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.,

The D~ily Sentinel

ByTheBerid

TUesday,August10, 1993

.

.

PaQe-1Q

Housekeeping offends daughter
De.- .U. l.wJM!en: I just read I
letter in your colunln lhat came &amp;om
my dlughter-ia-law. She wrote lhlt
she eoulda't llalld 10 be In my bome
because I'm such a tenible
bousc:keeper.
Her leuer.to you dc&amp;cribccl my
bouse .. •• pipty," llld abe lllid
sbe become&amp; nansr Fled when abe
visill me. She also claimed lhat II!Y
1011 found a dead mouse under lhe
refrigerator. I didn't know it w..
ihee. The cat pobably caught it llld
cbN[d it under the fridge.
There may be a dull bunny or two
and a few dead buss in the
bedroom•
wbal? I bave beuer
tbinp 10 do lban mindless bouse
cleaning. I prefer to read; make
quillS, garden and play with my petS.
My daughter-in-law's hou'se is
quire diffem~t from mine. She bas
snow-white CltpCting in every ·
nroom e&amp;cept the kildlen. Wben we
visii ~. we have to remove our
shoes. She requires that We wash
our hands before we I1'C allowed to
hold our grandchild. Her bouse
smells, 100 - of disinfectant and air

.,_10

An'END REUNION • Pictured L·R, front,
Nellie Parker, Pauliae Ridenour, Opal Wick·
bam. Back, Fred Smith, Earl Kni11ht, Virgil

McElroy, John Baile,Y who attended the recent
reunion or Chester H1gh School's Class or 1931.

Chester High class of '31 gathers ~;n:=toda=;~i
The Chester High School Class
of 1931 held its annual picnic at the
Chester Firehouse on July 25. John
Bailey asked the blessing before
the basket dinner.
The: group spent the afternoon
reminiscing and picture taking. A
donation was made to the. Chesler
flleiiiUl for the use of the building
and Opal Wickham was thanked
for her work in preparing for the ·

picnic. Friendship cards were
signed for classmates Betty David·
son and Mildred Collins, teacher
Bertha Smith, and Bruce Enlow,
son of recently deceased classmate,
Edna Warner Childers.
Earl Knight of Middleport, a
teacher, was present. Class members also present were John Bailey,
Irene Parker, Opal Wickham.
Pauline Ridenour, Nellie Parker,

Virgil McElroy, and Fred Smith,
all of Meigs County, Others present
were Henrietta Bailey, Arvilla
Frecker, Thelma Hayes, Mary
Buck, Victor Bahr, Mildred Caldwell Les Damewood, Martha
Pool~. Will Poole, and Janet Ride·
nour.
, . . .
Next year s p1cmc w1ll also be
at the Chester firehouse on the last
Sunday in July.
.

was 'hurt by that ~nse. Why
didn't you tell her 10 treat me to a
housebeperonceinawhile?l'dlove
that. •• BUSY GRANDMA IN
CALIFORNIA
DEAR GRANDMA: Anyone who
dot.vl't mind dust bunnies or dead
bugs accumnlaring in the bedroom
and ignores a dead IDOUie under lhe
relrigerala drfiaitcly aecc1s to lhlpc
up.
However, I second lhe nolion that
your daughttt~in-la_! I:"C8l ~ to a

Baughman
birthday
celebrated
Jonathan Baughman recently
celebrated his second birthday with
a party at the home of his gmndparents, Larry and Bessie Taylor, Mid·
dleport.
Jon athan .is the son of Jeff and
CrySial Baughman of Danville. Mr.
and Mrs. Baughman also have ·
another son, Jeffrey Michael, age 6

1/2.

ATrENDS SUMMER SCHOOL - Students
attending summer school from Salisbury Ele·
mentary included front row, Taaya Dill, Lacy
Banks, Tamra O'Dell, Beverly Burdette, Kim
Peavley, and Cortney Scarberry. Back row,

teachers Karen Walker aad Barb Matthews
Crow, students, Meredith Felts, Melissa Weny
Ryan Well, Marjorie Halar, Morgan MatheWS:
Ed Bartels, teacher and coordioator or project
and Wendy Halar, principal.
'

ANN LANDERS
"199!. Los ADeeJ ..

Tlm01 Syadlcate
Creoton S)'DC~lcme'' .

your
birthday and a rcw holidays in
1 .

debL
The only way I could clean up
our credit rating was 10 go to tile
aedilOI'i, e&amp;plain the sjlnaJion and
offer c:uh aeulemenll. Since the
debts were old, and tbae w.. no
indication that lhe former wife
intended to scute,lhe aedillli'S were
willlna to accept smaller ICU!ernents
in exchange for a letter to the
credit· reporting agency. It took I
year, but we wme flllllly able 10
establish credit. •• V .M., SAN

Dear Ana Landera: "Wiser in
.Sacramento" adviard "Uquid Assels
in Michigan" to ICliWIY (rom her PEDRO, CALIF.
DEAR SAN PBDRO: The key
wild-apending fianec before he
line
is u follows: "Go to the
ruined her crcdiL
crcclillli'S, e&amp;plain the phJ!dioo and
"Wiser" talked about her ftrSt
husband, who deslroyed her aedit, offer cub lleUlemenrs.• 11W line is
worth irs weisht in gold. Thank you.
and sbe ended her lcuer by
Gem of the Day: Why can't life's
sbe and her arcond husband couldn t
hardest'probleias
hit us when we are
qualify for a to.. "Wiser" insisted
16 and know everything?
that her husband not place her on
All alooltol problem? Ht1W CQ/1 you
any checking or savinp account in
help yofiT&amp;el/ o r , _ youlovt?
order to keep her rouen credit from "Aiooholism: HtiW 10 Rtcogllhe It,
tarnishing his.
WeD, abe's DOt much "wiser" if HtiW 10 Dtal With It, Ht1W to Coll·
abe thinks abe's proiCCdng him. My quer It" will gillfl you tire QIISWVS.
husband, "Lyle," was married Send a st/f-tlddrtsstd, lo11g, busi·
before, and his flfSt wife absolurcly ~~tss-si:t tllvelope twl a chtcJ: or
· moneyordtr for $3.65 (this illcllldts
deslroyed his crediL
·
When we married, my aedit was po.rtage twllrtuldlillg) to: Alcoltol,
spolless, but Lyle's was terrible. He c/o AM ~rs,I'.O. Bo:Jt 11562.
bad several charge .accounts that Chicago, Ill. 60611.()562. (In Call·
were four and five years delinquent, ada. send $4.45.)
so we couldn't qualify for a loan.
We explained to the creditors that
the accounts belOnged Ito Lyle's
ex-wife, but it did no ROOd- Since
!hey were married wbea lhe debls
were incurred, he was responsible
for them. And because we arc

sayln'-

I .

POMEROY - Revival at Hysell
Run Holiness Church through Sun·
day at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
George Williams, speaker. Home·
coming will be Aug: 15 wi!h dinner
at noon and Rev. Cecil Wise will
be the speaker at 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • Vacation
bible school, Silver Run Baptist
Church, Middleport, through Fri-

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL
HOME
RUTLAND, OH.
742·2333

I

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy Merchants Associatioo meets Wednesday 8:30 a.m., Bank One conference room.

THURSDAY
CaESTER • Free community
immunization clinic at Chesttt Fire
Department, Thursday from 9-11
a.m. for ages two months through
kindergarten. Bring child's immunization record.
·

BuckeyeS:

17·2730·33-36

Page7

NOW
AVAILABLE

Vol. 44, NO. 74

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 11, 1993

Mu!Umedlalnc.

Meigs board pays off band boosters' debt
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
The Meigs Local Board of Education .has agreed to pay off a
Meigs Band Boosters' debt of
$7,413 incurred in the purchase of
· new band instruments for the high
school two years ago.
The vote to pay off the remaining !l)ree years of a five year lease
agreement signed by the Band
Boosters passed by a split vote at
Tuesday night's regular meeting of
the board.
Randy Humphreys, John Hood
and Bob Banon voted in favor of
paying off the Boosters'. debt,
while Larry Rupe, board president,
voted "no". Board member Roger
Abbott was not presenL
The earlier two payments on the
instruments were also made by the
board. the fJrSt from lottery funds
received by the school, and the second from the general fund. This

An overview of the operation of
the Meigs County Agricult~re
Society which stages the Me1gs
County Fair was given by Dan
Smith, president, at Monday
night's meeting of lhe MiddleportPomeroy RoJary Club.
Smith was descJibed by Hal
Kneen, program chairman, who
introduced him as a "man of many
·hats": With that Smith put on the
hats of school bus driver, an auctioneer, a dairy farmer. a fair board
member and finally president of the
fair board.
Growth of the fair was empha·

Beginning Sunday,
August 15th
'

means that the board has paid the
entire amount for the insJruments, a
toJal of $12.895.
Toney Dingess, band director,
was at last night's meeting and presented a leuer to the board asking
for assistance on the debt. In the
past year he has been !here .several
times with the same requesL While
he was there last night to ask for
just this year's payment of $2,741,
he left with the board agreeing to
pay the entire balance.
As Humphrey put it "the matter
keeps coming up" and .it was on his
motion that the board took the
action to pay off the debt incurred
by the Band Boosters.
The board also voted to set up a
"recognition" fund in the amount
of $1,000 for !he year. The money.
according to a resolution passed
unanimously by the board, will
give !he Board of Education funds
to "honor its staff, former board

members, and other non-employee schools, except Pomeroy, and also
persons with plaques, pins. token the air ccinditionin~ project at the
retirement gifts. and a\1/ards, and high school. Financmg for the work
at Pomeroy has already been hanother amenities".
Such a fund has not previously died.
The plan which has state
existed, although it was pointed out
by Rupe who introduced the pro- approval assumes that the money
gram that general fund monies can saved through cost reduction for
be legally spent for recognition.
energy will be adeQuate to pay. off
EnerJIY Savlag Project
the nOJe.
Financing for lhe energy conserOther Business
vatiQD program bein$ carried out _in
Arrapgements were made at the
the Sc:hools of the distnct was dis- · meeting for Fry Jo represent the
cussed by Jane Fry. treasurer. She school dis!rict at the Ohio Depart·
was authorized to proceed toward ment of Natural Resources hearing
getting the needed funds tO pay in Columbus Monday. She said that
Landis and Gyr, the contrac!Ors, a several county officials will be
total of $418,200, through issuing a attending the hearing about the
note at an interest rate of not to Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s pumping
exceed seven percenL
of mine water into Raccoon and
The fmancing should be in place Leading Creeks. Board members
by AulOist 19, and the closing has felt Fry was the right person to
been set for Sept. 1. The- amount atJend in that she is the knowledge·
covers what Landis and Gyr has able one about the district's
been doing in all elementary finances and what monies come in

man Carsoo and Robert Sliostak, both or
Athens, take notes as Assistant Prosecutor
Charhis Knight questions a witness. (Sentloel
. photo by Jim Freeman)

THIS SPACE
$16.00
I

CALL 446·2342
OR

992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

Call Now For Sunday, August ,15th

sized by Smith who told the Rotarians that last year about 12,000
more people went through'the gates
!han ever before in the history of
the fair.
He credited the success to the
hard cooperative work of lhe board
members and especially commended Paul Reed for keeping the
finances of the fair in good order.
Smith explained that each of the
15 board members had charge of a
special activity of the fair and is
responsible for the operation or thai
part.
He talked about the improve-

Federal judge to
hear arguments
in mine situation

Carol M. Browner, administrator of
the Environmental Protection
Agency in Washington, D.C. ask•
A hearing is scheduled in U. S. ing that the agency withdraw its
Federal Court in Columbus this opposition by Ohio Gov. George
afternoon to determine if the U.S. . V. Voinovich, Rep. Ted Strickland,
Environmental Protection Agency and Congressman Dav.id L. Hob·
·
has jurisdiction over the State of son.
All three letters expressed conOhio and the Ohio EPA and can
secure an order ftom that coun to cern over efforts by 'the U.S. EPA
shut down the pumping of flood to halt the pumping of water out of
Meigs 31 flooded in mid-July and
water from Meigs Mine 31.
Dis!rict Judge Sandra S. Beck· appealed for ~nsideratiO!l on Jl!e
with is expected JO preside at the basis that 1f the pumpmg ts
stopped, 800 jobs could be at risk
hearing.
~
At a hearing earlier this month, in the region.
Leadin~; Creek Report
she ruled that the Southern Ohio
Water bemg removed from
Coal Co. could begin pumping.
That order, however, is now being · Meigs 3f mine via Leading Creek
has now resulted in hiB,her iron
challenged by the U.S. EPA.
content
and a change in color to a
· Yesterday letters supporting
·
Coatlnued
on paJie 3
continued pumping were sent to
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
OVP News Staff

THIS SPACE
$12.00

2 Secliona. 16 Pag• 35 centa
AMultimedia Inc. NoWopoper

from the mining operation and how building a shed or renting a buildthe loss of that money would affect ing was discussed. It was decided
the school diStrict. ·
to check with officials of Rutland
Workbooks considered text- :Village for suggestions before
books and who pays for w~t was making any other arrangements.
discussed at length after bein·g The building was transferred to
brought up by Board Member John Rutland at no cost with certain conHood. Supt. William Buckley . sideralions about using a ponion of
explained that when "workbooks it as a bus garage.
are considered text books" then the
The board approved tutors for
board is responsible for supplying Joe Hill and Autumn Phillips.
them. He said that a uniform policy Shirley Van Meter was hired to
will be carried out in all kinder- tutor Phillips at $11.72 per hour for
garten and lower grades in the dis· five hours a week. Hill, going into
trict this year to avoid confusion the ninth grade, will have teachers
about what has to be paid for and in the specialities nlleded assigned
what is provided. That infonnation to tutor him. Rick Blaettnar was
will be transmitted to principals employed as an assistant football
and on to parents, Bocldey said.
coach at Meip Junior High School.
What to do about storage for the
Bank One of Athens was desig ·
bus garage ohce Rutland Village nated as depository for district
tears down the old Rutland high funds. The treasurer noted tuition
school building was discussed w1Jh rates for students not under open
Paul McElroy, transP.oitation enrollinent, and the board released
supervisor. The possibility of
Continued on page 3

By JIM FREEMAN
cle on March 10 and 12.
pi!al where they were each ttea!ed
Senti11el News Staff
In addition, he is charged with for drug overdose.
The trial of D. Michael Mullen, aggravated menacing and comThe older girl testified she told
a Pomeroy attorney who is accused pelling prostitution for allegedly her mother she was staying at a dif·
in an alleged series of incidents inducing, procuring, soliciting or ferent friend's house and made
involving two female minors, got requesting one of the· girls to arrangements for a cover story
while the younger girl said she
off to a quick start Tuesday in Jhe engage in sexual activity for hire.
Testimony begins
snuck out of the house Saturday
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court after he waived a .trial by
The first witness c~lled by the night.
jury choosing instead to have his state was the older gul, now 14,
The two also testified that
c~ heard by Judge Dan Favreau
who testified that she had known Mullen, while waJching the older
from Morpn Countv.
·- M.~llen f?r about two _years and had . girl dance on on~ of the days, said
··'ElefendaritK·i.r a1elony-·case ate · · vrs1ted lilS' h~.
·she"wbulil' look better dancing
au19matically gran!ed a jury trial.
. She. tesuf1ed Mullen let her nude.
However a defendant can waive a drive h1s car to Darwm on WednesA former boyfriend of the older
jury !rial 'up until the time the trial day, Marctf' 10, at which time he · girl said he saw her driving
begins;
gave her a yellow pill, which she Mullen's car and saw Mullen Jliv·
In addition, Mullen's attorneys. took.
ing pills to the younger girl. He and
Herman Carson and Robert
She also stated that Mullen gave the Jwo girls testified that Mullen
Shostak, both of Athens, waived her pills at his home Friday, March pointed a handgun at the older girl.
opening arguments.
·
12, and Sa~urday.. March 13. The
During cross examination, aJtorMullen faces eight counts of younger gul sa1d she was also neys for Mullen pointed out indiscorrupting another with drugs. He given pills by Mullen on those crepancies between the girls' JesJi.
is accused of furnishing prescrip- days.
many Monday and earlier statelion medicine, namely Valium and
The two testified they made ments they made to Assistant ProsXanax, to two girls, ages 11 and arrangements to go to a nearby ecutor Charles Knight
13, on March 12 and 13. He was friend's home that Saturday night
Testimony will continue today.
· also indicted on two counts of con- where the older girl passed out.
According to Meigs County
tributing to the delinquency of a Both were transported by ~he Prosecutor John R. Lentes. corruptminor for allegedly allowing the Meigs County Emergency Med1cal· ing another with drugs is a felon)/
13-year-old girl to operate his vehi· Service to Veterans Memorial Hos·
Continued on pa)le 3

Meigs fair topic of Rotary_speaker

IN THE

THIS SPACE
$8.00

Low tonight In 60s, partly
doudy. Thursday, partly suMy,
hlgb In upper 80s.

•

QUESTIONING WITNESS- The trial of D.
Michael Mullen got underway in tbe Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas Tuesday.
Mullen, left, watches while his attorneys, Her·

Civil War essay contest ~et

MIDDLEPORT · The Middle. port Community Association will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Peoples
Bank in Middleport. everyone wei·
come.

9171

•

day from 6-8 p.m. Public invi.ted.

The Meigs County Historical incidents with the raiders. Stories
Society is sponsoring an essay con- may be handed down and documented or undocumen!ed.
ICSI on Civil War relatives.
Category two is for ancestors or
The conlCst is being held in conother
relatives that served in any
junction with the celebration at
Civil
War
unit, and need not have
Portland, Ohio, August 13, 14 and
'
lived
in
Meigs
Counl)i. Ilocumen·
IS. 1993,
tation
must
be
cited.
Due to a limited response, the
There will be two divisions in
deadline for entries has been
extended until August 10. All the judging with award winners in
entries must be received by !his eighth grade and under and ninth
grade through adulL First prize in
date.
. h each category wiD be $50 savings
Cate~ory one will deal w1t
Morgan s Raid across Meigs Coun- bonds and gift certificates. Gift cerJ.y and the ensuing battle that lld tificates will be awarded ro second
place at Portland. Subject ma!Jer place winners.
Entries may be mailed to the
may be an ancestor or relauve .
Meigs
County Historical Society,
involved in the Battle of BuffingBox
145,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or
ton Island, in attempts to halt the
brought
to the Meigs County
flight of Morgan's Raiders as they
Museum
during
open hours.
crossed Meigs County or other

Pick 4:

BULLETIN BOARD .

during the day with the theme, around the world which resulted in
going over the multiplication facrs
"Highlights of a Banner Year".
Bartels had several students in in a fun way and not just a repetieach group and they explained to tion of facts, place value game
the participants how they made or where participants placed their
developed their project. Projects number down and Jried to make the
included measuring grains of com highest number possible, slides
to determine how many equaled depicting different shaped cylinone gram, multiplication game of ders and trying to determine which
graph matched each cylinder.

RACINE - The Racine Lodge
No. 461, Free and Accepted
RACINE • Annual picnic of Masons, will meet Tuesday at 7:30
Ladies Auxiliary of Veterans p.m. Refreshments will be served.
Memorial Hospi!al will be Tuesday
at 6 p.m . at Star Mill Park in
POMEROY • Meigs County
Racine.
Post 40 &amp; 8 will meet at Pomeroy
American Legion Hall, Tuesday.
Dinner
at 7:30p.m. Members bring
REEDSVILLE • Eastern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7 a guest.
p.m. at the band room. All band
~
parents and students encouraged to
POMEROY • Cross Country
auend to discuss the marching band practice for Meigs High School and
Junior High Schooi will be held
program.
tomorrow at 8 a.m. at the high
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun- school track. The coach reminds
ty Board of Elections will meet athletes thai they must have a physTuesday at 4:30 p.m. at the board ical before they can participate.
Further information may be
office.
obtained by calling Coach Mike
Kennedy at 992-7552.

199

Testimony begins in Mullen trial

Community calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Summershine
is the theme for vacation bible
. school at Hope Baptist Church
through Friday from 6-8:30 p.m.
' with classes for all ages including
adulrs.
..

Pick 3:

The Birchfield Funeral .
Home will remain open
as Mr. Birchfield recov·.
ers from an accident.
Funerals and all other
aspects of business
are being maintained
on a dally basis.

.

Area students attend summer program
Ed Bartels, fourth, fifth, and
sixth grade math teacher at Salis·
bury Elementary, recently had
some of his students return to the
classroom during the summer to
prepare for a meeting held in
Zanesville. The meeting enabled
teachers throughout Jhe State of
Ohio to select different sessions

Reds
lose 2-1
to Giants

muricd now ,I have ICquircd Lyle's

Ann
Landers

between.

Ohio Lottery

ments which are Jaking place, noting the painting. o.f all of the bu~d­
ings, the ullllly connectiOn
improvements, the removal of the
hub rail on the race track to
improve safety, the replacement of
the judges stand and the generally
improved overall programming.
Last year the fence around the
fairgrounds improved control of the
grounds, and in !Urn improved gate
receipts. Smith said.
Subsidies of the fair include
$2,300 for the junior fair and
$6.500 from !he county, the board
presiden~ said. &lt;;&gt;ver $1~.01!0 w~s
paid out 10 premmms ID Juruor fm
exhibitors last year, Smith said .
LivestoCk junior fair exhibitors are
expected to bring in about 100
sheep, a hundred ·hogs, and 48
steers besides several hundred
other exhibitors in 4-H, FFA, FHA,
and the scllools. .He mentioned the
important role of the junior fair
exhibitors, noting that they resur'
rected the fair in 1943 and in 1963
raised $3,000 'to extend the junior
fair building 40 feet beyond what
the fair board had money to construct.
When asked by the Rotarians
what he wanted the public to do,
Smith said "encourage everybody
to come and enjoy the fair." Tickets for the week cost $10, daily
admissions are $5 and tickets with
voting privileges are $12, the fair
board president Said. Last year,
according to Smith, $16,400 was
received from $5 tickets, $48,000
from $10 tickets, and there were
!87 membership tickets sold.
Lance Harra of Kansas City was
a guest of C:· E. Blakeslee.at the
meting. Max.me Coats Gaskill was
welcomed as a new member of the
club by President Gene TriPie!l. A
dinner preceding the meeting was
served by women of Heath United
Methodist Church where the meeting was held.

1993 FAIR OVERVIEW • Dan Smith,
Meigs County Fair Board president, gave Middleport-Pomeroy RotariaDs an overview or next
.
'.

week's rair. He was speaker at Monday night's
meeting held at Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport.
.. '

--Local briefs-----.
Galliajail holds two from Meigs
The Gallia County jail is currently holding a man and a woman
for Meigs County authorities.
.
·
Jailed early this morning by Meigs County s~f's deputies was
Cyn!hia E. Smith, 20, State Route 68 I, Reedsville, for ~d theft
and failure to comply. Jailed Tuesday by. the Gallia-Me1gs Post of
the State Highway Patrol was Charles C. Sullivan, 24, Route I,
West Columbia,
Va. for faiiUte to appear in coun.

w:

MJHS orientation slated
· An orientatioli for 7th gradj::rs and new students attending Meip
Junior High School will be held Thursday at 6 p.m. at the junior
high school in Middleport.
.
The event, organized by Principal David Gaul, will include a
tour of the junior high school building.
·

Residents advised
to boil water
While the w~ is back on after
an outage of several hours Tuesday
in the Forest Run area, residents
are advised to boil their water for
three minutes before using it to
drink or in cooking.
Don Poole, general manger of
the T~ppers Plains-Chester Water
District, said that customers ·on
Minersville Hill, Yost Road,
Welchtown and Dutchtown areas
were affec!ed by !he leak. He said
that water samples are being Jested
and that residents will be advised
when the boil order is lifted.
According .to Pool anytime the
lines are depressurized for repairs,
the boil order is put into effect in
accordance with Environmental
ProJection A~tencv ~tuidelines. ·

�Wednesday, August 11, 1993

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11IE IM'I'ItRESTB OJ' 111E MEIGS-MASON AREA

•

Page-2-the Dally Sentinel

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS ·OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All leners are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address an.d telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leners
should be in good laste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Clinton says, 'budget
approval just the beginning

VVednesday,August11,1993

WASHINGTON - 'When blimp hovering 10,000 feet over foundation spolcesman Jose R. CarFranklin D. Roosevelt coined the the Florida Keys that is often denas. "We don't think this has
phrase "~nenal of democracy," he grounded for .repairs. The balloon anything to do with cutting .the
could not have envisioned that was recently resurrce~ after sit- · budget. This· is all political. Either
somebody would include in that
you capitulate {to Castro) or petse·
television reruns of "Lifestyles of
vere. We intend to persevere."
the Rich and Famous" or "Pop·
Jorge Mas Canosa, a conserva·
eye.''
tive millionaire and Bay of Pigs
But that's been the thrust of the
veteran, heads the fl)undation. He
'
U.S. government's 3-year-old, $52
· drives a bullet-proof Mercedes
million effort to undermine the
Benz and reportedly keeps a loaded
authorilarian regime of Fidel Cas· - - - - - - - - - - - .357-caliber Magnum In his brief.
tro thtOU&amp;Ji TV Marti. AJthou h its ting ·on the ground since March. case. For extra security, he report·
aim is to broadcast "the tru~" 10 The U.S . government easily edly debugs his house twice a
Cuba, the government station has sidesteps this glitch by transmitting week. He is said to want to succeed
had virtually no audience because the broadcasts via satellite, but Castro as the nelll ruler of Cuba
Cubans haven't been able .to tune there are not too many Cuban and is so sure of Castro's fall he
in. Castro has successfully jammed viewers who have private satellite has already prepared to rent out
alniost all the broadcasts.
dishes.
Miami's Orange Bowl for a cele·
Moreover, Cubans would have
''It's a total waste of time and bralion on the day it happens.
10 stay up all night to see the pro- money. It is neither seen nilr heard
Earlier this year, his organizagrams because an international in Cuba." says Wayne Smith, 8 lion succeeded m killing the nomitreaty restricts the station's broad- former top U.S. diplomat in Cuba. nation of Mario Baeza for the State
casting hours to the not·so-prime- "Let's admit that it's a failure'and Department's top Latin America
time hours of 3:00 a.m. and 6:00 stop throwing money away/'
post' on grounds that he was not
a.m. Even then, rebellious Cubans
But that's easier said than done. sufficiently anti-Castro.
might be lucky to catch a two- The TV program and its cousin, · But despite his controversial
minute blip of a baseball game or a Radio Marti, are the pet projects of image, Mas has serious clout in
Spanish-language version of "Kate the controversial Cuban American Congress and the White House. He
and Allie."
National Foundation.
was a personal friend to both
The station broadcasts from a
" We stand by TV Marti," says Ronald Reagan and George Bush.

