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                  <text>Page--14-The Dally Sentinel

--' -------

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Wednesday, September 7, 1994

A t:amily ownetl anti
Operated supermarket
OHering the best ol ser11iee,
oualitv anti Priee, to the
People ol our eommunitv

Ohio Lottery

Suspension
set for OSU's
Galloway

Super Lotto:
9-1 0-12-25-40-43

Kicker:

6-0-0-2-7-8
Pick 3:
5-8-2
Pick 4:
2-4-8-0

Page S

At The corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl st. • Middleport

A Cardinal - Afl1l1aled Supermarkel

PORTERHOUSE
STEAK

7J

•

Lean No Waste

BEEP CUBED
STEAK
pound

BJ
•

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef•Boneless

TOP ROUND
STEAK
pound

$ IS
•

U.S.DA Choice•Small End

BEEP RIB
STEAK

$

pound

91

•
fFl

Reg . or Diet•Mt. Dew, Dr Pepper, Slice,
Orange Crush, Hires Rootbeer, Caffeine
Free. Crystal or Origina/•12 12-oz . cans

RUSSET
POTATOES
$

I
I
I
I
I'

PEPSI COLA
&amp; PRODUCTS

4

15 pound bag

gal.
JUg

I

~..:· ~·· _:~· ~;' ::• ~~'~r:.: -~r )r.:... ..,jJ--------'
Limit 1 With Coupon lns1de
Kellogg' s•Assorted Vanetie s ~~---...

POP·

POP•

TARTS tans
11 ounce package

Frozen
Assorted Varieties

er.A.~~

~~i

PRESHLIKE ~~. . ··
VEGETABLES

--~-

c:
SALE DATES: SEPT. 6 THRU SEPT. 1 O, 1994.

16-20 ounce package

c:

1 Secdon, 10 Pagee 35 c.nta
A Mllldm...a Inc. ~paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 8, 1994

U S.DA Choice Beef Loin

.

Firm

to 80.

en tine

POr@PAS!

I
I
I

Highs 75

•

Vol. 45, NO. at
Copyright 1004

u.s.o

l ow tonight In 50s, mostly
clea r. Friday, partly cloudy.

Frozen•Borden
Assorted Varieties

ICE
CREAM

$all gallon~~

•

Roundy's Inc .. 1994
I
Quantity rights reserved. Not re sponsi ble lor typographical or pictorial errors . All items not available in all stores.
AABA
&lt;;:

Middleport ponders water service proposal
Ry GEORGE ABATE

Sentinel News Staff
Middleport officials heard proposals from the first of two private
water companies Wednesday in an
effort to resolve the village's water
problems.
Residents' rate s will likely be
doubled from the $14 -per-month
minimum with any av ail abl e
option, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
Although no costs per gallon
could be disclosed, Leading Creek
Conser.vancy District anticipated
that extending lines to the village
limits would total at least

$500,000, Leading Creek Director
Brent Bolin said.
The project would likely require
a $230,000, 347 ,000-gall on water
tank, a $90,000 booste r station,
3,800 feet of water lines near Bone
Hollow Road and $50,000 in plant
upgrades, Bolin said.
The upgrades would be needed
since the water district' s capacity
would nearly doubl e if Middleport's 1,100 customers ca me on
line, he added.
Leading Creek curr ently is
preparing to drill new well s in
American Electric Power Corp.

property, which will prov ide more
than five times the vill age's usc of
432,000 ga ll ons per day, Bo lin
said.
" In six months it coul d all be
put in . But fin di ng money is the
hard pan ," he added. If a 50 percent grani could be gained the cost
of the project could be slashed, he
said.
Middleport must make its wells
comply with Oh io Environmental
Protec tion Agency orders by Jan . I,
1996 ~ or have its water shut off,
Horton said.
To raise th e welt s abo ve the

White House steps up
intimidation of Haiti
wASHINGTON (AP) ~ The
Clinton administration is stel'ping
up its campaign to intimidate
Haiti's military rulers, with U.S.
Marines carrying out l're-invasion
warm ups in the Canbbean and
more tough talk from Washington.
Shortly after President Clinton
returned from his 12-day vacation
on the Massachusetts island of
Martha's Vineyard, he and his top
aides reviewed military planning
for Haiti.
"We're at a very delicate
stage," said one official, speaking
on condition of anonymity. "This
is serious business."
Joining Clinton at the 2-1/2 hour
meetin,_were Vice President AI
Gore , Secretary of State Warren
Christopher, Defense Secretary
William Perry and National Security adviser Anthony Lake, among
others.
The administration has been
hoping that Army chief Raoul
Cedras and his allies would agree
to step down voltmtarily if they are

convinced that the invasion threalS
are serious.
Officials acknowledged that the
administration suffered a major
credibility setback last October
when a plan to land 200 noncombat
troops from a U.S. military vessel
in Port-au-Prince was aborted after
armed demonstrators protested on
the dock . The troops had been
scheduled to take part in military
training activities, but the vessel
was withdrawn.
The adlllinistration has been
s'truggling to regain its credibility
ever since. For the past week, top
officials have been saying that an
invasion is a certainty.
On Wednes day, Christophe r
added hi s voice to the chorus of
warnings.
"One way or the other, the de
facto government is going to be
leaving," Christopher said. "Their
days are definitely numbered."'
He added: " We . think they
should get the message and leave
themselves.' '

fl ood plain will cost about $11,000,
Horton said. But EPA regul ations
will become more stri ngent, shutting down two of the three village
wells and forcing an entirely new
source of water, he added. New
we ll s cannot be drill ed in the village due to a lack of space.
A yea r ago , Mid dl eport and
Pomeroy villages worked to form
the Big Bend Water District that
would tap new wells hear Syracuse.
But to develop the di strict, start-up
costs could exceed $4 mittion, officials said in a meeting in Middleport two weeks ago.

Middleport has had two of three
readings and tabled the th ird readin g of an ordin ance th at wo ul d
remove th e village from the di strict
The district would serve at least
2,000 custom ers i~ Pomeroy and
Middl eport. About $ 1 milli on in
grants could likely be acquired, but
th e rema inin g fund s through a
grant/loan from the Farmer's Home
Admini strati on would take about
fi ve years to obt ain, sa id John
Rauch, district loan specialist with
the FmHA
A spcc•fic cost of the project is

still unknow n because the quality
of th e well s in Syracuse would
de termin e th e wate r tre atment
plant 's size, srud C. Boyer Simcox,
direc tor of th e Bucke ye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development Distnct.
Unfort un ately, th e Big B ~ nll
district cannot apply for gra•.ts either Middleport or Pomerr y must
send in gram applications, Simcox
said.
Leading Creek' s proposed lines
could work, but would not satisfy
promi ses to ex tend tines into the
(Continued on Page 3)

On-site student training___,

Bottlers
pour cash
into pop
tax repeal

••

Mason County man faces
sentencing in 1993 murder
I .

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Sentencing has been set for a Point
Pleasant man who pleaded guilty to
a 1993 murder, according to Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney
Damon Morgan.
·
David John Francisco, 19, will
be sentenced by Circuit Judge O.C.
"Hobby" Spaulding on Tuesday,
Sept 20 at 2 p.m.
Francisco pleaded guilty in
April to the murder and aggravated
robbery of Norman Ray Landermilt. 28, of Mason.
Laudermilt's body was found in
a dry creekbed at the McClintic
Wildlife Management Area's Public Shooting Range Sept. 2, 1993.
Francisco had taken Laudermilt's
uuck, weapons and wallet. He was

arrested Sept 6 in MacClenny, Fla.
Franc isco waived extradition
and returned to Mason County with
Sheriff Ernie Watterson and Sgt.
G.L. Clark of the Point Pleasant
Detachment-West Virginia State
Police on Sept. 9. He has been
housed in the Mason County Jail
since his return.
Spaulding ordered Francisco to
undergo a 60-day evaluation at
Huttonsville after he plead()(~ guilty
to the charges. Before his plea was
made, Francisco had undergone
two psychiatric evaluations and
was found competent to Sllllld trial.
The penalty for ftrst degree murder is life in prison and the minimum sentence for a~gravated robbery is I0 years in pnson.

\

Eighteen seniors enrolled in Meigs High School's nursing assistant program toured Veterans
Memorial Hospital Thursday. Rhonda Dailey, R.N., director of nursing at Veterans Memorial,
explained aspects of the hospital's emergency room to the visiting students. Some of the students
wiU work at VMH and other local health-care facilities during the current school year. The students, taught by ~argie Blake, R.N., include Nikki Bell, Mike Barney, Kevin Logan, Dorothy
Older, Shannon W1se, KeUy Smith, Amber Lyons, Tara Erwin, Jaclyo Swartz, Cindi Roush, Don
Shaffer, Eddie Willis, F..ddena Russell, Jon Newsome, Shawn Petrie, Becky Elliott, Erica Robie
and Rhonda Oiler.

States line up
to extradite
·o hio fugitives
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) Prosecutors are lining up to extradite two Ohio fugitives captured
asleep in New Mexico after a series
of car lhefts and killings iu several
states.
Federal charges of unlawful
flight to avoid prosecution were
dropped Wednesday against Lewis
E. Gilben, 22, and Eric A. Elliott,
16, both of Newcomerstown, Ohio,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert
Gorence said.
FBI a11ent Doug Beldon said
both Ohto and Oklahoma file!!
detainer warrants to keep lhe two in
custody pending extradition on
state char!!es.
First-ilegree murder charges
were filed against Gilbert and
Elliott on Wednesday in Nonnan,
Olda, where a court affidavit says
the pair have acknowled$ed
responsibility for the shootmg
death of a 37-year-old woman near
Olclahoma City.
Gov. Bruce King had received
no extradition requests by Wednesday evening but ellpected lhem and
planned to comply, provided that
no crimes were committed in New
Mexico, King spokesman John
McKean said.
A federal hearing that had been

COLUMBUS (AP) ~ Coca­
Cola and Pepsi Cola may never
drink to each other' s success, but
on one point they agree: Voters
should can a state tax on soft
drinks.
Bottling companies poured in
most of the $400,000 spent to put a
pop tax repeal on the Nov. 8 ballot
A campaign finance repon that
the Stop Taxes on Food Committee
filed Wednesday listed 20 contributors who paid to circulate petitions
needed to put the constitutional
amendment before voters.
Diana Winterhalter, committee
spokeswoman, said initial support
from the industry was expected.
" The people first affected were
the first concerned, and they went
out to make sure it went on the ballot," Winterhalter said.
The amendment will appear as
Issue 4 on statewide ballots.
Tax supporters who make up a
committee known as Concerned
Ohioans to Stop Issue 4 contend
repeal backers represent a narrow
special interest group.
Donald Van Meter, the group's
spokesman, said the fmance report
proved his point.
"It confirms everything we've
suspected from the very beginning.
These are the people behind the
issue. This is a drive to repeal the
pop tax , period. End of sentence,"
Van Meter said.
The amendment would repeal a.
penny-per can tax on soft drinkS'
that legislators and Gov. George
Voinovich imposed in December
1992 to raise about $67 million
year. It also would prohibit any
future wholesale taxes on food~
food ingredients or food packaging.

a

Ancestor's steps to be traced ·
Ohioan plans to attend
re-enactment battle set
at Buffington Island
For most, Friday 's cruise from
Gallipolis to the Battle of Buffington Island Re-enactment at Portland aboard the P A. Denny will be
a chance to leisurely cruise the
Ohio River. For Civil War re-enactors , it may be an opportunity to
retrace the route some Union soldier may have talc:en.
For at least one person, th~ voyage and following re-enactments
will have more personal significance.
Jane Clark Heist's great-grandfather, a Confederate cavalry soldier who rode with Gen. John Hunt

AWAITING WORD -Ellen Henderson, left, Toin Loader and
Cathy Bates, the children of Ruth Lucille Loader of Port Washington, Ohio, spoke to reporters outside their mother's borne. Mrs.
Loader has been missing since Aug. 30 and two Ohio suspects are
In custody in connection with the disappearance. (AP)
scheduled here today for the Ohio
pair was canceled, Gorence said.
Neither he nor McKean knew when
state extradition proceedings would
begin in state district court.
Norman, Okla., District Attorney Tully McCoy said he _sent_New
Mexico a warrant to detam Gilbert
and Elliott and hoped to be fll1it to
get them returned for prosecution.
He said he would seek the death
penalty if they were convicted.

•

Morgan, was taken prisoner at the
battle that ended Morgan 's Raid
through Indiana and Ohio.
Stephen William Clark was born
Dec. 26, 1840, in Nelson County,
Ky . He enlisted on Sept. 10, 1862,
at the age of 21 , into the Eighth
Regiment, Kentucky Calvary of the
Confederate States of America .
Following his enlistment, he rode
with Morgan's men until his capture 10 months later on July 19,
1863 at the Battle of Buffington
island at Portland in Meigs County
~ Ohio's only Civil War battle.
Meigs County Museum Director
Margaret Parker saftl Mrs. Heist
sent information concerning her
ancestor along with a request for
cruise tickelS.

Clark's name appears on a roll
of prisoners of war forwarded from
Camp Morton, Ind., to Camp DoQ·
glas, Ill., on Aug. 18, 1863. Clark
was received at Camp Douglas ol\
Aug. 22, 1863, and remained there
until paroled on Feb. 24, 1865, and
transferred to Point Lookout Md
for exchange.
'
·•
He returned to Fairfield, Ky.,
where he married Eliza E. Smith
( 1843-1879) on Nov.: 1. 1865 in
Bardstown. He died in Fairfteld oia
Oct. 20, 1914, and was buried at SL
Michaei' s Catholic Cemetery.
.
lron•cally, Mrs. Heist now
resides in Alexandria in the vc,.Y
state her great-grandfather raided
along with Morgan more than 131
ago.

River fest queen deadline today
Meeting set tonight
fO fOCUS On featureS
Of Sept 17 COnteSt

In an affidavit filed Wednesday,
Olclahoma City homicide derective
Bob Bemo wd Elliott and Gilbert
each admitted responsibility for the
death of Roxie Ruddell , 37, of
Oklahoma City.
The unlawful flight charges pertained to state charges in Ohio of
aggravated burglary and kidnapping in the disappearance of Ruth
Loader, 79, from her Port Wash(Continued on Page 3)

•

Any youn~ women who want to
be this year s Middleport River
Festival Queen should act quickly.
Today is the last day to apply.
The queen contest committee
will meet at 7 tonight at the village
hall on Race Street.
The contest is open to all

..

women between 16 and 21 as of
Saturday, Sept 17 - the day of the
river festival. Contestants must live
or attend school in Meigs County.
The contestanlS will learn about
what they are exP.ected to dress,
questions they wtil be asked and
where and when they should meet
during the festival, an event organizer said.
The 1994 queen will be
crowned at noon on stage Sept. 17,
succeeding 1993 Queen Penny
Aeiker.

•

The new queen will represent
the festival and the Middleport
Community Association at parades
a_nd events ~ross the area. fn addi"
uon to eammg hundreds of dollan
in prizes, she will compete for a
$1,000 scholarship at the Marietta
Stemwheel Festival Queen Contest.
This will be the last meeting
before judging this Sunday.
-·
J!or more infonnation, call Merri
Amsbary at 992-4247, Niese! Getard at 992-6736, or Penny Aeikei
at 992-2576.
.,

,,

�Thursday, September

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA . ,

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMB ER of The Associated Press. Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher A""ociation.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sboukl be less than 300
word&lt; long. All lettm are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned !ellen will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

.

Guest editorial:

Reflecting back
on the darkest,
yet finest hour
. By DAVID GLOECKNER
There is a moment in time, when the character of a person or nation is
. forever defined. That moment. for the citizens of Meigs County, occurred
during July of 1863. Just as the blacksmith heats lhe iron and repeatedly
hammers lhe metal to shape it into its final form, so lhe character of
: Meigs County was heated and shaped. The fue was brought to our county
by the Confederate General John Hunt Morgan and his cavalry.
For days, General Morgan had ridden across Indiana and Ohio unopposed and accepting the surrender of each local militia in tum as !hey
rapidly passed through county after county. However, on July 17. 1863 as
lhe Confederate forces approached Langsville, Ohio, the citizens burned
lhe bridge. With this act, the citizens of T&gt;ieigs County served notice to the
invaders that !his county would not penmt !heir unimpeded passage
As the raiders broke camp on the morning of July 18th, 1863 they had
no idea that July 18th and July 19th would be the worst days of !heir campaign. Troopers would fall to the guns of the militia as they passed
through what became known as the Gauntlet. In fact, opposition would
cootinue until late into the night. The local military slowed the Confederates enough to allow the pursuing Union forces to completely rout them
on lhe morning of July 19, 1863 at lhe Battle of Buffington Island.
On Sept 9, 10 and 11, a recreation of the pursuit and defeat of General
Morgan will occur. Portland will again be occupied by Confederates in
gray. However, until the fighting starts, they will be treated to the
wannest hosP.itality that Meigs County can offer. When the shooting
starts, they w1ll be driven out in defeat.
In an effort to raise the awareness of all of Ohio to the importance of
the Battle of Buffington Island, the Meigs County Historical Society is
sponsoring lhe recreation of the ba~e. Soldiers from Ohio, West Virginia,
Virginia, Kentucky and North Carolma w11l mvade Portland.
We need assistance in presenting this event During the week of therenactment, soldiers an~ ladies of the 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry will be
oraging for the essentials for the sold1ers.
We are requesting donations of raw foods such as potatoes, onions,
tarrots with tops, apples. coffee beans. tin cans of beans. bean soup.
peaches and of course sardines. In addit.on, seasoned firewood and clean
'l!ltraw for the soldiers to sleep on is also being solicited.
· If you would like to donate items, pl;:ase call 992-2222 mornings and
!1,92-3810 afternoons. Help celebrate Meigs County's darkest and finest
ilours. Please attend and support !his event
(David Gloeckner is a sergeant in the 91st OVI.)

i

.Letter to the editor
..

Praises county home

Dear Editor,
· This is a leuer that warms my
:Christian heart. It's one thin~ to go
10 church. but it's entirely different
'when you put it into practice. I
.bave seen this kind of Christian
love put into practice. I'm speaking
Gf the Meigs County Home.
This is a wonderful home for
;Qtose, who through no fault of !heir
own, are homeless. Be it by an act
ef God. oc by a tragedy Jou wake
:Up one morning and fin yourself
without a home, food or clothmg;
there is someplace for you to go:
the Meigs County Home. .
Sharon Bailey, the matron, is on
duty 24 hours per day. While the
staff works eight hours per day.
They provide you with a roof over
your head, a clean bed, food, cloth-

ing and assist you in obtaining a
medical card for medical or dental
needs as necessary.
The home is immaculately clean
and well-kept I wish more homes
like this one were available
throughout the county for the
homeless. I say a big thank you to
all of Meigs County and to the
Meigs County Commissioners. It's
a job well done.
Please come and visit the home
anytime you want. You'll be welcomed with open arms. Meigs and
Gallia counties have a lot to be
proud of.
Step ben A. Foulkrod
Pomeroy
Donna Taylor
Middleport

Today in history
1Jy Tbe Associated Press

..
Today is Thursday, Sept 8, the 251st day of 1994. There are 114 days
left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on Sept. 8, 1944, Nazi Germany fired the fust of its V2 rockets. which were faster and more powerful than the V-I, mto London
during World War II.
On this date:
. In 1565, a Spanish expedition established the fust ~rmanent European
seutement in North America at present-day St. Augustme, Aa.
In 1664, the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to lhe British, who
~named it New Yo!X.
.
.
In 1892, an early version of The Pledge of Allegi3Dce appeared m
"The Youth's Companion."
In 1900, Galveston, Te~. was struck by a hurricane that killed about
6,000 people.
F
.
. mail
.
.
ted
In 1920, New York-to-San ranctsco au
SCIVIce was maugura .
In 1921, Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., was erowned the first
Miss America in Atlantic City, NJ .
In 1934, 134 people lost !heir lives in a ftre aboard the liner Morro
Castle otT lhe New Jersey coasL
In 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, "The Kingfish" of Louisiana politics,
was shot and mortally wounded; he died two days later:
.
In 1943 during World War II, Gen. Dwtght E. EISellhower pubhcly
announced 'Italy's surrender, a decision deoounced by Nazi Germany as a
.
othe
.
.
cowardly act
In 1951, a peace treaty with Japan was Signed by 48
r nabons m
San Francisco.
..
In 1974, President Ford granted an uncondJUonal pardon to former
President Nixon.
.
. .
In 1975, Boston's public schools began theu court-ordered cllywtde
·~

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday,

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

Sept. 9

Accu-Weathe~

forecast for

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

Thursday, September 8,1994

IToledo I 77" I

Oliver Stone: so gifted, yet so evil
Oliver Stone is a gifted film
director, a teehnical virtuoso. It's a
pity he' s so cynical, so sick - ultimately. so evil.
Stone claims that Natural Born
Killers, hi s latest movie, is a
''satire" on America's violent television culture. But satire is supposed to make fun of lhe thing it's
attacking.
Instead, !his movie is lhe thing
itself: a horrific. blood-drenched
glorification of murder that is likely to encourage morally deadened
young people to com mit vicious
crimes, rather than produce any
refonn in society.
The nonnal adult watching !his
movie will find it ugly and witl be
fundamentally repelled by its two
main characters, Mickey (played
by Woody Hanelson) and Mallory
(Julielle Lewis), as they butcher
!heir way across the landscape.
But, for sure, a certain large
fraction of young people will identify - not with the murd erers
lhemselves, but wilh young people
pictured in the movte who thmk
lhatlhe killers are ''cool." Another
large fraction, seeing the movie's
gore as nonnal media fare. will be
further desensitized to violence.

