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                  <text>Page-08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Farm Flashes

Beef prices questioned
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Gallia County
l!:xtension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS - Senators Bob
Kerry and James Exon are asking
'Why declining beef prices at the
:reedlot aren't being passed on to
:conswners through grocery chains.
A spokeswoman said the Justice
Dept. is conducting a price analysis
"throughout the meat industry."
The Senators say USDA figures
.show a record wholesale to-retail
price spread for each of the past six
months and want Justice to see if
the price spread "reflects excessive
concenuauon within the retail food
industry."
Kentucky bluegrass is the primary turfgrass in Ohio. With proper management, it forms a ftne tex~ured, high quality, Ion~; lasting
lawn. It has an aggresstve sodforming nature which allows rapid
recovery from injury. It is winterhardy and is capable of withslanding severe drought; however, it
tends to become dormant during
periods of hot or dry weather, Nonirrigated bluegrass can be expected
to undergo some degree of dormancy during most Ohio summers.
, Kentucky bluegrass requires
moist, well-drained, fertile soil. It
will not tolerate extremely acid or
iillcaline soil and generally does not
perform well in high shade areas.
(lermination and establishment are
~low, and weeds may become a
problem if seeded in spring or sum!Der. 'I'haefore, fall is the preferred
lime of year for bluegrass establishment. Kentucky bluegrass can
be established from seed or as a
sod with equal ultimate success.
. For a high quality, weed free
turf, Kentucky bluegrass requires a

medium to high level of management with regular applications of
fertilizer. Although not needed for
survival, irrigation is required during hot, dry periods if turf quality is
to be mamtained. All varieties
respond well to a mowing height of
2.0 to 3.0 inches, and some tolerate
cutting as low as 1.0 to 1.5 inches.
Use of drought-streSsed com. If
drought-stressed corn is green chopped, it should be tested for
nitrate concenuation prior to feeding, Thi s practice is especially
imporlant if high rates of nitrogen
fertilizer or manure were applied or
if the soil has a high organic matter
content. A return to non-stressed
conditions following substantial
rainfall should decrease nitrate
accwnulation, but chopping should
be delayed for 3 to 5 days.
Ensiling high niuate forage can
result in production of various
nitrogen oxide gases. These gases ·
are highly toxic to humans and
livestock. The danger of silo gas
can exist from ensiling time to four
weeks later. Durin~ this period, do
dot enter a silo wt•hout first running the blower for 15 to 30 minutes. It is also recommended that a
hatch door be opened just above
the level of rhe forage when running the blower and that a self-contained breathing apparatus be worn
if you must enter any silo during
the ftrst four weeks after filling it.
Any person exposed to silo gas
should seck immediate medical
attention to combat delayed poisoning symptoms.
For silage, moisture concenuation should be between 55 and 70
percent. Green barren stalks contain betwee n 75 and 90 percent
moisture but will dry down rapidly
if weather remains hot and dry.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

August 18, 1991

Harrison, Eblin receive
promotions at OVEC

Fruit, nut production
sets new record

CHESHIRE - Two employees was promoted to Unit Supervisor
were promoted at the Ohio Valley and m 1982, to Assistant Shift
Electric~ 's Kyger Creek Operating Engineer. Harrison and
his wife, Mary, reide at Route 3,
Plant, effecbve August 3.
Gallipolis.
Donald L. Harrison was promotEblen joined OVEC in 1971 as a
ed from AssiSiant Shift Operating
Engineer to Shift Operating Engi- Laborer in .he Labor, Janitor
neer and Larry A. Eblen was pro- Department. In 1973 he lransferred
moted from Unit Supervisor to to the Operations Department as a
Assislant Shift Operating Engineer Utility Operator, and during that
same year he advanced to Auxilin the Operations Department.
Harrison joined OVEC in 1955 iary Equipment Ooerator. In 1979
as a Maintenance Helper in the he was promoted to Equipment
Maintenance Department, and later Operator and in 1985, to Unit
that year he tniiiSferred to the Oper- Supervisor. Eblen and his wife,
ations Deparunent as an Auxiliary Angela, reside at Route I, GallipoEquipment Operator. In 1973 he lis.

DONALD HARRISON

WASHINGTON (AP)-Amer&gt;
icans are truly nutty about nuts. ,
Total domestic consumption of
tree nuts - almonds, hazelnuts,
macadamias, pecans, pistachios:
and walnuts - exceeded 626 mil-·
lion pounds last year. That's a
record of 2.49 pounds per person, .
the Agriculture Department says.
According to a USQA report
Thursday on fruit and nut produc-·tion, U.S. production of the six
major domestic tree nuts set a new
record of 1.9 billion pounds in
1990, up 20 percent from 1990 and
7 percent from 1988.
The value of the nut production
also reached a record $1.25 billion
in 1990.

Ohio Lottery

Quarter
Horse
•
racing

Pick 3:079
Pick 4: 1882
Cards : 10-H, 5-C
6-0;5-S
Super Lotto:
9-10-17-18-26-43
Kicker: 833465

Page4

or rain 70 percent. High In mid-70s.

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 canis
A Multlmedls Inc. Newspaper

Leaders are
shocked by
Gorbachev's
removal

OTIIER GREAT PETS- These pel owners were recognized for
outstanding entries in other categories of the pet show held Friday
at lbe Meigs County Fair. First row, 1-r, are Harmony Thobaben,
first place bird; Andrea Neutzling, first place rodent; Joseph
McCall, second place, most unusual; Derek Johnson, first place,

most unusual; Odie Karr, second place rodent. Second ~ow, 1-r,
are Amy Wood, Best of Show and most talented; Do~nte May,
third place most unusual; Michelle Friend, 1991 Fa•r Queen;
Molly HeinJ!S, second place Best of Show; and Jessica Johnson,
first place most unusual (with her brother, Derek).

Communist hard-liners replace Gorbachev
MOSCOW (AP) - Communist
hard-liners backed by tanks in the
streets
from

If you think electric
cooQeratives aren't
looKing for ways to
conserve energy. ..

here's how we're driving
costs into the ground
with Geotherrilal.
Ohio's 28 electric cooperatives are leading the way in driving heating,
cooling, and water heating costs into the ground by promoting to their
members - who are also their owners- the new Geothermal Heating and
Cooling systems.
'!belay's Geothennal systems provide an energy-efficient, low-maintenance,
long-lasting, and environmentally beneficial advantage. Plus, by installing
Geothennal, you can cut your air conditioning costs by up to 30%, and your
heating and water heating bills by up to 60%.
A Geothermal system uses the eanh's relatively constant ground temperatures as a superior way of providing heating air, cooling air, and water heating
in one package.
But that's how an electric cooperative is different. After all, wouldn't you
take the lead in promoting Geothennal Heating and Cooling systems to help
protect the owners of your company from skyrocketing electric rates? Especially
if they were your neighborS/
'Ae do. Every day.
•

BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC
COOPERATIVE, INC.
One of 28 Ohio Electric Cooperatives

143 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 -0279

POWER BY THE PEOPLE,
FOR THE PEOPLE.
;

Low tonight in mid-60s.
Tuesday, chance

I

'

bachev
to ttansform the Soviet Union and end the Cold War.
Gorbachev was detained at his
vacation home in the Crimea, said
a spokesman for Boris Yeltsin,
president of the Russian republic,
as hundreds of armored vehicles
poured into Moscow and long
columns of tanks churned up the
pavement.
Thousands of demonstrators
filled the streets of central
Moscow; 34 armored vehicles surrounded the Russian Federation
building. The papulist Yeltsin, the
nation's other best-known leader,
climbed atop one of the vehicles
and urged the Russian people to
resist ·
Military action was reported in
other Soviet republics.
An eight-member committee
announced it assumed emergency
powers at 6 a.m. today (II p.m .
EDT Sunday). Vice President Genwas announced that Gorbachev was being
TANKS ROLL IN MOSCOW ·A division
nady Yanayev, who took over as
replaced by Gennady I. Yanayav as Soviet presior Soviet armored personnel carriers roll down a
president, said the changes were
dent. (AP)
street along the Moscow river near downtown
temporary and did not mean a
Moscow Monday morning, several hours al'ter it
renunciation of reforms or affect
the Soviet Union's international
Yanayev (pronounced yah- was designed to end "chaos and when Gorbachev chose him as his
commitments.
NEYE-yeff)
said he was taking anarchy" in the country and said deputy in December, held the. main
Even so, the takeover threw into
over
under
a
state of emergency Gorbachev, 60, was unable to per- power or if he was merely a ftgurequestion Gorbachev's policies of
and
was
supported
by the commit- form his duties for health reasons. hcad.
creating a free-market economy,
tee.
which
includes
the
KGB- the However, there has been no recent
granting autonomy to the nation's intelligence agency -and
republics and carrying out arms itary and police officials. top mil- indication he was ill.
It was unclear if Yanayev, 53, a
control agreements with the United
The emergency decree said it little-known provincial official
States.

~-Local

briefs

Woman suffers burns in fire
Brenda Hill was treated at Veterans Memorial Hospital early
Sunday morning for bums received in a fire at her home in Min·
ersville.
Pomeroy Fireman Jeff Shank reported that Mrs. Hill rece ived
first and second degree burns to both hands, her forehead, her knees
and feet when sbc opened lhe closet where the fire had started.
According to Shank, the ftre, presumable caused by an electrical
short, was confined to the one bedroom although there was smoke
damage to two other rooms.
,
Mrs. Hill told Shank that she woke up about 1:45 a.m. Sunday,
thought she had left the light on in the closet and when she opened
the door, the flames swept out. She was transported to Veterans
Memorial by the EMS squad where she was treated and released.
Four pieces of equipment and 13 Pomeroy and four Middleport
ftremen were on lhe scene until 3:24 a.m. It was reponed that the
family had insurance on the structure.

Coolville man killed in crash
Kenneth Wesley Bragg, 22, Coolville. died Sunday morning,
Aug. 18, 1991, at Camden Clarlc Memorial Hospital as a result of
injuries received in a motorcycle acctdent on Fnday at apprmumately 10:10 p.m.
.
According to Trooper Steve Weber of the Washmgton County
State Highway Patrol, Bragg was traveling nonh on County Road
26 in Washington County when he ran off the right side of the road,
striking a mailbox and utility pole head-on. We~ stated that.~ragg
was not wearing a helmet and that there was a good posstbtbty of
alcohol involvement" although that report is not yet available.
Continued on page 3

LONDON (AP) - World leaders and financial markets were
stunned by news today that Mikhail
S. Gorbachev had been ousted from
power by hard-line conservatives.
President Bush called the coup
"a disturbing development" and
said the U.S. may withhold aid programs for the Soviet Union.
Bush, who met with Gorbachev
last month for an arms control summit, noted "coups can fail."
There were no reports of Western governments increasing military alert status, but many vacauoning leaders and officials returned to
their capitals.
.
NATO officials called a spec tal
session today in Brussels to assess
the situation. The European Community foreign ministers said they
would hold an emergency meeung
on Tuesday in The Hague. .
Prime Minister John MaJOr of
Britain said Gorbachev had been
removed from office unconstitutionally and demanded that the new
government hold to e;ulier agreements.
"We will expect the Soviet
Union to respect and honor all
those commiunents President Gorbachev has made on its behalf,"
Major told reporters outside his
Downing Street office.
Former prime minister Margaret

Thatcher urged the Soviet people to
take to the streets. ''The people
have got used to democracy . I
doubt whether they will give it up
easily," she said.
Downing Street said Major
would discuss the Soviet situation
with other world leaders including
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl,
who canceled an Austrian vacation
and rushed back to Bonn.
The Soviet Union still has about
300,000 soldiers based in former
East Germany.
But the Soviet military headquarters in Wuensdorf, outside
Berlin, said in a statement that
plans to withdraw the troops by
1994 would not be affected by the
developments in the Soviet Union.
"The withdrawal will continue
as plru10ed," the statement said.
Upon word of Gorbachev's
ouster. world financial markets
plummeted, as the dollar and gold
bullion - considered safe mvestmcnts in times or unrest - soared.
Stock markets in Europe, Sydney, Tokytnifd Hong Kong and
plunged in chaotic trading. Tokyo's
Nikkei Stoek Index dropped I ,300
points, or nearly 6 percent.
There were shivers of fear in
Eastern European countries that
slipped the Kremlin's leash less
than two years a~o.

Drought could push
some off the farm
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Some farmers may be foiCed out of
business by the drought but blaming the dry spell for changes m
agricultural statistics may be dJfftcult.
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics
Service sa id there were 85,000
farms in 1988, the year the state
had a more severe drought than the
current one.
In 1989 !he number of farms
rose to 86:000 before falling to
84,000 in 1990.
A farm is defined as a single
operation that either produces or
has the potential to produce $1 ,000
or more of agricultural products a
year.

"It looks like just the normal
attrition that we've seen over a
long period of Lime. It's a steadily
declining nwnber of farms not only
in Ohio but across the country as
well," said James Ramey, state
statistician with the agency.
Net cash farm income amounted
to $1.44 billion in 1987, and
dropped to $1.34 billion in 1988.
Net cash income for 1989 was
$1.18 billion.
"A lot of that has to do with the
amount of government payments
that are in there. Those have
declined all three years as well in
response to budget pressures, "
Ramey said.
Continued on page 3

Competitive
bid plan is

criticized
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich' s administration is willing to defend a plan to
competitively bid millions of dollars in professional services contracts in coun if it is challenged, a
spokesman said.
The proposal would violate a
1988 state law requiring the state to
obtain engineering and architectural contracts through negotiations, said Donald L. Mader, executive director of the Ohio Association of Consulting Engineers.
If the administration puts the
plan into effect, "we'd have to take
a stand in defense of the law ,"
Mader said in a story Sunday in
The Colwnbus Dispatch.
"The governor has to uphold all
the laws of the state of Ohio, not
just the ones he likes," said Mader,
whose organization represents 175
engineering and architectural fmns
statewide.
Continued on page 3

CAT WINNERS • Tli'ese cat owners were
awarded prizes In tbelr category at tbe Open
Class Pet Show held Friday at the Meigs County
Fair. Pictured, rront, is Angela Wilson, second

place. Second row, l·r, are Molly Heines, first
place, Derek Johnson, honorable mention, and
Jessica Johnson, third place.

J

J,

�. ·•·-t

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTE RESTS OF THE

MEIGS· MASON AR""'-

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROB ERT L. WINGETT
Publl•her

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gene ral Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assl•tant Publisher/ Controller
AMEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dai ly Press Asso·
ela tion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OP INION are welcome. They should be less than300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
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ties.

Taft loosens up
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Ohio Secretary of State Bob Taft seems to have shed
the patrician image that his politically famous family has projected most
of this century.
. . .
. .
He relaxed at lunch with reporters last week, lflJCCLmg uncharactenst1c
humor into a briefing on his first seven months in office. He talked5with
enthusiasm about his new house in suburban Upper Arlington.
11 wasn't the straight-laced Raben Taft II, the pin-striped great grandson of President William Howard Taft, the lanky, one-time Ohio House
member from Cincinnati who always seemed uncomfortable with th e
media.
The 49-year-old Ivy League graduate - Princeton and Yale- apparently has learned to be at ease with him self, having had the exposure of
two statewide races under handlers who sought to loosen h1m up and g1ve
him a common touch.
He was former Gov. James A. Rhodes' lieutenant governor running
mate in 1986 when Rhodes lost a bid for a fifth term.
Taft wound up in last year's secretary of state race after George
Voinovich sewed up the GOP nomination for governor, which Taft sought
until persuaded by party leaders to become part of a unified GOP slate.
In the process, he dropped the " Robert Taft II" and became Bob Taft,
as evidenced by signs leading to his office and on state documents.
Taft, in an hour-long conversation, announced that computenzed campaign finance records, sought by the news media for years, wil l be read y
in January.
He also promised renewed efforts for passage of a long-debated campaign finance reform bill, currently stalled in the Republican-controlled
Senate after being passed by the House.
Taft said he has cut his staff and saved taxpayers' money.
In talking about the duties of his office, he admitted so~e are dull.
" I'm going to give_ a prize to the first reporter ~ho..wnt7s an mtercsting story about the Uniform Com~erc1al Code socuon, he JOked.
. He did not bring up next year s U.S. Senate race. but 1mpl1ed was the
notion that Taft wants 10 maintain good media relations that could help
him in future potitical undertakings.
.
Republicans hope next year to unseaL DemocratiC Sen. John Gl enn,
and Taft is among several officeholders who has fi gured in speculation
over the GOP nomination. He does not discourage such talk:.
Asked about making the race, he said: "I like my job, but I won't rule
iI OUI," he said.
Taft's father and grandfather both s erved in the Senate, and friends say
that 10 follow in their footsteps would achieve a long-held goal.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
.
Today is Monduy, Aug. 19, the 23Ist day of 1991. There are 134 days
left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 19, lK12, the USS Constiwtion - also known as Old Ironsides - defeated the British frigate Guerriere in a naval battle east of
Nova Scotia during the War of 1812. It was a victory that made a hero of
Captain Isaac Hull, and boosted American morale in the early stages of
Jhe war.
•. On this date:
:: In 1848, the New York Herald reported the discovery of gold in California.
• In 1929, the comedy program "Amos and Andy," starring Freeman
[iosden and Charles Correll, made its network radio debut on NBC.
• In 1934, a plebiscite in Germany approved the vesting of sole execuiive power in Adolf Hitler as Fuehrer.
. In 1942, more than 100,000 Canadian and British soldiers were killed
iii a raid against the Gennans at the port city of Dieppe, France.
: In 1951,40 years ago, the owner of the St. Lou1s Browns, Bill Veeck,
$ent in Eddie Gaedel, a 3-foot-7-inch midget, to pinch-hit in a game
~ainst Detroit. Gaedel, whose function ~as to ~aw w_
alks, was later
Nn-ed from play by American League PreSident Wtll Harridge.
: In 1955, severe flooding in the Northeast caused by the remnants of
Hurricane Diane claimed SOllie 200 lives.
: In 1960, a tribunal in Moscow convicted American U-2 pilot Francis
C)ary Powers of espionage, and sentenced him 10 10 years in prison.
•· In 1974 U.S. Ambassador Rodger P. Davies was fatally wounded by a
butlet that 'penettated the American em_bassy in Nicosia, Cyprus, during
an anti-American protest by Greek Cypnots.
.• In 1976, President Ford won the Republican presidential nomination at
lhe party's convention in Kansas City.
•

erry's World
•

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~

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--"Hi there! How are thongs - er - 1mean things ::'. ....
~-----------------------------~

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The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Ohio-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

1~ ·~ ·

·~

Competitive ...

...

Computer viruses becoming even more lethal
WAS HINGTON - When the
workers of a Washin g10n, D.C.,
company arrived at their office one
mornin g and switched on th eir
computers, they found an amusing
message fl as hing across their terminals: " Your PC is now stoned.
Legalize marijuana."
Then came the sinking realizati on th at it was no joke - but
rather it wa s a way of computer
hackers sayin g: Gotcha. All the
computers a t thi s Was hington,
D.C .. fi rm had th eir memories
wiped clea n and internal fil es
destroyed by a computer virus the deliberate sabotaging of a computer system.
An infinite number of viruses
have bee n empl oyed, and mo st
even have names and aliases. and
are used more than once. This parLicular virus even has aliases that
include " Hawaii," " Marijuana,"
" New Zealand, " " Smithsonian,"
or " Hamo."
Other viruses are known in the
trade by aliases that include " Friday 13th," "Frog 's Alley," " Fu
Manchu" and "Shake." According to the Virus Dictionary, the Fu
Manchu viru s is ac tivated when
certain keys are pressed, then the

message " the world will hear from
me again " is displayed. Rude messages materialize when the names
of several prominent politicians are
typed. (The authors of thi s viru s
misspelled the names.)
The authors of the virus called
" Sunday" apparentl y crusade for
leisure tim e. Their virus, which is
triggered when infected files run on
any Sunday, flashes this message:
"Today is Sunday! Why do you
work so hard? All work and no
play make you a dull boy! Come
on! Let' s go out and ha ve so me
fun! "
The lighthearted names belie the
fact that viruses arc lethal to the
nation 's private and governmental
computer systems. Experts estimate
that computer crime costs the U.S.
economy upward of $50 billion
annually. These are typically "perfeet crime s" in the sense that
detection is difficult and only one
out of every 22,000 computer
crimes results in a conviction.
Winn Schwartau , executive
director of the Jnternauonal Part·
nership Against Computer Terrorism, believes that an esti'!'aled 521
viruses have been 1denuf1ed, and
that an average of 12 new computer

viruses are being inlroduced every
day.
It happens with startl ing fre·
quency, though only some of the
more celebrated cases hit the headlines. Such as the estimated $116
million spent repairing damage
caused by a "worm " virus inserted
into the nation 's largest computer
network by a Cornell University
student in 1988. And the $100 million to clean up the effects of the
so-called "Columbus Day" virus
of 1989.
Sources told our associate Dean
Boyd that the computers of Amenca' s pri va te sector are at even
greater peril than those of the goveromcnt. Last April , we reported
thilt many U.S. government com puters are easy prey for saboteurs.
A recent example involves a Dutch
hacker group that evaded U.S.
authorities for nearly six months as
they penetrated the computer systerns of the Kennedy Space Center,
the Pentagon's Pacific Fleet Comm~d and the Lawrence Livermore
Nat1onal.Labratory. .
What s the solutiOn? Experts
beli_evc that Americans tend to treat
th e1r computers hk e small -town
re sid ents treat their cars. Th ey

"You might say the Zachary Taylor case was not lost on us ... "

By Jack Anderson
an d Da/e V.an Alta
leave the doors unlocked and their
keys in the ignition. Many sources
argue that the current apathy of the
fed eral government toward computer security has spilled over into
the private sector.
Until this new breed of micro
chip-terrorists can be foiled by prevention and prosecution, the crime
wave will go unabated. According ·
to Winn Schwartau, it is "safer to
commit a computer crime than to
drive your car to work."
CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST The Federal Communications
Commission recently delivered an
early Chrisun as present to Madison
Avenue and the television industry.
By delaying until January new regulation s curbing the number of
commercials during children's programming, the gold-mine period of
the weeks prior to Christmas can
still be mined.
Critics charge that the FCC
abdicated its authority as the cops
of the airwaves. The Children's
Televi sion Act was passed by
Congress last fall. It hmits commercials on children's TV to 10 1/2
minutes an hour on weekends and
12 minutes an hour on weekdays,
while encouraging more educational shows. But Congress also left
wiggle room for the television lobbyists to turn into a huge loophole.
The FCC had freedom to draft the
specific rules and until it does ,
advertisers can go hog-wild - and
probably will.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Deregula tion, the miracle drug of the
1980s. has once again shown its
darker side. The airline industry is
undergoing massive consolidation
(that's what polite people call
bankruptcies). Pan Am IS being
devoured by its competitors and
now TWA recently announced it
will be entering Chapter II reorga- :
nization. We suppose consolidation
will start to get a bad name when
the country is left with one or two
price-gouging airlines. That's not
to scoff at airlin e deregulation.
After all, it has produced wonderful
benefits to travelers who are willing to make their reservations a
month in advance - with hefty
cancellation penalties - and still
fac e the prospect of being
"bumped" by an oversold flight.
Copyright, 1991 , United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Who speaks for the middle class?
Have you noticed how carefully,
in recent months, prominent Democratic spokesmen like House
Speaker Foley and Senate majority
leader Mitchell have tried to identify the Democratic Party with the
" middle class"?
Of cour.&gt;e, class identification is
an old game in American politics,
and both parties are forever playing
it, both offensively and defensively . Thus the Democrats have
always. and by no means unsuccessfully, tried to depict the Republicans as "the pany of the rich."
The Republicans, in tum, are not
above hinting that the Democrats
are mostly interested in various
organized "minority" constituencies: blacks, homosexuals, and
American Indians, for example.
But the central psychological
fact of American politics is that
most voters think of themselves as
"middle class," or at least aspire
to belong in that spacious category.
The chief reason why socialism
never got anywhere in the United
States was that so few Americans
conceived of them selves as mem bers of the ·'proletariat '' - a

