarily to tbe
young, according to President Lindy L. Douglas, seated. Also pictured with Douglas is Robert Crook, coordinator or the facility •
They are pictured at one or the two Macintosh computers wbicb
wiD be used by students at the center,

FINANCE

Flood level beginning
to,drop in Midwest

CHARGES
FOR ONE
FULL YEAR,

Residents pray Mississippi
levees will hold up under strain
STE. GENEVIEVE, Mo. (AP)
- The warcr is subsiding in many
flood-weary towns along the Mississippi. But d~nger and fear are
no~ as levees left standing will be
strained for weeks until the river
goes back where it belongs.
"Cross your fingers and pray to
the gOod Lord it's going to hold,"
said Mick Schwent, emergency services chief in Ste. Genevieve,
where the levee held when the
49.5-foot crest arrived Thursday.
For Ste. Genevieve and so many
communities fighting flooding,
''the crest means we can start looking at the end of it." Schwent said.
But if the end means water

•.

*WITH *499.00 MINIMUM
IN·STOCK PURCHASE

SAVINGS
IN EVERY
DEPARTMENT!

THIS OFFER EXCLUDES
TV'S AND APPLIANCES

*

PAY CASH•••
SAVE AN EXTRA

JO%
_..- SOFA &amp;CHAIR ._,..
COUNTRY STYLE

5499

--·-----

.

5 PIECE

2 POSITION

PADDED SEAT -,..
DINETTE SET

5199

,_.

--·--~-----------

'

BEDROOM SUITE

5129

5249

__ ___ -·
...._

.

·,---

How Ohio's House
members voted
By The Associated Press
Ohto members of the Hous'e
voled 11-8 Thursday against President Clinton's deficit-reduction
bill, which was approved by a 218216 roll call vote, the barest margin
possible.
A "yes" vote was a vote for tl1e
bill.
Voting "yes" were eight Ohio
Democrats.
. Voting "no" were Democrats
David Mann of Cincinnati and
James Traficant of Youngstown
and the delegation's nine Republicans.
The delegation's vote was as
follows:
Democrats - Applegate, yes;
Brown, yes; Fingerhut, yes; Hall,
yes; Kaptur, yes; Mann, no; ·
Sawyer, yes; Stokes, yes; Strickland, yes; Tralicant, no.
Republicans -Boehner, no;
Gillmar, no; Hobson, po; Hoke, no;
Kasich, no; Oxley, no; Portmatf,
no; Pryce, no; Regula, no.

4 PIECE

RECLINER

--~---------

In June, 1993, according to
Ebersbach, 4,321,160 gallons :~f
water were used. In July, 1993,
4•701 .250 gaUons ~ere used.
~ber~bach sa•d he felt by
putung 10 meters 1! would benefit
everyone, that re.stdents Will use
water more spariOgly. He noted
that n.o doubt people hav.e wat~r
leaks 10 thetr homes,. and smce It It
not r_netered they fail lo have them
repatred. .
.
.
Also 10 the wtnter geople let
~ater run 10 keep _Ptpes rom freezmg. He also menuoned watenng of
gardens and lawns.
Council member Kathryn Crow

stated stated her opposition to
meters within the village.
"You're rclling u~ that we are
using· more water endangering our
system, but yet you want"? supply
water to out of the corporabon rest·
dents. Our job as council members
is. to work for the re!!idents of the
v1~age, not those outstde the corporattan. It does not make sense to
further jeopardize the ~aler supply
of the vtllage by fumtshmg water
to those outside the village.'
"This water system was built
with the understanding that there
would be no meters," continued
Crow.

