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                  <text>PIQI 1G-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy native celebrates
50 years religious life

Dar Au h-chn: An furmao
B·.S2 bomber naviplor IIIII DOW 1
pliwaee piloC, I love DyiJ!a. Ia Clllly
1~, I heud of an ::t':izetign
called AirLifeLine. 1bil I 1f0UP .
or volunteer piloiJ from II"OUIId the
ANN LANDERS
nalion who donale their lime, skills,
"1993, Lo. Ancel eo
planes and fuel to provide free
Tim.. Syadkote
Cre111ton Syndicate''
air transportation to ambulatory
medical patients.
I received the fust call from
AirLifeLine two months after ~ him to help me by l~pg up
. placing myself on its roster. A r~dto frequencies and _taxiway
17-year-old cancer patient's coadi· Signposts, He stopped being an
lion had worsened, and he had to ambulance ll8SSCIIRcr and became a
go to San FranciscQ for ueaunent crew member.
immediately. "Jack" lived in an
Although the Dying was preuy
~laled pan of Northern California.
routine, I felt diffc:m~L Ia fact, I fell
He was too sick to lake an eight- terrifiC. I have never experienced
hour bus ride and couldn't afford an such an overwhelming aense of
airline ticket
accanpliahmcnt is I did that day.
Nothing prepared me for what ran
AirLifeLine and I saved Jack 8nd
· through my head when I saw this hiJ family -a lot of anxiety and
kid. My fii'St thought was, "How in expense.
•
the world am I going 10 fit that
Ann, I hope your column will
wheelchair into my plane?" 1 was direct alletllion to 'this incredible
also a little aniloye4 because Jack public-service organization. We
seemed to have an "attiiUde" and desperately need donations and
made some belittling comments more volunleer pilots. I also want
about my "bug-smasher."
to put out a call to patienls, their
I finally realized that Jack didn't families, pbysicians and social
have an attilllde - he was just plain · workers: fl.se KS. If the airlines or
scared. I gave him a headset so we
other ll'8IIS)IOrlalion companies.won't
could talk without shouting and take you b«•nse of your condition
or if the cost of transponalion f~
treatment is beyond _your means,
call AirLifeLine. The toll-free
number is 1·8()()..4.46.1231. We go
strictly on the basis of need, and we
fly on your schedule, not ours. ••
POMEROY - The Meigs
DALE F. BROWN, PILOT,
County Bookmobile will observe
AIRLIFELINE
.
the following schedule this week:
"(uesday - Am-ericare, 11:30DEAR DALE BROWN: We
12:30 p.m.; Darwin, 1-2 p.m.;
checked out AirLifeLine, and it
Burlingham, 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Wildcame up with a 100 percent,
wood Estates, 5-6 p.m., and Baum
five-star rating for competence,
Addition, 6: 15·7:30 p.m.
compassion and generosity. AirLifeWednesday - Racine, 12·4
p.m., and Letart Falls, 5-7 p.m.
Thursday - Tuppers Plains, 2-4
p.m.; Reedsyille, 5-7 p.m.1 Long
Bottom Post Office, 7:15-8:15 p.m.
Family members of Helen GrinFriday- Maples, 12:30-2 p.m.;
stead of Letart, W.Va., ask cards be
Overbrook, 2:30-3 p.m.; Pomeroy
sent to her in honor of her birthday
Pike, 3:30-4:30 p.m., and Chesler
on Augustl4. Her address is:
(Keebaugh's), 5-6 p.m.
Helen Grinstead, Arthur James
Saturday - Rutland, 9-1 p.m.;
Cancer Hospital, Room 1030, 300
Danville, 2-3 p.m., and Salem CenW. Tenth Avenue, Columbus, OH
43210.
•
ter, 3:30-5:30 p.m.

Ann

Landers

KYLE JOHNSON

Announce birth

SISTER GRACE GARBER

James and Betty Johnson of
Middleport announce the birth of
their lOth grandchild, a grandson,
Kyle Gregqry . .
The son of Kay Johnson, he was
born on June 25 at O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. He weighed nine
potmds, six ounces and was 20

Cincinnati, and has also served as a
part-time music instructor at St.
Vincent de Paul in Cincinnati. ·

Bank account titles
affect SSI eligibility
By Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in
Athens
Having your name on someorie
else's bank account could keep you
from getting Supplemental Security
Income (SSI)," says Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in Athens.
"If you are listed as a co-owner of a
bank account, Peters.on says, we
must count the money as yours
even if your name is there merely
as a convenience to the account
holder."
Mr. Peterson explained that people cannot get SSI if they have
assets (including bank accounts)
worth more than $2,000 ($3,000
for a couple).
Here's an example. Janice
Jones, applies for SSI. Her daughter, Stephanie, has $3,000 in a sav·
ings account. Stephanie lists Janice
as a joint owner of the accountprimarily so that Janice will have
access to the money in case some·
thing happens to Stephanie.
Although Janice doesn't consider
the account hers, Social Security
does. Janice could be found ineligi ~
ble for SSI because she is over the
$2,000 resource limit.

If none or only some of the
funds in the account belong 10 Jan·
ice, she can retitle the account to
restrict her access to the funds or
reflect a situation where Janice is
acting solely on behalf of
Stephanie. Janice could also
remove her name from the account
or move any funds belonging to her
to another account.
Proper titling is also important
when community, civic, or social
groups collect money for a special
reason, such as to assist an SSI
recipient pay medical expenses.
"For the money to satisfy ils
intended purpose." Peterson says,
"the donors must place restrictions
on the use of the money and title
the bank account in which the
money is placed to show these
restrictions. As long as the account
title shows the money cannot be
used for food, clothing, and shelter,
the account is not considered a
resource." If you would like more
information on helping to set up
bank accounts involving SSI recipi·
cots, contact the Athens Social
Security office at 592-4448, or call
Social Security's toll-free number,
1-800-772-1213, (business days
between 7 a.m. and 7·p.m.)

'

AirLifeLine receives five-star rating

When the sisters of Charity of
Cincinnati celetinued 1993 Jubilee
Week at their Mount St. Joseph
Motherhouse outside Cincinnati
Pomeroy native Sister Grace
Graber was there.
She joined 29 olher celebrillors
for a special mass and dinner on
July 18 to celebrate their 50 years
in religious life.
Sister of Charity Grace Graber
has devot~ her life to the ministries of teaching and music. For
34 years she taught in grade
~chool.s in Michigan and Ollio,
mcludmg St. Mary, Greenville,
Sacred Heart, Dayton, St. Mary,
Marion, SL Patrick, Cincinnati, St.
Bernard, Spiingfield, SL Charles,
Kettering.
.While at St. Charles she coordinated the parish ceo program
(1976·1981). Since 1982 she has
been the parish organist at St.
Aloysius-on·the·Ohio outside of

2,1993

Meigs Bookmobile
schedule posted
TIMOTHY STONE

Stones announce
birth of son
· Tim and Kelly Hamilton Stone
announce the birth of their son,
Timothy Cole, on June 16, 1993.
Cole was born at Mount Carmel
Hospital, Columbus. He weigh~
ntne pounds, four ounces and was
21 1/2 inches long.
Maternal' grandparents are Tiny
and Bonnie Whittington of Har~
risonville, and Paul and Brenda
Hamilton ·of Athens. Paternal
grandparents are Elmer and Sarah
Stone, Dexter.

Card shower

Every

Line is a brilliant, hUllllllillrian con- cq11. and I am delighted to tell the •
world about iL
'
My rtadm should also know that
patients are pennitted to take a
companion along for emotional
1UpJ101L Also, in Qrder to qualify for ·
AirLileLine, patients must have a
letter from their doctor or social ·
worker indicating the diagnosis and ·
the reason for the trip. They
also have some evidence that ~
is a financial need for this service.
AirLileLine provides transportalion from airpM to airporL Patients
muSt be able to get 10 and from the
airports on their own.
I don't usually pitch my readers
for contributions, but if anyone out
there would like to send a few
dollars 10 this ttuly great group, I .
think it would be mighty nice. My
check for $100 goes in the mail
today. The address is: Air(.ifeLine,
1716 X St., Sacramento, Calif.
95818.
Gem of the Day: A liypocrire is a
person who is not himself on
Sunday.
Wh.!n planning a wedding, who
pays for what? Who stands where?
'Tit.! Ann Landers Guide f9r Brides"
has all the answers. Senla self-ad·
dresud, long, business-size envelope
and a check or mDMY order for
$3.65 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send .
$4.45.)

Ohio Lottery

Baseball

Pick 3:
870
Pick 4:
7855
Buckeye 5:

roundup
..
Page4

19 ~20-24-26-31

Property transfers
Beulah Udvarty, dec'd, cert, to
Tony L Udvarty. Columbia.
Tony J. Udvarty. parcel.to Kathy
L. Spencer and Gary E. Spencer, Columbia.
John Krawsczyn, Sr., certoftrans,
to Billie Jo Krawsczyn, Middleport
Village.
John Krawsczyn, Jr., Celia R.
McCoy, William David Krawsczyn,
Jennifer Krawsczyn, Mary Virginia
Pri~. David Price, Martha Jo l)nrein
and Donald Unrein,Lor3JO, to Billie
Jo Krawsczyn, Middleport Village.

a
Vol 44, NO. 68
MuiUmodlalnc.

Community Calendar itel!ls
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calen·
dar.

Pomeroy Council approves truck purchase
·By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
In a meeting marked by the
absence of long-time Councilwoman Betty Baronick, who is currently
listed in serious condition in the
intensive care unit at Grant Medi·
cal Center in Columbus after suffering a fall, Pomeroy Village
Council Monday night approved
the purchase of a new pumper-rescue truck for the village's volunteer
ftre department.
The new truck will replace a 25year-old truck and represents a
major upgrade in the village's ftrc
fighting capability, Councilman
John Blaettnar said.
. Compared to the old truck,
which features a 750-gallon water

tanil:, a 750 gallon$-per-minute
pump and 2 1/2-inch hoses, the
new truck has a I ,000-gallon water
tank, a I ,500 gallons-per-minute
pump and four-inch hoses, Blaet·
tnar,said.
The old truck has served the vii·
!age well and was state-of-the-art
25 years ago, Blaettnar said. However, it is now obsolete, he added.
The new truck is powered by a
Cummins diesel engine which is
more reliable than the older truck's
gasoline engine .. The new truck
also feawres a built-in air compressor with air lines to power air-driv·
en rescue equipment, Blaettnar
said.
WiU serve dual role
In addition to its role as a

pumper truck, the new truck will
also carry all the rescue equipment,
including the Jaws of Life and air
bags, now carried in a separate
vehicle, Blaettnar added.
This means firefighters can take
one vehicle to accident scenes,
instead of two separate vehicles,
Blaettnar commented. Less person·
net will be needed to respond to
accident scenes.
Plans are underway to convert
the current rescue truck iniO a haz·
ardous material truck which will be
used in situations involving haz-_
ardous materials.
"Most people don't realize the
amount of hazardous material that
comes through this area by truck
and rail," Blaettnar said.

---u.-H food judging

MONDAY
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. in council chambers.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School, First Southern Bapti st
Church, Monday through Fnday,
6:30-9 p.m. Call 992-6328 for
transportation.
CHESTER - Connie Karschnik,
R.N., Meigs County Tuberculosis
Nurse will conduct a skin testing
clinic at the Chester Fire Station
from 5 w 7 p.m. All food handlers
are required w have yearly tuberculin slrin tests. The public is welcome. All firemen, EMS ·personel,
church workers, fair workers, col·
lege bound students and children
entering kindergarten are urged to
take advantage of this free service.
For more information contact the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Office
at 992-3722.
RUTLAND · The Rutland
Church of God will hold v;)Ction
bible school for children ages two
to teens the week of August 2·6
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. The title of.
the program is "Celebration ParkProclaiming Jesus Thoughout the
Year!" For more information call
742-2060.
REE DSVILLE - Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, vaction
bible sc hool Monday through Friday from 6-8:30 p.m . across form
Forked Run State Park. For more
information call378·6175.
RACINE - The Racine Chapter
134 Order of the Eastern Star will
hold its regular meeting at 7:30
p.m.
SYRACUSE - Suuon Township
Trustees will meet at the Syracuse
Municipal Building at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet in the Meigs
High School Band Room at 7 p.m.
TB testing will not be done al the
meeting. Help is still needed for the
fair.
PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly m ~eting at the
Page ville Town Hall at6:30 p.m.

l

I

(

CHESTER · The New Life
Covenent Church of God will hold

TUPPERS PLAINS · Hickory
Hills Church of Christ will hold
vacation bible school Monday
through Friday, 7-8:30 p.m. Ages
two through junior high. Call 6fJ76973 for details.
SYRACUSE · London Pool will
offer lifeguard training starting at 7
p.m. Class fee is $25 . Students
must he at least 15 years old . To
register call 992-9909.
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
will be having vaction
bible school Mo~day through Fri·
day from 6 to 8:30 p.m. This year's
theme is "Digging for God's Truth
and the Great Dinosaur Hunt." Dr.
Digger will be there every night
and there will be a great dinosaur
egg hunt on the last evening. Ages
are 3 to 13 years. Call 992-6768 for
more infonnalion.
Churc~

Food/Drink

Rite Aid

MIDDLEPORT • Skin testing
clinic, Tuesday, 5-7 p.m ., Middle·
port Fire Station. Cards issued
Thursday 6-7 p.m.
POMEROY • F.O.E. Auxiliary
#2171 will hold a meeting at 7:30
p.m. there will not be a potluck
dinner. New members will be initiated.
MIDDLEPORT .· Middleport
Lodge #363 will have a meeting at
the Masonic Lodge at 7:30.
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee meets Tuesday at
the Burlingham Modern Woodman
Hall at 7:30p.m. Public invited.
· WEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Ora]lge
Township Trustees, Wednesday,
7:30p.m. at the home of the clerk,
Patty.Calaway.

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GILLETTE SERIES
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2 .25

Mr. Bee 6.75 oL
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c

99

Photo Center
KODAK GOLD PLUS
COLOR FILM

LET ART • The Letart Township
Trustees will meet at the office
building al 7 p.m.
TUE:SDAY
CHESTER • The Pomeroy
Chapter #186 of the Order of Eastern Star will meet al 7:30p.m. at
the Chester Masonic Temple. 25
year pins will be presented.

COLGATE
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A summer or work on 4·H
projects ends with judging and
the weekend was a time where·
hundreds or boys and girls
brought in their "best" for
review by specialists in their
respective fields or expertise.
Friday it was food at the
Senior Citizens Center, Satur·
day it was miscellaneous pro·
jects at the Rutland Civic Ceo·
ter.
Interviews is an important
part or all judging and above
J'ssica Hamilton tells Athens
nutrition education, Joyce
Brown, about her ."Tricks ror
Treats" project. She brought In
ham and cheese kabobs for the
taste test and then talked about
planning a menu, setting up a
recipe file, and basic nutrition.
Ldt, Kelly Canan of Kid
Connection 4-H Club arranges
her first year project, Let's
Begin Cookin{'· She prepared
a rruit t~ay wttb a strawberry
yogurt dip. (Photos by Char·
lene Hoenich)

deparunent, Reed said. I just want
council to explore the idea.
Offi cers servi ng as auxil1ary
officers must have police training,
Reed said.
In addition, council di scussed
revisillg the existing loiLCring ordinance to extend beyond the parking
lot and iniO the downtown area.
In more routine matters, council
approved the mayor ' s report of
$4,714 and gave a second reading
to a resolution approvi ng the place·
ment of a renewal of a five-year,
one mill fire prolCction lev y on the
November ballot.
Prese nt were Reed , co un cil
members Blaettnar, Sco tt Dill on,
Bill Young and Larry Wchru ng,
and Clerk Kathy Hysell .

ODNR evaluates safety
of Vinton County dam
authority over the dam, was not waler divi sion. which ha s no
conclusive.
. Bonny Arthur-Huffman, secretary· ·
Reed said the division was tak· treasurer of Sands Hill . "We do
ing core samples to test the strength not like to be the subject of these
of the dam's material and was plan- kinds of allegations that would lead
ning to hire another consultant. The our neighbors to feel that they are
U.S . Office of Surface Mining also in some kind of danger. It's commay investigate the safety .of the pletely unlrue."
dam.
David C. Cowherd, president of
The dam was made mostly of Bowser·Morner, said the dam is
shale, a thin rock formed by hard- similar to aboui 100 other dam s his
ening clay. There are no other rock · firm has designed in other states.
dams -of this size in Ohio, Reed He said there is nothing wrong with
said. State engineers believe. that the shale, the filtration system or
shale is too weak unless it is· com· the surface materiaL
pacted. which is not the case in the
The division of reClamation,
Sands Hill dam. ·
under ODNR during former Gov .
Reed said there also were con- Richard Celeste's administration,
cerns about the unusual design of approved the con struction of th e
the dam's filtration layer and about dam and its modification in 1988,
whether the outer layer of the dam
although some division engineers
was properly constructed.
safety concerns.
Sands Hill officials and Bowser- hadWarren
he was trying to
Morner Associates, the Dayton find out whysaid
the
diviengineering firm that designed the sion overrode thereclamation
concerns
of
its
dam, said the dam is safe.
own
staff
and
other
engineers
in
"We do things right here," said
approving design modifications.

Willis _enters plea, gets delay
Maj. Bernard Doyle, the lead
SUMTER, S.C. (AP) - Senior
;·defense
attorney, said he could start
Airman Jeremy "J.J." Willis has
the
coun-martial
thewcek of Sept.
said publicly that he is guilty of
27.
killing his esuanged wife, but he
Willis, 23, formerly of Ironton,
hasn't yet entered a plea on the
Ohio,
faces death-penalty murder
charges he faces.
and
other
charges for the Jan . 4
Willis was arraigned Monday on
shooting
of
his 30-year-old wife,
20 charges, including premeditated
Marie
"Mary
Ann" Willis: at the
'
murder, four counts of attempted
Myrtle
Beach
Air
Force Base legal
murder, two counts of assault and
office.
two counts of desertion. He was
given until Sept. 13 to enter a plea " She was shot after returning
so that defense lawyers could pre· from Rhode Island to press abuse
pare pretrial motions, The (Myrtle charges against her husband.
''I'm guilty as sin, and I did it
Beach) Sun News.reported today.
because I Iov~ her," Willis told

reponers Monday as he was led to
the hearing at Shaw Air For ce
Base. "It's the only reason ," he
said.
Some of the charges :Will is faces
relate to his June 6 escape from a ·
Navy brig in Charleston . He was
recaptured in Fort Worth, Texas.
The military judge, CoL J.
Jerem1ah Mahoney, ordered WJihs
and lawyers not to talk about the
case and asked reporters not to
question Willis. If his orders are
disobeyed, Mahoney could close
the trl31 to the pubhc, Shaw offi·
cials said.

State board approves package
deal for new jobs in southern Ohio

2nd

Premiwn
Quality Prints

The new truck will be purchased
. Mayor Bruce Reed said he disfrom Dills Fire and Safety in cussed the problem with village
Ravenswood, W.Va., for approxi· . police officers and plans were
mately $196,000 if financing can · made to take action to remove old
be approved.
furniture and trash, and enforce leiCouncil kicked off its meetin~ tering and trespassing laws.
with several residents of the Spring
In addition, Reed said he plans
Avenue area who are concerned to contact some property owners
about people loitering in the road and force them to remove trash
and problems related 10 the loiter- from their buildings.
ing, including trash being deposited
In a related matter, one option
and stored in and around area presented to council by Reed was
buildings.
the formation of an unpaid auxilOne man, who displayed pholds iary police force to assist regular
showing trash around a neighbor- officers on· weekend evenings.
hood building, commented that
"We do have a problem late at
people are loitering in the streets night in Pomeroy," Reed said .
and added that it's just a marter of "They come out at night."
time until somebody gets hit by a
I have no idea what it would
vehicle.
·
cost to form an auxiliary police

COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)State officials are trying to deter·
mine th~ long-term structural
soundness of a Vinton County dam
that was approved despite the con·cerns of some engineers, an official
said Monday.
The Ohio De,Pat?.Oent of Natural
Resources said Its division of water
has classified the long-term opemtion of the Sands Hill Coal dam as
highly hazardous, according to a
report in The eolumbus Dispatch.
ODNR Deputy Director Wayne
Warren said the dam - 100 feet
high and 300 feet deep - is
expected to operate for 20 years.
The reservoir has water and sediment about 15 feet deep, about half
of what is permitted.
Division unit Supervisor Jerry
C. Reed said that a complete col·
lapse of the dam would release
enough water and sediment to
swamp parts of Lake Alma State
Park and Wellston.
'
But the classification by the

a campmeeting Monday through
Friday at 7 p.m. nightly. There will
be three speakers and special music
by Gary Turner and the New Life
Covavent Singers.
ROCK SPRINGS - First South·
em Baptist Church will have vaction bible school Monday through
Friday, 6:30·9 p.m. Call 992-6378
for transportation.

1 Section. 12 Pages 35 cents
AMultimedia inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday August 3, 1993

Community calendar
•

•

I

must

Low tonight In mid-60s.
Wednesday, partly cloudy, high
In 80s.
·

79·
•

PEN-TAB I
POLY
•
BINDER
112 INCH WIDE

---

.

99

«1:

For~ Rite Aid Pharmacy nearest you...caii1·800·4·DRUGSTORES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state Controlling Board
approved development financing
packages designed 10 create almost
1.400 new jobs and save 1,000
more, most of them in southern
Ohio.
The Department of Development also won approval Mondny of
a $75,000 road im~vement for an
expansion that Airborne Express
said it would retain 4,500 jobs and
add 1,338 others in Clinton County.
In other business, the board
released $11.9 million in school
building assistanCe for three school
districts in Scioto County and
OK'd two contracts for services at
the Ohio Staie Fair, which opens
Friday and runs through Au~. 22.
· Mills Pride Inc. received state
backing for an $11.4 minion bond
' package to expand its kill;hen and
bathroom cabinet business in

Waverly.
posed .to retain 106 jobs and create
T)le department said the $29.4 119 o~er three years.
.
.
million project will help the comAtrborne Exl'ress received tls ,
pany retain 610 employees and add grant 1_0 help ~tth a $6.1 mtlhon
945 by mid-1996.
rel~uon of Airport Roa4, part of
Lincoln Electric Co. of Cleve- a maJor _expanston that mcludcs
land which makes electric motors . constructton of a new runway at the
and 'welding machines, received a old Clinton County Air ~orce Base.
$4 million, low-interest loan and a
The l~g~st of the_S~IOto.County
$304,085 grant as part of a $19.8 sc~~l dtstrl~ts receiVIng 81~ for a
million.expansion project.
butldtng _proJect w~s. Washtngton
George Kaitsa, development Local, with $6.5 million ..The. oth·
department finance director, said ers were Valley Local, $1.9 '!''!lion
the assistance will enable Lincoln . and Northwest Local, $3.5 mi~IC?n.
to retain 200 jobs and add 300 over
Pet~r Ktng, state J?xposttton
three years in an area hun by Gen· CommiSSion finance dtrector, got
era! Motors Corp. cutbacks.
board a~proval of a $193,244 c~n·
Royal Ice Cream Co. of Cleve- ·tract wnh K~S Inc. to provtde
land received a $1 million loan for "'!eats for. ~xhtbtlc;&gt;rs and othe~.eli·
a distribution and office center to gtble parttcipants m the 1993 fatr.
retain 84 jobs and create 15.
He asked to watve btddmg
ABS Industries Inc. of Carroll becaus~ KFS illready has~ contract
County received $6;46 million in to pro_v•de food at non-fm events.
bond fmancing to expand its forg- He sard It would cost too much 10
ing operation. That project is sup- . move someone else m for only 17
days.

