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                  <text>•

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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:
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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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UMWA. UAW ·WORKERS COMPENSATION FUND
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WALK·INS WELCOME

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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

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Mason
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.MASON, WV.

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,

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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

'

�I~

"

Commentary
The .Daily Sentinel

(

i

Cardsbower
p.m. at the fire station to· receive,
A card shower will be held for consider and inact a zoning resol~~r
Ethel Cozart, a resident of Poineroy tion ~
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
who will celebrate her 86th birth- . Yard sale
Clifton Tabernacle will have a
day on Friday. Cards may be sent
.to her at the center, room 140. A yard Sale Saturday beginning at 9
surprise open house will he held for a.m. Proceeds will be used to repair
her on Saturday at her former home the church.
in Old Portland (Johnson House)
from 1-3 p.m.
Reunion
· The Silver Run G'rade School
Revival
reunion will be Sept. 5 at the
Weekend revival at the Syracuse school playground from 1-5 p.m.
. Church .of the Nazarene will be Fri- Former students, teachers and
. day and Saturday at 7 p.m. and friends invited. P~otos will be
· Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. taken. Soft drinks will he provided.
•
· ·with Rev. Rick Sturgill and "DisHymn sing
·
-covering the Book of James." Song
Faith
·Full
Gospel
Church, Long
: evang~lists are.Ian Lavendar and
Bottom,
will
have:'a
hymn sing
Kathy McDaniel.
with the Clark farriily singers and
other local singers on Friday at 7
· Melon supper
Modem WOodmen of America; p_m. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
follows.
Burlingham Camp, is having a public. Fellowship
J
_ melon supper Saturday at 7 p:m. at
Orientation
the northbound park on Route 33 at
A meeting wit,. be eld at 9:30
Darwin. Sandwiches and melons
a.m. Friday at Chester Elementary
. :will be provided.
for children who have not pre-registered for ki.ndergarten. Registra·
Football meeting
There will be a meeting of all tion is at 9 a.m. A meeting will be
Mdgs Junior High School students held at noon at Tuppers Plains Eleinlerested in football at 8 a.m: Fri· mentary with registration at 11:30
. day in the junior high school audi- a.m.
torium. Those interested but unable
Event planned
to auend should call the school at
Faith Chapel Church, Coolville,
'.992-3058.
benefit sing, rummage sale and
soup bean and cornbread dinner,
Reunion
The 86th annual Perry Curtis Saturday. Rummage sale is 8 a.m.
.reunion will be Sunday at 12:30 to 1 p.m., singers at 5 p.m. and supp.m. at the Long Bottom Commu· per from 4-5 p.m.
nity Center. There will be a basket
Dinner planned
· dinner. Terry Curtis and Marjorie ·
Church Senior Choir
Trinity
Brewer families are hosts.
will have a chicken a~d noodles
luncheon Friday beginning at I0:30
Revival
a.m.
and will last until 5 p.m. Other
Weekend.revival and homecom.ing at Zion Church of Christ, Rut· foods, desserts and drinks will be
land, will be Friday and Saturday at available. All proceeds will go
·7 p.m. and Sunday at 10:30 and 2 toward the pl!fChase of the new carp.m. with a potluck at noon. Public illons.
'invited.
iR.eunion
A reunion of the descendants of
Tryouts slated
.
All Meigs High School fresh- Martin and Emma -Roush Sayre
man wanting to try out for volley- will be Sunday a\ Star Mill Park in
ball should report to the high Racine.
school Friday at 9 a.m. for practice.
Dorst reunion
Bring a completed physical card
signed by. a parent or guardian.
Dorst family reunion will be
Sunday at the home of Martin
Dorst in Shade. Lunch will be at
Entertainment
Entertainment at Star Mill Park noon_
. in Racine on Saturday will be
Performance
Specks of Bluegrass, Mountain
Liberty Mountaineers will perTop Singers and Ramb!in' Coun- form Friday at Skateland in Ripley,
try. Refreshments will be available. W.Va.
Bring lawn chairs.
Reunion
Samuel Eblen reunion will be
Curtis reuniQn
Satu.~day at Route 33 southside
The 86th annual Perry Curtis
:reunion will be Sunday at 12:30 park. Dinner will be at6 p.in .
Tournament '
p.m. at !he Long Bottom Commu·
A men's softball 1ournament .
. nity Center. There will be a basket
by the Tuppers Plains
spoqsored
dinner. Terry Curtis and Marjorie
and
Softball Association
Baseball
· Brewerfamilies are hosts.
will be held Aug. 28-29. at Eastern
Golf practice
High School. Fee is S65 and two
The Meigs Golf Team practice balls. Team trophies for first sec·will begin Friday a1 9 a_m . aT the ond and third places. Individual
Meigs County Golf Course.
trophies for first and second. Call
667-3653 or 667-3342 for informaDance planned
tion.
A round and square dance will
·be held Friday from 8-11:30 p,m_ at
Meeting slated
-the Tuppers Plains VFW HalL C.J.
Shade Ri ~ er · Lodge No. 453
·and the County Gentlemen will F&amp;AM Ches~r will meet Thursday
.pcrfonn with Melvin Cross calling: at 8 p.m. with work in the EA
All welcome.
degree. Refreshments w.ill be
served.
·
Meeting cancelled
The Olive Township Zoning
SOLOS meet
Commission has cancelled its
SOLOS will''have a picnic Sunmeeting for Tuesday . A special day at 4 p.m. a\ the Meigs County
meeting will b.e held Aug. 24 at 8 Fairgrounds. All singles invited.
Bring a dish of food . Call 985-4312
for information.

Pin the ·tail on the dinosaur_ _ ___,__
Ben 'Wattenberg

Letters to the editor
Responds to commentary

BAc;EIW.CS

~LE fiDDEL~ ...

'RlMDNitt;

COOL .

REALLY

SMOKES
HEE, KiE,

Why we need a ·health -care summit
Martin Schram

Regina Van Meter
Funeral services for Regina
"Jean" Van Meter, 62, a form er
Meigs County resident who di ed
Monday of an apparent heart attack .
wiU be held today at 4 p.m_ today
·at the Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knob in Meigs County, not
Friday at 4 p.m.' as indicated in
Wednesday's newspaper.
Burial will be in the Bald Knob
Cemetery. Pastor Roger Willford
will officiate. Friends may call at
the church for an hour prior 10 the
service. Arrangements are being
handled by Nixon Funeral Home in
. Newell, W.Va.

Sarah Overstreet

rr

Today in history

Is

.

~

.

Deer incident investigated

..

Hilda Weber

,

. · Hilda F. Weber, 82, form~rly of
Columbus, died Thursday, Aug: 12,
·1993 at the Elam residence in Mid,
dleporL
A retired restaurant m·anager,
she was born April 6, I91! at
Keno, a daughter of the late Jac'ob
and Anna L. Worthen Weber. She
was amt;mber of th.e Keno Church.
. She is survived by a sisler, Marcia Keller, Pomeroy; a brother,
Floyd Weber, Long Bottom; a sister-in-law, Olive Weber, Parkersburg, w .va.; a niece, Jeanette
Williams, Colurnbus; and a
nephew, Roger Keller, Pomeroy.
. . 'Graveside services will be Saturday at 10 a.m. at Kennedy Cemetery in Chester with Rev. Sharon
Hausman ofticialiJ!J.
· '·

Margaret Werner·
Margarer "Mickey" Werner, 74,
Pomeroy, died Thursday, Aug. 12,
1993 at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
Arrangements
will
be
amlounced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

Hou$e damaged by vehicle
~ house receqtly purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Harris Jr.,
Racme, was damaged early Tuesday evening after being struck by a
.runaway car.
·
,
According to a report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart•
ment, Melissa Bar10n, Vine Stteet, 1\ad·pai'ked a 1982 Ford owned
by Anna Scarberry in her driveway which is a steep incline. She left
her son, Jerry, age two, in the car. She took the keys and went into
the house to get a basket of laundry. When she came back out she
discovered the car missing. She noticed her neighbor running
toward the Edison Brace house.
The vehicle had gouen out of park and drifted back across Vine
Street into the yard knocking over a ligh( post, several yard ornaments, struck the corner of the house damaging the vinyl siding and
a downspout before coining to rest against a picnic table.
.
The child was not injured and the car was not damaged .
Braces just recently sold the property to the Harris farnily but
have not yet moved.

Semi overturns·
. A Pomeroy truck driver escaped injury Wednesday afternoon
when his semi overturned, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patto! reported.
James W. Cleland, 24, 33345 Hysell Run Road, was eastbound
on State Route 124 in Salem Township and was unable to stop for
. the ttii.[.fic in front of him. The truck went off the right side of the.
road and rolled down an embankment.
Cleland was cited for failure to maintain an assured, clear distance. The vehicle sustained heavy, disabling damage and remained
at the scene.
.

Smith arrested by deputies
Ci~dy

Smith, 20, Reedsville, was arrested Tuesday night by
dcpuues of the Me1gs County Shenff's Department on a charge of
grand theft of money from her step-father.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported $8,075 was recovered when
deputies arrested her at a campsite on Indian Run:
Miss Smith appeared in Meigs County Court Wednesday and a
preliminary hearing was set for Wednesday on the theft charge. A
$5,000 bond was set for the theft charge but she was remanded to
the custody of the sheriff to serve nine days remaining on an earlier ·
charge. She is being held in the Gallia County Jail.

Units respond to three calls

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDIC~L CENTER
August 12 discharges - Billy
· Matthews, Paula Bragg, Rena
Roberts, Allee Lockhart Charles
· Phillips. Kathryn Stone ~nd Marjorie Watson.
August 6 births · Mi-. a!ld Mrs.
Car!os"Stanlcy, son, Gallipolis and
Mr. .and Mrs. Dale Whited, daugh·
ter, Ripley, W.Va.

many whose jobs could be affected
by the outcome of the hearing.
There reportedly is also a contiJ!·
gency of Southeastern Ohio buSJ·
ness representatives in the court·
room.
In approving SOCCo's water
removal plan the Ohio EPA set
strict standards for the eompany to
meet. "The State EPA acted IR a
reasonable and expeditious manna
to help develop a solution 10 this
unique emergency situation," said
Smith.
"The water in the streams is not
potable and does not provide public
drinking wa1er supplies. The Ohio
EPA ecological e.xperts and compa· .
ny environmental specialists tire
monitoring the streams and the
SOCCo has pledged to rn itigate
any short-term effects. No lon,term effects are expected," sa1d
Smith.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, ciccasiomil showers and
thundersiOrms. Low 65-70. Chance
of rain is 80 percent Friday, partly
cloudy with a chance of tliunder·
storms. High il) the mid-80s.
Chance of rain is 40 percent.
Extended rorecast:
Saturday through Monday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday. Lows in the
60s. Highs in the 80s. Fair on Sunday. Lows in the 60s. Highs 80-85.
Chance of showers and thunder·
stonns Monday. Lows in the 60s.

COLONY THEATRE
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~------~

The Daily Sentinel

tl

at Meigs 31.
Additional - witnesses for
SOCCo are expected to testify
today_ As of 11 o'clock this morning, the U.S. EPA witnesses had
not started their testimony.
Smith did say, howe ver, that
federal U.S. EPA attorneys had
remarked during yesterday's sesSion that the federal EPA continues
to maintain the enforcement
authority even though the stale may
be acting on the issue.
When the hearing got underway
Wednesday afternoon the court·
room was packed and there was
· standing room only, Smith said .
Gary D. Evans, UMW local vice ·
president, said that about 70 area
miners were in the courtroom,

Units of the Meigs County · unit 'from Racine Fire Station to
Emergency Medical , Services Veterans.
responded to three calls for assis·
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
·tance on Wednesday and early
FRI., SAT., SUN.
Thursday morning.
BETTE MIDLER
Wednesday: 9:45 a.lil .. Pomeroy
IN
unit to The Maples for ·Charles
HOCUS POCUS PG
Kiser, 10 Vetemns Memorial; 5:42
p.m., Pomeroy unit to Pomeroy
AND
·GARY BUSEY
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
IN
for Mildred Long to Holzer MediROOKIE OF THE YEAR PG
cal Center.
·
Thursday: 6:59 a.m., John
446-1088
McMann transported by Racine

Veterans Memor'ial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Clarence Griffith, Pomeroy;
George Easter, Pomeroy; Peggy
Robinson, Coolville.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES ·
• Margaret Kennedy, Belly L8Jllbert.

wide Mello

Continued rrom page 1

SNOW WHITE AND THE
SEVEN DWARFS a

'

Hospital news

. •

.

. Michael W. Palmer, Owl Hollow Road, Reedsville, was travelmg south on Route 7 Wednesday morning at 6:40a.m . and struck a
deer that mn into the path of his 1992 Ford pickup. This was 300
feet south of Flatwoods Road. Light damage was listed to the left
front fender and door.
• •

Hymn sing
·
County wide hymn sing at the
grandstrand at the Meigs County
Fair Grounds Qn Sunday at 7 p.m.
Call 985-4312.

NOW 2 LOCATIONS
91 MILL STREET-MIDDLEPORT
151 SECOND AVE.-GALLIPOLIS

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fire insumnce on the house, b~t discovered the policy is not valid if
the house is not being lived in.
. '
.
An investigation is conlinwng. ·

.

Area deaths

The Dally Sentlnei-PaQe-3

Local briefs-...., Hearing...

..

Why do men barbecue? · Don't ask!

Sl.

'

