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10-The Dally Sentinel

Suprise party
held for
Bradshaw

'The Joy Luck Club' imitates art

A surprise birthday party was
held for Callie Bradshaw at
Me Donalds on Sept I.
Refreshments of pizza, pop,
cake and ice cream were served to
Art, Tessie, and Butch Bradshaw;
Kristi Richmond, Jeanie Lipscomb,
Becky Tyree and Ellie Faulk; ·
Gifts and cards were also presented by Vicki Ashton and Shirley
Tyree.

,,_,, ..!'~!;

,.;,.-

•

CALLIE BRADSHAW

Sayre family holds reunion
A reunion of the desi:endants of
Martin and Emma Roush Sayre
was held Aug. 15 at the Star Mill
Park in Racine.
Attending were: Halley and Jim
Boffencamp, Denver, Colo.; James
and Ann Sayre, Saint Cloud, Fla.;
Irene Payne, Saint Petersburg, Fla.;
Gene Payne, Montgomery, Ala.;
Norma Burris, Orlando, Fla.;
- Eldred Hart, Eliot, Maine; Todd
and Leah Burris, Taylor Hill , Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sayre,
Sandra Sayre, Maxine and Sharon
C!tnp, Jim and Roberta Cox, Doris
Rogers, Aaron and Janeene Davis,
Jack and Betty Jo 'Rush, all of

TUesday, September 7, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Columbus.
Dennis Hart, Middleport; Paul
and Evelyn North, Alberta Saundcrs, Connie Bradley, Shelley and
Brandon Pickens, all of Gallipolis;
Wilma Styer, Waterford; Rod and
Marjorie Grimm, Ronald and Linda
Grimm. George and Dorothy
Sayre, Luiley and Mildred Hart,
Ronald and Hilda Hart, Gilbert and
Audrey Hart, Robert and Lillie
Hart, Mark, Sharon, Kimmy,
Nathan and Matthew Harvey; Rollie, Shirley and Suzanne Stewart,
. Dan, Donna; Danny and Dena
Sayre, Joyce and Robin Manuel
and David 311d Dorothy Sayer, all
of Racine.

Tea," teamed up with writer Amy
By PATRIClA BIBBY
Tan to adapt her hugely popular
Associated Press Writer
Every once in a while a movie novel of the same name that domicomes along that is so stirring and nated best-seller lists in 1989.
so moving thai it stays with you . Simply put, "The ·Joy Luck
long after it's over. Like a wonder- Club" tells the stories of four
ful memory, it washes over rour young Chinese-American women
psyche for days and bathes 11 in living in San Francisco and the
hardships and tragedies their mothsome indescribable richness.
ers
endured before immigrating to
, "The Joy Luck Club" is just
the
United
States.
such a mov1e. This is filmmaking
The
tales
are !OQsely knit around
at its best: a wonderful story that
transcen$ cultures. It is beautifully June's going-away party in which
set and filmed, superbly acted and she is quietly inducted into her
mother.'s mah-jongg circle. June's
masterfuUy directed.
And it's no surprise when r.ou off to China to see the half-sisters
consider those who are responsible her mother was forced to abandon
for it. Director Wayne Wang, as she fled the counll'y. The mothknown for "Chan Is Missing," er, who recently died, never knew
"Dim Sum~· and "Eat a Bowl of the fate of her twin girls after she

--Names in the news-real pale, white, way overweight,"
he said. He has since shed 25
pounds.
Brooks' hits include "Friends in
Low Places" and "The Dance."

·-

-~

-.....

-.;_

..•.....

--··

left them by the side of the road.
June (Ming-Na Wen) has lost
her mother Suyuan (Kieu Chinh)
without realizing the hope and love
she had for her. It's only through
this exercise of venturing into her
mother's past that she finally
understaods the power of her mother's love an~ her high expectations
for the future.
·
Similarly, the three other
women of the mah-jongg club all
have some secret from their homeland that has taught them profoundlY. harsh lessons, And each mother,
like all mothers, wants to spare her
child the pain she has had to bear.
Bring a good supply of hankies
just the same because "The Joy
Luck Club" is a tear-jerker in the

best sense of the word. The film is
rated R.
Motion Picture Association of
America rating defmitions:
G - General audiences. All
ages admitted.
PG - Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be
suitable for children.
PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may
be inappropriate for young children.
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult guardian.
NC-17- No one under 17
admitted.

Ohio Lottery

Reds,
Cards
split pair

Pick 3:
830
Pick 4:
. 6043

Buckeye 5:
2-4-15-19-33

Page4

Willard honored at
quilting luncheon

Val. 44, NO. 93

Belva Willard, of the Darwin
area, was treated on her 96th birthday with a luncheon held in her
honor at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall on Sept. 1, by the
quilting group of which she is a
member.
The quitters have been meeting
each Wedensday for five and a half
years and Willard attends regularly.
In the afternoon the group was
joined by Wallace Bradford, Jim
Hazelton and Ann Lambert to go to
the Pomeroy Nursin~ and Rehabilitation Center to smg and serve
homemade cookies to the patients.
Attending the luncheon was
Helen Quivey, Sara Cullums, Leota
Smith, Golda Reed, Stella Colburn,
May Romine, Edna Clark, Janie
Offutt, Rosalie Story, Vada Hazelton , Aletha Randolph, Mildred
Ziegler, Lutchia Riggs, Muriel
Bradford and the honored guest
Belva Willard .

Pomeroy council OKs new water district

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A
~-new book by cable TV personality
CLOGGING - Pictured are the Midnight
val Saturday afternoon. (See page one for addiRalph Emery describes a tearful Ctoggers performing at the Rutland Street Festi- , lional pictures, story).
. George Bush on the eve of his reelection defeat
In "More Memories," Emery
writes that Bush broke down
aboard Air Force One the night
before he lost to Bill CliniDn, when
the Oak Ridge Boys began singing
".Amazing Grace."
·
"I think maybe some reality
was hitting," Emery quotes Joe
Bonsall of the Oak Ridge Boys as
saying. "There was a real possibiliBy ERINMARIE MEDICK
ty that George Bush could lose this
The Colu111bus Dispatch
election. Everybody was crying,
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP)- As
NEW YORK (AP) - Frances including the four of us."
her
hands
were
being
wra~ with
Emery wiU retire in October as cloth strips, police recru11
Fisher said having a baby with ·
Shana
Clint Eastwood in real life was not nightly host of "Nashville Now" Smith set her jaw in determination
far from the role she played in a onTNN.
looked into the empty boxing
His first book, "Memories," and
movie she was making at the time.
ring.
"Here's my character wanting spent six months on The New York
She had something to prove to have children and being with a Times non-fiction best-seller list. to herself, to her fellow recruits and
guy who has already done it before, " More Memories" was published to her instructors at the Columbus
and not being sure if it's going to last week.
Police Academy. The day before
wreck the relationship," the actress
had been a nightmare.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) said, describing her role in the yetSmith, 23, was going through
Writers Vernon Vinge and Connie Hell Week- the most grueling
to-be-released "Babyfever."
Talking to Eastwood about her Willis shared top honors at the part of the six-month training to
movie role led the unwed couple to 1993 Hugo Awards, a top prize for become a police officer. One of 33
think about their own situation, she science fiction.
renuits in her class, she already
Vinge, a mathematics professor had made it through five months of
said in the October issue of Redat San Diego State University, and exhausting preparation.
book.
"The decision to have a baby Willis, who had two previous
After today, she knew her goal
had been percolating in the back of Hugos, won in the best novel cate- would be within reach.
rny mind for years, and we were gory.
A single mother, Smith had long
coming close to it anyway," she
Awards were announced Sunday been interested in becoming a
said in an interview that took place at the 51st World Science Fiction police officer.
before she gave birth to their Convention. The annual Hugos are
"It's very hard, very serious
daughter, Franccsca Ruth Fi sher named for Hugo Gcrnsback. who work," Smith said. "But I like the
first published the science fiction idea that I can make a difference.
Eastwood, on Aug. 7.
The child was the first for Fish- magazine "Amazing Stories" in Even if it's in a small way."
er, 41. The 63-year-old Eastwood 1926.
Smith said her 3 1/2-year.-old
BREAKING BARRIERS- Shane Smith
police acade111y on March 11. (AP Photo/The
has two grown children by Maggie
Vinge won for "A Fire Upon daughter, Blaze, was a key part of
practices boxing techniques with Sgt. Eugene
Columbus Dispatch, Jennifer Brown)
John son , whom he divorced in the Deep" and Willis for "Dooms- her decision.
Beer during her lunch at the Colu111bus, Ohio
day Book." She also won a Hugo
"I want her to be proud of me. I
1984.
for best short story.
want her to know that I'm doing stand out."
meant to build confidence. Today Stephanie Martin, as a punching
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The award for best dramatic pre- my pan to help people."
Once Smith had to wear a would determine whether she had bag.
Garth Brooks says taking his fami- sentation, usually given to a film,
Blaze's father, David Griffith, mouthpiece as. punishment for talk- the toughness to survive on the
After two of the three required
ly along with him on the road took went to "The Inner Light," an also is a Columbus police officer.
ing. On other occasions, her mouth streets.
rounds, Smith was wringing wet.
a weight off his mind - and his episode of the TV show "Star
Smith applied for the job in was sealed with adhesive tape.
The day before she had been Sweat was pouring down her face .
Trek: The Next Generation.''
1991, taking tests to determine her
midriff.
It wasn'tlong before Smith had paired with a male recruit for her
Both boxers were exhausted and
The country star return ed last
communications, reasoning, memo- a nickname. Sgt. Eugene Beer boxing mismatch. Early in the had been stunned several times.
week after a month on the road
BOSTON (AP) - A six-hour ry and writing skills. Of 2,000 called her Tinkerbell, and it stuck.
fight, she was stunned by a blow on · In the final seconds, the
with his wife, Sandy, and year-old Labor Day concert organized by applicants, she ranked 21lth.
Besides physical training, the head. She panicked, forgetting observers yelled, "Good fight."
daughter Taylor to promote his Don Henley and featuring AeroNext, she had to write a biogra- course work included laws of everything she had learned.
"It's over. Thank God," Smith
sixth album, "In Pieces."
smith, Sting, Elton John and Melis- phy.
arrest, search and seizure, criminal
Instead of covering her face, she said. "My arms are like rubber
"I'm doing what I love, and sa Etheridge raised about $1 milThen she waited. After a year, law, patrol operations, civil disor- flailed her arms. When the fight bands. My heart was pumping
tomorrow morning, when I wake lion tn help preserve Walden Pond.
she was asked to take a polygraph der control, communications, acci- was over. she could barely staod or about 100 miles per hour."
up, that little girl is going to be
The Walden Woods Pr~ct is tes t, and detectives came to her dent investigation and traffic breathe.
Beer reinforced the reason for
pecking over the side of the bed at now about $3.5 million away from home to interview her.
enforcement, first aid and cultural
The critique by her instructor, fights.
me," Brooks said.
the $10 million Henley said is
Last December, she was inter- sensitivity.
Officer Joe Smith, and by her fel"Never give up," he said.
Last year, Brooks hit the road needed to buy land surrounding the viewed again by a four-person
But she found firearms training low recruits stung even more.
"Never
quit, if that's the only thing
alone. " You see pictures of me ?t pond. made famous by Henry screening panel, then by an assis- especially interesting.
"You would have been dead on you learn from this program."
the end of the tour last year, and l David Thoreau, and keep it .out of tant safety director.
''They take you and mold you the street," Smith said. "You're
About 11 percent of the recruits
look like I was about to die. Just the hands of developers.
A letter came a month later, in here. and it works. I was very going to get yourself killed."
drop out, Beer said. Five in Smith' s
ordering psychological and physi- nervous at rust because I wanted to
Smith wasn't going to let that class left before graduation.
cal exams. After passing both, she ~o so well, and I had to start fresh happen this time.
But of Smith, Beer said, "She
wa s offered the job of police firing a gun."
Her fellow recruits advised her committed herself to the program.
recruit. Training began March I.
The boxing match also was to think of this opponent, recruit
"It's kind of like a boot camp,"
Smith said. "You get yelled at for
everything. As a person, they tear
you down, then build you back up
again.' '

3y ED PETERSON
Social Security manager in
Athens
A person recently called the our
office and asked, "How much does
Soc ial Security pay toward funeral
expenses?" The caller was referring
to a one-time payment of $255
made to the surviving spouse or eligible children of a deceased wage
earner and is paid in addition to
any monthly benefits that' may be
due. Although the payment is usually considered as help with funeral
expenses, it need not be used for
that purpose.
The payment can be paid under
these circumstances:
• If you are the surviving spouse
and you were Uving with the worker at the time of his or her death.
• If you were married to, but not

li ving with, the deceased at the
time of his or her death, and you
are eligible for Social Security benefits based on the person's earnings
record. (You do not have to be
receiving benefits: you need only
to be eligible to receive them.)
• If there is no surviving spouse, a
child (or children) of the deceased
who is eligible for benefits on the
deceased worker's record in the
month of his or her death may
claim the payment.
The special one-time death paymen t cannot be made to a fanner
spouse. Nor can the payment be
made to a funeral home.
Social Security has been making
th ese one-time payments since
1940, when Social Security benefits first became available. Call our
toll free number 1-800-772-1213
for further information.

The physical requirements were
demanding. Recruits were required
to do 15 pushups, 15 situps and run
I 1/2 miles in IS minutes, increasing exercise routines as the training
went on.
Her pain tolerance was tested
when she dislocated her finger
while wrestling. Her doctor advised
her not to attend training for one
month, but she continued.
"I didn't want to feel like a fail ure," she said.
A white Beauty and the Beast
rain boot from Blaze helped. Smith
used it to cushion her injured hand
when she did pushups.
"It reminded me of why I was
doing all this - for her and me."
Smith found the academy can be
rough on a vivacious person.
"I've been called hyper, and I
guess that's true," she said. ''I'm
also very talkative, and that's a big
problem here. You don't want to

H&amp; R BLOCK OFFERS INCOME TAX
COURSE IN POMEROY, OHIO

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Experienced instructors teach tax law, theory, and application. Classrom discussion and practice
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Students learn how to handle increasingly complex income tax situations as the·course progresses.
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78-1 0-0636M

2 Section e. 14 Pageo 35 cente
A Multimedia Inc. IMwap.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 8, 1993

MuiUmedlolnc.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County came one step
· closer to getting a new water district Tuesday night after members
of the Pomeroy Village Council
approved a resolution to join with
the village of Middleport in forming the Big Bend Water District.
·The resolution now needs to be
approved by the Middleport Village Council.
The resolution reads in jJart:
"Whereas, the village of
Pomeroy realizes that there is a
necessity and urgent need for the
establishment of a better public
water supply system which cannot

be economically or feasibly provided by the village individually; and
"Whereas, the village of
Pomeroy desires to join with the
village of Middleport to establish a
water district which would provide
a mor~ economically feasible
source of regional rural water for
the village of Pomeroy; and
"Whereas, it is believed that the
joint efforts of the village of
Pomeroy and village of Middleport
would qualify said water district to
be eligible for federal and state
assistance and would be conductive
to the public health, safety, convenience or welfare of the villages to
organize such a district; and

·"Whereas, the district shall be
designed to construct, operate and
maintain a public water system for
the benefit of the village of
Pomeroy and the village of Middleport; and
"Be it therefore resolved that the
village of Pomeroy join with the
village of Middleport and execute
and file a petition with the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
formation of the Big Bend Water
District for the benefit of the village of Pomeroy and the village of
Middleport and such other areas as
may be specified in said petition
and/or subsequent modification of
petition."

Also, Council President Larry
Wehrung, Clerk Kathy Hysell and
Mayor Bruce Reed were appointed
to serve on the Big Bend Water
District Board of Trustees.
If approved by Middleport Village Council, the next step is to file
a petition in the Meigs County
Court of Common ['leas for recognition of the new district.
Ordinance discussed
A proposed yard sale ordinance
failed to get a second reading and
was sent back to the ordinance
committee for possible revision
after council members said they
received complaints the proposed
ordinance was too strict or unnecessary.

Realtor Dottie Turner said the
proposed ordinance, designed to
stop perpetual yard sales, would
hun poor people instead.
"A lot of people need the extra
money to buy diapers or food," ·she
sai~. "We're not a big city, we
don t need tn be so uptight." ,
Other business
In other matters, council:
- Authorized spending up to
$8,000 to repair portions of Pleasant Rjdge and Mulberry Avenue in
add1tton to the parking lot at the
Pomeroy ·Municipal Building;
- Approved the transfer of
$15 ,000 from the fire fund to the
fire truck fund;
- Discussed a problem with

people breaking into village parkmg meters. Village residents were
advised to call the police department if they see anyone tampering
with the parking meters;
- Considered examining the
possibility of extending the permitparking only area in the upper
parking lot and the creation of
handicapped parking areas;
-Approved the mayor's report
of$4,588.
·
Present were Hysell, Reed and
council memb'ers Wehrung, John
Blaettnar, Scou Dillon, Bill Young
and Thomas Werry, and Village
Adrmmstrator John Anderson. Not
attending was conncilwoman Betty
Baronick.

Murder suspect resided in
abandoned igloo in TNT area

Woman becotnes officet·
'to make a. difference'

Social Security used
for funeral expenses

Low tonight In mki-SO., partly
cloudy. Thursday, high In '80s.

on Aging whicb wiD provide volunteers· to assist
with clerical and directive work, Ann Looktan,
R. N.; Riverside Methodist Hospital, Nor111a
Torres, R.N., Meigs Health Deparlnlent, Rhonda Dailey, R. N., Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and T. C. Ervin, Health Department.

PROSTATE CANCER SCREENING Meeting jo complete plans for a free prostate
screening cllntc 01r Sept. :i9 at the Meigs County
Health Department were from the ldt, Dr.
James Witherell, one of the examining physicians, Susan Oliver of the Meigs County Council

Prostate cancer screening
clinic scheduled Sept. 29
lly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A prostate cancer screening
clinic has been planned for Sept. 29
at the Meigs County Health
Department.
~
Final plans for the screening
were made at a recent meeting of
the cooperating agencies - Riverside Methodist Hospital, Meigs
County Health Department, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Meigs
County Council on Aging, and
Continuity of Care.
Meeting recently with rcpresen- .
tatives of those agencies and Dr.
James Witherell, who will be one
of inc three examining physicians,
to di.scuss the clinic function was
Ann Looktan, outreach director for
the Cancer Institute at Riverside.
She is also affiliated with the
National Cancer Institute in Ohio.
Looktao said this is Riverside's
fourth year of doing massive
screening and the second year into
a five year study of the University
of Colorado where the results of
prostatic special antigen (PSA), a
blood test, and rectal examinations

for prostate cancer arc compared. ·is coordinaiing the screening the
This is the hospital's first year to first 60 men to call will be scheddo outside screening, according to ulea. They will be sent questionLooktan. A program of follow-up naires to fill out along with
for several years is planned as a hcmocult packets. On the day of
part of the screening clinic.
the clinic, they are to return the
Statistic show that prostate can: completed questionnaires. The men
cer is the second mos.t common will then be directed to Veterans
cause of cancer death in men. Each Memorial Hospital laboratories for
ycnr over 120,000 men are diag- the PSA blood test.
nosed with prostate cancer and the
Returning to the Health Departrisk increases with age.
mcnt, weight, height and blood
The warning signs are a change pressure will be taken and then the
in urination patterns lasting at least physical examination will be given
two wee~. frequen.t unnatJ~n .espe- by one of the three male medical
cl3lly a~ mght, J?Crs1ste~t pam m the doctors. A registered nurse will
back, h.1p, pelv~c or th.'gh, bummg show those being screened four
sensation d~rmg unnat1on and models of the actual prostate gland
mabd1ty to unnate, .
ranging from the normal to the canThe screenmg Will take place cerous gland. There will also be a
from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Sept. 10 minute film, educational book29. Anyone 50 &lt;!r .over who has nc;&gt;t lets and follow-up information
had a PSA, a d1g1tal rectal ex~m1- given to the clients.
.
nat1on ~r a ~o~pletc physic~!
Torres emphasized that the:e IS
exa.mmat1on w1thm the past year, IS no charge for the examinauons
mv1ted to take part m the prostate which would cost over $100 if hanscreening clinic. The. screen!ng is died by a regular physician.
tree although don~t10ns Will be
To schedule appoinunents, resiaccepted.
dents may call the Health DepartAccording to Norma Torres who ment, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. 992-6626.

Rain improves conditions, but
drought continues around Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
late-summer drought has produced
pockets of sharp agricultural losses
but appears to be less dramatic
overall than other recent dry speUs,
a member of a multiagency task
force said.
"We want to be careful about
this. I don't want to downplay
those folks that are hurting. We
can't ignore that situation," said
Stan Ernst of Ohio State University
Extension.
"But when we look at the big
picture of Ohio and the Midwest in
general, look at wbere we were in
July when we started talking about
bumper crops," Ernst said Tuesday
after a meeting of the Ohio
Drought Task Force.
Agricultural economists and
farmers had predicted high yields
before the dry spell that hit in
August.
"I would guess that's taken the
bumper off the crop in most cases,
not in all cases," Ernst said.
The National Weather Service
said soaking rain of 1 to 4 inches

Iaie last week eased - but did not
end - the drought The rain also

Ohio's drought
assessment at-a-glance
By The Associated Press
- Crop damage assessmfnt
reports from Crawford, Saodusky and Seneca counties sent
to U.S. Department of Agriculhlre, tbe first step in seeking
drought disaster declarations
that would 111ake qualified farlllers eligible for low-interest loans.
- The U.S. Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service said similar reports will be
reviewed Thursday from 17
other counties: Brown, Defiance,
Erie, Fulton, Gallla, Hancock,
.Jackson, Jefferson, Lorain,
Lucas, Medina, Meigs, Ottawa,
Portage, Richland, Sum111lt and
Wood.
,
August · precipitation,
statewide average: 1.56 Inches.
Percent ofnor111al: 45 percent.
'

•

••

"

The suspect in a Mason County
murder told Florida officials he has
lived in abandoned igloos in the
TNT area for the past several
months.
David John Francisco, 18, told
Investigator Chuck Brannan of the
Baker County, Florida Sheriff's
Department, he had attended sehool
at Point Pleasant through the lOth
~e and had been living in igloos
10 the TNT area
Francisco wiU be questioned
today to find out-what part, if any,
he played in the shooting death of
Norman Ray Laudermilt, 28, of
Mason by Mason County Sheriff
Ernie Watterson and Sgt G.L.
Clark of 'the Point Pleasant
Derachm~nt-West Virginia State

Police.
The local officials arrived in
Florida Tuesday and questioned
Francisco. Clark said Tuesday night
that the questioning will continue
because they have nothing definite
yet
Aorida authorities spotted Francisco in Laudennilt's stolen truck
early Monday morning.
Laudermilt's body was found
Thursday, September 2, in a dry
creekbed beside the McClintic
Wildlife Management Area's public
shooting range. He had been shot
six times either right before or right
after dark Wednesday.
Francisco scufOed with a Baker
County, FL deputy after being spotted. He ran into a heavil v wooded

area, wearing nothing but a pair of
shorts. Francisco eluded authorities
for approximately 14 hours before
he was taken into custody.
Brannan said Francisco is charged with dealing in,siDlen property
and resisting arrest with violence.
Francisco appeared before a judge
in Baker County on the charges
Tuesday afternoon and a $75,000
bood was set, Brannan said.
According to Clark, Florida
officials will be processing
Uudennilt's truck Wednesday
morning. He said authorities had
planned to process the vehicle
Tuesday, but were unable to do so
lxica\ISC of a murder in a neighboring county in Florida.

Pumps are going off;
SOCCO going to court
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Negotiations have broken off
between .Southern Ohio Coal Co.
and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) regarding
the removal of 2,000 gallons per
minute of partially-treated water
from the company's Meigs No. 31
Mine.
•B. J. Smith, public affairs director for American Electric Power,
Fuel Supply, which owns the mine
said late this morning that the U.S.
EPA's order to stop the removal of
that water becomes effective at
1:20 p.m. today.
Meanwhile, Southern Ohio Coal
attorneys today will ask U.S. District Judge Sandra Beckwith to nullify the U.S. EPA order, Smith
said. ·
Tlie order to stop pumping only
affects the 2,000 gallons per minute
of partially treated water going into
Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon
Creek, according to Smith.
"We can continue pumping
water that is released into Parker
Run, a tributary of Leading Creek.
That water is fully processed in the
Meigs Mine 31 water treatment
facility. Water released into Parker
Run. a tributary of Leading Creek,
now meets federal and state water
quality standards. This was
achieved through the recent

. upgrading of the Meigs 31 water
treatment facility," the company
spokeswoman pointed out.
"Again the water that is being
removed from that portion of the
mine (going into Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon Creek) has less
environmental effect because it has
a higher water quality with lower
iron content and nearly neutral Ph
levels," said Smith.
Since pumping began the company has put into service a second
pond at the Sugar Run release point
which allows more of the iron to
drop out as sediment before it is
released into the sb'eam. she said.
Extensive monitoring by ecological experts show that Raccoon
Creek and the Ohio River have
experienced minimal effects from
the mine water release, she conunued.
Smith pointed out that the environ mental effects of the release
have proven to be tempor~ry as
aquatic life is already retummg to
the creek.
Judge Beckwith issued a preliminary injunction against the U.S.
EPA .ind the U.S. Office of Surface
Mining on Aug. 19. That injunction
prevented the agencies from stop1ling water removal efforts at the

reduced what had been a growing
threat of fire in dry grass and
woodland areas of eastern Ohio.
Ernst said it is too earlr to speculate about the fil)3ncial unpact of
the drought.
"I think by the first week of
October we're going to have a pretty good guess. The corn crop will
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
be in. They 'II be harvesting some
- Negotiations between theUnitof it seriously. We'll have a good
A Chester man was found guilty cd Mine Workers and the Bttumlhandle on what's going on," he
of two counts of criminal damaging no us Coal Operators Association
said.
Larry Gabric, a weather service in a Meigs County Court trial Tues- were postponed until today while
' union officials consider a contract
meteorologist in Cleveland, said · day.
According
to
Assistant
Proseproposal issued by coal operators.
the rain may have reduced drought
cuting
Attorney
Christor,her
E.
sandy Taylor, a spokeswoman
severity by one category in the
Tenaglia,
Robert
"Micky':
Bauer
for
the Federal Mediation and Constate's 10 climate regions.
was
convicted
following
a
trial
ciliation
Service, said negotiators
' ' Where we had extreme
County
Court
Judge
Patrick
rescheduled
Tuesday's meeting for
before
drought in the north central pan of
H.
O'Brien.
The
charges
are
sectoday.
the state ... it's possibly down to
Tom Hoffman, a spokesman for
the severe category now. Where we ond degree misdemeanors.
Bauer
was
charged
on
July
8
the
coal operators' negotiating
had severe drought, it's probably
with
damage
to
a
1985
Volkswateam,
said the operators "reduced
down into the moderate range,''
gcn
owned
by
Belinda
Lane.
paper
all of the things that we
10
Gabric said.
Judge
O'Brien
sentenced
Bauer
have
been
talking about since the
An updated drought report is to
to
60
days
in
jail,
suspended
ID
six
first
of
the
year."
be compiled later this week. As of
" I don't think it should be
Aug. 28, six of the 10 regions were day. He was also ordered to pay
restitution in the amount of $1,000. viewed as a breakthrou~h." Hoffexperiencing severe drought •

Chester man
found guilty

mine.
Both agencies appealed the ruting to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals, asking for a stay of the
injunction. The Court of Appeals
denied the stay request from the
Office of Surface Mining, but
granted it, in part, on Aug. 30 with
regard to the U.S. EPA.
According to Smith, the court's ,
ruling permitted the U.S. EPA to
conduct an investigation of the
Meigs mine pumping operation .
However, the ruling enjoined U.S.
EPA from issuing an order requiring the immediate cessation of
pumping until after it had concluded such an investi~ation .
The U.S. EPA ISSUed its order to .
stop the water removal on Sept. 2,
only two days after receiving permission from the appeals court to
conduct its investigation, Smith
said.
"We will now ask the judge to
enforce the injunction and nullify
the U.S.EPA order," said Smith
· this morning.
Southern Ohio Cpal initiated its
water removal plan July 30 under
an ~cr by the Ohio EPA that set
stric standards the company must
fol w during and after the pump~ontinued on page 3

Talks delayed as union
reviews new proposal
rnan said. "It is pan of the ongoing
effort to keep talks going and moving forward."
He characterized the offer as a
" comprehensive proposal" that
covers all issues on the bargaining
table: job security, wages and benefits .
.
Union spokesman Jim Grossfeld
declined comment on the new proposal, but said,,· "Our ~jective
remains winning a contracHhat
honors our members' productivity
with job security which they've
earned.''

