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,

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BIG~EST 4 DAY SALE IN ATHENS HISTORYI

DON.

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. Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 86
Multimedia Inc.

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Low tonlgbt70. Cbanu or rain.
Saturday, blab nur 90.

1 Section. 12 Pages-35 centa
A Multlmedloo Inc. NMap.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 27, 1993

, --------------------------------------------------~----~~

!White House may intervene in pumping·dispute

:Clinton asked to step in

Bond set for Mullen

Sentinel News Staff
. overdosing on lhe drugs.
In response, Attorney Herman
A Pomeroy attorney found
Judge Dan Favreau set property Carson, representing Mullen, said
guilty ¥arch 12 on ~our counts of bond at $30,000 dwing a hearing in · Mullen is' prepared to enter into
corruptmg anolher wtlh drugs will the Meigs County Court of Com- counselinB and is not a flight risk.
be allowed out .on bond providing man Pleas Thursday afternoon.
Mullen did go 10 Florida, he said,
he be enrolled m a resident treat- . Favreau disregarded a request but came back.
ment pro~ for therapy.
by Assistant Prosecutor Charles H.
Mullen now faces a sentencing
D. M~chael Mullen, 41, was Knight to set bond at $500,000.
hearing tentatively set for SepL 20.
found gwlty of supplying two girls,
Knight said a high bond was
Favreau said Mullen must
now age&lt;! II and 14, wilh Valium, . needed due to the seriousness of receive treatment as soon as possia prescnpllon drug, on Friday, the crimes and pending charges ble. As of this morning, he was still
Marc~ 12, and Saturday, March 13. agai~st Mullen. An earli.er trip to
being held in the Meigs County
The
gtrls were treated later at Vet- Ronda mdicates Mullen IS a· flight Jail.
erans Memorial Hospital after risk, Knight said.

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AND SEVIL:LES

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.OUR EXCrriNG
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Drive A New
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,

Continued on Page 3

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JOLYNN BUTLER
fill the new role - if she is
allowed to. Butler's appointment,
effective Oct. 1, may be nullified if
the Ohio Ethics Commission rules
she has a conflict of interest
because of her current position.
.Butler says the commission has

.

TESTING"- rdteEiiil'es·ilf 1\"EP Fuel Supply's Centtal Coal
Lab, performs water quality testing near the Salem borehole
release point at Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No. 31
mine. Evaluations of the streams receiving water from the Meigs
No. 31 water removal operation are reported to the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency.
·

Chemical plant explodes - - -.. Local briefs-Officials probe B&amp;E

5,000 ordered evacuated
19'1~ fORO f-1!10
$11
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4X2
TOYOTA PICKUP

S16,995

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'per clolh seal.

Rear step bum
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luella"~· loaded

VEHICLES UND

-

' _,,.,,d '"''"""

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
· Associated Press Writer
ELYRIA, Ohio (AP) - Fumes
from explosions at a chemical plant
prompted aulhorities to order about
5,000 residents evacuated from a
square-mile area early today.
At least 43 residents were treat·
ed at area hospitals for minor eye,
throat and skin irritation, as well as
breathing difficulty. None of the
injuries appeared serious, hospital
officials said.
Maynard Bender, plant manager
at the Aztec Catalyst Co., said a
. crew of up to IS workers were
inside the plant at the time of the
first explosion shortly after mid·
night. None of the workers was
injured, he said.
Authorities and witnesses said
there were at least two explosions
at the plant, which makes chemi.cals for the cosmetics indusb:):.
: Bender said he did not know
;what caused the explosions and
was not certain what chemical was
.released. He said lhe chemical was

probably no worse lhan an irritant.
One cinder block building was
demolished and another was heavily damaged, he said.
Assistant Fire Chief Glenn Saddler said lhe ftre continued 10 bum
six. hours after lhe blasL Firefight·
ers stayed 500 yards from the fire
with unmanned hoses pouring
water on the blaze. Firefighters
monitored the rue with binoculars.
Six.teen city firefighters, a 16member hazardous materials crew
and representatives of the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
were at tl)e s.cene, he said.
Rich Roman, the Lorain County
Emergency Management Agency ,
director, said winds. kept fumes
close to the ground. "You can
taste, you can feel it," he said.
The fueball from the firSt explosion could be seen at least 12 miles
awar,. .
• It looked like fireworks at
first," said Jeff Cooper, who was
sitting on a patio near lhe planL "I
thought Iraq was bombing us."

The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is investigating the
breaking and entering of the Watering Hole on State Roure 7 nonh
of Pomeroy.
According to a report from Sheriff James M. Soulsby, lhe estab·
lishment was entered Tuesday between 2-10 a.m. by a person or
persons who forced open the front donr.
·
Several machines were forced open and money removed.

Water emergency lifted
Middleport residents are no longer being asked to conserve
water.
According to Bill Browning, assistant water superinrendent for
the village, wodc:ers repaired a damaged pumping station ·Thursday
mght.

Deputies investigate accident
No injwies were reported in a private property accident investi·
gated Thursday afternoon by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
According to a sheriff's report, Russell Singleton, 18, of Portland
was at the Kenneth Turley residence at Racine when he began backing his 1973 Chrysler. The lhrottle stuck, forcing the car into right·
rear comer of Turley's 1984 Oldsmobile.
No damage was listed to Singleton's vehicle while damage to
Turley's vehicle was listed as moderate.

WVa. man
electrocuted
MASON, W.Va. (AP)- An
electrical contractor's employee
was electrocuted while working on
a power line in Mason County, a
company official said.
Dennis DeBerry, 32, of Elizabeth died Wednesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy,
Ohio, a hospital official said.
DeBerry, who was employed by
R.H. Bouli~y Co., was working
on a power lme that had been lowered from a utility pole along West
Virginia 33.
The line touched a live wire still
on the utility pole, electrocuting
him, said Charles Talley,
spokesman for Appalachian Power
Co., which had contracted the job
to R.H. Bouligny.

Federal
Mogul to
be sold
Local officials expect the Gallipolis Federal Mogul Plant will be
sold.
According to Plant Manager
Bruce Graff, lhe Gallipolis plant is
one in a division that Federal
Mogul has decided to let go.
"Federal Mogul has made a
decision to selllhe precision forged
products division and is pursuing
potential buyers," he said.
The intention was announced
July 23 by officials at Federal
Mogul World Headquarters in
Southfield, Mich. Graff would not
comment on how soon he lhought
the Gallipolis plant would be sold.
But he said lhe sale is likely 10
have a positive effect on lhe plant
"Whoever purchases it will be
interested in making money," he
said.

"-------~------------~

Bus driver reports incident
A school bus driver for the Alexander School District was nonhbound on State Route 143 just south of Old State Route 346 when
she reported she heard a noise lhat sounded like a .22-caliber pistol
shot and lhe windshi~ld cracked above ber.
Robin Smith said incident occured as she was passing a southbound, red pickup truck: driven by white mille wearing a black: hat.
A bus mechanic examined the bus and found no hole in the
windshield. It is speculated that a rock was lhrown from lhe roadway when lhll truck approached.
No children were on the bus atlhe time of lhe incident
1

Racine man to begiTJ sentenc~
~·

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A Racine man was transported to'\he Orient Reception Cenrer 10
begin serving a sentence for child endangerment.
Charles E. Michaels, 31, was sentenced in the Meigs County
Court·of Common Pleas to serve two years in the state penal system.

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• • 'Prloft 1netudo lll..,ullc1~,.,-• . - . ond lncontl'"'· Unit a
oubj0Citopriorollo. 5. % O¥otl-w1thopprovod crodll uptomontha.

GO TO* WOOD

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AND GET A GREAT •

Police probe wreck

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• East State Strcut
Athens
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"Where Better Really Matters•

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•. EXCHANGE STUDENT- Adam Sbeell, who was the pest of
: the Mlddleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club Monday evenina, hiS been
: selec:ted at the state level to represent Rotary Inte'1'atlonal as an
: exchanae student. Beln1 sponsored by the Mlddleport·Pomeroy
• Rotary Club, he Is the sou of Jennifer and James Sheets. Adam bas
: been Involved In an extensive orientation and wiD leave for Turlno,
' Italy, In September where he will attend a scientific high school
, during the 1!1!13-!14 school year. Here, Rotary President Gene
: Triplett presents Adam with a Rotary banner to be presented to a
• Rotary club In Italy while parents Jennifer and James Sheets
:·watch on.
'.~

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. Two vehicles were damaged in a collision Thursday morning on
East Main Street in Pomeroy.
·
Pomeroy Police reported lhat Brian Phillips, 17, Pomeroy driv· ·
ing a 1986 Toyora owned by Paul Phillips, struck lhe rear of~ 1989
Nissan driven by Max Laudermilt, 3S, Pomeroy. There was light
damage 10 the center of the bumper on the Laudennik vehicle and
moderate front end damage IO' Ihe Phillips car. There were no cita·
tions.

Teacher hired by Eastern board
In personnel matters, the Eastern Local Board of Education
employed Daniel D. Thomas as the elementary p!!ysical education
teacher on a one-year contract and accepted Shtrler E. Johnson's
request to be transferred to the assistant cook's position at Eastern
Continued on Page 3
.

LIME CONVEYOR- Workers orchestrate the construction of
the lime conveyer support at the James M. Gavin Power Plant In
Cheshh·e. The lime conveyer will transport lime from tbe Oblo
River to the silos. The first section of the actual c:onveyor wiD .be
placed tbls weekend. (Photo by Bill Ross)

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Commentary

,

Friday August 27, 1993

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OHIO Weather

•

We-ekend promises little relief fr~m heat and humidity

Saturday, Aug. 28 .

I

Page--,.2-The Dally Sentinel \
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.··
Friday August 27, 1993

forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH.

•

Mind over matter? Just picture it

The Daily Sentinel

we will discover that the picture'
The Rev. Terry Cole-Whittaker to being the prettiest in my class.''
What she did to change this was will come to life," . she told· her
used to preach visualiz•ti&lt;&gt;n.
congregations.
But when she was drawing to picture herself as homecoming
After hearin~ her at the Church
3,000 people to her .sunday se~· queen.
of Religious Sctence in San Diego,
vices at the CaJifomta Theatre m
I put her theory to work on the ten·
San Diego in the early 1980s, some
mscourt
Georg~
wondered whether it was the mesI faced an opponent I had beaten
sage or the medium that was the
in practically every set thai we had
big attraction.
conjured up all the feelings, ever played together. She had also
She could well have heen the all "I
the emotions, the joy I would heard Terry expound her visualiza·
most beautiful minister in the
lion theory at the Sunday service.
world. At 38, she had finis~ed third feel if I were picked, " she My opponent was as anxious as I
in the national Mrs. Arnenca con- explained. "I lost 25 pounds and 'was to try it OUt
became a blonde agam. I didn't
~t.
.
Before each serve - hers or
She had grown up wanung to be understand a whole lot about the mine - she would close her eyes
principles, but they worked.''
beautiful.
.
She was chosen homecoming and picture what she wished the
When she was a freshman m
score to be af~ the next point had
college, her desire was to be home· queen.
If the principles of visualization been played. For example, if the
coming queen.
score was 40·30 ·my favor, she
Was it wishful thinking? That's worked for her, wouldn't the same would form the picrure "40-40" in
exactly what it was. And it worked! methods work for others? She her mind, which would mean she
As she told the story: "~y hair decided they would.
"If we picture vividly in our . had won the next poirit.
had turned from blonde to darker. I
Believe it or not- and I would
was overweight and not even close minds what it is we are wishing for,

111 Court StJeet .
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 111E INTitRESTS OJI' 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

R. Plagenz

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
~ARGARET

LEHEW
Controller

·cHARLENE HOEFLICH
General~anager

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300
wolds. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not penonlllilies.

Editorial roundup
By Tbe Associated J&gt;ress
. .
Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of nanonal and statewtde mter·
est
The (Lorain) Morniug Journal, Aug. 24
It seemed a good idea, so Rep. Paul Jones, D·Ravenn_a, sched·
uled a series of four public hearings around the state ~ h!S leg1sla·
tion to restrict how the state's Blue Cross-Blue Shteld msurance
companies spend their money.
.
But Jones cancelled the remaining three af~r the f1rst o~e m
Toledo He noticed, he said, that instead of hearmg from onli~
cons~ers from the grass roots, the witnesses were planted by htghpowered lobbyists on both sides.
.
we think Jones ought to reconsider, and resch~ule thC: heatl!lgs,
and open the topic up to include not only his spending limus legislation (HB 425), but also the proposal to force a merger of the Blue
Cross companies in Ohio (HB315):
.
f
The lawmaker's original premtse, that taking the forum out o
Columbus will increase the chances of letting ordinary people have
a say, shouldn't be tossed out just because of one anempt to orchestrate testimony.
.
An initial hearing could be .held in Columbus to allow the htghpowered types to have their say before the s~ow goes on the mac!·
Jones could then look to fellow lawmakers m each .area to recrUit
local voices on both sides of the fence for the regtona} hearmgs.
Hospital administrators, business leaders and labor uruon officers
could be among those invited 10 speak.
.
. There would be no harm done if the posi~ons of the maJOr players were presented, with reasonable ume hmtts, each ume. .
Regional hearings would guarant.ee more exposure 10 the tssu~s
in local media Let's face it, le~;islauve hearm_gs m Columbus don t
get much attention in the outlymg areas. RegiOnal heanngs, featuring the voices of home town people, can fall mto the category of
"local" news.
.
.
Jones' two initiatives stem from a power strugg~e ~on.g Ohto
heallh insurance giants. Whatever the legtslarure dec1des IS likely to
have a direct impact on the pocketbooks of worlcing people. The
more auention this gets the better.

HOW

DUE

FhTHE

CUNTON5

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WASHINGTON -· Surgeon
General-designate Dr. Joycelyn
Elders, who has been vilified for
her support of condom distribution
to teen-agers, might feel more
appreciated at the Agency for Inter·
national Development
The federal government spends
aboul $60 million a year on 18
varieties, two sizes and five colors
·of condoms, and six brands of binh
control pills. AID is in the forefront
of family planning.
The agency has published comic
books for prostitutes in the
Dominican Republic emphasizing
the use of condoms, while in Mexi·
co it produced a pop record promoting sexual ;~bstinence among
teen-agers. It has also lost 750,000
condoms at sea.
The history of AID is replete
with examples of waste, fraud and
abuse in areas ranging from contraception to computers, construction
and communications equipment.
Though AID is in the vanguard of
the effort known as "nation building," its own internal audits sug·
gests that the agency needs to
import better management.
As we previously reported, AID
auditors discovered tfiat during the
1980s, the federal Contraceptive
Procurement Project lost more than
$2 million worth of birth-control
devices and drugs, and has had to
destroy at least another $2 million
worth. In Mexico, 1.6 million con·

doms and 3.6 million cycles of pills
valued at $1 million were
destroyed a few years ago because
their shelf life expired.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Brian Atwood, the new reformminded administrator of AID,
recently told the Senate Foreign
Relations Comminee: "I think we
have acquired a new name. We're
now called the (beleaguered) Agency for International Development.
In fact, we had a debate in our
office the other day as to whether it
was really positive that we're now
called beleaguered as opposed to
troubled. Maybe that's a sign of
progress."
.
According to the agency' s own
internal investigations, signs or
progress are hard to find. Consider
the fact that AID has spent $4 million in Kenya on contraception
alone since 1989. With 66 million
condoms and 300,000 Intrauterine
Contraceptive Devices (IUCD), the
agency figured to curb population
growth in Kenya. AID neglected to·
ensure that the necessary surgical
gloves, lotions and disinfectants
were purchased by the Kenyans. As

a result, at least 11,390 IUCDs
went bad sitting in storage while
another 125,771 will go unused in
the next year because the other supplies were never acquired.
Meanwhile, more than $150,000
worth of laboratory equipment languished in storage ip Kenyli'for two
years because the equipment was
shipped before the laboratories
were even consttucted. When 51
computers and 34 printers that AID
installed at Egerton University in
Kenya broke down, university officials told AID investigators that
they did not have the spare parts or
anyone skilled enough to fix the
computers.
"If the availability of spare
parts locally was considered ...
other types of (computer equipment) for which spare parts and
maintenance would have been
readily available locally would
have been procured instead,"
according to the report reviewed by
our associate Andrew Conte.
A phone system that AID spent
$787,157 to install at the university
is also in disrepair. University officials told the AID investigators that
"a number" of the phones had broken down and were not being used
because the university ·did not have
spare parts or anyone with enough
sldlls to repair the system.
In Sri Lanka, at the same time
the International Monetary Fund
was pressuring that country to trim

W. VA.

Ice . sunny Pl. ClOUdy Cloud)'
C1993 Accu-W•ther, 1~ .

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with
scattered thunderstorms. Low in
the lower 70s. Winds southwest 5
Lo 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 per·
cent. Saturday, partly cloudy with a
chance of thunderstorms. High 85
to 90. Chance of rain 40 percent. '

William A. Rusher

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
August 27 discharges ·
William Salmons, Amy Wickham,
Gregory Northup, Willard Oxyer,
Patricia Holts, Mrs. Peter Rehn and
daughter, Geneva Conrad, Richard
Giiffith and Calvin Parsons.
August 27 births • Mr. and
Mrs. Chatles Harper, son, Ray.

its bloated government payroll,, .

AID spent 10 years constructing 601
buildings for new employees. U.S.
taxpayers wound up losing $1.,1'
million because the buildings are'
unoccupied. "The staffing problem
has persisted throughout the life of
the project - 10 years- and noW,
the buildings have been complete4.
the project is over, and the staff has;
still not been provided," states the&gt;
audit.
'
John Sewell, president of the
Overseas Development Council, a .
research organization advocatin~
the restructuring of AID, told us •.
" There is wide·spread agreemeqt
that AID is urgently in need of..
reform," he said. "AID has been
very badly managed over the years.
The task that faces Atwood is
retooling the management of an
agency that is not very well run." ·
One chagrined AID staffer told '
us that past shipments of aid t(l
Third World countries amounted tel:'
"sending refrigerators to the Eskimos and heat lamps to people in
the Sahara because of poor coordi·
nation. ••
This agency staffer was no.t
exaggerating. Over the years, AID ,
has handed out electric sewing
machines to Egyptians with no .
" electricity- and ice-{;ream makers
to desert inhabitants with no freezers.
Copyright 1993, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

I

f

admission that must be painful been valid." So too Buchanan' s
beyond belief to many Jews, but defense of Demjanjuk.
.
that does enormous credit to
It is important, it seems to me.~
Israel's system of justice.
that we l?ause and take note of the
A desperate effort is now being great inJustice that was done by::
made, by Demjanjuk's foes in over-eager attorneys in the federal t
Israel, to persuade its courts to try department named "Justice,'' and 1
him afresb on charges of having of the solitary journalist who, !
committed other crimes at other knowing perfectly well the abuse :
camps: but the only charges for that would be heaped on him, :
which he was extradited by the insisted upon standing up and :
United Sta~ to Israel for !rial have defending what he believed- and •
been found unprovable.
·
what has since been proved-to be 1\
Besides, as NatiQnal Review true.
I
points out, "It is disingenuous of
Congratulations, Pat. Ani1 1
his critics to argue now that ... thanks from every American whp :
Demjanjuk may perhaps have com· likes to feel that, somewhere, there •
mitted other crimeS••.. If Dreyfus is somebody ready to sumd up fci: :
1
·had proved·to be' an embezzler, -··ttuitruth-aloile, ifneeessary.
Zola s defense of him against the
(C)l993
NEWSPAPER :
charge of treason would still have ENTERPRISE ASSN.
l

Today iit ~is tory

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By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Aug. 27, the 239th day of 1993. There are 126 days
left in the year.
· 1
Today's Highlight in History:
1
On Aug. 27, 1883, the island volcano Krakatoa blew uP.. Tidal waves '
resulting from the cataclysmic explosions in Indonesia s Sunda Strait I
claimed IQIII6 56,000Jives iD Java and Sumatra.
.
On this date:
• .
1
In .1770, the German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was :
born m Sblttgart.
: .
In 1859~ Colonel Edwin L. Drake drilled the first successful oil well iJi ~ :
the Uni~ States near Titusville, Pa.
' ·' !
· In 1892, fire seriously damaged New Yofk's original Metropolitan · •
.Opera House, located at Broadway and 39th Street.
~

~

Extended forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Sunday and Monday, fair. Lows
in the 60s and highs in the 80s.
Tuesday, a chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the 60s and highs
in the 80s.

Jlospital news

Pat Buchanan's lonely fight for justice
For Buchanan was brutally
I remember how, as a boy in the
1930s, I thrilled to Paul Muni's denounced for daring to speak up
masterful characterization of Emile for John Demjanjuk. As National
Zola in the movi~. "Zola." I had Review said editorially in its Aug.
no previous knowledge of the
famous 1890s !rial of French IITf!lY
captain Alfred Dreyfus on charges
of selling military secrets to the
Germans, or of the great novelist 23 issue, "Patrick J. Buchamin
Zola1s dramatic decision to accuse doubted the evidence all along, and
high army officers of a deliberate was excoriated as a defender of
frame-up. Zola's courageous attack Nazi war criminals,' when he was
resulted in his Conviction for lihel, in fact a defender of someone
but Dreyfus (who was Jewish, and charged-falsely-with particular
was therefore a target of French war crimes .... Mr. Buchanan
anti-Semites) was ultimately exon· deserves double credit for persist·
erated. Muni's portrayal of Zola's ing, in the teeth of calumny, with
courage in defending Dreyfus has his attemP,t to ensure that justice
remained with me ever sin~ • 'l"'""w~_cJRqe '
·. .·
.
It comes to mind agam as we
·SPeaking as a columnist myself,
see John Demjanjuk's conviction I am ashamed, now, that! didn't
of savage crimes against Jews in grab a cudgel at the time and range
Treblinka during World War II myself beside Pat. But I hadn't
reversed by the Israeli Supreme . sbldied the Demjanjuk case, and I
Court. For several .years.ago, when more or less assumed he was guilty
our ow~ J~ti.ce ~~ deei4· as cllarg!'d· After all, hadn't. he
ed DemJanJuk was 'Ivan the Tern·· been certified as Ivan the Temble
ble" of Treblinka (a famously by the presumably objective sec·
sadistic guard at that death camp) lion of our own Justice Deoartrnent
and hustled him onto a plane to that is charged with finding and
Israel to be tried there for his deponing war aiminals who lied to
al11ege:d crimes, one journalist get into this country?
all Gt)MrJ 1P41M '41PiteiJH ..Ba "'11'1!,. J18Del of tile Sixth
enounc:e the evidence as shoddy Circuit Coun of Appeals, while
and battle his deportation. That stopping short of accusing the Jusjournalist was Pat Buchanan, and lice lawyers of a deliberarc frame·
every American who values the up, has concluded that the major
principles of justice owes him. a charges against Demjanjuk were
vorc of thanks. In addition, a good unsubstantiated. And the Israeli
many people owe him.an apology. .· Supreme Court has concurred-an

also trigger a few thunderstorms
By The AssOCiated Press
Ohioans can expect anothc:r hot this afternoon and Saturday.
The Columbus Weather Station
and humid afternoon and evenmg.
The hot and humid weather pat· says the record high for this date
tern will continue as abundant sun- was 100 in 1948. Tlie record low
shine pushed temperatures 10 to 15 was 45 in 1945.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:12
. degrees above normal with highs
p.m.
Sunrise Saturday will be at
90 to 95 statewide.
·
Temperatures will drop slightly 6:56a.m.
. Arouud the nation
on Saturday, witlt afternoon highs
relief' was in sight for the
No
climbing Into the upper 80s to near
heat-beat
East, but rain clouds
90. Lows tonight will range from
gathered
tOday
near parched San
upper 60s in the northwest to lower
Antonio,
Texas.
70s south.
.
Heat advisories were issued for
The muggy weather pauem will

this afternoon in parts of Indiana,
Pennsy!vania, New Jersey, Vir·
ginia, Maryland and Delaware.
Rain showers were in the area,
but if no measurable rain falls in
San 1\ntoni?, it will be the city's
61st straig~t dry day. Aash flood
watches were posted over much of
Arizona today.
Highs were expected to be in the
90s over the eastern portion of the
nation, except in northern New
England, where highs in the 80s
were predicted.
A band of slightly cooler air was

crossing th e Midwest, bringing
highs in the 80s. Highs were to be
. in the 70s across the northern
Plains, and in the 80s in most of
Idaho, Utah. and Oregon.
~ost of California was to be in
the 90s, with temperatures in the
70s along the coast and over I 00 in
the southeastern part of the state.
The nation 's 'high temperature
Thursday was 104 degrees at China
Lake, Calif. Temperatures soared
to 101 degrees in Pi1tsburgn, making it the hottest day th ere since
Aug. 17, 1988.

Jackson concert under way despite allegations

AID finds ways to squander money

Berry's World

'

... POSTAGE

TltOUGHTFUL ...
ARJST CARl&gt; .

The (Lorain) Morning Journal, Aug. 24.
.
Have you ever wonde(ed why the '60s rock stars, w1th therr long
hair, scruffy attire and faces painted to demon-like masks were so
attractive 10 the youth of the day? .
. .
They seemed ugly, but their ~us1c and. therr lffiages appealed to
that streak of rebelliousness that s found m many young people. It
was "cool" to look bad, and even a face that would stop a ~ck
truck could be beautiful in the eyes of so~e beholders. .
The remembrance of this mi!lht expl~ the po~lanty of one of
today's best known adverosmg 1mages, Old Joe, the. camel featured in cigarette marketing. How ru:yone, even rebelltous youth,
could think of a camel as glamourous IS hard to understand.
Now the Federal Trade Commissio_n is stud~ing a proposal to
ban "Old Joe" from adverosmg. The tdea of domg so seems misguided.
.
d ..
called "commer
The First Amendment protects a verusmg, so. •
cial speech" (as opposed to, say, "political speech"), allowmg
ovemment 10 step m only if the messag~ are proven to be false
~nd misleading. FTC anempts to ban adverus~g that ts not false but
merely offensive have not been fully tested m the courts, because
past threats to issue such orders have been settled by agreements 10
pull the ads.
.
ld th 'f ·
be
Basically, however, the Supreme Coun has he . at ·1 It can
shown that there is a government mterest !fi regulaung speech ~d
the regulations can be limited to serve that mterest wtthout affecung
others, such bans can pass constitutional m~ster.
.
.
·
In this case, the government interest .ts m protecung chtldren
from the dangers of smoking, whtch, as 11 says on packs, the Surgeon General warns is hazardous to health. The courts have allowed
ovemment to go a step further in protecting children because they
~e assumed 10 be vulnerable and not ready to proteCt themselves.
The problem in the case of " C?Id Joe" is that government IS not
directly regulating the harmful thmg- otJ:~er laws. already ban sell·
ing tobacco products 10 chtldren - but ts. reachmg out to a secondary influence, advertising that might enuce young people t~ use
the harmful product. The danger is that there are other posstbtlines.
For example. should w.e ban. news accounts of cnme because
impressionable people mtght mtmtc the acts?
.
.
The other reason to leave " Old Joe" ~one is that the ~age_ IS
really not pleasing. Reports that children m a survey could 1dentify
the camel more often than Mickey Mouse doesn't mean they want
to copy the behavior of either character.
.
.
.
While the rock stars might have been attracuve, ll was thetr
product- the music - and not their appearance that made that so.
Even if the appearance of " Old Joe" appeals to some, ~Y can rec·
ognize it as representing a product that ts not attracUve, but ugly
and unhealthy for all.
So, smoke cigareucs, if you want to look like a camel.

'91··

.

""·

IMansfield lsso le

not have believed it - she won the;
set, 6to 2.
:
One set of tennis does not a the;
ory prove. But visualization hasi
been tried on a higher level than
tennis and it has worked.
:
There is a cancer specialist iri
California - Dr. Carl Simonton -;
who tells his patients they have a
mind that is in charge of theiri
body's cells. The body will do;
what you tell it to do, he says.
:
One of the techniques that he'
recommends to his patients is to
form a picture in therr mind of the'
healing process going on within~
their body.
:
He told a 12-year-old boy to1
picture his white healing corpuscles!
as cowboys attacking his tumor.
The boy recovered.
'
Visualization is being used by
other physicians, too.
,
In his book "Healing Yourself:·
A Step-by-Step Program for Better
Health Through Imagery," Dr.
Martin Rossman of the University
of California Medical Center tells
how visualization has worked with
his patients.
· " A 52-year·old businessman '
a peptic ulcer," he writes,''
'visualized spraying the insides of'
his stomach with a cooling white
foam three times a day between,.
meals .... " Thereafter, Rossma11 .
says, the patient "was able not:
only to relieve his pain, but to heal
quickly, discontinue his medication'
and remain free of ulcers.' '
As for Terry Cole-Whittaker,
she left her ministry without explanation in 1985, when she was 45. .
But she was back in San Diello ·
in Jtine to speak at the Whole Life
Expo. Still with no explanation of ,
why she had left, she declared:
"I'm ready to stan helping people
again."
I can picture that
(C)l993
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
13-year· old boy who claims
Michael Jackson molested him told
investigators their four-month relationship began with hugs and kiss·
cs, then escalated into sexual acts,
case files showed.
"It really got out of hand," the
boy said in investigative documents
reviewed Thursday by The Assoctated PresS.
·
In other developments today ,
J ackson returned to the concert
stage after postponing a show for
two days, citing illness; and there
was a published report that videos
taken from Jackson's home showed
no sign of wrongdoing.
In the documents, the boy told
caseworker Ann T. Rosato with
Los Angeles County Deparonent of
Children's Services that Jackson
tongue·kissed him and performed
oral sex on him while the two
bathed together. The boy says he

Stocks
·Am Ele Power ................... .38 1/2 .