Meigs annoucements

thursday, August 12, 1993

tc congressional appropriations,
There is soniething sad to say matter. And the winner is ... the defiCit reduction is sliin, and invisi· driving
deficits skyward. Defic'it
ble for a tona tiD!e·
about the ~et bill, but let's Iaiit Republicans!
Ill COurt Street
hawks
believe
that a real change in
The.e has been other silliness. I '
After Ill, the likelieSI scenario is
first about ilupid and silly.
Pomeroy, Ohio ,
o
attitude
is
in
the
air and that gutsy '
There are conservatives who that the $6 trillion economic loved the part about "reversing
DEVOTED TO 'J1IIt ll'ITBU8T8 OJ' 'J1IIt IIEI08-MASON AREA
political
leadership
could have put
Reaganisrn." Oh, really. The zero
announce. with certitude, that the
a
lid
on
things.
tax rate for poor people ~f&amp;S of
deal will drive the economy into a
Reagan vin&amp;age, and remains unre- • But the biggest problem can be
brick wall. There are liberals who
versed. And I did not ex~ct a refined down funher than that.
bllmpet, with 'surety, thai the same
·-- dinosaur, barely impacted by the prominent rationale for a ' Yes" DefiCit hawks don't often differendeal will resun economic vigor.
tiale betweell entitlementS. Yet. the
This is "economic illiterlll:y." Washington biJlllflisan liars club; vote 10 be "saving Clinton's presi· troUble
ROBERT L WINGETI
with some entitlements are
dency." Say what? Wasn't the ide!!
~ budget plan runs for five years. will continue 10 crunch forward,
only
that
lheY. cost more than we
. • , . , ; , Pla!J~her: ,
10 save America's economy'/
~ curient Gross Domestic Prod" .justas it has been doing. What then
want
to
pay.
Social Security and
Beyond silly and stupid, there is
uct amounts 10·about $6 trillioo per will Republicans, who have preMedicare
generally
help Ameri·
·cHARLENF; HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
year. Over live yeara it will amount dieted recession, say on the bus- sadness.
cans,
Moreover,
they.
are officially
Genenl Manager
Controller
Clinton ran on "change."
10 an ~ ·estimated $36 tril· tings in 19947 Perhaps: "We were
"earned,"
not
"something
for
wrong! Vote Democratic!" Granted, that means different
lion, very b1g bucks.
nothing."
"Supplemental
Security
things 10 different people. But the
. By contrast, the deficit reduc- Depend on it
LETTI!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
Still,
the
GOP
can
clean
up
in
best
of Clinton's language caplljred Income" (essentially welfare for
tion allegedly amounts 10 $496 bil·
worda. All lettua 11'0 aubject . to editing and must be signed with aame,
addren and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
lion, 1.4 percent of the $36 trillion. 1994. They w-ill claim it's the most of us. It· will be a long time the needy aged), may be
sbould be in good tAste, addresaing issues, oot personalities.
Big leverage it ain't. Surety and biggest tax increase in history until we hear again words as radi· "unearned," but it too helps the
certainty it ain't ·It's a little l8i1 on (false, if measured in uninflated cal and right as the trumpet calls 10 recipients.
It's a problem . It causes the
a big mother dinosaur, ~Which is dollais and/or related 10 the GOP). "end welfare as we know it" and
defteit
But there is an aspect that's
currently. galumphing through the or course, Democrats will claim it 10 stop "something for nothing."
worse:
entitlement programs that
forest on its.own, as is iiS habit
is the bitf;l ~flcit reduction in
This deal hardly touches that. It
end
up
counter-productive. These
There l!as been a seriQUS contest history (f~ • for the same reason). is paitl.y because the entire political
include
pans of Aid 10 Families
about whether. Republicans or But the taxes (even though mostlfe establishment chickened out on
fo()dwith
Dependent
Democrats win the booby prize fCJ: hitting the. well-to-do) roll throu
·"entitlements,'' .those ravenous stamps, MedicaidChildren,
and
rent
subsiActually, it would be 10 the ben· . oversrated political rttCIQric in this the entire econOIJIY: ~bile t e progr1111s that grow without specif· dies, 10 begin a lengthy list
. Dear Editor
I feel I must reply 10 the Aug. 5 efit of Sen. Moseley-Braun and
Long-term, these programs hun
commentary by Sarah Overstreet Ms. Overstreet 10 continue 10 let
the very people they are designed
entitled ''Confederate Flag Makes Confederate history to be told by
to help. We have Creared a growing
Me Shiver." Usually, I tty 10 ignore any group. For not only is this the
dependency class. It is destro~ing
m111t of the liberal ravings in some basis of freedOOJ, but it also. profamilies, blighting commumties
of these columns, but I fear too vides opportllllity for them 10 disand souring the country.
many Americans are being cuss the tragedy of slavery with
This budget not only doesn't cut
deceived by tile false logic used by future generations. For if we
that sort of COUJ.Iler·~tive entiVINCE
Ull, PITc:HER
silence the Confederate side of his·
tlement spendmg. It mcreases it.
Ms. Overstreet.
COLEMAN'S
First Of all, I am historian of the tory, it would then be forgotten,
And the liberals are bmgging about
Ohio Department Sons of Union which wo_uld be a far greater
it.
Veterans of the Civil War, an orga· tra~edy. Psychologists make
The Clintonites respond: Just
UK•• tEE ,HEE,
nization founded upon the belief in J!llpents remember the "monster" in
you wait and see, more spending
IIEE ,MEE I H&amp;E,
preservation of the U.S. and the their memories that disables the!~)
and entitlement cuts are on the
H~E,HEE·HEE,IIl,
memory of the Union soldier. At so· that they may then deal with it
HEE·HEE;
HEE
way, wait for welfare reform,
UH,HEE
the same lime, my wife is a mem· and heal. So does the rememthat'll do it
ber of the United Daughters of the brance-but not celebration-{)f
OK. We don't have much
Confederacy (U.D.C.), the organi- slavery heal our wounds as a
choice. We will see; we will wait.
zation Ms. Overstreet seems to nation.
But for the moment OlD' Democntl·
Tq imply that everything about
imply would prefer 10 own slaves
ic legislators have enacted more
and beat. them daily for pleasure. I the Confederacy is hideous and evil
counter-productive something for
can assure you that my wife does is an insult 10 Americans of south·
nothing.
'
not fit this fictitious belief of Ms. ern ancestry. It was mostly our
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
southern forefathers, slave holders •
Overstreet
low at the American Enterprise
The U.D.C. has NO wish 10 re· indeed, who wrote the basic docu·
Institute, ·Is author or "The First
institute slavery nor yearn for. the ments of freedom of this country.
Universal Nation," published by ·
days it did exist· It does, however, We don't refuse 10 acknowledge
The Free Press.
wish to recognize the sacrifices the greatest of these men neverthe·
made for a cause it believed in- less. Nor do ·we fail to honor the
states' rights. They seek 10 preserve Pilgrims even though they were the
the Confedemte prospective of his· most religiously intolerant of peo·
tory by marking gmves of soldiers, pie. In honoring the memory of any
caring for monuments, and preserv· ancestor, it is important to honor
ing buildings. After THE WAR (as those things that were good and
it is usually called), the U.D.C. also decent. 10 recognize that as humans
One thing has yet to be tried:
President Ointon basked in the boast a 112-vote margin, nor their est margins in Congress isn't pri·
sought to aid those disabled and they made human e)Tors, and to
mal
leadership.
People
expect
their
presidential
clout, up close and persunshine
of
a
presidential
pep
rally
tie
in
a
Senate
where
Democrats
niade destitule from the mvages of judge our ancestors by the moral
leaders
10
be
able'
10
do
more
than
sonala
White
House summit
in
Charleston,
W.Va.,
the
other
day
have a 12-seat advantage.
the war. Does that sound like a standards of their day and not'ours.
twist
the
arms
of
enough
suiis
and
Perhaps,
before
c~ping on de
and
bathed
in
the
thrill
of
victory.
But
most
of
all,
they
were
conIf Sen. Moseley-Braun and Ms.
group having evil purposes? The
barter
10
reach
50-percent-plus-one.
facto
price
controls
through spendU.S. government gave. no aid to Overstreet feel that granting a "Change has come 10 America,"
Two
other
polls
this
summer,
ing
ceilings
set
by
government,
' these people to salvage the shr~ads patent for the emblem of the declared the" winner of the Great
although
focusing
on
separate
Clinton
ought
to
summon
the leadof their lives, but rather spent U.D.C. is so terribly wrong; then Budget Battle of '93. "Let's keep
issues,
ought
to
be
read
at
the
ers
of
the
health
care
industry
10 a
money to station troops for rears why .1100 they .not as quick to return it going!"
Wl)ite
House
as·
two
chapters
in
the
summit.
Do
it
at
the
White
House
cerned
about
the
r,esults
of
11
USA
But back at the White House,
the American Southwest to Mexico
around them.
advisers
monitoring the action via Today.CNN-GalluP. poll, taken just same leadership book. One, by The or Camp David. But let it be one
·
from
whom
the
U.S.
blatantly
and
Only 10% of Confederates actu·
where all cards are dealt face
ally owned slaves. Some of the unethically took it from? Does not satellite TV knew, deep down, that after the president s 1elevised bud· Washington Post, showed that most time
up.
The
health industry says it is
owners of slaves were black them- permiuing those states to seat a few more victories fike that and get speech in which he even used people like their current. doctors now ready for real reform and
selves, but have you ever noticed members of Congress put the con-· the Clinton presidency can be lost Perotian charts showing how the and their quality of health care, but
As tlter face ~linton's upcoming, rich will bear the greatest burden. are worried about rising costs and vows that it can cut costs as pari of
that Sel). C'arol Moseley-Braun, tinued seal of approval on that?
super-1mperauve
health reform, In that poll, 68 percent ol Ameri- future accessibility. The other was a system-wide managed competi·
who began this ranting about the Both of these women simply seek
they
are
pondering
how they can cans surveyed flatly rejected Clin- taken by Clinton poUster Stanley tion refonn. But it wants to· do it
U.D.C. and its Confederate flag 10 do the "politically correct" thing
the
president
reach the ton's prime assertion that his plan Greenberg for the president's old without government controls. Let
best
help
emblem. and Ms. Overstreet are of bashing southern history so that
leadership
high
ground
he's
tried 10 would tax the wCl!]thy hardest.
pals at the Democratic Leadership Clinton force the health industry 10
always careful to overlook this they receive press coverage.
And
get
this:
Asked
who
has
the
claim,
but
has
not
yet
held.
Council
and Progressive Policy make a public commitment - to
So 10 Sen. Moseley-Braun, Ms.
fact! Nor do they mention that even
best
ideas
for
improving
the
econoInstitute
There
is
one
bold
step
Clinton
think
tank. It profiled the achieve reforms, including firm
Lincoln, o[1en considered the great· Overs~. and all the others, let's
my,
35
pereent
answered
Clinton;
can
take
10
reacb
this
leadership
Perot
Voters
IOday's swing VOl· reductions in the rate of cost
· ' est U.S. president, said he would not denr the Confederate history of
as
many
~
30
percent
but
almost
plateau
.summoning
health
ers
as
wanting
10 reduce j!Ovem- increases, without clamping on
have freed NONE of the slaves if it th~ nauon; mther let us see that the
industry
leaders
10
a
White
House
-named
Ross
~1.
who'd·spent
ment's
involvement
in thelf lives, contrOls.
would preserve the Union-the idea of states' rights had some honCould it come 10 pass? When I
or,
better
yet,
Camp
David
Health
months
ducking
all
requests
for
his
and cut the size and scope of govREAL reason for the war. He orable intentions. Let it be told so
Summit.
We'll
explore
Reform
~utli~ the idea to one of the presissued the Emancipation Proclama· that the errors of our history can be that. But ftrst, consider the problem specifics. The Republicans got just ernment bureaucracy.
Ident s most semor advisers, he
24
percent.
-Read
together.
the
message
is
seen
and
learned
from.
tion to keep England and France
that
the
Clinton
high
command
is
What Clinton's problem really · clear: Before Clinton proposes any replied: "That's interesting. It
The old Confederacy cannot
from siding with the Confederacy.
privately
confronting,
even
as
we
comes down to is the leadership plan that injects government into sounds like something we ought to
Nor do these ladies mention that contrOl the fact that racist organiza·
speak~
thing. &lt;He gives a speech, flips his our health care decisioos as the best consider."
the Confederate constitution out· tions of today use the Confederate
The
Clintonians
took
no
cheer
charts
and the nation thinks he's hope for cutting rising costs, he
Martin Schram is a syndicated
Oag
for
the
wrong
reasons.
Unfor·
Jawed the importation of slaves
from
their
two-vote
victory
in
a
writer
for Newspaper Enterprise
not
giving
it
to
us
straigltL
People
must
be
very
sUJe
that
he
has
tried
BEFORE the U.S. government ever tunately, it seems that the liberals
who
House
ruled
by
Democra.ts
know
that
winning
by
the
.narrow·
every
other
nOn-bureaucratic
way.
Assoc:iatioo.
did. Many Union soldiers deserted and the media (excuse the redunthe military when the Proclamation dancy) cannot~parate the two. Re·
was issued because they joined the enacting the vii War takes two
verstreet. Your
war only to preserve the Union. sides, Ms.
,Gen. Robert E. Lee himself is quite nephew, a Con ~erate re-enaciOr,
clearly known to have or.posed is an educator of' the noblest kfud.
'
slavery himself but couldn 1 bring For it is far better 10 both see and
I'm always saddened as the end ries, in an age when we seek an camping trip, clobbering a wild ipate in the cleanup. In ·other
hear
living
history
than
to
simply
himself 10 side against his neigh·
of summer approaches. When I was . evolutionary answe~ to almost bunny with a rock and trying to words, they can make as bi$ a mess
read it from a text
as they want and Mom w1ll wipe
bors and family.
a kid, it meant school was just every question of human behavior, cook tt with a Bic lighter.
Blacks were permitted to be
First, there's the actual barbecu- everything up, no questions asked.
around the comer. But as an adult, is that men are re-enacting the
So remember, ~en. Moseley· it means the end of barbecue seaenslaved under the U.S. !laj! at the
ing instrument, sometimes called But I cannot truthfully say I've
Constitutional Convention by Braun and Ms. Oversbeet, that the son. which is the best time of year.
the "pit" or "grill," which in never seen a man clean up after a
Washington, Franklin, Adams, Klan noi only misuses the Confed· 10 my way of thinkin': The season
most families· is left outside 10 rust barbecue. I have seen men hose
Madison, and the other founders. erate flag, it also misuses the
and collect bird ~ings. (I have down the entire area with a highwhen men, God bless em, cook.
ancestral rite of drauing back a often thought, whtle enjoying a pressure hose!, leftover sack of bri·
No intelligent person would argue American flag when it marehes,
I have often heard women dis· dead mastodon, hacking away at
that this was a tragic outcome of 100!
cuss the question, '; Why do men two rocks until fire ensues then ~t steak, "Yes, this is good, but quell and all. (See: back 10 the Out·
Sincerely,
that great meeting. I am also most
barbecue?" or more precisely. hunkering down until' the tt lacks a certain spice ... I know, it door shop for more flammable liq·
Keith
D.
Ashley,
,- willing ·10 argue that the Confedera·
could use a dash of bird dropping! uid and a package of .. Magic Fire"Why is it a guy who would rather
Historian Ohio Dept., eat cold cereal with water than' so mastodon's entrails are IOIISty.
Starter Sticks," above.)
· cy had no right to secede and that
Some rust!"),
'
A
cynical
humorist
like
f'Uiitur
\
However, most of the mett 1'\oe
Sons
of
Union
~s,
slavery should have been outlawed
much· as turn on the oven to heat a, ~ze-winner nave Barry, who curs
Barry might next offer as evi- observed believe a barbecue grill is
eroy
everywhere.
TV dinner will suddenly·become h1s fellow men no slack might dence of the Dirt Theory the buildthe Galloping GoUrmet .at the men- hypothesize that men barbecue irig Of the fire itself, a ritual that like a self.-cleaning oven. They
believe you don't have to clean it
tion of I!•barbecue?"
because it is the nastiest, dirtiest can stretch into an hour-long affair because (and this is an approxima·
One of the most popular theo- trashiest form of cooking one ~ with much squirtin' of flammable
tion of an exact quote), ..The ftre
engage in outside ~f being lost on a liquids upon the pa110 CJ: deck, toss· bums off everything that could
By The Associated Press
ing of briquets and spent matches actuallr hurt a per~n. •' Thus, a
Today_ is Thursday, Aug. 12, the 224th day of 1993. There are 141
about
the scene and .a trip 10 the ·guy wtth a master's degree in
~off alflP a Boeing 747, separating; and then Wuching doWn in Calldays left m the year.
,.
outdoor
shop for more flammable microbiology will tell you he
fonua 's MoJ8Ve Desert.
.'
Today's Highli.ldlt in History:
liquid
and
a packaFe of "Magic doesn't need 10 clean off seven layIn 1978, PoJ.l!:l Paul VI, who had died Aug 6 at age 80 was liuried in
Fire-Starter
Sticks.' Only the site ers of animal grease mixed witb
On 'Aug. 12, llf98, Hawaii was formally annexed 10 the United Stales
St.l!cter's Basilica.
.
'
afler Congress passed a joint resOlution.
·- - ·
·
of
an
arson
fue
makes one question Soot because, •'The fue burns off
- In 1985, the world's worst single-aircraft disaster occurred as a cripthe
sanity
of
mankind
more than everything that could actually hun
On this date:
pled 1apan .A ir Lines Boeing 74 7 crashed into a mountain, ldlling 520
the
aftennath
of
a
barbecue-fire' In 1851, Isaac ~inger was grunted a patent on his sewing machine.
aperson."
.
people.
In I867, Pres1dent 1ohnson sparked a move. to impeach him as he
However, if you are blessed
Ten years ago: Plesident Reagan opened a drive for Hispanic political starting.
Then as the. aetual beast-parts with a man who loves 10 barbecue;
defied Congress by suspending~ of War Edwin M. Stanton.
,
.su~ as .he denounced Cuba's communist government m a speech 10
In 189,8,. the peace prococol ending the·Spanish-American War was
cook,
there's all that smoke and ash I suggest just going al(,lllg with it.
the ~ispamc Chamber of Commerce in 'Tampa, Fla.
that
blow
ul) in a man's rugged Even with all the time and BTUs
signed.
·
·
.
~~v~, Y~?JfS qo: The ~ontroversial movte "The Last Tempration of
In 1915, the novel ·:or Human Bondage," by William-Somerset &lt;;:brist, directed by Martin Scorsese, opened in nine cities despite objec- face and all over the patio, the next yOU spend keeping the other food
Maugltam, was first publiShed.
best thing to the wood shavings and warm until it's ready, cleaning up
. tlons by some Christians who felt the film was sacrilegious.
In 1941, French Marshal Henri Petain called on I;Jis countrymen to give
sawdust ensuing from a power-1001 afterward and, in the worst cases,
O!Je ,year ago: After 14 months of negotiations, the United SLI!tes
MeXJco and ~ announced in Washington that they had concluded project. Add all that grease drip· ' defrosting something else from the
full support 10 Nazi Germany.
•
In 1953, the Soviet Union conducted ·a secret leSt of its first hydrogen
the N~rth Amencll!' Free Trade Agreement, which would create the . ping onto the rue and splattering up freezer and cooking it inside
bomb.
.
wNorld s largest trading bloc. Avant-garde composer John Cage died in onto a guy's chest, and you have because the original food has been
In 1960, the fli'St balloon salellite, the Echo One, was launched by the
the closest pleasure you can get 10 reduced 10 cinder, it's still better
ew York at age 79.
United States from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
going
face down into a flank of than having 10 fook it yourself. If it
. T~y·s Birthdays: Ac~ Jane Wylilt is
Choreographer Michael
In 1962, one day after launching Andrian Nikolayev into orbit, the
steaming
mllSIOdon.
!'ldd 1s _74. Sen. ~ Bumpers, O.Ark., is 68. Actor-direcur Jolm Derek
doesn't tum out, you have someone
Soviet Union also sent up cosmonaut Pavel Popovich; both men landed
A
female
pragmatist such as else 10 blame.
tS 67. Smger·m!!SICtan Buck Owens is 64. Actor George Hamilton is 54.
safely Aug. 15.
Erma Dombeck might speculate
The former president of Brazil, Fernando CollCJ: de Mello is 44
Sarall Overstreet a stndl·
In 1972, the last American combat ground troopS left Viemam. ·
. Thought fo~ Todlly: ··wisdom is boq_t, stupidity is te8med_;,- ~us· that men barbecue precisely .cated writer for Newspaper
In 1977. the space shuttle Enterprise passed its fmt solo flight test by
s1an proverb.
, ..
.·
· .
because most of them do not Jl811ic· Enterprise AssodatW..

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 12,1993

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

I

11

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel

•

Thuraday, August 12. 1993 ·
Pag&amp;-4

Phillies edge Cards;.Reds .
drop third in row to.Giants
fice fly and Gary Sheffield's runBy Tbe Associated Press
While lhe headlines and atten- scoring single off Randy Myers (1tion last winter went to free agents 3) who blew a save for tlte second
Barry Bonds and Greg Maddux, lhe straight night. Steve Buechele had
Philadelphia Phillies quietly col- a homer, double and single and
lected some no-names and castoffs. matched his career-high with five
They may not have seemed to RB!s. His three-run liomer in lhe
be much in the offseason, but Pete third gave the Cubs a S-0 lead, the
Incaviglia, Jim Eisenreich, Milt first of four deficits the Marlins
Thompson and David West are would erase.
now key parts of the first-place Pirates 8, Cardinals 6
The Pirates scored three runs on
Phillies.
two
homers in the ei~hlh to rally
The four all had a role in
for
the
victory. Lon me Smith his
Philadelphia's 6-S victory over the
his
second
homer of the game to tie
Montreal Expos on Wednesday
it
6-6
and
A1
Martin's two-run shot
night, a victory that gave the
gave
Pittsburgh
its second win in
Phillies a seven-game lead over
nine
games
against
St. Louis this
second-place St. Louis.
season.
Luis
Alicea's
three-run
Jncaviglia hit his 21st homer of
double
had
given
St.
Louis
a 6-S
the season - and seventh in his
lead
in
the
top
of
the
inning.
Mark
last seven stats - and Eirenreich
Whiten's
tape-measure
homer
in
added his fifth in the sixth to liB the
the
sixth
was
the
fust
by
an
opposgame5-S.
Thompson walked to lead off ing player to reach the upper deck
the bottom of the ninth, stole sec- in right field in Three Rivers Stadiond and moved JO third on catcher um.
Darrin Fletcher's throwi~g error. Braves 4, Mets 2
Greg Maddux continu ed his
He scored on Mariano Duncan's
domination
of the Mets as he beat
bad-hop single over a drawn-in
them
for
the
fifth straight time over
infield. The winner was West (4-3)
and lhe loser was John Wetteland two seasons. Jeff Blauser broke a
(7-4), who said earlier in the season 2-2 tie with a sixth-inning homer
and David Justice's 27th homer of
lhat the Phillies would fold.
"That's in the past. It doesn't
matter wh.at anybody says," Duncan said. "We're in first place,
They have to catch us."
In ·other NL games Wednesday OLYMPICS
NEW YORK (AP)- A bipartiit was: San Francisco 6, Cincinnati
0; Florida 12, Chicago II; PiJts- .san majority of the U.S . Senate
burgh 8, St. Louis 6; Atlanta 4, urged the International Olympic
New York 2; Houston 9, San Diego Committee to reject Beijing's b\d
6; and Colorado 3, Los Angeles 2.
to host the 2000 Games because .of
Giants 6, Reds 0
China's human-rights record.
John Burkett became the
In a letter to all IOC members,
league's first 18-game winner as 60 senators - including Majority
the Giants swept the three"game Leade r George Mitchell and
series at home. Burkett (184) took Minority Leader Robert D~
a no-hitter into the sixlh inning. He said awarding the Olympics to Beiallowed four hits and struck out jing und er current conditions
eight. The Giants scored four runs "wou ld con[cr upon China's leadin the second off Bobby Ayala (4- ers a stamp of approval by the
5). Darren Lewis drove in the first intcrnationnl co mmunity which
two runs wiih a single, Robby they clearly do not deserve."
Thompson 's single drove in anothCROMWELL, Conn. (AP) er and a wild pitch scored the
fourth. Royce Clayton's two-run The U.S . Olympic hockey team
single in lhc sixlh capped the scor- announced a 25-man squad for the
1994 Games, featuring J.9 colleing.
gians, four minor league pro(esMarlins 12, Cubs 11
The Marlins set a franchise sionals and two major junior playrecord for runs and matched their ers.
The team will be led by 1992
longest winning streak with their
fourth in a row. Florida needed two Olympians Ted Drury and Mike
runs in the hottom of lhe ninth to Dunham and 1988 Olympian Peter
get the win ~ Jeff Conine ~s sacri- Laviolette.

Sports briefs

the season with two outs in the
ninth was the insurance. Sid Fernandez (1-3) lost his lhird straight
since coming off the disabled list
· following knee surgery in May. He
gave up ;hree runs on five hits in
eight innings. ·
Astros 9, Padres 6
.
Eric Anthony, Sco.tt Servais and
Andujar Cedeno all homered in a
five-run fifth inning as lhe Astros
rallied from a 6-2 deficit. The
homers, Anthony's was a three-run
shot, all came off Andy Benes (138), who allowed eight runs in 42-3
innings. San Diego took the 6-2
lead in a five-run third which fea. lured just one hit,' Billy Bean's first
career grand slam. Darryl Kilc (124) allowed four hits over seven
innings and struck out seven to end
a persona l three~ game losing
streak.
Rockies 3, Dodgers 2
Colorado won i!S fourth straight
as Armando Reynoso (8-8)
snapped a personal four-game losing streak. He allowed two runs
and seven hits over 7 1-3 innings
a.nd chipped in with three singles,
despite entering the game with an
.044 batting average (2-for-45).
Daryl Boston, Daine Bichette and
Pedro Castellano drove in the
Rockies runs, while Eric Davis and
Jose Offerman ·had lhe Los Angeles
RBis.

