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                  <text>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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.
.
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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.
'
·

••
,(

•

c

I

�Commentary
'

$MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publi,hcr

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINIO~ Jr l.' \H: Icoml' Thq -..huu ld he k"' thJn l(Xl
words long. Alllcn e r~&gt; ar(' ).UbJCCt ro CL!l !ln!! .mJ mu"t he " ' .Pi~J V. ll h n,mn~.
address and telephone number. No un-.1gncd ll'ttl'r\ " 1!1 he p!.i hh.., hl'd L~·th.'r"
should be in good ta,.tc . add re&lt;..'o ltl ~ ,..,,ue .... not pcrsonJIII IC'

.

Local briefs----.

OHIO Weather
Thursday, Aug.

The ARC will bleed·money for another year
•

I l l Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page2
Wednesday, August 16, 1995 '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!1.--'

Accu-Weather• forecast for

The Daily Sentinel
•

VVednesday,August16,1995

.

Perot says he'd
like to go away, but

WASHINGTON
The
Appalachian Regional Commis sion, which was created 30 years
ago to help coal miners in Kentucky and surrounding states out of
poverty, thought it hit upon a brainstorm several years ago: boosting
tourism in time for the 1996
Olympics in Atlruna.
But like so many other projects
the ARC has undenalcen, it bas had
little impact on the region and is
yet another waste of money by an
agency that bas long since outlived
its usefulness.
·
The budget-slashing GOP
Congress promised to kill this
dinosaur once and for all. But in
keeping with the traditional bipanjsan support for this agency that
provides so much bacon for members of Congress from both sides of
the aisle, the ARC bas been spared
yet again.
President Reagan tried to finish
the ARC off in the 1980s. but be
. was stopped by a Defllocratic
Congresnhat didn't want to pi!lt
with its prized pork projects. Now.
with a Democratic president and a
Republican Congress at the helm.
the same old song i$ playing.

ly WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corre.&lt;pondent
· WASHINGlDN - Running for president, Adlai Stevenson began_ by
saying be bad prayed that the cup of candidacy would pass from hun.
Ross Perot seems intent on drinking from 11.
He insists be docsn' 1 want to run again but hints that be migbl .
While Stevenson chose heavenly images as the 1952 Democrauc nomS'URE,
inee, PcrotlookCjl in the opposite direction in discussing his possible candidacy in 1996.
.
•
"I've got to honestly believe .it's good for my country, because that s
uie only reason I would want til go serve~ hitch in bell, ~d th_at's, y~u
Jcilow, the kindest word you could put on II .Ul terms of bemg Ul public
'd'
Iif. e, "hcsru.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
Then again, he believed 1t last ume. Twice, by his accounung, smce he
quit and then changed h•s mmd 2 112 months later m 1992. . . .
For all his complaints about the system and the pnx:es~. _Perot ts a mastor of both, as displayed at his command performance num-coovenuon m
Dallas this past weekend. As it ended Sunday, be was back on nauonal
television, NBC's " Meet the Press," explaining bow Republicans and
Democrats in Congress can meet his terms for staytng out by enactmg a
balanced budget, campaign finance reform. lobbying reform and other
measures by Chrisunas.
"Look, 1 would like 10 go away, but if I go away. th~. odds -:ve'll get
those reforms are zero, so I kind o( bave to stay around, he S3ld. Perot
said they could be done easily by December.
.
That isn' t going to happen on the whole range of changes Perot and h1s
United We Stand America organization are demanding. So the third man
in lhe 1992 race will almost certainly begin 1996 in about the same stan~
be's in now.
·
And he may well stay there well into !be campaign year. No urgency
about deciding, Perot said. lie's already shown that unlikely timetables
can work out; he won his 19 percent of the vote in 1992 after runmng,
quitting in mid-July, and reversing himself on Oct. J. after supponers
placed him on the ballots in all 50 states.
Then as now, be said his aims were n01 personal but to do what's best
for. the ~ation. That is. of course, the litany of all candidates, except that
th~ others say they do want to run and be says be doesn't. Perot says he'd
prefer to get back to the busin.ess world.
.
·
"We're beuer off to have the
· But be's done more than keep his band in politics. He's not only been a
right to have an abortion in the cirguest. and a debater, on the CNN "Larry Ling Live" interview show.
cumstance of rape and incest .... If
be'·s heen a guest host.
·
.
.
. .
.·
.
you're going to have a majoritarian
Again and again, be says be bas no mterest m public life. He said so m right-to-life position, it's going to
the Dallas ball be hired for a three-day political conference featunng three
accept that that's a reality." d(lzen speeches by politicians. among them all the Republicans running_ House Speaker Newt Gingrich on
for the 199§ ~residential nomination.
.
, --'
. :_ . .
~
@
CNN' s "Late Edition,'· -Aug. 6
Bob Dole, the .Senate GOP leader. S3ld be d seen that Perot was sup"My wife was attacked eigbt
pQsed to be the fly in the ointment. "WeU, we need more flies if that:.s the
blocks from where we are. It was a
case," he said. "You are the ointment. You are making a difference.
.
vicious rapist.. ...(lf she had become
. GOP flattery makes sense, given the polling evidence that Perot's 1992
pregnant) it would be vicious and
cQDstituency baQsted the Republicans in their 1994 congressional electmn
monstrous to say she bad to carry
vi&lt;;tory.
·
.
that baby to term ." - Sen. Kent
But it didn't work before. Campaign managers and advLSCrs for both
Conrad. D-N .D ., on the Senate
President Bush and Democratic nominee Bill Clinton went to Dallas to
floor, Aug. 5
'
ceQn Perot suppon in 1992; three days later be judged both sides wantihg
The majority of Americans
and re-entered the race .
more or less agree with the above
. Perot vehemently denied that bis 1992 campaign led to Clinton's vi~to­
statements. According to . tbe
,.Y, _pointing to polling that showed be drew about equally from each s_1de.
National Opinion Research Center.
Bill in 1996, another three-way contest includmg· Perot almost certainly
84 percent of Americans say that
would work to Clinton' s advantag~.
.
.
. .. .
abonion should be permitted in the
·But the mix co.uld change. Cohn Powell ~ leavmg open the possibility
case of rape. This is why the Senate
he will run as an independent. Jesse Jackson talks of a challenge to Clm- recently revised a bill that bans
~.
.
the
coverage of abortions in federal
ln Perot's words, politics is an irrati~&gt;nal p~oce~s. Nothmg _new
re.
employee 'bealth plans. T.be origiStevenson. was accepting the Democrauc nommauon for president wben ·nal bill only allowed abortions
he told the national convention:
when .the mother's life was in dan"I have asked the Mfrrciful Father to let this cup pass from me. But
ger. It was passed after exceptions
from such dread responsibility one does not shrink in fear, self-interest, or
for rape and inccs·t victims were
in false humility."
.
added . .
.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, who troiDlced Stevenson for the Wb_tte House.
Right-to-lifers would have us
was watching on television, "After hearing that," be was srud to have
believe that the abortion debate is ·
remarked, " !think be's a bigger faker than the rest."
about life and wben it begins. This
.
is a worthy concern, certainly, one
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and columthat bas generated a lot of interest
nist (or Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
and controversy. But it is not the
national politics for more than 30 years.
issue with which our representatives in Wasbington.are engaged.

Congress passed a budget resolution in May that eliminated all
funding for the ARC. But when the
resolution made its way to the rele-

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
vant comminees in both the House
and Senate for approval, a familiar
refrain was beard . The House
approved $142 million for next
year's commission budge~ a cut of
only 50 percent from this year,
while the Senate was even worse
- approving a budget of $182 million. The two houses . will split the
difference in a conference committee later this year.
Tbe tourism plan for the upcoming Olympics is a perfect example ·
of the wasteful projects that will
. live on. It was a ridiculous auempt
to .set people at the Olympics to
spend an extra two weeks in
Appalachia by promoting bed-andbreakfast workshops.
Tourism development bas been
a staple at the agency since at loost

1969. when ARC money built a 57unit motel-restaurant u-aining complex at the Tri-Coumy Vocational
Education High School and Technical Institute in Ohio. Time and
again, the ARC's own contracted
studies have warned against dabbling in the tourism and recreation
industry.
We dug up the first one, a
$70,000 study conducted by Raben
R. Nathan Associates in 1966 on
t.lie impact of to•trism. It concluded
that the ARC should stay away
from tourism investments because
the recreational indusuy is typically one of "low pay and a seasonal

nature.'·
Several years later, another
study confirmed the first reporl' s
conclusions and added that the
iouriSf\1 business bas not only low
wages but also includes the danger
of creating "an entire body of people who will become a service

class.''
A grassroots citizens group in
the region, calling itself the ARC
Accountability Project , once
cbar~ed: "The conclusions of
ARC s own studies point out that
not only are tourism and resort

SALE

THEY'RE
COMFORTABLE. ..

BUT WILL

THEY SHI21NK
WHEN THEY'RE

WET?

IToledo I 88" I

investments a poor financial risk,
but also they are a hindrance to
Appalachian life . Development of
buge resort complexes oft~n
inhibits other types of commumty
growth. Also, most Appalachians
never even receive a fraction of the
tourist-inspired dollars since many
of the resortS are owned by developers who live outside the moun-

Today in history

By Tbe.Associated Pres.&lt;
.
Today is Wednesday, Aug. 16, the 228th day of 1995. There are 137
·
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug . 16, 1977, the King of Rock 'n' Roll, Elvis Presley, died at
Graeeland Mansion in Memphis, Tenn., at age 42.
On this date:
.
·'
In 1777, American forces won the Revolutionary War Battle of Bennington, Vt.
,
.·
In 1812, Detroit fell to British and Indian forces in the War of 1812.
In 1829, the original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, anived in
Boston aboard the ship Sachem to be exhibited to the Western world.
In 1858, a telegraphed message from Britain's Queen Victoria to J&gt;resident Buchanan was transmitted over the recently laid trans-Atlantic cable.
In 1861 , President Lincoln prohibited the stales of the Union from
trading with the seceding states of the Confederacy.
·
.
In 1894, George Meany, the flfst president of the AFL-CIO. was born
in New York City.
In 1948, baseball legend Babe Ruth died in New York at age 53.
1n 19S4, Spans lllustrated was first published by-"Pime Inc.In 1956, Adlai E. Stevenson was nominated for president at the Democratic nationlll convention in Chicago.
·
In 1960, Britain granted independence to the crown colony of Cyprus.
In 1987, !56 people were killed .when Nor:thwest Airlines Right 255
crashed while taking off from Detroit.
Ten years ago: One ilay after South African President P.W. Botha's
speech irr which he refused to endorse sweeping reforms, blacks and some
whites expressed disappoinunen~ with many predicting an escalation of
violence.
· Five years ago: President Bush ~et with Jordan's King Hussein in
Kennebunkpon, Maine, where he urged the monarcb to close Iraq's
access to the sea through the pon of Aqaba. In Iraq, President Saddam
Hussein issued a sratement in which be repeatedly called Bush a "liar"
and said the outbreak of war could result in "thousands of Americans
wrapped in sad coffms."
·

~

lains.'"
Current ARC sources told us
that many staffers bave tried to dissuade their own agency from wasting money on tourism. Said one
staffer, who bas since left: "We
tried to keep the agency from making every mountain community
into a sure-flop tourist mecca, but
we were shunted aside in fa'olor of
tourist promoters in every regional
hamlet." '

Driver injured in crash
W.VA .

But top ARC officials and many
state governors loved tourism and
recreation projects. Here's a sample of some oLthe projects funded
by the ARC with anti-poverty
money:
- $2.9 million for an access
road to the Montage ski reson in
Lackawanna County, Pa. The county was forced to rescue it in a
takeover in September 1991 wben
it toted up a $9 million debt
- Another ski resort, Silver
Creek, about 26 miles soutb of
Marlinton, W .Va .. was built with
significant ARC funding. It was
later acquired by the federal R9SOlution Trust Corp. when it flopped
during the savings and loan scandal, and bas since been acquired by
a Japanese corporation.
- Some $3 million to the
M uskingum Area Joint Vocational
Technical Center in Zanesville,
Ohio, including $75,000 for culinary arts u-aining in 1991.
- $750,000 for a football facility for the NFL's expansion Carolina Panthers.
- There was even money spent
for a program to attract German
travelers to West Virginia.
- $100,000 for the National
Olympic Trials for Bicycling track
in Altoona, Pa.

Via Auocial&amp;d ,_., GriphbNBt

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Oblo
· · and variable. Low in the lower 70s.
Today... Partly sunny ... Hot and High thursday in the lower 90s.
Extended forecast
buinid. High in the mid 90s. Variable winds less tban 10mpb.
Friday through Sunday ... A
Tonight and Thursday ... Party chance of thunderstorms each day.
cloudy and continued very warm Continued bot and humid. Low in
and muggy. Winds tonight light the lower 70s and highs 90 to 95.

--Area Death--· -Richard $. Young
Richard S. Young, 50, of Lexington, S.C., and formerly of New
Haven, W.Va. died Monday, Aug. 14, 1995, at Lexington Medical Center.
Born April 17, 1945, in Buffalo, N.Y., son of Virginia Ferguson
Young and the late John S. Young, be was employed as supervisor or
electrical engineering and maintenance at S.M.I. Steel of South Carolillll:
He was formerly operations manager for Foote Mmeral Company m
Frazer, Peon., and former plant manager of the American Alloys plant in
NewHaven.
·
He attended the Lexington Baptist Church, was inember of many
professional and engineering organizations and was a member of the
Moose lodge .in Point Pleasant, W.Va
Swviving is his wife, Cathy La~son Young of Lexi~g10n; two _daughters and a son-in-law, Mary and Jun Freeman of Racme and Ebzabeth
Young of the home; two grandchildren, Chelsea and Victoria Freeman.
Also surviving is a sister and brother-in-law, Judy and Raben Sander
of Kalispell, Mont.
·
.
,
Services will be held Friday, I p.m. at Boyer Funeral Home m Waverly, with the Rev. Marlin Kellough officiating. Burial will follow in MI.
.
.
La(ham C~metery, Waverly.
Friends may call Thursday from 5-8 p.m. and from 9 a.m. ·unul the
time of services Friday at the funeral home.

a

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binslein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The majority of U.S. politicians,
like the majority o[ U.S. citizens,
do not believe that life begins at the
moment of conception. If they did,

Washington want. They are not .. the Senate managed to block the
really pro-life. They are pro prosurgeon geneyal nomination or an
life votes. They do not really want obstetrician -gynecologist because
to take a sincere ri2ht-to-life oosibe bad perfOrmed abortions.
tion, they want to take, in Speaker
With each of the measures
Gingrich's revealing words, "a
comes the bristling insistence ·that
majoritarian right-to-life position."
the debate. is not about abOOion they could'lieverabide the ''l:~ccpt
They want thiS because they
W.s about taxes,~states' rights, credin the case of rape or incest" need to keep the suppon of ultraibility. But let's just look at the
clause. If a 2-week-old fertilized right-wing religious groups like t.be
Foster nomination. If you think that
egg is to be considered a full- Christian Coalition, which has said
be was denied the surgeon general
fledg e d human being, then it it will only back pro-life candi- ~ost because he misreported Lhe
should make no difference whether dates. Right-wing religious zealots
number of abortions he performed,
that fcnilizcd egg is the result of may be relatively small in number,
as Senate Republicans contend,
marital love or rape. If aboning the but they are, unfortunately, large in
then ask yourself the question my
result or a one-night st~nd is the reSources. They are extremely well
colleague Saundra Smokes asked
moral equivalent or killing a child, organized and well funded, and
her readers: What if Foster bad
then so is aborting the result of a tbcy vote in rock-solid blocs.
goofed on a different record, say
rape.
So members of Congres!!"must
the number of ovarian cysts be
. Of course, some people do hold scramble for ways to appease this
removed? Would anyone care?
this position. They believe that powerful minority without losing
Would anyone even ask the quesabortion is murder in every the votes of the majority. You see,
tion?
instance. And though I do not agree they are pro pro-choice votes, too.
Of course not. Because the Foswitb this stance, I can respect it,
They do this by creating paperter rejection, along with the recent
provided it is expressed without the work. The Congress that said it
House and Senate measures, ARE
aid of firebombs, submachine guns
wants to get the federal governabout abonion . What they are not
or butyric acid.
ment out of people's lives is spendabout is life.
But I cannot respect the wig- . ing an inordinate amount of energy
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated
glcrs, the people who want to add
meddling with women's wombs . It
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
lit~e modifying clauses once the
wastes good taxpayer time fussing
Association.
questions get tough. Anyone who over bylaws and amendments that
Send comments to tbe author
agrees with Sen. Com:ad that forclimit the availability of abortion. In
In car~ of this newspaper or send
ing a rape victim to carry a result- June, the House voted to ban aborher e-mail at saraeumaol.com.
ing pregnancy to term is ''mon- tions at overseas military hospitllls.
(For Information on how to
strous," thus relinquishes their Early this month, the House passed
~ommunlcate electronically with
righno call abortion murder. You a resolution that would perD)it
this columnist and others, con•
can't have it both ways. ·
states to deny abortions to Meditact America OnUne by caiUng 1·
or course, having it both way~ caid recipients . And we all remem800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
is exactly what Republicans in
ber the Henry Foster furor, where

Sara Eckel

Wanted: centrist candidate for '96 ___ _ _
Opinion polls and the polarized
policies of Republicans and
Democrats indicate that there's a
huge bole in the middle of American politic&amp;. Unfortunately, no
one's around to fill that gap and
lead a new centrist majority.
The opportunity for a successful
third force in American politics
was demonstrated once again in a
recent NBC-Wall Street Journal
poll, which showed continuing dissatisfaction with President Clinton
and rising disillusionment with
congressional Republicans .
On the positive side, the poll
showed a clear preference for ceotrisl policies on the budJ!el, Medi care, welfare and rui'umativc action
- not the draconian measures
being enacted by Republicans in
Congress.
Other surveys indicate that a
growing plurality of voters regard
themselves as independents and
that more than 50 percent of the
electorate would like 10 see a third
party run candidates at both the
national and sta,te levels.
Intellectual work is being done
to create a "third way" policy
agenda - notably, by Lhe "New
Democrat" think tank, the Progres- ·
sive Policy Institute - but no can-

. ..

A bouse trailer that was being moved in Middleport sw~ng
aaoss the center lane and struCk another vehicle Tuesday evenmg,
according to Middleport Police Department reports.
Stanley E. Starcher, 59, Rutland. was cited for left of center after
bis 1981 Ford F350 truck went left of center and bit another vehicle
on driver's side at 6:05p.m. Tuesday on Mill Stree~ records show .
Starcher was hauling a bouse trailer and travelmg west on M1ll
Street.
Joyce L. Jacks. 42, Middleport, reported light dam~ge to her
1995 Chevrolet Cavalier as she traveled east on Mtll Street, reports
stated.
No on~ was injured in the accident.

•

Pro-life GOP wants it both ways _ _ _ __

-

Trailer strikes car

MICH.

•

Cash awards.::ntlnuadfromp•g•1
persons attended, while this year's
figure dropped to 9,130.
Tuesday's figures are also
expected to come in short of last
year's record attendance. Last year
more than 15,000 went through the
gates on Tuesday. Yesterday's
view of the midway was open
lanes, a lack of lines at the rides,
and plenty of empty seats at food
booths, an indication of an atten-

dance drop.

w~ unintentio~ally o~tted from~

listing of blue nbbon wmners.

1be Granges have such nice displays in the senior fair building tbis
year canying out the theme "Window of Upponunity for Families."
Judging has been completed and
flfst place went to Hemlock Grove,
second to Star, third to Rock
Springs, and fourth to Racine.

. .

And · the weather prediction
remains "bot and humid."
That familiar face in the
Methodist Church booth neat the
senior fair building where fresh ·
fruit and .cookie~ are the fare is the
former Ruth Ann Bailey of Rock
Springs.
For many years she bas been
Mrs. David Wiley, also a former
resident and lives at Glendale,
Ariz. Afier a two week visit here
.with cousins,' Harold and ~elen
Blackston, arid other relattves,
she's leaving today for Germantown for a wedding and then will
be beading back to Arizona.. . ,
. Incidentally, the heat dtdn I
seem ·to be bothering ber too much.
Sbe said it was well over a 100
degrees when she left Arizona.
If you win a blue ribbon you
want everybody to know It.
Well... ... Dale
Hoff~an
of
Pomeroy, won a blue ribbon for h!-"
peck of spring oats in the the )loruculture judging Monday. Hts name

Have you noticed - band fans,
being given by several commercial
exhibitors as favors, are right up
there in popularity with water fountains.

Hay~inners

announced
Winners in the Meigs County
Fair bay show have been
announced.
·
Brian Windon, Pomeroy, won in
the class for 75 percent or more
alfalfa, and Roy Holter. Pomeroy,
took the blue ribbons in both classes for all grasses and 49 percent or
less legumes.
·

.Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL .
Tuesday admissions - none
Tuesday discharges - noDe

A Milwaukee, Wis., man was slightly injured when his car
crashed early today on County Road 18 (Kingsbury), the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
Brian S. Esswein, 27, refused treabljent at the scene, the patrol
said.
Esswein was southbound, 125 feet west of County Road 19
(Peach Fork) at 12:45 a.m. when his car failed to navigate a rightband curve, went off the left side of the road and struck an embankmen~ the patrol said.
The car was moderately damitged.

Meigs announcements
Carpenter events
The Carpenter Inn &amp; Confer·
euce Center will bold a nature
retreat Friday through Sunday with
instructors from Hocking College
and the area For details, call Renee
Gremore at 698-2450.

The Racine Area Community
Organization will met Tuesday,
6:30p.m at the Star Mill Park.

