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                  <text>TuesdaiAugust3D,1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

China, U.S. in
new relationship,
trade rep says

Priest killing portends
era of violence

a~ain~t Haiti~~nw~!~~~~c~s

By U~A M. ~lAM .
·
Associated Press Wnter
PORT·AU ·PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
·est
- Th c am b ush sIaymg Of a Pn
and supporter of c•ilcd President
Jean·Beruand Ari stidc may foretell
f
. nee against
aHan .c.~a 0 . op.cn/Io 1.c romment
Ill s aCUviSl c erg)· a P
pnest warned.
The Rev . Jcan ·Marie Vince nt,
gunned down late Sunday outside
his home, was the first pries t ever
assassilllltcd in Haiu.
•' Probab ly it is the beginning
and we have 10 "peel that many
ot hers will fo llow," the Rev.
Antoine Adncn said at a news con·
ferencc Monday .
The death shocked the pro·Aris·
tide community and shattered an
apparent taboo again st ki ll ing
priests that had protected the clergy
after the mi litary seized power m a
Septcmhcr 199 1 coup.
.
"Th is was a message to Ans·
tide," Claudcue Werlcigh, a mi nis·
tcr ifl Aris ude's government·i n·
exil e. said by te lep hone from
Was hin gto n. "They're showi ng
th~t nobody 111 Ha1ti is safe anymore.
111 a statement fro m Washing·
ton. Arist ide ca ll ed Vince nt "a
champ ion of democracy. self·detcrminauon and empowerment. "
Secretary of Sta te Warren
Christopher called Vmcent' s death
"a uagK and sad renection of the
sta te of brutal repression and via·
lence that characte rizes li fe in Haiti
today."

the street from the Congregation of
· F h h d
Mon tforta1n at ers ea quarters
shot the 49·ycar·old Vmcent, said
·
f
Jean· Yv~s Urfie, coordmator o the
Crcole·lan~uagc weekly Libete.
Authonl iCS qmckl y took away
VIncent's body and car, Urfie said,
reading a statement signed by 53
·
. d
f h H
pncs ts an nuns o l e ai ti an
Conference of ReligiOn.
The body had nO! been released
as of late Monday, Adricn saJd.
Fnends said Vmccnt had recent·
ly received dea th threa ts, wh1ch he
fear~ anUc1pated a purge .of Aris·
ude s supporters. . . . .
Vmccnt sa vedb Ard1sUde sbel1fe on
Aug. 23. I987 , Y !vmg tween
h1m and a ba nd of thugs w1th
machetes dun ng an elecuon cam·
pa1g n. V an ce nt suffered head
wounds m the auack.
Hund reds of members of Tet
Ansanm (Heads Together), a ~­
ant mo vement he led mHa111 s
remote. Nort hwest Dt stnct, had
bee n k11l ed th at July by former
members of the Tanton Macoutes,
the dreaded militi a of Haiti 's 29·
year Duv ali er dyn as ty, and by
peasants loyal to large landowners.
The November 1987 election s
were canceled after months of the
army-orc hestrated terror. Aristide
was elec ted by a landslide in
Decemb er 1990, but was overthrown the following September.
Vincent continued his work with
th e poor. He rai sed money for
SJ3SH OO!S groups, helped peasants

Eight-day trade
mission paves
way for improved
political relations

PRIEST KILLING - A woman stands outside tbe cbur(b In
Port-au-Prince where tbe Rev_Jean-Marie Vincent was killed last
night to mourn his death Monday. Vincent, a rriend or exiled
Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Arlstide, was gunned down by
unidentified gunmen at approximately 8:30 p.m. Sunday. (AP
Photo/Rick Bowmer)
I md better markets for their crops
and channeled money from Europe,

Canada and the United States. to
small neighborhood businesses.

By CHARLICN IC L. FU
A.'i.~ ociate d Press Writer
BEUING (AP) -China and the
United States are developing a new
commercial relationsh ip that takes
into account China's ec onomic
clout and paves the way for better
political relations, U.S. Commerce
Secretary Ron Brown said today.
Noting that China is the world's
fastes t growing economy , Brown
said that by 2000 China's economy
wiU likely be one-third larger than
Japan's.
Brown is the fust U.S. Cabinet·
level official to visit China since
May, when Pres ident Clinton
decided nO! to make China's trade
benefits contingent on its human
rights record. He is on an eight·day
trade mi ss ion with 24 heads of
major American corporations.
' ' The goal of this busines s
development mission is to build a
trade and investment relationship
that will be the foundation of a
growing political and cultural rela·
tionship, and bring economic benefits to our nations and our people."
Brown said.

Brown said a better relationship
between the two countries would
advance strategic and human rights
objectives.
It will give the Chinese ' 'the
tools nee ded to co ntinue their
astounding growth and to nurture
their economic reforms, while fur.
ther ope ning China's vast market to
Am erica n firm s," he sa id in a
speech to the U.S.-China Business
Council.
Brown emphasized that Arneri·
can businesses intend to compete
and win against international com·
petition for contracts in China But
they need to move quickly, he said.
Personal relationships arc cru·
cia! to doing business in China, and
so companies that get the first con·
tracts for such things as subways,
airports and power stations " will
have advantages las ting into the
next century. " he said.
He estimated over a quarter of a
trillion doUars of infrastructure projects will start up in China before
2000.
Brown and Chinese Fore ign
Trade Minister Wu Yi signed an
agreement on Monday that sets up
a permanent system of talks to
smooth the way for more trade and
invesunent.
Brown called the framework " a
tool to resolve differences that slow
the spread of private sector agreements.' '

World population conference: View from an Egyptian village
Sex is tabu subject in Egypt
By KHA LED DAWOUD
Associated Press Writer
TlLWANA , Egypt (AP) - Not
far from where th ousand s of
experts are to disc uss controlling
the world population, the concept
of disc uss tng sex is so shameful
that a teacher has stapled closed six
pages of a science book.
Saeed Mohamed believes he
saved hi s school when he prevented his ll · year-old students from

sec 1ng drawin gs of male and
female sex organs.
" If I didn' t do that, the parents
would hav e destroyed the school
building for teaching shameful
matters to their children," he said.
In Tilwana, sex is rarely mentioned in public .
It remind s people of "bad
things that take place between men
ing" women would be ~eeted wil,h
confusion or anger m T1lwana. It IS

and women, " explains Aziza
Abdei ·Atti, a nurse and mother of
fi ve who runs the local family planning clinic.
Tilwana, a town of almost
10,000 people, is just 40 miles
north of Cairo. But it seems a
world away from where thousands
of experts will gather next week for
the United Nation s Population
Conference.
Delegate discussions of sex education, abortion and "empower-

typical of villages in the Third
World where conservative religious
beliefs, poverty and ignorance are a
challenge to population planners.
" People in underdeveloped
countries like ours arc struggling to
combat illiteracy," said Abdel
Fatah Ahmed, the veterinarian in
Tilwana. "If people here don't
have education at all in the first
place, how can I teach them about
sex?"

Illiteracy is estimated at 53 percent in Egypt overall - 64 percent
in rural areas. According to a U.N.
report, 960 million people in the
world arc illiterate. two-thirds of
them women.
But conversations in Tilwana
are a reminder that sexual habits
are tied not just to education but to
religious beliefs.
Mohammed, the reacher, smiled
as he proudly anoounced that "200
percent of our villa~e' s females
practice circumcision ' - removal

of the clitoris.
"It is God' s order," he said. "It
makes women clea'ler and more
respectable. Western women arc
more sexually loose because they
don't practice circumcision."
Female circumcision is not practiced in most Islamic countries,
however, and Egyptian feminists
argue it results not from religion
but from men's desire to control
women by limiting their enjoyment
of sex.
Dr. Azi z Khattab. director of
Egypt's program for population
education, said a paper he will
deliver at the Cairo conference based on 30 years experience explains how sexually ignorant
Egyptians are.
Khattab recalled being asked
whether mastwbation causes tuberculosis. And he said some Egyptians replied "jinns" - spirits when asked about the cause of
male sterility.

In Tilwana, even the educated
resist the idea of sex education, citing Islamic beliefs.
"We have to maintain the values of our Muslim society," said
Nour Ali, a pharmacist. He said
teaching children about sex "will
make them curious to know more
about it and maybe practice it
themselves."
Islamic teachings prescribe 100
lashes for men and women who
have premarital sex, but in fact the
women are sometimes murdered by
fathers or brothen to uphold family
honor.
In Tilwana, Ali said, young couples caught having sex "are forced
to marry in the police station to
avoid family feuds."
As for providing information on
safe abortion, Ali said this would
only encourage adultery. "If a
woman commits a mistake, " he
said, "she sbould be punished and
not allowed to have an abonion.''
·•

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!
MINING EXPLOSION - This is an undated
file photo or the main shaft or tunnel or the government-owned Philippine Naitonal Oil Company's coal mine in Malan~as town in Zamboanga

Del Sur, 500 miles south of Manila which WIIS
the site or an e:rP.Ioslon Monday night Aug. 29.
The explosion killed at least 62 workers in the
country's worst mining disaster. (AP Photo/GN)

Coal mine explosion kills at least 79
By OUVER TEVFS
Associated Press Writer
MANILA, Philippines (AP) An explosion in a coal mine owned
by the state-run Philippine National
Oil Co. killed at least 79 workers m
the country's worst mine disaster,
officials said today.
The explosion took place Monday evening at the mine near
Malangas in Zamboanga del Sur
province. a remote area w1th Jl!&gt;Or
communications about 500 mtles
south of Manila.
In a telephone interview from
the provincial capital of Pagadian,
Gov. lsidoro Real Jr. satd 79 bod•es
had been counted by this evening.
He said an estimated 20 to 30 more

workers were believed missing.
The Philippines' worst previous
mining disaster occurred m 1983,
when 27 workers died in a coal
mine on Cebu.
Real said relatives of the minen
crowded the site waiting for word
on the workers.
''They were crying, specially
those who were near the tunnel
waiting for their loved ones who
arc still inside. It was a pitiful
sight," he said.
At least nine workers were
flown to Cebu City for treatment of
bums.
Nazario Vasquez, president of
PNOC Energy Corp., which operates the mine, said about 170 min·

ers were thought to be working at
the time of explosion.
He said II miners were injured
by a similar explosion last March.
Vasquez said the blast occurred
when workers, who were about 500
feet underground, hit a pocket of
water and methane.
But Mayor Cecilia Tura quoted
miners as saying the accident was
caused by a dynamite explosion
that mixed with gases.
"I interviewed the miners and
they said there was a blast of dynamite," Tura said in a radio interview. "There was an open fire and
methane gas, carbon dioxide and
carbon monoxide mixed.'·

Sudan, Saudi Arabia withdraw from U.N. conference
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Saudi
Arabia and Sudan are boycotting
next week's United Nations popu·
Jation conference in Cairo follow·
ing criticism by Muslim clerics that
the meeting violates the principles
of Islam.
The Saudi representative at the
United Nations in New York sent a
message earlier this week "regretting they are not going to partici·
pate, " an offici.al at conference
headquarters in Cairo said today.
Sudan's government announced
Monday night it would boycoU the
meeting and urged other Muslim
nations to also withdraw because
the meeting would result in "tht
spread of immoral and irreligioll5
values."
Saudi Arabia and Sudan are the
ftrst countries lcnown to withdraw

from the U.N.-sponsored Internationa! Conference on Population
and Development, which is expect·
ed to draw some 15,000 people to
Cairo beginning SepL 5.
Also today, an Egyptian court
rejected a suit by Muslim fondamentalists aimed at blocking the
conference.
The suit argued that Egypt,
which says its le~al code is based
largely on lslam1c law, could not
hold a conference which runs
counter to Islamic principles. But
the court said the matter was· ootside its jurisdiction because President Hosni Mubarak had the right
to invite the conference to be held
in Egypt.
The meeting is intended to set
guidelines for the next 20 years for
halting the growth in world popula·
·

lion and encouraging economic
development, particularly in the
Third World.
Sudan's minister of social planning, Ali Osman Mohamed Taha,
said in announcing the boycott that
Sudan was trying to organize a
forum for opponents of the meeting.
He also complained that the
conference reflects the views of the ,
United States, telling reporters "a
considerable number'' of conference resolutions reflect the policies
that brought President Clinton to
office.
The complaints about the United
States echoed statements by some
Muslim radicals who have charged
the U.S. government wants to
spread what they regard as immoral
Western values into the Islamic
world.

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•

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Vol. 45, NO. 84
Copyright 111M

2 Soctiono, 14 Pageo 3S centa
A Mu ltimedia Inc. N-opopw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 31,1994

Riffe backs direct hearing of funding appeal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Schools that want to
speed ac tion on an education funding lawsuit with a
direct appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court have picked
up a legislati ve ally .
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said
Tuesday he believes it is a good idea. And Gov.
George Voinovich has not ruled out such a co urse.
The Ohi o Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of
School Funding asked lawyers for the state last week
to join in trying to persuade the state's highest court
to accept the case directly from Perry County.
William Phillis, coalition executive director, said
the group wiU not pursue the idea - which req uires
cooperation of a federal judge as well as the Ohio
Supreme Court - unless state lawyers go along.

He said the federal court is not likely to consider
the matter unless everyone involved agrees.
" It 's a long shot," he said.' "There's no poi nt in
our going out on a limb with thi s wi thout the state
bei ng in agreement. "
In addition to the Perry County case lhat deals
with claims under the Ohio Constitution, the coalition has a similar case pending in U.S. District Court
that raises federal issues.
The coalition wants to ask federal Judge John
Holschuh to certify the Perry County decision direc tly to the Ohio Supreme Court.
Riffe. D·Wheelersburg, on Tuesday endorsed the
coalition proposal to bypass appellate courts to save

time.
' 'That wou ld be some thing I would suppon ,
because l thi nk that's the coun that should make the
decision," Riffe told reporters after a non· voting scs·
sian of the House.
"They arc elected by a ll the people of this state. It
affects every sc hool district in this state. That's the
court that shoul d be mak ing the dec ision, I've said
thai right from the 'k1rt," he said .
Voi novich, who directed Attorney General Lee
Fisher to appeal the swte's loss of the lawsuit, will
discuss the matter with his lawyers as well as Fi, h·
er's office.
" The govern or sa id that it's so mething he'd have
to talk to his lawyers about before maki ng a dcci&lt; i•1n

Columbia Gas
rejects offer

... ...
~

Economy
continues
expand
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government's chief fore castin g
gauge of future economic activity
was unchanged in July after
increasing by modest amounts the
previous two months, the govern·
ment said today.
The performan ce is slightl y
stronger than anticipated by analysts , who said in advance of the
report they expected a small
decline that would be consistent
with other evidence that economic
expansion is continuing , but at a
reduced pace.
The Commerce Deparunent also
said its latest figures confirm earlier estimates that the Index of Leading I!conomic Indicators was up
0.2 percent in June and 0. I percent
in May.
The gauge remains at 101.5, its
aU-time high since the government
initiated the measurement in 1948.
It has now risen in 10 of the last 12
months.
Three of the 11 components of
the index advanced, led by higher
raw material prices. Also, building
permits were up and there were
fewer weekly initial claims for
unemplo"(ment insurance.
Six o the components retreated.
They were fewer factory orders for
consumer goods, a decline in consumer expectations, faster business
delivery times that usually are a
sign of decreasing orders, a shorter
average work week, fewer unfiUed
orders for durable goods and lower
stock prices.
The Commerce Deparunent said
the money supply iocreased slightly and business onlers for plant and
equipment decreased slij!htly, but
their contributions to the mdex canceled each other ouL
Today's report appears to support other recent data that suggest
the economy is expanding at a
moderate pace. Analysts said if the
trend holds, it could forestall for
months any further increases in
interest rates by the Federal
Reserve.

CHA RLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Co lumbia Gas Sys tem In c.
rejected a Philadelph ia invcsuncnt
group's offer to acqu ire and reorganize th e company because its proposal was " fatally nawed, " the
company chairman said.
Dimeli ng, Schreiber &amp; Park, a
firm that specialiles in bu ying
co mpanies out of Chap ter II ,
announced th is week. th at it and
other investors made an offer to

buy $500 million of newly issued
stock and elect a new slate of offi.
cers for the company.
Columbia Gas System of Wilmington, Del., and its subsidiaries,
includin g
Charle ston-based
Columbia Gas Tr.ansmission Corp.,
have been in Chapter II bankruptcy since July 1991.
Columbia Gas Transmission
employs 1,600 people in West Virgtma.

Plans announced for
Racine Fall Festival

HERBALIST HERITAGE- The River
Valley Herbalists are preparing for two Septem1\er events that will feature their dedication to
these medicinal and culinary plants. Weeding
the herb gardens in Middleport's Dave Diles
Park are one-year-old Alaine Arnold, her moth-

er Denise Arnold and Connie Hill. The herbalists will have displays during the Sepl. 17 Middleport River Festival, while the fifth annual
Herb Fest will be held tbe following weekend
between 10 a.m.-5 p.m. in Dave Diles Park. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

FBI joins jewelry theft probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- . Seven jewelry dealers attending
MiUions of dollars in jewels report- the Mid America Jewelry Show
ed stolen from a hotel during a said $2 million to $3 million worth
show may have been taken across of loose and mounted diamonds,
state lines, so the FBI has joined finished jewels, gold and personal
the investigation.
items were stolen Friday night or
Agents are working with Saturday morning from safety
Columbus police because of that deposit boxes at the Hyau Regency
possibility, said Douglas C. Ogdep, Columbus.
supervisor of the FBI office"in
"That jewelry could be anyColumbus, who declined to com- where from Colombia to Canada,"
men! further.
said Richard Frank, manager of the

crime section of the Jewelers Security Alliance, a IO,OOO. member
trade association based '" New
York.
"There is a huge market for a
thief to unload some jewelry."
Frank said. "That swff could ha~e
been sent overseas. It could be m
South America. And there are ple~ty of jewelers out there who Will
buy stolen merchandise."

Sweeney campaigns in Meigs County

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StaiJ
. This y~ 's state auditor's race
ts a portrait m contrasts.
Democrat Randall Sweeney partrayed himself as a private businessman who has never held politi·
cal office, who has perfonned hundreds of state audits, uncovered
welfare fraud, coopera~ with law
enforcement to get fug111ve felons
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va off welfare ~oils and .offered to
A GaUipolis Ferry man died Tues- freeze camprugn spendmg at 1990
day afternoon from injuries sus- levels.
tained in a two vehicle accident at
Sweeney visited Pomeroy Tues·
the intersection of State Route 2 day afternoon as pan of four-counand Crab Creek Road.
ty sweep of southeastern Ohio.
WiUiam H. Nibert, 83, died at
According to Sweeney, his
Pleasant Valley Hospital after the Republican opponent, Jtm Petro, IS
11 :05 a.m. accident. Nibert was a law~er. and Cuyahoga County
transported to the hospital by Point CommiSSioner, .who has never perPleasant EMS.
formed an audu or even taken an
The Mason County Sheriff's accounung class. oversees the
Department reponed Nibert was agenfy that accounts ~or half the
making a left twn from Crab Cree~ states ~elfare fraud, will not cooponto SR 2, heading south, and erat~ .wtth law enforcement to get
pulled into the path of Harry R. fug111 ves off welfare rolls and
Ballard, 63, of Barboursville, who refuses to sign campaign finance
was traveling north on SR 2.
ref?.rm agreement .
.
Ballard steered to the right and
.They have a chmce belw~ .a
braked in an attempt to ·avoid the b~sm~ss~an and a career pohuwreck, but his vehicle skidded into ctan, said S~eeney ~ who has
Nibert's vehicle, slamming the worked With pnvate busmess to get
driver's door, the sheriff's government.contracts. "Comp;u:e
spokesman said.
my rreparaUon as opposed to hiS
Ballard received minor injuries tota lack of background .... ~he
in the accident, but was not trans- government n~ to stan runnmg
ported to the hospital.
more ~ike busm~ss does. We need
Nibert's 1992 Pontiac was listed, to relcindle the 1d~ that taxpayers
as a total loss. Damage to BaUard's are the customelll. . .
1991 Dodge was estimated at
S~eeney ~mpha~tzed the bot$2,000.
tom hne m thiS race IS that a lawyer

Crash kills
area man

about it , and hear what the pros and cons arc, " said
Michael Dawson, press secretary.
Fi sher has not yet responded to the coali tion pro.
posal, but a spokeswoman said one is opccted
before a Sept. 9 deadline.
Jud ge Linton D. Lewis Jr. of Perry County com.
mon pleas court ru led Jul y I that the curren t stateloca l s ystem of paying for sc hools was inequi table
· :mel inadequate.
. Lewis said re liance on real estate taxes to come up
w1tli the local share of money produced di sparities in
per pupil spendi ng statewide. Property values vary
among diStncts, and •dent•ca l tax rates produce di fferent am oun ts of money .

can ne~er be qualified to perform
the auditor's JOb. Duties include
accounting for how all Ohio public
offices get and spend money.
"I want to bifurcate the job and
bring money into the state,"
Sweeney added. If elected, he will
bring his expenise in acquiring fed·
era! contracts to the state.
Currently, Ohio- which is the
seventh largest state in the nation
_ ranks 39th in acquiring federal
monies for projects, he said. Local
officials don't have the ability to
know all the details and facts needed to gel federal doUars.
"I know I've done it successful·
Jy in private business and I want to
get it for the state of Ohio. We're
talking about hundreds of millions
of dollars that we're not getting
that we're entitled to," Sweeney
said.
Other goals would include curbing Medicaid provider fraud with doctors that charge patients
for excessive unnecessary treatments, he added . The state's
accounting system would be comput.erized to lower the cost of audits
and speed up the process.
If elected, Sweeney said he
would seek re-election to anO!her
four · year term. The extra four
years would be needed to secure all
the refonns.
Sweeney woo his primary election by a 68-to-32 mar~in . His
opponent was defeated three years
ago in the state auditor's race.
Petro has already said he wants 10
be state attorney general _ not

state auditor.
Sweeney, who wa s raised in
rural Columbiana County, said he
will make an effort to audit small
communities differently than
Cleveland.
·
"As a Meigs Countian I feel that
as someone raised in Salem, Ohio,
I would better represent you than
someone from Cleveland. Cleve,
land may as well be another solar
system," Sweeney said. "The state
auditor is a very imponant position
and we shouldn't be playing games
with it for someone that sees it as a
stepping stone."

Plans have been finalized for the
Racine Fall Festival to be held
Sept. I 0 at Star Mill Park in Racin e
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Ent ertainm ent will beg in at
noon with the Middlebmnch Blue·
grass Band followed by Southern
Junior High cheerleaders at I: 15
p.m. The Rarely Herd band will
perform at 1:30 p.m. followed by
Southern High School cheerleaders
and the River Valley Boys at 2:45
p.m. and 3 p.m., respectively.
The Ath ens Di xieland Jazz
Band will perform at 4 p.m. fol ·
lowed by the Rarely Herd at 5: 30
p.m. and Meigs County ' s own
Middlebranch Bluegrass Band at 7
p.m.
Emcee for the day will be James
Carnahan .
A horses hoe pitchin g contes t
will be held at I p.m. There will be
an entry fee with monetary prizes
awarded to the fir st three place
winners depending upon the num·
ber of entries. For information on
the contest, contact Dick Wamsley
at 949·2926.
The following schedule will be
observed:
10:30 a.m. - Parade line up at

the fire station;
II a. m. - Parade;
II :30 a.m . - Announcement of
princess, queen and parade win·
ncrs;

I p.m. - Horseshoe pitching
contest;
4 p.m. - Kiddie tractor pull.
Pumpkin weighin g will be from
10 a. m. to 2 p.m. with announcement of winners at 2:30 p.m . Tro·
phies will be awarded for the ftrst
three places in groups ages 0· 18
and 19 and over.
Trophies and cash awards will
he given to the fir st three place
winners in the parade.
Set up time for craft, food and
game booth s is 8 a. m. with $10
be ing charged for a I O· foot space
and S 15 for a 20· foot space. To
reserve a booth, contact Maxine or
Chris at the Home National Bank at
949·22 10. The fee can be paid at
the ban k.
In the event of rain, all activities
will be held at Southern High
School. For more information, contact Sam Pickens at 949· 2670 or
Kathryn Hart at 949·2656 after 6
p.m. (See related photo on page 9)

r---Local briefs-___,
Car fire injures two youths

Two Reedsville youths were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi.
tal with minor injuries Tuesday after the car they were traveling in

caught fire and burned, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol said.
Brandi S. Barber, 17, 53287 State Route 681 , and April B.
Smith, 17, 54522 No. 9 Road, a passenger in the car, were transported from the scene by the Meigs EMS . Both were treated and
released from the emergency room, a hospital spokesperson said.
The patrol said Barber was westbound on 681 at 8 a.m. when the
car caught f~re. The car coasted to the benn and the Orange Township Volunteer Fire Deparunent extinguished the fire. The 1986
Pontiac was destroyed by the blaze, the patrol said.

Paving timetable issued
The Meigs County Highway Department Tuesday issued the following tentative timetable for State Capital Improvement Prognun
(SClP) and Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) paving
pro;ects.
Crews will begin paving Oak Grove Road Thursday morning
after fini shing Morning Star Road today, said Dave Spencer, highway department off•ce manager. The Oak Grove Road project
should take one day. he said.
Friday, crews will move to Swnner Road and complete paving
by Sept. 6 or 7. Work should begin on Salem School Lot Road on
Sept. 6 and take three working days, he added.
The Shelly Company of Thornville is doing the paving.

Man escapes injury in wreck
A Pomeroy man driving down Lincoln Hill lost control of his
car, smashed through a guard rail and landed 10 feet below on Butternut Avenue this morning, according to Pomeroy Police Department reports.
Mark Norman, 26, Lincoln Heights, was cited for failure to
maintain control after his car carne to rest in Butternut Avenue at
5:49a.m . today, records show. No injuries were reported.
Norman's 1989 Pontiac Firebird had h.eavy damage to the front
end, reports stated.
RANDALL SWEENEY

,

\

�VVednesda~August31, 1994

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubiL.her
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHA RLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
tho American Newspaper Publisher A ..ociation.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letten are subject 10 editing and mus.t be ugned With name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letteTI will be pubhsbed . Lettefll

should be in good taste , addressing issues, oot pen;onalitle!.

