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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport....:Galllpolls, OH-Point Pleasant, wv

Times Sentinel ·

r. Grico 1 osen as
Holzer Medical Center
cancer liaison
,
•
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GALLIPOLIS - The American
College of Surgeons Commission
on Cancer chose Alice A. Gricoski,
M.D., FACS as Cancer Liaison
Physician at Holzer Medical Center. The .appointment is for three
: years.
·
Dr. G ricoski is with the General
Surgery Departm ent at Holzer
Clinic.
·
The Cancer Liaison Program is
a nationwide network of over 2,100
volunteer physicians and is an inte• gral part of the Commission Cancer
of the Ameri can College of Surgeons.
With this position Dr. Gricoski
accepts the responsibility of pro·
viding leadership and support for
tbc hospital's cancer program. She
will work to promote communication and consultation in the medical
community as a means of providing beucr patient care.
The Commission on Cancer is
composed of Fellows of tile College of Surgeons and Liaison members representing 30 other cancerrelated organi zations. It has
• approved over 1,200 hospital cancer programs across the country.
The commission reviews each cancer program for conformity ID high
standards set by the Commission,
and encourages hospitals to participate so that the will be able to pro-

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LIMITED. Local owner. Expect the
best.
WAS
$7995
NOW

ROLLAND SWART

Swart named to
Peoples Bank post

DR. ALICE GRICOSKI
vide the highest quality care in the
diagnosis and rreatment of patients
with cancer.
Dr. Gricdski has been on the
Holzer Clinic Medical Staff since
1986. She receivet;l her Medical
Education at Washington Univcrsi·
ty in St. Louis, MO in 1981. She
completet;l her surgical residency at
the University of Cincinnati Medical Center in 1986. Dr. Gricoski is
Board Ccrtifict;l by the American
Board of Surgery.

GALLIPOLIS - Robert E.
Evans, President &amp; CEO of Peoples Banking and Trust Company
announced the appointment of Rolland (Rollie) B. Swart as Executive
Vice President/President, Athens
Division. He will succeed Gary C.
Smith who has resigned to take
. another position.
Swart joined Peoples Bancorp in
October,
1990
as
Vice
Prs:sident/Business Development. ·
In that position he has been responsible for marketing and .business
development for Peoples Bancorp.
A native of Athens County,
Swart graduated from Ohio School
of Banking at Ohio University. the
National Commercial Len\ling
School at the University of Oklahoma and the Graduate School of
Banking at the University of Wisconsin.
Currently, Swart is Vice President of the Athens Chamber of
Commerce and serves on the board
of the OU Green and White Club.
H.e had served for over ten years as
the "Voice of the OU Bobcats"
announcing their football and basketball games in at;lt;lition to serving
as chairman of the P.A.W.S. drive.
He has also been active in O'Bleness Hospital Golf Tournament,
United Way &amp; Boy Scouts.
Swart resides in Athens with his
wife Grace. They attend the First
United Methodist Church where he
serves on the Board of Trustees.
They·are the parents of two daughters, Cynthia Dupler and Mary Ann
Fouts, and five grandchildten.
~

Weekly ...
Continuet;l from D-1
so, they continue to underperform.
We believe that, after a period of
consolidation, many consumer non. durables· face the prospect of even
lower stoCk prices. Other groups in
which profit momentum appears to
be pealcingare technology and banks.
Meanwhile, our growth theme is
associated with companies and inNEW BUSINESS OPENS • Personal Touch Family Hair Care
dustries that have restructured to meet
Centers, 4277 State Route 160, Gallipolis, is open for
alowcr-growthenvironmentinamore
business.Michelle Denbow is the manager. The new shop is open
competitive world marketplace.
Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m. and 9 a.m. until
U.S. manufacturers should con6 p.m. on Saturday. Free consultations are offered. Walk-ins are
tinue
ID benefit from an undervalued
welcome. The new shop offers complete services. Pictured above,
dollar, the worlds lowest capital costs,
front row, Jert to right are l'atricia Silvers, perm and cosmetic
and highly competitive unit-labor
technician and assistant manager; and Manager Denbow. Rear costs. Groups that we favor in such an
Traci Fields, stylist; Sabrena TiUey, stylist and Angie Tackett, nail
environment
include auto-related,
technician ant;! stylist. The phone number is 446-4247.
airlines. steels, photography. and
selected conglomerates.
We recently added aluminum to
the list of groups we like Among
financials, we prefer selected insurance and thrift stocks. We still rewart;llong-term care as attractive.
GALLIPOLIS - A special
.
Stan Evans is a limincial conTHANKS to everyone who mat;le tobacco purchaset;l m excess of a sultant with Merrill Lynch in their
the 1993 Gallia County Junior Fai r 25 % annual level by U.S. Cigarette Gallipolis ofl"Jce. He can be reached
a huge success.
'
. .
~akers. Durmg recent years U.S.
Fairboart;l members, at;! VISors, . garette makers have substantially at 446-1176.
ant;! parents donate a lot of time and !ncreased the IT purchases bf
effort to make stlre everything runs lmp~.rts to a l~~cl of about 35%.
smooth. Local businesses and inter- The Foro Plan woult;l also extend
ested individuals spend a lot of a proviSion from prevwus years
.
d that hm1ts Quota cuts to 10% a
mo~ey to support I he f au sa1e an
year through 1996. At this point it
GALLIPOLIS - Independent
vanous awards. Many project areas is unclear if all or part of the "Ford
distributor
Bill Dummitt, for the
expen enced a hug~ tncrease tn Plan" was approved. We will try to
second
year
in a row, has been
numbers. AI! major ltvestock areas keep everyone informed as details
awarded
Volume
Leader in inoividhad number mcreases. . .
.
become more clear. Market reports
ual
Snack
Cake
sales.
Some of the less VISible PTO)CCI from the Type II and T · 12 FJ
areas had very keen compet1t1on . C d T0 b
ype
uc
Dummitt said crct;lit for his sucThe hay, corn, and grain projects . urc
acco a~cas show pnce cess should go to local grocers who
numbered nearly 60 exhibits. The tncrcases for the frrst three weeks carry the Little Debbie Snacks as
"Champion" hay project would of the season. Some were as htgh well as customers .who purchased
have been very competitive even in as $6 10 $8 per hundred over last the items during the past year.
a statewide show . I am sure the year.
1994 Gallia County Junior Fair will
Many local farmers are worried
be even bigger and better, but at about crop fields which arc showthis point w~ arc very happy with ing signs of stress oue to dry concti '
the !993 event. Plan to attend the tions. Many farmers report pastures ·
Meigs County Fair this week!
that were lush earlier in the season
Local tobacco growers arc in a nearing the point where suppleworld-market bout: According IDa mental feed is needed. Statew ide
recent new release from the Burley the Corn crop is behint;l schedule,
Tobacco Growers Cooperative with only 25% in the oough s~1gc.
Association , the world economics Des pite dry co ndition s, nea rl y
of tobacco is beginning to look like ~hr cc- quart e r s of the Oh io Corn
boxing. Dr. Will Snell , Ag. crop was ratct;l goot;l to c•cell cnt.
. Economi st at the University of The U.S .D.A. August lllh Crop
Kentucky, says that the one-two Prot;luction Report is expected to be
combination is the worldwide over- an impontant benchmark for evahisupply of burley and worldwide ating the potential size of the 1993
decline in price for unmanufactured Com and Soybean crops.
burley leaf. The bottom line
According to Darrel-l Good,
appears ID be that when U.S. fann- Extension Economist at the Univercrs cut their production through the sity of lllinois; the yield estimate is
national Quota system, foreign always very tentative in August
grown burley rushes in to fill that because a lot of growing season is
market share. U.S. Senator Wen- still ahead. This is especially true
Air Diamond Turf
dell Ford has prepared a provision, this year because of the lateness of
known as 'The Ford Plan," which the crop in many areas. He expects
was approved as a part of the U.S. the markets to be volatile for severLafayette mall
Budget Package in Washington last al more weeks.
week.
Ed Vollborn is Gallia Coun·
Gallipolis, OH
The " Ford Plan" called for ty 's Extension Agent, agriculassessments ant;! fees on imported lure.

:. Farm Flashes

. 1993 Gallia Junior
Fair was a big success

;:
-

•

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1986 JEEP WAGONEER

Pick 3:

452

Pick 4:
6297
Super Lotto:
8-9-18-31·35-44
Kicker:

PageS

842997

Low tonight!~ 70s, rain.
Tuuay, sunny, hlgb In 80s.

. 1986 OLDS CUTLASS

annual feed grain program beginBy LISA COLLINS,
ning September I, 1993, provided
County Executive Director;
that
they maintain adequate cover
Gallia ASCS
to
control
erosion al\(1 oo not overGALLIPOLIS - Feed grain and
graze.
· wheat program participants are
To qualify for full program benreminded that conservation protecefits,
producers are also required to
tion established on conservation
control
weeds, insects and rodents
reserve (ACR) and conservation
throughout
the year: protect ACR
use (CU) for payment must be
maintained through December and CU and from wind and water
1993. Program participants planted erosion through conservation praccover crops on the idled cropland, tices; and comply with harvesting
or put it into approved conservation and grazing restrictions. Producers
practices to guard against soil ero- could lose program benefits if they
fail to comply with these requiresion.
Program participants are ments. Contact the ASCS office at
remin;ded that they may hay or 446·8686 for additiomil informagraze this land enrolled under the tion.

•
-

Suspects
held in
-murder case

$6990

usn A set-aside reminders

~

Ohio Lottery

Dummitt honored

Deion Sanders'
Claws

The Shoe Cafe

SUPREME. VB, lady driven, 67,000
miles, LeSabre trade..
WAS
$4495
NOW

$3997

; Vol 44, NO. T7

1988 BUICK LeSABRE

$6990

NOW

j •

•

.

1987 BUICK PARK AVE.
Local · owner, shows .excellent care
and a lot of class.
I
WAS
$6990
NOW

$5990

1989 PONTIAC 6000
V-6, loaded, one owner, 48,000 miles,
quality at its best.
WAS
$7990
NOW

1989 BUICK LeSABRE
Marlin blue, little high on miles, but
shows excellent care.

$5997

NOW

l,.. - ·
·

~,_.

""·'
'."
~

1989 OLDS 98
Brougham, loaded, immaculate, low
miles.
WAS
$9990
NOW

58990

't

, U t

1990 FORD RANGER
5 speed, average miles, clean.
WAS
$4995

NOW

The 1993 Meigs County Fair
moved into run swing Monday
after a weekend of whirlwind
activities getting the exhibits
and concessions in place and
the carnival -rides up and ready
for operation today.
Hundreds or junior fair
exhibitors brought in their project work. • Booths were decorated in the junior fair building, and animals filled the
barns.
Above Ashley Hamilton and
Christopher Neece, members of
the New Horizon 4·H Club,
Middleport, complete the dub's
booth fn the junior fair building. In that building are
exhibits not only or 4-H Clubs
members but other youtb
groups, girl and boy scouts,
FFA, FHA, and VICA.
Quadzilla, below, is one of
three new rides on the midway
tl!is year. A family ride, the
cars travel on a circular track
and have joy sticks to control
the siren sound. Other new
rides are the Ring of Fire, one
of four in the world, and the
BarreD Ride, a twirling attrac·
tion. (Photos by Charlene Hoe,
nich)

$4290

1990 JODGE DAYTONA
V-6, auto., air, cassette, 44,000 miles,
double sharp..
WAS
$8450
NOW

57990

1991 BUICK LeSABRE
One local owner, low miles, sharp.
WAS
$12,990

NOW

511,990

'93
COUNT DOWN
@Brand New Buick &amp;
Pontiacs Going at
NO HASSLE PRICES and
Yo~ Get the Rebate.
So, Hurry While
Selections Are Good.

SUNDAY
SHOPPERS
WELCOME
Come In and ·
Browse!·

30 BUICK AND PONTIAC
PROGRAM CARS IN STOCK
92 Buick Riviera ........................ $20,900
12,000 miles

93 Pontiac Vans ........................ $16,890
List $20,952

93 Buick Centurys ..................... $12,900
Loaded

93 Pontiac Grand Ams ............... $11 ,900
Loaded

92 Pontiac Grand Prixs ............ $11,900
Loaded

92 Buick Centurys .................... $1 0,900
Loaded .

92 Pontiac Sunbirds ....... ;............ $7,900

Compare Our
Financing
WE WILL
Rates with
Other Dealers.
· .NOT BE .
We Shop Daily
UNDERSOLD!~
for Lowest
'Rates!

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.

election 4 p.m. Thursday

"'

•

~:s:5

A Multimedia Inc. N...apaper

--Fair in full swing-----. Filing deadline for Nov.·2

LIMITED. Lady driven, all service
records available with us. Nice.

~~:o

1 Sections. 10 pagea 35 cenll

P01f1eroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 16, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

.

Instensifying
:storm· heads
.for Hawaii
HONOLULU (AP)- Hawaii
:Island residents stocked up on
.emergency supplies and officials
·closed beaches ani! opened shelters
:in anticipation of the arrival today
:or Hurricane Fernanda.
Sirens on Hawaii Island, the
·state's southernmost. sounded Sun:day with the posting of a hurricane
•warning, forecasting winds of at
;!east 74 mph.
The rest of the state was placed
:under a less severe hurricane watch
;and high surf advisory, the Nation' al Weather Service sa~d.
; Meanwhile, the Army reported
~its chemical weapons facility on
.Johnston Atoll escaped undamaged
:sunday night when Hurricane
::Keoni swept past about 180 miles
-south of the island. Most personnel
had been evacuated from the atoll,
located 700 miles south of Hawaii.
Fernanda, with maximum sustained winds of 105 mph a,nd gusts
to 125 mph ~ was expected to
remain about 150 miles offshore as
it moved up the eastern coasts of
the Hawaiian Islancls at 12 mph.

..

•

---Local briefs---,
Three injured in accident
A Racine youth and her two passengers sustained minor injuries
Sunday night after their vehicle overturned, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrolaeported.
Driver Cynthia D. Litchfield, 17, and passengers Wendi D.
Krauter, 16, 32011 Welch town Road, Pomeroy, and, James M.
Litchfield, 18, Racinc,.-were transported by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where they were
treated and released.
According to the accident report, Litchfield was eastbound on
Baers Cemetery Road when she failed to negotiate a curve and lost
control. The vehicle went off the right side of the road, struck an
embankment and overturned onto its top.
Litchfield was cited for failure to control. The vehicle sustained
moderate, disabling damage and was towel;! from the scene.

Bloodmobile visit planned
The American Red Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Senior Citizens Multipurpose Building on. Mulberry Heights:' Pomeroy.
Wednesday from 1-5:30 p.m. '
'
·

Village y'ardsale slated
Following the success of an earlier community yardsale, the
Middleport Parks and Recreation Office will sponsor a second yardsale Sept. 4 in General Hartinger Park. To reserve picnic tables or
shelterhouses contact Mrs. Arnold Johnson at 992-6589.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY • The deadline for
candidates to file petitions, or political subdivisions, agencies, or other
taxing/authority to file resolutions
placing levies on the Nov. 2 ballot
ts Thursday at 4 p.m. at the Meigs
County Boart;l of Elections office,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. ·
Director Rita Smith said Friday
that to date resolutions to put levies
on the ballot have been ftled by:
Chester Township, a replacement tax of one mill for five years
for fue protection;
Rqtland Township, a renewal
levy of .3 (three-tenths of a mill)
for fue protection;
Scipio Township, a replacement tax of two (2) mills for fire
protection for five years:
· Meigs County for an additional
one .(1) mill for five years for providing and maintaining Senior Citizens service and facilities; and
Rutll!nd Village an additional
2.9 mills for current expenses for
five years.
While resolutions have not yet
been filed with the Board of Elections, both Middleport Village
Council and Pomeroy Village
Council recently voted to put one
(I) mill levies for frre protection on
the November ballot.
A referendum has also been
filed in the matter of a motor vehicle tax of $5 which was passed by
ordinance by Rutland Village
Council and is scheduled to go iniD
effect Jan. 1,1994.
In each township, except two,
there are two trusteeS to be elected.
In Salem and Chester Townships,

there are three trustees ID be elected.
School Boards
All school boards including the
Meigs County Boart;l of Et;lucation
have posts open.
On the Meigs County Boaro, the
terms of Harold Lohse, Robert B.
Burdette ant;! William C. Quickel
expire this year. In addition-to
those seats, there is also an unexpired term of two years to be filled.
Dohrman Reed is currently serving
that unexpired term.
To be filled in the November
election are three full ant;! one
unexpired tenm on the Meigs County Board of Education: two terms
on the Eastern Local School Board;
three terms on the Southern Local
School Board, and two on· the
Meigs Local School District. Full
terms are four years, the unexpired
term is two years.
Those now serving whose terms
will expire this year are Meigs
County Board, Harold Lohse,
·Robert Burdette and William C.
Quiclcel, full, and Dohrman Reed,
unexpired term; Eastern, William
Hannum and James R. Smith:
Southern Local, Scott D. Wolfe,
Janet Grueser, and G. Denny
Evans: and Meigs Local. Robert E.
Barton and Larry W. Rupe.
Village Officials
All five villages have openings
on Council and two have openings
on their Board of Public Affairs. In
adt;lition due to the resignation of
Frank Cleland as mayor of Racine
Village, his unexpired term will be
on the ballot.
In Middleport there are four
scats to be filled on council. Terms

BATTLE SC'£NE- ·onion troops reigned
supreme in Saturday's re-enactment of the Battle of Buff'mgton Island, Ohio's only Civil War
engagement. Here, Union infantrymen prepare
to advance on Confederate positions under the

expiring this year are those of Judy
Crooks, Dewey Horton, Jack Satterfield, and Paul Gerard, along
with Bruce Fisher on the Board of
Public Affairs.
In Pomeroy the terms of Bcuy
Baronick, Larry Wehrung. William
A. Young, and Thomas Werry will
expire Dec. 31 , 1993.
In ~ Syracuse, the term s of
Kathryn Crow, Kenneth Buckley,
Don Shaffer who was appointed to
the fill the term of John T.
Williams which expires this year,
and James Hill will expire this
year.
In Racine the terms of Jim
Snodgrass to the Board of Public•
Affairs, and the council terms of
Robert Beegle,. Ronalt;I Clark. and
Julie Randolph expire this year.
Also on the ballot will be the unexpired term for mayor. kff Thornton
has served as mayor smce the resignation of Frank Cleland. Thornton's unexpired term on council· is
also open and to date Council has
not made an appointment to that
scat.
In Rutland Village, there arc
four seats on council to be filled.
Those with expiring terms this year
are Warren Black, Steve Jenkins,
Duane Weber, and Randall Hays.
To File
Petitions for any of the openings
can be picked up at the Meigs
County Boart;I of Elections office.
Qualifications to file a petition
of candidacy include being a registered voter, 18 ye_ars of age or over
by Nov. 2 and a resident of the subdivision in which the opening
occurs. Fifty signatures must be
secured and the filing fee is $10.

fire of protective artUlery. In the original nattte,
on July 19, 1863, Union troops cut off the retreat
of Confederate General John Hunt Morgan.
(Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

Federal

.troops
triu"!ph ...
•
agazn
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Soldiers, dressed in blue and
gray, squared off across the field of
battle. Under cover of protective
artillery fire, Union soldiers
marched in file across the grassy
field toward the Rebel ranks while
Wives and loved ones, wearing
cockades to show support, watched
from the side lines.
Under sporadic fire from Confederate cannons and sharpshooters, the Union ranks halted, fired
two volleys and then, under orders
of their commanding officer.
reloaded and continued their
advance through the smoke-cloud- ·
cd battlefield.
One soldier, dressed in blue, fell
from ranks and a doctor rushed up
to treat him. Another soldier, struck
in the right leg below the knee,
used his bayonet to apply a tourniquet to the shattered hmb. As a
doctor appeared, the wounded
infantryman cried mit, "Don't cut it
off!"
A Civil War account? Perhaps
of the first battle of Bull Run where
curious on-lookers from Washington D.C. and Richmond gathered,
with a picnic-like atmosphere, to
watch the war's ftrSt major engageContinued on page 3

SUPPORTING TROOPS -The notlo 0 of supporting ttie
troops existed before Desert Storm and before people wore yellow
ribbons to show support, they wore red, white and blue cockades.
Here, Jennifer Heidell, left, and Sally Gloeckner of the Iron Hill
Soldiers Aid Society, make cockaoes. Women played an important
part in the Civil War by making blankets or bandages and !Jy running farms and businesses. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Ccnart Street Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOT£D TO THE 111'f'J'ERE8T8 OJ' THE JIEIGS-IIASOI'f AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT .
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OF OPOOON are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls. All !etten .,. subjocl Ill ediling an4 must be oigoed wilb DilDO,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub!iJbod. Letters
obould be in good taste, ~ssing issues, oot personalities.

How will a vote for Clinton's
plan look in '94 elections?
By WALTER R.MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- While Republicans claim to have recaptured taxes
as an issue, President Clinton's Democrats protest- perhaps too much
-that they aren't out to Soak the rich or punish success.
That draws some early lines for the 1994 congressional campaign,
when the Clinton economic program is sure to be a central issue.
. Clinton's advice to House and Senate Democrats nervous about the
impact of their votes for the tax increases in his deficii-curbing budgec
" ... If you go home and look your people in the eye and tell them you
were willing to put your job on the line so they can keep their jobs, !think
they will understand and reward you with re-election."
The political message fits an improving economy, in which more people are keeping jobs or findin)! new ones. Public opinion polls on the plan
Clinton has just signed into law reflect skepticism that it will enhance
economic performance. One year in a five-year program may not be
enough to prove its impact, but the trend in the economy next faiJ will be
credited or blamed on 11 anyhow.
Sen. Bob Dole, the minority leader, said Republicans regained standing as the low tax party by unanimously opposmg the plan, which raises
upper bracket taxes retroactive to Jan. I. That and subsequent spending
curbs are designed to reduce prospective deficits by $496 billion over five
Yea:epublicans, especially on the right, complained that George Bush
gave away his best issue and theirs when he agreed to a tax increase as
part of a 1990 deficit reduction.plan.
Reclaiming it now isn't risk-free. Republicans are also accused of
being the party of the rich. While the polls reflect mixed judgments on
some features of the economic plan, a Washington Post-ABC News ·survey reported 73 percent support for increasing the rate on families with
incomes over $180,000.
Clinron said that fairIy distributes the tax burden on people who got the
biggest breaks under Ronald Reagan.
There also is a practical advantage. It doesn't affect many voters.
"Ninety-nine percent of all West Virginiaps will not pay more in
income taxes," Clinton said at a Charleston rally celebrating passage of
the plan.
Sen. George MitchyU said just before the Senate vote on Aug. 6 that
only 3,800 families in his state of Maine had incomes high enough to be
subject to higher income taxes. " ... If every senator looks at his or her
state, you'Dfind about the same thing," he said.
Clinton said in advance he wasn't trying "to soak the rich or promote
class warfare," but 10 fairly redistribute the tax burden. That was a daily
cam~gn promise, certainly no surprise.
• We don't want to punish success. we want to reward it," he said after
the bill passed Congress on Democratic votes, with none to spare. But he
said fof aU Americans to have a chance to succeed, the deficit has to come
down, and it's only fair that those best able to pay do so.
But the last Democratic senator to sign on, grudgingly, said the sacrifice for deficit reduction should have been more equally divided.
" ... It is not shared sacrifice for us to brag that we are dnty raising
taxes on those who earn over $180,000 a year," said Sen. Bob Kerrey of
Nebraska. "It is political revenge."
Republicans are bearing down now on the retroactivity of the income
tax rate increases, saying they want that repealed. They don't have the
votes 10 do it.
The administration approved the Jan. I effective date, although Clinton
said on Aug. 3 that he'd supported moving it up six months. He said
Congress made it retroactive to offset other changes that were vital 10 getting the votes for passage, and it was better to do that than risk defeat.
Secretary of the Treasury Lloyd M. Bentsen says it's fair the way it is.
"We're not going to change that, in my opinion, because once again, it
affects only 1 percent of the people,'· he said, ''people who have done lhe
best during the '80s . .. .''

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Aug. 16, the 228th day of 1993. 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
Graceland Mansion in Memphis, Tenn. He was 42.
On this date:
In 1777, American forces won an important vic lOry of the Revolutionary War at the Battle of Bennington, Vt.
.
In 1812, Detroit fell10 British and Indian forces in the War of 1812.
In ·l829, the original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, arrived in
Boston aboard the ship Sachem to be exhibited to the Western world.
In 1858, a telegraphed message from Britain's Queen Victoria to President Buchanan was transmitted over ths: recently laid trans-Atlantic ~le.

Berry's World

"I KNOW there are too many people in the
park, but you're just going to have to live with
it until the end of summer."