Student to register
Students who are new to the
Meigs Local School District in
grades 9 through 12 are to enroll at
Cbeerleadlng tryouts
. Meigs High School on or before
AU girls in 7-8th grades who are Aug. 24. Office hours, 8 a.m. to 2
interested in uying out for junior p.m . For more information call
high chcerleading, there will be a 992-2158.
.
meeting Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in
the Eastern High School cafeteria. Bible club set
For more information. call 985A five -day Bible club will be
3392.
held Monday through Friday next
week, 6 to 8 p.m. at the Eden UnitWilson Reunion
ed Brethren Church, near
The annual reunion of the Reedsville on State Route 124.
· d.escendarits of John and Maggie Children of all ages invited.
Wilson will be held Saturday,
September 16 at the Syracuse Homecoming
Municipal Park at I p.m. Each perHomecoming at the Eden Unitson should bring a gift
ed Brethren Church, Aug. 27,
Carry-in dinner at the church felIce cream social
lowship hall, 12:30 p .m and serThe Columbia Township Volun- vices a1 the church at I :30 p .m .
teer Fire Department Auxiliary will Rev . Peter Manindale of Hilliard
serve homemade ice cream, pie, will be the speaker. Special music
sandwiches, and beverages at the by Rev. David Dailey and the
ftrebouse near Carpenter, Aug. 27, Daily family singers. Church is
4to 8 p.m.
located two miles north of
Reedsville on State .Route 124.
RACO to meet

Middleport Court news
1be following eases were beard
in the Middlepon Mayor's Coun of
Dewey Horton recently.
Fined were: ..
Christopher D. Smith, Pomeroy,
$100 plus costs for open container;
ChrisT. Becker, Middleport. $)00
plus costs for open container;
Patrick S. Steele, Pomeroy, $100
plus costs for marijuana possession, $100 for consuming alcohol
under the age of 21; and· Roben

James, Middleport, $100 plus costs
for assault.
Forfeited wore:
Todd E. Evans. Middleport, $60
for squealing tires; Richard L .
McCarty, Gallipolis, $60 for running stop sign; Gary G . Nlltter,
Ravenswood. W.Va .. $60 for illegal u-tum; Paul Allen Madill, Myrtle Beach, S.C., $60 for following
to close; and Larry J. Mitch, Jr.,
Middleport, $150 for disorderly.

Meigs EMS logs eight calls
Units of the Meigs County · Rupe. VMH.
'
Emergency Medical Service logged
9:34 p.m., fairgrounds, Norma
eight calls for assistance Tue~y.
Boggess, HMC
·
with three transfer calls. Units
RACINE
responding included:
8:33 p.m., ftre hall, Bob Roush,
POMEROY
VMH.
11 :47 a .m ., East Main Street,
Helma Jackson, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Receiving marriage licenses
2:36 p.m .. Union Avenue,
recenUy
in the Meigs County Prosmoke odor at Charlene Goodwin,
bate
Court
of Judge. Robert Buck
no injuries~
were:
SYRACUSE
Joseph Paul Gilbert, 30, and
2:42 p.m., Rose Hill Road, GarKimberly
Dawn Simplllns, 28, both
rett Randolph, Holzer Medical
of
Middleport;
Brian Keith
Center.
Phillips,
19,
and
Stacy Elaine
7:35 p.m., Water's Edge ApanBlankenship,
18,
both
of Pomeroy;
ments. Rick ·Lee, treated at scene.
James
Robert
0'
Brien,
34, and
MIDDLEPORT
Sherry
Sue
Chapman,
27,
both of
7:10p.m., Rock Springs fairRacine;
Evereu
Theodore
Coy.
43,
grounds, ferris wheel, Brian Wat3lld
Mary
Alice
Clark,
30,
both
of
son, VMH .
,Pomeroy.
7:51 p.m ., fairgrounds , Skyler

:.,
BANK APPRECIATION- Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton.
honored Peoples Bank of Middleport for its continued support of
Lhe pool and boat launch projects, along wltb tbe annual fireworks
display at Monday's regular council meeting. Accepting the award
are bank employees Cathy Linscott, center, and Carla King, rlgbt.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

RAC owner values
itself at $488 million
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- Rebounding aluminum
prices may help allracl Investors I() a eubllc stock olterlng of
tbe parent company of Ravenswood Aluminum Corp~ an ana•
lyst said.
.
Last week, Century Aluminum Co~ of Exton, Pa~ applled to
the Securities and Exchange Commission ror permission to
trade Us stock publicly. Century estimated Its shares were valued at $488.7 .million.
The aluminum plant Is In Rannswood, near tho southern
Ohio border.
''I think the market certainly wUI be more Interested ln.those
assets today tban II would have two or three years ago," said
David Molson, director of llght metal services for Resource
Strategies Inc.
.
·
Aluminum prices have rebounded to about 85 cenlll 1 pound
after dipping to less than 55 cents a pound In 1!193.
Tbe higher prices helped Ravenswood Aluminum post 1 $24
million profit In the first quarter of 1!195, compared with 1 $17
million loss In the same quarter a year ago.
Ravenswood Aluminum, whose plant is In Jackson County, Is
Ctntury's primary asset, although the company also owns a
.
minority Interest in a South Carolina plant.

Calaway's steer.~~ntlnuad from p•g•1
Wesley ·Karr; Experienced (3rd
Year)- Jeremy Hupp, Josb Ervin;
Yearling - Melissa Clifford,
Billee Butcher; Novice - Jessee

Stocks
Am Ete Power ............................. .34
Akzo .............................. ,...............59

Ashland OU ...:....................... .33 718
AT&amp;T .....................................52118
Bank On.e •.-;............................ .31 t~
Bob Enns ............................... l9114
Champion Ind ............................. .22
Charming Sbop ......................4 9116
City Holdlng ................................ .27
Federal Mogul ........................l l Ill
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .42 1/4
K-mart .................................... 14 J/4
Lands End ... :..........................16 J/4
Limited lnc ............................. 18 ~/4
Multimedia Inc ......................42 318
People's ............................... :..22 Ill
Oblo Valley Bank ........................ .35
One Valley ............................. .30 Ill
RockwcU ................................ 44 118
Robbins. &amp; Mye ...... ,..............l6 3/4
Royal0uteb .......................... ll7 118
Sboney's Inc . .......................... 11 118
Star Bank ...............................SO 314
Wendy Int•t ......:..................... 18 7/8
Worthington lnd .................... t9 3/4

Eastman, Lacey Bunting.

• .
Judge for the event was Jeff· :
Fisher of Waverly .

·-----·1
I
1
•

LOSE ~: 10 LBS. •. ·
IN 3 DAYS
:
All Natural C.H. 2001

With Chromium Plcollnata
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

FRUTH l'lt&amp;DiicY

-----

Mlddlopor1

992-6491 •.

-·-·-

.
Stock reports are lbe 10:30 a.m.
quotu provided by Adv .. t of
Gallipolis.

Marriage licenses

I

dictate seems to be emerging who
will grab the opportunity to unite
the country around themes of
shared sacrifice, the creation of

Morton KondrBclce
opportunity, a return to middleclass values, political reform, and
U.S. leadet&gt;hip in the worl~.
By late fall, PPI hopes to produce a "third way" manifesto and
by spring, a "new progressive"
platfonn grappling with such major
problems as stagnant worker
incomes, family disintegration, and
political d Ufunction. Tbe think
tank's sblutionswill stress individual empowerment, de-bureaucratization, and coitununity responsibility.
Sadly, no one seems ready to
stand on such a platform . Ross
Perot remains a vessel of popular
discontent but lacks a positive
agenda for the country and is
deeply distrusted by the public.
Colin Powell, blessed with a
dazzling aura of public support,
says he bas no passion for politics
and bas. yet to publicly test his
views on any controversial subject .
Moreover, Powell seems not to .

.

r

have reached out to PPI or any
other source of policy ideas.
President Clinton, former chairman of PPI's parent group, the
Democratic Leadership Council,
aims 10 reclaim lhe center against.
"ewemlst" Republicans In 1996,
but be's band.i capped by having
failed to deliver fully on his 1992
promise to !Je a new kind of Democrat. What's more, he can't get blS
approval ratings above 50 percent.
Right now, they an: at 47 percent,
according 10 the Han-Teeter poll
for NBC and the J oumal.
Republican presidential front•
runner Sen. Bob Dole (Kan .) is
vieWed favorably~by even fewer
voters than Clinton, although his
negative ratings are 10 points
lower. Dole's popularity probably
will dip further as be tilts to the
right to capture his party's nomina-

tion.

b

Probably the most significant
sign of rising dissatisfaction with
the GOP is the decline in support
for Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.,
whose positive rating is down to 29
percent, and whose negatives are
up to 45 percent.
·
By 68 percent to 25 percen~ the
public supports the GOP idea of

smaller goverrunen~ but by 66 percen.t to 30 percent, it also rejects
governmenl efforts to womQte
"traditional moral values. ' By just
41 percent to 39 percent, voters say .
they agree with GOp policies in ·
general, down !i:!im-42 percent . to · :
22 percent in January.
Republicans now get more
blame than Clinton, 45 to 28 percent, for msagreemelitS on the ·budget. By 55 percent to 38 percent,
the public prefers smaller spending
cuts over faster deficit reduction.
By 65 percent to 29 percent, it
prefers smaller cuts over reducing
taxes. By 62 percent t() 19 percent
to 13 percent, If prefers policies
that get welfare recipients to work,
over either reducing illegitimate
births among the poor or reducing
spending,on welfare.
And by 57 percent to 26 percent, the public favors reforming
affumative action rather than ending it. But only 13 percent favors
the Democratic party approach of
maintaining the program_ as it is.
(Morton Kondracke Is execullve edltor of Roll CaD, tbe newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel

V~n-Dells

&lt;USPS 213-%00
'Published ~very nflcrnoon. Monday through
Friday. Ill Coun St .• Pomeroy. Oh1o, by the
OhiO ~lley Publi~hina Company/MullifTl('dia
nrc:: P~fm:RJY: Ol'llo 4~7~9. rn . 992.215~ .
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Member: The

As~ociatcd r~s~.

and the Ohio

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POSTMASTER; Se~i oddre~~ correction~ to
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~! :~~:

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Rain OuUMte Mrlp Count)'

H::~:.: : :.: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : rJ:~ ·

Wed., Aug. 16- Grandstand

Wednesday, August 16

Suppotl

The
Meigs
County
Fair
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, V. VA'.
304·773·5583

A 100 Bed dua_l certified long term care facilit):
·in Middleport, Ohio, is seeking a direcmr 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
Management 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 Street, Middleport, Ohio, 45760.
•

E.O.E.

4:00·p.m.
4:30p.m.

Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
Little Miss and Mister Contest - HiUsidc Stage
~:00-lf.TTI. ·• ·
Kiddio Games • Show Alena
Juni or Fair Swine Show- Show Arena
6:00 p,m_.
6:00p.m.
Dazzling Dolls - Hillside Stage
7:00p.m.
· Open Class Horse Show ·
VanDciJs - Ginndstnnd
8.00 p.m.
8:00p.m.
Horse Pull
9:00p.m.
Hillside Stage' Midnight Cloggers
12:00 Midnight - Gates Close

Thursday, August 17
(Senior Citizen.&lt; Day until 2:00p.m.)
9:00a.m.
Juni or Fair Dairy Show- Show Arena
t 1:30 a.m.
Quick Bread ConicS! - l!ill,idc Stage
1~:00 noon
Open Class Dairy Show Show Arena
I :00 p.m:
Harness Racing
1:00 p.m.
District6 Holstein Show- Show Arena
1:00 p.m.
Flower Show Judging - Senior Fair Building
1:30 p.m.
Hillside Stage - Classics
4:00p.m.
Hillside Stage- Junior !'air Talent Show
Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
4:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
'Hillside Stago- Junior Fair Kiddie Games
6:00p.m.
Draft Horse Show- Show Arena
7:00p.m.
BAck Porch Swing - Hillside Stage
7:30p.m.
Antique Tractor Pull
8:\)0 p.m.
Western Flyer- Grand~tand . .
, 8·30 p.m.
Sheil,a Arnold &amp; Sunnsc - H1IIS1dc Stage
12:00 Midnight . Gates Close

I

•

1:
.

~

�Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
·
Page 5
Wednesday,August16, 1995

In the NL,

Reds blast Rockies 11-3;_Phillies &amp; Dodgers also win

MARKET LAMB SHOWMANSHIP- Rebecca Scott and
Shannon Enright wDn grand and reserve champion, respectiYely,
in the market lamb showmanship c:ontesl at Monday night's Meigs
County Junior Fair Sheep Show. Shown are, from left, Fair King
Jeff Rose, Enright, Scott, Fair Queen Noelle Pickens and Wool
Princess Dillee Pooler.

By MIKE FLAM
Associated Press Writer
Look out for falling Rockies in
tbe NL West.
,
Wben Colorado began its ninegame road trip, the Los Angeles.
Dodgers heaped home for a stand
of equal length. Along tbe way, the
teams passed each other in the
standings.
Despite a subpar performance
by Hideo Nomo, tbe Dodgers beat
the Chicago Cubs 7-5 Tuesday
night in Los Angeles to take their
first two-game lead or the season.
Colomdo pitchers gave up three
home runs to Reggie Sanders on
his ltrsl three at-bats as the Reds
beat tile Rockies 11-3.
Tbe Dodgers have won six of
eight games thus far, while tbe
Rockies bave continued their trend ·
of horrid play on the road by dropping seven or eight.
.

TALKING TO THE ANIMALS- Lillie Hannah Wolfe,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wolfe, Racine, on an outing allhe
Meigs County Fair Monday afternoon:, enjoyed a trip through lbe
barn where the lambs were housed.

-~

In the AL,

By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP)- Pitching
can be easy, even against the powerful Cleveland Indians. All it takes
is a bit of accuracy early in the

~~­

BREEDING SHEEP SHOWMANSHIP- Mary Nally won
grand champion and the Jack Seidenabel Award for breeding
sheep showmanship, while Stacy Wilson took reserve champion
honors in junior fair sheep competition at lhe Meigs County Fair
Monday night. Shown here are, from left, Wool Princess Billee
Pooler, Fair King Jeff Rose, Nally, Wilson and Fair Queen Noelle
Pickens..
·

lf-

I

count.

I

A COOL TREAT- While tbe temperatures stood In lhe mid90s, Ibis Holstein calf pwned by Krlstl Warner was treated to a
cool shower. Kristi said she was both interested in cleaning and
cooling ber animal, which wiD appear in Ihe junior fair dairy show
and the district holstein show to be held on Thursday. She Is a
member of lhe Meigs County 4-H Dairy Club.

Scolt Erickson shut down the
Indians' potent offense for tbe forst
time in more than two years,
throwing a seven-hitter to lead the
Baltimore Orioles to an 8· 3 victory
Tuesday night.
Erickson had dropped two
straight decisions and was winless
against Cleveland since June 6,
1993. He was superb this time,
however, in part because 70 of his
124 pitches were in the strike zone.
"He got ahead or a lot or guys.
That's lhe main thing," Baltimore
catcher Chris Hoiles said. "The
last game (an 11-1 loss), he fell
behind quite a bit. Tonight he went
right after them, and that's 'what
you bave to do as a pitcher.
"Once you get ahead of them,
you can lhrow anything."
Erickson (8-9) walked four and

GOLDEN NEEDLE AWARD- Juanita Lodwick, Chesler,
look the rosette best or show award for a blouse she made and displayed in the Golden Needle class or lhe domestic arts department.
Tbe class was for entries from those over 60.
·

Lucasville inmate escapes
murder charge conviction
I

CINCINNATI (AP)
A
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Court jury found a Lucasville
prison inmate guilty of kidnapping
guard Robert Vallandingbat)l during the 1993 riot but could not
agree on a murder charge.
Visiting Judge Everett Burton .of
Scioto County declared a mtstnal
in the murder case against Kenneth
·L aw on Tuesday because of the
hungjury.
.
Vallandingham · and none
inmates died in the 11-day siege,
which ended April21, 1993.
'-'There was not enough evidence to convict bim','' said juror
Renee Winbu'sh. She said she voted
to acquit Law ..._even tho~gh she
thought he probably was guohy. .
"There was no physocal evo-

SUFFOLK EWES-· Grand and reserve champion sullolk ewe
honors were won by Rebecca Scott and Aaron Yost, respectively, .
at the Meigs County Junior Fair Sheep Show Mo!'day ni~ht.
Shown are, from left, Fair King Jeff Rose, Wool Proncess Bollee
Pooler, Scott, Yost and Fair Queen Noelle Pickens.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Rain and
beat are keeping people away from
the Ohio State Fair Ibis year.
Attendance through Sunday was
down about 60,000 from last year,
The Columbus Dispatch reported
Tuesday.
1be biggest day yet of tbe 17day fair came Saturday, when
attendance bit about80,000.
"Basically, Mother Nature is

always in control, and she's certainly showing that Ibis year," said
fair General Manager Richard
Frenette.
.i .
The rains that overnowed tllir- ·
grounds drains and kept attendance
low Oil the fair's first weekend
have given way to stifling heat.
Those who do visit on a very hot
day tend to leave sooner and spend
less money, ·Frenette said.

Open class poultry results
Several Meigs County birds
were chosen as the top poultry
Monday afternoon at tOO fair.
In the open class, Ronald
Woods took two first place titles
[or his New Hampshire Reds and
Silver Lace Wyandots.
Pomeroy'' s Sonia Allen placed
first and second for her bantams.
Linda Rathburn placed third for her
·
.
bantams.
Mike Guess of Tuppers PI:uns
Director Larry Potts, covered up
their approval Rf controversial earned a first and second place fin-''shoot-on-sight- orders govcn to . i.tt for his Rhode Island Reds,
In lhe juruor l'iiir poultry show,
bureau sniper~ at Ruby Ridge.
the judges ordered the following
• The late or Potts and four
other top FBI officials, all suspended with pay, depends on the outcome of those cover-up mvesllgations. Two of the four have admitted destroying Fl)l documents dur,
The following won Grand

.

WASHINGTON (AI') - The
Justice Oep;:u1menl is paying white
separatist Randy Weaver ·and his
cbildrcn $3.1 million lor tbc killing
of Weaver's wife and son, but tbe
government is far from closing the
books on the siege by federal
agents at his Idaho cabin three
years ago.
The three surviving children or
Vicki Weaver- Sara, Rachel and . ing internal reviews of the case.
EUsheba- will receive $1 million
Another has admitted knowing
apiece. He·r husband, Randy, will about the destruction. Potts had
receive $100,000:
made no such admission.
"By enteriilg into a settlement,
• A Senate subcommittee on terthe United States hopes to talCc a
rorism
opens hearings on the case
substantial step toward healing the
Sept.
6.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.,
wounds the incident inflicted," tbe
who
will
chair the hearings, said
department said in a written ~ll!te·
the
settlement
shows both ''some
ment.
·
real
government
concern" and that
But investigations and contJo·
"the
inquiry
needs
to be pursued."
versy about the case continue to
roil the department and the FBI.
• Kevin Harris, a friend or
Tbe unfmisbed business:
Weaver's wounded by the same
• The fourth and fifth internal FBI sniper's bulletlhal kill~d.Vic!'l
investigations are under way. The Weaver is seeking $10 mtlhon m
latest, begun Friday, is a criminal
damag~s from the government.
probe by lhe U.S. auomey bere mto Negotiators working on a settle·
whether top FBI officials, includ-· menl are far apart
ing recently dem{lte~ Deputy FBI

MEIGS COUNTY SANITARY
REGULATIONS
Regulation •53012
Regulation for the storage

struck out one in bis second oom- Cleveland right·hander got only
plete game of. the year. The righttwo outs, matching tbe shortest outbander was 0-2 with a 12.96 ERA
ing of his six-year career.
Nagy threw only 36 pitches, 19
against Cleveland this .season.
Erickson was aided by three
or them balls. Despite bis wiruiing
double plays and benefited from
streak, be has allowe(l 13 runs in
some steUar defense.
his last6 1/3 innings.
"We hii the ball hard right at
·"Tonight he started out good,
people, and the Orioles made a lot
but then his balls just went flat,"
of great plays," Cleveland managHargrove said. "I think we need 10
er Mike Hargrove said. "But it examine our options and find out
looked like be bad a good sinker
what it is that Charlie's doing. He
going tonight. This is probably as basn 't bad one game yet this year
good as I've seen bim in the last
where he's had the kind or consisIWO years."
tency that I associate with Charles
The sinker was indeed a factor.
Nagy."
Baltimore second baseman Bret
Harold Baines hit his lR.th
Barberie had 11 assists and three homer for the Orioles, who led 8-1
putouts, while the Oriole outfield . after liye innings before coasting to
caught only five fly balls.
their fourth win in 16 games.
Rafael Palmeiro homered for tbe
Down 1-0, the Orioles scored
third slraight game and the Orioles six runs in the !irsi after Nagy
rallied for six runs with two outs in retired .. the first two batters :
the ftrsl inning 10 end a five-game Palmeiro doubled and scored on a
losing streak.
single by Bobby Bonilla before Cal
Baltimore's big inning carne at Ripken and Baines delivered sucthe expense of Charles Nagy (10- cessive RBI doubles. Mter a walk
5), who was 6-0 since June 23. The
(See AL on Pa2e 6)

Public Notice

Public Notice

. Pu,bllc Notice

business entity of any typo, code a euch as those
which, as a part of Ita referenced In the Building
and C.ode
builness operations, hat Olliclalo
tire storage In exceea ol300 Admlnlstratora (BOCA) Fire
and

as defined herein, and Ia ·.

