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                  <text>THE .GGEST 4 DAY BALE IN · ATHENS HISTORYI

•

•

DON
WOOD'S

0 hio Lottery

~ Reds

Pick 3:

beat
Mets

•

2·4..0

•

Pick 4:

6-8-8-9

Super Lotto:

8-15-16-17-37-38

Lo1!' lolllgllt '78. Chlt~te of l'lln.
Friday, blab nar 90.

Kicker:

Page4

• 8-8-1-6-3-4

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•

Vol. 44, NO. 85

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 26, 1993

Mulllmeclll Inc.

2 Section a. 12 Pages 35 cent.
A Multlmttdi• Inc. r.-p~per

.Health care addressed
at town hall meeting
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"We aren't doing a very good
job in making quality health care
available to everyone at affordable
COSLU

Congressman Ted Strickland
made that point before an estimated
50 people at a townhall conference
at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabiii·
tation Ce01er Wednesday evening.
A lot of people don't have insurance, including children, he commented.
Just because we have the best
medical care in the .world doesn't
not to think about

1993 CADILLACS

~6

S75QQ

making it better and more available, he said.
Through the use of slides;
Strickland explained that 85 percent of the urunsured ill the United
States are working people and their
families. They work at low paying
jobs without health care benefits,
he said.
Health expenditures account for
an ever-increasing share of the
gross national product, Strickland
commented. This puts us at a disadvantage with our competitors.
To illustrate, Strickland
explained that health care costs for
autoworkers add about $1,100 to

Off

DEVILLES • ELDORADOS
AND SEVILLES

Plane lands on State Route 7

1993 LINCIOUIS

From

$13,994 28 *
(24

month teasel
Drive A New

Lincoln Every

OUR EXCITING
NEW FACILITYf

2 Years

Striking mine worker arrested

•

.

.•..""..
ADDRESSING HEALTH CARE - Congressman Ted Strickland addressed health care issues and offered a glimpse of the pro·
posed Clinton health care plan at a town hall meeting Wednesday
night at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

