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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 26, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Astros
cut Reds
lead to 1

Drug victim sorry for problems he caused family

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob. Hoeflich

Dear Ann Landers: 1 am a 34·
year-old man who has spent the last
eight years incarcerated in the New
York correctional system.
I started drinking and doing drugs
as a teen-ager. For those young
people who read your column and
think this cannot happen to them.
let me assure them that it can. If
they continue drinking and using
drugs, sooner or later. it will catch
up with them .
My worst pain was being locked
up in prison when my parcniS needed
me. My mother was dying in the
hospiUll, and I was given a pass so I
could see her for Lhe last time. I was
shackled like an animal and brought
to her bedside for a final farewell.
Four years later, again shackled, I
was taken to see my father on his
deathbed. He died the next week,
and I was not permitted 10 auend
his funeral .
I can't describe the feelings I live
with dai ly. My wife has stood by
me, and I am grateful. I will be
released soon and will go directly to
the cemetery to visit my pareniS'
graves and ask them to forgive me.

The Mtssissippi Queen or the logg. daughter ol Bernard and
Delta Queen didn't pass by Mon- Betty Fultz, was the subject of a
day to get your attention but those recent feature story in the Small
two F· I 5's that flew over should Business News published in the
Columbus area.
have.
The full page story wi th a phoJ he pilot or one of th e two
planes was Capt. Mark Mums. He tograph of Dr. Kell ogg tells of
and another officer had flown the Beth's work operating her own vet·
planes to Dayton on Friday where erinarian clinic in Worthington for
they were a part of an air show held the past two years and takes the
on the weekend. Friday, due to rain reader through a very bu sy day for
and cloud s. visib ility was terrible Dr. Kellogg and her employees in
for spoiling the plan es and they taking care of the animals brought
could be heard but not seen. How - to the clime.
Before purchasing Lhe clinic, Dr.
ever, on Monday when the two
large airplanes were returning to Kellogg tried three different types
their home base at Tyndal Air of veterinary pmctice which includ·
Force Base at Panama City, Fla. ed country practice, a large urban
were easy to spot as they passed practice and a small animal prac·
lice so felt ready to take over Lhe
over our towns..
While in Dayton, Mark was able operation of her own clini c. The
to travel to Rutland where he spent major problem that Dr. Ke llogg has
a part of the weekend with his par- encountered is the fact that while
she was getting her intensive traineniS, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris.
ing to be a vet, the schooling didn ' t
business training. Howcv·
include
A big thanks from Iris Payne
who has returned to her employ- er, she mastering th0&lt;c problems
ment at Farmers' Bank after being too. The reporter do 1n g the &lt;lorv.-.
iU. Iris was a patient at the Holzer apparently spent a day at Dr.
Medical Center and then at Univer-- logg' s clinic and was more onar'"'-'
sity Hospital in Col umbu s. She impressed by the way Belh na~••weul~,::·
thanks you for the lovely cards, her many animal pare"n~t,~s. c';;~cd~ ~;~; ..
owners, and fi elded n
remembrances and your prayers.
phone call s related to her practice. ..
Dr. Kellogg, of ·course, grew·up!' ;'
Hnc · s an update on Aaron
Buffrngton, former Pomeroy resi- in Middleport and it' s nice to see ~ - .,
dent.
anolhcr local person getting some~· ;ji.,_''
: •
Aaron underwent amputation of well deserved recognition.
:. '!his right leg last Wednesday and is
Down Middleport way, Mar- '~}:
in Grace Hospital, 5071 S. Outer
garet
John son will be observing her · ··:·,
Drive and Schaffer Ave., Detroit,
94th binhday on Friday, July 29th J ·.
Mich., 48235. ,
His room number is I I 3 and he Friends arc planning a card shower
can be reached by phone at 3 I 3- to mark the occasion. Want to join
966- I 14 3. You did so well in 'em? The address is 325 Page St..
remembering Aaron during his last Middleport, 45760.
"bout" and he appreciated and
What 's a fella to do when the
enjoyed hearing from you so very
petunias
grow so fast that pinching ! '
much. No doubt he'd really apprethem could become a full time job? ~
ciate hearing from you now .
Beats me. Do keep smiling.
~
Dr. Elizabeth (Beth) Fultz Kel·

===C=o=m=m==u=n~ity~ca=l=en=d=a=r==='
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization (RACO),
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park, Tuesday.
New members welcome.
HARRISONVILLE - liar·
risonville Senior Citizens Club,
Tuesday. noon, at townhouse,
Potluck dinner.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Scottish Rite Club meeting
at Middleport Masonic Building
Tuesday at 7 p.m. All Scouish Rite
Masons welcome.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders suppon
group, Wednesday, I to 3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Center. Susan
Bowers to talk on hospice.
POMEROY - Wildwood garden Club, annual flower show,
Wednesday, 17:30 p.m. home of
Betty Milhoan.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
Wednesday. 8 p.m., Meigs SWCD
office.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County

Women's Fellowship, Thursday,! ,;
7:30p.m., Pomeroy Church of, .
Christ.
~POMEROY - Free clothing
day, 10 a.m. to noon at the Salvation Army 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education regular meeting 7 p.m. at the high school.
POMEROY - Pomeroy group
of AA , Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
Hean Catholic Olurch.
SUNDAY
HOBSON - Special singing
Sunday at 7:30p.m. at Hobson
Christian Union Church featuring
Bill Ward Gospel Trio and Rev .
Charles Curry.

News of our servicemen
Keith T. Hagen
Army Spec. Keith Hagen has
earned the Army Achievement
Medal, which is gtven to those sol·
diers who give meritorious service.
Hagen, a telecommunications center operator, is the son of Patricia
L. Hagen of Middleport
Hagen graduated in I 990 from
Meigs High School. He is currently
stationed in Sierra Vista, Ariz.
Steven F. Wilson
Navy Airman Apprentice Steven
F. Wilson , son of Fred and Kelli
Wilson of Albany, recently gradu·
ated from a basic flight course.
Wilson joined the Navy in March
1993.
Robert C. Francisco
Navy Petty Officer Third Class

Robert Francisco, son of Ci•nd,,IIJIQ
Kimble of Leon. W.Va., recently ~;--1
returned from a six-month Medii·
teranean Sea deployment. Francisco visited Trieste and Naples, IUlly,
and Valencia, Spain . The USS
Saratoga aircraft carrier supported
the U.N . and NATO forces in
Bosnia.
Tracy N. Lawrence
Air Force Airman Tracy N.
Lawrence graduated from Air
Force basic training in San Antonio, Texas.
The daughter of Max and Teresa
Huck of Lowell, she is maried to
Marine Cpl. Jermey J. Lawrence.
His parents are Melvin Lawrence
of Portland and Jill Lipscomb of
Pomeroy.
'
She graduated from Fort Frye
High School in Beverly in I 990.

Rock Springs Grange meets
George Wright was presented
the "Citizen of the Year" award at
a recent meting of the Rock
Springs Grange.
William Radford made the
plaque presentation to Wright in
recognition of community service
and his contribution to scoutin\(.
Wright was accompanied by hts
wife and daughter, Susan Clart.
"Good Citizenship through Education and Experience" was the
program topic presented by Pat
Holter, lecturer, when the Rock
Springs Grange met recently at the
hall on the fairgrounds .
The article read by Mrs. Holter
dealt with education inside and out.
side the classroom.
Opal Grueser, legislative chairman reported on several issues and
Barbara Fry, CWA chairman,

reminded mem bcrs that the county
judging of contesiS will beheld at
the September meeting of Pomona
grange. Bunny Kuhl asked members for contributions to the Mei~s
County Fair BOOih. Members wtll
vacate the hall for the fair at the
next meeting.
Humorous readings were given
by Radford and Roy Holter, and
Barbara Fry read "Door Jam";
Nancy Radford, "I Shall Not Pass
This Way Again", Sarah Caldwell,
"It Couldn't be Done" and Helen
Blackston had prayer and a reading.
Sympathy was extended to
Betty Conkle and Hazel Van
Cooney and get well wishes were
sent to James Conkle. RefreshmealS were served by Charles and
Bunny Kuhl.

This stranger's response was "I
.
didn't know there were special plates
for handicapped people." Then, the
idiot had the nerve to ask, "What is
wrong with you?" I told him it was
'""' ' 0 ' " " ' ' ' "
none of h1s busmess.
T1mes Srnd~eatt aoo
c"""' s'""'~"·
Please, An n, Jet peop 1c ••~
..now that
in some states, the car owner may
opt for license plates instead of a
window placard. And tell them, too,
that it is exuemcly rude to demand
The bigger question is: How do I that a toUll stranger reveal his or her
forgive myself for bringing such medical history .
disgrace to my family ?
Thanks for letting me blow off
1 hope every teen-ager who reads steam ... SYCAMORE, ILL.
this will realize that they run the
DEAR SYCAMORE: Thanks for
risk of being in my place if they blowing the steam in Lhis direction.
contin1 e to mess wilh drugs. I. too, Your letter is anotl1er reminder Lhat
thought it could never happen to me. the only exercise some people get is
.. STATEN ISLAND. N.Y .
running their moulhs and jumping
DEAR NEW YORK: Here's your to conclusions.
plea. I hope somebody tist.cns.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm sending
Dear Ann Landers: Once again, you an article from Lhe Mesa, Ariz.,
a total stranger knocked on the paper. It says the Social Security
window of my car to ask if I knew 1 Administration spent $32 million on
was parked in a space reserved for employee bonuses last year. The
the handicapped. I replied, "Of largest bonus went to an execuuve
course I know. If you'll look, you'll who had been on the job less than
see that I have handicapped license three months. His annual salary was
plates."

Ann .
Landers

more than $100,000.
How come government workers
haul in such huge benefits when
some of the elderly are ttying to
survive on less than $600 a month?
Please print this, Ann . I'd like
an answer. .. ANNOY ED IN
ARIZONA
DEAR A IN A: I read the same
news release and was as baffled as
you are. U anyone from the Social
Security Administration has an
explanation for this horrendous
inequity, I would like to hear il
Gem of the Day: When you go to
a restaurant, always ask for a table
near a waiter.
· What's the truth about pol, co-

Page 4

caine, LSD, PCP, crack, speed and
downers? 'The Lowdown on Do~"
has UIJ·IO·Ihe -minule information on
drugs. Send a self-addressed, long,
businus-siu envelopt and a check
or money order for $3.65 (this in·
eludes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, clo Ann Landers, P.O.
Box I 1562. Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4 .45.)

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
POMEROY, OHIO

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Last 10 Days - We Are
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On The Competition!

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$14,495

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1993 Nissan 4X4 Pickup Extuded Cab ••• s13,995
1993 Chev. lf2 Ton Pickup....................s1 0, 995
1991 GMC lf2 Ton Pickup........................59995
1991 510 Pickup ................................. $4995
1993 All Wheel Drive Astro Van ......... s1S,99S

1986 OLDS DELTA 88 ...........................................'3995
1986 BUICK LESABRE.........................................'3995
1993 EAGLE TALON ..........................................'12,995
1989 CHRYSLER NEW VORKER ........................ $6995
1992 BUICK REGAL ............................................. '8995
1990 CHEVY CAPRICE only 28,000 mlles .......... '8995

Open
Sundays

(EDITOR'S NOTE: A lawsuit outlines the grievances or
one party against another. It
does not establish innocence
or guilt.)
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- A $4 million lawsuit has
been filed in Mason County Circuit Court by Joseph Demck of
Aiken, S.C .. against Chern
Power Inc., an Ohio corporation
doing business in West Virginia,
for injuries allegedly suffered in
October 1992.
Derrick's suit allc~es that he
was electrocuted wh1le insulat·
ing a boiler duct owned and
controlled by Chern Power at
the Philip Sporn Plant in New
Haven.
·
The suit claims Chern Power
knew Derrick was working in
the area where electric wires
were charged, and that he came
into contact with the wires.
Derrick is suing for $2 million in compensatory damages,
$2 million in )lllnilive damages.
pre-judgment and post-judgment
mterest, and attorney costs and
fees.

~=! ~~~~~~~;:~-~.~~~~-~-~~~::~-~~=

Hotn:

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The legal bat·
tie over school funding has taken a
new twi st: prosperous districts
want to appeal a court ruling even
though they arc not part or the case.
The Alliance For Adequate
School Fundin g sa id Tuesday it
asked Perry County Common Pleas
Judge Linton D. Lew is Jr. for the
right to intervene in the case for Lhe
purpose or appealing his decision.
Lewis ruled July I that the current state -local system of financing
education was inequitable and
uncon stitutional because of dispari ·
tics in amouniS spent per pupil.
The alliance of 58 districts with
above -average real estate value
said it agrees that too many schools
are underfunded.
But James Betts, the group's
lawyer. said such a far-reac hing
decision should go to the Ohio
Supreme Court for review, instead
of relying on an individual judge.
Betts ac knowl edged that the
alliance request to intervene was

South Carolina
man files$4
million lawsuit

$·1 6,995

USED CARS

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::::::::

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Showers

Buckeye 5:
1-13-17-26-31

Tonight, showers, cloudy.
Low In 60.. Thursday, cloudy.
High In 80s.

en tine
2 Soctiono, 12 Pagee 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 27, 1994

unusual.
"It's rare that somebody who
has not been a party in the trial
court is granted the right to appeal,
but it's not unprecedented," he
said.
Three of [our defendants in the
laws uit that the Ohio Coalition For
Equity &amp; Adequacy of Sc hool
Funding filed already have decided
against appeal. They are the State
Board of Education, the Superin tendent of Public Instruction and
tile Ohio Department of Ed ucation.
Attorney General Lee Fisher,
acting at Gov. George Voinovich' s
request, has said he will appeal on
behalf of the state, the fourth
defendant. Voinovich was not a
defendant
Betts said a challenge to
Voinovich's authority to appea l
was likely.
"We have been advised that it is
a possibility but we certainly don't
know," he said.
William Phillis, executive direc tor of the coalition, acknowledged

...

- ~:
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•

Wealthy schools seek
role in funding battle

ResideniS of the Southern Local
School District will vote on a three·
year"4-mill renewal levy for general operating expenses when they go
to the election polls in November.
Meeting Monday night, the
Southern Local Board of Education
voted to place the levy on the Nov.
8 ballot
In May, voters defeated a
replacement levy for the current
school levy, which expires this
year. Replacement levies generate
more funds than renewal levies,
according to Dennie Hill, treasurer,
but since the defeat of the replace-

1994 OLDS
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that lawyers were looking mto Lhc
possibility or a challenge. The
coalition includes more than 500 of
the state's 612 districts.
Phillis said the coalition would
oppose any action tllat would fur ·
ther delay a solution to the funding
problem. including intervenor status for the alliance and its subsequent appeal.
"We recognize Lhat the state has
never wanted to race up to the
problem , and we differ with the
alliance on thi s basic point,"
Phillis said.
"They're operating under the
delusion that the state without a
court order will somehow so lve
this problem . But the sta te has
demonstrated throu ghout the
decades that it' s not willing 1~ face
up to the problem ," he said.
DistriciS raise money fTOm real
estate taxes. Because property in
some districts is worth more than
others, identical tax rates raise different amounts or money and put
poorer districiS at a disadvantage.

- -. !

"··-

. allltJ.

Dunfee said between 10 and 18
percent of the- students attending
Meigs Local Schools are ADD
children.
Although she said her own
experie nce with the district has
been good, the district needs to
sponsor an inservice session for
teac hers g rades kindergarten
through six. and needs to adopt a
umforrn poltcy on testmg. and management of chtldrcn wllh ADD.
The ADD support group will pro·
vide the inservice.
"T hi s will keep kids from
falhng through the cracks," she
said.
.
.
Answenng questiOns from
Board Pres1dent Larry Rupe, Dunfcc said ADD is a medical disorder
which can be treated with drugs
prescribed by a doctor.

An e• hibit featuring a halfBefore ADD was diagnosed as a
dozen operating layouts,
medical disorder, "the child with
including all sizes or model
ADD was probably the class clown
trains, is open for public view·
or the little girl who looked out the
ing at the Meigs County
window and just barely made it
library in Pomeroy through
through," she said.
Sunday. Trains owned by
Board Vice Presiden 1 Randy
Gerald Shuster, David and
Humphreys said the problem wilh
Nathan Robinette, Richard
ADD is that kids are not being
Freeman, Eddie and Tom
diagnosed. "We have to identify
Ball, Rob Lowery and
the problem," he said.
Howard Writesel are featured
Dunfee outlined the steps par·
in the extensive display in the
ents should take if they suspect
library's Riverboat Room . In
their child has ADD: r~rsl, consult
addition to model trains, the
the school psyc hologist and sign a
display includes railroad
release allowing testing; second, if
accessdries, such as books on
the child is diagnosed as having
railroading, steam gauges
ADD, consult a pediatrician for i, ~ from old engines, switch locks,
treatment, and third - meet with
marker lights which were used
the child's teacher.
on either side of en'g ines,
"It takes cooperation between
caboose lights, all owned by
(Continued on Page 3)
Shuster, and a crossing sign
marking the entrance to the
room of railfoading. Above,
from left, Nathan and David
Robinette, and Shuster stand
contract with the Athens County
beside one of the operating
Board of Education to ·serve as fis·
layouts. Shuster, at right, discal agent for the Southeastern Ohio
plays a before-the-turn-of-theSpecial Educational Regional
century caboose lantern which
Resource Center for basic services,
is a part of his railroad collecincluding special education insertion. It can all be seen free of
vice for staff and administration,
charge from noon-9 p.m.
development or forms and various
through Friday, from noon-S
documents, and interpretation of
p.m. Saturday, and from I-S
new laws and regulations concern·
p.m. Sunday. (Sentinel photos
ing special education. The cost per
by Charlene Hoenich)
year is $840.88.
To comply with state regula·
lions for a decision this year on
corporal puni shment, either 10 sup·
(Continued on Page 3)

Southern Local to seek 4-milllevy

1994 PONTIAC 1994 OLDS CIERA
'" .
BONNEVILLE STATION WAGON
WAS $24,252
NOW

Pick 3:
325
Pick 4:

e

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board of Education received a brief lesson Tuesday night on the subject of attention deficit disorder or ADD.
ADD is a term used to describe
a chronic behavioral di sorder in
children who are inattentive, easily
di stracted and impulsive . This
behavior is usuall y matched with
certain other criteria such as hyperactivity. ADD also includes Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder
(ADHD), in wh1ch hyperactivity is
the primary chamctcristic.
The board met with Teresa Dunfee. parent of a fourth-grader diag·
nosed with ADD and vice president
of an ADD support group for
Meigs, Mason, Gallia and Jackson
counties.

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Ohio Lottery

Board briefed_on learning disorder

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DEALER COS1

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ROYAL PALM
CONVERSION
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845

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Derarunent Ladies Auxiliary . specia session, Thursday 7 p.m. at ftre
station. Plarui for annual street fes.
tival on Sept. 3.
RACINE - Free irnnmni1zation I
clinic for children, Racine
Deparunent. 9 a.m. to I I a.m.; """'1:::1
I to 3 p.m. at Chester Fire Department

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ment levy in May, it was decided
by the board to go for a renewal.
A renewal levy will generate
about $215,000 a year, Hill said.
Employed during the meeting
was Vicky Northup on an extended
service contract as a Chapter I par·
ent coordinator aide. She will wort
two hours a day for four days a
week and will be·paid from Chapter I federal funds.
The board renewed the district's
membership in the Coalition of
Rural and Appalachian Schools fot
1994-95 at a cost of $250.
Members al so entered into a

Legislative. leaders
restore weapon ban
to pending crime bill
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A ban on
assault-style firearms was restored
to the $30.2 billion crime bill as
Senate and House negotiators crafted a measure that would put
100,000 more police officers on the
street and send third-time felons to
prison for life.
Senate negotiators voted 5-4
along party lines Tuesday· to
include the ban in the crime bill,
but its place there won't be fin~
until House negotiators approve it
as well.
House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Jack Brooks. D-Texas, is
adamantly opposed to the provision
and has written his own strippeddown version. However, Rep.
Henry Hyde, R-IU., a surprise convert to the bill last spring, was
expected to vote for the ban, keeping it in the crime bill.
"Don't be afraid 10 do what's
right,' ~said Sen. Dennis DeConci·
ni, D-kiz., co-author of the gun
ban amendment. "You'll feel bet-

ter about it and you 'II make your
state and your hometown safer."
On the other side, Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah, called it "a misleading substitute for fighting
crime"· and said it was "just one
more step to take firearms out of
the hands of law-abiding citizens.''
The provision, similar to mea·
sures passed earlier by both the
House and Senate, would ban 19
named types of firearms and scores
of others that the government says
meet the characteristics of assaultstyle weapons.
It also would limit magazine
capacity to 10 rounds. At the same
time, it would exempt 650 named
fuearms and all guns legally owned
when Lhe law took effect.
A compromise crime biU drafted
by Brooks and Senate.. Judiciary
Committee Chairman Joseph
Biden, 0 -Del., had omitted the ban
because of Brooks' opposition.
leaving the decision on whether to
include it up to the conferees.
The Brooks-Biden )I'Oposal was
introduced at the conference as the

CRIME BILL DISCUSSION - U.S. Rep .
Jack Brooks, D· Teus, left, chairman or the
House Judiciary Committee, spoke to Senate
Minority Whip Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., as Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohio, rar right, talked
to Sen. Joseph Riden, D-Del., chairmai.n or the
House proposal, and the Senate
conferees spent much of Tuesday
afternoon amending it. When the
senators are finished. the House
negotiators will have their tum to
make changes.

Senate Judi(iary Committee, during a HouseSenate conferees' meeting Tuesday to discuss
tbe pending crime bill. The conferees met to
cr:tft a compromise crime bill, deciding ir it
would include a ban on assault-style weapons
and other botly-contested provisions. (AP)

death penalty cases. The CongresOne major issue not expected to
arise until the House conferees get . sional Black Caucus strongly suptheir chance is a House-passed pro- ports 11, but enough senators ·
vision that would allow use of oppose 11 dlat a Republican-threatened fttibuster in the Senate could
statistics to show racial bias in
kill the whole crime biU.

