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Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Reds
end long
losing spell

Pick 3:
447
Pick 4:
8675
Buckeye 5:
3-12--21-28-32

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 78
Multimedia Inc.

ment at the Meigs County Fair. She's pictured
her with "George and Georgine", her floppy
eared rabbits seated on a miniature school desk.

NEEDLECRAPI' BEST OF SHOW • Francis Roberts of Racine took the rosette in the
need,ecraft division of the domestic arts depart-

FUN IN THE PUMPKIN PATC.H . Enjoying his outing at the Meigs County Fair Monday
was eight month old Briar Dill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Dill, Long Bottom. He appeared

delijlhted with the blue ribbon which hi~ broth-.
er, Cody, won on the pumpkin be exhibited at
the fair,

Rosettes presented for-top domestic arts displays
Rosettes for best of show dis· · exhibits judged by Mandie K. Kil- Racine; handmade dressed doll,
plays were awarded . to eight gamdi e, June Alley and Bunny Pamela Hagen, Coolville; purexhibitors in the domestic arts Kuhl, were as follows:
chased doll, handmade clothing,
Children's Clothing
department of th e I 30th Meigs
Rhonda Frank, Pomeroy; stuffed
County Fair.
Child's play dress and child's toy, Trisha Ann Spencer, Long
The top awards went to Deborah better dress, Margaret Weber, Bottom; stuffed animal, Francis
Grueser. Pomeroy, sewing; Francis Pomeroy; child 's shorts, Shirley Roberts, Pomeroy; misc. no clothRo~crts , Racine, needlecr.aft;
Smith, Pomeroy; other, Brenda ing, knitting or ·crochet, Jane Ann
Trisha Ann Spencer, Long Bottom, Kennedy, Pomeroy; better dress for Aanestad,Pomeroy.
knitting; Merrilee Bryant, Long ages 7-12, Rose Barrow s,
Crochet
Bottom. pictures; Linda Gillilan, Pomeroy; child's shorts, ages 7-1 2,
Granny square afghan, Barbara
Po meroy ; croche ting; Patricia Brenda Kennedy, Pomeroy; sleep- Murray, Pomeroy; ripple afghan,
Jones, Shade, quilting; and wear, Rose Barrows, Pomeroy
Rose Barr.o ws, Pomeroy; shell
• Michelle Harris, Racm e, hobby
Adult Clothing
afghan, Linda Broderick, Pomeroy;
comer.
Ladies dress, cotton or blend, mixed stitch afghan. Barham MnrThe blue ribbon winners in the dress-up dress, formal dress and ray ; misc. afghan, Elma Louks,
various categories out of the 354 blouses Deborah Grueser, Syracuse; vest or sweater, Rhonda
Pomeroy; adult t-shins, Marilyn Frank, Pomeroy; doily 14 inches or
Spencer, Long Bottom; adu:t !·shirt under and doily over 14 inches,
painted, Brenda Kennedy. Mary Shoulls, Racine; babi es
Another Season I am Blue
Pom eroy; adult shorts , Trisha sweater set and two crocheted pot
Oh the rain is falling down, very Spencer, Long Bottom; lady's suit holders, Linda Gillilan, Pomeroy;
slacks or skirt, Marilyn Spencer, granny squares baby afghan,
gently to the ground
As I sit and think of you, anoth- Long Bottom; lady's practical , Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy; mis c.
Francis Roberts , Racine; men's baby afghan, Ruth Pullins, Racine;
er reason J'U be blue.
misc., Trisha Spencer, Long Bot- miscellaneous, Marilyn Spencer,
tom;
ladies misc.; Marilyn Spencer, Pomeroy.
I wonder if you feel the same,
Long
Bottom.
Knitting
the lonely feeling of the rain
Needlecnaft
.
Sweater
or
vest, Trisha Spencer,
And this hurting in my heart,
Embroidered
pillowcase,
Patty
Long
Bottom;
pre-printed baby
since you and I have been apart
Dyer, Bidwell; crochet trim pillow- quilt, Patricia Jones, Shade; couon
And I think about that first time, case, Connie Moyer, Reedsville; patchwo rk quilt, Patricia Jone s,
painted pillowcase, Merril ee Shade; painted quilt, Addalou
I taught you how to kiss
We we re both so young and Bryant; counted cross stitch cush- Lewis, Pomeroy; cross stitch quilt,
ion, Debra Kennedy, Pomeroy; cro- Esther Frecker, Racin e; outline
innocent, all that love I miss
cheted cushion; Connie Moyer, stitch embroidered quilts, Barbara
But there is nothing I can do, Reedsville; quilted/preprinted cush- Murray , Pomeroy; applique quilt,
ion, Francis Roberts, Racine; misc. Grace Holter, Racine.
another has the love of you
Murray,
Hobby Comer (pictures II X16 or
But I stiU love you everyday, as cushion, Barbara
Pomeroy; painted tablecloth, Marunder)
you pass my house away
ilee Bryant, Long Bottom; embroiCounted cross stitch picture,
As I sit here distantly, and think dered tablecloth, Esther Frecker, Jane Ann Aanestad, Pomeroy; colof aU those memories
The tears start falling from my
eyes, just like lhe rain is outside

Poet's comer

\.

I

I' · '

BEST AFGHAN • Capturing the best of show in afghans in
domestic arts displayed at the Meigs County Fair was Elma Louks
of Syracuse. Her winning maroon afghan ~n tbe neld-of:~ineapples
design was one of three she made to enter m the compet•t•on.

Now the rain is falling down,
even faster to the ground
And I sit and think of you.
another season I am blue.

ored embroidery picture, Merilee
Bryant, Long Bottom; painted nocanvas picture, Trisha Spencer,
Long Bottom.
Pictures over IIX16
Colored embroidery picture ,
Esther Frecker, Racine; painte&lt;l. nocanvas picture, Merilee Bryant,
· Long Bottom; cre wel picture,
Grace Holter, Pomeroy; counted
cross stitch picture, Merilee Bryant,
Long Bottom .
Others
Purse or tote bag, Merilee
Bryant, Long Bottom ; s tained
ceramic and glazed ceramic, Melissa Coleman, Long Bottom; woodcraft under 8 inches, Linda Gillilan,
Pomeroy; woodcraft 7 to 18 inches,
George L. Wolfe, Pomeroy; household article, Terri Bishop ,
Pomeroy; Christmas decoration ,
Dania Renee Cotton, Middleport;
structure not over 6 inches, Terri
Bishop, Pomeroy; structure, 7 to 12
inches, Ruth Pullins, Racine; eracheted basket, Linda Gillilan,
Pomeroy; basket, under 15 inches,
Shirley Smith, Pomeroy; basket,
over 15 inches, Barbara Murray,
Pomeroy; decorated straw wreath,
Debra Kennedy, Pomeroy; wreath,
other material, Nancy Gard, Middlepon; wreath. decorated for any
holiday, Linda Gillilan. Pomeroy;
gift wrapping, Sharon Bryant, Long
Bottom, recycled craft, Delma
Karr, Middleport; anything not listed, Michelle Harris, Racine.
All of the exhibits are on display
in the senior fair building for the
enjoyment of fairgocrs.

BULLETIN BOARD

Louise Ead's oil landscape
which took the best of show in
the amateur painting exhibits
also took the eye of these Meigs
County fairgoers, James Clifford, left, Mary Lee Maxey and
Sean Maxey, Tuppers Plains.
Here they admire the Rutland
woman's art work.
The reserve best of show in
paintings went to Chester artist
Juanita Lodwick. Her still life
was painttid from a picture of a
flower arrangement which
designer Peggy Crane of Middleport exhibited in the 1992
Meigs County Fair flower
show.
Thirty·five paintings are
displayed in the Coonhunters
building this week for
enjoyment of fairgoers. ·
· At left, pretty little Jefinifer
Smith ponders the 'jars of
canned fruit on exhibit -in the
Coonhunters building. She is:
the four-year-.old daughter of
John and Glenna Smith of
Shade. The canning and baking
department has 534 entries, up
163 from last year, making it an
outstanding exhibit this year.
(Photos Charlene Hoeflich.)

..

c

ROSETTE WINNER • First time open class exhibitor Trisha
Spencer of Long Bottom won the best of show award in knitting in
the domestic arts department at the Meigs County Fair. Here she
displays the attractive pink, white and gray sweater she knitted.

St. Paul willing workers meet
The St. Paul Willing Workers
met recently for th e August meeting and was ope ned by scripture
reading and prayer. The secretary
and treas urer's reports were react
and approved.
Plans were made for an all day
work session in September with a

meeting in the afternoon and plans
were for an October outing to Burr
Oak State Park were finalized.
The group made 37 sick call s
and sent a fruit basket to member
Mary Vineyard. A thank you card
and donations were received from
the Edith Harper family.
.Readings were given by Mildred
Brooks, Glenna Sanders, Mary
Vineyard, Doris Koenig, Edna Harmon, and Mildred Caldwell. The
meeting was closed with a friendship circle and the Lord's Prayer.

Graveside services were held at
the Wells Cemetery on July 21 for
Mrs. Lydia Ball, formerly of Harri sonville.
Out of county relatives auending were Harold Ball, Charles Ball,
Carolyn Frasure, Charles D. and
Christine Ball, Mary Wood yard,
Ruth Welsh, Kenneth Woodyard,
all of Columbus; Tamara and
Ri chard Gearheart of Cincinnati;
Kei th and Tina Woodyard , St.
Louis, Mo. ; Elizabeth Woodyard,
Kalamazoo, Mich .; Donald and
Martha Burrow s, Matthew and
Maria Buriows, Cleveland. Several cousins, nieces and nephews
who reside here as well as friends
were present for the services.

NOW
AVAILABLE

IN THE
iunhnJI ~im:es - i:entin.el
BREEDING SHOWMANSHIP - Rebecca
Scott and Michele Guess were named grand
champion and reserve champion, respectively, in
the breeding showmanship event at the 1993
Meigs County Junior Fair Sheep Show. In addition, Scott's name will be placed on lhe Jack Sei-

CALL
NOW

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Mines awaiting word
on injuction request
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
There has been no word from
the U.S. District Court in Columbus regarding Southern Ohio Coal
~~.'s _requ e~t for a preliminat&gt;'
IOJuncnon agamst the federal Env1·
ronmental Protection Agency and
the Office of Surface Mining.
U.S. District Judge Sandra
Beckwith said at the conclusion of
last week's hearing that she would
rule on the preliminary injunction
request this week. At the conclusion of that hearing she granted a
seven~dliy extension on a restraining order which permined SOCCo
to continue pumping. That order
expires Friday at midnight.
B.J. Smith, public affairs director for the American Electric
Power, Fuel Supply, said Tuesday
afternoon that "Southern Ohio Coal
cannot predict the outcome of the
federal court proceedings."·
"However, we believe the company clearly presented its case that
the plan it has implemented meets
the dual needs of remov iilg the
water quickly to preserve the mining jobs and doing so with the least
environmental effect," said Smith.
The preliminary injunction
would prevent the U.S. EPA from
issuing an administrative order to
halt the pumpi_ng of water from the
Meigs No. 31 Mine. The company
. took the legal action after U.S.
EPA said it would order that the

pumping cease, according 10 Smith.
The company on Aug. 4 was
granted a temporary restraining
order against the U.S . EPA in
which the court stated that "the
defendant U.S. EPA's threatened
action is based on grounds .which
were considered and addressed by
the Ohio EPA and which are subject 10 ongoing review and monitoring by the Ohio EPA."
In remarks before the coun, the
federal EPA said it continues to
maintain enforcement authority
even if the state is acting.
SOCCo initiated its water
removal plan July 30 under an
order from the Ohio EPA which set
strict standards the company met,
Smith said.
.
In court Thursday, SOC Co
attorney D. Michael Miller said, "If
the preliminary injunction is not
iss ued. the mine will be lost, and
jobs lost and all that ·wiU be accomplished is that the U.S . EPA will
have won its jurisdictional suit.
"If this was really about the
environment, rather than this jurisdictional snit that the government
is in, I wiU ask the question I asked
yesterday: Where have they been?
The situation has been going on
now since July 11, and if they were
concerned about the streams and
the people along the streams, w)lere
have they been? This wasn't a
problem until the phalanx of
lawyers from the government got

involved with this," he added.
" We believe the Ohio EPA
acted in a reasonable and expedi ·
tious manner to help develop a
solution to this unique emergency
situation," Smith said. "We contin·
ue 10 meet with OEPA and other
state and federal agencies to seek
additional ways to minimize any
short term environmental effects."
The approved plan involves
pumping the water to nearby
receiving streams, notifying area
residents, monitoring the streams
and includes a commitment to mitigate any temporary effects on the
streams. The streams do not con·
lain potable water and do not pro·
vide public drinking supplies,
according to Smith.
The mine was idled July 11 after
water from an adjoining, closed
mine entered Meigs .31. Currently
about 300 employees a'le out of
work due to the excess water
underground.
Ohio EPA, ecological experts
and company environmental specialists are continuously monitoring the streams, Smith said.
"The company has pledged to
mitigate any shon·term effects on
the streams to speed up their natural restoration," Smith explained.
She said that the streams are
expected to begin recovering within a few days after pumping ends.
Ecologists predict no long-term
environmental effects, Smith said.

Southern board approves pact with URG

Gilben L. Fitzwater
Vinton, Ohio

Graveside
services held

2 Sectiono. 12 Pageo 35 canto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 18, 1993

----Fair scenes-------..

i.ow lonlgblln 60s, sunny.
Thursday, sunny, blgb In 90s.

denabel Memorial Plaque. Shown are, rrom left:
Wool Princess Christy Drake, Wool Prince
Jonathan Avis, Scott, Jean Seidenabel with the
Jack Seidenabel Memorial Plaque, 1993 Junior
Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre and Guess.

The Southern Local Board of
Education has signed a contract
which provides that the district pay
$25,200 for services from the University of Rio Grande during the
1993-94 school year.
The money is to be paid from
the Urban Rural Grant with the bal·
ance of the $60,2 15 in that grant
fund to go toward other programs
in the disnict. This is the third year
for !he money to come into the district from the Ohio Department of
Education.
According to the contract, there
are four facets of the URG assistance - teacher training, assistance
with effective sc hool projec ts in
each building, helping to develop
programs both during the summer
and regular school year, and evalu·
ating effective school projects.
The board, meetin g Monday
night at the high school, approved
participation in the High School
Athletic Association for both the
junior and senior high schools at
$25 a sport, approved the Title 6
(learning disability) program 10 be
paid for with $41,150 in federal
funds, the DPPF (disabled pupil
program fund) at a cost of
$33,907.20, and lhe Title I reading
program for $199,591.
Bids were accepted from Reiners for bread products, Parts Plus
for anti-freeze, Malone Warehouse

for tires, Raven Hocking for coal, Bradford as substitute cook and
Snouffer for fire equipment, Ash- custodian.
land Oil for fuel, oil and grease,
Financial problems of the disBorden Valley Belle for milk prod- trict were discussed and lhe board
ucts, Best Office Machine for approved having lhe Ohio Departequipment maintenance; 'Mic hael ment of Education and the state
of Jackson for ice cream, Standard . auditors in to determine if the disFood for lunchroom food.
trict needs to go into the loan proThe handbook for th e high gram.
school was approved, and hiring of
Attending were board mem bers
a study hall monitor for the junior Sue Grucser, Joe Thorne, Tom
high school was approved. C. T. Roseberry, Denny Evans and Scott
Chapman was employed as junior Wolfe, treru;urer Dennie Hill and
high football coach, and Rebecca superintendent Bob Ord.

Ohio State Fair on target
toward 800,000 attendance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Doh 't hold your breath waiting for
the traditional Ohio State Fair ceremony honoring the millionth visitor. This year's new honest-count
attendance policy likely will prec tude such an event.
However, attendance so far for
the Au g. 6-22 fair is well on its
way to a goal of 800,000 set when
the revised crowd-counting plan
replaced the inflated figures of 3
million-plus used in the past
"We quite possibly will not get
to a millionth visitor. But we will
have an accuraie count, and a more
accurate
of the fair,"

Tammy Knapp, director of public
relations, said Tuesday.
Arrival of the alleged millionth
person to pass through th e gates
triggered mini-celebrations in past
years with fair officials on hand to
distribute gifts and pose for photos.
Figures released by the fair
pegged attendance so far this year
at 580,435 from openin g day
through Monday. The exposition
continues through Sunday.
"We've set the goal of 800,000
for this year's fair. Every indication ·
so far is we're going to be able to
reach that,'' Ms. ~!IPP s~d.

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Attending were Everett, Charlo lie Grant, Raymond and Ada
Evan;, Charles, Marsha, Maria and
Adria Frecker, Delbert, Eleanor,
Elizabeth and Tim Lawson, Pam
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MARKET SHOWMANSHIP- Michele
Guess and Rebecca Scott were selected grand
champion market lamb showman and reserve
champion showman, respectively, in Tuesday's

Melgi County Junior Fair Sheep Show. Shown
are, rrom lert: 1993 Junior Fair Queen
Stephanie Sayre, Guess, Wool Princess Christy
Drake, Wool Prince Jonathan Avis and Scott.

DREAM
- Despite all the excitement
around him during the Meigs County Fair, little
Winston Burke, son of Willie and Janie Burke,

1

took Monday evening as an opportunity to catch
up on bls rest. His bale of hay proved to be a
· quite sumdent bed.

�Wednesday, Augusl18 ,.1993

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gentral Manager

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All letters are subject tn editing and must be signed with name,
address and t.clepbnne number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
sbould be iii good taste, oddressing issues, oot personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
. Excerpts of recent Ohio editorials of national and $tatewide interest:
Hamilton Journal-News, Aug. 8
Warning: Television may be hazardous to your health.
.
Nobody's going to affix that label to your next ~gnavox, but 1t wo~ld
probably do about as much good as n~twork promiSeS to monllor the VIO·
lence and sexual content of programmmg.
It's what sells, after all.
Parental discretion is advised. That's what the disclaimers on mature
programming will say this fall. But will the shows themselves be toned
down -or will the disclaimer be a band-atd?
Congress· has put the television industry on notice that it expects
change.
We'\1 be watching. Or better yet. maybe we shouldn't be watchingat all.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
We(!nesclay, August 18,1993

The mythology of the newwill budget
WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob
Kerrey, D-Neb., who gave the
administration fits two weeks ago,
may not have won nianr friends in
either political party w1th his last·
second grandslllnding on the budget deal. Unfortunately. the man
whoWhiteHousepersonnelreportedly call "Cosmic Bob" also
slllnds as the lone voice of reason
in an otherwise shameful budget
debate.
"Get back on the high road, Mr.
President," Kerrey recently told
his colleagues in a stirring speech
on the Senate flqor. Minutes earlier, he had provided the margin of
victory needed for passage by
agreeing to vote yes on the budget.
But. first, Kerrey felt his coUeagues
deserved a little lecture.
Rarely has a budget that does so
little become the sub~ect of so
much demagoguery, mtsinformation and political bitterness. Both
parties are to blame. The budget,
which passed the Senate on Aug. 6,
will not cure our economy, nor will
it plunge us back into recession.
Instead, it represents a broken
promise made to the electorate in
1992 - a year when voters said
they were tired of the status quo,
tired of "feel good" politics and

Ohio

ready to assume the shared sacrifice needed to set the economy
back on tract&gt;.
..
In the course of political postur-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
ing, several myths evolved about
the 1993 budget which deserve to
be set straight The first is that the
president's budget will soak the
rich. In theory, it does- the top
income tax rate jumps from 31to
36 percent.
In reality, any taxpayer with a
decent accountant can minimize the
blow simply by reducing taxable
income by about 10 percent. Even
the retroactive feature, which near·
ly spawned a constilutional challenge from frustrated Republicans,
may not have much of an effei:tmany wealthy taxpayers acted
months ago to proteCt themselves
from changes in the tax code. In
either case, revenue projections
from the soak-the-rich initiative are
bound to fall short.
The second myth is that Clin&lt;

ton's tax paclcage
hurt the middl~ class. In_ fact, ~e middle class
will ~ot nonce a d1ffer~nce. After

shelvmg plans for a m1ddle-class
tax cut, Clinton changed course by
proposing the infamous Btu tax.
When that proved too much for
rural and Northern lawmakers ,
Clinton was forced to settle for a
4.3 cent per gallon gasoline tax
hilce. This is the only tax hike the
working middle class will suffer.
As any car owner knows, gas
prices can fluctuate by more than
4.3 cents on the same city block.
The gas tax is an insignificant one.
The third major myth is that
Clinton's budget restored "fairness" to the tax system. If fairness
means the continuation of tax loopholes for any interest group that
screams loudly enough, then perhaps this budget is fair. Otherwise,
it's a continuation of a tax system
where the general public is taxed
more to pay for the breaks we grant
to groveling industries with powerful Washington lobbies. Methanol
producers, hotel and restaurant
owners, even the dreaded Washington lobbyist establishment were all
granted last-minute concessions.
Each one of these breaks, and there
were many more in the fine print.
.

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The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 10
The White House task force on health-care reform, which finished its
work earlier this summer, is not expected to make its eagerly awaited proposal until next month. But that hasn't stopped the airing of trial balloons.
Enough already. Dribbled "news" serves no purpose -and indeed is
probably counterproductive -.for task force insiders, or anyone else with
"hot news" to be leaking at this 11111e.
·
One day, "those in the know" say aborti~n is .to be covered in the
plan then ''insiders" say a few days later that tt tsn t. One day, some are
sayn;g it will be a "managed competition-type:· plan, followed by assertions that it will be more attuned to the Canadian and Bnttsh health systems.
.
The endless lilllny of trial balloons and maybes probably will cause
more confusion than enlightenment.