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel :
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Monday, August 16,1993

Tue!ldlly, Auc. 17

•

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

combat fraud and abuse, according
to government auditors. When 80
pharmacists were anested last year
for Medicaid drug fraud - part of

WASHINGTON - T~.e old
adage that crime doesn't pafis,put
to a severe test by Medicaid frescription-drug fraud. It's one o the
hottest !!CaDIS in which physicians,
pharmacists, patients and (}ther
Medicaid middlemen colllqle to
loot a program intended to serve
the II??! est of the poa.
• Many perpetrators of prescription-drus fraud, even when convicted, P,R&gt;fit financially from their
crimes, ' concludes a recent Gener·
a1 Accounting Office study.
The report states: "Even when
pursued, cases drag on for years half of those we reviewed took
more ihan three years to resolve.
PC!lalties are light: Almost no one
went to prison, and many offenders
retained their connection with the
health-care system - sometimes
even continuing as Medicaid
providers - with consequent
potential for further violations."
Medicaid, the largest government health program for the poor,
has been plagued by problems with
prescription-drug diversion for at
least the past decade . Yet, the
Health and Human Services
Department's Health Care Financing Administration has fail~d to
create any sort of SWAT team to

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
"Operation Golapill" - the FBI
warned it was merely the tip of the
iceberg.
One of the schemes singled out
by governrnent investigators centers on the so-called "pill-mill,"
which entails the prescription and
distribution of drugs mainly to
obtain reimbursement and kickbacks. Patients are often knowing
participants, and allow use of their
Medicaid recipient numbers for
billing purposes iii exchange for
cash, drugs and other inducements.
But there 11re many wrinkles 10 this
fraud.
Texas authorities have discovered Medicaid recipients who paid
physicians cash for prescriptions
they filled at local pharmacies,
They resoU1 the drugs - which can
cost the pharmacy less than 50

cents per pill - on the street for as
much as $85. In California, doctors
were paid by some clinic owners
for the use of their provider numbers, and then paid drivers 10 bring'
in Medicaid enrollees as patients.
Clinics called in prescriptions to
participating pharmacies, which
arranged for the bulk pickup or
delivery of drugs.
Drug diversion is Medicaid's
crime of opportunity, and those
opportunities are multiplying. By
I 996, Medicaid is expected to
spend $10 billion on prescriptiondrug benefits, or nearly double the
1991 figure of $5.5 billion. Part of
the problem is overlapping oversight - five or more state. local
and federal agencies have jurisdiction. These drug rings often keep
law enforcement engaged in a costly and Jabot-intensive cat-andmouse chase.
, There's a brazenness to this
fraud, illustrated by examples
unearthed by federal investi~ators:
a doctor wrote 2,000. prescnptions
a month; a pharmacist billing for
more than 30 l'rescriptions a day
for a single I'CCipient; one recipient
had the same three lab tests five
times in four days at three different
labs and six prescriptions for Zan-

MICH.

30 .SECoHP-THoUGJITS oVER SARA~e:Vo
--

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M3~, :X:

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.t:btfT Kl4o\ll
agour THiS!

0

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•

I Toledols1• I

tac in the same four days at six dif- : '

ferent pharmacies. In sum, )lfedi- ·
caid sheUed out more than $3,000 ·
during an 18-day period for this :
·
recipient
Even in the most egregious :
cases, many of .the guilty get off ·
with a wrist slap. The GAO found :
that the money actually collected in
fraud convictions is often a fraction ·
of what was ordered by the court.
In more than half the cases it examined, restitution was minimal,
amounting 10 $5,000 or less. Wben .
restitution was assessed at $20,000
or more, however, Medicaid recov- .
ered only a small percentage.
"Neither the 111edicaid agency
in its moni10ring role nor the court probation department charged with .
collections was aware that the
(guilty) had stopped making resti- . '
tution payments," the GAO report ·
states ..•'The probation department
had only three officers to cover a
caseload of 5,000." The GAO ·
found in its sample' that among half ~
of those convicted of drug diversion, penalties were consistently
mild and few of those convicted
went to prison . More 'than half
those convicted 'suffered·no license
action, or even probation.
"In addition, the government
has little assurance that individuals ~
or organizations convicted of
fraudulent activities wiD no longer
· be in a position IIi defraud the program," the report continued.
Government auditors found ·
overlap among lists of employees,
owners and directors who are under .
suspicion. The specter of sprawling ·
and sophisticated diversion rings is
perhaps the biggest headache for.
law enforcement ·
"We found that law-enforcement agencies have not followed '
financial trails demonstrating that
individuals billing'Medicaid have
used offshore fund transfers to
malc:e money defrauded from pro- ·
gram operations unrecoverable by
U.S. authoritie s," according to
auditors. As an indication of how ·
far-flung the fraud may be, some of
the illicit profits have been traced .
to the notorious Bank of Credit and
Commerce International, whose
recent collapse was associated with
charges of political corruption and ·
money laundering.
Jack Anderson and Michael ·
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

PA . .

IND.

'

Kennedy," McGinniss, without
interviewing Kennedy, ·has reached
the pinnacle of what a veteran wnter I lcnew called the as-if school of

Nat Hentoff
non-fiction. "It could have happened that way," the old-timer
used to say scornfully, ''so why not
write as if it indeed happened that
way?''

McGinniss himself, in the
"author's note" at the end of his
book, says coolly that he has
"written certain scenes and
described certain events from what
I have inferred to be (Ted
Kennedy's) point of view." And
on Charlie Rose's Public Broadcasting System's interview program, McGinniss added: "This is a
work that tries to perhaps break
new ground in terms of form.''
For instance, "I have quite consciously written portions as from
inside his mind." But there already
is a form in which that is done. It's
called fiction.
The book, however, is being
marketed as non-fiction: "a
detailed, tragic portrait of a man ...
trapped in the glorious but hollow
Kennedy myth, longing - but
unable - to escape." The buyers
of this hoUow portrait will lake it to
be history, for the publisher has not

warned them otherwise. And if the
projected NBC miniseries does
appear, millions more - who get
their history from steamy docudramas- will delightedly believe that
McGinniss did enter into the mind
and suffering soul of Ted Kennedy.
So far, the author has not been
treated kindly by most reviewers
and reporters, and his defense ,
on various television programs and' ·
radio talk shows - is that he !s the/"
victim of "The Kennedy
machine.'' The rebukes and scorn
visited upon him, he says indignantly, are due to an organized
effort by The Family to discredit
the book and thereby preserve the .
Kennedy myth so it can cloalc: the
younger generation of Kennedys
going into politics.
On ABC's "Good Morning,
America," McGinniss urgently
declared: "The American people
should not let the Kennedy family
dictate to them what they should or
should not read." According to his
conspiracy theory, Jonathan Yardley of The Washington Post,
Michiko Kakutani of T~e New
York Times, Larry Martz of
Newsweek and many more slc:ewers
of McGin'niss' book- myself
included - have somehow been
manipulated or intimidated by The
Family.
McGinniss, of course, did not
publish this albatross all by himself. As William Manchester told

In all the millions of words written and spoken about the Great
Budget Showdown of 1993, virtually none has addressed its most
interesting aspect. A majority, if
only the barest Idnd of majority,
was mustered in both houses of
Congress to pass something that
most Americans instinctively disliked and few special interest
groups were actively hacking.
More to the point, the final vote
and tho·long·debate that preceded it
were conducted in the (ull, merciless light of saturation coverage by
the media. This was not a case of
slipping bitter .medicine to the
patient in a sugarcoated pill. Each
and every member of Congress had
to stand up and take {lersonal
responsibility for his'role m a weDunderstood exercise.
It was almost a case of man biting dog. There must be another
time in recent history when something similar occurred in Washington , but I cannot remember it.
While most of the commentary has
pressed the view that the tight votes
augur tough times for several other
controversial Clinton proposals this
fall, it seems to me that the opposite, could be argued with equal

validity. For the (ITS! time in a long
time, all but a relative handful of
Democrats voted down the line in
favor of a hard proposition. Having

Hodding Carter III
done so once, they may discover
that it doesn't hurt as much as they
thought.
Much has been made of another
interesting. sidelight of the budget
(ight; which was that not a single
Republican representative or senator broke ranks. The GOP's party
discipline would have done credit
to a parliamentary government.
But the Republicans' negative
unity was less of a feat than it
might appear. The final form of the
Clinton budget was, if nothing else,
a direct repudiation of the favorthe-rich approach of the ReaganBush years. The tax rate on the
nation's wealthiest 5 percent, the
chief beneficiaries of Reaganomics,
was jumped by up to one-third. To
vote yes on such an approach was
to vote no on the preceding 12
years of Republican rule.
Even if some GOP moderates
had been so inclined, they might

'

have been deterred from breaking
ranks by the vociferous public
opposition. Besides, the budget was
the product of intra-Democratic
Party negotiations from beginning
to end. Not having been invited to
play a meaningful role in the takeoff, Republicans were uninterested
in assisting in the landing. Assuming there was actually a handful
who believed the fmal budget was
acceptable, there was nonetheless
almost no reason for any of them to
rise above partisanship l!fld do the
right thing.
But there was plenty of reason
for Democrats to break ranks, particularly in the House of Representatives, all of whose members face
the voters next year. The fmal compromise was displeasing to almost
every party faction . Its emphasis on
deficit reduction took a page from
the traditional GOP form bonk
rather than the Democratic. While
lower-income voters were targeted
for additional assistance and rich
Americans were soaked, the massvoting middle class was given rea·son to believe it had been betrayed.
The gasoline tax increase of 4.3
c.ents is piddling in reality, but it
~ooms large symbolically when
I

The record-high temperature for
By The Associated Press
Ohio will get a shot of some this date at the Columbus weather
much-needed rain tonight, with station was 96 degrees in 1913
measurements of up to an inch pos- while the record low was 46 in
sible. Then, no more precipitation 1979. SunsetiOnight will be at 8:28
is in sight for the rest of the work p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:45
a.m.
week, forecasters said.
Around tbe nation
Lows tonight will range from
Fog that stretched across the
the mid-60s in the northwest 10 the
Northeast early IOday gave way 10
low 70s in the southeast.
·High piCS$ure building int,o the . some showers, but there was no
Ohio Valley on Tuesday wiD pro- relief .in sight for the heat-beat
vide Ohio with partly sunny slc:ies South.
Rain falling in western Pennsyland dry weather. Highs on Tuesday
vania
early today was expected to
.
will top out mostly in the low to
move
iniO Jlarchlld New England
mid-80s.

by this afternoon. Maine and New
Hampshire could see lhunders10rms
by tonight
Across the southern Plains and
in the Southeast, highs were
expected to reach into the 90s. A
heat advisory was posted for today
over most of Arkansas.
A low pressure system of umi ttled weather was moving through
the Great Lakes region today, with
thunderstorms expected in Iowa
and the lower Ohio Valley.
An interlude of dry weather was
forecast for the upper Midwest
In the Pacific, Hurricane Fer-

Federal... __;:C:..;;o.:;;nt;_in_u_e_d_fr_o_m_p;_a_:g_e_1_ _ _ _ _ __

1

ment?
Hardly.
· Approximately I 30 years after
the Battle of Buffmgton Island at
W. V/(
Portland, Ohio's only Civil War
engagement, about 30 area Civil
War buffs recreated the banle Sat·
urday afternoon in Portland as part
of an observance co-sponsored by
the Meigs County Historical Society and the Me1gs County Park
Ice
Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
District
Approximately 200 people
=1 993 Ac:cu·Weather, In e.
attended the event, the goal of
which.was to increase awareness of
Ohio's only Civil War battlefield,
upper 80s.
the only battle north of the Ohio
.Extended ror~t:
River.
Wednesday through Friday:
On July 19, 1863, a Union force·
Fair through the period. Lows including the 14th Illinois Cavalry
60-65. Hig~s in the 80s.
and Illinois Independent Light

_ _ ___...___Weather----South-Central Ohio .
Tonight, showers and thunderstorms likely. Low in the low 70s.
Chance of rain 60 percent. Tuesday, partly sunny. High in the

----Area deaths----Lillian Turley-Moore

Bertha Thttle

Eastern Star services for Lillian
E. Turley-Moote, 72, of Pomeroy,
who died Fric!ay, Aug. 13, .1993,
will be held Monday at 8:30 p.m.
by the Evangeline Chapter OES at
Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.
Memorial Contributions may be
made to the American Cancer Society, Pomeroy.

. B~rtha Binice Tuttle., 92, Tuppers Plains, died Sunday, Aug. 15,
1993, at Pomeroy Nursing and
·
Rehabilitatin Center.
A housewife and member of the
Tuppers Plains Christian Church, .
she was born in Olive Township to
the late Elmer and Minnie Lea
Osborne Newland.
Survivors include daughters,
Oneita C~tle of Tuppers Plains and
Eleanor Douglas of Coolville; a
daughter and son-in-law, Juanita
and Gerald Guthrie of CoolviUe;
two sons and daughters-in-law.
Bob and Kilte Tuttle of Whitehall
and Bill and Faye Tuttle of ·Faitborn; 18 grandchildren; 34 great·
grandchildren and 11 great-greatgrandchildren.
Also surviving is one sister-inlaw, Phylis Newland ofReedsviUe.
She was preceeded in death by
her husband, Veri Tuttle, in 1977;
two grandchildren; a great-grandson; two brothers; two sisters and
two sons·in-lllw.
Services will be held Thursday
at 1 p.m. at White-Blower Funeral
Home, Cool ville, wifh Michael
Tuttle officiating . .Bunal wiU follow at Tuppers Plains Christian
Cemetery.
Friends may call Wednesday
ft'om 1·3 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Alice S. Nease

Howard Kunz of The Washington
Post, ''I'm really more baffled by
Simon &amp; Schuster than I am by
McGinniss .... Simon &amp; Schuster is
an established house."
The publishing fmn, however, is '
now less established as a trustworthy house. Why were there no P4b·
lie protests - by at least some of
the editors there - that the Simon
&amp; Schuster name had been placed ·
on this consumer fraud?
But the author says that "in '
almost every instance, the quotations and other facts that form the ·
basis of my interpretations have
been drawn from published sources ·
that I believe to be reliable.''
Why, then, are there no notesno piqning down of sources by
name, date, and publication? And
no index. Books of fiction have no
index.
·
..
Erasing the boundary between ~
fact and fantasy, writes Michiko :
Kakutani, ''suggests that there is no knowable reality ... that
verisimilitude is as good as the real ··
thing."
That has become the credo of
Simon &amp; Schuster.
Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the BiU
of Rights.
Nat Hentoff is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

.'

Congress finally takes responsibility

•

·ViB Associated Prns Grap!JcsNet

Imagining a senator's mind and soul
"Some degree of abuse is inseparable from the proper use of
everything," James Madison sai~
as he focused on those who wrote
with more sulfurous imagination
than facts about political figures.
"It is better," he added, "to leave
a few of (free expression's) noxious branches to their luxuriant
growth than, by pruning them
away, to injure the vigor of those
yielding the proper fruits."
The First Amendment largely
shields Joe McGinniss just as it
generally proteets the richly imaginative wnters for the supermarket
tabloids, in one of which an excerpt
from his "The Last Brother: The
Rise and Fall of Teddy Kennedy"
m'ight vividly appear. There may be
a copyright infringement suit from
William Manchester, who cla1ms
McGinniss borrowed extravagantly
from his "The Death of a President," but a claim of defamation
from Sen. Kennedy is most unlikely for it would bring more publicity
to the booli:.
McGinniss' problems, however,
have far less to do with legal costs
than the price of greatly diminished
credibility. Lawyers talk of making
a damaged client whole, but
McGinniss is like Humpty Dumpty
after the faU.
In his attempt to - in his words
- "convey to the reader what it
might have been like to be Teddy

• IColumbusIsa• I

84°

viewed against the background of
cand1date Chnton's promise of a
middle-class tax cut.
.j
A~d yet, for a variety o( reasons : :
ran~mg from conviction to log- . ;
rolhng, 50 Democratic senators
voted yes for more austerity than
the party has ever before endorsed
in this century while in power. So
did 218 Democrats in the House of · ,
Representatives. It was barely 1
enou~h i~ each instance, but it was : l
a. sohd ~ctory made more imprcs- . i
s1ve by us content. A president 1
elected with only 43 pereent of the :
electoral vote persuaded a working · !
majority of his party to endorse · '
pain, rather than the pleasure of a
tax .cut or major stimulus package. . •
Pain for pain's sake 1s not the :
point, obv~ously. The budget vote - :
IS the opemng act, not the final cur- .. 1
tain, in the process of fiscal recov- ;
ery.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, edi·
tor and publisher, is president or
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.based television production company.
·

,.

Clayton M. Rasp
Clayton M. Rasp, 60, of Fostoria, died Sunday, Aug. 15, 1993 at
Northwest Ohio Hospice Inpatient
Unit in Sylvania.
He was born on Aug. 4, 1933 in
Syracu~ 10 the late John W. Rasp
and Marguerite (Spencer) Rasp,
who survives.
.
A U.S. Army veteran, he was 'a
a former owner of Aces Body Shop
in Fostoria and manager of Tiffin
l'ord Body Shop since 1986. He
was also a member of Hope
Lutheran Church, the Disabled
American Veterans chapter in
Findlay, the Findlay Eagles, the
Fostoria Arnvets and the American
Legion post in Fos10ria.
He was also preceded in death
by one brother.
Other survivors include his
wife, Lenora J. (Prowant) Rasp,
whom he married on June 28, 1952
in Fostoria; two sons (Michael J.
Rasp of Fostoria and John W. Rasp
of Fort SiU, Okla), three daughters
(Mrs. Susan Peck of Fremont. Mrs.
Patricia Sherman of Helena and
Mrs. Jarla Ney of Fostoria),ll
grandc!lildren and.five sisters .(Mrs.
Elva Burdette, Jean Frankhart and
Mrs. Sharon Filer, all of Fostoria,
Mrs. Judy Harbor of Port Clinton
. and Mrs. Nette Lupercio of Murphytown, Ill.).
The funeral will be Wednesday
at 11 a.m . at Mann.Hare Funeral
Home's Fostoria chapel. The Rev.
Roy HoweU wiU officiate. Burial
will be at the Memory Gardens in
Arcadia, where the Fostoria American Legion will conduct military
graveside rites.
Friends may call the funeral
home Tuesday from 2 to 5 p.m. and
. from 7 to 9 p.m.
Memorials may be made to the
Northwest Ohio Hospice Inpatient
Unit, 5100 Harroun Rd., Sylvania,
Ohio43560.

'Artillery, the 5th Indiana Cavalry,
Kentucky 1st, 3rd, 8th, lith and
12th cavalries, Ohio 2nd and 7th
cavalries, 45th Ohio Volunteer
Infantry, Ohio Militia, and the 2nd
Mounted Tennesee Infantry along
with Federal gunboats, met' Confederate General John Hunt Morgan's force of approximately 2,400
mounted infantrymen near Portland
and cut off Morgan's planned
escape across the Ohio River into
Virginia (now West Virginia).
Morgan was ·captured soon after
the engagement.
.
Civil War rc-enactors, using
reproduction rifl es and uniforms
)lased on the genuine article, go ro
great lengths to accurately portray
soldiers of lhe ern. Women re-enactors wear clothing based on clothing worn during the Civil War.
Most, but not all, re-enactment
soldiers are men. However, now, as
in then, women still play an important role in maintaining the authenticity of lhe evenIS.
During the Civil War, women
made and wore red, white and blue
cockades to show their suppon for
the troops. Beyond that, they made
blankets and other items, sent food,
and ran farms and businesses until
"Johnny" came marching home.
In Saturday's 'battle,' soldiers
on both sides fought under cover of
protective artillery,
One artillery man, a crewmember on a reproduction Parrot rifled
cannon, explained that most battlefield casualties were caused by
cannon fire and that artillery crew
members were popular targets with
sharpshooters.
Cannons generally fired three
types of shot: the traditional cannonball; canister shot, resembling
giant shotgun shells which caused
great damage at close range; .and
case shot, fused shells designed to
explode, throwing shrapnel amidst
enemy troops.
Because artiUerymen were such
popular targets with sharpshooters,
crewmembers were trained to operate their cannon without assistance
in the event all other crewmembers
were unable to fight. ·
In Saturday's re-enactment, as
in the original battle, Union soldiers ruled supreme, driving the
gray-coated rebels off the battlefield.

Alice S. Nease, 84, of Pomeroy;
died Saturday, Aug. 14, 1993, at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Columbus.
.
A retired music teacher cor sev·
era! school districts including Point
Pleasant, Wahatna, Pomeroy, Ea$tern and Meigs, she was born April
12,1909, in Hartford, W.Va., to the
late Horace and ·Florence Higbee
Smith.
A graduate of Denison Universi·
ty, she was a member of the Kappa
Alpha Theta so~ty and the ~hio
Education Association. In addibon,
she was a ·member of the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy where she
served as choir director for 40
years.
.
She is survived by a husband,
Paul "Doug" Nease, and a son and
daughter-in-law, Richatd and Joan
Nease of Antioch, Tenn.
She was preceded in death by a
brother, Horac;c Smith Jr., and sis- Glenn 1\frner
ters, Margaret Haidet and May
William Glenn Turner, 87, HerStoUatis.
Services will be held Wednes- itage Comnions, Athens, died Sat·
A shotgun and some ammuniday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funer!Jl urday, Aug. 14, 1993, at his resition
taken from J.&amp;R. Sports Shop
Home with the Rev. Roland Wild- 'dence after an extended illness.
has
been recovered, Pomeroy
Born in Harrisonville on Jan.
man officiating. Burial will folldw
reported this morning.
Police
in New Lone Oak Cemetery in . 20, I906, he .was the son of the late
Two other shotgun s are still
Delben M. and Cora HuU Turner.
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
missing along with a Kawasaki
Friends may call Tuesday from He was a farmer and a membel' of
motorcycle. Two of the motorcy2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the filneral the byesviUe Community Church.
cles were recovered last week. The
He is survived by his wife of 65
home:. In lieu of flowers, memorial
breaking and entering remains
years,
Helen Caster Turner; one
contributions can be made to the
under
investigation.
son, Carl D. Turner, a daughter,
Tripity Church Choir.
"
Virginia M. Coleman, and two
grandchildren, Srephen Glenn Grissett and Stephanie Renee Coleman,
all of Albany; four brothers,
The following divorces were L. Laudermilt from Orland J. LaudQuarter horse races at the !30th Thomas Turner of Middleport, filed recently in the Meigs County ermilt, both of Pomeroy.
Turner of Somerset, War' A divorce was granted Monday
Meigs County Fair will be held Kenneth
ren G. Turner of Columbus, and . Common Pleas Court of Judge to Mark A. Salser from Christy A.
Saturday at 2 p.m. instead of 4 p.m. Frank Turner of Albany; two sis- Fred W. CrOw III.
Filing were: Heather A. Hartley Salser whose I&lt;\St name was
as was earlier announced.
ters, Hazel Slater of Millersport, from Floyd A. Hartley, both of restored to her maiden name of
and Alice Phillips of Columbus.
Jobn P. Pickens III from Koenig.
Besides his parents, he was pre- Rutland;
In addition, a dissolution was
Kathy L. Pickens, both of Portland;
ceded in death by five brothers, James Bing, Middleport, from granted Monday to Patricia J. HalVeterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - Gladys Wayne, Robert, Henry, Joe and Rebecca Jane Bing, Racine; Lu ley and Ernest E. Halley. Patricia J.
Ralph Turner; three sisters, Villa Ann Robinson from Danny Wayne Halley's last name was restored to
Shields, Racine.
Saturday discharges - Frances Swearinge,n, Mabel Gibson, and Robinson, both of Middleport; Leta her maiden name of Robinson.
Anna Kindell , and a. son-in-law,
Davidson, Rutland.
Neal
Grissett.
Sunday admissions- None.
·
Funeral
services will be held
Sunday discharges - Charles
Lemley, Pomeroy, and Vera Bee- Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the BigonyJordan Funeral, Albany. 1)e Rev.
One of two men allegedly his tenn for aggravated robbery.
gle, Racine.
Joe Sayre will officiate and burial involved in the June robbery of the
Rose faces additional felony
wiU be in the School Lot Cemetery. By the Way Grocery in Langsville counts in Jackson County to where
The Daily Sentinel
' Friends may call at the funeral will serve at least nine years con- he and his co-defendant, Randall S.
home 6 to 9 p.m. Monday, and any- flnement for his involvement in the Neil, Columbus, allegedly fled
(IJSPSZI3-HI)
after the robbery. Neil faces aggratime Tuesday prior to services. ser- crime.
Publiahed evr.ry lftetloon, Monday lhrouah .
Friday, U 1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by tbe
vices. In lieu of flow~rs. contribuJohn Alfred Rose III, 19 , vated robbery charge s in Meigs
Ohio Vllloy l'llbllohla1 Compuy/Multimodia
tions may be made to the Athens Columbus, pleaded guilty to a County.
ID&lt;., Pomoroy, Ohio 45769, Ph·.' 992-2156.
Area HOSjliCe, P. 0. Box 873, charge of aggravated robbery with
Crow said Rose's sentence was
Socoad W. po1t1p paid It Pomeroy, Ohio.
Athens, Ohio 45701.
firearm specifications recently in based on the recommendation of
Memba': The Allocilted Preu, IDd the Oh.Jo
'the Meigs County Common Pleas Prosecuting Attorney John R.
N..,,_ AModllioo. Nalioaal Ad~oa
Meigs
announcements
Court of Judge Fred w. Crow III.
Lentes. Rose is scheduled to testify
Reprcaealltin, Branham Newtpip« Sale.,
733 Thlrd AvCuue. New York. New Yat
Aggravated
robbery
is
a
felony
against
Neil as part of the plea
10017.
of the first degree. Rose must serve agreement. If he fails to do so, the
Eastern local ootice
FOS1MA$11!R: Sood addrOII dwl... ID The
All classes in the Eastern Local a mandatory tliree'-year term for the plea agreement can be nullified,
Doily S.olioel, Ill Court SL, Fo_.y, Ohio
School Distri~t will begin TuC$day, firearm specificatiof! before serving . Crow said.
1 45769.
Aug. 24. Buses will observe the
SUISCiliPI10N RATES
same
schedules as last year. All
If C...t• or Mob' • • •
One Week. ..... .......... ,.. ,........... .. ,... :..... ,,.... .$1.60
new students in grades 7-12 should
Ooe Monlb.. ........... ...... ............... :....... ..•...$6.95
register this week between the
0no v............................................ _ .. snw
SINGLEOOPY
hours of 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. New
NICE
elementary
students should register
Dally ......... ................. ................- 3 S Ceoll
at their schools on August 23 from
Sublcriben aot deliria&amp; ta pay lbe Cll'l'ier may
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. There will
remil ia tdvuoe direct to The Dally SeatiDel
be
no new student registration on
011 three, ail or 12 moclh billa. Credit will be
pvoa Cllrict elldlweet.
Aug. 24 . New students rilay also
register Aug. 25. All high school
No OlbiOriptiODI by mall ponnittod iD •ou
where home carrier 11«\'k:e lan"aillble.
schedule chan11es will be made
be(ore this Fnday between the
'
MollS._...._
loaldoM. . C..,.
lab 112....., Dalve
of 8:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.
hours
11 w-......................... ,..................... .521.14
High school students will he unable
26 w.ea ................................................$43.16
.
Pl. Plt11nt, WI.
52 ......................... ,.::.. ............... .. .$84.76
to malc:e schedule changes the firSt
' OoololdoM&lt;Ip«:-ly
,
11J4.171.12441ar Appl. arlnlarmatiaa
week of school. Marching band
t l -............................... .......... ...... ..$2MO
:ze
$45.50
practice will begin Aug. 24 at 3:30
Me-.r of Att•a PPO &amp; FHtral Motul PPO
.5 2 -..................... .....,....... .......$88:40
p.m. .
•
. .