PAVING CONTINUES- Tom

~tayle

and

Sons Construction, Bartlett, Ohio, ls continuing
paving operations in the viUage of Syracuse. The
paving, funded by Issue 2 grant runds, is expect·

ed to be completed Wednesday. Here, the paving

crew rinishes a portion or road in the Rustic
Hills area. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

I.

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~~August3,1993

Commentary

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel · ~
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUHday, August 3, 1993

P9meroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aug. 4 .

•

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

.

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues , not personalities.

Panel to study Ohio's taxes
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinoyich and leaders of the Legislature are putting together a commission that will make the first comprehensive study of Ohio's tax laws in more than two decades.
The governor requested and lawmakers approved late last year a pack·
. age of tax increases that will bring in about $1.1 billion in new revenues
in the two-year bookkeeping period that started July I.
,
The increases were mostly a mixture of politically acceptable taxes on
items such as cigarettes, tobacco, and alcoholic beverages.
The money was needed to solve a fiscal ye~ 1992 deficit and hel.P
boost funding for educauon and other setvJces m the 1993-1995 btenmum.
Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and House Speaker
Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, agreed with the governor at the timJ~ that
Ohio's e~~tire tax structure needs a review.
·
Voinovich said a study could determine if the present structure is hell'ing or hurting the economy and if changes could be made to make Ohto
more competitive in the search for more jobs.
As a result, the Legislature put $750,000 to finance the study in a twoyear budget that Voinovich signed into law July I, and the IS-member
panel could go to work as early_as next month. .
.
.
Voinovich already has appotnted Frank Moster, retired prestdent of BP
of America, Inc., as chairman. The governor will name four more members. Aronoff and Riffe will appoint five each to the Commission to Study
the Ohio Economy and Tax Structure.
•
Meanwhile, lhe Ohio Public Expenditure Council - a non-partisan
group that monitors taxes and tax trends - has issued a repon that may
help the commission get a feel for what was going on in other states.
The council said in a report titled "How Does Ohio Compare?" that
Ohio ranked near lhe top nationally In tax increases from 1981 to 1991. ,
Tbe per capita increase was 112 percent. IJI the same period, state
spending increased 103 percent, the 14th highest in the nation, the council
said.
The council made olher comparisons on the basis of taxing or spending
per $1,000 of personal income, rather .th~ _per capita. It said the personal
income factor better reflects taxpayers abtlity to pay.
Ohio ranked 31st among the 50 states in spending for primary and secondary education, with $46.14 per $1,000 of income. The state ranked
ninth in welfare spending with $31.99.
Spending on corrections and rehabilitation in Ohio wa~ $4_.46 per
$1,000 of income, wh1ch was 31st among the states, the counc1l S81d.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In a
town where conspiracy theories
abound, the mysterious suici!le of
White House Deputy Counsel
Vince Foster Jr. in Fort Marcy Park
overlooking lhe Potomac has ignit·
ed as much speculation as any
event in recent years.
Lurid rumors are everywhere as
people try to make sense or what
appears to be a senseless act. But
none of the dark theones seem to
hold water, and the mystery only
deepens.
Although Foster was not wellknown to the public, insiders knew
he was at the very center of power
in the Clinton administration. He
and other former members of tl1ll
Rose law firm in Little Rock, Ark:.
- Hillary Rodham Clinton, Associate Attorney General Webster L.
Hubbell and William Kennedy III,
also of the co un sel's office formed a powerful back channel at
the very center of power.
More than lhat, Foster may have
been the person in the'Whi tc House
closest to both the president and his
wife. A boyhood friend of Bill
Clinton's from Hope, he was effectively ·Ms. Clinton's chief counsel
and closest confidant.
Rightly or wrongly, it was Foster who· accepted much of the
blame for the failed nominations of
Zoe E. Baird as attorney general

and Lani Gulnier as assistant attorney general, the White House TmvcH Office firings, the rocky
Supreme Court nominee selection

Robert]. Wagman
prcicess, and the attempt to keep lhe
proceedings of Ms. Clinton's
health-care task force private.
Vince Foster was a brillianl
lawyer with an unblemished history
of accomplishment. Before coming
to Washington, he was considered
the best lawyer at the best law fum.
His clients were the blue-chi~s of
Arkansas: Wal-Mart, the nauon' s
largest and most prosperous retailer
and its billionaire owner, the late
Sam Walton; the Stephens family
investment banking firm; and
Tyson Foods, the nation 's largest
poultry company.
By all accounts, Foster had
enjoyed a career absolutely free ~f
cnticism. In Arkansas he was umversally acclaimC!I as the best and
the brightest. But once he arrived
in Washington, the perception- at
least outside the White House was that he stumbled constantly.
It was said about Vince Foster
that he was one of the so-called
"Arkansas-maflli" Clinton brought
with him to the White House, and
that he was a minor-league all-star

in over his head in the big leagues.
Most around the White House ·
.seem to believe that, SQiliehow, all .
this overwhelmed Foster and that
something in him snapped. Those
closest to him seem· to believe, as
the president has said, "I don't
think any of us will ever know why
his life ended as it did."
But in the aftermath of the ·
tragedy two things do stand out.
The White HouSe: seems to be
trying almost too hard to portray
Foster as a depressi ve who went
out of control and over the edge. In
hindsight, everyone seems to have
a tale of the stress that Foster was
exhibiting and how many people,
especially his wife and the president, were concerned about his
state or mental health.
In the days following his funeral, any number have compared him
to John Wilson, the chairman of the
District of Columbia Council who
also took his own life recently, But
there are flaws in this comparison.
John Wilson !md a long history
of depressive behavior, more than
.one previous failed suicide attempt
and clear, deep personal l'roblems
that finally overwhelmed him.
Vince Foster had never before
exhibited any signs of clinical
depression, had never sought or
been treated for depression, and no

one seems able to. pinpoint any
kind of triggering event that normally is present when someone
wilh a &lt;1\lpressive illness takes his
own life.
J:inally, the absolute mystery
here is why Vince Foster would
take his own life without leaving
any kind or explanation.
Above all, Foster was said to be
the moSI meticulous of men, with
almost an obsession for detail. How
is it possible, his friends ask over
and over, that Vince could have
done this without saying why.
As one longtime Arkansas
friend now in the White House
said, "1 am resigned to accepting
the fact that something just gave
out in Vince and thathe ·succumbed
to the belief that his only available
response was to take his own life. I
may not understand it, but I am
resigned to it.
"But what I cannot understand,
and what I will never be able to
accept, is that VInce would do such
a thing without leaving an explanation . If taking his own life seems
totally out of character for him,
doing so without leaving a note is
just incomprehensible if you knew
Vince Foster."
Robert Wagman is a syndical·
ed writer for Newspaper
Enteprise Association.

The threat of rain will ease over
western Ohio Wednesday ·artemoon

IND.

• lColumbus!7a•

I

Lodge to meet
The Pomeroy Masonic Lodge
No. 164 will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at the Middleport Masonic building.
Legion to meet
Racine Post 602 will meet
Thursday. DiMer will be at 6:30
p.m. with meeting at 7 p.m. Boys
State delegates will give their
reports.
VFW auxiliary meets

Ice

Sunny Pl. Cloudy CloUdy

The . Tuppers Plains VFW
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post home.

C1993Accu·Waather,lnc.

------Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming ·mostly
cloudy. Scattered showers and
thunderstorms, mainly after midnight. Low in the mid-60s. Chance
of .rain 50 percent. Wednesday,
mostly cloudy with scattered show-

'

ers and thunderstorms. High near
80. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair. Lows in mid-50s to low
60s. Highs in the 70s Thursday and
Friday and upper 70s to low 80s
Saturday.

--Area deaths-Mason Hemphill

Ho~
'Posr

OFFrce ·

Homer Watterson

next four years.
Then there are those who think
deficits and debts are irrelevant,
and the idea that we're soendin~

Joseph Spear
next century's money doesn't seem
to faze them. Before the negotiations even began, for example, Sen.
John Breaux , D-La., suggested the
law makers lop a cool $100 billion
off President Clinton's proposal
and shoot for a $400 billion deficit
reduction package.
·
Then there are those to whom
the deficit is secondary to personal
goals. Sen . David Boren, D-Okla.,
threatened to annul the entire budget if he didn't get hi s way on
Medicare cuts.
Then there are the Republicans,
to whom the deficit takes a back
seat to politics. When the White
House announced that low-interest
rates had reduced the estimated
deficit this year to "only" $285
billion, these sagacious solons reasoned that the problem wasn't so
bad now and therefore they should
eliminate tax increases and maybe

even lower the deficit reduction
target.
1 swear to you, if I had one of
Calvin and Hobbes' magic transmogrffiers right now, those natter·
ing nabobs of negativism would be
changed into stinkbugs before sundown. John Breau x would be a
water bug, skimming over a pond
full of voracious bass. And David
Boren? Boren would be a dung
beetle.
Then there are the tax negotiators, huddling behind closed doors
as they attempt to cipher out which
special-interest groups should be
subsidized by ordinary taxpayers.
Lobbyists have been scrambling to
save the right to write off their
expenses as business tax deductions. Oil company representatives
have been twisfing arms to keep
energy taxes to a minimum. Drug
companies have been fighting to
preserve the $3 billion-a-year tax
credil for firms that operate in
Puerto Rico.
This is by far the most insidious
and invidious aspect of the budgetary process. Huge favors are
granted to special interests through
deductions, exemJ)tions, cre~its,

allowances and exclusiOns and we
can't even grasp the dimensions of
it because you have to be an
accounting whiz to figure out who
is getting whaL The only thing certain is that the average taxpayer is
getting whacked, because every ljlx
break has to be made up by somebody. And you know who somebody is.
I could fix this mess easily, and
I wouldn't even need the transmogrifier: Just make me Paramount
Leader for a day and let me install
Joe's flat tax system. I'd protect the
poor and make it mildly progressive by creating large personal
aUowances. I would tax every additional dollar - salaries, wages,
business income - at the same,
flat rate. I'd throw out all deductions and let the marketplace determine where people spend their
money.
Final thing I'd do is give myself
eternal power to puni.sh anybody
who messes with the flat-tax system. They do it once and, presto,
they're dung beetles. They do it
twice and I stomp 'em and they're
orr to dung beetle heaven.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Homer E. Watterson, 81, Ashton,
Mason Lee Hemphill, 60, 676
Yellowtown Road, Northup, died died Saturday, July 3I, at Holzer
Monday, August 2, 1992 at Pleas· Medical Center, Gallipolis, Ohio.
He was a retired school bus
ant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasdriver of 35 years for the Mason
ant.
Hymn sing
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and County Board of Education, a forFaith Full Gospel Church in
7 to 9 p.m. at the Willis Funeral . mer employee of ·the Marietta Long Bottom will have preaching
Home. Services will be held I :30 Manufacturing Company and the and singing Friday at 7:30 p.m .
p.m. Thursday at the funeral home American Car and Foundry and a with Pastor Steve Reed and local
with the Rev. Alvis Pollard offici- farmer.
singers. Public invited. FeUowship
ating. Burial will follow In the
Born February 18, 1912 in Apple wiU follow.
Providence Cemetery on teens Grove, he was the son or the late
Run Road.
James Ernest and Lena Mae Dailey
Reunion
Additional information will be Watterson. He was preceded in
The 75th Davis reunion for
announced later by the funeral death by four brothers and two sis- descendants of Orlando and
home.
ters.
Katherine (Sheline) Davis will be
Surviving are his wife, Opal 'Sis'
Erma Roush
Deal Watterson; one daughter and
son-in-law,
Sally and Jerry Rainey,
Erma Mae Roush, 85, of
Point
Pleasant;
two sons and a
Racine, who died Monday at Veterans Memorial Hospital, was the daughter-in-law,
Milton
and
daughter of the late Isom King and Beverly Watterson, Point Pleasant
Sarah Latham King. Besides her and Everett EIIOn Watterson, Yin·
Nine couples received marriage
parents,
Roush was preceded ton, Ohio; a step-daughter, Bulah licenses recently in the Meigs
m death by a former husband,
Rogers, Point Pleasant; four County Probate Court of Judge
Frank G. Roush, three sisters and grandchildren, Crystal Rainey San- RobenBuck.
five brolhers.
ders, Aaron Watterson, Heather
Receiving licenses were: Todd
·.wauerson, Rusty Rogers and one Matthew Harrison, 19, and Jody
great-granddaughter, Keisley Wat- Gale Hayes, 19, both of Racine;
terson.
Willie Eugene Lane Jr., 21, Hart·
Funeral services will be held 1 ford, W.Va., and Juanita Ann
p.m., Tuesday, August 3 at thi: Anhur, 17, Pomeroy; Mark Pberis
Units of the Meigs County Crow Hussell Funeml Home wilh Krieger Jr., 23, Fairfield, and
Emergency Medical Service the Revs. Fred McCallister and Angela Kaye Sloan, 22, Pomeroy;
responded to three calls for assis- Marlin Campbell officiating. Burial Paul Elbert Baker, 49, and Carrie
tance overnight. Units responding will follow in the Apple Grove Belle Neal, 46, both of Middleport;
were:
Memorial Gardens.
Scott WiUiam Brinker, 20, and
Monday-8:50a.m . Pomeroy
Mindy Kay Harris, 18, both of
to Mulberry Heights for Betty
Pomeroy; Matthew Scott Ridenour,
Baronick who was transported to
VETERANS MEMORIAL
19, Long Bottom, and Jenny Raye
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 9:.35
Monday admissions- None.
Varney, 19, Portland; William
a.m. Pomeroy to Liberty Lane for
Monday discharges - Janet Bradley Maynard, 21, and Junella
Ruth Carr who was transported to Henline, Pomeroy, and Roy Fox, Ann Beegle, 20, both of Racine:
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 12:09 Pomeroy.
Matthew Dewayne Bun~e, 21, New
p.m. Middlepon to Village Manor
Castle,
and Chnstie Dawn
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Lamben,Ind.,
Apartments for Shirley Roush who
19, Langsville; Ralph Lee
August 3 discharges • Gretchen
was transported 10 PVH.
Cleland, John Bartell, Mrs. Nathan Fisher, 26, Racine, and Leslie
Powell and daughter Mrs. Dale Elaine Gilkey, 22, Middleport
Zinn and daughter, Mrs. Floyd Stuart and daughter, Paul Byus, Dixie
Neal, Mrs. Shirl Campbell and
daughter, Virginia Carlisle, Mary
A dissolution was flied Wednes- Wolfe, Florence Wright, Roger
Am Ele Power.................... 38 5/8
day by Kimberly L Hearing and Watson, Ruby King, Joshua
Ashland Oil........................29 1!2
Robert L. Hearing, both of Wright, James Brewar and Mrs .
AT&amp;T.................................63 S/8
Zanesville. In addition, a divorce Eric Halley and son.
Bank One...........................54 J(l
. was ftled Wednesday by Sheila L.
August 3 births • Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Evans ......................... 18 7/8
Smith from Randy J. Smith, bolh or Darrell Cox, daughter, Gallip&lt;?liS
Charming Shop.................:t2 3/8
Pomeroy.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bryan K1rby
Champion IncL............... 14
A divorce was granted Friday 10 5on, Gallipolis.
'
City Holding......................26
Wilbur L. Ward from Sharon L.
Federal Mogul.................. ..21 7!8
Ward and dissolutions were grantGoodyear T&amp;R ..................41 5/8
ed Monday to Ronald R. Cremeans
Lands End....................... ... 29 1/4
and Deanna F. Cremeans, and
Limited lnc......................... 20 3/4
&gt;
Ronald W. Vance and Vlrglnia L.
Multimedia Inc ..................33 3/4
Vance.
Point Bancorp .................... 14
Rax Restaurant .................. l/16
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
Reliance
Electric................33 3/4
- The operators of an amusement
The Daily Sentinel
Robbins&amp;Myers ................. l9 1!2
park where 18 people were injured
(~SPS 213-Ht)
when a ride malfunctioned are not · Shoney's Inc..................... .l9 3!8
Publi&amp;hcd every arternoo11, Monday lhrouah
Star Bank ............................ 36 114
worried about losing business, a
Friday, Ill Court St., Pa'meroy, Ohio by the
Wendy Int'1.. ................... ... 14 5/8
Ohio Valley Publilhlag CompiUly!Mullimedia
spokesman said.
·
'\
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45169, Ph. 992-2156.
Worthington Ind ................ .39 1/4
It was the second acciden\
Secood class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Stock reports are the 10:30
involving equipment malfunction
Member: The AsiOCialed Preas, and the Ohio
a.m . quotes provided by
in 15 years at 91-year-old Camden
Newspaper As.soc\alion, Natiocal Advertising
Kemper.Secur1ties, IDe., of
Park
in
Huntington,
about
15
miles
Representative, Branham New&amp;paper Sales,
Gallipolis.
southeast
of
Ironton,.
Ohio,
Keith
733 Third Avenu~. New Yort., New Yorlr:
10017.
Spears said Monday. .
POSTMAS'l'ER: Send addtea• c.hangea to The

Hospital news

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What is the point. of prophecies? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Being more rationalist than
What bothered me about the
mystic, 1 was a liule dubi9us about psychometrist speaking to the Sunthe psychometrist who was giving day school class was that he told
a demonstration for a Sunday the students only about their
school class.
Psychometry is lhe divination of
facts concerning an object or its
owner through c·ontact with the
futures. There was no way to know
..
'
object itself.
For instance, the psychometrist at that point whether these things
will hold your pen In his hand and would tum out to be true.
Of course, If he had said to one
be able to tell you something about
of the young people, "You were
yourself.
The lheorr is lhat we all leave born in Alaska," or "Your mothour psychic v1bmtions on the things er's maiden name was Wilson,"
we own aild handle. To someone those things could have been verilike a psychometrist, who is sup- fled. But he didn't do that.
When ·I mentioned this in an
posedly sensitive about such
article
I wrote the next day, one or
things, these vibrations, it is said,
my
readers
wrote back. He asked,
can reveal informatioil about us.

George R. Plagenz

.

.

"Did I sense some skepticism on
your part because there was no way
to check on whether the prophecies
the psychornetrist made to lhe students would come true?"
The writer said he happened to
know that this particular psychometrist once read for an 82year-!Jld artist - he told her she
would marry and go to Ponugal.
She dismissed the whole thing as
crazy.
"Then," the reader wrote, "'she
met another elderly artist and married him. And guess where they
went? Portugall"
He then went on to relate an
experience of his own with a psychometrist:
"She said she saw me surround-

ed by a bunch of bright and shiny Henry?' I said it was. (that was my merely says this is what will hap- :
pen If you continue on your present · :
cars. She said I was going to get brother's name.)
· "Then Ford grabbed his left leg course.
one of them.
That, he maintained, was the .
"Seven months later, I won an just above the knee·. 'I feel an
automobile as a prize and had my intense pain here,' he said. My purpose of Old Testament prophepicture taken in the showroom sur- brother Henry had been Injured in a cies - to give people a chance to
motorcycle accident. His left leg change their ways before it was too
rounded by a bunch of new cars.''
A couple of years before that, he had to be amputated just above the late.
After telling Jonah to prophesy ·
said, he sat for a reading by the knee.
"Then he said, 'I get a sense of that .the city of Ninevah would lje
Rev. Arthur Ford, the famous
Grace.' That was the name of my destroyed, God changed his mind '
medium:
"when the people turned from their
"He asked me to write some- sister, who wed at the age of 8."
So claimed the reader who evil way."
.
.
, thing :.- anything - on a piece of
paper and hold it (folded up) in my wrote tome.
!Jeoge Plageuz is a SY.ndieated l
Actually, what I did find inter- 1mter for Newspaper Enterprise i
hand. I wrote three words esting
about the psychometrist who
Association.
oI
'mother,' 'brother,' and 'sister.'
spoke
to
the
Sunday
school
class
" 'The name Anna comes to
me,' he said. (That was iny molh· was his theory that there is nothing How come our weather people t!an tell
er's name.) Then he said, 'I get an final or absolute about prophecies. us what's doing everywhere on Earth
H. Is it Harry?' I said no. 'Is it They can be reversed. A prophecy_ - except in our neck or the woods? ··

Divorces and
dissolutions

Stocks

Camden Park
doesn't expect
accident backlash

Daily Se111inel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

Galba County Jumor F'aJr
Wednesday, Aug. 4

45769 .
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Time
9 a.m.
9 a.m:!Oa.m.
!Oa.m.
!p.m.
2p.m.
3p.m.
3p.m.
6p.m.
7p.m.
7:30p.m.
9p.m.

Special service · ·
The Kootaga Indian Dancers
wiU perform at the I 0 a.m. service
at the Tuppers Plains Church ~f,
Christ on Sunday. The program 1s
presented by· the Bor. Scouts. A
covered dish dinner will l:le held at
noon. Public invited.
PERl to meet
PERI will meet Thursday at J
p.m . at the Senior Citizens Center.
All members urged to attend.

Star Grange to meet
.
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet Saturday at 8
p.m. at the grange hall located on
County Road 1 near Salem Center.
Final plans will be made for the
display at the Meigs County Fair.
Services
Hemlock Grange will be guests.
Services at the Red Brush Potluck refreshments. All members
Church of Christ will be Saturday urged to attend.
at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 6 p.m.
Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va., will be
Names omitted
the speaker. Public invited.
The names of Ella Osborn, Mar·
ilyn Hannum, Frances Reed and
Dauce planued
Patty Grossnickel were unintenThere will be a dance at the Rut- tionally omitted from the list of
land American Legion Hall on Sat· those attending the m:ent picnic of
urday from 9 p.m. to I a.m. wilh the Riverview Garden Qub.
music by Pure Country and Then
·Some. Public invited..

EMS responds
to three calls

Zapping the way to a lower deficit

Sunday at the American Legion Eli
Denison Post in Rutland. Basket
dinner at noon. Everyone welcome.

Dance planned
.There will be a round and
square dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Hall with music by the Smokey
Mountain Drifters. Public invited.

