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Page 10 • The Daily Senti nel

Monday, August 14, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Barrows earns 12 blue ribbons in domestic arts judging
Rose Barrows of Pomeroy was
Best of show roseues went to
tbe top blue ribbon win ner in tbe tbe following ex.hibitoo:
domestic arts judging at tbc 132nd
- Juanita Lodwick for ber entry
Meigs County Fair held Saturday of a blouse in tbe adult clothing
afternoon.
category, golden needle class for
She was awarded 12 blue rib· those over 60; and colored embroibans for her entries in tbo depart· dery needlocmft;
ment which bad a total of 20i
- Mllrilyn Spencer for ber vest
exhibits.
in fashion accessories, and a quilt;
- Connie Moyer of Reedsville
Ju anita Lodwick of Chester
captu re d nine blue ribbons. for her crocbeled doily;
Addalou Lewis of Pomeroy and
- Tris ba Johnson of Long BotTricia Johnson of Long Bottom tom for her knitted baby swea ter
were awarded eight each, and set;
- Maxine Dyer of Did well for
arenda Kennedy of Pomeroy and
Marilyn Spencer of Long Bottom an afghan;
received seven blue ribbons each.
- Marti Sbon of Chester for a

doll; and
· -Jonatban Gibbs of Racine for
his entry in miscellaneous crafts.
Tbe blue ribbon winners and the
classes in which they took awards
were:
MeriJee·Bryant; Long BotiOm, a
dress, cloth Amish doll, apple bead
doll, Christmas ornament, fi red
molded ceramic, non-flted molded
ceramic piece, a structure.
.
Delma Kan, M1ddle por~ clotb
doll, exterior door decoration.
. Rose Barrows, a dress, slacks,
letsu re wear, Sunday bes t dress,
shorts, latch book rug, doily 14
inches , baske t, afgh an squares,

Sayre wins grand champion
tomato at Ohio State Fair

Rutland holds experimental class

Jessiea Sayre, a Racine-South·
em FFA Chapter member, recenUy
won tbe grand champion tomato in
tbe open class at 'tbe Ohio State
Fair.
Sayre also earned: a second
place for her Lady Bell peppers;
third place, Hungarian wa·x pep) pers; third place, Silve.r Qu&amp;e n
sweet com; fourth place, largest
tomato; fifth place, Kennebec potatoes; and seventh place , six-by·
eight-foot display of vegetables. ·
In tbe junior crop show division,
which includes 4-H and FFA
exhibits, Jessica earned a reserve
grand champion for ber tomatoes
and a blue.ribbon for her potatoes.
In tbe senior yol!tb garden divi·
sion, Sayre also won a second
place for her cactus, fourtb place
for Swedish ivy, fourth place for
her potted plant "Moses in the
Bullbush" and fourth place fQr her
banging begonia basket. __ ,
Jessica serves as vice prcs1dcnt
of the Racine Southern FFA Chap·
ter. She is a member of the Meigs
County Junior Fair Board and bas
many school and community acti vities.

A program designed to give stu·
dents an early start on tbe school
year is in progress at Rutlllnd Ele·
mentary.
Tbe summer bltorial program modeled after a similar program in
Canton 'City Schools - was written by Saundra Tillis. Marge Fetty

ion, CJu:istmas tree skirt. .
band quilted quilt, quil ted wall
·Manlyn Spencer, skirt an d hangmg.
.
blouse, sui~ coat or jacke~ dress,
~Dyer, Bidwell, pot holder
T-shin, ves~ mixed technique quilt.
Elizabeth Bearhs •. P~m~r'l{,
Trisha Johnson,
afghan ~Us, afghan :::;l.e ;"~·
Addalou Lewis, practical apron,
Maxme Dyer, co1 10 as ton
one p1ecc dress~wear,emli'oi- - a.cccssones, baby af-gban croc-be~
dered antique quil~ painted band- npple af~bJ:· house~ol~ craft, .
quilted quilt, embroidered pillowMartt. S ort, mt~e matena 1
case,_ painted pillowcase, preprinled dol~ CbriStmas s~ng handmade
cushton qmlted
Janet TheisS,
ne,
Bette Edwards, Rutland, baby basket. .
swealer se~ crocheted cushion
Cbn suna Westfall, Long Dot·
Conni e Moyer, Reedsv ille,
tom, wood craft
.
•
dotly, crocheted ru g,
Jonathan Glbb~, Racme, wond
Patricia Jones, Shade, pieced
craft, seven 10 18 mcbes

Greta Rifne, former employee
of tbe Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney's office, was recently
honored with a going-away-to-college party.
·
Her grandmother, Mary Holter,
hosted tbe party at her Dasban
borne.
Riffle is enrolled in tbe West
Virginia University School of Law.
Pictures were taken and there
was live music by fiddler Lank
Wears of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va ..

and Sharon Edmonds are teaching are covered.
The prpgram bas been funded
tbe program.
This special program is targeted through the effective schools grant
for those entering first grade and · monies of 1994-95. ·
The students are in classes held
uses bands-on learning . Math
manipulative, letter and sound between 8:30-11 a.m. Mo nday
recognition, and sight word review through Thursday.

JESSICA SAYRE

land; Kym Jacobs of St Clairsville:.
Kathy and Jessica Johnson of Brad·
bury; Thelma White of Basban;
Susan Wolfe of Pomeroy; Kathy
Wears of Galfipolis Ferry, W.Va.:
Janet and Dr. Tom Spencer of
Pomeroy; Harry Lee and Keith
Spencer of Basban; Brenda and
Leela Lemley of Portland; Delbert
Lawson of Eagle Ridge; and Gardon, Jill, Wesley and Martie Holler
ofBasban.

guitarist Seaford Jordan of Rio
Grande, bassist Dale Baker of Tuppers Plains, drummer Edie Hubbard of Racine and singers Margaret Spencer of Racine and Bonnie Jordon of Rio Grande.
Atlending were Larry Hubbard
of Racine; Brian Hendrix of
Coolville; Ronnie Robinson of
Pomeroy; Alice Davis and Janet
Miller of RuJ]and; Bob Spencer of
Racine; Neil Fowler of Atbens;
Judy and Rebecca 'Kern of Port-

Celebrates 'first birthday ·

Her agriculture projects include
15 acres of peppers, tomaLOes, cab·
bage, melons, sweet com, pump·
kins and Indian com . She is tbe
daughter of Aaron and Shirley
Sayre of Racine.

Isabella Rose Doerfer observed
her ft.rtbst birthday recently with a
lcparty hosted by her parents, David
and Ginger Doerfer and sister,
Josie.
Balloons and pink roses were
featured in the decoratons.
Others attending were Julia

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pickett
and Lisa Carefoot of Burlington,
Ky., recently .visiled Stella Atkins
and Ruby Diehl. Mr. and Mrs .
Doug Bishop recently returned
from a Florida vacation.
Mcgban McKinney and Jessica
Dlalcc of Canal Winchester were
rece nt guests of their grandparentS,
Mr. and Mrs. George Lowery.

Darst, Pat and Sam Thompson,
Gina and Chris Duncan, Lorie Mercer, Trista and Bobby Doerfer, and
Geroge Reitmire . Cake and ice
cream following a barbeque. Josie
provided her pony for rides by the
children.

The Ohio University Art Series
Ibis year will feature 14 shows.
Some of the shows are Mary
Wilson of tbe Supremes, Crazy for
You, Cinderella, Beauty and the
Beast, Paul Winter Con sort; and
Les Ballets Africans.
All performances will be held in
tbe Templeton-Blackburn Alumni

-

17-19-26:30-37

-----L&lt;n• tonight In mid 60s, hoi
aod bumld. Wednesday, sunny,
muw. Hlghs lo lower 905.

'

'

DALTON HUBBARD

Hubbards announce
birth of second son
Dalton Tritt Hubbard .was born
at 5:11 am. July 20, 1995, at University Hospital in Augusta, Ga.
His parents are David and Teresa
Hubbard of Aiken, S.C.
lie weighed seven pounds, .
seven tiuntes and was 20 3/4-incbes long.
He joins older brother, 7-yearold Travis.
Grandparents are Harold and
Charlene Thomas of Middleport
and tbe late Dill and Mary Hubbard.

,

Quality Window Systems Inc.,
owned by Albert and Marjorie
Tromm , recently 'incorporated,
according 10 the office of Sec~
of State Bob Taft The business is
located at 110 Court St. ln
Pomeroy.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport
. Counci~ eyes
flood worries

.Old log
..cabin
features
!- crafts
: By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sentinel News StaiT ·
• . Again Ibis year demonstrations ,
will be going on at the Meigs
County Fair all week in the old log
cabin on tbe fairgrounds.
On Monday, Bunny Kubl
showed quilting techniques and
Charlotte Elberfeld was on band 10
do some ne edlework . Today ,
demonstrations include cross stitch
, by Patty Cook and basket weaving
' by Shirley Huston.
Needlecraft will again be featured in the cabin on Wednesday,
will! Kathy Reed doing cross stitch
during tbe aftemoo!l, and Jackie.
' Dailey crocheting from 5 10 9 p:m.
Thursday's scheduled includes I
to 5 p.m., Mildred Gaul doing
quilting, and 5 to 9 p.m., David
Gloeckner demonstrating carpentry. Rosalie Story and Etbel Brandt
wiU be in the cabin doing embroidery from 1 to 5 p.m. on Friday,
while Joyce .Davis will crochet
from 5 10 9 p.m.
Saturday gardening will be
demonstraled by Hal Kneen from I
to 5 p.m., and basketry by Janet
TlleissJrom 5 to 9 p,m.

,
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Statc;-fair
officials will have to wait a •week
or so berore they know whether
steps taken 10 prevent a repeat of
last year's tainted livestock auction .
have paid off.
.
But the grocery chains and other
big-time buyers gaye Monday's
Junior Sale of Champions a
$120,000 vote of confidence.
"It's in the past an·d tbey handled it correctly," said Randy
Stamer, meat and seafood special-

I

2 Sections, 24 Pageo 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 15, 1995

JUNIOR FAIR ROYALTY - Jeff Rose md
Noelle Pickens were selected as the 1995 Melg.o
County Junior Fair king and queen In cere•
monies on the bill stage MonW.y nlgbL R""e Ia
the son of Maxine Rose of Racine and the late
Chester Rose, and Noelle Is the daughter of Mr.
Time correction
The tractor and semi pull will be
held at 6 p.m. Satur~ay . The time
was incorrectly listed on tbe sched-.
ule.
Carey at fair
State Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston, will be visiting the Meigs
County Fair ali week. Carey said
that his emphasis will be on learn·
ing more about tbe concerns of area
residents. He will hi; conducting a
survey dealing witb some of tbe
issues facing the legislature,
including educati&lt;JI!. welfare, crime

and Mrs. Ray Pkkens, Pomeroy. First run"4'rup
was Christy Drake, right, daughter or Tom 1111d
Debbie Drake, Racine; Flowers and glfls, donal·
ed by local merchants, were presented to lbe
royalty and other participants in the conlesL

28; photography, 85; baking and
and jobs:
Hundreds of entries
canning, 273; and grange, 4.
A total of I ,841 entries were
.
Service successful
made in tbe 14 areas of open class
It was .bot imd humid, but sever:
exhibit at tbe 132nd Meigs County al hundred people still turned out
Fair, which runs through Saturday. · for tbe religious service Sunday
The total represented an nigbt at the fairgrounds, a traditionincrease of 85 entries over last al pre-fair event
year's total of 1,757.
An offering taken was given to
Entries in tbe various depart· the Meigs County Emergency
ments Ibis year were draft borses,
Medical Service.
27; dairy cattle, 86; beef cattle, 35;
The ecumenical service open.p
sheep, 17: poultry, 10; farm crops,
witb a prelude by Joann Robinson,
. 324; bay show. 15; flower shows,
a prayer of tbanksgivinl! by Sister
730; domestic arts, W1; paintings,
(Continued on Page 3)
·

Top steer at state fair nets $36,000 at annual sale

I

•

Buekeye-S~

Fair comments:

•·L

ISABELLA DOERFER

r-

Copyright 1995

incorporates

Memori:ii Auditorium.
Returning subscribers are
reminded to renew their subscriptions be~ore Sept. I .to insure the
previous year's seats . Telephone
orders may be made beginning 1-4
p.m. Aug. 15 by calling 593-1780.
The ticket office will open
Sept 6.
·

Pick 3:
126
Pick 4:
0453

Vot. 46, NO. 76

Window firm

Ou lists performing arts series

Reds
end;slump
with win

•

Riffle honored recently at party

Harrisonville news .notes
Jetlie Arix of Proctorville visit·
ed Louise Eshelman recently.
Ray Alkire ofColorado spent
Monday and Tuesday with his parents, ~· and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Juanita Bowels bas return ed
b'ome from the hospit al an d is
slowly improving.
Frances Alkire visited Minnie
McGrath in The Plains Wednesday
. .
evening.

embroidered tablecloth, small
stuffed animal, pot holder.
Trisha Johnson, sleepwear, play
o utfi~ shorts, blouse, man' s shin,
baby sweater set, quilted patch·
work cushion, large shlffed animal.
Brenda Kennedy;- Pomeroy,
Sunday best adult clothing, shirt or
blouse, pants and top, one piece
dress. jumper, sleepwear, party
wear. .
.
_
Juan ita Lodwtck, blouse or sldrt,
blouse, hat.in accessories, pieces
a nt i qu ~ quilt, picture , colored
embroidery and co unt ed cro ss
sutcb in needlecraft, crewel cusb-

Ohio Lottery

'
ist for the Meijer grocery .chain.
next several days, checking for pas~ tbete were always the rumors
''We're always going to be here signs ·o f vegetable oil and muscle- around tbat something was going
10 s~pport. the kids." .
.
enhancing drugs tbat marred last on.
Meijer, based in Grand Rapids, · "year's slile and resulted in the dis· ... "This year, the buyers are more
Mich., spent nearly $25,000 to take qualification of eight of tbe top- confident."
home botb the grand champion and placing animals.
Natban Smith, 15, of Marion,
reserve grand champion lambs.
Anyone caught cheating this took borne $20,000 for his grand
Both are beaded to the meat section year faces felony charges under an champion steer, Baja.
The Angus crossbreed born on
of tbeir newest store, in Lancaster. anti-tampering law signed by Gov.
once meat inspeciOrs give tbeir seal George Voinovich. · ·
U.S. Sen . Mike De Wine ' s
of approval .
"I think the air has been Cedarville farm actually fetched
Inspec10rs will give the carcass- cleared," Voinovich said. "In tbe $36,000Jrom the Kroger Co.
•es a thorough going-over over tbe

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News StaiT
Several Middleport residents
complained to Village Council
about last week's flooding at the
regular council meeting Monday.
. Broadway Avenue resident llob
Darton said the flooding Is ridicu- ·
lous. Three drainage sewer lines an 18-inch, 15-incb and 12-ineb all feed in10 an eight-inch line.
"Any fool would know you're
approaching it - backwards," Barton said, adding that Friday's
flooding was tbe worst in 20 years.
Barton suggested the village
install a curb on Grant Street to
divert water, along witb cleaning
ditches on Grant and placing a
· screen over a nearby drain.
Fred Pullins, who also lives on
Broadway, said he asked tile viilage to solve the problem a year
ago.
"They rold me to wait," Pullins
said. '"I'm not L'llking six inches in
'my basemen~ I'm talking four feet.
1 got the run -around and got
ignored."
Mayor Dewey Horton said tbe
village will solve the problem. Last
year, tbe village hired an engineer
to fLx the problem in Ibis section.
Councilman Nick Robinson
sugg ested the Board of Public

~:!t.r~:;.ta~rn: ~~v;~~e~~~~t~~

lines.
In otber action related 10 sewers,
all new .horrfes will be required to
1·nstall backflow rcgula1ors. Tbe
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency has recommended ihe
action to protect tbc village water
supply from contamination, said
Dill Drowning, village water supervisor.
'
. Eventually, the 1,100 village
taps will be forced to install tbese
devices, Drowning said. But, coun-

'

.

.

cil did not know now 11 could
enforce this rule, so tbe action was
limited.
Council also tabled· ~ decision
on a trash disposal contract. The
following firms made bids of:
• Sanitary Commercial Services
of·Jackson, $10.50 per month and
$9 for senior citizens;
• Manley's Trash Service of
Middleport, $9.25 and $7.50;
• Barr's Garbage of Bidwell, $9
and $6;
. • AB &amp; R Services of Bidwell,
$8.75 and $8; and

• General Refuse Service Inc. of
Milton, W.Va., $7 .92 and $7.42.
Randy Lawson of General
Refuse said his company will provide dumpslers for local apartments
. and at various village locations. .,
General Refuse already serves
Gallipolis, Lawson added
Council also agreed to apply for
a $500,000 Community Housing
Improveme,nt Program (CHIP)
grant for next year.
II approved, the village will use
tbe funding to rehabilitale low-tomoderate-income housing In tbe
village. Grant Coordinator Jean
·Trussell said CHIP has about $5.6
million available for housing activities.
-· . ,
· The current plan is similar to
one proposed by the village last
year. However, Meigs County
Commissioners allowed Racine to
apply for tbe· grant instead. This
year, Middleport was the only
poJilical subdivision asking for
grant funding.
Horton said the grant, if
approved, would make Middleport
a more desirable place to live.
"Tbis grant will be very beneficial 10 low-income renters and land
owners," Horton said.
Renovations to \he pool and the
(Condnued on Page 3)

Buy AB New '95
A Add "AConversion Pa
• Vista Bay Windows
• P/S, P/B
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• Tilt Steering

• 350 V-8 Power
• Driver Side Air Bag
·Anti-Lock Brakes
·Air Condition
·Automatic Overdrive

. '.$10,219
Factory Rebate

,
-

.• • S300

TomPeden01$C1JLJt .. · SI.41_1

Allowarce To

Sale Pric~

S..,.re , .. . · ssoo

Tom Paden Oi~nl

- $631

..-- $8-788

·-· ·-'·BRAND NEW '95 CIIM S.SERIES PICKUP
Sale Price

• Onver Stde Arrbag
•· Rear Anti-l ock Brakes
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-~

'

--

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• Custom Cloth lntenor
• Weii'Eqwpped'

~......,.____.J $11

• Sljle&lt;t Wheels
·Well Equ~ped'

list Pnce

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Factory Aebate
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Tom Peoen Dtscol.r~t . . -S1 ,012

~

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· Power Brakes
• 16 Valve Power
• Power Door Lcds
• Of1ver S1de Airbag
• 4 Wheel Anb-lock Blakes • AIIIFM Stereo
· Steel Be~ed TICIS
• Power S1eering

CHAMPION MARKET LAMBS - Rebecca
Scott and Kristina Kennedy bad tho. 111115 grand
and reserve champion market lambs at lbe
·Meigs County Junjor Fair Sheep Show Monday

Ltst Pnce ; .

$12'888
.

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Factory Rebate ·
TomPoden~"""

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'

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Factory Renate .
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fol:~ Ouo~.O

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.

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.

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.

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. -12.321

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!save '33211

.

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1995 Meigs County Fair
· Today
4 p.m. Kiddie tractor pull •
Show arena
·
• 5 p.m. Junior lair board auc·
lion • Show arena
6 p.m. Junior fair steer !!how
' . • Show arena; Robin D'hart •
Hillside stage
7 p.ll). DemoiHion derby •
·Grandstand
. Midnight • Gates close
~nesday

TOU"FREE 1·800·822·11417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422·0756•
• Tw.es. Tags. n1e Fees elljra. Rebale 1ncluded 1n sale pnce or new v&amp;ndo lil!tOd where applicable. ClfiiiPI)I'O'ifld credrl. Nol rvspr,lllS()Ie tor lypograptucal errors

Noon- 6

night. Shown abon, from left, an Fair King JeiT
. Rose, Scott, Kennedy, Fair Queen NoeUe Pkk·
ens and Wool Princess Billee Pooler. Results an
on Page 3. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

·
9 a.m. Junior lair goat show • Show arena
:: 10 a.m. Draft horae conteat ·Infield
Noon Baball and Hoole puppet show • Hillside atage; 4-H
flower show • Junior lair building; Guys and gals sheep lead
class • Show arena
2 p.m. 4-H style revue • Hillside stage; DARE program •
Grandstand
4 p.m. Kiddie tractor pull • Show arana
,
4:30 p.m. Uttle Miss and Mister contest • Hillside stage

DRIVER ESCAPES INJURY -James
Morton, 33, Pomeroy, escaped injury when lbe
1984 Buick he was driving blew 1 tire, went ofT
tbe road, struck a rock, and !'lipped over on Its
top. Morton was traveling squib on U.S. 33 earlr

_BEF reduces_. restaurant
By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
- RIO GRANDE :.... Witb compe·
tition among restaurant chams
becoming keener, Bob Evans
Farms Inc. is reducing slithtly the
number of new eateries it plans to
open next year.
BEF opened 44 rcstaur1111ts in·
1994-95 and is looking to build
nearly 40 in tbe future, said Stewan
K. Owens, who was appointed ·BEF
president last week.
•
"Everybody's competing like
we are and everyone bas built
faster than the population that can
be served," Owens said at the conclusion of tbe BEF stockholders'
meeting Monday at the Bob Evans
Farm Sbelterbolise.
"You'll fmd that's a trend in tbe
industry where the smaller operations are being squeezed out by.the
. larger chains," added Owens, tbe
firm's first' president since tbe

Monday afternoon when the accident occpred.
Spectators allbe scene viewed the damage lo the
car Ill the above photo. (Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoenicb)

expansio~

company is "not happy" with its
retirement of Bob Evans in 1986.
Last year's openings represented stock performance but is trying to
a significant increase over the pas~ stay tbe course by focusing on
when tbe fiTDl aime.;l at building 20 improvement of its restaurants and
to 25 restaurant&lt;per year, be said. • food products.
The board of directors bas disIn addition to regular Bob Evans
cussed
tbc possibilty of franchising
restaurants, the company operates a
the
DEF
restaurants or slowing
number of smaller-scale dine-out
but bas decided not to
expansion,
facilities and a Mexican food operdo eitbcr.
ation called Cantina del Rio.
Compared to otber "familyOwens and BEF Board Chair·
man Dan Evans outlined tbe com- style" restaurant cbains, BEF' s 6
pany's fmanci:ll stabJS to tbe 1,650 percen! stock pri9e decline in the
stockholders in attendance, wbo past year is not severe, Evans satd.
were informed they would receive He noted that Denny 's stock is
a quarterly cash dividend of 8 cents down 35 percent from 1994,
Frisch's 20 percent and Cracker
per share on SeJ)t. I.
While some stockholders asked Barrel 13 percent
The complex nature of a BEF
if tbe dividend could be increased •
or tbe current priee of BEF stock restaurant, which concentrates
improved, Evans noted in his report more on cooked dinners and lunchtbat tbe dividend represented a I0 es sets it apart from fast food
percent increase over tbe past Quar· cb'ain s that prefer franchising ,
ter.
'
Evans said.
Evans acknowledged that the
"We could lose control of our

slightly

operation by fr anchising," be
lidded. "That's the board's feeling
and that's th e way 1 feel we
shouldn't go."
Slowing growth will only nega' ti vcly affect the SIOCk price, Evans
·e xplained.
"Rest assured. we are not driving down the priee of the sLOck on
purpose," be IOld siOCkbolders wbo
cooled themselves with paprs fans.
in inlense law aflemoon bear.
"The key thing 10 do Is focus on
running Ibis company, and over
time, tbal and telling our story will
win out over the stod: price,"
Evans added.
_BEF currently operates 366
restaurants in 19 states and markets
its fond and related products in 28.
Evans told stockholders that
ftrst quarter 1995 net sales rotaled
nearly $206 million, a 4 percent
gain over $198 million earned at
(Continued on Page 3)

..
.

'

'

�1

Page2
Tuesday,August15,1995

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obio

fiMULTIMEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE IIOEFLICH
General :\rhmagcr
LEn'tRS OF
word ~

OPIN IO~

MARGARET LEHEW
Co ntroller

are v.dcome. They ;hould be le,; than oOO

long All letter"' arc \llhJect 10 cdt ung and mu"'1 he stgncd wlth narnl"

addrc::.::. and tckphone number. No unsigned letter::. \A. ill be pubh~hed. Lcncr'&gt;
should be 111 good ta-.tc. addressing t&lt;.,sucs. not pcr-.onahtte~ .

~~Today in history

Accu-Weathere forecast for

News flash: Sen. Byrd . has good idea
Raben C. Byrd, one of the most being uttered in defense of the
ponentous and seiMnfatuated gas- Fourlll Estate.
bags in the Senate, bas come up
'J generally agree with this sentiwith an idea that could be of great men~ aPd I' II detail the reasons in a
benefit to the entire nation. This is
highly unusual, as he customarily
Joseph Spear
concerns himself with the seizure
of vast quantities of taxpayer
mooies, which be then reinvesrs in moment. But first, there are some
projecL&lt; that.benefit his West Vir- things that need to be said in the
ginia constituents.
interest of truth and fair play. It is a
Byrd thinks journalists 'who fact that the House in· 1989 and. the
cover the Senate should be required Senate in 199 1 curtailed the practo file financial disclosure state- tice of accepting fees for spe~bes
ments. detailmg their sources of - which, wben you think: about it.
income. He is particularly interest- was son of like paying sharks to
ed in the " honoraria" they receive swim in the first place. But both
for speaking before groups whose Houses biked their pay 35 percent
ac tivities they might cover. He before they did it, and ananged for
recently introduced a "sense of the' an annual cost-of-living adjustSenate" resolution to this effect, It ment.
passed 60 to 39, with nary a word
And of course, Bobby Byrd

Excerpts f_
r om .other
Ohio newspaper~
By The Associated Press
Excerprs of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interesl
Kent-Ravenna Record-Courier, Aug. 14
Oseola McCarty spent most of her life as a vinual second class citizen
in segregationist Mississippi, making a living washing and ironing olller
people's clollles.
Somehow, Miss McCarty, who is now 87. managed to save $150,000
and She wants !0 make sure that her hard-earned money will make a dif·
fcrence for others. So she's leaving it to the University of Soulllern Mis. sissippi for black studenrs who need scholarships.
.
The studcnrs who will share in Miss McCarty's generostty would do
· well to learn from Ule example or this bard-working woman. a teacher in
bcr own right who is living proof Ulat some of the most inaportant lessons
·of life aren't learned in Ule classroom.
The Athens Messenger, Aug. 10
· Fairly or unfairly, Ule U.S. Postal Service bas developed a reputation
for homicide over the past 10 years. Shootings among postal workers are
so frequent lllat Postmaster General Marvin Runyon bas been forced to
deny that postal work is risk:ier than other occupations. He says .it may be
less risky Ulan most.
Just Ule same, Runyon is taking no chances. He decreed this month
that any postal. worker who brings a gun into the workplace will be ftred
· on the spot.
. .
.
.
The ban on bringing, storing or in any way ,possessing a ftrearm at a
postal facility makes se~se. Why would anyone want to bring a gun to
· work? And if you're wondering why the Postal Service is so jumpy about
weapons, consider that dozens of its workers have been killed in work. related homicides since the early 1980s.
·
.
It's hard to know whether some of these incidents could have been prevented. But postal workers and customers should have as much personal
security as possible. Banning guns in post offices is a step in the right
'
direction.
The (Toledo) Blade, Aug. 9
AI night, while most hone~! citizens were asleep, the U.S. House of
Representatives was busy last week debating the so-cllled telecommunicmions refonn bill, eventually passing the thing, 305 to 117.
Mostly, we are told this bill is about increasing competition and giving
llle consumers a littl~ more bang for their telecommunications dollar. That
reminds one of the adage, "The more he spoke of honor, the faster we
countCd Ule spoons." That is true also of lawmakers who talk of giving
U1e consumers hetter, cheaper choices through competition.
That argument is a boot when perfectly sound huge media companies
are swallowing up other media companies. l!lso perfectly sound, to no
apparent advanlllge to consumers. Two television networks were snapped
up last week alone. All this is being done for the good of the consumers?
.
Middletown Journal, Aug. 7
During Ule summer, homeowners are more vulnerable than usual to
burglar,; and thieves.
. ·
That's because summer is the season many people travel away from
home on vacation, leaving their homes vacant and unguarded. ,
So it seems fitting that tomorrow night - in the middle of •·acalion
sea,so n - is "Nillional. Night Out- America's Night Out Against
··Crime." It will be lllc 12th annual observance of this crime awareness ·
program.
During "National Night Out," ·residenrs in Middletown, Trenton and
· lhrougho~t the nation are encouraged to 16ck their doors, wm on Outside
:: !iglliS and spend the evening ourside getting to know their neighbors and
·: local police.
:·: That last pan is probably the most inaponant. Neighbors looking out
: for each olller can be the most effective weapon in the fight against resi: dcntial burglaries and crime. That's wliy there are so many successful
:Neighborhood Watch programs here and elsewhere.

Wednesday, Aug. 16
MICH.

IToledo

But all this is beside the main
didn't mention a little conflict ol'
interest be bas, to ,wit, he bates the point, which is that Byrd has c~me
media. Last year, an 'ABC "Prime- up with a good tdea. The halterTirne Live" crew confronted him than-thou motormoutbs in the
outside his Virginia home, and he media ought to tell us who is licktook his revenge on the Senate ling their palms and let us decide
floor, denouncing bis tormentors as whether it diminishes their credibil"vultures," "buzzards," and ity.
Hundreds of Washington jour"predators."
·
And of course, there's the little nalists , print and broadcast, speak
matter of the First Amendment. for money. One of the houest gabwhich bas been interpreted to mean bers on the lecture circuit for the
Ule press is not accountable to the past few years has been .ABC's
U.S. Senate and that if the U.S. Cokie Roberts. Why this dispenser
Senate doesn't like what the press of cliches and nuggets of extremely
does, the U.S. Senate can just stick mediocre conventional wisdom is
it in their ear. Indeed, if the media regarded as a sage worthy of
had any moxie at all, they would $35,000 fees. I'll never be able to
quit covering the posturing and · understand. According to Chicago
prancing in that baronial body for a Tribune Washington bureau chief
month or two and see how the pols James Warren, who maintains a
"Cokie Watch" in his weekly col·
like that.
umn. the ABC correspondent and
her husband. U.S, News &amp; World
Repon senior writer Steve Roberts,
once pulled down $45,000 to host
"forums" for Chicago bankers.
Cokie is only the most egregious example. Among her ABC
colleagues, Sam Donaldson gets as
much as $30,000 for a speech, and
David Brinkley pulls down
$18,000. A year ago, the network
was getting so much grief about its
well-paid correspondents gelling
big bucks fonalking that it baJ~Qed
paid speeches to trade associations
and for-profit corporations. But
there is no rule forbidding them
from taking large sums from organi~ations which are then reimburs·ed by lobby.ists and businesspersoos.
Your correspondent once Shared
his insights for cash - I think: the
most I ever got for a speech was
$500 - but gave it up in favQr of
writing and teaching. I now speak
only to worthy organizations, limit ·
the number, charge only what I
think my words are wonb, and in
the interest of cooperating with
· ~en. Byrd, hereby disclose my
earnings for my last six'speeches:
Lunch; lunch and Parlier pen
willl the words "Guest Speaker"
on it; dinner, golf balls 3!fd a neat
little pewter golf caddy "to bold
business cards; nollling; dinner; a
cup of coffee.
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
writu ror Newspaper Enterprise
Associati 0 n.
(For inrormation on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Oniine·by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.) .
·

BEEN THE.RE ...
DONE THAT

strangers for big bucks, the way the
free market intended.
Three last things:
One: Some economists now say
that 6 percent unemployment
equals full employment. Sorry.
That's only 94 percent employment: Small is not mediuin.
Two: The .'60s are not to blame
for our cwrem problems. I remem•bet' endless arguments with proVietnam Wai friends back then.
These would always conclude with,
"What' II you do when the commie
tanks roll through your hometown?" I'd say, "I'll be cowering
in the basement with a small soda.
~ ou' rF the one who likes guns, pal.
I m CO!!nting on you to defend
me.''

Three: The Cold War is over.
The commie tanks aren't coming.
Can we get over it now?
·
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Sboales newsletter, call 1800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
(Fur Inrormation on bow to
communlcatt electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

:·By The Associ.ated Press
:: Today is Tuesday, August 15, the 227th day of 1995. There are 138
. ;days left in the year..
·
:: . Today'sHighlight in History:
:. Aug. 15,, 1945, 50 years ago, was proclaimed V-J Day by the Allies,1a
-:day after Japan agreed to surrender unconditionally. In a recorded radio
: ;message, E.'!'peror Hirohito called upon the Japanese people to "bear the
· .u~beaiable :and lay down their arms. In the Unitcil States, V-J Day coin.ctdcd wtlll Ule end of rauomng of gasoline and canned goods.
On this date:
In 1057, Macbeth, Ulc King of ScoUand, was slain by the son of King
Duncan, ,
,
~
.
.,
'
"
In J..7t\!l, Napoleon Bonaparte was born un tile lslantl of Corsica.
I
In 1888, T.E. LawrcRce, the Briti sh soldier who gained fame as
, "Lawn;ncc of Arabia," was born ih Tremadoc Wales. .
: In 19~5. bumorist Will Rogers and aviat~r Wiley Posi. were killed
" . when !herr :urplane crashed ncar Point Barrow, Alaska.
" In 1944, during World War U. Allied forces landC(,! in southern France.
In 1947, India became indcpendcn( after some 200 years of ,Brilisb
DEAR BRUCE: I am an only catastrophic illness. All of your disappears. Tbe morality of this struggle.
.
o
,
. rule.
child and my molller keeps all her mother's 'assets can definitely he could be argued, but that's not to . Be that as it may, your reaction
. In 1948, Ule Republic of Korea was proclaimed.
possessions 1and accounts in joint transferred to you without a taxable he decided here. You can accom- ts normal and I empathize and
name with me. She would like to even~ claiming against her lifetime plish Ule end that your mother bas agtee witll it. However, the facts
: In 1969, Ule Woodstock Music and Art Fair opened in upstate New
. Yorlc.
.
• in -mind by following the path I are that bills must be paid: It seems
transfer her real estate to my name
have described to you. ·
: In 1971 , President Nixon announced a 90-day freeze on wages, prices
to me that it is no! unreasonable tO
alone.
· aitd rents.
·
, As the seller, does she have to
~ a group of children and grand: : In 1974, South Korean President Park Chung-hee escaped an assassiDEAR BRUCE: After reading children to accept responsibility for
pay a capital gains tax, or do 11 Do exemption of $600,000. By all
: nation attempt in which his wife was killed.
I need to have the property means, have an accountant handle your column about a widow who orie woman . .It always amazes me
; : In 1989, F.W. de Klerk was sworn in as acting president of South
a)lpraised, and must I try to sbow • · the transfer so that there are no had to sell her farm to pay for ber that one couple can raise seven
o!'Jnca, one day after P.W, Botha restgncd as the result of a powei strughusband's funeral, I was shocked. children, but the seven children
Ulat I paid for half of the purchase taxes to be paid.·
: gle wtthm the.Nauonal Parry.
·
·
(which I did not)?
Your maUler should understand, It seems so wrong and something can't suppon the one couple.
·: Ten years ago: South African Presidem P.W. Botha delivered an interMy mother is not concerned however, lilat if you. get into some should be done about this. You
:':'ationally broadcast speech in which be rej7Cted ,calls to dismanlle ., about the lax consequences when type of financial trouble- perhaps advised children and grandchildren
(Send your questions to;
;aparthetd, saymg 1t would lead whtte South Afncans "on a road to abdishe dies, as inheritance tax is not an unfortunate auto accident while to accept responsibility for the Smart Money, P.O. Box 50$,
·~ation and suicide."
,
that hefty and her estate is worth insufficienl)y .insqred - then the . widow, but these are the very peo- Elfers, FL 34680. Ql!estlons ot
: : Hve xears a~o: In an attempt to gain suppon against the U.S.-Ied coaliple who are struggling to pay mon· general interest will he answered
well under $600,000. She is, how- assets that were formally hers
·tion m the Perstan Gulf, lraqt Prestdent Saddam Hussein offered to make
gages and trying to send their chil- in ruture columns. Owing to the
ever, concerned about going to a could now be attacked. 0bviously,
:peace with longtime enemy Iran, saying he would pull troops out of terri·nursing borne and losinll every- when U1ese assets are transferred to dren to coll'ege, besides .Paying •olume of mall, personal replle'
·tories seized from the Iranians.
thing, leaving me with nothins. If your name, be certain Ulat you have higher taxes plus Social Security. &lt;annot bt provided.)
One year .ago: llich Ramirez Sanchez, the terrorist better known as
we convey the property, what do very high limits on all liability Our generation never had il as bad
Bruce WiUiams is a syndl&lt;ated
."Carlos the Jackal," was jailed in France after being captured in Sudan.
we need to fear, if anything?- Insurance to obviate that possibili- as it is now. - M.S ., Yakima, writer for NEA.
Today's Birthdays: Cooking expen Julia Child is 83. Actress Dame
(For Information on bow to
L.H., Brookville, Ind.
ty.
Wash.
Wendy H~lle.r is 83. Consel!'ative actiyist Phyllis Schlafly is 71. Actress
communicate
electronically with
DEAR L.H.: This is a topic we
If your mom stays healthy for
DEAR M.S.: It's interesting that
Rose Mane IS 70. Actor Mike Co.nnors IS 70. Actress Janice Rule is 64.
tbls
colunthlst
and otbers, con•
have addressed many times and it the statutory time limit.on gifts,
you adopt the position that your
Civil rights activist Vernon Jordan is 60. Actor Jim Dale is 60. Supreme
tact
America
Online
by 'caiUtfg 1·
deserves attention in !hat people which I '&gt;elieve is now about 30
generation had it better, because
Court Justice Stephen Breyer is 57. Author-journalist Linda Ellerbee is
8110-827-6364,
ext.
IIJ11.)
can indeed have a lifetime of work months, then the need to inapoververy few people see it that way.
51. Britain's Princess Anne is 45 . ·
· wiped out in very sbon order by. a ish herself to avoid' paying her bills
Most of us think we had the hardest

-

Mo.m 's,generosity raises tax questions
Bruce Williams

••

•

.
I I

Helen M. "Tweet" Lemley: 65, Middleport, died Monda~. Aug. 14,

-

1995 at Holzer Medical Center.
--·
Born Jan. 24, 1930 in Cheshire, da~ghter of the late Arthur and Margaret Athey Lynch, she was a homemaker and altended the Seventh Day

88"

Adventist Church in Pomeroy.
She is survived by two sons, Chris Lemley of Middlepon, rutd George
Lemley of Bradbury; a daughter and son-in-law, Linda and Robert Shaver
of Gallipolis; eight gmndchildren and one great-grandson.
Also surviving are two sisters. Betty Stewan and Joyce Wooten of
Cheshire; a brolller, William Lynch of Cheshire; and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, George Lemley; and by a
daughter, Debra Lemley.
. Private services will be held at the Fisber Funeral Home, Middleport,
wtth the Rev. Ralph Butcher officiating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. No calling hours will be observed.