About 17,000 mine workers in
seven states, including Ohio, are on
strike over job security at association mines. The sl1ike started May

10.

�•

WICfnllday, September 8, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

This political party
starts small, thinks big

You SaY
Voices

You

·

Sen.Jan M. Long

EDITOR'S NOTE- Mike Feinsilber bas covered events in Washington since 1968.

Berry's World

I

By Tht Associated Press'
Cloudiness will move east ~ly
tonight Lows tonight will fall into
the SOs.
Thursday, .a strong cold front
will approach northwest Ohio by
late in the day. There will be a risk
of showers across northern and
' central Ohio ahead of the front
Thursday. A thunderstorm could
move into northwest Ohio late
Thursday.
Strorig southwest wiryls will
boost temperatures up a bit
Highs Thursday afternoon will
reach 75 to 80 degrees statewide in
spite of some clouds.
Tbe cold front will move across
the state by Friday. morning bringing cool weather to the region.
Highs this weekend will generally
be in the 60s across Ohio which is
well below the normals for this

Jack Kemp . Bob Dole. Dan presidents, to lead the GOP out of
Quayle. Bill Bennett. Phil Gramm. the political wilderness into the
Dick Cheney. William Weld. Pat promised land.
Buchanan. Carroll Campbell. Lynn
In the meantime, while the party
Martin.
Expect to see at least half of
them stamping through cornfields
in Iowa come 1996. All have been
mentioned as possible standard- waits for this mess&amp;h to magically
appear out of the political ether, the
bearers for the Republican Party.
The GOP faithful are desperate- Democrats continue to control the
!y seeking a hero to help the party reins of power in Washington and
overcome the igno,10iny of its in most of the state capitals. All the
crushing defeat last November. Not speculation on whom the Republion! y did Republicans remain the cans will put forward to challenge
decided minority in both houses of Bill Clinton three years from now
Congress, they also lost the White distracts attention away from the
House for the ftrst time since 1976. party's real problem.
That is: The GOP does not ·
It is quite a comedown from a
know
what it stands for anymore.
decade ago, when the GOP had a
This
ideological
rift played out durman in the Oval Office and a
ing
1992
when
acliritony
bmke out
majority in the Senat~~. Back then,
the
conservative
wing of
between
Republicans were brashly talking
about wresting control. of the the pany and the so-called moderHouse (for the first time since ate wing.
The "moderates" blame the
Eisenhower .was president). They
quixotically thought they would conservatives for G~orge Bush
COID(Jlete the political trifecta that, going down to defeat-last Novemiromcally, the Democrats enjoy ber and for the party giving ground
to the Democrats on both the
today.
Oh, how the best-laid plans of national and state level. "If only
the conservatives were not so di vimice and I!!en often go awry.
sive," the squishy Republican
Ov~r the last decade, the GOP
has become less a party of ideas moderates say. "If only our party
and more a party of personality. It sounded more Iik~ the ~mocrats
almost s~ems these days that the on abOrtion and gay rights and sinparty of Lincoln and Reagan is gle parenthood."
waiting for someone to come
Please.
along, someone imbued with the
History shows that it was a consame stuff as the 16th and 40th servative Republican, Reagan. who

•

•lcolumbusln•

· activity) to create a central registry
of protection orders issued by
courts. The Bureau would also be
required to maintain a toll-free, 24
hour telephone line whereby law
enforcement agents responding to a
domestic violence call could
inquire whether or not a protection
order has been issued to either of
the individuals involved, Through
the Bureau's collection and mainte·
nance of protection orders, victims
of domestic violence can be
assured of protection no matter
where they might travel in the
state.
.
For more information about
domestic violence, or for a referral·
to a domestic violence center in'
your area, (Jiease call the Ohio
Domestic V1olence Network toll-:
f~ee at 1-800-934-9840. And as
always, if you would like m'ore·
information on this or any other.
issue, feel free to write me at the·
Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio
43266-0604, or call me at (614)
466-8156.
.

,
won the Wh1te House in both 1980
and 1984 and a i')ominally conservative Republican, George Bush,
who won m 1988.
.
That Bush went down to defeat ,
in 1992 owes to the perception in
the minds of a lot of people that he
betrayed some of the conservative
principles for which he stood in
1988.
Not, as both the Democrats and
Republican moderates would have
us believe, because of perceptions
that he formed some l::ind of unholy
alliance with the GOP's right wing.
• In the same vein, the Republican
Party did not get whomped at the
polls last November because the
party plalform had a strong conservative tilt. The platform was no
less conservative in 1980,1984'and
1988, yet that did not hurt Republican candidates.
The reality is that the GOP is
adrift because it has sacrificed principle .to appease the moderates in
its midst It has backed away from
the firm ideological positions that
once so clearly delineated the GOP
from the Democratic Party in the
minds of voters.
On a number of salient issues taxes, regulation, defense, environ-

ment to ·name a few - differences:
between the two parties became so .
muddled that only the most dis-·
ceming voters could make a dis-.
tinction.
Bush, a good man, a good~
Republican, but never really a
dyed-in-the-wool conservative,~
bears much of tlie responsibility. ·
He raised taxes in 1990. He :
allowed the number of federal reg- .
ulations to multiply. He cut
defense. And he gave his blessing:
to such onerous environmental ·
laws as the Clean Air Act. ·
:
It is hard to imagine that Bill :
Clinton would have done any dif- ·
ferent.
:
So, then, it really doesn't matter :
who the Republicans anoint for
1996. It can be any of the 10-pack ;
mentioned above. Or it could be '
some unforeseen dark horse. The:
GOP does not help itself by waiting '
for some political savior to emerge
to h!llp the party recover the ground :
it has lost over the last decade. The :
party of Lincoln and Reagan will ·
remain adrift until it ftgureS out just :
what it stands for.
·
Joseph PerkiDs Is a columnist '
ror The San Diego Unlon-Trl- :
bune.
.:

Today in history

.

"fwo-hundred years ag~. ori Sept. 5, _1793, the ~ei~ of Terror began :
dunng the French Revolution as the National Convenllon instituted t\arsh •
measures to repress counter-revolutionary activities. In the year that fol- :
lowed, thousands of people were sent to the guillotine.
I

time of year which range between
75 and 80 degrees.
High pressure was centered
across northern Ohio. A cold front
was across central Callada. A stationary front was over the s.outheastem United States. The high will ·
move east of Ohio by Thursday
mooting. Tbe cold front will move
rapidly southeast approaching
northwest Ohio by Thursday
evening.
Tbe record-high tempefllure for ·
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 100 degrees in 1939
while the record low was 39
degrees in 1951.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:52
p.m. Sunrise Thursday at 7:07a.m.
and sunset will be at 7:50p.m.
Around tbe nation
Fog and clouds kept the East
Coast cool and wet in spots this

morning, while a heat wave mounted in the Wes1.
. Tropical Storm Floyd was movm~ toward Bermuda today with
wmds near 50 ll!ph. Forecasters
said it probably would not hit the
United States.
.
A band of showers moved today
from the Deep South toward the
ll!id-Atlantic Coast. More than 3
inches of rain fell in just over an
hour Tuesday in Savannah, Ga.,
while· Jacksonville, Fla., was
soaked with more than 2 inches.
Highs in the 80s were forecast
over most of the Southeast, with
90s in south Florida and south

Texas.

The Northeast and much of the
Midwest was expecting to remain
relatively cool, with highs in the
60s in northern New England and
uppe~ Great Lakes area and 7Os

elsewhere.
Stron&amp; thunderllams wae lilcely aaain ,this afternoon over the
southern P!ains. Two-inch diameter
hail was reported Tuesday in the
Texas panhandle.
Suimy skies over much of the
Far West were forecast again
today. Highs into the 90s were
expected from southwest New
Mexico to southern Washington.
Triple-dil(it hiRhS were forecast for
southern Arizona and California's
interior valleys, with 80s elsewhere
in the region.
Warm, gusty winds from the
Rockies were expected to blow
across eastern Montana and the
Dakotas, pushing temperatun:s into
the 80s.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 110 degrees at
Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
.

Middleport physician honored --Meigs announcementsPt
C1993Accu-Weather,lnc.

-~---Weather-----South-Central Oblo
Tonight, partly cloudy with the
low SS-«1. Thursday, partly cloudy
with the high near 80. Chance of
rain 20 percent
Extellded rorecast:

Friday throu1h Sunday:
A chance of showers Friday.
Highs 65-70. Fair and cool Saturday and Sunday, Lows in upper 40s
to mid-50s Saturday and 45-50
Sunday. Highs in low to mid-«ls
Saturday and 65·70 Sunday.

....__-Area deaths-. Raymond. Glenn Hoffman, 76,
Word has been JW:ived here of
Wilkesville, Ohio died in Holzer the recent death of Franklyn Knight
Rutherford, 96, of Anaconda, MenMedical Center, Tuesday.
Born Nov. 24, 1916, in Green- Jana. He was the son of the late
rield, he was the son of the late Rob and Elma Knight Rutherford
Carey and Melva Grate Hoffman. and spend much of his childhood
He was a retired farmer and self and early adult life living with relael!'lployed seed and fertilizer sales- tives in Meigs County. His grandfather was the late B. F. Knight, ·
man.
He is survived by wife Ora Eliz- former sheriff of Meigs County.
Mr. Rutherford served in the
abeth Metheney, married Sept 7, in
Vinton and several nephews and Marines during World War ll, later
returning to Anaconda where he
nieces.
He ' was a member of the and a partner owned and operated a
'Danville Holiness Church, the summer resort. He was also a
Joseph Freeman American Legion world traveler visiting many forPost 476, Wilkesville and and the eign countries.
Wilkesville Volunteer Fire DepartRelatives remaining in Ohio
·IRent He was the grand marshal of include Earl Knight of Middleport,
Howard Knight of Olester, Chester
the 1993 July 4 parade.
' Services will be Friday at II Knight of Pomeroy, Nola K. Will
a.m. at Danville Holiness Church, of Canal Winchester, and Carl
Danville, Ohio, with Rev. Riel:: Knight of Columbus.
'Maloyed officiating. Buril!l will be
in the S11Iem Center Cemetery.
· · Joseph Freeman of the American
Veterans Memorial
Legton Post 4 76 will present an
Tuesday
admissions: Virginia
American Flag.
Edgingto,
Pomeroy
and Roger Hill,
Friends may call the the
Racine.
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, VinTuesday discharges: James
ton, Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
Silencer,
Middlepon. ·
' 7to9p.m.
•
' Holzer Medical Center
Sept. 7 dlsebarges: Don Russell, Sanford Bills, Mrs. Brian Mer· Units of the Meigs County · shon and son, MarRaret Buchanan,
f,mergency Services responded to Carrie Saxon, Charlotte Rice, John
: three calls for assistance Tuesday Roach, Luella Driggs, Richard
Richmond and Rodney Stapleton.
. and early wednesday morning.
Sept. 7 birth: Mr. and Mrs.
. Units respotlding wen: 8:39 p.m.
Michel
Merry, daughter, Thurman.
Tuesday Pomeroy to State Route
124 in Minersville for Robert Frye
who was transponed to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 2:28 a.m.
· Wednesday Rutland to Meigs Mine
: 112 for Roger Smith who was transported to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital; 7:26 a.m. Wednesday
Pomeroy to I04 Peacock Ave. for
Margaret Douglas who was transported to VHM.
Two defendants received fines
and jail sentences on charies of
Name contest winner assaulting police officers tn the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Johnathan Acree of 43S Headley Hoffman Tuesday night
St., Middlepon, correcdy identified
a recent mystery farm in the SunShannon L . Gerlach, New
day Times-Sentmel as that of Ben Haven, W. Va. was fined $100 and
Ewing, 41144 Keebaugh-Follrod costs and sentenced to five days in
Road, Pomeroy. He was one of jail on th.e charge, along with $105
three to correcdy identify the farm and costs and five days in jail on a
with his name being selected in a resisting arrest charge. Willi.affi R.
drawing. Acree will receive $5 Graves, Jr. Middleport was ftned
from the Ohio Valley Publishing $100 and costs and sentenced to 15
Co. which co-sponsors the contest days in jail on the assault charges,
with the Meigs Soil and Water $100 and costs and 10 days in jail
Conservation District.
for destruction of village property,
and $25 and costs for disorderly
manner.
The Dally Sentinel

Hospital news

Squads make 3 runs

Middleport
Court news

(OIPI 113-HI)

Publllbed ellery lfl«D,ooa, Moaday lbtoup
fltdly, Ill Court St., Pomoroy, Otllo by lhe
Ohio Volley P.,blllblDI C.-yllduiUmodla
11&lt;:., Pomoroy, Ohio 4S769, Pb. 9!12·2156.
,_,.,._pold•Pomon&gt;y.Ohio.
Member' The .wodlled Preoo, ud lhe Ohio
N'ewiplpW AllocillioD, NatiODII Advmiii.DJ
Re~Dbtlve, Br111hlm NeWipJper Stlea,
713 Third Aveaue, New York, New York
10017.
ro!TMASTER: Sead oddrwo chaaaeo to The
Dilly Seotiael, I t1 C- St, PometOy, Ohio
4$169.
S018CIIP110N RATES

1J c.n.r or Molar Roule

0. w.k, .. .......... .... .......... .............. ... ..... .$1 .60
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rtmlt hi advlllte dlr&amp;::t to The Dlily StDlillol

oaalhree.IJI or ll moDlh b11IJ. Credit will be
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No IUbiCripliOill by mail perqlitted iD WUI
where home carriet service llaYail~le.
·

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:ze w-.. .......................... .......... -¥s.so
•

-

u

'

A Middleport doctor was among
the 26 Ohio family physiciaris honored for SO years of medical practice and dedicated service to their
patients and communities at the
recent 43rd Annual Scientific
Assembly or the Ohio Academy of
Family Physicians held in Toledo.
Dr. J!)seph Davis, retired, was
recognized for his "lasting contributions to the field of family practic·e".
"Fifty years in medical practice
represents professional commitment worthy of recognition.
Through the years, these physicians
have contributed to improving the
health care of Ohioans, sometimes

serving Several generations of families," said Mary Jo Welker, MD,
of Columbus, president. "It is an
!~dmirable accomplishment when a
physician reaches such a significant
career milestone."
The Ohio Academy of Family
Physicians is a statewide professional association of ll(iproximately
3,500 members, mal::ing it the
fourth largest state chapter of the
American Academy of Family
Physicians. Since 1947, the Academy has represented the professional
interests of O~io family physicians,
provided postgraduate medical
education, and encouraged medical
students to enter the fteld.

Franklyn Rutherford

Jlaymond G. HotTman

'~

victim of domestic violence and the
alleged offender to enhance ob~­
tivity, and diminish and poSSible
intimidation.
Because intimidation can often
prevent arrest, the bill requires that
police officers would not be permitted to require that the victim
consent to ftling charges against
the offender, a practice which often
places victims m a "damned if you
do, damned if you don't" situatiOn.
If an arrest is not made, the bill
requires police officers to include
in their incident repon a clear statement of the reason why. Police
officers would also be required to
give the victim written notice of
their legal rights and remedies as
well as information about available
community services.
To better protect victims from
further attacks, Senator Sherrer's
bill would also require the Bureau
of Criminal Identification and
Investi.l(ation (which currently
maintains a state-wide database
relating to crimes and criminal

I

W. VA.

••

GOP needs to get back to its roots
.
Joseph Perkins

"I have a confession to make. I deliberately
changed my shopping route to throw off the
store's traffic-pattern research.·

Accu-Weamere fmecut for

"

The wrath of domestic violence

Page 3

Cold front expected to move into Ohio Thursday

•
IToledol7so I

his death. "Until recently, the only
But then something changed.
treatment for the disease was While in Los Angeles in the '60s
avoidance, prayer, punishment or and early '70s, Sundance bet:'n
incarceration. (The police) didn't spending his jail time readinjl w
need 'probable cause' whatsoever, bool::s and writing. With his eighthand they didn't have to have any- grade education, Sundance !:l~
one appear iii court as complainillg · writing writs to the court, pi
g
for an end to the
WitnesseS.
li practice
and of
• jailing
th
· Sundance's journey .from social chronic alcoho cs
putung em
miscreant to messiah began 66 to worl:: for the local government.
years ago on the Standing Rock
''The system was a mountain
Sioux Reservation in South Dako- and I was only dirt," he would
ta, where he was born into the later write. Time after time, his
H;unkpapa tribe of the Sioux indi- writs came back with the same
ans. His great-grandfather was a stamp: "Denied." Then a longfamous Sioux war chief, Mad Bear. haired graduate of Stanford Law
For the next 30 years, Sundance School visited him in prison. Timelived a life on the road that would thy McFiynn decided to take his
make Jack Kerouac blush. In this case to court. On July I 0, 197 5, the
world, passing out drunk meant "Sundance" lawsuit was filed in
geuing "jack-rolled" for all your Los Angeles.
worldly possessions, ll'3llsportation
Eighteen years later, the practiwas a passing freight train and cal effect of his crusade can be felt
home was 'the closest bar in what- in police stations across the counever town he happened to be. Over try. Although the California
the years, he was stabbed, shot, Supreme Court eventually stopped
beaten and survived more than 200 short of declaring laws against pubbouts with the "d.t.s," or delirium lie inebriation unconstitutional, the
tremens, vivid hallucinations that court declared that jailing someone
occur during alcohol withdrawal. for the disease of alcoholism was
Long before the world had heard of illegal. More than that, the publiciRodney King, Sundance learned ty that arose from his case led hun•
first hand what police brutality dreds of law enforcement officials
to rethink their policies regarding
arresting those who are drunk and
homeless.
Sundance never forgot his former compatriots on Skid Row. He
lived out his last years in the same
flophouse in downtown Los Angeles where he used to drink and
brawl, surrounded only by his
books and a black-and-whtte television set. In 1980, he iumed down
an offer of $100,000 to sell his
story to television. Instead, he ran a
detox center on Skid Row and cam;
paigned for Native American
rights.
.
"I think there is genetic memory that comes from thousands and
thousands of years back," he
wrote, ''It goes on forever somewhere in the mind, and sometimes
it'll come out in certain people·.
They can make a change if these
people get a chance to stand on
their crossroads of destiny. J
believe that's what I did when I
challenged the system.''
.'
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentinel

OHI O W e&lt;~ th e t
Tbunday, SepL 9

~~.?.!NS~~~ .!.~~~~?~~e~
~o.!!~c
~rusader
servi~

Sundance tool:: on the system and simply be re-aqested after
sentences, and put bacl:: to work for
. .. won.
DBVOTBD TO 11IE ll'n'ERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON. AREA
Sundance, whose given name the county.
·
was Rupert S. McLaughlin, died of
bone cancer last month in Los
Angeles. But his nearly lifelong
disease was chronic alcoholism,
which disproportionateIy pIagues
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Native Amencans. Although tall
Publisher
and intimidating, Sundance spent
most of his life fighting for survival
on Sl::id Rows from Pocatello to
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
Phoenix, His legacy is that he
That all changed with the "Sun· General Manager
Controller
transformed how the American dance case." Although Sundance
judicial system treats victims of ultimately failed. in his goal of havLE1TERS OF OPINION are welcom'e. They should be less than 300
alcoholism.
ing public drunkenness laws
word&amp;. All tellers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
Sundance
was
jailed
at
least
250
declared
unconstitutional, his loneaddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
times
before
he
quit
drinking
in
Iy
battle
against a system he
should be lD good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ,
1977. Sundance would no sooner believed was corrupt has led to drabe released from jail than the Los matic changes in the way police,
Angeles police would arrest him and society in general, view alcoagain for public drunkeness. Some- hoi addiction.
times his freedom lasted only a few
In Los Angeles alone, police
hours, or as long .as it took to get used to make more than 50,000
drunlc again. It was, as he would arrests per year for public drunkenlater describe it, like "doing a life ness. After the Sundance case, Los
sentence on the installment plan."
Angeles police now arrest .only
Sundance suspected that the about 3,000 people each year for
By MIKE FEINSILBER
L.A.P.D. was operating a form of public drunkenness.
Associated Press Writer
slave Jabot. Putting drunks in
"All I had to do was stay alive
WASHINGTON - Joel Rogers has gorten in line - a long, honor- prison allowed the police depart· and 1 could change things," Sunable, frustrated line that runs through much of American history. He men! to pad their arrest statistics. dance wrote in an unpublished
stands with the Bull Moosers, Free Soilers, Know Nothings, Greenback- Since alcoholics seldom stop drink- autobiography he finished with his
ers, Prohibitionists, Socialists, Dixiecrats, Right to Lifers, Libenarians.
He sllinds with the Eugene V. ~bses, Eugene McCarthys, William Z.
Fosters, Benjwnin Spocl::s, John Andersons, Barry Commoners, Henry
THe.
Wallaces and George Wallaces of American politics.
He's formed a tl!ird party.
WoN'T
But this one is different It intends to enter politics from the bottom up
-electing school board and zoning commission members, then state leg~T
SIJ?e.P?
islators and members of Congress before it shoots for big things like the
presidency.
.
Most third parties aimed high. And most existed for principle or
protest Winning didn't much matter.
·
Rogers is a professor of law, political science and sociology at the University of Wisconsin. As a teen-ager, he passed out campaign fliers for
Robert F. KeMedy.
His pany is the New Party. It claims 3,000 members- "not a bunch
of professors~ but mostly poor and woddng-dass people, about 30 percent
black, half women, a lot of union people.'' He guesses most voted for BiD
Clinton or Ross Perot.
Tbe New Party, he said, already has run 28 candidates for local office
in Montana, New York, New Jersey, Michigan, and elected 20. "We will
never waste your vote or act as spoilers," Rogers pledges. His party runs
where it can be competitive, or not at all.
Even if the party doesn't earn even the footnote in history that has
awaited most third parties, he offers a view of contemporary politics
that's worth a bearing.
''It's possible the American dream will be restored and people will be
well off, but the indications are that won't happen," he said in an interview. "We've had 10 years of effective economic decline for 80 percent
of the population. I don't see economic competition (from abroad) gelling
easier or our ability as a counlry to respond to it getting better."
"You could imagine a situation in which, for the ftrst time in a long
time, you bad the white working class see that it had interests with
African Americans. When you talk to white workers now, you don't hear
them say, the way they used to, that black people are poor because they're
lazy, The reason is that they themselves are getting smushed.''
Rogers thinks the time is right because people are making demands on
government that Democrats and Republicans seem incapable of fulfilling.
RDI!ers said the people have three overarching goals. They want radical
Domestic violence, by a long ter will be able to apply for a
camJ181gn reform and to clean up government. They want nationalistic shot, is the leading cause of injury $10,000 annual grant
trade policies and government intervention in business decisions to pro- to women in the United States
Besides increasing funding for
mote growth. And they want government accountability - referendums, today.ln fact, more women are vic- shelters, the Ohio General Assemrecalls, initiatives.; elimination of political action committees, lowered tims of domestic abuse than are
barriers for outsiders to seek office, term limitations - in other words, raped, mugged, or involved in
more democracy.
automobile accidents combined.
Conventional politics won't achieve those ends, he says. He says cam- According to the FBI, at least 30%
paign reforms Congress is considering are timid and that President Clin- of all female homicide victims are
ton can't enact even modest economic stimulation. When people speak of killed by their husbands or bly has ·introduced a total of seven
Washington what they say is, "They just don't get it"
boyfriends. But cases where death pieces of legislation since the new
Rogers citeS the 1992 findings of pollster Gordon Black of Rochester, is involved are not the only cases. year designed to help and protect
N.Y.: Two-thirds of voters were dissatisfied with the government, 60 per- One shocking study has shown that battered women. The most comprecent with the two (Jarties. Nearly half said the country neei:Ied a new party more than SO% of women are bat· hensive of these bills is Senator
and 69 percent said they were sure incumbents never would reform the tered at some time in their lives.
Judy Sherrer's Senate Bill 176.
political process.
The General Assembly has One of the major points of Senator
But what about Perot? He got 19 percent of the vote in his ftrst run for responded to these sobering statis- Sherrer's bill is to give police offiofftee. He's got millions of dollars.
tics by providing direct funding for cers more responsibility and
Rogers says Perot could form a party, but seems more interested in the state's domestic violence shel- authority when
being a one-man band. "What he's doing is building United We Stand. ters. For the first time, money has
handling domestic violence
It's a civic association, a lobbying group. It doesn't run people for been specifically allocated in the cases. As currently drafted, Senate
offtce."
state's biennial budget to help sup- Bill 176 specifies that detention
So what about Joel Rogers' idea?
port Ohio's 57 shelters. In the past, and arrest of the assailant is the
"He's got one thing going for him and one going against him," says domestic violence shelters have preferred course of action if the
retired Darunouth professor Frank Smallwood, an expert on third party had to compete against one another arresting officer has reasonable
movements. "As far as I can ascertain, there is a lot of dissatisfaction, for scarce federal and state grants, cause to believe that the abuse has
unease, concern, skepticism - almost cynicism - about the present private donations, and a portion of occurred. Furthermore, the bill
political sewp. A lot of people are scared. He's right about that."
marriage license fees. With the new requires that police officers conBut Smallwood cites the usual obstacles to third parties- the difficul- state funding, however, each she!- duct separate interviews with the
ty of getting on the ballots, the need but the cost of geuing on television.
Put him down as doubtful. Meantime, check your ballot - the bottom
of your ballot - to see how Rogers' idea is doing.