·Races 2 p.m.

Probe incident

Divorces and dissolutions

Saturday

Hospital news

Rose pleads to aggravated robbery

Co•plete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

w-..... ...... . . . . . . . .
;,.

The Dally 5entlnei-Page--3

, Sections of Ohio to get soaking tonight ·

OHIO Weat her

Rampant Medicaid fraud costs U.S. millions

'

'•

..

Pomen;~y-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 16, 1993

John A. ade, .D.
c-..

nanda continued 10 head for the big
island of Hawaii , Moving west·
northwest at about 1~ mph, the
storm had sustained w.nds of 105
mph and gusts up 10 120 mph.
Temperatures in much of the
nation's midsection were to be in
the 90s. with highs in the 80s
across the upper Midwest, Ohio
and Pennsylvania. Wet weather
was to bring temperatures in the
70s in most of New England, with
hi ghs in the 80s over most of
Maine.
The high temperature for the
was 109 degrees
nation
recorded at
Ariz.

TROTTER W~TH TRAINER· Pomeroy'~ April Clark has
been a traine~ for six years at the Rock Springs J,1airgrounds. Here
sh.e puses with -two year old trotter, J, H. Final, who will race
Thursday at the Meigs County Fair, The trotter is owned by Harry
Hanshaw.

Couples receive
marriage licenses , EMS responds

to 12 calls

Seven marriage licenses were
recently issued in the Meigs County Probate Coun of Judge Robert
Buck.
Receiving licenses were.:
Michael Heath Richmond, 21, and
Paula Renee Lane, 25, both of Middlepon; Jeffrey David Otworth, 25,
and Shelley Kay Black, 20, both of
Middleport; Ronald Lyn Skeen, 28,
Kenna, W.Va., and Victoria Sue
Morrison, 18, Ravenswood, W.Va.;
Barry Wayne O'Brien, 27, and
Nola Christine Young, 34, both of
Racine;

·

•

Peter Kyle Brickles, 22, and ·
Melanie Lynn Mankin, 23, both of
Summerville, S.C.; Jeffrey Andrew
Reitmire, 27, and Carrie Rae Dent,
27, both of Pomeroy;...! ohn Michael
Bush Sr., 40, Mason, W.Va., and
Judy Ji ~nell Carte, 48: Middleport.

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
August 13 discharges - Shawn
Gaffney, Emil Eynon, Stephanie
Hollingshead, Doris Fisher, Patricia Fraley, Loretta Adkins, Jane
Hanson and Regina Justice.
August 13 births • Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Merry, son, Gallipolis.
August 14 discharges Michael Stanley, Richat(l Bowman,
John Barlow, Ruth Hill, Alice
Tracker, Sharon Bartolome, Mrs.
Carlos Stanley and son, Mrs. Cannon Lively and daughter, Mrs.
Thomas Turner and· daughter,
Brian Keller, Mrs. Robert Merry
and son, Cleo Chevalier, Arleda
Simspon and Mrs. B,rian Adkins
and daughter.
August 14 births - Mr. and
Mrs. Holley, son, Kerr.
August 15 discharges • Joseph
Spires, Cordelia Jones, Alexandre
Yates, Anna Kerwood, Susan Baxter and Vanessa Dyke.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here arc
Saturday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Super Lotto
8-9- I 8-31 -35-44
(eight, nine, eighteen , thirtyone, thirty-five, fony-four)
The jackpot is $8 million .
Kicker
8-4-2-9-9-7
(eight, four, two, nine, nine,
seven)
Pick 3 Numbers
4-5-2
(four, five, two)
Pick 4 Numbers
6-2-9-7

I

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 12 calls for assistance
during lhe weekend. Units responding include:
.Saturday - 6:49 a.m. Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department and
Squad to Salem Street for an electrical fire at the Ray Willford resi ·
dence, no injuries were report; 7:34
p.m. Middleport to Page Street for
James Spencer who was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
11:51 a.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy
Cliffs Apartments for Kathryn
Smith who was transported to
Holzer Medical Center; 1:01 p.m:
Middleport to Village Manor
Apartments for Fern Smith who
was treated at the scene; 11:37 p.m.
Rutland to Langsville for Norman
Matson who was transported to
VMH.
.
Sunday- 11:31 a.m. Racine to
Bashan Road for Jill Holter who
was ttansported to Camden-Clark:
4:25p.m. Middleport to Middleport
Police Department for Barry Nelson who was transported to VMH;
6:56 p.m. Rutland to Salem Street
for Meryl Davis who was transported to VMH; 10:28 p.m. Rut- ·
land to State Route 160 for Dennis
Robinette who was transponed to
HMC; II :26 p.m. Syracuse to
Welchtown Hill for Cindy Litchfield and James Litchfield who
were transported to VMH; I 1:42
p.m. Pomeroy to Welchtown Hill
for Wendy Crautter who was transported to VMH.
Monday - 2:57 a.m. Syracuse
to Welchtown Hill for Margaret
Rose who was transported to
VMH.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
44&amp; •4524

"''' l'., ..."'!""S1 '

'
F&gt;OJ 'I

7

•t.f!GAIN MATINIIS SAT. a SUN.
I.MCiA.. MGHT T\IISOAY

Closing Sale
•Paper Backs 50¢
•Hard Backs 1/2 price
•Old Harlequins 10¢ each
•Readers Digest FREE!
Stop by before they're gone!

The Book Barn
Mon.-Sat. lO:oo-a:oo
Sale now through Sept. 10

�...
•

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

.

Monda~Auguat16,1993

•

In the AL, ·

Monda~AugUit16,1993

In the NL,

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -The
Atlanta Braves have won a seasonhigh seven straight games, but
remain 7 1/2 back in the NL West.
Discouraging? Not to the
defending champions, who are

heading into the last seven weeks
of the season playing champ ionship-caliber baseball.
The Braves beat the plummeting
Cincinn.ati Reds 1-0 Sunday ni~ht
to sweep a six-game road trip.
Their longest winning streak of the

COLLISION TIME comes for Atlanta's Terry Pendleton (left)
and Cincinnati shortstop Willie Greene at second base after a pick·
orr attempt by catcher Joe Oliver In the fourth inning of Sunday
night's National Lea~ue game in .Cincinnati, where the Braves won
1-0. Pendleton made 1t back to second safely. (AP)

season only earned them a couple
of games in the standings, but it did
alot for their outlook.
"It's not hard to keep your head
up when you're playing sa well,"
David Justice said.
They ' ve done everything but
make a charge· at first-place San
Francisco. But If they keep ~laying
this well, they' ll have a cluince of
doing that, too.
"It was a great road trip," said
Greg Maddux (14-9), who pitched
a four-hit shutout Sunday: "It was
excellent for u.s. We picked up·
some ground. We've got to keep
battling. There's a lot of games
left"
.
' ' When you start winning games
like this, you !mow you're playing
pretty good," Mark Lemke said.
'You ltnow you're a good allaround club.''
They've done it all during the
streak, winning with impressive
offense, defense and pitching.
Atlanta outscored Cincinnati 192 during the three-game sweep,
holding the Reds to a total of eight
hilS. They had a combined one-hit
shutout Friday in a 14-0 drubbing
that was the Reds' worst. in 15
years. Maddux polished it off by
• out-pitching the Reds' ace, Jose
Rijo, for his rll'St shutout since last
Sept 20.
"It's always nice to get a
shutout," said Maddux, who had
four last year during his Cy Young
Award season .for the Chicago
Cubs. "You only get one or two a
year. A shutout is hard to come by.
You've got to get lucky to get
one.''
Not against the Reds. They've
been shut out iii three of their last
four games and have lost a seasonhigh six straight to fall 21 ~ames
out of first place, their b1ggest
deficit since 1984.
A measure of the offensive ineptitude: Rijo (10-7) has given up just
five earned runs in seven starts
since the All-Star game, but is just
5-2. The Reds wasted one of his
best performances of the season
Sunday - a season-high
II strikeouts in seven innings,
raising his NL-Ieading total to 174.
"I had everything today: good

Scoreboard
~

Tcua (Brown 9-1) at.New Y~ (K.oj

• Baseball • -

14-4), 7:30p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EuttmDI•Woa

T..,.
W L
Philadeljlhia ...........75 43
St. ~ ................ 66 52
MontNal ................ 62 S6
Chicoao. ................." 59
Pil"""'l)l ..............56 ~
Florida ................. .51 67
New YID ..............40 TJ

PeL
.636
.5S9
.525
.496
.471
.432
.342

GB
9
13
16.5
19.5

1A
34.5

Wl!dern Dlwlllon
San .......... ........79 39 .669
Atl&amp;nLI ...................72 47

.60S

7~

-

.517

18
19.5
21
33.5
36

.................61
Loo Anaolco .......... .59
C!NcrnNATI. .......59
San Diego .............. 4&lt;1
Colonda ................ 43

57
51
61
73
1l

.so.·

.492
.387
.364

BIIWnon (5utcli£fe 9-1) at SNtlle
(Ficmina7-2). to~ p.m.
Milwulk.cc (Navoa 0-1) at Oakland
(V.. Poppcl:t-3),10,0S p.m.
DcwiJ. (GWli.ctlan t--6) at California
(Hachaway 4-1}, JO:OS p.m.

Tuesday's games
(P=z~lO), 7':!0pro.

Chicago (McDowell 18·7) at lloolon
(Sele 1·6), Hl p.m.
~u Cit)l (Haney 7-S) u Minne101a
(Deah&amp;~e~ 11-10).1:0:5 p.m.

Griffey Ir., Sutlle, 31; Bolio, CLEVELAND, 32: Thomaa, Chic:aao, 31 ;
Pabn.Uv, TCIUII, 30; F'Wdm-. Dalnil, 28;

lAND (Kramer S-2), 7,QS p.m.
Tcau (Roaen 10-7)

Baltimore (Valenzu.cla 6-7) at Scat&amp;le

Milwaukee (Navuro 7· 1) at OUJ.and
(Xmoy ~J.

BATilNG: Gwyrut, San Dicao• .:358;
Jerforiot , St. Louis, .342; Bondi, San

Allanle 4, ~A112
S.. LaW 2. MonUMI 0
HCWlDII 9, ColoradoO
Loo Anaeleo 4, San Diogo 3

Fnnoioco, .338: Mon:od, Piasbu'Jh. .337:
KNI, Philadclphio, .337; Rob Thompoon.
San Franc:iac:o, .331 ; Gruc , Chicaao,
.320.
RUNS : Dykltra, Philadelphia, 107;
Bond•. San Fnncilco, 97; Gutt, Atlanta,

Sunday's scores
Mmtreal 7, SL Lam 1
Philadelphia 5, New Yod 4
Pi..bwp •• Florida 3 (11 inn.)
s .. Fnilciaoo9,
7 (11 Urn.)
Colondo 4,1bston l
Loo .....- 4, San Oiogo l

11: Kr..k, Plillodelphio, 77: Gilby, S&lt;.

au....,

AllanU l, ClNCINNATIO

Tonight's game
1-l ) 1l

CINCINNATI (Lucbb&lt;n 2-2), US p.m.

Tuesday's games
Montreal (Martinez 1~7 and undecided) •t OUc.ao (Ouzman 10.7 •nd Hukcy

8-6), 2, 1~p.m.

San Francl.co (Burll:eu 18-4)

1t

Pin•·

......, (Coob 6-7), 7,35 p.m.
New York (Gooden 11 -12) at

CINCINNATI (Ayala 4-!5), 7:35 e:_m.
Loa An&amp;clol (R. Mll1inez 11-1) at At·
lanta (Smoltz 11-9),7:40p.m.
Florida (Rapp 1-3) al Houston (K.ilc
12-4), II:OS p.m.
S.~ Dicao (Bent~ 13-8) at SL Louis
1
(Cormier l-6).1,3S p.m.
Philadelphia (Riven 10-6) u Colorado
(Reynooo 1·8), 9,0S p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulrm IM'Ldon
W L
Pet.

New York ..............68 51
Torom.o ..................68 51
Ba~ton ....... ............. 64

.57 1
. ~.n

Baltirnon: ...............63 SS
DouoiL ...................60 60

.534

Milwaukoe .............48

.470
.410

(IJ

GB

.511

53

CLEVE!J\ND .......ss 62

,lO()

3
4.5
i .l
12
\9

Weslern Dl'lllon

Chicago. .. .. ............. 64
Xmau City ........... 61
Tc•u ..................... 60
Sc.attlc .................... !57
Califomia ............... S4
... """" ......52
Ooklond
.........47

