<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9803" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9803?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T21:22:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20241">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c53bc355ea09c82deb216cec1c4ee580.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3c18d9d62009a1bca6b5bcf9a2e14867</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31385">
                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,

27 1994

'

HARDWORKING LOW PRICES!

I
I
I
I
L

(

;

99 c

1"'

ONE 32 01. or large jar ONLY

·,-~-~-. -

' . \\1'.,•• (
I

.

P56 -07-100

I
I
I
I

I

·,

',

r-

MAll. TO t&lt;RAn, INC CMS Dept
121999, 1 Fawcen o r. oet Rto

rx

"\·

.

•;-

'

~

700 W. MAIN STREET
POME
OHIO

NEW i

We've developed a new low price
concept called Foodland/Xtra Valu. It
will give our customers the hot ad
features that you've come to asso·
elate with Foodland over the years •••
plus new low everyday low prices
that you've been asking for. No
more driving, iust stop in and give
low prices a try. You can't afford not
to shop the new Big Bend
Foodland/Xtra Valu. See for your·
self, you'll notice the change!

I

.J

7884 Cath Value 1/100'

I
I
I
I

HEINZ KETCHUP
Limit ONE 32 01. Bottle

CWith This
Coupon

.

I
.J

W1th this coupon and
additional purchase.

-------------------------Good Only at FOODLAND

r --------------------------, HOW WE'VE LOWERED OUR EVERYDAY PRICES •••
I
I
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON 1177 · EFFECTIVE 7124·7130

ADOW GOLD OR BORDEN ICE CREAM
BUY ONE GET ONE ONE v, Gallon

I
I
I

I
I •LOW RENT FACTOR
•CONCENTRATED BUYING

FREE ~=:~~ .,.."""""' !
(WHERE AVAILABLE) .