"working class" exploited by its
employers. Rightly or wrongly,
most Americans think of them selves as in control of their own
destiny, and as bargaining with
their employer, who in turn is in
control of his.
This concept, decorated with a
- wife and.two childten, a modest
house and a car, is so pervasive that
it is called "the American dteam,"
and practically everyone - even
Australian aborigines and peasants
on the Peruvian altiplano - is presumed to aspire to it. (As a matter
of fact, of course, a great many
envious foreigners do.)
So both parties will tell you,
with a straight face, that they best
represent the American "middle
class." But there is clearly something going on in the inner circles
of the Democratic Party, because
references 10 its identification with
the middle class have recently
become so standard a part of its
rhetoric that one can only conclude
a concerted campaign is under way.
The Democrats are forever making these pathetic attempts 10 graft
favorabl e attributes onto their

I

they just can't be bothered with
savmg their nation. Those remaining few who do aspire apparently
can't decide if they really want to
perspire: AI Gore, Tom Harkin and
Bill Clinton seem to be doing more
testing of the water than George's,
Barbara' s and Millie's chemists
combined.
As this epidemic of reticence
has paralyzed the party that still
in is ts it speaks for America' s
majority. only the noted philosopher Mark Russell has figured it
out. He says these Democrats must
be scared stiff at the thought of
running ~gainst the all -powerful
Paul Tsongas.
The Democratic Pany seems to
be willing America toward a fait
accompli that need not be. George
Bush will run for re-election in
1992 as a formidable but flawed
president.
Bush ' s grandest success - a
near casualty-free victory of our
military in the Persian Gulf seems increasingly harder to savor
with every day that Saddam Hussein remains in power in Baghdad,
with his nuclear and chemical
threat still at hand. Bush let Saddam survive despite the heroics of

party ' s image . Remember their try to avoid.
Lay off that stuff about "the
1984 convention in San Francisco?
The Republicans were making pany of compassion." Insofar as
headway with the accusation that there's a "compassion vote" in
the Democrats a! ways wanted to this country - a great aching
"blame America first." So some desire to tax money out of those
inspired PR man equipped virtually who have it and g1ve it, tg ~o~e
every delegate in the Moscone who don't- thefl\!lllt\e!ats 1i8ve it
Center with a small American Hag, anyway. But as far as the middle
to wave at the TV cameras as an class is concerned, "compassion"
earnest of the Democrats' patrio- is a loser. The average American
doesn't want the Democratic
tism.
In Atlanta in 1988, the worry Party's " compassion." As a memapparently was that the Republi- ber of the middle class, he can
cans were walking off with the make it on his own, thank you, if
issue of concern for "the family." he's just given the chance.
Talk about cutting his taxes (and
So on the last night of the convendon't
just talk about it - cut
tion. after Dukakis had made his
acceptance speech, not only his them). Keep government regulachildren but those of practically tions down to a decent minimum
every other aspirant for the nomi- (or, as Ronald Reagan put it
nation were brought onstage , to tellingly, get them off his back).
demonstrate that Democrats had Small wars are OK, provided
they're over quickly and American
families too.
What will the Democrats do in casualties are -low.
And by the way, dear
1992 to intensify their identification with the middle class? It's dif- Democrats, if you value your politficult to imagine; but I do have a ical lives, lay off of race quotas for
suggestion as to what they might jobs.

our men and women who risked
their lives so we would be free
from thi s menace.
Meanwhil e, Bush has but one
policy to solve our problems here
at home: manana. He has no plan
for national health care - never
mind that 34 million of us remain
uninsured, and that the life savings
of dedicated worker s can be
whisked away by catastrophic illness.
As a " War-on -Crime Pres ident, " Bush fi ghts plans to keep
guns from drug gangs. As an
" Education President," he is running on empty . And, as Mario
Cuomo is fond of saying, our cities
and states are suffering from a ·
decade of Reagan-Bush policies
that were designed to promote
growth for all but which fail ed to
live up to the promises of the supply-siders.
Here's how it happened: Reagan 's federal tax cuts led to the
elimination of l'ederal revenue sharing ; so states and local govern ments had to rai se taxes - 33
states did this year alone. Also,
social security payroll withholding
increased. So' Lhe total tax burden
of individuals is back where it was

Hurricane lashes North Carolina
before heading to New England
By ANITA SNOW
Associated Press Writer
Hurricane Bob lashed North
Carolina's Outer Banks with heavy
rain, then churned its way up the
Eastern Seaboard with gusts to 138
mph today as vacationers and residents took their boats out of the

water and fled inland.
Hurricane warnings were posted
all the way to Maine, and Massachusetts' Cape Cod braced for its
fiCSt direct hit from a hurricane in
six years tonight. Forecasters predieted Long Island, N.Y., would
get hiL around mid-afternoon.

At 6 a.m. EDT the storm was
110 miles east of the DelawareMaryland-Virginia peninsula.
The first hurrican e of the
Atlantic season knocked out power,
toppled trees and caused flooding
along the Outer Banks on Sunday
night, and at least two tornad~s
were reported. No m)unes or maJor
damage were reported.
Steered by a jet-stream current,
Continued from page 1
the storm's 20-mile-wide eye skirted the barrier islands that make up
the Outer Banks around II p.m.,
and began moving north-northeast,
Two accidents resulting in moderate damage and one injury were
parallel to the coast, at up to 30
investigated by Pomeroy police over the weekend.
mph today, said the National HurriFriday at 5:36p.m. police were called to East Second and Lynn
cane Center in Coral Gables. Fla.
where for a motorcycle-car accident Scott Chapman, 26, Mason,
"It's going to get a lot faster
w. Va. was on the motorcycle when it was struck br, Paula J:lall.
before it's over," center meteorolPomeroy, as she made a left tum. Hall was cited for failure 10 y1cld.
ogist Martin Nelson said.
Chapman received minor injuries and was treated at the scene.
Canada issued a high wind and
The second accident occurred Sunday at 9:27 p.m . o~ the
heavy rain warning for Nova ScoMcDonalds parking lot. Jeffrey Greer, Mason, W. Va. backed mto a
tia New Brunswick and Pnncc
pickup truck driven by George Connolly, Syracuse, There were no
Ed~ard Island.
citations.
The storm had sustained 115
winds and gusts 10 138 mph. But
the winds were below hurricaneforce - 75 mph - at Hatteras,
N.C., and emergency officials
He
is
~urvived by hi s wife reopened some bridges and let resiKennneth Bragg
Maudie Jordan Campbell to whom dents return to the Bogue Banks
Kenneth Wesley Bragg, 22, he was married June 28, 194 7, in early today.
"We've closed the shelters ,
Coolville, died Sunday morning, Kenlllcky.
He was preceded in death by opened up the bridges and sent
Aug. 18, 1991. at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital as a result of two sisters, Edna Thompson and people home," said Carteret Couninjuries received in a motorcycle Hazel Sheets , and two brothers ty emergency coordinator Tom
who died in infancy.
Hinton. "I've che~: ked everywhere
aocident.
Services
will
be
held
WednesI
can check in the county and can 't
Born in Newark, he was the son
.
day,
August
21,
at
the
Willis
find
any damage. "
of Paul and Betty Bragg.
Besides his parents he is sur- Funeral Home with the Rev. Alfred
vived by a brother, Roger Bragg, at Holley officiating. Burial will be at
home· two sisters, Tammy Bragg, the Campbell Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday ,
at ho'me, and Kimberly Bragg,
August
20, from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
Tuppers Plains; paternal grandparVETERANS MEMORIAL
p.m.
at
the
funeral home.
ents, Paul and Helen Bragg,
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Full
military
service
will
be
Coolville; and several aunts and
conducted by the V.F.W. Post None.
uncles.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESServices 'will be held Wednes- 4464.
Burwell McKinney and Carolyn
day at I I a.m. at the White-Blower
Atkins.
Funeral Home with Rev. Harold ~argaretJohnson
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Priddy officiating. Burial will be in
Dora Clay , Rutland; and Merle
the Coolville Cemetery.
Margaret Johnson, 68, of Mason.
Rutland.
Friends may call at the funeral died Sunday, Aug. 19, 1991 , in the Davis,
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
home on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m .
Ohio State University Hospital, Gladys Kacsor and Ilene Buck.
Columbus, Ohio.
She was a homemaker and
Clarence L. Crawford
member of the St. Joseph Catholic
Church of Mason, and Senior
Clarence L. Campbell, 80, of Citizens of Pomeroy.
676 Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, died
Born March 7, 1923, in
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Saturday, August 17, 1991, at Niederbrechen, Germany, she was a the selections Saturday night in the
Holzer Medical Center.
daughter of the late Herman and Ohio Lottery:
Born Sept. 21, 1909, in Crown Josephine Roth.
Super Lotto
City, he was the son of the late
She was also preceded in death
9-10-17-18-26-43
Eddie Joseph and Minnie Fillinger by an infant daughter, Claudia, and
(nine, ten, seventeen, eighteen,
Campbell. A World War II veteran one brother.
twenty-six, fony-three)
and former prisoner of war, he was
Surviving are ber husband,
The jackpot is $4 million.
a member of the Veterans of For- Eugene E. Johnson of Mason; a son Kicker
eign War Post 4464 and retired and daughter-in-law, Howard 0 .
8-3-3-4-6-5
from American Standard of Colum- and Jennifer Johnson of Knoxville.
(eight, three , three, fou r, six,
bus.
Tenn .; three grandchildren, Eugene five)
E., II, Shawn and Shannon . Pick 3 Numbers
Johnson;
two brothers, Joseph Roth
0-7-9
The Daily Sentinel
of Fula, Germany, Oswald Roth of
(zero, seven, nine)
Petersburg,
Germany;
sister, Pick 4 Numbers
(USPSitil·fiO)
Johanna lllhardt of Fula, Germany;
J-8-8-2
A Dlv lllon of MuiHmedla, Inc.
several relatives and friends.
(one, eight, eight, two)
Published E'Very afternoon. ·Monday
The service will be Wednesday, Cards
through Friday. Ill Court St ., PoII a.m., at the St. Joseph Catholic
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
10 (ten) of Hearts
Jlshtng Company /Multimedia. Inc ..
Church with the Rev. Andrew ,
5
(five) of Clubs
PomProy, Ohio 4!\769. Ph. 992· 215fi. ~
Hohman, Rev. Walter Heinz, and ·
6 (six) of Diamonds
cond cl ass postagE' paid at PomProy,
Rev. Raymond Jablinske officiatOhio.
5 (five) of Spades
ing.
Burial
will
be
in
the
church
M('mbt&gt;r: The Auoctated Pno ss, Incemetery.
la nd Da ll y Pr{'SS A.ssodatlon and the
Ohio New spa per Association. Na tional
Friends may call Tuesday, 3_to 5
Adve-rtis ing Reprt'!tnlatlve, Branham
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m., at the
Nt'Vr'spaper Sal es, 733 Third Avenue,
Foglesong Funeral Home. A rosary
New York , New York 10017.
Am Ele Power ........... ... .... 29 1/8
will be conducted by Rev. Andrew
POSTMASJ'ER: Send a'*lress changes
Hohmim
at
the
funeral
home
at
7
Ashland Oil .................. .... 28 3/4
10 111E' Dally Sentinel , 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, OhiO mm.
p.m. Tuesday.
AT&amp;T................................ 38 1/2
Bob Evans ................. .. ..... 17 7(8
Sl!IIIK:RIPTION RATES
Charming Shop.................. 21 3/4
By Carrier or Motor Route
Ruby Wise
One Week .......... ... ... .. ...... .. .........SJ.60
&lt;:;ity Holding ..................... l4 1/2
One Month ...... ...........................S6.95
Federal
Mogul.. .... ... ......... .15 1/2
Ont' Year ................................. 183. 20
Ruby Wise, 81 , of Columbus,
GoodyearT&amp;R
................ .33 7/8
SINGLE COI'V
formerly of Middleport, died Fr.t·
Key Centurion .................. 15 1/4
I'RICE
Dally . .. ......... ...................... . 25 Ce nts
day, Aug. 16, 1991 at her home m
Lands' End ....................... 19 3/8
Limited Inc ..... .................. 27 3/8
Columbus.
Subscr ibers not desir ing to pay. tht"carrler may remit In advance direct to
She was a former employee of
Multimedia Inc.................27 1(8
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
the
J.
c.
Penney
~ent
Store
Rax
Restaurant ................. 13/32
basi!. Credit wtll be gtven carrier e ach
and a member of Trinity Assembly
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............30
week .
of God Church in Columbus.
Shoney 's lnc ..................... l5 1/2
No subscriptions by ma ll permitted In
She is survived by a brot~er .
Star Bank ....:.....................22
areas where home carrier serv ice Is
av a l~bl e.
Charles Wise, a sister, Ruth WISC,
Wendy lnt'l.. .....................8 7(8
and a niece, Virginia Betz, all of
Worthington Ind ............... 25 7/8
Mall Subo&lt;rlpllou
IDIIde Melp CGuM)'
Stock nports an the 10:30 a.m.
Columbus.
. Graveside services w~re c~n·
quoits proPidtd by Blunt, Ellis
dueled at 2 p.ll). today at R1verv1ew
and Loewl of Gallipolis.
CemeterY, Middleport Funeral serOUiolde Melp Counly
LJ Weeks .................... ............. $2140
vices were. hapdled by Jeery Spears
26 Weeks ................................ U!!.=
Funeral Home in Columbus.
52 Weeks ............................... ... l88.

...---- Local briefs... ----.
Two Pomeroy accidents probed

--Area deaths--

Lottery numberss

By Martin Schram
in 1980, wh en Ronald Reagan
defeated all the Grand Ol&lt;l Party
greats: Howard Baker, Johtl Connally, Bob Dole, Phil Crane and, of
course, George Bush.
Yet today the mo st famou s
Democrats are discovering they arc
so busy they cannot be bothered to
do more for America. "I don't
think my state has ever needed a
governor more than it does now,"
Cuomo recently told the executive
committee of the U.S. Conference
of Mayors. "That is the commit·
ment I have made."
Cuomo likes to say that what is
important is that the Democrats
present America with a message.
Any fine Democrat can carry thai
message 10 victory, he insists. Most
recently, he was quoted that way in
The Washington Post, contending,
"We can find a persona. What we
need is an appropriate message."
Not quite. Twice now, when the
Democrats figured they had just the
right message, they handed it to
designated personas Walter Mandale and Michael Dukakis. ·They
made George Bush what he is
today.

leave the Outer Banks ahead of approaching
Hurricane Bob. (AP)

Hospital news

By William A. Rusher

Top Democrats run the other way
Suddenly, everybody's a busybody.
Dick Gephardt is so busy being
a House leader who attacks President Bush' s policies that he can't
fit a run for the presidency into his
daybook - so he just said no.
Jay Rockefeller is so busy being
a senator who blasts Bush' s nonexistent national health -care poli·
cics that he hasn 't had enough time
to work out every jot and tittle of
an eight-year Rockefeller presidency - so he just said no.
George Mitchell is so busy
being a Senate leader who lam bastes Bush's policies that he can't
be bothered to do more - so he
just said no, at least for '92.
And of course, Mario Cuomo is
so busy being a governor who
regales us with chapter and verse
on how Bush's policies are crippling every state, city and town that
he can't find the lime 10 lead his
country toward a fairer tomorrow
- so he just.... Well, he apparently
can't even fmd time to just say no,
so he just hints (negatively).
The best and brightest
Democrats say they are so busy
with these jobs that pundits and
pols consider stepping stones that

LEAVING THE OUTER BANKS - Cars
line up near Kitty Hawk, N. C., Sunday as they
wait to cross the Wril!ht Memorial bridge to

.
.
·
:
·
.
:
·
:
·
·
·
.
·

Stocks

Continued from pa11e 1
Curt Steiner, Voinovich ' s
deputy chief of staff, said the governor on Sept. I will make public a
system in which all contracts handled by the Transportation and
Administrative Services departments would be awarded through
sealed bids..
"The bottom line is the governor feels very strongly we can
come up ·with a competitive bidding situation that is in the best
interest of the taxpayers and (provides) the best product for the best
price," Steiner said Sunday.
"We recognize there are going
to be people who want to maintain
the status quo. If they want to chal·
lenge it in coun. we're more than
ready to defend it there," he said
by phone from Seattle, where
Voinovich is attending a National
Governors Association meeting
through Wednesday.
Mader said associations representing architects, land surveyors,
landscape architects and others
affected by the plan would join his
organization in a legal challenge.
He said Ohio's law is in line
with actions the federal government and most other states have
taken to eliminate competitive bidding for professional services.
Earlier this year, Mader served
as chairman of an informal task
force picked by Paul Mifsud,
Voinovich 's chief of staff. The task
force represented engineqs, archi·
tects and other professionals.
The task force on June I recom ·
mended that the state aocept quali·
fication proposals from professional service firms and then narrow
the list to the three most qualified.
Based on technical proposals,
·the state would rank the fmns from
frrst to third and then request fee
·quotations. The top-ranked firm
would win the contract and be paid
the average of the three fees.
Mader said the industry feels
competitive bidding would leave
the state with an inferior product.
" Whenever you force a professional to quote you a fee m
advance, he is going to quote you a
fee for the minimum set of services
in order to be the lowest bidder and
get the contract It's just a bad way
of doing business," Mader said.

Drought...
Continued from page 1
Agricultural economist Carl
Zulauf of Ohio State University
said producers with debt or cash
flow problems who live in parts of
the state hardest hit by the drought
could be most vulnerable.
"I think there will be individual
farmers who have been particularly
hard hit who already have financial
stress, and this could well push
them out," Zulauf said.
But he said drought cor.dilions
vary sharply.
.
"This is a spotty drought. ThiS
is not like the drought of 1988
when you had more uniform darnage across the state," Zulauf said.
"There are some producers out
there in this state who are going to
have close 10 or maybe even have
record yields.· ·
Fred Dailey, director of the
Ohio Department of Agriculture,
said there also could be a realignment within the industry.
•'There may be a number of
people wbo may stay in but get out
of a certain segment of tt, perhaps
get out of dairy!" Dailey said.
Jack Hill, v1ce pres1dent of the
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, srud
he is worried about young fanners
already in debt to finance thelf mt tial operations.
"Yeah, there's going to be _some
people that are going to h1t the
streets ... the ones that are sull
· leveraged out." Hill said.
The National Weather Service
rates the drought as severe or
extreme in eight of 10 rcg10ns '"
the state. Gov. George Voinovich
is seeking a federal agricultural disaster declaration for all 88 counties.

Jury seated in trial
of William Mathias
McDOnald's restaurant, and Matn- •
ias' residence in Kanauga.
More than 200 names were ·
A I 4-member jury was chosen drawn for prospective jurors for the
Monday from a field of more than case. Those who were chosen were
200 to hear the trial of a Kanauga asked to fill out a questionnairelast
man accused of murder.
week, and then were subjected to •
Seven men and seven women questioning by both Prosecuting .
were seated to hear the case against Attorney Brent Saunders and :
William A. Mathias, 24. who is Charles Knight, defense attorney •
charged with the kidnapping, rape for Mathias. More intensive inter- .
and murder of 12-year-old Stacey views narrowed the field to 32 FriLucas, of Gallipolis.
day. After dismissing two others
After hearing instructions from Monday morning, 16 others were
Gallia County Common Pleas excused in preemptory challenges :
Judge Donald A. Cox, jurors were from Saunders and Knight.
·
taken to view the area where
Cox said Monday that two of •
Lncas' body was found on Oct. 12, the jurors would be dismissed at ·
1990 off Poplar Ridge Road in the end of the trial.
Chesire Township. Jurors were also
Opening statements and testi taken to see the Pillsbury plant and mony are scheduled to begin TuesGinnetta's Bar in Wellston, the day morning at 9 a.m. in the Galtia
Gallipolis city park, the GalliJ!OliS County Courthouse.
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News StaiT

EMS squads make 18
runs over weekend
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 18 calls for assistance
over the weekend and early Monday morning.
On Saturday at 12:32 p.m. the
Racine unit was called to Greenwood Cemetery Road for AvoneUe
Evans who was taken to Hol zer
Medical Center.
The Syracuse unit at I :05 p.m.
transported Jerry Bourguin from
the Rock Springs Fair Grounds to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 4 p.m., Margaret Johnson
was transported by Skymed from
Veterans to the Ohio Stale University Hospital.
The Rutland unit, at 5:21 p.m.,
was called to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
William Keefer who was transport-

Meigs
announcements
Women's Fellowship to meet
The Meigs County Women 's
Fellowship will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ. The program will be on
herbs with Donna Nease and Bobbi
Karr demonstrating the uses of the
herb. The public is invited to
attend.
Tax office hours
The Middleport Income Tax
Office will operate during the
hours of 9 a.m. to noon through the
remainder of August. Normal hours
of 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m. will resume in
September.
Kindergarten registration
.
Any student who needs to register for Southern Kindergarten or
for Southern Junior Hi~h is 10
come to the Southern Jumor High
School on Thursday from 9 a.m. to
noon to register. Parents should
bring their child's Social Secunty
number, birth certificate and shot
records. Kindergarten parents who
missed the Aug. I meeting are to
come this same day and time to·
pick up their child's class schedule,
name tag and school booklet.

Weather

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

South Central Ohio
Tonight, occasional showers and
thunderstorms. Low near 60.
Chance of rain 80 percent. Tues·
day, rain likely _. mamly _1n the
morning. High m the m•d 70s.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
Mostly fair through the penod
with a gradual warming trend.
Highs from near 80 10 the m1d 80s
Wednesday and Thursday and m
the mid to upper 80s Fnday. Lows
from the 50s Wednesday to the 60s
Thursday and Friday.

.

·••···

.,

. -. - .

~·

.. ..

. ',', ~ .....

446 4524

U .OO e.AIIGAJN MTINE£S SATURDAY I StiJIIA't
Sl .OO BAKAIN NIGHT TUESMY

I

AuGuiTIIIhNU

L.,__ FUMY thrw T lfJR S ~f l
7:00.9 : 20 BA ILY
MAT! NEF S
1:00,3 : 20

~AT/SUN

liD PAUII

'10

IA I!Uof~

Mllillf

!' i· ll )

,,,
1: 20,9 : 1Cl DA IL Y
SAT/SU" MAT I,.H S
l : 20,3 : 10
li"•I J )

Shaver Repair Clinic • All Brands

$395
Same Day Service
All Parts Extra

Included: Cleaning
Oiling
Adjusting
Greasing

TUESDAY, AUGUST 20th
4:00 'til 7:00 p.m.
IAIOIS MAY II DROPPED OFF IN ADVANCE

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

~ ~=:::::::::: ::: : : : : : : : : :5:~

. . ..

ed 10 Holzer.
The Racine unit, at 5:33 p.m .,
went to County Road 28 for
Pauline Rose who was taken to
Veterans.
The Syracuse unit. at 5:52 p.m.,
answered a call at the Rock Springs
Fai r Grounds in which Tammy
Morrison refused treatment. At.
5:59 p.m. the unit transported
Shawn Mitch from the fair groundsto Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit, at 7:19p.m.,
went 10 Pearl Street for Carl Stew art who was transponed to Holzer,
At 9:19p.m. the unit went to Over-·
brook for Georgia Watson who was:
taken 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At II :08 p.m. the Syracuse unit.
transported Carleton Drummer
from the Rock Springs Fair
Grounds to Veterans.
On Sunday at I :09 a.m. the
Middleport unit went to Lincoln
Street for Edna Pinnellia who was
taken to Pleasant Valley.
At I :53 a.m. the Pomeroy Fire
Department and the Middleport
Fire Department were called to
Minersville Road for a structure
fire at the Jay Hill residence. The
Pomeroy unit transported Brenda
Hill to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit, at 3:24a.m .,
went to the Pomeroy Police
Department for Rhonda Dixon who
was taken to Veterans.
At 2:19p.m. the Rutland unit
went to Cotterill Road for Brenda
Cotterill who was transported to
Veterans.
The Middlepo!l unit, at 6:33
p.m., went to Vine Street for Mary
Beth Brewer who was taken to Vet·
erans.
At 7:50p .m. the Racine unit
transported Dwight Hill to Veter.ans from Route 338.
The Pomeroy unit, at 9:06 p.m.,
went to Butternut Avenue for
Charles Cline who was also taken
to Veterans.
On Monday at 6:27 a. m. the
Rutland unit was called to Route
143 for Juanita Carr who was transported to O'Bleness Memor ial
Hospital.

j

i.

