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                  <text>Ohio University .
College of Osteopathic Medicine

we GlatJI'I
A~tYour

Hubbard
tournament
results

FetJerai ·FocHJ
Stamps

FamilY.

Medicine
'

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

'

..

:

lctl

11,tii!;IN l'a.IIDY

WE RESEIM THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
OUANTIT1ES. NONE SOLD TO I;IEALERS.

hwt . . . . . . . . I

I

Super Lollo:

9-12-14-15-27-44
Kicker:

5-2-4·7-9-5
Pick 3:
9-6-8

PageS

•

:

Pick 4:
6-1-7-6

3ildtwl- ~ ...

-

. . lot

""""

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por iloln- :
•

Vol. 43, No. 48
Copyrlghlld 1992
:

Paving project
bids accepted by
Meigs commission

GRADE A

Perdue
Pick of the Chicken
P-.1

'
Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

one

COMING DOWN - The old Betsy Ross building on Fifth
Aveaut in Middleport is coming down. Pullins F.xcavating began
tearlll1 down the building last week and the lot is expected to be

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Past Councilor's Cub of Chester Council No.
323, D d. A. will hold iiS annual
DiCIIIc and meeting at Forl&lt;ed Run
!hate Park in Reedsville on
Wednedni11111dlaay at6 p.m. Officers will
be nominlled and installed. Guests
wclc0111e. Bring gifts for the

..-.

SYRACUSE · London Pool in
S)'IICUIC will hold a night swim
6olll7 10 9 p.m. on Wednesday. It
was abo •nounced that the baby
pool is now open, and dates are
Millllle for pool parties. fnfortna'
doe is available by calling Pool
Manaaer Shannon Slavin at 992-

Stew~ new director, will be p.esenL All students and parents are
urged to attend.

lliCDCL

tor.

POMEROY · A children's protee shins will be
preaented at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy on
Wettstlay at2 p.m. There is a $5
and all children are invited to

HARRISONVILLE • Harrisonville Masonic Lodge wiD hold
its regular meeting on Saturday.
Work in E.A. degree.

pam on tie-dyed

Dole
Bananas

.

'

~·

I'EPPERONI OR

I

Wilh , _ u., Tilll• • . Why Shop ...... - . &amp;ei

2 $3 White
Hair

Mama Rosa
Deklxe Pizzas.. :t::

Rain

Spray........ 7-oz.

I

79 C

POMEROY • Senior Citizens
Dance Club will hold a dance on
Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. Mosie by
Smokey Mountain Grifters. Bring
snacks for the snack Jable.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Men:lwlts Association will meet
W~y at8:30 a.m. at the conference room of Bank One in
Pollleroy. All members urged to

9909.

GOLDEN RIPE

FRIDAY
POMEROY • Meigs County
Bikers wiD have a meeting .egsrding its hog roast fund raiser for the
County Home and senior citizens
center on Friday at 6 p.m. at
Hawgholler on Slate Route 681.

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Children's
craft classes, for ages 3-9, will
begin on Saturday, and will continue July 18 and July 25 from 10 to
II : 30 a.m. at Middleport Arts
Council. Each class will cost $4.
Shirin Nuggud wiD be the inslruc-

R...,.In S.... &amp;.25-oz
lft..l"

I

l28HEETSP£RROU2PLY

79 C

BOIIIty
s
Paper Towels ~
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
DIET COKE.

21DSHEETSPERROLL1PLY

Charmin

Bath TISSUe .. 4-Roll

9
8

r-

Racine residents will vote on a
1.4 mill renewal levy for current
expenses in lhc November General
Election:
.
.
Mcctmg at Star Mtll Park thos
week, Racine Village Council
approved a resolution to put the
renewal levy on lhc hallol
A hearing was held on the proposed 1993 village budget which is
now available for public v~wing 9
a.m. 10 l p.m. at the mayors office
through July 17. A special meeting
was set for 10 a.m. Monday._ July
20 for the purpose of adopung a
budgel for 1993.
.
Council acccp!Cd lhc S3.155 bod
from John Fisher, Pomeroy, for the
1978 Ford Olassis. It was the only
bid submitted and was above lhc

minimum bid of $3,000.
Approval was given by Council
to transfer money from lhc general
fund to.cover repairs on the police
crutscr. Thanks were extended to
Sheriff James Soulsby for the usc
of a cruiser while the village cruiser was in the repair shop.
Clerk Carolyn Cleland and
Councilman Henry Bentz were
authorizcd. lo attend a workman 's
compensatiOn hearing at Logan on
July 22. The clerk reported that she
had received word that the $1,000
check from the Dcpanmcnt of Nat·
ural Resources for the fire equipment grant with which to purchase
·1umoutgcar will be received SOOn.
A complaint from Tom Wolfe
regarding a drainage problem on
John's 1toad was discussed. Coun-

_,.,.
\
. .
cil authorized the pun:hakc of lraf·
fie paint for the school signs and
markings, a ~as water heater for the
annex buildmg, and the hiring of
Craton Wolfe to work whtle Glenn
Rizer is on vacation.
Sidewalk repair projects were
discussed and it was noted that the
ordinance requires propcny owners
to share in the eosl of the repair.
One project was discussed and if
the ~ropcrty owner agrees woth
sharong the cost, the mayor was
authorized to proceed.
Attending were Mayor Cleland,
Clerk Powell , Council members,
Robert Beegle, Henry Benu, Ron
Clark, and Scott Hill, Marshal Don
Dye, Fire Chief John Holman, and
firemen, David Neiglcr and Craton
Wolfe.

I

Coca Cola Classic
or Sprite

. By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StafF

6-Pak 20-oL Btls..

71·
LIGHT ICE MII.K OR

Brayers

Ice Cream......

{

C
:&gt;

ATHENS (AP) - Cornmunily
leaders and officials from five
southeast Ohio counties llll!cd resi·
dents and supporters to attend the
last public hearing on whether
scrubbers should be used at Ohio
Power Co.'s Gavin PlanL
Paula Thacker, a spokeswoman
for the coalition of Athens. Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties, said the group was trying 10
brmg as many people as possible 10
the hearing todsy_in Canton.
.
More than 100 coal miners and
supporters planned to travel to
Canton, said Gene Oiler, president
of Uniu:d Mine Worl&lt;CIS 1886.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio is conducting the

hearing on American Electric
Power Co.'s clean air compliance
plan. The plan includes installing
scrubbers to clean the emissions of
high sulfur coal burned by its Ohio
Power subsidiary at the Galli a
County plant
The federal Clean Air Act
requires electric utilities to cut sul fur dioxide emissions by 40 percent
to SO percent on average over the
next 10 years to reduce environmental damage from acid rain.
If AEP's compliance plan isn't
approved by lhc PUCO, the company could switch to lower sulfur,
out-of-state coal, which could lead
to the loss of more than 1,000 coal
mining jobs in Meigs County.
Athens Mayor Sara Hendrickcr

said she would attend the hearing
because she cannot ignore the economic impact lhat could result if
scrubbers arc not installed at the
Gavin plant.
Previous hearings were held in. Athens and Columbus.
The Industrial Energy Con sumers. a group representing busine sses such as BP Oil and
Anheuser-Busch Inc., arc opposed
to the $800 million cost of the
scrubbers. They believe the cost
will be passed on through electric
rate increases.
Samuel Randazzo. IEC's attorney, said the group would present
us testimony at the Canton hearing.
The hearing was scheduled in
two sessions, at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m.

Merchants discuss summer.activities;
car show and sidewalk sales on tap

i
1

SALEM CENTER · Star
THURSDAY
1t778 and Star Junior
Grange
POMEROY· There will be an
oven bated chicken dinner at the G111np: 11878 will meet on Satunlay
senior citizens center in Pomeroy at 8JJ.m. at the G11Dge Hall located
C!n Thurlday from S-6:30 p.m. COst on County Road I near Salem Cen·
&amp; $3 per person. Entertainments ll&gt;'' ter.Judaina rJ the Art IIICH'holllg·
the Clusica will follow dinner. raphy contest will be held. Junior
craft judgina. Potluck supper folJlree will o«eriftg. !'llblic invited.
lowing the 'meeting.
POMEROY - Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - Holzer Clinic
Solpbox Derby meeting at Pleas·
of
Meigs County, at ISO Mill
er'1, 7 p.m. on tb.y. Plans' will
S~
Will do sports physicals OD
llesin for next year's derby, and
1111yone interested in "saving" the Sat.urday for area schools. AI!
!ltrbY for Meigs County is urged 10 Me1gs l..ocal students should mive
at 7 a.m. and all Easran Local stuUlld lhe meeting.
dents at 9 a.m. Students should
RACINE • There will be an bring' signed sporlS physical cards.
~"'ioNI meeting for South· · Holzer Clinic phyaicians have
1111 HiP School B.-I OD tbunday donlted their time for this service.
il I P-11· illhe bind room. ~ilsa 992-2188 for information.

Township projects were approved
. by the board last fall when CDBG
projects were selected for 1992.
The Rutland project, on the other
hand , was chosen as a substitute
proJ.ect after the state rejected a
proJeCt submllted by Tuppers
Plaons-Chestcr Water district for a
water lone ex ten soon.
Metgs County Engineer Philip
M: Roberts announced that townshops and other political s.ubdivis•ons should begon consodcrong proJCCts and JOb estimates for Round
Stx of the Issue II program (1993). ·.
According lo Robens, a new
"pr~-application" form is being
revtsed and approved for submis-.
soon by thos~ boards, The new
form , accordong to Roberts, wil(
eliminate the risk of filing volumic
nous paperwork before a project is··
approved for Issue II funding.
:
The application procedure iS:
expected to get underway for nextyear 's proJects before the end oC
July.
The board alsoapprovcd thC:
(Continued on Page 3)

Southeast Ohioans go to Canton
for last Gavin Plant hearing

rec
....,_

RACINE • Charles and Fannie
Wolfe Beaver family reunion on
Saturday at Star Mill Park in
RACINE · Southern Athletic Racine. Meal at ooon. All ~elatives
Boa 1 s wiD meet Wednesday at 7 and friends m invited, and should
p.m. It lbe high school 10 discuss bring a covered dish and tible serihe Meiss County Fair and other vice.
rand rai!lm. Everyone welcome.
LONG BOTIOM • Old FashMIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy ioned tee Cream Social, be&amp;imina
IAdae 164 F&amp;AM will hold a spe· at 4 p.m., Long Bottom Communi~ill meeting on Wednesday at 7 ty BuildinJ. Several flavor• of
JIJil. in the MM degree a1 the Mid· homemade tee cream, sandwicbes,
desseRS, drinks, music, etc.
illepM Lodge Hall.

deared in another week. Eight houses for low incom~ families will
be constructed on the lot once streets and utilities are in place.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New Staff
The Meigs County Commis sioncrs accepted bids for three road
paving projects, to be funded with
1992 Community Development
Block Grant funds at their regular
meeting on Wednesday.
Shelly Company of Thornville
was the sole bidder on the three
CDBG projects, and submitted bids
as follows: Middleport, widening
and pavong of a portion of First
Avenue, $22,932; Salisbury Township, paving of a portion of Naylor's Run Road , $30.039.90· and
Ru~and Village, paviog on Depot
Street, S8,466.
The bid was accepted by the
board, but no contract was awarded
pending completion of paperWork
from the state.
Little or no loeal matches will
be required for the projects, since
the CDBG grant amount and project estimateS met or cxcccdcd the
bids submitted from Shelly Campany .
The Mid~lcport and Salisbury

Racine council approves resolution
to put 1.4 mill renewal levy on. ballot.
-.
~

Community calendar

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, July 9, 1992

.
U~S.

•·

VIlli"'....--

price ......

.

Tonight, mootly doudy with
:ilightchanu ofshowers . Low
around 70.

compttelllt
.
-• ·•
·rolocillna
tho - · IIVIr9
or.• .ro~n-:
c:hlcl&lt; wlilah ..
- -• ._....,., t :
thllctta'
,..,.

; Qol _lin: I'• _,. alleqic 10 ivy tends 10

turn up all over the
poi- ivy, but ay friend never body, even tllougb lbe plants gener. . il ~- . . . be grabs lbe ally only come in contact with
,._ illiis •
llllllls. Whal caus- exposed &amp;leiS d. the skin.
es me 10 breat out when he · Question: What can I do to prevent gelling poison ivy?
doesll'l.?
" A.uwer.l'llisoo ivy and its Jela.
AIIIWer: Avoiding the offendlives, poison oalt and poison ing plants is the only SIR way. If,
J111111C. have lbe polential to cause however, )'011 Suspect dlaf)'OU have
ia:lly bliJiers in lboul8S percent of been in contact with poison iY)' or
ll!ose who are exposecf it. Your its cousins, poison oak or poiJOn
friald is obYiolllly one oldie lucky sumac, lhe fiiSl dling 10 do u lhorIS pm:cnt wbo aren't affected by o~ghly wash the exposed areas
With soap snd Wiler. 1 f - than
IInt"~ mil is caused 20 minutes have lapsed since the
by a SIK:ky chemical, urushiol, that CXJM?S!Dl'• wubing may notl:eep
II f~ willlilldle plaM's leaves, the !mbal rash frOm developing,
- - _ _ _ Ill addjrioe 10 get- but 11 can prevent )'011 from splalddna uruslliol Cll die skin by direc:lly ing it further.
If your clothing has come in
IDucllillg 1be lllliSbiol can be
l1llried 011 die ' fur of pelS, garden contact with the ~ sap tontain·
IDOls, golf balls or u~ing ~lse ing the urushiol, tt sbould be
dill comes in \XMiaa With a broken washed promptly. Handle the
planL II is also ~elcased when lbe clothes caRfully, preferably with
plant is bum~ so the smote is as vinyl gloves, 10 prevent any DIOR
!llngerous as rubbing against the skin tootact with the sap.
.
QlltSIIoo: Wbal's the.bcstllellleaves.
: Once the chemical comes In ment for poison 'ivy? · .
ODIIIICI widllbe ~• .egardlcss of
Answer: Avoidlncel But once
the way it came in contact, it it is too laic fer avoiilance 10 work
lqias 10 peneua1e in a mauer of there 11e things that may sbCncli
m~ Bu~ it Illites 12 hours to
the coune of the rash and itclUng.
ievenl days for the allergic reae- Mil4 cases of poison ivy may
Jion, c:ommonly called poisoo ivy, reqwre no more than a wet com1P ...-. II devdopi wilh Rdncss press or soaking in cold water to
pd sweUing, followed by itchy relieve the itdling. Cilamjoe locion
blislm.
may be soothing, too, but avoid
Conlrary 10 myth, poison ivy other home remedies. They often
can't be !plead via die oozing liq- wonen the damage to die already '
uid in the blisten. This liquid is initalcd skin.
your body's own Duid, and 11 does . There ~ ~veral non-prescrip1101 contain III'U.!IIiol. IIISiead, it is uon medtcauons on the market,
Jill •· cd by the body as a reaction like calamine lotion, that Clll dry
ID wlllhiol. But as )'011 tnow, poi· ·UP blisiCrS. However, the
per• ivy Clll be spread, and bm's cat! hydroconisone creams m not
!low itlllllllly hQ ~Ill:
. stroll8 enough 10 be of any vllne.
· The ~ pu lii'IISIIiol on his
Your pharmacist Clll point you
or ~er haads, and by toucMng 10 the best products of this type.
Pliler~ of his or ber or another Severe cases of poison ivy - parperson s body the chemical is ticularly those involving tbe face,
hPrred 10 lhll area as well. The eyes, hancb, or geaitils ~ sbould
that has the ~- eXJlOSUIC be refcmd 10 a phYsician for Propto the urushiol will usually break er care.
out first.willla 18911 and blislers.
"Family Medicine" is a weeldy
Areas that have thick skin or column. To submit queslions, write
las uruslllDl on diem wiD become to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni~a day or two laler, giving versity College of Osteopathic
die ilnprcasion that die poison ivy Medicme, Grosvenor Hall; Athens
.
'
- lple.d rrom die first group of Ohio.~S701.
ijisterS. Tlw's die reasoo polson

•••a

111M Nl.icY..flcll
o1f'lldly
lei to be
Nllorllloln-'-15-.
IIICIIll • : r: •illlnollf In thlud. 11
wt do run out af 1ft llf;a I 1 f ltml, •
. . allor ""' cllolot of •

COPYRIGIIf 1112 . • T11E KROGiR CO.
mMS AND f'!IICES GOOD SUNDAY,
JULY 8, THROUOII SATURDAY, JULY

·Obio Lottery

2·
li-GII.

Activities for the remainder of
the summer were discussed at
Wednesday 's regular meeting of
lhe Pomeroy Merchants Association.
The Oldies But Goodies Car
Club will sponsor a car show July
18 on the parking lot in Pomeroy.
Jerry Tillis is organizing the event
which should provide something
for people of Ill ageS to enjoy.
Sidewalk sales on Aug. 1 were
pla,ncd ·and discussed. Susan
Clark, president of the group,
encourages all businesses to hang
balloons outside their stores to
enhance the shopping BlmOsphcro.
The possibili'ty of purchasing

flags for business storefronts to identify the village of Pomeroy to
create a more inviting environment passing river traffic. Installation of
and visual appcai_IO the shopping lhe sign should be completed by
district was discussed. No action Sternwheel Weekend, 1hc second
was lakcn on this matter but costs wcclcend of October.
Kenny Utt, reporting for the
and details will be investigated.
Lions
Club, slated the construction
The development of a logo for the
association was also discussed.
of a roof over the parking lot stage
Progress on the installation of is slowly .progressing. Plans for
the riverfront sign on the parking such a structure should be forth ·
lot wall was discussed and it was coming from a contractor which
stated the wood for the sign will was contacted to do this initial
soon be delivered. The initial work. Those plans will be shared
par.1.ory work will be done by with Pomeroy Village Council for
llanks, president of the Big approval after which work will
Stemwhcel Association. This begin.
project is an undertaking by the
Ut~ also reponing for the Meigs
merchants and the stcmwhccl asso- County Chamber of Commerce,
ciations. The mcn:hants association urged anyone whQ could 10 attend
is responsible for having the sign today's PUCO hearings in Canton
lettered. The sign will be hung to
(Cotltlautd on PaJif 3)

JUST GOINC': TO DINNER • Sen. Albert
Gore Jr., stops to talk with reporters outside his
home in Carthage, Tenn., as he drives his family
lo dinner Wednesday night. Gore repeatedly

said he has no commenl on the speculalion that
he might be the Democrals' vice presidential
candidate. Gore's wife, Tipper, is in the passenger seat, ten. (AP)

With Gore pick, Clinton forms an
all-Southern, baby-boomer ticket
'

By JOHN KING
AP Politlcal Writer
NEW YORK - Bill Clinton 's
choice of Tennessee Sen. Alben
Gore Jr. as his running mate shapes
an all -Southern, baby -boomer
Democratic ticket that Clinton
hopes will personify change and
break the Republican electoral lock
on the South.
Gore is a safe pick in many
ways. He's been through a presidential campaign and its accompanying scrutmy, has a picture-postcard family, and his dedication to
the cnvirQ)Iment and arms control
issues shlJrc up Clinton in those
areas.
But the pick is not without risk.
Gore, 44, is a year younger than
· Clinton, so voters worried that the
Arkansas governor is a bit young
for the presidency aren't likely to
be reassured by the Gore selection.
And in picking Gore, Clinton in
many ways chose a mirror image of
himself - a fellow small-state
Southerner, a moderate and 'a
politician known more for substance than style. That's a good
ma1ch for him but not necessarily a
selection that will excite the Democratic Party's liberal base.
"It is a fairly narrow ticket.''
said Jesse Jackson, who this spring

said his two previous presidential
bids made him a logical choice for
Clinton. "It takes two wings to ny.
and here you have two of the same
wing."
Jackson had assured Democratic
National Committee Chairman
Ronald H. .Brown that he would
endorse Clinton prior to nex t
week's convention, but he sounded
noncommittal during a morning

appearance on Fox Tclevi soon in
Washington.
" I must assess this ticket," he
said.
But in a race in whic h Ross
Perot 's Jok cly independent bid
throws conventional thinking awry,
other Dcm,ocrats - including
senior Clinton aides who were
Gore boosters throughout the sclcc(Continued on Puge 3)

r----Local briefs--..
Thefts under investigation

,

Several thefts of property are under investigation by the Meigs 1
County Shcrifrs Department
Carl Vanover, Minersville, ~eponcd that sometime between June
28 and July 3 a propeller was stolen from his boat.
Anhur Gibson, Albany, ~eported that a three-wheeler was stolen
from his fann on Haning Road, and John Marzocchi, Carpenter Hill
Road, reponed 10 the department that someone stole 200 fecr of
Romcx I0-2 copper wire from his garage.
.

Sports physicals 'July 25
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County will be doing sports physicals on ·
July 25 for 8le8 scbools.
All Meigs District students should plan 10 arrive at 7 a.m. All
Eastern District students at 9 a.m.
·
firing a signed spons physical card to the clinic located on lhc ·
(Continued on Page 3)

�.

Thureday, July 9, 1992.

DEVOTED TO TIIB IJII'I'BU8T8 or THE IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Plabllsher

het.

Wright's cartoon sums up a confoundin$ situation that defies
explanauon. It perfectly captures
my own feelings about the nowinfamous "gauntlet" treatment that
Navy women were subjected to by
some pilOIS at the 1991 convention
of the Tailhook Association, a

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION uo welcome. They should be less than 300
words . All letten ue subject to editin1 and must be signed with name
addrus and telepbonc numba-. No unlli~ !etten wiD be publisbcd. Lc~
sbould be in good taste, addnssing iuues, not personalities.