•LONG TIRM BUYING OF DIALS
I
I
_.~:.J
·
coupon
•MINIMAL OVERHEAD
L!- ... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .J •SMART STOCKING TECHNIQUES
F~D~N;;P:;A:7a~::':7~E=C;:E-:.~---•PURCHASING FULL TRUCK
I
KRAFT SALAD DRESSING
~~~ I QUANTITIES
ONE
16
oz.
KRAFT
Regular
Dressing,
I
I
KRAFT DELICIOUSLY UGHT Reduced Calorie Dressings
I
•UTILIZATION OF PRODUCT
or KRAFT FREE Nonfat Dressings
I
1 ALLOWANCES
I
I
With This
=~~t~~R....n . ,•c cuso.pL 1L.•_M_IN_IM_A_LA_D_VE_RT_IS_I
4
1
I
Coupon
BJ·RJJE

•USE OF PRIVATE LABEL BRANDS
•DISPLAYS OF VOLUME ITEMS
•VOLUME SELLING TO DISPLACE
HIGHER PROFITS
•NO FRILLS•• .JUST LOW, LOW PRICES

-.==,

r-------

IZ1t99, 1 fawntt Dr. DelRio, Tx

-

7,.. Co•h Voluo1/100'

r --------------------------,
I
fOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON 1177 ·EffECTIVE 7/24-7/30

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
:1

I

• .._.

7

_,

00

T4541121

I
I
I 64
oz.
I

:0: ~:~ -~v~ ~ ';,.

" "' ~'o " " " ' ' moly

l--" .

. ....m.....,,.,,,.,,,,..,...

as our agent ancl redeem thrs crupon a1 lsU' Vo'lllue plu!l the hanchng rt rn acctll'dance wrth our redftmp.
\1 01"1 policy RETAILER For payment ffiEIII to . The Prll 5blMy Company, PO. eo~ 600001. El Paso. TX

L-------------------------Good Only at FOOOLAND

86560-0001 (lt 994 The Prllsbury Companv

WESTOVER

SOUR CREAM

16 oz.

ONION PATCH

CHIP DIP

16 oz.

12 PACKS
12 OZ. CANS

Apple Juice
(

BI·RITE- 7.4 OZ.

59c
Crackers

ift Franks Saltine
(

Bi·Rite • 7.4 Oz.

Macaroni &amp; Cheese

25 4

SHOPPERS VALUE· 'h GALLON BI·RITE- ROLL

ASSORTED- 12 OZ. CANS

I

.J1

79c
79c

ALL VARIETIES

COCA·COLA

12 OZ. PREMIUM

,mups""'".'""~ clcreeam$13~ liPoawpeerls 39cGDrl~lnnkdsale 17

pon may note repro&lt;lJc.ed rn any form Good only on produc1 sl'lown. RETAIL You are au1hot'rzed to act

(Maxrmum value 99e)

820505

Tonight, partly cloudy.
Low In 60s. Friday, cloudy. High
In 80s.

HUNDREDS
MORE NEW
LOW PRICES
EASTMAN'S

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Swrr
The Meigs County library system will lose about $14,000 in funding
this year. about 3 peJCcnt of its total budget, which will mean some belltightening, said Ruth Powers, director of the Meigs County Library.
The state's budget reduced from 6.3 10 5.7 percent the income tax col- lections for libraries, Powers said. A double whammy of fewer tax collections than were expected will also hit librari es across the stale.
"We can absorb this, but we don'l want to see any more," Powers said_
"When you're in a political melting pot, there is concern _I can't foresee
any more cuts this year."
The anticipated 1994 budget was $501,000, while the actual budget
will be closer to $487,000, she added_
The library will compensate for Lhis loss by making cuts in the general
fund, Powers said.
This cut does not jeopardize the new Racine branch of the library,
which has already been earmarked through the building fund, she added.
"Any cut's bad, but we will be able to survive," Powers said.
The decline in fu,nding does not show the tremendous growth in the
county library's budget.
Until I 986, the library was supported by a county-wide intagible tax
that raised between $50,000 and $60,000 for 50 years, Powers said_But in
1987, the budget changed forever with the current funding fonnula from
swte income tax collections.
"'It was slim pickings_ We couldn't afford any of the extras," Powers
said.
·
With a budget nearly 10 times as large as 10 years ago, the county
library could afford to:
• build a new main library;
• completely renovate the Middlepon library;
• buy its own bookmobile; and
• begin building a new Racine branch_
The Racine library is still being bid, so Powers said she could not
- release the cost for this new structure. Popular books, such as bcstsellers,
that the other two libraries do not have extra copies of will be bought new.
she added.
"When Racine opens we'll have more shelves than book," Powers said,
which will allow area residents to decide what books should be in tl1e collection.
Since 1986, the library's supply of books has jumped from 18,000 to
35,000 books, she added.
With serving three libraries, three payrolls and expanding book selection, the library sysLem could not go back 10 budgets of old, Powers srud.
"The legislature isn't going to let them do away with libraries," Powers
said. "We have a strong lobbying group in Columbus."
Next year, the percentage from the income tax is expected to return to
6.3 percent, she added.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 28, 1994

2 S.CUona, 12 Pagea 35 centa
A Muldmodlo Inc. Newapaper

,......--Preparing for the fair--- Health
reform
proposal
readied
.As pressure
mounts, GOP
asks: 'what's
your hurry?'
ny CHRISTOPHER CONNEL.L
Associated Press Writer
W ASH1NGTON - Worried
intere st groups arc steppin g U"'
pressure on Congress as Democratic lea ders final ize their hea lth
refo rm plans, a nd Republicans
keep asking what the rush is all
about.

SAFETY WITH GUNS- Safety with guns was the subject of 14-year-old Robert Harris' 4-H'
project in Wednesday's miscellaneous judging at the Rutland Civic Center. Here, Harris, left of
Long Bottom, shows his lever-action .22 rifle to Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood. H~r­
ris is a member of the Silveradoes 4-H club.

Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell. still searc hing for a formula that can attract 50 votes, is
weighing options that include the
possibility of phasing in refonns on
differen1 timetables for different
states_
Mitchell, D-Maine, se rved
no ti ce Wednesday that he will ·
make the Senate work six days a
week until it fini shes, once he
brings a health bill to the floor. He
also con finned that he is looking at
lowering the expected employer
contnbut10n to health insurance
premium s from 80 to 50 percent.

Senate Minority Leader Bob
Dole, whose office was the target
of a demonstration Wednesday that
resulted in 42 arrests, said Republican s will demand a full week to
review Mitchell 's bill before the
Se nate takes it up.
"What's Lhe rush on this bill if
it's not even going to take effect
for five years?" the Kansas Republican asked.
At the other end of Penn sy lvawASHINGTON (AP) - House and Senate negotiators were near
nia
Avenue, Pres ident Clinton
agreement today on a compromise $30.2 billion crime bill that includes a
expressed
frustration, saying, " I
ban on assault-style frreanns, dozens of new death penalties and life sendesperately want a bipanisan bill.
tences for third-time felons .
... But every time I have reached
A BOY AND IUS IGUANA - ''Bubba" the iguana was lhe subject of IS-year-old Kenneth
Nef!otiators worked until 2:15a.m. and then returned a few hours later
out,
they hav e moved furth er
Kirk' s 4-H pet project. Here, Kirk holds the iguana while talking to judge Scioto County Exten·
in !herr rush to iron out differences between diffenng cnme b1lls passed
away.''
sion agent Rick Em nett. Kirk, a member of the Salem Center Go-Getters 4-H club, has had the
earlier by the House an.d Senate. They hoped to finish tL_Jda~. setting the
House Minority Whip Newt
. iquana for about nine months. (Sentinel photos by Jim Freeman)
stage for final congressronal passage and scndrng the leg1slallon to PresiGingrich
warned that Congress·s
dent Clinton.
battered image will wke another
beating if the Democrats try 10 ram
a partisan bill through . "Why don't
we slow the express down? Let's
sit
down and talk together," he
" The governor will not debate disappointed and somewhat mysti- hired as manager of the Ohio Swtc dates," he said.
By JOHN CHALFANT
asked.
Billy Inmon ," said Curt Sterner, a fied that public radio and TV Fair during Voinovich's first term .
AMociated Press Writer
Inmon said in re sponse that
The president was meeting with
_ COLUMBUS - Two's compa- consultant to Voinovich 's cam- would make a decision like this He was fired at th e governor's Voinovich cannot hide from hi s
the
chief executives of some major
when they had an opportunity to request in 1992 after a rocky per- record as governor_
ny, three's a crowd. At least, that is paign.
U.S.
companies today while Hillary
Steiner said Ohio Public Radio televise what may have been the formance that saw fairgrounds
what Gov . George Voinovich
"I was hoping we could all act Rodham Clrnton headed 10 Capitol
believes is the case in debates and Television was told of only statewide live debate between operations IQsc money.
like adults," Inmon said.
Hill for talks with the Senate's
among the Nov_ 8 candidates for Voinovich's position last month the two gubernatorial nominees, "
"Billy himon is not a credible
Unless Voinovich changes his strongest supporters of universal
when he agreed to accepl the origi- Steiner said.
governor.
candidate_ He basically has an ax to mind. Inmon said he would hold a coverage.
Voinovich participated in three grind," SICiner said.
Voinovich on Wednesday with- nat debate inviwtion.
news conference Monday outside
In the House, a small bloc of
But the group invited Inmon debates during the 1990 campaign
drew from a proposed debate with
"All he would do is be a the governor's office to "explain
Republicans
and moderate-to-conDemocratic opponent Rob Burch anyway after he was certified for against Democrat Anthony J. Cele- sideshow in any kind of a debate, my plan to bring George Voinovich
servative
Democrats
was nearing
_
brezze Jr.
after event sponsors invited inde- the ballot July 15.
and would make it very difficult for out of hiding and to ask him to
agreement
on
a
new,
bipartisan
"I'm quite frankly surpnsed,
Inmon is a former used car a serious debate of the issue s develop enough courage to
pendent Billy Inmon to participate_
that
would
combine
insurproposal
salesman from Willard who was between the two major candi - debaLe."
ance reforms with subsidies, but
stop shan of compelling businesses
to buy coverage for their workers.
The prote st outside Dole's
office was staged by Citizen
Act1on, a group lobbying for Canadian-style health care.
use the lab's equipment to cut their Stanley Goldman sa1d.
Later, two advocates for the disSimpson lawyer Raben Shapiro abled were arrested when they tried
samples, which were to be stored at
the lab until Ito decides if they can had objected vigorously to Ito's to force their way into the Capitol
ground rules on the sampling. after a march from the White
conduct their own tests.
The blood undergoing testing "They are towlly unaccepwble, "
House, where they anended a cerewas swabbed up at the crime scene, he said_ ·'They arc useless and we mony celebrating the fourth
Simpson's whiLe Bronco and Simp- will not be participating."
anniversary of the Americans With
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
son's eswte.
After the hearing, Shapiro Disabilities Act.
Associated PreM Writer
· With a case dependant on cir- refused to say if the defense
The advocates for the disabled
LOS ANGELES - A judge cumstantial evidence, prosecutors planned to cut the the samples or many in wheelchairs, were eventu:
cleared the way for DNA Lesting of hope the genetic fingerprinting will even show up at the lab.
ally allowed in.
blood samples today in the O.J. link Simpson to the slashing deaths
In another development, GoldThe National Federation of
Simpson murder case amid signs of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson man's mother, Sharon Rufo, Independent Business, which led
the defense will wage a molecule- and her friend, Ronald Goldman . announced that she filed a wrong- the charge against Clinton's
by-molecule battle over evidence.
Simpson has pleaded innocent to ful death lawsuit claiming Simpson employer mandates, said its lobbyAt an emergency hearing two counts of fust-degree murder.
"willfully, wantonly and mali- ISts count 55 10 60 "pretty firm"
Wednesday, Judge Lance Ito
The defense is fighting over ciously" killed her 25 -year-old son votes agrunst mandates in the Senaffmned his decision that defense minutia - down 10 blood cells and on June 12.
ate, but the situation is more
expens could remove I 0 percent of the genetic material encoded within
The St. Louis woman had not volatile in the House.
each of the samples before the - as a distraction, a Loyola Uni- seen her son in the five years prior
NFIB President Jack Faris said
prosecution's testing began this versity law professor said.
to his death. She is divorced from the group will spend $500,000 over
morning. Officials at the labomtory
DEFENSE REVIEW - OJ. Simpson, rigbt, watched as bls
"The defense is hoping that all
Goldman's father, Fred.
the next ~ew weeks and put out
had wanted their own technicians these things will make the jury fordefense attorneys reviewed a letter from the CeUmark Diagnostics
The lawsuit seeking unspecified 900,000 p1eces of mail, hoping 10
to do the job.
Inc. laboratory during an emergency hearing Wednesday in Los
get there are two dead people with
damages for the loss of her son's generate a swarm of letters and
The defense, meanwhile, object· their throats slashed and make
Angeles County Superior Court. The letter discussed the laboratocompanionship and support was phone calls to Congrcss ·egainst
ed to Ito's requirement that they them concentrate on other issues,"
ry's concern over DNA testiDg. (AP)
mandates.
filed in Santa Monica on July 20_

Crime bill compromise nears

c

9
9
L--------------------------~

Kicker:

Page4

Meigs library
system faces
3% cutback

FOOD LAND SPECIAL COUPON 1177 - EFFECTIVE 7/24-7/30

1
I

I
L

RETAILER

Super Lotto:

6-10-32-33-35-37

Vol. 45, NO. 60
Copyright 1994

XTRA.
------------------------------------------------,
Low :
~
99
PRICES
'
With This
Coupon

( :-'--"I .

489

Pick 4:
6780

enttne

LB.
FOO DLAND SPECIAL COUPON 1177 ·EFFECTIVE 7124-71 30

Pick 3:

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

r --------------------------,
I !"""
KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP 3 varieties ~~-~~ :
I

Ohio Lottery

Astros
tie Reds
for lead

BIG BEND

99
SUPERMARKETS

Voinovich will debate Burch, but not Inmon

Judge's DNA order may prompt
molecule-by-molecule test battle
Expert: Simpson
defense employs
delaying tactics

''

�Thursday, J.~o~ly 28, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA. INC
HOBERT L. WINGE'n
Publisher
CHARLEN~;

HOHLICH

General \'tanager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER oflbe As~octated Press. Inland Daily Press Assoc taliOn and
tbe Amcri'an Newspaper Publlsh~r Ass~X:iation .

LETrERS 01' OPINION arc wdcome. lbey should be less than 300
words lo ng. AJI letters are subjet.:t to edi tin g and must be sig ned with name.
address wd telephone numb~:r. No unsigned letters wil l be pu t"l li s hcd . Letters
sho uld he in good t3ste . addressing iss ues. not persona li ties.

Letters to the editor
More abortion clinics?

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 28, 1994

NEW YORK - Will gun lovers
and gun haters ever cease fife?
Not until their war of words
gives way to common sense, says
Tom von Rosen. He 's ~1c president
ol the Firearms Marketing Group, a
magazine publisher that bills itself
as the "voice of reason" on gun
control.
"Cool heads need to prevai l at
this juncture," von Rosen warns.
He thinks fiery rhetoric on rifles
and pistols misses the target
·· All people. on hoth sides of
the gun issue, want to sec a reducLion in crime,'' von Rosen poinLS
out. '"Banning guns is not the

guns - in circulation in the United
States.
Nevertheless, von Rosen' s mag aZines remam staunch guardians of

Howard Siner

the American ngh1 10 own and usc
firearms for legitimate purposes.
" ' I don't think anyo ne in the
group would oppose any laws that
help reduce crime," sa ys von
Rosen. "'B ut restricting ownership
of guns by law-abiding citizens
floes not reduce cri me."
He cl aims the gun -control
answer, nor is running out and buy - debate often produces more heal
mg a gun without knowing how to than ltght
usc it."
For hi s part, von Rosen admi ts:
Based in San Diego, FMG pub- " I know we're supposed to be the
li shes Guns Magazine (wh ich 'voice of reason' -and I think we
beg an in 1954), the oldes t such are, actually . It 's just that when
monlhl y newsstand publication in so me body is really opposed to
America; Shooting Industry (cstab.: guns, we tend to go on the defen1955), the original firearms maga- sive side."
zi ne for retailers ; and American
No wonder, sa ys Tom HollanHandg unncr (since 1976), the first der, vice president of FMG. " We
major pistols-&lt;Jnly journal.
believe in reasonable gun ownerThose publications have a total ship, " he sa ys. "When a lot of
circulation of more than 350,000.
people speak about gun control,
"Our goal is to help people usc they really mean gun ban. That's
guns in a safe manner," says von what causes so many problems."
Rosen, who support s improved
Recently , Jim Brady, the widely
firearms education and training.
known founder (with hi s wife,
It 's est imated th ere are about Sarah) of the Ce nter to Prevent
200 million g un s of all types Hand~un Violence, to ld Parade
incl uding some 67 milli on hand- magazmc:

"(Our) organization is not for
banning guns but for keepi ng guns
out of the wrong hands. We don l
need Uzis out there on the street 1
hunt, and shoot traps and shoot
skeet But 1 don' t wan t ch ildren
carry ing handguns."
Neither do es lh e FMG . of
course.
"Everybody wan ts crime to go
down," von Rosen says. "'Nobody
wants nuLs running around wilh
guns, or kids, or anybody ill egally."
But he thinks qu alified adults
should have the legal opllon of carrying a pistol for the purpo se of
self-defense agai nst armed crimi nals.
lloll andcr adds: "On one side,
yo u have a lot of people who have
been hun by guns. They sec the
ncga li vc side of it. On th e other
side, you have a lot of people who
have been saved by guns. They sec
the positive side of it"
Which injects emotion into the
highly partisan debate on firearms.
Often, says von Rose n, th ose
who lack ex peri ence arc gun-shy .
He notes: " Most or the people who
I've mel who arc leery of firearms
hav e had ze ro ex peri ence with
them . I mean zero! They haven' t
even pulled the trigger once."
Yct von Rosen says both sides
don ' t have to rem ain at arm' s
length .

Throug hout 1h c Unlled States economiC iss ues to discuss and
we have seen rapid growth in both debate . The majority of the ht gh
edu ca ti onal' ef for ts and laws to school students came down squarereduce hanrds to our hea lth and ly on the side of se lf-disciplmc and
safety . The o utright bannin g of re straint. Co ntrary to what we
smoking in buildings and even sta- mi ght believe, many hi gh sc hool
diums IS one such example aimed studcnJS believe that "the right to
at reducing illness linked to smok- choose" precedes conception.
The follow ing is quoted directly
mg .
There arc anti-pollution law s, from he Assoc ialed Press article
A&amp;\1~
speed limits, automobile safety bell com ing fr om Lorain, Ohio and
law s , motorcycle cras h helm e t picked up in The Sunday Timeslaws, and all kinds of rules and reg- Sentinel on Jul y 17, 1994, " They
ulations and inspections to assure should hav e the right to choose, "
~FAU.INTO
that the foods we cal don't cause said Carol Westfall, director of The
illness. Baseball players wear hcl- · Cleve land Surgi-Ccntcr abortion
mets at th e plate to avoid head clinic . "People on Medic atd
shouldn 'I be having babies to keep
injuries.
With so much experience target - raising the amounL' of their checks.
ing prevention , why then does the There should be some option availClinton Health Plan contain huild- able."
We fatllo undcrs Jand Ms. Westing more abonion clinics? Where is
the economi c justifi cation to use fall' s logic also. We all know that
more ta xpayer dollars to fund a our welfare system docs not reward
condition which is first, easil y pre - young females on welfare who get
vented , and secondly is definitely married , or ge t a joh , or both .
Monthly welfare payments increase
not an illness?
with
number of children, but are
If we arc willing to tell people
not to smoke: if we arc willing to cut if the mother gets married or
force the makers of tobacco and lakes a JOb.
What docs Ms. Westfall mean
alcohol products to place warning
labe ls on packages and conJainers; by "There should be some option
if we're willing 10 force, or educate available"? We wonder whether
peop le to wear safety belts and she and others arc aware that workcrash helmets, why then are we so ing American taxpayers must pick
timid about telling people who are up the bill for th ose who do not
not dedicated 10 parenthood to exe rc ise self-discipline and
restraint
avoid conceiving babies?
For the past four years, our StuBoth President Clinton and his
wife arc said to be highly educated dents in Free Enterprise team has
and very intelligent After we read distributed The Freedom Foundathe latest release stating that "umlc- tions Bill of Responsibilities. The
servcd" areas of Ohio would be first of the 10 items goes like this:
OK , OK, I'm not arguing . We vehement testimony of several of to find an allorney who would'
supplied with more abonion clin- "Be fully responsible for our own
have
witnessed a football field full his co-workers that he was at his appeal Michaels' case. Most turned
ics, we could not understand the actions and for the consequences of
of
media
hineys on display job when the robbery occurred. her down, but a civil-rights allorlogic. We haven't graduated from those actions. Freedom to choose
throughout
the
OJ. Simpson case.
Why was he released after serving ney fmally took up the cudgel and
college yet But we know how not carries with it the responsibility for
I
thought
I'd
heard
it
all,
and
turned_ up tapes of children being
those
choices."
to gel pregnant. We also don't
mtervtewed by investigators in
then
NBC
promocd
their
special
on
We
arc
writing
to
our
U.S.
RepSarah
Overstreet
believe taxpayers should pay for
which
the children were appointed
"OJ.
and
the
death
penalty":
If
he
resentative
and
Senalors
to
protest
someone else's failure to usc
16
months
in
pnson?
A
"60
Min"deputy
investigators" and given
gets
it,
will
that
change
the
way
the continuing waste of tax dollars.
restraint or protection.
utes"
broadcast
detailing
his
case
badges
for
being "a lillie detective
Americans
view
the
death
penalty?
Clinton logic, if such exists, How about you?
we
haven't
Is
there
nothing
allowed
millions
of
Americans
to
with
us,"
as
one investigator put it
Mandie Gruescr,
would have us building more hosspeculated
on
before
a
jury
has
a
sec
the
holes
in
the
investigation
On
one
tape, a small child
Vice President for Communicapitals and rehabilitation centers for
and
prosecution
of
Geter's
case.
insists
her
teacher
did nothing and
chance
to
determine
Simpson's
lions,
crash victims, smokers and others
Could
we
al
guilt
or
innocence?
Kelly
Michaels
was
a
teachthe
investigator
is
heard
asking the
SIFE,
who misuse themselves and others.
least let a jury decide if he deserves er's aide in a New Jersc¥ day-care child, "How come you don't want
University
of
Rio
Grande
The idea of prevention would not
the death penalty before we worry center when she was convicted of · to help me and all your friends
The view s and opinions
be promoted.
about
the sociological effects on sexually abusing children and sen- have already told me?"
Where is the idea of self disci- expressed by the Students in Free
life?
American
tenced to 4 7 years in prison.
After five years in a maximumpline and restraint? This summer, Enterprise, University of Rio
However,
I
have
had
a
belly
full
Reporter
Dorothy
Rabinowitz,
covsecurity
prison, an appeals court
at The American Free Enterprise Grande , do not necessarily repreof
legal
types
using
the
Simpson
the
case
for
a
local
TV
stadecided
Michaels
had been unfairly
ering
and Leadership Conference high sent the views and opinions of the
to
rail
against
the
press;
more
case
lion,
realized
the
testimony
she
convicted
and
imprisoned
and
school smdents from throughout University of Rio Grande or SIFE
specifically,
that
cameras
in
courtheard
in
Michaels'
trial
didn't
add
released
her.
Was
it
the
even
hand
the state chose a variety of socio- International.
rooms somehow impede the august up: How could Michaels accom- of Lady Justice, working hermeticand holy work of the judicial sys- plish raping children with kitchen ulous fairness on Michaels? Not in
tem. They worry about the impact
Dear Editor:
!' m not the only one. If t!"s was of the press, yet here arc just a few utensils and putting peanut buller the least. It was the tenacity of
I live on North Second Avenue caused by dogs, I wouldn t have examples of how the press has on their naked bodies and licking it Rabinowitz, now an editorial-page
in Middlepon. I own two dogs and any problem because ,dogs have_ to affected the judicial process and off, all during daily nap times with writer for The Wall Street Journal .
other teachers in the building? Why
- When Waller McMillian of
1 do know they are to be kept on a be ch~ined, not cats. I m not saymg
the OJ. Simpsons of the nation:
no
physical
marks
whatAlabama
was convicted of murder
were
there
chain, leash or be kept in the house. I don t hke cats bec~use I am ~n
- Lencll Geter was working as soever on children supposedly on perjured testimony , with evi1 have no problem with that. ammal lover. What I m saymg 1s an engineer in Texas when he was
dence pointing to hi s innocence
The problem is why isn't there a cats and dogs are a nwsance when wrongly convicted of robbing a raped with knives and forks?
After
a
jury
convicted
Michaels,
withheld from his lawyers, · '60
leash law for cats? In the three they run loose.
.
fa st-food restaurant, despite the a stunned Rabinowitz went to work Minutes" brought the case to lighL
years I have lived here I have
l ' m not the only r_es1dent of
A dozen witnesses recounted again
cleaned cat droppings from my ~tddleport that has th1s problem,
porch, picked up trash out of my I m JUSl the only one who wtll
yard from ripped trash bags, and I speak up about 11. Come on people
have also replanted several flowers lake care of your pelS. I do.
.
TmaBlevms,
that the cats have dug up and
killed.
M•ddlepon
COLUMBUS - Farms with being buill about 40 miles north- farm laws."
Opponents of AgriGeneral Co.'s
thousands of hogs or millions of west of Columbus, is frustrated that
hens may be vital to the future of Ohio law doesn't allow counties or Croton E~ Farm_ first tried to keep
liveslOCk production, but concerned townships to wne against agricul- 11 from bemg bUilt by challenging
its ability to meet environmental
neighbors are looking for ways to ture.
North and other opponents rules.
regulate such "megafarms."
By The Associated Press
After AgriGeneral obtained an
Today is Wednesday, July 27, the 208th day of 1994. There are 157
Rural residents wony about the believe megafarms should be treated
the
same
as
other
businesses.
smell
and
possibility
of
ground
Ohio
Environmental Protection
days left in the year.
"We're talking about a $20 mil- Agency permit and started to build,
water contamination caused by the
Today 's highlight in history:
Three hundred years ago, on July 27, 1694 , the Bank of England, the
amount of manure generated by lion laying facility on 157 acres," company officials received local
North said. "That's not a farm, it's fire regulations dated after the farm
large tiveslOCk operations.
central bank of Great Britain, received a roya l charter as a commercial
Roy North of LaRue, who lives a company . But they operate under announced its plan to build.
institution.
near a 2.5-million hen egg farm
"We feel the regulations were
On this date:
In 1789, Congress established the Dcparunenl of Foreign Affairs, the
specifically aimed at us and keeping us out," said Marcus Pohlman
forerunner of the Deparunent of State.
In 1794, 200 years ago, French revolutionary leader Maximilicn Robe- President Nixon's impeachment on a charge that he had personally president of AgriGeneral.
'
spierre was overthrown and placed under arrest; he was executed the fol- engaged in a ''course of conduct'' designed to obstruct justice in the
The company has gone to federWatergate case.
al coun 10 protest the rules. Agrilowing day.
In 1980, on day 267 of the Iranian hostage crisis, the deposed Shah of Genera~, confident the fire regulaIn 1861, Union Gen. George B. McClellan was placed in command of
Iran died at a military hospital outside Cairo, Egypt, at age 60.
the Anny of the Potomac.
uons differ from state law, is conTen years ago: Actor James Mason died in Lausanne, Switzerland, at tinuing construction.
In 1909, Orville Wright tested the U.S. Anny's first airplane, flying
age 75.
himself and a passenger for one hour and 12 minutes.
Many large farms have agreeFi-:e years ago: Workers at th~ Nissan Motor Corporation assembly ments with companies that provide
In 1940, Bugs Bunny made his official debut in the Warner Brothers
plant m Smyrna, Tenn., voted agamst representatiOn by the United Auto livestock, feed, veterinary care and
animated cartoon "A Wild Hare."
Workers.
Eighty people were killed when a Korean Air DC-10 crashed in a guaranteed market. It lowers the
In 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom, ending
Libya.
three years of fighting .
risk to producers but also lessens
One year ago: IBM reported a record $8.04 billion quarterly loss. their independence.
In 1960, Vice President Nixon was nominaled for president at the
Bombs exploded in Rome and Milan, killing at least five people. Boston
Republican national convention in Chicago .
Farm groups themselves are
In 1967, in the wake of urban rioling, President Johnson appointed the Celtics star Reggie Lewis died after collapsing on a Brandeis University divided on the issue. The Ohio
basketball court during practice; he was 27.
Kerner Commission, charged with assessing the causes of the violence.
Farm Bureau Federation supports
Today's birthdays: TV producer Norman Lear is 72. Movie and drama Ron Bates, who is being prevented
In 1967, black militant H. Rap Brown held a news conference in
critic V~ncent Canby is 70. Sportscaster Irv Cross is 55. Singer Bobbie from building a I ,200-sow operaWashington, D.C. , in which he said, "Violence is necessary. It is as
•s 50. Actress Betty Thomas •s 46. Olymp1c gold medal figure
Gentry
American as cherry pic.''
tion by agricultural wning regulaPeggy
Fleming is 46. Singer Maureen McGovern is 45.
skater
Jn 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted 27-11 to recommend
tions in Pickaway County's Jack-

-me CIAW'UID Ukl

Nev&amp;R

WIU.

'CASSU~~RS M\~~Sl&amp;~
"CCt8iSS ~AT

""&amp; ~NG ~ANCS..,,

SIPU 111 A\iES 9'r

CA5i,. we:~~

~BIGW,,

)/

As far as he 's concerned, the
idea that the entire gun com munity
opposes all government restrictions
on llrearm s is a basic misconception .
The key question is: What controls arc necessary?
Accord ing 10 the FMG, there arc
some 20,000 federal , slate and
loca l gun laws curre ntl y on th e
books. It doesn' t see the need for a
lot more.
"I'm not say in g we shou ldn ' t
have some kind of restriction s,"
von Rosen says. "But I'll tell you
what happens - and I've run into
thi s a lot in my life - somcbotly
says, 'Gee, Tom, you sa id you
didn't mind having any kind of
restriclions, or any kind of control
over firearms, so we 'vc decided ....'
And they put out a li st that I can' t
possibly meet.··
So, for instance, while he favors
trai ning for gun owners, von Rosen
opposes forci ng them to regi ster
their weapons.
He says: "'Registration is a real ly bad word to usc in our commu nity. Cerltfica llon, or so methin g
along the lines of licen si ng, is not
the same. Regi strati on is like lllt looing somebody. Certifying is
O K. And licens ing is lik e th e
strongest word.
" But what doc s that impl y'l
That implies more than just talloo ing som ebodY, . It impli es· that
they've proven something, just like
a driver' s license. That they have
proven proficiency, that they're no1
a nut case, that the y aren't on prescriplton drugs, they don't have a
record .
"Personally, I would be in favor
of that "
Von Rosen blasts gun rcgtslra tion as impossible to enforce.
Besides, he savs, the real trouble
isn 't guns, but crime.
" It 's a bi g soc ial probl em,"
says von Rosen. "It's not something that they can simply put a
five-da y waiting period on and it 's
going to go away .
" If peopl e had jobs, and th ey
fell good about themse lve s and
· their family structure was together,
a lot of problems would go away
- including crime."
Howard Siner is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Friday, July 29
Accu-Weatl1e... forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH .

Reporters keep an eye on Lady Justice

A leash law for cats?

that McMillian had been at home at
a fish fry at the time of the murder,
and the story reiterated that there
was no physical evidence linking
M~Millian to the crime. An appeals
court later overturned the verdict.
The halls of justice sometimes
have no!hing to do with justice
whatsoever. In the same hall s
where decent attorneys and judges
put their hearts into their work,
slipshod lawyers don ' t represent
their clients properly and prosecutors strive to save face in cases
with holes you could throw a cat
through.
And where do the innocent tum
when the justice system fails them?
The press. It's much harder for justice to miscarry when reporters
investigate what doesn't add up,
and even harder in courtrooms
where millions of Americans watch
every move.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndicated writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800·827-6364, ext 8317.)

Farm groups divided over 'megafarms'

Today in history

•

son Township
Bates is challenging the rules in
Common Pleas Court claiming
they are illegal under staie statute.
The Ohio Farmers Union has
seuled on the other side of the
fence, coming out against plans for
hog contracung arrangements.
The move toward agricultural
contracting is similar to what
occurred in manufacturing, said
Thomas Sporleder, Ohio State Univ~}ly agricu~tural econo'!'ist.
Contracung was an Important
elem~.nt in manufacturing expanSIOn, Sporleder said. "It's common to enter into a contract to
buffer against risk or guarantee a
return.'"

AboUt 20 percent to 25 percent
of the nation's hog farms would be
classified as "megafarms," said
Chris Hurt, an agricultural
economist at Purdue University. He
expects that nwnber 10 increase to
40 percent by the end of the
decade.
"The trend lines on livestoCk
production are clear," said Fred
Dailey, director of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture. "If a
change is not made we'll see the
~radual but immin~ot dem'ise of
hvestock production in Ohio."

IToledo I 80" I

IMansfield !no I•
IND.

~
80"

•

W.VA.

Showers T-srorms Rain

Ice

Sunny P t Cloudy

VJa Associated Pr9ss GraphicsN8t

Cloudy

01994 Accu-Waather, Inc.

Skies partly cloudy Friday
By The Associated Press
Tonight...Partly to mos tly
Skie s will be partly cloudy cloudy with a chance of showers
across Ohio on Friday_
and thunderstorms. Lows upper 50s
. Isolated thunderstorm s are pos- 10 lower 60s.
Sible stalew•de. Afternoon high s
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A chance
wlll range from the mid-70s across of showers or thunderstorms mainnortheast Ohio to the lower 80s ly east and northeast. Highs mid
over the far south.
70s to around 80.
The record high at the Columbu s weather station was 100 in
Extended forecast:
1952. The record low was SO in
Friday night.. .A chance of
1962.
.
showers and thunderstorms. Lows
Sunset today will be at 8:50 upper 50s to lower 60s.
p.m. Sunrise Friday will be at 6:27