Mansfield
IND.

.-----'--,--·...,.

Helen 'Tweet' Lemley

-

•leolumbusl94'

I

W. VA.

KY.

Junior sheep competition
judging results released

Grand and reserve champion weight class: 85-89 .pounds market lamb honors were won by Pamela Rupe and Riki Barringe'r;
Rebecca Scott and Kristina 95-103 pounds - Stacy Wilson,
Kennedy, respectively, at Monday Bobby Rupe and Jessica Janey;
night's Meigs County Junior Fair 110-ll3 pounds- Ashley Hager,
Sunny Pt Clovdy Cloudy
Sheep Show at the Rock Springs Joseph Rupe and Michelle O'Nail;
Fairgrounds.
•
115 -119 pounds - Shannon
0 1995 Aecu-Wea1har, ln.::.
Scot.t dominated the competi· Enright, Aaron Yost and Adam
tion, also winning grand champion Johnson; 120-123 pounds honors for market lamb showman- Meghan Haynes, Holly Williams
ship, ewe market lambs and Suf- and Macyn Ervin; 124-129 popnds
folk ewe.
- Krist ina Kennedy, Whitney
In market lamb showmanship, Karr and Christy Drake; 130-140
knock a few degrees off of Scott won grand champion willl pounds - Rebecca Scott, Tyler
Wednesday's bigbs in northern Shannon Enright takin g reserve Johnson and Billee Pooler; underweighrs - Marcus Bratton; overOhio: but Uley still will be in the champion honors.
Winners
in
Ule
following
show·
weights - Mend'y Guess . Grand
upper 80s to low 90s.
manship
classes
were,
in
order:
old
champion
and reserve champion
The record-high temperatw:e for
pro,
class
I
Rebecca
Scott
and
wether
were
won by Kristina
this ·date at the Columbus weather
Melody
Lawrence;
old
pro,
class
II
Kennedy
·and
Shannon
Enright.
·station was 95 degrees in 1944
Shannon
Enright
and
Michelle
Winner of the best Meigs Coun·
while the record low was 43 tn
ty born and bred wether was
1964. Sunset tonight will be at8:30 Bissell; experienced, third year p .m. and sunrise Wednesday at Ashley Hager and Tyler Johnson; Heather Dailey.
experienced, second year - ThereIn U1e breeding sheep showman6:44a.m.
sa Baker and Derrick Fackler; ship contest, Mary Nally and Stacy
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Panly cloudy and novice, class I - Cinda Branon Wilson won grand and reserve
and Asbley Rupe; novice, class II ·champion, respectively, with Nally
muggy.
-Evan Eastman and Kent Haley.
receiving the Jack Seidenabel
Winners in the ewe market lamb Award for breeding sheep showcompetition were, in order by manship.
weight class: 85-90 pounds Winners in individual classes
Michelle .O'Nail, Joseph Rupe and were, in order: old pro - Mary
Aaron Yost; 92-97 pounds ,
Nally, Jonalban Avis and Rebecca
"It is the children who are ulti- Ste·phanie Wilson, Ashley Rupe Scott; experienced - Stacy Wilson
mately affected by these custody and Alan Haley; 101 -104 pounds and Ashley Hager; novice cases, not the parents," said Jen- - Holly Williams, Mendy Ouess Aaron Yost.
nifer Sheers, a Meigs County Bar · and Siacy Wilson; 105-109 pounds
Rebecca Scol! and Aaron Yost
Association officer.
- Megban Haynes, Kent Haley won grand and reserve champion
The classes teach parents how to and Derreck Bolin; 110-115 Suffolk ewe. respectively,' in the
deal with each other and their chil- pounds - Whibley Karr, Kristina breeding sheep competition. Windren during the difficull transition Kennedy and Shannon Enright; ners in individual classes were, in
from marriage to divorce, she 120-126 pounds - Rebecca Scon, order: spring ewe lamb - Heather
added.
Christy Drake and Kacy Ervin; Dailey and Stacy Wilson; yearling
Under the agreemen~ the DHS 130-138 pounds - Ashley Hager ewe - Aaron Yost and Ashley
will provide annual funding of and Adam Johnson; underweights Hager; ewe over 2 - Rebecca
$2,400 to fund the classes, accord- - Riki Barringer. Grand charripion Seal!, Michelle 0' Nail and Mary
ing to DHS Director Mike Swisher.
and reserve champion ewe were Nally.
Previously, the partie~ who ftled won by Rebecca Scott and Whiblcy
The brother and sister team of
domestic disputes in court were Karr.
.
Jonathan and Meg ban Avis won
required to pay for the classes as
Winner bf the best Meigs Coun- grand champion crossbred ewe.and
p!lfl of their filing fee.
ty bred and. born ew~ was Jessica grand champion crossbred ram,
Dillon. ·
respectively.
Winners in the wether market
The contest was judged by Mike
lamb contest were, in order by Stitzlein ·of Ashland.

:. Heat wave to maintain grip
.,,;·: on area for rest of the' week
• By The Associated Press
Scorching temperatures com'· pounded by high humidities will
'· continue to create very uncomfon. able and potentially dangerous con•. ditions across Ohio tile rest of this
week, forecaSters said.
Even the low temperatures will
be high, generally in the 70s and
sometimes setting records, the.
National Weather Service said.
,.
Isola!cd thunderstorms will do
little to ease conditions.
An approaching cold front could

;,. Human Services agency
~ . to fund parenting classes
'

The Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun and the Meigs County
Department of Human Services
:· (DHS) have recently entered into a
, cooperative agreement in which the
DHS will fund the coun's parent, ing education classes.
•
The coun, in the past, bas mandated that all who are going
' through divorce, dissolution or cus. tody proceedings must a!lenrl the
coun's parenting education classes.
The classes teach those in
· domestic relations cases bow to
:reduce stress from the liti_gation
· and also to remember Ulat the cbildrep who are the su bjcct of custody
contesiS must have their best interests served.
1

Meigs announcements

More beliefs- of a se~lar humanist
Tbe olller day I ordered a ,small penalty is a good idea should be of Newt Gingrich, but I no longer
soda from a well-known fast-food shot. If a woman wanrs to have an feel like kowtowing to anybody
joint. The unhappy teen-ager at the abonion, it's none of my business. . about anyllling. He blamed Susan
register told me they didn't have Gay people should be allowed to ·'' Smith's behavior on Democrats.
small, only medium.
--:----.,.~·- - - - - OK: I blame Susan Smith's slepfaSmall is now medium. That's
!her's behavior on Republicans.
lan Sh Oa1e$
what's. wrong with America right
· We're supp&lt;ised to apologize. to
there, !his insidious creeping relaJapan for dropping the born~ in
tivism. I want to live in a world serve in~the military. (Why they'd 1945. Why should I apologtze for
where small is small, and medium want to is a mystery, however.) something that happened before I
slays· in the damn middle where it Professional football should be ille- was born? Good grief, I have
gal. Roseanne' is talented.
belongs. Thai's alii want.
enough troubles. 'I don't think we
Sure, I'm a moral relativist 100
Taxpayers should fund the arts; should be proud of the fact that we
percent, always have been, always the· Star Wars missile defense sys- turned a bunch of civilians· into
will be . You're not supposed to say tern is still as lame an idea as it was paste, mind you, but what do we
this, but I have a certain amount of during the Reagan years: prayer in think war is? Civilized behavior?
sympathy for poor peopie. Beyond public scbool is a terrible idea;
Speaking of war, what's hapthe. bloated bureaucracy of it, I 11ag-bumin): is a Godgiven rigbi- pened to our national nerve? We
have nollling against' welfare . We so long as it's done in the privacy don't want to get involved in any
should either give poor people of the bedroom- and small is not conflicts because our soldiers
money or not. We shouldn't give 1 a synonyin for medium.
might get killed? Hello? Killing is
them money, and then tell t:hem
You h£tve a right to bear arms, what soldiers are supposed to do!
how to spend it: I don't think single certainly, but keep your guns away Get a clue! If our soldiers don't
P!lfents are evil._! think the politi.cal from me, all right? I don't even want to put themselves in bann. s
vtews of Chmuan f~ndamentalisrs . know you. Both the Information way, what the hell good are they?
arc cvtl. I thm.k famtly. values ~e Superhighway flDd negati:re reac- Perhaps the military service has
evtl. &lt;'f!'erc. I ye satd tt, and I m tions to it are,- boring, ·You can't become welfare, with uniforms. At
glad.) I m wtlhng to admtl that I teach a child to read with instruc· least we don '·t tell soldiers how to
view rich people with loathing (if.! tiona! videotapes! You do it with spend their money.
.
were rich, I'd even view mysel( books, moron! Polidcs? I think milSome want Mike Tyson to issue
with loathing - . all the way to the lions know what I'm tailting about an apology to every woman in
bank, of course).
when I say that every time I vote I America. Excuse me? The guy, did
What else do I believe?
have to wasb my hands.
'
his time, leave him alone. Let him .
Those who thmk the death
~aybe it's the sterling example
get back to bashing in me faces, of

conditions and high temperatures

'

94'

•

The Oaily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Death--

OHIO Weather

.

f

'
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,August15, 1995

Dorst reunion set
Thll annual Dorst reunion will
be held with dinner beginning at
noon Sunday at Martin Dorst's
· borne in Shade. All relatives welcome.
Church homecoming
. Homecoming at Ule Hazel Community Church at Long Bottom
will be held Sunday willl a covered
dish dinner at noon. The Rev. Han
wiU be speaker with special singing
by Tammy Bable. All welcome.
Special speaker set
Danville Church of Christ will
hold special scrvjces Saturday, 7
p.m., and Sunday 10:30 a.m. and 6
. p .m. with Denver Hill, Foster,
W.Va .. speaker. Public invited.

Group meetings
The county's bomescbooling
support group will hold a series of
meetings next month. Kick-off picnic at noon Sept. 8' at Star Mill
Park . Regular meeting at 7 p.m.
Sept. II at Carmel Methodist
Church. Seminar on courtship and
character at 7 p.m. Oct 5 a1 Racine
First Church of the Nazarene.
Legion to meet
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, will meet at 8 p.m.
Tuesday (tonight) at the hall with a
dinner preceding_ at 7 p.m.
Meeting changed
The montltly board meeting for
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis'trici has been changed from Aug.
I7 to Aug. 31 at5 p.m.

Old log cabin features ...
(Continued rrom Page 1)
· Fidelis Bell, and special music by
• Jerry and Diane Frederick, Laura
Guthrie, Susie and Joanna Francis,
·.Joe Rader, James M. Soulsby, Hal
. Kneen, J.B. Smith, and a duet of
Laura Guthrie and Darrell
· Hawthorne.
There were comments and

The Daily. Sentinel

prayers from several ministers and
an open songfest to round out Ule
program.
Racing ready
This year there will be only two
days ·of harness racing instead of three. Racing will be held on
Thursday and Friday, beginning at
1 p.m.
· And the quaner horse racing set
for noon oo Saturday bas been canceled :_ j usl not enough entries.

!USPS 213-960}
Publi shed

cvcr~

nflcrMon. Mnndny through

Fr1day, Ill Cnurt ~ ~ . Pomeroy. Oh 10. l'!y the
Ohin Vr~llcy Pullll~h1 ng Comp:my/Mult imcdia

Inc .. Pomeroy. OhiU ~~7(, 9, Ph. 9'12-~ 1 ~6 .
Second cia~~ ro~ tage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio
Mcmbrr~

The A•~owucd
NewSpnpcr A ~~nci; 1ti o n .

P re~~.

nmlthu Oh10

POSTMASTER : Send nddre~~ ~orrc~:no n ~ 10
The Daily SemmeL Ill Coun St .. Por11eroy.
Ohro 45769.
SURSCRIPTION RATES

Om: Wtt~:. :.~- ~-r~~r or Motor Route
One Month ........
One Year

Sl_?f
$7 ()()
, ~91 00

SINGLE CO P\' t'HICE
Dnily .

... 35 Cents

S ubsml:x:r~ not dc ~ irin g to p:ty the earner mny
remit rn &lt;ld~·:an cc dr ~c t to llrc D:tily Sorm ncl
on n lh ~ . ~i;o~. or 12 month h n~i~. Crcdr1 wrll Oc
giYen carrier c~ch week·.

No

~ ub~ nlptiu n

h)l m,rll pcrm1 ncd 1n

where oo·me c;un cr ~ rvi ce 1s

nrca~

~Ynrllblc .

i\11\1 L SUHSCRIPTIONS
in!iide l'rtrigs Coumy
13 Week ~ ... - ........... .......... .....
26 Week~ ..

52

Wee k ~--

. Sll91
\.47 06
...... $9256

Rates Outsidr Meigs Co unty
13 Wet:ks....
.. ..... $25 61
26 Wecb....
~2 Week~ ----

__ ..

.. .... $49.66

..............., ........................ $96 20

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... .33 7/8
Ak.zo ;.................................. ,....58 5/8
Ashland OU ........................... .33 Ill
AT&amp;T ...................................... 51114
Bank One.'"""""'""""""""".31 3/8
Bob Evans...............................19 1/8
Champion Ind ........................23 114
Cha•mlng Sbop ........,.............. .4 5/8
City Holding ........................... 15 7/8
Federal Mogul ........ :............... 11 718
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... :................ 4t 7/8
K-marl .................................... 15 1/4
I.;ands End ................................... 17
Llmlwd lnc......................... .... t8 til
Multimedia Inc ............... ....... 413/8
People's ........................ ,..... ....22 Ill
Ohio Valley Bank ........................ .35
One Valley ..............................30 Ill
RockweU ................................ 44 J/8
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .l6 3/4
Royal Du!cb .......................... ll8 1/8

Shoney'slnc........................... llll4
Star Bank .............................. .50.1/l
Wendy tnt'! ............................ 18 Ill
Worthington lnd .........,................lO

-·-·-

Stock report!l are tb~e 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advut o

Gdipotls.

..

STRANGE SQUASH - Darrell McKinney or Side Hill Road;
Rutland, recently round this unusual Siamese yellow squash In his'
garden. Since he doesn't like to eat squash, McKinney's plans cal[
for preserving the strange ••gelable. "I haven't seen anytlling like
it," be said.
·
'

None injured in accident
No one was injured following a two-car accident in which one
man rear-ended another vehicle Monday afternoon, according to
Middlepon Police Deparuncnt reports,
Paul Allen Madill, 30, Myrtle Beach, S.C .. failed to stop his
1989 Ford Acrostar van and .rear-ended another car at 3:20. p.m.
Monday, records show. Madill was cited for failure to maintain con·
troL
Dac A. Neff, 16, Stewan, bad light damage to his 1993 ChevrOlet. Neff had stopped at a red light at Ule corner of Hartinger
Avenue and Beech Street.

Middleport Council eyes
(Continued from Page 1)
boat launch. project can be used as
leverage, allowing for extra sidewalks, s.ewers and street paving,
Trussell said. '
In other action, the board:
• approved the bid of $5,325
from K &amp; H Contractors of
Pomeroy over the $5,750 bid of J
&amp; E Ragelln Consbllction of Jackson for installing catch basins;
• will seck another insurance
carrier; since the current company
will raise the village rates by
$(),000 a year beginning Sept. I; .
• may pay to replace the windshield on Ed Manley's car lifter he
drove by at a softball game;
• will discuss placing speed
bumps on Nonb Fourth Avenue at
Ule next meeting;
• will not apply for the next
round of state revitalization grants
because the village. cannot afford
the 20 percent match;
• ·spent $1,600 to remove
asbestos siding from a home that
will )&gt;e· demolished for tbc boat
launch project;
• stopped the $110 a month
maintenance fee for several dead
village trees;
• thanked Bruce Wolfe for stagingthe recent p:irade;
• reported a mayor's report of
$2,43 1.75; and

• learned the police department

malic 43 arrests anti invcstigatetl

four accidenrs in July.
The following funds had bal ances: general, $40,569.73; fire
equipment, $3,743.25; fire truck,
$16,163.56; revolving loan,
$17,67L34; ODNR Water,
$14,402 .10; refuse, $14,764.91;
street maintenance, $18,432 . l3 i
pool improvement, $51,447.06; law
enforcement, $4,877 .99; water
tank, $359.55; water, $30,140.92;
sewer, ·$32,06L86; and meter
deposirs, $30,157.26:
The following funds had
deficits: economic development,
$939.3 7; public transportation,
$40,730.76; Issue Two, $4,215.61;
tree planting, $879.19 ; miniature
golf. S1.522.08: cemetery,
$5, 709.34; and recreation,
$6.377.29.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAl,
Monday admissions - Annette
Knight, Potncroy.
.
Monday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER ·
Discharges Aug. 14 - Mrs.
Brent Barney and daughter, Trav·is.
Neal, Sara Walker, Tina Wines,
Claudia Springer.
·
·
(PubUshed with permission)

BEF reduces restaurant

Local News in Brief:

(Continued from Page 1)
· the same lime in 1994. Net income
for ibe quarter was $14.4 million, a
9 percent increase over $13.2 million In last year's ftrst quarter.
In detailing sales and marlceting
plans, BEF officials said the firm
would introduce into the restaurants this fall I 0 lunch dishes
priced under $4, Owens said be felt
the move could be the company's
"most successful operation" yet.

Two arrested on domestic charges
Two meii were arrested recently by Meigs County sheriff's
deputies on charges of domestic violence, reponed Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
Mike Henry, 29, Minersville, was charged wi(h felonY.llomestic
violence after allegedly assaulting his wife Saturday evening, Soulsby said. Domestic violence becomes a felony upon second and subsequent charges, according to Ute Ohio Revised Code.
David Grindstl\IJ, age unreported, Racine, was arrested early this
morning on a ml!demeanor domestic violence account. He is
accused of ~saulting his wife, Souls by said.

In olller business, stockholders
re-elected Evans, J. Tim Evans and
Roher! S. Wood 10 the board of
directors,. each to serve three-year
terms.

None injured in fender-bender
No one was injured and no one was cited following a two-car
collision Sunday morning, according to Pomeroy Police Department
reports.
Justin M. Fields. 16, of Pomeroy, backed his .1988 Oldsmobile
Cutlass int9 ;u~olllcr vehicle at 9: 13 a.m. Sunday in the McDonald's
parking lot, causing light damage to Ule left rear bumper, according
to police.
.
Norman G. Leget 58, of Letan, W.Va., had light damage to the
rear right quaner panel of his 1992 Chevrolet. pickup truck as he
also was backing up, reports stated.
1

POMEROY
Near Pome&lt;oy-Mason Bridge
992-2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard

t55 Main St.
388-8603

I
•

Squads log seven

C?SIIs

'

Units of tbe Meigs County
. Emergency Medical Scrvke
recordedseven calls for assisiJlllce
Monday, including one transfer
calL Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
6:42a.m ., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Mary Bonecutter. Veterans
Memorial Hospital ;
·
10':2 1 -a.m., Noble Summit
Road, Mary Birchfield, Holzer
Medical Center;
3:52 p.m ., OBNC, Daisy
Brown, VMH.

POMEROY
10:09 a.m .. Condor Street, Lisa
llaggy, VMH;
4 : .~0 p.m .. .Children's Home
Road, Anna Frank,-HMC.
TUPPERS PLAINS
. 10:50 p m.; Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Tyler Faulk, VMH.

Potential petit jurors
named for court duty

.'

Additional names drawn for
potential petit jury duty in Meigs
County Common Picas Coun are: ·
Richard A, Koker, Syracuse;
Angela D .. Edman, Racine; David
Russell Thomas, Middleport;
Charles F. Sargent, Coolville;
Crystal I. Pultiqs, Middlepon; Raymond Carlyle Elberfeld, Racine;
'John A: Byer, Middlepon; Peggy
M. Houdashelt, Pomeroy; David A,
Carter, Pomeroy; Kimberly Kaye
&gt;
Eblin, Rutland. .

~0~~·~
'

:too

N.2r.~ Mid:ll&lt;l~XI. ''JI
H)--5. !1clfJ thru

~~2 ~/;(l.'i'i

I
Sat

Vbu, Me t~.~.•.ml fJt:v;.M:t. l .ttyllvtiJ\-

A. I 00 Bed dual certified long term care facility
in Middleport, 9hio, is seeking a director of
Environmental Services to join our- goal
oriented management team. This position is a
vital management position responsible for the
operation of the Housekeeping, Laundry and
Maintenance departments. The ideal candidate
will have long term care experience in these
areas . You ' must have a basic · working
knowledge of General Maintenance and
l\1anagement Experience is a plus. Overbrook
Center offers a competitive salary ad a benefit
package is abailable. Send Resumes to David
Snyder, Administrator Overbrook Center, 333
Page Stree~. Middleport, Ohio, 45760.

E.O.E.

••

�•

Sports

:Tuesday,August15, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

MH.S_go!f~rs ~_ye six~_tt_
-sfraight TVC crown

Page4
Tuesday,August15,1995

•

Selig says baseball
talks still going on
CHICAGO (AP) - Baseball
negotiations? What baseball nego·
tiations?
They're ongoing, acting commiSSH)ner B•d Selig said. You just
can' t see them or hear mucb about
them these days.
"There are ilegotiations going
on. They're just quie~" Selig said
Monday after a meeting of baseball
owners lasted more tban four
hours.
"We have negotiators who are
meeting this week again. I keep
reading and hearing we're not making progre~s. but in my judgment
we're having meaningful discussion . They are less public and I
think !bat is a positive. I· think it is
important for us not to continue to
d~al ~n the glare of pubiicity . I
think 11 makes 11 almost impossible
to accomplish anything. Tbe only
ume we will bave a big announcement about labor is when we have

.a deal."

But !be question is when. Fan

disenchantment is still high, especially with no ne w collective bargaining agreement .
Auendance is down about 19
percent, reflecting fan anger over
!be strike and the cancellation of
last year' s World Series.
"!think someone delude" themselves to think that an agreement
and just solely an agreement wins
people back," said Selig, promising a major marketing campaign
soon. " That's totally unrealistic.
We have a lot more work to do."
During the owners' meeting
Monday, Selig said the issue of a
timetable for gelling an agreement
was brought up.
"There is no way logically or
scientifically or objectively we can
do that," be said. "It's two-pany,
not onc-pany.
" There is nobody in this room
that wo•ld debate the issue !bat we
need to make !l deal as expeditious·•
.
ly as possible."'
Selig said !be owners' meeting

Scoreboard
American League
East Division
· WLP&lt;t.
610
......51 49 .510

801100
NewY"'~
BaJUrncw-e

GB

..... . .61 39
...... .46 54
..... .... ..4:1 S7
.........42 51

Oetroh
Toronto

10 '
U
.00
U
424 lllfl

.460

Central Division
W L
.........67 32

.677

Milwaukee

.... . .50 49

.505

XaD111 City

....,..47 !10

Chicaao

......,42 56
........ 3.5 64

Clevelarod

Mln~aota

GB

Pet.

17
19
.4,29 24 tn
.354
32

.415

West Division
W

~alifonlla

Tex•

I,
.......... 63 38
~

Pd.
GB
.624 ·
.520 10 1n

............51 49
......... 47 55

.SID II 112
.461 t61n

.... .. 52

SeattJe
OakJand

Mond-r•• Gunu

'.

and Keita CrCIIpina, defcn&amp;ive bacb.
ATLANTA FALCONS - Waived .
Abdul Jacklon an~ Maurice Miller,
linebad:.en, and Bobby EvaDI, safety.
BUFFALO BIU.S- Relcucd AdrillD
Hill, widt receiver, and Micttael Hen·
·
JII!GUARS -

Waivcd Shannon Bater ud Will ManU.
wide receiven; Chris Dausu1. center: and
Marcello Simmon• and Eric Stephens,
comerbacb

(Lira 7-1~ 7,05 P·"'

son Wiorow , IJ,Uard, and Mitch Davi1,

(Ericbon 7-9), 7:3S,p .m.
Mllwauttc (Spil'kl 7-6) at Te111

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Re·
le.uM Malcolm Marshall, fullback; Jef(
WiiUu, ticta"; Clarence WiliUuna, tiJI,hl
end: and Shaumbe WriJht-Fair, runninJ

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Waived

Scolt Szeredy, kicker, and Lawann Lalaon, wide receiver
NEW YORK GIAN'TS-Wai'led Ja.

linebacker.

(Rogertl1·5), 8!05 p.m.
Oakland (D~Iina •l-6) ·at Kanul City .
(JIICOme 1·2), IJ:OS p.m.
Seattle (Boaio 8·5) ill Minoa!J!a
(Kiiagenbeck. 2·3), 8:05p.m.
CaJiforllla (LanplOn 11· 2) at OliCaao
(Bolton 0.0), 8:05p.m.
Wrdnt ...J'• Gamn
Cleveland (llenhiset 9·5) at Balti·
more (Brown 5-7), 12:3!1 p.m.
New York {Pettine 6·6) at BoltOn
(Eshelnw.n4-:?i. I:OSp.m.
CaJifon:rii1Alldeno!l6·3) a1. Chicago
(Fcntaltdo&lt; 6-1), 2,05 p.m.
Toronto (Hurt~ 4-1) at Detroit

(Moore 5-12), 7:05p.m
Milwaukee {Give!ll 1·2) at Tuu
(DorwlD 2-9), 1,05 p.m.
Oakland (Stonlemyre9-5) II Kuau
City (Oubicz.a 8-10), 8:0.5 p.m. ·
Seanle (Joh010n 12-2) a1 Minnesw
(Rodria~ 2-.. ), I :Oj: p.ili:

W
Atl.a.Dta
...........64
Moatreal
.........50
Phillldelphia ........49

AorM!a

New Ywt

.

L
36
ll
52

Pel.
CB
.640
.49l 14 Ill
.ofl.'i 15 In

...........45 52

.464 17lll

......... 1 59

...10

23

Central Division
W
..... :... 61
...... ,_,$6
.......... 51
......... 40
..........40

Ciocionlli
HoU~toa

Chicaao

Pii"""'Jih

SL LOI.Iil

L
37
44

GB
6

11

49

.5lo ·

l9
61

.404 21 Ill
.396 22 In

W L
....... 54 47

Colo"""
San Dieao
s~

.... ..... 53 48
.. ......so 50
FranciJoo ...... 46 5.5

M011d.,'•G-n

r.t.
.m
.soo

GB

..535

... ss

1·

J

1n

•

Mootr~ S, Philadelphia I
San franciiCO 4, St. Louil I
Cioclnnal 4, Colorado 0
AUanta 4, florida J
Sao Dieao 6. PittabwJh S
Chicaao 5,l.ol AllgeJea 4, II inniD81
Only 1PffiC1 scheduled
T11Hd•J'• G.mes
· St. Louis (Morp.n 4-.5) at San fran.
cilw (Brewington :2-1 ), 1:35 p.m.
Colorado (Retlw" ~0) at Ciocinuti
(Smiley 11·1), 7:JS p.m.
Aonda (BIUib 1).3) ot Atlanll
(Olavine 10-5), 7:..0 p.m.
.MQmC!l (Hrl!l}'_7·9lll New York I
(llnnahauaen 2·1 ), 7 ~ -Wp . m .
Philadelphia (Juden 0-1) II Howton \
(Swiode117·6), 8:05p.m. •
Chlcq:o (TrEhlel.5-8) atl.ol AI!Jc.1~ (Norno 9·3),_1Q;Q_,; p.m, ·
Pittlburah (Parril-4-4) IU San Diego .
(Blair 5·1 ), 10:0.5 p.m.

Wedntidar'• c...

.
Colorado (Reyno.o 4-4) at Clndlltlal.i
{Smiley 11-1), 11 ~ 3.5 p.m.
ChifiiO (Bullinaer 10-2) It U. AD·
aelea (Valda 9--7), 4:05p.m.
~

florida (~p6-7) II AUanla {Avtry
J-1), 7:40p.m
MoDtteal (Pt:tcz 10.4) at New Yort
(P\IltiphCII' J.6). 7:40p.m
Philadelphia {ftr!laDdez J.J) Ill HoUI·
... (Drab&lt;~ 1-6~ 1,05 p.m.
PiltlbtraJI (EricD 3-J) 11 Slll:l Di.eao
(Aihby S.6),10:3S p.m.
St. Loui.l (Pdkovaek 5-3) II Slll:l
FruciK:o (Leiter 7- 7), 10:3.5 p.m. 4:

Transactions
AlrrO IIACIN.G
UNITED STATES AtrrO CLUB-

Named Cary Agajuiaa uecutive vice
p~ident for the lady Rac:IIIJ Leque.
BASEBALL
Am•lean Leap
KANSAS CITY ROY -'LS- TnldOd
Chrl.li Jarnt.~, outfieldrr, to the BoltOn Red
Sox (or Wr.. Cllambalaia, outfielder.
SEATILE MARINERS-Optioned
Bill Krueger, pitcher, to TICollll of the
Pacific Cout Leaaue- Recalled 1M Guel·
&amp;amaD, pill:her. from Tacona
TORON'IU BLUE JAYS-AIIiped
Woody Williams. pitcher, to Sfll'C\IIC or
the Interntlional Leap for a JCMby to-

habili!.atloa ••iJilllleDt.

National League
CINONNATI REDS-PI: !ICed Briu
ialldder. on the IS-day cUaablcd
list, rettolctin to Au1. 7. Activated Eric
llunt~,

.

•

PITTSBURGH STEELERS- Reaigncd Lcvon Kirk.Jaod,linCbKier.
liOCKEY
National Uockry l.eape
....,
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Re·
lil!lled Rod Brind'Amour, center, to a

multiyear contrsct
ST. LOUIS BLUES-R~•la-1 Orca
Gilhert, left winJ. "
TAMPA BAY LIGIITNINGNamed Chril Reichart atrenath ud. COII.di·
tioniar; coach.
~
WASHINGTON
CAPI'tALS Sianed Craig Berube, len •ina. to a fouryear contract; and Keith Jone&amp;, riaht wina;
Ke11in Kaminski, center: aad Ken Klee,
dcfeueman, to one-year eontracll.

BAt't(NG- E.Martlnez, Sullie,
.359; CDavil, Ca.lilornia, .JotS: O'Leary,
Boston, .340; Knoblauch, Minnesota,
.)}4; Thome, Clenland, .331 ; Lorton,
Cleveland, .330; Baerp, Oevela.nd, .128.
RUNS - Edmonds, California, 96;
Phillip1, Califomia, 95 ; E.Martinez. Seat·
tit . 85 ; Salmon, Califonia, 82: Ja .
Valentin, Bo1too, 78; Thorn~~~, Chica(J.o,
15; Belle, Clevelud, 74. 1
RBl - Edmonda, Calirornia , 90;

I'&lt;L
.622
.560

West Division
.
Loa Angels

bact.

Leaders
AMERICAN LF.AGUE

National League
East Division

..

serve. Waived Chad Eaton, dden&amp;ivt
r.aclt1e; Ed Howard, wide receiver; Wayoe
Cook, quarterback; Bobby Gray, Sam
Hardy and leroy Truitt, offe01ive line·
men; Geor'e Terroll, tiahl end; Troy
M!ll1, ruooLnll back; and Mike Gillock

Milwiiube 3. Detnrit 2
l.Sean.le 6, Minnel0tl2
C.knland 9. Baltimm: 6
.
Cllifoulia II, Chlcaao 10, 10 inninp
OU1and 13. ~&lt;.ansa~ City S
Only pmea JCheduled
Tye.d.Jiy•• Cunn
Toronto (llentgen 9-9) a1. Odmit

New York (llitchc:CH::k s. 7) at BDtlon
(Cormier .S-2), 7:05p.m.
·
Cleft.Jand (NBJY 10-4) at Baltimore

..

FOOTBALL

National Football Le~~t~~w
ARIZONA. CARDINALS - Placed
Cedric Davis, cornerback, on injured re·

M.Vaughn, Boston, 90: TMIIrtiDCZ. Seat·
tie , •16; MRa-mlrCi , Cli!VfliDil, 14;
Thomas. Cbicqo. 81; SaJrmn, California,
110; Belle, Oen~laad, 18.
.
HITS- Baerp. ClevelaDd, 13S;
Kooblauch, Miooeacta, 126; E.Martiae;r;,
Seattle, 126; Salmon, CaHtomia, 123; Ed·
moods. California, 122; Nixon, Texu,
121 ; Curtis, Odtoi~ 120; Pucbl:t., Min·
De.t~la, 120.
OOUBLES-E.Martitlel, Stattle, 31;
Belle, Cleveland, 34; Pl.lckett, Mlnneaota
27: DiSarcina, Ca.iifomia, 26; o· Lea-y'
B.Piton, 2S; IoV•Ientin, 8o1ton 2'.'
Scitza-, Milwaukee, 2S.
'
'
TRIPLES-Lorton, Clneland, 10:
Knoblauch, Minnesota, 7; R.Aiomar
Toronto, 7; ByAndenon, Bllltimc.-e 7· 7
are tied wilb !i.
' '
HOME ilUNS- Thom,u , Chicaao.
31; M.Vaugbn, 801too, 30; Salmon Call·
fornia, 21; Ed moods , Caiiforni~ 27 ·
MRamlrez, Clcvel1pd, 26: TMartinu: !'
SeatUt:, 26; Belle, CJevelaod, 26· MeG·
wire, Oakla.nd,l6.
'
STOLEN

K~~

BASES-TOoodwin,

City. 3l;' Knoblauch, Minn50la,
• 30; N1100, Texu, 29; UohDIOD, Chica&amp;o•
-!8: L1:1flua, el!!nlaod, 21!1: Coltmin,
Kanau City, 2'~1enderson, O..k.land,

24

PITCIUNG (9 Decii!Oni)-Walt...
field, 80atoo, ~-4-1, .933, 1.6!1: Belinda,
Boaton, 1·1, .119; 3.29; Rlohnaon, Seattle, 12·2, .8.S7, 2.18; langston, Ca.iiforllia,
11 -2, .146, 4.05; DWella, Oerrolt, 10·3,
.769, 3.04; DeM.-tJa", Clo•cland, 9· 3,
.750, 2.11: 1--Iauoa, Botton, 11·4, . 733

35S.

'

STRIKEOtn'S-RJohtiJon, Sealtle
206; Finley, California. 14lt Stottlemyre~
Oakland, 131: Appirr, Kanau Ci~, IJS;
Colle, New Yort, 133; Hanlon, BoatoD,
109'. JMcDowell, New York, Ia;!.
SAVES-Mesa, Cleveland, ).4; ~
Smith. California, 29; Eckersley, Oai·
lud, 22; Wetteland, New Yort, :21:
RHerna.ndu, Chicago, 20: MoDiaomery
Kan111 City, 20; AJUilera, Boston, 20. '

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATII.NG - TOwyDD, Saro Dieao,
.365; Sesu•, Montreal, .330; Duoatoo
Chicago, .329; Bichetu:, Colorado, .326;
Bottilla, New Y?"t. .325; ODell, Houatoa,
,)24; ClrK:e, OlJCaiO, .319.
RUNS--Bigio, HOU4ton, 86; Finley
San Diqo, 13: Bo11dl, Su Prmcllco 19:
Lartl11. Cioclolllll, 71; Moodeli, Llii·An~
aela, 6~ McRae, Cb,jcaao, 68; LWatker,

Colorado, 61.

RDI-Bichettc, Colora.il, 86; ODell,
HoUitoo, 80: Karr01, Loa Anaelu, 7S;
LWalier, Colorlldo, 73; Galarraaa, Col·
ontOO, 73: Sou, C!.ieqo, 72; Bofldt,. Sll'l
Frucilco, 12.
Hry'S-DBdl, Houaton.. Ill: Finley,
SID D•eao . 131 ; TOwyu, San Dieao,
I 10; Bichette, Colorado, 129:· McRae,
Chi&lt;O&amp;O, 120; &lt;lnlce, Chi&lt;qo, 120; J&lt;.rOI, Lot ADBelet. I J8.
DOUBLES-Grace, Chiciao, 39;
Cordero, Montreal, 29; R.Sanden,
Cincinnati, Ht McRae, Chicaao, :27:

::,:~o2~:· ~~:i~020~!.:cr;;t~~~~~
New Yort, lS.