••

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MC SAFAR\
~~~V~RS\ON VAN

:Commission OKs property purchase

.'

' ~

Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners, at its regular meet·
ing Wednesday, approved the pur·
chase of three adjoining parcels of
land in Middleport from the Middleport Housing Authority for
S40,000.
The parcels are between Coal
·and Race streets alfd Second and
Third avenues across from the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services Building .
. The land· will be used by the
Department of Human Services but
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners will be listed as the
property owners.
After 'discussion with Depart·

..: . 4X2 .

~&lt;?YO'tJ(~ ~ICKUP

S16,995

·:~8.999

the cost of every new car made in
the United States. Health care costs
add only $550 to the cost of
Japanese-made cars.
In addition, we are paying more
for less, Strickland said.
Infant monality is higher and
life expectancy 1s lower in the
United States than in other industrialized countries, he said, adding
that lifestyle factors play a major
role in infant mortality and life
expectiulcy ligures.
·
·
investigating the scene commended pDot DwiBht ·
"Many people don't realize that
GOOD LANDING- Four business travelers
when you are pregnant and smoke,
Ensley ror seUing the plane down sarely. Here, .
r:rom Zanesville used Stale Route 7 near Middle·
you are damagmg your child.
Troorer Steve Circle or the State Highway
port as an emergency landing strip when their
Patro investigates the scene. (Sentinel photo by
"We smoke too much in this
small plane developed en&amp;ine trouble In route to
Jim Freeman)
country ... and live in unhealthy
Huntington, W.Va. Passengers and officers
ways," he said. "Americans seem
to know we need til change, but
seem unwilling to make the
change."
"It is pan of the American psy·
Cessna aircraft began ·losing oil was smeared with oil and oil could
che; we want and demand the right
By JIM FREEMAN
pressure past Athens and Ensley still be seen dripping from the
to choose our own doctors and hos·
Sentinel News Staff
plane's engine compartmenL
pitals. We are spoiled. We like
Under normal circumstances, began looking for a landing place.
Passengers credited Ensley with
· what we have ... if we have access State Route 7 would probably not
After failed attempts to contact
toiL"
be considered an ideal airplane local airports, Ensley decided to set getting them safely to ground:
"If it wesn 't for the skill of the
Most people in the United States landing place but, this morning, down on State Route 7 near Midare insured through employers, four business travelers facing dleport, passengers said. Ensley pilot, we wouldn't be here," Shaf·
Strickland said, while some are other-than-normal circumstances manuevered the small craft over fer said.
"I feel like a cat that just used
self-insured and pay high deducta· found the busy highway perfectly and under power lines before set·
one
life," Ross commented.
ting
down
on
the
roadway
near
bles to keep their_premiums down.
suited their needs.
Troopers
of the State Highway
Pilot Dwight Ensley of Medina, Leading Creek Road around 6:50
Strickland, who is self-insured
Patrol
investigating
the scene also
and declined government insur- and passengers Mike Shaffer and a.m.
commended
the
pilot
and said no
Although the road is usually
ance, used his experience with gall Aduge Crawford of Zanesville and
injuries
were
reponed.
bladder surgery as an CJ18!¥le: The Chad Ross of New Concord, left busy at that time, no cars were
"He ought to gt1 a medal," one
surgery cost $22,500, $2,500 of Zanesville around 6 a.m. heading coming, they said. Remaining at
ttooper
commented.
for Huntirigton, W.Va. , when , the s.cene, the bottom of the aircraft
which was paid as a ·deductai)Je.
Others, without insurance, go according to passenJterS. the small
without regular medical care and
often rely on hospital emergency
rooms, which are very expensive,
Strickland said.
Strickland pointed out the proposed Clinton plan, which may be
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP)- miners on strike in seven states.
ty and respect, that's all we're ask·
introduced next month, calls for For more than a day, angry United
Wednesday's standoff, between ing for."
Medicare to remain essentially the Mine Workers pickets fighting to striking miners, 50 state police
The law sided with the compasame with the exception of added keep their jobs tried everything troopers and coal company work- ny, however .
prescription benefits.
they legally could to keep equip· ers, ended peacefully.
Late Wednesday, U.S. District
(Continued on Page 3)
ment from entering an Eastern . Throughout the day Wednesday, Judge Irene Keeley in Clarksburg
as more than 300 miners gathered issued a temporary restraining
Associated Coal Corp. mine.
But the dispute ended after 32 at the entrance to Repair King Inc. order that bans pickets from threat·
hours Wednesday with trucks haul- in Shinnston and later at the mine ening vehicles at either location or
ing longwall machines into the near Fairmont, union officials traveling roads between them,
company's Tygan River Mine.
called for peace and said arrests Eastern Associated spokesman
to complete the plan.
The miners were frustrated.
were not the answer.
- Approved purchasing bitumi·
Mike Herron said.
"Somebody has got to say,
The dispute began ,at 10:30 am.
Repair King still has 27 of the
nous pavmg material from Asphalt
Materials, Inc., of Marietta for 'Enough.' I'm sorry I have to be Tuesday ended Wednesday at 6:30 company's longwall shields, equip·
the one to say it. There's at least p.m. as miners reluctantly stepped ment that protects miners from roof
September.
- Acting upon the recommen- one man whos' not afraid to go to aside and let a convoy of four falls, Herron said. ·Pickets argued
dation of Bob Byer, Emergency jail," said an unidentified miner flatbed trucks through the mine the equipment would allow management to mine for two years
Medical Service director, the com· who was the only one arrested in gates.
"We'
re
not
disobedient
people.
the
standoff.
mission approved a $30,000
without union labor.
The miner, whose name was not We believe in the law," said Local
"We have every legal right to
advance draw for the Meigs Counreleased,
was
charged
with
i949
President
Dutch
Morris.
continue
operations," Herron said.
ty Emergency Medical Services
traffic
after
he
ignored
obstructing
"We're
good
hard
working
people.
"It
may
take a little longer, but
from the upcoming property tax
pleas
from
troopers
and
fellow
these are· fundamental rights even
We did all we could do.''
settlemenL
It was at )east the third time the union can't deny Eastern Asso·
Paid weekly bills of miners to get out of the road leadminers in northern West Virginia elated."
ing to the mine.
$107,446.44.
The UMW has been on strike had blocked the entrance to an
Miners had remained off the
Present were Commission Presi·
road at the entrance to Repair King
dent Roben Hartenbach, Vice Pres- since May 10 against members of operation only to yield.
"All we can do is get the public for much of Wednesday morning
. ident Janet Howard Tacken. Com• the Bituminous Coal Operators
missioner Manning Roush and Act· Association over job security. The and the people behind us 10 support until drivers entered the cabs of the
union says it now has about 17,000 us," Morris said. " ... A little digni·
trucks.
ing Clerk Gloria Kloes.

1993 ...,.....

T-100 PICKUP

$14,995
•

•

•

.
'

VEHICLES UHIJER

ment of Human Services Director
Michael Swisher, the commission
approved the purchase on the condition the department of human
services remove an old house on
one of the parcels. The commission
stated the house was to be demolished with the stipulation that
remaining material be transported
from the site and disposed or prop·
crly.
In other action, the commission:
- Met with Sandy Whitt from
the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency who updated the
commission on the status of the
county's current Community Hous·
ing Improvement Strategy (CHJS).
Whitt said the county has been
given an extension until October 15

. Meigs Mine situation

.Parker Run pumping ce~ses

•

•. .
'

• • • Pfk:.. Include an ,..,.,ulactu,.,.s rebMet and tncentl'ftl. Un1t1

I t.

subject to prtor 1111. 5.&amp;% avatlabte with approved ctldlt, up to eo
months.
·

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• Buick, Olds, Pontiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck

~-

L

GO TO DON WOOJ)
(l

AND GET A GREAT

~,

I
',\

.

• Ford, Uncoln. Mercury
• Toyota

~ .59~6641
•

~; ast~:tlc St mt ,

••
: , East Stat$ Street

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h

•

I·· ~~--------~~~~~----~----~----~--~----~--_J
"Wherot Better Reallv Marten •
•.
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Athens

r
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Southern Ohio Coal Co.
officials
today
(SOCCo)
announced that untreated water
from the Meigs Mine 31 water
removal operation is no longer
being released into Parker Run, a
tributary of Leading Creek.
.
About 9,000 gallons per minute
will continue to be pumped from
sites near Parker Run. The company has upgraded its water treannent
faciliiy to fully treat 5,000 gallons
per minute. Its previous capacity
was 1,500 to 2,000 gallons per
minute.
The remaining 4,000 gallons per
minute will be pumped to the
. Meigs No. 31 impoundment for
treatment. The company received
approval from the Mine Safety and
'• Health Administration and the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resourc~s. Division of Reclama. ·tion, to increase the impoundment
' capacity.
The impoundment normally
.· treats water that is then either
-: released fully treated or is re-used
; · in the mine for dust control and ftre
: protectiori, and in the Meigs prepa, ration plant for coal washing.
· . The fully treated water now
being released into Parker Run

..

Raccoon Creek as receiving
streams.
The water removal operation
continues to release 2,000 gallons
per minute into Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon Creek. Water
removed from that portion of the
mine has less environmental effect
because it has a higher water quality with lower iron content and
nearly lleutral acidity levels.
Since pumping began, the company has constructed a second
pond at the Sugar Run release point
wltich allows more of the iron sediment to drop out before it is
released.
Raccoon Creek has experienced
very minimal effects from the mine
water release.
·
. "We have im~le!"ent~d these
Improvements to limn envtronmen·
tal effects.:' Tompkins sai(!. "We
are continuously monitoring the
streams and the Ohio River and are
talcing every feasible action we can
areas~ "
to comply with the Ohio EPA
The company obtained permls· guidelines and to get our people
sion that allowed it to pipe water back to work."
overland from the Wilkesville
Approximately 300 Meigs No.
pump site to the Strongs Run 31 employees have been out of
watershed, he said. This eliminates worlc smce water entered the mine
Flat Lick Run and two miles of on July 11.

meets all federal and state water
Q!lality standards.
"These improvements have been
in progress since we received the
order from the Ohio EPA on July
26 allowing us to initiate the pumping operating," said Jim Tompkins,
SOCCO vice president and general
manager. The OEPA order set strict
conditions including directing the
company to investigate ways to
reduce environmental effects of the
water removal and to implement
those alternatives.
The company also has set aside
plans to pump into Campaign
Creek and has eliminated the need
to release water into Flatlick Run,
Tompkins said.
"Since this process started we
have consrantly looked for ways to
reduce the number of release points
and take other steps to limit the
environmental effect of our water
removal plan," he noted. "We have
a~;complished that in several

·'
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IN APPRECIATION - Several businesses
and Individuals were recognized Wednesday
night for their interest in community affairs and
financial support toward keeping London Pool
in Syracuse open this summer. Presented
plaques or appreciation by Tom Lowery, pool
mana11er, on behalf or Syracuse Village Council
were(front row, L-R) Michael Warner, repre·
senting Brogan-Warner Insurance, Fred W.
Crow III holdlnll Fred~rlck W. Crow IV,

Richard Peyton, representing Jeffers ExcavatIng, and back row, John Thomas, repnsentlng
Valley Lumber and Supply, Manning Roush,
Meies County Commissioner, Charlene Hoe.Oich, representing Tbe Daily Sentinel, and Hugh .
McPhail representing Fruth Pharmacy. Absent
were representatives or Powell's Super· Vatu and
The Peoples Bank, Velma Winland, and Mr. and
Mrs. L. Frank Bright Sr.

�•

Ohio

Commentary
•

111 Court Sueet
Pomeroy, Ohio

It would be laughable if any
politician - especially a hard-line
Republican politician - were to
stress that the rate of illcrease in
violent crime is down. Yes, down,
while all America is scared witless
about crime. So Republicans did
not announce it grandly at their
recent Counter-Clinton-on-Crime
hearing.
But a suong case can be made
that, indeed, the rate of increase of
violent crime has receded. And it is
a very important piece of information . In fact, it is the unstated
bedrock upon which the Republican crime strategy is set. It makes
credible their central thesis: Punishment Works.
Notice immediately that it is
only the "rate of increase" of violent crime that has gone down.
Crime itself is up. Thus: from 1960
to 1970 the violent crime rate went
up by a stunning 126 percent. From
1970 to 1980 the rate climbed by
64 percent, about half the previous

DJtYOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wo!ds. All letle"' are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address aod telephone number. No nnsigned letlers will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Editorial Roundup
By The Associ~) ted Press
Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and statewide inter·
est
The (CieveiBDd) PlaiD Dealer, Aug. 23
Kindly old Doc Clinton staned dropping hillts last week that he
might be close to a cure _for health care co~~· But he wants more
time to test it on his adviSers and other pohucalleaders before he
tries it out on humans.
The president has introduced a lot of uncenainties, heightening
the fears and the rhetoric of his opponents, especially those in small
business.
.
We hope we're correct in our suspicion that the White House
knows a lot more about the details of the its health care plan than it
is willing to say. But teasing seems a taetieal error.
No one should be surprised if it takes major surgery to make
American health care more efficient and less costly. But give it to
us straight, doc. We can take it. At least we can talk about it.
.
The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 22
.
What a bizarre idea: Throw a prison riot and then file a claim
wilh the state demanding reparations for destroyed personal property. The Department of Rehabilitation and Correction shou!d be commended for taking care not to compensate cellblock ~ noters a~ It
settles certain legitimate claims from Southern OhiO Correcuon
Facility inmates who did not riot and who, officials conclude, lost
something of value during the 11-day siege. . . .
.
Most Ohioans have little paUence for whmmg mmates. When It
comes to processing claims for property loss and -:- gasp! - emotional disll'css, officials should follow the law sttJctly and not feel
pressured into bending it for any prisoner's benefit.
Springfield News-Sun, Aug. 18
The U.S. Constitution guarantees the right to express hatred of
another racial, ethnic or religious group.
. .
As despicable as it ma_r be to bum a cross, for exa;nple, tt IS a
legal form of communicauon protected by the Consutunon.
Last year, the U.S . Supreme Col!ft r~affirmed that protection
when it !brew out a Minnesota law bannmg hate symbols such as
cross burnings and Nazi swastikas.
Now however !he Supreme Court has issued a hate-crime ruling
that on 'the surfa~ seems to contradict its decision of a year ago.
The coun upheld a Wisconsin law allowing judg_es to im)JOSe harsher sentences for crimes !hat are mouvated by ractal, ethmc, rehgwus
hatred or !he victim's sexual preference.
·
Opj,onents of the law criticized the ruling, calling it an infri.ngement on free speech.
But actually, the coun took great care in drawing a difficult but
valuable distinction between hate speech, whtch IS legal, and hate
conduct, which is not.
. .
An attack on another person is not an act of commumcat1on.
Tbe Lima News, Aug. l7
President Clinton's new crime law reform bill would impose a
waiting period of five da~s on all natio~ hru;tdgun purchases. The
Brady Bill not only machine-guns Amencans Second Amendment
right to keep and bear arms, its waiting period just doesn't make

•

Page-2-The Dally.Sentinel

Friday, Aua. 27

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Thursday, August 26, 1993

level. And from 1980 to 1990 the
increase was 23 percent, less still.
(The data is prominently cited in
"The Case for More lncarcera-

Ben Wattenberg
lion," published by the Bush Juslice Department ill late 1992.)
Now, of course, no one walking
the streets cares much about this. A
decrease in the rate of increase
from a high base still means high
crime, and geUing higher.
And so: Mothers in the inner
cities arc still scared that their chi!dren may get gunned down .from
stray bullets; suburban homeowners still worry about robbery in
good neighborhoods; businesses
still won't set up in inner-city localions no matter how many goodies
are put in an "enterprise zone";
television reporters still accurately
fill the screens with blood.
..
But laughable-attable, or pohu-

cally uriS8yable, is not the same as
wrong. The cvi4ence, w~ile complex and arguable, seems solid. We
are malcing some headway against
the crime wave, and there are rea·
sons for iL
One big reason for a slower
inCieaSC ill violent crime- so goes
the argument- is that we are
putting more criminals in prisons.
Consider the flow: In 1960 there
were 213,000 criminals in state 'and
federal prisoners. But by 1970as the crime wave surged, and as
society opted for a mushy "social
welfare" responSe, softenmg deterrenee, and a search for "root causes" - the number of prisoners
actually declined to 196,000. By
1980, after society began. to toughen up, the figure climbed to
305,000. And in 1990 there were
713,000 prisoners!
In 1989 alone the number of
inmates in state prisons grew by
63,000, To be able to accommodate
that pace of increase means creal·

~·n'l&gt; fOII.f ~

'17«--me,-.... ·- e:rrA

~UI.M~

~. Kopel, shows !hat
'
The best recent study of gun conll'ol, by Dav1d
culture, not the availability of guns, determmes murder and cnme
rates.
.
He writes "Young adults in Washington, D.C. , are subjeCt to
strict gun ~;o~trol, but no s~.ial conll'ol, and they commit a staggering amount of armed cnme.
He contrasts that wilh Switzerland, where every adult male citizen, as part of the country's natio~~ defense forf,e, is required to
keep an automatic nne ~d ammuntuon at home . . Young adults m
Zurich are subject to mmtmal gun contra,!,. but stnct SOCial control,
and !hey commit almost no violent cnme.
. ..

Berry'? World

March that Congress restore its lost
I'm not sure wmcn part ol the
honor by repealing the 1989 law sc heme would return the greatest
that granted them automatic cost- · benefit to the nation. The deficit
of-living adjustments in their pay .
and national debt, in my opinion,
are life-threatening diseases that
arc eating away at our innards. But
one of the major reasons nothing
ever gets done about it, I also think,
-Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb. On is that down deep Congress doesn't
NBC's "Meet the Press," he said really give a damn.
Why should these nabobs care
he would push this year for curbs
on COLA i'ncreases for Social about red ink and inflation and
Security recipients and suggested what happens to the hoi polloi? In
they be limited to some percentage 1989, they granted themselves a 40
below inflation. He also said percent pay raise that firmly
Congress ought to set an example ensconced them in the nation's top
by cutting its own pay and budget.
income brackets. Then, to ensure
Now, put it all together The they would never again have to
president takes the iniuative, chal- explain their salary hikes to the
lenges Congress to trim !he deficit people who pay for them, they set
by passing painful cuts and dares up a COLA ~Ian that automatically
them to demonstrate the serious- jacks up thetr pay and thetr penness of their endeavor by taking a sions every year.
pay cut and revoking that damnable
In 1989, members of Congress
COLA plan they bequeathed them- were making $89,500 a year. In
selves four years ago.
1993, they are pulling down
It would be a two-for-the-price- $133,644- a pay hike of $44,144,
of-one package - reduction of !he a SO percent raiSe in four years. Not
deficit and restoration of the bad work, hey? Look at it over a
democracy we enjoyed before it longer period. In 1981, members of
was transformed into a plutocracy.
Congress were making $60,663 a
Now there's a Big Idea. ·
year. In 12 years, they have

Joseph Spear

.. .

enjoyed a $72,981 increase -'an
incredible 120 percent pay raise,
twice the rate of inflation during
the same period.
This means that for most congressional candidates, getting elected is a fmancial blessing. The congressional salaries of II 0 new
House members, according to a
survey by the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call, will average 70 per·
cent more than the income earned
in their previous jobs.
Please understand the import of
that The day they are sworn in,
every teacher, tailor and trucker
elected to the United States ·
Congress is instantaneously.rich . .
They are ipso facto fatcats .. They
are plutocrats , with plutocratic
agendas. Whazzaat? Deficit? .What
deficit? Hey Fred, do we have a
deficit?
So !here's the Big Idea Sop up
the red ink with a Clinton chal. ·
lenge, entitlement cuts, a congressional pay cut.
.
Actually, it sounds more like a
pipe-dream than a idea, doesn't it?
(C)l993
NEWSPAPE~
ENTERPRISE ASSN. .

Employment trend needs attention

qiz-.~
!l) 1193 by NEA. Inc.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 1993. There are 127
days left in the year. . .
Today's Highlight m History:
. .
On Aug. 26, 1920, !he 19th a;nendment to the U.S. Consutunon, guaranteeing American women the nght to vote, was declared m effect
On this date:
· ded 8 · ·
ln 55 B.C., Roman forces ulider Julius Caesar \ova
. ntatn.
In 1847 Liberia was proclaimed an independent republic.
.
In 1873: radio electronics pioneer Dr. Lee DeForest was born m Coun-

more college graduates employed
as baseline members of that muchheralded "service industry" some
economists assured us would
replace jobs lost to technology and
foreign competition.
Recent interviews with two college-placement counselors didn't
Many of ·them -at least 33 to 35 lessen my fears. The counselors
percent of recent college graduates, supplied me with loads of informaaccording to employment research lion .about which careers were hot
experts - are working at jobs for · now, and why so many care·ers
which they arc highly overquali- chosen by the underemployed
lied. They're wearing out !heir own young people I know are dead
cars delivering pizzas, waiting ends. I asked the counselors if 'they
tables or working at automated car- believed students at their colleges
washes, often for minimum wage, had been supplied with sufficient
wilh no benefits.
information to help them make
This time last year I wrote about wise career-planning decisions.
trying to talk a young family mem"Well. at everv orientation I
her into choosing a lesS expensive emphasize that our doors are
college than she chose, cavalierly always open, and we encourage
signing away on the dotted lines of them to come," one !Old me, and
her college-loan papers a huge the other agreed. Do many students
chunk of whatever she may eventu- seek them out for advice about
ally earn . The ensuing year has their career paths? Rarely, the
made me even more fearful for her counselors said.
future, as I've talked with many
I asked some recent college
graduates to tell me how much
emphasis !heir college advisers had
cil Bluffs, Iowa.
put on getting good career guidIn 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa began erupting with increasingly ance during tbeil college years. The
large explosions.
students said I generally they
In 1939, the frrst televised major league baseball games were shown on received very little direction in that
experimental station W2XBS - a double-header between the Cincinnati area. That is hardly a scientific
Reds and the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbers Field. (The Reds won the first sampling, yet I'd be surprised if
game, 5-2, the Dodgers the second, 6-L)
many colleges hit.career counseling
In 1957, the Soviet Union announced it had successfully tested an as hard as !hey should, considering
intercontinental ballistic missile.
the dire state of employment l!l'adu-

My friend the CPA-turned-public defender said she changed to
criminal law for its excitement, but
still does a little accounting whenever she needs the reassurance of
the "perfect world " .of sa~ e.
immutable numbers. Smce I ve
always looked at economics as the
science of applying those
immutable laws to the history of
human behavior, I'm puzzled at
how easily economists can look at
the same numbers and facts and
come up with such disparate predictions of what they expect to happen.
.
.
However, lately the economiSts
have been pretty consistent. They
don't see much in the President's
economic plan !hat will add ~ the
jobs tally, and especially not m the
short run. Bad news. According to
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
not even the official 6.8 percent
unemployment rate reflects the
sorry state of work in the United
States:
Many workers are so discour-

aged they've already quit looking,
and 6.3 million workers are
employed at part-time jobs tJ;tat pay
small wages and offer no benefits.

Sarah Overstreet

;l.

••

&lt;

'

ates face. If you're an ad'viseri n !he
department of (Your Career Choice
Here) and you tell a kid that jobs in
that field hug !he basement' as far
as hiring and salaries ·go, pretty
soon enrolbnent is .dowit ·and there
is no department of (Your Career
Choice Here).
The National Service Program .
will do nothing but get a lot of kids
into a more creative kind of debt .·
unless it's coupled· wilh sound ."
advice and government action to
prevent part-time servitude from
being so attractive to companies.
First; we should be· a lot less .
eager to iss ue student l oa~s for
unwise career ventures:
Second, we should promote a
national consciousness-raising
acknowledging that the part-tim e
hiring scourl!;e is ·not necessary for ·
businesses to slirVi:ve.lt is merely a ·
way for them to ge[ their work
done withou~ paying benefits, and .
it is creating a discouraged generation of workers unable to build !he
most modest foundation of security.
Third, we should give struggling
businesses tax breaks and incen·
lives to hire full-time employees.
An'd last, we should make it
decidedly unattractive tax-wise for
any business 'to make a healthy ·
profit on the backs of part-time, ·
uninsured employees.
}
.
(C)l993
NEWSPAPER . .
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

PlcaslnL

IToledol9ao I

He -

'

a retired fanner and

busincuman. He was a member of
the Wcstminsler Methodist Church

and lltiCIIde4 lhe JordBD Baptist

•lcolumbusl92"

I
MICHAEL T. GRINDSTAFF
W. VA.

Michael T. GrindStaff

Services were held earlier today
for Michael Todd Grindstaff, 20, of
State Route 124, Racine, who died
Sunday,. Aug. 22, 1993, in a boat·
ing accident ncar Racine.
Pt.
A graduate of Southern High
C11193
, Inc. School, he played basebal.l, basket•
ball and football and was named
first-team, all-league in all .three
sports. A recruit for the Ohio State
muggy. A slight cruutel!ofunlnaer- Highway Patrol, he attended the
Saturday through Monday:
A chance of thunderstorms Sat- storrns before midnight. Low 70- University of Rio Grande.
urday. Lows 70-75. Highs in the 75. Chance of rain 30 percent Fri80s. Fair and cooler Sunday and day, partly cloudy, hot and humid. Harold Cowdery
Harold Dutton Cowdery, 83. of
Monday. Lows in the 60s. Highs in Widely scattered afternoon thunderstorms. High in the low 90s. Kidder Drive, Belpre, died
the 80s.
Wednesday, Aug. 25, 1993, at St.
of rain 30 percent.
Chance
South-Central Ohio
. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Tonight, partly cloudy and
Va.
Born in Hockingport, he was the
son of the late Heman and Maude
Dutton Cowdery. He was .a U.S.
Army veteran of World War II. He
was a member of the Disabled
American Veterans, Word of Faith
· Various sections of State Route 338 and State Route 827, (the
Church, and attended the First Bapapproach to the Ravenswood Bridge) in Meigs County, along. with
tist Church, Belpre.
various roads and facilities within Forked Run State Parle, Will be
Surviving are one daughter,
resurfaced.
Doris
Blake of Belpre, two sons,
· The Shelly Co. of Thornville, is the contractor on the $445,671
Donald
Cowdery and Gary Cow1JroJe~:t, reports John Dowler, deputy director of District 10 of The
dery,
both
of Belpre; two sisters,
Oh10 Department of Transportation.
Mabel
Arnett
of Akron and Gladys
Altogether approximate! y six miles will be resurfaced. The conGeyer of Cuyahoga Falls, two
tractor plans to start work on Monday, Dowfer said. Completion
grandchildren, and three greatdate is Oct. 15.
grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Helen Barringer Cowdery, in
' A continuing education Pt;Ogram to include update~ in u:a.uma,
1970, one son, Jack Cowdery, one
legal, and aeroiJledical techmques wtll be held at Semor Cmzens
infant son, one infant daughter, two
Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy on Saturday.
brothers, Lawrence Cowdery, and
The free inservice progra'!l is being sponsored by ~eterans
one sister, Grace Kelly.
Memorial Hospital and the Me1gs County Emergency Medical Ser·
Funeral services will be held
Saturday
at 11 a.m. at the White
vices.
·
Registration will take place from 8 a.m. to 8:50 at which ume
Funeral Home, Coolville. The Rev.
there will be a program on assessment liOd manag~ent of trauma.
Paul Kenierum officiating. Burial
From 10 am. to 11 a.m. a doctor will talk about ~ay managewill be in Eden Cemetery of
ment w/C-spine control. The afternoon program will mclude talks
Reedsville. Friends may call at !he
on assessment and management of neuro trauma, Life Flig~t 11,
funeral home at 11 am. to 9 p.m .
scene team work and legal technicalities involved in trauma sttua·
Friday.
tion.

Weather

...-----Local briefs,--:.
Roads to be resurfaced

.

EMS, VMH to hold free inservice ' ·.

Enrollment figures released
First day enrollment figures for the 1993-94 school·year in
Meigs County's three school dis.tricts were announc~d today. In
Eastern, the total was 830; in Metgs, 11 was 2420 and tn Southern,
939.

Reunion set
The Cecil Leroy and Anna Sayre reunion will be Sunday at I
p.m. at Star Mill Parle:.

Water advisory released
· Residents of the Village of Middleport are urged to conserve
water until further itotlce due to an electrical problem ·at !he pumping station.

Trustees to meet
The Lebanon Township Trustees will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the township building.

Conservatory district to meet
The Leading Creeli: Conservancy District will meet Tuesday at 5
p.m. at the office. Public invited.

Weekend should break
hot and humid weather
By The Associated Press
Ohio will be in a hot and humid
weather pattern until the weekend.
Abundant sunshine will cause
. wid~)y sc.attered thunderstorms on
. Friday.

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS 113-Ht)

Publltbocl every aCtemoon, Monday throuab
friday, 111 Coun St., Pomoroy, Ohio by tho
Ohio VotleY PublllhiDi Comp111y1Muttlmodia
Inc:, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Pb. 992·21S6.
Sed;)Dd clall poltaf,e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Auoc:iated Pre.,, and the Ohio
Ncwapipll' Aaociatloo, Natioul Ad'tatialq

Reprueowive, Braahlm Newapll)« Sales.