Gridlock revisited
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
wASHINGTON - Not long ago, President Clinton and the
Democrats were boasting that they'd broken gridlock in·Congress and had
things moving again. Now there's a traffic Jam .stalhng even rout me b1lls,
amid !he wreckage of maJOr proposals that won t pass.
With time short - only about 20 working days between the current
recess and planned adjournment for a month's campa1gnmg for the Nov. 8
elections - things may be about as stalemated as m the da~s of div1ded
government when a Republican president faced a Democrauc-controlled
Congress.
f r· ·
"Passing the crime bill shows we can break !he stranglehold?. po. 111cs
as usual and solve !he problems you sent us all here to solve, Clinton
said in a radio talk as he and Congress went on delayed vacauons.
Perhaps so, but it took the better part of a year.
.
Differing crime bills had passed. m 1993, and when the .last sesston
adjourned the president sa1d enaclmg a final vers1on for h1s s1gnature
should get top priority early in 1994. He'll finally have a b1U to stgn when
he gets back from vacation after Labor Day.
. .
There's much more waiting to be done. The appropnauons that finance
the government are voted in 13 separate bills each year, and only two of
them are completed.
.
Welfare reform was sidelined weeks ago in favor of Clinton's high-pnority health care overhaul, which isn't going to happen either. At most,
there will be partial, incremental changes, should Congress settle on them
and Clinton choose to sign such a bill.
"Already we 've made more progress on health care than ever before,"
the president said. But the progress consists of debating the issue, not actingon~
.
. .
.
.
The administratiOn wants leg1slauon !h1s year to approve and Implement the new world trade agreement, a difficult deadline to meet on a bill
that hasn' t yet been presented to Congress.. .
. .
Just before the recess , a Republican obJCC!Ion blocked negotl3tlons for
a final version of campaign finance reform legislation. A congressional
reform measure is foundering. And !here's more -education, environmental and housing bills aU awaiting decisions.
A bill to overhaul !he toxic waste cleanup program has been in the
works for 18 months; sponsors are worried now that opponents could
block that one with end-of-session delays.
"We have seen gridlock on bill after bill this year," said Sen. Frank
Lauten berg, D-NJ . And if it happens on the toxic ~aste measure, the
result will be slower cleanups, higher costs and more hugauon.
That isn't ~oing to give the controlling Democrats much to crow about
as they head mto the election campaign. Earlier this year, !heir strateg1sts
had seen health care refonn as a Democratic talking point in the fall. Not

·:
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•

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:~

·•

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noNor wiU !he White House be able to claim the kind of success list that
led Clinton to say he'd vanquished gridlock in 1993 and fashioned a
record unrivaled since Dwight D. Eisenhower's frrst year in office. At that
point, House Speaker Thomas S. Foley said the Democrats had outdone
even the Great Society Congress of 1965.
The latter was overstated; the former, premature.
The legislative impasse called gri~lock seems to be ch~nic. It hasn't
been cured by ending the spht authonty of a Republican White House and
a Democratic ConF.s. Clinton.has blamed "partisan static," but the
divisions aren 't enurely on party hnes.
.
.
. .
Democrats who wouldn't vote his way almost. undid the cnme biU I!'
the House; Republicans who would were the. crucial votes that salv~ed It
in the Senate. It took 60 votes to get the bill approved there, not JUSt a
majority, because the issue was procedural. On a rul~s ?r filibuster question like that, the Democrats really don't have a maJOOty; theu 56 votes
aren't enough to win on party lines.
.
.
.
So there are internal differences along w1th the ~ship some see
intensifying. That's almost certain to happen after the electmns on Nov. 8.
"In my nearly 20 years here, I've seen the .se~te ~me m.ore and
more partisan," Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Yt. S8ld m a TV mtemew. He
said that's bad for both parties, worse for the country.
"No wonder penple are frustrated with this Congress," .s~n. Robert
Byrd, D·W.Va.. said in the Senate as he deman~ed a deciSion on the
crime biU. "We dither and we posture and we InsiSt on havmg our own
way."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Letters to the editor
Bend in road a problem
Dear Editor.
I would like to know if anything
can be done about a road that has
caused at least 12 wrecks over the
last year.
.
.
The road I am talkmg about 1s
Bald Knob-Stiversville Road.
There is a sharp cmter just before
you get to Hayman Road; the~e
needs to be a sign or a hght put m
mere because there is no warnin.g
• or anything to indic~ tha~ there IS
' a comer and if there ts ram or fog

j Today

it is really hard to see.
My main concern about the c~r­
ner is that someone out there will
see this letter and something can be
done, because on Aug. 24, 1994,
my nephew was in a wreck there
and it was hard to see your own
family member being involved in a
wreck there.
I would like to sec something
done.
Sally Donaldson
Portland

