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Plge 08 Sunday nm• Sentinel

Pomeroy llddleport

, August 22, 111a;

..

Quarter
horse racing
results

Clinic will expand facility
GAU.IPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
Inc. Ills lliiiOWICed plans 10 ~
its1ecbon.County branch cliniC
The clinic's Board of Dilecttn
appoved 111 uplllSion l"uposal in
concept and appointed a project
team to develop plans, arrange
financing engage a contractor and
oversee the cOIISii:uction of expanded facilities at its South Street clin·
ic in Jackson.
"We are considering adding
approximately 10 000 sqwm: feet
during the next t:i to 18 months,"
Robert Daniel, the clinic •s adminis•·

trator, salCL
" It is primarily an increased
dcmalld for occ~.,ational medicine,

physical therapy and rehabilitative
that has ma~e thjs ne_w
expansiOn appropnate, sEatd
Daniel. "It is our i~tent to prov· e
the space, the equtpment and e
staff needed to fully meet he
health needs of the business and
industry ofJackson County.
"It is our desire to have a fullfledged, state-oMhe-art Occupa·tiona! Me&lt;Jf~in~, Physical '):bcrapy
and Rehabih~&lt;?n _Center tn Jack·
son Countv - surular to our rehaservice~

·

USDA failed ;lcreage·options
'
·
By LISA COLLINS,
GalliaASCS
County Exet~~tive Director

QALLIPOLIS • In times of nat·
ural disaster from drought or other
conditions beyond the producers'
coil ttol, farmers are concerned
about replacing lost income. They
are also interested in receiving
planting credit for the lost crop to
maintain their production history
and protect crop acreage bases for
participating in USOA commodity
programs.
· FAILED ACREAGE: Producers

must file with their county ASCS
office before physical evidence of
the crop is destroyed. There is a
nominal fee charged.for a field
d visit
.
to inspect the planUng an canng
of the crop, and to verify disaster
conditions. This fee is refunded
once the disaster is verified in the
field.
PLANTING CREDiT: Fai'mers
who have crops that have been
damaged so that they cannot be
harvested (failed acreage may
apply for planting credit Failed
acreage is considered planted for
history credit. The county ASC
committee will substantiate the disaster and determine the planting
credit,
Parficipants In the I 993 Feed
Grain and Wheat Program ha've
until August 31, 1993 to revise
their report of acreage,, destroy
crops and reclassify their crop for
0/92 and/or disaster eligibility.
DISASTER-AFFECTED
FARMERS (ANY CROP)
SHOULD REVIEW THEIR
OPTIONS WITH THE ASCS
OFFICE AT 446-8686. REMEMBER ·APPLICATIONS SHOULD
BE FILED PRIOR TO HARVEST
OR DESTRUCTION!

bilitation eeau:r in Gallipolis," he:
added.
.
The last eq~~nsion Qf the Jack·
son County bnacb was completed
in 1990, providing about 9•.000
sqwue feet of space 10 substantially
i~prove its~ andlsoopc of~­
vtccs. At that li1lle, room for additiona! physicians was provided, .as
wen as the addition or JIUI1IIIIIO&amp;fll·
phy and physical therapy services.
Just last year, tile clinic further
expanded ,the space allocated for
phy~ical therapy and ldlabilitative
servtc~.
. . .
.
Darnel said the cli01c ts commtt·
ted to providing the best heaith care

of land adjacent to the Jackson
facility with the intention of being
able to expand 10 m~t the need for
comprehensive bealth services," he
'd
sat.
.-----------,

'I he
Oltit 1
Com pun)'

•
•
•
•
•

Stocks
Corporate Bonds
U.S. Treasury Securities
Mutual Funds
Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
• Insured Money Market
Accounts
• IRA's

Yn, 811.00 dawa wllh appraved cra,_t ... you can
buy aow! S.a a aow - aur lnvaatory Raductlan .
lala 18 gaiDg atraag. We are ••••• larward Ia 14
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WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Archives today released
thousands of documents relating to
the 1963 assassination of President
Kennedy, including classified files
from the Central Intelligence Agency.
Expens were hoping the documents would help answer nagging
questions, including whether Lee
Harvey Oswald had any ties to the
U.S. govemmenL
Thousands of documents,
including files from the Warren
Commission, investigative panels

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441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

1988 OLDS .
CUTLASS 2 DR.

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

•

e tg

•

We sold It new. Low miles, new Qlds.
trade.

ree

1989 PONTIAC

GUNDAM

•

Burgundy 2 Dr., air, auto., lady driven,
new Olda trade. Don't min this one.

BEST FRIENDS - or all the animals, they say tlie dog Is
man's best f'riend. Here, 6-year-old Matt Krawsczyn or Pomeroy
and Sbllo, an 8-year-old golden retriever, prove that dogs can also
be a boy's best f'rlend. Matt and ShUo were contestants in the pet
shuw at the Meigs County Fair Friday.
··

1990 PONTIAC
GUND PRIX

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1988 FORD
CONVERSION VAN

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..