Ashland Oil... .....................32 518
AT&amp;T.................................61 3/4
Bank One........................... 52 1/4
Bob Evans ........................ .18
Charming Shop.................. 13 1/4
Champion Ind.................. . 11 718
City Holding......................29 5/8
Federal Mogul.. ..................25
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. .41 1/2
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Lands End........., ................32 718
Tuesday admissions - None.
Limited Inc..................... :... 22 1/4
Tuesday discharges - None.
~ultimedia lnc .................. Jl 1/4
Point
Bancorp...................: 14
Isles de Fran~e
IWt Restaurant .................. l/16
Part of France is located jus( off Reliance Electric................ 20 518
the coast of Newfoundland. Ca nada. Robbins&amp;~yers ............. ,...l8 3/4
St. Pierre and Miquelon. two groups Shoney's Inc...................... 20 7/8
of islands off Newfoundland's south· Stai" Sank............................ 34 1/2
west coast, are an official French de- Wendy Int'L. .................... .14 1/2
partment. and they send a deputy and Worthington lnd ..... ;........... 30 1/2
a .senator to the French Parliament.
Stock reports are the 10:30
'I:~e St. Pierre group has an area of a.m. quotes provided by
10 square miles; Miquelon. 83 s9ua~e
Kemper Securtties, Inc., o
miles. The islands' total popu\auon ts Gallipolis.
about 6.300.

By LARRY NEUMEISTER
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- FoUowers
of a radical Muslim sheik accused

])eath rates falling
from breast cancer

(llSPS 113-Ht)

Published cvuy afternoon, Moadl}' throuah
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio by the
Ohio Valley PubliJhiDK Compan)'JMuitlmcdi.a
the., Pomeroy, Ohio 451.69, Ph. 992-2156.
Second c\au polt.J&amp;e plid 11 Pomeroy. Ohio.
Member: The Associated Pren, aDd the Ohio
Newspaper Allociar..ioa, Nallonal Advcrtiliaa
~eprucalalive, Branham Newspaper Saltl,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New York
10017.

.
POSTMASTER: Send addrea c::haqes

to The
Daily SentiaeJ, lll Cowt St., Pomeroy, Ohio

45769:

SUISCIUP'IlON RATES

By Curi• 01' Motor Route
OoeWoet. ................................................ $) .60
One Monlh...................... .................... ..... .$6.95
one Yeor .........Silili'L'E'con..... _ ..ss:t.:w
PRICI
.
Daily.................. ....................... - 3 5 c ....
Sublcriberl DOl dairtua to pay lhe curler may
remil ia lldvuee diroc:tlo The Daily Seottael
o&amp; a t.tane; 1b. or 12 month buil. Cl'fldit will be

Jivencarriereach weet.
No JUbaetiptiau by mall pmnltled In •ea&amp;
wbeie bomc carrie~' WYic:e ilavaUible.

wid. M•i81 CouoiJ

t3 WcciJ............ ................................... $21.84
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Oul.... Mef8o CouaiJ
13 Woeb ............. .................................... $l3.4C
2t We. .........................................$45.50
52 Wealai .........................................MB,AG

'

1

NEW YORK (AP) _Six in 10
.
.
h
· h
Amencans beheve t e nauon ~
made substanllal progress ~war
the dream of ractal equa~uy tye
Rev. Martm Luther Ktn~ r.
mvoked ~years ago, according to
an AssocB ~~JO·~tyss~ll~grees with
d ,
h
u1.a
orgamzers of Satur ay s. 30t
anniv~ ~h .on .W~hmJ!ton
tha! getnng equal J~suc~ .1s still a
major problem for mmonues.
. Tbebromadarch alp~n::,~o~i~~gh~
by a
co . 1 0
activists is mtended t? pushd
demands for "Jobs, Jusuce an
Peace." It may also serve ·to

women after lung cancer.
"We would expect to see a
decrease in breast cancer mortality
by the late 1990s," said Lawrence
Garfinkel, a statistical consulumt to
the American Cancer Society. He
spoke Thursday at a society-sponsored national conference on breast
cancer.
The incidence of breast cancer
has risen dramatically, especially
during the 1980s. However, the
death rate has remained virtually
unchanged for 60 years.

are each wonh $1.
,
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
S362,766 to winners in Thursday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
in Pick . 3 Numbers iotaled
$ 1.103,7~.50.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players
wagered
$242,532 and will share .$123,600.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$568,636.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing is worth $12
million.

Meigs County
announcements
Celebration planned
The Chester Volunteer Fire
· Department will hold its annual
Labor Day celebration Sept. 6 with
chicken, ribs and ice cream. Anyone wishing to paniciptite in the
parade please contact any Chester
Volunteer Fire Department member.

OAPSE to meet
Eastern Local OAPSE will meet
Monday at the cafeteria at 7:30
p.m.
Lodge meeting
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge No.
164 F&amp;AM will honor its masters
with a· past masters' night on
Wednesday at the ~iddleport
Masonic Lodge with refreshments
at 6:30 p.m. and meeting at 7:30
p.m. "Ptere will be work in the fellowcraft degree. All Pomeroy
members are urged to attend and all
.master lllliSODS are invited.

Mall S.'-ripriau

l

.
l
tensz·ons
racza
0if .tt
·

----Lottery numbers----

The Daily Sentinel

terror against the United States
threatened revenge in this ~ountry
and abroad 1f harm befalls hlffi. .
The warnjng Thursaay came as

· ·ttzn
• d z•·cates easzng
•
Po

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all five
numbers selected in Thursday's
Buckere 5 drawing, the Ohio Lottery swd.
.
· Here are Thursday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Pick3
. 1-4-0
Pick4
4-84-9
BuckeyeS
11-16-30-34-35
There were 142 Buckeye 5 tickets with four of the numbers, and
each is worth $250. The 5,367 tick.
et$ showing three of the numbers
ate each worth $10, and the 59,286
tickets showing two of the numbers

boys, the Los Angeles Times and
KCAL-TV reported. Police
declined to comment on the reports
Thursday.
The Los Angeles Times reported that videotapes seized from
Jackson's home do not incriminate
the entertainer, nor was there other
physical evidence to support the
abuse allegation.
Jackson has denied wrongdoing
and said through his private investigator that the case grew out of
alregations from somebody who
tried to extort $20 million from
him. Jackson rejected the extortion
attempt, the investigator said.
In other developments, an 11·
year·old Australian boy told a TV
audience he shared a bed with
Jackson but said it was !ill in slumber partr.·style fun and ihat the star
isnochildabuser.
"I was on one side of the bed
and he was on the other. It was a

big bed," Brett Barnes of Mel bourne, Australia, told KlltBC-TV
late Wednesday.
Another of Jackson 's young
friends came to the singer's
defense Thursday. Wade Robso n,
10, told Fox Television that he had
shared a bed with Jackson, but the
enterta iner never attempted any
sexual contact.
Jackson, who Lums 35 on Sun day, canceled Lwo concerts in Thailand after new s surfaced abouL the
molestation investigation, blaming
the cancellations on acute dehydration caused by his strenuous performance Tuesday in tropical heat. He
returned to the stage today.
Superstar pal Elizabeth Taylor
and sister Janet Jackson were flying today to meet Jackson in Singapore, where he is scheduled to per·
form this weekend, said concert
promoter Brian Marcar.

s~.~!~:.~ suJ!.fl!~~~.~~. f!!!.e.!!!'!~!~!?.ge

'

.: BOSTON (AP) - Federal
s(atistics suggest that the death rate
from breast cancer may be starting
to fall for the firSt time since the
· 1930s, probably because mammograms are saving lives, a health ·
eXpert said.
Do'ubt remains whether the
ajiparent turnaround is real or only
a 'statistical blip. But if it is a true
change, it represents an encourag •
irlg contrast to the grim figures .usua1fy cited for this disease, the sec·
oiid leading cancer killer among

did l'!ot reCiprocate.
· Jackson's lawyer, Howard
Weitzman, described the allegaLions as "totally false." He said he
had not seen 'the papers, but had
been told what they contained. A
source who acted on condition of
anonymity supplied the documents
to the AP.
•
Attorneys for the boy's divorced
parents did not re.turn calls to their
offices Thursday. The boy is at the
center of a bitter custody fight,
according to coun documents.
A
Children' s
Services
spokesman said caseworkers are
forbidden by state law to discuss
cases publicly.
The allegations by the boy triggered a criminal investigation of
Jackson by the Los Angeles Police
Department.
Police have expanded their
investigation of Jackson to include
his relationship with at least four

Yard sale slated
.The Middleport Park and Recreation Association will sponsor a
community yard sale on Sept. 4.
Further mformation may be
obtained by calling 992-6589.

BUtler.•••·

refresh wha~ the poll found to be
hazy memones of one of the ~t·
est moments of the civil nghts
movement
Nine p~rcent of Americans are
not at aU familiar and an a&lt;!ditional
27 percent are not too familiar with
the Aug. 28, 1963, civil rights gath·
ermgofmorethan200,000people.
Results based on the whole samle of 1,003 adults have a margin
gf error of plus or minus 3 percentage points The margin is up to sev·
era! poinis higher. for subgroups,
but the 111 blacks m the poU clearly had different views from the
h"
w lteS.

Continued from Page 1

this area after completing law
school in 1976.
Doug Cowles, current GalliJx&gt;lis
City Solicitor and her former part·
ner at the law fU'IIl, said Butler was
one of the smartest attorneys he has
known.
"She was always working hard
for the people in this area and
based on what I have seen she's
going to ~ork hard for the people
of Ohio," he said.
Butler, a democrat and an attorney, was appointed to the PUCO
by then-Gov. Richard F. Celeste in
April 1989 and served as chairwoman for almost two years.

----Briefs... - - - - . ,
Continued from Page I
High School.
.
.
The actions were taken at a spectal meenng of the Eastern Local
Board on Aug. 19.1n other maners, the board:
· .
- Heard a report from Superintendent Ronald D. ~mard
regarding the distribution of athletic passes for Tri-Valley Confer-

ence·

·

-' Released Jamie Ord and Raymond S. Zielinski from athletic
eligibility pending acceptance at ~eigs High School and Alexander
High School, respective! y;
.
-Met in executive session to discuss personnel matter.
Attending were President Ray Karr and board members Ron
Eastman, Bill Hannon, Mike ~arlin and Jim Smith.

Patrol cites two
Two men were cited for driving without a license Thursday, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Cited in separate incidents were Ronme E. Taylor, 32 , Route 1
Long Road, Longbonom, and Dale E. Taylor 37, 39427 Bone Hollow Road, Middleport.

EMS responds to five calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency ~edical Service
responded to five calls (or assistance overnight. Units responding
include:
11:31 a.m. Pomeroy to Liberty
Lane for Avanelle Bass who was
transported to Pleasant Valley Hos- .
pita!: 1:22 p.m. Racine to State
Route 124 for Everen Homer who
was transported to Veterans ~emo··
tial Hospital: 4:46 p.m. Middleport
to State Route 7 for Hubert Stubbs

The State DepartmenL, meanwhile, ~dvis~d Amencans I? be
careful m the1r travels, espectally
with their luggage, and not to
accept packages from strangers.
B~t spokesman MichaC?I McCurry
S3ld he knew of no spcc1fic threat
In the Manhattan courtrom;n,
plamclothes officers outfitted With
earphones and htdden weapo_ns
Stood Wall•to•WaJI. SIJ"eelS OUtstde
we~e lined with police and a police
hehcop.ter bu.zzc:ct o_ver the court·
house, m an mdicauon of the fear
that other members of the terrorist
cell remain free.
"Whether or not we' ve identified the major players, obviously ·
there's a concern that there may be
othersouttherethatwedon'tknow
about," said. Matthew Fishbein,
chief assistant U.S. attorney.

·

_::.:::=::..::..:.::.~----

Butler, who once headed the
House Ethics Committee and
worked with members of the Ethics
commission on some legislative
issues, said it was too early to tell if
the ruling would let ,her claim the
appoinunent
.
"The ethics opinion on the
application of the revolving door
statute has raised a lot of questions
and issues and we are going to be
seeldng answers to those questions
and issues," she said.
Following her stint in the solici·
tor's office, Butler was president of
Cowles and Boster law firm in Gallipolis. Originally from ~aricopa
County Arizona, Butler came to

ed innocent to federal charges he
planned bombings, .kidn.~ppings
and assassinauons m a war of
urban terrorism."
Fourteen co-defendants also
pleaded innocent during a hearing
at federal cowt in Manhattan exactly six months after the Feb. 26
World Trade Center bombing. The
appearance was the blind Egyptian
cleriC'S frrSt as a defendant in the
alleged conspiracy.
In Egypt, the sheilc's followers
said they were prepared to strike
back.
•'We will take revenge on all
U.S. interests and citizens, either in
Egypt or outside, if any .harm
occurs to Sheik Omar, '' said a
statement from three main Egyptian radical groups- al-Gamaa allslamiya, or the Islamic group: the
Vanguards of Conquest: and the

who was transported to VMH; 6:47
p.m . Pomeroy to Royal Oaks
Resort for Catherine Berger who
was transported to VMH; 7:58 p.m.
Racine to Pearl Sueet for Gina
Knotts who was transported to
PVH.

Coal talks continue;
no wo.r d on content
content of the talks, which started
Wednesday.
Negotiating teams met Aug. II
and Aug. 12 in Washington for the
first time since May 3, a week
before the strike began.
The union says it now has about
17,000 miners on strike a$ai nst
selected members or the Bttumtnous Coal Operators Association in
seven States.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Negotiators for the United Mine
Workers and the nation's largest
coal operators met again in Wash·
ington; D.C., officials said.
The talks lasted about five hours
on Thursday, ending around 5 p.m.,
said Sandy Taylor, spokeswoman
for the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service in Washington.
She declined to comment on the

Sailor faces court-martial in
connection with prison escape
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) A sailor faces a special court·mar·
tial Friday in connection with the
escape of a former Ironton, Ohio,
man being held at the Navy brig on
death-penalty murder charges.
Petty Officer 2nd Class William
B. Kern, 25, faces n counts of
dereliction of duty and one count of
neglect, said Charleston Naval
Base spo!Cesman Lt. Cmdr. Max
· Allen.
If convicted, Kern eould face up
to six months in prison, plus a loss
of two·thirds of his pay, a.reduc-

Area death
Richard Finlaw
Graveside memorial services for
Richard A. Finlaw, 75, who died
on Aug. 4, 1993 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, will be held at
the Rock Spnngs Cemetery at 2
p.m. Sunday. For 27 years .Mr. Finlaw owned and operated Gravely
Tractor Sales in the Pomeroy-Gallipolis area.

SPRING VALLEY CI~E~A
446·4524

' . . . ·•

7

tion in rank to seaman recTUtt and a
bad-conduct discharge, Allen said.
Kern had been stationed at the brig
since October 1992.
· Jeromy Willis, 23, a senior Air
Force airman from Ironton, awatts
his own court-martial on charges
he shot his wife 10 death Jan. 4 at
the ~yrtle Beach Air Force Base.
Marie Willis had returned to th e
base from Rhode Island to press
abuse charges against her.husband .
Willis escaped from the bn g
June 6 and was recaptured in Fort
Worth, Texas, on July 14. He has
since been returned to Charleston.
Reports following th e escape
indicated Willis fled when a guard
stepped outside th e brig for a
cigarette. Navy record s mdtcate
Kern was on duty at the time, Allen
said.
Another sailor also faces courtmartial in connection with th e
escape, but has not been fonnally
charged, Allen said. Ten other mili tary and civilian personnel at the
brig have faced nonjudicial punishment or administrative sanctions
rrom the brig's commanding officer as a result of the escape.

PIIKiAIN MAnNElS SAY. a SUN .

IARGAIN NIGHT TUIESOAV

can

CIDt!'IPlCAf'IB ,YAILABI.Rl

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. lHRU lHURS.
ARNOLD SCHWARZEIIEGGER IN

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

,.,

FAL, SAT., SUN.
10M CR41SE, GENE HACKMAN
IN

THE FIRMA
AND
DAN AYKROYD IN

THE CONEHEADS PG
4411-toaa

7110,9:10 Dlldi.Y
. . . , . _ SA! • !lit

SHOWTIME.S

FRI. .. SAT. 7:30 .. t:~S
SUN. THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1 .50

ROBI"i HOOO MEN l"i Tl&amp;ITI

IIIINii SUN•Nnn.•-••••""

7£9!1,!1]!

rrpr,

It== l!l

I

!Ill H.I$U . "".,._,. llert'

7:20,9:10 DULY . . . . . ., . .. 11210;3:30 t111:1 l)

SURF NIN.IRS
8ftiiN' IUIJlY , I :20 1=20 PG

446-0923

'I

ll

�•

Friday August 27, 1993

Sports

The

~laily

.

'.

·

•

On NFL camp scene,

Sentinel

· .

·

Pats get ex-OU Bobcat Carthen, McCants, Earle off waiver wire

.Friday August 'J:7, 1993
Page 4

By The Associated Press
Finally, the last weekend of
NFL exhibition games is here.
Games that mean something
begin next week, although the last
of the preseason games will go a
long way toward deciding who is
on what roster when the regular
season gets under way.
"We have ideas in our mind
aboui players right now," Green
Bay coach Mike Holmgren said.
"But I do believe an outstanding
performance by a player in the fmal
preseason game will allow a player
10 make the team."
'
That's a quote quite a few play·
ers are taking to heart. There are a

. ......-· ·····'···.
~~

limited number of spots open for
fourlh-string running backs, threedeep linemen and situational
receivers. All the 47-man rosters
must be set.by Monday.
"There's going to be more
maneuvering this year than at any
time in the history of !he National
Football League," New England
cooch Bill Parcells said. "The traditional way rosters were done is
not !he way it's going to be done
this year."
The Patriots did some major
juggling Thursday, trading Jon
Vaughn, their leading rusher last
season, to· Seattle for an undis·
closed draft choice and claiming

linebacker Keilh McCants, offensive lineman John Earle and
linebacker Jason Cartben off the·
waiver wire. To mali:e room for
them, the Patriots released offensive lineman Steve Trapilo, defensive end Tim Edwards and
linebacker Arnold Ale.
The 6-foot-3, 265-pound
McCants, the founb player selected
in the 1990 draft out of Alabama,
was released by Tampa Bay earlier
this week. New England offensive
coordinator Ray Perkins was the
Buccaneers coach when McCants
was drafted, and he recruited
McCants out of high school to play
for the Crimson Tide.

----In your face, Vince!------.

Evening Golf Leagne at the Me~ County Goir
Course. Pictured from left to r•gllt are Sayre,
Hysell and the fourth-place team of Peg Thomas
and Opal Casto.

FIRST·, FOURTH-PLACE WINNERS The team or De!lbie Sayre and Julia Hysell took
the top honors ia this year's Ladies Monday

STEALS SECOND - The Clevelaod lodi·
ans' Keony Lortoo (right) dives headfirst ioto
second base for the steal wbile New York short·
stop Mike Galleeo reaches for the throw in the

fifth inning of-Th!lrsday night's American
League game ill Cleveland, where the Yankees
won 4-0. (AP)

In his .first major-league outing,

The final exhibition games started Thursday night when Minnesota
beat Pittsburgh 30-13. Tonight's
schedule has Kansas City at New
England, Atlanta at Buffalo
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, Cleve:
land at TamJ?B Bay, Detroit at New
Orleans, Indianapolis at Green Bay
the New York Jets at Washington'
Dalla~ at Chicago and Denver at
Pltoemx.
·
On Saturday night, the New
! ork Giants are at ~i. Seattle
ts at Houston, San Diego is at San
Francisco and the Raiders and
Rams meet in an intra-Los Angeles
game.
In other news around the NFL:
Dolphins
Guard Eddie Blake, competing
for the starting right guard spot
with Bert Weidner, returned to
practice after missing three days
this week to attend a mandatory
drug evaluation program at the
NFL headquarters in New York.
Prior to the 1992 draft, Blake
tested positive for cocaine . He
described !he visit to New York as
procedural involving a lot or paperwork. He missed all last season
with foot and knee injuries and was
bothered by a knee injury at the
start of this camp.
Bills
Quanerback Jim Kelly had his

Hitchcock's good evening results
in Yankees' 4-0 win over Indians
here," Hitchcock said "A wiri is a
win, but a win in the middle of a
pennant race ---' it's a great way to
get your first one."
Cleveland's Bob Ojeda, in the
most effective outing of his,comeback, matched zeroes wilh Hitch·
cock for six innings. but the Yankees quickly went ahead after
Ojeda was replaced in the seventh.
Mike Stanley hit a two-run
homer off Bill Wenz (2-2) in the
seventh, and the Yankees added
races.
If either one was nervous Thurs- two in the ninth on Danny Tartabull's bases-loaded single.
day night, it didn't show.
Did Hitchcock pitch himself
Hitchcock, of the New York
into
the Yankees' rotation?
Yankees, and Magnante , of the
"Let us sit down and think
Kansas City Royals, each tossed
seven. scoreless innings to help about it," manager Buck Showalter
said.
the1r teams gam ground.
Magnante (1-1), making only
New York beat Cleveland 4-0
and moved into a f~rst-place tie in his second start since being
the East with the Toronto Blue recalled Aug. 17, allowed six hits,
Jays, and Kansas City blanked sii'IICk out two and walked none as
Minnesota 3-0 to move into second the Royals moved into second
place in the West, 3 1/2 games
place in the West
The 22-year-old Hitchcock (1 - behind the White Sox.
"I was able to throw my fastball
0), promoted fot a spot start in
on
the inside and got all four of my
place of injured Scott Kamienieclc:i,
pitches
ror strikes," ·said Maggave up seven hits, walked three
nanre,
who
lbrew just 70 piches, 52
and struck out three.
for
strikes.
"It's a lot of fun to look around,
The 28-year-old left-hander's
see !he guys excited, and know the
seven
shutout innings lowered his
importance oJ what' s going on
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
. No one could_ fault Sterling
Ht tchcock and Mike Magnante if
they were a little overwhelmed by
thetr new surroundings.
.
After all, the two rookie Iefthanders toiled through unspectacular seasons at Triple-A Columbus
and Omaha before finding themselves called up to big-league clubs
in the -thick of the AL divisional

SECOND-, THIRD-PLACE WINNERS Melanie Weese and Tonya Hunter came in second in the Ladies Monday Evening Golf League

at the Meigs County Goll Course. Pictured from
ldt to right are Weese and Hunter and the
third-place team Carol Crow and Celia McCoy.

· Ladies MDnday Evening Golf League lauds winners
The Ladies Monday Evening
Golf League held its end-of-theyear outing Monday at the Meigs

Meigs to host Morgan
in football preview
The Meigs Marauders will host
Morgan tonight in a football preview at Bob Roberts Field.
The freshmen will start play at
6:30, followed by the reserve and
varsity. Each team will play two
quarters . The Meigs Marauder
band will also perform between the
reserve and varsity scrimmage.
The Marauders will open the
1993 season at home next Friday
against Gallia Academy.

.

County Golf Course. There were
28 women were present for a ninehole scramble followed by a
catered dinner from Crow·~ Family
Restaurant
Following the dinner, league
president Becky Triplett made presentations to the winners of the
league. Since there was a tie for
points at the end of the regular season, a playoff match was used to
determine the first- and secondplace winners . The playoff was
won by Julia Hysell and Debbie
Sayre, with second place going to
Tonya Hunter and Melanie Weese.
The playoff format was also used
to break a tie for lhird and fourth
place. Carol Crow and Celia

.

McCoy won this match over Opal
Casto and Peg Thomas. Fourteen
teams participated in league play
this year.
Triplett announced and gave
awards to !he four person scramble
teams. The winning scramble team
was Tonya Hunter, Mary O'Brien,
Joyce Qutllen, and Becky Trent.
Coming in second place was the
team of Mary Bowen, Jean Powell,
Rita Slavin, and Becky Triplett.
Third place went to Opal Casto
Gail Davenpon, Carol McCullough
and Debbie Sayre. Founh piace
was won by the team of Nellie
Brown, Marilyn Browning, Mary
Froendt and Celia McCoy.

Scoreboard
- • Baseball • -

Ba11on .................... 66 6b
CUlVE!AND .......60 68

.524
.469

6.5
13.5

Milwauk.ee ............. !i4 ?4

.422

19.S

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eulem 01.-llkJn

Tum

W

L

PtL

Philadclphi.t ........... 80 47

.630

St.. Louis ................69 5I

.543

II

Montteal ................ 63

6()

Chicago .................. 62

6S
67

12...5
Ill

Pi.UJ:burgh .............. 60
Aorida ....... :........... 53 74

.531
.488
.4?2
.41"1

New Ycd:: ..............44

.346

36

83

GB

21)

Tclu ..................... 66
Se.tttle ....................62
CaU!omia ............... S7
Minnc&amp;ru. .............•54

61
6&lt;1
69
?I

Tl

Oollind ............... .51

75

.617

Houato'l ................. 68

59

.535

LOIAngc:lc. ...........65
ClNCINNATI ........ 63
San Dicgo ..............49

61
66

.516
.488

78
Colorado ................48 80

.386
.375

4.!i
1!i
17.5
21

Tonight's games

San FrancUco (Bu.rkcu 18·5) at Florid.t
(Ropp 1-4), 7 ,35 p.m
Hounon ( Dnbe.k 7-14) 11 Monueal
(Dennis Martinet 11-1), 1 :35 p.m .
CINONNATI {Ropa: 2-J) at Ph.il.Jdcl·
ph1 a (Mulholland 11 -9), 7:35 p ,m.
San Dic&amp;a (Bcnca 13-10) at ?i.wburgh
(Code 8-7), 7:35p.m.
Chi caao ( Harkey 8 -1) at Atlanu
(Smoh.z 13·9), 7:40p.m.

~

Setule 6, Tormw 3

Today's games

York (Fernandez 2--4), 7:40p.m.
St. Louia (Urbani 0.2) l l W Angclca

(Aru cio 10-7), I0:35 p.m.

.

DH : Minnuota (Delh&amp;iel 11 -12 and
Trombley 5-3) ll Chie~go (Belcher 2-2
'"d Mcllow.U 20-7), 5,05 p.m.
DH, C&amp;lilomi.o (llotzano. G-0 and M.o~ 0.1) at Milwaulr.c:c (Navuro 7-9 and
ligucn ().1), 6:05p.m.
New York (Perez 6-12) at CLEVELAND (Lilliquiot 2-2), 7,05 p.m.

Ba ltimore (Rhodea 3· 3)

(Rosm 12-7), 1:35 p.m.
So.tan (CJ.anen~ 9-10)

It

IL

Tnu

K.an.u City

CHaney 9-5), 8:3.5 p.m.
Toronto (Guz man 10 -3} al Seanle
(FimUng 9-2), 10:35 p.m .
Detroi1 (Boi1Cn 4·5) at Oakland (Van
Poppo14-4), 10:35 p.m.

Colorado (Bottenfield 4-8} at New

Saturday's games
Boa.on (Scle 6-2) at Kwu Cty (App1er I 4-6), 1:OS_p.m.
California (Fmley 13-10) at Milwau-

Saturday's games
{Guzman 11 - 8) 11 At lanta

(Avery 14-4), J :OS:p.m.

San Diego (Sanden 1-0) 11 PiwbuJJ,h
(Z Sm1th 3-6), 6 p.m.
ONCINNATI ~ya la 5·6) at Ph.il.Jdcl·

phil (Creme 12·3), 7:05p.m.
Colorado (Reyn010 1-9) at New York
{Jooeai · 1),7 :JOr..m.
Houlton (Kale 14·4) It Montrul
(RuNr 4-0), &amp;:OS pm.
St . Loui.a (fewbbuJy 13·1) 11 Lo. An •
gclc. (R . Mut.int:Z 9·1), 10:05 p.m .

Sunday '• gamea
DH: San Diego u Pittaburgh, I :05
p.m.

Oticago at Atlanll, 1:10 ~. m .
HouflOn 11 Montreal, 1:35 p,m.
CINCINNATI 11 Philadclphi1, 1:35

p.m.
Colorado at New York, 3:10p.m.
StLouis at t..o. Angelea, 4:05p.m .

Sunday's games

New Yo:dl: at o.EVEl.AND, 1:35 p.m .
Califomilat Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
BOlton at Kanua City, 2:35p.m.
Baltimore at Tuu, 3:05p.m.
Dctmtat Oakland, 4!05 p.m.
Twonto at Sea tile, 4:35p.m.
Minn.CIOU. at OicaJO,I:OS p.m.

lnlcrim "lcllin OIMich.