'•

-- .· -· ...
.~

�Wednesday, July 27, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROili.:IU L. WIN!.ETT
Publisher
MARGARE"I LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mana~er

A MEMOER of'lbc Assoctated Press Inland Da1ly Ptos Assm: w.twn and
the Amem:an Newspaper Publtshcr As souat1 on

LETfERS OF OPINION

are
words lo ng All letters are subject

welcome They should
lO

he less than 300
cdtlmg and mus t be stgncd wtlh name,

address and telephone number No un s1gned Idl ers wdl hr puh iJ ,. hcd Letters
sho uld be 111 good laste, addresswg tssucs, not pcrsonalltu:s

Whitewater hearings
short on drama
By WALTER R. MEARS 1
AP Special Correspondent
WASHlNGTON - As pollucaltheater, the congrcsstonal heanngs on
Whitewater may be short on drama, long on dry dcuul and squabblmg
about the rules lhal hmtl the mquii)' Prestdent Clinton calls u a rehash
irnd a Republican who demanded hcanngs concedes they could be bonng
on TV.
Even so, the hcanngs opemng today renew a naggmg problem for
Chnton, who has grappled for months wtth Whttewater and tnbutary
ISsues. They're back, JUSt as the prestdent and Dcmocrattc congressiOnal
leaders try to find a wmnmg way to health care reform.
Rep. Richard A. Gephardl, the maJority leader, satd the Whitewater
case won't make health care harder because that's what really mterests
people.
But distnacuons can't heJ.p Whnewatcr •s a recurrent one, ~own out of
the failed Arkansas land development m whtch the Chntons mvested and
lost money long before he became prestdent
The congressional investigations take it up a notch. but under rules that
both limit what's to be covered now and foretell later rounds of hearings
~ perhaps awkwardly close to the Nov. 8 congressiOnal elections.
The House Banking Committee IS gomg first, today, Thursday, and in
three more sessions next week. The Senate Banlung Commtttee starts on
Friday.
These hearings are to deal with more than 20 contacts between offi1:ials of the Clmton administnation and bankmg regulators involving a
fatled savmgs and loan linked to Whitewater. meetings that alerted the
White House on the S&amp;L case. Those contacts were first disclosed at a
:Senate banking hearing Feb. 24, kmdllng controversy over pohllcal
mvolvement in a regulatory case
Now there's more, over who knew, and when, for the congressional
panels to punme.
Also cleared for this set of hearmgs: the ruhng of suicide m the death
&lt;&gt;f Vincent Foster,the deputy White House counsel, a year ago.
But another question mvolvmg Foster IS out of bounds for now. That IS
the removal of files involving Whitewater from Foster's White House
office after hts death. That's the episode that ftrst revtved the Whitewater
case and made n an issue affecting Clinton as president, not past business.
. The hearing boundaries were set by Congress to av01d mterfenng wnh
the operations of Roben B. FISke Jr., the special counsel looking into the
whole Whitewater affair. Until he's fmished wtth a topic, it ISn't to be
.:Covered m the hearings. So the quesiJOn of !he Foster papers won't make
this round, but could come up in the fall.
Republicans demanded a broader congresSional investigation now, but
,were voted down - 10 umes in the Senate, So the hearings will be in
installments, and Fiske will go ftrst.
, "Let's get the facts out on the table," Gephardt said on CNN. "We'll
have another hoanng later m the year. But let's get it out there and gel it
whmd us."
That has been suggested before, but grudging early disclosures led to a
story that unfolded by chapters. "I feel quite comfortable that the hearings wtll be seen as JUSt a rehash of what has already been looked mto m
detail," Clinton said Saturday. "But if they want to do It, that's fme."
"You wtU find all of the wttnesses who are asked to testify cooperating fully and completely, giving them absolutely everythmg that the
White House has on this," Vice President AI Gore added on a TV talk
show.
Tile White House stnategy is to treat it as a Washmgton preoccupation,
ainatter that really doesn't interest the people who want government dealipg with problems like health .cane.
That wiD be tested now. "When Whitewater hcarmgs arc televtsed, it
be Clinton's tum in the bucket," the late Rtchard M. Ntxon, undone
by the 1973 Senate Watergate hearings, told Willtam Safirc of The New
York Times in one of his last intervtews.
But those hearings dealt first wtth a cnme, then wtth a covcrup. That's
oot the case now. Fiske says the administratiOn has been cooperative and
iisponsive.
.; TIIere' ll be television at the Whitewater heanngs, but not network and
rrot full ume. Indeed, the House mvestigation wtll recess soon after it
bigins, for a JOin! sesston of Congress to hear the leaders of Israel and
Tordan talk about the peace accord they've just pledged at the White
!t&gt;use.
.· Sen. Alfonse D'Amato of New York, who pressed Republican
d8mands for the Senate hearings for months, said the inquiry mighl be
iiither boring for the v.ewmg public "I ccrtamly wouldn't recommend
that people tune in live," he said.

will

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
nist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 27, 1994

WASHINGTON North
Korea may pose the btggest threat
to nuclear proliferation worldwtde,
but many Amcncans may have a
nuclear menace m thCII own netgh borhoods.
Government regulators have
been momtonng radtoacuve sludge
and ash from sewage treatment
plants - whtch get recycled and
used m baseball dtamonds, bncks
and garden fcrultzer The radtoac uvc matenal IS all legally relca&lt;;ed
and, where it has been detected, II
shows up m concentrated amounts.
The Nuclear Regulatory Com mtsston mamuuns lhatthe ash from
sewage treatment plants poses "no
health or safety nsks to treatment
plant workers or to the public."
But a recent General Accounung
Off tee tnve s11gat10 n found that
"the full ex ten t of the radtoacttve
contammatwn of sewage sludge,
ash and related by-products nation wtdc IS unknown .··
Most of the rad10acuvc matenal
comes from waste gcneraled by
hospttals, manufacturers and laundnes that these mdustrtcs arc stm-

ply allov.ed to flush away. GAO
mvestigators say these practices
have contammated at least nme
sewage treatment plants 10 the last

By Jack Anderson
and
Ml.chae/ Bl"nste1·n
decade. Netther NRC nor the Env1ronmental Protection Agency
requtre regular testmg for radtoacttve contaminatiOn of sewage treatmcnt plants that receive radioactive
matcnal. Of the 1,100 NRC
Iteensees permttted to dtscharge
radtoacttvc waste through th etr
sewage, only 15 have ever been
mspeciCd to ensure environmental
compliance.
NRC has assumed that the
radwacuve matenal from these
sources would dtsperse through the
large amounts of water processed
by sewage treatment plants.
Instead, the contammants settle
mto the sludge left over afler the
treatment process, and they arc fur-

--' h th sludge
ther concentralcu w en c
IS burned to ash A 1991 J'RC
report concluded that the ra 103c:
ltve contamtnatton of sewage tr~~ .
ment plants "may not be trtvta
and requiTed further study .
Twenty-one sewage treatment
plants contactt1 by the G.~o mvcsltgators were' generally unaware
of the radtatwn nsk. and half were
h
h f ferlt.ltzatton
rcusmg t e as or
•
recreational or construcuon purposes. Ash from sewage treatment
·
r--• 1ent 10 the
1 IS ISda pnmdary
ran
;"~ 0er
nil lor awn an gar en er I I.
gantte.
"Potentially contamtnated
. ftnd 115
sewage sludge and ash can
way mto unregulated landftll s, on
Iarmer' s fteld s, or eve nt.~ our
backyard garden a' feruhzcr, says
Sen. John Glenn, D-Oh10, cha11man of the Senate ,9ovcrnmcntal
Affatrs Committee. Scwage dtrcabtcment plant workers cou 1 .
exposed to low levels of radioacllvtty over a penod of years .. . It ts
our responSib~llty to fully ex plore
thts snuauon.'
In sludoe and ash at Cleveland's
"

Southerly sewage treatment plant
10 1991 NRC mvestigators found
cohalt-60. a radioactive matenal
common ly used to treat cancer
patients at levels 20 ttmes htgher
than n~rmal. "The most hkely
source of the radwacuvc matenal
found .. GAO's tnv es tt ga tor s
wrote '"was an NRC licensee that
d h.
d
1 1 th
ISC arge was e medo
the sewer
hnes that arc connect to e treatr th
1 " D. h
ment Pant.
ISC arges rom e
hcensec dtd not exceed NRC hm tls accord10g to the mvesttgators.
'customers of th e Southerly
plan! ha'e already patd nearly $1.5
1 ror a sccun 1Y rence aroun d
mJIIOn
the contammated matenal and onslle cleanup and containment H
NRC or th e state governm~nt
requucs off-s ne diSposal of the
material cleanup costs could top
$ b 11 0 ~
3
..' 1'am outraged," satd Rep
Louts Stokes, D-Oh to, " that the
NRC would prefer to have mnocent
ltcs who could legttimately be
~ar nbcd as the vtcttms 10 thiS Situa~•~n pay 10 clean up contamma'
f
h d. h
liOn resultmg rom 1 ~ 1 ~ arges
of radtoacttve matenal toto the
public sewer system, rather than
forcing the company !hat dis charged !he matenal to pay for the
damage 11 has caused."
NRC has recently boosted
restncllons on the level of radioacti vc matcnal 11 permtts licensees to
wash down the drain to prevent the
contammation of other sewage
treatment plants. In addition,
cobalt-60 is no longer allowed to
be discharged through the public
sewage syslem. But accordmg to
the GAO mvesttgators, NRC cannot guarantee this will be an effective solution since no one knows
how other radioactive materials
concentrale during the treatment
process.
"The full extent of this contaminatiOn natmnwtde ts unknown,"
GAO mspectors wrote in their
report, reviewed by our associate
Andrew Conte. "Some treatment
plants may use and dispose of their
sludge and ash in a variety of ways
that could expose plant workers
and the general pubhc to elevated
levels of radiOactivity.''
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Benetton corrupts discussion of AIDS
We have grown accustomed to
fatuous political acttvism by the
occastonal film actor, rock star or
sports figure. Jane Fonda in Hanoi.
Sting in the Brazilian rain forest.
Greg Lougams out of the closet.
Now, of all thmgs, a clolhier has
gotten into the mtx.
Ben elton. the Italian apparel
maker that has blighted the
wardrobes of Amenca 's youth for
the past decade, wants the world to
know what it thinks about the
AIDS problem.
Benetton self-importantly publtshes a quanerly magazme, Colors,
which is available in its stores and
at newsstands. The current issue,
which features an upraised middle
fmgcr ("protected" by a condom)
on the cover, IS devoted entirely to
AIDS.
It is unclear to whom the magaztne's content IS targeted, but reasonable-minded people almost certainly will be offended by a doctored photograph of Ronald Reagan, showmg the former president
wtth AIDS-related lesions marking
his face. (Benetton reproduced the
photo on New York btllboards.)
No less offensive is an accompanying obttuary which cymcally
mourns Reagan's death "from
AIDS complications in February of
last year.'' The twisted reasoning
behind Beneuon's belaled attack on
Reagan is that he somehow is
responsible for the spread of AIDS.
Indeed, says Tibor Kalman, who

level, not at !he White House. And
while the president might have the
power to order dtstnbuuon of condoms in federal bUildings, he has
no authority over state and local
buildings.
It is absurd to blame Ronald
Joseph Perkins
Reagan for the spread of AIDS It
been Ronald Rea11an. Millions will was not Reagan who forced homodie because of thts man's religious sexual men to have dangerous sex
and political ambitions. I beheve he or intravenous drug users to share
will be responstble for more deaths dirty needles. Maybe the former
than HtUer."
president might have acknowlSo what would the clothiers· edged the AIDS problem earlier.
cum-crusaders at Benetton have Maybe he might have agitated for
had Reagan do? Issue an executive more federal dollars to fighl the
order, they say. Nationalize the disease when 11 fll"st reared its ugly
condom industry. Requtre all tele- head back in 1981 But his failure
vision and radio stauons, newspa· to do so hardly makes him the
pers and magazines to devote spcc- moral equivalent of the genocidal
tfted advertising space for AIDS HiUer.
education.
All Benetton has accomplished
Order all public and private by so vtciously and unfauly attackschools to provide compulsory sex ing the former president is to alienand AIDS education. And order ate those who are sympathetiC to
free dtstribution of condoms in all AIDS vicllms, but who arc turned
public buildings, including schools, off by the shock tactics of AIDS
extremtsts. Bcnetton and tls conpost offices and prisons.
How simple. How ridiculous.
federates m the AIDS movement
If the folks at Benetton had a are trying desperately to revtve
clue about the American political pubhc mterest m lhe d1sease. But
system, they would lrnow that the the public has caught on to the fact
president cannot unilaterally that AIDS is not the epidemic it
nationalize an industry, not even was made out to be and that Ihe
condoms. Nor can the president U.S. government has devoted con·
trample upon the First Amendment siderable resources to fight AIDS.
rights of the media by diclaling Indeed, given the tremendous
amount of attention AIDS has genadvertising.
erated
over the past decade, one
Almost all school curriculum
decisions are made at the local would think it was America's most
falal disease. But it isn't. Ten times

edtts Colors magaztne from an
office in Budapest: "If one person
could have made a difference in the
history of AIDS, it would have

as many Americans die of cancer
every year; 15 times as many die of
heart disease. To put this m perspective, cancer claimed more victims last year than AIDS has
clatmed in tts entire 13-year history.
Yet, AIDS receives disproportionate levels of support from
American taxpayers compared to
other diseases. Last year, for example, the government spent $1.2 billion for AIDS research. If other
diseases received proportionate
funding, the government would
have spent $12 btllion on cancer
research rather than the $1.9 billion
that actually was laid out; $18 billion would have gone to hean disease rather than the comparatively
paltry $729 million that was spent.
Beneuon is wrong when il
asserts that Ronald Reagan could
have taken executive actions that
would have staunched the spread of
AIDS. It is dead wrong when it
suggests that the U.S. government
has not done enough to fight AlDS.
The Italian clothier ought to stick
to making halter tops and T-shirts
and leave politics to those who
lrnow what they're talking about.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
ror The San Diego Union·Tri·
bune.
(For inrormation on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling I·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Let baseball burn to the ground_ _ _~------After more than two decades of
watching baseball owners and
baseball players snarl and smpe at
each other. after four player strikes
IQid two owner lockouts, I have
come to the conclusion that the
game must be destroyed in order to
save it.
1 therefore hope the players
strike again, as they have threa~·
·ened to do. I hope tt lasts all thts
season and all next year and may_be
even through 1996. Let the quamt
collection of car dealers, magnates,
pizza makers, smging cowboys,
buffoons and unbalanced personalities who own baseball teams go
broke. Let the shakedown arttsts
who play the game and wail a~d
whine because they are mere mtllionaires instead of mulumtlltonaires find real work. To hell wtth
them all.
: We can live through it, we base·
ball nuts who slip into deep depression with the last out of the World
Series and don't come out or 11
until the ftrSl crack of bat on ball in

sprmg trammg. We can watch
minor-league baU, or go golfing or
fishing. For the truly desperate,
there's always arena football.

Joseph Spear
Professional baseball has been
consumed by greed and is simply
not worth saving at this point. It's a
$1.8 billion busmess, but "acting
commtssioner" Bud Selig says 19
teams are losing money. The owners won't open their books to prove
it, of course. They want us to take
them on faith. They want to "cap"
total player salaries at a fixed per·
centage of annual revenues.
The players make $1.2 million
on avera11e - a _3,804 percent
increase smce therr ftrst strike m
1972 - and they want more. Tile
owners want "an arbitrary limit"
on salanes, says umon head Donald
Fehr, one which would be "substantially below the fair market
value of the players involved.''

I tell you, it has gone far py.
3) Ban private ownership of
enough. Let them destroy themselves. Let us fiddle while baseball baseball teams. Never again would
burns, so to speak, and then we can this pristine game be tainted with
rebutld the game God mvented the likes of George Steinbrenner or
Marge Schott. Never again would a
from the ground up.
We should star! wtth the elec- Walter O'Malley or a Bob Short
tion of an overseer, a Baseball capriciously move a team from one
Czar, tf you will . I hereby city to the nexl In the new baseball
announce my candidacy and tender world, under the benign dictatorship of Joe Spear, the people would
my platform. If elected, I would:
own
their teams.
I) Criminalize plasttc grass.
This
could be accomplished in
Never again would a baseball game
two
ways.
be played on ersatz sod. I would
The fans would fonn cooperaalso ban bats made oul or recycled
beer cans that go "boink" when tives, sell shares and hire directors
who would in turn hire managers
striking a ball.
2) Outlaw domed sladiums. This is not a wild and crazy idea.
Baseball is meant to be played out- The Green Bay Packers football
doors in unconditioned air and team has operated in this fashion
under natUilll sunlighL If you need since 1922. Baseball could do it,
proof of this, consider the tiles that too.
The teams could be "mUI)icipal·
recently feU from the ceiling of the
ized,"
purchased by the communiSeattle Kingdome and forced the
ties
in
which they play. The cities
cancellation of a number of games.
arc- already paying for
and
states
Those were not tiles droppmg from
the
stadiums.
Why not the teams?
the sky, friends. Those were hints.
They
are
civic
instiwtions. Most of
Somebody up there is very unhap-

them make money and some of
them make a lot. Support your
team and pave streets wtth the profits.
This is also not a wild and crazy
scheme. Shonly after I ftrSI pitched
it in 1989, a New York reader
named Mario Cuomo suggested
that the public purchase the Yankees. "I suspect that it is eminently
financeable - for the state and the
city," he said. "The best mvcstment you could make is a Iran -

chise."

So lock 'em out, Bud. Strike,
Don.
Bum. baby, bum.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For inrormation on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, cootact America Online by ca16ngl800·827-6364, exl8317.)

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Todathy is Tuesday, July 26, the 207th day of 1994 There are 158 days
Ief tm e year.
·
Today's highlight in history:
0
English
Aldous Hux·
On this date:
' was m 10 Godalmmg, England.
In 1775, Benjamin Franklin became postmaster
raJ
wJ~n.l788, New York became the eleventh state 10g:~fy ihe U.S. Consti-

le~a':.~~~·b~ea~~;_, W0~~~ ~~· 189~

•

nov~list

--Area deaths-

OHIO Weather
Thur!rlay, July 28

Gale F. Shrimplin

Accu-Weathe,.. forecast for dayllme conditions and
MICH

Treated sewage turns up radioactive

•

IToledo !77" I

IMansfield 176° I•
• IColumbusl78° I

•

Sho wers f-storms Ram

Fl~,;,es

Ice

Swny

Pt Cloudy Cloudy

101994 AcC\l-WGather, Inc

Clouds to remain in picture
By The Associated Press
Mostly cloudy skies wtll continue on Thursday. Afternoon high
temperatures will rematn in the
mtddle and upper 70s. A few hngcrtng showers arc possible.
1 he record htgh temperature at
th e Columbus weather station was
11!2 10 1936. The record low was
45 10 1962.
Sunset today will be at 8:51
p m Sunnse Thursday will be at
6·26 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Today ... A httle sunshine nonh
otherwiSe mosUy cloudy. Showers

and thunderstorms hkely south and
a chance of showers north and central . Ht~hs mid 70s to around 80
Tomght and thursday .. . Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows 55 to 60.
Htghs thursday mid 70s to around
80.
Extended forecast:
Fnday ... A chance of showers
ami thunderstorms. Lows 55 to 60
and htghs 75 to 80,
Saturday ... Dry. Lows around 60
and htghs m the lower 80s.
Sunday ... Dry. Lows in the lower
60s and highs in the 80s.

