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                  <text>Sentinel

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Bartrum
•
survives
cut

Pick 3:
5-4-4
Pick 4:
6-2-0-3

Buckeye 5:

+

4-9-11-23-26

P!ige 6

SESSIO

Low tonllbt 70. Chanre of rain.
Thursday, hl&amp;h near90.

rr'S SCHOOL ,.IME AGAIN, SO REMEMBER
,.0 DRIVE WITH CAUTION•
.
Bfl•RA CARE MAY SAVE TBE.LIFE OF A CHILD
.

VoL 44, NO. 84

· Uulllmecb Inc.

1. Be prepared to stop quickly when

Officials receive grants to extend water lines
Meigs board
.initiates program
to purchase locally

near schools and playgrounds.
2. Adhere to speed limits in school
zones.
3. Show extra caution when driving in
bad weather. ·
4. Use common sense when picking up
or dropping off children in school
areas.
5. Do not pass a school bus that is
loading or unloading children.
6. Be watchful of children darting out
into the street.
7. Look for and obey school
•
zone s1gns.
8. Make sure your car is in good working
order. Don't let a mechanical
malfunction cause a tragedy

Ingels Furniture
992·2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Shoe Place/
Locker 219
992·5727

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Downing·Childs·Mullen
Musser Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Baum True Value
985·3301

CHESTER, OHIO

Adolph's Dairy Valley'
992·2506

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5141

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Quality Print Shop
992·3345
•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ·
A program geared to .keepi.ng
Meigs Local laX dollars m Me1gs
County by doing more local pur·
chasing was initiated at Tuesday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local
School District's Board of Education.
Board President Larry Rupc said
that about $100,000 a year is leaving the district in ou1S1de purchasing. He s~id some of that money
can be kept here if lbere IS better
communication between board
members, school personnel and
local businessmen.
· Rupe said the schools go to the
local businesses for money. and he
feels that local businesses should
have a chance to "meet" prices on
items which the schools purchase.
It was the consensus of the board
members lbat purcha~s should be

.

RACINE, OHIO
949·2210

SYRACUSE, OHIO
992·6333

(row's Family Restaurant
992·5432

POMEROY, OHIO

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
985·3385 .

992·6611

Ewing Funeral Ho.me
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Daily ·sentinel
liTHE

GRAVELY
SJYBTEM

. POMEROY, OHIO

992·2115

DR. BARRY M. DORSEY

992·3308

992·3785

The following people were
selected as potential jurors for the
September. 1993, term of the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas Pettit Jury.
ALBANY - James Carrol
Hayman, Maxine Hope Haning,
John David Gillogly, Patricia Lee
Arnold, Leonard K. Brooks, Dolph us Burke Jr .• Nancy Carol

CHESHIRE, OHIO

a fine arts concentration in the College of Education's masler' s degree
program was approved by the Ohio
Board of Regenl.'i in May. Enrollment in the concentration began
this summer, he added.
Additional degree program proposals are being prepared for submission to the Regents, he added.
Some of these new programs could
be offered as early as fall1994.
"I also want us this year to make
a thorough review of all our technology programs and to detennine
if there are other associale degree
programs that we should offer.
because there is a market demand
and a ileed for the programs in this
region," Dr. Dorsey added.
At the same time, Dr. Dorsey
said groundwork wiD be laid for an
improved evaluation process and a
beuer registration and academic

Phillips.
Mary M.
CHESTER GiUilan.
COOL VILLE - Clara M.
Follrod, James Allen Radcliff.
DEXTER - Monica Lynn
Perry, John Roben Hamilton.
EWJNGTON - Brenpa Sue
Vickers.
GUYSVILLE- Dave Weeks.

LANGSVILLE - Ronald L.
Williams, Carol F. Pierce, Linda
Sue Puckett.
LONG BOTTOM - Christi
Dawn Hensley, Oris Lee Smilh ,
Okey Theodore Pullins. Jane Ann
Coates. Ester Louise Pitzer, James
David Louks, Pauline Myers.
MIDDLEPORT- Elizabeth J.
(Continued on Page 3)

POMEROY, OHIO

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees

POMEROY, OHIO

992·6128

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GRAVELY TUCTOR
SALES and SERVICE
992·2975

OHIO

..

I

New initiatives for the 1993-94
academic year reflecting the
expanding service role of the University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College were
outlined Monday by the institu·
lions' president during a meeting
with faculty and staff.
Dr. Barry M. Dorsey listed such
goals as preparation of new programs, successful re-accreditation
and efforiS to promote the area's
economic development during his
remarks at an onentation session
held prior to the s!arl of fall quarter
classes.
"I look forward to wmking wilb
you as a colleague and friend on
these important endeavors," he
said.
In preparing new courses and
programs thai meet the needs of the
community, Dr. Dorsey noted that

.· Potential pettit jurors named

POMEROY, OHIO

·K&amp;C Jewelers

Vaughan's.Cardinal
1

992·6687

Ridenour Supply

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3471

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sugar Run Mills

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Prescription Shop
992·6669

year. There are also unexpired
terms 10 be filled in Chester and
Salem townships.
All five village councils, Middleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine
and Rutland, have four sealS to be
filled. All are four year tenns. In
Racine village the unexpired tenn
of mayor is open,•and in Syracuse,
Racine and Middleport there are
four year tenns on the Boards of
Public Affairs to be filled.
As for school boards there are
two four year tenns on lbe Eastern
Local and Meigs Local Boards of
Education, and three on the Southem Local Board of Education to be
filled. On lbe Meigs County Board
of Education, there are three four
year Jenns and one unexpired term
to be filled.

Area officials met with Governor George Voinovicb Monday to
receive grants which will be used
to extend water lines to area residenl.'i without waler service and to
enhance existing water systems.
Meeting with Voinovich were
Commission President Robert
Hartenbach, Commissioner Manning Roush and Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton.
The Pageville area and the village of Racine were named the primary beneficiaries of a $429,000
water and sanitary sewer grant
announced recently.
· The grant, from the fiscal year
1993 Water and Sanitary Sewer
Competitive Grant Program, was
received through the Ohio Dep8!1mcnt of Development's Local Government Services Office.
The grant will be used by the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District to supply water service to 69
households in Pageville. Many of
the households in the area are
served by cisterns and water
haulers because of possible groundwaJer contamination.
The :rP&amp;.C-Pageville project
picked up $268,000 of the grant
while Racine's share amounts to
$156,000.
Part of the grant to the village of
Racine wiD be used to inslall water
meters, Thornton Said.
Thornton said the Ohio Environmental Protecti011 Agency is requiring the meters be installed because
of the age of the well and the quantity of water being pumped per
month. Due to the grant, village
residents will not have to pay for
their meterf'i' the coSt of ms!allauon.
Thornton said village residenJs
currently pay $12 a month for
water.
"We're the cheapest in the county. probably the state," Thornton
said. "If we didn't get this grant,
the village water would have dou·
bled."
"Besides the meters, we are
putting down a new water well,"
Thornton said. "Af1er 40 years, it's

AREA OFFICIALS met
with Governor George
Voinovich In Colimlbus Monday to receive grants for
improving or adding water
systems to Meigs County residents. Above, Commission
President Robert Hartenbach,
left, and Commissioner Manning Roush receive a grant for
extending water service into
the Pageville area. Below,
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
receives the village's share of
the grant.
time for a new sysJem."
"We are also putting a new
water line out Yellow Bush Road,
he added. "This will help these
people and make this area a place
for economic development."
The village received $156,100
of grant money and is ma!ching it
with'$76.905, Thornton said.
This grant is the third reeeived
by the village in the last two
monlbs.
"It takes people working togeth(Continued on Page 3)

. .Rio Grande president outlines goals for new academic year

Swisher &amp;Lohse.Pharmacy
992·2955

When petitions of candidacy
. were reviewed by the Meigs Coun·
1y Board of Elections Tuesday.
, three failed to pass the reqmre. menl.'i to be placed oli the Nov. 2
ballot.
·
The petitions which the board
did not cenify as valid were those
of Victor Perry as a candidate for
Columbia Township' truslee, Walter
Jewell as a candidate for the unex&lt;'' p'ired term of trustee in Salem
Township; 3J1d Charles Barte)s as a
candidate for the Eastern Local
Board of Education.
In the November general elec·
tion two 1rustees wiD be elecJed in
each township for four year tenns
with the exception of Chester
where all three seats are open this

Brogan Warner .Insurance

Valley Lumber

992·2155

made locally if the prices are comparable in support of the local
economy which supports the
schools.
Rupe and Roger Abbott volun·
tecred to serve on a committee to
get the program going. Local business persons with merchandise or
services which the schools use are
inviJed to contact Jane Fry. Meigs
Local treasurer, 992-5650, so that a
meeting can be set up to discuss the
local purchases program.
Personnel
Carol Ohlinger, teacher at
Pomeroy ·Elementary School, met
with the board to discuss library
aides which were not re-hired for
this year due to a lack of funds.
Supt. Bill Buckley said that he
is working on a program where a
persen could be hired to rotate in
the three buildings were library
(Continued on Page 3)

Three petitions'jail to make ballot

Home National Bank

POMEROY, OHIO
992·21

1 Section. 12 Pill" 35 cente
A MuldmHialnc. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 25, 1993

....,.

l "..

TAKING SHAPE- Under construclioa is
the Meigs Motel, located north or Pomeroy on

the State Route 7 bypass. The motel is due to
open at the end of September. .

advising system.
Citing Rio Grande's periodic reaccreditation next year with the
North Central Association as "an
extremely important activity for
this institution," Dr. Dorsey said
work by various committees
involved with the re-accreditation
wiU swing into action this fall, led
by Dr. Janet M. Byers. the acting
vice president for Academic .
Affairs and lbc co-chairpersons of
the institutional self-study, Dr. Nat
Daniel and Dr. Larry SJ?CCS. A selfstudy of the universtty and the
community college is required
prior to the North Central accreditmg teams • visit on campus in the
fall of 1994, he said.

Dr. Dorsey said a North Central the importance of a college educa·
team visited Rio Grande's Japan tion to younger students - will
branch campus this swnmer, which continue through the new year, Dr.
he described as a "positive experi· Dorsey said.
ence" that "puts us in a position to · "This project is important if we
have a successful academic pro- are ever to increase the college"
going rate in southern Ohio, which
gram there."
Noting the importance of creal· lags behind the rest of the stale, and
ing jobs for future Rio Grande significantly behind the national
graduaJes, Dr. Dorsey said that Rio rate in the percentage of high
Grande has begun working closely school ~raduates who go on the
wilh area business and industry to college.' he remarked.
Dr. Dorsey also noted the
try to increase economic developimportance
to lbe institution of priment. "This effort cenainly will be
vate
fund
-raising
efforts and
accel erated in the new year," he
described
the
planning
that is
said.
occurring
for
a
major
capital
camThe Belter Infonnation Program
paign
to
increase
the
endowment
- a volunteer effort by faculty,
students and staff designed to stress
(Continued on Page 3)

Eligibility scale listed for free,
reduced-price benefits in districts
The i'ncome eligibility scale· for
free or reduced-price benefits for
the 1993-94 school year for EasJem ·
Local School District, Meigs Local
School District and Southern Local
School District has been
announced.
Children from households with
income at or below the levels
shown may be eligible for free and
reduced-price meals.
Children from two member
·households. are eligible for free
meals if annual household income
is less than $12,259 and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
1\ousehold inGome is less than
$17,446.
Children from three member
households with annual income at
or below $15,457 are eli~ible for
free lunches and elig1ble for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$21,997.
Children· from four member
households with annual income at
or below $18,655 ate eligible for
free lunches and eligible for .
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$26.548.

Children from five member
households with annual income at
or below $21 ,853 are eligible for
free lun ches and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$31,099.
Children from six member
households with annual income at
or below $25,051 are eli~ible for
free lunches and elig1ble for
reduced-price meal s if annual
household income is at or below
$35,650.
Children from seven member
households with annual income at
or below $28,249 are eligible for
fre e lunches and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$40,201.
Children from eight member
households with annual income at
or below $31.447 are eli~ible for
free lunches and eli~1ble for
reduced-price meals 1s annual
household income is at or below
$44,752. .
'
Children from households with
more lban eight family members
should add $3,198 in annual
income for each additional family

member for free lunches and
$4,551 annual income for reducedprice meals.
Households may apply for benefilS anytime during the school year.
If a household is not currently eligible or if the household size
increases or income decreases
because of unemployment or olber
reasons, the family should contact
the school to file a new application.
Application forms are being distributed to all homes in a letter to
parenl.'i or guardians. To apply for
free and reduced-price benefits
household should fill out the application and return it to the school.
Household will be notified of
lbe approval or denial of benefiiS .
If a child is approved for free or
reduced-price benefilli, the school
must be infonned when the household's income increases by more
than $50 a month or when the
household size decreases.
Under the provision of the poli·
cy the building principal will
review applications and delennine
eligibility. If a parent or guardian is
dissatisfied with lhe decision, then
a formal appeal may be requested
before Me1gs County Superintendent of Schools John Riebel.

�c

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO 'JBE JlfTEJU!STS OJ' THE MEIG8-IIASOlf ARU

ROBERT L WINGETI
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le.s than 300
wonls. All !etten are subJect to edtUng and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number No uruigned letl.erl will be publi&gt;bed Lentrs
sbould be in good taste, addresaing issues. not personalities

It is the stuff of history,
but mostly just stuff
By Mike Feinsilber
WASHINGTON (AP) - "What Is Past Is Prologue" says the
chiseled legend at the National Archives, which received some
800,000 pages of documents on the assassination of John F.
Kennedy, thanks largely to the exertions of film maker Oliver
Stone.
.Maybe so, but in this case what is pastts prologue to a whole lot
more bewildennenl on the who-killed-Kennedy question that Stone
answered his way and that others answer other ways.
Primarily as a result of Stone's sensational movie, "JFK," and
the theory it propounded- that Kennedy's killing in 1963 was
generated by a massive conspiracy wtthm the U.S. government Congress passed lhe JFK Assassinauon Records Collection Act of

WASHINGTON - The blunders that ~ immigration officials
from detaining Muslim cleric Omar
Abdel Rahman - a "tragedy of
errors" in the State Deparunent's
eyes - may only be the latest
symptom of a cancer that's eroding
law enforcement's control of U.S.
borders.
What's more, even if immigration officials did successfully elim·
inate glitches that allow the likes of
Rahman to enter lhe United StateS,
the door would still be open for
thousands of others to enter the
country without leaving a trace of
their whereabouts.
State Department Inspector
General Shennan Funk warned in a
recent report that the mistakes that
allowed Sheik Rahman - ori~­
ly from Egypt - to remain m the
United States eould easily happen
again because of sloppy enforcement and controls. Several of Sbeik
Rahman •s followers were implicat•
ed in the February born bing of the
World Trade Center.
Rahman's case has drawn wide
publicity bolh because of the highprofile nature of lhe
and
the weaknesses it has

in immigration entorcemenL U.S.
Embassy officials in the Middle
East issued visas to Rahman six of
seven times he applied between

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
1986 and 1990. Olify once was liis
name checked against a list of
"undesireables" and denied entry
into lhe United States. Three years
later, officials learned that one
immigration office in New York
was moving to deport Rahman at
the same time another office in
New 1ersey was issuing him a permanent resident green card.
We have reported extensively
over lhe years about the problems
U.S . immigration offiCials have in
controlling our borders. Sometimes, as with Rahman, problems
result from official incompetence.
In other cases, most of which are
never n!)ticed, immigrants who

AND AT 4g MILES

PER 6ALl9N,.,III;T THINK
OF THIS ASA

5AS·TAX DEOO:liON.

1992.

The law requires every government agency with a relevant scrap
of paper to ship it to the Archives building on Pennsyl.vania
Avenue, excepting only those needed to conceal the identities of
mteUigence agents or sources.
At first glance, what was released Monday, in a chilly research
room filled with 90 assassination buffs, historians, tourists and journalists. was unlikely 10 change many mmds or shed much light
If, gomg in, you believed that the murder was the work of lhe
CIA, or the Mafia, or the Teamsters, or Ftdel Castro, or the Martians, your belief would not be shaken by this new salvo of raw
material.
And if you thought that a psychopalhic Lee Harvey Oswald, act·
mg alone on instruction of his inner voices, killed Kennedy, you
will find here no reason to think otherwise.
The Archives got a hodgepodge.
Here was a biOgraphical sketch of Oswald's molher. Here was a
CIA analysts of Soviet press reaction to the shooting. Here were
nine folders listing telephone calls Lyndon Johnson made between
Nov. 22 and Nov. 30, 1963. Here were the names of nurses on duty
that day at Parkland Hospital m Dallas. Here were tickets to a dinner Kennedy was 10 have attended that nightjn Austin.
Here was a CIA memo from an informer saying that Oswald's
Russian wife, Marina, worked in a Minsk bar frequented by foreigners and, "source insists," must have been a KGB informant "since,
m his fum opinion, employees of such bars are ipso facto obliged 10
report to the KGB."
Here were lhe wounded John Connally's replies 10 get-well messages. Here were records from a Soviet hospttal that treated Marina
at 5 p.m. on April 15, 1960, for lacerations on three fingers of her
right hand.
What becomes most evident is that a document written in exctte·
ment 30 years ago grows no more mformative with time. Straws
grasped lhen remain straws. The JFK Assassination Record Collection Act had lhe effect of a vacuum cleaner. The accumulation ts
more impresstve than illummalive.
What it shows mainly is how lhe government accumulates.
Here from the CIA is an "official routing slip" addressed to
Juha Last Name Blacked Out. Someone has typed: "The anached
does not pertain 10 our office; I would think that the actmn office
would tal&lt;e care of this?"
And Julia (but signed " Julie", hmmmm) has wrinen: "CJ Staff
had the responsibihty for answering this cable. Do you want it in
Oswald's 201 ?"
The next sheet ts a "confidential" "Routmg and Record Sheet"
toCI:
"Cables forwarded herewilh have not been integrated into lhe
DO record system . If you feel lhey should be classified into a DO
file, please indicate file number (and other necessary processing)
and return 10 Sender.··
No indtcatton of how rectptent felt.

Letter to the Editor
Strickland unfairly 'dunked' on
I wa~ surprised and disappointed
to read Jtm Freeman's remarks
about Congressman Ted Strickland
10 th e August 22 edition of the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
I feel compelled to note that
Congressman Strtckland did mdeed
appear at the Meigs County Fair
and at the dunking booth operated
by local boy scout troops.
Although he was late getltng to
th e fairgrounds, our Congressman
spent his promised two hours atop
the dunking machine, as did several
other elected offictals during the
week of the fair. He fmally stepped
down from the machine at II :00
p.m.. and the operators of the dunkmg machme mform me that he was
the top-earning "celebrity" on the
machine for the entire week.
Mr. Freeman is correct m his
description of Congressman Strtckland as enthusiastic and congenial.
1 suspect lhat it was Congressman
Strickland's congeniality and concern for hts constituents that caused
him to be late for the fair. I have
been with Congressman Strickland
when he talks with constituents
about lheir probleq~s, and I know
that he is never in a hurry when he
is called upon to listen 10 the people he represents.
1 can assure Mr. Freeman and
the reader that Congressman Ted
Striclcland does not concern himself with what many might consid-

er "un-Congressmanlike'' behavior.
What ts important to Ted is to
reach out to his constituents in a
way that allows htm to effectively
help them with their problems.
Congressman Strickland (and
apparently a majority of lhe voters
in Ohto's Sixth District) believe
that "Congressman-like" behavior
(especllllly lhat exhtbited by his 6th
Dtstrict predecessor, Bob McEwen)
is at least panly responsible for the
problems that we face in Southern
Ohtp. I believe that Ted's willingness 10 sit on that dunking machine
showed that he is above the pre·
tense and arrogance which has
come to represent the U.S.
Congress. We should be grateful
and proud of him for thaL
I realize that Mr. Freeman's column was intended 10 be somewhat
"tongue-m-cheek," but in the
future, I would urge him to verify
his stories before lhey are printed.
Congressman Strickland's booth
and the Meigs County Democratic
Party's booth were both a few
yards from the dunking machine,
and both the local party and Ted's
staff always welcome questions as
they relate to Ted •s presence in our
county.
Brian J. Reed
Meigs County Co-coordinator
Strickland for Congress
Reedsville

J

Thursday, Aug. 26

2-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wldneaday, August 25,1993

Accu-Wcather• forecast for
. MICH.

Control of U.S. borders continues to erode

111 coart StJeet
Pomei'OJ, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Page

'

Robert}. Wagman

Pr.

o.:sen

J

C1993Accu-Weather, lnc.

Via AssOCiated Press

WeatherExtended forecast

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
-slight -chance of evening lhunderstorms. Low around 70. Chance of
rain 30 percent. Thursday, parUy
cloudy and very warm. A chance of
afternoon thunderstorms. High near
90. Chance of rain 50 percent.

Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday. Lows near 70.
Highs ,85-90. A chance of thunderstorms Saturday. Lows 65-70 .
Highs 80-85. Fair again on Sunday.
Lows in lhe upper 50s to mid-60s.
Highs in the upper 70s to low 80s.

a

Potential jurors named
Jim

EMS ·re$pOn ds
to

Committee. So when he accepted
Clinton's invitation to become
Defense secretary, he came to the
Pentagon intent on re-establishing
civilian authority.
One way he is doing this is by.
exP.anding his own staff and its •
abtlities. Over the past 12 years,
abnost all the staff work, briefmgs,
studies and decision memos in the
secretary's office were done by lhe
uniformed services. Now Aspin has
his own independent and largely
civilian staff performing these
duties.
Aspin has sought to relieve
some of the growing tension
between the civilian and military
leadership by lhrowing his support
-behind a call for subatantiahlddi·
tioaalmQ~~CI.!p 1~~JIJ- ~

Michael Todd Grindstaff, 20, of
State Route 124, Racine, died Sun·
day. Aug. 22, 1993, in a boating
accident near Racine.
Born Sept. 18, 1972, in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., son of David
Grindstaff and Sandra Kay Maynard. bolh of Racine, he was a logger and a member of the Racine
Baptist Church.
A graduate of Southern High
School, he played baseball, basket·
ball and football and was named
first-team. aJI-league in a!l three
sports. A recruit for the Ohto State
Highway Patrol, he attended the
University of Rio Grande.

callS

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ser: :
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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
August 24 discharges • Sherman Marcum, Carry Montgomery,
Vtrgene Jayjohn, Robin Calvert,
Tma Carlson, Larry Ashburn, Den·
nis Woods, Edward Lynch. Paoicia
Haynes. John Ambrose, Donald
Fisher, and Mark Coughenour.
August 24 births· · Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Dunham, daughter,
Leon, W.Va. and Mr. and Mrs.
Peter Rehn. daughter, Bidwell.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions- None.
Tuesday discharges - None.