�.'.

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Rhodes
sees need to
restructure
Ohio fair

Monday, August 19, 1991
Page---.1

Quarter
Horse race
results

''

Quarter Horse racing fans were
treated 10 six races on Saturday at

the Meigs County Fair.
The first race. a 550-yard run,
featured three-year-olds and older
horses and saw Beam Me Up capture first place. The horse is owned
by David Hoppel of East Liverpool, with Jeff Zook the jockey.
The second place horse was Fleet
Hostess, owned by Earl Cleek of
Portland, and ridden by Sammy
Newell.
· The second race, also for threeyear-olds and older, saw Chain
Command race to first place in the
300· yard run with Mike Rone the
jockey. The horse is owned by
James Barney of Bellville. The second place horse was Deck N
Ready, owned by Carl Hoppel and
ridden by Jeff Zook.
Two-year-olds were featured in
the third race, a 220-yard run. Racing to first place was Liberty Star
Line with Mark Arnett the rider
and Marcus Connelley of Salyersville, Ky., the owner. The second place horse was Comets Birdman, owned by Jennings Beegle of
Racine, and JOckied by Tammy
Morrison.
The fourth and fifth races, also
220-yard runs, featured three-yearolds and older, as Tony's Bid ,
owned by Earl Cleek raced 10 rust
place in the fourth race with
Sammy Newell the jockey. Bold
Beth, ridden by Tammy Morrison
and owned by Carl Benz, Auburn,
Ind., captured the second place
spot.
In the fifth race, Watch Billy
Sweep raced 10 flfSt place. He was
jockied by Tammy Morrison and is
owned by Jennings Beegle of
Racine. Easy Eightyniner captured
the second place spot with Sammy
Newell the jockey. Sam Lewis of
Athens, is the owner of that horse.
The fifth race, the SEOQHRA
Futurity Finals, featured a 220-yard
run, as Ohio Valley Belle, owned
by George Harris of Cass10wn, and
joclcied by Mark Arnette, raced 10
fust place. The second place horse
was Air Splitter, owned by Kevin
Sheppard with Rick Cullison the
jockey.

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER • The
reserve champion steer, owned by Jason Pullins,
was purchased by Home National Bank for
$1.70 a pound at the junior fair livestock sale on
PHOTO FINISH - Ohio Valley Delle, owned by George Harris
of Casstown, and jockied by Mark Arnette, captured first place in
the final race of Saturday's Quarter Horse races at the Meigs County Fair- a 220-yard run. The second-place finisher was Air Splitter,
owned by Kevin Sheppard of Racine, With Rick Cullison the jockey.

DyTIMLIOTTA
AP Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Watch out. Rob Dibble has put his
suspension time to good usc and
developed a third pitch - a
sidearm changeup.
Dibble pitched three scoreless
innings Sunday as the Cincinnati
Reds defeated the San Francisco
Giants 4-3 for their third consecutive victory, their longest winning
streak since they won five in a row
on June 23-28.
Unveiling the new pitch in .the
lOth inning, Dibble (3-2) froze
Kevin Mitchell and confused catcher Joe Oliver. Both were left shalc:ing their heads - Mitchell at his

(Boddick"" 10.7). k'll pm.
Baltimore (Muuina 1-2) at Texas (Ryan
7.1), s,JI ~. m .
Califonua (McCallil.l 9-1 S) at Seattle
(R. Johnaon 11-8), 10:05 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
bltem Dh"ldon
Ttam
W L PeL
PITrSBURGH
7t 46 .603
St Louil
....... 63 ll .543
Crucaao
......... 19 51 .504
NBW ark
....... ~7 60 .417
PhilMill•delphlo ....... 55 62 .470
ontrc.ll ......... 47 69 .405

GB

7
11.5

v

13.5
11.5
23

Western Dl"blon
Team
W l PeL
u.. Angel" ...... 6l 52 .556
Allanta
........ 63 53 .S43

GB
1.5
7.5
7.5
!
16

~jN~ATJ : ~ ~ ~::
' .-

San FruciJc.o ...... 57 60 .487
Houal.orl
......... 49 68 .419

Tuesday's games
Cltveland (OlLo l·l) at Billion (Gar-

diner !..fl}, 7:3$ p.m.
Mih.,..u.kee (Bosio 9-8) at Toronto
(SLOu.lempe 11 -5), 7 :35 p.m.
Detroit (Terrell &amp;-1 0) at Chicago
(Hough 7-6), ! ,Ql p.m.
Seattle (Hanson 7-5) at Minn~ot.a (Ericluon 1 ~- S), 8:05p.m.
New York. (Sanderson 12~ 8) at Kansas
City (Gubicu 7-6), 8:35p.m.
Baltimon: (Mcu S-8) It Tens (Boyd 04), 8:3S p.m.
California (Langston 15-6) at Oakland
(Darling 2-0), 10:05 p.m .

Sunday's scores
SL Louis 4, Montreal I
Pltllbur&amp;h 9, Nrw Yorkl
Chica&amp;o 7, Philadelphia 6, I0 inning•
Hot~~lOn 8,L.clll An&amp;elca: 4
Stn Dicao 2. Atlanta I

Transactions
Baseball

ClndDIUd ot, Sin Frudlco 3, 11 ID·

nlnll

Tonight's games
Chicaao (G. Madchu. 10-7) at MontRal
(Bame~3-4),7:35

p.m.

San Diego (Ra•mu11cn 4-10)
Angclco (Bclohct S. 7). 10,31 p.m.

11

Los

American League
CLIWELAND ·INDIANS - Recalled
Willie Blair, pitcher, from Colorado
Sprl na• or the Pacific Coast Lca(;UC.
Placed Mike York, pllchcr, on the 15day dltabled llsL
SEATTLE MARINERS - Activated
Ru.u Swan. pitcher, from the 15-day disahled liJl. Optioned Dave Acmin g. pitcher, to Calgary ohhc Paciftc Coastl....e.aguc.
National League
Optioned Steve
Wilson, pucker, to Iowa of the American
Auocill.ion . Puu:hued lhe contract of
Scott May, pitcher, from Iowa.
SAN DIEGO PADRES - Pltccd IJip
RGbcru, oullielder, on the 15-day di5·
abled liiL Rc.ulled Paul Farica;, infielder,
from Lu Vegu of the Pa cific Coas t
~JDCA _GO CUBS -

Tuesday's games
Alluta (Avtry 13-' and SmoiUI-13)
al Clntlnnall CRUo 1-.C 1nd Sanford 1t ~ l, 5&lt;3~ p.m.
_Chicaao (Scanlan 5-S) at Montrea l
(Haney 1-4), 7:35p.m.
Pltttburah (Smiley 14-1) at Phlladel·
phla (Greene 1-5), 7~$ p.m.
St Lou.la (B. Smith 10-1) at New Ycd

League.

(Cone t0-9), HO p.m.
San Fran~ (Mc:Cicllan 3-1 } ll Houa·

Football

ton (Del,haie~

4-l{l), 8:3.5 p.m.
San Diego (G. Hania 4-3) 1t loa Ange·
lew (R. Martinez 14-8), 10:35 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dlvllioa
W L PeL
......... 6S S4 .!146

Tum
Toronto

I
'

I:
'.
'
' .

Detroit
...........
Be»lal
.....
Milwouke&lt;
......
New Yodt
.......
Ba!tim.,...
........
CLEVELAND

62 57 .521
S9 59 .SOO
5.l 63 .466
53 63 .417
48 70 .407
31 79 .325

W.tern Dlvlllo.
W L Pc:L
71 41 .597
67 51 .561
64 51 .531
63 51 .534
61 II .126
60 56 .5 17

..............
·······
Chi&lt;o10
.........
OUtand
.........
-·
...........
IWaao City .......

r... .. . . . .

Catifomi.o

..... .... 51 19 .496

CD
3
1.1
9.5

!O.l
16.1
U

CB

15
7
7.1

!.5

9.1
12

Nallonal Footba ll LeaGue
CINCINNA 11 BENGALS - Signed
Alfred Wilhama, lincbiltkc:r, to a ltu ecye~r contract
CLEVELAND BROWNS - Waived
Chalica; Arbuckle, light end; Ken Edel·
~an, placekicker; Dwayne Fontencue,
hnebacier, John Hine1, defensive end;
Pete Lucu, offcna ive tackle· Den
Mitchell, auard; and Charlie Olive;, s&lt;~rc­
Pla ced R.hondy Weston, defens ive
lineman, on the waived -in jured list
Placed Thane Galh, ufety, on lhe physt·

tr.

c;IUy· Wllblo-t&amp;pctform-lisL

·

HOU'STON OllERS - Agreed to
wilh CrU Dilhman, cornerback.

t.cnru

Hockey
N•Uontlllockey L.etaue

MONfREAL CANADlENS - Signed

Jim Campbell, c:cnt.e:r.

In the NFL ...
Saturday's scores

Sunday's scores
Botton 5, KanJu City I
a.i&lt;al" II, Now Yod: 3
Toron10•. Dcuoit2
Tuuf, Clewland .C
Milwa!&gt;lloo 2, Baltimcx&lt; I
Calilomi.o 4, S..lllo 3
Minnoo&lt;&gt;Lo6,0Uiaod4

TonJcbt'l pmu
Clo,.laod (SwlndoU 7-11) at Booton
( I I - 7-l), 7:3! ,...
~~ (I'uana 9·1) at Chicaao (Fernondez 6-9), ljl! pm.
Oaklaad (Siu.anlti J.~) al Minneaot•
(W•t 3-3),1:i&gt;5 p.m.
New Yodt (Plunk Z.2) atltwu City

\

QUARTER HORSE WINNER- Watch
Billy Sweep, owned by Jennings Beegle of
Racine, raced to first place in the fifth race of
the Quarter Horse races on Saturday at the

0.... Boy lS, Buffllo 2A
l..ol Angele1 Raiden 13, Chicago I 0

Tampt Bay 12, Atlanta 7

Phillddphi&amp; 21, Pilllbur&amp;h 20
Cincinnati Z7, Minnelota 24

Con

New York Gimt124, New York 10
Kanau City 38, Ocuoit 14
lndianopolill4, New Orleani2J
Phoc:ni.l46, New Enaland 0
Seattle 23, l..ol Angelca Rams 1

Sunday's nnal
Houst.on 30, D.U.a 20

Tonight's games '
Mi1rni at Denver, 8 p.m.
San Dieao at S~n Franciaco, 9 p.m.

strikeout, Oliver at the prospect of
a guy with a 95 mph fastball and a
slider that has been clocked over 90
mph adding another weapon to
arsenal.
"I put down a slider originalJy,
and he shook me off. Then I put
down a fastball, and he shook me
off," Oliver said. "So I started
thinking . 'Wow, did he come up
with a new pitch, a forkball or
what.· But I remembered him saying he'd been throwing a changeup
on the side every once in a while
on the side. So he dropped down
into a sidearm changeup.''
The sight of Dibble throwing
sidearm left Mitchell frozen, able
only to take a called third strike
and shalc:e his head on his way back
to the dugout.
"It was an unhittable pitch,"
Oliver said. "It was right on the
corner and Mitchell was wallcing
back to the dugout shaking his
head. (Mitchell) had never seen
that pitch before.

.

••

"When you· ve been seeing a
guy throwing in the mid-90s, and
then he drops down and throws a
changeup 87, 88 miles an hour, it's
going to freeze you.''
Dibble decided to try the pitch
after Mitchell fouled off several
pitches.
"Mitchell was fouling off
everything I had.'' Dibble said. "I
made a decision 10 use it. If he had
beaten me with it, then I would live
with it.''
Dibble laughed at Oliver's reaction.
"Joe was a little confused on it
because he only has two signs for
me," he said. "It's something I
worked on during the suspension.
When you're out there a lot of
innings, you have 10 have a third or
fourth pitch. These guys arc too
good 10 go with two pitches."
Having been sent to the sidelines twice because of suspensions,
Dibble obviously had enough time
to practice his new pitch.

Texas hands Cleveland
9-4 defeat Sunday
By CHUCK MELVIN
reached the potential he showed
AP Sports Writer
when he led the American AssociaCLEVELAND (AP) - Not too tion with 29 home runs and I 0 I
long ago, a couple of strikeouts RBis in 1990.
early in a game would have
Accepting occasional failure, he
wrecked the entire day for Juan said, has made him a better hitter.
Gonzalez.
"Before, I'd get mad , Now, I
Not anymore.
know it 's a part of th e game,"
The 21-year-old Gonzalez Gonzalez said.
rebounded from strikeouts in his
His grand slam capped a fivefirst two at bats Sunday to get two run sixth inning Sunday that broke
hits including his first career grand the game open, after the Indians
slam as the Rangers beat the Indi- had whittled an early 4-0 deficit 10
ans 9-4.
' 3.
"He's a young guy, and they
The Rangers loaded the bases in
say he used to have a temper and the sixth on a single and two walks,
get down on himself," Texas man- and a passed ball on Cleveland
ager Bobby Valentine said. "Now, catcher Luis Lopez made it 5-3. An
he's giving the pitchers a little intentional walk to Ruben Sierra
credit. After all, it is the big reloaded the bases for Gonzalez,
leagues."
who hit a 3-1 pitch from Shawn
Gonzalez, who played with Hillegas over the fence in left.
Texas in September each of the
''He (Hillegas) is pitching
past two seasons, is hitting .296 behind in the count to everybody
with 23 home runs and 85 RBis in now," Cleveland manager Mike
100 games this year. He's quickly Hargrove said. "He gets behind,
has to come in with the fastball,
and they 're teeing off on him."
Gonzalez was only going to
swing if the pitch was in the right
spot.
The SVAC football preview will
"I was loolcing for a location,
begin with the Oalc: Hill-Hannan and I got the fastball mside ," he
Trace scrimmage on Friday, Aug. said.
23 at 6 p.m. on Kyger Creek High
Rafael Palmeiro hit a two-run
School's field.
home run in the first inning, his
North Gallia and Southern will 21st, and also had a single, keeping
take th e field at 6:45 p.m., and his average at an American
Symmes Valley and Eastern will League-leading .343. The Rangers
meet at 7:30 p.m. Southwestern added sin~le runs in the second on
and the host Bobcats will play in Gary Petus' RBI single and in the
fourth on Mario Diaz · RBI double.
the finale at 8:15p.m.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults Diaz had three hits.
and $2 for children.

a:

SVAC football
preview August 23

SHOP MONDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
AT

ANDERSON IS
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO
Of'LN MONDAY NIGHT TIL B P.M.

Friday at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured with
Pullins are Tom Wolfe, King Brent Rose, Queen
Michelle Friend, Beef Princess Anita Calaway
and Deer runner-up Stephanie Hoffin!)n.

Meigs County Fair. The race, a 220-yard run,
featured three-year olds and older. The jockey
was Tammy Morrison and the trophy blanket
was provided by R &amp; G Feed and Supply.

Dibble helps Reds record 4-3
win over Giants in 11 innings

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-5

Ohio

"'

,.

RESERVE CHAMPION RADBIT McDonald's purchased the reserve champion
rabbits for $355 from Ashley McKinney at the
junior fair livestock. sale ~t the Me!gs Cou~ty
Fair on Friday evenmg. Ptclured w1~b McKm-

ney are Bunny runner-up Jennifer Proffitt,
Bunny Princess Kellie Ervin, John and Noni
Hoffman, Queen Michelle Friend and King
Brent Rose.

THROWS DEEP - Meigs senior quarterback Jeremy Phalin
throws deep to Mike Cremeans in Saturday's football scrimmage at
Wheelersburg. The Pirates, who have one of the top teams in Ohio,
defeated the Marauders 3-0 in the controlled scrimmage. Meigs will
host Morgan in the annual preview Friday at6:30 p.m. before opening the season on Friday, Aug. 30 at home against Gallia Academ1 .
·
(Photo by David L. Harris)

I undamcntal football."

The Bengals didn't show much
offense the first half - 60 yards
ru shing and 51 yards passing, as
Wyche let Erik Wilhelm and Don
Hollas play a quarter each.
The first half was all Vikings, as
staner Wade Wilson passed for one
touchdown and Scan Salisbury
passed for two more.
" I made some mistakes, but 11
did go pretty well,' • Salisbury said
" We improved as a team. I have a
lot to improve on, but I'm getting
better."
Wilson capped a nine-play, 76yard dri ve with a 23-yard touch down pass to Cris Carter as time
ran out in the first quarter. Cincinnati's only scoring in the first half
came on Jim Breech's 48-yard field
goal in the second quarter.
With 17 seconds left in the half.
Salisbury hit Terry Obce with a 24
yard touchdown pass 10 make it 14
3. In the third quarter, Salisbury
used a 38-yard pass 10 Obce to sc1
up a one-yard scoring pass 10 Frank
Griffin to go to 21-3.

...... ___.._.._....__..._.._.._

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB SHOWMANSmP • Michele
Guess was awarded Reserve Champion Showmanship Lamb at the
1991 Meigs County Fair. She is a member or the Alfred Livestock
Club.

RESERVE CHAMPION GOAT SHOWMAN -Jenny Varney,
1991 Meigs County Fair Goal Princess and a member or the Country Critters 4-H Club, received Reserve Champion Goat Showman
at the Meigs Counly Fair.

Agency losing one
third of its staff

Bengals post 27-24 OT
victory over Vikings
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnat head coach Sam Wyche 's plan
was to hold Boomer Esiason out of
the first half, to get him ready for
the reg ular season by having him in
for the sort of end-of-game situation not usually ex perienced by a
Pro-Bowl quarterback in preseason
games.
Esiason responded by rall ying
the Cincinnati Bengals to a 27-24
ovenimc victory over the Minnesota Vilcings on Saturday night, com pleting 18 of 26 passes for 297
yards and a touchdown.
"We were talcing advantage of
some players that aren't used to
playing, that aren't Pro Bowlers.
Wc realize that," Esiason said.
"But still we had to work on a lot
of things on offense. You still want
to complete passes ... run with the
ball ... we did all the good fundamental things.
"I think the offense was a little
dtsgusted with itself at halftime and
wanted to go out and play good,

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Longtime
Ohio State Fair supporter and former Gov. James A. Rhodes says
the annual event is in need of some
change.
Rhodes personally escorted
Gov. George Voinovich around the
360-acre fairgrounds twice during
the fair, which ended its 18-day run
Sunday. Voinovich was presiding
over his first fair·as governor.
"I just think that they 've got to
restructure the fair ... ," Rhodes
said. Planning for this year's fair
was
accomplished
before
Voinovich lOOk offtceJan. 14.
Rhodes might not be the only
one dissatisfied with the fair.
Attendance was down this year.
A total of 3,323,753 people attended, down from 3,488,753 a year
ago. That was the lowest attendance since 1988, when 3,309,924
people attended. On Sunday,
253,874 people attended, up from
last year's final-day attendance of
168,133.
"I think the fair's going to be
different. They're going to restructure it," Rhodes predicted, without
offering specifics.
Voinovich is considering creating a visitor orientation center on
the fairgrounds. He also said he
had questioned the $3 admission
charged this year for big-name
entertainment that used 10 be free.
He also cited a need 10 recruit more
bidders for the Junior Fair livesiOCk
sale.
"We have a system and that is
that the governor does not run the
fair," Voinovich said.
"We appoint an Ohio expositions board and I intend 10 sit down
with the board ... and get an
appraisal of the finances of the fair
and also the finances of the Expositions Commission, •' he said.
Voinovich spokesman Curt
Steiner said the governor previously aslced that videotapes be made of
a variety of fair exhibits and events
for possible use in a presentation
that could be viewed by arriving
fairgoers next year.
"His concern is that having
been around the fair and seen
everything over the last couple of
weeks he doesn't think a lot of people know like they should what
aU's available at the fair, " Steiner
said.
"He'd like to have an orientation center. I do think that his fin gerprint will be on it next year."
Voinovich said he had questioned why a charge of $3 per seat
was imoosed for shows in the new
indoor entertainment center that
replaced the grandstand.
"Certainly I feel that that facility could be much better used during the day," he said.

RESERVE CHAMPiON HOG • The
reserve champion hog was purchased for S? a
pound from Alyson Patterson by Facemyer
Lumber and Mountaineer Veneer at the junior
fair livestock sale on Friday at the Meigs County

Fair. Pictured with Patt~rson are Melissa Faceroyer with Brittany, Robert Facemyer, Pork
Princess Mandi Sheets, King llrent Rose, Queen
Michelle Friend, Clinton llailey and Dill Faceroyer with Action.

_____

~!_GS CO!!_N].'_.._.......,
l' R£SiDENTS.._...

~ould ~ou like to purchase a SOx I00 ft. build·
Ing lot In a good location for only S3SOO?
Would you like to build a new home and pay
no real estate taxes for 1s years?
Wou.ld ~ou like to han up to $5000 FREE
for site Improvements on your building loti

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state agency responsible for
monitoring 65,000 active oil and
gas wells in Ohio is losing more
than a third of its staff and half of
its four regional offices.
. .
Don Mason, chief of the DlYl·
sion of Oil and Gas in the Ohio
Deparunent of Natural Resources,
said about 45 of the division's 110
workers will lose their jobs as a
result of budget cuts.
Regional offices in Zanesville in
Muskingum County and Mtllersburg in Holmes County will close,
Mason said.
The division will keep regional
omces in Uniontown on the Stark·
Summit County border and in Beverly in Washington County.
"There will be fewer inspectors
per county," Mason said.
Ed Hopkins, environmental
director for Ohio Citizen Action,
said fewer inspectors will mean
more problems as brine and other
pollutants from the oil and gas
wells contaminate surface and
underground water supplies.
"It can threaten pcof.le's drinking water, and I wou d imagine
there will be fewer inspections at
oil and gas wells," Hopkins said.
Mason said his division took a
35 percent cut in its two-year operating budget.

AwAy WE GO! - These four year old twin sons of Brent and
Judy Manley of Middleport took to the Meigs County Fair kiddie
rides like a duck takes to water. A favorite? Well, it was kind of •
toss-up, but Joshua and Jeremy really liked these motorcycles.

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
Asthma, Allergy &amp; Hearing Aids

John A. Wade, M. D.
Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV.

Call 304-675-1244 for Appt or Information

H&amp;R Block Offers Income Tax
Course In Pomeroy

-----

If you ~0', Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
SpeCialist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6782

237 llace Strftt, Mldclltport Village Offiu
1

~~;~~:o~::~lmla
0 rh t~ Joint effort• of lhe VIII•«•

RESERVE "CHAMPION LAMD • The
reserve champion lamb was purc~ased by Fruth
Pharmacy for $11.50 a pound from Christy
Drake at the iunlor fair live.«ock gJe on Fridav

overnor s Office of Appalachia.

I '

evening at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured with
Drake are King Brent Rose, Queen Michelle
Friend, Wool Princess Mkbele Guess and Gall
Francis of Fruth Pharmacv.

Thousands of people learn
how to prepare income tax
returns from H&amp;R Block and
then earn money as income tax
preparers. H&amp;R Block, the
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Ur•ll• ....t

,.

�·...,

' ,, '

;

·t

'\

..
The

I

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Classified

Monday, August 19, 1991

By Brian J, Reed

PO LI CI I:.S
• At b uu t s•d c M c 19s . Gallt a
p.JHt

01

• The Area's Number 1 Marketpla(e

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-215&amp;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Consider this ...

15
15
15
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15

1

3

6
10

Monthly

~nn o unc e men l s

Ov er 15 Wo rds
Rat e
.
.20
$4.00
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69.00
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.05 / da y
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Word$

Days

1 Card ol Than Its

fo r each

d~

as

sep ~or ~o t e

Yitl el Sal e tpa ld Ill ol lha n l.CI
Ftubl1 1: S;l!l u &amp; An t: ! tun
9 Wanted to Buy

OUTSTANDING DOGS· Awarded prizes for their dog entries
in the Meigs County Fair Pet Show on Friday were, front row,
Ashley Hannahs, setond place. Second row, 1-r, Amy Wood, rll'st

place; Larry Faw, Shirley Jones and
lion, and John and Betty Kalinowski,

Dorst, honorable menplace.
·

,.