n:l Third Avenue, New York, New Yorlr:

10017.

POSTMASTER: Send lddtea c:haaa• to The
Dally Seutinel, ltl Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
4l769.

·

•

SVasCIIIP'I10N RATES
17 c.n-1• or Molot lloule

o,. Woot. .................................................$1.60
ODe Moolh. ................. ............................. .$6.95

One 'I''J............... -........................._
·

SINGLECOPY

,PRICI

Dllly......................................... -

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.. $13.20

35 Cenll

Subla"Jbal not deairiq to pay the carrier may
remH ID Jdvuce direct to The 00)' SnU.ael
0111 UVM. all or 12 moath bll~. Cndlt wW be

Ill---week.

No AlbiCriptioaa by mall permitted lu .-eM
where home arrier .vice ilanllable.

-u. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MoiiS.t.oaiptloM
lntlde Melao t-(J .

11

$21 .14

·u w..u.................................................$43.16
s2 w..a ..............................................SI-4.76
.
0.1014• Mclao C..IJ
tl w..a .........................................:...... .S23.&lt;W
26Wolb .........................................$45.50
Sl!W-.............................................&lt;40

Temperatures will climb into the
lower 90s over all of Ohio Friday
which is around 10 to .15 degrees
above normal. With afternoon
humidity levels rangillg from 55 to
65 percent, it will feel like the
upper 90s to around 100.
Muggy conditions will continue
tonight with lows only dropping
into the upper 60s north to lower
70s in the extreme south.
A large high·pressure covered
the Ohio Valley' and much of the
eastern half of the country. It will
move slowly east through Friday.
A cold front over the plain states
will not move into Ohio until late
in the day Saturday.
. The recoid-high temperature for
·this date at the Columbus weather
station was 98 degrees in 1948
while the record low was 4 7
degrees in 1945.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:14
p.m. Sunrise Frid!IY at '6:55 a.m.
and sunset will be at 8:12p.m.
·
Around the nation
Hot weather was expected oyer
much of the nation 10d&amp;Y as a pool
of warm air pushed the jet stream
north into Canada. The Pacific
Northwest had unseasonably chilly
weather.
Temperatures 5 to 10 degrees
above normal were forecast from
the southern Plains to the Atlantic
seaboard. A heat advisory
remained in effect through Friday
in parts oflndiana

Hospital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CE!IqER
Aug. 25 discharges - Charlotte Beach, Mrs. Johnathan Ramey
and daughter, Alexis Hill, Robert
Newsom, Betty O'Donnel, Shirley
McCarty, Betty Williams, Roy
Burdette, Cathern Mill~r. Jeremy
Kisor, Todd Cox and James Betz.
Aug. 25 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Roush, son, Pomeroy.
Veterans Memorml
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
• Emerson Houdashelt, Pomeroy;
Mary Viola Bayles, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
. Dorothy Ritchie, Gladys Shields.

•

Church. He was a gnlt!uate of Ohio
State Universily Class of 1924 and
a 70-year of the Morning Dawn
Lodge No. 007 of Free and Accepted Masons in Gallipolis.
BoJ:n AJril 3, .1901 in Edgar,
WV. he was a son of the late W.A.
and Bessie (Casto) Lee. He was
also preceded in death by his wife,
VIOlet (Meaige) Lee; and two sisters, Gladys and Phyllis Lee.
She IS survived by four
daugltters, Joy Stilrgeon of Gal. lipolis Ferry, Betty Forman of
Mason; Wanda Waldie of Santa
Clause, IN, Anabel Thale of Miami,
Fl.; four sons, Rolfe A. Lee, Allen
Lee and Jackie Lee all of Gallipolis
Ferry and Charles Lee of Point
Pleasant; two step-sons, WL.
Henry of GallipoliS Ferry and
Brooke Henry of Point Pleasant; 15
grandchildren and 18 great·
grandchildren.
Service will be held at I p.m.
Sundayl-August 29, at the Jordan
Baptist Church in Gallipolis Ferry,
with Rev. Charles Moses and Rev.
David Frazie officiatin~. Burial will
follow in the Mound Htll Cemetery,
Gallipolis.
Visiting bouts will be held at the
Crow-Husse[l Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant on Saturday from 2·
4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. The body will
be taken to the church will be taken
to the church one hour prior to the
service.

Lottery numbe.-s

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold namillg all six
numbers selected in Wednesdsy's
Super Lotto drawing so Saturday's
jackpot will be $.12 million, the
Ohio Lottery said.
Here are Wednesday night's
Ohio Lottery selections:
Super Lotto
8-15-16-17-37-38
Kicker
8-8-1-6-3-4
Pick 3 Numbers
2-4-0
Pick 4 Numbers
'6-8-8-9
There were 62 Super Lotto tickets with five of the numbers, and
each is worth $1,320. The 3,009
· tickets showing four of the numbers are each worth $85.
In Kicker, one player had the
exact six-digit number and can
claim $ I 00,000.
·
The two Kicker tickets showing
the first five digits are each worth
$5,000. The 37 with the fust four
numbers are each worth $1,000.
The 400 with the first three numbers are each worth $100, and the
3,911 with the ftrst two numbers
are each worth $10.
The Ohio Lottery w_ill pay out
$271,706.50 to winners m Wednesday's Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,111,857.50.

RESIDENT OF THE YEAR - Bill Lowen, who is over 100years·old, was r~ognlzed as resident or the year at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Wednesday night. Here Congressman Ted Strickland presents Lowen with his award berore a town
hall conference Wednesday night.
A d d r e s s i n g_.:..&lt;c_on_
nn_ue_d_fro_
m_Pa...:ge_J_&gt;_ _ __
·A princijlal part of the plan is
what Strickland called "heallh care
alliances" which include all members of a community, including big
and small businesses and individuals . Members of a health care
alliance would then have a choice
between several plans.
Under the proposed Clinton
plan, illsurance companies would
be restricted from refusing coverage due to pre:existing conditions
or from dropping covemge, he said.
In addition, the plan calls for a
cap on rate increases, he said.
The plan rests on the concept of
managed competition, he said. A
nqmber of plans can be offered and
people will still have the OJ)!ion of
paying fees for elective proceedures.
Strickland said the Clinton
health plan will probably be introduced next month and will be followed by major debates.
·"If we miss this opportunity, we
will be failing !he country," Strickland said. "If Congress does not
take this matter seriously... we.will
have failed as a Congress."
Employees honored
Prior to Strickland's presentation, John Hughes, regional director of Unicare Health Facilities,
which owns the Pomeroy facility,
announced several awards recently
received by the Pomeroy facility.
The awards included: National
Business Award, National Nursing
Service Award, National Dietary
Service Award, Rhino Award presented to Marsha Houdashelt, Consumer Services Award and Facility
of the Year Award.
In addition, Hughes announced
that Carol Kanl!,walski, director of

nursing, was promoted to senior
director of nursing for Unicare.
Strickland presented Bill
Lowen, who is over 100-years-old,
with a resident of the year award
and recognized Dr. Richard Willy
for his service to the center.

Stocks
Am Ele Power................... .38 3/8
Ashland OiL ..................... 32 3/4
AT&amp;T................................. 60 5/8
Bank One ............. .............. 52 518
Bob Evans ......................... 18 1/4
Cliarming Shop .................. II 1(2
Champion Ind................... 13
City Holding...................... 29 3/8
Federal MoguL................. 24 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R. ................ .41 3/4 ·
Lands End ..........................32 1/8
Limited Inc ......................... 22 1/4
Multimedia Inc ............... :.. .31
Point Bancorp...... .............. 14
Rax Restaurant... ................ l/16
Reliance Electric .. :..............20 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ .18 3/4
Shoney's lnc ......................211/8
Star Bank............................34 3/4
Wendy Int'1.. ......................14 1/2
Worthington Ind .................30
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m . quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, Inc. , or
Gallipolis.

SPRING VAm~.ci.~.E~~
446·4524

'·" . . •... ,

7

•

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARliNG FRIDAY
ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER IN

Tidal Tille
The tides in Canada's Bay of Fundy
are believed to be the highest in the
SHOW TIMES
world. The biggest difference between
FRI. • SAt 7:30 • 8:46
' .m M"mas Basm
'
SUN. THRU THURS.
. h an d Iow wa ter IS
htg
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
at Burntcoat Head, where tides can
ADMISSION ,,, 60
reach as high as 60 feel from normal
44Hi:l3
levels of 54.5 feet.
..__ _ _...;,;;,;=----.1

EMS responds
to four .calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to four calls for assistance on Wednesday.
tl:IS a.m., Rutland to Painter
Ridge for Henry McKinney to
Holzer Medical Center; 2:02 p.m.,
Middleport to Railroad Street for
Judy Mahaffey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:31 p.m.. Middleport ·
to Overbook Center for Wilham
Sorden to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:16 p.m., Pomeroy to Second
Street for Donald Steinmetz to Vet·
erans.

torrection
An article earlier this month
inadvertently referred to the
"young men" on· the Harrisonville
Padres championship Minor
League team, when actually it
should have read "young men and
women" as both boys a11d girls
made up the team. The champi·
onship for the Padres was the first
for the community of Harrisonville
in the Big Bend Youth League. The
1 Daily Sentinel regrets the error.
The cutlines and accompanying
picture correctly depicted the
young boys and girls who earned
the championship crown.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI" SAT., SUN.
TOM CRUISE, GENE HACKMAN
IN

THEFIRMR
AND
DAN AYKROYD IN

THE CONE HEADS PG
4411-1088
.

&gt;

'
'

Rolfe Lee, · 92, of Gallipolis
Feny, died Thursday August 2(1, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point

•

\

Idea man that I am, l have a Big
One that would go a long way
toward solving the national deficit
problem.
. .
Actually, it's not all that ongtnal. My idea is to combine three
other ideas into one powerful concept !hat would almost cenainly get
us back in the black in a few years.
The savants who thought up the
three pieces of the Big Idea arc
- Carol Cox Wait and Susan
Tanaka, president and vice president of the Committee for a
Responsible Federal Budget. Citing
President Bill Clinton's promise to
conservative Democrats to come up
with additional spending cuts this
fall, Wait and Tanaka proposed in a
USA Today article that the White
House send a spending-cut package
to Congress and openly challenge
the lawmakers to pass it quickly.
And, these sages suggested, Clinton should get down and dirty and
call for cuts in Medicare benefits to
rich Americans, ·Social Security
cost-of-living adjustments, farm
subsidies and much more.
- The Charleston (W.Va.)
Gazette. The paper's far-sighted
editorial writers proposed last

Rolfe Lee

MICH.

ing a new 1,000-bed _prison every
six days! (The esumate tS by
Patrick Langen of the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, writing in "Science" magazine.)
The Republican crime plan is
keyed to these sorts of numbers and this sort of rhetoric: ''If we
want to bring the crime rate back
down to the levels of the 1950s, we
must raise to 1950s levels the
deterrent to commit crimes ... '' The.
'.itle of the Republican briefing
paper - an answer to the Clinton
crime plan - is ''Getting Tough.
On Crime?"
The key to that title is the question mark. The Republicans are
questioning whether Clinton's plan ·
is tough-minded enough to recol}-.
nize that more punishment will-'
drive the crime rate down further:
Republicans claim that the: :
Democrats are not only dismissing
the punishment strategy but undermining it by merely tinkering at the
edges of a prevention strategy.
After all, they say, Brady Bill gun
· control can't do much . Nor can
"more cops on !he street" if there
is no place to lock up the additional .
apprehended criminals.
Accordingly, the Republicans
are for more federal prisons for
state offenders (and claim that
Clinton has actually cut the budget
for new prisons). The Republican
plan keys the new prison space to
state reforms aimed at tighter crim ·
ina! procedures, less parole,
mandatory minimum sentences,
"truth-in-sentencing," and to a
challenge of toun-ordered caps on
prison populations. All this, say !he
Republicans, will put more predators behind bars where they can no
longer terrorize Americans, black
or white, in the inner city or in suburbia.
Clinton ran, and won, as a hardliner on crime. The Republicans
expect to test him on the issue.
They want to see if Clinton, too,
believes that punishment works.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, is author of '~The First
Universal Nation;" published by
The Free Press.

Big Idea does more than reduce deficit

--Area deaths--

OHIO WciJihcr

Punishing crime, GOP-style

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

•

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•

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•

•

SpOrts

•

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Thursday,

The Daily~!~~~

·'

NEW YORK (AP) - Dallas
Green was grasping for mght spots ·
after the New York Mets became
the fJrSt team in the majors to be
eliminaitd from the postseason.
He found one of the oldest in
tile book: Wait 'til next year.
"Last to first is not impossible
in today's baseball and there's no
better proof than the Phillies,'' the
Mets manager said Wednesday
after the Cincinnati Reds dealt New
York a 4-1 defeat.
The loss left the Mets 36 1/2
gamek behind fll'St-place Philadelphia with 36 games remaining.
It was the earliest elimination
New York has suffered in 30 years.
The Mets were eliminated on Aug.
II in 1962 and Aug. 20 in 1963 their first two seasons in the
league.
Jose Rijo (11-7) allowed only
three hits in eight innings and the
Mets' lone run came on Bobby
Bonilla's 29th home run in the
ninth, off Rob Dibble.
· Bonilla played a large role in the
Mets' demise, committing three
errors at third ba¥· He booted two

first to fafi out of playoff derby

How!ll'd' s sacrifiCe fly scored Rijo stopped SL Louis 2-1 in 10 innings.
Braves 9, Giants 1
and Sanders' single to left ·scored
On
the
field and off, the Atlanta
Brumfitld.
Braves
are
making a major move in
Rijo walked only two and struck
theNL
West
out SIX to improve to 7-2 since the
In what has become bllseball
AU-Star break with an 0.94 ERA.
most
intriguing race, the Braves
He said he thinks he can .p.ut 1
himself back in the Cy Young · completed an impressive threeAward race with five or six more · game sweep at Caridlestick Park by
trouncing San Francisco 9-1
victories.
.
"! have finally gotten my act Wednesday, cutting the Giants'
together," the 28-year-old said. "If lead to 4 lfl games.
Fred McGriff and David Justice
I keep it going, I'll be tough to hit.
"There's nothing else to shoot hit consecutive home runs twice in
for except the Cy Young," said the game, and the Braves connectRijo. "The team isn't going any ed six times in all, malting it easy
for Gre~ Maddux (I S-9) to best
place.
"Today I had good movement Bill Swift (17-6). Atlanta has not
and great velocity. My ba.ck-door been so close to fJrSt place since
slider also fooled them a lot," Rijo May31.
"Just being able to cut into the
said "I have.to stay focused. I am
lead
is exciting for us," Maddux
paid to pitch the entire season, and
said.
you won't see any change in my
After the game, it got even more
work habits."
In other games, Atlanta bombed · interestin~.
The G1ants found out that Will
San Francisco 9·1, Montreal beat
Chicago 7-3, Philadelphia defeated Clark, injured in a collision with
Colorado 8-5, Pittsburgh beat Los shortstop Jeff Blauser, strained a
Angeles 2-1 in 12 innings, Houston ligament in his right knee, and they
downed Florida 3-2 and San Diego placed him on the disabled list
The Braves, meanwhile, pulled
a big surprise by reaching agreement with Montreal on a trade for
pitcher Dennis Martinez. The deal
cannot be finalized, however,
unless Martinez gives his approval.
The Expos ace said he would
announce his decision today.
If he agrees to the deal, Martinez would join the Braves for
their weekend series at home
against Chicago. The Giants, after
being swept for the fll'St time this
season, will be at Florida for three
games.
Then on Tuesday, the Giants
stan a three-game series in Atlanta.
"We've just got to forget about
it and tum it around," Giants star
Barry Bonds said. "We've got
some problems, now but we don't
have any excuses."
While Maddux held the Giants
hitless until the sixth inning, the
Braves teed off on Swift.
Atlanta scored once in the fll'St
inning when McGriff homened on
the first pitch. Justice followed by
homering on the first pitch.
·
In
the
fifth,
McGriff
homered
•
Tournament. The Tigers finished third in that
deep to right-center. Again, Justice
tournament. Pictured are (front row, L·R) Kirt
hit the next pitch to faraway right.
Spencer, Steve Weeks, Matt Caldwell, Jeremy
. Terry PendletQn and Damon
yillilan, Matt Bissell, Dustin Kebler and Matt
Berryhill
also homened for Atlanta.
Boyles. In the back row are Justin Delacruz,
Expos
7, Cubs 3
Steve Whitlock, Jeremy Coleman, J.T. White,
Jeff
Fassero
defeated Chicago
Abe Rach, Josh Hager and Jereme Osborne.
for the second time in seven days
as Montreal won at Olympic Stadi-

grounders aild made a wild throw
on a double-play ball.
"This comes from not being
there for three years,'' Bonilla said.
Despite his rocky perfonnance
in the field, Green indicated that
Bonilla might still be the Mets'
third baseman of the future after·
playing the last three years in the
outfield.
"Bobby has played it and he's
played it decently," Green said.
"There are days when it's not
going to be very pretty over there,
but I think if you grade him out
overall, he grades out pretty
gOod."
Bonilla bobbled a grounder by
Reggie Sanders in the first inning
but.Mets starter Eric Hillman (1-7) .
escaped damage.
Sanders, however, doubled
home two runs in the third and
picked up his third RBI on a sev·
enth-inning single that finished
HiUman.
Rijo led off the seventh with a
single and advanced to third when
Bonilla threw wildly on a grounder
by Jacob Brumfield. Thomas

•

TUPPERS PLAINS TIGERS - Tbe Tuppers
Plains Tigers, coached by Dan Spencer and
Doug Bissell, recently rmished their little league
season with an overall record or 14-10·1. The
Tigers finished th~ season strong, winning six or
their last eight games, including four of five
games played in the Kyger Creek Little League

's

Long Beach, Germany win U.S., international
championship games in LL World Series

Scoreboard
C~•

- • Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE
Euk:m Dl¥LIIon

Tum
W L
P!Uiodclphio ...........
41
St. Lo.W ................69 58
MMuo&amp;t ......... .......61 60

so

auc.....................62

63
Pilllboqh ............ .. 60 61
Aoridl ....................52 74
New Yod&lt; ........ ......43 83

PeL

.630
.543
.531
.488

.472
.413

.341

Dlwillon
.634
Adanlt ...................79 49 .617
H...,oon .... ....... ......68 58 .l40
LooAJt&amp;."'" .... -......65 61 .516
CINCINNA11 ........63 66 .488

GB

11
12.5
18

We~ttrn

.316

Colondo ................48 79

.378

4.S
14.5
11.5
21
34
35

Wednesday's scores

Philadelphia 8, Coforado ~
CINClNNATI 4, New Yotk 1
Atlanta 9, Sut Francisco I
Son Dieaol. SL LoW I (10 inn.)
HOUJton 3, Aorido 2
Mootn:al 7, Olicago 3
PiwbwJh 2. Lao An8ol" 1 (12 inn.)

Today•s games
Hou11.0n (lhrniach 11 · 8) at Florid•
(Bawco s- t 1). 1,35 p.m.
Colorado (Greg Ha.rril 11 -12) at New
Yollt (Good .. 11· 14),7;10 p.m.

Friday's games
San Franei.lco (Bwkeu 18-5) a1 Floridl
(Ropp 1-4),
p.m.
Houlton (Drabek 7-14} 11 Monueal

,,JS

(BouCh" 0.0), 7,3.l_p.m.
aNCNNATI (R~ 2-3) at Philldd·
pn;. (Mulholland tt-9), 7,35 p.m.
San Digo ~era 13-l 0) at

(Cooke 8·1), 1.3.S p.m.

PittsbwJh

Chicaao (Harkey 8-7) •~ Atlan~•
(Smolu 13-9), 7:40p.m.
Colondo (Bouenfield 4-8) a ~ New
Yolk (Fernandez 2-4), 7:40p.m.
SL Lol.lia {Urbani 0-2) aL J...c. Angelea
(Astacio 10.7}, I 0:35 p.m.

Bal...,... ........... .... 61 60
Dooaoic ................... 68' 61
B..~a~ ....................65 60

a.EVELAND ....... 60 67

Milwa!Akoe ... .......... S3 74

.~u

.521
.520
.472
.417

Wntern Dlvl1lon
.552
Teua ..................... 66 60 .524
KaJ\tu City ........... 66 61 .520
Se.tttle .................... 6t 64 .481
Collfomio ............... 51 68 .456
......... .............. S4 70 .43S
OokJand ................. 51 14 .408

Friday's games
DH: Minncaota (Duhaica 11 · 12 and
Trombley S-3) ., Chi"go (Belcher 2-2
and McDowell 20-1). S:OS p.m.
Dlt Colifomia (llolzanerO.O ond Magranc 0.1) at Milwaulcoo (Navarro 7-9 and
lligum 0.1), 6'05 ~m.
New York (PCIRZ 6-12) at CLEVELAND (Lilli.,U... 2-2), 1,os p.m.
Bahimorc (Rhod~• 3-3) at Tuu
(Rag&lt;Dll-7), 3,35 ~m.
BOI1on (Clemen~ 9-10) 1t Kulu City
(ll&amp;ney 9-5), s,35 p.m.
Toronto (Guzman 10-3) 11 Seattle
, (Flcmina 9-2), 10,35 p.m.
Detroit (&amp;lton 4-5) at Oakland (Van
P"''P" 4-4), 10,35 p.m.

- • Transactions • BuebaU
Amerkan Luaue
BOSTON RED SOX' Aarood 10 """"
wilh Ouiii.Dpher NiJ.cn, oufficldc:r.
NEW YORK YANKEES ' Optionod ·

• Bobby Mun~ pitcher, to Columbus of

the lntemati,onal Le.sue. Recalled Sterling Hbcheock, pilehct. from Colwnhu&amp;.
N•llon•l Laaue
SAN DIEOO PADRES ' Pt.ocod W.Uy
Whitehuru, pitcher, on the lS·d•y d.iaabl~ lin. J"OU'Oic:tive 10 All!. 20: Rc:ca.lled
SCCitl Sandc:rt, pilehet, from Lu Veps of
.
!hc P.aJlc: Cooa Lague.
SAN FRANOSCO GIANTS , PloC«!
Will Ollk. fun bucman, on the 15-day
diubtcd lilt.

FootbaU
Nallonll Football Leque
CLEVELAND BROWNS ' Siplod Tim

WaUOft, aaf'ety.
DENVER BRONCOS, Cloimod Mitch
Donahue, Unebacier, off waivcn from lhc
San Franeilco 49en. Waived Kitrick T•y-

· AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dlwltlon
Twn
W L Pel.
T.......................14 54 . 51~
New Yod&lt; .............. 73 55 . ~10

am 13-&amp;),lO:OS p.m.

21)

27.5
36.5

Son Prtncioco ........13 44

s .. Dic... ............. .49 11

2-3), l:m p.m,

New Yolk (Hitchcock~) It CLEVE·
LAND (Ojedo 0.1),1:05 p.m.
B01ton (Viola 8·1) at Teua (Brown
10.9), s,~ p.m.
.
MimCIICKI l,»ani.a 8-8) at Kanau City
(M•II7'"'"0.t), BSl.m.
Tota'itO (Stewan •7) at Seattle (John -

lor, widen:a::i.ver. ·
DETROIT UONS' Sitll'od Ryan M&lt;·

GB
l
6.5
6.5
7.5
ll.S
20.5

Chicago .................. 69 S6

3.5
4
8
12
t4.S
18

Neil, ~mcrblc.k .

LOS ANGELES RAMS : Claimed
Tony lhralin. wide rece:i.-e:r, oft waiwen
!rom Kansas City OUcfa. Rcltand Joe
Johnlm, wide rccci.ver.
NEW YORK JETS : Signed Dennh
PriCe, dcfcn1ive b1ck. Waived Alec
Millen, offcrwive llckle..
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS' Sisncd
RMnic Hannon, NMing "Nck., lO a ~
)'Cir oon~ . Claimed Calvin Su;phcN,
guard, off waivers fmm the New EnJland
Pauiota. Releued Ra)' Smool., pard.
SEATIU! SEAHAWKS, Sipd T"·
ry Wooden, linc:t.ckcr, to 1 ono-)"CU CCI11niCL

HO&lt;key

Wednesday's scores

r......., to. CI.EVIll.o\ND 1

Dooaoil1, Se.tttlo 4
Collfomla l, Baltlmcn; I
Milwaukecl.2, Oe.iland 2
TuP 10, Be~tm Z
MiMelolo 4,.Kal\tu City 2
· New YOlk 7. Chie~ao .5

Today's games
Calilomia (Lc{twic:h 1-3) at BaJ~
(Md)onald 9-t I), 12,JS p.m.
Oatland (M~r 1-4) tl Milwaukee

.N11Jon1l Hot~•T ~ue

LOS ANGELES KINOS' Sipcd Man:
PoMn, tc.wud. 10 arwo-year CONI'II.'I.
NEW IERSEY DIMLS' Named Bob
Hof(moyer J'I"O tcow\; DIY• Nichol•
'"'"'~""'"" ............ Paul Boyor ......

"'"'SAN
"'oljln""
...........
JOSE SHARKS' Sipod DaviA!

Maley, forward, and Ou.y Oouelin, de·

r.........

-

TAMPA BAY UGIITNING' SIP""
. Joe Reckic, dcCODieman, 10 a multl)'Nr

By KELLY P. KISSEL
WILUAMSPORT, Pa (AP) Two teams with different stories to
tell about the 1992 Little League
World Series are in this year's
semiftnals.
Defending champion Long
Beach, Calif., faced Bedford, N.H.,
in today's U.S . championship
game, while Germany, w~ich gave
up 48 runs last year when its players weren't sick in bed, faced Pana·
rna in the international title game.
• . The winners play Saturday for
the championship of 12-year-old
baseball.
Because of the way the U.S.
bracket was set up, Long Beach
and Bedford played an exhibition
game Wednesday. Long Beach
won 21-1, its four home nms running its Series total to 10. Bedford
used four reserve pitchers.
Germany clinched its position in
the semifinals with a 5-1 victory
over Panama - the fll'St European
victory over Latin America in the
32 years both have sent teams.
Saip;m set Gennany up with a 43 victory over Canada. If Canada
had won, it would have beaten Germany on tiebreakers.
"You saw the kids jump three
feet in the air when they won. I was
jumping six," German manager
Bobby Enfmger said.
In the other American game
Wednesday, Hamilton, Ohio, beat
Richmond, Va., 1-0, with three
piiChers combining for a no-hitter.
In its two previous games, it was
Hamilton that didn't get a hiL
Last year, the German team made up of children of American
military personnel - suffered
through the flu for a week and lost
to Canada 10-3, Latin America 240 and the Far East 14-2. Two players from that team are liere this
year.
Long Beach is attempting to
repeat as champion, but hopes to
wm its first Series title on the field.
The Philippines beat Long Beach
I5-4 in last year's title game before
having its championship stripped
because Of cheating.

Sports briefs
Base baD
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- The I
San Francisco Giants placed first
baseman Will Clark on the disabled
list with a strained medial collateral
ligament in his right knee. ·He was
. injured in the fifth inning of the
G•ants' 9-1 loss to Atlanta when be
collided with Jeff Blauser while
sliding into second base.

urn.

Fassero (9-3) is 4-2 with a 1.75
ERA in nine games since being
converted from a reliever· to a
starter. He gave up six hits in 7 2f3
innings, and John Wetteland closed
for his 29th save.
Larry Walker hit a two-nm double during a three-run first inning
against Mike Morgan (8-12). Marquis Grissom had three hits for
Montreal, including a two-run single in the eighth.
Glenallen Hill, acquired by the
Cubs from Cleveland on Aug. 19,
hit his first NL home run.
Phillies 8, Rockies 5
Backup Todd Pratt hit a two-run
homer, helping Cun Schilling and
Philadelphia win at home.
Pratt homered for the third time
in his last five starts in place of
starting catcher Darren Daulton.
Pratt~s home run in the fourth off
Mo Sanford (1-1) put the Phillies
ahead fo good at 4-3.
Schilling (11-6) tied his career
high with nine strikeouts in eight
innings. He gave up home runs to
Daryl Boston and Roberto Mejia.
Pirates 2, Dodgers 1
AI Martin hustled for a leadoff
double in the 12th inning and
scored on rookie Andy Tomberlin's
single as Pittsburgh stoppe!l Los
Angeles' six-game winning streak.
Martin beat center fielder Brett
Butler's throw to second base .

Blue Jays notch 10-7 win over Indians
TORONTO (AP) - The slump tent." _
John Olerud was in , if it can be
Jeff Treadway had three hits,
q lled a slump, is over.
including his ~econd home run of
Olerud went 4-for-4 with two the season, and three RB!s for the
doubles and four runs sco·red Indians.
Wednesday to lead Toronto to a
In other games Wednesday it
10-7 victory over the Cleveland was: New York 7, Chicago 5;
Indians. The win kept the Blue Jays Detroit 7, Seattle 4; California 2,
one game. ahead of second-place Baltimore; Milwaukee 12, Oakland
New York in the AL East
2; Texas 10, Boston 2; and Min· " ! feel good, but I've just been nesota 4, Kansas City 2.
getting good pitches to hit and foulYankees 7, White Sox 5
ing them back reeently instead of
The Yankees found someplace
putting them into play," Olerud other than New York where they
do OK.
said.
Embroiled in an AL East penAfter hitting .311 over the last
nant
race with the Toronto Blue
12 games to drop his major leagueleading average as low as .387, Jays, the Yankees stayed one game
Olerud has now pushed his way behind the 11\lfending World Series
champions Wednesday night by
back up to .392.
He singled and scored in the winning away from home.
New York beat the AL Westsecond and third innings and doubled and scored in the fifth and leading Chicago White Sox 7-5,
seventh, matching a club record of ; and the Yankees' lOth victory in 14
four runs scored.
games gave them a 30-32 road
Olerud, who has two four -hit record, including ~- I in the threegames and one five-hit game this game series at Comiskey Park.
season, had a chance for a fifth hit,
''This series was important for
but was walked intentionally for an us because it was a fll'St-place team
AL-leading 29th time with one out and especially because we haven't
and Devon White at third in the been playing well on the road,"
·
said catcher Mike Stanley, who
eighth.
· "It's not a disappointment at all broke out of a slump just in time to
that I didn't get a chance for my break the game's final tie with an
fifth hit," Olerud said. "4-for-4 eigh~-inning single.
with a walk is not a disappointment
Stanley was 0-for-13 as pan of a
2-for-21 slump when he came up
at all."
Paul Molitor, who was 4-for-5 with runners on second and third
with a double, triple, three RB!s and the game tied 5-5. He singled
and three runs scored hitting to center off reliever Donn Pall,
behind Olerud in the lineup, fol- and the Yankees added another run
lowed the walk with a run-scoring
single to make the score 10-6.
"That' s the first time that
Olerud's been walked intentionally
since I started hitting sixth," MolitOr said. "I thought it might happen
t~y the way John was swingmg.
I~ s nice to come through and drive
irl that extra run."
\ Molitor, who now has a careerhigh 9t ·RB!s, would have hit for
t~e cycle had . he homered in the
final at-bat.
! "It's hard not to think about it,
eSpecially when you're leading,"
Molitor said. "It's easy to look for
a :particular pitch. I was looking for
a :breaking ball and he jammed me
with a fastball, but in that situation
you'll take the RBI."
: Ed Sprague was the other big
run producer for the Blue Jays,
c(lualling a career-high with four
R:Bi s on two hits and a sacrifice

...

Tomberlin then singled ofr Jim·•
Oou (4· 7). ·
•
.
...
The Dodgers left 17 nmners on,
base, nine in scorin~ position. ·
Denny Neagle (3-5) puched three
hitless innings.
Astros 3, MarliDS 2
Mark Portugal, Todd Jones .and .
Xavier Hernandez teamed on a
three-hitter as Houston won its .
fourth sttaight game.
Portugal (13 -4) is 7-0 with a
1.88 ERA in his last nine starts. He
pitched five innings 11nd gave up .
only one hit, a two-run homer by
Darrell Whitmore.
..•
Hernandez struck out four of ·
seven batters and got his seventh ,'
save. Charlie Hough (7-14) was the .
loser.
·
Padres 2, Cardinals 1
•
A double error by shortstop ~ ·
. Ozzie Smith enabled San Diego to.,
beat SL Louis in the bottom of the ·.
lOth inning.
~
A day after scoring 13 runs in "
the fll'St inning, the Padres got one
in the fli'St on Tony Gwynn's dou- ·.
ble and Phil Plantier's single: But,;
San Diego did not score again 1111til •.
the lOth when Smith bobbled a ,
grounder and overthrew first giving him three CIJ'!l1'S in the game
-and Bmd Ausmus singled with :
two outs and the bases loaded.
Gene .IJairis (5-5) was the winner and Lee Guetterman (2-3) was
theloser.

ATTENTION:
People covered by Public Employees
Retirement Systems (PERS)
State Teachers Retirement System (STRS)
State Highway Patrol
Retirement System (SHPRS)
We Are Authorized to Fill Your Prescriptions
Under the Aetna Pharmacy
Management Program.
You Only
the CO··Pavm,e nt

Ohio

fn AL action,

. --_:~==------~~~~------~------------------~--------------------------------~----~~----------------~--------------!P~~!D!•::·~

R':d~ top Mets 4-1 to make hosts

26,1993

on an error.
The Yankees went up 5-4 in the
sixth on a two-run' double by Mike
Gallego. Chicago tied it in the bottom of the inning on an RBI single
by Tim Raines.
The decisive.eighth featured two
bad fielding plays by Pall, who
threw a bunt away and then
couldn't get a runner at the plate on
a comebacker.
Rich Monteleone. (6-4) pitched I
1/3 innings of scoreless, one-hit
relief. Bob Wickman got the last
out for his third save.
.
Tigers 7, Mariners 4
At Detroit, Travis Fryman drove
in four runs and had four hits,