Local briefs-____,

In addition to his father and r - - '
mother, he is survived by his
maternal grandfalher, Cecil MayState Route 124 near lhe Meigs-Athens county line is now open
nard; paternal grandparents, Rose
for traffic, a· spokeswoman for lhe Ohio Department of Transportaand David Grindstaff, all of
tion reported lhis morning.
Racine; a great-grandmother, Mary
Workers were repairing a slip that damaged the road surface.
Grindstaff of Mt. Hope, W.Va., and
several aunts and uncles.
He was preceded in dealh by his
maternal grandiDother, Fannie
The Meigs County Public Library ts offenng a volunteer tutor
Maynard.
·
training
workshop at the library Sept. 13 and 14 from 10-3 p.m.
Services will be held I p.m.
Instructor
Candy Byron will instruct in the Literacy Volunteer of
Thursday at Ewing Funeral Home
America
melhod.
m Pomeroy with the Revs. Ken
Interested individuals can sign up at the library.
Molter and Roger Grace officiat·
mg. Burial will follow in Marcum
(Continued from Page I)
Cemetery in WilkesviUe.
Friends may can Wednesday
from S-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
aides were CUL
headed by ianet Bolin was passed.
"We're doing the best we can Th
with what we have," said Buckley
e resolution was necessary
who noted that the board is work- before the committee could receive
.
a start-up grant of $7,500
mg within the guidelines on equity
Two tmlion students were
monies which can be used for accepted, and Adam Riffle was
Clifton, W.Va., $200 and costs, things lilce library aides. Ohlin~er rel eased to auend Southern High
Jlubhc intoxication; Wanda Riffle, stressed the imponance of keepmg S
chool for athletic purposes.
Racine, $63 and costs. operatmg the libraries open _ "they're
important
to
the
students
and
the
A report was given on the enerunder suspension; Fa1th Roach,
10
tcachers,"
said
Ohlinger.
gy
conservation program underway
Racine, $63 and costs, failure to
10 the district. The treasurer reportPurchased
services
contracts
comply; Gail Bush, Pomeroy, $15
and costs, passenger seat belt vtola- were awarded to 1osie Morton , ed on financing of the work. She
tion; Crystal Pridmore, Pomeroy, Pomeroy Elementary DH (disabili· satd that Peoples Bank aod Trust
$63 and costs, expired tags, $63 ty-handicapped) aide, and Donna Co., Middleport, had bid 4.35 perand costs, fictitious tags; $25 and Wolf, aid for a severe behaviorally cent for the $418,200 note. Landis
handicapped student, and Bill Eblin and Gyr of Columbus is doing the
costs, seat belt driver violation.
for
a multi-handicapped student
work of replacing lights. heating
Kimberly Smith, Pomeroy, $30
Sandy
Napper
and
Judith
Eblin
systems,
and the air conditioning at
and costs, speeding; Vincent Gray,
Sr., Portland, $100 and costs, men- were hired as substitute aides for Meigs High School.
Supt. Buckley reported that
acing threats; David Parsons, the I99 3-94 school year: Employed attendance
on the first day of
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, seat belt as substitute teachers were Nancy school was 2,420, down 114 stuviolation; Bobby Van Meter, Jo Aldridge, Tim Allen Curfman , dents from 1992_
Mason, W. Va .. $375 and costs, 90 Mary Jane Edwards, Rachel hSkey,
Rupe brought up the district's
days license suspension and three Melissa L. Howard, Betty Hutchi- smoking policy which provides that
days in Jail, DUI.
son, Linda S. Johnson, Melissa K. teachers and other school personnel
Forfeiting bonds were Jack Reit- Justice, James A. Watson , and can smoke in areas where there is
mire,1r.. Letart, W. Va., $83, open Helen Wllliams.
The resignations of Lesley Carr no contact with students. He sugcontainer in a motor vehtcle; James
as
a substitute teacher and Tammy gested that either a "no smoking"
Manyard, fl, Mason, W. Va., $83,
as volleyball coach at pohcy be put into effect or that
Chapman
consuming under the age of 21;
now used by students be
John Wayon, Point Pleasant; W. Meigs Junior High Schoo1 were eq01pment
moved from teachers' lounges and
Va .. $83, open container in a motor accepted. Carr has accepted a fullh
·
h
ot er 1ocauons w ere smokmg ts
vehicle; Gerald Brooks, Letart, time teaching posibon in Athens.
W.Va., $83, open container in a Corporal punishmeat guidelines occurring.
Barton 's motion to pu t a policy
motor vehicle; Daren Blessing,
The Board acting on recommen- into effect wh1ch would cltmmate
Letart, W.Va., $83, expired tags, dation by Supt. Buckley, by a split smoking on all school property was
also $83, driving under suspension. vote, agreed to let corporal ]Juntsh- voted down by a two-two vote.
Brenda Tatter son, Pom eroy, ment contmue to be an option for . Barton and Rope voted "yes",
$395, DUI, 90 day suspension, and the 1993-94 _school year.
while Abbott and Humphreys voted
three days in jail; and Roland Lan- . As explamed by Buckl_ey there "no". John Hood was not at the
dacre, Pomeroy, $51, failure to tS a state law whtch prov1des that meetmg '
appear in accordance with a court by Sept. 13 the board must decide
·
order.
on whether 10 ban or keep corporal
punishment. Abbott, Rupe and Barton voted to continue the cqrrent
policy, while Randy Humphreys
CLEVELAND (AP) - There vo ted "no" on maintaining the
Am Ele Power................... .38 1/4
were three tickets sold naming all opuon for corporal punishment.
Ashland Oil... ..................... 31 3/8
five flumbers drawn in Tuesday
According to state law, the
AT&amp;T................................. 60 1/8
night's Buckeye 5 game. and each board must now move to form a
Bank One........................... 52 7/8
is worth $100,000, lhe Ohio Lot- committee of community people.
Bob Evans .........................18
school personnel, a psychologist, a
tery said.
.
Charming
Shop ................ 11 In.
The winning tickets were sold in pediatrician, and PTO representaChampion
Ind................. .13 In.
Hebron, Massillon and Stow.
tives to further evaluate corporate
City
Holding
..................... 32
Here are Tuesday night's Ohio punishment and then make a recFederal
Mogul
.................. .. 23 718
Lottery selections:
ommendation to the beard by July
GoodyearT&amp;R
.... ............41 1/4
Buckeye 5
IS, 1994.
Lands
End
......
...................
31 3/4
It was noted that the board is not
4-9-11-23-26
Limited
Inc
.........................
22 3/4
required to follow the recommenPick3
Multimedia
Inc
...................
30
5/8
dations of the lllsk force.
5-4-4
Point Bancorp .................... 14
The current Mmgs Local policy
Pick4
Rax Restaurant ............ ..... 1/16
provides for corporal punishment
6-2-0-3
Reliance Electric ................ 19 5/8
There were 248 Buckeye 5 tick- w1th permission of parents. Where
Robbins&amp;Myers ................. I8 3/4
ets w1th four of the numbers, and permission is not granted, then inShoney's lnc ...................... 20 518
each is worth $250. The 7,370 tick- school or out-of-school suspenStar Bank........................... 34 In.
ets showing three of lhe numbers sions become alternative options.
Wendy Int'l... .................... 14 1/2
Other Business
are each worth $10, and the 71,002
Worthington Jnd ................. 30 1/4
Bids accepted at the meeting
ttckets showing two of the numbers
Stock reports are the 10:30
included Dav1s-Quickle, Pomeroy,
are each worth $1.
a
.m. quotes provided by
for
fleet
insurance;
Rick's
Fire
and
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
Kemper
Secur~ties, Inc., o
Safety,
Pomeroy,
for
fire
extin$285,507 to winners in Tuesday's
Galli
polis.
guishers;
and
Warehouse
Tire
of
Ptck 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
in Pick 3 Numbers totaled Oak Hill for tires and tubes. The
vote on the bids was unanimous
$1 ,076.163.50.
In lhe other daily game, Pick 4 with the exception of Warehouse
Numbers players wagered Tire where Barton voted against
accepting the bid.
$236, 168 and will share $63,500.
He satd he was voting "no"
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
because he favors giving lhe busi$592,154.
The jackpot for tonight's Super ness to local dealers. No bids were
submitted by local dealers, the
Lotto drawing is $8 million.
superintendent reponed.
Voted down was a recommenDraft TV record
dation from the superintendent that
NEW YORK (AP) - Every the board pay $500 for hauling
phase of pro football seems to grow trash out of lhe old Pomeroy 1unior
in populanty.
Htgh School liuilding whtch was
The television coverage of the sold to Pomeroy Village. Rupe and
NFL draft, carried by ES PN on Humphreys voted against lhe payApril 25 , got a 4.2 cable rati!'g• ment.
which adds up to 2.6 mtlhon
A resolution of support for lhe
homes.
'
communi education
It was a new high for !he draft
on TV and at one lime in the afterSPRING VALLEY CI~E~A
noon it peaked at 3.6 mtllion
446·4524
' . . ..
homes.

Ohio 124 opened to traffic

Tutoring workshop slated

Mel•gs···------- -

Lottery results

•

September grand jury selected

Officials...

Hospital news

The three H's remain a part of
the Ohio weather picture for the
remainder of the week. Forecasters
say it will be hot, hazy and humid.
Highs will be mostly in lhe low
to mid-90s wilh relative humidities
55-60 percent
There won't even be much relitf
at night, the National Weather Service said. Many places, tempera- ·
tures won't drop out of the 70s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at lhe_~olumbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1959
while the record low was 46 in
1887. Sunset tonight will be at 8:15
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6;54
a.m.

--Court news--

Twenty-eight were fined and
four others forfeited bond in the
Meigs County Court of Judge
'
Patrick O'Brien Aug. 18:
Guy M. Berrett, Lebanon, safety
(Continued from Paget&gt;
violation, $45 plus costs; Bonnie
Dr. Dorsey alsii reviewed major Anderson, Gallipolis, speed, $30
and meet certain continumg needs,
events at the university and com- plus costs; Qarinda Theiss, Racine,
including scholarships for students.
An upcoming major event at Rio munity college that occurred over failure to control, $20 plus costs;
Grande wtll be the conferral of the the summer, including the opening . John T. Adams, New Marshfield,
university' s Fellow designation of the Sports Fitness Center, overload, $258 plus costs; John M.
upon former Gov . James A. accreditation of the Social Work Smith, Lavaletta, W.Va., speed.
Rhodes and House Speaker Vernal program, and the transfer of the $30 p!us costs; Jason L. Smith,
G. Riffe Jr. Both will be honored at South Central Ohio Regional Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Wanda Blackburn, Long
Teachers' Center, to Rio Grande.
convocation set for Sept 17.
Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
.
"I
think
it
is
going
10
be
a
good
"This is the highest honor that
the University of Rio Grande can year," Dr. Dorsey concluded. Sylvia E. Ray, Newark, speed. $30
bestow upon an individual, ranking "There will be challenges. there plus costs; Carl Vanover, Pomeroy,
above the conferral of an honorary will be opportunities. Above all, speed. $30 plus costs;
John J. Ginther, Racine, seat
degree," Dr, Dorsey explained. we must remember that we are here
belt,
$15 plus costs; Randall L.
"Both of ,these men have played to provide high-quality education
Mayse,
Kettlersville, speed, $30
i!DPOrtant roles in the history of for the students who enroll at Rio
plus
costs;
Christopher L. Klein,
this state and both were instrumen- Grande, and 10 serve the region of
spee(j,
$30 plus costs;
Westlake,
ta l in es tabhshing Rio Grande southern Ohio in whatever ways
Christopher
Carlet&lt;&gt;n,
Coolville, no
that we can."
Commumty College."
motorcycle endorsement, three
days jail suspended, $75 plus costs,
jail suspended if valid endorsement
presented within 30 days; Megi
.i
.
(Continued from page 1)
Edward McLain, Jerry Lee Cline, Cantley, Coolville, driving under
.Swisher, Roger K. Deem,
G. Richard B. Whited, Donald R. the influence (DUI), $350 plus
·Hysell, Johnny Gus Little, Donna Thomas, Juanita A. Norman, Ger- costs, 10 days jail suspended to
M. J!oyd, Christopher A, Davis, aid T. Welker, Carolyn Norm_an, three days, operator's Ucense (OL)
Kevin Andrew Haggy, Rose Elaine Alta Ferrell, Angela Dawn Larkins, suspended for 90 days, one year
Burton, Stephanie Jill English, Coy B. Starcher, Aimee Renee probation, $150 of the fine and jail
' Shane Marcel Engle, Ithmer R. Mitch, Desmond L. Jeffers, Teresa to be suspended upon completion
Neal, Artie Mae Buskirk, William Sue DeLong, Marie! Jean Will, of RTP school;
G. Walters, Clarence Gilmore, Eva P;tul J. Pauley, Kimberly Sue
Robert Hillbirk, Athens, disorE. Mtlliron, Robert T. Southern, Klein, Harold Ralph Sisson, John derly conduct, costs only; Matthew
Virginia I. Pennington. Carol A. H. Day, Dale Lee Little, Clara McGarvey, Alhens, disorderly conMahr, David L. Boyd, Timothy J. Hymphrey, Danny C. Buffington, duct, costs only; James Cleland,
Thomas, Roger K. Stewart, Timo- Lelia Jean Haggy, James Daniel Pomeroy, assured clear dtstance,
thy R. Priddy, Tamara K. Bachner, Parsons, Freda May Smith, Debo- $25 plus costs; Louise K. Smith,
timothy J. King, Michael B. Call, rah Kay Davis, ?4ila lane Woo_ds, Columbus, speeding, $20 plus
Pella Grace Mohler.
Gordon F. Rayburn, lma Jean Slffi, costs; Derrick Jackson, Middleport,
POMEROY - Tammy K . Donna Y. Jacks, Susan Elizabeth seat belt, costs only; Jody Fowler,
Wril(ht, Marlene M. Swartz, James Mossman, Vicki Linnea Long, Tina Middleport, speeding, $28 plus
R. Riffle, Lorena Virginia Arnold, costs; Amy Mitch, Racine, seat
Robyn L. Venoy, Harold E. Nor- belt, $15 plus costs; 1ohnny Sellers,
Portland, driving under suspension,
fi0UT
m~.ORTLAND -James Fore- $125 plus costs,.30 days jail susman, James H. Sellers, Donna Lee pended to five days, one year probation; seat belt violation, $25 plus
Ross, Wanda F. Sellers.
RACINE - Robert F. Lawson, costs;
.
Units of the Meigs County Lawrence G. Johnston, Tammy
Billy J. Reed, Corning, DUI,
Emergency Medical Service Yvette Clark, Don L. Beegle, Bon- $350 plus costs, 10 days jail susresponded to four calls for assis- nie S. Walker, Dennis H. Manuel, pended to three days, 90-day OL
tance overnight. Units responding Brian William Porter, Sheri Lynn suspension. one year probation,
included:
'
Young, Lestet P~ul .t;~anuel, Debo· $150 of the fine and jail suspended
Tuesday - 10:53 a.m. Middle- ra L. Michael, Robert Jean Smith, upon completion of RTP school ;
port 10 Turkey Run Road in Gallia Mary May Hysell, Terry L. Bell, Franklin Sewell, Rutland, DUI.
County for Ray~ond Fife who WIIS Donna Marie Sayre, Wanda E. $350 piUS COSts, 10 days jail SUS·
transported to Pleasant Valley Hos- Shuler, Patricia L. Davidson, lames pended to three, 90-day OL suspen·
pital; 5:31 p.m. Rutland Volunteer
sion, one year probation; driving
Fire Department and Squad to lhe Jarrod Circle, Charles Ray Deem, wilhout a license, 10 days jail susJerry Eads residence on New Lima Bethany C. Cremeans, Teresa L. pended to three concurrent with
Road for an electrical fire; Louise Pullins ; Christi Lynn W1l·son, DUI; Joseph Stout, Gahanna, reckEads was ~reated at the scene; 8:53 1oseph D. Glenn.
REEDSVILLE - Dorothy less operation, $100 plus costs,
jl.m. Pomeroy to Second Street for
$200 forfeiture 10 the Law EnforceBobby Ellis who was transported to Ann Lance, Craig Dou~las Reed, ment Trust Fund; left of center, $50
Kathy Ann Powell, Mttchell D.
Veterans Memorial Hdspital. ,
plus costs; speeding, $50 plus
Wednesday - 7:52 a.m. Rut· Barringer, Gary Eliward Kehl, costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; Ray
land to Salem Center for Beatrice Rhonda Faye Sai\ders, Domingo D. Foster, Middleport, menacing, 10
Rinehart wllo was transported to Delacruz, Marybelle D. Schultz, days jail suspended to three days,
Richard Lee Bartimus, Charles
O'Bieness Memorial HoSpital.
Edwin Hall, An~ela M. Watson, costs, six months probation; Carol
David Eugene Rice, Tricia Renee 1. Cleland, Pomeroy, speeding, $30
plus costs.
Burke.
The Dally ~entinel
Forfeiting bonds were Scott
RUTLAND - Rhonda G.
(USPS 2L).HI)
Shields,
Alhens, seat belt violation,
Mozingo, Larry M. Bissell, Sherry
Published every af~emooa, Moaday throuah
$45;
William
Boggess, Albany,
M. Miller, Birdie Mae Hysell, CynFriday, 111 Court Sl., Pomefoy, Ohio by the
speeding, $70; John Adams, New
Ohio Valley Pub!l&amp;hiua CompuyJMutlimedia
thia J. Krautter, Donna L.
ll'lc , Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992-2156
Marshfield,
safety violation, $90;
Williamson,
Donna
Jean
LauderSecond cJ-.. poJtaae pa1d at Pomcruy, Ohlo
Tommy Long, Racine, seat belt,
milt.
Member. The Auoctated Preis, aud the Ohto
$45.
SHADE - ·James M. Jones,
Newapaper AUociatlca, Natlo11al AdYettiliriJ ' Guy F. Demars , Cheryl Adina
Pomeroy court .
ReprcaeDtative, Branham Newapapec Sa\eal
Nine
were
fined and seven oth733 Thud Avenue, New Yort. New York
Willford.
10017
ers forfeited bonds in the court of
SYRACUSE - Robert B.
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed MonGi)&gt;bs, Vicki E. Morrow, Carrie L.
POSTMASTER: Send r.ddteaa ehanaea lo The
OOiy Sentinel, Ill Co\111. St., Pomeroy, Obio
McMillan, Michael E. Chancey, day night.
~769
Fined were Marvin R. Edwards,
Gregory John Michael, Harold L.
SVISCRIPI10N RATES
Patterson,
Ross
Norris,
G
Ioria
I.
87 Can-ltr or Motor Rouk
Michael, Jack R. Slavin.
Ooe Week . ... . :"!. .... ... .. ... $1.60
One Month ...... ,,, ............................ $6.9S
TUPPERS PLAINS - Kristi
ODe Year... . . . .. . . .. ... · - $83.20
Hawk,
Troy Donald Guthrie, John
SJNGLICOPY
The following people were
C. Hogan, Vernon R. Maxey.
PIIICE
Dally ........ . ..... ... .
___ JSc.ou
VINTON - David Might,
named to the September, 1993,
term of the Meigs County Grand
Sublcrlben not dealiiaa: to pay the earner may
Daren Eugene Calvin.
remit Ia advllDcc direct to The Dilly Stotioel
Jury. Selected were:
OD • lhret, 111 or 12 month bu&amp;a. Credit will be
Verdie M. Rider, Pomeroy;
liven earner each week.
Kimberly K. Reed, Reedsville;
No aub~eripUcna by mail permJned lD •eu
Francis Leroy
Thompson,
Y!'hen home cwrier service ilavallable.
Coolvill~; Marcella G. Durst, Mid:
• Mall So!Mmpllou
(Continued from Page 1)
dleport; Donald E. Vaughan ,
wldo Melp C...IJ'
er
and
help from the Lord for Pomeroy; George Douglas
13 w..u..........................................$2t 84
26 Weea ................................... .$43.16
things to work- with this every- Lowther, Albany; William Alvin
52 Weetl...... .......... ........ . .. ......... $114 76
thing is possible," he said. .
•
Oublde Melp
Stover, Racine; James M. Werry
Thornton said he discussed Sr., Racine;
13 Weotl ..................... _ . ......... .. $23 40
26 Woako. . . .. .. ................ .... .$45.50
other projects for Racine during his
Harley E. Boring, Albany;
52 Weako.................... ...... .. .... $88 40
meeting with Voinovich.
James Ead Hall, 'Racine; Jane Ann

Rio Grande...

~·.

fellow craft degree. Refreshments
will be served.
Reunioas aanounced
Aleutian Island Military Veterans, spouses, widows, guests, sons,
daughters, etc., will have fall and
winter reunions in Clewiston, Fla.
on Oct. 14-16; Wellsboro, Pa .,
Nov. 11-13; and Eureka, Calif.,
Nov. 19-21. For registration blank,
send self-addressed and stamped
envelop to A.F. King, P.O. Box
130327, Sunrise, Fla. 33313. An ·
servi(:e branches welcome.

---Area death-W.VA

suggest lhat this sop~. organtzed
labor ~&lt;_lllld som_ehow s~gthen
the abill!_y of thts country s .bustness and mdustry to compete m the
~orl~ economy. " It is ha~d to \
tmagme. even AFL:CIO Pres~dent
Lane Kirkland saymg that w1th a
strmght fac~.
.
And as 1f the pres1dent has not
done. enough to irygrat!ate himself
to B1_g Labor, whtch, 1t should be
mentiOned, represents only 15 percent of_American ~orkers, he is
now trymg to mak~ 11 unlawful for
employers t~ ht~e permanent
repla~ents if thru workers stop
wor~g.
Thts .reversal of federallabo(
law, which has worked JUS! fme ~or
more than .a half-century, wtll
enable aggneved garbage _workers
and teac.hers and bus ~rtvers to
on~ agam.wage econom1c ~arran:
agamst lheu ~mployers, while al~
thumbmg theu noses at lhe public
lhey are su~ed to serv~.
h' By malciPreng.deBtg LaC!Jars agenda
tS own,
S1 nt !into~ has all
but assured that _there :Will ~or~.
not 1~, labor strife whlle he IS m
lheMaWhibete Hthouse..
.
Y
e untons ~ nostalg~c
for the days when strtkes ~ere
com!Donplac~. but the Amencan
public surely_ts not:..

ing of the mthtary. Clinton has
budgeted about $1.2 trillion for the
downsiud Pentagon over the next
five years, about $127 billion less
than George Bush intended to
spend. Now Aspin is saying lhat is
not enough, and he is siding wilh
the Joint Chiefs in saying that at
least $20 billion more will have to
be found.
There seems widespread confidenco that Gen. Shalikashvili and
Aspin will work well together. This
should relieve much of the tension
But for many in the uniformed
vices, downsizing coupled, with
strong civilian leadership will mean
a very different military.

VSC to meet
The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at lhe Veter·
ans Service Office in Pomeroy.
B006ters to meet
The Southern Choir Boosters
will meet Mondar at 7 p.m. at the:
high school mus1c room. All par·
ents are urged 10 anend.
Lodge to meet
There will be a special meeting
of Shade River Lodge No. 453
F&amp;AM Chester, on Thursday at
7:30 p.~. Thete will be work in lhe

Michael T. Grindstaff

Clinton team asserts civilian control
Two seemingly unrelated Pen- dates.
be made by any service without
tagon events are actually closely
More imponant lhan personaliprior clearance from the civilian
tied and causing much unrest in the ties, Aspin was determined to draw leadership.
uniformed ranks.
back into the secretary's office
Many on the civilian side of the
On lhe same day that President
Pentagon see lhe Mundy episode as
Clinton announced the appointment
symptomatic. It appears that the
of Army Gen. John M. Shageneral honestly believed he was
likashvili to succeed Gen . Colin much of the authority that had been simply taking care of an internal
Powell as chairman of the Joint lost to the chairman's office under Marine Corps housekeeping matter,
Chiefs, Defense Secretary Les Powell. That meant, he believed, and it did not occur to him that he
Aspin ordered Marine Corps Com· reaching down into the ranks and had to clear it with his civilian
mandant Carl Mundy to withdraw selectin~ someone for chairman superiors.
hts order barring married recruits who, while a proven military leadThe current situation of military
after September 1995. The two er, would owe his loyalty 10 Clin- dominance over the Pentagon's
events are linked because bolh rep- ton and Aspin.
civitian leadership began in earnest
resent the continued effort of the
Gen . Shalikashvili fit that during the rapid Reagan military
Clinton administration to reassert description perfectly. He is consid· buildup in lhe early 1980s. EssenflDD ctvilian leadership in lhe Pen- ered a "warrior," has had numer- tially, whatever lhe service chiefs
tagon.
ous operational commands, but has wanted, they got. RCI!l!an Defense
AJthough no~ followe,c! .if!. the also served a year on the joint staff Secretary Caspar Wemberger -saw
past with mathematical precision, as assistant chairman.
his. role as the ct?ef lobbyist for the
there has been lleneral agreement
When Aspin learned of Gen . umformed semces, and the conamong the servtces that the chair· Mundy's order bannin~ lhe future cep_t of ~trong civilian Ieade':5hip
manship is rotated between the recruiting of married mdividuals, durmg his tenure seemed to disapArmy, Navy and Air Force. The he was reportedly shocked. While pear.
next four-year tour, it was he was surprised at the substance of
T~en came the Powell-Dick
assumed, belonged to the Air lhe order, what really shocked him Cheney years~ :when the stron~Force. It was widely expected lhat was that he heard about it from wtlled. and poliU~ally adept chair·
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mer- press reports and that Mundy's man stmply dommated. the personrill "Tony" McPeak would be the direct civilian superior, Navy Sec- able but relatively inexperienced
next chairman.
retary John Dalton, had not even congressman who was President
However, several factors appar- known lhe ban was being consid- Bush's choice fer secretary. Given
ently came into play to deny ered.
the number of conflicts over lhis
McPeak lhe promotion for which
The substance of the order aside four-year peri&lt;K!, including
he had vigorously lobbied. McPeak - and many in the Pentagon agree Storm, the umformed servtces
1s said not 10 have impressed Aspin that young married service person· . again ~eld sway1
.
and the president. In recent weeks, nel are a growing burden to all the
T!Jts bo!lJered A_spm greatly !15
when that fact became known, uniformed services - sources he vtewed II from his seat as ch_air·
reportedly the Air Force hurriedly report Aspin was livid that a policy man of the House Armed Serv1ces
put forward several other candi· decision of this magnitude would

PA

INO

~!B. . ~~~«?.!, !~u,~.~~~J~.!~O~~~!~~
Josenh Perkins

IToledo I!W I
•

enter the U.S. legally lai110 leave easiest way 10 get hele is often the
when their visas expire. Often, legal way. Tate the case of Haidar
inadequate staffing and resources Barbouti, which we reported on last
keep Immigration officials from 'JCIII.
Like nearly 300,000 othcn, Barkeeping track of some of the most
bouti
entered lhe United States on a
egregious violalon of immigration
visa in 1987. His offacial
student
law.
reason
for
coming was so he could
In 1989, for ell8lllple, we report· ,
study
at
Columbia
University in
ed on a case where INS officials
New
York.
But
Barbouti
apparent·
descended on a group of 12 crimily
had
a
lot
more
than
books
on his
nal aliens. But lhese were not any
mind.
aliens - they were known drug
Had immigration offacials done
pushers who came across the bor·
their
homework, lhey would have
der looking for trouble. Eleven of learned
that Haidar Barbouti is the
the 12 had prior criminal convic·
Iraqi-born
son of the late lhsan
lions.
Barbouti,
an
international arms
Unfortunately, the INS only had
'
dealer
who
once
played middleman
jail space for 10 people. So what
in a deal to build the largest chemidid they do? They let the aliens cal weapons facility in the Third
draw lots to see who among lhem World.
would be set free, according 10 INS
Shortly after Haidar's arrival in
soun:es present Two of lhem drew New York, the Barbouti family's
the short sticks and were set back deadly business began expanding
on to lhe streets. The INS told us to the United States. Within a
that lhere is a space crunch in fed· month after Haidar's September
era! jails, but that no criminal alien 1987 arrival in the United States,
is set free as a result.
subsidiaries of Ihsan Barbouti
Of course , most aliens who International began popping up
enter lhe country are not criminals, around the country.
nor do lhey intend to be once they · Allhou~h his student visa proarrive. But those who do have ulte· hibited Haidar from being the presnor motives have learned lhat the ident of any company in the United
States, by his sophomore year he
had flied documents with lhe government showing him as lhe president or general partner of 11 companies, including one in Florida,
which was 'investiga\C(I by the Cus·
toms Service for allegedly diverting deadly chemicals to Iraq. In
March 1992, a civil jury in Houston found a Barbouti-controlled
company liable for stealing pipe·
coaung technology and exporting it
10 the Middle East.
Barbouti's lawyers told us the
young heir made a mistake when
filing lhose papers, and that he was
only a "passive investor."
The INS has found it nearly
impossible to keep track of all
those who enter the United States
on student visas each year. To narrow its traCking activities to those
who arrive from countries with an
ax to grind with America - such
as Iraq - would land them in court
for discrimination.

when, say. lhe local garbage work· eventually force lheir employer- by more than 50 J!ercent. The
ers' union would walk off the job? m this case the federal government 1980s were ~ood hmes for the
Or the local teachers' union would - to accede to .o11heir labor average Amencan worker.
orchestrate a "sick out"? Or the
Now get ready for a return 10 lhe
local bus drivers' union would
bad old days. Garbage piles.
stageawildcatstrike?
.
AWOL teachers. Idle buses ..Bill
You'd have a mountam of
r
Clinton has a debt to orgamzed
refuse piled up in your back yard
labor, which spent millions of dol·
awaiting the garbageman's return. demands.
Iars (in union members' dues) to
You'd have to find someone to
But the PATCO strikers' ulti· putlheir man in lhe Oval Office.
look after your kids while they mate boss, President Ronald Rea- He's paying it back big time.
enjoyed their unscheduled vaca- gao, threw lhem a curve. He frred
Clinton barely had learned his
uon. You'd have to catch a taxi or them. Then he replaced them.
way around lhe West Wing before
bum a ride to work.
Employers have had the right to he made his first installment to Big
During the past decade, such hire permanent replacement work- Labor, rescinding two executive
public annoyances became increas- ers since the Supreme Court so orders signed by his Republican
ingly rare. In 1980, there were 187 ruled in 1938. But while employers predecessor.
work stoppages throughout the often reminded union negotiators
One of lhe orders required fed·
country involving 1,000 or more of lhis right during collective bar· era! contractors to post notices
workers. A staggering 20.8 million gaining, not until Reagan followed informing non-union. workers lhat.
work days were spent idle. By through did unions start to tal&lt;e this under terms of a five-year old
1990, the number of strikes had threat seriously.
Supreme Court decision, they
fallen 10 44 wilh only 6.5 million
With unionized workers much could not be forced to join a union.
days of idleness.
less inclined to risk their jobs Workers also were advised that
The defanging of the labor through strike actions, the 1980s they had the right to stop unions
unions may be traced back to lhat were a period of relative calm on from using their dues for political
fateful August of 12 years ago the labor front. And while union activities to which they were
when 13,000 members of PATCO, bosses lament their loss of power opposed.
the atr traffic controllers union, during lhe past decade, rank-andThe olher order prohibited either
staged an unlawful strilce and defi- file workers did ralher well.
federal agencies or contractors
anUy ignored a back-to-work order.
Industrial productivity, as mea- hired by the government from
Like the garbage workers, the sured by output per hour, improved requiring lhat workers on federally
teachers and the bus drivers, the air by more than 40 percent between financed construction projects be
traffic controllers figured that by 1980 and 1990. Over the same umon members.
stalking off the job and inconve- span, lhe average weekly earnings
The most outrageous thing of it

•

•

Ohio weather

Meigs announcements

OHIO Weather

..