Welcome Back...Steven Figiel,
my good friend from radio days,
his wife Crystal and their kid s
made it back to Chester for a visit
last week, and it was good to see
them.
I harbor many fond memories of
my first "real" job, and doing the
early morning newscasts on 1390's
Mild Mannered Morning Man's
show continue to be among the
fonde st. There was never a dull

Concert in the Park ... Th e
OUTSTANDING Eastern High
School Marching Band will perform an "end of the summer" concert in the lower picnic area of
Forked Run State Park on Thursday at 4 p.m. That is the area nearest the swimming area.
Under the direction of William
Hall, the band will be Detroitbound in November, where they
will play at the nationally-televised
Hudson ' s Thanksgiving Day
Parade.
The concen will be free to the
public, and Park Manager Randy
Wachter encourages everyone to
bring their lawn chairs and auend.

TRUCK PULLS - One or the favorite events at the Meigs
: County Fair is the ever-popular truck pull. In this event, trucks
from all over the area compete to see which truck can drag a
weighted sled the longest distance. As the truck pulls the sled, a

.

/

Michelle Friend. Second row, left to right are Queen First Runnerup Michelle Laughery, Belinda and Terry Bailey, Kathie and
Brandon Hanning, Jerrena and Hailey Ebersbach, Sue and Savannah Yates, Ann and Brian Van Matre, Pam and Daniel Buckley,
Debbie and Heather Cundiff, and Joy Sauders, representing the
United Pentecostal Church or Middleport, which, along with But·
tons and Bows or Pomeroy, sponsored the prizes awarded.

weight on the sled moves forward making it even harder to pull.
Here, a Chevrolet makes its attempt to pull the "Iron Maiden" sled
during Friday evening's' truck pull event. (Sentinel photo by Brian
Reed)

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - An 8year-old quadriplegic who has
lived in a hospital since birth is
being moved to a Columbus nursing ce.nter where he' II be with other
children who have similar conditions.
Donald Elam was born at Children's Medical Center in Dayton
with a spinal cord injury that
caused his paralysis. He needs a
ventilator to breathe and a tracheal
tube.
Though his family Jives in Dayton. Elam is being moved to the
Columbus nursing center because
his mother can't give him the medi·
cal care he needs.
"It hurts," Donald's mother,
Chrislynn Elam, said of the 72-mile
separation. "I think it's going to
take a little time to get used to."
· The family chose to send Elam
to Northland Terrace in Columbus
after failing to find a foster home.
Elam visited Northland last
month.
"He spent some of the time
meeting the kids , who just
swarmed around him with electronic wheelchairs," said Susan Steinberg, a psychology assistant at
Children's.
" It was really pretty charming.
He was bashful, but he didn't miss
a beat," Ms. Steinberg said.
Sharon Reynolds, administrator
of Northland Terrac e, said the

Tru ck and trac tor pulls are
~ays popular at the Meigs County Fair and this year's events were
no exception.
· Hundreds of fairgoers gathered
lit the grandstand and in the center
f)eld to watch the power struggle of
local yokel and super stock . trucks,
garden tractor, and all terram veht cles.
The ATV pull was new to the
fair schedule this year. Both three
and four wheelers were permitted
in the pull with cash being awarded
in three places.
: The winners, listed fIJ'St through
third respectively , were, 650
pounds, Richard Leach, Ri cky
Mcintire, no. third:. 750 pounds,
David Schnegg, Jumor Chne, and
Dusty Boley; 850 po.unds , Curt
Smith, Brian Schott. R1ck McTm;
900 puonds, Brian ~chott. Curt
Smith, second and thll'd; and 950
pounds, Brian Schott, Rick Mcintire, and Curt Smith.
· In the garden tractor pull, the
winners in the youth division ,
1,000 poupds were Kritina

Kennedy, fiJ'St, Scou King, setond,
and Travis Burbridge, third. In the
open classes the winners were Burris, Price, frrst, Earl Goodin, second, and Bill Burbridge, third ,
1000 pound class, and Bill Burbridge, first, Donnie Bissell, second, and Bob Dunbarger, third in
the 1200 pound class.
Cash prizes of $20 for first. $15
for second and S10 for third were
awarded in both the ATV and garden tractor pulls held in front of the
grandstand.
Again thi s fair , the truck pull
held on the track inside the center
ring brought out an enthusiastic
crowd. Cash prizes ranging from a
high of $300 to a low of $75 in five
places were awarded in four classes
of the pull.
The winners, listed fiJ'St through
fifth , respectively, were local Tim
Tay lor, Charles Reitmire, Bob
Forshey, Charles White, and Lee
Swain; 6,000 pound. John Henderso~. Hant ,Rinehan, Jean Redman,
Enc Russell, and Ron Thaxton;
5800, Paul Poston, Dave Howell,
r'IAvton Walford, Mark Stewart,
I

and Jack Waldern , and 6200
pound, Gary Parsons, Rob Tubbs.

1

Jeanette Poston, Donnie Brown ,
and Clayton WaHord.

Names in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sean
Penn. who is known as·a brooding
tough guy with a quick temper,
says he is turning to directing in
hopes of promoting compassion.
" Not only is that quality lost in
this country right now, it's seen as
an alien idea," said the 31 -year-old
actor. "It's become acceptable in
thi s country to be indifferent to
your fellow man."
His directorial debut will be
" The Indian Runner," a story he
wrote about loyalties of a patr of
dissimilar brothers. It stars Dennis
Hopper.
Penn, whose girlfriend, actress
Robin Wright, gave birth to their
dau~hter this spring, said the part
of his life that mcluded confronla·
lions with photographers and fans
is over.
" I never hit anybody who dido 't
damn weD deserve to.get smacked,
i

It!•

THUR SDAY PAP ER

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY

t HIUAV PAP ER
SUNDAY PAP ER

2 IJO PM FRIDAY

992

Ch • hlf e
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guyan 0111
Arabt1 Otst .
Wllnut

Pomerov
985 Ch es te r
843 Por11and
247 l etut h ils

Mtddlttport

949 Rac•ne
74 2 Rutl ~~n d

)!)

675
458
57 6
773
88 2
895
937

"

••
15

ln $ura nctl

16
11.

8u5m ess Tn mun !l
Schools &amp; ln ~; ltuc tn tr l
R &lt;tdiQ. TV &amp; C O Aut'·'"
M1scellan t!'Ou s

18

W t~ tt Utd

21
21
23

N ew H avt!n

l e t a rl

Butt a.o

lt \l t!! ludt
H;ty ~ G ' '' " '

36

Rv..l Es ta tu W ant t!d

6!l

St!Ct l P, t l'tlllllt" l

42

H o u ~li lot Atml
Mu htlt: H u m H~ ' ' " Rt ·rot

43
44
4 !i
4G
47

F;.um s to• At~ ' ''
A p.1111111:n l ltu R"" '
f tunt s h ucl R 11uno ~
Spacu l o1 Rmt l
W a nt m l tu R !!!tl

411
49

f ltliiPI I H ~ nt t o r

I l
II
I .I
/4

Aut o~

I'J

/~)

1!!! ,\l ~ K. Mo ht h '"' ~.!I t ·
1\ ut oP ,i! h fi.. Ait &lt;"!&gt;'oUI"M
A.ut11 R q J.III
Co!ll ll'll ll j I q ll ljHIII ' III
C.!llljlt: o:. &amp; M l• l v r ll u• • ,. ·~

fb
I 1

Rt n lt

f ml tldS t'

51
52
53

To Oo

W.tu hd t u Uu'l'

Trans ortation

/tl

Merchandise

flu S,tl t!
lw S .tll ·
ft. 4 WI&gt; ~

lt11rk~
\l ,u, ~

M u l wt; nl t ~

H o u w h o ld Goodt.
Spoitm g G ood ~
Ho n 1c l tll pi OVUilli.'UI :.

lihfild4611

An tiQu es
M t!iC M er c h a n dtst.:

H1

54

81

Plu!ll l.trl l~J

5~

Bllll d 111~ 1 S u p p l u.~

~

56

Pel s tor Sale

Bu smuu Oppoqutut y

57

Mo n ~

~IJ

Mu stcal !n !i tlumcnt s
fr u tts &amp; Vef!ll'lillll cs
f o r Sat e 01 Tnutc

H]
84
85

Pt P ht&lt;ISotlll

l tton
Appl e Grove
M ason

())
64

to l oan

Pr o f ttS~o n a l Sll r \l • et:~

ff9

86
87

&amp; th.•iflu;\1

.. t: .tv&lt;l lrl tll

lt ectr•c.tl

&amp; At! h ~j t!f ol l t w t

G1"1! t't &lt;l l H&lt;1u h n \l

M o l llh ! H uno e Rt:IJd ll
U phuls h" V

Coolvtll t'

Mllerltle.
Thll r11otut1on puood
Aug. 5, 18111.
ATTEST
BrM1111 L Morrie, Clerk
APPROVED
Richerd Seyler, Mayor
LlrryWehrung, Prea.
(B) 12, 1121c

Diabetes Support Group
Tuesday,Aug . 2D-7:00 PM
Pleasant Valley Hospilal
Commun~y Room
Speaker: Rick Eddy-Pharmacist
Topic: Diabetic Medication

•
:
.
.

Take care!

Public Notice

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
APS.OO PER DAY

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nome of
lbln Street
Route
No.Street:
U.S. Route
No. 33
ORDINANCE NO. 600

I

====~R~e~a:l :E:stlat:e::Ge:ne:raJ~~~~ll

f

An emergency
enaoted
by the ordlnence
Vllt1111 of
Pomeroy, Melge County,
Ohio, In the motllr of the
heretnefler deacrlbed
Improvement, and 10 requeet ooopentlon from the
WHEREAS,
Ute Vllllge h•,
Director
of Tr1n1p011111lon.
ldandftecl the need for end
propolll the rmprovement
of o portion of the publlo

way end keer, It free ot
Ob.tructlon. n a manner
..tl.f.ctory lo the State ot
Ohio end hold uld right-of·
W.y tnvlo!.le for PubliC
highway purpo••• and permit no eigne, poettre, bill·
boarde, roedalde ellnde or
Other Prlv.te ln. llllltlOnl
within the rlght-ol-woy lim·
Ill; end
(c) Piece and maln'•ln 111
~
tr."lc Control devices conforming to the Ohio Manual
Or Uniform Tr.rrlc Control
Devjcea on the Improvement
In compllence wllh the provlelone of Section 4511.11
and related section• ot the
Ohio Revleed Code; and
(d) Regulate perking In tho
following menner:
SECTION v
(Right -of-wey, Utility
Reorrangarnent
end Oamage
d u blllty
an 1
ReeponelblllllH)
(1)
That
existing
ltreel
end publicallwey
rlght-oJ·WIY
within the Vlltoge which .,.
nec ..eery lor theolorHe!d
h b
d
lmprovarnen~ I I 11 e ml e
evailabtetherefor.
·
(bl Thet the Stale wilt

facility will try to place Donald ·
into a Columbus public school with
the help of a nurse. He will stay in
a unit with 15 other children.
Ms. Elarn said Donald's stay at
the home is only temporary.
"That's not where I want him to
be," she said. "I still want him
home with me."

News briefs
Dubious drawing
To "gerrymander" means to
draw the boundaries for congres- :
sional districts in such a way as to
help the party that controls the state
legislature, which determines these
boundaries. The word combines the
names of 19 century Massachusetts
Gov. Elbridge Gerry, who devised
the system , and the salamander.
whose shape a gerrymandered district is said to resemble.

DOWNING C!ILD1
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 S.CIIId St.. Pomeroy

I
I dI h
o -way tequ re or t e conetrucllon of the alorenld
Improvement.
(c) Th1t'arrengemen 11 h'ave
&lt;
• wIll b1 ma d1 wlth
ueen ur
1
•,.·nd 11g1raebmll•nl111111obtetned
om pu c u Ycompenlee who•• llnee or atru~·
,. be I 11eel ed by I he
lurel
WIt
II ld 1m provemen 1 an d II ld
1 h
--•
com pan ee ave egr.nno 10
malca •ny and all necoeury
1 1
vola 0 rea angeP
•n remoouch manner
r rr ea lo
menllln
b• c1ear o1·•ny conalructlon
coiled for by the plona of
eald Improvement and aeld
companlea hevt egreed 10
meke euch necessary reerrengementelmmedlatety allor notification by 11td
Vlltage or the Deportment of
Tranaportallon.
(d) Thll It II hereby ogreed
the! the Vlillge 11'1111 be 11
Ita own ex pen at, make ell
!llrnngemenla of water
melne, eervlce linea, lire
h'fdranll, vatv.
· • boxol,
h •••I·
tary, ·e.awers or ot er mun-1
clpetly owned ulltltlll
and/or any eppurtenancee
thereto, which do not compty .wflh the piovletona of
Directive No DH·P·P-411 .

reconatructlon, and/or rearrangament of both publlclr.
and prlv•tety
owned utll•
Ilea, relerred 19 In ~ ubaactiona (c) and (d) above, ahalt
bt done In euch a manner
11 not to Interfere unduly
1h h
1
1 th
w t I o oparat on o e
contractor constructing the
Improvement and all bac kfilling ot lronchea made
neceaury by ouch
t
rearrangeman 1
1
d
1
per or me n
with the Dprovlalons of
Oh 1o
eparlmenl
Tranaportallon
and Material Specifications
and shall be subject lo
eppr,ova! by the Stale.
(I) That I he lnataltallon of
111 utlllly lacilllloa on the
rlght·ol·w•y ehaU conform
with the requlrarnenla of the
Federet Highway AdmlnlI Irati on Polley and Pro·
cedure Memorandum 30-4
· uunty Relocations and
Adjuetmente"r T ond the
Depan-manl. o rana~orta·
tlon'l rutu on
llllly
Accommodation.
(g) Thot the Village hereby
egreee
occepl responelb!llly
ond oil dam,/

MIDDLEPORT - Ranch
frame home. 6 rooma, 3
bedrooms. 2 ballls. Features bar, bu~t~n bool&lt;casa, large
raar porch, storage shed, liraplace, newef heat pump and
all new plumbing. ASKING $39,500. MAKE AN OFFER

MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

NEW USTINGI Brick ranch home with 2 tots. firaplace.
central air attic and lull basement hat could be used lor
additional bedrooms. Front &amp; side porches, 1 car garage
with storage space overhead. All lllis located in dose 10
10wn on paved street. ASKING $45,000
LANDAKER RD. - 49 plus acr,;.. of ground ~ith ~ 1987,
14&gt;80 mobile home. Fireplace, aor condoiiOnong, all
turnituro and appliances included. Homo s ready lor
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION I Asking $54,900.
DEXTER - Railroad Street - Get a 'Oown Home· tooling
in is 3 bedroom, 1~ alory well insulatad home with bay
window in living room . Features a two story cellar house.
storage building and e&gt;dra lots. ONLY $19,500

REDUCED PRICE on is lovely home. This h~me has
everything - 4 bedrooms, 2~ baths, lar~e tivong room
wllireplace and many, many mo.re unoque features!
$109,900. MAK.EAN OFFER!

HENRY E. CLE~ND.........................................tv2.tl1:
TRACY BR!NAGER..................................~........"!"~
JEAN TRUSSELL.............................................M.-.vvv

ACCEPTED ·

....

J9 HILL...................................................... ......II85-442
·22ee5"

... .

r:'f'O:I!'F. . . .

''

.

.. . . . . .. 9!1

..

CAREER POSITION AVAilABlE
Front End Manager position requires a
f S
f
•
3 f
minimum 0
yearS 0 experience, 0
h' h'b • • ·
•
'f p
W IC etng 1ft a SUperVISOry pOSt lOft. ay
and benef'its based upon experience. Bring
V h ' ( d' IS
kt
reSUme fO aucan S ar Jfta Upermar e
•
"ddl
f OH
In I epor I
•

992•3471.
t==========::========-=

e

e

of u.s. Roull No. 33 within
the Vllllgiii~~~~~SI~~~~~::~~
0.10 mue·.,
J....~.....;;_____T_;.;....;,;.;...::;;..:;._._.....:~-;;;.;-.;......;._ _ _l~------.,-------No. 124 and ending o.oe
mllel weet of the 1111 cor·
poratlon limit 11 the ·weet
WHALEY'S
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
•VINYL SIDING
DAVE'S
W.H. MOBILE
eclge of lite Pomeroy Bridge.
•I(LUMINUM
SIDING
AUTO PARTS
CONSTRUCTION
Seld portion of hlghwey
ELECTRONIC
•BLOWN IN
HOME PARTS
Specializing in
within the munlclpel corpo•New Homos
INSULATION
,.tlon limite being hlrel111l1· If you're in need of
Custom
Frame Re~air
SERVICE
oGaragos
or referred to 11 the
NEW
'
USED PAR S
BISSELL
lastalbn~ Cellular
tmproveman~ end
•Complete
Mobile Home Parts
FOR All MAKES &amp;
WHEREAS, the vtllege fur·
Phones, ar Stereos
It-doling
MODELS
SIDING CO.
or Accessories ...
thar deelree cooperation
or
Radios,
CB's
Stop
&amp;
Compare
New HOllin lullt
from the Director or
992·7013
SEE US FIRST!
Treneponatlon In the plenFree
.Estimates
"Free l!'stimatea"
or
992-5553
On SHelnstalallon
nlng, d..lgn and conotruc·
992-5800
01
TOU flEE
Frat
Estimates
PH. 949·2,01
985-4473
lion oleald Improvement.
RT.
33
WEST
OF
1-800
...8-0070
NOW THEREFORE, Be It
· or Res. 949·2160
742·2656
667-6179
DARWIN?
OliO
ordelntd by the Council ot
1/lt/1-.rA,
NO SUNDAY CAW
DARWIN, OHIO
5-31.'90 lfn
1 31 / '91 lfn
the Vlllllle of Pomeroy,
8/ 19/ 1 mo. tfn
3-11-tln
Ohio:
SECTION I(Cooperid on)
The! eatd Vll!ege hereby
•Remodeling and
MICROWAVE
J&amp;L
BOB JONES
reque111 the cooperation of
A&amp;B
Home Repairs
OVEN REPAIR
the
D'lractor
of
•Roofing
INSULATION
Tnneporlltlon, In the coot ~OMPLUE AUTO
EXCAVATING
ALl MAliS
•Siding
•VInyl Siding
of the above .described
Iring
It In Or We
•Replacement
UPHOLSTERY
Improvement u follow a:
•Painting
DOZER and
P'lclt Up.
Windows
SECTION1·A
Convertible Tops,
FULLY INSURED
Thetthe lump eum of SO.OO
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
•Roofing
Carpets,
Headliner
BACKHOE
FREE ESTIMATES
•Insulation
!1 hereby epproprlated lor
SERVICE
the Improvement of the &amp; Seat Covers and
CEDAR
JAMES KEESEE
WORK
992-5335 or
hlghwey 11 daacrtbed herel· Minor Auto Repair.
992-2772
or
CONSTRUCTION
nabove, by the VIllage.
915·3561
MAIN ST., MASON, WV.
(614)
SECTION II (Coneent)
742-2251
Acr011 From P'o1t Offlre
992-6648 or
Thot 1111 dacterecl lo be In
,217 I. Secend St.
639 Bryon Place
1-(304)the public lnteraet that the
698-6864
696-1006
P'O.IOY, ONIO
Middleport Ohio
773-9560
I co,nao•nt of oeld Vlllege be
6·6.'91
5·14·'81-tfn
3/6/ 90/ lfn
'
11·14-lfn
ouch con11n1 11 hereby
l•d•••n to the Director of
SHRUB &amp; TREE
tod11crlbed
construct · USED API'UANCES
PA~KER
90DU
WAIUNn
In accordance
TRIM and
CARPENTER SERVICE
plana, apaclllcellona WASHII!-S 100 op
- Room Addlttona
CONSTRUCTION
eetlm1111 ee approved DIYR!- 16• up
REMOVAL
- Guner worit
by lht Director.
lffllGIIATOI!- S100 'P
- Eiectricel and Ptumbina
Roofing,
Vinyl
•LIGHT HAULING
SECTION ttl
IANGI!-Gos·Doc.-$175 up ·
- Concrete work
Complete Grooming
(Aulflortty to Sign)
FIIIZIIS- S 12S up
'
- Roofing
•FIREWOOD
siding, Pai1ting,
That the Mayor of 11ld MIUO OYIN!- $79 up
- Interior &amp; Exterior
For All Brftds
P
..
ntlng
VIllage, 11 hereby authorized
KEN'S APPLIANCE
BILL SLACK
and Home repairs
fMilEE MERINAR
to enter Into maintenance
(FREE ESTIMATES!
SERVICE
end perking egrMmentaond
Owner
&amp;
Operator
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-2269
epeclol contractual obt!ga• 992-5335 or 98S -3S~ I
667·6611
tlone.
614-992-6820
Auos1 from Post Offiu
992-&amp;21
USED RAilROAD TIES
SECTION IV
After 7:00 p.in.
POMEROY, OHO
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio
0-12-90-tln
(Maintenance, Parking
7-25 I mopd.
z.ll-tl·ffn
11·14.'90 lfn
IO/a0/'19 lin
Trame Control stgnote end

YOUNG'S

s

Davie..)

That upon complellon of
Improvement, 11ld
lv: t;t:g~w~lu:;theraaner keep
I•
to tretnc

1

Improvewith the
lliiUiel
1nd m1k1
end other
euch meln·

REDUCED I POMEROY -Remodeled home in town wilh
large lot. Thrae to lour bedrooms, carpe~ . electnc B.B.
heal. 11 was a 'Bargain' now it's down roght CHEAP!
$19,900. Come seel
POMEROY PIKE - Appro&gt;. 25 acres ~ 3 bedroom, 2
baths la!1!8 living and dining rooms, equopped kolchen, 2
A IC until. Much morel This is a must see home!
ASKING $69,000. MAKE AN OFFER

r-----====::::;:====----,

B us1he- ss serv1ces

I :~~::~~~~~~:,

TOUIIIDEPENDENT
AGENtS SEIV•G
MDGS COUNTY
SINCE 11168

Ia legally liable arising from mamberellactecl to Council,
the negligence of Its olflc- It ahall take effect end be In
en, emp 1oyoos an d or Ioree Immediately upon Ita
agents
In lho performance
paaaoge end epprovet by
11ons lhe
of dth e Vlll age ·• obtl
ga
Meyor; otharw111, It
ma e or agree d 1o 1n lhlll tiki ellec1 end be In
Sections (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), Ioree from end after the ••r·
d (f) h -• bo
Ileal period allowed by llw.
an
er .. na ve.
Thle ordinance Ia hereby Poaaecl: Auguet 5, 18111.
declared to be en amergen· Alloal: Brendo L Morrie
cy m01aure by reuon of the Clerk
need lor expediting highway
D. Seyler
1
1 t
t
Mayor
mprovemen 1 o promo •
hl ghway 11Ie1y, en d prov ld •
Llrry Wehrung
ed It recelveatht
Prealdent ot Council
hi datnrmallve
1 lh
vole o1 two-1 r 1 o e (8 12, 19, 2tc
_ _ _ _..:,__ _ _ _
11 Help Wanted

~:•cq:u~r:•:•n:y~•:d:d~lll:o•:•:':rlg~h:•·rJ(~e)~T~h:•~'~th=e~co=••~l~ru:c~tlo:n~,J!•!e;•~o~r:!~!,!ro~r~w~h~tc~h~l~t

:~~:w~':i.h.~·=:~=

CARRY OVT ORDERS AVAILABLE (304) 773-532~
SENIORS GET
VISA • MASTERCARD.• AMERICAN EXPRESS

I

Galltpolt s

13

1l

M oasun Co . WV
An.! a Cui.l e 304

Area Co de 6 U

RESOLunON 828.81
BE IT RESOLVED by
Council of the VI !lane
• of
Pomeroy, all mamben
concurrlnu·
Thltlfle Cllrle/Treuurer of
·
the Vlltege of Pomeroy,
treneler In the Cemetery
Fund ••2,132.42 from ""
"·pita!
Outley to Suppllee end

BULLE'l'iN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 .P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

'nJESDAT 1r Tlll!R8DAT, CBJLDRE1'1111Q)Eit 12 EAT FRU
(EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESI?ERIJ
LDilT 1 CBJLD PER ADULT

..... ...