.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,
Wednesday, September B, 1993

Pomeroyy-Middleport, Ohio

Others fined were Anthony E.
Moore, Middleport, $10 and costs,
squealing tires; Jason L. Smith,
Rutland, $10 and costs, expired
registration; William A. Johnson,
Middleport, $10 and costs, running
a stop sign, and $10 and costs, no
motorcycle endorSement; Mary L.
Garnes, Pomeioy, $25 and costs,
no operator.'s license; Bonnie L.
Brewer, Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
speeding; Michele A. Long, Gallipolis, $15 and costs, speeding;
Debra Boring, Pomeroy, $25 aild
costs, no insurance; and Donita J.
Manuel, Middle(lort, $425 and
costs and 3 days tn jail, physical
control of a motor vehicle while,
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs; Donny Allen Freeman,
Pomeroy, $4/lS and costs, 3 days in
jail, physical control of a motor
vehicle while under the influence
of alcohol or drugs, and $50 and
costs, insurance suspension.
· Forfeiting bonds were Billy
Harless, Jr., Rutland, $210, drivina
under suspension; Leon G. Gray.
Pomeroy, $60, allowing an unhccnsed person to operate ·his motor

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
You 'II be thrilled to know that
I've just wrapped up another vacation. You'll be even more thrilled
to know that I continue the tradition of having lousy vacations.
This one, however, did ,stan out
on a higll note. I've always wanted
to see the glitter of Las Vegas,
Nevada, and a number of weeks
ago this alleged glamorous Western
city became the designated vacation spot. The location for our
vacation paradise was the result of
a no-discussion, silent agreement.
After all, why discuss it when it
was general knowledge that doing
Las Vegas ranked high on the
totem pole with me7 And, after all,
am I not king7
However, as time moved closer
to that precious "time off', the
silent spot continued, resulting in
no reservations to Las Vegas or
anywhere else beinB made. Time
waits for no one so It became necessary to schedule a top level summit. This session brought out that
half of us were afraid to get on the
airplane and the other half was a bit
fearful of going so far away from
hoine when health problems could
easily arise. Again, time marched
on and with the attitudes of the participants being such as they were,
no action took place. But then, just
as the vacation time came up to the
wire, an emergency roundtable session took place with both sides caving in a bit. At this concession session, the half afraid to get on the
plane agreed to board the craft
without complaint and the other
half decided that health problems
can happen anyplace, near or far
from borne.
So, with telephone in hand came
the big push for lasl minute reservations to Las ve,as. Visions of
millions of bright lights, top entertainment and breaking the bank
danced in our heads. It took very
few calls to learn that those Las
Vegas package deals which you see
advertised everywhere were "all
taken" and we were advised that
we would have to make separate
arrangements for flights, hotels and
other necessities, Again, back to
the phone. Again, disaster. Flights
were available. However, one airline increased its round trip flight
fare by $150 overnight. Well, we
conceded that's inflation for you.
Then there were the hotel accommodations. We were told, rooms
were just not readily available
because our late reservations trip
was planned during the "biggest
week of the year" in Vegas.
There were a few rooms
though. We were offered accommodations at a place called the

Comfort IM• Now the Comfon Inn
at Las Vegas might be really quite
a show place, but can you imagine
telling your friends that you did
Vegas at the Comfort Inn? Okay,
anywhere else, but Vegas? Personally, I was thinking The Mirage,
The Exqilibur, Or some other exotic chamber of beds. After x number
of phone calls, an x number of
best-made-plan balloons bursting
in air and the phone·growing to my
ear, the Las Vegas trek went down
the drain until later. Isn't that what
we always tell the kids? "Later,
later".
So the vacation beCame more of
a local situation. A trip to the
Amish Country in O])io was nice.
The food is good, the sights are
varied and interesting, and there
are some unique items to buy. The
Amish are ambitious, talented people whom I admire. On the other
hand, after a certain n'umber of
craft and gift shops many with similar merchandise have been visited,
this bit too, can get to be a bit
much. Naturally, I'm not going to
mention that I didn't have to drive
many miles really to come into the
gasoline prices. And as usual, I still
have trouble with this price difference and I still have problems with
the vague explanations I've heard
on the sub.iel;t. Oh, Weill
'
or courie, ·rm sure you know
that I have never been a very
understanding person when it
comes to vacations. I mean we
leave very comfortable homes and
take our lives in our hands to hit
highways ladened with football
field length semis and numerous
would-be Indianapolis Speedway
drivers who never slow down for
rain, snow, sleet or hail, Seems to
me they should hook up with the
postal service. Even though we're
"whole house" people who roam
around freely in our homes, we
pay outrageous prices for single,
confining rooms where we lay
down our heads when we not out
supporting business establishments
many of which stretching the imagination call themselves "restaurants".
When you think about it, the
entire scene doesn't really make
too much sense does it? But
repeatedly, year after rear after
year, many of us "must' get away
from it all. We need a change of
scenery, a change of pace. We need
to see new faces, experience new
adventures. And why1 Well, so we
can bllly appreciate all of the great ·
people and great things in our back
yards. And, of course, so we can
keep smiling.

'S
DAIRY VALLEY
Tfab W.cJr's Special:

Harvest Festival
The annual harvest festival at
Saint John Lutheran Church wiD be
held Sunday. Wonhip will begin at
II am. followed by a potluck dinner at noon. There will also be a
hymn sing and program at 1:30
p.m.
Bedford Trustees to meet
Tbe Bedford Township Trustees
will hold their regular monthly
meeting on Monday, September 13
at 7 p.m. in the town hall. ·
RailrOad Picnic
Tbe Annual railroad picnic and
reunion will be held at Krodel
Park, Point Pleasant, on September
12 at 11 am. All present and former employees at Hobson, Ohio
and Dickinson, West Virginia are
welcome. Bring ·a covered dish.
Meat, snacks and soft drinks have
been donated.
Chester Nazarene
The Chester Nazarene Church
will hold its annual homecoming
on September 12 with an afternoon
service at 1:30~.m. featuring Con- ·
hoe
rad Clark and e Calvary Ec s.
Everyone is welcome.
Tops meeting
TOPS will hold a free motivationa! meeting on September 14 at
6 p.m. in Carpenters Hall. For more
information call992-2973.

Hunter safely course
A hunter safety course is being
offered at the Coolville Lions Club
building on September 15, 17, 22
and 24 from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. The
course is free. For more infomation or to register call Bob PuUins
at 667-3831 or Ed Rood .at 6676348orEd Wigal at667-6657.
Square dance
There will be a round and
square dance at the Long Bottom
Community Building on September
II from 8 p.m. to midnight Music
will be by the True Country Ramblers. Refreshments and cake walks
will be available. Cost is $5 per
couple, $3 per single, $1 for children under 12 and children under
three are free.

Lottery numbers·
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were two tickets sold naming all
five numbers' drawn in TuCiday
nildll's Buckeye S' game, and each
tickel is worth $100,000, the Ohio
Lottery said. .
The winning tickets were sold in
Cleveland and Rocky River.
Hsre are Tuesday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
8. 3-Q
(eight, three, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers
6•0-4.3
(six, zero, four, three)

HUI reunion
The Cha(lman and Myrta Hill
family reuntdn will be held Sunday, September 12 at Star Mill
Pari::. Bring and covered dish and
your own place setting. Eating will
begin at 12:30 p.m. AU family and
friends are welcome.

Stocks

Am Ele Power.................... 38 3/4
AShland Oil ....................... .33 1(2
AT&amp;T................. ~ ...............61 3/4
Bank One........................... 41 7/8
Bob Evans ......................... 17 7/8
Manley reunion
Charming Shop.................. 12 3/8
Descendents of Emett, Lou, and
Champion Ind................... 13 1/4
Carl Manley, Nan Frazier, Corbett
City Holding......................27
Man ley, Menie Aleshire, and Ed
Federal Mogul....................24 3/4
and Lena Little will hold a reunion
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ..42
on Saturday at Star Mill P&amp;rk at S Lands End .......................... 37 3/4
p.m. Please bring a covered dish.
Limited Inc ......................... 21 1/8
Table service will be provided.
Multimedia lnc .................. .32 1{1.
Point Bancorp.................... I4
Friendship Sunday
Rax Restaurant .................. l/32
The Church of Christ at Hicl::ory
Reliance Electric................ 20 1/4
Hills is sponsoring a Friendship
Robbins&amp;Myers.................20 3/4
Sunday on September 12. This
Shoney's lnc...... ................21 1/4
event is an effort to encourage · Star Bank............................ 35 .3/4
members to invite as many friends
Wendy Int'l. ....................... I4 S/8
arid neighbors as possible for worWorthington InL ............ ;.30
ship, then spend an afternoon of Stock reports are the 10:30
good food, gospel singing, activia.m. quotes provided by
ties for the young and getting
Kemper Securities, Inc., or
acquainted with our neighbors.
Gallipolis.
Th1s is an open iflvitation to all.
Bible study will be at 9 a.m. followed by worship at 10 a.m., dinner at noon and a gospel sing at
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
2:30p.m.
446·4524

7

Pumps~ ..
Continued rrom page 1
ing. The order ~intains -the Ohlo
EPA director's authority to order
the ill!mediate cessation of pumping at any time that the environmental impacts threaten to become
irreversible, and also calls for evaluatio!!t!nd restoration of the creeks
by S\:ll,;CO after pumping is COm·
pleted.
·
Approximately 300 Meigs No.
31 employees have been idled
since water entered the mine on
July II.

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, September 8, 1993
Page-4

rr

In NL affairs,

Whiten's four homers tie mark,
help Cardinals split twinbill
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Gil
Hodges. WitHe Mays . Mike
Schmidt. Bob Homer. Lou Gehrig.
· Rocky Colavito. Mark Whiten.
Mark Whiten? What's he doing
in such company? He belongs there
now , and he's got.a bag full of
baseballs to prove it.
Whiten hit four homers Tuesda~
night for one of the greatest offen:
sive nights in baseball history. He
tied the major-league records for
most homers in a game, most RBis
in a game and most RB!s in a doubleheader while leading SL Louis
to a 15-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
The overlooked outfielder
became the 12th major leaguer to
hit four homers in a game and the
first since Homer in 1986. He was
the first in 69 years to knock in 12
runs- the Cardinals' Jim BottomIcy did it in 1924. And his 13 RB!s
in the doubleheader tied Nate Colbert's major-league record of 1972.
It was as unexplainable as it was
unexpec ted. Whiten, a 25-year-old
switch hiner known for his defense,
had trouble describing the swings
that produced the four souvenir
baseballs sealed into a plastic bag
in his dressing cubicle.
"It's like when Michael Jordan
gets in 'the zone,' " Whiten said.
" He's going to score 50 points.
That's kind of the way it felt. ll
didn ' t matter."
Didn't matter who was piiChing.
Didn' t matter what the fans were
doing. Didn't even matter that
c veryone else was frozen by tension as he came to bat in the ninth
inning against Rob Dibble with history on the line.
Whiten wasn't nervous. It was
JUSt another incredible opponunity

on a night that had staned with so
little promise.
Whiten misplayed Reggie
Sanders' line drive to center into a
two-run triple in the ninth inning of
the opener to give the Reds a 14-13
win. Whiten didn ' t do anything
offensively in that game - 0-for-4
with a bases-loaded walk from
Dibble for his only RBI.
Somehow, he found "the zone"
between games.
He hit his second career grand
slam in the first inning off roolcie
Larry Luebbers (2-4). After fouling
out in the fourth, he got to face
anotlier roolcie - Mike Anderson,
making his major-league debuL He
hit a three-run homer off Anderson
in the sixth and another in the seventh.
Things were happening so fast
"Right there, I was really in the
.zone and it really didn't matter,"
Whiten said
Everyone knew what was on the
line when he faced Dibble for the
second time of the night in the
ninth inning. The few thousand
fans left from a crowd of 22,606
stood and cheered Whiten as he
dug into the left-handed baiters'
box.
History was just one more
homer away.
"I didn't think about it,"
Whiten said. "Well. I thought
about it when I was on the field,
but not once I stepped into the box
and put the bat on my shoulder."
And not after Dibble, going
through the wildest spell of his
career, went to a 2-0 count.
"I thought he was going to pitch
around me," Whiten said.
Not a chance. Dibble, who has
hit 100 mph on radar guns numerous times, never backs down from

a challenge like that.
"I wa s warming up in the
bullpen when he hit the one before
that," Dibble said. "I knew I'd
probably face him, and I'd give
him a chance. I was going to go
right after him.
"I knew it was history."
Dibble gave Whiten one of his
best fastballs, right down the middle. Whiten lined it deep to center
- a no-doubter. It travelled fanher
than the other three.
"I was impressed by that one,"
Whi(en said. "It was the best of the
four, I think. It was straightaway."
It went 441 feet, by the Reds'
estimation, an impressive way to
enter the record books.
The fans didn't know all the
particulars, but they knew this was
very special. Ther cheered, bowed
in tribute, and enuced him from the
dugout .for a cunain calL
•'It was nice to be noticed by the
fans," Whiten said. "The curtain
call was very pleasurable. The guys
had to talk me into going out
Lhere.''
The Cardinals had their own
tribute in mind. They lined the
clubhouse floor with red traveling
bags - their version of a red carpet - and crossed their bats overhead in salute.
"I've been around 16 years,"
shonstop Ozzie Smith said. "I've
seen some guys do some unbelievable things, but nothing like
tonight"
.
Whiten has never done anything
like it in his life. Toronto drafted
him in 1986 and found him to be an
outfielder with a good arm - he
was named the outfielder with the
best arm in the South Atlantic
League in 1987.
(See NL on Page 5)

(Valcnmcl&amp; 6-9), 1:35 p.m.
Bolton (Dopam 7·9) 11 Chicago (Bere

7-5), g,o5 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division

Team

W L

Pet.

GB

Phi.la delphil ........... 85

53 .

. 616

Monueal ......... ....... 78
SL l.AJ..tis ......... ....... 75
Chicago.................. 69
Pill'iburgh ..............64

61
63
70
75

.561
.543
.496
.460

Florida ... ... ...........58

1!0

. ~20

Z7

New York ........ ..... ,47

92

.338

38.5

Western Division
San Francisco ........ 89 49 .645
Atlanll ...... ............. 87 52 .626
Houstoo ....... . .... 73 f6
.529
LosA!\geles ...........70 67 .511

7.5
10
16.5
21.5

New YoD:: (J~n J-0) al Texu (Brown
t l-11), s,35 p.m.
Milwaukee (BonCI 9-9) at Kanau City
{Pichardo 6-7), 8:35 p.m.

Thursday's games

California (Holumcr 0-2) at Detroit
(Gullic:kaon 12-7), 7:0:S p.m.
MiMeaota (Erioklon 8-17) 11 CLEVE-

lAND (Clark 4-4), 7,05

TIES RECORDS -The St. Louis Cardinals'
Mark Whiten connects nn a Larry Luebbers
pitch for a homer in the first inning of tbe second game of Tuesday night's doubleheader
against the host C:inclnnatl Reds, who lost 15· 2

2.5
16

18.5

CINCINNA·n ........68 72

.486

22

San Diego ........ ...... 54 85
Colorado .......... ...... 53 86

.388
.381

35.5
36.5

Tuesday's scores
DH: CINCINNATI 14, St Loui1 13
( 1st); St. lAui.s 15, C INCINNATI 2 (2nd)
Mootrea.l 4, Co1ondo 3
O!icago 5. Phibdelphia 4
Houston 4, New York 3 (10 inn.)
San Diego 6, Aorida 4
ALllnta 1. Los Angeles 0

PittabufBh 4, San Fn ncisco 3

Tonight's games
Colora do (Reyn oso 9 -9) aL Montreal
(Rue!Q 6-0), 7:35p.m.
Chie~g o ( Hiblnrd 11· 11 ) 11 Phiildclph.ia (Greene 13-3), 7:35 p.m.
SL Loui ! (Wilson 6-3) at CINCIN NATI (Ayala 5-7), 7:35 p.m.
New York (ftnana 6- 14) It Hou&amp;ton
(Kile 14·6), 8:05p.m.
Florida (Hammond I 0- 9) al S1n Diego
{Ashby 2-9) , 10:05 p.m.
Ath nla {G1avine 1'1-5) 11 Los Angeles
(R. M~mncz 9-9), 10:35 p.m.

- * Transactions * American Luaue
CALIFORNIA ANGELS : Waived
Kelly Gruber, third bueman. Recalled
John Farrell md Scon Lcwi1, pitchers,
and Jim Edmonda , outfielder, from Vancouver of lhe P•cific C01.11 League. Purchased the contnct af Brian Andenon,
piu:hcr, from Vancouver.
DETROIT TIGERS : Sent John DeSilva , pitcher, to lhe l.ol Angclea Dodgcnl.o
complete the trade for Eric Dav ia , outfielder.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Recalled
Mark Kiefer, pitcher, and Troy O'Leary,
outfielder, from New Orlean1 of the
Americtn Auociation.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS' Recalled
Kun Abbott , infielder , and Miguel
Jimmez, pitcher, from Ttcoma of the Pacific Cout Le.a&amp;\le.
TEXAS RANGERS : Activaled Butch
Davis, outfielder, from the lS·d•y dis·
ablcd lilt.

les (Hershiscr 11·12). 10:35 p.m.
St. Louis (Arocha 10-6) at San Fnncisco (Deshales 1-0), 10 :35 p.m

Edmonton of lhe

Eastern Division
Tu m
W L.
Torom o ................. 78 61
New York .............. '18 62
Ballimorc ........... 76 63

Pel.
56\
.557

GB

Ocuoit.................... '/2 67

.547
518
.S\ 8

CllVELAND ....... fiS
Milwaukee ............. 60

A7 1
.429

.S
2
6
6
12.5
18.5

Weiltrn Dlvblon
Chicago .............. .. 7S 60 .56S
Tc";,s ... .. ....... .. .. 73 65 .529
Kansas City ......... 72 66 .522
Seattle ..
.. .... .70 68 .507
Califonua ............ 62 7 5 .45 3
Minn eaou .............59 78 .431
Oakland .. .. ......53 83 .390

5
6
8
15.5
U.S
24

Boston ......... ., ........ 71

66

73
80

FLORIDA MARUNS' l'ut&lt;hucd \he

con11ac t of Terry McGriff, c1tcher, from
Pacif1c Co&amp;&amp;l la&amp;\.Je.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS : EKCr·
tUcd the option on Lhe contnct of Brcu
Butler, outfielder, for the 1994 ICIIOI!. .
MONiltEAL EXPOS : RocaUed Char·
lie Montoyo, infielder, from Ou.w1 of the
In ternational League. De..s ignatcd Pete
Young, pitcher, for anignmcnt.

Blue Jays' East lead still in place
despite blowing lead vs. Athletics
By The Associated Press
It turned out to be just a terrible
night for the Toronto Blue Jays.
Not . only did their woeful
bullpen blow a big lead again, but a
player they traded away in June
1991 hit four homers and drove in
12 runs to tie major-league records.
At the SkyDome Tuesday night,
the Blue Jays took a 5-0 lead in the
first inning against last-place Oakland and went on to lose 11-7 in II
innings. Oespite the devastating
loss, Toronto stayed one-half game·
ahead of New York and two in
front of Baltimore as both the Yankees and Orioles lost
It almost stung as much when
the Blue Jays found out Mark
Whiten hit four over tlie wall for
St. Louis at Cincinnati in the second game of a doubleheader.
Toronto general manager Pat
Gillick traded Whiten to Cleveland
on June 27, 1991, along with pitch'
cr Denis Boucher and outfielder

Basketball

Glenallen Hill for knuckleballer
Tom Candiotti and.outfielder Turner Ward. Earlier this season, the
Indians traded Whiten to the Cardinals.
The Blue Jays, however, are
more concerned with the present
and their inability to beat losing
teams lately.
·
"Blowing a 6-1 lead is uncalled
for,'' Toronto pitcher AI Leiter
said. "I didn't do my job and that's
frustraling.''
After a 4-6 road trip to the West
Coast, the Blue Jays hoped they
could solidify their slim lead in the
East by playing the A's and California Angels, both sub-.500 teams.
With the score 6-6, Jerry
Browne hit a pinch-hit double to
drive in the go-ahead run in the
lith off Tony Castillo (3-1 ). The
A's (53-83) tacked on four more
runs.
Rick Honeycutt (1-4) worked
one scoreless inning for the victory

Nallonal Basketball Auodatlon
ATLA~A HAWKS: Sia.ned Andrew
Lang, ccnte:t. to a 1ix-ycar contn.cL

as the Athletics won for just the
second time in their last 17 games. ·
Elsewhere in the AL it was
Texas 5, New York 4; Seattle 3·,
Baltimore 2; Boston 4, Chicago 3;
Detroit 10, California 6; and Minnesota 6, Cleveland 0.
Rangers 5, Yankees 4
Gary Redus' RBI single in the
eighth inning broke a tie and lifted
Texas over New York at Arlington.
The victory, coupled with Boston's
win over Chicago, moved Texas
within five games of the fust-place
White Sox in the AL West
Doug Strange led off the eighth
with a double off Paul Assenmacher (2-2). Pinch-hitter Doug Dascenzo bunted in front of the plate and
the ball rolled off the glove of
Assenmacher. Don Mattingly's
throw to first was too late to get
Dascenzo and Strange moved to
third before Redus singled.
Cris Carpenter (1 - 1) allowed
(See AL on Page 5)

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER .

DENVER BRONCOS : Signed Vance
Johnson,'wide receiver. Waived Chris
H1le, de!Cflsive bsck; OuJCk John~cm , offens~ve tackle; and K itrick Taylor, wide
rccaver.
LOS ANGELES RAMS: Signed Jim
Price, tight end.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS; Activated
Reginald Jone1, cornerback. Waived
.
Cedric Mack, ddmaive back.
PHI!.'.DElPIDA EAGLES' F"lred Joe
wooley, ptar"-pcnonncl &lt;li=t«.
PHOEN X CARDINALS : Wtived
Kani Kauahi, c:alter.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Signed
Adam Walker, ful lback. Waived Jamca
Parrish, tackle.

Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, or Garage .•.
And turn Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS '
Signed Thco Adama, ofl'enaivc linemm.
Waived Curtis Buckley, defensive back..
WASHINGTON REDSKINS : Waived
Kelly Goodbum, punter. Sisncd Reggie
Roby, punlcl'.

FREE

Hockey
National Hockey Waue
BOSTON BRUINS : Sianed Ctm

Stewart, center.

NEW YORK ISLANDERS, Agnocd to
with Bob Mc:Oill, dclensernan.
PHilADELPHIA Fl. YERS ' Signed
Mart Rcceh.i , right wing, to a aix·year

'

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TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS , Signed
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ovenirne, and a .4-0 loss to Wheeling Jesuit.
Being 2-1, then, doesn't have
Morrissey displeased, although he
feels the demands of back-to-back
ga'rnes away from home are issues
the team wiD have to do deal with
in the future.
"The guys put forth good
cffon and they know it's going to
be tough, but we have to work
through those kinds of situations,"
he said. "Physically and mentally,
we've got to become stronger." _

a

Most of the way through the
opener with Shepherd on Saturday,
the Redmen played "very good
soccer." Morrissey felt. His belief
was demonstrated wben Dwain
Allahar took the ball, made a quick
touch pass, dodged around Shepherd defenders and kicked the ball
from 20 yards for the firSt goal at
15 minutes into the first half.
Ken Dinwiddie, another of Morrissey's first-year players, scored
the second goal midway into the
second half after shaking off an

opposing defender and placed his
his shot on goal. Overall, the Redmen outshot the Rams 26-7.
However, the momentum shifted in the final 10 minutes and
Shepherd was able to score two
quick goals on the Redmen's
defensive breakdowns.
The Rams made the last goal
with two minutes left, and at the
end of regulation the score
remained deadlocked. During the
required meeting between coaches
and officials, Shepherd's mentor

Like other NFC Super Bowl champs before them,

Cowboys will find repeating.tough task .to tackle
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
It should have been easy to prediet.
Anyone who knows the NFL
sho uld have know that Washington i
would beat Dallas by somethmg
like Monday night's 35-16 score.
TheRepeatRuleisjusttoostrong.