·'

•

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TAWNEY STUDIO

"People who believe the agency
did it are paranoid, and naive !O
believe that they would be stuptd
enough to leave footprints," said
Roben Blakey, a Notre Dame_law
professor who served as staff director for the 1978 House Select Committee that studied the assassination. Blakey, who studied volumes
of CIA documents, concluded that
there is " no smoking gun there."

alone, kiUed Keonedy with a rifle
from his perch in ·a sixth-floor window at the Texas School Book
Depository in downtown Dallas.
Since then, however, numerous
conspiracy theories have surfaced,
revolving around whether Oswald
was the lone gunman and, if he
was, whether he might have been
acting at the behest of the CIA, FBI
or organized crime. .
Commissions that have studied
The Warren Commission con- the assassination over the years
cluded in 1964
acting have had aq;ess to the CIA files.
0

-

•

Dragging and diving operations
in the Ohio River just above Racine
were continuing late Monday
morning for the body of a possil:!le
drowning victim.
About 6 p.m. Sunday evening
four Racine young people were in a
boat on the river when one of them,
Todd Grindstaff, about 20, reponedly lost his balance and feel into
the river when the boat was rocked
by waves c_reated by a passing tugboat.
Others reportedly in the· boat
w·ere Roy Lee Bailey, Dawn
Shuler, and Nicki Beegle. After
Grindstaff fell overboard and did
not come back up, the other three
went 10 shore 10 get help.
Bob Byer, director of '!te Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service said tha~the call at the station
was received at 6:11 p.m., that the
Racine unit was dispatched, and
was joined at the site by units from
Ravenswood and New Haven,
W.Va. Also called in fer: assistance
were the Syracuse and Pomeroy

units.
In the water for several hours
Sunday night searching for the
body were divers Dana Aldridge of
the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
ment, David Hoffman, Middlepon
Fire Depanmeot, and Richie HunL
The diving and dragging continued until after midnight and then
was resumed early this morning.
Divers at the scene this morning
are Aldridge and Kenny Byer of
the Middleport Fire Department.
Both Racine and New Haven emergency units are back on the scene
along with personnel from the
department of Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby.
Byer said that the river was shut
down last night until afler midnight. He said the Coast Guard has
bee.n "tremen!lously cqop.eraljve .
insofar as regulating the barge traf.
fie" while the search continues.

•
•

,

•

BOY SCOUT RECOGNITION. Adam Whit~, ten, or Pomeroy
Troop 249, was selected as Meigs County's 1993 Boy Scout the
Year, an_d Ci!e~~er .Troop 235 was _named the .Boy Scout Troop of
the Year. Accepting the trophy on bebalr or the troop was Pat Clif·
ford, a~istant scoutmaster.

Petitioners try to keep Demjanjuk in Israel

4 Dr., tilt, crulae, stlf'IO. New Lumina
trade. Priced to Sell!
·

KODALUX Color Enlargements ·

and congressional committees.
were released at the National
Archives. But it was the unveiling
of 90,000 pages from the Central
Intelligence Agency that attracted
the most attention, since many of
the CIA•s records bad been secret
until'"ow.
"I think that there will be a lot
ot· interesUng information," said
James Lesar, director of the Assassination Archives and Research
Center. "There will be plenty of
information that will be of great
interest to researchers."

Rescuers search river for
possible drowning victim

1989 OLDS CUTLASS·
SUPREME S.L.

Jay Caldwell

1 S.CUon. 10 Paw- 35 .., ..

AMuttimedla tnc. Newtpeper

JFK assassination papers released

Just tnldld. Showroom new. Full power.

Contact:

GALLIPOLIS · Patricia Silvers
is 'a pennanent cosmetic technician
and assistant manager for Personal
Touch Family Hair Care Centres.

KOthlux
,, _, .........

Low ton!pt 66. Tbubdenlonas.

T......,y, blgh Itt mid-80s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 23, 1993

1989 MERCURY
MARQUIS LS

I

was office supervisor for Columbus
Southern Power. He bad been with
the power company for 18 years.
He was president of the Gallipolis
Kiwanis, a Webelo Leader, served
on the Troop 200 Committee, and
was on the Board of Trustees at
Grace United Methodist Church.
The family will reside in Marietta.

STORMY

Vol. 44, 110. 12

MultiiM&lt;jl•lnc.