Mtn g • Cou otv

6 67

o· .

FROM CJIII.DllE11"8 MENU.

··-

446
367
) 88
245
256
643
379

2 00 PM lHURSDAY

THE FAIR IS OVER ITS A BACK TO BUSINESS.
COME ON IN WE'D'UKE TO UST YAIIF YOU'RE
LOOKING TO BUY A HOME, COME SEE US ...VOU
WON'T BE ALONE I WE'LL HELP YOU OUT IN EVERY
WAY, AVISIT WITH US WILL MAKE YOUR DAY I

·• .

Gllllia Cot..~nty
Ar ea Co de 614

...u·LL.ETIN.. a· ARD
B

MONDAY- Creamed Chicken over Biscuits,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
TUESDAY -Beans &amp; Cornbread
WEDNESDAY - Liver &amp; Onions, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
THURSDAY - Sauerkraut &amp;Pork, Baked Potato,
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FRIDAY- Bar-B-O, French Fries, &amp; Soup

.

""'

H tlld Wantud
S tlt..~ lo ll o n W a n tud

fa1111 l qii1JI1111:1t l

~~~~~P~u~b~llc~N~o~t~lc~e~~~~P~u~b~llc~N~m~lc~e~~~~P~u~~~~~c~N~o~t!~c~e~~!!~P~ub~I~Ic~N~o~t!~ce~~~~~Pu~b~ll~c~N~o~t!~ce~~~~~Pu~b~ll~c~N~o~tl;,ce~~

Mon day Frida y . I I a.m . to 3 p.m .

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mel
Harris, president of Paramount Pictures' television group, is resigning
after 14 years with the studio.
It was during his tenure that
"Arsenio Hall," " Star Trek: The
Next Generation" and " Mac Gyver' ' were developed.
Harris announced his departure
Sunday, saying Paramount Pictures
Chairman Brandon· Tartikoff, wno
was hired in June after lifting NBC
to fiJ'St place in the ratings, "should
be able to build his own team."

S t ~11 11 11d

DAY BEF ORE PUBU CAT ION
COPV D EADliN E
11 00 AM SATURDAY
MONO AV PAPE R
2 00 PM MONDAY
l UES OAV PAP ER
2 00 PM TUESDAY
W£0N fSDA Y PAP ER

H OMESTYLE L UNCH SPECIALS

''Colors. ''

O;ulv

o·or ·· ·r

followill!{ lt•l••plll;,, . • •.rdwll~t ·., .. .

cl.t ss th L'(I tlt ~ plot't . Bu s tii L'SS Card .uHII t.•Hilll n u lt CllS!
w tll ,tlsu •'IJIHHII 111 th e P t Pt c .tSa nt Rll!ltStct ,uul lht! G all t
pt•h s O .ul y Trtbtt l tt ~. IIJ&lt;icl ttll !l O\lll r 18.000 hu ntllS

Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason, WV
Sunday lllru Thursday, 6 :30 am-10 pm; Friday &amp; SatUrday, 6:30 am-11 pm

and I don 't have a single regret,"
said Penn, who was married brieny
to Madonna . "I was in the eye of a
media hurricane, which is kind of a
no-win situation."
Penn's movie s include "Fast
Times at Ridgemont High" and

Ad ~

Y,u tJ S.tl t!s

c t~l) l

Som£tfring (jootf's %ways Coo{(j.ng 5lt

ATV s new addition to fair truck, tractor pulls

Hci l.I IJ 'I'

'A ct . ~~ tlm~ l .td\lt!flt Sll iH L"I tltJI .n : o!tltn lh t!

Quadriplegic boy leaving
hospital after 8 years
. PRETTY BABIES, PROUD MOMS • Tbese ·cute kids, many
·. pictured with their moms, were winners in Saturday's Pretty Baby
· Contest at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured, front row, l·r, are
: 1991 Little Mister Tim Cogar, Sarah Jeffers, Justin Arnold, Ryan
• Chapman, Joshua Pape, Derek Teaford, Debbie and Emily Bab: bitt, Arlene and Amanda Jo Parker, Natasha Knapp, Naomi Par: fait, 1991 Little Miss Kimberly Johnson and 1991 Fair Queen

T h ,tnk ~

I n Mt!lltUIIctnt

Clm sifietl lll'!i• '·'

61

f,z

l;mttnll

Empl oyment
Ser v1ces

'7 IJUIIII hn e l y ptl 1111ly 11St.'1l
'S t ! IIIIIH ~ tS !l UI ~~~po n s tbl tl lUI CtJ OrS &lt;1fh: r hi S! tl &lt;fV !Ch eck
htt N Ull S h no t l1 ity ,,fl "run s 111 p a ~t ! rl C,tllll t:hll t: 2 00 II Ill
tlof\' &lt;1 llt!l pubh COJ! ton to tn a kt ~ c: urm cttun
· Ad ~ th a t mu s t tw pittd 111 adv il ll cc ill!!

&amp; Lives tock
~ ,,~, .

8\JS in Mii Bwl &lt;l•m l l&gt;
lot ~ &amp; A creaw! .

41

'P11 cu ol ad lor all capttall eHers •s tlou bh : ~met! u t 01tl cusl

C ,u tl ut

3 t

8

· I rt:t• .u ls
G1v~aw a v an d f o und &lt;His undt:r , 5 wor tls Wtll b l.'
11111 J tlif{ !l ,11 II U c h atHl.'

moment at the station then, believe
me.
Everyone could have learned
much about professionalism and
workmanship from Steven's work.
Probably the "greatest" accomplishment from those days was the
"Cracker Barrel", a silly little program which garnered a pretty big
following for a year or two. The
Spam ~iveways , the crabby commentanes (from me, of course) and
all of the other craziness could only
be blamed on being at work at 5
a.m.
.
For those of you who don't
remember it. "Cracker Barrel" was
son of a radio version of "A Current Affair" (Meigs County style),
"The Odd Couple" and "60 Min·
utes" all rolled into one eightminute segmenL
Yup, it was that good.
Incidentally •. Steven told me he
thought it was "high time" .that
:heir visits back home were JOurlalized in this newspaper.
(And a big thanks to everyone
on "Erwin's Pond" for making me
feel welcome last week.)

33

Gtve awa y
H appy Ad s

1

a ds

thmws l ot Sah:
M o b1l c H umolo l u1
FJI!ll S 101 Sitl tr

32

6 los t and fou nd

R 11tes one lor con ~e cu11v e runs. bl' oken t..~ p dllys w 1ll b e cholfgvd

M aso n cuu nll e&lt;O 11111!&gt;1 tu ! p re

31

3 Annoucurn un h
4
5

Farm Supplies

Real Eslale

2 In Memory

' A t:C: t !lVI ~ S !)Q fti SCO tlll l l or ill l f p;IHI til ildvoi ll CC

It's Over ... Th e end of the
Meigs County Fair ushers summer
out with it for most of you. School
gets underway in Meigs County
next week and the cirtle closes for
another year. (Or begins again ,
depending on your level of opti mism!)
Fair time is one of my favorite
season s, and this year was no
exception. What were some of the
better (or at least more memorable)
events from the past week?
A fantastic performance on
Wednesday from The Hollanders
(and a chance on my part to chat
with them before the show) certainly highlighed the grandstand entertainment for me. Seeing those
tremendous crowds at the Demoli·
tion Derby and the Motorcross
events was pretty impressive, too.
I came away a liule richer from
the harness horse races (thanks to
Scott and Julie Dillon) and, of
course, who could forget 1990 Fair
Queen Miranda Nicholson 's high
price at the Junior Fair Board slave
auction?
Oh yes, there were also those
famous tacos-in-a-bag , sausage
sandwiches and lemonades - but
who cares about fair food, right?
An extra-special thanks from all
of us here to Phil Roberts and the
county garage staff for parking
accomodations. That really helped
to make a tough job easier!

Senti

(b)

the rl;ht-of·

~OU'LL SAVE

MONEY
IN THE CLAIIIFIEOI
AND THAT'S Nd"IUl Ll

JNDIPINDEIR
CARPET CLEANERS
and TIU fLOOR CAIE
•Reuoneble Retao
•Quality Work
•Free Eetimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time
•High Gloat on Tile
Floor Finish
Mill IIWlS, Own"
Rt. I, Rwtland, OH.
742-2451
3-14-'91-tfn

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
•IUY •SELL •TRADE
OPEN
Tuesday t~ru Satt,~rday
10:00 am-5:00pm

742-2421
2Tf2 MI. outside
Rutland on Now
Lima Rd,

,_
.......5·10.'9l,lfn.

APPAUCHIAN
WATER
HAULING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"lt R1010nabl~ Pri,es"
PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

0

••

0

•

•

0

0

0

0

..

.

.

.

..

.

..

Now /11Sfock/1

.

...

.

.

.

.

. .. . . . . . .

MOilLE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING
Loca._d On SaHartl khool Rd. off It. 141
(614) 446-9416 or 1-100·172-5967

BENNETT'S

Howard L. Writesel

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Golf
lessons (6) .... ISS.OO ,
New Grips ............$4.00
Woodl ................ 122.00
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used Irons ............ $5 .00
Used Wooch .........$7.00
AWARDS
8·9 ·1 mo. pd.

ROOFING
NEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7 ·1D· BI · I mo. pd .

4·16·16-tln

AIR CONDmONtRS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

POOU,
CIMRNS, ETC,
1,625 GAL- US·S45
Rt. I, la11 71•A
RUTLAND,
OHIO 45775·9626
614-742· 29_0:4 .

BISSELL
BUILDERS

STEWART'S

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EVEITTHING UNDERNEATH

~ TROMM
FlEE

BUILDERS

ESTIMA TIS

•20 Yura Experience

eQuellty Homes and
· Custom Remodellnq

..
742·2328
~, , ,,

....

-..:.....l..~....:..u..'t.l.'

,

I

I

I

�.

..

-··
iP;ag:';;;~
..
T.he
. Da.l;lyiSie~n:tl~ne~l::~~--:-~------------r=~~P=o~m=e=ro=y:~:;~l:d~dl~e=po;rt:,:O:h:lo=======r-:~--~~--~------------!M~o~n~da~y~,~A~ug~u~s~t~19:,~1!9~9r;
.
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

3

35

tt m1y

concern : I will

no4 be reapontlble for any
debtt other than my own. Mark

W. Holley.

4

Giveaway

112 block Lib ond 112 ~&lt;noll Col·
Ill. Very lrllndly m111. Alao cloii
houll. 114-1185-3336.
2 vottow moll kln1111, • -kl
old, outdoorl, good mouM

one lot. Good loclllon. Good
condition. Approx. $900 per
month Income. Will return lnveetment In 5-yMr'l, New Haven
WV, 304-882~411onytlmot
M11dowhlll 844bdlvlolon, U
mll11 out Send Hill Rood, hlo
rallrlctld building loto lor ulo
u low 11 $81500, ond one ocro
loll lor olnglo wldn ovollobll
1110, :IOU75-34150 or 875-4100.
lllrcor Bottom BuiHIIvlolon,

2 yr okl mat. dog, half Germ1n
Shepherd and hAlf Border ColIll, :I04.all5-31130.
2-puppllo, lomoll, port Collie,
114-8'3-5185.
e Khtena To GJv.. way. Some 6
Wllkl And Sornl 7 WMkl Old.
All A11onld COior11 614-441·1707.
e Puppiea To GlvNwty, 3 Malee,
3 Famaln, P1rt Bugle, 2
Monlhl Old. 8,.·388-81117.

~:'Kt:~7ut ~f~~ ~ko~~

8811-2711.

one acre Iota, Rt 2 tronlage,

"I want to finish this before he sees the first
ad for a back-to-schOol sale."

r-----------,----------

111yug Auto Woahlr; S.t Of 11
Help Want·..
Bol S'"prlnga And MettrwA For
ltN
SIOGII BM. 114 448 00111.
----"-----Dllry Form ll1nag1&lt; Wanted.
Smell Trpo Dog To Glvo•wolJ• Suporvlu 111 upocta ol dilly
operation. ln1uranco &amp; paid
g=..,~~~ly

h vacation. Send resume to P..18,

18

11• Ul 0317.

Lost &amp; Found

FOWid: Largo Doa In Bulovlllo
Addlaon ArU.I14~67~.
LOST: N1vy Sobogo bog, lift
ouloldl Llhlvottl Mill. PIAu
Cllll14-44t-4222 dlyo, 448-2174

......
7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yonl Selle llull Ill Pold In
AdftnCI. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dey bolorw thlld Ia to run.
Sundly ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llondly ldhlon - 2:00
p.m. Saturdar.

O.lry Farm Workera W.nted. ln-

ouranco &amp; Pold Vocotlon. Send
rwaume to P-17, c/o P~nt
Pt1111nt R~glllor, 200 Moln
Street,

25&amp;150.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
I Fomlty ,_ ond old very llrgo
rard ..,. on Layne StrMt, Mandey 1111 ? 1, ~~~~ 10:00 All, WI
Layne St, new Hlven.

Pl ..tant,

WV

Eaay Work! Excellent Pay! AaMmblt Product. At Home. Call

Would Ilk• to babysit small
babl. .young loddltra anytime,

814-112-3242

Financial

Wantect Ollry Farm Per-

mantnl Part-Time. 61.f.245-D232.

Houee kee per/Companl on
noldld lor 111 y11r old lldy wtlh
good mind ond good homo.
ld11lly nlld -nd oldor lldy to
make her home- wfth her. Ot:Mr
arrano-menta
coneldered.
Phone colllf'l 114-e98-2lU
(Aibllny)

Barna, Trailer Hook-iJp, Rural

Water, Tobacco BaH, Rt.7. 304'/II:H11811.

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent
S350111o., 1200 Dlpoolt. 2 Bid·
roomo, Uvlng Room, Llunclry,
Lorge Kitchen, SIOGII Gorogl.
Smoll Yord. 814-44&amp;.1356.
1br Hou.e, Fumlahad. 735 RNr

21

0

Business

1

pportun ty

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

INO'TlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
racommendtl that you do bual·
n... with people you knaw and
NOT to atnd monay through tha
mall until you have lnvftllgattd

For Information. 504--641..ao03
Eat. 313.
thl olferlng.
.
Got pold lor compiling nom11
Anhur'o
Choln
Unk
Fence.
1nd addru..., SSOO._per 1,000.
Cell t-900-24&amp;.3131 (SO.Hhnln) Allldlnllol, Commorclll, In·
Froo Elllmotnl Com·
or wrko: PASSE, 5170, 111 dull~ol,
South
Llncolnway,
Norttt pllll lnlllllotion. Phone: S14384.e277.
Auron, Ill 150542.
GET PAID for Compiling N1m11 locll Vending Route For S.lo.
Sell All Or Pen. Rop11t
1nd Addra- l500 per 1,000. WID
Cell 1·900-243-3131 (SD.IItlmln) Bualneu. Above Av•rag• ln-or Wrko: PASSE 31 Y, 181 South comol1-800.l140-88113.
Llncolnwoy, North Aurora, IL locll Poy Phone Route. Com·
150542.
~~~~· Sell Quick. t.aoclHAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Gaurantlld $170 W11k PIUI
llorol Plld Vocotlono. 114-448- 23 Professional
Tnl
Services

C.rport Sell: 2 IIIIH North Of
Holz1&lt; Holpltol On Rt. 160,
Mondar, Tueldly, 10th, 20th.
ChUdrono, AduRo ClothiOG. Htlp
lookt, Mlacellllneouel

Point

price reduced, city water, 304·
576-2336.
Reduced: 12 112 Acroo 2 Lorge

wanted to Do

Twin Gray/Whfto Lana Hotrod c/o Point Pt11unt Roglllor, 200
Killona, 1 Bllc:k/Whftol&lt;lnon, 4 Main StrHI, Point PIIIUnt, WV
llonthl To Good Hamil Onlyl 25&amp;150.

6

44

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® lly Lury Wrlpt

Apartment

(1

for Rent

Cultom Butchering, I daye a
WMk. Cows, Hoga, DHr, 304-

882-2353.
HEAT PUMP S.l11 6 Service,
304-11711-30119 or 614-446-e308.

Real Estate

INCOME TAX COURSE: Cl11111
Bogin Soplornbor I, 11111. II You 31 Homes for Sale
Ara CorMr Orllnlod Or Jull ABSOWTELV IIUST SELLII
Pomeroy,
Seeking Pon·Timo Employment, AOducod To Sell: 2 Story 3br
Thll
COUld Be For You! Contoct: Comer Lot In Chllhlro, Ohio.
Middleport
DlnTu, Inc. Atl14-44e.at78.
Eacollo,.. CondiUon. Fllnanclng
&amp; VIcinity
KUWA_I!,. SAUDI WORKERS Avolloblo Wllh Poy Pointe. 804'
All Yord S.lll llulll Bo Paid In NEE01:U: $35.00 6 Up P1r Hour. 832-e859, 804-1132·lll70, 814-387·
Advlr!CI. Ollcllno: 1:00pm thl Tu F101. Both Skilled 6 Unlkll· 004t.
dly boloro lhl od II lo run, lid For Info. Cell 115-7lllo5&amp;05 2 bldrooma, fuA ba11ment,
Sui1dly ldftion- 1:OOpm Frldoy, Eat. K-81111.
•ncloHd porch, gar1ge, 2220
llondly
ldftlon
10:00o.m. LET THIS NEWSPAPER BE Lincoln Ava, $30,000. 304-875S.turdly.
YOUR
KEY
TO
HUGE 15301 or 175-6416.
EARNINGS. No Exp. Noc-ry. 3br Horw~.~.Jcru. 111111 From
Call 1-1100·248-:1131 ($0.1111/mlnl City Umlto. Will Conaldlr Trade.
Public Sale
8
Of WrHo: PASEE · 33A, 181 Un- 814-4441-1340.
colnw•y, N. Aurora, IL 1054Z.
&amp;Auction
FIIIWoodl Arlit. Pomeroy. 2
Mulllcllno wo,..ld to lorm bond. Story
Rick Pllraon Auction Cornpony, Only
Homo. NIW KHChlll
l!'foul
nNd
to
oP!&gt;Iy.
lnlui llml luct-r, complete tervliW, 8'14..ee....301, 1-0 P.M.
Bllhroom &amp; C.rpotiOG. t'l
ouctlon II&lt;VICI. LICIMid Ohio,
Ac-. 114-44&amp;.2381.
Will VlrgiNI, 304-77W785.
Nlldld
lmmodlltoly, OOYERNIIENT HOliES From $1
cooklwoltraoo. Apply In poraon, (U Ropolr). Dlllnquont Tox
9 wanted to Buy
Country Kitchin, Recine.
Propertr. AepotMulona. Your
.. (1 80He2-8000. Ext. GH·
Good condition IHI Ford Eo- R-plfonlll lor 1 chlmlcol Ar
con Pony or GT ,wino or blown clli1lndlnCY program. Bulc 10181 For Curr~nl Ropo Llat.
otflct lldlli 12-15-houro -k. HOUSE FOR FREEII llull move
motor. 8"-H2-1111onytlmo.
Sand l'MUmo't to: F.A.C.T.S., Rl. oft lot In lllddloporL Fill In
Ulld lloblll Homoo, Cell S14- 2 Bo1 273-A, lldwlll, ON 45814. baMmtnt, aNd end 1t111w. Mu8t
44fo017B,
Doldll•: Aug. 30, teet. 11/FIH, olgn co,..roctl 2·BR, Llrgo LR,
DR, Both, hll now roof end gutWaniiCI aU !unk and ICI'IIP met- E.O.E.
at, 304 . . ~038.
Someonlto care for 4 mo. old, ter, ne.w copper and PVC plui'nbprotorobly In mr homo, begin- lng, nHCI eome work. You ply
Wonlld to buy, Slondlng limber, ning
Sept. 3, non-emour, ret. for the movlngl Only nrioua
Bob WMiilmo &amp; Sorut 814-11112· roq. 114-K2-3542
colllrol Cell 114-11112-2011 ofter
5441.
7:00pm.
Truck Ortvera NHdld, manu
Top Pricll Pold: All otd U.S. houll within 200 mUo rldluo ol Hou11 For Sell: 3 Bldroomo
Colno, Oold Rlnat, Oilmonda Pomeroy. S•nd rMunwto P·18, With Ponlll B~~~m~nt In BidSliver Colno, ltorllng, Goid c/o
Point Pfea ..nt Regl.aer, 200 will, Ro110111ble. 814-388-8621.
Colnll. II.T.S. Coin Sfiop, 151 M1ln St,...l, Point Pleaunt, WV
S.cludtd-Huntera Dr11m, 31
Sacond AVII'IUI, Ollllpolll.
25&amp;150.
w . - ICrH Wfth 3 BR, bllth,
Wanted Avon roprwllntollvoo, 111 modlm convonllncH. Only
for Rlvonowood ond
Employment Serv;ces .custom•,. and halpel'l. No 215112mlnutn
mlllllrorn Rlclno, coli 614door·to-door necas.. ry. FrM
848~381 .
gift. Call K•r otl14-11112·1180.
,1:::1_H_e_lp:.....,.W-:-a_n_ted
_ _ _ wonted: Pln·Tlmo Bookkllpw. Unique 3 bedroom houoo on 10
"When you wllh upon 1 lllr 1 Mull HIVI Knowlldgl 01 ec:rn. extra, 1 mile from Mid·
mokll no diH~r~nco who y,ou Wllholdlng Payroll, Etc. Aoply dtopon, Low 30'• 216-395-23119.
oro, AnythiOG your hlorl dH rH To Box CLA 087, clo O.lllpolla
wiM como to you". Childhood Dolly Trlbu~, 625 Third Avenue, 32 Mobile Homes
dellrM IN aometlmM very Galllpolll, utt 45631.
for Sale
elmple ...ldequate tood...love...a We'll Pay You to type nam•
life lret of hurt._By becoming • lnd addrnan from hom•l $1500 Robllt.On Any 111110 Or
toller po-. you con Mill tho $l50.00 per tOO. c.a 1oll00.246o 1881 Lot llodlt At EIAI Homo
- - ol ~loctld or obuud 3131 ($0.111/mln) or Write: C.ntor. Frao Sot Up &amp; Dltlvory:
child. Cell Try·AI)Iin HOmoo, PASEP- 31Z, 1St S. Uncolnwoy, C.ll1.aocl-5811-57t0.
Inc. ,.~ 422•3158, 345- N. AIWorl IL 150542.
KIDSm 1
21-1053. Become
1!172 Bolmood 12xl5, partially
1
perent. Make dl'llams well groomed, experienced lllmlohld, 2· BR, 814-888-eWI.
come true.
SliP peraon the Uelga Co.
19114 Colonlo114x70, All Electric,
aru, 81...SKI2-268G.
$2,1500 CREDIT CARDI
3br, 1 112 Bathl, CA. FlropiiCI,
OUirlnllld 11mo dly opprovoll 14
Porchn, And Outbulldlngo. Ea·
Business
AJoo . quollly lor NO dopoall
collont Condition! Ouoll Crook
YIIA/IIC lnd Cllh ldVII1CII. 1Mobile Homo Park. 614-245Training
10047t-2000 Ext. ~24.
85&amp;5.
Retrain
NowiiiSouthllltom
$3110/DAY PROCESSING
1858 FIAIWood, 14XT.I, 3 bod•
Buoin111
Collogo,
Sp~ng Volley
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE Ptuo. Cell Todly, 614-446-436711
rooma, 2 blthl, utllhy room,
CALL YOU.
electric, central air, 2 dlc:kl,
R~glotorotlon ttiO.o5-1274B.
NO EXPIRIENCE NECESSARY.
$13,000. 304-875-7122.
·-25&amp;.0242.
18 Wanted to Do
1181 Concord, Ilk• new, c:ental
AVOH • All trMI, Call Marilyn
eir, tlreplace, big front porch, on
Will Blbyob In My Homo rontld lot, 304-47H624 or 614WIIVI&lt; 304-812·2648.
Anr.lme.
Rodney
Area.
ADDRESSERS WANTED lm- Re eren011 Avellable. Call 614- 446·2824.
mldlltllyl
No Expo~lllco 245-5788.
1111 14172 Sunshine mobile
fhcnr'f.
Proceu
FHA
home set up at Quail Creek, lot
Mort- Aolllndo. Worl&lt; AI Bueh H~ Service. R111onable 53. 0 1nlng room, large kitchen,
Rolli.
No
Job
To
Smalll
&amp;14Homi. CIA 1-405-321·30114.
living room, two bldroomt,
3711-2842.
both with garden tub (nice),
POMEROY
Dunllvy WlldiOG Shop. Will do $17,000. 304-425-8245, 675-4827
"PPSTAL JOBS'
$1l78414.80 hr. No IXP, nlldld. email )obi anCI m1nuflctur1 efter 5 pm.
For oum ond IIPpllcatlon lnlo., ornoll homo. 304-1137-2733.
Groot Selection 01 Pr...OWnod
Clll 1-2!HI7-eHt 7o.m..tOp.m.
Export T,.. And Shrubbery, Mobile Homn. Small Down
7dlyl.
Trimming, Removal! P11ntlng. 23 Payment. Financing Avellable.
YNre Experience Reference F101 Sllup And DOIIvery. Cell
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Ea-nl
P1y,
lllni1H1, And Eatlmatu Avalleble. Call EIAI Homo Clnt" At 114-772·
1220.
Rog1r Broyl•, 614~46-4868.
T......,...,..lon,
407~12-4'/117,
111. 571. lll.m.·IOp.m. Toll
Goorgn Ponoblo Sawmill, don'l 34
Business
llelundod.,
haul your logo to tho mill jull
AVON I All Arolo I Shl~oy coii304.S75-1Q5l
Buildings
.,..,., 304-8711-1428.
LPN Wonting To Do Priv111 Duty OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
llbplllor Nlldld In Vinton Nurolng. Avolloblo Any Shift
2nd Avo., Gllllpotlo. Cloao to
Arll.- Rotor...... 814-388- C.ll814-441-1814, 114-446-28811.. Court
Hou... 1 rooM, 2 rooma,
t187 Allor flp.OI.
rooma, 4 rooma. All nlc:ely
11111 Pauto'o Dey c.ro Conti&lt;. 3decorated,
1ir condtUonlng,
.......... In lly Homo. Sell, onordabll, chlldcora. M·F
weter &amp; ..war bltl IN ptiCI.
114-411-11111 Alllr flp.m.
I o.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo :M-10. your
choice now. No
lllloro, 11111 achool. Drop-lno Make your
OVI&lt; tho ohono, you
Wlleoml.l14-446o8224.Nowln- quot11
mUll - thlm. Pliono lor on
llnt Toddllr C1ro, 814-44H227.
114-441-llllll cloy,
Will blbyall In my homo, "*-I~ IV.
R-•" IChool ..... :IOU'I!I8644.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
URN MONEY RaidinG Bookll
t30,~. lncomo Polontlol. Will Do Ironing In My Homo Con
0111111. (1) 101-8112.-o Ext. Y- Pickup &amp; Deliver, Have Rtleren- 1215&amp; mobile homo, 71 ocroo
. .. 814-388-17t3.
10118.
blacktop road, cltr wetH Pl.,!
turo; good hunting 'Lion

----------1

*'"

IDOOI-.