hereby prohibited by the : ·
Board.
:
b. In addition to all : ·

storage of tires constitutes

a lire hazard, a health
hazard, and a blight to the

adjacent properties within
the county: and,
Whereaa, tl'le Meigs
district B~;&gt;ard of Health
(hereafler
known as

"Board")

deolreo

to

minimize and control these
adverse effects and thereby

protect the health, safety
and welfare or the citizens;
now 1herefore,

BE IT ORDAINED by tho
District Board of Health of
Meigs County, State of Ohio
SECTION I.
That any

tires as

defined,

shall

Code

limitations shalt ' bo · ·
considered open dumping, . ·

comply with regulation• Existing Structures Code.
2. Shall not be located
established
In thla chapter.
Whereas, it is the purpose
within
any area determined
SECTION
II.
That
no
of this regulation to
to have a ground water time
regulate the storage of tires person shall operate any of
travel of less than five
within the Meigs County buslnaaa with tho ate&gt;rage years
to a private or
Health 'District and to of tires without obtaining a
community
water eupply. A
Certificate
of
Occupancy
promote the health, safety
studylatobaperlormedby
and
Compliance
reviewed
and general wellare of the
and approved by the Board a certified Ground Water
citizens of the county; and,
Whereas, Is has been of Health. A detailed alto Profeulonat, es defined
established that without plan Including designated herein. The cost of any
proper
regulatory lire lanea and appropriate necessary hydrogeologic
atudy to make such a
measures, the uncontrolled cover, along with a

of Tires
Adopted August 8, 1995

Prevention

storage 'area .
Outllde : •
storage In excess of these · :

completed application for a determination

ehall

be

Certificate of Occupancy borne by the applicant.
3o Shall not be located
and Compliance, shall be

submitted no later than on any lot, eomblhatlon of
fifteen (15) days prior to the Iota or parcel of land which
tleo within an . Area of
monthly Board meeting.
SECTION Ill.
That a Special Flood Hauird.
4. Shall not bo located
Certificate of Occupancy
and Compliance shall only within 500 feat of any lot,

P i'ev I o u 11 y
lilted ·:
requirements, the storage ~.
of tires shall not be . ·
permitted unless:
:

1. A

letter

authorization

Obtained

lrom

submitted by the applicant.
Such business shall also be
required to maintain a dally
log, as defined herein

detailing tho amount of tires .
received and diapoeed· of, : •

and the method of disposal. . :
Copies of tho dolly tog shall ·.
be submitted to said Fire :·

be lsauad II the proposed combination ol tots.; or
facility meets the following parcel of land zoned for Department and Board of a
monthly bas Ia.
The :·
conditions. The operating residential uae.
5. Shall nol be permiHed respective Fire Department . :
facltlty, alter a compliance
o :

to cover an aggr~ete
ground area greater than

11 Issued, must continue to

comply

with

these

and the Board
shall ·.
monitor the accumulation of
4

2500 square feet, nor tireo.
:
exceed a height of ·ten feel
2. Upon application the . ·
1. Complies with any 11 moaawr~d from the following _shall be delivered· :
·
and
ott previously adopted average ground grade . to the Meigs County Health :.
person, firm, corpor8tion or
Immediately adjacent to the Departmenti
Conllnued on page 9::
conditions:

•

a. The Storage Facility:

4

market pen winners.
Sarah Dailey e~rned grand
champion market pen, while Ken
Kirk took reserve champion market
pen.
Tbe rest of the contestants
incl~ded: third place, Robert Weedie; fourth, Melissa Kirk; fi!tb,
David Butcher; sixth, Jessica Carr;
seventh, Steven McDaniel; eighth,
Mike Guess; ninth, Kevin Butcher;
lOth, Alana McCoy; lith, Alban
Salser; 12th, Odie Karr; 13th. Kerrie Hetzer; 14th, Brent Butcher;
aM 15th, MatUl~w Salser.

DISTRICT
WINNERS

•

.•&gt;'
. ••,,•
~

0

EASTERN - Stacey Kimes - Riverview

:.
'' ''•
' ...
'"

MEIGS - Ben Milchell - Salem Center
SOUTHERN. - Erin Roach - Racine

•

Display of Grade

....

6 Recycle Posters

.....

""

,."'

~

••

••

I st PLACE WINNERS ·
AT EACH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

••

K

• Chester. Cinda Clifford
• Riverview - Stacey Kimes '
• Tuppers Plains - Josh Kehl
• Portland - Justin Burris
• Racine - Erin Roach
• Syracuse - Cara Ash

• Bradbury - Jessica Chapman
• Bradbury- Brooke Smith
• Harrisonville .- Johnni l3arley
• Pomeroy -Andrea Krawsczyn
• Rutland , Derrick Bolin

.

• Salem Center· Ben Mitchell
• Salisbury -.Joshua Jones

• Rejoicing Life - Chasidy Biggs

'

ISave $55001
'

•

~

ISave $5000 I

I

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 3,14 TON J.PNG
WHEELBASE CCIMRSION VAN

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED

CONVERSION VAN

"

""

o

-·&lt;

Extended Chass•s

• Ort'fer Side Atr Bag
• Anii·LO&lt;l&lt; 61at&lt;es
• Air Condt11on

MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING
AND LITTER PREVENTIOij

• Automatic Overdnve
• Vtsta Bay Windows ·

• PIS, PIB

o
o
o

Power Windows

o

350 V-8 Power

lnd~rectl•ghttng

·long Wheelbase
• 350 V.S Power

Premtum Wood Pkg.
Full Convers•on
Alumtnum Runntng
Boards
o Loaded! .

Power locks

o

nu Steering

o

• Crutse Control
• AWFM Cassette
o Capta•n Chairs

·PIS, P/8
• Power Wmdows
• POWel LOCI&lt;I
o TiH Steem-,g
o Crwse Contr~
• AWFM Cassene

•Ciiion:v.

o

• Onver S&lt;le A~r Bag
• Anli·LOC): Brakes
o Arr Condmon
• Automatic Overdn"e
V1sta Bay Wmdows

.'Sota/Bed

o

o

4 Capta1n Cha1rs

0

Sola/Bed

• lnd•red Llghtmg
o Prem•um Wood ·~g .
• Full ConverSion
• Alum1num Runn1ng Boards
·Loaded!

..'
•
•

,''
••

BATTERIES

SHOCKS

TIRE

LJstPnce. .

.f'iCIOij e.o tt

GMAC lSI Tlrll Buyer
Alowaoce To

TIRES

•••
••
•
•

'

SalePnct

sa,788

BRAND lEW '95 CIEVY S-sERES PICIUF
• Dn"er Side A1rbag
o Rear Anti·LOCk Bra~es
• Power Steerrng

Power Brakes
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• Well Equ1pped 1
o

• 16Vatve Power
• Driver Side AWbag
•. i 4Wheel Anielod&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng

• Powet Stakes
• Power Dom loci&lt;s
• AMIFM Steteo
• Sleel8elled Tires

• Styled Wheels
• W~l EQ1J1pped1

0

BRAIIIIIEW '95 BUICK CEI1URY SEDAII
· Ar Cardtioo
• Automatic
• Oliver Side A1rbag
•4 Wheel An1H.od&lt;
Stakes
• p,.., Steeong

$21 ,309

· 11 ,000

~1.100
·11
,666

$13,888

$t1,688
BIIAIID
lEW '95 PONTIAC llliAND .AM
.

.. .. . .. . It 7,076

-~TomPoJolllo&lt;:&lt;Mn
Salo Pnce

'"""

Sale Pric~ ·

Qwlfiod..,.,. .. .. ·15011

'

List Pri&lt;o

Lisl Pnoo
.
S\3,599
.FIICtory Rme ,
. · t.500
Tom Peden 0rsco..n1 - -'$I ,411

. .$10,219

__ . i1txl

Tom Peden Discwll .. . • $ti.31

COMPUTER BALAN.CE
4 Tires For The Price of 3
With This Ad

'

'·

;;;I

Top rabbits judged at fair

Giant, Billie Jo Welsh, Odie Karr;
Chinchilla, Rebekah .Karr;
Champion anil Reserve Champion
trophies Tuesday at the Meogs Dyt~h. Odie Karr, Rebekah Karr;
County Junior Fair Rabbot Show. French lop, Bethany Cooke, SumThey are listed in order of Gran~ mer Johnson; Holland Lop, Billy
Soulsby; Jersey Wooley, Michele
Champion and Reserve Cbampton.
Showman, Jennifer Cli!!ord, Hupp, both;
Mini lop, Rebecca Houser,
Michele Hupp; Best of Show,, Btl'
lie Jo Walsh; Best Oppostte, Sarah Sarah Houser; Netherland Dwarf,
Jewell; Market · Pen, John Betb Kaurr; New Zealand, John
Krawsczyn, Billie Jo Welsh;·
Krawsczyn, Cassidy Co!!ey.. . .
Other winners, with thetr do VI- Palomino, Sarah Clifford, Jennifer
·
sions and listed in order of Best or Clifford; ··
Rex,
Julie
Spaun,
Rebekab Karr;
Breed and Best Opposite are as folSatin,
Cheryl
Jewell,
Ann Kauff;
lows:
..
American fuzzy lop, Ltlhe Silver Fox, Ryan Kaulf, Al1 Tobm;
Tremblay; Californian, Sarah · Silver Marlin, Jimmie Putman,
Houser,
both;
Champagne Rebekab Karr; Crossbred, Michael
D' Argent, Andrea Burdette, Taylor, Amy Smith. .
Stephanie Burdette; Checkered

,J

0

&lt;

the ·

respective Fire Department
with responsibility for said
property after approval of a
detailed plan tor fire control

...

VISIT OUR BOOTH
COMMERCIAL BUILDING #2
'
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

of :·

has been

.;

State fair attendance suffers

Justice Department settles
with supremacist over raid

dcnce," she said , "There just
wasn't enough."
.
But'lhe jury of seven women
and five men found Law guilty of ,
kidnapping Vallandingham during .,,
the first minutes of the Apnl II, .
1993 riot at the maximum-security
Soutbem Ohio Correctional Facility.
. .,
Burton immediately sentenced
Law to the maximum of 15 10 25
years in ptisop on the kidnapping :;:
charge, which is to run consecuti~e . :;:
to the five to 25-year sentence he ts ,,:;:
serving on a rape charge out of~-;:
.
\,.
Mahoning County.
Prosecutors· said. they will try~\::,
again to convict Law for bis role in : ~
Vallandingham's death.
,:
"We're kind ofl:on!used at this ....
point," said Wanda Vallanding- •':::.
barn, mother or tbe slain
officer.
~:
.

Public Notice

surgery two years ago, pitched his
forst major league shutout for Pittsburgh at San Diego.
Parris (5-4) pitched a seven-bitter as the Pirates snapped a sixgame losing streak.
Willie Blair (5-2) allowed one
run and four bits in seven innings
for San Diego, which bad a fourgame winning streak stopped.
Giants 4, Cardinals 2
Deion Sanders went 3·for-3 and
scored twice as St. Louis lost its
fifth straight
San Francisco rookie starter
Jamie Brewington (3-1) held the
visiting Cardinals without a hit
until Scott Cooper led off the
fourth with a double.
St. Louis starter Mike Morgan
(4-6) hasn't won since July 3, wben ::
be carried 'a no-hitter into the ninth :.
inning against Montreal. He gave · :
up 10 bi~s and three runs in sjx ::
innings.
·

Expos, but was forced to leave
after 4 113 innings with a sprained
ligament in his lefl elbow . Tim
Scott (2-0) pitched two innings of
no·hit relief and Mel Rojas worked
the ninth for his 22nd save.
Mcts rookie Jason lsringbausen
(2-2) allowed three runs in eight
innings.
.
Pbillles 3, Astrosl
Jeff Juden (1-1), pitching
against his former team for the fom
time, allowed four hits in seven
innings for visiting Philadelphia.
Mark Whiten, obtained from
Boston on July 24, hit a two-run
homer in tbe forst inning off Greg
Swindell (7-7), and bis solo homer
in the sixth broke a 2-2 tie. Whiten,
who played for St. Louis last season, has a career batting average or
.410 against Houston.
Pirates 6, Padres 0
Rookie Steve Parris, who bad
major reconstructive shoulder

0 . . .. .

BEST OF SHOW - A doD created from thread spools wltli a
wooden bead and Spanish moss for hair, wearing a calico dress
and matching bloomer won a bell of show In the domestl~ arts
department crafts class ror Martie Short of Chester. Of her 10
entries, she had a best or show, a reserve best or show, and eight
other ribbons.

CROSSBRED SHEEP - The brother and sister team
Jonalhan and Meghan Avis won grand champion crossbred ewe
and grand champion crossbred ram, respectively, at ¥onday ·
night's junior sheep show. Shown are, from left, Fair Kong Je~f
Rose, Wool Prince" Rillee Pooler, Jonathan, Meghan and Fa1r
Queen Noelle Pickens.

and Robcno Kelly as the Dodgers Diego 6 -0 and San Francisco
took a 7-4 lead.
topped St. Louis 4·2.
In Cincinnati, Sanders bit a twOo
·Braves 4, MarUns 1
run homer. and a solo homer off
Atlanta improved to 7·0 this
rookie Bryan Rekar and added a year against Horida and bas beaten
solo shot off David Nied, becoming the Marlins 10 straight times since
the first Reds player to hit three in July 14, 1994.
a game since Barry Larkin in 1991.
Tom Glavine (11·5) won his
Tbe Rockies fell to 22-31 on the seventh game in his last eight deciroad. They have just one more sions by retiring 15 in a row
game at. Riverfront Stadium, wbere between the second and seventh
they're 2-14, before returning to innings . He allowed four bits in
Coors Field, wberetbey're 31-18.
eight innings.
"They've proved they can bit in
Fred McGriff s two· run bomer
this park," Colomdo manager Don in the third inning orr Willie Banks
Baylor said. "I've been here three (0-4) gave the host Braves a 3-1
years and I don't think we've bit lead.
too well in Ibis park. We can't slug
Expos 3, Mets 1
with them here. I imagine we can
David Segui, playing at New
slug with them at Coors, but we York for the first time since the
can't slug with them here."
Mets traded him, hit a three-run
In other NL games, Atlanta beat homer in the first inning to help
Florida 4-1, Montreal nipped New Montreal reach .500 (51-51) for tbe
York 3-I,Pbiladelpbia beat Hous· ftrst time since July 27.
ton 3-2, -Piusburgh blanked ~an
Butch Henry started for the

Orioles defeat Indians 8-3;
Brewers &amp; BoSox also lose

r

,

"It's just sad tbe way our team
is playing on the road." Coiomdo
leadoff hitter Eric Young said.
Raul Mondesi hit his ftrst career
grand slam for the Dodgers as they
rebounded after Nomo allowed
three runs in the first inning.
Nomo (10-3), wbo gave up a
season-high II hits, lost' bis previous start on a forfeit. He gave up
five runs- four earned- in 6 '113
innings . He struck out seven,
wall&lt;ed three and threw three wild
pitches.
"I appreciate all our bitters,"
Nomo said through a translator. "If
they didn't hit, we'd bave lost tbe
game because of me."
The Dodgers knocked out Steve
Trachsel (5-9) during a three-run
sixth. Eric Karros' ground-rule
double scored Jose Offerman with
the go-ahead run. Mike Perez
relieved Trachsel and gave up con:
secutive sacrifice flies to Mondesi
'

• PowO' Brakes
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Stile Price

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''l

TOLL FREE 1-8011·822·0417 • 372·2844 ·

344·5947 • 422·0756

• SaturdaJ: 9 am -

Noon· 6 pm

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

AL contests

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

···------

.

(Cominucdfroml'nge5)

and a run -scoring single by Jeff
In other games, Texas edged
Huson. Barberie walked to load the Milwaukee 3-2, New York beat
bases before Curtis Goodwin · Bo,ton 9-2, Chicago downed Calichased Nagy with a two-run single. fornia 7-3. Kansas City defealed
Chad Ogea got the fmal out
Oakland 7-4 and Delroil beat

Scoreboard
Wr1gh1, dcfensemen

Baseball
Major leagues
1\MERICI\N LEAGUE
f: .... lrrn m..;,.,on
r..m
.lr .L &amp;1. .Gil
Bo~l on

f. I

New Yurk
B:llt1more

52 4'J

515

47

S4

4M

14

DcliOLt

4J
~;

57 4'\6
'd • 4~0:

l~ 5

Tomnto

6. 4

4{ 1

"
17

DETROIT RED WINOS S1gned
I\1Uas L1dstrom, de(ensema.n, to a fouryear CUDIJ"iiCt.
FLORIDA PANTHERS Aarred lo
tt:rrlli w1L11 Radtk Dvolilk.. forward , Oil a
folJI"-ycar contract.
LOS ANGELES K.l.~GS ; Signed AkLPeuert Bug, d~fen~ma.n . to a lht~ ·ycar
contract Named Rrck Green u11"ant
coa~~h

Toronto 11-5.
Rangers 3, Brewers 2
The Seattle Mariners have Ken
Griffey Jr. again. the New York
Yankees added Darryl Slrnwberry
and David Cone and lhe Texas
Rangers reacquired Bobby Will.
Three wild-card contenders.
four good additions.
The fourth wild-card conlendcr
added a player, 100. as Rob Dibble .
joined tbe Milwaukee Brewers.
So far, be hasn 'I been much of a
help.
Dibble cost the Brewer. a
chance 10 IOO&gt;C witbin a half-game
of the wi!d-card s~o1 Tuesday
night, and they won 1 have many
more chances like it. The Brewers
losl 10 Texas 3-2 while Griffey and
the Mariners were losing a 7-6
heartbreaker at Minnesota on Kirby

VVednesday,August16,1995

Puckett's three-run homer in the
bon om of the ninth.
After lonight. the Brewer&amp; won't
go bead-to-bead against another
wild- card con1endcr untiJ Sept 8, a
facl thai makes their loss 10 Texas
all the more difticullto digest
· Milwaukee took a one-run lead
in lhe top of !be eighth, but Dibble
(0-2) walked lhe first two hillers in
the bouom of 1be inning . When
pincb-biuers Luis Ortiz and Esteban Bellre bit RBI singles, the
Drcwcrs were on lhe wrong end of
a 3-2 score.
Dibble bas allowed 12 bits and
3i walks in 18 1/3 innings this season for Chicago (which released
him) and Milwaukee.
The loss lcfl Milwattltce in
fourlh place in !he imaginary Wild
Card Division, 2 1/2 games behind

Te•as. I 1/2 behind New York and
a half-game behind Seattle.
The Brewers close their twogame series with Texas tonight,
then face Cleveland, Kansas City,
Chicago and Minnesota over the
nell 3 lfl weeks.
With the way things Slalld now,
they'll have -enly five games
remaining against wild-card contenders - three at home against
Texas from Sept. 8-10 and two
againsl tbe Yankees in lbe last
week of the season.
"We're battling the from-running (wild-card) Learn . This is the
kind of game we need 10 win . This
slows our parade a lillie bit. We
need 10 win to win tomorrow to
even l.be score orr them," manager
Phil Gamer said.

VVednesday, August16, 1995

Twins 7, Mariners 6
At Minneapolis, Griffey's return
was upstaged by Puckett. .
The Mariners led 6-2 going into
the bouom of the ninth and had
closer Bobby Ayala on tbe mound.

Winning fair
flowers
announced

"Say Love With
Rowers From!"

FLOWER SHOP .
I06 Buuerriul Ave. Pomeroy, OH

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

•

Ccnlral UL• I)Hln

671
50(
J•XJ

18

57

·1.::4

::!4 5

&amp;4

.160

Jl

CLI:\11-LA:·.;o
M1lwaukct

61
5•)

'l.l

Kans:b Ctty

.J~

Ou..;::ago

.J:

''J

MlllllLMili\

}6

~.)

!7

"r~tnn DiVl iion
f;:1
ll!
f.~7

C;~llformo~.
Texas

10 5
12S
17 5

~3 4b
j~5
5! 50 ~OS
47 56 '.J56

S~;~nle

OalJand

~

I
/ jI

Tu .....,dav·s scores

~\· 1.1.

y, rl

8J iiJJTM~

'i, Bo;l&lt; lil 2

'l (J.CVELA.f\jD .I

Ttl.tS J. M1I ""•!Uh't 2
M 1nn~&lt;-101 7. Sl'~11k 6
7. ('hJra,•u 1
Cn' 7. O.nJJild J.

c,lhlnrnl~

KJ -1~ :1!&gt;

17

JOn

· r.JID

I

lklrt •LI 11. Torontu '

roday's games
N~w

Yur k (Pl'llillt 6-61 ill
hdmJn 4-:" L I 05 f1 m

Bu~ton

(F-5-

Cahforn1 ~ tAndrr~ on

6-3! at Oucago
pm
,
Toron10 (ll urtado 4-1) at Detroit

(Fl!rnan!lcz 6-11); 2 05

5 LBS. OR MORE

(Mows-1 ~ 1 .