OFFERING:

Joins Parkersburg staff

y~hile in Gallipolis, Standish

Page4

•

Clarification

PARKERSBURG · The Parkersburg
Women's
Center
announces the appointment of
William L. Standish as Director of
Office Operations for the Parkersburg Center and its satellite offices,
effective Aug. 2. The Parkersburg _
Women's &lt;;:enter is OB/GYN facil- :
ity that serves West Virginia and
. southern Ohio. Dr. Standish
received his education from Otter·
bein College, Bliss Business College and Ohio University in
Atheos.
Standish, his wife Dee, and their
three children have been residents
of Gallipolis for the past seven

Pick 3:
6-0-3
Pick 4:
6-4-8-9
BuckeyeS:
1-2-16-18-19
(Saturday)

for.~ec~':=t=~n:es

Account Executive

JOINS STAFF • Jeannette
Farthing, Huntington, W. Va.,
bas joined the beauty salon
staff or Lissa's River View, Gallipolis.

Ohio Lottery

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1992 JEEP
COMANCHE PICKUP
5 speed, air, Rid - Rid - Red. New
Silverado trade.

JERUSALEM (AP) - Oppo- and that he served in the Sobibor
nents of John Dcmjanjuk's release death camp in Poland.
said they will do anything they can
Demjanjulc, who was extradited
to prevent him from leaving Israel, to Israel in 1986. has maintained
even if it means changing the law.
throughout his trial that .he was a
"I'm already speaking with victim of mistaken identity.
members of parliament from the
Betcer said he hoped the process
left and the right," Avi Beker, a would buy enough time to change
spokesman for the World Jewish the law so Demjanjuk would be
Conifess, said Sunday.
retried.
Petitioners have beeo given until
"We want the ~arliarnent to iniSept. 2 10 find new reasons to keep tiate a motion saymg the law dealDemjanjuk, 73, in Israel.
ing with Nazi criminals should be
Israel's Supreme Court last more flexible ... in matters of extramonth overturned Demjanjuk's dition and double jeopardy," he
1988 conviction and death penalty, said.
citing reasonable doubts be was
That won't be easy.
'
"Ivan the Terrible," a sadistic
Eight high court justices and the
Nazi guard at the Treblinka death attorney general have already reccamp.
·
.
ommended against a new trial, citBut the court said there was ing the dimger of double jeopardy
convincing evidence he belonged and saying the case has already
to a Nazi unit that helped kill Jews dragged o,n too long.

The auomer general also said
the U.S. extradition order was only
for Demjanjuk to stand trial for the
Treblinlca charges.
Efraim Zuroff, a spolc:esman fer:
another petitioner, the Simon
Wiesenthal Center of Los Angeles,
said the ceoter would address double jeopardy by introducing evidence that Demjanjuk was at other
concentration camps not mentioned
in the original trial.
Avraham Cassrier, a lawyer representing eight survivors of Sobibor, said he would continue 10 ftle
appeals until Demjanjuk is retried.
A statement from the Justice
Ministry said that an appeal like
Cassrier's - which seeks to convene a panel of judges in place of
the eight that have ruled against the
retrial- is theoretically possible.

OIDO STATE FAIR WINNERS- Numerous
Meigs County 4-H members took their projects
to the Ohio State Fair. Coming back as winners
in 1be competition there were these boys and
girls. Recognized at Youth Night Saturday at the
Meigs County Fair ror their project work were,
left to right, f'ront, Chris Krawsczyn, natural

resources; Heather Well, pork council tray;
Melissa Neutzling, Tobacco and You; and back
row, Vincent Broderick, foods; Debra Frost and
Denise Shenefield, clothing; and Kyle Ord, wbo
took a first in tbe state In the pole bending competition.

1990 PLYMOUTH
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See Don Carter, Bre~ Epling, Marc Carman, Hoyt Mullins, Greg Smith

446·3672

I

.'

'

I

. GIRL SCOUTS RECOGNIZED • These girl
scouts and their leaders were recognized at the
130th Meigs County Fair Youth Nl1bt beld In
the show arena Saturday night. Tbe recoplzed
group included Iert to right, front, Vicki Nor·
man or Letart Troop; 104, outstanding Brownie
.scout; Melissa Holmaa, Middleport Junior
Troop 1039, outstaodln&amp; junior; Bethany Cooke,
Pomeroy, Cadette Troop 1115, best cade,t te
exhibitor; and Rebecca Houser, PCHDeroy Troop
1271, who tied for OIJistandlng Brownie scout.;

back Michelle Bissell, Rutland, outatandlng
cadetle, who also accepted the award for best
cadetle troop; Terrie Houser, Pomeroy, outstanding Brownie troop leader; and Pam Johnson, leader of Middleport Junior Troop 1276,
tbe outstandln&amp; junior troop, tbe best overall
best fair b!Jotb, and tile reclpleut of the revolving trophy ror the overall best trnop In Mel15
County. Not present- Rachel Taylor, of Mid·
dleport Troop ll76, who received the best
junior exhibit award•

OUTSTANDING 4-H CLUB MEMBERS·
· Elizabeth Donie, ien, and Kelly Grueser were
bonored at tile 1993 ontstandln&amp;4-H club members durlu&amp; Youth Night at the Meigs County

Fair, Here .they accept clock trophies rro~;~~
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Couuty Extension Agent.
They were also presented S100 savings bonds.