Gale F Shnmplm, 81, of Mount
Vernon, dtcd Monday. July 25.
1994 at Knox Community Hospital.
Born July 4, 1913 tn Kansas
Ctty, Kan., to the late Frank and
Mac Shnmplln . he wa~ a member
of the Fraternal Order of Eag les
ff760 and was a 21-year employee
of
Katscr
Alurntnum
in
Ravenswood, W.Va ., rct111ng 1n
1979
Survtvmg are ctght daughters ,
Norma Cramer of Mount Vernon,
Ruth Whitt of P01nt Pleasant ,
W.Va, Pat Grennell and Rebecca
Snuth, both of Mount Vernon .
Mary Curtis of Chillicothe, Dtxte
Folden of Mount Vernon, Vtctona
Bradshaw of Vtrguua Beach, Va,,
and Vugmia Shrimp 1m of Mount
Vernon; five sons, Grover Shnmphn , John Shnmplm and Ronald
Shnmplm, all of Mount Vernon.
Gale Shnmplln Jr. of Pomeroy and
Jtm Shnmplm of Mount Vernon,
37 grandchtldren; 47 great-grand chtldren: two great-grcat-grandch•l drcn; ftvc step-grandchildren; and
one half-ststcr, Helen Buchanan.
He was preceded 10 death by hts
wtfe, Vtrgmia Mac Shnmphn. tn
1977 , and by a half -bro ther,
Charles Young.
Servtces wtll be Thursday at II
a.m. at the North -Dtlley Funeral
Home m Mount Vernon the wtth
Rev. John E: Capper officiattng.
Bunal wtll follow 10 Mound Vtcw
Cemetery. Friends may call
Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home

(Contmued rrom Page I)
pon or ban il, !he board approved
co rporal punishment as a disci·
phnary measure.
The graduation of David Neal
Rush was approved.
Htll noted that about 10-15 tons
of stoker coal are available [rom
the district and anyone interesting
m purchasing "it may contact htm at
949-2211 The coal furnaces which

(Continued from Pa~e I)
teachers, parents and phystctans."
she satd.
The hoard also met wtth Mctgs
High Athletic Dtrcctor Rtck
Edwards rcgardmg the athletiC program and dtscussed athlcuc facth ties needing improvement.
In personnel mailers, the board
have been used m the dtstrict arc
being converted to other fuel granted a dock day to Lorri Barnes,
ltbrary aide at Rutland, and acceptsources, Hill said.
ed
the restgnalion of Jeffrey A.
Approval was given by the
Baker
as assistant varSity football
board to u~te the math program
coach
and
reserve football coach.
m the distnct, and new books costAlso,
the
board approved the
ing about $16,000 will be purreSignation of Rick Blaeltnar as
chased.
Attendmg were Tom Roseberry, JUnior htgh football coach and
prestdenl, and Joseph Thoren, approved hmng him as varsity
Susie Grueser, and C.T. Chapman.
assistant football coach, wtth
Humphreys abstainmg In addttwn,
the board approved Frank Blake as
a volunteer assistant high school
Aug.l,5to7p.m;Aug 3,5to6 football coach.
The board also approved the
p.m. cards issued.
creauon
of two teachmg posttions,
Special fair clmic, Tuberculosis
one-Cach
at Salem Center and SalClinic- Aug. 2, 4 to 7 p.m.; Aug.
tsbury, for chtldren with problems
4, 4 to'6 p.m cards 1ssued.
m mathematics and reading SuperReedsville Fire Dcpanment Intendent Bill Buckley satd the
Aug. 9, 5 to 7 p.m.: Aug. II. 5 10 6
positions would be funded by the
p.m. cards issued.
Further information may be state.
In other busmess, the board:
obtained by contacting the tubercu•
Conunucd membership in the
losis office at 992-3722.
Coalttion for EqUity and Adequacy
in School Funding for 50 cents per
student;
• Approved Rtck's Fire and
Safety for fire extingutshcr mspccPOfNT PLEASANT, W.Va. tion and repair for the 1994-95 ftsA rally to send a message inviting cal year;
industry to Mason County - in
• Accepted D &amp; J Tire and Supparttcular, Apple Grove Pulp &amp;
Paper- will be held at Krodel
Park on Friday.
Hosted by the Mason County
Units of the Meigs County
Action Committee, which supports Emergency Medical Service reportjobs in the counly, the event begms ed five calls for asststance between
Tuesday and Wednesday mommgs
at 7 p.m.
Free entertainment wtll be feaUnits responding included:
tured, includmg The Classics, ldletMIDDLEPORT
ymes, Staffhouse, M.T. Factory
12:01 p.m. Tuesday, Beech
and Kevin Knott, for listening and Street, Ed Burnem, Veterans
dancing. Food and drinks will be Memonal Hospital;
11:28 p.m. Tuesday, Rutland
available for purchase from several
vendors, includtng Domino's Street, Helen Williams, SL
Pizza, Subway of Pomt Pleasant, Joseph's Hospital.
RUTLAND
and Vtllage Pizza Inn.
,
Those attendmg may bnng lawn
5 10 a.m. Wednesday, Salem
chairs. For more information, call School Lot Road, John Rankin,
O'Bieness Memonal Hospttal.
304-675-1050.
TUPPERS PLAINS
12:06 p.m. Tuesday, at stauon,
Leroy Fryar, Doctors' Hospital;
VETERANS MEMORIAL
11:34 p.m. Tuesday, State Route
Tuesday admission - Gladys 681 West, Jim Tnplell, St.
Smith, Pomeroy.
Joseph's.
Tuesday discharge - Josephine
McDaniel, Langsvtlle.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Distbarges July 26 - Mrs.
Ivan Stanley and son, Lester Rapp,
Leona Sauters, John Waugh, Melissa Games.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Jay Scarberry, son, McArthur.
(Published with permission)

TB testing for fair slated
Meigs County Fair workers
need to be skin tested before the
fair begms, says Connie Karschnilc,
R.N. of the Tuberculosis and
llcalth Clinic, because no skin testmg wtll be done at the fatr this
year.
Karschnik will be eonducung
evening tuberculosis skin testing
climes for Meigs County residents
who are unable to obtain skin tests
during datly office hours.
She emphasized thai tuberculoSIS skm testmg is required yearly
for food handlers in Meigs County.
The cvcnmg clinics are scheduled as follows:
Chester Ftre Department -

Stocks
Am Ele Power ·--"--"--"-..30
Akzo ........."....
1/8
Ashland OU "'"--"----.3.51/8
AT&amp;T .-.. - ·.... - -"--"--.54 1/2
Bank One .... - ...--"--"-- .325/8
Bob Evans-........ - ....·-"--.21 3/4
Champion lnd.--"--"--.211/4
Charming Shop ......."..........9 19/64
City Holdlng" ......""--.. --"'"..32
Federal Mogul .... - ..--..--.27 SIB
Goodyear T&amp; R .... -"'"·"-"'"-..36
K·marl................""--"·"--16 1/2
Lands End ""'"--""--"--.19 1/8
Limited Inc..........""-'"'""""19 1/8
Multimedia Ioc-"--"-----..30
Point Bancorp -·----·---"-"17
Reliance Electric
Robbins &amp; Myen.--"--"---20
Sboney's In&lt;. ·---"--"-----14
Star Bank ---""'-"'--"-"'.38 1/2
Wendy Int'L """·-"--"--.15 114
Wortblngton lnd.""--"--.19 1/8
Stock reporbi are tbe 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Advest of
Gallipolis.

"--"--"--.60

"--"-----"20

The Dftily Sentinel
(USPS lll-Mf)

Pubhslu:d every aftcnoon, MoDd.y tbtooJ,h
l·miay, Ill Court St., Pomcroy, OIJ.io by ~e
Ohto Valley PubluhiDJ Co(llpaoyiMultimedaa
Inc , Pomeroy. Ohto 4H69, Ph. 992·~U6
Seco~~od clau post-ae plld al Pomeroy, Otuo.
Member The Aaloci.aed Preu. aDd lhe Ohio \
Newlpaper AuDCtlbon, Natioaal Achatitin&amp;
Repructlattve, Braottam Newtptpa'" Sales,
7l3 Thtrd Avenue, New York. New York.

10017
POSTMASTilR' Scad- clwlJ• to The
Dai ly SellllDel, 111 Cowt SL, Pumcroy, Oh10

Pro-industry rally
slated for Friday

EMS logs 5 calls

Hospital news

Delta &amp; Gerber

Leb1111oo Trustees set meeting
The Lebanon Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the home of Trustee Eugene
Long for their regular meeting.

The family suggests memonal
contrtbuttons be made to the Arncrtcan Cancer Soctcty, Knox County
Unn, P.O. Box 12, Mount Vernon,
Ohw 43050

Burton DeWees
Burton Thomas DeWees, 70,
Dexter, dted Tuesday, July 26,
1994 at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntmgton. W.Va .
Born Feb. 19, 1924, m Salles,
W Va , the son of the late James
Stanley and Fannte Runmon
DeWees , he was a rettred auto
worker and an Army veteran of
World War II.
He IS survtved by daughter and
son-m- law, Regtna and Terry VanTine of New Port Ritchey, Fla.; SISter, Jean Drummond of Pomeroy;
s•sters and brothers-m-law, Mickte
and Charles Schoonover of
Wtlkc sv tllc, and Gcraldmc and
Gene McQu:ud of Lor:un; brothcrm-law, Lawrence W. McQuatd Jr.
of Pomeroy; spectal fnend, Lora
Mac Steele of Dexter; four grandchtldrcn and stx grcat -grandchtldren.
He was preceded tn death by
SISters, Ruby DeWees and Audrey
McQuatd; and broth e r, Jackie
DeWees.
Servtces will be I p.m. Fnday at
the Btrchfield Funeral Home, Rulland, wtlh the Rev. John Evans
offtctaung Bunal wtll follow m the
Standtsh Cemetery in Dexter.
Fncnds may call between 2-4 and
7-9 p m Thursday at the funeral
home. In ltcu of nowers donations
may be made to the American Cancer Soctety,

Board briefed on ADD

Sout~ern seeks 4-milllevy

41769

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Faucet
Sets

For Kitchens,
Lavatory
and
Bath Tubs

Pickens
Hardware
1115011, WY.
773·5513

ply Inc. as the suppltcr of bus ures
and tubes for the 1994 -95 ftscal
year;
• Approved DavtS·Qutckcl
Agency Inc. as the earner for the
fleet insurance and student accident
msurance for the 1994 -95 fiScal
year;
• Mel m executive scsston to
discuss negotiations and the htnng
of personnel.
Present were Buckley, Rupe,
Humphreys and board members
Roger Abbott, Scou Walton and
John Hood.

Local News in Brief:
Pomeroy-Mason bridge gets OK
Inspectors recently approve~ the Pomeroy-Mawn bndge as sale
and sound, wtth !he exception of a few mmor repatrs . acwrdmg to
Ohto Department of Tmnsportauon offtctals.
In June, Rtchland Engmccnng of Mansheld mspcctcd the enure
structure as part of an annual check, satd Nanc) Yoacham of
ODOT.
The mspectors ordered repa11 s to the electrical work on th e
bndge hghung, Yoacham S&lt;lld. The Pomeroy -Mason bndgc •s one
of four Ohto River bndges owned by the state of Oh1o TI1c others
arc the Fort Steuben Bndgc at Steubenville, the Grant nmlgc at
Portsmouth and the Ironton Russell Bndge at Ironton

Items stolen from Great Bend home
A gold watch. ndmg mower and noor fan were stokn from a
Great Bend home Tuesday altcrnoon. accordmg to the Mctgs Coun ty Shcnfrs Dcparuncnt reports
Eber Ptckcns, Sellers Rtdgc Road , reported someone stole the
ttcms after hts wtfe left at noon and before she rcturnetl dl l p m
Tuesday, records show.
The ladtcs · gold watch "'nh stll cr band and l(l. tnth S uupl" 11 y
ndlflg lawn mower were taken from th~ home t~llll gdr.Jgc, rC'rorts
sUited The mctdcnt rcmams under 1nvcsll gallon

Boat stolen from Shade

Ri~'er

A Ravenswood . W Va . m:m reported someone stole hiS 30 foot ,
v- bouom boat from the Shade Rtver ovemtght S,tllllda y, acwrch ng
lo 1hc Mctgs County Shenff's Department repon s
Jeff Johnson satd he had th iS boat stuck m 1hc mer al ahout m td ·
mght Saturday and when he returned Sumlay llllllntn~ 1hc boat was
gone, reports stated
The boat and SIX fish10g poles. bauery. cooler ,tml troll tn ~ mot111
all mstde the boat were stolen, records show

Area man returned to Meigs jail
A local man was recently returned to d1c Me1gs County Jatl after
scrv tng stx months m a corrcc uona! center 111 Nclsonvdlc on
charg" of rccctvmg stolen property, ,tcturdtng to the Mctgs County
Shcnff's Department reports .
Davtd Pntldy returned Tuesday to the county ptl from th e
SEPTA Center m Nelsonville. Pnddy' s 18-mont h sen tence would
he suspended to ftvc years probaDon tf he spent s" 111 onths at the
Nclsonvtlle Center, rcwrds stated.

Racine man suffers minor injury
A Racme man suffered mmor vtstblc mJury "' ,, two-vehtclc
awdcnt Tuesday on County Road 31 (Bald Knob) 1n Sutton I own shtp, the Galha-Metgs Post of the State Htghwa&gt; Patrol ' ""'Emerson R. John son. 44, 47920 Eagle Rtdgc Road. w,JS not
treated at the scene, the patrol S&lt;ud
Troopers satd John son was westbound, one -tenth of a mtlc cast
of County Road 28 (Bas han) at 6 p.m when ltc met a a wcsthound
vehtcle drtven by Forrest R. Teaford Jr. , 16, 11540 lroublc Creek
Road, Portland. The mtrrors on the dnver's stdc doors ol thc11 vehicles collided as they met, troopers satd
Damage was shghtto Teaford's car, whtlc none was li sted to
Johnson's ptckup truck , the patrol satd The acctdcm rcrn :uns under
•nvestigation.

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

The Peoples Banking &amp;
Trust Company
State Bank No. 176
of Marietta, Washington County, State of Ohi'f45750, at the close of busines.• June 30, 1994.
.
. . . &gt; ,\Bfi,ETS
Cash and balances due from de poiltory msUtubon.:
a Noninterest-bearing balances and currency and com .. : . ..............
, .. ... ,.... _..... , .
b. Interest-bearing balances... . .. . . .................. ., .... .::: -:. ......... .

_

13.~30,()()()

00

5R. 000 00

Sccuntics

5,702,000 00
a Held.to-maturity securities .. ., ............................. ·............... .......... .. . .. ......... .
77.566,001)
00
b. Available-for-sale securities .... ,.. ,...................... ., .......... ,... ,.............. .... . . . ...... .
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under agreements
to reseU in domestic offices of the bank &amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries &amp; m fiFo:
Federal funds sold ... . ..... .
. ............................... .............. . "1 :,· ...... . 5.200' 000 00
Loans and lease fmancing receivables.
i
291.676.010 00
Loans and leases, net of unearned income ............................... .
........ 5,727.000 00
LESS· Allowance for loan and lease losses ............. .. .. .. . . . .
Loans and leases, net of unearned income,
allowance, and reserve. ... . .......... ....................... . ................... .

Premises and fixed assets (including capillllized leases) ..... ........ .. . .......... .
Intangible assets ....................................................... .
Other assets .. .

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

. . .. . ... .

Toial assets .. ., .. ,.......... .. . .. ... ... ... .. .. ... .. .. .. .... .. ... ... .. .. .. .. ......... · · ··
Toial w;sels and losses dderred Plll"Suant to
12 U.S.C. 1823(j) .......................... ., ··········· · ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·

291,403,000 00
... 9,383,000.00
I 82,000 00
. 6,021.000 00
.. . . .. 409.720,000 00
..... .... .409.720, 000.00

LIA BIUTIF.S

Deposits:
a. In domestic offices........................... ......... ................. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .....
................... 340.25 LOOO 00
(I) Noninteresl-bearing . .....
.. ....... ... . . .
. .. .. . ..... .39.596,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ..... .'............. ,. .. .. .. .. ............... ........ ,.................... 300,655,000 00
Federal funds purchased and securibes sold under agreements
to repurchase in domestic offices of the banli: &amp; of 1ts
Edge &amp; Agrecmenlsubsidiaries, &amp; in IDFs
a. Federal funds purchased ... . .. . .. .. ..
-. .. . . . .. .. .. .... .. . . . ... .. .. . .. 260.000 00
b. SeciD'IUes sold under agreements to replln'hlllie ................. ,.. .. .. .. . . ... ... ... . . .. .. .. . . . 7,258,000 00 \_
Otber boJTDwed money:
With original maturity of one year or less ....................... .................................. , . . .. .. 2,500,000 00
With original maturity of more than one year ....................... ,... ..................... .............. 21.187,000 00
Subordinated noles and debentures ..,.. .................... .. .. ..... .. .
. . .. . .. .. . . 3.000,000 00
Otber liabiliUes ................ ,. ..,........ .. .. . . .................... ....... . .... ............ .. .... . . . .. . ... , .. .. . .... 3,351,000 00
Toial habilities ......................................... ., .., ............... ,................................ ,. ..... ,........... 377,807,000 00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of Sbarea a. Authorized ................ .300.000 ................ ........................ 1,875.000 00
surp1 111 ••.••••..•••••.••.•••. ,.,. •••••••••••••..• •.• ••••. ., ..................................... ,•••.••.•.•..•.... . ••..... ...... ......... ..... 7,346,000 00
a. Undivided profits and capital reserves............. .. .. .
. ..... .. .. . .. ....... ,. .. 22.779,000 00
b. Net unrealized holdmg gains (lo...s) on available-for-sale securities...... . .. . . . ... .... .. . . 87,000 00
Toial equity capiial ...... .. ..... ,............................ ..... ......................... .. .. ........ ...... .. .. . ... .. .. .. 31,913,000 00
Toial equity capital and losse1 deferred
pursuanlto 12 U S.C. l823(j) .......... ,............... ,.. .. ......................... .. . . . .. . . ..... ..... . . . 31,913,000 00
Toialliabilities, limited- life prefemd stock, and equity capiial,
and losses deferred punumtto 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ..................................................................... 409,720,000 00
MEMORANDA: Amounta outsl8ndlac u ol Report Dale:
. 1.623.0011 00
Standby letters of credit. Toial. ........................ ...........
.. . . . .. .. .
I, the undenigncd officer, do hereby declare that lhio Report of Condition bas been prepared in conformance
with offictal inslnlclion• and is true and ccneclto the best of my lrnowledge and belief
Jobn W. Conlon,
Chief Financial Officer &amp; Treasurer, July 2t, 1994 - (614) 374-6112
We, the uodenlsned dirednn, altell to the cmectoeu of Ibis Report of Condition and declare that it h&amp;J been
examined by us llld to the bat of our lmowlcdge llld belief and lw been prepared in oonformom:e with official
inslnlclioftl anclls true and comet
Robert 1!. I!van•
Joaepb H. Wcsel - Directon
Theodore P. Sauber
State ofObio, County ofWubin&amp;IDII, u:
Sworn to and subscribed before me thil 2ht clay of July, 1994 and I hereby certify that! am not an offiCer or
director of this bank.
Georgann Jobnoton, Notary Public
My commission expires June 27, 1998

�•

Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 27, 1994 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sports

Wednesday, July 27, 1994

Twinbill victories help Orioles, Indians
,By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ

Cleveland 10-4 Tuesday. The Indians got even in the nightcap, winning 9-2.
Both teams are in second place
in their respec tive divisions, and
eac h gained a half-game beca use
New York. and C hicag o - th e
first·place teams in the AL East

·AP Sports Writer
: A good day for Baltimore, a
;good night for Clevel•nd. In the
end, both team s were feeling a
half-game better.
, The Orioles began a rare day·
night doublehe ader by beating

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Monday thru Sunday
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and Central 1.-&lt;&gt;th lost.
At the sa me time, the Indians
stayed two games Hhead of Balli·
more in the wild card race.
Denn1s Martinez, the winning
pitcher in the second game, didn't
realize the Indians might actually
be banling the Orioles, as well as

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

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TOUCIIDOWN? - Not quite, but Houston
catc her Sco tt Servais (with armored leg pointed
skywa rd ) might think a fulll&gt;ack ran over him
after the Cincinnati Reds' Deion Sanders knocked

In the NL,

Astros hand Reds 6-5 loss;
Rockies make waves out West
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
AI thi s point in the season,
what's more amazing - Jeff Bag·
well having 101 RBis or the Col·
orado Rockies being only one
game out of first place?
In a ye ar dominated by Ken
Gri ffey Jr. , Frank Thomas and Mall
Willi;uns, Bagwell became the ftrst
player to break the 100-RBI mark
when he hit homered Tuesday
night for the Houston Astros.
"I guess I'm as surprised as
much as anybody else that I've got
101 already," he said. "It helped
tonight, which is all I wanlCd . That
was the big thing: It helped wm the
game. "
Bagwell's 33rd homer led the
Astros over Cincinnati 6-5, cutting
the Reds' lead in the NL Central to
one game.
The Rockies, meanwhile, con·
unued to close in on the NL West
lead. Their 6-5 win at San Diego
moved them just one game behind
Los Angeles.
"The thing that has been
encouraging for everybody is we're
only one game out and no TV
channels are talking about us,"
said Mike Kingery, who homered
for Colorado. "They're talking
about the Dodgers and Giants.
None of us feel we have played up
to our potential."
Bagwell has 101 RB!s in 101
games. He needs to drive in on! y
10 more runs to break Bob Wat ·
son's team record.
Bagwell's two -run homer
helped Houston take a 5-0 lead.

Linkfest slated
for Thursday
The annual Tri-County Ducks
Unlimited Golf Tournament will be
held Thursday at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason, W.Va.
The tournament includes lunch
and dinner and registration is $50
per golfer, said tournament
spokesman Horace Karr.
Lunch will be held at noon with
tee-off at I p.m. All golfers arc
appreciated. For additional information, call Riverside Golf Course
at 304· 773-9527.

The Reds came back at Riverfront
Stadium, tying it in the sixth when
Dcion Sanders scored by running
over ASIIos catcher Scoll Servais.
Luis Gonzalez doubled home
the go-ahead run in the seventh.
Todd Jones (4·2) was the wmner
and Johnny Ruffin (6·1) was the
loser.

In other games, Montreal moved
3 1/2 games ahead of Atlanta in the
NL East with a 5-3 win over the
Braves.
Also, San Francisco stopped
Los Angeles 12-5, Philadelphia
beat Florida 10 ·8 in 12 innings,
New York defealCd St. Louis 10-9
(See NL on Page 5)

U.S.D.A. CH

Rump Roast••

p -

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1

----------------------------·-----·-

Name ______________________________

Age

Telephone No. ___________

Anyone interested in helping with the organization of
this year's season, please feel free to call.

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•. Moo.................... 62 37
.. AoWooa .................. .S9 4t
· Aillodclpllil .......... .49 Sl
Now Yoolo .......... :...47 52

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aN&lt;INNATI ...... 58 4t .586
H..-o .................SI 43 .574
PiwbwJb ...... -......47 52 A75
St.IAuil .-.............46 33 .46S
OU..go .. _............44 l4 .449

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San FnnciK:o ........48 S3
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.182

Tuesday's Stores
AnJdol 5

s~. fnno;iaoo t2, Loo

Monltell 3, Atlanta 3

au..ao s, P I - 4

••

"""""' 6, aNCINNA11 5

Philodolphia tO, Aorida 8 (t2)

I

!'

Hou1ton (Drabek 10..6) at CINCIN·
' NATI (Rap« S.t~ tZ,35 p.m.
:
Mon.rcal (Hill 14-4) at Alluna (Mer' dt«l-l), t Z,40 p.m.
.
·
Philadelphia {Munoz 6-3) at flonda
.

.

&lt;llia.ao (Mora•n 2-9) tt Phubur&amp;h

(WloUo:l-l~ HSpm.

i

..
...