And, inevitably, a small fraction
will want to emulate the killers.
Oliver Stone does absolutely
nothing to stop them. He makes

Morton Kondracke
parent-killing out to be a legitimate
response to child molestation. (The
Lewis character is sexual ly victimized by her father, with her molh·
er's acquiescence, and lhey' re the
killers' first victims.)
Stone makes prison officials
(Jed by crazy warden Tommy Lee
Jones) out to be so brutal and
stupid lhatlhey deserve to be shot,
hanged or tom apart. In fact, out of
all the victims in the movie (of
whom there arc at least 100), few
seem genuinely innocent - even
!hough, by rational standards, only
one or two has com miued a capital
offense.
To give Stone hi s due, the
movie is a work of technical
genius, combining cartoons, special
effects, music and mixes of color
and black-and-white sequences to
dazzling effect.
To give Stone his furlher due.

there is a worthy target here . TV
and the movies are constantly
pushing th e frontier of violent
explicilllcss, much as !hey also see
how much sex ual explicillless t~ey
can get away wilh.
Sex and violence are the
media's two most dependable
pornographic playthings. In tenns
of sex, the movies have crossed the
frontiers of full frontal nudity (and,
just watch - lhere'll be more and
more of it, as the sleaze merchants
use concentration camp scenes in
Steven Spielberg's Schindler's Lisr
as precedent) and highly graphic
depictions of intercourse and foreplay.
HBO and lhe olher cable movie
channels have brought soft-core to
the living room, but broadcast retevision is still barred sexual explicitntss, so it increasingly tantalizes
w11h violence.
The same week earlier this year,
ABC News launched Turning
Point, its new magazine show, with
a long, detailed recounting of
Charles Manson's murders, while
NBC did the same with Jeffrey
Dahmer.
The movies, of course, have
been exploring the limits of violent

r~ LiTTLE RA~CAl£

explicitness for years - with
brains and blood drenching the
walls behind shooting victims,
throats being slashed and holes
being blown in victims' foreheads.
For some reason, Stone said in
one interview that " in lhe big pic tures today, it's PG violence, sanitized violence. The realistic viole~ce is being picked up by lhe TV
networks, the news . You know,
'Body bag at II. Victim's family at
5 ... and, later bloody body on the
fre.eway at 3.' The real violence is
on the news and, later, 'Hard
copy.'''
The only true satire in Narural
Born Killers is a take-off on a Hard
Copy Geraldo named Wayne Gale
(played by Robert Downey Jr.).
cynical host of a sensationalist
show called "Ameriean Maniacs."
One of the deft touches in
Stone's movie is !hat when Gale's
show leads to a prison riot, the host
himself gets caught up in the violence, shooting prison guards wilh
glee along with Harrelson and
Lewis. Anolher character, an expert
on mass murder, also turns into a
murderer.
In the same way, Stone ostensibly examining violence and
lhe media - is besotted with violence, making a movie that's
almost an orgy of violence.
Does he know what he's doing?
My guess is, he does . The motivating force behind many of Stone's
movies is hatred - of America, of
Western culture. of everything
that's made him fabulously rich·
and famous.
The crowning example, of
course, was JFK, an anti-American
propaganda movie that portrays a
drug-peddling CIA as the main
power center of lhe country, capable of killing a president if it wishes. But Salvador, Plaroon, Born on
the Fourth of July, and even Heaven and Earth take much the same
altitude.
Natural Born Killers is Stone's
vi ;ion of hell, and a graphic depictiun it is. But to tell people that
A:nerica is hell, as Stone once
aplin does, is a sick, evil lie.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor or Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Criticizing movies you don't see
enough for what?" I wondered),
and chide white audiences for not
seeing his movies until !hey come
out on video. He thinks white people are too a-scared to see his audaciously brilliant nightmares in a
movie theater. More likely, white
lan Shoales
people are too cheap. When Oliver
Stone goes on talk shows, on the
Spike Lee movie. I have seen a other hand, he's either talking
couple of their movies. I son of about Buddhism or the dark forces
know what I'm talking about Sal- at the heart of America. He
vador was a good picture: lurid, believes that figures of authority
nightmarish, brilliantly audacious. I often are liars. Yet, white people,
also saw half of JFK at a girlotten figures of authority themfriend's house. The movie was supselves, see his movies in droves.
posed to make me ask, "Who realBoth filmmakers 'have been pr(}o
ly killed Kennedy?" But the only
fi'ed in glossy magazines more
question I kept asking was, "How
than Demi Moore. (I guess audadid Kevin Costner ever become a cious haunting explosions make
movie star?" Then I got into a good copy.) The only other thing
fight wilh my girlfriend, and both !hey have in common is that rightquestions became moot. Between
wingers gnash their teeth at the
fights with girlfriends, I also saw
mere mention of their names.
Do the Righi Thing, a message picAll of this could fool one into
ture: Macho posturing leads to vio- thinking that their movies are
lence. I sure can't argue wilh !hat important. Natural Born Killers is
It also leads to lurid, audacious,
about two abused children who
nightmarish movies.
become murderers, and are then
These in tum lead to television . turned into heroes by lhe tabloid
interviews. I've seen Spike Lee media. My, doesn't that sound
chide Whoopi Goldberg for not ironic and controversial? Of
acting black enough ("Black course, it doesn't take much to be

I often have strong opinions on
current film releases, though I
wouldn't call myself a movie critic.
To qualify as a movie critic. I
understand you actually have to sec
the movie you're criticizing. Who
needs that?
I might sec more movies it I
could wangle an invitation to those
free press screenings, but I'm not
going to shell out today' s good
money for something I can probably see for free on an airplane two
months from now.
So how do I criticize a movie?
Simple. I read reviews in papers
left at bus stops. I try to catch all
lhe tag-team critics on TV. I examine the blurbs in the movie's print
ads, scan the talk radio dial, and
overhear as many conversations
about !he movie as I can. Only then
do I opine. If everything goes well,
a perfectly formed little opinion
pops into being, with no money out
of pocket!
Here's the process in action.
According to the ad blurbs, Nasural
Born Killers is explosive, haunting,
brilliant, brilliantly nightmarish,
and audacious. OK. It sounds like
every other Oliver Stone movie:
incoherent, paranoid, lurid and self-

confident to a degree approaching
delusional.
Come to think of it, an Oliver
Stone movie sounds a lot like a

controversial these days. J usl last
Sunday I read a feature in my local
paper that Natural Born Killers
wasn't really worth the media
hype. Pulling the feature on the
front page undercut the point a little, but that's all part of lhe fun of
the media hyping the media hyping
the media, isn't it?
So, in my opinion, Natural Born
Killers is bound to generate a lot of
coni(Oversy. The entire experience
will give you a splitting headache
that you 'II enjoy for days. In other
words, Oliver Stone scores again!
Three thumbs up! Four stars!
Check it out!
Oh, you're wondering what
gi'ves me the right to criticize? Hey
pal, our forefathers died so I can
have opinions on subjects I know
nothing about. That's lhe spirit that
makes America great. And what
kind of spirit is that? Brilliant,
audacious, nightmarish, and disturbing, not to mention lurid, stupid
and loud. Boorishness in the
defense of liberty is no vice! Ask
Oliver. Ask Spike. Ask anybody.
(lao Sboales is a columnist for
N &lt;wspaper Enterprise Associa- .
tion.)

Playing phone tag the modern way
tively ~ered, to be reachable by
those we want desperately to reach
us, while remaining remote to those
we wish just as desperately not .to

Along about the early 1970s,
houses began to become more and
more mouse-proof. The mousing
industry turned its attention to little
glue-floored "motels" that trapped
rodents inside and made them run
in place until their lillie hearts gave
out Homeowners no longer had to
handle !hem by !heir tails to throw
them out
The nation's inventors turned
their attention to anolher dilemma,
hoping the world would beat a path
to their doors: building a beller
phone-call trap.
They came up with call waiting,
call forwarding, the answering
machine, answering services,
pagers that beep, buzz, blab and
vibrate, and phones one can put in
cars, by pools and in boats. If we
allow ourselves to be bothered, we
can be bothered supreme.
But perhaps the most bothersome dilemma left them scratching
their superb heads: how to be selec-

Sarah Overstreet
reach us.
Of course, unlisted phone numbers are an especial nuisance to
reporters, whose livelihood
depends on whom we are able to
call. Yet I'll have to say that just
about as many potential sources
I've wanted to call and couldn't
were disappointed at not having
had a ch1111ce to be interviewed as
were relieved I couldn't reach
them.
And I hate even more having an
unlisted phone number myself,
because it causes all sorts of people
whom I'd love to contact me to
give up without so much as calling
someone who knows someone who

busing program amid scattered incidents of viOlence.
Ten years ago: Martina Navratilova battled from behind to defeat Ouis
Evert Lloyd and defend her women's singles crown at the U.S. Open Tennis Championships. (The next day, John McEnroe defeated Ivan Lendlto
win the men's singles title.)
Five years ago: Former President Reagan underwent surgery at the
Mayo Qinic in Minnesota to relieve a build-up of fluid in his brain that
was apparently caused by a horse-riding accidenL_

'

knows me to get my number. People whose livelihood doesn't
depend on calling olher people are
traditionally prelly lazy about digging for phone numbers.
I held out as long as I could with
a listed number until I become a
television consumer reporter, one
of those crusaders who help
wronged viewers get back at the
guys who replaced a transmission
they didn't need, or get answers
from government bureaucracies
who use their tax money to avoid
their phone calls.
After the 15th late-night phone
call !hat began, "Miss Over-street,
I couldn't get through to your station's help line today, but I'm sure
you'll understand why I didn't
think my problem could wait until
tomorrow ... ," I unlisted. Four
years after I left that job for another
in the same city, I'll still get calls at
my new job wondering if I'm the
lady who helps people because
they really have a problem ...
Still, I detest having an unlisted
number. And believe it or not, I
had already thought it would be
great to have some kind of go·
between amid the coaxial and
fiber-optic maze that delivers us so
much else. But, "No," I thought,
"that's why you were an English
major, l}ecause you don't under·

..

stand science or technology. Obviously, if they could, they would. ,
Now. shut up and wait helplessly ·
for that cute pharmacist who flirted ·
with you at that party to wade '
through the gaggle of friends who '
know him and know you until he
gets your number.'' Fat chance.
But lo, the technoheads were
holding out on mel The Nynex :
Corp. is starting an· experiment •
with some of their New Yo!X sta~e ·
customers whereby callers to an .
unlisted phone number can leave 1 a ·
short message. A computer wlll '
then ring the number.
:
If the unlisted cullee wants e :
call, he or she can bear the m - :
sage. If not, the callee can j t :
refuse the message and/or all fu
·
calls and not be bothered agai , :
Nynex promises.
:
The caller pays approximate y '
$1 for leaving the message. I fl
:
the times I'm in a froth to rca h :
someone about equal the times I' :
in a froth to be reached, so my bill •
should even ouL
:
Will it work? This experiment :
:
should J!ve us an idea.
U nlll then, Mr. Pharmacist, :
don't give up, I'll be waiting by tbe •
.
pt.one.
.'
(Sarah Ovel'5treet Is 1 cqlum·
nist for Newspaper Enterprise

Association.)

IND.

Showers T-storms Rain
V~a

Fl~tries

AssocitJifld Pr11ss Graphics/1191

Ice

S&lt;.rllly Pl Cloudy Cloudy
Cl1994 Accu-Weather. Inc.

Fair skies, warmer temps
.predicted for this weekend
· Dy The Associated Press
while the record low was 39 in
More fair weather can be 1951. Sunset tonight will be at 7:52
expected across Ohio for the next p.m. and sunrise Friday at 7:07
few days, thanks to a high pressure a.m.
system over lhe southeastern UnitWeather forecast:
ed States, forecasters said.
Today ... Partly sunny. A slight
There will be lots of sun and chance of an afternoon or evening
warming temperatures through the shower or thunderstorm s extreme
wockend, the National Weather norlh. Highs 75 to 80.
Service said.
Tonight. .. Partly
cloudy
There was a slight chance of a north ... Mostly clear south. Lows 50
thunderstorm or two tonight and to 55.
Friday over northern Ohio.
Friday... Partly cloudy. A chance
Highs on Friday will be in the of afternoon showers and thundermid to upper 70s. By Sunday, read- stonns northeast. Highs 75 to 80.
ings in the 80s are likely throughExtended rorecast:
out lhe state, lhe NWS said.
Saturday ... Fair. Lows in the 50s.
The record-high temperature for Highs 75 to 85.
this date at the Columbus weather
Sunday through Monday ... Fair.
station was 100 degrees in 1939 Lows 55 to 60. Highs 80 to 85.
·

P.A. Denny cruise tickets
still available for celebration
Tickets are still available for the
P A. Denn)' cruises being offered in
conjuncuon with the Banle of
Buffmgton Island celebmtion to be
held at Portland Friday through
Sunday, according to the Meigs
County Historical Society.
.
The P.A. Denny will leave Gallipolis at II a.m. on Friday, bringing Civil War re-enactors upriver
to the baulefield. The public is
invited to join these re-enactors as
they portray some of the excitement that happened 131 years ago,
when Union forces followed this
same river route into battle.
Cost of lhe 55-mile cruise from
Gallipolis to Portland is $38. Passengers are asked to assemble at
the Cushing Inn (Our House) at 10
a.m. For those wishing to embark
at Pomeroy, the cost is $35. Lunch
is included and will be served
between Pomeroy and Racine.
Tickets from Racine are $25.
Tickets may be purchased at the
Meigs County Museum at 144 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy (992-3810);
the Meigs County Park District,
200 E. Second St., Pomeroy (9922239); Sweet Greetings, 122 E.
Main St, Pomeroy, or at the Ohio
Valley Visitors Center, 45 State St.,

The Meigs County Board of
Education employed substitute personnel and approved school bus
driver certificates at Tuesday's regular meeting.
The board approved hiring John
Taylor and Valerie Hanstine as
substitute teachers and Josie Morton as a substitute teachers aide.
School bus driver certificates were
approved for Randall Boston and
Donald Ryan Hall.
In other business, the board

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zll·- )
Published every afternoon, Monday throuJ,h
friday. Ill Court St., Porncr&lt;Jy, Ohio by the

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Edgar F. Cook Jr.
Edgar F. "Fuzzy" Cook Jr., 70,
930 Laurel Road, Gallipolis, died
Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1994 at his
farm in Perry Township.
Born Dec. 10, 1923 in Blair,
W.Va., son of the late Edgar Sr.
and Rose Coffey Cook, he was a
prominent Perry Township dairy
farmer from 1947 untill990 and an
active beef farmer since 1990.
He was a corporal .in the 2251h
Field Anillery of the U.S. Army,
se rving three years in the South
Pacific during World War II.
Surviving are his wife, Belly
Gore Cook, whom he married June
14, 1946 in Hewell, W.Va.; two
daughters, Catherine (Steven)
Nolan of Gallipolis, and Christi
(Dw1ght) Rees of Rio Grande; two
sons, Rodney (Charla) Cook and
Richard Cook, both of Gallipolis;
and seven grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren.
He was also preceded in dealh
by a brolher, Emmell Cook.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday
in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Joseph
Godwin officiating. Burial will be
in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call atlhe chapel
from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted by VFW Post 4464.

Pallbearers will be Mike
Williams, Mark Hager, Dan Morgan, Kennelh Fry, Charles Tackett
and Lawrence Tackett

Luther C. Bartoe Sr.
Lulher C. Bartoe Sr., 75, Long
Bottom, died Wednesday, Sept. 7,
1994 at Regency Manor Nursing
Center. Columbus.
Born Sept. 9, 1919 in Whitman,
W.Va.. so n of the late John
Franklin and Nancy McManaway
Bartoe, he was a retired sheet metal
worker, a member of the Mount
Olive Community Church, a U.S.
Anny veteran of World War II and
a member of the Disabled American Veterans.
He is survived by wife. Elizabeth Vanover Bartoe; two sons,
Lulher Jr. and Joseph Allen Bartoe,
both of Columbus; a daughter.
Nancy Staley of Columbus; and
nine grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
four brolhers and three sisters.
Services will be Saturday at I
p.m. in the White-Blower Funeral
Home, Coolville, with Lawrence
Bush officiating. Burial will be in
Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bonom.
Friends may call Friday from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home .

Water service proposal
(Continued from Page I)
Hobson area, Middleport Council
President Bob Gilmore said.
Many village residents will
scream about any option the village
chooses, Horton said.
"We'll have to take in a lot of
costs, including maintenance of old
Jines," Horton said. "We'll have to

Corrections
In Wednesday's Daily Sentinel,
anorney Patrick H. O'Brien was
referred to as Pomeroy village
solicitor. That is incorrect. O'Brien
serves as independent legal counsel
for the village on an item-by -item
basis. As county court judge,
O'Brien cannot serve as village
solicitor. The Daily Sentinel apologizes for the error.

sit down and analyze these costs.
But, village people would rather
help !hose in lhe county !han out"
Horton said that th e village's
water rates - the minimum averages about $14 per monlh - will
increase with any option taken.
Whichever outside user supplies
water. lhe village must still maintam and pay for lines within village
limits, said Bill Browning, Middleport's water administrator.
To repair lines !hat are cunently
as old as 90 years - rates must
in-:rease, Browning added.
"The days of cheap water arc
gone," Browning said.
Middleport officials will meet
Gallia County Rural Water Association at 6 tonight in council cham·
bers.

Apparent suicide investigated
A 74-year-old Salem Township mar is dead following ar apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, the Metg s County -:
Sheriffs Department reported.
The body of William L. Henderson, Strong's Run Road, was
found Wednesday afternoon by a relative, Sheriff James M. Soulsby
reported.
Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter sai d the cause of death was a se lf- , ,
inflicted gunshot wound to the head . 1\lso responding to the scene
was Deputy Robert Beegle, Chri s Tenaglia and Jeff Miller of the
Meigs County Prosecutor's office, and the Rutland Squad of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.

Officials seek return of felon
A Pomeroy man recently se ntenced on charges of rec eivin g
stolen property and breaking and entering was arrested on a Meigs
County warrant m Royd County, Ky .. last weekend .
Donald Edwards, 22, was granted five day s' hou se arrest last
week but fail ed to report to the sheriff' s office for tran sport to
pnson.
Edwards refused to waive c&lt;tradition. Sheriff James M. Soulsby
said. He added that the prosecutor's office will request a governor's
warrant for Edwards' return.
Edwards now faces an addittonal charge of escape.

Man crushed by home improving
A Middleport man who recently was trapped for 30 minutes
bencalh a home he was demolishing has been upgraded from critical
to serious condition at Grant Medical Center, Columbus, accord ing '
to hospital officials.
Nonnan Milliron, 69, Bone Hollow Road. hart tom down two
walls of a Hysell Street structure when the roof collapsed Aug . 29,
said Bruce Swift, captam of the Middleport Volunteer Ftrc Ocpartmcnt.
Grant's LifeRightll helicopter tran sponcd Milliron to Columbus
after atleastl5 local rescuers lifted the roof off his back. Swift said . .
'

BB shootings under investigation
Deputies of the Meigs Co unty Sheriff's Department took a report
of BB damage at property belonging to Tim Hill and Tom Hill in •
Racine.
'

Gallia man killed in tractor accident
GALLIPOLIS - A Patriot man was killed Wednesday after· ":
noon when his tractor overturned , the Galli a Count y Sheriff 's
Department reported.
Edgar Cook, Jr., 70, 930 Laurel Road, died of mass ive head
injuries, said County Coroner Edward Berktch . . .
.
Cook was apparently haulmg a tra1lcr of fertdrt.cr down a hill
near his residence when he turned too fast, sa1d Ch1cf Deputy Dennis Salisbury. The tractor and trailer jackkmfed and crushed Cook "
undcmealh.