The Dally sentinel-Page 3

Bourne ; Pomeroy; Kevin Lee
Grady, Racine; Helena S. Brickles,
Pomeroy; Dortha P. Salser, Racme;
Ruth McElroy, Pomeroy; Anne E.
Sargent, Rutland; Dusty Tobias,
Middleport; Charles C. Wtlliams,
Racine;
Thomas Leroy Grim, Albany;
Richard Myers, Reedsville; Yvonna Sue Persinger, Long Bottom;
Kenny Eugene Lunsford, ~omeroy;
Mary Louise Scarberry, Tuppers
Plains; Alta Ann Rupe, Pomeroy;
Beverly S. Roush, Racine.

•

Stocks

·-

7

• A one COiro ,
easy·to-apply

glouenamel
llniah.

• Proteota
metal, wood
and masonry

surfaces.

Pickens Hardware
MASON, W. VA.

�.. .

.

-

~..

-

~

-·

.....

I

In NL activity,

Sports
Wn.LIAMSPORT. Pa. (AP) _ walke1fto the m!'U'!d ~ cov~g
Long Beach, Calif., and Bedford, rust on Tompkins hit, To_mpkins
N.H., took different paths to wrap /broke for second. As Bicknell
up berths in the American semif~-, · threw to second, Beyer ran home .
/ ~,_&amp; this
nat of the Little League World un~lntested ·
Series.
, a toiU'IIIDient """'
, you
The Californians had five don t get too many chances to
homers in a 12-8, seven-inning vic- score, so you have,!'~ manufacture
tory over Richmond, Va., Tuesday. runs.when you can,. Bedford manThomas Beyer pitched a no-hi\ler ager Greg !oseph Slid.
and scored the only nin for Bedford
The wmn~ng run. was score!)
in a 1-0 victory over Hamilton, after a ~4-m.mu~ ram delay, the
Ohio.
Ion~est m senes his!Dry. .
The teams meet today in what
If ther~. wasn t a ~n delay,
amounts to an exhibition game. w_ho !'"Ows, JIJI!Cilh S&amp;ld. Bedf~
They'll play again Thursday for a , d•dn t .~ave a h1t before the ram
berth in Saturday's tide game.
~clay and I told (t!'e pl~yers),
The international bracket stiJJ . I:eu.~uys are lootmg s•lly up
ha~ four leallls alive. Panama beat
1n' the top of the sixth, Hamilton
S31pan 4-1 ~nd Canada beat Ger- couldn't get a hit after Beyer
many 8-1 m games '(uesday- walked three with two ouL
Today, Panama J?lays Germany and , Hitting was no problem in the
Canada P!ays S~an.
n Long Beach victory. Kevin MiUer
. Beyers no-~llter was _the seco d and Brady Werner each hit two
m a row agam~t Ham•hon. The home runs and Sean Burroughs
Cenlral champwns l~st to Long added another Long Beach is
.
·
.
Beach 8-0 Monday mght. Beyer
also scored the only run in a 1-0 atte~ptmg to become the fust
Bedford victory over Richmond on ~encan team to repeat as chamMonday.
.
pions.
, .
Tuesday night, Beyer singled in . In Canada s VIctory Tuesday .
the bottom of the fourth againsl night, Blakr; Anderson had ~ ~­
Hamilton, moved to second on run homer m the nfth to giVe his
Man Joseph's sacrifi@ and went to !earn a 5-1 ~ead. Ge!'"any scored
third on Christopher Tompkins IIS onl_y run tn the third whCI! Mau
infield single.
~cLain walk~. f!IOVed to third ~n
As pitcher Ronnie Bictnell ~mcent Petu s smgle and a Wild
pitch.

llOYEAR
ANNIVERSARY

Footban

Nollonal r.....,u Looaue
BUFFALO BIU.S: Woivc4 Keilb

NATIONAL LllAGUE
Eu&amp;em DIYidon

W L

Wi.l.lia:, defensive lineman; ChN Hale,
comerbn~k; Glencll Sanden, Jaaoa

GB

~

Philodelphio .. .........79 .47
SL I..ouil ................69 57

.627
.548

10

Monu.ol ................67 60
C!Ucogo.... ..... ...... ...6~ 64

.528
.49~

12.5
17

Pittsburgh ..............S9 67

.468
.416
.344

26.S
35.5

F1orida ... ................Sl 73
New Yadr. ..............43 82

20

W•tern Dh·ll:ion

San Fnnciaco ........ 83 43

.6S9

49
51

.614
.l36

5.5
ll.l

Atlonto ...... ........... ..78
HoUlton ............ ... ..67
Lo1Anaele. ...........6S
CINCJJiiNA11. ..... ..62
Colorado ................48

60

.520

17.5

66
71

.414
.381

22
35

San Diego ......... - ...48 71

.381

35

Tuesday's scores

Atlanla 6, San ;nnciloo 4

HoUlton 4, Florida 0
Chic.go 6, Mmtrcal S

New Ycdtl, CINCINNATI 4
San Diego 17 , St. Loui.l4
Leo Angel&lt;~ ·13, Pi..bwglt 4

Today's games
Colorado (Sanfard J-0) at Philadclphil (Sc:hillina 1().6). 12:3l p.m.
CINCINNATI (Rijo 10· 7) at New
Yort (Hillrnml-6),1:40 p.m.
St. Louil (Arochl 10-4) at San Dic1o
ffim Wondll-3), 4:05p.m.
Atlanu (Madchu: 14-9) 11 San FranciJE:O (Swift 17-S), 4:0.5 p.m.
Howton (Portugal 12-4) at Florida
(Houah 7-13), 7:3l p.m.
Chicago (Moraan 8-IJ) 11 Monuul

(F"'""'
B-3), 7:3l pm.
PiuaburJh (Wtgncr S-6) 1t Lot Aft&amp;c-

loo (Condioai l · l),I0:35 p.m.

Thursday's games
Hourton (Harnisch 11 -1)
(Bowen 1-11 ), 1:35 p.m.

1t

florida

Colorado (Ore&amp; Harrilll -12) at New

Yark Oon111l-l), 7:40p.m.

AMERICAN.LilA GUll
Eutem DIYIJion

Team
W
Toron.to .......... ...... .. 73
New Yar:k ......... - ...12
Boltim... ...............67
Bostm ..... ;..............~

PeL
.575
.S67
.l32

L
54
SS
l9
.59

..524

6.S

Deuolt. ........... ........ 6'J 61

..523

C!£VELAND ··-···60 66
Milwaukc:e .............S2 14

.476

6.S
12.5
20..5

.413

Carth.en, Anlhony Fieldin_p and Kevin

O'Bri~~a,liaebic:k~n; Ed Thmau, liabl
end; Sobulian S.vtae and M&amp;lcalm :EvCift:U. dcfcnlivc t.W; Willie lluril, Bob
Oordon and Barry Row. wide ftiiiO'IIIi.vcn;
CJuiJ t •
~ mf'auivo linCIIIWI; Gnt
Patcrra and one! Jourdain, ruMina
bow: Kill\ Bloeclam, punw. llm Groy,
dd"mai.ve end; and Stave Kratz. kicker.
Placed AI Ed.wardl, wido RICCi.Ya', U!. in·
jw'ed I'III.VO.
CHICAGO BEARS: Wuvc&lt;lltiohord
Fain. c:ornc:ro.a.; LouU: AJe.lackJc; Dive
Hoffman, Gilland Hawkinl and Regie
Cooper, lin~eken; Jotm. Tony, JUirdi
Shine Mauhcwa, quarterb.ck; Anlonio
Jdmlm and Larry Wynn, wide ffiCCiiv1111;
Dewell Brewer, halfback; and Kc:my Wil·
hitc and Tracy Saul, dc!enlivo bact1.
Plocod T""' ThaF, fWd, on !he ph,GcalJy.lllllble-10-pe:dorm lilt. Placod Tony
b

In AE affairs,

GB
I
l.l

ceivcm; Mike Hinmnt, ti,lbt end; Eric

llomillon ond Rlchud , ....... defaui..
backs; Rab Mdlmem and MichK1 Reid,
lincbacltcn; 1ly ·~bel). CODtcr, R,o-man Andonon, kkUw;. Jcmno 810wa, dofentiWI lineman; and Brad Gaebel. qu.,..
tcrblck. Placed Bemtrd ElliJoa, Clutil
c....., llld Allon llollor, d.r.n.ive bocU,
on injured rcten"O.. Placed T·nris Hill,
lincba~:kc, on 1ho. physi~:ally·unablo-to­
J'O'!onnlia.
'DALLAS COWBOYS: Pbcod Pollon
Wa~:ucy, li,lht end, and Brian Nicli:CI!o,
suon~. .., injUIOd ,_.,_ l'llcod Ood!zoy
Mylel, lineb.ck•, on the ph)'licall,..unablc-lO-pelfoan liiL
DENVER BRONCOS: Wu...t Olof
Hampel. offcn~ive liDmwa, and Mic:bacl
A . Broakl, llfcty.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Wai-vod
Cecil Ony,llcklO.
HOUSTON OILERS: Wai-ved Joe
Campbell, Joe Liulc. and Jimmy Rayc,
wide rccci-ven; Doua Cartc:r, NnniDJ
back; and Eric Miller, dofenllive end.
Plocod John Flonnozy, oftonive linom10,
and Mike Ibnu, defcn~ive btct, m in-

12-Pack

-12-oz. cans

TORONTO (AP) - When the
Toronto Blue Jays handed Duane
Ward the full-time closer's role
heading inlo this season, no one
questioned his ability to get the job
·done.
. "Ward showed us in the last
·few years lhat he was as ~ood a
:closer as there is in baseball, ' Blue
.Jays manager Cito Gaston said
after watching Ward collect his
.cJub-record 35th save of the season
"Tuesday night in an 8-6 victory
·over the Cleveland Indians.
: The win, coupled with New
·York's 4-2 loss to the Chicago
·White Sox, gave the Blue Jays a
one-game lead over the Yankees
atop the AL EaSL
Ward spent five seasons as the
set-up man for Tom ,Henke, who
·had 34 saves for the Blue Jays in
: I 987 and 1992 before leaving for
Texas via free agency.
Ward would have liked to break
,the mark with a perfect inning.
• "I learned that's preny tough to
do," Ward said. "Nexl thing I
' know I've got runners at flrst and
: third, one out and Albeit Belle at
:the plate. That's not a great feel-

\
.

I

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW OR

U.S. GRADE A PERDUE

Pepsi Cola

Whole Fryers

jw.d....,..._

INDIANAPOUS COLTS: Woived
M~rquise

Thomas, lineblckar, and Jim

Peack, offcnaivelincman. Placed Mike
Hold' conw. Cod.. l!lbete4p, u,llt«td,
and. Anthmy Hamlet. dcfcna.ive cad, on
iniw-d mnrvo. PLacod Muk Vamt. Pool,

c{fCftlive YCkle. on lhe phyaic.u)'-un•bie~pcd'oan U.t.

Watern Dlvillon
Chicago .................. 69 SS
..556
Kan.au City ......... ..66 60
.524

4

TellU ..................... 65 60

..520

4.5

Scaule .................... 6J
Cllifomia ............. .. S6
Minnalou ..............S3
Ookhnd ............... ..ll

63
61
10

.492
.4.52
.431

I
13
15..5

73

.411

II

Tuesday's scores
Milws!.&amp;kcc 9, Oakl•nd 2, bt same;
Mil waukee 7, Oakland 6, 13 inninp, :lztd
game

Detroit 4, Seaalo I
Toronto 8, a..EVEl.AND 6
Baltim~JR. I, California 0
Chica&amp;o 4, New YOlk 2
Texu 4 , BosiM 3

Kanru City 5, Minncsot.~ 3

Today's games

C!£VELAND (MCSI 9-9) 11 T&lt;m&gt;nw
(Het1tgen 1~ 7), 12:3.5 ~. m .
Sotnlo (Lcsry 1-.5) at Detroit (Gul-

lickson 10-6), I :3.5 p.m.
Ctlifomia (lAngston 12-6) at Baltimare (Muuint 12-4), 7:35p.m.
Oa.ll:land (Wiu 9-11) at Mil wau.tec
(Eidm! 13-12), 1'05 p.m.
New Ya.:i. (]e&amp;n. 1·0) at Chicago (Fernandez 1.5-6}, 8:3.5 p.m.
Bo1ton (Qu antrill .5· 7 ) I t T e :us

(O..F 1-l ). l :llp.m.
Minncs«a (Erickson 7-15) at Klnlu

City (Gordooll-4), 8:3.5 p.m.

Thursday's games
Californ ia (Leftwich 1-3) at Baltimore (McDonald 9·11),12:3.5 p.m.
Oakland (Mohler 1-4) at M.ilwaulcec
( Minndo 2-3), 2:0l p.m.
, New Yodl (Hitch~k 0-0 or Wickman I 0-4) at CLEVELAND (Ojeda 0.1).
7:05 p.m.
·
BOlton (Viola S-1) It Teu1 (Brown
I 0-9), 8:3.5 p.m.
MinnCSOII (Banb &amp;·I) at Kan.as City
(MagnanI.e 0-1), 8:3.5 p.m.
To ront o (St ewa r t IJ-1 ) at Seatt le

(loh.nsm 13-S), 10:0.5 p.m.

- * Transactions • BasehoR
AmerlcoltiMilM
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Optioned
Jeff Tackeu, catcher, to RochCII\a of the
lnlem1tional Lot'au.e. Activucd Chris
Hoila , calcllcr, !torn lhe 15-day disabled

liltNttlonaJiaaue

ATLANTA BRAVES : Ploood lleim
S ande~ . outficlder, on the 1S- dat.t ~
1
abled list, rcuc.Clin t.o Aua. Zl.
up Tony Taruco, CJJt.ficldcr, from Richmond or lhe International Lc.apo.
.

KANSAS CITY CIUEPS: Wuvecl
Mike Evan~, William Kilbcy tad Troy
Rid1ley, defensin linemen; Tallaua
Lowia, Morris Lolar, Oary Dandridfe,

Tim Hill and O.rlel Phum~, daf...,ve
ba~s;

Tony

John Eulo. offcnAn

linomu~

Hatfain, Jeff Jma~ and Man O.y,

wide. recCJ.ven; Chip HWeuy, quii'ICl'bact: alld Vince Marrow, ti1ht end.
Plocod Chriation Oltoye, w.. ll«tdor ond
Trevor Cobb, NnniDJ bl:cks, ud CluU

•

Thome, oerMI'' (1ft iajlnd J'OICir\IC,
LOS ANGELES RAMS:' Wai.ed
Jamie Mutin, quanerbaek; Regie
Moore, Phillip Babo and L)'lln Jame.,
wide rocciven; Jay Barry and Kalclph
Cuter, runnina bacb; Brian Town~e,~d,
Malcolm Goodwin and Carlton Mila~,
u t ±crt~; Jd'l' Cwnmirw, d.t.-iv. IDd;
ShiWII H~rper, offenrive surd; Don.
Brackm., punt.cr; uu1 Mite Pie!. det.Wve ·
lllalc.. Pli.c:ed. Maa Tanuvua, dlt~n~ive
uctJc,. em injured tiHIW. A~ Sam
Gmddy, wide receiver, from the r... Anaele~ Raiders for a eondition.al drat\
choice. Ac:Qvr~ Bill Hlwkinl, dciMiive

....

LOS ANGELES RAIDERS : Tlldod

Dtvid JmN. tiaht end, to the Cleveland
Brawn• for a conditional draft pick .
Plaald Elaaon RidJic,. del-ivolinwnan,
on injurod ftiiCIVO. Waived Aathm\y Bdl,
Olen Youna. A.J. Jimersoa and Brian

'"""- lincbocken: Tim ltolhor, 8111 ld-

rcnon

and VlftCIIIII. Smith, off-.i.Ye liDomen; John Morten, wide rw*vor; Randy
lo.l10, N1V1ins bock; Akili Colhoun, Jan

Baker, Joe Cupe.rs and Alberto White.
defensive linemen; and Ccny Bnbham,
Brion Addilon, llutat BUller ond DauU
Jobnaon, defemive bleb.

MIAMI OOLPIDNS:Wuved -~
Harden, ufoty; Huey Richtrdson,
!in+•cker; RGMie Bmd!ord, ~ck;

llld Cedrio Stnitb, titllllodt.

MINNESOTA VJKINOS: Wai.-ed
Trlpp Welborne, nf•'Y· and Richard
loneo,punt«.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS : WuYed
Rich AndJOWI, placcUckcr; Eric Blount,
Pete Shv£ah 1n.d Tam ME:M•nu1,
linebilc:i.en ; Mike Brennu, offen1ivo
lineman; U:rnl Byrd, comerba'*; Rick
DoUy and Lunar Salley, dofenlive ends;
Oil Fenerty, Nmiat; bact; Jm }Wd.,...
ich tDd Jon IWtMy, defon.ive ucklM;
J.J . McCicrkey, wide receivoi; Sh&amp;De
Pahuku., ufoty, Mike S&amp;eiJP, ~ala;
utd Kevin
quonedloct. Plocod
Vaufut Dunbar, Nnnin&amp; be.ct; Sammy
Martin, wid.
tnd Royoo Ntllon,
pud, on in;rid ~
NllW YORII: GlANI'S: WU.ed Todd
- - · plo"*kttr. , . _ - l'lo..._ dcfauive ....t, oacl Midtoel Wri&amp;fi~
cornerback, m tho wai.-ocl-injureillilt.

v_,._

.-ver.

PHOENIX CARDINALS : Plocc4
Rob Bu.loy, offonsin t.ckle, Ooor1e
S.U.~, ~ boct, 1&gt;1 injtnd ,_..L
Rcoched U1 lnJWY .......... with 1\eitb
Pronklin, . . . _.

pull within 51!2games oftheNL record set in 1979 as Chicago beat advantage of a sloppy Montreal for the victory.
West-leading San Francisco GianiS Montreal at Olympic Stadium. Der· defense.
Chicago scored twice in the flfth
with 6-4 victory in a clay game.
Dan
Plesac
(
1-1},
the
fo
urth
against
starter Ken Hill (7-5) to
rick May scored twice, including
It was the closest the Braves the go-ahead run, as the Cubs took Chicago pitcher, tossed one inning take the lead.
have been to the lead since June 8,
and the win gave them the chance
to be the first team to sweep the
Giants this season.
The Braves won for the 13th
time in 15 games despite a seventhinning, two-run shot by Robby
Thompson, who homered in his
flfth comlecutive game.
Tom Glavine (15-5) gave up
three I)IRS, one earned, and nine
hits in seven innings. Bryan Hickerson dropped to 6-5..
.
Dodgers 13, Pirates 4
At Los Angeles in a night game,
Eric Karros hit two three-run
homers and Pittsburgh manager
Jim Leyland sparked a bench--clearing brawl in the third inning when
he went after Winner Kevin Gross
as Los Angeles beat the Pirates 13- , . ,
4 for their sixth straight victory.
Gross hit rookie Kevin Young
with an 0-2 pitch leading off the
third inning: Leyland .exchanged
words with Gross and ~barged the ·
Dodger pitcher as both dugouiS and
bullpens emptied.
Bob Walk (8-12) retaliated with
in the bottom of the inning by
plunking the Dodgers starter in the
left leg with his fust pitch.
"I don't wllfltto talk about it,"
of Tuesday night's National League 11ame in
TIDRD - Cincinnati's Jeff BranLeyland said. "I only have one sonSTEALS
New York's Sbea Stadium, where tbe Mets won
does a belly-Oop slide Into third base
comment: Just lodk at the tape of for a(right)
S-4.(AP)
.
.
steal before the tag by New Y ark
the pilch 1hat hit Kevin Young. It third successful
baseman Bobby BonUla in the third Inning
hit him right on the base of the
neck. I have ·no qualms with any·
body. Just look at the 1ape. You
guys make your own conclusions.''
· Phlllies 4, Rockies 2
Danny Jackson became the fifth
Philadelphia starter to win 10 or
more games this season, pitching 7
2/3 strong innings to help the
Phillies beat visiting Colorado.
By DICK BRINSTER
"The thing that makes this par- said the linebacker was cut because
Jackson (10-9) gave up one run
When the run-oriented Kansas ticularly difficul.t is w.h~n it of the team's changing defensive
. and four. hits. Mitch Williams got City Chiefs acquired Joe Montana, involves a person like Chrisuan. I philosophy.
"In our style of defense, we
lhe lasl three outs for his 36th save. the iilea was to junk the power don't know when I've been associneed
more cover linebackers, and
Astros 4, Marlins ~
game for a more diversified ated with an ~dividual that I've
less
linebackers,"
Wyche said, nqt·
c::;reg Swi~de~l (10-9) sttuc~ out offense. ·
had more fondness for as a pef!ion.
ing
most
of
Tampa
Bay's op~­
10 m seven mmngs and combmed
That, and a knee injury, helped
"But you have to make tough
with two reliever.; on a six-hiner as lead to the departure of Christian decisions 'sometimes. You make nents this season use three w1de
Houston beat Fl.orida at Miami. Okoye, the team 's career rushing decisions that affect people's Jives. receivers. "I have nothing but good
Craig Biggio hit a three-run homer leader .. He was placed on injured Butsilmelimes you don't make the thin~&amp; to say about Keith. It just
for Ho~ton.
, reserve Tuesday.
right ones. You have to do what didn t work ouL"
At 6-foot-3 and 265 pounds,
Flonda starter Jack Armsttong
The 260-pound Nigerian may you think is right."
McCants
simply lacks the quick·
fell to 7-13.
Okoye staned only flve games
have played his last game for the
ness
to
cover
the pass.
Cubs 6, Expos 5
Chiefs, wl!o not only have Montana last season, when he had a careerMany
thought
McCants, who
Randy _Myers saved h~s 37th but are going to a San Francisco" low 448 yards, which brought him
starred
at
Alabama,
would be the
game to t1e Bruce Sutter s club type offense based on short passes (o a career total of 4,897.
fii'St
player
selected
in
1990. But he
In olher NFL news Tuesday,
and slashing, runs rather than the
slipped
·to
No.
4
amid
reports he
buD-like rusbes of Okoye.
Keith McCants became remem.
"This offense is. geared to a dif- bered by Tampa Bay fans as anoth- had a suspect knee.
Drew
Bledsoe,
No.
I
pick
in the
ferent style," coach Marty Schot- er in a growing list of ftrst-round
NFL
draft.
appears
on
the
verge
of
tenheimer said. "We're headed in a flops.
, becoming the No. 1 quarterback of
different direction and we have to
Bucs coach Sam Wyche didn I
be concerned with the guys who
say the team's top 1990 pick was the New England Patriots. But
are with us right now.
being waived for poor play. Wyche coach Bill Parcells rettacted a pre(See CAMPS on Page 6)
·
Republic, was roughed up early in victory i; 13 innings, got crazy
his fourth career start. He lasted after nine innings.
A brawl broke out in the nightjust 2 1/3 innings, giving up seven
cap
after Milwaukee rallied with
·runs on seven hits and three walks.
· "He threw too many pitches two runs in the ninth to tie the
over. the plate," Indians manager game 6-6. Reliever Dennis EckersMike Hargrove said. "You don't ley and manager Tony La Russa
throw than many pitches down the were ejected for arguing with
middle of the plate and not get hun home-plate umpire Dale Scott, and
the commotion drew Brewers managainst a team like Toronto."
Molitor put the Blue Jays up 8-3 ager Phil Gamer out of the dugout.
''I don't like to be critical, but
with a run-scoring single in the
to
be
honest, I wish he (Garner)
fifth.
Reggie· Jefferson singled to wouldn't have come out. We felt"
score Belle and Alornar doubled in we had it resolved," said umpire
Jefferson to lrim ·the Blue Jays lead Dave Phillips, the crew chief.
Gamer exchanged words with
to 8-5 in the sixth.
Elsewhere in the AL it was Mil- La, Russa as both benches emptied.
waukee 9, Oakland 2 and Milwau- Oakland's Troy Nee! tackled Dickkee 7, Oakland 6 in 13 innings in a ie Thon, sparking several fights.
doubleheader; Dettoit 4, Seattle I; The biggest blow was struck by
Baltimore I, California 0; Chicago Oakland's' Edwin Nunez, who
4, New York 2; Te!tliS 4, Boston 3; bloodied BJ. Surhoff with a punch.
The game was delayed for 25 minand Kansas City 5, Minnesota 3.
Brewers sweep A's in DH
utes.
The extta innings feature4 pitchThe Oakland Athletics are in
last place in the AL West and the . er Ricky Bones, the winner of the
Milwaukee Brewers are last in the opener, playing right field and
East. That doesn't mean eith er pitcher Matt Maysey delivering a
team is playing out lhe season key hit in his first major-league atbaL
·
without a flght.
In the 13th, the Brewers loaded
The teams played 17 1/2 relatively uneventful innings Tuesday 1he bases on a one-out single by
night before things started happen- Kevin Reimer and two-out singles
ing to make the doubleheader a by Maysey (1-1) and Listach. Dave
Nilsson then sliced a J-{) pitch from
memorable one.
Milwaukee won the opener 9-2. Kelly Downs 0-9) down the leftThe second game, a 7-6 Brewers field line, scorin)l Reimer.