Today in history

'

By The Assoc:iated Press
Today is Thursday, July·9, 1he 19Jst day of 1992. There are 175 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July .9, !850,1he 12th president of !he United Stat£s, Zachary Taylor, died at the White House, having served only one year and four
months of his term. (TesiS pezformed on Taylor's exhumed remains last
year showed he had died of nawral causes - and not poison, as a writer
bad speculated.)
On this date:
In 1540, England's King Henry VITI had his six-month marriage to his
fourth wife, Anne of Cleves, annulled.
In 1755, British Gen. Edward Braddock was mortally wounded as his
troops suffered a massive defeat near present-day Pittsburgh during the
French and Indian War. One survivor was an aide to Braddock- Col.
George Washingtqp.
In 1776, the Declaration of Independence was read aloud to Gen.
George Washington's troops in New Yorlc:.
In !816, Argentina declared iiS independence from Spain.
In !819, sewing-machine inventor Elias Howe was born in Spencer,
Mass.
. In 1918,101 people were killed as an inbound local train collided with
·an outbound express In Nashville, Tenn.
In 1947, the engagement of Britain's Princess Elizabeth to Lt Philip
Moun!batten was announced.
In 1951, President Truman asked Congress to formally end the state of
war between the United States and Germany.
.
In 1976, Uganda called on the U.N. Security Council to condemn
Israel for iiS raid on Entebbe Ailport to rescue hostages held by pro-Palestinian hijackers.
·
In 1986, the AUomey Genentl's Commission on Pornography released
the final draft of iiS 2,000-page report, which linked hard-core porn to sex
crimes.
Ten years ago: A Pan Am Boeing 727 crashed in Kenner, La., kilbng
: all 146 people aboard and eight people on the JO'OIInd.

I

Joseph Spear
ranean cuisine.
But not in America, stuck as it
was on com, squash and other infe·
rior flora. Native dimwiiS thought
the tomato to be as toxic as the
henbane and lhomapple, to which it
is related. There were some notable
exceptions. A Virginia farmer
named Thomas Jefferson recorded
in 1782 that tomatoes were growing ih his garden at Monticello. A
1792 cookbook contained a recipe
for " tomatoe ketchup" (the
idiosyncratic spelling leads authorities to believe the author was an
antecedent of the Quayle family).
And in 1820, a beloved hero named
Roben Gibbon Johnson trudged up
the slCps of a courthouse in Salem,
N.J., and proved for once and for
all that the tomato is benign fare by
eating one in plain view.
Still there were doubters. As late
as 1845, a Boston editor (another
Quayle forebear) compared tomatoes 10 "rotten potatoe·balls."
But tomatoes survived, as virtu·
ous things tend to do, and today
every American consumes an average of 80 pounds of them· annually.
Thirty million of us grow them. We
bake them, we boil them , we broil
them . We grill, fry, stuff, stew ,
pickle, and puree them . We put
them in soups, sauces, sa lad s,
drink s, dre ss ings. ome lets and
aspics.
Let me put it to you another
way, Mr. Calgcne, Inc : I do.n't .
think I'll have any trouble raising
troops for the TLA.
So go ahead , mess with the
,object of our affections. But
remember, there's a fine line
between tinkering and tampering.
· (C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Mil G... &amp; Dllllj GloYw

Sarah Overstreet

FoR MeN To co~T~oL

io VoTe!

\'loMews 8oDie5 ...

Proclaiming a new holiday
We are at the m1dpoml between Day" it is. Write the president

th~ Fourth of July and Bastille Day. your congressman, and the secre:

It ts the nght moment to announce
the winner of the world's most
lm}JOrtant con~~ wh1ch was pro·
cla1 med tn th1s column some
months ago. The ~arne of the ~~me
was to come up w•th a new ho •day
to celebrate the E~d of the Cold
War. (I~ thesol~Judge.).
.
ThiS ts no .triVIal pursuit. Holtdays are guideposts; they are
lmportant because they tell us what
1s 1mportanL
There have been three great revelutions in modem times. The first
two heralded democracy: the
American (July 4, 1776), and the
French, which is dated from the
·
f
stormmg 0 The Bastille (July 14 •
1789&gt;· Much later (! 9!7) in Russia,
the Bolshevik revolution began.
The three revolulions offered
competing visions. The end of the
Cold War informed us which revolution lost, but not which revolu·
·
Th
uon won. e communist idea the people in slavish service of the
state_ stank to high heaven, and

that one is now out of the global
competition.
Freedom untrammeled _ that's
the big news .. and that's what the
new holiday ought to commemoM
d
·
rate. Yrca ers agree. Holidays
with the words "Freedom," "Libcrty, " ' 'D cmocracy" and
"World" predominated. (I include
a suggestion from A.A. Gentile of
Baltimore, Md., for a holiday
called "Da Day" - " da," to say
"yes" to democracy in Russia.)
More than 50 entries had "free"
or ''freedom" in them, wilh " Free·
dom Day" way ahead. That was
the choice of Professor G. Robina
Qua1eof Alb ion college (Mich.)
who notes that it would fit in nicely
with "Law Day," Memorial Day,"
' ' Flag Day •'' ' 'Independence
Day," "Bastille Day," "Freedom
Day" and "Labor Day."
(I have some creative readers.
Charles Muller recommends buil&lt;l·
ing a tunool from Russia to Amcftca, across the Bering Strail! Doug
Broadbent of Ridgewood, NJ., had
the longest holiday name: "Never
Thought I'd See It My Lifetime
Day." And I salu te Capt. Don
Phillips, of San Antonio, Texas,
who wants to toast the moment
with "Pour-Us-A-Boris Day.")
This contest should be decided
democratically. So "Freedom

tary·general of the United Nations.
But if the end of the Cold War

Ben Wattenberu0
told us who lost- who wins? The
American and French revolutiMs
both proclaimed freedom, but they
were not the same. The French rev·
olution was "top-down" and the
American
. revolution was "bottom·
up."
France was a class-conscious,
centralized stale, with a monarchy,
an aristocracy, and a history of feudalism. People knew their place.
The revolution ended the monarchy, the aristocracy and feudalism,
but much of the class consciousness and centralized government
. ·remained. European democracies
today are still centralized and classoriented. They arc nice places, but
they aren't America.
The American Revolution also
perpetuated something , but it
wasn't class-conscious centralism.
It was "the American way of life."
That has been described as individualistic, ruggedly individualistic,
capitalist, universal , pluralist, violent, vulgar, voluntaristic, populist,
religious, nationalist, patriou·c, libertarian, republican, open, modem,
upwardly mobile or just plain
mobile, - and mostly, free, or
more precisely , more free than
elsewhere.
The idea was to leave folks
alone, and keep the government in
iiS ~lace.
o, with the end of the Cold
War, we resume an earlier, healthier , competition: Old World vs .
New World. That rivalry,! believe,
will validate the American idea, not
the French one. You don't hear
much these days about how people
arc aspiring to the French way of
life, or about how the world is

SPRING VAL LEYCINEMA
446 4514

' .

7

Europeanizing
One respo~dent, Blaise Piazza
of Atlantic Highlands NJ waniS
to call the new hoiiday' ''Pax
Americana Day ." You'll never
know how close 1 came to making
that the top-down choice.
That wouldn't even require an
extra day off. It could be celcbralCd
on July Fourth, which is whal
Diana Heller of Baltimore, Md .,.
recommends: " ... extend lndependence Day l&lt;l other nations."
Too cha uv1mst,
· '' Too nauona
· l'1st
Too soon. But don 1rule 11 out for·
ever.

Clothing

BUnONS &amp; BOWS
992·5177

AND
RaW.Mla• 11

HOOK !'G
446·1088

/2 PRICE

Fragrance Bo-dy Sprays
2.5 OL Reg. $3.50

ONLY 5

2.29

Hall's Cough Suppressant Tablets
BAG OF 30

'f2 PRICE

ONLY

94(

· Aberthlfti
atah, lrt.aMa
:Now.,.,.
,
711 TIIIN-.
, Now .1Wt, Now'lllrUOOIT.

COMPLETE STOCK

. • CARLOON
GREOING CARDS

40o/O~FF

IHOII'7M

A workshop on still life amng·
ing will be held tonight (Thursday)
at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
will be
OrlllJe Hall. Peagy
instrucror for t1te workshop which
ia open to the public. TitOsc llltend·
ins arc to talte objeciS and plant
mlllcrials.
Still life exhibits are groupinp
of plant materiali and otber oojects
by whicH a 110ry is lOki or a theme
interpreted more by !he objects
ullCd than by the c~ and domi·
nance or plant materials. ObjeeLI
selected should be tniC to nonilal
Jize, Dcaitn elelltenll alld princi·
plea should .be observed in the
plicemcnt of rlani material and
objcciS. A stil life should noi be
confused with an assemblage,
SlreSscd the inSI(UCtor.

I

·0.. -

.

......................- ...-....-

...UD

IIIIIIL8 corr

:DoDJ.........................................-

·a I

July 9,
1992.''

Adlnllll= ) t1.1G

___ _
·:---··--·,....
-. .-..... ; ...
.,

C.to

... , ... _.,. .. ,., ... - .

•Doll, . ._
. . . - · lla .. 11
'
lloolo. CIMII wlllllo ...... -

:No ..-,...., ..,. ..n pondlloil to
-

"'"" · - tonior

...-.~. . .

- ···.a-·ot~p~~uu'"
·~
~· ..,............................................
-........................................ ....
.

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

,.

11-.. .. . . . ... . . . . .-.. . . .-..=AO
:18\V...............;..............................

·

Oat lh ...... c...e,.

153-.......................................... 411

,,

I

Six people were injured, none
seriously. ·
A tornado touched down
Wednesday south of Rush , Colo.
There were no reports of injury . A
construction worker in Spokane,
Wa., was killed by lightning.

IP TRUSTEE
To Fill The Unexpired Term
Created by the Resignation of
Vlctor A. Bahr.

Meigs fair tickets available
TickeiS to the !29th annual Meigs County Fair to be staged Aug ..
17 through Aug. 22, on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, went on sale
Wednesday.
·, , ·
Membership tickciS which provide gate admission, free parking
and voting pri.vileges are $12 each, while season tickeiS which proVIde gate admiSSIOD and free parting are SJO.
Membership tickets can be purchased at the Sugar Run Mill in
Pomeroy, the Five PoiniS Express, Route 7, Pomeroy; or from any
or the Fait Board members.
Season tickeiS may be purchased from Joe's Country Market,
Rutland; Waid Cross Sons, Racine; Baum Lumber, Co., Chester;
Sugar Run Flour Mill, Swisher·Lohse Pharmacy, and Gloeckner's,
Pome!'Dy; Nita Jean Ritchie, Tuppers Plains; Whaley's Grocery,
Darwtn; Keebaughs of Chester, Chester; Helen Baer, Syracuse,
~~Larkins Long Bouom; Dan's of Middleport, and Five Point's
Express, Pomeroy.

SEND RESUMES TO:

Chester Township
P. 0. Box 46
Cbester, Ohio 45720
RESUMES WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL

4:00P.M. JULY 13, 1992

COME AND Ill RutLAND PURNrriJRE'S NEWLY
IILAROID APPLIINCIIIIWRDOMS.
II 011 OF
LABia' APPLIANCE
IBOWIOOMIIN ftll fti.C:OUI!Y ABU.
OIBR 1111 APPLIINCD ON DISPLAY AND
MOREll DUB WlREIDUII
1117 PBICIS IN ftll fti.C:DDNn ARIA
LOIEST SELECnON OF CHEST &amp;
UPRIIHT FREEZERS II THE AREA

THOSE·HOT AND HAZY DAYS OF
SUMMER IRE
HERE.
SAVE NOW ON Ill
CONDITIONERS

5, I~ 16, 20, 2U. 26 w. ft. Qm Free1en
5ct. Ft. Gut Freezen Strilg at $279"
13, 16, Ihill 21 CL ft. Uprigllt lteny O.ty
FrHzen 13 adt.
Stri11 At

$39900

5,(J()(J BTU ••:....................................................... or-JLY $279.00
1,000 BTU .......................................................... ~LY $349.00
10,0IJO BTU ........................................................... ONLY $448.00
12,CJCMJ BTU .......................................................... Of!tLY $498.00
14,CJCM) 9TU .......................................................... (lilLY PII.OO
20,001) BTU ...........................................................()tilLY $111.00

22,CIOC) BTU .......................................................... ONLY $881.00
241D BTU ••• "..................................................... ONLY $799.00

LARGE SELECTION
OF GIS &amp;
ELECTRIC UNGES

All Styles and
Colors. Black
Glass Doors,
Self Cleaning
and Sealed
Burners
Available.

GAS UIIGES Ill 20
AND 30 Ill.
n&amp;RTIIG IT

$2 99

LOWEST PRICES IN THE ARE·AON
REFRIGEUTORS
14 cu. ft. Gibson or lelvlnator
St1rtilltlt 1449"
15 cu.. ft. Glbeon ........................................... ..-71.00

1a cu. 11. Admlrlll ••_ ................................. fli8I.OO
21 cu. tt. K*tn•r ...................................... $111.00
22 cu. fl. Whhww.tlnghoult SlciMV..Sldlo
wllll let l Wllltr In door....................... S1288.DO
24 cu. fl.1(8lvln11Dr Bleil by Bleil
with ..,In door .....- .......................... $1388.00
21 cu. 11. Frlfliclll,. Bleil by-Side ................ seee.oo
17 cu. fl. ....,.. o.lux•
wllh gliH
seee.oo
1t cu. fl. . . . . wllh .... lhell ............. .00

Crane

•'*'--..............-..............

•

DFU

ltlft lOu II 114

741-1111 or 1.- 817-1117

.

411 11121

;')

Will Accept Resumes For

"T'' in Middleport at ISO Mill Sueet.
Holr.er Clinic physicians have donated their time to provide this
service ID the community.
Further inf~J.Y.,.be,obtaioo~ by cal lin~ 992-218_8:

Another Bush strategist, howcv·
er, said the Gore pick pro~ably
would !)'lake more of the South
corilpetitive. "We'll have to work
hai'dcr, absolutely," said this aide,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
·

. IVIICIIPI'IOif UTD
:a..
-.. ..........................................uo
0.. lloello....................................._.....

thunderstorm ripped through the
area packing 100-mph winds and
baseball -size hail.
Eight mobile homes Wcfc OVCI·
turned an~ two houses destroyed in
Concordia, the hardest-hit commu·
nity, the fire department said. The
town 's schools and airport also .
were damaged.

CHESTER
TOWNSHIP
.

(Coolioued 1111m PaRe l)

(Continued fi'Oitl Page 1) ...
lion process - sugicst the regiooal
wcighl could work to Clinton's
advantage.
Their thinking is that lime and
exposure will erode some of
Perot's support, and that the Texas
billionaire's remaining suength in
Lhe South will be largely among
Republicans. Under that scenario,
Gore could help Clinton win a few
Southern staleS and force Bush and
Perot to spend more time in the
region and less in the keys to a
Democratic victory: California and
the industrial Midwest
Bush loyalists were quick to dis·
miss !hat suaaeslion today.
.
"I don'L think -we'll have any
problems at all in the South," said
Bush campaign manager Fred
Malek, a!Lhough he said Gore· s
Tennessee was now within Clin ·
ton's grasp.

Workshop slated

:r: q;OIIIoe111.

least lOS degrees.
The Ihreat of rain today forced
NASA lD revise its plans to land
the space shuttle Columbia at
Edwards Air Force Base in California because of rain.
.
Sh·owers and thunderstorms
were forecast for ·New England
today. Thunderstorms were expected in the nation's midsection from
Iowa through Colorado. Isolated
storms also were predicted for Ari ·
zona.
A state of emergency was
declared in northern Kansas counties of Cloud, Mitchell and Washington on Wednesday after a severe

r----Local briefs-__,

With Gore.•.

POlri'IIAITIII:.........
Tbo
DollY lillltnol,- Ill C..n
Ill.,

ru:ll

'

~ 111011tnr ·--~-- · ±

•
.1(-,...._.,...,__
......
•Qda ~·o:f daa, NalkiM1

Prices
Good
Through
Molday,

Housesitffir
~

1/

DESIGNER IMPOSTERS

MARTIN HAWN

OHE

SUNGLASSES

s2.79

GOWIE

Sl'EVE

COMPLm STOCK

12 PacH 2 Oz. C111s

II

LETHAL
WEAPON 3 R

Pomeroy, OH.

EARRINGS

STARTlNG FRIDAY

: Helen Carman Spahr, 72 , of
Huber Heights, formerly of
Pomeroy, died July 4, 1992 at Ket·
)Cring Hospital in Dayton.
· Born on Oct. 19, 1919 at
Pomeroy, she wu the daughter of
!he late Hany and Elizabeth Carman. Besides her parents, she was
prewled in death by her husband.
J..arry.
She is survived by three daugh·
Lcrs, Mrs . Joseph Taylor of
Jl.ochestcr Hills, Mich .. Mrs. Jerry
Seiple of Huber He,ights, and Mrs.
Dan Gaughan of Chelmsford,
Mass., six grandchildren, one sister, Mrs. Vernon (Betty) Evans of
Pomeroy, two brothers, Ralph of
Haughton, La., and William of Fair
baks, Calif.
· Funeral services were hcid
Thur.day at 11 a.m. at the Woodbine Mctltodist Church wilh burial
In the Xenia Cemetery.

-·

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

a.m.
By The Associated Press
Aero.., the nation
Aeross Ohio
Overnight tcmperatutcs in the
Showers and lhunderstorms are
possible the next several days as a · souLhcrn Atlantic coastal states
humid air mass hovers' over the dipped only to the 70s and 80s in
some cities, and forecasters warned
swc.
·
:rhe National Weather Service of very hot, sultry air today.
A heal advisQry was po~ted for
sal~ unstable conditions will prevall through Saturday and again today and Friday across Georgia.
The heat index - the measure of
Monday.
Temperatures will .bc in the 80s how hot it feels when the relaLi ve
and so will the relative humidities. humidity combines with the tern·
The record-high IClllperature -for perature - was expected to reach
this date at the Columbus weather lOS lD 110 de~rees.
The heat mdices for southern
station was 105 degrees in 1936
while the record low was 49 in Alabama, northwest Florida, and
1963. Sunset tollight will be at9:02 · most of North Carolina and South
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:12 Carolina were expected to reach at

Area deaths

We now carry several Gift Hems.
Stop In and see our new Hemal

Tha Daily Sentinel-Page--:!

Hot weather expected.in some Eastern cities

Merchants...

Bu Now For Fair •d Back To Sdlool.

TONIGHT
PG

Paving...