••

'
Colondo (Painw 3-4) 11 S•n Dicao
~ (llomillon 6-5~ t0:35 p.m.

••
•
I
I
I

••

.
New Yodr: (Jagomo 3-1) at SL LoW.
, . (UdJW 2-5), 8:35p.m.
.

.

~:

•

•

1..o1 AnacJ.• (Candio&amp;ti 1-S)
Fnnciooo (Sorif\8-6), t0:35 p.m.

.-

&lt;Uco(Budoaa6-7),4:05 p.m. .
ChiCIIO (Pollt'l' l-1) 1t PituburJh

• (Coob 4-8~ 7:35p.m.

,.

I

'' lliop {KNcs« :1-2), io:OS p.m.

I

'•••'

San

Thursday's 1ames

••

"

11.

Colorado (freeman 9-2) 11 Sin fnn ·
~

CJNCINNA n {Hinton 5~ 5) 11 S1n

AL standings

••
•••

•
'
•••
•

tnnings Lo wtn Ill S th 1rd straight

start, allowing five runs on 10 h1 L'
while striking out four and walking
two . Mike Fetters pitched the nonth
fur his 13th save.
· Red Sox 10, Yankees 7
At New York. Tim Naeh rin g
and Mo Vaughn hit two·run home
runs in the SlJ(lh .
Naehring's seventh horner of tJoc
year came off J imm y Key ( 15-3)
and capped a Red Sox comeback
that began after the Yankccs took a
5-0 lead in the first inning off Chris
Nabholz (3·3).
Key allowed II hi ts on six runs
in 5 l/3 innings. walkong three and
striking out four. Nabholz allowed
seven hits and fiv e runs, walked
four and struck out six in fi ve
onnongs.
Royals 3, White Sox 2
At Kansa s City, Mo ., Wally
Joyner had a pair of RBI singles.
Tom Gordon (10-6) improved to
7-1 li fetime against the White Sox,
allowing two runs and six hits in 7
1/3 innings. Jeff Montgo me ry
pitched the ninth for his 21st save.
Wilson Alvarez (11 ·6) gave up
six hits and thre e run s in seve n
onnongs.
Rangers 8, Twins 7
At Arlington , Texas, Ru sty
Greer's RBI single with two ouLs in
the e ighth inning was the differ·
cncc.
Doug Strange's run -sco ring
pinch-s ingle in the bollom of th e

eighth off Rick Aguolcra ( 1-4) lift·
ed the Range" onto a 7. 7 Lie before
G r~c r droc in lhc game-winner.
Jay Howe ll (4 ·1), who allowed a
run in the top of !he eighth on Matt
Walbc&lt;:k 's onc ·out solo homer, got
the win .
Athletics 6, Angels 0
At Anaheim, Ca li f.. Steve
On uve ros and two relieve rs combined on a three-hitter and Stan
Javier lien a club record with three
doubles for Oakland.
Ontiveros (6- 3) was pulled after
only 80 pitches and " two- hitter
through seven innings. He walked
non e and stru ck out four. Bob
Wel c h an &lt;l !lilly Tay lor eac h
pitched an inning.
Chu c k Finley (7 - 10) was
charged wilh six runs and seve n
hits over eight inn ings but allowed
onl y one hit over h os la st 6 1/3
innings .

·1

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER I
INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

THE 1994

Transactions
2.5

6.5
6.S

Tuesday's scores
DH: Bahimoro 10, CLEVELAND 4;

CLEVELAND 9, Blhimono 2
Detroit 9, Sclu.lc 1
Milwaukee 7, Tormto 5
Booon 10, New Yori. 1
K..nau City 3. auc..ao 2
Tuu 8, MiMmou 7
Oakland &amp;, Califomil 0

Today's games
Oakland (O.rlin1 9~9) at California
(Ldl.n.h s.s~ 4:0! p.m.
Suulc (Johnton 11 -5) 'a t Detroit
1-l), 7:!5 p.m.

CLEVELAND (Monio 9-6) II Bol&lt;i·
more (Muuinl IU), 7:3S p.m.
MilwallkcG (Wcpm 7·3) at Toronto
(11........ tl-6), 7:35p.m.
ChiCI&amp;O (Bcro 10·2) at Kan.~aa City
(Gubicu 6-1),1:0! p.m.
Mi.nnaOll (Mahontel 7~4) It Tcua
(l.euy 1-t), 8~5 p.m

(KonUeoUoW 7-5), t:OS p.m
S..ulo (FlanU1a 6-11) llllouod (GuJ•
W:boo4-5), t :IS p.m.
CLEVELAND (Orimaloy 2·t) II llol!i·
~(fcmondcz6-5),

7:15p.m.
Milw1u.koc (Scanlan l·S) ll TomtlO
(SIOWU11-I~ 7:)5 p.m.

OU.C.ao&lt;Rutrcom G. I) • JUn&amp;u City

(Cone 14-4). I :OS p.m.
c.Hro·mil (Lonline 0- 1) It Toua
(R"'IIn t().6~ . ,35 p.m.

Aulol"llclng ·
INTERNATIONAL AtrrOMOBtl.E
FEDERATION : S1upended Mi(;hael
Schunuchcr, fonnula One driver, from
the RClt two Grand Prix nee~ 1nd took
1way aia poinu from hia atmdin81. for
rule&amp; violaliona durins 1 nee tt Silver·
atone, Engl.ln4. Su.pendod the licen.e of
Pierre Aumonier, dirutor of lhe Britiah
Gnnd Pria, for one year for variow in·
fnctiml.

BasebaU
Lope
BOSTON RED SOX: Pl1ced Andre
America~~

Daw10n, outfielder, on lhe IS·d•y dla ·
ablod liA. Del.ipaled Ores Litton, pitch ·

er, for naianmcnl. A.Clivued Andy
Tumbc:rlin, inftclda, from lbc IS.d1y dd·
lblod lilt md oplionod hm to Plwtuctct
of 1bc llumltional Loi&amp;UC- P\udwcd the
contnc:t of Eric Wodae. c1t.chcr. from
Pnrtuc:bt.

CALIFORNIA A.NOELS: Pbecd Tim
Sohoon, outfoeldcor,oo ohotl-doy diooblod
lilt, ftiUOICiivc t.o July II . Rcx:~Uod Gam~.
Andcnon, oulfid.dcr, from Vancouva rl
oho P..W CoUl Loo,.._

DETROIT TIGERS : Placed M;ko

Henneman , pitcher. on the 15·d•y dia~
ablod lilt. rdr&lt;lllctive to July 19. Rocdled
Scan 8C1Jman, pit.cher, from Toledo of
Ute lntanationll Lcapc.
SEATTLE MARINERS : Recllled

Riclo

A111111~

inficldor, from Cuaory of

tbe P1eific: Co111 Ln1uc. Oplioned

Goo.p Glinollil, pddoor' Lo J.a.....m.
of ohe s...Mm Loop.
TEXAS RANGERS : Pt.ccd Tim
Leu}, pilcloar. Ill ohe 15-&lt;loy di..blod lia.
J'lltiOICII,V'C 10 Julyll.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 12, 1994.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 4, 1994.
THIS YEAR'S EDITION

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NICE JOB, ALBERT!- The Cleveland Indi ans' Eddie Murray
(left) congratulates teammate Albert !Idle after the latt er' s solo
homer off Mike Oq uist in th e third inning of the second game of
Tuesday's doubleheader against the host IIHltirnorr Orioles, which
the Indians won 9 -2 to gain a spli t. (AI')

CALL DAVE OR BOB TO PLACE YOUR All IN

••

••

.4SS
.416
.412

80110n (Hc:.koth (6-3) It N11w Yolk

Today's games

·; Olol'l' 6-S). 7:35p.m.

.410

Oaklond .................4l l4
Calilomia...............42 59
S..ule ....................4() 57

Thunday's games

New Yoolo t0, SL Louio 9 ( 11)
Colondo6, s.n D;...,s

I

Tuu .....................48 S2

(M.... 9-9), 7:05 p.m.
Booton (Selc 7-6) 11 Now Yodl (l'l=z

w.&amp;ern Dlvltlon

La. Angcle~ ...... .....49

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and Robb Nen (4·5) was the loser.
The Phillie s are 1-5 in extr a
innings, all on the road, and Florida
is 4-1 in extras, all at home.
Mets 10, Cardinals 8
Rico Brogna hit a two -run
homer in the II th inning and drove
in four runs as New York won at
SL Louis.
Brogna, who tied a team record
by going 5-for-5 Monday, connect·
ed off Gary Buckels (0-1) for his
sixth homer. The rookie is batting
.488 in his last 12 starts.
Todd Zeile hit a three-run homer
for the Cardinals.
Mike Maddux (2 -1) was the
winner and John Franco got hi s
24th save.
Cubs 8, Pirates 4
Mark Grace and Rick Wilkins
homered in the eighth inning and
Chicago pulled away at Pittsburgh.
Shawon Dunston also connected
for· the Cubs . Tom Foley and
pinch-hitter Dave Clark homered
for the Pirates.
Jose Bautista (4-4) was the win ner despite giving up two run s in
the only inning he pitched. Mark
Dewey (2-1) gave up Grace's
tiebreaking homer leading off the
eighth.

WMlemDMI&amp;on

NL standings

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Baseball

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.-..-................... . ! GOOD FOR S!
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Butch Henry (8·2) gave up three
hits and two runs in seven innings.
Giants 12, Dodgers 5
Matt William s hit hi s major
league-leading 38th home run and
San Francisco won before 55,771
fans at Candlestick Park.
Williams homered for the second straight day and Todd Ben·
zinger drove in three runs.
William VanLandingham (6·1)
was the winner and Orcl Hershiser
(5·5) was the loser.
Phillie!i 10, Marlins 8 (12)
Ricky Jordan and Kim Batiste
hit RBI singles in the 12th inning
that lifted Philadelphia over host
Florida.
John Kruk, who battled testicu·
lar cancer earlier this year, discov·
ered two lumps - one on his lower
abdomen and another on a rib and will return to Philadelphia
loday. Lenny Dykstra, shaken up
when he was thrown out at the
plate by Sheffield, also left the
game and underwent chest X-rays,
which were negative.
The Phillies led 8-2 in the fifth
inning before the Marlins tied it in
the seventh on Gary Sheffield's
two-run single.
Ben Rivera (3· 3) was the winner

th e White Sox, for a wild-card
playoff spot.
"I find it out before we came
here . I didn't even know what was
the wild card and how that thing
worked," he said.
Martinez (10·5) had a no-hitter
until Brady Anderson's two-out,
RBI single in the sixth. Martinez,
9- 1 since May II , walked two and
struck out seven .
"The thing ahoul Dennos is in
certain situations he can keep them
off balance," Cleveland manager
Mike Hargrove said. "You don ' t
try to strike people out - you try
to keep the big pan of the bat off
the ball. Dennis has done that very
well for us !his year."
Cleveland took command in the
first inning, using a n RBI double
by Be lle and a three-run double by
Manny Ramirez to go up 4-0. Belle
hit a solo homer off Mike Oquist
(3- 3) in the third.
In th e fir st ga me, Baines
snapped a long homerlcss drought
with two so lo s hot s . Rafael
Palmeiro and Leo Go me z also
homered for Baltim ore, whi ch
with stood Cleve land homers by
Albert Belle and Eddie Murray.
Ben McDonald ( 12·6) won the
opener, allowing seven hits in eight
innings. Albie Lope1. (0-1) lOOk the
loss.
Baines homered in the fourth
inning, again in the sixth a nd
capped his first multi-homer game
since May 7, 1991, with an RBI
single in a four-run seventh that
made it 10·2. He had not homered
in 69 at-bats since June 27.
Elsewhere in th e Am e ri ca n
League, it was Dctroil 9, SeatLle I ;
Mil waukee 7, Toronto 5: Boston
10, New York 7; Texas R, Min ·
nesota 7; and Oakland 6, Ca lifornia
0.
Tigers 9, Mariners I
At Detroit, Travis Fryman broke
an 0-for-26 slump with two dou ·
bles, two triples and four RBi s.
David Wells (4·6) allowed one
run on five hits in his fourth com·
plete game of the season. He struck
out ftve and walked his first batter
in 39 2/3 innings, a span of 156
bauers.
Jim Converse (0- 3) continued to
struggle, allowing six runs on nine
hits in 5 1/3 innings.
Brewers 7, Blue Jays 5
At Toronto, Jody Reed celebrated his 32nd birthday by hiuing a
pair of singles, scoring a run and
driving in two more in a seven -run
first inning.
Juan Guzman (10 -10) didn't
make it out of the first inning.
Ricky Bones (10 · 7) went e ight

Scoreboard

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10/$1°0

------- - ---------------------- - --1
•••••••••••••••••••••••

~

Mllllmam depoalt: Sl,YO.OO. Thlo CD lo •utomatlaoDy _
...le. '
Peaalty for •rly wtlbdnowal. Tbla Direr nplns 71l9194.

in II innings and Chicago beat
l&gt;iusburgh 8-4.
Rockie!i 6, Padres S
· Mark Thompson won his major·
league debut and Joe Girardi homered in his ftrst game back from the
disabled list as Colorado improved
til 26-25 on the road.
Thompson, Colorado's second
pick in the June 1992 draft, is the
first amateur ever ptcked by the
Rockies to make it to the majors .
He ~ave up three runs and seven
bits m 5 2/3 innings.
Steve Reed got his second save
by striking out Derek Bell with a
runner on third to end the game.
Scott Sanders (3-8) lost hi s fourth
!Uraighl decision.
Girardi, who missed 15 days
with a tom tendon in his knee, and
Mike Kingery homered for the
Rockies.
Expos 5, Braves 3.
.
Greg Maddux lowered h1s maJor
league-leading ERA to 1.69, b~t
wound up with the loss when hts
eyror contributed to four unearned
n,tns for visiting Montreal.
.
· Maddux (13-6), a four-tome
Gold Glove winner, made a three·
liase throwing error as Montreal
scored three times in the seventh
i~·ning for. a 5-21ead.

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MORTON •

consolation and championship games Sunday at
the Kyger C~eek EmJ?l.oyees Cl_ub, fi~ld .. The
induchon was 10 recogmhon of Sm1th s potchmg a
no-hitter and bitting two homers to help Sommerville Molors win the 1960 tournament title.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

---------------------------NL actiqn ...,~(~C~on~ti~nu::;::cd~f,:::ro::,::m:..:.P.:!ag~e_,:;4)~-------------------

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SMITH INDUCTED -Joe Smith of Point
Pleasant, W,Va. (left) receives his membership
plaque from Kyger Creek Little League Tourna·
ment chairman Don Barnette following the for mer's induction into the Kyger Creek Little
Lea2ue Tournament Hall of Fame between the

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Is Organizing For 94·9 5 Season.

Players: Cannot be 13 years old prior to September 1,
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Signup Dates are: July 16, 10 AM-1 PM;
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Location: Strike Zone on Front Street, Pomeroy

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him out him out of the way to score in the sixth
ining of Tuesday night's National League game in
Cincinnati, where tbe Astros won 6-5. (AP)

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Middleport, Ohio

:With losses by Yankees, White Sox,

R.C. COLA
PRODUCTS

P0 W.ELL'S

Pomeroy

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6-The Dally Sentinel
IID'f&amp;IE nal PQI7'f- Eacn of these adVertised 1
wit In eacn Kroger storo. except as specifically ,..,~~ I~ reQuired to be readily available tor
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~ednesday, July 27, 1994

Wednesday, July 27, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

COPYRIGHT
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SATURDAY, JULY
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same savings or a roJncne&lt;k whlcn wiU
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�Page

27 1994

Ohio

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, 1&gt; .0.
Associate Proll:ssor
of ·
Med• cuw
Q ues tion : My c hildren sw1m
eve ry day durin g th e su mm er.
Before !he season is over, each of
them will have swimmer's car at
least once. Why do !hey always get
this'
An swer: Let me ex pl ain a bit
about lhc parts of !he car in hopes
that it will make it easier to understand my answer. The car is a com·
plex structure. The outer part of the
car , the part you can wiggl e if
you' re ta lented, is made of carti ·
lage covered by skin . It is shaped
som e wha t lik e a funnel, and it
works like one ,in that it catches the
sound waves and directs them into
the narrow passagewa y of the car
canal. The surface of this canal "
covered by a thin la ye r of skin
attached ove r bone. The inside e nd
of the canal is close d off by the
eardrum, th e membrane that
vibrates when sound wave s stnke
it. The middle car - which begins
with the eardrum -- contain s a
series of bones that act as simple
levers to amplify and transmit the
sound into the mner ear, where the
vibrations arc converted into nerve
signals.
.
.
Swimmer' s car is a mmor skm
infection in the outer car. A small
scratch within the car canal provides an opportunity for !he infection to d e v~lop , and the outer car
becomes a lillie red and swollen. A
similar injury to the skin of your
arm doesn't cause much pa1n
because the ample soft tissue under
the skin allows for swelling without creating pressure. An infection
in the ear canal, however, causes
considerable pain because the skin
there is auached to the cartilage
and bone without the padding of
subcutaneous tissue. Your children
identify this condition by saying,
"Ouch! Mom, I've got swimmer's
ear again. Take me 10 the doctor."
Fortunately, antibiotic drops in the
ear canal and medication for pain
typically give prompt '"lief.
Your children have this infec tion repeatedly during swimming
season because they get water '"

their car canals.
water
to
di srupt th e nornial condition of the
car ca nal skin and makes it easier
for 1nvadin g bacteri a to sta rt an
infec tion. This is particularly true
when the wa ter IS untreated (like
water fr om lakes, rivers or
strea ms).
Q11cst•on: What can they do to
kee p from hi!ving swimmer' s car?
Answer: Since th ey shouldn ' t
quit swimmin g, another approach
is needed. Avoid sti ckin g things,
includin g fingers and collon swabs,
down th e car canal. I often tell
patients, "Don' t put anything in
yo ur car small er than a football! "
One thin g that 's small er than a
football is your fin ger. There' s a
natural tendency aft er sw1mming to
put a fin ger in your car and wiggle
it to remove the water. Thi s IS likely to make small sc ratches in the
skin of the car canal, which then
become an inviting site for invading bacteria to make a home and
multiply; that is, produce an infec tion .
Placing a few drops of Burrows
soluti on in the ear canal after
swimming often prevents episodes
of infection . Burrow's solution is
available without a prescription. A
common brand that is fonnulated
specifically for swimmer' s ear prevention is Star-Otic Ear Solution. A
homemade solution of white vinegar created by diluting a tablespoon
full in 8 ounces of water also works
effectively. This makes the ear
canal more acid, a condition which
slows the growth of most bacteria.
Some individuals may need to use
medicine stronger than vinegar or
Burrow's solution to prevent swim mer's ear. If your children continue
to have swimmer's car, talk to their
family doctor about other medications to help prevent the problem.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Meigs students tour Europe
Forty-eight student s, teache rs
and parents from Meig s Count y
participated in a study tour of Scotland , Engl and , and France la st
month. The ten -day tour, under
the direction of the Cultural HerItage Alliance program , was spon sored by the Meig s High School
French department to increase stu de nts' cultural and hi stori cal
awareness of Great Britain and
Fran ce. Je nni e Dorse y, French
teacher at Me igs Hi gh Sch ool ,
coo rdin ated the prog ram whi ch
incl uded many se minars prior to
th e students' departure.
They arri ved in Glasgow, Scotland , Jun e 8. Th e mornin g tour
took them through The Trossachs
or Scotland where th ey stopped on
the "bonnie, bonni e banks of Loch
Lomond ." Aft er breakfast in Callende r, th e group co ntinued
through the highlands to Edinburg
STUDENTS TOUR FOR CULTURAL
here at Gretna t;reen where the group partiicto vi si t the ancient capital of the
ENRICHMENT- These 48 Meigs students,
pated in a mock marriage over the anv!l, a tradiScots.
teachers and ·parents have returned from a tour
tional
ceremony in Scotland for centur1es.
During their two day sta y in the
or Great Britan and France. They are pictured
ci ty, students vi sited Edinburg Castle, where they saw the crown jewels and the me morial to the Scottish Theatre's production of Twelfth had lunch among the treasures of bring home. After another French
soldiers who died in battle through- Night.
their favorite rock stars.
dinner . stud ent s ventured to th e
The next morning, students visFollowing lunch, the y ventured futu risti c cultural ce nter of Paris
out the centuries . At !he end of The
Royal Mile, they also visited Holy- ited Trinity Church and Shake - toward Hyde Park, where Speech known as Beau bourg.
rood Palace, the official residence speare's burial spot before touring Teacher Celia McCoy, exh1 blled
l11c next morning, students visof the monarchs of Scotland as well the thatched cottage of Anne Halh- her talents among the native speak- ited Perc La Chaise ce met ery ,
away. The group then traveled to ers at Speaker' s Corner. The stu- wh ere Sarah Bernhart , Moliere ,
as today for Queen Elizabeth II.
dents then saw The British Muse- LaFontaine, and Jim Morrison are
Other features of the city includ- Oxford and London.
While in Oxford, the students um and the London Dungeon. After buried . Some students vi sited
ed homes of Robert Louis Stevenson and Andrew Carnegie as well visited the campus of Britain's old- dinner, everyone visited the famo~s Napoleon' s Tomb at lnvalides, the
as the towering monument to Sir est university and were able to Picadilly Circus and Samt Paul s Muscc d'Orsay, and Montpamasse.
Walter Scoll. One highlight of the observe robed students as well as Cathedral.
Those participating on the tour
The following morning the included Mike, Deb, Tara and Ali Edinburg vi sit wa s viewing the !hose participating in sports. They
contemporary musical , A Slice Of left Oxford and arrived in London group left for France. Along the son Gerlach; Steven, Jennie, ·rom
Saturday Night.
in time for the Queen's birthday way to the English Channel, the and May Dor sey ; Celia McCoy;
The tour left Edinburg early on and a visit to the Tower of London. tour stopped in Canterbury to v1sll Laura Miller; Cynthia Cotte rill;
da y four to journey through the After dinner, the students were able the Gothic cathedral made famous Melissa Wilfong; Don and Dodger
Lake Di stri ct to Grasmere . One to take in the London theatre per - by Geoffrey Chaucer's Tal es as Vaughan; Erin Warner; Cara Walstop in Gretna Green provided the fonnance of Blood Brothers.
well as the murder of Thomas A. ters; Sarah Anderson; Crystal
students with the opportunity to
Day six of the trip included a Beckett.
Vaughan ;'Monly Hunter; Jerod
panic1pate in a mock "marriage morning sightseeing tour, which
Upon arriving in Paris, students Cook; Kelly Grucscr; Benny
over the anvil" which was the tradi- went to Big Ben, The Houses of sampled the French cuisine . The Ewing; Anne Brown; Lynn Brown;
tional ceremony in Scotland for Parliament, Trafalgar Square and group traveled by metro to the Ladeana Grover; Jessica Thayer;
centuries.
Picadilly Circus. A stop was made Palais de Chaillot where they took Erica and Jeannie Robie; Amanda
Upon arriving in Grasmere, stu- at the foot of London Bridge for a night photos of the Eiffcl Tower. and Judy Well; Edeana Russell;
dents visited Dove cottage, home brief tour of the area where the Many students tested thoir French Joey Ruchti; Reggie and Sharon
of William Wordsworth and other Globe Theatre is being reconstruct- language skills by bargaining with Pratt; Kri sten Das sylva; Erika
Lake poets, This area was also the ed. A later stop at Westminster local sidewalk merchanLS.
Meadows; Becky Meier; Shannon
site where Beatrix Potier created Abbey gave the group an opportuOn the mornin~ of the eighth Staats; Sean Rice; Denise and BJ.
the famous Peter Rabbit tales.
nity to see a morning worship ser- day, students vis1ted the Eiffcl Buchanan; Mary and James Bays;
Late that afternoon, students vice and the most famous burial Tower, Napoleon's Arc de Triom- Ellie Drummond ; Laura Ehran;
arrived in Stratford Upon-Avon, spot in Britain.
phe, the Champs Elysccs, Sacre- Marianne Woodgerd; Marie Snyhome of the legendary playwright,
The tour then moved to Buck- Coeur, Montmartre and the Place der; and Linda Hayes.
William Shakespeare. They visited ingham Palace for the traditional du Tertrc, where many had porthe bard's birthplace before dinner, cermony of the Changing of the traits made by local artists. Stu·
and that evening were able to Guard. A stroll through Green Park dents shopped at Galeries
attend the Royal Shakespearian afterwards brought the students to Lafayette, visited the Cera House
With the family reunion season
The Hard Rock Cafe 1 where they and toured the lie de Ia Cite to visit quickly approaching, many will be
La Sainte Chapcllc. In the evening, submitting articles of family activithey took a cruise along the River ties for publication.
SATURDAY
Seine which highlighted the waterTo ensure prompt publication,
DANVILLE - Weekend ser- front landmarks of Paris.
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
vices, Danville Church of Christ, 7
The next morning a bus tour of
RACINE - Free immunization p.m Saturday, 10:30 and 6 p.m. Paris took the visitors to Notre requests that articles be neatly
clinic for children, Racine Fire Sunday. Denver Hill, Foster, W. . Dame Cathdrale and later to the typed and double spaced for easy
editing. Reunion items should not
Department, 9 a.m. to II a.m .; and Va. speaker. Public invited.
palace of Versailles. Upon return- exceed 300 words and must be subI lD 3 p.m. at Chester Fire Departing to Paris, students toured the milled within 30 days of occur·
menL
Louvre museum, where they saw renee.
SUNDAY
HOBSON - Special singing the Venus de Milo, Winged VictoNo exceptions will be made.
RACINE - Southern Local
ry, and The Mona Lisa. A stop at
Sunday
at
7:30p.m.
at
Hobson
All
material submitted for publiBoard of Education regular meetParis's Hard Rock Cafe and the cation is subject to editing. Articles
Christian
Union
Church
featuring
ing 7 p.m. at the high school.
Bill Ward Gospel Trio and Rev. Fragonard Parfumerie gave stu- wiU be published as soon as possidents a variety of souveniers to ble.
POMEROY - Pomeroy group Charles Curry.
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Calholie Church.