.-------· ----------.-----,-----------1
•

·

The foundation's political action
committee has doled out more than
$670,000 in campaign contribu·
lions to members of-Congress over
the [list decade.
Mas has also been the driving
force behind TV and Radio Marti.
Although there have been repeated
attempts to pull the plug on the
programs in years past, Mas and
his cohorts have always succeeded
in keeping them alive. This year
may be no different. W~en Colorado Democrat David Skaggs proposed to cut the $28 milllon in
funding for both Radio and TV
Marti earlier this year, he knew he
was asking for a fighL
After convincing tbe House
Appropriations commiaet to scrap
TV Marti altogether and half the
funding for Radio Marti, Skaggs
was blindsided by Rep Lincoln
Diaz-Balart, R-Fia . A CubanAmerican and flilll backer of Radio
and TV Marti, the freshman Diaz·
Balan retaliated by cutting funding
for a $23 million science project in
Skagg 's home district. In a press
release issued soon after, the Cuban
American National Foundation
crowed defianUy, "Opposition to
Cuba
Initiative
Costs ,Boulder Rep.
(Staggs)
Pet Project."
ATiitough Skaggs later succeeded in persuading the House to cut
off funding for both broadcasts,
news of his ·treatment at the hands
of the ciilian-exile lobby did not go
unnoticed in the Senate. Legislation introduced by Sen . Ernest
I:Jollings, D·S.C, 10 keep full fund·
ing for the Cuban broadcasts
passed the Senate without a challenge. "No one wanted to oppose
(Hollings) after word got out about
how they cut the le~ from under
Skaggs," said one Hill staffer.
· Hollings, a strong supporter of
both programs, has himself
received nearly $60,000 in PAC
and individual campaign contribu·
lions from the foundation between
1982 and 1992. His offiCe failed to .
return our calls.
As the House and Senate take
up the funding issue in conference
nexl monih, the foundation says it
is optimistic that the .full funding
will be granted. With an arsenal of
campaign contributions, it's not
hard keeping this .dubious ,"arsenal
of democracy" ahve.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

I am truly happy these .things are so

Today in history

Texas who signs his execution
orders with a happy face. It warms
the heart when people really enjoy
their work.

Joseph Spear
My Rolaids file has gotten so·
full that I have had to break it into
calef;ories. I have a Political
Rola1ds file, for example. in which
I have stored information about the
Dan Quayle museum in Huntington, Ind., across the street from the
school where Dan learned to spell.
I had been conce'rned that the
Quayle legacy might perish and
was ·relieved to know it is being
preserved. I also have stories in this
file about the rumors that Rep .
Robert Doman, R-Calif., may run
for president. I had been troubled
by the pr&lt;i'spect that the lunatic
fringe would have no one to vote
for and 'now this problem may be
solved.
,
In my Hollywood Rolaids file, I
have a story about Gerald
McRaney, who plays a Marine on
TV . During the campaign, Gerald
lambasted Bill Clinton for avoiding
the Vietnam War. Problem is, Ger-

aid was never in the military,
either, and he once told TV Guide
that he had thought about skipping
to Canada to evade Vietnam. So I .
was worried that Major Dad was a
hypocrit~. Then I learned that he
was not drafted because he was
married and had 8 child. "I was
·ready to do what had to be done,"
he said, "but they wouldn 'I take
me." What a relief it was to hear ,..
that.
The same file discloses that
Clint Eastwood has a vitamin
adviser. .Clint is so appreciative of
this person that he cast the vitamin
guru in two movies. It is such a
relief to know that Dirty Harry is
not going io .get run down by all
that shootin~.
My Religious Rolaids file is
stuffed full of tidbits about how
cler$&gt;' of aU persuasions are making u easier to be virtuous. Jewish
people around the world can now
send prayers to the Wailing Wall
by fax. Catholics in Italy are now
confessing in temperature-controlled, sound-proofed·, softly lit
booths. Busy churchgoers in Pensacola, Fla., can now attend the
Compact Mini 22-Minute Worship

Service, with a sermon guaranteed
to fast no more than eight minutes.
Doesn't it ease your mind to know
that Yups and busy Boomers will
not he deprived of spiritual sustenance?.
In my Wowser Rolaids file, I
have two items. First, there is the
fabulous · story of the Delaware
woman who alened us 10 the horrifying fact that actress Muriel Hem·
in~way would disrobe in an
ep•sode of ABC's "Civil Wars"
last fall. Millions of viewers were
no doubt sp~d perdition, thanks
to this time! y warning, The second
item has to do with Madonna and
the Miss America pageant. Last
year, the chairman of the annual
event vowed that the Material Girl
would never be the nation's No. 1
lass because '.'the image she pro·
jects is unwholesome.''
I hadn 'I heard that Madonna
was inlelested in the Miss America
contest, but it is a tremendous relief
to know that if she ever does go for
it, there will jle a guardian at the
gate.
Joseph Spear is a writer fnr
Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Democratic discipline breaks down

THE

..

By The Aseod•e4 P,.
A sunny llld Wlml day is on tap
for Ohio on Thlmday, forecasterS
said. Highs will be in the mid- to

WASHINGTON (NEA)
While the Clinton administration
found itself needing every Democratic vote it could get in the recent
budget batUe, the.Democratic leaders in both the House and Senate
have apparenUy lost control of their
troops. Every member now seems
out for whatever he or she can get.
There ' are manr .eJtamples of
Democrats demandmg deals before
agreeing to an administration's tax
and budget package, but few have
been as obviously self·serving as
Arizona's Sen. Dennis DeConcini.
Arizona has many retirees. Naturally, DeConcini knew voters
back home would he unhappy with
Clinton's plan to require Social
Security recipients with outside
incomes above a certain level to
pay taxes on their benefits. To
appease DeConcini al)d win his
vote for the budget, the administration raised, rather then lowered, the
income threshold.
Then DeConcini decided to cut
his home state in on .some ]iorlc. He
chairs the appropriations subcommittee that doles out money to the
General Services Administration
for constructing new federal buildings. When the subcommittee sent
its appropriations biD to the Senate
floor, it contained all sorts of good-

ies for Arizona.
The biggest is $199 miUion for a
new courthouse in Phoenix. Last
year, DeConcini only got funds for

ter, DeConc.ini gave $30 million for
St. Louis and $20 million for
Kansas City for initial construction
activities.

Robert]. Wagman

Things are just as bad in the.
House where, under Speaker Tom
Foley's loose hold, powerful com·
mittee chairmen are al each other's
\llroats as budgets dwindle and
!X&gt;rk is reduced.
· Congress funds government
programs via a two·tiered process.
The appropriations commiltees
decide how much of the federal
budget should be expended on each
agency and on each program. But
the program specifics are decided
separately by the oversight committees and subcommittees. Usually the process works with appropriations and authorizing committees
working cloSely and in tandem.
Now, however, it seems !he various wopiiatioos subcommittees
are te ing agencies very specifically how to spend the money being
appropriated. Not surprisingly,
those expenditures are in states represented by members of the appropriations eommittees.
The most extreme case in the
House involves tranSJXXIation.
Rep. Bob Carr, D-Mich., chairman of the
,, Hous~ .Appropriations

initial design activities. However,
the project remained low on the list
of GSA's priorities, was not sched·
ufed to begin for several years, and
was slated to cost much less. Now,
at $199 million, it may well be .the
most expensive courthouse, per
square foot, the federal government
has ever built.
DeConcini also added more
porlc that was nOt on the GSA's list
for '94: a Forest Service administrative building and "culture center" ($6 million); a U.S. Magistrates Office ($1 million); and $7
million in renovations and additions to two border station posts. •
DeConcini also didn't forget the
ranking Republican on his subcommittee, Sen. Kit Bond of Missouri.
Last year Congress passed identical
$9.8 million design and site seleetiqn appropriations for new courthouses in St. Louis and Kansas
City. Both still have lower priority,
and neither was approved for construction starts next year. No mat·

Transportation Subcommittee,
brought a Department of Transportation funding bill to the House
floor that mandated the department
spend hundreds of millions of dollars in Michigan.
Carr's appropriations bill set
aside $109 million- or more than
a third of the 1994 fiscal year's
$305 million highway "demonstration" funds - for Michigan pro·
Jects.
Carr said he was "forced'' to do
this because the authorizing commiuee, Public Works and Transportation - ~haired by Rep. Norman Mineta, D-Calif., and with
Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa., as the
ranking Republican - had given
too much money to projects in c8J.
ifomia and Pennsylvania.
:
Carr charged that under this
year's authorizing act, Pennsylvi.nia and California get more than 30
percent of the money for projects
under the Intermodal Surface
Tr~nspo~tat.ion Efficiency Ac~.
wh1le MIChigan was grievously
shonchanged.
•
.

' '
is a writer

Robert Wagmaa
for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

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I , ..

"
-

IMansfield 183'-I•

-

PA.

;

(f

.•••
J

'-, .

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~

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• IColumbus Iss• I

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upper 80s.
The daytime beatin~ coupled
with rather humid coodiuons could
cause a few showers or thunderSlorms, especially in southwest
Ohio, the National Weather Serv~
Sjl)d,
Fog greeted Ohioans this momiDg, aome of it dense with visibili·
ties under half a mile. Thbnder·
storms rumbled across northern
Ohio overnight.

.Power demand
sets new record
.

87"

(~

Columbus Southern Power
Company's customers set a new
W. VA.
one-month electric consumption
record in July surpassing tho marie:
.established in 1991 by 8.1 percent
According to a CSP press
· release, records compiled at the
utility's Ohio Operations Center in
Groveport indicate customers con:
sumed !.54-billion kilowatt hours
of electricity in July.
.
,
That. broke the old record of
' 1.42-billion kWh established dur·
ing the same month in 1991. The
1993 mark eclipsed 1992's July
usage by 13.7 percenL
Extended forecast:
Friday thr011gb Sunday:
· "The record-setting I,&gt;Crformance
A chance of showen .and thun- was not unanti~ipated, the release
derstorms Friday. Lows 65-70. said. "High humidity and temperaHighs 85-90. Fair ,on Saturday and tures in the 90s caused customer
Sunday. Lows in the 60s. Highs 8Q. demand for electricity to soar
throughout the month." ·
85 . .
Columbus Southern's record for
one-hour customer demand was
broken on four occasions during
July. The latest all·time d~mand
record of 3,130,000 kilowatts was
Caroline Miller .
set
iluring the one-hour period from
Caroline A. Miller, 95, of Vil4
to
5 p.m. on July 28.
lage. Manor Apartments, MiddleColumbus
Southern . Power
port, died Wednesday, Aug. 10,
serves
nearly
570,000
customers in
1993 at Overbrook Center, Middle25 central and southern Ohio counpolL
.
Born on Nov. 19, 1897 at East ties.
LiveJPOOI, she was the daughter of
Edwin Barrett and Ella Swan BarrelL She was a homemaker and a
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
member of the Middleport First holders of three Buckeye 5 tickets
Baptist C~urch. and the Auxiliary will collect $100,000 apieee after ·
of Drew Webster Post 39, matching all of the numbe-rs drawn
Pomeroy. ·
.
Tuesday night, t~e Ohio Lottery
.
.
She 1s survived by a daughter, said.
Laura Cornwell, West Palm Beach,
The winning tickets were sold at
Aa; and a son, Clarence A. Miller, Kelleys ·Island, Chesapeake and
Milton, Aa.; three grandchildren, Mariella.
and five great-grandchildren.
Here are Tuesday night's Ohio
Besides her parents, she was Lottery selections:
preceded in death by her husband,
Buckeye 5: 17-27-30-33-36
Pick 3 Numbers: 1-9-9
.William MiUer, an infant daughter,
Pick 4 Numbers: 9-1-7-1
.
a son, Charles Edward Millor, a sisSales in Buckeye 5 totaled
ter and a brother.
Funeral services will be held at $638,855.
The 227 Buckeye 5 game tickets
I p.m. Friday at the First Baptist
Church. The Rev. James Seddon with four .of the numbers are each
and the Rev. Steve Fuller will offi. worth $250. The 6,557 with three
ciate and ~urial will be in Letart Qf the numbers are each worth $10.
Falls Cemelery. Friends may can at The 67,737 with two of the numthe Ewing Funeral Horne Tlwrsday bers are each worth $1.
The OhiQ Lottery will pay out
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. and at
the church Friday from noon until $410,569.50 to winners in Tuesday's Pick 3 Numbers daily gaine.
the time of service.

A variety of weather TillS occur· parts of the Mississippi River
ring over ohio early this morning.
watershed Tuesday as storms were
The reconi·bigh tempel'llllre for · scattered from the Plains to the
this date 11 the Columbus weather EastCoasL
station was 98 .degrees in 1944
Elsewhere, almost 2 inches of
while the record low was 48 in rain fell in six hours at Fon Myers,
1967. Sunset tonight will be at 8:34 Aa
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:40
A high pressure system over
a.m. ·
·
Texas was expected to deflect cool
Around the nation
air masses and keep the southern
Clouds spread across much of Plains hOt today, and sultry weather
the nation early today as the North· also was forecast for the Southeast
east remained cool and the southern But clouds near a dissipating front
Plains looked forward to more hot was expected to keep the Northeast
weather.
cool.
More locally heavy rain fell in