GB

ss

Ba1timorc ...............6ll

60

.!ill

!i.5

0....iL............ ., .... ,6! 61

.527

6

SEA"'Td'fMARINERS : R•caUod
Man: Newfield, tint bueman-outtieldcr,

fmn J~&lt;:kaonvillc oflhc Southem League.
0,.. Pidtl. fim bu-., to Calpty
of lhe PacifJC C011t League.

s..,

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

IN THE
~tntin.el

m&amp;)OI" league KOUl Ex.tcndcd lhe cmtract
of Ken Bu cey, major leaaue acout

through 1994.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Pur·

CALL
NOW

Basketball
Nat""'al Bult-11-llon
NBA: Pn:wnoted Chria Brien.u., public
relatit:N coordi.natm, to manaaer of media ~lationa.
PHOENIX SUNS: Signed Cedric Ceballo., (orwa.rd, 1.0 a five-year contnct.

THIS SPACE
$8.00

Football

THIS SPACE
$16.00

CINCINNATI BENOALS , Si'nt:d
Regie Rembert, wide rooeivcr. Claimed
',
I•

Watved Tony Sawp.. defM&amp;inlm.nan.

DENVER BRONCOS: Waived 9rel
Le.wia, runnina bact. Atciva1ecl Ott)'

7mwnennan, otrcnaive w:kk.

DETJ:OIT UONS: Activawd .Ry1n

McNeil, comerbact. Waived Chuck.

LonJ'~ PACKERS : Claimed

Kco Coleman, llnebubr, oft wai.vcn
r..m tho New Yom J....

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Activated
quanorbact, and Duane
Bu:&amp;oct, liMbacker. Wai."od Juon John1101"1 and Oeorao Thomu, _.. ncaivm.
LOS ANGI!U!s RAMS: Waiwd wry K&lt;lm. lin•&lt;lter, ond Joe!......., and
LYM lana, wide roceiv..
~HOENIX CARDINALS : T"dt:d
Ernie 1CJnCII, wide ru:ci.va-, llllbcl.OI AnJ~ff Oeo~JC,

~Rama for an undiaclotcd draft

SAN DIEOO CHARUERS , Si&amp;nod

Ronnie Hannon. numina b.c:k. to a lhzeoJIOU """""-

Hockey

Nod ...! HotkeJwpM
NEW YORK RANOERS: SiJnod An·

drci Kttdinov, .......

THIS SPACE
$12.00
I

992·2156

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·.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

...•

•'

strong siUety sprained an ankle at
Dallas two weeks ago and IQissed
I~t weekend's game at Indianapohs.
49ers
Steve Young threw ror the ftrSt
time since breakin~ his left thumb
on .Aug. 8 and satd he was optimistic !he injwy could heal in time
for the regular-season opener.
Coach George Seifert remained
doubtful that Young could play
Sept. 5.
Lioos
Rookie cornerback Ryan
McNeil, who ended a lengthy contract holdout this week, will make
his debut tonight at New Orleans.
Coach Wayne Fontes activated
McNeil on Thursday and released
fourth-string quarterback Chuck
Long.
Oilers
. Wide receiver ~yw~ Jeffu:es.
will stt out Saturday's garne
because of an irregular heart beat
but expects to return for !he season:
opener. Jeffires' heart rate rose to
about 170 beats per minute during
Wednesday's workout and led to a
series of tests that revealed an atrial
fibrillation. Oilers trainer Brad
Brown said the condition was not
career-threatening and could be
controlled with medication.

Florida State's first test of campaign
Saturday vs. Kansas in Kickoff Classic
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
For months, college football
fans have been reading that F1orida
State is the best team in the country. On Saturday, the Seminoles get
their f~rst chance to prove it.
Top-ranked F1orida State will
try to back up its preseason billing
when it plays Kansas in the Kickoff
Classic at East Rulherford, NJ.
"We are taking Kansas serious.
ly," linebacker Derrick Brooks
Coleman, in his rourtb year with the club, has · said. "We need 'to show that we
That seems io he the attitude or the New York
deserve the No. 1 spot."
been em broUed in a criminal case involving his
Mets' management, which announced Thursday
The Seminoles are 26-point
throwing a rll'ecracker that injured a two-yearthat base-stealing ~enius Vince Coleman would
favorites
over Kansas, which went
old girl outside Dodger Stadium in L05 Angeles
not wear a Mets umrorm again, though Coleman
to
a
bowl
last season for the ftrst
earlier this season. (AP file photo)
has a year left on his $11.95-million contract.
time since 1981.
"We don't want to-overlook
To cap Mets' rocky year,
Kansas, but they are an obstacle in
our way to a national championship," receiver Kevin Knox said.
''We can't be detoured.''
The Seminoles lost Butkus
Award winner Marvin Jones and
five other defensive starters from
last year's JJ. I team, but their
NEW YORK (AP) - The New in a separate incident, Saberhagcn charge of possession or an explohigh-powered offense should make
York Mets wanted fast motion . admitted he sprnyed bleach on writ· sive device. Coleman played three
up for any defensive wealcnesses.
Instead, all they ever got from ers . Before that, Bobby Bonilla games after the incident, then left
Their shotgun attack is triggered
threatened a reporter who co-wrote !he team with permission Aug. 3.
Vmce Coleman was commotion.
by
senior quarterback Charlie
He verbally attacked coach a book on the 1992 Mets.
Coleman still has one year left · Ward, a dangerous scrambler who
Coleman contributed to the dis- on a four-year, $11.95 million conMike Cubbage on the field in 1991.
set a school record ror total offense
He shoved manager Jeff Torborg array when he swung a golf club tract. Wilpon did not say how the
(3,151 yards) last season.
and was suspended last year. He hit and hit Gooden in the shoulder, Mets will get rid of him after the
"Charlie is like a vapor," said
Dwighl Gooden with a golf club knocking him out of a stan.
season, only that Coleman will be
coach
Bobby Bowden, who has
His latest antics, however, land- gone.
tliis year.
never
won
a national title despite
. But when Coleman threw a ed him in court. Prosecutors in Los
" We have the right to actsix
consecutive
finishes in the top
powerful fiiecmcker at fans last Angeles said he threw an M-100, release him, trade him or fight him
four. "Just when you think you can
month and charged with a felony. which has the equivalent power of on the contract," Wilpon said.
reach out and grab him, he's
the Mets had seen enough. On a quaner-stick of dynamite, from a "It's in the best interest of the Mets
Thursday, they said Coleman will car as he left !he Dodger Stadium !hat he never wear a Mets uniform
not return to the troubled team.this parking lot on July 24. A two-year- again, even if he is cleared of the
season, and co-owner Fred Wilpon old girl was among three people criminal offense. He'll not play
vowed the 31-year-old outfielder injured.
here again as a Met, with pay or
Coleman eventually said he was without pay."
would never play for them again.
. ''We have been plagued by sorry during a carefully staged
Coleman signed with the Mets
By BOB GREEN
embarrassing problems," Wilpon ptess conference with his family, as a free agent on Dec. 5, 1990,
AKRON,
Ohio {AP) - Jim
said. " It is ownership's resolve to although he never used the word shortly after Darryl Strawberry left
Gallagher
took
advantage of a
bring an end to any further non- "apologize." He has said he will the team for the Los Angeles
monster
drive,
birdied
the final
not contest the criminal charge, Dodgers. At the time, !he Mets said
sense on and off the field."
hole
and
tied
David
Edwards
for
The Mets, picked by some to which carries a penalty ranging !hey wanted to shift their offensive
the
frrst-round
lead
Thursday
in
!he
win the NL East, have the worst from probation to three years in emphasis from power to speed.
World Series of Golf.
record in the majors at 44-83. prison.
But Coleman, who set NL stolen
Gallagher and Edwards each had
"Obviously, Coleman was a big base records in St. Louis, was
There have been lots of lowlights,
4-under-par 66s despite the finn,
il)cluding Anthony Young's 27- pan of the mix wilh all the prob- slowed by injuries in his ftrSt two
fast fairways and quick, tricky
game losing streak, Torborg's fir- lems," Mets manager Dallas Green years with the Mets, was on the
greens
that made the Firestone
said. "To put a team together, you· disabled list ftve times and played a
ing and numerous injuries.
Country
Club course play at its
It's been just as bad in the club- have to have 'we' guys. That total or only 143 games.
toughest
house during the worst season in wasn't Vince's ftrSt goal."
The Mets made an attempt to
South African David Frost was
Wilpon said Coleman will trade Coleman before this season
the team's 32-year history.•Bret
tied
for third at 68.
Saberhagen admitted putting a fife- remain on "administrative leave" began, but found no takers. ColeGallagher
turned the 18th faircracker under a table where with pay until his arraignment Oct. man is leading the NL with 38
way
to
his
advantage,
unleashing a
8 in Los Angeles on a felony steals this year and is batting .279.
reporters were interviewing Young;
'20-yard drive that set up a wedge
to the green.
He got !hat shot to about eight
_c_co_nu_·n_ue_dr_ro_m_Pa_ge_4_)- - - - - - - - - feet and made the putt that gave
him a share of the lead before a
Frank Viola (9-8) allowed only In the only other NL game, New 13th because Lachemann had no
position players left on the bench.
personal gallery of "40 or 50
four hits in 7 1/3 innings as he Yark beat Colorado 7-I.
Walt Weiss walked to start the
Lewis, batting for only !he secfriends and relatives,'' he sai'd
cooled off hot-hitting Texas.
Playing in 94-degree heat more
. The Red Sox took a 2-0 lead in ond time in his major league inning against Doug Jones (4- 10).
common to his hometown of
the first against Kevin Brown (10- career, pulled a two-out singl e After two forceouts, Orestes
Edmond, Okla., than northern
10), and John Valentin led off the down the left field line to score Destrade walked
Lewis
connected
on
an
0I
fastRich
Renteria
from
second
base
Ohio,
Edwards got around wilhout
seventh wilh a homer.
ball
for
his
first
major-league
hit.
.
with
the
winning
run.
Orioles 9, Angels 4
a hogey.
"I don't know if I was more · The si ngle snapped Hou ston 's
''A lot of filirways, a lot of
. At Camden Yards, Harold
stunned or elated that he hit the seven-game winning streak against
B~ines tied the game with a twogreens, not many chances to mess
run homer in !he seventh, and the ball," Renteria said. "When I was the Marlins.
up," he said. "On a golf course or
Lewis (6-1) also pitched I 2/3
Orioles scored five more runs in ·rounding third , I was thinking,
this stature, that's the way I have to
scoreless innings.
'Thank God this is over."'
the eighth.
·
play. That's the only game I've
"I know il may sound a trine
At 4 hours and 27 minutes , the
: Mark Williamson (7-3) got the
got"
win and Gene Nelson (0-4) took game was the Marlins' longest of trivial - a pitcher wan ling to hit
It was as good as any and better
and everything - but I've been a than most in the international 41!he year.
the loss.
Florida manager Rene Lache- three-sport athlete all my life,"
Brewers s, Athletics 3
man field made up of tournament
, At County Stadium ,• Angel mann won with some unusual Lewis said. "If you're going 10 be
winners from around the world the
Miranda (3-3) pitched eight shutout moves. Closer Bryan Harvey made out there and have to hi~ you might
last 12 months.
innings and Juan Bell and Kevin · a. rare appearance in a tie game, as well get out there and get the
The pairing of Fred Couples and
puchmg a scoreless ninth and lOth. most out of it.''
Seitzer homered.
Phil
Mickelson each shot 77 in !he
Mets 7, Rockies 1
Mike Mohler (I -5) held the Hammond, a .222 lifetim e hitter
sweltering
heat
At New York, Dwight Gooden
Brewers hitless for 4 2/3 innings pinch-hit in the lO!h and struck out:
Davis
Love
iii shot a 75.
, before Pat Lis tach doubled and Sanliago entered the game as an (12-14), pitching on two days rest
And
Paul
Azinger,
making his
for the ftrst time in his career, seal·
Bell followed with a two-run outfielder in the 121h.
first
stan
since
winning
the PGA,
"It's good to be out th ere; I tered four hits in eight innings and
homer,
was
.
e
qually
exasperated
with a
don ' t have all the equipment on snapped a career-high four-game
In NL action:
case
of
the
three-putts
that
ran
his
Marlins 5, Astros 4
me,'' Santiago said. Playing his losing streak.
score
up
to
73,
3
over
par.
Eddie Murray doubled and hit
Pitcher Chris Hammond became second game in th e outfield in
On the 18th hole, John Huston
his
20th homer, a two-run shot, and
a pinch hitter. Catcher Benito San- seven major-league seasons, he
found
a way around the putting
tiago became a left fiel!ler. And cleanly handled the only ball hit his Jeff Kent and Todd Hundley each
problems that were common to
drove in a pair of runs.
reliever Richie Lewis became a way - a single.
most of the rest of the field. He
Loser
Greg
Harris
(I
1-13)
hero with his bat.
Lewis was also put ln an unfaholed a 166-yard 8-inin shot for an
:It took extreme measures for the miliar situation. He batted with allowed six runs on eight hits in
eagle-2
and was in a group at 68
F1orida Marlins to beat !he Houston runners at first and second in the seven innings.
with
Frost,
fellow South Mrican
Astros 5-4 in 1,3 innings Thursday.

.......

-

~

Management corps sworn to sweep
Coleman from ranks despite contract

In the majors ...

•

chucd the cootract of Ril..k.crt Faneyte,
oul!i.elder, from Phoeni• of \he Pacific
C_o ut Lcaaue. Tn.naferred Bud Blac:k,
pitcher, from t.he 15· to the 60-day dia·
abled lilt.

contracl restructured so he will
receive more money this year. The
move was designed to help the
Bills deal with the salary cap that
takes eff~ct next season. General
manager John ,Butler said Kelly
will not receive any extra money,
only cash Jhe team already had
committed to paying him under his
contract. Kelly signed a seven-year
deal with the Bills in 1990.
Colts
Offensive lineman Ron Solt
underwent surgery for the ninth
time in his _IO-year career. Salt had
arthroscopic surgery on his left
shoulder after being injured in last
Friday's game against the Raiders .
He said he hopes to be able to
begin playing on Sept. 26 when !he
Colts host Cleveland.
Rams
Los Angeles acquired sixlh-year
wide receiver Ernie Jones from
Phoenix for an undisclosed draft
choice.
Ben gals
Cincinnati acquired defensive
lineman George Hinkle and waived
d~fensive lineman Tony Savage.
Hmkle, 28; had been waived by
Minnesota
Raiders ·
First-round draft choice Patrick
Bates will likely sit out Saturday
night's game with the Rams. The

gone.''
Kansas has 12 starters back
from last year's 8-4 team, wh.ich
beat BYU in the Aloha BowL But
the Jayhawks know almost ·everyone expects them to lose to F1orida
State.
.
"This game is an opportunity,"
coach Glen Mason said. "All you
ever ask for is a chance- that's
· the American way."
Kansas has lost its last six
games against No. 1 teams by an
average score of 47-10. That
sounds about right against the
Seminoles . ... FLORIDA STATE
48-17.
The second game of the season
takes place Sunday in Anaheim,
Calif., where No. 18 Soulhem Cal
meets No. 20 North Carolina in the
Pigskin Classic.
Much of the focus has been on
Soulhern Cal coach John Robinson,
who has returned to the school that
he left a decade ago. Robinson,
who won 82 percent of his games
at Southern Cal from I 976-82, has
I 7 starters back from a team that
went 6-5- I last season under Larry
Smith.
"We have lots of experience,"
he said. "I like our team. It's going
to be good."
North Carolina went 9-3 last
year, including a Peach Bowl victory over Mississippi State. Coach
Mack Brown will once again go
with a two-quarterback rotation,
using both Mike Thomas and Jason
Stanicek.

Gallagher, Edwards tied for lead
early in World Series of Go(f

NOW
AVAILABLE

.,.onool

GC?t&amp;c Hinkle, defcna:in lineman, off
wa1.ven from tho Minnc1ota Vlk.in&amp;• ·

B~baU

.514
.574

CINCINNATI REDS ' Claimt:d Phil

earned run average against the
Twins to 0.32. He's given up just
one earned run on 21 hits m 28
innings against Minnesota.
Kevin McReynolds and Greg
Gagne provided the offensive sup- .
pan with four of the five Royals'
hits off Willie Bailks (8-9).
In other junior circuit games,
Seattle topped Toronto 6-3, Boston .
downed Texas 3-1, Baltimore ·
defeated California 9-4 and Mil- .
waukee beat Oakland 5-3. In the
National League, Florida edged ·
Houswn 5-4 in 13 innings, and
New York beat Colorado 7-I.
Mariners 6, Blue Jays 3
At the Kingdome, Ken Griffey
Jr. took over the major-league lead
with his 38th and 39th home runs
and Mike Blowers also hit a pair. It
was Griffey's second straight two- ·
homer game, his I Olh career twohomer game and his ftfth this year.
Randy Johnson (14-8) improved
his record against Toronto to 3-0
this year, allowing nine hits, striking out eight and walking one in
eight innings.·
Red So¥ 3, Rangers 1
At Arlington, Boston's six-game
losing streak and Texas' four-game
victory string both came to an end.
(See MAJORS on Page S)

BULLETIN BOARD

Dauphin, outfi.d.cb, off waiYen from the
Chicaso Cubo 10nd
1Um to w;.
&amp;napolis d Lht Amc:nc1r1 Allociation.
COLORADO ROCKIES ; Phced
Bruce Hunt, pitcher, on Lhe 15-day diJ..
ablcd liA., rctro~ctiYe to A111. 22 RccaUed
llnce Painter, pitcher, from Colorado
Sprinp tithoPoeift&lt;&gt; Cout ~a.,.._
NEW YOU: MEl'S: A,peed to tam1
with Kirk. Plaley, pi~. ActivllCd Jciln
Franco, pilthcr, fmm thtl IS-day di&amp;ablod
l.Ul. P1acecl Tim Boau, ahCI'ti:Lop, em the
15-day dilab1ed list.
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Named Rea·
gie ~ aller 111iat~n1 aeneral manaacr;
K~·ra.n Towen d1rcctor of acoutin&amp;;
PriscUla {lppertheimer di.rcctor of minor
leaF adminiltntion, and Randy Johnaon

Minnuou (Tapan.i 7- 12) 11 Chicaao
(Due 5-S), 7 :0~ p.m.
Baltimore (Valenzuela 6-1) at Tex11
(Povlik 1-6), 1 :35 pm.
Totonlll (MoniJ 7· 11) at Se~~ttle (Boaio 6- 7), 10:05 p.m .

Amerlun Waue
CLEVELAND INDIANS: F"....t Riok
Adair, pitchina coach. Named Dan Chiti

New Yort ..............74 55
r ........................74

Orluodo

NaUonal Foocball Lequt
BUFFALO BilLS: Rcatruc tuml the
cmtnct. «Jim Kdl)', gUil1CIIb.U.

- • Transactions • -

AMERICAN LEAGUE

to

kee (Ncwoa 0.2), I :0.5 p.m.
New Y01.k (Key lS-4) at eLE VE !AND (Mow 2-S), 1,35 p.m.
Detroit (Moore 10·6) 11 O•k.hnd
(X.aruy 1· 1), 4 :0S p.m .

San Fra~coat Aorida, 6:05p.m.

I

18.5

Kansu Chy 3, MinnC&amp;Ota 0
BOlton 3, i e.u1 l

3!i.!i

New Yo dr. 7, Colorado I

Tum

3.5
4
7.S
12.5
JS

New Yolk 4, Cl.EVFL4.ND 0

34

Florida 5, Hou.non 4 (13 inn.)

Eutem Dlvblon
W L PeL

..WS

Thuraday'• Moret
9, Cali!omia 4
Milw1ukoc S, Oakland 3

Thursday's scores

Chie~go

.520
.492
.452
.432

SwtnzbuJ)&gt;, pil&lt;:ha-, outrilht
of the Southern League.

Baltimo~

Wattrn Dlvllion
San Francilco ........ 83 44 .654

ALJ.arna ................... 79 49

Wattrn Di"ldon
Chicago..................69 S6 .SS2
Kmu• Cily ........... 67 61 .523

u.,..,

· NationaJ
CHICAGO CUBS : Sent Femaado
Ramaey, (IUlfi.elder, outri~t to Iowa o(
tbc American Auociauon and Dave

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Fulton Allem and Massy Kuramoto
of Japan.
Greg Norman was in a group at
69.
Edwards, who qualified for this
winners-only event with a victory
in the Heritage Classic, is a short
hitter on one of the tour's longest
tracks, 7,I 49 yards and par 70.
His accuracy kept him in the
fairways and "I got some good
breaks. When you score this well
on this kind of a course, you have
to have some breaks," he said.
One of them came on !he ninth,
one of the few greens he missed.
He turned a potential bogey into a
birdie, chipping in from about 40
feet.
Gallagher, who gained the last
spot on the qualifying list for !he
American Ryder Cup team, said the
pr.essure of that competition is
behind him "and it's back to playing golf as I know it; not wondering if somebody is going to pass
me on the list"
He came from · two shots .back
wilh birdies on two of the last three
holes, flipping a sand wedge to
three feet on the 16th, the taking
advantage of the big drive on !he
final hole.

"I know people say you can't
win with a two-quarterback system,
but we did it last year,'' Brown
said. "Sure, I'd mther have a clearcut starter. However, we're fonunate to have two of the best quarterbacks in the country and we're
going to use them."
The Tar Heels are 8 1/2-point
underdogs against the Trojans, who
return to the site of their humiliat·
ing Freedom Bowl loss to Fresno
State last December.... SOUTHERN CAL 24-21.
Last season: 182-55 {straight);
Il2-104 (spread).

Sports briefs
Base baD
MONTREAL (AP) - Montreal
pitcher Dennis Martinez vetoed a
trade to Atlanta, mainly because
the Braves couldn't ensure him a
spot in !heir rotation.
Atlanta, which wanted to blOck
Martinez from going to rival San
Francisco, worked out a deal
Wednesday night to acquire him
for Brian Hunter.
Martinez, 38, had the right to
veto any deal as a 10-and-5 man he's played 10 years in the majors
the last five with the same team:
He's II-8 with a 4.23 ERA this
season.
Base baD
NEW YORK (AP)- Owners
and players association representa- .
tives met to discuss the proposed
expanded playoffs for next season.
No a~reement was reached, and
none tS expected for at least two
months.
The players have proposed three
division winners and a wild-card
team in each league starting in
I 994. The owners are leaning
toward four division winners and
four second-place teams.
Tennis
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP)
- Top-seeded Ivan Lend! beat
Joern Renzenbrink of Germany 63, 6-3 in the second round of the
OTB International. In the women's
draw, Natalia Medvedeva of
Ukraine upset second-seed Sabine
Hack of Germany 4-6, 6-1, 6-2.
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SUNDAY SPECIAL
SUNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1993
HOMEMADE NOODlES &amp; CHICKEN
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans with Mushrooms
Hot Buttered Roll
Small Drink or Coffee

$4~'

�\

l

Friday August 27, 1993

By The Bend
.,

~i Books

The Daily Sentinel

by mail set
. for Meigs County

Friday August 27, 1993
Page-6

~

Mail boxes in rural Meigs
County are receiving a special
delivery this month in the form of a
free service called Books By Mail.
This service is provided to area residents from the Meigs County Pub·
. lie Library and tbe Ohio Valley
· · .Area Libraries (OVAL).
Books By Mail allows people to
· borrow books from their home and
· is especially good for those who
. have · difficulty getti ng to the
· library. City residents can receive a
· catalog by calling the Library at
992-5813 or calling OVAL at I·
800-759-1537.
There are hundreds of books to
choose from in our easy-to-use 40
page catalog. The service is like a
. - public library in that patrons borrow books for a few weeks and
. then return them. The only difference is. that it all happens through
the mail, and borrowers don't have
to leave their homes to receive the
service.
All postage costs for sending the
books to the the readers and return ..
ing them to OVAL are paid by the
service . .
Novels, romances, mysteries,
westerns, and other books to read
for enjoyment are available for
loan. Information books such as a
biographies of Elizabeth Taylor or
Geraldo Rivera, cookbooks for the
health conscious as well as the All
Butter, Fresh Cream, Sugar
Packed, No-Holds-Barred Baiting
Book may be borrowed.
Books for children are also
available in addition to special
books in large type for those who
have difficulty seeing_and a section

Can deceased pet be replaced?
Dear Readers: I am 011 vaauio11,
but I /lave left bt#li/ld SOIM of
my favorite coiiiiMS tlttu )011 may
ltirr!e missU IN jil'st lime aroiiiiiL I
lwpe you enjoy them. -- A1111
Ltwlus
Dear Alia Lucien: Our little

TEACHERS WELCOMED • The Gallia Couaty Local Educa·
tion Association held a luncheon to weleome back associatlon .rep·
resentatives and new teachers to the county schools. Those honored at the reception were left Cathy Greenleaf, secretary, Carol
Langsford, treasurer, Gary PhHiips, association representative and
.Joan Eggleton, association representative.

_Names in the news_
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) Soccer legend Pele has apparently
found a higher calling: He says he
has the power to heal sick children
thanks to "a closer link between
Pcle and God.''
"Parents call m.c saying their
kid has cancer, has only one month
to live and wants to see me while
still conscious. I go to the hospital
and the kid recovers, '' Pete says in
the August issue of Playboy magazine's Brazilian edition.
He said such miraculous recoveries have occurred several times in
Brazil and olher countries, but he
never revealed his faith -healing
powers before because he feared
being misunderstood .

because of the latest incident, when
he allegedly punched QUI an
employee of Madonna's Maverick
Records and made a disparaging
remark about homosexuals.
"This latest incident made it
clear that he has yet to change and
would make a poor model for an
anti-violence message," said a
statement issued by the New York
c hapter of the Gay &amp; Lesbian
Alliance Against Defamation, the
Committee Again st Anti-Asian
Violence and the Anti-Violence
Campaign.
Wahlberg's attorney, Oliver
Mitchell, did not return a telephone
message left Thursday at his
Boston office.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Basketball junkies may want to tun e
into the season premiere of Fox
television's "Married ... With Chi!. dren" on Sept. 5.
Clyde Drexler of the Portland
Trail Blazers, Vlade Divac of lhe
Los Angeles Lakers and Xavier
McDaniel of the Boston Celtics
have walk-on roles.
The hook? The main characters
auend an All-Star basketball game.

PELE
NEW YORK (AP) - Mark y
Mark is in trouble with anti-bias
groups again. this time for an anti·
gay remark he allegedly made dur·
ing a fight in Los Angeles last
monlh.
The rapper and underwear
model whose real last name ts
WahlbCrg, had agreed to finance
and appear in a public servtce SJ?Ol
denouncing bias-motivated vto·
tence to atone for past incidents of
racial harassment and assault.
But the groups that had taken
him to task before said Thursday
they were canceling the spot
;

NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe
this time David Letterman fans will
find out what Vice President AI
Gore had for breakfast and dinner.
Gore has been booked as a guest
for the Sept. 8 edition of Leiterman's new show on CBS, "Late
Show with David Letterman.''
Earlier this year , Gore talked
with the Letterman on his old NBC
show by telephone. The vice president was part of a recurrent bit
ca lled " Tell Us About Your
Lunch. " He said he ate some food
from McDonald 's.
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
band Aerosmith, known for "Walk
This Way" and other endurin g
rock ' n' roll hits, has earned the
first star in th e Tower Reco rds
Walk of Fame.
Band memb ers Steven Tyl er,
Joe Perry, Brad Whitford , Tom
Hamilton and Joey Kramer attended th e cerem ony Thursday at
Tower Records. Each recei vcd a
replica of the 26-inch brass Aerosmith star that was cemented iota
the ground outside th e Newbury
Street record store.