including his 18th homer, and Bill
Gullickson improved his lifetime
mark against Seattle to 9-0 with .his
fifth straight victory.
Cecil Fielder added his 29th
homer for the Tigers, who scored
four nms in the sixth to overcome a
4-3 deficit.
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his 36th and
37th homers. Gullickson (11-6)
allowed four runs on seven hits in
six innings.
Angels 2, Orioles 1
Cal Ripk en's seventh -innin g
singl e was the only hit Mark
Langston allowed in eight innings.
Reliever Mike Butcher allowed
one hit and got his seventh save as
th e Oriol es were two-hit for th e
second strpight game. Langston
(13-6) struck out nine and walked
three.
Mike Mu ssina (12·5) had his

•

three-game winning streak snapped
as he allowed twa runs and six hits
in eight innings.
Brewers 12, Athletics 2
There was no brawl in Milwaukee like Tuesday night, but the
Brewers roughed up Oakland pitch- :
ers with three four-run innings. Cal
Eldred (14-12) won his third .
straight, allowing eight hits in eight
innings.
John Jaha had a three-run homer
for Milwaukee, while Oakland
scored its runs in the matchup of
cellar-dwellers on a two-run homer
in the eighth_by Mike Aldrete.
Rangers 10, Red Sox 2
Rookie right-hander Steve Dreyer (2-1) gave the depleted Texas
pitching staff a break with five-hit
ball over 6 1/3 innings and Ivan
Rodriguez took care of the offense
with a career-high five RB!s.
Rodriguez hit a three-run homer
in a four-run first as the Rangers
won their fourth in a row. The visiting Red Sox lost their sixth
straight and eighth of nine.
Twins 4, Royals 2
Scott Erickson (8-15), the
losingest pitcher in the majors,
allowed two runs on eight hits for 7
1/3 innings as Minnesota won its
second in eight games.
Pedro Munoz ended a 1-for-34
slump with an RBI single in the top
of the first as Minnesola took a 3-0
lead on Tom Gordon (8-5) . Kansas
City closed within 3-2, but the
Twins got the insurance run back
on a passed ball by Mike Macfar·
lane in the fifth.

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:·Tony Fernandez and Randy
Knorr had run-scoring singles and
Fernandez also scored on an error.
! Pat Hentgen (15-7) benefited
friJm the offensive display, !lllowin:g six runs on nine hits in 7 1/3
innings for the win. He walked one
aJ\d struck out four.
· Duane Ward struck out the only
b.aner he faced,- pinch-hitter Reggie
Jefferson, for his 36th save.
~- Clevelind starter Jose Mesa (9tO) was tagged with eight earned
rims on 13 hits in 4 2(3 innings.
". "He didn't have much today,"
r:hdians manager Mike Hargrove
s;iid. "His slider was very inconsis-

..

CAUGHT STEALING- Toronto's Tony
Fernandez rmds himself an out victim at second
base on a steal attempt following Cleveland sec-

ond baseman Carlos Baerga's tag in the second
inning or Wednesday's American League game
in Toronto, where the Blue Jays won 10-7. (AP)

$eles to 'start outfrom .scratch' after on-court stabbing incident
:: NEW YORK (AP) - Monica
s:eies says she "lost everything"
when she was stabbed in the back
at a tennis tournament four months
ago, and now "! have to start out
r~om scraiCh."
• In her first interview since the
April 30 stabbing in Hamburg,
C:ermany, the two-time U.S. Open
c ~ampion told ABC's Diane
S)twyer: "I haven't hit a ball for a
lcmg time and ... I mean for me to
get back to any level is going to
tdke a lot of hours."
: Unable to defend her Open title
this year, Seles said her recovery
\\!'ill include not only a great deal of
p~ysical work but also some men-

NOW
AVAILABLE

IN THE

tal conditioning.

Seles, recuperating in Vail ,
Colo ., hasn't even been able to
look at the injury.
"It's not something I want to
do. It just reminds me too much of
what actually happened," she said.
The interview will air on
" PrimeTime Live" today at 10
p.m. EDT.
"It's hard to talk about it
because it brings back that day,"
Seles said. "And that day I'm sure
is not one of the days I'm going to
look back on ever.
"I think as soon as I'll be able
to physically swinp; a. racket and hit

a ball, I'm· going- to go out there
and swing it. And I'm going to
practice hard. But I think for me
I'm going to have to deal with it
emotionally also.
"It's not a bad dream I have to
wake up."
Seles, however, vowed that she
would overcome the trauma from
the wound and said she bore no
grudge against her assailant, who
said he was a Steffi Graf fan and
wanted to unseat Seles as the
world's No. I player.
"! was always a strong person
mentally, and this is just another
hurdle that I just have to jump
over," she said. "It's just hard to

understand why a person would
stab another person for that person
not to be No. I, on the tennis court
while I'm playing.
"I mean, I was in a match, I was
the down 3-love, 4-3 and it just
happened. That to me is the hardest
thing to understand."
Since the stabbing, Seles says
she has sought out ways of coping
with her trauma, "and I've gotten
much better." And, she Said, she's
heen impressed with the increased
security at most tournaments.
She only wonders: "Why do we
always have to have a victim to
change something?"

Browns' top draft choice named starting center over Hilgenberg
: BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Bernie
Kosar will be taking snaps from
rookie Steve Everitt this season, the
ttlird in an to play center for the
Cleveland Browns in as many

CALL
NOW

year ago.
Modell said he had no indication whether Hilgenberg would
return or sign with another team.
Belichick ,said he spoke witb

Hilgenberg on Tuesday and let him
know that his role on the team
would be different from what it
was · last year, because Everitt
would be the starting center.

y~s .

THIS SPACE
$16.00

THIS SPACE
$8.00

.··
'·

·'

THIS SPACE
$12.00

berg a chance to return, most likely
.a reserve role. That would
require a new contract, replacing
the deal for this season Hilgenberg
had negOilated w•th the Browns a
10

99

"'

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Call Now For Sunday, August 22nd

• Everiu, drafted No. I by the
Browns out of Michigan, won the
stlifting position in the pres~son
over 13-year veteran Jay H•lgenbcirg. He came to Cleveland last
ydar from Chicago.
.
' The coaching staff decided to
~e the most of Everitt's natural
arnlities, coach Bill Belichick said.
: "Steve is really solid,"
B~lichick said. "He's a big, strong,
p~ysical football player. We'~e also
in)pressed with his overallmtelltgance, l!is instinctiveness at the
center position and his poise... .
. ' The decision left Hilgenberg m
limbo. The Browns released him
fr(&gt;m a $1.1 million one-year contract but said Hilgenberg would be
welcome back for Jess money as a
backu~ and mentor to Everitt.
• "It s an organizational decision.
Mike (Lombardi), as the personnel
ditector, has a reaDy better overall
fe~l for personnel moves than what
I have. That's his area of expertise," Belichick said.
I "F'i,Om a coaching standpoint, I
gi~e my opinion on the pltlye~
and of course, Art (Modell) ts
involved in all the decisions. But
organizationally, I think we we~e in
unanimous agreement of the s•tua-

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NOW

$10,995
OHI.Y 31,101l IILfSI
• doora. • wheel drive, air, auto., PS,

2 doors, V-8, air, auto., PS, PB,
power windows, power seat,
power locl&lt;s, lilt..._l, CNiae,
AMIFM stereo tape, radials,
bucket soa1S, rear win. defog.,
gauges. Kaytess En1ry, JBL Sitreo, Mlch Mon11

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ONLY 30,00i&gt;IILESl
PB, _.., wlndowa. powe&lt; locka, dlt ::· .'
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4 doo&lt;s, V-8, air, -.. PS,PB.dia18, rear win. defog.
window&amp;, powor &amp;eat, 1oc1t1, tit
wheel, cruise, AM.ft.hltnlO llpl, fldi.
als, while walls, r~~~rwin. defog., 1111"11"1·

ONLY 14,000 MLESI
6eyl., ail, PS, PB, powarwindows, pow•
locks, til wheel, cruise, AM.fM s1111110
lipe, radials, 1rz ton,long wide bed, """
step lilrnPI!', 1111. fut&gt; larlt, gauges, 81~
ing rear glass.

HOLE·IN-ONE PRIZES - A lucky golfer
that aces the 180-yard par three ninth bole can
claim one or these 11ew vehicles. Pictured from
left to right with the vehicles are Mike Martin of
Smith Nelson Motors, George Bush of Don Tate

NOW

Chevy-Oids·Cadillac-GEO, Mitch Roush of
Riverside Golf Course, Max Whitlatch and Bob
Damron of Southern Ohio Coal, Tim Hill or TriCounty Ford and Bill Quickel of Davis Quickel
Insurance.

$11,995

Southern Ohio Coal to sponsor linkfest slated for Sunday

Southern Ohio Coal will sponsor its fourth annual Children's
Serivices Golf Tournament Sunday, Aug. 29 at 9 a.m. at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason, W.Va.
Entry fee is $200 per team ($SO
per individual). The price includes
golf, can1 food, refreshments and
prize~. Prizes include a brand new
car for a hole-in-one on the 180ti&lt;)n."
·
' yard, par 3 ninth hole. A golfer that
: Modell the team owner, said aees that hole will have a choice of
the Brow~s have offe~cd Hilp;en- a ne":' vehicle ~rom Tri-County

p

2 doors, 6 cyl., air, auto., PS, PB,
power windows, pqwer seat,
power locks, tilt wheel, auioa,
AMIFM stsi'IIO tepa, radials, n~ar
win. defog., gauges.
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Ford, Smith Nelson Motors or Don
Tate Chevy-Oids-Cadillac-GEO.
Other hole-in-one sponsors include
Sears, Davis-Quickel Insurance,
P .O.K. Construction and Ingles
Furniture.

Other prizes include a trip to a
golfer that gets a hole-in-one on
number seven and closest to tlie pin
on number 14 will get a 1994
membership to the Riverside Golf
Course.

Tuesday ladies' league golf results announced
Winners in the Tuesday Moming Ladies' Golf League at the
Myigs Golf Course were Low
Gross, Joan Childs; Low Net,
Diana Ash; Low Putts (tie) Nellie
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Brown and' Joan Childs; and Dee
Teaford, Chip-in-Hole. The closing
day pany for the women's league
Will be held at the club at 4 p.m.
Tuesday, September 28, 1993.
\

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4 whael drive: 6 cyl., air, auto.,

PS, PB,AMIFMstereotape,l'ldals, long wide bed, raar otap
bumper, gauges, sliding rear
glass, fiberglass topper.

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Community Calendar

The Daily Sentmel

By The Bend

Commanlt7 Caleadar ltem1
appear two ~ belole u event
and tile daJ tllat eveat. Ite.,
Uluat be received In adYanc:e to
-ure pablk:ation Ia the calea·

Thursday, August 26, 1993·

'Country Living' competition sponsored by ganden club

WINNERS • Cheryl Jewell took best or show ill the junior
artistic: arrangements category, and Mrs. Vir~! Atkins, best or
show in
senior artistic arrangement division at the annual •
. home flower show or the Rutland Garden Club.

the

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Ann
Landers

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

'.

· : .... The death of Kathy Bilrringer
HeiZer at a Parkersburg, W. Va.,
hospital Sunday was a shock to her
many friends who had been wilh
her until midnight Salllrday at !he
Meigs County Fair.
.
·
The family was at !he flllr where
the children, Kcrrie and Peggy.
were participating in~-~ cl~b
activities as a part of !he Jumor fllll'.
Kathy seemed fme. However, as
many of us know, death talces no
holiday. .
.
Kathy's friends m the
Reedsville-Tuppers Plains area
stated that while the family never
had much to live on or wilh, !hey
all have extended a world of love
to everyone around them. For !hat
reason, friends came up with an
idea which, hopefully, will raise
some money to help wilh necessary
expenses.
At !he annual livestock dinner to
be held at Eastern High School !his
Saturday night, contain~ will be
placed at !he doors and animal buyers and the young people taking
part in the livestock program of the
fair will be asked to place dona·
lions for !he family in !he containers. canisters are also being placed
in business establishments of Tuppers Plains to accept donations for
!he family. Kathy was only 33.
Friends here received word of
!he death of former Middleport resident, Bill Mayes, on Monday.
Bill, a resident of Lima for a
number of years, some years back
had ,.ndcrgone bypass heart
surgery . . He was in Branson, Mo.,
wilh a group of travelers on Monday when he suffered a heart
attaCk. He was flown to a Springfietd, Mo .. hospital where he died a
short time later.
Bill last visited Middleport at
the end of May when he joined
members of !he Middleport High
School Class of 1943 at their
reunion activities. He appeared to
be in excellent health and enjoyed
himself thoroughly. He was a
guest of Joe and Rowena Yo~ng
during his return to the commumty.
He had been a friend of the couple

for years and always was their
guest when he came back home.
BiD is survived by two grown
children. Preceding him in death
were his wife, the former Rosie
Barker, of Middleport, his parents
and his sister, Virginia Covert, who
resided in Middleport and !he Rio
Grande area all of.her life.
Those former students of the old .
Silver Run Grade School are at it
again:
They're planning another
reunion from I to 5 p.m. on Sept. 5
at the school playground. Their
last get-togelher was held in July,
1990. All former teachers, students, family and friends are invtt·
ed to attend and to bring along with
them lawn chairs, cameras, photos
and a lot of memories. A photographer will be on hand for group pictures and a clogging group will
entertain those attending at 2 p.m.
Soft drinks will be served.
Maxine Herrmann Little is
among !hose planning the reunion.
You can direct any questions or
suggestions to her at 992-5703 .
·

"How's your brother?" Chester
Dear Reatkrs: I 11111 011 WICIIiio11,
jliRps down my lhroal and says, 'Jf
b11t I lum left belliNI SOIIIIl of
you want 10 have an affair with him,
my favorite cohlmlu tlult )'011 may
111
anange iL • (His brotber has been
llal¥ misud 1M first lime 111'011/ld. I
happily
married for 10 years.)
hope you e11joy them. -- A1111
He
tells
me 10 get out of his house
l..aNiers
ANN LANDERS
if I don't like the way he acts
Dear A.1111 baden; My husband
Loo
bcc:•nse he paid for the house and
and I ha\oe been married for 61 yean.
.,,I his.
I
Syncli&lt;ate"
We had a good ,nwriage .. not
Five minuteS later, he's crying his
without problems, but it was solicl,
and there wmiJIOI'C good limes than think of his unfaithfulness, and it eyes out, telling me he's sary and
malrel me sad. Please tell people not begging me to forgive him.
bad.
'
When I'm sick, he gets mad
Two months ago, John (DOt his 10 make death-bed confessions. They
bcc•'sc
I can't coot for him. He
real name) suffered a massive bean might get well. - KNOW TOO
says I have no right to be sick
8IIICk. Fer scvaa1 days, he hoYerccl MUCH
DEAR MUCH: Such confessions heel''" he "works all week.• What
~IICII life and death. The priest
was c:alled 10 give !he last riles. Thal (even made in good heallh) may be kind of reasoning is that?
This morning after Olester went
same night, John said he had therapeutic for the confessor, but
something he warned 10 ICl1 me. He they seldom help the one who has to work, I sat down and cried. I love
· then confCSICdan atrair he had had to listen. My advice for people who my husband very much and do
during World War U. He was 23 want to clear their consciences is ewrything I can to please him, but
lately, it just isn't enough. Please
years old at the tinic, and we had tell it to a clergyman. .
been married only 1S months.
Dear Ana Laaders: The help me. -- RED-EYED IN
Although he saw the girl only twice, problem is my husband, "Chest«.' RIVERSIDE
DEAR RED: Chester's problem is
hearing about it broke my heart.
He used 10 be the nicest guy in !he
eilher
physical or emotional. In any
John made a miraculous recovery world. He would take me mywbae,
and is now prdening as I wrile this do anything I wanted to do llld buy event, he should be examined, first
lea«. Whenever I 1oolc at him, I me little gifts for 110 special n:asoo. by a neurologist to nile out a small
The past two moaths or 10, he~s been llrllb, to....- or other factors that
a changed person, and I can't figllQ! r,ould ~ JJIII10IIIIlity cban&amp;es .
Jf be's OK pbysii:ally, he should
him out.
H I ask a simple question, like l8lk 10 a coomsdor and find out why

Shirley Stewart of the Racine
Home Nationlll Bank is another of
the individuals you can contact if
you wish to have a craft, food or
game booth at the annual Racine
Fall Festival coming up on Sept.
25. You can reach Shirley at 9492210.
Here •s a bit of information
which you may not have known. I
didn't. Doctors' prescriptions over
one year old cannot be filled or
refilled by your pharmacist. If the
prescription is for what is known as
a controlled drug, !hen it cannot be
filled or refilled if !he prescription
is over six monlhs old. This is the
law, I'm advised, and your pharmacist is in violation if he acts on your
prescription. You're right. It does
seem like there would be cases in
which the law .isn't too logical. But
when did you begin thinking that
laws had to be logical? Do keep
smiling.

..

allowed to cheer on grooms-to-be,
but they couldn't help.
None of !he three entrants finished ironing their shirts in the
allotted three minutes, but a panel
of judges .said Darren Nelson of
Lincoln did the best job in Tuesday
night's contesL He won a new iron.
Nelson said the crowd made

UJIIUome? Take cluvgt:

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH - Violet Hunnell
was recently selected as
employee of the month at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. She has been
employed as a nursing assis·
tant for one and a half years..
She was selected by her peers
for her quality and quantity or
work, cooperation and personality.

rof:·

50th anniversary celebrated
:; · Mr. and Mrs. Henry (Eileen Pig: ott) Bahr of (:hester will ~lebmte
: . their SOth wedding anniversary at
3:30p.m. on Saturday, by reaffirm.
ing their wedding vows at St. .
Bethel New testament Church, Sil·
:ver Ridge.
- The couple eloped and were 1
married at Chesapeake on August ;
·.
28, 1943.
The open chureh wedding will ,
be given by their 10 children: Mr.
and Mrs. Richard (Kaye) Fick Jr.,

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club will
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m. at !he senior citiztns center in
Pomeroy. John W111gh will be !he .
caller. Public invit'ed. Refreshments.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER • Columbia
Township Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary will serve homemade ice cream, pic, sandwiches
and beverages at !he firehouse on
Route 143 near Carpenter on Sun·
day from 4-8 p.m.

"

ROCK SPRINGS - Albert' and
Rose Priddy Jeffers reunion will be
Sunday at the grange hall at the
Meigs County fairgrounds. Brins a
covered dish and table service.
Dinner at 12:30 p.m.

CLIFTON, W.VA. - Tbere will
be a candlelight comunion and a
feet washing service Sunday at 7
p.m. at Clifton Tabernacle Church
m Clifton, W.Va.
RUTLAND - Rev. Calvin ,
Evans. Pedro, w.ill speak at Mt.
Union Baptist Church on Sunday at
6:30 ~.m. He will appear on Evangelistic Outreach Channel 13 that
morning at 8 a.m. Public invited.
Call742-2194 for information.

-----Names in the news.-----

MR. AND MRS. HENRY BAHR

Mr; imci Mrs. Roger Bahr, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth (Jaclde) Hartung, Pat
Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bahr,
Mr.O!md Mrs. Dave (Jeanne) Baker,
Mtr'illld Mrs. Robert (Tammi) Bar.ber; Mr. and Mrs. Tim (Terri) Bartee, Jim Bahr and Ran~ Bahr.
They also have IS grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.
A reception and fellowship will
be ~eld at the church annex immediately following !he ceremony.

~ )'OIU'

life aNI IIU'Il it tJrOIUIIL Wrue for
AM /..ml.ders'- bookhl, "Huw to
Make Frit11ds a11d Stop Being
Lollely.• Selld a glf-adiJTused, long,
busillt:u-siu enwlope aNI a cited:
or motley ortkr for $4.15 (thiJ 111c/udt:s postage and lraNIU11g) to:
Friends, c/o AM Lolukrs, P.O. Box:

And she did her duty by arraQg- · hilS newsslands next week.
"To suddenly find myself not
ing !he world premiere of her~~
working
and obsessing over ... a
movie, "Undercover Blues, 10
iler hometown to benefit a Girl court date or something would
seem to me the height of selfScout summer camp.
Tickets for the screening on destructiveness. So I worked. I
SepL 2 cost $10. Proceeds will go increased my physical exercise."
On another topic, Allen said
to rebuild !he loclge and dining hall
contemporary
culture passed him
at Camp Finbrooke, which were
by
when
it
comes
to rock 'n' roll
destroyed by fire in March.
and
drugs.
Turner's mother, Pat Turner, is
"After like 1950, somehow I
on !he board of !he Dogwood Trails
tuned
out," he said. "I have no
Girl Scout Council.
appreciation
whatsoever, zero, for
"Undercover Blues," a romanstuff
that
came
after that. ... I mean,
tic· comedy co-starring Dennis
!he
thing
of
Elvis
escapes me 100
Quaid. opens nationally SepL 10.
percenL ... The whole drug thing
NEW YORK (AP) -Woody eompletely eluded me; I've never
Allen says he kept his sanity during . talten a puff of marijuana in my
his custody battle with Mi1l Farrow life. I have no idea what it's like
.KATIILEEN TURNER
by throwing himself into his latest and not the slightest curiosity."
film, "Manhattan Murder Mys- .
tery."
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) "I was determined not to let all
Kathleen Turner built a career
that
nonsense become the focus of
~ying throaty, sul!ry vixens, but
my
.eiitlre
life," he told Rolling
Slie's s!ilh Girl Scout at heart.
Stone magazine in the issue that

Cellular pho~Jes p_opular
down on the farm -

11562, Cllicago, nt. 6061 I::OS62. (/11'
Canada, Rlld $5 .as .J •
·

T re•s
News In
polis•.

By DAVE CLARK
said about 2S percent ot her comAssociated Press Writer
pany's customers are farmers.
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - If
"I would say !he highest users
your idea of a cellular telephone . are not behind a desk; they're in
user is a yuppie driving an expen- small business - agricultute, consive foreign car and making deals struction, sales," she said. "It is an
during the daily commute, think enormous mainstream utility. It's
again.
not Joe Yuppie stockbroker making
More and more farmers are calls from a restauranL"
using cellular phones to keep in
Sullivan said CommNet 2000 is
touch with the world from their the biggest provider of rural celloJar service 10 the country. It does
GRAND CHAMPION • Stephanie Sayre displays the basket or . tractors and pickup trucks.
Farmers
use
cellular
phones
to
business in eight Midwestern and
tomatoes and the 1'08ette she won for her exhibit at the Ohio State
wilh
mar:kets
or
just
to
stay
Western
states: !he Dakotas, Monkeep
up
Fair. Sbe displayed the grand cham pion tomatoes.
in contact with their families. A tana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, ,
far:mer who has an equipment Utah and Iowa.
breakdown out in the field can tete"They've been longtime cosphone the family and ask them to tomers,'' she said of farmers.
•'This is IIOt a new uend. •'
go into town.
Nationwide, about 10 million
"Mother, run for parts!" Betty
Messer said, reciting the plea she people use cellular phones, which
commonly hears o,ver the phone typically cost around $100, plus
from
her five sons, who farm wilh monthly fees and varying per•
Stephanie Sayre, daughter of "How Raise tomatoes: second her and ber husband, Philip, south minute charges.
Aaron and Shirley Sayre, Racine, place; Christie Cooper. prepared . of Richardton, in southwestern
Mrs. Messer said the benefits of
won grand champion with her speech, "How to Raise Tomaroes", Norlh Dakota.
having
a cellular phone on a f.-m
Southern Racine tomato project at honorable mention; Sayre, ''How
"If
I'm
at
(my
farm),
I'll
call
-where
those out in the field may
Vegetables are Important to Our
the Ohio State Fair.
my
wife
and
tell
her
I'm
leaving
be
miles
from
each other and from
This made her eligible to sell Economy" by Sayre, honorable rww, or that I'm going to be late," home- far outweiglllhc costs.
her ten pound basket of tomatoes at mention.
"It is such a time-saver and an
Chris Hamm received A's on said Larry Larson, who farms in
the sale of ch1101pions. The tomaBisbee,
in
the
eastern
part
of
the
expense-saver
for us that we don't '
grass hay and more !han 50 percent
toes sold for $350.
state.
"It's
a
convenience,
and
it
·even
Ulink
about
that," she said.
Other Racine Southern members legumes, and B•s on potatoes and gives you a sense of security."
"They
don't
call
unless
it's some' participating were Christi Cooper · tomatoeS: Cooper, A on her t.oma·
Barbara
Sullivan,
assistant
vice
thing
they
need
the
boys are
and Sayre, demonstrations on toes and B on her yotatoes: and ~dent of llllll'keting for Comm- pretty good abou.t that."_
.
;Corey Rowe, A pn hts tomatoes.
Net 2000 of Englewood, Colo.,

•

PRICED BILOW COIIPAIIABLY FEATURED AfODILSf

lEAVY DUTY WASHERS • BIG LOAD DRYERS

Sayre receives grand
champion at fair
to'

Competition more a test of skill than strength
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - This
iron man competi~~n didn't req~e
any swimming, biking or long-distance running. Contestants had to
iron, man, as in wrinkled shirts.
A local department store and a
German iron manufacturer sponsored the contest as part of a fall
bridal fair. Brides-to-be were

his behavior is 10 malic. If )'OU have
IIO!W' it, othen have, too. The poor
gay needs help.
Dear Ana: Since a great many
people treat dogs like hwnans - they
leach them to sit up, speak, play ball,
felch slippets. guard sklres, lead !he .
blind, play dead, beg for their
supper and do any number of tric:ks
-- why can't !hey teach them 10 uae
!he bathroom? It certainly would
make a lot more sense than
ticketing citizens who refuse 10
follow their pets around wilh tho8e
silly super-duper pooper scoopers. .
--MAD IN CIDCAGO
DEAR MAD: Your idea is not as
aazy as IIOIIlC people might lhink.
In fact, a Long Island woman did
just that. And guess where she lived?
So help me-- in flushing!

=:;.course

=t

Winners in the artistic design were Cheryl Jewell, Kellr, Dalton ond, and third places, Pauline
classes listed first through fourlh and Sarah Dawn Jenldns, • Down A Atkins, fourth place; ~ti or succulent, Pauline Atkins, all four
fourth, respectively, were: Pauline Country Lane".
Winners
for
the
senior
horticulplaces;
African violet, Pauline
Atkins. Stella Atkins, Neva Nicholson and !&gt;earl Canaday, "Hospitali- ture class were: rose, hybrid tea, Atkins, first and second places,ll!ld
Margaret Bell Weber, first and sec- Kathy Dalton. third and fourth
ty Country Style". a design for an
informal dining table; Pauline ond/laces, and Pearl Canaday, . places. In the junior division, disAtkins, Kathy Dalton, Stella Atkins thir .and fourth places; zinnia, plays of silver foliage plants to add
and Pearl Canaday, "Welcome", a Pauline Atkins, all four places; to flower beds included: different
creative mass; Neva Nicholson , marigold, Margaret Bell Weber, varieties of Artemesia, Silver
Margaret Bell Weber, Pearl Cana- Pauline Atkins and Stella Atkins; Prince, Valeri Finnis, Roman
day and Kathy Dalton, "Country any other annual, Pauline Atkins, Wormwood, Cerastim Tometosia,
Remedy". a. design in a bottle; fmt and second places, Pearl Cana- Sage and a display of O.A.G.C.
Margaret Bell Weber, Pearl Cana- day, third place, and Pauline boob and books regarding arranging.
day , Kathy Dalton and Neva Atkins, fourth places.
In the category of container
The business meeting was held
Nicholson, "Colonial Beauty", a
grown plants, the winners were: following the judging, and plans
design of choice.
··
Winners in .the invitational class window Box, Pauline Atkins, all for the open house meeting to be
were: Allegra Will, Neva Nichol- four places; blooming house plants, held August 30, at the Rutland
son, Kelly Dalton and Pauline · Kathy Dalton, first and second Meihodist church were completed.
Atkins, "Country Kitchen", a places. Pauline Atkins, third and All garden clubs are invited to
desip using a kitchen utensil. For fourth places; foliage house attend. Harold Kneen, Meigs Coun!he JuniOr artistic category, winners plants", Kathy Dalton, first, ·sec- ty Extension Agent, will be the
speaker.

Confession lies heavy.in wife's heart

Bashan Fuehouse, Friday at S p.m.
Hotdogs, ~ joes, hot sa~es,
pies, pop,
ee, 11 flavQrl! ice
cream. Specks of Blucgrus will
entertain.

HARRISONVILLE • Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department will
dar.
hold a h)lllter
ThursLONG BOITOM - Faith Full
day through s
y from 6-9:30
THURSDAY
p.m: at !he fire ~nt in Har- Gospel Church. Lon.g Bottom,
REEDSVILLE - A tent revival rison ville. Class IS limited to SO preachin~ and singn~, Friday, 7
will be held
Tuesday at 7. people. Call 742·3013 or 742-2302 p.m. wi David ai ey and the
. p.m. near Eutrm ·gh School on to register. ·
Dailek Family Singers. Pa~tor
Steve eed inVIteS the public. FelRoute 7. Rev. Joe Beasley, Frcah
Oil Ministry, Vinceo.t, will be minGALLIPOLIS - Stroke support lowship follows.
istering. Special singing nightly.
group, Holzer Medical center cafeSATURDAY
tma, Thursday ftom 3-5 p.m. Call
446-5070
for
infOf)llation.
KANAUGA
- The Liberty
TUPPERS PLAINS • The
pers Plains VFW Post No. 90 3
Mountaineers wUI perform at the
will meet Thursday ai 7:30 p.m.
CHESTER - There will be a DAV Center in Kanauga.
Dinner will be at 7 p.m.
special meetinj, of Shade Riyer
REEDSVILLE - There will be a
Lodge No. 4S3 &amp;:AM, Chester, on
POMEROY • The Pomeroy Thursday at 7:30 p.ni . There will in en's softball tournament sponGrou~of AA and AlAnon will be worlc in the fellow craft degree.
sorcd by the Tu~ Plains Baseball and Softbal Association at
meet ursdalc at 7 p.m. at Sacred Refreshments will be served.
' Heart Cathol c Church. Call 992Eastern High School on Salllrday
5763 for information.
FRIDAY .
and Sunday. The cost is $65 and
RIPLEY, W.VA.- The Liberty two balls. Team trophjes for first,
MIDDLEPORT - There will be Mountaineers will perform Friday second and third and individual trophies for first .and second. Call
a round and square dance at the at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
American Lesion Annex in Mid·
Roger Willford Jr. at 667·3653 or
dleport on Thursday from 8-11
. TUPPERS PLAINS • T'fpers Dan Spencer at 667-3342.
Plains
VFW Post No. 905 will
~m. with music b&amp;,CJ and the
~ Gendemen.
st is $2 sin- hold a dance Frida6 at thepost
CHESHiRE - Descendants of
· gle, $ couple. Public invited.
Bertha
and James Cremeans will
home from 8-11:3 p.m. with
hold
their
family reunion S11turday
music~ CJ and the County GenRACINE • The Racine Amerl- tlemen. veryone welcome.
at Ky~er Creek Club House. Dinncr wi be at 2 p.m.
can Legion Auxiliary will hold its
family picnic Thursday at 6 p.m. at
BASHAN • Ice cream social,

Page-6

"Country Living" was the !heme
of the annual flower show of the
Rutland Garden aub beld recendy
' at the home of Mrs. Virgil Atkins.
The shoW was judged by Mrs.
Joe Bolin, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs judge, who gave
many helpful comments as the
show was judged.
Best of show went to Mrs.
Atkins for her arrangement "Welcome", a creative mass while Mrs.
Norman Will received reserve best
of show with her arrangement
"Country Kitchen". a design in a
kitchen utensil.
Cheryl Jewell received best ·o f
show for her junior artistic 8J11111gement, "Down A Country Lane".
including wayside material. Sarah
Dawn Jenkins received the junior
horticulture award, while Atkins
and Kathy Dalton won the senior
horticUlture award.

Star Mill Park. In caie of rain !he
picnic will be ~ the post home.

him nervous, not the task. He's
been doing his own ironing for the
past five years .
"He does a better job than I
do," said his bride-to-be, Jennifer
Herdahl.
She said he'll continue to do the
ironing after lhey're married. ' 1I'Il
walk the dog."

Nationwise
Is Now
Auto

r 1 r, Y 1 fd

,

WORKHORSE

Fits you to a T.

Rutland street festival plans finalized
Final plans for the upcoming
Rudand Street Festival sponsored
by the Rutland Fire Department
and Auxiliary have been

announced.

The event will be held Sept. 4
from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. at the Rut-

land F~ Sllltion.
,.....ienJe.of
tbe- e:.-~nts and times
1
~~~II'· ~t tables and bake
.:SB~e attO:lO a.m.; fish frY ad food,
1 i a.m.; dunking machine by
Meigs Flag Corp, noon; gam~s •. I
p.m.; Meigs Band, I p.m.; ki~d••
uactor pull, 4 p.m .; Li_tde Mister