States line up for fugitives ,

(Continued from Page I)
era l reporters on co nrlttton ol
anonymity.
ington, Ohio. farm house Aug. 29.
She said the fugitives drove up
Mrs. Loader 's car was found
Council not to meet
I in Fulton, Mo ., ncar the to their Lamy hom e Monday look·
Sept.
Gallipolis ( 1-800-765-6482).
Racine Village Council will not home of William Brewer,. 86, and ing for work and gaso line.
In Tuesday's Daily Sentinel it
Those needing transportation
meet tonight (Thursday) as previ- wife Rossie, 76. The Brewers had
back to their point of embarkment was incorrectly reported that the ously announced.
been shot to death . Mrs. Loader
She satd she sensed "something
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Department
should contact the Meigs County
was still missing Wednesday.
wasn't
right" and prayecl for her
and
Squad
responded
to
a
trailer
Museum at 992-3810 for assisOpen house set
The
Brewers'
car
was
found
husband
as the fugitive s accompa'-·
fire
on
Salser
Road
Monday.
The
tance. The Saturday afternoon and
The Adult Basic and Literacy Sunday in Oklahoma ncar Ms . nted him to his gasoline can. She
Syracuse
Volunteer
Fire
Departtwilight cruises in the Portland area
Education Learning Center will Ruddell's body. Authorities said
are $10 for adults and $5 for chil- ment and Squad responded to lhe hold an open house from I· 3 p.m. she was shot sometime between 7 sai d she believes lhc presence of a
neighbor working nearby may have
call. The Daily Sentinel apologizes
dren 12 and under.
and
5:30-8
p.m.
Monday
at
the
p.m.
Saturday
and
noon
Sunday.
pre
vented violence.
Re-enactors will begin arriving for the error.
JTPA office in Pomeroy. The pubNew Mexico state police said
"I
consider ourselves very
in the Portland area on Friday and
lic is invited to allend and learn Ms. Ruddell's silver-gray pi ck up lucky. We're th e ones they didn't
will be setting up camp lhroughout
about the program.
was found three miles from where kill," she told the Albuqu erque
the day. Celebration activities will
the two fugitives were captured Journal in a copyright intervieW
get underway on Saturday and SunChurch homecoming slated
Tuesday by state police as the pair published Wednesday.
Units of the M.eigs County
day with a company drill at 10 a.m.
The Chester Nazarene Church is slept under a bridge ncar Santa Fe.
Demonstrations of lhe way of life Emergency Medical Service logged holding homecoming Sunday with
Tuscarawas County, Ohio, Shersix calls for assistance Wednesday. services I :30 p.m. Special singing
in Civil War times will be taking
iff Harold McKimmic said Ellion
Units responding included:
place throughout bolh days. Special
by the Bissell Brothers. All wel- had been charged as a juvenile in
POMEROY
programs will be presented at
come.
Mrs. Loader's disappearance. Any
9:16a.m., Sand Hill Road, Sher11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. on Saturday.
decision
to try him as an adult
rie Bobb, Veterans Memorial HosIn addition, a ball will be held with
would
be
up to prosecutors and a
pital.
music by the Saxton's Comet Band
judge,
he
said.
RUTLAND
along with an open-to-the public
The stale of Missouri did not
wiener roast at 8:30p.m.
·
2:39 p.m., Maplewood Road,
Am Ele Power ........................30 112
immediately
charge the pair. CallThelma Chase, VMH;
The /'.A. Denny will depart
Akzo ........................................62112
away
County
Sheriff Harry Lee
Portland for the trip downriver on
3:51 p.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
Ashland 011 ..................................37
would
be considered
said
charges
Sunday at 4 p.m. Snacks will be
Rehabilitation Center, Hazel
AT&amp;T .....................................541/2
after an investigator return s from
Bank One ................................34 112
provided for the downriver cruise
Rogers, VMH;
Albuquerque.
Bob Evans ...............................20 7/8
5:15p.m., Strong's Run Road,
and costs are to Racine $25,
A couple who encountered the
Champion
Ind
..............................
23
Pomeroy, $30, and Gallipolis, $33.
William Henderson, dead on
Charming
Shop
.......................
.9
1/8
pair
Monday in La my. N .M., just
arrival.
Further information may be
City
Holding
................................
.31
soulh
of Santa Fe, said lhe fugitives
SYRACUSE
obtained by contacting lhe Meigs
Federal
Mogul
........................
28
518
told
them
they were headed for
2:23 a.m., Third Street, Archie
County Historical Society.
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................35 1/8
California. The wife spoke to sevLee, VMH;
K-marl .................................... l8 1/4
7:34p.m., State Route 124,
Lands End ............................. !~ 7/8
Mary Pugh, VMH.
Limited Inc..................... ............. 21
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
Multimedia Inc ..................... .31 1/2
FRI., SAT., SUN.
Point Bancorp .............................. 17
HARRISON FORD
Reliance Electric .................... 25 1/8
IN
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... J~ 518
Shoney's lnc .......................... .I4 7/8
accepted lhe resignation of Michele
"I
CLEAR AND PRESENT
Pratt as a speech therapist and
Star Bank...................................... 43
DANGER R
Wendy lnl'l. ........................... 15 J/8
approved a course of study for the jl Th f II ·
t'ons 10 end
AND
GRADS program
/
e o owmg ac 1
.
Worthington lnd ................... .21 J/8
BRUCE WIWS IN
Present were' Superintende~marriage were flied recently m lhe
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
COLOR OF NIGHT R
·
M gs County Common Pleas
quotes provided by Advest or
John D. Riebel Sr., Treasurer Car
~rtof Judge Fred w. Crow Ill:
446-1088
Gallipolis.
ole G1lkey and board members
D. 1 .
Charles
k d
Robert Barton, Howard Caldwell,
ISS~ utwn as e .
Jeffrey Harris, 1.0. McCoy and Roy Ae1ker and Faye Rose Ae1ker,
Jeanette Thomas.
both of Po~eroy, Sept I.
Ashland
COLONY THEATRE
Ashland 1
The board will next meet Oct.
Dtssoluuons granted - Benny
11 at 7 p m
Branham and Cathy M. Branham,
TONIGHT
· ·
Aug . 31· Beverly K. Jones and
JUUA ROBERTS, NICK NOLTE IN
985·3350
995-3350
I LOVE TROUBLE PG
Gregory' Alan Jones, both of
STARTING FRIDAY
Albany, Sept. 2.
.
. The following couples received
KEANU REEVES, DENNIS HOPPER
Divorces granted - John SulliIN
marriage licenses recently in the van Tucker and Viola Maxine
SPEED
R
Meigs County Probate Court of Tucker, Aug. 31; Dawn Early
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Judge Robert Buck. Issued licenses Young from Donald Young, Sept.
ADMISSION $2.00
were:
2; Judy M. Sayre from Timothy E.
446-$23
Thomas Allen Spears, 4 7, and
Davidson, Sept. 6.
Route 7 South, Chester, Ohio
Dixie Lee Spears, 43, both of Middleport; Gerald Bernard Arnold,
52, and June Marie Farr, 35, both
of Pomeroy; Robert Jeffrey Cottrell, 34, and Amy Jo Huddleston.
22, both of Pomeroy; Teddy Raymond Scott Jr., 23, Ravenswood,
W.Va., and Kelly Cheyenne
Autwnn Allen, 21, Racine.

Announcements

EMS logs 6 runs

Stocks

County board OKs hiring
of substitute pers·onnel

13

The Dally sentlnei-Page-3

--Area deaths-- Local News in Brief:

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

a, 1994

Dissolutions,
d vorces f"lled

CHESTER
QUIK STOP

Marriage licenses

Appreciation Days"
Sept. 9th - 1Oth

ANNOUNCING

The First Annual
Meigs County Republican

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions Alfred Birchfield, Middleport;
Thelma Chase, Albany; Hazel
Rogers, Athens.
Wednesday discharges- Elizabeth Will, Pomeroy; Beulah White,
Middleport; Robert Taylor, Vinton.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 7 - Ann
Whalen, Thelma Holtz, Mrs.
Mitchell Meadows and daughter.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Hudnall, daughter, Gallipolis.
(PubUsbed wltb permission)

BEAN DINNER
B~eans,

Hotdogs, Soft Drinks and
Good Conversation

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
4:00 p.m. until ?
At The Meigs County Fairgrounds
$5.00 Donation At The Door

REGISTER TO WIN!*
tj:) Purth l~(' tlPlP'&gt;'&gt;. I ry'

' 100 Getlon1 OUIMty A~~~tend G..allni!IO Wlnnwt)

• 1 · Sel of Binoculars
• 1 · Under The Cabinet Can Opener
• 1 . F"lash Ughl Set
• 1 · Ashland Logo Jackel
·• Plus · Many More GilJe·A·Ways 'll

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Trimble to host Meigs Friday night

Thursday, September 8, 1994
Page-4

In the U.S. Open quarterfinals,

Agassi, Graf move on to semifinals
By BOll GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - Andre
Agassi IS budding confidence with
every success against a seede d
player at the U.S. Oren.
Agassi blasted hJS way mto the
sem1finals Wednesday night, wipmg out a seeded player for the third
lime, then admilled hi s sights arc
set h1g her.
''I've s.11d 11 a lot, probably too
much, tube 4u itc honest, but! feel
lik e I ca n win these matches.''
Agass1 sa id. "And I feel hkc I'm
good enough lO do it."
Agass1 sunp ly outgunned 13th
seed Thomas Muster 7-6 (7-5), 6-3,
6-0 to grab a sem ifinal be nh
aga1nst ninth -seeded Todd Martin ,
a 6-4, 7-6 (7-5), 4 -6, 6-4 win ner
over Germany 's Bernd Karbac hcr.
With the victory. Agassi became
the seventh unsccded singles player
to beat three see ded men in the
same tournament. He ~feared No.
6 Michael Chang an d No . 12
Wayne Ferreira before Muster.
No unseeded man ha s e ver
defeated four seeded players, which
Agassi co uld do by winning hi s
next match against Manin.

The last unsecded male lO defeat
three seeded players was Australian
Fred Stolle in 1966. Iromcally, the
firs t to do ll was Francis X. Shields
in 1930, the grandfather of Agassi 's current gi rlfriend, ac tress
Brooke Shi elds.
Saturday's other semi final pau:
ing is to be decided today and
toni ght as Peru's Jaim e Yzaga
play s Karel Novacek of the Czech
Republ1c and No. 4 Michael Stich,
the highest seeded player remainmg in th e men's f1eld , takes on
Sweden's Jonas BJorkman .
The women's semifinal pairings
were completed Wednesday when
lOp-seeded and defending champi on Steffi Graf cruised past No. II
Amanda Coctzcr of South Africa 60, 6-2 and No. 7 Ja na Novo tn a
stopped No. 4 Mary Pierce 6-4, 60. Friday's other semifinal w1ll pit
No. 2 Ara nxta Sanchez Vicano
against No. 8 Gabriela Sabauni.
The Agass i-Muster clas h was
just that - two heavyweights slugging tt out from 78 fee t apart.
There were very few drop shots
or net appro ac hes - the two
in stead revertin~ to raw p :".'-' CC .

Side to side, baseline to base line,
comer to comer. To them , a change
of pace meant mixing 90 mph
slices in with the 98 mph fastballs.
Muster drew first blood breaking Agassi in the third gam~. And it
was the blond Austrian who had
the easier lime holding serve, at
leas t m the ea rly going. It turned
out to be Muster's final lead in this
year's lOumamenL
Agassi, finding the range with
both his forehand and backhand,
began moving MtLste r from side to
stde. con trollin ~ the points, making
h1s opponent work for every shot.
It paid off in the e1ghth game
when Agassi broke back to level
the set at 4-4. The two eac h held to
force the open in g set into a
tiebreaker.
When Agass i slammed a backhan d service return dow n the lin e
on the sixth poi nt, it gave him a 4-2
lead , which he quickly buill to 6-3.
Muster, however, refu sed to back
dow n, repeatedly running down
see mingly sure winners and forcing
Agass1 lO h1t yet one more shot.
Mu ster won the next two points

he se rved, stav in g orr two set
poi nts, before Agassi rilled a forehand blast into the comer. Muster
got to the ball, but hi s backhand lob
was long and Agassi was one-third
of the way into the semifinal .
" I weathered a storm in the ftrst
set, and I felt good from there on
in ," Aga.ssi said.
After Aga ss i broke Muster's
serve lO begin the second set, the
two pla yed perhaps the most
important game of the match.
Twice Muster reac hed break
point in a bid to level the set. Twice
Agassi brought it back to deuce,
and he needed three more ga me
points befor~ he was finally able lO
increase his second-set lead to 2-0.
When Agassi broke his Austrian
foe in the seventh game to take a 52 lead, for all practical purposes the
match was over. Muster won only
one more game, by breaking Agassi in the eighth game.
" He raised hi s game, definitely," Muster said of Agassi. "I had
a couple of chances to break back
to 1-al l, but I never real ly had the
feeling I could gct.on lOp of him ."

Unless agreement isn't penned soon,

Selig threatens to close book on season
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - One day
before the deadline to cance l the
season, players and owners are trying to work out an agreement.
Aft er a thre e- hour informal
meeting Wedne sday night, th e
sides sa id they ex pected talks to
resum e today , the 28th day since
the strike began Aug. 12. Acting
commiss1oner Bud Selig has threatened to declare baseball finished
for 1994 if an agreement isn't
reached by Friday.
''I'm sure if we gel closer to a
deal, I'm sure that date might have
some nexibility," Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris said after
the late-night meeting ala Manhattan hotel.
McMorris and Boston Red Sox
chief executive officer John Harrington sounded hopeful. They
attended the meeting along with
Selig's daughter, Milwaukee Brewers vice president-general counsel
Wendy Selig-Prieb, and management lawyer Chuck O'Connor.

Scoreboard
Transactions
BasebaU
A.mtrltan Lupe
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Named
Wa.lte:r Guwwski dirociOl' of bw:incu tffa~ .

Na.UooaJ Lap
PHll.A DEU'IDA PHlLI1ES Sclec1Cd
Fn:d McNair, firlt b11c:man, fran App!oton of the NOlthwm L.cague 1o cunplct.c:
the July 21 deal that acnt Shnm Bolk.ie.
piLChe:r. 1.0 the Se.anJe Marinen.

Basketball
Na.dona.l Bukelball AllocbUon
DETROIT PlSTONS : Signed Oliver
Miller, center. to an offer sheet.

FootbaU
Na.Uonal Football Laaue
ARIZONA CARDINALS : Waived
Michael Brandon, de!en•ive lineman
Signed Bernard Wilson, defenaivc lineman. Signed Hcnchd c.\urie, corncrblck,

and Bryw HooD,

dcCc:n~ivc

lincnan, to

Management negotiator Richard
Ravitch was not presenL
"I would say in terms of a specific proposal there's been no
movemem," Harrington said, "but
there was a good exchange of ideas
and positions."
Union head Donald Fehr, who
invited the management group for
dinner with himself and three union
aides, wasn't optimistic, but also
wasn ' t as pessimisti c as his norm.
' 'I'll begin to be optimisti c
when a deal is signed - I think,"
he said. ''I'm not going to do any-

thing short of that.'
Harrington , however, termed the
meeting "fruitful" and McMorris
said he was " hopeful."
"Thi s was a positive s1gn,"
McMorris said. "We've been seeking to get the negotiations started,
but you can't do that unless you
start talking . We 've got to continue
to talk. "
Fehr, dressed in blue jeans - a
contrast to management's business
suits - said he expected larger
groups will meet today. Chicago
White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf,

Is Michigan trying to strip
Stevens of scholarship?
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -

The National Rainbow Coalition
has asked the NCAA and the Big
Ten to investigate whether the University of Michigan is trying to
improperly strip an injured basketball player of her scholarship.
A university spokesman said
Wednesday that Tannisha Stevens
·of Mount Clemens has been
offered a full scholarship for five
years.
'"We didn't strip her of any
scholarship," s~okesman Wall
Harrison satd. "I m confident that
any investigation by any impartial
party will show that we have acted
in Tannisha's behalf.''
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said in a
letter Wednesday to NCAA executive director Cedric Dempsey and
Big Ten commissioner James
Delany that he believes Stevens'
plight occurs frequently in college
basketball.
''The fact that a large percentage of college athletes, particularly
in the sports of basketball and foolball, are African American, suggests that blacks are more likely to

suffer from this arbitrary and capricious persecution," Jackson wrote.
Jackson urged the NCAA to
examine whether injured athletes
arc being forced to relinquish their
scholarships.
Harrison said Stevens has been
offered a scholarship that provides
benefits identical to those of an athletic scholarship.
Stevens was a freshman when
window glass shattered Dec. 26,
1992, on an airport shullle bus she
and two teammates were riding in
Miami. Stevens underwent several
operations, bul some glass frag ments remain and she has lost sight
in her right eye.
Stevens notified the school last
week that she plans lO sue for $6.S
million. She said the lawsuit will
seek damages for negligence and
personal trauma.
Stevens said she was harassed
by basketball coach Trish Robens
after the incident and lost her love
for the game. Stevens also claims
the university violated its own rules
when the basketball team didn't
travel together.

Atlanta Braves president Stan Kas·
ten and forrner Sl Louis Cardinals
CEO Stuart Meyer also arrived in
New York on Wednesday. Twelve
players on the union 's negotiating
s ubcommittee were due in by
today.
''I'm not at the stage where I
can say anything definitive," Fehr
said. "There's nothing definitive to
say. We'll have conversations in
the morning and see what people
come up with overnight."
Fehr said the discussion
revolved around new information
the union received last weekend.
He said the data dealt with the revenue-sharing agreement owners
adopted last January.
"What we've been attempting
to do ," Fehr said, "is study
whether the suggestions we had
previous! y made would have been
any different if we had known at
the time before the strike what we
now know."

lbni1on, wide receiver,

to

the pncticc

oq.ud.

MlAM.l OOLPHINS : Signed Dcwayne

Douoo, lincblcict, 10 the pncticc aquad.
Rele.ued Vaughn Bryant, comat.c.i .
P\TfSBURGil STEELERS ' Signe&lt;l
Trr.:vm Cobb, running bad , lD the pract.iee ICJUad.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: W1ived
hmea Fuller, ufcty . Sianed Lonnie

Youna. aafety.

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One of the premier battles ot the
bend wiU take place when Eastern
(1 -0) meets Wahama (1-1) in
Mason County Friday night.
After claiming a 22-14 win in its
opener against Hamlin, Wahama,
with the help of three fumbles, fell
to a 34-0 deficit before avening a
shUt-QUI.
That score came on fre shman
quarterback David Mitchell' s 54yard run off the option. Mitchell
connected with Chris Mitchell for
the conversion.
Wahama is not the powerhouse
team of the last two decades, yet it
is still a recognizable force. The
White Falcons managed only 268
total yards, 25-123 rushing and 45
in the air. This illustrates that the
team does have the potential lo
attack both ways as does Eastern.
Mitchell rambled for 62 yards,
while Brad Stanhope totaled 49
yards in four tries . Jason King
completed five of IS aerials for 45
yards with Todd Roach catching
two for 24 yards . Chris Roach had
two enemy fumbles a nd Todd
Roach had an interception.
Roach had a 43 yard touchdown
pass in the Hamlin game and Chris

Mitchell caught a three yard pass
from King, whil e King added a
three-yard mn .
King led the team on 17 carries
for 89 yards that nighL
Although the test may not have
been a test of Eastern's strength,
but rather a test of Water ford's
weakness; the re sult s we re th e
same for the Meigs County club a huge 54-0 win .
Eastern scored early and often
with halfback Jason Sheets scoring
four times, Charlie Bissell twice
and Ryan Buckley twice. Eric Dillard added another score. Bissell
had 7S yards on 15 carries, while
sheets had 15 carries for 171 yards
and over 250 all-purpose yards.
Quarterback Brian Bowen illustrated Eastern's versatility by hurling a 30-yard touchdown pass lO
Trnvis Curtis.
Eastern head coach Dave Barr,
pleased with Friday 's effort, said
he's confident his team can pul
together another good showing, but
also said il will be a lillie tougher.
Barr said, "We're going lO have to
prove ourselves aU over again."
Game lime is 7:30 Friday.

Southern warriors to face
Waterford Friday night
This Friday, the Southern tornadoes go on the road again to
Waterford, where they will meet
the Wildcats in what should be a
great game.
Both teams are 0- 1, and both
were defeated soundly in their first
games.
Southern dropped a S4-8 decision to Zanesville-Rosecrans, a
team that was loaded with seniors,
talent, and the will to win. This
year is to be "the year" for Rosecrans.
Waterford dropped a 64-0 lilt to
powerful Eastern last Friday.
, Waterford has very few numbers m
its upper grades and over 20 kids
on the roster in the lower two
grades.

On paper, this will undoubtedly
be Southern's best shot for a win so
far as the two are evenly matched.
Southern may have the edge in raw
youn~ talent that had ils bright
spots tn last week' s loss.
Sophomore Jamie Evans had a
78 yard run, then finished it off
with a one -yard plunge seconds
later. Evans also led the defense.
Sophomore quarterback Jesse Maynard rnn the conversion.
Southern coach Joe Hemsley
said, "We're still learning. We lost
last week to a good team, a very
good team. But we had a lot of positive come out of it. We'll correct
our mislakes and go from there ."
Game time is 7:30 for the nonleague lilt at Waterford.

By DA VF. HARRI S
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs wi ll try and ge t its first
win of th e youn g seaso n Friday
evening when Mike Cha ncey's
Marauders travel to Trimble to tan gle with the Tomcats.
Trimble is under the direction of
first-year boss Phil Fai res. Faires
welcomes back 14 lettermen from
last season's team that fin1shed
with a 6-4 mark overal l and a 4-1
mark in the Tri -Vall ey Conference's Hocki ng Division.
Amo ng those returnin g letter
winners are Josh McClelland (6-2,
175), an honorable-mention all state pick as a linebacker, and Mark
Patton a S-9, 170 pound, aii-TVC
pick at split end . The Tomcats will
run a balance d attack on offense
with_about 50% rushing and 50%
pass mg.
The Tom cats will go with a
sophomore at quarterback in 5-11 ,
160-pound Zachary Miller. Miller
led the Tomcats to a 18-6 win over
Symmes Vall ey last Fri day at
Glouster. Miller completed 12 of
21 in lhe air with two touchdowns
and two intercep tion s and 11 5
yards.

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Southern lost a tough varsity
volleyball match by IS-5, 6-15, 157 game scores to Tri- Valley Conference foe Nelsonville-York.
Sammi Sisson led the Tornadoes
with seven poins and seven assists,
while Amy Weaver added five
points, Kendrn Norris and Amber
Thomas had four aces.
Andrea Moore led the team with
four kills and Jess Codner had two
kills as both enjoyed another night
of good front line play. Moore also
had two assists.
Jill Shafer led N-Y with 12
points. Teammate Lindsey
Shumway had 10 with two aces.
Monique Herplitzka had eight
points and three aces.
In the reserve game, Southern
won IS-2, IS-12 and was led by

At fullback for the Tomcats is 59, 190-po und senior Dennis
Osborne with McClelland al tail back. Osborne led the Tomcats on
the ground with nine carries for 32
yards and also caught two passes
for 23 yards. McClelland caught
three passes for 19 yards.
Nathan Dugan a 5-9, ISO pound
junior returns as the tight en~ with
J.R. Reynolds and Patton leads the
returnees at en d. Reynolds is a 510, 150 pound senior. Patton pulled
in three passes for 26 yards.
The offensive line for the Tomcats ha s some good size, the line is
anchored by center Nathan Angle a
6-3, 190 pound senior. The Tom cats also have a pair of big tackles
in Jamie Morris a 6-0, 275 pound
junior and Keith Dugan a 6-3, 245
junior. The guards are Joey Wright
(5 -11 , 165, jr.) and Marty Christa
(5 10, 165, jr. ).
The defense is led by McC lelland, Trimble held the Vikings to
eight fir st downs last Friday and
onl y 96 total yards, all on the
ground.
Meigs is coming off a 42-7 loss
to a very ~ood Gallia Academy

team at Gailipolis. The Marauders
were still in the game midway into
the second period, but a bad snap
on a punt gave the Blue Devils the
ball with good field position, that
set up a Gallipolis touchdown. The
Blue Devils sco red two touch downs in the final four and a half
minutes of the half to take a 2K-7
lead into the locker room at th e
half.