The 1995 edition of the Meigs
Marauder golf team ba s beg un
preparation for Lb is fall' s season.
The Marauders have won the TriValley Conference golf crown for
the past five conseeuti ve 'SCasons.
Coach John Krawsczyn will rely
on some young players in lhis season' s effon as Meigs lost three outstanding golfers ~ ia graduation.
The 1995 Me igs team will be
led by sophomores David Anderson , C lay Cro w, a nd M ick Barr
who co ntribut e d greatly to th e
team 's success last year as freshman and h ave rec o rded s ome
excellent qualifying scores this season. In summer golf, Anderson participated in the San Diego-Torrey

mar'

METS FINISH SECOND - The Chesler Mets
captured second phice in the Big Bend Pee Wee
Girls Tournament held at New Haven. The Mets
also won third place In the regular-season standings. In front are (L-R) Tiffany White, Misty
Roberts, Sara Mansfield, Jenny Long, Kristin

eight singles as Cincinnati ended
By MIKE FLAM
its four-game losing streak.
Associated Press Writer
The Rockies have fallen out of
· No Greg Maddux, no problem .
Despilc losing their three-time first place in the NL West by losing
Cy Young Award winner to illness six of seven on lheir road trip and
Monday night, the Atlanl.a Braves nine of 13 overall. The Rockies are
turned anolher late-inning deficit just 6-for-45 ( 133) with runners in
into anolher comeback victory .
scoring position during !be road
David Justice hit a two -r11n trip.
.
homer in lhe bottom of the eighth
, Burba (7-2) extended the Rockinning to give the Braves a 4-3 vic- ies' history of poor play at Rivertory over Florida and end the Mar- front Stadium, where they're 2:13.
lins' winning .streak at six games. .
Kevin Ritz (9-8) lost his !bird
The win was Atlanta's 21st vic- consecutive start.
tory - and its 14th since July 4 Cubs 5, Dodgers 4
in its last at-bat, The visiting MarBrian McRae singled borne lhe
lins lost for only lhe third time in winning run in lhe lllh inning and
17 games.
Sammy Sosa hit !be IO,OOOI.h home
"There's nothing ho-hum about run in Chicago history as !be Cubs
this," Atlanta manager Bobby Cox won at Los Angeles.
·
said. "You'd ra!ber have them
Todd Haney, starting in place of
wrapped up early, but without ¥ood injured second baseman Rey
pitching, we don't cnme back.'
Sanchez, led off !be 11 tb wilh a
Maddux fell ill with flu-like single off reliever Mark Guthrie (Osymptoms before the game, and J). lie advanced to second on a
rookie Matt Murray made his first ·sacrifice by Scott Servais and
major league start.
.
scored on McRae' s hit to left field.
"We couldn't consid~r it a
Haney went 3-for-5 and is b'itbreather because we didn't ba vc to ting 409.
fad: Maddux," Marlins manager
Randy Myers (1-2) earned the
Rene Lacbemann said. "We're not victory despite blowing his fifth
a good enough team to say !bat just save in 32 opporrunitics w.ben he
because one guy is not pitchi-ng, allowed the Dodgers to tie the
we're going to win the game."
game in the lOth on Chad
Murray gave up two runs on Fonville's RDI single. Terry
three hits and four walks in 4 2-3 Adams got !be last three outs for
innings.
his first major league save.
Justice hit a 3-2 pitch over lhe Padres 6, Pirates 5
center-field fence off Yorkis Perez
Steve 'Finley, batting .423 the
(1-4) for bis 16th homer.
last 23 games, singled borne !be
"We don't go out there throw- winning run with two outs in the
ing our first three at-bats.11way just e•ghth inning as host San Diego
so we can bit our fourth one," rallied after blowing a 5-0 lead.
Jones said. "I don't know how to
Archi Cianfrocco and Brad Ausexplain i 1. It just happens that mus drew one-out walks in the
way."
eighth off Jason Christiansen (I -3).
Greg McMichael (6-1) pitched One out later, Finley singled borne
the final two innings for the Cianfrocco.
Braves.
_
Doug Bochtler (3-0) allowed
"It's been a long time since two runs in two innings, and
someone came back and Snatched Trevor Hoffman worked !be ninth
one from us like that,'' l'lorida for his 22nd save.
,
starter Jobn Burkett said. "But we Expos 5, Phillies 1
bad won six straight! and we' ll get
Moises Alou hit a two-run
another streak going.''
homer in sparking visiting MontreIn other National League games. al to its sixth win in Seven games
Cincinnati blanked Colorado 4-0, and into second place, one game
Chicago clipped Los Angeles 5-4 ahead of Philadelphia in !be NL
in II innings, San Die30 nipped , East.
.
Pittsburgh 6-5. Montreal beat
The Expos trailed 1-0 in the
Philadelphia 5- I and San Francisco sixlh before F.P. Santangelo doudefeated St. Louis 4-1.
bled with one out off Paul Quantrill
Reds 4, Rockies 0
(9-8), and Alou followed with his
Dave Burba and two relievers 14th borne run of the season.
held Colorado's slumping lineup to
Pedro Martinez (II ' 7) atlowed

'

Smith &amp; Meadows
-a·i nong winners
in latest KVD races
Among the 200 -plus cars in
attendance Saturday at Kanawha
Valley Dragway in Southside,
W.Va ., the 1971 Dodge Demon ·
driven by Keith Smilh of Gallipolis
and owned by Dan &amp; G Ioria Ours
of Crown City won tlae Pro Division.
In the Modified Division, Steve
Meadows of Point Pleasant, W .Va.
won with his 1980 Monza. Behind
him were Randy Kent· of Jackson
and Kevin Venoy of Long Bottom.
In the Street Division, Brian
Potter of Huntington, W .Va. won
with his I %8 Ranchero. Behind
him were Loretta Burd of Crown
· City and Don Ashbaugh of Waverly.
In the Junior Dragster Division,
Jonathan Clay captured the win.
This week ' s agenda bas the
International Hot Rod Association
(IHRI\) hosting the final WCS
points meet of Lbe season. On Sat·
urday, there will be feature qualifying and record runs as well as a
two-braCket race. On Sunday, Aug .
21, lhere will he elimination rounds
for the points holders.

'

.

Pines Qual ifi e r played at NC R
Counlf]l Club in Day ton and in the
Ohio Rotary Jr. Champ io nsh ip at
Sa lt Fo r ~ wh e re he s hot an 84 .
Both Crow and Dm pl ayed in tlte
Ohio Optimi s t qu a li fi e r at
Zane&gt; ville wilh Crow ad vancing to
th e s tate tourn a me111 a t Middle town . At th e Sa il Fork Ro tary
Champi onship , Crow s hot a fine
round of 82 an d Barr sho t 88.

Other ret urning Jett er winn ers
from last year's team are sophomor es Jar o d Warn e r and Sc a n
0' Brien' who saw limited pl aying
time but will play a major role on
this season's team .
Junior Joe Hili has shot s..o me
fine qualifying rounds this year and

wi ll co nte nd fo r a s tart ing spo t.
O th e r. playe r s arc jun io r Dav id
He i ght o n, ' SO ph omore s S teve
Mc C ullo ugh. Gar y Ac re e, J. R .
Scarberry and Ja mes. Hud son .
Meigs freshman players tl1is season
are Josh Price and Jerod W oods .
Coach Krawsczyn will again be
ass is ted by Jack Slav in. Se ni o r
Matt O' Bryanl will serve U1e Me igs
go lf team as a student assistalll .
The go iJ tea m will open thi s
season' s matches by participatin g
in Lbe 22 team Lancaster lnviLational a t Valley View on August 16th.
Th e TVC matches will be gin on
Au g ust 29th at O xbow in an II
te a m e ve nt ho s ted by l'c d e ral
Hocking...

,Mickey Mantle's team·mates to
-serve as·p.allbearers.at fun~ral
Chevalier and Tirtany Hensley. Standing· teamrna les are Alison Rose, Stephanie Young, Clnda
Clin'ord, Julie Bailey, Tiffany ·Hollon and Carrie
Crow. Behind them are coaches Arch Rose and
Kirk Chevalier.

R~eds

Braves rally, trip Marlins 4-3;

Aalhony, outfielder. from lho U-day diiabled list
PriTSbUROH PIRATES- Actint·
ed Cll'ioa Garcia• .econd hueman, from
t.he l S-day dinbled list. Optioned Marlt
JohMOII , fiTII bueman , lO ta.Jpry oflhe
Pac1fic CO&amp;Iit League.

dticks, linebacker.
.
· JACKSONVILLE

BDiton9, New Yort 3

was harmonious and c o ve red a
variety of subjects .
' 'Are there people who have different views on labor and re venue
sharing? Of CQ~!,fse, there are. But I
would say !ley are le ss pro nounced.
"We covered every subject that
confronts us today from TV to
keting to sLate of lhe game to labor
to revenue sharing and bad a very
healthy discu~ion on all subjects.''
The game's TV paCkage took a
hit when NBC and ABC
announced they were pulling out of
The Basebali Network after this
season: The uncertain labor picture
was a factor. ·
Owners soon are expected to
appoint a new negotiator. One
report bas identified him as Randy
L. Levine, New York City's commissioner of labor relations. Selig
would not confjrm or deny that
Levine would he appointed to lhe
post
·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. ·-

seven hits in six innings.
The Phillies lost for !be lith
time in 12 games and have scored
just34 runs in lhose 12 losses.
Giants 4, Cardinals 1
William VanLandingham (4-2)
remained undefeated at Candlestick

Browns maul Bears 55-13

win

Park by allowing one run in eight
innings. lie j$ now 8·0 in 15 eareer
starts in San Francisco.
Royce Cla)'lll!l hit a. pair of R,BI
singles off Donovan Osborne (0-5),
who is winless since Aug. 18,
1993.
.

1995 FOOTBALL PREVIEW
•
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30TH
FEATURING

•MEIGS MARAUDERS •SOUTHERN TORNADOES
•EASTERN EAGLES
•WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
eOHIO STATE
•OHIO UNIVERSITY
•CINCINNATI
•CLEVELAND
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE

.,

GANT HOMERS - Cincinnati's Ron Gant rounds third base
after hitting a two-run homer off Kevin Ritz In the fifth inning at
Riverfront Stadium Monday nighL The Reds snat&gt;ped a four-game
losing streak with a 4-0 victory. ,(AP

----Sports briefs---SEATil..E (AP)- Ken Griffey
Jr., who broke .his left wrist when
be crashed into the center-field
wall in Seattle on May 26, was
cleared by doctors to rejoin the
Mariners.
11 ..
He wil1 start in center field

Tuesday night in Minnesota, manager Lou Piniella said. Griffey
received the OK to play again after
visiting Mariners team physician
Dr. Larry Pedagana.
Griffey went 0-for-'3 Sunday

-

.

Fair "Thank You" Ads

:·: Rijo will make decision on surgery·Sunday

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• For additional ad sizes and prices, pleas~ call

:

•••••••

Gene Butlig, former league presipita! last week.
DALLAS (AP) - Teammates
dent Dobby Brown and Donald
offi
c
iat
e
at
the
Called
upon
to
who last week said Lbcir goodbyes
Marr. president o f the Baseball
funer
a
l
was
Dobb
y
Ri
c
hard
so
n,
row (1-r): Coach John ~rawsczyn, Clay Crow,
to Mickey Mantle arc back to carry
GOING FOR SIX IN A ROW - The Meigs
flail of Fame in Cooperstown,
another
Yank
ee
s
teammate
and
Sean O'Brien, Dave Anderson, Jared Warner, his casket.
Marauder golr learn will be shqoling for its sb&lt;th
N.Y
.. confinned Mond"JJ. that they
now a lay minisicr whose counsel
Mantle" s survivors - his wife,
Steve McCullough·, Mlck Barr and Joe Hill.
TVC golr crown in • row this fall. Pictured ln
would
aucnd Lbe funeral.
Meigs will open up non conference action on Merlyn, and three of his four sons helped ease Mantle ' s final hours .
the front row rrom lert to right are: Jered
The
sanctuary at the church
Two other well -known personalWednesday in the 22team Lancaster Invitation- - want privacy , but yielded to
Woods, Josh Price, David Heighton, JR Scarscats
1,500 ,
but
church
Mantle's popularity and arranged a ities were part of the funeml: NBC
berry, Gary Acree and James Hudson. Second
al.
spokeswoman
Gayle
Baxley
said
broadcaster Bob Costas planned to
public funeral today . Thousands
two
otl1er
areas
were
set
up
with
)I
were expected at Lovers Lane deliver the eulogy and country
.
video
feed
to
handle
the
overflow
United Methodist Church, where singe'f Roy Clark was to sing.
ofmoumcrs.
•
"Ycst,erday When I Was Young ."
he supported a program for runA special area was roped off iJl
The family scheduled a private
Former Colorado receiver aways and homeless youth" .
CLEVELAND (AP) - Rookie and returned it 28 yards for a' score.
"They know that Mickey was a . wake during the morning, to .be fol- the sanctuary for Yankees teamMichael Westbrook, selected fourth
Eric Zeier is playing it cool, saying
Kenny Shedd then fumbled
shared
personality," said Mantle' s lowe d by lhc 2 p.m. C DT p•blic mates and other ballplayers ano
draf~
arrived
in
overall
in
!be
April
all the right things, refusing to ruf- away the ensuing kickoff, setting
dignitflries.
:
Washington late Monday to end his longtime friend and attorney. Roy service.
fle any feathers. He's not about to up the second of White's scoring
.
Mantle
,
who
received
a
liver
True
said
Mantle
would
be
laid
of
Dallas.
True
26-day
boldouJ.
suggest !bat be's after Vinny Tcs- runs for a 35-7 Cleveland lead at
Former Ne w York Yankees to rest in a crypt ..at Sparkmml-llill- transplant June 8, died at Baylcir
Westbrook's agen~ Steve Zucktaverde' s job.
lhe half.
·
University Medical Center in hi's
"Vinny is the No. I guy here.
In all, the Bears (1·1) turned the er, said lhe deal was almost done Whitey l'ord , Dill " Moose" crcst Funeral llomc. ncar his son
after a weekend of negotiations Skowron, Hank Dauer , Bobby Dilly. who suffered a heart attack sleep with his wife and son, David,
He bas absolutely earned that bali over on six straight possesat his side. llc is also survived b~
with Washington general manager Murcer, Yogi Berra and Johnny and died last year at the age of 36.
spot," Zeier said Monday night sions - Lbree interceptions and
The
Mamlcs
hoped
the
public
sons Mickey Jr. and Danny.
•
the
Blanchard
were
pallbearers
for
Charley
Casserly.
after be directed a 35-point first Lbrec fumbles.
.
1 tum into a spectaTrue
said
Mantle's
family
probservice
wouldo'
hard-hitting
center
fielder
who
died
"We're
just
working
ori
a
few
half that vaulted the Cleveland
"I apologize for wasting Clevecle "because Mickey never did like ably would have no public corr(Lbings now," Zucker said. "If all Sunday of liver cancer at age 63.
Browns past the·Chicago Bears 55- land's time," coach Dave WannstSkowron
and
those kinds of things," True said.
mcnt until after the funeral.
Blanchard,
Ford,
weD,
I
lhink
we'U
have
somegoes
: 13.
edt said. "There· wasn't really any
in
.UJe
hosAmerican
League
president
Bauer
all
visited
Mantle
thing
to
say
(Tuesclay)."
In two games .- one against !be .. one area that we showed any
Westbrook and Florida State
; New York Giants' scrubs in !be progress in, and !bat is very disapdefensive
end Deuick Alexander,
; ·fourth quaner a week ago, and one pointing to me. The only reason for
are
Lbe
only
unsigned frrst·round
·· against the Bears' first team mistakes like sb&lt; turnovers and· all
picks.
Alexander
was selected lith
· ·Zeier bas gone 22-for-27 for 277
those penalties is simply a lack of
by Minnesota.
yards and two touchdowns, without concentration. We weren't into it
Panthers
1
an interception.
tonight."
Frank _Reich, a backup d•ring
Neither Walsh nor Erik Kramer
. He also scrambled for a 7-yard
his 10-ye'ar career in Buffalo, was
score Monday night, diving aero- looked sharp in the contest for lhe
Bears' starling job, although
· batically fortherightpylontocomselected Carolina's starting quaner· plete the run.
Kramer had Lbe statistical edge. He
back by coach Dom Capers.
He completed the last 13 pdSses was 6-for-10 for 80 yards with one
"' With two weeks to go in the
he attempted, going 14-for-16 for . touchdown and one interception, to
preseason, we would like to get
!58 yards in his fU'st start in-place Walsh's 4-for-13 for 54 yards with
more continuity," Capers said.
of the ailing Testaverde . Tes·- one touchdown and two intercep"Our offense bas scored' two
.
taverde was to be discharged from lions. .
touchdowns. Frank Reich was !be
Lbe bospitai today after undergoing
"It was up and down.'' Kramer · quarterback:" .
treatment for an infection in his said. ·.. I. bad one bad decision on
Rekh and Jack Trudeau staged a
leg.
!be interception. We struggled as a
close battle since the expansion
"I Lbink Eric did a nice job," . team. We .know we're capable of
team's voluntary workout program
- ·c•o'-ac"'b Bill B-eltc'btck said: ·-" He~Iaymg m.uch better." ,
in April.
Rashaan Salaam, the Bears
played behind lhe line, and the way
"From a player's perspective, it
we were running !be ball, it didn't frrst-round pick, gained 60 yards on
doesn't get much better Lban it is
his first 14 carries of the preseason,
really take much."
right here. right now," Reich said.
Belicbick emphasized that Tes- all in !be second balf.
"There's such a commitment to .
''Hopefully I can do some
taverde remains the starter, and the
winning here from the coaches and
coach wouldn't be drawn into a things I did tonight against a frrst·
from the organization."
discussion of whelher Zeier was team defense instead of a third
Oilers
ahead of free -agent pickup Jim team,"' he said. "The defense (in
Offensive
tackle
David
McMahon for the No. 2 job.
the NFL) is a lot faster, and !be
Williams ended his holdout and
McMahon bas only been ill camp boles close up a lot, lot quicker.
practiced with Houston as talk conYou don't have much time to dance
for a week and did not play.
tinued of a possible move to ·
"I don't make those decisions,"
around in the backfield. You've got
Nashville, Tenn.
Zeier said. "I still Lbink I have a to bit it and go."
"I took a li!Ue extended vacalong way to go and I still have a lot Cowboys
tion. but I'm glad to he back, back
of !bings to do. My goal here is to
All-Pro offensive tackle Erik
at work," said Williams, best
get better every time I step on the Williams, feared lost for half a sea- known for "Baby gate," a road
field."
son, worked out Monday for !be
game he missed two years ago
The 55 poipts were the. second- frrst time since an October car accibgcau§e his wife gave birth thar
most the Browns (1-1) have scored dent.
weekend .
The 6-foot-6, 322-pound line·
Williams, the team's "fran·
in an exhibition game; surpassed
only by a 56-point outburst against man, w.ith a brace on his rigbt knee,
chisc" player. had been holding
the Los Angeles Rams in 1964 . participated in 1-on- I passing
out for a ,multiyear contract, bul
Lorenzo White and Ricky Powers driUs. He sat out of the more intenagreed to a one-year, $2.7 million
.
each ran for two touchdowns. sive 7-on- 7 drills and left pmctice . deal.
·
Chisfs
White in the rlfSt half and Powers earlY&gt;
1
in the second.
"Thank God," said fellow line·
Free agent receiver Webster
Slaughter practiced with Kansas
Cleveland took control with a man Nate Ncwtqn, who cbauf. 29-point second quilrtcr that includ- feured Williams ?"to !be, ~cld in. a · City for the nrst time Monday.
ed !brec touchdowns in lhe last two golf carl, procla1mtng, The Btg
"I did some good things out
there but I also did some bad
minutes of lhe half. Zeier started E's back I The Big E's back!"
lhings. Overall, it went wcU," said
Dallas coach Barry Switzer said
· the late flurry with his 7-yardTD
run. and on the second play of WIIllllllls •s hkely to sec acu~n. m . Slaughter, who signed last week .
"A lot of teams passed on me
Chicago's next posses.sion, at least one of lhe two remammg
because they !bought I was burt.
linebacker Mike Caldwell mter- exb1b1uon games.
I'm n01 hun: ·
:;: repled a pass from Steve yYalsb
R~!!skl!IS

992-2156

• ••••••••

•
••
••

•••••••••••••

•
•
•
•••
••

1 Col x 2 inDotted Line Box

,

$950 .
•

•••
•••

:.:
CINCINNATI (AP)- lose .
· ; . Rijo will play catch Sunday, then
~ decide whether to bave surge/)' on
"': bis sore right elbow.
J~
The Cincinnati Reds starter
. : ' hasn't felt much improvement in
~; the elbow, wblcb has sidelined him ·
,.,. most of the season . Dr. James
:,... : Andrews advised him last Tuesday
~: to continue resting, t11en gi vc lhe
~: elbow a test.
~.
Rijo will toss a ball about 60
·~ : feet for 10 minutes Sunday . If
.,. . there's any pain, be' II bead to
:~: Binningham, Ala , on T'llesday and
••
• , .. reques I surgery.
"This time I'm doing the talk:, · lng,''' Rijo said. "If it hurts, I'm
: ~ going to do the talking."
.
:~ · · Andrews has repeatedly advised
. • . rest instead of career-threatening
~ surgery that would sideline Rijo
"-·-nine to 18 months . Doctors would
:;:, . have to cut out a calcification in the
::'· ligament and might have to replace
:; !be ligament-;:- so-called "Tommy
• John surgery .
~=
Rijo said !be pain bas subsided
·~ with rest, but hasn't gone away.
~
"Sometimes when I pat people,
..;, it bwts,'' Rijo said Monday. "This
· moming ' wben llried.to turn over

•r

in bed, il was sore."
Rijo is mentally prepared for
surgery. He said the only lhing that
would de lay ·it aga,ih would be a
pain-free throwing session .Sunday.
. And that's something he considers highly improbable .
"The only !bing you hope for
Sunday is a 'l'iracle," he said.
Team meeting
Manager Davey ~ohnson held a
10-minute meeting with his players
before a game Monday night
against Colorado to try to ease
uncertainty over !be roster.
,. ' '
Players we.r e taken aback when
Lbe Reds obtained utility Infielder
Mariano Duncan from Philadelphia
last Monday. General manager Jim
Bowden claimed Duncan off
waivers, !ben worked a trade, to
prevent Atlanta from getting him.
The Reds hardly ·needed another
backup infielder. They assigne~
pitcher Rick Reed to the minors to
open a roster spot for Duncan.
.Cincinnati bas gone 1-5 since
the acquisition.
"Part of my meeting is to tell
guys, _Tknow you guys are .uncasy
about who' s here, who's going, all

that stuff,' " Johnson said . "(It's)

tb quell 'any fears that we're going
to constantly be making changes,
so we can have a little more settling effect."
Since the All-Star break, the
Reds have changed 20 percent of
their roster Lbrough two pitchingrelated trades and Lbe acquisition of
Duncan, which has cut into others'
playing time.
"We ' ve bad so many changes
and so many things - disabled tist
(moves) or trades or wbatever and role changes," Johnson said.
" It's very difficult when you're
successf•l and roles change. Everybody wants to play and everybody
probably bas 'a case for being in the
lineup ...
Surprising move
The move to activate outfielder
Eric Anthony and return Brian
Hmiter to !be disabled li,sl Monday
was a bit of a surprise.
Anthony, recovering from a torn
patellar tendon, was still suffering
from a virus that shortened bis
weekend rehabilitation stay at
Triple-A Indianapotis.

•

Advertising Deadline
August 23rd
,. Call Dave or Bob At
992-2155 For More Information

The Daily Sentinel

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

.Tuesday,August15,1995

Tuesday,August15,1995

Pomefoy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Emergency room nurse unduly loses patience ·with patients
"urgent. " Usually, some drunk got
first priority. While we waited ,
we were lucky if they gave -us
somethtng for my husband. to
upchuckin.Afterawhile, webrought
our own bucket
~:::;!';;",:~
Sometimes we came in after hours
or on holidays because we had no
Dear Ann Landers: I would like COntra lover when my husband would
to respond 10 the R.N. in Sacramento get stck. Cancer doesn't keep a 9-towho was ·disgusted with patients in 5 schedule. By the way, the nurses
the emergency room who complained and doctors were paid double for
about how long tlley had to wait
aftcr-oour visits and "olidays and we
'
My husband suffered with were charged extra'' to compensate
pancreatic cancer for two years, so them.
we had a lot of experience with
That nurse who wrote should try
emergency room s. During hi s to understand where we are coming
periodic bouts, he had severe from before getting fed up with her
abdominal pain and vomiting. His patients and their families. We are
case, however, was not considered nervous wrocks from worrying about

Ann
·L d
· an erS ,.

·,..,_too_

our loved ones.
In tile interest of fairness, I hope
you will print the other side of the
story ... EMERGENCY-ROOM
WIDOW IN CHULA VISTA ,
CALIF.
DEAR E.R.: Your rebuttal was
excellent. On behalf of all those folks
who have walked in your moccasins,
thanks for giving proper balance to
the picture.
Dear Ann Landers: Please answer
this soon I'm going crazy and my
· 15 years might 'leave me
husband of
if this problem isn't resolved.
Mom had a big fight with my sislel;
"Shelley." two years ago. Since then.
Shelley has refused to let Mom in her
house. This means Mom has been cut
off completely from her three

grandchildren. Consequently, Mom
hasbeenatmeeversincethelightto
tenninate my relationship wilh my
sister. I am veryc)ose to Shelley and
can't bear 10 think of ending our
relationship.
Mom calls me two or three times a
week to say if 1 really loved he~ 1
would have·nothing to do with my .
sister. I wind up crying, and my woole
day is ruined.
I don"! want to end my relationship
with either my mother or my sister
because )Jove them both very much.
Can you help? .• NO CITY. NO
STATE
DEAR N.C .N.S. : The ideal
solution would be to get an unbiased
person, a mutual friend, a psychologist or a family counselor. to

negotiate a peace set~cment between your qu~slion is yes: There are'
Shelley and your moth er. For a recordedtnsWlcesoftV:mswhowere
~otller and daughte r to go ·through fathered by m3\Cs of dt.fferent races.
hfe not spcakm g would be a real A good attorney Will kilow where tO
tragedy.
lindtlledocumentallon .
diffi
If no settlement can be reached,
Gemo!'theDay . The~ost ICU1l
you must remain totally impartial and chmces m life are .deculing whtch
ms1st tllat your mother lay off and not bndges to cross and whtch to burn.
persist in trying to drag y~u into her
fl~ve trouble sluplllg at night~
camp.
.don 1 want to get mYOI:fd m.a Gvtl.
Dear Ann Landers: Is it possible "A Col/ecr~~n of My ravo~d-st~
for a woman to conce1vc by -two of the Day IS the perfect
different men and have twins witll mar.. Send a s~lf-addresstd, long,
·
· en~ l ope and a check
two d'ff
1 erent f athers.,.
busmns-s1ze
.
Pleaseconsultyourexpens. lneed or money order for $5.25 (thiS
to know for reasons I cannot go into includes postage and handlmg) to :
now but you ca.1 probably guess. -- Co/lee/Jon . clo A.nn Lander~, P.~i
READER IN MESQUITE, TEXAS
Box 11562. Ch1cago, Ill. 6061 .()5
DEAR TEXAS : The answer to ( In Canada. $6.25 ).

Call

- - - - - - - I n the ser\licA-------}'RECKER RETURNS • Pomeroy's Jason
Frecker is pictured in action on Monday night at
the Meigs County Fair. Frecker is a veteran

Emmitt M. Furner, Jr.
Reserve.
Emmiu M. Furner, Jr., finished
Furner is a student at West Vir·
leadership training at ROTC ginia University.
advanced camp at Fort Bragg,
The son of Emmitt Furner of
Fayetteville, N.C.
Coolville, he graduatcd)n 1990
The camp, auended by cadets · from Federal Hocking High
normally between their t.hird and School.
fourth year of college, includes
instruc.lion in communications, Charles B. Wolre
management and survival training.
Navy Petty Officer Second
Graduation from college and Class Charles B. Wolfe 1 a 1984
completion of the camp results in a Southern High School graduate,
commission as a second lieutenant has finished half of a six-month
in the U.S. Army, Guard or deployment aboard the aircraft carrier U.S .S. Theodore Roosevelt in

molo cross racer. Monday's night action at the

Meigs County Fair is .part or the Ohio County
Fair Championship.

OUT OF THE GATES • Action is rast and
rurious as racers batlle ror the lead corning out

or the starting gates in Monday evenings moto
cross races held at the Meigs County Fair.

I

Sox win 12th in row; .Indians triumph

•

.'

.t

•

. '

•

DROPS THROW · Ballimore;s Cal Rlpken loses a late throw
rrom Orioles catcher Chris Holies In ninth Inning at Camden
Yar&lt;Js Monday. Cleveland's Ken Lofton was credited with a steal
on the piny. The Indians ralli(d to win, 9-6. (AP)
·
I

.

'Matchless Ball'
returned to museum
BALTIMOR£ (AP) - A baseball autographed by Babe Ruth,
Lou Gehrig and members of t.he
1934 American League All-Star
tea111 is back at the Babe Rutb
Museum after the man who bought
the stolen ball decided to return it.
Michael Gibbons, the museum's
executive director, noticed the ball
was missing from its display case
on Friday, prompting lhe museum
to issue a public plea for its return.
The ball is known as the
"Matchless Ball" because of Ute
number and caliber of players who
have signed it. II was ·signed by 22
members of the 1934 American .
League AU-Star Team.
Although lhe worth of the ball is
hard to determine, museum officials sat it could be worih as much 1
as $1 00;000.
A caller told museum officials .
Monday that. be had bought the
ball, not realizing what it was.
After listening to news reports, he
decided to return it. Tbc ball was
found a half hour later in a paper
bag at an undisclosed location in
Baltimore.
Gibbons said be noticed. tile ball

was missing from its display case
about 10 a.m. Friday. He said it
could have been Ullcen any time in
the previous,two weeks.
·
"I really was just walking by,
and it hit me," he said. "I sensed a
void there."
Gibbons walked over to the case
and .pulled at the bottom of the
half-inch thick Plexiglas case.
Instead of being securely fastened,
it gave way. He said several screws
that attach tile case to the wall had
been removed.
Dan de Ia Torre, SO, of Holiday.
Fla., said he was relieved the ball
was back in the museum. Torre
loaned the ball to the museum after
buying it in 1992 for $1 ,200 from a
small baseball card shop in
Roswell, Ga. He hopes one day to
open a museum centered around
the ball.
"My whole life and future
revolves around that ball," de Ia
Torre said.
Gibbons said he wants to know
how tile museum's security system
was breached so it can't happen
again.

Mantle's widow: He never
got to enjoy second life

•

By The Associated Pr..S
Boston's nine-game AL East
lead and 11-game. winning streak
going into i!S series . with the second-place New York Yankees had
Fenway Park tingling witll excite.men~ and the' Red Sox did notlling
to diminish it.
Homers by Mo Vaughn and~
Naehring put Boston ahead 6-2
after five innings, and the Red Sox
cruised to a 9-3 victory ..,- their
12th straight- Monday night.
In other AL games, il was
Cleveland over Baltimore 9-6,
SealUe over Minnesota 6-2, Milwaukee over Detroit 3-2, Calfomia
over Chicago II- 10 and Oakland
over Kansas City 13-5.
About the only excitement in
the Boston-New York game came
when Yankees staner Scott Kamie·
niecki (3-4) bit Luis Alicea on lbe
wrist with a pitch. Kamieniec.ki
was immediately ejected, liul
Alicea beaded towards the plate
and both dugouts emptied. No fight
erupted, though.
.
"You get mad and you want to
(reU\Iiate)," Alicea said. "But the
way (Erik) Hanson's ·throwing and
the way this team's playing, we
don't want to j!et in a fight, get
guy's hulj. Then we have more to

lose.··

Chicago at Comiskey Park.
The homer off Kirk McCaskill
(4--4), the sixth White Sox pitcher,
made a ' winner of Mike James (3·
0), who pitched 2 .2-3 innings of
scoreless relief.
Lee Smith pitched the lOth .
inning for his 29th save.
The Angels, who blew an early
7-0 lead. tied the game in the ninth
oil J.T. Snow's bit-and-run single
off Roberto Hernandez that scored ,•
Tim Salmon from flfSt base.
The White Sox scored three runs
in the seventh to take a short-lived
lead.
Athletics 13, Royals S
Rookie George Williams hit a
grand slam, helping another rookie,
Steve Wojciechowski, get his ftrst
major league win for Oakland.
Wojciechowski (I-I) went five
innings, giving up five runs on six
hits and four walks. Mike Mohler
relieved Wojciechowski after a
power surge knocked out two
banks of lights at Kauffman 'Stadium, delaying the game for 21 ininutes at the start of the bollom of the
sixth.
Billy Brewer (2-4) bas given up :
seven runs on eight hits in his last
four innings.
Oakland batted around 10 score
six runs in the ninth off two Royals
relievers.

Seles: I need to get some
matches under my belt
'
.

Farley joins 55,000 men and
women who Will enter the Navy
this year.
Farley graduated in 1995 from
Meigs High ScllooL

Gabriel C. Farley
Navy Seaman Recruit Gabriel
C. Farley, son of Diana L. Window
of Pomeroy, recently completed
U.S. Navy basic training at Great
Lakes, Ill.

RESOLUTION 6.95
AGREMENT FOR MUTUAL
AID FOR ADDITIONAL FIRE
PROTECTION
P~r~rsuant
to
the
provisions of Sections
505.44 and 717.02 of' lhe
Revised Code of Ohio and
pursuant to the laws of the
State of Ohio, this
Agreement Is entered Into
this 8th of August. 1995, by
and between tho City ol
Gallipolis, Ohio, a m-unicipal
corporation organized
under the laws of the State
of Ohio, and the Village ot
Pomeroy,
a
political
subdivision of the State of
Ohio, witnesseth:
. THAT, WHEREAS, the
respective
political

No time to get to the bank? Try the baf!kmobile
By DEB RIECHMANN.
As.•ociated Press Writer
URBANA, Md. (AP)- A vehicle stocked with tellers, computers
and an ATM machine is giving
new meaning 10 the word bankroll.
The Express Bank, which
resembles an oversized Winncba·
go, is rolling dgwn the highways of
central Maryland, stopping at fairs,
baseball games and commuter
parking lots.
Operated by Farmers and
Mechanics National Bank of Fred· ·
erick. the mobile bank is powered
by a generator and has cellular service that provides telephone and
computer hookups.
. Inside. computers and printers
are strapped to tables. Alarms and
video security systems make it as
secure as a regular branch, bank
officials say. It even has a bathroom and a hydraulic lift for the

handicapped.
Customers can use an automatic
teller machine built into its side, or
send their deposit or withdrawal
sllps through a vacuum tube, just as
they would at a drive-through
branch.
Tbey also can bank in air-conditioned comfort - services inside
the fully carpeted vehicle include
check cashing, bill paying, fund
transfers. trusts and investments.
Bankmobile employees also ·can
process mortgages and handle com·
mercial and personal loans.
"This is fantastic - good con·
cepl," said Mary Clinedinst after
paying her Visa bill and making a
checking account deposit in the
commuter parking lot alongside
Interstate 270. "It's right here. I
don't have to go anywhere. II saved
me 15 to 20 minutes.''
The mobile bank is able to serve

customers in areas that might not
support a permanent bank building,
said Faye E. Cannon, president of
Farmers an&lt;! Mechanics, a sub·
sidiary of F&amp;M Bancorp. 'fhe
mobile bank costs a third of what a
new branch would, she said.
Larry Price, publisher of Bank
Marketing Magazine in Washington, D.C., said many banks have
mobile automatic teller machines,
but there are few, if any, full-ser·
vice branches on wheels.
"This mobile bank is unique
and unusual," he said.
So is its license plate. which
reads "BNKROLL."
Richard McGinnis, senior vice
president of the bank, said people
who come in don't want to leave.
"It's as if they want to kick the
tires to say, 'Is this' thing real?"'