30o/o OFF

COMPLETE STOCK

BEOHOVEN

Picnic planned
able. Public invited. AU bands weiBurlingham Modctn Woodmen come.
will hold a picnic on Sund•y at
Ml!illlonary service
12:30 p.m. at the northbound park
The Harrisonville Holiness
on U.S. Roule 33 ncar Darwin Chapel, RoulC 6M, just off RoulC
Every one is welcome, and shoutd I 24 It Harrisonville, will hold a
bring a potluc:k dish, table service missionary service Sunday at 7!30
ancj a lawn chair. Meats ind sofl p.m. Special speaker wilfbe Mike
drinks will be furnished. Mrs. Eua Kline Family. They are with the
Collums and Christine Frulh will Montezuma Scl\ool1n Cottonwood.
!lc recognized for !heir outstanding Ariz., serving the American Indi·
community service.
ans. Rev. John Neville invites the
·
Tournameat plan11ed
• public.
The Middleporl Recreation
Trusltd lo mtel
Depar1men1 is seek.in&amp;lellins for a
The Bedford Township Truslees
· men's basketball tournament (c!Ou- will incct Monday al 7 p.m. at the
ble elimination) to be held at Gen- town hall.
era! Hartinger Parle on August l
Band practice slated
and 2. The tournament will be limPractice for the Meigs High
ited to the first. 12 ttam$, ID. apply. SchOOl.Mlldliili,Biild will resume
T-shi ns will be awarded to the Monday at 9 a.m. at the high
championship 1ea111 and runners-up. schOol and liSt until noon.
The toumarnent wiU have a:nifled
. OAV lo mtel
officials and the entry fee will be
The Disabled American Vetcr·
$50 per team. Each team will be ans and the Ladies Auxiliary will
allowed a I0-mM roster. Addition- meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall,
a! information and application 124 Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
material will be available from lhe
Matlack-O&amp;born nualon
department at992-6782.
The annual Matlack-Osborn
Nl~hl swimming
· reunion will be held July 19 at the
·
Night swimming is now held on Lancaster Fairgrounds shelter
Tuesday and Thursday at the Mid· house. A potluck dinner will be
dlcpon Pool from 7 to 9 p.m. The served al 12:30 p.m. Those atlCnd·
cost for swimming is SO cents per ing arc to bring their own table sciperson. Season passes will not be vice. All relatives and friends arc
honored.
invited.
Fla' footballleagA mccung will be held on July
16 for all studcniS aged 11-15 who
arc intcre~ted in participttting in a
(C0111l1ued 1!1111 Pace 1)
nag football league. The meeting
will be held at village hallat7 p.m. app~alion of tile ·second half of
All student• who would be inicrCst· 1992 s funding for the dog and
cd should attend the meeting. Fur- kennel bud~ct.
ther information and details conPresent were commissioners
cerning the formulation or the f'.lanning K. Roush, David
league are available by contacting Koblentz, and Richard E. Jones;
the Middlcpon Recreation Depart- along with Clerk Mary Hobstcttcr.
ment at 992-6782.
Ch ildrm's dasses offered
. Children's craft classes. for ages
3-9, will begin on Saturday and
(Caatlaued fretn Pa~t 1)
will continue July 18 and Juiy 25
from 10 to 11:30 a.m. at Middle- regarding the scrubber situation at
port Arts Council. Each class will the General James M. Gavin Plant.
Angie Swift, reporting for the
cost S4. Shirin Nuggud will be the
mslructo~. To rcfistcr or for further Meigs County Soap Box Derby
•oformauon, cal 992·2675 or 992- Auociation, stated the July 4th
derby wu very suc;cessful and that
7733.
Lwo local residcnu will be compet·
Couatry musk night
ing
in the national competition at
Country music night at the Lot·
lridge Community Cenler will be Akron. She alao stated a meeting
h~ld Saturday from 7 p.m. to mid· will be hcld tonight (Thursday) at 7
ntght. Refreshments will be avail· p.m. at Plclser's Restaurant in
J&gt;Qmeroy 10 begin planning next
year's derby. Anyone interested in
attending il encouraaed to dO so.
Mrs. Clark thanked Bank One
for sponsorina the June 2S Ohio
Larry D. Baker
University Communivcrsity Band
: LarTy D. Baker, 52, of Pomeroy, Concert in Pomeroy and she also
died early on Thursday, July 9, welcomed 10 lhe business commu1992 at Pinccresl Nursing Home in nity Larry and Wendy Tucker, new
Gallipolis.
of the Pomeroy Flower
· Fuooral arrangemcniS arc under owners
ihe direction of While-Blower Sbop.
The next regular meeting of the
funeral Home in Coolville, and
group
will be held Aug. 12 at 8:30
will be announced.
a.m. in the conference room of
Bank One in Pomeroy.
~elen Spahr

(Size 12 Mos. &amp; Up)

100 E. Main St.

Tonight, mostly cloudy with a
sliiht chance of showers and thun·
derstorms. Low around 70. Chance
or rain ,30 percent. Friday.Jla!tlY
sunny with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. High in the upper
80s. Chance of rain 50 percent

----Meigs announcements----

remembered ·seeing or heanng any.
thing the least bit untoward. But
this is 1992, and professional
women don't jusrkeep quiet when
a bunch of lewd buffoons try lo
play ping-pong with them:,
So despite the "wall of silence
among aviators and their commanders" that then-Navy Secretary H.
Lawrence Garrett 3rd complained
of in The New York Times, the
truth finally came out. The
women's colorful recollections
ultimately led to Garrett's resignation in late June, after the Navy
investigation came up with no suspects in its repon. Pentagon offi;
cials declared that pretty lame
investigating, and Garrett turned
the case over to Defense Depart:
ment invcstigalors, who have
already implicated 70 officers and
will put the men through disci·
plinary reviews with the possibility
of being booled oul of the service.
Well, suffice it to say that my
meager knowledge of simian psychology lacks the firepower to fig;
ure out why already powerful and
admired men think they need to
boost !heir status by grabbing their
fellow officers' breasiS. But once
the cover-up .was uncovered up, a
lot of good seems to be coming
from the incident
The new acting Navy Chief, J.
Howard Daniel, is proposing
changing Navy law to make it ill~­
gal to sexually harass one's fellow
service members. (Imagine that!
All these years sexual harassment
was hunky-dory if you were just
harassing another service member!)
He also ordered all Navy uniiS to
earmark one day in the next two
months for sensitivity training,
according to The New York Times,
and established a standing committee to focus on ways to enhance
opportunities for women in the
Navy and Marine Corps. And on
July 2 the Navy relieved of their
commands two Navy officers who
allowed their men to put on a lew~
skit June 18 about Rep. Patricia
Schroeder of Colorado, who harsh'
ly criticized the Tailhook incident
and the Navy's handling of it.
·
In light of recent allegations
from women who served in Operation Desert Storm that they were
sexually assaulted by officers and
virtually ignored when !hey sought
help, the Navy couldn't have
picked a bettct time 10 get its ship
mshape.
(C)J992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

r---------------------.
All Spring &amp; Summer

COlONY THEATRE
a.tesGr.....

FRI., SAT., SUN.

group of 15,000 retired and. active- age than to drive one of the most
duty Navy and Marine aviators. powerful rigs on earth, be called
I'm a.t a loss to conjure what on "sir" by a host Of underlings and
Earth was in those piloiS' noodles admired by all us groundlocked
civilians who'd love to have a
crat;k at one of those marvelous
planes? If it was a "We'll show
you to hom in on our action!" dis·
play, why use such stuniS on fellow
the night they formed a double tine officers? They're the kind of folks
down a hotel hall and passed 26 most likely to cry "foul''and most
women service members_ 14 of likely 10 be listened to seriously if
!hem orrocers, some of them fellow they do.
.
pilots -down the line, grabbing
Perhaps the Tailhookers thought
thctr breasts and buttocks and rip~ their fellow male officers would
ping their clothes.
prolCCt the good old boys who just
. If it was a dominance display, wanted to have some fun hooking a
JUSt how much more dominance few tails. For a while, it seemed
docs a fclla need in
dav
that way a5 none of the witnesses

. ,.....11{;$ i$ TRe. ]Me oF ~eaR We~~CeLeBRare O(J~ F'~eaDoM$: THe
fReeDoM of' ~el.iGioN, THe
...THe
F~UDoM oF SPeeCh', T~e Ff?eet:bM
F~eepoM

:A tomato by any
other name ...
• They are now messing with
. tomatoeS, and I have to tell you, I
receive this news wilh very mixed
feelings.
To be precise, the Calgene company of Davis; Calif., is about to
market a tomato ca)led lhe "Flavr
:savr" that has been genetically
:altered to inhibit rot Theoretically,
· it can ripen on the vine, retain its
: vitality during shipping, and be dis·
: played on supermarket shelves in
·all iiS fresh, juicy and tasty glory.
No picking green. No gassing with
ethylene. No pink spheres that
could be hit for horne runs without
· cracking. Just delicious, red, ripe
tomatoes in the dead of winter at only twice the price of the inferi·
or variety, no less.
That's what they say, and I'm
wai tin ~. Butl'm puuing Calgenc
on nouce: Succeed and all will be
well and I might even purchase
yo ur ovcrrriccd product when
company comes. Fai l and auempt
to foist off on us a piece of plastic
crud that yo u have to saw with a
serrated knife and you are in deep
sauce.
Worse , create some so rt of
mutant that attacks and alters or
· destroys Bcucr Boys or Big Girls
· or Romas or another of God's great
creations, and you will be under
siege by the Tomato Liberation
Army, which l will personally form
and head. Toma1ocs arc a reason
for living. It is written somewhere,
I am certain, that those who debase
them wi ll suffer an agonizing
demise.
The pages of history are replete
with fools who questioned the
merit of this fine fruit (technicall y
speaking, that is; according to an
1893 Supreme Court ruling, it is
-lega ll y a vegetab le), which first
· grew as wild berries in the Andes
and was being cultivated in Mexico
when the conquistadors waded
ashore in the 16th century. Castor
Durante, an Italian who evidenlly
preferred white pizza, wrote in
!585 that tomatoes "afford little
and poor nourishment." A German
expert later warned that tomatoes
. "should not be taken internally."
A Geneva writer in 1666 classified
the tomaiO as a poisonous plant.
Fortuna~ely for all mankind, the
opinions of such unlearned quacks
· were lost in a surge of positive
• publicity. A food authority named ·
' Pier Andrea Mattioli nolCd in 1554
·that "the tomato is eaten in Italy
·with oil, salt and pepper." Another
sagacious writer, Melchior Guilan·
dini, ·observed in 1572 that tomato
juice was "useful because of its
•cooling nature for rheumy joints
·and other such pains." By the mid
: 18th century, the tomalo ..had
gained acceptanCe across the cominent and waS a staple of Mediter-

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 9, 1992

In a recent Don Wright cartoOn
in the Palm Beach (Fla.) Post, a
Navy pilot stands in the open cock:pit of a sleek, needle-nosed U.S.
fighter plane: It's as huge and
splendid a symbol of power and
dominance as one could imagine.
In front of the plane walks a
woman with a handbag. The pilot
has his flight jacket open, flashing

111 Court Street
PVmeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/CoetrGIItr

By The Assoc:illled Press.
Saturday lhrouah Monday:
A chance of showers and !hUndcrstorms Saturday and Monday.
Fa1r on Sunday. Highs in the 80s
and lows iri the 60s.
South Central

Navy is finally beginning to shape up

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio '

----Weather---

Commentary

'

..,

. . ....

- .

-~ -

· ---- ...

-~

.. ... . ~

,,

IE CO.
ROTLIID, OliO

�Page . 4· The Dally Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 9, 1992

Thursday, July 9, 1992

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

!'omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Nelsonville, Coolville win Hubbard Memorial LL Tournament contests

JS223

Nelsonville and Coolville were
big winners in the Bill Hubbard
Memorial Liule League Tournament held Wednesday night at
Syracuse's King Field.
Nelsonville took a 2- 1 lead in
the first, then appeared to have
blown the game open with a sevenrun second inning. however, the
Tuppers Plains Tigers fought back
to 9-6 before dropping a 15-9 route

in the fUSI game Wednesday.
Roberts and Tigner led off the
game with back-to-back singles,
then both came home on an error as
Nelsonville toQic a 2-0 lead.
Singles by Smith and Fitch
brought home a run for T.P., but
Nelsonville blasted four doubles
(by Roberts, Odenthal, Gwilym ,
and Rowers) and a single by Gallagher to plate seven runs and take

a 9-llcad.
Durst and Curtis fanned 14
Tuppers Plains fought back (Durst si~·Curtis eight) and walke~
hard, coming 10 within three at 9-6, two.
but the 15-9 finale told the final
story.
Odenthal went five innings,
walking three and fanning eight, as
Blackburn finished the night.
Bartimus suffered the loss.
Odcnlhal had three hits, includ·
ing a doubl e, Roberts was 2-3,
Warren 2-4, Gallagher 2-3. with
singles each by Tigner, Flowers
and La Rosa.
For Tuppers Plains Fitch was 22, Smith 2·3, and Stevens 2-3 with
a triple. Gaspcrs, Bissell, and Barlimus each singled.
The Tuppers Plains Giams, .
despite a good effort, were no
match for lhc arms of Durst and
Curtis: who fanned 14, pitched a no
hitter, and posted a shui out for the
Coolville Tenninators.
Coolville won 11 -0 in five
innings.
Edwards was 3-3 with a lriple to
lead Coolville, while Knisley went
2-4, and Chapman 2-3 with a long
home run in the fifth inning. Curtis
and Edwards each singled.

S. Whillock. wilh relic! from Cardinals will meet the Albany ·
Fanne\5. and the. Gallipqlis Royals :
White, suffered the loss.
Tonight al6:15, the Middleport will fate the Raemc Hustlers.

KCLL diamondfest
drawing date Monday
The Kygcr Creek Little League
Tournament will hold its drawing
for pairings Monday at 6 p.m. at
Ihc Kyger Creek Employees Club's
clubhouse, located olf Ohio 1
across from the Ohio Valley Electric Company's Kyger Creek plant.
The 26-team tournament will
start on Friday, July 17 and run
until Sunday, July 26.
For more information, contact
Mark Werry at 992-6118.

-~

•

l';s

l

.•

HF.RE COMES THE PITCH - Nelsonville pitcher Chris Oden·
thai IIO prepares to work on a Tuppers Plains baUer during
Wednesday night's Hubbard Memorial Littlt League Tournament,
played at Syracuse.

~l$i r
~I'!!

Cochran's Exxon, Mason
VFW Hartford LL victors

S}{!Jtr

·~ .

Cochran's Exxon will play again
By Rex A. Young
Friday
at 7 p.m. against Pomeroy
In the old IOW1I of Hl!rtford !here
IGC.
Mason
Westmoreland will
was plenty of IICiim llld the action •
plly
Saturday
qaimt
Mason VFW.
was at the Hanford Little I.cague
The
second
game
had
all the inTOWIIIIIICIL
The evening began with Richard dii:Um of a good baseball game
nant,..y, a Korean Conflict IIJid it cenainly was. The Rutland
Reds and the M&amp;«lll VFW teams
veccr., Mw 0111 the first
sqtlll'ed olf and played an exceUent
Danbury leiVed in the Air
game.
VFW scored early in the bot·
lDilil I963. Once apin those who
tom
of
the first inning on a two-run
w= at the balllicld gave a RJW
sinBic
by
Keith Cundiff. BJ . Davis
round o{ applause to 8IIOihr.r
sinsled
in
the second inning and
deservin ~The ~ pmc saw the Mason scored Idler in the top half of the
Wealmordand 1e1111 taking on lhird iMiag when J .R. Kinnison
Cochran's Euon nine. Mason lOOk walked 8lld evenlllally scored on an
the lad quietly in the first inning error. The Reds would threaten a
when Joe Fmnicum 9COied from couple mme limes, but would not
be llble to push any more runs over
lhird 011 • walk.
CocluaD 's came bact in the boland Joe D'Auguslino com10111 of the first with two runs of the
bined
on
a four-hiller, while Cun·
their own on two base hits. The
Iliff
had
a
ncH!ilier going inlll the
damage was done by Nathan
sixth
inning,
when Joe D' AugusSimms lriple, knotlcing in a run and
on the same play he would score on lino hit a shoe up the middle that
an error. Cochran's would go on 10 Josh Jcfl'en reached but could not .
scon: onc:c man: lnd that would handle. Cundiff would go on to end
come in the fifth inning, against the night with two hits and three
with Simms knocking in Jeremy RBis for Mason. Roger .Wood and
Bwris with his second hit of the BJ. Divis each had a hit
Joe D' Auguslino provided the
game.
The pitchers had some trouble only hit for the Reds.
Now that the tournament is
finding the suite zone, but they
halfway
tlmlgh, Mason VFW wiU
would mantlllC to get their
play
again
Saturday against their
SlriltcouiS.
Burris saud: 0111 nine Mason own "brothers". the Mason
bellels and Josh Young sttuck out Westmoreland nine, beginning at II
seven Cochran baltm. Barns a.m. The Rutland Reds will play
would ooly give up three base hits, again Thursday evening at 7 p.m.
Syracuse
Hubbard's
but he would walk seven Mason against
bailers. Young would give up four Greenhouse.
Friday the .Green Senators wiD
hill and four bue-on-balls.
The hitting heroes for Cochran's take on Fruth's Pharmacy at 5 p.m.,
included Simms, with two hits; and while the 1 p.m. ·game will show·
Bunis and Cory Riddle, each with ease has the Pomeroy KFC matching up against Cochran's Exxon.
one hit
Sir.urday 's games wiD begin at 9
Far. Muon wes~moreland the
hilling heroes include4 Sterling a.m .• while Sunday's games wiD
Sbieldl widl two hits; and Ryan begin at 2 p.m. instead of the oormall p.m.
R.-IIwidiiiiC.

=

Here's An Example Of
How It Works:
Mans Short Sleeve Knit Shirt
Original Price •.•.••12. 99
.Red Ticket
Clearance Price . • • • . 9. 00
Lass Extra 25% • • • • • 2.25
YOUPAY
ONLY • • • • •

6 75
•

·111 Compact Discs And
Cassettes In Stock!
Reg. ~·39.99...Sall89t·27.99

Not ml~ble 1n J!wetl c~. CT

'

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SALE
I

*1

'111Q Ill

64 OZ. Son llld gonlle.

Esoeciiltl deslaned

J

lor 6abies: Reg.1 49

SALE 6.89

--------

SALE 1.88

2PICIIIIII PRins

Ia t 3 hell TIWIIs

Slandard sue with wMelicki111,1 . Reg. 9.99

2p~. 72 sheets per rol. Rto. 2.66

50" 0FF
,.....
IHIIIIII

Reg. 2,gg.14 .99
II~Uf.7.41

SALE

SALE

6.88

99~a

11111411

c

.....

~

?liB

Shompoo. condnloner. s1yllnQ
prodUC1s. Avallalll&lt; in many

One '"' li1s all. Ule In
c.~r. 11 home onne
olllco. Reg. 9.99

.........

210 ~ sllee1s

Oul~otl softness.

sins. formulas. Reg. 1.99 ea.

W L

Plnabw&amp;)l ..............-46
St. Lwil ....... ....... .:42
Monttc~l... .... .........-42
ChictJ0. .................40
New Ycd: ..............-40
Pflibdclphia ......... .. l6

58~
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Choose ~om tlild~
llld hi-cuts. Many
r, co!Qn. 5:-7.

vlnjl.
boCk.

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SALE 1.88
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38
41
-42
43
4A
41

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GB

.548
.S06
.500
.412
.47b
.429

H
4

S.S
6
10

Wlllerft IM•Woll
.610

CINCINN/\11... ..... 50 32
Adan\1 ................... 4S 37

s.nOicJ0 ..-..... _... 43 42
San Ftanc.ilco ........41 42

UOUILC11 .......;......... l9 ~
Loo An..,.. .......... J7 47

.549
.506

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1.5

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12
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Wednesday's S&lt;ORs
Oiea1o 3, CINCINNATI 2, 10 in·
ninp
Loa Anaclct 1. Mmttaal o, II innina1,
lfll"""

Mt~nll'flll4,LAII

An..- 1, 2nd a•me

Smfrancitoo 4, PtDlldclphi• l
H.....,l, Pitlo-2
Alit ... 2, New Ycxi I
SL Looia I ' San Diqo 0

TodiY'IIIIMI

Philade)fhii (MilkotlaM ,_.) at San
Die:&amp;• (llilond 0.2). Hll p.m.
Manu.! (Nabholl 5·6) ll S.n Fran-

111. a LMm, sNimpao, oil, powder. ~ U9

cilco (OO...U ().()), 4,()! P"'·
PlwhllrJh (V. Colo 0'2) ot UNCIN·

NA11 ( 1 - 1-2). HS P·'"·

Plaza
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SZ.47 sale price

J1 .00 mtt's rtbl!!!

147
,•filii'•
....

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cost
atlftl' rebat8

Umil2

13 1 ~

Frldoy's 1ames

In the majors...
E11ttrn Dlt"llloft

SALE

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torei91 Of dolfi8SIIC

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SALE
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.........

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J::-

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Jlrwllll~ . cr

.

Atlalda {lAibnnlt 1-l) at Oit~IO
(Jack_ .., , 1:051'...
Nilw Yolk (OoMon 6- 7) a1 How:ton
(l'onuioU·3). B! p.m.
SL l.ouia (f•..Uhu')' 9-2)" Loo An·

acloo (R. M•nlnao 4-6), 10,35 p.m.

,.._

Alilntl (Smohz 9-6) 11 Ch i~:~ go (G.
Maddurl0-1),3:20p.m .
Piauburah (Dnbek 6-7) 1 1 CINCI N·
NAn (lltmmond S-4), 7:35 p.m.
New YM. (Schourcll 1-3) at lloos~oo
(llamiJeh 3-'1), 1:3S p.m.
PhiladcJr.h ia (M i"k c William' 1·1) at
San Dic~o (1\. Hunt A-5), 1(1::15 p.m.
St. l.m.lia (Cormier I· 7} atl..ol Angcl e~
(llcnhitcr 7 · 6~ I ~35 p.m.
Mon~.re~l (Ifill l-4) t1 San Fr•ncitco
(f. WWon 6-1), 10:35 p.m.

55 · -

1817

.......
55 ....

AMERICAN LEAGUE
[Ulenl

DtvlliM

T•"'
W L
TOtunlo .................. 52 31
Baltimorc ............... 41 3S
Milwaukeo .............44 311
NcwYorl. .............41 42

578

4

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.494

7..5
II

801m.................... 39 4l
Dc\roil. ....................O 4S

.481
.471

12
13

CIJlVEL.AND ....... 3l 49

.417

17.l

Pd.
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Wetterw l&gt;l"hioft
.602
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2
Tu• .....................45 41 .523
6.S
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7.5
Kti\IM City ...........lot 49 .410
16
S.ttlc .~.................33 Sl
.3..
II
C.litcmla .. ........... ..32 ll .316 . II

Min"""' . . . . . . . lO 33
Oold•n4 ................41 3l

Wedoadly'IICOI'tl
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No"

Yorl. 2
TGNDto6.Salai•O
a.EVELAND I. Ctlifotnia .t
ao....s,K...sCil.y4
Dcuail 6, ~and 13
Mllwaukao4, Tun 3
l akimeto 5, OlicaJO 3

89!·.......
1!
....
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ICIIMI
I

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II II

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
S1- hourt: 1::10 1.111. 10 11).m. llonC10y ......... ·Fridly.
8:301.111. to 7 p.m. Soluldoy. ondto.m. to S p.m. Sunday

-

GALLIPOLIS

201 Upptf " " ' " ' "
t6t41446-3807

•CIC •..
ill

'

�ILand·transfers announced I

..__eat of the Bend...

COII!j!iled by:
Emmoaene Ho11itein Congo
Rtc~~rder, Meias County, Ohio

by Bob Hoeflich

'iek

~··· Hape yCN cajoyecllllc lloliclay
did give 1011e of us an
' ID apil • 011 ldevi''iMiil
~· lite.fdm cia$-

. !:':l
..
.-·- -.11111
•lliCe--tilrus.
Hiney Vllllteil rolled
.ia..fclr ... ""e ..14 from Norfo~.
"fl-..... dley'Willecl livillg lhe
.. "Y.-ce
a-c_

"~

inleresting.