One of th e br;ght spots for
Meigs was the play of the offensive
line, desp1te playing against one of
lOp defensive lines in the area, the
Marauders held their own. Corey
Seymo ur (6-2, 220, sr.) is th e
Maraud ers ce nte r, with Wal t
Williams (6-2, 243 sr.) and Adam
Barrett (6- 1, 213 so.) at the t:tckles.
The guards arc Adam Sheets (li-3.
206, jr.) and Shannon Staats (6 -2,
180, sr.).
Israel (lzzy) Grimm , th e
Marauder tailback, had 20 yards in
12 carr1es agamst Galila Academy .
Freshman tailback Matt Williams
led Meigs wi th 51 yards in 12 carries. The fullback will be Shaw n
Petrie a 5- 10, 194-poundS&lt;: nior.
Marauder uuarte rbac k Brcll

Hanson was four of nine in the air
for 32 yards and a touchdown. Paul
Pullins pulled in two passes for 20
yards, and Chad Burton had one for
nine, while David Feuy had one for
four and a touchdown. Jered Hill a
5-10. 175 pound se nior also will
see lime at end. Hanson also scmmblcd f1ve umes for 14 yards including a 22 yard S&lt;:amper.
On defense the Marauders will
go with e1ther Donald Shaffer (6-2,
192 sr.) or Crai g Knight (5-1 1, 230
jr.) al middl e guard. The tackles
will be Barrell and Petrie. Staats
wi ll be at one end with either Mike
Jarvis (6-0, 202, jr.) or Bert Mash
(6-2, 175, sr.) on the other side.
At lin eba cke r will be Jame s
White a 5-9, 148 junior and Jason
Parsons a 5-10, 178, sophomore.
The cornerbacks are Mike Marshall (6-0, 164, so.), Cass Cleland
(6-D, 171 jr.) or Erix Paxton (S- 11,
176 jr.) with Hill and Pullins at the
safeues.
"Trimble is a good aggressive
team," Chancey said. "You better
be ready to play when you play
against a Tnmble team , or they will
beat you."

NCAA sidelines Galloway for two games
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Nine month s earlier, Joey Gal loway delighted Ohio State fan s
when he announc ed he would
return for his senior season and for sake the big bucks offered by the
NFL.

On Wedne sday , in the sa me
room , Galloway admincd he had
not repaid $200 given him by an
agent in January. As a res ult, the
NCAA suspended him for two
games.
''I'm sure I will learn from this
situation. I'm a young man in col lege. I have some growing up to
do," the third-team all-American
split end said at a news conference
Wednesday. "This incident right
here will let me do that. Hopefully
some other guys wiU see this situation and realize this is the wrong
thing to do and learn as well as I
have."

The NCAA declared Galloway
ineligible to play in 18th-ranked
Ohio State's game Saturday al No.
2S Washington and the Sept. 17
home opener against Pittsburgh.
Galloway said he received the
money when he was considering
whether to make himself available
to the NFL draft in January.
"It didn't slip my mind. When I
look the money, I considered
myself 100 pen:ent leaving coUege
football at that time," Galloway
said. "Later I went home and
changed my mind about deciding to

Seventh-grade
Marauders beat
Point Pleasant

Justin Roush carried six times
for 182 yards (30.3 yards a carry)
and three touchdowns and added a
fourth touchdown on a punt return
to give the Meigs Marauder sev enth grade football team a 36-12
win over Point J;?leasant Tuesday
evening al Middleport
Roush , who also added three
extra points, put the Marauders on
lop in the first period with a 54yard run and a 63-yard {'Unl return.
He added both extra pomrs to give
Meigs a 16-0 lead afwr one period.
Cynthia Caldwell's 12 points and
Roush added a 79-yard scamper
five aces. Teammate Amber in the second period to give Meigs
Thomas had seven points and two a 22-0 lead. After Point Pleasant
aces, while Briannc Proffitt had
scored on a one yard run, Roush
five with three aces.
added his fourth first half touchThomas had three kills and down, this time from 28 yards out.
Proffitt two, while Caldwell had
He once again added the extra
three assists.
points lo give Meigs a 30-6 lead at
For Nelsonville, Ailainc Her- the half.
plitzka and Jeana Wycoff each had
John Hill added a one-yard run
four points.
in the third period lO close out lhe
The third game of the triple Marauders scoring before Point
header saw Southern's freshmen Pleasant added a touchdown in the
take a IS-9, 15-3 win.
fourth period.
Hillary Turley had 1) points and
Hill added 42 yards in seven
five aces to lead the wmners, while carries. Marauder quarterback Van
Jenny Friend had eight with five Inwagen was two for two in the air
aces. Tiffany Critchfield , Sherry for 26 yards, both passes were
Irwin, and Amy Adams each had caught by Grant Abbott.
three for Nelsonville.
'' Meigs will host Belpre on
Thursday, Sept IS at Middleport

Nelsonville- York sextet takes
three games to beat Southern

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y

NEW
1994 CHEVY
CAMARO COUPE

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Alai X.alat.. uvalu. auard. and Damon
WriP,t, wide rueiver. Sipcd Conu.lo
Floyd, linchec:ku, to lbe pneticc ~

At 6:00p.m.

-113W.Metn
Pomeroy, 992-6426

-303 IIpper River R.,.d
Galllpollt, 44~83

Auto., air, V6, cruise, P.
windows &amp; Jocks, stereo.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Si&amp;ned
Brian Bdli.nscr. pard. Sipod Garry Pay,
ccnla", and Junm Bryant. dden&amp;ive end,
to Lhe pnctioe ~qUAd . Waived Larry Wdh cc, wide receiver, and Stuumbe'
Wright-Fair, runnin1 bid, llwn tbc pn&lt;:t.ic.e kJUad.
WASHINGTON RFDSKJNS : Aebnt-.
ed Williun Bell, nwlin1 bod&lt;. Rdeaooc\

R

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Open
9:30 a.m.-1 :00 a.m.
Sunday thru Thursday
------------------------------------9:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m.
Friday and Saturday

LOOK FOR GREAT SELECTIONS
AND PRICES ALL MONTH
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1-992-6641 1-800-8237-1094

CLEVELAND BROWNS ' Signed

Darrylllcnley, cornerback. Signed Tooy

NOTICE
FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS

Gea Summer Sell Down

quarterb&amp;c.k, fn:m the prac1icc squad.
Dam..ion Lyona. defenaivc back, to the
aqua d. Waived P J. Killi1n,
Lincb.cket, fr..n lhc practice aqUIId .
DALLAS COWBOYS: Signo.i Llnd ·
sey C!apmm. running bod&lt; .
HOUSTON OII.BtS: Signed Billy Joe
Tullivcr, quarteJbad:.
LOS ANGELES RAMS : Re· aigned

Wahama to host Eastern
in Friday interstate bout

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. ~

lhe pnctice liqUid. Wtivod Quia Swuu.,

~n c tice

~ENDS IN PLAY - Meigs Marauder head coach Mike Chancey
(middle) gets set to send in senior end David Fetty (15) with a play in
last Friday's game with Gallia Academy. Fetty scored the Marauders' lone touchdown on a rour-yard reception rrom Jlrent Hanson.
llehind them is Marauder statistican Rick Chancey, the older brother
or the Marauder coach. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

YES! - Andre Agassi celebrates his victory over Austria's
Thomas Muster during the U.S. Open quarterfinals in New York,
where the unseeded Agassi won 7·6 (7-5), 6-3, 6-0. (AP)

The Dally Sentlnei-Paae-5

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MASON, WV

leave and I didn ' t repay th e
money.''

He would not identify the agent,
whom he referred to as a "financial
adviser." He said he repaid the
money last week with interest. But
that was after an NCAA mvestigator had discovered the payment
during a routine investigation and
told OS U officials about it
Last spring, the NCAA put the
Ohio State athletic deparunem on a
one-year probation, look away one
men' s basketball scholarship and
chastised head coach Randy Ayers
for recruiting violations in his program.
Athletics director Andy Geiger,
reached by telephone in Denver,
stressed that there was no correlation between the probation and
Galloway's problem s.
''There is an important distinction to draw," Geiger said. "The
university did nothing wrong. This
was not an institutional matter.
There was no relationship between
our probation and this instance.
This was an individual eligibility

pound split end from Bellaire, h a~
been louted by Ohio State's sports
information department as a candi date for the Heisman Trophy.
Asked if his chance at the Heisman had been ruined by the suspension, Galloway said, " I had no
comment on the Hei sman before
thi s and I won't comment on it
now .''

Ohio Stale quarterback Bob
Hoying said, "I t's unfortunate
because the way the system is set
up, when a guy ha s to dec ide

whether he' s going to go out for the
draft of not. the athlete is at a disadvantage."
At h1 s news conference in January to announce he was staying at
Oh1o State, Galloway said,"[ don't
put mu ch emphasis on material
things - I wasn't brought up that
way. Money is important, bul it
doesn' t drive my hfe. · ·
On Wednesda y, he said: ''I'm
sorry something like this happened
and a lot of people have to share in
the pain ."

matter.''

Galloway often has been com pared to former OSU star Cris
Carter, whose school record he
matched with II touchdown receptions last year. The NCAA suspension brought the comparison into
sharper focus, since Carter was
declared ineligible prior lO his
senior season for tak'ing money
from agents Norby Walters and
Lloyd Bloom.
"Obviously I feel very bad for
our football team and I feel bad for
Joey," coach John Cooper said.
"What does this do to our football
team? I've talked to the team about
this already, we've got to circle our
wagons and pick up the slack.''
Galloway was declared ineligible Sept. I, soon after the team had
arrived back in Columbus after a
34-10 victory over Fresno State
Aug. 29 in the Disneyland Pigskin
Classic. The university made no
announcement pending an appeal
to the NCAA, which rejected the
plea early Wednesday.
Cooper said Ohio State will not
have to forfeit the victory over
Fresno Stale, in which Galloway
caught two passes for 88 )'ards
including a 67-yard te~chdown
catch. He also ran the ball twice for
19 yards, scoring on an eight-yard
run when he reversed his field lO
outrace the Fresno State defense to
the end zone.
Galloway, a 5-foot-11, 186-

SUSPENDED - Ohio State wide receiver Joey Galloway will
watcb tbe Buckeyes' next two games instead or play in them because
or the NCAA's suspension handed down Wednesday ~ , G.aljowtjy
admitted to not repaying $200 given to him by an age1,1t th)s pll~mmer. (AP)
}---&lt;:_ ,-""- ,';;

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Pharmacy
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R. Ph. Char1et Rlflle, R.
R. Ph.

Mon. lhN Sat. 8:00 a.m. to D:OO p.m.
Stnday 10:00 Lm. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION

PH. W2-2DS5

E. Main Frlardy Sarvlce Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'till t

�Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 8, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A promises is a promise when dealing with inheritance
Ann
Landers
"· ~9~ Los Angeles
T "'t!~ ~ v"&lt;J '~"It ·&lt;~ ,d

,_ re o~t

1f5

Svna,ca tt'

Dear An n Landers: My husband
and 1arc scmor citizens. Th ree years
ago. we gave up our home and
moved inLO a small apartment. We
sold many 1 ~em s we couldn't usc and
gave much of what was left to our
daugh!Cr, "Ga) Jc."
.
1 inhcn!Cd many bc&lt;luufu l th mgs
from my mother -- her Jewel ry,
chma. stcn"'"c and l1 ne ns. Mv

mother and I had an understanding
th at th ese family heirlooms
eventually would be passed along
to my daughter. Gayle is aware of
the commitment because she heard
Grandm a talk about it, and she
expects to get these things.
Now I find I cannot in good
consc ience brin g myself to give
anytlling more to Gayle. She is 45,
irresponsible and unapprec iative,
and her life is totally chaotic. Her
house is cluttered and downnght
dirty . A never-ending stream of
scruffy-looking c haracte~ wander in
and out. Some of them have moved
111 and stayed for week s. These
peopl e she has befriended have
stolen money and jewelry. Every

lime it happe ns, Gayle is totall y
surprised.
Frankly, I doubt that my mother's
possessions would last an other
generation if I gave them ID Gayle. I
would much mthcr give my mother's
tllings to my niece, "Lenore," who
is a responsible woman. She would
delight in owning anytlling that
belonged to her grandm other.
My husband says I cannot do tllts
because Gayle has been promised
these items. He thinks it will cause
fri ction between her and Lenore.
What do you think we should do,
Ann? -- A ROCK AND A HARD
PLACE
DEAR ROC K: If th ere was a
commitment -- and it sounds to me

as if there was -- you must honor
your mother's wishes and give Gayle
what was promised to her, even
though she is a slob.
To go again st your mother's
wishes and take it upon yourse lf tD
give the lovely pieces to Lenore
co uld crea te li fe lon g prob lem s
between the co usins. If you could
tactfully sugges t to Gayle that she
give Lenore a few nice p1cccs, tt
would be a most generous gesture
and enhance the relati onship. I
recomm end iL
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I have some fri ends we like ve ry
much. "Lorn a and AI" arc an
auractivc couple, and we have great
limes together.
The problem is that for as long a&lt;

we have 'lmown one another, every
social evem has been at our house,
never th eirs. Even when we go out
to dinner, the evenin g begins and
end s at our pla ce. We have
Thanksgiving dinner together -- at
our house. At Christmas, it's the
same. This couple has never invited
us w their home for a meal.
To make matters worse , I just got
off the phone with Lorna, and she
said, "When are we going to see
you? " I said, "What did you have in
mind?" She replied "Well , the
weather's nice now so maybe we'll
take a drive over to your place and
have lunch." I changed the subject
The sad thing is that we like this
couple a lot, and we don't want 10
lose their fri end ship . Any

suggestions? -- NEW YORK
DEAR N.Y.: Yes. Next time you
plan an evening together, come right
out with it and say, "How about a
change of scenery? Let's go to your
house."
Gem of the Day: Have you
noticed that people who have an hour
to waste invariably want to spend it
with someone who is busy?
Forget to save some of your fa vorite Ann Landers columns? "Nuggels and Doozies" is t~ answer.
Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope and a c~ck or
money order for $.5 (this includes
postttge and handling) to: Nuggets,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Bo:r 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611.0562. (In Canada , send $6.)

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

WEDNES DAY
IIARR ISONVILLE - The Sc ip1u Towns hip Trustees wil l meet at
(1 H) p.m. Wed nes day at th e
l':tgcvllle town hall .
TII URSDAY
HOCK SPR INGS - Roc k
Spr~ n gs Gra nge mee tin g 8 p.m.
Thursday at the grange hall .
TUPPERS Pli\INS - Tuppers
PLuns Ve terans of Forei gn Wars
Pos t 9053 mee ting 7:3 0 p.m .
Thursday at the post home.
RUT LAND - Hy sell Run
Holm css Church mi ss ionary service 7 30 p.m. Thur sday with
Dav id Neville speaking.
POMEROY - Hill side Baptist
Church on S.R. 143 holding a soulwinning and visitation revival with
Dr. Carl Hatch from McKinney,

RAC INE - Rac in e Vill age
Council meeting 7 p.m. Thursday
in council cham be~.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rose of Sharon
Ho liness Church reviv al th rough
Se pt. 18 at 7 p.m. nightly featuring
evangelist Rev. Judy Withams and
The Vi ctory Trio. Special service
will be at 2:30 p.m. Sept. 11 with
Rev. David Hall speaking.

at th e Gra ce Epi scopa l Church.
Ftvc bruthcrs who served in World
War II will be recog nized.
POMEROY - Manley reunion
Sa turda y at 4 p.m. at Royal Oak
Park , Pomeroy. Bring covered dish.
Meat and table service provided.
PORTLAN D - James C. and
Eth elinda Ston e Moore reunion
Saturday at Portland Park with picnic lunch at noon .

DARWIN - Modern Wood men of America Camp 7230
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full potluck cookout at 6:30p.m. SaturGospel Church, with the Clark day at the south bound Park ncar
Family, Friday, 7 p.m. Public invit- Darwin. No charge.
ed.
POM ERO Y
Free dom
Reso
urce
Center
open
house
10-1
SATURDAY
p.m.
Saturday
al
the
124
Rultcmut
POMEROY - The Return
Jonathan Meigs County Chapter Ave. office. A dedication will be
DAR meeting 1:30 p.m. Saturday

held at noo n at th e park . Pu bli ('
welcome. Refr es hm ents will he
served.
SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Fork ed
Run Sportsman' s Club gun shoot I
p.m. Sunday at the clu b. Fac tory
chokes only.
ALBANY - Rawlin gs famil y
reunion Sunday at Lake Snowden.
Picnic dinn er at 1 p.m.
RA CIN E - Chapman and
Myrta Hill family reunion will be
at tile Star Mill Park. Food served
at 1 p.m. Bring covered di sh and
table service.
POMEROY - Pomeroy United
Methodist Church rally/festivUJ day
Sunday, church school at 9:15a.m..

worship at 10:30 a.m. potluck-fellowship following.

2239, Meigs County Park District
office.

POM EROY - Th e Bow ers
family reunion , noon Sunday at the
soulhhound U.S 33 p.1rk near Dar-

CHESTER - Ch es ter U. M.
church, fam1ly ni ght, 6:30 Sunday.
Everyone to ta ke a fr eezer o f
homemade ice cream , cake or pic.
Guest~ welcome.

wtn .

REED SVIL LE - The Bethel
AME Senior Choir of Parkersburg,
W. Va. dicee ted by Philli s Daniels
at Eden United Brethren Church,
two miles north of Reedsville on
State Route 124, Sunday, at5 p.m.

POMEROY - Wood fa mil y
reunion Sunday, Virgil King Farm.
38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. Picnic at 12:30 p.m.

SYRA CUSE - Soccer clinic,
Sunday from 2 10 4 p.m. ~t Carleton School lot in Syracuse. Open
to all children 111 the county, ages
fi ve through 12. Children who have
not turn ed in th eir reg istration
form s, may do so at th e clinic.
Additional information , call 992-

MONDAY
POMEROY - EFN EP nutri tion classes and "On My Own" personal development and employability classes will be held Mond ay
through Friday from 9-3: 30 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
through Oct. 6. For more information call 992-6696.

2ND

Imagination
Factory to
visit library

I
ANTHONY LEACH

Leach birth
announced
Tony and Julie (H~sell) Leach
of Dublin arc announcmg the binh
of their fi~t child, a son. Anthony
Cameron , on July 28 at Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
The new arrival weighed 6 pounds,
2 ounces and was 20 inches long.
Grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Leach of Syracuse and
Rosemary Hyscll of Middleport. A
great-grandmother is Margarette
Campbell.

The Meigs County Public
Library is sponsoring a creative
drama workshop for youths, ages
eight through 12 on Sept. 24 from 9
a.m . w 3:30p.m.
The creative experience will be
presented by The Imagination Factory, an educationally themed art
and drama company based in
Southeastern Ohio.
"Junior Celebrities" students
will _give themselves a standing
ovatiOn upon completion of the
workshop. Exploring theater
through acting games, improvisation, vocal expression, and body
movement. these "Junior Celebrities" wiU create original skits for an
end -of-day performance. Parents
may attend all performances. The
workshops are designed to bring
out the actor, playwright, and
director in those enrolled.
Each student will receive a certificate upon completion. Cost is
$10 per student. iegistration is to
be done at the Meigs County Public
Library where additional information may be obtained by calling
992-5813.

"Lo&gt;e Weight Like "Crazy"
Guaranteed
lose Poundl ond tnchea
Natural Herbal Tablets

44CI·.ta96

Sept. 9th and 1Oth
10 P.M.-2 A.M.
$2.00 Cover Charge
Mustbe21 .

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Meigs County Board
of Revision has completed

BIG WEEK

Ita work and the books are

now open
Inspection.

Meigs County
Board of Revision

(8) 29, 30, 31
(9) 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9;

10TC

Colkgc

6/1&amp;'1W TFN

32!!
39!~

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.lol tn C. Wolf'. I) ( &gt;.

Dual Termu1a1 Battenes

Dominator
Batteries
good wtlh
P r ~ee s

59!!
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A SStll' l :Il l'

~DT700

In Mempry

DAVID MARK
TALBOTT
In Loving Memory
on His 29~ Birthday.
Memories of your
birthdays
Looking back down
rough the years
Can't help but bring
gladness
In amongst the tears.
Your wishes and your
wants
Were not hard to
satisfy
For they were always
those things
Not much money took
to buy.
But as that day comes
once again
We need thla time to
say Have a very Happy
Birthday Dave,
Your soul God knew
He had to save
A candle burna
brightly at your grave
Love &amp; Miss You
Dearly,
Your Family &amp; Friends

YOUNG'S
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·New garageo
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
g92-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

-·

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RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11, 94
1:00 P.M.
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IN ADDISON'S DISEASE,
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SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
GALLIPOLIS OPEN
Store Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday

t V£AR WARRANTY

209 Upper River Road
446-3807

II

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iiil

-----------------------------IWXIt'&amp;»·

good through Wedne.Oay, Sept•mbet' 14, 1914.