$33,000. 304-451-1W' Mrtoul

Third Avenue, $100 Deposit,
$150/mo. 614-44&amp;.3870, 614-446·
1340.
3 Bedroom HouH For Rent. Gal·

llpollo City Umlto. ilt3-N4·3040.
3 Bedroom Rench, City
Schoolo, $300/mo. 614-38U305
Allor S p.m.
For A1nt: 2br Homo, Double
Gorar. $300/mo. PIUI Olpoolt
And oinnc11. 814 448 3548.
Fumlllhed 3 rm. houM, 1 BR, In
town. CINn. No petl. Rlf.,
Dlpooh roqulrod. 814-448-2543.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2·BR lumlohld or unlllmlohld,
good clun condition, New
Rav•n, 3()4.182-2461.

2-BR, fumlsha~ waaher/drylr,
central !!'1 $2150 pluo dlpoolt,
114·11112·111UO,
2br Trall1&lt; In Chuhlro. 814-387·
75ti0 Allor 4p.m.
2br Unlurnllhldjl Noor Holar
Hotpftal, No
ttl, $179/mo
Wotor Included, $100 Olpooh,
814-4441-3817.

2br, Air, Coble, C.rpot, Nlcr
6 Cl11n, B11utlllll River VIIW In
Konougo. Foetor'o lloblll Homo
Pork. ·-·11502.
3 bedroom double wide prlvlto
lot, 21ullblltho, olr ;;;;;;L, lomll(.
room, dining ~. centl'lll hea ,
utility room, lront pon:h with
ownfng, plonly of yard opoco.
Nice nofghborhood, O.lllpollo
Forry, U25. 304-e7&amp;.3087. llull
S.o To Appreclltl.
lloblll homo, Syracu111 2-BR,
$140/mo pluo utllltllo, oopoolt,
814-1112-5732 '"" 6:00pm.
Unlurnllhld 2br, CA, Hilt,
Prlvoto Lot, 2 lllln Out On At.
~.'!..0 "''''· .W0/'!'0· 614-448Yory Nice, 1411150, Air Condition,
Coble Avolllbto, Dlpoolt 6
RolorlllCII Required. 614-44410527.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom Ponlllly Fumlohld,
$230/mo. Dll&gt;otb Aoquirod
Utllhlll Pol~ _tot Second
Avenue, 814-311H171.

1 Bedroom Ponlolly Fumrlhld,
$230/mo. Olpoolt Required
Utllltl11 Pold, 108 112 Second
Avenue, 114-371-2111.
1br Aponm111t, Wotor, Sowogo,
Gorblgo Pold. OlpooH A•
~~:,r. Cell 614-44&amp;.4345 Allor
2 Room Fumi•hld Apartm1nt.
OowiWtaifW, AU Utllltlea Paid,

$175/mo. 811 Second Av111u1.
814-4441-3M5.
2-BR oportmont In Middleport.
Security dopoob roqulrld. 6141112·2211.
4-BR oparlmll'lt In Middleport
$200 month, 3·BA lllddlopon
$200 month, I·BA Pomeroy $1150
month, 114-llllll-11782.
BEAUTIFUl:. APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PniCES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!~". 538 Jocklon Plko
!rom $1rr.&lt;tmo. Wolk to ohop I
movllo. Cell 814-448~511. EON.
Compllloly Fumllhld Smell
HouH, No Pet8, Yard, Plue
Utlllll•. $235/mo. 814-44&amp;.0335.
Efficiency, atove, ref bllth
w/ahower, lie 111 elect, fun carplied, HUD occptld, 304-8758200.
Fumlthld Apartment,
1br,
Share Bath. 7'01 Fourth Ava, Galllpolll. $185 Utllltln Pold. 6t4446-4ol16 After 7p.m.
Fumlahld APinmonto, 1br,
$225 Lhllllln P1id. 1120 Founh
Avo I 1507 Second Avo, Gil·
lipoho. 814-44&amp;.4418 Iller 7p.m.

40 PIICII Of Norlfekl Chino.
PorfiCI Condlllonl Niver Uudl
Now, $384; Will s.n- For $170.
814-441-1422AII~&lt; e p.m.
Antiquo Wood Coolllovo WormIna Oven, Weier Tonk, $1500. 114441-3040.
County Applllnco1, Inc. Good
UAd applllnctl, T.v. 1111. Opon
8 o.m. to I p.m. llon.-8111. 814446·11111, 827 3rd. Avo. Ga~
llpollo, ON
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wllhlfl, dryare. refrlgeratora,
'"IIG"· Sklggo Applllf1CII,
Uppw River Aa. Bnlcll Stano
Croll llolol. C.llllt4-446o73111.
Llrgo Couch, Chafr Floworod
Dlllgn, $1150i.~ Llrgl OIIUII
Bor Sloolo, ..., Eocfi. A,..l'lu•
Tr11dll Sowing lllchlno, 115.
Olhor lllocl 814-24H085.
LAYNE'S RJRNITUAE
Complllo · homo luml~l~f:·
Houra: llon-SII, 11-8. I
0322, 3 mll11 out Bullville Rd.
Froo Dlllvory.
PICKENS RJRNITUAE
Nlw!Uold
HOUIIhold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. P111unt, WV,
Clll304.e75-14!0.
RENT20WN
814-448-3156
Vl'ra Fumltura
Solo 6 Cllllr, $1UO Wuk;
Recliner, $5.47 WMk, SwtVII
Rocker, $3.83 W10k.Bunk Bid
Complete $8.41 W11k, 4 Drowar
Chill, $3.28 W11k; -or Bidroom Sullo, 7 pc., $11.87 Wllk,
lncludll Blddlng.Country Pine
Dlnllll With Bonch a 4 Chillro
$10JI8 W11k.OPEN: Monday
Thnr Sllurdoy, ll.m. to 8p.m.1
Sundoy 12 Noon Tlll flp.m. •
lllln 011 Aoutl 7 On Route 141,
In Conllnory.
Sell On AM Corpll &amp; Vinyl Floor
Covering In Stockl Mollohan
C.rpoll, AI. 7 Nonh, 614-44811144.
SWAIN
AUCTIOH 6 FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Oolllpolll. 6 Ulld
furniture, heatere, Wutem I
Work booto. &amp;14-4441-3151.
VI'RA FURNITURE
814-448-3158
UVINO ROOM: Sohl &amp; Choir,
$1111.00· Rocll!ll•
$14t.OO;
Swivel Rockl&lt;, SIIII.Oo; CoHN 1
End Tobl11, 188.00 SII.DININO
ROOM: Table Whh 4 Podded
Cholro, $14t.OO; ·e ount'l Pine
Dinette With Bench nd 3
Choirs~, 1288.00; llltchiOG 2
Door Hitch $348; Or $5811.00
S.t; O.k Tobll, 42x62 With &amp;
Bow
Back
Cholro,
$8211.00.BEDROOII: Pallor Bidroom Suite (5 pc.), $34t.OO; 4
Drawer Chnt, $44.85; Bunk
Bid, $228;_Complete Full lion
S.t, $105.ou Sll; 7 pc. Coder
Blldroom Suite, IIIIII.OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru Satu;c:Uy, la.m. to
&amp;p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Tltl
5p.m., 4 111111 OH Route 7 On
Route 141 In Centenary.

54 MIScellaneous
Merchandise

Graclout IIVIOG. 1 and 2 bidroom aponmonll 11 Vllllgo
llonor
ond
·Alvorllido
Apanm111t1 ln Middleport. From
$1811. Cell S14-IID2·7781. EOH.
LIIIYIIII IIIII: 3111'1 2 Sotho, All
UUIItln tnctudoo. $4:Wmo.
0ipooll Alqulrod. No Poll. 614- .
448-7733, 114-44H222.
Now H1v111, 2 bedroom lurnlohld oponmonl, cllpoolt ond
,.,.renee, 304-882..ZSH.
Complllly Fumi.Oid moblll
homo, 1 mill low,!), overlooking river. No Poll, ...,., 81444U331.

'::'-"-:c,..-:::----:,.-,-.....,.......,-""7

Nonh 4th. lllddllport, Ohio. 2
bedroom lumlohod opt dopooft
;t.':•f-- -lrld,'304-882.

ChorrY
- . llld
llo.lidl1j
...
A
....I Oh-'1
ralll. 114-241-1,_..
_
Colli To Cooll lllmborohlp
Homo Pork In IIOhlo Royol Oak
R-.t. Very IIIOftlbtl. 817838-e1121.
Concroto &amp; pintle upllc llnkl,
Ron Evono Entol'llriMo, Jockoon, OH.1400-637.01128.
Good Ulld 3 Doort, 1311 Wl,.h,
232 Width, 614-446'0585.

calle onlr.
Ono lnd two bedroom
13 ocr• on Send Hll Rood 522 lparlmonto lor IIIII. ld11f lor
ft road frontage, city Water. llnill flmllllo ond eiOGIII. 304owner financing, 304.f1S.J030. . 175-2053 or 171-4100.

"

Smell Fumllhld Aportmont For
Alfll. 814-441-3351.
Unturnllhld oponmont. 2nd
fl-, Pom110y, 4-Roomt, bllth.
No poll. Aoloronco ond dopooR,
614-1112·22711 oltlr 5:30pm.
Wldgo Apto, 1101 Burdlllo St
Polnf P..... nt, no pe1a, 1 and 2
bldroomo, 304-8711-207:1 ollor
e ,., by MEA. InC.
5:00.
Whr Rent? Homu lor $1.00,
Repa.
Qov,
Glveeway
Progromol
For
lnlormotlon,
1504- ~==========r:=========~
1141-8003 Ext. R-313.
54 Miscellaneous
61 Fann Equipment
45
Furnished
Merchandise
Loll llodll 138 IIF Tractor
$4,5&amp;0; 185 Whh H11vy Dutr
Rooms
Gravel)' 6 HP Wolk Blhlnd 30 lolcllr SUllO: T030 Ferguson
Roome tor rent - weak or month. Inch Mower, EaCIIII,.. Condl- Wllh 4 Ft. Buoh Hog $2,395;
11500 Oliver $2,885. Own~&lt; Will
St:~~c'2~S120/mo. Galli• Hotll. tlonl $8150. 614-381-11032.
Flnllnco. 814-288-11522.
II
0.
Maytag Wa1her And G.E. Gaa
Dryer,
J!ISO.
114-446-8048.
Now Holllnd Supw 717 2·Row
Slllplng roomo whh cookiOG.
OIIVIf
16-loot
AIIO trallor lpiCI. All hook-upo. Partible Kllchon Aid dllh- Chopper,
c111n
Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·773- waaher, 1- tt electric biHboard Treneport-Diac,
wheat/Jtraw,
114-62·7302
5651, u..on WV.
hNter wllhermoatat, Ru8co eVenlnga.
atorm wlndowa, 304-182-3108.
46 Space for Rent
T.O. 30-Fergueon tr1c:tor, 614·
Recondhlonld Wuhlro, Dryoro.
Country llobllo Homo Pork, Guorantlld prom pi llltVIce lor · '/112-2675.
Roulo 33, North ol Pomorcy.
mokll, - · Thl Wllhlr 63
Livestock
Loll, rantoll, parll, NIH. Cell Ill
Dry1&lt; Shoppo. 114-448~1144.
~,..,....-...,.....;...;..;..,__,_ _
814-IID2·111711.
Slcldobllr llowor, 3 112 HP Sllf 2 HorN GOOIIOIC:k Troller,
For Allll: OHICI Spoco Within Propeltd 34• Cut Good Condl Large Dr...lng Room, $2,1500·,
- N- 12 R. Stock Trailer, $1,716;
City Umho. second Avenue And llonl 5506. 114-24s'.am.
llon:h 16th 1118t AOHA SorriN
Still Routl 7. 614-448·1888,
Surpl
..
,
coltOcllbllo,
ormy
Filly With One Holter Point;
8:~:00.
lolthor boola, comoulllugo Fll&gt;ruory 14th 111110 Chlllnut
lloblll Homo Spoco For Rlnl clolhiOG (1111111 ourpluo clothing Filly Sonny D-lllr Blood Line.
NNr Holur Hoapltat, No Pett, $3. per gmnont). Sam Somo- l14-2118-e522.
$71/mo Wotor Included. 814-4441- rvllll'o, belodl Sandyville Poll
3617.
Offlco. Frl, Sit, Sun. Noon-11:00 Flldor Cell S.lol Augull 24th 11
PM ottwr dap, hourw c:all 1p.m. Whh Regular Saturday
llobllo homo - ·· Route 2 bllloro11 :00 All. 304·273-585&amp;.
S.lo. Athlne Llvntock Selle. 11
end 82 ot •y•, 304-875-3818.
Hlld Hotel. S.lo From One
Throo 400 won high -•ur• Form. Uvollock Con Be
lodlum
GE
-•rllood Chlckld . In Allor 4p.m. On
Merchandise
floodllghto, mounting hlrdworo, Fndoy. Houllng Avolloblo. ConookiOG 1300. :IOU'IS-e30e.
llgnmonto WoloOI'IIII 114-592·
2322 814
353
W.lghl 914 BIIICh, P-, KnM
' "118- \
51
Household
Curf, Crow lor, Tricopto Bor, 2 Zlppo 0111 Pine Bar Chlllnul
Dumbllll Boro, 400 Pound lloro 15 Hondo, $1,700; Sharp
Goods
W.lghl. $1150. 114./lN-2111 After Point Moro 14 Hondo, $7110.

2 112 ton Inter Thllrm central air

unit $300. 2011 811 lloo polo
with 200 omp, dloconnact with
mltor 1Nr111 $70. 304-11711-2321.
2 Now Chlln Link Fence Goln.
Tx6' With Hordwora. 114-4481i43.

~6P:;;·;;;m;..- - - - - - - - I Duckl, G111u. 614-898-2716.

-

55

64

Building
Supplies

Hay

&amp;'Grain

Firat cuning hay for sal•. CaU

Block, brick, Dipu, wtndowo, Untllo, 11&lt;. Claude Win, _ Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114-

114-'1112·2083.

Transportation

245-512\

24X24Xi, 2-11111 ov-d, I·S
II
lntranco Praclalon
- · orlelld.
71 Autos for 5ale'_ _
$3648.00
POll .,.,,.,....,.,...-..;..;.;;_..;;.:,;.;.
Bulldora 814-11112-3541.
liN IIUIIIOG, IXC lhow cor,
304.SB2·33115 oftor 5:00 Pll.
Pets for Sale
tm Dada• Don, 440 St,ooo.
Groom 1nd SuJ!Piy . BltoiH'II 114-3811-8301.
1m Camaro, white with red In·
Grooming.
All · llvloo.
111111 Pot Food
Dlllor.
Julio llrior. Looko &amp; rune root good.
Webb. Cell 614-448.o231. t-800- f14-446-8052.
352.0231.
111711 Chryallt' Cordobo 360,
AKC Chow'o, 1-cr11m ond 1· lutO, new .IVIrythiiiG, $1400,
biUI, $100 IICh, 814-1112-7574.
d1ya 614-112·2155'. ollor 5:30pm,
AKC Porn~&lt;~nlum puppl11, coii:IOU'15oj1155.
lhoto &amp; wormed, :IOU75-21t3.
0
8
1
l~ooo ~\..SBSf.
~.1~
rNo ~!i.
AKC roglotorod Alahln Hound polntmonlll
S14-31J
PUPJ&gt;III, mole ot f'oltll!le, born
714111. vet ehecked, all llhota, 18711 Ponlloc Flrlblrd, Slightly
elrod SBIF Chlmolon, oxollc Olmogld On Drivlrt :oldl. llow
colo,., 304-17S·715'1.
Blnery. Good Running Condl·
AKC Aoglltl&lt;ld Bo-t pup- lionl $1500. 814-44&amp;.3375, 614pill. Fllldy to gol $100, Francia «e.em Ev•niOG•·
Blllldum, 114-867-3856.
1180 Pinto Station Wagon, low
Auotrolll Shlllhord
Pupo. mll11go, $1200 OBO. 1975 Un·
A~glalorld,
Lr. .erod For coin, exctii!Hlt running condi·
Quollty. All Shoto. .Brlldld lion, $1100 080. 614-84§-2804.
Since tm. 814-8711-252l

also Bartlett Pears and Prune tt85 Dodgo Chlrgor Shelby
Plum.• Ill• In Auaull. Cell t- Turbo, I aptld, 70,000 mltta,
1500-447-37150 lor pr1cot. BOB~S =~~~~· rldltllvor, $2,1195.
MARKET, lluon or O.lllpollt,
OH.
1885 Nl111n 200 SX. Ssp,
Canning tomaotH alrNdy load,!!ILIXCIIIIN Cond, Clll 614picked or P'ck your own at 112•1001 1ftor 5pm
Johnoon'o lorm, 814-247-2ilet.
1885 Ornnl GLH Good Condl·
llonl 81,000 111111, Alklng $1,800.
Conning Tomol-11 Plckod $4 1 114-367.(11507.
.
buohll. Picked own $3. Sliver
Oullll Corn II raody, R1ymond 11M Chevette, 4apd, Air ConRowo, 814-247-4282.
dhlonod, Good Condltlonl
Conning tomot-, II buohol. $1,550i 1985 Plymouth Horizon,
WI rlollvor II Syrocuoo, Good Condition, $1,400. 614-256Pomeroy end llldcloport. 814- 1251.
848·2388.
1811 Dodge 600, nicely oqulpExtre Good Canning Tomatoea, lll(l, goocf condition, low mlles,
lt4-IID2·3384 daya or '/112-3020
Cell 304-882-2237.
evening e.
For S...: Rid R.....,...rllo, Pick
1111 Monte c.~. s .s. 8t4-387·
Your Own. 814~45-11014
71ol1.
1811 Oldamobllo Cutten Clorra,
Farm Suppltes
4-dr, 6-cyl, A·I condition I $31500,
&amp; Livestock
114-11112-3184.
1811 Rid Floro Loaded Tin,
Crul111, Bunroo~ Low Mll11.
llorol 114-448..187 114-44&amp;.
61 Fann Equipment
0812.
Dolry Equlpm,nl 4 Ollovol illl Supw Span llonlo Co~o.
llllkoro Pul11tor Voccum Pump $1,000.
814 446 4523, 614-446Ptpo un.. 114-24&amp;.8525.

4011•1 bottle 11111 hot wotor. tonk
lor 1111 $100, t14-1112-el14
Built crib, ct~r Nit, awing,
wolkl&lt;, playpen,_!oodlll hlglichllr, blloll),ll, 304-e78-454t.
B~clllond unlcycl11. 814-4441- For Soli: Corn Plcklra, 1 And 2
808 .
.
Row PTO 11Mwe 8p 11d1~

1011.

.....
=.'=..':~

=LMr~-

WJJ~•.=:

!!qui!Nnlnll
-·•
Forrn
lllclilnory, AI. 124 AM lllvttow
Rood, Joobon, Ohio, 114-21f.
8844.

w•

ff•

Jim'• Farm~ul""::'44~~~
Golll
,
:
Wldlllilct

, _ . Ulld '"""

traeton &amp; lmpllmlnto. Buy,
1111, tracll, 1:110-5:00 Wlllrdlyo,
,s.t. 1111 Noon.

z,

omiim,

All Power, Air, Exc.llent Condllion. 114-44&amp;.4225, Aftor 4p.m.
1117 Ptymout Horizon, auto., air,
crul11, AII/FIIIIIoroo, $3,1500.
814-448-8m.
1BS8 Llitcoln Town Cor Loodld,
42,000 111111, 1 OWntr, Excellent
CondHiont 814-448-et57 Allor
flp .m.

' '

WJJAT 1&gt;. l.CNEA-Y
6011 nt ... 'OW'
lUlU.. eg $J9S'

8

ll\Q;Mt 1\:IT I

e

Tll.EE "?

~ Night Court Q
Cil (J) e ln11de Edition Q
ID (I) MICNoii/Lehrwr
NowoHour t:;1
1111 1121 • Current Affair Q
illl18 Night Cotrrt Q
It) Mec:CJyver Q
tD Sportaeenter
a

-

PEAl&gt; 5fA fC.~O/..LJ
p!lo..JEcT
-;::-, (;___

QQ

T~I/..A'I'IDN

f&gt;fl'i.
•

I

.i

a

·"

e

g 1121 Ill

2263.
'

.

. ~~

•'

,.,.
,,.
,.