&lt;•

Scottish terrier "Sir H_arry• (we
named him after Sir Harry I alder)
was run over last week. He died in
the IIIIlS of our ll·YQ"-old as we
were rushing him to the animal
hospital.
The children can't get over their
grief, Out 9-year-old sleeps with
Harry's collar and uh under his
pillow. The doj~'S toys are now
cherished krq~S"""s - the rubber
ball, the plastic bone, the beat-up
. 1'118 doll. We walk around with trars
in our eyes.
The man who run over Harry is
heartsick. It was not his faUJL The
dog should not have been TUMing
loose •• even lhough it happened in
front of our house, and someone vias
with him at the lime.
The question is this: The man
wants to buy us another Scottish
terrier. My husband says yes. The
kids are aU for iL
But I can't bear the thought of

Ann
Landers

out and said, "Sorry, you'D have to
move. This space is m~C~Ved for our
friends. • I moved. Docs she have
fJTSt dibs because she's a ·home-

. owner? -MIFFED

Garden club tours Barton's acres

A tour of the gardens of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Barton was a feature
of th e August meetin g of th e
Chester Garden Club.
Evergreens, hardwood s, crab
apple trees bending with fruit·, five
vari eties of lilacs, mimosc crepe
myr~c in shades of pink, white and
lavcndar in full bloom, and many
other specimen shrubs left plenty
of space for a rose garden at the
Bartori residence.
Also a display of gladioli in full
bloom and numerous border plantings and flower beds of a variety of
summer flowers were most attractive in spite of the hot, dry weather.
White lawn furniture, hanging baskets and urns of begonias marked
the from entrance. At the kitchen
enuance area, foundation plantings,
baskets and urns of pansies created
an attractive area to watch humming birds at feeders hanging in a
large magnolia tree with a base
planting of blooming plantain
lilies.
During the tour Mrs. Barton
answered questions on varieties
and culture. Her co-hostess for the
meeting was Pauline Ridenour.
"I Am Thankful Just To Be "
from the writings of Marjorie
Holmes by Dorothy Karr, devotional leader, expressed gratitude
for the five senses and the human
body . A reading "What Makes
Statues?" recogni zed th e unknown
peopl e who quietly do heroic

deeds, was included in the devo- held in Dayton last month . In the
tions ..
flower show she won a blue ribbon
For roll call a garden vegetable in tile class "The Mountain Slide, a
exchange was held. This included humorous interpretation. Her
Black Beauty egg plant, Red Indian arrangements included blue spruce,
raspberries, early transparent anthurium, white sled with white
apples and yellow banana peppers.
rope, and red mittens. She also won
In the Save the Earth les son, the horticulture sweepstakes in the
"Time To Retire", Bette Dean class, "Basket of Garden Vegeta·
noted that 240-260 miUion tires are bles" . The theme of the show as
discarded annually in the United "The World Around Us". She also
States. She noted that some landfill ·reported that Region II won· the
operators do not accept scrap tires. educational display with "Birds'
because they are bulky, do not nests", 20 of them displayed.
·
decompose, and provide places for
The resignation of Mace! Barton
mosqu11oes to breed . .
as vice president was accepted with
It takes a half bane! of crude oil regret. A lhank you from Maurita
to produce the rubber in one truck and Roy Miller was noted and a
tire, she said. Under-inflation cim book will be placed in the Pmoeory
waste up to five percent of a car's Public Library by the club in mem·
fuel by increasing "rolling resis· ory of Nancy Miller Mays. A lhank
lance" , keeping tires properly you note was also reported from
inflated, balanced and rotated every Virginia Chadwell , an honorary
6,000 to 8,000 miles and using member, for Ideals magazine.
radial tires improve gas mileage,
In community service, it was
according to Dean. She said that if reported that Pat Holter provided
all cars in the United States were roses from her garden to be
equipped with the most efficient arranged by Mrs. Dean for the July
tires pos sible , the fuel savings wedding of Judy Mora and Larry
would equal 400,000 barrels of oil Bunger at the Chester United
per day.
Methodist Church. Fourteen table
During the business meeting arangements were made for the
Maida Mora, president, reponed on reception tables at the Chester
the Meigs County Garden Club school auditorium.
.
meeting and plans for the fair flowDorothy Karr and Edna Wood
er show. It was noted that Bette made 35 table arrangements for the
Dean anended lhe Ohio Associa- Chester High School Alumni
tion of Garden Clubs convention reunion . Holter provided weekly

altar flowers at trinity Congregational Church during the summer,
and on Father's Day provided roses
for the children to present to the
men in the congregation. Maida
Mora and Clarice Krautter have
watered and groomed the planters
at Trinity. This month Kathryn '
Mora will provide altar flowers at
Chester United Methodist Church.
A planned tour of the Glass
House Works at Stewart was cancelled but will be rescheduled.
The P.rogram included a disc.ussion on 'Sunflowers" by Jean Frederick, "Price of Seed" by Kathryn
Mora, "Old Tires" by Pauline Ridenour who suggested they be used
for flowers or vegetables, and
"Right Plant Container", clay and
plastic both have advantages and
disadvantages.
An informal auction of books,
fruit and miscellaneous items was
held during the social hour.
The hostesses assisted by Car·
olyn Barton served a dessert course
to II members. Mrs. Frederick and
Mrs. Dean received the door prizes.
Next meeting will be held Wednes·
day at the home of Dorolhy Karr. A
home flower show will be held on
the theme "Harvest Time". Roll
caU will be best specimen flowers
for judging. The monthly tip was
that two of the leaves should be left
when cuuing gladioli to feed lhe
bulbs.

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE • A tent revival
will be held through Tuesday at 7
p.m. near Eastern High School on
Route 7. Rev. Joe Beasley, Fresh
Oil Ministry, Vincen~ will be ministering. Special singing nightly.
. RIPLEY, W.VA.- The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Friday
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
hold a dance Friday at thepost
home from 8-11:30 p.m. with
music by 0 and lhe County Gentlemen. Everyone welcome.

LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom,
preaching and singing, Friday, 7

p.m. with David Dailey and the
Dailey Family Singers. Pastor
Steve Reed invites lhe public. Fe!·
lowship follows.
SATURDAY
KANAUGA · The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform at the
DAV Center in Kanauga .

Western Square Dance Club will
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11
p.m . at the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy. John Waugh wiU be the
caller. Public invited. Refresh·
ments.
SUNDAY
CARPENTER • Columbia
Township Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary will serve homemade ice cream, pie, sandwiches
and beverages at the ftrehouse on
Route 143 near Carpenter·on Sunday from 4-8 p.m.

REEDS VILLE • There wiU be a
men's softball tournament sponsored by lhe Tuppers Plains Baseball and Softball Association at
Eastern High School on Saturday
and Sunday. The cost is $65 and
two balls. Team trophies for first,
second and lhird and individual tro·
ROCK SPRINGS - Albert and
phies for first and second. Call Rose Priddy Jeffers reunion will be
Roger Willford Jr. at 667-3653 or Sunday at the grange hall at the
Meigs County fairgrounds. Bring a
Dan Spencer at 667-3342.
covered dish and table service.
CHESHIRE • Descendants of Dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Bertha and James Cremeans will
CLIFTON, W.VA. · There will
hold their family reunion Saturday
at Kyger Creek Club House. Din- be a candlelight comunion and a
feet washing service Sunday at 7
ner will be at 2 p.m.
p.m. at Clifton Tabernacle Church
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus in Clifton, W.Va.

Hayes-Young Holiday school reunites

by Bob Hoeflich
Active Bob Gilmore of Middle·
port will be undergoing heart
surgery on Sept. 7 at the Qeveland
Clinic. Meantime, he and his wife,
Jean, will be doing a bit of vaca. tioning. They will be aboard lhe
Mississippi Queen four days next
. week malting a trip from Cincinnati
: to Portsmouth and back. Enjoy!
The "nest" of George and Joan
Hoffman, also of Middleport, emp. tied on the weekend of Aug. 13, 14
and 15, when they took their son,
, Bryan, a !993 graduate of Meigs
High School and the last of lhree
children to leave home, to Camp. bellsville, K)r .. where he is attend·
'- ing CampbeUsville College.
Although the trip seemed a little
' early, it wasn't because Bryan will
· be with the football team atlhe col, lege and practice was gelling
underway. And this week classes
began.
I guess i.t doesn 'I matter if you
have one or 12 children, it's a little
• depressing when the nest bocomes
· empty, a necessary evil, it seems.
So do give George and Joan one of
your best smiles.

--

The 69th annual Hayes-YoungHoliday School reunion was held
recently on the old school grounds
with 71 in auendance. The blessing
was asked by Craig Dougan and
the afternoon program was called
to ord( · by Hollie Hayes who ·
opened\ ,he program with . silent
prayer for those deceased during
the. year, Rev. Albert Friend Jr.,
Mr. H. Rose and Nancy Mays.
The secre1ary's report was read
by Kathy Dougan and officers were
elected. They include president
Hollie Hayes, vice president Craig
Dougan, secretary/treasurer Kathy
J., 'Ugan, and game comm.i ttee
Garoldene Boyd and Craig
Dougan. ·
Gifts were presented to lhe oldest woiJlan, Mandy Easunan, oldest
man , Pearl Gilkey, youngest
Cameron Bolin, traveled farthest,
Jean Friend . Melon door prizes

went to Hollie Hayes, Mandy Eastman and Linda O'Nail.
Songs . were sang by Craig
Doujlan and Jamie Boyd played ,the
vwltn. Fern Cheesebrew r.ead a
poem and the program was ended
with group singing.
Games were played by the chil·
dren and prizes were awarded.
Those attending were Craig, Kathy,
Kandt and Steve Dougan Robert
Stephanie and Miranda' Alsept'
Hollie and Linda Hayes Grac~
Richardson, Colleen and Floyd
Brickles, Audra Hayes, Heather
Fry, Bill Mullen, Fern Cheesebrew
Mary Jordon , Chuck and Flor~
Karns, Allan and Sahra Gibson
Virginia Gibson, Juanita Richards:
Joe. and Lynette Mace Jeremiah
Jordon, Jean Friend, Kim, Rachel
'and Holly Friend, Fawn Shannon
Ian Kathy Stevers, Jim, Gerolden~
and Jamie Boyd, Gene, Liilda and

That educational exhibit you
saw at the Meigs County Fair deal·
. ing wilh herbs was by Janet Theiss.
Earlier it was credited erroneously
· as being the exhibit of someone
else. Do want to get that corrected.

RUTLAND • Rev . Calvin
Evans , Pedro, will speak at MI.
Union Baptist Church on Sunday at
6:30 p.m. He will appear on Evangelistic Outreach Channel 13 that
morning at 8 a.m. Public invited.
Call 742-2194 for information.

Many of us have that inborn collector syndrome and probably Bar·
bara Sargent is among us.
Barbara has been living in an
apanment in Chester for the past 31
years and probably wonders where
all that "stuff" came from. She
now is moving to a mobile home
on ·lhe Sumner Road. While clearing out for the move, Barbara ran

RACINE • The Cecil Leroy and
Anna Sayre reunion wiU be Sunday
at I p.m. at Star Mill Park.
MONDAY
RUTI.AND · The Rutland Garden Club will hold its open meeting
and guest night Monday at 7:30
p. m. at the Rutland United
Methodist Church. Hal Kneen wil
present a program. All clubs welcome.

Cory 0 'Nail, Mary Hayes, Th~resa
and Tracy Shaffer, Mandy Eastman, Ehzabeth Hayes , Diane
Dixon, Rod and !!in Quinn, Ken
Hayes, Pearl Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Wolfe, Wayne Jordon, Ester
Baker, Brent, Camille, Lindsay,
Clay and Cameron Bolin, Sharon
Swindell, Clark, Bonnie, Seth and '
Andrew Baker.

Pomeroy, OH.

SPRINI UD SIMMER

BOllS

Mon.-Fri. 9:00·5:00
Sat. 9:00.12:00

~· TIE

·47th reunion held

WARRIOR RECEIVES FACELIFT • Tbe
restored statue of Armed Freedom sits in front
of the Capital Thursday Aug. 26. Tbe seven-ton,
19-foot 6-inch bronze female warrior bas been
successfully cleaned aad restored and will be

• Mr. and Mrs. Pat Johnson, Kel·
lie and Samantha, Columbus, spent
lhe weekend with Mrs. Ann Mash.
A cook-out was enjoyed Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mash, Christy and Bobby. Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Pullins and Jesse and
Dwight Cullins.
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore of Colum·
bus, and Mrs. Lisa Scranton and
!Darbie, Arimas and Jordan of
•Marysville, were w!lCkend guests
:or Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson

Race heats up for fabled Nazi treasure
By ONDREJ HE.JMA
Associated Press Writer
HRADISTKO, Czech Republic
(AP)- An old woman's tales of
buried Nazi loot said to be worth
between $30 million and $200 million have spelled an end to peace
and quiet in this river valley.
International salvage teams are
negotiating with the government
for permission to start digging.
Meanwhile, dozens of diggers are
camped near the Vltava River,
eagerly awaiting a decision.
Jan Vaculik, a senior police offi·
cial, said police and army searchers
may have to move in first. so inexperienced diggers are not blown up
by mines the Nazis are reponed to
have sown in the area during their
occupation.
Anna Krnanska, 88, says she
witnessed strange happenings one
night nearly 50 years ago near what
was then the Stechovice concentra·

TITeekend gUeS·f
l
d

$3.00/Couple

LONDON POOL, SYRACUSE, OHIO '

and children, Kellie and Eric, spent
the weekend with Mrs. Jean
WrighL
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker and
boys, Acrida, spent the week with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell.
Mrs. Ruth ·Douglas, Columbus,
spent the weekend wilh her mother,
Mrs. Emma Fox.
Mrs. Tom Parker has been ;u.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs and Mrs.
Donna Gilmore were the guests of
Mrs. Shir~y Wise, McConnelsviUe
on Thursday.

'A(fred news

Marlha. Joe and Will Poole and
Nellie Parker recently auended a
family dinner at the home of
Howard and Wilma Parker, honor·
ing Edson and Helen Parker of
Aurora, Col., and Jane t, Dfck,
· Parker and Kristin Harper of Parker, Col .. Parker Harper was ·recognized recently for participating in
the baseball play-offs in Dublin.
Olher guests were Irene Park~r.
Carolyn, Lew, Shetri and Michael
Smith, Lori, Doug and Adam War·
den, Mildred Caldwell, Dennis
Parker, Nancy Campbell, Homer
and Sarah Parker, all of Meigs
County; April, Todd and Kacie
Lewis, Springfield; Patty and
Aaron Parker, Germantown; and
Willis Parker, Parkersburg, W.Va.

·I
'I

The treaure .hunters believe the sure hunter, says SS Col. Heinrich
POWs buried crates of jewels, art Emil Klein, the commander of a
objects and other loot that had been military unit near the concentration
hustled out of Berlin by Col. Otto camp, told him where the treasure
Skorzeny, a commander of an elite was before dying in 1971. Gaensel
German mililary unit, in April 1945 says he has invested $400,000 in
preparations and preliminary digs..
ns the Allies closed in.
Gaensel's main. rival, former
The loot was meant to be spirit·
Czech
military officer Joze( Muzik,
ed to Argentina, far from Allied
claims
Klein knew nothing.
hands.
Muzik
boasts he holds the key,
Many say it j!OI no further lhan
based
on
research
in Czech Interior
jus1 outside thts town, 20 miles
Ministry
archives.
But his earlier
south of Prague, sharing space with
digs
have
yielded
little besides
secret agents' flies, plans for Nazi
wonder weapons and Swiss bank German army uniform remnants
account numbers in an under- and human bones. Muzik says he
has spent $50,000 on the search.
ground shaft ftlled with explosives.
"If they did not pick it up ye~ it
Gaensel 's and Muzik' s digs
has to be there," declares Kmans· were stopped in mid-August by'
Czech authorities who dido 't want
ka.
Shortly after World War II , uncontrolled treasure hunting in
American troops seized confiden- one of Prague' s most popular
·
tial Nazi files in another mined recreational areas.
Police now patrol the forest s.
shaft in the region. Secret police
searched the area after the Commu- Cameras have been deployed on
nists took power in Czechoslovakia sites of the most frequent digging,
in 1948, but found nothing else.
and surveillance planes drone overDozens of amateur treaure head. ·
Gaensel has rented a riverside
hunters, equipped with little more
than picks and shovels, are poised villa and ~ys he is prepared to stay
to dig alongside well-equipped pro- a long time for the go-ahead to dig.
fessionals who claim to know just
"I don't mind waiting a year or
where to look.
two," he said. "This is a great
Helmut Gaensel, a German trea· place. I like it here."

Public Notice .
bond of each unoucco01ful
bidder after a contract hao
been exoculad.
Bidders are required to
comply with the Minority
Busineu Enterpri11 (MBE)
requirement• set forth in
Section t64.07 of the Ohio
Revised Code, and Rule
164·t · 32 of tho Ohio
Adminiatrativo Code. In
part, this means that any
biddr, to the extent that it
oubconlraclo work, shall
award aubconolracta to
Cortifiad Minority Busineso
Enterprise• in en aggrogele
dollar value of no looo than
live percent (5%) of tho
prime contract. Bidder
procurement activities, to
the extent that it procureo

matarlala and/or services , C·4,

ahall reoull in tha award of
procurement conlracla to
Certified Minority Buaineu
Enterprise• In an aggregate
Broadway/Logan Street dollar value ol no leaa than
O,.lnage Improvement two percent (2%) of tho
Pro!ecl, Village of prime contract
Middleport
All conlraclon and
The project lncludeo aubconlracton
Involved
removal and replacement of with the project with, to the
varloua drainage linea and extent practicable uae Ohio
catch b.asina In the area of products,
materiala,
Broadway and Logan aervlcea, and labor
In the
Streets.
Implementation
oltholr
Plano and apecilicaliono p r o j o c 1.
Additionally,
may be obtained at the contractor
compliance with
mayora olfica lor a $t9.00 the Equal Employment
leo, which ia not rolundablo. Opportunity requirement&amp;
Further information on the o I 0 hi o Admlniatrativo
project may be oblainad by Code
Chapter t23 , tho
contacting Bill Browning at Governor'• ExecuUve Order
1-6t4·992-6782.
of 1972, and · Governor'•
Enginerrlng estimate:
Executive Order 84·1 aholl
St3,2t0.
'
requlrad.
A bid guaranty, aa beBidder•
mual comply with
roqulred by Section t53.54 the prevailing
waga rate on
of the Revlaed Coda ol public lmprovomenla
Ohio, shall accompany each Meigs County, Ohio, uIn
propoaal submitted , 11
determined by The Ohio
lollowo: .
of lnduatrlsl
t) A Certified Check, Department
Relationa.
Caohier'a Check, or letter
bidder .may withdraw
of Credit equal to 1o hloNobid
alxty (60)
percent of the bid. A letter daya afterwithin
the
octuol
date qf
of Cradit may be r'!vocable opening thereof.
only by the owner. Upon
All bldli ahall be properly
entering Into a contract with olgnod
by on oulhorlzad
the owner, the contractor repreaentative
ol tha bidder.
muot then file 1 bond for tho
All blda ahott bo aealad
amount of tha contract, and and
plainly marked
the chock or Letter of Credit Broadway/Logan
Streat
will then be returned to tha Drainage Improvement
aucceaalul
and Project, Vlllaga of
unaucceaolul biddera when Mlddlaport.
tho contract lo exoculad.
The owner reaervea the
or
right
to reject any or all bldo
2) A Bond lor tho full aubmlttad,
amount of thla bid.. Tho lrregularillea.and waive any
owner will retain tho bond
Frad Hoffmln, Meyor
of the aucceaslul bidder but
Village
of Middleport
lhe owner ·will return the
(8) 27, (9) 3, tO, 3tc

'·

90TH BIRTHDAY - Mrs
Edith Erdman of Belpr~
, recently celebrated her 90th
birthday. Mrs. Erdman was
born in Joppa in 1903. She has
four graadcbildren, Jobnay
Hetzer, Janet Hoffman, Pat
Martla aad Michael Boriag,
and seven great grandchildren, Todd Hetzer, Tiffany
Hetzer, Lisa Hoffman, Briaa
Hoffman, Michael Martin
Matthew MartiD and Jenn~
Boring.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE OF ARE
TOWERS OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURALRESOURCES
iiEAVERCREEKFIRE
TOWER &amp;
MISCELLANEOUS
STRUCTURES- FERNWOOD
STATE FOREST TUPPERS
PLAINSTOWER-PIKE
STATE FOREST GRASS
KNOB FIRE TOWER·BRUSH
CREEK STATE FOREST
POND RUN &amp;'TWIN CREEK
ARE TOWERS- SHAWNEE
STATE FOREST
Seal ad bldo ,.will be
received by lha Ohio
Department of Nalurol
Ruourcea, Ofllco of R..t
Eotala &amp; land Management,
Root Eatolo Section, Bldg.
Fountain

PubliC Notice
fire loworo and 3
miscellaneous otructur•.
All bldo are to be
oubmlltod on formo
furniohod
by
the
Deportment ot Natural
Resourcto. The Slate
roaerveo tho right to reject
any or all bida.
For "Bid Forme" or
lurthor lnlormotlon, contocl
Sandy Kegley, Office of Roll
Estate &amp;Lend Manoa-en~
ol the obove oddre81·
telephone number (6t4)
265-638t or Jam• Milliron,
Shodo. River Stale Foroot
Manager, 1722t SR ant,
Cheotorhill, OH 43728, (6f4554-3tn.
Only the oucceoolul
bidder will be notiliad. Tho

Square, tucceaaful bidder should

Columbua, Ohio 43224, up nota thai 1 performance
to and Including September bond of $t50.00 io requirad
t5, 1193, at 4:00 p.m. for .6 to be poalad.
(8) 27, (9) 3 21c

1----------!..!:!..::.!.!:!.:.:.=-.---Real Estate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
HAVE YOU EVER DREAMED OF OWNING YOUR OWN
BUSINESS? - This business is equipped with shake
machine, 4 freezers, ice machine, deep fryer, ice cream

machine, and grill. Approx. 1 aero lot along a slate route.
$50,000

MINERSVILLE - The works all done in this 3 badrooin
one bath homo with all new wiring, roof, fumaco, insulation and hot walor tank. Make your appointment today.
'
$35,000
ADDISON - Honoyaucklo Drive - Could be used for a
rental or a nice starter homo. Two bedrooms, t bath, new
septic, and new wiring. WAS 124,500
NOW St8,000
POMEROY- Union Avenua- AlariJi 2 story home with
' 3 bedrooms, large family room wnh fireplace, dining
room, 2 baltls, lull basement, and a garage in basement.
Nice big level lot.
$47,900
RACINE - Applegrove Dorcas Rood- 53 acres of land
with2 saptic systems, 2 walls and one water tap.
$30,000
DOmE TURNER, Broker .....................................992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................... 992-3056
DARLINE STEWART............................................. 992-CI65
SANDY BUTCHER.................................................992-5371

JERRY SPRADUN!J .................................... (304) 8824498
OFACE...................................................................992-2886

- . --

'·

Descendants of James and Aora
Chase recently held the family's
47th reunion at Pike Lake.
Sixty one members attended the
carry-in dinner. Grace was given
by Wendell Jeffers. Swimming,
boating, horseshoe pitching, walking, picture taking and fellowship
were enjoyed by those attending.

returned by helicopter to its regular perch atop
the Capitol October 23. The scaffolding that bas
surrounded the statue for the past three months
has been removed so the public may view it up
close until thea. (AP PhotCIDeaals _Cook)

across a unique wooden coat hanger. They just don't make •em like
that any more. The hanger is
marked that it came from "Louis
Horwitz, Clothier and Furnishe'r,
Pomeroy, O." Something teUs me
there aren't many still around who
remember that clolhing store from
1
1
B b
· .. ·
ong, ong ago. ar ara IS gtvmg
the hanger to the Meigs Museum
which should make another interesting item for the museum's collection.
•
d
h
. By the way, oes anyone ave
history in regard to the Felger Pho·
tography Studio which operated in
Pomeroy. a number of years ago?
A friend of ·mine is trying to date a
picture and would appreciate Lion camp.
knowing the years of the studio's
Crossing some fields, she ventured into an area the Germans had
· operation in lhe community.
declared off limits. There, she saw
Many of you should remember · about 30 prisoners of war digging
Esther Lowery McKinn~y. daugh· holes by lantern-light and lowering
ter of George and Betty Lowery of huge crates into the ground. ,
Harrisonville. As a teen, Esther
was a dancer and appeared in many YY C
of the local musicals.
Public Notice
About a year ago, Eslher had a We C0 me
bout with cancer. She is now havPUBUCNOTICE
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Donavan
ing additional problems and is con·
The
Moigo County Board
fined to Riverside Hospital in and children, and Mr. and Mrs of Revision haa complelad
Columbus . A resident of Gal- Gilben (Bud) Donavan and son, all ita work and the booka are
loway, Esther is only 35 and your from Wellsville, were recent guests now open for public
prayers are needed for her. She at lhe home of Mr. and Mrs. Orland lnopection.
Meigo County
undoubtedly would also appreciate Floyd of Racine. They came espeBoard or Revision
cially
to
attend
a
family
picnic
held
a note or card.
(8) 27,29,30,3t,(9) t,2,3,5,7,8
The address at the hospital is at the park on Route 33.
tOle
Attending the picnic were Butch
Riverside Methodist Hospital ,
Public Notice
Eighth Aoor, Room 8258 Bed B, and Teala Donavan and children,
O!enr.angy River Road, Columbus, Bud and JoAnn Donavan and son,
PUBUC NOTICE
Ohio. If you would prefer you can Wellsville; Maycle and Pearl SearADVERTISEMENT FOR
send cards to her home address and les, Oteshire; Sylvia Cook, Jim and
BIDS ISSUE 2 PROJECT
Saaled bid a will be
that is 120~ Oakpark Drive, Gal- Rhonda Morris and children and
loway, Ohio 43119.
.
J .R._. Pom eroy; Rob and Wilma received by the Village of
Middleport at the office of
Boltng and children, Syracuse; the
Mayour, 237 Race
Hope you 've ·figured out a way Rtchard and Teresa Cook and chil- Street,
Middleport, Ohio
to beat lhe steamy wealher. And I dren, Bashan; and Orland and June 45760 until 3:00 o'clock
Floyd of Racine.
hope you keep smiling.
p.m. Monday, Sept t3, t993
and then at the oHice oltho
Mayor the bide will bo
publicly opened and road
aloud lor the following:

:Guests, vacations:
tLaurel news reported

GUIELY
SYS7EM

DANCE WITH.60's, 70·'s &amp;80's
MUSIC FROM 8-MIDNIGHT
SATURDAY, AUG. 28
Admission $2.50/Single

Janet Venoy hos ted a recent
meeting of the Evangeline Mission·
ary Group of the Pomeroy Church
of Christ at her home.
Debbie Miles, presiden~ had lhe
opening prayer and conducted a
question and answer on the Bible.
Linda Laudermilt gave devotions reading the "Bread of Life
Brings Gladness" with scripture
from John 6-35 and 2nd Timothy
3-16. A missiori study on the Otiio
Valley Christian Assembly was
conducted by Betty Spencer.
·
The secrelary's report was given
by Pauline Kennedy, the treasurer's
report by Janet Veney, and the
mother/daughter report by Eileen
Bowers. Collections were taken
and cards were signed for Shirley
Caruthers, Margaret Kennedy,
James Spencer and a sympathy
card for Charles Snyder. A sunshine box was prepared for Kate
Smith.
Beuy Spencer gave the prayer
before refreshments were served by
the hostess. Others attending were
Eva Dessauer and a guest, Megan
Venoy.

By The Associated Press
ney)
3. "A Few Good Men ,"
Weekly charts for the nation's
6." Homeward Bound: The (Columbia TriStar)
'
most popular videOs as lhey appear Incredible Journey," (Disney)
4."Scentofa Woman," (MCA·
. in next week's issue of Billboard
7."Playboy Celebrity Center- Universal)
magazine. Reprinted with permis- fold: Jessica Hahn," (Playboy)
5."Home Alone 2," (Fox)
sion:
·
8."Piayboy Wet &amp; Wild V,"
6."The Crying Game," (Live)
.
(Playboy)
7."Sommersby,'' (Warner)
VIDEO SALES
9."Disney's Sing Along Songs:
8. " Bram Stoker's Dracula ,'
Copyright 1993, Billboard Pub· Friend Like Me," (Disney)
(Columbia TriStar)
lications Inc.
-10. "Ozzy Osbourne: Live &amp;
to
Run, "
9. "Nowhere
I. "Home Alone 2," (Fox)
Loud," (Epic)
(Columbia TriStar)
2."Teenage Mutant Ninja TurIO."Malcolm X,'' (Warner)
tles Ill," (New Line)
VIDEO RENTALS
3."Pinocchio," (Disney)
Copyright 1993, Billboard Pub4.' 'Playboy Playmate of the lications Inc.
Year 1993," (Playboy)
!."The Bodyguard," (Warner)
, 5."Beauty and lhe Beast,"(Dis·
2."Unforgiven,'' (Warner)
.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
'

Missionary
group meets

'List of video best sellers

POMEROY · Hunter education
course Monday, Pomeroy Municipal Building. Call 992-631! for
information or to register.

204 Condor S~

on easy-to-read books for adults
just learning to read.
Books By Mail is simple and
convenient to use. A post card
order form is provided in the cata·
log. Anyone interested in checking
out a book simply writes their
name, address, and the title of the
boOk on the card, and drops it in
the mail.
In a few days a nylon mailing
bag with the books will be delivered by the local postal carrier,
Upon completion, the boOks simi!IY
go back in lhe mailing bag and are
sent back to OVAL.
. The postage is paid by OVAL to
lhe borrower as weU as back to the
distribution center: There is no
charge to the reader for this.service
which is funded jointly by Library
Services and Construction Act Title
I funds provided by the State
Library of Ohio and by the Meigs
County Public Library.
,
Established in 1973 as lhe first
state-funded regional public library
system in Ohio , todar. OVAL
works wilh local public libraries tc
provide a variety of program!
designed to improve and extend .
services to local residents.
OVAL is comprised of public
libraries in Athens, Hocking, Jack·
son, Lawrence; Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, and Vinton counties. The
OVAL Board of Trustees, which
consists of one trustee from each
member public library board, determines policy, controls finances,
and makes final decisions on what
services will be offered. The Meigs
County Public Library is represented by Wanda Eblin.

Beat of the Bend...

Community Calendar

BASHAN · Ice cream social,
Bashan Firehouse, Friday at 5 p.m.
Hotdogs, sloppy joes, hot sausages,
pies, pop, coffee, II flavors of ice
cream. Specks of Bluegrass will
entertain.