�•

C0 mmentary·

.·

PIQI 2-The Dally

.•

Monday, Aug~

Sentinel~l

Pomeroy-MddlepOrt, Ohio

r-------------------------------------,---------------------------~--------~--------------------~MOn~dl~y~,A~ua~u~~~23~,_1~~~~ :

The Daily

S~ntinel

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE DITERBSTB OF THE IIEIGS-IIASON AR1tA

ROBEIU L. WINGETI
Publlsber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH\.
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

. l..ETI"ERS OF OPINION llfl' welcome. They should be less than 300
· wOlds. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
addles• and telephone number. No unsigned lellln will be published. Lett.en
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ·

Health care board
stakes out turf
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Health Care Board. Created by the Legislature to work out basic elements of health-care reform, has had some organizational problems.
State Health Director Peter Somani resigned last week as chainnan.
saying he wanted to make sure the board was flexible as it works to bring
diverse interests together - and not viewed as a tool of the administrati~
.
. .
.
The Legislature approved in late June an amendment clarifymg that the
board was independent and not a part of the Depanment of Health, as previously interpreted by some officials.
·
Somani said he favors independent status.
.
Following a closed meeting last week, the director denied reports of a
conflict with Jackie Fullerton, the board's executive director. Some members said privately they were having procedural differences.
Ms. Fullerton also denied it. She said Somani has shown tremendous
support for the board and has been fully cooperative.
-Some lawmakers who supported making the board an independent
entity said the Legislaltlfe invited conflic.t when it placed a supposedly
independent board within the administrative jurisdiction of the depanmenL
.
Ms. Fullerton, meanwhile, announced at last week's meeting that the
board plans to move its offices, currently located in lhe Department of
Health to another building in downtown Columbus, to gain more space.
So~ani said the board would be charged rent if it had stayed in the
department, which has been providing staff and legal work, in addition to
free space. However•.officials sliid the board has now been provided
financial resources that it previously lacked.
Ms. Fullerton said the Department of Administrative Services is working on lease arrangements that could be rutished by mid- or late-Septem~Meanwhile, the board heard updates last week fro m vanous
.
subeommittees that have been assigned specific areas of study.
· 01\e panel ~a recommendation 10 eliminate 19,000 hospital beds
that it says ~not needed.
Another recommended that all health insurance companies meet
national accrediting standards as part of a streamlined hospital and medi.
cal review system.
Neithrz proposal has been acted upon by the board, which is scheduled
to meet again Sept 1-2.
At that meeting, the board is expected to elect a new chairman to succeed Somani. Williatn Ruse has been serving as interim chainnan.
Undrz the legislation that created the 16-member panel, it is directed to
recommend state health-care initiatives to Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature by Jan. I.

Berry's World

"Hey, buddy! Can you spare a couple of bucks for
a cup of cappuccino ?:'

DOE needs to practice what it
WASHINGTON ~ When Vice
President Al Gore' s NatiOIIII Performance Review implements its
plan to " reinvent government," it
might S18f1 by ltlfDing off the lights
at the Department of Energy
The Department of Energy
expects to spend $789 million next
year promoting energy conservation. Taxpayer dollars are spent
producing glossy, multicolored
pamphlets with tips on conserving
energy, which it gladly provides to
anyone who asks. Unfortunately,
DOE doesn' t always practice what
it preaches.
·
Last winter, some DOE employees wore short sleeves to work
b ~cause the temperature in the
warehouse where they worked· was
kept 10 degrees warmet than the
federal government mandates. The
loss to taxpayers - $21,000 was enough to heat 100 low income homes for the winter.
Tbis was not the only crack in
DOE's ener~y-conservation program. DOE mvestigators estimate
that the department wasted as much
as $14 million last year owing to
poor energy conservation, or
enough money to heat the homes of
65 ,000 low-income people this

prea~hes

one is working. At sites where
energy-conservation equipment has
been inatalled, employees are atill
using men wasteful and expensive
systems.
· .
"The DOE is one of its worst .
offenders at its own facilities," a
spokesperson for Public Citizen, a
· government watchdog group, IOld
us. "You can verify this by driving
by its Washington headquarters at
rught and seeing the lights on. Not
bit of conservation would reduce only is it ironic, but it's moronic."
co.sts. As the government' s
In a recent report by the DOE
guardian of conservation, it is inspector general, reviewed by our
DOE's job to ensure that agencies associate Andrew Conte, the invesmake efficient use of their energy tigators recite the department's
dollars.
own axioms "Many (energy con" Making sure that enrzgy is not servation) opportunities can be
wasted starts with thinking cre- realized at little or no cost by mrzeatively about a problem, with disci- ly turniQg off or turning down heatpline, with changes in philosophy ing, ventilating, air conditioning
and behavior, and with awareness. and lighting systems in ID!occupied
. The payoffs can ·be significant.' • buildings."
reads one pamphlet DOE disIn just one area of one building,
tributes to the public.
inspectors found $5 ,000 being
"Thinking creatively" at DOE wasted each year by lights being
apparently doesn't include turning left on when they were not needed.
the lights off when leaving work at At another site, the department
the end of the day. Air conditioners could save $180,000 per year just
and heaters are run at temperatures by installing enrzgy-efficient fluoexceeding federal limiLS, and are rescent ligl)ting.
often kept running even when no
Inspectors discovered that most
winter.
The federal JOvemment current.
ly pays an esumated $8.7 billion
per year for energy, so every little