Scattered thunderstorms were
forecast along the Appalachians,
and in parts of the South•vesL
TUCSOII, Ariz, hit106 degrees on
Tuesday, breaking its record of lOS
for.the date, set last year.
The high temperalure for the
nation Tuesday was 115 degrees at
Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
Higps today were forecast today
to be in the 70s in the Northeast,
the northern RIJCk.ies and the Pacif·
ic Northwest. Eighties and 90s
were forecast elsewhere, with the
mercury expected 10 reach into the
. IOOs in the Southwest

~~~

- - - - -... weather-------

'•" Soulh·Central Oblo
.... Tonight, partly cloudy. I..oiv in
•·' the . upper 60s. Thursday, partly
·' '- sunny. A slight chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. Hig~ in the upper
•80s. Chance of rain is 30 percenL

,.

:---Area deaths-..

· Pearl Baker

Pearl I. Baker, 85, of Reedsville,
' died Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1993, at her
· . residence.
• Born in ReedsviUe, she was the
· · daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
· Alfred Mills. She was a housewife.
. She is survived by one daughtet,
' · Donna Jean Best, of Fairfax, Va.;
' · two granddaughters, Carrie O'Don: · nell, and Sheryl Jones, both of Vir... ginia, four great-grandchildren. and
: · one special friend, Sandy Cowdery
'. · Of ReedsviUe.
Besides her parents, she was
.. · preceded in death by her husband,
: Wilbur Baker in 1978.
.'
Funeral services will be held
.' · Thursday at I p.m. at the White
: · Funeral Home in Cool ville. The
' • Rev. Steve Reed will officiate and
:.. burial will be 'in the Reedsville
Cemetery. There,will be no calling
• , hours.
;

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Warm, sunny weather on ta·p for Thursday

OHIO Weather

U.S. pays for unwatched TV· station

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
.
WASffiNGTON - One campaign barely wo~: Presid~nt C:hnton
embarlted on another, promising J?bs, growth an4 a new direcu?n for
America" under the Democrats new economic program. He. s got
promises to keep.
The president need look back no further than George ~ush to see w~
can happen politically when the economy slumps despite a deal that s
supposed to be a boosL
.
·
And Is Bush lamented later, on his way to defeatm 1992, factors
beyond White House control can slow the U.S. economy m a global mar·
ketplace.
.
M da ·
·
Clinton was out celebrating the start of hts program on on y, saymg
it marlc:ed the moment America decided to change •. to " fa~ our pro~le!'?s,
meet our challenges~ build a better future and stop JUst talking about 11.
1
He told a rally in Charleston, W.Va.. that when Congress last w~k
narrowly approved a five·year plan of tax mcreases and spendmg
restraints, ''they voted for work and family, for reducing our deficit ... for
jobs and growth."
. .
..
.
It's only a first step. he said, but It w1ll help create 8 m1ll1on new JObS
over the next four years.
.
.
.
But curbing the deficit may not mesh w1th spurrmg economiC growth
in the short term, to enhance the long, sluggish recovery from the ~eces­
sion of early 1991. The increased taxes and the later spending cuts m the
budget Congress completed on Friday will take money out of the economy and that can mean slower growth.
.
Clinton points to low interest rates .as an immediate benefit, and said
that spurs the economy by making it easier to buy h~ll!es and ~· to pay
off credit cards. Rates already were down; the admn.ustranon srud If the
budget had been rejected, interest rates would hav~ spiked upward.
•
Instead, it was awroved, without a vote to ~pare m the ~ous~ on
Thursday and with V1ce President AJ Gore breaking a Senate ue Fnday
night.
. . kin ·•·-'-·A G
Clinton claimed a mandate despite the margm, JO g1y """"""' ore
for his part in the landslide. He said other changes have won "by thenarrowest of margins in the beginning, but always picked up steam," and
this one will too.
.
.
, .
c
"It is the fact of victory, not the margm of VICtory, S81d Sen. George
MiiChell, the Democratic leader, saying the budget vote strengthens ClmtQn to deal with issues like health care and welfare reform.
"I think it helps his clout enormou!&gt;ly, parU~ularly when you look at
the alremative," House Spea!&lt;er Thomas Foley said in ~ CNN .in.terview.
"If. he had lost this vote 10 the House or the Se~ate wed be s1tnng here
tOday answering questions about whether the Clinton presidency had any
future at all."
.
Clinton had acknowledged that in his pi~ for Democrauc sup~rt.
"My presidency is at stake," he told a wavcnng congressman the mght
Have you ever read a news story
the House voted. Relentin~ in his opposition, Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebras·
that left you feeling giddy with
ka told Clinton via television "I could not and should not cast a vote that
relief? Did you ever trip across a
brings down your presidency.''
bit of information about some hithThat may overstate the case, since eventually the~ wo~ld h~ve been a erto subconscious concern that
budget. Besides, compromises already had ~tered qmton s o~gmal pro·
gladdened your heart and unburposals drastically, and a defeat six months m doesn t necessanly undo a dened your mind to learn it?
I do this often. I read things that
four·year presidency.
· But a limping economy can. That's what happened to Bush after he
leave me saying, "Wow, I am truly
reneged on his pledge against new taXes in order to make the 1990 budget
happy this is so." I feel such relief
~to~the~~
.
.
from reading these stories that I
When he signed the 1990 budget, Bush called It the largest defi~ll keep them in a file labeled
reduction plan in history and an important step to ensure economic
"Rolaids."
I just found out
gro~.taX reversal hurt Bush. The economic slump and his inability to do thatFortheexample,
Feds have busted up the
anything about it- Democrats said it was indifference- hurt more.
dehydrated onion monopoly. Well,
Now it's the Republicans' tum to keeP. score, on a program they
the market was in danger of
opposed unanimously in Congress. "I don t think it's gomg to work.:'
becoming a monopoly, but the Fedsaid Sen. Pete Domenici of New Mexico. ''What we hav~ to watch fo~ 1s eral Trade Commission ordered the
to see if the econom~ hegins to grow at a steady and rapid pace, puttmg
McCormick spice company to prope&lt;~ple hack to work. '
.
vide the competition with enough
·"We are beginning," Clinton said in Charleston. " We cannot tnm th1s seeds to produce 100 million
around overnight.''
pounds of low-water onions. What
a relief it is to have this situation
under control.
· I was similarly gratified to hear,
according to a survey commisBy The Associated Press
sioned by the Quilted Worthern
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 11, the 223rd day of 1993. There are 142 company, that 40 percent of the
days left in the year.
American people crumple their toiToday's Highlight in.fi!story:
.
.
.
.
let paper, as opposed to wrapping
On -Aug. 11, 1965, noong and loonng broke out 10 the predommanUy or folding it It was comfortmg toblack Watts section of Los Angeles; in the week that followed, 34 people learn, also, about the judge in
were killed and more than 1,000 injured.
On this date:
In 1860, the nation's firSt successful silver mill began operation near
Virginia City, Nev.

Berryls World

! ....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By Jack Anderson·
and
Michael Binstein

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
' Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Regina Van Meter

Lottery results

Regina (Jean) Van Meter, 62, of
Tollgate Road, Pataslcala, a former
Meigs County resident, died' Monday, Aug. 9, 1993, at her Newell,
W. Vi, summer residence of an
apparent heart attack.
''
Born on March 28, 1931, in
., Philadelphia, Pa., she was the
: · daughter of the late Clinton Bl)d
.. · Rebecca Hilton Cozan of Meigs
· · County.
-·
•
She was a retired custodian of
the Southwest-Licking School District and was Protestant by faith. ,
.She is ·survived by her husband,
by Bob Hoeflich
Harold S. Van Meter, Pataskala,
four sons, Dennis R. Van Meter of
WellsviUe, Dan Van Meter of lndiat
I not only "wonder where the garten age is tomorrow, Aug.
. anajlolis, Inil., Bruce Van Meter of .
· · Columbus, and Steve Van Meter of yellow went" but I also wonder the Chester Fire Department head·
quarters from 9 to 11 a.m . There
~ · Canyon City, Colo.; four brothers, . whatever happeried to the summer.
will be ·no more immunizations
It
jtist
flew
by
and
it's
difficult
· ·Stanley Cozart and Joseph Cozart
then
until Aug. 26 when Glenna
to
imagine
that
next
we.ek
the
Rock
' of Columbus, Gerald Cozart of
wiD
be
at the East Letart Methodist
Youngstown, and James Cozart of Springs Fairgrounds, which norChurch
from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and
Staunton, Mo.; four sisters, .Margie mally lies so still, will be jumping
at
the
Racine
Fire Department from
Clark of Las Vegas, Maxine Har- with the action of the annual Meigs
I
to
3:30
p.m.
vey of St. Joseph, Mo., Fern Davis County Fair. After that, it's back to
· of Columbus, and Pat Campljln of school for the yoiulg people. Bet
Units of the Meigs County
St. Petersburg, Fla.; and seven they' too, wonder what happened to
Emergency
Medical Services
thesummer.
·
·
grandchildren. •
answered
287
calls during the
Besides her parents she was premonth
of
July.
Now
that's a lot.
Here's an update on William
. ceded in death by a brother,
Units
took
147
persons
to Veter(Bucky) Walters, former Middle· ' Charles Cozart.
ans
Memorial
Hospital;
36
to HoJz.
Funeral services will be held at port businessman and a member of .
4 p.m. Friday at the Freedom _Middleport Village Council. Bucky er Medical Center; 20 to Pleasant
Gospel Mission, Bald Knob, Meigs could probably handle your support Valley Hospital and 25 to other
.
County, and burial will be in the about now. Mail can be sent to him hospitals.
In
addition,
61
transfer
runs were
in
case
of
Penny
Clark,
P.O.
Box
Bald Knob Cemetery. Pastor Roger
made
and
four
aero-medical
calls
5830,
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
Willford will officiate. Friends may
were
handled
during
the
month.
call at the church for ll'l hour prier
Doesn't Bob Musser do a terrifto the service. Arrangements are
If you ~et· the maga2ine, "Mod·
ic
job
in cleaning up the messes
being handled Nixon Funeral
em
Mjltunty" perha~, you noticed
that
we
mate
in
Pomeroy?
Ever
Home in Newell, W.Va.
faithful, Bob is not only consistent- that the current edition contained
ly on t,he job on the streets, side- an article about the West Virginia
The Daily Sentinel
walks and parking lots, but he's State Farm Museum which is right
(VSPS ZIJ.,..J
doing good work. If we weren't in our own back yard ·
Fifty acres of Mason County
Publiohed ••"l' tllonlooo, Monday lhrou&amp;h
such slobs, he wouldn't have to
farm
land accommodate the museFriday. 111 Court st.. Pomenoy. Ohio by tht ' work so hard. Did you know that
Ollie Volley Publilhioa eompuyiMuttimedil
Bob is now 75 and outworks about um's working farm and 35 buildJoe., Plomercy, Ohio 4S169, Pll. 992·21S6.
.
bod I th'·'iDgs including a log house, a one·
Seeoad CIUI pollllle paid It Porn.Qy, Qllo.
· , every
Y,. ua,
room school, a doctor's office, a
Member: Th~' Auotiated Prea, ud die Ohio
Like Will Rogers, I only know church, general store/post office,
Newapaprr Alloc:iaiJon, NllioiW Adw:n..l.liaJ
news~aper office and a blackRepreantatl ve, Brubam Newspaper Sale~,
what I read iJI the paper.
733 Third Aveuuo, New York, New Y&lt;rt
smith s shop. A photo accompaI
noted
recently
that
a
educa·
10017.
tiona! advisory council open~ting in nied the article.
_;__
I'OSTMASlllR: Seod - . . . chUJ" to The
the county recommends tha.t school
Daily Sentinel , Ill Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
Would you believe that somebuildings be put to more public
45769.
one
paid $950 for the bed linens
use. In another news acco~nt of a
SVBSCRIP'I10N RATES
President
Clinton slept on at the
school board, I note that some feel
87 CarTier or MotGr Rquae
Comfon
Inn
in Chillicothe during
Doc Weck. ... ..................................... .........$1 .60
that usc of the buildings is mlde
o .. Montll. ..............................................$6.9.!
his
jlresidential
campai$n? That's
prohibitive bc;cau·se custodians
Ooe YNr........................................ ..- .. $113.20
what
they
went
for dunng an auc·
muskbe paid for the iime the buildSINGLE COPY '
tion_8tthe_
Qhio_State
Fair. You
PIUCI
ings are used. Interesting..
·
' Dally......................................... 3.! c ....
see. There is one born every
Sub&amp;criben Dol deairilll to pay the Cltl'ier IDly
I do what I can to help Glenna minute. Do keep smiling.
remit in ldvu.cc d.iroct to The Daily Stlltluel
Riebel, RN, in her program to proOD I three. &amp;il or 12 JDODth billa. Crecfit WiD 1M
vide free immunizations for chil._ Jivea Clfl'l• tKh. week.
dren
of tha county in a new pro. . No Olbl&lt;ripuo .. by moll permllled iD ,...
' where home cttrler t«Vice ilavailablt.
gram of the Meigs County Health
M.UIS.............
· Department I think the Jlrtlllf8lll is
· ltisldtMei•c. ..,
a money-saver for Meigs parents
13 VJ&lt;oea....................... ........................ .$21.14
and I want them to be aware of the
26 Woea................................................ .$43.16
'( S2 Wcea ........................ ........................ JI.4.76
oppatunity'
•
O.I.Wo Melp C..IJ
•
So Gleruia's next ~ to h(!u .. , began on the Pon
13 w.eu ................................................$23•.0
provide the bnmunizauons for chil· · Notre D8ma In Parl!l, France In
• 26 WHicl .........................................$15.50
1 52Weob ................ .,............., .........$8UO
dren from .two months to kinder- 1463.
.'

Beat of the Bend...

TAKING SHAPE- The new Hutton's Car
Wash on West Main Street Ill Pomeroy is taking
shape u workers continue construction on the
new structure. Acairding to owner Roger Hut-

ton or Mt. Alto, W.Va., the car wash will re(lture
four self-serve bays and one, large hand-wasb
bay. The raciUty is expected to be operational by
Oct. 1. (Sentinel photo by Julie Dillon)

Federal... Continued from page 1
portion of the Ohio River near mile
254, according 'to. Southern Ohio
Coal Company (SSOCCo].
. This was expected to ticcur. said
Gregory Seegert, an ecological
expert and environmental consul·
tant monitoring effects of the
pumping on streams and aquatic
life for SOCCo.
, "The structure and function of
the river's ecosystem is not expected to change as a result of the mine
water dispersion in the river," he
said. "There should be no long·
tenm effect on the river."
SOCCo is continuing to pump
water from the mine accordmg to
its ODj!Oing plan tO restore Safe
open~ung conditions in the mine as
soon as possible, B. J. Smith, pub"lie affairs director, American Electric Power, Fuel Supply, said this
morning.
In accordance with instructions
by the Ohio Environmental Proteclion Agency, SOCCo officials are
CQ9perating with federal and state
officials to monitor water quality,
habitat and aquatic life of streams
affected by the water removal plan,
including the Ohio River, she said.
Federal and state agencies
involved include the Ohio EPA,
which approved the plan under
strict conditions, the Ohio Depart-

me·nt of Natural Resources, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the
Ohio River Valley Sanitation Commission, and the U.S. EPA.
SOCCo has now reduced the
rate of flow into the Leading Creek
to assess the mixing of the release
into the river, Smith said.
The mine water has a high iron
content and is slighdy more acidic
than water in the Ohio River, Smith
explained. She said that the discoloration of the river water to a
brownish orange is evidence that
the iron is changing its chemical
form from ferrous 10 ferric.

'T'esti"mony
•••
.I. 1
Continued from,page 1
of the second degree, punishable by
five to 15 years in prison with a
mandatory sentence of three years
on each count.
Contributing to delinquency of a
minor is a first -degree misdemeanors, punishable by a maximum sentence of six months in the
county jail and a fine of up to
$1 ,000. Aggravated menacing is a
first-degree misdemeanor while
compelling prostitution is a thirddegree felony punishable by 12 to I
24 months in prison and a maximum fine of $5,000.

Meigs board...
Continued froin page 1
Aaron Drummer to Southern Local
for athletic purposes.
After a discussion on whether or
not to require CPR training fo r
coaches, a motion to abolish th e
requirement every other year was
defeated by a vote of two for and
two against. Rupe and Humphreys
voted against'doing away with the
requirement on the basis that they
felt it was a needed . skill when
working with players, particularl y
during practices when a doctor is
not on the scene.
On the recommendation of SupI.
Buckley, th e board approved rc·
establishing the study hall monitor
at Meigs Junor Hi gh School. It had
been abolished last spring on rcc·
ommendation of the principal who
has since left the school.
The superintendent was authorized by the board to fill any vacanl
teaching positions before scho ol
starts.

Hospital news

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Aug. 10 discharges - Sherry
Rose, Delta Phillips, James Loar,
Anna Johnson. Mrs. Gene Clay and
son, Beuy Craig, Maxine Walters,
John Tilley , James Adam s,
rootban meetiDI
· to attend should call the school at Gertrude Marcum, Amanda Moli ·
There will be a meeting of all 992-3058.
han, Philip Heck, Geneva Howell,
Meigs Junior High School students
Rosetta Adkins, Laura Lively, Opal
Melon supper
interested in football at 8 a.m. Fri·
Modem Woodmen of America, Robinson, Gary Spriggs, Edna Nciday in the junior high school audi· Burlingham Camp, is having a gler, Clara Riley and Cay !a Plese.
IOrium. Those interested but unable melon supper Saturday at 7 p.m. at
Aug. 10 births- Mr. and Mrs.
·
Richard
Griffith, daughter, Gallipothe northbound parlc: on Route 33 at
lis.
Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Lockh art,
Darwin. Sandwiches and melons
daughter,
Point Pleasant, W. Ya.
will he provided.
Mr. and Mrs. William Zuspan , son,
Chester.
Curtis reunion
Visitors to the Meigs County
The
86th
annual
Perry
Curtis
Fair next week will have the opportunity to cast their vote for a num· reunion will be Sunday at 12:30
ber of interesting, statewide issues p.m. at the Long Bottom Commu·
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
nity Center. There will be a basket
in a mock election.
446 ·4524 ROUTt 15 WEST
dinner.
Terry
Curtis
and
Marjorie
The political parties will operate
IAIIGAIN MATINE ES SAT. • 5UN.
IAIIGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
booths to conduct the mock elec· Brewer families are hosts.
lion and will provide voter registra·
lion to fairgoers.
Flowers For All Occasions
The questions to be voted on
are:
.
-Should the school year be
lengthened for Ohio's public
schools?
.
-Should the Ohio presidential
106 Butternut Ave.
primary be held earlier than the
Pomeroy
month of May?
-Do you favor a ban on smoking
in all public places?
·Do you favor the l!:!galization of
riverboat gambling in Ohio?
-Should Ohio continue to
require that the ninth grade proficiency test be passed as one of the
FJ:lDAr THE l l{Jf JASOtt GOBS '1'0 lllfLL"
requuements to receive a high
I "Ill 80Yntl!RO 'S MCI! "
school diploma?
Mock elections and voter registration are being conducted at 37
county fairs and voter registration
is being offered at 16 addition.at
county fairs throughout the state&lt;
Results of the mock elections
will be available from the Meigs
County Board of Elections.

--Meigs announcements--

Mock election
slated at fair · ·

'&gt;11 J4CIISOO PIKE

7

POMEROY
.
FLOWER SHOP

....:Q.

Your Kids Are Worth It!
Reioicing Life Christian School
GRADES K THRU SIX

The Birchfield Funeral
Home wlll ·remaln open
as Mr. Birchfield recov·
ers from an accident.
Funerals and all other
aspects of buslneu
are being maintained
on a dally basil.

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL
HOME
RUTLAND, OH.
742-2333

Enrollment Open
for
.
9J-94 School Year
;

~-

-·we offer the lowest tuition In the area.'

~Our Kindergarten Is only $60.00 per month

•Entering our 8th year of operation
For a quality education combined with the
teaching of good moral values,
•

CALL 992·6249
References available upon request.

�•

'
PIQI 4 The o.lly Sentinel

Flach ·defeats
slumping Lendl

\Viola blanks Yankees;
llndians lose 5-4 battle··'
•

\

By Tile AJIOCIIIIed .Jeu
:, . Good pilehing stops ·,'&amp;id ~it·

few balls in the first set, and he
made them," Lendl said. ·
Lend! dominated the second set,
but Flach broke. him to open the
favori~es.
third. He broke his serve qain io
He couldn't comprehend it go up 4-1, and Lend! was on his
when he actually beat him.
way to his siltth first-match loss or
!'It was weird," Flach said, still the year.
puzzled a half-hour after the
"I still think I can play pretty
biggest win of his undistinguished well," Lend! said. "I just have to
career.
get my game together a little bit"
Flach beat the slumping Lend!
It's already Flach's most suc·
7-6 (7 -4), 2-6, 6-2 Tuesdar for the . cessful tournament.
most notable moment o a rain·
"I kind of feel like just getlin~
shonened second day at the ATP into the main draw was a bonus,'
Championship. Several afternoon he said. "My attitude going in was
matches and the. evening matches to be relaxed and have fun and see
were rescht.d~ for today.
what happens. It's been good for
Lendl, 33, was one of three me."
seeds knocked out Tuesday:
A changed attitude has helped
Eleventh-seeded Todd Martin lost Agassi, of Las Vegas, Nev. He fell
to unseeded Andre Agassi in three out of the Top 20 for silt weeks
sets, and 91h seed Goran lvanisevic while recuperating from wrist len·
quit in the second set qainst Luiz dinitis, and went into his firstMattar because of a sore forearm.
round maleh Tuesday unseeded -in
Flach, 23, of St Louis,_ was the a tournament for the first time in
nrst and the most unlikely player to sill years.
reach the $1.65 million tournaHe teased the lines with sensa·
• ment's third round. Flach, ranked tiona) passing shots to OvertOIJie 23
· 2271h in the world, had to win three aces by Martin, winning 6;3, 6-7
qualifying malehes last week just (6·2), 6·3. Martin, of Lansing,
: to get into lhe pre-tournament chat· Mich., had beaten him twice this
Ienger series, which he also"won to year. But this was a different Agas· .
earn a place in lhe 56-mao draw.
si - much moie determined.
Just making lhe tournament was
"He's not playing to the crowd
an unqualified success for Flach, . as much as he used to:• Manin
, whose older brother, Ken, is a said. "He's not playing a lot of
Grand Slam doubles champion. loose points - taking a swing at
Afler a week of daily malehes, he balls he shouldn't. He's playing
didn't know much longer he could very disciplined tennis."
, hold up.
·
Agassi said it's not a coinci·
"I was drained," he said.
denee.
And more than a little in awe
"Tennis really hasn't been a top
when he showed up Tuesday to priority for me," he ~ said . "I see
. play lhe nflh·seeded Lend!, one of those priorities shifting. I want to
the players he admired as a boy. have a few unbelievable yeais.''
He'd never been on the same court
wilh him.
Lend! snapped him out of it by • breaking his serve to open the BASEBALL
' match. Flach figured his remarkCHICAGO (AP) - The Chicaable week was coming to a close.
go While Solt ttaded Bobby Thig, "When I got broke in lhat fii'St pen to lhe Philadelphia Phillies for
' game, I was afraid of gelling blown pileher Jose DeLeon.
offlhe court." he said, "Butlhen,l
. Thigpen, 30, has been ineffec, broke him back."
., tive and lost his closer job since he
' Emboldened, he relued and set the major-league record for
starting ~ng for broke. Lend), saves with 57 in 1990. This season,
' who has
n erratic this year, was he is 0-0 wilh one save and a 5.71
lalten aback.
ERA. DeLeon, 32, is 3-0 with a
"He took some chances on a 3 .26ERAin24~tames.•

I

110
YEAR

,\NNIVEttSA lt\'
............................

1883-1993
......................... ,..

~~=

Raiders-fine Long $100,000
following 25.-day holdout

Sports briefs-

.

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Golfer wins award
Aaron Vanln":'agen of Middleport placed second in the Jim
Wtlhams Memonal Golf Tournament in lhe eleven and twelve·
year-old class at the Friendly Meadows Golf Course near Cincinnati. Aaron shot a score of 44 for nine holes of golf. The tournament was sponsored by the Friendly Meadows Golf Club.

SALE! SALE! SALE!
TIMEX·WATCHES
.
•

Scoreboard
AtAllla..a

ByTIII~alodP,_

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SL Louil -

AH~EDT

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5l !5
41 69
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,..edultd

'

But that's iri the fup,!re. Most of
·' ibe pre-toutnament talk has been
~ boui the past: particularly about
· hat moment seven seasons ago
hen a shot from ,a deep bunker on .
' he 18th hole found tile cup and;
nt Twar leaping toward the s1ty
exuluwon ..
"I get asked about it quite .a
bit," Tway said. '.'It's the most
. eltciting thing that's ever happened
to me "'lfwiae. Obviotuly,I have a
Uttle bit bellllr lime liQciq about It
dian Greg would... . •
nat shot not only turned an
apparent Norman vlct,ory into
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A.Special -Edition ln.
The Daily Sentin~l
Wednesday, September 1, 1993 ,

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Jackson testifies
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Norman wants to
forget 1986 shot

:--Sports briefs-......
The 1993 Meigs County Golf Course Club-Champioilonship was
held Sabltday and Sunday, August 7th and 8th at the Meigs County
Golf Club near Pomeroy.
Jay Harris, Jim O'~rie~, Bob Hysell, George Nesselroad, Becky
Anderson, and Sean 0 Bnen were among the winners.
. The 36-Hol~ event saw two perfect days for the golf outing.
Dmnner and pnzes were awarded Sunday afler thj: final 18 holes
were played. The run-down for the tournament follows: (Player
pl~ce, score) Championship Flight, Jay Harris, first, 149; Paui
Michael, second, 152; Gene Thompson, third, 154; First Flight, Jim
O'Brien, f1tst, 165; Larry Whobrey, second, 169; Doo FilCh, third,
170: Second Fl!ght, Bob Hysell and George Nesselroad, tie·fii'St,
178; Dan Moms, second, 184; Women's Championship Becky
Anderson, first, 170; Debbie Sayre, second, 189; Studeni Flight
Sean O' Brien, fii'St, 179; Jared Warner, second 186· and Matt Brad:
ford,lhird, 187.
'
'

•
their own against Seott Kamieniec· shutout of the season. The only hits
ki (7-4).
Belcher (1·1) allowed were singles _
• Illig.
1
Bo$1011 scored a run in each or by Brent Gales, one in the fourth,
• It's been a saying in baseball . the first two jnnings, and Mo the other in the ninth. The While
~ ever since they decided to place the Vaughn made it 3·0 in the sixth
SOlt g?l ~ J~y 30 in a trade with
•' bases 90 feet apen. and it was true wilh his 19th homCr. One outlaler, the CUICmnall Reds and this was
Scott Cooper walked and John his ftrSt appearance at CQmiskey
. :; again Tuesday night
· The Boston Red Solt, lhe learn Valentin followed with his siltth Park. Ellis Burks drove Ill three
runs for the While Solt, two with a
:· with the AL's best ERA, beat the homer.
New Yorlc Yankees, the team with
·The win ·was · Boston's lith . double in t1ie sixth.
Brewen 5, IDdlaaa 4, 10 lnalnp
, lhe leag!le 's best batting average. straight a Fen~ Park.
·
Pi.nc~ ·hitter Dick.ie Thon sin·
FfBDk Vtola and J~ H~ com- . "This club has a good feeling
gled
over a drawn•in outfield with
• b~ned on a four· huter m the 5·0 about U:,Jlace," manager Buleh
the bases loaded in the lOth inning
VICtory,
·
' Hobson
'
.
.; Boston lowered its ERA to 3.43,
New York doesn't seem to like as the Brewers raUied for their lhird
:. while the Yankees were shut out the road: The Yankees are 8-17 in . straight win. The Indians, 0-6 in
· f~ the tb!td time this season, drop- their last 2,5 road games and extra-inning games, took the lead
, pmg theu average from .284 to Kamienieki dropped tb&gt;I-4 away in the top of the inning on Albert
Belle's second homer of tilt-game
• .282.
.from Yankec Sladium.
·
and
31st of the season. Milwaukee
, " I'm sure t~e c~nc~rns I had Tlgen 15, Orlolell
.
tied
it 4-4 when caleher Sandy Ala~· about (Boston s pttchmg), they
Detroit ·went to the long ball to
mar
dropped a throW to the plale
-; have about us as an offensive end Baltimore's eight-game win·
from
first baseman Carlos Mar' club; ' New York manager Buck ning streak. Chad Kreuter Dan
tinez.
. ShoWaller said. "Pill:hing usually Gladden Alan Trammell and Rob
works out in favor in those situa· Deer all borDered and John Dohertv Ran1en 6, An&amp;els 3
Nolan Ryan struggled iq 99: tions." ,
. (10-7) earned his fi!St victory since
. It hadn t been that way all sea· July 18 allowing five hits over degree heat but still earned the
Indians catcher ga!"e . 4·4 during Tuesday night's contest in
:son for Viola (8-8), who was 0-6 in ei~Jcrew;ings. Detroit led S-0 when 323rd victory·of his career. 'Ryan
Sandy
Alomar
Jr.
(15)
loses
ball
as Milwaukee's
Milwaukee~ Clev,land lost, 5·4. (AP)
·
·
; ~l!Y and !u!le-. He allowed three G
n hit his IICCOIId grand slam (4-3) allowed three runs on five
Pat
Listach
scores
in
the
lOth
lnninR
to
tie
tbe
·. htts over Silt mnmgs as the Red Solt of the season in the fourth Ben hits and struck out just three in silt
~ moved in'? sole JlllSS(SSion or sec· McDonald (9-10) lasled only '3 2·3 _ innings. He got all the' suppon he
• ond.place m the AL East, one game innings in dropping to 1-7 on the needed from Julio Franco's firstinning grand slam off. rookie Phil
~nd To~to. Not bad for a learn road this season.
Leftwich (0-3). Tom Henke got lhe
1wh1ch was m fifth place, 13 games Blue Jays 6, Twins 3
last
nve outs for his 25th save.
lou~,on June 21.
.
. Toronto had one big· inning- a
Royals
4, Marinen 1
1 You look ·forward to commg . five -run fifth - to back Dave
Tom
Gordon won for the sixth
110 the ba.llpark," Viola s~id. Stewart (7-6), who allowed five
time
in
eight
decisions, striking out
:"Everythmg means so!D~thmg. hits over eight innings. Joe Carler,
By FRANKELTMAN
today, Jones said, the Dolphins' of his recovery schedule, hopes to
a
season·hi~h
eight. Gordon (7·3)
·Last year we were out of lim Ju~. mired in a 5-for-46 slump, had a
Associated Press Writer
offer of $650,000 for one year will be ~eady fo~ the. season-opener
,You needed to push yourself. ThiS two-run double before John allowed five hits over seven
Howie Long's holdout with the be substantially reduced. ·
agrunst Washmgton.
:year, you don't need any pushing." Olerud Paul Molitor and Ed innings and lhe only run was Ken Los Angeles Raiders cost him
Humphrey, who was the learn's Oilers
In other g~es Tu~y night it Sprague' each drove in a run. Scott Griffey Jr.'s 33rd homer of the sea· $100,000 in ftncs. The Miami Dol· top receiver and second-leading
Houston's contract with rookie
was: Detrm.t 15, Balull!ore 1; Erit:kson (6-14) gave up silt runs son, a club reeord. Mike Macfar- phins say running back Bobby rus~er last season, wants $1.2 mil- offensive tackle Brad Hopkins has
.Toronto 6, ~ll!leSQta 3; Ch1cago 4, and 11 hits over 4 2·3 innings. lane homered for the second con- Humphrey stands to lose a lot of lion.
been approved by the league. A
secutive game for the Royals, who money, too, if he's not in camp
Oakla~d 0, !"'•!waukee 5, Clev~- Olerud had three hits to -raise his
"I don't know that I made any four-year deal was agreed upon
have won 127 consecutive games today. ·
land. 4 m IP mnmgs: T~ltas 6, Calt· average three points to .395.
·
~gress with Bobby," Jones said. two weeks ago, but Hopkins was
when leading after eight innings.
fomta 3; and Kansas C1ty 4, Seattle White Sox 4, Atltleties 0
Long ended a 25-day holdout 'He didn't say at the end of the -not allowed to practice un!.il the
I.
.
. .
Tim Belcher threw a two-hitter Mark Gubicza worked the.last two Tuesday and reporled to the camp convenation what he inlends to do. league approved some incentive
The Red Sox did some huung of for his first AL victory and third innings.for his second save.
afler renegotiating his contract
It was my 5\lllse we were not on lhe clauses in the pact The 6-foot-3,
"I think I set the NFL record same page."
300-pound No. 1 pick reported to
(for fmes)," Long quipped.
·
Jones said unless Humphrey camp Tuesday morning.
Long was due to malce $1.5 mil- sijlns by Monday, Miami •s offer Giants
lion this year, $1.6 million in 1994 wtll be reduced 11gain. "At some
Defensive end Eric Dorsey has a
I
.. ' •
$1.8 miUion in 1995 and $1.98 mil: point he's not going to be useful to degenerative hip condition that is
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) further clouding his status, trainer
Jim Jackson .of the Dallas Maver- l!on in 1996. He wanled to 'renogo- us."
He added that a season-ending Ronnie Barnes said. Dorsey, who
icks said he was not carrying a ~le because of the jump in ~aries
firearm the night four people said th1s offseason with the advent of knee injury to running back Aaron has beCn .s!d~lined since. the ~in·
he waved a gun at them.and shout- liber;sJ!zed free agency. Long said Craver won't affect the team's mng of trammg camp wtth a tmlat·
both Sides made concessions while tough stance . "We left it at : ed back disc, has had the hip probTOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Greg defeat, it also set the tone of near- ed racial slurs.
reworking
the deal.
'Bobby, you'd better get in here.'" lem for the past two seasons but he
Jackson, a former Ohio State
·Norman has heard enough about misses, frustrations and whatRaiders coach Art Shell said
In other training camp news:
has always played through it
.;Bob Tway, enough about the unbe- might·have·beens that dogged his standout, testified Tuesday at his Long
would
still
have
to
pay
the
Cowboys
Ben1als
trial on menacing and we.apons
1Jievable bunker shot of seven years career for six long seasons.
$4,000 a day' fine mandaled under
Super Bowl MVP quarterback
Progress was reported in talks
Norman put Ill that behind him charges.
,agq. .
.
new
collective
bargaining
Troy
Aikman
worked
out
in
pads
[he
with
fii'St·round draft choice John
· The four-woman, four-man jury
• "I'm tired of talldng about it. It lastlllQIIth, howe~. when he coma~ement
..
"
That
has
to
happen,
for
lhe
fii'St
time
since
undergoing
Copeland
. "We spoke several
·was seven years ago," he said piled a near-flawless 64 - one of is eltpecled. II! begin .deliberations
we
can
'I
let
that
go
by."
Shell
said.
surgery
for
a
hemialed
disc
on
June
and
made some significant
times
Tuesday at Inverness Golf Oub as the grealest finishing rounds in the this aflemoon, after hearing closing
Meanwhile,
Dolphins
general
,
19.
"Troy
gave
our
guys
a
spark,"
today,"
a$ent Joel Segal
progress
150 of the world's finest players history ,of m~or-tourruiment golf arguments from tile defense and manager Eddie iones spoke on the coach Jimmy Johnson said. "He
said.
~
·1
was
pessimiStic
before, but
r ,:began ~ving for the J'OA Nation· - in his BtiUs~ Open victory at prosecution.
te!epfione
with
Humphrey
for
20
was
sharp,
just
like
he's
been
for
we're
close.
I'm
feeling
pretty
Royal St. George's.
1al Champ1onsh1p.
mmutes
Tuesday
and
urged
him
to
the
last
week
or
two
of
throwing
Coaches
eltpect
Copeland,
good.''
· The four accused Jackson of
i The tournament begins .Thurs- · With that corner turned, the
Contillued oo paae 7
enormously
talented
Australian,
pointing
a *un at them and ·shout· repon. If Humphrey fails to show without pads." Aikman, far ahead
iday, and until then Norman will be
.
now
38,
appears
to
be
,ready·
to
ing
racial
slurs
as
they
were
driving
[foreed to relive.- time after time,
'in inlerview after inlerview - Bob reach - at last -lhe level he was down a Columbus street Dec. 30.
Jackson and his accusers all are
·Tway's 72nd hole birdie from a approaching when Tway's shot
sent
him
reeling.
black.
;bunker that snatched the 1986 PGA
"Win two majors in a year? Of
Jackson, 22, is charged with one
title from Greg's grasp;
course
it.
can
be
done.
No
qustion
.
cqunt
of aggravaled menacing, one
' "Seven years is a long time,"
about
it
W!ly·
not?
If
you're
playcount
of carrying a .concealed
.;Norman sa1d, his face cfosing in
ing
well,
putting
well,
have
·the'
weapon
in a motor vehicle and
', annoyance ai1d e~tion. "I put
confi~,.
why
not?"
he
asked.
thiee
counts
of disOrderly conduct.
·it behind me ·a long time ago. It's
And Norman, who has finished · One count of disorderly conduct
hisiory. jt's ~one.
·
' "But that s aD you guys want to fourth or beuer in eight of his last was dropped Tuesday.
If .convicted, Jackson could be ·
talk about lt'·s time to move on; 11 starts, is playin~ well, putting
time to fmd something else to talk well and ob.viously IS full of c0nfi· senlenced to 11 months in jail and
dence.
··
· . fmed $7,250:
·
.
about"
.
He's right. Qn the eve of the
'
:PGA's dialiiQnd anniversary tournament, there's plenty to talk
·
'about.
There's Norman's magnificent,
.record-setting triumph in the
British Open last month. There's
; the brilliant, best-in-the-world run
of Nick Price leading into the
,,defense of his title. ill the last of the
K
;year's Big Fo.ur events. There's the
.ever present threat of Nick Faldo,
',the tall Englishman whose world
No. I ranking is under challenge by
Norman and Price.
, There's also the course, softened
•and eased by sleady rains Tuesday.
CAN
"It could be target g~lf,' ' Nor·
man said.
If it is- even if the putting surRUSSELL STOVER PECAN DELIGHT
faces remain soft and holding " Inverness still holds one distinction
lhat offers a challenge: the targets
will be the smallest in golf.
ONLY
: The course, playing 7.J)24 yards
REG. 794
,with narrow, tree-lined fairways,
has a par of n wilh only tWo parS's and tlu'ee par·3's.
0
, And its greens, wilh a miltture
PER PACK
of poa annua and bentgrass, are
iimong the smallest in golf, averaging only ~.400 square feet. Since
most of them are convex, with the
edges sloping away, they play even
COMPLETE STOCK
smaller. ·
But that's not all bad, Payne
''
Slewart said.
"Small 'reens tend to narrow
your focus,' he said. "Wilh greens
this size, if you hit every Shot into
the middle of the gt\lCII, you're not
'ever going to be too far from the

=•

MASON, Ohio (AP) - Doug
Flach couJ4n't believe his birthday
present: a chanc:e to play Ivan
Lendl, one of his boyhood

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8 The Dally Sentinel

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Giants roll on with 2-1 win ·over Reds

••
•
~

.."
t•

By MICHAEL FLAM
Alsoclated Press Writer
Bill Swift and Jose Rijo combined Tuesday afternoon to pro·
duce one hour and 59 minutes of
the best pitching in the-National
League.
Looking at the statistics entering
the game - Swift was ranked sec·
ond in the NL in wins and third in
ERA; Rijo was founh in ERA and
· fllllt in strikeouts - it seemed nei·
ther pitcher would allow many
runs.
The projection held true as San
l'QDcisco eked out a 2·1 victory.
Swift (17-5) held the Reds to
two hits ani! one walk and struck
out six to tie teammate John Burkett for the National League lead in
victories.
"As far as I'm concerned the
best two pitehe111 in baseball went
at it today," Reds manager Davey

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CONCENTRATION • Cincinnati's Kevin Mitchell concentrates on the task at baod bdore the game against the San Francis;, co Giants Tuesday at Candlestick Park. The Reds lost, 2-1 (AP)

'

: Salary cap key issue
~ at -owne-rs meetzng
I

e

'

-•

By The ASSOI:iate Press
KOHLER, Wis. (AP) - A
glance at tile key topics and pro·
posals to be! discussed at the major• lea~ue owners meeting , which
begms today and could last through
Friday.
· Participants: The 28 majorleague owners, their representauves
and lawyers.
Key Issue: Richard Ravitch,
president of management's Player
Relations Commiuee, will put a
revenue-sharing plan on the table
· •,: that will be tied to a salary cap,
which the Major League Baseball
Playe111 Association is unlikely to
agree to without a wort stoppage at
: some point. Owners want the cap
on salaries in exchange for desig. nating a percentage of defined
: gross revenue for playe111. It would
- copy the NBA plan, which desig: nates 53 percent of defined gross
: revenue for the players.
The higher the salary cap, the
· higher a percentage of local rev·
· enue will be needed.
•
Process: Approval requires 21
. of the 28 clubs voting for the pro; posal. Not even that is a simple
; matt,er, however. Those believed
• opposed to revenue sharing are the
: Yankees, the New York Mets, Los
: Angeles Dodgers, Toronto Blue
Jays, Atlanta Braves and Chicago
: Cubs. Even if the plan passes •.
.• teams voting against it m!ght sue to
, stop it
!
Impact: Unclear. Owners voted
; last Dec. 9 to reopen provisions of
· the collective bargaining agreement
; relating to free agency, salary arbi·
· tration and the minimum salary of
: $109,000. If bargaining reaches an
' impasse after Jan . I, they may
. impose new work rules, which
~ almost certainly would trigger a
• strike. There haven't been any
' face-to-face negotiations since Jan.
25.
,.

Problems: Donald Fehr, execu·
tive director of the Major League
Baseball Players Association,
talked last month of a possible
walkout by the union in September,
two months before owners receive
about $250 million of postseason
television income from CBS. However, by striking, the players would
allow owners to impose new
workrules before Dec. 31, jeOpar·
dizing free agency this fall.
Who Gets .What Now: At the
top, the Yankees have a $486 mil·
lion, 12-year contract with the
Madison Square Garden Network.
At the bottom, the Minnesota
Twins generate about $4 million a
year in local broadcast income and
the San Diego Padres say they net
about $6 million a year.
Owners already committed
about $530 million to approximate·
ly 200 players for next year, so a
salary cap, if agreed to, would have
to be phased in gradually.
Proposals; Fehr says a potential
September .slrike could be averted
if owners state in writing lhey will
not conduct a lockout of spring
training in 1994 and agree not to
change the current system of free
agency and salary arbitration
through March, the 1993-94 signing period.
. Speaking:. "I don't know what
will come out of their meeting.
We've got a lot of questions with
no answers. They've talked about a
partnership with the players for a
long time. We' ve yet to have any.
We've, asked to be il)volved and
been refused any opportunity to
participate. All we can Say is we're
hopeful ther don't underestimate
the players.' -Donald Fehr.

Modell still
expects good
season
CLEVELAND (AP) - Even
after witnessing his Cleveland
Browns lose to the Washington
• Redskins 41 -12 in a preseason
game, the team's longtime owner- ·
president still predicts a successful
season is in the works.
Art Modell has said repeatedly
that this is the best Browns team
since the 1986 and 1987 teams that
reached the AFC Championship
Game. His only champton team
was in 1964.
So far in the three seasons of the
. 1990s, the Browns are 16-32, and
·· coach Bill. Belichick, beginning his
' third season in char~e of the team,
is still looking for hiS ftrst winning
record.
"I'm not discouraged at aU, not
even by the lopsided score," Mod·
• ell said Tuesday, after the Monday
~ night loss in Washingwn. "We've
• just got to make some adjustments
; and some corrections and maybe
shift some people. But I'm absolutely positive wl)'re going to be all
l right.'
:
Modell said he was encoum~ed
by what he saw from the offens1ve
: line, which was minus veteran cen• ter Jay Hilgenberg.
. ·
"It was their farst time together ·
:
; and they'll talce some time to jell,"
, he said. "I thought Steve 'Everitt
; made a fine debut and I liked the
: job (tight tackle) Ed King did on'
; Charles Mann."
'
Modell said the team is not
I overly concerned about the comer·
: back position, despite Washing·
f ton's 272 passing yards.
,
"It was a typical preseason
: game," Modell said. "There was
· good and bad and I assure you we
wiU imprQ~c in short order."

Continued from page 5
a defensive end from Alabama, to
move into the Bengals' starting
lineup.
Meanwhile, negotiations with
running back Harold Green, a Pro
Bowl player la_st year, and wide
receiver Reggie Rembert were
reported to have slalled.
Buccaneers
Running back Reggie Cobb,
sidelined for two weeks with ·a
hamstring pull , could return to
practice today and may play
against the Atlanta Falcons this,
weekend. Cobb rushed for 1,171