in history

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, August 31, the 243rd day of 1994. There are 122
days left in the year.
Toctay's Highlight in History:
0n Aug. 31, 1&lt;f80, Poland's Solidarity labor movement was born with
an agreement signed in Gdansk that ended a 17-day-old strike.
On this dale:
.
.
.
.
In 1881, the fJrst U.S. tenniS championships were played, m Newport,
R.I. In 1886, an earthquake rocked Charleston, S.C., killing up to llO
'

~~~·887, inventa Thomas A. Ediso~ received a patent for his "K.inetoscope '' a device which produced movmg p1ctures.
In '1935, President Roosevelt signed an act prohibiting the export of
U.S. arms to belligerents.
..
.
,
.
In 1941 the radio program The Great Gildersleeve, a spm-off of
"Fibber M~Gee and MoUy," made its debut on NBC.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
YVednesda~August31 , 1994

Suhartos grow fat at I~d~r~n~r~~. is!~t~ co~l~fa~ ~~!t

JAKARTA, Indonesia - This
country's 27-year autocratic ruler,
President Su harto. is c lea ning
house in anticipation of a Novem·
be r summit here with President
Clinton and a dozen other regional
leaders.
In Ind ones ia, cleaning house
means shuuin g dow n offensi ve
newspapers, making arrests,
quelling eth nic dissent and trying
to avoid repressive and bloody
actions in regions it occ upies by
force, such as East Timor and Irian
Jay a.
"Suhano is tryi ng to put hi s
best foot forward," a Western
diplomatic source told us.
Tha t even means several
Ind onesia n governm ent officials
secre tly approaching U.S. Embassy
offici als here to ask U.em to keep
human ri ghts complaints to a minimum unt il after the Nove mber
summit of the Asia-Pacific Eco·
nomic Cooperati on Forum at the
Bogor resort above tllis capital city.
The 73-year-o ld Suharto is a
former Army genera l who took

power in 1967 after an abortive
coup - which he followed with a
massacre of as many as a million
leftists, ethni c Chinese and other

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
innocent Indonesians. He has never
allowed a true democ racy in the
country.
Just last April, the deputy assistant secretary of East Asian and
Pac ifi c Affairs, Thomas C. Hub bard, reminded !he Indonesians at a
New York meeting that "you cannot have open economic and closed
political sys tem s for very long ....
For example, a free press roots out
corruption ; the rule of law encourages and protects investments.''
Since Hubbard' s warnin gs,
Suhano's police hav e arrested
labor leaders begging for more than
!he average $3 per day workers are

shut down three inOuentiallndonesian ppbl ications. Du ring several
demonstrations against this acuon ,
the police arrested more !han two
dozcns protesters.
.
The press h a~ never been free m
Indonesia, but some li bera li zing
attitudes in the last year by the
Suharlo government had allowed
more cri ti cal report in g of some
parts of his governmen t, though
never of Suharto himself. lndonesian sources told our assoc iate Dale
Van Atta th e reason for the shut·
down of the most popular magazinc here, Temp, was its cri tical
co verage of a S uharto friend,
Indonesian Tech nology Minister
B.J . Habibie, and his foolhardy
purchase of half the fo rmer East
German Navy.
Habibie spent between $10 million and $12.7 million each for 39
ships. Less l han ha If have bee n
deltvered, and one nearly sank off
France in June. The aging, Communi st-cra vessels are badly in
need of refurbishing, which could

much as $1 b1llton - money tt
does not have.
. Even so, the Suhartos are fil thy
nch~ and corrupt to the core. Suharto h1mself may not hve hkc a king
m luxury - !hough he d1d spend
$1 m1lhon plus on h1s posthumous
reSidence, a fam1ly mausoleum :but the a~ount of wealth !he family
IS amasstng '" thiSimpovenshed
country of 190 mtlhon 1s gluttony
on a world-record scale.
.
lntcl~1genc e so urces csttmatc
Suharto s fam1ly wealth between
$3 billion and $5 b1lhon. Sadly,
they. note, 11 ts not 1llegal for the
famtly to accumulate such a fortune, because Suharto h1m se lf IS
the law. But even $5 b1lhon take·
home: pay ts a p1ttance compared to
the b1lltons more they control tn
busmesses rangmg from banks and
cement facton es to toll roads and
restaurants.
For more !han a decade, Suharto 's wife, Tien, has been irrcverently referred to by Indonesian critics
as "Madame Tien Percent," suggesting the portion of the overall
Indonesian economy that she and
her family take. Madame Tien has
more expensive tastes !han her husband - favoring diamond rings and is infamous here for her ability
allegedly charitable causes in the
manner of form er Philippine first
lady Imelda Marcos.
"Many of us believe that Suharto only decided to run for his sixth
five-year presidential term last year
because he wanted to make sure !he
Suharto nest was fully feathered
and secure," one intelligence
source told us here, speaking for
American and other Western intelligence agencies.
The Suhartos have skimmed bil·
lions of dollars in the country's
wealth for themselves and their
posterity. In the mid-1980s, when
Australian newspapers dared to
broach the subject of Suharto fami·
ly corruption, Australian journalists
were banned in Jakarta.
That's why we don't expect to
be traveling back here for quite
some time.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Fiske firing reeks of corruption
It is a mystery to me why
responsible people of all political
stripes are not raising unshined hell
about the scurrilous sacking of
Robert Fiske.
You hear complaints. here and
there. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.,
asks the three-judge panel who
replaced Fiske with Republican
partisan Kenneth Starr to explain
why Starr can be better trusted to
conduct an impartial inquiry. (Of
course, they refuse.) Rep. John
Bryant. D-Texas, chairman of a
House judiciary subcommittee,
describes the Fiske firing/Starr hiring as "alarming" and threatens to
hold oversight hearings . Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio,
says the whole mess "reeks of pol·
itics."
That's a response? That's nolh·
ing. Washington ought to be a bubbling cauldron of anger over this
outrageous attempt to politicize the
judicial and independent counsel
system. There ought to be I0 hearings going on. There ought to be a
thundering, relentless barrage of
denunciations of the three main
scoundrels who pulled off the
putsch, and it ought not to end until
they skulk off into the vaporous
bogs of weird polit&lt;cal dogma from

whence they 't'"e.
.
For returnmg vacatiOners, a
.
brief reprise:
Late in t!l,e afternoon of Fnday,

Joseph Spear
Aug. 5 - a languid time traditionally reserved for the release of
embarrassing news - a panel of
federal appellate judges announced
it was dismissing Whitewater independent counsel Robert Fiske.
Although he was a Republican, he
had ' been appointed by Attorney
General Janet Reno and therefore
could be "perceived" as a partial
prosecutor, the judges said. They
were replacing him with Kenneth
Starr.
The mind reels. Fiske replaced
by Starr in the interest of impartiality? Kenneth Starr is a dedicated
conservative who served both
Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
His law fmn is stacked with attorneys who once clerked for staunch
conservative Supreme Court Jus·
lice Anton in Scalia, and Starr plans
to remain associated with the fmn
even as he investigates Whitewater.
As The New Republic put it, ''This
only fans the suspicion that Starr

and his associates; who constiwte a
Republican government-in-waiting,
have a direct interest in the Clinton
administration's downfall."
The minds spins again. The
judge in charge of the panel !hat
appoints independent counsels is
David B. Sentelle, a right-wing
North Carolina Republican and
protege of Sen. Jesse Helms, R·
N.C. Sentelle is the ma~istrate who
wrote the IT.ajority opmion in the
decision 10 throw out Oliver
North's c.lllvictions on the preposterous gr JUnds that his immunized
Congressional testimony in the
Iran-cilnua hearings may have been
used against him. The fact is, the
jury convicted North of three
felonies he admitted committing
undet oath from the witness chair.
The Fiske firing, I suggested a
couple of weeks ago, was not a
search for fairness. It was a political ambush.
That was an educated guess.
Now it has become probability. On
July 14, The Washington Post has
disclosed, Judge Sentelle had a luncheon meeting on Capitol Hill with
Sen. Helms and the state's other
Republican senator, Lauch Fair·
cloth ("Helms Lite," some call
him, meaning Helms without the

brains). Faircloth has been a leading critic of the Fiske investigation
and at one point accused the independent counsel of conducting a
''coverup."
All three participants claimed
the lunch was merely a meeting of
old friends, who chatted amiably
about western wear and prostate
exams. They did not discuss Whitewater, they said.
Robert Fiske was fired three
weeks later. Draw your own con·
elusions. This is mine: I do not
believe what these slavering ideologues said for a subatomic particle
of a second. I believe they talked
about Whitewater. I suspect they
even discussed ways of replacing
Fiske with a more dependable con·
servative.
If so, the hallowed principle of
judicial detachment has been
breached, and that is uncon scionable, and somebody ought to
be raising unremitting hell about it.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For inrormation on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by caiUng 1800-827-6364, ext 8317.)

Let Congress obey the laws it passes
With all the sound and fury tively bargain and. to.en~.age in which establishes civil rights proemanating from Capitol Hill over other "concerted acuvtues.
tection for persons with disabilities.
1n the ensuing six decades, the
- The Federal Labor-Managethe crime bill and health care
reform, liltle notice has been given number of laws from which ment Relations Stawte, which proto another piece of legislation that
tects the right of federal employees
is at least as important.
to form, join or assist any labor
That is: a bill that would require
organization, or, if they choose othJoseph
Perkins
members of Congress to abide by
erwise, to refrain from such activithe same laws that they expect the
ty.
Congress has exempted itself,
rest of us to follow.
-The Worker Adjusunent and
The measure, formally tided the either wholly or partially, has Retraining Notification Act, which
Congressional Accountability Act, grown exponentially. The list requires employers to give 60 days
passed !he House last week by an includes the following laws (all of notice of a plant closing.
overwhelming 427 to 4 margin. which are covered by !he Congres- The Americans with DisabilThe remaining question is whether sional Accountability Act):
ities
Act, which prohibits job dis- The Fair Labor Standards crimination
the Senate will approve the bill
against disabled indiAct, which prohibits employers viduals.
before it adjourns for the year.
Senate opponents of the mea- from paying less than minimum
- The Family and Medical
sure may try to thwart its passage wages and requires overtime pay Leave Act, which requires that
by claiming that the Upper Cham- for workers who put in more than employers grant eliJible workers
ber doesn't have time to deal with 40 hours.
up to three months leave for a new
- Title VII of !he Civil Rights child
it, what with continuing debate on
or a family health problem.
Act (as amended by the Civil
health care.
Until
very recently, when lawBut that's a subterfuge. The Rights Act, 1991), which outlaws make~s became .s ensitive to
reality is that some members of workplace discrimination on the increasing criticism that they operCongress - particularly senior basis of race, color, religion, sex or ated as caretakers of America's
members - simply believe that national origin.
''last plantation,'' they saw nothing
- The Age Discrimination in particularly hypocritical about their
they should not be held to the same
Employment Act, which prohibits exemptions from assorted labor,
laws as the hoi polloi.
Congress began the practice of discrimination in the employment, health and safety, and civil rights
exeml&gt;ting itself from the nation's discharge, promotion or treatment laws.
laws back in 1935, when members of persons age 40 or older. A 1986
Indeed, they sanctimoniously
decided that maybe they ought not amendment banned mandatory defended themselves against accube covered by the National Labor retirement
sations of operating above the law
- The Occupational Safety and by claiming constitutional priviRelations Act
The NLRA would have given Health Act, which assures safe and lege. Somehow, they figured that
congressional employees the right healthy working conditions.
they were exempt from certain
- The Rehabilitation Act, laws by virtue of the Constitution's
to create and join unions, to collec-

'

By The Associated Press
It could get downright chilly in
Ohio the next few days as cool
Canadian air starts pouring into tlle
state. A large high pressure system
centered over Saskatchewan should
also produce generally· sunny skies
through the weekend.
Highs on Thursday will range
from the upper 60s to mid-70 and
could be even cooler on the week.
end. Lows may dip into the 40s by
Friday morning .
The National Weather Service
said the fair weather could extend
into early next week.
The record-high temperature for

IToledo 168" I

"speech or debate" clause and its
"separation of powers" doctrine.
But these defenses ring hollow.
It is clear that' the framers of the
Constitution intended for Congress
to conform to the laws of !he land
just like everyone else.
James Madison was explicit
about this in Federalist No. 57.
"Congress can make no law," he
wrote, "which will not have its full
operation on themselves and their
friends, as well as on the great
mass of society.
"This has always been deemed
one of the strongest bonds by
which human policy can connect
the rulers and the people together."
By following the lower chamber's lead, and approving the Congressional Accountability Act, the
Senate can go a long way toward
restoring the bond about which
Madison wrote.
By refusing to act on the legislation this year, the Senate simply
will confmn the suspicions of the
American people that they are gov·
erned by an imperial Congress.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror Tbe San Diego Union-Tribune.
(For inrormatlon on bow to
communicate electronically witb
Ibis columaist and others, con,
tact America OnUne by calHIIg 1·
800-827-6364, ext 8317.)

IND.

this date at !he Columbus weather
station was 98 degrees in 1953
while the record low was 43 m
1915. Sunset tonight will be at 8:06
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:59
a.m.
Around the nation
Skie s were cloudy today and
threatened ram across a wide arc
stretching from Montana down to
Texas and up across the eastern
third of the nation.
Rain and low temperatures were
expec ted from th e lower Great
Lakes into New England today and
tonight. Showers and thunder storms also were to ftre up along a
cold front from tlle soutllem Plains

to the Great Lakes and the North east.
. Fall-like temperatures were posSible north of the co ld front w1th
highs in the 50s, 60s and 70s.
On Tuesday in Missouri, thunderstorm winds of up to 70 miles
per hour blew out some windows in
Rolla. Another storm dumped 1.45
inches of ra in in 20 minutes at
Anderson.
Showers and some thunderstorms were possible today across
the central Rockies an·d eastern Ari ·
rona. Scattered showers and !hunderstonns were also forecast near
the Gulf Coast and in Rorida.

Dry weather was expected
across Cal ifornia, most of the
Pacific Northwest and from there
east ·to !he Mississippi River Valley.
The southern Plains and south ern Missis sippi Valley were to
remain hot, with highs in the 80s,
and seasonal tempemtures from the
70s to the 90s were e&gt;pected west
of the Rockie s.
The nation 's hot spots Tuesday
were Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and
Death Valley, Caltf.. whic h record ed 113 degrees.

Health department looks at tighter smoking ban
COLUMBUS , Ohi o (AP) The Franklin Cou nt y Board of
Health decided to lose tlle battle so
it could win !he war against smok.
ing in public buildings.
The agency said Tuesday !hat it
wiU not appeal an Aug. 9 court rul S111ny Pl Cloudy Cloudy
Cl1994 Accu-W.a!her, Inc.

-----Weather----South·Central Ohio
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy. A 30
percent chance of an evening
shower or thunderstorm. Low
around 60. Northwest winds 5 to
IOmph.
Thursday ... Partly sunny. High
70 to 75.

Extended rorecast
Friday ... Fair. Lows 45 to 55.
Highs mid 60s to lower 70s .
Saturday ... Fair. Lows in !he 40s
and lower 50s. Highs upper 60s to
75.
Sunday ... Fair. Lows 45 to 55 .
Highs in the 70s.

--Area deaths-Larry Stafford, Sr.
Larry W. Stafford Sr., 54, of
Groveport, died Wednesday, Aug.
31, 1994, at Ohio Stare University
Hospital in Columbus. , He was a
laborer.
Born April 30, 1940, in Hunt·
ington, W.Va., he was the son of
the late Jack Hobart Stafford Sr.
and Dorothy Violet Carroll
Stafford.
Survivors include two daughters , Loretta (Joe) Baumann of
Groveport and Penny (Tim) Moore

of Columbus; one son, Larry (Debbie) Stafford of Groveport; three
brothers, Jack H. Stafford Jr. of
Arizona, Benny L. Stafford of
Yulee, Fla., and Joseph R. Stafford,
Sr., of San Jose, Calif; two sisters,
Kathleen Barnes of Sunbury and
Linda C. Will of Rutland, and six
grandchildren.
Graveside services will be held
1 p.m. Friday at the Miles Ceme·
tery in Rutland.
Arrangements are under the
direction of the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland.

Bank officials deny story
NEW YORK (AP) - Bane One with !he Associated Press that the
Cincinnati is under investigation reJiort is incorrect
He said neither Bane One's
for its fair-lending practices by the
Justice Department, an industry Cincinnati affiliate or other Bank
newspaper reported Tuesday. The One subsidiaries are under investibank's parent company denied the gation.
The Justice Department declined
story.
to
comment,
the newspaper said.
Citing unnamed soun:es close to
Justice
has
filed cases against
the probe, American Banker, a
five
institutions
since 1992 for fairtrade publication, said in a front·
page article that the government is lending violations, the newspaper
reviewing Bane One's branch oper· .said.
The department settled a
ation as part of an investigation to
ground-breaking
case last week
determine whether banks avoid
involving
a
Maryland
savings and
lending in poor neighborhoods.
loan
bank.
The newspaper said the governThe case was important because
ment was lookmg at whether Bane
the
government charged !he bank
One concentrates on opening
with
biased lending practices based
branches in white neighborhoods
while skirting areas where African- on its lack of branches in lowincome neighborhoods. In the past,
Americans live.
John Russell, a spokesman for the government tended to make its
the bank, which is based in Colum- judgements after looking at loan
bus, said in a telephone interview applications.

Meigs announcements
Coverlets arrive
The Meigs County ·coverlet
commemorating the I 75th anniversary of the county has been
received by the anniversary committee. Persons who ordered the
coverlet may pick it up at the
\1eigs County Museum, 144 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Tuesday
through Sawrday from 1-4:30 p.m.

Fire Department and Ladies Auxiliary will hold its annual chicken
barbeque Saturday with serving
beginning at I I a.m. Carry out
available. Other events include
games for children, a quilt contest
and a 'cow drop' . The barbeque
will be held at the fire station in
Reedsville near the junction of
state routes 124 and 681.

Pamona Grange to meet
\1eigs County Pamona Grange
w1ll hold il\ regular meeting Friday
at 7:3!J p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. All contest items are
to be brought for judging. Election
will be hdd. Harrisonville Grange
to serve refreshment~.

Board or elections to meet
The Meigs County Board of
Elections will meet Tuesday at 4
p.m. at the board office in
Pomeroy.

Plan chicken barbeque
The Olive Township Volunteer

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS JIJ.MI)

Publishod every aneraoon, Mooday l.brouaft
Friday. t ll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by tile
Ohio Valley P\lbliahil&amp; Compu.yJMultimedi.lo
Joe., Po"""'Y· Olllo •s769, Ph. 992-2156.
Sooood ella
pold •l'l&gt;,_.y, Obio.

po....,

Member: The Alloc:IUI PreA. lllld !he Otlio

Newop..,... Alloclllloo, NO!loul Adwrlilioa

Rcprcaentative, Bruham NtWiplptl' Sales,
733 Third. Avuue. New Yort. New Yctk

10011.

POSNASTI!R: Seod dllq&lt;o !Olbe
Dolly s..tlael, lit Coort St..l'l&gt;moroy. a.lo
4.1169.

SinKer to entertain
Country singer Robin Manuel
will be eniCrtaining residents at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Extended Care Unit Saturday at 6
p.m.
PTO to sponsor booth
The Letart Falls/Portland PTO
will have a booth at the Racine Fall
Festival on Sept 10. To assist, call
Barb Layne at 949-3005 or Patsy
Laudermilt at 2471'2484. The next
PTO meeting will be Sept 12 at 7
p.m . at Letart Falls Elementary
School.
It is a violation of federal law fof
employento ask job applicants about
the stale of their health.
·

Clarence Darrow, perhaps the most
famous defense attorney of all t;me,
never graduated from law school.

DOJIIIIIG CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER.
INSIUNCE
111 suDIIII 11., Pc~merpv

YOUIIIDIPEIDENT
AIEIISSEIVIII
EIISCOUNn
SliCE 1161

\
)

I

Cooler temperatures moving into Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 1
Accu-Weathe,e forecast for
lAtCH.

to raise "contributions" for

-.

OHIO Weather

as

The Dally Sentlnei....:..Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

in December, but a coalition of !he authority to enact an across-theing that overturned its ban on pub·
lie smoking.
restaurants and bowling alleys board ban with no exemptions.
challenged !he city and county regCoun ty common Pleas Judge
"We want to craft a regulation
Richard C. Pfeiffer Jr. was right,
!hat will witllstand not only Judge
ulations.
"We tried to carve out exemp- Preiffer's coun but a higher court,"
said assistant county health commissioner Jeff Cahill.
tions and we agree that probably Cahill said. He said his agency w1ll
went too far," Cah ill said. He work with !he other health boards
Pfeiffer wrote that the county
board and the county's four comadded that !he exemptions were an to develop a unifonn approach to
munity health boards exceeded
attempt to "soften the blow " on smoking.
their authority by enacting a ban
Other opti ons could include a
restaurants, bowling all eys and
Units of th e Meigs Co unty that provided temporary exemp·
other businesses that cater to smok· no-exemptions ban with a uniform
Emergency Medical Service logged lions for certain types of businessers.
period of time for phasing in
nine calls for assistance Tuesday. es.
Pfeiffer's
ruling
also
strongly
restrictions,
or a requirement that
Units responding included:
The smoking ban was approved
suggested
!hat
health
boards
have
businesses
post s ign s sayi ng
MIDDLEPORT
whether
smoking
is permitted.
I2:21 a.m., Middl eport Police
Department, Charles Myers, Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital;
4:21 p.m .. Page Street, Dorothy
Will, VMH.
RACINE
5:28 p.m., Fifth and Pearl
streets, Erma Norris, Holzer Medi The case is seen as a possible grateful for the court's decision.
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Many
cal Center.
"We share, as well , the court's
litmus
tes t as how far school disstudents
in
Springf
.eld
city
schools
RUTLAND
concern
tricts
can
go
in
denying
transfers.
rcgardin~ these young3:50 p.m., state Route 124, will not be attending their school of
sters, !he plaintiffs children," Ms.
The
state
adopted
open
enroll
when
classes
begin
today,
choice
Shorty Pierce. HMC;
Neal said. " And we're going to do
6:11 p.m., Hyse ll Run Road, now !hat a federal judge has pulled ment to improve schools by forcing whatever we can to address !hose
them
to
compete
against
each
other
!he
plug
on
their
transfers.
.
.
John Casto, VMH.
On Tuesday night, U.S. D1stnct for students. Students who arc concerns.''
SYRACUSE
Court
Judge Walter Rice denied a denied transfers still may switch to Fou~
8:04 a.m., state Route 7, Florequest
by some parents fo~ a P.re- adjoining districts but would have
rence Cartwright, O'Bieness
liminary
mjunction. The mJuncuon to pay tuition.
Memorial Hospital;
Thousands of children are par10:53 a.m ., state Route 124, would have made the district withPARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
draw its objections to the transfers ticipating in the 292 open enrollShirley Roush, VMH;
A runaway hearse carryin2 a
3: ll p.m., Bashan Road, Luve- being made under !he state's open- ment progrdms in Ohio, but Spring- casket hit a car and an office buildfield, Akron and Lorain are the
enrollment program .
nia Hayman. VMH .
ing, injuring four people.
"I
conclude
...
that
the
objecdi stricts that have denied
only
TUPPERS PLAINS
But !he funeral proceeded only
8:09 a.m., Tuppers Plains Vol - tions were motivated sufficiently transfers.
10
minutes behind schedule.
by
the
need
to
maintain
appropriate
Diana Dixon, who wants her son
unteer Fire Department, state Route
Both
drivers and two workers in
racial
balance
or
to
~revent the
to attend sixth-grade in an adjacent
681, auto fue, Linda Barber owner;
the office building were treated
racial
Imbalance,
"
exacerbation
of
and
was
among
the
parents
district
8:09 a.m., state Route 681 , auto
Tuesday at Camden-Clark Memorifire, Brandi Barber and April Rice said in his decision, which he who sued, said the Springfield al Hospital and released, authorities
read during a two-hour hearing.
schools have not given her son a
Smith, VMH.
said.
The Springfield district has said good education.
Funeral Director David Byers
the transfers would hurt the racial
"I don't believe it's fair: · Ms.
said
he put the hearse into drive
balance in cenain schools. The par· Dixon said of !he court ruling . "I
while en route to a funeral and it
ents counter that !he district is wor- just cannot believe il"
ried about losing $3,000 in state aid
Kathleen Neal, superintendent accelerated out of control.
•'Thank God 1 saw no pedestriRandy Hayes, new vice-presi· for each student
of Springfield schools, said she was
ans
and no traffic at that time,"
dent at Farmers Bank and Savings,
Byers
said. "I hit the front end and
was officially inducted as a memwas
no damage to the cas·
there
ber of the Middleport· Pomeroy
ket.''
Rotary Club during the club's most
recent meeting Monday night at
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport.
Carlos Gustave Alfaro Briceno,
the Rotary exchange student from
Costa Rico, spoke on his tour of !he
western United States starting last
July. On the tour were 100
exchange students from all over the
United States.
Most of the students were ending their stay in the U.S. with this
tour, but Carlos has nearly six
months before returning home. He
MEMBER INDUCTED - The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
is staying with his second family
Club
inducted its latest member, Randy Hayes, at Monday night's
now and will stay with Mr. and
Charles Blakeslee perrorms tbe induction.
meeting.
Mrs. Tom Briggle for his last few
months.
Included in the tour were stops
in Chicago, Mt. Rushmore and
national parks including Yosemite
Am Ele Power ........................31112
and other spots in California. The
Akzo ........................................613/4
tour finished in St. Louis at The
Ashland 011 ............................37 1/4
Arch to westward migration.
AT&amp;T .....................................54 7/8
Carlos pointed out many of !he
Bank One ................................34 7/8
incidents on the trip which were
Bob Evans ....;................................ 21
both funny and interesting.
Champion Ind .............................. 23
Charming Shop ........................8 7/8
Eating was a problem, he said,
Clly Holdlng ............................-...33
noting !hat trying to feed over 100
Federal M&lt;&gt;gu1 ........................29 1/8
young people becomes rather tax·
Goodyear
T&amp;R......................35 1/4
ing.
K-mart .................................... 17 1/8
At one such stop, they not only
Lands End ..-.........................20 1/4
ran out of food, but also money, he
Limited Inc ............................. 19 7/8
said. When that many ~yle are
Mulllmedla Inc ......................311/4
trying to pay for food w11h $20 and
Point Bancorp ......................... _,_17
$50 travelers checks, you can see
Reliance Electric .........................25
the problem, he explained.
Robbins &amp; Myers ......................... 19
Carlos thanked the club for givShoney's lnc ........................... 1J J/8
Star Bank ... -..........................42 718
ing him the tour of the United
Wendy lnt'l ............................ 15 718
States. A thank you was also read
Worthington lnd ................ll 13/16
from Sherry Burke whose pig the
l nirmal Raiwd \\hilt· L\'ltrr
Slack reports are the 10:30 a.m.
club purchased at the Junior Fair
quotes provided by Ad&gt;est of
Tin·~ .! .~3- 73-13
Livestock Sale.
Gallipolis.
There will be no meeting next
SaH' ' Ill Off Rt·~ular l'rit'l'
week because of Labor Day. On
Sept. 12, Rotarians are to report the
number of spouses and friends
planning to attend the Rotary Club VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Betty
picnic to be held at the home of
Stafford,
Middleport; Dale
Maxine Gaskill on Sept. 19.
McDaniel,
Pomeroy
Club president Jon Perrin officiSee Don Hysell or Randy Jewell for all
Tuesday discharges - none
ated.

EMS logs 9 calls

Judge denies transfers under
open enrollment program

injured by
runaway hearse

Rotary inducts
new member

Stocks

Now Stocking A Complete Line of
Hoosier Raised White Letter Tires
60 and 70 series

Hospital news

Complete Line of Uniroyal White
Sidewalls and Black Sidewalls
your Auto Needs

rr---------------------~

1 = 1

19 DA~if:lEY
19
tTols _

•••_...

II~

PIZZA BURGER

It

$169 '

'

\

'

992·2556

• Brakes
DNms &amp; Rotors Turned

• 011 Change
• Batteries

f

• Struts
• Exhaust Work
• Front End Ropalr

RUTLAND TIRE SALES
State Route 124

Rutland

742-3088

-----~!~!!~_u
'

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•Shocks

"*'
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FRIES......$
SUN.-SAT. 10:00 AM-10:00 PM •

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• Computer YVhool Balanced

'

�•

VVednesda~August31

1994

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

In U.S. Open's first round,

I

4

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - Now that
Jim Courier has rediscovered the
fire in hi s game, hobbling Pete
Samp1as will begin defense of his
U.S. Open title.
In mid-August, Courier, appearing tired and bored, announced he
was leaving tennis indefinitely.
"There is a problem inside, and
I'm not really sure what il is,"
Courier said at the time. "And the
only way to figure it oul is to just
take a step away and come back
when I'm ready."
Against Aaron Kriclcstein on
Tuesday night at the National Tennis Center, Courier was ready.
"I didn't have the fire in Indianapolis. That's what I went
searching for," Courier said after
defeating Krickstein 6-3, 6-4, 6-4
in a match that lasted 2:03. "It's
there. It was just hiding. That was
one thing I was looking for, win or

Browns hope to improve last year's 7-9 finish
CLEVELAND (AP) - On
some rad1o talk shows, the subject
" taboo Callers who bring it up are
scolclcd:
Bernie Kosar is a Miami Dolphin now. He won't be coming
home. And 1t's time for Cleveland
Browns fans to forget him and let
go of the 1980s.
.
Bill Belich!Ck certamly has.
"We feel real solid about the
quahty and the depth we have at
quarterback, '' the fourth-year
coac h sa id, l'av1ng pinned the
Browns· immediate future on
Vinny Tcstavcrde - Kosar's
understudy at this point a year ago
- and Mark Rypicn. "They've
both had real good camps."
Skeptics abound, with good rea-

son. Three full years into his have a chance to compete for the
rebuilding program, Belichick has championship. If you're not in the
yet to P.roduce a winner, and many playoffs, you don't. So your first
fans suU feel he bettayed them and goal better be to get in the playsabotaged a likely trip to the play- offs."
offs by cutting Kosar loose at the
The quest begins with Tesmidpoint last year. The Browns, in taverde, who won the Heisman
flfSt place at the time, fmished 7-9. Trophy as Kosar's successor at the
But neither Belichick nor Tes- University of Miami but has never
taverde appears to be shying from piloted an NF1. team to a winning
the pressure. Piece by agonizing season. He showed flashes of brilpiece, Belichick has tom apart and liance after coming back from a
re-assembled a team that he says is separated shoulder last season,
now ready to take the next step.
including a record-setting 21-of-23
"Your goal when you enter any performance against the Los AngeNFL season is to get into the play- les Rams late in the year.
offs." he said, mentioning the ·p·
Perhaps his most important
word more openly and confidently statistic was his 3.9 percent interthan he has at any time in the pasL ception ratio, his best since his
"IF you're in the playoffs, then you rookie year.
"I think I'm surrounded by the
most talent since the stan of my
career, and I think I mesh well with
the coaches," Testa verde told
reporters early in camp. "I've
heard people say that this is my
Head coach -Joe Hemsley
team, but I don't view it that way.
I'm one part of the team, and I'm
Player-pos,
W. .nt. .fi. comfortable with my role."
The backfield of Eric Metcalf
Matt Dili-RB/DB ...........................5·5 110
Fr.
and
Tommy Vardell should be
Eric Jones-RB/DB ................ - .......S-8 166
Sr.
deeper
with the addition of free
Jesse Maynard-RB/DB ................ .5·8 151
So.
agent Earnest Byner, the former
Travis Lisle-RB/DB .......................S-8 166
So.
Brown who went on to win a Super
150
Fr.
Mik~ Ash-RB/DB ~~......................5·6
Bowl ring in Washington. Testaverde's targets will include his
Jamie Evans-RB/D .....................6-1 160
So.
former
Tampa Bay teammate,
Tyson Buckley-EID .....................6-0 163
So.
Carrier,
as the possession
Mark
Matt Riffie-EIDB ........................ .S-10 140
Fr.
receiver and Michael Jackson as
Jeremy Johnston-OL/DL ............. .S-8 162
Jr.
the deep lhreat, with rookie Derrick
134
Fr.
Joe Flowers-OL/DL ..................... .5-7
Alexander of Michigan hoping to
earn playing time as the season
Nick Smith-OL/DL ..................... .S-10 200
Jr.
progresses.
Derek Smith-OL/DL .................... .S-9 151
Fr.
The Browns tried to shore up
Rich Wamsley-OL/DL ................. .S-8 165
Jr.
Testaverde 's protection with the
Eric Barnett-OL/DL .................... .S-8 150
Jr.
addition of free agent guards Mike
Jeremy Michaei-OL/DL ...............6-1 222
Fr.
Schad and Doug Dawson, but
Schad's season was ruined by a
Sr.
Steve Edwards-OL/DL .................6-2 210
tom biceps tendon and Dawson got
Joe Kirby-OL/DL ........................S-U 206
So.
poked
lhe eye soon after he
So. arrived,in making
Danny Fisher-OL/DL ................... .S-6 246
it doubtful he
jay McKelvey-E/DL....................S-10 163
Jr.
would have any immediate impact
Fr.
Jason Writesei-EIDB .....................S·7 122
Belichick has named former
running
backs coach Steve Crosby
Jr.
Brian Pagei-E!DB ..........................5-6 125
as
his
first
offensive coordinator
Jr.
John Harmon-OLIDL ...................6-1 172
after Crosby took over the play-

Southern Tornadoes

Nu.
2
ll

IS
26
33
35

40
42
50

52
55

57
60
61
72
74
75
76
80

82
84

90
94
99

150

Scooter Fryar-OLIDL .................. .S-8
Paul Flowers-OL/DL ....................6-0

Fr.
Jr.

160

Gregg lone survivor
of last UK-louisville
football game

Scoreboard
Baseball

CHARI.OTIE HORNETS : Si,ned
Durin Hancock, rorwud, to

MINNESOTA TlMBERWOLVES :

n
n

a..-.
RidunoN!

1. ts1. Iii

61
69

.S~I

70
73
78

A93
9
.4t.7 ll.S
.435 17

-

.SOO

I

Wat.ern Dlm&amp;oa

(et.v.) ........n 6t
(Ail.) ......... 76 6t

.s1~
.ss~

COLUMBUS (NYY).73 M
Nod'olk (NYM) .......... M 73
Toledo(Dd.).............oo 71

.S2'J

.s
4

.471

12
11

.43~

a-clinche4 divWaa ti&amp;le

Tuesday's scores
Syncuu 13, Rodtsla- 6
()aa..- 6, Pawmc:kct S
Toledo 9, COLUMBUS 8
StrmLon-Wilka-Bure 1, Norfoa: I
O.arloa. 4,1lidunond 3 (12)

Toledo at COLUMBUS, 7:05p.m.
Richmond at Otarloo.c, 7:30pm.
Norfolk at S.cnnton-Wilk:ct-Barrc,
7:30p.m.

Thursday's games
Rochcltcr ll Plwtuckct.. 1 p.m.
S yneuse II Qu,. WI, 1 :0S p.m.
Toledo at COLUMBUS, 7:05p.m.
Stranton -Wilkei·Bal'lC al Norfolk,
7:l~p,m.

Football
APTop 25
college poll
in 1.hil

wock'a AaociiiOd PRo collq,c footblll
poU. with (U'Il-pbce \IOU'.II irl panmlhalcll.
rc.rord• u or Mm1day'• tction, kUl poinu
buod on 25 poinu for • lint plaQo WJtc
iluoul)l ono
too a l!lh place ....,
and lul week 1 rankinr:

JNi'll