• BURKETT CONGRATULATED- San
Francisco's manager Dusty Baker, center, and
coach Bo~ Lillis congratulate Giants hurler

Jobn Burkett Wednesday arternoon arter be
hurled a 4-hit shutout win over the Cincinnati
Reds, 6-0. (AP)

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Cleveland 7, MilwauKee 5
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
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Toronto (S iolll~myrc 6-M} at noston
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Florida (Houah 7-11) at Plltlburah
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Atlanta (Av~ry 11-4) at Cincinnati
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The Dally SenUnel

:Tigers romp over Orioles; Indians .triumph
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Go figure if out. Every time lhe
Detroit Tigers break ]()ose on a
scoring binge, Cecil Fielder seems
to get shut out
Fielder, leading \he majors wilh
95 RBis, was blanked again
Wednesday night. The rest of the
Tigers, though, did just fine in a
15-5 romp over the Baltimore Orioles.
A day after Dan Gladden hit a
grand slam in a 15-1 rout of the
Orioles, he connected for another
one. Travis Fryman, Kirk Gibson
and Tony Phillips also homered at .·
Tiger Stadium, giving Detroit eight
homers in two days.
.
"I'd like to see us keep playing
this way," Phillips said. "This is
the kind. of ball lhat got us to 18
games over .500 once..Who's to
say we can't get there again?"
Fielder, however, does not have
a single RBI in the blowouts. Not
lhat lhe.Tigers exactly needed him
this time.
In April, lhe Tigers scored 20
runs in a game- twice in the same
week. Bu.t Fielder had a total of just
two RBIS in that rampage, those
coming on one pop-fly single.
In olher games, New York beat
Boston 8-3, Toronto. top~d Minnesota 4-2, Oakland defeated
Chicago 3;1, California beat Texas
4-1, Seattle stopped Kansas City 43 and Cleveland downed Milwaukee 7-5.
Detroit scored five times in the
first inning, two on Gibson's double. Gladden hit his third slam of
the season and fiflh of his caneer in
the lhird- inning as the Tigers made
it 10-1.
. Bill Gullickson (8-6) was the
winner and Rick Sutcliffe (9-8)
was chased in lhe first inning and
was the loser. Mike Devereaux and
• Sherman Obando homered for Baltimore.
Yankees 8, Red Sox 3
Roger Clemens' wildness
wrecked what was supposed to be a
great pitching matchup and made i\
easy for Jimmy Key. New York
ended Boston's longest home win-

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STEALS SECOND • Detroit's second baseman To_ny Phillips (4) steals second base as 8al-

•

By The Associated Press
Bring on the reserves.
Wilh lhe usual war of atlrition in
NFL training camps, such-teams as
the Minnesota Vikings, San Diego
Chargers and Dallas Cowboys are
trying to .flit holes in !heir lineups.
left by injuries.
The Vikings will find out next
week if-top running back Terry
Allen will be lost for the season
because of a knee injury. The
Vikings said Wednesday lhat Allen
will undergo arlhroscopic surgery
on his tight knee Aug. 20.
If Allen's anterior cruciate ligament is found only to be stretched,
it will be repaired by the arthroscopic procedure and he could
return in a matter of weeks. But if a
tear is found, major reconstructive
surgery will be needed and Allen
will miss lhe season.
Last season, Allen rushed for a
club-record 1,201 yards, caught 49
passes for 4 78 more yards and
scored 15 touchdowns .
"All I do is play with the guys
that are there," . coach qcnnis
Green said. "Injuries occur. You
can lose your best player the next
day. All you can do is develop a
mindset that says whoever is there,
you 'rc going to ao lhe best job you
can on that given day coaching
them. You want the players to
respond the same way.''
If Allen is done for the year, the
Vikings also can continue to cash
in lhe insurance policy lhey hought
before last season - form~r San
'Francisco All-Pro Roger Craig.
The Vikings also have Chuck
Evans. He missed his rookie year
with a knee injury, but has played
weU in training camp lhis year.
· Meanwhile, the Chargers~
learned· Wednesday lhat defensive .
tackle Shawn Lee, expected to start
.· this season, will be O!lt foQI' to six
wew with'a broken right leg.
Lee, who was injured in practice
' Tuesday, was initially lhought to
have a bruised calf. However, Xrays showed lhat Lee had suffered
a broken fibula:, one· of the two
bones in the lower leg.
·
Because of lhe injury to Lee and
others, the Chargers signed tackle
John Thornton, a second-year pro
released by lhe Cleveland Browns.
In the Cowboys camp, starting
fullback Daryl Johnsion will probably miss lhe rest of the exhibition
schedule with a fi'acturcd finger on .
his right hand suffered during a
training camp practice drill
Wednesday.
·
'
Johnston, a 'five-year veteran,
will be outfitted with a cast and
protective splint and ·will be avail. abie for lhe team's regular season
opener Sept. 6 against the Washington' Redskins, coach Jimmy
Johnson said.
Backup Tommie Agee will
replace Johnston for the fmal lhree
pre-season games. ,
Bengals
Bengals quarterback Da~id
Klingler returned to practtce
Wednesday after doctors set the
.broken nose ,he suffered in an atcident during workouts last week.
Patriots
Patriots cornerback Maurice
Hurst ended his 27'day holdput,

ning streak in five years at 11 allowed ihe first two batters to
games.
.
,
reach base in the ninth, then retired
Clemens (9.9) walked three bat- three in a row for his 25th save.
ters in a four-run first inning. He
Paquette hit his eighth homer
walked six, one under his career .after a double by Terry Steinbach
worst, and beaned Bernie Williams in the fourth. Wilson Alvarez (8-8)
in losing his third straight start.
is 0-4 in his last seven starts.
Key (14-4) pitched six strong Mariners 4, Royals 3
innings. He leads the league in
Mike Blowers hit his lhird grand
winning pe~ntage (.778) and 2. 74 slam of lhe season and Seaule won
ERA.
at Kansas City.
Dlue Jays 4, Twins 2
Blowers connected in lhe sixth
Paul Molitor hit a solo homer· inning off Chris Haney (7 -5).
and a two-run double , leading
Chris Bosio (5-7) was the winToron(9-over Minnesota at the Sky- . ner and Ted Pow~r got his third
save. Kevin McReynolds homered
Dome.
· Juan Guzman ~8 - 3) struck out for Kansas City.
10 in eight innings and won for the Angels.4, Rangers 1
Tim Salmon hit two doubles and
first time since June 26.
Jim Deshaies (11-10) gave ·up scored twice, highlighting California's win at Texas.
five hits.
The A11gels scored three times
Athletics 3, Wbite Sox 1
Todd Van Poppe! shut out in the first inning, the first .run on
Chicago for 5 2-3 innings and Salmon's double. He also doubled
Craig Paquette hit a two-run homer in the third and scored on Eduardo
Perez's second RBI single.
as Oakland won at Comiskey Park.
Rookie Hilly Hathaway (4-1)
Van Poppe! (3-3) gave up only
three single$.'Dennis Eckersley

saying he wanted to concentrate on
football the rest of the year. After
that, his future in New England is
up in the air.
Hurst signed a one-year contract
Tuesday night for a reported
$495,000, nearly $200,000 belo;v
the initial offer and far below the
team's second offer of $3.5 million
over three years.
Cardinals
Quarterback Chris Chandler,
recovering from a sprained ankle,

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timore's Cal Ripken fieids ball during Wednesday's game at Detroit. The Tigers won, 15-$.
won his third straight start and
Mike Butcher go\ his sixth save.
Kevin Brown (9-8) allowed . a
career-high 13 hi.ts in his major
league-leading ninth complete
game.

.

Indians 7, Brewers s,
·
Cleveland, which had .been O-S6
lhis season when trailing after eight
innings, rallied for three runs in the
ninlh at Milwaukee.
Albert Belle's 32nd homer in
lhe sixth inning began the Indians'
comeback from a 5-0 deficit
Trailing 5-4, lhe Indians loaded
the bases with one out in the ninth
when Jesse Orosco (1-3) hit a batter, gave up a bunt siniJe, threw a
wild pitch and issued an intentional
walk. Paul Sorrento's grounder
went under third baseman B.J.
Surhoff's glove for an error that
allowed two runs to score and Glenallen Hill hit a sacrifice fly.
Jerry DiPoto (2,2) was the win-

returned to practice Wednesday
and will be part of the three-man
rotation in Saturday's exhibi tion
game at Chicago.
Rams
The Rams .loosened a logjam at
strong safety Wednesday when
they traded Chris Crooms to the
Green Bay Packers ·for an undisclosed 1994 draft choice.
The 6-foot, 215-pound Crooms,
a second-year player out o~ Texas
A&amp;M, was taken m the fifth round

1993 MERCURY

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special teams as a rookie, but did
see some action in nickel situations.
Raiders
The Raiders promoted linebacker Joe Kelly to starter Wednesd;ly
and Howie Long returned to practice after a lengthy holdout.
Long, who has played more.
defensive tackle than defensive
end, renegotiated a contract
through the 1995 season.

1993 FORD
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'Injuries taking their toll on veteran players

Scoreboard
M•Jor League Bueball

:Thuraclay, August 12, 1993

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Wednesday, Septembe~ 1, 1993
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Three-on-three cage tourn~y for
cancer benefit scheduled Aug. 22
I

The Gallia County Unit of the
American C!IR~er Society, whi&lt;:h
serves the Gilllaa County area wm
be conducting 'it's first three-onthree basketball tournament on
August 22, at the 0.0. Mcintyre

Park.
. The funds being raised through
thiS event will be used for expenses
of the local unit.
So that American Cancer Society can auain it's goal as a volun-

CHAIRMAN OF EVENT • Brett Bostic Is chairman or the
American Cancer Society's three-on-three Basketball Tournament, scheduled Aug. 22 at the 00 Park District.

..

· taty health organization dedicated
to eliminating .cane~ as a major
health problem by preventing cancer, saving lives from cancer and
diminishing suffering from cancer
through reach, education and service. The American Cancer Society
is financed solely by voluntary
conblbutions and this unit does not
receive any United Way Fun4ing.
Chainnan of this is Brett Bostic.
Brett is the recreation program
coordinaiOr for 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park:
District. After talking with Coach
John Weinert, Coordinator of the
State American Cramm'n &amp;
Slamm'n Three-on-Three Basketball Tournament. Breu became
very enthused about the possibilities that this event could be ''The"
event of local unit. What makes
this event different from other
three-on-three tournaments is that
there will be a Slate Championship
to which the winners in each clivi·
sion locally will be able to advance
and compete.
There will be 14 Division beginning with ages 12-13; 14-15-16-17;
A Benchwarmer Division (for
those who love the game but aren't
great); Crammers (very competitive players); slammers (the best,
referees are used); and over 40's
(must be 40 or over to compete).
Teams are placed in one of the
division by experience. playing
level, age and height Teams c~­
not be coed but each of these diVIsions are available to both male and
female teams.
Volunteers are still needed for
the day of the event. Individuals
are asked to call the ACS Office.
446-7479.

Baseball owners split into
big, small market facti.ons
KO!ll.ER, Wis. (AP) - Base- resume this morning.
"The discussions have been
ball owners divided into large- and
constructive
and enli~htening,"
small-market factions as they strugsaid
Milwaukee
Brewers president
!lled to see if they can agree .to
Bud
Selig,
chainnan
of the ruling
mcreased revenue sharing.
c~unc1l.
"Obviously,
executive
In the longest major league
meeting in more than a decade, · there IS a difference of opinion.''
Large-market teams, who don't
owners debated revenue sharing for
want
to give up a, greater share of
abOut 12 1!2 hours Wednesday at a
retreat abOut 40 miles north of Mil- the ir local broadcasting money,
waukee. The meeting was to have the power to block change

because 21 votes are needed. Seiig
and management labor negotiator
Richard Ravitch, the chief propcnents of increased sharing, weren't
smiling after they met with the
large-market caucus for about 30
minutes late Wednesday night.
Owners, subject to $100,000 fines
for prematurely revealing details,
made unsubstantive remarks in
public.

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- The first degree was given in
full form by past master Lucille
• Potratz. Patty Dyer, county deputy,
served as inspecting officer.
Opal Grucscr gave the lcgislativc repOrt.
Barbara Fry reminded members
to keep the September isslll' of the
"Ohio State Grange" monthly as it
contains all new programs for the
upcoming year.
.
Lecturer Bunny Kuhl presented
a plaque to Barliara Fry for
"Granger of the Year" award and
told of all services and activities as
a granger she performs. Lecturer
Emma Adams, Racine grange, pre-

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Emma Adams; "The Red, White
and Blue," Dorothy Smith; and a
quiz by all members.
Bunny Kuhl presented a program on boating with "Tilting your
boat" by Kathryn Miller; "Renew
Registration ," Louise Radford;
"Required Equipment," Barbara
Fry; "0hio PFD Requirements,"
S11rah Caldwell; "Rules of the
Road," Harold Blackston; "Regula-

Computer specialist class offered

I

I

I ,
I

I

I
I

and Thursday evenings 6-9 p.m.
from August 23-December 16.
Interested persons are encouraged
to re~ister for tlie course as soon as
pOSSible and may register by sending a check or money order (made
out to' Gallia-Jack:son-Vinton
JVSD) to: Adult Services, P.O.
Box 157, Rio Grande, OH 45674.
More information on the Computer
Specialist Program may be
obtained by contacting Adult Services at (614) 245-5334 from 8
a.m.-4 p.m.

A .comprehensive 15-hour
evening computer course is being
offered during the fall semester
through the Adult Services Division of the Gallia-Jackson-Vinton
Joint Vocalional School District.
The 16-week course, which
meets three evenings per week,
covers all the main software programs used in businesses today.
The training emphasizes hands-on
learning on a variety of software
programs, and equips the participants for a variety of jobs.
The software programs covered
during the course are WordPerfect,
Lot.us , 1-2-3, Windows, DOS,
Microsofi'Wbrk:s, Dalibase, Pagemaker, and Harvard Graphics. In
addition to learning the main
aspects of these powerful programs, SlutleniS will learn computer
terms and
an underslanding of
how
operate.
The
Specialist Cour.,e
is held on

tions and Information," Bunny
Kuhl; "Safety Tips," Nancy Radford; "Hypothermia," Opal
Grueser.
. Refreshments were served by
Racine grange members, Bunny
Kuhl and Kathryn Miller. "Happy
Birthday" was sung to Harold
Blackston in observance of his
binhday and a decomted cake was
served to all members. William
Grueser and Charles Aldridge were
both reported as being iU.
Grange inspection held
Rock Springs Grange and
Racine Grange recently held a
point inspection at ·the Rock

Page 7 ;

31NSTOCK

1993
Chevrolet
Lumina

Lynch birthday celebrated
Joel Lynch, son of Keith and Lee, Ray, Tracy, Jacob and Aslllee
Beth Lynch of Middleport. recently · Smith.
'
celebrated his ftfth birthday with a
sy.oimming party.
Attending were paternal grandmother Delores Surface, maternal
grandmother Hazilee Riebel,
Roger, Robin, Justin and Dalton
Riebel, Richard, Diana, Ricky and
Christopher Johnson, Rhonda and
Megan Carnahan, Renee Riebel,
Mike and Mik:ey Lavender, Chet
and Stephanie Wigal, Nicole Varian, Linda and Jesse Hanson,
Tammy and Samantha Cole,
Michelle, Eddie, and Amanda
Neece, Craig Cundiff, Dorien
O'Neal, Donna, Jarrod, and CoBin
Griggs. .
Sending gifts were maternal
grandfather Ro~er Riebel, David
~arnahan, Jesstca Baker, Tyson
JOELLVNCH

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH - Penny Smith bas
been named August Employee or
the Month ror Overbrook Center. She bas been In the bouse- ·
keepingandlaundrydepartment
since January 1991. She resides
~scendentsofHenryandRuby
in Middleport wllb ber twin
dauKbters; Brook and BrandY,.
Whi!e Meadows held a family
reunton recently at the Harmon
Hospitalized
Park: i~ P~int Pleasant, W.Va.. 'A
carry-m d1nner was .served to 52
Alice Nease of Route 7, family members and grace was
Pomeroy, was transfemill Thursday given by Archie Meadows.
from Veterans Memorial Hospital
Those attending were Ken and
where she has been confined for Garnet Dillon, Mason, W.Va.;
several days to Riverside Hospital, Howard and Shirley Meadows
Columbus.
Charles Meadows, Doug and An~
fl{eadows, Mark: and Ellen Riffle
Betty Baronick: of Mulberry Tim Meadows, GeOillia Smith, Jen:
Heights, Pomeroy, remains in sen- nifer McConaas, Nara Birk:ley, Galous condition at Grant Hospital, lipolis; Fred and Ruth Smith, Jerry
Columbus. She is in room 731.
Gail, and Jennifer Rowe, James:

M ea dows fiaml'/y gathers

The beginning typist can.
advance to the expert category
quickly with a ftve week course to
be offered at Buckeye Hills.
This class will tCljch keyboard
typing from the very beginning
starting August 25 to be taught
Wednesdays from 6-9 p.m. for 5
weeks. Call 245-5334 for more
information.

TANDY®
I

•z
OR OLDJ:R? STAY COOL·
THIS SUMMER•••

33MHz386SX
107MB hard drive
VGA color monitor

CONSIDER THE MAPLES 100 MEMORIAL DRIVE EAST
POMEROY, OH.

Secure and air conditioned HUD subsidized
apartments for Elderly (62 years of age), and
Handicapped who meet all HUD guidelines.
'
All utilities paid. Conveniently located near
Senior Citizens Center.
Call (614) 992·7022

SIN

STOCK

IN JUST 2 SHORT YEARS OUR SALES AND SERVICE HAVE DOUBLED!
STOP BY AND SEE WHYI-Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 am-8 pm, Sat. 9 am-4 pm, Sun. 1 pm-5 pm
Tax &amp; Title fees not Included.
·

DON ,.1,.1 CBEV.-OLDS.-GID.-810

Tilted display for easy
viewing. 3-key memory.
Percent and square root.
065·560

Wire your dorm or play room. Circuit breaker
protects
A S14.99 Value •61·2719

-

BBMIIz IJflllld In 111 a«DI'tltlllltllloms PC
MS Works software package, with over 100 applications, is preinstalled I Windows 3.1, DOS 5.0, 3'12'' floppy drive and twobutton mouSe. IBM®PC compatible.

CIJT4Di

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V• stereo plug adapter.
Reg. 2U8 033·1021

=----

.
JAKE LYNCH
Second birthday

Summer Clearance
Now In Progress

Jake Lynch recently celebrated
his second birthday with a party at
McDOnald's in Pomeroy.
.
Attending were his parents
Keith and Beth Lynch, brothers
Josh and Joel Lynch, Jessica, Justin
and Dalton Riebel, Ricky and
Christopher Johnson, Megan Carnahan, maternal grandmother
Hazilee Riebel, paternal grandmott.er Delores Surface, Richard
and Diana Johnson, Roger and
Robin Riebel, and Rhonda Carnahan.
Sending gifts were maternal
grandfather Roger Riebel, great
grandmother Mae Lynch, Renee
·Riebel,.Donna and Gary Griggs
and family, Dorien O'Neal;

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 A.M.·S P.M.
290 North
Second,
Middleport

loiAINI·Isl -. ....

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5

1993 Olds
Cutlass
Ciera

Jamie, and Joshua Smith, Racine;
Archie and Betty Meadows, Nancy
James, Kelly James, Terry, Shelby,
and Jesse James, Ernie, Lisa, and
Shane Meadows ; Crown C1ty;
Kitty Dill, Georgia; Dodie and
Kirston Clark, Kim, Pat, Ryan and
Erin Meadows, Rick, Lynn, Jason
and Dylan Rogers, Tennessee;
Donald Shaffer, Crystal Simpson,
Syracuse; Amber Meadows, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Tedi, Michael and
Juston Sutherland, Virginia;
Emmanuel Cundiff, Middleport;
Heather Thonaas, Jessica and Ariel
Smith, Pomeroy.