yards last season.
Steelets
Linebacker Levon Kirkland was
cleared to reslillle practicing after
X-rays laken on his left wrist were
negative. Kirkland has moved past
David Little into a starting spot at
inside linebacker. He broke the
wrist last year and reinjured it
Monday in practice.
Broncos
Coach Wade PhiUips hasn't set·
tied on his place-kicking rotation.
Brad Daluiso and rookie Jason
Elam handled the duties last week,
with incumbent David Treadwell
silting out. The Broncos expect to
trade at least one of the trio. "I
think it's &lt;:ertainly a possibility,"
Phillips said. "We've jlOt three
guys who can kick in thts league.
Some teams don't have one."

Clippers lose 6-3
FORT MILL, S.C. (AP)- Four
home Tuns. including a two-run
shot from Jeff Schaefer, propelled
Charlotte to a 6-3 victory Tuesday
over the Columbus Clippers in
International League action.
The Knight's first home run
came in the third, when Jeff
Kunkel's solo blast broke a solo
tie. Also with a homer Tuesday
were Sam Hom and Luis Lopez.
The Clippers were not without
their own power, with Russ Davis
and Hensley Meulens hitting back·
to-back home runs ill the sixth
inning.
Scott Scudder (6·5) picked up
the win for Charlotte. Sterltng
Hitchcock (2·4) took the loss for
Columbus.

Johnson said.·
Rijo (I 0·6) struck out five to
increase his league-leading total to 163. And while he allowed only six
hits and two runs in seven innmgs,
it was his mental mistake that con·
tributed to the loss.
With one out in the sixth inning,
Robby Thompson hit a line drive to
righJ field, where Reggie Sanders
played it off the wall. Jeff Branson's relay throw to third was wide
for an error, and with no one backing up Chris Sabo, Thompson
scored easily.
·
Thompson hit his 1Oth homer in
the fourth inning and Cincinnati's
Kevin Mitchell hit his 17th in the
seventh.
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Florida 3, Chicago 2 in 15 innings;
Philadelphia 5, Montreal 2; St.
Louis 4, Pittsburgh 2; Atlanta 3,
New York 2; San Diego 7, HOI!Ston
2; and Colorado 4, Los Angeles 2.
Marlins 3, Cubs 1
Bob Natal tripled home Walt
Weiss in the 15th inning and five
Florida relievers allowed one hit
over the last eight innings in
Miami.
.
Weiss walked with two outs in
the ISth, his third walk in extra
innings. Natal followed with his
first triple of the year down the
right-field line off Shawn Boskie
(3-3). Luis Aquino (6-6) pitched
two perfect innings.
Phillies 5, Expos l

Curi Schill in' (10-6) pitched a
five-hitter in hts sixth complete
game of the season and Dave
Hollins drove in three runs with
two doubles for host Philadelphia.
The PhiUieSlnapped a 1·1 tie in
the third with three runs on three
hits and an error. Chris Nabholz (78) allowed four runs in four
innings.
Cardinali 4, Pirates l . ~
Brian Jordan and Mart Whiten
homered on coilsecutive pitches off
Joel Johnston (0·2) immediately
after a 31-minute rain delay in the
ninth inning as visiting St. Louis
won despite hitting into a triple
play.
Pittsburgh lost for the seventh
time in its last eight home games.
The triP.Ie play came after
Bernard G11key and Ozzie Smitlt
singled to start the Cardinals'
ei~hth. Gre~g Jefferies followed
With a soft liner that shottstop Jay
Bell caught in shon left field. He
flipped the ball to second baseman
Carlos Garcia to double Gilkey off
second, and Garcia threw to first
baseman Kevin Young to easily
beat a rei!Qiing Smith.
Rene Arocha ( 10-3) won his
fourth straight.
Braves 3, Mets 2
·
Fred McGriff scored the winning run on Jeff McKnight's twoout error in the ei~hth inning as
visiting Atlanta rallied against Eric
Hillman (1-6).

CHESTER RUNNER-UP • Rutland played
host to the 1993 boys' Minor .Leaaue Baseball
Tournament, wbicb included 15 teaiDI overall.
Tbe Cbester Pirates ddeated· five or sill oppo·
nents in the tournament, loliD&amp; onl7 Cbe c:baJDplonship game. The community or Chester Is very
proud or its team and the line group of ball players that make up the team. Pictured are front, J.

Hillman had held Atllnta to four
hits throu&amp;h the finl se'fa'l innlilji.
Steve Bedrosian (2·2) earned
the win in relief.
Padres 7, Aslros 2
Andy Ashby (1-6) allowed two
runs in eight mnings for his fi rst
victory in almost 16 months and
Phil Plantier hit his eighth home
run in 12 games for host San '
Diego.
Ashby set a career high with
nine strikeouts in his third start
since being acquired July 27 from
the Colorado Rockies.
Astros starter Doug Drabek (7·
14) broke a tie with the New York
Mets • Anthony Young for the most
losses in the National League. He
has gone 0-6 in his last seven starts
and is still seeking his lOOth NL
vi~.

. Rock1es 4, Dodgers 1
Darryl Boston hit a two-run
homer in the ftrst ituaing_and rOokie
Robeno Mejia rebounded from a
five-strikeout night by goin!! 4-for4 as visiting Colorado won 1ts third
straighL
Kent Bottenfield (4-'8) earned
his ftrst complete g!lffiC in 20 m~r
league starts. It was only the seventh complete game all season by
the Rockies.
Pedro Astacio(8·7) was charged
with four runs on seven hits, struck
out three and walked three. The
loss was his third in four decisions
and the Dodgers' founh straight.

r, Tim Hill, VInson Martin, William Woods,
Brandon Werry, Kass Lodwick, Jonathoa
Owen, Charlie Youna, Ryan Stobart. Second
row- Eric Batey, Jasoa Kimes, Travis Batey,
Adam Chevalier, Brent Buc:Jde,., J(llllllua Eaale,
Cody Faulk, Cacy Faulk. Third row-Rick S'tobart, Ed Young, Jen Hill, Chuck Faulk, aad
Raymond Werry.

Get ready. ••

ADOLPH'S
DAI VALLEY
tllfs Wee•'• Speefal:

for 17 days of•••

SANDWICH

$1.69
WITH FRIES..... $2.39
MON.-SUN.10:00 AM·10:00 PM •

992·2556

absolutely
everything to do!

PRE•SCHOOL

·'

It's live top-name entertainment, thrilling rides,
blue ribbon competitions, fabulous food, and non-stop fun!
This summer, whatever you do, don't miss the Ohio State Fair.
It's everything for everyone! Call1·10t·IUCIIYI for State Fair information.

326 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH.
MARY CAROLYN WILEY,.DIRECTOR

Now accepting registration for
.chlldre• ages 3, 4 and 5 .
Aug. 6-22, 1993

FOR MORE INFORMATION'
CALL
(304) 882·2318 or 992·5779
j

17 days of never-ending fun

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P-aa 8 ~ Dally Sentinel

VVedneaday,Aug~at11 , 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NE,

UY

AVE ON

VV8dnesda~August11,1993

I

ET

NE REE

PONS

$5T0$70
OFF

r.-------------------,--------------------r-•-----------------,

1 Foodland

Coupon #198

1
1

Valid 8/8- 81141931 Foodland Special Coupon #135

- 1 Dozen
Foodland Grade A

Valid 818- 8/14193 Foodland Special Coupon #102

4 Varieties - 16 Oz.
Oscar Mayer • Meat

1

:

¥alid 818- 8114193

Kraft
32 Oz. Jar

!

Large Eggs: ·

·W ieners .

Grape JeUy

I

BUY ONE, GET ONE :

BUY ONE, GET ONE

BUY ONE, GET ONE

i

FREE'.

I

.FREE

Wlllt COUPON &amp;$10 011 MORE ADOIT10HAL PURCHASE I

fREE

WITH COUPON

WITH COUPON

-------~----------~---------------------~----~------~----------1
1~-Foodland Special
Coupon #105 Valid 8/8- 8/14193 1 Foodland Special Coupon 11136 Valid 8/8- 8/141931 Foodland Special Coupon #101
Valid 818- 81 14193
I
·
Somerdale
:
Dinner Bell • 16 Oz. :
. Foodland
I·
5 Lb. Crinkle Cut
1
No Sugar • Lower Salt 1
48 Oz. Bowl • Spread

french fries :

L

Bacon

I

I

BUY ONE, GET ONE :

!"-~

ONE, GET ONE

~ FREE .:-------~
.

WITH COUPON

I

The Dally SEintlnei-Page-8

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

WITH COUPON

I

FREE

.

$5 T0$1
OFF

REGULAR PRICES

•
•
•

EVERY FREEZER
EVERY COMPAC I
REFRIGERATOR
EVERY DEHUMIDIFIER

•

EVERY 4-HEA.O VCR

•

EVERY CAMCORDER

•

EVERY STEREO

REGULAR PRICES

:;g::g;;=.:===·

WITH COUPON

Double Power

GET ONE

BUY ONE, GEt ONE

I&lt;ELLOGG~ESCOMP•NYwlll-ml.,

· :
'

Ice Cream

I
Millblt upon Jtquttt_Cnfl vaiiHI
couponlniCCOlda'lelwllhourramptiOn
I
.
IIIOO&lt;. Voi4 ......_ , ._..... _
Oo ooOo&lt;lod lOy""· MOl cou- lo: K£LLOGG'SIN·.O. CMS
I DEPT. 31999, ONE FAWCETT DR., DEL RIO , TX 78840.
I C81WIIogg Coml)ln~ C1!193 KaiJogo ~mfllny
L &lt;!_~ ~t-t.!?!".!!~- ~!~ .!.

FREE

.

~\

.•' ;

BONE·IN

PORK
CHOPS

ROUND
STEAK

LB •.

EVERY TRASH
COMPACIOR
EVERY TELEVISION

•

(EXCEPT PROSCAN AND SONY XBRI

/

s 39

60Z. BAG

(

Skim•Buttermlk
•2o/o Milk \12GAL

pl'f 'liOflth • &lt;'ll

ScarsChargc Pll,S

Was 1399.99. While quanlltles lost

Bagger sold separately, 229.99

an.

Shampoo

END-OF-SEASON SALE! 4.0-HP,
20-IN. SIDE-DISCHARGE MOWER

Trac tors require some assembly.
•See below lo r lmportonl c redit details

.

169.99

'•

END-OF-SEASON SALE! 4.0-HP, 22-IN.
REAR BAG POVVER-PROPELLED MOWER

.

269.99 :~~;~U~ntltles

WOI 199.99
While quonlltleslost

• Front wheel drive
• Rolled vacuum deck

· ·M L/Ich, discharge or catch
with optional catcher

Hamburger
Buns

ISOZ.

37228

• 6-speed tronsaxle

12 PACK FOODLAND

·ASST.

DELUXE CLUB

$22

SEALTEST HOMOGENIZED

2ooz.
Split Top LOAF
Wheat Bread

KAHN'S

END-OF-SEASON
SALE! SAVE s350!
12.5-HP, 42-IN.
LAWN TRACTOR

O'Bo

.· , HEINER'S OLD FASHION

V• 05

LB.

KEEBLER

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

3.0·HP
GAS EDGER

DELl
BOLOGNA
.
.

•

Chiq_uita
Bananas .

ASSORTED

Seven-Up

.

EVERYROOM
AIR CONDITIONER

LBS.

DIET OR REG.

'

•

GOLDEN RIPE

LB.

8AG

•

----------------L----------------~--~

Boneless

20.LB. ·

EVERY DISHWASHER
EVERY UPRIGHT AND
CANISTER VACUUM
EVERY MICROWAVE
•

WITH COUPON

. · TYSON &amp; HOLLY FARMS

88··

•
•
•

•

.WITH COUPON

EvERY WASHER
EVERY DRYER
EVERY REFRIGERATOR

(EXCLUDES BOSE SPEAKERS!

I~--------~------~-~----~--------~------------~----------------------~
MANUFACfURER S COUPON " Val1d 8/8 · 8114193 1 Foodland Special Coupon #199 Valid 8/8- 8/14193 Foodland Special Coupon #104 Valid 818 - 8114193
I
BUY ONE. GET ONE FREE
Borden • Meadow Gold
2 Varieties · 32 Oz. Liquid
:
(UptoS3.45YIIIIt)atlhl-.
Half Gallon - Assorted
· Wisk

:

•
•
•

79862

' 249.99

'

109.99

16-IN. ELECTRIC
· BUSHVVACKERHEDGE TRIMMER
.

...1

•

,...,...

32-CC GAS
POWERED BLOVVER

I CRAFTSMAII"I

Rag. 119.99

air output

34.99

Rag. 79.99

•Semi-automatic
line feed

Reg. U .99 .

• 3,000 culling strokes
per minute

.

LB.
,

I

,)

!•

·'

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Wt RIHMiht Rlgh Ito Umlt OU8ntltln • Prtctt. Etrectfv.lhru Stt., ~ 14, 111113 •USDA Food s-.,pa lllld WIC Coupont Acc.opiM • Nlll F1ttp011111M for'l\'pagl'llphlc.l-... Plclc:irttl Errora.

'

·'

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-- ·

--

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•

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15-IN.,
21-CC GAS
VVEEDVVACKERLINE TRIMMER

74.99

•170-MPH/360-CFM

79792

...

tast

\
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Wednesday, August 11, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The·Befid

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Dear .

Beef Market Drops
WE'RE PASSING THE SAVINGS

Chester Daughter of America meet
Chester Council 323, Daughlti'S ·est flag? It realiy does not matter
of America, me.t recently at the because the flag stands tall no mat·
ter what the size." The ceremony
hall. Betty Young served as cOUD·
ended
with everyone saluting as
cilor. The pledges to the Christian ·
members
marched. out.
and American fla,I!S and The Lord's
Attending
were Eli~abeth
Prayer were rec1ted. Chapter one
Hayes, Doris Grueser, Erma Cle·
from the book of Psalms was read
and the first stanza of ''The ·Star
land, Mary Holter, Do_ris.Koenig,
Spanglec! Banner" was sung.
H was reported that Dorothy
Ritchie and Zelda Webtz li'C bome
from the')1ospital while Gol\lie
POMEROY • The Meigs CounKracomburger is in the bospilal. .
Esther Smith read a letter from ty Board of Elections will meet
the National Conventi011 Commit· Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. at the board
office.
tee re$ardiJig a trip to Branson, Mo.
September 24-29. The cost is
$427.00 and ~;wjll be,~- ,
. WEDNESDAY
ing from Canton and Columbus. ·
POMEROY • Pomeroy MerA thank you note was read from chants AssoCiation meets Wednes·
Zelda Weber; Erma Cleland day 8:30 a.m., Bank One conferexpressed thanks to those who _ .ence room.
attended the funeral home for Mr.
MIDDLEPORT • The MiddleNewell an4 Manila Dtli'St's grandport
Amateur Gardener's Club will
sons or helped in any way.
meet
7 p.m . Wednesday at the
Past Councilors Club is sched·
uled to meet Wednes(lay at 7:30 home of Mrs. Iva Powell.
p.m. at the hall. The meebng closed
THURSDAY
m regular form.
CHESTER • Free community
Following the meeting, Esther
Smith read "What is a Flag and immunization clinic at Chester Fire
What Does it Mean?'' while flags Department·, Thursday from 9·11
ranging in a variety of sizes were a.m. for ages two months throqgh
carried around the hall. "Would kindergarten. Bring child's immuyou salute lhe largest or the ~maJJ, · nization recool.

BEEF
U.S.D.A. Choice • Family Pacli:

Delicious on The Grill

FRESH

BONELESS • BEEF ·

GRACIE ANNA HALL

Chuc Steak

Ground Chuc

U.S.D.A Choice
Family Pack

U.S.D.A Choice
Family Pack

U.S.D.A Choice
Beef 7·Bone

Semi-Boneless

BoHo111
Round

Chuck

I

·Correction
The fotlowina JIIIIICI were IDiin'

renrionllly omificd from an article
about the Heinct Brown/Genheimer Sponqel family reunion:
Dale DawiOD Clow.er and Lynn
Daw1011, Ow'Je.lon, W. VL

Boneless
Sirloin
Tip Steak

Steak

lb.

U ~S.D.A

· U.S.D.A. Choice
Family Pack

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and A1Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church. Call 992-

5763.
EAST MEIGS • Eastern Local
Community Education Committee
will meet at 7 p:m. Thursday in the
school cafeteria to discuss a new
schedule of classes. The public is
invited to attend.

Boneless
Ribeye

Boneless

To'- Round
Steak

Steak

Beef Chuck Arm Steak.............
US.D.A Choice

Beef Flank Steaks••••••••••••••• ~...

199
lb.

319
lb.

229
BoJI&amp;Iess Beef Chuck Arm Steaks
· lb.•
·

and Harold Lee Henderson , all of
Alfred; Eloise and Russell Archer,
Guysville; Lisa Ritchie, Long Bot·
tom; and David Games, Chester. ·.
Ruth arid Lloyd Brooks gave the
wedding rehearsal dinner at their
home in· Alfred for their son,
Robert Brooks, and his bride-to-be,
Katrina Specht of WeUston. Members of the bride' s family present
were her parents, sister and brother,
Linda and William Specht, Rick
and Carrie, Wellston; her grand·
mothers, Delores Gorman, Yank·
ton, S.D.; and Virginia Specht.
Wellston; her uncles and families,
Chuck and Cheri Gordian , Jolln,
Jeff, and Allison, Plattsmouth ,
Neb.; Dan Gorman , Egan, Minn.;
Mike and Cynthia Gorman, Eric
and Phillip; Yank10o, S.D.; aunrs
and families, Mary and Cliff Jor·
genson, Pierre, S.D.; Sharon Marti·

nee, Sioux Falls, S.D.; Peg and Dan
Scherschligt, Stacey and Mark,
Topeka, Kan .; Dianne and Terry
Walters, Newtown, N.D.; Kathy
Essman, Christina and Bethany,
Wellston; cousin , Bonni e Miller,
Vermillion, S.D..
Members of the groom 's family
present were his grandmother, Mil·
dred Brooks, Reedsville; sister,
Debbie Brooks, Alfred; brother and
family, Kevin and Tonya Brooks;
Hallie, Aaron, and · Heathe r,.
Chester; aunt, Janet Shepard, Reno.
Friends present were David House,
Rio Grande; Susan House, Colum·
bus; David Games, Chester; Jim
and Milley Hou se, Mechanics
Town; Tim and Michelle Showal ter; Tuppers Plains; Steve Leach,
Wellston.

~

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

ow
'IN THE
Beginning Sunday, ·
August 15th

'19

THIS SPACE
$8.00

. THIS SPACE
$16.00

lb.

•

.I 39
Beef Back Rills•.••••••••••••••••••••••

THIS SPACE
$12.00

Great On The Grill

. lb.

2''
Boneless Eye of Round Steak....
.
2''...
Beef Cube Steaks.....................
U.S.D.A Choice

111:

.

3''•...

OR

FOR MORE INFORMATION

fresh

.us.D .A Choite
.
lave 504 lb. 119
Ground llctllllcl......................... ·~· Beef Chuck Eye $teak ••••••·•••••••••

CALL 446·2342

992·2156

.

Fresh

Call Now For Sunday, "August .15th

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----==

AVAILABLE

Whole
Beef·
Brisket

$lib.

·

Charlotte and Warren VanMeter
were caiJed to Nebraska last week
due to the death of Charlotte's .
mother, Mildred Janesosofsky.
Osie Mae and Clili11&gt; Follrod,
kathy and Dave Watson, Stacey
and Allen, recently v~ationed at
Hilton Head, S.C .. Lisa. Ritchie,
Susan and Jason Pullins recently
vacationed at Virginia Beach, Va ..
Recent guests of Joe and Martha
Poole were Becky and Pedro Bar·
· rus of Miami, Fla..
Friends attending the wedding
of Robert Brooks, Alfred and Kat·
rina Specht, Wellston at Saint Peter
and Paul church in Wellston
included Lloyd and Doris
Dillinger, Pratts Fork; Sarah Cald·
well, Nina Robinson, Leann Fick,
Marilyn Robillson, Charlotte Van·
Meter, Nellie Parker, Melvin
Tracy, Gertrude R?binson, Wilma

U.S.D.A Choice

Choice Beef

SAVE

US.D.A Choice

nJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday. Dinner is at 7 p.m.
and meeting at 7:30 p.m.

___,;__--Alfred·neWS-- -

•

lb.

lb.

Boneless
Top Loin
Sirlo1n Steak

U.S.D.A Choice

MIDDLEPORT • Parenl/teach·
er/student orientation for seventh
graders and o~r new students at
Meigs Junior High School, Thurs·
day, 6-9 p.m. Picnic style supper.

9

U.S.D.A Choice

•

U.S.D.A. Choice

Roast
or Steak

SAVE
s lib.

3llts. or IliON

Sale!

lb.

Bulah Maxe~, Marcia Keller, Mae
McPeek, W1lma White, Charlotte
Grant, Betty Yoling, Esther ·Smith,
Jean Welsh, Everett Grant, Laura
Nice, Kathryn Baum, Faye
Kirkhart, Alta Ballard. Ada Bissell,
Sandy White, and Opal Hollon.

,_ Community calendar

Hot

Beef
Ribeye Steak

Robert DeLong and Penny
Gillispie, Long Bottom, announce
the birth of their son. Brady
Andrew DeLong, on June 30 at
Women and Childrcns Hospital in
Charleston, W.Va.
He weighed nine pounds and
was 20 and one-half inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Louise
Arthurs and the late Cecil DeLong,
Portland.
·
Maternal grandparents are
Theodore and Nancy Willford,
Long Bouom, and Robert Gillispie,
New ·Haven, W.Va. Maternal greatgran'dparents are Jim and Mary
King, Long Bottom; Joe D.
Lawrence, Belpre; Jake and Doris
Gillispie, New Haven , W.Va.
Maternal great-great-grandparents
are Doris and Mildred Arnold,
Pomeroy.
'

the musicians and photographer,
ld
·d
perhaps they shou cons1 er a
simpler wedding. It is unfair to cut
comers at the expense of the people
who work the hardest to make the
wedding special.
Wben I work hungry , I get
14!ht-headed and resentful, though I
never let it show. 1bank heavens
for kind caterers who make sure I
eat. Couples should consider
providing a meal for their wedding
professionals as part of the price of
service. Treating us well invariably
results in beUec music and better
pictures. - SI IFF ED IN D.C.
, DEAR D.C.: I've had dozens of
lcucrs from musicians and photog·
who tell me lhey've been
htred by people who spend a
fortune on weddings and cheap out
when it comes to providing a meal
for them. This mystifies me.
I hope this column will ~e lp
ednc•te people to be m&lt;)re cons1derate of those who supply services.
AS-you pointed out. they wiU come
out far better in the long run.
LoMsoml!? Take c/wrge of your
life and turn it aroun4. Writt for
Ann Ltuukrs' new booklet, "How to
Make Fritnds and Stop Being
Lo~ly." Send a se/f-addresst d, long,
businus·size envelope alld a check
or moMy order for $4.}5 (this in·
eludes postage and handling) . ro:
Friends, clo Ann Lar.ders, P.O. Box
Il562, Chicago,/11. 6061/.{)562. (I n

Victory.Baptist holds bible school
ONLY

DeLong birth
announced

Ann
L an ders

"'hen

ON TO YOU!

WE SELL

BRADY DELONG

,_,

had grown children,

ns her eyes .

finm:iahecurily,aloYely homund
ANN LANDERS
caundplentyofmcoey. Tbelelore,
"I993,LosAnael..
abe felt there was not a IlK she could
~:.:.!t~':- 1...
"cbell" his wife out of.
I just fQUDd out that my husband
D);AR OHIO: What I'm ·
to
of 47 yell'$ bas had I mistress for suggest mighl10und crazy, but if
the last 10. He has always been more "Other women· checked with
verbally abusive and domineering. the wife to find out what the
Our love died long qo. For lhe last marriage is really like, IIIey mighi
20 yean, I've begged him to "go get their eyes opelled up. It should
Dnd IOIIIC cute young thing, give be 00 surprise that men who cheat
me a divon:e and let me get oo with also lie.
my life before 1 get too old• He · Some men wbo claim •my wife ·
nevel' made the move.
won't let me go• don't want to be set
Wbenlfoundoutabouthisiffair, free. My question to you is_ why
I called the woman and thanked her. have you put up with his garbage
She wai. astounded that I had been for 20 years?
begging him to leave. They had been
Dear Ann Landers: I was
meeting once a week in a lousy liule ·interested in your'reply to the couple
room, and she was in my bed when wbo thought it Was inappropriate 10
Josh Harris, Michael Sloan, Brandi Hysell,
VBS HELD ~ Pictured L·R, are Michelle·
was out of town. All the while, she (eed the musicians at their wedding.
I
Ward, Trish Roush, Julie Youna, Bob Bar.ker,
Sbannoo Petrie, Steve Vance. The dinosaur was
was
hoping someday my husband · Aj' a ·wedding photographer, 1 am
made during tbe cburcb's vacation bible sebool
Misty Jeffers, Charles Hall, Auaela Hall, J.D.
would
marry11er.
awiiiC that weddings 111e expensive.
and was later presented to the Meigs Co11Uty
Keesee, Doa Barkman, Pat Canon. T«ns also
WeD, when I confronted him, it 1 also know how hard wedding
i'nvolved In the project but not plctur~d w~r~
.Public Library.
turned out that he had no intention professionals work. 1 was appalled
of leaving.me. He told me lhe affair by this couple's insensitivity.
had become a habit - like eating
1 often arrive at the site of the
cereal evecy morning. The woman wedding after breald'IISl and leave
'
is now 53 and has wasted 10 Years lhe reception in the early evening,
· "The Great Dinosaur Hunt: Dig· between digging for the truth and students cratte!l a amosaur by
ofherlife.
bavingbeenonmyfeeteightornine
ging for God's Truth," was the constructing a dinosaur. Each paper mache which was seven foot
Your
answer
to
"The
Other
hours.
Am 1 expected to bring my
theme of this years Vacation Bible evening the r.outh learned ways in ' mlength. The dinosaur was don~School held recently at the Victory . which the b1ble and science con:· ed to the Meigs County Library m Woman" describing what her future own lunch and eat it in the ladies
firm the biblical account of ere· Pomeroy along with a book ~tten would be like in five or seven years room?
Baptist Church in Mil!dleport. .
If the couple can't afford to feed CanaPo. send $5 .05·.)
Guided. by the theme, the teen ation and refute the theory of evo- by Dr. Dwine Gish of the Insutute was a gem. Thank you.- OIDO
lution.
Following
the
studies,
the
for
Creation
Research
tttled
class divided their evenings
·
· · · · ··
Dinosaurs by Design.

s'teven and Carrie Morris
announce the birth of their son,
Justin Ray, on June 24 at Holzer
Hospital, Gallipolis. He weighed
. eight pounds, five ounces and was
21 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris also have a
daughter at home, Rachael Ann,
age eight.
Maternal grandparents are Bill
and Florence Wood of Coolville.
Paternal grandparents are Leo and
I,.inda Morris and great grandmoth·
er Ruth Morris of Rutland.

Danny and Tracy Ellis Hall
announce the birth of their fidt
child, a daughter, Gracie Anna, on
July 2 at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis. She weighed seven ·
pounds, eight ounces and was 21
mches long.
The infant is the fli'St grandchild
for both Bob and Peggy Ellis of
Middleport and Carl and Paula Hall
of Pomeroy. Great grandparents are
Dale Ellis, RuUand, Kathryn Hall,
Ruby Frick, Pomeroy, and Anna
Welch of Middleport.

Landera: Some

defended ber affair by u.nng ber
lo~s wife

announced

announced

A••

IIIOIIlb8
ago, you publislled a 1eUa
from "Tbe Other Woman.• Sbe

liftER
TOTAL
VALUE! ·

Hall birth

Wednesday, August11 , 1993
Page-11

'Other Woman'.

BEftER Quality!
BEftER Service!
BEftER Selection!

Morris birth

•

Jl

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JUSTIN RAY MORRIS

The Daily Sentinel

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The Dally

Ohio

Home
featured at meeting
A home flowef show was a featun: ol a rec:eat meeting of the Rutland Ganlcn Club held at the borne
of Pauline Atkins in conjunction
with the annusl picnic.
. The creed and collect were
given in unison and roll call was
answered by telling their favorite
plant on tour of the Atkins flower
garden.
Clotine Blackwood won the
travelina prize furnished by Stella
Atkins. Neva Nicholson is to furnish the prize for the next meeting.
DQrothy _WOQdlud had the hint for
the meeting· "How To Make Your
Cut Flowers 1 Look Fresher
Longer." It was noted that proper
C&amp;Ie begins the moment the flower

•The Area's Nuniber I
Marketplace

is picked. Pick flowers durin&amp; the
early in the morning, late afteriJoon
or earlr evening 10 lessen the loss
of mo1~ture. At these preferred •
time§, flowers have built up an
ample supply ol food 10 make Iran·
sitiO!IS from gardens 10 base more
successful. Tlie flowers should be
placed direcdy in warer the minute
they are cut.
· ·
'
The open meeting scheduled for
August 30 at Methodist chun:h was
planned. The Meigs County Extension Agent will have the program. ·
Janet Bolin will give OAGC
update.
.,
Following the meeting the
flower show was, judged by Janet
Bolin.

RATES

SOUTHERN CHEER.LEADERS WIN •The
Southern. High cheerleadlng squad attended ·
cheerleacling camp at Wright State University at
Dayton, Ohio ·rrom Juae 18 ·through July 1,
where tbey claimed reserve cballpillllllllp llonors and tbe varsity top prlre; tbt superior per·
rormance trophy. Tbe reserve squad woa the
camp championship for tbelr outstandiDI side·
line cheer, while the varsity won tbe Superior
Performance Trophy for tbelr routine. In acldi·
tioa, both squads won spirit sticks for tllelr

great spirit and enthusiasm. The cheerleaders
won the eligibility to participate in the pre-pme
performance or the 1994 Florida Citrus Bowl in
Orlando, Florida on New Years Day, Jatiuary 1,
1994, The cheerleaders are advised by Sandra .
Baer aad Romaine Frederick. Pictured are,
front, 1-r, Sherri Frederick, Brandy Roush. Sec·
ond row-Chana Mulford; Tassi Cummins,
Camilla Yoacham. Back-Jennifer Lawwreace,
Lisa Wiles, Amy Northup, Kristen Hensler, a.nd
Jessica Chapman.

To place an ad

Parker reunion held

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M,·5P.M.- SAT.S-12
POLICIES

$499

OR

\

•

.

THESAURUS
4

PRONG
. PORTFOLIO

SCHOOL GLUE

10~

4 oz.

8/$~100

JIF

KEEBLER

CREAMY
PEANUT BUTTER

Crackers • Snacks

6'?II.

$

AS$0RTED VARIEnES

4
-~

(Two 4G u.Jo.....:rs-.,)

$100

'

j

3111-Vbttoo
9as..a-..r
245-Rlo Groado
843-Pord•nd
256-Guyoa Dlol. · 247-LolutF.U.
643-Arobia Dlol.
949-laelae
379-Wdnul
742-Ruti•ad
667-Coolrille ·

II- Help lVaalad
12- Situalio• Wanted

4- Gina way
s- Happy Ado
r-. Lootud Fouad
7- Lootud Fouad
a.. Publ;. Sale &amp;

Grooe

576-Apple

. 773-M-n
882-New Haven

895-Lotort
937-BuJTdo

II

j,

qu-

Molbile :Boa.., for Sde
3S- Fanu for Sale
34.-- 'Bu.a1Dflll Buildinp

WaaledtoBuy
Live.toc:k
Hay A Craia

3S...LollllAcnop

Sood ll F ertiliur

3&amp;- RodEolale "~'••lad

I; I \ I \I '
41- Ho- for Real
42- MobUe Ho,... for Real
43-- Far... for Rent

46-- Space for Rent
41- Waatecho Rent
48- Equlp._t for Rent
4P...... For Leon

13-- IDIW'&amp;ace

14- BwiDelia Training
lS- Sehool1 &amp; lndruetion.
10- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

Auction

17- MUcellan&amp;o\11

9- WU.teci'oo Buy

IS.. Waaled To Do

51- Houoeloold G.odo
52- Sporliaf G.odo
~Aaliq ...
54- Mi~. Mercbandi.e

ss- Buildiac Suppli.O

61

USED RAILROAD

•

.

EITU STRENGTH

GEL CAPS
24 CT.

BUY· 1I GET 1 FREEl .
BOTH FOR $ 77 ·-

3

to aald aocounta or to

mottor• pollelntng to tho
execution of tho lruat, nal
loeo thin Hv• doyo prior to
lhl dale aotlor Mwlng.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common P,lel• Court,
ProbeiD Dtvtolon
MoJo• Counly, Ohio

FARLEY
BAGGED CANDIES

(8) 11; 1TC
~

FOI

In Mlfl'JOry

GutteJS

· PUBUC NOTICE
• 1, ._._••• ,

ma.

In Memory of our
Dear Mother and
Grandmother,

$300

EMMA D.
JOHNSON,

;13 y•ra ago today,
Augull11, 111110.

•

;

Gone but nqt

·
'

.
forgotten.
•MIIMd so much by
:
Family.

'••

FREE ESTIMATES ..

t24, Chorto1ol, I'll. 11022,
Ann.: Don Grimm or by
clllll!ll C•mpbolf· Tr•ne·
porlllllon
413
fill Cor.:-y
fro• 1:00•ti4121J
AM· to, II
4:30 PM, Mont~ey through

949-2168
3·16-93-lfn

':=::;;:;;:;;;;;:::::::

Frldly.

.

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

22203-1804. .

111,18, II, 20, 21, 22, 23, 28,
27, 28, 28, 30; (I) 2, 3, ...
s..l. I, 10. II, 12, 13, :IOtc

SAVINGS•••

in the Classifieds!

112211 mo.

11-4-lfn

WICK'S
SERVICE

992-3470
OWNER: Jell Wlciltr&lt;ham
5/1

GENERAL
HAULING

PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
. LINES

'.'HOME SITES
.-uuNG: Limeetone,
Dirt, Greve! and Coal

Gtavel

PH. 614-992·5591

992-7878

!No Sunday Calls)

2112192/tfn

AMERICA.N GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•5264 5/IC/U/lln

7nl1 mo.

·- . ------ -·- . -- .

UCINE
·MOWER CLINIC

HAULING .

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
. 205-75RIS" 'lip P- XTU RWL
205;75RI4" 'lip P- XTU AWL
215-75R15" Flr11k&gt;neOWL
235-7SA15" Flr111Dne OWL
- CALL FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS" 1121113

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL

, WAlKER AllEY
Paris a.. Service

Mowlt't • Chain Saws
WeedHiers

Real Estate General

I

· Dirt

LICENSED end BONDED

614·992· 7 643

'

I

Limestone

&amp;~SEMENTS&amp;

· $100 Payoff
Thia ad good for 1
FREE c~rd.
Lie. No. 0051·32
. t1124f92/lln

COMMERCIAL nod RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

GRAVEl, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT
•.

R&amp;C EICIYIIING
BULLDOZING
'

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

Pomeroy,

7122113

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

36970 Ball. RunOhioRoad

985·4473

EVERY THURSDAY

. • IN POMEROY
&amp;:45 p.m.
Special Early Bird

949-2812J

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

BINGO
. EAGLES .
CLUB

122 Jay Drive, Gallipoili, 011.
446-7612 .
Fax/VOice 446-7612

•Complete
ReMOtlolia1

8-4-83-tfn
'

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Speci.altiea"

•Gara101

...., ..

304-n3-5533

2nd Locllllon call Lon N•l
Henclenon, W. Yo. 34M-t75-3331
~... Maalercard end VISA.:;;;~,.

'WI DOll

oNewHomes

tt••· 011. 45743
985•4181

m s,., 1, a. a. 12, t3, '"·

~·..

CONSJRUCJIOII

Fill lnloaa•ls
-•
50734 ....., lltltJ• ....

C.lw, 42K WUaon Blvd.,

Wo hovo 1 lilrp etock ol••-•1 nemo brllnd lir• lind
If we don'l hove, we cen got 1L

OUR NEWEST LOCATlON IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL. .

ROBERT BISSELL

11 for •ny · , ... on
C•mpbell T111.,_tlon
Company, Inc. t.u.to I!Ct 011 •Painting Services
your ollllm wllhln • ...,_,
Interior &amp; Exterior
then Y!'ll may eubmlt It to: •We Paint Mobile Homes
UnUIOd Sta... C:O.t Ouord
and Aluminum Siding
NeUonel PoiJuUon Funda •Power Washing
SuiiD 1000, Arlington, VA

(614) 992·7474
Pomeroy, 9hio

"Mathematica ie the
alphabet whh which
.God hae written the
Unlveree."-Gall/eo
By Topic
By Appointment

Painting

Public Notice

Reasonable
Rates

Authorized: Brlgga &amp;
St111t1on MTD, Ryan,
!.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 96- M-F 9-3 Sat.
Cloaad Sunday
949·2104

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

•DOZERS
. 205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
POMEROY· Buaornut Avonu.. A 3 alory building with 6
Iaiii" roorna and two hall balht. Would mako a g,.at
m"dng hill or could bo convorted into apartm.,ta.
; ASKING $28,000.
MINERSVILLE • The works all done in lhit :i bodrD9111 orio
bath horne wilh Ill new wiring, raol, lumaca, insulation and
hoi walor tank. Make your appolnlrnont today.
• $35,000
'
POMEROY PIKE· :'P.Jlrox. 1 milo from Slata Route 7 • A2
IIC,. home or mob•le homo lila wilh walar end electric
...IJibll. AgiMIIocatton end IIJIUt,bullding IIIII.
'

ASKING $1,000

POMEROY • Pleaaant Ridge • Looking for 1 111ntal or ail
~ical place to Uve? Thia ialor you. H• 1 112 atoriota, 3
bedraomo. ia'IIO utlity rcom and hoi watar beHI&gt;oard
.
.
JUST p,•orul
MIDOLEPOAT. H~~~nNIDn StrMt • Looking lor a nice homo-in
town. on o quiet atiMI.Thla 3 bedroom, 1 112 a1ory home io
Juallho ona. II hla 1 tot of hlrdwood lloo11, filllplace, 2 lull
balho, 4 porchoo. Slta on e comer lot and lha home ia w.ll
cared lor.
S3.2,ooo
l)()n'JE 'niAfEA. BroDr"'''''''''''''-·····.. - ........ 112-1112

IAEIIJAJIFFEM----....---·-···-·-112-1051
DAAt..M ITE'WAAT___ .................- ............_ ......
IAJIIJY .,-QEA. .... __,............-~.·-····-····112..U7t

.,

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

. •Lo•••··
flumblng

•••u•

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)'"
'
667·6628

. ..

:;:;e

~.

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

38904
Creek Road
Middleport, Oklo

614·992·7144

ASK FOR CHRIS

J

614·742·2138
_,

412&amp;/Un

· . · •·

•,

DAVID ARNOLD

PRIVATE .
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCnON

NEW- REPMR

DINO-MITE

ESTATE NO. 27518 • Final
•!HI Dlalrtbudve Acoount of
Orval L. Wll•, EllOcutor of
the Eitolo of Albert Y.
Hoflner, Doceeaed. ·
ESTATE NO. 27804 • Final
end Dletrtbulive Accounl of
Kathryn A. Hill, Elioculrlx of
tho &amp;telo of Vhgll L. Hill,
Deceoaed.
Unlo81 exoepttona oro
flied th•eto, uld 1ccounto
will btl fo• hearing before
..ld Courl on the 131h day
of Septomber, 1ee3, at
which time 111d 1ccounla
witt be conoldered end
continued from doy Ia dly
Willi ftnelly dtepoaed ol.
Any poreon lnter..tod
moy lllo written exoeplloftll

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

7nltfn

ROOFINt;

unknown
numbtlr2
poet 237.5 ef 1M Ohio
lh•
lnalude
mh•treoted
237.5 to- · 2Aiof
the Oh!o River. C.mpbell
Tr•neportaUon Compeny,
Inc. 181M ollhll 11/V
A.A. V•llll, wJdoh Ia the
(8)1111o
d•ltfnllled IOUfC. of the
eplll pu1111111nl "to the Oil
PUbliC Notice
Pollution Act ol 1110.
CI811M Mlelng out of thle
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION eplll may 1M eubmltted to
MEIGS COUNTY, otiO IN C8111pbell · T111118Parllltlon
Company, Inc., P. 0.
THE MATTER Of
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, Ohio
Accounta ind voucher•
ol the following nomod
flduclerloa h•v• bHn flied
In lho Probalo Courl, Melga
County, Ohio, for approve!
end aeltlom.,l:
ESTATE NO. 21200 • Anol
and DleblbuUve Account ol
Freda Durham, Execulrtx of
the Eateto of Doneld E.
Covert, Decaoaed.
ESTATE NO. 27417 • Final
end Dlalrtbudve Account of
Ullllln E. Plokone, Exoculrix
of tho Ealato of Wonen P.

o.......

Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-6500

1

Ho)Vard L Wril'esel

•Public Notlce
On

&amp; Cooling

or

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning ·
TO ALL WHOM n MAY
CONCERN:
on FrJay, 1M 13th dly ol
·Auguat 1113, •t 1:30
o'clock, A.M., •1 tho offloo
ol tho Comml.. ID~Jor• of
Jurora of Motae County,.
Ohio, Juron wtH 1M publicly.
dr.wn lor tho SepiDmbtlr
I 883 Term of 1M Common
PI- eo..t of ellld County.
w.n..o Br8111ord
I.O.IIcCoy
Commieolon- of Jura,.

_We Haul Gravel,

~eating

614-698-3290

THURSDAY
AT OSCAR'S
•
7-?
The Ritzy Trio Dixieland
&amp; Big Band Music
Special Price on Buffet 6:30-9

Public Notice

B&amp;f

Arnold's
Plumbing,

Truck1ng
•

TYLENOL

t '

2....... 111 Memory
3- A$1lou.ncemenla

675-l'l. Pl......
458-Loon

PomeroY

108 W. Main
Pomeroy
Artist: Speedy or Judy
Custom Art available. New

TUPPERS PLAINS · A round
and square dance .will beheld at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Friday from 8
to 11:30 p.m, C. J. and The Counlry Gentlemen will be playing and
Melvin Cross will call. The public
is invited 10 auend.
-

PRICES GOOD WEDNESDAY, AUG. 11 • SUNDAY, AUG. IS
AT ALL THREE LOCATIONS.
· •·

992-Middle..,rll

,\ I I \ I ' I I

44;- Apartaeat for Rent
~5-- Furuiibed Roonu

Meigo County Muon Co., WV

446-Galll..,bo
367-Cboohlre

SPEEDY'S tATIOOS .
NOW OPEN

' who pallid IIWIY

2501.JACKSON AVE.- PT.-PLEASANT
786 N. SECOND - MIDDLEPORt .
364 JACKSON PIKE - GALLIPOLIS

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Remodeling and Repair ·
Painting, ~ced
Free EaU1111tea

Announcement

'

f------.==--=-c====,......,,...----

CIIPDIU
WGIK

.

·2.

1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuetday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

PellforSalo
M..-ieallaa.,.__LI
Fntill ll V.......loo
ForSaloorTndo
I \J;\j ,. 1'1'111 ,

~

moves very qu1cklr so that th~se
who attend the semmar can be up
and running" with the main rea.;
tures of this popular program. Eveil
those persons with some knowl•
edge of Windows will find th~
seminar helpful as various hints arc
offered on making Windows worJF
more efficiently.
.
Interested persons may register
for the course by sending a cfiecl(
or money order (made out to: Gal"
lia Jackson Vinton JVSD) 10: Adult
Services, P, 0. Box IS7, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. More informa~
lion about the seminar may be
obtained by contacting Adult Services at (614) 245-5334.
:

'

OR

DAY BEroRE PUBLICATION

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Yard 5:alea
• A clallillecladftrtiooMonl placed in the The Da.Uy Sentinel
(..copl Claulflod lllopl•y, Bu.;..., C..d or Lopl .

Plckenei

OR

Gallla_Counly

Rato Over 15 Words
$4.00
s .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
S ,42
$13.00
$ .60

10
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be ·
charged for each day as separate ads.
Buainesa C.nl ......$17.00/lncl\ per momth
Bulletin Boanl ....$6.00/lncl\ per day

cover the
foUowin.g telephone e:rchanges ...

Ill Memoriam

24 CT.

POCKET

15
IS
IS
IS

Claaa~d pages

tJ.e Galli'polil Daily Tribua.e, reachiJll ower 18,000 home.

·69

ELMER'S
GLUE·ALL

be prepaid

Noliceo) wUialoo appoar in the Poiol Pleu..t.Kepler md

PRANG
COLOR ART
CRAYONS
.

DICTIONARY

MUll

run 3 cla11 at DO claarp.
• .Price of ad for aU capia.lleuen I. double Price or ad ca.t
• 7 poiatl.iae type oaly ....t
• Senliael Mra.~t r•poDiihle for error• af~ rll'1t d.y (check
for......, rnt day adruu in poper). CaD before 2:00p.m.
·day after publicatioa \o ..U:e correction
·
• Ad. th.t ••• be ,.id iD adYaa.ee ara:
· Caid of Th.. b
Happy Ado

FRUTH
AD FILLED BINDERS WEBSTER'S

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Adt ou.,ide tile coun'ty your ad ru..11.1

&amp;::!:

son of George Parker; traveled far.
thest, Sam and 'Donna Davis,
Charleston, W.Va.; _two largest
families, Carolyn, Bill, Cindy, Kellie, and Billy White and, Keith,
Emma, Rachel, Whitney, and
Emily Ashley; most recendy married, Sarah and Momer Pa{ker;
longest married, June and Bob
Ashley, 46 years, Joe Poole took
pictures of those honored and of
mdividual family groups. Historian Wilma Parker, Will Poole, Meigs
Keith Ashley di~layed chans and County; Anita and Helen Han,
Shade; Delben and Maxine Yost,
books of family history.
.
Lancaster;
Frances Frederick,
The same offJCers were elected
Smithville,
W.Va.;
Franklin and
for another year.
·
Parker,
Diane,
Jarold,
Gladys
Others present were Jack, JackMisha,
and
Josh
Parker,
Parkersie, Brad. and Breu, Parker, James
and Jenny Parker, Lester, Pam, burg, W.Va.
Next year's meeting will be the
Leslie, and Lester Parker, Mary
fust
Sunday in August at the TupEdna~. Jason, Leland, Albert,
pers
Plains
~lemenlary school.
and Toin Parker, Jeff Siunders,

The ~8th annual Parker reunion
was held recently at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary school with 60
in attendance. Willis Parker of
Parkersburg gave the blessing
before the basket dinner.
President Ral{lh Parker was in
·charge of the busmess meeting. He
asked those preseptto introduce
themselves and tel110 what branch
of the family they belong. Secretary-treasurer Howard Parker read
the minutes and the financial repon
of the 1992 meeting. Martha Poole
and Nellie Parker presented gifts 10
the oldest woman, Nellie Parker,
79; youngest girls, Amanda Jo,
daughter of Carl and Arlene Parker,
and Amoret Davis, daughter of
Sam and Donna Davis; oldest man,
Burl Walker of Shade, 75 ;
youngest boy, Tyler Parker, four,

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

Call992-2156

A family picnic was held recent- Keith, Paula, Chelsey and _Jo~
home of DQrothy Hawk of Wood; Paul . Hawk; V1rg1~1a
Hedrick; Nonna Hawthorne; J1111,
Atteqding were Bub and Betty · Alice and Kimberly Hawthorne;
Stivers, Pomeroy; Becky, Adam, Tfm, Betsy. Ryan and Dyana
Amy and Carlo Hargraves, Apex, Hawthome; David Hawthorne; Joy
N.C.; Carl and Maxine Hunnell, Swain; Troy, Laura, Mallory and
Columbus; Ivan and Evelyn Wood; Seth Guthrie; Dorothy Hawk.

. A day-long seminar on Wil)·
dows software will be offered on
August,31 by the Adult Services
Division of the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocational School
District (JVSD).
The seminar will be held at
Adult· Service's Buckeye Hills
facility in Rio Grande. The seminar
lasts from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. in Room
134 of the Human Resources
. Building.
The seminar starts at "ground
zero" for those who have little
experience with Windows but

1
3

• Recflite diKoutfor .a, paid in ad&lt;~aace.
• Free Ado; Ci-way •ad Fouad ado uador 15 word. wUI he

Windows program
offered atJVSD

Wonlt

6

Chester picnic held .
ROUSH, ALL·STAR
CHEERLEADER-Brandy
Roush, daughter or Gary and
Teri Roush of Letart, was
named All-Star Cheerleader
at Wright State University
cheerleadlng camp Iii Dayton,
Ohio. Brandy has tbe opportunity to travel to Loadon
England to participate in tbe
Lord Mayor or the West Min·
Isler's New. ' Year.' s Day
Parade. Braady ~as part or
Southern's cbeerle•ding
squad which claimed tbe WSU
Superior cheerleading cham·
pionship.

Days

S~ade

River Saddle Shop

CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER R£PAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720

. 9.85-3406

./ 992-7878

;::~========~- ~....~::::.4:n:9/~93:~~,1!==::::::::::
RIVER VALLEY
CONIUCIOU

HOWARD

EXCAVATING ·

BUUWDOZEA1 BACKHOE
•d TRACICHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPllC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES •nd
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS IN6TALLED
UMESTOIE·TRUCKJNa
' FREEESTIIIATES

FREE ESTIMATES

All work guaran~.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top
to Bottom

PH. 74~·2217

99~·3.838

&amp;-»1 mo. pel.

. 111/'IWI mtt.

••

f

YOUNG'S

Call Toda~ fer
Tourlr««

CARPENTER SERVICE
Roam Addltiona

M•rt«ONI'
Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants

Carolyn McCo.y
1182-5082
Sandy Henderson
892-3647

~WOIII

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets

·

Mason, wv

(304) 773-5585

'SUMMER HOURS"
Suri.-Thur 5·1 0 pm
Fri·Sat 5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

-EloctriODt lind Plumbing
o.4looflrtg
~r

a Extorlor

Pelntil!ll
(FREE ESTIMATE!I)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
p_,oy,Ohlo

. 9-lo-82·tln

'

'

�Ohio

...,....._,......,AIIIIII
....

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

.,,,,.~-

...

·~·•

_.,.._

:r;raeee;

. .1 Roalno IMMII:IIO.

11M;

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

--- - lrn Clllll

~ ·,.;

l'lftCh _.aya.

-

... 'M
·
...... --I'

Ul, din Wlllone tL rr • a1,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .b'Mia. .... I ladt
•

:!"'
·
.r.
.....
'.
.....
"'

..••

..... ., Ll .....,.. IIOou.U.
~-· $ ;.,. .... u..
RUIIInd, Cllllo, , _
IIIII Crtoll -lllllooblo o..U.
- . 114-J112.2121.

446-2342
992-2156
67S..l333

•

'"

·-...

Announcement•
QIRLBIII U-111 ~ H- -•u II
•s
~ ~• I
:EI ~-.:-8o 11 Yro.

-

•.••11. .

,

102
Loot ...,.... ._ nolonl dh aM liorbool pn&gt;ductt, 114112 411

-;::::::::::7.:--:--::---::~C'7'

U.. It •--~ • - u~tl On

~·"
..: - h. 1 •·2 -RmP~·

Cloon
1$475

- . HBO.
WMidJ. Cd ~ 1112.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·
IIATIW l·eoo-1110-3337 $2.IICImin 11+/aU _,... dattll"'
100'o of "'ngllltol-,_ •your
- ..,..toda';'. CCI iCiCA FL ~
RED\ICE; lum 011 f!d whllt ,....
Tokl OPAL, ovoltablo at

.

=·:":~ECTION

=::rrt-:·

,

. •• -

Gonorol llolrrtononoo, Palnt!"'IJ 1173 12llil Klillwood, 2br., Yord work· WlndOWI Wunoa ~poll" :.=:~,-~ ':,koldwi
Quit ... Cloantd Light Hauling,
~";.-·~
c:4';'!=~ Roolclontlal, SIIVI! llgl or1 :101 811 2011
I
- ·

..:t

Upoao, OH 45131.
4
Giveaway

&lt;:~:r . {:";~

:;""'il!.':

Elarnontal)' ond LO Toochor II

4 T•bby Klt1M18, Un1r Trained, Melga Junior High.

Retetw.a.
C.l l-.ft41 loovt - ·
.
lrrtorlor/utoolor polnllng, rool
polrrtl"t..!:"'"'• hoiaao a
Hot•n'l,lnlng.

Phone: 114 4 Ul 1501.

''" :::::;...:..:;.",:M.oo,

AVON I All ArNo I Sh,ldey
hod all Spoall, 301-875-'MZD. .
Avon Wanta lndlv11111 lrrtoroottd

;:::,..::~':l':'=.a~;:n
~0 ~~
..~g ~~0 Ho Dooo
.
~
.
'
.

rO "fl

moblllliC

~j ~