.....

~(14) ...... -~1~~
l Ndnoko(ZI).- .... 140
l Nnon.thrne (1 '!) .....G-0.0
4. Aoado SL (1) ..........0.0.0
s. ~.. (1) ...........0.0.0
6. Miami (1) ................0.0.0
7. AJizonl (2) ..............0.0.0

1,449
1.417
1,352

4
2
3

1,2.14

~

1,201

6

1,146
! . C..lando .................0.0.0 1,1175
9. Paul SL ...................0-0-0 l,OCII
10. Wiaoomin .............0-0..0 917
q. Allblrno (1) ..........0.0.0 921

7
I
9
10

12. Aubum .. ---··········"0.1).0
13. Tr:nnc~aee .............0.0.0
14. UCLA ..................G-G-0
IS . Tex•• AAM ..........o-0.0
16. Ol&lt;lohcma .............G-G-0
t7 . Col .........G-0.0

ti.NOdhc-lino .....~

19. r .......................G-0.0
20. OIDO ST............ .1-0-0
21. V'qioia Tedo ........G-0.0
22. Ulinoia ...... ,............G-G-0
23. Wuhinjlon ...........G-0.0
]A . Cl.......................G-G-0
2:1. Sllnfaod ................G-0.0

FootbaU
N1Uonal Football Leape
ARIZONA CARDINALS' Sip..t
Kevin Kn01, wide rocaivcr. a.n. Swuu,
q.......t.do;Perryea-,......-,md
O.nyl Hmly, linebodulr, 1D 1he pnclice
"!"•d.

All.ANTA FALCONS' Sipecl Dovid

Ricllml'

suud.

CLEVELAND BROWNS: Siane4
Cui•on Loomiti. Andy Mceallam and
Jed DcVrie., ci"rc:n~ivo l.iaemcm; M&amp;mll
Lee, runnina back; and P.J. Killian,
liDcbacter, 10 lhe pnclice oquod.
DA!L\S COWBOYS: S~ Colemill Bell aad John DaviJ, liaht end•;
Tony Riobmlooo, ....U.abock, md 0...
"" Slladaill, oalay, 10 obc pacoioo oq.N.
Aped
-Tally MiDI, Oldar.
DBTROIT UONS' Slaned Milooe
Mack. CICIID.tladl Wal.Wid Md. Tnvia,
dllai.. Slpad- Oo)..W,.
........ bact: Willoo, dof..,.;,.
IIIII: Ulll JlldlanlWoo&amp;,, wioleiOOIIiv«.

'"'\j~~ACUJlS, Claimad
Guy a.,.... -..ll&lt;t.le."" ...mn

hom P I - Wllvecl Duryl M00111,
allonlve ...&amp;. !lped Bill Scbmeder,
wide nceiv.r, Chari• Hope, auud;
Ben~ard Caner, liaobukor, aod hy
Willilma, daf-.in md, &amp;o \he prK1ic:c

~lANAPOUS COLTS: Sisned

Riclunond at Oladcac. 7:10 pm.

learnt

NEW YORK KN!CKS: Re-aianed
Herb Williaml, ca~ter.

oo-.

Tonlgbl's games
Rocheatcrat Plwwckct;7 p.m.
SyraCtJu. at Ou.wa, 7:0S p.m.

Here are the Top 2S

N1med Oui1 Wriaht vice president of
mukdina and
and Cotnd Sm.ilh 4i·
...... of COI[IORIOIII&lt;o.
.

••lea

£utern Dlvldoa

x·Paw&lt;uctd (Boo.) ....
OU.wo (MO.) ............. 69
Syra""" (f"'.) .......... 61
- ( B a l t . ) ........64
Scnn100·W·D (i'hil.).OO

mulllye.I

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: R..
"""""'
...... Koilh laoninp, pard .

International League
standings
:rua

I

904
812
6GI
577

12
11
13
14

IS

553

16

54.5

17
19
II
20
22
21
Zl
15

5Zl
503
457
2$1
1A9

116
114
95

o ..... , ...........: ae.au 91,
v....1 a9. v;,po;. M. a.....

Co~cto. ~3, KanA• Swe •t, Callfomia
31, MldJilan S111a 21, Syow:we 21, Nio·
oiaippi Sial&lt; 1~. WEST VlllGINIA 14,
K•n .. • 13. Soulh Carolina 8. Arizoaa
Stat~ 6 , Indiana S, Georai• Tub 4,
LouiJvillc 4, AlbnKa 3, Ullh 3, Boylcx
2. Ken!Uoloy 1, W.....,. Midliplll.

Transactions

o..kelball
N1dt111l Buketball Allodalloa

Paul J..U., ~. md 1Gpp Vid&lt;.
en, offooaive li..acman, to the pncticc
aqood.
.
MIAM!DOLPWNS: S•anecl Ethan
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IMck; Dcmoria Johrdoft. wide JOCC:ivcr;
and Pit Jobnloa, ,.,..,. to lhc practice
aqood.
MINNESOTA VlltiNOS : Woiv..t
Bmd Culpepp., &amp;.Uuiw tackle. Shell.)'
llunnoanilo; ilcleuive bocl:, Bry'" Barl&lt;er, pu-. It.oianed l.omar McOriql,
aafely, IIIII Ray lowe, llaht 111d. Sipd
Mike Suon. punier. Sipecll'ac llan:ido.
lioobacker, and RGbett Su.ten, NMi..l
bo&lt;2, oodoepracti&lt;oiQUid.

NEW ORLEANS' SAINTS: Si~ed
Moa Compllell, llaJl
Dowkinl,
rumina boct; Pat E-. . 101d; Abu
Kline, otreru:iw tac:kl.;
llnel Byrd,

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NEW
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LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Twner Gregg has become a media
celebrity - 70 years after the last
Kentucky-Louisville foolbaU game.
Gregg was the quarterback of
the Kentucky squad that defeated
Louisville 29-0 in the 1924 season
opener. The 95-year-old LouisviUe
native is believed to be the only
surviving player from that game.
"It's kind of confusing to me,
my memory being what it is,"
Gregg told Tu (Louisville) Courier-Journal. "But I'm enjoying it"
Back in those days, the
Louisville-Kentucky game was not
a big deal. The Wildcats beat
Louisville six straight times from
1912-24.
"Centre College was really the
team to beat," said Gregg.
"Louisville didn '1 have too much
of a program at that time. Georgetown had a better team in those
days."
Gregg's name doesn't appear in
the scoring summary againsl
Louisville, though it's noted in the
starting lineups.
Fullback Curtis Sanders was the
star for Kentucky, scoring 16
points on two touchdowns, a field
goal and an extra point. About
5,000 fans watched the game at
Stoll Field in what was then the
largest crowd in UK history.
Gregg, a 1918 graduate of
Louisville Boys High School, also
started in the 1922 game, but his
highlight of the season was dropkicking a field goal in a 27-3 loss
to Centre.

1980s, have moved to other teams
this year, victims of the salary cap.
Replacin~ them, however, are the
accomplished duo of Carl Banks
and Pepper Johnson, both formerly
tutored by Belichick when he was
defensive coordinator of the New
York Giants.
The secondary includes comerbacks Don Griffin, the free-agent
acquisition from San Francisco,
and flfSt-round pick Antonio Langham from Alabama.
It's no coincidence that
Belichick has brought in several
players - including Rypien,
Byner, Banks and Griffin - who
own SuJlf'I Bowl rings. They'~e. all
made it through tough dtvtston
races and know how to win big
games; the Browns , in contrast,

calling during the second half of
1993. The Browns averaged 338
yards per game over the last seven
games, compared with 264 in the
previous nine.
Defensively, Cleveland has one
of the deepest lines in recent team
history, backed up by a blend of
youngsters and accomplished veterans at linebacker and defensive
back. The defense allowed two
touchdowns or less in 13 of the 16
games last year.
"We could very easily have our
second four guys starting for a lot
of teams," said tackle Michael
Dean Perry, the anchor of the line.
At linebacker, Clay Matthews
and Mike Johnson, mainstays of
the old "DawRs" defenses of the

have collapsed in the second halva
of each o( Belichick's three yea11,
going 2-6,3-5 and 2-6.
"Guys who have been to SUilCf
Bowls and won Super Bowls caa
add to the mystique," Rypien saiiL
"I think this definitely is a pla)'Oif•
caliber team. Once you get to die
playoffs, it's good to have guys
that have had experience there
before.
"Your role as a player rigllt
now might not be on the field m•·
ing a lot plays, but maybe lll8kiJIC
sure guys are doing the riglal
things, getting in their playboob,
making it to meetings on time.
They're things you take f~I pnlllll
sometimes, but they are JUSt u
important as going out there a...
making plays in the field."

Nebraska gets to No. 2 in AP college
football poll faster than in 1993
until they had won 10 games. This
year, with a boost from the Kickoff
Classic, they reached that level
after one victory.
Nebraska jumped from No. 4 to
No. 2 after beaung West Virginia
31-0 Sunday in the opening game
of the season. The Cornhuskers
trail top-ranked Florida by only
seven points in the nationwide
media poll.

By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Many teams don't like to play in
the Kickoff Classic because it
makes the season too ton~. For
Nebraska, though, playing m this
year's game turned out to be a
good decision.
Last year, the Cornhuskers
didn't climb to No. 2 in The Associated Press colle~~I'_OC!tball poll

"In some ways, No.2 right now
is better than No. I because No. I
seems to draw a certain amount ~
attention from the media," Nebfal.
ka coach Tom Osborne said. "II
just seems to wear on you and that
are more distractions.''
Osborne has no second lhousi*
about going to the Kickoff Classic,
even though it means the Com·
(See POLL on Page 5)

Louisville to host Kentucky Saturday
in first gridiron encounter since 1924
establishing this rivalry could
prove to be far different a challen¥e.
,
'I don't know if you could
name a half-dozen coaches wbo are
stiU alive that have been in the initiation process," Schnellenberger
said. "I don't know if this can
develop into a Florida-Florida State
or Alabama-Auburn or whateverwe shouldn't expect that to happen.
"Rivalries are long-standing
things that take years and years and
years," said Schnellenberger.
"There has to be an initial year and
I'm excited that it's caught fever
like it has. But we don't know how
far it's going to go or how competitive the two ·teams are going to be.
As I see any rivalry. the only thing
that's important is to have a competitive ~arne year after
after
year. If U ever gets lopstded, you
lose aU the interest.''
But SchneUenberger said Saturday's game will take on a historic
significance regardless of the outcome.

By CHRIS DUNCAN
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) After more than a year of hype,
Louisville coach Howard Schnellenberger still has no idea what to
expect when the Cardinals meet
Kentucky at 7 p.m. EST Saturday
in Lexington.
At least 27 players will make
their first colle~iate starts in the
teams' fm;t meeung since 1924.
Schnellenberger said at a news
conference Tuesday that the youth
and inexperience on display Saturday night wiU be all too applopiiale
for the histaic occasion.
"ll's going to be a revelation to
me and a revelation to (Kentucky
coach) Bill Curry," Schnellenberger said. ''But this is probably the
right siwation to have in the inaugural game - you have two teams
that nobody knows how they're
going to play."
With coaching stints a1 Alabama
and Miami, Fla. on his resume,
Schnellenberger is familiar with
fierce in-state rivalries. But he said

rear

''This is much bigger than die
result of the game," Schnellell·
berger said. "It is more importalll
10 play them with the opportunitr
to win. Where we are with footbll
in this state requires something 'dl
this magnitude to generate the U..
of interest that's been generated bp
the great basketbaU cooches.
"It will be a festival of footblll
with all the positive things thll
come out of that," Schnellenberpr
said. "Truly, we can look at tile
next 100 years as a celebration ~
football here in the state. This II
going to be something special for 1
lot of people."
Still, Schnellenberger said 1111
and his coaching staff have beel
cautious about keeping Saturday'•
outcome in perspective.
"Our emphasis this year is le
make sure ,(the players) keep 1
level head, keep our emotions II
check," Schnellenberger said.
"Then, at 7:08 on Salurday niglll.
tum it all loose and play wtth COIIU'Ol but play with enthusiasm. ••
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Courier beats Krickstein; Graf wins

we.':lnesday, August 31 19M
Page

·TheDa!

Ohio

lose."

'

\

Sampras, who has played only
Davis Cup matches since winning
his second consecutive Wimbledon
title in July, plays his openinground match a.t!ainst Kevin Ullyett

LAUNCHES RETURN- Jim Courier or Dade City, Fla. launches
a forehand to Aaron Krickslein of Grosse Pointe, Mich. during their
first -round U.S. Open match in New York City, where Courier won
6-3, 6-4, 6-4. (AP)

While using 'Golden Bear' as yardstick,

Woods making his
own fame on links
By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
The father makes no small plans.
Earl Woods knew he had a golfer
on his hands the day he looked up
from his own practicing and, sweat
flowing freely, found his six-monthold son staring back. What struck
him then, what strikes him even
now, was that the boy's expression
never changed.
Hour after hour, swing afler
swing, for as long as he could pound
balls into a practice net in the
garage, his son could sit still in a
highchair, hypnotized . By 10
months, little Tiger loved the routine
so much he insisted on being fed in
tllere. At one year, he waggled a
Sjwed-off club over the ball and
began pounding them into the net
himself. A few years after that, he
was beating his father at the game.
At age five, he was featured on
"That's Incredible." He already
~·

, It was just about then that Earl
C!lvisioned not just another golfer,
not just the next superstar or golf's
f!£St black superstar, not even jusl
the next Nicklaus, but something
else.
Something grander. Something
on the order of a folk hero,
something very much like the boxer
Joe Louis had been for him when he
w311 growing up. A source of pride.
An inspiration to his people, to all
peoP.le, maybe.
"Awwwww," Tiger Woods
says, letting his silence on the phone
carry a moment of embarrassment,
"I don't know about that."
The first time the subject is
broached is the first time in 20
minutes of talk.ing that Tiger sounds
like what he is: an 18-year-old kid
trying to squeeze the last few days
of fun out of a summer after which
he will leave home for the flfSt time
to attend Stanford University. All
the usual goodbyes have to be

crammed in between the
celebrations of one more
groundbreaking feat.
Two days earlier Tiger won the
U.S. Amateur, the most prestigious
amateur tournament around in the
most dramatic fashion imaginable
and became the youngest ever to do
so. The scary part is that it was
expected. All of it.
And even so. everybody wants a
piece of him now- family, friends,
tournament officials, the golf team,
the media and who knows who else.
People are waiting everywhere he
turns, but Tiger takes pains to give a
thoughtful answer. He wants people
who only see him play golf 10 know
there is substance behind the sizzle.
Through his play and the dozens of
clinics he and Earl staged in the
inner cities, he is attracting kids to
the game in a way that cannot yet be
measured. He already feels he owes
them at least that much.
"I think being a role model, in
some ways, is already a reality. And
I know some responsibility goes
with it. Sure, it would be great if
everything works out, bul who
knows?
"I can only be myself," Tiger
said, "and see what happens."
One thing thai has happened
already: When he was a k.id, Tiger
made up a list of Jack Nicklaus'
accomplishments at various ages
and taped it to the wall of his
bedroom.
It now reads:
Njcklaus

Woods

Broke 50
Age3
(nine holes) .......... Age 10
Broke 80..................... .12
8
12
Broke 70...................... 13
Won stale
15
high school meet ........ .17
Won
U.S. Junior ............ Never 15, 16, 17
Won U.S. Amateur .... .19
18
Won first major ...........22 Not yet

Daly to take legal
action against Roth
after on-course fight
By BOB GREEN
AP Golf Writer
John Daly takes the role of the
aggrieved party, his agent says, and
hints tlu\t one of golfs great drawing cards may be considering legal
action after a public altercation last
weekend in the World Series of
Golf.
"We're considering our
options," the agent, John Mascatello. said by telephone from his
Herndon, Va., office.
The agent made the comment
Tuesday after confirming that Daly
had withdrawn from the European
Masters in Switzerland this week
"as a direct result" of a scuffle at
Akron, Ohio with Bob Roth, father
of national club pro champion Jeff
Roth of Flint, Mich.
"He's in pain . He's out indefinitely," Mascatello said of the controversial Daly, who has had
numerous confrontations with the
law and golf's hierarchy since
becoming something of a folk hero
with the enormous length off the
tee displayed in his upset victory in
the 1991 PGA Championship.
"John clearly was the mjured
party In the parking lot situation,"
Mascatello said of the weekend
incident. Daly and the elder Roth
had to be separated by caddies and
spectators after rolling around on
the ground near the clubhouse at
the Firestone Country Club.
"He (Dal,&gt;;) was attacked," the
agent ~aid. 'He was confronted .

He was verbally abused (by members of the Roth contingent) on the
golf course," Mascatello said.
"John has several commitments
for the rest of the year, including
business things that he may or may
not be able to fulfill," Mascatello
said of Daly, who withdrew from at
least one other tournament this year
because of back troubles.
At the same time, Daly faces
possible disciplinary action from
the PGA Tour for engaging publicly in what may have been the
fust physically violent, antagonistic
confrontation between a player and
a spectator in at least the last quarler-century.
John Morris, vice president of
communications for the tour, said
no decision has yet been reached
on any disciplinary action. Morris
also said Daly has not made a formal commiunent for any other tour
events this season.
PGA Tour commissioner Tim
Finchem has not yet lalked with
Daly "so far as I know," Morris
said by telephone from tour headquarters at Ponte Vedra, Fla., and
will have no comment until he has
an opportunity to review staff
reports of the incident.
Finchem was in Tampa, Fla., on
Tuesday allending the funeral of
Hugh Culverhouse; a member of
the POA Tour Policy Board and
owner of tho Tampa Bay Bucs of
the NFL.

Africa

No. 6 Lindsay Davenport, No. 1
Jana Novotna, Sabatini. No. 10
Zina Garrison Jackson, No. II
Amanda Coetzer, Huber and No.
15 Magdalena Maleeva.
Advancing 10 the second round
in the men's draw were No. 4
Michael Stich, No. 5 Stefan
Edberg. No.9 Todd Manin and No.
15 Marc Rosset.
In beatin g Kri cks tcin, Co uri er
appeared in control 1f not on top of
his game. His groundsuokes were
heavy, hi s court cove rage rn orc
than adequate and hi s forehand
booming.
Krickstein. who has played
scme of his best tennis in the Open,
almost matched Courier stroke for
stroke. But there was always one
ball too many for Krickstcin to stay
even.
"That was a perfect first-round
match for me," Courier said. "li's
a match I could have lost. Aaron's
got a grea t fivc ·sct record, so I
knew I'd have to fight all the way.
" I was happy when I saw the
draw. This was the type of match I
needed so I could sec where I am."
Courier had more unforced
errors (28) than Krickstei n (2 1). but

of South
today, following a
match between 14th-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov of Russia and Jacco
Eltingh of the Netherlands on center court
Also, eig hth -seeded Andrei
Medvedev of Ukraine will face
Austria's Gilben Schaller in a flist round match. All of the other seeds
play second-round matches today.
In the women' s draw , it was
second-seeded Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario against Nathalie Tauziat of
France, No. 8 Gabriela Sabatini
against Nicole Arendt, No. 9 Mary
Joe Fernandez against Pauy Fendick, No. 14 Anke Huber against
Leila Meskhi of Georgia and No.
16 Amy Frazier against Natalia
Medvedcva, Medvedev's sister.
Monday's opening-day of the
year's final Grand Slam tournament saw form er champion Boris
Becker and second-seeded Goran
lvanisevic bounced from the field .
On Tuesday, only one seeded play·
er, No. 13 Lori McNeil, was beaten, faUing 10 Israel's Anna Smashnova 6-2,6-4.
The winners included lop-seed·
ed aHd defending women's champion Steffi Graf, No. 5 Kimiko Date,

also had more winners (51-21 ).
. "If it wasn't a Grand Slam, I
mtght have taken this week off,"
Courier said. "B ut the reason I
play the game is to play in the big
tou~amenL~. If I can play here and
1f I m hungry enough and if I'm
healthy, I want to be here.
"I haven't won this tournament
yet. I'd like 10 have it on my manUe
one of these days. •'
Martin, hobbled by a groin pull
outlasted Guillaume Raoux of
France 6-7 (4-6), 4-6 6-3 6-4 7.{)
(7-1).
'
• '
Martin didn't appear bothered
by the injury in the first seL He lost
his service when serving for the set.
After taking a 4-0 lead in the
tiebreaker, Raoux ripped off the
next seven paints.
It was in the third set, the first
that he won, that Martin began
limping noticeably. He stretched
the muscle on nearly every
changeover.
" It was an awful lot of fun after
the first two sets for me to be out
there," Martin satd. "It was just
mce to be out there and finish the
job that I started."

With baseball strike in its 20th day,

Opposing camps to meet with Feds today
with the~ union outside the formal
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - With both bargaining process but the contact
sides seemingly entrenched, there did not lead to any progress, a
were a few distant rumblings in the source speaking on the condition he
not be identified told The Associatstalled basebaU talks.
The sides were to meet separate- ed Press.
Colorado Rockies chairman
ly with mediators today, the 20th
McMorris and Toronto Blue
Jerry
day of the strike. There has been no
Jays
president
Paul Beeston spoke
movement at the bargaining table
with
the
union
in recent days, the
for months, but away from the table
source
said.
Eugene
Orza, the
there were rumors Tuesday night of
No.2
official,
said the
union's
talk.
source
was
inaccurate.
Management has talked directly
ESPN reported that people representating the sides talked secretly
by telephone in recent days.
Richard Ravitch, the owners' negotiator , ca lled the report "non (Continued from Page 4)
sense."
Meanwhile, owners canceled a
huskers will end up playing 13
games this season if they go to a quarterly meeting set for next week
and the sides reached one small
bowl.
" I think it makes for a longer agreement- to postpone the Aug.
year, but if you come out of it with- 31 deadline for postseason rosters.
out any injuries I don't think it's a The deadline for the rosters will be
big problem, and that is what we set within 48 hours of any settlewere fortunate enough to do," he ment.
Boston Red Sox chief executive
said.
Nebraska got nine more first- officer John Harrington said he
place votes than Florida (23-14),
but the Gators finished with seven
more points (1,456-1,449). Teams
get anywhere from 25 points for a
first-place vote to one point for a
25th-place vme.
Florida opens its season Saturday against New Mexico State.
Notre Dame. which trailed
Florida by only two points iri the
preseason poll, fell one notch to
No. 3. The Fighting Irish, who play
Northwestern on Saturday, got 12
ftrst-place votes and 1,417 points.
Florida State, the defending
national champion, dropped from
No. 3 to No. 4. The Seminoles,
who open this weekend against
Virginia, received eight first-place
votes and I ,352 points.
The rest of the Top 10 stayed
the same. Michigan is No. 5, followed by Miami, Arizona, Colorado, Penn Slate and Wisconsin.

APcollege
poll...

hoped the separate meetings today
would spark a resumption of the
negotiations that broke off last
Thursday.
"Hopefully, that will lead to a
joint meeting later in the week,'' he
said.
Harrington and Philadelphia
Phillics executive vice president
David Montgomery will join Ravitch and management lawyers when
they meet with the mediators. Players' association officials will meet
with the mediators later in the day .
But owners won't be meeting in
Detrott, a~ had been scheduled for
Sept. 7-9.
"As long as the players arc on
strike, the clubs will devote all their
effons to resolving the dispute,"
acting commissioner Bud Selig
said. "Many owners arc involved
in the negot tations and everybody
agrees it would serve no useful pur·
pose to spend a couple of days in
meetings and divert altention from
the compelling ~1 s k at hand ."
Ravitch denied the meeting was
called off in an effort to deny a

fo rum to owners who dissent from
management's bargaining position.
"In the conference call today ,
there was not one owner who suggested that meeting go forward,"
Ravitch said. "No one objected, so
it can 'l be a move to stifle dis·
sent.''

Selig, in a telephone interview
after a conference call with about
18 clubs, said there was no desire
to go ahead with the meeting but
that it would be held in Detroit
before !he end of the year.
"This was one time I was willing 10 let the minority rule if a fair
number of clubs wanted a meeting," he said. "There was just
frankly no desire."
.
Baltimore Orioles owner Peter
Angelos, the most outspoken opponent of management's demand for
a salary cap, declined comment but
lamented the lack of bargaining.
''There nothing going on at
all," he said.
"It sounds like somebody
docsn 't want to have a meeting,"
union head Donald Fehr said.

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�Page----.6---The Dallv Sentinel

•'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

VVednesda~August31,

1994
VVednesday, August31, 1994

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Pomeroy Mlddlepon, Ohio

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although I've kept my infawation
weU -concealed.
I like to do my housework in the
nude, and when the wealher is
pleasant, I slip out for a skinny dip
in our secluded, private pool. Last
week, I was enjoying a nudie swim
when Rick suddenly appeal'Cd-itl the
pool. I was speech less 'wi th
embarrassment To make me feel
"at ease." he calm ly disrobed and
joined me. Rick is built like a Greek
god, and we cavoned playf,llly in
rockless abandon. 11 ended when he
kissed me in a way that made my
head twirl.
Now Rick wants me to be his
"MI;. Robinson." arguing that many
middle-aged women have young
lovers. I'm tempted but scared to

Sauters
birthday
celebrated
PRICES

700 W. Mfiltl STREET. POMEROY. OHIO ;;-.:,J:~
BI·AlTE
46mO
Z. aCAtN0

~

81-AITE
·51 COUNT

Foam
Cups

'to

~ Juice

18 COUNT

Medium

Swift
Franks

·~ Eggs

81 RITE
. FROZEN
12 OZ. CAN

BI· A1TE
4 ROLL

Orange
Juice

Bath
Tissue

69!",:, 69!:. 89~., ' 59~-'
81-AITE
15 OZ.

t 00 COUNT
91NCH • 61-RITE

BI·RITE
100 COUNT

Corn
Flakes

Paper
Plates

Tea
Bags

·. ~

~-

81-RITE - 12 OZ.

Sausage

$1?.:., 75!",.' 89!~, 79~...,
I

120Z

DIP

C

57
9(
Microwave Popcorn .•.•.•. 9
9c
MarshmaHows •...•.•.•••.•. 8
9'

81 -RITE · 5 OZ

french Onion.................

Vienna Sausage .............

45

8 1 RITE

8 1 A ITE -64 OZ CRANB ERRY

$

81 -AI-E

81 -AIT E

tO 5 02

t60Z REGULAR-MINI

1 ~ OZ

Sloppy Joe .••..••.•.•.•.•.•.•. 6
8 1- AITE

15 OZ WI B EAN S

(

Cln1i .............................. 75

5(
Pork 'N Beans ............... 3
99'
Spaghelli Sauce.............
9'
81 -RITE - 15 02

81 -RITE -3 VARIETIE S-3D OZ

81 -RITE

15 OZ

Cock tail Juice................
AI -RITE

,

C

lemon Juice ................... 9 9
BI -RITE - 64 OZ

C

S

46 OZ

Orange Juice .................
S

BI-RtTE · ~ OZ UNSWEETENED

Grapefruit Juice.............

o•

•6 OZ UNS'W'EETENEO

99

. (

S

Beef Ravioli .................. 6

Prune Juice .................. . 179

81 -RITE - I 5 0 2

81 -RITE

9(
Spag~elli Rings ............ . 4
69'

81 - RIT E- 15 OZ

Spaghelli &amp; Meatballs ...
81 -RilE - 32 OZ IAACAAONI or

Spaghelli ......................

S 179

BI ·AITE - 16 OZ

Egg Noodles ................ ..
81 -A ITE . 1302

Crispy Rice ....................
54 OZ - 2 VAR IETIE S

89'
S155
$199

27 02 . O R A NGE

Breakfast Drink.............

$

•s

1

8 1-RITE - 16 0 2

(

Applesauce .................... 4 5
61 -RITE · 16 OZ

Fruit Cocktail ................. 79
81 -RITE - 15 OZ

!9

Pea,hes or Pears ........... 79

6 1-AITE · lJ OZ - FIS H

81 -RITE · 29 OZ CLING

(

81 -RIT E · 1302. GOURMET

B I-AITE - 32 OZ

,

(

81- AITE - 24 07

(

Pancake WaHle Syrup....
81-AITE - 18 OZ
S J,
Peanut Butter Creme .....

BI · AITE . 32 OZ

61 -AITE - 13 2 OZ - J VARIETIES

C

BI -AITE · 20 LB .

$

BI- AITE · 4 LB

$

Cat Food ....................... 599

BI-RITE · 26

199
,

OZ MULTI -FLAVORED

$

BI·AITE · 25 L8

81 -AITE · 8 OLB _SCOOP

$

BI -AITE - 10 L8

I

19

Cho,alate Syrup ............

99

49

8 1-AITE · 15 OZ .

$

C

BI -A ITE · 20 OZ.

Fruit Roundup ........... _..
$

(

199

5 40% Bran Flakes .......... 1
20
$ l9
Chicken Noodle ..............
Mushrooms ................... 6 S Olives ........................... I 29
Raisin Bran ............... - .. 1
65'
$ Ot
20
$
Cream of Mushroom ......
Vegetables .................... 29
Hamburger Diii.Siices..... 1
Frosted Flakes ............... 179
$ l,
49'
$ lS
$ 9
Vegetable Soup ............ .
Instant Potatoes ........... 1
Whole Dills................... 1
Honey Nut Toasted O's .. 16
39'
$ ]S
$ 69
Broth ........................... .
Scalloped Potatoes ........ 69' Kas~er Spears ............... 1
Toasted Oats ................. 1
69'
35
$
Macaroni &amp; Beef .......... .
Tomato Sauce ................
c Bread &amp; Butter .............. 109 an.- TMS!er Pastry ....... 99'
$ JS
$
$1 59
09
Corned Beef Hash .......... 1
Tomotoes ...................... 45
Relish .......................... . 1
Quick Oats.................. _
69'
S llt
$
29
Onion Soup ...................
CoHee Creamer .............
White Vinegar............... 1
Cranberry Juice .............
8 1-FHTE

49'

19 OZ S OUP

Kidney Beans ................ 9

81 -RITE - 4 01 STE MS/PIECES

BI · RIT E- 10.5 OZ - SOUP

81-fiiTE PEAS -CORN · GREEN BEANS

BI - AITE - 10 5 OZ

6 1-A ITE - 10502

BI -AITE -13 "/5 OZ -BEEF/CHICKEN

!51 -RITE · 55 OZ AUGRATIN 01

BI ·A ITE · 15 OZ

BI·AilE · 15 OZ

BI -AITE - I t! OZ.

81 -R IT E

$

81 -AITE - 32 OZ .

BI · AITE ·

BI· AITE ·

BI -AITE - 320Z

81 -RITE . 24 02

(

BI -RITE · 22 O Z

BI-RITE- ROLL

C

BI -AITE · 5 . 75 OZ . STU FF ED

BI -A ITE · 160Z PICKLES

81 -AITE - 16 OZ

2 PACK

Cat litter ...................... 9

(

BI-RITE - 16 02:'

59

OZ .

OZ .

81 -RITE · 12 OZ

Bt-RITE - ZB OZ

33' Trash
.RITE Can Unen ............ $169

Chocolate Flavored Chips69'
l

$

BI -AITE - 140Z.

flake Coconut ................
81 -AITE - 8 OZ.

(

1

$ 99

8 1-AITE · 128 OZ.

Vegetable 011 ................ 4
$

BI-AITE - 46 OZ.

Vegetable Oil.. ............. .

,
19

61- AI T E - PINK · 32 OZ_

(

Dishwashlng Uquid ........

79

$

Pan Cooking ................ ..

SS

1

81-RITE

$

BI ·RI TE

BI-RITE • 31b.

199

Laundry Detergent Pad .. 59

tt

Cherry Pie Filling ........... 9 9
BI -RITE ·CHOCOLATE Of WHITE

(

1
$ 19
Fabric Softener ... _......... 1

BI ·RITE • 120 OZ .

81-t="mE CONCENTRATED 6-4 OZ

C

S

139
oz.
s I9
Dry Bleach.................... 1
S
Charcoal Llt~er .............. 1
81-RITE 40

BI:RtTE 32 OZ.

19

S. -~e 3 7~ 1)..1 Sllawi»&gt;IV. Red RMJ! Chod

81 -RITE - 24 OZ.

8 1-AITE - 1 t OZ .

81 -AITE • 42 OZ .

Baking Soda .................. 45'

BI -RITE · 16 OZ.

81-AITE · 2 LB . POWERED

or Brown Sugar.............

$

109

8 1-AITE · 25 FT.

Beef Stew .....................
BI -AITE - 4 VAR IETIES

laulllon ........................

(

$

159
sI 09

81 -AITE - 12 OZ.

81 -RITE - 3 OZ.

Filled Milll ..................... 49'

PoHed Meat ................. 29

rOPPERS VALUES· 'h GALLON H:;~c':aMJx~~ ................. s13'

(offHflten ..................... 95

GALLON

Bi-Rite Bleach

(

Lun,hean Meat .............. 99

81 -AITE · 20 OZ

EVERYDAY!

(

81-RITE - 200 CT.

81-AITE · 20 CT.

(

Foam eup ................... _.85
ll

$

BI-RITE · 250 C T.

1

Napkins ...... -................

Standard Aluminum Filii. 59

(

BI -RITE · 50 CT.

8 1-RITE 150 OZ
Fabric Sholtener Sheets. S 29 Sandwkh Bag~ ........... _.69'

Yellow Cake Mix ........... 9

S
(
~ Van. Instant Pudding ... 25

5299

81-AITE · 40 CT_

BI ·RITE - 150Z.

B•·rRel6 .5oz Devils Food 'iVtuteOr

81 -R ITE . 40 CT.

Trash Bags ...... - ............

Lunch Bags .................... 55

Fabric Softener._...........

(

S49

$

180Z.

81 -AITE CONCENTRATED 54 OZ.
Corn Od ............ - ......... . 279 Fabric Softener,_,.......... 9 9

8 1-AITE · 6 OZ.

$

BI · A ITE · 8 CT

Trash Bags....................

Bt -RITE - 30 CT
S
Dishwashing Detergent .. 159 TaU Kitchen Bags ........... 159

81-RITE - AUTOMATIC

$

8 1-AITE · 48 OZ.

$ 1"

· 20CT

Uquid Detergent ............

$ 49

Shortening....................

Plastic Wrap .................
81

Iodized or Regular Salt..

RTS Frosting ................. 99

EVERYDAY!

................. $149

$ 199

;:!:;5. . ~···39( ~~=~:~~. . . 17( c~~am...................s139
EVERYDAY!

BI · AITE . 200 FT.

Black Pepper................. 1 79 Plastic Wrap

BI -AITE - 14 OZ.

BI -AITE - GALLON

ASSORTED ·12 OZ. CANS

81 ATE
FT
. I . 300 .

BI·AITE . 0 OZ

BI·AITE · 42 OZ.

199

$

Black Pepper .........._..,..

BI -A ITE - 6 OZ.

$

8 1-AITE · 24 OZ.

$145

EVERYDAY!

BI · AITE - 4 OZ .

Instant Oatmeal ............

Chicken Stuffing Mix ...... 79

Marshmallow Creme......
BI -RI TE - 20 OZ .

81 -RITE VARIETIES - 13 2 OZ .

QUIC
• k 0 ats....................

S

Honey...........................
81 -RITE - 13 02 .

8S I

S239

81 -RITE . 32 OZ .

BI·RITE. 16 OZ.

EVERYDAY!

81 -FIITE · 18 OZ

19
$
09
Baking CO&lt;oa................. 1

BI · AITE . 32

Marshmallow Creme ......
,

89c
Flavorite 89 c· Saltine
8
9
c
Bologna.....
Crackers.....

C

Ketchup ........................ 79

81 -AITE · 40 lB.

Cat litter...................... 2
(

(

99
Moist Cot Food .............. 59
1
$ ,9
$ !9
Dog Food ...................... 5
Grape Jelly .................. . 1
oz
$ .,
Dog Food ...................... 25
Strawberry Preserves ... 1

Cat litter ..................... . 27

Sliced Peaches ............... 99

C

Squeeze Mustard ........... 79
,

Cheese Single

12 OZ. LUNCH MEAT OR

S

61 -RITE - 16 2 OZ

2

Dog Biscuits .................. 89
C

3

81 -AITE - J2 OZ

Salad Mustard ............... 9

81-AITE · 12 O Z - MOIST

Dog Biscuits ..................
(

61 -AITE- 15 O Z LIG HT REO

$

DOG FOOD

J,

2

Cat Food ....................... 29

Grapefruit Juice ............. 9 9
81 -RITE - 32 02

Bl RfTE - 72 OZ

(

Barbecue Sauce ............. 79

Tuna Cat Food ............... 59

1

I

$

4 LB

Kibbles Dog Food ...........
Moist Burger ............... ..

Apple Juice .................... 99
UN SWEE TENED

B l RITE

BI -RITE - 18 OZ . JAR

19

Dog Food...................... 2

I 99

32 OZ

$

81 -RITE 72 OZ CHEESE iMOISl

(

(

BI · A ITE

(

By BRIAN S. AKRE
Associated Press Writer
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - Two
Tlingit teen-agers facing banish·
ment to uninhabited islands for
beating a pizza deliveryman have
returned 10 their village 10 await a
tribal hearing - accompanied by
their victim.
Cousins Adrian GUlhrie and
Simon Roberts arrived in Klawock
by ferry Tuesday night, along with
Tim Whittlesey and his wife,
Tonya. With the group was Rudy
James, 1he Tlingit man charged
with making sure the youths appear
at a uibal coun hearing Thursday .
About a dozen elders from
throughout Southeast Alaska are to
sit on the Kuye'di Kuiu Kwaan
Tribal Coun to consider the case of
the two youths gone bad, returned
by the white man's court for a
tough dose of Indian justice.
But as the hearing nears, ques·
lions about James' credibility per·

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A
woman who said she was burned
when a cup of coffee from Burger
King spilled in her lap has sued lhe
reslaurantchain for $65,000.

l
S
99
21&gt;-30 c1. Ultra Diapers ..... 4
$ tf
Baby Wipes .................. 1
B•·Arte Boys &amp;Girls Me(l _&amp; Lg

81- AITE • 64 CT.

BI· AITE - 120 CT.

$ 49

Tall KJtchen Bags .. - .... -. 5
BI- AITE • GALLON

s

19

................ 1
32 OZ.
$ Of
Salad Dressing ..........,_, 1
81-Rite Dressing ............ 9 S
Cider Vinegar
BI-RITE •

3 VARIETIE S · 16 OZ.

81- AITE -_32 OZ

May-st ............. _.......

(

$ 4S

1

The Community Calendar is
publishe~ as a free sen.ice to
non-prof1t gr~ups wisb1ng to
announce meetmgs and special
eve~ts. The calendar is not
des1gned to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Eastern Ath·
letic Boosters meeting 7:30 p.m. at
Eastern High School.
PORTLAND - Revival 7:30
p.m . through Saturday at
Stiversville Word of Faith on Bald
Knob-Stiversville Road featuring
Joey Walker from Huntington,
W.Va. Pastor David Dailey inviteS
public.

THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees regular meeting
Thursday 6:30 p.m. at the f1re station.

TIJPPERS PLAINS- Vclenlns
of Foreign Wars Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary meeting Thursday 7:30
. p.m. at post home. Inspection wiU

Clampitt birth

,.,•.SJ59
bag
We Reserve the

Heiner's u3S"
Bread

,,4

All 6 Pod
Sport &lt;us
1994 • USDA Food

•

•

sist in Klawock, a sleepy fishing
village of 758 residents on Prince
of Wales Island, about I 90 miles
south of Juneau.
Washington state Judge James
Allendoerfer sent the 17·year-olds
north last week. The Tlingit (pro·
nounced CLJNK-ut) court is
expected to exile 1hem for up to
two years to se parate, isolated
islands in Alaska's vast Alexander
Archipelago.
James said Guthrie and Roberts
·would use traditional skills and
tools to live off the land, purify
themselves and reflect on the
shame they brought to their people.
Roberts' grandfather, Theodore
Roberts, said the family feared the
youths would be sexually abused in
prison and asked James 10 propose
an alternative punishment
Some people in Klawock, how·
ever, arc embarrassed that their village and culture are represented by
James, who they consider to be less
than honorable.

Mary Lou Trammel of suburban
Hoiland claims that the coffee was
too hot and that the design of the
container that holds coffee cups
was faulty .

'

They point to $60,000 in out·
standing court judgments against
him. in cluding $10,000 in child
support. They note he has not lived
in Klawock for nearly 30 years; he
has been living in the Seattle area.
They question h1s self-pro.
claimed status as a 1ribal judge .