On NFL camp scene,

Okoye's injury reinforces Chiefs'
dedication to diversified offense

:W ard gets 38th save at Indians'
expense to help ~~Blue J~ys- win .

Nicholl, w:kle. on iD.hnd __....,
CINCINNATI BHNOALS: Claimed
Brian Stablcin. wide receiver, d.f waina
fmn diG Denver BI'GilCCII. Jllac:CIII Elhart
Twner, wide m:civer, em in.iund n!IIOrWL
CLEVELAND BROWNS: ·Wu•c4
Huiln Jon• and K.cny Fanell. wide r.

Philacfelphil4, Coh:ndo 2

.

NEW YORK (AP) - Jeff Luebbenwiththehelpofaf~elding
McKnight was one of the few enor by first baseman Hal Morris.
heroes in a game filled with goats.
Joe Orsulak doubled, moved to
McKnight led off the ninth third on an infield out and scored
inning with li triple and scored on when Morris threw _wildly after
Kevin Wickander' s wild pitch to fielding Eddie Murray's grounder.
give the New York Mets a 5-4 vicWith Murray on second, BoniUa
connected for his 28th homer of the
tory over the Cincinnati Reds.
Wickander's miscue was a fit· season.
tirig end to a game which both
Tim Costo made it 3-1 in the
teams seemed deperate 11&gt; lose.
second with his first homer this
"I gave him a cutter, I cut it 'a seltson and Tanana let Jeff Branson
little bit too much, " Wickander score the second run o.n a wild
- said of his wild pitch to pinch-hitter pitch in the third inning.
Todd Hundley. "He's just sitting
Tanana escilped a bases loaded
right up on the plate. I didn't want jam in the fifth and then retired the
to give him anything out over the last seven hitters he faced before
plate. A sacrifice fly . and the Jeff Innis relieved to start the
game's over,too."
eighth. ·
Cincinnati took advantage of a
Elsewhere in the NL it was San
bizarre series of MeiS mistakes to Diego 17, St. Louis 4; Atlanta 6,
score twice in the top of the inning San Francisco 4; Los Angeles 13,
and tie the score 4-4.
Pinsburgh 4; Philadelphia 4, Col. R,eliever Jeff Innis walked Reg- orado 2; Houston 4, Florida 0; and
gie Sanders on four slrliight pitches Chicago 6, Montreal 5.
10 stan the ninth before shortstop
Padres 17, Cardinals 4
Keven Baez booted a routine douFor one game, anyway, the San
ble-play grounder. Then third blise- Diego Padres didn'tlcok so bad.
man Bobby Bonilla failed to oover
The Padres scored 13 runs in the
third on a double· steal, and Mike fir st inning a~ainst visiting St.
Maddux balked in the Reds' first Louis and went on for a 17-4 victorun.
ry Tuesday night.
.
· "Somehow we won it, it was
The 48-78-Padres, tied for last
ugly," manager Dallas Green said. in the NL West with Colorado, sent
"Actually, McKnight won it for us. the Cardinals to their fifth sttaight
Every time we ask him to gel a big' loss and dropped them 10 games
pinch hit he does. He's been a plea- behind first-place Philadelphia in
sure."
the NL EaSt. SL Louis has lost nine
Reds manager Davey Johnson of 13; and is 0-5 at Jack Murphy
saw a very small sliver of silver Stadium this season.
lining in the cloud of defeaL The
Tim Teufel, Phil Plantier, Phil
ninth-inning rally kept MeiS starter Clark, Archi Cianfrocco and Bmd
Frank Tanana from yet another vic- Ausmus hit homers for \he Padres
tory againsl his team.
•
. to match a club record. The Padres
"He's been tough. At least, he also bit five homers against St.
didn't beat us four times," Johnson Louis on Aprill8, a 10-6 victory.
said.
"I wouldn't say it was a managTanana is 3-{) against the Reds er's dream," San Diego skipper
this season and left Tuesday night's Jim Riggleman said. "It far
game with a 3-2 lead through seven exceeded any dreams a manager
innings. He allowed only three hits· mi$ht have about putting together
and two walks, but Maddux (2-6) an mning."
•
was credited with the win despite
Clark drove in four runs, includallowing two runs.
ing three in the first inning, Teufel
Jerry Spradlin (2-1) started the drove in three and Plantier hit a
ninth for the Reds and allowed three-run homer.
McKnight's one-out pinch triple. It
Padres staner Andy Ashby (2-7)
was McKnight's 15th hit in 48 allowed two runs and five hits in
pinch-hit at-bats, a .313 average.
seven innings. Allen Watson, fell to
"Pinch hining is a tough job but 6-l,lasting two-~it seems to be my role here. I've
llraves 6, G1ants 4
At Candlestick Park, Terry
learned to accept it. You become
accustomed to it," McKnight said. Pendleton's two-run homer and a
New York jumped to a 3.0 lead strong pefformance by Tom
in the first off Reds staner Larry Glavine helped the Atl;lnta Bmves

Scoreboard
- • Baseball • -

The Dally sentlnei-Page-5

Wickander's wild tos~ aids M_ets in gaining 5-4 victory over Reds

California, New Hampshire nines
head to LLWS American semis

Tum

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·· Wednesday, August 25, 1993

The

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But with one run alieady m on
Carlos Baerga's RBI single, Ward
, got Belle to·ground into a double
play to end the game.
• "You'd figure with the way this
club has been winning over the.last
• five or six years, the record would
.have been higher than 34," Ward
·conceded.
: Darnell Coles hit a three-run
:homer and Joe Carter added a two·run shot, his flfth homer· in the last
:three games, to propel the Blue
:Jays offerisc.
.
· Caner, who hit three homers in-'
:Monday's 9-8 loss to the Indians
~and one in Sunday's 12-7 win ovl?"
-the Mariners, followed Paul Mobtor's run-scoring groundout in the
first with his 28th home run of the
·season to make It 3-{) Toronto.
. Paul Sorrento hit his 17th homer
in the second to cui tho lead to 3-1.
• Learn a new skill
:The Jrldians pulled even in the third
• Increase your tax knowledge
when Sandy Alomar, who tied a
• Convenient times &amp; locations
. career high with four hits, singled
and later scored on Todd Stottle;myre's wild pitch. Belle followed
·with a run-scoring single.
Coles followed a RBI single by
:John Olerud and a walk to Tony
,.
•Contact our nearest oHice. ~ • • • • • • .fcmandez with his fourth homer, a
information about your tax return preparation course.
three-run shot for a ·7-3 Blue Jays I Please send me free
.
.
lead.
1 Name - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- - • •'I just got a pitch over the plate
that I could handle," Coles said. ·I Address - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - ·'"It was a big hit that gave us a II City - - - - - - - - - State - - - Zip _ _ _
much-needed lift."
Stottlemyre (7-9) gave up five I Phone -----~------,,---~---=--=-=runs on seven hits in 5 1/3 innings.
He struck out three and walked
618 E. MAIN STREET
. two.
Julian Tavarez (2-2), a 20-yearPOMEROY, OH. 45769
old rookie from the Dominican

-H&amp;R BLOCit

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.•

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�j

Sentinel

1993

Ohio

VVednesday, August25,1993

-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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MIKE BARTRUM

Chiefs' Bartrum
survives NFL cut
to 60 players

Tyson Holly Farms Fresh

Meigs ~igh graduate Mike
Barltlim came one step closer to
fulfilling a lifetime dream of making the Kansas City &lt;;:hiefs by surviving the NFL cut to 60 players on
Tuesday.
All NFL teams bad to have their
rosters cut to 60 players, they must
cut their rosters down to 47 players
by Monday, Aug. 30. The final 47
players will make the opening
weekend roster. The Chiefs open
the regular season on Sept. 5 at
Tampa Bay.
Banrum has seen action in all
three preseason games. He played
the most of the second half in the
first two games along with most of
the special teams. Last Saturday he
played on the special teams. In the
game against Buffalo on national
televisiOn, Chiefs head coach
Marly Schoitenheimer ivas quoted
as saying that Banrum bad the best
set of hands of anyone in camp.
Kansas City will travel to New
England s·aturday to battle the
Patriots. That game will put
Bartrum up against his former Marshall teammate Troy Brown, who
also survived the cut on Tuesday.
One former area university plilyer who dido 't fare as well was exOhio University defensive end
Jason Carlhen. Carlhen was cut on
Tuesday by Buffalo.

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NFL camps ...
(Continued from Page 5)
vious statement that the starter in
final preseason game - Friday
night against Kansas City- would
open the season Sept. 5 at Buffalo.
" I reserve the right to change
my mind," said Parcells, who will
start Bledsoe against the Chiefs.
Bledsoe has completed 28 of 52
passes for 323 yards and three
touchdowns in three exhibitions.
The Washington State rookie
played the entire game Friday
against Green Bay, completmg 19
of 29 for 245 yards and two touchdowns in a 21- 17 victory.
·
Saints
Running back Vaughn Dunbar,
New Orleans' top choice in 1992,
was placed on injured reserve with
knee injury. Among those waived
was veteran running back Gil Fenerty.
Bills
Eleven-year veteran Keith
Willis and five-year man Chris
Hale were among 18 players
waived. The Bills also put wide
receiver AI Edwards, who injured a
shoulder in the preseason opener,
on injured reserve.
Bears
Guard Tom Thayer, one of
Chicago's few holdovers from its
1986 Super Bowl championship
team will miss the frrst six weeks
of th~ season with an ailing back.
He was placed on the injured
reserve after missing all of the preseason.
. Browns
Wide receiver Hassan Jones, a
starter with Minnesota for fiv e
years, was released. Jones signed
with the Browns as a free agent,
retired early during training camp,
then came back a few days later.
Giants
Veteran kicker Matt Bahr has
staved off another challenge. Todd
Peterson, a seventh -round draft
choice, was cut by New York.
Linebacker Corey Widm er
underwent arthroscopic knee
surgery. There was no immediate
word on how long he will be out.
Jets
Rookie punter Craig Hentrich
was released after losing his battle
to oust Louie Aguiar. New York
also said second-round draft pick
Coleman Rudolph will miss six to
eight weeks with a sprained knee
ligament
Raiders
The Raiders traded former
Olympic sprinter Sam Graddy to
the Rams and tight end David
Jones to Cleveland, for conditional
draft choices.
Graddy had been with the
Raiders for five seasons as a wide
receiver and kick returner. Cut was
Anthony Bell a one-time No. I
pick of the Cardinals who was the
starting middle linebacker last year.
· Chargers
.
Safety Delton Hall was cut
because he failed his physical due
'to an Achilles' tendon injury .
Th ird-string quarterback Pat
·O'Hara and safety Anthony Shelton 'also were amo ng 15 players
waived.

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�Page

8 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 25, 1993 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS ABOUT
MANUFACTURER'S

WED.
AUG.

THURS.
AUG.

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By The Bend
. Dear Reil~Mrs: I am 011 WICOUoll,
bKI f luzve left behlllli IOIIW of
lft'J fawJiile co/11111111 111111 )'OIIIIIIZY
lttiiiC missed Ute first time .aroWNL I
hope 'JON e11joy tlle~r~ . ·- A1111
Laltders
Dear Au I •"11e.,.: I have ~
manied for 10 ye~n 10 a man I low
and bUsied. My b.usband's sisler was
the maid of honor at my wAding
She has been 1 dear friend all these
years. Somclhing happaled recendy,
lllld I don't 1mow what to do.
Lui week, I found lipstick on my
husband's lhirL I confronted him
widl the evidence in 1 quiet, calm
lll8liiiCl" aflcr the children went 10
sleep. He llrt£ down 8lld confessed
that he had been having .. affair
widl a woman aldie olf'ace for fiw

Quarters

.months.

MR. AND MRS. TONY SHOEMAKER
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Lambert. The matron, the maid of
honor, and the bridesmaid wore
Iii~ satin dresses with lace covered
sleeves. Their bouquets were white
and lilac flowers.
Best men were Marty Hart and
Mike Ebling and usher was Greg
Heath. The ringbearer was Andrew
Frazier. The groom wore a black
tuxedo with a lilac cummerbund.
The best man and ushers wore
black tuxedos with lilac cummerbunds. The ringbearer alsf&gt; :wore a
bluck tuxedo with a lilac cummerbund and carried a white laCe pillow.
A reception was held at the
Kyger Creek Employees Club in
Cheshire. The brides table featured
a lilac and white lhrM tiered cake
surrounded with four side cakes
and water fountains. The theme
was "I Love The Way You Love

Me...

The couple resides in Florida.

,•

HOME BEST

: ·~ p -

Mowery-Shoemaker

Colena Mowery and Tony Shoe-.
maker were united in marriage
June 12 at Victory Baptist Church
in Middleport.
Rev. James Keesee offiCiated at
the ceremony with music provided
by Ron Oprlmger. Tracy Collins
n;gislered the guests.
The bride is the daughter of
Roger Mowery and Gem Hanel of
Pomeroy. The groom is the son of
f;.ester and Viola Shoemaker. Fla.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a white satin
gown with a high lace neckline,
braided bodice and long tapered
sleeves. The cathedral train featured beadr.d lace trimmed cutouts.
The bride a fingertip len$.th veil
and carried a bouquet of lilac and
white flowers'.
· ·• The malron of honor waS Brendll Ebling. Maid of honor was Terri
Yeauger and bridesmaid w&amp;S Karen

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HENRY BAKER

50th anniversary celebrated

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Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bahr, Mr. and

Mrs. Kenneth (Jackie) Hartung, Pat
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Mr. and Mrs. Dave (Jeanne) Baker,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert (Tammi) Barber, Mr. and Mrs. Tim (Terri) Bar·
tee, Jim B ahr and Randy Bahr.
They also have 15 grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.
A reception and fellowship will
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75th anniversary celebrated

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We Fie.... the Right Ill Urnlt quMIIIIee • Prlcee Ellecll.. Thru let., Aug. 28, 1tlt3 • USDA Food Slltmpe end W1C Caupona Accepted, Not Reeponllblelor ~pogtllphiQI or Plclorlel ErroN

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appear two days before au event
and the day ol that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure pubUcatlon In the calendar.

Ann

Landers

liW livea neamy; aad we Ill go out
togccher often. We alway• UIC our
car, although thein is jult u
c:omfortable. l(a always. "Whhl time
will you pick us up?"
My husband is tired of getting
stuck for pa. ~g feea, etc.,
while they get porUt-to-ponal
lranlpOrtalion. How C8ll we tum this
IIIOUnd without appearinc che8p? FREELIVERY
.,.

DBAR UV: Next lime say, "How
about picking US up far I cJwJae1"
The time after, ay, "'t's our tum 10
drive. • Iii this way. you will set on
111 allemating blsis. Far beUtz to
speak up- mnain silent and build
an ulcer.
All alcohol problem1 Huw C/111 )ION
help )10/ITM/for &amp;OtMOM )'OK /ow?
"Alcoholism: Huw to Recoglliu It,
How 10 Deal With It, Huw 10 Coli·
quer It" wiU give )ION the QIISWeTI.
Send a self-addrtswl, lo11g, bfui.
nus-me e11velope llllll a cited: or
mo~~ey order for $3.65 (this illcllllles
postage and llandlillg) ro: Alcollol,
c/o AM Ltutders, P.O. BoJC 11562,
Chicago, Ill. fiJ61UJ562 . (Ill Can·
ada, send $4.45.)

Community Calendar
Heart Catholic Church. Call 9925763 for infonnation.

R(\ST LETART· A free community immunization clinic will be
held at the East Letart United
. ' Methodist Church on Thursday
from 9-11 a.m. for children ages
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE • A tent revival two through kindergarten age. Par·
will be beld through Tuesday at 7 ents must bring child's immuniza·
p.m. near Eastern High School on lion records.
Route 7 . Rev. Joe Beasley, Fresh
RACINE • A free community
Oil Ministry, Vincent, will be minimmunization-clinic will be held at
istering. Special singing nightly.
the Racine Fire Department on
CHESTER • The Wildwood Thursday from 1-3:30 p.m. for
Garden Club will meet Wednesday children ages two through kinderat 7:30 p.m. 11 the home of Juanita garten age. Pare·nts must bring
child's immunization records.
Will

1.•.

RED LAKE FALLS, Minn. a two-week camp in northwestern
(AP) - The reading at Sl John's Minnesota where the Klingon lan·
Lutheran Church told the story of guage is lxjing taughl
the-Tower of Babel - in Klingon,
About 50 people attended Sun· ·
one tongue God didn't include day •s service. Proechel translated
when he confounded the languages. the Lord's Prayer and the Aposlles'
Klingons are the alien adver- Creed into Klingon.
saries of those on 1he "Star Trek" .
The tenn Holy Spirit presented
starship Enterprise. And they are a _problem, because Klingons aren't
imaginary, but that didn't stop Glen btg on holiness, nor spiritual
J1oechel from planning a Sunday things. So Proechel constructed the
service in "tlhlngan." the Klingon term "honorable alien" - or
"No'l Batlh," in Kling on - to
lan~e.
'Sometimes you have to use describe the third person of Chrisfiction to deal with the problems of tendom's Trinity.
real life," said Proechef, director of
Proechel also translated the

Millionaire teacher says
classroom gives normality

By ROBERT IMRIE
Associated Press Writer
FOND DU LAC, Wis. (AP) Some students wondered why he
dido 't quit. And he certainly
doesn't need the paycheck. The
winner of half of a record $111
Samuel F. and · Clara Wills Williams repaired lawn mowers million lottery jackpot went back to
Williams will celebrate their 75th unlit the fall of 1987.
work Tue~day as a junior high
wedding anniversary on Tuesday
She worked for 13 years as a teacher.
Aug. 24.
' cook at the Ohio University health
"In the halls, you hear congrat·
They were married at the Meigs center.
.
ulations, but otherwise I don't think
County Court House at Pomeroy
The couple has three chtldren, it's too different," said Leslie
on Aug. 24, 1918 by Judge Emery M: . . and Mrs. Wilbur (Reba) Robins.
.
Carlton. They were accompanied Wdhams, Columbus: Mrs. Glenn
Robins wore a colorful tie bearby their mothers.
(Evelyn) Goldsberry, Athens: and ing the cartoon characters Sylvester
According to an article from the Mr. and Mrs . Charles (Kay) the Cat and Tweety Bird.
Athens Messenger In 1988 the Williams, Burlingham. There are
"I don't wear a tie too often. I
couple courted for about two years. four gr~dchildren and seven great· wanted them to remember it," he
At the time ·he \vas 14 and she was grandchildren.
said.
1S when they met a meetins on
She still resides at her BurlingRobins said he felt comfortable
Bunlter Hill.
ham home . He resides at the . returning to Sabish Junior High for
After their marriage ceremony Extended Care Unit at Veterans his fourth year of teaching, couchthe couple was honored with a Memonal Hospttal.
ing and advising the school news·
belling.
·
Cards may be se~t to them: Sam paper.
They purchased his father'S an~ Clara Wtlhams, 412~0
"This will give me a sense of
dairy farm which they ran until ,Wtlliams Road, Shade, Ohto security. of normality until I decide
~961. FoU!!_w_ing his farming years,
45776.
what I would like to do in the
future," he said. "Ifl thought that
I was a bad teacher, obviouslr,. I
would give the job up or 1f I
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde DaviS, Rut- of service
thought
it was just a job I would
~. wiJ! celebrate their 45th wedThey aire the parents of Janet
ding anmversary on.W~y.
Miller and Jim Davis, both of Rut· give it up. But ... it is something I
They w~ mamed m Cum~- land, and the grandparents of Lisa enjoy doin~ tremendously.''
Robins 1s splitting his winnings
larid, Md., on Aug. 25, 1948. She IS Miller Athens and Derek Miller
the former Alice Keller. He is Rolland
'
' in the July 7 Powerball lottery with
his fiancee, Colleen De Vries, a 24·
retired from Conrail after 41 years
The open church wedding will
be given by their 10 children: Mr.
and Mrs. Richard (Kaye) Fick Jr.,

ICE CREAM
,

Mr. and Mrs. Henry (Eileen Pigon) Baker of Chester will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary at
3:30p.m. on Sawrday, by reaffirm.
ing their wedding vows at St.
Bethel New testament Church, Sil·
verRidge.
The couple eloped and were
married at Chesapeake on August ,

28, 1943.

HAGAN

·s

I asked hoW he lll8ll8&amp;l'd it Iince
he is home ew:ry nigbL He aid he
bad been seeing her during the
afternoon at his sister's lijliillll.:nl
She had a key made for him. (His
sisler wcrks from 8:00 tin S:OO.) My
·· husband says he iS glad I found out
because the guilt has been killing
him, and now he is through playing
around for good.

few years ago, we· practiced
walkin3 with boob on our heads,
Now I'm in the habit of walking with
my head high and lhouldcn pulled
1llr8ight back. I won a pos111re award
at camp that summer and am very
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Lao An&amp;&lt;Ia
proudoliL
nm.. Sflldkat•
This nice girl, who rm sure w.
trying 10 help me, said I ~ 11 if I
am trying 10 advertise myself. She
But what lbout my sister-in-law? suggested I carry 10111e books in
Am I WIOIIg to feel she w. no friend front of me - especially when I wear
to me? What should I do? •• TORN a tank tq&gt; or something tight. Wbal
DEAR TORN: She was certainly do you think of her advice? - TOO
no friend. By all means, have alalk MUCH OF A GOOD THING
· with her, and see if you can MAYBE
DEAR TOO MUCH: Some girls
re-establish your friendship on an
honest basis. If you are unable to do may not lilte the way you walk, but
110, it is llllllersll!ndalo. If you Clll, I doubt that this is your major
probleJII, People (both girls 111d
you are ·a super lady.
Dear ADD Landen: I'm 16, boys) respond to the way you ll'eal
blue-eyed and blonde, llid I just them - not the way you walk. If
bippeu 10 IIICISUie 40-22-36. 1 have you make a genuine effort 10 show
plcl)ty of lloyfrieods, but the gi$ at girls that you want them as friends,
school are very unfriendly. this they will warm up to you. ·
Now that you have already won
really bothers me.
l asked a very nice girl in my the (IOiturnward, maybe you don't
English class to tell me why the girls need to pull )our sboulders back
don't lilte me. She said, •tes the way qlllle 10 much, dear.
De.- AIIIII.Pnden: My husband
you walk. •
and
IIR 'If%'/ frienci.IY with a couple
When I went to summer camp a

people. Call 742-3013 or 742-2302 ·
LONG BOTTOM · Faith Full
to register.
Gospel Church, Long Bottom,
preaching and singing, Friday, 7 ·
POMEROY · Preceptor Beta p.m. with David Dailey and the
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi Dailey Family Singers. Pastor
Sorority, opening day luncheon Steve Reed inVItes the public. Felwill be Thursday. Meet at Clarice lowship follows.
Krautter's at 11 am. to depan for
Point of View.
SATURDAY
KANAUGA • The Liberty
GALLIPOLIS • Stroke support Mountaineers will perform at the
group, Holzer Medical Center cafe- DAV Center in Kanauga.
teria, Thursday fu)m 3-5 p.m. Call
446-5070 for information.
REEDSVILLE • There will be a
men's softball tournament sponPOMEROY · Free clothing day sored by the Tuppers Plains Basewill be held at the Salvation Army ball and Softball Association at
in Pomeroy Thursday from 10 am. Eastern High School on Saturday
to noon. All area· residents are wel- and Sunday. The cost is $6S and
two balls. Team trophies for first,
come.
second and third and individual trophies for first and second. Calf
FRIDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA. · The Liberty Roger Willford Jr. at 667-3653 or
Mountaineers will perform Friday Dan Spencer at667-3342.
~t Slcateland in Ripley, W.Va.
CHESHIRE - Descendants of
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers ·Bertha and James Cremeans will
Plains VFW Post No. 90S3 will hold their family reunion Saturday
hold a dance Friday at thepost at Kyger Creek Club House. Din•
home from 8-11 :30 p.m. with ner will be at 2 p.m.
music by CJ and the County GenPOMEROY • Belles and Beaus
llemen. Everyone welcome.
Western Square Dance Club will
BASHAN • Ice cream social, hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
Bashan Firehouse, Friday at 5 p.m. p.m. at the,senior citizens center in
Hotdogs, sloppy joes, hot sausages, Pomeroy. John Waugh will be the
pies, pop, coffee, 11 flavors of ice caller. Public invited. Refreshcream. Specks of Bluegrass will ments.
entenain.

Churchgoers worship in Kling on

WESTOVER SOUR CREAM 16 oz. 99'

DIET OR REG.

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Orange PLASTIC
Juice %GAL'

Wednesday, August 25, 1993
Pag. 9

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
MIDDLEPORT • American
a
round
and square wince at the
Legion Feeney Bennett Post No.
American
Legion Annex in Mid128 will meet Wednesday at 7:30
dleport
on
Thursday from 8-11
p.m. Dinner will be a t 6 p.m.
p.m. with music by CJ and the
There will be a guest speaker. ·
County Gentlemen. Cost is $2 sinTHURSDAY
gle, $3 couple. Public invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
RACINE. The Racine Ameriwill meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. can Legion Auxiliary will hold its
Dinner will be at 7 p.m.
family P.icnic Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Star Mill Park. In case of rain the:
POMEROY • The board of picnic will be at the poSt home.
trustees ·Of the Meigs County Pub·
HARRISONVILLE • Scipio
lic Library will meet Thursday at I
Volunteer Fire Department will
p.m.
hold a hunter safe}Y course Thurs·
day
through Satuiday from 6-9:30
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AIAnon will p.m. at the fire ~ent in Harmeet Thursday at 7 p,m._at. Sacred risonville. Class 1s limited to SO

(

SEALTESI

Sentinel

Relative discovered as other woman

Chicken Leg

Smoked
·sausage

D~ily

~

TYSON • HOLLY FARMS
TRAY PACK

MT. TURKEY

The

,·

year-old nurse. They haven't set a
wedding date. They are creating a
foundation to manage their wealth,
which will be paid to them over the
next 20 years.
He intends to donate his pay
buck to the school.
"I am not working for the
salary, obviously," Robins said.
Deanna Pino, 14,. said she
expected Robins to quit.
"I would have left the state
because people know me and
would want my money. I would
probablr retire for life.··
•'He s just an ordinary guy with
a whole bunch of money." said
Aimee Becker, 12. "From what I
see, he just stillucts the way he did.
He doesn't act lilce a rich snob."