" They've had a lot of distractions,that's what haPMnS to you,"
Washington coach Richie Petitbon
said after his team beat the defending champions, the team that's supposed to dominate the 1990s.
Pelltbo~ should ~now. He was
the d~fenSive coordinator for thr~
Wash11l.Bton Super Bowl champ!-

ons, the last two of which went7-9
and 9-7 the year after winning the
title. .
Distractions?
Yes, but also fate.
The Cow~ys, youngest team in
the NFL, dommated the league_ last
year the. ":'ay the San Franc1sco
49ers, Chtcago Bears and New

six blocks and Kellina Cooper had
three, In serving aces, Chapman hit
for two and Smith had one.
Against Montana Tech, the
breakdown saw Billina Co.o per
with 12 kills, three from Kellina
Cooper and two by Chapman. Kellina Cooper led in blocks with four
as Billina Cooper came up with
three, and Chapman and McLaughlin were each responsible for two.
By the time of its final match
against Graceland, Fields felt the
team had become experienced
against such competition, "but we
got so far behind we couldn't catch
up." Nevertheless, Billina Cooper

declined the overtime - the second time in a week following a 0-0
regulation finish in the opener with
Marietta on Aug. 31. The end result
was a forfeit for the Redmen, and
Morrissey believes the Marietta tie
will result in another forfeit. '
"If I were a betting person, with
the way the game shifted, I would
have put my money on Shepherd to
win," Morrissey reflected. "So we
got the forfeit, but what could I do?
The only thing that disappoints me
is that we played very, very well
for 80 minutes, but for 10 minutes
we fell atJafl.
"It's a Situation of inexperience,

York Giants dfd in 1984.-1985 and
1986. Very little went wrong, few
key players were hurt, every ball
bounced in the right direction.
This year? ·
Already, injuries have claimed
Troy Aikman, Tony Casillas,
Alfredo Roberts, Darren Woodson
and Clayton Holmes, all keys on a
team that relies as much on depth
as anything else.
They've also been distracted by
the holdout of Emmitt Smith, who
led the league in rushing the past ·
two years and is the key to the
offense. .
Owner Jerry Jones would like to
think they can do just fine with
Derrick Lassie, the roolcie who ran
for 75 yards in 16 carries Monday .
night. But Lassie looks like a nice.
better-than-average NFL back.
Emmitt Smith is one of the three
best backs in football.
"Obviously," Petitbon said,
"with Emmitt in there, they would
have had a much better running

.,

netted 11 kills, Kellina CooiJer
eight , Chap111an...three and Smith
six. The Coopeis also led in bloclcs
-three from Billina, two by Kellina - while Smith and Heather
Exline had one serving ace apiece.
Talcing what they have learned
and benefiting from the trip will be
the philosophy the ream will ta1ce
into this weekend wben it travels to
W~t Virginia Wesleyan for a tournament featuring the host school,
Fairmont State and · Concord
(W.Va.). St Thomas (N.Y.), previously announced for the tourney,
dropped out.

But it's more than Smith, who
wi II vrobably show up.
It s fate.
Note that those dominant teams
of the mid-1980s gave way the next
season to ·new dynasties that lasted
only a year.

but that will come when they realize that in a game like that, anything can happen," he added.
On Sunday, the Redmen bauled
Wheeling to a scoreless tie by the
half, "but by then it was evident we
had run out of steam," Morrissey
said Wheeling scored four goals in
the second period, again primarily
on defensive errors by the Redmen.
"They capitalized on mistakes,
which is what good teams do," he
added.
The Redmen will be back on the
road again this weekend, meeting
Montreat-Anderson (N.C.) on Saturday.

LADIES JEANS

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'

• Learn a new skill
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• Convenient times &amp; locations

•

As the early ponion of the University of Rio Grande soccer
team's new season takes ·shape,
Coach Scott Morrissey can see that
mental as well as physical toughness will be an issue the team will
have to address before District 22
play begins.
The Redmen split a pair of
weekend contests on the road, battling to a 2-2 tie with Shepherd
(W.Va.), which will be forfeited in
Rio Grande's favor due to the
opposing coach's refusal to play

•

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SElliNG PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY. THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

•

Chapman provided two lciUs and a
serving ace. Deana Smith suwlied
a serving ace and Stephanie
McLaughlin offered up two blocks.
Billina Cooper fu:ed back in the
second match against Morehead·
with nine kills and three blocks,
while Chapman had three ltills, and
McLaughlin and Kristy Lindsey
had two apiece. Smith netted two
serving aces and Kellina Cooper
one. Kellina Cooper had four
blocks and McLaughlin two.
Moving to the ftrst meeting with
Graceland, 8 illina Cooper recorded
14 kills and her sister had seven. In
addition, Billina Cooper supplied

--

290 North
Second,
Middleport

iii]

992•3684

Football

Minnesota 6, CLE VE LAND 0
Delt'Oit 10. Californi a 6
Boston 4. Ch icago 3
Oakland II, Toron lo 7 (I I inn .)
Seattle 3. Baltimore 2
Tun S. New Yodr. 4

Tonight' s games

ly-ranked, so it was a super learning experience for the lcids," Fields
rioted. "I was impressed by the fact
that they di~:~ive up. Overall, I
had to be pi
with their peiformance, except for our serve reception and consistency. Billina could
have ~layed with any one of !hose
teams athletes, bUt I found that the
size and the experience of those
other teams was a determining factor in how things turned out"
In the opener against Hastings,
Billina Cooper led with seven lciUs.
two serving aces and four blocks.
Her sister, Kellina, offered three
kills and two blocks, while Jo

NaUon1l Fooaba\1 Leque

Tuesday' s scores

Califo rnia (IAng &amp;ton IS-6) 11 Detroit
(Doheny 11 -II), 7:05 p.rn .
M iMe.~ nt.a (Brummett 1-0) It CLEVELAND (Me!ia 9- 10). 7:05 p.m.
Oaklan d (Win 9· 12) at Toronto (Guzman 11-3), 7:35p.m.
.
S e;~llle (l!anJon I 0.11 ) 11 Baltllr\Prc

Hastings (Neb.), the team which
won the tournament; Morehead
(Minn.)6-15,13-15; andGraceland
(Iowa) 7-15, 15-11, 7-15. Moving
on to tournament action, the Redwomen fellll-15, 7-15 to MonWII
Tech and 8-15, 14-16to Graceland.
Throughout the tournament, the
bulk of Rio Grande's offensive
strength fell to Billina Cooper, the
senior outside hitter from Jackson
who was one of the 12 athletes
chosen for the AU-Tournament
Team. For all matches, Cooper
totaled 53 lcills, II serving aces and
19 block solos.
"All of the teams were national-

trat:t.

Chicago (Castill o S-8) at Philadelphia
(DaMy Ja cll:son 11-10), 7:35 p:m.
Coloudo (Painter 2·2) at Pillsb urgh
(Neagle 3-5), 7:35p.m.
Allan ta (Merc k.cr 3-1) u Sa n Diego
(ll rocail 3-11). 10:05 p.m.
Florida (Armstrong 7-IS) at LoA Ange-

AME RICAN LEAGUE

Although the University of Rio
Grande volleyball team returned
from the Southw~t State University Classic in Minnesota last weekend 0-S to start its season, Coach
Patsy Fields viewed the trip as a
teaming experience.
The tournament, in which
schools from 10 states were represented, featured teams that had own
national rankings in the preseason,
Fields explained.
"We've never been to the
nationals, but this is as close as
we've ever gotten," she said.
Ir pool play, Fiet~· young Redwomen squad fell 4-15, 11-15 to

Scott Burrell, forward, to • multiyear coo·

Baseball

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

:1!1 spite of losses, Redwomen ·volleyball team learns from trip

CHARLOTTE HORNETS ' Signed

National League
CINCINNATI REDS : Recalled Gary
Vu!ho, outf1elder; Dan Wilaon, cttchcr,
and Mike Andcrtpn, pilCher, from Indianapolis of the American Auociation.
COLORADO ROCKIES : Named
Bruce Andrew, West Coast CJOII·t:heckcr;
Bill MacKcnrie, C.n1di1n •cooling IUpet·
visor, •nd Ben Holt, area scouting Npctvisor for central Ca lifornia 1nd the Sa n
Joaqu.il_l Valley.

Thursday's games

after winning the first game 14-13. Whiten, who
tied six legends for the major-league record for
most homers in a game with four, also tied the
record for most RBls in a game and most RBis
in a doubleheader. (AP)

In AL action,

ST. LOUIS CAIWINALS: Activated
Rheal Cannier, pitcher, from ~o 15-day
dinblcd li11. Recalled Tripp Cromer, infielder, Lonnie Maclin, outfielder; tnd
. Stc.,.c ~on. pitcher, from Louisville of
the American Auociation.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS : Re·
called Paul•Farica, infielder, and Lui•
Mercedes, outfielder, from Phoenix. of the
Ptc:i.fic Cout League. Pun:hucd lhc em·
ttlct of Terry Brou, pitcher, from
Phoenix.

r.m.

Oakland (Van Poppe 4·S) at Toronto
(Morril?-12), 7:35p.m.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OT refusal hands RG soccer a forfeit over weekend foe

Scoreboard
- * Baseball *-

.Wednelday, September 8, 1993

State

The Daily Sentinel

Zip - - - - 1

I Phone -------------------------~------ I

111 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, OH. 45769

-----------------------618 E. MAIN STREET

Expires September 15, 1893- One Item- One Fres

POMEROY, OH. 45769
I

'

PerW11k.

PUNT-PASS-KICK WINNERS- Pictured
are two or last year's winn~rs in the
NFUGatorade Pass, Punt &amp; Kick local competition with Kansas City Chiefs rookie tight end
and Meigs alumnus Mike Bartrum. From left to

AL games...

(Continued from Page 4)
·. He played in 33 games for
Toronto in 1990. hitti~g .273 with
just two homers. He split 1991
between Toronto and Cleveland,
hitting nine homers, and hit nine in
148 game for the Indians last year.
Once again, his arm got the attention - his 14 assists tied for secone run and a hit over 1 1/3 innings
and Tom Henke pitched the ninth
for his 33rd save.
Mariners 3, Orioles 2
Mike Blowers' seventh-inning
homer ended Arthur Rhodes' no-hit
bid and helped fini sh off Baltimore's eight-game winning streak,
lifting S.eanle at Camden Yards.
David Valle hit his 12th homer off
Rhodes (4-4) in the eighth.
Brad Holman (1-1) allowed two
hits and a walk in four-plus
innings.
Red Sox 4, While Sox 3
Mo Vaughn and Bob Mel~in
each hit two-run homers as Boston
defeated Chicago at Comiskey ·
Park,
beating
the first-place
White
Sox for
the second
straight game.
Danny Darwin (14-10) gave up
three runs and five hits in 8 1/3
innings.
Tim Belcher (3-4), making the
first start of his ca·reer against
Boston, allowed four runs on seven
hits in 7 1/3 iimings.
Tigers 10, Angels.6
Chad Kreuter hit homers from
both sides of the plate and drove in
three runs as Detroit rallied to beat
California at Tiger Stadium. Rookie Darryl Scott (0-1) replaced
Chuck Fmley to start the sixth, and
retired just one of the five batters
he faced as the Tigers scored six

runs.

Joe Beever (5-2) was the winner
in relief.
.
TWins 6, Indians 0
Kevin Tapani (8-14) pitche_d a
four-hitter and Pat Meares h1t a
three-run double as visiting Minnesota beat Cleveland.
The Twins broke it open with a
five-run seventh inning, stringing
together six consecutive two-o ut
hits off Jason Grimsley (1 -3).
•

-

•

..

BULLETIN BOARD

right are Franco Romono, Bartrum and Jason
Laudermilt. Tbe event will be held Saturday
from 9:30 a.m. to noon at Southern High
School's Roger Adams Memorial Field.

NL contests .. .&lt;continuedfromPage4)
ond in the league with teammate
Kenny Lofton.
The Cardinals got him. from
Cleveland on March 31 for pitcher
Mark Clark and shortstop Juan
Andujar. Whiten is having his best
year, batting .254 with 22 homers
- two more than his career total
before this season -and 86 RBis.
Top it off with one of the best
nights anyone has ever had.
"After tonight, I think he can
write a book," manager Joe Torre
said.
Elsewhere in the NL, Atlanta
edged Los Angeles 1-0, Montreal
beat Colorado 4-3, Chicago beat
Philadelphia 5-4; Houston beat
New York 4-3 in 10 innings and
San Diego beat Florida 6-4.
Braves 1, Dodgers 0
While Whiten was putting on
one of'the best individual performances in baseball histo~y, the
Atlanta Braves inched ever closer
to the San Francisco .Giants in the

NL West.

The Braves' 1-0 victory over
Los Angeles, coupled with the
Giants' 4-3 loss to Pittsburgh,
moved Atlanta within 2 1!2 games
of first place. San Francisco's lead
hasn't been slimmer since it was
two games on May 17.
Steve Avery keyed the Braves'
victory with his arm and bat. He
pitched eight innings of six-hit ball,
doubled in the eighth inning and
scored the only run on Jcff Blauser's single off Pedro Astacio (11-8)
as Atlanta won for the 22nd time in
27 ~ames.
'I don't know it it's the sign of
a championship ballclub, but it' s
the sign of great pitching," outfielder David Justice said. "Avery
was great Runs were hard to come
by. and he just kept doing it.''
When Atlanta manager Bobby
Cox wasn't admiring Avery (16-4),
he was watch!ng the scoreboard.

•-----------------------,

HOMECOMING
CHESTER.NAZARENE
CHURCH
Sunday, September 12th
Afternoon Service Begins at 1:30
Featuring Conrad Cook
and the Calvary Echoes
LOGAN, W. VA.

Pubic Is Invited to Attend

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�Ohio

By The-Bend

.•

•• ••

•
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•

.

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, September 8, 1993

· ~-c~~~----~--------------------------------------------~--~--------------~------~p~~~~7•
· Special Olympics team completes successful trip ·

.

Wife needs to have head examined

•

'

SIIYDER
POTATO

in their division. Joan Han placed
fourth in the 100 meter dash and
Dear AID LaDders: I am the
Jeremy Johnson placed fourth in fathet of four children, age&amp; S to 14.
•
the softball throw and fifth in the My wife ud I are in our mid-30s
100 meter dash. Betty Smith and and come from f1111Uies lhat had
L.W. Harper served as chaperones curfews. Our parents hall to know
•
and coaches.
•
where we wtee at all times.
The Summer Games program
,
The problem u our 14-r-~ld
include thirteen sports, movies,
•
son,
"Billy." He bas been !lansing
recreational clinics and the colorful
•
out
with
his cousins, ages ·18, 2.1
Opening Ceremonies. Athletes and
•
chaperones were housed in Ohio and 24. This was OK for a while
State University donnitories and because they were playing video
•
were provided six meals through games and waachlng movie&amp; at our
place. Now, however, things (Ire
the University's Union Service.
I
getting
out of hand. His 18-year-old
The Ohio Special Olympics pro·
1
gram is now reaching over 16,000 cousin, "Ir:rry," has moved in with
athletes with developmental dis- us because we live close to a local
abilities with major emphasis on junior college. This ·boy never had
athletic training: Presently, there any kind oC curfew, nor did be ever
.,
. arc 35 Special Olympians from tell his pareniS where he was going.
Meigs County. Additional volun- His folks bought him an expensiYe
•
teers are needed to continue to car, and he Slays out all night and
•
strengthen the program, and it is comes in anywhere from 1 a.m. to
hoped that in 1994 the Meigs 3:00 in the morning.
"
.,.
County Special Olympics program
Jerry does whatever he pleases,
will be better than ever before. If
which
is OK with me since he's an
you would like more information
*dulL
Unfortunately,
Jerry bas been
SPE!CIAL OLYMPICS • Displayiria Meigs County Special • regarding Special Olympics, please taking our son with him. Billy's
contact Steve Beha at Carleton
Olympics banner are, left to rlgbt, Jeremy Johnson, Mamie Cade,
curfew is 11 p.m. Lately, he bas been
School
at 992-6681.
Roger Lance, Joan Hart, ~argard Cade and Marion Snider.
.coming home very late and hasn't
bothered 10 call and let us iy)ow.
My wife thinks this is OK ""c•nse
Billy is with his adult cousin. Whal
:
RICHMOND, Va (AP)- In a makes them ,.;onder, 'Could this propriate. She also testified that she do you think, Ann? •• SPLIT
- ruling that unsettled gay-rights happen to me?"'. said Liz Hen- herself was harmed by years of DEOSION IN SAN DIEGO
DEAR SPLIT: I think your wife
• activists, a judge declared a les- lltickson, executive director of the sexual abuse from her mother's
needs to have her head examined. A
bian's "immoral" relationship National Center for Lesbian Rights live-in boyfriend.
Dr. RocHelle L. Klinger, a psy- 14-year-old boy' should not be
• with her live-in lover makes her an in San Francisco. She denounced
• unfit parent and denied her custody the .ruling as " just based on big- chiatrist who i.s herself a .lesbian pennitted to run around with an
and works mostly with homosexu- 18-year~ld (cousin or no cousin)
of her 2-year-old son.
otry."
• . The case pitted 23-year-old
Ms. Bottoms and Ms . Wade als,. had testified that Ms. Boltoms who has his own car and Slays out
Sharon Bottoms against her own wept and embraced outside the and Ms. Wade were "a healthy, until all boln.
• mother, Kay Bottoms, who had courthouse. Neither they rtor Kay well-functioning couple.''
Video games and movies at your
· In taking the boy away from
• argued that her grandson would Bottoms would talk to reporters.
bouse
are OK, but night prowling is
~ grow up unable to tell the differDonald Butler, Sharon Bo110ms' Sharon Bottoms in March, Juvenile
O!IL
Put
a ~ to this at once.
ence between men and women if he lawyer, said he will appeal. He said Court Judge William G. Boice
Dear
Ann
Landers: My huslland,
~ were raised by two lesbians.
the judge set a dangerous precedent relied on a 1985 Virginia Supreme
: · Circuit Judge Buford Parsons by taking a ~.hild away from his Court ruling that said a parent's "Phil," and I haYe two loliJiime.
friends whom I will call "Bob
• ruled Tuesday that Sharon Bot- mother without showing that her homosexuality is a legitimate reason for losing custody. The boy's and Carol. • They both work
~ toms' relationship with April Wade· behavior causes harm.
~ ·''renders her an unfit parent''
Kay Bottoms had told the judge father wasn't involved in the dis- with Phil and were recently
divorced.
•
He also noted that Ms. Bottoms that the child calls Ms. Wade "Da- pute.
Since 1985, about 100 homo: :had admitted engaging in oral sex, Da"- proof, she said, that the
Two hundred years ago, in 1792, the
: . a felony in Virginia. "In the opin- boy co~ld grow up so confused that sexuals have gained parental rights
song
"Oh! Dear, What Can the Matter
ion of·this court, her conduct is he couldn't tell a man from a th(ough the courts in what is called
Be7"
was published in London.
a co-parent, second-parent or sam\'·
: immoral," he said.
woman.•
:
Upholding a Juvenile Court
"I don't care how my daughter gender adoption, according to San
Berore World War 11, the Army re • :order awarding custody of Tyler lives," she told the judge. "But Francisco's National Center for
moved
9t 1 names from the list or those
:. Doustou to the boy's grandmother, Tyler will be mentally and physi- Lesbian Rights.
who
had
received the Medal of Honor.
Among the most recent cases
: :Parsons said the "extra.ordinary cally harmed by this. We can take
Most
of
these
were former members
was one in Fort Worth, Texas,
:nature" of Ms. Bottoms' deficien- care of ourselves. He can't."
or
a
volunteer
inrantry group during
: ·cy as a parent outweighed the legal
Sharon Bottoms said she and where a judge last month permitted the Civil War who had been induced
• :presumption in favor of keeping Ms. Wade have hugged and kissed a lesbian to adopt her live-in com- to extend their enlistments by being
·: :mother and child together.
in front of Tyler, but have never panion's 2-year-old daughter.
promised the medal.
:
"'It's the· kind of case that had sex in front of the child':·...
sfi'"ilc_es_t_err_a_r~in_peo-pl-e's_h_e_arts_-_
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I wish you would write more to
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What I think of you
by Doug Freeman
If I actually knew where our
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promise land.

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~
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I know my letters don't say that
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Depaning from its namesake,
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"Now we'll offer an entirely ditferent kind of chicken, with the
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The product was declared a sue-

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I know our love is being put
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•
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: best

•

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•••
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d

That is what I think of you .

: 'Dcdic.ated to Tanya Whitt
1 by Douglas Freeman

•

1 GALLON and S
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Don't Forget
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cess after testing in Austin, Texasi
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Non-fried chicken, such as
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Jhe food industry. KFC sales of
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biUion fried chicken market in less
than five years.

FAI.I. DRY CI.EANINC
SPECIAL

Librarian Cynthia Pirtle is finishing
the catalog, due to begin mailing in
September.
OVAL is the only State funded.
regional library system in Ohio. It
serves the citizens and libraries of
Athens, Hocking, Jackson ,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, and Vinton counties with
programs of services develoPed by
those libraries.
Wanda Eblin serves on the
OVAL Board as a representative of
the Meigs County Public Library.
·

I hope you realize how much I
love you and care,
Because I only have one heartm
and it's a spare.

•Alcoholism: How to Recdglliu It,
How to Deal With II, How to Coli·
quer It" will gi~~e you tlte tu~SWBJ.
Send a self-addressed, l011g, busi:
IIUS·sizt tllvtlope lllld a clteck oi'
m011eyord4rfor $3.65 (this itu:l!Uie~
poslllge tUtd hoNJlillg) to: Alr:ollol,
clo AM Lantkrs, P.O. BoJt 11562,
C~go, 111. 60611-0562. (In Coli·
ado, send $4.45.)

KFC introduces new rotisserie
chicken in Pomeroy restaurant;

•

········~·············

I
I
I

Hello darling how are you doing
how is you new life treating you
A notice your ·happy no tears I
see falling
For your blue eyes sparkle like
gold

(OVAL) held their regular meeting
at system Headquarters in Wellston
Aug. 19.
• The Board approved a .l.5%
budget cut recommended by the
Librarians' Advisory committee.
This reduction was mandated by
the legislature and amounts to
$6,300. Director Eric S. Anderson
informed the Board that the cuts
would come from areas that would
not impact services for the mem bcrs.
·
Networks International, of
Columbus was awarded the con-

.,
I still have your.letters and I still
.; ha ve yo ur pictures
·.
The memories they bring to me
through-out the years
.
There is only one person in my
Oh I still ·remebcr honey th e life,
·
: good times that we .shared
and hopefully one day she will
I can't believe that it's all over become my wife.
· now
I would like to get married in
.
But I hope you stay happy and
December,
· your eyes go on shining
that way the whole world will
:
May you walk under blue skies
remember.
: the rest of your life
So stay happy honey until the
That our love is real and true,
: next time
we'll stick together like Eimers
:
I get to see you through our end·
glue.
: ing years

RICH'S
.
25
PKG.I

BUY ONE GET 01\JE

Our letters is the only way to
keep in touch ,
Even though I haven't been
receiving very much.

Oh it's been years since I have
seen you
.,
.
And I'm glad to see that you're
· doing fine

. --.) Rolls

Pies

Poet's Co·rner·

'

11~1ih/ omesty e

.

•

A Brief Hello Until Next Time
by Gilbert L. Fitzwater, Jr., Yin,_ tori
•
';
,,
;
•
&lt;

s 99

Shout
Liquid

The problem is Carol. She is
coostantly calling my husband and
asking him 10 belp her around the
bouse. She is lllo llwayaasldng him
for advice on penonal matters. rve
beard from mulllal friends that C.Ol
keeps talking to Phil at the office.
Wben I mentioned this to Phil, he
said that I was foolish to be
concerned, there was nothing to
worry about. they've been friends for
a long time and my imagination was
working overtime.
I don't trust Carol. I want to tell
her exacdy how I feel, but I ~·t
want Pllilto fmd out that I talked to
her. I love my husband and don'
wish to cause problems at his
offJCC. Please tell me what to do. I
am .. NERVOUS IN SOUTH
FLORIDA
DEAR NERVOUS: Leave Carol
alone. The person you need to 1alk
to is your husband, and the sooner
the beaer.
These mauers are best dealt with

OVAL approves budget cuts
,.Oh1oThe Valley
Board of Trustee~ of ~he tract,to print the fali."Books_By
Area L1branes Mail catalogs. ExtensiOn Semces

.

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; Judge denies lesbian mother custody of her son

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Nota

ANN LANDERS

.

•

Umit1 Wlth'

in an open and abovebomd ~'
Let Pili! know !hal you loYe hun a
lot ud 11111 you lnllt him c:omplceely, but you fed . . . .ltd by
Carol. S11y !=lole. non-ec:cuwory
ud plmnm Tile wife iavaiably
bold&amp; lhe winnia&amp; hmd. .
Dear ADD Lallden: Thank&amp;. 1
lbolllllld lime&amp; for printing the
1eUer from the Fort WOOh who criticized TV advCI'IisemerU
f~ incredibly "llobbish"llble
mannc:n. The Washington Apple
people must have Jotten lhe
1J1C1S11C beeP• they have -.dy
b1ceped out lhe disguJCinJ auacb·
ing noises with bad music. Keep up
the JOOd work. - MIAMI
DEAR MIAMI : Dozens of
readrnl have wriuen llbout Ibis, llld
rm delighted lhat we will now ~
spared . those awful squnds so
many people (inclUding me) foulld
irrillting. See - when CUSIOIIICI"S
speak up, they get results!
An alcohol problem! How CIJII you
help yoiiTulf or.someoM yow /o~~e?

Ann
Landers

'

·quita Banana

FOR

$10.00 or More
A~dltloh-1,: ; ·
Purchase. ·

Mamie Cade, Margaret Cade,
Joan Hart , Jeremy Johnson and
Marion Snider. The members of the
team took part in track and field
events. Marion Sni!ler brought
home two silver medals, in the 400
mcter dash and in the softball
throw. Marni.e and Margaret each
placed fourth in the 100 meter dash

•

FALL MUMS

LB~

Meigs County's Special
Olympics team recently returned to
Meigs County after a successful
trip to the 1993 Ohio Special
Olympics State Summer Games.
Fi've athletes have won honors in
their various events. Winners from
the Meigs County Special
Olympics team include:

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

Easy Double Chocolate Chip Brownies

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2 cups (12-ounce packagel NESni TOll. HOUSE 1Y. cups all-purpose flour
Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels. divided
I cup granulated sugar
~ cup (I stlckl butter or margarine,
~ teaspoon baking soda
cut Into pieces
I teaspoon vanilla extract
3 eggs
~ cup chopped nuts
'

MaT 1 cup morsels and butter In lal'9f. heavy saucepan over low heat; stir

untllsmooth.Remove from heat. Add eggs; 'sdr well. Add flour,sugar, baking
soda and vanilla; stir well. Stir In remaining I cup monels and iiUis. Spoud
Into gNased 13 x9-lnch baking pan. Bake In prtheated 350' F. own lor
18 ·to 22 minutes until wooden pick Inserted In center comes out still slightly
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·
·

,,

�..