LESS THAN PERFECT WEATHER FOR
Eleven-year-old Jimmy Laadls examines a rotting
from a
patcb he planted with bis sister, Jamey, ·
and their
friend, Zachary Keller, right, near Baltimore,
of the
curreDt dry spell tbe pumpkins are ripening early. Among them Is
this one examined by tbe children Thursday, Aug. 26. (AP
Pboto/Cbrls Kasson)

insulted? •• THE HOMING
PIGEON IN HARRISBURG .
DEAR PIGEON: Don't lltempt to
reimburse your co-workers for the
faleweU gifL After all, you did leave.
Take them to IWICh Bl a "special"
place. CaD it your "glad to be bact"
celebration. They'D love it, and you
will get off to a lovely start.
Confidential to all who wrote
about tickling children for "fun":
Tickling is not funny to the victim.
In fact, it can lead to hySf.erics and
coovulsions. Do !101 )ICIIIIK.a)'GM.
to tell you it's' ~ or lhii kidS
like iL The expression "tickled to
death" comes from ancient Olinese
literature which descn'bed liclding
as a method of IOriiJie,

DEAR MIFFED: She may own
her
home, but she doesn't own the
"1993, IMADaotes
Tim'" S,..Ucale
streeL You have as much right to
Creaton Syndicate"
park in front of her home as she
does.
Dear Aaa Llladen: Five weeks
risking 8IIOIIIer sorrow such as this. ago, I left a position I liked very
What do you say, Ann? - MUNCIE m11ch. I worlced there a little over a
MAMA
year, and it was a wrench 10 leave
DEAR MAMA; I say yes. Life is boc•nse I had made so many friends,
filled with risks. Those who are
My co-workers surprised me with
afraid to make an emotional a beautiful going-away gift It was
invesunent may not lose anything, · completely unexpected, and I nearly
but they miss a lot.
· bawled.
Losing Sir Hairy WIS painful, but
My new position turned QUt to be . Drugs tUe ewrywllere. They're
whe!t you lfal1l the plnilllft he gave a disappointment. After some easy to gel, easy to use tJNJ even
you. would you blve prefcmd not serious soul searching, I telephoned easier to gel hooked 011. If you have
to have had him It aU? Of coune my old boss and asked if I could questions about dnlgs. )OU 1ttedANa
IIOL
have my job back. He said, "You l..all&amp;rs' booklet, 'The l..owthw11 011
Dear ADa LaDders: The bet! How soon can you cane?" I Do[H!. ;, Send a self-addre.sstd, long,
apartment we live ln bas no saraF told him I would give two weeks' bu.siltess-siu envelofH! and a check
fll:ilities. Some nights, we mllll padt notice at once.
or mo1tty order for $3.65 (tltis ill·
four blocks from our building.
I feel WJCOIIIfortable about the eludes postage and llalldling) to:
Two horneowners on our block expensive farewell gift and think Lowdown, c/o AM L.mukrs, 1'.0 .
have gamges and driveways.
perbaps I should reimburse !hose Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611Last nigh~ I parked in fiatt of lovely people for what they spc11L 0562. (In Canoda. send $4.45.)
one of their homes. Mrs. X came Do you think they would feel
ANN LANDERS

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

. .

~~

~

' . ·-

�I

Page

8 -The

Dally Sentinel
Ohio

·•The Area.'s Number

CHURCH
Dl C

Apostolic

I'"

l'ltf Cllurdo al Cllrlol
212 Main St.
.
Paaor: Andft:W Milea

w.

SIOlday School - 9:30 o.m.
WonhiP' 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7 p.m.
l'omtrGy WOIIIide Clllrrdt of Cbrlll
33226 Childron'r Home Rd.
Sunday Sehool- H o.m.
Worship - I OLm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

MlddleportChurdlaiChrla
Sllund Main
Partor: AI H111t100
Youlh MiniJII:r: Bill Fnziu
S181day School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8: IS, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es -7 p.m.

- 9:4S a.m.
II o.m. l!ld 7 p.m.
Service - 7 p.m.

KeooCburdo ofCbrlll
Wonhip - 9&gt;30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 o.m.

Free WUI Bapllsl Chun:h
Arh SUocl, Middleport
Paator. Mark. Morrow

lleorwollow Rlclae Cburdo of Chrlll
Putor: Jad&lt; Colepove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
wednesday Servioet - 6:30p.m.

Salunlay Service - 7:30p.m.
Swlday School- 10 a.m.
Worahip ~ 11 a.m.,
Wedneaday Ser.vice.-7:30 p.m.

Rudand First Bapda Cburdl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.
P1111eroy Flnt Bapllsl
East Main St.
Swlday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 o.m.
Flnt Soulllont Bapllll
41872 Pcmeroy Pike
'
Pu10r: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Swlday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Flnt Baplill Churdl
6th ond Palmer St.
Partor: Rev. Jamer A. Seddon
Swlday Scbool- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip - IO:IS o.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- S:30 p.m.
Lord's Supper 111 Sunday of every month .
Wedneaday Service-7:00p.m.
Racine First Baplllt
Pastor: Sieve Fuller

Youlll Pastor Ricli: Harris
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:40o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~day Services - 7:00p.m.

7J.., Churdl al Christ
Pomeroy, Harriaonville Rd. (RLI43)
Putor: RogerWatata
s...dar School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednerday Semcer · 7 p.m.

Brodbury Chur&lt;h al Cbrla
Partor : Tom Runyon
SIDiday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 Lm.
Tuppen Plain Churdlal Christ
Paaor. Bill Winer
S111day Sehool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.

Outer Chur&lt;h of Chrllt
Pastor: Cllris Slewan

Sunday Sehool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviceo · 7 p.m.
Rullond Cburdl al Cbrlot
Putor: Eugene E. Underwood
SIDiday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m., ?p.m.

SUver Run Bapllll
Putor: Bill Liale
Somday Schooi-IOa.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Brodford Chur&lt;h ofCbrlot
St. RL 124 .t Co. Rd. S
Putcr. Derek Stump
s..,day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;e.r - 7:30p.m.

ML Unl911 Bapllsl
Panor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Sehool·9:4S a.m.
Bvenin&amp; - 6:30p.m.
Wodnerday Servic:eJ - 6:30p.m.

Hl&lt;ttry Hllll Churdl ol Chrlll
Pastor: Jooeph B. Hookins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip -10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicer - 7 p.m.

llelhlehem Bapda
Pastor : Rev. Bad Shuler
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30p.m.

Llllerly Cbrlallan Cbun:b
O.:.ler
Putor. Woody Call

Swlday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.
Lllni!S"Ill• Cbrlsll10 Cbur&lt;h
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi"' 7:30p.m.

Old Belllel Free Will Bapdllt Cllun:h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
· Thursday Servicer - 7:30

Homlo&lt;k Grove Churdl
Pastor: O.arles Domiaan

Hillside Bapda Chun:h
SL RL 143 jvll off RL 7
Pastor. Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · I0 a.m.

Sundav s&lt;hool - 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30 1.m., 7 p.m.

Vl&lt;tory BapiJsllndependaol
S2S N. 2nd SL Middleport
Paswr. lunes E. Koeaee
Wonhip - IOLm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia:s - 7 p.m.
Faltb Ba:fd" Chur&lt;h
Railroa St., Mason
Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II o.m., 6·p.m.
Wednerday Serviceo - 7 p.m.
Forest Ruo Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
ML Moltah BapiJsl
Foonh .t Main SL, Middleport
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Won hip - I 0:45 o.m.

Smday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4S o.m .
Thursday Servieer - 7:30 p.m.
RuUand Free Will Bapdst
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Swlday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicer · 7 p.m.

So&lt;red Heart Colllolk Churdl
161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-S898

Pine Grove Bible Hou .... Churdl
112 mile off RL 32S
Postor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
. Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service-7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holl- Churdl
1S Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday rohool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.AL
Wednesday Semce -7:30p.m.
HyHI Run Hollnea Chur&lt;h
Putor: Robert Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
of J..,. Christ
In Liller Day Solnll
Porllrnd·Racine Rd.
Putor. Jerry Collin•
S181day School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m.
Wedneaday Servioer -7:30p.m.

Reort~IDized Chun:h

Lutheran

Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School · 9 Lm.
Worship - 10 a.m.

RATES

New Haven Chur&lt;ll of the Nuarene
PallOr: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Ovr Sovlour Lulllenn Churdl
Walnut and Henry Sts ., Ravenswocxl, W.Va.
Co-puton : Revr. Ri&lt;hard a:

l'atricia Boods-Krug
Sunday Sehool ·· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

SL Paul Lulller10 Churdl
Comer Sycamore de. Seoond St, Pomeroy
Putor: George Weirick
Sunday Sehool - 9:4S a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

United Methodist
Gnham U•lled Melbodlal
Worship- 9:30 o.m. (ht .t 2nd Sun),
7:?!0 p.m. (3rd .t 4th Sun)
Wedneaday :;.Moe-7:30p.m.
ML Olive United Metllodla
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pa110r. Oarles JCGCJ
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Servicer - 7 p.m.

Morolnastor
Putcr. Kennclh Bak$r

Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Worship -1 0:30 a.m.
Thursday Servieer- 7:30p.m.
•
Sulton
SIDiday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m. (Ill&amp; 3rd Sun)

East Letart
Pastor: Roser OrKe
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
· Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Racine

Wo11hip - 9 a.m.
Sunday S&lt;liool- 10 a.m.
Thursday Servioer - 7 p.m.
Joppa
Puwr: Brenda Weber
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool · I 0:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Services-7:30p.m.
Loog Bottom
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Scarbeny
Sunday S&lt;bool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Semees- 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plllns St. Poul

Radne Flnt Clooon:b of the Nuareoe

Pallor: Shlltll Hausman

Pastor: Thomas L. Ga&amp;e1, II

Middleport Penlecoslll
Third Ave.
Pas10r: Rev. Clark Baker
Sundoy School - I0 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Full Goapel Llah3304S Hiland Road, Paneroy
Putor: Roy HIDittr
Sunday Sehooi - IOa.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday .t Thursday - 7:30p.m.

CentraiCI...,
Albury (SJro&lt;Uae)

Middleport Churdl oflhe Nazarene
Partoo Orogory A. Cundiff
s ...day Scbool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Serviee1 -7 p.m.

NI!IM Seutem..t Cllur&lt;h

Swlday Wcnhip - 2:30p.m.;
Thunday aervicer - 7:30p.m.
Soorlll Belhell'iewTeolamenl

Sil""r Ridae
Putor. Duane Sydenrlriclcer
Swlday Sdiool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednerday Serviee · 7 p.m.

Reedsville Felo-lp

Churclli of t1tt Nu.art11e

·

-Roofing

,

C ~htnet

Mak tng

Syra cus e

99 1 3978

L . ~t" ~:· '~ l'· l

I
•

[ -

·

,·l!c:•ITt'~

... ......
~

;'~
'""\fi\
... ~·-I....•

'

... ... .

BILL QUICKEL
992·6677

212 E. Main Slteet
992· 3785 . Pomeroy

992-5141
264 South 2nd

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
J . Mllrcua Fultz
Manager
Ph. 1182•2101

INSURANCE
; SERVICES

___,....__

214 E. Main
992 ·5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
0\\;(( Srul !Boof.1
93 Mill Stroot
Middleport. Ohio 46760
992·.6667 - 199B ·OOKSI

204 Condor St.

Nationwide Ins . Co.

Pomeroy, OH.

ol Columbus, 0 .

992-2975

n? ·?J18 Pomerov

eo• w. Ma•n

843--P~rtlon~

245-Rio Grande
256-Gayan Dlol.

24 7-Lelal\ Falla
949-R•elae
742-lutland
667-CoolviDe

643-Arahia Diot.
379- Walnul

Presbyterian

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seveniii-Day Advenllat
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinrky
Sabinlay Servicer:
Sabballl School - 2 p.m.
Wonhip - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Hennon United Brelbren
I• Christ Cburdi
Teau Cooununity off CR 82
Porlbr. Robert Sanden
Sunday S&lt;hool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
'Wedneaday Servicer - 7:30p.m .
Eden Unlled Bretllrenln Christ
2 112 mller north o( Roedaville
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Marldey
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Semoea - 7:30p.m.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF JUANITA J.
JENKINS, DECEASED
Cau No. 27180 Docket 13
·-431
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OFADUCI~

Rwleed Code, Sec. 2113'.08
"On July 26, 11193, In the
Melgo Caunty Pro!&gt;ete
Court, C111 No. 27180,
Uncq ·R. w...,, 1t1 112
Second SL, P. 0. Box 723,
Pomeroy, Ohlo, 45768 wae
appointed
Ancillary
Admlnletrolrlx ollhe Mtale
ol Ju•nll• J. Jenklno,
deceued, lote of MI. Juliet
Wileon County Tenneo-,
37122."
Robert E. Buclc,
ProbeteJudgOI
L.. • K. Neuliro8d, Cleric
(8) 27, 30, 31

NEW-REPAIR

Pomeroy Flower Shop: .rii;'\
06 B•ttera1t

~·"

·

Veterans

Ho~ital
P0111eroy

FUNERAL HOME .

"'Di/{nit~· and •..,erl 'i4•t• Alu •n.v~"

Established 1913

Prl' \Crt plt On li

PomNoy

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~l£S

&amp; SERVICE

992-7075

992-2121
106 Mulbtrry Avo.

~~!~! r~~
991 1911

Po~ roy

172 North Se&lt;ond Ave.
Ohio

left

us

years ago,

Aug. 27, 1991.
Sadly mlsaecl by
daughter, Narsa
Terzo lous

Socoml
Middleport,
Ohle

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Memorial
II S I. Memorial Or .
EWING

2

271 North

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS

INSTRUCTION
"Mathematics is the
alphabet w~h which
God has written the
Universe.' - Galileo
By Topic
By Appointment
949-2814
7i2211 mo.pd.

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top 10
Bottom

PH. 742·2217
6-30.1 mo.pd.

\I~

41- HoUle. for Real
42- Moblle Honut~ for Ren t
~ Farm• for Real
44- Apartment for Rent
4S- FunU!hed .Rooma
46-- Space for Reat
47- Waated to Rent ·

48- Equipment for Rent

11- Help Wanted
12- Situatiom Wanted

49-ForLeue
\11-.ll~ II\ \IJI~I

13- lruurance

14- Bualne11 Train.in.g
15- Scboob'&amp; ln~tructioa
16- Ra&lt;lio, TV &amp; CB Repa;r
17- MUeellaneou.
18- ·Wanted To Do

51- Houoehold Good.
52- Spo•linB Goocla

53-Antiqueo
54- Mi1e. Mercbandile
55- BuildiDf Supph..

HAULING

Shade River Saddle Shop

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp; COAL

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Reasonable Rates
Joe

N.

Sayre

36358 SA 7

SAYRE TRUCKING

Chester,

Oh. 45720

985-3406

614-742-2138

318/dn

314193 1 mo.

CaD TOday lor

EXCAVATING

Tour lot
· Makeover

992·3838

FREE ESTIMATES

RESIDENTIAl
·cONCRETE
WORK.

949·2168
$-111-83-tfn

Porches;
Patios,
Sidewalks
992·7878

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MJ:IGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Angle LoriiA!IP-,
Plolntlll,
No. ll2.
DR-324
I Dwight 0. AppM-1011,
DorlendonL

7n1mo.

ea..

-v

NOTlCEBYPUBL~TlON

To Dwight 0 . Apperoon,
Jr., wholl lut known
oddreoo woo c/o Unda
Loell, 1230 4th Street NW,
Waohlngton, D.C. 20001;
you •re h•lby notllled lh1t
ou b1111 nom8d d•t.ndant
n a 111111 oollon entitled
Angle Lorle Ap~on, VIDwight 0. .Apperoon,
det.ndant. Thlo 1ctlon hae
bMn aulgn8d Cau No. 82DR-324 ..,d lo p"""lng In

In Loving Mamory
of my husband,
CHIEF J. J.
CREMEANS
who diad 8 y.....
ago, Augullt 28,
.
1885.
Nevar wllllha one I
loved, from memory
•
paaa away.
Sadly ml11ad by wife,
Tere1a and child rei).

\'

...

45781.
The obleot ol the
oamplrolnl lo a dlvoroe ond
'the proyar Ia thll plolntllf
begrlnted 1 divorce from
the tlltendont, a. ••P•r•t•
~~~
~~
811 ultabla dlotrlbullon of
pert-· property. .
You .,.. raqulred to
a n - the oomplalnt wtlhln
28 doye altar the , Iaiit
pubiiDiltlon ol thla notice
which will be publleh..t
onoe a week for alx

.....

·-·lvl-..
1:;

Coal, Trash, etc.

USED RAILROAD TIES
1:z.30.92-dn

.

Arnold'I

PI uliS bl ng,
'· Healing
&amp; Cooling

It

"

DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

or

Sandy Henderson
992-3647

614-698-6500
mn1n

8ll/93

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding ·
Power Washing

•TRUCKING

...., ......, o•.

985·4181

~:.::r ~~~

ROIERT
CONSTR C N

IISSEll
aam,_Cil on lhlt d1te.
In OliN ol y - failure to
U TIO
•newar or olharw111 laNiew Homes
re~110nd 11 Nquked by the
Ohio Rul.. ol · Civil
-Garages
Procedure. ludament be
-complete
deflull wtll be render..t
agalnet rou lor the rellel
Remodeling
dltunded In the oomplalnL
Stop &amp; Compare
La,!!!.._E.oSfpCo.,.u~
FREE ESTIMATES
"""'"
·-

Commo:~=~

915·4473

By U • - HoiMon Deputy
(7) 23, 30, (8) .. 13, 20, 27

7/22193

I

Authorized: Brlggo &amp;.
Strallon MTD, Ffyan,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUYERY
Hourtllll- M-F 1-3 SaL
Closed Sunday
949·2104

4126/tfn

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 BaiiRtHt Road

667·6628

992-3470

4-19-93-tfn

Pomeroy,

OWNIR: .leH

Wklw.._
5/1018

BISSELL BUUDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

HAULING

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Callal
2112192/tfn

7nl1mo.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

·Mowers • Chall Saws
Weeclealers

(614)

8-4-83-tfn

Announcements

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Announcements

Moving Solo: CB Radio &amp; Towor1

Dat11ll M101 Guyo &amp; Golo In
Your Aroo. 1-1100-21•!1010· b tanalon 4005, $2.tl Per Min.
Mull Bo 18 Y~. Procall Co. 102-

South-om Equlpl, Kronauga,
Slllurday, Aug. 281h.
One day only Aug. 28: t-5; 4821

3

iM-11120.
Uve 24 Hourw IDrwlll Tolk To

POOR BOY TIRES

~

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
ZOS.1SR15" llger Paw XTM RWL
205-7SR14" na- PIIW XTU RWL
2tS.75t5" FlrMtOnl OWL
235-75R15" Fleratone OWL
.CALL FOR PRICING"EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS" &amp;/28193

non

RICHARD ROBERTS

"Ad Specialtieo,.
622 JfiY Drive, Gltlllpoli1, Oh.

(304) 773-5533

ASK FOR

CHRIS

liNDA'S
••INTING
rll

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

INTERIOR

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the ptlln out of
pt~lntlng. Let me do It
• for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
· ' (614) 843·5264 5114193Mn

614•915~4110 •
8112193/1 mo. pd

I,

Top,

Bahlna

Stata Ro~• 850, Bldw•ll Jarrell
r111idence.

DrJ••.

good homee, 304-71J.WI.

FrM 10 good homo- 2 ml•od

brMd medium male dog1, 114-

8112-3587.

KHty, KHIY, KHiy, Frw KIHonol

To Good HomM, 114-448-G811.

One lloet~e otova ~goldt and
one refrlprator, nlld work.

oocl condhlon,
l14-1112-3684.

114-14i.Z3'18,

Pu_ppln: Boxerlllb Ml:r, Fawn•
l Brlndloo, 114-3884541.
Puppln:
Pari
Gorman
Sh•Ph•rd,
Lttlla
Bit
Pomeranian, 114 4415 1667.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: o .._
l WhHo Cot
Found In VlclnHy Ot Adclloan

Club 814-441-104~.

Loll: Milo i~ah SOitor Lui S10n

Ill•, Including men., tole of
wornen1 a.rger 111-. l)rlced lo
NU, nothing over h .6ol. many,
lt~tm• new taga .till on, ~ mil•
IIOUth ot TuppiN Plaine on

- - Rd., aid church a1 tap
of hill, watch tor eigne, rain or .
ehlne, Judy Waber, IS~J.
11235.
AI Yord Sllln Mull Be Pold In
Advance. Dorultlno: 1:00pm tho
day beforw the ad Ia to run.

Sunday odHlon- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday odHton
!O:OOa.m.
Satunloy.
SlK tamtly lard ul• Seoul
Aoa , ChHier area,
Srtturday, Augua 28th. Clothing,
heuoahold, ate.
ze, 27, 21 ond Ill &amp;2nd. SA124
Long Bottom ond
Aeedevble, bihtncf N111.arene
Church, nowty upbalatorod
couch and tov....t.
CAmp

-on

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

In Bladen, MerciiiVIIIe Road A
Hamlnon R~d ArM, 614-4462828 O.ytlme; 114-448-61118
Evon!-.
Loll: On Bladon Road, 1 Llrga
Mole Dog, Light Brown -

Rick Peoronn Auellon Company,
lull lime auct-r, comploto
auction
aervlce.
Ucenaed
IIMI,Ohto I WM1 Vlrglnlo, 304-

114-!ISW180.

9

Medication Foi Elra: 1 FIIMII
Doge Bluo H-r. Bilek I Oroy,

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

448-7612
Fax/Voice 446-7612

Fumhura,

Frk:tay, 444 Laria1
B11111ttut Glrlotll 1-IIOo-aeo.one Thur.day
Drlvt, t:.4'. Mlcrowav., Children,
Ext. 8048 IUt Por Min. Mull AduH Ctorhlng, Mia&lt;., Olahoo,
81 11 Yrw. Procall CO. 102-13'1· Home Interior.
0815.
Pt. Pleasant
4
Giveaway
&amp; VIcinity
1 112 yaar aid lull bloodod
Pomeranian, 814-St02~n16.
WMkttncl 01rage Ale, r~~ln Dr
ablno, loll- llgno 10 tint
2 Month 0~ Mala Puppll8,
ptved roed on Jericho. Bar·
Black 1: Brown, 614-446-61M:.
gal noll
314 Mountain CUr, 114 walker
pupe, 4moa. old, worm.d twice
Pomeroy,
l had 1at ahote, 11......,.3-5241.
Middleport
Cto1hn
Bonio Gu, 814446-IIB&amp;t
&amp; VIcinity
Flvo odorable ftuttv bolla ot A building lull ot elo1hlng, all
mlachlel, part Angorfa kitt.na to

L----------~----~-----------------'1 Siberian
Hulkey, 1 YNr Old
Pt.. 3 Puppiel, 614-3711-2730.

~

~

WilKER lllEY
Parts and StrYkt

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

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

FlEE ISIIMATES
507J4 ... ley lf4ta ltl.
45743

0

QUALITY WORK
GOOD R A'JE S

614-698-3290

IIIII;:=======~ 1;:======·:4:'::'"

publication wtll be .....,, on
The
1

:::~··

Consultants
Carolyn McCoy

Llmes~one

992·2269

Trucking

992-5082

We hava • large olock of aavorol name brond tirao and
if we don'l have, we can get IL
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-773-5533
2nd Location coli Lon Nell
Henderoon,VV.Va. 304-&amp;75-3331
M•lorcard •nd VISA IICCIIPied.
1-6-ttn

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

B&amp;G
We Haul Gravel,

•LIGHT HAULING

BILL SLACK

EAGLE UNES
(lorrner Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304 }773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS"
Sun.-Thur 5-1 0 pm
Fri-5at 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Kay Beauty

GENEUL

r.

~w

Independent Mary

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM•••
REMOVAL
ofiREWOOD

~~~t~~

BULLDOZING

HOWARD

FREE ESTIMATES

Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleenlng
Painting

-----------------.
1
2
In Memory

;;;.o

1nd TRACIU1UE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITEB and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

ROOFING

Public Notice

n7-611119

f

PRIVATE
MATHEMAnCS

.

;a~

BULLDOZE)~ 1_BACKHOE

Howll'd LWritesel

More Le~als
on Page7

S7rawse First United Pr...,ylerlan
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 4 p.m. (ht.l 3rd Sun.)

Crow's Family Restaurant

992·5432

Auetion

9- Waoted 10 Buy

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llrneatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenead 1nd Bonded
PH. 614·992·5591
12-5-tfn
•

4/29/931fll

DAIWIN.OHIO

R.modoling and Rapair
Painting, Expeneoced
F'" Ealimalas
61281
614-446-8568 1 mo.

who

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

895-(.olut
937-Buffalo

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

614·992·7144

1·100.141..0070

WORK

In Loving

· "Fe•turlng Kentucky Fried Chicken"

4--Giveaway
5-HappyAdo
6- Lootaad Found
7- Loot ond Found
8- Public Sale &amp;

882-New Hnen

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

U.. Court
ol Common
1.~=::::;==:;:~=~
Coutt
of Uelge
County,Plaaa
Ohio 1

Middleport

Brogan-Warner

985-C:beole•

Creek Road
. Middleport, o•io

.10.tn~tn

ParlOr: John W. DouaJar
Stmday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicer -7 p.m.

fallen VOll Hallet
with awant f\d

4511-Leoa
576-Apple Grove
773--M-•

or 10ll .lEE

Pomeroy, Ohio

RAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

675-Pl. Pleuanl

Pomeroy

992·7013 or
992·5553 .

992-6215 .

MOO DIS PAUGH

Mi ll Wotk

992-Mlddleport/

367-Ciseahlre
388-VIaton

31904 .....i ••

AU.IWIII &amp; IIOtiU

-lntrorlar l Exlorlor
P.tnting
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

' HOMER

K&amp;C JEWELERS ·

446-GalllpoUo

•

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; lilt NIJINI

-Gun.rWorll
-Eiectricm 1nd Plumbing

Memory of

RACINE PLANING MILL

1\1·. \ I

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

Gallla County Melga County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

f!~~,lplng

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARIS

CARPENTER

wccmeaday Service -7 p.m.

Nazarene
Stmday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servieer - 7 p.m.

Putor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship -9 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Tuerday Servi&lt;er - 7 p.m .

Evening • 7 p.m.

Wedneaday Servi&lt;er · 7 p.m.

Uolled Fallll Chur&lt;h
Rt. 7 on Pcmemy By-Pus
Putor. Rev. Robert ll. Smilll, Sr.
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Torth Church

Swlday S&lt;hool - 9 o.m .
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
. Tuerday Serviceo -7:30p.m.

En~rlle

l'm-IA...,bly
St RL 124, Racine
Putor: Willi~m Hoback
Sunday S&lt;bool - 10 a.m.

ML OOve ComrHally Churdl
ParlOr: Lawm&gt;ce Bush
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Everun, - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Co. Rd. 63
S181day S&lt;bool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Putor:: Deron Newman

Pentecostal

llethel Chur&lt;h
Township Rd., 46SC
Sunday Sehool · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday S'ervi.ces - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

614-441-1168-61ll-446-6939

-Room AdcltiOM

Tuclday Semce1 - 7 p.m.

GrandSt~&lt;tt

to place your order or
more information

YOUNG'S
Ct.RPENTER SERVICE

Middleport l'nsbJierlan
Swlday School - 9 Lm.
Worship - 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd .t 4111 Sun.)

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - It a.m.

32- Mobile Home~ lor Sale
3~ Far•• for Sale
34- Ruin~• Buildinp
·35-- Lolo &amp; Ac ....ge
36- Ileal Eotate Wanted

VIDEO TRANSFERS

Clifioo, W.Va.
Sunday S&lt;bool - I0 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Thundoy Service - 7 p.m.

Fallll Goapel Churdl
LonaBouom
Sunday S&lt;bool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.,.7:30 p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.

HocklnKJiftrt Church

Call

cun.., Tabernacle Chun:h

Han1-vlle Pr....y - . Cloun:b
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4S o.m.

Reedsville
Putor: Rev. Phillip Scarberry
Wonhip - 9:30 o.m.
ht.l 3rd Sunday - 7:30p.m.
SIDiday S&lt;hool - I 0:30a.m.
Wedneaday Servi&lt;es - 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sehool - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wednesday Servioer - 7:30p.m.

•

Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Semce-? p.m.

Coolville Chur&lt;b
Main .t Flfih St.
S181day School · 10 l .m.
Wonhi~ - 9 o.m.

Fair Memories
Order Video Tapes of
the following event:
Demolition Derby

Chur&lt;h of Jesus Christ,
Apotttoll&lt; Faith
,
l/4 mile pan Fon Meigr on New Lima Rd. '
Putor: William Van Meter
S181day-7:00 p,m.
Wedneaday-7:00 p.m.
Fnday-7:00 p.m.

M- Cbapel Churdl

Pas10r: Hden Kline

,\ I I\ I 'II II 1,

Business Can:l ......$17.001 Inch per momlh
Bulletin Boan:l-•..$6.00/inch per day
1------~;;;--=--;=;;;;;:;;;:;;;;-.;-------j

Clauified pages cover the
fo~ing telephone e%change1 ...