Church services
announced
Weekend services will be held
at !he Danville Church of Christ at
7 p.m. on Saturday and 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m. on Sunday. Denver Hill
of FOSler, W. Va. will be !he speaker. The public is inviicd to attend.

and Miss, Prince and Princess, 5 yet to be established.
p.m.; pies and cakes, 5 p.m.;
For inforinatiOn on the pie bakcrowning of Little Mister and Miss ing, cake decorating contest or the
and Prince and Princess at 7 p.m.; Little Mister and Miss, Prince and
pie and cake auction 7 p.m.
Princess contests contact ~ ·
There will be a Harley Davidson Edwards at 742-2509; to register
motorcycle cruise-in during the · for craft tables contact Joan Stewday. More events and entertain- art at 742-2421 in the evenings.
men~ are scheduled but times have

SOUTHERNJuNIOR iuGH CHEERLE~ERS • The South·

em Junlor' lfllh cheerleaders r~eittly atteacl~ a ftve-day chtlllr·
teadlnp Cllllp at Southern Junlol; Hlgb ~ool under the Ins~·
tlon o Tamara Hayman. Hayman bas par
. ticlpated In t.he Lord
MaJor or Wtltllllnlllter's·New :Year's Day P11111de and Spec:taeular
as 1 result or beiDa picked a Universal Clleerleadillg A88oclatl~
(U.'C.A.) AD-Star Cheerleader. ThiS Is her second year as an ADStar aad lint u lutruetor ror this squad. The squad worked 011
jump tec:llnlqaa, dance and cheer routines, and other skills
preparatloa ror the upcomln1 fall
Pictured are (front row,
L-R) Jesalca Smith, Jesalca TheJg ud Alida Mulford. Second row
are, Julia Hensler,·Janey Hill and Jody Hupp. In tbe rear Is Tara
Michael, Nicole HUI, Ashley McKinney an«! Ha~man. Adviser of
the group Is Karen Hill. :

DANCE WITH 60's, 70's &amp;.80's
MUSIC FROM &amp;·MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, AUG. 28
Admission $2.50/Single

&amp;e-.

· $3.00/Couple

LONDON POOL, SYRACUSE, OHIO
'

1·

'

• Oellu&amp;.!asy-clean styling
=--!1
The Marie combines

cushioning com£ort,
Classic T·strap styling
and a Dexter value

• rio pre-washing
• Unsurpassed capacity

price.

With

In

M ... DE IN .._

fJ1le

MIDDLEPORT

FREE
DELIVERY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

ERI CA.

SHOE PLACE

Credit

742·2211
992·5627

7

1·100·937·1217

• MAIN STREET • RUtLAND, OHIO

11

�• ....

than 12 regular strength (325 mg)
tablets per day for an average
adult) or for extended periods of
time. So go ahead and take aspirin
when you need it, but follow the
package directions to avoid complications.
Question: Should I buy brandname or generic aspirin?
Answer; It probably doesn't
make any difference. However, I'd
recommend that when you buy
generic you pick a high-quality
generic aspirin -· such as that sold
· under the name of a national pharmacy chain. These products should
work tile same as tile brand-name
varieties. But be sure to watch tile
expiration dates on the aspirin
products you buy. They can go bad
sitting on the shelf in the store or in
your medicine cabinet at home.
One final point about aspirin. It
is still the standard by which the
other drugs in its class are evaluated. For general use, none of the
otllers is clearly superior to aspirin.
You'd never know this, however,
from the advertising blitz that's
being conducted by tile manufacturers of tile products you mention.
The companies have spent a lot. of
time and mone y in developing
these aspirin substitutes and they
want to recoup their investments.
Their direct goal is to take some of
the revenue away from aspirin
sales. That's no small potatoes
either. More than 15,000 tons of
aspirin are produced in the U.S.
.annually . Wow, that ' s a lot of
headaches and a Jot of money to
fight over. I get a headache just
thinking about it!

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D .O .

-.

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Question: There are numerous a few days and was unsuitable for
commercials for ibuprofen and illnesses like arthritis, where treatTylenol, but I usually take aspirin ment lasts for ,years. FeliJt Hoff.
when I get a headache or sore man, a chemist working at Bayer
joints and muscles. Is there any- Industries in Germany, desi~ed a
thing wrong witll taking plain, old more digestible form of salocylate
aspirin?
for his father, who suffered from
Answer: The "active ingredient" rheumatoid arthritis. His discovery
in aspirin is acetylsalicylic acid. - acetylsalicylic acid - was
This very effective pain killer and given the trade name "Aspirin." It
anti-inflammatory agent is classi- became commercially available in
fied as a salicylate by chemists. 1899 and has since become worldSalicylates have been used for wide ·in its use.
Aspirin, which is no longer the
at least since
thousands of
the time of Hippocrates - by peo- exclusive ttademark of the Bayer
ple worldwide to help aches, pains Co., is not witllout its side effects.
a nd fever. For instance, North Although to a lesser degree than
American Indians and the ancient unrefined salicylate, it still causes
C hinese knew of the benefits of some stomach upset. When taken
willow bark -an unrefined source in large amounts for prolonged
of salicylate. The use of salicylates periods, it can also produce kidney
moved from folk remedies to main- damage. It can even cause deatll if
stream medicine when the Rev. it is consumed in huge quantities
Edward Stone of Chipping Nor10.l, all at once.
England, submitted a letter to the
Despite these potential risks,
Rllyal Society in 1763 describing aspirin safely provides benefit to
his discovery of the benefits of wil- millions of people each day. It is
low bark for treating arthritis and primarily used - as you described
fever.
. - for the relief of everyday aches,
Willow bark extract, though pains and fever. However, it also
effective, had several major prob- reduces the inflammation of arthrilems. In addition to its bitter taste, tis and the risk of heart attacks. It is
which most people Aspirin proba- truly an amazing drug with nearly a
bly found quite annoying, it caused century of experience to document
noticeable stomach upset. Because its safety record. Most of the probof the stomach irritation, it was lems with aspirin only occur when
very difficull ·to take for more than it is taken in large amounts (more

rears -

•
Thurada~August26,1993

~ J - l lddleport, Ohio

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace
RATES

To place an ad
MON.

Truck and tractor pull results
Cash prizes in up to seven
places were awarded in the annual
truck and "tractor pull at the Meigs
County Fair Saturday night.
Winners in the various classes,
listed first through third were as
follows:
5,800 factory stock: Clinton
Bailey, Chester; Mary Smith,
Racine; John Rankin , Tuppers
Plains.
5,800 local yokel: Steve Mather,

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Long Bottom; Jeff Parlcer, TupperS
Plains; and Keith Hunt, Long Bottom.
6,000 field stock tractor: Conard
Hudson, Gallipolis; Lester St.
Clair, New Straitsville; and Blair
Windon, Pomeroy.
8,000 field stock ttactor: Coniad
Hudson, Gallipolis; Pat Barrett,
Vincent, and Earl StClair, Logan.
8,500 pro stock: John Cespedes,
Louisville; Paul Biehl, Athens, and

Richard Manzey, Pomeroy.
9.000 field stock tractor: Terry
Shafer, Glenford; Eryn Barrett,
Vincent; and Bryan Sm ith, Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
10,000 pro stock: Dave Hill,
New Paris, and Paul Biehl, Athens;
tic for first with cash premium of
first and second split between th.e
two, and Eryn Barrell, Vincent,
third.

&amp;SAVE

em·
M001nir ii'IO

S~1ktr/.1mp
llll1 indullt~

laP deslil' Wlll..t

Lighted keypad, redial.
Reg. 29.99 While, 11'43-585.
Almond, lf4J.586. Gray, H43·587

./Powerful 25MHz 486SX ./ MS-DOS 5.0, Windows 3.1,
Intel processor
Microsoft Works, more
./Built-in CD-ROM drive ./107MB hard drive
./Internal send-fax/modem ./4MB of system RAM

SAVE'301J111d-lllllill

·

Makes COQII1III hll-' easy fir lhllm~tlrlfldyl

COI'IIISS wtlllcla' sml

Enter the world of multimedia. Includes a CD library of
acclaimed, illustrated reference books-including an animated encyclqpedia. AU this plus "family-friendly" WinMate®
software, voice mail system and a MIDI port for musicians.
IBM®PC compatible. Was 1999.00 in 1993 Catalog •25·1650
MMS·IO Stereo Speeker/Ampttfier (shown). "5·1096 . . . . 79.99

Three instant-dial numbers plus 27 memories.

Garden club hosts picnic

Reg . 99.99 143-572

ifornia and Florida are where the
plants are mostly grown . Black
Beauty and New Hampshire
Hybrid are two popular varieties. It
was suggested to spray when beetles or red spiders are present.
Members also discussed different
varieties in which they had used the
egg plant.
For the arrangement of the
month, Janet Theiss had the table
centerpiece using red cockscombs,
love-lies bleeding, tige r lilies,
daisies, pearly everlastings and
Queen Anne's lace arranged in a
brown and white jar.
Gu es t included Sharon an·d
Tracy Card and Carrie Elberfeld.

CIIIJIIIrII'IVIII·fl'llll:.'
Ia w

'i-: " 25-1623

CUT 25%
VIII-IIJII3·Pidl
Less than $2 per tape.
Each records up to 6

hours. Reg . 7.99 144·490

STEPHANIE SAYRE
.... _

'

)

•

R

--

IAVE'511

Vlla·IC" 7'

CUT28%

• lllerii'ICINIP

11-I'IIII..UIII?Ir

Only 7'' high! Great

Check AC, DC, continuity.
Indispensable around the
house. Reg. 19.99 •22-221

Rea. 49.95

4981

...

Front· panel and on-mike channel
controls. Reg. 79.99 •21·1550

.:• Hands-free recording.
' case. Rog. 149.99 114-10&lt;3

.... •....... .

~ack . 1&lt;(1. 200() WMe •&lt;0·2045

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

11111'-1111111-- a..llllll'lllll

••
•
·•'
••

·-~ 1:.' 1711'11
: Auto·reverse cassette plus 22: watt-per-channel amp and dlgl-.
• tal tuning. R111. 1t1.t1 m -1944
:

' VIIuaPIUI~

A~YiftD Credit.

Pax..~:":c,.lflay
·your

YI'Y

""1:
end 9/25/93 excep! where noted

I

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL
R111011llle
Ratll
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRQCKING

2474ooao&lt; Folie
949-Rocine
742-Buoland
667-Cool.Wo

WALICII ALLIY
Paris and Servke
Mowm • Clta7tt Saws
WHdeattrs
· Authorlad: ~· l
Stratton MTD, •n,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP 811d DEUVERY
Houra II- M-F W Slit.
Cloaed Sunday
949·2104

614·742·2138
3-4-83- 1 mo.

a.:...

882-New Bnea.
895-Lolort

937-Bol'Folo

B&amp;G
.Trucking

lladlttlhaek
I•

5-HappyAde
6- Loel ud Fouad
7- Loeo aod Fouad
8- Public Sale &amp;

1.t:- BUiiDIII Trai.ni1111
15- School• &amp; Iutructioa
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Ropa;,

Auetion
!1- Wanted ic Buy

17- M;.collaneoue
18- '1Von1ed To Do

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

&amp;· FILL

DIRT

·992·3470
OWNER: JtH Wldtw"-

CARP ITER
WORK
Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
61281

614-446·8568 1 mo.

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
The following wore
recelvod/propored by the
Ohio Environmental Pro·
lectlon Agency (OEPA) 1..1
wMk. Effective doteo ol
Rnol octlono and laauance
dltM of propooed octlono
ond of droll octlono oro
ollted. Flnot •cUono may be
oppuled, In writing, within
30 doyo of the doll of IIIIo
nolloe, to the Envlronmenllt
Boord "of Review, Rm. 300,
236 E. T-n SL, Columbuo,
Oh, &lt;13215. Notice ol any
oppeol ohotl bo flied with
the director within 3 dayo.
Propoood octlono will
become llnol unlell 1
written adjudication hearing
requeot Is oubmllted within
30 doya of the l11uonce

Rusty!
Happy 18th!

Call Sentinel

IICIIIIIII.al

Gives a standard message

CLASSIFIEDS!

~·
II w

992-2158

plus a special one for family
and friends. Rea. 79.tl ••3·700
~ MllolllOCIIIons

W.tcl::\:tt.M

NEW-REPAIR

RICHARD ROBERTS

or

''Ad Specueltie•"

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

622 J1y Drlvt, Gllllpoll1, Oh.
446-7612
Fu/Volce 446-7812
1-Hfn

614·698-6500
7nllln

53-AnllqUOOJ
54- Miac. Mvclu.adiae
55- BuJldi111 Suppllee

(304) 773·5585

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS

7122193

mo. pel

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM •••
REMOVAl

.WORK

6·30-1mo.pd.

USED RAILROAD TIES

(614)
667·6628

''

"

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

(614) 992-7474

Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes e VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

BINGO

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
$100 PayoH
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Uc. No. 0051-342

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FRIIIITIIIITIS
50734 ....., Rltlte ....
IAI•I letto•, 011. 45743

"985-4181

11/24192/lfn

~93-tfn

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

QUAL?TY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

992·3838

4-19-93-lfn

8-&amp;-tfn

LEATHER REPAIR

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
.&amp; Cooling

BUUU)OZER,BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES end
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

EXCAVATING

We have a large atock af aever.. name brand tire• and
If we don't have, wre~~n get IL
Ol}R NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS

12-30.92-tfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

D.A. BOSTON

7131191/tfn

OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-773-5533
2nd Locadon call Lon Neal
Henderaon, W. Vo. 304-675-3331
Maollre~~rd and VISA accepted.

992·2269

7f71 mo.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

I•IOO.UI·0070
IAIWIN, 0150

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

PH. 742·2217

992•5551

or TOLL FREE

985-4473 .

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE

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

ALL IUUI &amp; IIOIW
992·701~ or

•New Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
·Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

614·985·4110
~12/V311

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; 1111 Plllrl FOI

ROBERT BISSELL
. CONSTRUCTION

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pa!n out of
painting. Let me do It
touou.
VERY R SONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

• SUMMER HOURS•
Sun.-Thur 5·1 0 pm
· Fri·Sat 5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Pom.-oy, Ohio
1-10.82-lfn

3-16-113·1fn

IlliTE II OR

(lormer Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV

CARPENTER SERVICE
-Roam Addition•
-Gun.r Work
-EieolriCIIIond Plumbing
-Roaftng
-tnllrlor • Exllrlor
Polndng
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101· 949·2160
or 915·3839
(No Sa11tlaJ Call1)

2112/92Jtfn

CLASSIFIEDS
...This Way

I ) ·j

Announcements
3 Announcements
DaiHII llut

Your

Guya

&amp;

Galo

A-. 1·1100·288-5010

In
Ex-

t•n•lon 4005, $2.SKI Per Min.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCnON

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

"Mathematics is the
alphabet w~h which

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

God has written the
Universe." • Ga/i/eo
ByTppic .
By Appointment
949·2814

712211 mo.pd.