•

-

- Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-MI~dleport, Ohio

1993

Wednesday, September 8, 1993

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

'•

-

Your IH!19hhu..-houd sto..-e \Nith all tht~ ~ •••·n~1ths of Se.a..- s '

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•

''

1

Family -~
.

Medicine

D

Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

..-.-

•

Question: School has nareiV
started and both of my lcids already
have colds. Winter is the lime for
colds and sore throats. Should I be
worried because my children are
sick even before the cold season
starts?
Answer: While we do usually
think of winter as cold season, I've
often noticed in my practice that
th e cough and cold season starts a
I inle earlier - with the return to
school. So when your daughter
says school makes her sick, she
might be partially right. In fact,
sometimes her going to school can
make you sick, too. It is common
to see a· mini-epidemic of coughs
and colds two to three weeks after
the start of school. The lcids get the
illness and then bring it home to
the rest of !he family.
The most common cause of
these coughs and colds is a viral
infection. However, the bacteria
responsible for "strep throat" are
aIso a common and more serious
c ulprit. Both bacterial and viral
mfections are spread from person
to person when we breathe, sneeze
and cough on one anolher. In the
winter we arc in confmed quaners
without adequate ventilation, and
we are, therefore, able to spread
germs much more efficiently.
Question: What should I do for
my children when !hey get a cough
and sore tluoat?
Answer: Toilay's modern science hasn 'I discovered any medication that helps the body fight a viral
infection the way antibiotics help
right bacterial infections. Since 90
percent of the respiratory infections
in children are due to viral infection, the best treatment is directed
m making the sufferer more comfortable as his or her own immune
system fights off the illness. Chicken soup is always a good choice.
Salt water gargle can help with a
sore throat about as well as any of
the more expensive products that
are available.
A cough, particularly one that
interrupts the child's sleep, has
been traditionally treated with a
cough medication. The most common ones contain the active ingredient dextromethorphan, which is
often indicated by the letters "OM"
at the end of the brand name. The
other common cough suppressant is
codeine. Cough syrups frequently
combine one of these medications
with ~aifenesin, food coloring and

~­
~

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ALL HOME
APPLIANCES

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ELEC I RONICS

EVERY WASHER
EVERY DRYER
EVERY REFRIGERATOR
EVERY FREEZER
EVERY COMPACT
REFRIGERATOR
EVERY DISHWASHER
EVERY BUILT -IN RANGE
EVERY ELECTRIC
RANGE
EVERY GAS RANGE
EVERY WALLOVEN
·'
EVERY COOKTOP
EVERY RANGE HOOD
EVERY UPRIGHT
.
. VAC
EVERY CANISTER VAC
EVERY ROOM
AIR CONDITIONER
EVERY MICROWAVE
EVERY TRASH
COMPACTOR

• EVERY TV

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• EVERY 4-HEAD VCR

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• EVERY CAMCORDER

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• EVERY RACK STEREO

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Shop your local Sears store "for the . . .

.

•
•

•••

•

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Weslyan
: · Bible Holiness Church will hold a
missionary service at 7:30 p.m.
with Mr. and Mrs. Mike !Qine of
Cottonwood Ariz. Everyone is welcome.

•

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a meeting •of all Catfish Festival
Queen contestants at People's
Bank , Middlepon, at 8 p.m.
THURSDAY
CHESTER · Shade River Lodge
453, F. and A. M., Chester, will
meet at 8 p.m. Thursday. Refreshments will be served.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post #9053 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served
at 7 p.m. All members are encouraged to attend.
; POMEROY - Perceptor Beta
. Beta will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
' home of Nellie Brown. Members
are encouraged to wear purple.

·
:
'
'

'

Bears Best/

save

POMEROY • There will be a
dinner at the Senior Citizens Cemer
with serving from 5 to 6 p.m. Cost
for the meal is $4 per person. The
menu will be turkey, dressing,
mashed potatoes and gravy, tossed
salad, roll, beverage and cherry
delight. Following the dinner,
music will be played by The Classics featuring music of the 40's,
50'; and 60's. A free will offering
will be taken for the musicians.
The public is invited to attend.

POMEROY
Alcoholics
' Anonymous meeting 7 p.m. at
, Sacred Heart Church. For more
· information call992-5763.

35624
37865

25485125949

HARRISONVILLE • A free
immunization clinic will be held at
Scipio Township Fire Department
' from 9 a.m. to II a.m. for children
, aged 2 months to kindergarten age.
Parents must bring child's immunization record.

"

~w

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5.5-HP, 22-ln. side discharge
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Sogger sold sei)Orotely. ut." . Tractors 1equlre some ossembly.

199.99 ~..

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8-HP gas chipper/shredder chips
branches up to 3-lnches in diameter

18-ln., 2.5-CID high
perf01manca gas chain saw

: REEDSVILLE - Reedsville F~l·
: lowship Church of Nazarene Will
; have a revival starting S~pt.embe~ 9
•. 12 starting at 7 p.m. mghtl&gt;: w1th
;Robin Elswick. Nursery w11l be
~ rovided.

• ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
~prings Grange will meet at 8 p.m.

..

•• BRADBURY - Bradbury I'IU

,

,.

other
active" ingredients.
Most moms, dads and doctors
recommend one brand or another
of these cough syrup productS for
children wilh a cough due to a cold .
Recent research published in the
J oumal of Pedia1rics, however,
showed that none of these medications were more effective at controlling cough than simple, cherryflavored syrup. Most of !he participants in the study had marked
improvement by the end of three
days regardless ·of what they took .
So much for traditional medical
wisdom. It appears that common
candy cough drops and time should
really be the preferred !featment.
The fancy cough syrups make
mom, dad and doctor feel better
without really helping the one with
!he cold.
Strep throat is defmitely different than a cold. A sore throat
C&amp;\lsed by the germ with the lovely
name of "grouJl A beta hemolytic
streptococcus bacteria" can and
should be treated with an antibiotic.
Penicillin is the medication of
· choice for this as long is the individual isn't allergic to it. The penicillin needs to be taken for I 0 days
to be sure the infection is cleared
up. However, the child doesn't
need to stay out of school the entire
10 days. Taking the antibiotic for
24 hours renders 83 percent of
strep throat sufferers non-contagious. It is generally considered
safe to send children back to class
after the first 24 hQurs of medication.
The important question you
didn't ask is, "How do I tell a strep
sore throat from a viral one?" The
only sure way is by having your
doctor order a 'throat culture for the
strep bacteria. However, there are a
few physical signs that increase the
likelihood of strep. A fever of 101
degrees, sore swollen lymph nodes
in the neck, swollen tonsils; and a
white, pus-laden "ooze" over the
tonsils should make you suspect
strep. If you or your child have
some or all of these symptoms, I'd
recommend that you see your family physician soon instead of wait- ·
ing to see if the illness gets worse.

llOYEAR
IVERSARY

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. ·wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Osteo·
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701 •

Community calendar

Each of these advertised Items Is readily
available lor sate as advertised. Most larger
Items Inventoried In warehouses. Allow
reasonable time for delivery.

1399.99

-

JoiU! C. Wolf, D.O.

•

. ..
·-..,.._.-.

~

I

'

will hold its ftrst meeting at ihe elementary school at 7 p.m. All parents are encouraged to attend the
open house.
SATURDAY
CLIFTON • There will be a ben·
eftt hymn sing at Clifton Tabernacle Church. Services wiU begin at 7
p.m. All proceeds will go tow·ard
church repairs. Pastor M.E. McDanial inviles the public.
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Style Square Dance Club
will sponsor an open .dance at ~e
Senior Citizens Center. Caller w1ll
be Scotty Sharrer. All western style
dancers are co(dially invited .
Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of DAR will meet at
I :30 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church . Members are invited to
bring guests. The public is cordially invited to the Richardson hat
show at 2:30 p.m. Call 992-2639
for a reservation.
ROCK SPRINGS - Big Bend
Girl Scout Service Unit of Black
Diamond Girl Seoul Council is
sponsoring a Country Line Dancing
event for all girls in Meigs County
between !he ages of 6 and 17. This
will be held at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds from 2 to 4 p:m.
Entrance fee is $6 Girl Seoul annual membership:
RACINE - Desendants of
Emmell and Lou Carl, Nan Frazier,
Corbet, Mertie· Aleshire, Ed and
Lena will meet at Star Mill Park at
5 p.m. Please bring a covered dish.
Table service wiU be provided.
DARWIN - Burlingham Modem Woodmen will have a cook-out
at the northbound park on State
Route 33 at 6:30. Camp will furnish hamb~ei"s, hot dogs, condiments and drinks. Members, family
and friends are invited. Bring a
potluck dish and lawn chairs.

. PIJBUC NOTICE .. '
The Melgo County Boord
of Revlolon ha completed
Ito work ond the boob ons·
now open lor public

Melae County
Bo•d of Revlolon

{II 27,21,30,31 ,(81 I ,2,3,5,7,8
lOti:

...

lb.

SLICED FRF.E
PREMIUM SANORINI, REO, BLUE OR THOMPSON

U.S.O.A. CHoiCE CRAIN FED BEEF,
(1~14 -LB. AVC.} CAP-&lt;JN

.

White
seedless crapes

Whole Sirloin Tips

U.S. GRADE A, PERDUE SPLIT

Chicken
Breast

J.25%

springdale
Milk

COLDEN RIPE

Dole
Bananas

lbs.
lb.

Gal.

•1N THE DAIRY CASE•

LUCk'S

Pinto Beans

Public Notice

...,..,tton.

lb.

15.01.
•

Kraft
Parkay Quarters

Kroger
Apple Juice

H. B.

64-DZ.

2

�Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 8,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

1993

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

BEnER Quality!
BEnER Service!
BlftER Selection! ·

.-

PRICIS
IFFICTIVI THIU
SATURDAY
SIPT. 11, 1993
We Redeem Fedo&lt;ol food Stomps O..ontity Rights Rese.-.ed

BEftER .
TOTAL
VALUE!

RATES .
)

To place an ad

Take Home A Big Bear Hug!

Call992-2156
MoN, thru FRI.

8A.M.-5P.M.-

SAT.8-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

FRESH

lb.

• Free Ad.: GiVOI!way and Found act. uDder 15 wont. will be
rua 3 day• at DO cha11e.
• PrM:e of ad for aU eapitalleuen il double prke of ad cOil
• 7 point llDe type oaly u.ed

Pork
Loin

• Scntiltel il not l'fllpon1ihle for error• after ftrlt day (check
for error• f1r1t day lid run• in paper). C.U before·2:00 P••·
day after publication to ~ake correcUoa
• Acil dwt mual be p1id in adn.D.ee are :
Card of Thaaluo
Happy Ada
In ~emoriara
Yard Salee
• A el ... ilied adnrtile~neat placed ia. lhe Tbe DaUy Sentinel
(except Clu.ifted Da.play. Bu.iae11 Cud or l.epl
Notice.) willallo appear in the PoiDt Pleaa.,nt Repb!r and

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thwsday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ad• out.tide the county your ad rupa miUl ba prepaid
• Roc:ein diKount for ad1 paid in advance.

Whole or Rib Half

I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thur5d;ly
I:OOp.m. Friday

Clauified pages cotJer the
following telephone e7tchanges •••

•

lb.

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

1625 Gallons

'50,., load

Roast •

Call

...

Ralph At

742·2904

446-ColllpoUo
367..Cbeoblre

992-Middl~ponl

388-Vlnton
24~Rio Grande
25c.-Guyaa Diot.

985...0...ter

458-Leon
576-Apple Gro•e

843-Portlond

77l-Muon

64l-Aro1Ho

Pomeroy

247-Leta"

Folio
949-Raei..n.e
742-Rudand

o;...

379-W.Inul

•

2

·~

Sweet .ancl

Juicy

Fresh
Peaches

8

Tropi-c ana
Or.ange
3 lb. Bowl
Food Club

Vegetable
5 read.

16 Sileo•
12 011:.

$

Pkg.

Regular or Light &amp; Heolihy

Budget
Gourmet
Entrees

Cooked Ham

of Voriety

a.7to

1 0,, Olo
Pkg.

.'

..

$

Half Gal.
Ctn.

.... Choeilty

58

FARM RAISED

Fresh
Catfish Fillets

Watot Atilllecl

""'"...... "-•
. o..v..,

J

Premium
Ice Cream

c

lb.
Pkg.
FROM THI DILl

Your Choic;:•

,.

IIG lEAR

Not BuHer

9

99

lit.

.

4-19-93·tln

89S-LI!tarl

937-BulTalo

Wlllll~ctlers

w:JOUOO.

RICHARD ROBERTS

..

and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HeME SITES Mid
TRAILER SITE!!,
LANOCLEARINIO,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

. , .. - -·

949-2104
4126/tfn

....~In

B&amp;G
Trucking
We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

614-698-3290

ROBERT BISSELL
CONnRUCTION
•New Homes
-Garages
•Comp.l ete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

7f1J®

7/22/93

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

992-7878
1n 1roo.

HAULING

Mason W.V.
773-5785
Auctioneer: Rick Pearson
Owners: Clyde &amp; Lenore Asbury
Tenni: Cash or check wilh J.D. out of slale buyet'S mull
have a currenl bank letler ol credill NO EXCEPTIONS. Not
responsible for accidenls or loss ol proP!'~­
Licenoed &amp; Bonded In Ohio, Ky &amp; W.V. M66
'

Authorized: Brlaaa &amp;
Stratton MTD, lfyan,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 96· M-F 11-3 SaL
Closed Sunday

BULLDOZER BACKHOE

LOCATED ON LEWIS LANE IN THE SANDY
HEIGHTS DIY. JUST OF SAND HILL RD., IN
POINT PLEASANT, WV. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
4 pc. pullman sectional L.A. suit, round eoffee table,
2 end tables, 2pc. Gold Broyhill chairs, Mah. Desk &amp;
chair, nice bookcase, Lg. rocker, Sear's Remote COnsole TV, 2 RCA B&amp;W Portable TV's &amp; stand, 2 nice
brown Mag;~h ide Recliners, 2 Mah. end tables, nice
brown &amp; rust sofa like new, Mah. gossip bench, ·5pc.
dinette set, 2 bar stools, J.C. Penney Microwave &amp;
stand, 5 pc. wood dinette wtporceline lop, 4 pc. Lane BR
Su~. 3 pc. Basset BR Su~ (Bed, Dresser &amp; night stand).
B.R. chair, Hard rock maple Bed. Maple chesl, 2 night
stands,,bed, Cedar Tripple Dresser, Rollaway Bed,
Baby Crib, Graco Hi Chair, Linen cabinet, Metal Cabi·
net, Whirlpool Washer &amp; Dryer same as new, Quilt
Frames, Old Quilts ~ Quilt tops, Queen size Electric
blanket, bedspread, !linens, towels, material , beautiful
colo,. glass swag lamp, Berry set of footed bowls, old
green Fenton vase,l;'enton dishes, krackla glass, vases,
blue candle holders, Amberina Rooster, lazy susan ,
carnival glasses, 0ld glasses, 6 stemware glasses,
sherbets, several /x:. Home Interior; anchor hocking
punch bowl set, ceramic Christmas tree. puss-n-boots
cal rookie jar w/cat creamer, saH&amp; pepper shaker, fruit
jars, old floor lamp, lamps, old radio, Record player,
stereo, books, lg/ rubberplants, Encyclopedias, reader
digests, jewel bbx, 2 tape recorders, nice pictures,
microwave coo~loiare. pots &amp; pans, pan sets, canners,
pressure rooker1, Granite pans, cookbooks, small k~chen
appliances, Sunbeam coffee maker. baskets, plaques.
Christmas tree, Royal typewriter, rugs, fireplace tools,
brass carriage clock, Hoover sweeper, Kenmore
sweeper, coolers, several lawn chairs, porch glider,
lawn furniture, several hand tools, drills, vise, bench
grinder, Alum. levels, screws, nuts, bolts, McCulloch
Mini mac ch'ainsaw, powerhouse 7" saw, Sears paint
sprayer &amp; cOmpressor, drop cords, 2 sprayers, metal
shelving, hedge trimmers, folding chairs, electric charcoal grill, g~s 2 burner stove. 16ft. Alum. ladder, lawn
. mower, cal top boat carrier. picnic table.
BOAT: Sears Ted William Model, Johnson51/2 H.P.
motor, 12 ,Ft. game fisher boat &amp; new trailer.
Cub Cadet 108 La"'n tractor, turn plow, snow blade
&amp; mower
I

Lunch

• •• ,p

446-7612
Fax/Voice 446-7612

EXCAVATING

I

.I-

Paris and Service
Mowers - Cltall Saws

614-698-6500

RICK PEARSON AUCTiON CO.

..

~

WALlER ALLEY

or

'AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

lb.

I

(614)
667-6628

SAT., SEPT. II, 1993 •

Ju 1ce ~~c:.~.N,RA1E

Believe It's

PUblic Sale
&amp; Auction

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

PUBLIC
ADC'riO

64 oz. Ctn.

·Borden
American
Singles

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

lnMemory

DAVID MARK
TALBOTT
In loving memory on
hie 28th birthday.
Blrthdllyo come and
birthday. go,
Willie our love for you
will alway• grow.
Becauoe your day today
brlnga pre..nbo you,r
way
Of laughter, loy and
pean
For tlmea of fond
memorlea are aura to
Mljoy
On thia day we know you
now olitep.
Happy Birthday, Dove
love You &amp; Mloo You
Your F11111ily 111d FriMida

set. Dews

I Can't

882-NeW Dnen

RACINE
· MOWER CLINIC

622 Jay Drive, Galllpalio, Oh.

Honey

CHEESE FOOD

675-PI. Pleooant

667 ..Coo!.!Ue

"Ad Specialtie•"

1118 1 mo.

'

Enloy Jhese Flavorful Melons
Callfomla ·

ppo
Y
22- Moaey to Lo.o
Z3-- Prof. .ioul Sentc•

33- Farm• for S•le
34- BUiineu Buildinp
3$-- Loto a Ac,.....
36- Real Eotate Waoted

GET RESlJI.'I'S • FAST1

51- Houoehold Gooda
52- Sportinr Cooda
53- Aotiqueo
54- Mile. Merebandile
5$-- Buildi"' Suppli'"

ln~ll'uclion

8-PuMieSale&amp;
Auction
9-- Wanted to Buy

18- Radio, TV &amp; CB
11- Milcellaneow
18- Wanted To Do

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM a•d .·
REMOVAL

$" Gr!lin
a Fertililer

\11 .1! 1 II \\lll :- 1·.

14- 8UiiDC&amp;I! Traiaias

School. &amp;

Hay

Seed

49-- For I..-..

12- Situalio• Wanted
13-- lnturanc:e
I~

qup
to Buy
LiYut.ock

62- Waat.ed

41- Hoa&amp;~e~ for R~nt
42- MoLile Home. for Real
43-- Farm• for Rent
44-- Apartmeat for Rent
45- FumUhed Roo~n.~
46- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
~ Equipraeal for R~nl

11- Help Wanted

$-- Happy Ado
6- Loat and Found
1- Loot aod Fouod

I \1\\1 ' i 1'1'111."

,'i. I I\ I ' I I )I h.

=:------1

2-lnMemory
· 3- Anaounce•eall
4-- CiYU.way

56- P... lor Sale
51- MU1tcal huLruaeau
58- Frui" .t: V. .tal&gt;leo
s~ For S.le or Trade

Repa~

BINGO

WATER
HAULING

Chuck

.

11\\\11\1

'

Bone In Blade or
.Seven Bone

-

Daya
Wonlo Rate Ovtr 15 Wonlo
1
15
$ 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 runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Busineos Card- • .$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board..• .$6.00/inch per day

Gailla County Melgo County MilliOn Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

the &lt;;;aUipoU. Daily Tribune, reacbine: over ~,QOO hornet

•'

''

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138
3/41931

3-16-93-lfn

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
f!~~,lplng

..
· ~

~ ·~·

38904 loading
Creek Road

Middleport, o•io
614·992·7144
4/29/931h

mo.

Trlnnitg, ToppiJtg, R1111aval
frH htlmates

L-• Message

-LIGHT HAULING

742·2360

•FIREWOOD

GENERAL
HAULING

BILL SLACK

992-2269 .
USED RAILROAD TIES

SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470
OWNER: JtH

'

Wid&lt;•,._

INTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let rna do It
lor you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·985·4180
81121113/t mo. pel

.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmelllone,
Dirt, Gr11velend Co•l
Ucenoecl .,d Bonded
PH. 614~992·5591

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-773-5533
2nd Location call Lon Neal
Hendaroon, W. Va. 304'675-333t
Meahtrcerd and VISA ecceplacl.
8-5-lln

992-7878
7nt1rro.

WHAL~Y'S

AUIO

PARTS

EAGLE
LANES

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
. . . 1111• Plllfl SOl

(Fornier Mason Lanes)
3nl and Pomeroy Streets

AU IWIIIIMOHIS

992-7013 or

(3041 773·5585

992-5553
or TOLL FREE

WINTER HOURS
Sun.·Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat., 4 pm-?
balllfd baooliv
.
.

1-IOD-141-0070
DAIWII, OliO
7f.l119Mfn

Mason, WV

Hart....,,_

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

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
318/tln

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • ·Health •

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(6'14} 992-7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

r~=================.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes·• VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
·
Room Additions • Roofing
coMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additlono
·GuttMWork
-Eiectrlceland Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exhtrior
PalnUng
(FREE ESTIMATES) .
V.C. YOUNG Ill

91J2-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
.

t-10.t2·11n

3 Announcements
Judy or Hazel McHaffie will not
bl rnponslbla tor aceldtntl on
our property at 10 Railroad
SlrMt, Middleport, Ohio. No

lrnpuolng Is pormltod.

Pagent .tyl1 modeling c\aue1~
614-441-0404 or 3041.S76-:Z207.

REDUCE; Bum Off Fat White
You SIMP.: Take OPAl Awallable
At: Fruth f"'hlrmacy.
REDUCE; Bum ott tat whlla you
sleep. Take OPAL, IVIIilble It

Fruth Pharmacy.

4

Giveaway

1 Yur Old . Collie Male Very
Gentle 614-446-4053..

Kittens: .2 White Females, 1
Mala, UHar Tr1lned, Anytime Af-

Garage Sale: Infant Clothing,

Sl1n 3-24 Mos, Stroller, Etc.,
Maternity Clathu, Microwave &amp;
Yartous Other ttemsl 227 Larial
Drive, Thurw, Frl &amp; Sat.
Salur~•Y

Thura ilf!J. Fri 10th, 2nd House
From
1hurman
Methodist
Church, Brut Daybed Desk
Clothn, Hounhold.
'
'
Thursday &amp; Friday 9-5, 2 Miles
E11t Of Porter On 554, Lot1 0t

Ciothas!

Yard Sala: 9th, 10th 645 Fourth
Awanue,
Lots 6I
Books
Cloth11, Mise, Rein Cancels.
'

tar 6 P.M. 6t4-446-3124.

7 Adorable Farm PupJHn, Mind
Harhtga, 614-388..stDB.
Au.traUan Shaghard &amp; t/4 Chow
Pu pplas, Vt~y ood With Cattle,

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Big yard ula-tOml, Rt. 2, north
end ot Bud Chattin Rd, •10.11
0:00-??, Maytag wrlngariW-her:
~

calico nl, 4yra. old, to

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

only. 304-675-5761.

FrH Kittens, To Good Home!
614-446-2398.

FrM LIHar Traln.ct 7 W11k Okf
Kittens, One Whlta, And 4 Grey

And Whlto, 614-446·2416.

S•plombtir nth, 10-5,

Astorted HouaeMid hems, 5
Piece Bedroom Suite . (Twin
C.nol)l11) White /Blue Trim
6464 S. Stala Route 7.
'

5 f

'I

d

1 1 A

ami Y rar sa a n
Addition,
Tuppers

rbaugh

Plains,

Thursday &amp; Frldii!Y·

Kittens to a good home. 614·

All Yard Slles Must Be Paid In

Older Dlchshund to 1 good
home. Good compay for older
parsons. 614-446-6189 or 614-

Advance. Deadllna: 1:00pm the
day bttore the ad Is lo run ,
Sunday edition· 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
adl11on
10:00a.m.
Saturday.

446•1173

446~865

Pan
Pomt~ranlan,
part
Chihuahua, will be 1m1ll dog.
. 304~75-7550 .

B11set1,dog,
fiimlll,
WI kids,
Sm1ll
partgc.od
Spaniel/
part7
monlhs old, 614·992-6939.

Utad Furniture, Good Shape,
But Needa Soma Cleaning, Must
Taka All, 56 Patriot Road.

.;.6......,..;.,Lo:.,.:st..:...&amp;.:.._Fo..:...u_n-.d-=-Found : 2 ban gtovoo at tho star
Mill Park In Racine, 614-949-

Carport Sata- Stpt. 10..11,
IH residence, Tyree
Racine . Kero11n• haater,
rug, bath carpal, crahs,
In g.

81.m.,
Blvd.,
throw

cloth·

Garag• Sala- 4 miles on SR 143,
Thursday· Saturday, 9-41pm.
Love nat, dreasora, 314 siu
water bad, old boUies, frankli n
wood burner, trundle bed, misc.

Garag_a Sale· Sept. 9, 10, Wipplo
Ad., Five Points, Pomeroy, rain
or shine, 9am-?.
Rain or shine. Maternity, men's,

women's, baby &amp; boy's clothes,

Loot: gray clutch purao, koop
money, return content1, no
quntlons oskod, Pomoroy aroa,

REPLACEMEI,. WINDOWS

8-4-93-tln

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

202a
household, misc. 400
,
- - - - , - - - , . . . - - carsnilt
Rullan St., Middleport.

614·992-7643

FREE ESTIMATES
50734 llll•y 114......
45743

12-5-lfn

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ollio 45760
(614) 843·5264 5/t-4193/lfn

(No Suncloy Calls).

985·4181

Announcement s

Children. 614·3117·1'113.