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

hymn "A Mighry Fortress is Our
God.''
And there was the story of the
Tower of Babel, when God prevented Noah's descendants from
building a tower to heaven by con-,
fusing languages; and the story of
tongues of fire coming down on the
heads of the apostles as they spoke
in other languages.
Klingons spoke English in the
original "Star Trek" television
series, but for the movie "Star
Trek III" in the mid-1980s, producers decided Klingons needed
their own language. The result is

"as unlike any language we know
on Earth as possible," said
Proechel, a Spanish instructor at
the University of Minnesota at
Crookston.
The Rev. Roger Rae bel, the
church's pastor who played organ
at the Klingon sezvice, was pleased
with the evenL
"I think it flowed very solemnly. It was a worship service," he
said. "As the church, we have to
learn to speak the lariguage of the
children with the Gospel of
Chrisl"

MOTHERS

PROFESSIONAL
PORTRAITS
I&lt;ODAI( PAPER
W1ll not '&gt;1 11 I\

•n l.ult•

REG . PRICE $14.95

NOW

$6.95
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INSUUNCE
Ill Secon• St., Po11eroy '
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

REGISTER 10 WIN
FREE. CHECK WIIH PHOTOGRAPHER
FRI., AUG. 27 - 10:00·7
FOODLAN~POMEROY

�'

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

List of TV's
weekly ratings

An "X" in JM~rentheses denotes
. one-time-only presentation. A rating measures the percentage of the
nation's 93.1 million TV homes.
Each ratings point represents
931,000 households.
I. (I) "60 Minutes," CBS ,
15.0, 14.0 million homes

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
IAM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROl OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTinES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, AUG. 28, 1993

3. "Dateline NBC," NBC, 14.0,
13.0 million homes

VanMeter returns from Japan
Navy Petty Officer John F. Van
Meter, son of Lester and Lera Van
Meter of Clifton, will return home
next month from a three-year tour
of duty in Japan.
His duties included preventive
and corrective. maintenance of
deployable da~ ~r05'essin~ equip-

ment, automauc mrormauon systems and ancillary equipment for
an airborne cryptologic communications detachment.
Van Meter and his fainily will
transfer to the National Security
Agency at Fort Meade, Md.

LAKE. BUENA VISTA, Fla.
Princess Diana and her
two sons went from the United
Kingdom to the Magic Kingdom
for a three-day visit to Walt Disney
World.
The princess and sons William,
11. and Hany, 8, anived Tuesday,
slipping through a back entrance to
the Grand Floridian Resort luxurr.
hotel, which is connected by rail
and commurer boats to the park.
The princess ~uested a ''lowkey" vacali.on, Brittsh sources said,
and Disney officials planned no
pu'blic appearances or activities.
Disney accommodates visiting
dignitaries by arranging for them to
enrer atlri!Cuons by side enttanccs
or by cutting in front of the usual
long lines.

12 PAK
12 OZ. CANS

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
24 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

4, (14) "PrimeTime Live,"
ABC, 13.5, 12.6 million homes
5. (12) "20-20," ABC, 13.3,
12.4 million homes
6. "Now With Tom and Katie,"
NBC, 12.3, 11.5 million homes
7. (15) "Seinfeld," NBC, 12.0,
11.2 million homes
8. (2) "Roseanne," ABC, 11.8,
11.0 million homes
.8. (20) "Unsolved Mysteries,"
NBC, U.S, ll.O million homes
10. (9) "Highway Heartbreaker" - "CBS Sunday Movie,"
11.7, 10.9 million homes
10. "Ned Blessing," CBS, 11.7,
10.9 million homes.

s

O'Brien-Papalios

99

lter'Shannon
Leigh O'Brien, daughof Pam O'Brien of Dayton, and

1

:Theodore Constantine Papalios,
• son of Mr. and Mrs. Gust Papalios
; of Huber Heights, were united in
:marriage, May 8, 1993 in a formal
• ceremony at the Annunciation
1Greek Orthodox Church, Dayton.
'! The bride is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James O'Brien of
j Pomeroy.
' Father Chris Hadgageorge offi: ciated at the double ring ceremony.
! The bride was escorted to the altar
! by her grandfather. She was attired
• in a Victorian style gown of white
taffeta and pearls y;ith an eight foot
beaded chapel train. She carried a
, bouquet of white roses.
; Clair Messmann, friend of the
• bnde, served as maid of honor.
:other attendants were Peggy Har: ris, aunt of the bride; Joy O'Brien,
•cousin of the bride; Maria Keilbalso, sister of the .groom; Christina
:Boyer, sister of the groom; and Jes!sica Papalios, niece of the groom .
:The attendants wore iridescent
.blue-black taffeta gowns. Each car:ried a bouquet of white and pink
troses. Erin Harris, cousin of the
r
.
'

12 PK.
12 OZ. CANS

1
RUMP ROAST•••••i!·•• .

$ 59

'
l

KRAFT

MATH WORKSHOP HELD - Participants
in the recently conducted K-6 Math Workshop
were, from left, Joni Jeffers (Pomeroy Elementary), Jan Norris (Raci!le Elementary), Donna
Sayre (Racine Elementary), Wilma Parker
(Chester Elementary) and Pam Crow (Salisbury

BBQ
SAUCE
18 oz.

Elementary). Tbirty-fivt teachers participated
in the workshop during which they focused on
cooperative learning strategies and problem
solving, geoboards and tangrams and probabiU·
ty, attribute blocks and geometric figures.

(

Clinton's vacation chance
to 'give his brain a rest'
By NANCY BENAC
Associated Press Writer
EDGARTOWN, Mass. (AP) The headlines are relentless: more
bloodshed in Bosnia, the Jcilling of
Americans in Somalia, and Russia
and Lithuania once again at logger·
heads. Not to mention the latest
embarrassments for the U.S. space
program.
On and on the world turns,
sending a never-ending stream of
crises to the threshold of the White
House. Plenty to ponder.
And, perhaps, all the more rea·
son for the still-new president to
take some lime off. Time to think,
or just as important, not to think.
''' One of lhe things you miss in
the minute-to-minute life in Wash·
ington is time to reflect ," says
Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers.
"One of the thing a va ca tion
allows you is lime to think ... but I
think he's trying to g1ve his bram a
rest "
Historian and Pulitzer Prize·

20 LB.
P-•A•A•A•AP•••••~A·A·A·~

1:

::
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11
11

RE
AWARD - Elizabeth Downie, middle, 18,. or
Pomeroy received the $1000 Bea Cleveland Scholarship during the
annual 4·H Recognition Luncheon, August 9 at the Ohio State
Fair. Bob Moser, left, vice president for agriculture at Ohio State
University, and Bea Cleveland, right, presented the award.
.

Vision screenings to be conducted
A free vision screening will be

Howard Greene, M.D., Opthal·
available to Meigs County senior mologist, and Dr. N. Bozkir, will
citizens.
conduct the screenings. He will
The screeni ng, sponsored by check vision, check for glaucoma
Holzer Ctinic, will be held Septem- and screen for cataracts.
ber 23 from 9:30 a.m.-2:30p.m. at
The screening will take approx ithe Meigs County Nutrition Center, mately ten minutes.
Middleport.

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Governor gets
back on track
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)- A
physical therapist is helping Gov.
Raben P. Casey stretch and exercise as the governor recuperates
from transplant surgery that gave
him a new heart and liver in June.
Kenneth Lennington has been
meeting with Casey three times a
week to help him regain strength,
stamina, and flexibility.
"I think he's doing fantastic ...
truly amazing," Lennington said.
"He's been able to more than double his endurance on the bicycle,
and we've walked up to a quanermile."
Lennington said the governor
still is battling the lingering effects
of the genetic disease that wasted
his heart and liver.
I
"He really hasn't been able to
do anything in the way of exercise
since 1990 because of the amyloidosis," Lennington said. "So
we're really fighting about three
years of physical inactivity.''
Casey said he hopes to return to
_ office soon, although he gave no
specific date. Last week, tests
found no signs that his bodr is
rejecting his new heart. His ltver
also is worlcing fine, doctors said.

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'

ARGO

, You ' U probably want to make a
• note on your.calendar that the
: annual Racine community fall fes: tival has been set for Saturday,
•Sept 25.
: . The committee is hard at work
~getting all of the details worked out
!for a smooth-running event.
; The festival will offer a variety
•of activities among which again
! will be a pumplcin growing contest
: with prizes being offered to win: ners in various age groups. More
··info on this popular event will be
f forthcoming.
t The parade is always a big part
~f the festival and that will start at
'II a.m. with the festival queen to
~be crowned immediately following
;the parade . There will be cash
Iawards to the top three floats in the
0parade with prizes to be $25 for
lfrrst place; $15 for second, and $10
. for third. · The parade awards ,are
;being provided by the active
;Racine Area Community Organiza•tion.
·
i And the hills will be alive with
lthesoundofmusic. Musicalenterltainment will go throughout the
;day starting at 12 noon. · Groups
oregistered to provide the music
:include One Way Street followed
;fly Silver Wings, C. J. and the
'Country Gentlemen , Out of the
lBlue. Middlebranch Bluegrass,
!B orn Again Believers, and the
;River Valley Boys. The musicians
:Will conclude their program at 10

: NEWTOWN, Pa. (AP) ~A
ttlan planting mums on his moth~r's grave was trapped for two
ijours when the ground gave way
$ld he S3llk knee-high.
• Kenneth McLaughlin, 29, said
tie tried repeatedly to free himself,
lfut the leg that sank into soft
ground Saturday became s.tuck
Wider the base of his mother's

s

lleadstone.

• Help arrived after two hours,

said McLaughlin, a security guard,

.

(

ties.
;
.
The committee really appreci·
ates the work of everyone so far in
getting festival plans rolling.
Out Tuppers Plains way, Jim
Stout will be retiring next Tuesday,
Aug. 31.
·
Jim is wrapping up 32 years of
service the Western Reserve Phone
Co., a part of All-Tel, and has
served as manager since the mid
. 1960's. Congratulatory messages
can be sent to Jim at P.O. Box 34,
Tuppers Plains, 45783.
Gilbert L. Fitzwater, Jr., of
Route 1, Vinton, has hlld some
good news. You may remember
reading Gilbert's poem, "The
Wishing Well" in the pages of The
Sentinel Lulu Roman; Nashville
star, wants to use the poem in an
album.
Following is the text of a letter
Gilben received from International
Productions in regard to the poem:
"We are proud and excited to be
producing Lulu Roman's new
album. We feel that your song,
"The Wishing Well", is just the
right material for Lulu.
"I have enclosed an agreement.
If you have any questions or wish
'to discuss this further, please call
me."
The letter is signed by Jackie
Donovan, associate producer.
Gilbert indicates that he will
have to head down to Nashville to
complete the details.

'

16 oz.

I·

c01Till10
· d,1t1es
, to be
.

The Gallia Meigs Community
Action Agency will be distributing
dried beans, pineapple, peanut butter and apple juice to persons holding food commodity cards on Aug.
31 at the following locations:
Meigs County, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds·, Tuppers Plains Fire
Station, Pageville Town Hall and
the Racine Fire Deparunent.
Distribution will begin at
approximately 9:30 a.m . and last
until noon or until the supply is
exhausted.
Gallia County , Galli a County

grave while planting mums

SWEET
PEAS

ings point equals 93!,000 house- Improvement," ABC, 14.1; "Dateholds.
· line NBC," NBC, 14.0: "PrimeMeanwhile the Dan Rather- Time Live," ABC, 13.5; "20-20,"
Connie Chung 'team remained last ABC, 13.3; "Now," NBC, 12.3;
in the evening news, with an 8.1 '' Seinfeld,''
NBC,
12.0;
rating last week. ABC held on to "Unsolved Mysteries," NBC, and
firstwitha9 .9.NBChadan8.2.
"Roseanne," ABC, 11.8 (tie);
Here arc the top 10 shows, their ::Ned Blessing," CBS; an~.movie,
networks and ratings: "60 MinH1ghway Heartbreaker, CBS,
utes," CBS, 15.0: "Home 11.7(tie).

: Beat of the Bend. ..

Man sinks ·into mother's

•

-~

Chung" was No.l2.
As the fall season gets under
way, "Living Single," the new
Fox Broadca5~g Co. si~om starnng Queen Lattfah, premiered Sunday in 30th place.
NBC's rebroadcasts of three
"Fugitive" episodes from the
1960s ranked 25th, 23rd and 39th,
respectively.
.
.
CBS won the overall prune-ume
ratings with a 9.6. NBC had a 9.3,
ABC a 9.1 and Fox a 5.6. One rat-

OUTSTANDING FFA MEMBER - Meigs County's Junior Fair
Queen, Stephanie Sayre, was selected to receive the trophy for outstanding FFA member in Meigs County. She was presented the
award by her father, Aaron Sayre, FFA teacher at Southern High
Sc~ool, at Saturday night's youth program at the Meigs County
Fa1r.

John and Ann Williams recently
Mr. and Mrs. Bill. Foley spent a
entertained Ann's two sisters and week in Michigan with her sister
the William's son, Carl, all from and husband, Mr. and Mrs. John
Michigan.
Dill.
Duane and Hazel Stanley had as
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
recent guests, Charles Scott and visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
son, Ryan, Vero Beach, Fla. and Bill Scott, Nelsonville. Mr. and
Lorene Scot~ Nelspnville.
Mrs. Douglas (Janet) Morrell, of
Nellie and Ruth Lowe and ncar Davenport, Ia. were also visitBessie Graham spent a day visiting ing the Scou's.
their sister, Helen and husband in
Former residents, Mr. and Mrs.
West Virginia
Sam Lewis, Florida, visited old
John and Ann Williams enter- friends and neighbors in this vicini·
tained Ann's cousin and wife from ty.
Stanford, Ky. recently.

Poet's Corner
Parents
P- Patience
With some biting of nails
When a Jcid covers up
The tallest of tales.

N- Nights
When the folks walked the floor
One eye on the clock
One eye on the door.

A - Attention
To the school play's bright star
Who's playing a Martian
And is bound to go far .
R- Reason
A sense of fair play
That kids don't respect
Till they grow up someday.

T- Thanks
For a home filled with care
And the loving support
That has always been there.
S - Sweethearts
A dear mom and dad
The most wonderful parents
Any Jcid ever had.

E ·Eyes
That see only the best
In a child whom some people
Might think is a pest.

Lacy, Jeremy and Homie
August 13, ) 993

PB'

DAIRY VALLEY
ftfs W.eJr's Special:

"I screamed and shouted for
help, but riobOOy came. I Was really
upse~" he said.
.
McLaughlin was rescued by a
bicyclist, who called for help. A
police officer used a flower pot
near the grave to shovel a two-foot
hole and free McLaughlin. . .
"One thing~s for sure,"
McLaughlin said, "I don't think
I' 11 go back there alone for a
while."

Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire ,
Mt. Carmel Baptist Church in Bid·
well and the Crown City Fire Station.
distribution will begin at
approximately noon and last until
2:30 p.m . or until the supply is
exhausted.
Persons picking up for others
must bring a signed note from the
person in addition to their food
commodity card.
Bring a bag or container for the
commodities.

Harrisonville news

'

_. _______ -•

~·A·A-AWA~·-~·-~AWAWA•~

1'

NB c 's 'N o.w' h as a strong t•Irst ntg
• ht
ll

distributed by agency

·:'

:'

-······················

George "Goober" Lindsey, Grandpa Jones and other members of the
"Hee Haw" crew are regrouping
for a stage show based on the TV
progmm.
"Hee Haw Live" will be presented during the summer season
next year at the Opryland USA
theme park.
The show will include comedy
skits frrst featured on "Hee Haw,"

'T'elevt'st'on magaz1'nes hot

Christian Dior formal black tuxetradi·
. .
tion followed the ceremony.
Mr. Pap,alios is a graduate of . NE,W YORK (AP) -News
Wright State University, Dayton, magazmes took five of the top six
and is with Robbins and Giori slots in the latest ratings. ·
Company at Wright Patterson, as a
"60 Minutes" wa~ the No. I
program anitlyst.
show for ~ week end!ng Sunday,
Mrs. Papalios is a graduate of the A.C. ~lelsen,~o. srud Tuesday.
Sinclair College, Dayton and is
The sncom Home Improvenow interning at Batelle in Dayton, ment" was .~o. 2, .followed i,~
working as a research analyst.
~rd:r b.Y
~at~h.~e N~C.
The couple are residing 7720
PrimeTtme L1ve,, 20-20 ll!ld
Stonesboro Drive, Huber Heights, . the launch of NBC s "Now" w1th
Ohio 45242.
Tom, ~~okaw and Kat_ie Couri~.
CBS Eye to Eye w1th Conme

• The festival will also feature
:Craft, food and game booths and
'J}Iere will be a $10 set-up fee for
I hope you caught some of the
:booths. This money will be used aging stars doing some of their
'tor prizes and advertising. And, by favorite old songs on PBS over the
the' way, anyone want to make a weekend. Very entertaining for
llonation to help pay for the bands some of us. I noticed that one of
,titlcing part may contact Sam Pick- the programs indicated thor the
ens at 949-2670; Lee Lee at 949- .show as we saw it had originally
2454, or Kathryn Hart at 929·2656. been telecast in 1981. That means
'these are the same folks who are you can add 12 years onto the age
t)J be contacted if you want to of the stars as you saw them on the
llecure a bootl! for the dily or they program. Too bad Ponce didn't
~\-ill be happy to take any sugges- fmd that fountain of youth. for us.
~ons you have on festival activi- Do keep smiling.

~WAWA.AWAP•••••~A•A•A·~

COUPON

dpsAw;~~~o::Oi~o:io~~k

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -

ANDY WILLIAMS

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Folk
singer John Denver was charged
with drunkel) driving after being
stopped on the way home from a
restaurant.
Denver was arrested early Sarurday and released to the custody of a
BOB HOPE
friend for a hearing Sept. 28.
·
new routines and country music.
The 49-year-old singer didn't
"Hee Haw" has been on TV return a call Tuesday seeking comsince 1969, frrst on CBS and then ment.
in syndication. The pr_ogram went
Denver's songs include "Rocky
out of full production for the 1993- Mountain High" and "Take Me
94 season. Reruns begin this fall on Home, Country Roads."
The Nashville Network cable chanHe is an environmental activist
nel.
and founded a nonprofit foundation
nearly 20 years ago to focus on
BURBANK. Calif. (AP) - Bob environmental research and educaHope's family wants to say thanks tion.

'
.,r--------------------------------

~.m.

I

---------------------------------·
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I'

bride, served as tlower girl: Alex
Pap alios, nephew of the groom,
served as ring bearer.
Charles Tam bakes of Tarpon
Springs, Fla., godfather of the
groom, served as best man. The
groomsmen were Melvin Dixon,
friend of the groom: Allan
Edwards, friend of the groom:
Stephen Papalios, brother of the
groom: Peter Papalios, brother 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

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) Andy Williams was up and wallcing shortly after minor back
surgery, his manager says.
The 65 -year-old singer had
surgery Monday at St. John's
Regional Health Center, Tennyson
Flowers said. The operation on a
vertebra had been pfanned for six
months, Flowers said
The hospital would not release
information on Williams' condition.
Willianls opened a theater in the
Ozarks resort town of Branson last
year. Flowers said the surgery
should not stop Williams from performing.

by Bob Hoeflich

SUNSHINE

winning author David McCullough, attack in Somalia. Another 400
a year-round resident of Martha's troops - elite Ran~ers trained at
Vineyard, seconds that thought.
ferreting out elus1ve command
"I think he's getting a very posts - are now scheduled to join
needed break," McCullough said them.
of Clinton, whom he has visited
Even in outer space there are
with the last three days. "And I problems: NASA lost contact with
think time in the mountains, or the $980 million Mars Observer
time at the ocean, or time off in this week just as it was about to
some wonderful wilderness also begin a lengthy orbit around the red
helps put things in proportion."
planet. Closer to home, a new
The daily newspapers offer weather satellite also apparently
Clinton a stark reminder of what's failed last week.
ahead. Questions shouted to him at
Back on Earth, there are big
the golf course invoke the unrest in challenges ahead on Clinton's
Somalia. Briefing papers from his domestic agenda as well, particunational security staff chronicle the larly with the health-care reform
latest developments in Bosnia.
plan that he hopes to make the cenThis week brought the resigna· terpiece of his presidency. The very
tion of yet another State Depart- foundation of the plan - requiring
ment official disillusioned and dis- employers to provide their workers
appointed with U.S. policy on with health coverage and pick up
Bosnia, where bloodshed and eth· most of the tab - is under attack
nic hatred continue at the boiling from Republican critics.
point.
Clinton faces an uphill battle, as
Three times this month, Ameri· well, in getting the North American
can soldiers have come under Free Trade Agreement past considerable opposition from congressional Democrats attuned to the
complaints of organized labor.

.

'

. MR. AND MRS. TIIEODORE PAP ALIOS

COCA-COLA
PRODUCTS
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

for the memories with a museum of
memorabilia from the 90-year-old
entertainer's career.
Hope stores his mementos,
including 54 honorary doctorates,
in a room at his home and in a
warehouse, said W~rd Grant,
spokesman for Bob Hope Enterprises. The family would like to
find a location by next year, he
said.
.
" We're at the embryonic stage
right now," Grant said.
The museum would probably
include a movie and TV theater.
·The warehouse also holds a propeller autogmphed by an Air Force
unit and bronzed milk cartons from
women at Wright-Patterson Air
Force base near Dayton, Ohio .
~1ope has been entertaining U.S.
troops overseas since the 1940s.

(AP) -

PRODUOS

2. (3) "Home Improvement,"
ABC, 14.1, 13.1 million homes ·

PETTY OFFICER JOHN VAN METER AND FAMILY

----Names in the news----

7·UP

By The Associated Press
Prime-time ratings as compiled
by the A.C. Nielsen Co. for Aug.
16-23. Top 10 listings include the
week's ranlring, with rating for the
week, season-to-date rankings in
parenthe~_. and total homes.

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�Feds eye
sanctions
against
weapons
maker

The case of thelost spaceship
Mars Observer glides past its
appointed planet rendezvous
By LEE SIEGEL
AP Science Writer
PASADENA, Calif. -NASA
scientists wailed anxiously for the
call that never CIIJlle. Now they
must contemplate the unthinkable:
The Mars Observer flew right past
the planet into oblivion.
"It's terrible, terrible; terrible,"
said Arden Albee, the project's
chief scientist
The wayward spac!:Craft hasn't
been heard from since Saturday
and failed to radio Earth as scheduled on Tuesday, when it was to
fue its lhrusters and drop into orbit
around Mars.
With no word from the Observer, scientists simply didn't know if
it started circling Mars, flew past it,
or was destroyed or disabled after it
was last heard from .
NASA scientists br.~vely insist·
ed they hadn't given up on the
Observer, launched in September
on a $1 billion mission to study
Martian terrain, climate and weather using sophisticaled insttuments,
including a camera that can spot an
object the size of a Volkswagen
Beetle from a 234-mile-high orbit.
"I would like to believe the
spacecraft is in orbit, " project
manager Glenn Cunningham said
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory . ."We will continue to try dili·
gently to re-establish communica·
tions with the spacecraft"
And what were scientists doing
to relieve the tension? " Screaming
loudly," Cunningham said.
If the spacecraft hasn't received
any of the commands sent to it in
recent days, it should automatically
start another computer program and
try to contact Earth thjs afternoon.
If the craft has indeed settled
into orbit and it's just a traQsmitter
problem, it could stay safe for
weeks while engineers try to regain
contact
But "if we don't get it toward
the end of the week, then the hope
is going to become, well, really,
hope," said Albee, a dean at the
California Institute of T&amp;hnology.
Cunningham said that if engineers re-established contact by
tonight and found the spacecraft
had missed Mars, they might be
able to send new commands to put
it into a bigger but scientifically
less valuable orbit around Mars.
If that didn ' t work, NASA
mig ht try to put the spacecraft in
orbit in eight months to a year tf tt
came back near Mars after swinging around the sun, mission manager Sam Dallas said.
Another possibitity was that the
Observer was destroyed during
pressurization of its fuel tanks on
Saturday though an explosion was
conside;cd unlikely because of
back up sys tem s to regul ate tank
press ure.
The Mars Observer was to be
the first U.S. robot explorer to
reach the Red Planet since Viking t
and 2 in 1976.
It started the 450-million-mile
trip last year when a Titan rocket
carried it from Cape Canaveral,
Fla., into Earth orbit. Another rock·
et then kicked the Observer toward
Mars.
On Tuesday, protesters outside

Unrepentant
killer meets
doom in chair

Ohio

Wednesday, Aug~et 2!5, 1893

F8QI 12-Thl O.lly Sentinel

Jet Propulsion Laboratory and 8\ a
Washington news conference
accused NASA of trying to cover
up evidence that alien creatures
built face•like sculptures, pyramids
and other structures on Mars.
They claimed NASA'failed to
place high priority on. having Mars
Observer take pictures of a facelike feature photographed on Mars
in 1976 by one of the Viking
orbiters. Scientists say the face is
an unusual hill.
They also claimed a " rogue
group" in NASA intentionally disabled Mars Observer to prevent it
from photographing ruins of a Martian city.
"It 's absolutely the craziest
thing I've ever heard," Cunningham said. "There is absolutely no
conspimcy. Everything about this
misston is open to the public."

NOT GIYING UP- Wi!Uam V. Boynton, .a
scientist at the University of l\rizona, is seen
Tuesdiy in the Flandrau Planetarium at the
school's Tucson, Ariz., campus. Behind him is
tbe NASA uplink explaining Main Insertion.

Boynton, wbo is in clulrge or the Mars Observer
. spacecraft instruments, said be was obviously
disappointed but bas not yet given up hope on
the spacecral't completely. {AP)

Cuban-U.S.· relations show improvement
By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Press Writer
WASIDNGTON - Officials at
Cuba's small diplomatic mission
here were all smiles a few weeks
ago when the State Department
issued a warning to Miami-based
exj les not to engage in armed
attacks against their homeland.
The diplomats never were sure
about the attitude of Republican
administrations toward such illegal
activities, and the U.S. warning
was viewed as a welcome gesture
by Havana's envoys.
Examples of that kind of neighborliness have been rare over the
years, \&gt;ut there· is general agreement that the tone of WashingtonHavana relations is more amicable
now than at any time since .the
early months of the Carter administration.