- -

The Marion Star, Aug. 11
.
President Clinton's record $260 billion tax increase slilhered through
the House and it squeaked through the Senate with Vice President Gore
casting a tie-breaker vote.
Despite the fact that telephone calls against the plan were swamping
members of Congress, a majority of House and Senate members put party
loyalty above the good of their constituents and passed this economykilling measure.
·
~mocrats have been complaining that Republicans who oppose the
The Aug. 16 cover of Time Democrats like to cast the 1980s as high-ski.ll~ positions-. managentax increase are being too politically partisan. Actually, the real partisan magazine features an upside-down a decade of greed, a decade in ~·professiOnal, teehmcal and the
Republicans were secretly hoping lhe Clinton plan would pass, because it photo of Ronald Reagan and a glib which the rich got richer at the like.
.
.
will make things so bad that large numbers of Democrats will be ousted m headline: ''Ovenuming The Rea- expense of the poor, the reality is
The 1980s economtc ex~s10n,
ne~t year's elections.
gan Em." An accompanying article
and resultant J_Ob boom, dtd not
The real losers, unfortunately, will be the hundreds ofthousands of hails the recent passage of Bill
happen by !'lagtc. Nor was ~o~ald
people who could lose their jobs as the Clinton tax-burdened economy Clinton's economic package as
Reagan SJ_I'f!PIY an ~nwmmg
continues to contract.
''the first real reJeCtiOn of
by~tander, nding the busmess cycle
Reaganomics" and "a return to the
as 11 crested.
.
Akron Beacon Journal, Aug. 16
economic orthodoxy of balanced that most Americans were far betThe supply-s_tder planted the
Relatively few school boards in Ohio have been able to raise new budgets."
ter off under Reagan than they s~s of econom•~ growth by cutmoney for schools through a local income tax. It's less than one in six.
Who are these guys kidding? A were under Carter, and than they tmg_ taxes; by bnngmg down the
A lot of older voters on fixed incomes are especially fearful of a school Democratic president with a solid wiU be·under Clinton.
top mc€lme tax rate fro_m 70 percent
income tax. Under current state law, an income tax passed for schools Democratic majority in both chamIt should be remembered that to 28 pe~ent; by _savtng the_ averapplies to all an~ual income of the re~\dents of a given school district. bers of Congress wins approval of · when Ronald Reagan inherited the age Arnencan famtly $6,000 m fedThat includes rettrement benefits, annwttes, mvestment mcome, rents and his program by a tiny two-vote White House, America was mired era! IOC?me taxes over the span of
capital gains such as profit from the sale of a house or farm.
.
.
margin in the House and a scant in its worst economic crisis since hts pres1dency.
No doubt there would be less apprehension about a school income tax one-vote margin in the Senate.
the Great Depression. The unemAs to the asserttons by Cbnton
if it only applied to wages, salaries, tips, bonuses and commissions, just as
That hardly can be considered ployment rate topped 10 percent and other Democrats ~hat, ~nder
city income taxes do.
either a resounding victory for during the depth of the downturn. · Reagan:s w~tch, the nch d1d not
Recently, Rep. Tom Seese, the Akron Democrat, introduced a bill that Clinton, or a real repudiation of Inflation stood at more than 13 per- pay thelf. frur share of taxes, that
would narrow the application of the school income tax in just that way.
Reagan.
cent. Interest rates were beyond 21 they got rtcher at the expense of lhc
The bill is worthwhile, although the real need in Ohio is for major
poor, the¥ stmply are untrue.
.
As to the notion that the Clinton percent.
school finance reform.
plan somehow brings us closer to. a ·
By the time Reagan left office,
The nch d1d get ncher ~unng
The legislation is not intended to ad~ss issues of fairness_ and adequa- balanced budget, one wonders 10 America had enjoyed its longest the Reagan era. But so d!d the
cy in school funding. The purpose of hts bill ~s hm1ted to giVIng schools a what Cloud Cuckoo Land the edi- period of peacetime expansion poor. In fact, the poorest ftfth of
more practical alternative to the property tax tf school boards must conun- tors of Time reside.
since World War II. Inflation had Americans saw a 15 percent
ue to raise money through local elections. It' s the "if" that needs to be
Over the five -year period cov- been pared by two-thirds, to just increase in total income betw~n
addressed by lhe state Legislature.
ered by the president's economic over 4 percent. Interest rates were 1980 and 1988, from $105 btllton
program, the gap between what th.e cut in half, to just over 9 percent to $120 billiOn, taking 10flatton mto
government spends and what It (and lower still under Reagan :s account.
.
.
raises in revenues will never fall successor, George Bush).
As to the nchest ~ertcans below $200 billion in any given
But perhaps the biggest eco- the I percent whom Ch~ton and .the
year. And by the time the Clinton nomic accomplishment of the Rea- Democrats so demo~tzed durmg
plan expires, the annual deficit will gan era was the creation of a record debate over the prestdent's ~CO·
profit on anything, give it to the be rising rather than falling.
Dear Editor,
20 million jobs. ·Democrats try to nomtc J?lan- they actually.prud an
lighting man.
·
I've got it. I've got it.
·
Here's a prediction: Once the advance the fiction that most of mcreasmg, not decreasmg, share of
Now, if we can't keep it from full brunt of Clinton's $496 billion those jobs were of the low-wage the nation's income taxes during
Every country should have a
starting,
please, don't call me. I in new taxes and illusory spending variety, but the Bureau of Labor th~ Reagan era. In 1981, this CQhort
law to send anyone who declares a
ain't
mad
at anyone. I was in the cuts is felt throughout the econo- Statistics says differently.
war, to the front first.
patd 18 percent of all mcome taxes.
fighting
15
months in World War II my, most Americans will long for
If our president starts it, he goes
Its numbers show that 82 per- By 1988, they accounted for 25
the day he declares, it the congress and still don't know why. I met a the Reagan era.
cent
of the jobs created during the" percent.
.
·
approves , they go next, then the whole lot of Germans and dido 't
For while Clinton and the Reagan era were high-payinJ!.
Democrats like to blame Reagan
military. Let all the gays that want, know a one of them, let alone havgo too. followed by all the women ing a reason to shoot one. I
who want. The women who stay wouldn't know a Serb if I saw one
can run the country until the men and couldn't talk to a Croat if I met
get back. Now, be a little careful one, so why should I have to shoot
In keeping with its mission to keep aging curmudgeons from · machine with which dentists can
with that women issue because, one because someone else says so?
clean out cavities without a drill
promote
the public welfare in high- looking like anc1ent ones?
I wish we could practice a little
remember, if old Adam hadn't had
minded
and
upstanding
ways,
the
Herewith, a few of the best ideas and often without pain. It performs
Eve we wouldn't have a country more defense and a little less Spear Foundation hereby presents of the
its magic by sandblasting the dam·
past year:
offense. You can hear people say
anyhow.
aged
area with a high-speed stream
its
third
annual
report
on
good
Those who .think they are not it's better to have it over there than ideas.
of
aluminum
oxide panicles. In
able, send anyway. to do dishes. here. Could be they are right, so let
fact,
this
machine
has been in exisWe
are
keenly
aware,
mainly
Let them live in tents and in side them go, but I'd like to stay here because we are 'often accused of the
tence
since
1951,
but it wasn't
-The
martini
diet
This
revolutrenches like the rest. If that and help take care of their garden.
approved
by
the
Food
Drug
Brooks Sayre transgression ourselves, of the tionary system for losing weight . Administration until lastand
doesn't do it, pay everyone, everyDecemSyracuse media's fascination with the nega- was created by IW Piper, a Balli· her. I have a conspiracy theory tQ
where, the same wage as the foot
tive. Yes, you tell us, there is star·
soldier gets, if anyone makes a
vation in Africa, misery along the more Sun editor. He begins with explain the delay: Dentists see
Mississippi, crime in the streets. four ounces of gin, omits the ounce themselves as the modern inearna·
but doesn't everyone deserve a of vermouth he added in the care- lion of the leech doctOr - ineffcc·
break from the bad news once in a free days when weight was not a tive unless drawing blood - and
problem, and substitutes a twist of they wanted to preserve the tracliwhile?
lemon
for the two olives he used to lion.
Yes, you do, and this is our
add.
This
saves a total of about SO
By Tbe Associated Press
meager contribution. Remember,
-The pay-for-your-own-rescue
Today. is Wednesday, Aug. 18, the 230th day of 1993. There are 135 we embrace all sorts of ideas, from calories per martini. Multiply tl!is plan. It costs the taxpayers a lot of
by 365 martinis a year and
days left m the year.
the cerebral to the serviceable. A figure
you get 18,250 calories saved. money to rescue mountain
Today's Highlight in HistOry:
solution to Fermat's Last Theorem
climben, hikers and hang gliders.
On Aug. 18, 1587, Virginia Dare becanle the fust child of English par- is a wonderful thing, but where Divide by 3,600, the number of The National Parlt Service has had
above or below your base·
ents to be born on American soil, on whal is now Roanoke Island N C.
would we be today without the zip- calories
On this date:
.
• . .
line that will cause you to gain or enough of it and is developing
plans to bill" the adventurers they
per, invented by Mr. Whitcomb
In 1227, the Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan died.
.
. Judson in 18917 Or the golf tee, lose one pound, and it is readily rescue for their deliverance. RiskIn 1846, U.S. fa-ces led by Gen. Stephen W. Kearney captured .Santa devised by New Jersey dentist apparent you will lose five pourids takers may even be required to post
peryear.
.
Fe,N.M.
William Lowell in 1924? Or the
1
-.
The
kinetic
cavity
prepara- bond or buy insurance. A single
In 1914, President Wilson issued his Proclamation of Neutrality aimed bifocals without lines, invented by
operation can cost $100,000, the
tion system. This, dear readers, is a Park
'
at keeping the United StaleS out of World War 1.
Service says. Expenses for
somebody a few years ago, which

_-

had a name ~hinathem.
This b~dget was not abo~t
shared sacr\fice; ll was_a!Jout sacn·
ficmg too. little and gauung almo~t
nothing in ~eturn. While .~uch of.1t
can be attnbuted to pohttcal COW·
ardice, some _of the blame must fall
on the Arnencan people. Everyone
seem~ to agree that government
spendmg ~l!st be cut, yet no one
seems_ wt!ltng_ to tah the h~t.
Spendmg ts evtl when tt benefits
someone else, b~t 1t beco~es sud·
denly worthwhile when It lan~s
close to ho_me. H?w many Amen~ns are still excned about spendmg.cuts when they realiZe tl mea~s
the~ roads will go unrepaued, theu
Soctal Se?unty check wtll shnnk,
theu Med1car~ benefits reduced or
theu local m1litary base closed?
It should already be clear to
anyone who follows the federal
b~dget that the onlr ~ay our deficll
wtll shnnk. S1gmf1cant!y IS by
reducmg entttlements. Entt~eme_nts
have become a cancer. that IS ea~ng
away at our producuve cal?acny,
yet tt alll!ost se~ms ~~posstble to
cure. Wh1le enutlements consume
mor:: !han half of every federal dollac, tt IS money that helps kee~ _the
elderly and ~e 10fum from abject
poverty. Sull, Congress. can cut
pork from the budget unnl they're
blue in the· face and the budget
deficit will still keep growing
unless entitlements are re10ed m.
When Medicaid_grow_s by more
than 31 percent 10 a smgle year,
eliminating a few peanut subsidies
and swine research projects is ~th10g more than an act of symbolism.
Finally. credit should go to
those who voted for tlie president's
budget without regard to the politi·
cal fallout: Representatives like
Karen Shepherd, D-Utab, who won
last year with 51 percent of the
vote in a district where only 31 per- .
cent voted for Clinton; or Rep.
Larry La Rocco, D-Idaho, who
took 58 percent in a district where
Clinton won only 30 percent of the
vote.
These members, like the rest of
the U.S. Congress, may not have
taken the "high road" that Kerrey
advocates. But they proved that
voting one' s conscience still counts
for something, even if the product
is unsavory.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

SECOND IN PARADE - Chester Cub Scout
Pack 235 won second place in the junior fair
parade on Tuesday afternoon at the Meigs

Letter to the editor
Reader has an idea

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday
Admitted: Albert Eisclstein,
Re edsville, and Lena Icenhower.
Rutland.
Di sc harged: Russell Meadows,
Pomeroy: Neva King, Pomeroy ,
and Marie Miller. Middlepon.

CHAMPION RABBITS - Pictured are Meigs County Junior
Fair reserve and grand champion market pen rabbit winners Ryan
Kauff and Jeanie Newell.

--Area deaths-Evelyn D. DeVault
Evelyn D. DeVa ult , 88,
Wilkesville. di ed in Riverside
Mcthodtst Ho sp ital , Col umbu s,
Tuesday evening, August 18, 1993 .
She was born June 4, 1905 in
Vinton County, daughter of the late
George and Blanche Bradley Kruscam p.
She was a retired U.S. Mail Carncr in Vinton County and a member of the Wilkesv ill e United
Methodist Church, the Wilkesville
Order of Eastern Star #407, the
Wilkesvill e Pythian Sisters #591
and th e Wilkesv ille American
Legion Auxiliary #4 76.
She wos preceded tn death by
her hu sband, Alva DeVa ult in
1973 : one daugh ter, Viv ian: one
grandson. Ralph Whi te Jr .. 1990:

and his supply_,~ide tax c~ts for .the
nauo~a! debt nsmg from Just·shy of
$1 tnll~o~ when he ~k offi_ce to
$4.4 tnlhon by the ttme Clmton
moved into the Oval Office..
. But Reagan hardly was at fault
His tax cuts gave ~s seven years_ of
sus!ID"ed ~onom1c growth, dunng
whtch penod federal tax revenues
doubled. The reason that the
n.a!ional debt is $4.4 trillion and
nsmg, after Reagan generated the
largest increase in tax revenues in
American history, is that the
Democrat-controlled Congress
more than doubled spending.
If the Democrats had exercised
spending restraint (or had given
Reagan the line-item veto or some
other mechanism to enforce fiscal
discipline), if they had allowed federa! outlays to rise no more than
the rate of inflation during the Rcagan era, there would be no $300
billion annual deficit today. There
would be no $4.4 trillion debt.
Bill Clinton has blown hi s
opportunity to preside over a real
revolution. He could have gotten
the sluggish u.s. economy booming again by cutting taxes like Rcagan did, rather th an raising !hem.
And he could have made a lasting contribution to the cause of halanced budgets by persuading hi$
fellow Democrats in Congress to
commit to the kind of freeze in fed·
eral spending that his Republican
predecessor Reagan could never
get them to accept.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for The San Diego Union-Tri·
bune.

and two br01hcrs.

She is survived by one daughter
and son-i n-law ; Bonnie and Ralph
White, Wilkesville; three grand chtl dren. Sandy Boyd, Atlonomtc
Springs. Fla.; Cheryl Lathcy, Hamden, Ohio; and Bradley White,
Wilkesville; seven grea t-grandchi ldren; and one great- great grand chi ldren.
Servi ces will be conducted 11
a.m. Saturda y at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home , Vinton with Rev .

A.B. Maloy and Rev. Dan Sttres
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sa lem Cen ter Ce metery. Fri end s
may call at the funeral home Friday
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

Patrol probes wreck

Today in history

'

'

Weather

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the mid -60s. Thursday, mos tly
sunny and warm. High around 90.
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:
Francis Hawkins
A chance of showers or thunderFrancis May Hawkin s, 91, storms Friday. Highs from the low
Pomeroy, dt ed Tuesday, August!?, 80s northwest to near 90 southeast.
1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospi- Fair on Saturday and Sunday. Lows
55-65. Highs in mid-70 to low 80s.
tal .
Born July 13, 1902 in Meigs
County to the late Frank and
Josephine M. Burkett Niemeyer,
she was a seamstress at Yonker
Manufacturing Co. , Point Pleasant,
Am Elc Power ................... .37 3/4
W.Va. and a member of St. Paul
Ashland Oil.. ..................... .31 3/8
Lutheran Church.
AT&amp;T... ...... ............... ......... 60 5/8
Surviving are a son and daughBank One........................... 52 5!8
ter-i n-law , Eugene and Mary Lou
Bob Evans .... ..................... 18 1/4
Hawkin s; a grandson, Ronald
Charming Shop.................. 12 1/2
Hawkins; granddaughter, Regina
Champion Ind................... 13 I/2
Lynn Simpson. all of Mid!lleport;
City Holding ............... ......J l
two grandchildren; three greatFederal Mogul.. .................. 24 .
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .41 7/8
grand children and several niece s
and nephews.
Lands End.............. ......... .31 5/8
Limited Inc ......................... 22 1/8
Besides her parents, she wa s
Multimedia lnc ................... 32
preceded in death by four sisters,
Point Bancotp .................... l4
Anna Enge hing, Kate Dernback
Rax Restaumnt... ... ............. l/16
Barbara Carl and Florence Hudson:
Reliance Electric ... .. ...... ..... I9
and four brothers , Herman, John,
Robbins&amp;Mycrs................. I9 3/4
George and Charles Neimeyer.
Shoncy's
lnc... .......... ......... 20 3/8
Funeral servi ces will be held at
Star
Bank
............................
35 112
Ewing Funeral Hom.e . Pom eroy ,
Wendy
lnt'
l..
................
..
....
14
1/4
Fnday at 1 p.m. w11h the Rev.
Worthington
lnd
.................
30
Dawn Spalding officiating. Burial
Stock reports are the 10:30
will be at Beech Grove Cemetery.
a.m. quotes provided by
Friends may call Thursday from
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
2 10 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral
Gallipolis.
home.

Stocks

club in the county. Several groups participated
in the parade. Judges were Jim Huff, Maureen
Hennessey, Jim Oliphant and Roberta Maidens.

PARADE WINNERS ·The Meigs 4-H Plea·
sure Riders won first place honors in the junior
fair parade on Tuesday afternoon at the Meigs
County Fair. The group is the oldest 4-H horse

Photo winners named
Hubert A. Eason, Pomeroy, took
best of show, and Kim Cowdery,
Long Bottom . reserve best of show
in the amateur photography show at
the !30th Meigs County Fair . A
to tal of 176 photograph s were
entered in the competition.
Winning l;lue ribbon s
were lhe followin g exhibitors:
Color enlargements
Landscape and seascape, Christine Saunters, Pomeroy; animals.
Patty Dyer, Bidwell; portrarts and
personalities, Ali ce Hawthorne.
Long Botlom ; pictorially story
telling, pattern abstracts and nature
close-ups, Gene Chancy, Pomeroy;
mi scellaneous, Dave Harris,
Pomeroy.
Black and white enlargements
Landscape and seascape, ani mals and portraits and personali ti es, Kim Cowdery, Long Bonom ;
pattern abstracts, nature close-ups
and miscellaneous, Larry Cowdery ,
Long Bottom.
Color, snapshot size
Landscape and seascape, Hubert
A. Eason, Pomeroy; animals. Ruth
Spaun, Pomeroy; portraits and perso nalities, Melissa Co leman ,
Pomeroy; pi ctorial storytellin g,
Hubert A. Eaton. Pomeroy; pattem
abstracts, Gene Chancy , Racine;
nature close- up s, Kim Cowdery ,
Long Bottom ; mi scell aneous,
Robert A. Bailey, Long Bottom .
Small Black and white
Landscape and seascape, Opal
Dyer, Bidwell; animals, Robert A.
Bai ley , Lo ng Bottom ; pancr n
abstracts. Mi chael A. Bai ley , Long
Bottom; mi scellaneous, Robert A.
Bailey, Long Boltom.

Lottery numbers

rescues conducted in 1991 alone
came to $3 million, half of which
were incurred by the military for
the use of helicopters.
.
- The trucks-to-the-right highway safety plan. This is the brainchild ·or Arthur Morrissette,.
founder of Interstate Van Lines of
Springfield, Va., who sees it as a
way of promoting safety on the
Washington BelfWay, which has
been experiencing a rash of truck
accidents. As he described it to the .
Washington Post, all trucks would
be required to stay in the right lane
antl drive no faster thl!ll 40 miles
per hour. He figures there would
still be plenty of breaks between
the b.e hemoths for exiting and
entering roadways, and the delays
would be tolerable for truckers.
Why n01 experiment with the concept in c.ongested areas everywhere?
.
And finally, a good idea we
overlooked from 19Y1:
1
Josepb Spear Is a syndicated
. writer tor Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

f

Joy Foreman, 89, of Mason, died
Wednesday morning. Aug. 18,
1993, in University Hospital,
Columbus, Ohio.
Services will be announced by
the Foglesong Funeral Home.

One in five facilities found
violating water pollution law

Hay show results

I .

I

Joy Foreman

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Aug. 10 discharges -Jasmine
Waugh, Paulin e Jeffers, Shawn
Snyder , Murma Miller, Pam ela
Warren, Charlotte Rice, Glenna
Smith, Mrs. Billie Holley and son,
Patrick Canaday, Bonnie Coon,
Mrs. David Sands and daughter.
Aug. 10 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Hindy, daughter, Point Pleasant, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. John
Johnson, son, Crown City. Mr. and
· Mrs. Lawrence Lee, son, Shade .
Mr. and Mrs. Saul McGuire,
daughter, Point Pleasant, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Smith, dau ghter. Jackson.

A Gahanna man escaped injury
Tuesday morning when his vehicle
overturned in Salisbury Township,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Hi ghway PntrOI reponed.
Bryan 1". Hollingsworlh, 2 1,
4 104 Willow Ho llow Road, was
so uthboun d 011 Township Road
20A when he .-:ltd sideways off of a
left hand curve. The vehicle struck
WASHINGTON (AP)- A pri- meani ng th ey were repeated or Grange judging results
a ditch and overturned once. The
patrol li sted unsafe speed as the vate environmental group says 18 long- term violators.
"Building for th e Future" is th e
percent of the nation 's major indus"Th ese are signifi cant violacontributing fac tor.
theme of the grange exhibtts at th e
No citations were iss ued . The trial, municipal and federal facili- tions and we're trying hard to stop
Meigs County Fair.
them," said EPA's water enforcevehicle sustained heavy, di sabling ti es - and 24 percent in Ohio The four booths, each receiving
damage and was towed from the violate water pollution laws or slcirt ment director. Rich Kozlowski.
a premium of S75, were judged on
reponing requirements.
The PIRG report did not provide
scene.
the basis of origi nality, attracti vcThe assertions Tuesday by the the location or in many cases the
ncss, appearance and nea tn ess.
U.S. Public Interest Research names of the facilities found in vi ogrange teachin gs, achievement
Group were based on a review of lation. More than 7,000 industrial,
goals and community se rvi ce, farm
The Daily Sentinel
Environmental Protection Agency municipal and federal facili ties arc
products and handicraft.
(USPS 21J.96())
data.
listed as major facilities under the
Star placed first, Hemlock, secPublished every afternoon. M onday through
The greatest number of violators Clean Water Act.
ond, and Rock Spring s Grange,
Friday. Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by Lhc
were found in states with larg e
Ohi o Valley Publishing Co mpany /Multimedia
third. The fourth booth exhi bit ing
number
s of indu strial plants:
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2 156.
was the Meigs County Youth
Second class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Texas, with 177 violators, PennsylGrange.
van ia with 86, Ohio with 73 New
Member: The A.ssoci:lled Press. and the Ohio
York with 71, Louisiana with 58
Newspaper Associati on , Nat•ooal Advertisios
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Represe ntative. Branham Ncwgpapcr Sales,
Michigan
with
57,
Indiana
with
5S
hol der of one Buckeye 5 ti cket
7JJ Third Avenue, New York, N~w York
Ribbon s and premium s were
and Alabama with 36.
1001 7.
wr ns $ 100,000 after matching all awarded in three places in lhe hay
PIRG lawyer Carolyn Hartmann
ftve nwnbers drawn Tuesday night.
POSTMASTER: Send addre.u changu to The
at ltlc Meigs County Fair. Jim
said
lax enforcement has turned
th e Ohio Lottery said . The ltckct show
Daily Scnbnel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Barrett,
agriculture extension agent
federal discharg e permits into
4l769.
was bought in Mayfield Heights.
from
Washin
gton County, judged
"permits to pollute" and made the
SU8SCJUPTION RATES
Here arc Tuesday night's Ohio the hay.
By Can ler or Motor Route
nation's waterways "easy cheap,
Lollery selecti ons:
Ooe Wctlc. .................................. ............SJ.60
Blue ribbon s went to David
IDXIC
dumps for environmental
Buckeye 5
One Monlh................................................ $6.9.5
Kin
g, Pomeroy, 75 percent or more
lawbreakers. ' '
One Year............. ..... ................... _____,.$.83.20
3-12-2 1-28-32
SINGLECOPV
alfalfa
; Kimmy Pierce, Langsville,
PIRG
is
a
nonprofit
consumer
(thr ee, tw e lve, tw enty -one,
PRI CE
all
gra
sses, and Brian Wmdon,
and
environmental
group
with
Daily..................... .... .............. ---··-·· 3.5 Cents
twe nty -eight, thirty-two)
Pomeroy,
49 perc ent or less
members
and
affiliate
offices
Pick 3 Numbers
Subscribers n01 desiring to pay the carrier may
legumes.
across
the
country.
4-4-7
remit in advaJJce dire&lt;:! to The Daily Sentinel
on a three. six or 12 month basis. Credit will be
The violators cited
(four.
four. seven)
give o carrier each week.
Hunter safety course
Pick
4
Numbers
either exceeded ~~~~~~
No
The
Scipio Volunteer Fire
1''~7·5 '
.
DcPIItment IS sponsoring a hunter
;
(fiWu.
ax,
seven, five)
''
~. I
.I
sa(cty course Aug. 26-28 from 69:30 p.m. at the fire station in Harperiod from Oct. 1
13 WcekS ................................................ $11 .114
'1.6 Weclcs ................................................. $43.16
ri sonville. The Ohio Department of
and Sept. 30, 1992.
.52 Wceks ............ .... ,................................ $84.76
BY PHIL PASTORET
Natural Resources is prese nting the
The
PIRG
report
li
sted
more
Ou'IIMic Mei11s County
13 Wcek.s ............................................ ..... $23.40
than 1,200 violators. It said all
Nothin g is more conduci ve to vege - co urse. Class size is limited to 50.
26 Weeks .................. ....................... $45.50
tarianism than studyt ng the meal TD register, call 742-3013 or 742were facilities cited by the EPA for
52 Weeks ......................................... $88.40
2302..
prices al the local supermarket.
"signific·a nt noncompliance,"

The b·est ideas of the past year
Joseph Spear

Scout Troop No. 1271. The troop is pictured
here as it parades pasttbe grandstand.