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing

Lo•• ......,....

if we don't have, we can g8t it

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

LINDA'S
PAINTING

We have a large atock of aeveral name brand tire• and

t2;30-92·tln

2112/92Jifn

9am-5pm,
Pike,
Items,

&amp;

7

GREAT LAKES ..; The Most
Advanced All Vinyl Replace111ent
Windows on the Market.
.
Why pty high eat-lf-tew- prlett whe11 yea
0111 get It lmfly 111d tnt $$$?

lG-11,

304-675-2503.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

1259 Johnson Ridge Road, oith
Place On Lift, Clothea, 2 ScrHn
Baby Clothn 8-5. Thura, Frl,

aduh's,

misc.

Thursday, Fridav, Saturday be·
hind Masonic Lodge in Rtclne.
Lots of clothing, accordion,
lamps, ·canopy
bad, boat
tran1c1iver n~dlo, Home lntarior,
many miac. Items.

8

Ooo,., Woodburnor, High Choir,
Sat

41830

Pomeroy.
clothing·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick PNrson Auction Compeny
full time tuctlonHr, complatl

auction

IINic:e.

Ucen.-d

166,0hlo &amp; ·W nt VIrginia 304m .5785.
•

Until October 1st: Buy any replacement
window and receive FREE - Beautiful
woodgrain Interior.
Colors: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
Lifetime Guarantee•

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUaiON
446·4514- 1·800·766·4013
••

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
42

5I

Mobile Homes

Household

44

Apartment

H2-7553.

1bdrm. apartment In Pomeroy

for rent, 514-ttl2-5166.

Wan4od llondlng timber, top
prlc11 pold, froo olllmotH,
llco,.od &amp; COI11flod togQing
304..85-3055 Of 815-3831.
'

1 bdrm. untumlohod apart mont
In Mlddloport, c-al Mol &amp; ilr
all utllltloo pold, $35CIImo., $100
dopoolt,l14-t411-221l

Wanlod To Buy: Stondlng nmbor &amp; Plno, can Sllil lmmodlltly, Good Prlc•, 114-381-

2 Bedroom 2 Bathe, $27SIIIIo.
Phil ~. Utllltloo, 2 Mlloo N.

Yinton: i,:.i:3Ba.eoao.

HOI.

Wa.nted to buy: uHd · mobil•
homM.6~71

Employment Services

2bdrm; apta., total alactrlc, ap-

11

Help Wanted

18

Wanted to Do

AVON! All . arNL Need extra .

monoy or want • c~':':arhar
way-call Marilyn. 3
·2145
or 1-tOO..H2-4351.
AVON I All Aroao I Shirley
Spoaro, 304-417S-142il.
a 0 job " 1d Y In • montho. Troln
In verlous k&gt;rm1 of Wlllding·

EU TREE SIRYICI. 1'~,
Trimming, lrM RMnOVIII,
Trl"=. F,. Eadmatlel 6
Aftor 4p.m.
Gonenlt llalntOilll ..., Pal~
Yard Work Wind- W
Outton Cloonod Light HouM~.­
Co
" 1 Rooldo lot 8 .. ,

:IQ.

114 1

oxyac•tylant, brau, m11taHic,
': ':.';~.
nl: • tiVI:
MIG, TIG. 'CIIU bealnt Oct.
11th. C411 Tht Adutt EduCation Genral hendym.n, · no ·Job too
Center, 1·800-637-6.508 or 614- big or too amell, ,.ftrtncN, call

753·35t1.

L.llart Folio, Ohio, 1114-247-2021.

C:Ordlnal Freight Carrloro.O.T.R.
Drivers wantid tor 1 new termlnal In Hurricane, WV, muat
have 1yr. O.T.A. experience pull·
ing a van trail•, good ..1rtlng
pay, lata moct.! aqulpment, Blue
Cross Blue Shlald, Inc., ttop ott
poy, lay ovor
brHkd-n
poy, company pol ponolon, 401
K plan, hom• mOlt wt~kende.
Call Boyd Adklno, 800-8211-6 222 •

Goorgoo PootobiO Sowmllt don,
logt to thl m~l luat
Clll
11·115'7,

pitJ•

haiAJ.O:

Home care tor yaur loved oneln
flmlly care home In Middleport,
114-182-1042.

~L-'oek.,:..:::,Sm.:.:,H;:h,'-:-..ho-m1. -.-.-ut-=o,--and-:

bualnon. L.OCko ~~~ &amp;
··- ·chanaod, vohk:too opened. 304675-~08.

Eam Fun-Tim• Pay For PartTime Work As A Chrl.tmll
Around
Tho
World.
Dtmonatrator. FrH 1500 Kh No
Collecting Or Delivering, Alto
Booking Partlao, Call 614-2455039.

c.,.

32

72
1esa

1, f

Olive st .. O•lllpoUa. New lUNd
tumlh..-., hNt•f'll, WMt.-n l
Woril boola. 1~31SI.

LA(lw'1 ·

wp.,(M,

~ ttn bw NEA, ~ne.

.!"""

114

-

-

'•'

. HIS UJCI&lt;.
(1-\M.)G£0

111'12 Chov~ 112 Ton 310 4 bbl. 4
AT, BSJ. PfTB, AC, 3.73 Pool
.,.,500, 0 v
radn 614-446:230=6::..- - - . . , . . - - - - 11177 Hon truck , duol """''·
81,000 actual miln. $1500, 614·
11112
c:::::-3'-'M
'-:';
11.:-c:-::::--:::::=--:::=::-

Merchandise
10 Ft. Alum. Mooh, Sotottlto Dloh
6 Rocllvw, 114-441-1738.
12hp riding mow.,., 38" cut,
$550. 304-4112-2422.
1987 Kaw•ukl 250 " Whlellr,
$800, 11187 Eocorl $1,100. OBO,
Air Condftlonor, $50, 814-3670632.
2 1
fuo1 oil •• •- - · · argo
wn~. - · 31167.
2 Ton Truck Lood 01 Flrowood
Grovel Houlod Up To 10 Ton A
Load 6M-245-1227.
•
·
36• klnclllwaocl Woodbumer,'
65,000 BTU Warm llorntng
p
H 1 • •
ropan.

•

ar, u1..-256-1526.

Wator Plllo.
Pharmoc:y.

Available

Fruth

Sura remote-control jMp, 125;

rabbit fur Jockot, $35·, olr
h L - $40 k:1
cx:.wr,
i
akatH, $20j
614-1'12·23117.
Sat Of Big Owl Lompo, With
Shadea,l40, 614--318-lNi33.
S
1 1 01 h
ovon PI r
Nvy cOtlon
wpa~~ ~~:;:,~~ waahod, $.50

6

Slzo 8 112 Nlko Shtrlt Football
Cleata, $25; 614·245-5713.
1;:--:;.:-:=:.;,.c.:.:.:.:::..:.:::..___
Small casl Iron woad atove,
condition, $100, 614·119291

2;od

.

55 Gallon Oil [)rumo $5 Eaoh
UH As Bum Barrels Or Gat 011,
Etc, 614-3811-t700.
81:11 wooden etorage bldg
$795. dollvory ... $55.1lldoro E:
qui-nt Co H d
WY
304':f1i-11121. ' on oroon,

Two Drop Sinko (WhHol With
Counttr And Splgotl S25 Call
614-446-6263Aftor7 P.M.
Vita M..t., exerciM bike, good
cond., $20. 304-1575-81110.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 lhoh
200 PSI $1U5; 1 lnoh :ZOO Pill
Antique Gold Iron And Brass $32.50i Ron Ev•n• Enterprla.. ,
Chandllor Rowlrod, Rlldy To Jookoon, Ohio, 1-800-537-11528.
Hong, $50, C.lt 014-446-0196.
WATER
STORAGE
TANKS
Apple lla• Computer With 2-3.5 Abovo And Solow Gr&lt;&gt;&lt;~nd FDA
Drlv11, Color MonHor, t Mog 'Ex- Approved For Potable Wolor.
paintlan Card, Stereo sound Ron Evant Enttrprltn, JackCard, tmagowrltor 11 Sura• oon, Ohio, t-600-837-8528.
Protector, Saver11 Application
.
And Progl'lmmlng Softw•re; Waterford c:rystal drinking gl ...
Also Runt Apple 111 Softwar•, IH, Llzmoort pattern, $40. Nch
Atklng SMO. 614-367.0545.
Ballboerd heat•r•, 3-6' 1500 pleca, ctsh ula. Largt Fishtr
wratt, $25 Nch, 4-8 2000 watt, wood burning stove, Wlblower,
$30 Nch. 30W75-t1'16.
Gn~ndpa mOdoi,:JOiood cond,
Brown upholtlorod choir groat ' 475' C,lllh NIO. I
-G 75-754L

::::~ :"'~~~~~': ~J.hl·..!~

Bunk Bodo, Good Shape,
Matrooo lnoludod $30 Call Ahor
7 P.M. 014-446-6623.
C.lllng Ll;ht For Dining Area,
Glasa, I Bulbi, $20 Call614-446-o
0115
·
·
Chnt TI/: D11p Fruzar 16 112
Cu. Ft.
p Well Waler Pump,
llka Now, 614·368,.318.
Chrome 22 cal. pistol, nice, $75,

mUll bo Ohio rooldont and 21
Y"· old, B14·tt12-2663.

Clorlnll, NHdo Now Pado, $50;
Bathroom Vanity, 48 lnch11,
Good Condition, $7S. 614-4464655.

Wood Burnor Stove With Trlplo
lnaulatod Plpa, 614-2&lt;15-9227.

55

Building

I:::--.-::-.:S:-=U::P:..:Pc:.l:.;le=s,__..,Block, brick, ....,..., r,poo, win·
d
tl 1
OWl, nte 1• etc. C aude Win•
~~-:~~~0 Grande, OH Call 614•

56

Pets for Sale

Groom ond Supply ShoD-Pat
Grooming. All brlldo, lllylot.
Julio Wo6b. can 614-446-0231.
Boston Terrier Puppy, $50
Plooo. Ot4-¥5i-625t.
AKC Bulldog Fomoln, 1 Yoor
Fawn, 3 Yr, Errlndto, 4 Yr, Fawn &amp;
WhHo, 614-3118-816~.

CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
11!100 Clollon, $325; Now JET Bot
(~o Sand Finer Roqulrod)
$1,495; Ron Evens Enterprls11, AKC Chlhuahu• Pupplea, 8
Jackaon, Ohio 1-800-537-9528.
Month Guarantte, 2 Main, 1
Fomalo, $125, $135, 614-367-11101.
Eight Foot .Picnic Table All
Trootod Wood, $80, 814-251- AKC Roglllorod Booton Torrtor
1136.
Mall, $200, 614-4441-1446.
Eloctrlc typowrltor, now t•r.· AKC
Rogllllwod
Cocker
18" carriage, $60, 614·192·735 . Spanillt, 2 Male Puppiea, 4
Montho Old 1 Buff l Whlto 1
~-4S alo •.· Exorcloo Blko $15, 614- Blaok &amp; Whho, Aloo, 2 Yoar Old
Ftmale Bl•ck &amp; Whh• &amp; 3 YNr
For Salt: Fuel 011 . Stove Wtth Old Mil• Bun • Whhe, CaR
Tonlt,_ C.U 6t4-256-6417 Roody Anytime: 114-441.0536,
For w1nlorl
AKC ~alotorod llalt- Puppy,
For Sail: Long Brown l.oothar Fomall,it Wooke Old, Worm~
Cool With Zip Out Pill Lining Flrll
Sholo,
114-245-IMIIf,
Slza14, SSG, 614-441-tllat.
Sarlouo lnqulrtoo Only.
For Solo: Protty 5 Ploc:o Bod- AKC roglllorod trl..oloNd Ba•
room Suite, Whitt /Biue Trim Itt Hound puppln, long Nrl,
(TWin c 1 naplaa) ldul For ud t1ce1, j21renta on pramiMI.
T•nager, Aeklng: 1500, 114-446- 304-882·3282.
8404
.
!_)og For Solo, Sovorol
For Sala: Woodbumer In Exc•l· Silll, 1 112 Mill Out At. 141,
lont CondHion, $100 Coll614-4 41 _ Wayne Shoemaker, 114-4410233,114-446-3458.
05t3.

871

Fish link. 2413 Jlckson Ave.
Point PINoan4, 304-4175-2013,
full Uno Tropical lith blrdo,
•mall anlmala •nd •upp1i11.
Blko For Salo Or T"do: AKC Real•
ter.d Shar.P.t, 114-371-2354
F&lt;Hzar boat 1 groin fod, holt cir Don.
·
wholo, $1.15/lo. 304-773-llltMI.
F
our vory Ml~hY Hlmalayon kitOlrta Murra~;Mountaln blmsk•n- tene, 2 malll a ::I ten~~·
••
11 apoodo, 00, 514-1411.
torod, 304-773-504t Of
•
Go Klf1• 3 HP &amp; up, oJ{oolal on Full
blooded
Soot
Point
t HP, In otook, Morrlo Equip- Hlmalayon k"ton, $100 080.
rs.~: 114-1112-2451 or 614-742- 304Ra -1175-2046. bbn For SolO t1 can Bo S11n
Homolho lllmm... on OOII At: 110M Ro&lt;~Mr Plko Rood,
durlng Sopt. Sldort Equipment llclwol, Ohio Anytime.
Co, Hondonon, WV 304-II'IS-11121. Sehnluztr .mlnlllturw,
Four elumlnum tin wh.. le, fltt
Chevy, $50; 4op. Chevy truck
tranomlaolon, $50; et4-ttl2-2063.

~ F~~~~:~~~;~

pu••
Poodlo -

K"'IY 1~,400. BTU Lorgo 011
HuJ:&amp;. uooa Very Uttro $85,
11411143.
.

ond odullo. ge:.
blooclll~- uno1,
IICllviiiO, 114-4te7
.
'

Mon'o 10 Spood Blkl, S50 Arm.
et4-266-885t.

51

oh.

Musical

Instruments
lllotol buo ooblnll, double
- . _ butcher block top, 120; Bundr trombone, VMd 1 moe.,
114-182-~ mornlngo botoro S350. Clwlnot, $110. 304-4175-

101M.

'

AQJ4
4

+.t.Jlot75

3728.

St

0731

Hummingbird MUile Center

Jaokoon, Ohio
114-2BI.sl6t
Trumpo4 For Solo: U50, Very
Good CondHiort, 114-441-11114.
UOid CoM Slldo Trombone And
C... Good CondHion, GrOll For
New Band Student• 1100,"' 114- ·
448-7538.

61 Farm

Equipment

• ·~·-=:--.--:-::::---r--:--

73

Vans

:;r..
:-;;:M::=o=to;-;rc-;:y~c:.;le.:..s::--,--

286-6522.

1878 K•w•Hid 200 motorcycle
a• It, $75, 514·985-3985.
'

u

-

~~!w~-=~~~~~; :OU:o~~~
·.

Hrod, 1200. oot holo digger,
3pt. hHcl!, $425. Flf1./Siod
oproldor, t225. All oxc. oond.

304-837·2011.
Plastic tanka, 285 gal, portable
POLE

BUILDING

750
'
• Ot4-4461tB5 Hondo Gotdwl-, Low
lillln, Excellent C:ndHion
$3000 614-441-67$4.
•

75

Boats

=

&amp; Motors

,..

PEANUTS
~- 8

IDOTO rTELL
HAVE AN'(TH N6
Tl4E CLASS?

'1'ES. MiX.AM ..

1

AWAKE~

I'M

YES, MA'AM ..

TJ.tERE's A SPIDER
ON THE CEILING .

..'

~~:1 ~!r:,t. t~;'~'::r~~~.:~h1:,;~·

76 . Auto Parts &amp;

Polled Hereford bull, 3 1/2yrl.
old, throwo nlco cotvoo. 304773-5725.

Budget Tr~~ntmlasions, UHd •
,.bulH, 111 typoo,llorllng at Itt:
owner 614-245-5677, 114-3792253.

ACCeSSOries

light wolghl utility traitor hltoh,
flta Horltona, Orrinl, and other
m:_ll bumper cart, $15. 3048 2315.

. Autos for Sale

1m OldtmobUe Delta II, E~-

$450, 114-245-

18'77 Chl¥1'01111 plclc~p truck,
~ n~nnlng oondHion, $1500.

~Wv~

..

SPECIAL.

HHorH, T•.m Of Droft lllutoo,
arnooo
Lor•• Wtgon, 114532-2870.
w-

FRANK AND ERNEST
TUVII ... &lt; •

tl'ff

J./0/i'Q('II'!'Q/&gt;l&lt;:('

~~ IIUS'T NDT I~
'rtf~~

TODAY I
I

- ·~~~~~~~
BORN LOS;.:;E:..;;..R;;___.,.
,.ll'. Nl4\ID
•"lltE.Y ~y f.IJE~::t'­
\oiiU.
1\15 15

()1£.

Mlt-1£~

lWEi dt~

C:Dl~TO~ctl

,I'J'C;;&lt;-..

1l't£ VIOCO

Locuol Sl.,

Fut-I~IE!lT!

Motor Homes
18ft. Trotwood. camper, good
cond., $1250. 304-G7HOHO.

11180 FINblrd 101,000 llltoolEx-

tm Comoron trollor, ldool tor

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY DAD COLLECTS
OLD ~'ZINE5.

11
=·t~tuon~:,
~
~:d.
~~~~.
:rl: .!:!r:~::
814-3'11-2882. ·
304-875--4248 or 675-540.

HE960T6T.AQ:.6.AND
5TA0&lt;:5ClFTHI:W- !N
HIS DEN ...

1181 Chevette, 4. door, auto., 1111 Camper Conversion, Exctl·
now front brokoo, $500. 304-182- lont Shopol Low Mlloago, 614-

11182

The Epson Worldwide Pail's events
were held on June 4 and S. The announced winners of the IM!COild heat
were Nl Xiao Ting and Ming · · from
China, with a score of 1816. Ho•~er.. l
Julius Fields and Calvin MM~o:rns:·t~r~
in a game in Rocbdale v·
!bat w113 run under the auspices.of tbe
American Bridge Association. It was
reported !bat !bey scored 1778, but
!bey actually bad 1873.
As Fields and Morris were not responsible for tbe error, by tbe time
you read Ibis they will, hopefully, have
received the appropriate prl2es.
Fields and Morris did very well on ·
Ibis deal, liut tbe declarer could have
made life touglter for .Fields, sitting
West.
North's bid of two no-trump showed
a minor two-sutter.
Fields led tbe spade queen. Declarer
won with tbe ace and played a club to
dummy's queen. After winning with
tbe club ace, Morris switcbed to his
'trump. West won with tbe ace and returned tbe diamond queen to durnmy's I
king.
Now South should bave ruffed a low
club with bis last diamond. U West
overruffs, South wins seven tricks:
two spades, four diamonds and one
club. Plus 300 would have given EastWest just 34 matchpoinls out of 100
and relegated 'them to IM!COild. But If
West discards; eventually be scores
the diamond four. The penalty of 500
would have been worth 52 points:
II~~:a~:;retain
plaell.
·Southlint
called for the
king.
ruffed, cubed the diamODd
jack and exited with tbe spade jack.
Now South could win only five tricks:
two spadei and three diamonCis. Plus
800 gave East-West 93 points.
e.-.IIIWWANRMICU LIIUIIL

~-41011

Or 614-3711-21'10.

Buk:k Rlvorlo.- 1ttl2 E-Z Rldor Tow Dotty Now
radiator very tow m-.a., aood 1750 Firm, 614-388-9616. '
'
oond.,
firm. IOUl'S-~21
.
oftor 4poil.
27 Ft. Motor Homo, $2,100, Firm
NOlde Minor Ropol" 614-~
1il3 Buk:k eon;~ for r~o. IMIIItl.
'
..._, onglno,
. 1118 VW
RobbbftinMclo -rlt, $100. 30451'1-280 or 678-4323.
Services

4 0 - - -1
41 l1odoot
41 floo tlloll

11 llolllaullll
13 lrloll11-Cup!

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cl6lbrtty CiC11* CIJP'IC.WtN . . cr.ted tl'oln CfiO'
N br ..... peapla, 5*1 and~Eactlllltlr In tM dphlr IUrMII tot aneth~~' . Todlf'J Ci.W E ........ P.

"NZSIF
NYBDIYH

•

UAG · ULIIFM:

U G .N Y D B I J Y
UGABDH

EBDBNZOYH,

C Y. H

I I

EBUIYIJY

BIH

XZMYNW

YNMY.'

DGZ

Y R y ·o Z G I Y
JBXEBIYNNB.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Don Dryoclata wu a Hall . ol Fame pitcher and a
Hall of Fame human being." - (Columnilll) Jim Murray.

WOlD

I AMI

I

I

CLICAT

GYSGO

I

I

Sept . 8, 1993

~i~iiill

TODAY'S HISTORY: Qn this day in
1974, President Ger~ld R. Ford granted a "full, free and absolute" pardon
to former Presidenl Richard Nixon.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS : Richard I
111 57-1 199), king of England; Siegfried
Sassoon 0886 - 1967), poet ; Claude ·
Pepper !1900· 1989), U.S. congressman;
Sid Caesar 11922·1, cqmedian, is 71 ;
Peter Sell ers (1925· 1980), comed ic
actor; Patsy Cline (1932·1963), singer;
Sam Nunn (1938- l, U.S. senator, is 55 . ·

1180 Vokaw•~ Rtbbfl, ~ 1180 Alum. Lilt Camping Tr~ller
GIS engine &amp; trllnlmlaik)n, 21 .A . 2 Ax it, Slit-cont.,
rough body, "'I tor P,lrta, $250. Shower, Tub, Real Cl•an 114304-G7H141.
·
446-7767.
'

2422.

10-

What will
the organizers do?

Today
is the 25 I st
dny
1of I 993 and the
80th day of summer.

&amp;

ttiO · Cho-•&lt;- ~,000 lllltn,
Runo Wllllltot-,..7...,3.

37 .... do

(]{ NN::RJ~~

: at tN''I:....

2n-i328.

Campers

7

2NT
Dbl.
All pus

:~·~ Rra:~:;:t'p~":"'wv~:J.::

79 ·

,l.ltllllll
Ctoaoot

44•oc•nlnt

Eut

eu:x:&gt;PER5

~MUTE.~

New gat tanks, one ton truck

372·3833 or 1

- (cocllll)

By Pltllllp Alder

for Sale

c.

='i3.WOfk C.r,

GAME!!

,•

StHI Slldo• 3' Uan Door. 614-245-5152 After I P.M.
'
$5,511. ERECrED. Iron HorH ·
Bulldoro I-600-3S2-t045•
14ft. Happy tr11votor flborglllll
flohlna boat Orfd traitor, good
Potato plowo, 2 toft, S'IS NCh; condlflon. $1500. linn. 614-4464
brush hOp, $3751: up. 614-843i2l '
5211.
15ft. Chtekm1ie lkl boat, metal
63·· Uvestock
flake bluo. Evlnrudo 85h.p. onp,ino with power tl~ ond
rt m.ElAy load tl'lller. gOod
20 HollieIn Hertert Ang. WeiGht condition. $~ firm. 614~6Approx. 410 Lbo.l14 446 405!,
·
"
4t2t
2il Llmoolno cowo &amp; bull,
$21000
11
11
• 11174 SkiHcrah 22 Ft. No Troller,
•
'
rm.
•organ 1 614·251·1526.
Wooclawn F•rm, Rt. 35. 304-137-2018·
19111 Baytlnor, IBn., 140hp, 'InBb B c
·
boordloutboard, ovorythlna 'In• ~Y ull alvte For sa•, 614- eluded, $8900. 304.fi7S-.408G. •
245 -IS57.
20 Ft. Rborgtaoo Boat, Jo(ow
Hlo
Houllnft:
Anyttmo, Sooto 6 Corpot, 110 Good RunAnywhiN. PLA lllobooo Ohio, nina Condition, tn water At: Ga~
Evary Mondey. Chuck Williams. llpolie Boa! Club, Selling Do-To
~~ CrHk Trucking, l14-2 411- Ill HoaHh, $3,000.014-4411-1521.

71

PARSON TUTTLE
AT TH' BINGO

TIDBIT?

.,.A

• durable. 304-'N3-4838.

~~:~. P~::r

WHO TOLD '
YOU THAT
LITTLE

•

240 tntomatlonot tractor with
plow, com pllnter and grain
drlll. S2t85·, t N Ford w"h ~-do

~I

Opening lead: +Q

..

&amp; 4 WD's

1188 Suzuki samurai 5 s ......... 4
WD S2,ttlt With Thlo Ad, J.;'hn•o
Auto Saito, Solow Holiday Inn
In Kanaug•.
'
1"" ~
-•
o G"nd Caravan Lo
5"• ·727 M • . v~
"'\Jo
. .utomatlc,
Powor Everything, All Tho Extrao Brown Willi Wood G 1
•
ron,
U ,500, 014-446-1675, Or 0076.
1t82 Ford Explorer XLT, 4WD
4dr.,
a~omatlc,
ov•rdrlve',
toadod 25
power
' ,aoo mun. will
1011 outrlght Of lako ovor
poymonto, 514-1192-11837.

Nortlt

::::~ ,
"=1-,
.....

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
Wttt
I.
Dbl.

1 Uti-

33
oiTot
31 fllltll (tl.l

+117

Soatlt

IICIWII

rro

+z

.

..-..r.....;.
-14

;J03t
porto

• J87U

18 21
·-~~·=---==:;;--===:::
:::
1087 Ford F-150 XL, $3,1100; 111116
Bronco II XLT $3,100. 614-441-

ii12 Chovrolll Sllv-cio oto~
tid•, under warranty, 10
mlln. 304-1175-3753.
78 FOJd F250 4WD. 014-446-11243 •

·~

.AKU

-:

::~· ~l'.':r ~~.~t-:k"tt;~,: ~:::'n=:,::,.o ~=.'ft:O 'J:: ~t Odyoooy

31 Fence Poste $2.00 Each, 614· Smith Corona Classic 12 Mtnual
Typowrltor In Good Condition,
251 _15 2t.
$100, 014-446·11212.
4 Foot Wldo 81-Fold Doo"• 2 1;:==-;:::::;~.;;:~;:..--.-=::Seta, Ntw Sllll In Box, $25, Ten ~lion Flah Aquarium With
Each, 080 614•387-02111.
Hood And Backgrovnd And Two
Nolo To. $35, 114-446-2551,
50,000 BTU Holt Noturat Gao I;::::,;:=~:::=.::-::.:;~;::::....,..,,.,
Furnace, 80 • Reg. $'1,695, Sale: Twa brill and wood thi'M-I~t
$1.059, Installation Available, chandellere with amtMr glaae
614-448-6308.
ohadn, $35,114-ttl2-1217.

thapo, $10, colt 614-446-2BiS.

.AQU

SO\lTH

~==========-r:==========i ~61;,::4~
-111::2~-30=;34:..C.::-:::-=-:==tt85
Ford F150, 4x4. 304-875-

SUIII- SUMM- SUMMER
SALEI
.

~~­
..
l 9 II

17 Tllllll

2 lllntllly

QJIOU
KU

1m whitt F 250, 4WD, $2000,

Muslcal
InstrumentS

.IJ·1' ( .....

11_,

13=(11.) '

•u

.,

.. ·--11-4---.._
.....
=-- ::....
,._.... ......

11=:..

t 7 . . - .....
liT_,.

EAST

WEST

!!'"·

call 304-4175-1450.

t-1-11

tKJOUZ
.KQIIS

.

. EEKAND MEEK

Trucks tor Sale
Ford F-1 tNck for - o "tlon wl loll at extra pirtl, 1750.
304-G'I8·21101 or 1175-4323. .

.f.'