As Cuba's &amp;anomie crisis has
deepened with the collapse of its
prime benefactor, the Sov1et Union,
Cuban officials have been especially eager for some sign that Wash-

ington wants a more congenial
relationship.
But the Clinton administration's
less-abrasive tone has not been
matched by changes in substance.
The centerpiece of U.S. policy
toward Cuba continues to be the
trade embargo, now more thatt 30
years old, and President Clinton is
showing no interest in lifting it
The administration has been
fmn in its insistence that President
Fidel Castro scrap his one-party
state and move toward a democrat·
ic system.
But Elizardo Sanchez, a dissident who was given pennission by
Cuban authorities to travel abroad
last month, said after a visit to
Washington that he found U.S.
officials "open-minded" about the
possibility of a new approach to
Cuba.
U.S. officials dispute that statement, but Gillian Gunn, a Cuba
expert at Georgetown University,
says, "There definitely has been an
improvement in tone. Both govern-

ments are choosing to emphasize
the more courteous aspects of their
policy 1\fld choosing to de-emphasize the more belligerent aspects.' '
Some analysts believe the Clinton administration is pursuing this
approach to make it more difficult
for Castro to blame the United
States for the catastrophic economic conditions on the island.
Castro is finding ways to cir- ·
cumvent the embargo. He recently
authorized Cubans to deal in dollars for the first time, and has
allowed a substantial increase in
visits to the island by dollar-carrying exiles. The measures constitute
tacit adl)lissjon by Castro that Cuba
is broke.
The malmitude of Cuba's inter·
nal problems has had an impact in
Washington. Officials are searching for ways to help the Cuban
people without bolstering the
regime, an approach endorsed by
Congress laSi fall.
The lawmakers tightened the
embargo but, at the same time,

made possible improved telephone
service between the two coumnes
as well as private donations of
humanitarian supplies.
As for state-to-state relations,
the administration ' s ability to
maneuver is sharply limited by
powerful Miami exile groups, especially the Cuban-American National Foundation, which strongly
opposes any relaxation of U.S.
policies.
Castro, who rocently described
Clinton as "a decent man, a man of
peace," has taken steps on a number of other issues of concern to lhe
United States. Last year, he ruled
out further Cuban involvement on
behalf of revolutionary movements
elsewhere and he authorfzed the
release of several high-profile dissidents from prison this year.
That's not nearly enough to suit
Secretary of State Warren Christopher, who dismisses notions of a
thaw with Cuba. Castro, says
Christopher, is " a relic of the
past"

'Priceless' Jefferson letters unearthed
By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Librarians
at the Agriculture Department
looked at their flies and saw - to
their complete surprise- letters in
Thomas Jefferson's own hand.
The 11 pieces of correspondence, from 1786 to 1819, were a
gift to the Agriculture Department
75 years ago - but the material
had been tucked away and forgot·
ten among the papers of a longretired Agriculture Department historian.
Unexp&amp;ted fmds are "a chronic
problem, we don't always know
what we have," Joseph Howard,
director of the National Agricultur·
al Library, says of the letters rediscovered a month ago in musty
library flies in BeltsviUe, Md.

The library has a backlog of
hundreds of thousands of unexamined documents. It's a problem for
other government repositories as
well. The Librilry of Congress has
28 million items that haven't been
catalogued - including hundreds
of thousands of sound r&amp;ordings
and photographs
and 17 million
.
manuscnpts. .
Alan Fusome, head of the specia!. collections section. at the
Nal!Onal Agncultural Ltbrary,
descnbed the Jefferson correspondence as "priceless."
.
The letters sho~ the applicatiOn
of science to agnculture and present "a wonderful picture of the
practicpl side to one of the country' s greatest men," Fusonie
added.

The correspondence refl&amp;ts the .
third U.S. president's lifetime pas~ sion for things agricultural.
In one letter, an English lord
praised 1efferson for inventing a
device called a mould board, a
plow with cutting edges desi,gned
with great mathematical preciston.
In another Jefferson thanked an
admirer for sending melon seed
from Persia. In a third Jefferson
detailed for a farmer the planting
procedure for chicory seed.
Regardin~ the mould board
plow, the Bribsh Board of Agriculture "is very gen~rally satisfied
that the Invention is important,"
Lord Sheffield of the British board
wrqte Jefferson on March 24, 1806.
As for the chicory, "sow the
seed in rich beds, as you would

.

Rebel Nicaraguan troops free
more hostages, suspend talks

By ANITA SNOW .
power with the Sandinistas, who hour's drive from Qui! ali on a
Associated Press Writer
remain Nicaragua's largest political rugged dirt road through mountains
QUILALI, Nicaragua - Contra party.
north of Managua.
rebels released II of their remainThe fanner rebels have repeat·
Salvador Talavera declared the
ing 16 hostages overnight, but said edly clashed with each other and Sandinista-led troops must with·
they suspended the first round of with the army. Last month, former draw from the northern region bartalks with the country's top church- Sandinistas seized the town of dering Honduras, which was a cruSTARKE , Fla. (AP) - An
men after spotting government Esteli, and about 40 people were cible of the civil war. .
unrepentant live-time killer who
troops nearby.
killed when the government counHe said some troops' were spotbegged the governor to sign his
Jose Angel · "The Jackal" terattacked.
·
ted just miles from Quilali on Tues·
death warrant- and sent him a
Talavem, the Contra leader, agreed
The Contras' hos tages were day but the releases went ahead
thank-you note for obliging to the releases after more than six turned over to Organization of anyway as "an act of good faith,
was executed in the electric
hours of negotiations with Roman American States representatives in despite the fact that we are being
chair at daybreak today.
Catholic Cardinal Miguel Obando El Zungano, a jungle hamlet an harassed by army troops."
Michael Alan Durocher, 33 ,
y Bmvo on Tuesday.
went to his death after the U.S.
The churchman said he would
Sup reme Court on Tuesday
seek more talks today. Talavem's
·
rejected two appeals filed over
brother Salvador said "the doors
MEDJUGORJE, Bosnia-Herze- desperate.
his objections.
remain open," but that the rebels govina (AP) - Trucks hauling
Today's convoy was to have
Gov. Lawton C~iles ' office
still demand the ouster of top San- more than 250 tons of aid lumbered arrived Tuesday but was delayed
said Durocher was pronounced
dinistas from the government of over narrow roads today to relieve by new conditions imposed by the
dead at 7:16a.m. He made no
President Violeta Chamorro.
despefate conditions for 55 ,000 Croats.
fi nal statement, officials said.
"We
r~main
open
to
continuing
Muslims trapped by besieging
Shortly after noon today, a 27He was the 32nd man to be ,
this
process
of
dialogue
and
mediaCroats
in
Mostar.
·
truck
U.N. convoy left Medjugorje
executed to the electric chair in
tion
as
long
as
the
government
Overnight,
the
U.S.
Air
Force
for
the
12-mile trip to Mostar after
Florida since the state resumed
begins
to
make
concrete
steps,''
he
had
airdropped
25
tons
of
food
and
supplies
were adlled for th.e Croats
capital punishment in 1979.
said without elaboration. 'dnt'ght (I, me d tea
· 1. supp rtes m
·
t o t he c1· ty, and an agreement on an exchange
Opponents of the death
The releases ncar ml
which has been cut off from atd of fallen Muslim and Croat soldiers
penalty d&amp;ried the speed with
a.m.
EDT)
carne
after
former
Sandeliveries
since Muslims and was worked out.
wh ich Durocher arrived at his
dinista
gunmen
holding
hostages
in
Croats
began
battling in May.
.
the 55,000 Muslims trapped on
cxcc utiQn day . He was se nManagua
freed
three
conservative
In
Sarajevo,
Lt.
Col.
Patricia
the
east bank of the Neretva river
tenced in 1991. But others cited1
politicians
Tuesday
and
said
12
Purves,
a
U.N
.
spokeswoman,
biS&amp;ting
the city were to receive
his own desire not to delay.
joumalisis
were
also
free
to
leave.
termed
the
airdrop
"a
great
suc175
tons
of
suppties, and 80 to 90
"The reaction has been, ' If
The
most
prominent
of
six
cess,"
and
said
packets
were
scattons
were
headj:d
for the Croathe wants to die , let him go
remaining
hostages
in
Managua
tered
over
a
wide
area.
controlled west bank, said Lync~all
ahead and do that," ' said Susan
was Vice President Virgilio Godoy.
But she also said airdrops were Sachs, a spokeswoman for the U.N.
Cary, a lawyer who has rer,reThe former Sandinistas said the too inadequate and haphazard to High Commissioner for Refugees
sented death row inmates. ' We
captives
would be freed after the answer the city's needs. "We need in Sarajevo.
wouldn't do that if he was hold·
Contras
released
theirs.
a road convoy in," she said.
The trucks carried food, basic
ing a gun in his hand."
Former
rebels
from
both
the
Bosnian Croats vying with Mus- drugs, milk powder and bally food.
Durocher went to his death
U.S.-backed Contras and the leftist lims for control of Mostar have Sachs said she hoped they would
for the 1983 murders of his 6·
Sandinistas
are an~ry with Mrs. refused to let aid convoxs reach arrive· by early afternoon, but
· month-old son, Joshua; his girl•
Chamorro
for
faihng to deliver their adversaries for more ihan two added: "I am no lon$er an optimist
friend, •Gmce Reed; and her 5land,
money
and other aid months. Over the weekend, U.N. enough to believe thm~s until they
year-old d2 ·6·tter, Candice. The
promised after a 1990 peace accord peacekeepers who reached are actually happening. '
bodies were not discovered until
ended their eight-year war.
Mostar' s Muslim sector said its
The Croats, meanwhile, contin1990.
The Contras also feel Mrs . residents were on the verge of star- ued to refuse letting other relief aid
Chamorro is sharing too much vation and hospital conditions were pass.

C

tobacco seed, and take the advantage of good seasons in the spring
to draw &amp; llllllsplant them," wrote
Jefferson. "I have generally set the
plants 16.1. or 2.F. apart every way,
to give room for several weedings
the first summer, for during that
they are too weak to contend with
the weeds."
Two of the letters- while nearly 200 years old - show a side to
Washington ·that hasn't changed.
They're from job-seekers asking a
newly inaugurated president for
work.
· "Should you think me worthy
of an appoinunent, a letter left at
the post office will meet me," a
surveyor wrote the new president
on March 7, 1801.
A garden designer wanted to lay
out public gardens in the city of
Washington for the new president.
If Jefferson gave the two men
work, there's no indication from
the rediscovered correspondence.

By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The United
StateS is considering imposing economic sanctions against a Chinese
flllll for sdling sophisticated missile technology to Pakistan, administration officials say.
·
U.S . intelligence agencies have
been trying for months to determine whether China violated international guidelines by selling M-Il
missile technology to Pakistan.
The State Department said
Tuesday the Clinton administration
was still "reviewing the evidence"
to determine whether sanctions
were called for.
But officials speaking on condition of anonymity said sanctions
under serious considemtion would
be applied to the Chinese government-owned company that manufactures Jbe missile and the Pak ·
istani company alleged to be purchasing the technology.
U.S. law requires that sanctions
be applied in cases of violations :Of
the Missile Technology Contr.ol
Regime, which bars the trallsfer t&gt;f
missiles with a range in excess of
186 miles or a payload of more
than 1,100 pounds.
• ·
The New York Times and The
Washington Post reported tod$y
that the administration was considering barring certain high-technolbgy trade with China because u:s.
intelligence officials concluded th'at
Beijing had sold M-11 missi•le
components to Pakistan.
The newspapers quoted unidentified officials as saying the State
Department was ml!king a lastditch attempt to ~uade China to
abide by the mtssile technology
agreement.
·
China asserts that the M-11 is
not covered by the missile protocol.
China has not. signed the agree,·
ment. but has pledged to abide by it
to avoid trade sanctions.
Sanctions could hinder efforts
by American companies to open
business with China, which has the
world's fastest-growing !:Canomy.
President Clinton pledged dur·
ing the election campaign io take a
hard line against Chinese rights
violations, but he has sought to
continue trade with China. Clinton
in May granted a one-year extension of China's most-favored
nation trade status, but conditioned
any future extensions on improvements in China's human-rights
record and adherence to arms-control guidelines.
The State Department noted
Tuesday night that U.S . . law
requires an "expeditious" U.S .
response in the event of violations
of the missile technology accord. •It
also pointed out that U.S. concedts
about Chinese behavior have been
raised repeatedly by U.S. officials
in recent months with Chinese
authorities.
Secretary of State Warren
Christopher addressed that issue
last month during consultations
with Chinese officials in Singapore.

•The Area's Number · I
Marketplace

'·

Worcla
15
15

6

Call992-2156
MoN. thru Far. 8A.M.·5P.M.- SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

••t

• Ad. ou..ide the COUDty your ad rwu
be prepaid
• Jleeeiw dl.to-i for ad.t paid in ad-.aace.
I r.... Ado: c;...a..., aad Fouad ado uod... 15 word. will he
run3 da,. at ao cbarp.
• Prlee of ad lor aU capital let~en i.o double price of od coot
t 7 poillltliDe type oaly ued
I 5efttiDelil DOl rt11po01iblefor errort after fll'tl day (cbeck
for orron fii'Ot day ad.rUDI in paper). CaD helore 2:00p.m.
day after pulalieatloo to Make cornctioD
• Adl that aut be paid iD adYaaee an:
Card ol Tb...lu
Happy Ado
la Memoriam
Yard Sal•
• A cluollled ad•ertloeaoot placed in tile Tho Dally s..,.;...,t
(oxeopl Cluoiftod Di.oplay, Bwineu Card or Lepl
Noticeo) will aloo appoar ia tho Poiat Pleoaant Rogiotor and
tile Callipollo Daily Trih-, reacbill8 om 18,000 homeo

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

992-Middleporll
Pomeroy
985-Chooo.er
843-Pol'llaod
247-Lotoot F.U.
949-RociDo
742-Radond
667-Coolville

446-Galllpolla
367-Cheohln
388-ViDtoo
245-Rlo Craodo
256-Cayoo Dial.
643-Arobi.o Dial.
379-'ll'alaal

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMt\TES .

915·4473
7122193

44.-- ApartiM.IDl for Rent

675-Pl. I'IMMilt
458-l.eon
S76-Appe Cro••
773-Maoon
882-New Haven
895-Letoot
937-B..tralo

7- Lootaod Fouad
8- Poblie Sale &amp;
Auetion

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES.

(

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 892·7474

USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lfn

Pomeroy, Ohio

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

CLASSIFIEDS

EAGLES

... This Way

. CLUB
IN POMEROY

6:45p.m.

CARPI liTER
WOII
Ramodiling and Repair
Painting, ExP.8rienced
Free Eatimatea
61281
61 4·446 -~568 1 mo.

Special Ea~y Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11124192/lfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR

PLUMBING

CreekRo..
Mlddlepert, Olllo
614·992·7144

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
3-16-13-Un

PRIVATE
MATHEMAnCS
INSTRUCnON
"Mathemalics is the
alphabet w~h which

614·915·4110

4/29/93th

EXCAVATING

Down8pouts
Gutter Cleaning

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
palnllng. Let rna do It .
toaou.
VERY R SONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

31904 l.•li•l

ROOFING

8/12111311 mo. pel

~~
EAGLE LANES
-"'

BULLDOZE.f! 1_!1ACKHOE
andTRACtutUE WORK
AVAILABU:.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE BITES 8ncl
TRAIU:R SITES,
LANDCU:ARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
UMESTONE-TRUCKJNG

~

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

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

ENTERPRISES

loP•aintin&lt;l Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile fio~nesl
and Aluminum Siding

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

God has writtan the
Universe.' • Galileo

(614)
667·6621

By Topic
By Appointment

4-19-93-lfn

949·2814
7122/1mo.pcl.

CaD Toda)' lor

Tovlal

£LASSDmDS!

Makeover

992-2156
Rea! Eltlte Geoeral

8a

roats agree to ceasefire

in·the

~lassifiedst

KID'S GRANP BUFFET'
ANPSUNPAE BAR ..........
.AJI·You-can-Eat

FR£E

: ·2

'. YJ·

In Memory

RALPH K. SMITH
who pMMd beyond
8-26-92.
Fondly r-btrecl by

RACINE - A 1991 2 bedroom 14X80 mobile home with
extra Jnouillt&amp;d, raioed dining room, garden tub, and skyH~~ plus loto olextras.
$18,000

lprd·l Fr&amp;era*.

CLASSIFIEDS ...
Your Key to G real Buys

w.,...E. -....,

__

---..-·--·-·..

"=

~·
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1
HURRY! CQ&amp;IJC'I ~ i l lllti:J '
I
I
I

.........
--..•

I

I

I

•

11

REGISTERED NURSES .

•••••••••••••1
HURRY! Co&amp;.tpott Etpiwllll/13

Chllbrollcd Chlcllcn.lllust Dinner :

$5.99

Immediate openings for registered nursu
to wo!'J( In lpecltll C.. ,Unit. Full and 11•n• .1
time j,oaltlona. Salary commenau111te with
experienctl. Excellent fringe benelltl.

:!

Includes GIIIICIIIuflwt" • SunGit t11r • :
-=a:-..,"'2i,"2,.--•- I

Ga!!loo!ls
215 Upper River Rd. - Rt 7
(acroaa from the alrpon)

Wanted

-......-:
:::..=-::.::=-....::- .•'

Contact: Rhonda Dalley, Director of Nursing

••••••••••
J

'\'ei'DOil
RICHARD ROBERTS
'~d

Specialtie•"
622 Jty Drive, Gllllpo!la, Oh.
446-7612
Fax/Volce 446-7612

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878
7n1mo.

RIVER VALLEY
CONTUCTORS

~

Mioe. Morcbaadloe

SS- Buildi111 Suppli"

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720

36358SR 7

985-3406
3l8l1ln

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
LowCo~t

Inside, Outside, Top to
· Bottom

PH. 742·2217

New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
lllo S.INiay Cllls)
2112192Jtfn .

B&amp;G
Trucking
or

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT ~NSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

614-698-6500

mntn

Mow111 • Chall Saws

lox 189

Mlddlt,ort, o•lo 45760
(614) 843·5264

WAllER ALLEY
Parts aid Service

WetdtaiiiS
Authorized: Brl\1::. I.
Stnttton MTD, an,
I.D.C. Repair Cantil
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 1111- M-F 11-3 SaL
ClciMd Sunday

949·2104

EICAYAIING
BULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATERl
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmaatone,
Din, G1'11Vel and Coal ·
u......ec~ ..d Bonded

We hava a large atook of aewral nama brandlir• and
If wa don't hava, we oan get II.
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MABON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL
304-773-5533
2nd Location call Lon Naal ·
Hendanon, W. VIr. SOC~1
Maalaroard and VISA;;;;. ...;

PH. 614·992·5591

12·5-tfn

"'lat

LIMESTOllE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL
RIIIOialtlt ·

POMEROY - Butllrnut Avenue· A 3 atory building with
6 larva roomo' and two hall bathe. Would make a gNat
meeting hal! or could be conwrlad Into llpallmlnt..
.
ASKING 121,000
BRENDA JEFFERS ......:........ ""''' " "'''''''''"''''' 182..sosl

53-ADtiq-

4128/lln

MIDDU:PORT - HamHkln Str"t - Looking for I nlu
home In 1o1m, on a
..,..l This 3 bedroom, I 'Ia llory
home 11 juot the o~e. It hu ~ lot ol hardwood ftoora, Iraplace, 2 IIJU batho, &lt;1 porches. Silo on a comer lot and the
home Ia Mil cared far. ·
$32,000

115 E. Memorll!l Drlvi
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611

\11 Iii II \ \Ill:- I
51- H .....hold Ceodo
52- Sportiat Ceodo

206-75R15" Tiger Paw X11l RWL
205-75Rt4" Tiger Pair X11l RWL
215-7515" Fl-klne OWL
235-75Rtl" Flentona OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING·
'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' ~~~

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel

.

DOTTIE TURNER, Brak• .....~.......................... tn-5812

EquJ,_.a

H~fn

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

DANVJLU: - Btala Routa 325 - Approx. 92 acrao of
~round wilh a huge bMutllul yard and approx. 20 acrao
tilleble or putura Janel. Loll of woods and a mobile home
with Hvera! additiono. Over 2,00.0 aquara fHt wilh 8
room a, 3 bedroom a, and 1'/a balho..
$64,1100

Vltersns Memorial Hospital
614-llt2·2104, Ext. _213 ·

~

GENERAL
HAULING

7f711mo.

ea.,..

Auto Repair

Shade River Saddle Shop

614-698-3290

992-7878

CHESTER - Tab over an ongoing reslatlrant buolnaM
v.ith polltntial for expanolon. S..to 38 people, Md comet
tully equipped. G1118t location, at Stat. Aout. 248 and
Route 7. large paved car parking Jot plua extra parking
· for irucko. Full hook·ilp for mobile homa •• a 18oldance or
extra income aa Nntal. Concrate block building far otor·
age.
REDUCED TO $75,000

ln~ryOI

.

·~-._

205 North Second Ava.
Mlddleport, OH
POMEROY • Uncotn Helghta - A lh1H bedroom frame
home with aluminum aiding, dlnlnli room, family
room ,chain link fenced yatd, in;ground pool, oN ol18at
parking and ~n chlc:ko.
JUST $28,800

MINERSVILLE - One ototy home with 2 bedroomo, 1'/,
batha, FANG lumace, TPC water, oltuatad on approx.
1.18 acras. Alto included is a small older home at !he
oame location.. .
ALL FOR $23,000

KIDI6o10

t~ Radio, TV &amp; CD Repair
17- MiKellaneo•
18- Waoted To Do

9112-5082
812183

SAVINGS•••

lo\- BuliDIIIt: Train.infl:
15- SClloat. &amp; IDI~Uetiolll

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

992-3647

....

13- luuraace

Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy

SindY Henderson

MotoJCJcle.

Boaia &amp; MoiDn for S...
Auto Parta &amp; A""'-'rioof

4~ForL..e

12- Situation~ Wanlad

e-ao-1 mo. pel.

Call Sentinel

DINO-MITE

4S- Funalobed Roonu
U- s,_ce for Beat
47- Waotod to Reot
43- Equip•eat for ReDt

11- Help Wutod
4--Giveaway
S-HappyAdo
6- Loat aod FoUDd

~WutedtoBuy

H WARD

Gut;ters

a.-

41- Ho-. for Beat
42- MohUe Holllel for Real
U- Far. . for Real

Hawanl L Wrftesel

NEW-REPAIR

3z.- Mobile

lil\1\1:"&lt;

,.;a·

&amp;Complete

I I I;\ I 'I I' 1'1 II '
,, I I I I ' I I " I,

for Sale
'll'antod to Buy
33- r.,._ for s.Jo
u-tock
34-- 81111.... Buildinp
,..,._ aay ·a Crain
3S-I.oto &amp; Aereap
,..,._ .,..., &amp; Fertili.o.
; - - - - - - 1 36- Real Eatato 'll'aatod

t'l~~~plng

-Garages

&amp; Cooling

Moalcall......_to
Frulto A Vaplal&gt;loo
For s.Jo 0&lt; Tnda

Gallia Coon1y Melp County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

•New Homes

•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

P.ulor Salo

. cta..ifjed page• cootir ihe
folloulin.g t~lephone e%chfmge, ...

CONSTRUCnON

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating

·15
15

Over 15 Wordo
$ 4.1X1'
$ .20
$6.00
s .30
$9.00
s .42
$13.00
s .60
$1.30/day
$.05/day

Rate$ are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Canl......$17.00/ln&lt;h per momth
Bulletin Board.....$6.00/ln&lt;h per day

DAY BEroRE PUBUCATION
1:00 p.m. Solurday
1:00 p.m. Monday
t :OOp.m. Tueod.ay
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. ThUIIday
1:00 p.m. Friday

IISSE~L

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM••d
REMOVAL

Rale

15

10
Monthly

To place an ad

RATES

'

DaY,
1
3

I .

j

The

JOE •••••
II. SAYRE

SERVICE
36970 Ball R• Raacl
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,
LI~ESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; flU DIRT

992-3470

DAAUNE STEWART .......- ..................
SANDY BUTCHER................................--.112~71
,JERRY BPRADUNG .... ,.~.............- ......,. (304) 11244•
. . . ·-HOOOINO_ . .. . .

3-4-83· I .

..

\

..

WNILIY'S AUTO
PARIS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

••a ·

. •AIWII,OIIO

OWNEI: Jeff~--

8ncl Plumbing

IIW&amp; . .INIONI
AUU1Ua•n111

. 992•7011 or
992-1151
or1'0U
I ..OOI'IIo41070

SERVICE

Adlltl-

Nntlng
(FREE 1!111MA1EB)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
..,CH2-Itt

I

' •.

'

�1993

ALLEY

•

OF

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

YOUR 1414Hhl15$, WilY
NOT.t:~ ME ....NT ALL

...........
_.,

I'Oit YOU?

AI:IICIII

,
,:&amp;::1ft

PHILLIP

ALDER '

37 ICIIocltln
tMIIIII

3llm!J811Cr·

40 YOUIII

trhon

......
....
10=
"OIIID

42111111dr-

11

11 . . . . . ., •

4aP*

15- IChoCII

•• Allllrlct

' 14 ~~n~~.,.
'
NORTH

.QIOH

18 • - ot trap.
r ahootlng
· 20 laplan111

.AKU

~ 21 rJinllltL

•Qs

EEKAND MEEK,

·~

-

•••

•Qu

'-

#

•

1-&amp;oll

•

~·

• ,. Gholt

EAST
.KJU
.KI

........,

.Kl0153Z

·~
SOUTH

NIMtlot

.. C'.euttb

I 22 IICIUinct Of
:

rulen

......

10 llallr. . lyre
11 PhOtocopr
82 Sault-

....

"250...tor
· 28FormwNew
YOI1t miJOt"
I

M Gotllr
57catUeN
1141111

2t TV'I

UlkinthorM

4 Dntllllld

DOWN

• •••cr
111
root

~well.)
. 33 ~or elnlw

.AJII85S

Vulnerable: Eaat-West

P u -: Box•Jl.ab Mix, Fawna
a Bilndlla, 114-~&amp;.

8

1•

H

Lost&amp;

Found
Found: Onnga . l Whha · Col
Found In · VlclnHy 01 Addlaon
Club 114-441•1041.
Found: Racooon Croak Park,
Small B - llata Dog, WhHo
Chell, 114-3"71-11318.
F!&gt;llfld: Vary Vocal SaHound, P I - Coli And ldantlly,
114-44&amp;-1354.