Reunion policy

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Alzheimers Disease and Related Disorders support
group, Wednesday, I to 3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Center. Su san
Bowers to talk on hospice.
POMEROY - Wildwood garden Club, annual nower show,
Wednesday, 17:30 p.m. home of
Betty Milhoan.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District,
Wcdncsctay, 8 p.m., Meigs SWCD
office.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Women ' s Fellowship, Thursday,
7:30 p.m., Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
POMEROY - Free clothing
day, 10 a.m . to noon at the SalvatiOn Army 115 Buuernut Ave.,
Pomeroy.

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary, special session. Thursday 7 p.m. at fire
station. Plans for annual street fesRACINE - .Racine Post 602,
tival on Sept. 3.
American Legion, Auxiliary, 7 p.m
Thursday at the post home.

STAR GUITAR
614-367 -C302
Ampe, Gultaro, String&amp;,
Keyboardo, Druma,
Plano &amp; Guitar L88oona.
Cheehlre, Ohio

Self Pick s1 O!bushel
Tye Brinager &amp; Sons

MORRISON'S

Reedsville- 1~14-378--6194

HEATING &amp; COOLING

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?
CLASSIFIED
. ADS
1

Card of Thanks

Public No1lce

We would like to
thank the Malga Counly
Soli &amp; Water Con-vaUon Dlotrlct, and the
Melga County Hlahw.y
Dept. for helping ua
lnetaU dry hychn18 111111
the pond ownara for
allowing ua to lnatall
dry hydrant• In their
pond a.
The Bedford Twp. Vol.
Fire DepL
Committee. Inc.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The lhlga County
Council on Aging, Inc., P.O.
Bo• 722, Pomeroy, OH
45769, wtn accept oeated
bldalor a 19861ourteen (14)

We would like to
thank the
Burlingham
Modern Woodman,
Juniper Camp
7230 for donating
us their matching
fundraiser.
The Bedford Twp.
Vol. Fire Dept.
Committee, Inc.
To all Meigs
County Firefighters
and EMS
Personnel, The
Ohio Division of
Forestry, The
Richland Area Vol.
Fl~e Dept, The
New Haven Vol.
Fire Dept, and
Mason Vol. Fire
Dept.: Thanks for
your support(
VVelookfonNardto
working with
you all. Soont
The Bedford Twp.
Vol. Fire Dept
Committee, Inc.
8

RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434

rtghl lo accepl or re)ec:l ony
or all blda. For more
lnformadon, contact Wanda

5

Happy Ads

11

ES.,A.,E

..I

QUALITY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

Call Western Auto
992-5515
Free Estimales
Residential , Commercial
and Industrial
&amp;.~ 1

Board Eligibility
Orthopaedic Surgery

Board Certification
Orthopaedic Surgery
General Surgery
Thoracic Surgery

Located at the Rick Peataon Auction Center on
Rt 33 In Maaon. W. Va. Due to perklngthll elllle
haa been moved. The ellllte of Oidia A. Fridley
will be aold
2 pc. L.R. suite, RCA color TV, end labiA&amp;, oak sewing
rocker, comer ahelf, 3 pc. B.A. suite. Queen Ann oak
tables, maple desk, metal haH bed, gun rack, Magic
Chef microwave, Nke new Whl~poot No-Froet raf~gera­
tor, like new Roper gu range, Hotpolnt washer &amp; dryer,
old dishes, butter dish, olllampa, Sylvania stereo, cassette player. Iron skillet, old bell. crock&amp;, atone )era,
Realistic 40 channel C.B .• Cobra 40 channel CB base
radio, several hand tools. drills, small vise, old tools,
nalls, steeple• &amp; tiC., Homelltt chain aaw, 10 amp battery charger, chains. chain blndera, lance poata, 2 rolle
barbed wire, 2 rolla ol woven lance, hallera, pitchfork&amp;,
2 Juel tanka, hyd. pumps. hyd. cyUndera, hyd hoses,
Or! act. gauges, 8 ft. cattle racks, cattle 0-homes, Troy
Built rear tine tiller, Statesman 22" aell propelled lawn
mower, sam• u new Statearnan 12.5-38' cut riding
lawn mower, alum. ext. ladder, N.H. 5 ft. buah hog, hay
wagona, pool hole digger, &amp;seder, van truck bed and
mora.

HOLZER CLINIC
ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY
Holzer Clinic's Board Certified and Board eligible Orthopaedic Surgeons offer
the highest standard ofpatient care and provide state-ofthe-art Orthopaedic
techniques such as ARTHROPLASTY (joint replacement). Our orthopaedic
phy.stcians studied in nationally recognized training program.\·. They perform
joint repairs and replacements with an expertise usually found only in large
metro medical centers, but they maintain "hometown care and convenience."

FIREARMS: RIIITiington Game Muter Model 760 • 3006 pump. Weal Point 410 pump thotgun, Stevena
Model 870-22 M~lomatlc, Hawthron•Vulcan 12 gauge,
Aminlue 38 sr-ctaJ revolver, HI-Standard 22 revolver.

Additionally, Holzer Clinic's Rehabilitation 1-'aciltties provide all necessary
rehabilitation and therapy, both before and after surgery

Mobile Home &amp; Vehicle wll be told 1112;00 Noon.
MOBILE HOME: 12xe0 Fleetwood 2 bedroom mobile
home.
VEHICLE: 1878 GMC Truck, 4 wheel dtfve.
AUCTIONEER'B NOTE: Large auortmant of farm
related lteme, be therelll
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

Holzer Clinic

90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

RICK PUUON IUCIION (0.

Ortllopaedics Department

MASON, WV
173-6185
AUCTIONEER; RICK PEARSON
ADM., PAUL E. WATTERSON
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH 1.0.
Not Retpo~... lelar Aoal•nta or Lou of Ptoperty
Uoeueed 6 Bondi' In Olllo, K.,tucty 6

LUNCH

446-5401

Genera/Information
446-5411

W.t Vlrglnill ...

•

POMEROY, OHIO
0128/lFN

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes

Help Wanted

,..,,

~
'\

I

• ."

·•'

.

Water's Edge Apartments- Syra&lt;:use, Ohio
Over 62, disabled or handicapped FmHA
1 bedroom. Rents for $0 to $415, b~ on
ln&lt;:ome. Range, refrigerator, carpet, j\/C, on site
laundry, parking.
614-949-2012 or614-992-6419
TDD 800-7~0750
FmHA Rental Assistance

~

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
314193 1 MO

Price
Construction
Co.

Apartment
tor Rent

n

Equal Houalng Opportunity

-

26 Yearo Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
For Free Estimate
Call 742·2303
7120/1 mo. pd.

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out ot
painting. Let us do it
for you. Very reaaonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Alter 6 p.m.
614-995-4180

Real Estate General

3/25194

YOUNG'S
CII\PENTER SERVICE

OFFICE 992-2259
POMEROY· Located on Condor St. - 2 story hamo home
situated on two lots. Includes 3 bodrooms, 1 bath, N.G. ftoor
lumace, Cohmbia gas, most wood floors and cablo.
ASKING $11,500
POMEROY- Point Lane· 4.5+ acros ol VACANT GROUND!
Rot~ng ground that ia mostly woodod. Immediate Possossioo.
On pavod strael Utilities should be ava1lablo.
ASKING $9,500
LONG BOTTOM-SA 248· Lovely,

wolt carod lor country
home that features 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 10+ acres w1th
large yard. Many ftowars &amp; trees. Large field with Pine Trae

Grove. The home includes blinds, curtains, wood shutters,
newer plumbing, cailinglans, handmade BiR:h cabinets, built
in hutch in dining IOOlll, large front porch w/awn1n9, covered

patio arua, 1 car garage, att1c space, n1ce

carJK~tiOg,

newer

-RoomAddltlone
-New garage•
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, oMo

Wanted to buy·
Standing
wood &amp; pine.

SR 124 REEDSVILLE- 3. 75.,. acres ol vacant ground.
Approx. 200' road frontage. Approx. t 00' River frontage,
t100'.,. depth.
ASKING $8,~.., ..

614·682·7676

REEDSVILLE-Approximately 4 acrao ol nice tayig land.
0 - wil Split. I acre $6,000. 125x359 approx.
COME TO CLELAND REALTY, WHERE WE HAVE
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE !II
.
HENRY E. CLELAND................. -........................ 192·6!8~
TRACY BRINAGER........ -....................................Mt-2 3
SHERR! HART...................... ;...............................742-2357
HENRY E CLELAND 111............. .......................... 192·61 81
KATHY CLELAND................................................ 992-8191
OFFICE ................-............................................... 992-2259

TRIM a11cl

USED RAILROAD TIES
120002/TFN

MARTECH

·INDUSTRIES
Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work
Porches
Sidewalks
Driveways
614-992-7879
SR 7 ·Five Polntt

Call
e-·~

DOG

q}j GROOMING
) \ ! AU IREEDS
.~~ ir S1sa1byGlmore
:..

QDALI'rY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
1 Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
1

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM'

110 Court St. Pom9rc.-;, Oiuo
"Look for tile Red and Whiw Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Owur 1-SOG-291-5600

ti'IN!t&gt;l

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Backhoe Service

3 Announcements

GRACE
ENTERPRISES

992·4103

111M11211fn

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES
-carpentry
•Painting
•Power Waohlng cleana all extarlora
with high praaaura
oprayer
•Reaoonable Ratea
•20 Year&amp; Experience
•Free Eatlmatea

915-4111

MAR TECH
INDUSTRIES
Backhoe Work and
General Hauling
limestone· Fill Dirt
Gravel- Sand
Leach Bed
Installation and
Septic Systems
6t4 -992-7978
SA 7 - Five Points
~1~-

212311 mo.

REDUCE : burn ott tat while yo~
1111p, take Opal tablela &amp; E-Vap
Diuretic . Available Fr~Ah Phar macy.

Roduee; Bum OH Fat While Yo~

Sleep,

Take

Opal,

Available

Frutl'l Ptlarmacy.

REDUCE..; burn oft bot while you
1l11p. Jakt OPAL, IYailabla
Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport.

tat

while you

Taka OPAL,

available

REDUCE; burn ott

alaap.

FMh Pharmacy; Middleport.
REDUCE · burn ott fit while yo~
1111p. Taka OPAL, IYailabltl

Fruth Pharmacy, Mldd5eport.

Strut Your Jeans Pageant. Camden Paf'k, Augullt 6. All aga

dhtlslons. Nlc:a awardtl. Call
Sholla Har1, 304-755-0060.

JESS' COMPLETE
AUTO UPHOLSTERY •
headliners, seat
covers, convertible
tops, Antique Cars.
20 yrs experience.
Boat Seats.
992-7587
41464 Starcher Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Howard
Excavating-Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Compl~le

House &amp;
Trailer Sites
Driveways , Septic
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
lines, Land Clearing
Trucking : Limestone &amp;

F1!1 D11t. Top Soil
Reasonab le Rates
Estimates

992-3838 ' '"""

The Town of N•w Ha'l'en, 218 112
Fifth St., Naw Havenl WV will be
accepting .. aled b dt tor the
purchaM and ln .. allaUon of 1
fire detac11on and alarm ayatam
to be Installed In tha Naw Ha.... ,.;
Communlly Canter. tnsp.cllon
of .. ld project mual be br. ai&gt;'
polnlmant only. To achedu a an
appointment, PluS8 call 304-

882·2698

w"n

or

304-882-3203, bol·

&amp;am-3:30pm,

Monday·

Frtdly. Tht Town reMrvH tha
right to rtfuu any 01 all bide.

Would Uka Someona To TNch
Ma To Read, Earn~ McKinney
'

&amp;t"-446-nOI.

4

Giveaway

Khtana, To Good Homt 114-.379-

2585.

'

To Good Home : Playful Kllltna

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.

614-3711-2552.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

6

'

Lost &amp; Found

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Lost: 3mo. old Oachahund
puppy, brown w..rtng whha n..
collar, Grear Rd. 304--&amp;75-&lt;M52.

7

614-992·7643

Yard Sale

(No Sunday Calls)
V121121ttn

~
SPEND

CLEANING SPECIAL

$100.00 GET 1 ROOM

FREE

(Carpal Cleaning Only-Maximum 240 sq. ft.)

· Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
193st
Chatham
Tl'lurlday,
Friday,
21hh, :!lith, lOth.

Avenue
Saturday:

4 Ftmlty : 1r2B, lr28f8.4, lott
Child,.,, Clothing, lAta Mont
500 Rouah HolloW Rd, Acroaa
From L.ondflll.

All Yard Salaa Muat Ba Pald In
Advanco. DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad ,. to Nn.

S.mday odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday odhlon • 2:00

• carpet cleaning &amp; 5COtchgard • drapery
•
fabric • general cleaning

992-5316

·x

Announcements

Water hauling

timber, all hard

repairs throultlout the ho,..., built in range &amp; avon, disposal.
Several outbuildings, TPC water. A WONDERFUL PLACE
FOR A FAMILY TO GROW UP INti CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENTII

RACINE-Graenwood Rd.· .57 acre with 1986 Modular Home.
3 bedrooms, full basement with gara9o, central air/heat
pump, newer carpeting, sma11 outbUI!dmgs, range and
doclcing.
,ASKING $44,1100

SHRUB &amp; TREE

992-2269

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

511 4/0Wn

7!3 1191fTFN

ACADEMY

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Hupp, D.C.U. e Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 4S760
(614) 843·5264

Rocky R.

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NFW &amp; USED PARTS fOil
AU MAlES &amp; MODElS
992-701301
99HSSl 011
TOll fl£11 -11»-141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

TRI-STATE K·9

LIMESTONE,

• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

•UGHT
HAUUNG
•RREWOOD
BILL SLACK

HAUliNG

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health

511694 TFN

985·4473

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection.
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Rottweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service ·
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
A(CIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

949·2168

REMOVAL

A~ '---=

We Want You
Overbrook Center's upuitnced staff is looking for a
few new members for our nursing team . CaU today to
learn aboul our NEW and IMPROVED WAGE and
BENEFITS arul sign on bot1us paclulge. Apply Today!
CaU Marilyn Conaway, D.O.N.
Morulay-Frid&lt;Jy
9:00a.m . • 4:30p.m.
EOE
333 Pag• STreet, Mid&lt;lleporl, Ohio 45766-992-6471

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

FR~E ESTIMATES

1:1/2/llo

SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1994
10:00 A.M

MALCOM W. LENTZ, M.D.

(614) 992-7474

In:)

ADC.,IOI
EDWARD W. EISSMANN, M.D.

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Dtaratlvo
Sal.. ..I
lnstolattoa

-NOW OPEN

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

7121Mn

u•-

@ ' O~-{~

44

Sake• alitJe, our
baby u FitJe!
Happy Birthday
Derek
Grandpa &amp;
Grandma Barrett

Fr• EetimalM:

IN
THE

Aging, Inc. reaervee the

992-2156

992-2096
550 Page Sl, Mkkleport

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Monday, Auguol 8th. The
Melge County Council on

WANT
ADS
WORK!

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Fond:\Ch«n
ood

IT! ACREAl DEAl

paaaenger Uaxlvan until

VIning, 614·992·2161.
(7) 24, 27; 2TC

lose Wel~lllllt •erar('
Guaranteed
Lose Po und s and Inches
Natural Herbal Tablets
1·800·796-6321

p.m. Saturday.

Frldoy, Saturday, July :19th
30th, Kldo Clotltol llatomhy
Ctothlo, Adult Clothn, llloe
3891 Bulavlllo Plko, 8:00-?
·•
Fnday, Salurday, Klda, Aduft

Clothlo, (Wlnlo&lt;, Sum"*) Sol
Of Chrome Ss&gt;ot&lt;ed Wllwta For

4 WD Rongar Truck, Other Truck
Pono• Curlalno, Mloc. eo.- 01
Klfl Hd, 160 I A.ll.·

SPECIAL CARE CLEANING SERVICE
4-7-1 MO

Thuro, F~~• Tc !, Clothlo, lilac.
lt•m•, H1. 160 White Ad

ICodarwood l.ono.

�NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

40 legal maHer

Answer Ia Previous Puzzle

43 Raccoonlike

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATTIE RLVll.'" by Bruce Beattie

51
In

J ul y 2Bth , 29t h , 30t h, 313 Up pe r
Route .... Across t- rom ~ liver

Golllpoilo.

Dopooh

And

Ratarencea -Required. No Pets,
Se nd Na me And Ph o ne Number
To: CLA 321, clo Gallipolla Dally
Tribu na, 825 Third Avenu e, Gal-

Bridal Plaza_ Tum At Ught Go
Stralg hl Past Bob Evans To,l.eft

Up Rlver Comer; Second Home
Behind The Ahen11or. Shop,

ll pollo, OH 45631.

Georg\1 Smith Has Moved To A

Smaller Home And Ia Salllng

42 Mobile Homes

EJ:cea lloms, Alao Offered Are

Goods

From

Famil y

Friends . Sa le Is Under Root. WU I

MA l.!&lt; C i1 AllVI &gt;J iSl
Refrtgar~tor

Ratrtgaralor $95;
Frost Free $150 ;

$'1915 ;

Nlca Electric Range,
Microwave Oven On Top, S2 SO;
Electri c Range 30 Inch $95;
$175~

Squaro Tub,

R.:

Remodeled. No Pal e, S2501Mo. $95; Skaggo Apr,llancea, 111 Vlno
Slroo1, Galllpol o, 614-446-7398,
114-387-0115.
Or 1-1100-499-3499.

li polla,

Hand Planer, 25 ' Ext. Ladder,
Eta. Pig Ta lis, Ugh! Axturu, 0.
Glasa Top /Other Glass, Jeans
Ortlsses
Coats,
Sweaters,
Tremendous Amount Of Ni ce
Clot hing, Uena, Womens, And
Books,

Hard

Moving Sahli Friday, S at~d a y,
July 29t h, 30th. Seventh House
Out SA n 5. Great Bac:k To
Schoot Clolhn, Bo ya, Girls,
Me ns , And Ladln , Couch,
Chest And Much Morel

Two Family: Wed .Sat, 9 A.M. -5
P.M. Clothing, Housahold And
Misc. hems, 2 Miles Out From

Rt . 7, On Addison Pike.