They say some of the other judges
who will consider the case are his
brolhers, and have criminal
records. They di spute his claim that
banishment is a traditional Tlingit
punishment. And they wonder if he
doesn'l have ulterior motives, such
as selling the story to Hollywood.
"'It' s created so many problems
for us, .. said Aaron Isaacs, a busi nessman and president of Kla wock' s governmcnt-recogn ized
tribal organization. ''There arc a lot
of people divided over the issue.' '
James accused critics of trying
to "destroy a beautiful thing
be1Ween the cultures.'·
He said he never tried to hide
his debts, and that he would accept

The lawsuit, filed Friday in
Lucas County Common Pleas
Court, is similar to a case decided
recently in Albuquerque, N.M.
·
- ·· · ·

be held: dues due. All members
should attend .

SATURDAY
RUTLAND- Star Grange 778
meeting in regular session 8 p.m.
SYRACUSE - New Take Off Saturday at the grange haU. Potluck
Pounds Sensibly (TOPS) club to follow.
meeting 6 p.m at Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene . Membership
enrollment and infonnation will be
available from 5·6 p.m. For more
information call Debbie Hill at
949-2763.
LAROE
SELECTION
RACINE - Racine Village
OF SUMMER &amp;: FALL
Council special meeting 9 a.m.
WALLPAPER PAITERNS
Thursday at Star Mill Park.

Just Arrived!
NEW

FRIDAY
RACINE - Southern High
School 'Meet the Team' night Fri·
day 7 p.m. at the football field.
Members of the football, golf and
volleyball teams and cheeri::aden
wiU be recognized. All welcome.
BRADFORD - The Bradford
Church of Christ will have a free
clothing give-away from 9 a.m.-3
p.m. Friday at the church, not the
Bradbury Church of Christ as earli·
erreponed.
POMEROY - Hymn sing
sponsored by Hillside Baptist
Church 7 p.m. Friday on Pomeroy
Parking Lot. Persons or groups
interested in performing should call
992-6768 or 992 -5705. Public
invited.

announced

Herr's
Potato Ill.
Chips Bae

Umll Quantlllea • Prlcea Effective Thru

and the late Mary Dice; Wilda
Sauten of The Plains and the late
Vaughn Sauters.

By MARCY GORDON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTO!I! J AP) - The
man wha pilotelllfie plane that
dropped the atomic bamb on
H1rosh1ma says he approves of the
Sm ithsonian Institution's decision
to redes1gn a controversial exhibit
on the bombmg.
Bul like some cri tics, he's still
not/ully saosfied.
There has been, at least, an
admiSSion on the part of the Smith·
soman that they really lacked balance and context" • m the cxh1b1t,
s~1d reured B~tg. Gen. Paul W.
T1bbets, who i1ves m Columbus.
Oh10.
.
Rc spondmg to pres sure fro~
membcrsol Congress and veterans
groups, the Smithsonian"s National
A1r and Space Museum announced
Monday It w1ll expand the exh1b1t
on the American bombing of Japan
m World War!!.

Community calendar---

$ 09

Bathroom Tissue............

situation,
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
is a veterinarian . I am sd and tired
of people askmg him why he d1dn't
become a "real doc lor"
Don't llley realize he i.r a real
doc10r? He is a DVM, a doc!Or of
veterinary medicine. He had to go to
college for eight years before he
could practice, the same as an M.D.
My husband works very hard
performing medical diagnoses,
taking
X-rays.
prescribing
medication and doing surgery. I
might add that there is very little
difference between a hysterec10my
(spaying) on a 110-pound Gennan
shepherd and one on a IIO.pound
woman.AndanM.D.'scostsdonot
require him 10 maintain a complete
hospital. Most veterinarians do.

I wish people had a better
understanding of (and more respect
for) their pet's doctor. Please
educate them. Ann ... ORLANDO
DEAR 0.: You did. And 1 thank
you, and so will several thousand
doc10n of veterinary me(licine.
What can you gi" the person w/w
has everything? Ann Landus' book ·
let. "Gems," is ideal for a nighwand
or coffee table. '"Gems" is a co/lee·
twn of Ann wnders' most requested
poems and essays. Send a self-ad·
dressed. long. business-size tnvelope
and a check or mouy order for
$4 .85 (this includes postage and
handltng) to . Gems. c/o Ann wn·
tiers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill .
606ll·0562. (In Canada. send
$5 87.)

The expanded exhibit will detail
events in the Pacific War leading 10
the droppmg of the atom1c bomb
on Hiroshim a and Nagasaki, the
m11seum said in a sllllement.
But Tibbets, 79 , sa1d he was
unhappy th at the exhibit still wi ll
include only a pan, the front fuse Iage, of the Enola Gay, the B·29
that dropped the world's first A·
bomb, on H1rosh1ma on Aug . 6,
1945.
By displaying the bomber wi th ·
out it s wings or oth er parts, the
museum will "disgrace" it, he said
in a telephone inlerview. ·" I think
there sho uld be a modif1ca1ion
made there."
.
Veterans · groups and m ilitary
hi slonans said the atomic bomb
exhibit lacked balance because it
failed 10 provide adequate explana.
tion of the events leading up to the
bombing.
'"We felt th at th eir conce rn s

were valid, and we think this new
exhibit - coupled with chang es
w1thm the ongmal cxh1bl!wn addresses th ose concerns," said
Martin Harwil. th e museum ' s
ditcctor.
Earlier this month, two dozen
me mbers of Congress wrote lhc
Smith sonian complaining that the
exh1bil wrongly portrayed Japan as
an mnocent v1c11m of the a1om1c
bomb and urging changes.
"I am pleased that the Air and
Space Museum has finally admitted
publicly that this exhibit is unbal·
anced and biased," said Rep. Peter
Blutc, R-Mass., who spearheaded
the letter. "B ut. even wilh lhc add.i·
11on of a secuon on the Pac1f1c
War, the cxlub•tton st•ll needs 10
under go a massive revi sion or
rewrite.··
.
.
.
An a tom1c ra1d on Na gasaki
three days aflcr the Hiros hima
bombing led to Japan 's surrender

and !he war's end . The anginal
ex hibit inc lud es graphic photo·
graph1c depletions of lhe destruc tionofmon:thanhalfofHiroshima
and the deaths of some 130.000
Japanese.
Now, to get 1o' the exhibit titled
"The Last Act: The A10mic Bomb
and the End of World War II " visitors first will pass through the
Pac1ftc War s how, consisting of
about SO pho10graphs and covering
4.000 square feet. Th e added
cxhibil also will include a Grumman F6F-3 Helical, described as
the most successful carrier-based
fighter used in the war.
.. The addition, tentatively titled
. The Warm 1he Pacific: An Amer1can Perspective," will focus on
the way s that Americans experi·
enccd the Pacific War, both on the
baltlefield and the home front the
museum said.
'

money for the story only if the cash
went to the tribal council.
"I've been offered money
twi ce, and I've refu sed money
twice, " James said Tuesday night.
He wouldn't say who alTered it.
James also wouldn 't identify all
the judges who will co nsider 1he
case. One, howev er, is Simon's
grandfather Theodore Roberts. He
said so me of the judges are hi s
broth ers, but not the ones with
criminal records.
One of the broth ers, Emben
James, said he and other judges
were preparing for the hearing with
traditional fasts that can last up 10
four days, depending on the seri·
ousncss of lhc offense.
·"I think everyone's been going
two days on this one,'· he said.

The purification ritua ls also
include medilation and abstinence.
Some of the judges will walk alone
to a mountain stream and meditate
on how the TiingilS once ruled the
reg ion , James said.
·· we just think about all our
ancestors," he sa1d, ··about the
power they had all over this territo·
ry , how they were able to travel
wherever they wanted, how they
knew how to survive and get out of
certain situali ons.''
Guthrie and Roberts pleaded
guilty in May to firsl·degrcc robbery for attacking Whittlesey with
a baseball bat in Everett.. Wash . His
hearing and eyesight were penna·
nently damaged in the beating,
which netted the youths $40 and a
pizza.

Allcndoerfer said that he was
aware of the questions about James
when he released the boys despite prosecutors' objections on a $25,000 property bond put up
by their families.
He warned the youths that they
would go to prison if they violate
tcnns of his order. which bars them
from laking drugs , drinking alcohol
and using guns.
Whittlesey said in a telephone
in1erview that he and his wife
decided 10 come to Klawock on the
spur of the mom ent. The co urt
could order the youths or lheir fam .
il ies to pay restitution to the couple.
"They"re the primary focus of
attention as far as the coun' s concerned.'" Rudy James said.

Woman claims Burger King coffee
too hot, faulty holding container

Bathroom Tissue ............ 59
BI· RITE • 6 ROLL

around. I came home from work
early the other afternoon and found
my 11-year.old son masturbating in
the livmg room. I didn't know if I
should spank him, ignore it, lecture
him or what. Now that 1 know he is
indulging in this despicable habit,
what should I do? I am frightenro
to death because I don't know if he
already has harmed himself. Docs
he need spcc 1al counseling? ··
FRANTIC
DEAR MOTHER: It is you who
needs counseling. Masturbation is
the natural way young people (both
boys and girls) discover their sexual
fee lings. The old wives' tale that
"se lf.abusc" causes physical harm is
not true. You need a third party,
preferably a professional, 10 advise
you on how 10 cope with the

Questions persist as banishment hearing approaches for Tlingit teens

POMEROY - Wildwood Gar·
den Club meeting 1 p.m. Wednes·
day at the U.S. 33 park.

Russett Potatoes

KELSEY MARK SAUTERS

1 LB. ROLL

./J" · Mountaineer

death. If my daughter found out.
she'd be furious .
I have a 33-year.old divorced
neighbor who would be crazy about
Rick. I've thought of introducing
them 10 gel him off my uaii. In the
meantime, I'm having nightmare.~ . 1
haven't been skmny dipping since. I
need help in · · MARIN COUNTY
DEAR MARIN: lnfonn Rick that
he is not welcome to drop around
your pool uninvited. When he comes
to see your daughter. get lost, Ma.
And don't introduce him 10 anybody.
I'll bet this kid already knows
several middle·aged women. Let's
hope Rick doesn't have a loose lip,
or you could be in for the hassle of
your life.
Dear Ann Landen: I am a
divorced woman with no male

Widened Hirsohima war exhibit is a positive step

Kelsey Mark Sautefll celebrated
his fourth birthday Aug. 21 at his
home on Collins Road in Pomeroy.
A spaghetti dinner, cake and icc
cream were served to his parents,
Charles and Dianna Sauters; his
sister, Britnee Sauters; grandpar·
ents. Leroy and Joyce Sauters;
great-grandmother, Manda East·
man; great-aunt, Theresa Shaffer,
and cousin, Tracy Shaffer, all of
Pomeroy.
Othen sending gifts were grand·
parents Delbert and Loretta Vandevander of Whitmer, W.Va.; June,
Jackie, Alison and Ashley Sears
Vandevander of Thomas, W.Va.,
and the late Willa Vandevander;
Lester Dice of Riverton , W.Va .•

12 OZ. PREMIUM

Paae-7

'Mrs·. Robinson' should cool it with daughter's boyfriend

Dear Readers: I am on vacation.
btU I have left behind SOmL of my
favorite collUM.! that you may have
missed the firsttimL around. I hape
you enjoy them. ··Ann wndus
Dear Ann Landers: I'm 37
married and the mother of ~
beautiful 1een·age daughter who
comes by her looks naturally. People
say we look like sis ters. Our
daughter has a handsome, 17·yearold boyfriend. Despite "Rick's'" age,

EVERYDAY LOW

The Dally Sentinel

SAVINGS
UPTO

50°/o

OFF

CLEARANCE!
WALLPAPER
&amp; BORDERS

75%
BORDERS
50°/o
UPTO

$5 Hills Gift
Certificate
when you cash your
payroll or government
check at
Hills!

OFF

OFF

BOOK

PRICES

Hills will double all
manufacturers' coupons
up to 99¢. So you can
save even more!

ALL 1st QUALITY

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

Raelynn Basham and Ronald
Reid Clampitt of Coolville
announce the birth of a daughter
Racven Dawn Clampitt, Aug.

1994.

NOW IN STOCK!

Look What's
Happening This
Week At Hills

3:

Maternal grandparents are Gary
and Lena Basham of Coolville and
Ron and Judy Clampitt of Belpre.
Racven weighed 8 pounds, 11
ounces jnd measured 19 inches
long.

IIEIIOiiAL IRtDCII -.CH 011
CWIRnD AVL, PAiliii.IUlUI

MON.·FRI. 9·8:30
SAT. 9-5:30; SUN 12-4

428·1065
RAEVEN CLAMPITI

OFFERS VALID
THURSDAY, SEPT. 1 - SATURDAY, SEPT. 3
at the following Hills Stores:
Ohio River Plaza: Route 7 North - Gallipolis

�Page-8-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
The Dally Sentlnei-Page--9

11 FtlmiiV owned 11nt1
Opertltetl Supermtlrket
OHering the best of ser11iee,

Meigs County land transfers posted
The following land transfers
were recorded recently in the ofrice
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Hamilton:
Affidavit, Clara Francis Gaylord , Marie Marcus, Frankie B.
Gaylord, Frankie Gaylord to James
A. Marcus, Lebanon, 108.5 acres:
Right of way. Elson R Dailey to
Earlene Stobart. Lebanon;
Affidavit, Goldie M. Holman,
deceased, to Earl Holman , Sutton,
one acre;
Deed, Earl Holman to Raben L.
and Rita I. Travis, Sutton, one acre;
Deed, Roy R. and R. Rog er
Hunter to Alan D. Luikart and
Aaron D. Owens, Rutland parcels;
Deed, Mary Frances and John
G. Smith to Robert and Peggy Harris, Lebanon, 108.50 acres;
Deed. James A. and Constance
Jean Marcus to Robert and Peggy
Harris, Lebanon, 108.50 acres:
Deed, Richard and Cheryl D.
Swackhammcr to Robert and
Peggy Harris , Lebanon, 108. 50
acres;
Deed, Eleanor Roush to Robert
and Peggy Harris, Lebanon parcels;
Deed, Patrick L. and Julie Lawson to Mark B. and Judith Searle s,
Columbia, 2.824 acres;
Cenificate, Robert R. Yonker,
deceased, to Olga A. Yonker, et al.,
Chester parcels;
Deed, Ray E. Wellman to
Andrew R. Eggers, Bedford
parcels;
Deed, Susan Pigolt to Charlene
Collins, Olive parcels:
Right of way, Joy Roberut Stewart, ct al. to John T. and Margie
Skidmore and Joy Renee Church,

Outllitv tlntl Priee, to the
People oF our community
At The corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St. • Middleport

IG DAYS OF SA
SALE DATES:
AUC. 28 THRU SEPT. 3, 1994.
Oua r•l •ly Rqr r t ~ Rnspr. •"!CI Nor

n.;::,pon~·b·· ~ 0 '

Qr P~J ')r tl
ll,.rn ~

1 f pogr .tp11o(. al
I

All

r.nl

In!&lt; '

,.

PRYER
BREAST

ALL MEAT
WIENERS

Dinner Beii•Reg. or Jumbo
16 ounce
ckage

Hamburger or
Hot Dog
8 count package

SHURI=RESH
BUNS

\(~?~~ MT. TOP
~1)

PIE

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.

Associate Professor
of Fmnily Medicine
READER'S SORE
AND
SORE BACK MAY STEM FROM
SAME CAUSE
Question: I saw my eye doctor
because I have been having eye
pain, particularly when I'm in
bright light. He said that I had
uveiti s and has treated me for it,
but he also wants me to sec my
family doctor because he said the
back pain I've been experiencing
might be related to my eye problems. Arc these doctors in cahoots,
or could my back pain and eye
problems really have the same
cause?
Answer: It is certainly possible
to have uveitis and hack pain as a
consequence of the same illness,
but you might also simply have two
different problems that arc produc ing symptoms at the same time.
I'm sure· that your eye doctor wants
to work with your family physician
to find out the specific cause or
causes of your symptoms so that
the proper treatment can be used.
Uveitis, the particular type of
eye trouble you have, deserves a bit
of explanation. I'll start with the
way the eye is built. The eye has a
tough outer wall that is composed
of three major layers, and a center
that is
rilled with a clear and colorless
nuid. The tough outer layer of the
eye includes the transparent cornea
over the pupil as well as the white
of the eye, called the sclera, around
the remainder of the eyeball. The
mncr layer consists of the light;
sensitive optic nerve. Between
these two - in the layer called the
uvea - is the location of your eye
trouble.
The uvea contains the iris, that
colored part that controls the
amount of light entering the eye,
the coroid plexus that is a collection of many small blood vessels,
and an organ named the ciliary
body that produces the nuid filling
the eye.
Inflammation of the uvea is
called uveitis, the condition you
have. This causes general eye discomfort as well as the pam you
experience in bright light. As you
know, bright light causes the pupil
- the opening in the center of the
iris through which light enters the
eye - to contract. The way light
causes thts automalic respoqse ts
rather complex, but ultimately the
pupil constricts because the small

Reg. or Oiet•Mt. Dew, Or Pepper. Slice.
Orange Crush. H:res Rootbeer. Caffeine ;=,ee .
Crystal or Ong :nal•12 12-ounce cans

PEPSI
COLA&amp;
PRODUCTS

19
POR
PORK &amp;
BEANS
Snow Floss
In Tomato Sauce
15.5 ounce can

.

WHITE
POTATOES
All Purpose
New Crop
10 pound

128 ounce jug
00438020

Chilled•Tropicana•Pius Vitamins, Plus Calcium, Regular or
Homestyle•64 ounce carton
Additional Purchase *1.59

season's Best
OPange
Juice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ . . . . . ..
-------------·- -

SHURI=INE
LIQUID
BLEACH ·

c:

muse
the in s
it
so.
These muscles become innamed
and sore with uveitis. Therefore, it
hurts as they contract as an autnmutic response to being in bright
light.
Now, your back pain poses an
interesting dilemma. Back pain is a
normal characteristic of the human
species. More than 80 perccnl of
the population will lose at least
some time off the job during their
work career because of back pain.
Perhaps your back pain is simply
this common disorder invo:ving a
disturbance in the smooth coordination between the muscles, nervous system, bones and circulation
of the back. However, your back
pain may also be the consequence
of a special type of arthritis that
strikes from five to 500 out of
every 1,000. You may have what
we doctors call a spondylarthropathy (yes. it's another terrible doctor
name).
Spondylarthropathies are specific types of arthntis that predominantly attack the joints of the spine.
Ankylosing spondylitis is the most
prevalent of these, but Reiter's syndrome and psoratic arthritis are
also fairly common. These conditions attack about 1.5 percent of
whites, 4 percent of American
blacks, 18 percent of Pima Indians,
50 percent of Haida Indians in
Canada and almost no one of Asian
ancestry.
All spondylarthropathies can
also cause uveitis. In fact, in some
individuals the first symptom of
these types of arthritis is eye pain,
and it may take months or years for
joint pain to "show up" and make
the diagnosis possible.
I thin.": your eye doctor is trying
to take good care of you - not just
your eyes, but all of you. He wants
to be sure that your uveitis does not
indicate a more serious underlying
illness such as a spondylarthropathy. Your doctors arc not in
cahoots, because that word indicates a questionable motive for
their collaboration. Instead, they
appear to be working together for
an honorable goal - your good
health.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submi.t questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

OSU mobile
mammography
to visit Meigs

•

Preciow to

MeAt4J!
Happy

acres;

Dee d, Donald C. Shaffer 10
Edward W. and Mildred J. Wells,
Syra cuse .. 3771 acre s;

Birthda,

MOTHER'S

BACK TO
SCHOOL
SPECIAL

r-- - -- PRESENT COUPON TO PHOTOGRAPHER - - - - - 1

5X7 I

a

WOOD PLAQUE I
WITH YOUR
II
PACKAGE
J

PLUS

The family of Sadie
Trussell would like to
express their sincere
thanks to all friends,
neighbors and relatives for the food,
flowers, prayers and
support showed during our recent loss.
A special thanks to:
Staff of the Intensive
Care Unit of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Dr.
Kusnir, Dr. Mansfield,
Rev. Kenny Baker,
Dorothy Harden, Staff
of Extended Care and
Ewing Funeral Home.
Your kindness will
not be forgotten.
The Trussell Family'

3" PICTURE BUTTON
REG. PRICE $4.95

.,. V"-'!f·

GOOD NEWS. SCENIC AND BLACK BACKGROUND IN YOUR PACKAGE
REG. PRICE $13.90
2 · 8 X 10
3 · 5X7
S3~~DEL
24 WALLETS
$1 .95 DEPOSIT

NOW

Persons under 18 must be accompanied by parent.

GROUP PICTURE $1 .00 PER SUBJECT PAY WHEN TAKEN.
ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY ONE SUBJECT IN ONE SPECIAL ONLY
NEW ITEMS . KEY CHAINS, BUTTONS AND PICTURE MUGS.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 2- 10:00-7:00

POMEROY

2~Month

=l

c

""

BIG BEND

FOODLAND

Certificate OfDeposit

•

~

Annual Percentage Yield
(APY,)

ROIJ.ER.SBADES
'
.... ......,..
- ·- ·

%

,

-------- ·r-r ---------

'

New Designs Of
Beautiful Heavy
Duty Moire Palterns
At_~re~~S~ving~. __
/

..

•

Interest Rate

""

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
- -

'

!PM11P'" IRIDGI-OACH ott
_ . . . . AYL, NRIIIMIUIIII

Cand~'s Eleetrol~sis

IION.·FRI. 9-8:30
SAT. 1-5:30; SUN 12-4

600 Grand Central Ave., Suite 1, Voonno, WV 26105

428·1065

295-4533

Right of way, Philip Bcarh s to
TPCWD, Sutton , 12.50 acres;
Right of way, Paul E. and Dotti e
L. Will to TPCWD , Salisbury, 2

Cl .i\ SS IFI WS

Coarse and deep dark hairs are found in women with characteristics
of masculine hirsutism (male pattern hair growth). Such hirsutism is
ehher inherited or developed by change in one's physiological conditions.
Hormonal imbalances. ovarian disturbances, medications, trauma, stress
or by personaltafl"41ering through tweezing, waxing and depilatories can
make a few light or dark hairs turn into a nightmare of massive hair
growth.
Electrolysis treatments will provide you permanent removal of hair,
plus the long term benef~s of elimination of an embarrassing physical
appearance. and the enhancement of your self-image.
Only the pefllon who has endured the burden of unwanted hair will
value the benefits of electrolysis treatments.
C.rtlllod Proloootonal Eloc:lrotoglll by lho American Elacllology
Hou111: Tuuday-llalurday •r
10% Dlecounl on lint office vlall
Free brochul8 writiMl by Candy Cox, L.E., C.P.E.

Still

ac res;

Card of Thanks

IT'S RAINI'IC
BAIIGAINS ...
on the

Just Arrived!

-Jon

1

"One in three women will develop breast-cancer during her lifetime, based on 1993 statistics,"
according to Norma Torres, RN,
nursing director for the Meigs
County Health DcpartmcnL
"While we cannot prevent breast
canc er, we can make! available to
cligible women the 'tools· necessary 10 detect early pre-clinical carcinomas." she added.
On Sept. 8, the Ohio State University Mobile Mammography Unit
will be at the health department
parking lot from 9-3:30 p.m. The
charge will be $55 for the X-ray
and the interpretation, combined.
This service will only be open to
women 35 years old and older who
have never had a mammogram, or
women 35 to 49 who need followup every two years, or women who
arc 50 or older and need yearly
mammographies; these women
must have no symptoms, be nonpregnant, non-nursing and with no
personal history of brca ~ t cancer.
Results will be scm to the client
and their physician of l:hOil:e, Torres said.
Eligible women wishing to participate should call 992 -6626 to
make an appointment.
"Breast cancer is the leading
cause of cancer death in women
between the ages of 35 and 55 . The
National Cancer Institute estimates
that if breast cancers are detected in
early stages before they spread
beyond the breast, up to 90 percent
can be trcatcJ successfully; annual
mammograms can reduce breast
cancer deaths for older women by
30 percent," she added.
"Successful educational programs for women focus on the need
for breast self-examinations, physical examinations and the screening
test of mammography. Unfortunately, the cost of a mammogram is
prohibitive for many women," she
commented.

Abnormal Facial Hair

Llconoed In tha Billa or Maryland

LIMIT ONE w•lh Super Coupon and ' 10.00 purchase ONE COUPON PE R FAMILY
Good Only at Cardrnal Supermarkets and Cardrnai -Affrliated Stores
00438020

'

Festival on Sept. 10. 'rhe band has released two
COs, 'Midnight Lonelines_~· in 1992 and 'Heart.
break City' this sprlng.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

U.S. Gov't. lnsp.•Boneless
Skinl
nd

Frozen • 8 Inch • Apple,
Blueberry, Peach or Cherry
~(:~
26 ounce package

THE RARELY HERD TO PERFORM Ohio's popular, award-winning bluegrass band,
the Rarely Herd from Athens, is among the
pol~~~== to perform at the Racine Fall

Rutland;
Deed. Constance Joan Mesc her
Deed. Richard and Karen Hat· to Denni s Wayne Mesc her, ct al. ,
fi eld to Roger Adrian , Salem lot;
Syracusc lots;
Deed , Roger Adrian to Paul R.
Deed , June M. Baum to Davi&lt;l
and Rita F. Walker, Salem lot;
B.
Baum
, Middleport parc el ;
Ri ght of way , Stephen M. and
Jamce R. Weber to Tuppers Plains5
Happy Ads
Ches ter Water District, 3.5 acres;
Right of way, Richard F. Sr. anrl
Lu ella Fick to TPCWD, Chester.
22.629 acres;
Right of way, Henry L. and
Mary J. Hunter to TPCWD, Sunon ,
2.50 acres:
Rrght of way, Dorothy Hawk to
T PCWD, Che ster, 14 .9 3 and
22.9974 acres;
Rrght of way, John F. and Jane
Hill to TPCWD. Ch es ter, 25.73
acres;
Right of way , Chloris L. Gaul to
TP CWD, Orang e, 1.9 and 6. 6

I
;

it's a certified hit. With a minimum balance of$1,000 to earn the
APY, you can take advantage of this exciting interest rate. Our
certificates of deposit not only earn high interest rates, but come with
flexible tenns as welL Call614-593-6681 or
1-800,-677-4994 for ITJQre information. Or visit
any Bank One office in Athens, Gallia, BANKHONE.
Hocking, Meigs or Perry Counties. Either Whatever it takes:
Bank One, Athen!S, NA
way, it will be music to your ears.
Member flltC

-

'

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 31, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11
MMIIBITBI POI.rf· Each of tlle&lt;e advertl&lt;ed ~erils Is reQured to be readHv avalable
For sale n each Kroger Store. OXCI!Ilt as &lt;Pe&lt;~lcafly noted 1n this ad. wwe do,.,., out of an
advertised ~em. we win oHer vou vour dlolce of a comparable ~em. when avalable, reflect·
hQ the "me savings or • raln&lt;:heck which wll entttle you to purchase the advert•ed Item
at the advertked orlce within lO days Or1y em vend&lt;&gt;' couoon wll be accepted per ~em
purchased

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ble

COPYRIGHT 1994 · THE KReGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY AUG 28
THROLX;H SATURDAY, SEPT 3, 1994 IN POMEROV.
.

5 Family: Aero.. From Addleon
Townhouse, Sept , .., 2nd, &amp;

3rd. i-5.

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

992·20116
550 Poll" Sl, Mkklepor1

FroeEotim-

See store for details.

'lose Weighl Uke 'Crazy"
Guaranteed
looe Pound8 and lncha

Natural Herbal Tablets'l

KINGS'

Home
Improvements

·PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. let us do it

33151 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

NewHomea,
Addltlona, Siding,
Painting, Garages,
Porchea, Pole Barna
Call Uo For An EoUma1e
614-742-3090

,
I

'-------..;...;,.;....! '

for

you .

Very

New

Monco·Go Karls

reas-

Parts

•message.
Alter 6 p.m.
614-905·4180

.

&amp; Service

Morris Equipment

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave

Rutland, Ohio

• $200 Installed

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'

and

w.....d

lnstalation

Call Westera Auto

5I 'Toucfi of Cfnss

Morris Equipment

992·5515

Custom Window Coverings

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

Free Estimates
Residential. Commercial
and Industrial

742-2455

&amp;-~

1 In)

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

RATON CORPS
Now accepti ng new
students. Girl s Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise
and self tonfidence
and have a great time.
ln11ructor· Naocy W. Swart!
Cl asses
beginning
September.
CaU 997·3796
tl.e

BINGO

Baum Addition

Winterizing

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

Homes, Roofing,

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Gutters, etc.

Garages • Replacement Windows

742·2443

Room Additions • Roofing

&amp;111f1 mo.

1

CLUB
IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
F.REE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Thurs., Sept. 1, 9 am·7 pm
Dick &amp; Sharon Warner

11~&gt;~/~Wn

BigK

Organization Yard Sale

Brewetlrea

September
Star Mill Park,

HOME

1-2

Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, Room

recliner, end tables, pots, pans.
dishes, children's clothing, winter
clothing, misc. Something · for ·
. everyone! Donations appreciated.
949·2071 or 949-2656
(Pickup Available)

J/S

2112JU'ttn

and Removed
Mis. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269
ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

GO·KART RACES
Every Salurdoy Nile
Hoi Lops 7, Ra1es 8
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds
NEW lOW ADM.
PRICE &amp; RACING

STRUCTURE

lpedators $3; Under 12 Free
Pit Pan $6; Under 8, $3

NO FEE TO RACE!
997-7717 or 742·2865
8125/lfn

Additions, Etc.

P.O. Box 220 Bidwel~
OH 45614
(614) 388-9865

• Garages

Howard

• Complete
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7tl2J'i).4

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Real Estate General
Public Notice

KROOER

Kroger
Pork In Beans

Lite Hamburger

or Hot Dog Buns
8-(T.

PUBUC NOTICE
OPEN WAITING UST
The Meigs Metropolitan
Houaing Authority is
announcing the waiting list
lor Section 8 Rental
Aulstance will be opened
effective September 1, 1994.
All houoaholda Interested In
receiving aaaletance may
obtoin an application at our
office located at 237 Race
Street, Middleport, OH ,
Monday thru Friday, 9:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. beginning
Thursday, September 1,

16-oz.

'

See Card of
Thanks and
Happy Ads
On Page 9
,'

J/S

Real Estate General

'

EMBERS

Instant Lite
Charcoal. . . . . . . . ~~~·

~·

••

•• •• •

DOTTIE

UR\ER REALTY
205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
POMEROY • WILLOW CREEK ROAD • A pretty
setting for this 2 bedroom ranch home with a full
basement and approx. t acre of land with central air
and a newer furnace. equipped kitchen. and close to
town.
$36,000

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, CRAIN FED BEEF,TAILLESS

Porterhouse or
T·Bone steaks

CHOCOlATE CHIP, PEANUT BUTTER,
OATMEAL RAISIN, SUGAR, DOUBLE
CHOCOlATE CHIP, RANGER

U.S. N0.1

Round White

Potatoes

LANGSVILLE • A 1 1/2 story frame homa wiih 4
bedrooms, large living room, family room with
fireplace, abova ground pool, large rear deck
front porch floor, and some newer carpet. Very
and setting on a 11 0 loot frontage lot.
$29,900

Available
only In

1D-Ib. Bag

2/S

stores
with

Deli

Each
'·

Pastry

MIDDLEPORT· S. Third · A 3 bedroom , 1 1/2 bath, 2
story home with family room, newer shing les, and
fireplace w~h buck stove inside.
$45,000
MIDDLEPORT· N. 4th ·A 2 story frame home with 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, some remodeling already done. 70
K1301ot.
Just$13,000
MINERSVILLE • Approx. 3 acres w~h a 2 story home
with equipped kitchen, newer roof, double Iron! porch,
washer, and dryer.
$26,900
DOTllE TURNER, Broker ........................9Q2·5692
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................UQ2·3056
JERRY SPRADUNG.......................... (304) 882·3498
OFFICE ........................................................ UQ2·2886

.,,,...

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience, •
law enforcement,
personal protection.
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale .
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Siud Service
By appi. only
614·667-PETS

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Meigs County Board
oi Revision has completed
its work and the books are
now open lor public
inspection.
1994.
Meigs County
Jean Tru..eli
Board oi Revision
Executive Director (8) 29, 30, 31
(8) 29, 30, 31; 3TC
(9) 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9; 10TC

949-2168

TRI-STATE K·9
ACADIMT

I

OFFICE 992·2259
SR 7 just out oi Chaster· Lovely, ranch style home that
ieahlr&amp;s 3 bedrooms. Master BR Wlih balh, built in dry sauna,
atrim doors, skylights, cedar closet, lirapiace, caiJlel
throughou~ moc:iam kitchen &amp; appliances, 16K32 inground
· pool, also ieaturas a 1 car garage that is completely wired to
handle all handyman needs. THIS IS AMUST SEE HOM Ell
ASKING $74,1100
POMEROY· Peacock Ave.· 1 112 story frame home with 3
bedrooms. ona balh, naw !henna payne windows. alec. B. B.
heat, remodeled in t990·91 , newer wiring, plumbing,
windows. carpet, front porch , side decking, blown -in
insuiabon, ion:ed air alec. furnace in lull baseman!.
ASKING $27,500
POMEROY· Umon Terrace· 17.9t2+ acres ol vacant ground.
Immediate possessionl Gr&amp;al building silal ASKING $25,000
TWP ROAD 3411- Appro•. 73 acres of vacant land with 2
story bam, stocked pond, old hDUSQ sits with well, approx. 20
acn&gt;s paslun&gt; wilh balance in T~mber, abunc:ianca ol walnut.
Gat a n&gt;tum on your investment irom sale of timbe~
ASKING $40,000
GREENWOOD RD.· RACINE· .57 acre with. 1986 modular
home. 3 bedrooms, lull baSQmenl with garage, central
air/heat pump, nower carpeting, small outbuilding, range &amp;
decking.
ASKING $44,1100
HYSELL RUN RD.· lovaiy 1 t 12 story irame home wilh 3-4
bedrooms, 2 baths, 27 + acn&gt;s wilh '""' gas. large dock, 2 car
garage, 52x40 bam, pond, pashlra &amp; hayfield· most land
fenced. Homa is well taken care of wilh hardwood &amp; carpel
ftooring, central air and an unusually deep fireplace.
ASKING $81,500
MIDDLEPORT· Rutland St· 2 atory lrame home wilh newer
vinyl aiding &amp; newer roof. 3 bedrooma, t 112 balho, gao ftoor
iumace, naw unit air, rear acnoened polch, appiianceo, blind8,
fireplace, block storajjll building &amp; wood storajjll building, 3
room apt. with atorajjll &amp; ceUar below. Lovely ftowera, stonn
doors &amp; windows. Very wol taken c:ara of. ASKING $30,000
RACINE· Nice 3 bedroom, 2 balh brick ranch home, sitting
on 2 shady loll. Full baSQment, N.G.F.A heat. enciooad rear
porch, lots of storage and doH! opace, lruit cellar in
basamenl Many olhar iaatures.
ASKING Sn,500
IF YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT SELUNG .YOUR HOME,
THINK ABOUT CLELAND REALTY, YOUR HOME TOWN
PROFESSIONALS. WE HAVE PLENTY OF BUYERSI
HENRY E. CL.ELAND.......................- ............... 1102-4181
TRACY BRINAGER............................................ a411-2438
SHERRI HART....................................................742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND lil...................................... 9112-4181
KATHY CLELAND................................................ 1192-41 81
OFFICE .................................................................11112·2258

New Company Coming Into
Area . We Are A Fltne• Center
Dedlcaled To The NMda Of
Tod•r,• Woman . We Provide
Tann ng Beds, Aeroblce, Weight
Loss Tra ining, Physical Fhnea
Training. Group And Prlnll Instruction Available, Alto Child
Care Facility. This Facility le
Open For WDmen Only. For
More lnformallon call 614-446-3401. Scnodulod to Opon Qe.

tobor 1sl .

help. 40"1 1st. 51., Mildred Stur.

NEW-REPAIR

gaon.

REDUCE..; burn ott tal while you
s~ep.

rake OPAL, available
Fruth Pharmmcy, Middleport .

REDUCE· burn off fBI while you
sleep. i'ake OPAL, available
Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport.

4

Giveaway

30 Gallon Gas Water Heater,
Small Air Conditioner, 614-3670214.
4 aolld while kittens, 3 blue1 graen .. yed. 304-5J6..
2917 after 5pm.

eyed,

5 Or 6 Year Old Part Collie Male

Dog, 614-367-7932.
5 Wask Old Gorman Shephard
Puppies, Female, 614446..0059.

Friendly black &amp; while 6wk old
kitten, liner trained 6 wormed.

304-675-5426.

Part Beagle, female, was a stray,
needs a good home, 614-7422153.

Puppln, Just Woanod, 6 Weoks
Old, 614-'146-7685.
Purebred Rabbits 614-245-54~

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addlilona
-New garage•
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
·Interior &amp; Elllerlor
Painting aloo concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
gg2-6215
Pomeroy,

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Lost &amp; Found

Lo11- Male mlnatu ... Dobermln,
black &amp; rust, w/choker chtln,
name BJ, Racine aret, 814-949-

2025.

lost : black white-faced cow,
last seen on Vance Rd. Snowvilla! Harrisonville vlclnby, 614992~146 Of 614-6Q8..3105 .

Lost : Coon

992-SSSl 01
TOll FlEE I·IOCf-141-0070

DARWIN. Oll~l~o. m ..~w I

F&amp;A TRH SERVICE

Tracking

Hound

Dewlcel Between Georges Cr.

Road

n Rodney, On Jackson

Plko, Mountod On Folding Typo
Aluminum Antenna, In A Bltck
Padded Case. Reward! PleaH

Call 614-'146-0223 Aftor 5 P.M.

lost : mate Golden Retriever,
Stndhlll Ad/Rayburn Ad area,
Reward. 304--675-5171.

7

Yard Sale

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PAllS FOI
AU MAllS &amp; MOOElS

99HOUOI

1 112 Miles Out 218, Stturday
Only. Toole, Children, Aduft
Clothing, Awon ttama, Occupied

. Japan lfomo, Misc.
1st, 2nd, 3rd, Sept. 1001 Thll&lt;l
Avenue.
Chatham

AvenUI,

8--5.

3 Family Gtraga Sale: Thun,
F~. Sot &amp; Mon., g A.M. 5916 St.
At. 160, At Kerr, Saara Treadmill,
Workmot~1

All Kinds 01 Cloth·

lng, And MisC.

GRAVEL

&amp;

COAL

Reasonable Rates
Joe N . Sayre
'SAYRE TRUCKING

614·742·2138

Mens Orasa Clothn Winter
Coata,
Household,
Toya,
Blcyc laa , Home Interior, C.r
Stereo lAmp, Knlcknack., Sept

tst, 2nd, 3rd, 51h, 9-1 0 Milas
Out SR 1&gt;11 From GolllpoUo,
Watch For Signa.

Hill and Neal Ftmlly Garage
S.ll. Fumtturw tnd Clothing,

Etc. 3556 SR 850, Bldwoti, Rod·
~~~-Rd. Frl 2nd, Sat. 3rd 9,()().