Marjorie Ann McComas and
Delbert McCormas, parcels, to
James E. Fish and Alta L. Fish,
Rudand.
•
Eugene Thomas German. dec'd,
cert .of trans, to Pearl Powell ,
Olive.
Nina Robinson, dec'd, cert of
IIIIIs, 10 Julill Ann Combs, Ronald
Lee Robinson arid Janice Sue
Robinson. Chester.
James Henry MoriOn, Sr. dec'd,
affid., to Bcuy Morton,'Josephine
Mor10n and James Henry Monon,
Pomeroy Village.
Jr.,
DEMONSTltATING TECHNIQUE - Eric Cbmbm
Donald
R. Taylor and Diana S.
cle11101lr1lel tM dlldplile of Tal Chi Ch' uaa. A provam in tM tec:hTaylor,
parcels,
to Ralph Fred
aique Is slated lor later dlll•oath.
Gambill, Hmisonville.

- --

And there's -good news. I
read that national television will
not play heavily on the national
political conventions this year.
And you thought you never g01 a
break:.

••Y years in
Jaee ud Harvey like

July and August, of course, are
typically
family reunion months in
-~·
-~fal:i li offers a 101 of lOP enrer- Meigs.
The Charles and Fannie Wolfe
:~••••· •a•y ti•e• free of . Beaver
Reunion will be held this
~ J - uys, llld IIIey enjoy
Saturday
at the Sw Mill Park in
·tt.a: Jin lhe insunn~
Racine,
accordingiO
a communica·
'u'rcta llld ha5 been able to conlion
from
llllllher
long-time
friMd,
.'Qil!lle
. . wcirlcilll as a clloir direc10r
Ud «PUst for one of ·lhe church- Helen R. Wolfe of Carroll.
All relatives and friends are
:¥ ·ill Jlbfolk-and she lites that.
invited
and those attending are to
·nty were helo, of coune, with her
take
a
covered
dish and their own
After two successful dtsm of
.Modler, Mrs. GlliCC Whaley, Lintable
service.
Food
will
be
served
introducay clallkll au- Tai
~ HiR Road, lid it lheir flfSt lrip
at 12 noon.
Chi Ch'uan, the Middleport Arts
-!Jack ia 111111y months. .
Council his aec1u1ec1 a continua": Fred llld Alice Sisson and their
Brenda Davis advises that the tion of this program during the
iWO dauptcls. AndrCa and Angela,
ot (lalion also came for the weck- Meigs County Bikers Association month of July.
Tile arts council invires all p.--·
OIId 10 visit his molhct, Mrs. Rose . will stage a hog roast Sawrday with
the
gates
opening
at
12
noon
and
ticipl!'ts of die Mirth llld June Tai
Siaon llld frialds. Both Fn:d and
Xli&lt;:c 11t ICIIChcn and arc busy in proceeds going to Meigs County Ch1 Ch'uan' clines to attcaclthe
continuation series to be held
lhl c:om111uaity life at Galion so it Senior Citizens.
The bikers have carried out Thunday eveniJIII from 7-8 p.m.
... lhcir flfSt lrip to the Big Bend
numerous successful projects over II the COIIIICil ct111e1 at 137 Nonh
1 number of months. Fn:d will
the
years. Their toy run 10 provide Sec:ald Awsnue in Middleport. Tbe
~ "illlhe pit" soon at Galion playChnstmas
toys for underprivileged dalea for dlis aeries o{ claaea will
ina dtu111s in the orchcsua for the
children
always
works. Several be July 16, 23 and 30. The coat will
community theater's presentation
communities
have
also enjoyed be $1S.
of"Wat Side SIOr)'". One of their
While the former students will
cllll&amp;hlm will be a member of the benefits from the bikers projects.
:I'he hog roast will be held at have the advantaae of previous
chorus for the upcoming produc"Hawg Holler" which is at instructiQII, new participants are
jlmi.
..,..Jo. long-time friend , Frances Snowville, one State Route 681 also wdcomc with the undenlandIilliodcn. was taking in the action West. There will be music, door inglhat they will have to undertake
~!:r~utlfnd July 4th ec~bration . prizes, and vendors other than addilional practice in order to
has taken to llllvclmg hav- those selling food arc wekomc for mlintaill die 1*0 of llltdenll who
iiJ.jusl rciUmcd from an all-points a fee of $10. Camping is available have had previous trliniJII. The
and there will be electrical service. lnsaructt fer dlis lllici ol Tal Chi
~~&amp; llip 10 New York City.
SiC's also done reccnlly Hawaii No animals or juveniles will be Ch'11111 cluies will be Brie Cham~ uavcls and has another trip permitted. The roast hog will be bers, who is 1 nitionaily know
Gi.lliag up soon. Frances has served at 6. If you need any infor- ~DCiitionC'I and lecturer in the diselidy adopled the philosophy mation call992-2242or698-712L ciplines of the Fir Eut and the phiThe association is not really a lolophy of Olinele tlloolbL He has
ol"JIO while you can"-and that's
club as such but simply was orga- aareed to provide additional
~ aood approach.
nized so that it could function as a instruaion fer my atudenl(s) who
,,.,,.
,, ··Barbara Fry, a member of the non-profit group and Saturday's arrive one-half hour early before
project is complcrely scparatl: from each clw ICIIion.
~ip County Fair Board, reports
all
of the toy run projects.
lliat plans are shaping up for the
Tai Chi Ch 'uan has been found
lllilllal Meigs County Fair---b'd 10 ,
to be 1ft non-im)JIICI.altemllivc 10
kJicve it wUI take place next Wow! Homegrown corn and the streiiUOII&amp; formS of COIIIII'Kinlh isn't it? An added atllaction homegrown tomatoes. Great. Now bative, aerobic or isokeneti,c prowho could ask for anything more? grams. Tai Chi Ch'11an not oaly
\!!i~ year will be helicopter rides,
Do
Jccep smiling.
conditions the cxlemll and iniMIII
A8iti
,. Jl:llllfiS-IIOw that should be
p~~~fltw yell'S 1ft«

-n

Fred Denney. tracts, to Tommy
Adkins and Joyce Childs,
Columbia.
Joyce A. Bowen, Robert E.
Bowen, Jack R. Sian ley, parccls, lo
Bernard R. Grueser, Donna J.
Grueser, Randal R. Grucscr and
Virginia M. Grueser, S;tlisbury.
Lucinda Wolfe, dec' d and
Will iam Wolfe, dcc'd, arfid , Julia
Ann Combs, Chc.~ter.
Keith Sutherland and Elsie
Sutherland , parcels, to Keith
Sutherland and Elsie Sutherland,
Rutland.
Delores Parsons, dcc'd, cert of
Trans., to Donald Parsons, Bedford
Township.
George H. Warner and Grace M.
Warner, lOA , to Gregory A.
O'Brien, Bedford.

Tai Chi Ch 'uan program slated

in

muscular systems, but also promotes and stresses lhe modern
world. Tli Chi Cb'uan provides a
pnctical "martiaa aru" system that
incorporates all age groups and
physical conditions. One is never
too young or 100 old 10 discover the
st=ts ofTai Chi 01'-·
In a recent issue of Modern
Maturity, the MRP journal, a lead
article touted the benefits of .Tai
Chi Ol'uan for the health and weiibeing of American aenion. Additionally, the article focused upon
the fact that Tli Chi Q ' UIIl would
be a major component in a multimillion dollar study of activities
which positively impact the lives ol
senior citizens.
To Je8isler for the next series ol
classes beginning July 16, ca11992-

D~. Thomas

Study: Calcium good for children's bones
BOSTON (AP) - A S\IJi! y
In the study, conducted on iden- colleagues from Indiana University
today found that young children tical twins, researchers gave chil- and the Re~enstr.Ief Institute for
grow denser bones if they get tw,ice drcn calcium tablets, although sim- Health Care m lndianapolts.
.
the recommended daily allowance ilar calcium levels could be
Whc~ the study began, 70 patrS
of calcium , but experts disagree reached by eating lots of calcium- of 1dcnucal twms - . 86 girls and
over whether kids should consume ·rich food.
54 boys - ~ere assigned 10 talce
morc·ofthe essential nutrient.
"Adding calcium beyond the e1thcr calciUm suppl.ements or
The researchers found that RDA seemed beneficial in terms of J?lacebos. Fony-five pairs _of lwi_ns
youngsters who $Ot about 1,600 skeletal mineral development, .. stuck w1th the study for tts enttre
mdhgrams of calcmm a day -:- the said Dr. Charles W. Sleinenda, a three years. .
.
equlvalcnt of I .3 quarts of mtlk co-author of the study and medical
The dcnSily of the bone m the
h~d measurably denser bo.nes than researcher at Indiana University. foreanns and spmes had mcreased
dtd those who consumed JUSt over " It didn't change chlldren's height, 4 percent more '" the prepu~M:naJ
the recommended amount of 800 weight or bone size, but the accu- youngslers who got the _calct um
milligrams.
mulation of mineral within their suppl~ments co"!pared With those
If the exllll mineral densily per- bones was greater."
who did.not Butll was not measursists through life. it could help proHowever, an editorial published ably d1ffer~nt m those who htt
rect PCft~!le from the fractures that with the study in Lhe New England puberty durmg the sludy or were
area maJOr hazard of old age, when Journal of Medicine cautioned alread y mto adolescence when 11
the bones tend lO grow weak.
against loading children up with sl.artcd. .
.
However, the study found that exira calcium until scientiSIS know
The lwms gcwng lhe dummy
only ·youngsters who have nol yet more about its longterm effects.
lablcts consumed a.n averil!lc of 908
gone through puberty appeared to
The latest study was conducted mtlhgrams of calcium daily, while
benefit from the exua calcium.
by Dr. c. Conntd Johnston Jr. and those
the extra calc1um

Co~unity

~
STIIII PO•IOY

224 WI IIIII

THURSDAY
,, POMEROY - There will be an
C!llfl• baked chicken dinner at the
linior ~itizens center in Pomeroy
on-Thundly from S-6:30 p.m. Cost
iJ·$3 per penon. Entenainmcnts by
The Classics will follow dinner.
Pl8e will offering. Public invited.

•

,{ .

ICCEPIIH lEW PAIIEITS
IYAIIAILE 01 PIEMISES
DiaHtlc, lyperttnslon &amp; Cardiac
Enlaatlon anti frHtment

s'ALEM CENTER - Star
Grange *778 and Star Junior
·;;. POMEROY - Meigs County Grange 11878 will meet on Saturday
Soapbox Derby meeting at Pleas- at 8 p.m. at the Grange Hall located
9r's, 7 p.m. on Thursday. Plans will on County Road I near Salem Cen·
bi:gin for next year's derby, and rer. Judging of the An and PhotOg~yone intcresred in "saving" the raphy conrest will be held. Junior
detby for Meigs County is urged to craft judging. Polluck supper following the meeting.
~ the meeting.

MIDDLEPORT - "Dare to
Dream" will be presented by the
'outh of United Pentecostal
Church and the Kent Olrislian College Drama Team on Sunday at 2
p.m. at the United Pentecostal
Church in Middleport. The public
is invited.

SCIPIO TOWNSinP - Tile Sci: RACINE - There will be an
organizational meeting for South- pio Township Fire Department will
ei'D High School Band on Thursday hold a tractor pull Saturday with
ii 8 p.m. in the bind room. Melissa weigh-in a~ 5 p.m. and pull at 6
Slcwart, new director, will be pre- p.m. Classes for children, 800; and
seaL All students and parents are adults, 900, 1,000 ani! 1,100. There
is a 50 percent payback.
Uiged 10 aucnd.

'Welcome back'

n...

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

POLICIES
• Acb ouuade the cowuy your ad ru.M lftYit be prepaid
• Rective clitc:oUDl for ad. paid in adwance.
• Free Ad.: Ci~way and Found ad. uDder 15 worda will be
rua 3 daytaliiO charp.
• Price olad for aU capllalleuera i• double prtce of ad eott
• 1 point line type only uaed

Cerd of Tloaalor

RUTLAND - There will be a

CHESTER - The Shade River

ai"-8 p.m. 1'hcre will be work in lhe Legion Hail on Saturday from 8
p.m. to midnight with music by
White's Hill Band. Public invited.

ItA. degree. Refreshments will be

scrwd.

..

·~

~;

.

'

FRIDAY

SUNDAY
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modem Woodmen will hold a pic-

:. POMEROY - Meigs County
lllbrs will have a meeting regardina its ho&amp; IOIISt fund raiser for the
COIIaty Home and senior citizens
contcr on Friday at 6 p.m. at
Hawghollcr 01 State Route 68 I.

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-GoiUpoU:
36 7 -Chethire .
388-Vinlon
245-Rlo Gnnde
256-Gayan Dill.

Happy A.clo
Yard Saie.

643-Ar~bia

...........

It US.

IIIII,~

I

Will ,....... • •••
~\':, .... ,. cwra
forWiuduwal

Words

I

3
6

10
Monthly

15
15
15
15
15

25
~LIShe..

I LlsCIIIID

29"' Off •

:.li

Low .a-111""' - ·

38&amp;SX Power!
Syst&amp;tn Price!
Get It All, Ready to Run!

• na c.. lullllll

a . . lllnllllln • WI•"

•l'rllllr 1111 CM11 • 2411J.... Ful .....

Save s331
Low ... 1M,., Month•

... H••• • Vi•yl si•i•a
lew Gfll'llll • lepl•c•me•t Wi•dows
looMAd.itioas • Roofi•g
I:OMMERI:IAL and RESID[NTLU
nEE I'.S'I'IMO'ES

614·949·2801 or 949·2160
(llo Sunday Calls)
2112182

llrf

CHARLIE'S
SMAll DOZER

WOIIC,
DRIVEWAY
WOII
1.,1
11
DEUYEIY SEIYICE

u•n°

uns

992•7553
POIHIOY, 01.

6-26-'92-1 mo. pd.

· Quality
Stone Co.

.

li.

Muaicallnttrur'lenu

For Sale or Trade

$ .42
$ .60

1"\B\1 ~I 1'1'1 II· :,'\. 11\l' .'&gt;('()('(~

$.05/day

GET RESULTS • FAST!

1111•••

ESTIIIATES

Von: &amp;4 WD':

44- Apartment for Rent

Motorcycle.
Boaa. &amp; Moton for Sale
Auk&gt; Pari! &amp; A.,,,.. ,;e:l

20 ln. lllfo

llllfiiiCII lnllllle

"-'· ••,.,.. ..... 2174.7$

AUTO RENTAL, INC.
1
l9e9S ~DAY AND UP
CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

II- Puhlle Sole &amp;
Auction
9- Wen led k&gt; Buy

125-IS10I&lt;04oll1070tae-2Mitaw

Is- School• &amp; lnelruclion
I ~ RadH&gt; , TV &amp; CD Repair
17- Miteellaneow
Ill- Won led To Do

52- Spordns Good:
53- Anliqu"
·
S4- Mitt. Merchandiae
55-L Buildins Supplie~

.

por
82- Plumblne &amp; He•tinJ
83-- Excualins
84-- Eloc&amp;rkol &amp; R•fo·if!e"o tio~

.._ Ao S15""' - ·

PubliC Notice

B l I .L 1·. ll \ B0 \ RD

• 2-way radio lor work,
pleasure or 11M
t21-1145

FI-.U

49'1
11•· 755

IMCIR

.....,.,

••u
*738

IULUniiiOID DIIDUIIE
,:.=~
4·.30 •ri... DIY IEFOIE
a.Wl-.eofllldclijlort
n· or...lnld liy the
of the VlfiiJIII of
".uc...OII _ _-t CouiiCIII
_ _ _.;;...;,;;;.;;;.;.;;.;.;";;;;;.;;.11.;.;.....
llllddleport • flllloWI:

!(,.

Rot.·nt.oo
a 5-color superimposer 11e-SM

LwAoUI,__ ,

ORDINANCE NO. 1255-12

1-

RHidentlll· Commercial

llrect Ptlllceoflrt c - t .
24 YMn El)llrfeiiCI
Stele lkeiiHII
l1tf••te1 • (DDI•)tatfDD

St.,&amp;Co...ro

"'*
Into 1 oontnct witll
Columbue lloulhlm P -

s'D 71 1 tr

sr

SALE

ta

TlllpiCO - - -.. 48i,IIOOiild
Enn:lng " • 10 "....,...

- bur""'Ill ~
'*'"-on

8~ General Haulins

86- Mobile Home Repair
87- U pho~l,..y

915·4473
667-6179

'"'Y
-411R,3-.2.,__,
BRtpl.
oq. ft. laml
oanlo

e..

..,.I'IC..
AI·Wota sr llldlo
~

~11)88
Aog. 1US

~1../She...

ZMQ sl
lint 1111

•ldeajln
lfllilliiiiCies 112·783

II: ,That th•

oonlraot wllh
loulhem P -

Cll 814-IIIQ-7104 for

approvld and
part of thia

llog. 2i.H

••'

• Hl/lo/oft

. J·

rtnger

..·-·-540
~

llldg.

24•

\\' ·.

MI. Thla Or.nlllca
.n.ot lfMI be In
from •ncl afllr tha

tlb

WhiM, 1£3·542.

TOfiO/fiiJIOO'diOI"''

IMih.t ..... • pr~~uldad ..,.

,/

MICIIIONTA'

Buline111 Services

M srllllll 21

SAVINGS
THE STORE.

E••*•....,...._
LowAol1f . . - ·

n•

1 1111

dil l -.,.._ .. __ ..,.... _ "=
_. • - - .
.._.....

...

--

PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND

...

-~

·~

....

'

April, 111!12•

AU.t Brion Conde, Clerk

BASEMENTS &amp;
HOllE SITES
HAUUNG: Umeltone,
Dirt, Gnivelllld Coal

LICENSED eniiiOIOOII
Pr•~~=n~:!':i PH.
614-"2·5591

l•thllrlzatl DH ..ra for:

Toshiba • Drake
Uniclen • Panasonic
Sales·Servke-Estimates
St. Rt. 588 West
Gallipolis, OH.

446-2411 or 1-eoo-365-1229
L,.;_;,._ _ _ _...O,~-------

HOWARD

EICAVAnNG
BUUDOZER, BACKHOE
lfMI TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSlEMS,
HOlE SITES Mel
TRAILER SllES,

LAHDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

UIESlONE-TRUCKING
nEE t:STIMATI:S

992·3838

BusineM Services

MICIOWAH OJIII
•• YCIIIPAII·
Trucka
TniCtor ·Trailera
HouMciblle Homtl
Equlpminl Cleaned •

o.g.....
FREE Et1WA19
41715 n e ood• Aold
Po-r. Ohio 41711
(114)--MII
. (114)--tlll

UCIII

555
.,_, .., mo

SATELLITE T.V.

&amp;lro"l?/1 mo.

Lime

..... w.v•.

DEAL~RS

••
•'

the 27th d8y of

lgr~ulture

••• 2

.

992-21-56

.•.

UNES

1111111

VALLEY INC.

IOI-008 _ _ _ Caop. -looltioy-_..toqu=..
- -· 8WITCI&lt;Aii.E
1liUCt!-1011EIPIA.IIE _
.......... ~ -""""" l loUeo
ol od. Noolorponyoi'C:oln-.
l o(lollly-

.-.. ...........

low.
Puud

WATER. SEWER

FOR SALE-

mllttt19'1

• H)1IIIKIII ~-llpllld
acan and IMith 120-131

fJJe

Public Notice

elrHt lighting

~-4.100

Knlono, 10 W- Old, 114'4404027.
• ....
Old wl,. lrnco, IIIII good, IQ,f175-1102.
.

rwo 13 w11 old part s~- kit·
•-..tblk mole 8 111'•Y 1rm110,
30C·t ~5340.
' .•
Yanl Silo loft ...... Mull toil+
111. 114-38$-11524 .... 6:00. - 'lo

......
IEII'S~E
111111111

~

I ElliCE
992•5335 or
915·3561

.................
217L .......

" •Y,3o231112Mn

SHRUI &amp;IREE
IRIMa1d
REMOVAL
1

30 VISITS FOR 30
Offer Good Thrv
July 31, 1HZ

•UGHT HAUUNG
•RREWOOD

C.ll for Appolnbnent

IH.l SLACK
992·2269

las••Rd.,Ra.

USIO RAilROAD TIES

wt-'12-1

:~:

=rt~"i~lde:~~
Lost &amp; Found .

6

·,;,,

omell

pa~
IWOIII ~
1773-5202 or 304-17HIIDI. • • •
LOST
1G01100
1111 .llod
u-ine hallor whh lOCI ·u .
t9, on HorN Lick Rd, nur
Crib C&lt;Mk, conlac1 ·~o
hiiiDfl, Horoo Lick Ad,
loolllo Foroy, WV 25515. • (
, .. , '

loll: MlddiOport vlolnny,~
4th, aold horringbone bioc .

114-112·2851 ...,... 114-111
IWnlngt,

· 1.

Beocljj

LOST: Rod ....,, melo
vlclnlly ol 1'110 block llll
A-ue. Rawonl. C.ll I~

-·

LOST: Whlta/Vellow, 1 year old
lemaio Cll. 400 block ol Fourth
lvonua. 114-448·2252.

•

-

-

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1 mill
Frldar,

cwt

Ntlghbothad 'W.

10.

July

Furniture,

cJothN: man1, woment, young
men1. 2 toam mlffi'IIMII •

2 IMolly' ooiO : 206 Larlal' Di
Thtn., Fri. 11-5. Dropao, dra=

'

111 Porlor Rood, Vlnlon F""""
7r10, SeiJII/12.
' .. ....,

~nMowlng.

I&amp;C EICIVADIIG
IUUDOZING

I

3 Family Yanl Seloe: EuNI!e·
ESASaiOnly111hOIJuly. - ,~1.

949·2627 or
1·100-137·1460

LAND CLEARING

In Ill• Vlllltge of
lor a ~~v..,.,

lOt qllllllyq por3:.1- In

3.

rodl, · medicine Clblnet,
clolhoa,lop.

filE ESTIIUIIS

iladon 1: n..t 1111 mliYOI' (7) •• 2tc
le hereby 11ulhorlnd to

~Lt•nL.

mr.

home. Good wlth ldde,
" · good ~~oonh, 114-w.l-

. BURGUR • FIRE
CLOSED CIRCUIT T.V.