TillRD IN PARADE· The third place spot in
the junior fair parade at the Meigs County Fair
on Tuesday afternoon went to the Pomeroy Girl

Hospital news

Reagan era looks good from here
Joseph Perkins

County Fair. the parade was presented in front
of the grandstand witb several groups partici·
paling.

i'

il

JUNIOR POULTRY SHOWMEN- Melissa Guess of Alfred
Livestock and Kennith Kirk of the Salem Center Go Getters were
named reserve champion and grand champion showman, respectively, in Monday's Junior Fair Poultry Show.

Units respond to six calls
Units of the Meig s County
Emc reency Medical Servi ces
responded to six calls for assistance
Tuesday.

Poultry judging
results listed
Delma Karr of Middleport was
th e top blue ribbon winner in poultry at the Meigs County Fair.
She rece ived seven blue ribbons
on th e chi ckens and du cks she
ex hibited .
The blue ribb on winners in th e
various categories were as follows:
Rhode Island Red s: Kimm y
Pierce, Lang sv ille. for her pen of
pullets and one cockerel; Karr. a
pair of pullets ru1d a pen or pulle ts
with one cockerel.
Silver La ced Wyandotl es:
Kimmy Pierce for a pair of pullets.
Bantams: Douglas Hunter,
Racine for a pen of one or two pullets and a cockerel, and a pen of
two hens and one cock.
Cochin: Brian Justice, Pomeroy
for a pen .of one or two pullets and
one cockerel and a pen of hens and
one cock .
Other Bre eds: Marcia Guess,
Tuppers Plains, a pair of pullets;
Karr a pair of broilers and a pen of
two hens and one cock, and Kimmy
Pierce, a pen of pullets and one
coc kerel.
Ducks : Delma Karr for a Pekin,
a Muscovy and a Mallard.

SPRIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

,,,ROUTE
JM:I&lt;.!&gt;Ot+ ~I((
W(ST
l~

7

Units responding were 12:27
p.m. Middleport to Meigs County
FaHgrounds for Eric McCool who
was transported to Veterans Memorial Ho spital ; 2:34 p.m. Meig s
squad to State Route 7 and County
Road 3 for Eric Roush who was
transported toVMH; 6:06 Pomeroy
to West Mam Stree t for Brian
Hayes who wa s transported to
VMH; 7: 10p.m Tuppers Plains
and Tuppers Plains First Response
to Silver Rid ge Road for Jesse
Beaumont who was tran sported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital: 8:56p.m .
Meigs Squad to Meigs County
Faugrounds for Todd Reitmire who
was tran sported to VMH, ant!
10:00 p.m. Pomeroy squad and fire
department for Nay lor's Run Road
for an automobile accident, th e car
was gone on arri val.

Be sure to
catch all the
fun and
excitement
at the Meigs
County Fair!
We salute the
people who
work hard to
make the fair
possible.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WY.

�,...

Page

1 The Dallv Sentinel

Wedneiif"''

Sports
Sabo's good-luck bell,
bat help Reds notch 6-0 ··
victory over N.Y. Mets

llOYEAR

ll y JOEKAY
So Sabo jingled with every step
CINC INNA TI (AP) -What as he came to the plate again, then
was Chris Sabo doing with a bell jingled around the bases after hiton his left foot and a teammate's ting a first-pitch, three- run homer
bat in hi s hands? Breaking out of a off Gooden that started the Reds
slump, of course.
towards a 6-0 victory.
Sure, it was a li ttle extreme
Saba's first -ever homer off
whe n Sabo walked to home plate in Gooden (11 -13) convinced him the
the fourth inning Tuesday night bell and bat had worked
with a small jingle bell tied to his
" The bell will be there for ·
left cleat and Hal Morris' bat on his another day," Sabo said . " I was
shoulder. But it was entirely under- stretching on the field (before the
game) and found it. I don't know
standable.
The Cincin nati Reds had scored where it came from . It was good
JUSt five runs on 21 hits in their last luck ." /
six games, gelling shut out three
So was his new bat - one that
tim es. They ' d los t a season-high belongs to Morris. Unh appy with
se ven straight and had Bobby - hi s 9-for-49 slump si nce Aug. I ,
Ayala, an emergency staner, on the Sabo has discarded his bats.
mound.
"Mine had no hits in them,"
Oh, and the New York Mets Sabo said. " I don't hang onto bats
were pitch in g Dwight Goode n, too long if I get no hits. I'm superwho blew Saba away with a fast- stitious that way."
ball in his first at-bat.
(See REDS on Page 5)

ANNIVERSARY
.
. . .. . . . .. . ..

CHAMPION GRADE MARE - Elizabeth
Beahrs shows the Senior and Grand Champion
Grade Mare at Monday's draft horse show of

•

the Meigs County Fair, The horse is owned by
TimBeahrs.
RUTLAND ROYALS- The Rutland Royals
recently completed their season with a 10-2
lea~ue record, good for second place in the
Mergs-Mason Pee Wee League. Pictured are
(front row, L-R) Zach Bolin, Mike Salsar, Zach
WiUiams, Mike Ramsburg, Justin Gilmore and

Toronto hands Cleveland 6-4 loss

Middleport captures Pee Wee
All-Star Tournament crown
Middleport claimed a 3-2 win in gles and a double, Williams a triple
th e fina ls of the Middleport Pee and singles by Lynch and Stanley.
Jacob Smith, Mike Hawkins and
Wee All -Star Tournament to clai m
Ski
p Dodso n each singled and
the championship over Point PleasGarrett
Kiser singled twice. Ki ser
ant Blue.
fanned
eight
and walked two.
In tl1e championship game, Zach
Middl
epo
rt defeated Point
Bain singled, Justin Gilmore sin Pleasant
4-1.
Middleport hillers
gled twi ce, Mike Smith doubl ed
were
Gilmore,
Stewart, Smitl1 and
and Johnathon Evans singled and
Kiser.
Kiser
tripled
and Smith hit a
tripled, while Josh Lynch singled to
homerun.
push in three runs for tl1e winners.
Evans and Lewis combined for
Garrett Kiser had a triple and
Jacob Smith had a single. Ki se r the win. Evans and Lewis comfanned nine and wa lked two, while bined fo r the win . Evans fanned
two and walked one, while Lewis
Evans posted the win.
In f1rst round action, Midd leport fanned II and walked three.
defea te d Tuppers Plains 6-5 as
Gilmore, Evan s and Mall Stewart Tuesday ladies ' league
each singled and Josh Lynch dougolf results announced
bled. John Stanley got two singles.
Mall Lewis was the winning
Winners in the Tuesday Mornpitcher wt th 15 strikeouts and two
ing
Ladies Golf League were Joan
walks.
Childs,
low gross; and Marga ret
Middleport defe ated Galli a
Follrod,
low
net.
County 11-0 as Zach Bolin had two
Action contin ues each Tuesday '
singles, Gilmore and Smith a double and single each, Evans two sin- at tl1e Meigs Counry Golf Club.

:

US D.A. CHOICE.
GflA IN FED BEEF WHOtE

Bonetes$
Top Sirtom

,,,,
Pound

SLICED FREE

2-Ltr.

CA&amp;if+NEo~~~~f~fk cg:E,

coca. Cola Classic
·.
CHAMPION GELDING - Grand Cham pi: on Gelding went to this horse owned by John
· Rose during Monday's dran horse show at the

I)raft hor~e show results released

Eu ltm

Team

L

Pd.

CB

Ph iladelph11 . ....... 76 43
52
Mont.real... ........... 63 57
Clucago ................. 59 60

639
.496

17

Piusburgh .............. 51 63
Florida .................5 I 68

475
.429

19.5
25

New York .......... ..41

.345

35

St.. l.nJis ...... .......67

78

563

9

525

115

.664

47

608

6.5

HOUlLOO .................62 57
Los Angeles ...........59

59

CINC INNATI. ...... 60 62
San Diego ............. .46 74

.521
.500
.49 2
.3&amp;3

17
19.5
20.5
33.5

Colorado ....... .. .43

.364

JS.S

. ...... .

75

ll (l"1pa.ni. 7-11),11:05 p.m.
Detroit (Moore 9· 6) at Calilomia
ley 13-9), l O:O.S p. m.

Boston Butt Pork Roast

RED, BLUE OR THOMPSON

·

White seedless Grapes

Thursday's games
Kansas City (Pi chardo 6· 7) at Min·
R on~

(Quantrill 5-6), 7 :35p.m.
Milwaukee (Bones 8- 8) It California
(l..ang&amp;~.on 12- 6), 10:05 p.m.

Tuesday's scores

Pluladd p hia lO, Colorado 7

Today's games
Mo nt~]

(Hil.l 7-3) at Chicago (Hib bard 9-9). 2:20p.m
San Franci5co (W ilson 6-4) at Pitt.sbu.rgh (Smill134), 7:35 p.m.
New York (Tanam 5-12) at CJNCIN ·
NATI (!'..gh 7· 11), 7,35 p.m.
Los Angeles {Hcnluser 8-12 ) at Atlanlil (Avery 13-4), 7:40p.m.
F1onda (Arm51rong 7-12) at Hou ston
(S wm dcll 8-9), 8:05 p.m.
San D1ego (llroc ail 2-9) at St . LouiS
(Osborne 9·6), 8 ·35 p .m .
Philaddphia (G reene 12-3) il l Col ·

ora do {SarJord 1-0l . 9:05p.m.

Th ursday's games
Sa n D1ego (Whitehurst 4-6) at St
iAul~

(Watsoo6·0), 1:35 p.m
Si n Fr&amp;ncisco (}lidr:erron 5-4) at Pnu-

burgh (Walk i\ · 10), 3:05p.m.
~ulatkl phJ~ ( Mulhollilnd 11 -9) at Col·
orado (Blm S-9), 5:05 p.m.
Los •\ ngele.s {Gross 7 - 11) at Atl anta
(Ubvme 14-4 ), 7:40p.m.
Mo ntreal (Fau ero 7- 3) at Chtclgo
(CHUI!o 5-7), 8OS p.m
f·lorida Ol ou l!h 7-12) at Houston (Portugal 11-4), 8:05'r m

AMERICAN LEAGUE
[ u tun Di vision
Tum
W L P~ l.
Toronto
... .. 70 51 .579
New Yurk ............ 69 52 .570
8cw;ton ...
.. 64 54 .542
UaltJmore ..
.... 6] 57 .525
Oe1roit......... ..... 62 00 .508
CII:VEU\ND .... 55 64 .462
Md w~ ulox
- ..... 48 71 .403

Wu lern Ui \'blon
Chu; ago .
.65 53 .551
Kanus City ........ 62 51 .52!
Tcus ..
61 58
5l]
Se.ttle ...... ... ..... ..59 60 .496
Califorrua ........ 54 64 .458
M.mnescxa ........... ..52 64 .448
Oakland . . . ........ 49 63 .419

CB
1
4.5
6.5

g5
14
21

American League
BOSTON RED SOX : Rei eu ed Iv an
c _,.Jderon, outfielder. Recalled Ken Ryan.
pitcher , from Pawtucket of the lntema CLEVELAND lNDlANS : I:&gt;esignaLed
Thomu Howard , outfiel der, fo1111 ign ment.
OAKLA ND ATHL ETICS : Pla ce d
Lance Blankenshi p, infielder, on the ISday diubled lill . Purchased the contnct
of St.eve Kuuy, pitcher, fn:m Tacoma of
Lhc Paciftc Cout League.

SEATJl..E MARINERS: Pl1ccd Edgar

6. ~

II
12

15.5

T uesday's scores
New York II , TelU 4 ( l • t game);
Te~a.s 3, New York 2 (2nd game)
To1onto 6, CLEVELAJ\'D 4
Chic1go 3, 8CMtoo 2

Kanu.s Ci l~ J, Minncsou 2
Oaklan d 6, Milw1ukee J
De~mit 9, C1lifomia 3
SC.llule 5, Baltimore J

third buem•n , on the 15-d•y
dlNbled lilt. Re.ca.Ued Ruu Swan, pit.cher,
frcrn Cal gary of the Pacific C01st League.
SiWJcd Ken Cloude, pitcher: IAleon lsom,
outfielder, and Andy Augwline, c:.~ot.eher.

Nallonal l.t!ague
CINCINNATI REDS : Traded Rilndy
Milligan, fln'it bneman·oulficlder, to the
Cle vel and l n d i1n1 fo r a player to be
named lai.Cr . RcciUed Tim COS\O, infielder-outfield er, from lnd iaoapoli1 of th e
Ame rican Anociation.
NEW YORK METS : Optioned Antho-

ny Young , pit.che.r,lD Norfolk or the International League. Rec alled Jt&gt;5iu Man ·
zanillo, pit.eher, from Norfolk.

Ba•kelball

Football

Hockey
Nation• I Hockey l.t.tjut
I!DMONTON OILERS : Signed Dya
Ryall:in , defe naeman, an d Ale:u nde r
Ken:~ and Oleg Mal~ev. ldl wings .
NEW JERSEY DEVIlS : Signed Brian
RolHo n, ·cente r, 1nd Mike Dunham
goalie.
'
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Agn:cd 1.0
Lerma: with Dean Chynoweth and W1ync
McBean, defensemen , and Davi d Chyzowsk.i, forwanl.
NE W YORK RANGERS : Signed
Sh aw o M cCo1h, forwud , u d Mi.ke

. SAN' JOSE SHAR)(S: Agreed to Lenna
wLt.h Bob Errey, left wing. Anno unced
Kelly K.isio, cenler, will not rttum to the

Today's games
.

Mtlwonlkcc (Minnda 2-2) at Oaklilnd
(D ~rling 4-6), 3:15p.m.

(Continued from Page 4)
Ayala (5-5) made the Mcts want
to discard theirs. Ayala, a reliever
making his second start while Tom
;Browning recovers ftom a broken
:finger, allowed just four hits over
seven innings.
·. Ayala was the most unlikely
.pitcher to lead the Reds out of thelf
' season-high slump. He'd. made 32
·~ullpen appearances thts season
;before Browning's injury, mostly
·iniddle-relief stints. And he was
:worn down from a head cold.
_ "In the seventh inning, I was
-very tired," he said. "I caught a
:cold and wasn't feeling too great
~ the last couple of days.''
; No matter. Ayala pitched out of
-the Mets' only real threat by getting a double-play ball in the fifth,
Scott Service pitched two.scoreless
innings to complete it, and the
Reds' slumping offense product&lt;!
three homers.
Joe Oliver hit a solo hQIIler, his
career-high 12th, off Gooden in the
second. Saba's 15th homer put
Cincinnati ahead 4-0 in the fourth,
and the Reds scored twice in the
eighth off David Telgheder on
Greg Tubbs' first major-league
homer and Saba's RBJ single.
"We went out and had a great
day," Ayala said.
The Mets didn't have much
j!ood to take out of their eighth loss
10 11 games. Gooden lost his third
straight despite striking out eight in
six innings, and Telgheder gave up
his ninth homer in 43 1/3 innings.
As for the offense, it didn't get a
runner' IO third until the ninth.
"There's not much you can say
about the game,'' manager Dallas
· Green said. "It just wasn't very
pretty."
'

.

N1 tlonal Baskelba ll Assodallon
II OUSTON ROCKETS : Signed
Richard Petruska , fo rward -center. and
Eric Riley, center. to multiyear cootract.s

McLiu!lhlin. 1er1wio g.

Te.tu (P1vl.i.k 6-6) 11 New Y&lt;rl (Ab ·

. Reds win ...

~arti.n ez,_

3.5
4.5

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)- A gun
and a videotape arc the latest pieces
of evidence . in the killing of
Michael Jordan's father, a sheriff
said.
Robeson County Sheriff Hubert

tiooa.l League .

Na llonal Footbaiii.A'•Kue
A11..ANTA FALCONS : Waived Fran..k
C'".ianetti, defen1ive lineman .
CHI CAGO BE ARS : T rade d John
Ropa, linebacker; Markus Paul, u fel.y;
wd Kelly Blackwell, tight end, 1.0 the Dallu Cowboya: for Vinmn SmiLll and ll arry
Minler, linebac:ken, and 111 und..isciO!iicd
dnft pick..
. CLEVELAND BRO WNS Sig ned
R1chard Johnson, dcfem:ive baclt. Waived
Gary Cuper. l.lneb1clter.
HOUSTON Oi l ERS : Wav icd Eric
Miller, defensive end .
PnTSRURGH ST EELERS · Waived
D1vid Liule, linebacker.

one year and under two - Bill
James, f11St; and Ronald Whittington , second; three best of breed Ronald Whittington.
. . Grade horses
Gelding, three years and over Tutde Brothers, fli'St, Terry Lewis,
second; Tim Beahrs, third; gelding
under three years - John Rose, fli'St,
David Coen, seco ; mare, three
years and over - em Beahrs; best
matched pair - ohn Rose, first;
Tim Beahrs, s cond; and Tuttle
Brothers, thir ; grand champion
mare - Tim B
; grand ~hampion gelding - Jo n Rose.
_,.0pen class
Farmer' s Hitch - Tuttle Brothers.

·Pistol, videotape newest evidence
in roadside slaying of James Jordan

- * Transactions * Baseball

Chicago 7, Monneal 2 ( 1st game);
Montrea\6, Oticago 4 (2nd _game)
Pitt.sburgh 10, Su1 Fril!lCJ..SCO 3
ONONNATI6. New York 0
ALlanta J, l.ol Angdr:.t~ 2
HouilDn 4, Aoridi 0
St. _Louis 3, San Diego 4

bOlt 9-9), I p.m.

CF"tn·

FRESH "SILVER PLATTER " WHOLE

(Guardado 3-4), 1:I S p.m
CLE VELA ND (T IVIJe:r. 1-1) I t

n

At.lanu ..

Chic~80 CBc:re 5-4) 11 8011tm (0 1 ·
1 2· R), 7.35 p.m.
Kansu City (Appicr 13-6) I t Miltneco-

lb.

nero~

Wutt:rn Di vision

San Francisco ........79 40

SLICED
FREE

I!JI

Dhl~lon

W

Winners in the draft horse show Brothers, ftrst, Charlie Chancey,
·at the Meigs County Fair on Mon- second; mare foal ·- Bob Harris,
first, Byran James, secopd; mare
day evening are as follows:
: · The highest award - Supreme and foal - Bob Harris; three best of
l&gt;raft Horse Champion - went to breed - Da11id Coen, first, Tim
Bearhs, second
·David Coen.
Percheron division
Belgian division
Junior champion mare - Ronald
Junior champion mare - David .
Coen: senior champion mare - John Whitting10n; senior champion mare
.Rose; grand champion mare - - Ronald Whittington; ~d champion mare - Ronald Whtttington.
·David Coen.
Stallion, one year and under two
:: Stallion foal - David Coen;
BiD
James; junior champion stal.Mare, four years and over - Bob
·Harris, first, Tim Bearhs, second; lion - BillJames; grand champion
·mare, three years and under four - . stallion, Bill James; mare, four
John Rose; mare, two years and years and ·over- Ronald Whitting·under three - David Coen; mare, ton; mare, three years and under
one year and under two - Tuttle four - Ronald Whittington ; mare,
·

lb.

J0-8), 3:35 p.m.
Toronto (Stoulcmyre 6--9) at C ; r
lAND (Lopez :1- 1), 7,05 p.m.

Meigs County Fair. The horse also won Junior ·
Champion Gelding.

'

Baltimore (Moyer 7-6) at Seattle (Han·

NATIONAL LEAGUE

By CHUCJ( MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Each
time you think Jack Morris has
reached the end , he somehow manages to win another game.
" I keep plugging along. I don' t
know how to quit. I'm not good at
it," Morris said Tuesday night after
his Toronto teammates scored six
early run s to help him beat the
Cleveland Indians 6-4.
·
The 38-year-old Morris (7r l I)
had been pummeled for five \fURS
and seven hits in less than four
innings his lilst time out, increasing
his ERA to 6.59 in a 9-2Joss to
Minnesota.
"Obviously, it's different when
you get six runs early in the ·
game," Morris said. "A' pitcher
can relax and let things go. It's like

""UN TRIMMED WHOt'ESAtE CUT'"
110· 14·i B. AliG.I

Scoreboard
.- * Baseball * -

Wayne Capehart. In the middle row are Aaron
Bowersock, Skip Dodson, Matt Lewis, James
Conley, Matt Stewart and Nathan Thacker. In
the back row are coaches Dan Lewis, Mike ·
Drebel and Rocky WiUiams.