Classifieds!
992-2156·
Public Notice

Public Notice

however, that at no time
shall the party or parties
upon which the request Is
made be required to
respond with more than one
piece of tire apparatus upon
first alarm ; and provided
lurther, that in no case shall
thepartyheretocalledupon
or rendering · such services
be liable in damages to any
other party hereto or any of
Its
inhabitants,
or
contractors obligees, for
failure to ansWer any tire
call or other emergency, &lt;1r
f.or lack of speed in
answering any such call, or
tor ariy Inadequacy of
equipment,
negligent
operation of equipment,
failure to extinguish any
fire, or for any cause
whatsoever growing out of
such use of said fire or
other equipment and
firemen; nor shall the party
hereto, !fhlch lsaued such
call, be hable·ln any manner
of event for ~amage~ or
loss of equ1pment or
personnel aulfered by the
party or parties answe~i'pg
such call. ,
2. That tor the 'purpose ?f
this Agreeme~t, mutua.~ a1d
Is hereby defaned as The
aid r~n.dered by or belween
aubdiYI&amp;Ions of govern"!ent
owning and operating
flrellghtlng or other
emergency equipment and

shall not Include primary
response t'O any alarm of

Public Notice

Public Notice

and personal of others of
the respective parties
hereto as may then, in the
opinion of the chief or
officer In charge, of such
other party or parties hereto
as are called upon;
IT
IS
MUTUALLY
AGREED ·ev
AND
BETWEEN SAID PARTIES
AS FOLLOWS: to-wit:
1. That for the purpose of
aflordlng
additional
protection to themselve!fi,
their contractual obligees
and their Inhabitants, the
parties hereto do mutually
agree to interchange the
services of rlre departments
and use of fire apparatus
and other emergency
equipment: and to that end,
it Is hereby agreed that they,
or any one or more of them,
shall assist the party hereto
primarily responsible and
responding lo any fire alarm ..
or fire call or other
emergency from any chief
or otflcer In charge, or other
duly constituted public
offl.cial which · is 8 party of
this Agreement, with Its or
thelr llrellghtlng equipment
or
other emergency
vehicles and firemen, and
shall render like services in
combating firea or other
emergencies as it renders
to Itself and its own
Inhabitants · provided,
'

subdivisions herinabove
named · have
certain
llrellghling equipment and
firemen to operate the same
but which, in emergencies,
may be Inadequate to aHord
full and complete prote·~tion
to
said
respective
subdivision,
their
contractual obligee, the
inhabitarits therof and their
respective propertiesi and
WHEREAS, It is desirable
that in case of such
emergency said respective
parties hereto may have the
additional ·tire protection
which may be afforded by
the fireflg~tlng equipment

fire or other emergency
made by a aubdlvloion
legally responsible lor sucb
primary response."
•
3. This contract ohall be
made and remain In fuQ
force and effect tor a perlotl
of live (5) years lrom &lt;;tatt
here_
of, , provided, however,

that

any

party

ma,

terminate this con1racl
upon thirty (30) dayo notice,

in writing, to all the othlf;
parties.
•
IN WITNESS WHEREOF,
said respective politico)
subdivisions parties hereto
have hereunto caused thlt
agreement to be executed
aa provided by ordinance ot
resolution duly adopted for
t~at purpose. a . copy of
which Is hereto appended,
t~ls 8th day ol Auguot,

1995.
Clly of Galllpollo, Ohio
By MaHhew W. Coppler, City
Manager
VIllage of Pomeroy. Ohio
By John Blaellnor
Witnesse1:
Kathy Hyoell

John Mueeei
The loregolng Agreement
is hereby approved as to
form.
Dougtao C'o.wtoo
Galllpolla City Solicitor
(8) 15,22 2 tc

'

TORONTO (AP) - All the
There was Martina Navralilova,
"I thought to myself, 'This is
She also bas to block ouC
practice is over. The exhibition visiting her in Aorida, hitting with embarrassing.' I had a zillion · crowds, and she didn't know bo~
comeback event is done. Monica her, reassuring her that her strokes thoughts. This is nola way to start she would handle that situation,
Seles plays her first competitive are still there. There were Olympic
· "You know, for 2 1/2 years, I although she w11s encouraged
tenni,s match in 2 1/2 years tonight, champion Jackie Joyner Kersee and . practiced and il didn't maller if I when, in her ftrsl publicappeatance
faCing Kimberly Po at the Canadi- her husband, coach Boh Kersee,
made a shot or I dida't Now, when since· the · stabbing, she was
an Open.
running with her, working on her . it's 30-.30 in a match, it matters . embraced by medal winners at the:
Seles, co-ranked No.1 in the starninaandphysicalfitness.
You'vegottomakeil. .
Special Olympics last month in
world with Steffi Graf, doesn't
And most of all, there was her
"I decided I was going to play New Haven. ·
·
~xpect particularly great tennis
father, Karolj.
·
tennis, calm down and have fun.
from herself. It has been, rememShe watched him fight off I've always been strong mentally,
ber, a long time since she was in a prostate and stomach cancer, stunable to block out everything but the
match that counted.
ning surgeons by walking shortly
Jlle ball," she said.
"l need to gel some matches after a four-hour operation. "After
under my bell," said Seles, who is ljlat, I told myself, I had--tOil;y,"
using this event as a tuneup for the she said.
U.S. Open, which starts in two
So now she tries -two inches
weeks. "I know this will 1be so taller at 5-foot 10 1/2 and equipped
By
watched and I will do my best. But with .a different perspective on her
I have. not been in these 'surround· sport.
; Dave
ings in 2 1/2 years.''
"After I was stabbed, I live
Grate
Seles left tennis when she was every day as jf it was the last,"
slabbed by a deranged Steff Graf Seles said. "I try to do what I want
of
fan at Hamburg tm April 30, 1993: to do and whatever bappens, hapShe bas battled some tough demons .pens."
Rutland
.·
Our statistics show that -mature dll-'
since then, fighting off the mental
That was the altitude she took
vers and home owners have fewer and
scars of that episode to return to the into the exhibition comeback match
less costly losses than oth~·· age
spon.
against Navnllilova. She opened
How important is anyone?
And, she said, she's had plenty with a double fault.
groups. So 1l's only .fair to charoe you
Today's
peacock is tomorrow's
of help.
~ ·1 was.so nervous." Seleuaid.
less for your Insurance-: I
feather duster.
·
home and car with us and savr ever.
•••
more wllh .our spwal multi-policy
We've got a friend who swears
discounts.
he's not conceited- but he's
convincjld that if he'd never
been born, people would
wonder why.

NEW YORK (AP) - The wife or mantioncd it," Mrs. Mantle told
of Hall of Farner Mickey Mantle tile Dai'ly News.
.
Manac is also survived by three
said be never really had a chance to
enjoy hi$-sccond life, one without sons -David, Who was at his side
when he passed away early Sunday
alCohOl.
1
Merlyn Mantle. told th~ Ne~ in Dallas- Mickey Jr. and Danny.
York Daily News m today s edl·
Merlyn Mantle said tile death of
tions that the former New York · their son Billy, who suffered a
Yankees center fielder was just heart attack and died last year at
starting to enjoy life again, when the age of 36, moved lhem closer
cancer came along and led to h1s together.
Mantle began drinking early in
death Sunda~ at the age of 63.
• 'He could have bad a whole his professional baseball career as a
new life if it had not been for the way to deal with the death of his
cancer," Mrs. fvlantle told the father, who died at the age of 41 · '·
paper. "It's not fair in a way, but from Hodgkin's disease.
. Last year, be admitted drinking
it's God's plan. This is just very
"
.
became
a problem be couldn't kick. ,
d
sa .
The Mantles had been separated He realized he was an alcoholic
for several years, but remained and sought treatment at the Belly
Ford Center.
close.
Mrs. Mantle told the Daily
"We were best friends. Even
though Mick an&lt;W didn't live News she too began to drink heavi·
together, we were 'very close. He ly and it took a toll on their lives
. Joved me and I loved him. We were which took years to straighten out.
''I was in there part~int and
never apart. We spent holidays
together, anniversaries and bulb- doing the same thmg as Mtck, she
days - me and Mick and the chil- siud. "That' was ollr life and I was
dreno The children wanted It that a parr O'f H. I can't deny tbal. It
way. We never even talked about ruins families.''
divorce. Neither of us wanted tllat
"

,

·

Hanson retired 14 consecutive

batters between the first and the Mariners 6, Twins 2
sixth innings·. He allowed eight hits
Mike Blowers is one bitter
and walked two before being lifted pitchers don't wan! to face with the
with one out in the ninth,
bases loaded.
tjew York made it 2-0 in the
He hit his second grand slam of
first on Paul O'Neill's sacrifice fly the season to cap a five-run seventh
and Darryl Strawberry's RBI sin· as Seattle won at Minnesota. This
glc. But Boston tied it when John season, Blowers is 6-f&lt;lr-11 with
Valentin singled and Vaughn hit two homers and 17 RBis in basesKamicniecki's fust pitch into the loaded situations.
left-field screen for his career-high
Andy Benes (2-0) allowed two
30th homer.
runs in seven innings, and Jeff Nel"The tone for the game was set son earned his second save as the
in the first inning," Yankees man- Mariners await today' s scheduled
ager Buck Showalter said. "What· return of Ken Griffey Jr.
ever momentum we gained, we
Mike Trmpbley (2-7) worked
gave it right back."
the fust6 2-3"innings for MinnesoNaehring added a three-run shot, ta
his seventh, to mak'e it 6·2 in the Brewers 3, Tigers 2
fifth.
Dave Nilsson's solo bomer proIndians 9, Orioles 6
vided some needed insurance as
Manny Ramirez singled in the Milwaukee held off Detroit.
go-ahead run in Cleveland's three·
After Tigers starter C.J.
run ninth inning as Baltimore lost Nitlcowski held tile Brewers scoreits fifth straight.
.
less for six innings, Greg Vaughn
Kenny Lofton opened the ninth homered off reliever Brian Maxcy
with a single off Annando Benitez (4-2) to lie the game in the seventh.
(1-4) and stole second. With two
Nilsson's eighth homer, a solo
outs, Ramirez grounded a single shot off reliever Mike Christopher,
inside third base, ¥Jd Paul Sorrento . made it 3-1 in the eighth before the
followed with a two-run double off visitors scored in the ninth off
Jesse Orosco at Camden Yards.
Mike Fetters, who got his 18th save
Alvaro Espinoza also homered in relief of Scou Karl (4·2).
for the Indians. Paul Assenmacber Angels 11, White Sox 10
(5-2) got tile final out in tile eighth
Gteg Myers' home run in the
and Jose Mesa worked the ninth for
IOtll inning lifted California over
his major league-leading 34th save.

the Adriatic Sea near Bosnia aod
Persian Gulf near Iraq.
While in the Red Sea, Jordan's
King Hussein visited Wolfe's ship.
Wolfe has visited Greece, Israel
and the United Arab Emirates.
He joined the Navy in June
1994.

The Light

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners And
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Owners Special
. Savings.

Toac!)

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for ly

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• Gruis~ Conlrol
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..

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R~G.

Straight l•g or Boot Cut

LEVI'S JEANS

LEVI'S JEANS

99

Look on the bright side. ff it
weren't for bad habits, we
wouldn't have anything to
make New Year's resolutions
about.

~26 99

OPEN MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

Lit!Pra ..

IJ!L·Pnce
.. .,.. •..110,2q 9
Faclory Aeballl
· t3oJ

1st Tm Buyer
Allowiu.:e To

~~:'!

Oualoloo&lt;I a..,..
Ton P""" ~""""

' S•le P11ce

• Dnver S1de Alrbag'
• Rear Anti-Lodl Brakes

·.Power Steering .

• Power Brakes
• Custom Cloth lntenor
• Well Equipped!

BRAIIIIIEW '95 POIITIAC GIIAIID AM
• 16 Valve Power '
• 1Jf1ver S1&lt;1e Au'bag
• 4 Wheel Anti·lod&lt; S.aoes·
• Power Steenng

• Power Brakes

• Power Doot Lod&lt;s
• AM/FM Stereo
• Steel Bened T1"'

U!J PriCe

$21.309

FKtory Rebale

• $1 ,000

l omPeoen~

· 12 . ~1

5ale Price

$11,688

· 1631

BRAND NEW '95 CIIM 5--SEIIIES PICKUP

- $1,411

Sale Price

. $5oo

$8 '788

Llsl Prv;;c
.. $1~ ,400
Fad~ Robllte .
, • $1 ,500
Tom PiKl!n Dlscwll . ·51 012

.513.509
. 1500

faclo&lt;y R&lt;ba~ .
TomPed&amp;nOrscottt

G~AC

•• •

$30.99 14 OZ. PREWliHED

Straight l•g or Boot Cut

$

Gramdma: a ·baby sitter who
watches the kids instead of
TV.
••
People in glass houses
shouldn't throw parties. ·

• Styled Wh~S
• Well Equ1pped!

ISave '2512\

$12,888

BRAND 1ft '95llDSMOBILE CIERA 5I.
• A&lt; Condrtl011

• AMIFM Sleteo

• Onver S~ Aoltag
• Anl, Lod&lt; B&lt;akes
• Povier Steenng

·HI Sleenng

• POVIer Brakes
• Power Door lock~

• Rear Oelogget

• Cuslom C~lh Bench Se~ts
• W~l Equtpped!
!«Jib: FilM Da!Yerllf'

1s.vo •3321 1

BRAND NEW '95 BUICK LESABRE
•A1r Coi'OhOO
· · AutomatiC

·Dual Allbags
' 4 - .ln1i l ocll

· Po-,er Steenng
• Pow er Brakes

· P"'er 0001 LIICis
• Power W1r"OOws

· AMIFMSl~eo

B1a1&lt;es

OGAN . ~-..,. .,..
-I=J
2\.RNEJ! :.~?.'
nsurance

Se~vice~

214 EAST MAIN
,POMEROY
992-6687
.Auro-o---s~
L.•le Hom e Ca• Ous•neS!&gt;

7/oL"NJ IJ:o6&amp;,'/iql&amp;o

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, Rllland, Olt.

742-2211

TOU FREE 1-800·822·0417 • 372·2844
·344·5947. 422·0156

Sunday: Noon • 6

•

• 1nSteenng
•CusiOm C~lh lni~KJ
· S~Oi!Wheels
• Wol Equ!1JI!d'
NoOcc ~~

Oell¥$' 8(1"

:

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page 8 • The Daily Senti n el

llilltslane Low Rates)

WICKS

Karolyn Welsh of Tuppers Rose Barr ows, Pomeroy, gree n
Plai ns took the rosette and a $15 cabbage, fed cabbage, white tomapremium fo r the best display of toes, pe,ar yellow tomatoes, yard
. garde n produce in the farm long pole beans, beets; Val Holter,
crops/horticulture judging at the egg plant, butternut; Kim Cowdery ,
Long Bottom, red tomatoes; Susan •
Meigs County Fair Monday.
The 324 entries were judged by Wolf, yellow tomatoes, cucumbers.
David King, pear red tomatoes,
Rob in Ste phenso n, ag ric ult ure
agent from Adams County, and his yellow onions; Ladona G. Boyd,
technician, Carl Garrision. Awards Shade, cherry tomatoes,. pic kl es;
were made on the basis of proper Peggy Crane, Middleport, bush
maturity, good quality, and table beans, zucchin i, c rooked neck
grade size. Premiums were award - sq uas h, and acorn sq uas h, Li nda
ed in three places, $2, S1 and 50 Rathburn, bi-color tomatoes; Deborah Mohler, Pome roy, green pod
cents, in each class.
'In grains, the blue ribbon win - pole beans; Le nora Leifhe it, ·
ners in various varieties of corn Pomeroy. lima beans, red onions,
were Alice Thompson , Pomeroy, ho t peppers; Ro nald Wood,
Pomeroy, while onions.
y~llow , white , yell pw popcorn ;
Abbie Chevalie r, Pome ro y,
Brian Windon , Pome roy , white
swee t corn ; G. R . Thompson , pimentos; Larry Cowdery, Long
Pomeroy, yellow sweet corn; Cody Bottom. swee t peppers; Alice
. 'Dill , Long Bottom. lndian corn ; Thompson, carrots; Kathryn Mora,
· ·and Val Holter, Pomeroy, peck of Pomeroy, okra. patty pan squash, ;
Glen Kenned y, Pomeroy, fi eld
'wheat.
In potatoes. the first place rib- pumpkins; Cody DiU, pie pumpkin;
bon winn ers we re David King , Kathy Dalton,. Rutland, cushaw;
.Pomeroy, cobblers, Ke nnebecs, Darlene Hayes, Pomeroy, summer
Lasoda, and other variety; Linda squash.
In melons,Drian Windon won
Rathburn , Mi ddleport, Triumph ;
all
first places in three classes. Blue
and Brian Windon, Nancy Hall,
ribbons
for apples went to Darlene
sweet potatoes and yams.
Hay
es
for
Wine sap , Jon ath on,
Vegetable blue ribbon winners

HAULING
•

siln.
:- Chorus: Yes, yes my Lord, I'm
J!(Jing to join the heav'nly choir;
Yes, yes, yes, my Lord, I'm a
soldier of the cross.
· ' 2 ."-What' kind of crown you
going to wear? Starry crown!
· Repeat above
Starry crown I'm bound to wear,
That out-shines the glittering sun.
· Chorus

,
JUDGING CROPS -Robin Stephenson, rront, agriculture
agent from Adams County, and his te chnician, Carl Garrlslon,
judged the 324 entries In crops and horticulture classes at tbe
Meigs County Fair Monday. Recording the results ali lhe judging
proceeded was Bob Lewis.
.
Rome beauty, and to EvelY'! Hollon, Racine for another variety.
Winners of blu e ri·bbons for
o ther fru its wer e Su san Wolf,
plums; Roy Holter, Pomeroy, Concord grapes. Niagara grapes, yel low peaches, white peaches; and
Maxine Dye r, Bidwell , Keifer
pears. Cody Dill took the blue ribbon for ornamental gourds, and
Briar Dill -for dipper gourds.
Winners of blue ribbons in the
classes for the largest or longest

GARDEN DIS
Ka·i'm,, n Welsh or Tuppers
Plains is pictured here with the garden
which won her a
classes.
rosette for the best exhibit in the
•

.

spec ime ns went to Dav id Kin g,
po tato; Brian Windon, pumpkin
and waterm elon; Evelyn Hollon,
apple; Tracy Card, Potneroy,. tomato; Lenora Le ilbeit. l).eet; Conn ie
Moye r. cucumber; Robert Smith,
Racine, longest cucumber; Lenora
Le ifheit, o nion; Brian WindoA,
cantaloupe, Larry Cowdery, largest
ear of corn, and Drair Dill, Long
Bouom, longest bean. ·
Susan Wolf took the blue ribbon
fo r freak vegetable

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Los 1· Cam~e r At R10 Gran ee
Bean Otmer. 6 14·1146-6810

Con•tnt•rr·inl am i Rcsidenlial

lost Huge leah lef Pu rse. 105

Driveways, Patios. Slabs. Parking lots. Curbs &amp;
Gultcrs Sidewalk.. Porches, Tear-out and

Cedar Street &amp; Halley Sta1on V" 1ne
Strea1, Important Paper~ Every
thingiJ 614 -446 - 1976

Rcplacc Tncnt

70

614-992-7643·
41960 Kaylor Road ·
Reedsville, O H 45772

( No Sunday Calls)

1Qt21/MIIfn .

2/12192/ltn

.

..
'

·-

News Hotline

992-2156

I. What kind of robe you going
ASK ANNE lk NAN
to wear? White rnl!e!
Repeat above
Long white robe I'm bound to
wear, That out-shines the glittering
sun
Chorus
4. What kind of song you going
to sing? New song!
What kin~ of harp you going to
play? Golden harp!
Golden harp I'm, bound to lay,
a fire. The skillet will come
that out-shines the glittering sun!
out
as a whistle." It can then
Chorus
be re-seasoned by rubbing with any
DEAR .ANNE AND NAN: Due kind of cooking oil. Then place it
to .tcndinitis in my' fee~ I have pain . in a 250-degree oven for half an
My onhopedic surgeon says to get hour.
well-cu shioned shoes . Several
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
years ago there were what were 1'·.0. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
called "crepe rubber" -soled shoes. Questions of goneral interest will
I'm unable to locate any. Can you appear in the column. Due to the
help? - ELIZABETH SIMS , volull)e of mail, personal replies
Perry, Okla.
cannot be provided.
DEAR ELIZABETH : We do
remember cr.cpe-solcd shoes, but
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
we couldn't find any. The Wissota. Nash-Cummings are co-authors
Trader catalog features se veral of "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whettypes of shoes that have well-cush- stone) and "Dear Anne and Nan:
ioned soles. They all look comfort- Two Prize. Problem-Solvers
able: Some are sturdy walking Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
shoes while others are more casual. To order, call 1-800-888-1220.
To receive a catalog, call 1-800833.6421.
Copyrfght199S NEWSPAPER '
FEEDBACK: CLEANING ENTERPRISE ASSN.
CAST-IRON SKILLETS - Mrs.
·(}' or Information on how to
Miller of Aurora, Ill ., writes: "To communicate electronically wltb
clean cast-iron skillets (old, horri- this columnist and others, conbly crusted ones), just put them in tact America Online by calling 1your fireplace the next time you . 800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

9:00 a.m.
IO:O·a.m. ·
12-2 p. m.
12:00 noon
12:00 noon
2:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
4:3'0 p. m.
5:00p.m.

Junior Fair Goat Show- Show Arena
Draft Horse Contest - Infield
Hi llside Stage- Babes and Hoola Puppet Show
4- H Flower Show- Junior Fair Building
Guys and Gals Sheep Lead Class- Show Arena
4-H Style Rev ue- Hillside Stage
. D.A.R.E. Program - Grandstand
Kiddie Tractor Pu ll - Show Arena
Li ttle Mi ss and Mister Contest - Hillside Stage
Kiddie Games- Show Arena

6: 00 p. m.

Juni or Fair Swine Show- Show Arena

6:00p.m.
Dazz ling Dolls - Hillside Stage
7:00p.m.
Open Class Horse Show
8:00p.m.
VanDells- Grandstand .
8:00p.m.
Horse Pull
9:00p.m.
Hillside Stage- Midni ght Cloggcrs
12: 00 Midnight - Gates Close

•

..
.
..••
...•
..,
-•
•

~====~~
~~----~
ALFALFA
ROBERT BISSELL•

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will. be publishing a

HOLID(jll
(00~1)00~
Included in the cookbook wiU be recipes from
Meigs County r_esidf!nts, a} 1!0 charge. ·
Th;·recipes ~ill be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages Bread/Grains
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables
•Soups and Sandwiches

BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

. 949-2512

=••• ·•

Gallipolis

Crites
614/667 -6!125

&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Pa 1d In
Advance . DEADLINE · 2 00 p.m
the day betore the ad 1s to run
Sunday Adman · 2 ·00 p m Fr~day
Monday edmon · tO:OO a.m Sa1
urday.

RtsurfKe Old Ce ramic Tile, And

Fi Der&amp;IMs Shower Cracks Or Sag:s

BA,.HTUB

Aaven Lanes

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGE S
. • REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
- • PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614 ) 992-5 535
(614) 992-2753

Ravenswood, WV

Complete
Detailing

Monday &amp; Tuesday Nite
Womens

Wednesday -Youth &amp; Mixed
Thursday Nita - Mens
Sunday Nita- Mixed.

1 ~8 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·$)81:~ ~

For more information
CalrRave-n Lanes

Week Day 8:00-5:00
Open Saturday •
9:00-3:00 a11mn

304·273-4475
'or Hershel &amp; Donna
304-273-3285

· . 1:. - .

-#

:.

Public Notice
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
SEPARATE SEALED BIDS
FOR:
For River Front Parking
Area Project Including
sidewalks, electrical service
·and llg~tlng, shelter structure, -and related work .
Wilt be received by tho
VIllage of Pomeroy at the
office of tho Mayor, Vltlage
Hall, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 11 O'clock AM Friday,
Septombe• 8th, 1995 and
then at the office of the
Mayor the bids will be
publicly opened and read
aloud.
Contract apecltlcatione
and bidding documents may
be viewed at the office of
SBA Conaultants , Inc. at
10247 Chillicothe Pike · P.O.
Box 730, Jackson, · OH.
45640 (Ph: 614-286-2155) or
may be picked up or
ordered by mall lot S35
which Ia non-refundable.
This pr&lt;1ect Is b~lng
" ---pai'i1alfy"lun&lt;rad bv Federal
ACR and CDBG.

0

·LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2m
Office Hours: "Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl a. Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
· Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
._
Doors, Storm
Windows,' Garages.
Free Estimates

.

PSYCHICS

know

Interior &amp;
b:terlor

ALL

the pain out of
painting. let us do It lor
you. Very reason&amp;ble.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
·
After 6 p.m.

Take

CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.

· Must be 18 yrs;

614-985'-4180 , _

·

IIIOw't mo. -

Public Notice

Public Notice

been executed.

Engineer's estimate for

this project Is $94 ,940_
A bid guaranty, 81
toqulrod by Section 15 3.54
of the Revised Code of
Ohio, shall accompany each
proposal . submitted, . 88
follows :
1) A certified cheek,
caShier's check, or letter of
credit equal to 10 percent of
the bid. A Iotter of creditmay be revocable only by
the OW!'Br. Upon entering
Into a contract with tho
owner, the contractor mutt
then fiia a bond far the
amount of the contract, and
the check or letter of credit
will then be returned to the
successful and unauccesslui blddeta when the
contract Ia executed.

Umest011e &amp; Gr.11vel,
Septic Systems, TraDer &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rules
Joe N. Say!'&amp; '

.

Attention ol bidder• Is
called to all requirements

contained In tho bid packet,
particularly the Federal
Labat Standards Provisions
and Davla-Bacoi Wages,
various Insurance requlrementa, various eq_!Jal .

Howard L. Writesel

TRAP SHOOT

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter c(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2,168

. Every
Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

81..fn

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING
•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines -etc.
•Concrete Work
~ravel Hauling
•WeldlnWfabrlcatlon .
Certified
Licensed/Bonded
25 Years Experience
614-992·2834

"

ll'

o"l\.\

v9:

'"m"

c;,\9-~,c MIKE MARCUM'S

Fa n
Yard Sale W11! Be Undef Shade
Terms ' Cash, N o Checks, All
Sales F1 nal, No Rel und,s. Not Re
spons1 bl c For Acc1d cn1s . Everf" ·
one Walcomet
~

ROOFING &amp; REMODEliNG
SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES
28 Years Experience
PHONE
1-800-377-4477
614-245-0437

' Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salas Must Be Pa1d In
Advance Dea dlme 1 OOpm t~e
day before lho ad ts 10 run, Sun day ed1110n 1:OOpm Frtd~y. Mon day editiOn 10 00a.m. Sa turday ·

~

B/811 mo.

Q

'

CLASSIFIEDS
REAL
TIME

SAVERS...;

152 Third Ave ,
G&lt;;~llipolis, OH
614-446-1207

CAU.

-·

992-2156

I'm Breunit KariJ
Bonnett.
I'm
week• old. · Tha
daughter of Paula
and ·Mike Bonnett
and 1llter to Chad,
II 4 ¥••n old.
I would II.. to
th•n• •~arf.one who
prayed · or mf
mommy and ,m l
&amp;efere I wu &amp;orn.
Your prayen were
lniWtrtd.
The Bonnett hmlly

1

Clean motor

2. Grpase roller bearings
3 ·Clean 8 check agitator
4. Clean all mov1ng parts

~,

.

5 C lean &amp; ch eck Wtet system
6. Check belts
7. Check electri&lt;.a! system
6. Replace filler bag

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts · •
One year warranty on work performed.
,, · ·
Valid on all nationally advert1sed brands.
We service most makes &amp; models.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

90 · Wanted to Buy
Clean late Model Cars Or
Tru "ck s, 1987 Model s Or Ne wgr,
Smtih Bu1ck Pontiac. 1900 Easl·
ern A-Jcnue, Gn!hpol1s
. bef0r81ed· stonewaio . wall tole
phones, old lamps, old 1hormome
lers. a1d clock s, ant1que lurn 1rur"e
R ivenn e An tiQUO&amp;. Russ M oore .
ow ner. 6 1 4·992 - 2526 .~ W o Dvy
eslates ·
·

368 W. Main St. Rtpley, WV

J &amp; D's Au to Pans and Sa lvaQe.
buy 1ng w rec ks, JU nk au 1o s ~ &amp;
lruc~s Als o, pans lor sale. 304·
773 ~ 534 3 o r 773·5033
Junk cars or 'M il ptck up QIVOAWftY·
cars or appl 1ances. 614 992

6069 anyt1me

1111\\ \IW

Top Pr1ces Pa1d Old U S Cams
S1lvor. Gold. D1amonds , A ll
Collec r1blos. Paporw01gh 1s. (rc

Old

M.T S Com Shop, 151

304-372-6144

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhamme~. Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic .
system_s, lay lines, underground bo~es.
FofFree estim ate call 949~251
~

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
ServiCes. ·
Home SUes, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways..
Trucking- Limestone,
Jop sruu:rn.Dirt
~ ~

.....

•.)0')0
-.)(),)()

Se~;;ond

Avenue. Gall1pohs, 614-446·2842.,

J.D. Drilling Company ··

E\C\\ \Tii\(;

(\(\•}

'

,..._ _ _ _ _.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...., Used 6' loldmg la bi(!S

'-====:::;====:;---:--------.!
WANT
GET
1

ALL-BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES
Tile Floor Strip,
Wax, 1). Maintenance.
Carpat Cleaning,
Complete Facility
Cleaning, Periodic
· or one time ·
Free Estimatas
Call 992·7272 or
1-80D-99D-7272

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill

PM

ADI.~C!
.

RESU[JS

612/lmo

Lilflt things ·
art Worth Alot

11 o

Help Wanted
A + Opportunity

Earn up. to $101hr. scheduling a~
po1n1man" lor our bus , olf 10 e.

lois or lrmge benefits also lntlud·
ed

Pleasant.

Slr .. s-fr ee aj·

lui , 0u 1 • •II

""'o

Call Larr,

bet·

ween 1Dem-2pm , 61&lt; ·991 -4472.

ADDITIONAL INCOME
DEL IVERY DRIVEn
,
Parr·l1me f.errollgas. A I eader In
The Propf!. no c,.,. l nduslr y, Is

ANNOUNCEMENTS
30 Announcements '
I Wil l N ot Be Respons1blo For
Any OOO!SOU'IOr Tnan My Own

Marvin McGu 1ro

-:----:--..;;;;;::.:.::.:.;;;.;=;:
40

Giveaway

2!U! HOlly free, !reo, !flusl be re
mOYVd. 304-675·4850.
4 Beagle Pup~les., 614&lt;JBB·9534

Seekmg R"CSI0Cn 1181. Bulk" Dehvar t
Dr1v~ · s l o Work A Pan ·Ttme
Vananu~ -Scliedule We N"eed
Pooplo Who Are Neal. Couneout
And EnJOY Mce11ng And SenHrf(f
T~c Pubhc F•cellent Opponunlry
r or SomP.one I ook1ng For A d d ~
tiOMi-:11 lrt cme Or Sunmtal Work .

To Qua lily, You M u!lt H ave Or
Ob1am A COL Dnvors L1tense
·, W1th Ua1ardous Ma1enals En -

4 cute kttlens. 1111or 1ra1ned to

dorsemenl Apply Or Send J1e -

good home. 614 · 8tl"3~ 5342

&amp;Wl"IQ

3928

Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Cillo 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

mosphore Prior eKpOriOnco help-

7-8 Week Old t&lt;1t 1ens, 614 o146

32124 Happy

cc------~

Wanted ro buy en11que and us9d
turniiUHI, nD 1iem ioo l.:u ge OJ too
small Will buy one p1ece or comple!e eslales. OSb~ Mar11n, 6 14 .
992 '7441

,

'''111"

REASONABLE RATES

Pho fl e

6214

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos With
Or W1thou t M olars . Call La rry
LIVely. 614 388·9303 .

2· ·

8wk old p~Jppy, 112 blacK Lab. tl2
Gorman Stwpard , le.male 30-'1 ·

lo

~ERAFLLG A S

8255 Slate Route 588
Galhpol1s, Oh1o 45631
Appl iC311MB Are Now Oemg 4 G"...

cep1ed AI P1nccros1 Ca re Ce nte;,

675· 7324

, 70 Rmecrest Onve. Gall1poh!i,
dhi0'~ 45631 For rull Tnne An d
Catage door to g1veawa~. you , Part T1me. Slate Tes led Nurs1n-g,
tak.e down and nau! away. 614
As s1s1ants Compellhve WageS
992 7283
D1llorent1al W1 th Ell:pononce, s~ 0 ;;.
On Bonus Available , Equal Op H1mele. ya n Cat To Gooa Home, portunity Employer.
Needs MBCI IC al Aucn u on . elll·
448 1621
AVON I All Areas I Sh1rle)':
Spears, .304-675· 1429
Long Ha1red Adorable Kittens lo
Good Hom e, 614 ·446- lt)lO
AVON SCLLS AT WORK .ijQME ,
Average .S8·$t !YHr Booehtsl
•
To A Good Home 4 Male K1ttens. No lrl\lenlory Or Door . To Doer
6 Weeks Old, 6t4-256- 17'9J
lndtrep HllO 7•Z;4736

rn

the Cla5sified Section!
\,)

.

R1ck Pea(son Auc110n Co mpa ny,
l ui! 11m e auct1oneer, com p le~e
a u cti on
serv1ce.
L1cons&amp;o
11 66,0hu:i &amp; West Virginia, 304
773·578 5 Or 304· 773·5447

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special -

special offer includes:

r- - - - - - - - - ,

The
Specialty
.
Shop
""&lt;t;-

·-

~

Public Sale
and Auction

304 - 67~ -

Call tor Low Prices

Herbs, Vitamins,
Supplements

~

Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420

80

·Competitive salaries and excellent benefits.
If you are energetic and looking for · rewarding
opportunities, send your resume and salary ·hlstory to:
Director
P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 45723
E.O.E.
8/1()(1 mo.

1-900-388-0400

Slick/MIG Aluminum
Complete RadlatQr
Repair S.arvlce
New Raatators &amp;
Recores Available

HEALTH FOOD
STORE

MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS
. JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTIERS
Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept. managers and joumeyman meat euners tO
manage and merchandise meal departments In their
corporate stores located in Southeastern Ohio

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!

lionw'S- Portable
elding

.

;

Faldmg D1splay Racks , 01shes.
Glassware, PlaSIICWlHe. lamps ,
Pots !Pans. Sel 01 01shes, K 1t~·
en Utensils, Toys, Clothmg, Potty
Chait, Chi lds Card Table W1th
Two ChEttrS, Lots 0 1 Sta1nl ess
Flatware, loads 01 Ol der Sll'o'er
Plated ·Flat wa re, Dresser W !th
M 1rror, Clothes Rack, HoSPIIal
B&amp;ds10e Table, Pa1r l amps, Clock .
Toy Chesl . New HaM Woven
Carpel Ru gs. All Kmds 01 Odd s
And End s. Sw1vol ~ocke1 , And

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1)~\c;,C/,\ ~

5J1mTFN

742_3212
Turn on Dapot St. In
Rutland 1.2

{,
J~

Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney

ROOFING

r-------~....,

.OUR

~

Scrugun [ l 1~e New), H 1de.a.bed
Sola Good Shape), Sola P1c1u re,
Casseue H. ~a d Sal. Ra d10 Hea.d
Set. Brothe r Sewm g M ach1ne ,
S1nger Sewmg Mach1ne, Palomar
H . 150 Lmear, 0 1 sp1a ~ Stands .

Check Out Our Tire Prices ·

Buzz's Car_pet

• RACINE
GUN CLUB

BULLETIN BOARD .
00
"'6 .coluMn Inch weekdays
*8°0 coluMn

'~

TV 1Ro.d10 (3 Way Po wer), 8&amp;0

Oil Change ......... ....... ...... .. ......... $17.95
Front End Alignment •. .-...... .. ...... $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Installing, rnc.
'We will Install carpet
and fl oor coverin gs.
Give us a call at
6 14-992-337918 Ye ars Expe rience.
Hours
Monday th ru Friday
8:00 a. m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00 a. m. to 12:00 p.m .

949-2862
RACIN E, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

"Your Parts or Ours"

,614-742-2138

opportunity provisions.
Successful bidder · to
provide an OSHA apptoved
safety_ plan tor proposed
work before work can stlrt.
992·7821 7/2fJ1 mo.
No bidder maY withdraw
his bid within sixty (60) deys
Card of Thanks
af1er the actual date of
opening thereof.
All bids shall be properly
Delmar and Jean
eigne~ by an authorized ·
Hamm
repres~ntatlve of the bidder.
All bids shall be sealed
would like to thank
and plainly martuid "Sealed
OR
Bid for River Front Parking
all friends and
2) A bond fat the lull Project, Pometoy, Ohio".
family members
amount of this bid . The
The owner reaerves the
owner will retain the bond of right to reject ony· or all bids
who sent beautiful
the successful bidder but submitted , and wave any
· cards for their
the ·owner will return the Irregularities.
Bona or iiCH"~ uneiJcceutur - _..}_._....._.-....,..By-the Own•r
~oth weiilii~;r,,
bldde[ after a contract has
The Village of Pomeroy
(8) 8, t 5, 22, 3tc
· Anniversary.

Your Message
With A Dally Sentinel

'

3RO ST. .

...

J&amp;LINSULATION

~

Pr~cel

IIams Offered : M oon Raker CB
Base Antenna Wi th Ro!Or (Buyer
Mu st Ta~e Do w n}. Colleclion 01
An11que Straight Razon, Paper back Books (Romance , W est
erns, S1range Tale.s) , Hardback
Books, Plastic Bucke ts, Book shells, GPX Stereo (AWFM, M 1n1
Turntable, Dua l Cassetle, Two
Speakers) . Sears C o Anyw here

AB&amp;T AUTO

EXCAVATION

L~ght ,

Turn Toward R1ver
·
Go S1ra1ghl To Last Tra1let
On Left B0s1de
The AlteratiOns Shop
Saturday " II Items W1ll Be Hall

1151 St. Rt. 141, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

SAYRE TRUCKING

Bill Slack
992-2269 or
304·773·5960

A.t S1lver Bndge Plaza

Residence: 614-446·2516

.

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Ml.s c. Jobs.

313 Upper Route 7,

Basement A1.d Retaining
Wall Construction

MAULING &amp;
Chip Repair In Tubs Or Sinks,

Thurs. Fr~, Sat,
,
Augustt71h, 18th. 19th .:;·

-"fll't'irtli:ing In:

Office: 614-446-0666
I

Yard Sate

Dou~

VERTICAL CONCRETE WALLS, INC.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

DAYS
CARWASB

ATTENTIGlN ALL
BOWLERS
Leagues Now Forming

Please , include your name and
phone # with .recipe.

Deadline for all recipes
'is October 20, 1995

:.1;

7122!94

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

Rring your recipe into our office or send it to:
Holiday Co.okboo·k
clo The Daily Sentinel
l l l Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

gang Volz of Christo and Jeanne- · it is Golden's binhplace . He also
Claude's wrapping projects. The '-5aid he lw!l't wanted to wrap anyshow runs through Oct. 16.
thing in about 20 years; the projects
Included in the display at the just take a long time to unfold.
Richmond Art Museum is a comThe Reich stag, for example,
puter, a magazine , a telephone . took 24 years to .complete because
Each wrapped neatly in fabric and the couple bad to wait for approval
tied with brown string.
from the German government
.
For some, the me3l\ing was easy
The couple said their wrappings
to see. Others left scratching their anempt to create beauty that drawheads.
ings alone can't capture.
"This is the son of thing where
' 'We are artists,·· Jeanne l see.e.vJ:rything th~re is to see, go Claude said. "We want to create a
!lome and let it settle on my mind," ' work of joy and beauty. We don't
said Margaret Black of Richmond, do it for the public. If it changes
looking at a wrapped Sta~ler and public perception, that's an added
flowers . " I've never seen anybody bonus. We do it for us.
.
.
" We're: reali stic. We haven' t
use this medi~. "
The collecuon - the largest pn- tried to wrap the moon."
vate collection of Christo worl&lt;s in
For their. next proj ect, Christo
the world- belongs to Tom Gold- and Jeanne-Claude said they may
en, a Richmond native and retired set up about 15,000 gates with
businessman who now lives in Cal- banging_ nylon fabric in New
ifornia
York' s Central Park or cover a
Cbds_to ~and Jean_ne;Ciaude busyc"'atetway in. Paris with six
spent much of the day stgnmg auto- miles of fabric.
•
graphs.
While be liked Richmond ,
At an afternoon news confer- Christo complained that the city's
ence, Christo said the collection museum doesn't stand out like
was brought to Richmond because
those in New York .