3 Family: 1tt, 2nd, 3rd, 2347
State Route 141, Cententry.

Addison Pike

i/1, 912,
Guess. Llvl. Coatt,
·Spread Sheets, OuiHing Frames,
Samaonlte Luggage.
3601

Jana:

4 Fomfly' 1~~ 2nd, 3rd, Womon,
llrgo
Mini
Clothing,
HouNhold ltomo, Cornputor, 110
Dtteun 280 ZX, Star.o, Good
- , , 1 lllle North 01 VInton,
On 100.

46

Hubbonl

AYfl.,

Kanougo,

Clo4hlng, Homo tnt.L a......,.,
Tupporwo111, Othor • ...,., Thtn
l

F~.

Garage sale- Thursday and
Friday, Yallowbuah Rd., Racine,
rain or ahlne.

Sept 2·3, Don lllila rnldlnce,
Main St,...., Rutland. LDII of
nice Infant., toddlert, a.dlea,
metemhy

cloth•.

houeehotd
boob , Me.

ltema,

Saplember 1·3 al

mite.

IQnnar,
543 North

S.cond Avenue, Middleport,
Oh"'. One 3 pc. bedroom •ult&amp;
dinette Mt, •mall ta~e. ~d
r.corda, mite.

and Friday, across
from Hubbard'• GrMnhouaa,
SyracuM on SR 124.
y rdJ
1 3 Ia 1
• garage aa •
m ty, Sepl .
1·3, Salem Canter, rain or ahlne .
Thuraday

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time 1uctlonMr, complete
auction
service.
Ucensed
166,0hlo &amp; Wast VIrginia, 304773-5765.

Auctioneer Col. Oscar E. Click,
lk:onH I 754-114 &amp; Bondad,

304-8115-3430.

'

Clean Lata Model C.rw Or
Trucka, 1987 Modele Or Newer,
Smhh Buick PootiK
noo
Elatem Avenue, G8111poda.
Decorated ltoneware, wall tal•
phon. ., old lampe, old thermometer~~, old clocks, tnUque
tumhure. Rl~erlna Antlquea.

Ruu Moore, owner. 614-092.
2526. We buy satet11.

Don't Junk hi Sell Ua Your Non-

Woll&lt;lng

Motor

App:lances,

large Sale: Frl -5at, IJ-5 Hull Color
T.V.'a,
Retrlgeraton,
Ols~ea.
Computer,
Roller FrMNra, VCA's, Mierowawea,
Blades, Good Clolhn, 56 Air Conditioner-a, Waahara,
LeGrande.
Oryera, Copy ... chlnea, Etc.
614-256-1238.
large: Sept 1111, 2nd, 3rd. At
Mary Layne's On Grover Rd, J &amp; D'a Auto Parts tnd Satvage,
Cheshire, Ohio. Fol6ow Large also buying Junk etfl &amp; trucb.
Signs Out Pass Gravel Hlll 304-77$-6343.
Cometary. Clothing Slz11 14 -16
Small Buck Stove Fireplace In·
·18.

sen

Coli Bolo,.

~

P.M. 614-387·

Sept 1st, 2nd, 3rd, On 279 At 0657.
Shirley Arrowoods, 9 Families!
Clothes, Toya, Furniture, Odds Old cigarette llghtera, milk botllae, fount1ln perw, eUverwere,
&amp; Ends, 614~2-7163 .
mtrbl11, etonew•rw, magulnaa
September 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 3683 Sttr War~ and Sttr lf'lk llama:
Canlorpofnl Road, 11 A.M. To?? Ooby Martin, 814-ll!12-;1141.
ClothH And Mlaeell•neoue. '
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Ganoge Sola' Thuro 1stJ.frlday With Or Without Motors. cau
2nd, S.tul&lt;loy 3rd, Tum un Rl. 7 llrry Lfvoly. 614-368-11303.
Onto Gr1vlal Hill Road, The
Road l'hlit Goee To Rlwer VaiJey Top l'rlces Paid: AU Old U.S.
High School, 181 -·Ant~ Colna, Gold Ringe, Silwer Coins,
quea, Juke BOI, .Rtcord Playtr, Gold Colne. M.T.S. Coin Shop,

Anllq,. Stend Table Old Strlk· 151 Socond Avonuo, Golllpollo.
lng Clock, Old Croom Seporotor
3 btfq.. Khchon Choi11, Oid
Kor..onoo limps, Clothoo And Employment Services
Mite. Old Of"'-. Poppln Fr•h
Dough Dollo.
11
Help Wanted
Thura, Frt, &amp; Stt, 115 Fraley Dr.,
Wnt On U.S. 35. Cielhoo And "PART TIME" Deportment S .o
NMded.

Wha.t.Note.

Merchandls.-1

Thuowdoy g ..[lark, North 160, 314
Milo Morgan Center Rd. School

lipolis. Work Vour Own Daytime
Hours, No W•kenda. C.r

aou....

loya.

Chlkhwaa,

VInton, Thura, Frl, Acroae From

Must

Llvo Wflhln 15 liM• ol Gal-

Needed, Na E•p. Noc-ry.
Send Name, Addraa and Phone
Numbor to ICC 5115-B, P 0 Box
23, So. Hockenooc:k, NJ 07100.

Thuraday, Still. 111, Maplo
Ortn, Sprtng Volley 9 '00 A.M.
-6'00 P.ll.
AVON I All A,..o I

s.,.....

3114-41~1429.

Shl~oy

Baptlot ChUICh, Blk.., Fumf· All aru.t. AVON earning postui'OI 1 Some Antiques, Ckfrchno alblihlat equal your cepabllhlaa,
CJotn., Much Morel
product with olgn-up.
Morllyn 304-882-26-4~ or 1-8009112-6356.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family Yard Sale-2211 JuHer·
son Ave., Sept. 1-2, 9am·3pm,
Garage Sale-2515 Mt. Vernon
Ave., Sept. 1-2, 81m-5pm. Band
uw, books, tools, enllquea,
misc.
Yard Sale-2418 Monroe Ava
Thur. &amp; Fri. Lots of children'S
clothing.
Rl. 2,
Slpt 1--2-3. AntiQun, wine
preaa ca8t Iron l.da, John
Deere' com sheller, wooden
doors &amp; windows, ahlllow w•l

Two-family garage ula, Frt. 1
Sit., 1-4, 81 Olk DrtYI. OOihM,
newborn to adult, toya,
houHhold gooda, mlac.

2023

LIMESTONE,

Craek Road, (From
Rt.7) 1st House On Right , After
Crossing R.R. 3 Families! Home
Interior, Clothaa, Etc . lat, 2nd,
3rd.

Georg..

Yord S.le-Bml. North,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Thura, Frl, Sat.

HAUUNG

Frl, Sat, Sun, 9 A.M .· Lot &amp; last
Everything, Chaapl 104 Green
Tenaca, 141 Centenary.
Friday, Saturday, 112 Mile OU1
McCormick Rd'r Toyal. Clott.•,
Furniture, Pool able, MIIIC.

AdUftl.

6

Garage Sal• Tt!ut, Frl, Sat, 1-6
PM, Crahman 10011, Craftman
roll-away lool chests &amp; tool
boxat, Uonel Eledrk tralnt,
bycycl . . , Jenny· Lyrvt Mby bed,
wood rooker, fishing ~-.Fenton, machlnsta toOls, loadl of
misc . One mila ou1143 from Rt 7
at Ona'e Swap Shop, Pomeroy.

Gigantic' Clothoo All SIHo, 9
Wanted to Buy
Chlldren &amp; Aduha, Lota Of Nice 1::::--~..,..:~..=,.=.;~.....,,..

3 Announcements

No bac k yard ule, nMd no

L.

ROORNG

Remodeling

Announcements

Garage Sai•S.pt. 1-2, a-4, JeH

Hl!1'1 on Morning Slar Rd,
Racine, boye newborn thl'\l 4T,
32" steel door, watar k..tar,
misc .

Camp Asbury 2144 Tyn Rh~
Rd, 3 MI., North Rio Grandt, OH j .,-~~~~~~~­
Cheny Aldg1 Rd, Sept 2nd, lrd, Garage Sail : presau111 cook~r ,
10 A.M. -4 P".M.
jars, ciO(Iles, bed, bk:yelea,
- - Sept. 1-2, next to L&amp; L Tire, Pine
Clay Township Building Lovers Grove Rd ., Five Pc:Mnta, f:i14-992 Lene, Rt . 7 South, Thursday 5344.
-Saturday, Baby Cto1hll, Lawn
Mower
Parts .
Cornplanter Huge garage ul• Sept. 1-2,
Wheels Etc·
Tackarvllle Rd. off Rt 124
Community Yard Salo : Galtla
Racine . Teaching materlais 1 col~
Met. Estates, 381 Buck Rld~e
lllctlb&amp;es, linens, Chrlat: mll,
Road" Frida y, So pt . 2nd , 6 A. . crib, muct-t mor1.
To 4 Y.M. Mlscallaneoua.
Moving u&amp;e- SR 3J8, 2 mll~t
Farm Equipment &amp; Misc. Sale:
•bove Racine dam, Tl\uraday
Turn Ott 141 On 775, Go lo Plcll- and Friday.
tord Road, Firat Blue HouM On Sept . 1 &amp; 2, Co41ege Rd.
Right, S8pl . 2nd, 31d, 4th.
SyracuH, 19" cc:MOJ TV, living
First Tima: 112 Mile Out Addison room suhe, c6othlng, mlac.
Pike, Prlaat Trailer Part, Sepl. truck topper, 1111ri01" door, yard
light wtth post, &amp; Home Interior.
111 .
Frl, Sat, Hilltop Drive, 112 Mile S.pl . 1.2,1, 831 Hy..u &amp; Laura!
Out Neighborhood Road, From on the CC&gt;I'T"*, In Middleport.
141 . Newbom -Adults, Ouality Sept 1·2 bnkla SLIYlfMrt~kft
Girts Cresses, MoCorcycle Hel- RM1aurant, ChMter. Infant glrl't
mets, Bicycle Carrier, En- to 5, Infant boy's to 10, .troller,
cycloped ias, 614-446-2689.
r.ttan ehalra, llereo.

Garage: Junc11on Route 7 &amp; 218
Thursday &amp; Friday Sept 111 I
2nd, 9-5.

(No Sunday Calls)

• New Homes

IMPROVEMENT

9 am·?

30' electric stove, refrigerator,

12-Pack 12-oz. cans

$ JJ

MANLEY'S

614·992·7643

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m .
the day betor. the ad ., to run .
Sunday edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition . :Z :OO
p.m . Saturday.
.
~
Block, Estate S.lea: Sept 1111
2nd, 3rd?llnwood Off l.aU, R~
Granda, Houaahold, Appllancoa,
Clothas, Mlac.

rd
9'7 e I Ill
Friday, Satu ay, 3
u av e
Pike, 2nd House 01 (R). E.Jcerelse Equlr.·· Clo4hlng, Mise,
Steroo Equ p.
Garage Sale: Friday, Saturday,
1294 Kemper Hollow Road, Lg.
Oval
Braid
RutJ,
Wooden
~ thl no.
Lamps, Tl res, C.0·'a, '-'tO
Atari Set With 26 Cartridges, Inel udes Remote Control, lhny
More ltemt.
- - - · · - -- Garage Sale: Sept 1111" 2nd,
From &amp;--4, 66 Broad St In VIllage
Of Centerville .