-c•.,...

A IJ .W a Cocuwu•dll
-Erollmal•

Dlir,

l~alt Wolllound. 10 1J2yoa.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

.' I· H\ ILL .'

8

14- Ouaineee Tt ainiDf

old pu~!P
glvowoy, 304-171-37711.
·

Phonl}.

Fertilizing. Weeding,

Rent

411-Equ;l'"'~"'

II- Help Wanled
12- Situatkuu Waneed
13- lnauranee

-Colle.-

IL.-------'!""'------....S chlldo

KEVIN'S UWI
MlllliEIIAIICE

45- Fumilhed Roome
· 46- Space (or Rent
%- In MeMory
3- AnnouncOmenll
4-- Ciftaway
S- Happy Ad:
6- Lo.t and round
7- Lui an.d Found

Femole Coc~or Spanlll, GoO!!
Homo, I YNr llegielorod. 1111245-tiH.

"It Ott Tilt Jt~ Dtnt lew"
~' 1":..~·!.:1:·.~.. ~
chllt, 114-IB5-4130.
q
Cal Allromm
614·742·2328
LOST - MaiO chocOI~:~
·
llaoon o,.e, Lyono

2-7-92-111

.U- Ho ... for Ronl
42- Mobile Ho~CI (o : Rent

lO

··.r

3412 ...111 •

·····-·

Farm• (or Saki

41- Wanted

14 kntono, black, groy, calico,

lkl. ., 4-1 w..U old, 114·-

Found: Goldon Relolever
yollow ropo collar, 814-lii2-~K'

••••• &amp;••

Fruiu &amp; Veptahler

$ .30

Cooktr
~ ~lf-

per1

wfth

NEW CONSTRUCTI.ON &amp;
pojp~
REMODELING
~~~~~:.~.,:a..~·c1

BISSELL &amp; lUilE

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

1120-145

'

Ftr , ...

C.os•ire, OH.

IW'. T \1 .:-

184290

2MB RAM, .Super VGA suppon

• HRr lint, air, police, rail &amp; more

H2·5627

u.,."

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

eG.......

~

';:J•

Block

:t;.t~.

'f

$ .20

$13.00
$1.30/ day

BNullllil knlono1o IIODCI
bltck. Whhl, lllvtr ( ·
2511·1783,1Nvt .. .....,.

8~.

St. II. 7

34- Bueineu Bui&amp;dinp
3$--- Lol! &amp; AoruJ•
-------=---~====- - - ----i 3~ Real Er.tate Wonted

• Tandy 2500 SX/25 HD with fast • DMP-136 dot matrix printer
25MHz Am386"SX processor, • Mouse • MS-DOS 5.0

3P
LawAI,...., ..... ,,.,LwPitcl

219 I. SICOID AYE,

P~~~p~,F....s&amp;

COISIIUCTIOI

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

•· .q

3:!.

6637

Over 15 Words

Rate

»c..•r•ers, Heat
Uti s.H.rHc..ai It
Glllpail~ 01I1e
c.l (6141446-9416 • HOH72·5967

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SAlE

66 7.c..Iville

DUOI&gt;IM:partoa...,
·Cilleva't aftor l ,'$i4-

charged for each day as separale ads.

OURRSII

-·-!:;lACINE - Chlrles and Fannie

Oneo

895-l.etut
937- BoJialo

949-Raclne
7 42- Rutland

379- Walnul

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

•-e

'

882-~ew

RATES
Days

the~.

SHOE PLACE

247-l..elart FaD•

Mar~etpla.c_e·

'h.telleo,CII,

I~ I lUIS rll

•lleedphol HI jack

- -IIAlRISONVILLE• - HarNonvile . . .ic Lodge will hold
its reatdar meeting on Saturday.
Work1n B.A. dearee.

675-Pl. Pla••nl
4511-Leon
576-Apple Growe
773-Muon

•The Area's Number 1

.._.._ . . , _ _ , Aog. H .M

99:-7733.

m.,.

9 92- !Uddleporll
Pomeroy
985- Che.ter •
843- Portlaad

Glality HI Elflcietlcy

Now Watw Healers.
Bennetts Mobile Home ~lting

T )'f'H

Call614-992·

..

.• -.
SATURDAY
·' )fiDDLEPO.RT - Children's.
crl ft clades, for ages 3-9, will
ljcpl 01 Sludly. and will contln'* ''uly 18 alid Julr 2S.from 10 10
f1:30 a.m. at Mtddleport Arts
Gq,uncil. Each class. will cost $4.
.$.1iliin ~ will be the instrueUJi. To NIISter call 992-2675 or

:;

IEASOIUlE

MeiS" Coun1y Mason Co., ·wv

Gallia County

the Dally Seatinel, re.chint over 18,0QO bo1n01

Mltf

·'"LONG BOTIOM - The Failh
Fail Gospel Church in Long Bot·
l!illl will have a hymn sing Friday
at 7:30p.m. with Doug Circle, The
Dli~Y Family and other local talelL Pastor Steve Reed invites the
pUblic. Fel~ip will follow .

Clossified poges cover the
foUowiAg telephone exchonges ...

Ia Memoria•
• A cloarifood ..lvortioo•eal placed in doe GaiUpolir Doily
Tribu• (..oept Cluooifood Oi:ploy , Bu:inerr Cerd or Lepl
Nobeel) willaMo .,,_r i.a the Poial Plu..anl. Rqilter and

A "welcome beck" party for lhe
Rev. Roger Grace, who has been
reassianecl u pastor of the Racine
Unitca Mcthodiat Church, will be
held Sunday at 7 p.m. at the
church.
There will be entertainment a
money tree preaentation. Refreshments will be served. All members
of lhe church are invited to attend

;. f'(&gt;MEROY - Senior Citizens
Dance Club will hold a dance on
liriday from 8 10 1.1 p.m. Music by
Slnbtey Mountain Grifrers. Bring
snacks for the snack table.

DAY BEFOI!E PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Mooday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.ll\. Friday

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

day aher publication tQ ...Ue correction
• Ad. that •ull be paid. ia ad•IIDC• are:

party planned

LOdge No. 4S3 will meet Thursday dance at the Rutland American

•

-

11e1n: ..... T111. &amp; Wed. I-S;
IH; Fri.l-4
(111.992·6411 for ..........

RACINE - The 1992 Theiss
family reunion will be held Sunday
beginning aL II a.m. at Star Mill
Park in Racine.

,II,

614·949·2804

fiE£ ESDIAIU
HAYI IUEIIIKES
....,,6p.&amp;f.-.L I
Alter 6,... 614-915-4118

• SeaUDelM DOt re~po•ihiefor errora after ftrat dty (e heck
for enor1 f&amp;ral day ad r unt ia pre. per). C. II before 2!00 P· "'·

nic on Sunday ll 12:30 p.m. at the
NorthbOund part on U.S. Route 33
near Darwin. Everyone is welcome,
and should bring 1 polluct dish,
table service and a lawn chair.
Meats and soda pop will be furnished . Mrs. Etta Collums and
Christine Fruth will be recognized
for their outstanding community
service. Bring a friend, and guests
are welcome.

LONG BOTIOM - Old Fashioned Ice Cream Social, beginning
at 4 p.m.. L.ong Bottom Community Building. Several flavors of
homemade ice cream. sandwiches,
&lt;lessens, drinlc.l, music, etc.

•Wedeaters

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

LOCARD lUI DOUAIII.Ul

5TtJRE"'

..

&gt;' -'

MOwen • ~Saws

- Uf

26-.:;75;:;·-------------------------------,
r

I

. ·.

PARTS &amp; SERVICE

FAMilY CARE

calendar

Wolfe Beaver family reunion on
Saturday at Star Mill Park in
Racine. Meal at noon. All relatives
and friends are invired, and should
bring a covered dish and table service.

ti••=~w
&amp;jllit) .

LINDA'S

.

.

CliO M.y

I

Spencer, D.O.

n

•'',l ·., ,

RACINE MOWER
CUNIC .

WHALEY'S AUIO
PARTS

SptiiMa.. II Cis._ .
F,_R......
IIEW &amp; USED PAllS FOR
IU IWES &amp; _,DElS
992·7013 or

Announcemenls

=
3 =A=nn=ou=ncem==,=nt=,=

-A

AWondortul Fomlly Erparionco.
Scandllwvlan, European, S....h
-lc!ln,
Jopei1010
Hlah
Sc- Exchaltg! Studtnlo J.rrlvlng.ln AuiJutt.
Hoal
FamllyJAmlrlcan lnlercullwal
St- E10honge. Cll IColhle
211 110-1111 Or 1·800 Stilling.
Dlvooce Ui' A...S BenllnAplcy
1140• Coven ChUdren, Pra.,..ty,
Ona Si9nalon OlvorDI, Mll111ry,
Mlulng
8pouM,
Etc.:
'Uncont. .od And Elcllldoa
Gov, Fell. can Toil FrH,
~\~. 1-100-147-HOO
Mr. Jock Danlol'a 9riainaJSflvor
Coonel Bond. Fri, July 17,
l ::tOp.m.
F...-'a
Hoi,
Archbold, 011
4111-41W222
llofll
Or
·-5-1310
Evoi11ngo) Foo Tlckll lnformaUon.
i

!

can

ALL Yanl Salta Mull Be Pold In
AdvoiiCI. DEAOLINE: 2:00
lite day bllvro the ocl Ia 10 _ ,
Sundoy ociiUon - 2:00
Friday. Mondoy odl!lon - 2:00
p.m. S1turdly.
~ · .~

,.m.
p.rn:

Ga- Bolo: Sri. 11lh, e ~

on Uncoln Plko on rlol'il.
- . . llraa, t.v., clothoo, btby_
clollt4e, baby wal~or.
··•
Ganige Sele: July Blh.~, 81h 1 101h,
1-1. Clrolyn Hollond ••aenca
2 milo""' 1541rom ChooNoo ~
Stingy Creo~ Road. Lalo ,,
claUilng, ltutftd enlmete, mfts:"

~'r:; '~.,:,:;, ~~ ·
5io?O::Yc:'~...~:
11: 11-S, 4821 Rodnoy Plko
In 81dwell; Home lnttrlor, Wlnon

July

caka pana, and ~rt .

• ~ •..:

Moving

Seie: 520 Rlchanl k;'
:~ Grando, OH. July 101ft '"""'

Parlllng L01 /Yanl Sole: 7l7 ·

Fowth Awnue, Frwnohtown
Aplo, By Fronchtowno Fllllll
(Hgonllollon &amp; Club. Lola . 01

Evorylhlng. Cl01n I Chooll.,
Friday 1001. 1:1 -rolll o;J

....,,.Ion..

_,;

Polio Balo : Sal, July 111h. 'D'
Lincoln Plko. Anllq- mlaca

loma.l-6.

•

Salunloy 111h. 8-? Furnilu,., jel
~11 gue!l (oona, Jenny Lind
- . lolo mloc. 1 mi. down
t.owor River Rd.

Uoed oqulpmoot

&amp; emoM"*"'
NIO: July 111h, 10 Lift . II !fl&lt;:f'.
Stange Unllo, 1110 mi. N. ol AI
lmjcl.
.
• .....

Veld Silo OCfOM loom North
CI.Uie High School, 111 _..._
tumhwt, clothllllntlquet. ···· ~
Void Sale: 2,05 Klneon Dr. ww.jl
Th~, Fri. ·,
• ~ !:.

992·5553

"TOU FlEE
1-1110-141.0070

Pl. Ple!lalnt

··· ~

&amp; Vicinity

.. ••

IIIWII,OIIO

71J1/'V1/II

Andyl Clll'll,
I love you.

Tiley took away
my hclme; they took
away my · money;
And lilly took liE
8W1Y flvm YOU. But

Yanl Sell, July 10 I 1\ 10:011

a.....,

All IO? Joyoa Holar'o ~·I
llun Ad, Apple
'Lola .._.

--Ia.

a., Moma. 10 • - end ..., ,

they can1 . . . ...,
my lovl for you.

Love,
Gl'llldp11 Bl....l

.........,...

y

'·'

"c'

�'

'
~· 8 The Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by B~Beattle

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
32 Mobile tfomfl

Pomeroy,

44

lor Sale

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity ·

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrilhl

-·

. . . . .·-·liN-· . .

~h Fou~h

ttttt, c•ll Antn
2:115.

-

""'· dip ..... - ·

114rnt.

lOUin

al ,..,_. Plllnt.

-h lor olgnl.

o.v.ra7

Land ~HGMt
mem. El- Hamot Contot Wit -You

.kiiY 1-111•....., of IR ta l
lllf, I ""llo put Hlrrtoon!illll
School. l'ufnluro. lllalhot;

Howl Your -

Doubtt.r.

-~.
bird 011101, '""' """"
Alert, 10fl,encHUf)lll,.,._

Y1ni 8111- JIIIY 1\ tum 111 rolld
. . lift· .....

dlopofl Hll.

wwo ."""' -

Slnglo

·ar

WIM, 8ootlo, Founda-

Any Budgll, Tropical Wlldlllo,
Worlcf·Fomouo Saalhlllt, Whh
BIIChll, OoU, Ttnnlt.

Business
Buildings

Lots 1 Acreage

Approll: one ICII land w/1411'0

moblohorno,_lld,.,s....,.
I'OOfMI 2 t,id;;, I'NIOftabll
priol,

l......e;mo •"'r s:wM.

~!:~~-Or
_ . , . _. .. ~T~_:.
,._ ~-!!'
_ . . -tn•-~
rur·

motion Colli- 441 :WO.

Rentals
41

Owrw Openi:Dfl El..... llld:
Run MldwMI, Iauth, louthMII.

=

Homo Evtwr 7·14 Dlyt, MUlonu•
hit
Prien P1ld: All Old U.S. Pay,
w.;!.,. Corop
n1, Ooftt Rings, Shver Coins, Ptot..,..,mllo,
Calno. M.T.S. Cain Shop. Pold Br Comoony. H11nllnd
181 8loond A-.llllllpotll. l!ltprlll. lnc. 1~1-41113.

OpportunHy
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
reoommende 'hii ·VOU do ttu.twith _ . . rou k-. ond
HOT to nnd monty lhrOI!fh tllo
...U until you llovo lftvwilgotlld
lht ollotlnf.

Employment Servtces

41

- --ry.
1012m.Ptl4.

tAVON' ALL AREAS! Shiro rour

Company. 1-.112..- .
A Bllllr Job. But No High
SChool Dlolomo? Flnllh V..Wo
AI ly Mill, 2.. WIKo,

""""' Hldh And Nlll~llon
Producla. For ApttoiniOMnt Clll

.1-800-n:l-4117.

31 Homes tor sale

hiY On Fllhlfto
...
~·--·
Elm-­
Oponlnp T-·

Mowine

IIIII /Fomllo.

El'*llnco Noco-ry. c:att
116-70110 Ill. 11MI4.

ilrf.... Go To Worlll_.-lloly

RotdNn,., Dlltrlbullon Sti·

•c.!""·
Tll-1-1110-144-4147.
-21W217 /l.etiO.fn.
~uu..,.,- eon.
_...... ..... /Doolll

-~~And Mlkl ~~­
Poyt Conotrwctton
-Polol Living
For All
.......
And- Trlvll ,
._
- · DlrtotoryiFolltlt Cluor&gt;nClll -1 -HMO
lit. ttOO, N UT.
RloOnndoPallcl.. Aocoptlna Apj&gt;llcolfono For

w-.

hrt·TIIM Atlp. MuM HIYI:
01llo Oftlcoro T'""'lng.
Appiloollont Mer 81 Plckld Up
F,_ N llondlr Thru Fridoy
AI Tho Rio Or&gt;ndo Munlci!lll
lulldlng.
1M Tho Country And Oot Polcl
For II Potrlcl Ofttr1 CluoiHy
TNCk Driver Tralnl!'f In Ont, I

BEAUTIFUL HOU8l FOR SALE
Hlllorlcat Aro1 c - L11 • t11
llllln St. Pt. Pll-nt, W. Yo.
Complollly Rllnovolld: 2 FuM
....... 3 ~
HVAC, Now Clrpll. Avllllblt
...... 1 5 1 - 5.
Flllwoocll- p_...y, Ll'l"
COuntry Home, New Kitchin,
Both. • Corpotlng. Low
au.oltlld luyor. IM-411-23111.
FORECI.OKD 6 REPO Hornn.
Ill""' Yllut. Fo-lc

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Household
Goods

=:..":

Wuh..._ dryers, ref.rittrllort,

lid-.-

no·.

S.vtnQI. Your ArM. 1.fi0&amp;-112·

-

Llll.

&amp;1. H-101111 F« Currom

- - l Ropo Ho!Mo,
W...tl Call 1..00 , .. 1150. -.ow !Nftlt4 'IIIUI. Ftntulie
Flnlncill
A111111noe
For Nvlnge. Your lrtl. 1-106-112·
1000 Ext. H-1311 for CurreRI Ull.
OuaiHIId Appllconlo.

cholro, ...,.,oryo, l:ltfdnl
- · llc. l14-41f-4311.
New Twin Bid,
Extra
Firm, Ol'lhtptdk: Manrtll I
So• St&gt;rinao. Wood HHdboonl,
1:1110. et4-4'414e011.
'
PICKENS FURNITURE

""'*"''

~~~~;j~ij;

~OR:..IvAictLEB

uu "":tu- on1y 4 ....,,.,

:OO~onor,

·-"=·.., ....

84 Hay &amp; G11ln

Truck O.lv.,., $2,000
Bonut

For

8aft.

Slg~

SWAIN
lldrooM
Dlahwuhtr,
Sttrto, W11Mr AUCTION a FURNITURE. ea
llrY"!! Clnlr&gt;l Air, On Kri.., oil OliVo St., OaiMpallo. - ' Ulld
Rl.21o 1 -. Oopooli. 114·
fumhuro,
-"" l
Work - · ·~
I 4~41 1111.

Fuml- mobile hoOMo ond Tal»e I 1 Chalra
opto, 3CM-ITMII2 o&lt; 115-3100. Formal il'mer

=-:.:::-:===-:::-:=
- I t ; And - 1 Culvor1llnclt

Thnr 10 Inch In Slocl&lt;. Ron
ivono, Jock- Ofllo. 1-.

......... dllh

a '::11
Sufi•.

-

•.......- .• ~.

55

, Building
Suppllll

· SC~S ANSWERS

e."":l.

Chfiloiot
~-High-. u.ooo.

I'IW332.
N1 Dodgo D1t1 tn 110
- · rolld

~~-

'pft.,.~

-

-

lot

...........

-~~~
1200.
e..-..:zte.

Juggle· Valor-Aglow· Yonder· YOUR AGE
Woman to man holding door open: "Don't hold that
door open for me because I'm a woman!" The man
grinned and answered, "I'm not holding ij because
you're a woman, but because of YOUR AGE!"

FRANK AND ERNEST
MY

nllh~1 _!1hone :

IIU....

Proctorville, liM·

IUT A
61!eAT
FALt;./

'

Alni·Z.OWn

tor Rent

=~~OnO ·-.. """"

...... """--:JU--

1112 IR unlumlohtd ............
downtown OllllpoUa. Air con-

. . . ""--r. . . .
o,_

....

1111 • .,.,.,. An, 2111, ,...

=-'" " "· -

- Q\!!' ~..... .:!:~- 1010.-- .,-"'I ........ ,., ...,., v.w. eo .. ~ -

- · lfW17.0210Catt Attor
LTD tlllloo _ , , I:OOp.M.

--·
..._-·
""" ..............

1 Clrnpuo.ll
5Winlelnttlon
11c13 Cilntt lntll
141nre-m
12 welt.)
15 Dmtng lor..

1nd llotiPIY iltlop.l'll

--N--

CIIIJ.I14 'A 1111,

Wtbb. Call I'M 441 0211.

11115

Pontile

-

............ 4dt. ....... ....,
oplloii ... ........ -

'""·
ioii
11ft.

V-1,

U:ZOO,

1111 Chevt4te Cl. 1

WATERPIIOOI'ING

Llnoondlt......
114-tl2· .... LoCII i . .WIDII

..-_ ~111 n1ct
Aul-lc. J04.e11.1114.

GWMI'.

oor.

~.

,,..111-..CIM-t114--.
day or ......

....

...... llllfMnt . . .. , . . .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
M 60r 1HI.T FSEUNEi .A&amp;\ IN ,

Ca•llll.
. _AlWM
, All ·
-It,
- . ..
111,000 Mltl. 1&amp;111. CoM Pol

=:.' ~--· ~­

eNI:AKIN&amp; L.Po-.IM£0.

-

__,

c--Ion. Afl.
~~1 ~040 b'::;..;:'l'3

C.onry LE,
hll~buk: fOC!d oond.; ,_
...... - · 11,100. 1 Oltflfllt ·~ ......
1111. •, . . . _ 1 XL.
llyL, ..... - . PW A PL.

J.W.

""""'.!!.

-

~~-. 110110. ....

MU.,. llatlot.

'*· - -

=. . "

F- f!.td ...._..:.vna.,,...

.•

=--.........

'OOO_J:·

lit...,

-·L .• """'
~.
*..

NEW PROBLEM ...

I.

West
Pau
Pau
Pass

,.

.

Eo II

Norlb
2+

tD-. ..,...APIII Dill' t ...._ ..

- .-

- ...
" " - ,.
Wll lld.l.lol-.
JIT

144-.