53
57
57

.S47
.517
.513

3.5
4

60

.487

7

.466
.452
.409

9.S
11
16

Saturday's srores
Minneaott. 5, Oakland I , 12

......

~~~. 76; D. Hollins, Philadalphla, 76;
Btggao, HOUflOn, 76; Blluacr, Atfanta, 76.
-RBl : Bonds, San Funciaco, 90:
DaullOn, Philadelphia, 11; Man Williima,
San frlnCiaco, g"J; Justice, Atlanl.l, 81 ;
Oant, Adanu., 81; Bagwell, HOUlton, 76;
Alou, MontJC&amp;J., 7.5; frl11m1y, New Ymk,
75.
HITS : Gwynn, San Dicao. 152; I. Bell,
Pi_~~~bu~. 147; Bagwcll, HOUJI.on, 142;
Kina. Pi1ubur&amp;}l, 139 ; Grace, Ch.ic•flo,
139: D~btn, ~delphia, 131; Jcffenea,
Sll.ouia,ll6: Buller, to. Anaclcl. 136. .
DOUBLES : Bichctte, Colorado, 36;
Dyknn , Phil1dclphia, 34; Owynn, San·
Diego, 34; Biagio, Hou11on, 32; Grace,
C~icaao. 30; _
B •awell.• Houato~ , 29;
Gilkey, St. Louia, 29; Zc::ile, SL Louis, 29;
H•ya, Colorado. 29: I. Bell. Piwbw-gh,

29.

Coleman, New Ycwk, 8: E. Youna. Colorado, 7; Cutilla, Colorado, 7; Finley,
HoultOn, 7; 6 are lied with -6.
HOME RUNS: Benda, San fr&amp;ncisco.
36; Gtn~ Atlanta, 30; JUJtice, Atlanu, 29;
Sou, Chiago, Il ; Man Willi1ma, San
Fn.ncisco, 27; BoniU1, New York, 26;
McGriff, All1nL1, 26.
STOLEN BASES : Colem1n, New
Yon, 31; D . Lewis, San Fr-nciaco, 36;
Jeffcri~:~, SL I..ouia, 36: Carr, Flodda, 3S;
DeShicldl, Monllel.l, 34; E. Yeung. Col·
orado, 30; Oriuom, Montreal, 29; Dyk·
1tx1, Philadelphia, 29; E. O.via, Lm An·

...... 29.
PITCHING (13 deeiaion,): Burk.en,

S1n Fran c is c o, 11-4, . 8111 , 3.09; T.
Greene, Philadelphia, 12· 3, .100, 3.,!5;
Olavine, Atlanui, 14-4, .711, 3.07; Swift,
San Francisco, 17-S, .773, 2.72; Ave.)l,
Atb.nu , 13-4, .765, 2.89: Kile.. HOUltOn,

iMina•

.733, 2.96.

STRIKEOliTS, Rijo, CINCINNATI ,
174; Smohz, AUanta, 156; Bene~ , San
Dieao, 144; G. Maddu., Athntt., 144;
Hami1ch, Houuon, 142: Gooden, Now
Yodt, 127: Guzman, Chi"'O, 11lfi.
SAVES : Lee Smith, St . Louis, 40;
Bock, San FrmKilw. 36; Harvey, Floridl,
36; Mycn, Chicaso, 3S; Mitdl Wi.J.lianu;,
Philadelphia, 32; St.nton, Atlant. , 'XI;
W....W.d, MonuW, 25.

(11&lt; 1..,.): Minnoo&lt;XI 6, OoltUnd 2 (1nd
)

0U..J04,Kan.uCily 1
a.EVELAND I , TowS
Detmit 5, Mihnukoe 1
Suulc 7, Calilomia 2

Sunday's scores
Torcnto9,BOilon 1

New Yodl: t. BalWnCieO

Tuu 4, CLEVELAND I

Milwaukee 6,Dctroit4

ALleaders
BAITING: Olcrud, Toronto, .390:
Molitor, Torcn\0, .324; Gonzale:, Tu11,
.322; Thomu, Chic•ao, .320; Huper,
Minnct:OUI , .320; R. Alomu, Toronto,
.319: llamilion, Milwoukoe, .317.
RUNS : Molitor, Toronto, 94 ;
Palrnein:l, Tou., 91; White. Turonto, 91 ;
Loil&lt;&gt;n, CLEVElAND, 16: Griffey Jr.,
Seaulc, 84: R. Alomar, Toronto 14·
Pl\i!lipl, Odrcit, 14; R.Hendcnon, T~
to, &amp;4.

tcu.a~ci'r 7,C~Dc:~ 1os
Colifomio 4, Sooalo2
Minne~GL~l2, Olkl&amp;nd

s

TonJabt's games
Toronto (Guuna.n 1-3) a t CLEVELAND (Ojodo 1).0), 7~ pm.

I

.

TRIPLES : Butler, Loa Angeles, 9;

12-1 •.750, 3.ll: Porw111. u..._ 11-4,

62
63
68

Tomno !5, BOlton 2
New York ... Baltimore 2

!O:OS p.m.

NLieadtn

Now Yodt 9, Plliladolohill

Florido •• Piltobuqh j

Tum

New York

(Bmio S-7), 10:05 p.m.

au.... 3, s.. Fnoncioco 2

New York (Fernandez

11

•

RBI: Thorn••· ChiOIJO, 91: Fielder,
Detroil, 97; BeUe, CLEVELAND 96·
O!aud, T""""o. 19: c,_, T.....0 19:
Baerga, CLBVBLAND, 17; Gon~lU:

Tau, S7.
HITS , Oienod, TOIU\10. 160; Molihlr
Toronto, ISO; MeRle. K&amp;nlu City, 143:

Avenue beyond the left-field
bleachers.
• He;, wasn ' t at all bothered that
Bonds retained his nine-homer
lead.
"I hope Barry hits 60," ·
Williams said. "If he does, then we
have a pretty good chance of winning this thing."
Kevin Rogers (1-2) pitched two
innings for his first major league
victory.
In other games, Atlanta beat
Cincinnati 1-0, Colorado beat
Housrori 4-3, Los Angeles beat Sari
· Diego 4-2, Philadelphia beat New
York 5-4, Montreal beat St. Louis
7-1 and Pittsburgh beat Florida 4-3
in 11 innings.
Willie McGee's third home run,
a drive off Jose Bautista, put San
Francisco ahead 7-6 in th e ninth .
Grace, who had four hits, tied the
score in the bottom half with an
RBI double off Rod Beck , who
blew a save for the fourth time in
40 chances.
Rockies 4, Aslros 3
Shortstop Andujar Cedeno misplayed Vinny Castilla's grounder in
the ninth, .allowing the go-ahead
run as visiting Colorado won for
the seventh time in eight games.
Doug Drabek, 0-6 in eight .starts
since July 4, took a 3-1 lead into
the eighth , but Chris Jones and
Dante Bichette hi t RBI doubles.
Bruce Ruffin (4-4) pitched a
perfect eighth and Darren Holmes
got three outs in the ninth for hi s
14th save. Xavier Hernandez (3-3)
was the loser.
Dodgers 4, Padres 2
Tim Wallach, given a reprieve
when rookie first baseman Guillermo Velasquez failed to cat~h his
foul popup in the sixth, hit a solo
homer and Cory Snyde~singled in
two runs at Dodger Stadium.
'Pedro Astacio (9-7) allowed one
run and five hits in five-plu s
innings, and Jim Gott finished for
his 32nd save.
Andy Ashby (1-7) gave up four
runs and nin·e hits in six innings.
Phillies S, Mels 4
Kim Batiste singled home Wcs
Chamberlain with two outs in the
eighth as the Phillies rallied from a
4-0 deficit to win for the fifth time
in six games.
John Kruk's two-run homer off
Eric Hillman closed the Phillies to
4-3 in the eighth at Veterans Stadiurn. Anthony .Young (1-15)
allowed Darren Daulton's double
and singles to Chamberlain and

B1U.imore, 27: Palmti.ro, Teua, 27:
o-we~~. lloolat, 'll.

TRIPLES: L. Johruon, Chica1o, 11;
Huln, Teu1, 10; Con, Chic110, 9;
Lotion, CLEVELAND, S; C•ylor, Dotrait, 7; McRae, IUnau City, 7; T. Fernando&lt;, T...,.to. 7.

Toronto (Morris 6-11) tt CLEVE·

Detroit (DeSilva 0 -0) 11 California
(FIJ'I'eJ.I2- l0), IO:OS p.m. "

Saturday's scores

.!JMrp. CLHVin.AND, J43; R. Alomu,
Toronto, 143; Lof\on, CLEVELAND,
137; Orili'O)' Jr., 134.
DOUBLES : 01oNd, Toronco, 44;
Whilo. T&lt;n1110, ~ Jo,..,, Konou Cily,
29; O' Neill, Now Yall&lt;, 21; Pudlca, Min- l i : C - . T.......,,21;-.

slider. eood fastball, ,~~;oo d attitude," Rijo said. " That was the
best stuff I've had all year."
He made just one bad pitch, and
it made the difference.
Deion Sanders tripled with two
out in the third, a liner into the gap
in right-center field thai Kevin
Mitchell couldn't r.un do)"n. The
ball sailed over the left fielder's
glove and bounced off the wall.
Jeff Blauser , one of Rijo' s
toughest ou ts (11 -for -32 lifetime),
hit a hanging slider up the middle
for a run-scoring single.
Enough for Maddu x. He
allowed only three runners 10 reach
second, struck out six and walked
two.
·
·
Maddux said he was still
inspire&lt;\ by a 4-2 victory Saturday
night- a combined three-hitter that let-the Braves gain a game on
the Giants.
"You wake up in the morning a
little happier. You're a little more
excited to come to the park because
you're a little closer," he said.
The Reds just keep sinking.
They've scored just three runs ori
13 hits in their last five games with
a patchwork lineup.
"I feel for the whole
club, "manager Davey Jqhn son
said. "We're sll1iggling and we've
run into some tough pitching. The
last five days have been awful."
G1an1S 9, Cubs 7
For Barry Bond s and Matt
Williams, it was little bit lik e
"Anything You Can Do I Can Do
Bcncr,'' lines from an Irving Berlin
musical.
. Bonds and Williams hit consecutive home runs in the thirdinning
against the Chicago Cubs on Sunday. That wasn't enough, so they
did it again in the 11th inning, leading the .San Francisco Giants over
the Chicago Cubs 9-7.
"It was a good game , exciting,"
Bonds said. "Too bad there
weren't a lot of people around to
see it."
The start of the game was
delayed by rain for 44 minutes.
There was a I :27 delay in the
eighth.
"I didn ' t think we'd play ,"
Giants manager Dusty Baker said.
·''Our dugout was flooded with
water. But their ground crew did an
outstanding job."
With the score tied at 7. Bonds
homered off Randy Myers (2-4)
with one out in the lith. WiUiams
followed with his 27th home run, a
drive that landed on Waveland

Batiste.
David West (5-3) pitched a
scoreless eigh th, and Mitch
William s. finished for his 32nd
save.
Expos 7, Cardinals 1
Center fielder Moises Alou
threw out Ozzie Smith at home
plate to end the fourth and Brian
Jordan to .end the fifth at Olympic
Stadium . John VanderWal and
Larry Walker dr ove in two run s
each in a five-run fifth.
Gil Heredia (2-2) allowed one
run and eight hi ts over 5 1/3
innings in his fust start since June
7. Rene Arocha (10-4) gave up five
runs and seven hits in seven
innings.
Pirates 4, Marlins 3.
Don Slaught's RBI double' off
Luis Aquino (6· 7) scored the winning run in the 11th at Three Rivers
Stadium.
Mark Dewey pitched three
innings of one-hit relief before Bias
Minor (7-5) worked the I lth inning
for the victory. Mark Petkovsek
also pitched a scoreless seventh.

--Sports briefs-Basebau
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bob
Ojeda, seriously injured in. the
March 22 boating accident that
k1lled teammates Steve Olin and
Tim Crews, is scheduled to make
his fust start of the. season t.oilight
for the Cleveland Indians. Ojeda,
35, has made two relief appearances since being activated Aug. 8.
. BasebaU
. NEW YORK (AP) - The Baltimore Orioles acquired third baseman Mike Pagliarulo from Min nesota on Sunday for a player to be
named later. Pagliarulo, 33, hit
.292 with three homers and 23
RB!s in 83 games for the Twins.
·
Auto racing
MOGYOROD, Hungary (AP)
-Damon Hill of Britain won Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix, making hi~D and father, Graham Hill,
the first father-son Formula I winners. Hill covered 189.851 miles in
his Williams-Renault in I hour, 47
minutes, 39.098 seconds. Italy's
Ricardo Patrese finished second.
Tennis
MANHATIAN BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Second-seeded Martina
Navr~tilova beat top-seeded Aran·
txa Sanchez Vicario 7-5, 7-6 (7-4)
for her !65th career singles title
Sunday in the Virginia Slims of
Los Angeles. Navratilova, 36,
earned $75,000 to pass $19 million
for her career.

HOM!! RIJNS: Oonzoloz. T••u. 35;

STOLEN BASES : Lofton, CLEVE·

lAND,.q; Curlia, Cllifomia, 41; R. Alomu, T"""'&lt;o. 31; Polmlo, Colifomlo. 31:
R. Henderson, Toronto, 33: L. Jotuuon,
OU..JO, 29; While, Tor&lt;&gt;nlo, 24.
PITCIDNG (13 docioiono): Koy, Now
Ymk, 14-4, .711, 2.74; MUM~, Balti·
....._11-4, .733, 4.4S; McDowell, CIWao, 18·7, .120. 3.61: Wic:.iman, New
Yall&lt;, 10-4, .714, 4.53: 11ao1p1. T"""'"'•
14-&lt;1, .700, 3.72; Femonde&amp;, Chicaao. 146, .700, 3.01: Appi«, Kanou c;,y, 13-6,
.614, 3.01.
•
STRIKEOlJTS, R. lohnoon, S..ule,
211; Guzman, Torccuo, 142: Lanpon,
Califomi1, 136; C1cmGnll, BDtltlrl., 13S;
AJ~Pie!. Kanau Cit,, 134; Cane,. Kantu

Ci•y. 134: F""""""'· Chieaao. 129: fin.

ley, Colifomio, 129. .
SAVES : Montaomery, K~nNa City,
36; IWKI1, u......_ 32; D. Wud, y...,...
10~ 31: Olson: Baltimore, 29; ~au.ilcr1 ,
Minnmota, 21, Hcnk'-, Texu, Tl, R. Hernandez, Chicaao, 25; Ec.kcnlcy, Oakland,
lS.
.

....
- • Transactions • BasebaU

Allltl'kln Laaue
· Bf&lt;LTIMORE ORIOLES' A&lt;&gt;j•iwl
Mike Poalllnllo. lhinl buan1n, ll&lt;im lho
MinMioca Twins rcr a pla)'CI:I' u, bb nltMd
lau:r. Dmiratcd Anthony Telfotd, pildt-

er,forauipnn.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Placed Gate
l...adtin., infJClder, on tho 1'-day dilabled
lill Rec:allod David hkearty, oudiolder,
from Ponland of the Paeiric Cout

Loo~ ATIIll!TICS' Pla&lt;Od Bob

Welch, pitch!A", on \he 1!5-day diJablod
u.,, reuoaaJve tO AUJ. I. Waived Joe
Boovor, pi.\char, -fortho putpaM m sivina;
him hia unconditiewtal rdca~e . Recalled
John Brilcoc., pitdacr, and Scat\ Broli.u.,
inficldor-outfiel4cr: from Tacoma of lhe
Pacific Cout La

i2:RiNEJls,

SEAITLE
AMouo&lt;Od
Lee Elia. benc:b co1ch, Sammy Elli1,
pi\ChinJ coach, Ken Oril'fey Sr., hitlina
coach, John Mtl..arca, bullpon coach. Sam
Mojiu, ruw.. buc coach. utod Sam Palot·
:u, third hue coach, willl'Cbl.m fc. 1994

-

Nalloftall.ea&amp;aM

.

MONTRE,t.L EXPOS, Plocod Chrio

Nabholz, pilchcr, at the IS-day di11hlod
li•t. retroactive to Aua . 11 . Called up
Buk:h Henry, pi.\Cbar, f1Qm Oa.wa of lhe
lntomolionoi!Mpo. Oplionod Tun LUar, cat.chm-, kt Otiiwa.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS ' Woived
loo Moanno, pia:h«, for lho purpooc of
alvin&amp; him hil UDCOnd.itiond alcuo. Ac·
tivaled Mike .Per., piu:Mr, from the 15d•y dUabled tilL

ASpecial Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, September 1, 1993
'

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT

FootllaU

NdlonaiFOOIIoolliAaa..
DALLAS COWBOYS: Reloucd

s.... Dom;no... -

.

NOW BY CALLING:

letml whh Tootie Robbins, oltenaive
&lt;ooklc.

NEW ORLEANS SAJNI'S, S -

R.Wld Ion•, cornerback, for die filii

aunc of tho..,. far failin&amp; to reporc. kJ

-

"""J'i..K FRANCISCO 4'BRS : Sipod
Koilh Dol.ona, linoboclror, .. I .....,..,

League East standings.
The New -York Yankees and
Toronto Blue Jays are tied for frrsi
place, while the rest of the guys are
starting to fade a little.
Toronto rocked Roger Clemens
(9•10) for two homers and six runs
in less than four innings Sunday at
Fenway Park to beat Boston 9- I.
At New York, Don Mattingly
broke a scoreless tie with an
eighth-inning home run and Scott
Kamieniecki pitched \hree-hit ball
over 8 1/3 innings as the Yankees
sent the Baltimore Orioles to their
sixth straight loss, 1-0.
The Red Sox now trail the divi·
sion leaders by three games and lhe
Orioles are 4 1/2 out and falling
fast. Detroit dropped 8 1/2 games
off the pace with a loss at Milwaukee.
.
.
Juan Gonzalez opened the scorJoe Carter, Darnell Coles and
ing with his 35th home run, a two- Ed Sprague homered for the Blue
run shot into the left-field stands.in Jays and Paul Molitor drove in
the Texas first inning.
three runs ,with a pair of singles.
Texas made it 3·0 in the fourth . Dave Stewan (8-6) allowed three
Gonzalez was hit by a pitch and hits in eight innings for Toronto
went to third on Julio Franco's line and has won 11 of his last 13 regusingle over the head of Baerga at lar-season decisions against
second. Indians starter Jose Mesa Boston.
(9-9) muffed a high chopper hit
"Roger's going through somebetween the plate and the mound thing he really hasn't had to go
by Ivan Rodriguez, loading the through before. He has always been
bases. Gonzalez scored as Dean a dominating guy on the mound,
Palmer grounded into a double and right now he's not," Boston
play. .
manager Butch Hobson said.
Mesa allowed four runs on six "Physically, there's not anything
hilS and two walks, while striking wrong with him. His velocity is
out three in eight innings.
high. It's almost like they know
The Rangers added a run in the what's coming."
seventh on Dave Hulse's RBI douToronto, which had 36 hits
ble.
while taldng two of three games in
Tom Henke got the final four the weekend series at Fenway Park,
Oul!&gt; for his 27th save.
sent Clemens to his fourth straight
Elsewhere in the ALit was New loss.
York I, Baltimore 0; Toronto 9,
Yankees 1, Orioles 0
Boston 1: Milwaukee 6, Detroit 4:
Mattingly's 13th homer came on
Ka'nsas City 7, Chicago 5; Min- an 0-2 pitch from starter Ben
nesota 12, Oakland 5; and Califor- McDonald (9· II) leading off the
nia 14, Seattle 2.
eighth . TV replays showed a fan
. . Yanks, Jays In first
reached over the right-field wall at
Things are starting to look a lit. Yankee Stadium and caught the
tie different in the American ball.
Kamieniecki (8-4), who ha s
won seven straight decis ions at
home, walked six and struck out
three before Paul Assenmaeher got
one out and Bob Wickman finished
for his second save.
Brewers 6, Tigers 4 .
Kevin Seitzer's two-run double
snapped a sixth-inning tie as 'Milwaukee defeated Detroit at County
Stadium . With one out in the sixth,
Seitzer lined a 2-2 pitch from'
starter John Doherty (10-8) into the
gap in left-center field.
.
Cal Eldred (12-12) gave six hits
and four runs in eight-plus innings
for the vicrory.
Royals 7, White Sox S
Kevin McReynolds hit a homer
and drove in three runs to lead
.•
Kansas City over Chicago and Tim
Belcher (1-2) in a game de-layed
DANIEL A. GREEN
twice by rain at Comiskey Park.
LARRYM. DEMERY
Tom Gordon (8·3) beat Chicago
for the third time this season without a loss, and has won four of his
last'five decisions. He allowed
. '
three runs and seven hits iii 6 1/3
innings:
..
Twins 12, Athletics S
JGrby li'uckett went 5·for-5 and
hit two of six home runs by Minnesota as the Twins routed Oakland
what they ended up with. ''
By RANDALL CHASE
at the Coliseum . Puckett hit two
. Green was paroled in June after two -run homers, driving in four
LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) After a weekend of wild specula- serving less than two years for a runs, and Bernardo Brito. a 29tion surrounding the slilying ofbas- conviction in Robes.on County for year-old rookie, al so hit two
ketball star Michael Jordan's assault with a deadly weapon with homers as the Twins completed a
father, auth'o rities arrested two intent to kill and armed robbery, four-game sweep.
teen-agers and said the motive Robeson County Sheriff Hubert
Scott Erickson (7-14) snapped a
seemed to be simple highway rob- · Stone said. Demery was under personal four-game losing streak,
indictment for armed robbery and giving up three runs and 10 hits in
bery.
The suspects, two 18-year-olds out on bond.
seven innings. Losing pitcher Mike
Police said Jordan was driving Mohler (1-4) ~ave up -seven runs in
with criminal records, were caught
in part through calls they made home from a friend's funeral when the fust 2 213 mnings.
Angels 14, Mariners 2 ·
from James Jordan 's car phone he stopped his car to rest. He was
Greg Myers drove in a careerover several days following his killed early in the morning on July
23, Stone said. They then went high four runs and rookie Phill4tslaying last month, police said.
The two allegedly had set out to through his personal effects - and wich (1 ·3) earned his first majorrob someone, never imagining their found out whom they had killed.
!caguc victory, leading California
victim would be the father of t~J.e
"Once they knew it .was over Seattle at the Kingdome.
·Leftwich, a 23-year-old right·
Chicago Bulls basketball star, one Michael Jordan's father, they tried
of the world's richest and most cel- to cover their tracks the best they bander making his fourth start for
ebrated athletes.
could," by taking the body to California, was backed by a sea"What happened to Mr..Jordan South Carolina, said Capt. Art son-high 22-hit attack that included
was the kind of random violence Binder of the Cumberland Sheriff's seven doubles and only the Angels'
fourth home run in August.
that all the public are. concerned Department.
·Seattle's Tim Leary (8-5) lasted
about and afraid of," said Jim
They apparently kept the car, a
Coman, director of the State red Lexus 400, for three days only I 2/3 innings, giving up seven
• Bureau of Investigation. "It could before abandoning it near Fayct· runS'On eight hits and a walk.
have been any one of us."
teville, police said. The car was
The 56-year-old Jordan was shot seen in and around a trailer park --..- Sports briefs-in the chest more than three weeks where Green lived;·
·
Tennis
ago, apparently after he parked his
The ear ended up in the hands of
SAN MARINO (AP) - Topcar to take a nap along the gravel several youths who drove it for a seeded Thomas Muster of Austria
entrance to a srore on U.S. 74 near while, then stripped -it of parw. It defeated Renzo Furlan ofltaly 7-5,
Lumberton in southeastern North was found last week on a secluded 7-5 in the final of the San Marino
Carolina, authorities said.
dirt road ncar Fayetteville, in CumHis body , found floating in a berland County, but officials did ATPonSunday.
South Carolina creek Aug. 3, was not ~now until last week that it
not identified until Friday.
belonged to Jordan.
,.
FBI agents said Saturday they
Green and Demery were arrest.were looking inro the possibility of ed at the Robeson County Sheriff's
kidnapping and at Jordan's busi- Department after being called in
ness interests in South Carolina .. for questioning. No murder weapon
Questions also had been raised has been recovered, authorities
about the possibility of links said.
• between Jordan's death and his
Records from Jordan's cellular
son's well-lmown gambling.
phone were used to u'ace the susBut on Sunday officials arrested pects, police said, declining to
Samt Day Strvkt
Larry Martin Deinery of Rowland elaborate. "It was a tremendous
. All Parts Extra
and Daniel Andre Green of Lum- help to us," Bedsole told The
berton on eharg~ of murder, armed News &amp; Observer of Raleigh.
Includes: Clalng, Ollllg, ·
robbery and conspiracy. They were
Adjuslmtnls, Greasing.
Four youngsters arrested during
jailed without bond pending their ·the weekend and charged with vanrll'St court appearance today.
dalizing the car were not connected
"They had conspired to rob with the murder, Bedsole said.
before they left home,': said Cum· . A private- service in honor of ·
berland County She riff Morris James Jordan was held Sunday
Bedsole. "I don't know if they afternoon at RockfiSh AME Church
knew who, what or where. This is in Teachey.
Ryan (S-3) passed Don Suttop
for lith on the all-time victory list
and .went by ' Walter Johnson for
17th with his 803rd major-league
pitching appearance.
The right-hander, starting a day
game for the first time this season,
strUOk out two and wallced two as
Texas smipped a two-game losing
streak and Cleveland's four-game
winning streak. It was his third
consecutive victory and fourth in
five decisions since returning from
the disableq ilst July 19. .
The only run off Ryan came
without a hit in the fourth inning.
Wayne Kirby led off with. a walk,
took second on Baerga' s gtoundou't
to rll'St base, went 10 third on a wild
pitch and scored on Albert Belle
grounder to shortstop.

.- ..
-·...

COMPLETES TWIN:KILLING - Cleveland second baseman Carlos Baerga (left)
watches his throw to first after stepping on the
bag to retire the Texas Rangers' Ivan Rodriguez

By BOB GREEN
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Paul
Azinger won the tournament and
lost a title. Greg Norman· lost the
tournament and gained an unwanted ptece of history.
·"] think I'd acquired the label
'the best player not to have won a
major," ' Azinger said Sunday after
a playoff victory in the PGA
Championship.
Norman, meanwhile, will now
be known as only the second pl~yer
to lose all four Grand Slam events
in playoffs. Craig Wood was the
other, in the 1930s.
"I've been there a lot more than
some others," Norman said.
Norman's three-pu u· on the second extra hole cost him a chance to
win the last of this year's big four
tournaments.
Norman lost in playoffs to
Fuzzy Zoeller in the 1984 U.S .
Open, to Larry Mize in the 1987
Masters, and to Mark Calcavecchia
in the 1989 British Open.
· And, it was Norman's second
wrenching PGA loss at Inverness.
He lost on this same course in 1986
on Bqb Tway 's spectacular birdie .
from a bunker on the last hole.
That was the beginning of a
series of difficult defeats that
marked Norman's star-crossed
career and which, eventually, sent
him into a two-year decline.

992-2156
ASK FOR DAVE or P.J.

"It brought tears to my eyes,"
Azinger said. "It lifted a huge burden off my shoulders. There is
tremendous satisfaction. I thought I
was good enough to win a major
championship."
On a couple of occasions near
the end, Azinger admitted, "I
called myself on it''
"Are you ready to deal with all
this?" Azinger asked himself.
He proved he was.
He played the back nine in 32,
finishing off a final round of 68. It
produced a 272 total, 12-under-par,
and was good enough for a playoff
when Norman, playing behind him,
missed an 18-foot, downhill, leftto -right birdie putt on the 72nd
hole.
Norman shot 69, despite some
short· game mistakes early in the
round: a sand shot left in a bunker,
a missed two-foot birdie putt, a
poor chip from behind the seventh
green.
Only a few moments later, play-

TUESDAY, AUG. 17, 2:30 P.M.-4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1993

ing the 18th as the first hole of the
playoff, he had an almost identical
putt- same length, same line.
And it was the same result.