Saturday ... A chance of showers
a.m .
and thunderstorms .... Mainly cast
Weather forecast:
half. Highs upper 70s to lower 80s.
Today ... Partly to mostly cloudy
Sunday and Monday ... A chance
wtlh scauered showers and thun- of showers and thunderstorms .
derstorms. Highs in the mid and. Lows 60 to 65. Highs in the lower
upper 70s.
to middle 80s.

Po~~roy

mayor's court

The following cases were heard plus costs for left of center, $52
in the Pomeroy Mayor's Court of plu s costs for speed; and Jeff
John Blaennar Tuesday.
Stone, Pomeroy, $63 plus costs for
Fined were:
no operators license.
Harry Barton, Racine, $150 plus
Forfeited were:
costs for operating under suspenAnthony Smith, Cheshire, $83
sion, car will be clubbed for 30 for failure to maintain control:
days; June Landaker, Pomeroy, $63 Marlin Oldaker, Gallipolis Ferry,
plus cosiS for expired registration, W.Va., $83 for expired registraS J 00 plus costs for no child tion; Thomas Anderson, Pomeroy,
restraint; Caroline Davidson $83 for expired registration; TamaPomeroy, $113 plus costs for pub~ ra Buckley, Syracuse, $70 for
lie intoxication ; Jerry Sharp speed; David Wolfe, Middleport,
Reedsville, $88 plus cosis for ope~ $63 for failure 10 maintain assured
contamer;
John
Sturgeon, clear distance; ViclOr Coates, Long
Pomeroy , $83 for no operators Bouom, $68 for speed; and Cecilia
hcense, $50 plus cosiS for no insur- Harris, Mason, W.Va., $83 failure
ance, $63 plus costs for failure to to maintain control.
register: Keith White, Racine, $43

Meigs announcements
Tuppers Plains VFW meeting
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
wiD hold its regular meeting at 7:30
tonight at the post home.

Syracuse Municipal Building.

Ice cream social to be held
An icc cream social will be held
at the North Bethel United
Western square dance set
Methodist Church on old Route 7
The Belles &amp; Beaus will hold near Coolville, Saturday, noon to 8
hold a western square dance from p.m. Gospel singing wiU begin at 5
8-11 p.m. Saturday at the senior p.m.
citizens center_ The caller will be
Scouy Sharrer. The dress is casual
and homemade ice cream will be
served.

Stocks

Wilkesville church ice cream
social
The Wilkesville Presbyterian
Church will hold an ice cream
• social at4 p.m. Aug. 6. This annual
fund raiser and homecoming will
feature the Late Bloomers old time
music duo.
Songfest to be beld
There will be a songfest Saturday at the old Dexter Bible Christian Church featuring the Prayer
Chapel Bunch. The pubtic is invited.
Trustees lo meet
Sutton Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m . in the

Am Ele Power ····-····-··-···-····.30
Akzo ........,_....,..... --·······-····-..liO
Asbllllld ou _, , ......... - ..... -.35 J/4
AT&amp;T .................................... .541/l
B1111k One............................... .32 J/4
Bob Evans---·-.................. .21 J/4
Cb11111plon lod ....•...................211/4
Cbarmlag Sbop .......- ............9 1/8
City HoldiDg ............................-.32
Federal Mogul ............................ 28
Goodyear Tik R ......................35 J/8
K-mart -------·- ..·-···-·16 Ill
Lands End --------·-..-18 J/4
Limited In&lt;. -·-·-------··-19 1/4
Multimedia In&lt;. ·------....29 3/4
Point Ban&lt;orp
Rella.n&lt;e Electric
Robbins &amp; Myers .... - .................. 20
Sboney's loc .•• -·----------14
Star Bank
3/8
Wendy lot'L ----..------15 1/4
Worthington lnd .....·- ----··19 1/4
Stoc:k reports 11re the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Adnst ol

·-----·-·-----17

---------..20

---·-···--------311

The Daily Sentinel

GaWpolls.

(USPS liJ.96t)

Page-3

--Area deaths-- Study to eye impact
Lee Roy Fryar
of proposed airport

OHIO Weather

Why gun control is a fiery topic

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Lee Roy Fryar, 65, of Coolville,
died Wednesday, July 27, 1994 at
Doctors Hospital in Nelsonville.
Born in Andalusia, Ala., son of
th_e late Arthur and Maggie Hutchi son Fryar, he retired after 25 years
at McBee System in Athens as a
carbon maker. In addition, he was a
member of the Coolvi lle Veterans
of Foreign Wars and a U.S . Navy
veteran of the Korean Conflict.
He is survived by his wife,
Mary Pullins Fryar; two sons and
daughters-in-law , Randy and Anita
Fryar of Coolville, and Brian and
Kathy Fryar of Guysvi lle; a daughter, Anne Krell of Coco, Fla.; two
stepsons and a stepdaughter-in-law,
Jack Rankin of the home, and John
and Con ni e Rankin of Tup pers
Plains; nine grandc hildren and one
great-grandson.
Other survivors include three
brothers, Arthur of Bosto n, and
Vaughn and Jessie, both of Pensacola, Fla.; a sis ter, Eve lyn , of
Lake City. Fla., and a mother-inlaw, Mattie Pullins of Coolville.
Services will be Friday at I p.m.
in the Whisle Funeral Home,
Coo lvill e, with the Rev . Sharon
Hausman officiating. Burial will

follow in Meigs Memory Gardens
where mtlttary graveside rites will
be conducied by the Coolvi lle and
Tuppers Plains VFW. Friends may
call tomghl from 6-9 at the runcral
home.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Two funds.
companies have been hired to study
Three sites, including one in
how a proposed airport in western Mason County, are under constdcrWest Virginia would affect the auon for the proposed airport.
region's economy, the Huntington
Randall Biller, executive assis Theresa Schad
llerald-Disparch reponed .
tant for t11e West Virginia Dcpan Economic Research Associates mcnt of Tran sportation, sa id the
Theresa Schad, 79. formerly of Inc . of McLean, Va ., and LPA sludy will exam me:
Dexter, died at her Coming, Cali f., Group Inc. of Columbia, S.C., will
• whether su rrounding land ncar
conduct the study, Debbie Phillips, the proposed sites cou ld be deve lhome on July 22. 1994 .
Born Jan. 16, 191 5, in Pius - executi ve director of the Putnam oped ,
burgh, Pa., she moved to Dexter in County Development Authority ,
·potential job creation,
1977, where she was active in local told the llerald-Disparch.
• how man y wou ld usc th e airThe f1rtns will be paid $184,000 port, and
churches. In 1991 she and her husband moved to Ca lifornia to be for the study. About $140,000 will
• the effect on aHpo rt s in
come from a federal grant; the Charleston. Huntin gton and Park- '
closer to family members.
She is survived by her husband, remamder wiO come from state crsburg.
Charles Schad; daughters, Con nie
_ Officials will usc the stud y to
Houser of Coming, Calif., Barbara
a"l m dcCldmg whether the airpon
Gummow of Willows, Calif.. and
should be bui ll , Biller told the
Bcuy Cavalcri of Lancaster, N.Y.;
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ncwspapcr
son, . Charl es Sc had of Hop Wednesday admissions - none .
The proJect is cslimated to cost
kmsv tlle, Ky .; brother, John James
Wednesday dtscharges - none. up to $400 million.
of Pittsburgh; 13 grandc hildren ; 15 HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
The state department of tran sgreat-grandchildren; and 89 foster
Discharges July 27 - Mrs. Jay portation also hopes to beg in an
children.
Scarberry and son, Justin North up, env tronmcntal study soon.
Funeral services were held earlt - Judy Kanouse, Mrs. Michael May cr 1his week. She was buried at the nard and son. Starla McCoy
Sunset Hill Cemetery in Corning,
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Ca!t f.
Jackson, son, Rio Grande.
(Published with per mis.~ion)

Hospital news

Local News in Brief:
Three injured in car accident

Three people were injured in a two-car accident at II :56 a.m.
Thursday on West Main Street at the Pomeroy-Mason bridge.
Nicholas J. Goodwin , 16, of Middleport, was driving a 1977
Ford Mustang when he lost control going east and crossed into the
westbound lane. He was struck by a 1992 GMC van driven by
Nickolis L. Leonard, 53, of Pomeroy.
Nicholas, along with Nathan Goodwin, 16, a passenger in the
Mustang, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
Pomeroy Squad I . Eleanor Leonard, 59, was also transported to
Veterans. All three were treated and released.
The Mustang, owned by Goodwin's Auto Sales, was disabled
and towed with heavy damage to the passenger's side. The van was
also heavily damaged on the passenger's side and had a cracked
windshield. It is owned by Ohio Valley Plumbing and Heating.
Nicholas Goodwin was cited by Pomeroy Police for assault,
property damage and failure to maintain control of a vehicle. Police
said he broke the windshield of the van with his fi st, broke the
antenna and assaulted Leonard, the driver of the van .

NORTH

1:15,9:1 '&gt; 1Yill..Y ltld'.Sola'/9.1'1. \ : 1 ~ l : l ~ ( PC )

AND

LASSIE

l:l0 , 9 :.l() nuLY Mr.SM"/~ .1:20 , 1:20 IPG I

IHl UllNT
oQ

" lUI

OOJ '-""'" 01r.. 1

7:00,9:J.O llii.II.~ l'trr.SAT/~. l :OO,J:lO (I'GlJ )

tnTLE BIG ~EAG~I

TRUE Llli

""""!!

.., .....,IOtiOr&lt;T

1 :oo, 9 : 4'&gt; ()IJJ.Y JIVtT .SAT/lUI . I :00,

1: 45 1111

RNGIL! IN rHE OUHIElO

7: 10,9:10 nuLY MII.T .SI&lt;'r/~. l : lO ,J; \O (l'G)

DISNEY S LION kiNG
7:10 9:00 MU.Y tfAT.SitT/lJJI.l:IO l :OO ICI

come

9lll!

"Lrn!z

RA.'J.:7o.lb-f·A.D ti!NJS"

GIFl CE.RnFICATES A.VA.ILABLEI

Pomeroy hit-skip reported
A Pomeroy woman reported a red vehicle backed into her car
Friday at the Village Green Apartment parking lot , according to
Pomeroy Police Deparunent reports.
Cora See, Pomeroy, had light damage to the passenger side door
of her 1989 Chrsyler LeBaron when it wa~ parked facing west in the
lot, reports stated. The incident remains under investigation.

Woman fails to park, crashes vehicle
A woman who left her vehicle in gear when she stopped her car
Wednesday morning had the car roD across West Main Street and
hit a telephone pole, according to Pomeroy Police Deparunenl
reports.
. Leah Russell , 35, Pomeroy, reponed moderate damage to the
front of her !983 Dodge truck at 8:20a.m. Tuesday. Russell had
stopped her car in front of the GTE building but failed to place it in
park, records show.
No citations were issued.

None injured in three-car wreck
Three cars had light damage after two of the drivers misread a
stop light at East Main and Sycamore streets Tuesday afternoon,
according to the Pomeroy Potice reports.
Lorena Oiler, 1,9. Langsville, was travelling south on Sycamore
in her 1984 Oldsmobile Cutlass, making a left tum onto East Main,
and said the light was green at 12:46 p.m. Tuesday, records show.
Stephanie Alexander, 29, Vinton, was travelling east on East
Main in her 1983 Chevrolet Caprice and said the light was on caution. While turning left, Alexander's vehicle caught Oiler in left
comer area, reports stated.
The impact caused the cars to bump into Barbara Johnson, 27.
Racine, who was stopped at the East Main light in her 1978
Oldsmobile Royale.
No citations were issued an no one was injured, records stated.

EMS logs 5 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reponed five calls for assistance between
Wednesday and Thursday mornings. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
11:59 a.m. Wednesday, assisted
Pomeroy on West Mam Street,
Eleanor Leonard, Vcterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
II :59 a.m. Wednesday, West
Main Street, motor-vehicle acci dent, Nicholas and Nathan Goodwin,VMH;

10:59 p.m. Wednesday, Stale
Route 7, Rick Hatfield, VMH.
RACINE
II :34 p.m ., State Route 338,
Carol Riffle, VMH.
SYRACUSE
3:06 p.m. Wednesday, June ·

Street, David Flagg, Holzer Medical Center.
TUPPERS PLAINS
10:46 p.m. Wednesday, State
Route 248, Thelma Hayes, VMH.

M\YI'AG
AMERICA'S NO. 1
PREFERRED BRAND

WASHERS
•Lasts longer than
any other brand

MAYI'.AG

~~LL~·H~e:a:~~d;uw~·~l:a~~e~ca~p~a~c~i~~

~1\YI'AG

AMERICA'S NO. 1
PREFERRED BRAND

DRYERS
•Dependable CareThl Drying

_su_p_e_r_ca_p_a_ci_ly_lbMAYE~AG

L-·-H_e_avy_d_u_ly_,

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

BABYS DAY OUT PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY

M\YI'AG

lf

AMERICA'S NO. 1
PREFERRED BRAND

ir'rf;-;(V/rJ.n~
~UU~ill

'11mlillrlml!.U(Qfill'll®llll•
G

~i!.!.l!f.9.1K.

l!!illi.G.

DISHWASHERs

~_jgJ

•No prewashlng with Maytag
•Full 20 Year Tub"' Warran~

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADM!~~~oo

L.---.!U:!IZQ.___J

Publilhcd every alternoon, Moo.day through
Friday, Ill CQurt St ., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley PubliJiltDa: CompanyiMultimcdi•

BE READY F&lt;&gt;R THE FAIR!!

Io.c .• Pomeroy, Ohio 4!i769, Ph. 992-2156 .

Second class postaae paid at Pdmecoy. Ohio.
1

Member: l'be Aslociatcd Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Maociation, N•liooal Adva1lli11.J ·

Repreaentative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
133 Third Avenue, New York. New Yc:wt
l0017 .
POSTMAS'reR: Send lddrcsa chaoge. to The
Dai ly Seutinel, 111 Coun St, Po101:10y, Ohlo

&gt;11769.
SUBSCRIP110N RATES

BJ t:.nlcr or Motol' Roul•
One Week ................................................. .$1.60
Ooe MonliL ...............................................$6.95 .
0-' Year.......................................... _ ..$83.20
SINGLE COPY
•
PIIICE

Fair workers need to be skin tested before the Fair begins. There will be no
skin testin~: at the Meip County Fair this year. Connie Karschnik, R.N., will
be conducting evening tuberculosis skin testing clinics for Meigs County
residents who are unable to obtain skin tests during daily office hours.
Tuberculosis skin testing is required yearly for food handlers in Meigs County.
The following clinics are scheduled:

No 111bocrlplloDI by malt pennlttod ln . . .
wbcre borne cariet ICfVicc llavan.ble..
Mall SubKriptloM

INideM•.. c-IJ
Jl-u...............................................$2LI4
76 Wooll ............................................... .$43.16
52 Woeb ............................................... .$M.76
Oubld• Molp c-17

~ :-:::.~·:::::::·.·::::::::·:::::::~:-::·::::.~.:::::fs:~

52 w-..............................-..........saa.40

~line·

RANGES

Dolty.........................................--35 c....

Sut.aiben DOt deliri D1 to pay the Clf'l'ier may
remit Ia .tvaooe direct to The Daily SeJtl.nel
DD 1 ttnc, sit or 12 month buil. Credit will be
aivc:o cmia" CICb week.

MAYTAG

CHESTER ARE DEPT.

8-01-94
8-03-94
8-02-94
8-04-94

5:00.7:00 P.M.
5:0()-6:00 P.M. Cards Issued
SPECIAL FAIR CUNIC
4:00.7:00 P.M.
(TB OFRCE)
4:0o-6:00 P.M. Cards Issued
REEDSVILLE FIRE DEPT.
5:00.7:00 P.M.
8-0~94
8-11-94
5:0()-6:00 P.M. Cards Issued
For further Information contact the Tuberculosis Office at 992-3722.

• Deluxe aasy~ean llytlng
• Exclusive Of' Lonely'• Warranty

MAYTAG

~IJne·

RANGES
• Deluxe ..IY-dean atytlng
• ExciUIIve or Lonely•• Warran~y

ot::Rv RUTLAND FURNITURE

~C~RE~DIT;TEelR~MS6iiij 7 SHOWROOMS • 11 WAREHOUSES
Filancing Available
Wltl AppJOYed Credit

742-2211. 1-800-837-8217 •
MAIN STRrET
RUTLAND, OHIO

''

�.-

i

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

"

Thursday, July 28, 1994

Thursday, July 28, 1994

Royals beat ChiSox 4-1 to tighten Central Division race

In the NL,

Astros top Reds to share Central lead

NOTHING'S WRONG -The Philadelphia Phillies' John
Kruk gets into his car arter leaving a Philadelphia hospital
Wednesday. Kruk round out that his internal lumps aren't
connected to the cancer he head earlier this year. (AP)

Kruk says can.c er scare
is just that
By JOHN F. BONFATTI
PHILADELPWA (AP)- John Kruk delivered the good news in
his usual down-to-earth fashion.
"They don't know what it is, but it ain't cancer," Kruk. said as
he left Thomas Jefferson University Hosp1tal following a night of
worrying that the cancer he fought off earlier in the year had
returned.
Instead, doctors confirmed that the lumps the Philadelphia
Phillies first baseman found on his body were "a minor medical
problem unrelated" to the testicular cancer the~ found in March ..
A surgeon also examined Kruk and detennmed that the medical
problem did not require urgent attention.
Kruk, examined by three doctors for about an hour Wednesday,
was scheduled to return to the hospital today for further evaluatJOn.
In a statement released by the hospital, Dr. Carl Mansfield,
chairman of the department of radiation oncology and nuclear
medicine, said there was a "99 to I00 percent likelihood that John
does not have a recurrence of cancer."
Hospital spokeswoman Kellyann McDonnell said she had no
further details about the "minor medical problem" Kruk has.
Kruk said he hoped to rejoin the Phillies in time for Friday's
game against the Atlanta Braves.
"Never thought I'd look forward to facing the Braves, but it
· beats the alternative," he said.
After Philadelphia's 10-8 victory over the Florida Marlins on
Tuesday night, Kruk, who left the game in the seventh inning with
what the Phillies called abdominal pain, said he would have doctors
examine two lumps he discovered recently on his body.
The hospital report confirmed the opinion of a specialist on
testicular tumors. Dr. Ray Stutzman of Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Although Stutzman termed the appearance of the lumps bizarre,
he said that there was "a very, very slim chance" that it would be
related to the seminoma doctors found on Kruk's right testicle.
That testicle was removed March 8 and Kruk underwent a series
of radiation treatments that were designed to make sure the cancer
hadn't spread to his lymph nodes.
Stutzman said that removal of the testicle and radiation
treatments "have an almost 100 percent cure rate."

three is tn:mendously important"
"We've gotten ourselve s to
even," said Bagwell, tile man most
respon sible for the share of first
place. "Whoever plays the best to
the end of the season is going to be
the champion."
In the other clubhouse, there
was a lot of hand-wringing over the
way sole possession of first place
slipped away. The Reds wasted a
bases-loaded chance in the ninth,
giving the Astios a chance to catch
them for the first time since June
15.
"I'll say this once more and for
the last time: You've got to take
advantage of your scoring opportunities," said Barry Larkin, who
Oied out to the warning track to
end the ninth-inning threat "If you
don't, til is is what happens."
"This is over. Forget it," Brct
Boone said. "We lost twice. We
shou ldn't have. It's over. Forget
it."

Bagwell's incredible clutch hitting made the series unforgettable.
He homered Tuesday night in a
6-5 victory to become the first
major-leaguer to reach 100 RB!s.
He homered again Wednesday in
the fourth to tie the game 1- I.

The Reds were so wary that they
walked him intentionally in the
lOth with two out and a runner on
third. But Reds manager Davey
Johnson had run out of good choic es when Bagwell came to bat in the
12th.
Steve Finley opened Lhc inning
with a triple off Scan Service (0-2).
bringing up Bagwell. There was no
strategic value to walking him . The
Reds couldn't play for the double
play and their bullpen was nearly
on empty.
"I didn't want to pitch to him,
but I had to," Johnson said.
There was one consolation : Service had struck out Bagwell tile last
three times he faced him . But this
time, Bagwell was ready.
''I'd faced him a few times and
had success against him," Service
said. "But he's a pro. He makes
adjustments. That's what he did
there."
Bagwell was waiting for a slider
and got it on the first pitch. He
lined it to left for a game-breaking
2-1 lead and his 103rd RBI in 102
games.
"I'm glad he's on oui team this
year," the Astros' Craig Biggio
said.
The hit broke the game open.
Andujar Cedeno, who made two
fielding errors to give the Reds
their only run and cost Doug
Drabek a win, doubled home two
more runs and Tony Eusebio had a
three-run pinch hit homer.
Brian Williams (6-5) got the
win with one hitless inning and
Todd Jones, who won Tuesday's
game, got the last three outs.
It was the Reds' third extrainning defeat at .·home against nine

"''ins and their 12th loss overall in
38 games at Riverfront Stadium
this year.
.
"I'm glad we came into the1r
building and took two of three
because those guys play real tough
here," Biggio s:1id. "This is big to
get two of tltrec in !his place."
Other division races
tighlen up
After three days of divisional
showdown s, the National League
races arc tighter than they've ever
(See NL on Page 5)

MIDDLEPORT
fAUIERS

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE

MAltKET

EVERY SATURDAY
8 A.M.· 2 P.M.

Tomatoes, Com,
Peppers, Cabbage
Parking lot between
Family Dollar &amp;
Dave Diles Park
Call 992-5458
For More Information

By TOM WITHERS

Kansas City, which has hovered
Associated Press Writer
around .500 for much of the seaThe two best teams in tile Amer- son, has opened the second half 9ican League Central may soon be 5.
joined by a third.
"The guys have du~ in and
The Stieaking Kansas City Roy- they're ready to fight ,' Royal s
als have quickly turned the AL manager Hal McRae said. " It is
Central into a three-team race witll not a streak yet, but it is going to
a five-game winning streak, includ- take a lot to knock us off our feet"
ing their 4-1 victory over Chicago
Mark Gubicza pitched Jason
on Wednesday night
Bcre to a standoff through seven
While the White Sox and Cleve- innings, and the Royals capitalized
land Indians swapped turns atop on an error by third baseman Robin
th e division and then took turns Ventura in the eightll.
beating each other in the past two
Brian McRae scored th e goweeks, the Royals have used tlleir ahead run when Ventura bobbled
winning streak - the last three vic- Wally Joyner's easy grounder.
tories have come against Chicago Bcre, comtng off one of the worst
- to pull within 5 112 games of !he starts of his life, held the Royals to
fir.;t-place White Sox .
three hits for seven innings before

PR&lt;&gt;Ttl f,UJ Af,A rJSI
t. UTHEF1 rJATUhE

Before disaster
strikes, put
Nationwide•
on your side.

been . Seven teams arc either in fi;st
place or very close behind.
The Los Angeles-San Francisco,
Montreal-Atlanta and Houston Cincinnati series concluded
Wednesday with no team gaining a
three-game sweep.
Barring a long strike, the three
matchups won't be repeated unul
the final weekend of the season,
Sept 30 to OcL 2, when the games
will be held at Houston, Los Angeles and Montreal in stead of the
otllcr way around.
San Francisco won two of three
from Los Angeles, taking the finale
4-1.
And Atlanta, in the worst shape
in the standings of any of the second-place teams, prevented a Montreal sweep by beating tile Expos 41.
In other games, San Diego beat
Colorado 9-2, New York beat St.
Louis 7-4, Philadelphia beat Florida 3-1 and Pittsburgh beat Chicago
9-4.
Giants 4, Dodgers I
At Candlestick Park, Los Angele s had a 1-0 lead until the eighth
inning, when Barry Bonds sparked
San Francisco's comeback victory.
Tom Candiotti (7-6) gave up a
leadoff single to Darren Lewis,
who took second on John Patterson's bunt. Bonds' sharp single to
right tied the game, and Matt.
Williams doubled off the left field
wall before Darryl Strawberry was
intentionally walked to load the
bases.

Nationwide oners special
coverages to protect your home
against flood and earthquake.
Call us today for all the details.

West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992·5479
1·800·742·3868

....... -....a~IJldAIIMid~
HDml Olb: en~~. CoUrbA. OH Gle

...~ .•• ,..,...,.. ..... ..a

MinnGIOC.I ..............47 53

Baseball

man mNlllolwidl tti.lll n.nra ~

Eulern Dlvtalon

Team

W L
Moouai ······ ........ 62 33

Adanu ..................60

PeL
.620

.S94
.490

41

Pltiladelpltia ... .......50 52
New Yori.
... ..48 S2
Aorida
..45 56

CINCINNATI .......58 42
Houllon ........... ......S9 43
PitUbu!Jh..............41 52
SL Loui.1 ................46 S4
Cl!icaao .................44 55

GB

2.S

13

.480

14

.446

17 .S

RESIDENTIAL,
COMMERCIAL, INDIVIDUAL
&amp;FARM SALES &amp;SERVICE

.580
.578
.480
.460
.444

10

12
llS

53

.-480

j

Cohndo ................49 S4
Son Di'l" .............. 40 63

.476
.381

10

I

Wednesday's stores
Philadelphia 3, Florida I
Piutbwgh 9, Oticago 4
New Yoti 7, SL L.ouia 4

(Cooke 4-8), 1:J.S{.m.

CINCINNAT (Hanaon .S-.S) at San

Oioco (Knqu ~2), 10:05 p.m.
Friday's games

Montreal (Heredia 4-3) u Florida
(Sdticd 0-2), 7,Jl p.m.
New York (JonCI 10..7) at Pittabwjh
(Liobor S-S), 7:35p.m.
· Philadelphia (JICb:m 13-4) at Alhnll

200 GAL. OF

00

FAMILY OWNED

excitement of the midway at th e Ohio

come and see why this year's midway

State Fair! There's more than 75 whizzing

won't just have fair rides, th ey'll have

1·800·837·8217

Today's games
(He~kcU!

6·5)

ll

New York

6-11)" o.u.;, (Gul-

lidtlm 4-S~ !:IS p.m.
DH: Cl£VEU..ND (Morria 9-6 and
Orimaley :2.-1) at B.Jtimore (Mu..tn. 14-4
md Fernandez 6-S), S:OS p.m.
Milwaukee (Sculan l-5) at Toronto
(Stowart 7-8). 7:35 pm.
Otialso (Ruffcwn 0-1) 11. Kan.au City

p.m.

Milw•utce (E~dred 9- 10) 11 Bocton
(Van..,.ond 0-J), 7:05p.m.

CLEVELAND (Naay 1·7) ot New
Yod&lt; (llio:hcoclt 2.1). 7:05p.m.
Oakbnd (Van. Poppel 6-9) It Deuoit
(B.W...7-12), 7,(15p.m.
Toronto (Leiter 5·5) at Baltimore
(Mo,...4-6), 7:35p.m.
Sunlc (Cummin&amp;J 1·4) tt Chicaao
(Fanandcz 10. 7), 1:05 p.m.
Minn.CIIOC&amp; (fapani 9-6) It Iaal• City
(Del- ,.,),1:0.1 p.m.
Clli(omia (Lansaton 6-6~ tt Tuu

IPovlilt 1-Sl. 8:35 o.m.

l.c:.aaue. Rccal1cd Annaudo Bm·

TEXAS RANGERS: Placed Tim

Leary, pitcha-, on the 15-day diaablcd liA.
Recalled H«tor Fajardu, pitcher, from
Okl&amp;hm1a City d the American Auocia·
tioo . Placed Gal')' Rcdw, outfielder, oo
the 15-day diublcd list retroactive Ul JWy
24 . Purchned the contract of Butch
Davia, ootfidder, from Oc.hhoma City of
the Ameri.c.n Auocnion.
Nallonal Lcape
CINCINNATI REDS : Pltoed Jerome
Wallon, oulfiddcr, on the 1$-Cay disabled
liL
fLORIDA MARLINS: Plaoed CI!..U.
Hough, pitcha. on !.he 15·dty diubled
liot.

PITI'SDURGH PIRATES: Tndcd Brian Hunttlr, &amp;nt beac:man-ouafiddcr, to lhc
Cincinnati RcU for • player to be named
later.

Football
Nttlootl Foolblll Leque

ARIZONA CAR DINALS , Si1ned
Jnhn Reece, cornerback. and Gene

McGuire. omte:r.
DETROIT LIONS : Wtived J .. on
Jonca, offcnaive lincmtn.
GREEN BAY PACKERS : Rclcur.d
Mike Prior, .. rety, and then rc-•isncd
him.

NEW YORK JETS: Signed Guy
Beckford, dcfcnaive bl,ck . Watved Robert
Trice, fUMing baci..

.....

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Si8ned
Doug Brien, kicker, lo • two-year con-

WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Sipod
Richard FUn, c:omcrback.

Hockey
NalJORallloc:kty League

Shjoo Podcin, caucr-ld't ..nn,.
TAMPA BAY UGIITNINO: Sisnod
Rudy Pbc::acbct, defmaenun·forwud, and
Doo. Murdoch, head acoot. to mult.iy~
contracta .

AL standings
Eulenollloldon

W

L

Pd..

NowYodl ..............60

37

.619

Bottimono ..............
42
...................48 50
Torontc ..................47 52

j67
.490
.473:

12.5

Detroit... ................45

.450

t6j

ss

ss

GB

s

ou.................... .S9 41

CUMliANJL .. ..S7 40
Kan.u City .......... .s4 47
Milwa'*oc .............47 53

14

j9(1

j88
.535

.470

$500 OFF

j

s.s

12

ON NEW PRESCRIPTIONS
AND TRANSFERS
Whh Any Pharmacy Coupon at Your Fruth
Phannacy's In Middleport, Pl. Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis

Call 1-800-BUCKEYE

Brewers up 5-0.
Twins I, Rangers 0
At Arlington, Pat Mahome s
pitched six solid innings and the
Minnesota bullpen bailed him out
or a jam in the seventh. making a
first-inning RBI groundout by
Kirby Puckett hold up.
Puckett's one-out grounder
scored Chuck Knoblauch, who
opened the game with a double off
Texas fill-in starter John Dettmer
(0-5). Knoblauch also doubled in
the fifth, upping his major leagueleading total to 41.

Tennis
TORONTO (AP)- Eighthseeded Andre Agassi beat Jakob
Hlasek of Switzerland 6-1, 6-1 to
advance to the tllird round of the
Player's International.
Top·seeded Sergi Bruguera of
Spain, No. 3 Michael Chang and
No. 4 Jim Courier also advanced.
Brugucra beat Jim Gmbh 6-1, 6-4,
Chang defeated Jeremy Bates of
Britain 6-1, 6-3 and Courier beat
Nicolas Pereira of Venezuela 7-6
(7-3), 6-4.
Second-seeded Todd Martin
retired from his match with Israel's
Amos Mansdorf because of a leg
injury.
Football
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) One collegian and three high
school athletes died from injuries
sustained playing football in the
1993 season, according to a survey
conducted by the University or
North Carolina.
Nine other players - eight in
high school and one in college died , but their deaths from heart
failure and asthma cannot be
attiibuted directly to football, the
survey said.

Mahomes (X -4) allowed three
hits in 6 2{3 innings.
Yankees 3, Red Sox 3
At New York, the game
between the Red Sox and Yankees
was suspended because of rain in
the bottom of the eighth .
Boston scored twice in the top
of the eighth to tic it 3-3. Mike
Stanley, who hit two homers, singled w1tll one out in the Yankees
eighth, and Bernie Williams was
batting when play was halted. The
suspension was announced I hour
and 7 minutes later.

Delehanty to get posthumous
Ohio Baseball HOF induction
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Ed
Delehanty, the only man to lead
both the National and American
leagues in hitung, will be inducted
posthumously into the Ohio Baseball Hall of Fame.
Delehanty won the batting title
in 1899 when he hit .408 for
Philadelphia in the NL. He cap tured the AL hitting crown m 1902
when he batted .376 at Washington.
He died July 2, 1903.
Delehanty, a Cleveland native,
was inducted into the national Hall
of Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y .. in
1945.
The state induction ceremony
will be Aug. 19 at Ned Skeldon
Stadium in suburban Maumee, said
Kathleen Gardner, curator for the
Ohio hall. The hall is next to the
stadium. the home of the lnterna-

--Sports briefs--

Leo,....

Diqo (AIItby 4-10),10:0.1 p.m.
Colorado (Nied 9-S) at San Fnncilco
(Black l-1), 11:05 p.m.

Team

and Jeff Montgomery pitched the
ninth for his 22nd save.
Chicago's Frank Thomas went
1-for-4 and has only two hits in his
last 15 at-bats .
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was Oakland II, Cali fornia 3; Detroit 3, Seanle I; Milwaukee 5, Toronto 0; and Minnesota I, Texas 0. The Boston-New
York game was suspended 3-3 in
the eighth inning, and the Cleve land-Baltimore game was post poned by rain.
Athletics 11, Angels 3
At Anaheim, Mike Bordick had
three hiL~. including an RBI single
during a six-run outburst in the first
inning.
Geronimo Bcrroa hit a three-run
homer in the third inning for the
A's.
Ron Darling (10-9) won his
sixth straight decision, giving up
three runs and eight hits in five
innings.
The A's ripped Phil Leftwich
(5-9) for six runs and six hits in just
one-third of an inning.
Tigers 3, Mariners I
At Detroit, Mike Moore allowed
only two hits in eight innings and
Travis Fryman hit a two-run homer
off Randy Johnson.
Moore ( 10-9) walked four and
struck out four, ouul ueling Johnson
(ll-6),who struck out 13.
IJrewers 5, Blue Jays 0
At Toronto, Dave Nilsson hit his
second three-run home run in as
many games and drove in four
runs.
Bill Wegman (8-3) allowed four
hits in seven-plus innings for Mli --'Wauk.ee.
Pat Hentgen ( 12-7) gave up five
runs and seve n hits in seven
.
innings.
Nilsson, who went 3-for-4, hit
his 12th homer in the seventh
innin!J: off Hentgen to put the

itcz., pitcher, from Bowie of the Eutt:rn

PHIU..DELPIDA FlYERS' Sisnod

Transactions
Baseball

BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Sent Mike
Oquial, piLChcr, to Rochmcr of the lnLcJ-

great rides!

It's a party 'til the cows

WITH APPROVED
CREDIT

in ~

BOlton at New Yotk, comp. of au.p.

(Kamkniacki 7-S)
S..tllc (FlaniJ&gt;&amp;

.

CINCINNA11 (Schourck S-2) at San

speeds ofthe new Falling Star ride. So

for more information.

Rutland Furniture &amp;Bottle Gas
614·742·2511

HOUAOn (Reynolda 1--4) at Loa Anae-Jea (Attacio 6-8), 10:0:5 p.m.

Central DIYUion

PROPANE
OFFER EXPIRES
JULY 31, 1994

Clticago (Bullinaer S-2) at St. LoW.
(Waunn 6-4), 1:05 p.m.

B@lUilFon
And Gam@S!

PRICE OF

PRICE INCLUDES

(Avmy 6-l), 7:40p.m.

Join us for the Wild, Woolly &amp; Wonderful

1.5
6.S
6.5

Friday's games

Today's games

Llf@ Can

54
60
Sl

Ctli(omia (Lorraine 0 ·1) at Tuu
(R"'on10.6), l :ll p.m.

Coiorldo (FR~Cnan 9-2) 11 San Francioco (Bwltel16-7), 4:05p.m.
Chicago (Foatcr 2-3) 11 Piluburgh

•Normal LP. Gas Tank Installation ALL -FOR
•Rent Free Tank
THE LOW

stiikcouL&lt;. Lance Painter (3-5) took
the loss.
Mets 7, Cardinal~ 4
At Busch Stadium, Bobby
Bonilla hit a pair of two-run home
run s, including the tie -break ing
shot in a four-run eighth.
Tim Bogar added a two -run
homer in the eighth and Ryan
Thompson had a solo shot in the
ninth, his 17th.
Rookie Ja~on Jacome (4 -1) won
his fourth straight start, workmg
seven innings and allowing seve n
hits with five strikeouts. St. Louis
starter Tom Urbani (2-6) carried a
tllrec-hitter into the eighth before
the Mets rallied.
PhiUies 3, Marlins I
At Joe Robbie Stadium, Bobby
Munoz pitched a two-hitter for his
first career complete game.
Munoz (7-3) retired the final 23
batters after Benito Santiago homered with one out in the second
inning. He did not issue a walk.
Pat Rapp (6-6) took the loss,
allowing e1ght hits and three earned
runs in eight innings.
Pirates 9, Cubs 4
At Three Rivers Stadium, Rick
White (3-5) won for the first time
as a major league starter, limiting
Chicago to two hits in six innings.
Tom Foley had four RBis and
three of Pittsburgh's 16 hits, and
Don Slaught was 3-for-4 with two
RBis.
The Pirates had six hits off Mike
Morgan (2- 10) in the first three
mnmgs.

naliooal

.475
.%0
.4 12
.401

Minnetoll I, Tuu 0
&amp;.ton 3, New Ycd 3, 1uap., 8th
rUna. n.in

(Cone 14-4).1:tlS

Son Fnnciloo 4, t... Anjelco I
San Diego 9, Colorado 2

4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE You·

53

OUlaad II, Califomit 3
Dcooit 3, Sallie I
Cl..EVE.U.ND 1t Baltimore. ppci., rain
Milwaukee S, Toronto 0
KIJ\UI City 4, OUcago I

Botton

"""""" 7, ONCINNA11 I ( 12)
ALlan&amp;a 4, Moobc&amp;l 1

WANT RELIABILITY
AND SERVICE?

12

Wednesday's scores

same. 12:0:S p.m.

Wetlern Dl.talon

t... Angel........... ..49 52 .485

San FnnO.CO ........49

.470

W•&amp;ern IMvtllon

Tun ................... ..48
0Uiond ............... ..46
Califomil ...............42
Sallle ....................40

NL standings

BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE

GIVE US A CALLI

Candiotti then walked Dave
Martmez on four strmght pitches to
force in Bonds with the winning
run. One out later, Kirt Manwaring
drove in two more run s with a
ground-rule double.
Dave Burba (2-5) got the victory
by retiring the only batter he faced
,in the top or eightll.
"'
Braves 4, Expos I
At Fulton County Stadium , Kent
Mercker pitched seven strong
innings and Jeff Blauser hit a tworun homer as Atlanta moved within
2 1,12 games of Montreal.
"It's very even between the se
two teams,'' Expos manager Felipe
Alou said. "I don't sec anybody
taking a big lead. The Braves will
come back.''
Mercker (9 -3), who allowed five
hits and struck out six in seven
mnings, escaped a pair of basesloaded, two-out jams by retiring
Larry Walker in the first on a
strikeout and in the fifth on a
popup to shortstop.
The Braves broke through
against Ken Hill (14-5) in the sixth
on Blauser's two-run homer to
right-center.
Padres 9, Rockies 2
At Jack Murphy Stadium, Col orado blew a chance to move into a
first-place tie with tile Dodgers.
Eddie Williams had a three-run
homer and four RBis for San
Diego.
Joey Hamilton (7-5) gave up
one run and three hits in six innings
and tied a season-high with seven

Scoreboard

~

WATCH IT!- Home plate
umpire Jerry Larne warns
Cincinnati pitcher Ttm Fortugno
after the latter hit two Houston
Astros in the 12th inning of
Wednesday night's National
League game in Cincinnati,
where the Astros won 7-1. (AP)

Rutland,Ohio • The Plains, Ohio • Torch,Ohio • McDonnelsville, Ohio