Res ume

To:

Nate

COf'l't-Eaatem

municallons,
1 ~2
Avenue, Gallipolis,. OH,

Phona Ca lls .

31

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full Ume auctionMr, complete
auction
service.
Ucensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, 304-

773-57115.
AucUonHr Col. Olear E. Cllc k,
License 1 754·94 &amp; Bonded,

304-l!QS-3430.

2 bedroom &amp; 2 car garage apl .
In Mlddloport, new palnl I

wallpapor, $13.1100, 614-992-5310.

.

Wanted to Buy

Truckl, 1987 Uodeh• Or Nawar,
Sm~h

Ea~tem

Buick

Pontlacl

Avenue, Galllpol a.

1900

Decorated atcmeware, wsll tel•
phonee, old lamj», old thermoml1era, old clocks, antique
furniture. Riverine Antiques.
Au• Moore. owner. 614·992·
2528. Wa buy aetatea.
J &amp; O'a Auto Parta and Salvage,
also buying Junk ca,. &amp; trucl(s.

304·773-5343.
Want to buy: Home or trailer on
land contract . 304-67.S.1335.

Old cigarette lighters, milk bol·
tin, fountain pens, allvarware,
marbles, atonaware, magazines,
Star Wars and Star Trail Items;

Osby Martin, 614-ll92·11141.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
With Or Without MotOfl. Call

Larry Uvoly. 614-388-9303.
Top Prl- Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Ringe, Silver Coins,
Gold Colno. II. T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

Employment Services

this newspaper Is subfed

Ing limitation In their home on
an " aa nHdtd'' baala? Salary:

$5/lv. Hlah ochool rllgr11 nlld

d~vo(a liconao, good driving

l'llcord, ttvaa yaara llcenaad
driving experience and ad.
quata automobile lnaurenoe
coverage required. Contact

Cec:llla at HI00.531·2302. EqUII
Opportunny Employor.

to

Ihe F-ral Fair Housing Act
o11961l wl1lch makes H Hlogal
lo ll&lt;!verflse ·any pralerenct.
llmhalion or clscrtnlnatlon
based on race , colOr, religiOn,

sax famllal slatus or national
oriQin, or any Intention lo

make 8lr'f such prelerence,
llmHallon or discrimlnaUon."

This 118W!p8p01 wll 001
knowllngly accep1
·~· a&lt;tventsemens for

real ea1a1e

'whlctl fs fl violation ot the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed lhal all dwellings

ll&lt;Wertised In this newspaper
111'8 avaMable on an equal
opportunity basis.

For eale by owner· log home,
1860 oq. ft ., lull baaomonl
wlfamlly room woodbumer1 3
badroome, 2 khchana, 3 lMt ha,
CIA. central v•ccum, cathederal
calling, .. one Urepllel', 11rg1

docll,

321!16

outbuilding

WfhNted work room, 2• lt:Naln
woodlld are~ cloaa to town,

llolga School Dlolrlct, daytlmo
614-992·2318, ovolng 614-11112·
Tl33.

Alllauranl S..klng Enofllollc For Solo By Owner: 3 BR., 1 112
Exporlonced a Woll Groomod Bath, 2,100 Sq. FL, 1 Slory, 2
Parson• FCII Uuhlpla Openings. FINplacee, Gut HNt, Cent. Air.
Send Reaume &amp; Aet.,.nca To: llriat Drtva. Walking Dletanca
ClA 322, cio Galllpollo Dolly lo hoopllol, 1185,000. llhown By
Trlbunol..~ Third Avonue, GoJ.. Appolntmonl, 114-446-1206.
llpollo, un 4!1631.
Hou• tor aale, $17,000 or Nnt
Smoll Local Firm S..klng Part· S3001mo., In Pomoroy, 3 bodTlrno On Coli Clunlng 1'8110111. . _ , lull -mllnl, coil 114Sond Roaumo To SCCS, P.O. MII-2- oft« llpm.
Box 538, Karr, OH 45843.
llodul«, 2 cor garogo, 2 belhl,
Temporary Wortc, Mull Have central air, nNr Qleatw, 814Experlenc. In Houea And 1185-42811 or 1114-985-3631.
Home

Rep~~lr,

Roof,

JM'

GaUls -llolga Hoad Slari II A&lt;ceptlng Applications For Tha
Following Poahlont:

Psrent

lnvolvemt~nt

Coordinator

• BS In Social Work /Rolalod

304-773-5496.

Will steam cieoln cerpete cheap
lo flnloh my poymonll on
cleaner, IM-182-4538.

Field Or Equivalent Expertane~~
P1ua ThiW y..,.. Experience
WC&gt;flllng Wl1h FomiiiM With
Young Chlldran.

DlaabiiRin Coontlnalor • BS In
Spoclll Hoods /Rolalod Flold Or
Equlvalonl Exporlanco Plus

Financial
21

Business

2bdrm. apta., total electric, appliance•
tumlah..:t, laundry
room hlcllltlu, cloH to .chool
In town. AppUcationt available
at: VIllage Green Apta. 149 or

Fumlolled Eftlcloncy $165/Mo.
IJIIIHI11 Paid, Sharo Balh, 607
Second Avo.• Galllpollo 614-4464416 AHor 1 ~.II .
'
Fumlehed Efficiency 701 Fourth
Avenue, Galllpolla, $220/Mo.

Ulllhl .. Paid, 614 446 4416 AHer
7P.M.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackoon Plko
from $222 lo $285. Walk lo shop
:OH~VIOL Coli 614-2568.
Fumlahed 1 bedroom apart·
m.-rt, all utlllllte tumlahed

$2501mo., 114-11411-2526.

'

Fumlahod 3 Rooms I

Balh

Clan, No Peta1 Reference

&amp;

DoPJ*t Roqulroa. 814-446-151Q.
Nicely Fumlahlld Apartment

1br, next to Ubrary, parking:
central haat, air, "terence ,...

qulrod. 614-446~338.

Furnished afflcianw- Apt. Central,

Air Cond. P~valo
IJIIIHioo
lumlohod.

parking.
oxcopl

private Elec. 814448.2802

Opponunhy

room

apar1menlll

at

NOIY Air Condltlonod 1 Bodroom, Convenient To Shopping
&amp; Theatre, 1255/Mo. + Utfllllea

114-446-2957.

•

Nlco 3 br. opl. In Mlddllport
614-!192·5858.
•
One bedroom furnished apan·

monlln Middleport, coli 614·992·
5225 or 614·992-5304.
Pomeroy Clift Apartments are
now

accepting

applications.

Fair Ho..lng I Equal Oppor·
tunlty.
Damon
Stapleton,
managor, 614-992·7712.
Unlumlahod

oportmonl,

Pomeroy, 2nd tloor, 4 rooma
b1th, no pate, reference a;.d

depooh,
5:30pm.

45

114-1112·2215

11111

-=:

Hrllp Wonlod: Body Work, 114441..1168.

-nlon

Uvo-ln
lot akforfy
lady, mu.t hln ,.,.. •.eM, 11of.
992-3140 or 114-992-e232.

3

Homes for Sale
bed.-..,

11/2

botho,

pll-. lull corpotld,
· - ·patio,
'-

flpump
..

"!.~

garogo, .....oo lol, Horton St,
llbaon, 304-J73..888ll.
3br. ronch, Gallpolla Forry, CIA
lor rlololll. ~'111-3328.
I room A laundry A ~ /12
ocrll, bldg, big Nd brtm, 114;112-2751:

Hou-.
Elrllto

S.Hiemonl Solo: 3
Acr-. Ballllllo Dllh
-contact Tom Loftill AI 1 845-1702 Or 112-128-8473 Allor 5
P.M.

Houses for Rent

AI..,..,,..

2
2

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Roome for rant • w.ek or month

Slartlng at $120/mo, Galli&lt;~ Holll.
614-446'9580.
.
SIHplng rooma whh cooking.

Alaa lrollor apaco. All --upa.
Col aftar 2:00 p.m., 304-7736651, Msoon WY.

46

1~

&lt;;;!

=-=.khl

Baclroame

In

O.llipolll,

Required, 114-441·

1308.

51

Goods
U.oo Up Vln~ f:e48

Merchandise

1966 GMC 2 1121on, 5 &amp; 2 opood

1U92 Chevy 112

22' grain bed/dump with 18 torl
Refrlgoratore, Stov.., Wa•hart holsl, also cattle racU (MidwiSt
And Oryera, All Reconditioned Bed), 33,000 miles, ona owner,
And GaurlntMdl $100 And Up, oaklng $25,000, 614-992-5072.

exc. cond. 304-713-5774.

10'x20'

pallo

roof
~75-

w/acceaonoo, S300.
1832.

12,000 BTU Amana 110 Von
Used 1 Y11r $285, 81&lt;H37-0168.
1981 GMC truck w11h log bed·
1978 log trallerj 2 11wa; IMit oJ
alddder chalnej call 814-62·

5380 or 614-992·3220.
t985 5-10, Gr1vaty, rwcllner, 1981

Font 4x4. ~~62.
2 Aoh Tanko,1 Sol 01 Bunk
Bods Waigh! Bonch Wl1h

W.tghte,
Recliner,
S!oare
Craft..,..an 18.. Scroll S.w,
Stereo And CO Player, Hlntendo
With 11 Tapn, For More Infor-

mation, 814-367·~.

;;sr=o"'R""A~G"'E;-;;T:::A-::N::K=-:S3"ooo
=-cG::-o-,ll-on- l John O..ro

773-5646.

Jacklon, otUo

Woodbumer; 1988 allver truck
topper; truck tool box· 614-8986345.

'

55

picker, 12 roll bed, $2000; also 3
com warne, complete, Ill {3),
$1000;
heavy duty gravity
beds

minus

running

gears,

$200111., 814-ll112· 50n.

Supplies

63

Livestock

Block, brick, - • plpoa win· 1:--:--::~--,----­
dow. , llntele, etc. Claude' Win- 1 Small Gentle Pony, 614--446taro, Ria Granda, OH Coil 614- 6981.

56

I :::-":C:"":-:-- , - - - - - -

24 Month Llmosln Bull, 5
Black &amp; Wt1lte Faea
Hafloro, 814-446-4053.

Grooming.. Julie Webb. I
0231.

-riding ~ng q'!)~,
locany, 5225. uta
Royal ='nor, -ko. 150.

Hay &amp; Grain
Pompored Poll by Sonya, dog 64
grooming, belhlng, all breodo.
Squoro
bal01 hoy. 304~75-3960.
304 ..12·3730.
10lr10ll8 dog kllllllll, $111t.9S.

doublo

handmade

304-815-

1fter 1pm.

Apple II GS Comput• and lmageWrhar H Pnnter, :z dac.
ditvu, moute, •nd 10ftwara.

sooo. 814 446 6658

Chill F r - $100, 814--441-4141
AHor I P.M. Or On WNkondo.
C.llor ID box, 14 momory, bnnd
new, $43.15, 814oet2-t168.
CompU11r IBM Compatable. 3.5,

Naletered Walker Coonhound
51110 or trodo 1or light

304-882:

3n.

AKC Coekor Spaniol pupplao, 10
wkll old, ohola I wormed, $100.
304-6111~223.

Concrolo a Plllllc Sopllc
Tonkll 300 Thru 2,000 Gaiic&gt;no
Ron Evan• EntenwiAI, JIICk·

aon, OH 1-800o637..0528.

Couch 6 Choir In Good Cond~
lion, Price: $100, 1--3548.
Full olu bed; lull o1u boll
spriniJI and monrou; olono·
1111oll chool of d...,on; oiid
misc .; 114-992-ea24.

20

Inch

T.V.

$99.11~;

Mamoru 20 Inch Stereo T. Y.

Lillo Now $248.1111i_ RCA 13 Inch
T.V. Uko Now, 0134.1111; Mag.
navax VCR Wnh Romola $119 1111:
Shllrp VCR 188.1111; Oald Sll;

IBM Compo1111o Comput« 2
Dllk Drtvor, Color Mon~or
MouNI Printer, I YNr11 Old'
_.132.
'
$650 F nn, 1_
King IIZ8 walorblrf wkh llghto

ancf mirror, 0 drawerw u~
n•th, new ll'llhreu and llnw

hAIIf, comfort• and curtalno'

$300, will dollvar Ia 1011011111&gt;10

oroa,l14-11411-2888.

King Silo Walorbod, 01111
C.blnolo,
MlrTor,
Ughlod

Headboard $400. au..n Size

Watorllod $200. FIMZ« f75
Sofa, Rocllnlr Rocking Ct.li
814-887-4245.
Largo 111
Duncan
1

..,.mlc kiln. 3Q4-

.:.:Movi"N.
1 1-: 6-1'1; : :~·;;:::;-;;::;:-=:-::--:Muot s.u Foot: Froot

F'" ""
~~rotor, $111j_Sldo By
Sldo Ro -or S1ou· Stove
1160; King otorllod Wbh Oak
BaokcoM Holdborllll, S250·
Couch I Choir, 1160; End T.b!O
$35·
Coif•
Tablo
1160·
NlgMoland $10; Largo Antique
Mfrror 1185; ~r CupboOnl
$128; Oak SOfpllllllno Front
o..- Wl1h Mlmor $1110· t14441-o25l

•

Nlco Hutch $225; Nlco Air eon.
dHiono•, $128·, Solo'• 1160·, Ent...
Ia1nmont C.rrl« •75: Woodbur·
not $100· Antiquo Maytag Wrln~ ,!_~, Bulft In llztl $100;
514-&lt;1~ Aftor I P.M.
Norl Track oxcl-. 1400.00, Uko
._,_6-1811
,$65. 304•1H851.

au- Sla Bad Now Hrlodboanl

71

Autos for Sale
~~~~~~~---

AKC Roglolllrod Mol• Mlnlaluro
Schn.ouzor, 13 W11kll Old, 614~38.

AKC

roglolorod

pupplee,

Schlppolka

2

mal81,1 flmele,
$250
114-fi6.2806

lholl,
ovonlnp 1ft« l ar-konda.

AKC Roglalorod Wolmaronor
pupploa. 304-li7S.7lll0.
F1oh Tank I

To
11144,

Bac1'8::'r1

--=-----

-rlllco.

.. Q 2

39Small amoun1

Pa s s

Pas s
2•

3 "'
6•

Pass
Pass

4e
Pa ss

ahape, nice &amp; ciNn, $600. 304-

13 - lens
18 Act ress

22 Dissipated

ma n
23 - welllhal
end s we ll

24 Aff irmatio ns
25 Defe nse depl.
27 Ezekie l' s

nickna me

28 - St. La urent
29Hoaxe~

30Sneaky
31 A rrow po ison
32Sa ndwic h

lype (a bb r. )
36S uit able
38 A c cl aim

39Tangles
40 Laug hi ng
41 S h arpen er

· 42 D1 rty

I

By P hill ip Ald er
S ir Thom as Bro wn e, th e seve n ·

Motorcycles

SEE. RERUN

7

'1'0U TWI RL THE
ROPE. AND 't'OU
JUMP UP AND DOWN
LIKE THIS ..

IT 'S

A J UMP ROPE..

1988 Hond• 4 Trax 250, good

cond., $1500 Nrlouo cello only.
304_.75-4152 or 675-1665.
1987 Suzuki 300, $1150. ~1116335.
1988 SUzuki 4 Wh•lor 230 Ex·

cellent Condition, $1,'700, &amp;14-

245-6593.

250 Yamaho 3 Whoalor $75
NMdo Unlo Work, 614 448 66111.

75

17' Slof'&lt;raft

a 120 h -

FRANK

..

'

•

&amp; Motors
for Sale

Boats

&amp; ERNEST

r---::;;-::::;:;-:::;:;::::;;;:::::;;:=-:::;:::;:::;::::--;;----------------:---:----:-~---,\
.J. T~INIC TME g~~T WAY TO P~DVIt&gt;f

19118 Pacer, 15 112', Tri-Hull
flborglau bloo boat, 10 hp.
Moll:ury oil lnJoclod, 28 lb.
thru.. , Ulnnkota trolling FMtOte

control motorL $3500, 114-992·
2067 Monday.,.~dey, 8am-4pm
•

1990 Yamlhl Wove Run- 1100
/Dual Trollor, -6-9364.
'

20 Fl. Galaxy InBoard /Outboant

, ,

dummy's
and
ca lle d for
the
pade
Thi sJack
is th
e correct
per
ce sntage
play for no s pade lo se r s You s hould
a ss um e Easl ha s th e ktn g, and you
s tart with dummy 's j ack so as lo pick
up K10·5 in the East hand .
Her e, though, Ihe jack Ios ito Wes t's

...

[ W&gt;ti-'( 00 en£ fCR
~(H{;L£. .

Accessories

[,.If\'( tJ.SE:,

[ "''
'" ~ 17 t D\"''T
v "O' 1
.J.,.._......_
VN
N~ ""
1-\t&gt;..D 1-\r-.Y FE.VER

WOULD I ~"-1/E

PI&lt;.KE:D '\l{(f£ ~':&gt;
F~ YOO?

l

8 &amp; 30 dlyo. 30H75-4890, PI ' .:
Pt.... nt.

79

,

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1981 Eldurado C.dlllac $2,100, '72 SUporlar 22' mocor homo,
good lhllpll, 304..75..186.
.ta1p11 5, rune like new, roof air
1912 Bronco; 11180 11-60 Pick· condhl";'~nli Dodge 413 C.I.D.,
8-3301.
Up; 1985 Honda Shadow Boloro 15500, I
6:00P.M. 614~45-1555.
18 R. HI Lo All ..drill C.mpor,
1964 Mas;.~ CoUIJII good $2,100, 614-3Bl'71lll.
wortc car,
. C.lll14-m.~71. 1m 2111. Titan mocor homo,
1985 C11111ro, rod v.. aulo fully 1111-conlalnod, flll'llnlar,
wllh air, osklng S18oci, S14-1112! olr,
Nhlglfalor-or,
2357.
microwave. mauve Interior,
59,000ml, -Y lor road, S8500.
1966 Oldo Coli, ru1111 gooo, looko 304_.7~1148.
aood, $11100. ~75-4001 aftor

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

....•

As suming Wesl wasn' t playing a sub·
lie game with his ope nin g lead . this
places East wllh the A·Q of hearts and
th e c lub ac e. Ye t he didn't hav e
e nough lo open th e biddin g. Ergo,
Wesl must have lhe spade kin g.
Always count the high -card points .

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

, ,.

BIG NATE

-~

'·~·
'

.•

.......

"

IS BETTER

I HOPE HE HAS A
GOOD TIME SEEING
M.L HIS C.lA5.St1ATES.

...,.
I

-....
...

GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

·-:

-.-.

Umbert o -

U;o&lt;+-f--+- +--

48 -

Lingus

(airline)
50 -

de France

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CeloiJnl 't" Clphf!r r:ryptr:-g rAms M il r' A~ ! Pr1 trom rJil•") I A II on ~ hy lilmn"5 peo ple pas t an d pre sent
E&lt;wl" letl er 1n lheophf!r ; t 3nrls lo r a r1oth er Today s clue K t&gt;QL.J I ~ C

.zsy

UY P TT F

S PDY

ZYR AYA

VRY

C F

p

A V Z

P W F

XUYP Z

WVD H Y N

c y

zv

0 YUNVA

G UH ZZ YR

HN

G U HZ HR X

KVWW L RHN Z

YR Z Y U0 UH N Y

YQ S U V R .

PREVIO U S SO LUT IO N _ " M an can be li eve tile 1mposs 1b le

be l1 eve lhe Imp robable" - Oscar W1lde .

r-,G__I-r-N_O
. -J- r--11;,~
s
6
/ . . . .

I

I 1 I :;

~::;~;;~::::~::::~::~-"--.
--:,S,.:.
O,.O~M.;...;:E~R......--11

~

L-

8

I I 1I I
7

~T'S R\6\-!Tr
A I'ORRE~T
6\JMI' HAIRCUT!

!

ASTRO·GRAPB

broken romance? The Astro - Graph
Matchmake~

can help you lo understand

what to do to make the relationship wort&lt;

uc.

Mail $2 lo Matchmaker. P.O. Box 4465,
New York, N.Y. 10163.
BERNICE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. ~) Your audience
BEDE OSOL w111 lake 10 heart loday comments and
su~slions you make. Resisllemplalions
to pass on mforma11on thai may not be
supported by an array ollacts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Prudence must
be practiCed aiiii'S lime, or your exlrava·
gance may oftsel your gains. Even though
you might be adept al acquisition, you
could be equally adrort al squandering.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Two factors
might COnlribule IO falling short of your
Thursday, July 28, 1994
• aspiralions today. One rs a lack of inrtia·
You're an individual who prides yourself i live; lhe other is an inabilily IO clearly
on your lack of dependence on others . I define objeclives.
However, In the year ahead your moat SAGlnARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) A lack
sucoesslul veniUreo might be !hose you do of 1mag1na1ion iS not apl 10 be your probin con)unclion wilh an equally talented lem lodey. Oiflicullies mig hi be created
partner.
beCause you may oveiS911 yourself on 100
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Today if you many illogical schemes.
.
expect persons wilh whom you have CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) II mrghl
strong emotional bonds lo drop whal IIIey be wise today to lOOk for an uherior motive
are doing in order 10 gralify your whims, should an acquaintance who knows you
you could be in for a severe disappoint· only casually oilers you a pflli)OSilion thai
men I. Be realistic. Trying to patch up a. sound loo good lo be Irue.

-.na

J::

·•

Fumacoo~c. Master

,;

· 'P
·'
7

'

I

B

..L.-..J.L.-1.._ .J.- ....1..._J.

bu t can neve r

·

A co-worke r was always
fawningov ertheboss. ltoldthe
boss to be careful of flatterers
who act like fnend s, because
even wolves look . . . . . .. _

0

Compl e te the chudc.le quote d

by fdl.n g •n the m1\s•n g words
yo u deve lop from st.ep No 3 below

PRINT NU MBE RED
I
i fl lER S IN SO UARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Jew1sh · Thick · Ditto · Factor · HOT WATER
A neighborhood kid always got mlo m1nor scraps, but
always rema1ned cool One evening my son asked him
"Is it hard to remain cool when you 're up to your neck i~

HOT WATER ? "

•

Hoot Pumpo, Air CondHion«o,
Eloclrlclan
114 44t lou&amp;, 1..000.287,.308, '
Realdenelal
or comm.clal
wiring, n.w eervlca or NPal,..
Moolor Uconold o!Ktrlclon
Rlrlonour Eloclrlcrll, WV000306'
304-676-1788.
•

o rgani sm s

47 Au1hor

THANA

.J

··1,

Pol Shop 2413
Jackson Ave. Point Pl~uant ~pm or leave me...ge.
19'78 Wlldernna Cempar 24' Air
304..7~063.
•
CondHion«,_ Roll Out A,7'~
1967 Clnyllf LaBsron 2.2 Fo~ Condltron, '2,!100, I
Full Blooclod Auotroli&lt;ln -lor Turbo,
Good Condhlan, $2,100, 11818.
Pupa, 2 Fomaloo, $40 Each, 614- 614-3116-9125.
1-=,.--:-:::-,----,,.-- - --3711-2836.
C.mpor,
PI
1967
ymouth Sundance, 4
Full blooded Baoglo pupil!•• rloor 5 opood, AJC, omllm. good
1
6wko old, $4010. ~111-'l&amp;gcj conahl"!!.t
84,000 mlln, 52415,
befaro tpm.
014·992·1U35.
.
HAPPY JACK FLEABEACON: 1987 Pontlac Orand Am I.E, air,
:
EIICironlc Dovlao Conlrolo tin, cru111, 1uto, 4cyl, 1port
~ •
Floao In Tho Homo WlthoW P.... whHII, n• white paint, 12500.
~ · ·••
tlcklll.
Potontld
Dlllgn
304-675-4530.
-----------,
~
~~· :
Crosloo Burol 01 Uaht Flou
Con' IIHIII. AIIU"• Ovwnlghl. 1Q67 Pontiac Turbo Grand Am, 2 81
Home
• :
J 0 NORTH PRODUCE 6 - · ~-;,~dod. ao,ooo Mil•, 814Improvements
"":
1133.
BASEMENT
Roglol«od Sybrtrlan H,.ky 1966 C.maro 614-446-8114.
WATEAPROORNQ
Pupploo, 114-4411-3888.
1166 Font Escort ar 5 SPIId. Uncc&gt;ndHional llfollmo guaron· •
High Mlloar. $1,100, 114-448! '"· Local r1hnnc• tumlah..t. :
Schnauzer pupDI•, mln1t1.n
sail a poppor; olaa loy poodleS: 11317 ...... . . . . .
Coil 1..0G-287-o5711 Or t14-23JI. '
AKC, cbllmplon blaadllnoo, 6140488 Rogoro Wollfl'IOOIIng. &amp;- ,•
1&amp;88
Uncoln
Town
C.r,
14500.
667-3404, Coolville.
•
1889 Font iEicort, loadod, tabllahocl 11175.
Wantod: Slud Sanilco Far $2300. 11185 Codllloc Eldondo, cac
Gonorll
Homo
Roglolorod Rod Doct.hund Hoo $2100. 304..75~440.
MaiRenance- wallpaper, etonn •
roofing and complolo ·• •
Hail All .. :\1~ 1 Wantod To
Elahl
Oklo. dooro,
Buy: Farnall Yononlro Torrlor 19118-Ninoly
home rept~lr, complete window ~
Brougfirn~~n,
one ropolr, PNIIU111 Wllhlng lnd
In Good Hoonh, For Bllldlng' Regency
114-367·7105.
• ownorl Exc. Corid. 75,000 1111. mobh homo ropolr. FOf frll ....
Loaded, full power, AMIFII, llmaltl call Chol, 114,.~.
Slorra. Con., Battory. Musical
Tlrn. Excoptlonolly Clun, 814- Curtl1 Homa lmprovemantl. No
446-1000 larlvo - g a l
Job Too B'sbOr Small, v.. ,. EJ:. ·
Instruments
-liomoo. AddHiona,
n Older
.w-r ;~
19119
Dodge
O.ytono
Shllbf
T·
Faundlllono, .i
Kimbell Plana, Excallllll Cond~
lopo 1 S.pil., w l - tint,
Roofing,
KHc......
illllhl, ~
tlonl $1,200, t14~56-1;&gt;17.
cona,low mlloo, . . -. :104-4511- Ropllcomom Wlndowo, lnourld ~
Star Gultu· 1mp1, guh1ra, 10118.
FrM Ellimrlloo. 614-387-0SII. '
11rtngo, koyboardll dnrmo. Aloo 11119 Ford M..tong Convertablo
lllono and guftar 814- OT, 5 Spoerl, Slondonl, Dork J&amp;E Home Mllnl..,._ point·
!1674102, Oielhlre,
lng, vinyl oldlng, raollng and
Blue a Oroy. Ellcollont Cond~ d'lY"'II. FJM lllfmal11, 1"-1182·
tlonl 6--0418.
4232, 11k lor Joo or Eorl.
·
58
Fruits &amp;
1990 CodiiiiC Dovlllo, whko, Ron's TV BoMco, -'"llzlna · 1
Vegetables
37.0C!!!'I,~c. COIId., $13,600. In lanllh ot.o
mooil
304-1~.
ott.r bnlncla. Houle colla, 1110
Conning Tarnal- $3 BuPick Your Own, Bring Own C...: 1890 Corolca, air crul11, now 101M -i&lt;lnco -1111. WY
1111111. Anlllblo Aftor Friday, lira, 14100. 304:Qi.2141 aflor 304-ll'll-2388 Ohio 114-44f.2454.
July 2111h, Dan Hill Fanna, 411585 Spm.
Stata Route 338, Racine OH
82 Plumbing &amp;
,, '
114-24]1.2532.
•
1811 Codllloc SovHII, fully
Heating
loaded, CD, IJ.C. cond. 3044~
Conning - . ,3/bll., pick 2895.
FrMIIIIIn'o tiNting And Cooling.
own, brlna contslnon. Bob 1811
Oldlmoblll
CUtluo lfllllllllllon And Sonilco. EPA
~a.... 114-2"47-3421,
l.olart
Flllo,Uiio.
SUI&gt;Nml 1 0... 48,000 Aduol Cortlllod. Rool-1111 ComrnorMlloo, PIW A 0oar Locka, A1C clal. 614-2!11-1111.
'
Conning ~--. Wlllomo Crulao, Till, AIU'II Sl-, &amp;!
Farm, Syroc~,-~lo, 114-1182- calion! CondMion, 18,300, 114- 84
Electrical &amp;
Bitl orf14-~W-.o.
446-ll266.

Refrigeration

46 Small

WIth th e a ce. I If E a s t du c k s .
ss ing wh a l is going on , h e d e ·
se rves to d efeat th e contr actl

r-....t~-- r----1---Afl:-.~~

=350~or~4"'oo':-tur-:-bo-lro_no_m_l'"•-•lono.-- - -:
ullld or overhlulad, g&amp;Mranteed ' :

play erT arkenton