BINGO·

Rejolc:lna Ure Churdl
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Putor: lawrence Fon:man
Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Wedncirday Services - 7 p.m.

Chrlsllan Fellowllllp Ceol&lt;r
Salem SL, Rulland
Pastor: Robcn E. Muucr
Sunday Sehool - I 0 o.m.
Won hip - II: IS o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednerday Service -7 p.m.
Paswr.: Mike Matson

I \H\1 '-I 1'1'1 II~

Monthly
IS
$1.30/day
$.05/day
lUtes are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged lor each day as separate ads.

DAY BERJRE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
HJO p.m. Monday
I:OOp.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
IOOp.m. Thursday
I:OOp.m. Friday

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad 'good for 1
· FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11/24192/dn

SU•envllle Word ofFallh
Putor. David Dalley
Sunday S&lt;hool9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Dyesvllle CommunH7 Churdl
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Laurel ClifT Free Melhudlsl Chur&lt;h
ParlOr. Pe~&lt;r Tmnblay
s...day S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednerday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hazel &lt;:o.munllr Churdl
OffRL 124
Pallor: Bdrel Hart
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

lUte Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
~.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60

Huri1onville Road
P11tor: Rev. Victor Roush

S7racuoe Million
1411 Bridseman St., Syracuse
Partor: Roy (Mike) Thompoon
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednerday Service - 7 p.m.

Putor: Kenneth Baker

Words
15
15
15
15

Calvary Pilgrim Chopd

The Sol.. lh. Anoy
liS Butlemut Avo., Pomeroy.
S~mday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.
Worship -I O:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.

Fallll Tobernoc:le Chur&lt;h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawaon
S111day School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening? p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

• Acb outlide the eounty your ad rwu m111t be prepaid
• R«**we diteoUDt for ad1 paid i.n advance.
• Free Ad.: Ch·eaway aad Fouad ad. uDder 15 word. will be
run 3 day. at .a eharp.
• Priee of ad for aU capitallelten il double price of ad COlt
• 7 polntliae type oaly u.ed.
• SellliDel il Dot rspontible for error• after ftrlt day (check
for error• r.,.,, day ad runa iD paper). CaD before 2:00p .m.
day after publication lo make correc:tioa
• Ada that •lilt he paid iD ad•aace are:
Card of Thonlu
Happy Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Sal•
• A clu1ilied advertiaement placed iB the The Daily SentiDel
(n.cept Cla.uified Dilplay, Bu1inU. Card or l.esal
Noticet) willal.o ap.,-r in lbe Poial Plea~&amp;nl Rept.er ud
tl.e Gallipolil Daily TrlhUDe, reachia« onr 18,000 ho•u

Follh Fellowalllp Crusode ror Cbrlst
Pastor. Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service; Friday, 7 p.m.

O.ur&lt;b- 9:1S a.m.
Worrhip- 10:30 a.m. -

Carmel

thru

POLICIES

Pastor: Rev. Blackwood

Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman

Putor: Kennelll Baker
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S Lm. (2nd .t 4111 Sun)

MoN.

Stmdsy Sehool - 9:30 o.m.
worship 10:30 o.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Trinity c..,grqodono1 Churdl

Paller. Kennelll Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 o.m.
Wednerday Servi&lt;eo - 10 a.m.

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
FRt. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12 ·
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
CLOSED SUNDAY
Sunday Paper

Call 992-2156.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Pastor. Robert Vonoe
S181day wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday rervi"' - 6:30p.m.

Mlddlepolt Community Cllurdl
S7S Pearl St., Middleport
Putor: Sam Andenon
Sunday SehoollO 1.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
WednesdayServi&lt;e- 7:30p.m.

To place an·ad

Fal"lew Bible Chur&lt;ll
Lellll, W.Va. RL I
Pallor: Jamer Lewis
Sunday &amp;bool - II a.m.
Wonhip _ 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service' 7:30p.m.

Endllmo H - of Prayer

Bellouy

SL Jolin Lullleran Churdl
Pine Grove
Pastor: Geo'lle Weirick
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Swlday School - 10:30 a.m.

Ml ~--

(II Bw!inabam &lt;bun:h off Raute 33)

Snowville
Putor: Florence Smith
SIDiday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

1
3
6
I0

Freedom Goap!l BalAI Knob, ori Co. Rd. 31
Putor. Rev. RoserWillfonl
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.
While's Chapel Weslt71n
Coolville Road
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Servi"' - 7 p.m.

Portland Flnl Chun:h r# lllel'iazarene
Puler. William Jwtir
Sunday S&lt;bool-9:30am.
Worship - 10:40 o.m., 7 p.m.
' Wednesday Servicer -7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pallor: Eunhae (Grace) Kee
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:1S a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wedner.day Servieer - 7:30p.m.
RockSprings
Pastor::Keith Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - I 0 a.m.
w~.esd~r -~~.:e-• --~p.m.
RuiiPanor: Anhur Cn.bua
Somday S&lt;hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip " 10:30 o.m.
Thursday Servioea -7 p.m.
Sai0111Center
Pastor: Ron Fien:e
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Wor~hip - IO:IS o.m.

Days

Kingrbury Road
Putor. Clyde W. Hmclenon
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe- 7 p.m.

Rullaod Cllurdlal the Nazareae
Pastor: Samuel Buye
Sunday S&lt;bool - 9:30am.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pearl Cbapel
Pastor. Florenee Smilll
Swlday School - 9 o.m.
Worship - IOa.m.

Hob100 Chur&lt;b of Chrlolln
Cllrlsi!UI Union
Pannr: Theron Durham
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.
llortford Churdl of Chrlot In
ChriiiiiUI Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Partor: Rev. David M&lt;ManiJ
S111day S&lt;hool - II a.m.
Worship· 9:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servicer - 7:30p.m.

Chur&lt;b of God ol Propheq
O.J. While Rd. off St. RL 160
Putor: Pal Hemon
Sunday Sehool • 10 a.m.
Wcnbip • 11 a.m.
Wedneaday Semcea . 7 p.m.

Pu10r: Rev. Waller E. Heinz

Sat Con. 4:4S-S:ISp.m.; Mm- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Maar - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mur · 8:30a.m.

R,.. ofSIIoroo Holl- Chord!
New Lima Rood, Rudand
Pa1tor. Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sunday rohool- 9:30 o.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer meeting- 7 p.m.

c - . . Chun:b oflhe Nazarene
G
Puwr: Rev. Herbert rate
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9' 30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Cool•llle United Mtll!odlst Parllll

Syn&lt;1110 Ch•rdl of Ged
Apple and Sc&lt;ood Sts.
Putor: Rev. David Ruaaell
Sunday School and Wonbip- 9:30a.m.
E......U., Servia:a- 7 p.m.
Weclneaday Services · 7 p.m.

Catholic

Holiness

Healll (Mkldlepon)
Putcr. Fronl\ Smith
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 6 p.m.

Chesttr

Pastor: Rev. Jamer Sauerfu:ld
Sunday Sehool - 9:4S a.m.
Evenins - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Rudand Cbur&lt;b r# Ged
·Puwr: John F. Co=ran
SIDiday S&lt;hooi - IOa.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednerday Servic:ea · 7 p.m.

PasLOr: Kenneth Smith

Holy Euchariatand Somday S&lt;hooll l'o.m.
Colree hour follotvina

Pcm&lt;rOJ Cllurdlallhe l'iuanno
PallU&gt;r. Rev. Thomas M.Oung
Somdoy S&lt;hool - 9,30 a.m.
W-"· _I0: 30a.m. ond 6 p.m.
• ••..,.
.
Wedneaday Sem"'s - 7 p.m.

Christian Union

ML Moriah Churdlal Ged
Racine

Anllqully BapiJsl

Grete ~1prl Claurdl
326 B. . SL, Paineroy
Rod«: Fr. Bill Lylo

R
F
oreot un
Putcr. De ron Newm10
Sundoy Sehooi-IOa.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services-6:30p.m.

Rudand Bible Melllodlst
Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioet - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Pastor: Rev. Gilben. Craig, Jr.

Episcopal

Putor. Rev. Ricll: SlWJill
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9,30 a.m.
Worship _l0:30 am., 6 p.m.
W-'-""~ Se ·
1 p.m
_ _, mcea ·

Flalwooda

Putor: IWth Rader
Sunday Sehool -10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Servicer - T p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Norlbea!l Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Reodmlle Cburm a1 Chrllt
PallOr: Philip Stunn
SIDiday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Wonhip -lla.m .• 6p.m.
Wednesday Services -'1 p.m.

l'i..,. Lire Ckurdl &lt;I God
Cherlcr
Pastor: Oary Hinea
Somday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 6 p.m.
Weclne!day Servicea - 7 p.m.

I

Marketplace

~--------------------------~====~--=---~~----------------------------------------~--s-~-a·au.--~C~h.--&lt;h~al~lllt-:l'i:ua::nn~e~---:Ca:~::~l=•wr=~ln.U•atChur&lt;b
Church of Christ

The Dally

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
4 Family Sale: 1oo3, 1-5, Adutt,

77U781.

Wanted to Buy

Antlqta~

and ulod turnltura, no
hem too llrat or too llnlall, will

buy one PI- or comptoto
heM uhold, · call O.by Martin,
114-8112-11141.
Dlcorctlld ltOMWIN, . .11 1...

, . _ , old llmpa aid lhor,IIIF Ill 4

ld

J 1
I

t:t:"

I

Baby Ciolhoo1 Homo lnl., 815
LaGrandlllva.

ALL Yard Sllloa Muot 81 Pald In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

th• day befon tM 1d Ia to run.,
Sundar tdttlon • 2:00 p.m.

Fdday. Monday odl1ion - 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.

J I D'o Auto Patta lnd Slllvago,
Flrwt Tlmo Yord Salo: Friday, olao buying junk .... l lrucb.
Sllturday, M.L. 101 Bulavllle, 304-773'5343.
--------Foullh Hou11 un RoU1a180.

,

�Page-1o-The Dally Sentinel
9

41

Wanted to Buy

Two

Wanled olandlng llmba&lt;, • top
frM

eatlmatee,

llcon.ed l ce~llled logging,
304-11115-3055 "' 895-3831 . .
Tap Prlcoo Paid: All Otd U.S.

42

CcHns, Gold Alnge, Sliver ~nt;,

Gold Cains. II.T.S. Cain Sllop,
151 Stcond A¥111"'1, Galllpolla.

10x10 moblla home, 2 bedroom,
t120 Fourth A... Gaiilpollo. $325

Help Wanted

wotor ond trooh paid 114-446-

4416 attar 7 p.m.

•

way-call Marilyn. 304-182-2645
or 1-iOG-992-6356. .

2 BedrOom Trailer For Rant,
Ot~ I Raftranc:ea Requlrwd,
51(-251-11~.

10 O.monltr11ors NMded To
Sell Toys &amp; Gifts For Chrfetm11,
No Colleetlng Or Delivering,

$500 Kit Supplied Coil !lory 614441-11219 4·11 P.!!.
arw now beJng
takan al Pomoro~ Nurolng ond
Rohobilltation C.ntor lor Cor·
Appllc:atlona

tilled Nursing Alslttanta. Appl~

36759

Aocksprtngo

2 Bed100mo, CA, Ro- Solo
On Land Conii'ICI. 2 Biocko
From Big Boar. 514-445-1408 A~
•., 4 P.M:

"Don't wait so long to light the grill

after you turn on the gas!"

t::==:;;:::::=;::==;:===-r:=::==::=;:===13
18
31
Wanted to Do

Homes for Sale

Chriltlan woman wanting to

Rd., clean homol, p i - call l14-

Bedroom Double Wide Moblla

Homo, 0no 12x60 lloblio Homo
2 Bodroomo, 814-445-2003.

5 bad100m brick homo, t 112
Hth,
flnllhed
bulment,
llectr.lc heat and air, 2 c.r

For rtnl· 2bdnn. troilor In

Pomeroy, Ohio 45761. No phon•
calls plaas•. EOE.

Hl-7030.

AVON I All Araaa I Shlrtau
•
Spaara, 304-675-1429.

Cut laN-rOOII ng_, .. dl ng, aap ha
~&amp;~ling, painting, c:arpentery.
"
FrM E"ttlmatll. ::J04.-675-57'01 or

1387.

Do you on1oy cooking? Job op.

575-6422.

portunitles areavalla61eln nurslng homn, ac:hools, tta.pital•,
prison• or small bualnHa.

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, TrN Aemov.l, Hedge
Trimming. Fr• Ellimallll 6 14-

Houoa B~ Ownora: 521 Fourth t1 ,., 114-445-0508.

Oponlngo

avoilbll

In

Food

,Mana~ment and Catering. Call

now. Class begins Oct. 11th.

The Adult Education Center, 1-

800-437-4508, 614-713-3Sit.
Earn Fuii·Timo Pay For

Po~·

nme Work A8 A Chrhrtma1
Around
Thl
World.

Dlmonsti'J.tor. FrH $500 Kit No

Collteting Or Delivering, Aleo

Booking Pa~IIO, Coil 6\4-24550311.
Easy Workl Excellent Pay! A•

samblt Products At HolM. Call

Toll FrH, 1-800-467-5566, Ext.
313.

Flower designer nH4kiMI In
Pomeroy ar..,~, send resume to:

QuaiHy And Experience 11 The
t1 Concem For Your Chlld'a

C.ro. Call Uo For A VioM. ln111nl
/Toddlo,. 114-446-11227. p,...

Head Start Family Sarvlet~
Worker • Hartford. "Mul1 have

choolera ISc:hool Age 614-446-

high oehool diploma or GED.

commercial driver'• llctnH
(CDLj· Sallry ba10d on

qualllcatlona.
Apply
..
SOuthwestem Community Ab-

tlon Council, Inc, 540 Flhh Av~,

Huntington bofore 5!00 PM
Tuetday, Augult 31, 15193. SI:OO.

5:00 daily. S.C.A.C., inc. io on

EOE employer.

HOUSEMANAGER, Part Time
Poslllon, 25 Hours A WHk.
Outlas
lncluda
Monitoring
Women And Children In A

Rosidentloi

Setting,

8224.
Wonted to do- bobyoHting in my
horne on NlchoW!1 , Aoad, c:er·
titled nur ... eld, 61,..742-3607.

Loeda At A RtnOnable Prk:e.

LarD~

c.-a. 114 446 4151.

NM&lt;I Ladlos (Or Mon) For Light

Delivery Work. G11 AIIOWinca,
Appty In Parson Only To Mrs.
Carter, Suite 1132, Econo Lodge
Motol,
Galllpoh1,
Monday

August 30th, 9 To 9:30 A.II.

light Delivery Driver Wtnted:
Mult Have Economic Vehicle &amp;
Know Gatlla, Malgs, 6 Mason
Countlat I Surrounding Area.

Can Ray HOD-1145-0455.
LPN- lull time and pa~ time: Full
Ume posltlon available tar our :t.
11 ahlft. Part time poshlona
avallabla tor tha11·7 ehlfland).
11 rallaf. As.... rnant skills and
garlatrlc a.:parl1nce 1 plua.
Prof81slonat and cart~ anltuda
a m~o~lt . Qualified LP"'r• piNM
apply In parson between th
hours of a :'lOam-5:00pm at
Overbrook Center, 333 Paga St.,
Mlddlepor1, Ohio 45760. EOE

!!EDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST:

21

45631.
Now accepting application• at
both locations. Ap~~ at Sarvlc:a
O.Sk of our Middleport Store.
Several pcehlona aVIIIable.
Vaughan 's Cardinal, 405 Peart
SlrHt, Middleport, Ohio.

Oak Hili Trucking Company
Seeking Experlenc:.td Over Tha
Road Semi Tractor !Trailer
Drivel"', Excellent Pay, 014-682·

6613.
REAL ESTATE CORRESPON·
DENCE COURSEo complete WV
requirement• at y01.1r own pac:a.
No tim. lost oH job. Fully ac-

crtditod.BASIC
APPRAISAL
CLASSESoChoMoton Oct. 415Martlnsburg Ocl 18o29.1-800-

766-4477NMhoaollm
Jack Kolly

College

Aegiat1red MLT Fer A Fully E-

qufppod Lab, No Shih Work, OH
Holidays. Apply In Pai"'In AI
Madlcal Plaza, 936 state Rout•
160, Galllpclll

Secretary
IDispalchlr
/Bookk.. per: Must Have Excol·
lent Organizatlon•l Accounting
&amp; Telephorw Skills, Some Word
Processing &amp; Typing, Fuii·Time.
Send Resume To; ClA 283, c/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avanua, Gallipolis, OH

45631.
Seeking ~eaunt, maluf'll &amp; exporianied Insurance otflc:e staff
person. Mu81 be willing to ac:·
c:apt work load 6 bl a taam
player. Computer typing &amp; lneura nc:a experience neceaaary.
Send resume Box C.24 '% Pt.
Pit. Reg istar, 200 Main S1, Point
Pleaunt, WV 25550.
Train lor amploymant In the
elactronlcs li1ld. OpportunitiH
lncluda taehnlclan In elec:tronlc
rtpair, eleetronk:a engineering,
communication and c:omputar
repair. Openings avallabla in the
Ocl. nth class. Call now. The
Aduh Education C.nllf, 1.SOO..

631-6508 or 614-753-3511.

Truck
O,.tver
Combination
Veh icle COL R•qulrtld , Pay $250
To 13SO Per Week, Very Few
ovemlghll. Rtspond To; P.O.

Box 805, Gallipolio, OH 45631.
TRUCK
DRIVERS
Lim~td
Opaninga With Jacklon County

Trucking Company. No Overnight TraveL An Exullen1 Opo
portunhy
For
Long--t•rm

Employmonl
Drlvera.

For

Benellt•

S.nd R10umo Too
P.O.

Qualified

Available.

DRIVE'!~,

Box 109, Jackson,

ut1

45640.
Wendy 't Now Hiring In Th• Gal·

llpolio Aroa For Ail Shiht, Apply

In P•raon, Monday Thru Friday,

2-4 P.M. EOE.

2988.

Business
OpponunHy

1D72 Wlnd80r, 12x&amp;O, 2br., gOod
cond.,
firm. 304-882·2658
atler6pm.

44

INOTICEI

11173 12r65 Kirkwood, 2 bad·
room, new carpet, tuma~ 6 air
cond 3yN old, 10x12 bldg,

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
,.camrMnda that ~ou do bual·
niSI Whh ~pll you know and

NOT to aend mon1y through the
mall until you have lnveetlgated
1he offlrlng.

lf'llated deck wf roor. ~.,s;.
7138 ftave maiHge w 1·304-

588·2013.

1188 Pine Aldgl, 3 bedroom•, 2

both, utility 100m, $13,000, 5\41192-3048 or 814-1192-544i.
Local Pay Phone Route: 11.200
A WMk Potonlial, Pricod To 1189, 14~:70 mobile home, 3 Hdrooms, 2 full batha underpen·
Soli. 1-1101).488.7632.
Local Vending Route: $1,200 A
WHk Potential. Must Sell. 1-800-

1155.0354;

Vending Route: For Sale.
Strong, Solid Caah Buslnast.
High iraHic, loc:al LocaUont.
NN Equipment. 1-800..284Vend.

23

Professional
Services

nlng, ceiling lans, nic:e, $16,000.
304:.&amp;95·306"8 III.VI m..sage.

1191 Palm Harbor, 281154, loadlld
with opliont, muat .... lnc:ludn:
H1up and delivery, 1..aoo.a37.

8825.
111114 Rodman 14x79, 3bdrm., includ• tklrtlng1 atepe, blocke,
5yr. warrant~, nomaownerw Insurance, and 1 yur ot frM Jot
rent, all for only $1'rnmo., c:all 1·

800-1137-32311.
A Lot &amp; Trailer,

114·2~948

Al-

ter 5 P.M.
Grand Opening: Septambr.r 11t.
M . T&amp;T Shop (T·Shlrta, Tapes, Mobile Home And Land For
Cr1fta), 725 Flrlt Avenue, Ga._ Solo, By Owner, 814-245-9124
lipotio, 614-446-2388.
Anytime. Addrns: 3266 Cora

Real Estate

614-446-ll358.
1 112 Bedroome, 2 Bathe, 2

lllln, No~h 01 Vinton S27SIIIo.,
DopoaH, UtiiHI• 814-388-11080.
lbdnn. apaltmant in Pomoroy
lor ronl, 814-9!12o6851.

1br. apartment~
In Point
PINSint, furnished or unfur·
nllhed, very clean, no peiL 304-

175-1386.
2bdnn. opts., 10411 oloclric, II&gt;'
ptllncaa lumiahed, llundry
room llcll~lao etc&gt;oo to ochool
In town. Appll'caiionl awellab ..
lito Villogo Grwn Apta. Mil or
call 614.0112.:1711. EOH.
Fumlohod
EHicioncy:
607
S.concl, Goiilpolia, Shoro Both,
UtiiHiao Paid, $186/llo. 614-4464416 Aftar 7 P.ll.
Fumiohod EHieiancy 7 112 Noll,
Goiilpollo, UtiiHin Poid, $165,
114 441i 4418 Aftor 7 P.M.
Fumiahod I Dr Apl., 701 Fourth,
Gallipollo, Sharo Bath, $200
Utllltl• Paid, 614 446 4416 Aher

7P.!!.

rant In Pt.
1\4-11112-$858 ahor
tor

6590.
COUNTRY HOliES /ACREAGE

E11lra Large Contempory Home
On 17.8 Acres MIL With 2 Barna,

8"l

8258.

al196ll wnich makes HIllegal
to advertise "any preference,
Hmltallon or discrimlnaUon
based on race, color, relglon,
sex lamlllal Slatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such pretetence,
limitation or disalminatlon."

This newspaper wll not
knowing~ accept
adVe rt isements lor real estate
'Nhlch ts h'1 Yl olaiOO of the
law. Our readers are hereb~
lnlormod Ihal all dwoHings

advertised in lhls newspaper

For Occupancy, 2 Bedroom
Un~o. Ronge, Rotrigorator AC,
1
C.rpo~ Income R11trictoo, Eldorty, Dlooblld Hondlcappod,
814-441·1800, ~quol Houalng
Opporlunfty FIIHAIRA.
First Holzer , Apartmantt, Firat

And C.dar Sl, Gaiilpolia.
Sonlcn, Dloabied, I Handlcaj)o
pod, FIIHA inCot"nt Rootrict"!! 1
kent• Balld On 30% ur
HouMhold lncoma. Appllancea,
C.rpo~

On.Sito La~ndry, AIC.
Raoident Payo Ei.ctrlc Utllfty

~.

Aucllon Or 4 !IIIIo Oul MI.
Opon t A.M. To I P.II. Mon -Sat,

Chorry dining ouHa, 1 cholnl,

.,.,

U·"yht
Glboon - . , runo
QIOI
, 814-119U677.

1 acra lett, Rt 2..t.._Ashton. Clyde
Bowen, Jr 304-5to-2338.
3 Lola South Vanict Flortda, 3
Mlln From M1na110l1 Beach,
Nice Family Orlentld Living,

Lott &amp; acreage for home c:onttruc:tlon on Rayliw-n Ad,
raatonable rlltrlctlona, county
water, lntormallon mailed on ,...
quest, 304175-5253, pteaae no
aingle wide trailers.

Trailer Lot For Sale, 614·258--

1br, nut to Ubrary, parking,
cantril heat, ek, reference ,._

quirod. 614-441.0338.
Furnished oHicioncy,

$185.

Red Angu1 Slmmatal

2444.
AKC

Pu~ Puppy, Fema.. ,
Ad-blo 010on1lit 1$300 81 111
E
PICKENS FURNITUR
~Y
• ~
Now/Uaed
446-01110.
Houoohold lumiohlng. 112 mi. AKC Rag. Slborlan Hualcy Polj)o
Jorricho Ad. Pt. Pl..-, WV, ptoo, FimaiH: $100: llolooo
Cllll304-875-1450.
tl21, Excellent lloodllna. Very
SWAIN
Smort, 514-441-11627.'
Galllpollt, Ohio 111 Uti 4318.

AUCTION l
OIIv• St., Galli poll•. Naw &amp; Ulld 3 r.malll, 1 male, $250,
lumHure, hllltf'l, WHttm &amp;

2yro ol&lt;!/..~hrowo

304-475'r..3.

enkle~

fumithed

opartmont, utilllloo paid, ral. I
dopoa~. 304'182·2566.
!!odam I BR opl.l14-446-0390.

Mt. Vernon An, vary nice amall

tumlahld apartment, 1br, upper
duplax, 1225. ph• aiKtrk:, na
pets, na HUD, ret &amp; d•p. 304~75-218!.

Nicely

tumiahld

apartment,

largo yard with prtvato parking
aru., no pete, 614-992·5633.

North 3rd, Middleport,

2br.,

untlrnlthtd ;cr:•nt, depoan

I raf11ronc6.
One

bedroom

2-2566.

apartmenta,

61148 Ahor 5 P.M.

$225/mo. lncludos utilllios, $100

36

11112-2218.

Real Estate
Wanted

Young Protenlonal Couple
Allocating ToA.ru. Looking_ For
3 Or 4 Be&lt;troom HouH To Aem

Or Buy. 614-441o0960.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

2 Bedroom With Garage And

Baument, Lots Of Storaga On

St . Rt. 141 $350/llo. Dopoa~ And
Referencea, 6'f4.446~566.

mil·:nt.: ,:.~:::~~
-II
!104.
3 Bedroom Houu In Country 2

aec:urlty depoeH, no pelt; 814-

r'::l

Tn-5312

gaa
heaters;
one
amaO
woodbumar: uHd doora and
windowt; 814-N5-3838.

Card, lmagewrtter II Surge
Prot.c:tor, Several Application
And Prog~mmlng · Software:
Also Rune APDie lla Software,

plea

Poodle

Puppltt

dua
to
lllnna,
Tom cat &amp; khtane.
One Thorobred female ChoW.
Hlmal~yan

304-451-18112.

Musical
Instruments

Rainbow Sw•perw. Paying:
Model 0..3 with all attachmenla,
w~h

Couch &amp; chair, exerclee biked
braided room-slza rug, ol
ZlnUh
c:onaale
•llreo,
tabla/lamp combo, 25" color

614·992·5053.

Console,

Pine

Jacklon. Ohio

Spo~o Cor ColiiCIIon For Sol'!,
Or Trodo For Cor. Coli Ahw •
~

AGAINST
REGULATIONS,
IT'S

BUT TSUPPOSE
WE CAN DO IT..

•

John lennon'• Son'• Gutter
SOOO Finn: Eivlo Whiakay

Docantar $200: Elvia Trading
C.rde -AA 880 In Eivlo Album
$175; Eivlo And Bootln Recorda
$10 And S15 Each. 81WB2·79114.
New Sal'l Craftman 1 HP above
ground twlmml~ pool pump 4

61

304-aa.

Two 215 x70 x14 Stinger Radial

·

Cara, New Hewen, WY,

$1500,

call 614·112·571112 awanlngs attar

AA. 50 I DID,
,....., llO'I'.. '
AAD IT~
~'('»,'(' "
ISM\ IT~

~TYOO'D~

'I'OOil. APPRECIATIOO
otl

!

7:00am·

1m ~or

37'0-2123.

.....

.

MORTY MEEKLE.AND WINTHROP
¥.1-fY lXlE6 '10JR CJA.D
ALWAY5 ~~HAT
"REreKINS"CAP~

6SCAL..l5E He.':&gt;
A W".'91·HNGTi:JN
I¢D6KIN6 F;4N ...

motor home, nelda

$2200. 773-5284.

~·--·--......

88,

....

Services

ballr.

$3,500. ezc Mape. 304-171-1751.

Home
Improvements

Pl~mouth
Horlton,
304-451-1727.
Automotlc, Air, 2~!000 llllo_a.,
Good Condition N,200; 1IIMI
Allee Chalmer 0..7 bull dozer, Dodgo Arloo, Autometlc, Air,
300hnl. 304-458 1540.
82,000 lliioo, Good CandHion,
King Cuttor, 5 Fl. Finioh llowor, $1,4~. 1\4-441-11172, 114-251King Cuttor, 5 R . Bruoh HC11J, 1251. '
Both 1 YoarOtd, 114-388-11082.
1ggo Goo Storm 4 Cylinder... 5
Air CandHioni~A!!"'II
llantio Tlill,., $40 ...,.Ia or 111tt Spood,
"ion,
opociol in Olock only thru Conetoe Ercotlont
n
August 31, 6t4-'Jit2oo2:4!1, t1+742· $5,500. 14-:JII..IBIS.
2510.
18111 C.moro RS, CD Ployor,
New Holland 717 for~ga han~... Vlpor Cor Allrm, ~ Rod,
ter WI both huda, 3 bealer Aalci!'ll $6,!100, 814-4
. 12.
lorage wagon, New Holland T till! Pontioc Firoblrd, tinted T·
hay bind, Gohl grindar/mlxar, 12'
trantpott dltc, AC no tUe com topo1 ioedtd, low miloo, IIC
plantar, Oliver 1800 trte1or, all eonG. 304-1175-71188.
Gr nd P"
I ;g;;ood::;;-c-;:ond::::.304-::;;:273-4::::;-:215::;-.-::::- Iiiii -~-loedtd1 S3,000
..x,mlilo,
bluo
lour
door,
1
Small lntlrMtloNI 105 comvary aood oon&lt;luon, now 'lh•a,
blno, 10' plotfarm, wldo 2-OBO, 814-tm-2008,
com haod, 814-Mi-2871 or 304- $11,0db
ovontnga.
882 -2023.
Tobacco ltlckt, 11 cent• ..ah. 72 True~• for Sale

NO NO. NOT ii\IS ONe ...
rvE GOT ~ 6th SENSE ASOJT

ROP..DS ID~.
TI\INGS liRE.