WE ARE NOW THE lARGEST INDEPENDENT PROPANE DEAlER
IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO &amp; SOUTHWESTERN WEST VIRGI"'IA.

he was replaced by Kirk McCaskill
(1-3) after giving up a leadoff dou ble to Chico Lind.
Lind, who went to third on a
single by McRae. was thrown out
at the plate by shortstop Ozzie
Guillen while attempting to score
on Da vc Henderson's grounder.
McRae took third and Henderson
went to second on tile play .
Denni s
Cook
reli ev ed
McCask ill and got Joyn er to
ground to Ventura, who failed to
field the ball as McRae scored.
Joyner s tole second and Bob
Hamelin walked to load tile bases
for Felix Jo se, who grounded a
two-run single to center.
Rusty Meacham (2-3) pitched to
one batter 10 the eightll for the win ,

J\fl. (i£:fi()/l ...,~(C~o~nti=nu=ed~f=rom~Pa~ge_4)~------------------­

Central DlYIIIon

SERVING YOUR AREA
FOR THE LAST
49 YEARS

The Dally 5entlnei-Page-5

In the AL,

Page-4

lly .JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- No wontier the Houston Astros celebrated
loudly before leaving town - they
had accomplished twice as much as
they hoped to.
The Astros knew what they
were up against when t11ey arrived
fo r a three -g ame series again st
Ci nc innati . The Reds led them by
one game in the NL Central DiviSIOn. had the best home record in
baseball and almost never lost in
cxtia innings.
"We came in here saying,
'We've got to win one game,"'
manager Terry Collins said. "We
didn't want to go out of here four
back."
They left with a roar Wednesday
after beating the Reds at their own
game to claim a share of fir.;t place.
Jeff Bagwell hit his 34th homer and
singled home the tie-brcalcing run
in the 12th inning - his 103rd RBI
- for a 7 -I victory that gave the
Astros two of the three games.
After the game, the congratulatory yells in the clubhouse could be
heard through two closed metal
doors.
"T hey should be excited,"
Collin s said. "To win two out of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

tiona! League's Toledo Mud Hens.
Buck Ewing, a 19th century
catcher who managed Cincinnati in
1898 and 1899, also will be inducted posthumous! y.
Modem-era players to enter the
Ohio hall this year include three
form er Cleveland Indians Orestes "Minnie" Minoso, James
" Mickey" Vernon and Dave Pope.
Russ Schneider, a sports wnter
for The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer,
will receive the Ohio Baseball Hall
of Fame Media Award during the
induction ceremony. The ceremony
will be held before the game
between the Mud Hens and Pawtucket Red Sox.
To be ehgihlc for the Ohio hall,
players must be natives of Ohio or
have played at least part of their
careers with the Cleveland Indians
or Cincinnati Reds .

LEGAtNOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled local public
hearings In Case No. 94-987·GA·AlR, tn the Matter of tha Application of
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. for Authority to Amend Flied Tarlffo to lncreaoe
tho Rotoo end Chorgeo for Gao Service. The hearings are scheduled for the
purpose of providing on opportunity for interooted membera of tho public to
testify In thlo proceeding. Tho local hearings will be hold as follows:
Mansfield, Ohio· Monday, August 8, 1994, ol 7:30p.m., at Clly Hall, City
Council Chambero, 30 N. Diamond Street, Room 75, Mansfield, Ohio 44902.
Parma, Ohio . Wednesday, August 10, at 2:00 p.m. , at Clly Hall, Council
Chambers, 6611 Ridge Road, Parma, Ohio 44129.
Toledo, Ohio - Tuesday, Auguol 16, 1994, at 2:00 p.m., at Toledo
Government Center, City Council Chambers, First Floor, 1 Government
Center, Toledo, Ohio 43624.
Athens, Ohio· Tueoday, August 16, 1994, at 3:30 and 5:30p.m., at Athena
Public library, Mooting Room, 30 Home Street, Athena, Ohio 45701.
Springfield, Ohio- Wednesday, Auguot 17, 1994, at 6:30 p.m., City Hall,
Forum, lsi Floor, 76 Eoat High Street, Springfield, Ohio 45502.
Columbus, Ohio· Thursday, Augual18, 1994, at 3:30 and 5:30p.m., Public
Utilities Commlooion of Ohio, t80 East Broad Street, 11th Floor- Room 11A,
Columbus, Ohio 43215-3793.
By Ito application, Columbia Gao of Ohio, Inc. Increase which would
generate approximately $47,499,000 In additional gross annual rovenuoo, or
4.11 percent, for Its gas service. This amount of Increase has been agreed to

by most of tho parties participating In prior Columbia rate caaoa. The
agreement to supported by Columbia; the atoll of the Public Utilities
Commlulon of Ohio ; the Office of the Consumers' Counsel; the Industrial
Energy Consumers; Honda of America Mfg., Inc.; E.nron Access Corporation;
the city of Toledo; the Bay Area Council of Governmen1s, the Greater
Cleveland Schools Council of Government&amp;, and the Lake Erie Regional
Council of Governments; the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation; and the

lnduotrial End Users·Ohlo. The city of Parma oppooeo lho company's
application. The maJor lsauea In the case are:

o) whalher tho}olntlnvoollgetlon conducted by the Commlulon'a alaH and
the Office of the Consumers' Counsel meet the requirements of Ohio law;
b) whether the joint lnveollgallon'a failure to consider t~o coat of service to
Parma resldenta and to make the direct assignment of coats and the
allocation• necessary to set rates appropriate to Parma consumers causes
the proposed rates to be unreasonable and unlawful;

c.) whether tho joint agreement of the parties Ia reasonable and lawful In
recommending adjuatmenta In the form of an experimental weather

adjustment and a temporary ba.. rate revenue rider;
d.) whether lha ratemaklng method used In the }olnl agreement of the
partloa Ia unreasonable and unlawful.
Further lnformallon may be obtained by contacting the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Slreel, Columbus, Ohio 43215-3793.

Canning Peaches
**Now Available**
If you're looking for canning peaches then you
should read this canning peach update and advisory
from Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses, Inc.
For the last 25 years Bob's Market has been very proud of its success of
being able to provide to the consumer the very best tasting, fresh and treeripened peaches available at reasonable prices.
However, in these pas.t.._ years almost 100% of these peaches were grown
in the states of Virginia._JVest Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.
Unfortunately, this year for the first time, mother nature had a strong hand
in determining what states were allowed to have a peach crop. The 30-40
degrees below zero during the month of January took care of that by
freezing the tiny peach embryo inside the buds on the trees at that time.
This year only South Carolina, Alabama, and Georgia will have a peach
crop in the entire eastem United States.
Bob's Market has excellent grower contacts in South Carolina and will be
able once again to supply their many satisfied customers of 25 years with
the same good tasting, top quality, yellow freestone peaches. But the
season will not last long and due to short supply prices will be somewhat
higher than other years. The canning peach season starts with this ad and
may not last any longer than August 20th.

I

go home 1

Bushel

Half Bushel

$19.98

$10.50

Peck

's5.75
Two Convenient Locations:

786 NORTH SECOND • MIDDLEPORT
2501 JACKSON AVE.• PT. PLEASANT
364 JACKSON PilE • GAlliPOliS

1/4 Mltllertllol P-•y/Mu• IIIWp
...... WY
,._ (304) 773-SIU

•....,,,
..,.Sihr..............
..... ,,....

2400 E.tn Alr1. (llrlll ln. ' - t )
.... (614)446·1711
0,. Mt • r s.tw ... I...,. t p.&amp;
.....1011&amp;-7p.&amp;

I

�\
I

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

On the NFL camp scene,

r
'

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 28, 1994

Thursday, July 28, 1994

Ohio News in Brief:

Jackson unhappy with Saints' less-than-half-salary offer
lly MARY FOSTER
ed him with a $300,000 offer,
AP Sports Writer
linebacker Rickey Jackson said.
The New Orleans Saints insult - They raised it just enough to soften

TUNING UP- L.A. Raiders quarterback Jerr Hostetler tbrows
the ball during his learn's practice Wednesday at Montjuic Olympic
Stadium in Darcelona, Spain. The former West Virginia University
star will lead his club in Sunday's game in Barcelona against the Den&gt;tr Broncos. (AP)

Western Michigan tabbed
·to win MAC football title
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Westem Michigan has been picked in a
media poll as the team to beat m
the Mid -American Conference th1s
seaso n. But Bro ncos coach AI
Molde said he wishes someone else
would have received the honor.
The Broncos received 32 of 47
first place votes in Wednesday's
poll and had 453 total points. They
were followed by Bowling Green.
with 14 first place votes and 417
poinLs.
Ball Sta te, last year's MAC
champion. received 314 points. follo wed by Toledo, 299; Central
Michigan. 294: Eastern Michigan,
208; Ohio University, 205~ Miami
of Ohio, 203; Akron, 141 and Kent.
51. Ohio got the other first place
vote.
Molde said he does not put

much stock in pre-season pol\s.
Since 1968,the MAC media' s pick
to win the conference has done so
eight teams. Last year. Ball State
was forecast to finish sixth .
"This is more of an indictment
than an honor,' ' Mol de sa id of
being selec ted as the favorite. "ll
l&lt;lkes more than returning talent,
which it appears this prediction is
based on."
The Broncos. who finished second in the con ference last year,
return 20 of 24 staners this season,
inducting two kickers.
They arc led by junior quanerback Jay McDonagh, who completed 174 of 283 pass altempts for
I ,974 yards and 16 touchdowns
with four interceptions last year.
SLaying healthy will be the key
to the Broncos' season, Molde said.

EHS football camp to begin Monday
Eastern High School will host a
football camp for boys in grades 48 on August 1-4 from 6-8 p.m ..
The registration fee is $20 with
a free T-shirt for each participant

Pre-registration fcc and T-shiri size
can be sent to Eastern High School
in care of head coach Dave Barr.
For more infonnation call Barr
at992-3302.

BBYFL's final sign-up tonight
The Big Bend Youth Football
League will have its final stgn-up
today from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the
Strike Zone on Front Street. .
The purpose_of the league IS to

Meigs ,·unior high
footba I meeting
slated for Monday
There will be a meeting for all
seventh- and eighth-graders interested in playing football at Meigs
Junior High School on Monday,
Aug. 8 at I0 a.m. in the junior high
auditorium.
The purpose of the meeting will
be to hand out physcial cards and
general information.

teach basic sk.ills and to develop an
understanding of basic football
rules for fifth- and sixth-graders
graders as well as to foster good
sponsmanship and a positive attitude.
The structure is to develop as
many teams according to the level
of interest. Players cannot be 13
years old prior to September I. A
copy of the child's birth certificate
must be available at sign-up date.
Fees are $14 for membership
and $36 equipment use.
Anyone interested in helping
with organization this season
should contact league president
Dave Jenkins at992-2117 or secreLary Lisa Roush at 992-3486.

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
Don't be "brave• about arthrltla pain. A report to the
Arthritis HeaHh Profasslona Association noted,that woman
report fewer aymptoma than men with equally aevere
dlaaasa--and so they gat less helpful medlcatlona.
Reporting specific symptoms helps.

•

•

the indignity , but not enough to
entice him to sign.
Jackson. a six -time Pro Bowl
player, d1dn't mind a reduced
salary. or even less playmg ume.
The deal the Saints said they were
withdrawing would have wounded
his pride as well, Jackson said. . . .
"I don't think Il was falf,
Jackson said from the Saints'
Mankato, Minn . trainmg camp. "I
expected a cut; I didn't expect them
to treat me like I was dirt I didn't
expect them to insult me with an
offer like that. "
Jackson , 36. made a base salary
of $1.3 million in 1993. He al so
made the Pro Bowl for the second
straight year. starting all 16 games
and getting II 1{2 sacks.
.
The Saints offered htm
$500,000 for next season, or about
5100,000 less than defensive lineman Frank Warren will make.
"They cou ld have at least kept
me around what Frank is making,"
Ja ckson said. ·'At what they
offered, I would have been the low est-paid linebacker on the team.'' .
The offer d1d include the possibility of another $800,000 in incen tives based on individual and team
accomplishments.
"I couldn't have made them if
they put me, Derrick Thomas and

Thorpe sole American victor
in latest Goodwill Games
Dy STEPHEN WILSON ~
ST. PETERSBURG. ussia
(AP) - It was a day to for et for
American athletes at the G will
Games.
The U.S. basketball team was
beaten in the semifinals, boxers lost
all three of their matches and the
water polo team suffered its second
straight defeat.
In fact, the only American winner Wednesday was in !&lt;lekwondo,
as Kelly Thorpe of Edmond, Okla ..
took the gold medal in th e 121 pound class.
The biggest disappointment was
in basketball. with the United
S l&lt;ltes losing 81 -72 to Italy in the
semifinals - another embarrassing
defeat in international competition
for American college players.
It was the Americans' second
loss of the tournament, following
their 77-75 defeat by Russia on
Sunday. The two meet again Thursday for the bronze medal, while
Italy faces P-uerto Rico in the
championship game.
"I left the U.S. with a confident
feeling we could win the gold
medal," U.S. coach George Raveling said. "But Americans need to
understand that there are other
countries that are efficient at playing basketball besides the United
States.'· •
Since 1986, the only major
international event won by a U.S.
amateur team was the 1993 University Games_ Pro basketball is
another matter, with Dream Team

OXFORD - The site of a laboratory that handled several hun dred tons of uranium metal during the 1950s docs not pose a public
health hazard. a fede!"'J.I repon said.
The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry in
Allan La, pan of the U.S. Pub~c Health Service, included the finding
on the fonner Alba Craft Laboratory in a recent rcpon.
The report said fonner employees who worked full time could
have been exposed to uranium levels that exceed current safety lim its.
The laboratory machined several hundred tons of umnium mc1al
from 1952 to 1956 as a subcontractor for National Lead of Ohio,the
former operator of the Fernald uranium process ing plant ncar
Cincinnau.
ATS'DR officials visited the site in late January and March.
meeting with several pasl and present neighboring residents and city
officials.

Bryan Harlan said.
Brooks had a condition known as
Chiefs
Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
Head coach Marty Scholten- " in which an extra strand of muscle,
hcimer said it was unlikely the often no larger than a strand of
Chiefs would play their newly hair forms an electrical pathway
acquired defensive slancrs much in bet~een the heart 's upper and
the exhibition opener against Hous- lower chambers.
On Tuesday. he underwent a
ton on Sunday night in Kansas
City.
non-surgical technique known as
Lions
"radio frequency catheter ablaBennie Blades, the fonner All- tion" to remove the extra muscle
Pro safety who missed most of last strand.
season with a broken ankle, sufCowboys
fered a minor setback in his recovThink winning two Super Bowls
ery when the ankle was too sore for has made the Dallas Cowboys
him to take part in the afternoon complacent? Rookie Willie Jackpractice.
son, a fourth-round wide receiver
Redskins
from Florida, knows the answer.
Heath Shuler's representatives
Jackson quit running on a pass
think Washington's first-round from Troy Aikman during practice
draft pick will be under contract Wednesday. Instead of gelling a
soon. possibly this weekend.
handful of ball, he ended up with a
Shuler traveled to Kansas City faceful of Aikman.
for a few days of talk with his
"We don't quit running around
agent, Tom Condon.
here until the ball ha s hit the
Packers
ground!" Aikman yelled.
Third-year wide receiver Roben
Coach Barry Switzer said,
Brooks was c Ieared to return to
"Willie th en ran as hard as he
Green Bay's training camp after
could as fast as he could in a scrimdoctors corrected a potentially dan- mage, laid out, and made the
gerous hean ,condition. An electro- catch.''
cardiogram revealed an abnonnaliAdded Switzer: "The moral of
ly in the electrical activity of
the
story is that if you run as hard
Brooks· hean, and he was sent to
as
you
can as fast as you can until
the Milwaukee Hcan Institute.
the
ball
hits the ground, it might
There. doctors discovered
not hit the ground."

Plant denies federal allegations
CINCINNATl - A dye and chemical plant said there was no
truth to government claims that it burned hazardous wa~tcs improperly for a year and created a health hazard.
Hilton Davis' company attorney Paul Casper Jr. said Wednesday
there was no justification for the $1.6 million civil penally imposed
by the U.S . Environmental Protection Agency.
The company filed its response Wednesday to accusations made
earlier this month by the agency. Hilton Davis has asked the EPA
for an infonnal settlement conference.
The proposed penalty was one of the higher fines for boiler or
industrial furnace operations, which the EPA began regulating in
1991.
EPA attorney Richard Nagle said Hilton Davis' worst offenses
during 1991 -1992 were repeated releases of excessive ash, ch lorine,
arsenic, chromium and lead from the boiler smoke stack and the
company's failure to analyze what it burned so it could control
emissions.

Court upholds robbery conviction
COLUMBUS - A coun was correct in the way it sentenced a
man who robbed two seventh -graders of their starter jackets at gunpoint, the Ohio Supreme Coun said Wednesday.
Daniel Wills was convicted in Montgomery County Common
Pleas Coun of two counLs of aggravated robbery with firearms specifications. He was sentenced to three to 25 years on each robbery
count and to three years on each fireanns count. The four sentences
arc to be served consecutively.
Justice Paul Pfeifer wrote in the 6-1 opinion that the issue was
whether the Dec. 2, 1991, robberies - which occurred on a Dayton
street within minutes of each other - counted as a single criminal
act with regard to the state's firearms specifications statute.
The law calls for only one sentence if the acts are pan of the
same transaction, which the high court defined as ''a series of continuous acts bound together by time, space and purpose, and directed toward a single objective."
Wills' crimes did not fit that definition.
"Wills should serve no less time because of the coincidental
proximity of his two victims,'' Pfeifer wrote.
Concurring were Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer and Justices
Andrew Douglas, Craig Wright, ~ce Robie Resnick and Francis E.
Sweeney. Justice A. Wiltiam Sweeney dissented.
John Rion, the Dayton auorney who represented Wills, said
Wednesday the two crimes should have been considered one transaction.
Waller Ruf, assistant county prosecutor, did not return a telephone call to his office seeking comment.

See how far we'll go for
abucke \ ·

You'll be surprised at how many good things cost less
at Dairy Queen• Brazier" stores. Good food, good treats,
good values are all here all the time. Stop in soon and
see your alm1ghty dollar m act1on.

Appellate judges overturn decision .
DAYTON - A state appeals coun has overt~med the conv1cuon
of a Franklin woman who claimed self-defense m the 1992 shootmg
deaths of her former husband and another woman.
.
The Ohio 2nd District Coun of Appeals said Wednesday that the
trial coun should have allowed Susan M. Daws, 28, to present an
expen on battered woman 's syndrome to testify on her behalf.
The coun said such testimony was necessary to esl&lt;lbhsh whether
Ms. Daws believed it was necessary to use deadly force.
.
She was convicted of two counts of volunLary manslaughter m
the July 1992 shooting deaths of Dwayne Daws and Karen Houseman in suburban Dayton. She ts servmg a pnson tenn of 20 to 53
years.
.
The appeals coun's decision paves the way for a new trial.
- The Associated Press

•

We Treat You Right'
Oa•tl' 0UHn' llOIIIIIIt OIOUd sponsors Of IIIII Ct"laf!lll i lojoracle Ner ..or• leleii\OI'I

•t~~en Pe"'ll•u IOCIII'JOSOf1115 tor Chk,lrtn

1
1

•
• •

~,.,...;,.'(

Ut ~154

Sun- Thurs. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Fri.- Sat. til I 0 p.m.

700N 2nd Middleport, OR

992-3322

'

~~

Meigs announcements

'\'

)t~

Church holds revival
The Calvary Bible Church on
Pomeroy Pike will hold a revival
through Sunday. each night at 7:30
p .m. Blaine Farley will be the
evangelist

\

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

Rock Springs ice cream social
The Rock Springs United
Methodist_,Church will host an ice
cream social at 6:30 p.m. Saturday
· at the church.

2 DAYS ONLY! 9:00A.M.- 5:00P.M.
FRIDAY, JULY 29 &amp; SATURDAY, JULY 30

' 25%* OFF

Tuppers Plains square dance
The Tuppers Plains VFW will
host a square dance with CJ and the
Country Gentlemen at the post
from 8-11 p.m. Saturday. Admission is $5 per couple and $3 for
singles.

OUR ALREADY LOW SALE PRICE

On All Furniture Items In Stock
uNot The List Price- But Our Sale Price!!!"
SAVE AN EXTRA 25o/o ON ALL:

Botulism toxin, a deadly polson, has proved effective In
ralaxlng Involuntary muscles. Doctors at Johns Hopkins
uM minute doses to relax muscles lnthe eaophagus thatwhen In apasm-won11et food pass Into the stomach.
*
*
•
Braast feeding helpa new mothers lou weight faster, a
study at the University of California at Davia found. It -ms
that just froduclng brust milk bums 500 or mora calories a
day, so I the mother doesn't overeat, she will lou weight
easily.
•
•
•

v Living Room Suites

v Sectionals

v Bedroom Suites

v Dinettes

v Sofa Sleepers
vTable Sets

Tharl'l something In f:!a that slows the absorption of

Dlabltlca know lhey"ll alway• find the 1peclak:are llllda
their doctors praac:rlbl at..

11 se t to win the gold at next
month' s World Championships in
Toronto, just as the original Dream
Team triumphed at the 1992
Olympics.
" We know with the Dream
Team we'd probably lose every
time, " said Paolo Conti. who
scored 17 points to help guide Italy
to its first victory over the United
Slates since 1978.
The United Sl&lt;ltes led 40-39 at
the half, but l!&lt;lly scored the first
seven points of the second half. and
the Americans never recovered.
''As the game went on, they lost
the fear factor," Raveling said.
"Midway through the second half,
they started believing they could
win the game.'
Damon Stoudamire, a point
guard from Arizona, led the United
Slates with 17 points. Also in double figures were Alan Henderson of
Indiana with 12, Shawn Respect of
Michigan State with II and Cherokee Parks of Duke with 10.
In boxing, Americans lost all
three of their semifinal bouts
Wednesday.
Light flyweight Albert Guardado of Topeka, Kan., was outpointed
by Joon-Wook Choi of South
Korea 8-5. Eric Morel of Madison,
Wis., also a light flyweight, was
hammered by Manuel Mantilla of
Cuba 19-8. And lightweight and
team captain Larry Nicholson of
Tyler, Texas, was beaten by Heiko
Hinz of Gennany 16-10.

·"~

v Curios

~ v Accessories

Speaker at Danville church
Denver Hill of Fosler, W.Va.,

Pharmacy
Ken&lt;nelh Mc:Cutlough, R. Ph. Char1aa
Ronald Hamlng, R. Ph.
Uon. thru Sat. 8:00 Lm. to D:OO p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 pm.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. OD2·2866

E. Meln

Sarvlc:e Pcmaroy, Oh.

will S;Jeak at the Danville Church
of Christ at 7 p.m. Saturday and
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Suoday. The
public is welcome.
Gilkey-Hudnall reunion set
The descendants of Tommy
Gilkey and Milda Jane Hudnall
will hold a reunion Sunday at the
roadside park on U.S . Route 33
south of Darwin. A potluck dinner
will be served at noon. Those
auending should bring ~able service
and folding chairs.
Middleport Garden Club picnic
The Middleport Garden Club
will meet for a picnic at 6 p.m.
Monday at the home of William
Morris. Members should bnng a
covered dish. Beverages. dessert
and table setting will be provided.

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Pres.s Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Potential testimony from a twiceconvicted killer linking a Hare
Knshna swami to the deaths of two
former devotees would only help
the case of the guru, his attorney
said.
Thomas Drescher. who is serving two life sentences without the
chance for parole, said in telephone
interviews thi s week that he was
prepared to testify Kirtanananda
Swami Bhaktipada "encouraged"
the murders to silence charges of
child moleslation.
"It would probably make our
case easier because if (prosecutors
arc) going to rely on someone
whose credibility is so suspect, it
would probably undermine their
case even more than what it's been
undcnnined," Bhaktipada 's attor ney. Nathan Dershowitz, said
Wednesday.
Bhaktipada is scheduled to be
retried in November on federal
charges he used the murders of the
two men, threats and beatings to
protect an illegal business worth
$10.5 million at the group's New
Vrindaban commune.
He was convicted in 1991 and
sentenced to 30 years in prison, but
a federal appeals court ordered a
new trial saying test1mony about
child moles!&lt;ltion and homosexual
co ndu ct was improper and may

Middleport court
The following cases were heard
in the Middlcpon Mayor's Coun of
Dewey Honon Tuesday.
Forfeited were: Michael W.
Roush, Pomeroy, $60 for running
stop sign.
Fined were: Dale R. Herman,
Middleport. $465 for driving while
intoxicated and three days in jail;
Sharon L. Cummings, Pomeroy.
$15 plus costs for speed: Cheryl A.
King, Pomeroy, $10 plus costs for
improper backing; Shelly Lynn
Rupe, Pomeroy , $10 plus costs for
assured clear disiancc; and Doris J.
Richmond, Middleport, $10 plus
costs for failure to yield.

Lawsuit filed
Editor's Note: A lawsuit out·
lines the grievances or one party
against another. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Raena L. Eblin, Pomeroy. was
named Friday in a $250,000 lawsuit filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Alisha
and James Duncan, Pomeroy.
The suit stems from a car wreck
on General Hartinger Parkway,
Middleport, on Aug . 3, 1992. A
jury trial is requested.

have wrongly swayed the jury .
Dershowitz said Drescher has
no credibility and has repeatedl y
offered ·differing stories swrnunding the murders.
"Apparently Dresc her has gotten to the stage in his incarceration
where he is willing to say anything
to curry favor with th e government ," Dcrshowitz sa id Wedn esday .
Drescher sa id Bhaktipada
"openly encouraged" the 1983
killing of Charles St. Denis at the
New Vrindaban community ncar
Moundmlle and the 1986 killing
of Stephen Bryant in Los Angeles.
''One could say he ordered (the
deaths)," Drescher said.
"He was 1mplying that these
people were demons and that for
other reasons these people were a
great danger to our community and
to Krishna society," Drescher said.
"In fact, the only danger was to
himself and that he would be
exposed," he said. "He manipulated the loyalty of his disciples to
such an exten t that he involved
them in homicide."
Drescher was convicted and
sentenced to life in prison in 1986
in West Virginia for St. Denis'
death.
In 1991. he was convicted in
Los Angeles for Bryant's death. He
was sentenced to life in prison and
returned to West Virginia.
Bryant was a dissident devotee
who crusaded against the commune, accusing Bhaktipada of vari ous cr im es. Drescher said both
Bryant and St. Denis accu se d
Bhaktipada of assaulting young
boys.
Drescher would not admit he

killed Bryant and St. Denis because trial, said William Ko~bash, fonncr
" I still have some legal issue s to U.S. altorncy who prosecuted
Bhaktipada.
re solve.''
"We would have had to give
"There's no question that had I
not been a willing parti cipant , him immunity and that would have
things would not have gone the interfered in the prosecution out in
way they did," he said. "However, California and we didn't intend to
because I was mi sled by Kir- do that," Kolibash said.
tanananda, everything reached a
Kolibash said Drescher's testi deadly climax ."
mony could help the government's
Drescher said he had rema1 ned case if hi s charges can be corroboloya l to Bhaktipada until se veral rated.
Bhak tipad a, formerly Keith
month s ago when he began to
believe longstanding child abuse Ham. son of a Baptist minister in
allegations made by some children Peekskill, N.Y. , quickly rose in the
and parents.
Knshna hierarchy after becoming
"He's laken our religious tradi - the first Western disciple of A.C.
ti on and attempted to alter it in Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.
such a way that he was an infallible founder of the International Society
autocrat," Drescher sat d. "I' vc for Krishna Consciousness.
actually shielded him, but knowing
Bhaktipada came to West Virwhat I know now ... I cannot allow ginia in 1968 and built a communithi s monumental fraud to contin- ty that grew to as many as 600
ue .
devotees on 3,500 acres.
P.K . Swami, spokesman of the
The government charges the
250-memher New Vrindaban com- commune made and sold million s
mune about 80 mi IGS southwest of of caps, bumper stickers and TPittsburgh, sa1d Drescher ' s allega- shi&amp;ts bearing copyrighted and
tions arc groundless.
tracfemarked canoon characters and
"To make this allegation that if spons logos and then sold them at
he did so methin g wrong, he was events across the country.
under the swami's trance (is) total In June, Bhaktipada said he was
ly absurd," P.K. Swami said
tempted to accept a plea bargain
Wednesday. "When the facts come
wnh federal prosecutors, calling
out, he' s going to be a man who
the deal one "only a fool would
did what he wanted to do.''
lurn down.''
Assistant U.S. Anorney David
P.K. Swam1 satd Drescher
Godw in , who is in charge of Bhakbecame upset when llhaktipada did
tipada's case. would not comment not accept the deal .
on Drescher's allegations or
" I think his opinion of Bhal;tiwhether he would be cal led as a pada has changed for whatever reaprosecution witness at th e trial
son. He 's gone sour on Bhaktipada
scheduled to begin Nov . 7.
and he want s to se c him · punished," he said.
Drescher did not testify against
Bhaklipada during the 199 I trial
Drescher said he still has "great
because of the pending mur.dcr
affection for the man."

Couple receives
marriage license
A marriage li~ense was issued to
Robert Glenn Creeger, 27.
CoolviUe, and Paula Lee Cowdery.
26, Reedsville, recently in the
Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck..

SAVE I5IJ CD and lllal caaaette

SAVE '100 Hlsc CD changer
11!111 Dual cassel\es. AM/FM .

34U

3-band equal1zer.

reg 449 99 '13· 1259

-

D
SAVE 150
IJJI...
'lfil-

I

-

I

I
'I

-

....

I

SAVE 151J CO mini-system
8!1!1 with dual caaette

··i

co IDinl·system

19U

Dual cassettes and
dtgital AM/FM stereo.

0%

v Bedding ,
vDesks
v Grandfather Clocks

(Special). It ·, an exciting story nf an Orego u
pharmacist who developed an "age spot" cream which
has really worked wonders.
Robert Heldfond. an Oregon pharmaci st.
deve loper of many cosmelic discoveries. used
knowledge from pharmacy school and year&lt; of
experience to compound EB5 Age Spot Formula.
which has shown exc1 ting results for age spots, "liver
spots", and other unsightly skin discolorations.
Women for years have dreaded these unsightly
and embarrassing discolorations on their hands and
. face and products in the past merely bleached the
spots. Heldfond's EB5 Age Spot Formula works w1th
an exciting triple action. First, it helps safely remove
dark pigmented dead skin cells from the pores with
natural exfoliation. Second. it helps fade discoloration.
Third, it helps protect against funher spotting.
Already users are reponing wonderful results with
EB5 Age Spot Fonnula ... "I hated the way my hands
and face looked .. .! dreaded showing my hands in
public, they were so spolled ... l saw a big difference
after using EB5 Age Spot Formula." "This cream
really made those age spots on my face look much
better ... l'm happy with it. .. certainly worth the
1'I'~ 1 u1. conP

low As SlO P1r

On apptove&lt;l AaOtC Snan V~ •ut~P iu s· accoun1
"''" s.mgle-hckel pur cM:;e ol $!)9 01 nore
Of1e&lt; r;pod tnr ocgn Ju"r )I ~~~ Delaols Ce&gt;O&lt;N

SAVE I3IJ AM/FM, dual

l&amp;P

INTEREST ~NO NO
PAYMENTS UNTIL
OCTOBER '94

Month on Radio
Shack ValuePius •
Revolving Credit

5·CD changer system SAVE '111

cassette stereo
Speakers sw1ng m
to save space .

D1g•tal AMIFM stereo
5- band equaltzer and remote .
19 ('J

reg 199 99 •13· 125 7

3P

200·Channel SCIIII8r
Our las test scanning handheld. Tunes ai r. f1re. marine.

awerer

weather and more

Digital outgo1ng message. Touch-

SAVE1511

19fl

SAVE'100

Telepllone
Tone remote operation

49P

599991 13-1767

SAVE '211

reg 299 W lf20 ·308

rAg 59 99 lf4J.755

19P

~

Dot ·matrix printer

...

Prints 180 characters

::! I J ·

·=:·

per second. 24 -pm pn nt

head.

reg 249 99

•26·2906

lP

~

llelk/wall phone
Last -number red1al. In
white, almond Or gray.
reg 29 99 IJ4J-Stl51617

-~

lia
.... ..

BY PAT GREER

v Recliners

AM/FM stereo. 5-band

graph•c equat12er.

re g 299 99 •13 -1261

SAVE'IO

Develops New
'l\ge Spot" Cream

ValuePius · Revolving Credil

ValuePius' RevDiving Cred it

Divorces and
dissolutions
The following actions to end
marriage were filed recently in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill:
Dissolutions asked- Ronnie E.
Powell, Shade, and Becky E. Powell, Pomeroy, July 19; Maxine
Rose, Middlepon. and Lawrence E.
Rose Sr .. Racine. July 21.
Divorces granted - Dale E.
Taylor and Mary A. Taylor, July
20; Samuel V. Wamsley from
Jacqueline L. Wamsley. July 26.

SlS Per Month on Radio Shack

low As S15 Per Me nth on Radio Shack

Famous Pharmacist

I

SWISHER LOHSE

Convict claims swami 'encouraged' killings

Report clears uranium laboratory

•

•

glucoea, the journal D
tea care reports. Longer-acting
forma of Insulin msy be In order to keep glucou levels
steady.
•
*
*

Lawrence Taylor in the same
body," Jackson said. "Superman
couldn't have made them."
Jackson said he spoke with
Atlanta Falcons coach June Jones
on Tuesday night and again
Wednesday.
"I want to play another year.
I'm still young and I'm as good as
ever," Jackson said. "I would like
to have played for the Saints. but
right now I guess the Falcons arc
the front-runner. My agent says
they're going to make an offer."
The Falcons. however. deny that
they talked with Jackson.
"There's been no negotiations
whatsoever," Falcons spokesman
Charles Taylor said.
49ers
Doug Brien, the 49crs' hope as
the answer to their kicking problems, took pan in his fust workout
Wednesday after ending a five-day
holdouL He signed a two-year contract wonh $367.000 that could be
en hanced by $130,000 in performance incentives.
Bears
Wide re ceiver Tom Waddle
strained his left knee during a passing scnmmage Wednesday and is
expected to miss two weeks of
practice, Chicago Bears spokesman

The Dally sentinel-Page-?

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

..~.

,
•. •...
_ "·'"~- •.. ~-'.....T.~ .t. .•_i.J&lt;i.;
•·- ""
~- ;
. . • .

5P

•, •

SAVE121J
Cordess phone

ANSWER TO AGE SPOTS
Pharmacist Robert Hetdfond displays his EBS Age Spot
Formula which he spent 12 years developing.
money" ... and on and on, the wonderful repons Oow in.
EB5 Age Spot Fonnula slowly and ~urely gives
the resul~ that women (and men) desire ... an evenly
toned skip' without the embarrassing appearance of