~~~·:.- ... :-': . ,..
ma .
-~·--·
Mloo Paula'o o.,
Contor 1
B~ WOol 01 HIIC On Jockooo1
Pika 11-F I A.M. ..,.,30 P.M. ft
Ouolly And lapooto,_ It Tho
,,
A-cao-m
~'I Ut Fw
For •Your
Vlo".Chlld'o
In:;-..:.;- -· •••~.~· . p
.,.....,..,. •~•·
-

Block lob, I llontho Old, Malt, Bobyoltt• For '3 YNr Old AU
0 - Whh Chll-, P,olomobl' Day I I Y11r Old Altoo School,
C:OO'ntl)' - . 114-441-1121.
RIO Orondo AroolanProllr NonA-L•• •--'-', lilt 10 __, Smoking Cholot
114-24f.
-....,.... IIZM.
'
homo, d-brokon,
AT. R.
Indoor
6g, grllil wHh kldll-.dly,
. ' 1+ .-A.rdl na I F,. Ighi A.
_.,....-·
11112..112.
Dd¥111 wontOd tor o now tor•
mlnol 111 Hunicano, WY, .....
Kmono, 304..7'5-!110.
hove 1-. O.T.A. oxporlonco pul~
•·
I
~
Pupploo:
Pail
German 1!19 o van tro lor, good olaoung
Shop~d.
LHtla
an · po,, lato onodoll'*tulpononl, Bouo
Pomeranian 4 Fomoloo, Coli AI· Crl!M Blue Shlald, Inc., 11':1:..:11
tor 5 P.M. 111 1111117.
PIIJ', Ia' ••• pa,, - k
n
.
PIIJ', compan~ paid ponolon, 401
Socloty Flnchoo to glvoowo,, K Plan, homo - ' wookondo.
114-1112..141.
Coli Boyd Aclllno, 800-82NZ!:I.