Each

YrCat_
CHILLED REGULAR OR COUNTRY
STYLE DONALD DUCK

·orange Juice

ASSORTED VARIETIES POLAR PAK

Ice cream

SMALL OR LARGE CURD,
2% LOWFAT OR NONFAT

Hanover
Pork&amp;
Beans

Kroger
cottage
Cheese
24·0Z.

.,

14.5-0Z.

WEST SIDE CALIFORNIA

cantaloupes
U.S.D.A. CHOICE CRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
Top Sirloin
steak
Pound

«om.

.,

Stone said lawmen have recovered
a .38-calibcr handgun they believe
wasusedtoshootJamesJordan. He
said the gun has been sent to an
State Bureau of Investigation lab
for ballistics tests, but he gave no
further details.
Stone also said suspects Larry
Martin Demery and Daniel Andre
Green, both 18, videotaped themselves with an NBA championship
ring, golf shoes and a watch they
are accused of stealing from James
Jordan.
"We weren ' t dealing with two
Einsteins here," said Jim Coman,
director of the State ·Bureau of
Investigation.
Stone's comments about the gun
and videotape were made to the
Chicago Tribune, Charlotte
Observer and Fayetteville Observer-Tirnes.
One of the key clues iinking
Demery and Green to the slaying
was telephone calls the two men
made while cruising in James Jordan's car, investigators said. The
calls staned only hours after police
say tl1e two teens killed Jordan' on
July 23 and dumped his body in a
creek just 50 yards inside South
Carolina.
They made the first call to a 1900 porn line. Then they called a
soldier at Fon Bragg, The News &amp;
Observer of Raleigh reported.
The soldier, Green's half brother, led investigators to the Green

Adams, Adkins among
Skyline Speed~ay winners
Friday tl1e 13th wasn't superstitious for Racine's Bob Adams Jr.
as he powered his w~y to consecutive wins in both the UMP Modified and Late Model feature races
last Friday at Skyline Speedway in
Stewart.
Adams also set fast time in the
Late Models with a 14:47 clocking
aboard
the
Morrison
Motorspons,IJ.D. Drilling/Rayburn.
Racine drivers fmished one-two as
Scon Wolfe placed second, making
it a clean sweep for the Racine
drivers.
At the drop of the green, LaiTy
Bond rode the high side and led
past the half way point as Adams
moved around Andy Bond for sec,
ond. Kirk Isner had come from
lOth to fourth at this point as
Racine's Scott Wolfe aboard the

~~~~~i~c.~~~o~r~~:f~·~~~:~

from eighth into fifth. ·

wo~sta1~~SB~~~~~s~dth~e~:~d\~

and was sent to the tail, handing the
and Demery, who are charged with
lead to Adams. A restart mishap
first-degree murder, armed robbery
between Isner and Andy Bond sent
and conspiracy.
Isner to the tail, leaving Bond and
"That one rea lly pushed us
Wolfe 10 pursue Adams.
through.'' Cum berland County
Wolfe and Bond raced side-byS~~riff Morris Bedsole said of the
side for six laps for second spot,
interview with the soldier. ''He
then Wolfe passed with two laps to
told us who had the car."
go. Bond ran ove{ the rear of
It wasn' t out of the ordinary to
Wolfe's
D&amp;M
discover an abandoned car in CumPizza/Anderson 's/McDonald' s car
berland County . When Jordan' s on the ensuing circuit causing a
Lexus 400 was located ncar Fayet- wild melee in turn one. Bond was
teville on Aug . 5, authorities sent to the tail , while Wolfe
recorded the vehicle identification resumed second.
number and checked a crime comAdams pu.Iled Wolfe on the
puter to see if it had been reported start, leaving Wolfe to fend off the
stolen.
elder Bond for second. Following
There was no such report.
Bond were St. Albans' Porky
The identification number came Shores and Mike McDaniels. Heats
back as belonging to James Jordan, went to Larry Bond and McDaniel.
but police didn't link his name to
Coming back from his late
Michael Jordan. A state trooper model feature win, Adams sat on
called several phone numbers the pole and led all 20 laps of the
found inside the car, tracing the UMP main. Mark Dickson was secLex us to the dealership in Glen- on d. followed by· Dough Henry,
,;;viiiiiewjj,,loiiiiiUii
.,oiithiiaiiotsiiioiiildiiiiiit._ _ _ _ _..;;B;;;ru;;;ce;;;,;De;;;;;;nn:;;is;,an;;d;,;AI;;;;;le;n;,;Hi~·;b;;bar;;d·~
I'

We Will Close, on
Thursday, August
19th at 1 P.M. So Our
Employees Can Attend
the Meigs County Fair. ,
SEE YOU
THERE!
'
•

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

'INSUUNCE
111 Second St. Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGEID SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

enough to guess what was coming
next
"He only threw one strike to
Devon," Alomar said. "Afterthat
the coach went out there , and I
knew he was going to try to lay tl1e
ball in tl1e middle of the plate so he
could ge t a strike. And he did."
Alomar hit the first-pitch fastball &lt;Jver the .fence in right for his
13th home run and a 3-0 lead.
When Kramer wallced Joe Carter
on four pitches, manager Mike
Hargro ve had seen enough . He
replaced Kramer with Jefr Mutis,
who gave up RBI singles later in
the inning by Paul Molitor and
Rickey Henderson.
Tony Fernandez added an RBI
single in the second.
,
The Indians' . bullpen held the
Blue Jays scoreless the rest of the
way, but the damage was done,
Kramer's start had been pushed
back a day because or muscle stiff. ness.
" He was rushing everything "
Adams and Hibbard took the Hargrove said. "I don't know if he
heats.
was too excited or what The pitchAdams now has five wins in es !le threw were all over the
each class. .
place."
Kirk Isner from Marietta picked
Cleveland scored three runs off .
up the feature win in the Ltmited Morris in the fifth on an RBI
Late Model division over Ed Yen- infield single by Sandy Alomar and
ham, Aaron Fleming, Kevin a two-run single by Carlos Baerga.
Haught and Roger Cozad. Isner and Two of the runs were unearned
Fleming won heats.
because they scored after Fernan· Don Ross of Albany picked up dez, the shortstop, dropped Glehis sixth Pure Stock win over Mid- nallen Hill's popup in short left
dleport's George Adkins, Evan field .
Chichester, Todd Smith of
Morris left in the sixth after
Pomeroy in the Sugar Run Ashland/Andersons car #7 and Ginny yielding a double by Paul Sorrento
and single by Reggie Jefferson. Jim
Adkins.
George Adkins jumped from his Thome followed with a deep sacripure stock into his four cylinder fice fly off AI Leiter that White
where he won his third feature of caught against the fence in center.
"Devon White has robbed me
the year over Reedsville's Bobby
three
straight years," Thome said.
Bailey, Bert F1ora, Keith Zimmer"
I
hit
it on the good part o~ the bat,
man and Brian Bailey. Early
but
I'd
rather not hit it to hiin."
Reeves and Tony Roush won heats.
In his five-plus innings of work
Morris gave up four runs, two of
This week Skyline will host them unearned, and eight hits.
Bicycle race s- for the kids alon g
" I know I'm on a great team "
with a complete regular program, Morris said. " We're in first plade.
then nex t week, Augu st 27 th e That's the end of the story right
STARS Super Late Models come there. We're doing our best. They
to town.
have to come and get us."
night and day. I can't emphasize
that enough. The bottom line is, the
offense got runs early."
Toronto won its fourth straight
game and moved a full game ahead
of New York in the AL East, jumping on Cleveland for five runs in
the first and anotl1er one in the second.
lao.
Indians starter Tom Kramer (53) lasted just four batters, walking
three and giving up a honie run 10
the other. Of the 14 pitches he
threw, two were strikes. ·
Kramer started the game by
walking Rickey Henderson on four
pilches .and Devon White ·on five,
prompting a visit from pitching
coach Rick Adair.
Roberto Alomar was smart

.

Prescription Shop
992-6669
253 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

~------------~

The 1993 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

~

Wednesday, August 18--Klddle Day unUl2:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractnr Pull- Show Arena
4:30 p.m.-Uttle Miss and Mister Contest- Hillside Slage
5:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Beef Showmanship followed by Junior Fair Steer
Show-Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Elvis Impersonator
7:00 p.m.-Open Class Horse Show
7:00 p.m.-Hill Stage-Born Again Believers
8:00 p.m.-Horse Pull
9:00 p.m.-Elvis Impersonator
9:00 p.m.-Hill Slage-Midnight Cloggcrs
Thursday, Augusll9
9:00 a.m.-Junior Fair Dairy Goat Show-Show Arena
!0:00 a.m.-Junior Fair Dairy Show-Show Arena
t t :30 a.m.-Hillside Stage-Homemaking Pie and Country Fair
12:30 p.m.-Harness Racing
1:00 p.m.-Open Class Dairy Show-Show Arena
1:00 p.m.-Flower Show Judging
3:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage-Chester United Metbodisl Youth Choir
4:00 p.m.- Kiddie Tractnr Pull-Show Arena
4:00 p.m.-Hillside Siage-Talent Show
6:00 p.m.-HUtside SJage-Kiddie Games
7:00 p.m.'-Hillside S1age- Federal Valley Cloggers
8:00 p.m.-Auto Thrill Show ·
7:00 p.m.-Guys &amp; Gals Sheep Lead Competition-Show Arena
9:00 p.m.- Hill Stage-Idle Tymes

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

VVedne8da~August18,1993

By The . Bend

Win I trip Far 2 'h
tbiChiii'IISIOD

Stamwlllll B11atta 0.11
A llnrbaat7rlp Ia
law Orleans.

•,

The Daily Sentinel
VVednesday, August 18, 1993
Page-7

;II

Flower show features·300 entries; awards presented

See store for details.

--······················
FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

.

Name ______________________

I I

I .I · .

·

Address----------

•GREEN BEANS
•CORN •PEAS
•SHELUE BEANS

Phone~~~~~~~~~~
··············----------

STOCKELY'S

.MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE DIET OR

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PEPSI COLA

VEGETABLES

I

I

I
I
I

jj

JUNIOR ROSETTE WINNERS • Josh
Bolin, Rutland, front, took the honorable mention rosette for his specimens entered in the fair
flower show, Zach Davis was the reserve best of

I
I

I
I
I
I

2 PACK
'12 OZ. CANS

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CANS

································-·

Folg~f?s

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.•.

,,

... ......
'

'

BEST OF SHOW ··Sheila Curtis of tbe Sbade Valley Council
of Floral Arts, took the best of show award in the first show at the
Meigs County Fair with her creative mass arrangement in the
class "Grandstand Attraction". Her arrangement featured
hydrangias, phlox, castor beans, and corn tussles with Ohio riverbank root.

'

·,

oz..

Eoffee

..

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

1

LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

I

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..39
CAN

~

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW • Castor oil bean and caladium
leaves were featured in Betty Dean's reserve best of !show award
winner at Monday's Meigs County Fair flower show. It was
entered in the category "Rainy Day".
I

Huck engagement announced
Mr. and Mrs. Max R. Huck of · Specialty and is planning to ·leave

.Banquet

TYSON HOLLY FARMS

NATURE, ART AND INDUSTRY ROSETTE WINNER.
Alice Thompson, longtime member of the Winding Trail Garden
Club, took Ibis special award for her exhibit in artistic arrangements at the Meigs County Fair Flower Sbow. Entered In tbe
"Antique Tractor Class", Thompson used peach glads and scour- ·
ing rush with her welded construction.

rozen 8·11
oz.
Dinners

Pick of
,.the Chix

LB.

Turkey
Breast
FRESH GLAZED

DONUTS

$199

4·10

lB.
AVG.
.. ·.

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TENDERBEST

4 ROLL

Tissue ·

SLICED BACON

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PKG.

VELVET SUGAR FREE

VELVET

ICE CREAM

SUPER SAVER POPS

Y2
GAL

FRESH DELl

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12 oz.
PKG.

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$349

18 CT.
PKG.

$199

CHIPPED

Chopped
Ham
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Reserve the Right to Umlt quantities • Prices Effective Thru Sal Aug. 21, 1993 ·USDA Food Stampa and WIC Coupon• Accepted· Not Responalble for Typographical or Pictorial E"ors.

'

Lowell announce the engagement
of their daughter, Tracy Nell, to
J~remy Joe Lawrence, son of Jill
Ltpscomb of Pomeroy and Melvin
LawrenceofPortland.
The bride elect is a 1990 graduate of Fort Frye High School. She
ts currentlv emoloved at Ma&lt;met.ir. .

for the United States Air Force in
1994.
Tbe groom is a 1990 graduate of
Eastern High School and is serving
with HQ BTRY, third BN, lOth
Marines at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Wedding plans are incomplete
at thi~ timP..

Farm crop results released

FRESH FROZEN

~~-i-

show in arrangements, and Lisa Stethem, the
best of' show in arrangments and the junior horticulture sweepstakes award.

I
I
I

I

Limit 4 With
$10 or More
Additional
Purchas1e.

l

I

Joyce Sauters of Pomeroy was
the top blue ribbon winner in the
horticulture and farm crops competition at the !30th Meigs County
Farr.
.
Exhibiting in numerous categories she won 30 blue ribbons for
her displays of com, potatoes, vegetables, and fruits.
Receiving blue ribbons and the
categories in which they won were
the following exhibitors:
Grains
Six ears of yellow com, Dale
Kautz, Pomeroy; six ears of white
com, Alice Thompson, Pomeroy;
six ears of white sweet com, Fred
B. Smith, Pomeroy; six ears of hicolor sweet com, Indian com, yellow popcorn, and other popcorn,
Joyce Sauters, Pomeroy; red pop·
com, Alice Thompson; peck wheat,
Ben Holter, Pomeroy; peck spring
oats, David King, Pomeroy.
Potatoes
Cobblers, David King; ttiwnph,
seneca beauty. Bermudas, Idaho
bakers and other varieties, all blues
to Joyce Sauters; kennebecs, Adam
Chevalier, Pomeroy; yams, Fred B.
Smith; lasoda, David King; Nancy
Hall sweet potatoes, Blair Windon,
Pomeroy; yams, Fred B. Smith;
other variety, sweet potatoes, Lenora Leifheit, Pomeroy.
Vegetables
Green cabbage, Rose M. Barrows, Pomeroy; red cabbage, Lenora Leifheit: Jed tomatoes, Lenora
Leifheit; yellow tomatoes, Kim
Cowdery, Long Bottom; pear red
tomatoes, Jim King; pear yellow
tomatoes, Maxine Dyer, Bidwell;
cherry tomatoes, Jim King, Long
Bottom; bi-color tomatoes, Cyndi
King, Pomeroy; green pod pole
beans, Jim King; yard long pole
beans, Mary King, Long Bouom;
yellow pod pole beans, Rose M.
Barrows; green pod bush beans,
Roy Holter, Pomeroy; yellow pod
bush beans, Joyce Sauters; lima
beans, Patricia Cook, Pomeroy;
white onions,-Lenora Leifheit; yellow onions Lenora Leifheit; hot
peppers, Lenora Leifheit.

Peppers, Larry Cowdery, Long
Bottom; beets, Lenora Leifheit;
carrots, Cody R. Dill, Long Bottom; green cucumbers, Patty Dyer,
Bidwell; pickles, Opal Dyer, Bidwell; okra, Joyce Saunters; field
pumpkin, Cody R. Dill, Long Bottom; pie pumpkin, Ross Holter,
Pomeroy; summer squash, Joyce
Sauters; crooked neck squash,
Peggy Crane, Middleport; acorn
squash, Mary King, Long Bottom;
butternut squash, Rose M. Barrows
Gourds
Dipper Gourd, Joyce Sautcrs;
ornamental gourd s, Lenora
Leifheit.
Melons
Charleston Gray and another
variety, Blair Winf!on .

""'·

&lt;

United Kingdom
~"

Gold Rule SS meets

The Golden Rule Sunday class joined the young chiidren and
School Class of Middleport Frrst sang children's songs. June Kloes
Baptist Church met recently with led the gro~p in a lime of devotion
several members attending. The and Randall Davis concluded the
group traveled to Rocky Fork Lake services with prayer.
near Hillsboro for an outing with
The class then returned to
Hanning and June Kloes where Kloes' cottage on the lake for a
they had sack lunches and other weiner roast followed with homerefreshments.
made ice cream. Attending were
The group then had a lengthy Lawrence Eblin, Donna Grinstead,
boat ride on Rocky Fork Lake Ra~dall and Carolyn Davis, John
aboard the Kloes' boat One high- Retbel, Jean Thomas, Dale and
light of the afternoon was going to Marjorie Walburn, and Manning
the outdoor chapel next to the and June Kloes.
campground. A group of young
The next class meeting will be
children were at the chapel practic- held at the Ambrose home with Sis
ing for a play which they were giv· VanMatre as co-hostess.
ing Sunday. The Sunday school

'

...·J'~1.. 1&lt;~~~ ·

-*i"'"' ·,

·••

-·

40% OFF
HANG TEN

*'&lt;·

1.9

@.t f)"""' .
h'A'·

··.· .

2.4

· sriiZJi

2.6
188
~~'10
'
61

Indonesia
llf4ldco ,.,
;i. ' .

Turkey

ltlrlltt

'

i''.J.~~o~··.

Apples
Stayman winesap, Jim King:
Jonathan, Rome Beauty, Red Delicious, Golden Delicious, Grimes
Golden, Joyce Sauters; other vari:
cty, Blair Windon.

.,.

.

VIetnam

. Philippines
Egypt
Iran
Nigeria
Pakistan

72

3.0
';;_~ 3.4~.
3.6
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4.0

65

4.1

58
63

4.6
6.6
6.6
6.7

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Btl

lOf«·•

95

122

~~I

*'i:' ' --·-Ji.-~

30%oFF 25%0FF

-,

20

23
23

MEN'S AND
LADIES

SHORTS

Other Fruits
Prune plum, Samson plum,
green gage plum, red plum, all
'
blues to Joyce Sauters; Concord Given Italy's low fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman, it~ population would
3,466 years to double. Iran, however, has a fertility rate of 6.6 children
and Niagara grapes, Roy Holter; take
per
woman,
and its population will double in only 20 years.
Keifer pear, Patty Dyer; Bartlet .
'
pear, sugar pear, yellow peaches,
Joyce Sauters.
Largest Specimens
Potato, Maxine Dyer, Bidwell;
pumpkin, Joyce Sautcrs: watermcl·
on, Fred B. Smith; tomato, Larry
Cowdery, Long . Bottom; beet,
Lenora Leifheit; apple, Joyce
Sauters; cucumber, Lenora
Leifheit; longest cucumber. Joyce
Sauters; turnip, Roy Holter; squash,
Pat Bishop, Rutland; cantaloupe,
Blair Windon; ear of corn, Larry
Cowdery, Long Bottom; cabbage,
Alice Thompson; largest sweet
potato, Lenora Leifheit; longest
bean, Joyce Sauters.
·Best display of garden prpduce,
Pamela Hamm, Cool ville.
Freak vegetable, Hoben Eason,
Pomeroy.

Horticulture Division
Alice Thompson took blue ribbons for decorative extra lar~e
dahlia, decorative medium dahha,
and miniature dahlia.
Addalou Lewis took blue ribbons for decorative large dahlia
and ball dahlia.
Betty Dean took frrsts for cactus
dahlia, gladiolas, flowered dahlia
zinnia, large orange marigold, large
yellow marigold, and crested
celosia.
Peggy Crane took a blue for
small zinnias.
Pauline Atkins, Rutland, took a
frrst for plumed celosia.
Gladys Cummings, Pomeroy,
took a first for potted Succulent
Mary King, Long Bottom was
the first place winner in potted
foliage plant.
Faith Varney, Portland, Won a
blue for potted flowering plant.
Junior exhibitors, Josh Bolin,
took a blue for a large dahlia type
zinnia, and Lisa Stethem, Pomeroy
for a marigold and also for some
roadside material she e~hibited .
Lisa Stethem was the horticulture
sweepstakes award winner, with
Josh Bolin taking a junior honor·
able mention for hi s specimen
exhibit.

SlOP ,.liS WEEKEND
AND SAVE 1,. DIN'S

iluula
'

Sentinel News Staff
Rosettes for outstanding
arrangements in a Meigs County
Fair flower show that featured over
300 entties went to three longtime
Meigs County Garden Club members.
Taking the best of show awards
in the show were Shelia Curtis,
best of show in arrangements,
Alice Thompson, the nature, art
and industry award. and Betty
Dean, reserve best of show. Mrs.
Dean also won the horticulture
sweepstakes award.
"'On the Midway" was the
theme of the show co-chaired this
year by Karen Werry and Addalou
Lewis. While exhibits are way
down. this year, probably due to the
dry weather, the overall ~uality of
the show is fine and includes
numerous arrangements and specimens for the enjoyment of fairgoers.
A second Oower show using the
same theme will be staged Thursday afternoon in the senior fair
building.
Mary Ellen Miller, an accredited judge of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, judged the show
awarding blue ribbons in the various classes to the following

exhibitors:
Artistic Arrangements
"'Popcorn Stand" , featuring
white: Melanie Stethem, Pomeroy. .
"'Antique Tractor Display ~'.
abstract using some metal: Shelia
Curtis, Pomeroy.
"'Couon Candy", shades of pink:
Melanie Stethem, Pomeroy.
"'Grange Booth", using grain :
Shclia Curtis.
"'Grandstand Attraction", creative mass: Shelia Curtis.
"'Secretary' s Office", arrangement in a basket: Donia Rae Cotton, Middieport.
"'Domestic Arts". using kitchen
item for container: Evelyn Hollon,
Racine.
"'Rainy Day", underwater
design: Betty Dean, Pomeroy.
Junior Division
"'Children's Attraction" small
de·sign : Lisa Stethem, Pomeroy,
also best of show in junior division.
"'Junior Parade", animal figurine
as accessory : Zach Davis,
Pomeroy. also reserve best of show
in junior division.

20% OFF

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY.VALLEY
This Wee•'• SpeeiiJI:

LADIES
SUNSET BLUE
AND
CHIC JEANS

MEN'S AND LADIES

WESTERN BOOTS
'

I

lOTS OF SUMMER ITEMS\ON SALE
FALL FASHIONS NOT INCLUDED''IN SALE

•~-Sirloin

Steak Sandwich ~-

$1e79
WITH FRIES..... $2.49
MON.-SUN. 10:00 AM-10:00 PM • 992•2556

OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 A.M.·5 P.M.
290 North
Second,
Middleport

a~e•
[GJ

992·3684

�Pomeroy-Middle~p~o~rt~,~O~h~lo~===============~T~h~e~D~a~l~ly~~~~~~!;

VVednesda~August18,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•The Area's Number I
Marl~etplace

BEftER Quality!
BEftER Service!
liftER Selection!

RATES

BEnER
TOTAL
VALUE!

We Redeem Federol Food S!anps
Ouanhty Rishh R""""ed

Call 992-2156

Home A Big Bear Hug

CHAD GRIFFITH

• Ad• oull:tde the co unty your ad runt mwt be prepaid
• Recetve ducoun t for adt paid m advance .
• Frt:e Arb Giveaway and Found ad. under 15 wordt will be
run 3 daya at no charge
• Price of ad for a U capital letter.&amp; ie doub le price o£ ad cost
• 7 pomt line type only u1ed
• Sentinel 11 not re.pon~ihle for errora after ftnl day (cbetk
for error• fu-11 da y ad r un.1 10 p&amp;per) Ca ll before 2:00p .m
day after publica tion lo make corr ec llon
• Ada that must be paid tn advance are :
Card of T hank.&amp;
Happ y Ada
In Memoriam
Yard Salea
• A cluaifted advertU ement placed m the The Daily Sentinel
(uce pt Cl.a.!lllfied DL!!play, Bua1neu Card or Legal
Nollcce) will also oppear in the Point Pleoeant Regilter and
the Gallipoha Daily Tribune, reac hing over 18,000 homea

Prices lffective Thru Saturday, Aug. 21, 1993

Griffith reports
for basic training

Pork Loin Sirloin

Chad E. Griffith, Tuppers
Plains, recent! y reported to the
t,Jnited States Army Reserve for
eight weeks of basic training. He
will either stay at Fon Jackson or at
another port in the United States
for Advanced Individual Training
(AIT) in the specialties for which
he is enlisted.
Mr. Griffith is a graduate of
Eastern High School and the grandson of Kenneth and Merle Griffith.
He is planning 10 attend The University of Rio Grande after graduating from basic training.

8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-l2
CLOSED SUNDAY

FRI.

POLICIES

Boneless

Pork
lb. Cho· s
18 Pc.

Fresh
lb. ChickenD

STIHL CHAIN SAW
CARVING

California

'

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - American Red
Cross Bloodmobile will be at the
Meigs Senior Citizen Multipurpose
Bmlding on Wednesday from 15:30 p.m.

THURSDAY
CLIFfON, W.VA. - Evangelist
Ray Laudermilt, spealcer, Thursday
at Clifton Tabernacle Church at 7
p.m. Pas10r M.E. McDaniel invites
the public.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA and AIAnon will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m . at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Call 992-5763 for
information.
POMEROY - Revival at Believers Fellowship Ministry (formerly
Elberfeld's Warehouse), Mechanic
Street, will be Thursday through
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
Jeff Cotterill, evangelist. Special
singing nightly. Rev. Margaret
Robinson invites the public. Call
992-2463 for infonnation.
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
Local Board of Education .will
meet Thursday at 6 p.m. at the high
school to discuss personel matters.
FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will hold a dance Friday from 811 :3 0 p.m. with music by the
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Public
invited.
SATURDAY
WILKESVILLE
The
Wilkesv ille United Methodist
Church will have a chicken and
noodle ice cream supper Saturday
from 4-7 p.m. Public invited.

Cantalou e

/'

Regular or Light

Imperial Margarine

64oa.99
Ctn.

I'

World Classics Cola
24 Pack
12 oa. Cans

Michelina's Entrees
m
8·1 0 oa.
Box
\..

7'1

OHIO

'

Pkg.

I'

.)

sa~

Big Bear

"~

Wiener or Sandwich Buns

PROUD ..J \..

.r

Your Choice of Flavors

Velvet Supreme Ice Cream

~t49

Half
Gallon

169 oftio
PROUD

during regular buaineaa

773-~luo n

882-New Hnen
895-l..etarl

937-BuiTalo

5 _ _H_a.:_p;_py:__A_d_s_ _
_

Cindy Lynn
Soulsby
Joseph Richard
Fields Jr.
August 18, 1990

Cindy,
Happy 3rd
Anniversary

..

~·

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
MIDDLEPORT· Shady Cove Road- 1 1/4 acres ol ground
with a 2 bedroom mobile home, thatlooka good inside.
Some furniture stays. Property goes to Leading Creek,
ONLY S12,000
so you can fish later thio year, maybe.
have the building for you. It haa 3600 square feet of area,

partial basemen~ plus a 6"x8' walk in cooler.
PRICED TO SELL AT ONLY 27,000

Revision i Syracuse--Racine

Regional SD District Board

HARRISONVILLE- A very well maintained mobile home.

Card of Thanks

and cornea with an equipped kitchen.
CAN BE YOURS FOR ONLY $25,500

"Mathematics is the
alphabet with which
God has written the
Universe."- Ga/ileo
By Topic
By Appointment
949-2814
712211 mo. pd.
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additions
-Guner Work
-Eioclrical and Plumbing
-Roofing
· Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
9-10.92-trn

$ .42
$ .60
5.05/day

CLASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FAST!

2- In Me mor y
3-- Annou ncemenll
4-- Gtveaway
5- Happy Ado
6- lo1t and Found
7- Lost and Found
8-- Pubhc Sale &amp;
Au chon
9- Wanted to Buy

11- Help Wanted
12- SJtualiONI Wanted
l l - 1n1Uraoce
14- Buainca1 Trs.tntfl!
lS- School• &amp; Inatruction
16-- Radto, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mucellaneoua
18--- Wa n ted To Do

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
t 1124192/lfn

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
IIEW &amp; USED PAllS FOI
lLL lUlU I •otEU

992·7013or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE
1·800·84..0070
DARWIN,

OHIO
713119tntn

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

Parts and Service
Mowers - Chain Saws

992-3470
OWNER: JeH W!chnham
5/10193

~~

Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy

Makeover

WALKER

,

AllEY

Weedealers

Authorized: Brlgga &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96· M-F 9-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday

949·2104

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

38904 Leading
Creek Road
Middleport, Ohio

992-5082
Sandy Henderson

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7144

992-3647

992·3838

4/29/93!..

992-7878
7rl1 mo .

•DOZERS
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON

8f2/93

~ii

EAGLE LANES
(f ormer Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOUR S"
Sun.·Thu r 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDN ESDAY

B&amp;G
Trucking
We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

EXCAVATING

614-698-3290

1614)
667·6628

or

614-698-6500
mmn

4-19-93-Jin

GO INTO BUSINESS. With a linle know how and a lot of
iniative you can become an Entrpreneur (Buainaaa
Owner). Own a Septic Tank Service that has been in
businell lor 29 years. Comea with a 1978 Ford F600 with
35,200 actual milea that has new radials, now paint job, 2
yr. old pump, new hoaea and 3 porta johns. Servea

Marathon Riverside
Food Mart
Dairy Queen
Video Touch
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
Crow' a KFC
Powell's Super Valu
Big Bend Foodland
Twin City Machine

MINERSVILLE- One ttory home with 2 bedrooms, 1 112
baths, FANG furnace, TPC water, situated on approx:.
1.16 acres. Also included is a small older home at the
oamelocation. All lor $23,000.

aeveral counties. $65,000

Howard

L Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

POMEROY- Old Union Ave. - Two big Iota with a little
over 1/3 aero.
tho end of tho road aito a 1983 Clayton
double wide
3
2 bathe, family room,

.... _.. -~--- h ' l ,,.
' ·r
_......_..-. ., . . 7''.
,7

'

PDK
Blue Construction
Streak Cab Co. ·• ·•
The Daily Sentinel
Downing Childs
Mullen Musser Inc.

JJ~i•$i3·:i~~===:s~=t::l:.::=
:

~P.~I~E;A~i:~~~:.~:~.~.~::::::.: : : :.::::::.: :::~:. .,

~

., ..

i

. .. ............ 992·5692
............................................... 992-3056
STEWART ............................................. 992-6365
SANDY BUTCHER ................................................. 992-5371
JERRY SPRADLING .................................... (304) 882-3498

OFFICE ...................................................................992·2886

INTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

614·985·4180

3-16-93-tfn
MIDDLEPORT- S. Third Ave.- You need to oee thio one. A
beautiful homo otarting with 3 bedrooma, a large dining
room, 2 nice lireplacea, an open staircase, partial
basemen~ all wrapped In low maintenance vinyl siding
and priced iuot right ONLY $45,000

LINDA'S
PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do it
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

8112193/1 mo. pd

9/2Bf921 n

Inside, Outside , Top to
Bottom

PH. 742·2217
6-3&lt;H mo pd

1-'\H\1 ~ll'l'lll ·. ~
.~ 1.1\ 1·.~ 1'0( 1'
1- Fum Equipment
Wanted lo Buy
Ltvettock
Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; F ertillzer

..

Til

111-:NT\I.S

1\ ~ l'tlBT

ITIO\

Auto1 for Sale

41- Houaea for Renl
42- Mobile Home• for Rent
43-- farm• for Rent
44.---- Apart ment for Rent
4 5- F urn Ubod Roo ma
46- Space for Rent
47- WaoLed to Rent
43- Equ1pment for Rent
49--- For Leue

\lEI\&lt;: II\ 'WISE
51- Houaehold Gooda
52- Sporting Good.
53- Anliquea
54-- Mile. Merchandile
55- Buildirl{!: Suppli ea

72- Tru cka fo r Sa le
73-- Varu &amp; 4 WD't
74- M o lorcyclt~.l
75-- Boa ta &amp; Motora for Sale
76-- Auto Parte &amp; Acc&lt;uooorie•l
77- Auto Repatr
78-- Camping Equipment

~EI{\ IU~
Home lmporvemenLI
Plwnb ine &amp; Heatin1
Excava ting
Rof.\geratioo~
Gener al Hauling
Mobile Home Repair
Uphola tery

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 5114193111n

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Sidin~
New Garages • Replacement Wmdows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801. 949·2860
or 985·3839
(No Sundoy Colis)
2/12/92/tfn

POOR BOY TIRES
ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
205-75R15" Tiger Paw XTM AWL
205-75R14" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
215-7515" Firestone OWL
235-75Rt5" Fierslone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING"EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS" 6/28193

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773-5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

GENERAL ·Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
HAULING Limestone
Dirt
Gravel

LEATHER REPAIR

and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720

992-7878

985-3406

7rl/1 mo.
3/B/Hn

COLLINS

ENTERPRISES
•Pai nting SeJVices
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Alum1num Sid1ng
•Power Washing
fREE ESTIMATES

50734 Bigley Ridge Rd.
long Bottom, Oh. 45743

985·4181
8-4-93-tfn

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
Rales
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenaod and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

12-5-tfn

CARPENTER
WORK ·
Romodohng and Repair
Painting, Expenenced
Free Est1mates
61 4·446-8568 ~~.:.

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP WITH
CLASSIFIED ADS

3-4-93- 1 mo.

•New Homes

FREE ESTIMATES
Low Cost

\T 1-:

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RIVER VALLEY
CONTRACTORS
All work guaranteed.

I.~T

MU1ical lnllrumenLI
Fruitl &amp; Vesetabte.
For Sale or Trade

4126/tln

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLEO
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

Porches,
Patios,
Sidevvalks

1\1-. \I.

57-

1-lusillt•ss Servict•s

Call Today for
Your .f.ue

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

21- Bu•illeu Opportunity
22- Money to IAan
23-- Profe.1ional Senku

31- Home~ for Sale
32- Mobile Ho rnet for Sale
charged for each day as separate ads
3l-- Farm• for Sa le
Business Card ......$17.00/ inch per momth
34--- Bwinca. Bu ilding~
Bulletin Board.....$6.00/inch per day
35- Lou &amp; Acreage
1------:::::=-.,..-,:=-:::===:c-::::,..---~ 36- Real Etla te Wanted

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
r!~~.tping

56- Petl for Sale

Fl\\\1 . 1\1.

A 1984 three bedroom Naahua home. Sits on a 1.42 acrea

Pomeroy
Youth
League would like
to say Thanks to the
following sponsors
for the 93 season .

1

- ~

Looking to start your own business in CHESTER? We

DRAFT NPDES Permit
Renewal - SubJect to

~~:'.atd'a • . .

PRIVATE
MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCTION

•BACKHOE

for requirements.

Pool People

l

a

Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box 1049,
Columbus, OH, 43266-Q149
PH. (614) 644-2115. Consult
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
Chaps. 3745-47 and 3746·5

1

Absorbent

1 Roll

unless

shall be sent to: Hearing

2D•••!1

\..

fln.al

actions, all communications

Gala Paper Towels

399

I' Choice of Variety International ""'

Fresh Eggs

Food Club Orange Juice

Lb.
Qtrs.
Regular, Diet, CaHeine Free Diet

Foocl Club Medium

of Trustees, P.O. Box 201,
Racine, OH; Public Notice
Date 08-16·93, Receiving
Waters: Ohio River, Facility
Description: Regional
Feclllty,
Permit
No
OPQ00003"DD.
(,8:~.)
1 .!!18:.c;.!.1T~C:...,__ _ __
_ ___:P...:u=b:.::ll.:.c..:.N=O~Il;,;;c.:,e_ _
PUBUC NOTICE
Th
1
F
e annua report orm
990PF for the Kibble
Foundation, Bernard v.
Fultz, Trustee, ia available

Info r mation .
Unless
otherwise provided In
notices of
particular

2 Druoutlckl, 2 fhlgho

From Concentrate

PUBUC NOTICE
The following w8re
received /prepared by the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency (OEPA)
last week. Effective dates of
final actions and Issuance
dates ol Proposed Actions
and of Draft Acllona are
alated. Final actions may be
appealed, In writing, within
30 days ol the date ol this
notice, to the Environmental
Board of Review, Rm . 300,
236 E. Town Sl., Columbus,
OH, 43215. Notice of any
appeal shall be llled with

USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30.92-Hn

lHI\EH REAIJ'Y

82 lre•sh,
Pieces
2 Wlftgl,

r

•LIGHT HAULING

l)tHTIE

•
d
FrI e
•-;,:te Chicken

l•ch Slho

675-Pt. Ple81anl
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove

667-Coot.itl e

992-2269

'

Big Bear's Famous

w..,,...

388-Vi.nl o n

245-Ri.o Grande
256--Gu yan Dill.
643-Arahia Diet.
379-Walnul

wrlllen adjudication hearing hours lor a period ol ISO
request Is submitted within day a subsequent
to
30 days of the issuance publication of thie notice.
Love, ]oe
date; or the director (8) 13 16 17 18 19 20 23
revises / withdraws the 7tc '
'
'
' '
'
proposed action . Any
person
may
submit
commenlo and/or a meeting - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - regarding any draft action
Real Estate General
within 30 days ol the date, _ _ _ _ _..:..:.,::.::;...=.:.=:.....:..~-----Indicated . " ACTION", as
used above does not
Include receipt ol a verified
•
•
I
0
complaint. If significant
'
public Interest exists, a
public meeting may be held.
As to any action Including
receipt
of
verified
complalnls, any person may
obtain notice ol further
actions, and additional

Hot! and Ready To Serve

American
Sin les

Pom eroy
985-Chelter
843-Portland
247-l..elart r.u.
949-Radne
742-Rutland

Publlc Notice

become

·Eastern
·lb. Peaiches
~-

367-Cheahire

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

for public inspection at
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,
the director within 30 days. 111 112 W. Second Street,
Proposed actions will Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

Sweet and Juicy
Fresh

Borden Cheese Food

992-M;ddtepo.ol

BILL SLACK

Califo ia

1 6 Slices • 1 2 oz. Pkg.

446-Gallipolio

•FIREVVOOD

Enioy These
Flavorful Melons

Community
Calendar

Over 15 Words
$ .20
$ .30

4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
51.30/day
$

Gollia Coun ty Meigs County Maeon Co., WV
Areu Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

If enough interest is shown,
Lme Dance Instruction will be
given this fall in Pomeroy,
Ohio. For more information
call (614) 992-5858.

Honeydew
ea. Melons :;:r

ea.

Rate

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days w11l be

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

QUALITY WORK

AUGUST 19th
Meigs County Fair
Mike
i
Carver
I LUrrlDer

Rich In Color &amp; Taste

Chris Neel, son of Margaret and
Gary Neel, and 1993 Meigs High
School graduate, has been accepted
at the Ohio University school of
Music where he will major in
music education.
Chris has been a member of the
Meigs High School marching and
concert band for four years and was
selected for All County Band and
the District 17 Honor band for two
years. He was also selected as a
member in the Kent State "All Star
Band" and the Eastern Kentucky
University "honor Band". He participated in the Solo and Ensemble
Festival at Ohio University where
he received a superior rating for his
class A, tenor saxophone solo.
Chris was awarded the John
Philip Sousa aw ard at the 1993
Meigs High School Band Banquet
He recently partici pated with the
Ohio University Communiversity
Band and is currently a member of
the B1g Bend Community band.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I 00 p.m. Saturday
I 00 p m' Monday
I 00 p.m Tuesday
UXJ p m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I 00 p m. Fnday

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

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

6 Drumstlct.,
6 Thighs,
6 Wing•

Neel accepted at
Ohio University

15
15
15
15
15

lltmsiness Services

Country Pride • Combo

CHRISNEEL

Words

1
3
6
10
Monthly

To place an ad
MoN. thru

Days

eG&lt;1rages
-complete

iUIM*I
RICHARD ROBERTS

"Ad Specialties"
622 Jay Drive, Gallipolia, Oh.
446·7612
FaxNolce 446·7612
8-4~fn

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
7122193

We have a large •lock of aeveral name brand tire• and
il we don't have, we e~~n get it
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL:
304-n:l-5533
2nd Locodon call Lon N..l
Henderoon, W. Vo. 304-675-3331
Maatercard and VISA occopted.
8-6-tln

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

�3

VVednesda~August18, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

44

Announce ments

31 Homes for Sale

Announcements

Hou" For Sale: Land Contrtct,
$2,000 Down Located a .. w..n .2bdrm. apartment, Racine arwa,
Contorvlllo And Ook Hill, On tor lnformallon cali814-JII2-34'11.

Anr penon whhout pormlulon
t!Hpaulng on tho propo~r ol
Nl1ino on Whhoo Hill Rd. In Rut-

ApanmenJ
for Rent

GIRLS! II UVEIII 24 HRS IDAY III
TALK ONE ON ONE! HQ0-28826i2 Ext. 6004 SUMlin. ll"ol
602-li31-o6t5.

prlv•ey fence, 814-992-346.5 atter 4pm, anytime WHkenda.

land will bti proeecut.cl.

bock, loncod In r•nl with

Be 18 Yra. Procall Company,
Myrtle BNch A,..: Mot•l On

Beach, t &amp; 2 Am"- EH.' Cloon
Roomo, HBO. o;&gt;75 1$475
Waoklr. Coli 803-238-5812.

32 Mobile Homes

REDUCE; Bum off fit whl .. you
1111p. Tiki OPAL, IVIIII~I at
Fruth Pharm.~cy.

$185.64 per month, naw 14' wide
mobile home, includ11 delivery,
complete ut-up, skirting,
•nd 6 months lot rent, 1

"a•&amp;:

137-lie25.
74 Sch"ltz, 12165, 3 bodroom

Whhl Mill Age 23 Looilng For
Single White Female Pen p~~ l

Age: 17 112 · 25 , Prtfw Nonsmoker &amp; AlcohOl Fr.. , S.nd
Response To: P.O. Box 55, Gaf-

centrlll air, ... trtgeralor ancl
etov•, washer, dryer, undtrpln.
nlng, good condition, 614-94g..

llpollt, OH 45631.

4

:ma.

Giveaway

"I st ill have nig htmares of mv Mom

12'115' 2 Room Building To TNr

throwing out my whole inventory!"

Downp Slat•
For Root,
Materials
fnclud ing
StN
114-3&amp;&amp;-i7'68.

18 c:ubk toot, upright trMter,
st ill running, r\Mds wori... 3Q4..

e7$-2284.
2 BNgle pups and , yr okt
tenu~

Baag)e_ 304-SSIS-3972.

""===========r==========:I

9

wanted to Buy

Wanted .tanding llmbtlr, tap
prie.a p.e lcl, frN •ltimates,
!lensed &amp; ewt ltt.d logging,

3()4-II!IS-3055 .. 895-3838.

2 rabDi1s, 614~46-2052 .

• t.malt klt1tna, 1 purw bl.ck
mate ut . 304-895-3017 or 895-J&lt;nl.

6 kitttns, all blu...yld,

whho

long-1\alr.d, to

50m1

good

homa. ~~7~3n7.
Clot h~ Drytr, Bottle Gas, 614-

1m

Employment Services

11

Help Wanled

11

Help Wanted

NMC!od

bobJshtor,

Scho&lt;M Olatric1, &amp;14

Groon

ue 6887.

17 Miscellaneous
Sldo br olde rolrlg., Admlrol

$150. T.V. antenna and towar

$125 . 814-367-0240.

18

Wanted to Do