~

39 Trpo ol cro~o
40-blll

........... -

41 Grntlrtdtt
43Pitlolfon
46 Thlcklt
48 Suooll
52 Fui-b.lllftg

lnirnll

16 Bqln
(2 Wdl.l
18 tooling

54Aidlrolt
55 PllltPift'l

drltlkl
18 Actrm
SotMnt
20 tlabrew litter

58SIIrlldt

Colllgltt

57 Florld1
counly

22 ProlnfcM

OIJWN

24 Firat,...

26 R-tllltlllf

1SIIIul-

211-r
otruggll

2 con-11
"'"'

31 -•Kitvlt
' 33 IJHWctiYI
•
1111

..... ..-......

I:'"'~··~M;NZ~=-==1·__~----

Toyalo

INVISIBLE
ALLI6A'!VR6.

\~0

P - Or1nd Aro, Y·l. roallng. oldloo, ......... , _
aoocl ooncl., P8 'AO, MW pilnt, tcltloftil and litt..... rutldtl

I~MN.

NOTH!t-.16 1Ha;!6 .
loON lVe EiOT A

THAT ),N ALI...I64.1VR 15

1111
!=firylllr·,~J
CefMII*\
Hllh Miltags,
1117' PlyiiiMilh ,Hortlitft,
Cancltan,l1.200.114 211 1211.
,...
OldiJL 1~111
IW/1..
' - " " " ' U, AC. PS. PI, l&gt;W,

-*·
............-.... '1-hro
'Ill·- ......._

::::::==."':::-:-::-::c-:-.-u"'"""'·

Whitt-.

........

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Sootb

dummy's ~iamond wouJd have bee~

--.-.204-1-11.
-

tAl
• 32

.n

MotorHom11

Oloomlna. All ...... ..,....

-y =""'d

-oo:;:,":·

•

'L""'r •olf..:t
T-.~~~
,.,. ,.,........... soo

.

...
:;:h:·. - ,,.., -.

-

.AKQJIO

fau
Bridge features several plays in 2 +
Pass
which an apparently certain winner 4 t
4 NT
Pass
disappears. Perhaps declare-r exe- 5 +
Pass u
All pass
cutes a squeeze or an endplay. There is
a third possibility in today's deal. ·
Opening lead: t K
Bidding is more sclenlific than it
lfl!ed to be, bul it still isn't an exact sci- L------------....1
ence. U it were, North-South would
have reached either six clubs or six , .-- .- • .
hearts, easy conlracls to make. But, utscaraetl.)
understandably, Norlh opted for the
Dummy overrulfed; three round.!.
l'tt&gt;own eigltt-card spade fi~ raising to clubs followed. East ruffed low •!1!1
three spades. Tben South cue-bid his South overruffed. ~be process wasrt~­
diamond ace, and North lfl!ed Roman pealed t.wo more tomes, West ruffmc·~
Key Card Blackwood learning that heart wtnner and dummy averrullblg,
South had three aces ~r two aces and then East rolling a club winner and
tbe spade kin1.
'
South overrulling. Now, however, DillY
West led tbe diamond king. After the spa~ ace remained at large, '\\'
wlnnlltg with tbe ace. South realized dummy ~ diamond IO!Iel' was tbi'O!'Il
be had to discard a diamond loser 01t tbe ftlth heart and tbe slam w~
from either tbe dummy or his hand be- made.
lorehecoutdallord to lead trumps. He ~at an ~~ony lor tbe defenders ~
started with three rounds of hearts. two certaon lncks reduced to one.
West bad to ruff the last of ihese tow. No wonder the French call this plat
(U he had ruffed with the •pade ace Le Coup de J'Agonie.
•·

Ptts lor Slle

'"·
,.,.... · - Hound,
MO, old
IM412•1111.
CASH
AND
CARRY
Rofrlgoroloro SllrllnJ AI 1311,
RICtr,.,. 1141, 2x1 '""'~.,':;;',~
.... Dlntlll 811 With. 4 .
Chalro 1121. OPEN:
Thru Sotutdly IA.II. To IP.II. AKC
Rogiolorod
lllnn1n
Cloolld On Bundoy. I..OCATEO: 4
pupplll, IM-1182·
MIIH Off Roule 7 on FkMI14t,
In C.nttntry, 1/4 uta. On Un·
AKC Scallloh Tlnllr puppllo, 2
toln pu,..
ftmllll, 111 thotl, wOrmed,
Whirlpool W11hlr W• 1150 Cut rolldy by July 1tlh. ~M..-1'7.
To $tl; Olbton Hlrvnt Ootd
Oryor 171: Frlglclalro Dryor 171; Aullrotlln l!lophtnlllll, ,..,,
O.E. Dryor WniiiO c.. To 1": To Mlldlurn 111111. 1101- Pol
O.E. W11hl&lt; Almond Woo 1110; Or Wllcl&gt; Doa; 111 - . Cut To 185; Ktnm0r1 WMhlr • !Md. IM-241-1131
Dry" Sol W11IISO loch"Clll To Dnipnwrntl Cllllry: CIA p.,.
195 Each: 20 Inch Eltj:lrlc ...,. • • ....... ltll-. 114Rongo 115: 30 Inch Copportono .....Aftw7:00 p.M.
Etoclrtc Rongo 115·
Etoctrlc Ringo, 115· Co-ono ExcotioM lrolld Of .,_..,
Rofrll"otor, Uko Now, Cut To Lob P u - - Holclo
1225i s,ooa ITU a.C Ill; Your c:ticilol Ctn T1rry HIWII:
Slotfll' Apptllnco, ll Vlno 1-1187.
ltrHt. Ool~pOrlol-.1311.

Cell-. - ""' "''

t

By Pllilllp Alder

ACROSS

VI'RA FURNITURE
IM-44f.3151

Nlct 2br Tr&gt;llor, Out St.Rt. 210, 8
MltM, Dlpoett I Atference R• Waohor And Dryor 117.H ~
quind.IM-251 .. 251.
Bunk Bed Complete,' ll.n
WMk, 4 Drawer Che.t 13.12
WHk Atcllner U .24 W..k,
44
Apanment
Solo And Choir 110.:18 Wolle.

-;M
,.,..,_ _.........
.

:'lf:'tnaK'T.

An agony - but
only for one pair

A BAP SUMMffl

35

roo:- -

cot!CIIft

36 Actrtll liMn
37U-chllr

BARNEY
[

3 Ro•
-'•"""
4 Ordertd

"""'""

5 Saonrnllltfde
B Ellctrtcol
unH

7-.ry

13 EqulpiMIII

dlwltiOII

11 Actrlllrtttl

a- Ling
Srne

20 Chitter (11.1

8 Low

tO TrODicll ltult
12 Vnl portod
o!Urot (vtr.)

FAVORITE

HE'S TIED UP
IN A BODACIOUS

....

CAitO .AME

UNCLE?

=.~I.
........,,Oh.

ololh

................... -

..

......
, ... =::N~-, .·
Co.-EVAMI
Jlloklon, OH t - . . ·
Dlvlo
-Yio - ·
-,... Ctollc Rd. Pltlt, IIIII
114o

taa :::=10

..... _ ,

..,.._, ·

=
.

a.-Jon
··--

:-'Do............~:
HIUNng
1

'

- , . . . . - 4 w'ol. 111

"''"'

1
• No ....,,_

Or

v... T -'""'t:la•
- "
-·
-.
,
'-~:m~~S:N~At~o~gll~~~~~
BOod lr7

Upllillliltry ~

oond. I'M4114t1t.
tMIOIIC-IIId. - U I :;,;t"~~"#~'il:
.... 4 lfl!ll. 4 In - . . . ~
ow ..... fll'l.
fi.IIO. Catt litr hi ...
1M 1a1a
tlmlt&amp;
t
. ooitf

0

.

=

.t•

IIW4Uaf _

•

=::.r

extOl

_.,. ,

48- FOil
50Unrl- .

Electi1011 a

Rlllltotllt Ot I
I till
I~ .......... ...., ....... - - ..
aiHiil ''
1 'tl
1tJI Pft ,... '"""· VJ ton, n· R't FIIW ,.,.,_ WV I II
tro rt111. ...... Y-1, ""' fml- J14.171.1111.
'
'
-.AC.IMI. 114 112 lrll. ... ..,___
-. -

45

46 - ~~o~n~~ · ·
47 HHIIM . :

\

.

~

Send lor Cancer' a Aslro-Graph predlc· •rating Independently.
tlono'today by mailing $1 .25 plus alOng, CAJIII1CORH (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) II tO·
Hlf·eddrlllld, stamped envelope to day's preuures become too demand·
Aetro-Graph, c/o thll nowspapet. P.O.' lng. go oil by youroetlto sort things out .
Box 9t428, Clovelond, OH 44101-3428. Solitude etlmulltao solutions
Be sure to atatt your zodiac lllgn.
AQUAIIIUI (,.,;
ll) eoffllf. ·
LIO (.IUIJ :13-Aug. 22) You'N derive lions ere favorable today for launching
your moot pleasure today from Involve- · - pro)eelo. llyou're allllt "go" point,
'menta that have elements of friendly make your move now: you .!Should be
competition. The aecrat Ia not to take - t o trlnolate Ideal Into action.
winning or losing too oerloualy.
PIICII (,.. 20 Mll'tll 20) You tliould
VIRCIO (Ayt• .:13-a.,t. 22) Thll Ia a do well tod1y hlndUng chlllengao or
good day to tll&lt;e time to tidy up lltul· _ competitive d .. elopmeflt.. Don't lldetlolia tttlt ·require a flnlohlng touch. otap your objeCII- juat becluM
You're a strong- today, 10 trlde ' · •aalft-.onttterOid.
on thlt - t .
. Alllll (llaniiii1-Aprl11) By
UIIIA (lept as.oct. 21) Tilt more you ' play "*Ythlng , _ onc1 hiYt to handll, tilt bettor you're lllcoly ' you_'ll find you Cln
to pttform · today. Don't bt rltlctnl · any 1ypo of tilly
I bout trying to Juggle - • • aa\llgn· TAURUe (Aprtl20 ""'
Pay p1rtlc·
rnento atmultiQeouflly. YoU're up to tilt ular attentloli to tltUitfona today that
Cllllltnat.
could provide oomt 1ypo o1 ooconc1 fn.
ICO!Iilo (Ocl - . - . 22) COnditions come for you. 11 you're llatt. yoll hiYI
1!0 gen«ll ratlttr IIIVOtlbll for you . good c1t1n01 It UfiCO..,.IV IIOtlltlhlng
todly, but you'rellkoly to do belt In lit· '-ageout.
Ultlonl wltttt you're dNIIng with tengl· · ,. _ (""' 21-.lune 20) Strive to
bite- Make that your 1oc11 point.
koop tivetythlng In proper bellnoe In
IAGII'TAIIIUI (lito. 21 Dtc. 21.1 Try to - ' ! . . . a1 your life today. Allow- ·
frMyounelltodayltomencurnbrltiCII ·quatallmelorrtapOIIIIblelntorette. but l
and lndlvldulll who 1ren't - to milo· . 11ao t11ot 101111 houtl lor fun .
tlln your'*'· You'll funct.ion tialt Ot&gt;-

1111111

51COIImunt '

nHimon-

ao-F-.

·

• •••••

5
-

Crr of 1 lliltb

~

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

l.._~....._
.
101.

43

44 Long .......

t:.;" : r'::l&amp;:'""' diiN..,.

::..
--::::~~ ~!"

: .

30 Dlrtc110n •
32 Bort wlbtt._
34 llklmltllltd '
38 Wooden tub'
40 Start
42- Whitt .

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

84

·.·

28Type of nth ,
21 tOOlS, Rotnin

1111-.EI_Cot,..llon,AI- - - - · " " ''
ltJnl: 11,1110.

_,_

-.

261-.o-

....-.1

1111 Ct.Yt, - · · 1111 010 lltlro, olt condltlonlld, .........., IAN. 41
PI' a;,~ ofiO ·-

--:·.
Slmmoftl

23 Slttltton port

_ _..,-,..,
-- 27 Two--tot41 · :

I maloro In otoolt, ,_ 1u1ok ,..... Wed, IVAHI, J•aciON, Ott. 1-100~1 ...... loW - · IM- -lton'l TV - . lfiiiOIII-,
.
112·,.\
1NI Ponl ,.,. OT, 41.000 In :r.n. , ... ..,,._.

--om

21 Blbllcllltlng ~
2UCifMI- ,
25 Do

WHAR IS MY

1:::::-c:-:,..--=----=-

=

SOUTH

+K J 6 5

IIIO~'IHIII.

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

EAST
+73
.87 ;c
tJ8532
+75

~O,OSCOPf

SAY f I.' L,_ t4AIIf

-

WEST
+All
• 96
t K Q 10 9
+9 8 6 4

Hom1 In Crown Clly, 1&amp;81.

A•..-: And A~rtlor Fur·

-lad.

vory lim,.

PHILLIP
ALDER

llcor ~~~ llo. D l · R A,.o,
RloiiY, WV. 30447:1-2131 or 1•

campe11&amp;

NORTH
nil
+QI098
.3 2
t76
+AKQJIO

BRIDGE

.......... body ..........
ton lruck wheelt, 111111. .,

79

&gt;·•

~rt11

... -..

...