,.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconc:llrlon•t lifetime guar1n· .:
til. Local reterencn tumlshld.
FrH Htlmataa. Call collect 1·
614-237-0488, doy or Nghr. ::
Rogers Baum~nt Weterproe&gt; ·'
ling.
·'
Complete Mobile Home Set·Upt, ·'
R•r•lra; Commer~ll, Rnldtn· "
tit lmprovem.ntt. lnc:ludlng: ""
Plumbing, Electrkal. lnaurtnce "
Claim• Ai:coptld. 614-258·161\ . ~.
Curti• Home Improvement•· •.
Years Experlance On Older &amp; ""
Newer Homta. Room AddiUone, •
Foundlllon Wook, Roofing,
Wlnclowo &amp; Siding. Froo El·
tlmatnl Referancn, No Job. To.
Big Or Smolll 614-441.()225.
~
E &amp; A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
TrlmmiOG. TrH Aomovol, Hodge
TrlmmiOG. Fr11 Eatlmotul 614·
367-7115T.
JET
Aeration Motora, repaired. New
&amp; re-built motors In atock, R"
EV~S, JACKSON, OH. 1.aoci537·852B.
Ron's TV Service, spec:lalizJng
In Zenith alao Hrvlc:lng mosl
other branda. Houae calla, also
some appliance repairs. WV
304·5lll·23118 Ohio 614-44&amp;.2454.
Septic Tonk Pumping SilO Gillie
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPiiiSES
Jocklon, OH 1-800-537-11528. '
Davis
S.W·V•c
Service,
Georgn Creek Ad. Parte, •upplln, pickup, end delivery. lt4UII-G2t4.
•
Will build potlo covoro dlcko .
tcrHnld rooma, put Up vlnyi'
oldlng or trailer oklnlng 614-•
245-665l
.
Will do romodollng, rooiiiiG
building; troo trimming on~
removal, houu pJ~Intlng. For
frH ntlmatu, c:all George at 1·
614·1192·5752.
'""'

&amp;

Certer'a Plumbing
and Heating

Fourth and Pfna
Golllpolle, Ohio
614-445-3888

Electrical &amp;

cornmorclol .;

wiring, new Hrvice or repalre. .
llaater UcenMd electrlc:lan. '

304-875· · •
.

... .