It li~pe~ out .and Norman grimaced m frustrauon and his sevenyear-old son Gregory, watching
from behind the green, pounded his
fist on the ground.
On the secorid playoff hole th~
lOth, both Azinger and Norm~ hit
irons off the tee and had short irons
to the green.
Norman got his about 20 feet
above the hole, while Azinger was
less than half that distance and

FRUTH PHARMACY

GOOD WORK, PAUL- Australia's Greg Norman (right) con·
gratulates Paul Azinger after the latter's sudden death playoff vic·
tory Sunday in the 75th PGA Championship al tbe Inverness Club
in Toledo, Ohio. ,It was Azinger's first win in a major tournament.
(AP)

SUPPORT
RUTLAND BOY SCOUT TROOP 240
AND
POMEROY BOY SCOUT TROOP 249

'-··~·

At the "Dilly Dunker" booth at the
Meigs County Fair!

Among those scheduled to appear are:
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
Sheriff James Soulsby
Secret Service Agent Gary Wolfe
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
Judge Robert Buck
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed
Commissioner Manning Roush
Commissioner Janet Howard
State Representative Mark Malone
U.S. Representative Ted Strickland
Township Trustees Association
President Gary Dill
Check the sign on the midway
for complete schedule!

716 N. Second Ave. • Middle ort, Ohio

I'

v

I' .

.)1

•

below the hole.
Norman's downhill birdie
attempt was woefully short, five or
six feet
Azinger also missed.
"My heart sunk," he said. "I
thought I'd missed my chance."
But Norman lipped out his second putt and it was all over.
While the playofr was a twoman affair, several players were in
contention for most of the final ·
round. At the start, 1.1 men were
within two shots of the lead. During the day, five men either led or
shared the lead.

"I've really turned my career
around" beginning · with a recordsetting Briti.sh Open triumph last
month, he saitl. ''I can tell myself I
am back in contention every
week.''
Azinger won for the' third time
this season and the 11th time in his
career. More importantly, he
gained a m·ajor-tournament title
that he needed to confirm his
stature in the game.

(All Brands)

.,.

ror the double play during Sunday's American
Leagu~ game 'in Cleveland, where the Rangers
won 4-1. (AP)
·

Azinger gets past Norman in sudden
death to win PGA Championship

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC

,

GREEN S'AY PACXEJIS, A..-1 1o

CLEVELAND (AP) - Maybe
46-year-old Nolan Ryan Of·the
Texas Rangers ought to change his
mind about making this his last
season·. The·Cleveland Indians say
he's pitching better now than in his
flame-th{Owing past.
''When I first faced him in
1989, he threw fastballs and curveballs," said Indians first baSeman
Paul Sorrento. "I;Iut as he's gotten
older, he's learned how to pitch. He
threw a lot of change-ups today,
and he threw them for strikes .
When a pitcher does that, he has a
chance to win.''
A-crowd of fiJ,727 showed up at
qeveland Stadium on Sunday' to
see Ryari for the last time on a
pitcher' s mound.
Ryan pitched two-hit ball over
seven innings for his 324th career
victory as the Rangers defeated the
Indians 4-1.
"This was definitely the ~est
I've felt all season, what with being
on the disabled list and ;~II," Ryan
said. "I wasn't overpowering at all,
but had good location , and a good
1changeup."
Ryan received standing ovations
during his pregame warmups, when
he took the mound to start the
game and when he was replaced by
Craig Lefferts to open the eighth. ·
"I can't really remember ever
getting a standing ovation when l
just went·out to warm up,'' Ryan
said. "It makes you feel good
when the fans tum out. The crowd
today might be the most I've ever
pitched in front of, I don't know,
but you don't see many crowds of
60,000 at a baseball field."
Carlos Baerga, who at' age 24 is
clearly a leader on this young Indians team, said he enjoyed taking on
Ryan.
·
. "He's a legend," Baerga said.
"A Hall of Pamer. You can't l!et
mad because so many people like
him. I wish he'd come back. I like
when there are this many people in
the ballpark."

FHEE 1:\SPECTH)l\

Boxing
USA BOXINO, Amoon&lt;Od lho&lt;lomeo
J. Poa, exeou.dvo 4itoctor, il ftllilnina effective Aua. 31 to become director or
broadCIIlt nw:kotina for the U.S. Olynipic:•
Cammi-

.

::: Phone ~alls. help police
.
·_· arrest two zn connection
&lt;~ with Jordan murder

T -. D«ro;J, 26.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Indians impressed with Ryan:'s
pitching in Rangers' 4~1 victory

Paga ·4

Atlanta beats Cincinnati .l-0 to record six-game road trip sw~ep

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

�I

By The Bend

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

The D.aily Sentinel
·

•The Area's N·u mber I
Marketplace

llonda~Augult16,1993
Page 6

Community Education.leaders (J.ttend national confer~nce

RATES

nity based operation.
the current status of child care's !he community be made an educaDuane Brown. Executive Direc- many needs in this country, and tional requirement · ·
Maria Ferrier, director of mantor for the NCCE, gave a history of how community edueallon Is helpagement and staff development for
community education and the ing to fill those needs.
trainees implemented several forms
A panel. of community directors Southwest Independent Schools,
of group interaction activities in · including Chuck Teal of Business and a member of a committee in
determining impediments to quality and Industry for Mott Community Washington, J?.C .. furlhere&lt;! this
of life in our communities.
. CoHege, Joann Pastpr of Bendle idea in speakmg of the nat10nal
Dr. Jack Minzey, a retiied vro: Public Schools in Burton, Mich .• Youth Communily Service Letlrnfe5SOr afEasr.em Michigan Univer- and Lee Westervelt of Jenison. ing project
..
Numerous opportunmes for
sity, and author of a comm~ Mich., discussed the ijtvolvement
educati011 text, discussed the
- of their programs in whole and group discussion an~ problem. s~v­
· ership as it relateS to sehools and small group sessions, giving tips ing were included m th~ tratmn~. ,
Trainees already expcnenced m ·
what needs to be !)one to fully and ideas for various situations.
develop such a program in a comParticipants enjoyed a break community education shared bQtl!
munity. Shane. Tiedeman, assistan( from. the classrooms indoors as positive and negative situations ..~
director of NCCE, hosted a dinner they viewed ·!he outdoor education the fmal day, two teams of parllCIat )tis home for the entire group to center at Mou-Hashbarger Farms. pants used role-playing a.9 members
become acquainted and network They ·joined the children who.co~e of representative community facideas.
. ·
there for learning and recreauon m tions as they debated whether
Dan Cady, director of communi- a real farm setting, lunch prepared "Anytown, USA" should initiate a
ty education for the Flint schools, by the farm staff, as they conversed community education program .
described the mandated citizens with t!te students about the learning Ceroficates.of award and pins were
council active at each pt~blic school activities there. Students pay a,nly given by Brown, Tiedeman, and
in Flint and h.ow effective their one dollar per day, includin~ a their secretary, Dorothy Ostrander,
involvement is in the education meal and all activities includtng during a celebration dinner at the
process. Trainees visited the swimming, farm chores, horse rid~ Bavarian Inn in Frankenmuth,
Doyle-Rider CE Center. where ing and fishing.
·.
Mich. participants !!!so enjoyed
Chazz McCall demonstrated how
Richard Kaye, Principal of touring Br.onncrs Chnstmas
an old school became the center for South Brunswick High School, World, complete with extensive
revitalization of the community New Jersey, told of the many bene- outdoor lighted holiday decoraeffort. Olher field trips included to fits derived by its .schools in send- tions.
the Mou College Early Childhood' ing juniors and seniors one day per
Attendance at this training was a ,
Development Center, the Mott Cui· week into the conimWiity to learn part of the Meigs Local Communi· ·
tural Center and Adult High at 300 sites, and how partnerships ty Education grant from the Ohio'
School, and to the Bloomfteld area are built to aid bolh the schools, the Department-of Education. division ,,
schools.
Sbldents
!he citizens.
of Community Education, whic" ~
A'ITEND EVENT • Pictured L-R, are local
munity Education. Seated, Duane Brown, direcPatricia Edwards, program offi.
The partnership benefits were provided lhe ~gistration fee~ travel ~
residents attending tile recenfNational Center
tor for NCCE and Suzy Carpenter, Meigs Liacer for the Mon Foundation, helped also stressed by Jim Leary, f,or expense and. food not provided by ·
for Coll!munity Education in Flint, Mich. Stand·
son or Community Education, secretary for
participants to look at the percep- Adrian, Mich.. superintendent and the national center. This training ~,
ing, Shane ·Tiedeman, assistant director for
advisory council.
tion of "community" and ex~ri- author of "Educators On Trial?" and all of the community education :
NCCE and Janet Bolin, director for Meigs Comence facilitation skills useful in Leary shared practical suggestil&gt;ns · activities are covered by the state :;
workin&amp;. with groups, so that citi- for developing unique and mean- grant and are at no cost to the ,1i
Local leaders of the Meigs Colorado, New Mexico, North helped to originate the Community zens can feel comfortable panici- ingful relationships between the Meigs Local Schools. Mrs. Bolin. ·~
schools, business and general pub- Mrs. Carpenter and all advisory
Community Education project Dakota, South Carolina, Florida, Education project in Flint, wilh !he paling.
Bob. Doan, director of commu- lie commm~ities .
·
council members donate their time
spent two weeks at the National Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Michi- guidance of Frank Manley, a local
nity
education
in
Harbor
Sprinfs·
Rick
Collins,
co-eltecutive
and services to the Community
Center for Community Education gan, as well as Quebec, Canada. A physician education teacher. Radler
Michigan
County
Schoo
s,
director
for
Future
Builders
and
in Flint, Mich. Janet Bolin, com - special participant was Dr. Keun than spend additional money on described their intergenerational Delta Service Corporation of Little Education project and are not paid ·~
by the Meigs Local Board ope111t- ·
mWiity director, and Suzy Carpen- ' Yeop Lee, a professor from Seoul, building special buildings for boys
which
conn.
c
cts
the
youth
with
Rock,
Ark.,
spoke
on
the
positive
ing
monies. Stipends for operater. advisory council secretary and Korea.
clubs, senior citizens centers and senior citizens in active participa- impact on youth and adults that ser- tional expenses and training were Iiason for the Meigs Local Schools,
Funding for most of the training others, they decided it would be
joined community educators from expenses, food and accommoda- more cost effective and generally tion in the schools and in the com- vice to !he community can have. written into the grant for separate :
Reminiscent of the "Ask what you and additional funds, with the .
all over the country in training ·and lions is through the Mott Founda- more positive for everyone in the munity.
Dan
Hodgins.
coordinator
of
!he
can
do foi your country" theme, Meigs Local Schools clerk acting ':
networking. Participants states lion, formed by Flint industrialist community to involve the public
child
development
program
for
Collins
suggested that '11s many as fiscal agent to oversee disburse- ;,
included Arkansas, Mississippi, and philanthropist, C.~. Mott, who schools in expru\sion to a commuMott Community College, told of , stare.s are doing now, that service to ment.
,\,

and

-..

., '

~

Nu_trition camps conducted Generati.on gap in musical lyrics . .
0

it

c

TUPPERS PLAINS • Over forty
young people from Meigs County
recently participated in a prograin
acclimating them with the ways of
the kitchen form food preparation
to nutrition.
·
An Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program (EFNEP)
Day Camp was held in Tuppers
Plains at the St. Paul United ·
Methodist Chilrch and at the Salem
Center flfehouse.
The two day camp was designed
to teach basic nutrition, food safety ·
and food preparation techniques to
the one-hundred children who participated. The program also included nutritious snacks and lunches,
recreation. singing and group activities.
Campers each received a
kitchen magnet, ruler, coupons
from local businesses and a certificate recognizing their attendance.
The camps were conducted by
staff members of Ohio State University Extension and also held in
Vinton and Athens counties. Staff
members coordinating the activity
included Sharon Smith, Meigs
County; Janet Harris, Vinton County; and Joyce Brown, Alhens County who are Nutrition Educators
with the EFNEP program and Mary
Jane Black, coordinator for the
three county project.
Meigs County businesses who
helped to sponsor th e two Meigs
County camps included Middleport
Trophy, Pizza Hut, McClure's,
Dairy Queen, Subway. McDonald's, and Dairy Valley. Milk was
provided by Broughton 's Dairy
Foods and Valley Bell Dairy .
Financial sponsors for the Tuppers
Plains Camp were Baum Lumber,
Forest Run Cement, Smith Nelson
and O'Dell Lumber. Rutland Furniture and Edwin Davis and Sons
helped to sponsor the Salem Center
day camp.
The Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program is a federally funded project which helps
families with children to stretch
their food dollars. 'l;he program is
offered free of charge to all interested residents and includes a
series of twelve classes on basic
nutrition, food safety and food buy-

I .

loin bim another $1,000. I said l ol
was sOrry, but his. credit wasn't all ~~
that good with me and he'd have to .~
loo1t elsewb=. He became veey,~
upset and said that I WI$ "110 friend" •·

Dear Ann Landers:. I am getting
fed up with aU the knocks
froRt people of your generation who
scc:m to 1hinlt our musi: is cruy.
My Jm111dp81ellts m just about )'dur
age. They ga'ie me some record

and now that he sees my "true "
colors" he·is sure I wouldn't make a ;vccy good wifC. So it was "Oootlb~ ~
•• I'U - you around. • .
-.
Did I make a mistake? Should I :.
have taken"a chance and loaned bim 1
the $1.()00? I am self·SUppuitidg but ~
not rich. - SOLVENT BUT NOT :
LOADED
•
DEAR ·SOLVENT: No, I don't •
•
lhinlc you mado ti mistake. This way, :
you. are only out $2,000 iDSIC8d of ~
$3,000 or maybe more.
1
Consider yourself lucky. If Mr. ~
H. would break off with you : ~
because you.refused 10 111111 bim any S
more money, a bargain he wasn't.
•
Fuling pressured 10 haH su? •

.

pretty

albums that they thought wen:
'tarifiC in their day. .
1 The lyrics made no sense at aU.
What is a "FFat,Poot Floogie"wilh a
Floy Flay"? Then there was 1 one
about ~ Little Fishies in an
Itldy-Bjddy Pool." The craziest one
was "Beat Me, Daddy, I Ate the
Bar."
How about translaling some of this
gobbledygoolc'l Or don't you know
what I'm lllking about? •• BORN
IN 1963
DEAR BORN: I know exactly

what you're talking about. The name .

TABLE DECORATIONS FROM VEGETABLES. Josh Hager
shared bis skill at making table decorations from vegetables with
others attending tbe ·recent Food and Nutrition Education program day camp at Tuppers Plains.

MAKING COOKIES • At the Food and Nutrition Education
Program day camp held at Salem Center, Sharon Smith, nutrition
educa~or, demonstrated how to make cookies to the youngsters
attend mg.
ing. For additional information University Extension are available
about the program contact Sharon to all potential clientele on a
Smith, at Meigs County Extension nondiscriminatory basis without
Office, 992-6 696 between the regard to race, color, creed, relihours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. gion, sexual erientation, national
Monday through Friday.
origin, sex, age, handicap or VietAll .cducational programs and . nam era veteran status.
activities conducted by Ohio State

Birthday observed

Jake Lynch recently celebrated
his second birthday with a party at
McDonald's in Pomeroy.
The Meigs County Womens
will be held at the Ohio Valley
Anending were his parents
Fellowship held the regularly Christian Assembly September 24 Keith and Beth Lynch, brothers
monthly meeting recently with 23 and 2S wilh Gladys Smith as guest Josh and Joel Lynch, Jessica, Justin
members present. The opening speaker. The Fifth Sunday Hymn and Dal,ton Riebel, Ricky and
song was "Tell Me the Storr of Sing will be held August 29 ~~ 7 Christopher Johnson, Megan CarJesus." Opening prayer was gtven p.m. at the Dexter Church of nahan , maternal grandmother
by Eleanor Hoover and .devotiotts Christ
Hazilce Riebel, paternal grandwere given by the Bradfmd Church
The closing song was "Blessed mother Delores Surface, Richard
of Christ. Two poems, "Rule For Assurance" and the closing p111yer and Dian;! Johnson, Roger and
Daily Living" and "Prayful-Thank was given by Ruth Underwood and Robin Riebel, and Rhonda Camayou" were read by MI!J'fe W~t.
refreshments were served.
han.
•
Zion Church of Christ will. hold
The next meeting is scheduled . Others presenting gifts were
a n:vival August 13-IS. Homecom- for August 26 at the Hemlock maternal grandfather Roger Riebel,
ing will be August IS with a Grove Christian Church. Devotions great grandmother Mae Lynch,
potluck at noon and afternoon ser- . will be given by !he Dexter Church Renee Riebel, Donna and Gary
vices at 2 p.m. Women's Retreat of Christ
~ Griggs and family, Dorien O'Neal.

'

j

DeaT Reatkrs: I am 011 vqcatitm,
b111 1 have left bthllld lOIIk! of
my fQII()rite to/IUfiM thai )IOU IIIII)'
lfaole ~d 1~ firS/time aroruuL I
/tope you e11}oy them. '-· Ann

~Tl

Women's Fellowship meets

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

of that last number is "Beat Me
Daddy. Eight 10 the Bar.•
Don't ask me wbll it means. It
didn't make 1 lot of 11enae then and
makes even lea sense now. Some
of !bose lyrics of the '40s were
wiggy. but evtzy gcnmtion has ils
lunatic Cringe. We bad ours, and you
have yours.
Dear Ann Landers: I wrote this
poem to help me sweat out my
ftnals. I( it's too late for the spring
nignt.man:S. it might.come·in handy
next .fall:
Test Prayer
Now I lay me down to study, ·
I pray lhe LOrd I won't go nuuy.
If I should fail to learn this junlc,
I pray !he Lord I will not flunk.
Bubifldo,don'tpitymcataU, ·
Just lay my bones down in lhe

study hall.
Tell my teacher I did my best,
Then pile my books upon my
chest
Now I lay me down to res~
And PlliY I'll pass tomorrow's teSL
If I should die befcxe I wake,
That's one less tesl ru have 10 take.
•• SUFFERIN' S1UDENT ·
DEAR SUFFERIN': Thank you
for a light' touch to a heavvvvvy
problem.
Dear Ann: I've been going with
Mr. H. for three years. He bon'owed
$2,000 trom me after our sixth date
and promised to pay it back when
the inheritance from his BWit came
through. He got the money last week
and said he was sorry, but be bad
other debts that were more pressing
and I'd have to wait a while for my

money.
Yesterday, Mr. H. asked me to

· Foundation, Barnard Y.

Fultz, Truot~,'lo .,.a.ble
lor --publto ln•p•cllon at
Baflllll'd V. Fultz Law Olllce,
111112 W. Second Str"t,
"-•cw. Ohio 457611,
!luring regul•r buelnMo .
houre for a pMiod ol 150
daye aub1equent to
publlcetlon of lhle nollca.
(I) 13, 18, 17, 11, 18, 20, 23
7lc

'

.

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad. ouiiMle tho eoUDty your ad I'U.DI 111\111 be prepaid
• Recti,.. di.eo•t for ad. paid in •dwaoce.
• Free Ado, Ci..._y aod Fouod ,..U uodorlS worda wilt ha

45772.

Olive Townohlp Zoning
Commlttolon

843-Portlaod

2$6-GIIf&amp;D 01.(,
643-Arahia Dlol.

247-Lolorl Fili
949-Radae .
742-Ru!land
667-Cool.tlle

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painting Setvlcea
Interior &amp; Exterior
We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
Fill UIIMITU
son4llltller1Wtt••..
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915·4181

67$-1'1. 1'1-aant
458-Leon
576-Ap.,le Gron
7·7 3--M•on
882-New H•ven
895-Lelarl
937-Bull'alo

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'

ROOFING
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EXCAVATING
(614)
667·6621

3-tS-13-tln

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MATHEMATICS
INSTRUCnON
"Mathematics is the
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By Appointment
949-2814
7f22/1mo.pd.

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R••so•able
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JOE II. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

n~~.tptng .

• .

WHALEY'S IUIO
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inside, Oi.rtside, Top to
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992-5151
or TOLL f"ll
loiOG-141 0070
DAIWIII, 01110

PH. 742·2217

7131/91/lfn

11-30.1 mo.pd.

HAULING~
Limestone

7n/1rM.

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

•

4

·

The affordable fee Includes textbooks and supplies. Gtaduates
receive Certificates of Achievement' and eontlmil\'11-·eduCition ·
units (CEUs). Qualified graduates of the course ~·Y be ofl'eaed
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accept employment.
·

••

•

.

If ~ ...•

LINDA'S
PAINTING

"

'
I

INTERIOR

In precloua memoriH
, who pa..ect aWIIY Aug.
1g73. Loved,
~ · Lost &amp; Remembered ~y
&amp; Friends.
' Near shady wail a rose once grew.
) Budded and blossomed in God's free 111#11.
( Watered and fed by morning dew
r Shedding HI aweetneaa dey and night.
~ As Hgrew and blossoned fair and tall.
SloWly riling lo loftier height.
h came to a crevice in the wall
Throu~jh which there ahona a beam of light.
: Onward ~ crept wHh added strength
WHh never a thought of fear or pride
h followed the light through the crevk;e·length.
\ And unfolded HaeK on•ihe other aide.
i . The light, the dew, ihe broadening view.
Were found the same as they were before;
And Hlost baeH In beautlfjea new.
Breathing i1a fragrance more and more.
Shall claim of deatl1 eauH us to grieve.
And make our courage faint or fail?
Nay, let ui fabh and hope recellleThe roM atlli grOWl beyond the wail.
Scanerlng fragrance far and wide,
Juat as-H dl&lt;lln days of yore.
Juat Hdid on the other aide.
Jull aa h will forever more .

FREE ESTIMATES
Taka tha·paln out of
painting. LAt me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·915·4110

1112111311 mo. pel

Porches,
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992-7878

1512~11

1304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:,._ _ _ _ _ _ __,

Shade River Saddle.Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
36358 SR 7

lox 189

Middleport, O.lo 45760
' (614) 143·5264
UCINE '
'MOWER CLINIC

w.....rars

Chester, Oh. 45720
318/tfn

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290
or

614-698-6500
mnrn

~

"Ad Specialtie1"

~w

EAGLE LANES
(former Mason lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
I -Room Ackltlon•
1-GI~tler Work

'I::::;~ and Plumbing

Wa h••• a lttrge 1t90k ofoeverel n•m• br1nd tirea 1nd
II w• don't hove, we can pi It
OUR NEWEST LGCATION IN MASCIN, W. VA. lSI
OPERATED BY aiRIS NEAL.

,.......,,....,

11 y,._ -•H

Campeny,

304-77U533

2nd Location 01111 Lon Hut
llonder110n, w. Va. 304-675-333t
~!II MalllrGard and VISA -.pilei•.~tj

llyrtlo 1 - AIM: Mol~ On
a 2 IIIII,_Eft. Cloon

- h ,. 1

R-

HIO.

..71

$171

Wooilly. Call-&gt;MI2.

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,._,.,... To: P.O.
llpolio, DH 4!1431.

4

a01

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Giveaway
Angora •m-. To

2
Good
Homo Only, 114-441'7340.

2 nblllte, 814&gt;441-aot2.

Nome: Soaka, lllctc I Whfto
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241!4.

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Malo
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Dachohund I Chlhuahuo ml1
puppy, 10Wkl old. SOW7a-7712
•ft•lpm,
.

,,..
- · a ldttono to good
homi. 3IN437.:111111.

II P•lntlng• ext.rlor