71 Autoa tor salt

TV 121. .JM.e11. ·1111

Av•-

=,_it

-·

Dull ..... lor 114 ton
Chtvy- 41.... -

I I I I I. I

Ontv
Thoot lntorllllld CIM: IM-2411-

• ,.,.,.ncH

Ouilllltd

....,. _ _ ...,,w

the chuckl.e quoted

by f11l1ng •n lhe minrng words
develop fro m slep No. 3 below.

~~~N~~~£ lETTERS

•

B - ,,.,.,......... Ulld •
robultt, 111~ II IIIU:•-

drflll llirllna .. t-110
114-241 1171, 11W11-Zaa.

o·~:mplete

IHfSf SQUARES

Auto Pan• &amp;
Acceaaortee

76

who made world affairs an

PRINT NUM8EREO LETTERS IN

•

~:~·=o·"~;.4'~ii~Mi'i\t~w~·i.

ponr,IIOO. toU1M110.

r :~a~~~ne~~~:r ~~
you

11

-

.

.. '
.

One dummy was reading the
paper. He turned to his buddy

Il--r.,5:....:,,,-:..;,.:....::,.,.:.:...., ~1
. ....J.
L--1...--J.'-...l.-l..- L

..r.,vo=.:

Oroon ochoot dlllrlcl: Elcllltnl dlllonlr, w1lerllruh paid.
condition 3 Yr. okl finch, 3BR, J ~
r~qulred .
Colt IM-441-3302 or 114-411Drlvtro With I - h t OTR Ex· both, CA. 11'"111· 114-14f.tll7.
- IJD To :111 lllloo To Home, 20 ac,..: :II A, 1·11&lt;111 bath, IIIT7 ..... lpm.
)i;lv"" W- kulhWIII ICo~l
Pluo :1/mi. IIPO loniM l hMI pump, ruf'll Wltw. Rio tlldrrn. lfll lor ront, 1225/mo.•
llolor , _ lno. ..~ ...
nt"Jntoool1 Por. Tuition Ortndl1rN.
Turn Poy 21 ii3 Conti Pot Mill. Lolld
-utlly dtpod, no ptlt, 114·
114-245-1113.
Rllmb&lt;i- vii. (Up To
flt24211.
)ltclci&amp;IUfw lneuranct. Lold· P ,CIODI Fo&lt; Drlvl"tt Behoof
togN~
Poy. OI'ICII. Tullion-Fr11 Training Fot Locltlld On eo,_ Lor In 2 bedroom lpf, U50. month Ill
~ooyovtr.tlop
Ply. Slllllllo ThOll WINo 11p. HUibondiWllo Chloh~o. Prlclld 1:111 000. Moro
Information Clll IM·:ti7-G244, utiiMIH paid, no HUO, 304..!75cornmuntclllono.
Excolltnl
..ml Wtk:omt. M'* Be 2\ eu ue 1111.
2122.
_,h a 1on.. Packlgo. II You T
WIOood O.lvlng 6 Worl&lt; Hlllc.y.
Havt 1 Y•r OTA E•p.rttnce, Com Tr&gt;no Inc. (Gen. Frolghl NCi Hoar Ocoon: Gordan Hornn 2 Roono. I 81lh, Oownltllrt,
Cllln MVR 6 Aoo 23. CIH S..bolcllory Of ~h A-lOan In lol..lful Wllorfronl, Oolflna Cloon. No
Polo, Qultl.
To4tyl 1~111·20'1 .
Van Llnee), 1.,eoo..111-t110, Community,
Stirling
Af: - - And Oopooh R•
t101,000 Wfth Oorogo. Low qulrod. 1 -·1111.
Drtvorl W.ntlld. U.S. Xpmo. Oopt. 8·107.
Inc. Sttrtlna Tum Pay 21 112 Truck Drtven: Stirling Pty Up Tlltl, Country Club ...,.• • 2 lA IPirtmente In Mlddlepol'l,
Clnl Ptr llfiDt. All Conventionll To a;, Wfth P.,..,.,_ In· lhlp. lrlakllndlng 1-..38- MWiy ~led , lOW utlllllll,
FIMt. BMtUhe Commun~lont. CtM. . AI 3 &amp; I Month.. Homl 3001.
no polo, 1220 por month.
W.dlcauur.
lntUrlnot. Evory 10.14 Doyo. Muot 1o 2S Rl. 1tO -h. 3 IR , llkt ,_ dopod roqulnd. 114.ft2·2311
Uyovtr/BrMkdown Pay. .,..8" W/2 Y11r&gt; OTR Exp HW111 En· oonctlllon, 131,000. Coil lor ,,. daya
ned TI'ICiorw. It You Have 1 Y11r dOf'Hmtnl . Otcktr ·rr.ntpOrt, t• Ddl••wtd IM41M111 or 3112bdnn. lpU., IOial tlectrlc, apOTR Ex~· Cloon IIVR l 100-t34-1150, All&lt; F« Dlpl. &amp;.e. l11t
Fl~ 110 Mllh,l14 1121111.
plflncet fum51hN, llundi'y 53
A I
lllnli!r 23. Coil Vonguml
nt que•
MINI
Strvlc1 Todly! 1- Worud: Llno cool&lt;, IMiudtd homl I 1crw, 2 miiM """" ...1111111, ....... ochocil
Filii Tonk, 2C13 Alot.
100·3 . 21)14.
lhlll. Elporlonct ....... ,..[ out 8ond HfU Rd !rOM Pl. Pit, 1ft 1-. Appllcallont IVIIIIblt ,:.:.--,;;:,.;:::,:....,.-,,-It: Yllllal ·orwn Alltt. 148 or Bur or till. AIYtrlnt Anllqun, full llot T,..,..... IIIII - .
Qualllttd 1ppllcinl1 mer Hnd
Drfv"": c .... For Tho llonoy, ,.,ume lo: Boa CLA ~ clo :104-ll'S.e212.
~1114.fl2·3111. EOH.
1124 E. lloln Slrotl, P«n~roy. tmalltnllnllt1nd •·,pdta.
Ho11,.: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to.I:OO
ICoy For Thl liability. J.B. Hunt1 Clallloolo Ollly T~b&lt;lno, 12S Two ltory Whlto Ftamo, 3 lr. All
0n1 01 A.,.rlcl'o Llrglll Ano Third Avonuo, Clllllpallo, OH -~~-. Mulborr; StrOll, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT p.m2 _!-n&lt;llr 1'00 lo 1:00 p.m. ~
Jack ,Trlbtrmlaldl :
IUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON 114·- ·321.
Molt SIICIIUiful T11111~llon 4Hlt.
Chllhlrl, ·~·72S1.
By
Cofnpen• Payt nt Driwtrt
EITATE!,.. $31 Jocklon Plko
U.l . CoM« ,.,.
" - .,,.,.., Wllk to lhop 6 54 Miscellaneous
SOmo 01 Thl 8tlt 8ll1ri11 In Wanllld: llolnlonanco Enf'-· 32 Mobile Homes
o t ...............
·
Tho Bu-o. Cell ,-.2.Ja. lluol bo lloltlld In hlollntl. olr
I- l
Tq:eatiiRI
In ~ &amp;Celt.
· CIIII-.ZSII. EOH.
Merchandise
HUNT Today. EO£/SubJo&lt;l To oonctMionlng,
-rlcll.
Avllilllll
~T.C:
AI
,.,..
6
Fold
tor sale
- h St. -lopofl. OH. 2 IR
P!ugSC,..n.
fum~ ar.l'lment. UliiMin 1011. 11111111 dl•\:=".........
Oporotlontln ··~· hlfPul.
...... IZllll On 1.821 -...........
Add'-'
11 I rtt.r~nce. 304- Mllh, completa
Eaoy World bcolltnl Pay! Q. Par comrnentu • wllh ••·
up, Dntkl . . . .......... •
paid.
ml~
Nowtr
Totol 11241M.
Hmldt Productt AI Home. Clll poito- Ropty: lo1 CLA 28, Pikl,
controto1 call IM.If24117 lor ' -Y!'! k!tco\ lor .....
Efootrlc,
$11,500,
Htootlonril&gt;ll,
.Toll F,.., 1-IOII-4fl..!llfl; Eot. cio Ollllpallo Oal~ T~b&lt;lno IZS 114 141 301Ufllr lp.ro.
lnform1tton.
. , _, OIC). -1111, I~
313.
Cloon
a a d
Third Avo., llllllpollo, OH 4ittat.
,._
• air
no cond,
polo, 1::=:-;=-:--~=:-:
121,000 11U tum-1 _~ 3 111110tl-·llll0.
Frltndly Honll Ponllo Hn WANTED: Oplotnllrla Alllollnl: 141170 111111111 - . lA :104..7HIA.
rnontht, will 1111 lor - · ooM lllnl Plno""' Rid IIIII, IM-31'Opl!llnat F« Demontlrtlart. Driof tlp.rilrt;t pnlefnd. ....
IM-812-!hll
0111.
r:::.-.~:r~·
Ootuxo 1bt. a Cor Gorollf, CA, 1
No CHI' lnv.IIMF!t. No Service hovo """o offici lklllo. 8ond
Chl'l"· Hlfh Comm- And NIUIM to: lox CLA 221, olo 11'73
II, 12rllt.J: beef. "r" Avo, Ollfllpotlo, 12U/IIo., 1171 Toyoto IR.. Coupo, 2 - ·
HoltMI AWirctl. TWo Cat;l:c, Clall- Dolly ~-. I2S lilt ....... ~..... 31)0. - . I fllllroncn. IM·ZSI· 4 cyt, good aao " ' - · Don
11:11.
w..... .,.
lo4.e71ov~r eoo tttm~, cau 1-eo
Third Avon.., 01111,.,.., OH 11:14101.
"14.
..
4171.
4Yl1.
Fumllhld At&gt;f . lbt" 12:11/Mo.
ThorOI!f~tiNd Aullrlllon Clftll
UIINIIoo Pofd, lOr Blcond 1912 Cull... lupraOM. 0!111 dogl,l-old,H4-711-.
JOIUVAILAILE
. Wa,.od : Poroon To Rldll Trlln
Avenue, GtDipollt. 114-441-4418 top ttblt wlfour chain, 304-171!SallriH IIOGI illlwlln 1$1). Oua~or Hotolo, Port·Thlll a
Afltr 7p.M,
27M 1ft1r -4:00PM.
Two Pel A ltoo ,. "lit, t wb
$311 -kiYI ~1111 « Pori·Tima. Show On WMUndl,lluM Hlvt
~Nolo tht high coot of llctc.y EIPI-· 114-2f1-1122.
'umllhlld ••: Ill lllllllllo -1"., 21 lneh llur11r U HotM Ulld old. ._,.,., 0 ~ LMn
lhlro 1111T. 11251-. ~,., Lnl Thin 2 Nouto. IN. IM- .....,
• .101-h.
tpiCI,
I'*"'""· wMtf'l
oornPf'lllljon. ond otht&lt; com- 12
SHuatton
....... IM-o44f.:IMI. I :'"':.::.:41=.22.=-:-.,..-,:---c:--:::- 57
Mualcal
f'!"J..
. 11pentt1, lt'lny cornan NVII thoultndl of
,umlthld
•Hicltnc~y
1pt., tO gtl Halt tank cornjMIIt with
Wanted
lnatrumtnte
"' ............ u... with
-111 hill l llr cond.• quill I :"- ':rid-' ::1114
:--1?_1-41
,_11
-,.-,- 1-bllne
8obyollllng 1ft "Y h«no ..,.
ond ,.twill,
dop., 311211' _. ...... Wit" ..... ... MwpRn., 1 ............ 1
• .. - l o r · -· llllld. rolli-,1-...10.
..... 104lfll.lll!ll.
.
Mille w IXperitnct nol
,urnllhlrl: i. J, 4 ROOOM, loth, gal klf.-.111Bullneu
LIU. ,..,., t.iolld
-ond .....DowMIIIrl, Up, a.n._No Pel:a,
Mil 1,. -lftllrwctlooo
to you, 14
·
Trllnlilg
11'1.
'\':' ~ou oompH• work, 11n11
"''""""' Dlpoelt "tqulrM. ..,,~ Tollll, a ~ ~c:.'C'-::.t""
1-111~
•
lor
- .....Tllo
m«&lt;
_,..
.......tr.o
,... ....
!:!~ d~~!l!'-p11
~ltll. _,
IJill _ _ _ • . . , _
0 - lvlfte. 1 """ 2 - 1=-~~-~~~;f-i;;i
' ~-;;a
rooM'· lflllt"""* ll ¥1"-te ~~- eucl1 ad ~ I
ine!',~-•mtwin Mdl wllh ......._-"',.....
11M lttUttJ. t I ~ OOfll, front
11
~..t..H
"' 1'!17. EO
•-· - kllltwi~ wit- .4
kilo~ !. bllh, IIIION!y nllrco,
Colli-·
· EOH.
ohllro, 11- ~ w-.
:104..,..,...
varloly. bolh
al d
l -Mil-~.
· '""
IIUIII
mtn
~
a.,
comdryor,lf14.MM422.
.
1117 14xl0 lblno llltt, Waohlr
oloN, rou- IOU
D:vot~,.~. Witt ..... ,.,.. =~ ~~~ AC,
wllor tonfl, 1210. 114'
I fJ1f_ . .k tl M-lliiilliiiolifijl
241
11i-lh-tul.
•
.
· 111 Farm Equipment ·
..,.,. ....... lloilll -141., Ant'-- 1111 111""""" 4 ........... Mill I
llltng
1117 " ' - 141?11, 2 CO; . . ., . . . . .
,....
' "·
...-. 1 1-~ Din ...... I •
4»f IMIIO OOft¥4!»tlw ~tr'
_
.. ""
In 4myy- - old,
· """'
....... - · - front N•,
ohlfllto
IIi S,
IM- """"''hill
purnp,IOW11411t.
CoMoMtnlunwt
Indoor
...
..,..
Wltl
a.
..
:t1t
141 1111 _1.111
CCII ,.,.II, O.nv'- ltofllll. ,...,..,"'"
"'""" lllllrll.....
- ·
~
1MT Wlnd;IOI 14X70 ltaUII', P-,
1on zo· 11u11y """"
ooniiNktf., •
atr WOI$1 I ,.;. Nolllft
.,.,.., 1 112 l!ofll, IN po. • - Cloal AmuMIMIItl, 1.aoo.Ut- IHI"k.!z...II
..
wtth
...
~~·~.'Y
_
..
..
1111111-D4.._.
114;11i1•2U~
.=.::=~en.
Cllovy
lor ........ ..., - l o r
llllnf. Ollro ..., not lllltttlld
ft2.500.
CoM
dri
H. Third llildllp I~. Ohio, 1 Chlldl """"' Ill, 4 yro old. lltulltl
.. 114-lt2-tlll, 114-t4f.23.. ....,,_
lurniii!Od opt, dip l moklon o110r, ·304-11WISS 1~
11,.,.-,1ret, IOf.taaM.
ttri:OOPM.
1111.
.-s-4 . ..
~tkM'a Elc.. lfgn Orl lonut

B I l My N

v... lip., ,

ElltoiH blkl, 130; nlct Klro75 Boatl &amp; MoiOII
8"" - . . . htltor, 110 ' ,,.. 63
Uvestock
111a-m1.
:;.......,;::.:,:;:;::.:;:..-,....
tor Sale
'REE IIIITALLATION
10 _ . ... old bnlod tor ii11ifiF1c.FiFiblr~rat;;_;;;~flll~·ik~~r:iti:;o:ill
1-NOPOOI..I
Hfl. or lrlldl lor BOod dairy With- T112 HP .....,, 9nlr
1711.110
. ~-.; Slllo, 114--Uftlr .,.
""·'"'
,.., •• Pool fnoludlol: !~"~'·~·11!!4~1~1!:11-4~3~111!:_
Fllltt" Dicit, Fanoo, ~. 10 rr old- Olllld ~'!t duo
BOATEAe
lie. uon1 lolllvl H? CIM IPI
lo flof 1ft Ail(l..l, toU,....fll. J.S. fllltlno 8orvloe - flit.
1--141-tfi2S
3yr. lid R..... 114 Ar1blln cury lllfll""' In BlociL Parll a
- ; t3yt. old Rltllll- 112 AccHtorllo In Stock, Flcltwr
0onN11 NutrHion Pn&gt;dilcll ltoblflit ftllro,I14:"J-1111.
T11inlld lorvlci.IM&gt;alfWIIO.
IM!uring Amino Alld Fir l 11 ~ Control For All Flborvlllo INt• boot ond tr~lt.,
8ulldlnelor:."J! 11o1 ttnc1 Ill Bill l Dairy a !:loB. Dlmtl . tGOHP lllroury motor, trotllntl
= l l y II Alii
HI""' l o t - Tlriillll Pool rollor, IWIVII ~ MWI
TlloHfl-todlll.
Conlrot.l-2101.
...... -.114-e
.

~

Mk:row~vt,

Mobile

·

131-IW.
'""·""' ..... - · · - frlldlloro--aiNIII
1or ..... " " " ' - I~·=O.::I._::,.:.,..~:-:-=-=-:-= ntw,~
lnoiWIId, - . ,IM--1.
t•--ntu• •·•- •~~.-.- ~.
NewNud
Slan:rol P'l:,::ll. - ·
ldr
Comjillll~-.,
....
Bpollot, - · 1171
HouHhokt fumlshlng. 112 mi.
•• .... •
loft, ....
143-1250.
Jtrricho Ad, pt, Pt ....nt, WV,
•
·~ • 12.7:101
soo.,.. 114-442422 ..,..,
T-.11,2011.~
7:00p.
CIII:I04-115·14SO.
WATEAIJNIIALE
·
CruiiiAir, 21 \ ' ;...- · - "
.au..n alza toll llllper, 504- 114 !noli !100 Pit- I - 200 - l1lldfo Mil, 2dt, 4 Cr!lft• oond, 1u11r ::;: Lmuil 1111,
PSI 133.50 Ron lw.,. En- dlt, AutOMitlc, AlrN PS'p,PI,
171-3271.

2

- 1.

whHit,

-llut - ·

Merchandtse

Air Condltiantf'l, R•gtJ;•tott,
Orytt I Wt"!_o}1
T.V.,
lllcrowavo,IM-i111·1238.
0000 USED APPLIANCES

-It

Real Estate

·

rL--'--.JI,__.LI~-...!1--'
I

Rllall
Or Off
let11ilo448
B!&gt;IM Avoltoblo.
_1EiilfOO.
CiiiC5i'i37-3iiWfiMiii.iiidiilkc;;;a 11'1 •r
HUIIIoo.
i;-;ijiiii.
Llltylttl
Mall.
4222.
EIICIUII
fAITTfiAUl'
doot/0111-,- l Ulld. Uft 21 4
11U Robll &amp;1 lint
47 Wanted to Rent
Cllalro. _ . . ttomoco11
HP wo NtH: 110 HP 4 wo Condlton ~ 11111o, Alklng
IM-411-l'.iA.'i-.tll 1144.
ll,l.., R~,llorloll1. !11~,211~1~Mtl~l!l~-!!:!:..:::....:.:..:

51

2 IR 1111111 In country. 1200
month. 1200 dopooM. 2 mliH
, _ Point PI11Hn1. :104-IS'/o
2010.
2 BR trollot In Hondlroon. Will
ront with HUll. :104·713-5241
onytlmo.
2bdnn., central hut I air,
rwngt, rtfrig«&lt;tor, wathlrl
*Yir hook-Up, ntW carpet,
6 11wago provldld, lg.
Dtlvoll ''" In country, 1250/mo.
Raferanct 1 clepoeh required.
114 UWZII.

·-Nutrt-Cool&lt;loo
Dlllribld«
Fof
And- 200 Add!-

TrtntpOI'IMton,
407412-4li17.
Ell. m. .. .....,o,.ro. ToA
Rtturuhd
AVON I AN Aroll I Shl~oy
lf&gt;Nro, :104-111-1421.
IIANNERY WORKEAe /ALASKA

Ent=....

:Otci-.. ...,., ~ ~

Fortn-loo.

·

1
·
-n:
II
J0
30i0
Trlotor
-~~~~
Ill1114
lint Bllo,
Country Mobllo H«n~ Parle. Rt..l---;_;....;...;.;_..;..;._ _ ollfno Aakll lollr,.,,7111; 100 IOU?S4311 . ZIOR
.
:l:llt, undlr now m"""G'"""'· Cooonlll a Ptoollo 8ottllc Fofd With Orlldor 11101 a
Lolo, 115; homo ,.ntoll, 1231: Tankl, .lot Alrollon Tlnkl. Ron IIIIo " · - It' ·'" ••'-'
tiM VT·11111C ,.,_,
IM-112·2117
Evono
Jocbon. 0H
' ...- . •·~D.
11110 mil•~ coridNioo,

KIRIUQI. Clun I quiet F... whitt, .200. Calll~l.
ter'• llfoiN.. Home part. ,,..,._. New Oak Fumltur1: China.
1102.
Clblnelt, wllhltlndl, tabtl &amp; ;;;: -

Itt T~ll. P1ytMnt Plan AvaU.
.Jbt-. 1~31; Colulllttu._

·

WE WERE SUPPOSED
TO PLAY BALL TODAY,
SUT IT LOOKS LIKE
IT MA'&lt; RAIN ..

---~~
~tt,IGII:-,... oond, t!M-

81 Fann Equipment
..

tor ..... round 120.
dryor. 12501111. 01""' """"" Lumbor: - r . wild chlny, Hoy
...._..... trlitt. ...... lit. 011611.- , _ 12. up. t!MN6ol 2 bedroom mobl .. homt, &amp; dryert 1125 I up. C.n • .........., .,.
411
1031.
1~.
A_,.,. Lant, Chnhlrt, Ohio on 284(.
1
2
nlct '"· !104·'773..!S I Ilk lor
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
:-loll'7r·,-.--~::---::--:-· l Complolo homo lumllhlllfll.
~.,
f::~.:l.71,
1
2 Mdroom tralltr, Rtclnl, Hour~: Mon-Sat, U. l'f4.4.tl.
~
iftlr1:01
PM. «
Q251tno. pt.... 1111~&gt; - · ana, 3 mil• out lutavllt Rd. M*1 t~tddlng pn, MIIMMI.
1nd ,...,.. .,.., 114.....,·7503.
FrM Dlllnry.
llu 1110, worn - . IMTrJnsportJitOil
UI 1021
2 IR unlurnlohtd. Clblt" olr. IIIVfal portabll dlo-htr; 4 Nlntlfldoc.:
101
_
_
_
,
___
_;,....__.._..._
Overtooklng
Ohio
Hlver, yttl"l okl, e~eelltnt condition,

flmt with Poll . You'll love U'll

AUIITRALIA WANTS YOU
EICIIIonl
Por. ..

00~~-~
54 Mltpllaneoul
46 Space tor Rent
.... hindi
11651 111100
'
wv.

5 00
' p.m.

111-?U-

11111 Ollovy Altro Va~ollllnl
CondHion 11,000
IM111"111 Aftor lp.lll.
till a - I XLT: AII/AI, llr,
.... &lt;10,1100 ....

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Paid, In City. 11,.-4Q.3171 After HlirvHI Gold mini Wither I

prdlrll P - CIM You. No Ex·

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141011, 114-MI 211'7• .

114-+II'MBG.

f.:"h."'r.'~:".!~':i,l2~ ~~·..:.~~

Help Wanted

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newFofd
tnglnt,
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1ft, .,

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lml111 bedroom, S room fioute
w - r . M10 Lowlo St. Pt. Pit.
lf4.441.1NO dlr 1:30PM.

SlEEWA

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Roome lor renl • WHk or monlh.
St1rtlng •• f1201mo. 0.1111 Hotel.

Houses tor Rent

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2 - - ..... _
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P«n~roy,
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THU., JULY 9
MNINCI

Rooms

Aloo trallor,_,.
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An hook-upo.
Slllfllng
cooldng.

35

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ooiltl!i'. ll100. 010, ...

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tl. .,. Conetoe, btltM, Mtny
On tllo OUtl Fr«n 1380 Wnk.
Slnlbot Roa"itv 1-800 1 8onlbll.
(1-100-67:1 ..4211.

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1117 Ford F150 XL plot!... lid
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Thursday, Jul 9, 1992

Apartment

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Tilt time could be rlpoln tilt yur ahead .
to _,., an Important • ....,.. you've .
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not be ~oly opfl(!lum. but you'l ,
know- to,..,. .tilt tia1t Ollhtnga. .
CAIICIII (,_11......,21) II you truly,
Ulltt ptldt In - t you're atttmpllng to
· lfOOOtiiPIIIIl. tlika wltl be 1111 lrduoua .
tocllty. But H you."re lndllfertnl tQWIIr!l
your wortc. rMUIII will rlllect II. Get • :
, jUmp on 11111 by undlrotlndlng ttll lnfluio.
gOv.rning you In tilt )'Nt .,..d.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Mayltt a poraon gota to till point Iitty'·~
enough · Let .................... - Bob Oylari •• -~

....

• tttt.., NEA.IrMI.

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.....
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Page-1~The Dally Sentinel

'

Japanese develop portable telephone manner~

Reader discusses sleep arrangements
Dtlr AM Laadm: This is ill
response 10 "Ceiling Zero," the
PennsyiYIIIia wbo did IIOl
wart ID sleep in the same bed wilh
·ber husband, so sbe 1110W1C1 into tbe
gUest room. (He bad IOid her lhat if
she was in his bed, sbe should Jmow
' whaiiDCXJlCCL")
My husband and I have no
problem with sexual iooompalibU·
ity but we do have a mutually
satisfactory sleeping llll'lllgement
which "Pennsylvania" might
consider.
For lbe fust few years or our
marriage. I slepl wilhoul covers on
17 inches or a 54-incb double bed.
My husband was a restless sleeper
and sprawled horizontally across lbe
bed and hogged the blankeiS.
.My solution was to rcdccoralc. I
bought two twin beds. They each
have their own co~ arc made up
SCJllll*ly and then JliLftd together.
Wilh one bedspmld, it looks like a
king-size bec!Now, after alm~t 50 years of
maniage, we bOO! like our sleeping
arrangement and nobody feels
exploilCd. Pennsylvania and her
husband seem ID be thoroughly
confused about sex, sleep, night
and bed .. things which arc not
necessarily related.
. A sexual acl can cake place on 1be
kiiChen Door, or under lbe dining
room table, as well as in a ll\lmber
or other loc•tions in the house. It
can occur dllring lhc day or nigh~
Sleep, however, generally occurs in
bed and usually 8l nighL
Your advice 10 seek counseling
is right on Latgct. Sign me ..
SLEEPING BEAUTIFULLY IN

Thursday, July 9, 1992

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Imperial Ho1el, diners arc firmly
priCiice OUiisla (sdf·J!WifieMier).
askpd to leave their tables 10 conand lbe ochers pal:ellli!C liars"?
duct urgent phone business.
Of course, wllal dill womaa
The requests might seem calcu·
who
10 :rou rally waall is a
lated 10 irk portable phoncrs, who
man's hUgs llld caaa - a •ioe
can pay from S700 to SJ,500 up
inlimll:y.
This
s11e
by
front and SIOO a month for t·hc
ANN LANDIIIS
herself
but
lk
caa
IIIII
sllould
privilege
of ~ing able 10 wlk on
ners.
"!Jn.IMA!IIM
, _ , . . rt . .
"Usc of ponable telephones at th~ phone wherever and whenever
take lbe cdacolfhcr-- we*
c-s,........
when lbere is., .... illla'life, or your scat may be a disturbance 10 they·want.
But in a country where people
lbe man is Ullllble or IIIIWilliD&amp; 10 Other passengers, so please usc the
vestibule even if il is inconveaa:ommodale her.
DEAR SLEEPING BEAUTY: If
You are sure 10 set a lot or . nient," runs the message that
all lbe women who wrote to semi-litente flat from various grcciS riders aboard Japan's super·
complain aboul !heir marital seiC-righiiiOIIS mli&amp;ims 111111.. I jusl effiCient, super-fast bullet trains.
sleeping llll'lllgements were laid Wlllll to give 10111e •I""'C 10 lbe
At rcslawaniS in Tokyo's plush
end 10 end, lbey would be much ranting llld ravia&amp; and say, Udy,
tn01e comfortable.
you're a champ. - C.N.
Gaul honored during
Twin beds pusltcd rogelhcr, as you
DEAR C.N.: Ywwaeriplallaul
dcsaibed, is lbe ideal solution for lbeonslaughtliollldmenodida~ Eastern Star meeting
CCilples who want to be close. but
like my advice, bul a s.prisiJII
Roger Gaul was honored recent·
nol all night tvtry nighL
number or readers rushed 10 my