~~~~~~~~~~
AVON! All ar~aa . NINd axtra

Will do babyetttlng, my home,

446-11861.

money or wanl 1 ~;arNr, 11ther Chester trN, full time, part
tlma, after tchool, 111 agM, 614wa~all Marilyn. 3Q4..882 -2645

FrM to good home only, klttana

.. 1-1100-1192-11356.

985-4282, Mary.

AVON 1 All Areas 1 Sl'1ir1ty
•--3"'~
.,_ ......
..,-rs,
~,~1-•.

Babyatnlng In
My Home,
Cheshire Area, 814-367-7848,

Cardll'llll FraJght C.rrlers~ . T. R .

Cu11a...rooflng, aiding, aaphah

plus cat tood, will deliver within
reasonable dlstancl . 304-6755'110.
One Year Old Black Miaed
Breed , DoQ To Giveaway To
Good Country Home, Good Wlth

Driv.,. wanted for a n.w ter·
min1i In Hurricane, WY, mult

Kids, 614-388·!il768.

lng 1 van tralltr, good ltartlng
pty, late model equipment , Blue
Crop Blue Shltld, Inc., .top off

Puppies, mark.cl Hkt German

Shapard, black &amp; tan. 304-8£123495 mornings.

Two Mini-Lop Bucks, Approx. 4
t.tonths Old, First Year 4-H Rabbit&amp;, lnclud" HUtch, 614-4468945.

6

Lost &amp; Found

t'IIVI 1yr. O.T.R. experience pull•

pay, tty over pay, breakdown
pay, comptny paid ptnslon, 401
k. ptan, home most wealc..,de.

Col! Bord Adklno, 600-92&amp;-6222.

Earn Fuii-Tima Pay For Ptrt·
Time Work AI A ChrlltMII
Around
Thl
World.
Demonstralor. Free tSOO Kit No

Collecting Or Delivering, Also

Found: Irish Setter, 614-446-7908
Call Attar 4 P.M.

Booking Portloo, Coli 614-2455039.

Fcund: Ugh! Brown Male, Ooa,
Looks LUte Part Pit Bull, No Cellar, Vicinity: Ingalls Road, 614446..(1420.

Gallla -Meigs Head Start Has
Immediate "Openings For 81.11
Drivers And Sut)stlute Bus
Driver's , Beginning Rate Of Pay

Lost, Brown/multi-color wallet In
Big Bear lot, Thur1. Raward.