Typing class set
for Buckeye Hills

Equal Housing Qpportunlty

SJS,495

1992 Geo
Metro ·
5

)),999

5

1993
Astro
Van

1993 Olds
Delta 88
5

. . . 199.3. ". .,
Oldsmobile
Achieva

and Corey Hutton, Rutland; Billy,
Bridgetr, Talfatha Wells, Tony and
Kimberly Chapell, Racil)e; Mr. and
Mrs. Allen I acks and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Dannie Jacks, Mitch,
Deen, Bonnie Shea, Randy and
Corey, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wills
and family, Ronda ·and Benton and
family, Joe Andreen , Ponch and
Becky McGrath, RuUand;
Hurly and Mildred Rife, Stony
and Shelly Johnson and family,
Langsville; Belinda Johnson, Kenneth Sorrell, Michelle Shuler,
Langsville; Angela and Levi
McGrath, Dana Jacks, Debra Jacks,
Garry jacks, Springfield; Joe and
Connie. Neace, Langsville; Renie
and Jim Fish, Rutland; Robert E.
Jacks, Pomeroy; Garry and Donna
Griggs, Pomeroy; Flora nad
George Bing, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. James Van Fossen and Tiffm,
Lancaster; Mindy Lambert, Doris
Ellen Jacks Vittoe and friend.

Rock Springs Grange holds inspection

HIGH SCHOOL
.CLASS RINGs··

992·3785
\'--------=-=·==•::m:;.:..

Middieport; Paul, Molly and
Nicholi Webb, Bidwell; Randy,
Lori and· Nicholas Mozingo, Lancaster; Buddy, Wanda and Eric
Thorp, Woodbridge, Va.; Randall,
Shirley, R.J. and Rhonda Gibbs,
Pomeroy; Tom and Irene Mozingo,
Shade; Cathy, Ami and Ryan
Smith, Front Royal, Va. ;
Patty and Hershel White,
Pomeroy; Earl and Jean Jacks, Rutland; Jackie, Brian and Jason, Maysel, W.Va.; Debbora Borah, John
Hankla, Angel, Ryan, Kelley and
zachary Borah, Tim and Jodi
Jacks, Columbus; Shaunda, Taunda, Carolyn, Sonny and Kathy
VanMeter, Clifton, W.Va.; Misty,
Rodney and Brian King, Tammy
Capehart, Chester; Michelle, Paul
and Stephen Will, Pomeroy; Pat,
Cindy, Patsy, Penny and Patrick
Aeiker, Pomeroy; Jeremy Cline,
Tim Bissell , Mickey and Rachel
Hutton, Rutland; Lorana, Marty

The annual reunion of the
descendants of Earl Jacks and Virginia Morrison was held recently at
the Jacks residence in Rutland.
Following a noon luncheon, a
singing session was held. Recogniz¢ and presented with gifts were
Dolly Cleland and Sylvan Cleland,
oldest woman and man, Sandra
Jacks of Arizona, traveling the farthest, and the smallest boy and girl.
Gifts were donated by Eric and
Rhonda Mozingo.
Attending were Debbie and
Mike Bales, Wellston; Leroy and
Virginia Kessinger, Rutland; Russ
and Marie Mozingo, Rutland;
Clarence and Maxine Jordan ,
Pomeroy; Ricky, Gina and Andrea
Birchfield, Rutland; Charles and
Marilyn Rife, Wellston; Rbsty
Mozingo; Dolly and Sylvan Cleland, Middlepcrt; Eric, Chenna and
Ja co b Mozingo, Rutland; Jack,
Alana, John and Justin Cleland,

OFF.GOLD

1993 Chev.
Lumina
Euro

Thursday,~ugust12,1993

Annual Jacks reunion held

21RTQ1RVED

1993 Cadillac
Sedan DeVille

·The Daily Sentiitel

i

Sports briefs

5

$6,699 $13,995

By
The
Bend
.
.

By DIIVe Harris
attempt. 1-AA Player-of-the Year
Meigs High graduate, Mike Michael reyton injured his l_yg a
Bartrum continues to work toward couple of weeks ago and was
a lifetime dream tonight when the released by the World Champion
Kansas City Chiefs meet the Buffa- Dallas Cowboys.
lo Bills in N.FL. preseason action.
In an article a couple of months
The game will be televised nation- ago it was pointed out that it was
ally on the T.N.T. network. Game · believed the Bartrum was the ftrst
time is 8:00 p.m., Mike's number player from Mei11s County to get a
with the Chiefs is 93.
shot at a professiOnal career. 'ActuBartrum a free agent with the ally i{ looks like he is the third
Chiefs turr~ed in _a solid perfor- player to do so.
"!ance, seemg· ac~on on four ~Ron Me Dole who played for a
cllll teams and ac.uon on offense ~n number of teams in the I970'·s
the sec~nd half 1D last Saturday s including the Washington Redskins
,MIKE BARTRUM
29~~1 ~ID ove~ G~ Bar,.
.
was born in the Chester area and
. I thmk: ~ did all nght, . Bartrum lived there in his early years.
sa!d from his hote! room Ill Kansas
P. J. "Junior" Hawthorne was a
C1ty. Bartrum sa1d he w.as m on 1958 graduate of Pomeroy High
&gt;
three pass plays, but t~lfd , team School and went on to All SEC BASKETBALL
•
quart~rback Matt Blundtn did not honors at Kentucky. After finishing
HOUSTON (AP) - Sam Ca$,call hi~ number. Bartrum also saw his career at UK he was drafted by sc ll, th e Flortda State guard and
acuon tn the second half on several the Minnesota; instead of suiting it first-round pick of the Houstoh
runnmg pla.ys.
.
up with the Vikings he went to the Rockets, agreed to a five-year ceqThe Ch1efs S;fter spendmg the Canadian Football League and tract guaranteeing him $2.4 million
last r:nontb at !belT c~p at the Um- played for the Edmonton Eskimos.
over the flfst three seasons.
·
vefSity of W1sconsm-R1ver Falls
returned to Kansas City. on
Wednesday. "Our average day
while in Wisconsin started at 6:30
3 WEEK DELIVERY
in the morning and we fmished up
around 10:00 in the evening",
Bartrum said.
Mike said his highlight of camp
came a couple of weeks ago when
he caught two touchdown passes
from future Hall-of-Farner Joe
Montana in a 7-on-7 scrimmage
against the Minnesota Vikings.
There are five tight ends battling
for at least three and maybe four
spots on the Chiefs' squad.
Jonathan Hayes it\ his ninth year
out of Iowa and Keith Cash of
Texas are 1-2 on the depth chart.
Between the pair they combined to
Tholnrro,id Strf•
catch only 21 passes for the Chiefs
fllloonColloctNJn Styles
last season. Saturday evening
m 1ox Gold only.
Bartrum was the fourth tight end
used by KC coach Marty Scholten/I
heimer.
------CLASS RINGS
Bartrum's former Marshall
Tht:OrWmiO.•'- _ _ _ __.,;;::::::==
teammate Troy Brown also made a
BRING THIS AD
good showing in his professional
~~
debit. Brown led aU New ·England
'"
receivers with five catches for 45
yards and the Patriots only touchdown in a 13-7 loss to San Diego.
The speedster also returned punts
for a total of 27 yards.
One member of the Division 1POM~ROY
AA National Champion Thundering Herd did not fare as well as his
two teammates in his professional ._uo_.171
______
::-=-:"':.:-:.:'".:-::..J

STARTING AT

Ciera

•

Ba_rtrum, Chiefs
on TV tonight

$

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Speaker/amp

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Alarm. Rog, 89.95 '65·947 more Reg. 99.99 w4J -s72
Sale price end• 8122193

S.te price ends 8/22/93

�~· · ·· -· ·- -·· ·~ - ··-··

- - ·· · - - -· - · · -

· ·· · - t

- - --

-

· - - ·· -

- - -· - -·-··r

- -..- · -

Ohio

Thursday,

?

-------.,.----- -- ·-

12, 1993

Young love is not a bed of roses
De.- Alii blden: 'l1lil 18 in
reiPODIC 10 tbc lctlt.r from "Feeling
MiJcrable in Jacboavillc, f1a. •
wbose 16•yeu-old daughter,
"Mme."·wlllled 10 pi married. You
told tbc llll!dw lbe Wll right to
· reluae top~ h« lepl coasent.
Yout __. wa OK. but you
cxiuld baw given abella' one -right
from your owa fileL In fact, you
did, in 1967. It appeared in the
Den- Pclll and wu wrillen by a
17-,elr-Gid who bad married young
llld·bad llllily~ Her leiter was
simply llettr¢n:UiDI.
Wby don't you rep~int that
c:alumn so "Feeling ~· can
p~ it 10 Marie?.It may ~ her 10
change her mind about aettina
married. - EVELYN IN COl,.().

RADO
DEAR EVELYN: Tbanlt you for
your sharp eye lll!l terrifiC.memory.

MR. AND ~RS. THEODORE PAPAUOS

I' OS
0 ·'Bri'en- Papal
· ·
Shannon Leigh O'Brien, daughtcr. of Pam O'Brien of Dayton, aild
Theodore Constantine Papalios,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gust Papalios
of Huber heights, were united in
marriage
in a fortnal
ceremony
at
the
Annunciation
Greek
Orthodox
Church, Dayton. The ])ride is tlie
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James O'Brieil ofPomeroy.
Father Chris Hadgageorge officiated at the double ring ceremony.
The bride was escorted to the alter
by her grandfather. She was attired
in a victorian style gown of white
tafetta and pearls with an eight foot
beaded chapel train. She carried a
bouquet of white roses.
.
Clair Messmann, friend or the
bride, served as'·maid of honor.
Other aucndants were Peggy Harris, aunt of the bride; Joy O'Brien,
cousin of the bride; Maria Keilbaso, sister of the groom; Christina
Boyer, sister of the groom; and Jessica Papalios, niece of the groom.
The attendants wore irredescent
· blue-black tafetta gowns. Each carried a bouquet of whit and pink
roses. Erin Harris, cousin of the
bride, served as flower girl; Alex

papalios, nephew of the groom,
served as ring bearer.
CharlesTambakes of Tarpon
SpringS, Fla ., godfather of the
groom· served' as best man. The"

~roomsment

weregroom;
Melvin Dixon,
friend of the
Allan ·
·edwards, friend of the groom;
Stephen Papalios, brother of the
groom; Peter Papalios, brothe of.
the groom; and Chris Boyer, brother in law of the groom. Ushers
were Jim and John O'Brien,
cousins .of the bride . All wore
Christian Dior formal black tuxedos with rose boutonnieres.
A reception in the Greek tradilion followed the ceremony.
Mr. Papalios is a gradual~ of
Wright State University, Dayton,
and is with Robbins and Gi.ori
Company at Wright Patterson, as a
program analyst.
Mrs. Papalios is a graduate of
Sinclair College, Dayton, and is
now interning at Batelle in Dayton,
working as a research analyst. ·
The couple are residing-7720
Stonesboro Drive, Huber Heights,
Ohio 45242.

Eagles class of Asbury meets
The Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church, Syracuse, met re.cenlly at the church
social room with Bill WinebleMer
giving the opening prayer.
Devotions were Psalm 121 by
Elma Loldcs. OffiCers reports were
given.
"
The class has purchased a new
air conditioner for the church and
will also purchase new flower
vases for the altar table.
Flowers were sent to Hallie .
Robertson at Holzer MedicSJ. Centcr.

The class wiU send a monetary
donation 10 the flood victims and
will invite the other church members to panicipate.
The Ladies Circle will start
meeting again at the church every
Tuesday to quilt and sew carpet
rags. All ladies of the church are
invited.
Irene' Parker served refreshments to Bill Winebrenner. Bob
Smith, Wanda Rizer, Marie
Houdashell, Beulah Ward, Mary
Cundiff, Elma Louks and Mary
Lisle.

Second birthday celebrated
Tyler Andrews, son of Ray and
U ga• Andrews, recently celebrat-

ed his second birthday at the home
of his parents in Chester. An outdoor play party with a Barney and
Baby Bop theme was carried out.
Refreshments were served to the
guests. Besides his parents, those
attending were grandparents, Ken
and Nancy Cale, Margaret
Andrews, Laura and Brianna Wayland, Susie, Roger, Jess and Val
Karr, Brian, Missy, Drew, Mason
and Valerie Conde, Jessica Calc,
Tim, Jeannie, Benjamin and
Bradley Hood, Mark, Gwen and
Morgan Hall, Steve, .Tammy and
BrandQn BachiiCl, Kay and Breanna Hemsley, Dan and Angie
. Edwards, John Seidenable, Anne
llld Anlhcny ·Bearhs.

. TYLER ANDREWS

Sending gifts but unable 10
aaend were his great grandmother
.Dorothy RoUer, and Jim Andrews,
Judi, Kris, Rosie and Marcia
ArrinJIDII.

Here'stbeletterwbicllayaitall:
Dear Au Landen: Let me tell
you what it 18 ~ 10 be married at
17. It is lite living iD this dump on
the third floor. Your mly window
lobks out on somebody else's
'

Landers
. ANN LANDERS
"1993, LooADc&lt;l..
Tim.. Syndicate
Croaton S)'Ddlcato''

third-floor dump.
It is -~ coming home so tired
you feel nearly drad from Blanding
all day • your chectct's job in tbc
1Upcrmarbt. But you don't dare lit
down """'ltae you might never get
up. And thele ~ so many things
you have to do -- cooking and
washing and iroaing. But. )'Oii go
lhlougb tbc motions. and you !we
your job. you ut younelf, "Wby
don't you quit?" And)'Ollknowwby.
Bcquae there are grocery bi1J1 and
medical bills llld tbe rent 10 JIIY•
And Jimmy's cnuiuny 6Uie cbcc:t
&amp;om tbc lumberyard won't cover
them. That's why.
Then you tell tbc sitter goodbye,
and you try to play with the baby

LONDON (AP) - Salman
Rushdie made a surprise appearance before 72,000 rock fans at a
concert by the band U2.
The author'S voice was piped
over the speakers Wednesday night
at Wembley Stadium, and he
appeared to be talking by telephone
with lead singer Bono.
"I'm closer than you think," he
said, and walked on stage.
Rushdie has been under guard
since 1989, when the Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini called on Muslims to ltiU him for his novel "The
Satanic Verses." Khomeini called
the book blasphemous.
The British writer went into hiding but in recent months has been
making more and more public
appearances.
The concert also featured live
pleas for help, via satellite, from

Community
Calendar

•

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Parent/teacher/student orientation for seventh
·graders and other new students at
Meigs Junior High School, Tljursday. 6-9 p.m. Picnic style supper.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday. Dinner is at 7 p.m.
and meeting at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AIAnon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Cathohc Church. Call 9925763.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Community Education Committee
wiU meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the
school cafeteria to discuss a new
schedule of classes. The public is
invited to attend.
FRIDAY
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 Country Gentlemen wiU be playing and
Melvin Cross will caU. The public
is invited to attend.

'

To place an ad
Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT:S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

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

• Ad1 oulfide lhc county your ad rUJU InUit be prepaid

run 3 day• atao ~~:harp.
.
• Price of ad for aU t:apitalleuen i1 double price of ad eoet
• 7 poinlline type only uaed

• Seo~l ~not re~po111iMe for e nor1 alter f'111t day (check
for error~ fll'll day ad nm• i.a paper). Call befon 2:00p.m.

In Memoriam

Ratr OvrrlSWonls
1
IS
$4.00
$ .20 .
3
15
$6.00 ,
$ .30.
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
IS
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as·sel"'rate ads.
Bueine.. Card-...$17.001 ~ per momth
Bullrtin Board .....$6.001inch per day

446-G.Wpolio

992-Middleport/

367-Cbeohire
388-Vinton

Pomeroy

985- Cheo..r
1!43-Porlland
24 7..Let.. ..

245-Rio Graadc
256-Goor•• Dlot.
Ma:.Arablo Diot.

Yard Sale.

773-M_uon

ran.

882-New Haven
8'9 5-Letort

949-Raei.oe
742-Rudaod

379-lV.t....

•

67 S-Pl. Ple..anl
458-Leoo
576-Apple Grove

GET RESULTS • PAST!

2- In Mem_o ry
3- AnaouneemeniA
4--Giveaway
5-HappyAd.

11- Help 1Vanlod
12- Situliou Wanted
13- ln•ur•nee

6-- Loo1 aad Found
7- Loot aad Found
II- Public Sale &amp;

14- BuiDel• Tr•iiLiDS
15- SchooL &amp; I.utruetion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB RepeD-

937-BaiFalo

667-Coolvllle

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR ·

17, ·Mioc:olla....,.
18- Wanlod To Do

Auction

9- Wuted to Buy

•

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FRIIISTUIAJIS
son4 lltlty Rwt• Rtl.
la•t lette•, Olt. 45743

PRIVATE

Howard L Wrltesel

MATHEMAnCS
INSTRUCnON

NEW~REPAIR

"Mathemalics is the
alphabet w~h which
God has wr~ten the
Universe." - Ga/i/eo
By ToPiC
By Appointmenl
949-2814

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP WITH
CLASSIFIED ADS

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
3-16-93-lfn

CARPENTER
. WORK
Remodeling and Ropair
Painting, Experienced
Fraa Estimate&amp;
61291

~
RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Specialtieo"

622 Jay Ditw, C.IUpollo, Oh.
446·7612
FaxNolce 446-7612

8.;1-tfn

1·.-111

l•trt·J

\

.

$899~

'

''

A EDUCE WE.OHT.

~ ~~
•.

SHI\Q WOULDN'T

-

OTHERWAV.

•••

~LASSIFIEDS!

P!JbllC Notice

Public Notice

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

.

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11124192flln

?1 1S/93 ftfn

.

'

'

Authorized: Brlgga &amp;
Stratton MT.D, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVER:V
Houra 96· M-F 1-3 Sat.
Cloeed Sunday

949·2104
l

412&amp;'tfn

LIMESTONE,

Reaso•••le
Rates

.

"

.-

.,

'

.

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473

)

Any-·-

WHALEY'S IUJO

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE ·
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

NIKino on Wllloo Hill Rd. In Rlll-

..

a.nd will be pr..ICuted,

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

?l~lfi~~~ 1JM~~~

a. 18 Yro. Procell Company,
102-t31-otl15.

211112 Ext. 1004 SUIIIIIn. lluot

AU IUIIII . . .IIJ .

· 992·701hr ;
992·555:1

I.QOO wolght IN noturol woy

whh all

~-1

pn&gt;ducto, lt4-

H24St7.

or. TOLL FlEE

llyrtla IMCh - : llotol On
INCh, 1 &amp; 2 Rml. Ell. Cloan
- . _ HBO. ..75 IS475
Wooltly. Call -23Uit2.

I•IOCI-141•0070
7/31191/tfn

OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTERNATIVE 1-·JIIC»337 SUO·
min 11+/all llfwlylao d.tollne

your area today. CC:I 8
Fl
THE GAY CONNECTION 1-IOG1111).3337 S2JiCHnln. II+ I!IMI
100'.. of txcHing men In your
arM tonight. Gol pltono l'o . CC:I

Shade River Saddle Shop

Work

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Plumbing
Painting
1 (FREE

pormltlio PIOIIOfiV
or

rnMt 100't of 81nglell~l'" In

CARPENTER $ERVICE

ESllMATES)

36358 SR 7

BOCA FL.:

Whlto llalo A~ 23 Looking For
Slngla Whh• F.,..la P.. pal
Agt; 17 1f2 -25, Pr•fer Non-.moker &amp;' AlcohOl FrM, Send ,
~MpanH To: P.O. Boa 51, Oatllpollo, OH 45631.

Chester, Oh. 45720

4

Giveaway

985-3406

!1-10.!12~111

~w

EAGLE UNES
(former Mason LaniiS)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, wv

205-7SR15" Tig11r Paw X11ll RWL
205-75R14" Ttget Paw X:rM RWL
215-7515" Ffi..tone OWL
235-75Rt5" Flerttone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 6/28193

• SUMMER HOURS•
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDN.ESDAY

.....,.

Independent Mary

Carolyn McCoy
992-5082
Sandy Henderson
992-3647
812193

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
•nd 'mACicHOE WORK

AVAILABLE.

r

Socloty Flnchoo
614-m-6148.

To Good Homo: Lop Ea...t Rabbit Call E.-go. 614-44e-7551.

blaCk Chow, 2 emaU flmale

doga, 814-11112~71 ovonlnga.