Dear An• Landtrs: Most or yOII' defense. Thanks ror ""'- _ , ll_ at the Eastern Star meeting of
-'6
Chapter 186 at Shade River Lodge
advice is sensible and even-handed.
lbem.
in Chesler wilh Kathryn Windon as
Sometimes il's a pearl. The advice
Gem
of
lbe
Day
(Ciedit
Jules
worthy matron protem . Gaul
you gave "Zero Self·Esleem" was a
Feiffer):
I'«
DDe ~. J'CIIillg
recently received his ninth degree
c1iarnorK1. You may be sick of the
out
or
bed
in
lbe
.........
isM IICl
in
the York Cross or Honor.
subjea by this lime, bull hope you
offalse confidence.
Dorothy Woodard presented
will permit me 10 have my say.
Pla1111i~g a weddi111? Wfllu's
him with a gift and Sylvia Midkiff
Everyone should be able to
riglu? Wlw's wr011g? "Titt Allll presented him a gift from worthy
masiWbale wilhoul feeling guaty. Landers Gllide for Brides" will matron Eli&gt;.&lt;Jbelh Robens.
Maybe sane day it will be OK 10 rt~ yow 11/UkiJ. Sud 11 x/f·
Past matrons and patrons were
admit it. I'm a 38-ycar-old man addrtsstd, lo11g, basiuss·si•t presented and the sunshine collet·
with a wonderful wife and 1wo tn~lope and 11 clttd or _ , Lion was lakcn by Jean Fredrick.
grcal kids from a 10-year marriage. order for $3.65 (1/W i11c/IUJes
A gel well card was signed for
I caD honestly say we have a good poslllge and lllwlli"') 111: BriMs, worthy maltOn Eli•.abeth Robcns.
sex life. rve laugh! my wife a lot c/o Alllll.aN/ers, P.O. Box 11562,
Punch, cake and sandwiches
which has made it bcUcr for both or
CAicago, 1//. 6061J.(J562. (111 :~n~~a~ ~;~Je!'ir'ard,
us.
Rollett A Heinlein said it best in Canadtl, Wid $4r·:.;;45;;·J,-··-·-~~~'!!"'~·-··-··-"''
a book tided, 'Time Enough for
Love": "Maslwtialion is ~lean. safe
and economical- il's jusuo loM/y."
And waso'l it Mark Twain who
said, "Ninety-five perccnl of men

Ann
Landers

""*

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TOKYO (AP) - Ahout I mil·
lion por1ablc phones arc on Japan's
streets, and it sometimes seems
there's no escaping them. So th~
Japanese. masters or etiqueue as
well as ICchnology, are now com·
ing up with portable-phone man-

home runs;Danicl Babic, 9-10
years old, SIX home runs; Tyson
Evans, 11·12 yc:us old, three home
runs; an'd Brian Bowen, 13-14
years ?ld, one home run.
. Pnzes were awarded to each
wmncr. Pmes were d~natcd by
Royal Oak Resort~ H1ll s Classic
Cars, Pleasant Y1cw Farm and
Dou~ and Tonia Hunter. Olhcrs
conlrlbutmg were M1ck and Cmdy
Winebrenner, Joe and Brenda
Johnson and the judges.

1986 CHEVY S..10
Stock t 22901. o4 cyl., o4 speed • t
stand. trans., AMIFM stereo
tape.

YOU PAY ONLY

YOU PAY ONLY

ss

IURIIITURE

PageS

•

.

.

....

Clllll G

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Sion from~Pdtic=cllb.!
~ISSJOtl~·
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address~~dol:~

dm~cr mrlllilJlg Qweril " .

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1990 DODGED-50
Slocll ' 23261. 4ql, 5 !ipllll Mid.
lln.,Aiml•-•·~~~~*·'12
ton. shall whlllllllt. shoilllidobod,

.........

.

ByCHARLENEHOEAUCH
S..!Brll\fts Sblf
A St:aJemMI COB!aiamf:
of IIIOre lluia ·~

R•'

-·-----·...
M,6ql.llir, d.,PS,P8,-11in-

....... Mifll- ........ win.dolog.

YOU PAY ONLY

sa,995

sipa1

n:sidcnts prGtcstill.: the water ud
sewage r.llCS · the ~ •ill be
prcscnied 10 Rutlm! V'Jilit!le c-eil Monday ni;ghl..
Gladys lbrlcr wllo cilnbl&lt;d
one ~of llhc '"''r:znrws Slitl tlallhl:bills arc hlg,h!Y limo- .,..;,na,.
cxpcaod or QD alTon! II&gt; P"J.
For llhosc IISliii&amp; 2,111! plllnmllf
watcr ·or less, lbe llill b ....- is
$17 andror~SZUD..r+io@;
a 101al of S3&amp;JO..
Bar'ku said 11oM Qile tlliCS

Stoclll23115t ,• """-. '"'"'-

95

By WOllAM IIIl. WEI.OI

SOUD 011 CONTEMPOURY CURIO, HUICI, Ill DICI TOP TAILE

2999'5

nlllll&amp; IICIIT $

STRIKING BACK AT HIGH lllnRESS PRICES
SIYE ON SPRING Ill · RESTONIC • SOFT SIDER WITERBEDS

5

I

,.,._

Wrilllr

The day-ftd D • • 1.UC lidn

STRIKING BACK
011
FINISH
PIULIUIYON

BEDROOM SUITE
STilliNG IICI
IT

$.118888

'\~

12!?

- · ZN6t,4dooll......, hot-

Slock I 23-471, o4 daors, Milan,

CHERY
5 PIECE

· pDIIIriadls,
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AllofM , _
11di811.
-·
win. dalog.

front wheel dri¥9, 6 cyl., air.
auiO., PS, PB, powef wi!dows,
tik wheel, AMfFU ller80 llpe.

BEDROOM SUITE
51111111 UCIIT
.

MONTHS
$1999''
. FREE
FINANCI G

PEDESTAL IDLE 011 TOP

•It• ...,4 0.. I ..ite U•ln

YOU PAY ONLY

STIIIIIG llCIIT t688"

All Furniture At Strlklil lick-Prices.
Dinet1es, Sofas, Rediners;Swivel Roders, lamps, Mirors, Tables, DeW, OIISis

fUISRIL • llelllt • IWSITT •
(WSICS • SPIIHIII • son a111
IIICH IIOOI•IIICIII

FIIDAYS I A.M. IlL I P.M.
SAIUIDAYS I Ul. IlL 5 P.ll.
IIOIIAY tin IIUISDAY I A.M. TIL 5 P.M.
RIIIIIIIACI Will
FME DILIYID AID SET UP
FilE
• 90 DAYS 016 MOITHS

'

YOU PAY OIILY

$7 495

sa,995

1989 FORD ESCORT

1991 FORD TEMPO

Slocll '23171.. daaJs. .... frllft
w111111 diM. 4 cyl, lir.uo., PS. PB.
AMift.t .... llpl, radals, bucMI

Sloctl '22641, 4 daals.lldr,.fat
whlll ~. 4 qi.,lir, Uo.. PS. P8,

- · rNI win. dllog.

YOU PAY ONLY

~

wi1d!Ma, .,._.lados,MIR

--•·~~~~*·
YOU PAY ONLY

S4,995

sa,995

1985 DODGE DUSTER

1991 FORD ESCORT
STATION WAGON

niiiiH IICIIT t 58811

011 FIIISH COMPUTEIIOU TOP DE.

1991 CHEVY CORSICA

SOLID

elM, 6 cyl., til....... PS, P8,- win·

SIDCk' m72. 2dDcn, .... frllft
...... drM, 4Lllo.lir. 5.p.dlllnd.
1m., PS, PB. Alltfll "-llpl,
.... .buc:MI ....

YOU PAY ONLY

SJ, 195

Club between Jackand
Wellston.
500
·rm happy to report that, lhc
Jlaostl h&lt;:ard, !think we've made
~mgNSS and llhink an announce·
""'nu wotl be made tomorrow or
Morulay aboul keeping the mines
opelll ~ b:e said 10 a unanimou s
roundcl applause. ''That's whm we
wanl.l&lt;&gt; keep those 1,000 jobs
g}l&gt;!IISC0untry

there."
.
...
.
The Publoc Uloiillcs CommiS·
sian of Oh10 wra~ped up ihc las! of
ihn:c sets of hcarmgs on Amcncan
Elcwic Power Corp.'s compliance
plan for clean a11 swndards Thurs·
day m Canton. The plan, which
includes the mslallauon of coal·
scrubbing technology m ihe Gen.
James M. Gavin power plant in
Cheshire, fell into jeopardy two

weeks ago when an auomcy exammer laid ihc PUCO th~tthe Soulh·
em Ohio Coal Co. mmmg complex
In Me1g s and Y1n1on counucs
should be excluded from the ~lan.
Southern OhiO Coal provides
Gavin wiih the high-sulfurcoallhe
plant uscsfor fuel.
.
.
Followmg h1s speech , R1ffe sa1d
at an impromptu press conference
thai his office had been closely

w~~hing l~c hearings.

There s been a lol of work
done tillS week by vano us orgamzauons workmg wnh AEP 10 come
up w ~~h an agreement ~~y c~n li ve
wnh. 1he speaker sa1d. We vc got
10 keep th ose mine open, thai's
what I vc been s ay•ng all along .
Lei me tell you, 11looks a lot beucr
today than il did a week ago."
Although he offered no funher

information, Riffe used his predicuon as pom1 to und er! me an
address lhal hailed the cooperauvc
process between commun1Ucs and
individuals 10 reac h a com mon
goal. He also wed the wodcly·
reponed dispute betwcenhimsclf
and Gov. George VomoviCh over
!axes and budget cuts as anothe r
example.
(ContinuedonPage3)

Sloc:k' 22171, .. doOII. fnlnl ......
drM,4crl,llir.-.• PS.PB.~
•1llhiii,ANIFM--- ....

•. bucllll-.
-·
YOUPAfONLY

dllog.

$

995

ralc of $16.12 a month for sewer.
However, once all of the grinders
were connected 10 the lines leading
10 the sewage treatment plant in
June, the rate increased to S21.50
for 2.000 gallons of water used
wilh S4.50 for every thousand gal·
Ions of waler used thereafter.
lll£m.
That amount is in addition to the
Barlcrr said lhat res idents arc monthl y minimum charge of $17
lwp:rul allat by laking lhe mauer 10 for 2,000 gallons of water with
«&lt;WW4:il Monday nigh! something S4.50 for each additionall,OOO gallons.
tan be dane to reduce the charges
for tile water 0r sewage or bothAccording to Sandy Smith, vil~.,.}ll'tingW• bring the bill down." · lage clerk, the sewage rates will
From January 10 June while lhe bring in approximmely $8,200 a
SCW~tt cenncctions were being commonth in revenue. or !hal $4,200
plktl&lt;d,. a! residents paid a slandard
(Conlinued on Page 3)

residt:nts usc the minimum , most
are way o.vcr that. Sewer ra!Cs arc
liol!ro ~" wa1cr usage.
S.:..o•JII tCSidCnlS, she SOlid , !Old
!ocr ufun uflctr June bills for water
and sewer were over $100, and one
.,.;o~ il was S I 59. One (l(luple
ICJlllrtod,a bill of S82 for ihc two of

Democrats seek youthful appeal
LITil,E ROCK., Alt. - Bill
Climon 6 'XI' Me c. A11C11 Goo:
lO SlrCitphcoilhi: I ) . . . .. pcralional appeal ...trilc oiTo:riJic a
sharp, QWQ llJ JL l""'i M
Dan Quayle.
4
' Ptudeot"" w.as die 1dJ
pollslC&lt;' SW!ky. Gn:c•bcr&amp;
described the scl&amp;tioa or Gore.
like Gimon a )QIIIIfol ~.
as his vice prcsii!IMW r:IIoia'
' 'There was ., auldd lOr AI
Gore - poopk i••cdiau:ly
assumed lhaAIGon:-w•••
who could •be........,.,.. of doc Ulliiled StalCS.'' Gux:wba
. t Sliil.

1990 PON. BONNEVILLE

by 11t~ 0 ,gan&lt;zation at th e Fair·

Rutland residents protest
water a~d sewage rates

n-.

WITH

storms. Low around 70.

Riffe predicts PUCO w-ill back Meigs Mines

A. •

I 6 PISTIL CHillS

Mostly cloudy tonighL A
chance or showers .and thunder-

2 S&amp;ction, 14 Pages 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Friday, July 1o, 1992

R'~~o
~SF lia&lt;r~~
1

1990 DODGE DAKOTA ·.• • • . 1989 BUICK l.ESABRE

raciall, white ...... 112 .... allall
..... allall wido bod, 1811
llDp bumper, gliiiQif.

Pick 3:
1-9-6
Pick 4:
4-4-8-0

ValU,Iio.ft

S3,995
SIDdct2332t, • .,.., 5apooclllllnd.
nna., PS, PB,AMfliloWJniO 11!118.

beat
Pirates

eo.w,.,.....tta

Home Run Derby results posted
Home Run Derby Results for
the Fourth of July in Racine at Star
Mill Park have been announced.
Over 50 participants joined in the
successful event sponsored by the
Racine Youth League.
The winners were: girls, 9: 10
years old, Am her Maynard, five
home runs; 11 -12 years old, Jodie
Hupp, nine home runs; 13-14 years
old , Jennifer Cummins, seven
home runs. Boys winners were
Nalhan Manin. 7-8 years old, two

Ohjo Lottery

Reds

arc bombarded from infancy willt
lessons about noL annoying Olhers.
the new .ctiqucuc Slalldanl seems to
have caught on quickly:
"At the beginning I think
maybe there were customers who
wanted to show, 'Hey, I've gOl a
cordless phone,"' said Yoshio
Owaki, a manager at the Imperial
Hotel. "But now CI!Stomers have
come to undcriiland manners.'' .

was ·cooduc:lillg ills lis joilll._
confercnoc loday ill J.iu}e Rocl:..
where Clia1011 u-.c:cd JUs
choice fmm llle ~s-.
sion on 'flllnlay.
Gore, a 1~ lli•••:atic
scnal&lt;!lr fftlliD T«nnCS&lt;&lt;&lt;'''.II
d 111
Oy hOOIC lata Mill ... r-ily wife 1'\ppcr and
of llacir l'cu'
children.
The sclca.ioo or &lt;itft ck:fd
many convc.olioo21 ~ of J1IISl

polilicallictcl5, offering no bal· campaign for warning labels on
-.:. in age oc geography and very rock-music albums that contain
._., in idli!ology. Gore, at 44, is a offensive lyrics.
year younger than Clinton, their
Gore and Clinton said Thursday
5l3ltS are ncighhoFS, and holh are they stood for strong families, a
moderate Democrats who have clean environment and a growing
dcrioo lit~ party's more liberal economy with benefits for all - a
likely preview of issues 10 arise in
The •election instead is an the three-way r~c c wilh Bush and
llllmlpl 10 bring balance in other Ross Perot.
W:IJS.
Gore is a Vietnam veteran,
Gore is well versed in foreig n while Clinton avoided service .
poliq. where Clinton as a five· Gore has a picture-book family of
- go.~moor has none.
four children, three girls and a boy.
Goce is lhc Scnalc's acknowlThough Gore's record as a camcd,;ed upen on the environment, paigner for the presiden cy four
llc ..-ul:osl area of Clinton' s years ago was mixed, ClinlOn
pkmatorial record in Arkansas stratcgisl5 believe he will provide a
illlll IJIIC w~erc Republican surro- st;ong second voice that will not
!!'i*S fc. President Bush and Vice shrink from auacking the Bush
Pnesidcnl Dan Quayle already record.
lilliiDd!•:d an auack. As the aulhor
At the same time, they c'pcct
or a &lt;wrenl. best-seller on the sub· Gore to offer a visible contrast to
jm. Goo: may inoculmc Clinton on Quayle, who after nearly four yeaN
tllol lronL
in office has low confidence ratings
And willr lire crucial intangible in the polls, is an easy large! of
or •31'1!£s. anolhcr certain Republi· derision by Democrats and is an
c. wgc1, Clinton strmcg ists arc unseuling figure to much of the
•clcoming Gore's squeaky-clean public.
n:coal aod Mrs. Gore's work on
Gore can be expected to try to
dlildren"s issues, panicularly her draw lhe conU11st himself by wking
on Quayle's record as head of lhe
Bush administration's Council on
Competitiveness that has tried 10
block many federal environmental
regulations in 1hc name of cuuing
red wpc.

l!llholfm,_

.

.

Polls shows Bush
barely ahead of
Clinton, Perot
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush is edging ahead of rivals
Ross Perot and Bill Clinton in two
national polls of likely voters.
An ABC News- Washington
Post poll showed Bush favored by
35 perccm, CliniOn, 30 percent and
Perot, 30 percent, wiih the remain·
dcr undecided.
A CNN-USA Today-Gallup poll
indicated a similar spread but with
Clinton narrowly in third place:
Bush, 35 percent; Perot, 30 percent; and Clinton, 28 percent. '
T~c surveys, both released
Thursday, had a margin of cn:or of
3 percentage poinLS.
Bush gained 6 perccn1agc poinlS
from an ABC-P.ost survey a week
ago, Perot held steady and Clinton
lost a lillie of the boost that had
him at the top of last week's poll.
Perot, who has not officially
announced his independent presidential candidacy, still appears to
be drawing .support about evenly
from Clinton and Bush . In the
ABC-Post survey, he had the sup·
pori of 26 percent of DcmocraiS
and 25 percent of Republicans, as
well as 38 percent of independents.

LEADERS MEET - House Speaker Vern
.Riffe, cenler, consulls wilh Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council Vice President Bernard Fultr,
left, and SEORC President Bob Evans prior to

Thursday's SEORC dinner meeling in Jackson ·
County. Rilre predicled good news on the fate of
the Meigs Mines during an address to the orga· ·
nization. (OVP photo).

Supporters ask PUCO to save
coal jobs; final hearing held
CANTON (AP) - Some 60
so uthcaSicrn Ohioans asked the
Public Utilities Commi ss ion of
Ohio 10 support a plan that cb uld
save more than 1,000 coal mining
JObs in Meigs County.
The hearing Thursday was the
last in a series by lhc Public Utili·
tics Commission of Ohio 10 hear
teslimon y on clean air compliance
at the Gavin power plant 1n
Cheshire. in Gallia County.
The planl is owned by Oh10
Power and supplied wilh high-su lfur coal by two Soulhern Ohio Coal
mines in Meigs County. Amer~can
Electric Power, based in Columbus,
is the parent of bOlh Ohio Power

and Soulhcrn Ohio Coal.
ruin lhe tax base.
AEP has submiucd a plan 10
More than 40 Meigs Countians
mccl federal swndards by installing traveled 10 Canton Thursday for the
scrubbers 10 reduc e sulfur dioxide tasl of lhe Public Uti lilies Commiscm iss ion s while burning Meigs sian of Ohio public h e&lt;~rings on the
coal allhe Gavin plant A switch lo Gavin scrubber issue.
low-su lfur coal would mean closPaula Thacker, exccuuvc dircc·
ing Meigs County mmes.
tor of the Meigs County Chamber
A spoke sma n for a group of of Commerce, said thai she was
large manufaclUrers said adopting . impressed with ihC IUrnoul of
the plan could mean large increases Southeastern Ohio businesses and
in electric ratcs for some of Ohio's other concerned couzcns because il
biggest industrial employers.
"shows th e miners thai they have
Members of the so utheastern lhc suppon of the local communiOhio group. including elected offi- ly."
cials and m1nc workers. testified
Jack Fowler, d!lcCIOr of the Galth ai a mine shutdown would crip· lia County Chamber of Commerce,
pic their region economically and
(Continued on Page 3)

Corn growers urge federal 0 K.
for ethanol; seek EPA approval
lly JOHN CHALFANT
As.o;ocialed Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Backers of
ethanol say progress in creating
markets for the corn·bascd fuel
could be reversed if it is not
approved as an additive by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency.
The Ohio Com Growers Association drew bipanisan polilieal sup·
pori at a Statehouse rally Thursday
10 pressure the federal agency 10
require elhanol-blendcd gasoline in
certain cilics thai fail 10 meet air
pollution guidelines.
U.S. Sen. John Gl¢nn, D-Ohio,
SOlid elhanol is a key to lhc nation 's
energy independence, and to
aehicvmg clean air swndards.
"Ethanol is good for the .environment, it's good for the eeonomy, it's good for our fanners, and
it's good for our country," Glenn
told aboutl75 people althc rally.
"So I don't undersland why lhe
Bush administration seems so
intent on pulling the rug out from
under us.'
Lt: Gov. Mike DeWinc, a
Republican who is opposing Glenn
in lhe November election, said the
rally reflected unity among farm
organizations and politicians.
" We understand the imponance
of com to Ohio's economy, and we
support, very much, ethanol,"
De Wiilc said.
Mike Wagner, executive director of lhe 1,250-niemhcr association, said more oil companies are
beginn ing to distribute ethanol-

blended gasolmc in Ohio.
"We have 25 percent of the fuel
in Ohio now is an ethanol-blended ·
fu el, so it 's in various places
al ready," Wagner said.
" The major indcpendcnl5 in ihc
state ... arc using it," he sa id .
"That's up 50 percent in the last
lhrec years."
AI iss ue is whether clhanol will
be included by the EPA in what is
known as lhc reformulated gasoline
program designed 10 reduce ozone
in the nation' s nine smoggieSI
cities staning in 1995.
Manha Casey, a U.S. EPA
spokeswoman in Washington, said
rules for arc not expected for at

least two months. She did not know
if ethanol would be included.
Ms. Casey said ethanol, as an
alcoho l based-addi tive , releases
hydrocarbons !hat arc a maJOr componcnl of smog.
House Agriculture Chairman
Dwight Wise. D-Frcmom, dcfcndcd clhanol as a c le&lt;~n- buming fuel
and a renewable energy rcsoorcc. .
" I know first hand that ethanol
is safe for au tomobi lcs. I have
burned ethanol-blended fuels in
three &lt;lifferent cars since 1982,
each with approximalcly 100,000
mile s on them, and have no
mcchamcal trouble at all," Wise
said.
;'\

--Local briefs-License bureau to close
, The License Bureau in Pomeroy will close on Wednesday, so
that employees may altend a U11ining seminar in Columbus.
According ro Deputy Registrar Sue Maison, the office will n:cognizc normal operating hours for the remainder or next week: ,
Monday, Thursday and Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Tuesday from 9 :
•
a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon .

Arson attempt reported
David Dailey. pastor of lhc Stivcrsvillc Word of Faith Church•.
on Thursday evening notir.ed the Meigs County Shcrirrs Dcpan.
mcnl !hat sometime since Monday night someone had attenlpled 1o '
· set ihc church on nrc.
:
According to a report from the deP.artmcnt, some type of·' l
nammable Ouid was splashed on a rear wmdow and 1gmled. Some
namc.1 dropped on the ground and igniied pass along lhc founda-.·
tion. Both names died out before the butldmg caught fire. The· 1
(Continued on PaJl" 3)
·

-{..

l

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