~~~~=~-=~~~~~=::;~::::::~~~~~~!~~=-~~~~~·~·_:o~,,.~~~·~··:_•:oc_2l':;....~,_~E~s~7~-1.~12._j,,1;,~ ~

-

Auto Pans &amp;

45Foolball

dummy's king at trick tw o, whic h Eas t

BOR~ LOSER

110 Hor~~ MIICrul- Uko Now
loll 01 Ex1rul 814-:Ml'ma. ' ~

76

a nd fl exibl e truths . We have lhose in
brid ge . The re a re cert ain su it combination s . like lhe Nn r lh-Snuth sp ades
in tod ay's di agram, I ha l a re no rmally
p laye d on e way. tH ow?l Bu t s om e·
lim es c irc um stan ces - lik e tho se
he re -- require a ce r tain fl exibility of
thinkm g by lhe declare r. !Why .' I
Soulh re bid lh ree clubs beca use he
wa nte d t o know if North had he lp in
t hai s u1t And wh e n No r th m a d e a
s plinter JUmp of four dia mo nds, s how
ing a single ton lor void! in diamonds.
h elp in clubs a nd the values for ga me,
South look a shot at the s la m
West led th e he art 10: ja ck, quee n,
ruff. Decl ar e r pl aye d a diam ond to

NATIONAL ~EA£.TLIf1 C..A"'
I' '1'
~" 7 i
TO ~fQU,f t&gt;OC:TO~S TO 6fT"
LAw DEGI!tfS. TMAT WAY ~
WHEN .&gt;OMeDNf (;ETS ~ ~~~e~~t~:,st score d th e club ace a
INjU,fD T~f(I..L
~
Soulh cu rse d qui e tly when he sa w
oJAV'
DO'TD""
~ lhal Wes t's king had bee n a s in gle ton .
p
\.
\..
,..J
0 But how was he to know?
,Al-l.. OVf~ T~fMI
2 Well, South mi ght hav e led a club lo

Evln-

ruda motor, call 114-JII2·2484 11terO pm.

.

44E ugene
O 'Nei ll' s
d aughter

t een t h-ce ntury autho r, wrote of nat

PEANUTS

New gu tanb, on. ton truck
whaolo 111dlo1oro floor milo.
work, $1500. 814-853-266' sftor ole. Di R Auto, Ripley, WY. 30437:1-3933 or 1..000.273-9328.
7pm.

675-6211.

20 Lav ish
fondness on

Pass
Pass
Opening lead • lO

lntectlorl

1979 Chrysler LeBaron, good

alphabet
12 Lo nged (l or)

Pass
Pas.s

1977 Poi'Khl 1124, now Plrolll'a

sunroof, n•dl fuel

And Fl'lllll $110; 8 Ft Antiquo
Show- $71; ·or;~ c..
3Room,
BadHome - I :~~~
OVon 2 Yu,. Old
· DE
At EvergrHn,
W.$100;
Ff1i(delro
3823.
Couch a choir, beige &amp; ........ Rlfrlgondar $150· 2 Now a..
Chinning Country eon-, 2 $228. 30W8241114.
Hooton 1 Vonted 1 Unnnlld
Bld.-n,
L.Mila
ll"oorn, GOOD USED APPUANCEI Paid •1100 Will S.Crillco Cuu.or
Floor T.V. $150L 160 Milk Cro111
IKJtchon -Oinlng AIM, llolh,
Wo~ryorw. roMgont..., S1 Each,114-317-71l0t . .
FUI
your
-.,1
Bini 11113 Hyundal Sonata V.ry Cloon
C.rport, All Eloclrlo, $400.11o. nngaro,
Appll._ lW
clunegagad, ehort ..,., ..... Low Mil•, For Soli Or loki
No Palo, 814~45-5051 .
Vlno S1-,~ 1-.73111, 1bed w/Book com. SUpor IWIIII Plclt your ovor Plymaraa, 1114-31Jl.TI13.
800-41111-34...
$200.00 814- -n. $1.0CIIdl. Thur.frl.a.l
Nlco 4 Room In Qal.
llf&gt;OIIa, Uvlng Room, Khchln,
momlna 11-12. Eootorn Bllr 1t113 OEO llolno IIIlo rww IIIII
LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
unrllr warmly, Glial gu
Olnono, Bath, Larao
Complolo homo lumllhlnp. RCA co-b wHh 1400 0 • Farm, Al2, Millwood, wv.
W I D Hook-Up,
mllugocoll: 114-441-11601
Houro: Mor&gt;Sot, •5. 814-446- Ira lnc:tudld, Ice new. lnuat
Whllo
112
Rumor
Ba11111
You
Nalahboltlood, Porch, Vanl, 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulavlllo Rd.
1100 firm, call 114-11411- Pick; C.bbogo, You Pick' 114- 84 Dona Oldlmobllo, $11100. 814Parllng, No Polo, 114-445-0111.
F101Dollvory.
2858.
2!6-1353.
•
441-0147

Carpol
18.50 In Stock, 1
Mollohan C.rpolo.

74

.... "" Jody,

1969 Mirollng, 6cyl., auto., PS,
8 W•k Old Chow Puppies, 150, IXC. lnlorfor, $4200. 304-B]S.
3 Malo &amp; 3 Fomaloo, 614-446- 3960.
6m.
AKC B11- puDoloo, 5 Wilko 1916 Dodge Aapon, Slant 6 Enold, $100, F.A. llonodum, 614- gine, Runa Good, $e00, 014-3712120 After 6 P.M.
66]1.3856.

AKC Min. Plrw. 8 W•kll Old
$200
Eoch,
514-25fi.111B
EvaniOIJI.

G.E.

Transportation

1950 Pontiac Chleftan, good
3 Roglolored B11gloo 10wkll ahapa, $2200. 1987 Ford Tarua,
old, lamal•, $80... 814-1.2-2722. liNda wa~ $600. ~75-234l

AKC O.mon Shopont pup,
malo. ~15-1638.

•

I

1fr. old malo, Spring Crook brad

5.25 And Hrlnt Drtvo. Color
Monhar. Pa111llol And Serial
Porto. Aut. So11waro 614-446-

1711.

379·2836.

Paint Phil, 30W75-4084.

Slz•
Slackable
Waaher &amp; Dryer, Kenmor. Almond In Color. 8 Month8 Old,
New Condhlonl 1600 Firm, 014446,.132.

I

=~=~ u~!rce:!:: vaf::d~~~
.t
ull, 614-388-98'11.
'
,._.,

YNrllng

Groom and Supply Sh~';:' Ouar1er HorHe Well Broke 614-

36 Guitar part
37 Actua l be i ng

- West

10 Letters of

Look left
and right

Rod 1987 S-10 Chovy Blazer 4x4
olr cond., PW, P L, aunrool, lilt

N~

Pets for Sale

OF SUGAR!!

19112 Honde 250X $2,150, 614441·1062.

Building

Anllq.. Slngar aowlngn.chlno,

exc. cond, workli, S1QO. Oak
wuholand, SUO. Quoon olu

I

$900 nagotlabl•. 304-882-:WH
after 8pm or 304-882-2847.

614-~930

30 S ke leton part
330odged
34 Exceplll
35 Small barrel

black, w/350 onglno 514 500•

Tgy cheat wlhutch, chn1 of
drawers, baby crtb, l1roller,

4546·
Hog, 15,950; 650 Font Wl1h Plow
WATER LINE SPECIAL : 314 ineh Ana CuHivalor, $3,750; 614-288200 PSI $19.86; 1 Inch 200 PSI 6522.
$l2.50; Ron Evana Entef"')riue, New Idea 325 2 row narrow corn

1 Politician
Ma rio 2 Deduce
3 Kind of foot t
race
4 Actor James 5 Super la ll ve
ending
6 Runner Lewis
7 Refer ence list
8 Falsehood
9 Comparative
end i ng

25 Acco mpli shed
26 B ullr ing cry
27 Prima r y ce ll

t

I •

['M PLUMB OUT

verado, loaded, 33,000 miles
614-992-5072,

:::::;--:;---:--:-:-:::7:':-:--:::--1965 Suzuki RM125, llko niW

81Ing , WI lk"· caruat. 304-875-

UH -OH !!

ton 4x4 sn.

Upright, Ron ev1111 Enterprlo.., wHh 335 cam head 3 raw nor·
row, 1xcellant condition, $2500,
614·992·5012.

245-612~

4 wtndow lir canciHionora. 304-

82S

Jack10n, Ohio, 1-800-537-952&amp;.

Massey Ferguson 35 Tractor
Wllh Buoh Hog &amp; Blade1$3"600;
2020 John Deere Wltn
tiuah

['LL NEVER SPEAK TO THAT
ELVIN EY BARLOW AG'IN AS
LONG AS
[ LIVE!!

8t4.

•

DOWN

Vuln era bl e : Ne1ther
Dealer. Nort h
South
West North East

MIIH, $4,1r00; Can Bt ~11n' At·

446·2342.

•AI09 5
SOUTII

•A K Q 4

Gallipolis Dally Trlbuno,

53 Chief arte ry
541ngress

21 Aid in
diag nosing

&amp;AQ9 7 642

1989 Dodgo Ram Von 60 ooo

61 Fa nn E qu ipment

155 E.B. combine

Ping Eyo" 2 drlvero, axe. cancl.,

Household

Miscellaneous

H W w/cablnat, $75 .,

614-319-9889.

VCR 188.115; J&amp;B
372 Still ROIAo 180
Oalllpollo; 114-441-41160.
'

Rooms

54

¥AQ4 :l
t ltl 9h

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Third Avenue, Gallipolis

•

10 Inch Craftsman Table Saw, 2
Horse Power Direct Drive, C.at
Tabla, Like New, Allklng $250
tO.. tabla

""""'"'"'

Q 19\H b'f NEA. 1oc

Will Dollvor. 614.a611-6441.
Chain Saw bare &amp; chains to lit
Sowing machlno worko aood. almoat any aaw. Best prlcae In
S35: oloclrlc chain oaw, US; 12 lrN. Sldara Equipment, 304hoi'SI riding mower, $650; 614- 675-]1121 or 1-800-277· 3917.
1149~526.

Toc~nalagy

Space for Rent
~.::.:;,;.:.:...;:::.:.:.=""
1; 7
3 Room Ofllco SullO With
Prlnlo Tollol In - n Aro
33 Fanns for Sale
::~:A, 18
Fann~ 01cro1, Crob Crook Ad, Marhart Rllllol A Storage Unlo,
~~lnl~~~:"=lnm~~
. ~ 5110, 10.10, 101115, 101120, 10Jr30.
304·111
5.
304..7~450.
~":a ~co. In Rio
35 Lo &amp;
6
17.
ts
Acreage
Trallor
loll
lor
,.nl,
304-8755.32 ac-, $13,110. 8.14 ocroo, 1
514,510
llo"'"•m
Rd
1184.
..._abll rlll~lono. lntor!
motion 1'11111111 an
304- 47 Wanted to Rent
1111-11253.
W ~T
ani- a Ronl: 3 Or llorlllacf.
Aero t,.llor 1o1, Falrvlow Ad., room Homo Nlodld By PnofBidwell, E!''!'1 _~omplolo - · olonal Family Ralocotlng In Ga~
~:W304.., 1......,.
IVIfllnga 814- llpolla /GoUla County AiM, 304344.
~~340.

41

31

54

Sylvania

..=·="

All APIIIIconlo Mull P • - A
Valid ·0111o Drlvor'o Llconoo And
Corry Au1o Liability IMuronco.
Drlvor'o Lleen11 And Crlminll
Rocord Cllockll On "-poctlvo
Employoll Aro Roqulrod By
LaW. Emptoymonl Appl...lk&gt;no
Ani Available AI Gallla -IIIIIJI
Hold Starl'l Woodland C.nlarl
Offlco, IG8t Still RCIUII 160
Bolw- 8 A.M. And 4 P.M.,
Monday .frtdly. For AddHionll
lnformollon Coli t--t8111.
Gollla
-lloigl
EqUII Opportunity
• All

yea rs npertence. PleaM call
614-992-2822.

VCR Whh Remota 185.Dti Sears
VCR 1185.1111; Shllrp VCR .111.85·

Furnished

4~ '1

¥ 1 0987 ~

.

1984 Ford Conversion; alto 1979
Dodge Con~eralon; good condition, 814-84~2626 .

7- J7

EI\ST
.. 10 5

•J6

52 Hawk

15 Co mm a nd s
16Average
17 Soap pla n I

we igh l

WEST
•K
t87 53 2

DQv\OCi&lt;AC'r' ..

-1

J•,..

dollar paid. One place or one
hundred .
APPRAISALS,
40

iS 00T FREE
E:L£CTIOIJS. ..

1978 CJ 5 I"P now
1
paint lift, front' end, bnk 11:
hood lop, looks/runs good
$2600. 3~5-5128 .
•

McCoy Rooovlllo, ate. COLLEC.
TIBLES· prlnlo, poote111, loola,
poHery, clocks , boxn,
botnos, bookll, loya, ole. ALWAYS
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top

VIllage

Manor
and
Rl~eralde
m:rtmenta In Middleport. From
E~:ms . Coli 614-992·5859.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINCI CO.
,.commend• thlt you do bu._
n... wllh pooplo you know1and
Galli&lt;~ And Molga County SUbalhuto Buo DrtvON • RoqulrM A NOT lo oond _..,. 1hroorgh lho W.ntod 10 buy- or rnoro Elderly lady would llko 1 n1oo
Closs C /CDL Or Willing- To mall until you hlvo lnvllllgllod
aui11blo to build on ond 1111111 . , . _ or II
Obtain CDL Prior To Employ· lho oHorlng.
clooo to • blocktop rood, 114- 111uanablo
_,.r
mont.
Hrlrdwsro bull11111 lot 1111 duo ft•ft
ft
Po--ay,
·-.:or
-~m.
··~
lo lllnoa, reuonobly pricod.
Syroc..., 114-ll82· B.
ContriCI Galli&lt;~ County Cook • 304-ll82·3544 or 882~343.
JloquiJN A Hlah School
Rentals
~And Prior Food SO&lt;Yico
Merchandise
Exporlenco.
Real Estate
Ing Wl1h Fomllln Wllh .Voung
Chlldllll.