Couples granted
marriage licenses

[CL£1&gt;1

Nothing gets. ine in a dyspeptic
humor faster than watching politicians preen and posture as they diddle with deficits and tinker with
taxes and, yes, July was a fairly bilious month.
Two hundred-plus members of
the House and Senate assembled at
mid·month to hammer out a compromise package of tax increases
and spending cuts that could result
in a $500 billion redu ction in
deficit spending by 1998. Please
understand: If everything went perfectly and Democrats and Republicans and liberals and conservatives
and goofballs and gadflies all
agreed on every single item , the
annual deficit wouldn't go up so
fast and might only be increasing at
the rate of $200 billion a year by
1998.
Let me put that yet another way:
Our leaders are not tallcing about
eliminating the deficit, and they
certainly are not considering paying down the overaU debt, which is
now· about $4.4 trillion and eating
up $300 billion a year in interes t
payments. No, they are trying to
agree on how to hold deficit spending to a mere $1.1 trillion over the

but remain in the easL Highs will
be in the 70s Wedllesday through
Friday. Overnight lows will be in
the 50s.
.
The record hilh tempel'lllure for
this date •t the Columbus wcalher
station was 100 in 1955. The record
low Was 45 in·J965.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:44
. p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at

Meigs announcements

Mrs:

By The Associated Ptess
Today is Tuesday, August 3, the 215th day of 1993. There are 150
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Aug. 3, 1943, during World War II, Gen. GeorgeS.
Patton slapped and verbally abused Private Charles Herman Kuhl of
Mishawaka, Ind., at an army hospital in Sicily, accusing him of cowardice. Patton was later ordered by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to apologize for this and a second, similar episode that occurred a week later.
On this date:
In 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Palos, Spain, on a voyage
that would take him to present -day America.
In 1914, Germany declared war on France.
.
In 1921, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis refused to
reinstate the former Chicago White Sox players implicated in the Black
Sox scandal, despite their acquittals in a jury trial.
In 1923, Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as the 30th president of the
United States, following the death of Warren G. Hardmg.
In 1936, the U.S. State Department urged Americans in Spain to leave
because of that country's civil war.
In 1948, Whittaker Chambers, a former Communist. publicly accused
former State Department official Alger Hiss of having been part of a
Communist underground, a charge Hiss denied.
In !949, the National Basketball Association was formed by a merger
of the Basketball Association of America and the National Basketball
League.
In 1958. the nuclear-powered submarine Nautilus became the first vessel to cross the North Pole underwater.
In !981 , U.S. air traffic controllers went on strike, despite a warning
from President Reagan that they would be ftred.
Ten years ago: President Reagan apologized in person to a professional
women 's group for a canceled White House tour, but the gesture apparently backfued. The audience reacted stonily as Reagan said, "If it wasn't
for women, us men would still be walking around in slcin suits carrying
clubs."
· Five years ago: The Soviet Union released Mathias Rust, the young
West German pilot who had landed a light plane in Moscow's Red Square
in May 1987.
One year a~o: The U.S. Senate voted to sharply restrict, and eventually
end, U.S. tesung of nuclear weapons. Millions of South African blacks
joined a nationwide strike against white-led rule. Russia and Ukraine
agreed to put the disputed Black Sea Fleet under joint command for three
years.
.
. .
Today's Birthdays: Former Se~ . John Stenms, D-Miss:, ts 92. Author
Leon Uris is 69. Smger Tony Bennett ts 67. AciOr Marun Sheen ts 53.
Movie direciOr John Landis is 43.
Thought for Today: '.'The man who has"? inner life is the slave of his
surroundings."- Henn Fredenc Amoel, Swtss cntJc (1821·1881).

v

60s.

IMansfield In· I·

Today in history

'

By The Associated Press
A cold front will bring showers
and lhunderstmns throughout Ohio
tonight, and below-nonnal temper·
atures are_expected Wednesday
through Friday.
Lows tonight will be in the mid-

MICH.

Death of Clinton friend has D.C. baffled

3

Showers, lower temperatures forec~st

OHIO Weather
Accu· Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlneb-Page

Event
Goat Ju~ing '
En~ineerm~ Project Judging
Darry Judgmg
4-H Demons!ratioits
4-H Demonsrations
Style Review
Aero Space Demonsmtions
Swine Judging
Market Hog 1udging
Robin Lee
MotoCross
Robin Lee
Fair Opens- Noon

Place
· Show Arena
Activities Bldg.
Show Arena
Activities Bldg.
Activities Bldg.
Main Stage
Field
Show Arena
Show Arena
Main Stage
Pulling Track
Main Stage

6:33a.m.
Ar911nd die utioll
Qouds 8nd some showers kept
the .Upper Midwest unseasouably
cool, while the beat wave continued today across the Southwest and
upCalibnia's Central Valley.
A tornado watch was In effect
early this morning for much or
northeastern New Mexico and the
Oklahoma and Texas (llllhandles.
. Showers and thunderstorms
were expected to form 11ain this
afternoon across the southern
Plains, with most of the rain centered In Oklahoma tllld west-centml

Kansas .

Scattered showers aud storms
were also expected across the
humid SoutheasL
Below normal highs in the 60s

and 70s were fortcist today from
the northern Rockies to the Upper
Great Lakes region. The Northeast
was eltpecting a mix of sun and
clouds with temperatures in the
80s.
Temperatures in the 90s were
expected today across the southern
tier llnd up to the Pacific North·
west
Dozens or citiCs in centml California, Arizona and Nevada reponed highs lOpping I00 degrees Monday. That extreme heat was eltpect·
ed tO continue across the southern
·Plateau and the valleys of California into_Oregon, while along the
West Coast things should cool.
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 127 degrees at
Death Valley, Calif.

7,000 remain without .
power in Cleveland area
CLEVELAND (AP) - About
7,000 Qeveland·Eiecaic Illuminating Co. customers remaiiiC(i with·
out power early today, nearly a
week after severe. thunderstorms
swept through northeast Ohio.
"We expect to have power
restored to all but ·about 5,000 or
6,000 customers by Tuesday
evening," said CEI spokesman
Todd Schneider.

Schneider repeated CEI's earlier
estimate that it might be the end of
the week before all service was
res10red.
"All our main lines have been
restored, but there are still some
primary lines and some lines going
into -individual homes that must
still be repaired,'' he said. "It's
very labor-intensive work 10 restore
individual lines."
.

--Livestock report----COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Direct livestock prices aud receipts
at selected buying points Tuesday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
cents higher; demand moderate to

......--Local b~iefs-~
Road closing for paving work
Salisbury Township Trustees are scheduled to start paving on
Township Road 165 (Bailey Run Road) Wednesday at 7 a.m.
The road will be closed to all traffic in front of the paver, eltcept
for emetgency vehicles.
A fla~er will be placed at both ends of the road to direct traffic.
Paving will continue until completed Friday.

Parents urged to set aside money
Parents or children returning to school this JWlllth are urged to
set aside money now for school supplies and workllooks.
According to Meigs Local Superintendent William Buckley, the
district usually maltes arrangement for people who are unable to
purchase workbooks. However, by seUing aside money now, a
child's transition to a different grade can be made a little easier.

good. ' .
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 44.5Q-45.25; plants 45.7546.75, a few 47.50.
Soned U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 45.50-46.25.
Reee1pts Monday 5,800. Estimated receipts Tuesday 8,000.
,Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 50 cents 10 2.00 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 69.00·
74.35; select 64.00-71.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 69.0073 .50; select 57.00-71.00.
Cows: steady to 2.00 higher; all
cows 56.50 and down.
Bulls: 2.00 lower; choice 68.00
and down.
Veal calves: not tested; choice
130.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: 1.50 to 4.00
higher; choice wools 46.00-51.75;
choice clips 47 .00-51.75; feeder ,
lambs 48.50 and down; aged sheep
32.50 and down.

Men face sentencing August 23
Two men face sentencing August 23 after pleading guilty to
charges In lhe Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
According to court documents filed Wednesday and Thursday,
respectively, Brandon Shuler, addreSs unavailable, pleaded guilty to
a charge of receiving stolen property while Charles E. Michael Jr.
of 325 Spring Avenue, Pomeroy, pleaded guilty to a char~e of
endangermg children.

Meigs jobless rate down
The Meigs Co1111ty jobless rate for June, 1993, is down 3.5 percent from last June's mte of 13.5 percent. June's 10 percent unemployment rate, however, is slightly higher than the 9.5 percent mte
forMay.
·
Nauonally, the unemployment mte stands at 7.1 percent while
lhe Ohio rate stands at 6 percent.

IO,.ICE
By
Dave
Grate

of
Rutlud
F~r•lttre
lfo not true thctt you CM't (lilt
·oomething for nothing. You c.n
get 10 y•r• lor eM!dlng nothing
to theiRS.

THE OHIO EPA HAS APPROVED PUMPING
OPERATIONS TO REMOVE WATER FROM
MEIGS NO. 31 MINE. THE WATER QUALITY
AND FLOW OF NEARBY CREEKS WILL BE
CHANGED, ESPECIALLY NEAR THE PUMPING
RELEASE POINTS. THE CREEKS AFFECTED
ARE LEADING CREEK, RACCOON CREEK AND
SOME TRIBUTARIES OF RACCOON CREEK.

•••

The P,oblem with doing ao.,.
thing right the flret time le lhlot
nobody appreclllleo how hwd II

wa.

•••

Everything'• Iunny, u long aelt'•
hoppenlng to aomeone eloe.

•••

llettary makere ore (llltting ..,.,,
Now th!lir paokagH aay, "Toye

not InclUded."

·

•••

1r. flnelly happMIIng. 8.1~
coaehM are putting on weight
Ju.t ao they can do Sllm·F•t'
commarclala.

·

••••

C••• aut 11 Rutl••~

F~r•lture

1111• •••• ltr Ill•
,...., Te1t Sale I•
pratrtu uatll Satur~ey, 6
p.M., Aut. 71~. Hut•
S••l•t• Sterewl~el
* ••

•...
""
...
,
•.
C:.•• ... ,.., "" ....,
7 SHOWROOMS

II WAJEHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124

RltlaiMI, Ol.

742·2211

THESE STREAMS ARE NOT NORMALLY
SUITABLE FOR DRINKING. YOU WILL SEE A .
DISCOLORATION OF THE WATER DUE TO ITS
IRON CONTENT -WHILE PUMPING IS
UNDERWAY. PEOPLE SHOULD REFRAIN
FROM USING CR~EK WATER FOR DRINKING,
SWIMMING,· USE BY LIVESTOCK, IRRIGATION
AND SIMILAR USES DURING THIS TIME.
PUMPING IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE UNTIL
LATE AUGUST 1993. ECOLOGICAL EXPERTS
WILL BE MONITORING WATER QUALITY AND
STREAM BIOLOGY DURING THIS -PERIOD AND
AFTER PUMPING IS COMPLETED.
QUESTIONS CAN BE DIRECTED TO
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL COMPANY
AT (614) 286-5051.

�r

j
..

1\leHay, Auau-t 3, 1993

·

Sports·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel .
.

In the majors,

.

The Deily Sentinel .:Page 5

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Tuesda~August3,1993

Page-4

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Cubs defeat Pirates 12-10 after brawl; Reds down Rockies 6-2
-

Welcome to Wrigley Field, Minor would retilliate after the
By DICK BRINSTER
where one of the targets - Chica· . Cubs _plunked Carlos Garcia for
• AP Sports Writer
There were seven home runs, go's Marl&lt; Grace- was actually homering in his first two at-bats
six ejections, a few well-timed gracious enough to say he fully Monday.
· brushbacl&lt; pitches and a bench· expected to be hiL .
"That's the way the game is
Grace realized Pittsburgh's Bias played," Grace said. "I told the
clearing brawl.

pitcher 'I'll stand here until you hit
me.'''
Minor (6·5) missed, but his
effort gave birth to a brawl in the
sixth inning of the Cubs' 12·10 victory. Bob Scanlan (3·5) - who hit
Garcia in lhe top of the inning Minor and Piltsburgh's AI Martin
were ejected.
· End of story, right? Wrong.
An inning later, Pittburgh's
Lloyd McLendon homered. Jose

Bautista then hit Lonnie Smilh.
Bautista has pinpoint control."
;
Pirates manager Jim Ley,land
Garcia homered off Mike
thought an ejection was called for. Harkey in the frrst and fifth innings
For arguing that point with home as Pittsburgh built an 8-2 advanc
plate umpire Charlie Reliford, Ley- tage. But Doug Jennings hit f
land became ejectee No. 4.
three-run ~omer in Chicago's six.
"Everyone knew Scanlan threw run fifth, and Steve Buechele broke
at Garcia and the players took care an 8-8 tie with a two-run homer,
of that," when Minor threw at, but giving the Cubs the lead for good. '
missed Grace, Leyland said. "OK,
Smith and coach Bill Virdol)
let's play. Bot they got away with were chased later for arguing with
one when Bautista hil Lonnie . Reliford.
·;

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of Gallipolis Ferry

Bill
didn't want
to own the biggest store in town ...
.
.
•

is pleased to announce the association of

Michael }.McGinnis, M.D.
BIG BEND PONY LEAGUE CHAMPS The Middleport Giants, sponsored by The Cor·
ner Restaurant, recently claimed the Big Bend
.Junior Pony League championship with an 11·1
record. Pictured are (rront row, L·R) Matt
Williams, Nathan Stanley, Tony Dugan, Gary
Acree, Chad Hanson and Marc Jones. In the

General Medicine

second row are Brad Davenport, Tory Swartz,
Tim McClure, Justin Seymour, Collin Roush
and Kenny Barnhart. In the back row are coach
Jerry Davenport and assistants Perk Ault, Steve
Bachner and Mick Davenport. Not present were
Jeremy Lowe, Kevin Neel and Jeff Fowler.

Office Hours:
Monday &amp; Wednesday- 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Tuesday and Friday- 9 a.m. ~ 5 p.m.

Middleport Giants win Pony League title
The Middleport Giants, sponsored by The Comer Restaurant in
Middleport, defeated New Haven
Monday to claim the Big Bend
Junior Pony League championship.
Both teams entered the final game
with only one loss, but Middle·
port' s dramatic 10-7 win brought
home the crown.
New.Haven jumped out to a 2-0
lead in the first inning on a single
by Dana Gillespie, a walk and a
triple by Keith Cundiff. New haven
went up 2-0 in the top of the second on a walk and singles by J.R.
Varian and David Mitchell.
In the home half of the second
frame, Middleport scored .once on
two walks and an infield single by
Tiin McClure. New Haven got that
run back in the third on a wallc, a
double by Gillespie and a single by
Varian.
Trailing 4-1, Middleport tied it

In the bottom half of the frame,
up in the i.hird on a walk, a single
by Nathan Stanley and a booming Middleport used three walks, an
home run to center by Tony Dugan. ' error and some effective base run·
The Giants took the lead for ning to push ahead 10-7. Stanley
good for the first time in the bottom re-entered in the seventh to gain the
of the fourth when Justin Seymour save and Davenport was credited
walked and Man Williams blasted with the win.
Middleport won the league with
a home run over the left field fence.
an
11-1 record, while New Haven ·
Tony Dugan smashed a triple,
finished
at 10-2.
and Gary Acree doubled to make
the score 7-4. The tide soon
changed in the fifth as New Haven
tied the score again at 7-7. With
hard throwing right-hander Nathan
Stanley showing signs of fatigue,
the West Virginians used three
. T~e Big Bend Senior League
wallcs and a sin~le by Mitchell to
gtrl.
s softball tournament continues
knot the score.
tonight
through Thursday at
Right-hander David Mitchell
Racine's
Star
Mill Park in Racine.
shut Middleport down i the bonom
The
double-elimination
event
of the fifth, but in the sixth, after an
opening walk, Brad Davenport features Eastern, the Racine Suns
Middleport #3, the Middlepori
relieved Stanley to retire the next Angels,
the Middlepon Yellow
three batters.
Jackets and Rutland.

Big Bend senior
softball tourney
to start tonight

.

' , ,,
... ' I I 1 r
-'·~----~------~------------------~~-

Monday's scores
Toronto 4, New York 0

Baltimore 7, MilwaWtcc 5
Teaas 9, Olic•go 8

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eulem Dhislon
W L PeL

Tum

Phil•delphia .........67

GB

Tonight's games
Detroit (Beraman 1-2) 11 CLEVE ·
LAND (Lopez 2- 1), 7:05 p.m.

)9

.6J2

St. louis ................ 60 45
Mant.r"UI ................56 50

.571
.528

6.5
11

Chicago ............. ..54
Pituburgh ............. 47
Florid" ................. 44

50
59
61

.5\9
.443
.419

12
20
225

New York ..............37 68

.352

29.5
-

Western Dlvl.slon
San PrancUco ......71
ALlant.l ................ .64
Lo~&gt; Angeles .
. 54

35
43
50

.670
.598

1.5

.519

16

Housuln ............... 54 51
54
San Diego ..•....... _. .41 65

.514

16.5

.500
.387

30

.343

34.5

CINCINNATI ......54

.. 36

Colorado

69

1S

(304) 675-3062 for appointments

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals

THE 1993

Se~ttle

Oticago 12, l~t w. burg1110
ONCINNA TI 6, Colorado 2
New York 4 , Montrea l 3

·'

Today's games
Pittsburgh (Z. Smilh 0-4) at Ch1~a go
(Hihbard 8-'7), 2.20 p.m.
Cn1on do (Sanfo rd 0-0) aL CINCINI'A11 (Luebbers 2· 2). 7:35 g·m
1t

MontrCil

(Faucm 6-1), 7 :35p.m
Phi lmdclphia (Mulholland 10-8) at At·
lant.a (Avery 11-3), 7.40 p.m.
Lo~ 1\ngelc~ (Gross 7-9) at Houston
(Portugal 9-4), 8:05p.m
f·l orida 0 Iough 5- 11) at SL. Louis (Osborne 9-4), 8 :35p.m.
San r:ranc isco (B lack 8-2) at Sa n
Diego (Urocul 2·7), 10 .05 p.m

Wednesday's games
Pit ts bu rgh (Willl 11 - 8) at Chi c ago
(Casullo S-6), 2 :20p.m
.
New York (S , Fernandez 1-1) at Montreal (N.. bholz 6-7), 7:35p.m
·
Colorado (Greg H u r i~ 10- 10) at
CINC INNATI (Roper 1· 1). 7:35p.m.
Phi ladelphia (Schilling 9-6) 1t Atlan\1
(G l av~ne 13-4), 7:40 p.m .
Los Ange1e.!i K• ndioui 6-5) n Hrn.u LOn 0 lamUid1 I(). 7), 8:05 p.m.
f-1o n d• ( Howen 6 · 10) It S1. Louis
(Wo•on 3-0). 8J5 p.m.
Sil!l f r1nC1.\CO (Rrummett -2 -3) at San
Diego (WorreU 1-3), 10:05 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Division
Team
W L Pet.
Toronto .. ................62 45 .519
Bost.on ....................59 46 .562
New York. .

CB

2

. ....60

47

.561

2

Balt.unore ......... ......56
Oet.ro1t... ..
......53

49
53

.533
.500

11.5

CLEVELAND ..... .49

56
62

.404

Mdwu!k-ee ........... ..42

'II

.~7

WHiern Division
Chlctgo .................. 58 46 .558
K1nus Cuy ...... .....54 51 .51 4
Texas .....................53 52 .505
Se~u..le .................... 5J
S4 .486
Califomia ......... ......48 56 .462
M.innc5 ot.a ..............44 58 .431
Oakland .. ........ ..44" 58 .431

~

12
18.5

4.5
S.S
7,5
10
13
13

Jon 6·1 2), 8:05 p.m.
Olicago (A. Fernanda. 12-5) at Texas

(Ryan 2-3),11.35 p.m.
Kansas Ci1y (Gordon 6-2) aL California
{LeftWICh 0-- J). )0:05p .m.

- * Transactions *Baseball

American Leaaue
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Actinted
T im Belcher, piLchc: r . Oplioncd Rod
Bolton, pilChcr,to Nuhville of the Ame:rican AsulCi ation .

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,.,.••

NatlonaiiAague

COLORADO ROCKIES: Actin lcd
Luis Aquino. pi\.chc.r, from Lhc I S-d•y diailbled lis t. Optioned Dav id Wea t hers ,
pitcher, lO EdmontM of the Pacific Coast

,.
•

Luguc.
NEW YORK METS : Named Cannc:n
Fusco m~jor league

I
cing A Sto.-e Wdh The
National Rm;ources Of Sears And
The
I Service Of Middleport's
Bill R. Ha
II

r

TEXAS RANGERS: Optioned Milr.c
Schooler, pitcher, 10 Ok.la homa City of
the American Anociation. Recalled Jeff
Bmn..key, pitcher, from Oklahoma City.

!•

~eout.

••
•

Basketball
Nallonal Basketball A.uoclallon

••'
'',.

HOUSTON ROCKETS : Acquired
Mario Elic, g.oud, from the Portland Trail
BlazeR for a 1995 1ccond-round draft
pick. Waived Sleepy Floyd, guard .

'

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'r

'f

ling 4--4), 3:15p.m.

St. Louis 5 . Florida 3

'

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,.

(Wry 8-4) at Oti.Jand (Dar-

Detroit (Moo~ 7-5) at CLEVELAND
(Meaa9-7), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Stcwan 6-5) at New York
(Kam_ienieck.i 6-- 3), 7:30p.m.
Mll.,.auk:ec (Eldred 11 · 11 ) at Balli·
mon:. (Rhodtll1 ·2), 7:35p.m .
Boston (Sc.lc 5-0) at MiMesota (Eridt·

. Just
. . .. ' .
the best.

'

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Wednesday's games

Monday's scores

New York (Tanana 5- 1 )

Toront.o (Hentgcn 12-5) at New York
(l-lunm 1-0), 7:30p.m.
Mihl'lukiCC (Bones 6-7) at Baltimore
(Moyer 7-5), 7:35p.m.
Boston (Dopson 7-5) at Minn esot •
(Banks 7-7), 8:05p.m.
C h icago t'McCulull 2-7) u Texu
(Lci.brandt 9-7), 8:35 p.m.
Seanle (Johnson 10-7) u Oaklan d
(Welch 8-7), 10:05 p.m.
Karu:u City (Pichardo S-7) at Califor·
nia (l...angmn 10-5), 10:0S p.m.

' , •.

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Scoreboard
- * Baseball * -

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Or the smallest.

Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry
1/2 mile north of Crab Creek Road
Call

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3 FAMILY
PATIO SALE

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AUGUST 5-6-7

0

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FIRST HOUSE BESIDE
CHURCH IN CHESTER
HOLLON RESIDENCE

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-SIGN- UPBIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL
9:00 A.M. • NOON
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7TH
BIG BEND HEALTH &amp; FITNESS CENTER

The Meig• County Fair Tab Is co... ing
August 13, 1993.
Advertising Dea.dline Is
August 5, 1993.

~:
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MILL STREET MIDDLEPORT
Open To All 5th &amp; 6 th Graders In Meigs or
Mason Counties
Wishing To Play Football or Be A
Cheerleader.
(Cannot Be Age 13 .Prior To September 1)
Any Adult Who Is Interested In Coaching Can
·
Turn In Resume At The Sign Up

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992·2155 .

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Middleport

·on SearsCIKirge PLUS.

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.. .

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-"-" "'' lifit: .r. ;1'r

t

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO ·PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

And of course, with Middleport's
Bill R. Haptonstall as owner, you'll have
his personal commitment to customer
satisfaction. He guarantees low prices
and very fri~ndly service. ·
Bill R. Haptonstall decided
on a store that's big enough to have
what you want ... but srh~ll enough to
care who you are. After all, he's your
neighbor. Why not stop by and say
hello to Bill at his new Sears Middleport?

Many of you were satisfied
customers of Bill's Sears Catalog store.
Bill's new Sears Middleport is even better.
It's a·new combination .of the best
brands. of lawn and garden equipment,
electronics and appliances. You'll be able
to se~ Kenmore, Whirlpool, Sony, GE and
Craftsman, all under one roof.
You'll have Sears national
guarantees and the lowest monthly
payments in the industry:
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Cl Sears, Roebuck and Co. 1993

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�Peg1 I The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday,August3, 1993

Tuesda~August3,ru993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~7

A. RCA COMPACT
8MM CAMCORDER

, . STAR.IS

I Kenmore·!

. (Mir. OPR0808)

THURSDAY,
.AUGUST 5th,

.

599.99

Through August 1

A. 538 12

o
o

B. FULL-SIZE VHS
CAMCORDER

.AT 8:00A.M.

.
I .
I

·'·

1 LUX low-light sensitivity
8X power zoom lens

699.99

•

Through August 7

',

1 LUX performance
12X power zoom lens
• Built-in color enhancement
o

I
l

•

o

'

per month• on SeorsCharge
PLUS for 719.98 pair

3f0r3.99

62821

•

RECOTON T-120 VHS .
VIDEOTAPE 82288

8. 53802

'IRECOTON I.
•

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.