At tl1is point in time, the water
board is providing water to 25 resic
dents upriver who are outside the
corporation that is not metered. '
T.here are 12 resid.ents in Minersville who also recetve water but
tl1ose residents laid their own line,
maintain t~eir own system, and
thetr water 1s metered, 11 was pomted out
Tbere_aJe a total of ~9 reside~ts.
who recetve water outstde the viilage. Five are in Rose VaUey, two
on Snowball Hill Road, and five.
others wilhin the area not in the
corporation.
· Continued on page 3

Tutoring center will
246
•
open in Pomeroy Aug. 9. mzners

BILLY IDOL

I

'

A Multimedia Inc. N~apoper

Water service proposals aired by Syracuse Council

DOWN
PAYMENT,

FREE OF
INTEREST
.
FOR
ONE FULL
YEAR

1 Section. 10 P•DM 35 centa

· Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio, Friday, August 6, 1993

I

•

Low tonight In mld-501.
Saturday, cloudy, high 111701.

1-3-12·24-26

· Bf Kathryn Crow
Sentmel Correspondent
Several proppsals regarding
water service were made by the
Syracuse Board of Public Affairs
and discussed at length ar Thursday
night's meeting of Syracuse Vii!age Council.
Meeting with council were
Larry Ebersbach, water board
member, and Bob Moore, board
superintendent.
Ebersbach,
s okesman for the board, advised
~ouncil that he wanled to discuss
double check valves, water melers
and water li'ne extension,
He said that the board would

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Arnold
Schwarzenegger courrcd Mexican
film fans, hoping "Last Action
Hero" will fare betrcr south of the
border than it did in the· United
States.
The muscleman star was in
Mexico City on Wednesday to pro- ·
mote a sneak preview of the $80
million film. It opens for 111~. Mexican public on Sept I6 . .
It bombed in the Uniled States
afler going up against such heavyweights as "Jurassic Park" and
"The Firm."
Schwarzenegger dismissed the
box-orficesweepstakes.
"This isn't a .competition, but
the mass media makes it out to be
one," he said. "I make movies that

Pick 3:
648
Pick 4:
4066
Buckeye 5:

, .

.•.

'

ARNOLD

Indians,

2 DAYS ONLY- FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, AUG. 6 &amp; 7 AT MASON FURNITURE

Town tries
its own time
By ROSANNE PAGANO
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) - .
res a new day on Little Diomede
Island. And an earlier one, 100.
Weary of berry picking and
hunting in the dark, residents of the
rocky, windswept island in the
Bering Strait have opted out of
mainland Alaska's time zone.
The breakaway , has created
" Little Diomede Time" - three
hours earlier than the rest of the
stale.
"People out here, they pretty
much have their own lifestyle,"
said Andrew Milligrock, a 42-yearold city worker who has lived nearIy all his life on the island, siwarcd
a mile or so east of tl1e international date line. "We don't like the
idea of the federal government
telling us what time to wake up and
what time to go to sleep.''
So, afler passing around a peti. lion signed by about a third of the
community's 180 resideniS, Little .
Diomede on Sunday turned back iiS
clocks.

NEW YORK (AP) - The crit.ics have shown no mercy toward
Joe McGinniss' new book on Sen.
Ted Kennedy. And readers are
showing little interest
Gigi Weinrich, head b.lyer for
Oxford Books, the largest independent bookseUer in the South, said
sales of "The Last Brother" are
"real bad."
.
•
Kim Becker of Barnes &amp; Noble
. Inc., which has 1,200 stores, called
the book's showing "laclduster;''
And Susie Russenberger of Ingram
Book Co., a distributor in
Nashville, Tenn., said sales are
"not what weexpecled."
The book, which went on sale
last week, has been criticized for
puuing words in Kennedy's mouth
and thoughts in his head; for presenting allegations and unproven
theories as fact; and relying largely
on other authors' material, often
without attribution.
The Washington Post's
Jonathan Yardley said it was easily
the worst book he's reviewed in
three decades.