614-441-0749.

.·

7

Yard Sale

Is $5.50.

~ppllcants

Whh Com-

mercii! Driver's License Preferred. Applications can Bs Picked
Up At Woodland C.nte,., Inc.
For Additional Information, Call

614-446-66111, 8:00 - 4;00, lion-

day ~ Friday. Gallla -Meigs Head
Start, A Division Of Woodland
Centar, Is An AA JEEO Employer.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Gall Ia- Meigs Head Start Has An
Immediate Opening In Gallia
Count~ For A Family Servlcn
19th, 20th, 21st. 4867 State Aide. Applicants Must Penna
Route 650, Rodney PUce, Bid- An Associate O.gr• In Social
Wortl: /Raiated Field And Hold A
well, Everything Cheap!
Valid Drivers LlcenM. The
2196 Statt Route 588, August Beginning Rals Of Pa;i Ia $6.25
20th -21 st, 9-5, Leu Of ltemsl
/Hr. For Additional Information,
Call 6'14446-66)1, 8:00 - 4:00,
8117, 8116, SJ19th. 755 Buckeye
Hills Career Canter Road, Ria Monday ~ Frldal. Galli• - Meigs
Division ot
Gnmde, Toys, Glasa, Toolt, Head Stan,
Woocland Cent1111, Ia An
Muek M«al

Mlling, p~lnUng, e~rpent..-y.
FI'M Utlmatta. 304-675-570i or
S7S-6422.

DaycaN .vallablt, all ag•, Rutland area, for lnfomuiUon call
114-742·3411 IMVI m...agt.
Hurry, achool ..1rt1 aoon.

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. ToPDing,
Trimming, TrM Removal, Hedge
Trimming. Fr• Elitlm~tesl 814367-NST After 4p.m.

Windsor,

1978 14x70 wtth 7x24 expando, 2
bedroom, llreplaca and has a

dock. $11000 linn 614-446-1524.

1980

Fairmont mobil home,
$6500. 304-675--1304 after Spm.

1982 Fairmont TownhauM 14x70
All Electric, Central Air, 2 Bidroom, Bath Has Gardan Tub,

Good Co'dltlon, 614-388-8193.

11182 Oa"brook 14'x56' 2 Bid·
rooma, Clean.~. Washer, Dryer,
Ctntn11 Air, 1-'orch, Underplnnln~,

$8,000, 614-44&amp;-1352.

1993 Palm Harbour, 28.153, total
drywall, Tharmopane windows,
HI-up and dellvary, muel ue to
appr.clate, 1-800-637...e625.
1994 Redman 14x70, 3bdrm., Includes tklr11ng1 11ape, blocks,
Syr. warranty, nomeownera Insurance, and 1 year of frM lot
rent, all tor only 1177Jmo., call1-

800-837-3238.

Sala, By Ownar, 614-245-9124
Anytime. Addrns: 3266 Cora
Mill Road.

30 acnt farm tor eale, 2 112 mllu
out Rio Granda. 614-2:45-9227.

Commorical, Roaldontlal, Slovo;
34
614-44&amp;-1658.
Georgn Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs ta thll mill lust
call 304-675·1857.
Home care tor your loved one In
family cara hams In Mlddlepan,
114-992-5042.

Mist Paula'• Day Care Center 1
Block Wool 01 HMC On Jockoon
Plko 11-F S A.ll. -5;30 P.ll. II
Quality And Ex~rlence Ia The
t1 Concern For Yow Child'a
Cars. Call Us For A Viah. Infant
/Toddlers 614-446o-6227. Praschoo11111 /Sc:hool Age 814-446-

8224.

Will babyalt In my home, cloas
to schools, have rtferenesa.

304-1175-2784.

Wut do babysitting In mr, home,
Middleport, Link certlf ld, IX·
perlencld, rer.rencee, Shelly

Wood, 814-992-3166.

Will Ht whh elderly-live ln. 304675-7831, uk for Ann Meadows.

Business
Buildings

Commercial Building For Sale
Or Lease, 336 Second Avanue,
Phone: 614-446-2522, 10 A.M. To

5 P.ll .

1 acr1 k»ts, Rt 2, Ashton. Clyde
Bowan, Jr 304-576-2336.

Dap.

Garage Sale : Housahoid hems
And Clothing, Friday Onlr 9-4,
443 Jerry Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Garago ~le: Thursday 19th Frl
20th, 9-? 1032 Kamper Hollow
Road
Scnoot Clothes, 4
Wkee'lar, Guns, LDta Of Mlacl

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vlclnlly
Birch A.ve, Meadowbrook Addl·
tlon, follow signs, Thur. Aug 111,
Bam-3:30pm.
Gallipolis Farry, sam• road ae
Jordan 8aptis1 Church, eign
South ot Post OHica, Aug 18-23.
Dishes, pans, toys, radios,
mixer!, bikas, books, misc.
Rt. 62, 1mt South of Ambrosia,
21st
&amp;
22nd .
Furniture,
typewriters, carpet , whHichalr
&amp; Iitt, and more.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard SaiH Mul1 Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the
d01y before the ad le to run ,
Sunday edi11on- 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
edition
10;00a.m.
Saturday.
Moving Salt- Saturday, 9-5pm &amp;

Sunday, 9-3pm, 31920 SR 325,
Langsville.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complata
auetlon
aervlca.
Ucens9d
166,0hio &amp; Wast Virginia, 304-

m-5785 .

9

Wanled to Buy

Antiques and used furnhura , no
ltam too large or too small, will
buy one piece or complete
household, call Osby Martin,
614-992-71141.
Champion juicer, will pay up to
$75, call 614·949-2973.
Oocorated stoneware , wall lei•
phones, old lamps old tharmomelers, old elocka, anllque
turnlture. RIYerlne Anllquas.
Russ Moore, owner. 614~992·
2526. We buy estates.
Don 't Junk It! Sail Us Vour NonWorking
Major Applianc ..,
Color
TV's,
Retrlgeratorl,
Froezers, VCR's, Mlcrowavts,
Air Co ndlllof'll~ , Guitar Amps,
Etc. 614-256--1238.
J &amp; O'e Auto Parts and Salvage,
also buying Junk car. &amp; trucka.

304-773-5343.
Junk cars, 1ny condition, 614992-7553.

On Land Conlracl: 5 To 20 Ac:rn
With Ot Without House, Phone:
614-446-4489 Ahar 5P.M.
Wanted to buy : good, used turnilurl, 614-992-7508.
Top Prices Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold bolns. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avanua, Gallipolis.
Wanttd ta buy: u11d mobile
homes. 614-446-0115

21

Business
Opponunlty

1485.

Natlailal Publishing Flrm NMds
People To llbtil Poltc.rds
From Home. $800/Wk. s .. Your

OWn Hours. 1·900-740-7371 (1.49
Mln/18 'IrS+) Or Wrho; PAASE-

33J,
161
S.
N.Aurora IL 60542.

Llncolnway,

NHdeQ Immediately local home
and
lndapsndant
dlalars.
Talemerkttera tor Interview 304429~975 Mon.-Fri. after 4p.m.
Receptlon·latJSecratary nlldld
lor prot...icnal oHie.. Mutt be
willing to work on an . .nuctld
basis, aomt part-time, soma
full-time. Typing, word processIng, and general oHice akllla a
muat. Experience prtftrred .
Respond to Point Pleasant
Roglstar, Box C.1~ 1 200 Main St.,
Pornt Pleasant, Wv 25505.
Registered MLT For A Fully E-

Local Por Phono Route: $1,200
A WHk Potential, Priced To

160, Gottlpotll
FIELD NURSES

Field Nuran Wanted To Make
Part-Time Home Health VIsits, IV
Skllla Aaqulrld. Call 614-5694111 For Application Inform•·
lion.
S.rvlce Master-a• adver11Hd by
Paul Hiu·vey-haa an opportunity
for an indlvldull In tha Paint
Pleasant • Mason County area
to start thalr own commercial,
residential, rlltOflltlon, ciMnlng
buslnan. Flnanclel saal .. ane.
available, clown payment to
qualified buytr. Clll Mr. Hlnkll

t-800-444-t71i.

Take Advantage Of Thl1 Fut
Track CerMr Opportunity, Good
Salary, Top Benefits, Extcutlve
Training, Opponunhy For AdvancerMnt, Muet · Be Wilting To
Work Hard Auuml! Raspon-

olbi\Hioo, Think For Yo"rHII

And Bs Cu-'omar Sarvle.
Oriented. For Immediate Conelderation Contact Guy Morrcw
At Beneficial 614-t46-27'65, An
Equal Opportunhy Employer MF-0-V. Smoka F,_ &amp; Drug FrM
Environment.

Rentals

25550.

Vacancy Phyelcal Therapist
Phyeclal
Ouattflc111cna:
Therapist Cenltlcatlon Notify:

S"pt. OH!co, Galllo .,jockoon

·VInton JVSD, P.O. Box 157, RJo
Grande, OH 456,_, By: Augu ..
31, 1~3, 614-24~S334 , EEO.
WANTED: Poehlons Avsllat&gt;M At
A Community Group Home For
Persona Wttb MRIDD In Gal-

1\pollo. Ho"'"' (1) 40 Hrw /Wk, 3
·11 P.M., S" IW ITh; 4 •It P.II.,_M
JTu; (2) 33 Hra IWk: 2 -11 P.M....;,o

5pm.

614-992-5858

In

after

2 Badrooms, Fumtshld KHchan,
Ciou To Spring Valley Area,
$335/Mo. Plus o~T:9' Deposit
1
1
ter
.M. rance 6
Plus5 P
Ret
u 57 At-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
1138 Jockoon Plko
ESTATES,
from $206/mo. Walk to ahop &amp;
movlu. Coll6t4-44S-2561. EOH.

~~~a-!!! c., $200 DspoeH, 614--

__ ,_3 ·

First Holzer Ap~rtment•, 553
Second Avonue, Now Available
For Occupancy, 2 Bedroom

Unho, Rongo, Rofrlgorotor, AC,
dorlr, Dlooblod, Hondlcoppod,

Carpet, Income Antrlctsa, El·

Oppo•

t.~al

11 FMH RA

•• un Y

Housing

·

First Holzor Apartmonto, First
And Codor Sl, Golllpotlo.

Seniors, DIBablad, &amp; Handicap-

FMHA lncomo Rootrlct-21

Rents BaNd On 30% ur
Hou18hold Income. Appliances,
Carpet, On.Shs Laundry, AJC.

Roaldon1 Poro Eloclric Utllhr

Only. Flm Holzw Apartments
Are Now Opened For Occupancy. For Information Or To

Roq"nt An Appllcotlon Coli

614-441-1800, Or Wrhe 1et Holzer
553
Second
Apartment•,
Avanue, Galllpotle OH 45631
Vouchers and Cer1lflcatn, Hud
Approved. Eq"ll Ho"olng Opportunlly.

Fumlohod 1 BR, LR, khchon
largo porch, 458 Socono1
Nlctly Fumlshld Apartmtnt,
1br, nut to Ubrary, parking,
can1ral heat, air, relerence ,..
qulrld. 614-446.0338.

apartmanta

at

VIllage

Middleport, Ohio, Beech St., 1
room
afflclancy
tumlahtd
apartmant, utllltln paid, ret. I
deposit. 304-8~·2566 .
One
badroom
apartmenta,

1 Bedroom, Referancea, $150
Deposit, $150/Mo. + UtlliUaa,
Pine Grove Church, VInton,

Ohio, 304-1152-2307.

2 Bedrooms, 6 Miles From
Cheshire On 554, 614-388-8613.

deposit &amp; approved raftl'lneee
required, 614-992·7285.
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Fim
Avanua, Galllpolla, Watar, Sawer
Paid , $375/Mo. Referencn R•
qulrad. 614-446-4993.

3 Btdroome, 2 Baths, 2 car At-

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Also
DownstalrB
Apartment,
References &amp; Deposit, No Pets,
614446-1158.

367-7504.

3bdrm. houM &amp; gan~ge, Apple
St., SyracuH.i a110 3bdrm.
howe on LM ~tnttl Sr,racuu;
call Racine Home Nat 1 Bank,

814-Hi-2210.

7 rvom, brick, 1 112mt ott
Sandhill Rd , 6yra old, 1 112 bath,
tcrMn room , 10 tcr11, $77,900.

304-5260.
BNutltul atone ranch ttyle
houta, 4 bedroom , 2 full baths,
large LR, den wi lton• fireplace,
large kitchen, Iota of cabintts,
3-ar carport, 30'x40' garage ell·
tlng on 2.1 la\181 acr11, beautl·
tulry landscaped, on New Lima
Road near Rutland, Ohio, Lead·
lng Cr81k water and cable a&lt;Jail·
able, 614·742-ma.

2 badroom trailer, reference &amp;
deposit, Rt. 1, Locust Ad, on
right, Point Plu.sant.
2 bodroom, locatlld In New
Haven, WV, $215/mo. + utilities.

3()4-773-5881.

For rant, need roommate to
share 3 bedroom tn~ller, no
deposit, no utltltlte, $150
monthly, 614-992-3949.
Nice mobile homes for rent
starting at S2601mo., and apacH
at
$85Jmo., plus deposit.
Country Mobile Homo Park, 614-

992-2167.

Rio Grande 12x60 2 B9drooms
On Central Avanua, Clean , No
Pets, Deposit, References, 814245-5795.
2bdrm., fumlshed, good concH·
tion, good location, 1 c:hlld, no
pats, $250/mo., Naw Havan, 3Q4.
882-2466 anytime.

44
All real estate Mver11slng In

this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing ACI
ol 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise ~any preterence,
limitation or discrimi nation
based on race, color, religion,
sex tammat statu s or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any suCh preference,
limitation or ~lscrtm lnalion .•
This newspaper wl• not

Sot; :l:!G -11:30 P.ll .• T" IW ITh "'·

knowing~ accop!

adver11sements lor real estal"'
'1'
whlcn ls In violation of the
·taw. Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dweiiJngs

Rn"mo To C.cllla Bokor, P.O.
Bor 604, Jackoon OH 45640.

adYMised In !his newspaper

A,ppllcatlon•: .
are available on an equal
Opportunfty • ..,_
opp
_ o.rtu•n•ity• •basJ
• s•. . . .
'-· .

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom• Fum lsh~
Apartments
In
Pomeroy,
Reference &amp; O.poalt, No Peta,

53

45

PremiHa, 814-a58-1450.

Antiques

Aoh Tonk, 2413 Jockoon Avo.

Antique treadle sewing machina, radio stand, w..h tt•nd,
woodon lllo box, lor lnlormotfon
call614-992-2414.

Rooma far rani - w.sk or month.
·startlng at $120/mo. Gallia Hotsl.
614-446-9580.
SIHplng roams whh cooking.
Also trailer apace. Alf hook-ups.
Call attar 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13565'1, Mason WV,

snd video taps, exe.llenl condJ.

Household
Goods

Hot tub, 6-8 people, new cover,
gaod condition, for Information

2Mt.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

L.oadldl $7,500. 814-446-I&amp;OS.

18,000 BTU Air Conditioner, Naw
Comprnsor, 1 VHr Warranty,
$295, Skagg'a ~~r.lancH..t 16
VIne Straet:, 814
·7398 Vir 1·
800 .... 99-34~ .

61 Fann Equipment

King alze waterbed with shHia
&amp; comforter, $100, 614oi112-3411.

Rullstic car 11trao power amp,
80 watts, like new, $45, 614-992-

2354.

hay bind, Gahl grtnderlrnlxsr, 12'
tn1naport diec, AC no tile com
planter, Ollvtr 1800 tractor, all

good cond. 304-273-4215.

Ptalllc tanka, 285 gal, 2.. valve,
portablt &amp; durabla. Grut for
water or any liquid. $90. 304-

525-a30t or 304-1'13-4838.

63

Livestock

Call~

Hauling:
Anytime,
Anywherw. PLA Rltlaboro Oh&amp;a,
Evary Monday. Chuck Williams,

REDUCE; burn on lot whllo you Triolo Crook Trucking, 614-245-

lletp, take OPAL tabltts and EVAP dlurttlc, available Fruth
Drug• ..

15006.

VI'RA FURNITURE
Reg. Umoueln bulla for Nle,
614-446-3158 Or 014-446-4428
614'1112-atllO.
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
Royal Oak Membtrahlp for Sale:
OR RENT-2-0WN !NO DEPOSrr 11 lntorootod Coli 606-1173-tt69 64
H"u &amp; Grain
""411
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS; After 5:30 P.M.
Wrought ·tron Tabla W/4 Chairs;
Fan Back Rocking Chair $58;
G•rdan Arch Wa~·a $1211.00

Stroller, babybld, walker, highchair, car sui~ awing, little grrla
Mlcksy MouM vanify HI . 304-

Bedding -TWin Mon Sot $89, F"ll 67$-4548.
$H Sot &lt;luoon $141 Sot; 4
Drwwor Chool $44.15; Cor Bod"o,

Bunk Bid's, Poster B... Full
Line Of Southw..tem Vn•
Star1lfli At S20.00i Indiana Many
Shape'• &amp; Slzaa Starting At
$5.00. 2 Location• -BHide Auto
Auction Or 4 Mile• Out 141.

Opon 9 A.M. To 6 P.M . IIon -Sot.

Brown Love Seat, Good Condi-

tion, $50, 614-44W038.

Day Bad, Pink Heart O..lgn
With Manreu, Naw Condition,

Paid $300 Will Soli $150, 614446-9780.

Duncan Phyfa dlntngroom table
&amp; 6 chalra, m•hogany. Twin bed,
ahort post.,., earved. 304-875647i.

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

B00-4H-34H.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

'

Mollohan Carpeta, Rt. 7 N. 614-

448·11144, ixt:l C.rpot NO, VlnJI
f4.41 Yd.

Ook F""'h"'"; T - &amp;
Chlllr11, Cwlol, Curvsd Ola•
Chino Etc. AI- Voller Ook
Fumlture,

Geora• Creek Road

Clll304-675-1450o

I

13UT FIRST; l WANT TJ
KNOW I~ 'IOU LIKE ME. .

FRANK AND ERNEST
I

..
&lt;:'

v

.• -. .,. .

I

..

o~.

t-Ie'S A

CtiA~MtNG

Gl.IY, ruT YOU i
C,Arl'T 8tLIEVt
ArlYTti\NG
!!
t-It SAYS.

i

DDO
0 ••

.

.'

' . .,

t•

I

I

'

r ~~A WAT€:11: "'
~ 0~

NO, llUT t'O ~IZ€

II£ f'RO\'o, -oc

TIIOii:AAI'f't£~

wx.ll

-

Hay for AI• 10 round be.IM of
atlalfa snd orchard, 120 round
balM of clovsr, timothy, tnd or·

chlrd1 $20/plr bolo. Wo witt
\Old, ot4-HII-2884.

are 1/JvltM to -

t8' t!l78 S.. Sorllo 85 HP
Johnoon And Tln 'rrau.., Ercol.
lonl Condition, St4-4441-NH.
tm Cryol• bolt. tH2 Chovr

0

.

1877 17 Fl. Conl"ry With ;
tt5 HP Olotboord llolor And
Trailer. Good Condition, Phona: ·

lt4-:mi-28Je Col! Eonr Mornlnge Or Lite In Evenings.
t881 4 Wlnno tao liortron 18'6",:
opon - · 205HP, St4-1112-311l .
24' T"nnot Croft pontoon bolt ·

. WHEN WE 00

e.Aa&lt;. TO

6Cl--OOL, I?.\ &lt;:iOI"-Gt 10 RLIN
F'ORCI-A'ee PRE61DENT.

I've

l--r5 THE LUNCHRCOM
FCOD, 6\UPID! "

ALREADY
&lt;90TA

SL05-AN, . .

•t •

Lono Oak Com!'graundo, oouth ·

•

of w... ~umbla, W. V.

814-245--~

ISM-~

2263.

New gu tanka. ona ton truck
wh111i1J redlatore1 floor mate,
ole. 0 a R Auto, Rtp\or, WV. 304-

IIVIIII1CI

32 Toanoll
· treatment
35 Actor
· Andrew•
31 Bushy clump
40 Lot.
41 Butnoa 42 Whluft
43 Pueblo lndl11
44 Grovel rld(llt
45 AciranMoore .
47 Roof •ldgo
48 Trill of duel
49 Wtlltt]KOOf
cowering
52- ond
gllttll

.z

N

z

FJA'H

e

c

AJH

ROBOTMAN~~~&gt;

NGHVJF

HTPAZAW

c

C H LV

CLHJP .
HVG

H J

I Z E G

BVGGfX

BVGA

FTAA.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I lhlnk .we wilt
Brlnkler, why can't It work for uo?" -

sUcceed.

II " worked lor Hunlley(Cc&gt;-anchor) Connie Chung. ·

tAM I
S©~~lA-~t.~s·
-----ClAY I. P O l l A N - - - - - WOlD

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

Edilo~ ~r

Rearrange lttttn of
0 four
scrombled words
low to form four words.

I

OTRHAT

I

IJITOS

I

GR I 8 N
r-T-...;..;.,i---r---r::--1

Nagging wifa 10 husband:
"You ware being very rude.
5
~ You yawned all lhe lime I was
--'.-J.._~-,_--'-~- "' talkinP.." _Husband replies : "I
r---:-~::--::-:::----, wasn 1 being rude . I was trying
ME D P 1 N
say ------·-!"
1---T~;,.7-=,1,.:;...;.,18:-=TI
Complete the chuckle q"oted

I

[ 1 I I"

L.

~~~

I

llo

,,.:.-..,1,--1 Q

.

•

.

.

.

bv filling in the missing words

L-l-..1..-L-l-.J..----J you develop from step No. 3 below.

TODAY'S HISTORY; On this day in
1587, Vi rgi nia Dare was born a l
Roanoke Island, N.C. She was the
child of English pare nt~ to be born in
the New World. Four years later. she
and the rest of the settlement myste ·
riously vanished without a trace.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS; Meriwethe r
Lewis 0774-18091, explorer; Shelley
Wi nters (1922-J , actress, is 71; Ros- :
alynn Carter (1927-1, U.S. fi rst lady, is 1

.

..

L

A PRINT NUMBERED 11
~ LETTERS
•

0

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

II IIIII II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Family - Crumb - Newly • Valued - MY WIFE

.,

"I can'l believe you're in the hos,pit;ilr the guy consoled his friend. "I saw you danclnQ w11h a beautiful
woman lhe other night." "That's just 11," sighed the pa·
• tient. "so did MY WIFE!"

AUGUST 181

~~ V8--ITR\~OQ\JISNI
CO~RSE f\ASWT WON illS ,,
"11\E TKRON6t, Of "-VMIRSI&lt;S
PROMISED IN THE COU RS~

SO fAR

1'1~06 S1~C:i&lt; IN
1\\\; P&lt;Xl~ fillER

312·3133 .. t-II00-273-'1132i.
Services

$700, 614-Hi-2804.
WATER LINE SPECIAL; 314 Inch

200 PSI $111.95; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32 .50: Ron Evans EnterpriHs,
Jackaon, Ohio, 1~537-8528.