304-ll75-6266,

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTIQUES· Amorlc:on ort

Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bed-

roq-.

ThrN YNra Experience Work-

•

Chevrol et , Ford, Dodge- pickup
beda. S hort o r long. No rust

Antiques

Apt~rtm.nt

New r1nch a~la home Plants Moclom EHicloncy Apartmonl
eub-dhtl81on, 3br., 2 bath, etona Country Soiling, Coli AHor 5pm:
on " - &amp; dock, altllng on 2 8'14-44&amp;-8120.

Help wanted
AVON I All Areas I Shirley Truck drlve111 wontod lo hlullr&gt;- loll. 614-446-8433.
Spoaro, 304-'75-1429.
cal, coll614-;&gt;12-2548.
Sanlc VIew, 2 plua ac,.a, 2br., 1
AVON! All araaa. Need extra WC&gt;fllor Noldod For B..ln- a 112 bltha, :Z-car garage, duck
pond, much moro, 148,500. 304money or want a career, either Small Tl'ltller Park, Drlvare 518-27'18.
llcenM A Mual Soma Exway~all Martlyn. 304-882·2645
ptrlance In Mechanic, Plumb-or I-BOI).!I92-l!356.
Ing, C."':~\:1: Ront Pluo Hourly 32 Mobile Homes
tli81.
Allonllan: Wanl To Earn Whal WIIJI, 61
lor Sale
You Are Worth? Due To Planned
Exponolon &amp; Promollono Wo 18 Wanted to Do
Need 3
Enarg1tlc Money .,---,.,..,---;_....,.;___ 12lr32 aHico-lypo roam, good far
room addhlon or office, wood
Motivated People Now! Call General Maintenance, Palnt!ng1 fnmo,
m..l be movod $1500
SMwean g..5 Tuasda~, Wedn... Yard Work Window. Wa•naa 814-;112-2247.
.
•
day &amp; Thuroday Only. Fe&gt;&lt; lnlor· Gut1oro Cloonod Ughl Hauling,
view Thuroday, Start Sol, 614- Commarlcal, Rooldontlal, Slavo: 1Q60 N- Moon 10x60, 2br.,
446-1441.
814-446-4148.
$1000. 304-6111-11134.
Goof11" Portoblo Sowmlll, don~ 1987 Castle 10x55 wl4x8 u·
AVON SS SALES
loge to tha min just pt~ndo In llvlngroom, 2br., 1
Patonllal S200 -$2,000 Monthly. haul
75·1~57.
bath, $1500. 304-ll115-331l5 anor
Fanlaallc Dlocauntal Bonolhl call
Floxlblo Houro. TorrHory Op- Miss Pault'a Day Care Center 5pm or w11kondo.
llonol. 1-80CI-1112-4738.
M·F I A.M. -4:30 P.M. QuaiHy 1973 Now Moon 12x80 2 BodBabyolllor noodod1 prelorably In Loving C.ro Far All Chlld111n rooms, Gao Hrlal, N- C.ll&gt;ol,
my home fof newDOm, etartlrlQ Our 11 G011l. Part-limo, Ful~ Llko N- Through Outl 6~
In lata September. Ref..-anc .. TlmoL Foci. Alolollnco Avallablo. 0115.
required, It lntere..ed pleaM Coli &gt;or lnformollon Or VIall. Infant /Toddlor 814-448-4227. Pro- 1885 Skyline 14x10, 3br., 1 beth,
coli 814-llll2·22112.
School,
Schoolror.,
B&amp;A CA, dock, $10,200 080. ~1112503 or 1~1135.
Elm up lo $1000 wookly School, l--ll22 •
procaoalng 1111111. llart now, noaxperlenca, frae..aupplln, free. Sun vaaor Nuroory School. 1966 Clllyton Wlnnor II 14X115. 2
lnfonnollon, no-oblgotlon. Send ChlldCiro 11-F 1om-6:30pm Agn BR. 1112 Balh. Aftor BPM. 114SASE: C.ocade Dilpl·50._ P.O. 2-K, Young School Ago Du~ng 441.07117
Box 5421, Sen Angolo, TX IV902. Summar. 3 Daye par Weak Min- 1868 Schulz 14•7U mobil homo
Imum 6'J4-.446-3657.
wloapondo, 3br., 2 bath, nlco
Easy Worl&lt;l Excollonl Payl A.
Will do brtckhoo - " , 114-1113· lorgo 1f!11 unal1aohod IJIIOIJI,
11mblo Proclucll AI Homo. Call 5858
or
814-11112·3173.
nice rMtclent ...... J04..882-3502
Toll F101, 1-1100-487-6566, Ext.
H 5
•-•
or pm or - n .,_go,
313.
Will do houMCiaanlng on
w11kly baala, hav• raferencu.

carpet.cf, appliance s furnished,
tree Wltar, frM tr. . h pickup, on
the management, holiday activity tor children, close to
atorea,
churches,
schoold.
Where can you get all this for
$2101mo. laureland Apanmante
tlth &amp; George St:t New Haven'
WV. 304-$2-3TI6 ~QH .
'

colllfl.l-8112·3111. EOH.

EOE.

lo care tor persons with learn-

9:30

:Z atory, :Zbr. all eiiK:trlc apta. ,

Pomeroy Nursing &amp; RehabllhaUon Center 11 accaptlng applications tor C.rtitl.ct Nursing
Asslstant1. Appy at 36759
Rocksprings
Ad., Pomeroy.

RESPITE
CARE
WORKER
NEEDED: Would you be willing

BatwMn

614-44&amp;-1733 ,

Owner/Operatof'l
Cardinal Freight Carriers Ia
hiring experienced OTR's to run
fl atbed, earn percentage of
gross revenue pulling company
trailers or pulling own trailer,
health lnsuranc. wldental 6 "'sion available, base plat ..
a va liable, bob-ta ll Insurance
a¥allabla, h..lel e~~rd 1yatem,
weakly
aettlamanta,
rider
program , lime home. 1-80~~

Mobile

2
Bedroom•
Untumlsh&amp;d,
Stove, Re trtgeraloiJ AC 1f2 Mile

·5:00.

All real estale advertising In

2949.

HIIB84!

china, ar1 glua, eUvar, fumttura:

1 and 2 bedroom apartments
unfurnished:
tumlahod
and
MC url!y depoalt r.qulr td, no
pet e, 614-992·2218.

'DI D You ~£!&lt; G£T 111~
FE£W!J3 1'1AT 1HE. REAL
DRIVIfJ6 fOR(t; CF aR

1987 Dodge Dakota , mld -alze
new t int•. Ss pd. $2950. 304-Grs:

Work boolo. 614-44&amp;-3159.

S200/Mo. All IJIII~Ioo lncludod:

Ca rdinal Freight Carriers Inc. le
hiring
1xperlenced
ow118rloperato ra
for
the
van:tlatbed dlvlelon, prolheble
pa y program, a ccurate WHkly
settlement s, medical Ins. avaiJ.
able, rider program and time
home, no up front money to
lease on. Call Boyd, 1 -ao0-~

Floon And Painting, 6"'"t8361118.

11

Apa n m e nt

:Z Rooma &amp; Bath, No Kitchen

New Termi na l

THAT f3USt1Y T'I IJ.- I
woo Woo~ H"BBA

1918 Chovrolol 4•4 Pick·Up
Short Whooi 8- . l.olo 01 N..;
Portal 614-446-2640.

From Gavrn S2o01Mo. S200
DopooH, 614-367-0438.

No

2421.

CINn Lite Model Cars Or

Homes for S ale

1979 Chevy Pick-Up $700 614•

Olive St., Galli potla . New &amp; UHd
furniture, heal ars , Wnteril &amp;

53

•K II 7 4 3

446 ~ 958.

614-440-3413.

for Rent
Needed : 2 Salas Persona S.lf
Motiv ated Some Ex porienca In
Rotall S alas A Plus. Good BaH
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Bring

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2421.

8

9

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Au1 amallc, $700, 614-367-n 30. •

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FU RNITURE. 62

Polo, $350/llo. Dopooh, 614-197·
4345.

'Tv e qot

BABY'

•J

EEK &amp; MEEK

1977 Ford Pick-Up, 6 Cylinder

~.

0

woman
51 Seas

19 J azz player
Kid 20 i&gt;.polhecarvs

• K J 6 5

2 Bedroom, Tota l Electric, 1 112
Mil es From Stat • Route see
Aatarances, O. poalt Required:

$400/Mo., Woaho1 Dryer; 2 Bodroom HouH, r-umlshed, No

Ba ck

Bookl 1Pap41r Backs, Toaster
/Bak•r Oven, CB Sets , Dis he s,
Glassware, P"ant, Tupperwa re,
X-Mas Items , Pl ast ic Bucket s,
Fuel Oi l Tank "'ith Stand,. Display Stands /Racks t' OrcM
Sw1ng, T-B ird An d American
Racing Hub Caps And Sears Air
Cond itioner (As Is) Sat. 30tM
Remaining hema Sold For Halt
Prlc1. All Sales Final. No
Refunds. Terms Cas h. No
CMeds. Not Respons ible For
Aceldenta .

From Gal·
Rt cently

2 Badroome, AC, No Pete,
O.poah
And
Ratarvncee,

Children•
Jewelry,
Scrap
Material, Valet Stand , Pictures,
Poc ket

Reterenc..

Juat

&amp;AM ~,

Au1omatlc

Pool Sti ck Stand, Gran it e Table
With Chairs, Slone Jug, Tuba
Radio, Dairy Scales, Rout er, Jig
Saw, And Circu lar Saw Stands,
Batt Sander, Jig Saws, Power

And

~f'.[:: A1 ~li4RT~T

Was her
$95;
uryar
$75;
Whi rlpool Wa a Mar Uke New, 1
Vear Warranty $205; Gaa Range
30 Inch $95; Gas Range 36 Inch

Oapoah

qulred, 10 Mlnutn

t-~v¥&gt;1'11 f\ vB~ HvflR I

EIIC1 rlc Rango 40 Inch $125;

12x65 2 Bedrooms, Gas Hut

.. J B 3

3358 aher 9 pm.

Side By Sldo W81 $26 , Now

Be Optln Rein Or Shi ne. Of·
tertd : 78 Records, Oapresslon
Glasa, Tea Pots, Com Jobbers,

7 27 !H

36,000 101111, $6000. 304-8112:

Ratrtr.r~tor

11 Nol comfortable 49Quarrelsome
(2 wds.)

19721nterna tlonal Tandem cab 6
chassis, 671 Oetroh 13epd

Maytag Wringer Washer, Ni ce

for R ent

And

72 Trucks for Sale

Goods

Two Or TtvM Bedroom HouH
7

mamma l
45Rover 's fr iend
46 Fanatic

13 S illier
14 Recently

KIT 'N' CA R LYLE® b y Larry W r ight

Household

1 Sorceress at
myth
6 Eye lashes

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Objectives
you have today are likely 10 be worthy
ones, bul negative opirVons of associates
could create doubts in your mind . In this
case, follow your own dictates 1nstead of

lheiiS.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If someone
asks you for specific information today

about some1h1ng he/she does nol under·
stand , don'l p1elend you have all lhe
answers if you really don't
ARIES (March 21·Apri119) Just beCause
a friend of yours was lucky recently 1n a
chancy endeavor, there are no guarantees

you'll be able lo duplicate his/her success .
TAURUS (Aprii20-Miy 20) lnslead of lry·
ing lo be all things lo all people, il may
prove wise today lo 1usl be yrurseH and do
lhe 'besl you can. Even lhen you may nol
bal a thousand.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Guard against
inclinations today lo rationalize why you
should or should nol do certain things.
Your indecisiveness could rob you of your
industriousness.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Avoid
involvements or arrangements today lhal
could bruise your budget Later, when lhe
bills come due, you'll be glad you used fls· .
cal discipline.

!

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,

27 1994

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By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Swrr
The Meigs County library system will lose about $14,000 in funding
this year. about 3 peJCcnt of its total budget, which will mean some belltightening, said Ruth Powers, director of the Meigs County Library.
The state's budget reduced from 6.3 10 5.7 percent the income tax col- lections for libraries, Powers said. A double whammy of fewer tax collections than were expected will also hit librari es across the stale.
"We can absorb this, but we don'l want to see any more," Powers said_
"When you're in a political melting pot, there is concern _I can't foresee
any more cuts this year."
The anticipated 1994 budget was $501,000, while the actual budget
will be closer to $487,000, she added_
The library will compensate for Lhis loss by making cuts in the general
fund, Powers said.
This cut does not jeopardize the new Racine branch of the library,
which has already been earmarked through the building fund, she added.
"Any cut's bad, but we will be able to survive," Powers said.
The decline in fu,nding does not show the tremendous growth in the
county library's budget.
Until I 986, the library was supported by a county-wide intagible tax
that raised between $50,000 and $60,000 for 50 years, Powers said_But in
1987, the budget changed forever with the current funding fonnula from
swte income tax collections.
"'It was slim pickings_ We couldn't afford any of the extras," Powers
said.
·
With a budget nearly 10 times as large as 10 years ago, the county
library could afford to:
• build a new main library;
• completely renovate the Middlepon library;
• buy its own bookmobile; and
• begin building a new Racine branch_
The Racine library is still being bid, so Powers said she could not
- release the cost for this new structure. Popular books, such as bcstsellers,
that the other two libraries do not have extra copies of will be bought new.
she added.
"When Racine opens we'll have more shelves than book," Powers said,
which will allow area residents to decide what books should be in tl1e collection.
Since 1986, the library's supply of books has jumped from 18,000 to
35,000 books, she added.
With serving three libraries, three payrolls and expanding book selection, the library sysLem could not go back 10 budgets of old, Powers srud.
"The legislature isn't going to let them do away with libraries," Powers
said. "We have a strong lobbying group in Columbus."
Next year, the percentage from the income tax is expected to return to
6.3 percent, she added.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 28, 1994

2 S.CUona, 12 Pagea 35 centa
A Muldmodlo Inc. Newapaper

,......--Preparing for the fair--- Health
reform
proposal
readied
.As pressure
mounts, GOP
asks: 'what's
your hurry?'
ny CHRISTOPHER CONNEL.L
Associated Press Writer
W ASH1NGTON - Worried
intere st groups arc steppin g U"'
pressure on Congress as Democratic lea ders final ize their hea lth
refo rm plans, a nd Republicans
keep asking what the rush is all
about.

SAFETY WITH GUNS- Safety with guns was the subject of 14-year-old Robert Harris' 4-H'
project in Wednesday's miscellaneous judging at the Rutland Civic Center. Here, Harris, left of
Long Bottom, shows his lever-action .22 rifle to Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood. H~r­
ris is a member of the Silveradoes 4-H club.

Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell. still searc hing for a formula that can attract 50 votes, is
weighing options that include the
possibility of phasing in refonns on
differen1 timetables for different
states_
Mitchell, D-Maine, se rved
no ti ce Wednesday that he will ·
make the Senate work six days a
week until it fini shes, once he
brings a health bill to the floor. He
also con finned that he is looking at
lowering the expected employer
contnbut10n to health insurance
premium s from 80 to 50 percent.

Senate Minority Leader Bob
Dole, whose office was the target
of a demonstration Wednesday that
resulted in 42 arrests, said Republican s will demand a full week to
review Mitchell 's bill before the
Se nate takes it up.
"What's Lhe rush on this bill if
it's not even going to take effect
for five years?" the Kansas Republican asked.
At the other end of Penn sy lvawASHINGTON (AP) - House and Senate negotiators were near
nia
Avenue, Pres ident Clinton
agreement today on a compromise $30.2 billion crime bill that includes a
expressed
frustration, saying, " I
ban on assault-style frreanns, dozens of new death penalties and life sendesperately want a bipanisan bill.
tences for third-time felons .
... But every time I have reached
A BOY AND IUS IGUANA - ''Bubba" the iguana was lhe subject of IS-year-old Kenneth
Nef!otiators worked until 2:15a.m. and then returned a few hours later
out,
they hav e moved furth er
Kirk' s 4-H pet project. Here, Kirk holds the iguana while talking to judge Scioto County Exten·
in !herr rush to iron out differences between diffenng cnme b1lls passed
away.''
sion agent Rick Em nett. Kirk, a member of the Salem Center Go-Getters 4-H club, has had the
earlier by the House an.d Senate. They hoped to finish tL_Jda~. setting the
House Minority Whip Newt
. iquana for about nine months. (Sentinel photos by Jim Freeman)
stage for final congressronal passage and scndrng the leg1slallon to PresiGingrich
warned that Congress·s
dent Clinton.
battered image will wke another
beating if the Democrats try 10 ram
a partisan bill through . "Why don't
we slow the express down? Let's
sit
down and talk together," he
" The governor will not debate disappointed and somewhat mysti- hired as manager of the Ohio Swtc dates," he said.
By JOHN CHALFANT
asked.
Billy Inmon ," said Curt Sterner, a fied that public radio and TV Fair during Voinovich's first term .
AMociated Press Writer
Inmon said in re sponse that
The president was meeting with
_ COLUMBUS - Two's compa- consultant to Voinovich 's cam- would make a decision like this He was fired at th e governor's Voinovich cannot hide from hi s
the
chief executives of some major
when they had an opportunity to request in 1992 after a rocky per- record as governor_
ny, three's a crowd. At least, that is paign.
U.S.
companies today while Hillary
Steiner said Ohio Public Radio televise what may have been the formance that saw fairgrounds
what Gov . George Voinovich
"I was hoping we could all act Rodham Clrnton headed 10 Capitol
believes is the case in debates and Television was told of only statewide live debate between operations IQsc money.
like adults," Inmon said.
Hill for talks with the Senate's
among the Nov_ 8 candidates for Voinovich's position last month the two gubernatorial nominees, "
"Billy himon is not a credible
Unless Voinovich changes his strongest supporters of universal
when he agreed to accepl the origi- Steiner said.
governor.
candidate_ He basically has an ax to mind. Inmon said he would hold a coverage.
Voinovich participated in three grind," SICiner said.
Voinovich on Wednesday with- nat debate inviwtion.
news conference Monday outside
In the House, a small bloc of
But the group invited Inmon debates during the 1990 campaign
drew from a proposed debate with
"All he would do is be a the governor's office to "explain
Republicans
and moderate-to-conDemocratic opponent Rob Burch anyway after he was certified for against Democrat Anthony J. Cele- sideshow in any kind of a debate, my plan to bring George Voinovich
servative
Democrats
was nearing
_
brezze Jr.
after event sponsors invited inde- the ballot July 15.
and would make it very difficult for out of hiding and to ask him to
agreement
on
a
new,
bipartisan
"I'm quite frankly surpnsed,
Inmon is a former used car a serious debate of the issue s develop enough courage to
pendent Billy Inmon to participate_
that
would
combine
insurproposal
salesman from Willard who was between the two major candi - debaLe."
ance reforms with subsidies, but
stop shan of compelling businesses
to buy coverage for their workers.
The prote st outside Dole's
office was staged by Citizen
Act1on, a group lobbying for Canadian-style health care.
use the lab's equipment to cut their Stanley Goldman sa1d.
Later, two advocates for the disSimpson lawyer Raben Shapiro abled were arrested when they tried
samples, which were to be stored at
the lab until Ito decides if they can had objected vigorously to Ito's to force their way into the Capitol
ground rules on the sampling. after a march from the White
conduct their own tests.
The blood undergoing testing "They are towlly unaccepwble, "
House, where they anended a cerewas swabbed up at the crime scene, he said_ ·'They arc useless and we mony celebrating the fourth
Simpson's whiLe Bronco and Simp- will not be participating."
anniversary of the Americans With
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
son's eswte.
After the hearing, Shapiro Disabilities Act.
Associated PreM Writer
· With a case dependant on cir- refused to say if the defense
The advocates for the disabled
LOS ANGELES - A judge cumstantial evidence, prosecutors planned to cut the the samples or many in wheelchairs, were eventu:
cleared the way for DNA Lesting of hope the genetic fingerprinting will even show up at the lab.
ally allowed in.
blood samples today in the O.J. link Simpson to the slashing deaths
In another development, GoldThe National Federation of
Simpson murder case amid signs of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson man's mother, Sharon Rufo, Independent Business, which led
the defense will wage a molecule- and her friend, Ronald Goldman . announced that she filed a wrong- the charge against Clinton's
by-molecule battle over evidence.
Simpson has pleaded innocent to ful death lawsuit claiming Simpson employer mandates, said its lobbyAt an emergency hearing two counts of fust-degree murder.
"willfully, wantonly and mali- ISts count 55 10 60 "pretty firm"
Wednesday, Judge Lance Ito
The defense is fighting over ciously" killed her 25 -year-old son votes agrunst mandates in the Senaffmned his decision that defense minutia - down 10 blood cells and on June 12.
ate, but the situation is more
expens could remove I 0 percent of the genetic material encoded within
The St. Louis woman had not volatile in the House.
each of the samples before the - as a distraction, a Loyola Uni- seen her son in the five years prior
NFIB President Jack Faris said
prosecution's testing began this versity law professor said.
to his death. She is divorced from the group will spend $500,000 over
morning. Officials at the labomtory
DEFENSE REVIEW - OJ. Simpson, rigbt, watched as bls
"The defense is hoping that all
Goldman's father, Fred.
the next ~ew weeks and put out
had wanted their own technicians these things will make the jury fordefense attorneys reviewed a letter from the CeUmark Diagnostics
The lawsuit seeking unspecified 900,000 p1eces of mail, hoping 10
to do the job.
Inc. laboratory during an emergency hearing Wednesday in Los
get there are two dead people with
damages for the loss of her son's generate a swarm of letters and
The defense, meanwhile, object· their throats slashed and make
Angeles County Superior Court. The letter discussed the laboratocompanionship and support was phone calls to Congrcss ·egainst
ed to Ito's requirement that they them concentrate on other issues,"
ry's concern over DNA testiDg. (AP)
mandates.
filed in Santa Monica on July 20_

Crime bill compromise nears

c

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''

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