HAY

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

1•

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop ·&amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

FOR SALE

c

S·end Us llour ·favorite Recipe

:t

8·11-1 mo. pd

AND MIXED

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic t~nks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp;
rental rates.
sites•====

.•

84H124
992-2984

..,

(Kiddie Day) $3.00 till 2 p.m.

1

'

R~asonable

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUCTION
• Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Additions &amp;
· Garages
• Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing
Free Estimates

Wednesday, August 16

RECOGNIZED- Mr. and Mrs. Keith Ashley and rarnily were
recognized as the largest ramily attending the recent Parker fami·
ly. Pictured, front, left to right, Rache~ Whitney and Emlly Ashley, 'with parents, Emma and Keith Ashley, back. ,
Frederi ck, Smithville, W. Va. ; Va .; Helen a"nd Edson Park er,
Becky; Larry and Angela Edwards, Albany ; Judge William All e n
Ted· and Gladys Parker, Parkers- Wolfe, Paul and Joseph Wolfe,
burg; Gail Mills, Elizabeth, W. Zanesville. ·

·Ope n Water
• Adva nced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
• Assista nt Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Wate r Scuba Instru ctor
- 614-992-3314

4113195 .

Kiddie Tractor.Pull 4 pm
Show Arena
Thesday, August 15

~;{/JIJ

Scuba Classes Now Forming

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; £lath
Remodeling .
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Pallas

Lost and Found

lost- male Boxer/PH Bull. reddiSh
brown &amp; bf1ndla, 614 ·9 49 2955 or
614 ·949·2 5211

Abiding Concr et e
Construction

COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

State Rt. 33
· Darwin, Ohio

lnsu,es - Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Estimates

4:00p.m.
Kiddie Tractor Pu ll - Show Arena
5:00 p.m.
Junior Fair Board Auction- Show Arena
6:00 p.m.
Junior Fair Steer Show- ShowArena
6:00p.m.
Robin D' Hart - Hi llside Stage
7:00p.m.
Demolition Derby- Grand stand
12:00 Midn ight -Gates Close

Richmond art enthusiasts rap with .the wrapper
RICHMOND, Ind. (AP) Christo has thrilled and intrigued
art enthusiasts all over the world
with abstract projects.
The artist and his wife, JeanneClaude, have surrounded islands in
Biscayne Bay in Miami with pillk
fabric and erected 3,000 yellow and
l)lue umbrellas in Japan and Cali fomia. This summer, they wrapped
Germany ' s former parliament
building, the Reichstag, with more
tban I million square feet of silver
fabric.
On Saturday, they came to Richmond, about five miles from the
Ohio border, with a less ambitious
project.
The opening of ''Twenty-one
Golden Years with Christo and
Jeanne-Claude: The Tom Golden
Collection" attracted hundreds of
· an enthusiasts to the Richmond An
Museum, as well as those who just
wanted to get a glimpse of the
artists and their work. The exhibit features a collection
of Christo's smaller works, including drawings, collages, lithographs,
seriagraphs, photographs by Wolf-

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

'

Treasured old hymn finds a new audience
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
. DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
· 75-year-old mother is going blind
in one eye. but she loves an old
,hymn, "Golden Slippers." I have
tried to find the words to no avail . I
·have tried music stores, groups
wbo sing gospel music, looked at
some old hymnals, and looked at
garage sales and flea markets. I
·sure would appreciate your help. DEE WOLFE, Ludlow Falls, Ohio
. DEAR DEE: We are blessed by
knowing Dob Deer of Poultney,
Vt., who loves and knows old
hymns. We asked about your mother's favorite "Golden Slippers."
Within hours, Dob called to say be
had found ·'What Kin!! gf Sboe
Are You Going to Wear" in the
1918 edition of "Rodeheaver's
Plantation Melodies."
I. What kind of shows you
going to wear? Golden Slippers!
.
· Repeal abpve
Golden slippers I'm bound to
:wear, That out-shines the glittering

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair
Chucl( Stotts
614-992-6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

{Specialize In
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-34 70

.Parker f~mily holds 60th annual reunion '
77; th e youngest girl , Angela
Edwards, two; the youngest boy,
Joe y Richard, six; .the longest married , Helen and Edson Parker, 50
years; the ones traveling the· farthest, Judge William Allen, Paul
and Joseph Wolfe, Zanesville; 100miles; the largest family, Emma,
Keith, Rachel Whitney, and E;mily
Ashley.
Attending were Howard and
Wilma Parker, Russell Parker,. June
Ashley, Emma, Keith , 'Rachel,
Whitney and Emi.ly Ashley, Nellie
Park er, Albert Parker, Joey
Richard, Carl, Arlene and Amanda
Parker, Mary Parker, Carolyn, BiU,
Dilly, and Kelli White, Crystal
Morris, Ralph, Virginia, and James
Parker, Jack, Jackie, Brad and Brett
Parker, Homer Parker, Joe, Martha
and Will Poole, Pam, Lester,
Leslie, Lester Parker II, all of
Meigs County. '
Anita Hart, Shade; Frances·

Sentinel • Page 9

60

· Welsh takes top
_prize in horticulture
judging at fair

The 60th annual Parker reunion
'was held recent! y at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School. Nellie
Parker gave the table grace before
the basket dinner.
· James Parker, president, conducted the me ting with How ard
Parker giving the secretary-treasurer's report. A discussion was held
on sending cards announcing the
reunion, and it was decided to do
so to those out of the county about
a month in advance. Virg inia· Parker and Keill1 Ashley volunteers to
be in charge of cares.
Officers elected were Ralph
·Parker, president; Gladys Parker,
vice president; Howard Parker, secretary -treasurer; Nelli e Parker ,
reporter; Keith Ashle y, hi storian;
Martha Poole, gifts; and' Joe Poole,
photographer.
· . Martha Poole presented gifts to
the oldest woman, Nellie Parker,
81; the oldest rnan, Edson Parker,

D~ily

The

Pome r oy • Middleport, Ohio

W h1rtpool Oryet R~ns Good,
·ooosn·t Heal, May Need Heat1ng
Element . 614 367 7891 Lea\le

MC'lsage

AVON EARN $$$ at home -a!
work Atl areas 30•·882 2645. 1·,

BOO 992 6356 INDtRFP

'

�J -

I

15, 1995

Ohio

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
39 After Mon
40 Br1tlsh Navy
1 Goods
abbr
5 Football dlv
42 - Chaney
8 Exploit
43 Mower pert
12 Nevada city
45 Outdoor area
13 Chemlcaloulllx 47 Thaw again
14 TV award
49 Orove (a
15 Forearm bone
vehicle)
16 Fled
53 Stove part
17 Laundry Item
54 Bustle
18 Optic
56 Actor Hackman
applicator
57 Oeparted
20 Blab
58 Along In rears
22 50%
59 Oole (out
24 Ia appropriate 60 Puts
to
61 Wooden tub
25 At the back
62 Jacob o son
28 Conflict
29 Export
DOWN
ACROSS

BEA1TIE BL YD.® by Bruce Beattie

440

Apartments

540

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by

for Rent
Babysme r Nee«:~ed For 2 Sma ll
CMdren 3 Days A Week Reier
ente IE:.per tence Rcqu11ed 614
367-748)

2Rooms Plu s Bath lafayette
Mall No Kttchen ' All Utthlles patd
$ 175 00 Monlh Oepo!ltl Requ tred
614 446 7733

PHILLIP
Larry Wright

chatrs rear a1 r &amp; heat
I
S5 000 fum 6141
8 Grave lOIS Ceruenary Ceme

tary Sec11on New Addllton $300
For All 8 Graves 614-446 4938

1991 Ford Aetostar 89 000 Mi les•
Blue &amp; G rey AM tFM Cassette,
AC Aulo Ovordnve Just Tuned
&amp; Serv ces Nada $9 875 Sell For
$6 BOO Trades Welcome 614
256 6969

Ohp go cart 4 wheeler l~ro&amp; 1 11
2yrs old great shape $900 304·
675 1575
Apple lie Computer Color Mom
tor lmageWnter I! Color Pnnter
Ftsher VCR Camcordef W th Trt
pod 6 t&lt;l 256-664 7

740

0

"

••

$1951Mo Utr l1t1es Pa 1d 607 Sec
end Gallipolis 614 446 4416 At
ter 7 PM

~~::J:~~~~~~~
1 and 2 bedroom

Sprtng
Valley3 Area
Weekdays
After School
6 30 Occa~slonal
Saturdays References Send Re

L-::::::::::::::::::::::r-:::::::::::::::::::::::1~~~'i:;':,~ ~~~:~~~rs~ Manor
and
eta Ga111pohs I
m Mlddle

piles To CL4 354
Da~ly Tribune 825 Thtrd Aoenue

310

Easy Work ' Excellent Pay' As
semble Produ cts At Home Call
Toll Free 1 BOO 467 5566 Ell!
91-3

3 Bedrooms Bath &amp; 112 L v ng
Room Fam 1Jy Room F1n 1shed
Basement CA In Ground root
614 441 s 4 agsL Please Leave
Message

Fantasltt Sam s Now HtrmG Lt
censed Cosmetologtst Guar
anteed Wages Pa td Vacattons
6,4 446-7267

3 Bedrooms Gas Furnace Free
Gas Garage 40 Acres $39 900
Back or Add son 614 367 7259
614 446 1988

No E•penence Necessary • $500
To S900 Week ly ! Potent al Pro
cessmg Mongage Refunds Own
Hours Call (909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours)

3 4bedroom 21ull baths custom
kttchen lull basement 1eve1 lot tn
Galltpohs Ferfy 304 675 1252

Gallipolis 0H 45631

Ravenswood Care Cemer 1113
Wash tn gton St Ravenswood

Homes lor Sale

330

3bedroom 2bath Ranch sect on
al ftreptace 12:.:16 deck 1 11
21ots Ptne A.ve MeRdowbrook
304 675 t294

WV tS currently iccepttng appll
Poss t b~

catiOns tor tl'le lollcWJng postltons

BeJ\J!II u Large House

Nurstng Asststants (Will Tra n)
regtstrat•on lor classes starttng
soon, benellrs .nclude compett
uve wages patd meals patd va
calton CNA bonus retmbursed
tra n.ng health tnsutance patd
shtft d flerenttal &amp; career ladder
opportuntt es all lnqu r~es may
apply wtth n datly relerences re
qured

Bedrooms Sky ltghts Double
Decks roo! Bu ldtngs ldeo.l For
Ch ldrcn 2-. Acres S55000 614
379 2586

Secret.aryiRecept crust
40 yr old lnternat tonal Co tn
sra1e of the art warer treatment is
expandtng othce m Mtddleport
area Hourly rate plus benet Is
614 992 4472
Someone to Mlp manage small
bust ness Must know ofltce sup
pltes offtte expenence helplul
Must to able to deal wtth the pub
lie &amp; other bus nesses Also must
be able to fallow tnstructtons both
wr tten &amp; verbal Send resume to
Offtce Servtce &amp; Supply 112
West Matn Str&amp;et Pomeroy Oh•o
45769
SUPER SALES OPPORTUNffY
40 year old lnternattonal Co tn
state ot the ar1 Water Treatmenr
•s e•pandtng olftce tn Megs Gal
Ita Mason Excellent opponunt[)'
for person jUSt stantng career tn
sales or expertenced sales exec
uttve to represent outstand t
product m growth rTilrket
"NO DOOR KNOCKING
"RELIABLE CAR NECESSARY
"FULL TRAINING
Salat)' aruLc..cmmJSSIOn $35 000
65 000 lttst year For funher de
latls can Glen 614 992 4472
180

By owner 3bedroom home ?mt
out Jeflcho Ad 304 675 4575
For sale by owner rhree bedroom
house wnh three outbuildtngs ap
p~ox one acre pr me commerc al
land a1 Ftve Pcnnts owner movtng
must se ll caii6U 992 6300
LOCO. !Od At 5 Edgemont Ortve 3
Bedrooms Ftn shed Basement
Ftreplace CA D shwasher, 1 112
Baths
Garage &amp; Carport
$72 000 614 446-3117
Lo~ely

B11ck Rancher 3 Acres
Wooeled Lo t Near Green Elem
School 4 Bedrooms 2 Ba th s
Bnck Ftr eplace In LA Full Base
ment Wtlh Famtly Rec Storage
Room 011er 3 100 Sq Ft Ltv ng
Space 2 Car Garage Beaut tlul
Landscape For Pnvacy lnground
Pool Wnh Deck Large Storage
Buldng$127000 614 446 t025
Pnvate rusttc ranch style 3 or 4
b&amp;dtooms two baths full 1n•shed
bas ement 25 •27 tamtly 10om
large stone ftreplace large deck
three oulbUtld ng~ on approx 6 7
acres three mtlas from M ne 31
l)rtce $89 900 call 614 742 2228
lot appo ntment

Care g ver lookmg 10 take care ot
elderly tn the r home durtng day
ttme hours 614 742 1701
Check thts out F rsl Save$$$ In
tenor/extertor pa nttng root patnt
tng handwash down houses &amp;
mobtle homes odd tobs neat
work Guaranteed 15yrs ex pen
ence References Free estr
mates 304-675 6921
General Ma n1enance Pa nttng
Yard Work Wtn dows Washed
Guners Cleaned l tght Haul ng
Cortimer cal Restden {l al Steve
614 446 8861
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your togs to the mtl 1us1 call
3041375-1957
Prolessronal Tree Serv ce Com
plete Tree Care Bucket Truck
SerVIce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re
(T!Oval
Free Esttmatesl In
surance 24 Hr Emergenc::r Serv
rC'ti Call Ana S'aV91 No Tree too
Btg Or Too Small! B dwell Ohto
614 388 9643 614 367 7010
Sun Vaftey Nurserv School
Chtldcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week Mrnt
rn.Jm 614 446 3657
Wttt' Sabysltl lnfant Or Todeller In
My Home W1ll Babystt Any Age
Chrld R10 Grande School Area I
Rodney Afea Aelerences 614
245 5887
Wtll Do lntertor Extenor Patfl! ng
Reasonable Rates Experienced
References For Free Esttmates
Call 614 245-5755~
FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends lhat you do bust
nGss w1th p&amp;Opl~ you know and
NOT to &amp;end money through lhe
tn atl until you have tnvesngated
tl19 oflermg
REAL ESTATE

310

350 lots

Homes for Sale

a

5acres 11at steel 11o concrete
clocK. bu ldtngs large stlo 113acre
paved Ct(y &amp; well water 10m1 S of
Pt Pleasant on WV2 Lyle Austtn
Barns $13 900 304 576 2694

All real estate adver11stng tn
this newspaper tS sub)eclto
the Federal Fair Housrng Acl
of 1968 which makes It tllegal
to adverttse any preference
limJ!ahon or dlscnmtnatton
based on race color rehgton
se.11 fam!ltat status or nattonat
ongtn or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference
ltm1ta11on or dtscnmlnalion •
Tt11s newspaper will nol
knowhngly accept
advertisements lor real estate
whiGh t&amp; rn vtOiatlon otltle law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
ad11erttsed tn th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
A oppottuntly basts

Outet country home two bed
.rooms and bath ba&amp;omem ga3
we I and furnace salellrte dtsh 38
acres call 614 985 4243
Spltt level house lor sale tn Syra

~u~1~gt~t~~aeq~~::!,~'t'~~n bV::~h

Four lots near Rae ne appro• 1
112 acres each staf!tng at $5000
call 6t4 94SI 2025
Scentc Valley Apple Grove
beavttlul 2ac lots publ tc wa ter
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576-2336 ,
RENTALS
~---

41

~- -

--

o Houses tor Rent

2 Beelroom House Located In
Gall pelts Depostt And Relerenc
es Requtred For More In forma
ton Call 614 446 4069 Please
leave Message

Ntcely lurntshed !bedroom duplex
on 21st Street clean prtvate no
pets no Hud References &amp; de
pos t304 675 2651
Stonewood Apartmen rs now renr
tng one bedtoom all elec!rtc for
eldetlj and d!Sabtlttv FmHA sub
stdlzed Equal Housmg 614 992
3055
Th ree bedroom apartmenl With
washer and dryer hookup large
kttchen and ltv ng room on Thtrd
Suee1 Ractne $29Simo plus uttlt
nes $125 deposn 614 247 4292

Ntce three bedroom house tn
Mtdel teport no pets 6t4 992
5858
Smal/1bcdroom aouble lot Gil
ton S275Jmo S200 depostt no
pets 304 773 9192

Mobile Homes

12x65 2bedroorn 1 bath on At 2
Crab Creek 2 HarseLtck Rd
$300/mo Depostt &amp; relerences
304 369 644 7

.2 Bedroom Home W th Ftreplace
In 19 Acres Sowards R1dge
Road Crown Ci!y $350tMo 614
256-1559
2 Bedroom Uobtle Home In R o
Grande $235/Uo $100 Depostt
Water Included No Pets 614
446-3817

2 Bedrooms AU elec trtc Beautiful
Cond !ton Parttally Furntshed
$300/Mc Pl us Depostt Electnc
614 256-6399
2bedroom washelldryer ac all
atectrtc no pou Ma son WV
304 773 5751
2bedroom You pa~ ll'{il t es De
post! No pets 304 675 2535
2br

Iurn shed AC washertdryer
all electrtc S2501mo plus unlmes
dep s. ref no pets 304 675
tHI74
Furnuohod Tro ll er 2 O&amp;l..lruums:
On 112 Acre Lot Deposit No Pets
Ca11 Aher600 61&lt;12561304
House Fot Rant In Countty 2
Bedrooms Gatage Gas Heat
$300 /Mo Depostt References
6t4 426 6926
Ira tier tn Apple Grove WV par
11ally turntshed HUD approved
304 576 2890

Three bedroom two bath LR FA
basement wh te alumtnum s1dmg
garage budd ng
1 5 acres
Rac1ne OhiO 1n town by Methodtst
Church $45 000 614 949 2709

Two bedroom partly lurmshed
good clf'an cond !ton porch
yard prtvu!9 lot above New Ha
ven S275 wtth water and sewer
3Q4 662 2466 anytune

320

430

Rooms lor rent week or month
Start ng at S1201mo Gallta Hotel
614 446 9580
Sleeptng rooms w th cooktng
Also trailer space on nvar All
hook ups Call after 2 00 p m
3l4 773-5651 MasonWV
460

fratler lot on Braod Run Rd New
Haven $60fmo 304 773 5681
MERCHANDISE

51 0

Household
Goods

A r Condtttoner Washer Dryet
Retrgerator 614 2561238
Ant•que Ba1h1ub New 112 Horse
' raltsman Garage Door Opener
3 Year Old Roppet Lawn Tra ctor
614 367- 7117
AppltancesRmMtrtoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refn
graters 90 Day Guarantee •
French Ctty Maytag 614 446
7795
C .. rpet &amp; V1nyl In Stock SS 00 Yd
8. Up 60 Patterrts 01 Kttchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Pauerns
V nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpels
614 446 7444
Countr~ Furntture Furntture lor

440

1966 Homette $2 000 1981
AtlantiC $7 500 614 3 79- 9447
614 379 2936

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
ntshed and unlurntshed secunty
depostt requued no pets 614
992 2218

Apartments

VIRA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oual1!y HouseOO!d Furmtum And
Appltances Grear Deals On
Cash And Carryl RENT 2 OWN
And Layaway Also Avatlable
Free Delivery W1thtn 25 Mtles
520

Sporting
Goods

20 Gauge Remtnglon 1100 Lt WI
Slug Barrell Thompson Centender
Super 16 223 Ban ell 2 Thomp
son Center Pts!ol Scopes 2 5x
Wuh Mounts 614 245-5831
Aemtngton ttOO 12 Ga Magnum
Only 614 446-0180
Antiques

Buy or uell
-,,24 E Qiln
Pomeroy Hours
TW 1
am to 600 pm Sunda~ 100 to
600pm 6149922526
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

79 PT Round Dtamond Solttatre
HS13 14K Yellow Gold Pa td
S2 192 January Rope Item
Amencan General Ftnance 614
446 4113

t9Q4 ShUltz. 24x.60 Modular
Coml)lerely Remodelod NEM~ Roo f
New Furnace &amp; Heat Pump
$20 000 614 446 77fH

t 990 ModUlar Wtth Caltledral
Ce1hngs On 1 89 Aetas East
Rt~Ciuced To
,Shade Roai:!
,65 000 00 Call Cheryl Carr
Coldwell Banker landmark Rela
tors 304 863 6636 Or 30.4 422

New 1996 14x 70 tncludes sk rt
tng steps Qlocks one year
homeowners 1hsu1ance and SIX
months FREE lot rent Only S1025
down anc:j $207 17 per fl'K)nth Call
1 BOO 637 2238

wv

Pnco Buster! New 141170 2 or
3br Only $995 down $1951month
Free deltver y &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes Nttro WV 304
755 5885

2 Oedrooms 2 Baths 2 M les
North Of Vtnton $300/Mo + $300
Depos t -t ElectrtC t ly No Pets
A11atlable 8116195 614 388-906Cl"
2bdrm apts total electnc ap
plmnces lurntshed laundry room
factlll es close 10 school tn town
Appltoa ttons ava tlable at Vtllage
Green Apts #49 or ca ll 614 99~
37 1I EOH
2be droom apartmenr l~rmshed
utll!ltcs ncluded ac 304 773
9009
Apartmem &amp; Tra ler Ullltttes Pa Cl
304 fi7t; 257g

Shelves Ntgh Stand
Slate 614 446 1423

Rooltng

3 Ton Cenral Au Cond1t1oner
Package System Or Split System
S1 250 lns!alled 5 Vr Warranty
All Parts 1 800 287 6308 JS 14•
446 6306
386 SX 25 MHZ Gold Sar1es
cornpliter 28 Dot pttch monttor
mouse 2 MEG A4M, DOS e 0
127 megebrres hard d11ve,
games and Jorsttck, qutck shor
sound system wtndows e:.cel
spreadstleets, etc $500 lor all
Weslo nerc1se btke computer
controlled programmable patd
1199 sell $100 negortable wed
dmg dress stze 5-6 With votl $90
negoMbl&amp; 614 94g 2709

VAfJl':&gt; 10 OO..UIJ 51Zt a.R RE(ATION5f.\1P
lmUlc;u:.

'-' ..

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repared New&amp;A9bUtltlnStock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537 9528
Mo\l tng Sale Ltvtngroom Bed
room TatJies Numerous Other
ltems'614 446 3037
Movmg Sale NICe Sto¥e &amp; Re
lrgerator 614 446-8627
Ntce Couch IChatr Collee Table
lamps Sears Dry Ptano 2 Atr
Condtttoners + 17 500 10 000
BTU 5 61A 446 3224
Now ava lable at Patnt Plus lor
your log home cedar !tdtf'IQ deck
or outdoor lurntture AKZO NO
BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
675 4064
Orlando 4 hotel mghts near DIS
ney use anyttme paid $300 sell
$99 304 3{1 2489
Refr gerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recondtttoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W II DeiNer 614-669 6441

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Uprtgtlt Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson OhtO 1 BOO 537 9528
SUNQUEST WOLFF TANN lNG
~

BEOS

Commerctal Home umts !rom
$199 Buy factory dtrecl and
SAVEl Call TODAY for NEW
FREE color catalog 1 800 462
9197
Sunray gas cook srove avocado
color $150 :JJ4 773-9192
Tracker VIII System 10 Umm
esh dt$h Trackur VIIJ recotver
$600 614 9992 7283

Vmyl house shuuers electrtc
baseboarel heaters soltd steel tn
sula!ed door two louvered 1ntert
or doors range hood ta ll 614
992 5293 a he• 3pm
Wh te Campertop Ptck Up $300
614 4-46 -4141 Alte r 0 00 Or
Weekends
550

Building
Supplies

Block brtck sewer ptpes wtnd
ows I ntels etc Claude Wtnters
~~~ Grande OH Call 6, t4 ~45

1

560

Pets lor Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea
IL.tnng Hydro Bath Julte Webb
Call614 446 0231
2 AKC regtslered male Shih IZU
puppt~s born 6121f95 614 742
3006

2 mate AKC Cocker Span tel
pups black &amp; blacklwh te Cham
pton bloodlines $150oa 304 937

2733
3 Chow pupptes tor sale botn
Aprt l 13th parents AKC regs
tered $100 each 1 black male
one coco lemale 1 red fema le
614 992 2232
55gal aqu.U um Tank hood
stand &amp; accessones $165 304
675 6258
At&lt;~ Reg stared WhttG Mate Po
merantan S75 2 Voun11 Boauttlul
Female Not Regtslered S65
Each 614 446 6627

AKC Boston Temor pupp tes

304 458 1649
AKC Reg tstered Col li e Pup
ptes Trt Co or $150 00 614 446
7644
AKC R"egts(ered Da!rilattan pup
ptes 12wks old vet ~;hecked
shots &amp; wormed 2 males liver
spot $25oa 2 female!! black/
wh11e $200ea verv soctal great
w/chtldren 304 675 3738 alter

4pm

10 ~ /./Oil..E.

1tJ

10DA't5

RCSPOJSIV&amp;:

• 7 2
• K 9 7 3
lloJ 9 8 6 2

VXRLD

i&lt;Af'.~'\

J,ol(&gt;oll1\-Tf

1986 Honda Rebel 250 Low Mtle
age Cal l Aller 5 PM 614 446 -

..

BARNEY

HE'S

WHAR'S
JUGHAID,

1
1

South

BACK

OUT
TRAtNIN'
HIS FROG,

MIZ SMIF?

fullbloodedBiueHeeler pups
Smales $100ea 304 675 5964
Rat1 Ten ers 6wks old $50 304
882 3340

JAMEY

Three fema le and one mate Jack
Russell letrters $250tea 6t4
742 2050
570

Musical
Instruments

1 Year Old Bundy Clannet For
Sale Bought New Patd $450 In
Mtnt Cond tton 614 245 9099

1990 Cavalrer 5 Speed
$3 600 304 675 2579

750 Boats

&amp;

l-:-::~,-....,..'o.:._rs,..a_le_-..,__

1991 Camaro RS All Power Op
!tons Rep 39 000' Mtles F 1 3 4
lb $7 100 OBO Trades Welcome,
614 256 6969

1=.....::.:..:..=.....::______

s•

Ntce Story &amp; Clark Ptano L lo.e
Newt 614-388-9502
580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
Canntng tomatoes and bell pep
pers tomatoes $3/bu you ptck
p eked $4 50 peppers $6/bu you
ptck $7 ptcked brmg contatners
Raymond AO'MJ 614 247 4292
Canntng tomatoes for sale $4
$3 you ptck hot peppers
Marshall Ad ams 48060
Adams Ad I mart Falls Ohto
614 247 2055 •
Canntng tomatoes for sale brtng
contatners pte~ your own or a
ready ptcked 614 247 2961
Cann tng tomatoes nc1edtble
corn 614 992 5866 or 614 992
3985
FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;

LIVESTOCK
~

.

610 Farm Equipment
1 94 7 John Deere Mode A Wtlh
Front End Loader New T1res Ex
cellent Condttton $3 500 1950
John Deere Model A Completely
Rebutlt New Pat11t Excellent Con
d !ton $3 350 614 64;3--2300 0.4
6146432916Aher6PM
Otscaunt larm !factor PiHts lor
Ma!i!il:!'Y Ford IH • &amp; ot hers
Stder s EqUipment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
277 3g17
Used Tobacco Sttcks
614 256- t65t
630

15¢ Each

livestock

5 MOi11Fi Old Ptgmy GlHII S50
61'11 300 9534

Appaloosa mare t6yrs old gen
lie ndes well $550 Mare 1 tl
2yrs old green broke $400 or
both $800 304 675 6591
l1mous n CD tile purehted some
wtth paper s some wttho ut 6 14
992 6190
Reg tstered Angus Bull 3yrs old
perlormancc tested appro.
t8001bs $1 tOO ltrm 304 675
2902
640

Hay

&amp;

Gram

Round Bale Hay For Sale Stored
11'1 Barn Never Wet 614 2tt5
5t17
Square bales $1 S2 Round ba es
$!Sea Taktng orders lor 2nd cut
ltng unttl Sept 1 304 675-3960
TRANSPORTATION

710

Autos lor Sale

85 Mercury Cougar motor needs
wo rk $500 614 742 t507 al ter
5pm

f97'2 E! Com tno 350 Auto AC
PS r'B Arso t'9"8B s-:10 614 256
1481 Alter 6 PM
1977 Corvene Manne e1ue 350
Barrel 46 000 Actual Mtles Very
Good Condtton $9 000 614 446
1098

1979 Chrysler New Yorker all
AJ&lt;C Reg1stored Dalrnattons fe
power good Sltcker 304 675
male 813194 male 1123195 not related ready to breed Must sell 1 4063 alrer Spm
due to health reasons 614 742 •
1961 Delta 98 $650 OBQ 614
265-&lt;
446 7730
AKC Regtstered Golden Retnever
1984 Bu"k Skynawk $1000 OBO
Puppms $200 614 367 7009
304 675 7126
AKC Reg1s1erod Coc.ker Spanrel
Puppy Male Buff &amp; Wt11te
1985 Chrysler Laser All P..ower
Wo(med Vacctna1ed Champion
Otg!.WI Dash, High M loti F':ut Runs
Bloodltne D 0 8 3!2195 S200 , !f'cetlwntl Neoda Petnt $1 500
614 379 2728
Trade 614 446 4165

II

p.c·s

1989 Ch&amp;.~ S 10 87K New Patnt
Ttres Battery Excellen t Cond1
non $3 995 Ftrm 614 446 4564
Aher 5P:M
1989 Ch&amp;.~y K1500 4•4 350 auto
PS PB AC 304 1!B2 2962

MOO·~OO·GAI-PAN

O(lle-NTA/..
C.LII$'1NE
,,

vJITt-1 A
L.ITTLt MO~E

/

MOO ANI&gt; A

L-OT LESS
GOO.

'•

BORN LOSER
11\1:) I::, 11-U::: Tl-\ IR.D 1-JEE.K. 1N 1\
ROW YI'J.J'VE. &amp;EN Plct£D UP ON

Full stzc be nc h seat for a Plv
mouth Voyager mm t&gt;tan gray
$75 614 985 4287

790

Campers

&amp; 4·WDs

1977 Dodge van 15 passenger
61 SOOmt 360 engtne auto PS
PB .r ear heater 1ght blue 304
675 3039 Btds Onlyt See Legaf
Ad

1976 GMC WJtmmy~ 4 WD Auto
Tran s PB PS PW 350 Cu In
Motor Wnh 4 Barrel G-a rb Front
Hubs Aut lock In Body Rough
Actyal Mles 59 000 Dr1e Owner
$1 BOO Cash 614 4~6 3277
1984 Ford Bronco 4ll4 New Mo
tor 2 Complete Wetght Set&amp; Wtrh
Benches SSO 614 446 4217

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250,
72 000 Mtles $6 000 Can Be
Seen AI Gall~pofts Dally Tribune
825 Thtrd K¥enUQ Galhpol!s
O"o

DIITEW-\T

.STOR.Y I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher ci\']Jfograms are crea!ed from quoiaiTOI'Is by famous P«lf)kk pall and Ptesent
Each ltiner In the cipher slands lor allOiher TOO. II 1 clre V fKIUIIIS 0

"T

1v L u c J

MZSURJ

CEZULJ

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heal Pumps Arr Condt!lontng If.
You Don 1 Call Us We Both lose I
Free Esttmates 1 800 287 6308
614 446 6308
002945

wv

Restelemta l or commerctal wtrtng
new sorvt ee or reparrs Masrer lt
censed el~ctrtctan A denot.u
Ela,tr~cal WV000306 304 675

1786

Ml

J

XU

RCWAF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'The toUphesl hitter I ever faced? Tommy Hennch

....

WOlD
GAM I

0 ll:eorronge

le"•n of lho
lour acrambled words be
low ro form four words

I

SYATYE

I
~-o-T;,...:E~N,....:..I..:L:_,..--11 ;,'
1 I I
I

::

R A D T WY

IO

what you - - - - • • • know •

•

Comp lete the chuckle quoted

by hlltng tn the mtu1ng words
y!;)u deveiQp from step No J below '

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

.

-

To

IIIII II I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Pelvis · Olden - Hyena - Jersey - 0 VERHEAD
Some of Granny s old say1ngs never made much

STRI&lt;E. A8JPN IN TI-E. WIR ON
HIGH PRICES. ~HOP' THE CLASSf/EDS.

lTUESDAY

DRYWALL
Hang f1ms~ repatt
Cethngs te111ured plasrer repa1r
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 yearS
bxpenence

840

MYU

E T I U

WN

CEBCNF

0 ~~ic:~~~~ER LETTERS

ASTRO·GRAPH

ahead by ma•llng :ti2 ana !:iA::it IQ A slro
Graph clo thts newspape r P 0 Box
4465 New York NY 10163 Make sure Ia
slate your zod1ac s1gn
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) An opponunt
ty mtght present 1tse11 today gtvtng you a
chance Ia get togelher wtth someone
who has been eJudtng you Thts person
should be receptive now
LIBRA (Sept 2:j;9J:t 23) Under your
d1rect1on a collec:ltve lamtly tnvolvement
ca n be •mplemented today All w1lt take
pnde tn parttCtpatlng but you need to
push the go bunon
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22) Several
1mportant maners can be 11nalized to your
VVednesday Aug 16 1995
sattsfachon today tl you locus on pnor1
A secret destre you ve worked for long ttes not probab1llhes Do not turn your
and hard looks like tl may come to pass agenda 1nto a guess1ng game
1n the year ahead Luck wtll not be the SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0ec 21) Walch
maror factor It w1H be somelhtng you for an unusual de11elopment today w1th
j:(_Oittable potenltal It w tH be somethtng
deserve
that you mtght recogntze bul assoc1ates
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Punlng your tnge
nutty to good use today shouldn t be too wont
CAPRICORN (Dac 22·Jan 19) Some·
-dtf:ltculi aspetlally tn Muahons that oth
ers have 91ven up on or diSCarded Leo t1mes tt s necessary tO take an unyteldtng
treat yourself fa "1 birthdaY" gtfl Send for pos11i0n on a moral tssue aboul whtc:h
your Astro Graph predtCitons for the year you feel strongly Today m1ght be one of

'

•

E U C F J

Henrich could hl1 me at mtdntgh1 wtth 1he llgh1s out"- Bob Feller

8

C&amp;C General Homo Matn
tenence Pa nttng &gt;t tnyl stdtng
carpentry doors wtndows baths
mobtle home repa r and more For
free esltmale call Che! 614 992
6323

Freeman s Heatmg And Coo!mg
Instal Ia! on And Serv ce 'EPA
Cerulted Res denllal Commercial
614 2561611

B C F

L-J.L-..1.-J.L-..1.-J.~,.J

Earl s Home Ma menance vtnyl
srdjog roolmg extertor patnt ng
pgwer washtng Free E!ltmates
614 992 4451 Of f!14w~2 4232

J

I

T

~-..,,,.,6~-r~-..,~r:7,.:...TI,-..,I,-~

Btl I Omck s Home lmprovemenrs
add t!tons remodeling rooftng
stdtng plumbmg elc Insured call
Btll OmcK 614 992 5163

Heating

T y

EMOU

B X T R X

I

Improvements

!!2L Plumbing 1

c

RMYRUTOUG

G 1ve other people a chance
to express their opm1on
the
L-...J.L...-..!.-J..
. ....:..L..--I
professor lectured When you
. . - - - - - - - - m _ _ , t a l k 'he added you hear D~ly

Home

Roolmg and gutters commerctal
and res1denltal mmor repa rs .35
yeats expeflance 614 992 5041

1989 Chevrolet Astro Von
70 000 - Mtles Aulorl'tatte A1r
Crutse, Ttl! LQo~s Runs Good I
New Ttres luggage Rack -4 Cap
tatn Chairs 1 Bench Seot $4 900
614 446-8172 614 256-6251

tYn.ll!'&gt; CRI~Ii'IN..
k.TIVITY OO:Ct/.Jf¥0&gt;_::1

SERVICES

198f5 Chevy S 10 Blazer Tahoe
4X4 2 Tone Blue IWhlle Looks
Ru ns Good' S3 500. 6t4 446
4355

4a8 0003

WILL BEl\

1975 26 Foot Holiday Vacatton
Camper Gooel Shape E~erythtng
Works l fi14 446 1400

Ron s TV Serv1ce spectaltltng 1"'
Zenllh also ser\ltCtng mosr other
brands House calls 1 800 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

f989 Astro Mark Ill Convers ton
Van loaded 1982 Red Mustang
E)(P Exc81fent Condttton AIC
Now Tires S1 195 Most Trade
Ins Posstble Cook Motors 614

t-~o:rww.

A Ml~ll"f.OOR. 1

&amp;

1985 CJ5 Jeep Soft Top 304 En
gtne V 8 Body Good Condtllon
$3 200 614-441 0202.

t 988 Plvmouth Voyage' van Auto matte Cold Atr Nrce Van
$3,200 080 614 441-Q584

():),l'f 1-JORRY

Motor Homes

810

Calli. airport

Poetic time

Cad
Hlt·ahow
abbr
43 Foreheada
44 Pier
46 Doctrine
48 N M art
colony
50 Dregs
51 Grafted, In
heraldry
52 Fawn
55 Poatalebbr

1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unc;ndtttonal hlehme guara ntee •
L9~1 relerences !urn shAd call
[614) 446 Jl670 Or (01&lt;) 237
0488 Aogets Waterp,ooltn9 Es
tabiiShed 1975

Vans

P'

New gas lanks one ton truck
wheels radtators lloor mats etc
0 &amp; R Auto Rtpley WV 304 372
;!_933 Of 1 800 273 g329

1995 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT pw
PI pm atr tIt cruse lowtng ~ck
a.ge redlstlver, 3 100m1 $18800
3(}4 675-5128

730

34
35
37
41

5

Appl anc;c Parts And Servtce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
pencnce AH Work Guaranteed •
French Ctty Maytag 614 446
7795

90 model• Chevy 112 ton St l ~eta
do almost aH opt tons 138 ooo
very good condtt on SS 700 ltrm
61499241t1

'I

P'

19M ._ord F250 X:LI Lartat 480
EFI 5spd overdr ve super cab
36 OOOmt power everythtng ac .,
exc cond $10 500 Call 304 882
2766 alter Spm

1995 Ford F150 61!yl 304 675
7669

31
33 Roundworm

Pholhp Alder

Declarer unblocked hiS two
club honors then led the diamond Jack
kmg ace e1ght South completed h1s
quest for mformal10n by ruffing dum
my s last club m h1s hand
What had South learned' He llnew
East had begun w1th seven spades, two
hearts and three clubs Therefore. hiS
diamond etght was a smgleton
South was lett Wllh the 6 5 2 of d1a
monds and the heart queen Dummy
had the Q I 0 4 of d1amonds .tnd the
heart 10 South led the d1amond two
from hand and when West covered woth
the three South lied a world record by
successful!; linessmg dummy's four
Pre empts
are double edged
weapons They make 1t tougher for the
opponents to reach the nght contract
But 1f the other s1de docs wm the auc
tJon the descnpt1ve pre empt wrll often
make 1t eaSier for the declarer to place
the cards

Ptfl.SONAJ..L.Y, Z P,EFE~ MY

1-.....::....:.:..:.:.:::..::....:.::.:.::::.:::__

1987 Stlverado Good Moto r
Transmtsston Bed Cab Has
Been Crushed
Sell Whole
St 300 614 38B 8596

~~~Ita

•K

m hand

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1976 Customtzed Mat I Jeep 327 Chev Engtne $600 614 446
Good Shape Perfect For Hunung 4141 After 6 oo Or Weekends
F 1shmg Or Camptng S69 5 61 4
256--6753
350 Buck Engrne 400 Turt&gt;o
1979 GMC Ton Dually Crew Cab Trans Ace $250 080 614 38B
6647
New Patnl Ttres Runs Good
89 000 Mtle s $5 000 614 388
Budge! Transm sstons Used ll
8596
Rebu1l! All Types Acco sstble To
l.9.8~ FoUi F 150 Jh4 30a- auto, Over tO 000 Trans m sston Also
Patts CIU!clie'S &amp; 1'ressure
PS PB AC new motor &amp; trans
Plates 614 379 2935
mrss on 304 862 2962

6144&lt;~63139

Pass

dummy s .ace and ruffed the spade sev

B·•S

1992 Pl ymouth Laser 41 000
mtles e~ccllcnt condttton great 1985 Bomber 16 112 F1 Ftsh And
gas m teage $8600 5 14 992 Skt 115 HP Motor E•cellent Con
6725
dtnon Must See To Apprectate
$6500 6144461155
1 g93 Cllev Geo Metro 2 Door
Grear Conel ton Excellent Mtle 1991 Yamaha Wave r unner 3
age $4 995 Fum 614 446 4564 1$::3::500:.:::..:6::1.:.4..:4.:46:.-:.1:.758::.,_ _ __
Aher SPM
,.
1992 Sea Nymph boat Wtlh tra ler
1993 Eagle Vtston TSI Loaded 75 hp Johnson engtnc wlllllots ol
Green &amp; Grey 39 ooo M11es extras take over paymenrs 614
S13 000 6t4 256-1616 614 256 949 2872
1252
760
Auto Parts &amp;
720 Trucks for Sale
Accessories

$5000

Pass

25
26
27

hearts but wath two aces and three

1964 16 1t2fr mboardlourboard
open bow $3500 304 675 2245

1987 Nt ssan Ktng Cab Topper
V 6 New Clutch Ttres Patnt
70 000 Mti01i EMcellenr Cone111on

5•

Pass

23

Two of Van Loon s words vaguely re
late to today s deal
North m1ght have passed over four

161! fi berglass pleasure boa!
70hp rebu !t engme $2 500 OBO
304 675 1304

1985 For d Ranger 2 WD truck
good conel needs autornat•c
transmtss on rcpatredneplaCP.d
$1200lrm 3046756192

Pass

18
21

East
3 ..
Pass

North

trumps, he took the aggressove course
chasmg a h1gher scormg slice of the
loaf
West led the spade king East over
took With hiS ace and conlmued With
the spade n1ne South ruffed h1gh
cashed the heart king, played a heart to

1:.:=:::..:.....::...:..:::..:._:..:.::.....::___

Mslvtlle Clark sptnet ptano ap
P,fOX 25 years old excellent con
dttton 614 992 7512

TI4EN A VOiCE COMES TO ME THAT
SA'&lt;S, ''RIG14T AFTER THE CREDITS!"