1.-------~
...- - - - - - - - .

lOX

Middlt porfI

189

Olllo 45760
·.

numbing
..... ·

HAULING

.;Ji!.

Limestone
Dirt

38904 .....1••

c....,.,.,
••"•o•1o
.....

Gravel
992-7878 •
7ni1mo.

Ll~o 24 Hciura IDoylll Talk To
BNUIIIul Gl~olll 1•91J0.860.0n8
Ext 8048 $3.91 P•r Min. Must

Bo 18 Yro. Procaii Co. 802-6310115.
Giveaway
4
1 112 yur old 1uu blood•d
Pom•r1nl1n, 114--802·7816.
2 llonlh Old Male Puoolaa,

Black &amp; Brown, 114o446w8112.
CIOihn Dtyor, 801111 Qu, 614-le~

.~·
FIM IO good homo- 2 miKod
bnld modlum mole doga, 814·
good ...,_, ;104'

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

GENEUL

lluot Bo 18 Yrs. Poocall Co. 6021154-7'120.

"---~--(6_1_4_)_8"":"4_3_·_52_6_4...-,.;;,511;,;,4193M~;,;;,;.,;.n_, :.e:orablo
uu
ball• of
part A
IJ!!I. .:.oa,

-

11112-3587•

205o75RtS"llger P!M XTM AWL
2[)5.75R14" Tiger P!M XTM RWL
216-7515" FlrMtone OWL
lp5-75R15" Fleratone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING·
"EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS" 11281'83

614·992·7 44

Hid• • Couch,_Yard Solo homo!
Scrap Iron • ""· lluit Tlko Ail

I14-388-DI24.

KhiiiiiO, 114-256-41242.

To 0 Ill.,.., 114-441o0811.
Kht~,

fd111v, Khty, FrM Klnonol

OM oloctrfc oto.. (gold• and
ono llfrfgoralor, nMCI -k,
ood
114-MI·2311,
14-MI4.

r -ton.

PuopiM: Boxer/Lob Ill•, Fowno

I llilndleo, 114-388-8541.

(I) 211to

•

\I~

\11 1\1 II\ \1!1:'1-.
51- Ho...hold Goode
52- SP.,rtinr Goode

949·2168

LINDA'S
PAINTING

the "._,
6 1fassifieds'•

Thla
not
preceded by propoood
oadon ond Ia oppeoloble to
EBR.
Effective Dill 01101/V3
Flnol loo1111nao ot permit to
ln...n
.r.yor lnd Council
Pomeroy Oh Feclllty
O..arlplfon: Weallwoter
Ar&gt;Plloadon No. 01-3838
Tlifa flnol octlon not
preceded by propo11d
10llon and 18 .,....loble to
EBR. Forao·motn lor w•t
Moln Street Sewer llno
Extenalon:

ROOFING

614-698-3290

36970 Bal Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl,. SAND,

Hown L Writesel

w:rtm

SERVICE

~~1rFD
lln.l oatlon

59• cur

IIIII·

I I H ;,

41- Ho~~~e~ for Beat
42- Mobile Homa for Rent ,....__ "··· &amp; 4 WD'•
4.\-- .farm• for Rat
74- Motorcyele. .
44- Apartmeat for Rmt
75- Boau &amp; Moton for Sale
45- Funi.lbed Rooma
46--- Space for Rent
4.7- Waatad to Re11.t
48--.- Equlp111at for Rent
4!1- For L.a.·

II- Holp 'IV onted
12- Sltuatione Wanted
13-- la•uranee

~

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Traah, etc.

412&amp;'tfn

.
.

IRadlo ShiiCk
'

985-a...o.r
·848-PoJtlond

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

HAULING

Grandma &amp;
Grandpa Jeffers

•

CUT II%

388-VIDton

458-IAon
576-Applo Grove
778-M-•

2- Ii!t Meao_r)'
Aonouneementl .
4--- C iYMWfl)'

SAVINGS•••

ff~,

Sayre attends
school for gifted

•

_

GET RESULTS • FAIT!

date;
or tho director
revl•••lwithdr•w•
the !:~=======!
propoaed action. Any
peraon may oubmlt
EXCAVATING
com menta ondlor 1 meeting
reg.ordlng ony droll octlon
BUUDOZING
within ,30 day• of tho date
lndie~~ted. "Action", a uaed
obove dooo not Include
receipt ol a vorllled
complaint. II olgnlflcont
public lnlereat exloto, a
publlo meadng may be hold.
Ao to ony octlon, Including
· receipt of verlllod
compllllnta, ony perao·n moy
obtain · notice of further
octlono, ond addltlon•l
lnlormetlon . Unteu
•
othorwloe provided In 1~.:~-----;,
notlcos of portlcullr
ID
octlona, 111 communication•
CaD Today lor
i:l:::========:========:::.l johatl be oent to: Heorlng
Your la:t
·Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box t049,
Cotumbuo Oh, 43226-0149
Makeover
PH. (114) 644-2115. Conault
lnde,..ndent Mary
ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
.-1
Chope. 3745-47 and 3746-5
Kay Beauty
for requlromenll.
ConauHants
Flnolllluence of ren-al of
NPOES Permit
Carolyn McCoy
Ohio P-er Company
892-5082
Stall Rouii33B Roclno, Oh
Sandy Henderson
Receiving wotero: Ohio
River Focltlty Deecrlptlon:
892-3647
Power Pienta Permit No
1112193

MS Works software package,
with over 100 applications.
Windows 3.1, MS·DOS , 3'12''
floppy drive a~d two-button
mouse. IBM PC compatible.

518

Pomeroy

Free Estimates

Point me with joy tci
the great raunlon.
-But until then,
MWble me to II~
happily and worthily
ofthoHwhowHh Thee. In the
· Name of Him Who Ia
the Lord of LHe, I
pray, Amen.
Sadly mlaud by
family.

tomm~menl

.••. •.. •................... ••

867-Chealotre

379-'IValnul

DINO-MITE

ntw actrvalion ancl mlmmum ~JCe
with Radio Sholck cellul81 cBrnel.
va ~ oapend1ng ~ u rvite plan
Hlt&lt;:IDO (por lee w~ houl aclivetlon 1299.99)
Vood In CA. Olttll!ll in -'Ora

675-~ Plouoat

648-Anlola Dfot.

preHncei. Help me
to know hoW cloH
my loved ones aN.
For If they are wHh
Thll, and Thou art
with me, I know that
they cannot be
far 1w1y.
Make real for me that
contact of aplrH with
aplrH thlt will reeatablllh the )Qat
fellowship lor which
my heart yearns.
Give to me faith
lhlnlng through my
tears. Plant peac1
and .hope within my

R~~qu lra;

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

GIANT
require giant tomatoes and this
three pound tomato, displayed by Lula Toban, should rdl tbe bill.
Tbe Burpees Big Boy tomato was grown bn the Cecil Toban farm
in Bedford Township.
·

In Memory Of
CHARLES F.
PYLES, SR.

IBM/Reg . TM IBM Corp. The Intel In si de Logo is a lrademark o! Intel Co rp.

Pric• ma¥

992-Mlddlopoltl

~

II~

33- Far. . for Sale •
M- Bueine.e Buildmp
35- Lou &amp; Aereai!"

Iii.\ I

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
~aliipolio

1'1'1

~1

,\ l l \ I

•

Mell!o County M1110n Co., WV

245-Rio Grande
256-GII)'OD Dfot,

l \1(\1

In Memory

No installation IJust plug
into cigarette lighter and
start using . Rag. 99.99 m -1020

•
Stephanie Sayre was one of 56
Ohio students chosen to anend the
Martin Essex School for the Tal·
ented and Gifted.
She spent a week at Ohio State
University this month participating
in activities in the arts, government, human services, science and
industry.
At comme ncement exercises
she played bass guitar in a bimd
and sang several songs.
She was selected based on her
grades, activities and essay.
She is presently completin!l the
college preparatory and vocabonal
agriculture programs simultaneously at Southern High School. She
has been active in the FFA, TI,
drama club, band, choir, junior fair
board, honor society, library youth
council and church activi!ies
including singing and playing in a
gospel group. She is a senior at
Southern High School.
She is the daughter of Aaron
and Shirley Sayre, Racine.

Ga?Ua County

Mlllicallutr\d'l.eatl

Fru;,. &amp; V. .tabloo
For S.)e or Trade

1-------:=c-=--=====-=-----l 36- R..t Eeale Wanted

Clauffied pagei cover the
foUowing telephone eschan.ge1 ...

heart.

CUT 33% DW·fllll®

&amp;911

100 p.m. Thunday
. 1:00 p.m. Friday .

Days
Words Rat• Ovor 15 Wordo'
1
IS
$4.00
$ .20
3
15
$ 6.00
$ .30
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive rims, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
BusinHI Card-.. .$17.001 indt por momth
BuUetin Board.....$6.00/indt per day

meunMWt

-~

with his award while his wife, Betsy Willy,
watches on . Strickland described Willy as an
·' inspiring model for all who want to do good

2

Fllthlr, IIIII only
. human. I Mid the
touch or hUman
companionship.
SOI'ely, I mila u- I
love who 1re wHh
Thee.
I pray, 0 JIIU8, that
Thou wtH reveal to

............................•.................................

The Wild wood Garden Club
recently held its annual picnic at
the Racine Locks and Dam on the
West Virginia side. Doris Grueser
gave th e bless ing. prior to th e
potluck meal.
A short business mee tin g
opened with Kathryn Miller reading "His Mysterious Ways" fro m
the Gu ide Post. For roll call, mem·
bers named their favorite herb seasoning.
For the monthly report, Mrs.
Grueser had th e egg plant , an
ovoid, a dark pUfPle, glossy shined
fruit. It prefers well drained-loamy,
sandy, high organic soil, she said.
Since it is a warm season crop with
temperatures 80 to 90 degrees, Cal-

CLOSED SuNDAY

• Ada oullkle the eoUD.ty your ad rwu awt be prepaid
• Recelft dileout f~r adt paid inadYaaee.
I Free Ada: CiTMW&amp;)' aad Fouad ad. U.ader u·worcb will he
ru111 3 . , . at DO eLarp.
• Priee of ad for aU ~pitalletten b double price .o f ad coet
• 7 potnt Uno type only .....!
• Smu...&amp; ill aot r•pouible for errora after flrat d.ly (e.heck
(or OIT&lt;&gt;rl ront day od.rUDO iD poper). C.U before 2;110 p.m.
day alter pia))Jicatioa &amp;o aake cOrreetioa
a Ad. tMt ••• he paid la advu.ce are:
Card ol Tbanu
Happy Ado
In M...orioa
Yard Sal•
• A clueillod ad•erU..ment placed In tho TIM Dally "Sentinel
(except CIMalflod Dleplay, BueiDOM Cord or l.opl
·
NotioN) wlllaleo appoar iD tiM PoiDt Plouant Rapier ucl
!be C.lllpolio Dally TrlbliDo, naehlnt o••• 18,000 loom•

Ohio State Fair; Tbe Goumor met Nicole, Abby
· and Debbie during a visit to the Meigs County
booth in the SITE building at the fair.

STATE FAIR VISITORS· Gov. George V.
Voinovich visited with Pomeroy residents Nicole
McDaniel, Abby West, and Debbie Clay at the

DAY BER:&gt;RE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. SahlrdJiy
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueod•y
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday

Monclay Paper ·
Tuesday Peper
Wednesday Paper
Thurtday Paper
FrldJiy Paper
Sunday Paper

tbru FRI. 8A.M,-5P.M •• SAT.8-12

POLICIES

DISCOVER

works."

COPY DEADLINE

can 992-2156

,~.

DOCTOR RECOGNIZED Doctor
Richard Willy was recognized for his work in
physical therapy at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center Wednesday night. Here, Con~ressman Ted Strickland, left, presents Willy

The

Ohio

.,

,,

�... ---r-

....

·.

--,.-

1993

Ohio
BRIDGE

~~"'-v. 1 'fw · Old
"' ..., P\IIIPIIe, ~mo.

e..

The Dally

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

Loat a Found
1 =Qullil
llltlp't
workert

PHILLIP
ALDER

• Couple

36

45

"Fleet Estate

Wanted
Lllol: On -

Rood, 1 Largo
..... Dog, !Jghl ....... 111011 Foi ...; I Ft. .le
11uo - r . &amp;look a ar.y,

1

......

ALL Yard BIIH Mull Bt Paid In
A d -. DEADLI.NE: 2:00 p.m.

t.= btod"':.:.ht.od2~1D r~

r

0

I Bod- Uppor -

3 Bodroomt FA, A11achod
Eaoy ,~oPrkrodl boll!ontH Payf Aa- Go~, 2 N:., Building SHe,

pr~c~ay; llonday odHion • :00
p.t~~ . . _ ,.
.

ttml&gt;~
ucla ~1 - · Co 0 Gordon Routt110 ArM, 112,1011,
Toll
:11 3 FNI, 1-800-417-1581, bl. I I4 "81
• -ol
w ·

Flrol Ttma Yard Solo: Frldoy,
Saturday, M_._ 108 Bulavlllt,
Fourth Houaa ""' RoUII 180.
Hugo Yard Sale, Friday 271h, 3
Famlllea, Loto 01 Evtrylhlng,
~r ~ltld Extlnllon.
0na • - onfu Aug. 28 , 9-5• 4121
Slate-"'-• 'aso,ilk!Woti Jerrell
rotldtnca.
Thurod~Y., Friday, 444 Lariif
Drlva, ,... Mlcrowavt, Chlldrsn,
Aduft Clotllfng, Mlac., Dlthta,
Homtlnlorlor.
• Friday, 10:00·? Eallorn Avonua,
Aduh, Baby Clolhlt, Baby
h-. CUitHto, C.D.'o Weight
Blnch, Houttholcl homo.

a._

1•

=~ar'tt~le~Zi""·

lilf., fuN banmor~, 1 both,

':f .

11

Help Wanted

Commerical, AHidlinlial, St•v•:
814-446-1858.
way-&lt;:all Marilyn. 3iioi.U2-2145 Goorgot Po~ablo Sawmill, don't
or 1-81J0.892-8351.
haui:J:: loga to the mill lu.t
75-1Q57.
10 O.monstrators NNded To call
Sail Toya I Gitto For Chrfllmao, Home care for your loved one In
No Colloctlna Or Dollvorlng, family cora 11orna In Middleport,
$500 Kh Supplied Call Mory 614- 814-1192·5042.
446.f21t 4.f P.M.
AVON! All .,.... NMd tX1ra
money or want 1 carHr: tl1twr

Applle~tlons

being

are now

taMn at Pom.-ay Nuralng anc1
Rehabilitation C.nltr tor

c.r.

llflod Nursing Asslllanto. Apply
11 36759 llockspringo Rd.,
Pomtroy, Ohio 45769. No phona
callo pl-o. EOE. •
AVON I All Areoo I Shlrioy
Spoors, 30H75-142i.
Do you enjoy cooking? .lob opo
portunh.IU ar• aytllatill In RUIWIng homM, .choolt, hoapltlll,
pri10n.· or

1mall bnln••·
avallbll In Food
Mana~mant and Cal..-lng. Cell
now. Clou boglna Oct. 11th.

Opanlngo

Tht Adult Education C.nler, 1·

809-837-8506, 814-753-3511.
Elm FuH·Timt Paw- for Part·
Tim• Work Aa A Chrlatm11
Around
Tht
WOIId.
Demonstrator. FrM 1500 Ktt No
Collte11ng Or Delivering, Aleo
Booking Partie1, Call 614-245-5038.
H•d

Start

Family

lntertor/axttrior pt;lntlng, roof
pointing, handwaah · ho..oo &amp;

mobil flomoo, odd lobo. 15yrs
txp., axe. ,.,., Fr• a.tlmatea.
304;a75-4D33.
Ml11 Paula's Day ea,. Ctnt., 1
Block WOOl 01 HMC On Jaclcoon
Plkt M.f 6 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. ~
Quality And EKporlonct II Tho
11 Concom For Your Chlld't
Cart. Cali Ua For A Ylah.. Infant
/Todd.. ,. 114 44&amp;
p,..
ch..- /School Ago lf4-44&amp;.
1224.
Wanlod to do- bobyalltlng In my
homo on Nlcholu Roail - tilled nurooo old, 114-1112:3'8o7.
Will Bobylh In My Homo, Cfolt
To HMC 814 448 8838,
Will babyoft In my llorna, c._
to ~hOoll. Nve r...,_ cu.
.304-87W714.

em.

Financial

Service

high achool diploma or GED. 21
Mu81 have car whh valid WV
drlv1r'1

(CDLI. Salary
quail lcatlpna.

llcenH

blood
Apply

on
at

Southw..tem .Community ~

lion Council, Inc, 540 Fifth Avoil
Huntington

before

5:00

P

Tuooday Auaull 3\ 18113. 8:00.
5:00 daltr. S:C.A.C., Inc. lo an
EOE emplOyer.
HOUSEMANAGER, Po~ Tlma
Poolllon, 25 Hours A Wook.
Dullao lncluda
MonHori"l
Wornon And Chlldrsn In
Rooiclonllaf · Soiling
Filing
Rapo~o, Schodullng, ~noworing
PhonU And Suporvlolng Evonlng Stall. Nood Dopondotilol Moturo Poroon With Rot abll
Tranaportallon. Roply To: Poreonel, P.O. Box 454, Gallipolis,
Olllo 4118:11.
Light Dollvoiy Driver Wanlod:
Mull Havo Economic Vtllfelo •
Know Gallla, Meigs, l Maoon
Countltl &amp; Surrounding Araa.
Call Roy 1o80floM5-0455.
LPN- lull lime and po~ lima: Fun
tlmt-"""' oval-lor- S.
11 ol!l(!. Ptrl lima potlflont
avafloblt lor thl11·7 thlfland S.
11 rolltl. A-0*11 lkfllt and
aortatrlo ooporle1Ct I fllut.
PrMIIilh.al and Clrfna .......
1 mull. Quallflod LPH"t pftolto
apply In paroon btiWNn tho
holn a1 8:301m-5~ II
Dvtrtrook c.nur,_w 1'111111 81.,
llkldltporl, Olllo ..'1110. EOE

t

=

Na.nl,

- Good Condition ....

12165 Coachman 2 Blidroomo.
Control Air, Bu\11 In Dining
Room Hutch, Curtalna, Under·
pinning, 114-2U·9188.

11173 12x85 Kirkwood, 2 bad·
room, naw cafiMl, furnace l air

cond· 3yro old, 10x12· bldg,
INIIod dock W/ roof. 304-81571311 ..... mt-g• "' 1-304581~013.

1188 Pine Rldg1, 3 bMirooma, 2
bath,_ utllhy room, '.!?,000, 6141192..,041 or 1114-192•...8.
1188, 14x70 mobile hom•, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull balht, undorponnlng, clUng tana, nlc., $18,000.
304'185-3G68 Ieiva m-go.

"""'I"""'.,.
.,,
• ., ........

BUsiness
Opponunny

HousehOld
Goods

51

A.,alleUc car lttrto power amp,

ea wall•, llu now, 145, 114-1192-

A.O. Smllh 1'1ormaglelt Ont

ll&amp;lalrk:l ...... .....-.. 12gil••

--81;L~aonnw.ttoo
...
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-44W1510rl14-441-4421
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT~~ (NO DEPOSIT)

614-112·5851

For

loll, Recliner, I Chtlrw, Dlntllt
Tobit I ·Ditk, Corbin .Snyder
Fumhuro,l14-:44fl-1171.
fllrotlar, ittbybad, wlfflor, hlahcho~. car 0011, owing, douolt
llrotlar. 304-17&amp;-4&amp;48.
Burplut ormy camollaugo, now
•hlprnent combat boofa, tr~

Boddi~Twfn Matt Sat SaG,.Full
$119
Cluttn $141 Sal; 4
Dnwtr
144.15; Cor Bod's
Bunk
Bod'o,
·• .,.
- ·Yaooo
Full
Llna 01 ._,..
llllrli!',!! All20.00; lncltnt Many
lhapo t ' SlzM lllrflna AI
ta.oo. 2 l.ocallont -Batkle 'bta
Auction Or 4 Milot Qui 141.
Optn I A.ll. To I P.M. Man -Bot. ·

Uotd riding lawn mowar, tl75,
olll
1:00.1114.f92-51112 ovonlngo alttr
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch
200 PSI hUS; 1 Inch 200 PSI
132.50; Ron Evana Enlt...,...t,
Jockaon, ohio, ,.-uJ-8521.

WATER
TANKS
Above AndSTORAGE
Balow Ground
FDA
Approvod For Potable Wiler.
Chtrrr dlnl"' oulta, I chofro, Ron Ivana Enfln&gt;rltta, Jack·
tlghttd llutcfi, llu ,.. oond, ..,, Ohio, t~'7.fl21.
304-875-5180.
Wltllt Wooii!!Qhoult 211 Cubic
uprlthl 01~- ,_., runt Foot, Chill Tjpa DMit FIIHor,
• - '.
'
Good Condhlon, 814-317-01118. ·
g... . "'• --2
·~ - · '·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
rohtgtrttoro, 55
Building
rsnga.
till Applfll1!!!!1 'II
S
II

wa;::;dryart,

~·.1!!.'~'~."''1114-446. 1311
~-w

"""'·.,_ "'-:-::-=~~u~p~p~es-:::::~:::-

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolt itomt lltmlofllnge.
Houre: IIDn-lat, 1-11. ~~
0322, 3 mlot out Bultvlllt Ad.
FrM o.llvery.

Mollohan Cart&gt;tlo, At 7 N. 11444&amp;·1't44, 11112 Corpt1180, Ylnyf
SUI Yd.
Now Ook Fumlttn: To- a
Chairs, Curlot, Curvod GloM
China Etc. Rl- Vallly Ook
Fumhur,a, Qoargn c-~ Rood,
Galllpolll. Ohio "114 118 4311.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Nowlllood
Houaehold tum ..hlng. 112 mi.
Jtrricho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WY,
caii304-41S-1450.
SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 12
Olivo Sf., Galllpollt. Now l Ultd
lumHurt, hut-, W - '
Work booiL 114-441-:1151.

Block, brick, _ . , plpao, windowo, llntolo, ole. Claude Win!t:;:m~ Orondo, OH Call 114-

56

Pets for Sale

-::::::~:::-~::;~;;:::=-:=
Groom and Su~ Shop-Pot
Qroomlng. All
'!! ttvteo.
Julia Wttib. CaU 614 44o 0231.
AKC Blooonr.r.:• I - k t
td tfOO ~
anod
e••
~-385l. • r, •
,
um, ~

AKC Miniature Pfnoehtro, lwkt
old, $175 u ., 3 maltl. 304-57'62444.