CERTIFIED

1osfm

CLEVEL.A....,.D ( lmtHM-'T 9-S) at Balllmon IIlrown ~-71. 7 35 p m
~llwa ul.l'e (Gr vcns 3-2) at Teu1
(DotrwLn :!-~).1:1_.05 p m
o~I.IJnd ISIUttlt·rnYre 9-5) a\ Kansas
C11y (GutHO,d 8-10). a:u5 p m
s~atllc I J ohn~u n 1:!· 2) at Mlnflt&amp;Uia
rROclngurz_2-4 .1, II 05 P. m
Thursd~y's
Ko~n~J~

ASSORTED FLAVORS

GROUND CHUCK

-~

''

games

CJty (App1er lJ-7) at Balti -

more Nu:.sJDl13-7J, 3_05 p m.
M d w~ u he (McAndrew 0-2) at
CU:. VI:.LASD { ~artme2 9-3 ). 7 05 p m.
Toronlv {lc:Jtcr 7-7) al Dcttull (Luna

c

1-JJ, 1 o·s r rn
Tl' l.l!i (Pavl1k CJ·,7) at Cl11cago (RJghet-

u3-\J,SQ~pm

Se:1tlle (lkkhtr !1-7) at Oakland (Van
f\1ppel 2-4!, 10.05 p m.
B o~lnn

PEPSI COLA

(Clemens

4·4 )

at Ca!Jiorma

'

ll i.Ltli:cy1-7 ). 10 OS p m

WHOLE

Ni\TIONI\L J.Ei\GUE
[adun

Oivi~ion

!!: L I'd.

fum

A l l :.mt~

J6 .644
Munllcal ,.. ,., ... .l I l t .lOO ·
f'111l addptml .
ll 490
. 45 53 .459
Flumla
.....
1\"cw Yort.
41 6(1 ' 406

"
'"

Cen lral Division
ONClNNATI .... 62 37 .626
lloustbn
56 45 555
OliC:Ig&lt;l.
. ... 51
50 505

.Gil
14 l
ll .l
18 .5
l4

41 0
.392

7
11
21.5
23.5

Wuffrn Division
~5
47 .539
lAs Angeles
· Colorado .... . .. 53 49 .S20
S~n Dtcgo
50 ~I .495
San FrJnc1sco ...... 47 55 .461

2
4.5
8

41 59
.40 152

P1tj..\hur.gh

St. Louu .

SIRLOIN Tl

',

SJ ~~~

San Diego 0

Lo.s Angel« 7, Cllicago S
~ames

Colorado (RcyDoso 4-4) al CINCIN·

NATI (Srruiey 1I -lj. 12.35 p.m.
Odcago (Bulli nger 10-2) at Los Ang~·
le.o; (Valdes 9-7). 4 05 p.m
f-luud~ (Rapp 6· 7) al Atl anta (Avery
5-&amp;J. N Op m.
,
Mont real (Perez 10-4) at New York
(PI.liMpher J.-6), 7· 40 p. m
Plui:Jticlph1a· (r-ernandez 3-1 1 at 'Hous ton (Drabelc: 7-6). K·05 p m.
Pll~ bu rgh (Ericks 3-5) at San Diego
(Ashby /!.6 ), 10:35 p.m. .

81% LEAN

aac

12 OZ. • REG. • THICK •

4 ROLL • WHITE

SLICED

San Franc1sco 4. St. Louis 2
• Atlanta 4, Florida I
ONCINNATI ll.Colorado l
Montreal ], New Yor k I
Phifadclphia 3. Houston 2

Wednesday's

BOTTLE

CATSUP

Tuesday's scores

Pitaburgh 6.

2 LITER

LB.

COTTONELLE

Tenderbest BACO

BATH TISSUE

.

Sl. 1-'lu1s (Pttk.ovsek S-3) a1 San Francrsco (l..e11er 7·7), 10:35 p.m.

, Thursday's games
Ptu!adelph1a (G reene 0-1) at Houlton
(Broca.il4·l), 235 p.m. ·
W~ Angeles (fa pam 1-0) at CINClN·
NATI (Schu urek 12-6), 7.JS p.m.
Ch1~ago (Navarro 10·4) at Colorado
(N1cd 0-0), 9OS p.m.

12 oz.

EA.

PKG.

$288
FQODLAND

Dilscball
DOSTON RED SOX· Oc.si!!;llal~ Ron
nutri~ lde r. for ass1gnmcnt Op uoncd Man Statrs. outfielder, to P:awtuckct of the lnt!'r[\a11onal Lc:01p:ue.
CA LIF ORN IA ANGELS Sent Russ
Srnnl!er, pllc hc:r, to the Philadelphia
Plnl h cs lu complete the trad.r [or Oa"e
Gall a(ther. o utfield~,
· C IIIC AGO WHITE SOX · Stnt Chri1
Snopck, Infielder, to N&lt;~&amp;hville of thf
A men can As~ociation . Re cal led Bill
Simas. pitcher. from Nashvtlle.
Dl:::TROIT TI GERS : Ac:quued Ph1l
Nevin . infielder-outhtlde r , from the
llouslon Astto~ to complete the lrade for
Mik~ Henneman, p11cher
Sl:A.rrLE MARlNl!.kS : Act1vatr d
Ken Griffey, Jr .. outfielder, from 1he 6Q...
day dr uhled h•l. Acqu1red Vince Cnlt·
ma n. o utfiel der. from the Kanus C 11y
Royal8 for a player lobe RiUiled . A.!is1gnoo
Bill Krue:!!U. pttcher, outnght to Tacoll\il
of th e Pac tfic Caul League . Opti oned
Alu Rodri guez . shortstop ." to Tacnma .
Pu r cht~ scd the contract of Lee GuetterrTWn, pitcher. from TacomD.
Mahay .

'"'

-Nmtlonall..eaji!ur
WS ANGELES OO[)GER,S: Pl aced
Mitch Webster, ou t!i~lder, on Ut e L'i·ttay
.di&amp;ahled I1S t. Purchased the- contract of
Ric k rark e r , outfielder, f rOm Albuquerque of the Pacific Cout Lu.II\Je.

FoolbaU
National Footb111l Le"'i!:W

ATLANTA FALCONS: Clai med Eel
Howard. wide receiver, ofT waiver&amp; from
the Anzona Cardi nali.
GREEN BAY PACKERS : Wai ved
Briall Bollinger, guard; Let Becton. rull"ning back; and Robert Jacbon, w1dc recef\ocr. Releaied Darren Klein, def~Dsive
tnd.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS .

WaiY~d

Chad Co pher, defen• ive ta ckle, iilld
Aubrt)' Hill, wide receiver.
OAKLAND RAIDERS : Waiv ed AI
Smith and MiU Bellamy, wide receiven;,
and Darren Butler and John Herpin, defensive bacb. .
PJTfSBURGH STEELERS : Siancd
Carnell Late, ufety, and Leven Kitk.land,
linebacker, to !ow--year contract&amp;.
· ·
SEAm.£ SEAHAWKS: WaiVed Kir·
by Jacboo, cornerb~~~; k.; Bobby Hamilton,
defens ive end; M il~ Moody, offensfn
t.ackle; and Robert Baldwin, ful lbacL

WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Agreed
ten111 with MichMel Westbrook. wide
receiYet. on a 5even-year contract.

to

Hockey
National flocb1 Le•uc

BUFFALO SABRES: Agreed lO tepm
wit h Dave Hunan , center, an.d Doug
Houd a. Charlie H\lddy and Shayne

ASSORTED

2% · ·HOMO
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SALTINES
.16 oz.

~ox

$118

Vegetables 7
FOODLAND FROZEN

ORANGE

JUICE

ac

KRAFT

~2/8

88

STOKELY

GRAPE JELLY
oz.

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32
JAR

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Sunbe~m

BLUEBERRY'1 CAN

King Size

CHATHAM~

DOG FOOD

,.,~398

79&lt;

6401~

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PIES

BREAD

BITE SIZE •

TOMATO
JUI_CE

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TOWNHOUSE'-t-2
CRACKERS

13·16
OZ. BOX

$259

KNbler Vanilla
Wafen......11-12 ...

$ 99

1 •

1

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88

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AMERICAN FLAVORITE

ROAST BEEF or
VA. STYLE HAM
La

9
$2 ~.1

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
.
The !alent of Meigs Countians _
in growing and showing flowers
was evident when spectmens and
arrangements went into place Man•
day for th e first of two Meigs
County Fair .flower shows on tbe
'l.bcme .. Memories."
Over 700 entries have been
entered in the flower shows, tbe
second to be staged Thursday in tbe
senior fair building. Judging will be
at I p,m. The shows are cooperatively staged by tbe Meigs County
Garden· Club Association and the
fair board.
Winning rosettes for their ~­
tic arrangements were Melame
Stethem of Pomeroy, best of show;
·Donia Cotton of Middleport,
reserve best of show; and Betty 1
Dean of Pomeroy, creativity, of ihC · ··
senior division; and Christie Crane, ·
Pomeroy. best of show; and Ltsa
S tethem, Pomeroy, reserve best of.
show in !be junior division.
The specimen swe~psta~es
awards. given on the basts of n~­
bons received, went to Pat Hams
of Pomeroy in the senior division,
and Lisa Stethem of Pomeroy in
the junior division.
A highlight this year was an
extensive di splay of specimen
roses. Pat Harris took seven blue
ribbons, and Elizabeth Bearhs of
Pomeroy. won two blues for ber
exhibits. ·
Other specimen blue ribbon
winners were-Alice Thompson ,
large marigold and zinnia miniature; Cheryl King, Pomeroy, small
marigold; Lula Tobin, Pomeroy,
flowered dahlia; Janet Tbetss.
Racine, small sunflower, foliage
bouse plant
Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy,
Dahlia pompom, decorated dahlia,
miniature ball; Karen Werry,
Racine, flowering bouse lllant;
Melanie Stethem, cactus dablta.
In the junior division, the blue
ribbon winners were Lisa Stethem,
Pomeroy, large zinnia, large
marigold, and perennial; and
Rebeccjl Taylor,' Pomeroy, small
zinnia.
In artistic arrangements, the blue
ribbon winners were:
"A Three Ring Circus," using
three containers; "A Zoo," abs[1aet
design; and "Old Memories," using
dried or fresh flowers, all by
'·
Melanie Stethem;
:•A Bowl of Cherries," using
shades of red: Pat Holter, Pomeroy;
"A Little Bit of Heaven," religious influence: "Grandcblldren,",
miniature; Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy;
.
"A Ball," creative mass: Doma
Cotton, Middleport~
•·
"A [ove of Nature," dried ll!lUcriat: Betty Dean. Pomeroy;
,
. "Love Shared," miscellaneous
design: Joseph HID~ ~~g Bott~m:
In tbe junior dtvtston, arusuc
arrangement classes, tbe winners
were Christie Crane; Pomeroy,
,;Graduation Pany," using balloons;
and Lisa Stetbem, Pomeroy,
"Gieen with Envy."

•

Carolyn Nicholson basted the
August meeting of ihe Bradford
Church of Christ Lydia Council at
;.
ber borne.
Mrs . Nlcbolson, president ,
opened the meeting by extending a
welcome to Kristen Cooper, the
new minister's wife, taking prayer
requests, Jtnd ~iving devotions ,
"Lesson of Lifex'
·
Several
a~tivities ' were
announced. Bradford Church of
Christ will host ,the women's fellowship on Thw;sday, August 24, at
7:30p.m.
,
0n September 28. women s fellowship will be at Dexter Ch"!'ch
of Christ with Bradford bavmg
devotions. ·
Women •s retreat will be held on
September 22 and 23 at the Ohio
Valley Christian Camp wtlh a
theme of "Transformed." The
speaker will be Billie Jean Fine of
St. Petersburg, Fla
,,
.
It was noted lbaL contributtons
are needed for the cookie ministry.
Spiritual renewal monlh will
~begin Sepl. I. A dinner will be held
every Wedne~day at. 5:30 p.m.
before the evemng servtce.
Keith Cooper, the new pastor at
Bradford, with bis wife and daughters will hold an open bouse on
Aug. 26 from 6 to 8 p.m, Everyone
is welcome.
. Tbe visitors list was passed
around and the August sunsbme
fruit basket will be given 10 Harold
Willis.
A new prayer chain list will be
1
.;;ade. A layette shower will be
held in October for Tim and
Christie Durs1, .
On Sunday, August 20, an 1ce
cream social wUI be held following
the evening service.
A new order of Lydia Council
cookbooks are beiilg taken. If anyone would like to purchase one, the
cost is $4.25.
Hostesses for the September
meeting wiD be Paula Pickens and
Janice Fetty.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

p w El L
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

·i&lt;w

\,.

CREATIVITY AWARD- Taking the rosette for the most cre·
atlye arrangement was Betty Dun of Pomeroy. In the class "Love
of Nature" she displayed handcrafted com husk Dowers, magnolia,
and •
vine in a fence rail container.

298 SECOND ST.
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
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RESERVE BEST OF SHOW - Donia Colton of Middleport
took reserve best of show in artistic arrangements at the Melgo
County Fair flower show Monday. ,In her creative mass arrange·
ment in the "A Balr' class she used golden rod, dock, cockscomb,
and bamboo.

14.75

oz.

5.5 OZ.

,.i

OF
-Christie Crane look best of show
in the junior division with ber arrangement in tbo ''Graduation
Party." She used a graduation cap for the container for glads, sun·
flowers and dock.

ARMOUR
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Lydia Council
holds meeting

Detergent

Transactions
Am.-ric:an Lu11ue

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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�•
i
Page

8 • T he Daily Sentinel

P o m ero y • Midd leport, Oh io

VVednesday, August1S, 1995

Wednesday, August 16, 1995

Ann
Landers
.199S, lot Ang&lt;lln
11mn Syn4Jeate and
CrNtofl S'f'"dlcate"

Dear Ann Landers: I am the
eldest of four girls. Our farner passed
away 2I years ago. We were 12, II
and I at the time, and Mom was
pregnant with my youngest siste~
· Amy.· We all love Amy a lot.
Here's lhe problem. Amy will be
marrying in a few weeks. We will all
be attendants in the wedding along
with some of our children. Amy
wants my mom to carry a bouquet in
my father's memory. We feel dl is is a
wonderful idea, but she wants to carry
this gestun: further.
FollO'!' ing the wedd ing, Amy
wants all of us to go to the cemetery
to witness her placing the bridal
bouquet at my dad's headstone and
have a pictun: taken.
I think this is morbid. Our father is
·missei! dei!rly, llllt if Amy wan ts ·w
do this. she should do so in private; .-:
after me wedding.
I have not said anything to Am y.
but this bothers me. Am I neurotic,

.

parents, who are in poor health, to our look upon our house as the family be hun or indignant Are we being
town. l toOk early retirement in order headquarters ~nd feel it is our duty unreasonable? •• TOTALLY
to care for them, as well as help my to put them up and feed them. They ANONYMOUS PLEASE
own mother, an Alzheimer's patient always say, "Oh, don't go to any
DEAR TOTALLY: Unreasonable?
who lives in a nearby assisted care trouble for us·· we just want to visit ·No way. Self-preservation is the ftrst
fa~ility. It is tiring for me to try to
with Mom (or Mom and Dad)." In law of survival. I say it's about time.
run my own home and take good care the past year, we have played host on You're going to love your newfound
of the three parents, but I do not 27 occasions and are about to cave freedom . Hallelujah!
cons1der it a burden because I love in from ex haustion .
Dear Readers: Interested in a
them.
We have decided to write to all fabulous read? I just finished a book
Our real problem is that between family members explaining that to about love, scientific research. family
us, my husband and I have eight preserve our heal til and sanity, we can fight s, duplici ty, compassion,
siblings who have giown children no longer accommodate them . We courage and pain. It is brilliantly
and grandchildren.They come 10 visit will offer, however, to make hotel written by one of the principal
our. parents and stay for anywhere rescrva tinns if they phone ahead . characters of this real-life drama.
from two nights to two weeks. They Some will understand, but others wtll You'll be riveted. The title: "Mapping

•

REO'RGANIZATION
$500,000 INVENTORY·
ORDERED SOLD!!
GOODS TO BE
EXPEDITED TO THE
PUBliC!!!

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Roth{Jeb marks
second birtl:lday
Nathan Fred Rothgeb, son of
Todd and Beverly Rothgeb of
Langsville, celebrated his second
birthday July 15 with a Lion King
and Barney th eme party at the
home of his parents.
Those attending and sending
gifts were grandparents, Fred and
Pauline Hoffman and Libby
Rothgeb; great-grandparents, lma
and Floyd Kingery; Mike and
Vicki HotTman; David, Kathy, Lian
and Marlee Hoffman; Jon, Tami,
Trevor and Jordan Buck; Terry and
Jo Beth Rothgeb; Wedzel Kingery
. and Coltan; Donna Houck; Carlos,
Pat, Shawn and Shane Swisher; ·
J.D. Bradbury and Mike Bradbury;
Michelle and Brianna Frash; Beth
Bradbury and Gary Nutter; Roger
Watson, Shirley Smith, Poe ·and
Angie Johnson; and Randy, Debby
and Mirnnda McKinney.
·

Painting class
judging results
Betty Ed·wards of Rutland won
best of show and Juanita Lodwick
of Chester reserve best of show in
painting class judging at the 132nd
Meigs County Fair.
Edwards won lhe best of show
for her nora! study in oil. Lodwick' s winning entry was in otber
media.
The blue ribbons winners were
1 Patti Williams, Rutland, in both
landscape and animal study . In
addition to her best or show,
Edwards won a blue ribbon in pic·
· ture from life. Carmen Hayes ,
Pomeroy, took a first for her art
work in pencil, pen and ink.
In the junior divi sion , Wes
Crow or Pomeroy was a blue ribbon winner for his pen, pencil and
ink art work.

Kiddie tractor pull
contest results listed
Winners in Monday's kiddie
tractor pull were, in Order by class:
35-55 pounds - Pairick Johnson,
Zoch Newell and Jeanie Hupp; 567 5 ·pounds.- Brand on Fackler,
Bron Haggy and Jr. Hupp . These
winners will compete in Saturday's
ki&lt;khe tractor pull championship at
4 p.m. in the show ring.

All
Goods

With the famil y reunion season
quickly approaching, many will be
submitting articles of famil y activitie' for publication.
To ensure prompt publication,
tbe GallipoliS Daily Tnbune and
The Daily Sentinel requests that
articles be neatly typed and double
space«!foi easy editin'g. Reunion
items should not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted witbin 30
days of occunrence. ·
.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to editing.

•

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95

StartingAt$119
~U~N~D~ERtQ~~~D~I~SH~W~~~S~H~ER~·~~!!-=~~--~--~~~~~~~

..•

3435

l.png Hatred Adorable K1ttens To
.•

Good Home. 614 ·446-1610

l~ l'p Ja~cmc nl

( No Sunday C a lls)
mo . pd

2112J92Jtfn

Male
RoUWO iler
Germaf-1
• Shepherd mix I yr ol o noutor~q ,.
all shots. 614·667 J021

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 45772

Part lab, par t Cho~. black , maj 11 •
1yr ol&lt;l, to good home Carr 304
675-3331 or see bu side H endcr
son Post Ottrce

Doug Crites
6I4/667-6825

To A. Good Home 4 Male K1t1tmS, ·
6 Weeks Old, 61&lt;~ - 256 1793

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

To Good Home .On I-, 11 Wh,te f!e-."
male Cat, About ' t Year Ol&lt;l. L•tte, .
Tramed, Had Shot5, Nev or Bee('
Outstde, \/ery loveable• 6 1'4 ·
256-1481 Ever11ngs
·

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

· 60

Found · At 681 area, Coc~cr'
Spantel, call tO 10, 614-992-6282.

State Rt. 33 ·
Darwin, Ohio

Scherfel

Lost and Found ·

Found- camera on p1cn•c table at
t4H parade, Vivtan May, 614 992
7853
-,·

·~

Chrl•

Found : Camera ar Ordnance lteld
CaJI &amp; tdent•fy. 304-675-57t5.

10121/Mitfn

DAYS
CAR WASH

Custom Building&amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
(614) 992-2753
-

Complete
Detailing

-'
ATTENTION AL L
flOWIERS
L.. tqtr, .,., r-~m·: F-:_,rrrHHJ
Raven Lanes

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vlnyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, 'Garages.
Free Estimates

rul'~.~--tv Nrk
\}}nrw·r:•,

\;J:,rHJ.:v ,'\

HAULING
(Speclallze in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
· Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

Yr rutlr ,'-, r,.,JXC!d
Tllt.n~;~J;ty Nrlt' · L~t·r·~
Sunc;;-y ~J rl f:· Mrnd
f-m

tlttftfn

r!rlorrnatron

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUmON

House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; flalh
Remodeling
Room Addition•
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Ina urea -Experienced
Call Wavne NeH 992-4405
·For Free Estimates

you. Very reasonable.

Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180 ~.... .

· effective control measures
: certify that the manner In
· which said tires are •tared

· does

not conslitute a

: nuisance or a public health

· hazard.
• SECTION IV.. When the
· approved permit Is Issued
: by the Board and

· performance bid received In
· the minimum amount of
: $200,000 , Issued in favor of
• the Board, the Applicant
:. shall renew the perm II and

· bond provided that all

: conditions of this regulation

FOR SALE

• Electncal &amp;Plumbing
Free Estimates

•'

Into other forma, solid or
otherwise removed from the
business premlaes, and to
whom and where the tlrea

operating .
8. "Tire", as used herein,
shall mean any new or used

BAILED

TO

YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

or

11nconiot1dated geologic

)ormation or series of
.formations that
are

6 14-388·8079.
Los t. Camper At R•o Grande
Bean Otn.ncr. 614 -446·6810

Most major credit cards acceptGd.

L~~O~w~n~e~rs~:JR~i~c~ha~r~d~M~o~or~e~&amp;~E~d~~~~~~~~rn
\\~\.

\~c:.C:.\0 t
v9-o

c:.~\l.'~'c

lost Huge laahter Pu rse 105Cedar Street &amp; Halley S1a1o~ V•ne' :
Street, Important Papers. E~Jer.v-".

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

thJngll6 1'1 -446 -1976

MIKE MARCUM'S

arrest &amp; co n\liCt•on of that p w ~.
son or persons Someone ha:i· ~
shown up w•th a new dog, look around Fem ale, Ronweller, black &amp;
tan on lace &amp; pa w s, Bmos old
Contac t or answe11ng mach1ne, ..
Reta Roush, N t'W Horizon Greet\· '
houses, Hanlord . WV. 304: ae2 . ~

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES
28 Years Experience

949-~168

36 6

Yard Sale

PHONE
614-245·0&lt;137

1-800·377 -4477

5f16.1EM TFN

Gallipolis

District, .