Motors

1990 Ponttac Gran Am Loaded
ooo "''I" $5 ooo oso 614
256 1539 614 256 1233

10

11

Drug agcy
Penny
Hand moHona
Full ofteellng
Blue pigment
Uoea a
k1yboard
Labor org.
Snakes
Foamy
Eastern title
Fixed charge
Old- (Bibla

pense '

SOMETIMES I
AWAKE AT NIGHT, AND
I ASK ''WHEN WILL IT ALL END?''

Hondo. XR 60 good condtlJOn
$400 614 949 2249

Atr

5 Sky vehicle

Hend11k Van Loon the Dutch born
Ame11can JOUrn~IISt and h1storoan,
wrote. "The hostory of the world os the
record of a man m quest of h1s dally
bread and butter" He m1ght have
added ·often at someone else s ex

PEANUTS

1995 Honda 4W0 h.ont 8. back
1969 Ford Tempo 71 000 M les 4 burpers sttck stoppers e111ra feet
Door Atr $3900 MayConstder gautel Also 1990CR125 304
Parttal Trade 614 256 6854 614 576 9907

256 6329

6
7
8
9

4 Urban pest

3 Actresa Baxter

Uncover your
opponent's hand
By

1994 Toyota &lt;lx4 $1 200 pay off
good condttton 614 2473500 al·
1er 6 30pm or lea\le messa""'
,~

West

Opemng lead

Autos tor Sale

1989 Beretta 4 Cylmder Auto
Atr PS PB 58 000' M les S4 500
614 446 7912

fear
2 Slippery

Vulnerable East West
Dealer East

I:.:::..:.:...:::.:...:.:::.:::..:.::__ _ __

Ch huahua pupptes female 1~
old housebroke ~ole 8w~s ol
-- ~
304 675 7732
rtruUCII:U prtCC

1 Shudder of

32 Pllllo
36 Artistic peroon
38 Out of danger

• J 6 5 2
lloA K

1986
50 4
looks Good Runs Good $650
Cash Or Trade 614 446 0621
1985 Honda Accotd LX maroon
Iguanas Tarantulas m c
e
6
-:.14:."....:.6..:6.:65:.1.:._.'-----automattc
atr
conellltontng
load
_
h T k • P81 Sh
2 4 13
ts
an Ave Pont Pleasant
op
ed e111ra mce $3850 614 992 1989 Ju.on d a 300 4 wheel et
Jackson
304 675 2063
2594 alter 6pm weekdays or any S2 700 304 89s-3013
flme weekends
1993 Honda &lt;1 wheeler 300 utd ty
Boxer Pups AKC Regts!Sred
1987 Cutlass Ctera Wago n V 6 tr~oelel exc cond 304 675 4848
Auto A1r Cona AM!FM Stereo alter 4 30
Tatls Docked 4 Females 6H
Clean $3 000 614 379 2853
::::::...:,::::_ _ _ _ _..:.__ _
710

&amp;Q I 0 5

•KQJ986

1986 250R Fourtra• $? 150 614
446- 1756

0 1995 by NE" Inc;

Pets tor Sale

30Horse
directives

08

•4

1984 Honda V65 11 00 Magna
new bres mtnt cond rOO S3 150 304 458 1088

8 ,,-

560

EAST
•AQJI0963
• 4 3

•K 8

1984 Honda Goldwtng 57 OOQ
M1tes Lo ts Extras! $3 500 614
388-8056 Alter 4 PM

Sellers K1tchen Cabmet Patnted
$250 614 446-3159
Septtc Tank Jet Aeratton Motors
New ll Rebutlt llnslalled Cal l
Johns John 614 44&amp;4782

WEST

SHE. SA'-t:'i SH{; \IJAIJTS US

SOUTH

446 7166
Glasstop Dtnette Set Glass Shelf
To
10 Malch 1300 "I' 388 9261

Used Bundy Flute $85 Sears
Woodburner $5(1 614-446 4621

tor Rent

1975 New Moon l ratlet t4x70 2
3 Bedroom 2 Full Baths Gas
Heat Very Clean $6 696 614
388 0208 Aller 6

G rls 10 Speed Schwtn Btcyc le
$50 Bundy II Sa'ophon. ltk.
New $600 Young Gtls Bedroom
Sutte All Wood $900 Full S ze
Headboard Dresser Wllh Mtrror
Chest 01 Drawers Hu tch With

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers re ln gorators
tanges Skaggs Appl ances:.J..6
V ne Street Call 614 446 7~H
1 800 499 3499

Farms for Rent

14x70 Wtncl so Deluxe E•cellent
Cond I oa large Kt!Chen Ltlllng
Room 2 Bedrooms 1 Baths
$12 000 614 2&lt;15 9431

Maple 120 Level Ptek Up Load
You ~au I 61-4 446 4245
•

Two to1s at Metgs Memorv Gar
dens musl sell 614 992 3875

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
01 &gt;te St Galltpol ts New &amp; Used
furniture heaters Western &amp;
Work bo&lt;Xs 614 446 3159