22821

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131 0 1

63 101

·-.

J

Kenmore·

~,.

18-HP, 44-IN.
GARDEN TRACTOR

$13

2-CYCLE LARGE
CAPACITY WASHER

-- ~

$198

ThrOugh Auguat 7

Through August 7

• 3 water temperatures

• Top-mount lint screen

$19

pP.r mnnn1• on
Sf'nr~C nmg0 Pt lJS

per rnon !h• on
Scar~Churge PLUS

• 6-speed lfonsaxle
• Briggs &amp; Stro1ton IC
Gold engine
Bagger sol(:! separately, 229.99

899.99

Through August lA

Jhrough August 14

• AlllrosHess
• Twin crispers, meal drawer

• AlllrosHess
• Meat drawer, gallon door storage

Reg. 2399.99

• Briggs &amp; Stratton 1/C Gold twin
cv.linder engine with electric clutch
•6-speed extra heavy-duty transaxle
•Infinite cutting height adjustment

T1aclors requ1re some assembly

' To tal capaci ty Prices are for wh1te . Colors. connec tors. d 1sh washer installation and rel r1gerato r
lcef!1oker hook -up ex tra . Gas drye rs pricea higher. "See below for important credit d e tails.

. ...........*''''"'" ' '"'''"'''"

799 11

34 18

18315 (Mt. MGDS580P)

699• 99
19.9 cu. II.'
able shelves.

per month· on
SearsCharge PLUS

REFRIGERATOR

599.99

$248

$42

19.7 cu: Fv

18.1 CU. FV
REFRIGERATOR

$188

lhrougl&gt;

August 14

I
Through

24 -in . built-in dishwasher with
2-level wash and air dry op.'ion.

. adjustdoor

While quantltlea
lost

249.88

August 7

4-heod VCR, built-in VCR+ Plus,
on-screen displays. unified remote.

64.99

,.

~:.~

399-99

16·in., 2.75-HP electric chain sow
with sprocket nose guide.

" 79882

-·......

- --------~~

42641
(Mtr. mA5634A)

32641
(M!r. ILLA6233A)

379,·99

Through

Augusll4

6-cycle, large capacity washer
with double-duty ag itator:

299• 99

Through
Augusl14

5-cycle, Iorge capacity dryer
with Auto Dry-Miser' sensor.

Kenmo

311 11 (Mfr. •WWA3650R)

279.99

. 23143

9 11

·99
229
•
.
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~~~3ht4 .

GE Iorge capacity washer
means fewer loads per week!

38048
98073 (Mtr.

Through

August 1.tl

. GE Iorge capacity dryer with
timed drying .&amp; up· front lint fi ll er.

299• 99

Through
Augual14

299• 99

Through

1 99• 99

August 14

Elechic range .with decorative
30-in. gas range with extra-large
back&gt;juard. porc elain lift-up top. oven. Lift-up , easy-clean cooktop.

Through AuQUst 28.
Reg. '1:19.99

4.3 peak HP canister with Power·
Mate'" and micron air flltrotion.

Rog.
249.99

399.99

5.0-HP, 22-ln. high wheel .
side discharge lawn·mower

Tabletop stereo system, CD .
4.0·HP, 20-in. mower. Mulch. dis·
dual cassette. 5·band equalizer. . charge or catch (catcher extra).

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37228

38324

~&amp;9

199.99 ..~:i99

269.99

4· HP rear bag lawn mower.
Mulch or catch clippings.

4·HP, 22-in. rear -bag
power-propelled lawn rrniwer

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�-PIG• 1

The Dally Sentinel

Community
calendar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

l'tiiUC NOTICE

NOTICE QF SALE
By vlriUe of an order of
hie laauod out of the
Common Plue Court of
llelge County, Ohio, In the
0111 of A-loen Oenerol
Flnan01, Plalntlll, aplnat
John A. Hunnell, el ol.,
Delendenlo, upon 1
ludgment hreln rendered,
baing C111e No.13oCV·15, In
uld Court, I will offer lor
ur., Ill the front door of the
Court Houae In P-eroy,
Ohio, on the 27th day of
Augull, tll3, at 10:30
o'clock A.M. the following
lando ond tenemente:
PARCEL NO. 1;
The following deacrlbed
premlaed, oltuoted In the
Vll18ge of Andqulty, County
of llelgo and State of Ohio
and Townlhlp of~=
Being In tho Village al
Anllquhy, Lellirt Townehlp,
beginning at a atone on the
Eool aida of the public
highway on Lot 34, Range
112, Toll!n 12, Section 114;
thence 12·1/2 rodo at right
onglao from .. ld highway,
mloelng Henry Harpold'•
""orn crib 10 feel end hlo
al8ble 32 IIIII In the South
end; thence In a Southerly
direction parallel with tho
11ld hlghwoy to a lillie
creek; thonca down the
channel of the atore11ld
IIIUe creek to tho aforeaald
highway; thence down the
hlghwoy about 5 roda 1 D
f..t to the place of
beginning, oanr.lnlng about
2JSth1 of en ecre, more or

le•led bide will lte
I'Melved
oponed lty the
Leeclng CrMk ConiiiVMC'f
Dlalrlot at their oltlce, 34411
COrn Hollow Ad., Ruland,
Ohio un111 5:00 P.ll. on
Augu.l31, 1113. Bldlo 1hd
be for th• enllre job of
ole•nlng, do-wning,
Come Make Us A One
(lllnllng
of the In
r ud - l o r
Price Offer For all
of (1) ·100.000 gllllon.
Remaining Yard Sale
2T OD x 24' tit., ground
otorogellnk looi1M on the
Items, Good Deal!
IOCCO cool conveyor line
Call 949-2988
IRd C.R. 2 (Brl• Ridge Rd.)
In RuU.nd townohlp, llhlgo
County, Ohio. ·
Addlllonol lnlorm•tlon
ond opecllloollono moy Ito
obtolned 11 the Dlotrlct
olnce at 3oM81 Com Hollow
Rd., Rutland, Ohio, 4577$,
Each bid muat b•
anclooed In an anv•lope
which lo ....ed IRd plainly
m•rked TANK 11 PAINTING.
Such bid onvalope muet
IIIIo contain tHo lull n•m• of
•very , firm
andlor
KANAUGA, OHIO
corporation wllh lnllr•t In
lh• ••m• and muat be
$100 to $40 Games
-ornpanled by • 100% Bid
Total $400 Coverall
Bond In the lull •mount of
••ch propa10l to thi
Nllefectl.on of tho Dlatrlct
a-d •• a guaranty that If
the bid II ICCiplod, I
contrect will Ito entarld Into
. _______.....,_,.. and ' 111 performance
pori Fire Station. Cards 1ssued r _......,...._,
1ncurod. On bldo lhal ora
Thursday 6-7 p.m.
r.jeclod, tho guoraniH will
· Ito promptly returned IAI the
POMEROY • F.O.E. Auxiliary
blddoro. On tho bid that lo
No. 2171 will hold a meeting at
, IICCeptod, ouch Bid Bond
will be returned to tho
7:30 p.m. there will not be a
aUCCIIIIUI bidder upon
pocluck dinner. New members will
-lion of Ill ocnlrocL
be iniliated.
An lnopocllon tour of tho
tank will leave from the
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport
office on Auguat18, 111113 IAI
Lodge No. 363 will have a meeting
thoeo who call and moke on
at the Masonic Lodge at 7:30.
appointment before 4:00
P.M. on Auguat 16, 111113.
State Auto's already
BURLINGHAM • The Bedford
The
tank will not bo drolnod
low premiums can be
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
thla lnapecUon.
reduced even more by
The Loodlng Creek
ment Committee meers Tuesday at
insuring
both
your
car
Can11rvonay
Dlolrlcl
the Burlingham Modem Woodman
reaorvea
the
right
to WIIVI
·
and
home
with
the
St~te
Hall at 7:30p.m. Public invited.
lnformalltlea,
to
reject
ony
Auto Companies.
and all blda or to accept
REEDSVILLE · The Olive
auch bid that will boat aerve
Township Zoning Commission
Let us tell you just
the DlalricL
LEADING
CREEK
meers the fllSt and third Tuesday of
how much your savings
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
each month at 8 p.m. at the Olive
can be.
By: Robert F. Snowdon,
Township Fire Station. The meet- '
Pr11ldont of the Boord of
ings are open to the public.
Dlrectora
(8) 3, 10; 17 31c

Md

Co••••ll7 Caleadar Items
appnr two da71 before a eveat
llld tile day ollllat eveat. Items
must be received Ia advaace to
auure publk:atloa Ia tbe caleD·
dar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • Vacation Bible
School, First Southern Baptist
Church, through Friday, 6:30-9
p.m. Call 992-6328 ftr ttansporta·
tion.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Church of God wiJJ hold vaction
bible school for children ages two
to tccns through Frillay froni 6:30
to 8:30 p.m. The title of the program is ·~celebration Park-Proclaiming Jesus Thoughout the
Year!" For more information call
742-2060.
REEDSVILLE • Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene, vaction
bible school through Friday from
6-8:30 p.m. across form Forked
Run State Pari:. For more infonnation call 378-6175.
CHESTER - The New Life
Covenent Church of God will hold
a campmeeting thrOugh Friday at 7
p.m. nightly. There will be three
speakers and special music by Gary
turner and lhe New Life Covavent
Singers.
ROCK SPRINGS • First Soulh·
em Baptist Church will have vaction bible school lhrough Friday,
6:30!9 p.m. Call 992-6378 for
· ttansportation.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Hickory
Hills Church of Christ will hold
vacation bible school through Friday, 7-8:30 p.m. Ages two through
junior high . Call 667-6973 for
details.

rueaday, Auautt 3, 1993

...,.1••=:; Md

SPECIAL PAPER

NIGHT

Thursday, August 5
6:45P.M.

AMVET BINGO

URI AM ON •

~fliRiliJl Sill

1\ Rll II •

DEED REFERENCE;
Volume 318, Page 287,
Melga County Dead
Recorda.
PARCEL NO. 2:
The following real eetate
altuatad In the County of
Melga, In the Stole of Ohio
and In the Village of
Syracuae:
Beginning
at
the
aoutheut corner of Lot In
oald Village of Syracuse
formerly owned by E. M.
Evana, but now owned by
Mra. Ellubeth Jon11 and on
the weal aide of road
running North from the Ohio
River Electric Rollway to
Carleton Collage; thence

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

W.at along the aoudl olde NOTICE~
oluld lol- r..ndretllool;
OF
"On .klly It, 1113, Ill ...
t h - eoudl parallel with
Nld College floed - t y · llolga County Preboto
IIYO flit; t h - ..., tOO Court, CliO No. 11011,
,... 10 .... _ , . . . olllld , _ •• Hobltllllr, 11221
'Collage Rood; tr-o. North o.ter Rood, Ruhnd. Olllo
along uld College Rood to 45775 woo appointed
the place of ltegiNII,.._
Exeouklr of Ill 111111 of .
A to.- Grantor, Wlllem WlllloM J. Hollatetter,
F. Bortella, herein reoerveo ciiOI•••d, late of 8o• 22,
. '
tho coal, oil ond gaa Rutllnd. Ohio 45171..
RoblriE.....
underlying the oald
Prablll,..
p,_l_ but not the right
1..11n1 K.tllllllraad .
to driU ~~teNon.
Cleltl
DEED REFERENCE:
Volume 311, Page 151, (B) 3, 10, 17'
llelga County Dead

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RATES
Days

PubliC Notice
PUBUCAT10N NOTICE
"To all ...,._ In-tad
In Ill~~- of LINDA GAIL
BAILEY, decellad, lata of
31118 McCumber Roed,
Lengavllle, Ohio 417•1,
Melga County Probate
Court,
No. 21020. An
appll.,.don hu boen filed
ulclng 10 rill... the 111111
from edmlnlatralon, eeylng
that the uaell do not
exceed S15,000 ond the
credllora will not be
prejudiced thereby.
A
hurlng on the application
will be held Frldoy,

c-

September a, 111113 ot 1;30

To place an ad

-

PubliC Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REALE8TATE
Th•
of Ohio,
Uelga County.
COMMERCE BANK,
- PARKERSBURG, INC..
au-eor by mergor IAI
Wood County Bonk,
PlalndH, va. ROGER W.
DAVIS and IRIS J. DAVIS,
DIIWncllnte.
Call No. U.()Y.123 '.
In purauonot of an Order
Of Sale In Ill aboYO ondlhl!l
action, I will oltar far aale 111
pub!lo iiucllon, on IH'
grou11d floor of the
CourthouN In Pomeroy In
the above nomed County,
on Friday, the 3rd day of
Septarnber, tel3, at 10:30
o.m.,
the followln.JI
ducllbod .........,
'
Being
In Bedford
Townahlp, Meta• Coun(y,
Ohlo, : and In nactlon 36,
Town 3, Range 13, of tile
Ohio COmpany'• Purahoa;e,
and bounded ond deaarlbed
followe,
to·•ll:
u
Beginning at the IOUI~.
corner of uld Fraction ;
thence north following
w11t line of Frectlon so
the eouthwnt corner ~
George Howatt'a 47 acr~
tract, bolng the 'n orthwa«l
corner of Mary A. LH'il
711.83 ocre tract; lhanoa ~~~
following the aouth Una ~I
George Howatt'• 47 ac.\'e
troc1 to the 010tar line of IJ\il
Inter-county highway ~~·
33, Nld point oleo being ._.
(Continued on Poge 8) ~

POLICIES

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Jlltha
place of beginning,
~ntalnlng 65 acres, more

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Huge Garage Sale
Friday 4th 9-4
179 Oak Dr.

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MAN IROUBU

LAYNE FURNITURE
MATIRESSOR
BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR ................................. $78
FIRM .......................................... ~
EXTRA FIRM ............................. $98
ORTHOPEDIC
.
KING SIZE SETS............ $350 &amp;·Up
QUEEN SIZE SETS........ ~75 &amp; Up
BUNK MATTRESS ............ S58 &amp; S811
BED FRAMES............... $25·$35-$50

---==--··

HBe

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VALID AUGUST 3-4-5 ONLY!

...
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02

MON. THRU SAT. Q.s-I'HONE 418 0322
3 Ml£8 OUT BULAVI.LE PICE

USA

'; FREEE INSTALLATION (REGULARLY '39.95) FIRST MONTH OF SERVICE' ONLY '9.95

Wanted, one good
hearted woman to forgive imperfection in
the man that she
loves.
Wanted, just one
chance to tell how
much he still loves
her. He can't be sorry
enough.
I love you with all my
heart.
Your One and Only

"'*

YOU SAVE OVER sso.OO

~ --~--------~--------------------------------------------------&gt;=.

•

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PLUS! ADD HB8 OR [JJ(jQjjJffJjJ AND GET YOUR SECOND MONTH FREE!

CALL NOW! l-800-766-0553
.
.. ........
CableV'tsion
WE

CA~EI

,==
..;;

;:; .

2i
IF YOU ALREADY SUBSCRIBE TO CABLE, CALL TO SEE HOW YOU CAN GET ONE MONTH FREE. ,,.
rn

AND IS VAJ.JO POR SIJILKlUBBRS IN W1RBD SIIRVICB ARB.U ONLY.

~

RE0ULAR MONTHLY FU.S APPLY POR SECOND MONTH OF SBR.VICL OffER. APPLIES TO STANDARD INSTAI.l.ATX&gt;N IN RRSIDBNTW.. tnm'S
AND ON PRIMARY 0UJ1.ET ONLY CJ11Dl RB.S'J1UCI'10NS MA V AJIPL Y

*

*

MAN TROUBLE
THE LARRY SANDERS SHOW
MO' MONEY
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
STAY TUNED
CLASS ACT

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PI••• Court,

mated at three acrea,
eorlesa.
DEED REFERENCE:
'
me 260, Page 937,
ga County Dl8d
rda.
.O,SubJecl to all eaaementa,
lliihta of way, reaarvatlona
iiO'd other reatrlctiona of
llicord.
!;.!EXCEPTING
EREFROII, tho following
crlbed tracta:
mACTI
Sltuota In Bedford
wnahlp, Melga County,
all of Ohio and baing In
action 38, Town 3 North,
· nge 13 Weal al the Ohio
bmpany'a Purchaae and
iilng doacrlbod •• lollowa:
lnn)ng at • paint Eaol
ut 150 feet from the
uthweat corner of aald
ilftoctiaq 38, oald point of
;(jtglnnlng baing on the
'll&gt;uth line of aald Fraction
Jj and being marked by an
1!t&gt;n rod along • fence line;
;ujence ' North 4 degrell
:P,'ta" Weal 187.18 feel to
Iron rod; thenoe South
degr11a 55' 31" Ent 300
to 1 point In the center
l!f Townahlp Road T·17 NE
illkGraljl R01d), uld center
;!f read being tha Wool line
:1if Herb (or Fred) Riggs;
enoo South 14 degree• 22'
" Well 62.39 feet and
uth 0 degrHo 12' 29"
oat 85.37 IHI along the
nllr of aald Townahlp
od and the Herb (a• Fred)
ggo Weal line to the
uth Una of aald Fraction
; thanoe Weal 270 loot
ong- a fence op the South
• al aald Fraction 38 to
• point of beginning,
!ll&gt;ntolnlng 1.01 acrea, more

......

' The bearing• In tho above
ocrlpllon ere boud on
e Ohio / Company'•
rchne aurvey. Above
acrlpllon prepared by
bert H. Eaaton, Reg .
rveyor No. 5·08548, In
•guat1980.
EXCEPTING all coal, oil,
a and all other mineral•
d rlghla oppurtenant
ereto outatandlng In

I....

!:SUBJECT to ..aemente
'lit record.
:!suBJECT to 11111 lor the
:G!•t hill of 1880 and
illier111tor. Grantora agree to
taxea for all of 11180.
ant- agree to pay all
•• ollmmonclng 1881
d theraaller,
uld
lll!l•nt bolng 'In lieu of
cu~tomary proration of

E

§

•OfftRBXPDt.BS IMJ AND lS SUBJSCTTO AU. MPLICAIUPIIBS AND TAXES. APIUBSlOCABUiVISION SE"VIatONLY

;;c

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INSTRUMENT
Volume 280,

~ERENCE:

2811.
t

ie:

~ TRACT tt

llu•t'ed In Bodford
ownahlp, Melga County.

(

•I

ClassifWd pages cover the
foUowin.g telephone e:tcchanges ...

21- B~iD- Opporbuaily
22- M-y 10 LoOD

$ .30

$9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
51.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
15
15

23-- Pror..ioaal Sw-.tc.

charged for each day as separate ads.
Business ~rd- ...517.1101 inch per momlh
Bulletin Board....$6.00/inch per day

1-----------:=;-;:-;::;=;;;;;;:;::;;=---------l

446-Galllpollo

992-Middlepo~

675-Pt. Plea•aDt

367-Cbeehlre
388-Vinton
245-lio Grande
256-Guy•a Dill.
643-Anbia Dial.
379-Walnul

Pomeroy
985-Cheoter

458-Leon
S76-Apple Gro-..e

843-Portland
247-Letnl

r.u.

949- R•cine
742- Rudand
667-CoolviUe

773-Muon
882-New Ha"en
895-Lelarl
937-Bufralo

3-- An.nounce.menta
4-- Giveaway
5-HappyAdo
5- Lo.o1 and Found
1- Loet and Found
II- Puhlic Sal. &amp;
Auction
!J- Wuted to Buy

32- Mobile Home~ for Sale
33- Farm• for Sale
34- 8Uiineu Builclinp
3;.- Lo .. &amp; "'•'"""'
36- a..1Eota,. w••..a

IU \ I' \I ·"

GET RESUI.TS • FASTr

41- HoUiet for Heat
42- Mohile Hom.e. for Rent
43-- Farm• for Rent.
44.- Apartmeat for Rent
45- Fun.Ybed. Room~
46- Spaee for Rent

Gallia County Meigs County M11110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
II- Help 'IV anlOG
12- Situatiou Wanted
13- ln1uranc:e
14- BUiiiiCII Trainiq
15- School• &amp; ]..,truclioa
16-- Rad•o, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mioeelleaeouo
Ill- Wan lOG To 0.

BETT~R lnaullled R Value 4 $475.00

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EICAVA8NG
(614)
667·6628

614.098-3290
Dr

614.098·6500

•

$289.00

•BACKHOE

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raiaed Panal
Garage Door• Completa With Track, Lock,
Spring and Hardware.
GARAGE DOORS
16x7
9x7
8x7
BEST RValue 6.5
$575.00 $350.00 S345.00
1Dyoorwarrlllly,wllll0only.

•DOZERS

Tr:1fng

446·4514
1·800·766·40 13

ftS•ieal hut.rwn.eat.

47- Wantod to Re~~l
48- Equipmeat for Rent
4!1- For L...

\11 lil:ll \

511- Frui" 4: V...tableo
5~ For Sala or Trada

I \li\1 "i 1'1'111"
,._ I I \ I :- I I I ( 1,
a

61

'I"P

62- Wantec:l to Buy

Liwutock

, _ ""'- for Sale
Truck• for Sale
Van~ &amp; 4 \VD'•
Motorcycle.
Boat. &amp; Moton for Sale
AulD Pub 4: Aecuoo'l'i"''
Auto Repair
CaMping Equipmenl

\111~1 :

51- H........lcl Good.
52- Sportin1 Goodo
53-ADliq,_
54- Mi~e. Merc:bandlle
5;_ Bwlcli"' Supplieo

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS
FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteJCI.
Low Cost
lm1i,de, Outside, Top

to Bottom

PH. 742.·2217
6-30- t mo. pd.

717/lfn

$285.00

1Dyoorwammty,w11Moorbfown.

GOOD Non-lnaulated, 24 ga. $357.00 $255.00 $250.00
10 yor warr1nty, whH:a only.
V. hp Opener w/electronic eye, 2 tranamittera............ $235.00
Y. hp Opener, 21ranomittera. ........................................$200.00
All Prlcea lncludolnaulation.
You Won't
A Dotter Value!

I1"':=======:;-t=:;;;;;;;;;;:~
HAULING
CARPENTER
WORK

~lua.
Subject to a right of way
l11t wide, conveyed by
y Lee to Guy W. L11, et
' •• recorded In Deed
ok 172, Page 883,•~• '
unty Dead Recorda.
.,.- :Excoptlng that part
!lierecf which wao taken far
i'!ahwoy purpoaoa by the
Jiata of Ohio, Coae No.
077, Melga County

State Auto

lnsur•nce Comp•niea

~

HJO p.m Saturday
I 00 p.m Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I 00 p.m Friday

-f:

MAIN

.,
..."....
f CALL BY NOON AND GET CABLE- INSTALLED BY TONIGHT. FREE!~""
':&gt;

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

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

$ 6.00

11\\\11\1
I

Public Notice

992-6687

,•.J!j

15

Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20

JUte

•

,..;
thence
along
~ulh
IIJ11'al-••
Froction
No.tho
36

214 EAST

CALL TODAY!
WATCH TONIGHT!