.rules

regulations.

·

MEIGS COUNTY SANITARY
REGULATIONS
Regulation #530t2
Regulation lor the Storage

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Siti!S, Land
Cle11ring, Septic
S~stems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

of nres

Adopted by the Meigs
County General Health
Dlitrlcl In regular session ,

Auguste, 1995.
Gene Jetrers, President

Board of Health
Jim Cllllord Or., Vice
President Board of Heolth
Ann Barrett, Member Board

of Health

.IJI[Jfty, Tifty,
.Loot( %e Ofd
(ja[ is J"ifty!!

...

C)t) •) - .'') (ct
'(
' "o)
).)

Tony's Portable
Welding

(juess 'WIW

Jon D. Jacobs R.S., Deputy
Health Commissioner

tire made from rubber or a
natural or synthetic origin.
9. "Board", as used
herein, shall mean Melge

Stlelt/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service New Radiators &amp;
Reeores Available
Call tor Low Prices
742·3212
Turn on Depot St. In
Rutland 1.2 miles.

Get Your Message Across
With. A Dally Sentinel

County Olatrict Board of
Health and their actlvltte,.
SECTION VI. That should

any section or provision of
this regulation be declared
by
courts
to
be·
unconstitutional or invalid,
such decision shall not

aHect the validity of the

regulation as a whole, or
any part thereof, other than
the part so declared to be.
unconstitutional or lntJalld.

SECTION VII.

BULLETIN BOARD
1

6°0 column inch weekdays
$8 00 column inch Sunday

--

the

fo~rth

Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

CHEROKEE CLASSIC

conviction ;
shall be
punished by a line of not

· 2. " Orolfnd
Water SECTION VIII. That the
·Proleulonal ", ao usad lmpoallion olthe penalties,
herein, ahall mean any herein deacrlbed, shall not
-f!orson certified by the prevent the Proaecullng
"Aoooclatlon of Groundwater Attorney of Melga County
:Scientists and EnglnHroto from Instituting appropriate
&lt;:onduct hydrography action to prevent unlawful
actMty, or to restore ,
) tudlea.
... 3. "Open Dumping" , as correct, or abate a violation;
used herein, shall mean the or to prevent Illegal act,
deposition of solid wastes conduct, a business, or use
into watero of tho County, of a building or otructure In
itnd also meono the final or about any premlsea.
4\apoaltion of solid "(llleo Section IV. Thlo regulation
on or Into the ground at any ahaii not be Interpreted to
place other than a solid euperaede or repl•c• other
agencies, Je:
Ohto
waste f~citlly.
: 4. ~~vector" , aa used Environmental Protection
herein, ohall mean on AgeACy, ·So II d ' Wiste

Portable ·

2:00 rm UMT DUUKt PUBLICATION! § ,,, ~ '--: ·-;;;;.!':.iili'iti)~e-;-.;;~';'!1:'"=",£?,:"i:,Z;:ij;:4,.~,;; ·: ~: '
,': ;
_

Announcing Our New
Shop Hours Effective
Monday, Aug. 21
8 AM-5 PM Mon . thru Fri .
8-12 Noon Sat.
Evening Hours
Tues. &amp; Thurs . by
Appointment Only

-=
-=·
-·
-=
'

: f

=

k

CHEROKEE CLASSIC
Wants tp Thank
Everybody Who
Stopped By To See Us
At The Fair. The Grand
Prize Winner Was Scott
Smith, the Car Tinting
and Nellie Durst the

•
-;jjjt tiiliit IIIII Ill IIJtjjj II itll\1111 II IIll IIIII I
I

mo.

H&amp;H SAWMILL

U~MULIIU:

degree, and upon

more than one hundred
dollars ($1 00.00). Each day
that a violation continues,
after a notification, lhlll
constitute a aeparate
offense.
_

111011

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

That any

.

~14-742-2193
61211 mo.

Easy Payment
= Auto Insurance
Accidents/
Violations

-=

DUI· SR·22
DISCOUNTS

-=

Best Rates
(614) 992·7040
Pomeroy

=

=

l12hltfn

ttl lilt II\Ill;::

1 CIPrm motor
2 Grease ra:ter bearings
:l Clr!rm &amp; chrck agitator
4 C'ean al l movmg parts

5 Clean &amp; check fi tte r system
6. Check belts
7. Check electntal system
8 Replace filter b.ag

Pnco•

,. ·

Val1d on all nalionally advert1sed bra nds.
~.

We service mosl m akes &amp; models.

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
368 W. Mmn St. R1pley, WV

~

·'
")

Items Olferod : Moon Raker CB
Base Antenna Wtth Rotor (Bu yer
Must Take Do wn) . CollectiOn 01
Antrque Stra1ght Razors, Pap er; •
b nc~ Boo ks (Roma nce, Wes t· •
erns, Stra nge Ta les) , Hardba ck .
Books, Plasttc B UckO ts, Boo k -'.
shells, GPX .Stereo (AMtF M, Mmi •
Turn ta bl e, Dual Casse ll ~. Two
Spoak(HS I. Sears Go Anyw here

All For Only $14.95 Plus Parts ·· .. ,
One year warranty on work pertormed.

Go Stratghr To last Tratlef
On left Beside
The Al teratiOnS Shop
Saturday All Items W1ll Be Hall

T\1 1Rad1o (3 Way Po wer ), BIIO
Scrugun tLtke New). H1de· a·bed. ·
Sofa Good Shape), Sola P•c lure.
Cas !lotte Hoad Set, Rad ro Heiid '

304-372-6144

r-----------------'111

Set, Brother Sewrng Machine,'
S1nger Sewtng Mach1ne. Palomar

J.D. _Drilling Company

TX 150 lmear, Display Stands.
Foldmg D1spla ~ Ra cks , D•sheS,
Glassware, Plast•c ware, Lamps;
P.O. Box 587
Racine, Oh. 45771
Pots !Pans. So l 0 1 D1shos, K•lch·
James E. Diddle
en Utcns•l s. Toys , Clothmg, Pony.. ,
Ch air. Childs Card Table W•fh
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck ,
l wo ·Cha1rs. Lo t s 0! Stai n less
Flatwa1e, Loads 01 Older S11ver.
Jackhammer, Available
Hrs.
Plated Flatware, Drosse 1 W11~
Mirror Clo rho s Rac k, H ospl!pl •
We dig basements, put in septic
Bod s•do Tuble, Pa1r Lamps, Clock ·
Toy Chest . N ew Hand Woven' :
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
Carpet Rugs, All Kmds 01 Odds. •
And Ends . Sw1v e 1 Rocker, A~d ·. ;
For Free estimate call
Fan
• •
Yard Sale Will BoUnder Shade
• ,1
REASONABLE HATES
&amp;'311'"
Terms · Cash, "'No Checks All
Sales F•na l, No Relunds, Noi Rq· \
-- - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - -- -... • spons1ble For Acc1dc ms Fvery - •
one Welcomer
L . •
r
1 Yard Or Back Porch Sate . Ram (
Sh1ne, Fn 18th. Sat 19th. Q-6, 229
POMEROY, OHIO
•
~ Fourth Avenue

24

949-2512

I

MODERN SANITATION

t

Septic tanks cleaned &amp; port~ble toUets rented.
&amp; monthly rental rates.
Ra•mlono &amp; Parties

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

~

a l

••

~

=····· '

a

0
:.••

: 1

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Al l Yard Sa le s Mu st Oo Pa1d In
MVifi'\ ~t! Dlml"/ltr"'I · 1 00Pttt ltiu. · .
d~:~y before tl'le ad 1s to run, Sunday od1!1on 1 OOpm Ffld;ty, M on. , •
"da v od•lion 10 OOa m Sa tu1day
•

•

· ....

Sa rur dpw 19th, 8af11 5pm, 35655
11ocksprmgs, ? mtles north of la•r· · 1
ground s, vanes rwms.

--- · :....:....:..::.=:.:...::...:..::._ _ _ . 1

ThUisday 1?th, f-r•day 18th, 9am- ·
Lors of rtiCC lurmture, home 1n-' '
10r1or, d1$ht1s, ch•na. cookware,
ora pes , bed spreads , Ma1y Kay,
lOy'.; , CI O!tHng. gla ssware , 5 ' ~ 7"
ova l bra•dt&lt;l brow n rug, much
more, ra•n cancels, on nr 7 above •
~--------- Eastorn H•qhSchool
·
?

All Ohio
=

313 Upper Aouto 7,
At S1lver Bndgo Plaza L1gh~· . •
Turn Toward RIVet.

Vacuum
Cleaner
S~rvice Special Spec1al oiler includes:

110\\ \1(11
1-:\( \\ \'('(\(;

or
·

17th. 16th, 834 F1rst Avlffiue, 9 -S ·
MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS
3 Family · F11. Sal, Augus t 18th,, ,
JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTTERS
19t h, Rt. 160, 2 Mi. N. Holler's
Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced T•mc:9
5
·
meat dept. managers. and journeyman meat cuHers to
4 Fam1l y 6 Mi lO S Out 14 1. 3 :5 ,•
manage and merchandise meat departments in their Miles
Down 775 , Ever~ung•17th.' :
corporate stores located In Southeastern Ohio
1811"1, 191h
Competitive salaries and excellent benefits.
ALL Yard Sales Mus t Be Pa1 d rn ·.
Advance . DE ADLINE· 2:00p.m'
II you are energetic " and tooklng lor rewarding the da~ Lul or e tho ad Is 10 run. • ; "
Sunday odt!1on ·. 2:00pm , F11da y.. ·
opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:
M onday od•t1an · 10 '00 a .m Sal· ~ .
Director
urday
._
P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 4 ~ 723
.
'
ThUrs. Fr1, Sat,
E.O.E.
111011"""
August 17th,- 18th, 19tn
· '

Shop Classifieds
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pt. Pleasant

.
&amp; VIcinity
ALL·BRITE
30 Announcements
Yard Sal e Thur /1. Ffl, l~ t 62, Am-· :
CLEANING SERVICES
·
I Will Nor Be Re sponsi ble Fo r bros•a
Tile Floor Strip,
.'
Any Detlts Other Than My Own
80
Public
Sale
MaN•n
McGuire
Wax, &amp; Maintenance.
and Auction
. .
40
Giveaway
Carpet Cleaning,
7Auc.,..
t'o_n_•-.,-.,-, "'F-,d.,-ay--S.,.a-,u-ro-ay,'
Corilplele Faclllty
4 c:ute k1t1ens , IIIIer tfa 1hed. to 7pm, Mt 1\lto Auct ton , Rt 2 -33'
good home, 6 14 843-5342.
·c,ossroads" New merchand•st , .
Cleaning, Periodic
grocerte9 &amp; lots more Ed rra2 • t~;_ '
4 Flu!l y Soft Kttrens , 2 Grey. 1 9:)()
• •
or one time
Ye llow, 1 White, 1 Ca t1c o Ca t.
Free Estimates
R1ck Pearson Auct1 on Com pany, :
I 614-388·9328.
lull 11 me a uct10n ee, , com plete'
Call992-7272 or
I 4 month old black &amp; tan puppy, auct1on
servtce
L1ce ns ed
qood With ~IdS, to good home, 11:66,0h•o &amp; Wf!sr" lllfQ inla, 30 4·
1· 8()().99()-7272
614,992-3240.

"//3 ·5785 Or 304 71 3 544/

I'&gt;

·•

•: •

Someo ne stole in~ dog I Reward·
SSOO lor mlorma110n laad•ng to t~e-:

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

818/1 mo.

Public Notice

person, firm, corporation, or
. fiave been mel
·, SECTIONV. That the business entity violating
ofollpwing dellnltloria ahall any olthe provitlons olth\s
)le used to clarify the Chapter, or falling to
-wording used In this comply with any order
lseued pursuant to any
)'eg_ulation:
• t. "Aqulller", . ao uaed section thereof, shall be
"'her ein, shall mean a guilty of a miiUemianor_of
:C onsolidated

Lost. B•g Stmmental Bull &amp; Young
Wh1te !=ace Hefler Bull , Around
Clay Chapet Road . SidWell . Ohlo ·

Check Out Our Tire Prices

1·900-388·0400
Ext. 6742 '"'
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954·7420

: 'lpplicants. Said plan shall
(8) I i;, 23 2TC
· Jihow and provide lor tire or any part thereof, of a
: tor mosquitoes and other

lost· Po meroy parkmg lot, long
ha1r&amp;d brown WIth blac~ tace mask
puppy, $25 reward, 614 -681 ·
1785

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

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!

HAY

were present. A daily Jog Or. Margie Lawson, Health
:the right to establish shall be kept each day ' a Commissioner, Secrelary to
.additional
bond business is open and the Board of Health
both
new

r

AND M()(ED

Roofing
•Siding
• Remodeling
• New Ackmions &amp;
Garages
•

•Board. The Board feierves

. •requirements for
· :e xisting · and

NEW-REPAIR

949-2882
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr. ·

"Your P11rts or Ours"

ROOFING

ALFALFA

843•5124
-~13195 ' "":!::::==99=2=·2=9=84=
' =~

that transmits a
: Continued from page 5 organism
pathogen .
: A. Sit&amp; plan for
5. "Pathogen", aa used
· •operation
herein, shall mean a
· : B. Plan review fee of specific cause of disease
· $100.00, Fee to be set by (as a b~cterlum of virus).
· : the Board.
6. ." County", saya used
•· C. Permit application herein, shall mean Meigs
. : arid accompanying fee. County, State of Ohio. .
· Annual lee lor permit to be
7: "Dally Log", as used
set by the Board.
herein, shall mean ·a record
3. Performance Bond in reporting the number of
the form and with an tires received, processed

of

Interior &amp;
Exterior

Lost· In Syracuse, small black &amp;
while, tong ha1r, kttten , 6 14-9923717.

&amp;Vlclnlty

Public Notice

:s200,000.00 in favor of the

Jl'·O•O

Call Raven l anes
304-273-4475
or Hershel &amp; Donna
304-273-3285

Public Notice

: Insurance
cor,npany
· . satisfactory to the Board ,

Howard L. Writesel

Take the peln out of
palntlng. Let us do H lor

Vv'r···lrH;~,d;J•I.

3RD ST.

614-992-3379-

18 Years Experience .
Hours
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a. m. to 4:00 p.m.
Saturday
8:00 a. m. to 12:00 p.m.

St At. 850, Bictwell, Call To Identify I
Call Alter 5.00 614-388-820t

AB&amp;TAUTO

We will install carpet
and fl oor coverings.
Give us a call at

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

Ravenswood, WV

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

WICKS

amount

811011 mo.

Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.

(Unteslone law Rates)

·minimum

CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2

Buzz's Carpet
Installing, fnc.

•Septic Tanks.
•Plumbing
•Water Lines · etc.
•Concrete Work
•Gravel Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified
LlcensediBonded
25 Years Experience
614-992-2834 .
992-7821 7,.,1 mo.

All

. 128 Meehan ic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·4081
Week Day 8:00..5:00
Open Saturday
9:00..3:00 &amp;'1Mn

•

WILLIAMS.
TRENCHING

PSYCHICS
know

J&amp;L INSULATION

llydraullcal\y

EMPIRE
FURNITURE COMPANY

cu.

Bwk. old p~.oppy L2 Dtack lab, If.(

Free lwtens. 4ma les. )female!
reaay f~rs t week ol Sept 304-882

Chuck Stotts
614-992· 6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

992·2269 or
304·773·5960

.

interconnected and that
have the ability to receive,
store. or transn:dt water to
wells or aprlnga.

95
5
BOTH FOR 649

6mo old Black Chow to good
home 304 862 2878 alter 2pm . ...

Ado rable krl!e n. 1 left 304· 67S ·
1872

614~992-7643

•

Bill Slack

8/4/lfn

· vectors. The Board shall

SOLID OAK CURIO

BY TAPPAN

$399 95

RECLINERS

95 '

..

•BLUf, EARLY AMERICAN ...................................... 5399.95

LARGE CAPACITY

BROWN OR MAUVE

$39' 5

$449

FRIGIDAIRE 24 CU.
FT. REFRIGERATOR

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

CHERRY FINISH. I PC, DINING ROOM SUITE

WOOD ROCKERS (. tn•·tinn At s99,95 .4 DRAWER CHESTS

95

5149995

&lt;.

NOSTALGIC OAK FINISH
PEDESTAL TABLE
6 CHAIRS

10 GUN CABINET

Uh1mate JuxUJy,trad~ona\
beige. mauve, blue, green.

EMPmE MUST REORGANIZE TO GO FORWARD
__...J

SOLIDWOOD

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

••

97

$799 97

SMITH BROTHERS

••.

.

Commen·ial uml fi,·sitlt· ••linl
Dri veways. Palios. Slahs, Parking loLs. Cu rbs &amp;
Gutters Sidewalks. Porche&gt;. Tear-o ut and

COMMERCIAL and RESIDE~TI AL
FREE ESTIMATES

Light Hauling,
.. Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
' Remodeling
.
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985·4473

,.; '

WITH RECLINER AND SLEEPER
MULTI·COLOR

$19

•

10 A.M. TILL 8 P.M.

ENGLAND SECTIONAL

WING
CHAIRS

•

.

$299-95

Reunion policy

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY •
'

.

.-4e: ·

Found : Co llte Type Dog, 1/u;mity '

'

I

7-8 Wee~ Oltj Ktttens. 614 •

3928

Abiding Concr·ete
Construction

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacem~nt VVindows
Room Additions • Roofing

FREE
ESTIMATES

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

UCINE
GUN CLUB
TUP SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m. ·
· Everyone
Welcome

~11-1

?4i)l'

7/2219~

.B. Williams • England/Corsair • Restonic
Smith Brothers
• Corolla Classics • Caldwell
'
.Spring air • Maple Mountain • Tappan
Frigidaire • Wh~te Westinghouse • Zenith

Up To 65% Off

WITH ICE

SAYRE TRUCKING .
614-742·2138

CONSTRUCTION

Now

ONLY

Joe N. Sayre

Giveaway

German Shepard lemale 30 4
675· 7324

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

• Open Water
Y:O ·Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
' Dive Master
• Assistaot Instructor
• Spedalty Classes
Scott Walton ·
Open Wate r Scuba Instructor
- 614-992·3314

Umest1111e &amp; Grave~
Septic Systems, TraBer &amp; ·
House Sites.
Reasonobla Rates

SMITH'S

.., ..

All Merchandise Displayed At

Scuba Classes Nciw Forming

.

)'0

Stored
and/or
Displayed will be
placed on the publit
market for liquidation.

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

THIS IS A PUBLIC SALE. NO DEALERS ALLOWED.
' OPEN I 0 AM. THURSDAY.

DOORS
OPEN
THURSDAY
AT
0 A.M.

40

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

All
NOTICE: Purchases must
11aid for by cash, personal
SALES checks, MasterCard,
fiNAL!! lb=Dis~~~~:d!!l~ta~nd~/~ori~t~~a~l~e

NO LAY·AWAYS
BUT SPECIAL
ORDERS
AVAILABLE!
NATHAN ROTHGEB

Fate " by Alice Wexler. Publisher:
Times Books. Price: $23 (in Canada,
$32). You won't be able to put it
down. l guarantee it.
Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy to get, easy to use and even
easier to get hooked on. If you hove
questions about drugs. you need Ann
Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or money order fo r $3.75 (th is
includes postage and handling) to:
LowdtJwn, c/o Ann LAnders, P.O. Box
1/562, Chicago, /11. 606}]-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55.)

STORE HAS BEEN CLOSED TO
ALLOW FOR THIS MASSIVE
LIQUIDATION.
DOOR'S OPEN THURSDAY AT 10
A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
FRIDAY 10 A.M. TIL 8 P.M. ·
SATURDAY 10 A.M. TIL 6 P.M.

REORGANIZATION
LIQUIDATION

The Daily Sentinel • Page .9

56
To P',~~!..~~,a.~~.!~~-~!-~~~·

Bride includes morbid memorial in wedding ceremony
dwelling on my grief at a ume when
we should all be happy, or IS Amy
going too far? ··HOWELL. MICH .
DEAR MICH.: If Amy wants to go
to the cemetery and place a bouquet
on her father's grave and have a photo
taken she should certainly do so. To
.
ask the family to accompany her IS,
in my opinion, excessive. It would be
a dow ner for die others·· CSjJCCJ3ily
your mother. I hope Amy will
abandon the idea of the entourage.
Dear-Ann Landers: My husband.
"Jim; and I are in our mid-50s, in
good hea lth and very happi ly
married. A year agp, we moved his

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•

Classified line Ads

Tribune 446-2342

Sentinel 992-21 56

•

• • ••
•

•

3 papers

Register 675-1333

3 days
6 days
10 days
.. Mont hi

BEATTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie
'

s-.