~~~vd~:~TE~~ ·

CaD Today lor
Tour lui
Makeoy•
lndapendelit Mary
K1ylleluty
Coneultlnts
C•I'O!Yn McCoy
/192~
Sandy H1nderaon

'PuDDioa, I Woou Old Mother:
Full' B&lt;oodod

Fot1101:

Bluo

Hoelor

-nllan lhephonl
Ill•• Good O.unl Dog. 114-24&amp;150r.

811 molo 112 Oonnon SMflllnl,
11:1 Coillo ,..,., swu. o1o1. aw185-3141.
Bmall Toy Chihuahua, ._...,
gontlo WI

ktda, to-to play, to

ovontngo.
jood
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30W71-T.IOII

Loot:-- old lutto;Rat lln1or; E~M l.Jttart ar•. 814-

1147~25.

Loot: lied With Whllo Pttoa

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

614·949·2101. 949·2160
-er915·3139

Any ·
•-aetna
on - porm!Mion
1tr .

a.

1J2113

•

3 Announcements

102411-olll.

982-3647

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Announcements

IM "'""
Dl
Nlxina on Wh~•IWI Rd. In Rill~will be pr tculect
OIALlltlt UVIIU 24 HilS IDAYtlt
TALK
ON£ ON ONEI
1_
-..
:1182Elt_h.
_

992-6215
PomMOy, Ohio
11-10-e2~rn

985-3406

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement WTndows
Room Additions • Roofing

II

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

CONCRETE
WORK

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

aa

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614·992·7144

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Trucking

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622 J1y Drive, G111ipafia, Oh.
.446-7812
Fax/Voice 446-7812

11/24192/tfn

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51- iloutehold COodo
52- Sportins COodo
53-Antiq54--- Mi.c. Me.-cbandiae
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PH. 614·992·5591

U....Ll-tock
M- Hay .t Graiit

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lfl

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SEPTIC SYSTEMS
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WATER&amp;
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BASEMENTS l
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Lhn•tone,
Dlit, GITi•l and Cool
UcenMII and Bondllll

.

~

Wan&amp;ed. to Buy

· 41- Ho .... for Beat
t2- MoL;Je Ho- (or Rent
43-- Fanru for R•
44-- Apartment for Rent
45- Furaiah.ed .Room•
46- Space for Heat
41- Wanted lo Rat
48- EquipiHIIIt lor Rent
41i-ForL..o

412Wn

;:.;:.o

3-4-93-1 mo.

lnMamory

~

,

-Garages
.Complete
Remodeling

I,

'I

1:1\111&gt;

ROBERT BISSElL
CONRRUCTION

;iij.

Middleport, o•lo

RIC EXCAVATING
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35- Lou 8: A.36- Raol Eolote Wanted

Authorll*l: Brlgge &amp;
Strallon MTD, Ryan,
!.D.C. Rep•lr Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houri Ill- M-F 11-3 S.L
CloMd Sunday
949·2104

HOUSE OVERROWINC?

Gravel
992-7878

~

32- Moh;Je H - lor Salo
33- Fanta lor Sale
34- Buot- IIWidinp .

WALlER ALLIY
Partsa.. Ser¥1ce
Mowers • Cltaltt Saws

•New Homes

...

,\ I I I I ' I I

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

915·4473

31904 Leadlag

614~742·2138

Heating
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I

Bl~

Arnold's
Plumbing,

949·2168'.

HAULING

.,

614-446-8568 1 mo.

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problems provide students with a thorough understanding of each tn topic Included in the course.
Students le~ how to handle.lnaeaslngly compleX Income tax situations as the cotilse progresses.
Ideal.for people who want 10 increase their tn knowledge, the course teaches students how to save
money on their taxes and also prepares them for a rewarding

I 11:11 ' i 1'1'111 •

II- Holp Wantod
12- Situtlo• Want.d
13- ln1uraoco
l.J.- Bwineu Trainlas
I~ Sebool1 &amp;: lnllruetion
16.- Radio, TV&amp;: CB Repair
17- MYcellan.eoUI
18- 'Waoted,To Do

3-- Annou~mentl
4--Civeaway
5-HappyAdo
6- Loal aad Found
7- Loataad Found

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
and TRACOOE WORK'
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOioE BITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANOCLEARING
DRIVEWAYS INSTAllED
UMESTONE-TAUCKING
·FREE ESTIMA'J'ES

Dirt

!

For Sal. ., Tndo

RESULTS • FAST!

HW D

'

I

IS

p.,./or Sala ·
M,..icallu. FNiu .t v..... b

$ .20
$ .30
S .42
$ .60
S.OS I day

:------i

4-19-93-tfn

USED RAILROAD TIES

'I''

YOUR IIIDEPINDENI
AGENB·SERVING
.IGSCOUNIY
SINCE 1161

IS

8-4-~lln

992·2269

l,'

111 Secantl St., P0111roy

,·

24$-Rio Graod.o

GENERAL

I"SUUNCE.

' '

388-VIDIOD

Pomeroy
9Q5-Cboater

BILL SLACK

'

DOWIIING CHILDS
•uLLEN •usSEI

IS

IOOp.m . Thumday
1:00pm. Frldly

992-Middleporll

379-Walnal

••Iii •••

2

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
51.30 I day

2- Ia Me111.ory
446-G.Wpolla
367..a-hlre

Public Notice
claiml, duty 1worn to1 to
thla Court within lix m011tha
1111• the filing or llllld .....,.
In thlo Court, or their ••ld
lleno ·ohall forever be
deemed b.,red and

From
Student ro 3rd
Cmde Teacher.
Ho"' time flie•·
Happy 40th Patti

R.ate

Gallla County Melp County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

NOncE'OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
"On Augnt t1; 11183, In
tha llel(lll County Probllll
Court, ca.. No. 21040,
O.Vkl Careon, 11110 Patty CIIIICelecl
.
· Plaae, FL Wayne, Indian•,
Robert E. Buok
41104 ••• •ppolnted
Judge
Admlntotrator of 1M •t.t.
30 3to
of A·drian A. Caroon, 1..:..:...;..:;:..;;;;:...;..:;..;.;;;_.....,;,_ _
dea•a11d, tate of 35352
PubliC Notice
lltua Ro•d, Middleport,
LEGAL NOTICE
Mel(lll County, Ohio, 45710."
"Public
notice 11 hereby
Roberl E. Buck given to the
realclenlll of
Proballl Judge Olive Townohlp
the
t..na K. IMu*o.od Ollv. Townohlp that
Zoning
Cleric. Commloolon will hold •
(8) 111,23, 30
Public H•arlng on the
Propoeed
Zontng
_..:.P..:ub::.::IIC:...;;N:.:ot;::l::ce:;__ Reaolution on Thureday,
S.plllmber 111, ~m at e:oo
NOTICE OF PUBUCATION p;m. tn the OliVe Townehtp
Notice lo hereby given Volunt- Fire Oeparbnent
that on IIIII 28th dlly of July, ollltlon, RHdlvlllo, OH, ..d
11111, Beverly Croliby, therewllh wiU hold • opeclttl
E•110utor of the Eotalll ol meeting ol the Commloeion
VIrginia Slltltworth, tate of lor the purpoee of h-lng
3342 103rd StrMI, Coron1, •nd conelderlng public
Qu-• County, New York, comment on the propoud
filed In thll Court under Reoolutlon. Prior to the
Docket N. Call No. 27101 h..rlng, the public may
an authentlcatecl copy or review oople• of th•
Lall•ra ol Admlnlotratlon porpoeed -otuUon at the
loiUIIII to her by the Stitt. ol Comml11lone R•gul•r
N•w :Y11rk, Surrogate'• meeting on . Tuoday,
Court, County ol QUMno. September 7, 1118S at 1:00
Notice lo MtiMr given lhlt p.m. at !lie Olive Townehlp
alhondl-·of
FVD abtllon In• RMdllvllle,
who· dllelre to aeeert their GH. Copl• may atoo be
llemi on the real .... ._ ol requeoted prior to the
..ld decedent locatllll In he•rtng bv conbtoHnf the
lhlo oba ehllit pr-t their lollowlng officer• o the
comml1elon:
Elt_-n
Sheilnun, RL t, RMCIIville,
45772 or D. Kreiu, 86010 S.
R. 124 Reedovltle, OH

' .