STORAGE

TANKS

Above And Below Ground FDA
Approved For Potable Wattr.
Ron Evans Enterprla•, Jack·
eon, Ohio, 1-800-637-11528.

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, IIWir plpea, win·
dawa, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
Iars, Rio Grande, OH Call 814245-5121.

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
bs ••n at 38548 bR 143 or
WATERPROOANG
IHvo -~· It 114-1112-2380.
UnoondHionol llfollmo g"orontm Buick Electro 225, AC, t•. lacal refsrenc• fumllhld.
amlfm caustte, 41,000ml, aome Coli t-IIQ0-287.()578 Dr 614-237ru81, ,.liable a comfonabll, 0488 Rogers Waterproofing. Ea$750. 30W75-71011.
tabllahld 1875.
Autos for Sale
78 Chlvr lmpalo, runo good,
body oxcollont ohlpo~ S501f, con

1179 Dodge, 4dr., 318, air, naw
tlras, clean, l&amp;K mill, $12,000

linn, 6t4-114i-21104.

Davis Sewing Machine And
Vacuum Ctear-.r Repair, Frae
Pick-Up And D.llvery, Gsorg11

Crook Rood, 814-4«.()294.

J"llo Wotib. Coil et4-446-0231.

AKC Boxer puppln, male &amp;
f1m11e; fawnlblk muk, rHdy

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

til3 Chryolor lA Boron 2dr.

front WD, PS, PB, AC et1
electric, grNt 1hspe, t2900;
1175 B"ick 2dr. 100 Pon1toc on-

. Q~

1184 Ford EXP good oond.,
tlopd,

Graph Malchmaker can help you to under-

~QUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t9) Stall lor lime

stand what to do to make the relationship
work . Mail $2 and a long. self·addressed,
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, P.O.

tOday if you feel like you're being pressured
into making a decision of wh ich you're
unsure . Poor judgment could cai.Jse you to
ma~e an error with 11ngenng ill effects.

BoK 4465, New York, N.Y. i0163 .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be ca relul

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Yo u mighl

abo"ut making commitments today without
fi rst having a clear understanding of what
you're getting into. There's a chance you 'll
.bite off more than you ca n chew.

friends with contl icting views. It's okay to
arbitrate, but n~t to shaw partiality.

have to contend with a heaVier war~ toad
than usual today, so be ca re,ut what you
volunleer to do that could make this condi- ·
tion worse.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Don't impose
yo urself on any social Slt u.ations to day
where you are not warmly welcomed. If you
aren't invited, it's their loss, not yours.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nav. 22) Where your

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) lmportanl

reputation is concerned the end does not
justify the means today. Don't use tactics to
advance your interest that could tarnish

developments must not be taken tor grant·
ed today. For instance, don't assume a criti·
cal situation Is firmly secured, when it may

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Slaer a middle

gino, 5 . _ 11- . $&amp;75; 11172

Corulr c1mper, 17 112', .-.,. 4
or I, bathroom, cook stove,
refrigerator, r•l gOCNt Wps,

56 Pets for Sale
:::--:---:-::--:---=:-""-='"" $1300; 614-3117-0612:
Groom and Supply Shap-Pit
Grooming. All brlldl, atylee.

Story of My life &amp; Times

ASTRO·GRAPH

'!lr.t..!~nrool, amllm, $1200.

304-a7...,. or 675-tm

Thuroday, Aug. 19, t993

Sopt tO, now toklng dapooho,

There could be numero"s pleasant s"rprises in the offing for you in lhe year ahead.
You mu st be carelul. however, 1hal self·
defe ating lhoughts don'l spoi l lhem . It's

304-4i7i-3848.
AKC Dalmatlon pupe, f111111 ..,
12wka. old, shDtli &amp; wormed,
$200 or trade for equal valua,

614-532-1203.

imperative you look for the positive side in

Rl•ldlnUal
or
C011Jmsrclal
wiring, new MrYice or repslra
Maatlr Ucenlld electrician' -

Rldonour Eloctricol WV00030• ·
304-175--1786,
•
u,

all .yqur endeavors.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you lael like you
are being pulled in two diHerenl dlreclions
loday, thai might be lrue and il could also
be your own fault. You must be firm when
1
you make a decision, ndt indecisive. Trying
lo patch up a broken romance? T~e Astro-

co urse today if you find yourselt among

1
yo"r image.
be held down just with a paper clip.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There is ·GEMINI (lloy 21·June 20) Nothing advana friend of yours who always lakes an lageous will be gained loday by trying lo ·

opposing po si tion to the one you hold . If impose an unpopular suggestion on unreyou encounter one another today , neither is · sponslve listeners. II you don't .scrub the

apl 10 have any palience for the olher. Be
carelul.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be carelul

idea, they might.
CANCER (Juno 2t -July 22) Belter pul a
lock and key on yo"' monay bell today,

in transacHons today where there is some·

because you might be lacking in financial

thing ol material value at stake. If you don't · discipline. It won't t5e hard lo spend more
know what you're doing. yo" might suffer a than you should .
costly loss lrom your lack ol knowledge.

z

RGPMJPNCALG .

EGOZA

tile""""""=

IWEDNESDAY

----.....
1\t:t illtRt'S "-

CEI.EBRITY CIPHER

Ceiebflty Clplwt cryplogr.-na n creMid trom quotallanl by r.ntouii*Pie, put end pr..,t.
EKh lettlf In It'll clpha' tt.nda fOf anotl\er. TDIMy'l ClUe: FfequM P.

18, 1993

Today is the 23Dth
day of 1993 and the
59th day of summer

66

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budg.t Tn~Mmlaione, UMd &amp;

owner

II

30HP, Yamat. motor, ,

robuln, oil l)lpoo, olortln~ ol Sll9;

mtiiUII
30 Filii wHh

DATE BOOK

DID IT?

Aug .

76

25 Slf¥11
26 Chlmnty dirt
27 A Scott
28 Soulll Alrlclll
trlbl

card-p/aT q -

Dey.,.. be -lliiiT lll!""P

OlD 't'OU S£t. loiiiO

fOr Sale

$2500, &amp;14-1112·2048 or -

ROlli-

Pass

u- to l'aiJIIp ~. ,. &lt;no o1 w. .._

AN'fWHER£!

OffiC£ Wii-IDO\ol !

I

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. S2
St., Galtlpollo. Now I UHd
1\pollo, $150 Ospooll, $170/llo. Olivo
fumltura, heattrl, Wosttm &amp;
614-446-3870,
Work booto. S14-448-315i.

TI-IAT'S W~AT I I-lAVE TO
CONFESS. CI-IARLES .. l COULD
I-lAVE STRUCK 'IOU OLIT IF
I I-lAD WANTED TO~

75 Boats a. Motors

w/1181

Eul

In the Bridge Federation of Asia
and Middle East Championships, held
last June in Mauritius, the finishing
order of the flnt four teams was the
same in the Open and Women's Series;
SOuth Africa, India, Egypt and Paid·
stan. The lint two teams qualify for
the wor ld championships that are
about to be held in Santiago, Chile.
The Indian Open Team ·led most of
the way, being passed near the finish·
ing post by newcomers, from South AJ.rica (wblch bas just returned to the international bridge fold). During the
Indian hot streak·over the flnt seven
days, this deal occurred.
SOuth was the Indian player Avin·
ash Gokbale. His open!Dg bid of two
hearts showed a three-sulter short in
diamonds. His band bad to have one of
four distributions: 4-4-1-4, 4-4-0-5, .._3-1·5 or 3--4-1-5. ·
North, Rajesb Dalal, bating the
wbole business, passed. SO there was
Gokbale in a 3--3 fit.
.
West, who bad read all the
books, led a trump. (When
knnto-1
Ide&lt;~larer bas a three-suited
ally a trump lead will be best.)
After South called for a low heart
from dummy, East won with the king
and returited a bearl Declarer won
with dummy's ace and cashed his A-K
of spades, dropping West's jack. Now
came a spade to dummy's 10, West being unable to ruff. A club to the ace allowed Gokbale to cash the se&amp;de qlul!'!!ll
and ~rd dummy's Jut
ruff in dummy brought South's total to
sevea tricks, and be still bad the good
heart queen In his band.
Wilen you're sizzling, you're
sizzling.

.

44t-G404 or 304-17S-2207.

3 City In
Garmany
4 Conaumaa
tobaeco

C!li 1'\l}lG .

Tralter: 6'4" wide 18' long, tandam aria, . 7,000 lb. eapachy,

55

I HAVE TO TELL YO U
50MET ~ I N6. C~ARLES ..

Ou11n ala w1t1r bed, $200.

Transportation

WATER

PEANUTS

.

cultomlzed van, red w/tllnr
trfm, take over payme.nte. 8,...

32 Prldotor'a
food

By Pbllllp Alder

Good Condhlon, 614-245-5624.

King Cutter, 5· Ft. Finish Mower,

1 -u ..ont

2 Tiny amount

When you're hot,
you're hot

OOLLERS !!

drlvo, 3800 mUoo, llko ._,
$1800, lt4-tl2-77141.

Whh 234 Com He•ds, Really

-~~~·

H Etarnolly
57 Flcwar ·
58 Abotroct
baing
sgOoza

31~~t

5 Sl11rlngI Above (poal)
7 Probld
8 TwofOld
I Coolld
10 Mldlclnel
plont
11 AHeht
tl Acl9r Ron -'21 All rtghtl
24 TVntwemon

DOWN

211 Habraw

THUTTY-TWO

1887 Suzuki 100 OuadraCif",

J.D. 4e Comblno Lato Modot

54~

51 Alcoholic

AT LEAST
I WON

72 Trucks for Sale

388-6358.

Norlb
Pass

.....

46 lllott unuouot
SOCon-11
51 Flying IIUCII
.(abbr.)
s3nbabtn

Opening lead: • 3

Y

304-a75-t272.

King Cut!or, 5 A . Bruoh Hog,
csll 614-1112-3411.
Both t Yur Old, 5 HP Go-Ca~,
6t4-38a-110112.
H"lfv 12 Spood 82&amp; Sorloo,
Black &amp; While, Man'• $50, &amp;14- Now Hollond 717 loro~ ha.-.446-4223.
tar wl both hNds, 3 buttar
tor~.ga wagon, New Holland T

70to.

Galtlpollo, Ohio lt4-446-43111. '
PICKENS FURNITURE
1br. apar1msnta
In · Point
Now/Uud
Pteasant, furnished or untur- Ho"oohold lumloltlng. t12 mi.
nlehMt, very clean, no pets. 304- Jerr1cho Ad. Pt. Plusant WV.
675-1388.
2 Bedroom Apar1manl, Stove,
Aafrlgarator,
Furnished,
Locafed: 34 112 Smlth1r1, Gal-

Hsfl2 112 Ton Haal Pump, lnltalled $3,4115, 6MM&amp;-e308.
Homa
Medical
Equipment,
S.mi-Et.ctrtc Bed, Wh•lch•lr,
Both New, 61444&amp;:0150.

Maytag wringer washer, $50;
twin box apringe &amp; manreaa,
$50j coli onor S,.m., 614-1112-

1 Bedroom Nur Hdur, Air

1bdrm. apilrtmitnt In Pomeroy
tor rent, 614-992~58 .

Canning lotMIOM tor Hie,
bring own container•. 114-247·

Rl~l~~ Lawn Mow1r.L $450, Call
61
6-4015 Aher 4 1-'.M.

304-1175-5022.

F,.. Ootlvory,

$100 Ospooh, 6t4-446-381l

Firewood Prwpars For Winter,

Long woodburnar wl tcreen &amp;
glaaa door~, triple pipe, $450.

Merchandise

Pass

ChiV.J 112 Tan 350 4 bbt 4~
HAPPY JACK MANGE '-ON·. 1tn
Bon, AT, PS, PB, AC.._ 3.73 Pool ·
-..u
Promola Hoollng And Holr $3,5\)0, Or OBO ur TrodH ·
·
Buy 01 alii. Riverine Anllquu, Growth to A~y Mtnge, Hot Spot, Photio; St4-44&amp;-230e.
1124 E. lloln Stroot, on Rt. 124, Or F"ng"o On Dvao l Horsa
IiilO
F-1150
Full
Slzo
300,
I
Pomwoy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 Without Slaroldel ~vellable 0-TC,llndor, 3 Spood, $2,300 oBo,:
o.m. to S;OO p.m., S"ndor 1;00 c J D NORTH PRODUCE Oh.
614-258-11277.
to &amp;:00 p.m. St4-192·252e.
Male Shih--Tzu 1 112 yr11 old,
rwglotor.d, $75. 304-67&amp;-t:m.
ti87 S.to D"rongo, high mll;g::
54 Miscellaneous
rune but Maids work, saoo.
Mlnlatu,.
Schnaular,
AKC, 882-2848.
Merchandise
female, 10mo. old, Mil &amp; pepper,
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
10 Ft. Alum. MHh, Satellite Dleh $100. ~75-2231 .
&amp; Racalvllf', 8~1·1738.
M = bird &amp; csge, $250. 304- tl78 c.J-7 Joop, va, 304 on~lno,
21.
2 Ton TrLJCk Lood 01 A - - 6
SttOO. 2tt4 ap,_ Ave. 304-&amp;75Grovol Houlod Up To tO Ton A RabbHo.._lllnl Lop, Mini Ro•~_Mir 364.
Lood, 614-245-1122l
BrHd, -.;an Be S.en: 5004 ~ate
tm Ford Bronco 4 whoot dr.,
Routo 8150, Bldwoll, Ohio.
24 A. R""nd Pool (Noodo auto, p.e., p.b., stereo. dlilay
Llnor) Comololo Whh All Ac-- Roglolorod American Eoklmo wlporo $1200 61.-•7132.
oorlos, S5o0. 814-3117·7123.
P"pploo, $100 Col! 814-1143-0441
11183 Dodge Ram Van, Auto
(Evonlngo).
25" ZonHh Cot0&lt; TV, uklng $175,
Trono, GoGG Condhlon, St4-38a614-992-&amp;093 bofl&gt;ro S,m, 614- Small
Raglstar.d
mate 852t
247-4231 aftor Spm.
Chihuahu., 3' yaar~, 614-8021885 Ford F150 4 whlrll drtve,
.
8x8 woodon otorogo bulldln\18, 7008.
$3500. 304-875-224e.
Sli5, dollvorr • MI"P. sss. ~
Musical
1ill5 Rod Chow B..... 4x4,
Other sizes svsllable.. Side,. E- 1.J r
Very Good Condition, P~, PB,
qulpment, Hsndlrson. ~
Instruments
Automotic, ~ AII/Fll Coo11121.
.. $4,200, 114-379-2737.
Anllqus whlll hoi'M, n.w Kimball Spinet r,llno, Ilk• new,
paid
$1800,
oo
ling
tor
$1100,
1i81 Ford Et50 ~olom Von,
(originsl) 4HP Kohtlf' tnglne,
laadMI, 851( mUll, IIC. cond.,
mowr deck, $450, nHds ,.. 614-Hi-2682.
torod, 6-11-2804.
Slo,Y l Clorko plano. 304-182- $5&amp;00. 304-875-2534.
Automatic washer &amp; dryar, t150: 3541.
74 Motorcycles
Autom•t&amp;c waahar, SUi gold
SUII- SUMM • SUIIIIER
rwfrlgorotor, $85; &amp;14-1112-2352.
11172 Honda Troll 70, Vorr Good
SALE I
I :;::..;::::;:;;;c.:..,:::;=.::"'-=:c:==- Hummingbird
CondHionl $2150, Bolwoon I P.ll.
Mutlc Center
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS.
&amp; I P.ll. St4-44S-Sil38.
JaCklon, Ohio
t1 ~ Gallon, $325; Now JET Bot
614-286-6881
(tio Sond
AHor Roq"lrod)
till Uko Honda ttO 3
$1,495i Ron Evan• Enttrprtlea.
Whoolor, $600 Dr Will Trode,
Jacklon, Ohio 1...aoo.537-U21.
814-2116-41277.
58
Fruits &amp;
DP Chlllrman rubberband m•
1985 Hondo 70 throo who-.
Vegetables
chins with lnatructlon booklet
$400, 614-1112-2241.

mont, 614-1112-2455 or 814-11122580.

614-44&amp;-9358.

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart·
ment, Stove &amp; Aafrigarator, No
Pita, $189/Mo Wattr Included,

Point Pluunl, 304-875-2063,
full lint Tropical flehl blrda,
small animate and 1uppl11.

Go Karl .. 3 HP 6 up, special on
I HP, In stock, Morris Equi~

Furnished
Rooms

Well

F,"'·

tiBI KlwMikl 484 LTO, bolt

Complete home tumla~I~C'
Hours; Man-Sat, 9-5. 61
0322, 3 mlt11 out Bulavllle Rd.

NICE!

.Q42
t5
.AIOU 3
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: SOuth

56

HOUSehOld
Goods

manager. EOH. :104-882-3716 or
come by today, Laurland Apta,
6th St, New Haven, WV.

Washers, dryers, retr1geratorw,
rangu. Skaggs Appllancn, 76
Vina Strett, Call 614-ot48-73N 1-

Apanment
for Rent

Condl!lonod, SUPER
$245/llo. 614-446-2957.

51

block bird

42 Pelt for wild
lftlml(l
43 Aatro~lcot

-·

.AKQ4

112-3712.

llntl

nlcknoma
24 Untidy
27G-ucm..
tarlltl Cobbr. I
28 Smoll
org11111m1

SOUTH

Will Bo Sooaonod Whon Cold Peach11, now rudy, whfte and
Spacious 2 bedroom apts, ear· Weather Arrlvta, Delivered, 814Ill lhr" ~""'· Koloor
petlng,
range,
ratrtger~tor, 256-1318, 614-387·7025 Evenings. JOIICMJ.
Frutl t"arm, 6'14 ~438, Ohio
family atmoaphar~, on •tt• For Sale: Crafttmen 11 HP Rt. 7, 1 milo bolow Athlllo.

for Rent

2 bedroom furnished mobile
home, 304~75-6512.

owner. Scotty's Ulld car.. 304-

37=~~

31 Total
31 Slghlllelng

23WNta~

.KJ lot7
ta

mo1or,

naw

..

31 Conlldllotl

17 Llborll
111 New
Entllnclll
20 8Mpecl
22 Clolll

EAST

Loadad, flo
7770.
r.~=~;;;;;;~~;;;::;;;;~;;;"';";'';";";"";·'"';·~~ ~1~8!1~1Dod~~~~~~~~lrfl~E~S,P1ri.;OWbinuoor
,

1192-2218.

51

42 Mobile Homes

2 bedroom hou•, full basement. 304-675-1486.

O"tbulldlng,

~~ ~

She!~

111~=of
Ume

lrllll
41 8oullllrn

.A86
tQ87U

$'14115.

good eond. 304-875-3773.
till CR :150 A Hondo Dl~ Blko,
$1,200, 614-446-3083.
ti88 KX2150; tll84 Hondo Gold
Wing; 1!178 Klwoookl 650, &amp;14-

security daposH, no pets ; 614-

41 Houses for Rent

10x60 mobile homi, 2 bedroom,
920 Four1h Ave, Gatttpctla. $325
wa1ar and 1rash paid 6'J4.4464416 after 7 p.m .

Gorogo,

i . I
1

••

Wanting to rent· 2 or 3 bedroom
house, ln clean and good condition, prefer privata eanlng, 614992·2428, If no •n.wer pleaH
laave mHSage on machine.

Bldwau Porter School Area, 614-

Dodgl

new motor,

••ou
•u

-•ra'ore-

34 Scooby31 Act

1-11-11

NORTH

33 Undlrground

1 C111M (ILl
lllonow
8 F-ofclock
12 Da lw
13C..to
line 11141 luck
14 w. Coat coli.
15- -

1911 Pontloc Grond Prlr, bluo
PetS for Sale
Ioiii' · loldoddo33,000 mlloo,
c
R
Slbori
H
k
p
St""!'o
goodooondiBO
, .~·.
n!.':_200uro6°,'
AK
ag.
an us y up" 00
,.,.._"
Upright Glboon lrMz•,
ploo, Ono $125, Rnt; $150; Ad"H I·O=Y o::-nl-:ng::-o_.--:---=---.,
great, 814-M2-em.
rune Female Unreg. $25, Blue Eyea, 1882 Chivy camero, AS, 25th
B-h St., lllddlopm, Oh., t l 2
614 441 882l
Annlvoroory Edhlon, • --•-•
bedroom tumtshiMI apartment•.
--~
Aloo t room oHic. apa~monl, Twin bod, $25. ~blo bod, $40. AKC SooiUoh Torrlor p"pploo, With T·T- 614-256-87111.
utllltln paid, depostt &amp; rate. 30Ui75-3615 after 5pm.
small, no....-haddlng, one mala, I 811
c::::-;T:-om-po-'-=o"L,-.-.-CII-,--tont_r_"-...,-1
c-nl304-882-2566,
W hor Dry
R
one t.male, I WHD old, $250,
~
•lrlaorotor, A1hono, 614-SH-4877.
oondltlon, 1o1o of now porto, 61
FIHh Avanua, Galllpol11, 1 Bed- ~~~:~r, 'V. ~~ A ~
• .,C R I -• ._192
,...."
-:340-:• .,--=-::-:--roo mil Wsahar, o ..
ryor, Cabla Re lrlgtrator, II'--·
Doberman
•a starwu I ;u-~
e-!t
·. ·-·
- Chovrol~
nrFOWIYI, 814- p
1oo
All
Sh
p
~
.,
$2501 o.
Plua
Utllltlea 256-1238.
upp '
Oll, arents On Ber.ta, V-t, Automatic,
A"'-,

Thr• bedroom all 1lectrtc
double wide good neighborName Your Own lncoms Make hood In Racine, $200 deposit,
Fortune AI Homa, Own Bual- $300/mo. Includes watar/ garn..., Profits Dally, Gaunmtead . bagtJ sower, 614·94g..2217.
Frae Dllalle, 212-265-6100, Ext .
21tl
ThrM bedroom, Midway Drive,
New Hlven, WV: $250/mo., $300
deposit,
614-992-6981
aher
Real Estate
5:00pm .

High School Dlgrll, Valid
Driver's Llctf"'le, Thr• YNrt
Driving Erpsrlenca, And Good
Driving
Record
Required.
Salary: $5.00 /Hr, To Start. Send
ONdtlne For
8120193.
Equal
Employer.

P easant,

lor rent

$22!i/mo. lncl"dn "tllltln, $100 lion, 614-1192-5053.