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

DOE buildings had heating, ventilating and air-conditioning equipment running 24 hours per day,
seven days.s per week. In some of
the older buildings, heating and airconditioning uniLS were running at
the same time for additional' com- :
fort. At one site, investigatorS esti- :
mated that the deparUuent was los- : .
ing $2.5 million per year just by •
leaving heating and cooling sys- I
terns nmning at night and on week- I
ends. Employees at this facUity .1
argued that the equipment should •
iJe left on "just in case" one of :
them decided to put in a little over- :
.
',
ume.
Even in cases where OOE tried:..,
to conserve energy , i ts efforts ·:
weren't always successful. The j
department has spent more than, ..!
$121 million since 1985 conducting energy-a&gt;nservation surveys of. •
its buildings and installing new
cost-savin~ equipment. But much ~
of the savmgs were lost when the ·
equipment was not used as intended. At one site, DOE spent $5 million to install an " energy management S)!.Stem," only to find its
employees weren't using it. Total .
loss to the government S12.6 rnil"
lion over 10 years.
An Energy Department '
spokesman explains that the con-·:
servation problems are P.;u-tly the'
result of his agency' s 'hybrid"."
mission. Besides conservation;
DOE also oversees some defense
systems and administers our nuclear energy and weapons programs. .
"We're talking about getting
people who are not working in.
energy .efficiency to conserve,",
said DOE spokesman Larry Hart;
"It's not in their normal frame of'
mind. You can have the prognims
out there, and the knowledge out
there, but it requires education and
training to implement •'
Oil Sept 7, Gore will unveil the
results of his year-Jon$ National
Peformance Review imtiative. In
the case of the DO.E , the best
advice might be found in one of its
own manuals ."Your company's
actions to .enhance energy efficiency will reap rewards through a
more efficient, more productive
and more profitable opemtion.'' '
Jack And~rson and Michael
Binstein are writers for Uniled
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'•

l

The separation of church and state
Two interesting news items the
other day illustrated the wisdom of
contemporary American thought
and practice on the subject of religious belief and state power. They
also underscored the necessity in
this extremely diverse society of
continually strengthening the constiwtional buffers between the two.
One item was datelined from
California. The second Story came
from Israel. As distant as one was
from the· othef geographic8lly they
were bound at the hip theologically
and politically. More about both in
a moment.
Totalkaboutchurchandstatein
the United ~tates of 1993 requires
an appreciation of the work of
those who wrote the Constitution
and its Bill of Rights just over 200
years ago. The men who added the
ftrst 10 amendments to the ConstiLution we're intent on creating an
appropriate space between church
and state. Different as they were,
whether from Puritan Massachuseus or Catholic Maryland or
Quaker Pennsylvania, they all had
the bad example of England
squarely before them.
There the Anglican Church was
an estabiishment of the state and
the two were inextricably bound.
Anglicanism was for a time the
only accepted religion and tl)e king
was chief enforcer as well as exemplar of the faith. Many of those
who carne to the New World did so
to escape the stifling confines of
that arrangement
That is why the First Amendment to the ConstiWtion opens with
the famous phrase "Congress shall
'

m8ke no law respecting an establishment of religion, or p,rohlbiting
the free exercise thereof. '
It was intended to prevent the

Hodding Carter JJJ
state from setting the terms of reference for religious practice. Over
the next two centuries, and most
particularly over the past 50 years,
court decisions and legislative acts
added a new and different dimension 10 the original doctrine. A
' ' wall of separation'' between
church and state was built, piece by
. piece, to ensure that no particular
religious form or faith is ID!derwritten, endorsed or practiced by the
govemmeDL Prayer in schools, specific religious representations at
holidays and theology imposed
through acts of the state were
struck down or forbidden. At the
extreme end of this newer notion of
separation of church and state is the
idea that religion and the secular
state should never meet, which is
bad history, bad politics and bad
religion.
But the roots for such a belief
are not hard to fmd. Catholics and
Jews forced 10 endure Protestant
prayers in the public schools nurtured them. so did atheists and
non-Christians, required 10 pay
through their taxes for crosses and
Nativity scenes erected by local
governments. And large groups of
Christians as well as non-Christians
eventually rebelled against laws
such as Prohibition, which reflected an extremely narrow reading of
the Bible. In my youth, many