Motorcycles

~~~~----------~::::::::::::::::~r::::::::::::::::::1:.(~=·~-------------F1rewood Mostly locust Some I·
Suzukt LT
Wheeler ',

Every Room 6nit AI 2 North Pt
Pleasant 304 675 6820

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home lurn~shmgs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 6'14 446
0322 3 mtles out Bulavttte Ptke
Free Del vMy

EEK&amp;MEEK

1982 Honda 6 50 Ntghthawk
Good Condtt ton 12 000 Miles
$1 100 OBO Call Berweoo 9 AM
9 PM 614 256- 1443

Space tor Rent

Mobtle Home Lo1 In Centenar~
SlOO!Mo 614 446 t610

530
1-1 sUtll horae batn on :lQa;rQ'
for lease 304 •369 6447

Electr c Whee lchatrs /S cooters
New /Used Scooter t Wheelc hatr
UftS SrtllrWAf E!8Vato75 Lift
Cha1rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

Rooms

Clean 2 3 bedroom house $400/
mo wtoptton to buy deposit re
qwed no pets 61 4 696 7244

rooms up two large rooms down
o!ltcel ulth[)' room area sul'lpotch
Located tn ntce ne rghborhood
near school total electriC 614
992 6970

Mobile Homes
· - lor Sillll

tunmes

Ashton Upland Roao bea u !!lul
l acre lots No tra t ers w II accept
double w .des public water
Tw tn Rtvers Tower now accepttng
$10 000 304 736 9516
apphcattons. lor 1br HUD subs d
.:...:::.:..:..:...::.:.......::.:..:._:....:__ _ _ _ , llzed apt lor elderly and handt
Corner 101 2t4 Poplar St &amp; Mad
capped EOH 304.e7S.6679
son Ave approx t7 51175 $1 000
Very clean one bedroom fur
304 675 7169
ntshed apartmem tn Mtddleport
County Road access survey 614 &lt;146 3091 or 614 992 5Xl4
method !I aliatlable 5acres 304
675 1918
450
Furnished

for Rent

$28 500 2 Acres More Or Less
On Roule 218 6 Rooms And
Bath Garage And Out Bulldtng9
614 446 4938

2tledroom wnh basement. close
to schools S14 500 Ce ll 304
675 6621

Acreage

5 Acres For $12 000 Locared
Between V nt on
A to Grande
Sa lor Road 614 386 9737

420

l1m1ted Offer' 1996 doublew de
3br 2ba th $1695 down $2591
month Free dtHrvery '4. setuP,.
Only a! Oakwood Home~
304 755-5885

548B

&amp;

Two or three bedroom house tn
Rutland depostt and references
teq~tred no pets ~614 742 2661

-

o

46 Acres Pond House Complete
Remod'ed Barn Garage Outbutl
mg Tra1 er Hook Up 614 446
t098

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Servtce Complete tree
care 20yrs exp &amp; tnsured free
esttmales 614 441 1191011
000 508-6887

21

5

Call eu
Oppor

Farms lor Sale

Concrete &amp; Ptasttc Sepltc Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Ga llons Ron
Evans Enterprlses Jackson OH
1 800 537 9528

8 J5 95

• 7 5 2
•A 10 5
tA Q 10 4
llo7 4 3

1979 1000 Suzuki motorcycle lor
sa le lor of new part runs excel
lent 614 992 6069 ca ll an~l!me

Black Formal And Cap &amp; Gown &amp;
PromDerss 61444 1 1595
Fvrntshed Eff,c; enc;y Share Bath

NORTH

100 Yamaha XL 4 whee ler
$1 500 304-675-5502

0

Are :;au siCk ol the cable compa
mes? NO cable avatlable'? RCA
18~ dlg.ral satelhte dtsh Btg
screen teiW!Stons SEE and
FEEllhe ACTION Over 115
channels All tor as low as $201
mo Buy DIRECT and SAVE
CALL oday for FREE color cata
log 1 800-553 5443.

Dependable Htgh School Student
Wi th Transpcrtatton Needed To
Watch 2 Young Ch1ldren In

ALDER

1988 Dodge Converston Van "'

Answer to Prevlout Puzzlt

'Your
'Birthday

~

w

~-

'

'

those d~:~ys
AOUARIUS (Jan 20· Feb 191 Your char
table tn sltnct s can be eas 11y aroused
today but only lnr rhose you feel are truly
deservtng Moochers won I pul l the wool
011er your eyes
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) You could
be qutle fortunate lormtng lasttng relat1on
shtps m thts cycl e If there 1s a spec•al
fnendshtp you wtsh to cu lttllate do 11 now
ARIES (March 21 April 19) Where your
career ts concerned thts could be an
mtere s ttng day t o p lay a trump ca rd
you ve been holdmg back When you play
1t maKe 1t really count
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) A seem1ngly
d tfftcult development can be resol11ed
today 1f you use the same lec:hntques that
worked for you 1n the pas\ Trust what
you already kn&lt;?w
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your chart
tnchcates a posstbtllty that you mtght get a
btg bOost today !rom someone who' se/
dam goes out of h1slher way to ass1st oth
ers Capttahze on this
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Mak,ng a
sol1d bargatn wont be d1tflcult today if you
treat others as fatrly as you would ltke to
be treated yourself Try 11 and see

•

sense to me The funmest one was Hav1ng a bird
hand IS better than one OVERHEAD •

m

AUGUST15l

�Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Tuesday,August15,1995

Activities for 132nd annual event begin

Opening:day at the Meigs County Fair

~c:::

A combined publication of:

Joint Jltascrnt ~gishr

f'allipolij llaUu Wtihnnt
~

Seabee duty on Guam:

Gallia County
man recounts
4-day ordeal
Page3

Twin brothers
work together
in the Pacific
Page 7

tU .~

The Daily Sentinel

\

Indianapolis survivor:

·~ 1U
~.~

·-s::-g.....
~a.

1 Section • 12 Pages

50th Anniversary V-J Day Supplement • August 15, 1995

Multimedia, Inc., Publication

.Sheriff recalls island hopping
:campaign i'n South Pacific·;
Defends use-of atomic-bo-mbs
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
MIDDLEPORT-- For Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Souls by, the surrender of Japan brought about a feeling of
relief- relief !hat he would n01 have lo participate in an
invasion of the Japanese homeland. ,
Soulsby, a Navy veteran who participaled in the island~opping campaign in the South Pacific and !he invasion of
!he Philippines, was in Guam- a sraging area for the
invasion'of Japan - when he first heard about rhe dropping of the alomic bombs on Japan, and !he empire's
subsequenl unco,ndirional surre nder.
·
"We were happy about it, bul we couldn 'l really celebrale," he said.
: The overall feeling was one of relieflhatlhe invasion of
Japan would no! lake place, he recalled.

YOUNG EXHIBITOR- Fiveyear-old Tina Drake, above,
showed her first ewe ever,
"Cutle", In the open class last
night. Here, the Racine resident
tries to put the lead over the
ewe's head. Drake Is a Clover
Bud In the Pioneer 4-H Club. The
ewe was not cooperating and
kept shaking Its head.

Soulsby's Navy ser- ers.
I lis wartime duties started in New Guinea and pro vice started in 1942
ceeded from island 10 island until the invasion of the
at the age of 18.
At Great Lakes. Ill . Philippines. In the Philippin.s, he landed at Lingayn and
he served in the choir headed inland to Clark Field
Being on the ground resulted in sev~raltense moments
CO!npany which pcrfor
Soulshy as Japane&gt;e bombers occasionally attacked
fornled forsu~.:h Llig·
nitam:s as EleantJr the ai rfield~ .
Follo~ing the Japanese sun·ender. Soulsby' s ship picked
Roosevelt and exiled
up
the 77th Army Infantry Division and dropped il off in
Chinese
president
'"We.were slated for the invasion," he said ... We were
Japan
and China for occupation duty.
Chiang
Ki
Shek.
familiar wilh !he fanaticism of the Japanese."
He
was
then discharg~d from the Navy as a raPiortlan
He
then
wen
t
to
the
Soulsby said he disagrees wilh modem historians. many
tirst
class
and
sent back tu Bay City which he eventually
Univer~ity nf Wi ~­
born since the end of the war, who tend to criticize the us~
co nsin for raJio l~ft to return to Meigs County,
of the atomic bombs on Japan.
For his rolo in !he war. Soulsby received !he American
. . chnnl and then on to
"The A-bombs saved millions of lives on both sides."
Thealer
Rihbon, lhe Asiatic Thealer Ribbon wilh two
California
fnr
field
Soulsby countered, explaining !hal an invasion of Japan
the Philippines Liberation Ribbon with one
battle
stars.
trai
ning.
similar
to
would have been much more costly in human terms.
Army or Marine ha- battle slar and the World War II Victory Ribbon.
"I hear people say we were the aggressor: I think about
sit: training, he exA Syracuse native, Sou lsby gradualed from Pomeroy
(I he surprise auack on) Pearl Harbor and Ihe Bataan Death
High Sehoul in 194! .
plained.
March, the rape of China and Manchuria," he said, refer- JAMES M. SOULSBY, 1942
"I call our cia" 'The Class of Desliny' ," Soulsby said.
Soulsby' s responsi ring to various Japanese atrocities.
"Almosl
all the guys in our class went inro the service.''
hilities
kept
him
on
the
ground
for
the
most
part,
vulner"It was a wise decision; Truman· made rh e right deci"The
service
was an education in itself.'' he said. citing.
.able to Japanese attack,
sion," he affirmed. ·
Altached to the Fleet Air Wing, he was responsible for the leadership e•perience and exposure lo different cul"lflhe Axis powers had the atomic' bomb. they wouldn't
'
setting
up communications for ground-based patrol bomb- tureli as example s.
have hesitated to use it on us."
·

Y-J Day in Gallia County: Citizens react

READYING Tt!E RIDE - Kenny
McMannis, right of Wintersville
plugs the lights together on the
Ferris Wheel Monday afternoon.
The Bates Brother Co. employee
·r anked meeting women the best
part of his job.

to news of war•s end with 2-day holiday
was on hand.
.
.
By KEVIN KELLY
On Wednesday, the cily and counry fell inlo accord with
OVP News Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Galli a counlians awoke on the morn- President Truman's call for a tw~day holiday 10 nole the
ing of Wednesday, Aug. 15, 1945; wirhout the onus of war occasion. Srores were closed, no mail was delivered and .
Jhal had hung over the nalion for the pas! 45 monlhs to "I he jails were emply ,"•!he Tribune nored.
The boiswousness thai surrounded !he end of World
enler "a bright new era of peace," as the Gallipolis Daily
War
II may have in pan been anributed lo !he release of
Tribune noled iq that day's edilion.
AI 7 p.m. Tuesday news services and radio nelworks lensions !hat had buill up si nce Aug. 6 when !he lirsl
had flashed lo the world the anxiously-awaited news of atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. When !he JapaJapan 's acceplance of unconditional surrender 1erms with . nese did not immedialely surrender, a second bomb devAllied forces. The war-weary homefronl promplly went astated Nagasaki rhree days larer. Since !hen, it had been
wild with joy, and as the Tribune reporled , Gallipolis and a wailing game form any Americans hoping the war would
ride to a swift .end.
,
the surrounding area was not immune.
On Aug. 14, !he Tribune's mail\ headline reported the
In contraslto the almost hushed observalioifOfV -E Day
lhe previous May. merrymaking rhrough Gallipolis was Japanese response 10 the Allied .ullimatumlo give up the .
tight was "on (Ihe ) way." Locally, Police Chief Chester
rife, according to Tribune accounts.
"Gal lipoli s was Leeper said eight to 10 additional oflicers would be on
closed. up tighter duty to handle any !rouble arising from a victory celebra"Fof-Good or Ill, Man Has than ~Dick' s hal- lion, and columnisl J. Sherman Poner in hi s daily "P~~P"
~and today afler
A Gallipolis Diary" observed archly of the Japanese thai
Freed the Power of the some noisemaking a "people whodon'l know when lhey 're licked, can't be ."
for lhree or four ·
Earlier in lh e week, in irs continuing coverage of
Atom," the Tribune's lead hours
Tuesday . serv icemen's news, the Tribune noted !hal Richard Eustory on Aug. 7 read, and nigh!, chielly by gene Houck of Mercerville, electrician 's mate "on a
youngsters and warship in the Pacific," had been wounded in action on
"Peeps" w.as moved to predominantly by July 30. No olher derails were immedialely available.
automobiles." the
On Aug. 15. as !he. nalior\ rejoiced, !he !ruth about
comment a week later that Tribune reponed. Houck's injuries \)ecame knnwn wh~n . the Uni(cd Press
Trucks tilled reponed from Guam .lhat !he Indianapolis, the ship on
"has. put it with
the bomb
.
young men which Houck had served, was sunk by a Japanese subma·
squarely up to the world mld women !rav- rine and its J 16 surv ivors had floaled in shark-infesled
eled up and down waters for four days be lore being rescued. Later, it was
as to its future- peace or the city's business revealed the lndianapolis' had ferri&lt;!d the bomb used on
section, llashing V Hiroshima to Tinian and was returning to pori 'when
pieces."
for victory signs, attacked .
Post.war mood
bunging on ' lhe
Aside froJll its,local coverage of V-J Day. !he Tribune
trucks and occasionally firing a gun in the air. A dis·
charged ~oldierreportedly got into fist fight wilh a citizen used UP dispatches reporting thai wilh war's end gasoline
on Second A: venue near the city park "and the «-soldier mtioning was over and nylons would ohce agaif! ~he
gave lhe other fellow a seVere pummeling," the newspaper available - but I,KOO empioyees of the Wesl Virginia ·
Ordnance Works at Point Pleasant would be out of a job by
said.
The more serious side of the celebration could be found wc e~· s enc.i.
The sh utdown of the plant, which had opened in Octoa11he Firs! Baplist Chur!:h, where a hastil y-called thanksgiving service was organized by the Rev. J. Edward ber 1942. w;,~ a sign of the conct:rns raisl!d about resh;Ip- ,
Hakes. In spite of the shorl notice. a heallhy-si zed,crowd ing !he war-driven job market for the returning soldier -

CHALLENGING COMPETITOR
- Candace Bunting, 16, lett,
takes her horse through Its
paces during the 4-H Horse
Show Monday afternoon. The
Allred resident rode her horse
· "Challenge the Dawn". She won
praise for her ability to steer and
turn her horse In circles.
•

a

the topic &lt;&gt;fthe V-J Day editorial appearing in that day's
Tribune, which discussed an
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
survey determining the
veteran's employment needs.
Also on !he minds of !he
public and I he local edilorialists was the impact of the bomb
and it; ~eslrucrive capabililies. "For Good ur Ill. Man
Has Freed the Power of the
Atom," the Tribune's lead
slory on Aug . 7 read, and
"Peeps''.was moved to com·ment a week later that the
bomb "has put it sq uarely up
to the world as to its future p~!l!.:~ or pieces."
However, the Tribune's
main editorial of Aug. 14, !'oreshadow ing the deh:1te over the
bomb's use that continut:!s today. fell no apologies should
be made for the attai.:kS on
Hiroshima ami Nagasaki.
•· Jf one must choose, cer·lainly an lnstanlaneous de"lh

by

atomic bombing i~ more
humane than tht:! brutality of
the Bataan Death March. or
I he slow death by lorture, starvation anU dist:iJSe of thou ~
A COLLECTION OF NEWSPAPER HEADLINES from around the country from
sands of Allied so ldiers and Aug. 7 to 14, 1945, the days lollowlng the dropping of an atomic bomb on
civi li ans." it re;ld.
Hiroshima, Japan. In addition to lhe latest war news, the papers also reported that
News of the day
gauallonlng was ov•r and nylons would once again be available,
Once the revelry over war's
end had evaporared, life in Gal lipoli &gt; "nd the co unty Lafayelle Post #27, announced that a V-J Day parade
would not he tJrganited until the official observalion was
continued rnut:h a's it had throughout the t:o~1 1li t:t.
Aside from the loc.tl. ~ tate and national coverage of announced by the pres-Ident. fhe Tribu ne's V-J Day e.tra
celebrations. the Tribunc's other main loc&lt;.ll story of the sold nearly KOO copies before 10:45 that morning.
News of area communities supplied by t.:Orrespondents
Jay focused on Constable Roy J(Jhn~on given a . . uspenlled
made
up a large bulk of the paper's inside pages, while in
jail s~ nlence and line in Ga lli a County Juvenilt: Courl for
sport~.
Rio Grant.le was to met:l Cadrflus ·in lhc 4-H
t:l,tntributing 10 the Jelinquem:y of a rninor.
Col. H.B. Ecker, commamlcr of Arncrkan Legion~ See V·J DAY, Page 11

With retease-frlHfrPDW camp

&lt;$

'

~

I

.
..

....,11•
•

EWE-FANGLED VACUUM - Mary Nally, above right, dries the
wool on the ewe she showed last ni!Jhl. Nally Is a member of
the Dreamweavers 4-H Club of Pomeroy.
FUTURE FARMER?- Erlnne Kennedy, 6, lett, pedals this
miniature tractor across the fair grounds Monday morning. The
Middleport resident said she was not going to compete In the
"'Kiddie Tractor Pull, but she enjoyed this chance to ride.
BEATING THE HEAT- Melody Lawrence, above left of the
Meigs County She_pherd's Club takes a drink from the. hose ·
Monday afternoon. The 14-year-old took this break to cool off
·
·
from Cleaning her ewe's wool.
FOWL INSPECTION - Klrt Spencer, 13, above, looks at the
pens of chickens, turkeys and other fowl Monday afternoon.
The Tuppers Plains resident will be exhibiting an antique plow
made In the 1800s.
JUDGING JEWELRY- Tiffany Green, 7, right, looks at some
of the merchandise she Is selling Monday morning. The
~arrlsonvllle Elementary student has sold several rings and a
pair of moccasins at the Albany Mint Mall on the lair grounds.
She also runs the cash register, giving change.
Dick Orci of New Haven

..

and dance hall. The upper deck that had once been !he beer
By MINDY !&lt;;EARNS
join!
was now where the prisoners ate. And the dance hall
OVP News Staff
that
had
heen downslai« was tran~tJ.irrned iplQ a bunk
NEW HAVEN .. Allhough V-J Day did not come unlil'
house
lor
prisoners. where the beds stood five high.
t.;everal .months later. victory came in freedom for DiCk
said
while being held prisoner, the men were forced
Ord
Ord of New Haven on April 25, 1945, \"hen he was
liberared in Germany afU:Lbe_ing ~prisoner of ~:If for five to work on !he railroad. They were fed once a day·. in lhe
cveni ng. ·arfd I he ln&lt;al &lt;onsiilcd bf a small~lni'in1 icc ·c\f
monlh~ .'
...
ol Wa!oi overseas, ~.:aptur~.d . 11erv~i:J a!t·n pri!'loner of war bread and a vcgetahle, hal rway 1\ctween a-lurn rp anJ sugar
and wa• back in the Slates bel'ore the age ol ~I," said Ord. bee!. cut into small bits and boikd into a sLJup. The I urn ips
traveling back lo the days when he was a private -first cia&gt;&lt; that were fed to the prisoncr.s were the ones too old tn Iced
in lhe 106th Division, Camp Alterby . "I was 145 pounds to the cuttle. wh1ch-;.,. what they w~r~ grown t'or. That i\
bel'ore I was captured; 97 pound; afterward ... and I still why Ord cannot ~land to cat a turmr tn this day .
"Therc were four of us who \:hummed' togethcranJ we
.,
won'! eat a turnip today."
,tole
anything we ..:maid to eat. Whatever we stole , the four
Ord. along with about 30 others, was captu red in Gerof
us
shared." Ord stated . Like the day Ord was working
many during !he Battle ol'the Bulge. Ord said his company
was on the buige of the land and !he enemy was laying atop a hill on the railroad, and &gt;aw a garden down lhe hill
artillery on it. He said the men went up over u mountain and :JL:m_..., a neck. He .. nl!akcJ down. pulli!J up onion~
nm l soun aflerun tlrtillc:ry ~ell went qff above them~ ncur and-,hal'etl the hounty with lri' J'riend' Ihal evening. But
a trel! , which sent limbs down. "It was the last time I .-.Jw nnt h~forc the farm~r &lt;.:aught him in the a~.::t and gave him
my &gt;&lt;rgcant," he said. "It broke both Iris legs. I told him he a good tongue -lashing.
Onl ..,aid Sunday.., were :-.pc&lt;.:ial in the fact that on 'hat
bctler take his sulfa drugs and drink his water. He Iold me
then that hi~ can teen wa!--. empty . lldt him my cnnlel'n and day. ydu received a howl of thin pntato !-!oup with one
took his. which I later filled hurn 'water in a catlle path." · ml!atball in the center. in . . tt.!ad of the turnip \nup He . . a1d
Ord ... aid the men cOnlinucd on and dm.Jgc:d around the practice of th~ men W:t\ 10 galht!r a !-! mall bit of the
Germans for three day ~ before bt!ing captured . " We were pot;Ltn -..nup in J "pnnn. along with that one meat hall. ph1~e
15 mile!\ into the em:my line," OrO said. AI one point after it in the1r rm 1ulh 11nd "m:k the JUice nil the meat hall. Th~.:.~y
Ord knew be and th~others were behind t.:ncmy line~ . he would then r~movc the meatball Irom their mouth. put it
was lying llat nrone man· ., feet when a 'hot hit the m;rn in ha.~.:k into tilt: ..,illlp :tnd go through the proct:'i...., agajn. until
lh,e .fleCk and sen! both his head anr.l helmet about tO feet all the ..,llUp wa" l.!~mc . Thq ..,a v1 ,red the ta . . tc of the meat
until the H'r) er1d
in the air.
flrd ' "id he kepi a POW di·"'. ;rllhnu~h 11 wa' lile
After being captured: Ord was held in a formc:rhccrjoinl
•

\

'

«(

For New Haven man, end .of World ~ wa.rr _II
came seven months before V-J Day

•
•

'

.,,·

·-.·

~

·-·--·-·

threaten in) to do so. He remembered one lime as he was ,
working on Ihe railroad, hi.s German foreman barkedr
_orr,ters to him in Ihe foreign language, Or~ . who though! he
had learned some German while being a POW, talked
back, bur said he obviously didn't realize what h'e had said,
hecause the ne&lt;t thing he knew.rhe foremar had lifled his
·~;;un from l.hi! holslcr. rern(iv~&lt;! lhj: )~fcly . :md hatf.the gun .
poi nrccl at Ord 's forehead . Again. he said some word' i,n
Ge rman , which Ord did not recognilc. The showdown ·
ended. and Ord h:rd hardy e&lt;caped with his life.
. He was libcratcc.l ncar Wertzen, Germany by Americans
on April 25. IC,J45 . Ord'.., :-.tory doe~ not stop there( however. What ho1rpcm:d OI!Xt was nothing short of a miracle.
Ord "aid they wen~ the fir..,t to arrive at a fight~r- plane
ai "I rip out side Wcrlrcn after being liberated and gol their
choice of harrack&lt;. ·lie "rid they chose a former officers'
barrack". the only one . . with maHr~sscs .
Ord "rid the rn'en 'tii'l tdt they 'weren' t being fed enough.
anJ went hun gry a lot of the fime. lie said OQC of his
"chum .... •· E... tc ~. worked in the kitchen . Ord and the other
twn dccidctl one evening to ruh th.:: rnc .. ~ hall. One of the
hudUic" . . lipped through an opening ut the bottom oF the
dm1r. while the others served a.~ lookouts. Jusl as lhe man
... tipp~ Lithroug h the door on hi!-! hands and knees. the door
~ wung open anti rherc si&lt;KJt.l E"tc~. The men :~ . . ked him not
to turn thern in. and E...re~ ended up helping the men carry
,ix Gt!'.C\OfC· ration.., out. whir. :h were hid in the barracks.
Ord ..,aid the men were a\ked to volunteer to type 25
n:unc-; on lt:o.t' that were used to fill trucks going to France.
where the men were return ed to the U.S. Ord said he
See END OF WAR, PJ!Q't 11

- - - -- ·----·---'

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                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Tuesday,August15,1995

Activities for 132nd annual event begin

Opening:day at the Meigs County Fair

~c:::

A combined publication of:

Joint Jltascrnt ~gishr

f'allipolij llaUu Wtihnnt
~

Seabee duty on Guam:

Gallia County
man recounts
4-day ordeal
Page3

Twin brothers
work together
in the Pacific
Page 7

tU .~

The Daily Sentinel

\

Indianapolis survivor:

·~ 1U
~.~

·-s::-g.....
~a.

1 Section • 12 Pages

50th Anniversary V-J Day Supplement • August 15, 1995

Multimedia, Inc., Publication

.Sheriff recalls island hopping
:campaign i'n South Pacific·;
Defends use-of atomic-bo-mbs
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
MIDDLEPORT-- For Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Souls by, the surrender of Japan brought about a feeling of
relief- relief !hat he would n01 have lo participate in an
invasion of the Japanese homeland. ,
Soulsby, a Navy veteran who participaled in the island~opping campaign in the South Pacific and !he invasion of
!he Philippines, was in Guam- a sraging area for the
invasion'of Japan - when he first heard about rhe dropping of the alomic bombs on Japan, and !he empire's
subsequenl unco,ndirional surre nder.
·
"We were happy about it, bul we couldn 'l really celebrale," he said.
: The overall feeling was one of relieflhatlhe invasion of
Japan would no! lake place, he recalled.

YOUNG EXHIBITOR- Fiveyear-old Tina Drake, above,
showed her first ewe ever,
"Cutle", In the open class last
night. Here, the Racine resident
tries to put the lead over the
ewe's head. Drake Is a Clover
Bud In the Pioneer 4-H Club. The
ewe was not cooperating and
kept shaking Its head.

Soulsby's Navy ser- ers.
I lis wartime duties started in New Guinea and pro vice started in 1942
ceeded from island 10 island until the invasion of the
at the age of 18.
At Great Lakes. Ill . Philippines. In the Philippin.s, he landed at Lingayn and
he served in the choir headed inland to Clark Field
Being on the ground resulted in sev~raltense moments
CO!npany which pcrfor
Soulshy as Japane&gt;e bombers occasionally attacked
fornled forsu~.:h Llig·
nitam:s as EleantJr the ai rfield~ .
Follo~ing the Japanese sun·ender. Soulsby' s ship picked
Roosevelt and exiled
up
the 77th Army Infantry Division and dropped il off in
Chinese
president
'"We.were slated for the invasion," he said ... We were
Japan
and China for occupation duty.
Chiang
Ki
Shek.
familiar wilh !he fanaticism of the Japanese."
He
was
then discharg~d from the Navy as a raPiortlan
He
then
wen
t
to
the
Soulsby said he disagrees wilh modem historians. many
tirst
class
and
sent back tu Bay City which he eventually
Univer~ity nf Wi ~­
born since the end of the war, who tend to criticize the us~
co nsin for raJio l~ft to return to Meigs County,
of the atomic bombs on Japan.
For his rolo in !he war. Soulsby received !he American
. . chnnl and then on to
"The A-bombs saved millions of lives on both sides."
Thealer
Rihbon, lhe Asiatic Thealer Ribbon wilh two
California
fnr
field
Soulsby countered, explaining !hal an invasion of Japan
the Philippines Liberation Ribbon with one
battle
stars.
trai
ning.
similar
to
would have been much more costly in human terms.
Army or Marine ha- battle slar and the World War II Victory Ribbon.
"I hear people say we were the aggressor: I think about
sit: training, he exA Syracuse native, Sou lsby gradualed from Pomeroy
(I he surprise auack on) Pearl Harbor and Ihe Bataan Death
High Sehoul in 194! .
plained.
March, the rape of China and Manchuria," he said, refer- JAMES M. SOULSBY, 1942
"I call our cia" 'The Class of Desliny' ," Soulsby said.
Soulsby' s responsi ring to various Japanese atrocities.
"Almosl
all the guys in our class went inro the service.''
hilities
kept
him
on
the
ground
for
the
most
part,
vulner"It was a wise decision; Truman· made rh e right deci"The
service
was an education in itself.'' he said. citing.
.able to Japanese attack,
sion," he affirmed. ·
Altached to the Fleet Air Wing, he was responsible for the leadership e•perience and exposure lo different cul"lflhe Axis powers had the atomic' bomb. they wouldn't
'
setting
up communications for ground-based patrol bomb- tureli as example s.
have hesitated to use it on us."
·

Y-J Day in Gallia County: Citizens react

READYING Tt!E RIDE - Kenny
McMannis, right of Wintersville
plugs the lights together on the
Ferris Wheel Monday afternoon.
The Bates Brother Co. employee
·r anked meeting women the best
part of his job.

to news of war•s end with 2-day holiday
was on hand.
.
.
By KEVIN KELLY
On Wednesday, the cily and counry fell inlo accord with
OVP News Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Galli a counlians awoke on the morn- President Truman's call for a tw~day holiday 10 nole the
ing of Wednesday, Aug. 15, 1945; wirhout the onus of war occasion. Srores were closed, no mail was delivered and .
Jhal had hung over the nalion for the pas! 45 monlhs to "I he jails were emply ,"•!he Tribune nored.
The boiswousness thai surrounded !he end of World
enler "a bright new era of peace," as the Gallipolis Daily
War
II may have in pan been anributed lo !he release of
Tribune noled iq that day's edilion.
AI 7 p.m. Tuesday news services and radio nelworks lensions !hat had buill up si nce Aug. 6 when !he lirsl
had flashed lo the world the anxiously-awaited news of atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. When !he JapaJapan 's acceplance of unconditional surrender 1erms with . nese did not immedialely surrender, a second bomb devAllied forces. The war-weary homefronl promplly went astated Nagasaki rhree days larer. Since !hen, it had been
wild with joy, and as the Tribune reporled , Gallipolis and a wailing game form any Americans hoping the war would
ride to a swift .end.
,
the surrounding area was not immune.
On Aug. 14, !he Tribune's mail\ headline reported the
In contraslto the almost hushed observalioifOfV -E Day
lhe previous May. merrymaking rhrough Gallipolis was Japanese response 10 the Allied .ullimatumlo give up the .
tight was "on (Ihe ) way." Locally, Police Chief Chester
rife, according to Tribune accounts.
"Gal lipoli s was Leeper said eight to 10 additional oflicers would be on
closed. up tighter duty to handle any !rouble arising from a victory celebra"Fof-Good or Ill, Man Has than ~Dick' s hal- lion, and columnisl J. Sherman Poner in hi s daily "P~~P"
~and today afler
A Gallipolis Diary" observed archly of the Japanese thai
Freed the Power of the some noisemaking a "people whodon'l know when lhey 're licked, can't be ."
for lhree or four ·
Earlier in lh e week, in irs continuing coverage of
Atom," the Tribune's lead hours
Tuesday . serv icemen's news, the Tribune noted !hal Richard Eustory on Aug. 7 read, and nigh!, chielly by gene Houck of Mercerville, electrician 's mate "on a
youngsters and warship in the Pacific," had been wounded in action on
"Peeps" w.as moved to predominantly by July 30. No olher derails were immedialely available.
automobiles." the
On Aug. 15. as !he. nalior\ rejoiced, !he !ruth about
comment a week later that Tribune reponed. Houck's injuries \)ecame knnwn wh~n . the Uni(cd Press
Trucks tilled reponed from Guam .lhat !he Indianapolis, the ship on
"has. put it with
the bomb
.
young men which Houck had served, was sunk by a Japanese subma·
squarely up to the world mld women !rav- rine and its J 16 surv ivors had floaled in shark-infesled
eled up and down waters for four days be lore being rescued. Later, it was
as to its future- peace or the city's business revealed the lndianapolis' had ferri&lt;!d the bomb used on
section, llashing V Hiroshima to Tinian and was returning to pori 'when
pieces."
for victory signs, attacked .
Post.war mood
bunging on ' lhe
Aside froJll its,local coverage of V-J Day. !he Tribune
trucks and occasionally firing a gun in the air. A dis·
charged ~oldierreportedly got into fist fight wilh a citizen used UP dispatches reporting thai wilh war's end gasoline
on Second A: venue near the city park "and the «-soldier mtioning was over and nylons would ohce agaif! ~he
gave lhe other fellow a seVere pummeling," the newspaper available - but I,KOO empioyees of the Wesl Virginia ·
Ordnance Works at Point Pleasant would be out of a job by
said.
The more serious side of the celebration could be found wc e~· s enc.i.
The sh utdown of the plant, which had opened in Octoa11he Firs! Baplist Chur!:h, where a hastil y-called thanksgiving service was organized by the Rev. J. Edward ber 1942. w;,~ a sign of the conct:rns raisl!d about resh;Ip- ,
Hakes. In spite of the shorl notice. a heallhy-si zed,crowd ing !he war-driven job market for the returning soldier -

CHALLENGING COMPETITOR
- Candace Bunting, 16, lett,
takes her horse through Its
paces during the 4-H Horse
Show Monday afternoon. The
Allred resident rode her horse
· "Challenge the Dawn". She won
praise for her ability to steer and
turn her horse In circles.
•

a

the topic &lt;&gt;fthe V-J Day editorial appearing in that day's
Tribune, which discussed an
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
survey determining the
veteran's employment needs.
Also on !he minds of !he
public and I he local edilorialists was the impact of the bomb
and it; ~eslrucrive capabililies. "For Good ur Ill. Man
Has Freed the Power of the
Atom," the Tribune's lead
slory on Aug . 7 read, and
"Peeps''.was moved to com·ment a week later that the
bomb "has put it sq uarely up
to the world as to its future p~!l!.:~ or pieces."
However, the Tribune's
main editorial of Aug. 14, !'oreshadow ing the deh:1te over the
bomb's use that continut:!s today. fell no apologies should
be made for the attai.:kS on
Hiroshima ami Nagasaki.
•· Jf one must choose, cer·lainly an lnstanlaneous de"lh

by

atomic bombing i~ more
humane than tht:! brutality of
the Bataan Death March. or
I he slow death by lorture, starvation anU dist:iJSe of thou ~
A COLLECTION OF NEWSPAPER HEADLINES from around the country from
sands of Allied so ldiers and Aug. 7 to 14, 1945, the days lollowlng the dropping of an atomic bomb on
civi li ans." it re;ld.
Hiroshima, Japan. In addition to lhe latest war news, the papers also reported that
News of the day
gauallonlng was ov•r and nylons would once again be available,
Once the revelry over war's
end had evaporared, life in Gal lipoli &gt; "nd the co unty Lafayelle Post #27, announced that a V-J Day parade
would not he tJrganited until the official observalion was
continued rnut:h a's it had throughout the t:o~1 1li t:t.
Aside from the loc.tl. ~ tate and national coverage of announced by the pres-Ident. fhe Tribu ne's V-J Day e.tra
celebrations. the Tribunc's other main loc&lt;.ll story of the sold nearly KOO copies before 10:45 that morning.
News of area communities supplied by t.:Orrespondents
Jay focused on Constable Roy J(Jhn~on given a . . uspenlled
made
up a large bulk of the paper's inside pages, while in
jail s~ nlence and line in Ga lli a County Juvenilt: Courl for
sport~.
Rio Grant.le was to met:l Cadrflus ·in lhc 4-H
t:l,tntributing 10 the Jelinquem:y of a rninor.
Col. H.B. Ecker, commamlcr of Arncrkan Legion~ See V·J DAY, Page 11

With retease-frlHfrPDW camp

&lt;$

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.
..

....,11•
•

EWE-FANGLED VACUUM - Mary Nally, above right, dries the
wool on the ewe she showed last ni!Jhl. Nally Is a member of
the Dreamweavers 4-H Club of Pomeroy.
FUTURE FARMER?- Erlnne Kennedy, 6, lett, pedals this
miniature tractor across the fair grounds Monday morning. The
Middleport resident said she was not going to compete In the
"'Kiddie Tractor Pull, but she enjoyed this chance to ride.
BEATING THE HEAT- Melody Lawrence, above left of the
Meigs County She_pherd's Club takes a drink from the. hose ·
Monday afternoon. The 14-year-old took this break to cool off
·
·
from Cleaning her ewe's wool.
FOWL INSPECTION - Klrt Spencer, 13, above, looks at the
pens of chickens, turkeys and other fowl Monday afternoon.
The Tuppers Plains resident will be exhibiting an antique plow
made In the 1800s.
JUDGING JEWELRY- Tiffany Green, 7, right, looks at some
of the merchandise she Is selling Monday morning. The
~arrlsonvllle Elementary student has sold several rings and a
pair of moccasins at the Albany Mint Mall on the lair grounds.
She also runs the cash register, giving change.
Dick Orci of New Haven

..

and dance hall. The upper deck that had once been !he beer
By MINDY !&lt;;EARNS
join!
was now where the prisoners ate. And the dance hall
OVP News Staff
that
had
heen downslai« was tran~tJ.irrned iplQ a bunk
NEW HAVEN .. Allhough V-J Day did not come unlil'
house
lor
prisoners. where the beds stood five high.
t.;everal .months later. victory came in freedom for DiCk
said
while being held prisoner, the men were forced
Ord
Ord of New Haven on April 25, 1945, \"hen he was
liberared in Germany afU:Lbe_ing ~prisoner of ~:If for five to work on !he railroad. They were fed once a day·. in lhe
cveni ng. ·arfd I he ln&lt;al &lt;onsiilcd bf a small~lni'in1 icc ·c\f
monlh~ .'
...
ol Wa!oi overseas, ~.:aptur~.d . 11erv~i:J a!t·n pri!'loner of war bread and a vcgetahle, hal rway 1\ctween a-lurn rp anJ sugar
and wa• back in the Slates bel'ore the age ol ~I," said Ord. bee!. cut into small bits and boikd into a sLJup. The I urn ips
traveling back lo the days when he was a private -first cia&gt;&lt; that were fed to the prisoncr.s were the ones too old tn Iced
in lhe 106th Division, Camp Alterby . "I was 145 pounds to the cuttle. wh1ch-;.,. what they w~r~ grown t'or. That i\
bel'ore I was captured; 97 pound; afterward ... and I still why Ord cannot ~land to cat a turmr tn this day .
"Therc were four of us who \:hummed' togethcranJ we
.,
won'! eat a turnip today."
,tole
anything we ..:maid to eat. Whatever we stole , the four
Ord. along with about 30 others, was captu red in Gerof
us
shared." Ord stated . Like the day Ord was working
many during !he Battle ol'the Bulge. Ord said his company
was on the buige of the land and !he enemy was laying atop a hill on the railroad, and &gt;aw a garden down lhe hill
artillery on it. He said the men went up over u mountain and :JL:m_..., a neck. He .. nl!akcJ down. pulli!J up onion~
nm l soun aflerun tlrtillc:ry ~ell went qff above them~ ncur and-,hal'etl the hounty with lri' J'riend' Ihal evening. But
a trel! , which sent limbs down. "It was the last time I .-.Jw nnt h~forc the farm~r &lt;.:aught him in the a~.::t and gave him
my &gt;&lt;rgcant," he said. "It broke both Iris legs. I told him he a good tongue -lashing.
Onl ..,aid Sunday.., were :-.pc&lt;.:ial in the fact that on 'hat
bctler take his sulfa drugs and drink his water. He Iold me
then that hi~ can teen wa!--. empty . lldt him my cnnlel'n and day. ydu received a howl of thin pntato !-!oup with one
took his. which I later filled hurn 'water in a catlle path." · ml!atball in the center. in . . tt.!ad of the turnip \nup He . . a1d
Ord ... aid the men cOnlinucd on and dm.Jgc:d around the practice of th~ men W:t\ 10 galht!r a !-! mall bit of the
Germans for three day ~ before bt!ing captured . " We were pot;Ltn -..nup in J "pnnn. along with that one meat hall. ph1~e
15 mile!\ into the em:my line," OrO said. AI one point after it in the1r rm 1ulh 11nd "m:k the JUice nil the meat hall. Th~.:.~y
Ord knew be and th~others were behind t.:ncmy line~ . he would then r~movc the meatball Irom their mouth. put it
was lying llat nrone man· ., feet when a 'hot hit the m;rn in ha.~.:k into tilt: ..,illlp :tnd go through the proct:'i...., agajn. until
lh,e .fleCk and sen! both his head anr.l helmet about tO feet all the ..,llUp wa" l.!~mc . Thq ..,a v1 ,red the ta . . tc of the meat
until the H'r) er1d
in the air.
flrd ' "id he kepi a POW di·"'. ;rllhnu~h 11 wa' lile
After being captured: Ord was held in a formc:rhccrjoinl
•

\

'

«(

For New Haven man, end .of World ~ wa.rr _II
came seven months before V-J Day

•
•

'

.,,·

·-.·

~

·-·--·-·

threaten in) to do so. He remembered one lime as he was ,
working on Ihe railroad, hi.s German foreman barkedr
_orr,ters to him in Ihe foreign language, Or~ . who though! he
had learned some German while being a POW, talked
back, bur said he obviously didn't realize what h'e had said,
hecause the ne&lt;t thing he knew.rhe foremar had lifled his
·~;;un from l.hi! holslcr. rern(iv~&lt;! lhj: )~fcly . :md hatf.the gun .
poi nrccl at Ord 's forehead . Again. he said some word' i,n
Ge rman , which Ord did not recognilc. The showdown ·
ended. and Ord h:rd hardy e&lt;caped with his life.
. He was libcratcc.l ncar Wertzen, Germany by Americans
on April 25. IC,J45 . Ord'.., :-.tory doe~ not stop there( however. What ho1rpcm:d OI!Xt was nothing short of a miracle.
Ord "aid they wen~ the fir..,t to arrive at a fight~r- plane
ai "I rip out side Wcrlrcn after being liberated and gol their
choice of harrack&lt;. ·lie "rid they chose a former officers'
barrack". the only one . . with maHr~sscs .
Ord "rid the rn'en 'tii'l tdt they 'weren' t being fed enough.
anJ went hun gry a lot of the fime. lie said OQC of his
"chum .... •· E... tc ~. worked in the kitchen . Ord and the other
twn dccidctl one evening to ruh th.:: rnc .. ~ hall. One of the
hudUic" . . lipped through an opening ut the bottom oF the
dm1r. while the others served a.~ lookouts. Jusl as lhe man
... tipp~ Lithroug h the door on hi!-! hands and knees. the door
~ wung open anti rherc si&lt;KJt.l E"tc~. The men :~ . . ked him not
to turn thern in. and E...re~ ended up helping the men carry
,ix Gt!'.C\OfC· ration.., out. whir. :h were hid in the barracks.
Ord ..,aid the men were a\ked to volunteer to type 25
n:unc-; on lt:o.t' that were used to fill trucks going to France.
where the men were return ed to the U.S. Ord said he
See END OF WAR, PJ!Q't 11

- - - -- ·----·---'

�'

!'age 2 • V-J Day Supplement

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

Hong Kong

OVP News Staff
: RACINE -- The end of World War II '"the Pactfic was
11larked with jubilation. (.me area veteran ~auJ.
; Rae~ne'; Virgtl Wa"er. now a 6R-}ear-old C.S. Nasy
\lete!ran. had ju~t been a'~'~£- ned to Jnother 'hip in San
F!rJnci-,co at war"' ~nd .
.
·
: .. It "as preny Jubilant ther~ ... Walker said. "Thev had

parade&lt; and partte&lt; on the ,treet."
·
: ~ut.the exultant VICtory wa' tinged w1th the memnne'
l)f·fnends and fnmilie~ Joq to the v.ar - 1ncludino Walker''
e
~ro1her in the Banle of the Bulg~ .
· M'alker was di,charged from the Nav' in Jul) 194ti.
~arnmg the rank of Signalman Third Class in the comm unications division of ship&lt;. he &gt;erved in Guam. Okinawa.

Jnt..l

people and

Shanghai.

The U.S appeased the Japanese and the German,, he
&gt;aid.
"lthtnk "c 'hould learn to be more careful with these

~ids

d) ing. but war" war."

lioneJ in

Racine·.., Tnm Diddle v..n-.. in Guam when the atomic

\Valk.er wa ... decormed with 1he A,i~lli&lt;.: Pacific Cam·
patgn Ribb11n. American Theater Ribbon. China Service
Ribbon and Victory Ribbon.
" I v.ouldn't want to go throug h it again." he added .
"Being in the Navy 1augh1 me self-"'surance and it taugh t

bomb was dropped.
"They wouiJ have dropped it on u&lt; if they'd had it,"
Diddle said. "They didn't think anything about bombing
Pearl Harbor.
"It was a grealthmg. I'm glad 11 happened ... Diddle said
of the bombing.
Diddle was charged with making ami de li vering all the
orders as a member of the o.,pectal ...ervices or public
inform:Hion ufGcc. Alv.a)s un guard. the special forces

me

were allowed limtted a:-.soctation "-ilh others.

countne ... :· Walker ... aid. " We ~;hould be ahle to rell
C\er)·one what \\e ex. peel them to do."

lot nf th1n gs."
11 one American wa'\ saved by 1h ~ u.Se of the alOmic
J

bomb. the weapon was wort h it. Walker said. ·
"They Jese&lt;ved it." he added. "I didn't like innocent

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lladte lbaeli

122 Nor1l1 s.eond Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

ow'~~

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Mon.-Fri.9-7
Sat. 9-5
Sun. Closed

CDs

Au~tralia,

En1witok and Guam.

During a sniper allack, Diddle barely escaped with his
life only by fakmg hi s death.
"I was sleeping in bed and I got under my sheet," he said.
Many lesson&lt; can be learned from this war, he added .
Diddle cautioned others to watch their "ep and keep
awake , lu about being carefu l whom one talks and deals
with.
" I rememher the torpedoes shine and just mi» us and

MERCERVILLE Fifty yea" ago Jul y 30.
rupted in the ,hower.
Nul by the le kphone
or an annoying door-todoor sale,man, but by
1wo torpedoes.
"We didn' t have any

hom her ... go overhead." Diddle said. " lt ' o,; ·nol "ornething

you forget."
By \var's end. Diddle had reached the rank of Printer
Third Class. Diddle enli sted on Nov. 20. 194J and was
honorably discharged May 30. 1946.

idea what hrlus. but we

•

V-JDAY
50th ANNIVERSARY
. Our sincere gratitud~ goes out to all the World War II
veterans living in our area,
who heeded the call to arms
to protect and defend this
great nation in a time of
turmoil.

MONTHL JORDAN '

board side.
The lirs't struck close
tolheship 's bow .Aboul

a minute later, th'e sec-

N[ IL YOUNG

~&lt;Nil

We Do Special Orders For All New &amp; Old Titles

Remembering Those Who ~erved
In The Second World War

50th (il{nniversarp_
0Vlemorial
·Gfribute

said. "They were available if you could get to them ."
The Mercerville native acquired one and was headed
back to a ~s bt when the Indianapo li s, which w:.t~ rapidly
taking on ~e~1 water through its torpedo wounds, lifted it'
fantail ou t of the wat~r anJ li sted ontp its starboard ~ ide .
Houck wa;.. thrown 25 tu 30 fed into the tlark water.
'" I guco..s a lot or stuff was goin g through 11_1y head ." he
said. "'We wen~ all stared. There's nobod y quite that
brave."
·
or a crew irf I . 197 men. ~HO made it off the &lt;in king sh ip.
Many o ftho "e - 5fi3 - would die before being re-;c ued.
In kss th an 15 minutes. t h eoce&lt;.~ n swallowed a pi en: of

Middleport

.

~

American hi.slory which had participated in the baules of
Okinawa and lwo Jima and. a li:w days earlier. had
del iven.~d compone nt.., or the first A-bomb to Tin ian Ish1nd
in the Marianas . ·

Naked·e,ccptlo r hi.s lifo jacket (he lost hi s towel when
he hit the water). Houd watched as his home for the past

remember. it was terrible

~ater -

but great"

.

part of youi family. You become very altached lo your
, hip. It's not on ly your home. it's your "tfety."·
The surv ivors huddled in tloating masses.
··we jUst kept cong reg ating together,·· Houl:k said. ''In

From the attack on Pearl

To prevent themselves from drifting apart at night.
Houck's grqup U~'-' t'd the rope attached to a life ring to ti e

themselves toge ther.
Beside ~ the suffering that accornpani~d being in the
water all that -time. Houck al so had 10 deal wi th b[indness.
Oil from the sinking ship hac..l gotte n in Hou~.: k \ eye ...
Without dean water to rinse it away, the oil caust:d ulcer"

which temporar il y robbed him of95 percent of his vision.
For more than I{X} hours. the men awa ited rescue among
the oil anti ll_oatin g bodit!s. Hou~.:k sa id he watched rnen
die from injuries a nd drowning. Others wen~ taken by

sharks.
Lack of fo od and water. acco111panied by fa tigue and the
lc:: rror of their . . itu:.ttion. hc~an tu wear on the mt!n .
··wewere really afra id (I he Japanese) mi ght c(Hne up in
their subs and ust! £.uns on us:· Houck said.
Some acc used ot hers of heing Japanese and began to

scufile .
Houck said he later heard sto ries from other groups that
some had drow ned otha survivor:\ in fits of dementia.

·~~!'~~:""·

December 7; 1941 until the an-

Meigs Counties who served

nouncement by President

our great country during her

Harry

We. are proud to honor those who
•
served our country...
•

1 ..

S.

hour
need;

•

the ll!Orning

made the en-

of Tuesday,

tire world a

Augugt 14,

bette:r -and

1945 of the

safer place

uncondi-

to be. May

tional su r-

your deeds

render

of

and bravery

J .a p a n ,

never be for-

Americans

gotten; .es-

unite(:!

pecially the

and

UNITY SAVINGS BANK

never before to preserve our

sacrifices of our loved ones

freedom and stop the agony

who did not return.

500 Third Avenue Gallipolis

and sufferin g of World War II.

,

,~_.

'

of

Truman on

as

•I

God Bless America!

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Mcmbr.r FDIC

•

•

he 'aid.
Houck was later taken to the showers where he was:
doused in diese l fuel to break up Ihe oil thai coated his :
body and maned his hair.
· :
The 'u rvivors were taken 10 Guam and hospitalized. It ·
l ou~ Houck about two weeks 10 regain enough of his :
vision to write his w~f~ a Idler.

'

"She 'aid it was a little hard 10 read ."
. ,
On the anniv~rsa ry of the sinking. Houck lelt for India- ·
tlCtpolis. Ind .. where lie met wi th other survivors for the :
Aug , 2 unvei ling of a long overdue m~moriallo the cn:w.:
. It was not the firsuime HotiL.:k ha..~ reunited with hi.-. ~
shipmates. The Indianapolis Survivors Organizati on m eet~:
eve ry five years. .
' •

"We 're a pretty tight-knit bu nch of guys. Our experi-• ·
'
"(Serving on the Indi anapolis) was quite an ex peri-:

ence tics us togethe r.

.ence." he said ... It gave me the privi lege of meeting a lbt :

of people; the opportunity 10 know a lot of people I never ·
would have met otht! rwi se."
·

Built: 1930, New York Shipbuilding Corp.
ol New Jersey
Launched: Nov. 7, 1931 Commissioned:
Nov. 15, 1932
Sunk: July 30, 1945
Length: 610 leet.
Width: 66 leet, 1 inch at widest point.
Draft: 17 leet, 6 inchel\ (24 feet fully
loaded)
·
Flank speed: 32 knots ..
Horsepo.wer: 107,000 '( eight boilers, four
geared turbines).
Armament: 'Nine 8-inch guns, four 5-lnch
guns, 24 40mm intermediate range guns
and 32 20-mm Oerlikon guns.

•~ • , •

We salute the men and

am.! put in a bunk.
"'The crew gave up their bunks and put us on the bun~...__:.•

just as bad the other way."

·~l..'lj.·~!.
..........
~... ~,. ,;.

SUPERMARKETS .

Put on a stretcher. Houck was taken aboard the Dn) 1e:

U.S.S. Indianapolis

the daytime it was terrible from the heat: At ni ght it was

~HANKS~

Pomeroy

Gene Houck today and during the war years

my life. You become a part of a ship and the aew hecomes

,

-Harbor on Sunday morning;- -women of Gallia, Mason and

•

.

Doyle, Talbot and Dufilho.
Houck said he did not know which was harder waiting to be spoiled or waiting to be rescued.
The wait lo be rescued was more comfortable. he
admitted. because of the rafts and other supplies. such a~
drinking water.
"Getting a swall ow of water was a great help. As I

ODLAND ·~~VETS!,...~

'

446-0315

mine ."

15 month' di,appeared.
"That 's a feelin g th at" ~ going to live wilh me the re~t of

sailors inside and clinging to the body and wings.
Th~ plane ~ hild ulsu dropped raft ~. m which the rnen
wuit~d until night for the arrival of the de~lroyer;.; Cec~l

To. All of our Veterans of War and Battle .We
at Eastman ~s F oodlands say 'THANKS.~

EWING FUNERAL HOME

'~

&lt;.t

"We had twi ce as many life Jackets as we had men." he

We salute the Veterans of
V-J Day~ many of whom gave