~~~bMI

NORI'II

•u
•to

well maintained, 114-:171-1331
oftorlpm.

.,..,
"'

.... _..
41$'

7--lf

....

air, AMIFM ,...,..,, •utomltlc.

5

~~:~.~~ ~;,=:::. E~~~! ~;:J~~~~·FMH~~-

PHILLIP
ALDER

tHO Plymouth Llaor, 10,000
~~ hcollont Condition,
,tM-441-IJ$4.

PICKENS fURNITURE

pllanc11
fumlahod,
room
laciiHin,
ol- to laundry
ochool

lllloo Pauto't Coy
Contor 1
Block WHI Of HMC On Jacuon
Pike M-F 6 A.ll. -11:30 P.M. ~
OwoiHy And Exporlonce lo Tho
t1 COncom For Your Chlld'o
C.rt. Cllll Ut For A Vtaft. lnflnt
/T-10" 61~227. p Eaa~ Work! Excelltnt Payl A• chooto" ilk:hool Ago 114-+te2
Houolng
semble Produeto At Homo. Cllll 8224.
Toll Fr11, 1-800;'167-8511, Elll. Piano tooohor wilt toko bogln- toni Condition, 614-25H543, Dr Fumlthod 3 room aport-·nt.
313.
61:-,4-,.:256-::,:-:.,'':.;41;;..--,,.--.,-.,.-- Porter lrN on SR 554 lt~iaa.,...., lntormodloto, and odvan- ::::
bd
Rodman
_
Experienced Auto Body Person, cod otudonto. 304-el'S-105t.
1994
14x70 ' 3 rm., 1n 8000 ·
d
klrtl
614-367-7444.
Wan4od to do- bobyoHtlng In my c 1u " •
ng, otopo, btocko, Fumlohod Aporlmont 1 Bodhome on Nichol• Road, Dll'· 5yr. warrsnty, homeowntl'l In·
Exporlanood LPN• Ovorbrook tl
..
f:::lod=::n::ur
::
=.:•::ld~,
1::14-:..:74::2:.:·380=l:.._
•urance, and 1 y11r of trM lot room, 820 FOurth Avenue, GalCanter new h11 lulU pan lime :-:
, , rent, on tor only 111771mo., calli- 6ttpo14 ~~. ~~501"/MAno. Utllltloo Paid,
postlona avall1ble for 3-11 and Will do bobyolltlng In m~~mo, 800-G37-3238.
I ;:::~=:::::.::•::::::::•:-r7:_P:.:.M::.·7-=:11-7 1hiftt. PltiH apply In pt~r·
prtcea.
75Mobil• Home And Land For Fumlehld Apartmtnl 2 Btdson it 333 P•a• StrHt, Mid·
Solo, By Ownor, 814-245-i124 roomo,ll41 Saoond Avonuo'-Gol·
dtaport, OH. 45760 EOE.
Witt do modlctf tronecrlptlono, Anytime. Add ron: 3216 Coro llpollo, $395/Mo. Utllltln ~aid,
FLATBED
DRIVERS.C.rdlnol roaum11l
114-441-441Uftor 7 P.M.
torm
poporo, 111111 Rood.
F,..ight Cirri.,. h.. ari appot· m...,ocr peo, nowo loll ..., l
;;:.;-"-:,:;=':--~--,..,---...,..tunity tor Hatbed driver• ttw Ia olhor typing, will pk:k up 1
Palm Harbor homo 28154, In- Nlcoty Fumlohod Aportmont,
.ucond to none! Do you own dtllver, 1144H-1011S.
clud11 glamour ba1h, fireplace, 1br, next to Ubra~, Plrklng,
utup &amp; delivery, 1-800-831-6625 . central htal, alr1 _~ eranc• reyour own trector? HaV. yoU
quiNd. 1514-448-0;saa;.
thought about buying your. awn
tractor? 11 Mlng a companr
Fumlllhod
EHI-Ionc•,
•
Financial
33 Farms for Sale
•
•
~ 11
driver what rou .,. lntereated
Utlllll• Paid, Shira B•th,
In? Thon ". at C.rdl1111f today ol
41.71 Acm 2 Story Farm $140/Mo. tnl Second Avenue,
t-4100.929-0222 and ook tor nm.
HouM, Lg. Barn, 2 Mlln F10m Galllpollo. 614-448-31145.
WE HAVE IT Alll
21
Business
Mercarvllre, Tobacco Ban, coal,
offlctoncy,
$165.
Out Building $35,000, 114-251- Fumllltod
Gallla -lllolgo Community Ao:tlon
"1
ld F rth •
Opportunity
11111 11
IO'IS.
.
PI
•
....
,
ou
..
ve.,
"
Agency Haa An Immediate
Galllpollt 614-446-4411 after 7
Opening In Molao County For
INonCEI
INS acre farm out Manila Ridge, p.m.
An Ol&amp;ruch lfntake · Worker. OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. 304-837-2436.
L-"·
Thlo Poolllon Roqulroo An In- recommend• that you do buale
a rile Ioua II vI,.. 1 •nd 2 dividual Who WorU ·Will Undlr nou with people Y"" k.- and For S.l• S&amp; ICfl farm, 3bdnn,, room ap111mtnta II VIllage
Prnsure. Good Math or NOT to tond money tlwOUiiltiho with 2 bulldlngo &amp; lorgo bam, Manor
and
Rlvorolao
Bookkllplng
Sldllo
And mall unlll you hllv•lnvMifpted prlcod to Hit, 614-1112-2410.
Aportmonto In Mlddloport. From
·
CapobiiHy Of Worlllng lndopon- tho olfl&lt;lng.
$202. C.l 614-812-58511. EOH.
dently All Well As Teamwork Ar•
35
Lots
&amp;.
Acreage
Further Requlrllmenle For tM Local Pay Phono R - : $1,200
=~~lld~::::.::rt~~~
Pasllon. Comput• Ex~1nct11 A WHk Pot.,tlal. Prlt»d To 1 acre lots, Rl 2, Athton. Clyde
Soli.
1-801J.488-7632.
depoelt
end .-.feNnCII ,.._
O.sll'lb!e. The Individual Uult
Bowen, Jr 304-576-2338.
"""
qulrod,
614-Mi-4441
Have Since,. Concern For the Local llondlng Rouio: $1,200 A
Ecanomleally
DINdvantaged WHk Polelitial. Muet &amp;.II. 1-800- 5, 8, 10, 20 Acrn MIL 'Will Lond S·OOpm
•
'
Contract, Small Down Paymtnt
And Abllhy To Worlej Eftlctlvely 153-1363.
.
No~h 4th, Middleport, 2 room,
Law Paymon4o, et4-384-s!84. ' eftlcllfq'
Wllh Tham II EeMntlal. High
ap.~rtment, dtp &amp; ,..,,
School Education Or _EquiVIIItnt
304-f82-2511. ·
2
Lots
For
Sale:
Approxlmataly
Roqulrod. Trlpo To Out.Of·ArN
Real Estate
1 Aoro lot, &amp; 112 Ao,. l.ol, 4110
Madleal FacllltiiS Are A Pan ot
bedroom
aporlmonto,
milo out Neighborhood Rood 0no
The Job; Therefore Expertecne
$225/mo. lnoludoo utlllll•, $100
Off
St
Rt
141.
114-446-3438
for
In Fed1ral Program• Including
ooourlly dopoolt, no po4o; 614rnor. Information.
Outr1ach And Tran1portatlon 31 Homes for Sale
882-2218.
Art Bonoflclal. Only Those With
SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS: Pomo~ aporlmonto tor rent,
Insurable, Reliable Tran1portae
...
· ·~
lllalgo County, Salem Twf..
tlon And Valid Drlver'a ~k;enn
$850J acN. Remota, beauti ul c 1011 to town, •• 75- S250i trailer
Should Apply. A Knowto(lgo Of
land; wood1, pasture and hllia. IOl, $75fmo.j 114-882•5333.
Meigs County Needed For Out·
Call
for good map. 1-614-5113- Wottlopt 1Bodroom Apartment
reaCh
Transportation.
AP8545, Athtnt,OH.
plications And Resume's Will Be
On ulavlne Pike, Counuy Sit·
Accoptod Through Soptombor
·tlrig, $245/Mo. Dlposh R•
14, 1993 At Thl Gallla ~elgs
qulrod. 014-245-8757.
Rentals
Community Action Agency 8010
45
Furnished
North State Route r, Chnhlre,
Ohio. We Are An EqUII Oppor~
Rooms
All real esrate aaveniStng k1
tunlty Employer.
41 Houses for Rent
IItts newspaper Is subject to
LAW ENFORCEMENT U.S. MorRoomo lor ront- wook or month.
2 bedroom home, 1112 bath•, 111 Sll~
tho Federal Fair Housing Act
11 $120/mo. Gollla Hotot.
shal'af Cuatoma Now Hiring. No
elec, wood burner, 1112 acra
of
1968
whloh
makes
H
itogal
EJipar ance NacHNry. For Ap..
814
9510
prlvato, aurroundod by Chiol
·
to advertise "any preference,
plication Info. Cllll 2111-'ISHMI
Comltalk, hunting &amp; fishing, SIHplng roame with cooking.
Ext. OH155 6 A.ll. To 6 P.M. 7
Imitation or dlscrfmlnaUon
$285. w/$100. dopooH. :lll4-i37- Alao traller lpiCII . All hook·Upa.
Days. .
Call aftar 2:00 p.m., 304-773-based on race, color, religion,
2010 or H7·27tt.
5651, Maeon WV.
sex famiMal status or national
MLT!MT-20 hours pef WMk.
2 Badrooms Furnished, Deposit
Primarily WHktndlmldnlghte.
or1gln, or any Intention to
I
Rettrence
Required,
No
Pitt,
SIHplng r - • · w/ kHchon,
Must be able to work holidays
make Nrf sudl preference,
014-448-4679.
laundry uoo. Sitting room
and other shlf1slt lllldMI. Send
Nmltallon or ~scrlmlnallon . ·
w/ceblt TV. Loc•ted New Havtn.
resume
IO
PlfiOMII
It
Good, ciNn, 2bdrm. homt, with 304,.82-2t911.
Pltasant Vallay Hospital, 2520
banment, ttorage room, l'lnt or
Valley Drive, Pt Pla..ant, WV
11111 with option to buy on con·
This newspaper wiN not
46 Space for Rent
25550 o\AJEOE
tracl, Pomeroy, 614-tiU-7244.
knowing~ oooopt
S
acNertlsemenl:s for real estate
Part·Timl Help Wanted: Con·
Nlc. 3 bedroom houH- In
for ...,, llortlng II
cession,
D.J.'a,
Costume
Which IS In VIOlation of the
Pomaroy, $350/mo., de~lt and . .srmo., 614-812-211!7.
Charactlf'S, Ftoor GUIIrda, lnttr·
,. ..renc11, no pttt, 614-618law. our reader! are hereby
views To Ba Hald At: Skatll47 Wanted tO Rant
7244.
tntormed
that
all
dwellings
vlllo, USA, 211 Upper Rlvtr
adverUsed
In
this
nawspapsr
Southoldo, 2br, bath &amp; 112, oil Wanting ta Nnle 2 ar 3 bedroom
Road, Tuelday Sep114th, From
electric, prlvalt, 2 acm, sur- houee, 1n clun and good condl·
are avaHable on an equal
7-B P.M.
roundtd by conmalk hunllng lion, prot.r prlvato olltlng, 114opportunity
basts.
Want to bo job rudy In loll
ar11 , cloH to fiahlng laka,
If no •ntwlf' piMM
than one yur? Night cl..l n
$285/mo., $100/dop. 304-1137- 112.-2428,
IMve meuage on machint.
ara not convenient? Try ona of 2 bedroom houM, full bl ... 2010 or 304-t37·27111.
our daytime programa.. Diver·
mont. 304-1575-1486.
Two bedroom houae, 1250/mo.,
slUed Mldlcal Occupatlone and
Merchandise
Offici s.rvtc... O~lngs .. 111
3 bedroom homo In Rutland, private Hltlng, Pomeroy, 614available. Call now. Th• Adutt
doubil lot, garden. cellar, out- 949-4258.
'EducaUon Center, 1..aoo-637·
building&amp;, lmmldllte ~ . . .
6506 or 014-'ISJ-3511.
olon, $1'3,500 080,114-1112-2502. 42 · Mobile Homes
5I
Household
WANTE[): EMERGENCY REUEF
3 bedroom, t 112 bath, garagt,
for Rent
Goods
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC. oqulppod kHchon full baTOR (S) NOidod To Tseoh
ment, rural wat11, 2.48 acr•, 10 1Dx6D mobile homt, 2 bedroom, 13x13 mutlt-brown tcalloplld
Community And Personal Skllla
mll11 from town, State ROUII 920 Fourth Ave, Gallipollt. $325 carptlt, 130. Eartr_ American wall
To Adutta
With
Lumlng
141, $37,100. No lind contriiCit. watar tnd truh paid 614-446- un~. Oft., $25. TV 111nd, $10.
- Llmltatlo111 In Gallla And llelg•. 114·379-2252 anyttmo; (3711-2120 4416 tHor 7 p.m.
304-773-5202.
HOURS: AI Schodulod lAo
3
2 bedroom tralltr In Tuppere 3 plect white wrought Iron
NH(ttd;
Some
OVII'nlahta or 7t-22'14evenlngt)
3 Bedrooms, .2 Batha, 2 car At• Plaine, $1751 month plut utllltiH blllro oot, $35. 304-675-5880.
NHdtd, LictnM, Thi'M V""..ra
[)riving Exporionoo 1 Good Driv- Itched Ger~~ge, Outbulldl.-.a, and dtposlt, 614-161-3487.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Bidwell P - School Aroo, 114Ing Rocord Ana Adoquato
2 bedroom trsller, rat &amp; dtp, no
114-446-3158 Or 614-441-4428
AutomobUa Covaraae Required. 387.7504.
polo, Rt . 02 N. Locuol Rd on
'tO DAY SAME AS CASH
So lory: $4.7S Mour. If lntorHiod,
3bdrm. houH &amp; gor11go, Appto rlght, 304-675-1076.
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
Contact Cecilia AI 1400-531·
S.., SynteUIIj,_ 11110 :lbclrm. 2 Bod
CA R
2302. Deadline For Appllc.nll:
FURNISHINGS:
haute an LM ::HNitNOSvracuN·,
rooma,
, entor Sa .. OUTSIDE
9/10193.
Equal
Opj&gt;orlunHy
11 A 1 Ho
,,
On
Lind
Contract.
2 Black• Wrought Iron Ttblo Wfo4 Choirs·
1
1
Employer.
~ :'~o. mo
Bank. From Big Boor. 614-446-14011 Af- Fon Back Rooking Chair $51:
Garden Arch Wl)t'a $129.00
'
ter 4 P.M.
Situation
12
3
Lind ContrliCI:
Btdroom 3 Btdroom Mobllt Homa In
Bedding -Twin lllatt Sat Silt, Futt
HOOIIO On Comer Lot In Mlllor, Bidwell ArH, 01,.,.11 Roqulrod, $ttl Sit Cuoon S14t Sot; 4
Wanted
Ohio, SIOJlOO SS,OOO Down Coii114-368-M36 After I P.M.
Dr11wor ChMt $44.118; Cor Bod'o
$400/Ma. 1-rM Rnanclng, 6
G.,tlaman Looking For Llidy
· Puil
Bunk Bod'o, Poollf Yurs,
Then
MuM
Ren~late
3
Bldrooma
1250/Mo.
Plua
Com~nion,
Frl111d, P11111
Lint Of Southw'lltem YltM
Or
Fafl1111noo
At
Bonk.
Clll
114Dopollt
SR
554,
112
Milo
OH
160,
Send A..ponM To: Box CD 100,
Storti~ At $30.00; lndano Many
251-15550 Or 114-8111-6500.
514-311-11151 . '
cio Golllpollo Dilly Trlbuno, 825
Shopoo l Slzoo Storllna. At
Third Avenue, Gtlllpolll, OH
Uka
Now
2
Bedroom t55 Friendly Rldgo $200/Mo. $5.00. 2 Locatlono -hlldo lluto
45131.
Homolhoomont.
$36,500. $100 DopooH, 1 BOdroom, 114- Auction Or 4 Mlloo Out MI.
0-11 A.lll. To I P.ll.llon -811.
$4,000,DP. $360.28 Monthly 256-611Qg.
• NOidod: Room And Board For
Poymonto, 614-446-1157, t-8, Or ;::.::..:.::;:::.:--:;--..,.- - - - Bunk Bodo, llolh Full llu
• 40 yur Old Malt Who u ... A
614,.94-450I After 7 P.M.
Fumlllhod Exoopllonolly CINn,
· Walker And Needt Monitoring
2 bedroom tralltr In Porter eru. OwoiHy, Rod Tubulor F-...~....~­
- • Of lllodk:atlon. can 614-367-7374'.
collont Condftlonl 114-318-vlUI.
M11on, 3br, llmilyroom, 1 bath, 114·:J88.8000.
Aok For Caoo l4anagor.
otorogo building, largo bookElrty
American , eeooden
yard, wnn wt~lkfng dlttanc• to Nice 1 112br. mobil homa, quiM ••, . . drN..-, • . 304-7'1'J..
echool, Poet Office, btnk, country lilting, 7ml out
18 Wanted to Do
grocery IIO&lt;o. 304-882-28ttl or Sandhfll Rd., goo hoot, CA, 5202.
• • C:Ortlllod child co,. provldor will
114-441.(1340,
lease • $27S dopooft roqulrod,
Flrooc"':o"4 :J:zoctrlo logl, 2 anno pola, $275/mo. 304-1115-34113.
.. teke cara of ClhUdnn In my
dlrono.
-21U.
· home, full time or per1 lime, af32
Mobile
Homes
Nlco
ciNn
mobtto
homo,
good
; t..- .c:hool, rtf.....-.cee, Ch•ster
for Sale
rofiJonco roqulrod, will conoldor
. ar11 , piHII e~ll e14-id-4282,
conttructlon worker•· tor ,.n.
. Mary.
f144.72 per month, n.w 14' wide ten. 814-448-0SOI.
•, ~ Cttlid ctre, I will watch InhuMe l
mobl .. home, Include• aklrtlng, Rio Grandi 12d0 2 Bldrooma
up In my Polnl: Ptee11nt home,
etepe, compltte
Nfup I Unfurnlahld,
Stove,
$50. wMk, full time. 304..a75dlllvory, I montho lot ront, and Rolrlgoro~ Cloon1 Roflronooo, King olzo watorbod, now rnat,,...., :104-112·37'14 01 304 ·~
153t.
I yoor warronty, t.aoo-837... 25. 114-245-11110 After • P.U. ·
. 242t
.

-· = = - - - -

.

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

41T-

1=(1o)

~' ~AI~ !

Upright Frlgldalr,.
-114· I·
atmond,tllui
now. tiel.
$200.00
245 31
tor Sale
~~ : 'Yrr~·•a•Att,loatl"l"
...,~,
,. '
54 Miscellaneous
, _ ~PI•. 14• or · WuhorL Drtor, Rofrl•ontor,
call 614-812-3711. EOH.
I.
Fl
,
Merchandise
'·
Fumllhod
EHiclorocy:
107 ~l:.r, .V. ~.;...Air ~
1014 New Moon 10x55 2 Bad·
roomo, AC, Awning Good Con- Socond, Galllpollo, ShaN Both
Rotrtgorator, llk:rowave, 114UtiiHin Pold, $185/Mo. I~ 258-1236.
dillon, $3,509, 614-:is.:ii&amp;'ir.
••
-11 Attar 7 P.M.
M1tal Lawn Furniture Set lnclud·
1911 12xl0 moblta homo,
Fumlohod
EHiclonc:y
Noll
52
Sporting
Goods
lng Glldor c;hotr Tablo country
2bdrm., m111t move, $2500, lm·
7 112
12 r.~go Browning auto modo :J:.'-4:~ .Cotor $35, Phone:
m~la11 po... uion, &amp;14~742· Galllpolla, Utlllllll Paid, $105;
2357.
814-448-4411 Aftor 7 P.M.
In oiQlum• DOOd cond, 51100.
NSA Wotor FIHor With ThrH
·1m tfew Moon, 12 X 85, 814• Fumlohod 1 Br Ape., 701 Fourth, firm. )~o-1732.
G 111f.:
Sh
B h $
Y11r Warronty. Sold For $180.
11112-39411.
I
I,
are
It ' 200 Bur Hunter Megnum Com- Askin~~ : $50, Call614--441-1721.
00
...
11173 WlndiOf, 12xl0, 2br, gao ~w~ Paid, 014-446-4411 AHor po101d ~ f!'~!l"l' camoulllgo,
· ·
$75. 304-o,....,-..,..
Dno "Holt"
Urod ba10mont
hut, good cand., •$5,000. 304Apartmtnt tor rent In Pt. Remington 700ADL 270, new model fore air tuma~Ill up
882-28'58 after &amp;pm.
PJ ..aant, 614-992·5858 after cond, ecopo • CUI Included, lor de~llng; 150,000
' exc.
--"
con ., .200 linn. 304-6711-2t02.
11173 12xl5 Kirkwood, 2 bod- 5pm
·
u..u
one
au801"1,
•400.
•
ou....
_,
·
_
room, ntw carpet:, fumaca &amp; air
eond 3y" old, 10x12 bldg, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT _204_6_.- - - - - - - " - - Portobtt Ughtod Ftaahtng Sign
With l.ottoro $200, Phono: lfotlreated deck w/ roof. 304-875BUDGET PRICES AT JAC~SON . 53
A tl
446·7787.
7138 ltiYI meaage or 1·304- ESTATES,
535 Jockoon Plko
n qUeS
586-2013.
ttom $206/mo. Walk to ohop &amp; Buy or oal. Rl-lno Antlquoo, RabbH Jockat, Whfto, Sill
1124 E. Main 81-' on Rt. 12... Small, Ladlll, $20, Ellctllent
11173 UnKopo 12165 2BR. gao movlle. CIIIIM-441-2568. EOH.
,_,
.., Condition, 114-4441-2201.
heal, new c:ai'PII1~xtra nlc1 EtflcJtncy apartment, ,.,.,.nee, ~-~--ow-. HouN: M.T.W. 10:00
through out. $79~0.uo 0144-446- dopooH, no polo. 304-1175-6102.
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00 Rolnbow Swoopor, Llko Howl
ot'IS
to 5:00p.m. 614-H2-2526.
U- Watorl Takn Dull Outf
bu
Complat• With Atttchm•nta.
1979 New Moan, 14x70, 3 bed· Rm Holw Apartment•, 553 W. eel
Avonuo, Now Avoltabto
nt
to
y: ''Old Loa Dlllvor S45Q, 304-529-9450.
roomo, AJC1 natwal gao fumaco 1 Second
For Occupancy, 2 Bedroom Hauu'" will Nmovt. 614-2~
underpen01ng, porch, gooa Untt•, Range, Ritrlg"rator AC, .c48 •v•nlng• or Nrly am.
Rulletlc car stereo powtr amp,
oond, Galllpollo Forrry, WV. :lll4- Carpet, Income AISirlctaa,1 El80
watt1, like new, S45, 614·&amp;92675-297B.
.
dorly, Dloablode Handicapped, 54 Miscellaneous
2354.
Mobile Homes

Sale

1HO PontiK UMane, 44oor,

SWAIN
AUCTION 1 FURNITURE. 12

.. p

Autos for

AaiOit

Ook Fumlt11r11: To- A
Chalro, Cwloll, Curved Glooo
China Etc. Rlvor Valloy Ook
Fumnure, - - Crook Rood,
Clolllpoh, Ohiol14 441 4311.
NJco - - tobto. 2 ......,
~nlng jara. all far 120.00. 114--2111

2 Bldrool'l'lll, Stove, R.trtger~tor
1
·
h
Fumlohld,
(Oalllpollo)
eop e gomg t rough a divorce
DowntownAroa, Off Stroot Porlt.__ _ _ _ __,;i:.;u;.;s;;,t,;,lo;;.v;;e;.,;;th~i;s.;o;;;n.;;e;;l.".._.,..,..,..,..,..,...jlng, Rafartnca Required, 1514r
441.0855, i~.

151 Sacand.Avenua, Gllllpollt.

~toll , ~~~~ \ lif '•

-

NewiUs-.1
Houoohold fumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrldlo Rd. Pt. PINHnt, WV,

COint, Gofd Rln,a, SUver Coln1,
Gold Colno. Ill. .S. Coin llhop,

"""'P

~··
At. 7 N-VInyl
114~~:
••
CarpoiiiO;

2 Bedroom, Oarogo Aportmont,
Stov• l Retrlg•r•for Fumilhed,
~oforenc11, &amp; Dopooft Roqulrod, 614-446.0284.

Top Prl- Pold: All Old U.S.

tt~ob '(.