6t (511£f&gt;.T... TRUST ME .. .

TH~SE. IHII'IGS ...TI4\S ON~'ll

ii\OSE:

BASEMENT
WATERI'liOOANQ
UncondHionai lifetlma guoran-

"lOUil.\SiS

ii&lt;AI'S.

111. Local reteranc• fumiahed.
Cali 1-1100.287.0516 Or 814-2370488 Rogar1 Watarprooftng. E•

tobllohad 1975.

;:;;:;;:u:;=::-;::=:='::--;::--;;c

Curtla Home Improvement•. No

198t Fot"d Torua GL. 304-8711- Job Too Big Dr Small, Yoaro Ex·
4014. .
1888

YOU
KIDD1tl6 1

r&gt;.R~

Sold 81

Plrlence lln Okler /Newer
Hom ... ,Addlllana, Foundatlona,

Rooting, K~chono /Botho. In-

lUred, rrat Estimates. &amp;14-367•

0515,
Davia Sawing llochino , And
Vocuum Cioanor Repair, Froo
Pick·Up And Dollvary, OoorgH
CNok Road, 814-441.0:Z94.
Ron' TV s-• ·
•
~ .. co, opoclollzlllll
In Z.nHh alto MrviCing moa1

....:.kJ~~;;;;;;;;=:;;;;::;;;:.~~'~~
ASTRO-GRAPH

•

se ll ·addressed, stamped envelope to
4465. New York. NY. 10163

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

other branda. HouM c:alfe, alao

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0et. 23) Usually mem ·
bers ol lhe opposi le ge nd e r lind you
appealmg and atlractive. but today you
mig ht not get these h•gh grades on your
score card ,, you appear to be too self-cen-

tered.

Saturday, Aug. 28, 1993

Heating
FrNman'a H•tlng And Cooling.

..

:o~§~i+;~y~ou~rs~:ei~r,~n~y~ou~r~s~po~u~s:e~·s~s~h~oe~s.~ru

'feveaiS Wli'tch s tgns are
cail y pertecl tor you: Ma11 $2 and a long .
Malchmake r, cia th1s newspaper. P .O . 80)(

oome oppilenco ropai,.. wv
304-671-23111 Ohio 114-445-2454.
Saptlc Tonk Pumplnf $80LGallia
Ca. RON EVANS EN ERPHISES
Jockoon, OH 1.SOO.a37-ll528. '
Will build polio cov-. docka
ocrHntd rooma, put up vinyl
aldln~ or troller oki~l~.
... 1\4245 S2.
I ~:-·..;.;;~------82 PI um bl ng &amp;

11172 Chivy 112 Ton 310 4 bbl. 4 'lnolallatlon And Sorvlca. RSES
63
Bon, AT, J'.!l.1. PB. AC, 3.73 POll Cortllied. Rooldantiat, Cammer·
Livestock
$3,600, 0"" ll'rodoo 1 - clll. 114-215-1111.
Approvtd For Potable Water.
·
I:-:-~....;.;;.--~on Evant Entarprl.... Jack· 11 Umashw c:alv-. zso..450, 2301.
llot!lon'o Form, Rl 31. 304-ti37100, Ohla, 1-800-437.0S21.
11171 ~t Hoavy ~ 84
Ellletrlcal &amp;
201S:
Ton
T~
4
WD,
Runo
Rafrlgeratlon
Wedding dt'HI, hat, and ICCII- 2 R-latnd A,IVIUJ B 111 4 Sail IT
,too, 114-317-791 1n:=.:::;:r~,;...:...:.;.;.._,.,...,
aorloo, ooking $300, pokl $800,
·•
co~ •
A10ldentlol or · commercial
304-671-IIJOII.
~::r:~. 7 Fooder Calna, Aftor 4P.!!.
11111 F250gsr.kut noec1o wlrtng; now MrYica or rJPIIlro.
•
~ •
!!allor Uctnaed oloclncl...
Whl11 Wostlngbouao 25 Cubic I:2!1:;;;-L;-;i:mool::::;::no:-::co::•::•:-:1-;bul~l:-,:;11:-orropo 1r, • • ca ·~2~1142 R - r Eloctricol, WV00030e,
Fooe, Choat Typo 0atp F._., gon'a Form, Rt 36. 004-1137·2018. avonlnga
oftor
1:00.
304-1175-17111.
Good CandftiOn, 814-317&gt;0158. ',

t'=zlec~,ln

21 Scott.
22 Att.rnoon

12 H1rn111 p.t

8 Fond du -,

18- Tin Tin

,

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 if you want help
!ro m anolhe r today don 'l 1mpose upon
h1s/her emotions and se nsiliv1t1es . Ke8p
leelings out of lhe p1cture and s11ck to lhe
you'll l1nd it The AslrO·Graph Malchmaker

lesson lhe hard way
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) You1 oehav10r
pallerns w•li be carefull y scruM•zed today
by fnend s w1t h whom you·re mvo lved
soctally Don't put your a s hes 1n a collee
cup or w1pe your mouth on you r sleeve.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) in a career

TAURUS {April 20-May 20) Your goals

si tu ation today there 1s a poss1bihty an

assoc1ate m1gh1 try to take cred1t for some·
th1ng that was your do1ng. not h1s/hers. Be
ready to respond in defense

and ObJeC tives are hke ly to be clea rly
defined today. yet you may not be much of
an ach1ever Thts 1s because you m1ght
stop try1ng 11things don't come easy

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 -Dec . 21)

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) it someone in

Opt1m1sm IS a marvelous attnbule that has
power1 ul msp1rational effects wh1ie wishful
think1ng is merely seil·dllut1ng and usually
resulls In d1sappo1ntment. Beware of the

your presence does someth1ng outstanding
today, be lavish 1n your pra1se However. if
you attempt 10 use flattery to achieve a
selfish purpos~, 11 won't wprk

Advancement In your chosen field ·of
endeavor is a slrong probaOihty lor the year latter
ahead Hard Work and dnve will play the CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) Yo u mus t
• · lllljer rolel wllilo luCk, will play· 1M ......,... prd age~nll 1ncilna11Dn$ IO&lt;I~y thai u1ge
one.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) II w1il be eas1·

e r 10 make prom1ses today than 1t w1ll be
lor you to lull! II them at a later dat e
Unfort unately , you may have to learn th• s

CANCER (June 21·Juiy 22) You r sense ol
va lues m1ghl oe a !rifle diSiorted loday and
lhiS anomaly could become evident 1! you

you to spend now 1n hopes you II be able to
pay latter There 1s nothmg certam about

go shopp1ng. Be care fu l not to pay more for
th1ngs than they are wonh.

lhe luiure .
AQUARIUS (Jan: 20-Feb. 19) Your mate's

LEO "(July ·23-Aug. 22) Tactfulness and
decorum have ihe~r places today 1n one· to·

tolerance and pat1 ence will have 1ts hmits
today. so be very care ful not to make
unreasonable demands on him/her Put

one relationships, but don 't give th em
precedence over substance It 1s the latter
that really counts.

I.

r.:L

c...,
24 North ol

23

trlln

Okll.

25 Ring

-

28. Till KinO -

z+

28 Colorado lkl
rnort
28 Blbtlcllldng
30 Old Portllg.... money

t+

Pua
Pua

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day i ~
1859, Edwin Drake struck oil with th'1
first commercial oil well, in Titusville,·
Pa
·
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Georg Wil·
helm Friedrich Hege l (1770·1831) ,
philosopher; Theodore Dreiser (1871 1945), novelist; Samuel Goldwyn (18821974), film producer: Lyndon Johnson
0908 · 1973), U.S. president; Lester·
Young (1909-1959), musician; Mother
Teresa (1910-), missionary, is 83 ;
Martha Raye 091 6·l, comedian·ac·
tress, is 77; Tuesday Weld (1943·l ac·
tress, is 50.

I FRIDAY

facts. Know where to look for romance and
(

AND 6ECALJeE HE DI9COv'ERED
THATHESGOT A BA.L.De.FOT.

1332.

Dollo

7

(MOM dogl

g Before
10 L"t-cuttlng
lnt
II Sound oh

Eul

Every now and then, you watch a
deal played by uperts al\jl you cannot
believe what i5 happening. Today's occurred duriDI the Bridle Federatl~
of Asia and Middle East Champion•
sbipa, beld lut June In Mauritius. I
will allow the perfonnen to retain anonymity, but there are several instructive points In the deal .
I would have overcalled one spade
with that South band. And North
should make a take-out double over
one spade. AIJO, wbea North overcella
two clubs vulnerable oppo1ite a
paged partuer, u South I would have
t-1 thinkinl about three no-trump.
I'm not sure I would have
three no-trump u North. Partbel' II upectiDfl a better band for two
bids like that.
·Weal Jed the diamond three: 10, ace,
two. The commentaton were confl·
dently predlctlnfl three down when
Eut cubed the spade ·ace! After West
discouraled, East switched back to
the diamond four: queen, king. Three
down after all.
There are tWo key poiDts. Would
Eut win trick one with the diamond
ace If bolcliDI the ace and ldng? It's unlikely. And If be bad done so, be would
have retumecl a low diamond at trick
two. When Instead the spade ace wu
cubed, It wu clear East wu tryinl to
run one suit or the other. This i5 not a
loeical defense when one holds the ace
MJd kinK of diamonds. So It II correct
to play low on the diamond return at
trick three. Then the contract makes,
declarer &amp;ettiDg biB ninth trick from
either major.
What a Comedy of Erron - wu
Sbakespeere a bridge player?
o-.. ........,., u..

1891 Olda Rogonoy Broughom, 1;;;;;--;;;:::::-;:--;;;::::':-:--;:--

Brougham, PS, PB, PW, Power
Climate Control, Power
1600 Olivor traclor whh S.ata,
Locke,
E1c.
A!!II'M Staroo C..
mounted 2·10W Ollvor plckor
· · Loadedl One Own«
John Dooro 68 COIIIblno wHh 131 To
platfotm and 3-row n.rrow head Boughl Now Cor, and Haw ld• 324 pull pk:klr Eacalllnl Cond~lonl Looko

v•

40
llludent•
41 Deubld

34 Actor Alntllr

37 PUUllnO
lltuallon
38 - ,CIIIre,

Wll.

38 Dllmlll

42 Iorden cow
43 eonatrucUon

bHnt
44 Brlld apreild
45 Com-plant

Plfl•

47 Culllvaq
48 ReluMto
elgn

49 Pretty malde

lllln - 51 Rodent

52 Summer (Fr.)
54 Actor Linden

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.t.brtty Clpf1ef cryptogram~ are aer.ted from quotation• by •~ ~*JP~e, put Wid Pf'l"l!l.
&amp;c:h lett• In the cl~ etn. for MOihef, Today't CIW: VfiQIJIJI C.

• L

XBBV

JWINRCVG

TIWLJWJ

ETJJLRC

T R Z

BHEBILBRUB

TRGNRB

LX

TAN M W

N R

N M I

FRNDVBZCB

DTRWJ

L W .'

(JNEITRNI
TIVBBR
TMCBI.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I like to schedule Ions and Ions ol lhlnvs.
because II I'm not working, I'm really bored." - Jenna Von Oy.

I PEWMIL
I

.

1988 Dodge Arl•, Good Cond~
lion, Air, fUOO,,8~1552.
1f71 Yellow Stone Country Club
C.mpor 32 Fl. Excotionl Candi1881 Dodge Daytona Turbo 2, tion, ~~~B' $1,500, Coil AHor 5
AJC, TIH WhHI,. Roar Dttroot, P.!!. 8,1
·7371.
PS, PB, PL, 84,300, OBO, 1\4•
446·1853.
1983 PopUp C.mpor, S i - 6

1Mola471i.
1891 Oldemoblio

...,

8 Llolded

K•n•wa

LIDYE

I

S0 U M E

I

II

2 door Spor1 Coupa wfth moon 20' Claas A Motor Home,
root, Hkl new condition, evtry GIMI'Itor, Air Cond., SIIIJHI I,
option •v•llable, 3.1 V.e, $3185, Good Condition, $4,500''114-~

Fann Equipment

304-171~341.

614-62·5710

""II

Farman Cub tractor wt 5ft.
mower, fatt hltc:h wl carry al.

1:00.
WATEA LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 inch
200 PSI $18.t5; I Inch 200 PSI

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

liBI Chryalar Now Y-. 4 8o00pm, Darroii.
Door, Turbo, All -.... Fully 11172 Bonnaza Pull TI'IIT.ior, 35 Fl.
Loaded, Excaiitnl CandHklo!~ In Air, Now Condition, N ca, f1.600
l OUC Now Fronl Tl101
Finn. 514-441-4258.
,
KOI&gt;I i:z,8oo, Ahor a P.M. 114-

Pool table, good concl, 304 ·773-

CJoed rtding lown mowor, $171,

BORNu'-'''-'

Jr
.
.
I.Jt.OliE.f? YOO~D If r

lAAOE.I&gt; "!llE aETER

11 R . F,_oy truck cl mpar, &lt;"
v.a, T-Top, good cond, :IOW75- tully nit-contained, aiHPI . 5-6,

275 Markfge Grain Drier, a.:c
cand, 304-57'8·2238.

80 wotta, liko new, $45, 814·1m·

79

tion, 3.8 V4, $1800, 114-9!12-1171i.

Tr11ted 2x6's 8' SiS; 6'. MO,
Gravely Wood Splitter $400, 614•

Realistic: c:ar at~reo power amp,

1.3;;72;;;-3;-8-;33=or~l=::-::273'::'-1132::'-8":.-:--:;

• - •an. •• • ·
::1:,, B~~.Skl!:'.:&gt;. 'fl=

t

• Wood Swing Sot, 5 R Swing,
614-445-8568.
Picnic Tablet For Labor Oay.L.~II

5207.

,,
'•

,•

TIRE EXPRESS: QuaiH~ Ulld
Tir11h :orontM&lt;I, Thouoando
To C 0 e Fram Our 281h Y•r,
Wo Want To Romro You Bat·
woon Miller Uthalll, OH.

Older Sure 16 HP Lawn Tractor

367·7512.

~ ICN0.;1

5·P.M. E,arMnga, 014-24W021.

Whh 32iSUP11'11hOIIng unh, 114- Good, Aaklngo 84,715. 114-44f.
4223 After 8:110 P.M.
1115-31156.
260 White Tractor SI,UO: 180 11188 Sunf&gt;lrd, 5 Soood, 40 Mil11 ·
IIF $3,550; 101 Fot"d Workmoo- PIIr Gillon, $1,2001 080, 014tor $3,850, Track Loodor, $2,950, 441·1726.
1888 Ford Tempo GL, 4 door,
014-280-t522.

flHor, Will Mil fOr 112 prlco or
trado. 304-875-2634.

t{Ovl ftiOULP

Mlper car, call 814-949-2045 91 !!ork IV Cantinontal Flborglaoa
114-11411-2819.
Topper For Short Bed Coil ~ftor

$1500. 191111 SUnblid GT, $2585.
1884 Ranger, NbuiH motor,
$1395. 11118 Pontiac La Minot,
7t5. 1185 Do!Jgo Diplomat,
995 1D84 VIII: ,.~.. "
.,.3"5

WI

•.-e~

38 Uvelr

=·

WOilS~1

New gaa tanka, qne ton truck
radiators, floor mata, :
1885 Dodgo Sollw, now molot", Ole. 0 &amp; R Aut.:oJ!Iplly, WV. 304-

4 - lllhll
5 Wolflke

-"-?

A real comedy
of errors

IS YOUfl AMNfSIA GETTI/'IG A/'IY

wh•l~

3 Doctrine•

By PhiJUp Alder

For Sa .., 614-388-08~.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

J.C. Penny wedding gown, tize

47 Wanted to Rent
Singll !lola Coliogo P r - -

IMve m. . .g• on mac:hlna.

WHACKED
ME WITH
IT ! !

FRANK AND ERNEST

1183 17 112 Ft. Rinker, 170 HP

Pua

IXIIII

"'·ln

(2
Wltet'a

Opening lead: +3

AN'

....

crulle, powtr wlndawallocb,

18811 Ponllac 6000, 4 door,
bu.utlfut family c:ar, every op-

Canning Tomatoea: 14 Buthel,

314, $100. Fiuto1 ortglnoiiy $1;00,
will 1111 lor $40u. 304·773-5432.

WATER STORAGE TANKS
Abovo And Below Ground FDA

For Rent· 3bdrm. house, Llnc:aln

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

While or blua grapM for prlzlll

$32.50; Aon Evant EnlerurtHe,
Jackeon, Ohio, 1-800-&amp;37-0:128.

Hill, Pomeroy, phone 814-9!12· h-•· ln -nand good cond~
305i or 614-118:1-6642, aak lor lion, prolor prlvoto oottlng, 114Rick.
9!12-2428, II no onowor ptoaoo

58

Firowood P-ro For Wlnloril winning wine, l•lly or luice,
Will Bo Soaoontd Whln Col SOC~b, 20ib box mln. 304-875Waathar ArrfvH, Otlllvitred, 814- 3937.
258-1316, 614-367·71125 Evonlnga.
For Sale
Go Korto- 3 HP &amp; up, opoclll on 59
8 HP, In olock, llorrto Equii&gt;'
or
Trade
menl, 614-i'l2·2455 or 614-742·

Spac• lor IWII otoning ot

eage.

drive, 3600 mlltt, like new,

SHE RAISED
CANE

3712.
QT Til.. Laoa Than 100 111110, ;
1i85 Ford Tompo, good condl· Poid $130, Sail: $71. 614-245tion, $500, 814-1143-5380.
11322.

814-286-5889

With Dark Stain, 31"H r4T'W 514-448-1712, 114-388-11249.
X18"0, $100, 814-446-7271.

SIMpina room• whh oooklng.

Iw:::;;::-::-=~:::-:;-;:-::::-:-::
Wanting Ia ,.,.. 2 ot 3 bedroom

Pelt, 614-24~5430 .

WHAT DID ELVINEY SAY
ABOUT YOU PLAYIN'
CARDS ALL NIGHT
LONG?

IH 1989 toyota or newer; Jan11n ~

1884 Pontiac BOO!IJ 1200 Or -

menta, $200. 304-273e4098.

Sun, 12:00pm~ :00pm, othlra
days &amp; hours.. 304·m-5655.

Apartment In Tho Oollootio
Aroo, 114-245-7284 Loa.. liM-

1987 Honda 250, util~~ 4
WhHilr, ridden VIr)' illtia, 304175-7163.
1888 Kawasaki 454 LTD, bah

Pua

liM Oldo Royall, PS, PO, AC, box a-koro; 114-1'12-2192.

OHtr, 814-441-28a.

ail alflch- Rockford Punch 150 Amp
Stlilwotar 15" Kickoro, Pyramid
7 Band Equalizer, JVC cauett•
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS, Dock, 614-37i-11384.
11!'00 Galion, $325: Now JET Bat
SUII· SUM!!· SUIIIIER
(l'lo Sond Flnor Required)
SALEI
$1,495; Ron Evana EntarpriHI,
Hummingbird !!uoic C.ntor
Jac:klon, Ohio 1-800-537-1528.

$100•.Modol D-4

ahlpment combat boafa, tfM

!!lin From Rio Granda,
S25iiil.fo. Security DapoaH, No

at

BARNEY

Male

Selling

Bost Offlor. 81(..317.0545.
CEDAR VACS Nowliuylng uood

Roome lor renl • week or month.

or 2 hdroom

I. s•z•

Norll

2 Future llltya.'

Flrat"''ete

35 Singer - Te

Vulllerable: Both
Dealer: East
Well

1 HlghWIJ
1houldtr

Altlntpt

33 Swlllnge

•Qu

~~~~~~~~~~

OOWN

older
Fui!Mu
Turldll! title

32

+A112

Arctic Fox, 13' Python 7' Boa &amp; 11182 Trano Am, Red, PW, PB, T·
Accassorles
Much !!oroi 614-367&gt;0117.
Topo, Air, $1,800, 114-441.otl31,
Budael Transmlalont:, UMCI 1
axa wooden ltorag• bulldlnge, Rabb~a... llinl Lop, lllnl Rex.~. Mix 3015, 350 Trona.
robulh, oil tvpn, oto~ln\ot $119;
$395, delivery I ootup $55. Breed, van Be S.en: 5064 ~tate
1884 Dbdgo Dipiomat1 I cylin- owner 61(·245-5877. 14411-Othar alua available. Sld'•r• E· Routo 850, Bldwoll, Ohio.
der, ~d, excellent Conclflon, 2263.
qulpment, Hlncleraon. 304475-Sclwlluzor mlnlotUNO, puppln $350Cf, phono 6\4-247-337.1.
ltl21.
Lund vis«; bush wacker; ••·
and adulta, alao Poodll pupflarw; bug ahleld;
llnoo, 1884 EXP, 4 cyl, s opd, air, amllm tand..,·fander
Applo llgo Camputor With 2-3.5 ~· ch. bioodiinoo, IVIIII, 014..0174404.
Olllolttl, IIUnroG1, 304-t75.27M window ventt; aquare tube
Drlvn, Color Monitor, I M~ Ex·
bumpori. Toyoto rtmo wnl ..o: Ill
"'3CioWI75-1577.
pantlon Card, $11reo Sound

Starting ot $120/mo. Gollll Hotel. barka. Sam Somervllla'a1 by
Sandyvilio PoOl OHica. Fn.S.t114-446-11580.

Wanle To Rent 1

ood Grain,

!len:., Excollont Candlllon, 1142584160.
KK'o Petiondl Now Have Doell- 11180 llonto c.r~ - · --~------8 ft. truck topper; 2 circulating ohund Pupp n, Cockw Pup- $500, call 814-119276 Auto Pans &amp;

ap~rtmanl,
2nd Solo, Recliner, B Cholro, Dlnotto
flow, Pomaroy. 4-l'oornl, both, Tabll l Daok, Carbin .Snyder
no pelt, refarenc. and depoalt, Fumhure, 614-440-1171.
114-lm·2276 aftor 8:30pm.
S1rollor, bobybod, wolkor, high•
chair, c:ar lilt, awing, doubl•
45
Furnished
atroller. 304-675-4548.
Rooms
Surplua army cemaflauge, new

IU!mo., 114-112·210'7.

.H

1883 Yemaha Kodiak, 4 Wheeler, ;
Sought New July 12, 014-371).. ,

••c.

•s

SOUTH
.KJ874

64

now, taUt bobbed, ahott.

lllcome

.AHH4

KIS
J 10 s

57 Lilt
58 Prlm1ry color

Ointment

•an

Kif

Boarda,

$1800, 114-ll92·m5.

nlca

Or Fungus On Doci1 &amp; Hor111
L82
80 " · •
cond.,
2 Complete Set1 ot Harness For Whhout Staroldel J:vailable O.T· 111 ._,.. ••tte,
83
mirror f·lopo,- •000 mlloo, 304A Large Hom, Plua Extra C J D NORTH PRODUCE •".
175-2714
or
304475-1571.
Pl.cu, 1850, 814-.532·1203.

Unfurnished

46 Space for Rent

4x4

tllllrtct

17 Alttge (lllbr·I
18 Aromlllc

t.\Q

101185

exc:. c:ond., $2100.

.......

11 Vlnqlr

EAST

WEST

7

2354.

Al10 ~rallw apace. All haok·upa.
Clll after 2:00 p.m., 304·773MSI, Maeon WV.

th

1-1'1·11

•w

:'p0;

led $3,495, 614-446-6308.

room

V4

41 Author JIM
II. 47 Fldlralegcy.
5D Loud, harah
aound8
53P. .
5I Fill wllh 111
5I Theiler

compolltlone
14Actr--

.KQ878f

675-6043 ahor 5pm.
11381.
·
AKC Ragillorod Cacko!Spanlot
75 Boats &amp; Motors
p&lt;~ppiao, 4 mal10, 2 lomaloo,
for Sale
ohota, wormed._10111 bobbed, 71 Autos for Sale
roady Sapt 8. J04-882·2087 or -:::~:-:--::-::::-~:----:-:---:--:--..----1 .-;;;:;-;;:::;:;:::::;-;:;;:;::;::::-=
882·2831.
'ita Olda Cullooo SUpro. ., air, tery,
12 FI.·Aiumlnum Boat With Bat-oo, ••• - _ 23
Troy Motor, Olrw, $325,
53
Antiques
AKC Raglotortd Mlnlaturo Rod ... ·~- •
114-245-5152 Aftor 1 P.M.
~~~~-:::~~~~~ Dachahund puppiH, moll ond 1"54 F d 2 ~ H t Ytcforla
iuy « Mil. Alvtrlne AnUquea, female; OW.tt2·5e24.
"
or
...... • •
i 12ft alumn boat tralltr, 7.5 Mer1947
1124 E. llaln Stroot, on Rt. 124,
Plymouth Caupo, No cury m04or, !linn Koto trolling
Tank, 2413 Jacklon Avo, Rlloonablt Off• Rolu-, 114- moor,
&gt;II
t l many extraa,.
T W. 10:00 Floh
Pomeroy. Houra: II •.
Point PINHnt, 304-175-20&amp;3 , 251 _1058,
... •
a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundo~ 1:00 lull ltno Tropical fiohl birdo,
;$1;;,200;-;. 304~-11=82:--2-::5:-4-::8.~-:--:--:1m llultang, fut back, new 14ft. Y..boHorn 1lumlnum boat, 1
to ti:OO p.m. 614- 62~ 28 •
amallanlmals and auppl•.
brok11 • liroo, chromo whMio, U !!o~eury malor, troilor, can.'
54 Ml see II aneous
Full blooclld Cocker Spaniel good body, nHda: motor, $850 vat cover, IPirt tire. 304-458Merchandlse
pupploo, wormed • tirot ohoto, OBO. 304-1175-71131.
1727.
Nldy 10 go, 304-571-2222.
li78 llonll CoriO, T~opo, black
12"
Televltlon,
Draperies, HAPPY JACK MANGE LO'TlON: w/rod lntortor, 301 aulo, olr, low lBft., Ba~linar ball bolt, 1988 .
llodlclna Cobinot, Ladln Caoto,
--•
k. ~
moael, new In 1991, a.:c. cond., :
.. II '!z.!'~•
aomw wor ••500• many 1 ztraa, $6500. 304-!176Bedapraad, Cunalna, And Pic- PromotH HNIIng And Hair
Growth to An~ Mongo, H04 Spot, 3041r....324.
4011.
lurea. 614-446-3375.

Hell 2 112 Ton Heat_ Pump, Instal·

$202. C:OII 614-1192·58511. EOH.
•lddiopor11• Ohio, Botch St., 1

•u
.AQIOS

:Wo_rk;-boo_t•-::·,-1_14-441-_"=31-;5-;-i._-:--l
7
Waahor't ~· Rolrtgorotor,
'J:I:'nor, .v.
Ali ~
Rolrt!orator, !!ictawava, 6\4_251
•1 38.

Gallipollo 614-446-4416 oftor '
room apartment• at Village
Manor
and
Rlwarslcta
Apartment• In Middleport. From

NORTH

1810 Y1mahe Blaster 200, 1982
· KDX ll'S Kowooakl dlrtbikt. 304Hay &amp; Grain
575-3773•
-;:;::i:-:=:::~~~::::--=:::
Al1111111 J!.~· hoy roll'!,. $25 18113 Yamaho ·Banohoa 4 ·
Mch. '-20.\an•, F•rm. H1 35. wheeler, need p~yotr. $4100, ~
304-1137-201 •
only rlddon opproxlmaloiy 12 ,
tlmoo, 514-992-2on.
FURNITURE. 112 AKC Aaglotortd Boxor pupploo, Hoy-llrot.cuttlng, S1.001ball. 304- I :;;:;;:;;;;:::~==~==:c-::-

2580.

Gracloua living. 1 and 2 bad-

Running

~~========~~==~=====~Shield
/Whitt
814-388-8290.

Oieora• er..t Aaad,

UIIIIU• pikl, 701 Fourth Av•::
p.m.

XLT

1 C.ehM

7 Wlllten
13 Ullrery

Kltt

&amp; 4 WD's

Anowor to l're.- ......,_

43 From held lo

11 Aln:r11t

Low Mlleag1, 1 Own•, $12,500,

Entertainment

Avonuo, Gaiilpolio OH 45631
Vouchara -nd C.rtlticatltl, Hud
Approved. Equal Houolng 0,..
port unity.
Furnished ApaMont In Ga~
llpollo, Socurtty DopooH, 114WI-1423 Aftar I P.!!.
Nicol~ Fumlahed Apa~mont,

Ford

Automatic,

1138.