Lilli UN~

• Ad• ouUide the coWilf your ad run• mUll be prepaid
t Recebe d..eount for ad• paid in advance.
• Free Acb: Gi.,caway and Found ad. under 15 word• will be
run 3 day• at no cbarp.
• Prk:e of ad for aU capttalletten ia double price of ad coet
• 1 ~lblli.actype only uaed
• Sentiueli. not re~pon~ible for error• after tU"Il day (check
for erron ftnl day ad run• in paper). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day after publication to make correction
• Ada lhat mu.l be paid in advance are:
Card of Thanh
Happy Ado
]D. Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A clu,ifiedadvert.i.temeal placed in the The Daily Sentinel
(ekcept CW..fied 011play, Bu•ineu Card or Legal
Notieea) willal.o appear in the Point Pleaunt Repter and
the GallipoU. Daily Tribune, reaching over 18,000 home~

1:,

•

•

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

Ol! I
• fSPN SI'ORIS (I NHR • CNN H·IIOliR WORLil NlWS • BLUl Ill ONlY UN liDO

,

Call992-2156

s-

NTHI

3
6

POMEROY

you want it...
you've got it ...

o'clock P.M. Paraona
knowing any reoaon why
tho applicatiOn ahould not
Ito granlld ahould appur
and Inform the CourL Tha
Court Ia located on the
aecond floor of the Court
Houao on Court end Second
Str..ta, Pomeroy, Melga
County, Ohio."
Rabort E. Buck,
ProbotoJudge
Lane K. Neallkoed
Clerk
(8) 3, 10, 17

I

Words
15

10

.

, Said Percel No. 1 •••
appraleed at: $3500.00.
Said Parcel No. 2 waa
appraleed at: $t200.00.
T•m• of Sale: Caah
Tho real 111111 oennol Ito
aold for leu than -thlra
oltheappraleld nlue.
Jom11 U. Soulaby,
Shariff of Melga County,
Ohio
(7) 20,27,(8)3,31c

The

PubUc NotiCe

,.,. (COntinued from Page 8)
~uthoiot corner of Geo!'lle
wett'a 47 ocre tract;
' enco In a · aauthorly
' lr•c!lan following tho
J;oenler line of lnler·county
.,b}ghway No. 33 to a point
l'l(here the Klngabury Road
~Qina aald . lnter•county
Highway No. 33 In Fraction
)B; thence following the
: c:.~nter line of uld Inter·
·eounty highway No. 33 In an
,.aterly dlrectlon about154
l~ol to Herb Rlggo line;
·ftienco In a aouthwaaterly
~cilrectlon following oald
Rlggallne about 178 feel to
the center of tho Kingsbury
Road; thence In a aoutherly
direction following tho
cent•r 11 ne
of a aid
Klngabury Rood, aold
.9!"Jir line being elao olang
!f,Jr11 Rijgo weal line to the
.i1&gt;uth line of Fraction No.

lor

POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church will be having vaction
bible school through Friday from 6
to, 8:30 p.m. This year's t!teme is
"Digging for God's Truth and the
WEDNESDAy
Great Dinosaur Hunt." Dr. Digger
TUPPERS PLAINS -. Orange
will be there every night and there • Township Trustees Wednesday
will be a great ~mosaur egg hunt 7:30 p.m. at the hon{e of the clerk:
on the last evenmg. Ages are 3 to Patty Calaway
·
13 years. Call 992-6768 for more
·
information.
CHESTER • Tuberculosis skin
leSiing cards issued Wednesday, 5CHESTER • The Pomeroy 6 p.m., Chester F'lre Station.
Chapter No. 186 of jthe Order of
,
Eastern Star will meet at 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • Missionary
at the Olesw Masonic Temple. 25 service,
Middleport Wesleyan
year pins will be presented.
Bible Holiness Church, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with Rev. and Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT • Skin testing Philip Knisley, Mission, S.D.
clinic, Tuesday, 5-7 p.m., Middle-

.....

PUblic Nollce

Ohio '

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Rea-·able
·
.,.._...
Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE

614•742•2138

Remodeling and Repair
Painting, Experienced
Free ~admatea

614-446-8568 :""
Howard

L Writesel

ROOF IN~

NEW- REPAIR
Gutter Cleaning

State of Ohio, and bolng In
Range 13 Weal of tho Ohio
Company'• Purcheae and
being d110rlbed ao lollowa:
Boglnnlng at 1 paint Eaal
about 420 feet and North 0
degrHo 12' 20" Eut 85.37
feet and North 14 degree•
22' 01" Ealt 62.30 flit from
tho Southwell corner of
aald Fraction 38, a eald
point ol beginning baing In
the center of Townahlp
Road T·t7 NE (McGrath
Road) and being on the
Herb (or Fred) Rlggo Welt
line; uld point of beginning
alao being tho Northeaat
corner of • 1.01 acre lot;
thence North 11 dagr~~~ 26'

21 " Eut 107.58 feel ond
North 0 degr111 40' 21"
Welt 1114.74 flit and North
8 degr- 01' 46" Ealt 68.51
IHI and North 27 degrHI
58' 54" Eaat82.16 flit along
tho center of Townehlp
Road T·17 NE (McGrath
Road), aald center of
Townahlp Road 'T•t7 NE
alao being the Herb (or
Fred) Rlgga Weal line;
thence South 69 ctegr111 03'
111" Wtol 438.74 fill to an
Iron rod; thence South 4
degreeo 38' 18" Eoal 352.04
feet to •n Iron rod 11 the
Northweat corner ol a 1.01
acre lot; thenae South IS
degreea 55' 31" Eeat 300
feet along the North line of •
1.01 aero lot to tho point of
beginning, conlllnlnf! 3.46
acree,

more

or

Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy

992-5082
Sandy Henderson

992-3647

(lormer Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur5·10 pm
Fri-Sat 5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Limestone

Dirt

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

. '
949-2168

3·16-93-lfn

• I'll T•H Your Futur•, Now111·100-

Ext. 4587, · 13.111 Par
lllln. lllust Bo 18 Yro. Procalt Co.

288~

Gravel

102-631.()1115.

992-7878

m11 mo.

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC
WALKER ALLEY

YOUNG'S

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

CARPENTER SERVICE

Purls and Servlte
Authorized: Briggs &amp;
· Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M-F 9-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday

Porches,

949·2804
4/26/lln

Wontod: Lady CampJlnlon 40 To

eo Nonemoker To Shire Expan-

Patios,
Sidewalks

'"· One Child W•lcom•
(Caunlry Homo), P.O. Box 652,

992-7878

'Singlo WhMo F..,.lo Ponpal
Age: 17 112 ·23, Pfolor .......
omollor I Alcohol Fr11 Bond
Rooponu To: P.O. Box M, Ga~
llpotlo, OH 4!14131.

Oottlpotla, OH 4H3t.

Whllo Malo Ago 23 Looking Far

ml1 mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
Public Notice
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
•LIGHT HAULmlu
"On July 30, 1993, In the
•FIREWOOD
Melgo County Probate
Court, Ca.. No. 28022,
Mulne Griffith, 34440 State
Route 7, Pomeroy, Ohio
457&amp;1 waa appointed
Admlnlatrator of the 11tate · USED RAILROAD TIES
of Charlea E. Grlflllh,
'

BILL SLACK

992-2269

atate
Routelate
7, of
Pomeroy,
deceaaed,
3•uo
Ohio 45769."Robert E. Buck,
Praboto Judge
Lena K. Neaaelroad
(8) 3, 10, 17

crork

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

CLUB
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
On JU' · • I,

BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES

.~_.HAOSMEMEESNITTESS&amp;

lfAUUNG: Limestone,
Olrt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

1&lt;!-~··nnr

l!t=~~~~r~1 II~~~=======~
PRIYIJE

• IN POMEROY
6:45 p.m.
Special Early Bird
$1 00 Payoff
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES

"Mathematica ia the
alphabet with which
God hal written the
UniveraL "-Galileo
By Toplc
By Appointment

205-75R15" Tlgor P.w XTM AWL
205-75R14" Tlgor P.w XTM RWL
21S.75R1~" Flreatone OWL
23S.7SR15" Flreaklne OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 61281113

.949- 2 81 4

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

1/'DJI mo. pd.

Thrw tem11a pu,-, Grut O.ntl
Shophord mix, 814-1112·3133.

Uood tumbor 216'a and 2x4'o,

oddo ond ondo m..t tau all.
Apply at 1705 ChHtnlrt St., Go~
II polio.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Sot Of Kop, At Rlco'o

Fumllur1, Gallipolis, 114-441-

11523.

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

Ieee,

excepting all legal rlghll at
way.
Thollearlnga In the above
deacrlptian are b•aed on
the Ohio Company'a
Purchaae aurvey.
DEED REFERENCE:
Volume 334, Page 761,
Melga County
Deed
Recorda.
Tho premlaea to Ito sold
are located an llcGroth
Rood, Pomeroy, Ohio.
S.ld preml111 appralaed
at Twalvo thouaand dollaro
and
no/100
Dallara
($12,000.00) and connat bo
aold for leu than rw.,.thlrda
of that amount.
The h lgheot bid will be
aocepted.
TERMS OF SALE: Five
Hundred Dollara (SSDO.OO)
coeh or -tilled ohlck on
dey of aale; ltalaiiOI due
upon conftrmatlon of Nle
and delivery of deed.
Jamn 11. Soulaby,
ShwiH llllga County, Ohio
Gragg II. Emrick,
Anarney lor Plalntlll
(7) 27; '(8) 3, tO; 3TC

GENERAL
HAULING

24w.
EAGLE LANES

Weetleoters

Downs]Xluts

Fr•ctlon 31, Town 3 Noflh,

Jlfa•cov...

; '~';b7?~

Mowers - Choln Saws

Gutters
Public Notice

Call Today for
Tour free

Shade River Saddle Shop

...l'lumblng
"..

CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR .
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

;a~
::;:o,

38904 Lead•ng
Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

36358

614·992·7144

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

992-3470
OWNIR: Jell Wickanham

Chester, Oh. 45720

'ISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ·

·Quality
Stone Co.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

COMMERCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Call 614·992· ·
6637
Cllesllire, OH.

7

318/tin

,tM.JAY,MAR

St. Rt. 7

7

71111!.

985-3406

. 4/29/93 fflt

SERVICE

SA

614-992-7643
' '

2 ba1giM, tri-color, 1a

molo , ..dun llmolo, SA
t431Hyaoll Run vlclnhy, 814-II!I:Z.

(No S1nday Calls)
2112192/tfn

Yard Sala

�e-10-The Dally Se~lnel
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Flnl TliM ao-. Ylld Sole,

220 ~

DrW•,

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

44

"-lnllde Tog Solo: From Bldroom

dopooll.

For Slgno.

Moving S.le: 48 Lincoln, Fuml-

tur. li Anllqu-. Call
ti7H.

2 ramify yard 1111, 1114ml below

v tt

O H!

nenlng1.

~"ec

Mvn

MHeubllhl Ecllpee "So,
Spood Air ConciRionlng, PI
PS, AMIFM StoNO, Rod, 1,300"MII•, 814-446--7521.
.:

1!o6

.r
,0

1&gt;1~-fiN&lt;,

/'o6AIN., ·.

NORTH
+9 6 ~

Mon· Wid,

t9 B 7 2
+7 B 3

18

Wanted to

Do

Financial

Gabtown Ad ume road •• Jor· 11m. with ua. You'll tova the
dan Baptllt Church, aboUI ;1cml company. t«JJ.992-6356,
South · ol Church,GIIIIpotlo As per Article 9, Transflrs and

Forry, Aug . 4-5-5-7.
Vaconcleo, !loctlon 8, Polltlng, 21
Moving I Yord Solo, I Maple St., ol tho Nogollllod Agnomont
M..on, WV. .Aug. 3 &amp; 4,

r~ln

cane~~ II:.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

bttW.In lfie MLTA and the
Board at Edue~tlon , the lhlga
INOTICEI
Local School Diltrld Ia ~ling
tha following vacancln for h• OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
re9u1ar teaching etan: LD recommenda thlt you do bual·
TeaChar at Malga High School nna with ptK»pla you knowhand
and Science/ MathiPhy_alcal NOT to send money throug the
Education Tncher at Melg• m1ll until you han lnvntigatld

Junior High (Eiomontory cor3-famlly garage HI• O.nv•r llllcotlon~
Weber reald•nca, RHdav111e;
August 5-8, 9:001.,.? Toyo, lur· AVON I All Anao I Shirley
nhure, an11quee, golf equip-. Spa,., 3Q4.87'5-142t.
mont( lowllry, loundry tub, AVONI All ar.... NMd 1xtra
cloth ng. boby oqulpmont.
money or W.nt a carHf? Etthttr
4 flmlly, 512 Hudlly Str..t, way~all ·Marilyn. 304..a8:Z-2645
Mlddlopon, Tulldoy ond Wod- or 1..aoo-~.easa.
nMday, I:OD-5:00.
Avon want Individual• lnla,....
All Yard Sal• Mull a. Paid In Iedin umlng $6-$'10/hr, No door
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the to door, 1.aG6-82'7.. 640.
.
day bllfol'll the ad le lo run, Bab.ysttlar NHded In My Home,
Suncloy odHion- 1:OOpm Friday, In Bldwoll. can Btlort 9 P.M.
llonday
odHion
tO:OOo.m. 114-381-8788.
·
Saturday.
ca.. Manager FuU-niTII Poal~-- 4--5, ~CUH, ·comer of lion Working With Emotionally
bob~ :r:.lkii'II~~Ot:_m, .., Community,
Dillrubed "'At ,_lsk'" U11 In The
Tha Horne &amp;
tum ure, toye, mtac. 1:30am- Sc~a. Mult Have Reliable
5:00pm.
Transportation Teacher Car·
Aug~st 5th &amp; lth, t-4pm, c.... tlllcatlon And Monlol Haalth E•·
Rd., behind fairground•. Loti of parlance Or Training Desired,
nlca cloth!~, eome Fisher Prtce Bachalora O.C.rM Required,
&amp; Lhtll TtkM top, homa Inter- Sand Reaume lo: Accau To
lor, curtalnl, b.cl aprada, gn ~.6~a;o~·~uo',CI~~~~·
•1 01H
_, 11 ~ nilt
grill. -hlng lor IVIryo&lt;ll.
• o - 1 11 •· 0
45631, Attention: C.r Bowere.
August 5-7 boeldo Bnhln
Firehouse, turnltul'll, nice ck)th· D J For Tha Addlaon Club,
Ina Including large alz•, miac. PINH Call, 114-441-4756.
Dental Hygenllts- to work In
Helen HIH reald•nc..
Augu .. 6-7, niCe clean ciDI:hH, achool based Dental s..lant
howehold Herne, toota. Loop Program, full or part time, Mllge
Rd., Rutland, &amp;14--N2-27'DO.
and Athena County, must have
Ohio ltcanH, call Debby Fulks,
Four family, Tu.day and Wed- 614-!592·3612 tor mora rntormannday, one mile up Hyaell Run. lion.
~""7':'":-----::,...--,Frlday, Augutt 7 from 9amoo4pm. Dependable
Experienced
Greg Ebl[n rw~•nc•, 36180 HOUACteaner
NHd8d
On
Peach Fort&lt; Rd.
Fridays For 5 Houre; Mutt Hava
Work R•ferencn, S5 Per Hour,
Friday• 133 Butlamut Avenue; 814-446-0671.
heater, lam~, dolts. cablnete, 7-'..:..::,.::.:c::~-=-=---c,--,
mirrors, . advertlalng tin cana, Oanar1l Office Work And
coltectlatH, much ~Counter Salls, Computer Ex·
Garage tal• 71'3().813, o:oo-?, ~rfance Hel~ful, Sand Rnume:
782 High StrMt, Mlddl.port, ~3-t.Bor: 2 8, Gallipolis, OH
many nka Items tor everyone,
baby clalhal as wall •• llwt HVAC, Service TKhnlclan, 18 To ·
elzae.
$12 Per Hour BaNd On EJ:.
.
perlence, And l•n•fft Package
Oan~g• Sal• Rain or ahlna. Only Need Apply. Mall Retume
Aug. 2nd-8th, hm till 7. 1 Reference To: Dan Inman,
Womens ct01hH, shOM, exar- Elact:rk: Inc., 6341 Radford Ad,
cite blka, hor.. tack, knlt.s. Att'!•na, OH 457'01.
Hyooll Run Rd., 2 mil" on right.
Medical Record Ctark·futl time
Gigantic Yerd Sat. Past pashlon, evening ahlh Man.
Matron• of Harrlsonvllla, Chap- thru Thur., d1y ehlft S.t.
t•r O.E.S., Friday, Aug.6, 9am· knowledge of madlcal reco;d
5pm, Saturday.!. Aug.'i_ lem-5pm, systlm r.qulrld. Stnd tnuma
Larkin Slreat, HUitana.
to Bill Barker, Plusant . Valley
Large yard ul• Tunct.f 1nd Hospital, 2520 Va!lay .Drive, Pi.
Wednesday, Showalter Rd., Plaaaant, WV 25550 AA/£0E
Chester, 0:00-?
Needed: Data Coll~or, no ax·
1
1
A
.t
4
a
5
Da
perlance
necuury, aooc:1 pay,
Mov ng 11 • ugu
• n· wa wilt train you, Catllllon., Tuo,
ville, IJriar Ridge Ad.
Wid ., 9:00-5:00, 614-282-7724.
Patio Sal... Aug.S-6-7, Tupper· No Exporlancat •soo To $900
ware, home Interior, ...-all 1V1,
•
appllanc•, K:hool clothing, lots WHkly !Pot•ntlal Procnalng
of thl~•· Fll'lt houu pall . FHA Mortgage Rafunda. O!Ain
-• •At......
t
Hourli. 1-S01-646-0503 Exl.118.
chUr~&lt;n, ,....r,
-.
24 Hour..
Porch Sll• Aug. 2-a. Dolls, craft I
hema, matartal, womanl and Overbrook Canter has part-tlma,
childrene thort sat 1 , amall to 3-11, CNA position• avallabl•,
..._ tor mora lntormallon
tutl aln, hand plow, many otn.r contact Robyn Han on, A. .O.N.,
.
Items, 315 Condor St., Pomaroy. 61 .._.992-6472.
Thursday- Friday, 1 112ml. north Tomato picker• wanl8d ·, r,p-r
of Cheater, first houM on left on
.....Sumn•r Rd. Lar,.. clolhl_, and P1ckerw wanted, Harris arma,
.~
··•
Ponland, Ohio, 614-843-5113.

:.!:

:o:===:--=--c---,-81111"

misc .

Yard ulo- Pornaroy, High Strwt,
3-famlly (Annla Chapman, Susie
AbboU, and Chi rtane Hoeflich)
ard and moving uta. Evarythng from winter coats to cottacttblel and mol'tl. Really nice
bedroom anHmble With eklrt,
comfortar, aham1, and prlac:itla
curtain• In hunter green, barely
used complete nt of VIsion•
cookware, rugs carpeting large
and small apptlancn Including
a r•frlgerator, adult, children
and Infanta wear, all alzes, Including numwous autta and
1ackoto, olzo 42 Tall and oldn·
· larga;
.wutar1,
eklrt1,
ateepwear, dree... and other
clothing, tome new ; craft hams,
toya
and -game•,
eome
aleclronlcl, balkata, and mora.
All d•r sa tu rd 1 Y start Ing at

r.

9:~m.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Paarwon Auction Company,
full tim• auctlonHr, complale
auction
aervica.
Unnsed
166,0hlo • w.. t Vlrglnlo, 304773-5785.
Wanted to Buy

Antiques a"d UHd turntture, no
Item too large or IC)O email, will
buy one pi~ or complete
household, call O.by Martin,
614-992-Jit41.
Decorated wtontWart, otllampa,
anllqut furnhu11, mall pouch
tharmomtt.,.., general anti·
quit. Riverine Antlqun, Run
Mool'll, own.,-. Wa do ap-.
pral..lt, 614·ei2-2526.

Business
Opportunity

Q' IO 7 6
10 3
KQJ9

-SOUTH
+AKI087
• A K 53

Want.ct:

Good managarl&amp;alll

person to 10ilcil buslnen locally, In parson and/or by tel•
phont, good poy lor good
NIUIII, MMII tO 11art Jm•
m8diately. Wrhe· P.O. lox 406,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 giving
qualtltcationa. lnt.rvlaw wlll bi
arranged.
17

Miscellaneous

Garden tiller 1100, air comp,....
aor $150. 114-448-1~51 .

ed

::18~~W=a n,;.t~':"t~o':'D;;.::o::-':'~

7
_Babyalning, mr hom•, Cheater

arR, 814-885-4282, Mary.
Chrl 1 w1
stan
It baby.Jt In thalr
home, located 3 mllu out SR
143, M· F, call 114-892-!5271.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Tr11 Removal, Hedge
Trimming. FrM Estlmlt181 8M-367--7951After 4p.m.
Gana111i Malntenanca, Pal,.lng 1
Yard Work Wlndowa Wath.a
QuH•rt Cleanltd Light Hauling,
Comf'!'lerical, AHidentiat, Stave:
114-446-1651.
Goorvn Ponablo Sowmlll, don't
haui:J:.r loge to the mill )uat
coli
75·11157.
Home care for your lovltd one In
tamtly car. hoinl in Mlddlepon,
114-992·5042.

Mitt Paula'l Day Cal'll C.ntar 1
Block WHt Of HMC On Jackson
Pike M-F 6 A.M. ·5:30 P.M. It
Quality And Experience I• Tht
11 Concam For Your Chltd'a
Care. C1ll Ua For A VIs h. Infant
/Toddlon 114-446'6227. p,...
Don't Junk ~I Soli Uo Your Non- choolono !School Ago 114-446Wortdng Major Apptlancea, 8224.
Color
TV't,
Refrigerators,
FrMzerl, VCR'1, Mlcrowavat, Uothar wanta to do babytlttlng
Air CondHionono, GUHII Ampo, In hor homo In Polnl PlloHnf1
Etc. 1514-256-1238.
near echool, wtores, ana
h._pnat L.oct of TLC to lhare.
J &amp; D's Auto Parto ond Solvogo, 304-87&amp;-em onrtlmo.
oloo buying junk con I truc~o. I;;::::-:=~~7-=~::;::7--::-304·773-5343.
Room and board fDr handicappod ond lldoriy whh lower InJunk cart, any condition, 814- coniH wbo like country ~Jn
11112·7553.
flmlly cal. homo, 114-llt
•
Top Prlcos Paid: AN Old U.S. TrN ldump nmoval, cornploto
Colnl, Gojd Rinas Sllv., Coin•, dapandable urvlce, raaaonable
Gold Colno. M.T.il. Coin Shop, rat... 304-3754731.
151 Socond Avonuo, Gollipollo. ·. Will do bobyolttlng In m ~omo,
Worlod to buy: uHd mobltojrwaoonoblo pricu. ~75, . _, 114-44f-017S
.::
•704
:.:.:.:..- - - - - - -

tha oft•rlng.

BIG $$$ Gov'L Auction Info
Sind $12 Chock 111.0 . To: BCB
4053C Ta1H c....k Ad, Dept.
144, Loa, KY 40517.
Car lot, building W/3 apts, bldg
40x90, two utra lots, 2 Herroom home on anott.r lot
Ownar will fln1nca wlreasonabla
down paymant. 1-614-o384-6435
or 304-882-3752.
Loco! Pay Phone Route: $1,200
A_ Wtek Potenllal, Prlc_.. To
Soli. 1-110~71132 Eld. 321.
Locol Vending Route: $1,200 A
WHk Potanllal. Must Sail. 1~
1155.0354.