I:~~;~~-~~~~;;
25511

w-;-

wlndolni 114 Ill 3131.

Full bloodod Cocker Spaniol
pupploo, wormod a flttl lholo,
n1Hytogo, ~.
HAPPY JACK MANGE LOTION:
Promctl• Hilling And Hair
Growth to Any llango, Hot Spol,
Or Funguo On Dotit • Har'oat
Wltltoul&amp;loroldol ll'vallable O.T·
C J D NORTH PAOOUCE ·~.
KK'a Polland, Ntw Hava Dacltthund ~upplao, Cctak.- Pup-

Musical

tnatauments
Bundy Ano

Grand ()paning: Still- 111.
fl-8. T&amp; T ShoD (T4hlrlo, Tapu,
Crafts), m
Av- IIIIo
lpalla,8144tiUM

,lrll

oaxopllona.._~

cond. :IOW'IS-4111 oh• rpm or

115-3:124 anytlmo.

Fumlalttd Attutn!onf In Gaf.
llpolfl, Sooutlly Dopotlt, 114441-MD Aftarl P.M. .

cond, 304-111-2238.

'

Fa11111111 CUb tntelor wl 51. btiiY
m-!• lui hHch wl carry al. 74
Motorcyclel
304-4...1127. .
7H;;;;;;iii;i;;-iii;~
Allee Chalnw 0.7 buU - · ·a .,,, a 801. • •
300hrt. 304-4. .1140.
·
·
. . - . ........
,...good, 11HW...
.
King Cutler, 5 Ft. Flnlof1 - .

I::Y:nd

KNOCK DOWN
AN' DRAG
OUT!!

25118rchlrt'

58

304.e37~431. '

1 ri-"-·lml- 12"

planter, Oliver 1100 traetor, oil KDX I'll Kngood o_ond. 304-:zn.4211.
11S-377S.

pecana
81 Drllleac:J.
12-LII
13Jog

r.r.,.o:- noor
ltllrlftCI

llldi88 011
lltlti

1:::=....

4- Plllt, CO
5 NewDMI

eCt:'

Eut
AUpua,

It

~

.......

11 Dolllr ....
18~

21 . . . .
23--

25 D-lliiJrl

-

--r....,

Llvaatock

63

:-=====--=-=-:

a

LlN US 15
~AVI NG DIN ~ E R
WIT~

USTONI6~T

W14't' IS
LOOKING A
t
ME 50
FUNN't'?

=:a...__,

;;;t-' _. ....

Rtcl A_ngut 81...-.. CrOoto,

ay,.
"old, · 304-875-71113.

-

.........

76

ol ....

·=...ac
44=-fiCIIIII

341urlll

41 Poll •••

..........

~=::::

lllllnJI I
48 Zoll loiN cl I
51 . . . ol • ...,

· 52Aftjtn.

1111 00111 IU 01

I

,,.":FRANK AND ERNEST

Aut~

Parte I
Acceuorlea

Hay &amp; Grain

~

oltdlll32Findlllll0d

Soutb opeued witb a cla.,lc
two-bid. Nortb, wbo knew bla
ner's style, dldll't stop to
flowers.
.
West, a pupil of the All"::~~
Leads-Against-smau-stama
fiubed tbe club llx onto tbe table. ·
Looklllg at tbe full
tbat tbe
heartSoutb
fillelle
II ~~~~:;~; j
ever,
unless
baa tbe
of a free peep, tbat fillelle ila't
correct play in six spades.
Soutb eUibltecl excellent - If
succeasful - teclmlque. He knew
If one bas to find one red-suit queen,
one should cash tbe A·K in
witb tbe greater number of car~. J
Then, if tbe queen hasn't dropped,
finesses In tbe other suit.
Declarer ducked tbe first Irick
open up his communications. He
tbe iecond trick witb tbe club
drew trumps and cashed dummdliaiy1n's dI
00
K of bearts. Nen came tbe
ace, a club ruff to get back to
a flnesee of the diamond jack. Unlluckyl

11M I--lOT USED
TO EATIN G
WITH T~E
ENLISTED MEt-1

75 Boats Motors
for Slfe

a-.

64

T~ERE

WAS
WE'VE AL READ~ 1-lEAW
lc:-Yc~: STAI\TED EATING FIG~T lNG OVER
STMII41EL. ..
'(OU'RE LATE ..

1111

2 Ragll1tltd A!IGUI Buill, 4
Cowt B~ 1 FMclar Ctlvto, 12 Ft. Will lti~514-3711-7,-'-'-';:.,.:.:.·:,..-.,~===• )lory, Ttar llalor, Owe, 1321,
Athlnl Llvttlook.llpoc:loi 114oi4WIA Afltr I P.ll.
Fall F - CoH Sole, SSiurday, 121 a1Umft nltr, u Mar~ull 21, 1M3, At 1 P.ll. All :::r..;rno1or, 111nn Ka1t -ng
Ftodor Catvat " - "
I
tod. Catllt Acct(lfod Slt~lna M tt;lll4.
allft,
4 P.M. On Friday. All Conllgn0*11o - - . 114-512- 1411. ¥-boft0111 boll,
2:122, 0r1 - 3531.
u ~ WICIIor, - · 304 •51
Conte
HaUina:
Al)y!lmt,
Anywhoro. PLA A I - Ohio,
E•ory llondly, Chuok Wllllamo,
=~ Crltk' Tntck~ 114-246-

21 ....,,_

Read on.

Small International 101 ...,. ·1 Da Yomaht 8 - 4
bfno, 10' pltlfom!i wldt 2.- whnlu; , _ poyall, ~
corn hood; · -...2871 "' 304- ~
5124923.
•
·
.~
210 Hondo o.w'ol&gt;acco lflekt, l5 canto • - · Evtnlngt: IM ....ta:
3D4-8ll~341.

27F. .

f---1--+--1 31

s:;:;l

dk1blltt. -

13 ForiWIIIIt

H OppOIIt.ol

""
,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.._.lOt

tfll--

c.lltwtty ClpMr c;ryptogrem~ . . cnMid from QUOtJIIGIIll by tarnoul peaplt, pt11t and~
EIOh *!«In
lnOtf*'- Tocr.y'l Q1ue: I~ J.

• F

PM

Z F G K

PMBO

PMIO

WBY

PCFBDO,

IMP

.0 H C K Y J Z K

AKHWJOK

EMTGFBD,

F'lll

ML
F

F L

I

fi

TKWZZU

AMTKY . '
I K I I W
IMI
M U.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I someflrnet Ult TV rather lhlll laking a llllplog
pill. It provldea a rhythm that pula me to lillp." - Wlllam Shatner.

....

111lT DAILY
'UULU

WOII

- one down.·

Hly.flttl-ng, .,__lo.-

m-a:tt2.

However, In - n spades tbe diamond finesse is no good to you.
lng two dlscards, you must hope tbat
' tbe heart suit is generating five tricks.
You will trick one witb tbe club ace,
cash the heart aee, draw trumps and
finesse tbe heart jack. Lucky - aeven

Transportation

~:BORN

LOSER
,.TIIA~ TRIJ:., YM FATil~

AA~£ YOU 1010\o.l [
.l-J~ "'

~['~ ni&lt;ED Of 'lOUR lllROWINC.

"rLL

~(X)R FRIE.t~'V5'/~:-'I

&amp;&gt;--. .................. AIM.

HE5TANDSIN FRDNTCF

LEN6Et;; IN 11-IEM .

FUN TH&lt;IN 1V. HE 6A.Y6
WHE'N HES ~EV- ..

THE R::li&lt;E5 IN H16 NOBE ,

I

J

GL.ASee'l W111·l MA6NIFYING-

campers&amp;
MotorHomet

I
1--rl
--r:-1,--r:-1
-r-1
I
;---:--=:-:---,
RYF E L

HE SA.Y 5 THE:YRE MORE

li'-IVI:NThD

THRUEN

Bridge can be such a frustratinl or euy - game.

IN Xflj:xJL :)J

MY 5t?ANP~1HER

I

made.

KIC1£D ::urco f

OIAMPIOO

,IAJ.I.If.O
"F~ill~
·01' TO lfo£!

A MIRR:JR AND O:::UN15

'

I
i'

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1883, lh e Indonesian volcanic islantl of
Ka raka ta u erupted in an explosion
tha t wa s he ard 3,000 mi les away.
l ~'""e 36,000 people were kill ed.
TODAY' S BIRTHDAYS : Le e De
Forest (1 873,1961 1, inventor; Christopher Ishe rwood !1904 · 19861, writer;
Albert Sabin 11906·1, microbiologist, is
87; Ben Bradlee (1921 -), journalisl, is
72: Irvin g R. Levine 11922·1, broadcast
journalist, is 71 : Tom Heinsohn (1934·),
bas ketball slar-coach-broadcaster, ·is
59: Branford Marsalis 11960·1, musi·
cian. is 33.

Late ona
sistor-in-law
-l
lamented, "1 . know what a
6
.___,__....._,__--'·---' ; mothers misarable day is. ll's
" a rainy day at home with three
'I_Y_A_G~T-E-R--,1 kids and the baneries dead in

1 I I I Ie '8
7

e:-.;),;plelo tho chuckle Quoitd
by f,/l,ng in the m•ss•ng words
.._....._..__._....._,.._.... you develop from step No. 3 below.
•

R

•

•

•

..

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETT ERS IN SQUARE S

ANSWERS
Firmly • Often • Vomit • Justly • MYSELF ·
"You're quite capable of doing the work yourseij ·the
mom told her son. Altar he had completed the woik he
bragged, "Gee, I don't know what I'd do without MY.

SELFr

.

·

·'
1188 Cannoro Z-211, allfD Irina,
V'!~ T-Top, good cond, :J04.41111""1181 Clntltr Now York•, 4
~=~dllt.W, AI ~a'"?., l':uf1r
• - - """""!on. 1ft
'~
Oul...
Allor 5Tlrttil.'
P. " Wol
114-

=-

Serv1ces

81

Home
Improvements

1181 Dodlll Dtytona 1'urM z.
-IIIHT
NC. n• Wheel, ,..,. o.tra.t:,
WATE11PR011 fliNG
:::..:..PL, 14,100, 080, 114- Ut- dill ntl flllllxla . . - t-. LAIOIII ...... IIDII fumWiecL
Qo 114-2»1181 Ford Tau.,... 4dr., ~il~ Call
AC, wll lakt payoff, t1 .
~u:t· Wllorptoollng. Elo
II
11'11.
-...,114'27U:Ii0.

1-217•

r

1~~========.-:::::::J;:;~r~;;~·;
h d
~
governt ng you •n the yea a ea

- . ClitMio ~ ' -

l.oolla, Eta. Allofll -

~

·51tfit..=!r..:~d .:CJ

ASTRO · GRAPH

lanl L-.
- . Alldng: ~;,... 114 Ill Dovlo ~ llat:lllno And
422' Allor 1:110 .....
Vtouum Clot- ilop*, FPiok-u. And 0..!-!t 01 a1. .
CrMk Aold.l1t .......

,,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

srgn
.
.
3
LIBRA_(Sepdt. 23 ·0kc~~ \~'yp~oumr~~d~~ra

· r

yourself from an uncomforta ble Slt ua IOn .

, _,~~
Friday, Aug. 27, 1993

Faults &amp;
Vegetables

•

E ~~:citing

opportunities could be 1n 1he offing
111. th e year ahead where investmenl s a_re
cqncern.ed . as well as with your social life.
l~hese arc prom 1sing yet critical areas
whe re good judgment mus l be used 1n
each.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Paling around

For Sale
orTradl

w1th !he h1gh rollers 1oday may not turn out
10: be as much lun as you lhougtu, On top
Of: tha1 , all you might get lor your spe nding
spree 1s an empiy wallet. Get a jump on life
t&gt;Y unders1anding the 1nfluences wh1ch are

,,

i

i li

is of utmost

PISCES [Feb 20-March

When some·

o r Astra-Gra ph pred 1Ct1o ns 10d ay by ·
·
Y u
$ 1 25 and a long. self-addressed.,. thing is used 11 1S subJected to a nom1na1
mailing .. · 1
1 Astra -Graph c/o this ~ amount of wear and tear regardless of Ihe
stamped env~ 6ee~x 4465 New .York. N user. Today you might loan some1hlng you
~e~sci,a~;r . B e sure 10 state you r zod 1ac prize that' s abou1 read y to show so me

Ll bran s tra emar ,
au
.
I d
lh·ng thought less or lnsensl·
:~:', ~allob!~~~n :his line quality to extncate

Cannl'!ll TOIIIII-: 14 luthtl,
114 IIICIOL

59

1 lllr1lldQ 2PMI
3 Yllellludfllll

110 .~-

word
28- -1111

7-11

By Pblllip Alder

Ira~ dlac, lA(:"";; tho tiom 1110 YIIMht -~~~ 1100. -

Jtafllon, Ohio
114418 . . .

~- Nvlng. 1 and a bod-

Jttot

58 Leg joint

Bridge can be
a baffling game

Now Holland 7fTiortiJII - . , . . ~ 4&amp;4 LTD, lttl
1• w1 waC\'
hotdo,
I -r
- . ... -•· •
Now Hofland
T drlvt,
tiiOO, 114-7711.

SUII- SUIIII· SUIIIIEA
BALEI
Hummingbird llutlo Coni•

fiiOIIIill owlmmlng pool pump a
Rltor, wt1 ttl! 1Di' 1f.l ll'fot or
. - . 30Ul'WIM.

••

lli'onn

lhdl1d

Bridge can be such
game at times. Henry
ript Idea when be wrote,
tbeir politics, frustrate tbeir
tricks.' But sometimes the
cards leave the players frustrated.
In today's deal, you make
spades but go down in m! How cc

..

Now Boort Craflrnan 1 HP abo..

Pua

12 wdl.l
IIIIONti

24111ft.ln

30

.

17 Flnl-&lt;llle

!

YO'RE SMART, PAW!!
lT'S GOIN' TO BE A

~'l ~~~.~~-~· =.o:t"emo~:::;=

Real Estate

31 Hom11 tor Sale

YOU COU LDN'T
HOG· TIE AN'
WEDOIN' rv&lt;-.; DRA G ME TO
THAT
??
r -"",-lit THING ! !

lplnll Conaolt plano. Wontod
rtlp alllll~.!12!f. to mtke loW
~/45.-" Sat locally.

•port- o1 Vlllllll
Mlac. OU1 Building 135,000, 114- room
Maand
AI......
251·11'11.
Apo~0*11o In MlddleporL Fntrn
811 aero firm out llanlla llldga, 1202. Coil 114-lfl2.a&amp;l. EOH.

a..,,

-............... 14.000-.-

AKC
Roglllored
LabrodO&lt;
Rlfriovero, Yoll- &amp; Black
Wormod &amp; 1tl Sholt, t175 Each,
114-21111-t733.
AKC Raglllarod lllnlatu,. Rod
Dochohund puppln, malt and
fornalt; 114-1192·51:M.
AKC Ronwtflor puppiM, Garmon • champiOn bloodllnoo,
tiC. IM!porarnonf, 1300, dlpoofl
will hold, Alhtnl. 814-441'37111
•"• lpm or anytlma w-ndo.
Flofl Tank, :M13 Jaclcoon Avo.
Point PI-nt, 304-815-2013,
lull llna Tropical floh 1 blrdt,

.uranct, 1nd 1 year of lrH k)t
,.,.., all for onl~ 1177rmo., call1·

Tobacco

YO'RE NOT
GOIN' TO TH'

m lolorldao Grain Drltr, .... - - -·lll&lt;ill..nte.4

,... Oldt- Dtlll ...
Brougham, PB, P8, PW, P-r

23

2.

.......,...

,

kldnlyt

Aug. 26, 1993

cludn tkl~ln;r otopo, blocks,
5yr. warranty, norneawnert ln--

24 ac,. firm In Rutllnct.. gU
well, llrga bam, fruh trMt,
Nmodlled living qu1rttr1, man
building loto, pilc:od on lnopacrlon. no 11na contractt, 114-7U200i'.
41.71· Ac- 2 Story Farm
Houoo, La. hrli, 2 Mllao From

N-

55 Sly

21 Cllntl flilll

-~. 114-445-8627.

Rabbllo, lllrol Lot&gt;, lllnl Rn, 1111
Brood, Con Bt Stln: 8111o
Route 880, Bldwlll, Ohio.
!lchnaLIZir mlnllluroi, puppltt
and llduftl, allo Poodle pup· ctt. _ , , . . , - 11,...
Coolville, 114-5174404.

Houalnti

Well

20 ArtiCI88 ol

. Openiaglead: + 6

AKC Rog. Slbarion Huoky Pupplao, Fiomalao: hOO• llatoo:
$125, Excafltnl Btoodllna, Very

CJc
f:.l,1• ~=·~ ..:~
Much MortiiM4'17oQ117.

2 Bedroom
Unllo, Range, Ra!rl-.fort AC,
Corpot, lnciOme Roilrlaloa, Eldlrtv. DIAbled Handlon~

SNIII

tau--lui

47 ......
liD Nolltlt!;
114 Frtneh!OI

~

22 F!ll 1tound

Vulnerable: Neltber
Dealer: Soutb

11m111 anlmalti 1nd eupp(•.

18tl Palm Harbor, ~8x54, loaded

Me......vu.a,

.4.(JII,

38

2 Cornplolt Of Ha..... For
A Lor~--- Pluo Etdra
Pl. . ., $810, 114:a32-1203.
I ft. lruok ~ 2 olieulltfng
ou Mltni one amaH
doort .....

-....

.15

~ Coli """' 4 Nl. 114-

AKC Rogltlorod Boxor pupploo,
3 ltmoteo, 1 malt, 12110, ~
now, WI .. ~ ehol:1.
87W043ahor5pm.
WI-t. Drvor, Rofrlgorator,
Color t.V. ~-. Air CandHionor,
Compor
Slu
Rohta;r.tor, Mleiowovt, 114-

OcGu~.

114-441·1800, Equal
QpporlunMy FMHAIIIA.

.

barkt. Sam Somtrvlllo't by
Stndyvllle Olflct. Fil.satSun, 12:00pmo8;00pm, ••'!'hort
dayo • houra. 304~13.0.00.

after

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jackton Plkt
from $2081-. Walk to thop I
movloa. Calll14 U&amp; 25611. EOH.
Booch St., IUddllport, 2br, lurnlehed
apartment,
al8o
offlcloncy, dtpoolt l roll.,
utllhiH paid. 304-512·2551.
Flrwl Holzer Apa~-. 553
Second Avon.., Ntw A¥111tblt

2114.

CUTBIDE •
FURNISHINGS:·
Wrouilhl Iron Tobit W/4 Choirs;
Fan Back Rocking Chair 151;
Gordon Arch Way't tf21.00

5pm.
Avolllblt Sof'lornbor lot: Cloan
2 Bedrooma, Fumllhed Khct.n,
All Elactrle.!. AIC, No PolO..
$335/Mo. • u.D. • 814-448-8151
Afl•r5P.II.

Loool Vt. . ng Route: h,200 A
Wotk PolontiOI. Mlllt Soli. 1-80015$.0384.
Vondlng Route: For Solo.
Sfi'CIIIIIo 8ofld Coofl luolnoto.
High lrofllc, Local Looollono.
Equlpmtnt. 1-800-214Vond.
·

Professional
Services

C. "

piiOIII

.15,
+10 3

-

&amp; L t v~stock

llgl.

with optlona, muat .... lncludn
m~ and dliiVtfY, 1..eoo.&amp;37•

INOTlCEI
100-137-3231.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. A Lo1 l Troller, 114-251-11141 A~
NCOmmondt 1hlt you do buof.. 111 5 ~ M.
, _ 1ilffh pooplo you k.-1 and 1;;~;-:
~·.....,.=::-;=~=-;:-:::
NOT to otnd monty tllrougn lht Mol&gt;lle Homo And Land For
maN uniU you htvo ln-lgllod Sail, By ow-, 1114-245-11124
tht aff.tng.
A~ytlmo. Addr-: 3211 Cora
Loco! Pay Phono Route: "-200 Mill Road.
A Wotk
s.11.
, _ Polontlal;
m 7132. Prtctd To 33 Fanns Ior S aIe

--- .......

llctn, IUOOo

IWIIIIr

17lclrChlll0ttl

SOIJTI
.AK8115

'::'Mi!Gio • Condl-

1111 -

~~;:~======1iiiiiiiii
r;:.'
:
.!:t
~ ~ 1.1.'e2 54 Mlscelfaneoua
f &lt;II In Surp1 1rc;
.w-. 11444A-12M Latvo
MerchBndtaa

opportu~ basis.

'74 Schuttz, 12x65, 3 bedroom,
eent,.l air, refrigerator and
llov•, Waaher, dryer, uncltorDin~·. good condition, 614-0411-

'~ ,.." .

llnglt lllle Cctlltat
1
2- -

adverttsed In lhis newspaper
are avalable on an equal

32 Mobile Homes
for Sate

• · ··

1104 Redman 14x70, 3bdrm., ln-

Worker • Hartford. Mult t.ve

commercial

or

:P!IIIill~ni~,!WY~25!550~.~~~

Yard Work Wlndowa Waahta
Gutttl"' Cluned Light Hauling,

vans a 4 'liD's

73

rwlenonoot!toc $400
..__.,
-t-••-•
,_ _,.,.,I_
or •• Wlnllng to ronl• 2 or lllodroorn Oldtr Batrw 18 HP Lown Trtcl0&lt;
'-'111.;.55-:;.= ·- :::-::-7::::-::::-;:::::- " - • ln olton and good~~ &amp; Wood Swing Bll, 5 1'1, 114'
Avolloble - . now 3br. llorna, liOn, ....... prlvtt~ lllfi"@,_!M- 441-1581,
1192~i1211. H no - • pooooo
rat. • dtpoefl, no ptlt. 30Uli- IMw
m
1 on rnaohN.
Plcnle Tablot For Labor Doy1 ~jl
~U.
lntlod 216't I' tQS; ••• - ·
Th;;;_
:
"--=-bad
~room
-:-::::-;:h::-ou::;o~l
t ;n-;M:;;Ido:;:
:
=-.,;!&amp;.Wood 8pllflar &amp;400, 814Mercl1andtse
ddlepo~, no pole, rtftiWIICtl
ond dt""""
Paot toblt, good cand, 104-m,_.. raqulrsd, 114-1192·
8207.
.

ro

Soma

Wanted to Rent .