71

~ '(61-H'I~/~AI ioWAf"Jl.ll.I,I~M­
( L&lt;&gt;llt.ol¥i'T 9..1-ll&lt;'Vt;' All'j1'~t~'!

LAYNl'SI'URNITURE
COfnplolo homo fumlohlnao.
Hour.-: ...., .....................
0322, 3 mu. 0011 lulovllto Ad.
Froo Doliwi'J.
.

for Rent

Junk care, any condiUon, 114-

I

Goods

tor Rent ·

J &amp; D'o A41to P111a ond Salvogo,
aloo buying junk ..,. &amp; trucliL
304-773-1341

Wednesday, September 8, 1993

••

f9 PRINl
NUMBERED IE TIERS
IN THESE SQUARES
A

V

I

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
G ET ANSWER
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
J- •
Mentor - Audit - Witch - Waggle - TOWING
Tha not so smart fellow jumped into the slowly moving
cab and yelled." Follow that cab!" La~hing the cabbie
replied , "I have to, he's TOWING me!
. .

"800

1tl3 Thundorblrd1 gOod ru:a
condttlon, IOiidea, lookl
,
$3100 or mako olio&lt;, I 11121778.

81

'

Home
(

Improvements

11184 Dodge Diplomat, n-pollool--..:.;~=~~;:.:::_...;__
BASEMENT
groo!, $8011. 304-4171-40tO.
WATERPROOFING
,
Uncondltlonol lllotlmo gua"n1884 . PonUac
Partatenne tH. Local rtflrancet tumlshld.
Brougham 4dr... Mdsn, bea.,ltul Call 1-tD0-287.0571 Or 114·237cayr, IY«J option, now tlroo, 301 0488 Rogoro Watorprooflng. Eo21_;_
00.:.•.:.
1 14-t...:..:--112.:.-11.:.71:..:.::1·----- tobllllhod 11175.
_ ..
..;.;_•$21:.;:
,
ttll OtdoDavie
Sewing
Machine
And
ho
PS PI ~nap II,
c'llmato eoittrot,' p::; Vacuum Cl11ner Repair frM
Lockl, Etc. AIIIFM Storoo ca. Pick-Up And Dlllvery, a0or; 01
Crook Road, 014-440.0214. ·
Mill. .l..oHodt 0.. . OWnor
Boughl New Car, N..cl To hil Ron'e TV SII'Yice, epec&amp;llillng
Excelllnl: Condition!
Loaka In :Z.nlth also Mrvlclng moat
Good!. Alldng: $~7U. 114-441- ottwr br1nd1. Hou11 calls, 1110
4223 11hor 1:00 P.M.
IOmo oppllanc:o Nptlro. WY
_
Pontile
F'-,
olt-,
••
304.S'I8-23tl
Ohio 014-446-2454.
111 ~
_..,
· -· 1 ,..
ltl2-2411.
SoPik: Tonk Pumping $10 Galllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPIUSES
'
ttll7 Chevy C.vatlor, $3,500; Jacklon OH t-800-537,.528
110 Chevy ClvaU., $3,500.
'
•
114-441-473f.
Will build polio oovoro, docko
-~
Or--"
A
ooroonod
roomo, put up vlnyi
8
1111
1- '
..... m 2,000
Ill, aidlna Of trtllll' aklr11ng 514·

'I

'

~ .

'

car wf pollctl peck•ge, RIM

'I

a

a:;'l,

:::.~Vwy CINn, $3,509.

2454152.
•
Curtlt Home lmprovtmeMta. No
Oldomoblto 11• bltock. l14- .toll Too Big Or Small, Y10ro Ex2•2411•
•
Plrlonco {In 01"- ~-r
Hom1
'""""
1118 F~ GT, black exttrior: R mil. Addhlon .. Foundatlone
g"y 1 - air PB PB iiw.
ooflng, Kltcltono /Batho. In:
POL, ounra.:., 1' ~. j,...;
!'roo Eotlmolot. 114-387drlvon In wlntor, Sunday drlvor,
I.
$10,500, 114-11411-2211
, .... Muotong CIT, ""' lnllflor
Plumbing &amp;
and olllorior, PW1• Pl:!'.ilt PM,
H
olr, I •P~'ll.·•oOHont
ion,
•
eating
$11100, 6
11-2217.
Froomon'o Hootlnl And
1. . Ptym11Ah Rlll8nt, Run. l tnlllllatlon And II'Yicl A '

J:87

;,rod,
B2

Coolt\

LaMo Oeod, $1,800, 114-441- Corllllod. Rollldonttal
2124.
clal. 114-2116-t611.
'

c;..,,.or-

ttat Llnoaln lllorlt 7 Elloollont 84

. Electrical &amp;

$10,500, . . . , _ luyono 0n1y.

Refrigeration

Condft~ '!1·0011 1111101,

114-441-1011

Aoklng

llooldon4111
or
c:oritm~n~lat
111112 ChoVJ
AS, 21th wllllrtng, now Of ,.potro
Anni'!':!"JY Etllttoft Loodod
•-r Ucenltd tlectrlcl :
With T-T- M..t W tt• OOO Rldon011r Eloctrlcol wvOO:~~·
OBO, IM~I-t7ltl.
'
•
304.. 75-1711.
•
•

ca-..

your acts could affect others
adversely tod~y. so be sure your intentions
Mail $2 a nd a long, self-addressed, are pu re and noble. II they aren't, problems
s tamped en velop e lo Matc hmaker. P .O . are possible.
Box 4465, New York. N.Y. 10 163.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Even though
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) T hings you e nioy you can gel qu1te angry lrom time to lime ,
doing loday you will do with elficacy. bul you ' re not a person who holds prolonged
can

ASTRO-GRAPH

.'
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

,.

..

I you

quences

·what to do to make the relationship work .

asstgnments or tasks you dislike might not grudges . Today forg1veness is likely to gov·
1
be things to which you 'll want to affix your ern you r behavior .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Small issues
could cause you considerable fr us tration
endeavor today bad leelings could result it today and slow you up mor e th a n they ·
you expect too much from your co-partici· . sho uld. Conversely, if you have to deal with
pan t. The same will be true if 'he /she .1 something serious and important . you 'll
expects loo much lrom you.
· handle it wel L
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 211 Small GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Don't do any·
•
domestic issues could be blown totally out thing today you know lrom persona l experi·
of propo rtion today. Keep th is in mind ence could cause you or someone else a
Thuroday, Sopl. 9, 1993
before you star t finding /aults with your · problem . II you ig nore you r judgment ,
.
..
. mate.
~ you're apt to regret it
_ Your leadership qualitieS could be substan- CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) In your CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) Today you
, • ' tia ily enhanced In the year ahe~d . In material affai r_s today you might caine out 1 might be inclined to strive lor something
a rrangements whe re yoll w~re previously bolter if you follow you r awn advice and that is presently beyond your capabilities .
content to be a _lollower, you II now want a cou nsel instead of adhering to the sugges· Don't spin you r wheels on the unattainabl e,
- ~ mare commanding role.
.
tions of others.
';
s~;~l realistic objectives.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) In comp~tltlve AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-fob. 19) You'll have LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) A domi.neering
situations today, you ~ho uld fare well II you to be a bil ,thick skinned today It you in tend ' associate might try to involve you in some·
:: ,:think' of your compettk&gt;rs of bemg at_least to take over a faltering s ituation and reorga- thing today In which you do not want to par·'
as good as you are and of yqur being at nize it. Even thoug h you 'll be right, you · ticipale. Stand up lor your rights and don 't .
. least as good as they are. Trymg 10 pate~ might be severely criticized.
be coerced.
·" up a broken romance? The Astro ·G raph PISCES (Fob. 20_-Morch 20) The conse·

''

'

sig nature. Take pride in all you do.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In a 10inl

...

..

'\

�P11ga 14-The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 8, 1993

=r~~~~~------------------~

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

teams play

Pick 3:
816
Pick 4:
5213
Super ~tto:
6-16-21-32-39-46
Kicker:
517609

home games

12 PAK
12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS

Ohio Lottery

Meigs grid

PageS

·Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

Low tonight In mlcl-501, partly
tloudy. ~rlclay, blah In 70s.

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SEPT. 5 THRU SEPT. 11, 1993

RC COLA
·PRODUCTS

Vol 44, N0.14
llulllmedl•lnc,

1 Section. 10 PIIIIN 35 cen..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 9, 1993

AMulllm.... lnc. ,..,_~

24 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

Catfish
Festival
• • •
activzties
announced

.CAMPBELL'S

BUCKET BEEF

.
$249
Cubed Steak •••••••••!~•••

(
Sausage •••••••••••••••••••• 99

MOUNTAINEER

I LB. ROLfor 10 OZ. LINKS

$

'
.
899
·
Ch eese ••••••••••••••••••••••
SLB.BLOCK

\

LB.

Eye of Round Roast...
USDA CHOICE.BONELESS BEEF

LB • .

Bottom Round Steak ••

S~ITH~ELD SMOKED

.

_

·

P1cn1c Hams...........~••• 89

$ 189

.
$219

(

.

DEL
MONTE

PUDDINGS

18.

begin at 1 p.m. and those attending
areaskedtotakealonglawnchairs.
will he provided this

~~~leachers

CHARMfN

TOILET
TISSUE

SLB TUB

~

12 ROLL PKG.

$ 99

c

·--·
•

SUNSHINE

DOG FOOD
FRESH

.

·

Celery••••••••••••••••
VALLEY BELL

2 '$1 00

.

2o/o Milk ••••••••••••••::~~.
DEW FRESH

1-----~ ~'

99(

CATSUP

Margar1ne •••••••••••••••••

4
Cat Food ••••••••••~.~~~••

KEMPS

9,.LIVES

·

·.

3 LBS.

.

Ice Cream •••••••••!:~=~~...

.

$299

'

DEL .MONTE ..

.,_

_ •

_

COUPON

I

::

I I
II

HI DRI

_

IP-17.......

PAPER TOWELS

JUMBO
ROLl

ol

_ _

I

_

COUPON,.,___ I • r

:1

I ::

::

II

: i GAL

I

•

COUPON ...._

·

KRAn· .._....

(

Good Only AI owoll'a Super Valu
ol
I
I: Offer Good Sept Slhru Sept 11, 1!193 11 I I
1
Umlt3 Per Cuatomor
1
1I

r- -- --- co1JPON -..;;..;,;..;,;.-II

11

:~

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE ::

::

CHEER lOS

lOOL
SIZE

:

·- ------- -- -- ------ -...
................
...

Good Only At Powell'a Super \lalu
Olltr Gao4 Stpl. 5 lh1u So pt. 11, 1111
Llml11 Per Cualomor

I

1

1 11
11

~ - - - - - -------------- --·
·············~·

Good Only AI Powoll'a Super 'holu
Olltr Gaa4 Sopll !h11 So pt. 11, tIll

::

17 OZ. CAN

IUY ONE, GET ONE ::
.

1l
II I

Good Only At Powoll'a Super Volu
Olfoo Good Sop!. 5 thro Sept. 11, 1Ill

:1

11

·--------------------·· ................
---------------------·.
······-:········
Umlt 3 Per Cuato-

,.

.
'

•

I

I

..

28 OUNCE
SQUEEZE BOTTLE

2
s100
ARGOZesta
Crackers
•••••
!f••••• 99&lt; P1zza •••••••••!2!·..... . ·
.... .... ....... ....... . . ._... ... ....... ..._... ................ -· . .. .... ...... ... .............. .
PEAS
:: cLoRox a·LEACH
I:
.
: .:
I.
:1
I:
::
69(
:
:
3/S
1
:::
:1 .3 s1 i:
:17.250L
. . l: :
FREE . ::
s
BA~QUET

I

1

Umlt 1 hr Cullom•

1

,.
~

:.
"

~

r•
,..r .
r

,..

'

~

.•'
i

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Creek.

CATFISH FESTIVAL smins ·You can be
in style with a catrJSb festival shirt, says Tom
Dooley, president of the Middleport Community

Association which is sponsoring tbe Sept. 18 res.·
tival from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

·

$10 000 f rom·
.

'

At 1 p.m. Dee and Dallas will
By JIM FREEMAN
present an hour of country and
_ Sentinel News Staff
.western music following at 2 p.m. . The Meigs Coun~, Chamber of
"· l)y'a'dante Pi'iiilam from the Mid- commerce and !conomic Develnight Cloggers. Satin and lace, a opment Office may be the first
baton group will perform at 2:30 . county office to profit from forfeiand at 3 p.m. · the Middleport_ . tures stemming from the Robert
Church of Christ quanet will take Fife case,
.
the stage for a half-hour of gospel
The Meigs County Board of
and barbershop.
Commissioners, during.its regular
At 3:30p.m. the Ohio Valley · meeting Wednesday ,;norning,
Two Steppers will perform fol- approved making $10,000 available
lowed at 4 p.m . by C. J. and the for the 'economic development
Country Gentlemen, at 4:30 by the office. The $10,000 was assessed
Big Bend Cloggers, and at 5 p.m. for prosecution costs in the case
by Blitzlcteig, a rock group.
and was deposited in the Meigs
In David Diles park from noon County General Fund.
until 6 p.m. when th~ festival con:Fife, 67, of Middleport, who
eludes, will be Shirley Huston entered guilty pleas to two counts
doing basket weaving, the Middle- of receiving stolen ~perty and a
port Church of Christ wome.n doing third count of trafflckmg m food
quilting, Susan Baker making stamps, forfeited approximately
bears, and Mary Wise , caning $185,000 and about 3,000 rifles,
chairs. There will also be a display shotguns and handguns seized from
by the Big Bend Antique Farm his South Third Avenue home and
Equipment.
·
business on July 9. In addition he
Veterans Memorial Hospital and agreed to forfeit appro~iniately
Continued on page 3
$60,000 from bank accounts and all

•t
It e I~0 r ~
I eI u re

F•~

personal property of which he is
unable to prove ownership.
An entry in the Meigs Co11nty~
Coun of Common Pleas, signed by
Judge Fred W. Crow UI and dated
Sepl 2. authorized the transaction
·into the county general fund:
"The coon, upon motion of the
prosecuting attorney, ·ol\. behalf of
the state of Ohio and for good
cause shown, finds that the costs of
prosecution in the (Fife) case
should he assessed in the amount of
$10,000 for the benefit of the
Meigs County General Fund: said
costs to be deposited with the clerk
of coun.
"Said $10,000 shall be taken
from the proceeds of the items voluntarily forfeited by the defendant
and paid over to the county general
fund from the sale of forfeiied
items. The prosecuting auomey, in
his discretion, may pay into the
general fund, the sum of $10,000
from the cash forfeited pending
reimbursement at the time of the
sale of the forfeited items. The

clerk of coons is funher authorized
to pay said $10,000, upon receipt.
to- the .Meigs County General
Fund."
Commissioner Manning Roush
moved: "After we put this money
in county general, we in tum make
it available to the chamber of commerce for the purpose of continu·
ing operation of the economic
development offiCe for the remainder of the year."
.
The motion passed unanimously.
Commissioners met with
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton
concerning a proposed business
arrangement
between
the
recorder's office and B11siness
Records Corporation of Chicago.
Under the proposed arrangement, the company will provide
three computers to be used by
recorder's office employees and
attorneys using the office. Pan of
the company ' s jo~ des_cnpt~on
incllldes the recordmg, mdexmg
Continued on paJ!e 3

Economic recovery stronger
Firm hired
.
to remove in Mid-America than on coasts
t!ood
asbestos at
surSouthern
.

$189

·

•

.-

20 LB.

Southern Ohio Coal Company
will be able to continue pumping
water from the Meigs 31 mine after
a federal judge yesterday allowed
the company to proceed.
U.S. D1strict Judge Sandra
Beckwith Wednesday temporarily .
stayed a U.S. EPA order that would
have stopped the pumping from the
mine into a tributary of Raccoon

c
b.
•
Ad:~~~:~~g:;gewill .Meigs ham er to recetve

4 pk.

(

$4 99
R1beye Steak•••••••••••••
•
·
s2
99
Chicken L1vers••••• ••••••
US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

A queen's contest, a pet parade,
demonstrations and diSplays, a
variety of entenainment, and health
checks are all included in the lineup for the 1993 Catfish Festival to
be held on Saturday, Sept. 18, in
Middlepon.
Activities will get underway at
11 11.m. with a pet parade f01111ing
at Dan's on North Second. The
parade will move down the street to
the T where entries will he judged
and ribbons awarded in several categories. Edie King is chairman of
the new festival feature.
Pet costuming is encoutaged as
are dnusual modes of pet transponation for the parade.
At noon the annual queen' s contest will take place under the direction o( Merri Amsb;uy on the stage·
to be located at the intersection of
North Second and Mill. Girls
between 16 and 20 are invited to
participate in the contest and entry
forms may be picked up at the

s

.

AMERICAN

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

CHICKEN
NOODLE SOUP
10.75 oz.

Federal judge
allows pumping
to continue

economists by surprise. Many of
WASHif:lGTON (AP) - The ·and ihus provide more jobs for U.S. them had been expecting jobless
U.S. economy got
news today workers.
The U.S. government supplied claims to increase last week.
from two econom1c reports and a
In a second report, the Com long-awaited cut in German inter- good news of its own in two merce Depanment said that a
est rates .that analysts are lioping repons showing that the number of vey conducted in July and August
will spur the sluggish global econo- laid-off workers fil~ claims showed American companies plan
for unemployment lieilefits fell to
my.
.
to increase investment spending on
A finn for asbestos removal wr 5
Germany's central bank, after its' lowest level in four years, while new plants and equipment by 7.1
hired and an energy audit of the months of pressure from the United businesses increased their planned
schools was planned during Tues- States and its European allies, spending on new plants and equip- percent this year. That - up from
.a 6.4 percent projected inc~ in
day night's meeting of the South- finally cut both of its main interest menl
The Labor Depanment reponed the previous survey done 10 Apnl
em Local Board of Education held rates by one-half percentage J)&lt;llnt.
and May and if realized would he
at the high school.
President Clinton and others in that first-time claims for jobless the biggest gain in investment
Site Scam, Inc. was hired for the his administration hope the lower benefits dropped by 10,000 last
asbestos project to he financed with German rates will spur increased week to 316,000, the lowest level spending since 1989.
Economists cautioned, however,
a $223,000 interest free loan to he purchases of American products since June 3, 1989. The report took
against
reading too much into one
paid .bilck by the district at $11,000
day's
events.
They said that even
a year.
the
cut
in German interest
with
The program of reducing energy
rates
and
the
other
positive news,
use by improving heating and lightthe
U.S.
economy
is likely to
ing in sch®l buildings was disremain
on
a
fairly
sluggish
growth
cussed and an energy audit was
path
for
some
time
to
come.
planned.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that on SeptemThat assessment was supponed
Margaret Smith was hired as a
ber 8, John Chaney and Domie Spaun repOned that between 6 and
by
the latest regional survey by the
teacher at the Syracuse Elementary
6:30 p.m. someone entered Chaney's ·vehicle parked near County
Federal Reserve, which showed
School, Tammy Chapman as the
Road 28 in Letan Township and stole a wallet, a cassette tape, a
th at the United States in August
girls' junior high basketbaU coach,
pack of chewing tobacco and some change.
remained
mired in a sluggish and
and Carolyn Robinson as a study
Chan~y and Spaun were in the area doin!): some target shooting.
unven
recovery
with the vast midhall monitor iit the junior high
An old dark colored station wagon was seen 10 the area.
dle
of
the
country
doing better than
school at a pay rate of $9 .05 an
the
East
and
West
coasts.
hour.
The report Wednesday Qy the
Hired as substitute teachers
Fed
•s 12 tegional banks singled out
were Nancy Jo Aldridge, Tim A.
Helen Cutlip, Langsville, was arrested and cited to Meigs County
Cleveland,
Dallas, Kansas City and
Coon on a petty theft clwge after being caught by the Loss PrevenCurfman, Mary J. Edwards, Rachel .
Minneapolis
as Fed districts where
Eskey, Linda F. Johnson, Melissa
tion Officer at Fisher's Big WheeL It was reponed that the suspect
growth
was
above the national
had 76 paclaiges of floss, a lint-up kit and two packages of floss
L. Howard, Melissa K. Justice,
average.
But
it said economic
bobbins. Cutlip will appeal in County Coon next week.
Heather Sk~nner and Dorothy
growth
was
lagging
in states along
Bentz.
the
East
and
West
coasts.
The board voted to increase stuAnalysts said weakness in these
dent tldmisaion to basketball anq
\ITeBS,
because they are among the
in the case of the State of Ohio versus Bob Bush, a motion to
football games from Sl.SO 10 $2.
most
populous
in the country, was
release the defendant upon his own recognizance was denied recent· It - voted to employ Negotjahaving an adverse effect on the
Iy in the Meigs County Coon of Common Pleas.
tions Services of the Ohio School
economy.
entire
'
Contlnaed on pal(t 3 ·

,..---Local briefs-----.
Deputies receive theft complaint

Women arrested on charge

Bush denied release

~

Beckwith directed that briefs be
submitted in two weeks . Further
administrative action by the U.S.. .
EPA is precluded until then, she
ruled.
SOCCO had stopped pumping
temporarily Wednesday to comply
with EPA's order which was
scheduled to go into effect at I :20
p.m., company spokeswoman BJ.
Smith said. Pumping resumed after
Beckwith issued her ruling at about
2:10 p.m., she added.
. Beckwith issued a preliminary
injunction against the U.S. EPA
and the U.S. Office of Surface
Mining on Aug. 19. The injunction
prevented the agencies from stopping water removal efforts at the
mine.
· Both agencies appealed the ruling to the U,S. Sixth Circuit Coun

of Appeals ano atso askeO' tor a
stay of the injunction. The coon of
appeals demed the stay request
from OSM, but granted it i1l part
with regard to the U.S. EPA. The
appellate coun' s ruling permitted
the U.S. EPA to conduet an investigation of the Meigs mine pumping
operation. Howe.v.er, the ruling
enjoined U.S. EPA from issuing an
order requiring the immediate cessation of pumping until after it had
concluded such an investigation
and made necessary findings,
Smith said.
The U.S. EPA issued its order to
stop the water removal on Sept. 2,
two days after receiving permission
from the appeals coun to conduct
its investigation.
·
. Southern Ohio Coal attorneys
Wednesday asked Judge Beckwith
to enforce the injunction and nuUi·
fy the U.S. EPA's administrative
order, arguing that the agency did
not conduct the necessary investigation in keeping with the intent of
the appeals coun ruling.
Southern Ohio Coal contends
that the U.S. EPA had no basis to
attempt to ovenule the Ohio EPA's
order which made the pumping
operation legal.
Continued on·page 3

Man charged with murder
A felony murder warrant issued
by Mason County authorities Wednesday led to the extradiclioo of a
man suspected in a Mason County
murder.
David John Francisco, 18; ad- ·
dress unknown, waived extradiction after a lint degree murder warrant was issued by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department Wednesday. He is enroute from Florida
with Sheriff Ernie Watterson and
SgL G.L. Clark of the Point
Pleasant Detachment-West Virginia
State Police today.
Francisco is clwged with the
murder of Norman Ray Laudermilt,
28, of Mason.
Laudermilt's body was found
September 2 in a dry creekbed near
the ,McClintic Wildlife Management Area's public shooting range.
He had been shot six times by a
small caliber weapon.
According to Clark, authorities
have "a lot of good evidence"
against Francisco.
Laudermilt 's bUck was processed Wednesday morning by Florida

authorities. Clark said a gun,
believed 10 be the murder weapon,
was found. He Slated the gun and
other evidence will have to go to
the State Crime Lab in Charleston
for testing.
Clark reponed Francisco appeared before a Baker County,
Florida judge 3TOI!nd 3 p.m. Wednesday and waived exlradiction.
Francisco charged by the
Baker County Sheriff's Department
with dealing in stolen property and
resisting arrest with violence.
David Dearing of the Florida State
Auorney's Office said Francisco
was released into the custody of
West Virginia authorities.
According to Dearing, Florida
will not drop the charges until
Francisco is prosecuted in West
Virginia.
Francisco was 81Tested around 6
p.m. Monday, near MacClenny, FL
after eluding police for nearly 14
hours. He was spotted in Laudermilt's s10len · uuck around 4 a.m.,
scuffled with a deputy and ran into
a heavily wooded area wearing
only a Jl81T of shons.

Coal talks resume
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Coal industry and union negotiators are back at the bargaining
table, maintaining a ~tore of discreet " no comments ' on the tenor
of the talks.
But their public war of words
continued unabated.
Neither side would discuss
details of the negotiations that
resumed Wednesday after a break
for the Labor Day holiday.
But in an exchange of shafi!IY
worded news releases, each s1de
accused the other Wednesday of
viohiting federal labor law.
"The BCOA's contempt for the
law and workers' rights is an illegal
throwback to the 1930s-era labormanagement relations," UMW
President Richard Trumka said as
lhe union filed a complaint with the
National Labor Relauons Board.
The union's complaint asked the
board to charge the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association with
refusing to provide information
needed for the negotiations.
The union's news release carne
on the heels of one issued by the
operators • group to announce that
the labor hoard on Tuesday filed
charges accusing the union of
inducing AMAX Coal Industries
Inc. to illegally withdraw from the
association .
AMAX, the nation ' s thirdlargest. coal producer, also was

charged.
"The NLRB action serves to
underscore the desperate and
doomed strategy the union has chosen in its conduct of these ne~otia­
tions," said B.R. Brown, chwrman
or CONSOL, Inc., and chief negotiator for the o~rators ' group.
AMAX sa1d on June 7 that it
was withdrawing from the operators group after announcin g it
would lf)erge with Cyprus Minerals, which has a separate contract
with the UMW.
The association contends that
AMAX's defection is illegal.
Under federal labor law, a company that joins a multi-employer bargaining group is obligated to accept
the resulting contract once bargaining hegins.
"We said reJ?Catedly that the
union's action VIOlated the law."
Brown said. ' INow, after nearly 90
days of investigation, it is clear that
the General Counsel for the NLRB

agrees."

No dale has been set for a hearing on the operators' charges,
which were filed by the labor board much as 8 rrosecutor files charges
on behalf ·o a crime victim.
An administrative law judge
will rule on the charges after a
hearing which will he beld later
this year. No date has been set.
The board had not yet ruled on
whether it will take up the UMW's
clwges .

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