dark age spots and skin discolorations.
I urg~ you to try EB5 Age Spot Fonnula, I know
you'lllov~ it 1
Note: E85 Age Spot Fonnula is available without
a prescflption. Phone 1-800-683-9325, loll free,
and leirn more about this amazing discovery
:lind how you may order by maiL

\
~r.-~~,
_&lt;".1'"t -·~
: -

1

~

• \

~

• " - • a.-

,:. ;-

i···

1.

. _ ,-. .,,.,...

• ,t. " ·. ··-

--

-

~

~
.

·: ' .-:- 'l

.

.

.

.

..

.

.'

·-

Base -to -handset pag.
mg. Noise-reducing

law A1 S3G Pef

circuit. reg 79 99 ~43 - 1005

Month on Radio

Radio Slladt ValuePIUS'-' Cledit
cant and Most Major C!edll
Cants an wac-

29!

Sate ~rices 1111111teed
lllroMgll lj211M

I·::~\~i~;!~J.~;~::fri~:·~":~"F,"j;:~'"H"';~"elal ers

IWf PIIICEI

ca1r

r

permo,$rOn

I

o-. lnltf'elt and No P.,mmta Until O.::tot...
On apprgyed regiAar revolvrng RadiO Shack

ValuePius" aceount

For home, office, dorm,
car or surround sound.

In black or white.

Shopping for • tMrthdliy? AnnlverNry?
Now you can ser.d anyone a great gift
with Radio Shack Gift Exprtu. We can

wrap it, include a permnlltzea greetrng
card. and ship your IJ!n anywhere in the
U.S via Federal Exprasa4' delivery ter·
vice. lt'a last and it's easy. lry lt todeyl

wtth

amgle -treket pur-

cha&amp;e of S99 01 more A monthly 11a1ement
wrll be senl. but no J)ayment Of rnr::~eue .n

pavment wrll be due on the quall ly mg
purcnase unrtl Oclooer, 1994 OepenOr"'iJ 011
your stale and/or federal law. l()llowrn~ the
no paytfle!'lt/f\0 '"'"""' ~nod. lhe rem8lnrng
baJanr::e on lhfl qualrfyrng purchase wrll be
UbJ&amp;C! lo a ttnance charge of up to 21~
APR (504: mrnrmum II'IOI'IIhly finance charge)
and charges tcw 111a payments m1y 1)8 •• ·
&amp;M$8d . Otlt11 ~ •alod July 14&lt;11, 1994

VALl PC!

!

Shack ValuePIUI,.
Revolving Credit

PC with _lilt locll ... VIdeo IIIII
pre·...... II"'OU:tlvlty IOftwn
The Tandy_ 3200 Is optimized for tO&lt;Jay·s
graphiCS·TICh programs. Local bus video
speeds screen graph1cs. MS-DOS 6.21,
Wondows 3.11 and PFS: Window Works aro
pre-installed. IBM• PC compatible. Ready
for expansoon with three 16-bit slots and two
5'/." dnve bays. 1.44MB floppy drive. 2-bul\on
mouse. 125·16:).3 MONITOR
I

1tad1e lllaeK

lnsrde

NOT INCLUDED

tooa til !I trademartc ollntel Corp

TM/IBM Catp.

You've got questions. We've got answers.SM

OU1 of wtlaclr? Out 01 warranty?

The Repair Shop at Rad10 Shac' li•••
most m&amp;JOf !&gt;rands of out-ol-wananly
electronk:s- VCAa, atereoa. c:om~t~.

telephones and .mora : Call today for al)fiolr
range. then decrde 1frl'l worth l1xrng

�Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 28, 1994

Anniversaries form afar may tear a marriage asunder
No, she was not tn the Army before
we got mamed. She dectded she had
to do something mcarungful With her
life and JOined up. I agreed to take
care of the ktds so she could go
•
"1994 . Los A.ngeles
to bas•.c tratntng . We m tssed
'
: ~ f•m es Synd&gt;cate and
' C reatOfs S~nc•cate"
celebraung our ftrSt two wedding
anntversartes. Mazte told me
yesterday that we may be apart for
Dear Ann Lllnders: I am a young another year, because she wtll be m
man of 29 and have a wife who is Germany . .
33. "Mazie" has two children, II
llove Mazic very much and would
and 13 . Age has never been a do anythmg to make thiS mamage
problem with us. The only thing I work, but I can no longer talc:e bemg
fmd to complain about is that we wtlhoul her on our anmversary. ··
have been married for two years and BEDFORD. TEXAS
have yet to celebrate an anniversary
DEAR BED.: I'd say you've
together.
earned at least two ~ood conduct
Mazie, you see, is in the Anny . medals, so please don t blow ll now.

Ann
Landers

Planes ny both ways. Make plans
would show the other person's name,
to celebrate your unntversary m
not yours. Can you imagine the
Germany with Mazie. If you make
confusion if family members did not
arrangements far In advance, Mazte
know you were on that plane? There
may be able to get a weekend pass
would be more chaos when the
and you C8n get a cheaper uck.et.
insW11Jtce company tried to payyour
)'lest wishes to you both.
heirs.
Dear Ann Landers: Thank. you
Further problems would result if
for printing that intelligent response you used another person's ticket for
from Roben Crandall, chairman of international travel. Passports are
American Airlines. It's time more checked at the ticket counter right
people understood why they are not . along with the ticket. 1 can see the
allowed to pass on an arrline ucket long lines at JFK getting longer
to a friend or relauve tf they are while the confusion resulting from 8
unable to use ll themselves.
handed-down tick.el is being sorted
I would also like 10 pomt outl)lat oul
if you were to use a ticket issued in
A passenger's name can be
another pmon's name and the plane changed in me computer before
had an acctden~ the passenger ltSt ticketing, but after the ticket has been

issued, it is virtually impossible. ••
WASHINGTON TRAVEL AGENT
DEAR AGENT: Thanks for
shedding more light on this SUbjeCt.
The public needs to understand the
importance of playing it straight with
the airlines. Your letter should help.
Dear Ann Lllnders: This is for
"Colorado," who said people always
make remarks about how tall he is,
but 110 one would think 10 ask a shon
pcr.;oo, "How short are you?" Maybe
not, but as one of those mort people,
I'm frequently asked, "How's lile
weather down there?"
Recently, as 1 stood in line at the
supermarlcet, a woman looked at me
and hollered, "My God, but you're
short!" Of course, everyone tn the
place had to take a look .

Tel~ Colorado to .be grateful h.e
doesn t have to shop m the children s
deparunenL ·· MICH~GAN
.,
DEAR MICH: Lets jUSt say liS
rude to comment on s11.e and let tl
go at that.
,
Gem of the Day: Don t change
yourplanstoooften.Onesornellmes
meets desuny on the road he took to
avmd tl
Forg~t 10 savt so""' of your fa vorite Ann Lander~. columns? "Nug gets and Dooues IS the answer.
Send a self-addressed, long, bust·
ness-me envelo~ and a check or
money ordu for $5 (this rndudes
posrage and handling) ro : Nuggets,
cia Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1/562,
Chicago, Ill. 606JJ .{)562 . (In Canada. send $6.)

STAR GUITAR

Half-Runner Beans
Self Pick

Rolling
Stones take
to the road
By RICHARD KEIL
Associated Press Writer
WA SH INGTON (AP) - The
legendary blu esmen - Muddy
Waters, Elmore James - from
whom the Rolling Stones draw
their greatest strengths died of old
age still plying their craft. So why
sho~ldn 't the 50-something Rolling
Stones hit the road once more"
' There's lillie argument against it

ings away from the band . He' s
been replaced by Darryl Jones.
If the early sales totals on the
new album arc any indicati on, the
band is likely to play before full
houses everywhere.
"Voodoo Lounge" debuted at
No. 2 on Billboard Magazine's
chartofthe200best-sclling albums
in America, the Stones' best firstweek show ing for any of their 22
stud io albums.

itoba; Aug. 26, Mad tso n, Wi s.;
Aug . 28, Cleve land; Aug . 30,
Cincinnati.
Sept. 4 -5, Bosto n; Sept. 7,
Raleigh, N.C.; Sept. 9, East Lansing, Mich., Sept. 11 -12 Chicago;
Sept. 15 - 16, Denver; Sept. 18,
Columbia, Mo. ; Sept. 22-23.
Philadelphia; Sept. 25, Co lumbia,
S.C.; Sept. 27, Memphi s, Tenn.;
Sept. 29. Pittsburgh.
Oct. I, Ames, Iowa; Oct. 7-8,
New York ; Oct. II , New Orleans;
Oct. 13 , St. Louis; Oct. 16, San
Antonio; Oc t. 19, 22, Los Angeles;
Oct. 26, Anaheim, Calif.; Oct. 2829, Las Vegas; Oct. 31, Nov. I,
Oakland, Calif.;
Nov. 3, San Diego; Nov . S, El
Paso, Texas; Nov. II, Little Rock,

Here arc the Rolling Stones tour
dates, as currently scheduled :
Aug. 1-3 Washington; Aug. 6
Birmingham, Ala. ; Aug. 10 Indi anapoli s; Aug. 12, 14-15, 17 East
Rutherford, N.J.; Aug. 19-20
Toronto; Aug. 23, Winnipeg, Man-

1994
DAKOTA SPORT

Magnum V-6, auto., AC, custom
wheels.

Magnum V-8.
Loallell!

August 1 &amp; 2, 8 am-4 pm
Ewing Residence
300 Fourth Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ark.; Nov. 13, Houston; Nov. 16,
Atlanta; Nov. 18- 19 Dallas; Nov.
22, Tampa, Ha. ; N ov. 25, Mtarm;
Nov . 27,Grunesv tllc, Fla.
Dec. l, Detrotl; Dec. 3, Toronto;
Dec. 5, Montreal; Dec. 8, Syracuse,
N.Y ., Dec. II, Mtnneapoh s; Dec.
15, Seattle; Dec. 17, Vancouver,
B.C.

DAKOTA ClUB CAB 414

RAM 2500

(15 In Stock)
AS LOW AS

Super SLT. LOADED!
Save Over $2300.00

y, Ton, chrome wheels,

DAKOTA

RAM 3500

(Stock #66029)

WANT
ADS
WORK! .

"&amp;·CONVERSION VANS

"'94 DODGE DAKOTA

Auto., V-6, AC, tape.

Loaded with all the extras.

4x4 SLT Package, auto., AC,
only 3500 miles!

':~ 514,365°0-

#;:Sw $12,886°0-

*'925·10

*'91 POWER RAM 4x4

5-speed, tape, AC.

AC, bedllner, stereo.
#3042

NOW $8,460°

0

Now s11,350°

0

As;~w

#4666

NOW $1 0,230°

# ~ow s9,365°0

*91 NISSAN

"91 EXPLORER
Nice - Must See!

with

Approved
Credit!

~~w ss,995°

1

0

#5033

*'88 S·10
White, visor, bed ralls.
#4026

AC, bedllner, bed ralls.

os;:w sa,975°

Now 54,485°0

0

RV'S

*No

Money
Down

17

0

*'90 F·150
#

$16,485°

NOW$11,960°0-

Bedllner, stereo.

NOW $8,745°

4

0

NOW ONLY

0
-

AC, custom wheels.
#7007

Topper,AC.
#1094

LOADED, CLEAN!

Red, AC, stereo.

s4,988oo-

"'93 NISSAN 414

*'91 RAM 150

*'90 POWER RAM 4x4 •'90 FORD F-1 SO XLT LARIAT

99~-2\56

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF EDUCATION
Combined Financial Report
of the Board ot Education
For tha Fiscal Year Ended
June 30, 1994
Source Decrlpllon, Totals
Receipts:
Misc. Rocelpts ..... 63,357.95
Grants in Aid
State Sourcea .... 634,282.37
Federal Sources .. 42,695.a9
Total Receipts (Operating) .
............................740,336.21
DISBURSEMENTS:
lnstrucllon ......... 236,067.31
Supporting Services .......... .
............................ 552,039.52

Public Notice

992·5515

Excess Receipts/Sources

Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial

Over/(Undar)
Disbursements &amp; Other
Usoa/Net .............. (43,548.15)
Bsginnlng Fund Cash
Balance ................ 127,565.05
Ending Fund Cash Balance
.............................. 84,016.90
Reserved

Unreserved Fund Balance ..

........ ...................... 81,315.86
Outstanding Warrants
(Net) ..................... (40,008.00)
Bank Balance .... 124,024.90
Total Fund Balance .............
.............................. 84,016.90
MEMORANDA DATA
ADM ........................ 4,286.00
Extrac\Jrrlcular Actlvltlea ....
...................................768.00 Number of Non-Cart .
Total Dlaburaemants - Employeas .............. , ....... 9.00
(Oper.) .................. 788,874.83 Number
of
Cort .
Exc. Rcpts. Over/(Under) Employees .................... 17.00
Dlab .....................(48,538.62) I certify the following
Contributions &amp; Donallona report to be correct and
................................ 5,000.00 true , to the beat of my
Advancea~n .............. 353.66 knowledge:
Carole J. Gilkey
Advances-Out ........ (353.66)
Treasurer of the
Refund of Prior Years
Board of Education
. Receipts ....................... (9.53)
Total
Other
Fin . (7) 26; 1TC
: Sourcea(Usea) ......... 4,990.47
Card of Thanks

$AVE$$$

RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling
In Loving Memory of
MICHAEL
PATRICK
BISSELL
on his
7th birthday,
July 28,1994.
Sadly missed by
mother, father &amp;
sisters.

Stop &amp;Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
Lose Wligltt Like "Cruy"
Guaranteed
Lose Pounds and Inches
Natural Herbal Tablets

1-800-796·6328

HOBARTV.

NEWELL

$AVE
THOUSAND$

"'85 F·150
2-Tone, topper.
#6032

We've beconw
great friends.
Hope it never
changes.
Happy 16th
from sonw 2
day11 older!

Apartment
for Rent

FmHA Rental Assistance

:Conservation district offers no-till drill service

Financing
Wa•th

. Now is the time to start lilinking
· about fall seedlings for hay crops,
: according to a release from the
Meigs Soil and WaJer Conservation
· District
The soil district has available to
Meigs County farmers a John
Deere No-Till DrilL Blair Windon,
Meigs soil disllrict technician, is
available at farmer's convenience
to bring the drill to any farm, set it
up and calibrate it.
This drill C8D be used for different types of small grain and forage

Approved
Credit!

NOW $6,000° OFF
0

I

seedings, lile release stated. A few
seeding guidelines include:
- get a soil test of the field to
ensure proper Ph and fertilization .
- graze pastures close and use
appropriaie spray to control competition. The best results occur when
spraying seven to 10 days before
seeding.
- check fields closely for
insects. Walk through existing vegetation with fmc mesh net, swinging it back and fonh.
- ensure the soil has a good

•

' }\ I

IU IREEDS

... I Susa1by
·~

:··

Gilmore

992-5316

Water hauling

·viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Poll)'.l~cy, 0 nio
"Look fo~ tile Red and White Awning"

Backhoe Service

992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1-SOG-291-5600

GRACE
ENTERPRISES

)\

992·41 03

Price
Construction
Co.
26 Yearo Experl0&lt;1ce
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, VInyl
Replacement
Window•
For Free Estimate
Call 742·2303

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW ' USED PAllS 101
AU MAlES ' MODRS
992-7DU Oil
992-SSSlOI
lOU fi£11-1DH4H070
DARWIN, OHIO

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMM ERClAL and RESIDENTIAL

1131191/TfN

112M mo. pd.

Wanted to buy·
Standing
timber, all hard
wood &amp; pine .

· Call
614·682·7676
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Addition•
-New garage•
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting aloo concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
-carpentry
•Painting
•Power Waohlngcieano all exterloro
with high preuuro
aprayer
•Reasonable Ratao
•20 Yearo Experience
•Free Eallmalao

985-4181
2ml1 mo.

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES
Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
limestone -Fill Dirt
Gravel • Sand
Leach Bed
lnslallation and
Septic System•
614-992-7878
SR 7 - Five Points

......

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let uo do it
lor you. Very reaeonabie.
Free Estimate•
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter&amp; p.m.
614·985-4180
~

3125194

TRI-STATE K-9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel aervlce, pups &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667·PETS

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
headliners, seal
covers, convertible
taps, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boal Seats.
992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)
1'11/l:vttn

Announcements
3

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Announcements

I, Benjamin Clrroll, will nol be
responsible for any debts other
than my own from this data.
ll~a

Howard
Excavating-Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;
Trailer Sites
DnvcWil)ls, Scpttc

Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
L ines, Land Clc,u ing
Tru c king : Limestone &amp;
Fill Dorl. Top Sod

992·3838

temperature. Ideal soil temperalllre
for planting is 52 degrees Fahrenheit.
- do nol graze a pasture too
close once a lush meadow or pasture is established. Rotational grazing is a good practice.
- production forages should be
fertilized to maintain lhe stand and
obtain production potential.
For more information on fall
seeding, contact Blair at 992-6647
or stop by the Meigs soil district
offtee between 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday.

J 'O"Io

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES

&amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

GRAVEL

'SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3~1931

the fact that major historical
themes C8D link lilese sites around
the state," said lhe historical society's director, Gary Ness. "We see
it as a rethinking of the concept or
historical sites."
The society also plans a
$500,000 project to improve the
National Afro-American Museum
and Cultural Cenler in Wilberfort:e.

Community Yard Sale: Amvets
Kanauga, Ohio, Monday Auguet
11t •Tu. . August 2nd, IJ.4.

MID YEAR RESOWllON
7 -Day Diet Plan. loll Exceu
lbo For Good. I Lost 2C l ... In
5 Wl&lt;s. Eallng Right Without
Dieting. 3 Min. Recorded u..
Mge. S'tGS /Uin. Mu.t Be 18 To
C.TI. 1-1100-255-5533.

Friday, Saturday, July 29th,
30th, Kids Clolhaa Matemtly
Clothes, Adull Clothea, Mlec.,

3891 Bulovllio Plko, 8:0Q.?
Strull Your Jeans PagNnt. Cam- Friday, Saturday, Kids, Aduh
den Part.., August e. All 9
Clothes, (Winter, Summar) Set
dlvlslona. Nlca awarda. C.ll 01 Chromo Spoked Whoolo Foo
Shalla Hart, 304-75!H!OtiO.
4 WO Rangor Truck, Olhor Truck
Varsa1111 blind available tor Partal. Curialna, Mlec. Corner Of

partlu, dancn end nl~htclub Kerr Hd, 160 i A .M.·
;'e07~AJ~ typaa of mu• c, 614- July 30th lhru August 2nd, 78
;;:---.-;-:-;-;-:-;;-:--:-:~;:-;~ Hubbard SlrHt, Kanauga.
Would Uke Someone To leach I::;--;--;;-c:-;-;:-:-;----=:-:--:Mo To Road Eamla McKinney Moving Sale! Frtday, Saturday,
614-446-720'1'

' July 29th, 30th . Sennth Houaa

CLUB

· IH POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Eerly Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie: No. 0051-342

·-

MO

&amp;:ft C~EANING

ns.

Out SA

Graat Bae k To

Giveaway
School Clothn, Bova. Gtria,
4
Morw, And Udl.. , Couch,
::-t-::C.::'I::":ic'0::--::c.,:-::1~.'::s:":poda~.-::6::-:t4-:4-::46 Choat And Much Morol
7_31:-3_.-:-::--:-----;- Moving Salo: F~dov 29th, &amp;-5,

=-2 tamale Beagle pupe, wormod,

Fumltur1
Knlck·Knacka,
Heater, Cloth .., Boya: 10.12,
good hunting dogs, 6t4-94i- Gl~o: 8-10, Mioc. 6 tr.! MliH Out
2844.
t160 Nod Rotd Paat lntaruc.
z email tom1M pupplu. 304-- tlon, Homewood Dr, 4th HouM
895-30411.
On uft.
:::--::-:-,--,-- - Cute &amp; Cuddl~ Kitten, 3 Montha Thure, Frt.~. .• To 5, CloU1n, Mlac.
Old, Gold &amp; Marble St~ood Mole homo, Hl. 160 Whho ~d

Lhter Tralnld, e~1Bso.
~Cedarwood LAne.
Ktttena, To Good Homo, 014-311- Two Family: Wed .Sat, I A.M. -5
2585. ·
P.M. Clothing, Houoohold And
Misc. Items, 2 Milas Out From
To Good Home: Playful Ktttana, Rt. 7, On Addleon Pika .
614-!1711-2~52.

3 Month Otd Kilt .... Grov
eotond, &amp;14-446-7313.
6
Lost &amp; Found

~

-------P1. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
2 Family Estato SolO, old tuml-

lure, Old glassware, lots of ax, PI:. tru, atarta 12:00 noon Friday

Found: COCklf' Spaniel
Pleasant II'U. 304.e75-6

or Saturday, Sunday &amp; Monday:
127 Georg• St, New Haven, WV.

:6JS.48--:--::;46;-;a;-;v::-on-::ln,=;go"C.;;::-:-::;:---:Loot: Chlld'o Pat, YaiO Choco-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

late Lab 1 Ulaalng Since Sunday
7124194, ust
Seiin In Vicinity Of
R•ccoon CrMk County P•rk,

Ot4-367-2548.

7

Yard Sale

2 family ntat• sal•· 127 George

S1r..., Now H•von. Starting t2

Frtd•y, July 2i, Saturchy,
:~~~ndoy. Old lumhuro,
old -~·· toea of txtrll.
All o'rd Soln Muot Bo Pold In
noofl

Sun
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Advonco. Doadll,.: 1:00pm tho
doy ..foro the od to to run
Sundov odhlon- 1:OOpm ffldoy
Thondoy, Frldly, Sot..doy, Monday
odhlon
10:00o.m'
28th, 29th, 30th.
Saturday.
Oorogo Solo: Friday I To 5, Rain
/Shine, At . 180 N., 8 MIIM From 8
Public Sale
Holzer, Tum Right At Blue Water
&amp;Auction
Tower, Second Hou•. Fum.,_
ture, Running 801rd1, Cr~~fta.
Nice Clothu, au..., L.vt. Gu Rlek Paaroon Auction Company
1131

LIMESTONE,

the day belora the ad Is to M'l . ·

Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m.

Hot Glrta 1-900-263-iOOO

Monday edlllon • 2:00
Ext. 5070 $3.98 /Min. 18 • Yrs Friday.
p.m. Saturday.
Procall Co. 602-1154-7420.

Aeilsonablc Rates
Estimalcs

I:PI2/IIn

HAULING

ALL Yard Sa les Mus1 Be Paklln
Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

Two

Chatham

Awnua,

Hoi Walar H..lar, Lota Ulael

July 28th, 29th, 30th, 313 llDDor

Route 7, Aerou From SliVer

full time auctioneer, comploti

auction
aervk:a.
Ucansed
166,0hlo l Woot VIrginia, 304~.

B~~· Pl•za. Tum AI Uaht, Go

Col . Oocor E. Cllek,
Stro hi Poot Bob Enno'ro ul AltcttotUcenoe I 754-84 l Bonded
Up ~ vor Comer: Socond Homo 304-8116-3430.
•
Bohlnd Tho Aftoratlonl Shop,
G-..IIBmltiiHoollowdToA 9 w medt B

1mo1Tor Homo And to s.tll"'
Eo.- ltonw, Aloo Olfwod Ari

:::::'~-:-8-:--,--:-0-:-U,..;Y:.._~
Cloon loto

Modo!

Carw

Or

FomHy And Truclto, 11187 llodoto Or N-or
F - tlelo II Under lrool. Wll Smfth Buick Pontloc, 11100
a.
o,on
Allin
o.
s -. len
()1.
Eootem ....
•-frNM: 71 Recorda, o.pu
.,,ua,Galllpolla.

-

From

11

Qlul, TM P..., Com Jobboro,

Stick llond, Qronho Toblo
With Cbolro, 81- Jug, Tubo
Radio, Dairy ScolH, Rout•, Jig
Sow, And CU...IIr Sow Slondo,
Bell Sandor, Jla Sawo, P Hond Pia-, S' En. loddor,
Elo. P1a Tallo, Ughl Rlltur-, D.
Pool

SPECIAL

SPEND $100.00 GET 1 ROOM

FREE

(Carpet CINnlng Only-Maximum 240 eq. ft.)

Bond money will improve historical sites
iy, the society gets about $3 million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ·
every
two years.
More than $13 million in sta~e
The money wililtelp the society
.bond money will help the Ohto
·Historical Society improve 28 h~­ plan fulllre exhibits and repair and
:torical siJeS and ~S, the SDCI- expand buildings. It also will help
with planning propams on themes
:ety'S director S81d.
. ..
· The Ohio Arls Faciltues Com- such as military history, blacl!; her:mission voted Wednesday 10 over- itage and Ami'ZiC80 Indian history.
"We used to look at them as
·see spending $13.4 million for the
:Bites and related projects. Typical- stand-alone sites, but that masked

I

DOG
g}~l GROOMING

LINDA'S
.PAINTING &amp; CO.

Equal Houaing Opportunfty

6-NEW DODGE MARK Ill
CONVERSION VANS

·~

TDD 800-750-0750

NOW 54,885°0

*'93 SHASTA MOTOR HOME

Call For Details

_,,~.

12f.IQWIT!'N

'

Water's Edge Apartments - Syr11cuse, Oblo
Over 62, disabled or handicapped FmHA
1 bedroom. Rents ror $0 to $415, bued on
Income. Range, refrJgerator, carpet, AJC, on site
'
laundry, parking.
614-949-2012 or 614-1192-6419

Loaded, 7,000 miles.

SHASTA PUll BEHIND

8,905

In Memory

44

*'91 F·350 DUEllY

Shower, tub, refrigerator, stove, ml&lt;:rol¥ave,}
AC. MANY EXTRAS!

NOW

HEATING &amp; COOLING

NOW OPEN

Sleeps 6, shower, tub, microwave, stove,
awning, AC- Many Extras II

00

2

MORRISON'S

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

Your wHe, lnzy
Johnny &amp; family
Elm• &amp; family
Shalla &amp; family

HOW $14,950°0-

CaiD-O,ver·s, Cat diesels, Jake brakes, AM/FM
tape, AC, Air Ride sleeper- White!

5

mo

July 28, one year
ago today, you left us
for a blttll' land, one
you alway• dreamed
of. Your family ml11
you very much.
Some dey we hope to
meet you whll'e the
atreeta are paved
wHh pure gold.

.

22V. ft. New! Loaded!
WAS $12,995.00

s-~1

for

Encumbrances ........ 2, 701.04

2-tone, AC, cust. wheels.
#4521H

*'91 DUTCHMAN 5TH WHEEL

DETROIT - Diesel, AM/FM tape, AC,
Air Ride sleeper- Green!

Wn..l

*92'POWER RAM 414

*5-'88 WHITE FREIGHTLINERS

*3-'80 KENWORTH CAB OVER

.......
Docorotlvo

CaD Westen Auto
Public Notice

Howard L Wrltesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
W1MM TFN

u•·Woo4

Magnum V-8, auto., tape, PW, POL, tilt, cruise, AC, chrome
wheels.

*'93 DAKOTA lE

992-2269
USED RAILROAD Tl ES

1110.

949-2168

Fondng C'hlla

1994 RAM 1500 lARAMIE SLT

Bed, cover, two-tone.

•UGHT
HAUUNG
•AREWOOD
BILL SLACK

Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
• Custom

1II2I/Tf1j

Auto., 5-speed, tape, AC,
Cab &amp; Chassis, Magnum
till/cruise, 4X4, 4X2, Conversion, V-8 5.9, Super SLT ·while I
V-6, V-8 SLT, Super SLT.

"'94 S·l 0 CLUB CAB

a.

QUALITY WORK
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) :192-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

AC, tape, extras!

PRE·OWNED - OVER 25 IN STOCK

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

HERE'l AlALE
"fORE" YOU
IN THE .
CLAltlfiEO AOl

1

WITH FULL·SIZE
POWER.

$12,998°0

Magnum V-6, auto., tape,
custom wheels.

RAM 1500 414

71'26'1

Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-992-7878
SR 7 • Five Polnlo

712Wn

EXPERIENCE THE POWER OF THE MAGNUM
DAKOTA SPORT

550 P - Sl, Middleport

MARTECH
• INDUSTRIES

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM•ad
REMOVAL

•ee.

One mile out Rl 143
from Rl7

Fr•Eodm-

Y 29'" AND SAYURDAY JULY
DAKOTA•••
MID·SIZE

Something New for
Melg• County
Tuea. thru Sat 1-6
Name Brand Tools,
Toya, Fenton.
Corne and

99:.!-2096

Reedsville - 1-614-378-6194

"$AVE BIG BUCK$
AT OUR
$UMMER TRUCK $ALE"

COWBOY
SEZ•••

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

$1 O!bushel

lye Brinager &amp; Sons

At half-a-century or older, rockers open tough new tour
to be found on their new album, ly afford - and rec ord stores
"Voodoo Lounge ," an energetic, report, at leas t anecdotally, that
aggressive offering that bows to tho se purchas ing '' Voodoo
music past with lyrics that apply to Lounge" arc mos tl y of the postthe here and now .
adolescent set.
But somehow , the age issue is
" I think at thts point, it's the
inescapab le . Rock 'il' roll has old er end of th e demographic
always been a young man's game, group buying 'Voodoo,"' said Jim
and the Stones helped mak.e it so. Riel, record sa le s manager at
Now. they' re over 50, old eno ugh Towe r Records' downtown Washtha t short of staying thin, they · ington store.
need n' t bo ther trying to look
Over the next five months, the
young.
Stones will be c risscross ing the
Unden iabl y, lhe 43-city, 58-date continent on a tour that would test
American tour that opens here the endurance and me Hie of men
Monday is geared towa rd their half their age.
baby boomer following . Tickets
They'll be touring without bass
have a top price of $55 - a figure player Bill Wyman , who called it
most of those chronically underem - quits in late 1992, and, finally,
ployed Generation X 'ers can't casi- made it stick after severa l meander-

6t4-367-0302
Ampa, Gultaro, Strlngo,
Keyboardo, Orurno,
Plano &amp; Guitar Leaoono.
Cheahlre, Ohio

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
OPENING AUG. 2

o- Top

-Boolta IPopor
8oolto,1ao1ta,
lllok•
CB Sot-, Dlohlo,

Star Won ond Star lloli homa·

o-.

...,.,.

o-..,Pono,~

Roclng Hob C.,.. And S..ro Air
Cond- (M II) Sot. 30th
-nlng . _ 8old For Ho~
-Rotundo.All T..,.
Flnlt. No
CUll.
No
Cltodto. Mal ~lblo For
Acddento.

W.nl to buy: Home or trailer on
:J8W7tl-1335.

Old 9olt• llghtoro, milk bot·
Boolt ttoo, liiunlotn ,.,., lllvorwaro,
Too111111111111,
moguinoo,

=.e.•r.:nl ~..~
4-7-t r.tO

;::.=t'nlt ..,. &amp; trvc:ko.

lind--·

w..........

.Jowlry,

Jtolllo • - Pt. .lc · lluc:tuu;
Fuel Oil Tlltlt With tltlntlfo ot.

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE

2528.W.buyeotatoo.
J &amp; D'e Auto Prirta and 9alvag•.

Yatorlal, Volol llond, Plctu...,

Clllld.....

• cam181 clraanlill{l &amp; ICXI!chgard • drapery
fabric • general cleaning

o-.

IOthli
.leona
-.
Coote,
...
T.............. Amount 01 Nlco
Clolhlng, ......
And

Decorated •onewerw, wall tal•
flhonM, old lompo 1 old thOI·
montolorw, old clocq,
ontiqua
fumfttn. IUV«i,. Anttq,.,.
R- Moen, - -· 614-tm-

•-•ro.

Oobv Mottin,l14.at:l--.
•
W.- To Buy: Junk Autoo
Wllh Or With... Mot- Colt
......, U...y. • ,. 311 11303.

Pold: All 0tct US
Ringo SUYOr Coin.;
Gold Colno. M.l.S. Coin SJtop;
151 Socond Avonue, QoJJlpol(o.

Top Ptiooo
CO!no, Oold

/

�j

Thursday, July

1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The

ALLEYOOP
' WHI CJ.I
""'""'•! ... AT

TIME I $AALL
ANNOUNCE THAT EACH
CITIZEN WILL G£T Fill
MaPICAI. CAlli:!

NEA Crossword Puzzle

G EE, ' "ME.&lt;.N W E
WON' T ~AF TA Gl\lf

YOU

FOR

IVI~ T&gt;&lt;IN G

rocro~rN·

US'

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATTI E BLVD.'M b)' Bruce Beattie

44

Employment Services

"'

c · - ~ .-.l•"""

Help Wanted

11

AVON I All Aroaa I

Spears, 304-11~14211 .

Shl~oy

2bdrm. aptt., Iotti electric, appliance• rumlahed,
laundry
room tacllttln, ciON to echool
In town . Application• 1vallab..
tl : Village GI'Mn Apt1. 148 or

Att1ntlon: Want To Earn What
You Are Worth? Due To Planned

t · . '.
~;- l . (-r ·
I I

Promotions We

Energetic Money
P.opl• Now! Call

Betw. .n a-s Tueaday, W.ctn. .
day &amp; Thur8day Only. For Interview Thu.-.day, Star1 Sat, 614-

AVON$$ SALES
Polontlol S200 -$2,000 Monlhly.
Fantettlc Olacount•l Benefits!
Flexible Houro. Torrhory Op-

Bobysltlot

n~rolorably

In

call 814.fi2·2292.

DriWf'l Wtnttd. Str.lght truck
ctlu D lie ., 21 or over, currant

llflystcal, good d~vlng rocord. ,.
llocl-4114-lil'n -o:J93.

Elm Thouaandll Stuffing En~~~~-- Ruoh S1.00 And A Soli
Addreaed, St1mJ»(t Envaloptt:
Name, Addr.n to: Hall'e En·
terprt ..., P.O. Box 152, Applegrove, Wat VA 25502.
Eam up to $1000 wMkly
proce11lng mall, .. art nc:M, noexperlenct, frM.suppllas , fra.
lnf01ma11on. no-obligation. Send

SASE: Cascoda Dept-50. P.O.
Box 5421, San Angelo, TX 76902.

Elay Wortc.l Excellent Pay! Aa.

oombto Produclo AI Homo. Call
Toll Froo, 1-ll00..067-556l;, Exl.
313.
Experienc.d
farmer
for
Cambridge/ Z.neavllle area,
help wfth gllntrll farming .
S..l1ry snd berleflle, Rogovrn
Brothere,
P.O.
Box
685,

Cambridge, Ohio.

Flexlbla Houre R•llablt And
o.p.ndable SM-US-1012.

Gtllll -lltlge Hud Start II At!·
c:eptlng Appllcallone For The
FoUowlng Poeltlone :

Par.nt lnvolvamenl Coordinator
• BS In Social Work !Ralaltd
Fleld Or Equlv111n1 Experience
PtUI lhrM v..,... Experi•nce
Wortdng With Famlll• With

Young Children.
DIAbllhla Coordinator • BS In
Spec:lll Heedl /RIIIttd Field Or
Equivalent Experience Plua
Three Yea,. Experience WorkIng With F•mUJ• With Young

Chlldron.

Gallla And Melge County SubaiHUII Bua Drtvere • RtqUI1111 "

Clno C /COL Or Willlngnoaa To

Obtain COL Prior To Employ-

ment

_11_ _ H_
e..:.lp_W
_ a_n_t_
ed_ _
Temporary Work. Mull Htvt
Expertance In Hou.. And
Repair, Root,
Floore And Ptlntlng, 614-9836168.
Mobile

Homt

Truck driYitrl wanted to haul tocal, call 514-i'l2·2548.

Worker Needed For Buain1s1 &amp;
Small Trailer Park, Ortvarl
LlcenM A MUit. Some Ex·
pgrianee In Uechtnlc, PlumbIng, C.a~ntry, Rant Plu• Ho urly
Wage , 614-388-9686.

Wanted to Do

l8

....:.-.,.-,,-,-----::-:-.--

A

High

Will ltllm CINn Clrpt;tl ChNp

to flnlah my peymentl on
cleaner, 814-892-4Sl6.

Schoo4

Are Avtiabfe At Glllla ~elge
Head Start't Woodland Ctnters
Office, 3086 Statt Route 160
B•w•n 8 A.M. And 4 P.M.,
Monday .friday. For Additional

tnlormatlon Call 614-448-6674.
Golllo -Motgo Hood Slart II An
Equal Opportunity Employer.

Financial
Business
OpponunHy

21

Care

Cenler,

170

Plnecrnt

Drlvo, Galllpollo, Ohio 45631,
814-448-7112. Equal Opponunhy
Employer.
Immediate

Openl~

Av•llable

tor Oonlflad Nuroo Aldoa. Compaihlvo Wagoa, Dl111ronlol wtlh
Exp~rt.nc1, Sign on Bonu•
Available, Equ.l Opportunhy
Employer.; Contact the Anletali:

otr.ctor

of

Nuralng,

Plncrnt caro 0on1or, 1ru
Ptnoc- Drlvl, Galllpollo, Ohio
45631 614-446-7112.
u-ln oomponlon lor oldarfy
ladv, mull have ~. 8141112"-3140 or 114-9112.Q32.
NowTarmlnal
Oorclnol Frwlght Oorrloro Inc. Ia
hiring
uporloncod

ownerloperatorw

tor

the

van11101bod dlvlolorr, prvfhobla
ply program, KCUrlll WMicly
-lomanto, medical lno. oval~
oble rtda&lt; program ond lima
t.otN, no Up front money lo
1oa01 on. Coli Boyd, 1-aGO.ZZO.
242~

Ownerl()per•tore
Clrdlnol Frotght Carriero lo
hiring oxparforii:od OTR'o lo run
ttotbid, aom parconlago of
rovonua pulling oompany
fra!Mn M puiR"9 0111111n trsller',
- h tnaurance wldanlal I vi_.. palllble, bue plltN
aVIlla.._

=. . .

avallablll,

woa111y

bob-tall Insurance
fuel card eystem,

Hlllo-nla,
rldor
~- homo. 1-800-220-

- . . y NUfWing I RohabiiH•
tlon ContM Ia occeptlng op-

RESPITE
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would JOU bl willing
10 ..,. lor f&gt;1NCH.11 wflh foamIng ............, In their homo on

.....
...., ...., ..
:-.-:rr-ac.:-~~~

,.~

_ , . , - p~~ra-driving
............. """
quolo outiomalltto
tnouronco
....... reautrwd. Contact
c:.atla .. t.-at-2'02. Equal
OpjiOIIunltJ Emp!opr.
__... laotdntl E111rglllc
~Cid a Wall Oroofned
_,.Far Muttlllil ~
Salld 11ooum1 1 llolorinco To:
CI.A 322, clo Oonlpolla DollY
Tribuna, 825 Third .....,..., CW.
llpafla, OH 45131.
- · Loco! Firm loold~ Partlimo On CaN Ctoonlnll Sand Rnumo To SCCS, P.O.

... w. Korr, Otl 41143.

576-27711.

Ulllhloo
tumlohod.
IICOpl
prtvoto Elac. 814-446-2602

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Groelouo living. 1 ond 2 boda,_rtmentl tt Vllllge
Manor
•nd
Rlv•ralde
Apar1mentt In Mlddlaport. From
room

12&gt;32 o"lea-typa room, good for
room •ddhlon 01 oHlcl, wood
frame, m~at btl moved, $1500,

$232-$358 . Call 614-M-5858.
EOH.

614-1112·2247.

NEW BANK REPOSt Ollly 4 loft! Palkl, 8M 388 DODO.
Novor tlvod In, ofllt hu ...w
Furnished
homo warranly, t.oo dollv""" &amp; 45
lit up, own~r flnl.nclng tvaitRooms
oblo. 304-755,.71111.
Roomt lor rent • week or month.
33 Fanns for Sate
Slorttng II $120/mo. Gallle Hotol.
614-4'16-11580.
Form1 38 ocroa, Crob Crook Ad,
euhtDie for

ttouae., t.rmlng

&amp;

$14,570.
Rtybum
Rd,
rweeonable rntrlctkml. Infor-H•rdware buelneet tor aale due mation mallld on requ.t. 304-to lllneu, ru.eonablv priced. 575-8253.

304-ll82·3544 or 882-2343.

Aero 1rollot lot, Folrvfow Rd.,
Btdwoll, Ohio, complata '-"·
up. 3CM-875-8321 tvenlng• •~
245-6344.

Real Esla1e

Approx one .ere trailer tot, blk
top road, all utllltlee enll•ble.

31 Homes for Sale
2 bedroom 6 2 c.r garage •pt.
In Middleport, new paint 1

m3

ochoot bua to d~~
304-lt85-3568 or

monlh.

SIHplng roome whh cooking.

Also tnllw apaco. All hook·upo.
Call .... 2:00 p.m., 304·Tn5051, Mleon WV.

46 Space for Rent
3 Roam ottlco Sullo Whh
Primo Totlat In - n Flro
Proof Blda. OoN Monfo Haoklna
114-446-2631 Or 114-446-2512.
Malltlll Rontot I Storage UnHo,
S110L 10ll10, 101115, 10x20, 111I30.
304•75-aoteO.
Moblla Spooo. In Rio
Orondo, 114 441 3617.
TraiW tote for

,.nl,

304-475-

8984.

Wanted to Rent

~

Rd, Pomeroy, 614-aa2-4503.

Wanlod To Ronl: 3 Or Moro Bod"""" Homo Noodod By Ptot.alontl Family Rolocatlng In Glllllpotlo IGotNa County Aroo, 304-

tcr•, eultlble to build on anct
3 bedroom houM, .ttactMd cl- to 1 bloeklop road, 114garage, 3 V2 acers, Fl•twood• 848·24111.
3

bedrooma,

1112

bath•

Rentals

2

tlrapltCII, full baHmtnt, heat
pump w!CA, carpeted, patio,
ga111ge, 60x200 lot, Horton St,
Mason, 304-71J.5685.

at.J.Q340.

41 Houses for Rent

3br. ranc:h, Gtlllpolla Farry, call

2 bedroom ·houao...!!"!!'.!'1 S250.
tor datallo. 304-675-3328.
pluo do~. 304·1 r.........
8 room I laundry &amp; bo1h,2 112 2 Bocfroomo In Gatllpollo,
••rl!t bldg, big rod bam, 114- Rotor.ncoa Raqufrwd, 114-"1·
1112-ulil'.
1308.
aal• by owner- 'oa home,
1860 oq. ft., 1\111 bioOIOIInl
wlfomlly rooml. woodbumar, 3
bedroome, 2 knchlnt, 3 betM,
CIA( central vacc:um, cathederel
coli ng, atone lltaplaoo, largo
clack,
32&gt;58
outbuilding
wlh•ted work room, 2+ Kr'llln
For

'

Ntca 4 Room In Qal.
llpollo, lhrtng Room, Kn-.,
Dlnat1o, Iaiit, Largo BocfQ
W I
D Hooii.Up,
wooded .,... c"-1 to town, Nolgh-. Porch, Yanf,
Molaa School Dlotrlci, doyllma Plrfd"ll, No Palo, 814-445-0181.
614-lll2·2318, ovllng 114-m.
7133.
42 Moblfe Homes
For Sola s:r OWner: 3 BR., 1 112
for Rent
Dllh, 2,10 Sq. Ft., 1 Storyl 2
Flropta-. Golf Hoot, Cont. Air. 12&gt;115 2 Bldrootno, Gao - · ·
Lariot Drfva. Wolklng Dlotonc:a O.PDIII And Roforoncaa Roto hoaphal, $85,000. 11hown By qulrad, 10 Mlnutoo From Qal.
Appolntmonl, 814-446-1208.
llpotla,
Jlal
Ao-'ly
Houoo lor sole, S17.000 or ronl
No Pato, 82801Mci.
$300/mo., In Pomaroy, ~ bod- 1::-~:-:-==7---::---:----,
room, full baaoment, call 814- 2 Bocfroom, Total Etactrfc, 1 112
8411-2405 oftor 3pm.
Mtloo From Stoto Route 188,
Rotor- Dopoo1t Roqulracf.
Modular,
2
car
prege,
2
Hthl,
~~~·~·i·;·e~34;;13.~·~;:-iiQp­
centrel air, naar Chester, 014185-4286 or 114-185-3831.
2 8edi OC:Wid, N;, No P•e,
~h
And
Rolw•rooo,
S400111o., ~ Dryer; 2 ....
room HouM, t"umiaMd, No
Pata, S3501Mo. Dopoalt, 114-NJL
4345.