·· 6

-------....i....--------..
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
·
COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL

LoSI &amp; Found

Fomata Walkor Coon Hciunij,
VlclnKy 01 Rlvor Valloy High
R-rdl614-&lt;146-2431.
Found: 2 Sola Of Koyo On
0'""'11• Croolt &amp; Mill Crook
Road, Looko Lilla Oomat

Se-.

llotON, 8--41154.

Fot01d: BlaekOrLab
On 218
Call
114-258-1288
Cclloct
At Work
11442-2!103 From 11-5.

Found: him of value, fronl ot

TJ'e R11t., Maaon. 304412-27"M.

LOST Gray I Ton Slom- cot
neturecl &amp; dec..wed, 2500 block
ol Ill. Yomon Avo, REWARD,
304..75-1452.

Loat: loaton T•rrl~r bulldog!. ~A
338, above AntlquJty, IK-MI-

2452 or 614-247-4555.

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
~
. uot

171h, 1343 Clark Chapot
Road, 1 112 Mllel From Porter,

Z.ne Grey Hard luk looka,

Orhat Bookti Achoft Clothing,
Flnt Tlmo Oilorad D -. 1881
boort Wogon, latollorol

1nAtn

Pomeroy, Ohio

H2-3141.

Rocky R~ Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

2112192/tfn

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290
or
614-698-6500

DAVID ·ARNOLO

Six male V.Z G.rman Shlpird,
112 Collie pupo, lwko. old, 1!4-

(No Sallidcty Calli)

-Trucking

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

old

To good hom. 0 yMr old mille

614·949·2101 • 949·2860
or 915·3139

&amp; Cooling

lwk•.

Sunday, 814-148-2017 aftor 5pm.

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident .;AnnuitY, IRA • Mortgage

Box 189
Middleport, o•lo 45760
(614) 843·5264 511

H WARD
EXCAVATING

B&amp;G

eood

Fl.. kltt•no, gray, !Igor, black

and whhe, wHI be

ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Consultants

992·3831

to

home, houHbrok.n, frllinclly,
lnd- dog, (11011 whh kldo, 1141192-6112.

LIFE and

Kay Beauty

LANDCLEARIN10,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUED
UMESTONE-'mUCKING

Cockar Spaniol, -

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773-5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

CaD TodaJ' lor
Toar.fal

SEP11C SYSTEMS,
HOllE SITES and
'mAILERSfTE!!.

8mo. old Po•k·A.Poo, hod oil
ohoto. 30&lt;W75-3712.
Blick Lab, 5 Montht Otd, Mile,
G- WKh Chlld&lt;on, Pr.._ably
Country Hom., 114-446-1121.

ORIGINAL t:.l.oi\Jtl'n

(304) 773-5585

FREE E~11MATES

(614) 992-7474

7122193

t,.pauii!Q on

PIUS

12-30-92-lfn

3+93·1 mo.

......

•'1

~

'

.,

Ceaeral Hauling
Mobile Home Repair
UpboLotery

319/lfn

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Remodeling ..

IJliWii

51- HouNheld Good.
52- SporW.s Good.
53-ADti.Juoo
54-- Mi.e. Merchandile

. FREE ESTIMATES

·~.

•856 Third Avenue in Gallipolis- ~hone (614) 446-3045
~

\II · 1;1 II\ \Ill~!.

YOUNG'S

81'

Men and Boys

~=::"0::::~

49-For'-ae

tAIWII, OliO

6 14 -985 -3373

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

-.--·:~'

Shop Dally 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. , J•Free Delivery
· ~:
Shop Friday Only 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. •Free Parking
.
Subject to prior sale.
•Financing Available

46-- Spa~ for Ren.t
47- Wan.ted.to Rent
43- Equipm.ent for Rent

USED RAILROAD nES

6-30:1mo.pd.

' ···~
'J
• j

HA\IE IT ANY

Aut.ot for S•le
72- Truek• for S•le
42- Mobil.e Home. for Rent
Va\u &amp;4 WD'•
Motorcycle. ·
43- Far.., for ~ent
BoaiA &amp; Moton for Sale
~ Apartraent for Rent
~ Fumilhed Room•

41- HoUHe for Real

PH. 742·2217

Pomeroy, Ohio

(614)
667·6628

'

.I ;"
'' •...

RAOICALL V SCULPTED SOLE AREA TO

S...i &amp; Fortilbu

1: I \ I \I :--

IIW 1 .1111 PAifl fOI

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

992-3470

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
.
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;

992-2156

Mariy StYles and Colors to.Choose From

Live~toc:k

n.y &amp; Cn.ia

35-Loto&amp;Ac.....,

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
. 99~·2269

fr, · rknHJV,Jl
Pho~e Eve nings

Call Sentinel

..

.

- Starting At

FOA UGHTWEfOHT SUPPORT. AND A

·•·d·n•! X.

4-19-93-tfn

' 00·
Starting At $39'9

AND ~T. PLUS, THERE'S AN

~ ..

p,Hif]··,

JOE N.SAYIE

'

aSECTIONALS

'I"P
W•nllld to Buy

33- Fann•for Sale
,34-- BWiiMII Buildinp

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top to
Bonom

• Exterior

ilttVL'\'.,·.ty·.
Hl'rJit': Itt--,

LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

BULLDOZING

.-.
•

~-Jilr k

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

EXCAVATING

oo

AEE~

,- EXTENDED QAAPHUTE• ARCH BRIDQE

l~. 1 ckllnt

36970 Ball Run Road

PONDS

p

PUJ~o'P"" SYSTEM FOR CUSTOM FIT

r..

HAULING

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,

CONTRACTORS

Sr·plrc Sv~.t··n·&lt;.;

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

•

PATTERN FOR TRACTION. ANO.THE

Dtl/t'l

Paris atld Senkl
Mowers • Chait! Saws
Wttdealen

5110193

~~---

'
DURABILITY. A HERRINGBONE TREAD

SERVI U

WALKER ALLEY

OWNER: .ltH Wldterslt..

ON REMAINING STOCK ONLY
ODDS AND ENDS

HA8 HIGI"'·ABRASION RUBBER FOR

GREEN-UP
RECLAMATION

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

Q

ROOFING

712211 mo.pd .

•SOFAS

I \1 \ \1 '- I 1'1 ' 1 II ,
,\ I I \ I " I t I I 1,

.55- Buildi"'! Supp&amp;,.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
tRIM••II
REMOVAL

RIVER VALLEY

7n/1mo,

8-4-e3-ttn

50% OFF REGULAR PRICES

THE LANE ~D Cl~ARS THE BOARDS. IT

Gravel
992-7878

. ·COLliNS
ENTERPRISES .

614-446-8568 1 mo.

THE
SHAQATTAQ:""'THE SMOE
BUILT FOR THE WAY SHAQ DOMINATES

toryou.

985·4181

•All PATIO

299

. Dirt

. 8112/11311 mo. JIC!·

7-?
The Ritzy Trio Dixieland
&amp; Big Band Music
Special Price on Buffet .ij:30·9

•BRASS HEADBOARDS
•
•LIVING ROOM TABLES

Reg. $499.00

Limestone

614·915·4180

ITURE'S

staring At
SALE

HAULING

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

AT OSCAR'S
.THURSDAY
'

'

•LOVESEATs

GENEUL

FREE ESnMATES
Take the pe'n out of
· painting. l.e1 me do It

SPEEDY'S TATIOOS
NOW OPEN
108 W. Main
Pomeroy
Artist: Speedy or Judy
Custom Art available. New
needles
- 992-6138.

20% TO 75% STOREWIDE

•Tables
•Gliders
•Umbrellas
•Folding Furniture
•Lamps
•Cushions
•Chairs
•Chaise
•3 Cafe Sets •Children's

21- llwo.._ Opporteaily
22- Moaey to Loan
23- Prol.oiOtial Senic..

3 Announcemems

Semi-Annual Clearance

•SIMMONS BEDDING SALE
•DINETTES

,56-: Petl for Sale

57- Mllliealln•trua.Ala
511- Fruiu &amp; Veptabloo
5~ For Sale or Trade

Announcements

SUPE SAVINGS OPPORTUNITY AT
OUR SEMI·ANNUAL
SALE.
'
·sAVE

11\ 1\11\l

,...----~ 36--JReal E.tolo Wanlod

. Galli a County Meigl Co!'JIIY Maaon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

day after publication lo 111ake conection
• Ad. that Jinut be paid in &amp;dv~ce are:
Card o( Tlwika
Happy Ad.
• A cla..ifted advertitemeat placed ia,the The I;l~ily Seotinel
(eXc~pl Clauilied Dilplay", Buain.u. Wd dr ~
Notice.) wiJI alae appeal' in the' Poillt Pleuut Repter and
the GalUPolil Daily Tribv.ne,·reachins oYer 18,000 ~oma

DAY BER:&gt;RE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday ·
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100p.m. Thwsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Wonb

Classified page1 cover the
follolfling &amp;elephone e:~~:change1 ...

• Receive diaco\Ull for ad1 paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Gi:vuway and Fouad ad. un.der IS won:U will be

SALE!·

•

NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
992·5627

RATES

D~ys

STURGIS, S.D. (AP) - Way-,
I on Jennings, one of country
music's "outlaws," said before
CLEVELAND (AP) - Dennis performing to a biker-heavy audiBarrie, the museum director encethatheloolcs upon motorcycle
· cleared of obscenity charges for an enthusiasts as today's cowboys.
·
exhibit of Robert Mapplethorpe
"I've been around bikers and.
photographs, has a new job: direc- Hells Angels, and I kind of look a\
. tor of the Rock and Roll Ha!l of them as modem-day cowboys," ho.
Fame and Museum.
said before performing Wednesday:
Barrie was named Wednesday at the Bentshoe Fesiival, near the
as the third director of the oft- Sturgis Rally and Races, a ¥ather;
delayed museum. It was supposed ing of bikers. "I've found its kind
to 'be finished in ,1988 but has been of a matter of territory - .don't
plagued by problems with location mess with theirs, and they won't
and money. Ground was finally mess with yours."
broken in June.
Jennings, 56, has one boast no
"! have a high-culture back- other biker at the raUy can topground, but I've ll.lways been very he has the Aerial motOrcycle once
interested in pop culture,'' said · owned by rock pioneer Buddy
Barrie, who lists Sling, U2, Peter .· Holly.
Gabriel and The Who among his
Jennings toured with Holly in
favorites. "It's one of the most 1959andwasbookedonthcfateful
potentforcesintheworld"
ni ght in which Holly was killed,
Barrie, 46, resigned in 1992 but !lave up his seat to the Big Bopafter 8 1/2 years as director of per. He said l)e doesn't ride the
Cincinnati's Contemporary Arts British-made bike much because
Center. Two years earlier, he and it's "all backward."
the museum were acquitted of
Jennings' latest album is "Too
obscenity charges over an exhibit Dumb for New York City, Too
of Mapplethorpe's explicit photos.
Ugly for LA."

LIFESTYLE FU

•

Marketpla,c.e

three people represeniing different
The prosecutor said she made
factions in war-ravaged Bosnia. · · no deal to testify against James.

SAN FERNANDO, Calif. (AP)
- Rick James' girlfriend was a
victim of abuse by the funk singer,
a prosecutor said as the woman
pleaded guilty to assault.
James, 44, and Tanya Anne
Hijazi were charged with beating
Mary Sauger, 34, of West Hollywood after she met the couple in a
hotel room on Nov. 2 to talk about
a record label he established.
Miss Hijazi , 22, pleacted guilty
Wednesday to assault and agreed to
a prison term of four years.
"She's pleaded guilty because
she appears to also be a victim
here, a victim of physical and mental abuse by James," Deputy District Auorney Andrew Flier said.
James, who had a hit in 1981
with ·~super Freak," also is
accused of torturing and sexually
assaulting a woman at his Hollywood Hills home in 1991. Jury
selection in that case b.egan
Wednesday.
Other charges against Miss
Hijazi, including some in the 199I
Community Calendar items assault, will be dropped, Flier said.
appear two days .before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar . .

WITH THE RIM IN YOUR HANDS, YOU'RE ON

IIIIL-I

until Jimmy comes h0111e. Only her a dried-up old woman and
IIOIIlCiimca you don~ feel like iL But I!'PIW h«ofbavin&amp; flllJOOtil what
you do it anyway because you feel it wulike to be in lo~.
·
suiJty about being away from h« You II)' Ill push 1M lhouil!ts of
allllay. 'n1en you mill tbc formula other boys.out of your mind, but
ud walt diapcn, and you bate . they keep coming back. Espceially
doing iL You wondet bow long it that c:eruin boy who pvc you your
wiU be before she knows you bate farst kiss. He won tbc stale science
it. And wouldn't it be awful if she prize and is going to be a doclor.
·kneW already?
You Wonder how dilfcrcut your
Then Jimmy doc$a't come home, life would ba~ been if you bad gone
and you know he decided to go out ·to college. You bavc ihe feelina that
with tbc boys apin llld do the things Jimmy and tbc baby are all part or a
he sho11ld have done before he bad ~- B11t you know ies no
married you.
dream. It's for real. So you reach
So flllllly you eat.tbc lousy meal over 10 IOUCh Jimmy, tn1 he ptsbes
by younelf and g6 to bed ud r:ry you away and 18)'1 somcdling mean.
your eyes buL When he doea come You r:ry younelf 111 sleep and wake
home, you can tell lie's been ·· up with up6uing headaclle.
drinking, but you don't say a wOrd
If you meet ll)yone who thinks
bc)cause he hates to be IDid anything.
she knows wbat it is like to be
So you try to go Ill slcql anddtelm maniecl8ll7, please teU h« about
about your parent&amp; and your . me. Or better yet, give her this
.broeben and tbc kids you knew at letter.--SORRY
school. You think about tbc great
DEAR READERS: I could print
meals yQur niotber used to cook and a letter similar 10 this one every day
how nice your room Wll It home. of tbc weelc. Aze you listening out
Tben you remember bow lhe tried tbele? I bopc ao.
IOtalkyououtoflllll1)'inBsoyoung.
GemoftheDay:lfyoulhbutknew
and you got mad It her llld called · whatqecould teU ···

-------------Name·s· l.n the n'ew s-------------

WHEN YOU SLAM DUNK, AND COME DOWN

fit-AN T REEBOK.

Ann

· ·The ·Area's. Number I.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE

WOii '
Porches,
Patios, .

Sidewalks
992-7878
7n I mo.

Oaro~
Sola: 110
Fou~h
Avanue, Friday, Satun:t.y, 8113o
141h. W, Olrla, Women, Men

Ctothlng, MI-. h•ru.

. _ Gorago Sola: F~day 1
Soturcla~ 8-5, 2 Family Movlnt
Sa.. : .-ppiii11C811 Am~UH,
Toya, Fumltur•, Carpot, H Fl.
Campo! Toolo, ClothM Largo

SlzM, iltoe..:L.~,Pumpk(n Town
Road, 114-•11H1124.

Largo 3 Family Yard Solo:

So-y 14th, N . Car Soota,
-lng lalla, Golf. Ctubo,
Clown Colloc:llon, Curtolna, Loto

Olloya Clot""!1_Nioa llwootora,
Swa,at Shlrtt ..,... 4-11, GlriO
Ctothoo, Si.a 4, I , I . Ptno
Stroot" .Rio . Oron&lt;M 1· _Aero.
From cotlaga Porltii!Q LOt .

�0. - • •• ·- -·~ ·· · ·-·- · · ·- · . ... ..

Pege fD-The Dally Sentinel

¥

Gallpolll
&amp; VIcinity

-=- .

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

au.. •

c:.,..!
qa., IlL .7, A Lillie Of

Apanment
for Rent

'""" -

•

The

l

Altot' f P•. I!Wia.1411.

PHILLIP
ALDER

3041 or IM-1112-1441.

1HI F - """- 14ll70, 3111., 1
112 - · loundry
171-71tl.
' lOOm, CA.-

._lalo, 1.-f:il'IIZI.
1114 Aedm11n '14170, ~m., Inoldrtlng, ...... blocb,

lyr.

warranty.

homaaw,...

aul'lnct, anti" 1 v•r of frll

en•

·

sp;t;;\

P0111eroy,
MlckiJeport
&amp; VIcinity

11

Help Wanted

21

3 familY yord - · loturdoy,
Auguot 14, _ , . up Eaoy Wootol Exoolltnl Part A.
ln&gt;in Pool Oltlct In TupptN Proclucta AI HomO. Clll
Ptolno.tto?
Ton Frtt, t-eoo.olt7-6511, Ext.
St!.
• tomltv, Auguot 12 • "~· S1771
SA l2f; ono 11om "'· 124.
Fo&lt; · A
Rttnor
HolM lnl«kw, cl_.., cwtllna, ..-1"11
(So......,.on)
To
To
• boddlnto child,.. and adun MontgtmMlt And Run AUploctl
-hlng, .... · - .............. Attl &amp;toto Office Hlro Your
...,.,, toolo • ""'"" Own Sotoop:oplo You Wll lo
"'!""· watch lor.IIIQno.
Tho Moln P11roon In Thlt
All Ytrd SoiOt Muot Bt Pillet In Agoney. II lnlarooltdi I Would
Dtocllno: 1:00t&gt;m tho UTw to Talk To You, una To a.
dey boleN tho td II to run, Soloct..... All lnq. .let StrictlY
8uilclay tdHion- 1:DOpm FriclaJ, ConAdtnllal. Wrtta Down Your
_,
od~lon
10:00t.m. RtoJ E - Exptfltlocoo And
&amp;omtlhi"'J AbOUt YourMII,
a.....,.
Sand To: CLA 212 c/o Gatllootlt
Tribuna, 125 Thttd . . ..,
Flnl 11lno ron1 ttio· Frldtr
polio, Olllo ot51!1.
Met S.turday, box lin on
-tonbiOdelor-Trwctor, 8hlrta and . . . . .,. for ...ture Women NHcled M
loiN - l o t At Hollmtrk
ochoOilnlolt ol odd ondo,
..,...
front of ChMt• Fire card Shoo. Ohio Alv• Plaza,
Gailtpollo, · lnttrYt...I"'J Frldar,
.... SlatkM\, Undo ca.y,
Auguot 13, 11 A.ll. To 11'.11.
Largo g o - ttle- Frldar and
Saturclir, llrtck horn. acraea Ntllontl Pubtlthi"'J Fino Nttdt
l'aoFio To Labol Pootot,.
Bolltbilry E_,ary.
From Homt. s-'Wk. Sol Your

Opponunlty

Vtnillng Aautt: For Solo.
SIFOflll, Solid CUlt Buolnoto.
High inofflc, loctl t..ac.tlont.
NOW EqulpoMnt. 1-214-8363.

· Ad-.

••nd,

PubliC Sale

8.

• ,.,....,~.=&amp;..:.:Au;;ct::;lo::.n:;...._
Rick Pelreon AucUon ComPiny,
tvU time •uc:llonMr. compllte
auction
ttrVice.
Uctnotd
III,Ohlo • Wttt Vlrglnll, 304773-571111.

Wanted to Buy

9

UHd turratture, no
or too amall, will
buy one Ptee41 Ot complele

Antlqun •nd

tt..., too

late!~

h04 ••hold, call O.by Martin,
114-182·11141.
Decorttod oton-ro, "'" .....
phonit, old tampa old thor·
momotorw, old ctoclw, onllqut
fumnuro. Rlvwlne Antlquoo.
Aua Moore, owner. I~·
2521. Wo bur ootat11.

Don' Junlt HI Stll Ut Your NonWorkl"'J Major Appllancoo,

Color

Aetrtgeratcn,

TV'•

F-zoro, VCR'o. Mlcr-avot,
Air CondhloMN, Qull.- Ampe,
Etc. 814-250.1231.
J a D't Auto Pllrto ond Botv-,
~=lnil cora • truclio.