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

SWEETENED OR UNSWEETENED
Racine Area Community

483 REECH ST. MII)DtEPORT OH

Specializing in

EVERY THURSOAY
EAGLES

Fri. &amp; Sat., Sept. 2 &amp; 3
Rain or Shine

6·Pak f2·oz. cans. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

B linds • Vert icals • Shades
Shop At
il's not just a way to
Home
cover a window
Service
It's a way to
Day Or
light up a room
N1ght
51}. 55% ofT
992·5311
Blinds &amp; Verticals 1-800-8LIND·11

~~~ --

"DAZZLING
DOLLS,.,

Pound

Call For Details

110 Court St. Pom'.l~.cy, Onto
"Look for the Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Owur 1-SOD-291-5600

Dtmrativo

Parts &amp; service

Charcoal Steak
or English Roast

windows
• Free Estimales

Uri·Wood

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, CRAIN FED BEEF BONELESS

replacement

Side Hill Road

742-2455

3/25194

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl

3H.P.&amp;Up

onable .

•

QUALrrY WINDOW SYSTEMS

fondng C\lln

FOR SALE

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE CLASSIC,
DIET COKE OR

FOR SALE

LINDA'S

855 Jackaon Pike, Thurac:t.y,
Friday, Saturday, 9-5, Ctothls,
Fumtture, Crafta.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

5 Stl• RapreuntatiYH Neoded
to
Demonatrate
Chrlatmas
Around the World and Glfta. No
lnvesllng, No Collecting, No
DaiiVIIrlng. Now Booking Par11es
Call
\lory
614-4-46-8219

WMkdayo &amp;-7p.m.
ACllYITY DIRECTOR· Ovorbn&gt;olc Centw le IICCeptlng application•

from

qutflf'-d

In·

dlvldualo lor tho pooltlon of k·
tlvhloo DIIKtor. O.ollllc:lltlono:
working knowledge of Mos.
eyatem, lntenllecrpllnary care

l'tsn...ng a Documonlalfon. Su.
pervlu and achedule ectlwhiH

department.

lndlvk:lual

mu11

wori&lt; woll whh tho I'Ubtlc. Will
bo r.aponolble lor ochodullng
pump, otono (1111, 3pc:. bodroom ond
euporytolng voluntMrO.
suhe, tot• rnotW.
Schodulo ond eurrv••• group
lndlvldua
sctfvhl•
Ytrd Sat....ppror. • mllae out ond
GrMr Rd., S.pt. 1, ~pm, lnelde PfOirlmo lor 100 l'lllldonla of
variOuo oklllo ond abllltloa.
It rllrll.
NCCAP corlllcollon p111iorr.d.
Yord Sale-lit 2 Box flO Thomao Quallllod opptlcanto PIIIM
Ridge, Wod-Thur.f~. Uttle bH ol opply to Ovorbn&gt;ok Cantor, 333
onrythlng.
Page St-t Mldcl-, Ohio
46780. Attn: lJ;i; Brlggto, NHA.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
3 lomlly, S.plembor 1&amp;2~bolow
Molga mlno 31, Solem wntor,
baby c tothaa, horne Interiors.

"Halp Save Mtddlopon Pool",

EO£

AVON CHRISTIIAS NOWI
Avarago &amp;8 ~ Hou~y AI Wori&lt;
-Homci. Entoy Flexible Houra
0&amp;8counte, And Benefits. Tw!
rHory OptionaL HIOI).JII2-4n&amp;.

Bobyol1tor -

lor 2 YMr Old

Boy Part Time 114-245-114ffl' A~
ter Sp.m.

yard eele '' the pool on Hartlngor • BfiiOdway, Sepl. 1-3.

Chrlotmu Ar'"'nd Tha Woltd

play pen, comtorler aet, toye,

Join Our Ftmlly Pr~etlce Ex-

Oamonetrators

NMdld.

Free

Own Hou,._ No
3 lomlly Nit, gl~a clolhoo now- $300 Klt. Work
No O.livorlng. Also
bam to elze 8, boyt ek.)lhea Coflocllng,
Booking Partin, 6)4-3111-21117.
newborn to 3T, emel/ &amp; medium
women's c:lolh. ., baby awing, O.ntol Anlstanl Neodod To
mlae . Thu...tay Sept. let, r1ln
cancele until next day, 400 Rut-

porlonce N•-•'l.· Sond
Rauma To: CLA 32 c/o Clalland Stroot, Mlddiepon.
llpoUo Dilly Trlbt11111 izs Third
All Yal&lt;l Sola Mutt 11o Paid In Avonua, Golllpolto, OH 45831.
AdvoiiCII. Doedllno: 1 :CIOpm tho Dontll Aollotont Port Tl- Ex·
d8y bator. the ad Ia to rvn, oorlencod
l'lot.r.d,
s;;d
Sunday odhion- 1:OOpm Friday, ~-- To: CLA 326, c/o GaJ.
Monday odhlon 10:0Ga.m. llpolla Dally Trlbuno, 825 Thll&lt;l
Saturday.
Avonuo, Galllpolie, OH 45831.
Dunn raeldenca, Belley Run Daponctabte babvolttor, panRoad, Pomeroy (1.7 mlloo o" SR Ume, after eclloo1, eorne
124), Sapt. 2 l 3 til I PM, ltlds morlnga, lor 2 chllclrlll In my
thlnga, gu otov., ate.
11omo.-,oc.a75-11142.

�31 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BRIDGE

OUT AT MY OI.D

13

The

NEA Crossword Puzzle

CAVE ! A COUPLE
HA:1 TAKEN OVEit
,.,'\' f"'t.A£TICE!

ACROSS

40 Rel atives

Answer to Pre11ious Puzzle

43 Prepared

PHILLIP

11

Help Wanted

DIETARY TECHNICIAN- 100 bod

aklll~ tacllhy 11 accepting ·~

Wlli:

pUcaUona tor a per141me Dietary
Technician. Applicant must bo
reglsttrtd or willing to become

______,

nlah~,

tNm

monhor

44

mMtinge and

implementation

of

careplana.
Knowl«tga
of
food/drug lnttrlctlon 1nd wortl.·
lng knOW"IedQ. of lab values tf·
tected by dleta. Qualified apMan~gar

Middleport, Ohio

2 Roome &amp; Bath, No Kitchen,
$200/Mo. All Utllltlea Included,
6~1733.
BetwHn
9:30

Orlvar, CO L. haz. mat.. good
driving rxord, tor ded ic ated
run JackJon, Oh to Det roit, ML
304~75-6no af1af 5pm.

-5:00.

EJm up to $1000 w•kly stutf!ng
envelopes at home, lfat1 now,
no-..x~rience,
fre•§iupp llel,
trM-Intormltlon, no-obligation.

· Th1nk your back ac hes? I s le pl 1n a hammock
l~s l mghl lymg on my s tomac h,..

Send SASE: Cascodo Dept-so,
P.O. Box $421, San Angelo, TA
7'111102.

18

Full-11me Experienced Person

To Aalllt In Busy Office . Race~
tlonlllt Ovtln To Include: Ans.
Muhl-Line Phone, Patient Greet·
lng !Scheduling, Insurance
VeriUullon, Over -The -Count9r
P1yment Collection. Strong Organlutlonal Skllla Wlth {ttenllon
To
Detail.
Mature,
MotiYatod, With Good Com-

31

Wanted to Do

Forry, call tor doto!lo. ~753328.

General •blntanance, Palnl!ng 1

OWNER WILL FINANCE TO
QUAUFI£0
BUYER...
Juat
Full Boooment W IFP. NOW Root,
Caf1MII All Through Enllro
- . Now Plumbing. Call 014245-41114 Allor 0:00 P.ll.

str roomo ond loundry, both,
big rod bom, bulldl"'l, 2 112

Hinely man, lnterkH"I•x1erkH"
painting, light htullng • carpentry. Auto body woril &amp; pointIng. ~4-89S...363Q or 304-875-

mull be 1ble lo work 1ny shift
Including moet w.abnds. Must
have cl11n pollee record, good
work hlllory, .-.na bfe lr.napor·
tatlon, drtver's llcan.. 1nd
home phone. P1y .tarts 11 $4.25
per hour 32-40 hours per weok.

llwlng, Ulllhr room home In Mid-

dleport, close to grocery and
ochool, $35,000, 614'992-34:16 or
614-1192-5790, uk lor Sonny.

32

7010.
Professional TrN Sorvlce, 30
Yean Experience, 6t-t.:J88..1643,

Oualhy

wMkly. Need small c1re &amp; know
aru Will. Clll Chrtstlln, 304-

Cleaning

Anordablo

Prlcea, One Time IWMkly
/BtwMkly, Vure Of Experience,
FrM E8tfm1t .. , 614-379-2100.

67S-8424.

6

nl"'l, Outbuilding,. ~I 614448'0433 After 7 1':01.

Tribune Pholog111phor Avatloblo
tor Wedding• &amp; Other Eventa
Call Kevin 614-&lt;44&amp;-i51t Aft• 5

Now hlrtng orporlenc:ed dock· p.m.
hlnda, A &amp; W lhrtna, Inc.,
benefits &amp; pay, wort 28114 Will bobyon, Loon,,.. _3()4-ql1888.
ec:h~ull. Call tor apl.:::on to

mollod, 1-eoo-28:

Plrt-tlm.

ca1hler,

EEO Will do babyonllng In my homo

mutt

In A1elne, Mot1day through
Friday, 614-04~237'1 •nytlme.

bl

l8y111. old. CrowforG'a Grocery,

Henderson. WV.

POSTAL JOBS
Stsrt $11.41/hr., tor axam and

Financial

application Info. call 211-789-

830, ext. WV548, hm-9pm,
Sun-Frt.
Rosponslblo r."""'n to enSWIIr

21

Business
Opportunity

bualn••• cal a In your home -----'--:'::-::=:~...;.___
thru ca ll forwarding. 304-675!NOTICE!
n09 aHor 5pm.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Ohio BurNu of

tho ollortng.

Dry Ciao..,. &amp; loi.Oidry In Ga~
tlpotlo ArM. Eotobtlohed Von
Route. Excollont CondHJont 114·-......., 014-4112 311111 Aft 0
-··--.
•
or
P.M.

VENDING AClJTE: Won, Gal
Rich Oulek. Wll Gat A Stoody
Cosh Income. Prtcotl to Soli. 1110C1-4120-4353.

Real Estate

follows:

salary - $111,362.10. Pion end
provide Individualized EducaAIIIMI-IIdvortlolng In

"*.,._..to ouiJiecllo

progr~mmlng.

Schldulo:

Monday

Frtday

pm

2

Ia

Spocloltzod
oltllto
knowledge: lolatntatn an

pm.

wl1lch 11 1n vtottdton ollho

ond
118CH-

..an'J performance.
slate r.corda ot attendance
Communicate

Our,._...,. - y

1,

"*

odvortlsod tn
,._r
.,. ...,_on on equal

progmo to tho Sontonclr111

IJili)Orlurjfy

b-.

'I••••••••••

the
uu ofdiHleull
motlvltlonlll
tecMI- 11
queewfth
populatlona.

TELEPHONE
TALKERS
NEEDED. Cnh peld wMkly. Ho
nporlonco noco...ry. Call
31 Homes for Sale
Chriatlan. 304-075-&amp;.124.
Wonted: Full And Port Ttmo 1.58 aero with double wldo, I

s.t..men, Must Be Ex~rlenced
t

•-tl

tl

•11 p

01

~-id.~:l n\.;;,.,...n~~ Coli

rooma, 1 bath,wlll w.ter with
ace... to TP water Edit l.etart

6 mlloo obovo Roc:lno, 014-24722011.
Wanted: Rolloblo babyoHior lor 3 bedroom, oil oloctrlc homo,

014-4411-4!11~ 6 A.M. -41 P.M. lol.f.

one child. Hours vary. Pomeroy
.,... It lnternted pia... cab

Spring

Avanue,Ponwror,

~.000, 814-GD2-2113 or 114-

114-n2·7824 and '•'~'• m.. 00:2-7304.

a...,.,

..
· c-::::-:::::-==--:-=-=- I 3 Bodroomo, 2
Hoot
c:::g::•::
WBGS om 1030, WBYG 1m 119.5 Pump, Gu Ftlrnor:o,_ 1 Aero,

llonogor.
Announcor•Boaro1
~lora,
Soc-computer
operator, S.l• per.ona, Newa
peraona. Ute aummarlflll. Send
r..umo to CEO WBGSIWBYG,
P.O. Bor 4711, Point Pla-nt,
wv. 2SB50.

13

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IHSURANCI;;
VICKtE CASTO, AGE~
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DISCOUNTS
UFE I HEALTH
,.,. 511 4251

llii'IIQO. Will Cono- Sl"'llo
Wldo On Down Payment, AddiMn ArM, Sl2,000, tM-31?-

72t7.

Brick Homo On Two AI:NO eta.
To O.tttpotll. Th,.. llodroonta,
~ 112 Bathe, Fomty With
S1ono Flrootoco, llvt"'l Room,
Dlnt"'l lloun, La.- Eot-tn

=·
a,_

Cone1ructlon Workers Welcome,
Efficiency
Khchan,
Fr•

46

Space lor Rent

3 Room

Olllco Sullo With

tO KT I 14 KT Gold, 614-446-

~~ ~:

E...:ry, GAllS. 11444UUO 114-441-7110.
;:;--::-'--'-:-"7--:--:-::-:o-:Now Homo In Country, I llodroomo, _Laundr(,_ Runt WI!!.
On 3 ...... of uratJIId
114-!1!1-2240.

ua.....,

,-

BTU

Gas

Furnace,

386-16
computer,
math
coprocuaor, 4MB RAM, 80MB
HO, modem, sound, SVGA
monhor, DOS 6.22, Window• 3.1,

$750. 304-675-2462.

4 guHaro\ ophlphono, hohnor,

Arl1 Pro I, dixon banJo. Gooa

,-.t,

mul1

see. Ktwasakl 200 differential,
looks new. 304--675-1636 •her
5pm.

55 Gallon .A.qu1rlum Compte!•
Lorv• Tropical Floh a22~ - 211
Galron Aquarium Complete

Wiih

Gupptoo
$125;
Antiquo
Wardrobe $100; 3-10 Gollon AComplete,

814-44f-

SI650.

Whirlpool Washer, Kenmore
Dryer, Good Con&lt;ltton $75
Eoch Or $150 Both, 614-25&amp;-1332.

Woodbunwr, Kozy Comfort,
mlid atH~ air light, uta on
~~ol, o4!50 OBO. 304-57&amp;Workout c:enter w/atalrcllmberm
bought from Soara, honlty uood.

uc. cond., $200. 304-a82-2533.

Block, brick, -

56

lumber, bark buattr wood opllltor, wood moldl"'l (oak I

Pets lor Sale
Groom ond SUW.It Sho~Pat
"

wlmower, storm wlndoft. 304875-4004.
9110 dog kon11111, pold $350 now

0231.
Pomporod Pota by Sonyo, clog
g~~ bo_thl"'l, oil breodo.

~dlr

poplar), IIMI llnlela, grav•ly

'*

Grooming. Julie

• b. B14-441a

Pass

4•

Pass

4•

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

G•

4215.

UoodRol- ......... wlllt2
-rnoeotooondnawoaacltholdo 20-30 .,._ can pop,

AKC Famala Cocker Spaniel

BMP

W N

NUOKZL

Block, Whno, Tan. 3 Yoara Old.

D M F B 0

P M

A K

Livestock

75

Evory

Monday,

Call Tripplo
Wil-

014-4411-1646.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

14ft. boat, live wall, 20hp Mer·

tory, lrotllng motor, $1!500. 304875-68011.

tory, •Ish Finder, Aoc:noorloo, S8!50, 614-441-0819.
17112

IIFG

I

BORN LOSER

/t'-.'1 DO&amp;'S T()()(,IJ.£R 11-\AN Of\.Y€AIF Wfll,MY
'1tAA ''1-IUL. ri\Y OlD
1
YOUR. !)(X, 1.
PRE.TTIER 1\\M Y~ fi(:Jio.. IQ LEVEL I~ ~161£R
I
\
YOUR. OlD tt,N\'51

()I YEAA? 1-.{LL, /1\Y ~'s

Square bales. $1.25 to $2.00 par
bale, alfalf1, clover, orchard

1984 24' Bue Tr~cker Pontoon
B011t New Motor 1988 Low H....

gran. 304-675-3960.

Transportation

\

114 ft. -

a

Autos lor Sale

Aug . 31, 1994

HouM Boat,
Ccmlortobly, Color

T.V., Mk:rowave, Can

71

DATE BOOK

Trl. ii Cover, In Wotor Till Labor
Day, $8,500, 814-446-1'903.
Sl•pe

Be Seen at

Galllpolle Boot Club. "Tlmo Out"
114-44&amp;-1324 Evonlngo.

===-=-:~-::-:::::-:::-~

AKC twglot- Borer pupo, 1
lnrn malo, 1 brlndo lomalo,
oholo I wormod, chomplon
podlg-. 614-1112-22011.
CFA Aogtotorod Htmotoyon Ktt-

'72 MGB-OT, n•do luol pump 76
and body wor~ good title, $450,
814-11112-4002.

/I.RE -&lt;OU "'-1/I.RE TKAT
SC.HOOL 5T"RT5 IN
LE55 THAN P&lt; WI£ K 7

'71 Oat1un 240Z part. car, ull 850 Kawualtl TS Wave Roonor
Ulca Now, $4,1500, 114-446-71103.
whole c~r, $350, 614-iln-4002.

WHAT DID HE
r1E
TO SAY ?

EXPECT

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

tlrW, 1 !Due Point 6 1 SUI Point

1160 Eoch, 114-441-G77t.

Gordon Mums: Yoltow, WhKo,
Ontngo And PurJ&gt;te. TaYI«'e

Chocked 114-440-1104.

AK

J 0 Z U

AFPPKT

Today is lhe 24Jrd day of 1994 and lhe
7211d day of summer.
TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1886, the first major ea rthquake in the
recorded history of th e eastern United
States occurred near Charleston, S.C.
About 100 people died in th e quake .
which was felt up to 800 miles away.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Cahgula &lt;12 ·
411 , Roman emperor; Arthur Godfrey
(1903 -19831, broadcaster; William
Saroyan Cl908- 19611, writer; Buddy
Hackett 0924· 1,
is 10·

famllll Hlmal•r•n ktttana, Vet

F p

Z M B F

8 0

uRNN

:==M:=E:=P=L::I====~~
i I
...,'~

rr---------,
I
_ _ 1
_6 1
_

The not so smart fellow was
trying lo impress a new g1rl he
wa s dattng He told her thai a
membrane was th at part of your
bram thai you - - - - - - __ wtth

I

Ru0 E E N
1-,7:--.,-.,,r-~~-,~-8-,.----l C)

I
.

.

.

.

.

_

.

Complete rhe chu ck le qu 01ed

by fdlmg 1n th e moH1ng word ~
yov develop fr om step No 3 below

P~INT NUMB E ~ED
t[TT[~S IN SQUARE S

0 ANSW
UNSCRAMBl E fOR
ER
SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Pol1sh - Daily- Ounce - Office - FOLD it UP
While !raveling lc..;t summer my husband became very
unnerved. "A road map tells you everything you want to
know," he grumbled. "but how lo FOLD 11 UP again"

New complet• carpet tor '71 or
'72 Dotaun 240Z, block, $125,

114-11112-40112.

Good CondBian am, one 8,ooo

51

Household
Goods

BTU Air CondM- m, One
zoo "'"" T11111or 01-.noc~ m
317-7577.
o..r 60 Pattome Kitchen Carpot
In Stock. 30 Pllt10mo V1nyt tn
Stoclt. llottolton Caf1MII, AI. 7 N.,
114-4-il-11144.

10,00DBTU Roper air conPalnto colll"'l
2br. houoo, lluon, $265/mo. dhloner, Ilk• n.w, $350. 304-875- Plftoburgh
point 17.119 gal. Lator redwood
pi,. utltKt... 304-n:J.6881.
5980.
or cedor •iln $3.99 gat. Palm
loYely 3 - - . . homo In 1919 Moped 175; Nice OuNn Pt ... 3114-175-4084.
oy, loC, equipped kitchen, stzo Bedroom, Suhe, $115; For- a.- Slzo Wotarbod $1110, 814~~'"'3:,
WID hook- cod Air Goa Fumoce $50; Part- 37'8-ml.
and n-..ca,...
up
Metal Khchen Cabinet $20;
l(hd,
can 114 815 4441 after able
Ntco 24' Above Ground Round
p.m.
00
Pool With Dock. L•• Now
~:.=--::--:-=:;:-:~;:::::::--::::
Smlll untwnlehacl holM nur $3,000, Sot At: 69 l'orch St,
AK!no, no po4o, $300/mo. pluo Kanauga, OH, 814-448-'M73..
..IMtoo, tlepo8l required, 114- GOOO USED APPUANCES
tl41-2817woningo.
Wooh.,.L. dry018, rolrtgorat~
ra"'loo· "'"11110 Appltoncoo, 111
V11111 s•-LP•U 814-440-73118, 1Untumlohod
carpolod &amp; 2 ctun, no poto, 800-41111-34w.
tlepoelt • ......... reqUired,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
114--112-3010.
~on.Siov-.w.-.
CompiMo homo lumlohlnga. And llry8m, All -~­
Hou111: 1101&gt;-Sat, t-S. 014-446- And Otlunnt- ftOO And Up,
42 Mobile Homes
0322, 3 mUM out Bulovlllo Ad. Will Dotl-..r. I1WIIII-tl441.
FrN Delivery.
lor Rent
Star Worm In Your llobllo Home
1 llod~J.!20MirL; 2 llod- Ulca New Soctlonot 2 Butn In Whln Tho Eloetrtc OoM 011
Rocttnoro &amp; Bulh In Tope_Ployor Thlo Winter WKh An Emolro
r'OOIM ~110, FrM Water,
-go; Dopoell For llolh R• &amp; Stereo $300; 2 PI- Sola llobllo Homo Walt Fumoco 1hot
U.. No Eloetrlclty. Colt BonqulfWII, Country Santng, 114- Choir $!50, 814-446-11850.
llobllo Homo HTO &amp; CLG
24UII04. 114-28Utl08.
Somlllll waterbed 7 tubee, AI 114-441-1411, or 1.-..n2 llodroome, Parter-· 14160, quMn ooft otdod, $eo, 114-992- 51117 For Dotallo.
.
$260otlo. Depoe1t I A-ncoe 4002.
9ol8 &amp; Low- 1171; End
Aoqulrod, You Pay All Utllltloo,
SWAIN
Tobloe. CdM Tob1~1 f1211, 114114-31&amp;-t102.
-AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. e:! :1714720 AFTER I P.ao.
Olivo
St.,
Otltllpollo.
&amp;
UNCI
2br. mobil homo lum~ 1 ~
TANKS 3 000 Gallon
~ . HUD occoptod. _..,,._
fllmHwe, ~~"lie ;oo~orn I STORAGE
Uprtaltl, Ron EYINI ~ntororlMI,
Worlt booto. I
51.
11512.
Jar:-., Ohio, 1~DS28.
Vt'RA FURNITURE
Nice 2 1 :1 bedroom mobllo
Truck T - For Sho!t Bod
4 lollloo Out Rt. 141
-11858. In lollddloport, - a-,. Power Rock Loa l're•
014-440-3158
And Squat Rock 814-4~05.
01' Solo 1o4r70; Walk Around Ouothy Howohold Fumtohi"'ll
1Wo
Burtot ' - " Ohio Vttltoy
Slovo, Buln tn Ste~ Butn In And Appltonc•. lolanruo Sato lolle-.vo, Gordon tub1 Ateo $89.00; Dlnottoa - $141.00; Memory Clanlone, LAI 140 SeOShower Stott. Prlvato Lolo Ioiii• Living Room St. - $215.00i_ Bod- tiotl 1., Spo- 3 • 4, 15!50
Tronofor I'M Included, 114-441From
Town.
Reterenc• room•
St.
$3r5.00; 1811 Altar I P.ll.
$300/Monttt. HUD Wolcomo 014- RolrtgerotOI'I - Aanga
Waohotw/Dryttw
1Wo
-ern lloddt.. ftM - ·
114-1112-21151.
SmiM 2 llodroamo l.oeat.d In
Cant-ry. Wlllor &amp; ,,.., F..,. Houtw lion. • Bat. H Wod. H;
Utlod - · · For Sole, tal I Up,
~No Polo, $240/llo. 114- Don, Forgot Our REPO. sec- Cal~
Altar I P.ll.
tion.

bod--·

'*''•

79

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1904 Palomino :;:up, 16ft.,
firm. 304peld $3400, oatt 1
57&amp;-2ell8.
Toy Poodle pupploo, 7wlto. otd,
tlral ahola &amp; wonned1 1 l•mal•,

2 mole, opricot &amp; blacK. 304-57&amp;2441.

1988 Oldomobtlo Cutlou Clam,
Good Tlru, No R..~ Aakl"'l:
$1,600, 814-24!1-!117t.
1888 Toyota Torcll EZ. • Spood,
ilcollont Condlton, 40 + MI'G 814-446-7205
Evenings.
73,000 Mlln

Musical
Instruments
Conn. Trumpot 1or .... Good
condition.
114-448-3132
Evonlngoi
Gamolnhanlt Fluto Paid $435
SoH For $260, 114 3B8 111120.
Kimball Artlet Con- Plano,
VO Corttltlan, $800; Snare
Drunt f100, 814-441-7110.
Luclwla Snore Drum KH, Ercollont t:ondltlon $300. llach
Trombonoof' Slop, Exct1llont
Cond111on 1300 814-446-11408.
FOR SALE; SPINET-coNSOLE

PIANO Wontad. --'blo
porty to molto tow "-hlv
~~Boo tocolty, coU f-

58

Fruits

&amp;

11169 Camero, tow mllogo, AC,
tl!!_. !'_\!.. moroon 1 otlvor. 3046r.....,, or 304-882-2348.
1889 Dodge Do~ona, 113,537
mlloo, S op., black w/gray lnlortor1 PS, PB1 PW, loCi! ftOOO, 814041·21500 aayo or 14-lMt-2844
IVtnlngl.
18111 Ford Probo~hHo, uc.
cond., $5000. 1vro Muatt"'l
Cobra 302, rune good, $700:
304-4182·2533.

72 Trucks for Sale

Services
81

Home
Improvements

BASE ME~
WATERPROOFING
UncondHiontd lllotlme gtlllrantoo. Local rolaronc• fllmtohod.
Call 1-11110-287-0578 01' 114-2370481 lloaoro Wotorprooll"'l. Eatobltohol1V711.
C&amp;C
o. ....,
Homo
Malnt.,.nco- waltpepor, •onn
- . , rooll"'l end comploto
homo npotr, comploto

11175 Font 112 lon pickup 302,
auto, lot• of utru, •harp,
f1,000,114-1112·2502.

ASTRO-GRAPB

might have a pro blem d1sce rnmg what
s hould b e taken se rious ly and what

should not . Unfortunately. you may put

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

'blr
'Birthday
Plumbing&amp;
Heating

Thursday . Sept. 1. t 994

under es t1ma te your co mpe !lll on today,

especially 1n commerc 1al marters . The
edge you thmk you have m1ght be a figment ot your active Imagination_

ARIES (March 21 -Aprit 19) Reslnct your

expend1tures today . espec1ally th ose you
more emphas1 s on the latter than the for- ; s uspect are nones se n t i a l What you
mer .
waste now you m1ghl be badly 1n need of
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) We all have 1 later
our good hair days and ou r bad hair; TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Problems 1n
days Try to keep this in mind. because it ~ friendsh1ps could stem today from thmgs
cou ld make you more understandmg of th at a re owed or loaned . This condition
an old fnend who is a tnfle out ot sync can be avoided 1f you do not participate 1n

tlmate celt Chit, 114-!1112-41323.

82

work . Ma1l $2 to Mat c hmaker .

P 0 Box 4465. New York. N.Y. 10163.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) Today you

wi.-

Vegetables

1m El c.mrno, v-e, aut-le,
block wHh outlaw mogo, $1800;
1m brood truck. 1to0vy duty,
480 outo dUIII .. ~
Canning tornol- lor oalo, pick on goa, ftBOO; 1185 Grond Ant,
your own i oomo otr•cty I :':;V7;;;;'5;--:0;:14::--1112::-:;--78;;n:-;.;;::;:-::---;:-;i&gt;lcltod. brtna your _ , con- 1987 Atao 9-tO Pickup TrUck
lalnoni, 01·247-211e1.
!50,301 lltloo $4,500, 114-440Stl- a.-t - n picked clalty, 0112~.
Wtlllamo Fann, Syrocu-. Ohio, ! ·1:-:I-::111:-=
G:::IIC
-=--:S:---:
onoma 4-r~=--=Ext
-,on1114-992_. or 814-112-3D85. clod Co'!, Slo Loodod, Tlh,
Pe
plck
S4fou Crulae, a;alance or Wamnty,
St'ppert,.F·ol&gt;ol - .. _, yowPort'~'!""nd''Ohio• ., Aakl"'l: $10,600. ~~~~~~••• 18111 S-10 Tohoe, loodod, blk on
Com F F zl
-2
.. ... "'I· • ~ blk, u L. 614-Hl'-0122 Ollar
41-4312.
4:30.

=~~~=~~~~=~~~=-.:..~tio:,n~s~hlp

Npalr, .,.....,. wuhl~ and
mobtlo homo tw!lllr. For If• •

'85 Ford Econoltne factory
G::rl'd!J~r'n, good IIIIo, $384,

1

today .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Make

GEMINI (May 21-June 20~ In order lo

every effort to b e co nsi stent in your
behav ior toward s subordinate s today .

ach1eve a goal sign1ficant to you today ,
you might have to step on some toes 10

Don 't be harsh a nd demandtng 1n one
instance. then sweet as sugar 1n the next.

either pract1ce

the process . Whal you gain might not be
that 1mpress1ve, but what you lose in an
alliance could be.

FrMman·a HHtlng And Cooling.
tnotallotlon And Sorvlco. EPJ.
Cortlllod. Aaolclontlot, Commllfclal. 114-256-1011.

In the year ahead , your opportunities
might come m bunches instead of one at
a time . Be ve ry careful, however, to make
each one co unt for something special .

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19~ Don'1
verbally re-1gnile an old misunderstand-

84

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Matching wits

lapse under its own weight.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19~ A new
long-term obligation you 've been contem plaling should be gtven more thought

doubts , your fears might be lullilled. Don"t
tempi late.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22~ The world

before you commit yourself today . It

don·t be looking lor handouts. You might
end up geHing what you deserve - and
this may not be anything about which to

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Hoot Pumpe, Air Condltlonaro,

Fu,_ lolaotor Eloctrtclon,
114 448 doe, 1-eoo..287-t308.
Rooidontlot
or commercial
wlri"'l, now Mnrlco Of rapalrw.
Muter u-...r oloc:triclon.
Ridenour Eloctrtcal WV000308 ·
304-41711-1788.
•
•

W N

I LARE M I

lf.\lal~

f\IGIU.TIWI ~ 01\D~ I

Capric.

cover, wl1raller. 304·m.a54o.

M

F

lovr Krombled words below to form lour words

II'Voutbolrd, 140hp Mercrulte,
$25. Morvan's Farm, Rt 35. 304- opan bow, full whitt canvae

937-2018.

AFPPKT

W Z Z M E

'~i:~~, S@\\~11~\-tZtZf~" WORD
GAM I
Edited by ClAY R. POUA~N~;;;;;~--::::-0 Reorronge letters of the

Premium 2nd cutting hay rolls,

pupo, oil . - and wormod, 8
wka. Augullt mh, $200, 814-'M2·

31n

ft

p M

iJil&gt;t .trv1 pr e&lt;; o"•tll

5 fH.'t r.tiS V

PREVIO US SOLUTION "No sacn!t ce IS wo rth the name unl ess 11 tS a JOY
Sacnf1ce and a long face go 111 together·· - Mahatma Gandhi

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

cury mocor, tlh tralltr, 1wlvtl
..... fish flnct.r, marine t.t.

U M J

l.ri111Ju' ~·upll'

ltJ!Idl' \ ,.,L'f'

WBYKTDMB .

111115 Honda 300 FoLW Tru UnBaby Bull Calvea For Sale, J11r· der W.ITIInty, With Loading
say, Angus, Cross. Baby Ram,-, And Tie Oowna, 814448-31145.
Holsteins, 614-245-llSSI

Cows And Calvu For Sale Or
Trade For Feoder Calv11, 814-

p

S W F B

NWGKO

tor 6 P.M. 614·367-0591.

Caro For Good Fomtly Pat 304675-S22l' AHor 5p.m.
AKC Gorman ohort-hlllr polntor

PM M

1911 Hlrtay O.vldeon 1200
1 Mart With Con $400 &amp; Olher Sportlter, IXCIIIent condtUon,
make oHer, 814-992-4503.
Hon1e1, 614-446-41,0.
Attention Dog Tralnerw : For 1911 Ytmaha Bl..tar 4-whHlar,
SOlo, Bob Wllno OUoll, Rtng •xtra Mt tlrn &amp; whHia, In·
Neck Pheasants, Plgaana, Rof· cludH ,.., r1ck, great cond.,
l1rs, &amp; Homers, PleaH Call At· $1800. 304-8112·2533.

Good WHh Chlldrtn $100. NMCI
to Sate Due to Lack of nma to

$280, 814-11112-40112.

::1. Patch, Kerr Aootl, 11&gt;1-241-

, F

tV87 Ntnlo 64l0, '-- lllloo,

Registered Polled Hereford Bull 16 Ft. SNra Boat &amp; Tr~ller 2
4 Ynra Old, 1,800 Lb. $1,200, Saato,_Trolling Motor, Bot-

Elvto l'reoloy plato, block I
whke, $800 value, wUI •• $250.
P. Buckley moeo omamema,
Noel Noel $50u. 304-u!-2431.

WAY

$3,300 OBO, 614-25&amp;-63111.

09:24564.
2 Cockatiels, mete •

Cotlctwlo I
Plulle Septic
TonlcaL 300 Thru 2,000 Otdlono
Ron 1:.nrw Ent•,.,._•, Jack..
eon, OH 1-100-5:17-6528.

sanc tuary
35 W. Coas t co li .
36 North or
Sout h 38 Trappist
cheese
m---t-- T--1 41 Roman date
42 Syntheti c
--r----1
materi al
43 1mpolite
44 British schoo l
46 Type ol
divi sion
47 Concerned
w ith
w--r-t--t----J 4B Aobin ·s hom e
49 Los Ang eles
p layer
5 1 Sheep so und

1H15

NH 7h hayblnd, NH 351 grlndor clutches, r~~bulh motor, 4 new
mixer, ln1ema11onal Fannall 806
tractor, 111 good cond, 304-2TJ.. "-· $1300. 304-678-2688.

BIIement full of blcyclea and
pat11, Mil •ll for $275 firm, 614-

- n at ond 01 Bowhuntor Rd.
(old er.m.,.~ In Rutland.

World

A reversal
for fortune

Chain Saw bars &amp; ch1ln• to Ill
almost 1ny saw. Bast prices In 1984 KXBO Loob and Runs
area. Skters Equipment, 304- Good $500, 814-37i-2240.
675-~2, or 1-800-2n·3917.

Creek Truc:klng, Chuck
liams, 814-245-5096.

Cue backhoe 580C. lloy bo

enter tai nment
29 Neckwear

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Livestock Hauling, Anytime,
Anywhera. Producal'l, Hillsboro

AKC block. lomalo, Cocker
SDanlllt, 1omoe. old. 304-57&amp;:W5.

28 Lavish

,

34 Bird

E,1 r. t1 1el!cr on Ill(' c oph e• s tand :&gt; l or ~ n oth e r

1ox1oxa dog konnot, ft99.V5.
Paint Pl~a, ~5-401W .
2 a..g~e doa•, 008 rw~nlng,
one otonod, 175 lor both, 014-

992-4002.
$100. 304-e82-3438.
Bauott Solo And Love-t, IAK-;-;;:C;;-;;-R_:::;111
::orod=~bt;:;:-ac:;k:-;P;-:o:;:ltl;::-nG- CondHionl $550, Oek
~
Kttchan Tabla $50, Golf Bag S17, gne, male, 3 yra old, $250, 814614-446--4503.
1112-3!506.

thing
Mawr
25 1ml at ed
27 M1n e entrance

JO We - The

Ce teb11t~· Cophct c• ypt og o;uo·.s .1r e crea tl'ld lo on&gt; quolahon ~ b y

1112-3013 ohor 5:00pm.
lloby bod, olrollor, owing,
walker, cats~~~~, high chair, P•Y
pon. 304-41711-4548-

C.llor ID bol, 14 memory, brond
now, $43.85, 614-11112-411116.

r--nr--,0

8 - 11

38H366.1

,.rna",

en ding

23 That ide ntical

occaston

Opening lead: • K

YOU WERE A BORDER
COLLIE , YOU'D BE OUT
HERDING SHEEP ..

2 1 Compa r ative

19 Festi ve

By Phillip Ald e r

304-uurl-3730

will lake $200,

work1ng o rder

13Chalr -

24 ~

FIRST PLACE
HE 'LL LOOK II

IF

63

Building
Supplies

8ft. aluminum
•loctrlc water

52g•l.

Cosby
7leave
6 - -da1sy
9 Hav e a snac k
tt In good

11185 SUzuki Ouodrocor. new

tion E.J:en:lu M1ehlna $75, 614brake,
hHier,

6 Cl inton and

PEANUTS

tnduotrlal chtlln link fence 140',
hood, No Lean, 8t4-441-1:!b5.
Want to rent ln1xpanslva houu 48" !'lgh, 2 gat•, $1110; nona _.ted com ohotlor,
or lrsller In country with land •nd outbuilding. Willing to make ft00,114-112~repel.-, 513-4142-411'112.
One 11.500 BTU Air Corttlt-.

Merchandise

-780Q.

!!

¥Q76 2
¥A Q 2
•A J 8

3 Ba se ball
eq uipment
4 Stee lworker
5 Mag icia n Ge ller

:on

olpoo, window, lintels, ltC. Claude WJn1.... Rio Orondo, OH Call 014245-4112t

from se.,.,

COOK POT

QJ

] ...

3478.

WATER UNE SPECIAL: 31~ Inch
200 PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.~
Evane Entet'PrlHe,
6141130 .lockoon, Ohio

55

Ploco Wood Style Uvlng
Room Sullo, $200, Munt Func-

• 5 2

26 Float
30Unpaid debl s
3tAgnus 32Type of bread
33 Scholarly
370ppos ite ol
ecto
HFi~

THAT'S TH '

1888 4WD GMC Blazer, very
good cond., well mainlllned,
like now lnoldo &amp; out. ~75-

IO&lt;, 014-446-322~ .

56" oow blade, 304-li"l&amp;-4024.

47

Houses for Rent

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

nace, Metll Doof FramM, ..._

• Aoroo Oft Adell-. Plica.!. Cor·
nor Of -um Trot And 011oHr
R.d, $14,000. 814-36l-78tl.

after

54

oortod Slue, 614-446-0308.
Uood Spood Ouoon dryer, like
2 Hulera Thormalalre Vented ,..., whit•. $30. 304-675-3383
40,000 BTU, &amp;.lnst•r -Unvented . after Opm, Mrtou1 lnqulrtn