I

I,

I

Question: My friend was diagno sed with Addi son 's disease .
What happens in this illness, and
what causes it? Answer: Addison's
disease is an illness named after
Thomas Addison, the British physician who described the illness in
· the I 800s. A much better name for
this illness is the newer term that
describes the underlying abnormality - chronic adrenal insufficiency, although the older term, Addtson's disease, is still used quite
commonly.
The adrenal glands arc part of
the body's hormone-manufacturing
machinery. and in this illness, they
fail to produce a sufficient quantity
of the hormone cortisol. This hormone. like all hormones, is pro duced by one tissue - in this case
the adrenal glands \\ hich are located atop the kidneys. All hormones,
once produced, are conveyed by
the bloodstream to other parts of
the body to affect the metabolism
and other activities of these distant
organs.
The adrenal glands release their
hormones into the blood in
response to the level of the regulating hormone ACTH , produced by
an organ at the base of the brain
called the pituitary gland. In chronic adrenal insufficiency, the adrenal
gland is damaged and unable to
respond to the stimulation of
ACTH . Th«f pituitary gland
attempts to correct the low levels of
cortisol by increasing the amount
of ACTH 1t produces.
The pituitary gland makes many
hormones. One of these controls
skin pigmentation. This hormone,
released at the same time as
ACTH, is pumped into the bloodstream in increased amounts
because of the elevated ACTH production. The high levels of this second hormone cause one of the common physical symptoms of Addison's disease- increased skin pigmentation.
The increased skin pigment is
particularly noticeable when loolcmg at the creases of the palms,
elbows and other places the skin
routinely folds. There is also
increased pigment around the nipples and where: the skin is chroni-

a car.

386 State Rt. 160
w/Nationwlde Ina,
Gallipolis, Oh.

Come
. see
us at .I.

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CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

..~.., .... pu• iJ tlaU lOG,.,

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Call Ua At 446-9971 and (ask for Becky)

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing

QDALift WINDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
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• $200 Installed
Call For Details

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Howard
Excavating· Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service

Complcle House &amp;
Tra iler SHes
Driveways , Septic

Systems, Waler &amp; Sewer

Lines , Land Cl~ .:uing
Trucking: Lime stone &amp;
Estimate!&gt;

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOM'
Porn'lt~cy, Onio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Ow1er 1-80()-291·5600
110pourt St.

Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

}l 'Ioucfi

742·2443

Custom WindOw Coverings

111111 mo.

992-3838 "''""

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Blinds • Verticals • Shades

"DAZZLING

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
l1structor- NaiiCJ W. Swartz
Classes
beginning
September.
&lt;aD 992-3796

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

. DOLLS"
BATON CORPS

Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

not just a way to
cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room

~ ·s

50-5~%

off
Blinds &amp; Verticals

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NIW &amp; USED PAllS FOI

All lUllS &amp; MOOElS
992-70UOI
992-SSSl 01
lOll fR(( 1-101).141-0070

cally irritated by pressure, such as
the belt line. General weakness,
loss of appetite with resultant
weight loss, and low blood pressure
are other common signs of tllis illness. So this describes "what hapHEATHER CUNDIFF
pens" in Addison's disease.
Chronic adrenal insufficiency
results from an auto-immune illness in 70 percent of cases. This
occurs when the body's defense
mechanisms inappropriately identifies the adrenal gland as an invader
- as though it was an infecting
bacteria - and tries to kill iC. There
are no widely accepted explanations for the cause of this or other
Heather Lynn Cundiff, three, of
auto-immune illnesses.
Racine,
was a contestant in the
About 20 percent of those with
Strut
Your
Jeans Pageant held at
Addison's disease develop it as a
Krodel
Park
consequence of an infection in the Va. recently. in Point Pleasant, W.
adrenal g)and. The most common
Heather won queen in her age,
cause of this is tuberculosis, but division. In the overall competition
histoplasmosis? sarcoidosis , and she won most beautiful, prettiest
blastomycosis can al so attack the hair, and the friendship award. She
gland. About 5 percent of individuthe daughter of Lawrence and
als have AIDS as the cause of their is
Debbie
Cundiff of Racine, and the
adrenal insufficiency, and less than granddaughter
of James and Ruby
5 percent have cancer or other ill- Eynon of Middleport,
and James
ness as the cause.
Question: My friend had symp- and Thelma Cundiff of Racine.
toms for years before she finally
was treatcd for Addison's disease.
Is the treatment any better if the illness is identified early?
Answer: Death can result from
. untreated chronic adrenal insufficiency while early treatment can ·
lead to a normal life. So, early
diagnosis and treatment is clearly
an advantage. The specific treatment depends on the severity of
sympwms as well as the underlying
cause. In the most common autoimmune cause. replacement of the
missing adrenal hormone is the
proper treatment. Adrenal insufficiency caused by infection or can- '
cer responds best to treatment of
the underlying disease. It is usually
necessary to talce supplemental
EMPLOYEE OF THE
adrenal hormones in these illness,
MONTH
-Sharon Older was
too. But, as the gland recovers from
tbe
August
employee of the
the original disease, it may begin to
month
at
Overbrook
Center,
function properly again and make
Middleport.
Older
bas
been
the daily supplement of cortisone
an
employee
in
the
hoU&amp;ekeep·
unnecessary.
ing department since July 25,
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
1989. She and her husband,
colnmn. To submit questions,
Fred,
an employee for the
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Middleport Village, reside at
Ohio University College or Osteo440 Russell St., Middleport.
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
They
have three children,
Atbens, Ohio 45701.
Dorothy and Rick or Middleport and Jim or Columbus.

Cundiff
places in
pageant

7lltiDI/TFN

Bill Slack
992·2269

Announcements

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Friday, 140 O.pot Road Bidwell,
Women, Boya Clothing, lntanl

Giveaway

C.r Seat, Top, Walktr, Mls~ :

Ront, 814-387-11141.
4

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let ua do it
for you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimatee
Before 6 p.m. leave

ragls a rod BordiH' Collie, mott.r

lothor lull
tun blooded Boagto.

3 pur.piH,

5142 leave mMNge.

Gl111 Clothing, Infant Carrier

"blooded

7 Momh Mixed Doa, H01 Some
Collie In It, 614-245-&amp;un
Adorable Puppfn, 7 wka old,
baon wormed, great with
chlld,.n, 304-875-1105.

Alter&amp; p.m.
614-985-4180

3/2S/94

lmprOYINBIJ

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

33151 Happy Hollow Rd.
Midcleport, Ohio 45760

NewHomee,
Additions. Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchea, Pole Barna
Call Ua For An EaUmate

614-742-3090
304-nJ-9545 .,..,.

Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, ROOJll
Additions, Etc.·

P.O. Box 220 BidwelL
OH 45614
(614) 388-9865

GO·KART RACES

FOR SALE

Every Saturday Nile

New

Hot lop1 7, Roce1 8

Meig1 Co. foirground1
NEW LOW ADM.
PRICE &amp; RACING

STRUCTURE
Spec to tors $3; Under 12 fre e
Pit Po" So; Under 8, $3

NO FEE 10 RACE!
992-7717 or 741-2865
BI2Sitln

-

filling &lt;"IIIII•

lili·Woo4

Dtiii'IIIYI
Sttln_.
lut.......

Cal Westen A1to
992-5515
Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial

....,,..,

FOR SALE
Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,

Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

742·2455

Manco-Go Karts
3 H.P. I Up
Parts I Service

Morris Equipment

. ........

To 5, 38 Smlthera

4 Froe Kl«ene, 3 Main, 1 Gamga Sola: 502
Female, 614-258-1m
SoJII lith. Frl, 11-4.

•message.

MANLEY'S

Fl1dly, S.turday, S.pt lith, 10th,

304-773- From i

Brown loweaeal with wood trim,

Ho111e

1-800-BLIND-11

Roommate W1nted $100 Mcnh

liNDA'S
. PAINTING &amp; CO.

KINGS'

992-5311

483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

3 Announcements

l'n Jll 'ssn r

Harry •• • M!fJ

ru•d o ,..ntaJ tGI' from
K•nny ~ Auto R•ntal."

7355

DARWIN, OHIO

Master Quality.
Starters
and Alternators
Puce good w•th e•change

1597

Pellet Stoves

Fill Dirt, Top Soil

FROM

FROM

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

-GOA~I~~me

Heating, Inc.

Reasonable Rates

Ill i';uuil y l\1 cdiCi tiC

Pflce goOd wtlh excnange
Everyday Low Pnce

e~c ha n ge

Fl ame

or Osicoralhic Medicine

Family
Medicine

Mtlltmwn Jcpostllo open an account ts 57,500 00 Rates mdtcate annual percentage yield

•

public

949·2168

Ohio University

5.54%APY

H)JC

for

992-2156

18 Month
Peoples Value CD

=~;;;;;;;;;:=;

2

AI

THE WATERING
HOLE

UffTIME WARRANTY

MCMIU

W1m

Playing

PennzoU
1DW30,
10W40
or5W30
Motor 1111

"" suh1e&lt;tto d:tdy rale quot:ttiOns Apenalty for earlyWlthdrawal may be imposed Abo&gt;e
rate-s avaJiahlc a! aUPeoples Hank locations

25 Veara ExPerience
992-4447 or 742-2360

ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

Uff11ME WARRANTY

APY

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES

~BJE

"GYPSY"

l

FREE ESTIMATES

9 to 5 Weekday•
Evenlnga By Appl
oflnanctng

446-7400
800-757·PEUET

BIG YARD &amp; BAKE SALE
AT
FELLOWSHIP CHURCH OF
THE NAZARENE
Reedsville - Rain or Shine
SATURDAY ONLY

WANT ADS

Everyday low Price

6.16%

Page St, Middleport
Free EaUmatee
7nlnln

OF SAVINGS

SIIIICO
Wlter PIIIIIPI
Pr tee good ..,.,lh tllCiiang tl

30 Month
PeopJes Value CD

ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

992-2096
550

- -----------Community c a l e n d a r - - - - - - - - - - - Texas, through Sunday at 7:30p.m.
nightl y.

Howard L. Writesel .

Dobbto Drt,
Solo, Chair,
Um,-l._br~pee, lbttreM S.t,
Pot!. wnlrlpool Rowing Machine, Clothoo, Mil&lt;. Homo.
I l l - Solo: Sept Blh, lith, 10th
1112lii1M North, 160, look Fo;
Signa, 1o.5.

:-:-=-c:-'--,-,-~,----­

..ovlng Sal1: Friday And Satur·

614-m-ens.
dty, Cf:OO To 1 Rain C.ncel•.
Fumhure
Organ,
Mowara
Eloctrlc dry•• lor porto, 6t4-992- Tllltra,
Misc . Household hams:
6nB.
146GB SR 554, Btdwoll.
G10y Strlped Cat &amp; Two Khlena, Sopt Blh, 8-? 215 Hilde Avonuo.
614-446-!1'1112.
Seven Family: 3 Mllea Below
Mate Booglo, lamola Bugle, 3 Dam
On Rl. 1, Furniture, Clothnowborn pupplol. 304-875-6675. Ing, Knick-Knacks,
Household
Prlced To SoUl Sop! Blh
Plor.t Kfnona: One Groy And Goodol
Dti'I,SJ.-7
'
Wh • One O.rll Groy Long Hair,
8 Wookl Old, To Good HOmoo, Sl. Rt. 160 3 112 lllloo, North

814-44~311

HIIC, Signa, 2 New Tilt Out In-

sulated Wlodowo, CAr Trailer
RoostoB. 304-875-5578.
Numerou• Mise, Friday, u-1
Only!
Scrap motet, 304-8~53CI1.
Small puppln, pert Bllgll. 304- Thurac And F~. 2 Family Yonl
Soia, :ohoes1rlng Rldgo 2 Truck
0~2961
Tool Box, Car Caut1tt Pl1yer
Sweet 6mo. old puppy to good Gun C.blnet, Ntw Tlru, An~
homo, vory tntall/gon~ playa Wheelt, Baby bema, New Scroa
Frlsbao 6 other triCka, Cont. S.w.
Coyote mix, thort-hllred. 304'TWo Family lith, 10th, 4110 lllln
61S-6J11l.
on Kriner Rd1 on 218, Tu-r.
w.,., Avon, LOti Of Oddt &amp;
6 Lost &amp; Found
Endl, Phono: 6~-4419.
Lost: yellow ond groy Cockotlol, Yard Solo Sept. 7-a-9. Homloc:k
vicinity
ol POmoroy/IIQon Road on Evorgroon Rd .
blldgo,
614-lli2-8624.

7

Yard Sale

Pt. Pleasant

&amp; VIcinity
2 FamilY Yonl Sola, 1101 Ftrol St,
Gallipolis
Ape D, F~ and Sal.
&amp; VIcinity
742·2455
Yard Bola, 8th I 10th. 2818112
142 LDwor Gllflald Thurodoy, lbclaon Ave, Home Interior,
Friday, Sllwday, U. Wtnte1 mt.c, 111 clothing Pllcod 25
Clothn, Doek With Hutch, _ . . llcll.
Tsblo, Chslro, Electric Htator, Yard S.t.2nd. St. Clifton, ThurBedtpr.. d,
With
Curttln.
t- 7 Adutt-boby clot hoe,
. Round Aug, G-. O..Cila, Fri-So~
~ (10.12), lvlng"""" ouMa,
11
LIMESTONE,
:.,-=:
t•c::...-c---::----::------ dtril,._, oulto1 . olactllc fur15 Family: 8omo 01 Evoryth!ngl nace, end tablee, Home Interior,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL · lori)look
Portollwook lono In Tho Pof. Mg lawn mower, comforter Nt.
Sub. on 01 Cani"'"'J
Reasonable Rates _Rd::-,F_rl::-,Sot~,•::-2.:-:--...,.-,,---=-:4 Fomtly: 114 Unc:otn Pika, Frt,
Pomeroy,
Joe N. Sayre
s."' Blh, to~, r.~, L.ompe,
Middleport
lllciOWive, ....,. .., Sula,
&amp; Vlcl
'SAYRE TRUCKING . ~;o-~~;..9:/!:"'· ctottwa.
nlty
2 familY proa• 1111, Friday
71h,·tlth. 114 IIIII Down 2111 !:6- Sopl. lill, ono mill on Hyaolt
614•742•2138
Car S11t, Poaad Chair, unta Run Rd., lint Ume IIIIa y.. r.
Gl~o Tlllngo, Lola lllocl
billy • - · clothoo, mite.
314.931 MO ALL Yard Solei lluot 81 Paid In AI Yard So._ llual Ill Plfd In
AdYinca. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. - - · O..dlne: 1:OIIr&gt;m the
.---':.""!~~,_...,-.., tho doy balot8 the ad Is to Rift. day blloF8 the ad II to run,
I Sundoy adHICXI - 2:00 p.m. Sunday adltJon. 1:00pm Frklly,
liNGO
Friday. Uondly edNioft • 2:00 lllondiJ odltlon 10:00o.m.
EVERY THURSDAY
p.m. soturclay.
::,:s.:::turc~~.:..::::!r'-:-: -::-:---:---:--EAGLES
Amvat FIN lllrlral,...., I TUH, FrtdiJ IIIII Soturday, September
CLUB.~
Dui. . Wateoma.,_OO/Tal!lo.
..:.~.::.:-~ Roctna,
o1o
Big a.- Salo: lllllfnd Hutton
'
•-.
-~-.
IN POIIEnOY
ear w.~ on 111. 7, 14 Birch · ~ ••112 mtlo •'-• Flw
6:45 p.IIL
lono, Eloct~c Stovo S25, X, XX Palnia, n...-y and Flldoy.
S"'""t.l Ear.. Bird
Size lodN ClothN a Othoro, Oallfll •ta: Fl1dly So~ lith,
...•r
Boddfnt, a..-, Cultolna, -- 1 4
Coun
d
.. 00 P.uoff
Rupt.!.OC• ·01 Ni• Hilke 1 Mtoc. ~ o Pill.
ty
11,
••
-•
SoJII ""'• 10th, I To 7
illlln ...,.. Thlallll good for 1
EREE C8rd.
~roa:.~~!'!'"' l'lme: Fri. a
~CX,:,..
-t,
k
~
llllllnd
·
·
dln-.i
Lie. No. 0051-342
Amorlcan Llglon.
Aocllor, calcal-'"o,_ ........
rnrn
Evervlhtna
, _ Buggy'a Clotfioa, Storm WI,. ...,... aof1 8ajll...... 11111 c:or;
L - - - - - - - - ' l d o n , •llr Bad,llllc.
lop Af. ._..!.':;~:00.

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

HAULtNG

r;:;,

=·

tl:..

•-1

�.

:

..

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I ;

Classified Line Ad_s

;

3 papers

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

. Tribune 446·2342 Sentinel992·21 56 Register 675·1333

15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less

.

:

•

I

f

•

•

:

I

I

'

.'• : ·f~
Over 1Swords .·; ;}

September

6.00
19.00
5
13.00
1
1.30/day

· GUZ~ .WHII.T 'S GO ING ON
. THE&gt;&lt;&gt;-&gt; 15 T"-'T OR&gt;.N-' ,
T~ £ WIZE!t'S
....__

GI R.l~lt i E N D?

BEATTIE BLVD.'" by Bruct Beattie

Rentals

ON£ OF TH EIR ~l"Cf

GUA.RDS!

P HI LLIP

41 Houses for Rent

..,.

-o,
rnor.

~.

0Q68.

2 B1Jroom Hou-. Unfumw.d,
Goo Hoat, No Polo, Aeforwncoo

Roqulrod, 1114-44fl.44111.

iam-Spm.

11838.

tull time auetlon..r, complete

auction

eervlca.

Ucensed

713-51811.
304-8115-3430.
Mt. Alto Auction eve'/ Frtdly &amp;
s.turday, 1r, Rt .
a Rt 33

Csrs

Or

Trucks, 111111 llodoia c. Nowor,
Sulek Pontile: 11100
E.ootom Avonue, Galllpollo.

Smhh

Decontld

ltonftlrl,

wall • •

phonoo, old lompo 1 old thor·
momoton, old &lt;locll, ontlque

fum"""·

11

Help Wanted

~'t Junk Itt W Us Your NonWorill"11 MaJor Appllo,_.,
Color T.V.'o
Rofrigoratora,
Froomra, VCR'o, lllcrowovoo,
Air CondiUonera, Washtra,
Drytn, Copy Machin.., Etc.

114-~1231 .

J &amp; D'o Alo1o Porto ond Solngo.
also buying Ju,. cara I trueb.
304-Tn-5343.
Old clgorollo llghtoio, milk bet·

u... tounltln perw, aUverwara,

marblla, atonmnrw, magazlnn,

Star Wtrw and Star Trwi h.,.;
Ooby llorlln, 11H92-llt41.

Wlnlod To Buy: Junk A111oe
With or Without llot018. cou
U.rry Uvtly. 814-388-1303.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
CGino, Gold Ringo, Sllvw Colno,
Gold CGino. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
1St Socond Avonua, Galllpollo.

Goln orldltlonol okllfa to lnc:tMM yow omploymont apporturltloo. Loom a lint Umo trodll:
ola/11 typoo or woldfng tough!.

21

Business
OpponunHy

P I - Coro Contor lo look·
Of

~,;;-~~-~

-liOn.

t:

_.........,0,

C

~~..:r:r,.:;

:...,.......
lncl~
olllcoo, ... ~.. ~nloo,

=-~i!:i~tf'ao':

..... 10-10-84. t-.e37-1808.

~

:=~:;"'~"'"r:;";:
:zoo

-Ion. lind roouma Box
o1n1 P-nt ftoafot~t,
St, PI Pit, WV zsAo.

I'ULL!R BRUSH '"""' ollln
fDr Chllltm&amp; Pltono .
Dolo I Wood, 104-17&amp;-lnolapondont dlol~bul-

~

Wanted to Rent

2br. mobil homo, Rod Tralllr
Court, Haven. -.t'IS:13111.

Move Boto.. Wlntor. Nfce
llobllo Homo Lot, Block Top
Road, County Wllor, 114-2455854.

a.-.,

A:;:loncoo, Fur-

2 R_,. &amp; Bolli, No Kftc:hon,
~3)0/~~o. All Utll- tncludod,
114-44&amp;-7731, - n 1:30
-6:00.
. apia.,
tala! - ·
op.,..._
....._,
louncjy
_ , - - t o ochool
In town. ~- onlfoblo

~f=-37tt.Er

_. or

lncl-

2br. apt,

S371/1no.

......
..-

...,.., 6opoalt •
rwq- 304-171-

afl

wtiNoo, oU , _ rwtltgorator, ~

11111.
3

B1 d oom

Unfuml8hecl

Upotolro
ltofwencoa
ltOqulrod,"""""""''
No~
Stavo,

Ralrlgortttot F
0284.

, ,,.._

:15 WHI Apt. 2br, 1 both, pootlo,

.-lo.-yot-·ohopproVIdod,
_......,_ -EQ..I·Houoplng
-!....'!""·
lng Opportunity, l--h·1108.

..rt :l-4br, houM w/1 112 bath,
Pt. p - 0 - 30U'IS-7124,

T-¥
L -" fi-ll"'\

/# ....

Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Household
GOOds

GOOO

LAYNE'S RJRNrTURE
Comploto homo fumfol11ngo.
Hou,_: llon-811, H. 514-4400322, 1 mtloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
FrMDollvery.
q._..uo
wlloobod,
wluttr. finn 2000 wavele•
......... $2SO cuh. ~'IS­

Ook

mi.

Plttoburah Pafnto coiling
point St.'!lll gil. Uolox rodwood
or cedar ataln $3.1~1 gal. Paint

trade

OUIIfty Houo-d FumloNngt
And Apptlonooo. Mon. . . Solo •

Socond st. lla_,, WV. OWtw·
Rocky Poo....,. 304·773-15341.

$81.00;

Dinette•

-

$140.00;

PIUI, :J04.07S--4084.

Qu"n Size Wattrb.d $150, 014-

3711-2728.
R&amp;S Furnnura. Wo IMJy, olll ond

anUque,
newfUMd
houoohold lumlohlngo. Wilt buy
tny amount. larglllmall. 50S

Rolrt11_1&lt;lloro, Stovoo, Woohora
And Dtyera, All Reconditioned

Uvlng Room St. • S2e&amp;.ooL BodrocHII8
St.
13t5.00;
Rofrlgorot0111 • Rangoo
Woolioro IDfyo,.