73

Vans &amp;

4

4NT

wo·s

~NT

For Sale
1183 S-10 Blazer, Good Cond~ :
.orTrade .
lion, $2,1100, 814-441-lit~.
•
Sporta Cor Coilecllon For Solo, tiBB Ford Rane- XL, Aalrlng : ••
Or Tnda Far car. can Aft• 5
$3,1100, ·-~· .
'
P.M. (Richard) 514 318...57.
1NI _Fonl XLT V~ 4x4
Autornotlc, Running · 1101nlo, ,
~
Cob, 18,1100, 514- .'
Farm Supplies
4)l

.Ext-

Real Estate

&amp; Livestock

HERE COMES

••

ELVINEY WITH TH'

ro-au~

e '"'-r
llch ICIH

Two

LPH-Iull tlmo and pan tlmo: FuU
tlmo poaftlon anllllblo lor- 3n ohlft. Pan Uma pooltlona
l~llllblo lor the t1•7llllft IIIII 3tt nllol. A-mant ollllla and
Male Ba...U Hound, Answe,. Olriltric experience 1 ~ua.
To: Iamey, 114-441-3210·.
ProroMional lnd .. ~ng otthudo
I mUll. Quol- LPN"I piolll
appty In ~ bMt ••n the
Yard ·Sale
7
houro ol 8:30om-5~ II
Conior, 333 Pogo 81.,
Mlddllport, Olllo 4111110. EOE
Gallipolis
Nlld blbyllttor In my homa,
&amp; VIcinity
Mon-Frl. -.G"Ill-3448 aftlr
Flnll Tlml Yord Silo: Frldoy, lpm.
Soturday, u.~.... 108 Bulovlllo, ~::.._-..,.---::-::--::
Fowth Houoa un Routl 110.
lccoptlng lppllcltlona II
both locotlona. - Y II Sorvlco
Moving S.l•: 111 BaMIInl Drive.

O..k of our MklcUeport: Store.

Tools, 10 Pc. Sofa, Etc.

Sti'Mt, Mkldleport, Ohio.

24th, 25th1 26th, g.? Wolfa Ton. .,....,.,

All real estare aaventsrlg In
tl* nowspiper II ilubJea to
tho Foderlll Fair Housing Aa
o1 t 968 which makts Hllegal

t o -.. "MY pnlerenot,
limitation or &lt;lacrlrrlnatlon
baled on race, cotor, relll;on,
sex famllal status or nallonal
oflgln, or any lnlenllon to
make ony sucll prelerence,
limitation or dlscrlmlnatlon."

This nowsp- wtl not
knowingly accept
advertisements lor real estale

ovotloblo.
nlng Bea, K.,osene Heater, Vauglwl'• C.nl1111l, 401 Purl

Ono doy only Aug. 28; g.s; 4821
Still ,Ro!Jit 850, BI!IWOII JorraU
noldonco.
Thundly, Frldoy, 444 Llrllt
Drtve, t-4. Mlcrow•v•, Children,
Adun l)lothlng, Mloc., Dlohoo,
Homo lnlt~or.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

at, 2"1, 26 and 111 Unci. SR124
Long Bonom and
Roadtvlao, IMihlnd NlllroM
Church, nowly uphoiato""'
couch and lovnRt.

bot-

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick PIII'SQn Auction Company,
full tlmi auctlonllr, complete
euctlon
servlca.
Uceneed
168,0hio &amp; Waat Virginia, 304-

173-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Antlquta and u11d furniture, no
Item too hlrge or too amall, will
buy one pi.ca or complltl

houaohotd, call Olby Monln,
814-!192-'11141.

Decor.ted ltoneware, wall t.a.
phonet, okl lampa old thermomettrl, old cloCk.., antique
fumhura. Riverine An11quee.
Ruaa Moore, owntr. 114-802·

2520. We buw tllatat.

Don't Junk It! Sell U1 Your NonWorking
Major Appllancea,

Color

Fr~~zers,

TV"o,

Rofrlglfatoro,

VCR'a, Mlcrowavea,
Air Condllloner1, Oullar Ampa,

Elc. 814-256-1231.
J &amp; D'• AuJg Plrtl and Salvage,

alao buying junk cara &amp; lNCb.

304-173-5343.

Junk cor•, any condlllon, 614w.!-7553.
Wanlod otondlng tlmblr, top
price• p.~Jd, . frM ••tlm1tea,
ll~n..d

&amp; cer11flltd

logging,

304-695-3055 or 885-3831.

Wanted to buy· good uNCI circulating n~tural ;a• heater, I"Ma
992-2529.

Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ring'!, Sllvor Colna,
Gold Colno. M.T.~. Coin Shop,
151 S.Cond Avenue, Galllpolla.
Wontld to buy: ulad moblla
homn.61~

Employment Services
1.1

Help Wanted

AVON! All areas. Need axtre
money or want • cmra-'ther
way-call Marilyn. 3
·2645
or HJQ0-992-6356.

10 Oemonatratorl NHded To
Sell Toys &amp; Gltts For Chrlll.m. .,
No Collecting Or Delivering,

poaftlono

which is In violation ollhe
law. Our readers are hereby
lnlonned thai olldwellngS

Olk HIM lruj:klng Com~ny
Satldng Ex~ncid OVtr Thil
Rood Bonil Tnctar /Tnlor
:~· Exoollonl Ply, BM-ea:l·

ldYortlsod in this n o - r
are avallll* on an equal
OPPO&lt;tunlly basis,

:=-::;:..,-.,...,=-::--:--::-::-=ROGIIII- liLT For A Fully E·

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!
qufppad_Lib, No Shih Work, 011
Holldayt. Apply In Plroon AI 31 Homes for Sale

Modk:ot Pllzl, t:te Stoto Route
110, Golllpollo
Socnllory
IDit~tcher
/Bookkoapor: Muot Havo Exoottont Orgonlzltlonat Aooountlng
a Totophono Sldllo, Sorno Woril
Pr.....tng l Tv!&gt;lng, Ful~lima.
Sand Rn..._. To: cu. 213, cJo
GaiiiDOIIa Dally T~buna, 825
Third Avenu., Galllpoll8, OH

45631.

2 bod- ........ lull mont. 304-6711-1411.
3

Bedroom•

FA,

AHKhld

Gango, .2 foe, Bulldlna SHo,
Gerden Routa 160 ArM, $12,500,

814-3811608.

a

3 Bedrooi'I'W, BMM, 2 car At·
tached G1,t11g_t, Outbuilding,
Bidwell Por1ar School Ana, 814311~7504.

Seeking pl ....nt, mature &amp; experienCed ln1unu10e office atatt
paraon. Mull ba willing to IC·

3bdrm. hou11 l ganga, Applo
St., SyracUH.i,_ aloo 3bdrm.
houH on LAe :Rrwt Svracu•:
1
capt
-I
bo
1 t.. m call Roclna Homo Not 1 trank,
plllytr. Compoitlf typing &amp; ln- 814-84g.221o.
IUrlnc:t experience nec....ry.
Send resume lox C.24 % Pl. 5 bodtoom brick homo, 1 112
llnlohed
baaamant,
Pit Reglllttr, 200 Main St, Paint both,
Ptaaunt, WV 25550. .
aloctrlc hut •"'! . 11~ 2 • car
Train for emptovrMnt In the
tlectronlce tiekl. Opportunltl•
Include technician k'l lltctronlc
l"'~lr, electronlc:ll engineering,
communk:atiDn and computer
rw~lr. Openlnge avallabteln the
OCt. 11th claM. Clll now. The

Adun Educodon Clnllf, 1-lltJOo
137-esct8 ori14-153-3St1.
TRUCK
DRIVERS
Llmllod
Optnlnga With JICkocn County
Trucking Company. No OVIf·
nlghl Trovol. An Exoollent Opponunlty
For
Long-tarm
Employmont For Ouallllod
D~vora.
llonefHo Avollablo.
Sond Roouma To: DRIVE'!~r
P.O. Box 101, Jaclwon, utt
4564G.
Wondy'a Hl~ng In Tho Ga~
tlpollo Ar01 For All Shlfta, Apply
In Poncn~!!ond•y Thru Friday,
2-4 P.M. EVL

ga111ge, nice neignoornooa on
nlco lovot lot. For appt. 114-446-

11387.
.
COONTRY HOMES /ACREAGE
Extra Large Contempory Home

For MoNt Information. I

for sale
$185.84 por manlh, now 14' wlda
mobile home, lncludet «MII'flry,

oomptola aot-vp, oldrtlng, otopo
and I month• lal rent, 1-800837-8625.

'14 Schultz, 12185, 3 bedroom

centl'lll air, relrigerator and
ltovt, washer, dryer, underpin.
m_'lg•. good condition, 614·94~

...a

lnttrloflexterior p.lntlng, roOt
**"" Good Condhlon ...
Plllntlng. handwath houen &amp; 12x85 Colchman, 2 Bedroom•
mabU homH, odd Jobe. 15)'1'8 C.ntn~l Alr1 I ullt In DlnlnQ
exp., axe. n ... Fr• elltlmatee. Room Hutcn, Cur1akla, Undar-

AVON I All Aroaa I Slllrloy

8224.

WOnlod ta do- babyolning In my
homa on NlcholaO R""!'"-~·
tilled nur- old, 114-1112·_,.,
Wll Babvllt In 11y Homo, Cloll

•-lito, 1.&amp;0CI-83T-6825.
·
1184 Rodman 14x70, 3bdrm., Includoa aklnlng atapo, blocko,
5yr. worronty, homacwnon In·

Eooy World Excollont Payl AIHmble Producta At Home. Call
Tall Fr01, 1o800-41l7.Jl566, Ext.
313.
ELECTRICIAN
lmmedlata Openings For In·
dlvlduol Who Pooon... Boote
Knowtodgo Of EloctrlcHy And
Woridng Experience With 480
Von Power Dlatrlbutlon Equip-

To HMC &amp;14 441.,1,

pinning, 614-245-!1181.
1117:1 12x65 Kirkwood, 2 bod·
room, new carpe1, furnace &amp; air

cond 3yro old, tll)rt2 bldg,
tnatld dock , w/ root. 304-6751131 latvo mo-go or 1·304-

_581:::::'~'::01:0:3.:...-:7"·':--~-­
~

IUI'IInce, and 1 rur ot frM lot
rant, 111 for only $'1771mo. ca111 ..

WIN babyllt In my homa, cto. 800.&amp;37-3231.
'
1o K~ hln ,.._ =11.
304.&amp;1WT14.
llabllt Homo And Lind For
Salo, By Ownar, 'li4·245-tlt24
Anytlmo. Addr-: 3258 Cora
Financial
IIIII Rood.

mont, Both AC And DC Motoro, 21
Business
Motor stonoro Whh 115 Volt
Control, Control Dlvlcn Such
Opportunity
Ao Photo Eyoo And ProxlmH,
INOTl-l
Swhchoa. lluot Bo Abto Ta Road
Elact~l Drowlngo. Knowlodga OHIO VALLEY PIIIUSIINCl OD
01 PLC'a It Daalrobla. l'aaltlona ncornmonda thai ,... do ~
On Second And Third Shift. Poy with poopt0 ,... k.-h lnd
Alto f10.11 To 10.61 Dapondl:::r. :;:- ~":..-::!."l:vooorlnthraug-h ttodho
On E•ptrlanco. II lnllfalt ,
,PIOIH Sand Rnuma To: The the 0 llorlniJ.
PINobury . Compony, P.O. Ba• Locol Ply Phone Routa: f1,200
151, Walloton, Dhlo 45U2, An A Woak Patantiol, Prlcad To
AM:EO Employor.
1~So~U,~1~-~~~~~~~11!33.~-_:_::~

•-lgat

iii "iRiiiiNn'iiiiir--·l

::BCJ0-4:.:....;gg.:ivi

33

tor,.,., 114-112ollll.

41.11

M,...,

2

Story

Farm

Born, 2 Mlloo F"'"'
Mon:er:vtlfo• Tolooeca a...
Mloc. Dut aulldl~ ••5 ooo e••'
-

. Lg,

258•187&amp;,

"W ...

1

I

r."

REDUCE· bwn off lot whllo you
llaop, toka OPAL toblota ond E·
YAP diuretic, •vallable Frulh

====:-7-=-:-

=-Dru=:go;::;.
"
Royal 01k Mombonhlp lor Solo:
II'ftlnta-od
1 30 ~.. .Coli 60tl.&amp;l3-11H
ft

"

:

~-.

tractor wl5ft. ballY.
Motorcycles
•:
hbch Wf carry II • 'U Hondll SMdaw 100, ..... . ~
d~va. wator ~. 1 - and ,
Allca Chohnor 1),7 bull doolf, runa good, 514-t4fi.2NI.
300hn. 104-ttlllot&amp;tO.
1184 Honda lnlarcaptar 1000, ;
King Cuttor, 5 Ft. Finish · ~· cond., $2100. 304 451 1011. !
King euttor, I A. Bruoh Hog, 1118 Suzuki RM·125, 1400. - . •
Bolh 1 Yoar Old, 114-388-11082.
418·1715 ar 11&amp;-1211.
;
Now Hollond 117 Iongo harvaa- 1111'1 Kaw-kl 484 LTD, bolt :
tar WI both l heada, 3 bo- driw, 3600 mil. ., like new, •
lonaa wogon, New Holland T t1800,"114.m·1Tiil.
I
hay ~nd, Gehl grtncl.rlmlxer, 12'
'
tnnapon dlac, AC no lito com =-i:--7'-:::-::..:::--:::::-:=
1880 Yamaha llaeter 200, 1112 · j
plllntor, Ollvor 1800 lnctor, all KDX 111 Kaw-kl dlrtblko. - . ·
good cond. 304-273-4215.
1115-37"73.
Tobl- ltlckl, 15 conto ooch. 210 Honda OdyaHy 18110"
304.a784-•
Evet~lnge: 814-''llxOM3.
"::~.;...;;-~·---:---:
83
Livestock
75 Boats &amp; Motors

Galllpolle

Share Bath, 12uu1

Uood

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA'!_~1 531 Jocklon ~lka
trom ..,.,/mo. Walk to ahop &amp;
movln. Cllllt4-441-2568. EOH.
Boach St., Mlddlopon, 2br, lurnlahed
opanmant,
lloo
oHicloncy, doposh l rota.,
utiiHin paid. 304-11112-2568.
Firat Holzlr Apa~manto, 583
Second Avanua, Now Available
For Occupanc_y, 2 Bod,_
UnHo, Rongo, Rolrlgarotor1 AC,
Clrpot, lncoma Rtotrlctoa, ~
dany, Dt ..btld Handlcappad,
114-441·1800, ~aU.t • Haualng
Oppo~unHy FMHliRA.
.
Flrwt Holzer

A~rtmente,

FRANK AND ERNEST

8pllt.

town mower, f175,
Clll 814-182·0.2 avenlnge after
8
:00.
;iW~AT;;E;;R;-;L~IN~E;-;S;;P;;E:;:C;;IA""L""':
31;c4:-;l:::-nc-::-h
200 P8t flUS; 1 Inch 200 PSI
332.10; Ron Evano Entart&gt;riuo,
Jockoon, Ohio, 1-80C).53~052B.

S'TY)( PICS FOil
/CIC.IC51

Building
Supplies

••-4

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Rid A~ Slmmalol Croea,
2yra
lhrowa nice calvea. 1880 Chlvr~ .lmpella. 301 En- , .•
304.&amp;76' 3.
gino, 22,82g Mlloa, 114 2111-. ..:
4 Eogte GT t&gt;luo 4 11" trr.,; ,
&amp;4 Hay • Grain
30,000 mltaa, 171. 304o173.a1101. '
ca
:':Hoy=
••1 :-rmlnl"="""cutt~l--,~$1:-.~001ba~ta:-.~304o= ;;B::-ud:;:CIII::;-T:;-n-nam":::-c:;-lw-;-lana...:...,:_:U,.:oarl~;_;.,· ." :
173-1312.
·~
robuln, an ty- ••~lng ot $11; '
- r 114-245-BB7T; ~~ \
2atl3.
lI
Transportation
Mark IV Contlnontol FlbOrgluo I
T - For Shon Bod Call J.ftor
5 P.M. Evtnlngo, 814-245-1102t.
I
71 AutOS for sale
I
=...,..,..;..,.;...;....;_,..;;.;...;.._,..
New vu tanko, or. ton truck •
'88 Otda CIAlae• Supr.1n1, 1lr, wheara, ndlaton mota, I
IIC. D l RA ' * , WV. 304- :
$2000, 814'-!1924023. '
372-H33 ar 1
132!1.
1
'110 Chevy Clvalllf, $3000, 114TIRE EXPRESS: OIMIRy Uoarl:--'
!192.. 3111 ar 1114ofi2·2114.
Tlrao, Guoranteod ThOu- .

BORN LOSER
~

tUr, ()JR. E~I/E TEL.EPOU...
ooeTIOO ~ lliiS EVENINC....

,

Groom and sue,~ Shop-Pol
Qroomlng. All
o, otyloo.
Julie Wa~b. Clll61t ttl 0231.
AKC Boollltl.uppln, I WOIU
al'!, $100, F. . lft-.dum, 614811·3856.
AKC Miniature Pln~ehll"', twkl
old, 1171 u., 3 malla. 30ot-57'62444.

:10%

E~Tll¥&gt;?

nady Sop&lt; a. 304-882·2087 or
182..2831.

-Millora•Athaiiii,OH.
79 campers &amp;

INVITED~

1173 Dodge motor hom~ude ~·
.......

'

I

I.!

ahol1, wonned, 11111 bobbed,

Merchandise
t.1 LHor Eacort Motor $150• 1872
Surukl Tll·t25 ttso; Riding
Booto, ftS. Sizl: 10, 114-241'
fl1l8.
18' McCulloch Choln Sow 11,500
BTU1.KaroMn1 Hlltlf, Llttll Ut·
ton 10lc.....,,
OVon 10.11 Torp
24' Panel Door l Jam, 114-4460254·

1W7 Dodoe llolor Home, AKC
Raglatarocl Young Bolton T•
~tr, Block, WhHo, Parrvt Whh
C.go, B14-612·TI30.
I.:,::;:::,=;-:...:.::::.;.:~=--:,--

HW. .. .. ....... ... 1\~\-1 ... \\t:\·L

OF THESE TOWNS.'

AKC Rottwollor puppln, Gtr·

man

I

champion bloodline•,

II TRO\JT

LICK

fllllS"! IIE.H!

uc. lamparamont, $300, dapooH
wilt hold, Alhona. 114-441-37N
aftor lpm or onytlma . . -.....
Flah Tank, 2413 Jockoon Ava.
Point · Plaulnl, 304.ar&amp;:2083,
lull tina Troplcll lloht lrl,.,

JUSTGlYE

l&amp;lHt
RO\lTt1
N\Jt~&gt;BER

amall anlmall •nd aupph•.

what lc do to

ASTRO·GRAPH

o,.v•l Hau~_ YP. To 10 Ton A

KK"a Pats• Now Havo Dochn~,_ ~ktr PupBaautllul Shape, $200, e - . oWl
le Python
·'"""""'" Boo
llolo
:\ret c Fox, 13'
&amp;
1137.
Much Morol 1"14-3l7~17.
1100 gat. ~Ina llorogo
30 B•- Dolla a El&lt;tro Cloth1~.

tt111111, ahund Pu

Townhou11, Ott•r

S.Cond tank,1fiet,ont

Fumlohod offlclanoy, f185. AKC Raglltlfld lllnllturo Rod
UtiNtln paid, lOt Founh Avo DachohUiKI pupplol, mate and
Golllpollo 111-4411-4411 ohar 'I fernata; 114-!192'1624.
p.m.
Vlll~g~

Apanrnonto In Mlddloport. F,_
11202. can 114~2-119. EOH.

r

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

m~~nUN

--- ·~·

Rlvtrwlde

-

Load, 114-2411-All.

Avanua, GotUpqllal OH 45131 apraader,orw
Youchen and cert llcatoa, Hud waaon.mle.antlquee. . .~come
Approvacl. Equol Housing ap.
portunlty.
Ia
lxl · a a lf1n ..~ bulkllnp.
Nlcaly Fumlohod Aportmont $3!15, dallvory • alt!'Po " ..
1br, nUl to Ubrary, Plrklng; Olhlf - · IYIIIIblo. Sldtra E·
c:entral heat. air, refarwnc:e ,.. qulprnant,
HandlfiOfl. -.G7tlqui,..,, 114-4411.0338.
~21.

and

I HE til\lolt.S Of SOMt.

... , .... . ..... 1\"-1\ .. 1\I:H .. I\t;IL

01 2 Ton Truck Load Of Flrowood

Clrpot, On.SHt Llundry, AIC.
Rnl•nl Poyo Etactrlc UtiiHy
Only. Flr.t Holur . A~rtmanl•
An Now Opo-.d For Oc·
cupancy. Far lnlormatlon Or Ta
llaqunl An Application Coli
614-441·1100, Or Wrha1ot Hollar
153.

FUNNY, TH&lt;\'te 114E: s.AM'E:
THING MA.RCIE ~teo
MOTHER ASKED ME .

WEQE'rt'U

,.

SIN.-

Sola •• mi.U..ur., l....,.
and aduno, llao PaOdlo . j,up.
oln, ch. b-In;~- Uno0,
Cootvlno, 5M.&amp;B7
.

57

Musical
Instruments

Bundy Ano 11uphono" na.
oond. -.G11-411St aft" tpm or

1711-3224 onytlma.
Rocldord Punch 110 Amp,
Stlllwat• 15" Klckaro, Pyramid
1 Bond Eauallrlf, JYC C.-a

ca. 11W1M:I84.

Spinal Conoolll plllno. Wonlld

'"-''=~
lo maka low
~ . o.IHioCIIIJ.
IUII·IUMM ·IUMMER
SALE I
H'""ml!'tblrd Mualo Contar
Joekoan, Ohio
·
814-28NIIfl

••

bave been forced to
a spade, coacedlnc 1
and permlttlug South to avoid a
loeer. But wben Welt woo with
nine, be wu no better off, since be boad4
to lead a spade or a club. l.e.IGIDI
away from the J-10 of clubs
Soutb a loeer In the lUll. (Tbla
would aiiO work U Welt bad a· sltui~e-1
club

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1944, the Free French 2nd Armored
Division marched into Paris to receive
the s urrender of the . occupying Ger-

.; ·
~

.

44111rry

45

'h.lr ,
'Birthday
Thurlday,Aug. 26,1993

is alrea dy under way.

make
relalionship work. Mail $2 and a
long. sell-addressed. slamped envelope to
Malchmaker, P.O, Box 4465, New York ,
N.Y. 1016~.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23j You might be in
lor a pleasanl surprise today when you

.PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) More benelits
are likely to come your way today lrom
your partnership arrangements than from
what you'll do on your own . Unions oller
the greatest probab1lilies.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) 11 you follow

learn that someone you thought didn't like
you is. in reality, quite amcious to become
your pal.

your ambitious inslincls today while your
competitors idle their time away. it could

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Mu.ch of
value can be gained today through liiendly
in depth conversations with !Mends. There

put a few stndes ahead of persons who are
trying to outdo you.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Treat tile
philosophically today and try to play thai

are things you'll be able. to teach them;

which occurs as a game instead of some·

Ihere are things they'll be able to teach
you .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) II you let
your instincts di rect you t()(Jay you should
be capable ol doing and saying all of the

lhing overly serious with which to contend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) The secret to
gaining lor yours~lf today is to be sure per·
sons with whom you're involved will do
equally as well as you do. II they win, you'll

right things to the right people, especially ' be a bigger winner.

Lots of new acquaintances could help ·
make your soqial life more exciting in the
year ahead. You may !ravel in new circles
and have greaw sta]ure than you've had
previously.
VIRGO (Aug. '23-Sipt. 22) Your lwo best
asse1s today are your leadflllhip.qualltiM· '
and your organizational abililies. Your chart
indicates lmportanl uses might be found for
each . Trying to petch up a broken ·
ro'!lance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

persons with whom you have commercoa l ,•CANCER (June 21·July 22) Friends will
involvements.

find

you an extremely desir~ble companion

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Try to par- today. not just becau!e you're a good conticipate in activities today which hetp "rein· versali,onalist. but because they'll sense
Ioree · your Ieith and basic philosophical you're sincerely inlerested in them.
be!iefs. The wisdom and strength you'll LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Keep a whether
gail&gt; WJII bt effectively used a bit later.
eye peeled for situations today lrom which
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Fob. 19) Lady luck '• you can either make or save money .
might Ileal you in an extraordinary kind There's a lots of material opportunities
manner today by making i( possible lor you around you atthis lime .

I to

participate In a

outer

41!Mctdtl
47 Rtll eltltl

41 ~::ck

51-lllfor

l:n'r

DZKM

DKEJMA
JD

K

OSCCHJMA

HIRPJLCO

HGDO

IJIIJKF

Aug. 25, 1993

Motor Homes
•
::-:---;=:=-~.:_- .
15 Pl. F-oy truck camlllf, ~
tully Hll-contolnecl, _.,. w, ·•
$1100, IM-en.5710 7:00am- ·j
1:00pm, Dorroll.
""1
, worl\, $2200. 173-

41A. . .

F C

D II

K

IZNOZF

OICCH.'

OZKDMCI.

I

l

LIMFRY

FENDT

I

I
II I I
v r

Firat

Houeehold Income. Appll~a,

Ap.rtmenta,

RE&lt;ru1CES Ia ~ ~T IN

1117'1 Okle CUtlea Supreme, VI, To Choau From Our 211.h Y•r,
· Wt W1nt To Re/Tlre You Bet.. .,.
eulo, 12300. 30M7S.214t.

*"

ped, FMHA Income Restrlclld,

Boood On

- . Wt\10\ OF OOR c.outoiTR:I'~
C\IIN(£.R Of

And Cedar St, GIIIIP&lt;&gt;IIo.
Santon, Dlublod, l Handicapllonlo

'

r

I

Pets for Sale

31 Colum.lllt Bombtcli
40 lmlllltorleli

At trick two, South unblocked the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ""Wer II not tlte Super Bowll Wer io a place
amoad ace. He played a club to
young people on both lidM get maimed and killed."" - Rou
my's kine; then be took a ~uc~lfuil ,._ot.
beart flnellle. (It doesn't belp
cover with lbe kin&amp;.) Tbls wu
lowed by a diamond ruff, the beart
ace, a beart to dummy and the dil·
mood queen ruffed ID band. Finally,
South cut adrift with bls
If Eat bid WOII this
be

CtiiC.~S NIC.I' 51'1-

~ding

34 TIMIUten
37 8lllllntl of ...

QIUivoidllble, South bid to IIIBUJlle the H J I I .
beltt finellle wu worklna. Then U the
clubs were 3-2, be wu safe. But U
DZKD
Bible, be wauted to allow for a '-1

Surplt• army nm~flauge, n•
ehlpmant combat boofa, lr•
barb. Slm Somarvlllo'a1 by
Slndyvlllo Poll ottlca. Fn-Sit·
Sun, 12:00pm-I:OODml_.'!'horo
daya l houro. 304..273......