Ohio Lottery

people want to see, tbat people
really enjoy. What does it matter if
you win two Oscars but nobody
goes to your film?"
'

--·

dropping below flood markers, it'll
be a long time coming. Flood stage
in Ste. Genevieve, about 60 miles
south of St. Louis, is· 24 feet, and
experts say it will be October
before t11e wa1er drops that much.
"Meanwhile, the pressure is the
same on t11e levee goin!( down as it
was coming up, and thts could still
be packed with problems,"
Schwent said.
Three· months of flooding the
Midwest have contributed to 48
deaths and caused at least $12 billion iP damage.
Tbe flooding has put summer on
hold in this community of about
4,100, founded in 1735 and
renowned for the nation's largest
collection of preserved French
Colonial architeCture.
The county fair was cancelet!,
and so was a weelceiJd hand concert
on "The Desert," the Vaile High
School parking lot. Instead, the lot
remains a sandbagging headquarlers. Jour de Fete, one of the Midwest's largest crafts shows with
some 50,000 guesiS expecrcd, was
scheduled for Aug. 14-15 but now
·may not be held at aU.
"The tourist season is just a
wash," said Jean Rissover, a city
spokeswoman.
· On Thursday, sandbaggers
helped"plug leaks in t11e earth and
gravel levee, which reaches to 52
feet in places.
Ed Herbst of Ste . Genevieve
dug into a pile of damp sand while
his wife, Lou, held open burlap
sacks.
"What's at stake'/ Not. only the
town and the historic houses, but
all that hard work that so many
people have put in," he said. "We
feel like we're geuing close to the
end and we hate to see anything
happen to the levee when we're
almost borne-free.''

.

•

I

•

individual talents, all services of
the center are free of charge.
Crook said, "We are trying to
provitle a good quality place for
young people to go to keep them
off the street."
The m~n focus of the center is
education, but Crook said they try
to keep learning as fun and as
relaxed as possible. One way they
do this is by using computers. The
center 'will stan with two Macintosh computers, and Crook said
they would get more if needed.
Another way that the center will
take on a relaxed atmosphere is
there will be four or five video
games in the back.
For tutoring, the cen1er wiU hire
two cenified teachers. Crook said
Superintendent of Meigs Local
School District Bill Buckley is currently compiling a list of people he
thinks might be interested in the
positions.
·
Besides the teachers, the center
will hire a number of high school
students to act as peer bltors. The
pejlr tutors will be paid minimum
wage. More importantly, Crook
said tl1at peer tutoring is very effective with grade school childre~
because it takes on a kind of a "~ig
brother/big sister" type of relationship between the student and the
tutor.
Until school starts the center
will be open from noon to five p.m.
Monday through Friday. Crook

said that although he doesn't
expect many kids in for tutoring it
will be available. He also said he
viewed this time as a chance for
people to stop in, view ihe cenler
and ask questions.
"We want the public to get to
know us," he said.
Once school starts back the center will be open for grade school
tutoring from 3:30 to 6 p.m. and
then offer the wood working and
proficiency test help from 6 to 9
p.m. on alternating evenings twice
a week.
'
Alt11ough Crook said he hadn't
worked it out with Buckley, he
hoped that an arrangement could be
made such as in a center in Albany
in which a school bus brings children out of walking distance to the
center.
To allow children a chance to
break routine and have some fun,
the cenler will reserve Fridays for
activity day. Crook said the center
tries to do community projeciS and
small ftelds trips such as visiting a
ftre station.
Friday evening will also be
reserved as movie night from 6 1o 8
p.m. Crook said this is a good,
structured activity for the children,
but it also gives parents a break.
"We are committed to providing
a place for kids to get away from
tl1e pressures of life such as drugs,
alcohol and teen pregnancy that are
so common today," Crook said.