Name Your Own Income Make
Fortune At Home, Own BualhHI, Profile Dally, GaurantNd.
FI'IMI O.tallt, 212·265-6100, Ext.
2117.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
New. Com~arclal · Home Unhs,
from $'199.00, Lampe, Lollona,
Ac:ciHOrin, monthly payment•
low as $18.00, call tOday FREE
NEW Color Catalog, 1-800-&lt;162·
pi97. .
'

.A KQ

Farms for Sale
30 Kl'll t.rm with 3 bdrm.
house, 1 112 ml'" od: Rio
Orondo. 814-245-1227.
41.71 Acne 2 Stoiy Farm
HQUN, La.
2 . IIIIH From
M-rvllle, Mloc. Out Building
$35,000, 114-2515.1175.
Mini farm 23 acrH 10 room 2
ttory houH, 1m1t1 ·bam, 1 mile
out Jarrlco Rd, OVIrfOOka Pdnt
PIHNnt, $35,000. »H75-48Jit.

UnlumlohOd,~l
bod-.n,
NAn• •
• _,
8·
••
,..... ~

45

••m.

34

54 M. lscellaneous

Furnished
Rooms

4 Piece Bedroom _Suit•, $150,
114 441 1621.

Room1 for r•nt - - • or month.
Stoning ot $120/mo, Galllo Hotol. Buck Stove, - d wry 1m1o,
muwt Hll-, uklng $500, catii14114-446'11580.
Vi2-8855, lean rna. .ge.
Sl•plng 100m11 whh cooldng.
Aleo tra11ar 1paca. AI hook-41pe. o.non.t eo wan 1tareo,
CaU 1~11 2:00 p.m., 304·773- · Korookl olnglng ond ,_,.,lng
oyldom whh $115 ShUN pror..;.
15651, Mooon wv.
·otonot microphone oncl 30
aoapal .ang tracu, anty.. ulld
46 Space for Rent
fwlco In chUrch, hove $1200 lneorn.,...,tai 0111co Speco For v..tod, but wll tako $750 lw Ill
Rent: Rout. 7, Narth, Near Pon- or lau without the lapel.
dorooo Stookhouoo, (Golllpollo). Bought !rom thl Top In Sound
klaal For Phplclans, Dent:llt Cornpeny, 814-94!1-2543.
Office Or Beauty Salon Phone: Firewood Prepare For WJnterr
814'-446-24111 ..
Will Bo Soooonod Whon Cola
Woothor Arriv"!! Dollvorod, 114258·1318, l14._'lor-7025 Evonlngo.
HoUM, 3br, 2 Mth!t ,buement, GE Roli1ctorotor, 22ft., good
out ol town, In p,..,s cllltrlct. oond. 304~75-1381.
304-a75-4041 Dennis.
·
Go Kan• 3 HP l up, opeclol an
Wanting to I'Wll· 2 or 3 bedroom 8 HP, In oloclt, Morrie Equipho&amp;..-t, ln clean and good condi- mont, lt+llt2-2455 or 114-7142·
tion, pnolor prlnto Httlng, 114- 2580.
192-2428, If no answer plaaH
GOLDEN
PRIDEIRAWLEIGH,
teave m. . . on machine..
lonnulll lor hoOith. Dale lo
Wll~ Wood, Dlit. S.. Ul 11 our
boolh 11 tho Maoon County Folr.
Merchandise
IOW7S-10110.
Hul1y 12 Spood 1121 Sorioo,
!:;~J,.WJt"o, Man'•
61451
Household

Business
Buildings

Commercial Building For Sala
Or LIIM, 3" Second Avenue,
Phono: 814~8-2522, 10 A.M. To
5P.M.
35 Lots .&amp; Acreage

3 k»ts, N•w Haven. 304-773-5808

aft•r4pm.
5+ ICrH Qn Jerry's Run Rd, approx. 5ml out. 304-5711-211211.
Lot• I at;:rwage for home construction on Rayburn Rd.
reseonable rutrictlo:na, county
water, Information mailed on ,.
qunt, 304-t75-5253, pleaH rio
aingle wldl tralttra.

Rentals

sso.

Goods

41 Houses for Rent

Laur Computer, Appt• Com·
r-riJ:.I• With Prlnlor, .614-446-

VI'RA FURNITURE
114-441-3158 Or 814-448-4428
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

1 Bedroom Houu Fumlthed,
Located 735 A-, Third Avonuo,
Gallipolis.
$150
DopooH,
$160/loto. 114-445-38711.
2 Bedrooms Rornodolod Aport·
mini Whh Rafrfgeralor And
Stove, C1oH To Galllpolla, 1144M47t7.
3 Bodtoomo, 1 Bath, Fomlly
Room, Larg• 2 Car Garage I
Yard 2 Mlln From Golllpollo, At.
14\ 814-446-4824.
!5 Rooms And Bsth, Good L.oeatton, Inquire At 818 Second
Avonuo, Golflpollo, 814-4463373.
Potnl Plnunt..r:c. neighbor·
hood, young, 3br., 1 112 both,
large family room, rent/lust.
114'446 0827.
'

lawn mowll', 22"' cut, llkt ntw,
175. 304-882-2211. •
Lennox 3 Ton Air Handlll', WHh
11 KW Ellctric Hilt, Approa. 7
Yeare Old, 31,000 Lennox Hud
Pump, 114 441 4885.
.
Lln9Qin waldar, 225 amp wHh
Onon onglno, $1000, 814-1112·

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chllrs;
Fan Back Rocking Choir $118;
Glrdon .Arch Woy'o $1211.00

r"'""i

.

"'"'".1.

t:m••

v...:

e
_ x

f'....-,

f.l:pplll

Fruits &amp;

58

Merchandise

Bidding ·Twfn llaH Sot $81, Full
$tt Sol~ Cluoon $149 Sol; 4 3Mt.
Real Estate
Drawer Cheet $44.1Sj Car BMI'•
Bunk Bed's, · Potter Beds. Futl Nlnton~ garno Glnl, 8
whoto sol $150, wll ool
Line Of Swthweltem Va•• aoparotoly.
304-175-4431.
Starting At $20.00; lrldlono Many
Shapo'o I stz.. Stanlng At Old plano ond dlnotto Ill, call
$5.00. 2 Locotlono ·Sooldollouto 114-985-38113.
Auction Or 4 Mil•• 0\11 141.
Open 9 A.M. To 8 P.M. Ilion -Sol.
Plcturoa, Droparlll, Modlclno
GOOD USED APPUANCES Cablnst, London Fog Cold, Bluo
w11hi,..._ _d4 ry....., r•friaer•lora, Table
Coat, Badlpi'Uda, Cur1aln1,
Cow.,., Curtain•, Valan·
All real eslate advertls!ng In
rangn. Skagga Apptianc., 78
8'• •••3375
this newspaper Is"subject to
VI no Stroot, Caii814-441-73M, 1- ~--~·,:;;:;;:-=~:=.:::;·:.,-,...,:-:-,.­
42 Mobile Homes
800-411i1"3411t.
Prlcocl TD Sail: 2 Aall Troltor In
the Federa l Fair Housing Ad
Good Condition, '1114-2AUSII.
tor Rent
011968 which makes II Illegal
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
to advenlse ·any preference,
12x50, 2 bedroom, gaa hN1, CompiM.e homa tumJHI41~J:· OU.n box IIWino•. 1r Ouuar
TV, comblnatfon atalr . . . a tkl
tim!latlon or discrimination
washer and dryer hook-up, Hours: Mon-Sat, f.l5.
,.modeled lnt•rlc:W, 2 mt111 out 0322, '3 mlloo out Bulovllll Ad. machine. 114-11824881.
based on race, color, religion,
Naw Lima Ad. In Rutland,
sex tamlllat status or national
Fno Dolhnry. ,
Sinko, - · Tubo, Ulod
$250/mo., 114-llt2-2803.
origin, or any Intention to
llotlohon Ca,..o, Rl 7 N. 114- Ell• SooutiM B!lgo, Groon,
2 btdroom lurnlohod moblll 441·7444 h12 Corpot •~ AN Whll!; llotchlng Towel Rodo,
make arry such preference,
home, 304~7.5-eal2.
VInyl In Stock $4.49 Yd. ....
Etc....... BUNDLE on homo
Nmllation 01 "isaiminatlon."
Thlt Uollolly lloko Romodotlng
2 bedroom, 14x70 mobile home.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Or Building Coote SKYROCKET.
Good condition, S2751mon.,
Nowii:Jood
114-4411-7711, 614-446-2582, 114This newspaper will not
$160/dop. Gnhom School Rd. lumlohlng. 112 mi. 4M·7t120,
knowingly accept
614-446o8323.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pt1111nt, WV,
StockmaUe Stove, 814-44$-0527.
adve r1 1sements lo r real estate
2 Bedrooms Slave, Rafrlgatator, caii304-67S-1450.
which Is in IJiolatton of the
Wat11 &amp; Trut'l Paid, Nur North Queen 1111, brau bad, brand Zanith contola TV, couch. Wurlaw. Our readers are hereby
lhzer coneole plano, nanny
Gallla, $200 Pluo DopooH 614- ,_, $250, 304-aiZ-2387.
lnlormea that all dwellings
goot, 614·7142·2418.
388·9888.
'
Rolrtgorator Ukl N-lrr 1 Yoor
a&lt;tvertlseel Jn this newspaper
2 bdrm. trall•r, 3 mit• out Rio WaiTinty $215j Ae geretor 55
are available on an equal
Building
Grande. 814·245-9227.
Froot FrN $150LRolrlgorotor 2
opportunity basts.
Door Whlta, .-.25i ~otpolnt
Supplies
Nk:a mobile home k»te tor up to Washlr Like New, 1 YNr Wer16x80 homn between Ath1n1 &amp; ronty $205· Whl~pool Woohor Block, brick, . _ . alpoe, wtnPomeroy, $85tmon., 614-9924167. $150; G.E. Waohor $125; Clolhoe ctowe, 11111111, ate. Claude Win·
31 Homes for Sale
Dryor $115· 10" Eloctric Rongo ter., Rio Grand•, OH Call 114Real Nice 14x70 2 Bedroom.. $95;
T.V. l:cinsoll $95; llaytog 246..5121
Gardan
Tub'Privata
S.nlng,
2 11ory, 3br., 1 112 bath, 2 car Just 6 Milas r-rom Gallipollt, an Wrino11 Woohor $110; S~go
garagt~ , approx. 2 acrn. 304SA 218, HUD Welcome, $275/Mo. Applfancaa, 614-448-7318, Oi 1· 56 · Pets for Sale
51'6-2708 aft•r 5pm.
B00-411i1"3411t.
"Water Paid, 614-256-1393.
G-.n ond Supply Shop-Pot
3 Badroom HOUH Full BIH- Two 2 bedroom traltera. Deposit
SWAIN
All broedo, styloo.
ment 24x44, 2 Car Garage, and Reterrancn required. 814- AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 112 Grvomlng,
Julio Wo~b. Calll1oH46-0231.
Abova Ground Pool, 1.6 Acr• 446·1104.
Olivo St., Galllpolle. Now &amp; Uold
SA 160 Vinton, Ohio, 614-388-tumhure, h~~az.s Wllttm .6 Mlnlaturw Plnechw AKC, 3
9502.
Worll booto. 8
3158.
'?_lk I ton, $200. ooch
44
Apartment
304-6At-i1!:444.
•
3 btdroom, 1 112 both, ltlachod
Wooher~ Oryor,
Rolrlgarotor,
for Rent
garago, 183 MIHan Ad, Camp
Color t.V. Freez.,, Air eon.. AKC Rog. Slbtrion Huoky PupConley, appllancH Included.
Camper
Slu plll1 Vory Calm And lnlolllgont,
1 112 Bedroom~..__2 Mlln, Nol1h dHioner,
304~15-1636",
Refrigerator,
MIC'9Wave,
814- Wot1 G!oy Or Black &amp; WhHo,
or VInton $27&gt;~roo. + 1 Monlh 256-1238.
$150,1M~8 8127.
·
3 Bedrooms, 2 Balha, 2 Car At· Doposh, Utllhlooi14-38B-11080.
tached Garaga, Outbuilding, 1 B~room Apartmanl In GalAKC
Aoglotorod
Cockor
53
Antiques
Bidwttt Porter Sc:hool Area, ,.._: llpolla, 814-446-8221.
Spanlolo, 2 Aduho, 1 Moll, 1
387-7504.
Antlq.. Wood Cook Stove, With FemaJe, With 2 Pupe, Chain Link
Bldrooma,
Unfumlthld Warming CIOHI, Home Comfort, Fence, All For $500, 814-4-485 bedroom brick home, 1 112 2.
Apartment, Stove, Refrigerator, Dato: 1884 St. Loulo, 110, Excol- 4110.
bath, ll.ctrlc h..t and air,
AC, 112 Mill From Gavin ltnt Condition, 1300, Cell Attar 5
family room with flraplace, nice $275/llo.
Dobarman AKC Ragltlar.d
$250 DopooH, 114-387· P.M. 614._'1711-21123.
Puppln, All Shotl, Parente On
lanllot. 614""'46-1387.
0438.
Buy or aeU. Rlvartne Antlquea, ·PremiHI, 614-258-1450.
Sne SSQOO, realty fM. Brick 2bdrm. tpll. , lalat eleCtric, ap- 1124
E. Main StrMt, on Rt. 124, Famate Dalm111on 12 Months
houae, 3br., · · ktt., dlntngroom, pliance• fumlahed, laundry Pomeroy.
Houn: M.T.W. 10:00 Old, Good With ChHdron, 614ltvingroom, 1 112 bath, family room facllhln clo11 to ac:hool e.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 4411-2075.
room, Andaraon wtndowa, In lown. ADDJ(catlons available to 8:00 p.m.IM-1182·2528,
tcrMn room, pond, 2 car at : VIllage ·d,..n Apta. Mil or
Flah Tank, 2413 Jackeon Ave.
garage, outbuilding, 10.5 acres, call614..g82·3711. EOH.
Point PIIINI'II, 304-175-2013,
54 Miscellaneous
S77,9b0. 3ml. from town. 304lull llno T111plcol lloh 1 birds,
675-5260.
4 Room Apanment For Rent;
Merchandise
lftllll anlmoll ond luppl!H.
Also, Chevrolet Suburban 1180
Six beautiful rolling acrn with llodol 4K4, 614-256-5180, 11J.10.
1 Skla Mount Mower, 1 Cui· Full bloddod No,...lun Elk
new 3 bedroom home, lncludn
docka &amp; walko, outbulldlngo &amp; Apartment tor rent In Pt. tlvatOI'I + Side Dr....,, New Hound puoploo, llwkl old, $110.
ponde, locat8d 5ml. from Pleaunt, 814-H2-5858 attar Malara, $1,250 Each, 614-388- 304-a~ . .
83111
Raventwood Brtdga on Rt. 124, 6pm.
Gomtltil Shorihalr Polntor Pups,
Portland, Ohio. Will consider
1187. Hondo Fotcot ZOO, Exoof. AKC Born 1/28183 Champion
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
uHd moblta homa at panial
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON lent Condhlon, $500· 10.14 Loa Blood Uno $200, 11W45-54Jit.
trada, 304-273-5270.
·
Building Molond Jolnto, IU:
ESTATES, 636 Jackoon Plko 3711-22:22
Late Evanlnga.
from
$2011/mo.
Wolk
to
ohop
&amp;
32 Mobile Homes
movl ... Calll14-44t·25418. EOII. 11t3 Moda4 SherwaDd Mulmua
for Sale
.and
Octopus,
Regulator
Flnll Holzor Apanmonto, Flnot Soaqulll
ADY
SpoctNm
4 BC,
$185.64 per month, new 14· wtda And Codor St, GIIIIDCIIo. Phoenix Diva C~putar, &amp;her·
Sa.rnors,
Disabled,
&amp;
Handicapmobile homa, lncludn dlllv•ry,
wood lOci tank 7-t3 Hydradoto
compl4tla Mt-up, tklrttng, eteps pod, FMHA lncomo Roldrlct~ 1 2.7cf Spero Air, Wllght btl oiid
Rant1
Baud
On
30%.
ur
and 8 month1 kX rent, 1-800BNChaut Maak &amp; ftr'tl,
Houoohold Income. Applloncoo, welghtl,
837.U25.
114-~·3314 Oftll' 1:00pm,
Carpal,
On-sb
Laundry,
AJC.
::
,73
::-:;S,.:h
:=------c ultt, recently remodeled Ruldonl Poyo Etoctrlc Utllllr 2 Toylor Soft Sorvo leo cnom
12.&lt;65, $5000, 614-all-5288.
' Only. First Holzor Aponmonto mochlnoe, 1 hoi lhlkl fillAn Oponod For Oco chino, 3 p/1101. Hoi tobto wl
12x55 trailer wf 12x60 addition 3 cupancy.
For fnfomt1tllon Or To on-• guord. Llrgo llalhlng .,.
or 4br., larg·e ttvlngroofn, Roquost •n Applleldlon Call row a~n wJ laiHera. I elactronlc
kUchtn, dlnlngroom
8r:24 114-441-1800, Or Wrlto 111Hobor
Etoclrlc grfll on
covared porch, amall d.ck, and Apartment•,
553
Second - h roglaton.
3
or 81ngle
more, vary good cond., SDOOO Avonuo, Gllllpollo, OH 415631 E· wheels.
phoN. 114-94W066.
Rogllllorod Rot Tomor, whllo w1
OBO. 304-882..'1397.
biiOk ,.,..,, lyN. old, $50. 304o
qual - n g Dwortunhy.
R . Round P"!!',.&lt;Noodo- 11112~211.
1981 Buddy, 12x50, good ahape, Fumllhld Duptox. Uppor, 111&lt; 24
Unor).!=omPfsto wnh Ail All$4500, 114-192-7077.
'
Schnluzor 111lnllltuno, pupploo
$225 pfuo oloctrla. Ground 11oor' oorioo, $1l00.114-381'7t21
oncl oduHo, afiD Poodle pup.
br, 11261 pluo -ric. 111.
ttllll Frlldorn 12ll60 2 Bod· 1non
t - . otongo bullcllftgo, ,... ch. bloocll~, !Jill linn,
Ave, ,.,, • dep., no Hud, no
roome, CA,I14--446-4885.
1315, dotlvory 1 oolup, lh. too1
ville, 114.f874'1Q4.
polo. 304-175-211111.
Other q l evallable. 8ld«e E111'1 Kirkwood 12x85 TcOal Eloc.,
CA, I Hoot, Two Add Ono, 112 Furnlohod oHicloncy, $195/mo.,
Honclor-. »H'II- !i7
Musical
1120 Fow1h An., Golllpollo.
21
~L Country Soiling, 114UtiiHIII paid, 114 Ul 4411 oltor
'
Instruments
.
N&lt;C Aegl.._ecl MlnlatuN Red
7pm.
1184 14r:58 2 Bedroomt, AC,
$7,1100, Phone: 114-446-1340.
1Nll 14&gt;711, 3br1 cothodral col~
Ina, leland kltcnen, 8x18 clack,
Clo., outbuilding, $10,000 OBO.
304-875-2291.
1D88 Holly Parlci 14XTl, 3br., 2
lull bothl, lcOal oloct~c. $14,000:
304-875-5218 aft11 4pm.

EAST
+Q3
.J9
+J6 S4
+A 10854

J42

"How long should I boil these so they'll t ast e
like the frozen stuff I usually serve?"

Employment Services

1-S.Il

•a u

304-175-1400.

t:00-5:00.
Will do typlno!Word procOAing
2A05 Monroo Avo, Wid. only,- 11
Help Wanted
boby lo toddler clolhll, toolo, :;:;:;;;;:~~~~:;,;~~­ In my honlo. d"14-V92-'li81.
pupplos.
'AVON' ALL AAEASI Shiro your

9

PHILLIP
ALDER

18111 Pontile Grind """· biiiO.!
lour-· lol4oo!r.~.OOO mlloor•1
vary aood conciUDR, new t1re1,
tt r,odb oBo, -zoot,;
1tt3

OBO. 304-882-2218.

.

I·•

BARNEY
I SHORE WAS TICKLED
TO SEE YORE SISTER
lONEY IN CHURCH,
LOWE ElY

Hay &amp; Grain

f.EANUTS
.DEAR 6RANDMA.I AM
DICTATIN6 TI-llS LETTER
TO MV SISTER SALLY
W~O 15 5TUD~IN6
SHORTJ.IAND.

Tra nsportation

FRANK AND ERNEST'

~ -

BORN LOSER
v:-

...

:~V IW.K'S llE£1.1 KJLUNb /IE. 511-1££
·t !f91T 1'1£ C*.Y WOIOONb AT
·THE. (o;\PUTE.R ~I.VL AT
TilE Offle£

Autos for Sale
11170 Chovallo C.ii For Dotolle:
814-258-1481 o. &amp;14-2156-!058.

,...

~T TO~. 11\0~,

'"I

IT~ A~ AIL~T 11-1
Til~ C\o\'6 C£ I~D
~€RIZAllOt-l ...

I UU IT -mE:

FLOW&lt; D&lt;~!

A"ID l"l"lo/o./ 5"CAY

~Y, l'HEI&lt;E IS

•· nJNED R:lR
TOMORROW!:&gt;
WE'.41H~ IVR!:CA6T.

NO 'WS&lt;I.lHE:R
FORECA6T FVR.
TOVOR.ROW.

Sec rot
7 Sea anemo-

ne, e.g.

8 Pooltlve

n-+---1-~

Eaot
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

,.,..+--1--1
-+-+~

+K

spades, West leads the club king and
continues with the club queen. After
you ruff, what is your plan?
Understandably, you ctrove
hand to game. But for once nar:tno·r I
has exactly wbat he
a
anced Yarborough.
you go down,
you know he will nod learnedly and
say be warned you with all those nega·
tive bids.
Assuming spades are 3-2, you have
nine tricks: four spades, two hearts
and three diamonds. Either a 3-3 heart
break or a heart ruff in the dummy
· will have to generate your lOth trick.
But you must be careful if the distribution Is as in the diagram . If you start
with two top trumps before playing
three rounds of hearts, West will win
three consecutive tricks with the heart
10, spade jack and heart queen. If you
play three rounds of hearts immedl·
ately, West will win and play a fourth
round . East will overruff the dummy
and West will still have a trump trick
to come.
The correct way to try to retain con·
trolls to duck a heart at trick three.
Ruff the club return, draw two rounds
of trumps altd then play hearts
the top. Here you ruff the fourth heart
in the

BUTI

DONT LIKE Tl-lE

-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On thi s day ·
1492, Christopher Columbus set
on hi s first voyage of exploration lo
the New World.
TODAY 'S BIRTHDAYS: Rupert
Brooke 11887· 1915), English poet · Delores Del Rio 11908· 1983), act;ess;
Leon Uns 11924 -l, noveli st, is 69; Tony
Be nnett 11926-1, s inger , is 67; Martin
Sheen 11 940 -1 , ac tor, is 53 ; Marce l
D1onne 11951-1 , hockey star, is 42 .

I TUESDAY

'lrt--4~1--_.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.tebtlty CIPher CFYP'OQrMII . . created trom QIIOI:IItonl b~ lamout people, past and preeent

....,

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UZBKBUXDK,

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TKSXXDO

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H H
X R

A R R L
X BID

L R

S X

A R. R L

TRKI.'
XBXCW
R ' ODBtl.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Growing old Is mandatory Growing up
optional. " - (Santor PGA Tour winner) Tom Wargo, ·

I
13

CILCNI

ti t I· I ·
l

N

P A N0 C

"My firsl car was a real
junker." laughed the old timer
!o his . teenage · grandson.
• ......J.'--...t.--L.-..L.
~
Every lime I put my hand out
R H0 I R 0
llo signal a turn, someone
l-.,-:;~c....::...,.:.-.:r....;;..,.,..-r
would ···· .a .... in il!"