And Gaunortoodl $100 And Up,
Will Dellveo. 11U611-1441.

Houno lion. • Sot. 1-1 Wod. H;
Don, f'Grgot Our REPO. sao-

Sam Somorvlllo'o Army Surpluo.
F~cloy,~. Sat, Sun. Noon • 1:00 Pll
onfy. ay Sondyvlllo Pool Olflca,
304~655.

52 Sponlng GOOds
. -rttolna lncludod,
$210. ... - . 304-4'11-6181.
PSE -

Stoy Worm In Your llobllo Homo
Whon Tha Eloct~c a- Ofl
Thfa Wlntor With An Empl,.
llobflo Homo Wall Fumoco That
U1M No Eloctrfclty. CoU Bonnott'o llobllo Homo HTO &amp; CL.O
At 814-446-!1418, Or 1.-.n51187 For Dotolla.

TO GIT RIO OF
TERMITES!!

61 Fann Equipment
Cllofn saw bo,. &amp; chafna to lh
ol ...... ony lOW. a.- prlcoo In
oroe. Sldora Equipment, 304675-11121 or 1-800-21'7-3t17.

11H4t 1308.

very lhtle. ld.1l

100,000 BTU Gao F u . - tl2'll.
Elllcloncy, Elllcloncy, 1-

-r

~874301, 114

ue ew.

24x4 . - _..,.t owtmmlng
pool wlaU - - , now
blonllot olll boxoa. 304-

!17W773.

around owtmmtng
otcll_ou. cond., toyo
lncluciOd In ,._ Exon:loo old
mochlno. 304-815-31114 oftor
2h4ft. -

pool, , ....

ucollant buy 11150, 114-11112·
5!102 ofter 1:30pm.
Wanlod To Ront Or ...,_,
Spoco Or Bulldlna, For Adult
11anc1 Practa, 614-317-mo.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 lncll
:ZOO PSI flUS; I lncll 200 PSI
132.10· Ron Evorw Entorprlooo,
114-iii 81110 Jackoorl, Ohio

Building
Supplies

55

llprn.
32" - . .._ w/glou uood

tor 1tudent1,

c:te: -wtn- . llntolo, ale.
Block, brick, -

toro, Rio a..nda, OH Col 11424Ht21.

56

Pets for Sale

su=.,

......

comoun-

a-•

~

I BROUG HT '!'OUR
LUNCH BAG FOR i'Oli

~-j£R E ,

oofgfnal mlloo, cofl 114-992·7603
:

s om et im es y ou m a ke th e co ntract

1Di1 Ytmahs Blslter ...hosl91',

a nyway
Wes t lea ds t he h eart qu ee n. After

_,
_,.

t:':'

~~"=:

··o -

.

Blue

Tofmmecl, In Whho $4,200, 6144411·733l

.l Llt::E SCATTe~l&gt;

motorcyclo
mlloo, askln!J
S!S400 uBO, 814-e411-2e00 days
1800 Lila) Hol_~'5._Six 4 or 114-049-2«144 . . . nlnga .
1
llonth Old Rabblto,
75 Boats &amp; Motors

Suzukf

m

,)1-lOWf'~$

:ff,!~7'1.Pony'• llatch ~

114-247-2781 after 7pm.

for Sale

1577.

Transportation
11

Autos for Sale

=-..="Vol==:":::::-:,~..:::..:-_=-::::...:::lon::-.
114-M~

=. i:.O':..""k.!.""on

Conn TNmpot $1110, 11W110201.

" - a- Outtor With Amp,
l(oy

114"4:""- Clll A~

tor I P.ll. I
4171.
..... Drum With 1\oo
$221, lt-t-m-mt.

, ..

IT'$ MUCH
MO~E f\JN TO

_,.7047.

l'fU Tt-fEM

cannot produ ce a p r omot1on to wm

6Uf'SSIN6/

thr ee t rump !ricks .I But if the club fi
nesse loses. th e co nt rac t will be two

down in st ead or one

BORN LOSER

W~OOPS 1

,

~

P"

I AAVE. f-.IOTI\JW_, f./:,~1~5T ~

~IN&amp; lO "- DIFFEK.rnT ~
aJl' f\1~ CAAI \&lt;UP

·.

•

TI'f. eo.T1 ..--

2 man BUihU'Iter w12 1eat1, :
$200. 3Q.I..e75..M51 evonlngs •
8pm-llpm.
•

--

In the eve nt, ta king the cl ub fin esse
a nd ma kon g t hree diamond s fo r p lus
11 0 was worth 66 ma tc hpoints out of
100. Playing on Irump s as~ d go ing mi nu s 50 gave No rth -South 26 pomt s .
And minus 100 would have been worth
four points So the club finesse was a
worlhwhile ri s k
If in doubt , go with th e pe rcenta ges .

230 hp !10, SIS prop, AMIFII :
cuHtta. S8.300, uc. cond. 304--~ ,
773-11141.

29The self
30 Va st period of
time

1 Zola heroi ne

animal

2 Royal
guardsman

32 Fertilizers
36 Precedence

3 Dwe ll
4 South Amer ican

38 Frost

5 Type of s quash
6 Th ose holding
office

ott.r ptlrtl, new ehNnllor. 304'
Collo, • Cyflndor, 875-2405,
lllloo, Aoklng; St,IIIO, 114Now gu tonka, ..-. ton truck
2411114.
nodlotoro, 1toor mall,
1187 .. Oklo llagoncy ' - etc. 0 l R Auto, Rllllav, WV. 304I l l - E•colloo~ Concltlon, 372·3833 or 1-800-:173-'!1321.
AlwoVe Oorogod, $4,7118, 1141181 -

•'

7 Barbarian
8 Gelatinous
substance
9 Loyal to one' a
country

10 Dog-tired
(2 wds.)
11 Singer Defla
19 Adherent of
(suH.)
21 Genus of
maples
23 Genus of ant•
25 Des troy (sl.)
26 Comparative
ending

27 1nane
31 Loudest
33 Represents

34large bird
350bserve
37 Actress
Martha -

41 Mao - tung
43 Sew lightly
44 - Gantry
460urs - - to
reason why
48 Gaming cubes
SOT of TV
51 Arabian
commander

52 Space
55 Greek Island

Celeb

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r,- C•phe•

cryptograms are crealed l!om Quola1tOnl by lamous people . pas t1nd present
Each lener on lhe c•pher stands lor anolher Todl r"s clue T equals S

n

v

VKFGYWB ,

NELNDBK

yJ c

0 Y P S E

XB

KYO

GVF

' L

XL W C . '

TZWLKS
XPO

L'G

v

HPJ LV

NELJC .
PREVIOU S SOLUTION ·1 like Kermit , becau ~e Kermot and I dod a due t of
Bein' Green together and that frog smgs 1n tune . - Ray Charles

'::~:~.~, S@\\~lA-~t~Ss
- - -- - - -

WOlD
GAM I

ldlood by CLAY I , ,OU.AN

Reorronge IeHan of
0 four
Kromblecl words

the

be-

low. to form four words

I UNLODE
I

BA S UE

I~I'

1.....---11
4

....,........,!

I. I.

I

.

I. _

S E CE X S

.

L....l._..L-l-..!..-

Good adv1ce to live by "If
you're going to chmb very far,
you've got to grab t~~ branches
not the • • • • • • • •

I0

Comple le lhe chuc kl e q uoled
b y l,fl,ng 1n the m • i~ •n g wo rd s

L-...J you d evelop fr om step No 3 be low

PRIN T NUMBER ED
TTE RS IN SQ UAR ES

t[

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

etart-::
.
Corvalr -or. 41DCI. tron1011o, -

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

DOWN

28 Nervou s twitch

1--r~-T~-..,~-,~r:;7-r;\8:-i

76 Auto Pans &amp;
- · S2,:15a. 3DWI2-24I2.
1811 Cavatlor, 4cyt., 112000. 304Accessories
773-ISIO.
~R:'J'""""aat-.,...,P:--,rtc,-od-..-::l,-no_n_om"'to
'""oton..,--o. :
1111 Cllov. IEuno Sport, 4 ..__
I Nbulll, all type1,
~12.
Ina 11 ~;_ownor 114-245-5877, ,
114-371-D;~D, 014-3N-2Z63.
f

79

62 Se mester

25 Pep

.

11183 Dodgo Colt. 4 Spaid, 54 ft. SOmorwot HOUIO Boat,
Hatch Baci; $800, 080, Coif Af. Sloopa 8 Comlortobfy, Color
I• e P.ll.11t Ul Uti.
T.V.,IIIc._a-..~t::on 8o Soon at Golllpolfa- uub. "Time Out"
1114 ......... 1144, 111,000 - . . 614-44fl.1324 Evenlngo.
Gold wl8r. lnt~,S:: roor
81 Yam~hl Wave Runnar, 2 pas- ;
·
- · ...._
080, 1011gor, loft oldt domogod In- •
114-MI-ZIIOO
• • at ~-~
2144-nlnga.
IUrlnct MtUtmenl,
asking '
3,000 080 814-MV-2800 dsys or :
1114 Dodgo Cor 1 1111, PSL!'IJ 114-MII-2144 ovonlngo.
PW, ~ ca..tte. Vti9il

441-1'7211.

Phil -

h-1,'
s J.-A--.-R_OrrM-.--11:"'
16

n 0pon sow,_ 30S

20ft. Wtttc ..

aftor llprn.
• Winne Frn!fam 170 110 130 •
11111 flloreury llarqufo, $400, HP, AIIIFll CD 11111.. Radio ~
11Wti2-41SO.
Trolflr $7,411!1, 514-446-11364.
_

Fondly · Jerky · Icing · Lupine · IN the RED

Economists always conclude that our nabon's economy
is rosy Everyone knows lhat's because the government
is running IN the RED.

ROBOTMAN

I'T 'S \&lt;.INO \f ~ Sl'tcl~l
A"1"1r,.

mliNIQ G«:l\NG fOR
HWOLL 'IJ I~ 1\'JO
PO'i!\ES STRNi'IIt\G
1HE\R Lt.AS\-\t.S ..

IT'S ~ llillt AARO 1D £:&gt;:.Plfo.IN.

I H:U \ \\\£ f£Cll'\£ lOOI\
Wit n\fHRtNTL'i LiKf
:,OR'T Of UWI 01\ t IXlN'T

=:-::-~.::-:-~=:::-:"::--'
ttml llotor Homo ~000 llleo,:
1187 Dodgo Omni114-2!6-1S7'1.

20 Pul Compor 1111,
7830.

,... Dodgo ~. 11,!!,000

.... tluboru Stollon Wagon, 4
WD, 5 a-d. Air~.
PS, P~ -AlllFII Cttaaatta, HaW
Tlroo, ..,ooo -.lt4-a6-11124.
9odon DeVIto 4
Do!!. Cadllloc
4.1 Port FUll ~~ y.
.. 01,000 Wolf Corad For ....
Lllltw lnlerior, Nlw 0 aady•t
lrrllaloo,
With .... - lor,ivonlnp-.-.

-

-0

114-6112~

'

'

Serv1ces

-llopalr,O!t
_Engtno,
Naode
St,700;
81HII
41121-

81

Home
lmprovaments
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Plotlmo guarontoo. Locat ,.,.,.,.,_ lumfahod.
eon t-100-217-o57t Or 114-2370488 ~Wil-ling. btobllohti 1875.

Chevy Aotno eor ........
Oorwrol
Homo
Von, 12,000 IIMoo, Loodod, Not&gt;- C&amp;C
Smoltlr, 11,!011, 111-387-0641.
llolnt·
otorm
- . , ""!'!ng ond comploto
11111 11uotona 1112, runo good, homo """"· -pl&amp;ll window
$700. 104112=2113
ropalr,
.....,.. _
_ ..wooto1r111
_For n.ond
...
11111 ...... Ll 400, .....
- . 51,000 milo&amp; .,..... =-=:.:-=':.:Chii=·:.:•.:.:14-11.:.1112::..:-"':::.32=J.~ .
2055.
llon"l TV lorvlca, -"'lzllla
111 Fonl Tornpo OL, 2
I Ill - ...... Cilia,moo1 ',
.......... !'fUioo. tilt, AIM'll athor ...__

*•

Musical
Instruments

a r e 4 3-3 -:1 rou nd th e t ab le. a no lhe r
hea rt will be best. Yet this is unlikely.
And as South i s mark e d woth th e
hea rt kin g, Wes t surely has the s pade
kin g. So E as t s hould s wit c h to th e
sp ade seve n. leadm g lhe low ca rd to
avoid blocking 1he suit.
Now declarer is in a qu a ndary ff he
plays on tr ump• . he gets home wh e n
the s uit brea ks 3-3. But th at woll hap p e n only a b o ul on e tim e in thr ee .
Al te rn a tive ly. South plays a hea rt to
hi s king a nd ta kes th e 50:50 cl ub fl .
nesse. If it wins, he has a doscard for a
spade loser a nd ca n afford to lose two
trump tric ks . !Hope fully th e_ defenders

11114 - l d Vulcan EN 500,

RFBOOR~

Sebastian 59 Mixt ure
60 Fo rmerl y,
formerl y
6 1 Type of curve

22 Te nnis grea t
Arthur 24 The - Mutin y

winnin g wi t h t he ace, what sh ould
East retu r n at t rick two'1 If th e hearts

1V83 Hondo 4WD 4-whoelor.,
304-178-H07.

19M

tree
18Wea k

deal s . Th e one in to d ay 's d ia gram
ca ugh t my eye.
_
If yo u open wit h a pre-e mpt and 11
goes a li pass , normally partne r has a
ha nd like North 's: a vood m your s uo t
a nd g ood de fe n se S u c h is life . Bu t

PEANUTS

till$ Hondo Al-do, loadod,
lola of chrome, new tlras,
ltrt.,.. and mwielt, matching
helmett and lnte~. 29,000

Turquoise

53 Pinta il d uck
54 Ro m an 3
56 Ver ne hero
57 Hardy her oi ne
58 Ru nner

Te lecom. conta ined a few interestin g

304-475-51:15.

Driven

49 Ra nkle

Faith
in figures

ROOM

Motorcycles

.:.11111.:....,Y..:o...
:.:.ha=-:850~~fu::ll,::--&lt;l-::r=..::.::od:;-,
booutlful. 11181 Dodgo Shadow
auto, both .,. baulltul &amp; rur.a

S.H

47 United

14 Strong wi nd
15 TV science
series
16 Tex. time
17Tamar isk salt

The seco nd sess1 on of th e N inth
Wo rldwid e Bridge Co n ies! , h el d
Sa tu rday. Ju ne II , a nd sponsored by
Se iko Epson Corporation and France

Ford 8000 tnoctOf, '*'!'1 • ~ extra _. tlrN I wheota, lncuhlvlloro, wogano, ......,,..
clud• r..r r~ck. grNt cond.,
2814.
$1800. 304-8112·2533.
Ollvw BOO Tr8Cior WIN RIOt Or lVIII
1ZOO Hortoy-llllvfdson
For Porto,~ .
Sportater, exc•lent condttion.
S$500 flrm, Coif botwoon 5-9 pm,
63
Livestock
114-11112-1332.

*'••

01-.

LET ME CHECK
MY SUPPLY

1884 Al"11or 4x4, 4 cyl., 5
._.t, 21,- mHn, 814-992·
I:*=:1··:.:"'::.::":;.,.::=::"~1~'-;__ __

aftw5pm.

tam e
45 Unless

By Phillip Ald er

Dtlhw-.

Dttlororul
011

tunly ilnployori -Conloot:
,., _
_ Drtvo,
Coro Oolllpolla,
........ Ohio
1711
41Ut11oH41-7112.

I NEED SOMETHIN'

Rogfotorod Umoulln . - 1178 Glntn&gt;n 11 Fl. 6 C.dar
ond coH polr, 2 bulfo, 114-llll:l· Bluo I White, 110 HP, Morcury
54 Miscellaneous
11.~110~:..,..
· -,-,:-=-==:: I Englno, l.ooka • Runs a .... n
Ragfatorocl Yoorttng Sullolk S2,IOO, I14-3N424G.
Merchandise
Ram. Boon 8 -. Rooclr 1187 18' Cltlllon okl boat, 130
1 -Radio Control, 0.. Power..t,
To Wort. Prlcod To Solll 114' HP, 4 cyt, 3.0 Ntor lnboord motor,
T....,. Air Plono; 1 • Rodlo Con-111, 114 1111 311tl.
8 paoolngor, opon bow, walk
trol 000 Pow- Spood Boet STORAGE TANKS 1 000 Gollon
through wfndol11old, wall taken
And 1 Air Boot; 2 -Rodloo; , Upright, Ron Evano Entorpriooo,64
Hay
&amp; Grain
.... 01, •II- guard roqulled .
·...:....,..:..:;-=-:-~~-:--::::­
.flold Box, 614-446-7015 Allor 5
537-052&amp;.
equipment. $5,100, 114-992- ,
Joci&lt;Oon,
Ohio,
,__
Promlum
2nd
cutting
hoy
rolfo,
P.ll.
5544.
Tondy 1000 RUHO computor· $25. IIDigan'o Fann, Rt :ftl. 3041 Copport..,. Sto-.. Top, Ovon, 512K RAII1 IBII compolfblo, In- lllll-2lltl.
1V87 VIP wrllercury outboard 75 ,
Doublo Bowl Slnll, clud• pnnter, mouH, 3 112"'
... __. ..... call hp, _.r trim, SJ1300. ell old &amp; •
Ringo Hood, ·-267-1308, dl..., now color monitor. Uoocl Squoro boloo ol mo- ·-•·
tto.tlng 1cceaortu, 3()4..675- :

......... Oponlngo - For Cortlftod - . Full
Tlrno And Pori limo. fn.
..,.,_ Pockago AvaH-.

w.;o.,

BARNEY

e"M.H2-4* sfter 8:00p.m.

g-~

42 Hint
43 - Ross of flag

Vuln e rab le: Neithe r
Dea ler : South
Sout h
West Nort h East
:1 •
Pas s Pass
Pass
Ope nin g le ad • Q

llltte. PB PW, air, rear heat,
114-44&amp;- 14,oo0 mltoo, aoldng pay oN,

74

1 Actres s Carter
5 Sharp tu rn
8 Arm adillo
12 Base of lea f

Answer to Previous Puzzle

40Choose

•4

1083 CUII:omlzld Chavy van,
310 engine, 314 ton, AMIFM cas.

*

-+-

~~==L--:1:::-N-

t KQJ7G4 3

111100, 13,~; Con So s.;;n AI:
Oolllpolfa Dally Tribuno, 825
Third Avenuo, OolllpoUs, 61444W342.

Connfng Tomotoa,
KillS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER 34111.
Floo Klllono for polo, homo &amp;
yord. GUARANTEED offor:th•of tncr.dlblo _ ,, olcbd dally U·
Available at: R&amp;O FEED AND cept Sundoy, tillllomo Fonn,
O'DELL LIJIIBER.
Sy"'"""!1 _!1h10, 51W82,_ or
Ov11 mapl• clnlng room t1ble 1 11112
....s.
w,.lx cholra. flghtod chfna
cablnll, $1,200. 304'-175-1732.
Farm Supplies
Over 80 Pattomo Khchon Corpot
In Stock, 30 P111omo VInyl In
&amp; Livestock
Stock, llollohan Corpot, Rt. 7 N.,
514-4411-11144.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; RJRNrTURE. 112
ou-.. a.., Gafflpolfa. Now • Uood
fumHurw, heat.,., W..tem &amp;
Wort-a. 114-411-315t.
VI"RA RJRNrTURE
41111M Out 81. 141
114-446-3158

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

58

• 97

• K 3

!Mifll.
111811 Dadao Ram Von 80,000

!\

~ ,.