For Lease

For Lllao: Comptata F1111 Food
Moztcan Rlllouront Dina In Or
Corry 1M Borvtco. Evorythlng
Y0&lt;1 Nood To Gat Stortod. Groot
Locatlorr, Nowty Conotruclod
Building, 1750/Mo. 814-245-5040,
814-245-111571.

61't:'~Z

3Room,
Bedroom
At Evorgnon,
382:1.

49

Merchandise
51

-t

Allroolao111o AIIYOIIIUig In
lhlo n o - l a IIUbjod lo
the Fadorol Fair Houatng Act
oi198B Which mallal I tlllgll
to • - 'IllY pNI-,
-nor&lt;laakrilbuod on .-. color. rolglon.
aufarnllalltiiUO o r origin, oc lilY
to
make IllY IIUdl pral-.

lnl-

-·-lon.
Our-..

lmllallon 01

TNone- . . not

kuowllugly accopf
·-rnontoror I a l wtrk:h lo I n - of ........
twoby
lnformod ...... ctwoltngo

ov-

..Wortioodln!No n o - r
oro
on on oqlllll
oppDifunfly-

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Md 2 bedroam ..,..........

lurntohoct
-urtty

ond

do-

poll, lf4-IIIN211.

unfumfohad,
roquhd, no

2
B1droarna
Unfumlehed.
Slcwo, Ratrtaorat2:J_~_ 112 Mlta
Fram Oovlit ........ 8200
Dopoolt, ~~-

2 otory, 211&lt;. oN -

apta.,

Olrpalod, ~ tumlahod,

hoO wotor, ho trolll plcftup, on
otto . . . - - . ltallclo)i ...
tlvfly for chldran, to
churchM, echookl.
Whoro oan you got oil thlo for
8210/mo. Louratorid Apart-..
fllh ' Gaorgo Sf2 Ha...,
WV. 30WI2'3711 ~OH•
ltor.,

00,000

Mlloo, 54,0"00; Can Bo Soon At:
Golllpolla Dally Tribuna, 825
Thlnf Avonuo, Galllpotlo, 814448-2342.
t9i2 Chevy 112 ton 4x4

Red 1987 B-.10 Chevy Bltur 4x4,
air c:ond., PW, Pl, eunroor, tilt
whe~l1
excellent condition,
prlcea under book value, mull

74

$900 nogaelablo. 304-882-341111

2 Rth Ta~t,1 Sat Of Bunk

t98ti Honda 4 Tru 2SO, good
ccnd ., $1500 Mrlou1 callt only.

Saw,

storoo And co PI•Y•!, Ntntondo
Wilh 18 TIPI!t For 110,. lntor.
matlon, 114-3or•JIWI.
2 pc Early Amlf'ICin llvlna room
tullt &amp; IIWivet rocker, '" 3 pc

$125. 304-773-6832.

Pets for S&amp;le

56

Printer, 2 diH.
drtvn, mouM, and eoftw1r1.

$$50. 814 441 8858

tnd t1blt, muet take all, $150,

614-8i2·1038
71108.

homo,

814-1182·

O.ytone 8MCh Condominium

For Rant, A'1. 20th 47!h. OCtln
Front Pool
So1M11 Sfoopo 4,
5450, 814-388-11758.
Entortalnmonl Cantor
O.k
Flnlah, Holdo 140 IIH!'1 ¥xoonont
CondHiorr, $121, 114-,....11217.
Full alzo bod; full lllzo box
aprlng• and mattreu; eter.a;
emtll cheat ot dreWWII; •nd
mloc.; 814-M-6824.
G.E.

20

Inch

T.V.

$H.'!5j

Llko Now 5248.85i. RCA 13 Inch
T.V. ltka Now, 0134.85; Mognavox VCR WHh Romola 188.115;
Shorp VCR $88.115; Gold Star
VCR Wflh RamaCo $85.1111; Saoro
VCR $85.115; St...p VCR $~.115jl·
Sylvonto VCR M8.85; J&amp;
Tochnology m Slalo Route 180,
Galltpotlo, 614-441.()950.

THUNDER
TOLD YOU
THAT?

DID YOU NOTICE
HE DIDN'T TAKE
HIS HAT OFF
TH' WHOLE TIME
HE WAS HERE?

LOWE EZ:Y DIDN'T
SUSPECT A THIN G

AK.C Baeutt puppl.., 5 WMka
old, $100, F.A. Bonodum, 814887-3856.

Fllh Tonk • Pat Shop, 2413

Jackton Ave. Point Pleaunt,

304-675-2063.

Full Bloodod Auatrollan Hootor
Pupa, 2 Fomatoo, 540 Each, 8143711-2838.
Full bloodad Baogla pupJ!Ioa,
8wka old, - · ~75-'18110
boforo8pm.
HAPPY JACK FlEABEACON:

Electronic
O.vke
Controle
Flou In The Homo Withoul P-

ttctdaa.
Poltntod
Doolgn
Croatoo Burot Of Ughl Flou
Can, Roafot. Roouho Ovomlght.
J D NORTH PRODUC£ 814-1481833.
Roglotorod Sl~s'l:a"
PupPioo, 1114-4'1
•

H.. ky

Schmluzer puppl•, mlntture,
..It pepper; •i•o toy
AKC, chalmplon bloodlln~~, 814-

a

poodt••·

887-3404, Coolville.
Six - k old ooppa..Boaglo pupa, 3 lamlltoo, 1 moto,
hoo hod ohoto and wormod, 540,
814-m-3537.

Quarter HorN• Well Broke, 614-

Squoro baloa hay. .,... .. 17S-3Q60.
-

Tf-11 5 IS ~ O W WE
SHOOT BASKETS. RERUN

1

\.

SEE, WE BOUNCE
Ti-1E BALL A COUPLE
OF TIMES TO 6ET
OUR f\1-NTHM ..

TI-IEN WE

IT TI-1ROUGH

new Pl,.lll'a, tlberglase

Chryslw LeBtron, good

Household
Goods

Co"'"' $5.00 Up VInyl 54.48 To
U.tlo In Stock, 814-441-11144,
Mollohan Corpata.
Couch I chal!t_~lga I mouva,
$22&amp;.-.... - ·
.

Rolrfgarator $118: Ralrfgorator

l'nlof Froo $1110; Ralrfgorator

Stdo ByNtco
Slda Ellctrtc
W• -~-11118;
nango,
Mlo,_ve Ovon On Top, 1210:
Eloctrfc Ringo 30 Inch h5;
Eloctrlc Ranjo 40 Inch 1125;
Maytag W~ngar
Nloo
Squaro Tub, .. tm&amp;i,~ornatlc
W.oltor Sill;
171:
Whirlpool Waohor U Now, 1
Yoor W.rranty $205; Gao Ringo
30 Inch hS; Goo Rango 36 InCh
$118; !lbaao Ap::nooo, 71 Vlno
Stroot, Cfaltlpot 114-448-7381,
Or1-ll00-4-

w-.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FIJRNITURE. 82
Olivo 51., Gatllpolto. Now I thod
tumfttn,
- · Wootom I
Worfl
- L-114-4441-StH.

53
Antiques
==~~~=~
DONALD 811rTH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIOUE8- - - . , art,
china, ort ~,_-. ....
lllcCotr ROMvlrro, oto. COLLECTIBI..B- prlnto, paotora, toolo,
pottary, clool1a, boxoo, foro, botliM, boako, taro. ota. ALWAYS
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
- r po1c1. 0no 111aco ar ano
hundrod. APPRAISALS, 40

blu boat, 70

~w:-100. PftooO

alii.

'

Mercury oil tnjeclod, 28
thrust, Ulnnko.. trolling remote
control motor, $3500, 0*182·
2067 Mondoy.f'~day, 6om-4pm,
Ilk lor Jody.
1980 Yamaha. W•ve Runner 500,
IDuol Troller, 614-4411-9364.
20 R. Goluy InBoard IOutboanf
110 Horso Mon:ndur Llka N-,

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Eacn tener rn me copher stanas tor another Today's cl ue J equals F

--

"E

MDUEDKD

EW

-=~~ · ~~~~~==~
AfH~

AL.t. OF ou,

TOGETtff",

nA~5
F~ANCII'It

Ttfii'I~S ~'M
M~. ~IGtfT, ANl&gt;

P G Z P

V E UU

HDVWAZWPW

m

F N

AF · ZHAGFNEHR

P GZP

WFYOPGEHR

JFON

ehape, nice &amp; c,..n, $600. 304175-8211.
1i81 Elduroclo Cadllloc $2,100,
good aluipo, 304-lt75-ll986.
1882 Bronco; 1980 D-&amp;0 Pick· Lots Of Extr..l 614-387-7755.
Up; 1985 Hondt Shadow Befor• Four Winds 16112 tt boat wtth
6:00P.M. 614-245-9555.
Inboard &amp; oulboard. 30~21964 Eocort AL«o11111t1c, $450; 2658.
1!179 ToyaCa Corolla, 4 Speed,
$300, Aak For Rick 614-245.0912. 76
Auto Pans &amp;

James

C eletlr n~ CrPfler cryptograms are created I rom quotat100s by fam ous people past and present

0

M 0

B 0 Z N W

J E K 0

F P G 0 N

SF E H R

EH

SZH

NZPGDN .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The really 9reat movies have !ended lobe wntlen by

l

one person . Writing

STil-L.