their lives to restore peace
and promoe tranquility
and democracy.

We mourn the loss of ljlose from our community who bravely fou ght and gave 1hc1r ~iv cs w preserve
our country's freedom and make the world safe for democracy.

992·2121

GENE HOUCK of Mercerville, a survivor of the sinking of the U.S.S. Indianapolis,
1 Japanese torpedoes struck the ship.
points· to the spot where the second of two

sailor who could not swim and did not haveoneof hi s own.
Hout.:k then ran to the gun de~k for another.

992-5141

.

- '
:..··~·.. ,

1

. EASTMAN'S .... ~Independently Own~d and Operated
. ·
In an Independent Democracy.

Mulberry Ave.

If

First to answer Gwinn's call was Navy pilot Adrian
Marks, flyin g a PB-Y sea plane with pontoon~ . Seeing
men being anacked by sharks. he landed on the open se a
and he and hi s crew bega n pulling survivors aboard.
The plane quickly became a tloaling lifeboat. with

' '. · j

from 1he showers and grabbed hi s lifejacket. He soon
parted wll h it. however. when. he encountered a fell ow

FISHER FUNERAL HOME
264 2nd Ave.

'

Ocean.
Wearing only a towel :.t[ld shower o.;hoes. Houck ran

I

their buoy-

ancy . Only the n1en's heads were above water. Houck

The dual explosions signaled the beginning of a lourday ordea l in the shark-infested waters of the Pacilic

\

lo~ing

said.

my first thought was th at we hit

:xr ~ 1~:.

PRIMUS • '~ ' (0\CJI'£

48 hours. were becom ing saturated and

ond hit at mid- ship be·
low the su perstructure.
"Thai Lore the guts right out," Houck said. "I suppose

LUI'IIl ••Ol " ·~I Oll!.IJ
~ 1o:1

knew we got hit hard ."
he said. "II shook us
around . It rallied us
around quite a bit ."
Houck. se rving during World War II as an
Electrician's Mate Third
Class in the U.S. Navy.
was wa~hing up a fter a
. shift change on the
U,S.S Indi a nap o li s
when two torpedoes
from a Japanese submarin,e pounded in~o the
heavy cruiser'\ ~ t a r ­

lHE A(~BR.&amp;ND1S Lo

XSCAP[

f

Gene Houck wao.. inter-

Cassettes

--""""-0~!._~1

"ll 's a lillie hard for me to believe," he said. "Although
they were delirious and out of their heads."
Houck added his group of survivors did not experience
anything other than irritability and squabbling.
"I had 10 be in a good bunch vf guys." he said.
The oil which blinded Houck also proved to he his
salvation. On the morning of the fol!rth day al'ler the
attack, Lt. Chuck Gwinn piloted hi s PV- 1 bomberoverthe
si te and spoiled the oi l slick.
·
Thinking it was the sign of an enemy submarine. he
dove for a bombin g run . At the lower altitude. he sponed
the survi vors and radioed for assistance.
Gwinn circled the site until he began running low on
fuel. Houck sa id the pilot delayed leaving because he was
afraiu he might not be able to find the men again. ·
The life jackets. designed to keep sailors afioal for only

B¥1KEVIN PINSON
O,vP News Staff

" I ima~ine they thought no one was under it"

"We had to burn all ourscraps." Diddle said. adding hi s
detachment made and delivered all the orders for the
Philippine !~land~ inva ... ion. During the war. he w;Js ~ta·

V-J Day Supplement • Page.3 '

Indianapolis survivor re~ounts four-day
ordeal in shark;.infested waters of Pacific

fllle·g$ County Navy veteran: A-bomb a critical'war ender'
ay GEORGE ABATE

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

August 15, 1995

· August 15, 1995

r'

1.

�•

....
Page 4 • V.J Day Supplement

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

August 15, 1995

August 15, 1995

MEIGS COUNTY SAYS "THANKS''.
To Our
World
·War
·ll
Heroes!
•

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

V-J Day Supplement • Page 5

MEIGS COUNTY REMEMBERS ...

•

6t.

~0

~MoV~

SALUTE . 'A ll Our Veterams

•Army

'

• Navy
· ·Marines
• Air Force
Men &amp; Women alike

•

.
,.

..

-•

f

--.
•

'"

5()' ilNNIVI~Il illlY f~I~I. I~IIIlil'l,lf)N
I f)LiLi * AUGUST 15TH * 1995 .
1, 0

.....

.....

·.- ~

,

-

We mourn the loss of those from our community who bravely fought
and gave their lives to preserve our country' s freedom and.
make the world s.afe·for democracy.

I

I

'

;.

Downing·Child-Mullen·Musser )Home

National Bank .

Insurance
992-2342

992-2210 Member FDIC 992-6333
· Syracuse, Ohi.o
· Pomeroy, Ohio - Racine, Ohio

(row's family .
Restaurant
992-5432

Rutland Ohio

·Funeral Home
992-2121

Mills .·

992-211 s

Pomeroy, Ohio

: The Shoe PlaceI
: ·Locker 219

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Middleport, ~hio

.·~------~
.. ------~--~~--------~---------------;

'

. 992-5627 Middleport, Ohio

Middleport Trophies
&amp;Tees
Pharma~y ·. .

IL. Birchfield·Funeral . ·sugar Run
742-2333

Ewing '

Fruth

Pomeroy, Ohio 992-6491

Home

.

'

992-6128

Middleport, Ohio :

ENTERPRISE
NAGEL
'
· Heating &amp; Cooling
"We're the :
inside guys" :
.

992-4485

· Middleport, .Oh ·

:
'

~

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2104

992-3785

..
•

We Can Help

KING SERVICESTAR HARDWARE .

667-3161

..
~-Your

Bank (o-t/i:(f-... ruPPERs PLAINs
t

MEMBER FDIC

Swisher· Lohse
Pharmacy ·

992-334.5 Middle ort Ohio

Brogan Warner
· · Insurance
Pomeroy; Ohio

992-2506

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2635 · Middleport, Ohio

Th.e Daily Sentinel
992-21 SS · Pomeroy, Ohio ·

992-5141 · Middleport, Ohio

.
·
..
Adolph's
Dairy
Quality
Valley
. Print Shop·
992·6687

405 North Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY, OH.

" ' - - ' &amp; Sav1ngs Company

I

•

ewe
ry
.
d S .I C
Pomeroy, Ohio
an upp Y· O.
,
992·6611
Middleport, Ohio

Fo Farmers Bank

Veterans Memorial
Kospital _,

:-oo

Ingels Furniture
&amp; Jewerly

' 992·2136

Mill .
Street Books

•

992-6657

Baum · ·.

.

Chestert, Ohio

.

Middleport ·
Departm_ent Store

True Value
985·330 1

Middleport, Oh

992-3148

I

l
\.

Middleport, Ohio

�Augu~t

Page 6 • V.J Day Supplement

15, 1995

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

V·J Day Supplement • Page 7

August 15, 1995

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • pt_ Pleasant, W.Va.

Racine· man re·m embers Seabee
duty on Guam with twin brother
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
CHESTERHILL .. For Harold Rainer of Racine. the
news of the lirst atomic bomb being dropping on Japan
made moreofan impact than theofllcial end of the Second
World War.
··1don ' t remember the surrender as well as when they
dropped the lirst bomb," 'Uid the former Navy Seabee. a
bmnch of the Navy ta,kcd with jobs simi lar to those
performed by Anny combat engineers.

Mason County Remembers!

··we were still in our beds when the n~:w~ c&lt;1me ~ the

war stopped then." he &gt;aid.
It got so quiet. everybody shut up. he said. For engi~

neers. accustomed to explosives and what they could do,

\Remembering Those Who Served
In The Second World War

the idea that one bomb could destroy an entire ci ty wa'

On the atomic bomb:
For engineers, accustomed to explo·
sives and what they could do, the idea
that one bomb could destroy an entire
city was staggering.

..

.

'50th

: "We knew what ordinary bombs could
.. We joined al the -.arne time." he ~x: plained . ' "Twins
do; we couldn 't comprehend anything they
usuall y left together upon request."
being that devastating ... That was all it
Morn requested we stay togerher. he said.
The Ruiners were 27 years old when they joined up. For
took."

,

nnzversarp_
emorial
Gfribute

Stationed at .Pearl Harbor,
Meigs man recalls beginning
of Pacific conflict with Japan
· By GEORGE ABATE
OVP News Staff
LAUREL CLIFF .. One area World War I!'veteran saw
the conflict from a different perspective - he was a
witness to its beginning, but was back home when it
ended.
Grover Klein was at Pearl Harbor when. the-Japanese
;mac ked Dec . 7. 1'14 I.
· "It was pretty daggone terrifying, " said Klein. who had
&lt;n listed in the U.S. Army the previous June. "The laps

We mourn the loss of those from our community who bravely fought and gave their lives to preserve
·
our country's freedom and make th~ world safe for democracy.

circled over twice ahd strafed at our tent s.''

After the Japanese pilots did· as much damage as they
could. the suicide crafts wou ld dive into hangars. These
pilots did not have enough .fuel to return to their ships. the
74-year-old Klein said.

•

'

two years before they entered the Navy. they worked at the
Galion Iron Manufacturing Co. in Qali on where they
helped build road graders.

Harold Rainer

'

-....

staggering.
"We knew what ordinary bombs could do; we couldn't
comprehend anything being that devastating." he noted.
"That was all it took," he said.
Although astounded by the power of the weapons.
Rainer, Iike other servicemen and members of his genera·
tion. did not and still does not question the morality of
using the atomic bombs to hasten the end of the war.
"A lot of people criticized (President) Truman," he said.
"Well I' ve &gt;ee n what war is ana t 've also see n he saved a
lot more lives than were lost (by the bombings)."
"We had planned an invasion, but the bombs stopped
it."
· The Japaoese had plenty of opportunity to surrender.
but decided not to. he said.
"We had warned them ... told them to &gt;urrender, but they
didn't listen." he said.
Unl ike other servicemen, Rainer said he received plenty
.
of informution about the war effort.
It got kind of like the OJ. Simpson tri al. he joked.
However. one thing he didn' t know about were the two
bombs destined to bring about the surrender of Japan:
Raiher was one of five brothers participaling,in the war
effort. Hi s expt: rience was even more unique in that he
shared his wartime duty wi th hi s twin brother. Garold.
who now l1ves near Chesterhill.

Military officials did not release the full extent of the
attack'.&lt;damage. which included numerous buil dings and
many more lives. he added.
The Pearl Harbor tragedy could have been prevented,
Klein said as he blamed comm anding oflicers for the
· eve nts.
Radar crews and other r~ports stated-the Japanese had
flowrl and we re readying to ny a major mi ssion. Klein
said.
Klein remained in harbor defense his enti re tour of duty .
Although he req uested on more than one occasion to be
allowed to join the lighting troops. he was told he was
needed at Pearl Harbor.
"I vol unteered to fight. but they kept me because I knew
the island like the palm of my hand," Klein said.

lannes Williamson .
Pallels Inc.
675·2716

Rt. 35

Southside

Harry

2118 Jefferson Blvd .

-Point Plea:;ant

&amp; Sons Jewelers

True Value Hardware

675·3857 446-DAVE
Rt. 2 S. Gallipolis Ferry

Silver Bridge Plaza
I

Orman Hall, Inc.
wv #000612
1.317 Ohio Street

Point
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773·5561
"

Mason
I

Save·A·lot .
Point Pleasant

Health Aid
Pharmacy
307 5th Street

882·2005

(C ·
2601 Jackson

Ueader
675·2113

Leon

2415 Jackson Ave .

Point Pleasant

Point Pleasant

-

700 22nd Street
Point Pleasant
615-2100

5th Street
New Haven
882·2157

.

675-7254

Point Pleasant

-~

House of
Gifts- - - - ...

~

1102 Viand

Silver Bridge Plaza

Pt. Pleasant

Gallioolis

.Paint Pus

Tri·County Sports

675·4084

675·2988

2801 Jackson Ave.

Point Pleasant

Grandview Heights Point Pleasant

Valley Brook Concrete

Four Seasons Florist

. 773-5234

675·5033

New Haven 2399 Ohio River Rd .

Lakin

502 Main St.

'

..

.'

1

Point Pleasant

•,

---- -··

'

'

,,_

·o-

Throughout our history, it was through the efforts and
sacrifices of those who served their country, that enabled
Americans to live as a free and peaceful nation. ·

Mason furniture Co.
713·5592
2nd Street

Mason

ON

Dairy Queen
2208 Jackson Ave.

Bank For All Of West Virginia.

Point Pleasant

MASON
773-5514

Bob's Market &amp;
Greenhouse, Inc •
1/4 mile N.

J

!'OINT PLEASANT
675-1121

NEW HAVEN

Member FDIC

882·2135

£QUAl

MEMBER F.DJ.C.

I

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Bridge, Mason

'
&lt;.,...!\, ·'·"

Pearl Harbor was not His del'mnt ions included : Asiatic Pacifi..: Theater with a
far removed from the Bronzt! Star; American Defense Service Medal with a
figh ting in the Pa· . BronLe Star: .tbe good cmiduct ribbon ; and later the Pearl
Harbor Commemorative Medal.
c itic, he added .•
Kl e in was hnnorahl y di st.: harged June I H. 1945. When
" I saw plenty of the
wounded coming in." he returned to Meig.., County. he worked inthecnul mines
Klein said. "Yo u and drove his own tax i cab.
··1 was j ust daggonc tick led to get home in one piece,"
cou ld see the men
!lawn in on the lit - Kle111 'aid. adding he wa' &gt;et for th.;Jl.allle of the Bulge in
ters. It was a bloody Europe
' HcJid not rememhertheday the bomb was dropped. He
mess~ I saw all I
al so dpcsn · t remember wh:u othe r local people's response
needed to see."'
Nearly every night.~ wc·rc to thi s bomb.
Rut . Klein harhors strong feelings about the atOmic
Japan ese seaplane
·
would ny overhead bomb. .
"I th ink they shoulu have used it before." Klein said. " 11
• keeping the troops
awake and aggra ~ might be cruel, bull still feel that way aboui the Japan~«!.
. It \;'o'ould ha ve end~d the war quiL:ker and sav ed a lot of
vated .
Later in the war. Ii vcs."
GROVER KLEIN
The Japanese had burieu themselves into many caves
Klein monitored
' whom he said wouiU have ::md fought (() the death. with high ~.:asu ••lti es listed to U.S.
about 20 Japanese prisoners
troops, Kh;i n said .
kil led him if they had the chance.
"I was Jam n glad they done it (uruppcd the bomb)
Born and raised in Thomas Fork. he now lives outside
because
I had a lot of friends that lost their lives," Klein
Laurel Cliff. Klein reached the rank of Private First Class
with the Headquarter,s Detachme nt 522 nd C. A. Battalion . said .

SAL
AMERICA'S FINEST

Funeral Home

1701 Jefferson Ave.

---~

They wouldn't t:ome our and we couldn' t have them
coming our later to shoot at us. he explained.
"We only ta lk about the gooJ times," he sa id.
"I' II stil l never buy a Japanese car." he added.

P01nt Pleasant

675·6547

Phone 675·2630

wv #O:t 2638 "-

still alive inside.

TWIN SEABEES - Harold Rainer, left, of Racine,
and his twin brother, Garold, of Cheaterhlll, shown
here in an oHicial Navy photograph, served on Guam
during World War II as Navy Seabee&amp; or construction
engineers. Ironically. the two are shown here with a
Gallon road grader similar to those they helped build
before the war at the Gallon plant in Ohio.

. ]

895·3874

Warner Heating &amp;·Cooling

Harold plans to attend a reunion of the 76 th Seabees
battalion this fall, is a life member of the Middleport
American Legion po&gt;t and is a member of the Tuppers
Plains post of the Veteran~ of Foreign Wars.
Although Harold said he w"' spared much of t~e trau matic combat experience or the Army soldiers and Ma·
rines in the Pacific Theater, he st ill e.petienced many
thin gs he feels uncomfortable discussing.
For instance. he mentmned that soon after the U.S .
reoccupation of Guam hi s outfit was tasked with 11eali ng
tunnel s used by Japanese ~oldiers- wi th some of.them

Hockenberry Pharmacy ·

Classic Video

Crow~Hussell

•'

675·1155
At. 62 North

Mason

Rt 87

11 0 S. 2nd. Street

Fog
Funeral Home
2nd Street

Na

noted.

We wouM CiKJ: to pay tribute to tlie many brave men
aru£ women wlio liave given tfieir fives to upfw{c{ aru£
protect our country s itfeafs.

Keefers Service Center·

525 Main Street

· · William Hussell, Agent
· nJ-5942

675·2877

773-5554

675·7256

The younge'\t brother. Lee. 1\Crved in the Army Air
Corps. Harold said he arrived home in November. 1945
'"Home alive in '45' was what we said at the time," he

Those Who Have Given Their Lives
To Preserve America's Freedom

American
Legion
Post 140
New Haven

Hogg &amp; Zuspan
Materials Co. Inc.

675·2739

were together. ,.

Smith-Capehart

~

Village Insurance, Inc.

Hiley , who served aboard an ain.: raft earrier. and later

served on Guam with their brother Alvin, who was ~ta­
tioned with a Naval aircraft unit there on the island
Harold recalled he was driving a truek around Guam.
checking up on their eq uipment, when a jeep pulled up
containing both Garold and Alvin.
"It really &gt;urprised me," he said. "Fromthattrme on. we

&lt;!.,!'.

Stewart Johnson
VFW
Post 9926
Mason

American
Legion
Post 23
Point Pleasant

helped build .
Twice the twins were reunited wilh other brothers
during the war. They had a bnefmeetrng with their brother

LET US.NOT FORGET...

.

'

Mason County

· lroni&lt;.:ally , as member-. of a Seabee battalion. they
worked with Galion road graders '\imilar to those the)

'

-

'

'

�15, 1995
'Page 8 • V..J Day Supplement

Former Gallia County resident 'reports from the U.S.S. Missouri
By KEVIN KELLY

'

OVP News Stiff·
, GALLIPOLIS .. Sometime' being a witne&lt;s to hi&gt;tory
can come purely by accident. For Thomas E. Hairston.
being in attendance for the signing of the Japane&lt;e surren·
d,eron the USS Missouri on Sept. 2. 1945 was oneofthose
quirks of chance.
Hairston was then a technical sergeant in the U.S.
Marine Corps. supervising reporter, and photographers
tbrthe Pacific edition of Leatherneck. the natio'nal Marin e

, ·'While they were setting up for theceremony,the
Marine PR man came-up to me and asked. 'how'd
the hell you guys get here?'," Hairston said. "I
explained to him and he said, 'well. gel some pictures for me. too....

•

Hairston said he couldn't pinpoint any onoreason
for the secrecy surrounding the ceremony's location. other than American commander Dougla~
MacArthur·.., un:heslration of the event.
"Knowing MacAnhur, it may have been because
he
had his own press club. so to speak. and I guess
magazine . An assignment to co&lt;ver the &lt;;urrendcr cerhe
wa
. . n't go1ng to allow oub1ders like Marines in."
emony was transmitted in . late Augu" to HaiNon at
Leatherneck'&gt; temporary base at Guam- but no one had Ha1r&gt;ton said. "But si nce we repre&lt;ented the Marines' national magazine. I think w~ had a lillie more
a clue as lo where Lhe surrem.ler-W&lt;l'.. to lake place.
Hairston, now aretirededucator who served a'i 'iuperin- punch .
"We ju&gt;t lucked out on that one," he added.
tendent of the Galli a County Local School District from
Hair&lt;ton noted that MacAnhur was not held in
1976 until 1979. recalled that pure luck got him. writer
Duane Decker and photographer Bob Walton aboard the high rego-d by Marine&gt;. partly because he was with
th~ Army ;u,d becauo;;e the Marines felt MacArthur
Missouri the day before the 'urrender ce remony.
. "I had gone 10 the Marine Corps public relations officer appropriated equ ipment and material from the corps
to lind out where it would take place. but he told ·me. to benetit the Army during the Pacific connict.
'Sergeant. l can't even get my own menlo when~ver it will
Hairston said he felt the same way throughout the
take place. how do you expect me to tell you'!'." said war. but that day aboard the M is~uuri made him· a
Hairston. who ~ow resides in the Cinc·innati suburb. tlf beli«!ver in the · man he now considers one Qf the
nation 's great military leaders.
Goshen.
"I was on lhe upper deck looking down at Marine
Hairston said he brainstormed with Decker and Walton
. and deduced that the ceremony wou ld probably occur in and Army gcoerals, Navy admirals and hundreds of
FOR FORMER GALL lA County Local School DhJtrlct superintendent Thomas E. Hairston, being In attendanee lor
Tokyo. Where in Tokyo, he added. he didn't know. but the the ship's personnel. and there was-MacArthur. his
arms
folded.
every
inch
a
kmg,"
Hairston
recalled.
the
signing of the Japanese surrender on the USS Missouri on Sept. 2, 1945 was one of those quirks of chance.
trio would take it from there.
··It
was
almost
us
if
he
had
rehearsed
it.''
\
"If anything's going on. we figured we'd lind out in ·
Accounts of the sig nDue to the disruption of the Japan"'e economy brou ght Hairston said.
Tokyo." Hairston said. "I was in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ing nf ...'iurrende.r documents about by war's end, Httfr&gt;ton recalled he. Dec ker and
charge nf th ~se guys and thi"i
got one beer on Saturday night and you wouldn't
"There was a lot of scurrying about indicate a re!'. trnined. nearly ~ Walton stayed at the Imperial tor the price of a carton of be"You
was hi story it1 the making. ~o I
lieve the stories g{li ng around." he reca lled. "Some said
decided I was going."
it wa.., ..,mai ler than a grapefruit, others said it was big as a
at first, but it went off like clockwork silent activity. which Hairston ~garettes .. that co-;t me JU!'It 50 cents.
confirmed. After ob tain ing clearan~e.
"The ama1ing thing about Tokyo wa~. the building plane.
"There was a lot of exterior" would look normaL but the interiors had been
Hair ~ton and his \taffe r' took and MacArthur had his eye on every"We just hop&lt;d it wouldn't drop before it got off tlie
sc urrying about at firs!, but it wrecked by all the napalm bombing that had go ne on . i~land and we"-.1 never be heard of again. That was one
the next avai lable crui~e r to Ja·
pan and three days later found thing ... They called the ship the went off like clockwork and before the .'iurrender : · he said ... It was almost total destruc- story Tokyo Rose didn't .have before we did," Hairston
added.
·
them selves ina la unch in Tokyo 'Mighty Mo,' ~nd it just seemed ap- MacArthur had his eye on ti on.··
everything." H ai r~to n ~aid.
Say .
'
News of the conlli ct's end was no more welco me th an
Hairston. who had enlisted in the Marines in September
"They ca ll ed the ship the to the soldiers and s"i lors in the P~cific facing the planned 194t wa-; discharged in January 1946, returned. to his
Observing one of the U.S. propriate the ceremony would be on
'Mighty Mo.' and it just invasion of Japan. Hairston said.
Navy's · supe r-ha tt teships
humetowri o f Waterloo and later resumed his edu cation at
seemed oppropriate the cermoored in the bay. Hairston said a ship like that."
The a ... .., ualt . crK_le nam~d Operation Olympia, was to . Wilmington College.
emony would be on a ship have staf-ted Nov. L
he asked t h~ co~swai n o n tl1e
·
Faced with a delay of up to six weeks in getting off
Thomas E. Hairston
l1ke that."
launch what the ws~e l 's name
"But th en the atomic bombs were dropped and we we re Guam when the war endt!d. he recalled pulling a few
After the "u rrendcr. glad we did n·t hJve . to invade. because we could ha ve strings to ge t on the nex:t transport home. but with a
was .
. ' Thecoxswam r&lt;plied. "Oh.that's the Missouri . That's HaiNon and his staffers toured the Japanese capitol. ea .., ily lu..,l a ha!f mill ion men ." he 'iaid. ··w hen you've condition- he had to' supervise the loading of 1.500 men
'taying at the Im pe rial Hotel that servgd as MacArthur's ..,ee n your buddies killed or injured for as long a" we had , and " I don't know ho w many truc ks .. on the ship.
W:her'e the &lt;\Urrenrler will he tomorrow ."
·· ··That \, where we're going:· Decker vo lu nteered. and lX:C Upation headquarters. A week after the . , urrender. you wan ted ill o stop."
·-r m su re they laughed about it at he)ldquarters because
within minutes Hair:-. ton and the othl!r'i were aboard the MacAr.thur ortic iall y took control of the Japanese governRumors surrOunding the first atomic bomb were rife on they felt thi s rasca l hudcuuse d noe ndoftrouble." HaH-ston
ment.
Mi s~uuri and on hand to cover the event for Leatherneck..
Guam just he fore it was dmpred on Hiroshima on Aug. 6. chuckled .

PATERSON, N.J. (AP)- As the national cemeteries
with the veteran&lt; of World War II, remember tho&lt;e
died on the home front.
Rememberthe Alday-Parkerclan, which began lmgratnonh in 1942 from Bainbridge. Ga .. looking for work.
found it here at Union Asbesto&gt; &amp; Rubber Co ..
was operating around the clock to \upply Navy
along the Ea&lt;t Coa&gt;t with insulation.
Five men in the family joined UNARCO. and each
Iev,enu~allly died from asbestos they inhaled and ingested

:. SEATTLE (AP) - While victoriou' World War If
t-rOops go t homecoming parades. a far different welcome
awaited Japanese-Americans return ing from the internmen I camps where they· d been forced to spend the war.
: The Naga.ishi Family found their Seattle home defaced
by graffiti proclaiming · ' ' D{::ATH · · and '' NO JAPS
~ANTED.·· In a cemete ry south of the clly, headstones
with Japanese names had been toppled.
: 'Chuck Kato was 12 when his family returned to Seallle

internm~nt

from an internment camp in Idaho. He recalls running an
errand to a neighborhood store and being st unned by a sign
in the wi ndow: "No Japs or Dogs Allowed."
Nearly 120.000Japanese-Americanson the West Coast
were forced into internm ent camps after Japan 's attack on
Pearl Harbor in December 1941. They were accused of no
en me. and two- thirds were native- bam Americans. but
they were cons idered a security threat due 10 thei r Japanese ance stry.

Every nation that fought in World
War II suffered major losses. The
Axis nations. as well as China,
France and Great Britain , were
particularly devastated .

~

'

'

.
M1.1.1tary arrcraft

losses

U.S.
- Germany
Japan .
Britain
Australia
Italy
France
Canada
New Zealand
India
Sweden
Denmark
·

-

59,296
!!5;000

-

49,485

33,090

17,160

·

14,000
12.100
12,389

I 684

dead

THE ALLIES
thousands of dead
U.S.
. 405.4
Belgium !11 .,2
)49.5
India
Poland
1107
I 200.2
France
Britain
• 271.3
China
- 1 ,324.5
Other•
1145 _2

~~E AX~S

u gana
Ftnland
Hungary•
Italy
. Romania'
Austria
Japan
Germany

+

110
I 51.8
1140

1160
1200
.247

! 272

. . Prisoners of war

154

A witness
to the end

(excluding those in the Soviet Union)

Number of ships
• (Submarines, frigate s, larger ships)

U.S.
Germany
Japan
Italy
Britain
France
.U.S.S.R.'
Netherlands
Norway
Greece
Yugoslavia
Others

region'shpanese- America~populationcouldharborspies
and saboteurs.

Only 44.000 internees remained in the camps at war's
end. Beginning in 1943.the government encouraged fami·
lies 10 resettle in Ihe. Midwest and Easv·•.md many young
adults left to aue nd college.
Young men in the camps could JOin the military starting
in January IY43, and a year later they were included in the
draft.

the rafters and beam' The air wa' hazv with it.··
The danger ~&gt;asn' 1 limited to UNARCO work eN and
fmml it:"''. The factory ' s air W&lt;.t-.. vent~d nnto Ujunk)"ard nex:l
door. The owner later died of me!\othdinma: even tht
junkyard dog died of asbestosi,.
Today. 13 years after asbestos-related claim' forced 11
into bankruptcy court. UNARCO still operate' under th'
legal protection of a court-approved reorganitaiJOn pl:t~
A workers' lawsuit. which accuse' UNARCO of concealing the health risks. is still in court.

I 527

Naval losses
.,

recalls. ''The fibers stuck to h~&gt; clothes.' ·
His wife always shook Benny', pant' out before" a,h.
ing them. thereby launching u..,bc..,tO!o! tiber, into the air.
They lodged in ramily memberli' lung'». cau:-.ing a' ariely
of health effects- ranging from a,be&lt;to'" to cancer that appeared years later.
Somet1mes. AI got the 'pecial treat of v~&gt;iting hi'
father's workplace.
" It looked like there wa' angel ' \ hair all overt he place.
only thicker'· he said of the asbestos. " It hung down from

~~====~====~======~======~

Prisoners held by the Allies

camps; But shame remained .

While V-J Day closed the camp &lt;. it did not end the
racism that many Jnpanese-Americans believe prompted
their internment in the lirst place.
Fifty years later. the indignity of the intern ment still
Stings as they endure more subtl e di..,crimination blocking
th em from fee ling accepted as "real Americans.' ·
The mass evac.uation was authori zed by President
Frankli n Roosevelt on Feb. 19. 1942. Military officials,
fearing a Japanese allac k on the West Coast. said the

there. They also carried death home with them - two
'Women in the family died of lung problems. a son died of
lung cancer and other descendants report lung~ scarred by
:t.sbcstos.
,.....
'All were vict1ms of a national industrial policy that gave
lip service to workplace safety. but really demand~d production at almost any cost.
Benny Parker ran an oven that baked insulation slabs
that were sprayed with asbesto&lt; fibers . "When he came
home, he looked like he was in \ pun glass." his son AI

1t- Milita~

1-------

War's end closed Japalnese-American

V·J Day Supplement • Page 9

he other casualties of war: Death on the home front;

•

A witness to history:

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

August 15, 1995

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

-157
433
-300
-296
.129
.102

1 4o
I 40
122

113
I 36

• Unconfirmed or unoffi cial

thousands of pnsoners

630

German
Italian
Japanes~

111.6

Prisoners
French
Italian
British
Yugoslav
American

held by Germar:ty

Prisoners
British
Dutch
American

held by Japan
.106

GALLIA COUNTIAN Charles
Ewing Campbell, a Sergeant
with the Army Air Corps 41h
Fighte{ Reconnaissance
Squadron, was among those
soldiers on the island of Shima,
above, who witnessed a delega·
lion of Japanese officials on
August 20, 1945, enroute to the
signing of the final peace treaty
that ended World War II.
Campbell, who served as .an
aircraft maintenance technl·
cian, Is pictured al right (sec·
ond from left) with the crew of
his fl9hter plane.

'

765

-200
•125
• 90

l22

115

onoring Those
ho Served
Our hearts and sincerest gratitude go out to
every man and woman who has served this great
, land. Their devotion to duty and country does not go
unrecognized. Please join us in this special salute.

•
OLD TOWN ROAD

POINT PLEASANT

WE SALUT'E THE

J

V-JDAY

.

.

fiOth ~ANNIV·ERSARY
•

VETERANS WHO

8&amp;0ff'c9•c9•

Our sincere gratitude goes out
to all the World War II veterans living In our
area, who heeded the call to arms to protect
and defend this great nation in a time of turmoil.

CITY COUNCIL

DEFENDED OUR

Leonard Rime ..............~ .............................. Third Ward
Suzanne Dickens ....................................... Fourth Ward
Elaine Hunt ....... .-........................................... Fifth Ward
Patty Jo Lee.:...........:.................................... Sixlh Ward
Kip Hartcnbach ....................................... Sevenlh Ward

Amerigas

I.

Randy L. Filkins ......................................... Eighth Ward

(

'

~.,r.~-~
~
~~1,-·
•.
-~

'

.

FREE DO •
..

.

'

..
Marilyn McDaniel
City Clerk

400 VIAND STREET
POINT PLEASANT. WEST VIRGINIA 25550
PHONE C304l 675-:z:Jro

•

•

Tim,othy L. Scarberry ................ Councilman At Large
. -' Dana T. ~rown ..... m ......... ........... Councilman AI Lnge
David Reyn!Jids ................. :........................... First Ward
Bob Doeffinger .......................................... Second Ward

Russell V. Holland
Mayor

"
•

.:171.1
PL~ASAf~~ VALLEY HOS~ITAL
lirJ The rami1yo proressiona1s
(
2520 Vall•y Orlva, POint l'l•asant. WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

'',.
r

675-1700
Rt. 62 North

P~int
·,

----

----~-

·-

•.......!...

Pleasant, WV

..

�•
Page 10 • V.J Day SUpplement

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

August 15, 1995

August 15, 1995

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Ohio • Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

V.J Day Supplement • Page 11

The damage of World War II
By September 1~5 many areas ol the wO!Id lay devastated The ma1n
theaters ol war had left a massive t1ail of destruction in their wake. Some 50
million people had lost thelf lves.

General area m
figllng look

.

Pril'q)al aggressor

•

plaCe

COWII•.es &lt;Uupl8tl

oaberls and pre-war

b'; ltle a91)reSSOI •

possess~

rat o.~s. dunng the:
lte ft'a r

' .
Continued from page 1
ba&gt;eball club finab.
H1fdgilt •
Porter. u.,ing h1s ''Jaspey" sporLii colum n monicker, noted that the day the
&amp;··
war ended was also significant in th at the first -ever softba11 game was played
on Memorial Field. Harry Grayson·, NEA feature discu&gt;wd how the war had I ClNAOA:
39 (« Ule&lt;1
affected bo~ing grem" Max S~hmeling anti Primn Camera.
I
Ads m the p;.1~r announced the Rio Grande bean dinner was set fvr that
Saturday, and "Charleston radio stars" would perform at the Bidwell Park on
Sunday. The Economy Cab Co., 56 Court·St., advertised Yellow Cab service
for 25 cent.' a ride .
Aside from radio programs and the Tribune's regular lineup of comics.
including Blondie, Alley Oop. Red Ryder and Our Boarding House with Major
Hoople. di,traction was offered in those pre-television day-.t the local movie
palaces.
JTAL~ I'
On V-J Day, "Captain Eddie" with fired MacMurray was lini&gt;hing its run at
lll,tm~
the Colony. to be replaced th.· next day with the Tallulah Bankhead extravaGREa:E:
BRAZIL: • lOO,OOO kilo
ganza "A Royal Scandal." The Gallipolis Theatre featured Robert Livingston
, 2QO~ea
and Ruth Terry in "Tell It to a Star." plus the lat"'t chapter in the 'erial
"My stery of the Riverboat," which had 'been running since July.
Pacific
As was the practice then. the bill would change by the weekend. "A Royal
Oc-tatl
Scandal" would yield to the Alan Ladd-Gail Russell vehicle ·:salty O' Rourke."
' 1 '
and the Gallipolis scheduled a double feature - Richard Arlen in "The
I Mort lha!l21 millln
_.
.t '
Phantom Speaks" and "Firebrands of Arizona" with Smiley Burnette.
0
sttipl; ..........
•
Columnist Harry R. Horn. in his "Yow Hometown and Mine" entry in.that
•
I Mort liM 2 rniOI
-:
day's Tribune. niade note of lack of interest in local elections. "the early
browni-ng of the loCust fo11Uge ·· antf St!leC'tiVe SerVice Board C,.le[l Gilbert
' ·.
Beard' s ob&lt;crvation that more Galli a countians were born in July than any
other month of the year.
But significantly. Hurn discu~-;ed 'grow ing sentiment for es1ablishment of a

211_...,
RUS~A :

'

U.S.S.R.

Man Wflltm &amp;US

•, _,..··I

Drll~led

'

I

Remembering Those Who Served
In The Second ·World War

"

•

,
nnzversar,
emorza

.r,""&lt;
--,•

WORKERS AT THE 'Secret City'
of Oak Ridge, Tenn., celebrate the
· end of World War II in this Aug. 14,
· tf145 file photo. There were 75,000
people working at Oak Ridge at the
' height of production of the ura·
:nium used In the first atomic bomb.

'

~End

.

We mourn the Jo~s of those from Gallia County who bravely fought and ga~e their lives to preserve
our comttry 's freedom and ma.k e the worl(\ safe for democracy: ,
t

•

This Page Sponsored By These Many Fine Community-Minded Bus· esses•••
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446-2342
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•

446:.4222

••

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'

I CENTRAL EI.IIOPE:
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."I

''

: NEW ZEALAH01
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""'-·~""" ....

--

murdatld ill !he Holotaust

YOU'VE COME A LO"G WAY BABY!!
Just like our wartime buddy. We still
· work hard. Ateas largest selection of
Jeep vehicles.

General George Marshall
said it ..

"This country's most
important contribution to the
war."
Outillty • SaUefactlon The Wharton Dlnerent:fl Slnt:~~1ec&amp;

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424 SECOND 1\VE.
GALLIPOLIS

IN AMEIUCA

/

/

17 Court St. Gallipolis
•

Jackson Pike • Gallipolis1 OH • 446-6620

446-2374

' '

·( qrcater {o.ve fiatli no man
t!ian this, tliat a man fay
down fiis fije for liis friends."

Remember... With Our Product Line And
Our Pricing Policy - It's Hard To Imagine
Anyone Not Buying From Us ...
However, If You Don't Buy From Turnpike -...

J(yJ{'J{_ 15:13 .-

.

.\., .,

PLEASE BUY AMERICAN! .

••• ••••••

500 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis

446-0315

.,
JEFFER~'JN BLVD.

•

POINT PLEASANT

_, -· -····
' .

!

:I

.

County hhs t!Very reason to be proud of her service roster and its
perpetration should be of paramou.nt interest to all," he wrote.

446-4343

co.

446-3278
Banli

,· ,'

326 2nd Ave. • Gallipolis

CentFal Supply ..

169 Upper River Rd. ~' Gallipolis

Savi~gs

:

:

' I

842 Second Ave.
Phone 446·1405
Gallipolis, Ohio

-- -.

Unity

Octc!ll

The Shoe Cafe )ACK&amp; )ILL'S

CHEVROLET • GEO • OLDSMOBILE

•

.'

Parific : 1

"Proud To Be A Part Of This Special Edition"

Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, Ohio

II~

: ···Jesus Christ. sarge. here's my
' brother." Ord said he told his ser:·gea nt. H~ s\aid the! ~ergeant carne to
: look , and told Ord he would help him
; find Milton Ord, who had also been
·captured a:&lt; a POW .
.
: Tile ironic part of the story is that
·'Milton. 0 r "Mit" as Ord calb h1m.
joined the army at a dillercnttime that
.he had. was captu'red in Africa not
:Germany . washdll in.adlffercnt camp.
1ibcrated by a d1tlerent country (Ru',.,ia). but wound up at the ""ne place
.:Us Ord did. about three days llater.
: Ord anti hi s ~ergeant found Milton
·on the third lloor of a building by
~and lei ight. Ord said the two got ubmll
:rive feet from each other when the
:... ergeant told Milton lhat.he \vas with
· 'hb brother.
· "M ilton looked at me und -.;aid,
:·You're not · 'my god-damned
:brother'.'' Ord sa id. He added he had
:-to tell Mdton who hi ~ ·parents were
. and variOus ofh~r fach hcf(m~· M i"lton
: would finally believe it. While Ord
·had lost from 145 pounds to 97, Mill on
: had lo,tto 95 pounds and had been in
: captivity for 3:1 months
· Ord sa id he took his brother down: !-.lair-.;. gave him some or"thc s10len C·
: rations i.llld'OITered him his mattre ~s ..
:whi ch Milton refu -.;ed. Before return•. in11&lt; to his bed on the lloor. Ord sa1d he
· made Milton prornist.! not to kavl! the
: barracks without him . The next morn-

., ....
•I

"G~ Iha

bookkeeper. He worked his way to
the presidency of the bank. a title
which he held until he retired 14
month' after Peoples Bank took over
Mason County Bank. Milton died in
the '70's.
Ord brought several items back to
the states thai remind him of his days
;.is a pri;.,nner Of war. inc,luding the
spoon he used to eat the turnip soup.
the diary that cou ld have cost him his
life. and the gun the railroad foreman
hdd tu his head. Ord was determined
not to forget the ~xperience, even
taking a German language class sev·
era! year&lt; later. It wa&lt;then he realized
he had gollen mixed up in what he
was trying 10 say back to the railroad
foreman. ;.md the foreman's response
to him.
On.J'.., days am mostly -spent rdaxing. at his Ne'w Haven home anti en ~
joying his f:1m il y. Recent ~ays have
found Ord picking blackberries ncar
hi s hom~ and reminis-cing about hi"'
w:.1r expencncc:...

• I

-·

monument.

irig. Milton was back downstairs. next
to his brother.
"We stayed together until we got
back to New H~wen," Ord :..;~id. He
added after the brothers found ea.ch
other. Ord was called to one of the
trucks that was to take him to France.
but the truck only had 23 men instead
of 25. He yelle&amp;.to hi s commandin g
officer and asked if hi s brother toulct
Join him. The officer allowed Miltoh
to get on the truck and th ey traveled
home togt!thcr.
"I bet there is no other instance in
the United States where brothers
joined the .;;crv ice at different tii1tes.
we rc captured in different places, he Id
in different camps. were liberated by
different cou ntries. and ended up
meeting three day-.; later." Ord said.
After a leave in New Haven, Ord
returned tO finish out his serviLe day"
in ArkansaS. Milton rcenli..;ted in the
&lt;.,ervice and Ord decided ln go to col +
lege. Ord got married in IY46 and
began working at the Mason County
Bank in 1947 :IS a janitor, teller and

•

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veteran..,· mernoriul in tht! countv.

Offers of contributions had been made. but Hurn leltthe "personal sacri lice"
was unnecessary and that the county should appropriate the money for a

.
.

"'loy I.

.

:his brother 's.

~"'\...

co.._,.,
IIY•""'""

of war- for New Haven man

: continued from page 1
:vn lunteere_.d, putting his name fir!".l on
;t he list he typed. As he wa' typing
"ilam~s. he came upon a familiar one ...

r

·-,..--·

~ ls

JAPAH:

....

----.......

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�Page 12 • V-.1 Day Supplement

•

Gallipolis, Middleport-Pomeroy, Oh io • Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.

August 15, 1995

Ohio Lottery
.

Sanders
shines in
Reds win

•••

Pick 3:

595
Pick 4:

HUMID

5833
Buckeye 5:

PageS

1-8-29-31-34

...

Vol. 46, NO. n
Copyright 1995

Low toai&amp;IJI Ia 70s, hot a ad
bumld. Tbunday, partly cloudy,
mU(IgJ'. Highs Ia llowor 90s.

2 Sections, 12, Pa ges 35 cenJs

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 16, 1995

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Calaway's steer·cops top honors

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER - John Collins won resent
champion In Tuesday's Meigs County Junior Fair Beef Show.
Shown here are, from left: ColOns, fair king and queen Jeff Rose
and NoeUe Pickens, and beef Jlrincess J amle Drake.

Air Forcle punishes
officers for deaths
.

Anita Calaway ' s 1,270-pound
steer took top honors in lbe Meigs ,
County Junior Fair Beef Show
Tuesday night earning the title of
1995 grand champion market steer.
Winning reserve honors was
John Collins with his 1,330-pound
entry.
'
Winners in the various classes
were, in order by class: 950-1,030
pounds- Jonathan Avis, Dezra
Wrikeman, Jared Hupp; I ,0901,145 pounds - Sarah Clifford,
Robert Hoffman, Jbey Dillon;
1,16(),1,200 pounds - Joe Brown,
Randall Burke, B.J. Ervin;
1,215-1,245 pounds :.... Julie
Brown, Shawn Dailey , Laura
Brown ; 1,250-1,290 pounds Anita' Calaway, Jessee Eastman,
Janet' Calaway; John Collins, Wesley Karr, Jason Pullins; 1,3951,435 pounds - Chance Watson,
Andy Myers, KeUy Dalton.
Winning the Fanners Bani( Best
Meigs County Bred and Raised
Steer contest was Julie Brown with ·
ber 1,220-pouod entry. Second
place honors went to Sarab Clif·
ford.
In the steer showmanship com.petition, Chance Watson and Jeremy Hupl' took grand and reserve
champion, respectively.
.
Class .winners in the showman·
s)lip cootest were, in order by class:
Old Pro - Chance Watson,
Jeromee Calaway; Experienced
(4th Year) -James Chapman,
.
Continued on page G

GRAND CHAMPION STEER - Anita
Drake, fair queen and king Noelle Pickens and
WASHINGTON (AP) - The trol aircraft that was at the scene
Calaway
won
grand
champion
steer
honors
In
Jeff
Rose, Anita Calaway and her sl.ter, Janet
Air Fon:e closed the book Tliesday' but failed to warn off the F-15
Calaway.
Tuesday's
Meigs
County
Junior
Fair
Beef
Show.
on one of its worst friendly fue dis- pilots, who said later they bad misShown are, from left: beer princess Jamie
. asters by grounding five officers taken the Army helicopters for
and imposing penalties that effec- potentially threatening Iraqi Hind
lively end their careers and those of choppers.
The three AWACS crew memtwo generals in ·the 1994 shoot·
. down o~ JJ:aq,
,
--.. bers iil~lude Capt. ~im_ VJ'an.&amp;.
The p!lots or the two F-15 flasle · ,. senior director on tbilt ill-fated nus- B~YCHARLENE HOEFLICH
· .orie entering the grandstand and
· The mon·ey for lbe cash givejets thai shot down two U.S. Army sioo. Wang was acquitted June 20 Sentinel News Staff
'
casb prizes of $25 wiU be awarded away is being provided by the
The hot, humid weather Is talc·
Black Hawk helicon!ers over north-- . by a military jury in Oklahoma
after each race starling after the Meigs County Agricultural Society, ing its toll on attendance a't tbe
em Iraq on April f4, 1994, have City on tbree counts of dereliction
Again
this
year
a
cash
give·
third race. and $50 after the ninth Roger and Debbie Spencer, Brooks Meigs County Fair.
been disqualified from flying for at of duty. The two other crew mem· away will lake place at the harness race,
on both days.
·
. Sayre. Wilma Slyler, Bill Roush,
Monday's auendance was down.
least three years, Air Force officials bers wbo have been grounded are
horse racing on Thursday and Fri- .
But you must be in the grand- Bill Rou sh, Jr .. the New Haven by more than 1,300 over 1994 figsaid.
Capt. Joseph Halcli and Lt. Ricky
day.
stand to claim a prize. and you can• Super Market. and Pomeroy Eagles ures. Last year a total of 10,440
Twenty-six people, inCluding 15 Wilson.
TickeiS are given free to every- win only once.
Club.
·
Americans, were killed in the
The F-15 pilots are Lt. Col.
Continued on page 3
sbootdowo. Only one Air Force Randy May and Capt. Eric Wickofficer was tried on criminal son, wbo each shot down one belicbarges, and he was acquitted.
copter. May bas not been allowed
In addition ·to the action against to fly since the incident; Wickson
the F-15 pilots, the Air Fon:e said it bas gone through flight instructor
grounded three crew members: of school but that career path is now ·
an AWACS radar warning and con- blocked.

Fair Comments

Ca$h give-away at races set for Thursday, Friday

l am th~ emblem of the greatest sove~eign nation
.
on earth._I am the inspirati~n for · which Arrierican
patriots gave their lives, an·d freedom~
'

My red stripes are symbols of the blood spilled in defense ofthis glorious nation.
My white stripes signify tears shed by Americans who lost their sons, husbands,
lovers and friends~ My blue field: The heavens under whic_h I fly.
'

'

My stars clustered together unify 50 states as one for God and country.
'

"OLD GLORY" is my~ name·and I wave on .high, proudly.
'

Here's to the men and women of Gallia, Meigs &amp; Mason Counties, who
unselfishly answered their nation's call. In times of war an'd times of peace, you
have stood ready to fight so th(lt Democr~cy might live on. We honor them one
and all, and proudly display our flag .out of respect to those who make .us all
proud each and every day~

Burlile
Oil
Com·pany·
is
proud
to
honor
the
courageous
.
.
men aijd women of Gallia, M·e igs &amp; Mason Counties.
'

''

JCT. RT. 35 &amp; RT. 7

(614) 446-4119

.'

'

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

* * * * '·* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

•

~ay two: Beating the h~at at the Meigs County Fair

Antitax proposal receives
cool reception in Senate
COLUMBUS (AP) - An 'ohio
House-passed resolution proposing
a constitutional amendment to
make it harder for lawmakers to
raise taxes got a cool reception in
the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
.
Chairman Richard Finan, R·
Cincinnati, said after Tuesday's
initial hearing he remains opposed
. to the idea of requiring a threefifths vote, instead of a simple
majority, to pass bills increasing
taxes or repealing tax exemptions.
" Unless somebody convinces
me otherwise, r m opposed to this.
and I didn' t hear anything here
today to convince me otherwise,"
Finan said.
Finan promised further bearings
on the resolution but said be wants
to check with national bond-rating
agencies on bow the state's credit
rating might be affected by the

.supennajority requirement.
Rep. Lynn R. Wacbtmann, RNapoleon, told the panel the super·
majority requirement for tax issues
is a good idea because ·'in extrnordinary times it takes exlrnOrdinary
means to protect the taxpayers." ··
Wachtmann,.a co-sponsor of the
measure. said, "Ohioans, like all
Americans, arc paying more taxes
than ever before and keeping ·less
of what they earn.
" Now, more than ever, Ohio
13Xpayers are vulnerable to dramatic tax increases at the state level,"
said Wachlmann.
· He said it lakes a ,supennajority
to override a governor's veto and
amend the Constitution. "We give
Ohio's governor protection," he
said. "We give lite Ohio Constitu·
lion protection . Why shouldn't the
Ohio laX payers enjoy the same prote&lt;:lions?"

COOL WOOL - B.listering Autumn temperatures affect ail'
· Meigs County Fair-goers, including the four-legged variety. Here,
-Krlsdna Kennedy assists her father, Glen, In Installing a fan over
her grand champion wether lamb. Also assisting were Kim Ritterbeck and Jason Pierce.

-

••

¥

GROOM AND CLEAN - It Isn't \nough to know bow to ride
and show horse., exhibitors also have 'to know how to groom and
clean their steeds. Here, Stephanie Story-Schwab grooms during
Tuesday's groom and dean contest ,while Kenny Whe~ler holds the
. reins.

1995 Meigs County Fair
Today ·
4:30p.m. Little Miss and Mls·
ter Contest- Hillside Stage
5 p.m. Kiddie Games • Show
Arena
6 p.m. Junior Fair Swine
Show • Show Arena
7 p.m. Open Class Horse
Show
·
8 p.m. Van Dells· Grandstand
8 p.m. Horse Pull
Midnight· Gates close

.
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Thursday
.·
9 a.m. Junior Fair Dairy Show· Show Arena
11 :30 a.m. Quick Bread ~ontest • Hlllslge Stage
Noon Open Dairy Clan Show· Show Arena
1 p.m. Harnesa Racing
1 p.m. District 6 Holstein Show - Show Arena
1 p.m. Flower Show Judging • Snlor Fair Building
1:30 p.m. Classics.· Hillside Stage ·

.

'

WORK - It takes a lot of people to park aU the cars at
the ·
County Fair, and it'a bot work, ac~ording to Tracy
Scllatrer, abown here direcdng tralllc Into the fair grounds. Schaffer, a member of the United Pentecostal Church of Middleport,
says parking attendants generaUy work· in shifts and drink plenty
of water •

RABBIT JUDGING -While ohen the focus is on larger ant.
mal., 5mall animals· also get a lot of attention at tbe Melgt County
Fair. Here, judge Cathy Backw; of Atwater examines a market pen
of rabbits•exhibited hy Ryan Kaulf.
'
·

••
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I

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