Sou_them co~munities had laws
aga1~st dancmg be_cause of the
teaci!U!gs of the B8!,&gt;bSt church. :"11
prohibife!! the teaching of e~lunon
~use 11 seemed to contf8!1ict the
biblicalaccou~llofth~~on.
NIIV! thf~;fe IS a ~ligious ~terrevolunon.m ~uon to the ~all
of separa~o~ and the percepuo,n
~ong mill_10ns of devo!ltl~ rei!rcous Amencans that thear th IS
eing actively persecuted by a
Godless state. Even as the people
of the United State~ ~me dail)'
less homo_genous te!1BI0~Jy, eth~,
c~ly, racill;lly and m nauonal ongl!l, there IS~. con~erted ~f~o~ '!?
reunpose !he old _ume religaon s
m~t chmshed beliefs on the larger
SOCiety.
It has been an open·e!"fort condue~ through democra~c means.
Rehgmus fundamentalists have
won control of _Repu~lican state
and )()(;al com.m~ttees m scores ?f
places. '"!ey stt ~Congress and m
governor s manstons, And_ lately
they have bee~ ~oncen!faling on
grassroots. acuv!sm, w1th school
boards thear p~rttcular focus .from
New York Ctty to San D1ego,
Calif.
They won . tot~ I contr?l of a
school board m V~sta, Cal1f., last
November. In m1d-Au~ust, the
bo~rd adopted three d1rect,ives
wh1ch. taken tog_ethe.r c~allenge
evolution as. a valid sc1en~~ theory and reqwre that CreationiSm be
presented a_s an alternative . .The
~ctual. wording of the ~ darec~ves 1s almost unexceJ!Iional, paruc.uJaa:lfi Ol!e that reqwres ~~ n?
sc1enu IC theory be taught dogmatically." Such an injunction

J

mony before the Senate Labor and
Human Resources Committee by
Elders on May 23, 1990. The issue
then was the Freedom of Choice

Nat Hentoff
Act In stressing that "abortion has
had an important, and positive,
public health e(fect," she pointed
out - by way of celebratory example - that "the number of Down
syndrome infants in Washington
state in 1976 was 64 percent lower
than it would have been without
legal abortion."
Dr. C. Everett Koop has a distinctly different attitude. Before he
became surg~eneral, Koop was
the nation's I ng pediatric surgeon. And at Children's Hospital in
Philadelphia, he spent a considerable amount of time and energy on
Down syndrome children. For
years·, it had been the practice in a
number of hospitals throughout the

I

country for some of those infantS to
be " allowed to die" - as the
euphemism had it - very soon
after birth. Some called it a late
abortion. This was the wish of their.
parents, concurred in by their
physicians.
Koop believes, as he told me
once, that Down syndrome children
"are part of the human race. "
Accordingly, he saved many of
those children from extinction,
arranging instead for them to be
adopted. Unlike the doctors who
had told parents that these infants
would grow up to be "blobs,"
Koop knew bell&amp;. There is a wide
range of potential intelligence
among these kids, and there is no
way of knowing at birth just how
far the child will develop.
When he wu surgeon general,
Koop worked with the Down Syndrome Congress year llfta: year to
-among otha' things· ~ dispel the
destructive notion that these children were not fit to be among us.

•

..

sh~uld lie, b_ut too rarely is, the.

basas of ll;ll_sc1ence.
..
~u~ dls!flgenuous as the board. :
m~J&lt;lf!ty tnes to be, the .fundam~- .
talists ~ there and elsew~f!'IIIS .
clear. ~ is to reassert ~ehg1ous
do811_18 an th~ classroom, ~cremen- ,
tal JliC?Ce by mcremental paece, and
then m the halls of g~v.ernment. ,
Where that would lead tS illustrated ·
by the story from Israel, where.
ultra-Orthodox Jews are cracking ·
down on a company that uses
dinosaurs as illustrations on the ;
P!!:kage of food products. Tbey are :
'imbuing Onhodox children with .
heresy," one rabbi said. "The .':
dinosaur is l"'esent i~ en~y_clope- ·
elias as an anunal that IS millions of ·,
years old, despite the fact that the .
worl.~ was created qnly 5,753 years . :
ag9.
'
The latter is a matter of funda!llental~st Christian as well as .Jew- '·
1sh behef, one of countless h1ghly
spec1fic tenets from among scores .:
of faiths, all of which vic for offi- :
cial recognit!on as singular state- .,·
ments of reality. None should be so '
empowered, a point well under- ·
stood by the Founders and
strengahened as civic doctrine ever
since. My faith is precious to me;
yours IS to yo~. What we can~ot
WID by persuasiOn and convers1on "
should not be imposed, required or .i
supported by government
Hodding Carter III, former ,
State Department spokesman '
and award-~ning reporter, edi- · .'
tor and pybJisher, is president of ..
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.- .
based .television production com- ·
pany.
;