153-Vend.

tochod

Chllvy S-10

Utllltiaa Pakl, 614446-4416 After

47 Wanted to Rent

31 Homes for Sale

,JI&gt;~t&gt; ffl.IMMI"'~ -

701 Fourth,

w..k Potential. Must Sell. 1-80().

Teachtr Naida Babysitter In
Own Homa. Clay School Area.
Must 1-l•v• RtfarenCH. 614-2566011.
Truck DriY..-., paid vaeallon &amp;
holidays, home wHk8nda &amp;
some during WHk
Mnd
qualifications lo Point Pteaaant
RegiS1ar, Box c-11, 200 Main
StrHt, Point PleaAnt, WV

A~ .•

ond
Rlvorolao
Apa~monto In Mlddloport. From
$202. Coii614-H2-585i. EOH .

Soli. t-80~7632.
Nice , 2br, house, Apple GroVe.
304~75-1761 or 675-1972 after
Local Vondlng R""to; it,200 A 5pm.

q"rppod Lab, No ShiH Work, OH
~olldaye . Apply In Person AI
Medical Plaza, 031 Stat• Route

.K7

Fumiehtd 1Br

Manor

\NOTICE\
2-3 badroam, L:tngavllla, large
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. yard, country setting, $212/mo.,

,.c:ommend1 that you do bualnua whh ~pie yau know, 1nd
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnvntlgated
the otftrlng.

Avallablo Soplombor 1ot; ClAn

St511. 11114 Cdt Vloto Wogon ,
St3i5. 1118&amp; Buick Skyhowk,
St415.11l87 lloc"ry Cougor, t

11'S GN?'11• ~~LL
1'11\I&gt;N HI~ CtAW)

614-446-4416 AHor 7 P.M.

room

Contract, Small Down Paymant,
Low Paymanta, 614-384..5184.

PHILLIP
ALDER

.HU

,. ~~fiM~ S

Utlllt!H Pold, $t851Mo. 6t4-44&amp;44t8 AHor 7 P.ll.

Graci""• living. t ond 2 bod-

5, 8, 10, 20 Acros MIL Will Land

ACIIOII

Pt.

Second. Gallipolis. Shari Bath,

q""'·

Real Estate
Wanted

OtdomoiJIIO Dob II,
PS,PB, PW, P~

1i84 Ford Rong..-, $33115. 1188
Pontloc Lomon, SINS. 1985 ·
Dodge Dlplontll, Stt5.1185

807

Lota 6 acreage for home con11ructlan on Rayburn Ad, Fumla:hed
•Hielancy,
$185.
reasonable restrictions, county Utltltloa paid, 701 Fo"rth Avo.,
water, Information mailed On,. . Gotllpollo 614-446-4416 aHor 7
304-4;75-5253, pla151 no p.m.
single wldetrallara.

36

ti81

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE -

7 P.ll.
Ar,anmont

EHiclaney;

Avenue. Ref,, dep. S2301mo. 8141145-2236, 446-2581.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Autos for Sale

Galllpollo, Sharo Bath, $200

F"mlohod

pod,

33 Farms for Sale

'

71

llouahl Now Cor, To SOld
Exc:OI!ert Condllonl l.ooko,
0ooc1, Aoklng: s:~,m. 114-4441-.
4223 After 5;00 P.• .
ti87 Moc'"Y Caolgor, llO%
show.-n concfhloJ\, $3000.
304-582·3&amp;72.
tW Pontloc Lomono, 4ql., ,
4op., OICII!Ont oondhlon, 1141112-5013 boforo 5pm, 114-247·
4231 oftor Spm.
tiH Sunblnl OT, $25115. ti88
Oldo Cutlaoo, $23115. 1984

614-441-1800,

Mabile Hom• And Land For

Mini farm 23 acres, 10 room 2
Gtntral Mtlntenance. Palnt!ng1 11ory housa small barn, 1 mile
Yard Work Wlndowt Wa.nea out Jerrico Ad, overlooks Point
Gun.,. Cltanld Ught Hauling, Pleasant, $35,000. 304-fi75-48711.

AAIEEO Emploror.
Would Ukl To Do Babysitting In
LAW ENFORCEMENT U.S. Mor- My Home M-F Spring Valley
shal's, Custom• Now Hiring. No Aru Cortlllod, 614-44e-B"344.
ALl. Yard Sales Must Be Paid In Experilln~ Necatury. Foi Ap.
AdYanca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. pllcotlon Into. Coli 21i-755-e66t
the day before the ad Ia to run. Ext. 0Ht55 8 A.M. To 8 P.ll. 7
Financial
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
llvt In houstkll~r. room I
board
plu1 small
ulory,
ref8rence. requlr.d, 304-875-

2br.,

$6000. 304-882·2658.

9·5 Wed &amp; Thurs, 2 Milas Eas1
Of Porter, On 554, Nice Things!

Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

121:60,

The

Salta. CIIIMII Contrat, Power
,_., Elc, Alllf'M 81- Coo- •· l.oldodl Ono OWnor

Furnished Efficiency 7 112 Nell,
Galllpollt, Utllitlee Paid, $165,

for Sale

Ohio

B~ham,

Routo m, Col! &amp;14-245-11315.

2bdnn. ap-.., total electric, epo
In Ulddlapott, ctc.e to ec:hoola, pllances tumlshed, laun*Y
one .tory, csntrsl air thntt bed· room tacllltln cioN to echool
room, 1 112 batht, tfvlng rQOm, , In town. Appl(catlona •vallable
llmllr room, khchon, dining at: VIllage Green A~•- 141 or
room, front porch, deck oft colllt4-9i2-371 t. EOii.

18,1993

�by Bob Hoeflich
Hi Cousin Charlie,
Just a few lines to let you know
that the 130th Meigs County Fair
did, indeed, get underway on Monday. The fairgrounds are hot and
steamy, but noboby seems to pay to
much attention to tllat. They just
keep doin' their thing.
You said you might get down to
our fair later in the week and I
wanted to. get word to you that
there 1S an error in the activities
schedule which I sent you earlier.
Somehow an error got through in
most of the programming showing
the quariCrhorse racing will be held
at 4 p.m. Saturday. Not so. That
racing will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday. I wanted to call that to your
attention since I know you always
enjoy those fast-moving races and
you wouldn't want to be late. So
that's 2 p.m. on Saturday. Okay?
You remember Garnet Irvine,
Racine-Portland Road resident?
Would you believe that Garnet,
who will be 92 soon, was on hand
for the opening day of the fair on
Monday? She was in a wheel chair
piloted by her granddaughter-inlaw, Terry Shain of Pomeroy. Garnet, a daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. C. W. Hoback, remembers the
days when she attended the Meigs
Fair aboard a wagon pulled by
horses.
By the way·; Margaret and Herman Kincaid who still live on
Brownell Ave., in Middleport were
on hand for tile fair Monday also.
Margaret remarked that she and
Herman observed their 47tll wedding anniversary on July 30.
And Rick Werner was doing the
fair on Monday with his young
twin sons who certainly resemble
their dad rillht down to the red hair.
Rick and h1s family who reside in
St. Louis, Mo., were in Meigs
County due to the death of his
Mother, Mrs. Mickey Werner, who
had been in failing health for sometime. So tlley're spending a few
days with Rick's Dad, Paul, to help

him over. some of tile rough spots.
Charlte, yotl will enjoy seeing
your long-time friends, Muriel and
Wall.ace Bradford when you get
down for the fair. Muriel who was
long-time secretary of the fair
board, is working in the secretary's
office during the fair and Wally,
who was such an active fair hoard
member for so long, is on the
!P'Ounds every day. They're holdmg up great,loolcin' good.
Also your friend Ed Ihle of
Racine was out for opening day
activities at the fair Monday and
you can count on seeing Ed when
you're down. Ed attends many of
the fair activities on tile grounds
everyday. Monday, he enjoyed the
mus1c of The Classics who play his
kind of songs.
Former fair board member, Barbara Fry, and her husband, Jim,
who was active in many directions
with previous fairs were talcing in
the fair Tuesday. Barbara commenl&lt;i that she doesn't miss not taking her more active role in staging
fair evenl&lt;i. Accompany them were
their daughter, Ruth Bush and their
granddaughter, Cheryl Bush, of
Virginia Beach. Cheryl has a good
record. She's tllree years old and
has attended three Meigs County

Fairs.

So, again, we hope you get
down for the last couple of days of
the fair. We know how you love
Meigs County tomatoes so as an
added incentive we have some
tomatoes from young Julie Spaun,
daughter of Ruth and Bill Spaun,
for you. Julie was reserve champion in vegetables in 4-H .this year
and Ruth is the only one in the
family who likes tomatoes. The
rest of tile overflow crop was given
to friends and Ruth put some aside
for you. Incidentally, Julie was
also reserve grand champion in
photography so she's had a good
year.
We'll look for you down now.
Meantime. do keep smiling.

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
.8AM•10 PM

NATHAN FRED ROTHGEB .

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY; AUG. 21, 1993

Rothgebs announce
birth of first son
Todd and Beverly Hoffman
Rothgeb, Langsville, are announcing the birth of their first child,
Nathan Fred Rothgeb, born July 15
at Holzer Medical Center. The infant weighed se.ven pounds, nine
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Fred
and Pauline Hoffman, Middlepon,
and great-grandmother, Ellen
Smitll, Middleport. Paternal grandparents are Elizabeth Rothgeb,
Gallipolis, and tbe late Nathan
(Randy) Rothgeb. Great-grandparenl&lt;i are Floyd and Ima Kingery,
Gallipolis, and Delmar and Betty
Rothgeb, Ocla, Fla.

The sixth reunion of Lenora Hudnall, David Hudnall Jr., Connie
McNutt Hudnall, Albany and the Phelps, Gerald, Linda, Scott and
late Ernest Hudnall was held Melinda Douglas, Frances, Lee,
Amanda and Ed Green, Clinton,
recently.
Kate,
Chelsea and C. W. Sanders,
No deatlls and five birtlls were
April
Savage,
Sherri Cooper, Charnoted. Son, E.W. to Becky and
lie
Carsey,
Tereasa
Carter, Albany.
Alfred Hudnall, son, Charles to
Grove,
JoAnn
and Mina
Lloyd and Penny Hudnall, daughter, JoAnna to Jennifer King Laud- Willard, Joe and Mary Christy,
ermilt, son, Christopher to Angie ' Alfred, Becky, Michael, Michelle
and E.W. Hudnall, Delbert
and Barney Barnhouse.
Attending were Lenora McNutt McBride, George and Bonnie DouHudnall, Howard, Addie Mae and glas, John and Brenda McBride,
Addie Hudnall, Dale and Denise Dale McClain, Atllens, Betty, April
Hudnall, Delbert, Nancy and David and Lisa Blankenship, Dewey Lee,
Sanders, Kenny and Rachel Hud- Ruth Steffel, Robert Pickett,
nall, Amy West, Bill Sr., Glenna Pomeroy, Junior, Evelyn Weblin,
and Billy Wade, Edna, Tony and Roger Hudnall, Angie Lee, Julie
Rob King, Robert Hudnall, King, Dave Reeves, Pagetown, Art
Howard, Katlly and Howie Hudnall Willison, Mary Willard, The
Jr., Jim, Charlotte, Bill and Chad Plains, Joan King, Don and Jennifer King Laudcrmilt, Jamie,
JoAnna Jeffers, 1-!arrisonville,
Larry, Gloria and Jared King,
Lloyd, Penny, Rand y, Lloyd Jr.,

Eric, Richard and Charles Hudnall;
Tommy Hudnall, Chuck, Bobbi
Lee and Lillie Randolph, Shade,
Willard, Linda, Becky, Sharon,
Willard Jr., Faith, Timmy, Linda
and Abby, Dyesville, Rick, Randy
and Robert Hudnall, J oni Peters,
Columbus, Crystal, Missy and
David Priddy, Mike Clark, Jerry
McDonald, Rutland, Mike and Bill
Osborne, Misty Llewellyn, Andy
Kirkendall, Carpenter, Dan West,
George and George Cooper Jr.,
Billy Jr. and Eric Osborne, Steve
Mia, and Alex Dylcn Secoy, Da~
West Sr., Brenda Bailey, New
Marshfield, Ruth Hudnall Chne,
Mar10n.
Music was played by Rick Hudnall, Joe Christy, Lloyd Hudnall,
b1il Osborne, Glen Faulk, Jared
King, Junior Wcblen and Ed
Green.
Next years reunion will be
announced July, 1994.

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Public waler systems are
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of tho drinking water In their
dlotrlbution oyotem.
The Rutland water oyatem
Ia required to collect and
examine a minimum of one

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m'onth. No eamplea were

collected and analyzed lor
tho month·of June, 1993.
Tho Water Departmenl
hao taken steps to Insure
that adequate monitoring
will be performed In tho
future.
Fo.r additional Information
contact the VIllage Clerk at
742-2t21.
(8) 18; 1TC

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 19, 1993

Muldmedlalnc.

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
BLACKSVILLE, W.Va.
Striking miners frustrated with
their employer blocked a road for
two hours before allowing a convoy carrying supplies to enter.
"We don't have the right to
block the road," said Larry
Knisell, president of United Mine
Workers' Local 1570. "We're
aware of that, but we don't have
any otller choice. We can't throw
rocks. Our hands are tied.''
About 60 United Mine Workers
members blocked the el)trance
Wednesday to Eastern Associated
Coal Corp.'s Federal No. 2 Mine
near Blacksville before union officials called the protest off.
One traCtor-trailer carried a load
of cots and mattresses. Others in
tile 11-vehicle convoy carried lumber, rock dust and fuel. Knisell said
it appeared the company was
preP.aring for replacement workers.
'If they bring replacement
workers in, there will be a ·war
because there's nobody ... who's
going to stand by and watch tllem
bring guys in to take ,our,johs," l)e .
said.~ ·-·"-·'
• .
'"'~ ·~ ~
Job security has been tile chief
issue in the strike tllat began May
10· against members of tile Bitumi- .
nous Coal Operators Association.
The union says more tllan 17,000
miners arc on strike in Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia. ·
Eastern Associated spokesman
Mike Herron called Wednesday's
action "annoying" and said hinng
replacement workers
an option
for tile company.
"The bottom line is Eastern
Associated is faced with the
prospect of losing customers and
we can't let that happen," Herron
said.
Also Wednesday, more tllan 200
pickets gathered at Philippi Development Inc.'s Sentinel Mine near
Philippi, apparently unaware of an
injunction that prevented them
from being there, said Lt. Terry
Snodgrass of the state police
detachment at Ellcins.
"I read tllem the order and told
tllem tlley needed to disperse and
not block tile entrances, which they
did," Snodgrass said.

POUND

AMultimedia Inc. Newopaper

Council delays
action on joint
water district

Miners
are irked
by new·
workers
.

FAIR ROYALTY SELECTED- Named little Miss and Mister Meigs County in ceremonies
held Wednesday ..afternoon at the 130th Meigs
County Fair were Ashton Autumn Bush, 4-yearold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenna Bush,
Pomeroy; and Dale Clair Teaford IV, 6-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Clair Teaford Jr.,
Racine • .Pictured from the left are Ashton Well,

son of Russell and linda Well, Chester, and Jennifer Smith, daughter or John and Glenn Smith,
Shade, first runners-up; Mister Meigs County
Dale · Clair Teaford IV and Miss Meigs County
Ashton Autumn Bush; and second runners-up,
Joshua Pape, SOD of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Pape,
Racine, and Sarah Marie Jeffers, daughter of
Howard and Terressa Jeffers, Middleport.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Plans for establishin~ a Middleport-Pomeroy water diStrict were
discussed at length by Middleport
Village Council Wednesday night,
but action on moving in that direction was postponed pending additional information.
Mayor Fred Hoffman presented
a resolution to council providing
for tile village to join witll Pomeroy
in filing a petition witll tile Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
the formation of the Big Bend
Water District
:
The proposed district would be
composed of Middleport and
Pomeroy, witll each viUage to have
three members on a board of
trUStees.

.

STEER SHOWMANSHIP - Jeromee Cal·
away and Billee Pooler were named grand and
reserve champion, respectively, at the Meigs

County
Fair Beef Showmanship Contest
Wednesday evening. Shown are, from left: Fair
Queen Stephanie Sayre, Pooler and Calaway.

was

(

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IN INDIANA • Tom Wyatt

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blgb In 80s.

Z Soctiono. 12 Pageo 35 c.,te

Vol. 44, NO. 10

.i

STOKELY

::
Real Estate General

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
(

.

Low

Friday

•
2 LITER

Vows in the air
LEBANON , Tenn. (AP) Whether love really makes the
world go 'round may be debatable,
but it got a Ferris wheel to spin at
the Wilson County Fair.
Brenda Linhart and John Dedman, both 22, exchanged vows
Monday in a gondola 80 feet in tile
air. The ceremony marked the
amusement ride's 100th anniversary on opening night of tile fair,
about 30 miles east of Nashville.
The bride-to-be arrived in a
horse-drawn wagon and walked
through an arch to the base of the
ride as "Here Comes the Bride"
played on a portable stereo.

24 PAK
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Pages

Hudnall family gathers for sixth reunion

attended Kentucky Christian
College and Cincinnati Bible
Seminary and bas been in the
ministry for 43 years. He bas
ministered at Zion from 19541956 and has served churches
in Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky,
Indiana and Illinois. Wyatt is
currently serving with the
North Liberty Christian
church in Indianapolis, Ind.
where be bas ministered for
seven years.

Sayre wins
Wednesday
harness race

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

Beat of the Bend...

Ohio Lottery

The questions discussed at tile
meeting dealt ·with how m.uch it
would cost to set up tile district and
what powers the trustees would
have insofar as administration of
the two. separate systems and the
setting of rates are concerned.
Councilman Paul Gerard raised
the questions about movinf:: forward on the joint venture w•tllout
answers to those questions, and
also some figures on what it will
cost to operate a 'district once it has
been established.
Representatives of Middleport
and Pomeroy councils have been
meeting for sometime as a first step
toward establishing a joint water
system. Both towns have water
problems, according to Hoffman,
who said tllat new water well fields
are needed and Middleport has no
place to drill.
As council member Judy Crooks
said, "We have to face the facts.
We either buy water from another
district or do our own, and it seems

Pomeroy-Mason bridge
work to begin Monday""
MARKET STEERS ·- Jason Pullins of
Alfred and John Collins of Reedsville were
named grand and reserve champion, respectively, in the Meies Countv .Junior Fair Beef Show

Market Steer -Competition Wednesday. Shown
are, from left: Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre,
Roger Pullins, Jason Pullins, John Collins and
George Collins.

Work on the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge will start Monday, August
2 3, according to John Dowler,
Deputy Director of District 10 of
the Ohio Department of Transportation.
Dowler said The Shelly Company of Thornville will be overlaying
the deck witll a specialized asphalt

Commissioners OK new roof for county garage ~~~~~t!~~~p:r~o~idu7:~;~~
.
.
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners approved a resolution based on the opinion of Prosecuti~g Attorney John R. Lentes, to
allow County Engineet Robert
Eason to proceed on an emergency
basis to replace the roof on the
county garage.
The county will pick up tile tab
for materials and cons,ultants to
install the new roof. Cost of the
new ·roof is estimated between
$20,000 and $30,000 with the
money to come from tile construe-

that going witll Pomeroy gives us-a
greater chance of gett.ing grant
money."
Hoffman said tllat the cost estimate to build the system has been
estimated at $4 million and that by
the two towns combining in the
project, the chance of getting a
grant is much greater. Without
mostly grant money the system
could not be built, said Hoffman.
He said tllat tile district would
have charge of the system and
would sell water to tile communities who would then sell it to the
consumers. The plan calls for each
village to maintain its own distribution system, according to the
mayor.
:
Council President Dewey Horton encouraged adoption of the resolution as a first step toward getting the district formed , but at tile
urg,ng of Gerard , no action was
taken. Gerard's contention was.tllat
members need time to look over
the petition to be filed with the
common pleas court. Copies of the
proposed petition were given to
Council members at last night's
meeting.
The importance of the water distric~ stressed Horton, is that it pul&lt;i
tilt rwo viUages in a position where
tllere is a better chance of getting
grants wi(hout which, he said,
there's no way a new system can
be built.
·
Hoffman said there are only
three ways the village can go
because of the current water problem - it can buy water from
another l)istrict, like Leading
Creek, it can drill its own wells, or
it can join Pomeroy to form a district He described buying water as
not being "c"ost effective."lt was
(Continued on Page 3)

tion and contingency funds.
Labor will be furnished by tile
engineer's office.
In additiol), the commission
authorized tile paving of a parking
lot serving the Department of
Human Services office in Middleport.
The parking lot is currently
leased from the village of Middleport. The paving, whiclt will cost
approximately $4,95!1':, is being
paid for by tile state.

Afterwards, commissioners
went into an executive session witll
Michael Swisher, department of
human services director, to discuss
legal matters.
In other matters, the commission:
• Met with Chester Township
Trustee Gary Dill regarding the
Goeglein Addition area off Flatwoods Road. Dill said trustees have
expressed interest in adding ihe
area to mileage. Currently the road

.
.
.
through tile area is defined as a pnvate road. .
C
Off
• Gav~ L~tter ontro1
•cer
Kenny Wtggms ~tll.on~ to aprly
for a Recr:cte h•o rant or
$12,000 wl!h a local m~tch ~~
$4,000 to~ p•clced up by e so 1
waste disblcL
. .
.
Present were CommiSSion Pres•dent Robert Hartenbach, V•~e !'res•dent ~anet Howard, Commtss1oner
Manmng Roush and Clerk Mary
Hobstetter.

the matenal last used wh1ch did not
hold up, tile deputy director said.
ODOT officials in cooperation
witll tile mayors of Pomeroy, Middleport and Mason determined the
best time tp begin tile project was
after both the Mason and Meigs
County Fairs were over.

The contraCt price on the project
is $129,379 and the completion
date is September 30.
One-way traffic controlled by
naggers will be maintained tlloughout construction except for two
nights when tile actual application
process will take place. The bridge
must be closed to tiaffic while the
over!ay is being applied .
Hopefully, Dowler said, the
night closings will minimize inconveni.ence to motorists. The twonight closings will not be on Friday, Saturday or Sunday nights,
and will be restricted to tile hours
between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. Advance
notice of the night-closures will be
given, Dowler said.

90
....----_ ___.........,

.."

/ ROYAL
CROWN COLA
PRODUOS
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(

.
OLDEST TRACTOR -Dale and Jo Kantz of Pomeroy won a
trophy for the oldest tractor displayed at the Meigs County Fair
Antique Farm Tractor Show. Here; the couple displays their 1927
John Deere&gt;Model D farm tractor.
·
•

EQUIPMENT DISPLAY- Edison Hollon of Racine won a trophy for best equipment display at the Meigs County Fair Antique
.
Farm Tractor Show.

ELVIS AND FRIENDS - People lined up to get their picture
taken with Elvis Wednesday night at the Meigs County Fair. Here
Elvis gets his picture taken with two friends between shows.
\

. ·I

'

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