15

Cltusified pages cOtJer the
folloll!ing telephone uchanges ...

l'llD3dayoalaocii&amp;IIJO.
• Price of ad for aD eapitallelten l1 double price of ad eoel
• 7 poiBlliae 1ype only._~
• S..liDel .. IIOll'fllpo!Ylble for efi'Orl alter rll'll day (check
for 1rron lint day ad ruu in paper). CaD hefon 2:00p.m.
day after publication to ..ake correction.
• Ad. that nn11t H paid in ad..-uce are:
Card of Thaab
Hoppy Ado
Ia Memoriam.
Yard Sale~
• A cluollled od•orlioe10eol plaeed Ia lha Tho DaUy Seolioel
(excepl Cluoitted llioplay, Bualaeu Card or Lepl
Nollo01) wllloloo appoar in tho Point Pleuan1 Rep..,. and
lloO CalllpoU. Daily Trilnute, reacblaflonr lS,OOO loo'"oa

$4.45.)

H &amp; R BLOCK OFFERS INCOME TAl
·COURSE IN
Y, OHIO ,

career.

MoN. lhra FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12

PubliC Notice

I :00 p.m. S.turdly
1:00 p.m. Mondly
I :00 pm. Tu!llday
1:00pm. Wednooday

Moitd.y Paper
Tuetday Paper
Wednooday Paper
Thwwdly Paper
Friday Paper
Sundly Paper

Words

1
3
6
10

Monthly 15
Rates are for conSI!C1ltive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Bueineas Card-".$17.001 inch per momUt
Bulletin Board....,$6.00/inch per day

DAY BEFORE PUBUCATION

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

How well·ilifOI'-d are JOU? Write :
for .AM ~rs' booklet "Stl% lllld
the Tu11-ager.~ Send a self-ad·
dressed, long, blllineu-liu tiM/opt
and a check or ' money ortkr for
$1.65 (litis illCIIUies postage lllld
haN/ling) to: TeeM, c/o AM Landus, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicago, /II. ·
60611-0562. (In Canada, send

Public Notl~
PUBUC NOticE
The annu1t report Form
IIIIOPF lor the Kibble

To place an ad

D1ys

36970 Ball R1111 Road
PIIIIMftly, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
. &amp; FilL DIRT

992·3470

Hoo""" d

Clll Vlolntly: IUilollin

Alttl 8tote A - 2111, 114-211-

lllll.

l'ound: Malo ~nlon
RodnerPike,I14-IU7120.

7

At:

YardSale
, Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Adft-. DIADUNE: 2:00

ALL Yanl S.IH MUM le Plltltn.
[1.11L '

.... cloy be....... od .........
y . 2:00 p,.,._
flltln: Mondor odftlon • a:oo
jl.m. totunlay.

OWNER: Jeff Wkk•....

l'

•

•

�P-ae 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pom~y--Middleport,

7

Monday, AuguSt 16,1993

.

~
lor Rent

35 Loti &amp; Acr.QI

-. ....-.

Gill!pOlls
&amp; VIcinitY

I aero ...._ II I, Alhlan. Clydo

36

HUI!I , _ F...., Augu11 lllh
2Qih, .., :Ill 2 .... 0117, OrllhiM.

8

I, I, 10, 20 -

11J1. W11 Und
~. -Down P a , -,
LOWPoy--.e-14.

"Auction

ALLEY OOP

.,

.....,._ . . . . . . 1ft
~

......

•· '

"NEA Crossword Puzzle

_0..0 ........ 10...,

1 '" '"'~'-- H" $6£&gt;,
"(oo M ~'- H '(loi-1&gt;/I(C.~
ON 1'~ ~ ~ V I? Iofll.

..... ....,

R..IEitlte
Wanted

Public Sale

Monday, Auguat 18,1113

Ohio

. . _ . . . . . .7711.

=

..

=:... ,,c;:::;::••:,r.
-

Pl.

Mt 1114 ...... - .
.. ·~1111.

WI! J

PHILLIP
ALDER

W.nlod To Or lluy: Couple IMD 0oAo1 T .,.._, ...... 111111 :a.

Wanted to Buy

41

HoUIII tor Rent

one Pllcl or compl ...

For-.,....-,...,

45

-•hold, coli Ooby lkrlln,
114-1112-11141.

Furnished

Room•

rent·-

IM 1. .8!10

.......

.J8 72

tl~

BUT HF; WOfJ'T &amp;

I=:IJOIJJ:S

.H.

;c;ATISFIED UUTlL HE.'S

Wf.IO HE I.S...

CQIJFtRMED

.KJH

e-1' if-1£

•ton

SEIJA'Tt

.KitS

46

Spaee for Rent

Nloo fuU .........,p, Ohio Rhror
~::&amp;..-·oleo,_,., 114-

Q

Wanted to Rant

Wanllng ·IO Nlll· 2 or I bodraom
-.ln-nandgoocl-.
tlon, prwtor priwllo oiolllng, 114IIN421, H no jilouo
INn m Jlgt on rniOhiM.

Merchandise
51

Houtehold

Gooda

h-.1~1711

Employment Services

11234.

Eom oxtro "*"'Y lor ochool
clolhM I Chrlotmu glfto. Avon
Npr. .ntJtlv• •m an IYWigll
of $8/hr.. Sian up now I recelVII
gift. 'toll 1-800.'113-8161

codo5422.

12 • IS, 2 t»droam, $2501rnoN:h
piUI ~K, 614-84:J.5281.

Homes lor Sale

2 badroorn furnlahod mobllo

Ranch 81yle home, 3 beclroome,
1 bath, IHIChed gllhSJI, Ntw
Andenon wlndowl, central air,
F - Sl, Muon. 304-773-5150.

2 Bodn&gt;am llobllo Aloo
Downatolro
..,.......... ,
R.-nc:oe A Dopool~ No Pota,
114-441-1111.

Mobile Homes

2 bodroom trallor, A
doooalt, Rl. I, Loculi Ad, on
~ghl, Point PI-nt.
2 bodroom, locatod In Now
Hann, '!Y.t. $2111/mo. + ulliKin.

31
17

Miscellaneous

Bldo lw oldo rolrlt., Admlrol
tesa. T.V. ntenna n ,...,
$125. &amp;14-M7-o240.
. 32
Trail• landollt uol, tlolbod,
boll hltoh, ·-Jock,
1300. 2110!1&amp;1 gao II'*, 1' lland,
t!OO.
IJoeOiatod ftfOIIIoco,
-rio, t!OO.

.....,r.

O.lllo -llolga Hood Stoll Hu
lmmodloto llpol!lngo For Bua
Drlv... And S..tioltuto I'"'
W eel Do
Dri-'•·
Boglnnlng Rllo ot Pay1.B:,___,a:...n:...t,;...;;.:...to:...·::...:.._ _
.. $5.!50. Appllconla Wllh
morclol Drlvor'o Uconoo Pt-· Will do bobyolltl::.l' my homo,
red. ApPlication• C.n Be PlcUd ~.,.-=~•II•:;:.,
Up At Woodland c.m..., Inc. ~282, liON,
_
For AddHionol lnlormotlan, Call
.,
.
614 44611111, 1:00 • 4:00, II- Bobyolttlng In My Homo,
day • Frldoy. O.lllo -llolga Hood ClooOhlro - · 114-361'-'11141.
Still, A Dlvlolon or W"oodlond
Corllor, 1o An AA IEEO Employ•. Doyoan ... ll.lblo, ol Rill·
.. 1\d aru, tor Information cal
Oallla ·llolilo HNd Sllll Hu An
loavo - lmmodloto ODonlng In Delila 114-1112·3411
Hurry, echoolet1rt1 aoo11.
County For A F•mlly Servlc•
Aldo, lppllconll lluot PoNooo E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. l~,
An Aooodala o.a- In Soclol Trimming, T,.. Remonl,
Work /Rolalod Field And Hold A Trimming. Froa EoUmotoal I
Velld Drive,. Uc:enM. The 317-7117"Aftor 4p.m.
&amp;~ginning Rate Of P.y 18 $8.25
llolntonanco, Pal~
Mr. For Addhlonal Information. Gonoral
Call 614-441-6e111, 8:00 • 4:00, Yard Worfl Wlndowe Wa
Mondoy • Frldoy. Oallla • llolga Gull.,. Cleanod Light Haulng,
Head Ster1, A Dlvlelon Of Commerieal, AMideNIII, Steve:
Woodlend Cent1r1, II An 114-4411-11158.
AAIEEO Employer.
Goorg11 POIIable So-Ill don'
HEAD START TEACHING AS- haul your loao to lha mill lull
SISTANTIDRIVEA·HARTFORD.
coll304-8711·1ll7.
Minimum r.qulremenlt ll'li High Home care for your loved one In
~.='
~:~=~ In lllddlopal1,
mu.. M'lllr CDA tr1lnlng and be
an.... d by end of MCond yur HouMcleanlng.
Ret.rencea,
of employment. Slllry based on Call 114-448-8148 Loavo IIMquelllicltlonl. MUit hive car aago.
.
with valid WY CO'mmecclal

tor Sale

--2010.

c- -

=:

'!".::::.: OE.,.'!;.:,::

Oriver'a Llc:en• (COL). Apply 81

Mlea Paula'e Dly_~,. C.nttr 1

Avenue In Huntington Mtore

Ou•llly And E:rptrience • The

Soulhwoolom Commun•y Ill:•
tion Council Inc., 540 Fifth
s:oopm Fridoy, Auguot 2o, 1!1113.
~5 dally. S.C.A.C., Inc. lo an
EOE.
lntorMtod In Woridng During
Tho. Wlntor llonlha To Pay Oft
Thoel S.eaon~~l Bill?
Pre.-rfng_ Income ••IXM 11 Your
AniWarl DinT.. lo Looking For
Employ.. In Thl Huntington,

wv.
WHI

Gtlllpolt., OH .,.... WI

Troln. Boote Foo $7Q.OO
Comprohanolvo 13 WK Couroo,
1 Dof A Wk Roglolor Now, Clu- llagln In Soptombor. Roglotor At·
'
DonTax, Inc. Galllpollo On Each
T.Oodoy And Wodnaldoy 10
A.ll. • 4 P.ll.

Block Wnt 01 HMC On Jackoon
Pika ll.f 8 A.ll. -5:30 P.ll. H

~eoc:=:'U' ~ 1~" Cf"~~
l troddlen 1~ 4 448 U:,,· ~-

l choolon 18c.- Ago 114-1461224·
'
I Will bobyoh In my homo, clooa
to echool8, hlw • ref1Nnet11.
:' .:.:.:..::..:.:.::.:.:.;;.
304-575-27114. _ _ _ _ __
1Will do bobyolltlng In my hafM.
1 by
hour, day, wen. U ·
I perienced,
rlflrwncM, Mkf.
dleporl aroa, 114-1112·5305.
·
Will do blbyolnlng In my - .
lllddloporl, Unk corllllacj,. .,.
l*loncod, ror.nncoo, lfhally
Wood, IM-11112·3111.

Financial

1----------

Laundry Aulllant: Parl·'flmo,
12:30 A.ll. To 4:30 A.ll. H Dovo 21

Business

WMk. Apply Scenla Hlh Nu,.

lng Cantor, 311 Buck Ridge
Road, Thank You.
National Publlohlng Arm Noodo
Paoplo . To L.abll , -corda
From Home. $800/Wk. Set Your
Own Houn. 1 ·-1'10-13'11~41
E•
lllnt18 Yrs•) Or Wnto: ~
33J,
161
S.
Llncolnway,
N.Awora IL 80542.
Nood Babyllttor In VInton, For 3
ChlldiOn llldnlghto, 614-388111118.
Noodod lmmodlatoly loeol homO
and
lndapendent
dNIIrl.
Telemarketers for Interview 304421-1975 Mon.-Fri. titer 4p.m.

Opportunity

1---.:..:~,...,,....:...

__

INonCE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
nd t•do •··at
,.commt 1 , .., you
uw •
nuo with paoplo you k-,and
NOT to oond money fhrougn tha
mall unlll you havo lnvolllglltod
1....._oft•lng.
''"
Local Pay Phano Route: t1,2DII
A Waok Potantlol, Plfcod To
loll. 1o800o4811-7632.
l..ocol Vondlng Rauta: t1,2DII A
WMk Polent~ . Muat Sell. 1-I00-

163·Yoncl.
Namo Vout OWn Income lloluo
FortUN At Home, Own Buainea, Profit• Dally, O.u...nteed.

Rocopllon-llt111oc:ratory noodod
ior protnelonal office. Mutt bl Froo Dololll, 212-265-8100, Ext.
wiUlnQ to work on an ...needed
belli, .-,me pilrt-tlme, eome 2117.
tuU-clme. Typing, word proc .....
lng, ·and general offlce lflilll 1
Real Estale
'mult. Experllnce preferred.
Rnpond to Paint Ploooant
Rogiltlf, Bo• C.l:l, 200 Main Sl.,
Porn• PINIInt, wv 25505.
31 Homes for Sale
s.rv~• uu1er.... advenleed by l-121&lt;""""eo,....,H"'h--ndo..,...~Mvl.,....;__
Paul Harv:Y,oh'' an o'lJ:rtunHy aood w
expel on 314
111 room,
condHion,
ICF81
Point fioull tr...
tor •n Ind vld ue I In
, Qlraga &amp; lftlllll buUdPINNnt I lkoon County • - lng, 114-1112-3411
to tlal'l their awn commercial,
reeld•ntlal, reetomk&gt;n, .c'-inlng 2 etory, 3br., 1 112 bath, 2 oar
buelneu. Fklanclll ualltance
approx. 2 acr•.
available, down peyment to
71-2701 after 5prn.
quallflod buyar. CoM llr. Hl'*lo I.::..Cc:--,.:-=c..:::=,.....,-...,-=1400 111 1111. .
3 BtdroOnw, 1 Bath, Llrge F.R.
U.R. Attachod Garaao, EiociJic:
Taka AdvanlltiO Of Thlo Foot Hool, 2A 11/L GordOn, Prlvolo
Tl'l&lt;!k ear- Opponun~y, o.d ldoal For Family Or Rlll~ 1
Bolary, Top Bonallto, Exocutlve Oft Stoto Aouta 110 Aloovo ..,.
Training, 0-"unHy For Ad- N.G.H.S. 112,500 L.w flola , .
vancemt~nl, ·Mwt h Wlllktg To eum. Mortgage 114-381 1101 For
Work Hard Aoaumo Raopon, Appolnlmont.
olbiiHiol, ·Think For v And Bo Cull- SorviCII 3 Bodroomo, 2 Bllho, a car Alo
Orlonlod. For lmmodloto c- tachod O.roga, Outbuilding,
ol~~lcc:,"'.;~~
__,
-,
An 317-7104.
lldWIII -School-, 114Equol Opportunity Employor 11F-D-V. Froo I Drug F- 3bdrm. houoa I goro110, Apple
Envi!Oftmont,
Sl., Sy,.,....i. oloo :lbdrm.

1•reae,

*"

At

Drl•....

pold -ion •
T""'k
holidayo, -nda•ndI
oorno during .....
quoiHicollono lo Polnl Pt-nt
Ragtotor, lox c-11, 200 llaln
Sl ~ Point PloONnl WV
r-,
'
25550.

VI'IIA FURNITURE
114-4414111 Or ... 4tl •••
'10 DAY BAllE All CASH
DR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOsiT)

~:In~llom':"'~~r":.:::

114-Mf-2210.
HouM For Bole: Land Con!roct,
$2,000 Down, ~lod lllwoon
CorllorvUia """ Oak Hill On
Routo m, Caii114-245-1131S.

home, 304~7WSI2.

304·'173-0Al.

Bodd~'l'wln IIIII ...... Full

HI

Duoon tMt ·hi; 4

Dnl144.M; Cor Bod'o,
Bunk
Bod"o,
- · - ·V...
Full
Uno Of
Bout-om
Stal11~ At 120.00; lncl- llony
Shape a • BizM swr11na At
ta.oo.
a ~- ·IMido 'l.ao
Auction or 4 Mltoo Dul 141.
-Dpan I A.ll. To I P.ll. -

Dining A-. Table, • - · I

For rwnt, need roommate to

lhare 3 bedroom trailer, no
'73 FOITMI · Pork, 2 bedroom, dopooH, no utQHioo, t150
good cond~lon, 114-1111.2·3761, -.thly, 814-ii2-31141,
-louolnqulriN only.
Nice mobile hamel for rent
''M Schultz, 12d5, 3 bedroom, otarllng ot $250/mo., ond opacM
dopoolt.
central air, refrigerator and ot 18Simo.,
ltove, waeher, drytr, underpin. Country lloblle Homo Pork, 114nlng, good oonciHion, 114-Mf-. ii2-21S7.
2188.
2bdrm., fumlahod, good condi10 x 50 mol&gt;llo ho- $2400, tion, ~ locotlon, 1 chid, no
l&gt;olo1 SUO/mO., - Hov.,, 304814-1111:1·57.12.
812..488 onytlmo.
.
laxl5trollor w/121111 addHion, 3
or 4br. la~ga llvlngraom, 44
Apartment
ldlchan
linin-.
Bx24
-oa1 porch, iinall dock, lnd
for Rent
IliON, · VO&lt;Y _.t cond., · OBD. 304-IU-3387.
1 Bod- NNr Hotz•,. Air
ConciHionotl, SUPER niCE!
12x10 New CarpeC, Water HMter, I24Mio. 114 411 2157.
Electric lox Including: Por&lt;h,
Undorplnnlng, CIA 14;DOO, 114- lbdrm. opon..- In Pomeroy
386-"1686.
for ..... 114-lt2ol81111.
Mx'ID F-ood Foollval, 3br. 2 lbr. apollmont. In Point
bath, Joi~l IIICtrtc,
PINMnt, fumllhed or unfur.
nlr)g. 814-:JIIII-MOII.
nlohod, vwy cloan, no polo. 304-

Jll••

und•P/n-

1173 12x11 Kirkwood, 2br., new
carpet: rurnace. CA, 3y,. okf,

OUTSIDE
FUANIBHI-:
Wrought Iron Table W/4 Chalroi
Fan Bock Rockl!)g Chair PI;
An:h . , .•• $121.00

171-1:181.

2 Bedroom Apartment, Stove,

Chalrw And 1 Arm_Chair, 11ZCYI
To 1130'•, Good eor,dfllon, 114-

441.0507.
GOOD

USED

APPUANCE11

w.-~. dryoro, Nfrfgarolon,

rang ... ..._
Appll•- "
Vlno 81-1 pd 114-441-73111, 1-

...

~Homo ow..

-mo fllt;' ":! 61

=

' --

A--.

=K:-'Ing_:alzo:-:'-,.-IRI-:-•~bod-=-w-:H::-h-117W=ol
t!OO, 114-1112-3411.

IMlf'! lull all que borgo llahlo;

1'4" It' long, ton1o lolflna Tralllr:
dom ulo1 _ 7,000 lb. aajooaiiJ,
EVER'fTH!NO You Hood To Ad A $700, . . . .NI04.
Bolhroom: Sink, Cor!ltMdo,
Tull, c..-lo T - - . . _ WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
Dloh, Etc. Wo Wanlod A 011- 2GG P8l flUS;_ I ,Inch 1111D PSI
Coior.l300 Tailll All. 114- 152.50; Ron bona Enlo,.,._,
441-ml.
Jocltoon, Ohio, 1~7-1121.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
WATER . STORAGE
TANKS
Complolo homO fumlolllllfll. - A n d Ground FDA
Houl'8: llon48t, N. ·~ Appauuid For PalaiM Wat•.
0322, 3 mlloo out lu...lllo Rd. ROn Enno Enton&gt;riM..O, Jocko
F-Dollvery.
oon, Ohio, 1-.ul'-tS:..O.
llolloh.on Corpota, Rl 7 N. 11455
Building
441·11144, ..12 Carpal ""'· VInyl
14.41 Vd. .
.
Supplies
Now Ook Fumhtn: Tablao &amp;
Block, brick, . . .. wlnChain, cuno., CUrved · 011• dowo,
llntolo, .... cc.u. WlnClllno Elc. Ahror Volloy 0a1t tllf'l, Rio
Fumtture, 01011181 C....k Aoed, 24~ Grtnde, OH Call .,._
QaiH,_.., OhiD"11t 411 1311..

"""""*""•

-lor

For

•tt•

Lot lor mol!ll .........
olngle or double wldo o_,cod.
304"~--

Lolo I IONigo lor homO CCIIIIIrucllon on Rayburn Rd,

J'MIOI'\Ibfl l'lltrlctioM, COUrdf
wll•, lnlormollon mollod on ,..
que~~, 304475-1213, P'N• no
lingle~ lralloro.

lt2~2fl.

Bpaclow 2 bod
~
·-·~·raacun:~pt•,
~r~gono.~.
1:1 ,..,
m • ll.,..ploon, . _, olio
. IC»l 304 Ia Uti •
by lacloy, L . a - Altlo,
•• Now Hann, wv.

N=.

DP Cha- - - chino with lnol-lon oncl v l - t - o x - - .
tion, IM.ftZ.CIOA.
fii!Ori!IHO ~ lo fl1 El
Camino 11171 up, .,21, 114-1112·

~-214~0;..'-':--=----:--.,,..--

Zl4

-..-s-41311.

SPftz.

0121.
One
bodroom
_.....,
1221/mo. lndudoo uti!Hioo, ~
- - dopool, no pote; 114-

304-

J.D. 41 Comlllno L.alo llodoi
Wllh
Com HuM, Roolly
Good Condllon, 114-24M824.

•erw

no,

&amp; Acreage

• , ..
oond.

HS; anildlnnO&lt; ball; Now Hollond 717 lorago ...,_
Toppa
. n gao ol'ovo, 145; 114-11411- t• wl bolh haodo, 3 boater
2121.
Iongo wogon, Holloitd T
hay bind, Gold g~ndor/mbtor, 12' ·
tranoporl dlec, AC no lllo oorn
lkytog ~ woohlr, $50; plani~~IMOtro«or, ~
twtn 5ox
.._. • m~ttrwa, good concl. 304-27S-4216.
~- coil o or lp.m., 114-ii2·
Ptootlo tanka, 216 110~ T ....,.,
pori- • d ....... lor
.._lillie ar
~';;· Wolor or ony lkluld. hO. 30410 . - , liD MW,I45, I
• 52&amp;-8301 or
2354,
Llve.s tock
63
Rani Ook lkmbonhlp lor lair. - .;;;,..-,.....;;~.;;...;.;;.,;,...-~" ............ Cal ~IIH Yaoilng
Hamoohlro
Rom
Aftori:30P.II.
PhoMo,14-441-1il6.
lola And Chair And 0... Oddo Reg. Umouoin bullo lor oolo,
I Endo FumituN, 8 - l l l l t.
114'1112-11110.
S..rpluo anny Gttmo!loo,.., ...
o h l - _ .... ~­
~ a- ._rvlllo'o, by
•
Sonclyvllle Pool DIOCII. Fti-So(.
S..n, 12:00pm-l-=.:haro
doyo • ,houl!, . .

oc-

Lots

''*'·

-·--1.