87
Upholstery
~~~~~~--~
Mowrey'o Upilollllring urvlc· · ·'
lng lrl oounty IrA 20 Yllfl!. Thl '
bolt In lumlturo upholstering 'M
Call 304-67S...154 for frH ••~

tim••••

A crowd watched as the
man took a lump of clay and
5
smoothed it into a long
. . . .
slender vase. " Say," sighed
,.--------.:....... one woman; • I wish I could
--ru....;R..:,..::Q_u;:....:.:M:.,.o:....,.~~ do that with -· ____ ,..
6 Q Com plele the chuckle quored
-J..-.1.-..1.-.J.L-...L..-l.
by f•ll•ng in the miuing words

I I" I I

:1

~I

L...

I I I 1

you develop from stop No . .3 below.

PRI NT NUMBERED LETr ERS IN
THESE SQUARE S

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
9- 1~
Flavor - Index - Youth - Kaiser - YES or NO
Flight attendant to traveler, " Would you like dinner?"
Traveler, "What are my choices?" Puzzled attendant
A simole YES or NO."
'
NORTH

BRIDGE

1·11·11

+ K 62
•Ks

• Q 10&gt;

.KJ754

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

+QilS3
• Q962

• 10 4

• J7
.KJ873

• A94

+6

+Q 8 3 2

SOUTH

+ AJ 9
• A 10 S 43
• 62

The end

+A109

,. ,.

of an era

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By Pbillip Alder

Soutb

Wes1

When masterpoints were first
awarded in 1936 by the American
Bridge League (now the American
Contract Bridge League}. 10 players
were given the rank or Life Master, on
the ba• is of their tournament records.
The last surviving member or the 10.
Sam Fry. Jr., died on June 28 at 82.
Fry won a silver medal at the 1959
World Team Championship and col·
Ieete&lt;! many national titles, including
lhe Spingold Knockout Teams and the
Vanderbilt Knockout Teams.
In 1966 Columbia University played
a match against four experts. includ·
ing Fry, who were alumni ol Columbia. The experts lost the 20·board
match despite Fry's excellent play as
South on today's deal. If you wish to
test yourself, cover the East-West
cards and select your line in three no·
trump against a low spade lead. East
playing the 10.
Fry might have bid three clubs at
his second turn, but he liked his strong
spade holding for no-trump purposes
and decided to Lake a gamble on the

2 NT

Pass

North

2+

3 NT

East
Pass
All pass

Opening lead : • 5

diamond suit.
He won the first trick with the spade
ace. This didn't cost a trick because he
could always finesse against West's
marked spade queen later. but it did
mislead West about the location of-the
spade jack.
Next Fry ran the club 10. East won
with the queen and could have
switched profita.bly to a diamond, but : ·
undP.rstandably he thought declarer ·
had the diamond ace and West the club ace. Therefore he returned a spade,: ·;
expecting to establish his partner's •
suit. But Fry immediately claimed
nine tricks: three spades, two hearts
and four clubs.
@ 1•1. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .

e

'/112·2675.
Budget Tranaml11lont, Used &amp;
rebuilt, atartlng at SH; Auto
Parta. 814-24S.5e77. 114-3N-

Ridenour Eloctrico~
1711.

(]) Me)or L11gue hHblll
Chicago Cubs at Montreat
Expos (L)
(I) 1121
Enllrtllnment
Tonight Stereo.
(J)
Mlme'o Femlly
g Whloi of Fllltllne 1:;1
illl. M' A'S'H
Ill Be e Stir Stereo.
tD lnternttlonel Outboltrd
Orand Prix From Pittsburgh
(T)
Crooofire
7:35 (]) Andy Griffith
1121 Frwoh Prtnco of
8:00 &lt;II
Bel Air Will upsets the
neighbors when he
decorates the mansion. (AI
Stereo. tJ
(I) (J) 8 NFL Preeoaoon
Footblll Miami Dolphins at
Denver Broncos (LI Stereo.
ID (I) Elvlo '58 Exclusive
photos, interviews and clips
reveal Elvis as he was in
1956, poised on the brink ol
superstardom. (1 :00}
1111 1121 Ill fvenlng Shade A
convict vowing revenge on
Ava escapes . (A) Stereo. Q
illl18 MOVIE: 'ronk iPGI
(2:00} Q
It) Murder, She Wrote Q
Ill On Stlge Stereo.
tD World Weter Skiing From
St. Paul, Minn. (T}
PrlmoNowo
0 Beauty end the Beall 1:;1
8:05 Cll MOVIE: Opel'lltlon
Petticoat (2:30)
8:30 (2)
lUI Bloltom Blossom
is tricked into dating the
school geek. (R) Stereo. Q
1111 1121 Ill Mojor Dod Gunny
cares lor a homeless puper
lor the Major . (A} Stereo. Q
Ill On Stl(ll Stereo.
9:00 &lt;II
1121 Cheert Woody
takes action after he
discovers why his~· rt is
lrisky. (R} Stereo.
ID (I) American eotero
The romantic, popular and
Iunny songs ol Cole Porter .

e

1981 4.3 Vortec engine and
tranamlstlon 12,000 mllea, 014·

or

'·

. -,r--;;.,;.......;.....l.y___.l
T 0 J 5 { ...fiill

Moneyllne

a

llfl/ltJ/./.1 N(T ANI&gt;

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ANidlnUII

I AMI

~-I-r-f.:..ru'l:....;..r_:_,Y,~ll_i

e

1911 Hand• Mag111 V.65, now
battery and tlraa, exc c:ond,
$2,000. 304-875-4802.
1081 Kawa..kl-220 4-whleler
114-742·2675.
'
Suzuki DR 500, Runa Rut
Stronglt $500 0 .8.0. 614-3711- "
2163 AI or 7p.m.
.::··
~ •fi
--.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
::,9;:6;;-1o;;:PII::-:,y-.:rbo-::oy~P;;-on=too_n_bo:--ot:-_~-20.. -'
ft. long, 30 HP motor $3700; OW4" _•
675-n58.
,
Starcraft 19'11" 175 HP Outboaid
Runlbout, $6,000. 814-446-4523;•
814-446o10Ge.

84

WDID

I rv~~Nr2"'E''

e

1881 Hondo CB, 7150 K, uc .
shape, 7.400 ml ..l, muat ... to ·
approclltl, $1,1500. or bolt offer,
304-1175-7534.

Plumbing
Heating

'

TIAT DAILY
PUIIUI

0 Sc8recrow end Mra. King
7:05 (]) The Jelflrton1
7:30 &lt;II. 1121 Jlopllrdyi t:;l

1rni Honda 550, • cyl, run• •..:. ·
good, lookl good, $300. 080
304-1137-3451.
. '•

82

\

e

Motorcycles

76

8

a

1987 Ford, F·1150 XLT, 53,000
II lin, Auto, 351 EOGino, Air, 814·
446-4225 Alii&lt; 4p.m.
Extra Good 1180 lntematlonel 2
112 Ton Truck, 404 EnglnohU 2 .
Spood. 1711. Flit bod Wit Lao • .
Bunkli 310 C.H Dozer Dfatl I • ,
Woy Blade Afmoll Under· '·
c:ariiagt Super MaJor Fordaon ·
Troctor Dloul lndullrlll End ·
Motor; Din Bucket Log Forl&lt;o~ ;
814-25&amp;.11122.
. •.

1

MON., AUG. 19

.,,.

8:00 &lt;II • (I) (J).. Ill 1121 •
lUI Newt
(]) Andy Orifflth
1D Club Connect
(I) Reading Rainbow t:;1
illle Andj Grlfflth
It) Clnoon EXPNII
WOflcl Tocllty
0 Rln Tln nn, K-1 Cop
Stereo. t:;1
8:05 (]) Bewllehed
8:30 &lt;II
1121 NBC Nowt t:;1
(]) I Dreem ol Jeennle
(I) (J) • ABC NIWI t:;l
1D Wild Amerlcll;!
&lt;II 3-2-1 Contllct 1:;1
1111 1121 11 cas New• 1:;1
illll8 WKRP In Clnclnnttl
0 New Zono Stereo. Q
6:35 (]) Andy Griffith
7:00 &lt;II
1121 Wheel of Fortune

c:-:,:.:.,:,:.c_;_:-:c::--:-c:-::::-:--

74

'

Sentlnei-Page-9

EVE NINO

DID 1 TELL
YOU I'VE BEEN
READING ''UNDER
i~E 6REENWOOD

11118 Chivy Yin, $BOO O.B.o :"
Cell Rob, 614-446-ti!C)g,
·'·
1978 CJ-7. Hard Top, 304, $2,700:
614-448-8138.
11118 J11p CJ 7, outo., V-8, good
engine &amp; running gNr, $700.
304-45&amp;.1647.
111711 J11p Wogon11~ crul11 1t1H1 ,,
AC, Quad-Track, Me....Hneh,
body rough, $8150. 304-875-3903 ··
lftlr 3:001&gt;11.
1111 Chevy S IOJ outomotlc, 414,
45,000 mll11, •6,200. 304-IJ'S.
3433 or 675·7108.

t

Television
Viewing

1987 otout F·2150, 4x4 Pickup. ~ ·
loldldl 1 Owner, Eacollonl ·.
Condltlonl 614-448-1675, 614- .
UII.S288.
:'

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

RC.Or#. CJIA£ WITil
ACO\'fl.lf.F.:IIWf

1971 GMC Chevy, 350-lnglno,
300-duratlon cam,
501-llft, 31• ton, twln-ttacka,
304-773-5128.
1878 Chovrolll h1ll ton pickup,
6 oyl, 3 opold, body rough,,
$375. 304.e75-17TI.
19-78 F·150 400 Motor, $3,800.
:•.:.•4:..:·36:::.,7-D6.:.:.:5.:.7..,.-,---,-:--:::-:-1883 Chevrolet, 4x4 Pick-up,
614-379-2119.

·

llllwl Jlltl
.
1117 Oklt DtMt II, 12,000 Milia.

'I

~~MV

overha~Aed,

,..... .,.,..- ......... ,. .;l".:~""'f~="'~Jlr . ;;::;::;::R::;e:;f_rl.:g~era;,;,:.tl;.:o.:..:n_,_ ~'
ter7 c.moro lroc

&gt;

72 Trucks for Sale

Home
Improvements

cond, $4,500. J04.17H829.

'

w~! ~J.OTa

----------.
'
81

Canning PNchn now tvllltblt,

I

August 19, 1991

Autos lor 5ale

Services

Poodle PUJIIIIII, loyl ond Ill
cupo, AKC t;:hlmolon Bloodline,
Coolvlllol14.e87-M04.
1184 AMC EtAie 4 WD, Air, AT,
AIIIFII, EC1 'IIIK .2,900;
Rlglaltrld Bllgll pupo for AC,
1880 Hondo C1vlc
SW, Air,
1111. 814-742·-or 742·2421.
AIIIFM C..ol Slpd, 40 111111 Per
5T
Ollil~..: g
Musical
114-2
17. nil - · $1,200.
Instruments
1!114 Buick Skyhowk, oun roo!,
Conn Trombona Uold For 1 112 auto, lront whlll drive, :IOU75YIIro, sm. 614-3118-8406.
1831.
:1:::8114:-;-:C:;h-rylll-.--r::N-ow--::Yo-rl&lt;.,-1-r-;"'tll8=7
58
Ford T~tnpo. 614-388ot816.
Fruits &amp;
1115 Camara Z28, loaded, exc
Vegetables

.

I

1888 lincoln Town Car, Exctl·
· lent Condition, Loodldl 814·379- '
2246 Alllr 8p.m.
1988 Omnl $2400; 11188 Aollonl
$1700i 1983 Chevy convoralon •
van ,sooo. For ••I• or tr1d1.
814·25&amp;.1270.
19811 Dodge Doytono ES, ~ '.~
Condtllonl I14-446-INII4.
· .
1989 Eocort aT, whllo/groy lntori ·,
lor1 21,000 mllea, uoelllt'lt coni.' .
dltoon, $511115, 11411-247-4881.
.: .
1989 Rid Boroto, Air, Tilt,
Crul11, AIIIFII Storoo C.outto,
25,000 UIIH. OriGinal Owner.
Will Sill For Per bill 8,.-4468112.

For rent , 1 bedroom apartment,
$225 utllltln lncludlcl, d-ft
l'llqulred, no peta, IM-112·2218.
Fumlohed ·Aponmont 1 BldroombiWolor Pold1 S27i1 )(2 IIIIo
Eoll Porter. 814o388-wo3.

HouM and 4-:moblle hom• on

ChiMrl. 304-f7H111.

,8onty Chlckono, 614-44&amp;.1843.
Froo To Good Homo, Small

&amp; Acreage

Loll • ecro~g~ ovolt•bt• for
new home construction on
Aoybum Rood. Povld rood,
county
wotor,
rao~on~blo
raotriCtlont. Comploto Inform•·
lion moiled on roquoll. 304-87115253, John D. GoriiCh no
llngt•wldo tralllra, pl11u.'
2 Bedrooma, 2 Bathe, Trailer On
314 Aoro Lot. ;&amp;prox. 2 111111
~rom Holzer, C
Electric H11t
With WB. $18L-:: , Cell Alii&lt; 8
p.m. 114-448-4i&lt;!i8.

Announcements

To whom

Lots

ir

~

1 THINK FLOSSiNEi'

AFTER EVIRY' ~l­
HELP.S A LOr.

FLOS61Nc:t~

WHAT

AAe 'rOLl TALKIN&lt;:r
ASOur~

r Ae&gt;KED '10.1 WHAT
"'rrt.i THINK Aea.IT
§UN CONTROL!

1991 Mill Tlln
USA Pag11nt Summer Fun is
the theme for this year's
pageant in which 51 dynamic
teenagers compete live from
Biloxi. Miss. Hosts: Oick
Clark, Leeza Gibbons. (2:001
Stereo. !;:!
It) WWF SummerSiam
Spectacular WVVF Champion
Hulk Hogan vs. Sgt.
Slaughter.
Ill Neohville Now Stereo .
tD Four-Man Beach
Volleyball From Myrtle
Beach, S.C. (TJ
Larry King Live!
0 Beouty end tho Beool 1:;1
9:30 &lt;II
lUI Dear John Plans to
repair John's antique watch
lor his binhday go awry. (R)
Stereo. 1:;1
10:00 Cll
1121 Cheetl Sam gats
involved in a property
dispute with the restaurant
owner. (R} Stereo. t:;1
ID American Ortglnelo
(I) Oreal Perfonnencoo
Songs ol Berlin. Gershwin.
Porter and others are
featured . C
illll8 Stir Trok
tD Pro Surllng From
Newquay, England (T)
World Newo
0 700 Club With Pet
Roblrtoon
iiJ Papelblck Writer
10:30 &lt;II
An author's rich lifestyle Is
complicated by his
opinionated father. an
aggressive assistant and a
patronizing literary agent.
(0:301 Ste.reo Q
I!) New8'
Ill Crook and Ch111
tD Surfer M1g11ine
10:35 Cll MOVIE: Miller Roberto
(2:30}
11 :00 &lt;II • (I) (J) . . 1111 iiJ Ill
1121 Newo
ID Nowowotch
illll8 Artlnlo Hall
1!11 Crlt111 Story
Ill On Sl8ge Stereo.
tD lleHbell Tonight
Sporb Tonight
0 Sc8recrow ind Ml'll. King
11:30 &lt;II
1121 Tonight Show
Stereo.
I!) Megnum, p.l.
ID Europeen Joumel
(J)
Nightllne t:;1
llll Al'lllftlo HIM
1121 'S..Ung Bulleb' CBS

a

e

BARNEY
. PAW ff

HOW MUCH DID YOU
AT TH' CARD GAME,
PAW?

YOU NEVER
ANSWERED MY
,;c1~,_~~ OUESTION !!

WIN

e

111

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Plump
7 Selection
13 Polar lights
14 Beatie John
15 Flag
16 Jubilant
17 Highway
curve

18 Slice oil In
thin layers
20 Crlckel
positions
21 Giving lood
23 Joylul
exclamation

26 Computer
abbr.
27 Weapons
31 Bride's
pathway
33 Engine sound
34 Polson
35 Lizard
36 Home or Eva
37 Female
antelope

An1wer to Prftloua Puzzle

40 Diminutive
suffix
41 Lese aged
44 2001. Roman
47 --with a
View
48 Large cup
51 Expose to air
53 Crystalline
gam
55 Gate UP
56 New York's
-Island
57 Plural of
"Mr."
58 Mother DOWN
1 Circular
cloak
2 Shades
3 Vases
4 - voyage
5 Oatmeal
6 Pulled lsi.)
7 Attaching
device
8 Actress -

Hayes
9 - - Clear
Day
tO Not out of
t 1 Film director
Joel12 Companion
of odds

a

e

and alert.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18) You
tically perfect for you. Mall $2 plus a should be able to size up situations very
long, self-addressed. stamped enve- accurately today by relying on the anlope to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa- swers you arrive at both deductively
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland , OH and intuitively. In sum, use all your
Iacuities.
44101-3428.
BERNICE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sipt. 22) You may run PISCfS (Fob. 20-Merch 20) Your comBEDE OSOL into an old friend today you haven' t panions will have an enormous enact on
seen for quite some time. The meeting your outlook today. II you're with promight be just a chance event, but il gressive and creative thinkers, you'll be
could be the harbinger or something pleased with the way they' ll stimulate
your thought processes.
more interesting and exciting.
LBRA (Sipt. 23-0ct. 23) You might not ARIES (Mirch 21-Aprll 18) Achieveget oft to a dazzling start today, but ment Is within lha realm of possibility
your finishes could be dramatic. lt'slm- today, provided you are both swiH and
portant you keep In mind that It's the consistent. If you dilly-dally, you might
not be given a second chance.
bollom line that counts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Your com- TAURUS (Aprii20-MIJ 20) Vou may be
inenls will have a greater Impact on the recipient of some unuaual Informafriends
today than you may realize. For- tion today. It may not fit Into your preAug.20, 1W1
tunately, you'rellkely to say all the right sent plane, but it could be of value In the
future .
·
The urge to travel and acquire knowl- thlnga, strengthening relationships GEMINI (MIJ 21..Jut11 20) Something
rather
than
weakening
them.
edge from firsthand experiences could
of benefit In the business realm might
be very pronounced for you In the year SAGmAIIIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) The· unexpectedly develop for you today
ahead. If you begin to target your desll- probabilities for today being a profit- through an Individual who Is more or a
na11ons now, happy trips CO\IId be In lhe able one for you look quite good. How- friend than an IIIOClate. Check It out.
ever, what you gain could come about in
OHing.
CANCER (June 21..Ju1J 22) Do not disa
very unique way.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Put your 1hlnklng
count your mate's flashes of Inspiration
CAPRICORN
(Die.
22·Jen.
11)
Greater
cap on at work today. Clever Ideas you
today just because your partner' I reabenellla
are
likely
to
be
derived
today
conceive could go s long way In chalksoning Ia not along traditional linea. It's
from
things
that
you
do
on
the
spur
of
Ing up pointe with those who paaa out
the concept that counts, and lheoe
lhe bonuses and promotions. Know the moment rather than that which could be Ingenious.
taken
pains
to
plan.
Slay
flexible
you've
where to look for romance and you'll .
lind it. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

ASTRO-GRAPH

«l '

instantly reveals whtch signs are roman -

a

e

e
e

~==· tl

til On

@

Slereo.

aM-yiiM
11:35 (I) Chllre t:;1
12:00 (J)
Into the Night Stereo.
illle Pen, Mlchlne With
Nil PMP111
It! The Hitchhiker
til Noohvllle Now Stereo.

e

19 eacholor'o
latt words
(2 wdo.l
21 Crime
22 Gather
23 Billow
24 Hurrlod
25 Serf
"•
28 Poko around
29 Lo1e feathero
30 Diving duck
32 Type
nteiiUrt
33 Botwaon WV
and DC
37 Coercion
3B Yoko39 S.Hiah
Individual
42 Cowboy
movlo (ol.j
43 Behave
thtetrlcelly
44 Yoo, - I
45 No more thari '
46 Part Of eye ' •
48 Tlny paroolte· "
49 Southwell· · •
orn Indiana
50 Actrooo- "
Rowland•
52 NorH
relative
54 Apo

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryp10Qrlma lit crMI..:I frOI'I'I quotatiOn• by famous ~. put and Pl'etent
Etch Ntltll' In lht Cipher ltandllor tnotNr. Totlly 't clw: A . . /).
.

'PAWHUPZHVR:

VLU

UYKVXRHZHVR

VI

UYNYWCTPRKY

zv

VLUNYTDYN.

OVTHZY
PRVZSYU'N

PWCUVNY

CHYUKY.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You can't find true aHectlon tn Hollvwood
because everyone does the lake &amp;Hactlon so well." - Carrie Fisher.
C 1991 by NEA. Inc

17

-------------------------------------------------------··-··
~-

�Monday,August19,1991

Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Building home to
two different faiths

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

Fifth and sixth graders who are
to play with the Big Bend Youth
Football League this fall will have
their physical examinations from 6
to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
The exams will be given by Dr.
James Witherell and Dr. Thomas
Spencer in the Home Heallh Nursin g Service quarters of the Me1gs
Medical Building, adjacent to Veterans Memorial Hospilal. The front
of the door is marked with a Home
Health Nursing sign so that the
young people and !heir parents can
find the right location. Clarence
Molden has arranged for !he physicals before practice sessions start
on the following Tuesday, Sept. 27.
About 60 youngsters from Meigs
and Mason Counties are involved
in the football program.
The Rutland Fire Department
and its Ladies Auxiliary - who
always do such a good job in staging !heir July 4th celebration - are
now gearing up for their third
annual sueet fesuval and ftsh fry to
be held Saturday, Aug. 31 , from 10
a. m. to 10 p.m.
Joan Stewart is serving as chairman with lots of help, she says.
There will be crafts for sale and if
you want to have a craft table for
the day contact Joan. The cost is
$5. There will be a bake sale, car
show, public games, pie and cake
baking contests, a tractor pull for
kids,live enlertainment by Dee and
Dallas and the Country Misfits in
the evening. The popular dunkin'
machine will be in operation with
Meigs High cheerleaders getting
dunked. The Meigs High Band
will also perform. Incidentally,
there will be cash prizes for the top
three winners in both the pie and
cake baking contest. The phone
number which can get you
involved is 742-2421.

I

I

You remember Mary Ellen Hennessy of Pomeroy? Many of you
will.
Her son, Capt. Thomas I.
Eubanks has been named Prospective Commanding Officer of the
USS Hue City and this marks the
third ship that Capt. Eubanks ~as
commissioned as commandmg
officer. He graduated from the U.
S. Naval Academy in 1966.
Capt. Eubanks· sea assignments
iJJclude ftrSt lieutenant and naviga-

tor, USS Cochrane; weapons offtcer, USS Agerholm, and commanding officer, USS Illusive. While in
command of Illusive he participated in Operation Endsweep, the
1973 mine-clearing effort in Nonh
Vie!Dam's harbors after the war.
Capt. Eubanks also served as commanding officer of the USS Robert
G. Bradley and executive officer of
the USS Anhur W. Radford. He
has held a number of ashore assignments during his rraval career.
He is a graduate of the Industrial
College of the Armed Forces, the
Armed Forces Staff College and
Naval Postgraduate School. He
holds a master's degree in computer systems management and has
received numerous awards in
recognition of his worlc:.
The USS Hue City will be commissioned at In~alls Shipbuilding,
Pascagoula, Mtss. , on Saturday.
Sept 14.
An aunt of his by marriage is
Mrs. Phyllis Poulin of Pomeroy
and Phyllis does plan to attend the
commissioning and of course, other
festivities involved.

Sunday was like "hangover" day
for many residents whose duties in
one activity or anolher took them to
the Meigs County Fair every day
last week. The fatr is a nice activity but most workers breathe a sigh
of relief when it wraps up.
Incidentally, Katie Crow, retired
Sentinel reporter, was again on
hand Friday night to join Julie Dillon, present staff member. in getting all the facts together on the
annual Junior Fair Livestock Sale.
Covering the sale is a big job Katie traditionally has come back
every year to help - and her help is
really appreciated.
I'm really not into all of lhese
pulling contests held at the county
fair. Frankly, on most days my big
concern is pulling my own weight.
How about you? Do keep smiling.

Community Calendar items ChUJCh, Long Bottom. David Daiappear two days before an event . ley wiD be the speaker. The public
and the day of that event. Items is invited to attend.
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calMIDDLEPORT - There will be
endar.
a meeting Tuesday at 5:30p.m .
regarding the Middleport Catfish
MONDAY
Festival. The meeting will be held
RACINE - Southern Junior in Middleport Council chambers at
High yearbooks are in and may be village hall
picked up at the Junior h1gh school
on Monday between the hours of 9
TIJPPERS PLAINS - A meeting
a.m. and noon. Extra copies are will be held Tuesday at 9 a.m. at
available for $10 each.
Tuppers Plains Elementary school
for kindergarten registration. ParPOMEROY - The 1992 Mau- ents will need to provide a copy of
rader yearbook staff will meet their child's binh certificate and
Monday at II a.m. in Room 310 at various vaccinations and shots
Meigs High School. All staff urged already received.
to attend.
POMEROY - The American
SYRACUSE - The Meigs Coun- Lefion Post No. 39 Drew Webster
ty Board of Mental Retardation and wi I meet Tuesday at the post
Developmental Disabiliti~s will home. Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting at
hold its August board meeung on 8 p.m. All members urged to
Monday at 7 p.m. at the board attend.
office.
WEDNESDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP SYRACUSE - ADK Fall picnic
The Board of Truslees of Columbia and meeting will be held WednesTownship will meet in special ses- day at 6:30p.m. at the home of
.sion on Monday at8 p.m. at the ftre Linda Fisher m Syracuse. Members
.station to discuss an addition to the are urged to atlend.
machinery building.
CHESTER - The lOth CongresREEDSVILLE - Eas1ern Junior sional District Democratic Action
High Football practice will begin Club will hold its summer meeting
Monday at Eastern High School Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the home
from 9 a.m. to I I am.
of Mary Hunter, 37613 Texas
Road, off Rotue 7 at Chester. Bring
TUESDAY
a covered dish . Meat and beverages
LONG BOTTOM - Flame Fel- will be furnished.
·lowship will meet Tuesday night at
7:30 p.m. at !he Faith FuU Gosvel

Rates likely to rise for
.young women drivers
der gap IS begmmng to narrow,
sa1d the Akron Beacon Journal.
Some men pay double what
women pay because men m the!r
teens and 20s have had mor~ accidents and more .severe acc1dents,
the newspaper satd.
.
But as more women drive more,
they are havmg more acc1dents, the
newspaper satd.

---Hospital news--~uotzer Medical Center
Discharges, Aug. 16- Mrs. Gregory Caulley and daughter, Zelia
Coppick, Arthur Essman, Mrs.
Brian Hughes and son, Floyd Newsome, Paul Nonh, Dessie Preston,
Ouwarra Roe, Mmi She~. Betty
Stewart, Michelle Thomas and
Andrew Weaver.
Births Aug. 16 - Mr. and Mrs.
John cwoll, a daughter, Gallipo-

which tractor can -pull a we ighted sled the
longest distance. Here, one or the competitor's
tractor "di~s in" to pull the sled at Friday' s
event. (Sentinel photo by Brian Reed)

Gerald Shuster, long-time Lincoln Heights resident in Pomeroy,
was returned home Thursday from
the Holzer Medical Center where
he was confined for a couple of
weeks following major surgery.
He's doing fine but as we know.
recovery is slow in these things.

Community calendar

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- lnsurance company officials say auto
premiums may rise for young Ohio
women as they follow nationwide
trends by having more traffic accidents, a published report said Sunday.
Young male drivers have historically paid higher premiums than
young female drivers, but the gen-

LAWN TRACTOR PULL - While the garden and lawn tractors may lack the brute horsepower or their larger counterparts, they are stiU
a popular event at the Meigs County Fair and
the Idea behind the pull is still the same: to see

lis. Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Lyles,
daughter, Jackson.
Discharges, Aug. 17 - Cynthia
Bentley, Luann Pentz, Stella Perez,
Joseph Stewan and Robert Woods.
Births, Aug. 17 - Mr. and Mrs.
Troy Ward, a son, Long Bouom. .
Discharges, Aug. 18 - Lo.n
Blanton, Tiffanie Deem, Dale G1ll
and Jean Johnson.

DAIRY SWEEPSTAKES ·Winners of the
Dairy Sweepstakes at the Meigs County Fair
were announced prior to the junior fair livestock
sale Friday evening. Pictured, 1-r, and their
placement, are, front, Tricia Davis, eighth place;
Kristi Warner, lilth place; Paul Smith, second

place; and Tyson Rose, ninth place . Back,
Chuck Parker, lirst place; Vicki Warner, third
place; Mike Parker, sixth place; David Smith,
seventh place; and Brent Rose, tenth place. Not
pictured is Chris Parker, rourth place.

LA Dodgers
hike .NL West
Division lead

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio
(AP) - Rosh Hashana, the Jewish
New Year, will signal the stan of a
unique joint venture between two
Jew1sh and Christian places of worship.
The congregation of St. Alban
Episcopal ChUJCh in this Cleveland
suburb has agreed to rent space m
its new church to Templ e Ner
Tamid.
Temple Ner Tamid was established in 1948 and is located on the
city's east side. It will operate a
satellite congregation at St.
Alban's.
Rabbi Bruce Abrams, spiritual
leader of Temple Ner Tamid, had
announced this year that his synagogue inlended to open a branch in
Cleveland Heights to provide a
place of worship for Jews of the
Reform tradition.
The agreem ent to share th e
building is "a new chapter in
Christian-Jewi sh relations in the
Cleveland area, " · said Jeffrey
Bendix, a spokesman for the two
churches.
The new St. Alban's church is
expected to be completed by next
June. It will replace a church that
wa s des troyed in a June 1989
arson.
Until then, the two will share
worship spac e at yet another
chUJCh, !he First English Lutheran
Church.
The new building will contain
symbols appropriate to both faiths,
Bendix said.
Bendix said he knew of only
three other places in the United
Stales where Jewish and Christian
congregations worship permanently
in the same building.
The suggestion that the two congregations share a house of worship was made last spring by a
small group of Jewi sh residents
who were not members of any congregation and wanted a branch
staned in !he area.
Abrams said he was aware of
plans for the new church and
approached the Rev. Robert C.
Weaver, St. Alban' s rector.
The two congregations met, and
their governing boards approved
!he joint use of the building.
Abrams said services would be
on Saturday morning, the Jewi sh
holy day, while the Sabbath eve
services would be at another synagogue.
He said he believed this was !he
first Reform Jewish congregation
in this eastern suburb, which has
long had a suung Jewish influence.
The present Jewish congregations
in the area follow Orthodox or
Conservative traditions.

Durst, third place Best of Show and rrrst place
Best Dressed; and Jessica Barringer, third place
Best Dressed.

'Dead Again' opens August 23
By DOLORES BARCLAY
AP Arts Editor
There is something so Hitch cockian about Kenneth Branagh's
"Dead Again" that you can almost
slice it with Norman Bates ' bloodspeckled meat cleaver.
It is a film that combines the
best of such timeless suspense
yarn s and thrillers as "Spell bound,""Dial 'M' for Murder"
and " Psycho," and dabbles in the
supernatural.
With a touch as devilishly light
as Hitchcock's, Branagh smoothly
pours a delicious blend of romance,
comedy, mystery and murder that
goes down as nicely as hot-buttered
rum on a snowy night.
Fresh from his directorial and
acting triumph in "Henry V," the
Irish-born actor plays the dual role
of cynical but upscale private
detective Mike Church, and Roman
Strauss, a flamboyant and romantic
conductor and composer of 1940s
Los Angeles.
Emma Thompson co-stars in the
roles of the mysterious Grace, a
woman who has no memory of herself other than haunting nightmares
of another life, and· the lovely and
urbane MarJW"Ct, who fell in love

with Roman· and lflarried him. She
is slashed to death with a pair of
antique scissors, and Roman is convicled of the murder and execuled.
Andy Garcia pops up as a jaded
journalist who was attracted to
Margaret and later as the owner of
a bar frequented by Mike.
As hard-boiled as he pretends,
Mike is actually quite tender and
becomes Grace's champion.
rranKL:yn Madson (Derek Jaco-

bi), an effete and eccentriCantiques
dealer who Jives with his mother
(shades of Norman Bates), answers
a new spaper ad about Grace and
volunteers to regress her through
hypnosis in an attempt to discover
who she is.
The regression reveal s a past life
not only for Grace, but for Mike as
well. As they gain more knowledge
about the
!he present becomes

Pick 3:398
Pick 4: 8674

Cards : J -H, 2-C
3-D ;2-S
Partly cloudy tonight. Low ~
mid-50s. Wednesday, sunny,
high near 90.

Page4

Vol. 42, No75

Thousands protest takeover

Investments in
the Soviet Union
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev's ouster
by military hardliners has undermined the
already fragile relationship many westem
businesses have wnh the Soviet Union.
Here's a look at how the Western world
has Invested in the Soviet Union:

By BRIAN FRIEDMAN
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW- Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets
today to shout for !he downfall of
the military and Communist ~Y
hard -liners who ousted Pres1dent
Mikhail S. Gorbachev a day earlier.
"The junta that has come to
power will not stop at anything to
keep that power," Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin told a
cheering, waving crowd of m~re
!han 150,000 people at the Russ1an
Parliament building.
"They understand that things
have reached the point that if they
lose, they will lose not only their
armchairs, but !her will be seated
on court benches, ' said the Russian republic's president, who has
spearheaded resistance to Monday's ovenhrow of Gorbachev.
In another development, a Soviet Foreign Ministry official said
Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmer!Dykh had taken "sick" after
returning from vacation, "but was
expected to return to worlc: in a few

As of April 1, 1990
Western partner
country

W. Germany"

I U'

Number of
joint ventures

Investment In joint
ventures In millions {US)

IL====:;=;;~...!2::4::.J41 £1QB\MiliB'lL\1~Ml

Finland r

nsl

fu1~1illh'if~&amp;Rl

u.s.

112 1

m~~iil~t~~t~~~~1Ifi%tll!~!!IUllt:i

Austria
-at
Britain
G

991

!@f[L~i.~

961

lR!:tiWli)~
~;~~;;:.;:::;;&lt;::;.;a;:,~ f.!:!'v~~

.

ualy I
951
swnzorland I 691
Sweden c:J!I
France[]!)
Canada 0 37
Japan Q27
Spain 021
Australia 0 21
Netherlands 0 20
Other I 70 I
Total: 1,256

!iilWUE&amp;INJ&amp;Wi&amp;i~Jii'B!l

mns3o
Rill~11ltl~!i

days.' '

~t~~t. $38

fu1Btil$Jt}j
Total: $2,165 million
AP

source: PlanEaJn Research Assodates Inc.

Bob clears out after
soeking-New-England
BOSTON (AP) - The rem nants of Hurricane Bob swept eastern Canada today after the storm
tossed boats around and tore off
roofs in a race up the Eastern
Seaboard. At least four deaths were
blamed on the season's ftrSt hurricane.
The hurricane, the ftrSt to hit the
Northeast since Gloria in 1985,
knocked out power to an estimated
1.5 million businesses and households from the Carolinas to Maine
and injured 20 people, authorities
said.
"The bad news is, someone told
me, 'There's a tree in your room,"·
said Teri Barba, assistant manager
of a restaurant on Martha's Vineyard, Mass. "But the good news is
the rest of the house wasn't hurt.''
Hurricane Bob was downgraded
to a tropical storm late Monday
when its maximum sustained winds
dropped to 70 mph, 4 mph below
the hurricane threshold. At its peak
its sustained winds were 115 mph,
with gusts to 138 mph.
The storm crossed into Canada
early today and was moving northeast at about 30 mph with gusts
near 50 mph , said the National
Hurricane Center in Coral Gables,
Fla. At 3 a.m. the storm was near
Fredericton, New Brunswick.
In Canada , the storm toppled
trees and utility poles, producing
scattered power outages.
As the storm moved up the coast
Monday, Navy submarines left
their benhs in Connecticut for !he
safety of the deep.
Fierce waves off Massachusetts

SABINA, Ohio (AP) - It has
been 27 years since the embalmed
body of a transient was displayed
for the public, but the unidentified
man still attracts notice.
About 1.5 million people traveled to this Clinton County village
between 1929 and 1964 to see the
embalmed body of a man nick named Eugene.
"You have to understand how it
was back then," funeral director
Barth Littleton said. "People today
lhink this was weird."
The man wa s found dead on
June 6, 1929, hi s body leaning
against a fence by a small pond. He
was one of many hobos who passed
through the community.
The death wa s due to natural
causes, the county coroner said. In
the man ' s pocket was a scrap of
paper with a scribbled address for a
vacant lot in Cincinnati, but there
was no other identification . The
closest resident 10 the lot wa s
Eugene Johnson, so village offi cials nicknamed the dead man
Eugene.
Officials delayed burial for a
few days in case someone came to
identify the man. Nobody did.
"People don' t understand why
we did it. It was planned to keep
him just a few days. Before you
knew it, 35 years had passed," Littleton said.
Littleton, 62, said he inherited
the body when he took over the
funeral home operation in 1948.
Eugene was dressed in a new
suit each year and laid on a table in
the turn-of-the -century building
that housed his body.
A chicken-wire screen was built
in the small building to thwart
pranksters, but college students
sometimes stole !he body.

spit fi sh into the air and tossed
boats like toys . "It looks like
someone just took their finger and
poked boats over like a kid in a
bathtub," said Elmer Bartele, a
vacationer on Martha' s Vineyard.
Vacationers in Saco, Maine,
defied an order to evacuate. Instead
they marveled at how the hurricane
sent plumes of spray 20 feet into
the air. "I've never seen this
before. This is beautiful," said
Donald Jacques of Plymouth, N.H.
The storm, which formed off the
Bahamas last week, glanced off
Cape Hatteras, N.C., late Sunday
night. causing little serious dam age.
Then it swirled northward off
the coasts of Virginia, Maryland,
Delaware and New Jersey, staying
about I00 miles offshore.
The storm center slipped about
50 miles east of Montauk on the tip
of New York 's Long Island, turn ing the midday sky purple, crossed
Rhode Island with winds of at least
I 05 mph and cut across Massachusetts, passing just east of
Boston.
At Newport, R.I.. waves
engulfed three waterfront homes.
A housing project and the
Chamber of Commerce lost their
roofs in Falmouth, on Cape Cod.
On fashionable Martha's Vineyard.
Bob rudely interrupted the summer
routine of yachting, drinks at the
water' s edge and celebrity-watching.
The storm passed east of Boston
around 4:30 p.m. The usually
Continued on page 3

Board to pay for SUS band,
athletic busing events this year

'

1 Section, 10 Pagea 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 20, 1991

Copyrlghteci19G1

Embalmed transient
drew millions

BEST DRESSED - These pets were judged
Best Dressed at Friday's Meigs County Fair Pet
Show. Jennlrer Dunn, second place ; Cindy

Ohio Lottery

The cost of busing students to
athletic and band events during the
1991-92 school year will be taken
care of by the Southern Local
Board of Education.
That was the decision following
a lengthy discussion with about 50
parents and other interested individuals at a meeting of the Board
Monday night
Cost of the busing for the fmancially strapped district was not
reponed although it is expecled to
be several thousand dollars.
A discussion was also held on
changing from the SV AC League
to !he 1VC with the superinlendent
and spons personnel to check into
that possibility.
Fmal plans for the opening of
school next week were made. The
teachers will meet on Monday with
classes to begin on Tuesday.
It was noted that $36,800 has
been received from the State
Department of Education for the
DPTF disadvantaged pupil pro-

gram.
The resignation of Kelly Rizer
as a substitute teacher was accepted. Thelma Salser was hired as a
cook at the high school replacing
Laura Circle who retired. Salser
was formerly a parttime custodian
at the junior high school.
Don Smith was added to the list
of custodian substitules, and substitute teachers hired were Barry
Haynes, Karla Brown, Earl Fields,
Jennifer Barnette, Cheryl Halley,
Marta Blackwood, Amy Murray,
and Sherri Hensler.
The Board accepted the resignation of Bill Hensler as assistant
football coach and hired Jeffrey
Baker to that position. The re~igna­
tion/reurement of Delbert Sm1th as
a bus driver was accepted at the
meeting.
Attending were board members,
Denny Evans, Susie Grueser, Gary
Wilford and the newly appointed
member, Joseph Thoren, Supt. Bob
Ord, and Treasurer Dennie HiU.

The coup leaders also claimed
Gorbachev, who was overthrown
while on vacation in the Crimea,
was ill. Few believed it.
Resistance to the overthrow ,
meanwhile, appeared to be spreading.
A demonstration in Leningrad
drew 200 000 people - many of
them heeding a call by Yeltsin to
protest the coup by going on strike
- and one in the capital of the
Moldavian republic drew an estimated 400,000 people.
In his speech outside the Russian Parliament building, Yeltsin
derided the coup leaders and told
the crowd to disobey their orders.
"Was it not Pavlov who
brought prices and inflation to !he
level that the people are poor and
hungry? Pavlov!" yeltsin s~~ted.
referring to Pnme Mm1ster
Valentin Pavlov, one of the coup
leaders.
"Does not Yazov have blood on
his hands, the blood of people of
other republics? Does not Pugo

BUILDING UP A BARRICADE Protesters topple militia booth and move it into
position ror use as a barricade across one of the
have bloody hands from the people
of other republics?" Yeltsin continued, referring to Defense Mimster Dmitri Yazov and Interior Minister Boris Pugo.
One speaker told the crowd that
a radio broadcast had said Yeltsin's
arrest had been ordered "Will we
allow that?" the speaker shouted,
to cries of "No!" and "Yeltsin!
Yeltsin!"
The report that Yeltsin was
ordered arrested could not be confll11led.
The Russian president spoke for

streets near the Kremlin and Red Square early
Tuesday to prevent access or Soviet tanks and
troops. (AP)

less than I 0 m.inutes, sayin g he
could not stay long at the podium
because snipers had been sighted
on the rooftops of nearby buildings.
Meanwhile, the Russian Min istry of Foreign Affairs issued a
diplomatic note saying it refused
any responsibility for action s or
obligations incurred by the coup
leaders, and asked all foreign governments to freeze lhe gold and
hard-currency assets and transfers
of the Soviet Union until the coup
commitlee is disbanded.
In Leningrad, crowds jammed

Palace Square and cheered for
Mayor Anatoly Sobehak, a radical
reformer like Yeltsin . Protesters
filled the center 0f Ki shiniev, the
capital of the southwestern republic
of Moldavia, according to Molda vian television.
Rally organizers, including Mol davia 's independence-minded lead ers, issued a resolution calling for
the resignation of the coup leaders,
the reinstatement of Gorbachev and
for Moldavians serving in the Red
Army to "follow the people, not
the fascists."

Council OKs second reading for pay-hike
Mayor Richard Seyler settled a
By BRIAN J. REED
tie vote on an ordirrance that would
Sentinel News Starr
The second reading of ordi - raise council members: salaries to
nances granting raises to elected $30 and the pres1dent s salary to
village officials was held at Mon- $40 in January.
.
Bruce Reed made the motiOn,
day night ' s regular meeting of
Larry .Wehrun g. seconded and
Pomeroy Village Council.
Bryan Shank was the only coun- Baron1ck voted tn favor of the
cil voting against a ordinance rais- raise. Shank, Young and Werry all
ing the salary of the mayor to vot ed again~! t~.e rai ses, with
$6,000. The motion to approve the Seyler voung yes to break the ue.
All members voted in favor .or
raise was made by Betty Baronick,
with Bill Young seconding the mamtammg the salary of the vtl motion . That salary currently is set lage clerk durin,g 1992. That. salary
at $3,600. The raise, if approved at was ratsed Significantly earlter thts
the next meeting, would take effect year, with the salary. to change
back to the ongmal f1gure at the
in January, 1992.

end of !he derk's current term.
Counctl members heard of a
neighborhood's interest in annex1ng lhetr street m10 Middleport.
Ro~er Manley of Rutland Street
cxplatned that members of that
neighborhood are interested in
bemg a~ncx ed by Middleport. and
that offiCials there have sa1d they
would be willin~ to annex the s treet
(part of which IS now m M1ddle port).
. .
. .
Counctl d1scussed a Similar proposal !hat was made before council
several years ago, at wh1ch t1me
~~~jdcnts of the Rutland Street area
mvolved
to pay for the nee-

essary legal paperWork. However,
no action was taken, and the idea
was forgotten .
Last nigh~ council expressed no
immediate objection to the annexation but again said that !he paperwork would have to be performed
and paid for by those involved.
The residents on the street
which makes up part of the flood
road bet ween Pomeroy and Middlcport, arc generally served by
emergency crews and other services from Middleport.
Coun cil di scussed overtime
compensation for a salaried street
Continued on page J

Raid nets 107
marijuana plants
in Meigs Coun~
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT
An estimated $104,000 in mari juana plants were seized on Monday in Columbia and Bedford
Townships in Meigs County.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, 107
plants were seized from private
properties in those townships. In
the case of the Columbia Township
property, a search warrant was executed, enabling officials to seize
the plants and possibly make a ease
to send to the Meigs County Grand
Jury.
A total of 35 officers from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, the Army National Guard,
and the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation
conducted five separale air searches in ftve townships. The Natiorral
Guard operated a ground communications center and assisled in the
collection of marijuana.
The operation was late in getting staned and cut short in midafternoon due to fog and impending storms, and that, according to
Soulsby, was a major disappointmenL
, "I am not disappointed in the
Continued on page 3 '
,
1

GROUND CONTROL - This operation on
U.S. Route 33 was the communications center
set up by members of the Army National Guard
to assist in marijuana eradication efforts in

.
'

Meigs County on· Monday. $104,000 worth or:
plants were c~riSCllted and at least one person.
is expected to be Indicted. (OVP Pboto by Brian·
·
J , Reed)
I

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35026">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35025">
              <text>August 19, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="506">
      <name>bragg</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="820">
      <name>crawford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2006">
      <name>roth</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="234">
      <name>wise</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