IS

not a commun tst enterpnse ."- Amy Ephon.

MY FI,ST NAMt
IS ''l'lf"Vt~ ".

Accessories
1888 Oklo Call, runs gooa, looka
good, $1600. ~75-4001 ohor
350 or 400 turbo tran•mlalllona,
4pm or luve meuage.

uNci or overhauled, gua,.ntted

1987 Chroylot LoBoron 2.2 8 I 30 ctoya. 304-675-4880, PI
Turbo, Good CondHion, 52,100, PleaNnl.
814-388-11725.
New gu ttnkll, one ton truck
1887 Plymouth Sundonce, 4 wh11ls1 radiator., lloor mate,
ctoo.il 8 apoact, AJC, omlfm. good ole. D &amp; R Auto, Rlploy1_~· 304con Ilion, IM,OOO mil•. $2485, 3n·3933 or 1-800-273-&gt;rul.
114-aa2-1036.

BORN LOSER

r

DOI-II &amp;. TOO
W5ETWITI\11\E.
eDY , BRUTU~ .. ~.....-._j

Campers&amp;
1987 Pontiac Grond Am LE, olr, 79
llh, CNioa, auto, oleyl, apo11
Homes
Motor
whllle, new whhe paint, 12500.
304-675-4530,
'72 Superior 22' motor home,
5, rune Uke new, root •lr
1987 Pontiac Turbo Ortnd Am, 2 •ll•pa
eondltlonlng, Dodgo 413 C.I.D.,
Door, loodod, 10,000 Mlloa, 814- $5500,
814-1148-3301.
~·7181.
1188 C.mtroiM~4H114.

r---------~

r

~

N'T£12. N..L, 1-\£ 1-1~ 2.0% Ft:..U
CA.V ITIE!&gt; 1

DI"~ONL.Y

Refrigeration

1----------

I

OOI!£~0CY
liM(.K£{)

IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·fUl
OF STUFF

ITHURSDAY

Hoot p...,pa, Aft Cond"""Fu._ Maotw Etactrtcton,
IM 145 13oi, ~~--301.

$1 .25 to
, c/o lhis newspa·
per, P .O . Box 4465. New York. N. Y.
10163. Be sure to stale your zodiac sign .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

I
Frrday, July 29, 1994

Probabilities for success are quile strong
tor the year ahead. even though your vic·
tories might not come overnight. Be

patient- you're on a winning track.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Guard against
inclinations Ieday to worry about things
that might never happen . Instead, be
positive and visualize events as you
would like them to be. Get a jump on Ina
by understanding the influences govern·
ing you in the year ahead. Send for your
Astro·Graph predictions today by mailing

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You have a
facully tor being able to spot the flaws
and shortcomings of others . Today

AQUARIUS CJan. 20-Feb. 19) Promises
or commitment s yo u make to others
today will be taken senously. even 1f you
don't inlend lhem lobe .
PISCES CFeb . 20-March 20) There's a
possibility you might not keep your priori-

there 's a chance you might oveJWork this

ties in order today . Instead ol working

attribute to your disadvantage.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) This is one of

first and playing later, you may deliber·
ately reverse lhis procedure and do your·

those days in which you might not handle

self a disservice .

things as well as you usually do where ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Today you
competitive involvements are concerned might find yoursel1 in the company of a
Whether you w1n or lose, do so with person who you know has a 1endency to
grace.
gossip and distort information about othSCORPIO (Oct. :ioJ-Nov. 22) Be a good ers. Don'l contribute to her/his repenoire.
trstener today. or you might read unsa - TAURUS (Aprlf 20-May 20) There's a
vory meanings into words or statements, chance you might fee l it ts necessary
which weren 'l actually intended . Don't today to tell someone who has always
wound your emolions and feelings need· been up-front and leveled wilh you linle
lessly.
white lies in order to spare his/her feel ·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) In ings
business Ieday, double-check all of your GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) An acquain·
financial receipts or business records. tance who is a skilled manipulator might
There's a possibility you might make try to appeal to your generous nature
some small but serious mistakes in these today in order to gel you to pari with
areas.
something he/she wants.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 221-Jon. 1!1) Be very CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you have
careful today about advising others. Even a product or sarvice to offer today, don't
if your counsel is requested, you could . be afraid lo ask a tarr price. Your deal is
still be held accountable tor lhings that only likely tall apart if you ask for more
than things are wonh.
may be misunderstand.

.,·,

3

..

~

My teenage

--,Hr:-ETV_Ar=-N-r--1~~;,'
...
6
7
. 1 I 1 I

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

ASTRO-GRAPH

2

I I 1 I 1 1

PRINE

HI~ ~T

BIG NATE

I

0 Rc L E0

I
I 1· Is I I

&amp;.C-/o.l.r.£

18 Ft. Hf Lo AN Motol Oompar,
$2,100, 114-387-7891.

Joe-.

- - 3 2 5 2 RIWnarrvwcom
plckar, 12 roll bod, S2000; 3 173
·:.:.,...;'l::I;,:RI:,&amp;;:;.;4..,;W,;,;D;:.',;;,a---:
_., • - . -ptoto, aM Cll, 1'1177 GMC bol ......, von, .~
tiOOO; 2 tt.vy duty gravity
-•
,_
bodo min.. iunnlng gaoro, lor fila .,.,...., cjaod " " S2001oa., 114-182-107:1.
$1100, 114-1112-331&amp;.

I

,...

T€£TI\ OJTI

:S.OO:tt;;...---

_,_

Pass
Pass

6.

~

"'ra:,a;