can.

-

Ago • -

-

8224.
·
Room and boord lrw hondlcaPpod and .-~Y whh - r fn.
comoo who llka courotoy llvlna 111
lamll, corw homo, 114-1182~
Troo otump .....,..,, complolo
, do-'foblo ...1oo, 11uonoblo
Point Pltaunt, ratH. 304.a11-3'131.

6

Ylaor, . muet

=:e:.~'1'l,.;321Polrrt
c.oo .... _ l'ui~TI. . Pool-

••rw-..,_

ey••·

7

Yard Sale ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL 'lord Iloilo Mull Bo Paid In
2 00
~'d vance. ouDLINE
: : p.m.
tho do' bohml tho od Ia to Nn.
Sundoy odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Fnd
11 do odltlo
2 00
n • :
.
Ctrpoot . Solo: 12th • 13th, I
Mlltl Down At. 7, A LHIIo 01
Evorythlngl
Rodney On 35, Window Air
CondHionor, ·Antiquo Monoot
Clock, Loll Morol Auguot 12·
l3th.
Thurodo,, Frldoy &amp; Soturdoy,
1013 SoConol Avon ....J. Clothing,
•-._0..12 Months, "'~' W l
iil4 •oro And 111oc.
'lord ' And Cioft Solo: Thurtdoy ·
AndY!ton~~· Bull Run Rood In
n • ·
Yord Nit 113 Spruco at. 1\Jml·
tu ...llorlo,blkoo,coth~.-.loy
end onoro. wtd.-y:•un...y. ·

p.m.'~'atuo~,.'

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
• VIcinity
I lamlly, Augull 12 a ~~ 31771
IR 325', ono milt !rom "'· 124,
Homa lrrtorlor, cllohoo, curtalno,
boddlng. chlldoon and odun
-hlng. nice 1- aloto clothto,
eiNtriC d~er, tool• Ia much
onorw. Wootc lor olgno.
••o 'lord Sa'- MuM Be Pald In
idvonoo. DNciiiN: I:OOpm tho
t.r....~n= ~~ t;rld':.;:
llondoy • tdftlon !O:OOa.m.
Soturclo,:·
••~uot 12th a 13th, 'IWp. Rd. 71,
~ mobllt
. bohlnd llolgo
Fal111rouncte.

8

Public Sale

&amp; AuctiOn.
Rick Pooraooo Auction Compon~,

fuM tiiM 1uctloneer, compllt•

ouctlon
HOYico.
Uconotd
III,Ohlo I - t VIrginia, 300l'T.J.I7U,

9

Wanted to Buy

Antlqu. and UMd furnhure, no
tt.m 1o0 ..... ot loo UNII, will
buy II*' or complolo

hoWohllldL cau DobJ Mootln,
, 114-112•11141.
Docorotocl 11-rw, woll ,....
ph-.oo, old ltmpo old ·- .
- - IIIII ciOCb, ontlqua
tumnuro. Alvorlno Arrtlquoo.
A- Wolool)'
- · ·ollllao.
· ,114-DII:I21121.
J I D'O Aollo- and Salvar.,
aloo loooylng lunk c:.tll I INC I .
304·713'5M3.
Junk coro, an, condMion, 114-

112·7513.

Wonted ._ndlng 11-. tiop
Dricel peJcll. frM eetlmatee,
llco•O:::J. cortlt~ logging,

epm.

='!0:. ~~t~e,t.•rrt

tloo! Wilolllng Whh Emotlonolty
DIIINbocl ~t Alok" Youth In
Tho CommunMr, Tho H'""' a
Sc-o. IIUII Havo Rlllablo
Tranoporlallon,
Toac;hlnt,
Porwnt . Training, And llonttl
-Doolrod,El!Dirl,_
Tooln!!lv
loc._ ·o.
Dogroo
R•
qulrod, Sind Rooumo To: kcooo To Hull""n A11ourco
Dovo"'-nt, P.O. Bolt 110, a.~
llpollac 0H 45CI31, Anontlon:
Corol t o - .
·
Eom oxtrw .,..., tor ..clothoo I Chotobnoo glfto, Avon
rwpreoontollvoo Non on ovorogo
of SS/hr.. Sian up now I r...lvo
lilt alii. 'tall , .. 00'78:HIII1
coda r.taz.
-~l E
P
,
Eoooy W~· xcollont "'' o\0.
oomblt Pooclucta At HolM. C.ll
Toto Froo, l.eG0-417.asll, Ext.
313.
FLATBED
DRIYERS.C.nllnal
F-' hi ~. ~
h
·rwog -mora 11 on oppor-

King

~::~ =-~~·u:::•

21

B

33 ·Fanns for Sale
~~...~ 281.:2. ~:::

1

US I\8SS ·

Opporti.lnHy
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINQ 00.
rwcommondo thol ,.... do buof.
• - with pooplt ,ou
and
NOT to lind monoy lhrougn lht
moll urrtll ,.... han ln-Tgatod
tho ollwlno,
BIG s•• Gov'l •··-ion Info
•·nd .::'2 Chock IM~
.o. ~o·
. ac~~
••
,,
4053C Totoo Crwok Ad, Dopt,
144, ..... ICY 40517.

k.-,

lat.

=:.~"::.,":"35 ::

::"'J..."';~'",:::1 ctr~~..'.":.,~

:;1:

t::: .:':.'!:\";.S,

21 1

::0

Cerd Shop, Ohio Rlww

P~, eon~'

appliencM

Dolllpollo, lntOJVIowlng Frida,, 304..7i-IIU.
·
Augu.l13, 11 A.M. To 11'.111.
Nlld Bobplttorln VInton, For 3 ~.~~~
Chlldoon MlclniQhto, 014-3118- Hoot, 2A MIL Do

-L. . .

Maniorvllio, Mloc. OUt lulldlnl
••• 000 114-211-11-

...,

'
lllnl lonn

••·

n ocroo 10 room 2

MOO)'
n birn, 1 milt
ou1 .._rico ftd, ovootaoko Paint
..._rrt, na,ooo. 304-t~B111.
Plcturooquo, 20 ocroo, now

lanco, 2 bo,.., '!".'!!.... canlellfdr, nlco homo. 3....,,..,385,

34

Business
Buildings

Com..-lal Building For Solo
Or loooo, 331 Socond Avonuo,
Phono:
10 A.M. To
• P.ll.
·

114-441~522.

Aahlon. Clydo
-on,"'lat•:iJ:,·ll111-2331.