Sears grand opening held Thursday
William R . Haptonstall,
Pomeroy, has teamed up with Sears
to open a new Sears retail store in
Middlepon. The store, which for·
merly was a catalog store, celebrat·
ed its grand opening as a Sears
appliance, electronics and lawn and
garden store on Thursday.
"We couldn't be more deligh'led
to be openinj! and we think customers are gomg to be very pleased
witl1 how we look and what we'll
offer. Our merchandise assonment
is very broad," HaptonstaU said.
As a pan of the grand opening,
customers .can enter a sweepstakes
t11at will award a winner a 20-inch
Sony color television. Customers

may register for this until Aug. 19.
This is one of a number of new
retail dealer stores Sears ,is planning to open in communities across
the country by t11e end of the year.
These stores have previously been
part of the former Sears catalog
network of stores.
The stores will display a selection of hardlines merchandise and
stock cenain other models of hardlines merchandise not displayed in
the small stores but available at
larger retail stores.
The store will carry not only the
Kenmore and Craftsman brands,
but it wiU also carry names such as
General Electric, Whirlpool,

LIVESTOCK ROYALTY - Prince a lid princess in several
livestock mteaorles bave been selected to reign .at the 1993 M~i"
County Fair, Aug. lli-21. Judging took place at tbe R~nd Cmc
Center. Selected were len to ri1bt, Jamie Ervin, bo
princess;
Christie Cooper, rabbit princess; ~eremy Cowdery, ra bit prince;
Anita Calaway, beef princess; Jeromee Calaway, 1i er prince;

Amana, KitchenAid, Magnavox,
Philips, Sony and many more.
The new store will offer major
home appliances including clothes
washers and dryers, refrigerators,
chest freezers, ranges, dishwashers,
miorowave ovens and range hoods.
The store will offer vacuum cleaners from Kenmore. Eureka and
Hoover.
In consumer electronics, customers will be able to shop for
TV's, VCR's, camcorders and
stereo systems from LXI. Gold
Star, Hitachi, Philips/Magnavox,
Pioneer, RCA, SanyO/Fisher, Sony
and Zenith.
Continued on page 3

laid off
Soutl1ern Ohio Coal Co. today ·
announced the rcmporary layoff of
246 active employees f1om its
Meigs 31 underground coal mine.
.In addition about 48 employees
were placed on "idle status" until
they are brought back to assist with
efforts to repair and restart the
mine;
B. J. Smith, public affairs director for the America Electric Power
(AEP) said late this morning that
the 246 laid off employees work
underground and have actually not
worked since the mine became
inactive July 11.
That was when water rrom an ·
adjoining closed mine flooded
Mine 3I. The remainder of the layoffs and idled employees work at .
service operations, Smith said. The
employees are represented by the
Umted Mine Workers of America
(UMW), Local 1857.
"We have worked with local
UMWA Leaders io streamline ihe
process of bringing employees
back to work as the need for additional people to complerc this work
arises," said Jim Tompldns, Southem Ohio Coal Co. vice president
and general manager.
Tompkins added that the company cannot yet predict when the
mine will resume full production.
The company began pumping
water from the mine last Friday
under an order from the Ohio Environrpental Protection agency.
Water removal efforts are now
anticipated to last more than a
month.
"We are essentially down to a
one mine operation with only
Meigs Mine 2 coal going to the
preparation plant and machine shop
work coming only from that mine.
The work load for surface operation employees has decreased,"
said Smith.
Both the laid off and idle
employees are eligible for unemployment compensation, said
Smith. The idled employees will be
brought back to work first as their
help is needed to maiCe repairs in
the underground mine.

Cbr~ty Drake, sbeep prlneess; Jonatban Avis, sheep prince; Krlsti
Warner, dairy princesa; and Melissa Guess, pork princess. Kyle
Ord, horse prince, wu unable to attend. Runnen-up were Sarah
Roush, first runner-up to tbe beef princess; Jeanie Newell, nnt
runner·UP to the rabbit princess; and Peggy Hetzer, seeond ruaner-up to the rabbit princess.

�</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="32650">
            <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="32649">
              <text>August 5, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1587">
      <name>carr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3654">
      <name>finlaw</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1104">
      <name>imboden</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3362">
      <name>searles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