Dr. Elders and the return of eugenicsAlthough the Senate vote on
confuming Dr. Joycelyn Elders as
the next surgeon general of the
United States has been delayed, she
will surely take office. But for the
record, it's illuminating to conaast
het with a predecessor, Dr. C.
Everett Koop, as to how the American zeitgeist is moving toward an
acceptance of eugenics.
People who want to stop the
breeding of those whom they
regard as the physically and intellectually unfit have been uncomfortable with the term "eugenics,"
because of its history elsewhere in
this century. The American Eugenics Society, for instance, changed
its name years ago to the Society
for the Study of Social Biology.
Dr. Elders' view on preventing
at least one kind of defective genetic material from further lowering
· American population standard$ was
cited on Au~. 5 by Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz.
Tbe senator quoted from testi-

-·•
I

..

••

in their ability to hold a job, .but should have been extinguished."
.
K!lOJl says - quite correCtly Reporters who cover the man ·:
that it 1s not essy to upstage bim. they certainly are not "blobs," and
He has the presence of a whaling they~ more open and honest than who nominated Dr. Elders might ·;
captain who easily ended the career a good many "normIll" people 1 as1c bim whethrz he believes eugenics is the way 10 ~· It would cer- - i
of Moby Dick. But once, as he tells have known.
Sen. McCain mentions a recent tainly be cost-efficient In any case, ·:•
the story, he was eclipsed·on stage.
Dr. Elders' credo- and the reac- ."
It was by a 14-year-old Down syn- recipient of the Jefferson Award drome youngster. "It happened in given to people across the country lions to it - are not about the genCincinnati," Koop recalled, "and who have devoted themselves to era! abortion debate as such. The r .,
he was going 10 introduce me. He service to others. One of the win- chilling proapect in this debate is ..:;
walked across the stage, stoad ners, Cindy Todd from Phoenix, having a surgeon general of the •
befcg the mi;:t,.m:· and said, 'I belps people with. disabilities. She United States who believes that one
·
of her missions is 10 perfect future · :;
have Down s
. That means has Down syndrome.
"I
dare
say,"
the
senator
points
generations in this way. Which .:
I have 47 cllromosanes. And you,'
out. "that her family, and the com- defect would be next. acCofding to . ·:
he turned to me, 'have only 45.'"
· ;•
Some of Dr. Elders' SUP{IOf!efS munity and individuals whom she the surgeon general?
Nat Hentolf Is a nationally
say she is like Dr. Koop m her serves, would be shocked to Jearn
forthrightness, but there is more that the individual who aspires to renowned authority on the First ,,,
than that to Dr. Koop. He used to . be surgeon general of .the United Amendment and the real of the .:::
.,
mention the "extraordinarily States believes that Cin.4ts life BiD of Rights.
strong and warm bonds between
Down sr,ndrome kids and their
families. ' As a~. moreover,
I've done a number of stories on
In 1754,Fnmce'siCingLouisXVIwasbomatVersailles
'
,;
children with disabilities, and I've
seen those bonds. And Down syn. In 1785, U.S. naval hero Oliver .Hazard Perry was born in South ·•'•
drome kids vary in inteiiigence and KinllStown, R.I.

Today in lilstory

\·

I

'

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.

23,1993

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

OHIO WeJthcr
Tuesday,~

The Daily sintlnli-Pa98;=3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Edwin Cozart