Roquost An Appllcalion Call

PHILLIP
ALDER

CC, EKtended Clb, $1,1500, 614258-11434.
•
11180 Dodge Corovon Excollont
Condition IF~ ~hta Bug

Half Runner Gnan Baana On
Fairview Road. Pick Your OWn,

Aro N- Opened For Oc-

Vans

1988

GOOD USED APPUANCES
w
.. ~~onc.
Nrrtgorotoro,
Building
63
Livestock
rongoa.
, .dry.,.,
. _ Apptloncoo,
71 55
Yin• Slrwt1 piit·lf4.44e-73111, 1·
Supplies
Alhono Uvoalock Salol, Spoclol
800-4119-34w.
F - Coif Salt, Soturdayl
Block, brlcil, _.r Pipao, win- Foil
28, 11193, At I P.M. AI
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
doWI, llnloio, otc. Claude Win- Auguot
Breed• Fetdar C.lv• Aecep.
Complete horne fumiahlnga. tera, Rio Granda, OH Clll 614- ted.
C.ttlo Accoptld Sll~lna AI
Houroo IIOO.Sot, 9-S. 114-441- 245 · ~2•
4 P.M. On Friday. AU Con0322, 3 mlloo oul Bulavlill Ad.
~· '
tlgnmente Wlk:ome, 114-582·
Froo Dollvary.
56 Pets for Sale
2322, Or 81WIII-3531.
Mollah•n C.rpate, Rl. 7 N. 6,...
Hauling:
Anyllma,
446-7444, txl2 C.rpot 160, Vinyl Groom and Supply Shoj)oPot Cottle
SUi Yd.
Grooming. Ali brlldo, ot~ios. An,whorw. PLA Rlllaboro Ohio,
Evary !!onday. Chuck Wllilomo,
Julia Wotib. Coil 114-441-0231.
Triplo Crook Trucking, 1\4-245Now Dok FumHuro: Toblao l
ChaiN, Curloo, Corved Gluo AKC llinioturo Plnochl,., twko 110118.
Chino Elc~ Rl- Volley Dok old, S171 11., 3 maloo. 304-516Fumh~n,

ACROU

cond., $1800. 304-875-1145 onor 1
Spm or Jeava m....ge.
lt85 Ford Bronco II, Excollonl
Cond~lon, Coli Aftor 4 P.!!. 1144464888.
.

1186 Carmero Z4:8, allta tran•,

Couple Satko Quiet Traillr
Space, Phono: 614-446-2306.

All real esuue aaveniSing In

Flrwt Holz.ar Aportmonto, 553
Second Avenue, Now Available

__ ........

:a':,'.".
"1$20~ -:::...111~
$5.00. 2 .._....... -ldo

lighted hutc~, llko now oond,
304-1175a80.
Dining Suhl Table, 4 Chlll"',
Hutch, S15~i 2 LR. ChaiN, UO
Each 514-2oe-131i.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1184 Bronco 2, 4WD, good :

514-388'8701.

Wented To Rant Or Buy: Audit

this newspaper Is subJect lo
the Federal falr Housing Act

utll~i .. paid. 3~·2588.

73

'

DP Chainnan exerciH machine
with inatruetlon booklet and
video tape, lxcellent c:onditlan,

Pool, 2 Ponds, $1 10"000: 4 Bod. $12,000. 614-441-11891.
room Home, 2 112 t:Jatht, Large

Pal1y Room, All On 4 Ac:rn MIL
$140,000; 110 Aer11 MJL Fann
Whh Barn • 30 Tillable. $110,000;
80 Acrn Mil $30,000; Ali Of Tho
Above With in 3 Millt Of Rio
Grande • PluM Call 8111 Con..
nail At Donna Summers Ae
For More Information. 614· 3

Baac:h St., Mlddlaport, 2br, fur·
nished
apartm•nt,
aleo
efflcllnq', deposit &amp; rar..,

'

814-44HIOD, Or Write 181: Holzer
Apettmenta,
553
S.C:ond

3bdrm. hOUII &amp; garage, Apple JuiSt Ustltd, 123 acres ott Sand
St ., s~racuH; alao 3bdrm. Hill Ad, mod1m 3 biKiroom
houae on LM StrHI, S~racuH ; home, Hveral bama &amp; one outcall Rac ine Home Nat I Bank, bu il ding, all mintral Included
(frM gas ). One of tha nicer
014-941-2210.
farma In t.taaon County, owner
3br houH
for
ale, lg nlldt a tmaller plac:a, call
batMaundry room, vinyl aid ing, Somerville Rulty, 304-675-3030
new wlndOWI, gaa furnace, or 675-343'1.
located at Ambrosia, WV,
$'15,000 090. 614--367-7607.
Mason County
50
act"lla,
:::~--:::-::---:--;::::--;~:I Heludld, excellent hunting,
539 Fourth Avenue, 5 Am., Naar 304:.&amp;9S.3413.
Schocll, Central Heating, Fancad Yard, Starter Home !Rental 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
614~46-

mavl•. Call 61.....eoo2568. EOH.

0

11001' TV, 614-1185-3693 ohor 4pm.

304-937·2435.

$35,500, 24 Hr. Notice, 514-445-

Ail Eloctricb AIC, No Poto,
$335/Mo. + .D. • 114-446-11157
Ahor5 P.!!.
BEAUTIFUL APAAT!!ENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jackoon Pike
from $201/mo. Walk to aflop l

*"''

cupency. For infonnation Or To

Tobac:c:o
Base,
Misc. Out Building $35,000, 6143 Bedroom•, 2 Bathe, 2 Car At- 256·1675.
tached G1rage, Outbuilding,
Bldw111 Porter -school A,.., 614- 96 acre farm out Manila Aldge,

367-7504.

Available S.ptemblr 1M: Claan

2 Bedrooma, Fuml•hld Khc:hen,

c

· Boildlng ~Twin Mitt Sot $811, FuU
$119 S.'J.... Ol;'•n
Sot: 4
Dnlwor ...,.. $44.111; Car lid'o,
Bunk Bed'o, Poolw · Full
Lino 01 Southwlolom v-

33 Farms for Sale

Mercer~lle,

614-388-9608.

are avaltable on an equal
opportunity basis.

614-1192·5333.
1 &amp; 2 Bedrooms Fumlehld
Apartment•
In
Pomeroy,
Aalwanca &amp; O.poatt, No Pete,

,·

Sentlnei-Page-11

The

!UnO good, - 2·3afl2.
I
1811 GIIC Pick-Up Good Cond~ :
lion, No Rual, 114·25f.lotll.
,
I
1881 Ford Ranger XLT, v.a, air, 1
auto, PS, PB, cruiH, long bed, •
ore. cond_,_ ~~000 mileS, '
$HOG. 304-n&gt;.a....
'

Only. FINI Holttr Apartmentt

2007.
3 Bedrooma FR, Anachld
41.71 Acrn 2· Story Farm
Garage, 2 AC • Bu lldl ng Sil1 • Houu,
Lp,. Bam, 2 Milel From
Garden Route 160 ArN, $62,500,

61~6-4365 ,

12) 2bdrm. apartment• In
POmeroy, $225- 1250j trailer lql
lor rent, c:loH to town, $75Jmo.;

ALLEYOOP

Ohio

1913 0111011 wflopper, 1450. :

Mill Road .

24 acre farm In RUI:Iand- gas
well, larga bam, fruH trees,
31 Homes for Sale
Nmodalad living quanara, man
2 bedroom houu, full ba• building loti, prlced on inspecmenl. 304-615·1486.
lion, no land contracts, 614·742·

1478,

Apanment
for Rent

ssoao

Ac:c~o~l'llte

Typllt With Medical
Terminol~y Needed For Full..
Tlma
Position.
WP
5.1
Know1adge Helpful. Exctllent
Working Conditions And Liberal
Frlng1 Bentflts. Salary Com ..
mansur~~te With Ability. Send
Rnum• To: Holur Clinic
Human Ralatlona Deptrtmen~ 1
90 Jac kson Pika, Galllpolla, Ott

Ranch style home, 3 bedrooma,
1 bath, anachld garage, New
Anderson wlndowt, central air,
Folttr St, Maaon. 30~773-5150.

pinning, 614-245-9188.

eonal, P.O. Box 454, Gllllpolle,

No Experience Nacnllry. Alao,

35i4.

- Good Condition ....
121:65 Coachman, 2 Bedrooma,
Central Air BuiH In Dining
Room Hutch, Curtalna, Under·

Financial

Transponatlon. Reply To: Par-

Ohio 45631.
LADIES (Or !!on. Hooded For
Vary Good Paying Temporary,
Light OHict Work. (OVor $5 Hr)

banmtnt, a1arage tlulldrng, 5bay pole bam, At 2, ripley Rd,
4ml from Pt. Pleaunt. 3Q4.67S-

Will Bobyolt In llyHomo, C._ 32 Mobile Homes
To HIIC 814 446 6838,
for Sale
Will babYoit In my homo, ciON '74 Schultz, 12x65 3 badroom
ta .choola, hl'll ref.,.I1CII.
control air, rolri'garator ond
304-1176-2784.
stove, washer, dryer, underpin·
Will Haul Smllll.oldt Or 10 Ton ning, good condilion, 614·1149-

Filing

Report I, Sehedullng, AniWtrlng
Phones And Supervising EvenIng Statt. NHd Dependable, Mature Person Wllh Rtlilblt

nt.ranc. rwqulrad, will con•kllr
construction workera for ,.,..

$49,1100. 114-445-1479, 614-44636.,_7957 Alor 4p.m.
0365, 614-446-8590.
a...,..l llolnlonance, Polnt!ng1
Yard Work Wlndaw~ Waanea Like
New
2
Bedroom
Guttoro Cllantd Light Houilng, Homo!Baoomont.
$36,500.
Cammorlcai, R11ldential, Stovo: S4,000,DP. $380.26 Monthly
614-448-1658.
Pa~mema, 614-44S..1157, 8-5, Or
114-894-4501 AHor 7 P.M.
~ PCII!abto Sawmill, don't
haul your fOal to the mill Ju.r LOOK only $53,500. Country
home on one level acre. 3 or 4
call304-e71-lll7.
bedrooma, full balement, home
Homa care tor your loved one In buyara warranty. C.lf Jim SyJ..
111mlly caN 11o1ne In !!lddllporl, VHter, Century 21 Action RNhy,
814-lm-8042.
800-444-8!21.
Mitl Paula'l O.V Care Center 1 Ranch ~WI• brick, 13 acrea,
Block Wool 01 HMC On Jockaon largellvin'groom &amp; ldtc:hen, 3br.
Pike 11-F 6 A.M. -5:30 P.ll. H 1 1T2 batht, attached garage, ful 1

P.O. Box 729•, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Muat have car with valid WV

Pomeroy ar11, total altctrlc,

814-182·2312.

gorago, niC. neighborhood on '7.:~':':':~::-:-::;;:--;::=:-:::::;
nlc.1 Jewel toe. For appl. 114-441- Nice Claan mobile home, .,......
•~

Avenue, 3 Bldroan1a1 • VInyl,
Near School, Central ttullna,
Garage
WHh
Apartmenl,

VI'RA FURNITURE
114-446-31111 Or 814-44tl-44a
'tO DAY SAME AS CASH
OR REHT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSil)

·r:..

27 ·1 993

Truck• for Sale

miiN, beefy rouah, rww good, '
4opcl. 3~1f8 .... tlpill.
!

Good•

FURNISHINGSo
Wro&lt;~lht Iron Tabto W/4 Cholftl;
Fon acll Rocking Chair SN:
Oordon Arch Way'o $121.00

Mobile Homes
for Rent

August 27, 1993

lUI Dodge Rom 60, 119,-

OUTSIDE

compllte Mliup, akirtl~, ttapa,
I yMr warranty and 6 months
lol rant, 1.aoo-837.-25.

AVON! All lrNI. Need txtrl
money or want 1 c1rwer, either

ot

unfumllhad

$160.47 por month, now 14' wlda
mobile hDIM, lncludn delivery,

Employment Services
11 .

bedroom

h-• in !!l~dlaport , $250/mo.,
S150/dop., utllltl• not Included,
no pat:a, n..,.,cn requlrwd,
1Mola·3457 aftar 3pm.

72

Household

8!62.

192-7553.

paid,

Merchandise

Houses for Rent

Anillbto aoon, ,_ 3br. homo,
,.,, a dopooll, no po4a. :IOW75o 5t'

Junk C.rs And Truelul, AuMing
Or Not, l\4-25f.1051.
· Junk c•ro. any condMion, 6\4prices

Friday

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

I I•
.

•

15
.

~

. ~

r--::-=-:-:-:::-:--:--1

The boy wrote his folks a letter from camp . It read : ''The
first day I had no friends . The
second day I had a few friends .
The third day I had friends and

r__,.N,_E'Ir;-~-Erl_ETIL--,1:;-7-11 0--~:mpiele

lhe chuckle quolod

.
.
•
.
_
_
•
bv fdl.ng m the miss1ng words
..__,_ _.__...__._ _.___, you develop from step No 3 bii!!IOW

•

PRINT NUMBERED lfTTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

6

UNSCRAAIBlf LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWER)
Hunter • Rover - Flyer · Gyrate • EVERY TOY
Late one rainy afternoon my sister·in-law called and
lamented "I know what a mothers miserable day is.
It's a rainy day at home with three kids and the batteries
rlP.Rd in EVERY TOY!"

AUGUST27I

�'

'
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt,
Ohio

PIQI 12-.The Dally Sentinel

Friday Augusl27, 1993

Sunda~

$1.011

\

THE BIGGEST 4 DAY SALE IN ATHENS HISTORY/

DON
WOOD'S

Recalling the

Major League baseball roundup- C-1

world war of
50 years ago
in Gallia

James Sands notes the creation of a
Gallipolis •suburb'.in the '20s- B-6

.

'

'

-B-1
'

Vol. 28, No. 28

.

Inside
· Aloaatbe river """"""'''Bl-8
Buslaas/Farm"-""'"".D 1·8
Classifted ....- .........- .... Dl-7

'Needful Things' loses some of.the
King touch, Kevin Pinson says - B-8

..

Entertaiameat .....-" .......B-8
Deaths ....... _ .....- ...........A-6
Editorai ................,............A-4
Sports.............................Cl-6
Weather...........................A-2

Program
targets
welfare
frauds

·Voinovich defends his record·
on environ·ment in mine visit

S750Q

Off
1993 LINCjJLJIIS

From

$13,994 28 *
(24

,.

month lease)

OUR EXCITING
NEW FACIL.ITYI

Drive A New
Lincoln Every
2 Years

.

MA PICKUP
soH O

. S9999
.

~&amp;. a~r

20

ondltlonlnQ.
g
~uel tan~. loaded

GMC SAFARI
~~~VERSION VAN

POMEROY - A forfeiture
hear'ing in the m81ter of Robert D.
Fife, 67, of Middleport, was con tin·
ued to Oct. IS at 10 a.m . in the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas.
ln addition, Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill ordered petitioners office
to publish notice of the forfeiture
proceeding once each week for two
weeks and to give notice of the
proceedings to any person known
to have or claiming to have an
ownersltip or security interest ·in
the property.
Present were Assistant Prosecu- ·
tor Charles H. Knight, attorney
Linda R. Warner, representing the
village of Middleport, ~ttor'!ey
James Wallace, represenbng F1fe,

4X2
TOYOTA PICKUP

S16,995

saggg

a\\00

..• ,

VEHICLES UNIJER
VEHICLES UNDER

1&amp;86 PL r,o .
VOYAfiEII UTH
1986
4x4 PICKup
1985 CHEVY . . . . .

Ssooo

$3
roroiA ···· 999
$2999
11f1N
$2999
1CIT~
987 FO,,; · · .. •·
F·250 PICKUP
$4999
1990 GEO
.. . '
•Tito .. ....... $4999
•• · Prlcll Include all nwnufacturer's rebatu "\d lncentl¥1!11. Unlt1
subject to plior aale . 5.5'/e available with approved credit, up to 60
monthS.

.,
I

0

GO TO DON WOOD
AND GET A GREAT

\

• *$500 commercial lnoantl~o~e available to ~ualllled business owneJS. Young buyers program
· ayallable 10 enyone under the age of 30 wtlft approved Ct"edlt.

I

I

i

Court to continue
forfeiture ·hearing
...
in Robert Fife case

• 2• month t..... monthly payment $581 ,22x 24'• S13,9SM.26. Option to purchase $18,143.78.
Ad-vanced payment progmn raqulree full payment at te•e Inception. Baaed on MSRP plus
talC, tit._, licente and luxury tu:.,

1993 GMC

By JIM FREEMAN
An estimated l billion gallons of
Tlmes-Seatinel Staff
water flooded the mine on July ll
ALBANY :.._ Gov. George V, putting about 300 miners out of
Voinovich ripped those criticizing work.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s pumping
Voinovich said the area could
of the flooded Meigs 31 mine 81 a ·not afford to lose the 815 coal-minpress conference at the company's ing jobs which are at stake.
offices in Meigs County Friday.
"Th.e loss of 800 jobs here
· Some people say it is a matter of would be .like !~in&amp; 8,1XJ9 jobs in
jobs versus the environment, another commumty, he sa11f.
Voinovich said. ''That's B.S."
Voinovich said he planned on
I
,
"I've done more for the environ- calling West Virginia Gov. Gaston
left, Dave Lawsoa, vice presideat of UMW A
~Al._K_ING
,
TO
MINERS-'"
Gov.
George
"\1,
1
ment than
other governor in the Caperton concerning complaints by
Local l886, and Geae Oiler, presideat of
Volaovlcb
a few mlautes before Friday's
state of Oh1o," Voinovich said, the West Virginia Environmental
UMWA Local 1886, speak with Volnovich. (T -S
press coarereace·at Soutbera Ohio CoaJ Co.
lashing out at critics.
.
Protection Agency about the pumppboto by Jbn Freemaa)
offices Friday to meet unloa ollicials. Here, fro!"
"I won't tip my hat to anyone as ing.
.
far the environment is concerned."
It is not hurting the river. Maybe
'
the order.
. Voinovich said the companr. is they think it . will increase the
''The feds ought 10 back off and ues."
Although most aquatic life in
TompJQn·
said
it
will
take
at
doing everything they can poss1bly demand for West Virginia coal if let u.s get the Wl!'Ct oitl," he said:
Leading
Creek has been killed, the
do to lessen the environmental theminesareclosed,hesaid.
J1m Tompkms, SOCCO VICe- least a week determine the status
impact
on
Raccoon Creek has been
r it is re-entered.
impact of the pumpin$ including
Voinovich and Ohio House .president, said ~pecially-uained of the mine
minimal,
company
offrcials said.
A federal judge issued an
the creation of arttfic1at "beaver Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Ir. sent a · mine exploration teams may reA
biologists
said
some iron
dams" to help uap iron flock in the letter to President Clinton asking enter drained po~ons of t!Je mine injunction preventing federal a$encies from st~pping the pumpmg, flock has been observed in the
water.
the president to stop the federal as early as~·
.
· Approxima~ly 600 million gal- agencies-from intervening.
"It's a slow PJ!OUSS," Tompkins .. however, the1U.S. Environmental Ohio River, but added that it settles
Ions. of water has been pumped out
, .VoinoYil:h ~~.~~ bas received explained. "Other miners will be PrOtection Agency and the Office quickly and is having no impact Oil
of the flooded mine since July 30, no~~llje_JCtler. .
Pl!llsed in as, e~plor!I~SD ~ontin- of Surface ~ning are chs~.!ll)ging the river.

anr

DEVILLES • ELDORADOS
AND SEVILLES

.,

"Where Better Realbi Matters"

·•
• Buick, Olds, P~tlac, Cadillac, GMC Truck
• Ford, lincoln, MerciJ'}'

..~.

• Toyota

~ 593'~6641
East Stat~ Stmt
Athens

Easl State Street

••

and Fife.
Fife, who last month entered
guilty pleas to two counts of
receiving stolen property and a
third count of trafficking in food
stamps last month, was sentenced
to 18 month prison terms conseculively on each of the three charges,
with the sentences being suspend·
ed, and was "placed on probation for
five years. He was also ordered 10
pay the maximum fine on eacb
charge, $2,500, for a total of
$7,500, the $1,200 cost ofprosecution plus court costs, and to appear
at all forfeiture hearings.
.The viUage of Middleport joins
the Meigs County prosecutor"s
offJC:C and sheriff's office as a party
in the pctition·for forfeiture after it
intervened on Aug. 20.

~~~m'P

tions ·10 be met before the u.S:
Army combat unit, known as the
Quick Reaction Force. would
leave: establishing "reasonable
security" in Mogadishu, the capital; malting progress toward deny·
ing heavy weapons to Somali warlords, and setting up credible
Somali police forces.
The third condition. establishing
police conuol, seemed 10 imply the .
rebuildin~ ofa jlolitical authority in
Somalia 10 order to make the police
credible. '
..
"When these three condlllons

$18~00.

GEARING UP FOR COMPETITION Bikers Ia the ~eo's Opea Dlvlslol! of Saturday's
Gallla County ,Ralls to Trails Criterium tighten
their bebnet straps aad take a few deep breaths
before liniag np to await the starter's whistle.
The day lacluded eight separate races arouad
the GaDipollt City Park for a aumber of laps.

are met:'" then ~?Cheve that the
U.S. Qu1c~,Rea~uon. Forces can
come back. Aspin said. He spoke
to an ~udience at th~ Center ~or
Strate81~ and Intemau~ Studies,
a W~ing.ton-based tbinlt I8J!k- .
W1t~ 1mpr&lt;?v~~ securlly 10
Mogaduhu, C1v1hans could be
hired 10 pcrfonn iSUPJ?OI:I work ~d
most of the U.S.',IOglSUCs special·
ists there could lie brought home,
Aspin said.
'
..
The defense secretary. made 11
clear that the U.S. commllr!l~nt to
Somalia went beyond m1htary

COMMAND UNITY - Gel'IIIID MaJ. Gea. .
Berabardt,
left, Ualted Natloas ron:es LL Commaader Cevlk Bir, ceater, and
U.S. Army Gea. John Moatpmery, right, pve a three-way baud·
sblke Ill Mopdbbu, Somalia, earlier tbls year wbeli the ftnt post·
World War D deploymeat of Germaa soldiers arrived In Somalia.
u S Defease Secretary Le1 Alpin said Frid·ay Amerlcaa troops
w~~kl come home wbea their mlaslon there Is compl~te. (AP)
I
•
').

&gt; '

By JAMES LONG
Times-Seatinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Double-dippers beware: a local investigator is
cracking down on welfare fraud in
GaUia County.
Ernie Meadows, special investigator with· the Human Services
Overpayment Unit, bel!an in May
10 ferret-out welfare rec1pients who
get more m011ey than they are entitled to.
.
His operation is part of a
statewide effort to recover miUi011s
of dollars lost to those who, for
instance, lie about their assets or
falsely report that a bread-Winning
spouse has moved out of the house.
According to the investigator,
half the welfare cases in Gallia
County involve fraud. Multiply that
by the 87 other counties in Ohio, he
said, and the state has a sigaif1C8111
problem.
.
"Fraud's a big business," be
said. "We will soon see a multimillion doUar savings in the state."
uman Services caseworkers
a outside. informants, such as
n bprs, alert Meadows 10 possible. tases of overpayment. Not all
of the suspects commit fraud deliberately.
"These people either forgot to
tell us something or they didn't
know they were supposed 10 report
something," he explained.
If the error was not intentional,
the recipient is asked to pay the ·
extra money back to Human Services.
However, if they will not surrender the money or agree to pay it
back over time, Human Services
can regain the overpayment .
through Gallipolis Municipal ·
Colilt. Meadows has 41 such cases ·
pending in September for a total of

I

The criterium is spoilsored by Holzer Clinic a·ad
is part or the Second Aaaual Unity Saviags
Bank Tour of Southeastern Obio. the race wiD
also beaent a hike aad b_ike trail Ia GaUia Cou~ty. Complete results will appear Ia Moaday s
Gallipolis Daily Tribune. (T -S p, Olo by James
Long).
.~,

, Aspin sees no long_-term c~mm~tment
to.
Somalia
·
I
By ROBERT BURNS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON _U.S. support' forces will remain in Somalia
until it begins to rebuild, but the
roughly 1,400 American combat
troops there could go home once
their main security aims are met,
Defense Secretary Les Aspin said
Frida .
1/ 8 speech describing the Clinton administration's $OBis for
Somalia, Aspin menuoned no
timetable for withdrawing U.S.
forces. But his remarks seemed
designed.to reassure the public that
the military commitment was not
open-ended.
President Ointon 's decision last
weekend to send a 400-man Anny
Ranger saike force to Somalia has
raised fears among many in
Congress and others that the United
States is expanding its involvement
there with no clear plan for getting
out.
The United States has about
3,100 support troops in Somalia
plus about 1,400 Army combat
troops , not counting the 400
· Rangers who are :::nning to
arrive there. At the
early this
year there were 26,000 U.S. !lOOPS
there; in May the United Nations
took command of the opcratioo and
·the U.S. presence shrank.
Last December, when the frrst
u.s. troops arrived in Somalia it
was c,.;pected that within several ·
weeks or a few months the forces
would return home.
Aspln spelled out three condi-

13 Sec:UDn 148 P•ae•
AMuiUmld.. Inc. nM•paper

.

'

Gover-n or tells
feds: 'back off'

~~

Par11J •••r, Hllh •ear tO.

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpoii&amp;-Polnl Pleasant, August 29, 1993

"Copyrighted 1M3

1993 CADILLACS

.

m:vo!vement, but that the m1htary
m~1on was not yet completed.
The. danger no~ IS that unless
we re.turn s~~urtty to ~outh
Mogadishu, poli~cal chaos .~111 follo~ any UN. Withdrawal, . Aspm
sru~
,
.
.
'file danger ~ere dealmg w1th
here IS that. the snuaoon will re~urn
to what e,.;1st~ ~fore the !{mted
Stales sent m .us troops last
Decem~r. h~ said.
. .
Aspm srud the top pnomy for

!he Umted Nations should be to
10~ ~e s1ze of the .multtnauo~a! m.1htary ~onungent m
Mogadishu. He sru~ the UN. force
of 23,000 troops 1s about 5,000
short of what the U.N. 1tself had
plll!l."ed.
. We fully expect others to do
theu. share, , as .. they have
pro~1~" As!&gt;m SBid m a ~ark
that 1mp!1ed CliniOn d1d not mtend
to contnbute any more Amencan
troops.

Cablevision plans adjustments
in its pricing policy procedures
POINT PLEASANT - In rate. The result is a regressive {Xicresponse to enactment of the 1992 ing structure. giving the greatest
Cable Act, Cablevision, serving savings to those cus10mers who
GaUia, Meigs and ~n cou~ties, have purchased the most additional
is announcing sigmf1cant adjuSt· outlest and other optional equip·
menta in its pricing policies. These menL Regrettably, this "unbundling" also compels Cabtevision 10
changes are effective SepL I.
Cablevislon has long prided it- begin charging fa' aU converters,
self in providing its cus10mers leading to increased prices for
,
quality service and programmins 81 some subscribers. '
The
effect
of
these
changes
on
fair and reasonabfe iares.' These
cus10mer
bills
will
vary
according
rates have been adjusted, howevez,
· to comply fully with the Federal to the actual level of service and
Commumcations
Commission"s ·equipment taken by a subscriber.
(R:C) benchmark calculations. The Most will see their rates go down.
next effect of the changes on Otlier may notice little difference or
Cablevision will be significant even see a sligltt increase in their
monthly bill.
revenue reduction.
Cablevision will continue 10
As required by the new federal
keep
its subscribers informed as the
rules, c~~arJes for basic serv~ce, tier
effects
of changes in the law warprogrammmg and each p1ece of
rant.
customer equipment will be se!J8·

'l'he investig81or's other option
is tQ l:onclude that reciJ?ients cheat·
ed On their appliC!l!IOnS tO gel
unwarranted benefits.
Those he believes have lied are :
charged with theft by deception.
lalllpering with records or falsification- all felonies that cany possible jail terms.
But Meadows said the opera- ·
tion"s objective is to recover
money, not send people to jail.
"We loolc for probation, community service or whatever we can
get," he said. "We want them
empJpyed so we can get the money
bac'E:for the state."
Human Services is also trying to
stop overpayments before they
occur.
Meadows said the state's new
Early Detection Prevention program gives caseworkers more
power to deny suspicious applications in the early stages.
If they determine, for example,
that an applicant who claims not to
be working has l)lany assets, Meadows will investigate the case to see
if the person is actually employed
before any money is allocated.
Case w®cers can also refuse 10
fund applicants who have moved
more than three times in the last
three months. Meadows said it is
common for people to try getting
money in more than one state,
which is possible since each slate
keeps separate records. ·
Southern Ohio is a popular
place for interstate tncksters
because it is close to West Virginia
and Kentucky.
"Gallia County in the past has
been viewed as an eii$Y county (in
which to receive overpayments),"
headded.
·
. He said it will take a county·
wide effort to reverse the trend
completely , and he enc"ourages
anyone with suspicions about wei.fare recipients to phone them in 10
the front desk at the Human Ser(Continued on A·l)

.

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