'IW (P,ME Af!rui) .

aJR CHl l t::REAJ 'S
H£ADS ... ·

fli\N VIOLE:f.XE TILL

1111KII

18 UN 1111

tQI7 2
.QJIO U

6U
Jt86

••--........
-.

2 Bllho, 2 car AI3
homo, toe hod Garage, OUtbuilding,
aflor Bldwol Porter 'School ArM, 114lpm.
367o7504.
·
Now a-lng opplloatlont at 3bdrm. hou• I g•JOG•, Applo
both loellfona: APIIIY II III'Vfco Sf., SyraeuiiJ.. olio 3bdrm.
Dttk of our
llkldltporl
8tora. on LaoHomo
ou•tNat
~-;
,.,.,.,
potlflont
avail-.
call ·Rtclna
I Bank,
Vaughon't Cardinal, 401 Pot~ 114-MW210.
:,7853
::.::....,·,--.----:-:::-:::::::::~
SlrMt, Mlcldltporl, Ohio.
bod
room
.
bl'lck
homo,
1
112
Two
badroom unfumlahtd
5
Oak HIH Truckl
Co
lnlahtd
•·-monto halaa In Mlddllport, $2501-,
ng
-ny bath,
I
. utllhloo nc1 lncludod,
Saokfnt Exporltncid OVor Thil ollctrle hut and II• 2 car fi&amp;Oidtp.,
Saml Trsetor ITralllr gorogo, nice Mlgllboii.ood on no Dltt, ,.,.._.. requl,..,
Dri..,., Exooflanl Pay, 114-8112· nlct ltvol lol. For •Pill· 114-446- 114-1182-3417 aftar 3pm.
1111.
9387.
Raalllorod liLT For A Futty E· COUNTRY HOMES /ACilEACII
quli&gt;t&gt;od Lab, No Shift Work; Dff Extra Largo Cont1n1pory Homo 42 Mobile Homes
Hotldaya. ADDiv In 1'1oroon AI On 17.8 Acroa MIL With 2 Barna,
for Rent
Pome Yt
Modlcril Pllii, )38 Slott Aouto Pool, 2 Pondo, tl10 000; 4 llodMfddfepOn
180, GaiUpollt
room Homo, 2 112 Baths, LIWL $180.47 par month, MW 14' wldo
Sooroloiy
/Diapotchor
P1o~y Room, AU On 4 Acroo L moblll home, lnciUdH diUnry,
&amp; VIet nItY
/Boo-por. llull Havo Exco~ h40,0ilo; 110 Aero MIL Farm complolt tllup, ald~lng. llopo,
•rr.nty and e month•
!tnt Orgatnlutio-~ •ccount:lng With Barn • 30 Tlllebla. tl1_!11000; 5lotyear
rent, 1-800-837-&amp;e25.
' All Yord Saltt Mull Bl Ptld.:: &amp; Ttlaphono Sklil::
Woril 80 Ac,_ MIL $30,000; All Tho
Advanca. Dotcllna: 1:00pm I
Procoaolng, Typing, Ful~Timo. Abov• Wlt~ln 3 Milot 01 Rio
mobllo homo 2 badroom
" dty bolort lht od ill to ru~, Sand Rnumo To: CLA 213, c/o Grandt • Ploaoo Coil Bill Con- 10160
820 Founh Ava, Galllpollo. $325
' SUndly_ odhlon- 1:OOpm Fl'ldly, G•IIIJ&gt;oflo Dolly Tribune, 825 noll AI Donna Summors
walor and lraofl pold 114-445MondaY
odhton
tO:OOo.m. Third Avenue, Galllpolll, OH For Mort lnlormotlon. 11
4416 aftar 7 p.m.
Saturdty.
•
~51.
45131
21, 27, 28 and 111 lo2nd. BR1:M
Gaillpollt Forry, all b~ck, 3br., 2 Bedroom-.' CA., Rtntor Salt
IMtt 11n Lang Bottom and S.•klng lll....nt, matul'l ' ••· lull baMrnent, comer lot, car- On Land Contract. 2 Blocko
R-vlllt, bolllnd Nua.-rod porienCtd lno..-anco oflleo ollff port, now ook coblnota In From Big Boar. 1114-4411-1401 A~
Cllurclt, nowty up/lolita
poraon. lluol bo willing to ac- kHchtn, control hoo~coollng. 1tr4 P.M.
,,_ 011
cop! work load I ba I tum So
11 R n
- 3030
nd
2br, all tleclrle, Aahlon Upfond
couch t - · - .
player. Colllfllllor typing I Inmorv le II y.
·~
Ad, $175/mo. plus dt:l,
IUI'IIncl ·•xPtrfence nec-.ry. or 304-175-3431.
'
8
PubliC Sale
Sand reoumo Bo• C-24 "" Pl. Llkt Now 2· Bedroom Homil, dlpooltl utllllla. 3114-87
&amp; Auction
PIL Roglotor, 200 Main St, Point 138,500, Baoomont M.OOO,
=-J~m. dtpoofl ' utiiHIH.
Rick Poaroon Aucflon Company,
•1411·1157, 11-8, 01' 514-8114-4S01
&amp;310.21
Monthly Payment, 114- 3 lodroom Double Wldo Moblll
tull tlmt 1uctlonHr, compltfe
Attar
7 P.M.
OM 12110 MobU• Home
auct•Dn
llrvlce.
Ucented
LOOK only $53,500. Country 2HorM,
Boctroomo, 1114-445-2003.
116,0hlo 6: WMt Vlrglnltl, 304hom. on one ttval acre. 3 or~
'Tn-5785.
'
•
bad_., full baoomonf, homo For ,.nt· 2bdrm. tren.r In
buyara warrantY. Call Jim Sy~ Pomtro~ . aru, total 1'-Ctrlc,
9 wanted to Buy
valor, Conlury 21 Action Roany, 814-1192·2312.
809-4-21.
AntlqUII and UNd turnhure, no
hm too lartP or too amall, will
Ranch llyle bl'lcl&lt;, 13 acno,
Apanment
buy· on• pi• or compl.t1 Truck Drlvtr Combl,.llon !ergo llvfngroom a kltchon, 3br. 44
householt;t, ' call Osby Manln, Volllclo CDL Required, Poy 1250 1 112 bathf, alilchod garogo, lui1
for Rent
To 135~ Por Wotk, YOIY Fow ba-ni. llortgl bilildfng, 5614-1192·11141.
Ovornlghlo. Roopond To: P.O.
baif!..
AI
2,
ripley
Rd,
C2) 2bdrm. apartrn.nte In
Dtcorttod 11...-re, wall to.., Box 805, GoiUpollo, OH 415631.
Pl. ......nt. 30UlS- Pom•oy, 1225- RIO; troller 1o1
p/lonot, old Iampo old thor·
DRIVERS
Umllod
for rant, cl- to town, $75/rno.;
momlttl'll, old clock., am:Jqu. TRUCK
814-M2·5333.
tumltwe. Rlv•rlrw An,llquea. Oponlngx With Jockoon County
Trucking Company. No OVor·
1 1 2 Bodroomo Fumllhod
Ruoo Wo
- buy
· ·tllotoo.
- -· 114-892· night TriiVol. An Excollonl Op2526.
Apo~mont•
In
P-roy,
portunhy
For
Long-term
Rtltfonco &amp; Dopooh, No Plio,
Don, Junk hi Soli Uo Your Nan- Employment
For QuoUflocl
•14-446--••
Working Major Applloncoo, Driver.. a.... nta Avallablt.
"
•Color
TV'a,
Relrlgtratot'l, Sand Rooumo To: DRIVER~,
1bdrm. apartmll\l In Pomtro~
frMUf'l VCR'a, Mlcrowavu, P.O. Box 108, Jackson, Ott
for ron!, 114-1192-5151.
Air Condlllonoro. Guhor Ampo, 45140.
Etc. &amp;14-256-1238.
1br. ajtl~mtnlt In Point
All
real
es1a1e
aavertl!i'lg
In
Wondy'o Now Hl~ng In Tho Gal·
Pl....nt, furnished or untur.
this newspaper Is subjed lo
J a D'o Auto Par10 and Salvogo, llpollo Aroa For All Shlho, Apply
nllhod, vary clean, no pllo .. 304alao buying lunk caN &amp; truciCa. In Person, Monday Thru Frrday,
the Federal Fair Housing Ad
815-1381.
304-Tn-5343.
2-4 P.M. EO&amp;.
ot 1968 which makes II ilogal
2bdim. apto., total tloolrle, aplo advertise •any preference,
Junk cars, any condhlon, 114- 18 Wanted to Do
pllancoo lumlohod, laundry
imitation or dlocrlmlnatlon
1192-7&amp;53.
,.,-,~----::--:-:room iociiHiao c - to achool
based on race, color, ralglon,
In town. Apot(caliono •vollobli
Want.cl ltandlng tlmbw, lOp Ch~ollan WQIJan wanting lo
sex tamliaf SIBius or national
at: Vllltga G.- Aftla, 141 or
pn- paid, ho ootlmatoo, c111n holnae, p~.... call 114coll814.fl92-3711. EOH.
origin, or any lrtenllon to
llconood I carlffled togging, 1192·7030.
304-895-3055 or 895-3831L
make any such preference,
Cutl. . .roofing, aiding, 11phah
3 Room Apa~'"~!",__Ground
Nmllalion or disCrimination.•
Floor, All Pilvllo, 614-440-3351.
Top Prieto Pold: All Old U.S. Haling, painting, carpanttry,
Coins, Gold Rlhga, Sllv• Coins, FrM Estlma1H. 3()4..675..5709 or
Fumllhod
Elllelency: 107
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 875-6422.
This
newspaper
wiD
not
151 second Avenue, Galllpo'lll.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Toptllng,
Ufllllloo Paid,
tf851Mo.
814-4111knowingly accopl
Sacond,
Galllpollo,
Share
Bath,
Trimming, Tr• Removal, Htdgt
4418 Ahor 7 P.M.
aavertlsemen1s lor real esll!lle
Trimming.
FrM
Estlmateal
614Employment Services 387·~Aftar 4p.m.
which Is In vlo~llon of the
Fumlohod Ellleloncy 7 112 Noll,
law. Our readers are hervby
Qallilwllo, UIHHin P1old, hiS.
014 141 4411 Aftar 7 P.ll.
Gonorol Malntonanco, Palntlng 1
lnlonnod lhal all dwellngs

'
Naod bobytlfltt In
Mon-Frl. 304-871!-34

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46 Space tor Rent .

2 8odroom Wfth Garage And

31 Homes for Sale

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41 HOU181 for Rent

a VIcinity·
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NORI'B
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Roome

lllrii!IJIIII
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Yard Sate
"Do I believe in astrolcogy l My horoscope says

FumleMd

Wl!llod To lltnl .Or luy: Alldft
~ Iota Quill 'l'roiltr

Rentals

GallipoliS

1211 notwll
13 Qloew llbrlc

ragged edges.
ARIES (March 21·April19) S:IUalions you
personally d"ec l migh t be sub1ected to

d h
toda These won't
unex pec1e c anges
y.
be too de1rimen1al 1! you 're aware of th e
tactth1s mighl occur.
TAURUS ~April 20·May 20) Your concen -

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Occastonally . tration could be la r to lax today. 'Even when
we are fearful of disapprovaL This could be
one of tl1ose days you may tell little fibs to
shore up your ego only to be caught in the

doing rote jobs you must be careful to pay
at1 ent10n to the ·tasks a1 hand or errors
could occur.

precess.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21 1 Today

GEMINI (May 21 -J.une 20 ) Happiness
depends en your choice of frie nds today. II

might bnf'ltd abou1 a strange reversal where you find yourself ,in the company ·of people
your incom~ IS concerned . Oddly. your nor· who could lead you astray or cause trou mal channels of money making may offer •
little, While unique OUtlet COuld YIBid 3 lot.
bie, make a quiCk exi1.

a

CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan. 19) Be carelul

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Someone .

whose business you but1 into today . Some

upon whom you may be looking tor support
today to back you up may leave you stand·
.
do
ing alone. so don't unw1lllnQ 1Y sa y or
anyth1ng you can'1 ha ndle by you rself.

people migh1 welcome your input. but most
could feel it to be an intrusion ollhelr cher-

~~~:~i~~~Y(Jan. 2o-Feb. 19) Most people
stri ve to keep secre1s. but they are not
always able to do so. Think twice today

before yo u Jell a nybody anything where
.,
•

LEO (July 23-.4ug. 22) Behaving as il you
have all the answers 10 everything thai
arises at work today migh1 resu lt in having
your co-Workers dump au the jobs on you.

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2-Tht

BIG~EST 4 DAY SALE IN ATHENS HISTORYI

DON.

Ohio Lottery

Yankees
beat
Indians

WOOD'S
'

Pick 3:
1-4-0
Pick 4:
4-8-4-9
Buckeye 5:
11-16-30-34-35

. Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 86
Multimedia Inc.

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Low tonlgbt70. Cbanu or rain.
Saturday, blab nur 90.

1 Section. 12 Pages-35 centa
A Multlmedloo Inc. NMap.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 27, 1993

, --------------------------------------------------~----~~

!White House may intervene in pumping·dispute

:Clinton asked to step in

Bond set for Mullen

Sentinel News Staff
. overdosing on lhe drugs.
In response, Attorney Herman
A Pomeroy attorney found
Judge Dan Favreau set property Carson, representing Mullen, said
guilty ¥arch 12 on ~our counts of bond at $30,000 dwing a hearing in · Mullen is' prepared to enter into
corruptmg anolher wtlh drugs will the Meigs County Court of Com- counselinB and is not a flight risk.
be allowed out .on bond providing man Pleas Thursday afternoon.
Mullen did go 10 Florida, he said,
he be enrolled m a resident treat- . Favreau disregarded a request but came back.
ment pro~ for therapy.
by Assistant Prosecutor Charles H.
Mullen now faces a sentencing
D. M~chael Mullen, 41, was Knight to set bond at $500,000.
hearing tentatively set for SepL 20.
found gwlty of supplying two girls,
Knight said a high bond was
Favreau said Mullen must
now age&lt;! II and 14, wilh Valium, . needed due to the seriousness of receive treatment as soon as possia prescnpllon drug, on Friday, the crimes and pending charges ble. As of this morning, he was still
Marc~ 12, and Saturday, March 13. agai~st Mullen. An earli.er trip to
being held in the Meigs County
The
gtrls were treated later at Vet- Ronda mdicates Mullen IS a· flight Jail.
erans Memorial Hospital after risk, Knight said.

1893 CADILLAC$

~:;

S750Q

Off

DEVILLES • ELDORADOS
AND SEVIL:LES

1993 LINCO

From

$13,994 28 *
(24 month lease)

.OUR EXCrriNG
NEW FACILITYI.

..... ~....

Drive A New
lincoln Every
2 Years

,

Continued on Page 3

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I

JOLYNN BUTLER
fill the new role - if she is
allowed to. Butler's appointment,
effective Oct. 1, may be nullified if
the Ohio Ethics Commission rules
she has a conflict of interest
because of her current position.
.Butler says the commission has

.

TESTING"- rdteEiiil'es·ilf 1\"EP Fuel Supply's Centtal Coal
Lab, performs water quality testing near the Salem borehole
release point at Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No. 31
mine. Evaluations of the streams receiving water from the Meigs
No. 31 water removal operation are reported to the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency.
·

Chemical plant explodes - - -.. Local briefs-Officials probe B&amp;E

5,000 ordered evacuated
19'1~ fORO f-1!10
$11
MSRP .. -········· ...
1993 GMC SAf M\\
CONVERS\ON VAN

1993 GMC
SONOMA p\CKUP

6
1/ '

~~~~~auon

to\11111- 11\t. . . .. . . . .. . .. -$~00
~ ''"" 911'jel . · · · • · · · -

4X2
TOYOTA PICKUP

S16,995

~oua $10 999il il

saggg

\'1\l&amp;E

'per clolh seal.

Rear step bum
~lo\IFM

luella"~· loaded

VEHICLES UND

-

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By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
· Associated Press Writer
ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - Fumes
from explosions at a chemical plant
prompted aulhorities to order about
5,000 residents evacuated from a
square-mile area early today.
At least 43 residents were treat·
ed at area hospitals for minor eye,
throat and skin irritation, as well as
breathing difficulty. None of the
injuries appeared serious, hospital
officials said.
Maynard Bender, plant manager
at the Aztec Catalyst Co., said a
. crew of up to IS workers were
inside the plant at the time of the
first explosion shortly after mid·
night. None of the workers was
injured, he said.
Authorities and witnesses said
there were at least two explosions
at the plant, which makes chemi.cals for the cosmetics indusb:):.
: Bender said he did not know
;what caused the explosions and
was not certain what chemical was
.released. He said lhe chemical was

probably no worse lhan an irritant.
One cinder block building was
demolished and another was heavily damaged, he said.
Assistant Fire Chief Glenn Saddler said lhe ftre continued 10 bum
six. hours after lhe blasL Firefight·
ers stayed 500 yards from the fire
with unmanned hoses pouring
water on the blaze. Firefighters
monitored the rue with binoculars.
Six.teen city firefighters, a 16member hazardous materials crew
and representatives of the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
were at tl)e s.cene, he said.
Rich Roman, the Lorain County
Emergency Management Agency ,
director, said winds. kept fumes
close to the ground. "You can
taste, you can feel it," he said.
The fueball from the firSt explosion could be seen at least 12 miles
awar,. .
• It looked like fireworks at
first," said Jeff Cooper, who was
sitting on a patio near lhe planL "I
thought Iraq was bombing us."

The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is investigating the
breaking and entering of the Watering Hole on State Roure 7 nonh
of Pomeroy.
According to a report from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, lhe estab·
lishment was entered Tuesday between 2-10 a.m. by a person or
persons who forced open the front donr.
·
Several machines were forced open and money removed.

Water emergency lifted
Middleport residents are no longer being asked to conserve
water.
According to Bill Browning, assistant water superinrendent for
the village, wodc:ers repaired a damaged pumping station ·Thursday
mght.

Deputies investigate accident
No injwies were reported in a private property accident investi·
gated Thursday afternoon by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
According to a sheriff's report, Russell Singleton, 18, of Portland
was at the Kenneth Turley residence at Racine when he began backing his 1973 Chrysler. The lhrottle stuck, forcing the car into right·
rear comer of Turley's 1984 Oldsmobile.
No damage was listed to Singleton's vehicle while damage to
Turley's vehicle was listed as moderate.

WVa. man
electrocuted
MASON, W.Va. (AP)- An
electrical contractor's employee
was electrocuted while working on
a power line in Mason County, a
company official said.
Dennis DeBerry, 32, of Elizabeth died Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy,
Ohio, a hospital official said.
DeBerry, who was employed by
R.H. Bouli~y Co., was working
on a power lme that had been lowered from a utility pole along West
Virginia 33.
The line touched a live wire still
on the utility pole, electrocuting
him, said Charles Talley,
spokesman for Appalachian Power
Co., which had contracted the job
to R.H. Bouligny.

Federal
Mogul to
be sold
Local officials expect the Gallipolis Federal Mogul Plant will be
sold.
According to Plant Manager
Bruce Graff, lhe Gallipolis plant is
one in a division that Federal
Mogul has decided to let go.
"Federal Mogul has made a
decision to selllhe precision forged
products division and is pursuing
potential buyers," he said.
The intention was announced
July 23 by officials at Federal
Mogul World Headquarters in
Southfield, Mich. Graff would not
comment on how soon he lhought
the Gallipolis plant would be sold.
But he said lhe sale is likely 10
have a positive effect on lhe plant
"Whoever purchases it will be
interested in making money," he
said.

"-------~------------~

Bus driver reports incident
A school bus driver for the Alexander School District was nonhbound on State Route 143 just south of Old State Route 346 when
she reported she heard a noise lhat sounded like a .22-caliber pistol
shot and lhe windshi~ld cracked above ber.
Robin Smith said incident occured as she was passing a southbound, red pickup truck: driven by white mille wearing a black: hat.
A bus mechanic examined the bus and found no hole in the
windshield. It is speculated that a rock was lhrown from lhe roadway when lhll truck approached.
No children were on the bus atlhe time of lhe incident
1

Racine man to begiTJ sentenc~
~·

• I

'

A Racine man was transported to'\he Orient Reception Cenrer 10
begin serving a sentence for child endangerment.
Charles E. Michaels, 31, was sentenced in the Meigs County
Court·of Common Pleas to serve two years in the state penal system.

\~.- .

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• • 'Prloft 1netudo lll..,ullc1~,.,-• . - . ond lncontl'"'· Unit a
oubj0Citopriorollo. 5. % O¥otl-w1thopprovod crodll uptomontha.

GO TO* WOOD

'

•

AND GET A GREAT •

Police probe wreck

-

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•

• East State Strcut
Athens
'

"Where Better Really Matters•

I ·

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•. EXCHANGE STUDENT- Adam Sbeell, who was the pest of
: the Mlddleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club Monday evenina, hiS been
: selec:ted at the state level to represent Rotary Inte'1'atlonal as an
: exchanae student. Beln1 sponsored by the Mlddleport·Pomeroy
• Rotary Club, he Is the sou of Jennifer and James Sheets. Adam bas
: been Involved In an extensive orientation and wiD leave for Turlno,
' Italy, In September where he will attend a scientific high school
, during the 1!1!13-!14 school year. Here, Rotary President Gene
: Triplett presents Adam with a Rotary banner to be presented to a
• Rotary club In Italy while parents Jennifer and James Sheets
:·watch on.
'.~

.~

. Two vehicles were damaged in a collision Thursday morning on
East Main Street in Pomeroy.
·
Pomeroy Police reported lhat Brian Phillips, 17, Pomeroy driv· ·
ing a 1986 Toyora owned by Paul Phillips, struck lhe rear of~ 1989
Nissan driven by Max Laudermilt, 3S, Pomeroy. There was light
damage 10 the center of the bumper on the Laudennik vehicle and
moderate front end damage IO' Ihe Phillips car. There were no cita·
tions.

Teacher hired by Eastern board
In personnel matters, the Eastern Local Board of Education
employed Daniel D. Thomas as the elementary p!!ysical education
teacher on a one-year contract and accepted Shtrler E. Johnson's
request to be transferred to the assistant cook's position at Eastern
Continued on Page 3
.

LIME CONVEYOR- Workers orchestrate the construction of
the lime conveyer support at the James M. Gavin Power Plant In
Cheshh·e. The lime conveyer will transport lime from tbe Oblo
River to the silos. The first section of the actual c:onveyor wiD .be
placed tbls weekend. (Photo by Bill Ross)

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