Apanments
for Rent

440

256 1270

Wanted to Buy

90

1 and 2 'bac:frQ(I m apar ments lur
n1shed a"d unlurn1shed secur ty
depo,.lt r eQu~red no pets 614
992 2218

Cleal' Late Moae Cars Or
Tr ucks 1987 ModPis Or Newer
Sm1th Bu rck Pa m ac 900 rast
ern Ave nue Ga hpo s
Decora1eo stonewa e

NJ

1 Bedroom Range Retr gerator
Furn1she-d A1r Gond 110ned $2591
Mo Ut 11 es Oepos 11 Requ 1red
No Pets 614 4116- 2957

I Ee

phones o d amos o d tMm ome
ters o d cloc~s anUQJC lurn lure
R 'ICnne An t qu~s R~..ss Moo e
owr e 6t&lt;~ og;&gt; 252D .vr ovy

2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Wa ter Sewage Pa o $295 Me ..
Depos I 6 14 446 2481

&amp;!i!ates

J &amp; 0 s Aula

Pt~

s arc Sa 11age

2 Bed rooms 2 Baths 2 Miles
Nottn Of Vmton $300/Mo .. $300
Ocpos11 ,.. Electr c t ~ No Pels
Available &amp;'1 6195 614 388--9080

ou.,:. ng wre cks 1un l\ au os &amp;
truc; )j;s A so oa r s lor sa e 304
773 5343 or 773 5033

Jvnk cars or w II p ell, up g veaway
ca s or app! a nces 614 992
606Q any11me
Top Pr ces Pad Ola US Cams

"I knew someone
I think of us1ng 1n·hne
skates on a treadmill sooner or later '

S lver Gold D arnonds All 0 d
Collectr bles Paperwe rghts E1c
M T S Com Snap 1S, Second
Avenue Ga t1 oa ts 614 446 2S42

160 Wanted To Do

310 Homes for Sale·

Wanted to buy anuque ana used
!urn lure no rem 100 1arge or too
sma l w U OOy one p ece or com
D\He esta!es Osby Martm 614
992 7441

Chec~ 1n1s out F1rst Save $$$ In

By owner 3bedroom home 2m1
out Jer1cho Ad 304 675 45 75

Wa ned To Buy Junk Auros Wnh
0• W tho u! Motors Cal Larry
Ll~ly 614 388-9303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

$35 000 tYR INCOME Potent al
~ead mg Books To ll Free (1) 800
898 9778 A 281 4 For Deta 1l~
$40 000 YR NCOME Potent a!
Ho 'nC T~o•srs ' PC Us ers To I
Free ( 1) 800 898 9U8 [• T
Z814 Fo( I slings
Appt1cat•ons Are Now Be ng Ac
cepted AI P necres1 Care Center
170 Pmecrcsr Dr VC car pols
Oh o 4563 For Fu ll T me And
Parr T•me State Tested N urs.ng
Ass•stants Compell! ve Wages
D lercnttal W11h EKpenence S1gn
On Bonus Available Equal Op
por1un ty Ernp oyer
AVON I A!l A eas
Socars 304 675-1429

I

tenofle-te11or pa nlmg roof pa1nt
•ng l'landwash down hous es &amp;
mob1fe homes odd JObs neat
wor~ Guaranteed 15yrs expan
ence References Free cst1
mates 304 675-6921
General Uanntena nce Pamttng
Y;ud Work WindOws WasNed
Gu!fers Cleaned l1ght Haultng
Commer1ca t Res1dent1al Steve
614 446 8861
Pro!essJonat Tree Serv1ce Com
plete Tree Care Bucket Truck
Scrvrce 50 Ft Reach Slump Re
movat
Free Est mates• In
su rance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1c~ Ca ll And Savel No Tree Too
B•g Or roo Smalll B dwell Oh•o
614 380 9643 614 367 7010
~ur Va ey Nursery School
Chddcare M F Sam 5 30prn Ages
2 K Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week M nt
mum 614 446 3657

Wou d L•ke To Babys 1 1 Ch1ld
lntant Or Toddler In My Home
References 61 4 245 5887

AVON E ARN $$$ at home 3t
war"- All areas 304 882 2645 1
000 992 6356 INDIREP

'

BabysHter Needed FG 2 Small
Ch ldren 3 Days A Week Refer
en~.:e ![ •per ence Req u•red 61 4
367-7480
Chnst an Non Smoker Baby s ncr
Wanted h My Home Days Rat
erences 6t4 669 4305 Leave
Massage
Deper,dable H gh Schoo l S!udent
With Tra nspo tat on Needed To
Watch 2 Young Children In
Spr ng Va lle ~ Area Wcokda~s
After School 3 6 30 Occass1onal
SatUrda~s ~eletences Send Ae
plies To CLA. 354 c1o Gal t polls
Da1ty Tnbunc 825 th1rd A~cnuc
Gallipolis OH 4563 1
Eas ,. Wodo: l:.o.:ce ll ent Pay I As
semble P roducts At Home Ca ll
To ll Free 1 800 46 7 5566 Ext

313
Fantast c Sam sNow H r ng l1
tensed CosmetolOg i St Gwar
an teed Wages Pad Vaca110ns
614 446 1267
Neerled Interpreter for the Dear
!o r hear1ng mpa re d studentls
ma1nstreamed 1n lhe school d1s
tnct Prefer p or- nterpret1ng ex
pe11ence and cerJd1 ed I rom the
Na11ona Reg istry ol lmerpreters
for the Deaf o state quality as
suran~e progr am Must have h1gl1
school d1ptoma for tu mer 1nlor
ma t10 r1 and or mqUincs contac t
Carol S Mill er Mason County
Board o f Educat1on 304 6 75
4540
No [~per encc Ne cessa ry I $500
To S900 We ekly Porent1al Pro
ce5s1ng Mo tgage Relunds Own
Hours Ca ll (909) 71 5 2300 E~l
782 (24 Hou s)

qu red•;_--=:------::
Somepne to help manage small
busm1us Must know ottlce sup
p11es olltce e~perrence helpful
Mustj,o able to deal w th the pub
lie &amp; jJther busmliJsses Al so must
be a~e to lollaw mslrucuons both
wntte1, &amp; ver~ill Send resume to
Offlctt SerYife &amp; Supply 1 12
West ~a m St~eet Pomeroy Oh10

45769

su;;·c:~R-S:-A~~c~:-S:-OP::PO=R::T~UN::;I;::TY-;40 yeju old lnternat1on •l Co m
state pi the ~~t Water Treatment
s e.w.p~nd ng ptf ce rn Mejg s Gal
t1a M,son EJc•Uent opportl.triiiY
lor pqrson
l!&amp;rt ng career 1n
sales or eMppr C~r&amp;td salllJ eKec
u t1ve to reRr41~t\'11 out~t~nd1ng
produut 1n gr~ JTIIIrket

Nf\

MOCKING

INO 000
'REfiABLE p NECE$1iARY
FU~~ T !!liNG

Sal" I and cq!11"lilllon f:l5 000

65 0
I rst y·-~ for furlf!er de
ta1IS c II Plen ,_.• •2 447!

180 WaJlled To l)o

Com~ele

Wee

Ace
ServiG•
tree
care ~Oyrs t~p 1 lnsu,ad free
es!lnlflles 614-~41 11fil or I

800 5Q8 8887

Spht level house lor sate 1n Syra
cuse fu lly equ 1pped krtchen w1th
dmtng area one bath two bed
rocms up TWO large rooms down
oH1cet u!ll ty room area sunporcn
Located 1n n ce ne1ghborhood
near Schoo total etectr1c 614
992 6970

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1966 Homette $2000 1981
Allant1c $7 500 614,..379-94 47
614 379 2936

210

Bus1ness
Opportunity
NOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
econmwnds that you do bus1
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money througn the
mall unlll you have tnvest gated
the offenng

REAL ESTATE

1984 Shultz 24x60 Modular
Complete y Remodeled New 'Roof
New Furnace 8. Heat Pump
$20 000 614 446 7767
l1m1ted Oflerl 1996 doublew1de
3b r 2bath $1695 down $259/
month Free del1very &amp; se~up
Only a1 Oakwood Ho mes N nr o
304 755 5885

wv

New 1996 1411.70 m~: l udes sk1n
1ng steps blocks one year
homeowrrers tnsurarce and s•x
110ntl1s FREE tot rem Only $1025
down and $207 t? per month Call
1 BOO 837 3238

p, ce Buste r ' New 14)(70 2 or
3br Otlly $995 dawn $195/roonth
Free tiehvery 8. setup Only 9"1
Oakwood Homes N 110 WV 304
755 5885
All real estate Mvert1s1ng 1n
th1s newspaper IS subJect to
the Federal Fall Hous ng Act
of t 968 wh1ch makes 11111ega1
to advcnlse "any preference
ltm taiiOn or dtscnm1nauon
based on race color rehg1on
sex fam1hal status or natrona!
ong1n or any Intention to
make any such preference
hm1tatmn or dtscnm1nat10n"
This newspaper will no1
knowlmgly accept
advertisements lor real estate
whtch 1s rn v10latton of the law
Our readers are hereby
mtormed that all dwellings
advert sed u't thiS newspaper
are ava1lable on an equa
opponunlty basls

31 o Homes for Sale

1990 Modula r W1th Cathedral
Cetl1ngs On t 89 Acres East
Shade Road
Reduced To
$65 ooo 00 Call Chervr Carr
Coldwell Banker t:.andoJa,rk Reta
tors 304 B6:'.1 6636 Or 304 422...5488
lacre 6 room house wtshower
$1 7 000 Lee Bard 304 675
5714
20ectroom w th baseme nt close
to schools $14 500 Call 304
675 6621

330 Farms for Sale
46 Acres Pond House Complete
Remodled Barn Garage OutOOii
mg Trailer Hook Up 614 446

1098

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
5 Acte s Fo r $ 12 000 Locat ed
Between Vmton 8. A o Grande
Sailor Road 614 388-9737
5acres flat steel &amp; concrete
block buildmgs arge Sl o 1/3ac re
paved CIIY &amp; well wate1 10m• S of
Pt Peasant on WV2 lyle Aust1n
Barns $13 900 304 576 2894
Corner lot 214 Poplar St &amp; Mad1
son Ave approx 175x75 $1 000
304 675 716g

Four lots near Racme approx 1
112 acres each starr ng a! $5000
call614 949 2025
Scemc Valley Apple Grove
beautrful 2ac ots public water
Clvde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS

2 Bedroom House 1 Lotatea In
Gallipolis DepoSit And Referenc
es Requ1red For 'More lnforma
1 on Call 614 446 4069 Please
leave Message
N1ce three bedroom house 1n
M1dd epo r t no pets 614 992
5658

420 Mobile Homes

for Rent

Gas FUrnace 1 Aef f:! !3a lage
Addison Area Pr1ce Reduted To
$57 000 614 367 7267
3 Bedrooms Bath 8. 112 L1vmg
Room Fam1ly Room Frn•shed
Basement CA In Ground Pool
614 446 4895 Pl ease Leave
Message
3 Bedrooms Gas Furnace Free
Gas Garage 40 Acres $39 goo
Back 01 Add1son 6t4 367 7259
614 446 1988
3 4bedroom 21ull bat-hs custon
kl!t:hen !ul basemen! level lor •n
Galtpolls Ferry 304 675 1252
5 Rooms Bath Basem~nt Decks
Pool 1 1110 Mt es From Gall1pol1&amp;
At 141 614 446 1026
Beaut1lul Large House Poss1ble 5
Bedrooms Sk.yl1gbts Double
Decks Pool Bu1dmgs Ideal For
Children 2+ Acres $55 000 614
379 2506
For sale by owner Jhree bedroom
hOuse w th three outbu1ld1ngs ap
pro.rc one acre pr1me commerc1al
land at Fwe Po nts owner mo~mg
must sell ca I 614 992 6300

304 6 s 1957

614 992 7423

9009
2Room's Pus Ba th lafayette
Mal No K tchen All Uhl hes pad
$175 00 Month Oepos1! Requ red
6 4 446 7733
Apa nment &amp; l1a 11 er Ut li t1es Pa1d
304 675 2579
Apartm4mt In Gallipolis DepoSit &amp;
RtJiere nces S2251Mo 614 446
7130 614 446 2131

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Or1ve
from $226 tO $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mo111e s Call 614 4&lt;16 2568
Equal Holls1ng Opportun ty
Furmshed t Bedroom 6 Month
lease $250/ Mo $100 Oepos1t
U!lll!les Pa1d 258 State Street
Gallipolis 614 446 3667
Furn shed Apartment All Ut1I1T1es
Pa 1d DownstairS $185 /Mo 919
Sec.ond Avenue 614 446 3945
Furnished Aot 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Oownsta •rs Al l Ut l111es Pa1d
$250/Month 919 Second Ave
614 1146 3945
Furn~shed

Etllc1cncy Share Bath
$195/Mo Utd t•es Pa1d 607 Sec
and Ga lipcl s 614 446 4416 A.l
ter 7 PM
Grac1ous I v1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V•llage Manor and
A.ivers1de Apartments m M1ddle
port From $232 $355 Cal 614
992 5859 Equal HOUSing Oppor
tun•t•es
N1ce One BA Unfurn shed Apart
ment Range 8 Retrrg Prov1ded
Water &amp; Garbage Pa1d At Con
d 11on Depos11 Requ1red Call 614
446 4345 AllCJ 6 PM
N eel~ fu rnished 1bedroom duple.w.
on 2tst' Street clean pnvate no
pets no Hud References &amp; de
pos•l304 675 2651
Stonewood Apartmcms now rent
1ng one bedroom all eleClfiC lor
etde~ly and dlsab hty FmHA sub
S!d zed Equal Housmg ti14 992

30S5
Tw n Avers Tower now acceptmg
applications tor 1br HUD subs1d
-+zed apt tor elderly and R-and
capped EOH 304 6 75-6679
Very clean one bedroom lur
n shed apa trnen1 n M ddlepo1 t
614 446 309t or 614 9g2 5304

t2x65 2bedroom 1 bath on At 2
Crab Creek 2 Horsel ck Rd
$300Jm o Depos11 &amp; references
304 369 6447

2 Bedroom

Home W1ttl F~rep l at:e
In 19 Acres Sowards R dge
Road Crown C1ty $35QJMo 614
256 , 559
2 BOOro&lt;lms All Electnc Beautiful
Condtt1on Pan1ally Furnished
$300/Mo Plus Oepos11 Electnc
614 256-6399
2bed oom washer /dryer ac all
elcctnc no pets Mason WV
304 7/3 5751
2tJodroom Vo J pay u!li1t1es De
pos1L No pets 30t. 575 2535
2or lu n shed AC washer dryer
al l e ectnc $250 mo Alus utli1 hes
dep &amp; rei no pets 304 675
4874
Furn shed Tra1ter 2 Bedrooms
On 1/2 Acre lot Depos11 No Pets
Cal A!ter600 6142561304
House For Rent In Country 2
Bedrooms Garage Gas Heat
S300 /f.Ao Deposu Relerences
614 426 6926

Trailer 11'1 Apple Grove WV par
t a ly furn1shed HUD app oved
304 576 2890

Furnished
Rooms

450

Rooms lor rent week or month
Sta t ng at $1 20trno Gallla Hotel
614 446 9580
Steep1n9 rooms w th coo ktng
Also trailer space on mer All
ho ok ups Call after 2 00 p m
304 773-5551 Mason WV

460 Space for Rent
Tra 1ter lot on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $60/mo 304 773 5881

Coumy Road access survey
me thods ava labl e 5acres 304
675 1918

3 Oedrooms 2 Baths H~at Pump

Sawrqrl! don I
haul our log• 10 the mill jusl call

Por"ble

Ranch sty e on 33986 New l1ma
Rd RuttRnd ask1ng $22 000 pnce
negooable 1514 742 2225

FINANCIAL

M ddleport close 10 store &amp;
schOol 2 story 1 112 bath 3 10 5
bedrooms 3 lots fenced yard

Geor~es

Ou1et country ,home two bed
rooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace satell te d s~ 36
acres cal1614 985 4243

t4x70 Wmdsor Deluxe E•cel ent
Cond1t10n large K tc hen L1v ng
Room 2 Bedrooms 1 Baths
$12000 614 2459431

$28 500 2 Acres More Or Less
On Rou te 21 8 6 Rooms And
Bath Garage And Ou J Burldrngs
614 446 4938

Ravenswood Care Center 1 1 13
Wastung ton St Ravenswood
WV 1 cuHeflliy seevptmg appll
cat ons for t11e tollow•ng pos1 t ons
N u rs1ng ASS IStants ( Will Tra1n)
reg1s1rat on lor c asses startmg
soon benel1ts nclude compel
t1ve 'o'!ages pa1d meals pa •d va
cat1or1 CNA bonus re1mbursed
tra n1rog health nsurance pa1d
shIt dlllerent a &amp; career ladder
OPRO• tum11es all nqu1nes may
applv wnh1n datiV references re

Pr~va1e rustle ranch style 3 or 4.
bedrooms rwo baths fuJI lmshed
basemen! 25 x27 lartuty room
large stone fu eplace farge deck
three outbulld ngs on appr~x 6 7
acres three m les from M1ne 31
pr1ce $89 900 call 6 14 742 222B
for appomtment

W1tl Do Inter or E1Ctenor....Pa1n1 ng
Reasonable Rates Expenenced
References For F1ee Est1mates
Call 614 245-5755

AVON SELLS AT WORK HOME
Average $8 $15/Hr Benef rsl
No nvemory Or Door To Door
lrxl/rep t 800 742 4 738

2bdrm apts total e ectr c ap
phances lurntshed laun dry 100m
fac11111es close to school m town
App ICat tons ava lable at V llage
Green Apts #49 or ca ll 614 992
3711 EOH
2hedroom apattment turn shed
ut 11es mcluded ac 304 773

Used 8 fo l d ng tab les; Phonlil
J04 675- 627&lt;1

15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less
1S word·; or less

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry
11 s1a 1 horse ba rn on 20acres
tor rea$@ Xl4 369 644 7

Sa "age f3y I nE&gt;
d Toy s lly
l t- e Prc k Up T uc .. Loao 61 4

•

-

MERCHANDISE
Household
Goods

510

A r Cond1t1onor Washer Dryer
Aelr~gerator 614 256 123B

Ant qve Bathlub Now 112 Horse
Craftsman Garage Doo r Opener
3 Year Old Rapper Lawn Tractor
614 J67 7117
Appliances
Recond1uoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relr
grators QO Oa~ Guarontoe
F-rench C1ty Maytag 1314 446

7795

Country Furn lure Fur nnure lor
Every Room 6m At 2 North Pt
Peasant 304 675 6820

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers reh gerators
ranges Skaggs App liances 76
V ne StreeJ Call 614 446 7398
I 800 499 3499
LAY~E

S FWRNITURE

Complete home furn 1sh1ngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m1les out Butav111e P1ke
Free Del very

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
01 ~e St Gallipolis New &amp; Use9
turnlture hea te rs Wes-tern &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159

vrRA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oualny Household Furnlrure And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry I RENT 2 OWN
And .Layaway Also Ava1lable
Free De!IYOry Wllhi, 25 Mil$$

520

Sporting
Goods

20 Gauge Remmgton 1100 l1 Wt
Slug Barrell Thompson Centender
Super 16 223 Barrell 2 Thomp
son Center Pistol Scopes 2 5x
W1th Mounts 6~JI 245 5831
Remtngton 1100 t2 Ga Magnum
Only: 6,.4-441-o180

.

Wednesday,August16,1995
.