•K10Bfl2

~

A !I 8 5

Jfmmy ..-&lt;S 13,500. 114-446-

1Room
- Sulta,$200,
· Wood 114-441·1025.
Btyfa Living 0!~=:.:.:;:-;~;;::;;;;;;:;;
arol
~
10,000 BTU Colomon -trtc a.-tllng. olullo
·1
0231
BIEAUTFIJL APARTIIENTS AT ......_ 1ar trafflr, szso, 114-1112· : =·--:-:=---:--=----:::--:BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON 2783.
Pomparod by Sonve. dog
grooming, bothlng, Ill loioodo.
ESTATES, &amp;Ill JacUon Plu
Baby bod, otr&lt;&gt;llor, owing, 3D4-I«W730.
$222 to $211. Wllllt to alloll
. . . . . . . Cal 1144412111. wafkor, - · high chair, ploy 10110111 dog _ , _ $1111.15.
~
iOH.
...,. Lollf'o, . -.. Jaclloto, Nlu Point Pluo, 3114-8711-40M.
OWner flnonclng on lhfa 2 otory, FurnW.I 2 Dldroom .,_.. loatboll cloota, lirond namo
4 bedroom.. baMment, one acre mont,Ao- ............... CA, No a1t1rta, 11 ltlncla,
land, poymonto $258.82 month gund. $:15111110. ll14-446-a71l huntlna I panto. llod lo
- · - - . Dapoalt
at 8'11. lntorlll. $5,000.
Everything
... - ~;lltt41DI77Evenlnp.
PIIIU Clll Somorvlllo Roohy,
~1BII4.
304-17!&gt;3030 or Joon Cuto 304- Fumlohod
loth,
575-3431.
Cloon, No ,.., Ralwr•- &amp;
Train In light flolda. -trfchy,
00poo11 Roqund. 1114-441-1111.
-1"11, n\acNnlng, carpentry, 32 Mobile Homes
hvdnoullco pll.lllblng, -u onF . . . - ~. Utllltloo Cllrlnot $175; Compalto 80X100 - - llhiPhonl P u Plld, 1 llltrootn, u,.talra. $1,500, 614-6112-2412.
gino FiPiJr, hooting/ olr confor Sale
A9CA And StoCbd Dog RigS:
dhlonlng. CoN obcKd fnduolrlol
A - Oolflpollo, No Conc..to &amp; Plutlc loptlc torod $1110, 114-245-6435.
1m Elcono 12180 With 11111
llofntononca. 1-100-137-1808.
lboaffonl Concllilon, 114- Tonkot 300 Thru 2,000 Gollono ~'l::,· both_......,,_.,
Roomot'lo 12128 lluot 8o t41.aD
13
Ron vona EntonoriMa. ~-..--- . llovocl, SS,OOO, Ftrm. 114-388Insurance
eon, OH 1-11)0.137~ ,.
, aldng
IM982L
1112·2121ovontngo oltor tpm.
Worb Good, llou
-AII-=ER"'ICAN=SU,--IWI,.,
...
11179 llodol 14x70 WI0011or!f!:.~1~14~4~11~34~81~.---::-:--,.,.--l CFA Ragfat- Hlrnolyan Kit·
Moblla H...,o For Sale. 2 BodVICKIE CASTO, AGENT
· -·-1104.
"
2
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DfS. rooms, In E.tcellent Cotd&amp;on,
Contnol Air And Sovoral ApRowing
AW! A_oglotorod Dol-ion COUNTS
pllancoo. 814-245-51128.
UFEIHEALTH
Strongthono Tho ..... f4o, ploo, .... • - · ...
304 581 1257
IVBT 9c~uft 14'1711', Expando. 3
· Eaolty
In Tho Undor
. _ 8ad
IllatiOn.
- ~· 4 - · flit.
Stora
Or !ltiUI2-240I
.
Bodnoomo.
2
Bllho,
Stond In CIMot. 1 lo hO; Othor Flolt Tanlt &amp; Pot Shop. 2413
- - - - - - - - - - Re~erator, Slow, Washer,
$40, Erod _T..... 1121 Thlnl Jackoorl Av.. Potnt ,..._,
18 Wanted to Do
B'xtll Storago B..clna, AU Tho
AYIII .., GllllpOIIO, l14-44fi.Otl1. 3114-171-2011a.
Extrae, Muat S.. To StUeve AI
FLEAS? ENFORCER OVERNITIE Malo Shoftlo, ay,.. otcl, $150.
~~~~~= ~ .,.,Th,to~P-::rlco::-l,-114---:2~45-..,.!101,;...;1-:--::-.,.
FLEA TRAP oontrolo llooo
1
lnfonnodon, 114-441· 1188 Clayton Trallor. 2 Bodwithout
......
ond
room, 1 112 Bolho. 14112A
GUARANTEED! Awafloblo at: apopol odult
0131.
Room Addftlon. Sltuotod on 1
VALLEY WilBER AND 11&amp;0 - . loVfng oom"""'", 1ar
0onora1 1 1 - - . Pllrtf"11, 112 AcrM. Lllln. OH. Excafltrlt
FIEEO.
homo wtlllooit clllld-. $110.
Yanl Worll WI-. Woohod ~. Uu 114-24J.
a.. u.rbor
-.t71-64lt
avanlngo
or
Ounora Cfoanod Light Hauling, 3883Ew.,fngo.
Far. . . . au - ,_
.,., wr hnd.
·'
oaff814-lt2448.
Com..tc:al, - -........,
11H4f1.4141.

1

Conlpotttlvo

II

• !\ 2

F.AST
• QJ 7
• AIOR2
ti 09B5
~OUTH

1 8pood, 13,100, 1ga5' GMC

Cl 1994 D'j NEA. Inc

FIHnlohod Elllcloucy . -. for kltchon. Brown otorm .._
Utllllloo Pold, llolh 107
Slcond ~ 011111 Dill, I~ · - • . -. 304-1711-23311.
414 atlld'o lllltery ~.mod
4411 Aft• 7 P.ll.
1 2
TNck; Purnpldno, 14B7.

-n.

HANOGUtJ

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

couple want lo

251-'12311.

nllhed 114 4411.

A"LtJ.EAR

!8811 lllloubllhl 4x4 4 Cylinder,

Pto,.nl~""lll

Dryer, Color T.V.,
fi'MUI', Slave,
Ralrtaorwtor, llfoc. llllc:. 114-

::'..'":l=:'1.

INV~t\JTE-D

loldod. aood ol1epa, aaklng

M&amp;crow.n,

1 ond 2 bodroom oparlmonto,
lumlohod ond unfum-.
rwqulrod, no

1

Bl6 liDJ5i..E

WEST
" K 2
• Q J (i

saaoo. :JOUn.ma.

Wooloor,

Apanment
for Rent

::GJ1£B::::.O-f 5

11111 9-10 Blozor 4WD, fully

lion.

44

Ct1 ,OH l!,J. f&lt;E lfJ

Truck Parte From Southwesl:
ChiVY ond Ford Bodo, CIMlvy
Cobo 9-10 Bod, ~~~~ Bod
5H t \ 8 0440 or 114· a.

looking For Aporlment With
Kltctt.i 1 Bedroom, Bathroom,
LA For Undor S25G/IIo., Moor
GOitifiOifa, Dacont Neighbor·
hood, No U.uo, 514-441-1205.

39TV's - Peeples

20 Com edian

•A Q J 5 3

5~-

USED APPLIANCES
Woohoro, d.,..., rolrtgorotoro,
nongoo. Skoggo Applloncoo, 76
Vlno St-,_CiM 114-441·7388, 1·
1100-&lt;15-:Mw.

fuml-l
lrM -$2!10
··
pluo ut IHioo.
depooit, 7ml. out Sondloiff Rd.
304-1111-3483.

•

EEK &amp; MEEK

Healtl'l SMou. lnqulriH Only,

10.50 Ono Bodroom Tnollor
$15Mio. 114-24U778.

~ncao
mo

PART·TfiiE EIIPLOYIIENT
Hondymon Jobo, 114-4411-34111.

• 9 7 5

4 WO, lluot Sacnoflco Do To

51

·-/dryor. -od. -.

no-

Exporlollcod - - ·
t.lllrl, wv.

rood, oc- bw routo, only
$711/mo. ~ or SU.
3431

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

11111 14x70 1 llod,_,., 2
I NOTICE I
Botho, At Quoll Crook Park,
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBUSHING
CO.
Now accepllng oppllcotlo.-. for
S300/llo. Da-'1 S:ZOO, No Polo,
OMOmmondo
that
you
do
bualdell clltt and caahlel"l. Mull bl
8~111-7017.
obla to worll any 11111ft. Apply In nooo with pooplo you koow ond
NOT
to
o.,d
monoy
through
tho
2 bodroom mobile homo Go~
person or Mnd ,..urne to 405
Poari Strwo~ lllddloporl, Ohio mall until you have lnv•trgated llpollo Forry, centol_!!'1 1111 oloc,
offering.
tt\e
prfvoia lot, ~11-......
451110.
Port limo botoy ofttor n..tod of. STEEL BUILDING BUSINESS fS z llodroom Troller, $1711/110••
ter echool, Clenwood, Alhton BOOMING! Notlonol llonut... o.-11, Ofl SL Rt. Me, Bfdw.ll,
turer o.. llfyf"11 Doll"" fn Coif Aftor I P.ll 114-3BIIItltlt.
•r•, Qll evenlnga 3()4...576- Soioct
Open Morkoto. Big
21102.
Prollla On S.lea And /Or Con- 2 llodroomo, llllf Crook Road,
303-7511-3200 Ext. S221111o. Pfuo $100 ~.
Pon~lmo Cllhflr, mull bo 18 11ructlon.
County Sc-o. 114-2!11-1:111.
yro. old. er.wtonl'o G.-ry, 2300,
Hondoow..,wv.
2br.
Ill
oloctrlc,
AC,
Port-Timo eor-ton Stond
Real Estate
no polo. 304-17W'7St.
Floor llonltor Pn&gt;-Shop Anondoni. SkatoovllloS.~~· Coli For
2br. mobil homo, CA, oU op- ·
lnterviiW, .,...24
.

lng For An Enlh,.IMIIc Olroctor
Nu,.lna With Excollont
loodorohlp Abtlhy, Communlcotlon Sldllo, And Suparvlaory Ex·
Employment Services perlenc:w. Knawtedal Of Stale
All AIIIIOIIIo lltiertiUlg fn
lind Fodoral Roaulitlono And
Abllhy To Apply "Them To Tho
IIIIo ..,....,_lo oubjetl to
11 Help Wanted
Dally llonagomont Of Rnldont
lho Feclaral Fllr ~ ACI
C.r11 And PereonMI laun I•
ol 1968 which""""" lllegaf
AVON I All Alooo I Shirioy Roqul,_d. Tho AbiiHy To Stimu10 lldllertloo ·on~ praleronco,
Spooro, 304-175-1428.
late Cooperative Tum Work
lmttallon or &lt;llclfnWNIIIon
And To llonHor All Alpocto 01
All orou. AVON 111nlng AealdlrC Cere Program Are
billed on race, cokw, relgiOn,
llbiiMioo oquol your ClpaloliHioo. Dlllrod. Contoct Tho Ad·
HX fandalllatus or naUorwl
. . . product wtlh afarHIP. mlnlatratOf, Plnec,..t c. ... c.~
origin, or llf'/ lnlentkln to
Marilyn 304-182-2145 Of ; . - . ter, 170 Plneci'MC Drive Gal1111243SI.
IIIIIIOIIf'/ ouch pnl""'""',
floollo Ohio 451131, 114-44&amp;.7112.
l.nialloo or - i o n.'
lluotl,;iy Iofaro Soptombtr 5,
11181 Buick Ellctno, PS, PB, Tift, 11114.
·e":'6:E.
CNioo, Atr, AMIFIII Co-o, V·
•• AutamlllcL.~uat lnjoctlon, p
POSITION OPEN
This
wll 001
!1ooto, PW, ,.., Hfdl llr.-,
FOR POLICE CHIEF
knowlirV\1 occept
13,4111, 114-441-0HOl.ftor I P.l'l. Appllcotlono Are 8ol"11 Tokon
o&lt;MI~IallmortoiOr AIIIIOIIII
For lho Pooltlon Of Pollco Chief
wt'lch Is fn vlolallon of lhs low.
AVON CHRfSTIIAS NOWI
our roadon are hlnby
A - II -t14 Houoty At Wort For Tho Vllllgo Of Rio Gnondo:
Informed lhol ell dwelfnga
-HomO. Enjoy Flollblo Houra, Appllconlo lluat Novo Succ-~-ortlood In lhlo n o - r
Dtocounto, And llonoflll. Ter- fully COmpl- Tho Ohio Boolc
Olllcor lnofnlng. A llln~
ritory Optlonot. t-800-JII2.4738.
mum Of Flv. Yur. Full Time
ara avalabll on tn equal
opportunity...._
Chilo'•• Around Tho World Job Exporfonco And Two Yoono
Decor And - . Damonalatora 01 Suparvlolon 01 Ponoonol Or 1. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _•
-..s, FIWI S301J Kit, Erom Ftva Yooro E1parfonco And A
Full-11mo Poy For Plrt-Timo B.A. DagrM In law Enfon:oWort. A1oo, Boold"11 Portloo, 1111111 lo Roqulrod. Applloont
Should 8o Soff·llollvatod,
~~Flulbll To Job Schoclulo, Ablo
_
.
.
,
_
__
Froo
c:tvtotm. Around Tho World To Oraonlu Dapt. Trolnlng, Wll~ 31 Homes for Sale
lng TO Work With Vlliago And
$300 Q . Worll Own Houro. No ~,!.....,nol. Solory lo 2 br. -.g. on Eaa1o Rldgo Rd,
~- No Oollvortng. Aloo
Immaculate
TP wator,
-.ng P'ortloo, 11447NIIIl
$30,000, pooafblo -nor flnon&lt;&gt;
pllciUone And R•~"a"'iar Be tng, 814-7711-4111.
Domlno"IPizzll otP.... rar oow
In AI Tho Vlllogo 8uffdltlrlng, mUll have good 2 yoar Twnod
lng At 401 E. Collogo Avo fn Rio
3 bodroorn, 1111 homo,
driving hfotory.
.
Gnondo, llonday ThN Frfdoy 8 Storl"11
Avenuo,P. . . rar,
$30,000,
114-11112-21113
Of
114A.ll.
To
4
P.ll,
Ooodffno
For
ApErom up to $1000 MMiy otufflng
envelopee et home, ltart now, plytng 1o 4 P.ll. s.,.tombor 23, 11112·7304.
-pplloo, 1884. Vlllago Of Rio Orondo fa
3 Bldroom1, Good Condition,
-.nlormlllon, no-abllglllon. An Equal Opportunity Employer. 112 Ac,. Goound, Runol Sonlng,
Sorol SASE: Cucodt Dipt-!C!,
$25,000 114-445-1804.
POSlALJOBS
P,O. Box 5421, San AngelO, I A Starl $11.41/hr.lo for aum ond
111102.
lllllllcotlon In . coif 2111-7611- 4 bodroomo, kltchon, dlnfng,
ab'l ext. WV548, Glim·gpm, lYing, utllfty """"· 2 bolho, '2
a,.go, olf brick, In ground
Sun-F~.
, 1.2 KI'M In town, ecra.
m North Potrt Elomontory,
Spoclollu In ono ol lfovon
hMih coro oroao. Employmont 2211 Lincoln Avo, toy - - .
ot&gt;PoofunHioo In clontaf lobo and $125,000. -.t'IS-T.IM cloyo,
ofRcM, hoepltall and cllnlc1, 175-41131ovonfngo.
modlcof and opllcal ofllcto,
pharplocloo arol votortnary Ono bodooom, ~bfy 3 bodollleoo. CIM- In IM...tflod room houle laundry room,
lloolcol Occupotlono bogln Oo- IIVI"11 room, farao kltchon with
labor 10th. CoM -Ill 1-800- loti of cablneta, 10 acr.e whh
pond, 2nd hook-up on proporty,
137-1101.
E.ogll Ridge Rd., 514-M0-3411.

=:--·

*•·
In country neer Mt Alto,
WV, Ill wtllltloo anlloblo, paved

TWo bodroom fumlohod houM
In
llld&lt;loport, $325 pluo
dopoolt, ooll 614-aeZ-6225.

Financial

..:..:__.:.:_:~_.:..._.:...__ __

Rlvwlno Antlq-. CIUs ltarta October 10lh. Enroll
Au. Moore, owner. 614-t02- now, 1-800-63~

252e. w. buy ........

,..

SmaU 3 b 1dl oom houM In
Ohio, unfumlohod,
$2211/mo. plua u111111oa. 1 - J .
fl:lOS.

"You haven'! been 1n such a good mood s ince
your exerc1se bike broke down 1"

Wanted lo Buy
Mod..

depoelt

a-or,

(croai'OIIdl . Grocerla, n. .
qualhy ,.."" brand merchan·
diN. £d FnzMN UlO.

Late

and

qulrod, no polo, 814-lU·211U
u.-n Pika, 2 lladroomo, 1
Bllh In Country, 130Mio. Froo
Truh And Hoot, 114-~2.

Aud- COl. OICII E. Clltll,
Llconoo 1 754-M &amp; Bondod,

ONn

ront In Rutlond,

for
,...,enc.

1166,0hlo 6 Wool Vlrglnlo, 304-

9

v..y lotvo tralflr lal wl booutlful

1814 OIIC SleiTI Ext1nd ad Cab,

I 8odroomo Now Co'l!" &amp; Point
S300111o. No Potof DopM1t &amp;
R o - Roqulrod. 1114-44&amp;-

Rick Pu-. Auction COmpany,

NORTH
9894
• AI0643

4x4 Good Shopa, $1,500 0 80:
514-245-114211.
1i87 Mazda Pickup, 4 Speed,
AMIFII $2,200, J ohno Auto
Solie, 130 Buiavlllo Pike, Gal·
llpolfo.

2 br. houoo for ..rt In S,..c:-.
814-llll:l-7181 oftor 7 pon.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

New Valve Job, Rune Excallant

$800 080; 11179 Joop Wagonor

2CJ1 Or IM-t4f..z.st2.

ACROS S

13 Numero-

11186 Dodgo CNuvor, 5 speed,

Proof Biela. Con llorrto Haldno

2 llodroom 40 CIIIUfcatho
Road Full B o -. Corpelod,
Goo ~umaco, No Poto, 114-44&amp;-

what-nota, toota lots
ZIAopon Hollow Rd., Gl~

-

114 441

ALDER

"'1'2 Tlucks for Sale

Offlco SlAte With
Prlvolo Tolloe In llodom Rro

1

TWo llmlly, 1 ~ mfloo ooU1h of
T - . Plolno on Rt. 7, look for
Cord 11011 olgn. Frfdoy only.
Yonl ..... Sopttmbor H-10,
t J Jl FMdt, .,_I, kJtchen

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

46 Space for Rent

NEA Cross word Puzzle

BRIDGE

VE~ ..... AN' TAAT l.IZAR. D~I N W ITH I-IER IS BW,

'·'-'

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VlclnHy

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9

- ALLEY OOP

$.30 per wd.' ~ •(
to 4?_
:,.
. per Wd• '._~Jv·· ~(
$.60 per wd. · · ·:
$.05/day
,·

5

'

Po meroy- Middleport, Ohio

1994

_

••ICina
........... .......,._wv ,,

·--· Pw. - . ..... In- ~ONo~. ' '
-.
·11,1011
41,000oao,
-.
...
.,.__

31122orl--.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

~~~~;~~~~==;=~"""s~o~nd
ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-=~
Friday, Sepl. 9, t994

for your AStra-Graph predict1on s
loday by mallong $1 .25 lo Astr a-Graph ,
c/o thos newspaper, P.O. Box 4465. New
York. N. Y. 10163. Be sure to state your
zodiac s1gn.
LIBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 23) Today ~ou

ble fri ends will make th e bes t comp anions lor you today . The1r 1deas and suggestions could be of Immense value to
you in helping yo u make your own Judgments.

could be luckier than usual in your finan ·
cial affairs. especially if they a·re on a
somewhat large scale . Lady Luc k wil l
cooperate with you 1f she see s you're
mak1ng ·a s1ncere effor1 .

your time effecti ve ly and pr oducti ve ly
today . you wi ll enJOY deep gratification
Conversely . you could collect gu11t from
frivolous involvem ents.

SCORPIO (Oct . 24· Nov . 22) The fa c t
that someone you'r e involved with
a«empled something and failed doe s not
mean you'll suffer lhe same res ulls . Be
optimistic when pursuing your hopes.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Oon'l
be tearlul ~ you have 10 swim agaonst the
current today . You're capable of over -

In the year ahead, you might be more for- coming obstacles that te nd lo s ubdue
tunate than usual in acceptlnQ an weaker types.
endeavor thai anolher has originated and CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19)
expanding it into something truly signili· Sometimes il's appropriate to loot your
own horn. If you recenily accomplished
cant.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22) You're likely something that key people should know
to fare belter loday in an omportant about, bring it to their a«ention.
arrangement if you're the one who dete~­ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Someone
mines the conditions and course. Don t

with whom you were recently involved

mighl come to you for a favor tod~Y ­
You 'll earn his/her gratitude 1f you re
capable
of granting it.
ences governing you in the year ahead.

relinquish authority to the unskilled. Get •
jump on life by understanding the onllu·

PISCES (Feb. 20-MarCti

2o) Ma ture. s la-

ARIES (March 2t·Apri119) If

~ou

spe nd

TAURUS (April 2D·May 20) Go place s
today where you can make yo ur pres ence fell a nd meet new peopl e . Yo u
could be luck y with r elat1 on sh1p s you

establish atlhls lime .
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Foc us your
efforts today on your domestic responsibilities. Conscientious measures you're
capable of imple menting could contribute
to everyone's we ll being.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Friends will
respect you for your _opinions today, pro·
vided you tell it like 11 os. Be forthnghl ,
even if your c omments are painful t ~
yoursen or1hem .
LEO (JUly 23·Aug. 22) Financial trends
look prom&gt;sing for ~ou today . If there is
something profitable in lhe m111. gnnd 11
out for all it is wortt"l .

•

·,

.,

.,
•

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�..
Ohio

Seniors raising
:grandchildren face
vari£:Jty of problems
By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Lowincome elderly people struggling to
raise their grandchildren are being
denied welfare benefits by caseworkers who refuse to acknowledge the growing nwnbers of threegeneration families, a seniors advocacy group said in a repOn released
today.
The report, by the American
Association of Retired Persons,
documents the hardships facing
seniors who become parents again,
often at a time when their health
may be failing and their financial
security at risk.
AARP's study found the number of children under age 18 living
in homes headed by grandparents
increased by more than 50 percent
in the past two decades, from 2.2
million in 1970 to 3.34 million in
1993.
In most cases, the mother of the
children is living with the family.
But in one-third of such families,
neither parent is present.
Social problems, such as joblessness, drug and alcohol addiction, imprisonment, deaths related
to street crimes and battering,
AIDS and child abuse are largely to
blame, the study said.
AARP, the nation's largest
se niors group, based its study on
Census Bureau data and its own
telephone survey of a small sample
of the estimated half-million
midlife and older Americans who
are on their own in caring for a
grandchild.
These families, the study found,

HEALTH CHECK-UP- Dr. Jim Young, Holzer Clinic dermatologist, examines a patient during the Holzer Clinic Health Fair.