Junll a~ra, •nr condition, 8~
11!12·7553.
Wt,.od ttandi"'J tlmbor, top
Dficel pekl, frill •stlm....,
llconotd
cortlllod loggi"'J,
30UI5-3085 or IN-3131.

a

Tap Pr1too Paid: Atl Old U.S.
cotno, Gold Rlnao, su.., Colnt,
Gold Colnt. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Stcond Avonut, Golllpollo.
Wtnii"'J to bur 1 aero or lot In
Southam local School Dtotrtd,

·~~~71.

Employment Services

v-

Own - . Maka
Fortune At Home, Own Bull,.., Prolb DoliY:Ie~ronlotd•
Fr11 a.~•, 212·
100, £11.
2117.
Narnt

Real Eslate

All real estate advert~lng In
11111 nowsp- ~ suf&gt;lect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ol ,1968 which makes K Illegal
to adver11s8 ~any preference,

Nmllatlon or discrimination
based on race, color, rellgkm,
sex familial status or naUonal

N.AuroraiL 10542.

ortgln, or any lnlanllon to
make any such preference,
YmHatlon or \lfscrlmlnatlon."

llaiiJolttor In VInton, Fof 3
Children Mldnightt, IM-311-

... ,_-

tnll8.

-·

REAL ES1A11! CORRESPONDENCE COURSE: oomptolt WV

.......
,,_,.
No dmt -

This newsp""l"r will not
knowingly accept

ott job. FullY ...
crtdHtd.BASIC
APPRAISAL
CI.ASSES:C-on Clot. ..
15Marllntbi1~ = 1a.21&gt;l'66-MnNort 1
m Colltgt
FIELO,NUASES
Flald Nuratt' Wtnttcl To Mab
Pllri-Timt Homo Hotnh Vltltt, IV
Skills Atqulrarl. Coli 814-511•171 For Appllc:otlon In,......
tlon.

adver1isemenls for real eslata
which Is In violation of the
law. ·Our readers are hereby

lnlormed lhal all dwellngs
advertised In this newspaper
ara avaUable on an equal

.~!!!!!!!opportunity basis.

3t · Homes for Sale

-pontlblt couple or lody to 12x10 with oxpando.lhrlno raom,
ll'lllln to ur. 1Dr : . n tMir aoocl condhlon, on 314 acre,
country homo, a 14
:z.
liult tr-, g a - a amall bulldTtu AdvtnbJII Of Thlt Fut lflll, 1Mo1U·M1i
Track CarMf" appctrtuntty, Good 2 otory, 3br., 1 112 both, 2 car
Salary, TOfl ltntllto, Extcutlva
•rage, approx. 2 MlrM. 304Training, ~unlly For Acf..
71-2701
•""' 5f!m.
vancemtnt, lluot lo Wilting To
Worll Htrd -umt ·R • - 3 bado oom, 1 t/2 btthiltnachtd
tlbiiRieo, Thlnlt For Yowtalf
, 183 Mlnon d, Clmp
And lo Cuotonw Sorvlco
•1 epplllnctt lneludod.
..11138:
Orttntod. For llllllltlllttt eon.
-ttlon COnttcl Guy Morrow
At ltnollclol 114.-.a.Z?U, An 3 llod100tnt, 1 Bath, Largo F.R.
Equal Opportunlly Emj&gt;loytr U. U.A. Anachod Garage, Etactrle
F·D-Y. Smob Frtt a Drug Frtt Httt, 2A MIL Gardiln, Private
ldOtl For Fomllr Or Attlrwmtn~
Environment.
011 State Routo 110 Abova Ola
N.O.H.B. M2,500 r.- Attt f4t.
tum. llorlgogo 114o38fl.118.08 For'
Avalltblt Soplombor lot, ,.... Appoint.-.
tourwnt oqul_.,t , 111 HlgiNrar 3 llodro.mo, 2 lotht, 2 car AI·
tnn, 114-Wt-oMI.
tac:hod Ga-. Outbulldl::t
Bklnll Portorllchacll Artt, I
18 wanted to Do
31'-~.
'