blk;l!,..-ato. Claucla
~~~- Wl~t­
-Blocll, Nntoll,
tora, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114-

Pass

5•
Pass

.
.

~'
"•

==

Building
Supplies

4•

Pass
Pass

~

he.
I.

1988 Font Eocort GT 5 Spoocl, 18 F1. Trovol Troller Well Carad
High Mlloago $1,100, I~ For, Doubl• Axlt, Elect. Brakea,
9317 Lllvo - g o .
$2,300, Moy Conaldor Smallor
Wanlod: Stud 5oMea For 1888 Uncoln Town Car, 54500. Troller Troct.ln Or Small
IBM Compatible Computar 2 Roglotorod Rod Dachlhund Haa 18111 Fonl Eacor1, loadad, Aluminum Boat ffiwller fMOior,
Diu Drlvor, Color Monhor, Haa All Shoto, ::~ Wontod To 82300. 1985 Cocllltac Eldondo, 814 1186 6500.
Mouao Prinlor, I Voare Old, Buy: Fomata ¥
lro Torrlor, 82100. :104-6711-2440.
1~ Z111. Than molor homo,
$850 F1rm, 114-4411~
In Good -nh, For B-Ing,
tully aoll-conlolnod, gonorotor;
1888-Ntnoty
Eloht
Ofda.
rtfrtger•ornr..zerllj
ken~ waahlr, brand new 814-367-7705.
Ragancy
Brougfi11111n,
ono air,
microwave,
mauva Interior,
pump seo. 304-675,.1038.
-norl
Exc.
Coricl.
75,000
mt.
59,000mt, roody tor rood, 18500.
Musical
Loodod,
lull
_.,,
AMIFII,
King atzo wotorbod whh llghla
Sl•ro. Cue., NJW B1tt1ry. NJW 304-6711-.2848.
Instruments
tnd mirror, 8 dr•w.,. und•·
Tlr-. Exceptionally Clean, 114- li711 Wildornoao Campar 24" Air
nNlh, new manreu and lin•,
Condltlonsrlo Roll Out Awning,
hnlar, comforter and curtalna, St•r Guhtr• •q., guh•rw, 448-1000 Lllve - g o l
S300, will daltvor to rooaonable atringa, ktyboardo, druma. Also 11111 Qlov Corwla LTZ 54,2115. Folr Condit n, $2,500, 814-388plano ond guflor I-na. 814- 1880 Fonl Aoota $1,585. 1180 81118.
.,.., 814-D4&amp;-2888.
367-0302, C~oahlra,
Lumina Euro 15,11115. 1887 Grond 1981 VIking Pop-Up Compar,
King Silt W•t•rbtd, Gll.n
Am $2,585. 11186 Font Rongor uoo, 814-3811-11888.
Cablnata,
Mirror,
Ughtod 58
Fruits
&amp;
$2,885. 111111 Chevy 5-10 54,250.
Hoadboard 5400. Ouoon Stzo
1887 Cbavy Bluor loadod 1987 Alumo Uto XL Holld1y 31
Wolorbod $200. Froozor S75.
Vegetables
54,41111. 11182 O.ryolor oonvort~ Ft. Exeattant Condltlorr, Full
SOlo, Rocllnor Rockl"ll Chltr
Cannl~ Tomat- S3 Buohat. able, now top1.uo ahapa $1,100. Bod, Awning, Air, Etc, 814-388614-aT'-5245.
Plcll Y'"'r Own Bri"ll OWn Con- Now 0oooo NICk Volley Stock 9384.
Largo Duncan Ootamtc kiln. 304- tot-. Don Hill Forma, 4111188 Trallar. Undar " - Managomont
6"111-7188.
Stata Route 338, l.olart Folia, OH Pato Ohlinger, Scolty'o thod Trotwood camper, •IMpel, Mlf...
ea,., Now Hovan, wv. 304-182- oontatnod, $1200. 304-ltlltl-3381.
114--2.
Lmlo Tlkao Bod With Manraoa
3752.
And Bomay Shoot Sat thod Conning tomat-, $3/bu., lllcll
Services
your wn, brf"ll contolnaro. 8ob 11811 Dodga De~ono Shltby, Tv.., Llttto, - - · · ·
5apCI., wind- lint, oxo.
114-247-3421, l.olart
Ntca Hutch 8:128; Nlco Air Con- Morrla.
, low mlloo, $1800. 304-1511Folia, Ohio.
ditioner, $125; Sofa'• ISO; Ent•
1088.
81
Home
1alnmont Oonlar $75; W-bur- Cllnnlng tom.toea, WIIIIIIMI
1888
Font
Tompo
LJC
Loadad,
not ttoo· Anllqua Moytag WrinImprovements
Form, Syroc_L_Ohlo, 114-882·
S21t~OBO, 18811 a;;;!..-Omnt,
ger Wu~ Bull In 18:111 $100; IIIII or 814-1182.-88.
BASEMENT
814-3711Aftw I P.M.
a
~• ~.ooo M-~~ car
Fill
your
frMzarl
Bini 1860, ..........1o0837,
WATERPROOFING
Noll Trock ozcl-. 5400.00. Uka dlmaggtd, •hart ...,., _ ...
U.-.ctHional lllotlmo guorannowf 514-4411-6811
- . . SUpar IWIIII Pick your 1180 Cadtlloc Devllla, whho, too. local rwloroncoo fumllhad.
_., 11.00/ciL Thur.fri.Sat 37,000mt., IIIC. oond., 113,100. Call 1.jl00.287.omt Or 114-23JL
Old roal ..... 300 ploclt, 525, morning
8-12. Eootorn Star 304-773-a2111.
0488 Rogoro Wotorprooll"ll. &amp;catll14-e92-33e7.
f•rm, Rl2, IIIHwood. WV.
1180 Coralca, a~ cruloo now tablllhad 1878.
Ping Eye, 2 drivoro, ua. oond., W.nlod to buy- picked blackbaro tfroo, 54100. 304lai-21147 after
c&amp;C
Gonorol
$85. 304-6llhUSI.
5pm.
•lntentltC8- wllltp~~per,
riel, I ... 7 gal-. 114RCA carncordar( whh 5400 Ol· 1182-6M.
18111 Cadllloc Bovtllo, tully 11--, RIOflng ond -.ptoto
troa Included, lka ._, mUll Whtle 112 Au,._ Blane. You toeded, CD, IXC. ooncl. ~ ho1ot r•~• comptato rapolr, pro-ra wuhlng ond
aocrltlco, MOO firm, call 814-841128115
·- -- - - - - mobile homo - l r. For frao 2811.
Pick; Cabbago, Y011 Pick, 814258-1353.
11111
Ofdomoblle
Cutlaoo tlmato call Chat, 814-41112-632!.
Ralrf~atoro, Stovoo, Woahoro
Supnmo 1 o..r- 41,000 Actual CUrtll Home lmpro¥ementl. No
And Dryoro, All Rocondlllorrod
Mlloo, PIW I Door Loc11a, AJC,
Job Too Bla Or 8mal~ Yooro ExAnd Gouronloodl $100 And Up,
Farm Supplies
Cruloo, Tin, AIIIFII Storao, El· -'"nco
bn Oldar I N Will Dollvor. 1-11-6441.
conant
Condftlon,
U,300,
814&amp; Lives1ock
Iiomoo. Addfllona, - . - .
44H268.
Roofing,
Khc'llotlto,
Sowf"ll mochtno good
1882 HvundtiSonala V.ry Cloan Rlflllc......, - . n u r a d ,
$38; - l o chiln
i2
rfdl"'l - r .
; 114- 61 Fann Equipment
Law llftoa, For 8ola Or Taka FIM Eoflmatoo, 114-351-0111.
114~1121.
Over Paymonla, 814-311JL7113.
JU Molntlnl,_ polnlSTORAGE TANKS 1,000 Ootlon 11188 GMC 2 112ton, I I 2 OIIIOd,
fng, vtnrl oldl"ll, roollng ond
::Jroln
bodld...,p
whh
11
ton
Upright, Ron Evono Ental'llrlaoo,
drywtll. F,_ Ntflftlt:M, I'M-la·
, - c - rocka CM- 72 Trucks for Salf!
Jaclilon, Ohio, 1-537-0528.
4232, aok hrr Joa or Ea~.
Bod), "~!_~ mltoo, ano - · 1m lntomotlonol Tanctom cob 1
Toy - . w"'.ach ohaot ol Uktng -.000. 114-tfl2.507:1.
-Ia, m Dalroll 13opd, Ron'a TV Sarvlaa, -latlzlng
dro...., boby crib, atnlffor, 273 Now Hofland bolfor, 801
In Zanhh olao - " l l moat
304-182- othlr branda. -COlli,aolng, Wllktr, ca..-. 304-675-r. rolla, 30U"J!I.
4541:
38111.
- l e - -lro. wv
1177 Ford Plj:k.Up, I CV1tndar, :104-6lt4S118
Ohio 114-441-2414.
Uaed C.rpet. 114 441 201'1.
Automatic,
$100,
114-36JL7ZIO.
Chain Bow ...,_ I chaine lo Ill
Plumbing &amp;
WATER UNE SPICIAL; 3/4 Inch almaol any - · prlcM In
200 PSI 518.81; I Inch 2110 PSI - . SkiOro Equl_.t, 304Heating
532-!!.i Ron E'llllll E..___ 1711-11121 or 1~
1114 Chevy 112 ton,ahan bod,
114-- 11930
Ohio
.
Frooman'o
Hooting And Cooling.
.John Dotro iltll E.8. ftbor gto• top, • now tlrao.
1 row rw- 430011 octual mlloo, 541100, call lnatolle~an And Sorvtco. EPA
WID tnda 4 ton Holl Com- wMh 138 com eartttlad. Roaldantlol, eom...,.
- h r r 3 t o n - . 3 0 4 - RIW, OICIIIII'II - . 82ICiO, Ifill' 4 pm 114-14~172.
clot. 114-256-1811.
114-8821012.
1711-7MI.
111P Doclga Daf1ata. mid ofzo,
W diiUmll'j 1181 e&amp;fver truck
... tlroo, lopd,, 821(0. 104-675' 84
Electrical &amp;
211411.
~; IIUOIItool box; 1 -

55

Pass

4 NT

:
t

•orm

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complato homo tumlohtngo.
Houro: lion-Sot, H. 114-MI0322. I mttoa out Bulavtllo Ad.
FrooDollvory.

3 •

-

22Beverage
con1alner
C2wds.)
23 Sleeping·
sickness lty
24 Vegetable
25Noman - island
.,-+--.jf-+-+--1 · 26 Crazy
person (st.)
27 Pierce
29Vas\ ages
30Bye-bye
32 Cloistered
36 Small factory
38 At what time
41 Goddess ol
peace
43 Set up
(gotl ball)
44 Eye tsyer
46 Pairs
47Quarrels
48 First-rate
(2wds.)
50 - Francisco
51 Spanish· hero
Et 52 Night before

.,

THE BASKET :

::2120:.:::..::A:::ftar::...:I.:.P:::
.M:::.' - - - - - I 1988 Pocor, 15 112', Tri-Hult

1m

- Garr
19Singer

7·l 8

FLIP

glne, Runs Good, $600, 614-3N-

7pm.

tennis
1 t Was dressed In

Some days,
stay in bed

11188 M..,.ng, lcyt., IUio., PS,
for Sale
.... tmortor, 54200. 30W753880.
17' Starcrth &amp; 120 horM Evln.
n.1d1 motor, Clll 614-~2-24M •f.
1i711 Dodge Aapon, Slant 6 En- lor 8 pm

aunrool, nMdl fuel lnJecllon
work, 11500. 814-853-2688 attar

8 What's in - -?
9 Frees from

PEANUTS

1992 Honda 250X S2.650, 814448-1082 .
71 Autos for S&amp;le
..,-,-..,......,..-=-:-----:I 250 Yomoha 3 Wheel or S75
1950 Pontiac Chloftan 1 good Noodo Uttlo Work, 814 446 8848.
lhopo, $2200. 1987 Fora Tirua,
nMda work, $800. 304-675-2347. 75 Boats &amp; Motors

11J77 PoriChe 824,

17 Actress

By Phillip Aldor

:.24,.::5,.::-5,.::593'-.'-.-::-:~-:--1i91 Ha~y Dovldoon Sponator
1200 CC, extra~ •howroom
condhlon, $8,000 uBO, 614-aa2·
4503.

Hay &amp; Grain

-==========

37 Was aware of

confusion

10Trounced in

1988 Suzuki 4 WhMier 230 Ex·
cellent Condition, $1,700, 814-

31'9·2836.

64

33Mauna ~
34 Hearing organ
35Lassening

4 Ralny ·day need
5 Symbol of
'llictory
6 Navy ship pref .
7 Cut oN

Opening lead: • 3

.._n,,..,

·

Pampered Pete by Sony1 , dog

••kinde.

Couch, 2 chill,., reciiMl tnd 1

IN

-::-----:--:----:::---,:Gn&gt;Om ond Supply Shop-Pat Nice 24 Month Uma.ln Bull, 5
Black &amp; White Face 1987 Suzuki 300, $1750. 304-675Grooming. Jul'- Webb. 81~ Yearling 614-446-4053.
6335.
0231

Baby Bod I Mottr- 814-4411981.
AKC Garmon Shoponf pup,
male. JOH7H1138.
Chlll1 Fr-ot $100,.814-448-4141
Ahor8P.M.Or0nwAKC Min. Plno. 8 WMka Oldjj
$200
Eoch,
114-256-111
Collar 10 boxi\14 . .mory, brand Evonlngo.
now, 543.85, 14-m-ll188.
-::-=::-=-7.:::-:::----,:'7::-:::-:-1 AKC Rogtotorod Male Mlnlolura
Comt&gt;&lt;lor IBM Compoloble. 3.5, Schnouzar, 13 Wooka Old, 8145.25 And Hanf Drive. Color 256-6438.
Monhor. Ptrollol And Sortol AKC ,.glotorwd Schlppolka
Porta. Alll1. 5aftwora, 614-448- pupplao, 2 11111110,1 fomola
1
1718.
lhota,
$250,
11WN-28ou
Concroto I Ptootlc Soptlc avenlnga •fter I or
Tonka 300 Thru 2,000 Gallorra AKC Regl8t1red Wthna.raner
Ron Evan• Enlerpr\He, Jack· pupploo. :104-67!HJIIO.
aon, OH 1-i00-137~828.
Couch I Chair In Good Condition, Pria.: $100, 814-446-3548.

A LITTLE
SPAT,
PAW !1
.A.. ..I. -

WHO

1987 Htrley Sport•ltr Good
Condition 12,000 Milos Ctll
BetwHn 8-2, $14-388...0254.

Livestock

63

24 Lackadaisical

Vuln e r a bl e: Ne ithe r
Deal er: North
South
West North East
Pass
Pass
I .
Pass
IA
Dbt.

PARSON TUTTLE
AN' HIS WIFE HAD

304-675-4152 or 675-1685.

grooming, bl.tt,.ng, all breldti.
2 o-n Size W.torbodo $75 304-ll82·3730.
Each, 114 44&amp; 1011.
10I10lll dog ko~ $1118.85.
.
4 wtndow air c:ondhkmll"l. 304- Paint Plus.~
7T.H5841.
1yr. old mota, Sprt"'l Crwok bred
Apartmant
Slu
Stackab&amp;e real•tered Walker Coonhound,
Waohot I Dryar Konmoro AJ. $1110 or troda for light. 304-882mond In Color. i Monlha Old, 2S13.
~w.jl~lorrt S600 Firm, 514- 8 Woolr Old Chow Puppleo, $50,
-;:::-.::-;;-=-=:=-:---:-:-1 3 Mole &amp; 3 Fotnoloa, 114-4411Appla It GS Computw ond lm- 67n.
ageWrhlf' II

+ A K ,J 96

lftlf 6pm or 304-882-.2847.

tribe
2 Grows old
3 Winnie the -

311ncreases

..

1985 Suzuki RM125, like new,

C 1994 by NEA. Inc

28 By the lime - to Phoeni x

SOUTH

BAR NEY

1880 Chevy Aotro Van, •"""
good oond., 8hp raCotlllor,
walght bench I wol8hla. 304875-7585.

1 South African

• Q 5 4 2

• K.I10~ 53

Motorcycles

58 Halted
59 Opp. of NNW

Asian holiday

23 Gull-like b ird

• K 4

Nil, 614-3118-8111 t.

1985 5-10, Grovoly, rwcll-. 18111
Fotd 4&gt;4. 30U75-&amp;182.

Scroll

-m m AI.JY!l-\11.)0

56 Possess
57 Pigeon pea

DOWN

•a
•A J 9 2

verMio, loMIId, 33,000 mll11,
black, w/350 engine, $14,500,

5pm.

18..

'10.R CXVE ~NT
UJ\'5 ARfi:SIW ~f(:R£
'10'J M D A CAA ~£

81~

1881 GMC truck wtlh log bodi
11178 log trollor; 2 aowo· HI 01
okldder choln•L can 614-m.
5310 or 114-aa2-u20.

Crafteman

AA 7 J 2

!::1

:.-:=a.

3 bod,_, troller hrr
114445-G82tl, H~DIIIcCialton.
...... bodroorn moblla homo lor
ronl, nvw "'"lL. utltltloo fur.
nlahad,8M-m...,.l.

1989 Oodge Rsm Van

Pt1Y.

Answer lo Previous Puule

attendant

EAST

'J,,I-\AT A

f..D MA1TER. 1-bJJ 0..0 lA£ GET
OJ£ ALWAYS lHif--IK (f ~LV£ ')
A'S Efl".lG 1H£ ACct. lU-1£1\1 Wf
:S,\CffiO GRCvJIIJG
1

tlon, 814-848-2528.

814·!192·50n .

Bodo
Weight Bonch Wllh
Walghta,
Rocllnor,
Saorw

11-'£RE5 A Tl-{E()RT Tl-{AT SAYS

1 Destroy Cst.)
4 Palata part
9 Labor org.
12 Playwright
- Betti
13Etementary
particle
14Sgt.
15Zodiac sign
16Splash
18Weddlng
20Civll War
general
21 Southeast

• KI 0 864

1984 Ford Converalon; 11~ 1m
Dodge Convertlon ; good cond~

$300. 304-87!·

11132.

Memorex zo Inch Stereo T.v.

wallpapar, $13.100, 614-882·5370. Wantad to buy· two or more

.....lono lor Corttflod Nurol"ll
Molotanlo. Apply .. 38758
IIOCUIWfngo "Ref., Pomeroy.

EOE.

qulrad . l-.0338.

Stnlc VIew, 2 piUI ICI'el, :Zbr.1 1
112 bl.lht, 2-car g•rage, duck Fumlshtd lfflcleny Apt. Central,
pond, much mora, $49,500. 304- Air Cond. Privala port&lt;lng.

tht offering.

Wages,
Vo&lt;atlon Poy, 614-446·7266, 614448·71120.

Holp Wanlod: Body Work, 814448-6858.
lmmodlalo Ot&gt;onlngo For Part
llme And ~ull Tlma LPN's,
Compolflvo Wogoa,_ 01111rontlol
Wllh Exporlence. """loci The
Olrldor Of Nunlng, Plnecraat

a

hunllng. Small cabin. $37,000.
INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 304·~3-3655.
r.comrnanda th•t you do bullnasa wh:h people you know 1nd 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
NOT to send money through thl
mall until you h•v• lrtvntlgatld 5.32 1CrM 1 $13,160. 8.14 ICNI,

Needed

Halrd,...•r

Now n1nch 11ylt home Plante
aub-dlvlalon, :lbr., 2 bath, lion• Nlealy Fumlehed Apautment,
on lront
dick, ehtlng on 2 1br, next to Ubrtry, p~~rklng,
central httt, tlr, rwfar.nce , .
Iota. 614-446-IM33.

M·F 6 A.M. -6:30 P.M. Quallly Llko Now Through Out I 81~ Pomeroy- Cliff Apartment• are
loving Care For All Children 0175.
now KC:Iptlng •pplklllons.
Our 11 G011l. Part-nm•, Ful~
Folr Houal~ I Equal Oppor·
llme, FH. Aaaltta nCI Available. 1965 Skyline 14x10, 3br., 1 bath, lunlly.
Dlimon
Stapleton,
Call For lnlormttlon Or VIsit. In- CA, dock, $10,200 OBO. JOH7S- mantger, 814-IKI'2·7772.
fant !Toddler 6M-44~227. p,.._ 2503 or 675~t35 .
School,
Schoolage,
B&amp;A
Apartmon1o oro oow
1988 Cloyton Wlnnor It 14X65. 2 Stonewood
School. 614-44fl.jl224.
BR. 1112 Bolh. Anor 8PM. 114- oceoptlng appltcallona ond rootIng apartment• tor tld•rly and
Sun Valley Nurwery School. 4'11.0757
114-!192-3055,
dlaabtfly,
Chlldcoro M·F 6am.S:30pm Agoa
Stonawood Apto., Middleport,
2·K, Young Se~ Age During 1MB Schunz l4x:70 mobil home Ohio. EOH.
Summer. :J Oaye per W11k Min- w/Oxpondo, Jbr., 2 both, nloo
lorgo toed unattacluid garago, Unfurnlshecl
Imum 614-446-3657.
•partment,
nle~~ rul ent ar.a. 304-882-3502
Pomeroy, 2nd floor, 4 rooma
Will clo luickhoo -rk, 814-M· aft., 5pm or leav• m.... ge.
bath, no pata, rotoronco on~
5858 or 814-882·3113.
LIMITED OFFER! Now 14xl0 dopooH, 814-882-2275 ahor
Wlll do housec:laanlng on only makt 2 p~~ymante, no 5:30pm.
weekly batls, h.vt reftrancee. payment• tfter 4 yMf'l frM Unfurnllhad Upolalro Apartmont
doltvory I oot up, ownar financ- 3 AOOITie, Bath, 11 Cedtr StrMI,
304·71J.5498.
Ing IYIIIablo. 304-765-6588.
Vtry Cle•n, $300/llo. Water

Oiptom• And Prkw Food Service
Exparionce.
All AppUcante Mu.t Potua A
Valid Ohio Oriyer't Ucenae And
Carry Au1o U1billty lnaul'llnc:t.
Ortver's LlcenM And Criminal
Rocord Chocka On Prospocllvo
Employ- Ara Roqulrod By
Law. Emr,loyment Applications

Fumlahed 3 Roome &amp; Bath,
Claan, No Pate1 Rafwance &amp;
O.poaH Requi,..G. 114-446-1518.

Now Air Condhlonod 1 BodGeneral Maintenance, Palntlng 1
Yard Work Wlndow1 Washea 1gso Naw Moon 10x50, 2br., room, Convenient To Shopping
• Th11tr1, $25SIIIo. • Utflftllla,
Gut1er1 Cl81ntd Light Hauling, $1000. ~75-7634.
814-446-21157.
Commerlcal, Realdentlal, Steve:
1872 Elcona 12I60 With 111111
614-446-&lt;4148.
Roomane 12x28 Muat
Be Nice 3 br. 1pl:. In Middleport,
Georgn Por1able Sawmill, don't Movod, $6,000, Firm. 814-388- :8.::14:..:·11112=-6115=::8:..:.- - - - haul your logs to lhe milt jult 9821.
an. Ndroom turnl•hld •part.
call 304-675·1957.
ment In Middleport, call 614-882·
11173 Now Moon 12&gt;10 2 Bod- 5225
or 814-aa2·5304.
Min P•ula'a Day Care Center roome, Gat Heat, New C.rpet,

Contract Gallla County Cook •
R~utr..

1 bedroom apart·
ment, all ul:llllltt fumlehed,
5250/mo., 814-8411-2528.
Fumlthed

31 Homes for Sale

W/a~aorlll,

1\Nj) A SI X· P ""K
of M IC{; !

• A G 4
+I 0

EEK &amp; MEEK

palnl tin, tronl ond, bnkla,
good,

hood toPt k»oks/runa
$2600. ~5-5128.

root

14S l.C Rugor Blaekhowk, Mn·
rick pump ehot gun 12ga. 2 btr·
Nit, 15' ..V'" Hull ~at, trall1r,
10hp molor. 304-t'r&amp;-4338 after

EOH.

··1 to ld yo u to le t the pa 1nt dry before
sw1tchmg the fa n back o n 1"

polio

Fumlohod EHieloney $165/Mo.
U111111oa Pold, Sharo Bolh, 607
Sooond AVI.L Golllpolla, 114-4464'116 Anor 1 ~.M.

&amp; movlea. C.H tl14-44&amp;-2568 .

my home tor
m, atartlng
In lite September. References
requlr.ct, It lnt.,.etld pi• ..•

cond. 304-7'1'3-42111.

12,000 BTU Amana 110 Von
UIOCI 1 Yoar S285, 614-8374168.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jockaon Pika
lrom 5222 lo $285. Wolk to ohop

llonol. 1-i0().~2..0738.

1" 1ZZ A

10" table . . . w/cabllltlt, $71.,

10"ll!O'

Plclc..Up,

1i78 CJ 5 )Hp, OIW whMII,

VJ oW I MY FA Vot&lt; ITe l

814-37$-8888.

call 614-992-3711. EOH.

Fumlohad Enlelency 701 Fourth
Avonua, Galllpotlo, S2201Mo.
·Utllltl .. Pakt, 114 446 4411 Aher
7 P.M.

~·1'141.

1m Chevrolet 4x4

Shon Whool Boao. LoCo Of Now
Portolll14-446-2640.

10 lneh Craftlman Table Saw, 2
Horae Power Direct Ortv-. C.M
Table, Like New, Aaldng S250,

IXC: .

Of 1-8()().gQi;!~$6.

NHd 3
Motivated

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Roome I Bath, No Khchen,
$200/Mo. All Utllhl11 Included,
614-446-7133,
BltwMn Sl:30
·5:00.

AVONI All arNe. Need 1xtr1
money or want a nrwr, either
way--c all Marilyn. 304-882-264S

El:pinelon I

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
tor Rent

39 Part of graph
40Tory's foe
42 Cloth measure
43 Potato, e .g .
45 Extremist
49Faded away
53 Court
54 Slippery fish
55 Guileless

..-R-I_P_T_O-C---,

I IB I I

ughler drove

down tl e street at a very reasonable speed. I told her how
proud I was but she sa id that
everyone goes the speed limit
it they are followed by a- -- . .

19 O

Complete the chuckle qu oted
.
•
•
•
.
1
•
bv fdhng rn rhe mr~~ong wo rds
.___.__..__,_........_.___, you develop from step No ) belo w

1

A PR INT NUMBERED
~ lfTTfRS

I'

3

I' 1 1· I' I' 1· I" I' I

@)~~~AMBLE
TTERS
SCRAM-LOS ANSWERS
Embark - Plaid- Jingo - Morose - LIKE DOGS
A co-worker was always fawning over the boss. I told
the boss to be careful ot flatterers who act like friends,
because even wolves look LIKE DOGS .

JULY 281

�12-The Dally Sentinel
•

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
He re· s an update on young
Mary Rankin who has had su many
difficulti es to face since she was
struck by an auto on Route 7 in
Tuppers Plain s over eight years
3£0.

Mary sti ll has to wear braces to
her knees and al though that' s not
one of her favo rllc thmgs , she
ha11gs on w1th them hoping that her
knees will continue to get bcuer
Jnd onr day she can shed the
brJCCS.
The big excitement in Mary' s
life right now is that she will be
Jblc to show hogs at the Meigs
Co unty Fa1r next month. II has
been her ambition to be able to do
that and although she may have
some trouble walking on the sand,
gravel, sawdu st, whatever, at the
fairgrounds. she 'll be right there to
show her pigs, Barney and Baby
Bop. She 's enjoying caring for
them and has worked every day to
learn to say the 4-H pledge. She
kn ows what she needs 10 say but
has been left, so far, with some
speech problems. Mary, however,
just doesn't give up-she's a deter·
mined survivor. If you spot Mary
at the fair be sure to give her a big
"hi" . You're gonna get a big smile
in return.
Mary's Molher, Connie Rankin.
al so hang s right in there to give
Mary a great deal of suppor t.
Although th e accident did occ ur
over eight years ago, it's still a very
vivid picture for Connie who says
it seems that the misfortun e hap·
pened only yesterday. Connie fee ls
that Mary is doing extremely well.
The train show is underway at
the Meigs Libra ry in Pomeroy.
Hours arc 12 noon to 9 p.m.
through Friday; 12 noon to 5 p.m·.
Saturday and from I to 5 p.m. on
Sunda y. There's no admission
charge. Drop by. You'll enjoy it.
Tunc number e igh t in th e
" Whatsa Name of That Song?"
contest really cut down the entries.
In fact, to well less than half the
number who have been naming the
tunes every week before number
eighl came onto !he scene.

According to the comments I
get, some of you do enjoy the contest even though you don't submit
enuies . Thinking about the old
songs apparently brings back a lot
of good memori es. Hey. That
ain't all bad.
Only IS people correctly named
tunc eight which is "Life is Just a
Bowl of Cherries". Those coming
up with the right answer include
Louise Hall, M1ddlepon: Pauline
Wolfe, Racine; Martha Hoover,
Pomeroy;
Ramona
Hawk,
Pomeroy;
Lo rena
Beegle,
Pomeroy: Belly Denny, Middleport; Rita White, Cheshire; Mildred
Milburn, Middleport; Marie Boyd,
Racine; Betty Curfman. Syracuse;
Mary Roush, Racine; Mazie Han·
nahs, Pomeroy: Louise E. Gloeckner, Pomeroy; Joan Mescher, Syra·
cuse, and Ruth Younl( of Middle·
port. An entry for tune seven by
Mrs. Lora A. Russell , Mason, W.
Va., was apparently held up considerably in the ma1ls. She did correctly identify that song, "My Hap·
piness".
And here arc some of !he lyrics
of a so ng copyrig ht ed in 1925
which has survived preuy well over
!he years.
"I t' s been said she knocks 'em
dead.
"When she lands in town,
"Si nce she ca me why it 's a
shame,
"How she cools 'em down."
Can you identify tune nine? If
so send your guess to Box 729-B,
in care of The Daily Sentinel,
Court St., Pomeroy, or drop it by
!he Sentinel office.
Winning the $5 prize for correc tly identifying tun e eight is
Loretta Beegle, 300 Spring Ave. ,
Pomeroy, who consistently comes
up with the correc t titles for our
songs. Your check is in !he mail,
Loretta.
The Ohio Penitentiary wall in
Columbus has been brought down.
One suggestion has been made that
pi eces of the wall be sold to the
publi c. What was that you were
saying about a fool and his money
being soon paned? Do keep smil·
in g.

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is Board of Education regular meet·
published as a free service to ing 7 p.m. at the high school.
non·profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
POMEROY - Pomeroy group
events. The calendar is not of AA, Thursday , 7 p.m., Sacred
de sig ned to promote sales or . Heart Catholic Church.
rundraisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
RACINE - Racine Post 602,
cannot be guaranteed to run a American Legion, Auxiliary, 7 p.m
specific number of days.
Thursday at the post home. ·
THURSDAY
PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet at 7
p.m . Thursday at the home of
trustee Eugene Long for its regular
meeting.

SATURDAY
DANVILLE - Weekend ser·
vices, Danville Church of Christ, 7
p.m Saturday, 10:30 and 6 p.m.
Sunday. Denver Hill, Foster, W.
Va. speaker. Public invited.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Women 's Fellowship, Thursday,
7:30 p.m ., Pomeroy Church of
Christ.

RACINE - Free music at Star
Mill Park Saturday at 7 p.m. Free
Country to perform. Public invited.

POMEROY - Free clothing
day, 10 a.m. to noon at the Salva·
tion Army 115 Bunernut Ave .,
Pomeroy.
RUTLAND- Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary, spe·
cia! session, Thursday 7 p.m. at fire
station. Plans for annual street festival on Sept. 3.
RACINE - Free immunization
clinic for children, Racine Fire
Departrnem, 9 a.m. to I I a.m.; and
1 to 3 p.m. at Chester Fire Department
RACINE -

Southern Local

Alfred UM
women

meet

Martha Poole led the program
"No More of This/Stoppi ng the
Harmful Touch"· when Alfred
UMW met recently at the home of
Nina Robinson and Clara Follrod.
The increase in domestic vio·
lcnce , !he historical background of
pennillcd vio lence, and the inOu ence of violence on children were
discussed. Education, counselin g,
group therapy, and shelters for the
abused were proposed as remedies.
The business meeting opened
with prayer by Ruth Brooks and
group si nging of "The Touch of
His Hand on Mine." Twenty-four
rricndship cal ls were reported.
Ne lli e Parker gave a brief
review of "Joy of Service," a read·
ing program book. Sarah Caldwell
wi ll report on the making of AIDS
quilts for babies. The society also
discu ssed serv ing a t a sa le in
August and purchasing greeting
cards for the church.
Mrs. Robinson gave the prayer
calendar report for Charloue Van
Meter, who chose Li nda Ray in
education work in Zaire. The group
signed a birthday card for her.
The! rna Hend e rs on gave the
mission report, "It Couldn't Be" by
Violct Kanonuhua of Zimbabwe
whose co usin died of AIDS.
Reports show th at six million
adults and seven million children in
the world arc affected by this dis·
ease.
Mr s. Robinson serve d ice
cream, cake, bugles and nuts dur·
ing the social hour. Members present were Aorcnce Spencer, Thel ma Henderson, Osie Follrod,
Martha Poole, Nellie Parker, Clara
Follrod, Sarah Caldwell and Nina
Robinson. Guests were Marilyn
Robinson and Ruth Brooks.
The next meeting will be Aug.
23 at the church. Thelma Henderson will be !he hostess and lead the
program.

Hart attends
conference
Ethel Hart recently returned
from the Mod ern Woodme n of
America Merit Club Leadership
Conference in Orlando, Fla. She
was one of 342lcaders who earned
this trip. While there, she aucnded
workshops with other youth service
leaders from 34 Slates.
This conference was held in
conjunction with Modern Woodmen 's 37111 Quadrennial National
Convention. Approximately 3,000
delegates, Youth Service Club
leaders, field representati vcs and
guests were in auendanee at the
Manion World Center in Orlando.
Modern Woodmen, a fraternal
life insurance society, is headquar·
tered in Rock Island, Illinois.

SUNDAY
HOBSON - Special singing
Sunday at 7:30p.m . at Hobson
Christian Union Church featuring
Bill Ward Gospel Trio and Rev.
Charles Curry.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
will host an ice cream social at
6:30 p.111. Saturday at the church.

CHESTER - Chester High
Class of 1931 will hold its annual
reunion Sunday at the Chester Fire
House at I p.m. Bring basket dinner.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains VFW will host a
square dance with CJ and. the
Country Gc.ntlemcn at the post
from 8-11 p.m. Saturday. Admission is $5 per couple and $3 for
singles.

. POMEROY - The Calvary
Bible Church on Pomeroy Pike will
hold a revival through Sunday
each night at 7:30 p.m. Blaine Far:
ley will be !he evangelist.

DANVILLE - Dcnm Hill of
Foster, W.Va., will speak at the
Danville Church of Christ at 7 p.m.
Saturday and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. The public is welcome.

DARWIN- The descendants
of Tommy Gilkey and Milda Jane
Hudnall will hold a reunion Sunday
at the roadside park on state Route
33 south of Darwin. A potluck dinner w1ll be served at noon. Bring
table service and folding chairs.

Pick 3:

822
Pick 4:

7841
Buckeye 5:

13-17-24-32-33

Page4

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA
549 ~VEl ·~I, NVOICE MEANS~ ••

en tine

VALUES!

Vol, 45, NO. 61

Copyright 1994

By
rk Ill &amp; Universal

REDA schedules
meeting to outline
development goals

LARGE SELECTIO~
STARTING AT... ~

Dy KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
As a Cirst step toward a possible
coordmat10n of efforts, the Region·
al Economic Development AssociatiOn w1ll ask officials and busi·
ness men in Gallia, Meigs and
Mason counties to help back a cen·
tralized development support office
bas ed at the University of Rio
Grande.
A meeting with public and pri·
vatc sector leaders hosted by
REI?A will outline the organiza·
lion s goals, cx pl~in the need for
employmg a REDA director and
describe the newly-founded Center
for Economic Development at Rio
Grande.
The meeting will be Monday,

$19,43365*
Prices Quoted Include Rebate Where Applicable. Tax, Title &amp; Fees Extra.

GET ANY IN STOCK CAR OR TRUCK AT
~:::ICE
OR ORDER ANY FORD, LINCOLN, OR MERCURY TO
YOUR SPECIFICATIONS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE!

$49

WHAT'S NIW ·IN USED?
1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

2 Dr., V·B, auto., am/fm cass.,
climate control, ps, pb, pw,
pi, p. seat, tilt, cruise, leather.
Much, much more.

Signature, V-8, auto., climate
control, am/fm cass., ps, pb,
pw, pi, pwr. seat, tilt, cruise,
leather, moon roof, much
more.

Executive Series, V-6, auto.,
Climate Control, am/fm cass.,
tilt, cruise, ps, pb, pw, pi, p.
seat, leather, moon roof,

528,449

5

27,949

more.

525,949

1992 CADILLAC
BROUGHAM

1991 CHRYSLER
IMPERIAL

1993 FORD
TAURUS

V-8, auto., Climate Control,
amllm cass., tilt, cruise, ps,
pb, pw, pi, p. seat, leather,
padded top, low miles more.

Marx Crosa Edition, V-6,
auto., climate control, tilt,
cruise, ps, pb, pw, pi, p. aeat,
Infinity stereo, leather &amp;
more. Only 14,000 miles.

4 Dr., V-8, auto., air conditioning, am/lm case., ps, pb,
pw, pi, p. seat, tilt, cruise, air
bag- more.
Stock 118970

519,949

514,449

512,949

•

1994 LINCOLN

MARK VIII
auto., climate ,.nntr...t
tilt, cruise, ps, pb, pw, pl.,
pwr. seat, leather,
stereo and more. Only
10,000 miles.
V-8,

1994 FORD F150
FLARESIDE 4X4

1994 FORD
RANGER XLT 4X2

V-8, auto., XLT Lariat, pw, pi,
pa, pb, tilt wheel, cruise,
am!fm cass., alum. wheels,
air bag, etc.

4 cyl., 5 speed; air cond., ps,
pb, am!fm cassette, rear step
bumper, gauges, sliding
back glaaa, more.

$19,949

.s11,249

1992 CHEVY
CAMARO

1992 PLYMOUTH
ACCLAIM 4 DR.

Automatic, air conditioning,
tilt, cruise, am/lm atereo, CD
player, pa, pb, gaugea, redl

4 cylinder, automatic, air
eondltlonlng, ps, pb, tilt,
cruise, am/lm stereo, rear
defroster.

510,449

1993 FORD E1 SO
MARK Ill CONVERSION

Aug . 15 at 7 p.m. in Rio Grande's
Wood Hall auditori um . REDA
members plan to have its goals and
a job description ready for prescnlatton, and seek participation and
financial commitment for a budget
to employ the REDA director and
fund the director's activities.
While REDA' s goals arc to be
finalized prior to the meeting, its
director would work out of the Rio
Grande center to coordinate , supplement and assist each county 's
moves to attract industry and JObs
to the area, REDA member and
Gallipolis banker Jeff Smith
explained when REDA met Thurs·
day at Rio Grande.
"We want to provide an organi·
zation for regional economic development activity under the center,
because we' re not convinced each
county can afford to employ a person to handle each of !he respective
counties' needs," Smith said.
" It just makes sense that three

counties with one professional and
one budget should work," he
added.
The center, recently approved
by the university's board of
uustccs, has received $16,000 in
startup money prov idcd by grants
from AT&amp;T and Buckeye Rural
Electric Coopcmtivc.
In addition to REDA, two olher
organizations - the Wood Focus
Products Group and the Southeastem Ohio Regional Council - have
agreed to be allied with the center,
Smith said.
Using the center as an umbrella ,
REDA will seck support to fund a
budget for its director. who would
be involved in development pro·
jects in each of the counties that
seek !he center's help. The univer·
sity will serve as the fiscal agent
and provide office space.
"I think the only organization
that can pull it off is Rio Grande
because of the broad base of sup-

port it enjoys m the area's counties," Smilh said.
He added that the proposal
wo uld not on ly foster intcrsta le
cooperation between the Ohio
River counties, but has the paten·
tial to he a pilot program that could
eventually atuact federal funding.
Several people attracted to the
regional concept have "expressed
an interest in the job," Smith said.
REDA member and Point Pleasant businessman Jack Fruth said
Mason County, whi ch ha s been
without a development authority
director since January , is interested
in the proposal.
Members also learned that the
idea will have to be presented to
Gallia County lcadeiS, while Meigs
County - which currently operates
a development office - is also
interested, but needs more infonna·
tion before making any decisions.
Overtures may also be made to
(Continued on Page 3)

COLUMBUS (AP) - State school Superintendent Ted Sanders has
created two school funding panels and given them a formidable task:
develop an equitable system and do it before !he end of the year.
Sanders on Thursday appointed a nine-member committee of school
finance spec ialists and State Board of Education members to redesign !he
current funding system that a judge in Perry County declared unconstitutional .
Sanders also created a 46-mcrnber panel of advisers made up mainly of
education groups to critique the proposals before they are presented to the
Slate board .
Formation of the committees comes as !he state prepares to appeal its
loss of a school funding lawsuit.
It also coincides with Tuesday' s special elections that fmd 35 school
money issues at stake in a fraction of the state's 6 I 2 districts.
Secretary of State Bob Taft said 30 school property tax levies, two
school district income taxes, and lhrec school construction bond issues are
before voters.
Common Pleas Judge Linton D. Lewis Jr. ruled July I that the current
school funding system produced disparities in per pupil spending among
dlSlrtCIS.
He said the differences deprive students of educational rights the Ohio
Constitution guarantees.
'
Members of the finance group Sanders appointed include some wit·
nesses from the trial in New Lexington.
Sanders said he chose experts who testified for the state, the Ohio
Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Funding, and the Alliance for
Adequate School Funding.
"I am calling them together now not to argue the constitutionality of
our funding system, but to usc their different philosophies and approaches
to 1den~fy remedtes to our fundmg problems as framed by Judge Lewis,"
Sanders said in a news release.
The coalition, a ~up of more than 500 of the state's 612 districts,
filed the lawsuit agamst the state. The alliance represents 58 weallhy dis·
tricts.
Lewis ordered Sanders and the State Board of Education to develop
proposals for elimination of weallh based disparities and present them to
the Legislature.
State aid to schools comes from the income, sales and other taxes.
Lpcal districts rely on real estate taxes to raise money. Because propeny
is worth more in some districts than others, identical tax rates produce far
different amounts of money.
Sanders asked both panels to complete their work in time for the state
board to make legislative and budget recommendations to Voinovich and
the Geneml Assembly at the end of the year.

Council
gives nod
to budget

$20,949
1991 HONDA
CIVIC DX
4 Dr., 4 cylinder, air condltlonlng, pa, pb, amlfr(l cassette, rear defroster, more.

f

BELPRE (AP) - An oil tank
ncar this southeast Ohio city leaked
an estimated 1,200 gallons of crude
oil into a pasture and a creek, a
Division of Wildlife officer said.
The leak found about 8:30 p.m.
Thursday came from 'I valve·on the
tank, said Officer Charlie Stone.
The oil posed no lhreat to nearby
residences, he said.
The tank, described as a stan·
dard-sized oil well, is in a pasture
about two miles from Belpre.
A small amounl of the oil had
reached the creek, Stone said. A
crew prepared Thursday night to
siphon off the oil.
''The majority of it is in the
immediate area of the well and a
pasture," Stone said. well and a
pasture," Stone said.
The tank is operaled by Constitution Petroleum.
Stone would not speculate on
the cause of the leak, other than to
say it appeared to be an accident.
The Department of Natural
Resoun:es' division of oil and gas
was supervising the cleanup.

Racine Village Council accepted
a deficit budget of about $10 000
for fiscal year 1995 at its r~ent
council meeting.
Anticipated income for 199 ~/
will be $208,013.08, while e~pen
cs will be $218,328.58, Mayt~' ;• ·
Thornton said.
,a
But because of a carryovc~''e
ance f~m the 1994 budget, th •
!age wtll end 1995 in the blac.
.
added.
Both the general and cemeterJ
fund expenses outstripped income '
Thornton said.
'
In other action, council:
• discussed the Greenwood
Cemetery finances.
• talked about di smantling the
Cross Mill building and asked the
project coordinator to bring the
architect's plans for the museum to
the next council meeting.
• voted to accept estimates to
repair the fire hall roof. Council
members warned against waiting
too long for repairs since !he metal
substructure might rust. The coun cil agreed to buy a new door and
frame for the fire hall 's kitchen
door.
• listened to concerns about the
squad building downspout.
• authorized the purchase of two
uniforms for the marshal and
deputy marshal.
• approved vacation time in
August for Sueet Commissioner
Glenn Rizer, and named Allen Wil son as his substitute.
• authorized buying a bauery for
the police hand-held radio.
• set the next meetin~ for 7 p.m.
(Continued on Page 3)

·n

NOT TOO HAPPY - Tbree-year-old Mallory Guthrie, daughler of Mr. and Mrs. Troy
Guthrie, was not too happy about leUing judge
Sally Stapleton or Gallia County, right, look
over the pantsuit with matching hat outnt which

Leaking tank
fouls creek,
pasture area

Ralaed roof, 351 V-8, auto.,
dual ale, tilt, cruise, all power
equip., TV, VCR, power aola,
much more. Only 1o,ooo
mllea .

sa,449

A Multlm.... Inc. Newapa.,...

State schools chief
assembles panels
to equalize funding

..

1994 LINCOLN
MARK VIII

2 Sectlono, 12 Pagee 35 ..., ..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 29, 1994

Economic grotJp reaching out

CONVERSION VAN

ORDERED UNITS...
NO EXTRA CHARGE

Tonight, cloudy, showen and
thunder.;torms. Low In 60s.
Saturday, cloudy. High In 80s.

•

' '

•j

Ohio Lottery

Rogers
perfect in
victory

Pioneer Club member Heather Well, 16, made
as her 4-H project in tbe "Sewing for Others"
category. The annual 4·H clothing style review
will be held at Meigs High School at ' :30
tonight.

Pomeroy residents voice
zoning concerns at hearing

BED TO BENCH - All old bed became BD attractive bench In
12·year-old JOilb Hager's 4-H project in wood recycUngiDd refinishing. Hager or Tuppers PlaiDs, sbow here using bls project, Is a
member of the Alfred Livestock 4-H club. He said the project took
about three weeks to complete.

About 25 residents of the MuJ.
berry Heights neighborhood in
Pomeroy attended a meeting of the
Pomeroy Zoning Review Board
Wednesday night to voice their
concerns on a proposed business in
the area.
. James E. Althof, Ph.D., is seek·
ing a variance in the village's zoning ordinance to allow him to place
an office in a building in an area
currently zoned as urban-residen·
tial.
Nearby property owners, on the
other hand, are concerned about the
proposed office affecting their
propc7ty values.
Dick Follrod's comments
seemed to mirror the sentiments of
the assembled property owners,
and he brought wilb him Pomeroy
auorney Jennifer Sheets, who
spoke on the criteria needed for
granting of a varience.
The residents' concerns are that
commercial ventures into the area
will devalue their propeny through
increased traffic flow, unattractive
parking loiS, and trash and debris.

Allhof, a psychologtst who currently has an office in a nearby
medical building by Veterans
Memorial Hospital, said that his
therapy is be ncr administered in a
home-like environment
Pomeroy Village Administrator
John Anderson spoke brieny, giving the village's view that the zon·
ing ordinance be kept intact and no
variances be gran~_. .
'

. The zoning review board conS!Sltng of chairwoman Belly Daronick, Wayne Davis, Don Thomas
Frank Vaughan and Leonard Jew:
ell, has 30 days to render its deciSIOn.
Other village officials present
were Mayor John W. Blaeunar and
counctlmen Larry Wehrung and
John Musser.

W.Va. authorities hunt
missing Racine youths
A search is underway at the
Canaan Valley State Parll: in west
Virginia for two Racine area
youths who disapP.eared around
noon Thursday while out piclting
blackberries with one of the boy's

grandfather.

Reported missing are Ryan Hill
12, son of Dwight and Lorna Hili
of Lelart, and .Chris Randolph 13
son of Julie and Steve Rand~lph:

Racine.
The ~earch began soon after
Gary Gt~lis, who was with the
youths, diScovered them missing
a~d it continued throughout th~
mghL Gibbs is the grandfalher 0 f
the Randolph youdl.
At II :45 a.m. this morning (Fri _
d~y) he~tcopters were reported!
JOtmng m the search, a local rei &gt;:
uve reponed.
a

..

/

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="363">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9735">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31387">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31386">
              <text>July 28, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3846">
      <name>fryar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6296">
      <name>schad</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