Lot 1rw mo1o11 homo tor ......

~~~7"' .._.. wkll occopttd.

.. WIII4,
Lot For Solo: Bohlnd Govln
Plant. Tuollov Run Rood
ChooltiN.114417.oMa.
'
~ 1 ocrwogo 1ar home llouctlon on Reyburn Rd,
ro-blo -rlcllono, aount'
wotor,
.fNIIIed
on , .
_. lntonnltlon
304-1711-12113
plio 11
~!lgtOwldotrolltn. '
no
Trolr.. '~': lor oonl In t&lt;Mn,
fM-1112·

·36
...-

••

Ptri·Timo Dook Cllill, ~lr
8olwoontl1•NoPhonoA·1f
•
,
Boot Wootom, 111 lloc:ond
A-.uo, Dolllpollo.
REAL ESTATE OORRESPONDENCE COURSE: comploto WY
-~-•
oi_Jour oWn pooo.
No umo loll on lob. Fully ...
arodHtd.IASIC
APPR"SAL
CLASSES:Chtoltllon
Oct . 415Mortlnobu'11 Oct. 1f.21&gt;.aoo.
758-4477NoothNotom Collogo
FIELD Wontod
NURSESTo lloko
Flold Nurwoo
Paii·Tima Homo Hoanh Vlolto,IY
Sklllo Roqulrwct. C.ll 114-51114171 FDI' Appllc.ootlon Int.....,..
tlon.

- - couple or lolly to
· llveln 10 c~nlor - I n thtlr
oounlr)' homo, f14-112·10411.
Takl -onlaJII Of Thlo Filii
Troclo C.... OppootunH,, Good
Solaoy, Top _,Ita, Eli-vo
Trolrilng, -unHy FO&lt; •Advoncomont,
... 8o Willing
'lb
WortL
Ha"!o,·11Aoou..
R111
":.. '~.!: y =
Ooiontod. FOI' bnmotlllo Con· - Contilct Cluy ....._
At -llctal
An
EQual Oppootunlly Em.Pf"''or 111F.!).V. Srnoko Fr• I DNg Froo
:E:::••:::Ioon.:;:;,:m::•:;;••::.·_ __ _...._

=.

.,......,271111,

.SHuatiOn

Ohio'"

·

.

1181 Sunblrd LE Air, Allll'll
C:.Oolto,,Good Condition, CtU

Aftor IP.• . 114-2118-1411.
1110 couaor. Alllo, Air,
Eloctnonlc l&gt;ult, PL, I'W,
CNIH, nn, - ·· 114-

Oooclauo living. t ond 2 .bodroom opollmonta ot . Vlllaa:
Manor
1nd
Rtv.t•a.
Apaltmente In MkkUepoll From

szoz. Coii1114...2,.U. EOH.

..

"a:"

57

Musical,

oo"::!
=

·-

72

Ono bod,_., olllcloncv ...,....
011111, IUrnlohod, third lloo;, no

n1

a

45

Rooms

1rw...,..-

RooiM
or month.
Slort111g ot $120Jmo. Dollla Holol.
IM 41111180. ·
Stooping ooomo with _...ng.
Aloo trollor opaao. AI hook-upo.
COli alor 2:00 p.m., 304·l'T.J.
11151, Mooon W!l.

47 Wanted to Rent

Wontln~o~
,~..

"nlco" 3 "'
4bdrm.
lri SOulhorn Local
Sc'-1 Dlolrlct, 114-1411-2371.
Worrtlng 10 - · 2 01' 3 bod-

ho,.o,lncltonandgoodoolld~

lion, pN1or prlvoto -ng. 11411113~428, H no plio•
loon mmogo on -hlnO.

Household
Goods

1

olovo, - · -

-·

Trucks tor Sale

1171 Chivy Bluar 4WD ono
1
omoll Nil lfiCI!, S1200 OBQ, coli
114-1112·300hiookdo'"""''·
73 "ans· &amp; 4 WD's
••
'82 Ford Yon, 4· c~ln _,,_.

"-go.

1•

=.";'A.C:, .~:,,:::

Ullllty trailer, 304-t71-3nl.

=

080.·

11112.

warm

Morning

~....,,.. w

IJ4.112·

e.,:• .....

Sueot.·ro:zop

=

11

*·
•;lot*:U:, ':

=-~75

-. go.... ....

ezoo

304..
. . . . 3131.
tlformo&lt;l ,...., all ctwoDigo
Wanted
Top PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
-ortlsod In lhla n o Colno, Gold Ringo, Sllv.,. Colno, Dopondablo lady to llvo111 w/of.
... avlllliiblo on 11r1 equal
Gold Co1no. II.T.S. Coin Shop, dar la&lt;IJ', muM hovo rolaloo-o,
opportu~bosla.
111 - . . . Avonuo, Dolllpollo.
HaYon, WY. :J04.1ta.:INI. ,..,_ _ _ _ _ _...

I
,,

#

••

homo,--.. . . . . .
lpanlol, ' lilt lo

Electrical &amp;
Retrlge,_lon

West
Pass
Pass

Nor tit

Eul
Puo

- • 'Omtta lrOttt
prOtlllnCio

• Wlcklid

Wklo•"
toll!IID.tr

1D- -lot All

It liD AI

IliOn

11 ClnclnMtl
IIIII cltrll
11AIIeer

SNT

r\llpuo

2+

20 L.Mellllt

22VIfletrol

iiiiMI

24 8ull11'111111 11
loft
25 - ·lllllor

HTIIt8the
2S-Wehl
:IDIDider'l kin ·

310l . . . .
1-12
33 w,:.~.':lntph
35 A
'

40=:.rf
, -terp•m

431'

41 P-.Untetyll

t:,e

Aug . 11 , 1993
-

~:::~ !L..l.~::::::.;..L.E~::JII..;~~~~~IIj ~~nJ :~~h~iP~~ rn~IIJJil

L..J._..:::::.I...t:!lod........

52ru:J dny ofsummer.

MORTY MERKLE AND WINTHROP
. IN L.E5511-WJ ANONTH,
WE'L.J.. BE ISO lNG ~

WEL.L,IHAT DIDN"r
HELP.

TOOCHOOL .

'

·

·'

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1965, rioting lwhich would continue for
six days I broke out in the Watts section of Los Angeles. -·

41
et.)
47 Atllnll - •
48 Roof eclet

eo

Sioux Indian
51 T-llon
52 Anglo-Sa&amp;on

lllvl

55 Uke (aull.)

·-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
c.w.tt)' Cipher cryplogr. . . . .
bJ famoul peoptlr, palt Mel
~from ~IOttllcMII

· .

• p

z

ZLLX

y

H F

R L I K

Z J .Y Z
ZJYZ

I WEDNESDAY

Cl rMl .,IOU. ~

GWE ME l\B~R1Y OR Gil/£ M~
~ ~lOSE I ~OMFORTABl£ SHAVE'

VYU

ZL

p

VF

z. w

SLZ

(IJPRFYS

G L H Y I.'
SLEFRPWZ)

PWYVFR

YRRFSUF .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I wotnled lo succ:eed at oomethlng. I just didn't
know whiot It wu going Ia be." ~ (Producer) Malt Wllloma.

WOlD
GAMI

I

O Rearrange
letten of
four scrambled words

the
be.
lgw t9 form four simple words.

I

INTWHE

I

AMURN

I

5 QE u T

I

I

1---.:....:~.::..,,::....:,....-..l

I I

~~

1:

The diner said to the waiter,
"I would like fresh squeezed

orange juice, please." The ·
waiter sliffly replied, "We only
..- - - - -- - - . hava frozen, but its ..... fro·
GRAFUL
'zen!'

1..-..L..J......JL,_..L...J~

- ~.

,I I I I I

L _L.JL.J_.J_.J.....J.

0

Complete ti-le chuck l~ quoted
by filli ng in the missing words
you develop fr om step No. 3 below.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LHIERS IN
THESE SQUARES
. ~ UNSCR ...MBLE ABOVE tellERS
TO GET "NSWER

AUGUST 11

HEY, 8/t,~l&lt;. OFf.
IT'S i'f\'(

..

••
••

,;

ASTRO-GRAPH

j

whal 10 do. to .make the relatiooship work. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob, 19) One of you r
Mai l $2 and a lon g, sell · acd ressed, , greatesl asseos is your ability to gel along
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, P.O.

..
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

with persons from all walks of life . This

I

80)1 4465, New York, N.Y. 10163.
splendid. virtue could be your dominating
VIRGQ (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Be watchful lor characlerislic ooday
bolh caree r and fi nanc ial opporoun11ies PISCES (Fob. 2f!.March 20) Several situa·
today. Interesting currents are stirring that
could turn out to be e:~~ t remely advanta-

tions in which you're involved could prove
very advantageous for you if brought to a

geous for you.
L18RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) You're in a very
propilious cycle lor lullilllng your hopes and
expectations on a rather grand scale. Lady
Luc~ mighl help !ill in blanks you can't fi ll in

head and l•na lized al lhis lime. 11 looks like
ohis is whal you may be doing Ooday.
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll19) Because you'll
be willing to see anoth er's point·O f·view
loday he/she will be open minded towards

yourself.

yours. Use this gift in ail of your one-to-one

.

SCORPIO !Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Today you relaoionships.
•
migho be subjecled lo some changes over TAURUS (April 20· May 20) Today and
which you'll have •little or no conlrol. Don't I tomorrow locus. your elforts on ma ile rs
1993

d~s pair .. h o~e v e r , because th ese alter·! which could be me,!\nlngful to you financial·
allons will be Improvements upon your own ty. Your possibilities lor coming out on the

Interesting developments could be in the
oiling lor you in th e year a head.

basic designs.
plus side ol the ledger look gOod.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) When it GEMINI (May 21 ·Juna 2Q) Subsoantial

Improvements and substantial successes

comes to engineering a bargain or doihg a strides can be made today to lur1her your

are probabilities In several areas of your little horse tredlng today, you could be with· personal interests. Don't be afraid to dele·
lila where you lorm,e~y experienced failure. oul an equal. HoWever, you'll be as lair to gale assignmonls or aulhorily fo persons
'LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your inluilion could othars as ypu'll be to yoursell.
·
, you lh1nk can handle them.
Junction as an accurate gauge of pu blic , CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) There will! CANCER (June 21.July 22) Today you
opmlon loclay. You'll know hoW to eHectove· be )ustilicalion in taking pride in your mighl be lucky in malarial ways through a
ly presenl your ideas to olhers eilher lndi· achievements today, because your basis peoson you have helped previously but who
vldually or In a group. Trying to palch ·up a ' mo ti ve~ will be nobl e and un selfi s h. has also helped you. This Is slilla winning
broken rom ance? The Asoro·Graph , Looking oul for loves ones will be your pti· , combination .
Matchmaker can help you lo unders,land mary concern.
\ ,i

Z P H F

y

H~llUC\N~1IONI

Thun~day,Aug. 12 ,

~.

!ldl...._lnbCIIpMr . . . . lorlnOtlw. Todl;t'*'-·l~f'.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Alex Haley ,
0 92H992), author; Carl Rowan (1 925-1,
journalist, is 68; Jerry Fa lwell 11 933-),
clergyman, is 60; Hulk Hogan 0953·&gt;, pro
wrestler, is 40; J oe Jackson (1955-l, mu·
sician-songwriter, is 38.
·

:'~o~.; 'i1r

- " " " .... dh kldll,lt+
1112.f112.

•IIPOI'I

2 lnlorntalloll

Surprisingly, it is legal Ia kill your
opponents at the bridge table. Jlut
luckily this is only In the metaphor!·
cal, not literal, sense. And a good way
to sharpen your homici,._l Instinct Ia
ta read Scotsman Hugh Kelsey's book
'More KiUIIig Defence at Bridge•
(SI2.7&amp;, ;I'he Bridge World, 39 Weal
94th Street, New York, NY 100257124). It was originally published In
1972 and has now been reprinted by
Gollancz.
The book contains almost 200 tough
defensive problems backed up with lu·
cid analysia. I recommend it for any·
one striving to reach the upper echelons of tbe game.
In today's deal from the book, you
are sitting in tbe East poa!tion.
Against three n~trump. your partner
leads tbe club four. Plan the delel!le.
First, you shoold play tbe club
queen at trick aae. U declarer hal the
king, you don't want him to make a
holdup play. However, when your
q"""" wins the trick, you continue
with the ace and three of clubs, hoping
partner can cash five trlclla in the flllit.
Sadly, that doesn't happen. But what
do you throw on the lourth club, dum·
my having released two dlamonda and
a heart?
Probably your_ llrst reaction Ia a
heart. But you must hope partaer hal
~n entry. Aild biB only possible entry
card Ia the diamond jack. You must
make an unblocking discard, throwin&amp;
your diamond queen.
U you don't jettison tbe queen, declarer establishes biB dlamaad suit
_...,1 with an avolctance play, leadlns the
suit twice from the dummy and duck·
In wheri your q~~r:!:. _

;

= :=.:"! =

a-d

• "lltrrY

This news
isn't so bad

I

olhor---.-

•n•

7 ••pi8Ce

4 .... . ,..

·a. """-'
Conlllnlr

1 AIOIIIIc ·

.DATE BOOK

c...... v...

DoiiOIIt

htrwbJ

·FRANK AND ERNEST

-

•*211'

3:I;..

DOWN

Opening lead: • 4

·-

:J::."'

· ~ow; OUr,_,. 111

WELL, l TI11NK NOW
'I'OU'YE GOT ONE ,

--

":'

--=·

knowtlgly acoop1
adYMisements tor real estate
which Is In viOiallorl ollho

NOW--I NEED TO
SORRY A FEW
TATERS, POLE BEANS,
CARROTS, ONIONS,
CELERY AN' SOME
STEW BEEF

YE5,
.. DO YOU ~-lAVE ANY 600K5
llERE IN YOUR. LIBRAR'o' Wl-lERE A DOG
TAKES OVER THE WHOLE WORLD?

:~~~~~~~~t

Ukl now~ trompolln; 1187 Daen Fl~o Sid
Ofloro. l
·'1811 ovonlngo.
63
LIVestOCk
!:Ia HP 110 1 Trollor, t14fow n 11o; ~Nr EoGio ,;2yt.:...
. ol_d.,.;.Pa:.;lnt.;..;,fl:.;lly.:.:.:.:..,h_br_ok_ 441-4477 Evonlngo; ·• 114-1411• 3881 Dop.
or... , 2111110
R 11 PO,~ 3114
• yout
,
13115.
-lu.347V 111
II Evlnrudo . t~ hout
11
Hay &amp; Grain
- P Evlnrudo ono1 lrolltr, 11400 Kart• 3 .., 1 up, opocltl on 64
t HP, 111 olock, MO&lt;rio Equip,::1'1::2..:·2=580::·:,..._ _ _ _ __
~.· 114-1'12·2•61 or 114-1112· l:r~ . = n
Aut
'
Parts &amp;
76
0
....__
AAAftiSOrlel
8
. ~i::t 112Whr:.·~_:.•,::-;,4:
-.....
••• · '
,._
-~- · F-d
- •""'po
·~c. 4clo: ~- po 010•
LIMoln · - · 225 . omp with
:'o..~=~-~ tranomleOnon -1no, $0000, t14-ll2· 71 Autos for Sale
touc:k tlr-•
1 1~ •••
l:::3111=::.--··
- - - - - - - • ..;._;;.;;;;.:.;;...:.:..:....:;;,;:.;.:..._ •• Chivy
&amp;'
""' -~ w •
4..
Allllotlccarllaroo-omp, ]!!!_dill,, ; : : ..'ot:l.'~"::"l!a:, 304
..7 t435.
wotto. IIIIo ,_, $45, l14-lll2· . . go, tonka, ono ton truck
10
:2314.
8tl Up Jlor Round T..... 1300, whooiO, lldlootoro, .._ matt,
~:=:--,.,:-:,.....,:-:-..,.,--=-:= 111 441 4112: ·
.
ole. Da. AA~ Iploy, WY. - .
Switched To central Air Solll!l9 11171 F.d Ooonoda, Odr. lldan, 372·3133 art
273'1321.
Air CondM!ono&lt;, Ctrrlor Brand',
• - mint ooild~lon
" ' =~ kl~ ' 79
11,500 8TU'o Woollo Orwol, ..~. 51,1!1!0 oct ...! ml '
2 Cf,
campers&amp;
1!4-44f.77t1.
$0- ' 114-IIH7tl.
Motor Homes ·
Tono Unft: llkl now wlouppllto. 1171
PS, PB,
Pootablo _...... Enorpoc a-.aootto plo,.. oooroo, 11110 gam!"' Fu!ly EauiiiiiOCI,
~ Boglnnor drum 111. l14o24J'.2001.
Good Cofldlllon, 11,000,
. ...,._.. •
11711 ~~'!._7!,000onl, UOO 11111.

11 TollY

. AQS

By Plillllp Alder

D
.
ol

for Rent

I'D LIKE TO BORRY
YORE STEWPOT,
LOWEEZ:Y

oi

fx'lli 1241~Mpl~n:,..~:nprl":':, I;;!~~~ .....,

IIOthl

eo Wllltllld

·Q ~

'12·14 points

::n~. .== 4~~~~

••col-

a.-.

•'

WHAT CAN I
DO FER YOU,
ELVINEY ??

c::;..::

!:3:

=:·=';":':i:!o",'t:
-All

42

z•

1 NT•

BARNEY

.

••,..
oolldil ·l110 010.
FruitS &amp;
•111-tlc, tM-7112-2180. ·•
58
all• pm.
•
Volklwogoot von, 1110
PICKE,:S=:n'RE
Vegetables
onatno. -lr, uoo, 114-1'12·
liou- lumlo!*tl. 112 mi. Conning ton- lrw oolt, 27J4
~ Ad. Pl. Pl........ WY, brl~ awn aantaiMf"', IW.24J. 1181 Fori:l El&amp;O -cu.com V•n.
ooll304-t75-'1410.
21111
lootdod UK mllto
aond.
Ct..;..:;.
. lomal- $3/louohol, -.zoo. ':104-tM.,. ~.frl ~
AUCTION IBW~~ITUiiE. i2 ,.... piC M' Oliekoo1 lltlna ....,. tlr lpm, sat-sun onvtiOlivo St., Oolllpollt. - a Uttd tol..,., orollall Ada-,l.ol•ll 11118 Ford Rongor XL, -lng:
lumHift, - - · - - l Folio, 114-247-aau.
p 500, t14-441.ml.
Wort!: boote. ,...........,..
'
,
1117 F·250 4x4 Slandofd 302
53
Antiques
~lgh Millo, Good . Condition,
118,500, 080, 114 311 1130.
luy w 101. ll'-lno Ant~
INI 0oc1ao Ctronn BE. 111a1o
1124 E. 11o11111-. on Rl 124
un:rr;," lUI Eooctllont tonal. .10
, .1:00
Houoa:
tlonl z
- ••••••
- · All• I
•-.m.
p.m. II.T.W.
,.-.... 1D:iiil
1 00
. -,
~
·
' _,_y :
6 F
E 1
P.ll.
lol:00p.no.l14-112.alal.
1
qu pment
- ~h "Yl -•
, .. , .., .. .,.. ....- . '-o.,
54 Miscellaneous
2000 Fanl TtiCior 12.31111; 11000 AC PS, amllm - · · lugago
Ford 12,:111· 240 lriiomollonol roclt; oxc. oond. 304..7U1131!.Merchandise
Whh Com Ptorrtor 12,1111; IIG
M•ForguiOn
Shoop, 1112 Ford XLT, · 4 whttl dl'lvo,
12 Romlnaton, moc1o1 P,IIIO; eoo Ford 12,'181; 114- :IO,OOOml, a111o:, 113,000. 3Q4.
1100, olllo. 304-t75-'11111 ollor 28111522.
458·11101.
lpm.
Ctoo Har laytor, UIO. Yorcl
1171 Ford T.bfrd, many MW llolc!, 12011. JOhn D•rw CVcll 74
tinj~;:~C~;ji;;;i
pa"a, doell not run, f17S 010. 4 Bar IIIIOWel, $200. 304ol7&amp;41t7.
OoodJNI' OT PIQ. . . .R14 tltH,
eza-.
or StO 111. bv oldll ~.'"d~!,
~'Jll,
Nfrlgtrltor,
7&amp;4101.
··..•
~!~. Sidooo
, ~u. lpmont. :104-t
11i17 Hondo Fotcot 200, Exoof. ~Zl
r.lld~=i.!d500.icJ:,~ ~ Com Plckoro 1 I 2 Row Nl 2
31N222 Lot• E..,.ngo.
::' ':. ~ ~~.!: N~.~::;
20' A Z!' complo1gtrolloro, .oxc.: Rokoo; Mowoll; NH 4TT Hoy
cond., llrlco on lriopoctlon, Full Bind; · I N Food Tractor;
o1za bod WI - . ~oodoro: Othor Flold Aotdy
1187 Suz'*l GS450L, loto o1
httdboord, now onottr- &amp; box Equl_.t, - · ·
Faron chrome,
rune gr~~lt, 114-M2oprlngo. 304-773-11011. •
lloclllnooy, ~ockoon, Ohlc!, 3085 or • • ·~ Sugar Run,..lllll,
l x l - 11_
bul~ Phono: 114-2111 5144.
114oiiU·21 111, $150. :
Ull, dtiiVW)' -,-~
I ootup, • I. 'Hoy_,...,...,- Holland, 72' 11110 Hi'otoy Dovldoon ...,.,
Othor olzoo avolloblo. 8ldoiO E· w1 -riC molor, oxc. oolld. Aklor, 1340 CC Rovl. llolor, Btl
fl-nt; Ha~. 304-t75-'
Woodle.., Form, 304- •Driw, U,IOO, Finn. 114-44121·
a
•.
1~04.
CONCRETE BPETIC_ TANKS, HomoiHo lupor XL cholnoow, 11!13
Katono eoo, 400
...
'
a••• du"
tho ~
11 ~ Golon,
JET - · .-1,
nllf_ tnt -oon Courrt,
IIIIo
Bond . .-5;
Flltor- lloqulrwd)
Folr, 81dono
Eqoolpmont. 304-t711- Mlloo, Uko Now, 14,100. f14-24f.
11011.
11,411; Ron Evono Enta~ 11121.
Jockoon, Ohio I-IIJO.I3U52I. ·
.
J.D. 45 CcxnbiM Loto llodol 75 Boats &amp; Motors
DP Chtlrman -riiOnd Whh Zl4 Com Haodo, RN!Iy
tor Sale
ohlno with lnotruatlon Good Condllon, 114-24f.SI:M.
ond vi- tapo,
coild~
1114 Owono 21' C.bln Cru'-,
_ HP .. Lina:
lion.~~-~·
Holland 717 foolgo ' * - Y.a E....o
""-t• w1 both - · 3 bqtar
.,..no, 2Fl-ood p_,. For Winter loroao - · Hollond T 111:000. Col: 114-44&amp;-'1812
Will 8o 8111 ontd Whtn c;;kl hoy ..nil, Gohl gdnolorlmlx•, 12' f11-44t 1133.
-t~·· · - - . Dollvortd, 114- ,,._...... dloc, IIC no tilt com
- · -311 "::._.~-·E........_
... ~.:;o-:...~ _
ct
11171 17 R. CeniUIJ' Whh
- 1 • ·~•·•- ......,.o. ,_,.or, - - 1- 1ro or, 111 1·11 HP. OUiboord llolor And
good- 304-Z13-4a1l
TraMor Good CondMion Phono
For SII..Cooollno woodbumor,
'
·
•
•
'
tractor. 304llor-

- -·

This newspaper wll nat

Sotttlt

Suwltl

""..!!.. dopooM - .!rod, f14-112.
Ml&lt;
•-·•--- 2 bod
..,....1:'.:1~r•-, _ opta, '::
..~
-·•:L rototgono
mil, , olmaopnorw, ., 111o
....
EOit 3018f2 3711 ...
como
lodoJ, .......nil Apia,
'lth 81, wNovon, WY.
Unlurnlolttd~l
It bidroono
u. ,.
•
""" -P~.
B.
.
Furnished

Hn.Mtald

Vulner able: Neither
Dealer: South

=

.._II,

M lltnl OGIOr

.AK91
+J10116

1

=

57=

•u

FaniR~UI:rDitnd'la!r_~I11'!&gt;Jio~·

~

M:'
.:ii:tl..
M Afltcln

•Au

low-·

1112-Hrl'.
·
~·-• oaa..,.....,
Ohio, l14-le2-TJIII.
·
Sol Wool• Fl- FDI' Solo, C.l IIUII •·•!·. 1111 ~-•~
114-441-!433 wvo llo.ago &amp; · - • · -~l- A.. oonot~:~~
Numbor, C.l YO.. Book.
Lotdtdl l7,ow. 114-44W...,.

liS COttlllltn -

SOIJTH

Ctollt1oL
Air,
Lockl, P-r
Wlndowo,l14-:zlll.14l1.
1111- POitllac !lrlliil Pits, blua ·
loodtd1 33,000 mllto,
"'"'
aooo1 conclt-.
,_ llrwo,
.,,~
080, · 114-1112·2001,

=.=. =- ::t 410

m ......

lllddltpod, Ohio, 81., 1
roono .. mlclo!lcr lumlohod
~3114':::':~· rwl. a
llodom 2 bo*-' oportrnonto
In P_..., and llldcl~ E·
qulppod llllaloano, dopoolt,
" ' " ' - Nqulowd, phono 114Uf.444f oft• 5:00pooi.
1 Btdroono Downtown,
Com•'"'• KMohon1t.
"- 1
· ~--"'"'
~rot -•·••• ......0131.
0no · bodroom
apootrnont_o,
SZZ.,_, lncludol utllllto, 1100
-"'"'
no polo; 1141112~211.
·

-

'1"'.:..-ol:l

.J86
• It I H Z

1111 llltlublohl Ecllpoo, Sta!l-

41 L'lllc poem

EAST
.J10 12
'QH5

,8 74

441~422Aftor7P.M.

Serv1ces
Wacdbu,_,
lluotang. alonofonl, $100.
41 Houses tor Rent
~~· =oonp:=: '1171
3041 112 3241.
, PtlvMo
I19Wii vtlilur - .
Mka manco, 114-:151-1221.
Home
Dodgo Arloo, booty a lnlor· 81
~:'~~: =~ ~
~~~":'i\M'~~=~:
304-17W147.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 114 lo)C~ lor
aclool,
noodo
onglno,
\410·
Improvements
N.O.H.S. uz,aoa Low Roto AtYrRA FURNITURE
:ZOO Pll $0,.11; 1 Inch :ZOO "I 304oi75-'71H.
• · -· ' e••~••-~••o.-••••••$32.10,·
·Ron Evant! Errt=o,
oum. Moot gogo 1~-•··-F
~
or 2 Btdrcomo Romodoltd ...,._,
~~··~~
~"IIASEIIENT
Appolnlrnont.
mont Wfth Aolrlgontor And
.,., DAY lAME AS CASH
Joe_,, 0111o, , _ . , 21.
Oldomobllt, $110, fM-1112·
WATEAPAOOfiNQ
====---.,..-~ Btovo,_ ~ To Gilllpollt, 114- OR RENT~.ow!l f110 lllfiOSIT) 5S
2712 DI'I1Hijl.z377.
u-......1 111111mo _....
3 Btdroomo, 2 Botho, 2 c.r AI· 401o3n7.
Building
11 h·" Q~ Olllbulld~
1112 ComaN ~~ T.Topo, Ex- too. l.ocol .......... lumc '
col- Cono!Mion, $04-.1211. Coll
1 ' 2 Btdrooono, 1 Bolh Ho-,,75 aulsiDE
Supplies
FURHISIINOS:
Or · 0481 1-IOO-J17.01'18
R - Wotorpoooll!lg.
&amp;.
:."rr:::.~
Hubbard stroot, $300/llo. 114- Wniught lion Tablo
W/4 Chlloa;
44f-G4U.
tobllollorl 1m,
llock,
brick,
·
1112
ComaN,
:105
llilo,
S2000
Fon A~ Choir S$1; Mrrttlo, ole. C
Win- 080, $04.fl2-2023.
Alclo Woy'o 1121.00
Doovlo Bowing ., lloolllno And
lr-::;;::~-,~7
roomOltnwood,
houoo Chonclor
Ridge
~~ Orondo, OH Cl!ll 114- 1112 Pontloc Grand Am, 11 IH•, V.Cuum ct.ner Rep.lr, . Fr.
, Rood,
WY. 304-57112301.
Sodding ·'!Win- Btl I", Fill ::.;;~~--;_---11111 o.,. ~L ,..,. flOOd, Plclo·UD And
1:1¥: -goo
ltthiOUooneMI8ol; 4 "
•• 000 ~
CrMk ......., .........
Doowor i!toiii $44.11; car 8od't. 56 Pets tor Sale
• :-,:,Pol
td\oi~Zbrniu~ Bunk Btd'o, - . , - Fill ;.:.-:...:.:;..;;:.:.~::;-,....,. - Qdo AOI'IIt, "· PI, IIC, R-.'o TY - . -"'lllntt
111 lonMh lito ooniCing tnooil
oroo,
rrt ·
oorrt.
U
Of - 1 Clroom
andAll
Pol ........
- oo1 .
wlndo-.
...ko,
"'
·--mm
Groomlno.
olvtoo.
supor ~
_..2041
or
:1523.
1
~$20~ ':.~"1 Julio- Coli
ft .
"-1-.:..,:.:.:..= c:.·:.__ __ __ 10&gt;01'- -Ira. WY
Pt. Pltooorrt, oxc. nolghbor10W1WHI Ohio IM-441 2411.
hood, ~. 3br., 1 112 Mth, U.OO. 2 Loaotlono ·~ AKC lllnlaturw Plnocht'!', _7Wico 1N5 Hondo LX 4
All realeslote advertising t1
largo laml!y""""• _,....,,
llplla Tonk PUI'IIIIIna -~~Gotllt
T!
.,:.·
oo., 3 malta. -.s75-'
lhll nowopapor Is subjed to
11 .... 15 wr.
'
Co. RON EYANIIH!lRP 1118,
Jockoon,OH 1-IIINJ1'-IJZI.
' tho F~ooal Fair Housing ACI
Rio Orondo, . 3 l t d C...caurrtrlld
ond lllwl'!tl...
AKC
lUChini. I1WII
•1 ..,.. ....
.._~·~It 11111 no ~od""~;..
of 11188 which m11&lt;es h 11ega1
141041o.
a At_.,... lolr
ahlnl.tl11211 1311
r......,.l
I
'
ftiW.,
..., Wit bullet ....... - . ~
to odvortl11 •any p"'foranco,
Aoq.-,114-44e •m
lpm.
•
••
lmllalloo or-llMion
AKC ~~~~- Rollwollort,
Tlww bldl OOftl •• electrlo
Tallo lloiclood, Dow et.wo
Cluyllor- - booutllul
...... :zu.,tllil.
ba8od 011 race, color, relglon,
wlclo~;,od nolghbo&lt;·
R - , lholo I Wonnld sexlamllal llalu~ or nollonal
In At
dipcielr,
SilO, 1'14411 1117.
......., ....... , opllon, liN 82
origin, or on)' Intention oo
f3GIIIKJO. lncl
Wllor/ fill"'
Plumbing &amp;
IINo, 1 - onglitl, 112100, 114make any IUd\ proteranco,
boflll-, 114-MN217.
·
CI'A Roglol- 111..-n...._mooalo,'tMHNtlng .
I4HI1L
.
N..-raolon oo ~9CI1mlnallon.'
Mobile Homes
.

WEST
.73

ann

:IS" RCA TY, owlvol Nmotl oont~ .... 00. Enclc nd

'

.,

.A

.• ltQ14
It lO S .
. 107 u

0

5I

44TIItl . . .
41s-

........

NORTH

Ful •In dad Collie pu~, 1 ~-~~·~...,....,---::::-"7=

5lr.::~ ~~~~ko-

SpoCo, Ph-.1: 114-441-23011..

:::'l.:.".!

tll'l8

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
'!'mlll: 1
rw:
, ~. ·1
~Z.O:.':!: outlulavlllt Rd.

Pets tor Sale

- Ook Fumllln; Tobloo a
lniiNments
Cloolro, Cuoloo, CUovod OloApoot_.. lor rllll In Pt. ?.;'~.!,~~~.::;: c'.:rR= ::g.~::'~.:;'
~
..
114-1112-51111 - r Oolllpollo,
441 1311.
...,,..,.... ' 'hoovy
111"
- - --•
~• ~- lplokor,-- :104-8112· •
~"L:
~ Yoonoho Pootalono PBR 31 unro

Real Estate
Wanted ,

eouWo'!~ "1-.o
Ronl OrOUIBot"''T~udllt•r

- - Wlh
'-i:t...Heieclbolrd
a~,.!M._

,

• '

35 loiS &amp; Acreage
1 ocio

56

ComHou plotolloin":-M
•
0

m.'

=It B~"'J:.!~...~':'&amp;-~~
~. ~r~':ir. Add-: 3211 Cora ·

Household
Goods

lade
·~
O...Poo-•
. .. 011
I Nlalol,
- -~
••-. PM. I~
3111.

11U Jo' Gulllnoi'cMxJO, 3 ilfd..
-·All Eloctr Good Cond~
lion, 1114-llt-IISII 17,500.
Ill •· Bkv I
3bdrm oil
1
_,
no,
"
tloatrlc, M • good eondltlon,
1-NSI\
11811- Aldgo, 3 bod-, 2
both, ,.IIHy room, 113&lt;000 or
lako -~"'·· · -3041 or 1
"""1·
1181- Pooto, 14xJO, 3br., 1
1/2 both, laUndiJ' room, CA.-.
f75-'711f,

12111G - Ctrpol, Wotor Hlltlf, ·
Eloctrlc lox Including: Pooch,
= :.nlng, CIA H;oGO, 114-

C.r lal W/11 luiOO, building on
anOther 1101 w/3 opto, bldg 40d6,
- oxtro lett, 2 boclroom homo
on onothor
Ownor will 1111·
: 4
,....r own tractor? Hovo ~· 3-•.
·
thought about IMiJing ,....r o,;;; ·looctor? Ito bolng 0 ooonpony l.ocol Pay Ph-.1 Routo; 11,200
dl'lvor whet rou ora lrrtll'lltod A Wook Potontlol, PoiCecl To
In? Thin col Ctrdlnoltoday at SOli. 1-100-41f.7&amp;~ Ell. 327.
1.1Q0.12t.1222 ond ook tor nm.
WE HAVE rr ALL!
~':.'1'~~
LAW ENFORCEMENT U.S. Mor- 153·Yond.
ohol'~,::'- NOw Hiring. No Nome Yo'" Own lncomo Mako
Eoopo
HocooNIJ'. Foi Ap- Footuno At H-. Own Bufl.
plication Into. Call 2111-7511-C1661 · - . Prol"o 0111 • ;. u-nl~.
Eoot. OHtss 8 A.M. To a P.M. 1 ;;;;; Dotoli'., 212: - 100, id.
::D•~P:::·:.__._,o---:---::---,- -,..
.
•• ''
:=.~:..,..,";"To .t..a ~·r,.;"~ Yondlng ROUio: For Bolt.
Mana~Cmono And Run A 11 Sir::\ Solid C.oh luolnooo.
High ra"lc Local • -~1ono
Roo I lalo Olllco, Hlro Your
•
- · · 3·
Own Slllopoaplo, You wloo Bo NowEqulpmoni.I-IOQ.~ ·
Tho Moln Poroon In Thlo
Agoncy. II lntoroottd.J. I Would
t~,,r•1: r~ YO,::, unoSTrio.Bo
eo':'lclooitlai w';il, "0ow".' Yo:f. - - - - - - - - - Alii Eitato Expado,.,_o .And . 31 Homes for Sale·
Somothl, About Youroolf,
Sond TribunLA 212 clo GootMr.:lo 2 OIOIJ', 3br., 1 1/2 both, 2 car
Dolly ", Oholo
; l:lli4s•-Thlnl ••·· garage, opprox. 2 ocr•. 304Galllpol 1 •
- ··
· 5~27Q8 allor tpon.
Motull Women Notdtd Ao . 3 bedroom, j 112 both ottaohod
Iloilo ,.._lot.. At Hollmark goro- 113 IIIHon ill::c~f.

12

5I ,

1110 Faiii!IOnt mobil hoono,

tar.,

hliv•
DOOCI
mon"8omonl 1 . wool! oliiiOO.'
lind · rooume 10: Googol)' K

Found
F-It Wol._ Coon Hound,
VIc~ 01 Rlvor Volley High
Sc
, R-rdlll14-44f.2431.
Few1d: n.m ot value~, frorw of
TJ'o Root., ....... 304-1112-27'JII.
Loot: loMon Tlfrlor bulldoa, SR
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hol••kl!lplng 1 ltundiJ' ..,....

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1803 Palm Harbour, :llx1!3, toto!
drvwoll, ThonnopoM wl-,
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appnaloto, 1-100-837«:15.

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"This is our biggest seller for
pe ople who made their money in oil,"
for Sale
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good ooildMion, 114-112·3'181,
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dining-,
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An.a•• te ""1111 Palll

37 DrUJhl

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1993

Ohio

-~---People

iri the news---~
FiMbogadottir, former Danish Foreign Minister Uffe EllemannJensen and Prince Frederilc, heir to
·the Danish throne.
The programs will be aired on
the Public Broadcasting System
network in mid-1994, Jacobsen
said.

She said her sister and nephew
were among those arrested Monday.
"My family is involved in both
sides of the issue, just like many
B.C. families," she said.

to make a 13-part television series
about the Nordic countries for
American viewers, his Danish producer said Tuesday.
The 30-minute shows will focus,
on different aspects of the life irr
the social welfare slates, such as
the environment, family life, the
arts and Nordic cooperation, said
Claus Jacobsen.
''Many Americans wonder what
Scandinavia really is," Jacobsen
said. "That is what Cronkite will
describe to them."
The 76-year-old former-CBS
newsman arrives Saturday in
Copenhagen and will head to Finland, Sweden, Norway and Iceland.
He will interview such dignitaries as King Carl XVI Gustaf of
Sweden, Iceland's President Vigdis

A store where 'Nick at Night' comes to life
By THERESA HUMPHREY
Associated Press Writer
CAMBRIDGE, Md. (AP) The sign says "antiques," but if
you're looking for Civil War relics
or old furniture, forget it.
EnU:ring Herb Hastings' "Way
Back Machine"- a two-story yellow house jammed full of baby
boomer nostalgia- is like walking
into a TV set locked ,on the "I
Love Lucy"·era.
It' s "Nick At Night" come to
life.
1\ package of Lucy and Desi
cutout dolls dangles from the ceiling just inside the front door. Head
shots of the Beatles oversee the terrain from atop a big red Coca-Cola
chest.
.
There's a mild musty smell in
the air, but it's part of the shop's
character, just like the broken windows, the tattered American flag
hanging from the porch and the
powder blue 1960 Chevy Biscayne
out front that doesn't run.
A slogan on the side of the
house says it all:
"If it's old and stinky, we got
iL"

Metal lunch boxes from old
television shows and cartoons line
ceiling beams. A "Charlie's
Angels" lunch box is tagged at
$45. How about a "Welcome
Back, Kotter" thermos?
There's a rack of children's

books from oldtime TV shows "Bat Masterson," "Sea Hunt, .. "'I
Spy," "Gunsmoke."