.:.;,16;-.;.1~

I1I
7

__.z

I I 18 0 "Compl~te

~--..1..-..J.L.........t..-.l---.J.L.......J.

e

_the c~uckle q uoted
by f1 ltm g m the m1ssing wor ds
you develop from step No _ 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LE TT ERS IN SQUARES

A UN SCRAMBlE FORI
11:1' ANSWE R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Volume · Haunt • Tryst • Fellow . ENEMY
Two worne'l were sitting outside a divorce court . "My
ex-husband IS complatmng aboul the money he has to
pay me. He says lhat alimony is giving comfort to the
ENEMY."
•
.

AUGUST3j

~TA\IONI::RV

Sll!'Pllt:S?...

~

~

f

•
"
:

•

~

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
•BEDE OSOL

;.:711mc;:., rn'::a:l.~
Soptlc Tonk Pul!lplna leO Golllo
1188 eo....., Barilnlo, "-". Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
•"9
outo., loldod, lhlrp cor lnol. I Jackson, OH t-.a37-1628. '
l.out;;;:•;:t~~o~po==,6:.:14:.:,·e:714=2:.:·235:;:7.;,.::. ...,--:- Wilt build polio - . docko, .
t 1m Acoord LX 4 ~. ecreened roome, put up vinyl
oldln; or traitor oklnlotll. 814-nJ -~lila blue, olr . _,.. 2AI-9l52.
dhlo":!!t oulo., oi'WM, now
IIIII· od , _ ur.., clo_l_n&gt;
Plumbing &amp;
,.,,'.("
no rust. runo llllfwct. 17,..., 82
miiM, UUO, 114-812..ziM lftlr
Heating

filii!"!.":..Doollln;. ' '

RSEi,lli(l

eam...,.. , ".:

'

I

'Your ·
'Birthday
VVadnasday,Aug. 4,1993

·

Through last year's personal experiences
you now ha ve a better understa nding of
yourself, as we!t as a better understanding
ot others . In lhe year ahead this wilt be a
poWerful asset you can use advantageous~

.

-

.

.

LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) You'll learn by
teaching othe rs Ieday. This will' become
very evident 10 you it you 're called upon to
heiR an asso~iate. sort out a complicated
problem. Leo. treat y,ourself to a binhday
gift . Send for your Astro-Graph predictions
lor t,he year ahead by .mailing S1.25 and a
I
j .

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb . 19) Your
1ns!lnc ts for spotti ng bargains could be
keener than usual today. tt it fits into your
agenda. th1s might be a good time to shop
lor something you 've been wanting.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In your impo r· . PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Lately you ve
tant one -lo-one relationships today you're. been focused on tloing thin gs to r oth ers and
likely to reach others quicker through their this is admirable . However, loday it's impor·
emot10ns than through their material mter· tan! you devote time to some of your perests. Don't put the emphasis on the latter.
sonat needs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 22) II won't be nee· ARIES (March 21-Aprl( 19) Today you're
essary for. associat es to look over your apt to be a bit more responsive than usual
shoulder tod ay and to prod you to do a to pe rsons who are in need of your help.
good job. Your self-pride will influence your Even it sacrifices a_re requ1red. you'll do
productivity.
what it lakes to assist.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Today you TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Dealing with
may be in tove with love and there ts noth· others in a kindly fashion is the key to sucing wrong with that. There is ample room in ceSsfut relationshi PS today . It's good you
this abrasive world tor.anothe r romanticist.
understand lhis ; because involvements with
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec. 21) You oihers will either mak e or break you.
could be a take-charge person today. bul GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Objectives that
fam ily members won't fi nd thiS offens1ve . appear to be too -difficult to attain can be
When yoU assume au thority over a situa- achieved today. Regroup your fo rces and
lion. they•tt know'ifll make the ir life easier .
do not settif;l for failure .
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan , 19) A change CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Seek creative
of venue could help regenerate your outlook invotvements Ieday that enable you to use
toda.y. Go someplace dillerent. not neces- your full powers ol imaginaliOn. Sever al!
sarily distant, but where you can experience rttstraints on your thinking and tat your mind
the unfa miliar.
9)1plore ail possibilities.
long . sell-addressed. stamped envelope to
As tro-Grapll. c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
44 65 .. New York. N.Y. 10163. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign .

Ron'o TV Sorvlce, -"'llz!na
In Z.nlth aleo • l8lq moil
other bnndo. "'"- t@lti. 1110

CtChi -

8 - Gol a

1 19441nva·
olon date
2 Archltoct Saarinen

. words
9 Beula of
burden
10 Irela nd
11 Peel
19 And ot.he rs
(2 Wdl .)
21 Pinch
24 Coni" of
shield
25 Hawaiian
Island
26 - Mawr
27 Kind or collar
29 Hawkeye
State
30 VP' a superior
31 Return e nve. lope (abbr .)
37 Sea cow
38 Alloy of gold
and sliver
41 Hawaiian
timber tree
43 Crowned
45 Consecrate
46 To whom -concern
48 Calm
49 Biblical king
50 Polar
explorer
52 Gaelic
53 Stou~cord
54 Freshwater
tortoise
57 Hatal

PSSST... HEY, 11\lVOY,
'\'lANNA S\JY SOME

{

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhional llt.llme guaran-tM. Local reterencM tumlshed.
Call ·--287,G171 Or 11,4-2370488 ROQIIO Wst-llng. e..
tablllhecl1m.
Curtla Horne lrnprovementt. N9
Job Too Big Or S1111tl, YNro Ell· porilnoo lin Oldor IN-r
Horrtt:1. Addltlone, Found1ttont
Rooftna, KhchiM fllltho. tn.! .
ounod, 'F,_ Elll1111too. I14._'11Ji ·
0518.
~
Dovlo -lng llaoh!no ~'
Vacuum CIIII!Wr A__.r Froo'
Plck.U And Doll ..,...o0or
CNok_ Rood, 61~94., gee

lnett!llatlon And
Conlllld. Rooldentlol,
clal.l14-2111o1111,

3 Exlatad
4 Merchant
5 Nobility

DOWN

A new book called "Bridge Quiz
Improving Players" has been Wrlitte1n I har-1-+by Australian Tim Bourke and Sects- I
nian Hugh Kelsey (Gollancz, U3.95,
800-274-2221). It contains 60 declarerplay problems, each on a right-hand 11!1'+-tpage with the solution overleaf. The 1._.;.r._.r..,_
problems run from the somewhat sim- I"
• .. ••.. _ .~. ..1...11...&amp;.ple to the decidedly difficult.

'Rd"BbiMAN•

:

Improvements

F,.....n•o

CALLMC A
\'ORRY WART;

50!JNOCF
THAT.

/

/

... ..

.

Opening lead:

44th day of summer.

.....

ttpm.

Norlb
2+
2NT
3+
Pass

Today is the 215th

1m Merced• Banz, 4!50 SL,
Motor .Homes
~
convenible, hard top, new pelnt,
tira, brak•, 11111, carpet, 11185 Pop-Up Compor -~~~ 19000. 61+9411-2055 or 304-675- Good Condftlon, 814-3814)658. ~ .
1041. •
111117 P-lor, bock bod~ &lt;~\
. ,...
11178 Cobra II Ford Muotong, AC, owning. 304-773-!ltBO.
.$800, 814-992-3465 oltor 4pm or 31 Fl. Alntroom Clmpor, Vo,Y~
anytime WMkllldt.
Good Condttton; $5,700, eM;.~
1W7 Buk:k New T,.111mla.lon, 24Hift.
•
~
Runo Goodlltot-445-1848.
1877 Chevy Bl-r 4WD; '88
Services
Plymouth Tourlema, both run
~ ~
$1600 lor both OBO, 114-tt2!
30011 during doytlmo '-'"• no
w•kendl.
;:~=-~~~~--~~· '•
Golden V.ara Haven, Sanlor '; "'
1W7 Old1 Cutlat1 BR, 2 door, Cttlun1 family home. Porttr, 1 "'
olrLcrulao, $1300 firm . 304-8711· OH. For detaltt call Donna 114- J ~
111'19 Camero, VB, T~ope, I'IVO.
304-6711-2'104.
1171 Continental Mark V Front
End Damaged, llcOor O.K. &amp;144Mo9732 Coli After 5 P.M.
1171 Oldl CutiiH, SIOO Finn.
114 446 1511, Hat New Til'lll
New Battery, Glau Packt Run8
Good, Englno Smokoo ilut Do
Hovo An E'klnl Englno And Sun·
roof To Go Whh M.

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

day of 1993 and the

• •

tf'la. Home

de nee
sg Hockey areal
Bobby 60 R1Uonal
61 Cotch olght
or
62 Cover
63 Auld Lang 64 Act

r"''""!"''''I'f"''

Aug . 3, 1993

:.'79;.:.::.:::.::.:.::::::.:::::::;......:; ~

11&gt;1.

51 Current unH

55Peg-Helrt
58 Send forth
58 High achool

m•••·
Resentment

I

.1,

Campers &amp;

47 ltecent(prol.)

S..Ngle
Over there
Wanted (II.)
G111k leHtr
P1111ure

1--,1.-,l~s

New pa tankl, orw lon truck '
whMII l'ldlaiON floor matl, :·
otc. D AR Auto, Riplly, WY. 304· o'
372..'1933 or t~t.
• &lt;

71

JlpMIII

4811tadeolblue

Frulhollda
Damago
Permit to
Anglo-Suon
money
35 Pureh11e
36 ModiCII
suffix
39 Film director
- Crlven

Against your Contract of four

30,000 mitH al10 311 M Fore&amp;.

0

(

1

MAYBE YOU D BETTER JUST
CALL 1-lER ON TI-lE PHONE ..

1189 ·Ford Tempo 4dr. for pono,'·

tngiMi 114-tt2-3111. '

24
28
32
33
34

.....

t.r+-+-

B·J

.,

Accessories

Strow, $1.50/bolo, from wogoit In
!told. 304-11711-2733. or 11'111-2107.

Mlrul
13 Aeveltra' C'J
14 12, Roman
15 .........
18=ry

By Pbllllp Alder

-lng.

64

"

The old trick
of trump control

Canoae, Wenonah &amp; Mohawk,

76

llle-

,;::;,~rt.)

HEARD!!

..

II

Dochohuncl
mole onc1
c-L ,oue•~~J
I
; . .tc og ...
...,,
ond ottDmln; ch,_ ona
gtooo top tabto wlh 4
Electel I •
• ••
choln;l14-tt2-11124.
. Refrlgte8110o1 .
Bohomo Crulao, I doyo/4 nights. ·
;;:::;:;::-=.:;.;.;.=;:.;.:;;;~~-.-: '•·
Undorboollldl
1111111
..., "';;;;i;;~;;5;;~~;:-;;.:; ='"'='"-::-::;.:.:,.:-=::-;....,..,..,-- A
_ aol•rittal or oom=lll c·~.
'$21111-Po. UmHod . tlckots. Conning ton ton IDr p!clt 11111 Pontile S-nl LE. aulo., wlrlng, , _ or
In ,
40J.71N100 ext. 1511. Mon Sill, rour own, br~=aiMra. •lr, •lft'fml~....ne, till, one M11ter UCMMCI elect dan: ,_i
8:00AM · 10:0QPII.
Gone Dovlo, 1
' · ~nor, 14000, 114-11112·3114 oftor Ridenour Eloclrlcol, WVC100301' .. ,,,
. :OOpm.
304-875-1711.
.

Fumlohld
EHicloncy
f1tt
UtiiHI.. Pald1 Shorw IIIIth, 807
So~ Gollipollo, 114 441 4411
After .11.
,
Gnclou'l living. 1 oncl 2 'bodroom '~~'""'"""'
Vlf'llonor
oncl · otRI-a.
Apanlftlftts In MlddiiDOrl. Front
$202. C411114'11112-115l. EOII.

HALLELUJAH
I EVER
._...._-&lt;",

.

for ony tlmo of
304-o
1125-8301 or 304-1143-4131.
&lt;
Chooloh Jot a ... 480 Ford Foot:
I ClAn 15,1100, 814-256-1823~
Blllw- 1 ., 5 P.M.; 814-258-:
1849 After 8 P.M.
'

+

SHE HOLLERS TH ' LOUDEST

'

Four Yur Old Bt!glum Mara,
Atao John O..N Horae Df'llwn
Aiding Plow, 114-37i-2338.
Two, tmo. old roglot111d polled
Chartale bulle. Bmo. old r.;l•
torod Umoualn bull. 304-G3Ji.
2121

South
2
2+
3•
I

+

-··

Auto Pans &amp;

IOUIId

,...,lou• P11zzle

42 Tennll p1ay11

5 111111

17
18
20
22
23

An•wer to

Fatrttylld

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Canning tomatOH lor Nil,
bring own contalnere, 114-247- Chavrdlt, Fo.rd, Dodge.- picku1(
21161.
bodo. Short or tong. No IIIII.
304-37U288.
C.nnln\tomatoes 1 $3/buehel,
you pic $4 plckaa1 bring con· 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
talners, arahall Aaama,
l.atart
--:;::-;:::::~=-;;::-:::-::-::-:::-:::Falls, 814-247-2055.
.
1m
Chevy, 4&gt;4, VB, Hoovy Holl,· \~
:.
C.nnlng tom1t011, $41 bushel, $1800. 304-6711-2'104.
olroody Dlckodl coli 114·992· 18M Ford E150 Cuatom Van, ~
5881, Wllitam1 t-arm, Syrlcute, ta.ded, 85K mil•, ~c. cond., ,
Ohio.
$8200. 304-872-2534 Mon-Frl ol· '
Clnnlng torn1toet, $5 a bucket l•lpm, Sat-Sun anytime.
=,c.:::x::Lt~,'"'~u""'t,...ly , :
!5 gollonl, bring own bucklt, =,9::&amp;:.:9c:,Fo;;.::.ni::-;Aar=....
i14-tl411-24ilt.
. loaded, 4 captain chalra, hJgh •
~
Canning tom11011, ,Mckeel mllega, $5700. 304-875-2827.
$4.001 liuahel, pick your own $31 1989 lull olzo Bronco XLT, nd &amp; '~
buahat, bring contaln•ra, 114- white, amJtm can., PS, PI, PW, \
247-42112 onytlmo, Aoymoncl PDL, 302 V.a, oun -~ high 1
miiH, $8500. 114-Mt--20111.
:•
Qnon
buna,
$10/buohol,
I
, . . .,.... $5/bushll 0 you ptck ::74=~M:-:o::.to::-rc.:..:.y~c~le~8~...;:; •
thorn, 814-1'42·2180.
'81 Suzukf 850, gi&gt;od shiP11 nft!
Poach.. Pick Your Own $10 'tlrH, new battery, $1000, H'appyBuohll, Bring Own Container Hollow Rd., Rutland.
• ••
614~41 4107.
•
1fPI Honda 750, E.C., fairing, '
new lire-, chain and _,rocket a, :
Farm Supplies
1750, 114ott2-731~ lftll 5pm. •
&amp; Livestock
1983 Hondo Odyooey, runo woiJ. ,
304-a82·2035 oftor 5pm.
.
1988 Hondo Gokllllng, ...,
MIIML Ei:callant conditiOn, 114- :.
61 Fann Equipment
448-8154.
350 John o..,.. Dozer, diMII angina, I way manual bt1de, 1987 lnteratate, excellent condl- •·
wench, rollover canopy. 304- tlon, 17,000 mltet, loaded, •
chroma and llghtt, matchln'
882·2887.
corgo
Inlier,
814-i411-258 ,
.
.:
Good 14 FL o... onoct&lt; Cattle evanlnga.
Troller, 5 YHII Old, $2,000; 814- 1DB7
Suzuki
molon::yct. ·.
388-91148.
GS450L, toto of olvomo, N~·
Hydraulic all $14.50 buckll or 50 D'"'!l, 614-992·30115 or - a1.
.
-,;
gal $i25. Sidon Equipment, Sugor Run IIIII. ·
Hondoraon, WV. 304-875-7421.
1187 Yomahl Ba,.._ 350; lolr •
~
J.D. 45 Camblno IAto Model ......,., $1500, 614-14"'3010.
With 234 Com Hoods, RAlly
1988
Suzuki
Savage
Low
Mlttt,.
~
Good CondHion, 114-24S-5124.
Show Roam Condition, Must •
•
John O.re Modal eo, 2 ·nn Solll14._'187-7t13. •
rear tlrM, $800 or trade. 3041993 Suzuki Kotano 800, 400 '
57&amp;-28117.
Mltn, Uke Naw, $4,800.114-245- '•
.
Now Hoaond No. 451 Dyno 11101.
Bolo nco Mowor, 114-3711-2272.
;;:For::=;s.=la:::;;
Hondo
=;:-;F;:-ou-n7na
._2::5=o-=~ ::
Whoelor,
Good
Conclhlon, 304- I
Plattlc tanka, 285 gal, 2.. valva,
I
portable • durabl._ Gr•t for 175-4152.
watltf' or any liquid. $10. 3()4. ;Su;::z=-uru~~D:;;R:;;250:=,-;$85::-:cO:-·-=au
-,-u""kt ;
525-8301 or 304-Jit3-4838.
RIIIBO, $850; Hondo CR80, $550; :
Tractor, 601 Ford Workmister, excellent condition, 114-849- ..
..
O.lsel, 2 1xl111 ,.., tlra~ , $21!50. 2240.
304-6711-2867.
.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
63
Livestock
for Sale
2 Sprlnglng Hollltlno Hollors,
1988 Four Win no 11 Ft. 160 ·
will calf eoon, no Sunday calli0 Fnodom
Skf Boot/ 110 HP
614-llt2·3401.
.tohnoon a.-nt, ElocolloUt
Condition, 61+245-11581.
,,
3 boby goato. 304-t75-4312.

19811 0111 o.11a II.
lrougham! PI, PI, PW,
Power
PlonD,
Control, P-r
Sooto,
1
m1
Btoroo C...
n ; :r,
_['0'
mu..'·""""
_.-u, Looko, Eto.
LoedAMIFIIOne
1
1
- n;
,I
58.
~ NNd T~l
ExoOitonl
ltont Looka
58
Fruits &amp;
Good Alliin;: 14711. ttot-441,Vegetables
4223 A!tor 5:Ga P.ii'.

Looter=, ....,

+2

1881 Dodge pickup, Yt, auto.,
amtfm etartO, ~hh• I tan, 8' ·
bod w1 llnor, 211.-n~, MOOG;

Vagetables

~

1 "-towtd

1
I

Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACIIOII

Uountlan Stat• Hom•, 3411
.t.ekeon Ave, Pt'Ptt. Hut Wave
SpKIII. Fr• c.ntral 1ir with
IRY elngte wtde home In Mock.

_&amp; VICinity

8

•

t-------"""r-------~ 33

Pt. Pleasant
Railroad,

'

2:4x30 Glraae, 1 112 Acre,
$26,000; IW:Z Schul 14a'IV
$1\000; 11170 Robot Whh 12x2A
Addhlon on 112 Acn $11,000
Cu!Tintly Rontod Th- H;;l
$275/llo. 114 Ul 8373.

Moving Soli: Tllundoy only,
Roln Or Shlno, 1314 Nolghbof·
._Rd. •
llovlng Yard Solo: 4 Famllloo, .
84;:tm1
A~qu•,
Fumhure,
Cloth.., llonl Rodney 35 At
588 Junction, Aug ..t 51h, lth.
Wed -Sat, Chlldref'' ClothM
.25., Aduho: .50. Toya. Mise,
lngolll Rd. 112111111 Off 218.

Aahton

. .

Eno Area : 1886 Skyline 'Mz10,

81~

for Sale

.._.TM.

rwt.•

=mont,

.,....ch

Autos

The

OhiO

304-175-1'111 "'104 •a-210l
1110 Plymouth lA-. 41,000
MIIIIJ..-IIont C&lt;lnclltlan, 114-

Rod. .n 1411?0, Sbdrm., In- · New Havan, 11w, tumlahld
cludoe olllnlng ....,., btoclco,
dip. • ,.,, 5yr. warranty, hweeuc uwer• Inaura net, and 1 y11r ot frM kM
.._..., all for anly $177/mo., CIM 1· Nico Z - - aportnwnl far
'".n1 In Pomeror: 81WI2-5858,
eoo.a:l7..'1231.
aftll' Spm or WMktnda.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, 114m-am.

To Khchoi'o Tllun, -Fri .Sill, 10-?
10 Grape !M, GIIMpolll.
Llrgo Flmlly Yard Solo: Wodnlliloy, SR 141, At o,_, Tor·

Pa"

:104..-.

ALLEYOOP

-,
1110 Clnollr lA llalon, ts:rtoo.:

11

Apartment
for Rent

' ulltldlia ,....,

1993

Tuesday,August3,1993

:::;m.~
BL, 1
room
.
Ioney looch
lumllllod

Wid 4th,

Th'"
lllh.Clothing,
Babyloti,·New
Houa•hald,

rate Mobile Home

Tuetdey,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

and Mrs.

I

is

�\

.
Page 12-TheDally Sentinel

•

TUelda~Augusl3,1993

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Clinton's choice has 'Zoe Baird' P!Oblem in past:·
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton's le&lt;Kting choice to run
the Social Security Administration
didn't pay Social Security !lUes on
a part-time baby si~ in the 1970s,
an adminislration official acknowledged.
A Democnitio congressional
aide said it could create serious
problems if Clinton fonnally nominates Shirley Sears Chater to head
an agency lbat will distribute $300
billion in Social Security retirement
and disability bene.fits this year.
And Lawrence H. Thompson,
named last month to be the second
in command at Social Security,
only recently paid back-Social
Security taxes for his domestic
help, an administration spilkesman
said Monday.
Thompson, described recendy
by the administration as one of the
foremost experts on Social Security, did not require Senate confmna-

tion. He is the agency ' s acting ent climate and is not an issue as
commissioner and came to Social far as the administration is conSecurity from the General cerned," Health and Human SerAccountin$ Office, where one of -vices spokesman Victor Zonana
his specialues was pension issues.
said of Chater, president of Texas
The law requires employees to Woman's University.
pay Social Security taxes on
Zenana said Chater was the
domestic help earning more than leading candidate for the Social
$50 in a three-month period. The Security post
.
law has been on the books since
According to Zonana, Chater
1951 and the Internal Revenue Ser- failed to pay Social Security taxes
vice estimates that three-fourths of on a paq-time baby sitter who
the 2 .million 'household employers worked for her off and on for sevmay be ignoring it.
era! years during the 1970s. Chater
The payment issue has been a ' began paying all the baby sitter's
hot one since Zoe Baird, Clinton's · taxes in 1975 when the baby sitter
original nominee for attorney gen- became a full-time employee.
era!, was doomed by her failure to
."They have subsequendy. based
pay taxes on her domestic help.
on the new climate, gone back and
A Clinton administration paid back taxes for this baby sitspokesman Monday sought ~o ter," Zonana said.
down play the situation at Social
~onana said Thompson paid
Security.
back taxes for his domestic help
"For crying out loud, this hap- several months ago.
pened 20 years ago in a very differ"I do not have the details but I

Ohio Lottery

Reds
edge
Rockies

know that he has Jiaid back taxes
and that, as you know, is the new
standard in the administration,"
Zenana said:
Congressional aides, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said
administration officials were con- ·
cerned enough about Chater's situ· ·
lition that they have contacted •
members of Congress to diseuss iL .•
Seniors advocates also said private! y that they were dislressed by
the news that both Chater and
ThompSon, a Social Security
employee from 1979 to 1983, both
have "Zoe Baird problems."
''In these positions, impropriety,
the appearance of impropriety,
would just be awful ," said one
advocate who spoke only on condi- •
lion of anonymity.
"This issue is a very big issue," ·
said another advocate. "It remains ·
a big emotional issue with a lot of
people."