~

•

s

HSI3 1 4K Yellow Gpld Patd
S2 192 January Repo Item
American Genera F1nance 614
44641 13

oao

'

•'

8hp go cart 4 wheeler r res 1 11
2yrs old great shape $80,0 304
676 1575

11 500 304 675-5502

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; Rebu 1lt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 000 537 9528

100

Pets for Sale

560

71 0 Autos for Sale

AKC Regtstered Cocker Span e l
Puppy Ma le Bull &amp; Wh te
Wor med Vaccmared Champ on
Bloodlin e D 0 8 3t2t95 $200
614 379 2728

I~~~~---~:--::-Ch 1huahua pupp1es female tyr
Old ho~sebroke Male 8wks o d
reduced pr1ce 304 675 /732
Three female and one male Jack
Aussell tefrlers $250/ea 614
742 2050

Musical
Instruments

570

t Year Old Bundy Clannet For
Sale Bought New Pa1d $450 ln
M1nt Condition 614 245-9099
Ban JO good shape w !h case
$150 304 675 3862
Melville Clark spmet p1ano ap
pro~~: 25 years old excellent con
d1t10n 614 992 7512

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

Cannmg tomatoes and bel pep
pers tomatoes $3/bu you p ck
p1ck.ed $4 50 peppers $6fbu you
p1ck $7 p1cked brmg contamers
Raymond Rewa 614 247 4292
Cann1ng tomatoes lor sale $4
PICked $3 you piCk hOI peppers
$8/bu Marshall Adams 48060
Adams Rd Letatt Falls Oh1o
614 247 2055
Cannmg tomatoes tor sale bnng
conta1ners p ck you1 own or al
read~ piCked 614 24 7 2961

M0\11ng Sale L1v11'1groom Bed
roo m Tab ec Numero us Other
ltemsl614 446 3037

Cann1ng tomatoes 1ncrcd bte
corn 614 992 5866 or 614 992

3985

N ce Couch /C hatr Collee Table
Lamps Sears Dry P1ano 2 All
Cond1110ners + 17 500 10 000
BTU s p14 446 3224

BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
675 4084
P zza oven IJiodgetl gas oven 2
stone decks $950 firm May help
w1th mo~mg and del1very 614
992 2478 days or leave mes

sage
RCA Camcorder Full S1z:e Color
V ew 24 Power Sum 4 Mon ths
Used 3 Trmes $500 614 446
7139
Refr gerators Stoves Wash ers
And Dryers All Recondtt oned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll Deliver 614 669 6441
Se lers Kttchen Cabmet Pamled
$250 614 446 3159
Sept c Tank Jet /\era! on Mot ors
New 8. Rebv1lt ilns talled Cal f
Johns Jotm 614 44&amp;4782
S x electriC e~erc1se ton 1ng ta
bles they do all the work lor you
very ellect1Ve 304 6 75 7541
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gal on
Upnght Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Oh1o t 800 537 9528
Two lots at Me1gs Memory Gar
dens must sell 614 992 3875
Used Bundy Flute $B5 Sears
Woodburner $50 614 446 4621
White Campertop P1ck Up $300
614 446 4141 Alter 6 j 00 o,

Wool\ends

Butld1ng
Suppltes

Block bnck sew1:tr pipes wind
ows 1ntels etc Claude Wtnters
R o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

Groom ShO-p PiH Croom ng r'ea
lur ng Hydro Bath Ju l e Webb
Call 614 446 0231
2 male AKC Cocker Span1cl
pups blac~ 8 black/while Cham
pton bloodlines $ 150ea 304 937

2733
3 Chow pupp1es lor sale born
Apnl 13th parents AKC r~ g 1s
tared $100 each 1 black male
one coco female 1 red female
614 992 2232
5 Black Lab pups AKC Aeg1s
tered 304 675;;6359

,

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
194 7 John Deere MCldel A W•th
Front End load et New T1res E~
cetlent Cond I on $3 500 1950
John Deere Model A Completely
RebuHt New Pa mt Excellen1 Con
dt•on $3350 614643 2300 B4
614643291C.Aite 6PM
6 Row Jonn Ooore Corn Plan ter &amp;
Cultvaror $50 614 245 0610
Corn P1cker s Wagons Hay 81n
ders Rakes Squa e Balers Mow
ers Tedders Gravely Trac tors
Elevators Man ure Spreaders
Plows Dtsks Other F1e ld Ready
Equ1pment Howes Farm Machm
erv Route 32 Jackson OH Jack
son Oh•o 614 286 5944
D1scoun r tarm tractor parts lor
M assey Ford IH &amp; ot hers
S1der s Equ pment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 o 1 800
277 391 7

•

F'urg son 20 eng nc over nauleCl
w1de lront end $2 000 6 14 992
2822
MF 231 218 Hr s $10 200 JD
2640 $t1 900 JD 2640$10 900
JO 2940 $11 900
MF 135
$4 950 JD 375 R Ba ler $8 500
NH 853 $8 750 NH 565 Square
Baler $7 950 NH 474 Hayb1ne
$5 950 JD 39 Mower $550 Deutz
7 D1sk Mower Cond $3 100 MF
7 Hayb ne $1 2501 JD 24 f Baler
$1 500 NH 256 Rake $t 950 tH
18 Hoe 0"1 $1050 JD !=99 Onll
$500 JD 3800 Chopper $2 500
H&amp;S V Tank Spreader $7 950
New 50 60 85 100 HP Tractor s
In S10ck Lew Rate Fmanc ng
New Rakes Baler Mowers Ted
de rs Wrappers In Stock Car
mtchaels farm &amp; Lawn 614 446
24120r 1 800 5Q4 1111
Used Tobacco Sl!cks
614 256- 1651

630

15~

Each

Llveslock

Appaloosa mare 16yrs o d gen
tte r~des well $550 Mare 1 11
2yrs old green broke $400 or
both $800 3QA 675 6591
Holsten Cow 614 245-0610
l tm ousm cattle purebred some
w th papers sorne wtthout 614
992 6 190
Registered OuArter Horse Geld
1ng 5 Year Old Patom1no 614
38B 8579 614 388 8804

640

1972 El C.am no 350 Auto AC
PS P8 A so 1988 S 10 614 256
1481 Alters P:M
1g77 Corveue Manne Blue 350
Barrel 46 000 Actual M1les Very
Good Cond !JOn• $9 000 614 446
1098
1979 Chrysler New Yorker all
power good sticker 304 675
4063 after Spm
t981 Della 98 $650 080 614
446 7730
1984 8u1ck Skyhawk $1000 080
:))4 675- ?126
t985 Chr~s!er Laser All Power
D g!lat Dash H1gh M1les But Runs
E)(celentl Needs f"'ant $1 500 Or
Trade 614 446 4165
1985 Honda Accord LX maroon
automatiC au cond1t onmg load
ed extra "'n ce $3850 614 992
2594 alter 6pm weekdays or any
11me weokends
1986 Dodge 600 89*'000 Miles

$900 614-446-6956
1988 Ford Escort new motor
38 OOOm1 runs great new parts
best offer 304 675 7495

lades d amend 111'19 appra1sed
!1 500 wil l sell $750 Have ap
pra1sa papers 304 675 7541

Now ava able at Pa1nt Plus for
your tog home cedar s1d ng deck
or outdoor turnuure AKZO NO

R?t'..ITICIAfJS

euf ~€ Ql...b5TIOIV
IS IIJf-IAT 1&lt;-!IJD Of
(HA)..)G~

l TWO lD
FP&lt;-./OR LOOSE'

7'

WEST

EAST

• 7 6 3

• 8 4

¥KQ98 2

¥AJ!0 63
• J 8 2

0 3

•J

Hay &amp; Gra rn

AKC Regtstered Wh1te Male Po
meran an $75 2 Young Beau11lul
Femalt'! Not Reg stered $65
Each 614 446-8627

Hay rolls $20 Delivery storage
aval able Morgans Farm At 3S
304 937 2018

AKC Reg1stered Collie Pup
p1es Tr Color $150 00 614 446
7644

Round Ba te Hay For Sale Stored
In Barn Ne~er Wet 614 245
5117

AKC Regtstcred Oalmanan pup
pes 12wks old vet checked
shots &amp; wormed 2 males l1ver
spor $25ea 2 females black/
white $200ea very soc1al great
wlchtlclren 304 675 3738 alter
4pm

Square bales $1 $2 Round bales
S 1Sea Tak ng orders for 2nd cut
1ng um I Sept 1 304 675-3960

AKC Reg1stered Dalmat1ons le
male- 8/3194 male 1/23195 not related ready to breed Must sell
due to health reasons 614 742

710 Autos for Sale
85 Mercu r~ Cougar motor needs
work 1 S500 614 742 1507 after

2654

5pm

TRANSPORTATION

••1 0976

t

1989 B~retta 4 Cylmder Auto
A r PS PB 56 000 M11es $4 500
6t4 446 79t2
1989 Fo1d Tempo 71 000 M les 4
Door A1 r $3 900 May Cons1der
P:'l.rl al Trade 614 256 6854 614
256 6329
1989 Ol ds fo ronado 61 000
M1les loaded Excellent Condt
11on $8 000 6t4 379 223 8

XL

I

GUESS WHAT'S
FER SUPPER,
BLUE EYES?

1g82 Honda FT500 Good Condr
t1on $550 1979 K'lwasak 650
$500 OBO 614 379-2313

ooo

~

~

AND EVEI!HONE 15 MEAN TO lliM

19g4 Toyota 4~4 $1 200 pay off
good cond111on 614 247 3500 af
ter 6 30pm or leave message

i

1995 Honda 4WD lront &amp; back ;
bu rpers StiCk stoppers extra teet-'
gaurd Also 19go CR125 304;
5-76 9907

A
E-'ONOMlST

750 Boats &amp; Motors

ANSyl~~~

for sale

1991 Yamaha Waverunner 3
$3 500 614 446-1756

Budget Tra nsm ss10ns lJsed &amp;
Reburlt All Type s Access1ble To
Ov er 10 000 Tra(lsm ss1on Also
Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 6 14 379 2935
New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels rad alors floor mats etc
0 &amp; R Auto R1p1ey WV 304 372

1ga7 Silverado Good Motor
Transm ss on Bed Cab Has
Oeen ,Crushed
Sell Wnote
$1 300 614 388 8596

1989 Chev S 1Q

~IK

i'low Pa,m

T1re5 a\)tte ry Excellent Cond1
I on S3 995 F rm 614 446 4564
Alter 5PM
1989 Chevy KtSOO 4JC4 350 auto

PS PB AC 304 882 2962
t9B9 Ford F250 XLT lar at 460
EFI Sspd overdnve super cab
36 OOOm power everythmg ac
exc cond $10 500 Call 304 aa2
2766 after 5pm
1995 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT pw
p pm a1r 1111 crutse tow1ng pack
age red/s ver ~ 1OOm1 $1 B BOQ

304 675 51;!8
1995 Ford F150 6cyl 304 675
7669

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
19 77 Dodge van 15 passenger
360 ong1ne au10 PS
PB rear heater l1ght blue 304
875 3039 B1da Only! See Legal

f? 1 SOOm1
Ad

111985 CJ5 Jeep Soft Top 304 En
me V 8 Body Good Cond1110n
3 200 614 441.0202.

I

1989 Cl'le11role1 Astro Van
70 000 Miles AutomatiC An
Cruise Ti ll looks Runs Good I
New T1res luggage Rack 4 Caplain Chatrs I Bench Seat $4 goo

614 448-8172 614 256 6251

1"

'' CAStl FLOE '' !
•••

CtW..IlVI'tEA one

~[ WJE.

m

"

from P 0 Box 169 Roslyn Hts , NY

-

Ok~homa

" 48 Lolrs
51 Last tetter

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrty Ciphet' cryplograms 111e crl!lllea from quolaiiOIII by famout peop4l Pill lnd pr&amp;telll
E.:h ~her ~nlhe ciphe1slands lor another TOdays Clue T tqUIII Y

'Y

KGPZ

UKH

UZBZ
UZBZ

11577 0169

y

UK Z D

GWABZEEZE.
AKZT

E XHA

E H LA

G

AKZ

L H 8

U G E

HORT

DYWZ

AH

X H H 8

XZHKRZ
OZ

OYWKGZR
WGYOZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I conce1ved at least one great lo\e 10 my life ol
which 1was always the ob1ect • - Atbert Camus

~~~:~' S@\\~lA-"t.trs·

wan
GAMI

1411o4 ~. ClAY • POLLAN - - - - - - -

Rearrange leHers of
0 four
l(rombled wordi

low to form four

the

be

words

RUWBOR

'

Ph1lllp Alder's book, Get Smarter

l ~~'~ employee
There are two types of bad
'
I
I
mIL~~-;~·
I ~-~~=::.:m~ formed me aThecolleague
first resents
EKI LN

5

cnhclsm and ' the other w1ll

r

0(;~,;p11~••
r I I I 1I
_RIEID_GIU1T&lt;T-il
6

1he chuckle quotoq

l......i.L.....J.L...-L.-...1..-...L-:'

by f1ll1ng 1n lhe m1nmg words
you develop from step No 3 below

6 VNSCRAM8LE
ABOVE IE !TEAS
TO GET ANSWER

T

C::CMb
~av1

Ellero

·+

a

n

t

bile.

~dor

.~

Yeasty- Maker· Inlet - Tawdry ALREADY

P er-r e. ov.,..

IOn

fiSh on
c.onsu\ dn

STRI&lt;E A BLOW IN Tl-£ WIR ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP THE CI.ASSF/£D$.

~'?/' C,I,I&lt;'T

*WO).It s-.e,
CORN
~~

!

~~~--~------~!
~

yourself

Earls Home Ma1n1enance v1ny1
S1drng rpol1ng exter or pamung
power wash ng Frt!e ~sflmat9$,
614 992 4451 Ot614 9924232
~

you 11 lind II The Astra Graph Match

AQUARIUS (.tan 20 Fob 19) II you and

maker Instantly reveals wh1ch s1gns cue

your mate dtsagree on an 1mportant tssue
today don 1 a r your drHerences 1n pubhc

romanttcally perfect for you Ma1l $2 75 to
Matchmaker cto thiS newspaper P 0

That would only make maners w0rse

by

90&lt;446i;,-New York NY 10163
VIRGO {Aug 23·Sept 22) 11 m1ghl be

drawtng rn others

your lo t today to ptck up the loose

egos LJrge today to take on an asstgn

threads that others have unraveled and
try to weave order from chaos You

f1ed Ia handle 11

Roof1ng and gutters commerc•BI
and res1den!lal mmor rep;ms 35
years experience 614 992 5041 .......

mustn t wa1t to be asked
•
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Be very selec

you re a rather prudent conservato r of

t1ve wtth your assoc1ates loday If you re

your resources Today however 11 looks

Plumbing &amp;
Healing

not drscnmtnatmg you m1ght be drawn

as though you may be .nclr ned to taka

mto an ugly development not of your own

unwtse frnanc1al rrsks

Ron s TV Serv.ce spec al•ztng In
Zanrth a so serv1c1ng most other
brands House calls 1 800 '797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

j maktng

Frelilman s Heating A.nd Cool ng.
lnstalla llon And Serv1ce EP/\
Cart hed Aes1denttal Commerctal
614 256 t6 t 1

Electrlca 1 and
Refrlgera~lon

COMFORT ASSURED D£ALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISI'S
Heat Pumps A1r Cond1t1onlng If _.,
You Don 1 Call Us We Both lose! "
Free Est1mates 1 BOO 287 6308
614 446 6308
002945

other people a chance to express their opintne professor lectured WHen you talk ' he added
hear only what you ALREADY know

G1ve

~~

C&amp;C Cene1al Home Ma1n
w nence Pant ng v n ~l s d ng •
carpan1ry doors w1ndows batt'IS
1
mob e home repa r and more For 1
lrii s;hm~\9 call Chet 614 992"'
6323

Thursday Aug 17 1995
The compassron and kmdnefiS that
you ve always feh but that s been difftcull
for you to express could permeate your
personality m the year ahead Your chart
1nd1catl:ts a nse tn popular1ty

LEO (Juty 23·AUg 22) To avood d1ssen
stan and hard feelings wtth assocrates
today cton t glor1fy your tdeas while treat
tng therrs as tf they have l1ttle or no va)ue
Know where to look for romance and

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) Resosl your

ment to

1m press others 1f you re not quah

ARIES (March 21 Aprlt 191 Usually

TAURUS (Aprlt 20·Moy 20) Your resl

SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22) Show con

less nature mtght tmpet you to start sev

S1derat1on of persons you have to deal
w1th on a one to one basts today It you

eral protects stmuttaneously today While
your acttvrty could tmpress others you ll

behave 1nsenstttvely they mtght not wanr
to cooperate wtth you

not fmrsh what you beg1n

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Dec 21) Do not

never easy for you to keep secrets

be stubbOrn about chang1ng your plans

today s pressures mtght make tt even
more dJffrcult 1han usual not to sptl! the

roday If more expenenced tndiVlduals tell
you that your 'Ideas woo t work drscard
Ihem
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Belore
commtttrng yourself to a JOtnt endeavor
today analyze all of rts ram1f1ca1tons so
that you know eJCactly what you re getltng

GEMINI (May 2t·Juno 20) A11hough 11 s

beans

II

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
..,

add \1ons, remodeling rool1ng
S1d1ng plumb ng etc Insured call ,
B t Orrck 614 992 5183

Res1dent1a or commerc1al w rmg
new serv1ce or repa1rs Master LJ
cf;lnsed etectr1C1an A denour
Electr cal WV000306 304 675
1786

~-r--t--t--1

44 Boxing
victory
45 VP'o
superior
46 ttollen
currency
47 City In

dtamonds

makes for North South But that con
tract 1s hard l 1mpoos1ble' l to reach
Wlth any cert.amty after the aggresSive
b1ddmg by East and West Souths " '
spades was a pract1cal reb1d Also note
that seven hearts doubled costs only
1400 wh1ch IS less than the value of the
vulnerable seven d1amonds (and SIX
spades&gt;
Thmkr"ng h1s saw 12 easy tricks ls!K
spades f1ve diamonds and the club
acel South ruffed the heart lead drew
trumps and cashed two of dummy's lop
d10mond s However when West d1s
carded a heart South suddenly not1ced
that he t:ouldn t run the d1amonds 1m
mediately How d1d declarer overcome
the d1amond blockage•
Souths first thought was to cash lhe
dmmond queen play a dmrpond to h1s
10 and try to enter dummy Wlth a club
toward the queen As you can see that
wouldn t have worked Declarer would

ca"

Home
Improvements

wv

1¥

at Bndge, ' !S avmla/Jle , auto
graphed upon request, for $14 95

- - WNK
DONl&gt;TS
II'-! 1'\Y

::--::::----·
B1l Otr ck s Home Improvements •

840

11randeon
30 Corry on
32 Sheltered
35 Upper-tlmb
oupport
36 Made IIzzy
38 Norma39 Young guy
41 Levts
42 Actreea
Cheryl43 Of grand·

Pass
Pass

Instead, South called for a heart from
the dummy and discarded one of h1s
two remammg dtamonds West won
and returned a heart, but South ruffed
and cashed dummy s three d1amond
tncks diScardmg his two club losers
Always keep an eye open for a loser
on loser play

I~
\\-\~l:-S"

Uncond t onal lilehme guaran1ee I
L.oca references I urn she d Call;
(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 231 t
0188 Rogers Waterproot ng Es
~bi1shed 19.75

820

+

Pass
Pass

have lost two club tncks

8

o

SERVICES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF lNG

creation•

BIG NATE

1975 26 Foot Holiday Vacation
Camper Good Shape Everythmg
Works1614 446 1400

1985 Ford Ranger 2WO truck
good cond
needs automatic
uansmiS Slon repa1red1 rep aced
$1 200 ltrm 304 675 6192

••

~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Appliance Ports And Serv1ce AI!
Name Brands Over 25 Vears Ex
per ence 1'\11 Wo k Guaranteed
French C1ty Maytag 6 14 446
7795

1987 N ssan KlnQ Cab Topper
V 6 New Clutch T1res Pamt
70 000 M les Excellen t Cond1110n
$5000 6,44463139

~---------,

Mf.. 1\
DONUT,
WOULD
YOlJ 7

8647

m

BORN LOSER

ro~s

350 Ouck Eng1ne 400 Turbo
Trans Ace $250 OBO 614 388

1984 Ford F150 4X4 302 auto
PS PB AC new motor 8. \fans
miSSIOn 304 882 2962

1985 Nrssan K ng Cab P1tk Up
$650 OBO Must Sell 614 446
:JIJ/1

fflOZflll ASSE-TS"

•

SAY,
GLN&gt;YS 1

327 Cficv Engme $600" 614 446
4141 Aller 6 00 Or Weekends

810

•

YOU#l

•
~

1979 Ford F tOO $500 614 44!3
6958

TE-flM FO,

AJOUT
fiNAI'I'E-

1

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

790

/

f~I'IIE­

''I&gt;E-A~ f'NIE-,
w~AT IS AIIIOTtlf~

ASICS",

QutSTIONS

1984 16 11211 mboard/outboard
open bpw $3500 304 675 2245

1976 CustomiZed Ma1 Jeep
Good Shape Perfect For Hum1ng
F1sh1 ng Or Carnpmg $895 614
256--6753

1979 GMC Ton Dually Crew Cab
New Pa nt l1res f3uns Good
89 ooo M1 es $5 ooo 614 388
8595

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Honda XR 80, good cond1110n
$400 61lf 949 2249

3933" 1 8oo 273 9329

4•
Pass

As you can see, seven

1993 Honda 4 wheeler 300 uhlity
model exc cond 304 675 4848
alter 4 30

720 Trucks for Sale

t976 F 150 good cond 11on 304
675 3218

I ~OPE illl5 ISN'T ONE OF TllOSE MOVIES
AKIO GOES TO BOARDING SCilOOL,

W~ERE

1986 250A FourtraJC $~ 150 614
446-1 756

760

=~":;;;..-.--:--:--;---1

10 - Angeteo
21 Omelet
Ingredient
23 Leap
24 Heeta
25 Btlndao - 26 Military cop
27 Trudge
28 Opinion
29 Adam·o

covering•
9 Green gam
tO Al'11 Spldero"

As S1r Thomas More placed h1s neck
upon the block pnor to hiS beheadmg m
1535 he moved h1s beard to one s1de
and reportedly sa1d "Th1s halh not of
fended the king
Can you keep your beard from get
tmg m the way of success rn today s s1x
spade contract'

PEANUTS

614 ..

1992 4 Door Chev Corsca 6 Cy
1 nder AtJtO Atr Td! Cru1se
38 000 M1 fes $8 000 Make 0 ffer
614 446 7127

1993 Chev Geo Me tr o 2 Door
Great Cond1t1on E •cellent M Le
age $4 995 F~rm 614 446 45~4
Aller 5PM

City In Norwoy
Shorpened
Nixon a VP
Englishman
Long fish
Optic

One away,
two back

1

1993 l arson 18ft open bow 4 3l'"" '
sport 1nter or wts~ deck, 614
44t 1084 aher 7pm

1992 P ymouth Laser 41 000
m les excellent cond1110n great
gas m eage $8600 6t4 992
6725

2 Horned owl
3
4
5
6
7
8

Opemng lead • K

1982 Honda 650 N1ghthawk
Good Condltton 12 000 Miles
S1 tOO OBO Call Between gAM
9 PM 614 256 1443

1990 Pont ac Gran Am 1 oaded
54 000 Mtles $5 000 080 614
2561539 6142501233

1992 Ford Fesl!va am tm stereo
Sspd ac 7t ooo mJersJate m1tes
great gas m1leage $4 300 304
882 3435 or 304 882 3348

1 Seaweed
product

parent•

$3 600 304 675 2579

Atr

DOWN

By Ph1lhp Alder

1992 Sea Nymph boat w1th trailer
75 hp Johnson eng1ne With lots ol
emas Jake over pavments 614
94g 2872

1990 Cavalier 5 Speed

COOKE:&gt;
GOOSE!!