Comic books featuring Hopalong Cassidy or Roy Rogers and
Trigger that sold for a dime 25
yean ago carry $15 price tags.
That should be good for Hastings. TV -related items from the
1960s are among the hottest things
on the memorabilia market, according to Pat Bishow, manager of 1ust
Kids Noslalgia in Huntington, N.Y.
"What's creeping in are the
television shows of the '70s. You
can feel it. 'The Partridge Family'
and 'The Brady Bunch' are on the
rise now," Bishow said.
Hastings also has GI Joes from
1964, a Dudley do Right jigsaw
puzzle and a Ben Casey board
game. There are unopened boxes of
Sugar Crisp cereal, a Wheat Honeys box with Buffalo Bee on the
front from 1959.
For sports fans, there are baseball cards and Wheaties.boxes. One
featuring former Chicago Bears
star Walter Payton is offered for
$25. And there's a youthful, longhaired Joe Namath in his New
York Jets jersey on a popcorn
machine box.
Hastings, a 41-year-old illcurable collector, opened the store
seven years ago mainly to get rid of
all the stuff he's amassed.

~~~

-

was held recently at Bess and
Junior Miller's farm at 325 Stem·
berger Road, Jackson.
1\ covered dish luncheon was
served was enjoyed by the more
than 70 attcndin);. Prizes of sil:ver
dollars were giwn to the oldest
attending, James Farrar, age 82,
and the youngest attending, Taylor
Rene Farrar, age se,•en months.
Door prizes were )~iven to lvor Farrar and Don Clark. A prize was
given to David, Lynne •. and Kris
Bown who traveled the farthest
from Redfield, 1\rkansas.
Those attending were Juanita
and Don Clark. Jackson; Vince,
Lisa, Kristy, and Kayla Carce, Bob
Farrar, Hazel and James Farrar,
Terry, Diana, Cowdeny, Jeremy
and Bryan Farrar, Betty and lvor
Farrar Pomeroy; Ralph and Marilyn Flirrar, Sandy Byrd, Martina
Farrar, Chuck, Lori. Morgan and

L\J

SKVV&lt;i

A day-long ·s eminar called
"Using WordPerfect 5.1TM" will
be offered on August 26 by the
Adult Services Division of the Gallialackson-Vinton
JVSD. The semiOTHER MAN'S TREASURE • Herb Hastings sits in his store,
nar
wiD
be
held
at
1\dult Service's
the ''Way B.ack Machine," August 5 in Cambridge, Md. Entering
.
Buckeye
Hills
,facility
in Rio
the ''Way Back Machine," a two story yellow bouse jammed ruu,or
Grande.
The
class
will
bel
held
baby boomer nostalgia, is Uke walking into a television locked on
from
9
am.-3
p.m.
in
Room
134
of
the "I Love Lucy" era •. It's Nickelodeon come to lir,e. (AP
the
Human
Resources
Building.
Pboto/Ted Mathias)
The seminar is designed for
those JICISOOS with some training or
background in WordPerfect who
wish to expand their knowledge.
Topics covered include advanced
block operations, line draw, merging, formatting (including tabs,
The
minutes
were
read
by
the
A donation of $100 was made
secretary,
Lillian
Weese
and the
toward the fall festival activities in
Racine by the Racine Comm.unity treasurers report was given by
Organization which met recently at Tonya Hunter.
the Star Mill Park.
·
The organization will be serving
Fifty dollars will go for prizes · lemonade and baked goods at the
for the parade· $25.00 awarded for Civil War Enacunent celebration in
nrsrplace. $15.00 for second place, Ponland on Sanmlay.
·
A yard sale is being planned for
and the remaining towards the
the fall.
entertainment
It was noted that new members
Tlie meeting was opened with
prayer by president F\'Bnk Cleland, are always welcome· to the meetA meal was served to IS members ings which take place on the fo;urth
Tuesday of each month at 6:30
and one guest.
p.m. The dinner is $3.

Taylor Farrar, Rick, Michele, and
Madison Maniskas, Midge and
Francis Farrar, Crystal and Missy
Farrar, Scott Farrar, Debbie, Halie,
Deric Hartberger, Logan; Violet
and Bill Bobo, Doug, Pam, 1\ndy,
Addi, and Cody Bobo, Westerville;
Chuck King. Susan Bobo, Gahanna; Mildred and Lawrence Wolf,
Newark; Marie and Bruce Stewart,
Medway; Bobbie and Bill Farrar,
Oak Hill; Jeanette, Don, and Nick
Bobo, Franklin Valley; Peggy and
Matt Farrar, Reynoldsburg; Brian,
Lindy, Amber, and Christopher
Burkham, Syracuse; David, Lynne,
and Kris Brown, Redfield,
Arkansas; Heather Wise, Nick,
Tammy, Derek, and Jason Bobo,
Dawnne and Willy Hall, Middle-

Racine community meets .

port

State of Ohio
Department of Insurance

Attending the past 22 years have
been Mildred an.d Lawrence Wolf,
Hazel and James Farrar, Bess and
Junior Miller.

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Frl.ay,August 13,9:00.4:00 p.m.
11 Dr. I. Jaclcs01 Bailts' Office
110 Mecllaaic

:
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1312 Easter• Avtlut (Roae·7), Galli HilS
614·446·1744
W•••estlay, August 18, 9:00 a.m.•4:00

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ficial. The purpose of phy~cal therapy is to maintam t!J~ !l'&gt;il~ty to do
one's necessary acUvlDCIIIR a nor·
mal or near normal fashion. There
is usually a reduction in discom•
fort, too. However, that benefit
· should be considered a bonus. It's
not the primary reason for sticking
to a physical therapy program.
Medication can help control the
pain and minimize the inflammation of osteoarthritis. but it can't
slow its progression. The drugs
most commonly used are in a "family" of non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory medicines. Aspirin is the
oldest member of this family; but
there are quite a nlunber of close
and distant relatives. These antiinflammatory medications are suf•
ficiently different that your doctor
may ask you to try several before
you find one that gives you good
relief of pain and stiffness.
The pain of arthritis can also be .
helped with medications other than
anti-inflammatory
drugs .
1\cetaminophen, commonly sold 1
under the brand name Tylenol, is '
an affordable and safe medication
for arthritic pain. It can even be
taken along with an anti-inflammatory medication. Another medication, ZOstrix, is applied like a lini·
ment and gives satisfactory relief
of pain to some people. There are
even electrical devices - called
Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve
Stimulation (or more simply,
TENS) units - that block the signals along p~in nerves and give
good relief to some who suffer
from arthritic pain.
· Unfortunately, none of these
measures alone or all of them in
combination can guarantee tha(
your .arthritis will not progress to
the point of producing. a crippling
disability. Follow your doctor's
advice. Use all the modalities that
he or she recommends to maintain
your comfort and your ability to
perform the tasks you must do.
Even' if, and I stress the "if," your
arthritis progresses to a crippling
stage, there are many joint replacement surgeries than can help
restore your mobility and rwuce
your discomfort.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolr, D.O.,
Ollio University College or Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701. •

... Wordperfect seminar

Farrar reunion held
The 22nd annual Farrar reunion

Page4

John C. Wolf, .D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

--

•
•
:
•
•
•
•

I

CERTIFICATE OF COMPUANCE .
The
undersigned, $UPERINTENDENT OF INSURANCE OF
THE STATE OF OHIO, hereby certifies that MUNICIPAL MUT INS
CO
OF WEST VIRGINIA
of
WELLSBURG Sate of WEST
VIRGINIA has complied with the
laws of the Stale appUcable to It
and Is authorized during the current
year to transact In this alate Its
appropriate buslneu of Insurance.
ON THE MUTUAL PLAN. THIS
CERTIF.ICATE MUST BE PUB·
USHED IN A NEWSPAPER OF
GENERAL CIRCULATION IN
MEIGS COUNTY.
Its Financial condltlon Ia shown by
Its annual atatemenllo have been
as follows on December 31 , 1992:
ADMITIEO ASSETS ... :$12,388,757.00
LIABILITIES ..................:$4,185,018.00
SURPI.US....................... $8,211,739.00
INCOME .......................: $7,857,908.00
EXPENOITURES.......... :$8,846,781 .00
IN WrrNESS WHEREOF, I hove

-·.-m~

namo IIIII ..,IIOd mr Mollo be
albood Ill Collmbua, Ohio, lhll

day and dale.

HAROlD T. W'IYEE
DIRECTOR
Superlnlen&lt;lenl o1 buranoo o1 0111o

headers, page numbering, etc.),
search/replace, windows, fonts,
special characters and an introductiOn to graphics. The seminar is
practical and emphasizes hands-on
training. Attendance at a beginning
WordPerfect seminar or,previous
WordPerfect experience is
required.
Interested persons may register
for the course by sending a check
or money order (made out to: Gallia-Jackson-Vinton JVSD) to:
1\dult Services, P.O. Box 157, Rio
Grande, 01:1 4S674. More information about the seminar may be
obtained by contacting Adult Services at (614) 245-5334.

~\:.-.

Support

The

KID'S 'RAND BUFFET·
AND SUNDAE BAR
AII-You~n-Eat

Mason
County

tODS 51 LINDU:

FREE
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f«JRRY! Coupotl Ex{JitN gJ8 1i3

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•

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Lunch Grind Buffet·
Purchlst of our
Fair!
$3
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PICKENS
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215 Upper River Rd. - Rt. 7
ont

tnctuda sundae

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.MASON, WV.

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-:=-

,

·--~·- ·-·-

LOW' 11&gt;olgbt .. mid 6GI, nla.
Frldey, parUy t loudy; blgllla

mid 80s.

·

•

Mullen
cleared on
three of 12
charges

Meigs Commission has
no money .avuilable to
help fund hotel project
LISTENING TO TAPE -Judge Dan Favreau listens to a tape
recording or a conversation between D. Michael Mullen, lnvestiga.
tor Gary Wolre and Pr&amp;iecutor Jobn R. te11tes during Mullen's
trial Wednesday in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Mullen, a Pomeroy attorney, is accused or giving drugs to two
minor females on March 12 and 13. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

~n the tape, Mullen commented
.the older girl had tallced of going to
parties and getting drunk. "She tol9
me some pretty hairy stuff. So
much I almost called the sheriff,"
he said.
At one time, she came to my
house and said she thought she was
pregnant, Mullen related. I gave
her a toll-free number she could
call for teens in trouble. She hoped
she was pregnant so she could
move out of her mother's home,
Mullen said.
"Off ihe cuff. I would sav... she
made it up to get out of the.house,"
Mullen said··referring to the allegalions he gave her and her younger
sister drugs.
Mullen said he had a prescriptiori for Xanax but denied having
Valium in his.tzouse.
James Ferguson, chief toxicologist for the Frrutklin County Coroncr's Office, testified that blood
te.sts indicated the older girl had
40.4 milligrams of valium in her
bloodstream the morning of March
14 while the younger ~I had 17.9
· milligrams of Valium m her bloOdstream.
No tests were performed to
detect Xanax, he said.
1\ nurse at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, where the girls were
treated said t~e girls said they
received the drugs from Mullen.
However, she a),So added the older
girl at fii'St denidd having ~en any

drugs; th&lt;;n admitted taking two
Valiums and then eventually admit·
ted taking six of the pills.
The older girl was concerned
about receiving a catheter because
she thought she might be pregnant
and didn't want to hurt her baby,
the nurse commented.
Seen b uylng drugs
Following testimony for the
state, Connie Higham, Racine, tes·
tifying for Mullen, said she saw the
older girl purchase drugs in May's
Tavern in Pomeroy on March 12.
In additlon, she purchased drugs on
March 13, she said.
Higham testified she had seen
the girl in the bar on several occlisions purchasing drugs from several different people.
.
. Vickie Michaels, Pomeroy. also
reporte" seeing the older girl in
. May ' ~ Tavern op March 12 purchasing drugs .
Ken Hartley, Pomeroy, said he
spent part of the evening of March
12 with Mullen while Mullen's
neighbor, Darla Griffith, said
Mullen did not come home until
around 11 :30 p.m. on March 12,
when some of the alleged incidents
were to have occurred at his home.
Griffith said the youngsters
were at Mullen's home on March
13, but only for a short time.
Following testimony, Favreau
recessed the trial until 9 a.m. this
morning to give both sides time to
prepare closing arguments.

Residents outside ,_ Syracuse-will
not be served.by TPC water system
By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Correspondents
Syracuse Village Council
lcar.ned at n recessed session
Wednesday night that it will not be
tying into the Tuppers PlainsChester Water System to serve residents upriver who arc located outside the corpomtion limits.
The feasibility of such a connection was discussed at length by
council members, with Don Poole,
general manger of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District, and
Gordon Winebrenner and Larry
Ebersbach of the Syracuse Board
of Public Affairs.
Emphasis of the discussion was
on connecting to the Tuppers ·
Plains-Chest~r System, energizing
2,000 feet .of line laid many years
ago and extending it to 1he Jim
Cundiff property.
Poole, aft;; presenting some
cost informatliJn explained that the
time and money involved would
not warrant his company's tying
into the Syracuse system upriver
from the corporation limits because

so few people would benefit
The general mana~er gave some
information to counc1l in regard to
water quality and gave a bniakdown on cosiS.
Pool suggested' that since his
company's system is already tied in
on the Roy Jones Road in Syracuse
that that line be strengthened to
better serve the area.
Speaking of his own operation,.
Poole said that his system has a
contract with individual customers
and that the customers pay $390 for
meter and tap and $1.10 Jl foot
from their line to the poinl of supply.
He said that in 1992 the system
delivered 899,000 gallons a day to
11,532 customers, an average of 77
gallons per person per day. He said
that statewide the avemge per capi.
ta consumption is 60 gallons.
Those figures were compared to
the 950 customers in Syracuse who
had an average consumption rate of
136 gallons per capita per date.
Poole said the increased consump-

--Local briefs---.
Middleport home leveled by fire
On Tuesday night, deputies .of the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department tDOk a report that a house owned by Opal King, Lead. ing Creek Road, Middleport, had burned to the grouqd.
According to Mrs. King, she was gone July 24-28 and was not
aware that anything was wrong. She rel'orted the house still had
electricity in it but no one was living in 1L She resides in a mobile
home some distance away. On Tuesday evening her son-in-law was
visiting and walked up to the old house and discovered it had been
burned.
She advised that the power company had sent her a final bill on
July 28 but she did not really question why. She reported she had
·
·Continued on page 3

tion is not unusual for unmctcred
areas.
Cost in the water district system
is $10.50 for the first 3,000 gallons.
He said that meters are more beneficial to retired persons than single
ones and commented that it is hard
to compare the Syracuse system· to
the water district system from the
cost standpoint.
It was noted that Cundiff had
hired an engineer to design the line
lay on his property. This was a
tliree inch line which Eber Pickens,
acting fire chief, said would not be
large enough for a fire hydrant.
Poole, however, said that a dry
hydrar\t could be used.
As for cost Ebersbach said it
would take $2,800 to energize the
2,000 feet of line already in place,
and by putting in m~ters and taps
and laying more line the costs
would be over SlO,OOO for those 26
residences upriver and outside the
.
corpomtion limits.
. "Our problem is to protect the
people in the village, and supply
several people on the outskirts of
town with water," said Mayor
James Pape. He said he hated to see
any business not thrive because
they could not get water, and
would like to see the Tuppers
Plains system serve the upriver residences. .
Pickens was authorized to pur·
chase 12 pairs of gloves for the fire
department at a cost of $312. Pickens noted that the roof on the
municipal building needs painting
and was asked to come up some
cost figures for COUJ\Cil.
Attending were Jim Hill, Don
Shaffer, Kathryn Crow, Dennis
Wolfe, Bill Roush, Mayor )?ape
and Clerk-treasurer Janice Lawson.

'
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ready 10 move on the project and in . vention program was sent to the :
Sentinel News Staff
fact will probably be "ready to Ohio Department of .. Natural ·
Funding for a water line exten- move on gelling the water in there Resources which provides partial :
funding for the program. The Com· sion to the new Meigs Motel on the next week".
Route 7 by-pass was discussed at
Also meeting with the commis- missioners in the letter noted thai ;
Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs . sioners were Wanda Reynolds and the local cash support for the grant
County Commissioners.
Leslie Foraker of the Easter Seal year 1994· is in the amount of •
•
Brent Bolin, Leading Creek .Society. They requested $5,000 .to $12,000. .
Purchase of a Ford tractor was •
Conservancy District general man- fin'lnce the speech and hearing
ager, and Paula Thacker of the clinic in Meigs County which is approved and a resol~tion was
passed authorizing the board to ·
Meigs County Chamber of Com- operated at the Meigs County
secure a loan in the amount of'
merce met with the commissioners Health Departmen~
to ask' for any funds that might be
They reponed that 54 children
$29 ,700 at five percent interest
from th e Racine Home National :
available which could go into the are in the spcecfi program here and
line extension.
that 350 children have had one- Bank , The loan is to be made for a
periM of six months with the
They explained that there is time visiiS to the clinic. The comsome urgency in getting water to missioners explained that they have option to renew.
Read at the meeting was a leucr
the motel site since the owner. no money to put into the program
from
Jon D. Jacobs, deputy health
Frank Herald, wants to open in and sugges ted various agencies
commissioner,
requesting that the
September. The water lines are which migh t contribute.
county
transfer
title to two used .
now at Big Wheel. Projected cosl
It was reported that Ferrell Gas
of the 3,000 feet exten~on to t~e will be moving from the building sheriff' s cruisers to the Meigs ·
motel site is about $20,000, Bolm which ·the county leases at the County Health Department. Action
said.
interseclion of Union and Route 7 on the request was tabled.
Bill s in the amount of
The commissioners advised by-pass at the end of August. 'fhe
· Bolin that they have no funds avail- space is available for rent at $575 a $119,.629.30 for the week were
approved for payment by the com- •
able to put into the project.
. month .
A letter of support for the Meigs missioners, Bob Hartenbach, ManBolin said that Leading Creek 1s
County Recycling and Litter Pre- ning Ro~sh, and Janet Howard.

Gove~:nment

says work
at·,· mine has wiped out
millions in cleanup
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (1\P) The pumping of untreated water
from a flooded mine has wiped out
cleanup work that cost $4.6 .!llil·
lion, the federal government S31d.
The U.S. Environmenlal Protection 1\gency and the federal Office
of Surface Mining objected
Wednesday to allowing Southern
Ohio Coal to pump water from the
flooded Meigs 31 mine into southeast Ohio creeks.
·The company has been pumping
the mine since obtaining a temporary restraining order June 30
against the Office of Surface Mining from U.S. District Judge Sandra Beckwith.
Ms. Beckwith heard argull)ents
Wednesday to determine whether
to issue a preliminary injunction to

'

~

allow the company to continue
pumping.
.
More than 100 people, many of
them employed by the mine,
crowded the main courtroom in the
U.S. District Courthouse in Columbus.
Pamela West, a Justice Department attorney representing the
Office of Surface Mining, said the
federal government spent $4.6 mil·
lion to clean up pollution that
flowed into Leading Creek from
abandoned mines.
''Unfortunately ... that benefit to
the public has been wiped out,"
Ms. West said.
Leading Creek can be saved if
the judge denies the preliminary
injunction, because the coal company has removed only 10 percent

of the estimated I billion gallons of .
water in Meigs 31.
. D. Michael Miller and Janet
Henry, attorneys for Southern Ohio
Coal, said that before the judge's
temporary restraining order, the
Ohio EPA approved the pumping
and is now monitoring it.
"I think what they're suggesting ·
is that the governing agencies
involved are not doing their jobs,"
Miller said. "The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency is doing
its job."
Miller said Leading Creek has
been damaged and fish have been
killed because of the pumping but
said the creek should recover.
"Who will provide jobs for the
miners if the mine is not recovered?" he said.
'

Hearing continues in U. S. District Court
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff .
The hearing in U. S. District
Court, Columbus, continues today
as witnesses from both the South·
ern Ohio Coal Co. and environmental protection agencies testify.
Emphasis of the hearing is on
determining wheth·er the U. S.
Environmental Protection Agency
has jurisdiction over the Ohio
Environmental Protection 1\gency

which approved Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s plan to remove water
fTom Meigs Mine 31 which flooded
in mid-July. Pumping began early
last week.
Yesterday Southern Ohio Coal
Co. (SOCCo) called five witnesses.
B. J. Smith, public affairs director
for American Electric Power, Fuel
Supply, of which Southern Ohio
Coal Co. is a subsidiary, said that
the witnesses spoke primarily on

P .A. DENNY CRUISES • Crullel on the p .
. A. Denny wUJ be featured this weekend u a
or th• 130th anniversary of tbe Battle ot Bulflng.
ton Island. The boat wUJ leave Gallipolis at 11
a.m. Friday morning aad· after plekiag up pas.
sengers at both Pomeroy and Racine, wiD arrive

pari

'

the background of the mining operation, the equipment involved in
underground coal mining, the alternative~ to the water removal plan
that were considered, and the need
for removal of the water in a timely
manner.
In addition, said Smith, Larry
Ward of the United Mine Workers
of America, District 6, testified on
the importance of the mining jobs
Continued on page 3

at the old biltorle Portlaad levee about 4:30. A
dance wl!l be held on the boat Friday evenln1
with music by tbe Saxtoas Cornet Band. T~re
will be two cruises·on Saturday and two oa Sun·

day.

•.

'

L..P.1fQ

.,

-2 Sec:tiona. 12 P~~gee 35 centa
AMuiUmodialnc. Nowllfl~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 12, 1993"

Multlmeclillnc.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
D. M;ichael Mullen faces three
less charges as three of 12 counts
· against the Pomeroy attorney were
dismissed in the Meigs County
Coutt of Common Pleas Wednesday.
Two charges of contributing to
the delinquency of a minor were
dismissed as was a charge of eompelling pr,ostitution. However, he
still faces eight counts of corrupt·
ing anbther with drugs and one
charge of aggrava(ed menacing. .
Compelling prostitution consists
of inducing, procuring,.,soliciting or
requesting one to engage in sexual
activity for hire. Judge Dan
•Favreau said testimony did not
show Mullen requested sexual
activity. The charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor
were dismissed with agreement of
the Meigs County Prosecutor's
Office.
Mullen ~ accused of furnishing
prescription medicine, namely Valmm and Xanax, to two girls, ages
11 and 13, on March 12 aitd 13.
The girls were later treated and
hospitillized for overdose at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital.
- Mu\)en's trial began Tuesday
morning after his lawyers, Herman
Carson and Robert Shostak, both of
Athens, waived a trial by jury and
opening arguments.
:·
Testimony continues
Testimony continued Wednesday morning starting with Gary
. Wolfe, investigator for the Meigs
County Prosecutor's Office.
Wolfe said he spoke with
Mullen during a taped conversalion, in the presence of Prosecutor
John R. Lentes, shortly after the
alleged incidents of March 12 and
13. Wolfe then {llayed portions of
tho taped discliss1on.
Mullen said during the conversation that he·knew the two girls. "I
have visited their' house before,
they have visited my house
before," Mullen said.

•

•

Vol. 44, NO. 75

(aero" from the airport)
-~.........

Pick 3:
705
Pick 4:
0206
Super Lotto:
8--9·14-16-35-45
Kicker:
310296 .

sweep
Reds

Family
Medicine

TAMPI\, Aa. (1\P)- The new
love in Burt Re~ds' life probaTOFJNO, British Columbia bly appeals to him because she's a
(AP)- California state Sen. Tom simple country girl, and is denni~~~r ·
-By Job C. Wolr, 0 ;0.
H~y!ien and. actress B~rbara ly no gold digger, her attorney and
ASIOdate Profe110r of Family
W1lliams mamed near the s1te of a boss say.
Medldne
Oblo Unlvenlty Col·
Pam Seals, a 37-year-old bar
logging blockade outside this
lege
of Osteopathic Mediclae
manager
at
M~lio
s
in
south
remote Vancouver Island town
•
where hundreds of protesters were Tampa, has refused to talk to the Question: I have suffered with
news media except for an interview
arrested.
since I was in my late 20s.
The couple's vows, exc!tanged published by the National Enquirer arthritis
My
doctor
gives me medication
before a Buddhist priest, included a this week.
that
helps
keep
the pain under con·
Her attomey, Joseph H. Ficarpledge to preserve old-growth
trol,
but
I'm
concerned
that I may
rotta, says she is a "down to earth"
forests.
become
crippled
by
it. Does
The marriage Sanmlay was held woman who feels overwhelmed by
osteoarthritis
always
become
cripon an isolated beach in Clayoquot her newfound celebrity. "It gets to
pling?
'
Sound, the site of ongoing protests be a hassle from what she's telling
1\nswer: Arthritis is defined as
1
over logging. Police removed more me,'' he said.
inflammation
of a joint.
The lawyer said Monday the
than 250 protesters from the road
Osteoarthritis
just
one of many
blond, green-eyed former pro footleading into the sound on Monday.
types
of
arthritis
is
characterized
• 'Marriage is similar to old· ball cheerleader isn •t after
by roughened and 111isshapen joint
growth forest - you have to be Reynolds' wallet.
"She's not a gold digger," he surfaces arid involves one or more
especially loving and vigilant to
help it survive and grow," said. "! !hink they've got a very areas, such the fmgers, knees, hips,
feet, or spine. Even though tbe
deep relationship;"
Williams said Monday.
·
joints
are distorted and painful,
Seals' employer, Malio
Hayden, a Chicago Seven defentheir
range
of motion is usually still
dant previously married to Jane Iavarone, said she probably wasn't fairly good. And despite the
Fonda, is a longtime supporter of bowled over by Reynold's fame requirement for inflam!llation in
because celebrities often frequent
environmental causes.
the definition Qf arthritis, the
the
bar. But he thinks he knows
Williams was born in Esperanamount
of inflammation in
za, a tiny Vancouver Island com- why Reynolds fell for her.
"She' s really a basic person, osteoarthritis is usually small.
munity about 70 miles from Totino
Osteoarthritis is by far the most
and 175 miles northwest of the kind of a country girl." he said. common type of arthritis, It is estiprovincial capilal of Victoria. Her ."She's fust class. She's v~ sim- mated that there are 60 million
film credits incllide "Thief of ple, and he's not used to that '
Reynolds, 57, and Loni 1\nder- Americans who suffer with this
Hearts" and "City of ltope."
condition. One third of adufts age
Hayden's new father-in-law is a son, 47, married in 1988 and have a 25 to 75 have X-ray findings of
retired logger, but Williams and 4-year-old adopted son, Quinton . osteoarthritis of the hands, feet,
other family members support They recently announced divorce knees or hips, even though 40 perpreservation of old-growth forests. plans.
cent of them have no other symp. toms of the disease. Osteoarthritis
can be mild and almost unnoticed,
or it can be severe and crippling. It
is the illness responsibte for 5 percent
of disability retirements.
Nineteen-year-old Laszlo baseball cards and we wheel and
Arthritis
is second pnly to heart
Ambrus of Cambridge says he deal," Ambrus said. "I think (the
disease
in
this regard. So, your constops in at the store on U.S. 50 store is) really neat It's got a lot of
cern
about
becoming crippled js
about once a week.
swff that anybody can walk in here
justified. •
"I collect comic books and and be interested in something.''
Question: Should I be doing
anything besides taking my medi•
cation to prevent my arthritis from
becoming crippling?
Answer: .No one has discovered
a cure for osteoarthritis, at least not
yet. The best treatment for the condition requires establishin~ the
proper balance between exerc1se to
maintain muscle strength and joint
mobility, rest to reduce the stress
on the arthritic joint or joints and
medication to reduce the pain and
inflammation.
Physical therapy is an important
..,., ~t-l"l'
part
of arthritis treatmenL Specific
oc-r ,.J nP
(j{; .. "·
exercises are prescribed to
strengthen muscles without putting
excessive stress on the arthritic
joints. Heat, bmces and other physical modalities are also often bene-

DON HENLEY

WALTER CRONKITE
COPENHI\GEN, Denmark
· (1\P} - Walter Cronkite is going

Giants

Ohio Univer.rs~i~lety:op:lrdtr'!"flllll!llff!Wr
College
of \.J
f

"'

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) Elton JQhn, Sting, Aerosmith and
Melissa Elherid&amp;e will join singer
Don Henley in a Labor Day concen
Jt Foxboro Stadium to benefit the
Malden Woods Project
Henley founded the nonprofit
environmenlal apniution to pre·
serve the land near Walden Pond,
the woodsy area made famous by
19th century author Henry David
Tharellu.
In three years, the grouP. has
acquired more than $8 million
wort,h of land near the pond. But
the, acquisitions have put the projec,t almost $5 milli.on m debt Proceeds from the concert will be used
to pay off the loans. ·
Tickets prices range from $35 to
$125 . .

Ohio Lottery

I

J

'

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