54 Miscellaneous

Bur or Mil. RlvtriM Anllq~a,

UtiiHI• Paid, 814 418 4418 Aftor 1124 E. Moln Sl-1, on Rt. 12_4,
7 P.M.
Pomlfoy. Haura: M.T.W. 10:w

ace. Now, with a apade loeer virtully

ltroller. 304-11111-4548.

a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlr 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. 814-112-2.521.

Fumlahed EHiclonoy 7112 Noll, 256·1238.
Golllaalla, UtiiHin Paid, SIBil,
et4 4464t1uft.. rP.M.
Antiques
53
Fumlahed 1Br Apt., 7Dt Fourt_h ,;.;._ _:...;.;.:.:.;.::.:.;;,:__ __

Blaclt:wood followed.
Welt led the 1p1de 10: queen, kina,

Stroillf, blbybad, -lkor, high·

11171 MOnla C.r1o, tliiO. 1!111
Cougor, no tHto, $500. Ant~
.riC ""VCR, 20yra old. $250.
11Wf184.
11171 llonta Clr1o, T~opo. block
w/r'M Interior, 301 a~.~to, air, loW
mlloo~....fl!ldo--". rtSOO.
AKC Raolott""' Boxtr pupploo, 304.&amp;111&lt;1324.
3 ttma111, 1 mail', $250, raadro
now, Ill~ bobbed, aha11. 304- 1NO Corlettt, L82, IJIG, oond.,
mirror I~ 13,000 miiM,
175-8043 """ lpm.
175-2714 or 304.&amp;711o157l
AKC Ra\llotorod CockarSponlll
puppt.a, 4 matao, Z lomolaa,

ditioner,
C.mpar
Slz.e
Retrlgeretor, Mlciowaye. 114-

AROUND ~ERE, MARCIE ..

chair, car Hilt, ewing, . cloublt

56

Wa- Drv11, Rofrtgarotor,
Color 't.v. , .....,, Air Con-

HIEI&lt;.E AREN T ANV ZEBRA5

for Sale

terw, Rio Grandi!, OH can 014::2t;:;ll.at2.:::.:~---------1

room • .,.rtmanta a1

romoclaloa living quonon, man
building lott, prtcod con In_.
ll"'!r, no land oantncto, 814-'1112·
2007.

.

Btock, brlclt, - • plpn, wind. ., llntlla, otc. Ct.uda Win-

Manor

24 acre farm In Rutlilnd- 111
well, large blm, trult ,,..,,

2354.

55

Onclouo living. t ond 2 badFanns for Sale

Picnic Tobin Far Llbor_ Dly1 ~1
Trulod 2Xf"a 8' $85: 1'. ooO,
OnvoiY w - Spllftar MOO, 11431l'-7B12.
Pool toblo, good cond, 304-71311207.
Raallltlc car llterwD powar amp,
80 Wlttl, IIIli new, $4~. 014-992·

WATER STORAGE TANKS
Abova And Bo- Ground FDA
~provod Far Polroblo Wator.
lliHt Enna Entorprlats, Jock·
..... Ohio, 1-.a37-t52B.

1bdrm, apartment In Pornaroy

&amp;pm.

32 Mobile Homes

441-6568.

31 Perllllll
32 Actor llnlce

Pus

It certainly be!JIII to be curious at
52 Rtlort ot
the brldse table. You need to know I hr-1-+--+Newllelllco
53 llrottte hlroabout the oppotll!lltl' methods, and to
lntrJ-.~~earcb for any little ed&amp;e In the card·
551Mtltll
play that will iDcreue your cbances.
DIIJerllelToday's deallQOb euy, but the un56 ..... tbllr.
wary - the uncur!OUI - will co down.
.,_..c.- ....._
____
.. ___ ...... _
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
North respooded with the Jacoby
bet~ ltltllr In the dpher tUndl hw .,._._ Todly'1 QW: L llllUIIJ D.
ForeiDc Rille. South's three-diamond
rebid llbowed a llinlletoa or void .
•J
0 p
that suit. One cue-blilaud two doles
ORFCOJFCO
GOC
IKOZCI

1

YOU KNOW WI-IAT WE SI-IOULD
DO; MARCIE? WE SI-IOLILD SIGN
UP FOR RIDING LESSONS ..

74

I

APirtment for rent In Pl.
Pl....nt, 614-ev2·5858 after

1183 Palm Harbour, 28153, lotal
drywell, Tharmopane wlndowe,
Ml-up and dallvery, m~t ... to

8pMN, . . . .75-14211.

&amp; Wood Swtng Sll, 5 PI, 814-

A.D. SmHh Paomoglllaa Ona
oloctrlc wotar IINttr, B2gol.,
uood 3moa. Stay RHe wator
10d0 moblit home, 2 bedroom
120 Fouoth Avo, Gllllpolla. n25 eottner, $100 M. 304-1'7s.ao81.
wotar and trooh paid 114-446VI'RA FURNrTURE
4410 after 7 p.m.
114-4411-3158 Or-~
DAY SAME AS CASH
2 bodroom, locltod In Now OR '10
RENT..2-0WN (NO DEPOSII)
Hllven, WV, $215/mo. • utllltl••·
304-7TW811.
FURNISHINGS:
2 Bedroorno, CA, Rontor Solo OUTSIDE
On Lind Contract. 2 Blocka Wrought Iron Toblo W/4 Cholra;
From Big B01r. 114-i4&amp;-14Gg Afo Fan Bock Rookl!'t Chair $611;
Gardin Arch Way'a $12g.00
ter 4 P.M:
2br, oil olaclrlc, Alhton Uplllnd Bidding ·Twin Milt Sat $11'1, Full .
Sol Queen $14!1 Sat; 4
Rei, S1711mo_. piUII d~c:&amp;' SH._r
2. - : . . . . . ., ~r 8 •••,
dopoaft l utiiHin. 304-87
. Dn
..,_
-~ "Bacia.
~ -Ful1
Bod'a, Pootlf
2br, you pay •poolt l utltHiao. Bunk
01
Southwoatam
vuno
304-615-2535.
Storti!'!! At szo.oo; ln&lt;lana lotlny
3 a - . . Doublo Wlda Mablto Shopoo 1 · Sizla lltanlng AI
·ttome, One 12x10 MobUe Hom• $5.00. 2 Locotlona -Baalda Jouto
Auction Or 4 Mlloo Ola 141.
2 Bodroorna, 114-446-2003.
o!""·u .M. To SP.M.IIon -sat.
For Nl"'l, need roommate to
ahara 3 badroom tr.lllr, no Cllorry dining ouha, I chalro,
dtpoaft, no utiiHioo, $150 lt~"' hutc~, like cond,
75-61180.
monthly, 114-62-384!1.
For rent· 2bdrm. traitor In Uorlaht Glbocn lrMzor, runo
Pom1roy ~ total tlectrlc, giNT, 814-flfl2.&amp;6n
814-!192·2312.
GODD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhan~ dryan, rofrlgoraton,
44
Apanment
rongn. ~kaggo ApplloilcM, 711
VIne SII'Ht, Call 814-441·73N, 1·
for Rent
3411
for Rent

!-::l:

callspiHsa.EOE.

Application• are now being
taktn at Pomeroy Nunlng ana
Rehabilitation C.ntar for C.r·
tlfled Nurslna Aulltanta. ADDiy
It 31!759 llockop~nga ·Ad.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;8. No phone

42 Mobile Homes

Whh Barn • 30 l'llloblo. f1~1 000;
BO Acna MIL 130,000: All &lt;n Tho
Abova Whhln 3 Mlln 01 Rio
Grandi • PINII Coli Bill Connell At Donna Summtra

304-675-4m.
Mloo Paula'a Day Clro Contor 1
Block WHt ot HMC On Jackson
Pika M·F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. II
Quol~y And Exparllnco Ia The
11 COncom For Yow Chlld'a
C.ro. Coli U. For A VlaH. lnlant
/Toddta,. 814-44&amp;-6227. p choolera !School Age l14-441-

$500 KIt Suppllod Call Mary 114446-9219 4-9 P.M.

Oldor Baaro 16 HP Llwn Tractor

Goods

-

30=ot

PUs

Dr. Samuel Jolmson wrote, "Curloeliy Is, In great and aenerous minds, the
lint pasoloo and the list.•

PEANUTS

axe

Ho ... sehold

27 CrotbJ,
.... -lltd

0

1112 Ford Aaroatar Electronk:, 4 •
wheee drive, 14,000 mU•. 304-...
1111-2314.

S140,000i 110 Acre MIL Fann

Cull....rootlna, ekllng, 11ph11t
Hilling, ,-lnOng, Clrpentery.
Frte El:tlm~~tea. :Io4-17s...5708 or
675-8422.

814-!192·1042.

51

Eut
Pw
Pw
Pw

By PhUUp Alder

=====...,......,·

roam Homo, 2 112 othl, Largo
Piny Room, All On 4 Ac,_ MIL

1112•7030.

Home care tor your loved one In
family care home In Mlddlepon,

houoa In Mlddtopon, 8250/mo., '
$150/dap., utilltloo nol lncludod,
no pMa. Nflrwnoee required,
814-082-3457alor 3pm.
,

21 Allluawe

Curiouser
and curiouser

·'

1180 Dodga ca •••., Exoottont •
CondHion .t'og Llahto Bug :
Slllold .Whha With W'"ood Oraln, •
Low Miloogo, 1 Owrw, 1112,500,

Merchandise

unfumlahad

On 17.8 Aci'M MIL Whh 2 8am1,
Pool, 2 Pondo, $110i!OOO: 4 a.d-

525!1.
Galllpotlo Forry, all brick, 3br.,
full buement, comer tot, car·
port, now ook cablnota In
kitchen, control heating/cooling.
Samarvtuo Rarony. 304-6711-3030
or 304-4575-3431.
Like Now 2 Badroom Homo,
18 Wanted to Do
$38,500, laNment 14.000,
S36D.25 Monthly Poyrnont, 614Chrlltlan woman wonting to 4411·11~ g.s, Or 61Wt4-4501
claan home~~, p..... call 114- After 1 ~. M .

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming. TrM RIII110YII, Hedgt
Trimming. Free E.ltlm~tul 614367-7~5T Aft If 4p.m.
General Maintenance, Pllntlng 1
Ytrd Work Windows Wathoo
Guttaro Claanod Light Hauling,
Com~at, Rllidonlllll, Stove:
114-448-1151.
Goorgoa Ponablo Slwmlll. don1
hlut,z:: loco to tho miM jult
call
75-1157.

bedroom

4•

=:.. ln.,.

......

25

Opening lead: • 10

SIX O'CLOCK
NEWS!!

814 381 8200.

Loot: On Bladon Road, t Lorge
Molo Dog, Light Brawn Nllldk:atkin For Eoro; 1 Fomalo
Daga Blua Haolor, Block l Gray,
114'258-1110.
Loot: Vlolnlty Gacrgoo Cnak &amp;
Bulllvtlta Road, Rid l Whha

Welt Nartl
Paa 2NT
Paa
Pus
~·
Pus 1•
P111Paa

11 lllkll Ieee
17 l!l¥e I IIIHI
,. l'ltiJtul cltlkt
23 Anti not
24 llotrprotlt

......

Dealer: South
Sae1l

10 PUIIIIM

s~~er•-

1 Fntll Mtdl
2 Sonlblrtl
3 ....... d

35 ZIP35 Mo.. , ...

.Q74S

molcRno

83 Emit coherllll ....t

successful~nd~av~r
(

.

TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Brei Harte
0836-1902), writer; Leonard Bernstein
11918 -1990) , composer-conductor;
George Wallace 0919-l , U.S. politician,
74; Althea Gibson (1927-l, tennis
·~~a,~~r, is 66; Sean Connery 11930-l,
, is 63 ; Rolli e Fingers 0946-l ,
baseball star, is 47 ; Anne Archer
(1950-l, actress, is 43 ; Elvis Costello
0954-l, musician, is 39.

T0 M
"You're quite capable of
t--r-=,r:r-;.~ t, doing the work yourself," the
~~
~ momtoldherson.Afterhehad
1.-...t....--L-...J'--J.._.J "' completed the work he bragged, "Gee, I don't know what
t--rl:......:;UriT:.....rS...:Y,_::.J""T:""-Ill'd do wilhout ----·-!"
Complere lho chuckle quoted
1L.- l .. ._.I..5-..1.-..L.-.J.'--.J
by f1111ng "' the missing words

I. 1 I I

•

16 0

yo11 develop from step No. 3 below.

PR~~s~!~~slfTTEAS IN

6 u~~R~~N~~f Lf11fRS

I' I' I'

r I" r I

1 1 1 _1 1 , I

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
Pallor · Tongs - Silky • Bemuse • SPILL MOST ·
Two fellows were standing at the bar. The first fellow
says: "Boy, your hands really shake. How much do you
drink?' The second fellow replies : "Not much. I SPILL
MOST of it."

J

�THE .GGEST 4 DAY BALE IN · ATHENS HISTORYI

•

•

DON
WOOD'S

0 hio Lottery

~ Reds

Pick 3:

beat
Mets

•

2·4..0

•

Pick 4:

6-8-8-9

Super Lotto:

8-15-16-17-37-38

Lo1!' lolllgllt '78. Chlt~te of l'lln.
Friday, blab nar 90.

Kicker:

Page4

• 8-8-1-6-3-4

•
•

•

Vol. 44, NO. 85

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 26, 1993

Mulllmeclll Inc.

2 Section a. 12 Pages 35 cent.
A Multlmttdi• Inc. r.-p~per

.Health care addressed
at town hall meeting
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"We aren't doing a very good
job in making quality health care
available to everyone at affordable
COSLU

Congressman Ted Strickland
made that point before an estimated
50 people at a townhall conference
at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabiii·
tation Ce01er Wednesday evening.
A lot of people don't have insurance, including children, he commented.
Just because we have the best
medical care in the .world doesn't
not to think about

1993 CADILLACS

~6

S75QQ

making it better and more available, he said.
Through the use of slides;
Strickland explained that 85 percent of the urunsured ill the United
States are working people and their
families. They work at low paying
jobs without health care benefits,
he said.
Health expenditures account for
an ever-increasing share of the
gross national product, Strickland
commented. This puts us at a disadvantage with our competitors.
To illustrate, Strickland
explained that health care costs for
autoworkers add about $1,100 to

Off

DEVILLES • ELDORADOS
AND SEVILLES

Plane lands on State Route 7

1993 LINCIOUIS

From

$13,994 28 *
(24

month teasel
Drive A New

Lincoln Every

OUR EXCITING
NEW FACILITYf

2 Years

Striking mine worker arrested

•

.

.•..""..
ADDRESSING HEALTH CARE - Congressman Ted Strickland addressed health care issues and offered a glimpse of the pro·
posed Clinton health care plan at a town hall meeting Wednesday
night at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.

••

..

MC SAFAR\
~~~V~RS\ON VAN

:Commission OKs property purchase

.'

' ~

Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners, at its regular meet·
ing Wednesday, approved the pur·
chase of three adjoining parcels of
land in Middleport from the Middleport Housing Authority for
S40,000.
The parcels are between Coal
·and Race streets alfd Second and
Third avenues across from the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services Building .
. The land· will be used by the
Department of Human Services but
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners will be listed as the
property owners.
After 'discussion with Depart·

..: . 4X2 .

~&lt;?YO'tJ(~ ~ICKUP

S16,995

·:~8.999

the cost of every new car made in
the United States. Health care costs
add only $550 to the cost of
Japanese-made cars.
In addition, we are paying more
for less, Strickland said.
Infant monality is higher and
life expectancy 1s lower in the
United States than in other industrialized countries, he said, adding
that lifestyle factors play a major
role in infant mortality and life
expectiulcy ligures.
·
·
investigating the scene commended pDot DwiBht ·
"Many people don't realize that
GOOD LANDING- Four business travelers
when you are pregnant and smoke,
Ensley ror seUing the plane down sarely. Here, .
r:rom Zanesville used Stale Route 7 near Middle·
you are damagmg your child.
Troorer Steve Circle or the State Highway
port as an emergency landing strip when their
Patro investigates the scene. (Sentinel photo by
"We smoke too much in this
small plane developed en&amp;ine trouble In route to
Jim Freeman)
country ... and live in unhealthy
Huntington, W.Va. Passengers and officers
ways," he said. "Americans seem
to know we need til change, but
seem unwilling to make the
change."
"It is pan of the American psy·
Cessna aircraft began ·losing oil was smeared with oil and oil could
che; we want and demand the right
By JIM FREEMAN
pressure past Athens and Ensley still be seen dripping from the
to choose our own doctors and hos·
Sentinel News Staff
plane's engine compartmenL
pitals. We are spoiled. We like
Under normal circumstances, began looking for a landing place.
Passengers credited Ensley with
· what we have ... if we have access State Route 7 would probably not
After failed attempts to contact
toiL"
be considered an ideal airplane local airports, Ensley decided to set getting them safely to ground:
"If it wesn 't for the skill of the
Most people in the United States landing place but, this morning, down on State Route 7 near Midare insured through employers, four business travelers facing dleport, passengers said. Ensley pilot, we wouldn't be here," Shaf·
Strickland said, while some are other-than-normal circumstances manuevered the small craft over fer said.
"I feel like a cat that just used
self-insured and pay high deducta· found the busy highway perfectly and under power lines before set·
one
life," Ross commented.
ting
down
on
the
roadway
near
bles to keep their_premiums down.
suited their needs.
Troopers
of the State Highway
Pilot Dwight Ensley of Medina, Leading Creek Road around 6:50
Strickland, who is self-insured
Patrol
investigating
the scene also
and declined government insur- and passengers Mike Shaffer and a.m.
commended
the
pilot
and said no
Although the road is usually
ance, used his experience with gall Aduge Crawford of Zanesville and
injuries
were
reponed.
bladder surgery as an CJ18!¥le: The Chad Ross of New Concord, left busy at that time, no cars were
"He ought to gt1 a medal," one
surgery cost $22,500, $2,500 of Zanesville around 6 a.m. heading coming, they said. Remaining at
ttooper
commented.
for Huntirigton, W.Va. , when , the s.cene, the bottom of the aircraft
which was paid as a ·deductai)Je.
Others, without insurance, go according to passenJterS. the small
without regular medical care and
often rely on hospital emergency
rooms, which are very expensive,
Strickland said.
Strickland pointed out the proposed Clinton plan, which may be
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP)- miners on strike in seven states.
ty and respect, that's all we're ask·
introduced next month, calls for For more than a day, angry United
Wednesday's standoff, between ing for."
Medicare to remain essentially the Mine Workers pickets fighting to striking miners, 50 state police
The law sided with the compasame with the exception of added keep their jobs tried everything troopers and coal company work- ny, however .
prescription benefits.
they legally could to keep equip· ers, ended peacefully.
Late Wednesday, U.S. District
(Continued on Page 3)
ment from entering an Eastern . Throughout the day Wednesday, Judge Irene Keeley in Clarksburg
as more than 300 miners gathered issued a temporary restraining
Associated Coal Corp. mine.
But the dispute ended after 32 at the entrance to Repair King Inc. order that bans pickets from threat·
hours Wednesday with trucks haul- in Shinnston and later at the mine ening vehicles at either location or
ing longwall machines into the near Fairmont, union officials traveling roads between them,
company's Tygan River Mine.
called for peace and said arrests Eastern Associated spokesman
to complete the plan.
The miners were frustrated.
were not the answer.
- Approved purchasing bitumi·
Mike Herron said.
"Somebody has got to say,
The dispute began ,at 10:30 am.
Repair King still has 27 of the
nous pavmg material from Asphalt
Materials, Inc., of Marietta for 'Enough.' I'm sorry I have to be Tuesday ended Wednesday at 6:30 company's longwall shields, equip·
the one to say it. There's at least p.m. as miners reluctantly stepped ment that protects miners from roof
September.
- Acting upon the recommen- one man whos' not afraid to go to aside and let a convoy of four falls, Herron said. ·Pickets argued
dation of Bob Byer, Emergency jail," said an unidentified miner flatbed trucks through the mine the equipment would allow management to mine for two years
Medical Service director, the com· who was the only one arrested in gates.
"We'
re
not
disobedient
people.
the
standoff.
mission approved a $30,000
without union labor.
The miner, whose name was not We believe in the law," said Local
"We have every legal right to
advance draw for the Meigs Counreleased,
was
charged
with
i949
President
Dutch
Morris.
continue
operations," Herron said.
ty Emergency Medical Services
traffic
after
he
ignored
obstructing
"We're
good
hard
working
people.
"It
may
take a little longer, but
from the upcoming property tax
pleas
from
troopers
and
fellow
these are· fundamental rights even
We did all we could do.''
settlemenL
It was at )east the third time the union can't deny Eastern Asso·
Paid weekly bills of miners to get out of the road leadminers in northern West Virginia elated."
ing to the mine.
$107,446.44.
The UMW has been on strike had blocked the entrance to an
Miners had remained off the
Present were Commission Presi·
road at the entrance to Repair King
dent Roben Hartenbach, Vice Pres- since May 10 against members of operation only to yield.
"All we can do is get the public for much of Wednesday morning
. ident Janet Howard Tacken. Com• the Bituminous Coal Operators
missioner Manning Roush and Act· Association over job security. The and the people behind us 10 support until drivers entered the cabs of the
union says it now has about 17,000 us," Morris said. " ... A little digni·
trucks.
ing Clerk Gloria Kloes.

1993 ...,.....

T-100 PICKUP

$14,995
•

•

•

.
'

VEHICLES UHIJER

ment of Human Services Director
Michael Swisher, the commission
approved the purchase on the condition the department of human
services remove an old house on
one of the parcels. The commission
stated the house was to be demolished with the stipulation that
remaining material be transported
from the site and disposed or prop·
crly.
In other action, the commission:
- Met with Sandy Whitt from
the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency who updated the
commission on the status of the
county's current Community Hous·
ing Improvement Strategy (CHJS).
Whitt said the county has been
given an extension until October 15

. Meigs Mine situation

.Parker Run pumping ce~ses

•

•. .
'

• • • Pfk:.. Include an ,..,.,ulactu,.,.s rebMet and tncentl'ftl. Un1t1

I t.

subject to prtor 1111. 5.&amp;% avatlabte with approved ctldlt, up to eo
months.
·

..

• Buick, Olds, Pontiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck

~-

L

GO TO DON WOOJ)
(l

AND GET A GREAT

~,

I
',\

.

• Ford, Uncoln. Mercury
• Toyota

~ .59~6641
•

~; ast~:tlc St mt ,

••
: , East Stat$ Street

•

•

h

•

I·· ~~--------~~~~~----~----~----~--~----~--_J
"Wherot Better Reallv Marten •
•.
••
Athens

r
•

•••

,...••

Southern Ohio Coal Co.
officials
today
(SOCCo)
announced that untreated water
from the Meigs Mine 31 water
removal operation is no longer
being released into Parker Run, a
tributary of Leading Creek.
.
About 9,000 gallons per minute
will continue to be pumped from
sites near Parker Run. The company has upgraded its water treannent
faciliiy to fully treat 5,000 gallons
per minute. Its previous capacity
was 1,500 to 2,000 gallons per
minute.
The remaining 4,000 gallons per
minute will be pumped to the
. Meigs No. 31 impoundment for
treatment. The company received
approval from the Mine Safety and
'• Health Administration and the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resourc~s. Division of Reclama. ·tion, to increase the impoundment
' capacity.
The impoundment normally
.· treats water that is then either
-: released fully treated or is re-used
; · in the mine for dust control and ftre
: protectiori, and in the Meigs prepa, ration plant for coal washing.
· . The fully treated water now
being released into Parker Run

..

Raccoon Creek as receiving
streams.
The water removal operation
continues to release 2,000 gallons
per minute into Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon Creek. Water
removed from that portion of the
mine has less environmental effect
because it has a higher water quality with lower iron content and
nearly lleutral acidity levels.
Since pumping began, the company has constructed a second
pond at the Sugar Run release point
wltich allows more of the iron sediment to drop out before it is
released.
Raccoon Creek has experienced
very minimal effects from the mine
water release.
·
. "We have im~le!"ent~d these
Improvements to limn envtronmen·
tal effects.:' Tompkins sai(!. "We
are continuously monitoring the
streams and the Ohio River and are
talcing every feasible action we can
areas~ "
to comply with the Ohio EPA
The company obtained permls· guidelines and to get our people
sion that allowed it to pipe water back to work."
overland from the Wilkesville
Approximately 300 Meigs No.
pump site to the Strongs Run 31 employees have been out of
watershed, he said. This eliminates worlc smce water entered the mine
Flat Lick Run and two miles of on July 11.

meets all federal and state water
Q!lality standards.
"These improvements have been
in progress since we received the
order from the Ohio EPA on July
26 allowing us to initiate the pumping operating," said Jim Tompkins,
SOCCO vice president and general
manager. The OEPA order set strict
conditions including directing the
company to investigate ways to
reduce environmental effects of the
water removal and to implement
those alternatives.
The company also has set aside
plans to pump into Campaign
Creek and has eliminated the need
to release water into Flatlick Run,
Tompkins said.
"Since this process started we
have consrantly looked for ways to
reduce the number of release points
and take other steps to limit the
environmental effect of our water
removal plan," he noted. "We have
a~;complished that in several

·'
·•
" ''

.. ·-

.. ... .. .
~

IN APPRECIATION - Several businesses
and Individuals were recognized Wednesday
night for their interest in community affairs and
financial support toward keeping London Pool
in Syracuse open this summer. Presented
plaques or appreciation by Tom Lowery, pool
mana11er, on behalf or Syracuse Village Council
were(front row, L-R) Michael Warner, repre·
senting Brogan-Warner Insurance, Fred W.
Crow III holdlnll Fred~rlck W. Crow IV,

Richard Peyton, representing Jeffers ExcavatIng, and back row, John Thomas, repnsentlng
Valley Lumber and Supply, Manning Roush,
Meies County Commissioner, Charlene Hoe.Oich, representing Tbe Daily Sentinel, and Hugh .
McPhail representing Fruth Pharmacy. Absent
were representatives or Powell's Super· Vatu and
The Peoples Bank, Velma Winland, and Mr. and
Mrs. L. Frank Bright Sr.

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