19,000 BT\J Sunray Gu Stove,
only.
614-367-7901.
WaI
Dryer
1250.
20 Inch Glrto Bleyclo 1 Brood Rolrtgonrta&lt; $150; Couch &amp;
Now $75; Full SIUI Boa, Brood Chair $225; Gu Stove $200;
Now $200, 614-446-41470.
Table • Chal,., Truh ComJ*:-

quarium•

JUG IN TH'

1887 Chevy Astro van, $4DOO,

Used 3 Ton Package Air Conditioner 1 UHCI Electric Fur-

20ft. c1mper atova,

I'LL HIDE YORE

614-992-319~ .

80,000 BTU Gas Fumace, 1

Iabrie

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South
West North East
South
Pass
1•
Pass
t•
2NT
Pass 3 •
Pass

BARNEY

MAW!! HERE
COMES TH'
PARSON!!

1 Dull one

2 Ca r

24Army home

SOUTH

,,

20No n-c le rgy
22 Fine cotton

• 7 4 3

• J 1o 9 3
0 J 10 7 5

• K

DOWN

16Amount ol
medicine

EAST

THATS Wf{R£ IT ElvCW

58 Obtained

(suH.)

5

I 1-\AD A 8JT REKT!OU
TI HiS GJT R£/ICTtav PIJD

lUJ&lt;KQJT7

8(],000 Mlloo, ",200. 614-245SII58 Daytime. 814-245-5992
£venlnga .

C 1994 to-, NEA. lnt

homo, 614-1112-2357.

Fow d111wr, al..._.op cooler,

304-67!-1131

tHI Ford Full Stu Conversion
V1n, All Extras, Very Nice,

if"t1""{

1200 BTU air condhloner, $200;
electric turNca tor mo,blle

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

LR, For Under $250/Mo., Na.ar
O•tllpolla, Dtcent Nelahbora

J,,~,.."'
VJ fLI

B00-28NI30B, 614-448-6308.

mente, 1315 080,114..12-1341

Looking For Apertmont Wllh
Khchen 1 Bedroom, Bathroom,

1984 Chevy Conwarslon Van,
S71,000ml., Ilk• n1w In &amp; out.
W-675-1880 or 87S-e,56!, atk
tor Cllt.

,,

\

.

100,000 BTU Gu Fumacea 02%.
Etfleiency, 80% Ettk:lancy, 1·

Proof Bldg. Call Morrie Haskins
614-446-26"31 01' 814-446-2512.
Wanted to Rent

c- - - : --;-;-

3358.

150,000

HOVJ QD IT

linn, 014-092-6884.

Ro n~:e ~·
1-eoo-ZBUJOB,
8.

11 Adherent o f

• K Q 10 Y 7

1980 JMp Wagooner 414, $600

61 4

8·3 1·94

e6 3

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1 Coppertone Stove Top, Oven,
Dlehwsaher, Double Bowt Sink.

C8fPO'II

klformedthalllll du elhgl

CoUrt. Skill In wrtnen and oral

commtlnlcatton. Prottclont In

tow.

S!Hplng Room• $15 Por Day.

0

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

=

wtl not
kno-.11nih 110Cep1
adverUiamentstor,..1Mtall

tlvough
10

no-

Cabe, $-10 Bed, Rangar Bed
614-448-0440 or 614-256-6018.

Prlvat• Toll• In Modem Fire

41

lamlllloiiiUI or nollonli
origin, Of any tnlontlon to
make any 111c11 pl1llerence,
lmlltdlon or -tnollon. •
Thll

Rooms for rent - wvek or month.

Stanlr111 at $120/mo. Gatlla Hotal.
614-4411-9580.

•rca

Rentals

tltllt

B1c:helor'a or Malter's o.grH
required. Experience In 1n adult
envlroment prafenwd. Prior
work experience: ThNI yNr. of
,.lltad work e•perience. Work

Riverside

Steeping room• with cooking.
Alao trliller
on rtvar. All
hook-upa. Ca I efter 2 :00 p.m.,
304-m-5651, Maaon WV.

Farms lor Sale

based on race, color, rolgton,

Education: Valid

and

33

lrnlallonMollct•t~nollon

Ohio Toachlng Cortllleoto ond

Second Avo, Galllpolto 814-4464418 Ah•r 7p.m.

ablo. 304-756-71111.

to lldvortloo •any prwl.....,,

provide direct lnatructlon.

Furnished Apartment 1 Bltdroom $260, Utllhl• P1ld, i39

euto.

tt. Fedora! Fair Housing Acl
ol t 968 wNch lllogat

Admlnlstsr 1cademlc placement
tilling and coordlnaleln-11ouH
OED and Aduh Basic Education

Bath,

,...

REDUCED! 27ac., commen:lll
gal1lgo, 3br. mobil homo,
Sancl!tll Rd. --.ttlo Roofty,
304-417WOJO Of 1175-3431 .loon

Uonlll Programs to 50 .tun ln.

carcerala&lt;f main. Malnteln all

Fumlshed 3 Roome •

Cloon, No Pato1 Roloronco &amp;
DopooH Roqulrea. 614-446-1519.

Laundry, 614·38&amp;-117211.

available).
Spm.

Educ1tlonal Coordln1tor, annUIII

u

4 , .. ,..

Booutllul ~- mil, private rood,
woodtl, open ..... camp lite,
ctoolt, lgu. oloctrlc, wator

recorda 11 requlr.d by lhe Ohio
C.nlrtl Schools Sy.1em. Super·
vise Ch1ptar One and ABLE
Programs and t11ctt1F1, u Will

Wohlr &amp; Dryer, Porklng 614-4464383
D.ayo;
614-446-01311
Evenings.

0

441-1025.

:r~w=-I.':'R~-:"~.=:

Employm~~nt

••

Khchen,

Comptete

Manor

304-4175-42711or 875-7853.

1ti4.Pc:.Ung

Ia

Clean 3 Roorr. &amp; Bath Fura
nlahed, water and traah paid!
Pot1•r Aru. No Pats! 614-3888000

A.partmanta In Middleport. From

24.3ac.,
. '2br. log
older ·
unllnle...,
hou•
wlblsament &amp; •pUc eyetem,

Ooodllno lor appllcotlon to Sop14,

trom $222 to S285. W1lk to ehop
movlee. Call 614-446-2568.
EOH.

0

minor rep.lr, tl25, 814-002-2478.

Parts From
snd Ford Beds, Chevy

54 ,

'I

EEK &amp; MEEK

Chav.

0

4 Knead
7 Can. prov.

• A tU 9 8 6

I Wt:m OVT IV I11-1 a£ IT
1r1J~£ llTRA SUJS111V£ . 1/JTUJSE ,
SCXIAL k:.TIVISfS LAS1 IVI6HT

53
Antiques
~H~ooo:::;ler::-:ca::;:-bl~n::ot:-i":::..::l;-:lo::rs:-;":-,:-nood::-::::,

1182t

Never lived In, 1111 hu rww
homo wonanty, ll1le delivery &amp;
Ml up, ttnancl"'l oval~

dHCrlptlcns ara avell•bte for
review at the OBE9 office.

Doot:riptlon

BEAUTIFUL APARTME~S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, !138 Jockeon Pike

I , Olllo.

Wood•. 304-675-157"l.

6

doltvory &amp; Ml up, ownar tlnanci"'lavalloblo. 304-755a88.
NEW BANK REPOSt Only 4 loftl

Sorvlcn oHico. eomp)Mod Job

tembar

Avonuo, Gotllpollo, $185/Mo.
UtiiHI• Pold, Shore 8ath,614446-4418 Afta&lt; 7 P.M.

I

Shoot• a...u $800, 614-3792601.
Golt-c"'"
lu-:-bo- .- 1:-MI
--:-:-Irono
- -.-, - - 11:-o-d:

1m Ek:onll 12160 With 1m
R~
tba8 MuM Bo Graclouo !lYing. 1 and 2 bod·
Moved, $5,000, Firm. 114-38&amp;- room •Pirtmenta 11 Vlllaga

.,.,......... .n...

recommend• th1t you do buaiRestaurant tHklng Khchan and nn• with people you know and
Clearing
P•rsonai..Fia•lble NOT to 11nd money ttvough the
Hours .. wrlle to: CLA Box 330 mall unl:ll you have lnv.tlglted

"'Galllpollo Dolly Trlbuno 825
Third Avo. Galllpollo, Oh. 45631
Soloo Polftlon : Local Manufac&gt;
-• HouolnS ft--•- Hoe 1.,_
lu ·~
-modloto Open "'I For Full Time
Soln Person. Soloo Erl*lonoo
p,.ferrld- E.u:ellenl Potential.
Send Rnumo To: CLA 327, Cio
Galllpollo Dally Tribune, 825
T~trd Avanua, GotUpoMo, OH
45831.
SouthMitern Probetlon T,..tmont
AHomattvo
(SEPTA)
Cantor
AppUcollona moy bo obtained
from end mumed to your local

Fumlahed EHiclency, 7'01 Four1h

1V75 Folnnont 14170 wltoto ••· $232-$355 . Call 814-11112-58511.
tru, big ttvtngroom w/coltlng EOH.
fin, tongue &amp; grove floor, 2
large bedroome wlcelllng t.ne, Larva 2br., portly lumlahod, AC,
kitchen &amp; dining araa Mona HUD opprovod, Pt. Plaaunt.
floor, new applianc•, dlah- 304-4175-7783.
wuhor, wuhlr &amp; dryer uklng
2 br •pta, In Pomeroy, all
$5-'-~' loto of _.biiH 1
•. 304' Nice
utllnlu peld, 614-11112-3858.
110-4il41.
11811 Clayton T111llor. 2 Bod- Nlco 3 br. opt. In Middleport,
room, 1 112 Batha. New 14x24 614-992-5858.
Room Addftlon. SHuatod on 1 Furnished
Smatl
Howe,
112 AoiM. Ulort, OH. Exc.ttont S215/mo. + Utllhlea, Parking. No
CondHlon, Uke 014-247- Pets. Call Beta,-. 1 P.M. 614-4463883 Evenlnp.
0338.
11811 Col! Wood rnobllo homo,
45
Furnished
'M1:7CJL 2 becfroomtl, IIC cond,
304-41rW653.
Rooms
3br., 2 both, on t20x!50 lot, HonRoom for rwnt, ahower, cabla
dorwoo, WV. 304-31'11-4024.
TV, microwave, refrigerator,
UloiiTED OFFER! Now 14x80 private entrance, Middleport,
onty make 2 pay,....•, no 614-992-7n1.

Imum 61U46-1657.

someone
with
own
tr~nsportallon to ciNn home
tnd offiCI WMkly, 614-992-4002.

NHd

75.

Fana, Washer,
Dryer,
Appliances, C.ntral Air. \Jnderl)ln-

825 Third Avenue, Galltpotto, OH 2-K, Young School Aao During
Summer. 3 Days per ~Ilk Min~5831.

Second Avo.LGalllpollo, 614-4464416 After 1 ~.lol .

dhloned,

1tm Concoro 121185, 3 Calll"'l

Local M1nufactured Housing S.1mat,...a Will Do: AheraUons,
Deeler Hu Immediate Opening Ropel!i. Cwtom Sowing. loloko
For Full lima Service Parson • and ueslgn GrNt HIUOWMn
Uus1 Be Knowledgable In Malnt. Costum11 "614-446-0465.
And Reptlr Of M1nutactur.d
Hom... Send Resume To : CLA Sun Valley Nursery School.
328, Cio Galllpolla Dally Tribune, Chlldcara M-F 61m~ :30pm Ag•

Fumlahed EHiclency $150/Mo.
UlllhiM Paid, Share Bath, &amp;07

Modem, 2 Bedroomo, Fully Corpotod, Air Con-

Mobile Homes
for Sale

4

r.

Downtown

14x60 1978 CompiMry Total
Electric, 2 Bedrooms, Llk• New
rr ~':f:nOut Alto Now Carpet,

614-367-7010.

UGifT DELIVERY. cash paid

35 Welt Apl. 2br, 1 bath, patio,
cioae to grocery atom &amp; shopping cenfer, water, uwer, trash
rovlded, $295/mo. EqLIIII Hou•
ng Opportunhy, 814-441-1608.

&amp;

Two bedroom, ldtehen, dining,

llmotaal 614-383-9643, 614-:167-

piNie.

Ad., Rut-

land, 814-1112~7.

Prof8aslon1l Tr.. Service lopping • Trimming Hedge Trimming Stump Removal Frw Es-

HouHkeeper needed, room &amp;
board plua tmall salary. 2008
Shore St. No phone calls

Urn~~

ecrM ot1 New

7595,

Call 6~a-26JII Mon-Frlday,
8am-4pm tor appointment.

Gllllpolle

Mlnut• To Holzar, 3 Bedrooma,
1 112 Bathtl. LR, DR KHchtln,

Gaargn Portable S.wmlll don't
h1ul your loa• to ttM mill Jult
Clll 304--e75-1lf.57.

Help wtnted: security guardt-

ranch

2bdrm. spta., Ioiii electric, applllncea tumlahed, laundry
room facllltln clo1111 to IIChool
In lawn. Appl{cauon• available
•t: Village Grwen AJ'Is. •4g or

call 614-9112-371 t EOK

Homes tor Sale
bedroom

3

0~148 .

CLA 32U clo Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, GaiUpollo, OH ~5631.

"'

Experienced
Gultartet
Now
Giving L..saona In Ther• Home.
For Mort lnform~tlon, 614-4410138.

Yord Work Wlndowo W Gunors Cloonod Ll9ht Houll"'l,
Comrnorlt:ol, Rooldontlol, Stove:

munication Sklllo. Apply To:

loiF

1 and 2 bedroom a~rtmenta,
tumlshad
and unfurnished,
NCurlty deposit required, no

51138.

EOE

bo

1873 Winchester Rille 38 -40

1bf. furnished apt ., gru1 cond.,
,..modelad. aood location, cora
mer 6th &amp;. llaln, AC, utllhln
paid, depoelt requlrltd . 304-675-

457W . Ann : l.Jnda Brlggle , NHA.

Plko,

Cal, Above Average Condition,

1987

Muds 4 Speed, Cl1rk Rubber
Tires Fork l ltt, Prlc.d To S.JII
John'a Auto SaiH, 130 BullVIlle

Sporting Goods

lor Rent

6n&gt;-28m.

to develop quaUty mNI urvlca
tor ra~kjanta ot Overbrook Can·
ler. Oualllllld appli cants plena
1ppty to Overbrook Center, 333

Page St,_t

52

Apartment

1br. tumlsh~ apt., no peta, no
HUO, ref•rence I deposit. 304-

Olt~tlc lan

arxl

&amp;

pete, 814-GG2-2218.

pllcanta muet woril closely wtlh

Dietary

Ret.rencaa

Depoon, No ~ota, 814-446-31'110.

regl•tar.d. R"ponslblll11n In·
elude MOS+ and careplan
documentation ; participate In
ct~raplan

Al!f

1992 Nlosan 5 Spood

Dryer, eo. or T.V.,
Mlerowava Stove, FrMzer, Air
Conditioner, Mite. 6,4-256-1238.
Washor,

ALDER

10Hawaiian fe ast 52 Shade
53 Fuss
12Eye part
54 Sail upward
14 - - tree
15 Baseballer Mel 55 Picnic pests
56 Guys
a nd fam il y
57 Nega tive vote
r-----.uwi'iil---;;::;;-:;;;;--,116 Wicked

KIT 'N' CARL VLN by Lany Wrf&amp;ht
Small Moblla Home P1rtly Fur-

45 Porce lain cl ay
49 Wheel track
50 Czech rive r

1 Taxi

w1th sharp1es today might not work out to

if they 're on their
home turt and you are not. Wa1t until you
can read from the same page. Trying to
your liking , especially

patch up a broken romance? The Astra-

Graph MatchmaKer can help you lo
understand what to do to make the rela-

ing today between you and a friend . This
matter 1s on its last legs and about fo col-

mighl be wise to nd yoursell ol old debts
before a cquiring lresh ones.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20~ Don'l

CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22~ II you are
pressured into making a commitment
today despite

a

residue of lingering

doesn' t owe you a free ride today, so

Ch8P'

·,

.

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 31, 1994

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10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3/$1.00 plain

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
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Low tonight In 50s, partly
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\lot. 45, NO. 85
Copyright t 994

3 Sec tions, 24 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 1, 1994

U. S., Cuba begin talks on exodus problem
NEW YORK (AP) - In an
effort to hall the nood of Cubans
trying to reach the Uni ted Sta tes.
U.S . officials and a Cuban delegation began talks today to discuss
the exodus and the possibilities of
legal migration .
The talks at the U.S. mission to
the United Nations came after more
than 19,000 Cuban s fled their
homeland in the past month. The
exodus began when Cuba President
Fidel Castro responded to Aug. 5

riots in Havana by suggesting he
would no longer stop those trying
to leave.
Michael Skol, the chief U.S.
delegate at the talks, told rcponers
he expected serious lalks on migration .
"We know it is in their interest,
as wcll 'hs in the Interest of th e
United States, to establi sh a firm
syste m of legal, safe and orderly
migration from Cuba, to rep lace
what is happening now , which is

dangerous, chao ti c and unsafe
migration ," said Skol, a deputy
assistant sccrc~1ry of slate.
On Wednesday. Coast Guard
and U.S. Navy ships picked up
2,159 Cubans trying to reac h the
United States in ricke ty rowboats,
homemad e rafts and sai lboat s.
They will be taken to the Navy's
base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.
Cuba's delegate, Ricardo AIMcon, had no comm ent as he entered
the U.S. miss ion , which is across

First Avenue from the U.N. build - Castro's most truster! foreign po liing protected by a police booth and cy advisers.
concrc le barri ers to keep ca r
Wa shington h;os lung rejected
bombers away.
that demand and U. S. offic1;ols sa id
As he left for the t1lks, Alarcon today' s talk s would be limited to
told Cub:J's state radio Wednesday migrat ion questions.
th at the on ly way to stop the exo"No other topics wil l be disdus was for the United States to CUS5Cd," said Wal ter Douglas, a
end illi 32 -ycar economic embargo spokesman at the U.S. missron.
against Cuba .
Cuba has said the refugees :lre
"All they have to do is change necing for economic anrl nol polit ithat basic issue," said Alarcon, a cal reasons. but U.S. officials have
former foreign minister and one of blamed Cubd's communist pol iCICS

Cedras faces arrest
by American troops
WASHINGTON (AP) - Amer- est so far, thou gh he prov1dcd no
ican troops invading Haiti would 1imetable for moving against
arrest Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras and Cedras.
Denying reports the Pentagon
1urn him over lo the Caribbea n
co untry's lawful government, a was reluctant 10 act, Deutch sai d
there was no policy disagreement
senior U.S. official warns.
With training of hundreds of with the State Department, usually
mostly Caribbean troops about to depicted in the media as more
begin, Deputy Secretary of State prone lo use the force au thorized
Strobe Talbott said Wednesday by the U.N. Security Council in
"it's a dead certainty" Cedras and July.
Even so, Talbolt said force
his cohorts would be apprehended
and turned over to the elected gov- would be "a last reson," adding:
ernment of President Jean-Bertrand "We want to make sure we use
other avenues.''
Aristide.
Deutch and Talboll headed a
The predominantly American
military force would restore Aris- U.S. delegation that went to
tide 10 power. The politician-priest Kingston, Jamaica, on Tuesday and·
was ousted three years ago by the won unanimous suppon of the 13nation Caribbean Community and
junta.
Common
Market for the U.N. resoAt a news conference with Tallution
.
They
then went to the
bott, Deputy Defense Secretary
Dominican
Republic
to check on
John M. Deutch said American
troops will be dispatched to Haiti infiltration of supplies to Haiti in
- either to expel Cedras and his defiance of a U.N. embargo.
Talbott said they detected durlieutenants from power or to help
restore order if 1hey yi elded to ing a helicopter ride a large,
international pressure and departed. makeshift pipeline, apparently to
Deutch said some 10,000 U.S. carry oil, as well as several large
troops would be in the coalition barrels of oil being carried across
force, supplemented by up to I ,000 lhe border to Haili . He said the
from other hemisphere countries. Dominican government had
He said the point of such a large promised to enforce the embargo
force was to minimize American with troops.
Adminis1ration officials are
and Haitian casualties.
hopeful
three nations, the Bahamas,
Clinton administration officials
Antigua
and Guyana, which did not
have warned Cedras for months he
commit
1roops
on Tuesday will do
is running the risk of an invasion.
so
eventually.
'
Deutch's statement was the tough-

in Columbus and Cincinnati Is
$1.16. Cleveland reported an average of $1.18, the group said.
Stales surrounding Ohio are
reporting average prices ranging
from $ 1.14 per gallon to $1.23.
They are: Kentucky , $1.14: Indiana, $1.15; Pennsylvania, $1.16:
Michigan, $1.19 and West Virginia, $1.23.
Travelers will find adequate
gasoline supplies on Labor Day. In
Ohio, about 71 percent of the service stalions surveyed plan 10 be
open , with more lhan 30 percent
open 24 hours, the group said.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Six
month s in a hotel.
Tha t's what jurors in th e OJ.
Simpson tria l may face if tllc judge
dec ides to scq u" tcr th em fro m
what is sure to be overwhelmin g

pub licit y.
Pro sec utors s:~ id Wedn es day
!hat tlrcy wo uld ask lo r a
sc qucsll'rl'd jury .

A second DUI conviction can
lead to automatic confiscation of
the vehicle. Nearly 700 cars and
uucks have been confiscated from
repeat offenders in the past year,
slate highway safety officials said.
"The lhreat of losing your
license is cited as the No.-1 deterrent of driving while under the
influence," VoinoVich said.
Ohio's laws, among the tough-·
est in the nation, reflect what can
be done, said RQbert Pollack,
Chicago regional director of the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration.
"These laws reflect the public's
outrage over this crime," said
Michelle ChiJlPlll!. executive director of the Ohio chapter of Mothers
Against Drunken Driving.
Chippas' lobby f!':OUP, with the
support of Voinovtch , will renew
its effort in the next session of the
Legislature to lower Ohio's legal
definition of drunken driving to
0.08 percent blood alcohol content.
An effort to do that this year
failed. Ten other swes have adopted the lower threshold .

'

:\~ws

org:.llliJJ-

tion s fi ght ing a proposed g~1g order

agreed that a hotel-bou nd jury
111igh t b~.: the best way to go.
Supe rior Court J udgc Lance Ito

COURTROOM CLASH • Defense Attorney Robert Shupiro,
right, argues in court as Deputy District Attorney William Hodg·
man stands after a courlroom clash during a pretrial hearing of 0.
J, Simpson's double-murder case Wednesday. (AP)

A 21-year-old Wakeman man
was sentenced Wednesday after
being found guilty on a felony theft
charge Tuesday.
' Jasen Thompson was sentenced
to 18 months in prison, the maxi mum penalty , by Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill after a Meigs County
jury found him guilty in connection
to the theft of items, including a
motorcycle, from J&amp;R Spans Shop
in Pomeroy in July.
Thompson was found innocent
on a charge of aiding and abetting
in the actual breaking and entering
of the business.
Thompson was also sentenced
on two counts of contempt of coun.

Thompson made a vulgar utterance
during a motion hearing before the
tria l and, during the trial itse lf,
refused to stop talking when
ordered by Crow.
Crow sentenced Thompson to
30 days in jail on each count and
suspended one of the counlS.
Two other men involved in the
incident served as witnesses agains!
Thompson, said Prosec uting Attorney John R. Lentes. John Kirby and
Anthony Scott Boling pleaded
guilty to related charges earlier.
Thompson was represented by
Public Defender William Safranek
while the slate of Ohio was represenled by Assistant Prosecutor
Chris Tenaglia.

Ohio's DU/Iaw reflects
r---Local
briefs----.
need, MADD chief says
Residents urged to conserve water

COLUMBUS (AP) - Slate and
federal officials are hailing the
effectiveness of Ohio's year:old
drunlcen driving law, which has led
to more than 68,000 on-the·spot
license suspensions.
But Gov. George Voinovich
said on Wednesday that tougher
measures are needed.
"Our policy is simple and our
actions are swift and sure,''
Voinovich said. "You drinl( and
drive in Ohio, and you'll probably
lose your license - maybe your
vehicle, too. No ifs, ands, buts or
jailhouse lawyer."
The state's drunken-driving
statute went into effect Sept. I ,
1993, targeting fllSt-time offenders.
. Nearly two-thirds of the 73,000
drunken driving arrests each year
in Ohio are of fust-time offenders.
People whose blood alcohol is
at 0.10 percent or above when
stopped can face confiSCation of a
driver's license. Among other court
penallies, a person convicted of
dri'ving under the influence also
can have a license suspended for an
additional 90 days or as much as
six months.

mcdi~L

" If th ey do so, that is a good
idea," Gomes said, "but it must be
imp lcmenled."

Siml?son jury may
be sequestered

Higher gasoline prices Man sentenced to 18
curtails holiday travel · months on theft charge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Fewer people in the Great Lakes
region will drive 100 miles or more
away from home during the Labor
Day weekend, the Ohio Automobile Club said Wednesday.
Parl of the reason for the estimated 7 percent decline in travel is
rising gasoline prises. The state's ·
average price for a gallon of selfserve unleaded gasoline has
increased 11.8 cents since last year
and 6.2 cents since July 4, the
group said.
The national average price for a
gallon of gasoline is $1.20. Ohio's
average price is $1.19. The avem2e

for the co untry's econom ic hardships.
Alberto Gomes, a spokesman at
the Cuban m1 ss ion, said Cuba
wou ld welcome a U.S. proposal to
pan t 20,000 visas a yea r to
Cuh:ons . Doug la s said he had no
111form:o1ion on suc h a proposal.
which ho" been reported in news

Syracuse residents arc being asked to conserve water until further notice.
The village's board of public affairs is requesting water customers to conserve water due to a well being shut down, possibly by
a faulty pump.

Car hauler involved in accident
An unattended car hauler backed into a small span-utility vehicle
at Don Tate Motors in Pomeroy Wednesday afternoon and came to
res! on Main Street, according to Pomeroy Police Department
reports.
·. .
.
William S. Thornlon, 36, of Gall1pohs Ferry, W.Va., was c1ted
for driving under. suspension after his 1983 International coasted
into the unoccupied 1988 Suzuki Samura1 at 12:55 p.m., reports
stated.
The large uuck had light damage and two 1994 Buick Centurys
on its trailer were also damaged, records show. The Samunu. owned
by Don Tate Motors, had heavy damage to the front end.
.
No injuries were reponed and no cars were mvolved on Mam
Street, but the road was blocked for a while to remove the vehicles,
police reported.

Clerk's office to close for training
The legal deparUnent of the office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer will be closed Tuesday, Sept 13, and Thursday, Sept 22, for on· site computer training.
Additional training days are anticipated and will be announced,
Spencer said. The title office will remain open during those times.

was clearly uncomforUtblc with the
idea.
"Will the L.A. Times foot the
hotel hill for the sequestration ?" he
asked sharply , clear ly angry tha t
the Times had printed details of his
pro pose d gag order, which was
released thi s week to on ly four
attorneys.
Ito also worried that "the enti re
jury p:Ulcl" could be scared off if
they have to stay away from home
for the six months tlt:Jt Ito estimated the tria l could last.
With so much attention focused
on the Simpson case, it was only a
matter of time before lawyers wck lcd the sensitive subject of sequestering the jury , which is expensive
and can be rough on jurors.
But Deputy Districl Attorney
William Hodgman sa id that the
white-hot media glare may leave
no other alternative. "It' s the only
way we know of (for) completely
protecting the sanctily of the jury, "
he said.
Simpson, 47. has pleaded inno cent to the June 12 knife killings of
hi s ex- wife Nicole Brown Simpson, 35, and her friend Ronald
Goldman, 25.
Jury se lection had been set to
begin on Sept. 19, but Ito pushed
the date back 10 Sept. 26 to allow
more time for prelrial hearings.
A pool of 1.000 potential jurors
will be screened out for such h:Jrd-

shrp reasons as work comm itments
and family obligations. Question ing will begin ahout a week later,
Ito estimated.
It could take several weeks to
sca t a Jury, which would push
open in g arg um ent s to early
November.
Also Wednesday, Sim pson's
challenge to the cre dibility of
Dctccti ve M:lrk Fuhrman suffered
another setback when Ito denied a
defense request to search his personnel file for signs of racism.
Ito said he found no information
pertinent to the issues in the case .
The ruling, along with a previous one denying the defense access
to Fuhrma n's Marine Cor ps
record s, limits defense efforls to
make r3cc an issue.

Fu hrman testified at the preliminary hearing that he found a bloody
glove behind Simpson's estate that
matche d one found ncar the bodies.
The defense has suggested that
Fuhrman, who is wtiitc. 1s a racist
who may have planted ev idence
again st Sim pson.
Fuhrman's attorn ey , Robert
Tourtclot, called the ruling a va lidatiOn of th e privacy rights of his
client and police officers everywhere.
The ruling docs nol prohibit th e
defense from challenging Fuhrman
wtth a number of public records il
has unearthed in which the detec ti ve expresses a dislike for minori ties.

Robert Pugsley, a professor at
Soulhwestern University Law
School. said the defense may have
already accomplished part of its
goal of discredit ing Fuhrman in
media leaks.
"That's part of the reason Ito
was considering a gag order: The
lawyers arc accomplishin g out of
court what they can't accomplish in
court," he said.

'Battle of Buffington
Island' set for Sept. 10, 11;
reenactors to arrive Friday
The Meigs County Hi stori ca l
Society continues to move along
with plans for the reenactment of
the Battle of Buffington Island to
be held Sept. 10 at I p.m. and Sept.
II at 1:30 p.m. at Portland.
Several reenac tors will arrive
Friday on the slcrnwhcelc r r.A.
Denny, boarding at Gallipolis and
following the same path upriver
that brought gunboalS to the scene
of the baltic in July 1863.
Tickets arc sti ll available for the
one-way Friday cruise, departing
Gallipolis at II a.m., but mu st be
purchase&lt;! by Sept. 7. Cost, including lunch , from Gallipolis is $38.
from Pomeroy, $35, from Racine,
without lunch, $25. Snacks will be
provided.
The Saturday afternoon and twilight cruise cruise in the Portland
area is $10 for adults and $5 for
children 12 and under. Tickets may
be purchased a1 the Meigs County
Museum at 144 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy (992-3810); th e Meigs
County Park District. 200 E. Second St., Pomeroy (992 -2239);
Sweet Greetings, 122 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, or at the Ohio Valley
Visitors Center, 45 State St., Gallipolis (1-800-765-6482).
Member s represe nting Civil
War re enac tment groups from

Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky,
Virginia, Tennessee and the Carolinas are ex pccled to participate in
the weekend activities, with several
boarding the boat at Gallipolis to
be brought to the battle site.
The camp will open to the public at 10 a.m. on Saturday and 9
a.m. on Sunday with the battle
reenactment taking place Saturday
at I p.m. and Sunday at 1:30 p.m.
The Ohio Village Muffins will be
playing on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. in
the Portland Park.
Activities on both days get
underway with a company drill at
10 a.m. Demonstrations of the way
of life Civil War times· will be taking place throughout both days.
Special programs will bC presented
at 11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Saturday. In addition, a ball will be held
with music by the Saxton's Cornel
Band along with an open·to-the·
public wiener roast at 8:30p.m.
The P.A. Denny will depart
back down river on Sunday at 4
p.m. Snacks will be provided for
the downriver cruise and costs are
to Racine, $25 ; Pomeroy, $30 and
Gallipolis, $33.
'
Further information maybe
oblained by conlactinl! the Meil!6
Counly Historical Sociely a1 (614)
992-3810.
"

•

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