Meigs Holzer Clinic
holds Health Fair

The Meigs County Branch of
Holzer Clinic held its health fair
recently. Residents were provided
with free testing and screening in
t!lc following areas: height, weight,
blood pressure, pulmonary
function, hearing tests, blood sugar
and cholesterol, vision
s'creening and skin cancer screening.
Sharon Harvey, R.N., Branch
Manager, was pleased with how
things went at the Health Fair.
"Although our health fair was
held during the County Fair, I think
we had a very good turn out," said
Harvey. "The health fairs are

enjoyable for us. They give us an
opportunity to give a little something back to the people in the
community. Everyone seemed to
enjoy themselves."
Ac co rding to Todd Fowler,
Human Resources Mana.l(er at
Holzer
Clinic, the health fairs will remain
an annual event "The
clinic plans to offer this free
screening each year. The Meigs
County staffs effons in the 1994
Health Fair were appreciated
and we_are looking forward to
another successful event in 1995."

tend to be poor. More than half had
incomes of less than $20.000, and
more than a founh live at or below
the poverty line.
Twenty-eight percent af the
grandparent caregivers collect welfare benefits. But AARP said others have trouble when they seek a
monthly check from Aid to Families with Dependent Children, the
state-federal welfare program.
The association said the problem is due lar~ely to state welfare
workers who 'vwlate the law by
refusing to follow federal guidelines.''
AARP said some states simply
deny benefits to any nonparent,
even though grandparents are clearly eligible. Others require grandparents to obtain legal custody,
when the law imposes no such
requirement
In its telephone survey, the association asked grandparents if they
had ever been denied benefits such
as AFDC or food stamps because
their household didn't fit the typical mold.
Only 21 percent had sought
puolic aid, but more than half of
them stated that they had run into
eligibility problems.
The Administration on Children
and Families, which oversees the
AFDC program, is not aware of
any such problems, said
spokeswoman Michelle Jefferson.
She said the agency had not seen
the report and could not comment
on it funher.
The grandparents' biggest complaint, AARP said, was the "discriminatory treatment" they face

Midkiff appointed Heart Walk director
The Meigs County Division of
the American Heart Association
has announced Millie Midkiff the
chairman of the 1994 American
Heart Walk to be held Saturday
morning, September 24 at the
Meigs High School Track.
"The research that has been
funded by the AHA ha~ certainly
been a factor in developing new
surgical techniques and drugs for

I

the treatment of heart disease, as
well as the educational programs
the AHA supports," commented
Midkiff. "We hope that through
events like the American Heart
Walk, the AHA can fund continuing research and educational projects to help all people with heart
disease."
Corporate sponsors are Whaley's Auto Parts and Bank One.
Midkiff and the American Heart

Family reunion .

BREWER
The Brewer family reunion was
held recently at the home of Davtd
Brewer of Stiversville with 50 family members and friends. attending.
The Rev. Jason Btbeaut had
prayer before the picnic luncheon.
Attendinj! were Michiko Brewer
and Patncia Brewer of Jackson;
Charles Brewer of Sedalia; Mr. and
fo/Js. Robert Schott of New Washir.gton; Mrs. Doris Goodrich, Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. David Brewer and Susan Brewer, Long Bottom; Travis Brewer, Pomeroy:
Angelia Powell and Celilia of
Newpon. Va.; John Brewer, Marietta: Emma Lee Brewer. Reynoldsburg; Tisha Simeral, Columbus;
Gertrude Brewer, Pomeroy.
,
Marilyn Beall, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Lelan D. Close and
Jeremiah, Dania! and Julie, Little
Hocking; Mr. and Mrs. Jason
Gibeau!, Point Pleasant, W. Va.:
Tresia and Malley Wood, Gahanna; Rita Garrett and Timothy,
Clllumbus; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Ct.ose, Shannon, Shay, Jaush,
Fleming; Rodney Beegle, Portland;
Patricia Circle, Racine; Mark Beall,
C:llumbus; Leanna Beegle, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Close, Waterford: David A. Brewer, Portland.
Kyle Dobbins, ML Liberty;
Christa Blower and Chtssa, Laoeasier: Ruth B Biber, New Wash-

Walk Recruitment Committee have
already begun coordinating volunteers to recruit teams for the event,
which wiU take place nationwide in
over 700 communities.
''I'm very excited to be chairman of this event for 1994. Last
year's walk was again a tremendous success and the committee is
working hard to plan another positive community activity," Midktff
stated.
"The American Heart Walk is a
chance for the people of Meigs
County to join thousands of others
across the country to help fight car·
diovascular disease, the number
one killer of Americans, to get
some exercise and to have fun."
"Our ftrst step in organizing the
event is to have our recruitment

I

ington: Shay Cou~. L•ttle Hocking; Elizabeth Stitch, Lancaster;
Wallace Brownie Watson, East
Liverpool; Mrs. Emma Bess, East
Liverpool; and Jade and Jasman
Gibeau!, Pint Pleasant, W.Va.

commiuee meet face-to-face with
potential team captains and explain
how their business or organization
could be involved in the walk,"
Midkiff explained. "If anyone is
interested in participating and has
not yet been contacted, please call
me or one of the other recruitment
leaders."
Members of the recruitment
committee are Midkiff, Donna
Carr, Debbie Haptonstall, Ida
Diehl, Linda Warner, Mick Davenport, Texanna Well, Denver and
Nora Rice.
Although the event is based on
team participation, individuals are
also welcome to walk. For more
infonnation contact Midkiff at 9925278 or the AHA at 1-800-AHAUSAL

]on~cr has enough work for a third of

its dolphins.

DEAN'SUST
Melanie J. Beegle, Racine,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jennings
Beegle, Racine, was named to the
Bowling Green State University
dean '.s list for the summer
semester.
Beegle is a senior in the
school's College of Education and
Allied Professions.
. The first bicycle had wooden
wheels and was seen on the streets
of Paris in 1690.

,:..

'

I
.
'

..

~

I

. .- - - - - · · · ·

$10,449

.-

~-

-

~--·

...

------ ----

~.

Low tonight In 50s, partly

I

cluudv. Saturda'l'·, mostly ~unny. ,1
HighS in thews: ______,__ j

•

enttne

cond., PS, PB, PW, PL, Pwr
seat, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cas
aette, more.

tlonlng,PS, PB, AM/FM cal
sehe, rear defogger, more

Pick 3:
7-8-8
Pick 4:
7-2-9-8
Buckeye 5:
10-12-17-18-36

I

8 cylinder, auto., red, al

4 cylinder auto., air condl

$10,449

Vol. 45, NO. 90

Copyright 1994

1 Section, 10 Pageo JS conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 9, 1994

A Multimedia

Inc. N-apapar

Line extension underlines water proposal
lly GEORGE ABATE
Sentind News Staff
The Gallia County Rural Water
. .
.
AssoctatiOn
to I d Mtddleport
o ff'tctals Thursday 11 could meet the
village's water needs, but . it would
cost about $300,000 to build a new
eight-inch line extending from
Georges Creek to Kyger Stand
·
· 1
through Cheshtrc to the Midd eport
village limits.

1993 FORD EXPLORER 2 DR. SPORT
V-6, air cond., PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM

1994 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7
V-8, auto., air cond., PS
PB, PW, PL, tilt, crulae
Pwr. seat, _AM/FM cassehe
more

$10,949

1993 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1993 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA LX
V-8, auto., A/C, dual Pwr
seats, all power, ABS, uuatt.u·•
air baga, leather, air au•o-t. •
pen1lon, keyleu
more.

Signature Sarles. 8
aulo., Climate Control,
power equip., keyte..
Gold Package, leather.

$16,949

1991 FORD
AEROSTAR 4X4
Eddie Bauer,
length, 4.0L, auto., F. &amp;
A/C, tilt, crulae, all oo·w••r.a &gt;·· ,•
loaded! Low miles.

1993 FORD
RANGER
SUPER CAB

$15,449

$13,449

1994 FORD
F150 4X2

1993 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO

Long bed, 4.11L, IutOn~:~~;; V
:il ~ Ton, short bed; 4.3L, 5
air conditioning,
'.·; epaed, elr cond., tilt, crulae,
ateerlng, power br1ke1,
PS, PB, PW, PL, AM!FM
AM/FM 1tereo, 8,000 mllea
cauette, 18,000 mllea.

&lt;

$13,949

Work progresses on tourist attraction in Racine

4 cyl., auto., air cot~dltltor1-l
lng, PS, PB, till,
AM/FM cauehe,
mllea

$16,449

$14,449

Gallia Rural was the second of ing 3,800 feet of lines to the village
two private water companies to limi !s - and adding a 34 7,000 offer proposals to the community.
tank , boo ste r statio n and plant
. C reck Conscrvancy upgrades - would toial at least
_Lcadtng
D•stnct prese nted estimates SSOO.OOO, Leading Creek Dtrec tor
Wedne sday. Neither company Brent Bolin said _
would state a cost per 1,000 gal Middleport must have 1ts wells
Ions, upon which the final deci sion comply with Ohio Environmental
wtll be based.
Protecuon Agency orders by Jan. I
·
.
'
Leadtng Creek Conse rvancy 1996 or hav e tts wa1cr shut off.
District anticipated that by extend- Mayor Dewey Horton said

Old mill awaits re-assembly

1994 DODGE
SPIRIT

Long bed, V-8, 5 lpeed,
cond., PS, PB, tlh, cru111eJ;il
AM/FM ca11., bed llnet•lil XLT, V~. air cond., PS,
tlh, cruise, AM!FM C81111tlle
more, 12,000 mlle1.
15,000 mllea.

Jean Werry, Nellie Brown, Donna
Byer, Martha McPhail, Carol
McCullough, Betty Ohlinger,
Norma Custer, Betty Ohlinger,
Ruth Riflle, Maida Mora, Roberta
O'Brien, Mary Morris, Ann Rupe,
Shirley Beegle, Vera Crow, Rose
Sisson, Eleanor Thomas, and Mildred Karr and Margaret Stewart of
Florida.

~~

1992 MERCURY
COUGAR

1993 FORD
FISO 4X4

-Society scrapbookMYSTERY FARM WINNER
Golda Reed of 39320, St Clair
Road, Pomeroy, correctly identified Sunday's mystery fann as that
of Gilispie Howard, located on
Route 143, south of llarrisonville.
She was one of six to make the correct identification. The winner was
selected in a drawing. She will
receive a check for $5 from the
Ohio Valley Publ~hing Co. which
co-sponsors the contest with the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District
SORORITY ACTIVITIES
Fall activities of Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, were kicked off with a
luncheon recend Y.
The first course was served at
the home of Carol Jean Adams in
Syracuse, the second at the home
of Charlotte Elberfeld, flatwoods,
and ihe third at the Clarice Krautter
home, Pomeroy. Others attending
were Jane Walton, Dorothy Sayre,
'

1993 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

$13,949

The band bas been playing to southeastern Ohio
audiences since the mid 1970s and last appeared
in Racine at tbe Flower Festival in April.

~

4

MARK Ill CONVERSION,
8, auto., A/C, AM/FM ca•-· I':H
aette, all power, le1tth•1r.l
5,000 mllea.

JAZZ BAND RETURNS - The Athens Dix·
ieland Jazz Band will make a return appearance
to Racine Saturday from 4 to S p.m. at Star MiU
Park as part or tbe village's annual fall festival.

.L,! ......,)
. ',
(I'
.~

Page4

1994 FORD
F1 SO SPORTSIDE

~ retlrenMIIIt
After years of riskin~

nipper and
lin for their n"ion. one of the liS
Navv's most elite squads has fallen
victim to post -Cold War budget cuts.
The Pentagon sa\s that it no

Strike may
cancel 1994
World Series

( )h io Lottery

I

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Work is steadily progressing
on the Racine Museum/Cross
Mill project at Star Mill Park,
the project's director said Thursday.
Dale Hart said he awaiting a
pennit from the state before the
building can be reconstructed.
The building siLe is on the !DOyear flood plain, necessitating a
special penni!, he explained.
Hart added that the perm it
may come as soon as next week.
When completed, the old
building will serve as a museum
and a tourist attraction, allowing
visitors to see how grist mills
worked in the 1800s. Hart estimated the building would be
erected in about six weeks.
The mill, erected early in the
last century by the Cross family,
was originally located near
Racine by the present junction
of Oak Grove and Bowman's
Run roads . Sections of the old
mill are Still visible near the
home of Gary arrd Donna Norns.
"We've come a lot farther
than some thought possible,"
said Hart, who added that some
people thought it would be
impossible to dismantle the mill
in Pomeroy.
To date, workers have disassembled th~ building and moved
the pieces to Racine. Now numbered, the pieces await reassembly. In addition, a site has
been prepared for the building
and sandstone blocks have been
brought in to support the structure .
Currently, workers are sawing the building 's posts to make
the entire building shorter.
Approximately 95 percent of
the original timbers arrived in
Racine in good enough condi -

~[CONSTRUCTION- Work is steadily progressing on the
Racme Museum/Cross Mill project, according to project director Dale Hart. Here, Harry Shain of Racine uses a special saw to
shorten the building's posts.

tion to re-use, Hart said. Plans
now call for a portable sawmill
to be set up where needed timbers and siding will be constructed on-site, he added.
Hart urged area residents to
support the mill project, noting
that completion of the project
may be delayed if there is a
shortage of local funds. Currently, contributions can be made
toward the project th(ough the
Racine Home National Bank.
Hart also appealed for volunteer workers "willing to help

with general construction,
pulling nails and stuff."
This is strictly a community
project... in the finest, old-fashioned tradition, Hart commented.
"We're not getting any grant
money, not a penny," he sa id.
"We're not looking for a hand out from Columbus or Washing lon."

"We want something the
entire community can be proud
of when it's done."

A year ago, M&gt;ddl c pon a nd
Pomeroy vi ll ages work ed to form
the Big Bend Water Di strict thai
wou ld tap new wells ncar Symcuse.
But to develop the Btg Bend dis trict,
cxccC(J $4
. . stan -up. costs could
.
tnt 11 ton. offlctals satd at an earlier
mccung in Middleport
M&gt;ddlcpon h:c; read two of three

read n, . . d tabled , th d . d'
of ·u', ~~";;. n th· a ';d rca tng
the' .11 _ ,t. af ce tha 1 wBouB rem!dove
trtct.v&gt; ·•gc rom c tg en&lt; &gt;·SRc-idcnts' te
- l'k
1Y ' 10u wt 11 th' ecost
,1 1c" t1,·'e ,o . /, 3pers man
or
66
urtl'r 0 000 gallons -Lh . . ..1
able,opt;on, Horton s:i'd. any '1'"' 1tC
.
d
P
'\

p agev I•11 e area resIdents
•
·
arrested in marijuana raid

By GEORGE AllATE
Sentinel News Staff
Three Pagevillc area residents
were arrested on cultivation of
marijuana charges Thursday, fol lowing a search warrant entry of
their double-wide trader. accordtng
to the Meig s County Sheriff's
Departm ent.
Daniel, Philip and Althea Morgan were to he charg ed with al
least cultivation today, with other
charges pend ing , Meig s County
Prosecutor John Lentes said.
Althea Morgan will also be
charged with tampering with evi dence after she allegedly threw in
the trash some marijuana that had
been see n in th e ho me, Lcntc s
added.
A total of 18 plants potted out·
side, along with marijuana being
dried in a dilapidaLcd shed and
marijuana and paraphenalia in the
home were seized, Meigs County
Sheriff James Soulsby said. About
$900 was also taken from one sus pect.
At a street value of about 53,000
a plant, iht s operation was definitely not for casual usc, Soulsby said.
The number of plants is not signifi cant in this case, Lentes said,
but the height and the high quality
of the buds.
The plants were grown in large
pots and buckets, camouflaged
with vcgctmion.
"This is too high quality and too
much trouble to be doing for their
selves." Lentes said. "We believe
that there arc more plants out there,
but in a swamp it's impossible even
with a helicopter to see the stufL"
Since the Morgans are renting,
the real estate cannot be forfeited,
but a series of four-wheelers could
be, he added.
No booby traps were found in
the swamp area about I 00 yards
from the trailer, but in higher elevations where the land is more

on 1mue on

l.lge

~

RESULTS OF RAID - Drug charges are pending against t"n
Page ville area men following execution of a search warrant early
Thursday. Uere, Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes examine marijuana plants
found by law enforcement officers. Philip and Daniel Morgan of
Goose Creek Road were being held in the Meigs County Jail
Thursday pending the tiling of charges, Soulsby said. Soulsby estimated the plants' street value between $2,200 and $3,300.
open, the investigators were being
especially carclul, Lentes said.
An informant's tip helped crack
the case, Soulsby said.
This remains the peak season for
cultivation of marijuana, Lcntcs
said. But during the last three years
the number of drug mids has fal len
off - because of stale and federal
funding cutbacks. For example, a
helicopter that was supposed to
scan the area never showed

because the crafts arc spread thin,
Lentes said.
The number anti si1.c of dru g
busts has dropped also because th e
p'ants are not grown in the large
groups they once were, Soulsby
added.
"We gather information over a
period of time. If peop le know
things or think they know things,
they should contact us, " Soulsby
said.

Pentagon readies vessels for invasion

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Pentagon says seven supply ships
will be ready within days to suppan a possible invasion of Haiti.
The ships, at five pons on the
eastern and southern coasts. will be
ready to sail within four days to
_ "carry just about anything in the
were clear.
U.S. Army and Marine Corps arse-_
Investigators hoped to gain nal,'' Defense Department
some clues from the plane's black spokesman Col. Doug Kennett
box, which records flight data. An announced at a Pentagon briefing
emergency worker said the box
was recovered.
The plane was powered by
CFM-3BI engines, made by CFM
International, a joint venture of
General Electric Co and French
manufacturer Snecma. The plane
was manufactured in 1987 and had
logged 23,846 flight hours and
14,489 takeoffs and landings.
Firefighters fought their way to
the scene through trees and down
treacherous terrain, but there was
no road to transport heavy vehicles.
The search was called off about
two hours after the crash, and the
· area was sealed off for the night.

Death toll hits 132 in USAir jet
crash near Pittsburgh airport
ALIQUIPPA, Pa. (AP) -The baggage strewn everywhere.
"It was total devastation," said
jetliner banked to the ri~ht, rolled a
few times and nose-dtved into a Jim Bothwell, director of operaravine. There was a muffled boom, tions for the STAT MedEvac helithen the sky turned bright with copter service. "The airplane was
!lames as a black cloud of smoke in a million pieces and the people
inside were in pieces."
·
mushroomed into the air.
USAir
Flight
427
originated
in
"It was just coming straight
Chicago
and
was
to
stop
in
Pittsdown," said one person who saw
the US Air jetliner crash Thursday burgh before continuing to West
Palm Beach, Fla.
evening.
Jason Moka, a 10-ycar-old who
All 132 people aboard the Boewas
playing soccer a half-mile
ing 137-300 died - the deadliest
from
where the plane went down,
crash in the United States since
said
its
engines seemed to be sput1987 and USAir's fifth fatal crash
tering
before
the crash.
in as many years.
The
crew
radioed Pittsburgh
A pilot, nurse and paramedic
International
Airport when the
flown in by a medical helicopter
was
about
six miles away and
plane
walked through the site moments
"there
was
no
indication at that
after the 7: I 9 p.m. crash. They saw
time
of
any
difficulty,"
US Air said
body parts hangings from trees and
in a statement this morning. Skies

To raise the well s above the
nood plain will cost about $1 1,000 ,
Horton said. But EPA reg ul ations
.
w&gt; II •·""come
more strmgent,
s hut ung down two of the three vtllage
wells and forcing an en tirely· new
source of water, he added. New
wells cannot be drilled in tile vii lagc due to a lack of space.

Thursday.
"We obviously arc prepared to
go into Haiti one way or another to
return democracy there, and we're
ready to carry out whatever orders
are presented to us by the prcsi dent," Kennett said.
Asked about the Pentagon 's
preparations for such an operation,
Kennett added, "Obviously, prudent planning continues at all levels of the military and the government. Patience is obviously run-

ning out with the senior lcadcrslt&gt;p
of t!le country."
Rarely is such overt language
used in connection with potential
military operations, but such a tone
has been prevalent in Washington
in recent days.
Meanwhile, the United States
also is setting the stage for devel oping a temporary Haitian civilian
police force for the country to keep
order in the aftennath of an inva-

smn.

Officials say device was not a bomb
IRONTON (AP) - Authorities
said Thurs.day they have determined tha~ suspected explosive
device left in a paper bag at a
department store was not a bomb.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms found no explosives in the device at Hills Department Store, Police Chief Rodney
McFarland said . The FBI would
investigate the case as extonion, he
said.
Mike Scanlan, spokesman for
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms in Louisville, Ky.,

said Wednesday that the store technician actually causes a counreceived a bomb threat late Tues- tercljpge, using other expldsi ves
day. The device was found at the that are placed on or near a susservice desk early Wednesday.
pected bomb.
The store was closed Wednes"If there's any explosives in the
day while police and ATF agents suspected device, it will blow up
searched the building with special- and then it can be safely
ly trained dogs.
approached and handled," he said.
Technicians test the debris from
McFarland said on Wednesday
the device was apparently a pipe an explosion to determine if a
bomb attached to a pager or radio. ' device was a bam b.
He said it was detonated by ATF
A security guard reported that
agents outside the store, near U.S. the store had received several
52 in this southern Ohio city.
bomb threats.
'
Scanlon Thursday said a bomb
,I

QUEEN CANDIDATES- Seven queen candidates for the aimual Racine Fall Festival this
Saturday were selected Wednesday at Southern
High School. The queen will be selected and the
winner crowned at 11:30 a.m. at Star Mill Park,
following a parade through the village. Among
the hopefuls are, from lert, Jessika Codner or
Portland, daughter of Jim and Sandra Codner;
Rrandv Roush or Racine, daughter of Gory and

Teri Roush; Courtney Roush or Racine, daul!lt·
ter or Marshall and Debbie Rou~n •
ie
Collins or Syracuse, daughter of Ruella ~nd Bob
Crow; Erica Dugan of Racine, daughter or
Shirley Dugan and the late Darrt:l Dugan·
Kendra Norris of Racine, daughter Gary and
Donna Norris; and Tracy Pickett of Letart Falls,
daughter of Lewis and Judy Pickett.
.,

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