r

~~~~~--------~---Will do . babytltti"'J, mr homo,
c - . . .,... full lima, ..rt

time, 1f11r echoo4, Ill

egM, 114-

185-12112, Mary. .

11

Doycart avallablo eu agtt, Aut·

Help Wanted

A-1 All .... -

..nd area, tor In1onnlllon call HoUM For Sate Br Own1r:

.....

.....,. or wMl 1 c.,..r, ehtwr

..
,.....,.11 Marltyn. :104-882·or 1-IOO-ttl2-635e.
Aa .pet. An~ i, Tral'lll,.n and
--

-ion a, Pool·
::=,ollha ~d A g IIR 1M MLTA and the
Board o1 Education, tho Mtlgo
r.-1 Dlatrlct lo potting
lht - n g ......... , .... b
ntgUtar tttchlflll otall: Sixth
OrW!t Toachtr ot Rutland
El_..ry tnr1 LD Ttaehtr ot
lltlgt Junior High.
A - I All Anu I Shlrtoy
lpttrw, 304-11'5-1429.
Avon Want•lndlvUilalnterHttld
In Eamlng 18 ..,0 Mr., No Door
ToDoor,f~ .

Babytltt• Far 3 YHr Old All
Day a 1 v- Old Anar School,
Rio Grandt Arttla Prolor NonSmolllng Chrilt n 614-246~.

Cordintl Frtlght ClrTitro-O.T.R.
Orlnrw wantld tor • new twmlnal In Hurrt01ne, WY, mutt
ho.. 1JI'. O.T.A. nporltnee put~

lng .....
-·
good ··~Inti
""''
.............
oqut_.t,
llut
CfOII Blue Sh'-ld, Inc., lt~p art
por, . ltJ ....
-kdown

,:J·

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

Call ...,.. Aclldnt, 800-l:ze-6222.

CUt Montgtr Fui~Tlmt - ·
tlon Wortdnil wnh Emollonaur
Dlotrubod "J.t Rlllt" Youth In
Tho Communlly, Tht H - •
S c -. lluot Htvo Atlltblt
Tr~on,

T..chlng,

Pt,... Training, And Monlol
· Htotth Exrart- Or Training
Dttlrarl Bochatoro Dogrtt R•
qulred, 'send RnuiM To: AI&gt;
a.n To Hu.-n Aelource

Develapmenl, P.O. 80K 810, GaiUoollt 011 41131, AHtntlon:

Carol .......
Eam ..,,. _ . , lor ilc:hool
clot'- • ChrtotrntO glftt. Avon
rw~IVM Mm In IVet'lgtl
of
llan up now 6 recelvtl
trot gift. 'talt 1_.00.-~Utlt
codtAZZ.

..,..o

• Looklll!l For .._hi"'J · Un~
? nrart Of Hlah Uti!Hiiot And
hbonl Too Cion For c ....
Thin You Mar Want To
Trimming, Trw A1mova1, H4klge Conakler Thl1 Blcludld, L#M
Trlmmi"'J. Frtt Eatlmalotl 11+ Mal..-.nance, Ruelle Cedar With
31'-1'118TAfttr
An:hltoct Doolgned P-lvt
Solar Room L.Oealect • On 35
- • Malnlont,..., Plllni["'J, - d A&lt;rtt 112 Milo From
Yard W.,., Vifndon Wunoa
OUHtra C!ttntd Light Htuii"'J, CKr Of Golllpotlo. 1800 Plut Sq.
A., 2-3 Br't!, 2 B~h1, Bulb-In
Comrntrtctl,
lookcatt, Pttlot Stovt, Dtckt,
l......a.tua. Rtoldo.. lol,
Gan.g•, 11x20 Barn, 22X32 Poll
OI~JVM PCHtable S.wmlll, don't Garage. Fru11 Trott, Ortpo Ar·
houl rour ..... to tho mill luot bor. li1torttlod Ptrtloo c:'~laCll
61....1-0233 Or 8Mol.a.
.
ctll304-11'5-1l$7.
114-1112-3411

....

~•

Hurry, echooleaana aoon.
Ea A TREE IE AVICE. TOIIIII"'J,

.,.m.

··-=

-

ctrolor rour lovtd - I n
homo .In Mlddloport,

lo~carw

e

-

-2.

HouMCI..nlna.
AefiNneea,
Coli ,,...,._ LAavt l nttrtorftlttrlor polntlflll, root
painting, handl'tth hout• &amp;
mobil rtom., odd Jobe. 15yra
IJip., IXC. Nfw. frM litJrnMel.
304-675-1133.

-=:t,..J"gl

•'

Bovt UOOO, roonr Itt. Brlck
ho4ae, 3br., ktt.,. dlnlngroom,
llvllliJroom, 1 112 bath, lomllr
rvom,
And1r100
wtndow~,
ICIMn room pend, 2 car
gorogo, outbufldlng, 10.5 acrto,
1!00. 3ml. lrom tol'n. 3Q4.
81'5-52110.

•n:

Block Waot 01 HMC On JaclcMn 32 Mobile Homes
Plu 11-f 8 A.M. ..:30 P.ll. N
for Sale
OuaiUy And
It Tht
t1 COncom For Y- Chlltl't $185... par month, , _ .14' wide
Clrt, CIU Uo Fof A VIal. lnfont mobllt homt, lncludtt dtllv.ry,
!Toddloro IM-44a.1227. P - complete ul..up, 1ldrtlng. 111p1
chooltro /School Ago • - and 6 monthe kll rent, 1-80()..
8224.
f37.M25.
Room and board t..- hondlctp- '73 FOITMI Park, 2 · bodroom,
.-d ond oldorly *"h lowor In- good condKion, 114-112·3188,
com. who llkl caumry living in -1ouo
lnqul- only.
flmlly tare home, 114-H~-5042.

E..,.._

12x68 trlllllr w/ 12X80 addhlon, 3
or 4br., Ia~ llvlngroom

ldtc=::::r dlnllliJroom1 lx24
cov
porch, emal aeck, .and
mor1, Ytirv IIDOCI cond., SiOOO
OBO, 304-68f-3H7.

Will do btbl'omi"'J In mr homo,
Mldd'-l, Unk conltlod, tx·
oorltncod, roto-, ShollY 121:80 New C.rpel, Wlter H•ter,
Wood, 114o112..stll.
Elactric Bow rncludlng: Porch,
Wll! do - t l houtoclttnlng. Uncloralnnlng, CIA $0;DOO, 114311-tlia6.
3CM...,_3010 o r - -·
Will do gtnonl " - J or bl- 1m 12xl5 Ktrk11rood, 21tr., ,_
_ , clttnl:t r.v. ... carpal, fumaco, CA, 3rro old,
perience and re Nncea. eon. 10lc12 oulldlngl...treatod . .k w/
tact Paule •t 114-148-2447 after rool. 30ot"15"· n31 IMvt ft!N- o r 1·304-688-2013. .
,
lpm.
Will do houtoclttni"'J, Point 1f73 Schubz, 2 bedroom, IIOVI,
rslrlgtrttor, CA, F.A.N.O. htot,
PI--nt ar11. ~ .

FLATBEO
DRIYEIIS-Oinllnat
Frtlaht
Clrritra
tn 1unlfr tor llttbod htt
..,.,_.
tilt! ·
11
Ftnanctal
MCaild to none! Do_you own
,.... . . , troctor? " ' " rou
thought
buying
""" ~1
traotir? ·Iabolng
• JOUr
oomponr
Business
drtVer Whllt you ,,. ..,..,...ld
Opponunlty
In? Thtn coM Clrdlnol
ot
1~222 tnd ttk tor m.
IN011CEt
WE HAVE IT ALLI
OHIO YALLEY :PUBUSHINO CO.
• - -lttant It carteton roeommondt tho! JOU do butt.
School to -with tho ochool ,_with paopto JOU k -1 tnd
tgt, program. ho.. or bo NOT to ttnd IIIOniJ tlrougn tho
llllllrig 11 to ollloln on moll until 'yau ho.,. ln-tgattd
IEIIuolitlonal Aldt ....... 11om tho-ollorllliJ,
tho ·OIIIo lloptltmMlt of . , _
tlon. A =
· len doocll,.. lion- Local ' Pllr Phono Routt: 11,200
.~ 11 ot no A Wtok Polontltl, Prlctd To
cloy,
..., ..~ •.., Soll.1- 411 7132 Ext. 327.
phono .... .,...._ Dl,.~~ ~-~ WLocal Yonclflll Routt; 11,200 A
1
- · • _..
tok Pottnttol. Mutt lol1.1-iooM D,
P.O.
llol.
113·Ytnd;
ltrac-,Oit. ot5771.
· ~. 1-.:...:.::;.::;:._
_ _ __ __

'i:'f.

HouN For Slle: Land Contr1ct,

$2,000 Down Located 8-ton
Conltf)'lllt And Oak Hill, On
ROUII 271, Call 814--24$.83'15.

Ml•• Ptula't Day C.N Center 1

Tr• ..ump r'8fi\OW.I, com~•
dt.-ndablt ..,.Ice, rtatontblt
ratoO. 304-6754?31.

aoo

gallon

propen•

rocenttr remorltltd,
..3-6286.

t•nk.

uooo, 614-

1f114 Fratdom 211odraomo Total
Eltctrle, Clnirsl Air, U,iititi, 614441&gt;0885.
11171 Scllun, 14 x 10, 3 bodroomo,
2 full dl•hwfi•Mr,
bothl, " aMI
dryer, r~~nge,
" ' . - o t t - - · porc'lnoluclld, totll .-ctric, Coleman
furnace, 1a1 nallnclucled, $8.500,
114ola4157.
1DIO Ftlnmont mobl homo,
18$00. 30W1'5-1304 """ lpm.
1111 .Mr ~~~~~ 14x1'0, 3 lltdo

-All....,. Good

tton. .,.......,.1 P,soo.

Cond~

tNS Joy Skyllno, 311drm., all
tltclrlc, 14x70, good condition.

814118 lilt

34

Sn,Qdb---010,

fumlthod
paid, ..... .

'

=~ B":=n~··*E:
Central Air,
0131.

o.-... •

$225/mo.
lnclud• utlltllel,
$100
Ono bodroom
apartmtnto,
-urltr depooK, no ptlt; 814iiiiZ-2211.
,
0nt. bodroom alliciencr ... rt.
mont, furnlthtd, third - · no
~ roqulrart, 114ollll2·

=

pt
roomrelllgtnltor,
• ., ..,.
paling,
~L
lomltY ttmoopnoro, on lltt
manager• .EOH. 304-112·3711 or
como by todtr, Laurrand Aptt,
llh 81, Ntw Htvtn, WV.

Spac lout 2 bod

Business
Buildings

Commti&lt;:ltl Billldlng .For Solo
Or Llllu, 338 Second Avenue,
Phone: 1--2522, 10 A.M. To
SP.tl.

IU 1121CM,

! EEK AND MEEK

Ford LlU, 1ott condnlon S4SO.
410 Autltnd It-, llll h p t,
Ohio, ......Z.7Jtl.

f · l~

Phone: 11t
DHo, .o r==~======:lr---------jll3,!100,
Dr111
080
11?7 ChtYJ Blutr 4WD

54 MISt;:JIIaneous
Merchandise .,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

11171 Fard T-blrd, mtnr """
ptrto,- nor run, 11?5 '010. 4
Ooodyttr GT PIGS-IC).A14 tlroo,
S25 to. or SIO tot. Sk1t by oldt
rwlrlgtrotor, $75. 304-67HIOII•
o10 ft. ttumlnum txttnolon ltd~! hoi!IJ dutY, uu - . 114M,...Ot3.
.

Clniii"'J tornl-

brt

211"~~1. -n

con1a1

tM-1112.JOOt-.,.an~r.
11112 ct. .rottt 11tve.-, ...,..

bedroom,

Wool

Pw
Pw
Pw

_n.:rn.
__

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

HE'S

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

HER

-'t, cit"!', 114-GIIll-7217.

AN' SHE'S HOLDIN'
HIS SKILLET
--.;,....-.:::&lt;.:
HAND ! !

11111 C.J5 .......~ oond. 468·1775 aft~ opm.

ovor NAPA. 30W75-2211.

'

unknown.

. PEA,NUTS
SC~OOL

.'

STARTS IN

FOU~ WEEKS!!

' uI(\ \Jilo-'

.

. FRANK AND ERNEST

r ,•
'

I '

I

1[1 1H.3 by NEA. tne.

, BORNLOSER
· '"r Tl\lt.IIC, ~OU'u. FIND Tl\15 Afltlt·"" .
. ....,....:....

B-IZ

f.££, ~T MI~E:..

DII-INIE.R IWWf

11'~~

Y~ UKI!'\Go,

""

-me. loJ~ ~DE: .

Today ·is th e 224 th

day of 1993 and the
53rd day of summet.

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP
MY~~THeR
H.IB~~

F!OE:T.

He 5&lt;\.'15 He'D ~
THE Pei&lt;FEiCT
DONOR ...

IF 60MEeoDY E'.£:R
NeEDS A 6L.lN ION
TRANSPLANT.

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1977, the Enterprise made the first
successful flight of a space shuttle,
TODAY' S BIRTHDAYS: Christy
Math ewson (1880· 19251, baseball star;
Cecil B. De Mille 0 881-19591, direc·
tor·produce r; John Derek (1926· ),
actor-.producer-director, is 67; Porter
Wagoner fi 92H singer, is 66; Buck
Owe ns 0929·1, s inger , is 64·

ITHURSDAY
GEORGE
\'
j
J\SI-\IN6TON
THt CHEST, I CP,N
~lOR If¥ THAT IT'S SlEPT H!;RE!
AFTEI( E.)(At-/IINII'IG

fROt-11 TtiE 1100'S.

·ne.•

.

, ~~·.· -- .

"'ASTRO-GRAPH

• I

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

..

=.. ~ r':'S::1

..

=~A~·: ~.;;

~= ~.~r::·Ut~

•, .

...,pl.... ,

rloci

=.
_,

=· . .
...

41=ot

--

43 lulhorltiiiYI
41 Precllell

47 A11Piaaren1

48 Dec. ltolkllr
48
50 Sltoo
53 Foollllll org.
54 Froety
Hln- Mood
5I !MIIrew IIHer

Pennr

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CllltwWy Cipher c:rrptogrttnl .... CNftld from quotattone by IMiol.- ...... pelt end .,..,..
Each t.ft•ln U.clphlr ttlndl tor lnOthlr. T~ '*-: H ~F.

'L

NMO'W

CAPO'W
TZLUN.
CAP

L W

,,,.

.•

Friday, Aug. 13. 1993

In the year ah ead you may take time tO
review things in depth that have proven to
.be unreward ing and then lake measures to
' rid your se lf of the se emc.uni"b ra nC'es .
"eventual success is indicated .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) It may be best to
temporarily shelve for the nex1 few days
tas ks you lind d1s iasteful. What you do
,under a cloud will have ro be redone again.
Get a jump on li fe by un derstanding the
influences wh1Ch are governing you in the
, yea r ahead. Send for your Astro· Graph

'·.

predictions toda y by mailing S t .25 a nd a

long. s~ll-addressed. stamped envelope to
Astro ·G•aph , clo this news paper, P.O. Box
446 5, New Yo rk. NY 10 163. Be s ure to
state your zodiac sign .
VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sept. 22) Unde r most
conditions you are usually a rather prudent
and cautious· person. but today you might
!eel 1nclined 10 take unwi se risks in finan·
cia! or business matters.
'"
LteRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 22) Don't le i yo ur

ego overrule your commo n sen se today
and make you feel you Will lose face if
you're not No. 1. Inordinate pride is sell-.
defea!ing,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Us ua lly your
intuitive perce ptions are reliable and provide you with helpful insights . Today, hOW·
ever, the:se signals could be erroneous and
you lead you astray il adhered to.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov .. 23· Dec. 21) Be ca re·
ful loda y yoa &lt;Jon 't get in vo lve d i n an
arra_oge~en t wn ere you manage something lor another lhat could cos t you money
out of your own PDGket 11 it goes awry.
There's a chance it may.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.' 19) Do nolh·
ing impulsive today if you are negotiating a
critical agreement with anolher. Hasty mis·
. takes. will weaken your position and be difficult to retract

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb. 19) Be wary
today of laking on ass1gnme nts or protects
that e •ceed you r \•Ients and capabilities. If
you get in over yQur head , you could have
a tough time trying to crawl out of the hole.
PISCES (Feb. 2D·March 20) Accep! your
lriends lor what they are today withou t try·
ing to maoke them over in your image. Once
you begin to point ou.t t h e i~ fault s, they
might snoWyou areas where you need cor·
recting
ARIES ~March 21 ·Aprll19) It's best nollo
bu y anything la rge lo r yo ur hou se ho ld
today without first consulting your mate ..
.You r choices and his/hers may be poles
a pan.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Mar 20) There's a pas·
Sibilily you might be uni ntenlionalfy critical
or others. tod a y, e s pecially c o-workers ,
Thin k carefully before offe ring s uggestions
or appraisals of their performance.
GEMINI (May 21.Junt 20) 1n order to provide you rse lf wi th ins la nl g rali llcation
tod ay . th e re a re indicati o ns you migh t
spend more than you should for the things

you now want.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Don't be the
one who brings up an old, volatile issue
today tna l always turns you r house hold into
an armE!d camp with several warring tac·

tions.

. ..

!

"

CAWTZ

w

AUUMCVN

E G

F M L 0 F

J.

WM

HAWZVX

SXALDP .

WM

L

A P

A

W Z M D·F Z W
XMW

MDX

EANMOOR.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "ft took me a long time to acc..pt that it's not
that bad to b&lt;! a woman." - (Chilean novelist) lsab&lt;!l Allende.

T::;:~:~' S@1t~lA-~t.trsOI
Ed;rod bf CLAY
Rearrange letters of
0. four
sorombled words

WOlD
GAME

,OllAN

tke

be.

low to form fou r simple words .

I

I I I II I

1

I

LIXEE

I

0 C0 y E

I

POTRRO
2

Our son got a summer job
working at a local bowling
~. alley. His work shirts read:
. . . . . . • "Bowling Alley . . . A Place
..--------=~Where You're Gli;id To Hear a

I• I I Is I

r

.....,..::IG:....;I;_I6:_P.;.:.IN_:O:;.,I7..:.C

~~ O

T"l

Co:plere rne cnuck le q uoted

by fill ing in the missing words
L-.1.-.1.-.1.-.J.I......J.I......J you develop
from step No. J below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS-

Whiten - Unarm - Quest · Frugal • FRESH
The diner said to the waiter, "I would like fresh
squeezed orange juice, please." The waiter stiffly replied,. 'We only have frozen, but its FRESH frozen!"
'

m

••llo

38WMd

.

In SeAttle she was Stella,
Tbe pick of all tbe bWJCIJ,
But don on bJs upemes, ,
Sbe was Gsund Oil and Lunch.
It is all rlgbt if you can get away
with il But sometimes wlnnlDg a
cbeap victory early leads to an espen·
slve defeat later - an ms audit This
can bappen in a bridge deal too - as in
today's.
,
West led his fourth·hlgbest heart.
Ili!ciarer called for dummy's jack,
which won the trick. A diamond to
South's king was followed by three
rounds of clubs. West won with the 10
and cashed the club queen before exit·
ing with a spede. DeClarer won, took
bis club winner and continued with
two more roUDds of spades. but East
won, !l&amp;Shed the spade queen and
pushed ·a heart througb. South could
take only eigbt tricks: two spedes, two
bearts, .one diamond and tbree clubs.
"Sorry, partner; said South. "I was
worried that the diamond blockage
would kill the contract.•
"I bope you won't mind my saying,
but It was your penny·plnchlng that
defeated tbe contract, not the block·
age. Play low from dummy at trick
one and win in band with your ace.
Thea overtake tbe diamond king with
dummy's ace, and continue· diamonds
from tbe top until you have driven out
the queen. Win any return and play a
beart, forcing an entry to tbe dummy.
Yo!J _Win 11 tricks ~lead of eipt. •

Nj.v:::J:hi:,..

r.=-:---.:-:------:------

Pua

DATE BOOK

w-...

'*

Eul
Pus·
Pus

Tbe nreetest fir/ 011 urtb.

a

5

5 CutdHn (I

In Boston she was Brenda,
Sbe was ~1 don iD Worth,
In CMnbrldge she was Csndldjj,

n.

.,...

4~

Bomlleck

I would like to start by Americanizing a poem, tbe author ·of whlcb is

v..

\f"

3 . Co~ent

ColumnNt-

· By Pblllip Alder

from"=

a....,..,

1 IIOnk'l llllt

2Grllft

Pay as much
as is necessary

'

=1.

=h

nowtna

1-.)

OpenlnJlead: • 2

LIN' PIN HAND

'12 Ford Von, • captain oholrt,

'

1:. riPidlr

24 AnlelopH
28 IIOwbut

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

ono

olde .........,, 1,000 mllet, 304lor ttto,l
ss_. _· - - - - - 1 ,_24?-

nora,

21

ttodc.,.•
ern

~-n
Culillon

+AK63
"A8!
+K
+AKH%

omt1t ruot opot, 11200 oliO, caN

58

.....

-pod

15 TI'IIIIUI

27 ~lor -

SOOTH

1172 Chevy 112 Ton 350 4 bbl. 4
Bon, AT, PS, PI, AC~ 3.73 Pool

NfA. tnc.

4211ote

O'IINI

11

EAST'

.72 Trucks for Sale

"'::"

::-~

40 lowlltd -

1..........,

+QJ108

t .... ..,

37Cryotptln

3t Hr. lllllllllt

17 "--tlo

•us
+Q87%
+a

7 Oulrt cenner ~; FoUr 14..
Tlrto 110.:1tc1rle wl- Floor
11eq VoiUw~on van, Midi
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
45. Furnished
Air Joek,
'41a.o325.
~~ repair, 1800, 114o'lll2·
61 Fann Equipment·
... llorlgl bulldlrt!la,
1 .... Iota, At 2, Aohton. ctrde
Rooms
l!Ds, dtlt-r a totup,
80'MI"', Jr 304-516-2338.
Ford Tnctor $2i3H; 5000 1115 Rod Chtvv Bilz!r1 4x•,
Olhlr lllze• •nll1b&amp;l. Sldar11-E· 2000
Lol for mobil home for ,.nt, RQOml Jor rent · week or month. ~lprMrd, Hendtraon. 304-175- Ford $2,311;. 2ol0 tntomttlonal Very Good Condition, PB, PI,
Com ~ltnt., $2,115; 110 Automat~ V~1 AMIFM CuStarti"'J t1 1120/rno. Gallta Hotal.
21 '
•nale or double wide acc~pted . 114-44f.1510.
Maioty . forguton
Sharp,
.
•
---675-6184.
· - · IM-31'11-2737.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS, 113.550; 800 FOrd 12,1'115; .,... -1111.. ··
Ford EtiiO CUllom Yon,
Lot Fof Sole: Behind Gavin · Slttplng IOOI!JI ""h cooki"'J. 11!JOO Gallon, 11321; '"" JET lot 216-6122
loacllkl,
ISK mU•, ••oo aand., ·
Plant, Turkey Run Road, Al10 trall• lpBI. All hook~.-. tr.o Stnd Flntr Atquhod)
C._ll after 2:00 p.m., 3Q4..7J3.. 11.US; Ron Evtno Enlorprt-, Ch!lln Sa" Cholnt, bUJ 1 get 1 liZOQ. 304-175-2~ Mon-Frl alChtthlre, 814-387-0145.
t-. durlog tho M•"'' County ter 8pm, Soi.SUn .• nrt-.
5651, Moton wv.
~bon, Ohio 1.f00.53'-1112B.
Fair, Sldtrt EquiAmtlll. 304-11'5Lalo • acroogo tor homo conFord Rang~~ XL, Atklng:
otructlon on Atrburn Ad, 47 Wanted to Rent
DP Chairman rubbtrbond .,... 11121.
t3,500, 114-441~.
NMOnlble NetrlctiOM, county
chlnt with lnot111Ctlon bookltt
water, lnformatla.- mailed on ,.. Wanllng to ,.nt "'nice• 3 or ond video ..... txi:tlit,. cond~ Com Plckoro 1 • 2 AOlO Nl 2 11187 F-250 414 - r d 302
ROlO 12 Roll Bod; 312 NH Grln·
quMt, 304-e75-5253, piMM no 4bdrm.na.... In S~hem Loeal lion, 114...2·11053.
dlr Mixer; Square B•l•r8i High MIIN, Good Condllon,
olnglo "Ida trwlloro.
SchoOl Dlttrlct, 114-MII-2371.
Atbt; U...tro; NH lfl7 Hoy $5,500, 080, 8*388-1430.
Proparo
For
WI~
Bind;
I H Ford Tractorj 1111 Dodge Clravan BE. Hklh
Trailer •Pice tor rent In town, W.ntlna 10 Nnl· 2 a~3 bedroom W l l l l o - - n
IM-182·2185.
houu, ln·ct.n and ~ condJ. -·htr Am- Doll-tcl. .,.. Sprttdtro; Olhtr Field Aotdy MIINgt But E a - Coni~
tlon, prwfw prl'lttt -ng. 114- 256·1:ttl, 1144ii7-7021 Evtnlngo. Equipment;
- · · · Fanw tlont 17,500, 1-:1011 Allor I
Miehlnary, JecUon, Ohio, P.M.
112-.2428, If no anew• pielll
36
Real Estate
Pllont:
,
,
.
.
_•.
IIIVI Q Ill IQI on m.chiM.
For Solo-Ctrollna - - .
good conct•lon; Ponuonlc
1111 Plrmoth 'IDJtgtr, VI, Milo,
wanted
Htr - o r , Ntw Holland, rr AC PS, tlllflm ctl-t, ~1241 N pin -rt• prtnttt
1
W.nltd To Rant Or Buy: AudH
Merchandise
uu new; tarve t..,.,polln: iiNI "' tttctrle motor, exc. conct. riCK. UCo cond. 304..1MitQ.Couple S..b Qui-' Trailer
Woodlawn Fann, 3Q4..
Ollero. 114-182·7111 tvtningo.
1112 FOI&lt;I XLT, 4 "httt drlvt,
Spact, Phone: 8-2306.
30,000ml, auto., t13,000o J04.
Four Tlrot: Ooodr- Eagle
Supar XL chtlnotw, oi58-1D01.
5I
Household
GT.., 211110 A 11110, 1 - .,.1,
durl"'l.. thO Maoon eountr
6315.
Rentals
Ftlr, Sldtro equlpmant ..:JOU"/1. 74
Motorcycles
Goods
Go Kart• 3 HP &amp; up, _,.aLII on '11121.
.
'
;_;..._,:,;.;.;;,:..:..:.;;,.:...:.;.;..;;.__
4pc. bedroom ault1, off wh•• w/ D HP, In ttoclr, Morrlt Equip.
1877 ...... . 710, Exoelllnt
bOx tpringt a mtnrMO, t250. mont, 114-1112·2455 or 114-1112· J.D. u c-no Lot• Modtt
41 Houses for Rent
wnh
234
Com
Httdt,
Rttllr
Condftlon, $550 Could So · a ....n valour choir, 1135. All llq 2580.
At: 411 Gtonlt Rood EM Olllo
Good CondKion, I*ZU·51N.
Or Cllll14-3f1.8221 After 4 P.M.
- · 304..75-2647.
,I· Hot· tub, u J*)pl•, n. . covar,
1 Blldroom; 4 WhlteWIIy Avenue,
YI'AA'FURNITURE
Holland 7171orogo ha,_ tm Htrloy Drwldoon !lpottot•.
good condKion, lor. lnlormallon ·-t1r wl
bath hllld•, 3 bliallr
O.lllpoUt $175/Mo. 114 448 1872.
814-448-3158 Or ......6-M28
ctll614·1112-3411
loraae - n , Holland T 304-875-6215 after • ::JOpm.
'10
DAY
SAME
AS
CASH
2 Btdroornt R..-itd Apart• O.R AEHT-2.0WN (NO DEPOIIT) Hurty 12 Sratd 128 Sarlot, hoy l&gt;lnd, Gthl grlndorlmlxor, 12'
1!il87 Kawaukl 301 LTD, exo.
ment With Retrlger.tor And
Black • Whftt, Mon'a $110, 11.. lnlnepolt dl.c, AC no till corn cond"' low mlltt, 11050 OBO.
Stowe, C._ To Gdlpolll, 114pi.Mter, Oliver 1800 tn~ctor, all 30ot., rs-3111.
441-4223.
oMth1717.
'
good cOnd'. 304-213-1215.
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Suzuki GS410L, loto of
WrouGht
Iron
Tobit
WI•
Chalre;
olzt
l'ottrbocl
""h
·
King
2-3 - . . . . . Langovuto, tarve
TI'OJ buln gordon troctor. 304- 1D87
I comlortor, 1100, 814-'11124411.
chi'OIM,
runa greet, I'Mo9t2·
)'lrd, country Mlllna. $212/mo., Ftn lock Rocking Choir S58;
571-2114.
3065 or IN 1t !Sugar Awe MID,
depool • tpprovtcf.rtlorwnctt Garden l,rch Woy't eta.OO
Lincoln. ,...rltr, 221 tmp dh
IM-1112·2111, SilO.
roqulrart, 1~·72111.
onatno, 11000. 114-182· 63 • Livestock
Bttldlng .,...In Matt Sot $11, Ful Onen
QuMn llze Wlter bed, t200o
-IY conot111Ctod, 2br, tt· $1111 &amp;el OUttn *lfl Sol; • 3111o
amp, ~ otd Plllnt fll!y, JOU!h broke. :;l~M:.:..:";.:.75-:.1272.:;
· ::..:;._ _ _ _ __
tachld pr1ge,
tal~da
Drawar i!hOOi ..-.118; Clr llod't, Rttllotlc cor . , _ -811-34'70 llnl!l mMUga.
arM, Point Pruunt.
75- lunlc led'e, PaMer Bedl. Fu• 10 ...... like ~. $45, 114-t!il22523.
Une Of Southwottm Yutt _._
75 Boats &amp; Motors
64 Hay 1 Grain
Sttrtl~
At
S2CI.OO;
lndltno
Manr
Nice 1 Bod100m Fumlthod Shtpt t &amp; Sizto Sta~lna At S"lchtd To Contrwl Air Stlllflll
for Sale .
Rtlaranee • Bocuntr ss.oo. z L.ocatlont · Beoldo 'Auto Air CondH'-, Clllltr BrwncJ, crow~
In
16'
1171
Sao Iorita 11 HP
1
Roquh:ld. .,._1751.
or 1176•
Johnoon And Tilt Trwll• liitctiAuction Or • Mltto Out 141. 11,500 BTU'a Wootot Grwat, $200, ltld.
614-oM&amp;7711·
.
"nt Concltlon, 814 448 HBI.
Pl. Plttttnt, Nc. · neighbor- Opan 11 A.M. To 8 P.M. Mon .sat.