1979 1000 Suzuki motorcycle lor
sale lot ol new part runs e~cel
lent 614 992 6069 ca I any11me

~~~o~~~~~:,r~a~~$3 500

with bone or
brooker
12 SUdden
outpouring
13 Author Zone 14 Holll
15 Skllnut
16 ~gyptlan river
17 New soclatlte
18 Small plant
part
20 Ogtea
22 Drag
•
23 Lively dance
24 Deaoertl
27 Falter
31 Retired
32 Chorltv gilt
33 Genetfc abbr
34 Bounce
35 L.eanlng
36 Vaotllme
period

An.wer to Previou• Puute

•A I 0 2

I •
6•

4 wheeler

1984 Honda Go dw1r1g 57

1 Tlke - 5 Bu1y11-9 Word uMd

37 Moved
39 Mlntmum
40 Soul (Fr.)
41 Glaoo
container
42 L A othlote
45 Cycled
49 Mo Gordner
50 - Cornel!
52 Fork prong
53 24 hour•
54 Observed
55 Emerald tate
56 Poolol abbr
57 Hardy gal
56 Fathers

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North
South
West North East

Motorcycles
Yamaha

•K 9 4

8 7 3

SOUTH
•AKQI092

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 000 M l as $6 000 Can Be
Seen At Gall pohs Daily Tnbune ,
825 Th ird Avenue Gal polls•
Ohto

740

G1rl s tO Speed Schw n 81cycht
$50 Bundy 11 SaJCopnone L1k4
New $600 Young G1rls Bedroon'l
Suite All Wood $900 Fu ll S1ze
Headboard Dresser W11h M1rror
Chest Of Drawers Hutch W1th
Shelves N gh Stand Root ng
S late~ 614 446 1423

TAU&lt; AEOJT
1\t)VJ IS CHAIJ:;t CH MlG£ I
.. ·(HAA.X;&amp;I CHAIW£'

-os84

B Grave lots 't;entenary Came
tary Sect1on New Add1t1on $300
Fer Ail S Graves 614 446 4938

Electnc Whee!cha rs !Scooters
New /Used Scooter 1Wheelcha r
Lilts Sta1rway Elevators Ldt
Cha rs Bowman s Homecare
6t4 446 7283

ALl

1989 Astro Mark 1!1 Con~ers1on
Van Loaded t982 Red Mustang
EXP EJCcel\ent Cond1t on AIC
New T1res S1 195 Most Trade
lns Possible Cook Motors 614
446 0003

•

3 Ton Cenral A ir Cond111one r
Package System Or Split System
$1 250 Installed 5 Yr Warranty
All Parts 1 800 287 6308 614
446 6308

Couch Chair H1de A Bed Range
Kmg Wa trebed Oval Rug 614
446 1026

oAKQ 5!

•Q 6 5

6PM

26" console c;;olor TV JC Penney
remote by ZeMh eMce\ ent cond
tiQn $179 OBO call 6H 949
2203 or 614 949 2879

B 1695

• 7 ' ~

EEK&amp;MEEK

1988 Toyota 4x4 Short Bed
t07 ooo Miles Clean PB &amp;
Steermg Rust Free Runs L1ke
New $5 500 614 256-1540 After

25~ ZeMh color TV floo r model
$100 ca!l304 773 5746

1 800 537 9526

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH
• J 5

J

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

1988 Plymoutl1 Voyager Van Au
tomat lc Cod A~r N1ce Van
$3 200
614 441

1993 Down Ea&amp;; t Ho t Tub EJCcel
ent Cond t on1 Holds 5 People
EICcellent Ouahty Cedar Wood
Wllh Cover 614 «6- 1098

Concrete &amp; Plast1c Sept1c Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evanc: Enterpr ses Jackson OH

BRIDGE

\

1988 Oodge Convers1on Van 4
caplam chaus rear a1r &amp; heat
h1gh m1leage $5 000 l~tm ~ 614
992 5232

79 PT Round D1amond Solnane:

Commodore 128 computer $250
Bassen babv bed $30 304 895
3013

ALLEYOOP

986 Chev~ S 10 B lazer Tahoe
2 Tone Blue t Wh te looks
Goodl $3 500 614 446

MerchandiSe

ve

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wnghl

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�Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pom·e roy • Middleport, Ohio

Weber
celebrates
birthday

"

Derek R. Weber, son of Keith
and Marcella Weber from Olestet,
recently celebrated bis sixth birthday with a party at Chester-Skateaway . Cookies and Kool-aid were
served to the guests.
Those atlending were his parenL~. bis brothers, Josh and Jeremy
Casto: his grandmother, Vera
Weber; Dan and Rhonda Davis,
Ryan and RacheUe Davis, Brandon
and Morgan Werry , Ray Werry,
Bruce Myers, Kelly and Brittany
Myers, Georgana an\! Rick
Koblentz, Amanda Parker, Christy
Mills, Jeremy and Kayla Lee,
Suzanne and Jarrod Bentz, Sonny
and Summer Folmer, Nancy Broderick, Megan and Holly Broderick,
Rhonda and Joey Vales, Jason and
Carly Kimes and Carla Kimes.
Sending gifts were his grandparents Henry and Nara Hariman,

Chester UMW hear program on missions

• · DEREK WEBER
Norman Weber. Bob arid Mary
Barrett, Codey Gerlach, Judy Well
and Jody Custer.

"UnderSianding
Missions
Today" was the title of the program
presented by Mrs. Ethel Orr and
Mrs. Clara Conroy at the recent
meeting of the Chester United
Methodist Women.
The scripture read was John
20:21, Acts 1:8, Acts 2:8 and
Matthew 8:11. The group sang two
verses of "In Christ, There is no
East or Wes~" wilh Betty Dean as
pianist.
The focus of the program was
for United Methodist Women to
COD:\C together and to explore what
mission is all about.
Each passage read contained an
image of mission. In John 20:21

'

God sends Christ to us, in Acts
Jesus sends His disciples and in
Matthew people sit at a feast in
God's kingdom.
It was noted that God sent Jesus
to the world, and it is our responsibility to send missionaries from tbe
west to the "non-Christian" countries,
"Jesus is the message and the
mess~nger to us. He is the Good
News and the bringer of the good
news. From Jerusalem to Judea to
Samaria. the Holy Spirit undergirds
us. The circle is ever-widening and
never-ending," was the emphasis of
the program topic.
It was pointed out that for mon:

than a centwy, women have been

sent out..to be in mission work and
that is an important pan of the heritage of our organization and our
church.
.
The Women's Foreisn Mission
Society of tbe Methodist Episcopal
Chilrcb was founded on March 23,
1869. ·Mrs. Porter. who was instrumental in founding the society, sent
the first female missionary physician, Dr. Clara Swain and a teacher, Isabella Thoburn, to India.
The program leader said that
today, the world has come to our
doors. People from more than 165
countries are Jiving within the
boundaries of the United SLates.

Pick 4:
5021
Super Lotto:
24-27·29·36·38-42
Kicker:
20·35·99

Page6

'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 17, 1995

(12·14-LB. AVG.) U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Whole ·
Sirloin Tips

BySAUCHAN
AssQCiated·Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The
state's modification of a water pollution permit for a proposed Mason
County pulp mill is a political ploy,
environmentalists and union groups
contend.
"It's a ruse. Thll,t's all it is. :ne
state bas become too compronused
in its industrial and economic
development efforts," said Stuart
Calwell, an attorney for the Afftliated Construction Trades Foundation• a union group.
.
Eli McCoy. director of the Division of Environmental Protection,
announced Wednesday that the per·
mit would be modified to prohibit
any dioxin discharge into the Ohio
RiVI:r from the $1.1 billion project
in Apple Grove.
1 The permit was appealed by the
foundation, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and other environmentalists.
"We're going to pretend there is
no dioxin when there actually is,"
CalwcU said Wcdoesday at a bear-

' the state Environmental
ing before
Quality Board.
Dioxin is a toxic chemical
released during chlorine-based
p:lper bleaching processes. A federal study last year found that many
Americans already are exposed to
levels of dioxin that can cause cancer, birth defects and development
disorders.
'
Calwell said the permit modiftcation would change nothing. It did
not change the mill's dioxin monitoring requirements, sg, the mill
could still emit undetectable
amounts of dioxin without the division's knowledge, be said.
Division attorney Matthew
Crum said the division cannot mandate the sort of technology used at
the plant.
"This represents the Division of
Environmental Protection's offer to
provide as much assurance and
comfort as it can," he said. "What
would ACT have the board or the
agency do?"
·
The division issued the permit
in August 1994 lo Parsons &amp; Whittemore of Rye Brooke, N.Y. It
allowed the mill to discharge a
small amount of dioxin which
woUld add up to about a pound in
10,000 years.
McCoy said 'he does not !'&lt;lieve

the plant will ever diScharge dioxin
because the type of chlorine it
would use does not mix with other
substanCes to produce dioxin.
"It's the perfect lie," Founda- ·
tion Director Steve, White said.
"He knows the mill must dischllfj!e
dioxin with the technology it has. ·
White said other technology
exists to prevent dioxin· discharge.
hut the facility bas refused to commit. The environmentalists said
they would be satisfied with nothing less than the permit's withdrawal.
Board Cbaltman Charles Jenkins ordered the division to have the ·
modified permit completed and
available by Sept 5. ·
•'Tbe state has proposed making
fairly important changes in the perIIIit. and the parties involved should
evaluate these proposed changes
and work with the state to resolve
whatever remaining differences,"
he said.
Gov. Gaston Caperton has been
a strong backer of the mill, saying
the project would establish about
600jobs.
Tlie modifiCation ' 'is a positive
step forward in addressing public
concerns about this plant and its
saJety," Caperton said in a sLatement released Wednesday.

Pound

SUNDAY
ATHENS - Descendants of
Abraham and Margaret Williams will meet at South Side Park on
Dairy Lane at 1 p.m. Bring a covered dish.

Yeauger
family holds
25th reunion

U.S. GRADE A WAMPLER/LONGACRE

Chicken

BreastPound
Ouarters
CA

RED OR WHITE

seedless.Grapes

BURNING MARUUANA- Meigs County .
sheriff's deputies Wednesday morning
destroyed marijuana plants seized up until now
by lawmen In the county. Meigs Drug Abuse

IN OIL OR WATER CHUNK LICHT

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·'

Slow•moving hurricane keeps
coastal residents in suspense
MANTEO, N.C. (AP) - Hurricane Felix dawdled off the North
Carolina criast today, going from a
creep to a virtual halt and infuriating many who remained in the .•
storm's ~th.
"We re ready for this storm to
come already - and leave," said
Fran Crutchfield or Nags Head.
"We've had our excitement."
In Jllags Head, people spray·

painted slogans on the plywood
boards they used to cover their
windows. One, spread across three
sheets of plywood, read: •'Felix You Cat- Scram."
Tbe huge storm, never a fast
one, slowed from 14 mph Wednesday to nearly stationary at 8 a.m.
today. It was about 150 miles eastnortheast of Cape Hatteras. in the
long, skinny Outer Banks islands.

1995 Meigs County Fair
August 15th!

·on 1-Day Admission Or
Off 2-Day Admission.

Resistance Education omcer Mony Wood, left,
and Sborlff James M. Soulshy wal&lt;lh u special
deputy Thomas Werry put the torch to tbe
plants.

If our electronic check-out system prints and charges a
prtce for an Item different than the stated prfce for
that Item, you get one of that Item absolutely l'ftlllt ·
Items With ·~ off" labels will scan the price on the shelf
tag minus the amount of the •¢ off' label. Note:
AlcOhol and tobacco products excluded by law.

Today
4 p.m. Junior Fair Talent
Show • Hillside Stage
4 p.m. Kiddie Tractor Pull Show Arena
' · 6 p.m. Jurilor Fair Kiddie
Games • Hlllsl~e Stage
6 p.m. Draft Horae Show •
Show Arena
7 p.m. Back Porch Swing Hillside Stage
7:30p.m. Antique Tractor Pull
8 p.m. Weatern Flyer • Grandstand
8:30 p.m. Shalla Arnold &amp; Sunrise • Hillside Stage
Midnight • Gates close •
Friday
9 a.m. Pet Show • Show Arena
11a.m. Dog Obedience Show- Show Arena
Noon Kiddie Tractor Pull ·Show Artna
1 p:m. Harness Racing

. The unusually wide storm also
began to shrink. Hurricane-force
winds of 75 mph, which bad
extended 115 miles from the cen·
ter, were reduced to a 90-mile
radius.
Forecasters were having a bard
time figuring out when: - or even
if- Felix's center would bit land.
If Felix moves along a nortbnonhwest track as expected, its eye
would make landfall late Friday
- night at- the North Carolina-Vir·
ginia border, said Martin Nelson, a
forecaster at the National Weather
Service Hurricane Center in
• Miami.
But with the hurricane· s surrounding bands of wind and rain,
coastal North Carolina and Virginia
are in for a battering anyway, said
Jerry Jarrell, deputy director of the
Hurricane Center. And at Felix's
sluggish pace, the lashing could be
, a long one.
As of this morning, wind speeds
along the Outer Banks were only
around, 20 mph, with gusts of nearly 30. Gusts above 50 bad been
reported overnight. Waves two
miles offshore topped 20 feet. and
rough surf had Jcllled at least four
bathers as far north as New Jersey
since the weekend.
As many .as 200,000 vacationers
· and residents fled the Outer Banks
and other coastal communities
Tuesday. filling motels for hundreds of miles inland at the peak of
tourist season.

•

2 Sections, 12, Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia tnc. Newspaper

....-----;.-Meigs fair royalty--

Pulp mill Opponents
criticize 'perfect ·He'
West Virginia
DEP demands ·
zero dioxin level

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

Low tonight In 70s, hot and
humid. Friday, panty sunny, bot
and humid. Highs tn mld 90s.

e.-

992-2156

COPYRIGHT 1n5 ·THE KROGER CO ITEMS AND PfliC.ES GOOO SUNDAY,
AUGUST l l, Tl-IAOuc;.H SATUACA¥. AUGUST 19, 1995 IN POMEROY &amp;

EAST MEIGS - A meeting for
7-8th grade girls wishing to try out
for junior bigh cheerleading will be
held at6:30 in Eastern High School
cafeteria. For ·more information,
call985-3392.

New officers were elected at last
week's meeting of Racine Grange
held at the hall. ·
. Elected were Chuck Yos~ master; Barbara Dugan. overseer; Janet
Theiss, lecturer; Ruth Frank, steward: Mike !Juhl, assistant sLQward;
Geraldine Cross. lady assistan.t
steward; Mary Easterday, chaplain;
Jean Alkire, secretary/treasurer;
-Helen Pickens, gatekeeper; Tara
Norman, Ceres; Nita Yost.
Pomona; and Nancy Carnahan,
Flora.
Elected .to _a _t!!_ree-year term ~n
the executive committee was Ntta :
Yost.
.
The .legislative committee
reported on a bill _before the state
legislature regardmg food safety
scares that have haunted farmers in
the past.
Dorothy- Smith presided at the
meeting and it was decided to g~th·
cr information to he presented 10
the state master regarding the sale
of the fellowship buUding.
Tb. ~ death of Mrs. Carnahan's
father' was noted. Mrs. Yost volunteered to do some window repairs
before winler.
The next meeting will be
September 21 at 7 p.m. when the
new officers will be installed.

Pick 3:

' 760

opyright 1995

THURSDAY
POMEROY ~ Alcoholics
Anonymouswill meet at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Church on Mulberry
Avenue.

Racine grange
elects officers

Ohio Lottery

Rockies
slip past
Reds 6-4

News Hotline

'SON?'MbN' tuEs Wed tHUii . FRf 5A'tT
1~ !: I14&lt; 1~ ...16, . , K
1~, l i~ i
· GALUPOUS

'

ol. 46, NO. 78

Community
calendar

The Yeauger's 25th 31\nualfill!). - ily reunion was held at the Silver
Run Baptist Church.
Those attending were Susie
Yeauger of Elkins, W.Va.; Pearl
and Lena Yeaugcr of South
Charleston, W.Va.; Robert and
Geri Halley of Cheshire; Steve,
Cheryl, Ashley and Mcgann Halley
of Middleport; Ryan and Cassandra
Carsey of Troy; Seth Kendall,
Misty, John and Ruth Ann Carsey,
all of Athens; Betty Mcintosh of
·Cheshire; Alfred and Hilda
. Yeauger of Racine; Gene and Sanlea Yeauger Enon of Ohio.
Alfred Yeauger was hqnored as
the oldest family JDCmber presen~
while Mcgann Halley was the
youngest.

Some 636 languages and dialect
are sp!&gt;ken in the U.S. Our country
is the fourth largest Spanish-speaking country in the Western hemisphere.
The group sang "In Christ.
There is no East or West"
Thirty-two sick and shut-in calls
were reported. ,
Fun Day is Sept. 14 with members to meet at the church at 10:30
a.m. to go to Jackson. County
Council is Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m. at
the churcb.

Items &amp; Prices Good Through August 19, 1995.

. Hood marks
birthday
Brandon Todd Hood recently
celebrated his second birthday .
His parents Todd and Sandy
Hood, along with his grandmother
Kathy Hood, threw a birthday party
with a Sesame Street theme.
Attending were: great-grandparents, Ken and Lois McElhinney,
Kandi and Kayla Bachtel, Marshal
Wolfe and Ricki and Roy Laudermilt; sister, Heather Hood; uncle,
Jeff Hood and Trisha Sams.
He also received gifts from Nora
Rice, great-grandparents, Eileen
and David Londakcr, grandfather
John Hood, Crystal Hood and
Tyson Lee.

Wednesday, August 16, 1995
.

Alyssa Baker, daughter of Rick and Sherri Baker or ReedsvUie, was nained Little Miss Meigs
County, and Justin· Duckworth, son or Robert and Angela Duckworth of Middleport, was named
Littl~ Mister .Meigs County Wednesday afternoon. The twti, seen at center,. were selected from
about 311 youngsters competing for tbe title. Second runner-up was Sarah Jeffers, left, daughter of
H.oward and Teresa Jeffers, Pomeroy, and first runner· up was Heather Cundiff, daughter or Debbie and Larry Cundiff, Racine. Second runner-up for Little Mister was Zack Newel~ right, son of
Jeff and Pam Newell, Chester, right, and first runner-up was Daniel Buckley, son of Bryce. and
Pam Buckley, Pomeroy. The contest was sponsored by Vaughan's Cardinal with Dowers and gifts
being presented In tbe winners. (Sentinel pboln by Charlene Hoenlcb)
·

Top swine
picks set
for sale

Kayla Gibbs' 246-pound •ill
was named 1995 grand champiOn.
market bog Wednesday at the
- Meigs-County Junior Fair Swine ~
Show.
·
·
In addition to earning a berth at
the top of the swine sale order, her
entry was one of two winners of
the Meigs County born and raised
contest spons.ored by Farmers
Bank.
Alyson Patterson's 245-pound
gilt was named reserve champion
market bog. Gibbs' and Patterson's
entries were also named grand and
reserve champion gilt. respectively.
Alyssa Hoffm·an and Lester
Parker won grand and reserve .
champion market barrow, respectively, with Hoffman's entry winning the best Meigs County born
and raised barrow contest spon·
sored by Farmers Bank.
· GRAND CHAMPION HOG - Kayla Gibbs won In gnnd
Winners in the gilt competition
champion market hog competition.It the Meigs County Fair J11nlor
were, in order by class: 210-219
swine show Wednesday night. In addition, her entry won best
pounds - Elaine Putman, Jeremy
Meigs County born and ra.ised gilL From left are Fair King and
Gillilan, Kay Hunt; 222-226
Queen Jeff Rose and Noelle Pkkens, Gibbs and Swine Princess
pounds - Mary Rankin, Chad
Nicole White.
Wheeler, Thomas McKay; 230-235
~unds - David Ranlcln, Jonathan
.~~aggerty, Amanda Wheeler; 23 5. -z;jS pounds - Alyson Patterson.
James McKay, Robert Harris; 246250 pounds - Kayla Gibbs, Chad
Hubbard, Stephanie Hoffman; 254260 pounds - Travis Lodwick,
Staey WI!Uarnson, Leslie Parker.
In the barrow competition, winners were, in order by class: 210216 pounds :- Kristi Warner, Lori
Harris, Steven Kauff; 220-227
pounds - Matthew Jltstice, Gary
Cooper, Bobby Kauff; 230-239
pounds - Alyson Patterson,
Jonathan Haggerty, Sheena
Gillllore; 240-244 pounds - Billie
Jo Welsh, Chris Barringer, David .
Ran10n; 245-254 pounds - Lester
Parker, Robert Harris, Chad
Wheeler; 258-260 pounds Alyssa Hoffman, Travts Lodwick,
Kayla Gibbs.
·
Melissa Guess and Jonathan
Haggerty took grand and reserve
champion honors, rcspecuvely, m
the swine showmanship contest
.preceding the market swine competition.
Placing in their individual classes were, in order: Old Pro Class I
- Leslie Parker and Travis Lod· .
wick; Old Pro Class ll - Melissa
Guess and Chris Barringer; Third
RESERVE CHAMPION HOG Patterson
Year_ Jonathan Haggerty and •. reserve champion market bog honors In
night's junior
Nicole Wbite; Second Year_ Bilfair swine show. From len are Fair King and Queen Jeff Rose and
lie Jo Welsh and Kim Mayle;
NoeUe Pickens, Pa'tterson ond Swine Princess Nicole White. (SenNovice Class 1- Christopher Jude
tlnel photos by Jim Freeman)
'
and Jeremy Gillilan; Novice Class
11 - Rees Wyant and Kl!Ssandra
Activities at today's fair includ- Fair Building.
Lodwick. . .
Tonight's activities include the
ed the Junior Fair Dairy Show, the
The swine show was judged by Open Class Dairy Show and the · Draft Horse Show. an antique tracTony Nyc of Wilmington ..
District 6 Holstein Show, all in the tor pull, and performances by Back ·
The annual livestock sale begins Show Arena. Harness racing was Porch Swing, Western Flyer, and
at 5 p.m. Friday in the Sh'!w Arena set for t' .p.m., the same time set for Sheila Arnold &amp; Sunrise.
Flower Show Judging in the Senior
at the fairgrounds.

•

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