Pick 3:
402
Pick 4:
3918
Buckeye 5:
15-16-19-30-33

Page4
•

•
Vol. 44, NO.et

Senator to TV officials: Curb violence or elset ·
LAST OUTING - Robert DeBoer, right, followed by ber bus·
band, Jan, rear, carries baby Jessica from their borne to their car
for one last outing before turning her over to her biological parents Monday in Ann Arbor, Mich. Tbe DeBoers, who have raised
Jessica since shortly arter birth, later surrender Jessica to Dan and
Car a Schmidt of Iowa. The man at left is a security guard. (AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- Sen. Paul Simon gave the television industry two months to clean

Missionary group has meeting

Snyder reunion held recently
About 50 family members
attended the 19th annual Charles
and Alma Hinzeman Snyder
reunion held recendy at Star Mill
Park in Racine.
·
The group enjoyed a covered
dish dinner at noon . Sam Shain
conducted ·the busi ness meeting
with reports being given by Carolyn Robinson, secretary, and
Frances Rowe, treasurer.
Officers elected for the 1994
reunion were Jane Teaford, president; Pete Snyder, vice president;
Robinson, secretary, and Rowe,
treasurer.
,Recognized and presented gifts
were Pete Snyder, oldest man :
Clara Powell, oldest woman; A. J.
Rowe, youngest boy, and Kayla
Sa lser. youngest girl. Eve lyn
Manuel was recognized for having
the most family members attending, and Connie Ransom for traveling the farthest to attend.

Those attending were Carl, Carolyn and Nikki Robinson, Evelyn,
Carmen, Jenny, Jane, and Joan
Manuel; Earl Holman, Donna and
Brady Sayre, April Stitt, Debi,
Tara, Myca, and Jeff Michael,
Ruth. Sam, and Emily Shain, Ruth
and Arnold Johnson, Jerry Rowe,
Clara Powell, David Graham,
Sampson and Jean Hall, David and
Janice Lawson of the Racine/Syracuse area.
Bill Snyder, Judy Nelson, Virginia Rowe, Charles Shain, Kalby,
Mike, Matt and Kayla Salser,
Anthony Cindy and A. J. Rowe,
Middleport; Morris and Joyce
Wolfe. Bidwell; Mel, Joe, Joey
Bobbi Jo Holman , Crystal Bamete,
Kerry Withenauer, Westerville;
Verdina and Pete Snyder, Patsy
Helton, Delaware; and Connie
Ransom, Marengo.
The 1994 reunion will be held at
Star Mill Park on July 17.

Chester D of A has meeting
Several members were reponed
ill when Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America met Tuesday
night at the hall.
It was noted that Dorothy
Ritchie is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and that Zelda
Weber is confined to St. Joseph
Hospillll, Parkersburg, W. Va. Ill at
home is Enna Cleland. Cards will
be sent by lbe Council.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flags, and the Lord's
Prayer in unison, singing of the

~alph

national anthem, and reading of
Psalms 26 opened the meeting conducted by Betty Young councilor
Virginia Lee, Nancy Bond, ~d
Brenda Cunningham served.
refreshments to those named and
Charlotte Grant, Mary Barringer,
Kathryn Baum, Mary Holter
Sandy White. Everett Grant, Opai
Hollon, Marc1a Keller, · Inzy
Newell, Betty Rou sh, Doris
Grueser, Thelma White Esther
Smith, and Elbel Orr.
'

Werry hosts church fete

Ralph Werry hosted the annual
Trinity Church senior choir picnic
held at the Clifton, W. Va. campsites of Tom Werry and Carl and
Janet Morris.
Choir members and guests ·
attending were Lois and Mari'in
Burt, Alice and Phil Globol&lt;ar,
Debbie and Bill Haptonstall, Beth
Mayer, Mary and Art Skinner,
Dianne Hawley, Irene Bailey ,
Linda and Don Mayer, Pat and Roy

Holter, Dottie and John Musser,
Becky. Nick and Trevor Depoy.
Carolyn and Don Thomas, Don and
Lisa Snyder, George and Lena Nesselroad, Roland Wildman, Ruth
and Marianne Carsey, Tom Werry,
Carl and Janet Morris, and Werry.
The cho ir is conducting fund
raisers to purchase carillons for the
church . Plans are for the carillons
to be installed by the end of the
year.

Youth visit noah~s Ark recently
Youth of Trinity Church and
their guests made a trip to. Noah's
Ark Animal Farm in Jackson
recenUy.
Besides the animals, the group
enjoyed miniature golf and a cook- ·
out, with several also taking the
train ride.
Making the trip were Bethany
Cooke, John Coolce, Trevor Depoy,
P. J. Erwin, Alyssa Holter, Kelsey
Hol ter, Lauren Schmoll, Jamie
· Schmoll, Jessica Marcum, Josh
Marcum, Ryan Well, Ross Well, J.
T. Evans, Sarah Hawley, Alex

Hawley, Megan Games, Andy Garnes, Jeremy Blackston, Joey Blacks ton , Marianne Carsey, Evan
Needs, Michelle Ennis, Debbie
Cooke, Alice GlobQkar, Becky
Depoy, Jan Holter, Jim-and Debbie
Schmoll, Connie Marcum , Su·san
Well, Jay and Debbie Evans, Sandi
Hawl ey, Dianne Hawley, Shari
Garnes, Ruth Carsey, Brenda
Blackston, Tom Werry, and Ralph
Werry.

.

A swimming party will be held
for the youth at the Holter home
Sunday at2 p.m.

Patty Dyer reelected to post
Patty Dyer was re-elected master of Star Grange 778 when the
group met recently at the hall.
. Other officer s elected we re
Larry Montgomery, overseer; Ray
Midkiff, steward; Vicki Smith, lecturer; Rich Macomber, assistant
steward; Maxine Dyer, lady assistant steward; Freda Smith, chaplain ; Waid Nicholson, treasurer;
Opal Dyer, secretary; Rose Barrows, Ceres; Bernice Midkiff,
Pomona; Janet Morris, Aora; Alan
W. Smith, gatekeeper; and Eldon
Barrows, exec utive committee.
Janet Mccomber, community

service chairman, reported on the
food barrel, noting tlmt 11 5 pounds
of food and 25 pounds of hygiene
products have been collected. She
as the grange's deaf chainnan read
an article on leaches.
Keilb Ashley reported on plans
for. the Meigs County Historical
Society's observance Aug. 13-15, .
of the battle of Buffington Island.
Plans were made for the Meigs
County Fair exhibit and the next
meeting was announced for Aug. 7
at 8 p.m. with Hemlock Grange as
visitors. Attending ·were 31 members, visitors and juniors. Potluck
refreshments were served.

J. R. and Linda Laudennilt were
hosts for a meeting of Evangeline
Missionary Group at the Pomeroy
Church of J]lrist recently.
A potluck dinner was served
with Andy Miles, pastor, giving lbe
prayer. Others attending were Deb·
bie Miles, Charldine and Debbie
Alkire, Eileen Bowers, Eva
Dessauer, Betty Spencer, Pat
Thoma, Janet Venoy, and Pauline
Kennedy.
,Mrs. Miles had a Bible quiz and
an offering was taken. Mrs .
Kennedy gave devotions from the

Air Conditioners Lamps
Tv's
Refrigerators
VCR's
Ranges
Sofas
Washers
Chairs
Dryers
Recliners
Microwaves
Sweepers
Desks
Bedroom
Curios
Coffee Tables
Gun Cabinets
Daybeds
Bookcases
Bunk Beds
Swing Rockers
Bean Bags
Mirrors
Mattresses
Hide·A·Beds
Bar Stools
Dinettes
Paintings
Hutches

CHOOSE FROM:
Gibson
Maytag
Frigidaire
Tappan
'
White-Westinghouse
Premier
Kelvinator
Broyhill
Riverside
England/Corsair
La·Z·Boy
Lane
Flexsteel

VETERAN OVP EMPLOYEE RETIRES •
Emma t.ou Davis, Pomeroy, Ohio Valley Pub·
lishing Company ad composition employee 'll'ltb
42 years service, retired on July 27. Miss Davis
began her career with The Daily Sentinel In
Pomeroy in 1951, in the mail room department.
Sbe served as the Sentinel's proofreader two
years before assumln1 duties as a Unotype oper·
ator.. Wben OVP opeaed its new priating plant
at Gallipolis In 1967, Miss Davis was amona
those who made the swltcla from "bot metal"

Vaughan

1.

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP)
- Coal miners locked in a 2 3/4month-long strike are considering
enlisting their union brethren in a
bid to pressure the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association, a
United Mine Workers official says.
The UMW, which has 17,000
members on strike in seven states,
including about 300 in Ohio, may
call on members of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers, according
to UMW international governing
board member Howard Green of
District 17.
Several coal companies targeted
by the strike are owned or pardy
owned by companies involved in
other energy or chemical produclion.
Strike target Hobet Mining Inc.
of Madison, for example, is owned
by Ashland Coal Co. of Hunting-

Zenith
Magnavox
Florida
·Keller
Bruards
Simmons
Restonic
Namaco·
Bushline
Chrome raft
Leister
Bassett
·Dobbs ;···.
Bernards·
·Quality
Brooks

CINCINNATI (AP)- Israel
would violate its extradition treaty
with the United States if it brought
new war crimes ch.rges against
John Demjanjuk, a federal appeals
coon said.
A three-j udge panel of t~e 6th
U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals ruled

Man injured in ATV mishap

Deputies probe theft of items

.

Deer-vehicle accidents reported
11
WAREHOUSE

MAIN SIREET - RUTLAND, OHIO ·

.'

'I

.

· Depaties of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are investigating the theft of items from an Albany woman's residence.
Heather Caravolo, State Fann Road, reported Tuesday afternoon
that some items were taken from a residence on State Fann Road
from which they were mo~ng.
·
·
.C1JI11volo reported the items were in the hoUse when they took
the ftrSt load, but were missing when they returned for the second
load.

Delivery

~

an

A Rutland man was listed in good condition this morning at
Grant Medical Center following a four -wheeler accident Tuesday
morning on private propeny off Parkinson Run Road near Rutland.
James M. Birchfteld, director at Birclifteld Funeral Home; was
attempting to climb a steep incline when the four-wheeler he was
riding overturned, said Sheriff James M. Soulby. .
T!le Rutland Squad or" the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service transported Birchfield' to Veterans Memorial Hospital. He
was later transponed to GMC for treatment of a compound leg fracture.

FREE

.742·2211

unanimously Tue$day that the government cannot block Demjanjuk's
return while the coun investigates
his 1986 extradition.
In response to the ruling, Israeli
officials said they intend to keep
Demjanjuk in jail until
Aug. 11
Supreme Coun hearing on whether

r---Local briefs-__,

···- -·· .

RUTLAND FURNITURE

.

•

•

'•

,.

ton, which in tum is owned chiefly rauon of a 60-daY. extenSion 01 the
by Ashland Oil Inc. of A&amp;hlaitd, contra~t that ex~rred Feb. I. The
Ky., whose employees are repre- extensiOn, negouated by B.ern!lfd
sented by the OCAW,
~eLui'y, the federal mediauon
"We're thinkiJlg about the dtrector, ended a mont!t·long walktransportation unions which trans- out and got the two stdes back to
pon coal. We're also ~ng about the table.
. . . .
some of the energy ~ions like the
The UMW says 11 IS. 'flllltng to
OCAW joining us before it's over resume ~lks, but only 1f the coal
wiJh," Green said Tuesday.
compames' co~rate parents .are
Green said Ashland Oil would pan of the negof:tBUons. I~ clatms
be a likely strike target in s~h a ~e .JIB!"Cnts are usmg non~on subcase. 11ie OCAW has not noufied s1d1ar1es to open new mmes and
Ashland Oil it is considering a avoid job security provisions guarstrike, said company spokesman an teed to the UMW in the 1988
Roger_Sctu:um.
.1
contracL
.
The str1ke began May I 0 and
The operators, m~anwh1le, ~y
has been rep~atedl&gt;: expand~d. they have offer~d JOb secunty
Coal as!lQC1a110n offictals say most ~tronger than that m the 1988 conUMW miners who work for associ- tract. They are unwilling to bind
~ti~n. members ar~ 'nbw on .strike, parent companies ~o. the contract
hmtnng further strike expans1.ons.
but say !her are w1lltn$ to extend
There have been no formal job secunty to thetr related
negotiations since the May 3 expi- nonunion companies.

Court says further prosecution
of Damjanjuk would 'violate treaty

EVERYTHING IN THE STORE IS REDUCED!
Extended Hours
· for' this Sale
Mon.·Sat. 8:30.6:00

tylle. to !'oiTset" In the c:omposln&amp; room, sett1n1
stra1ght matter (copy), ads, and beadliaes on
new offset Jllllowriter equlpmenL Her nlial 14
years in the composing room were spent settlag
ads on modem electronic: computer equipment.
Above, Miss Davis is presented a new television
set as a company retirement gift by OVP Publisher Robert WiDcett, left, and production foreman Fred Hofrntan. Miss Davis was also bon··
ored with a retirement party. .
·

UMW looking for ways to
\st~p ,up pre-ssure on BCO.A

,.,.

~adgett

2 S.Ctiona. 14 Pagea 35 centa

AUultimaclalnc. Newapaper

Thornton sworn in
as new Racine mayor

sian. About 650 wri~ . pr()!lucers
and television executives wtre ·
joined by academics and members
of watchdog groups critical of the .
industry.
·
The session followed congressional hearings in Washington that
put increased pressure on the TV
industry to reduce violence.
Simon, D-lll. _is the author of the
1990 Television Violence Act that
gave the industry a mandate to ·
refonn its violent programming. He
urged self-restraill! and called on •
television to help educate the '
nation about the hannful effects of .
violence.
"You have -in your hands a tool .
that is unprecedented in the history
of humanity in its power," Simon
said.

WHEW! IT'S TOO HOT! SO WE'RE HAVING OUR TENT SALE
INDOORS, WHERE IT'S COOL! EVERYTHING IS REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE, STOREWIDE, ALL 7 SHOWROOMS,
ALL 11 WAREHOUSES

SHOWROOMS
The
actual golden disc was one sprayed by RCA VIctor for
bandleader Glenn Miller for his "Chattanooga Choo Choo" on
Feb. 1o, 1942.

Christian Standard "In God We
Trust" and read ·a poem entitled
·" Each New Born Day ". She
thanked the group for prayers.
cards and flowers during her illness.
Cards were sent to Barbara
Fields, Elizabeth Ohlinger, Martha
Hoffman, Dorothy Ritchie, Ka te
Smith. A sunshine box was given
to Mrs. Fields.
Mrs. Mil es had th e clos ing
prayer. The next meeting wi ll be
held at the home of Mrs. Venoy. ·

days some indication you are movi~g. and moving in the right direc- .
uon, then my colleagues are going
to be pushing and pUshing hard"
for regulatory limits, Simon told
industry members who gathered
Monday for a daylong meeting on
the issue.
"The fact of the matter is our
society has gotten more violent. No
matter what you believe about the
studies, we've got to be pan of the
solution and in no way part of the
problem," CBS programmmg chief
Jeff Sagansky said in an interview.
"As far as CBS is concerned, this
is going to have an impact on how
we do business."
The unprecedented meeting was
organized by the non-profit National Council for Families and Televi-

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S
AIR CONDITIONED
INDOOR TENT SALE

7
.

up TV violence or face the threat of
regulation.
" If there is not in the next 60

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 4, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

Low IOnJahtln rnki-SOs.
Thursday, partly cloudy, hJah In
80s.

•

••
'

No injuries were reported in two deer-vehicle accidents investigated recendy by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's DepartmenL
Deanna J. Secore, Crown City, was nonhbound on State Route 7
near the Big Wheel store Sunday momiag when she struck a deer
that ran inlll the roadway. Damage to her 1988 Toyota was listed as
heavy.
·
Garv G. Brown, Liule Hockin1. was southbound on State Route
Contlaued on pate 3

Jeff Thornton was sworn in as
mayor of Racine at a meeting of
Racine Village Council Monday
night
Thornton fills the vacancy created by the July. 31 resignation of
Mayor Frank Cleland.
On Council for three years
Thornton as president pro-tem of
council, advanced to mayor by
virtue of that offiee. He was sworn
in by Council member, Bob Beegle.
As required by law, Thornton
will have to run for the unexpired
temi of Cleland (two years) in the
Nov. 2 election. He said Tuesday
that he does plan to file his petition
for mayor of Racine with the Meigs
County Board of Elections before
the Aug. 16 deadline.
Thornton is active with the
Meigs County Chamber of ComJ~~erce and chairman of its agribusiness committee. He attends the
Racine First Baptist Church, is
politically active with the Young
Democrats Club of which he now
serves as president. and is a Democratic committeeman for Racine
Village.
.·
·Passed at the meeting was a resolution on a right of way across
property in the Wingett Estate to
the village's water tank. 1be ~­
menJ is of mutual benefit to the village and lbe es~ in that it grants
both parties a right of way. The
right of way e.xtends from the
Greenwood Cemetery Road across
village-owned property and the
Wingett Estate propeny up to the
water tank. ·
The Wingett Es~ also granted
an easement to the village for a
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District line. That line will go to the
tank and will pro~de an emergency source of water for the village.
The walking track at the park

was discussed. It was noted that the roof replarement at the 'frre station,
Park Board has received donations The docking of the P. A. Denny at
for the materials and that the vil- the Racine levee the weekend of
lage will haul the" gravel. The pro- Aug. 13 was discussed.
Cable reception complaints were
ject is expected to be completed
heard
as was a complaint about
sometime this monlb.
water
pressure
on Vine Street from
An ordinance ptovidint for- the
Dan
Littlefield.
sale of the 1965 Dodge fire truck,
Duke Bentz was authorized to
classified as surplus property. was replace an old fire cistern in the vilpassed. Council approved a $1,000
. No action was taken op
expenditure for wdrk at one ·of the lage
replacing Thornton on Council durwater wells.
The first reading on an ordi- ing the meeting. Attending were
nance providing for water rate Beegle, Bentz, Julie Randolph, new
charges recommended by the council member; Scott Hill, council
Board of Public Affairs was given members: Glenn Rizer, street comby Council. The ordinance if . missioner; Carolyn Powell; clerk;
passed will mean an increase in late Bill Gilmore deputy marshall; Bob
charges to $7, shut offs to $10, tum Roy, Board of Public Affairs; Carons to $20, and after regular hours roll Teaford and Dale Han, park
board members; John Holman and
to $40.
.
Scott Hill and David Neigler David Neigler, Racine Fire Department, and Bob Wingett
were authorized to go ahead with

·

JefrTbornton
Racine's new mayor

· Julie Randolph
New council member

coast-to•coast trek for trasn--By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff ·
If by some chance you spot a
white and
plastic bag along
the side o the road, it's a good
indication that Glen and Susan
Hanket have passed that way.
On April tool's Day. the Hankets, fonnerly of Anaheim, Calif.,
started out on foot in six inches
of snow from Acadia National
Park in Maine with a destination.
in Washington .state and an
unusual ulterior motive.
From sea to shining sea, the
Hankets are walking. However,
they are apparently more concerned with what lies in between.
More specifically, they plan to
pick up trash.
That's right, lraSh.
But the joke's not on them.
Since embarking on their ramble
for refuse 1,200 miles ago, the
Hanktts hav~ collected more than
500 bags or gatbage - slighdy
more than one bag every two
miles - which they deposit on
the side of the road for collection
by the Ohio Department of Transportation.
The Hefty garbage bag company sponsored the 3(1-somethingish duo by giving them
coupons for free trash bags (Glen
pointed out the last batch of bags
they obtained in Elizabeth,
W.Va .. were scented). In addition, much of the gear was provided by companies sponsoring

fink

to try him for other war crimes.
"The state of Israel is
sovereign. At this stage, we work
by Israeli court decisions," said
Prison Services spokesman Dubi
Ben-Ami.
Demjanjuk's Israeli attorney,
Yoram Sheftel, char~ed that his
client was being held illegally, and
that Isntel was perpetratin' a "blatant violation of his rights. '
Israeli Nazi hunter Efraim
Zuroff said today he planned to
submit new documenis to the high
coon Thursday to back alle~atlons
that Demjanjuk was a war cnminal.
"We will leave no stone
GLEN AND SUSANHANKET
untumed in our efforts to see that
this criminal will be forced to pay
- picking up litter as they go.
their "bcilittered" journey.
for his crimes," he said.
. Although the pair usually
While
pausing
in
Meigs
CounStill, Sheftel predicted his client
p1cks up·cans and other commonty Tuesday afternoon, Susan
will be back in Cleveland after the
ly discarded items, they occasionexplained the two are "forsaking
Israeli coun hearing.
ally find other flotsam and jetlarge highways and interstates,
"Indeed the gates have been
sam.
preferring instead til take the
opened and won't be shut again,"
"Lots of underwear/' Susan
roads less traveled by - town. he said.
Continued on page 3
ship,
county
and
state
The Israeli Supreme Coun on
Thursday overturned Demjanjuk's
1988 conviction and death sentence
on charges he was "Ivan the Terrible,"-a Nazi guard who operated
pan_of a plan to tax telephone COil!· and local governments, as well as
the gas chambers at the Treblinka
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) school districts, should not lose
death cal)lp in Poland. About State senators are studying a bill pan1es the same as the1r compeu- ,existing revenues. And customers
.
tors
in
a
fast-growing
telecommu·
850,000 Jews were killed at ;I're- that raises swe and municipal sales
should not have to pay more, he
nications market, he said.
blinlca during World War 11.
taxes, bitt with a new twist.
said
·
In
effect,
the
companies
would
But the Israeli coun on Sunday
The !lUes wolild be applied to
Taxation officiBts are still workbe
paying
the
sales
tax
for
their
ordered Demjanjuk to remain in monthly telephone rates, which
ing
on estimates of the bill's fiscal
prison wliile prosecutors consider theit Would be reduced by an equal customers and generati!l11 new rev· impact, which will be reviewed in
other charges. It scheduled-a hear- amOunt so that the customer would enues for state and local govern- detail later, he said.
ments, in exchange for reductions
ing Aug. II to learn the prosecu- pay the IIBtnC.
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. and
in
cenain other taxes.
tors' decision. The coun on TuesWhy this seemingly needless
others
requested the bill, saying the
The bill would stop taxin11 teleday refused Dem~anjuk's request to exercise?
utility
tax - 88 percent of taxable
move up the hearing date.
· . Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincin- phone companies as utilities and value on equi\'ment and other
The Cincinnati-based appeals nati, explained his·proposal Tues- tax !hem as corporations, the same investments - 1s an unfair carrycourt said Demjanjuk should be day to the Sell8te Ways and Means as cable and other competiton.
Finan said the bill makes over from the days when they
returned because 1\C was extradited . Committee he chain.
changes but that s~
Continued on page 3
Continued on paae J
~
The iax aod rate reductiOn are · numerous tax ~·

Phone companies seek tax restructuring

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