hood, young, 3br., 1 112 bath, Crott countr Ski and rowing tX· UIIIRJ trwlltr, ~D;JI.
1D64 OWtna 28' Clbln CruiMr,
llrg~ flmlf"room,
..._,,.nt. lctr machine. 114-256-113$0 meWtnn llorni"'J Woodbur,.r
Etlglnt, 225 HP Atklng:
chino. 814-258-iJa.
·~·•=t
Good Cond~lori, Cuttom Bulft,
S5,0001 Ctll: IM.olfa.7112 Or
Rio 0r11.-, 3
eu uo &amp;133.
.
Dining Room Tabla lulfwt, I w- Sptmor, · HigH Perior· 71 . Autos for Sale
$0DIIIIIo. Do-'1 • Aolorenctt Chalro And 1 Arm Choir, 11120't m•nce, IJ14..218-1221o
1m 17 Ft. C.ntury .... wnh
Aoqulrod, 114-441-4222.
To 11130'o, Good o.nc~nton. 114- WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch 11171 Ma-k • Cyiindll 3 115 HP Out-d Motor And
Spttd,
AoGull
Motor,
Roll
flor,
441.0507.
Tina borlroom all -trlc
ZOO PSI I1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI Bot Ill&gt; Far Round Trwclr, S300, Trailer, Good c:onotnlon, 1 ' -:
&amp;M-3711-2175 Coli EtrtJ Mor"'do good neighbor· Elactrlc Ovan 1125; Aetrlgtrotcr, 1132.10; Ron Evant EnttrtHitto, IU Me 4482.
hood In Atclno, tzoo· d-n. 8225, 114-Mt-4M53.
ning• Or Lato In EH111np.
. Jocltoon, Ohio, 1.f00.1137·0528.
$300/mo. lncluott "ator/ gar·
11?7 FOI&lt;I Granodt, 4dr. tte1tn,
bagal.-r, 114-tMi-221l
Flbonllett lkl
mint conctnlon, g o - bpt, 1D87 Ot&gt;on GOOD USED APPUANCES 55
Building
W.ohtrs~. dryaro, rotrigtnt"!!,
&amp;5,000 aet•l ml'-e, "302 V-8, loot 1:10 HP 110 • Trilttr, 114s......a.
o448-llfl7
EYtnlngt;
Supplies
rwnv-. ::ouggo AppllancM, "'
$1800, IM-iiZ~D.
42 Mobile Homes
3888Dap.
Vln0 St-. Cal 814-441·73t8, 1•
for Rent
Block, brick, Dlpoo; wtn800-11111-MIIII.
-._llntolt, .... Cltudt Winz.
pontoon - · 31HP, tvfn.
rude mot-uoalltnt - i o n ,
10x50 ilobllo Homo ii1001trlng Home
Ownor
lo
Stlllna tort, Hlo Grand4, DH Ctll 114o
ttklng
,1-11-2013.
24S-&amp;21
.
Aldgt, No Pott, UOOIIIo. 1100 EVERYTHING You To Art l
11171 lomevlllo._l!,OOOml, ssoo
OepOelt,
Ret.r.ncee,
Par Btthroom: Sink, Commode,
080. 3CM-6754rot,. 114-11!12· N' Tunnot Croft pont- Eloctrle, ...... a-1758.
Tub, Ctrtmlc T""•' Roda, Sou 56
Pets for Sale
wf111i 30HP, Ytmahl motor,
5692.
Dlah, Etc. We W1nt1d A Dif. 7,;;;;~~:.;;;;~;;;;;:jji;i
$2500, 11..1112·- ar ot
12 x 85, 2 bedroom, $2!10/month ltront
Color. $300 Toktt All. 81.. Groom and Supply Shop Pot 1m Muota"'J, ottnrlard, $1100. Lone Oak Cllllflllroundt, oouth
ptuo ~. B14-843-112B6.
441·7711.
GlOOming. All brttdt, otyloL 304-61124248,
ol Wtot Columbia, W. Y.
2 btclroom furnlthod mobile King Slzt Watorbod Wlh Julio Wtlib. Clllltl HB 02:11.
1981 Dodge Arlot, boclr • Inter• 76
home, 304-875-ISW2.
Auto Pans&amp;
Boolccttt.L Httdbotrd S:ZOOj I Wttlt Old Albino Ftrrtltt, 814- lor gootl.l. noodo tfllllilt, 1450.
2 Bedroom TrwUor Fof Rant, Draotor chaat &amp; Night Stana 388.fl33.
304-671'nll.
·
Accassorles
12x111, Neighborhood Rood, Ga~ PondtrOOt Plna, $350., 814-Mfl.
·AKC lqxor: puppltt, mole • 1DB:I Oldamobl'!t $110, 814-11!12· 3 Chtvr truck tlrtt, 1 tug. 11".
llpoilt, -M755.
3988
·
tomato; - .Wnlblk , rnuk, rttdy 2712 or 114ollll2'&lt;:177.
·
304.,75'1435.
Nlea mobile hom.. tor Nnt
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Bolli 10. taking rlapoofta,
1183 Clmoro, 308 outo, $2000 ;CI:.b:..:;lor.:....:.am=aiO..t"'Foni-,-:R:a--~-.-rart""
etartl~g at 1280/mo., and apacn
Complete hom• tunil~l~~= · 304-875-3148.
at Hilma.
piUI
depatlt. Hourw: Mon-Sat, H . 81
• ~c · Da
OBO, l14...2·2023.
llberglatt, 1120, IM-1112-2157.
lmallon pupa, tamale,
Country iiObltt Pork, 61.. 0322, 3 miiM out Butovlllt Rd. 1183
Pontiac
Grwnd
Prlx,
3.1
F- Dtlivory.
12l'b. old, thota
1100m10d,
182·2167.
Now goo tanltt, ono ton truck
$200 or tr11dl for equ.~l v11ue, ltlw, 1utoo, body good, rune , whella,
radlatora, floor mate,
N"" Dak Fumnurio: Tabltl 1 814-532-1203.
good, 11000. 304-~~S-34~2. .
Apanment
44
.otc.DAR~. 304Chalrt, C~~rlo•, Curwd GIIN
.
Chin~~ Etc. River· V•lley O.k AKC Mlnl.tur8 PlnacMra, 7wka 1 • Dodge Omnl Automotlc, 372-31Uor1
for Rent
Furniture, Oeorgn Crwk Road, .~ ~75 II., 3 main. ~5li­ SIOO; 11171 tmpalo Cuttom
4
80,000 Mlltt l'I_I!O...i..1111 Pontltc 79
Campers&amp;
1bdl'lt'. apartment In Pc:meror Galllpollo, Olllo 814-148-1316:
T·1000 $100; f14-31l0o2751.
lor rwnt, 11ot-lea-f1158.
OWner moving. &amp;mo. old Ktn• AKC Reglaterld BMgle Ma..
MotorHomel
1184 Oldl Royall, PS, PB, AC, I __...:.;;.:.:.:..;...:..:.;;..:.:;::.::..__
2bdrm. IPiirtmenl, Racine area, mo,. hnvy d"IY w1hlna m• Puppy, $10, 114-317-0171o
11?0 Clmpar Fully Eaulppod,
tor lnfarrrmion call I'\4.7112.J41 1. chin, $«)0, firm. 4 6urnei' AKC a-tat- A~tt•-­ cruiN, - r
Maglc Chollloctrlc=l~'
~•wC!tn
- · · auf* aer, Clll 814-Slote-2041 or GOOd Condition, $1,000, ,,.....,
TaMo DOcked, Door
1115.
2bdrm. apt1., total 1lectrk:, apo cond, 1110 080.
• 011 Rtmovod, Shott • Wormod 614oM1-21711.
pllanct1 lumlthod, toundry 'l ftlt Dpln.
,
s••A
8u ·-~·­
-,~-:.
.1185 Accont LX • dr. 11171 Coaohmon 21 Ft. Good
·room racuntoo, c l - to ochoot
-ollie blue, olr con- Conctftlon, 114-388-tlll.
In town. AppUcatlonli available
PICKENS FURNITURE
AKC Toy Pr.mton - · molt todtn
dli~, 1W:o. orul•, n..II: VIllage CNin Apla. 148 or Household
112 mi. 1 rr otd. Ft. .lt I wb old Mlno. otMWiOT!td rod!at tlrtt, clt_l_n,
ctll81•.nz.m t EOH.
•
turo
DachtltUndi's.
blk
•
ton,
Serv1ces
no Nit, run. pert.ct, lftoou
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pluelftt, WV, notpa- ~~ 5731
~ •· ~
·
mltoo, 113110, .114-11!12-25M alttr
2br, kltchon furn~ - ·call 30W75-1450.
2208 Jollor8on. 3
7. ·
CFA Aogltttrod Hlmtlap,. lpm.
SWAIN
•ch, 114- 1111 Chry- Fumlthod
Efflcltncy:
1107 AUCTION &amp; . FURNITURE. 12 Perallln klttnl,
Home
YOfktr, 4dr. 81·
.
Bocond, Oalllpollt, Shan loth, Olhro St., Gtlllpolll. N- &amp; Uatd ..3-6318.
- n . go- bpt, botutlful
Improvements
UIIIKI• Paid, 1185/Mo. 614-Mfl. fumltwe, hNt.,., W..tem a Cocktr Spaniol, . trot to good lomltY car, "''!Y option, ...,
4111AHtr7 P.M.
Wort booto. 8t4.ol48-3150.
homo, . - . . . . . . .. ..lti1dly, tlno1 turbo tfllllnt, J21110, 114IAS~MENT
182..,711.
lnd- dog, Wtt1 with kldt,
WATERPROOFING
Fumlthod Efflcloney 7 112 Ntll, W11hor._ Dryer,. Refrle"'!tor, 182
..
112.
1111 Dcldgt 500, 31,000 original Uncondftlonal ltlatlnlt GolliJ&gt;ollt, UIIIHiet Pold, 1115. Color I.Vo FI"HUr, Air eon..
114 448- 4 414 After 7 P.M,
dltloner,
Campw
Size Dobam1an AKC
IeHne .... Loca.l ........... fumlthtd .
Aegfat•rwd mllw, ~r., 1uto.,
Refrigerator, Mlcrow•v•, 114- Pupplel, All Sholli, Plrentll on ~l~ tfirork, flrwt $'1000 buye It, Clll 1-800.217-GI18 Or 114'ZU.
Fumlthod 1Br Apt., 1111 Fourth, Z!e·1231.
o.aa A_,. Waterproofing. E.
a 11'2013.
PremlMI, 114451-1410.
Galllootlt, Short loth, $200
tabllahtdtf15.
Antiques
Flth Tank, 2413 Jac:bon Avo. ..- IJneolf1 Town C.r, BurUtiiHltt Paid, 611 Ul 4416 Al1tr S3
Point Pituanl, 304-175-2083. gunrlw With Burgundy Interior, O.vla -"'I Machlno , And
7 P.M.
full
Tropical llth 1 blrclt, Exoilltht CondKion, $1,000, 114o Yoeuurn Clttnor Aaptlr, , _
Apartment lor rtnl In Pl. Ai111quo trwodle -lng mo· omalllno
Pick-Up And Dallvory, Gaoro317-431M, 814-31'-1813• .
onlmtlt
and
Pl. . .nt, l'f4.112·585B after chine, ,.dlo atand, Wllah . .nd,
Creek AOICI, 8~-G214.
wooden
file
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Ohio

1993

TH ursda~August12,199$

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

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• •" •

.....

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AUGUST 121

�\

•

'

~ag1

12-The Deily Sentinel

Thursday, August 12, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lotter y

Meigs
County
fair tabloid
•

Pick 3:
021
Pick 4:

5598

Low lolll&amp;bt Ill mid 60s, dur.
Saturday, sunny{blgla In mid
80s.

BuckeyeS:
6-17-21-25-28

Inside today

3 Sections . 52 Pogeo ~ conlo
A Multimedia Inc. Ne.w opaper

Vol. 44, NO. 76

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 13, 1993

Mul.dmecllalnc.

Mullen found guilty on four counts ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A Pomeroy allorney was found
guilty in the Meigs Counly Coun
of Common Pleas Thursday on
four counts of corrupting another
wilh drugs.
D. Michael Mullen, 41, was
found guilty of supplying two girls,
now aged II and 14, wilh Valium,
a prescription drug, on Friday,
March 12, and Saturday, March 13:
The girls were treated later at Veterans Memorial Hospital after
overdosing on the drugs.
Mullen was found innocent on
four related charges of giving .the
girls Xanax, anomer prescription
drug, and on related firearm and
automobile specifications.
He was also found innocent of
aggravated menacing.
According to Meigs County
Prosecutor John R. Lentes,· corrupting another with drugs is a felony
of the second degree, pliDishable by
•

five to 15 years in prison with a
mandatory sentence of three years
on each count In addition, Mullen
faces a possible fine of $7.500 on
each.rount.
·
Closing arguments
Attorneys representing Mullen
and the state presented thea closing
arguments . before Judge Dan
Favreau, Morgan County Common
Pleas Court judge.
"The privilege of being a lawyer
is a wonderful thing ... no~ to be
taken lightly," Assistant Prosecutor
Charles Kni$ht said. "To ~ for
a defendant IS a privilege."
"Today I rise in defense of two
young $iris... prosecution for their
rights 1s no less important," he
added.
The girls received the drugs
from Mullen and gave independent
accou01s that they got the drugs
from him, Knight said.
You couldn't have picked a
worse day 10 give drugs to a juve·

nile, Knight said. It was the &lt;lily of
~ 'When you are young an.d doing
the biggest storm in the century, something wrong, especially if you
the town at a screeching halt, and have done it before, it is not unusueverybody remembers it
al to corroborate your stories," he
The youths described !he Xanax added. ''They are JUSt vouching for
pills; Mullen had a prescription for each other; they said they vouch for
Xanax, he added.
each other."
On Sunday, March 14, Mullen
Carson said the testimony from
went and got more of the pills James Ferguson, chief toxicologist
which he takes for anxiety, Knight for Ute Franklin County Coroner's
said. I think anxiety was really set· Office, indicated the girls took the
ting in. He knew the girls had over· . drugs before they got to Mullen's
dosed and he didn't wailt the drugs house on March 13.
"A finding of not guilty is the
in his house, he added.
He then asked for a guilty ver- only reasonable choice," he said.
During his rcbutL11, Knight said
dict on all counts.
Mullen
came to the office of ProseDefense closing
cutor
John
R. Lcntcs "with a shovel
Attorney Herman Carson of
to
di1J
a
little
dirt on these girls."
Athens, citing conflicting testimo"Instead
he
dug a hole and put
ny, asked Favreau to find Mullen
himse.
l
f
in
it,"
he
said,
innocent on the charges.
Verdict
announced
_
"The whole story do(\Sn't work
Before
announcing
his
verdict
at
out," he said. "The girls agreed
'11:45
a.m.,
following
a
I
1/2
hour
they were willing 10 lie for each
other to ger out of the house that 'deliberation, Favreau emphasized
he would "tolerate no outbur~ts"
Saturday."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
hearing on a request by the South·
ern Ohio Coal Co. to continue
pumping untreated water out of a
flooded mine into southeastern
Ohio creeks entered its third day
today.
.
.
On Thursday, coal miner
Charles Neece recounted how he
walked- through neck-deep water to
lead trapped miners out of the
flooded Meigs 31 mine July 11.
"It was a life-or-death sttuation.,'' he said. "Iwent through
\vater neck-high to bring them
out.''
Neece testified for Southern
Ohio coal; which is asking permissiori to continue pumping out the
flooded mine.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Ute federal Office

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY ·T HESE COMMNITY-MINDED INSTITUTIONS ...
.

VETERANS
MEMORIAL
Your Bankfot~···
Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
Step back into history
during the Battle of
BufFmgton Island
Encampment Days on Ohio's
only Civil War Battle Field.
J

211 WEST SECOND ST.
P.O. BOX626
POMEROY, OH. 45769
(614) 992·2136

ROUTE7
P.O. BOX339
TUPPERS PLAINS, OH.
(614) 667·3161

Peoples ~ank welcome_s
both .the Blue and the Grey
to the green hills
I
ofMeigs
County.

~--

V.lffOI!I MenQiol llo!lflili~

'Cjl--

"Your Hometown
Hospital"

REGISTERING FAIR ENTRIES- Always
a top exhibitor in number of entries in the Meigs
County Fair open classes is Barbara Murray.
Here sbe works in completing her entry forms

We salute those

Where you are cared for
and cared about.

making this historic

Veterans Memorial
Hospital

weekend possible.
Syracuse
992-6333

Racine
949-2210

115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy
992·2104

.....

/~\1 1SHER
FUNERAL HOME

BANKEON£

....

Whatever it takes~
Bank One, Athens, NA
Member FDIC
"

(Oop~! We're not

yellow, but we'll just

watch from the
sidelines.) .•

·B attle of Bullingto~ Island
i;"(!amRment· Days :
•

-·
MJDDLEPORT OFFICE
97 N. Second St
992-6661

"

992·5141

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-

PORTLAND, OHIO

August 13·15, 1993 .

this, we h.ave &lt;1n obligation to sec
Utatjustice is served," he said.
"We feel bad about the impact
tlt)lt these charges have had on the
defendant's famil y," Lcn1es said,
·"but the impact on th e victim' s
family is far worse and I do n'ot feel
lhatthc charges against Mr. Mullen
could go unanswered."
The mother of the two girls said
she was pleased witlt the decision,
but f!dded she was glad the trial
was over.
•
Mullen is being held in the
Meigs County Jail pending a bond ·
hearing which is set for August 26.
At that time, the court will listen to
arguments from defense attorneys
that Mullen wiH be released on
bond.
Lentes said the prosecutor's
office will request the highest bond
possible "in the interest of protecting the victim s in the case." A sen.
tencing hearing has been tentati vcly scheduled for Sept. 20.

Mine ·hearing continues

COMMEMORATIVE
MARCH • David Gloeckner, a
Civil War re-enactor, in full
uniform and CBITying a musket marched the route which
Confederate General John
Hunt Morgan and his raiders
took from Vinton to Portland
as a prelude to the celebration
weekend.

.

from people in the courtroom.
Mullen stood silently with his
lawyers, Carson and Rob ert
Shostak, in the courtroom while
Favreau annqunced his verdict.
' "It is my sad duty to repon to
Ute Meigs County Bar Association
and the Ohio Supreme Coun that
you have been conyicted of four
felonies," Fav'reau said . Under
statute, attorneys and other professionals, including teachers, who arc
convicted of a felony are reported
to the bar association for disciplinary action - usually suspen sion.
.
· Lentes said he also believes
Mullen is a certified secondary
school teacher.
.
· "This has been a very difficult
case to prosecute because of the
professional association between
Mr. Mullen and the prosecutor's
office," Lentes said.
"However, nobody is abQve Ute
law in Meigs County, and when an
attorney commits an offense like

•

Fair entries down due to d~y season
The number of entries for this son.
The entries are: Draft horses, 33
year's fair was 282 below !he 1992
entncs for the 1993 Meigs County
(down
four from last year); diary
figures, but fair board members
Fatr were made before the deadline
33,
(down
16); beef cattle, 42 (up
contributed the drop to the dry seaat 4 p.m. Thursday. The fair opens
20); sheep, 16 (down 4); poultry,
Monday.
54 (up 31); farm crops, 423, (down
44); hay show, 24 (up eight); flower show I 309 (down 343); flower
show 2, 174 (down 169); domestic
•
•
arts, 354 (up II); painting, 35, (up
13); photography, 176, (up 52);
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the theft
baking and canning, 534 (up 163);
of two nylon straps and cachets reportedly taken from a truck at the
and grange four, same as last year.
old chipper mill on Rocksprings Road.
According to a repon from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the theft
occurred either Wednesday night or Thursday morning between
SOCCO offers area
4:30p.m. and 7:30a.m.
A.- total of 2,211 open ciass

,..---Local briefs-____,
Deputies probe theft

swimmers free passes

A Syracuse man reported Thursday that someone shot holes in
the windshield of his 1988 Oldsmobile and 1977 Ford pickup truck
during !he night
Charlie Canter reponed two holes were shot in each windshield.
. . Someone also attempted to hacksaw the chain and lock on the
gate at the propeny, the report stated.
·
Deputies of the Meigs Courtly Sheriff's Department are investigating the incident.

Traffic signal stolen
li. traffic signal pole was cut down and a traffic light stolen from
the bridge replacement site on Ohio 7 ncar Chciter, an Ohio Department of Transponation inspector reported.
According to a report from the Meigs Courity Sheriff's Department, Roy VanMeter reponed !he incident Thursday morning. He
advised !hat the light belongs to the DJM Company.
The pole was reponedly dragged over the embankment.

Association
supports levy
.
...

At the reque;st of Su~ Oliver, executive director for the Meigs
, County Council on Agmg, the Pomeroy Merchants As~ociation
voted a~ its r~gular meeting :Wednesday to support the MCCoA's
levy whtch Will appear on the November ballot.
The one mill levy is necessary, according to Mrs. Oliver, for the
purpose of maintaining and increasing senior citizen services and
maintaining the Multipurpose Senior Citizens facility for the elderly
citizens of Meigs County.

Man dtedforDUI
An Albany man was cited early Tuesday morning for driving
under the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of. the State Highway
Continued on page 3

pumping but that the creek should
recover.
" Who will provide jobs for the
miners if the mine is not recovered?" he said.
The company started the pumping after obtaining an order from
Beckwith June 30 agains't the
Office of Surface Mining. Ten per- cent of the water has been
removed.
During cross·exam ination
Thursday, the EPA attorney, Phillip
Brooks. asked Neece whether the
seal of the adjoining old Raccoon
No.3 mine had failed, causing tlib
flooding.
Neece said the cause won '1 be
known until the Meigs 31 mine is
pumped out, but he believes a roof
collapse around the seal is likely
cause.

Accord reached on free
trade side agreements

witb new Fair Board secretary Debbie Watson.
At deadline 4 p.m. Thursday the board had a
total of 2,211 entries registered.

Windshield shooting reported

of Surface· Mining have opposed
the company's dumping an estimated I billion gallons of mine water
into the creeks.
The hearing is expected to end
today. Judge Sandra Beckwith has
suggested that parties try to negotiate a settlement
Southern · · Ohio·
Coal
spokeswoman BJ. Smith said. the
company is willing 10 negotiate but
th~t government attorneys have not
agreed. · .
The pumping of untreated water
has wiped out i::leanup work that
cost $4.6 million, the government
said.
D. Michael Miller, an attorney
for Southern Ohio Coal, said Lead·
ing Creek has been damaged and
fish have been killed because of the

People who live along Leading
and Raccoon Creeks and may have
used the creeks for swimming prior
to the water removal effort at the
Meigs 31 mine, will not be left
high and dry for the remainder of
the summer.
· Southern Ohio Coal Co.
(SOCCo) is offering to provide
those persons witlt passes to either
the Gallipolis or Middleport municipal swimming .pools.
"We realize that me people
haver been inconvenienced by our
need. to remove the water. from our
idled coal mine," said 1im Tompkins, SOCCo vice president and
general manger. " "We feel this is
one thing we can do to help residents in the immediate vicinity of
the streams.
He added the company is also
working with area farmers who are
inconvenienced by the water
removal plan. SOCCo is providing
water, feed and fencing for livestock !hat have been relocated.
"We are working with farmers
on an individual basis to determine
their needs and to see how we can
provide assistance," Tompkins'
noted.
Area residents seeking information on !he pool passes, and farmers requesting assistance can call
SOCCo at286-50Sl.

"I

••

WASHINGTON (AP) - Trade
negotiators for the United States,
Mexico and Canada today
announced t¥Y have reached
agreement on environmental and
labor issues that ()ad delayed
approval of the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
·
Conclusion of the side deals
ends an impasse with Canada that
had kept trade negotiators stymied
over the past two weeks.
The breakthroughs on environmental and labor clear the way for
!he Clinton administration to submit the entire NAFTA pact to
Congress when it returns from its
summer recess next month.
"With this historic agreement,
we can reform a trade relationship
with Mexico that has been driven
more by
than desi

•

U.S. Trade Representative Mi.ckey
Kantor said today.
Treasury Secretary Lloyd
Bentsen called the agreement
· "very good news."
"We soon will be able to take
NAFT A to Congress for approval
and get on with the business of creating 200,000 new jobs for Americans," he ~d.
The agreement was announced
in simultaneous news conferences
in Washington, Ottawa and Mexico
City.
Canadians had balked about a
U.S. demand for trade sanctions in
the event that their country did not
comply with environmental or
labor laws.
The deal - hammered out
Thursday night in phone calls
between Kantor and his Mexican

and Canadian counterparts would provide for different treatment for Canada.

Seats open on
Meigs board .
Three full terms and one unexpired term are open on the Meigs
County Board of Education this
year. Completing their terms this
year arc Harold Lohse, Bill Quckcl,
and Robert Burdette. Dorham Reed
was appointed earli er th is year to
fill th e unexpired term of a board
member who resigned. The uncx·
pired term is for 1994 and 1995.
Deadline to file for a sc;n on the
board with the Mci ~ s C'ountv
Board of Elections is Tl1ursd•" e1t 4
p.m.

...

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