10.12 I.Uildlng,_lrollod clock w/ RofrlgO&lt;IIor,
F11ntlehod, 0wnor movtng. - · old Ken- 56
Pets lor Sale
roof. 304-l~n38 ...Y. mw- l..ocofod: 34 112 SmlthO&lt;o.J...~... more hNVJ au~y wahlna Nga or 1-304-681-2013.
llpolla, 1150 Dopolll, t1 IUIIIIO. chino, 1400, firm. 4 liumor 01001tt and 8ut&gt;llly ~
814-Mf.387U,
lkfll!: Chat oloctrlo NllfiO, aood Groomlncl. AI i&gt;i-,
1m SchuHz, 2 bedroom, ltove,
oorici~IO DBD. 304-8~ Julio Walib. Calll14 448 02 •
Nfrlgatator, CA, F.A..N.O. hill, 2bdnn. a,_rtnwrt, Racln. araa,
'
4 llonth Old IIIIo Block Lob I
500 golion propono lank, lor lnlormatlon can 614-.2-3411. a~ar
roconlly Nmodolod, J!OC)O, 814PICKENS FURNrrURE
lklamuto lllxod, Sholl $25, 1142bdrm. lpll., tllol -lrlc, apNowr\JHJ
441-1181.
143-62811.
plloncu fumlohod, tounclry
112
mi.
I
~AK:,;C,;.;;Bo;::..._-w_
pu-~""pt,..n-,-mo-=-~e-=a
tumo.ltlng.
111l14 Froodom 2 Blllroomo, Total room IICIIHioo lo
Electric, C.nt111l Air, SI,IOO, I* ln lown. At&gt;llli'oiiioM ovelleble Jorrloho Rd. Pl. PI-nt, WV, female; folwn/bli , _ ....,
Bopl 10, now laking .,.....,
448-0885 . .
., , Vlllaga ·o,_, Aplo. Ml or oatl-.e'/1-1410.
coiiiM--3711. EOII.
au- 81m llottr- • BoX ~*--'-871-,-31_4,-1.'------1WI14x7Q wlih 1lo24 Hpondo, 2
114.' - 4 - .
AKC Do-ion pupo, -lo,
bedroom, UrepltCI and h11 1 Fumlohod
Efflcloncy:
807 Sprlng Sol
dock. $8000 llrm 814-4441-1524.
Soooncl, Galllpollo; ShioN Bath,
SWAIN
l2wka. old, ohoto A wormod,
UtiiHI11 Pold, ttlllllo. I , . _ AUCTION A FURNITURE. 12 $200 or lrodo lor oquol voluo,
1180 Falnnon1 mobil homa, 4411 Aftor 7 P.ll.
Olivo Sl., Galllpollo. Now A Ulod ~114-1:='-':::32,.-·1202.;.::...:.
' -::--:---:::-=
ti500. 30U75-1304 aftor 5pm.
Fum- Efflcloncy 7 112 Noll, fumllun, _..., WOIIom A AKC Poodloa Cockor lponlol,
1182 Fairmont Townhouoo 14x70 O.llillalloL UtiNIIN Pold, S115, Work _._ 114-441-SIH.
Calm Torrl•,
Puga, Mollan
All Eleclrlc, Centl'll Air, 2 Bid- 614 C4&amp;4111AHor7P.II.
Greyhound, 111amooo olio. 114Wa-~ Orvor, R~lor,.
room, Bath Hal Garden Tub,
Color ••v. ,_, Ali c- 441-D404or304-S71-2207.
GOod Condition, 114-31111-8113.
Rill Hol..r
1111 dftlonor,
Campor
Bin AKC raglolorod Colllo pupo.
Avon•, N- A110lloblo
11185 Jay Qulllrw, 'Mx'70, 3 Bed- Socond
For Occuponcy, 2 Bodroom Rolrlaorolor, llloiow&lt;on, 114- 304~224 .... 4pm.
rooma, All Eloctrlc1 GoOd Condl· Unllo, Rongo, Rotrlg-or AC, :1541-'12311.
1
lion, 114-118-5111 t7;500.
Carpet, lneom1 R•trlctea, 11doriy,
Dloablod~
Handlcoppod,
1116 Jay Skyline, 3bdrm., all
oloclrlc, Mx70, good c:ondlllon, 114-441•1100, ~quol Houolng
OpporlunHy FIIHA/RA.
Whirlpool dryor hi....., aold,
614-1111-551~
.... Conti., .-o.lo4.47W4a.
AKC Rottlllorod Bchnouz• Pup
Rrat
Hotzor
Apallmonto,
Flnl
1181 Pint Ridge, 3 bodrooma, 2
Female,lM 441 1123.
both, utYHy room, 113,000 or And Codor Sl, O.IIIDOIIo. 53
Antiques
tekl over paymenl:e, 11-t-ft2· Sonl~, Dlaablod, A Horiclloopood,
F11HA
1
ROIIrfct~ 1
3041 or 114-!1112-8441.
Antlq• troodlo -lng mo·
llonto B - On ur ohlne, radio atand, waeh atand,
1181 For- Park, MK70C 311!1 _1 Houoahold Income. Alltlllonc:oe, wood., 1.118 bo•, lor lnfaromotlon
112 both, leundry n&gt;am, A. ,.... Clrpo~ ~HI Laundry, A/C. oall IM-"'a2·24M.
'
Rnldonl Pap El.ldrlc UtiiHy
1~7111.
-rollan II•
Pupo,
Only. Flrll Holzor A!J!ol-.to Buy or ooll. Rlvorlna Anllq1101, Ftom Working PolWito, llhOia,
1an Palm Harbour, 21K~, latal
1124 E. lloln St-, on Rl. 124, Wonnod, Rotiulor, Good DloAN - For- fnlormotlon OrOcdrywall, ThO&lt;mopone wlndowo, cupancy.
To
pooltlon, • WMD Old 17th
oot-up and dollvory, muot aoolo Roqunt An Appllcolion Call Pomotoy. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 Auguot.
114-21M6111.
o.m.
lo
8:00
p.m.,
Bundoy
1:00
lpptWCIII11 1~7..e121.
814-441-1100, Or Wlflolll-r lo 1:00 p.m. 114-tfl2·2621. •
CFA Roglot- HlmoloyanApori-.to, . 563
Booond
1194 R1dm1h 14x70, Sbdrm., In· Av..,uo, O.lllpollo, DH 45131
Penlan kftt..., m Mch, 114cludoo akllllng1 atopo, blocko,
143-8311.
and CarlmcotM, Hud 54 Miscellaneous
5yr. warrenty, nomeownera In· Vouchon
Apprvvod.
Equal
Houolng
OpMerchandise
eurance,· and 1 ~r of frM lot
Dobonnan AKC ~lllod
,.,., all for only 111'71'mo., call1· ponunlly.
Pllpploo, All Sholo, Porinta On
F•mlohod 1 IR, LA, ldlchan, 11178 l'c!rd T-blrd, many niW - - . 114-21111-MSO.
1100-837-3238.
lor- . -h. 458 Saoana parlo, noot run, t171 OBO. 4
~
~·Ooodyoor GT Pllf.ID.RM IINo,
-lie Homo And Lind For
by oldo
Solo, By OWnO&lt;, 814·2-24 Avonuo. Ro4,dop. $230/mo. 114- $21 oo. or SIO oot. ~;.:.:~::2341::;.,4:.;.:,::2111=.-,--- -I Nfrl~or.m. 304-875-aol.
Anytime. Addr. .:. 3260 Cora ~
IIIII Rood.
Nlooly Fumlahod Apol'lf!lant, 2 Ton TI'IICk Load Of Firewood
lbr, nollt to Ubrlry, periling, Onovol Hau~~~ To 10 Ton A lkll Bhlh-'bu 1 112 ,... Old,
central heat, air, ,.,.,.nee ,... Load 11"2
33 Farms for Sale
roglolllod, 175. 304-871'~
qulrod. 114-446.03311.
,. ~
•
30 ecre firm tor 1111, 2 112 miiM ~F=uml:.::a:.:hod:..:.:..::::,ff.:lc::le::!fCJ:.._,-..,.,-,-a·. l 20' • 22' campll)ll lrol..., ••·
fiT
Musical
oul Rio Otando. 11+24!1-1227:
Utllhloo paid, '101 Fou11h Avo'f oancl., IMio8 on liiapoctlon. Full
alzo
bed
WI
boolt
e111,
lnstncments
41.71 ,.,_" 2 lllory Farm Gtllipoll&amp; 114-t41-4418
h111111 aard, new m.tt,.. l box
HouN, LG. oarn, 2 IIIIH From
=.,·
" - - - -- - - - 1 oprfllfll. 304-773-1101.
tnnnpol, uc. qtllllly.
llo.-.lile, llloc. Out Building :::;P-'
:104-171-2801.
Fumw.d 0111 Mdraam 1part- Ill
d10
~.
$36,000, 114-261-11711.
mont, nlca view of rlvw, utllhiM
wac
It~ wulldlnal,
~~~. doll..., I Ollup, 111.
Mini llrm 23 tcrw, 10 room Z tumlehed, $300/mo;, I'M-141- Other
llae anH1ble. lldera E· Pkg. dool-- PNVJ F 252::::'·:..__ __ __ __ 111flpmont, Hondoroon. -.e'ill- lloii IMI w/ Poony aanlulton
llory .h oullc omall bom, 1 milo ::
1
omp-haod A hNVJ ~ 16"
out Jorrloo Hd, OVOII- Paint
11121.
Pl....nt:, $31,000. :IQC...e~. Oraclouo living. I onc1 2 bodopookor, · - 304-112
..
room oponmonto o1 VIllage Anllq• whaol horN, lltoty • Clarka plano, 1100. lknor
lnd
RI,...Hio CCHfglnoQ 4HP Kohlor lllfiiM, 1'111-1011.
Plcturooquo, 20 OCIW, t.nce, 2 berne, ~~~~ cante- Aparlmonloln lllddlo-'- From doc~, l'llady, ~!lee home. ~1311.
$202. Call14-11112·511t. EDit
1 - .1 .
lUll· BUIIII· &amp;UllMER
SA LEI
llldd'-&lt;lo/ttc
Ohio,
IHch
St,
1
CONCRETE
BPETIC
TANKS,
H""'"'lngblrd ll,.lc CaniO&lt;
Business
34
""""
Ioney
tumlohod 11(100 Dolion, ~a; JET lot
Jac.c.-,Ohlo '
oportmonl, UIIIHioo pold, Nl. A (llo Sand Filter R.....nid)
Building•
114-211.111
~- 304-·2151.
t1,4M; Enno E11te!PJ111o,
,
Jocltoon, OHol_,tllll. ·
Commorclol Building For Sale
Or Laue, 331 s-ild Av.,uo, llodom I lldroom Dawnlawn,
Vllltlllto POri- PIR :ie unro
Phone: 114-441~522, 10 A.II. To Complolo Klahan&lt; ClrDII; Double· ovon gao '"""'' good IIIOdom ...,_d, Ulle now, 114Conlnl Air, D_.., I~ ••71, 114-111143A
I P.ll.
ltll-31110.

35

•··.

For SI...Carollna uu: •u,..,
"""" oancllllon; p lXP1124124 p1n
Fenn Equipment
Ike - . lofliO trompolln; 1
Dflorl.ll4-lft·7181 - aooo Ford 12,JM; 1000
Full s•: w...rt&gt;od, Baakohatt
=~~.::,.";r.;:.~
Hood- $200 With Po-ll " ' " ,~"Dni-7.WI"'N.:..:..I14-441~::7-ot'c:.31;;;'--:-:-l 28f.411i22.
~,550; tiGO .. FOrd $2,'111; 11'f.
::;;
Go Korlo- 3 HP I up, -'"1 on
I HP, In otock, llorrlo Equip- Com 1 &amp; 2 R- N1 a
monl, t14-1112·2415 or 114-1112• 12 Roll hct; 352 NH Qllft.
2110.
.
ttor 111Kw; Bquoro 1111.,.;
--leo! Equ1
- Rokae; - . ; NH 477 Hoy
.-·-·• · lind· I N Ford T-or:
hftii.EIIctrlc Bed, Whelk:halr, SpnidJJs; OIMt Ae6d A..ctY
Bolh - · 114-44f.OIIO.
~ul_.t, - · • Fonn
Hoi IIJb, M _,.., ...., co-, IIIOohl,._ry, J - , Ohio,
good oondKIOn, lor lntarm.Uon PhoM: .....- 4.

58

Transportation

7"1

12

Truckl for

11181 ~ 1 OWnor 71,000
MIIM, All Oi'loinll t1,M, 080,
IIIII Ply-.llt· lavlf!l N lololor 14GP, OBD 114-211-1012.
1m l•lclt SI&lt;Yio!lo Ru .. Good,
S400, 114 t484127.
.
1171 llllolt Eloclra, AC, tonV1m
Clftllttl, 41,0Q0ml, 80IM rvlt,
Jollablo • _ .... - .
304-871-7101.•

.7150.

1m Dollp, 4dr., I'll. air, IWW
11-, clun ~ milo, N.OOO
flml, 114-144
'

1182 Oldomolllle, ••• · ma or 114-tfl2-237l
1113 Camo10 Wllh T·T-. Eocoilant ConciMion, 114-381-11211.
1113 ColmoJo, 301 auto, $20011
010,~

1113 ca ......, :1101

oao,....--.

au~o,

$20011

.

WllloJ JaiP, 4 WD,
Harllop, 4 C.llndor, fllolhaod,
Enalno Jull rlalft, 1800, 814441-7110.

I

I

I SHORE COULD
USE ME A

1116 Chevy 4lt4,
Very Good c:onat~,_~, PI,
Automatic, Y-1. eo.;
lllllo,l4,200, ~~o~-37~-27117.
1811 Ford E150. Cl!olom Yon,
loltded, IlK ml•. uo. ODnd.,

SIIOO. 3GW75-:il34. .

·-·4131.

1811 Ford flongor II, ,Aoltlng:

•
The Freocb team tbat won last i
year's World Team Olympiad ID SaJso. -. t...+--f
maglore,ltaly, wu lucky to qualify.
ID tbe trials, It entered the Jut deal
three laternatlonal malchpoiDtl
abead.
One pair from Ute Salaomaglore
team, Paul Cbemla and Michel Per·
ron, reacbed three no-trump and went
two down: n$WI 100.
The opposite North-South pair, .
Georges Iootzeff and Ollvlet Beauvll·
laiD, would have stopped ID one ella·
mood If they bad known. But they
LZ DM I
B D
NLG
TFPI
'8 V F
pushed Into five diamonds. As Beauvillain wrote, at least It was a better
BD
8 D
XD
MP
TLOOIDLGFJP
contract than three no-trump.
West, Herve Mouiel, led the club
JFPBLWJLHB
XDDS
L
ace. Beauvlllaln ruffed and played the
spade four: eight, ace, five. Now,came
DFLXWF
E L Y ·p J
(C:DJEFJ
a losing diamond finesse. West returned the spade two: king, jack, 10.
EUULJZFJ .
B ME
IOLGFJI
Declarer ruffed a club ID band, drew :
trumps and tried a heart to the queen. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "We naad lo flnd new ~eroea and new mythl
However, East, Alain Levy, won with our society - the old oneo .11111 aren 't working ." - Jooe Rivera
the king and returned a club. Beauvil·
lain ruffed, cashed the heart ace
WOlO
ran the rest of his trumps.
UMI
There were two cards left. Dwnmyl
- -'-- - - - - r.lltod ~y CU.Y l . I'OUAN
bad the Q-7 of spades; declarer
Rearrange lenen of the
heart seven and spade six. When
four scrambled words beclarer led his spade, West played

PEANUTS
NOW, GET OUT TI-IE~E
IN RIGI-IT FIEL~ AND
CONCENTRATE 1

T~INK

ABOUT

WI-IAT You'i~E
DOING ..

KEEP YOUR
MIND ON
T ~E GAME ..

KeEP YOUR
14EAD OUT OP'
T ~E CLOUDS ..

1111 Dadoo Connn II, Hklh
I I ' - l.a EK- Conaillonl t7,500, 1114-44f.2011 Allor I
P.ll.
111112 Ford XLT, 4 whaol drlvo,

~OOOml, outo., t13,000. 304IIOI.
MotorcyCiel
74
Ifill XA•IGO, 0Shapo, Extru, $400, 114-441niO.
11117 Suz'*l CIS450L, lolo of
chromo, 1'11110 groot, 114-11123015 _. HI at Sugar Run MIU,
1'14-111:!·2116, 1160.
Honda 150, t!OO, 114-114~21!11.

\

TONIGHT'S

MAYB~

· TAX POLICY.

11' 1m Boa B!Mf1o II HP
Johnoon And nn Troll';i~•coilonf Conclhlon, · •

0

·-

,,

.

~.

1171 Cly- boot. 11112 Ci!eVJ
·cu ..omli:8d van, Nd w'-ltv.r
t~m. toile ~= ~
114441-G4D4 or
2207.
•

,.

three.

~i'IOO

fi£AA

With

At-IOT"[.II.
tlll.Y,
AAOTIIE.R

Trol!!!._ Good Condlllo_!t.lPhano:
814-vw-2171 CaM E..., - nlnga Or Lolo,lft Evonlngil.
IIH 4 WlnnoiiO .....,_ lt't";
- · 20-, 114-1tZo3117.
24' 1\lnnol Crol ,...._, w/1111 30HP, YtmaM moeor,
$21011, 114-111a-2041 or II
Lone Ook c-....,....., - h
of Will Coltlmlilo, W.Y.

-~~-·-·-­
no.

$21H,I14-~.

11to1a11 Tnnomloolono, ~ I
roiMiln, III!Ypoo, llorllngot$H;
OWMF 114-2o\5-51T1t "J14-3JI..

1814 Oldo Royale, PS, PI, ·AC,

oruloo...
lUI*' aar, elM 114-141-2041
or
·114-1141-2171.

=·

1116 """'"
2,
M,OGO
llllila, Do)'lono
Eilcollonl- Contll'
Aoldng: S3,200, 114-441-

I

I

1~

I

I

0 I L VI

~

~=~~:::~~::::~:~--~-'-"'-,

I

F I N RuA

"Please buy something
lady,' pleaded the salesman.
"It really is a fire sale. If I don't
sell something the boss say's
be ·····!"

I'e'"

~-..,;_.;,l"!'s.;.;..r',.;_;r'l..;..;.rl--i

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
L.-..L.-.J.'-..1...-1...-J..---' vou de-velop from step No. 3 below.
_

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

V

A
U

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEITERS
TO GET ANSWER

'1l:UM-LETS. ANSWERS
Shrill · Taffy - Issue • Wiggle • FIGURE
The woman was ttying qn a dress that was obviously
·.: too small. "My husband was right," she sighed, "too
many
an. awfully big FIGURE ."
- . calories add up to
.

2211

gao lanD, ono ton fnlclo
wtteele raclalorl floor mM•,
lie. D R Auto, Rlp~oy, WV. 304-

a

372-313:1 · · - - - -

79

-·•772.

1116 - n Co!OroJ J - ·
IUIO., $1100.
1111 Iuick Contury Good cdlllon, Hlgll llllolgo, 114-441-

THRIME

:~.
I
I
I
_
1-I_,U;;...:.Ny...:::E..,V,;_:;S~~
I

()()t.()R? /

1113 Clwolor L.a ....., 2dr.
lronl Wd, P8, PI, AC ail 76
Auto P1rt1 &amp;
lloclrlc, groat ohapo, UIOO;
Accessories
11171 lulcll2dr.l4011 POntiac .,...
gina, s now troo, S8711; tm
Conalr compor, 17112', lloolfO 4 . IIIII ·11117 Oldo Cui- 231 ~'
Englna
Porlo
Dido
or I, bllthioom, DOOII. •••, · Tranomllllon
114-211-1012.
Ntrtaoralor, IMI aood ....,..,
t130ll; IM-317~
:1111
Chavrolll
llolor •I
Trtnemllllon v..,f14.211 1131.
1113 Onond Prb&lt;, u
~:l runo !'IJlllr, fill fullollll ChaVJ truck,
114 3111401.
.
111~ Monte C.rto, V-1, air,

:',:;,,=a.

low to form four simple words. f-..-l~'-'

Time stood still. Had West made
ridiculous error by slgnallnl with
el&amp;bt from 9·8·8-2? Or bad Eut foWlld I
a 6rilliant false-card from ·J·I -5
be dropped the jack at trick four?
it wu the 12,349th trick of the tri·
ala, and BeauvlllaiD misguesaed, call·
IDg for dummy's queen.
The rest is history.

'•

BORN·LOSER

Ill HP ~ llolor And

tor

T::~;~~~~ S©\\&lt;ll~- ~t(fS"

EE~·ONOMIC.S

Boats &amp; M&lt;ito111
tor Sale

IW7 17 Fl. Conlury -

\T'S AIOIJT

GOVtllNIIIENT

LSCTURS

-..tor bod, $200.

Engine, 221 IP Aololng:
~000. Call: 114-441-7112 Or
1 u em

Eut
Pus
Pus
Pus
All pus

. By PldlUp Alder

E!o&lt;lge Rom Von, A.ao
Trone,Condition, 1621.

v..

,_

Missed it
by that much

1tQ

11184 OWeno 21' Cabin

lltnt

1110111
10 Ktttledntm
11 RIIIIIDUI

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SNACK II

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7 . . . . .JIIIIIOI

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1171 Ford Branoo, llulo! 4WD,
llltllm . - - . 16 ~.­

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MotorHomll

11 ft. " "
" tui,
- Hit
·- .
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114-14.:1121.

1334.

1111

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Wllh I!'!Vuntty lnletlor,
Exctnent.COndltl9n, 11,000, 1143 1 - , ._,.1111.
.
Ifill Oldomoblle Dolll 81,
I~ PS, PI, PW, Po.r
CH11t011 Conlrol, "-r
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'

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Cond~lonl

Home
Improvements •

BASEMENT

_n-

WATERPROOAIIO

u - atot ....

Loolto •... Looal, .......,......,.......
Good
Aololng;
14.711.
·
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4223 ~lllr I:IID P.lf.
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11117 Toroll motor - · I 000
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Door, llloiclt With Rod lnl-, I
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lluol .... az,lilo, 080
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llll

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82

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

84

Electrical &amp;

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~.:tn.
-- 4 . .w:
Aflor 7P.II.
t:-'1. - --· 1,.247- 44NIID
IOie,

Matchmaker instantly . reveals which signs
are romantically pertect for ,ou. Mail $2 and
a long, sell-addressed. stamped envelope
to Matchmaker . c/o this newspape r. 11.0 .
Box 4465. New York. N.Y. 10163.
VIFiGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) II pressed
loday. , ou might rel inquish your a uthorily
ove r a situation you should personally be
manag ing. Your abdication will hu rt things
instead of improving them . .
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0ct. 23) Gua rd a gainst
inclinations today to bank upon friends who
aren'llhal dependable. Toy lo handle critical
matte rs yoursell. Instead of looking for a
s urrogale.
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) II you lail lo
be cooperative with associates today. you
Tuelday, Aug . 17, t993
might tle denied the success you're seek·
Some weeding out where personal relation- ing. because the' cou ld elecl lo block your
ships are concerned could be in the offing path in order to penalize you.
for the year ahead . This will not be a nega- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You're a
tive development. What you do will benefit very imaginalive person today, but there is
you.
a chance you might have more bad ideas
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Independence is a than good ones. The problem comes by not
good quality of cha racte r11hal has its place. knOwing hOw to discern between the two.
However, don't caroy It lo extremes today , CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . ,1!1) If some·
like refus1n g to alle r a bad decision jus l ihing in which you're presently involved is
because someone else came up with the , pro~ing to be a liabi lity instead of an asset.
answer. Know where to look for romance see it it can be unloaded . Don't put In good
a nd you ' ll lind it. The As tro - Gra ph money aner to bad.

ASTRO . GKAPH

-

Cfbur
CJirthday

1111 8unblnl LE Air, AIIIFII
C rt1l Oootl ConciUon, Cllll

IHO

""'...._

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Refrlgll'ltlon

.
5

FIIWOOCI p._. For WIPer chll. now ,._, whlla INI IHO Goo · - 4 ~ I
Wll 1e leu enid When Cliil rotJow
Air Cot-oltijj, 14,.
lltru .......... - .
Woothor- D o - , 114- llrvM •••
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114
CJNo
211-1111, 114:iil-7f121E¥8nlngo.
11. ,114a-lant
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.•

•

Pus
. Pus

BARNEY

1171 Ford lronco 4 dr.,
auto, p.o., p.b., , . _ dolay
wlpato .,2GGI14-441-nU.

Vegltlbln

11£14..

Welt

Pus

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304-871-1272.

Autos lor Sale

Sail

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'I

au- ...

21Tho!IHI30=1
32 .... et1tlc
PIUIIM-

Vulllerable: Eut·West
Dealer: Eut

1m Chevy 112 Ton 310 4 IIIII. 4
- . AT, PI, PI, #II;, 1.71 Pool
13,500, or oao t1r ,.__l l144ti2M

~.100,

11 Help

20 ........ -

34F11111DIIl

.AQH743

Fa1m Suppl1es
&amp; L1vestock

:.::!'~Whfto, Mon'w 110, 114- = 1 . W-wn Fonn,

for Rent

AVONf All ar-. Neod tllra
money or . ."' 1 carHr, elthtr
w._au II~J;· 304-1182-2645
or 1-800.1112
•
AVON I All Aruo I Shlrloy
Spooro, 304-II~M:III.
B...,.lttor For 3 Yoor Old All
Doy ·A I Yoar Old Aftor School,
RIO Orondo Aroo1. Ptofor NSmololng Cllrloloon 11+245;

Mlacellaneous
Merchandlae

=====----,--1
Har uom.,or, New Hoi
HutfY 11 IDMd 121 8tf1ea. WI elealriC malar, IJC,

Mobile Homea

Help Wanted

54

111 ......
17 .,...,. .

31 l!tthllllt .
3111MYI41 LoWif'

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27 Ono (Scot.)

EAST

SOUTH
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-

22 lllnY oz.
23 Country ol
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Folrlano; 1111 Dodao - .
- . ........., IIIOfor ......
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NORTH
.AitQ7
.QIO U

A-lor
or
llorllng ot . , . , _ , - .......

Junk CIR, .a nr condiUon, IMii2·71U.
wa- llandlr)a timber, 10p
prlc.. p.id, ffH eltlm~~tae.
llcoriood. A -lflod logging,
304-8116-305S or 185-3138.
Tap ·Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Rl~ 81- Colno,
Gold Colno. II.T.ll. Coin 8llop,
151 A_,uo, Galllpollo.
W.nlod to buy: uood moillle

.

11 Oltewholl

14s.tw-•

~--.........
110m
...........
- . .no
.
buy

1 z.to
I llltger FI'BIIk

12 flodlllt

Rentals

9

Ani•••P•W

ACIIOII

t

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.

...,.

~

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20.-Falb . 19)
alliance
that has only been of nominal IJ&amp;Iue might
be terminated at lhis time. Actually ~ cou ld
prove to be the besl move tor the parties

.concerned.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) In order to be
p10duclive toda y, you must be melhodical
and consistent. If you perform in a hit or
miss fashion , your effort s co uld count for

nothing.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) A new project
in wh ich you're presently involved might
become more complex as you get into it. To
be on lhe sale side. have back-up persons
reedy lo oeallirm your procedures .
TAURUS (April 20-MIIJ 20) Toda, , ou're
like ly lo be judged by the company you
keep, so pick compan loys wh o e,nhance
your image and not detract from it. You can
get 1nto enough trouble on your own without
an accomplice.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you r current ·
pl a ns lor som ethi ng in whic h you 're .
involved don 't appear to be productiv e,
make improvements on the spot, instead of
letting things run you Into a waiL
CANCER (June 2t· July 22) Someone you
know rather well is a better sale sperson
tha n producer ol what he/she conceptial·
izes. Don't invest in t~e sizzle instead of the
steak.

Slalklngs (CC)

l.tysleries
Billie lmprov

a

'

"

�Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday,

August16,.
199~
.,

Livestock interview winners announced
Winners have been selected in
the annual livestock interview competition in conjunction wilh the
annual Meigs County Junior Fair.
The winners are:
Market Steer: Tyson Rose,.
grand champion; Lisa Hoffman,
reserve champion; Anita Calaway
and Myca Haynes, honorable mention.
Beef Breeding 1: James Chapman, grand champion; Sarah
Roush, reserve champion.
Beef Breeding II: Stephanie
Hoffman, grand champion; Anita
Calaway, reserve champion; Julie
Brown, honorable mention.
Feeder Calf: Michele Guess,
grand champion; Anita Calaway,
reserve champion; Ann Wiggins
and Eric Monlgomery, honorable
mention.
Dairy Cows and Heifers: Nancy
Nally, grand champion; Ben
Holter, reserve champion: Kristi
Warner, Chris Parker. honorable
· mention.
Dairy Cows and Management:

WINNER • Kay Warden or Racine was recently selected as the
winner or tbe "Penny Michelle" doll donated to lhe Racine Park
Board by Lloyd Middleton or Royal Vienna Collection. or CO!IIviUe.
The doll was numbered and signed by the artist 'and signed and
dated by Mr. Middleton. Presenting Ms. Warden with "Penny
Michelle" is Dale Hart, presidenl or Star Mill Park Board.

Tricia Davis, grand champion;
Chuck Parker, reserve champion;
Paul Smith, honorable mention.
Goats: Tara Grucser, grand
champion; Ben Crane, reserve
cham pion; Patty Nally. Danielle
Grueser, Kay Hunt, Stephanie
Kopec, honorable mention.
Market Lamb I; Elaine Putman,
grand champion; Matt Pavich.
reserve champion; Tyler Johnson,
honorable mention.
Market Lamb II: Rebecca Scolt,
grand champion; Riki Barringer.
reserve champion; Patty Nally,
honorable mention.
Markel Lamb III: Jonathan
Avis, grand champion; Shawn Dai·
ley, reserve champion; Heather
Dailey. honorable mention.
Beginning Sheep Breeding:
Billee Pooler, grand champion;
Christy Drake, reserve champ1on.
Intermediate Sheep Breeding:
Rebecca Scolt, grand champion;
Jonathan Avis, reserVe champion.
Advanced Sheep Breeding:
Nancy Nally. grand champion;

A bridal shower was held Linda and Leslie Gilkey, Ruth
recently for Mindy Harris by Ms. Durst, Pam Dill, Audra and Wade
Vickie Harris and Mrs . Penny Harrison, Krisli Durst. Jan, Liza,
Brinker.
Willie and Victoria Zahran, Vicki
Refreshments were served and H;u:ris, and Penny Brinker.
games were played with pri zes
Sending gifts were Mrs. Nancy
going to Mary Parson s. Cindy Morris, Bev Roush, Monk and Nan
King, and Leslie Gilkey.
Herman. Laura and Amorcuc
Those attending were Destiny Salser, Laura Harrison, Wilbur and
and Linda Jenkins, Phyllis Morris, Tillie Rowley, Goldie Gilmore,
. Terri and Janet Manuel, Sally Hoi· Audrie Young, Stephanie, Tim and
man. Lorrctta Tiemyer, Cindy and Tiffany Deem, Mr. and Mrs. John
Misti King. Mary Roush. Lois Bacon, Jan and Chuck VanCooney.,
Jenkins, Melissa and Josh Morris, · Sandy, Marty and James Hart,
Tina Bissell, Mary Persons, Kim Kevin and Candy Uelbrick, Sandy
and Dusly Eads, Flossie Nelson, and Mike Walker, and David and
Patty Imboden, Amanda Brinker, Stephanie Roush .

Plans lor a chicken barbecue
were discussed when Star Grange
No. 778 met recently.
The event will take place on
September 19 at 11 a.m. until 2
p.m. al the grange hall located on
County Road I ncar Salcm Center.
. The meeting was opened by
. \"aster Pauy Dyer who welcome
rpembers from Hemlock Grange
who were visitors.
Susan· Oliver, Executive Director for the Meigs County Senior
Ci lizens was present and discussed
the programs and services of the
cenrer and asked for suppon of a I
Mill levy to be placed on the

November ballot. the grange went
on reel?"' as supporting the levy.
Jams Macomber. Deaf Chairman, read an ALERT on Medicare
and hearing aids.
Allan Halliday. Agrieullural
Chairman, reporiCd that the Meigs
County Fair will be August 16-21.
Patty Dyer, Fair booth chairman
reported that the grange received
eighth place on the booth at the
Ohio State Fair. She also reported
that work will begin on .the Meigs
County booth about 5:30 p.m. on
Friday. Members were informed of
what was needed for the booth.
Legislative chairman Eldon Bar-

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days bdore an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
m usl be received in ad vance to
assure publication in the calendar.

•

MONDAY
RACINE - The .Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the high school.
RACiNE • Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

have enrollmenr Monday through
Thursday from 8:30-11:30 a.m.
POMEROY · New student
enrollment at Meigs High School
will held at the high school through
next week from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

PICKiNG UP MATERIALS - New students attending Meigs
Junior High ScbO(II picked up registration material at an orienta·
lion picnic 'Thursday. Here students, accompanied by parents, pick
up a schedule.

RACINE • Schools in the
Southern LocaJ School District will

Student orientation held

Joel Lynch, son of Keilh and
Beth Lynch of MiddleP;On. recently
celebrated his fifth binhday with a
swimming party given by his moth·
• er and father, and his brothers Josh
and Jake Lynch. A T-baU cake was
served, a cookout wass held, and
.the guests swam.
Attending were paternal grandmother Delores Surface, maternal
grandmother Hazilee Riebel,
Roger, Robin, Joslin and Dalton
Riebel. Richard, Diana, Ricky and
Christopher Johnson, Rhonda and
Megan Carnahan, Renee Riebel,
Mike and Mikey Lavender, Chet
and Stephanie Wigal, Nicole Varian, Linda and Jesse Hanson ,
Tammy and Samantha Cole.
Michelle, Eddie, and Amanda
Neece. Craig Cundiff, Darien
O'Neal, Donna, Jarred, and Collin
Griggs.
Others presenting gifts were
maternal grandfather Roger Riebel,
David Carnahan, Jessica Baker,
Tyson Lee. Ray. Tracy, Jacob and
Ashlec Smith.

Observes birthday

'

cent of the stall are new-comers to
the school, he said he is very excit·
ed about developing new educational programs for the students.
Gaul then invited all guests to
sign the registtation book, pick up
scheduled and materials purchased
by the Effective Schools Team,
dine on the picnic-style supper provided by Vaughan's Cardinal, the
Meigs Junior High's Partners-In Education, and browse through the
building.

..

Computer class set
Learn the basics with of personal computers with a class to be
offered at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
The Adult Services Department
of Buckeye Hills Career Center is
offering a class on the basics of
operating the IBM Personal Com·
puter (PC). The hands-on class is
scheduled 10 begin August 24. This
class is for those with limited e•pericrice and builds confidence by
teaching the popular Microsofl
Works Program as well as lhe Disk
Operating System.

•

Classes will 1&gt;e taught on Toes·
days and Thursdays from 6-9 p.m.
Call 245-5334 for more information.

f

\

Pick 3:

360

· Pick 4:
8fi04
BuckeyeS:

Social Security benefit estimate
adjusts for current dollars
by Ed Peterson
Social Security manager In
Athens

llol. ,44, NO. 78

1 secuon. 10 Pages 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 17, 1993

llultlmecll• Inc.

,------Kiddie tractor pull-----____,

A Multimedia

Inc. Nowspaper

PrOposed yard·sale

ordinance has first
reading by council

LEVOLOR

Long a favorite with young·
sters, the kiddie tractor pull
competition got underway
Monday arternoon at the
Meigs County Fair. Children
use a specially built toy tractor -to pull a sled, similar to
sleds used in the big tractor
pulls - only smaller. Kiddie
tractor pulls will continue all
week with a pull-off to be held
Saturday. Tractor r.ulls start
at 4 p.m. daily witb the exception or Friday when pulls start
at noon. At left, 5-year-old
Brandon Goeglien or Tuppers
Plains, son of Jody and Mike
Goeglien or Long Bottom,
weighs in prior lo the competi·
lion, Top, Jennifer Harris puts
in the extra err6it to achieve a
full pull, proving the event is
not JUSt for the boys. (Sentinel
photos by Jim Freeman)

1" Aluminum

Horizontal BUnds
59x42" 73x50"
68x84"
72x50"
71x72"
72x64"

Vinyl
Blinds

$499

.
WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

. 428·1065

The 1993 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

drive set

'
•

LIQUIDATION
SALE OF
BLINDS!

accurately. And, although you may
not be ready to retire, you will find
the benefil estimate helpful in plan·
ning your furure.
The nexr time you ask Social
The earninss information and
Security to send you an estimate of benefit estimate is easy to obtain.
Start
the benefits you would receive a1 Call Social Security s toll-free
retirement, you will find the number, I-800-772-12l3 and ask
At
Each
amount figured in "today's" dol- for a Form SSA·7004 (Request for
lars. Estimates prepared before Earnings and Benefit 'Estimate
September I 993 were projected in Stlllcmenl). You should receive lhe
"future" dollars using a I percent form in about 10 working days. It
adjustment to take inlo account will take you about 5 minutes to
MIMORIAL IRIDGI A-CII 011
wage growth for each year up to complete the form. Mail it to Social
GARFIEUI AVL, PARitiRIIURQ
age 62.
Security in the envelope that
MON.·FRI. 9·9;
When Social Securily first accompanies the form . You can
began issuing earnings and benefit expect 10 receive the report of your
SAT. 9·5:30; SUN. 1·5
statemenrs in 1988, the estimates earnings and your benefit estimate
reflected the probable effects of within 6 weeks.
continued work and changes in the
economy up to the time the worker
reached retirement age. Social
Security is no longer adding the I
pertenr factor in order 10 rnaire its
retirement benefit estimates consistent with benefit estimateS prepared
by most private and public pension
planners.
Your benefit estimate aJso will
include a yearly breakdown of your
earnings that have been )'CilOt1ed 10
Social Security and an estimate of
how much you have paid in Social
Security taxes.
It's a good idea to re·queSI a
Monday, August 16
statement of your earnings at least
every three years so that you make
4:00 p.m.-King and Queen Contest- Hill Stage
sure that your ~ings are reported
4:00p.m.- Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sllow Arena
6:00 p.m.· Hillside Stage- God's Kidz
Clothin~
6:00p.m.- Draft Horse Show
The Gallia·Meigs Community
7:00p.m.· Moto-Cross
Action Agency will hold its free
8:30p.m.· Hillside Stage- Shady River Sllufflers
clothing day for low-income persons on August 17 from 9 a.m. 10
. Thesday, August 17
noon. The agency is located in the
8:00a.m. -Junior Fair Rabbit Show- Show Arena
old school house building in
Cheshire.
·
I :00 p.m. -Open Class Flower Show- Junior
I ;00 p.m. -Draft Horse Fun Sllow
3:00p.m.- Junior Fair Parade
4:00p.m.· Kiddie Tractor Pull· Show Arena
4:00p.m. -Hillside Stage- Middlebranch
5:00p.m. -Junior Fair Board Auction
6:00p.m.· Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by Open Class
Sheep Show- Show Arena
7:00p.m. -Grandstand- Demolition Derby
7:00p.m.· Hillside Stage- Kingdom Kids
9:00 p.m.- Hillside Stage- Out of the Blue

Low tonight In 60s, partly
~!":l· Wednellllay, sunny, hlgb

1-9-12-16-29

Page4

rows spoke on forestry problems Crafi, food and game booths will
and about reeducating people oil be available. Entertainmenl will
stan at noon with One Way Slreet,
managemenl teChniques.
The Literary prograni was pre- followed by Silver Wings, Our of
sented by Rosalie Story, master of the Blue, Middlebranch Bluegrass,
Hemlock Grange in the absence of Born Again Believers, CJ and the
Jesse White, Lecturer. There were • Country Gentlemen, and The River
readings "Sure I Remember When" Valley Boys. There will also be a
by Rosalie Story; ''The Old Cov- fall festival queen, pumpkin growered Bridge" by He)en Quivey; ing contesr, and a parade. The
"The Thrashing Ring" by Wally parade will be sponsored by
Bradford; "Looking Around" by Ravenswood Aluminum Cotpara·
Muriel Bradford. A skit called lion Company (RACO) and·awards
"Who's on First" by Muriel and will be presented for first, second
Wally Bradford was also per- and third pllice floats.
formed. the program ended w1th a
Anyone wishing to ser up a
number game and Eldon Barrows booth should contact Shirley Stewwinning the prize.
art at Racine Home National Banlc,
Patty Dyer discussed National 949-2210 to reserve a space. There
Convention in November and will be a $10.00 fee to reserve a
reminded those planning to go to space. Anyone having any queslet her know so transportation and tions may contact Sam Pickens at
room reservations can be finalized,. 949-2670, Lee Lee at 949-2454, or
The next meeting will be Kathryn Hart 81949-2656 at 6 p.m.
September 4 with an officers conference at 7 p.m. and the meeting at
8 p.m. First Degree win. be put on
in full form following Junior
Grange Graduation.
'
Forty members, visitors and
juniors were present and a potluck
refreshments were served following the fl!eeting.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - American Red
Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Racine Fall Festival
Meigs Senior Citizen MultipurPose
Plans are underway for Racine
Building on Wednesday from I · Fall Festival which will be Septem·
5:30p.m.
her 25 from 10 a.m . to 10 p.m.

POMEROY - A team meeting
for the Southern High School Golf
Team will be Monday at 5:30p.m.
at the Meigs County Golf Course.

TO PERFORM • These 17 dancers, dressed in SO's attire, will
be dancing to ''Wear My Ring Around Your Neck" as they perform with the Shady River Sbumers clogging team, Monday on
the hill stage at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured L·R, rro.11t,
Jaynee Davis, Je~ica Bla~ttnar, ,Charla Burge, Marissa Whaley,
Amanda Hoyt, Enca Hanmg. Mtddle row, Judy Eichinger, Dena
Manley, Sbawna Manley, Pooch Brewer, Donna Roach. Back row,
Alice Hawthorne, Amy·· Hendrix, Lara Sayre, Libby King, Cinda
Starcher, ,Sheila Whaley. Tbe sbow wiD begin at 8:30p.m.

grand champion; Jeanie Newell,
reserve champion; Jennifer Clif·
ford, Peggy HeLzer, Rr.an Kauff,
Kindell Brown, honorat le mention.
· Rabbits II: Cheryl Jewell, gland
champion; Amy Smith, reserve
champion; Joshua Roush, Jason
Ervin, Kristen Brown, honorable
mention.
Basic 4-H Horsemanship: Jody
!hie, grand champion; Daniel
Young, reserve champion; Joshua
lhle, Tara Grueser. Whimey Karr,
.lp,s_je Jarrell, honorable mention.
Basic 4-H Horse Science: Jamie
Erwin, grand champion; Danielle
Gruescr, reserve champion; Cassandra Smith, honorable mention.
Light Horse Selection: Jaymie
Miller, grand champion; Sara
Craig, reserve champion; Sarah
Grueser, honorable mention.
The Normal Animal: Tricia
Davis, grand champion; Mathew
Justice. reserve champion; Jeanie
Newell, Susan Grueser, honorable
mention.

Star Grange plans fall barbecue

Harris bridal shower held

MIDDLEPORT - Appro•imately 250 students, parents. staff
and board members auended the
second annual student, parent,
teacher orientalion picnic held
, Thursday evening at Meigs 1unior
High School.
Principal David Gaul welcomed
those altending and introduced
each staff member. He indicated he
was pleased with lhe large turnout
of parents, teachers and students.
Since he and approx.imately 45 per-

MichCie Guess, reserve champion.
Beginner Market Hog: Melissa
Francis, grand champion; Lori Harris, reserve champion; Robert Harris, Kay Hunt, Chris Barringer,
honorable mention.
lntermediale Markel Hog:·
~abby Kauff, grand champion;
Amanda Wheeler, reserve champion; Matthew Justice, Alyson Pat·
terson, honorable mention. ·
Advanced Market Hog: Ginger
Holcomb, grand champion; Mandi
Sheets, reserve champion; Alyssa
Hoffman, Aric Patterson, honor·
able mention.
Raising Pullets: Melissa Guess,
grand champion ; Odie Karr,
reserve champion; Michael Guess,
Mendy Guess, honorable mention.
Ra1sing Broilers: Bob Hoffman.
grand champion; Melissa Guess,
reserve champion; Odie Karr, Barbara Smith, Brandon Smith,
Matthew Kirk, honorable mention.
Ducks and Geese: Rebekah
Karr, grand champion.
Rabbits I: Joseph McCale,

·ohio Lottery

Reds·
lose tilt
'to Mets

POULTRY SHOW WINNERS- Tbe rol·
lowing youngsters were named grand cbampi·
ons or reserve champions il) Monday's Junior
Fair Poultry Show. Winners sbown are, rrom
right: Alban Salser or the County Critters,
grand champion exotic birds; Rebekah Karr or
the Busy Beavers, grand champion ducks ait~ .

geese, reserve champion pullet;- Mike Guess of
All'red Livestock, grand champion pullet, grand
cliamplon market pen; Barbara Smith or the
Pioneers, reserve champion market pen; Melissa
Kirk of the Salem Center Go Getters, reserve
champion broiler; Kennilb Kirk of the Salem
Center Go Getters, grand champion broiler.

By .RM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy residents may soon
find a change in the procedure for
holding yard and garage sales in
the viUage.
A proposed yard/garage sale
ordinance received its frrst reading
Monday night at a regular meeting
of the Pomeroy Village Couricil.
Council members may vote to
accept the ordinance afler three
consecutive readings.
The proposed ordinance contains definitions and outlines the
type of property which may be
sold .
If the proposed ordinance is
adopled, individuals desiring to
hold a residential sale must obtain a
permit from the village. Permit
applicants must supply their full
name and address, the location of
the planned residential sale, the
date or dates upon, which the sale
will be held, the date or dates of
any other sales held in the past 12
months and an affirmative state·
ment that the property to be sold
was owned on the date of application by the applicant or by members of his or her residence and was

neither acquired nor consigned for
the purpose of resale.
A $10 non-refundable fee will
be charged for perm irs and resi •
dents are limited 10 two permits a
year. No sales will be permiued
except between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 6 p.m. nor for more than three
consecutive days with exceptions
being made for inclement weather.
The ordinance also details display of permits, signs and inspections.
·
· Charitable or~anizations are
exempt from proviSions of the proposed ordinance.
Endorse levy
Following a meeting with Susan
Oliver, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
council members voted unanimously to support a one-mill senior citizens tax levy which will be on
November's b3llot
"Everrone regardless of age
should have a choice where they
spend their life," Oliver said.
It's cheaper to keep people at
home, she said.
The agency has been here for 20
years, she said. I wanl to see us
here for ~0 mog: years.

.

Oliver explained the levy will
cost the average taxpayer in 'the
county approximately 4" a day.
"For all the good they do, it is
well deserved," said Councilman
Bill Young.
Reading a report from Village
Administrator John Anderson,
Mayor Bruce Reed updated council
on several on-going projects. .
Work on extending sewer lines
on West Main Street to Ihe
Marathon Service Station and the
Hutton Car Wash should begin
Aug. 3I with work being complet·
ed by the middle of OciDber, Reed
said.
'
Also, engineering is almost
completed on· the Lincoln Heights
Reservoir and Main Street Water
Line projects, he said.
A smoke lest wiD be conducted
In lhe area near the Meigs County
Public Library to detect a troublesome sewer odor. he added. Smoke
will be injected into the sewer lines
OK emergency resolution
Council approved an emergency
resolution allowing the village of
Middleport to apply for gran Is
under the Ohio Deparrmcnt of
Continued
on page 3
.

Poorer school districts funded,
but inequity suit .will progress
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The state has
paid out another $60 million to the
state's poorest school districts to
try to eliminate some of the
inequities in its scl)ool subsidy for. mula.
But the money, released Mon ·
day by the state Controlling Board,
will not stop a lawsuit filed by districts trying to get a new funding
formula in place.
Monday's allocation is the first
of two payments planned under the
state's current two-year budget.
Another $75 million will be sent
out in 1994.
Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature started the subsidies in
1992 after lawsuits challenged the
formula used for Ohio's 611 school
dislricts.
:
The suit flied in Perry County
Common Pleas Coun is scheduled
to begin trial Oct. 18. The Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
of School Funding, consisting
mostly of officials from smaller,
rural districts, med the suit
The group contends thai the current formula does not compensate
for variations in local tax wealth,
leaving students in poorer districts
with less financial support than

those in wealthier districts.
The lawsuit asks the court to
require the state to use a system
that fills in lhe gaps and gives
every sludent equal educational
opportunity, said. William Phillis, a
former assistant state school superintendent and a spokesman 'for the
group.
Voinovich and legislative lead·
ers have acknowledged that the
currenl system is flawed, They said
the equity payments could ease the
effects of the lawsuit and perhaps
prevent a court-ordered solution
that eould take the matter out of the
Legislature's hands.
The Controlling Board approved
the request unanimously. The Legislature previously authorized the
payments by overwhelming majorities.
Two Meigs Counly school districts, Meigs and Eastern, received
allocations in the board's action.
Meigs will get $192.251 and Eastern $198,628.
·
Gallipolis City Schools were
awarded $99,969.
Other area districts receiving
money included Jackson City,
$316,591;
Wellston
Cily,
$440,659; Oak Hill Union,
$239, 756; Vinton County.

$206,976; Fairland,$490,376; and
Symmes Valley, $391,798.
In ~ther action, the board:
• Released $110,000 for lhe
removal of asbesiDs from the basement ofthe Slatehouse, which is
undergomg restoration . Officials
said the contract is part of a $2.3
million expense not anti cipated
when the $68.7 million project was
announced in 1989.
The cost projection has now
been increased to about $82 million.
• Approved an Arts Facilities
Commission $179,187 architects'
contract for a Center for Science
and Industry project in Toledo. The
contract is with Bauer, Stark and
Lashbrook Inc .. Toledo.
. • Approved grants totaling $3.4
molhon for Edoson Materials Technology Centers that include private
companies with participation by the
University of Dayton, Wright State,
Central State, Ohio State, Ohio
University. Case Western Reserve
and the University of Cincinnati.
• Released $75,000 from the
Department of Developm ent's
roadwork development account to
the city of Shelby to help pay for
an extension of a new road into the
Shelby Industrial Park.

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
Will be closed on Tuesday
10:30 -12 noon

For the Funeral of Lillian Truley- Moore
Wife of Board member Ferman Moore

Marda Guess, and second-runner-up was MeUs·
sa Renee currord, daughter or Jim and Faye
Clirford. Tbe other queen candidates were
Debra Frost, Ginger Ann Holcomb, Nancy
Nally, Melissa Dawn Neutzling, and Mandl
Lynn Sheets. Tbere were no candidates for
.
junior fair king Ibis year.

ROYALTY SELECTED • Stephanie
Mfcbelle Sayre, center, daughter of 'Aaron and
Shirley Sayre, Racine, was crowned the 1993
Meip County J!lnior Fair Queen In ceremonies
held Molldlly afternoon on the hill stage at the
fair. First runner-up in tbe competition was
Michele Guess, left, dauRbler of Michael ancl
~I

h~rse show at the Mel11s County fair. The Belgtan mare was. awarded Supreme Draft Horse
Champion.

\

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