deaths------:-- -

Arrangemen ts
wiiJ . be . ·tery in Cllesiiire:
.
Romaine Walblim of Jacobsburg; a
announced
by
F"ashet
Funeral
Home
Friends
may
call
from
6-9
p.m.
son Ronnie H. Walburn of Jacolis·
Edw in W. "BiiiMCozart, 80,
Accu-W~ rorecast fill'
c:ooditiODI and
buri: one daughter and son-in-Jaw.
in
Middleport.
Tuesday
at
the
funeral
home.
'
Racine, died Sunday, Aug. 22,
•
Mary K. and ~ve Taylor of FostoMICH.
1993, at Pomeroy Nursing and Kathy Hetzer
Mary
E.
Walburn
ria; two sisters, Opal S)!ylor of
Rehabilitatioo Center.
Oklahoma
and Emma Ruble of
Kathy Hetzer, 33, of Reedsville,
Mary E. Walburn, 81, MiddleA retired mechanic, he was born
Vienna;
several
grandc hildren,
Oct 27, 1912 at Stivenville to the died unexpectedly Sunday; Au jt. port, died Saturday, Aug. 21, 1993,
great-grandchildren,
nieces and
22,
1993,
at
SL
Joseph
Hospital
10
at
Vetenms
Memorial
Hospital
in
late Joseph and Estella Pease
nephews.
Pomeroy following an extmded illCozart. He was a member of the Parkersburg, W. Va.
She was preceded in death by a
Born in Steubenville on Sept. ness.
Racine First Baptiit Chureh. He
husband,
Raymond, in 1990, and
Born in Clifton, W.Va. she was
was a former trustee for ·sutton 19, 1959, she was lhe daughter of
Mansfield BS•
four
brothers.
Township and was a central com. Ernest and Ferra Lou Chevalier the daughter of the late Daniel and
Services wiD be held WednesBarrio~ of Reedsville.
Kathryn Knopp Harrison.
mitteeman of the township.
IND.
.,
day
at 11 a.m. at Fisher Funeral
Bes1des her parents she is surShe was a homemaker and a
He is survived by bis wife,
in Middleport with the Rev.
.
Home
Laura Brown Cozart, Racine; a vived by ber husband, Kerry, two member of the Middleport Church
Lloyd
Grimm
and the Rev. Robert
I .
daughla'. Dixie l:.eek, Minneapolis, daughters, Pesgy Sue and Kerrie of the Nazarene.
Styers
officiating.
Burial will folSurviving are six sons and
Minn.; three sisters, Audra Nice, Leigh .Helzer, both at home; mater• !columbus! &amp;a•
low
in
Gravel
Hill
Cemetery in
Garnet Roush lll!d .Eiizabeth Will- nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. daughters-in-law: Raymond and
Cheshire.
ford, all of Racine; a brother, Chevalier, of Reedsville; five Mary Lou Walburn of Middle)l(Xt,
Friends may call Tuesday from
Alfred Cozart. Youngstown; three brothers. Rick, Donnie, Bobby, and Dana S. and Beverly Walburn of
2-4
and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
M i tche~l Barrin~er, . a!~ of
Salem, Ore., ~e E. and ~orie
s te~ - children, Walter Brown,
h'lme.
Memorial contributions may
Spnngfield, Judy Shuler, Durham, Reedsv1lle, and Bnan Barnnger, Walburn of Middleport, Blaine D.
be
made
to the Middleport Church
Conn., and Rita Pilkington, Day- Hockingport; two sisters, Bonnie and Vonda ~alburn of Vienna,
of
the
Nazarene,
Beech Street,
ton; seven step-grandchildren and Pooler of Stewart and Jody Goe- W.Va., DeM1s G. and Doris WalMiddlepon
OH
45760.
glein of Long Bottom.
burn of Beverly and Peter E. and
one step-great-granddaughter.
, W.VA.
She
was
a
member
of
the
Eden
·
Besides his )lllrel!ts he was preceded in death by his first wife, ~~~ill:.rethren Church in
Ollie Mae Pickens Cozart, oo Aug.
9, 1979; a son, Larry Cozart: a sisShe was preceded in death by a
Revival extended
Letart United Methodist Church oo.
ter, Veta VanMeter; and brothers, nephew and one cousin.
·
Revival at the Believers Fellow- Thursday from 9-11 a.m. for chiiClinton , Hobart, Roscoe and
Funeral services will be held
ship Ministry has been extended to dren ages two through kindergarten
Gyrtha Cozart.
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the White
Monday at 7:30p.m. Patty and age . Parents must bring child's
Services wiJJ be TuesC!ay at 3 Funeral Home in CoolviiJe. The
Lenny ministries will be special immunization records.
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in · Rev. Robert Markley will officiate
C1883Accu·Wo.all0t, lnc.
guest speaker. Rev . Margaret
Pomeroy with Rev. Steve Fuller and burial will be in the Heiney
Clinic set
Robinson invites the public.
ofrlciating. Burial will be in Green- Cemetery. Friends may call at the
A free community immunizafuneral home Tuesday from 6 to 9
wood Cemetery.
tion
clinic will be held at the
Open meeting
Wedneaday through Friday:
South CentratOhio
Friends may call at the funeral p.m.
Racine
Fire Department on ThursThe Rutland Garden Club will
Tonight, panly cloudy. Low 65Fair on Wednesday and Thurs- home on Monday from 5-9 p.m.
day
from
1-3:30 p.m. for children
hold an open meeting and guest
70. Chance of rain 20 percent. day. Highs in the upper 80s to low
Delbert C. Love
ages
two
through
kindergarten age.
mceling Au$. 30 at 7:30p.m. at the
Tuesday, partly cloudy with a 90s. Lows 65-70. Chance of thun- EdwardThle
Delbert C. Love, 84, of Colum- Rutland Uruted Methodist Church. Parents must bring child's imm uslight chance of thunderstorms. . derstorms Friday. Highs in the
Edward Ihle, 67, Racine, died bus, Ohio and formedy of .Point
niZation records.
High around 90. Chance of rain 30 upper 80s and low 90s. Lows in the Sunday, Aug. 22, 1993 at Veterans Plea811lt, died Monday, August 23, Hal Kneen will present a program.
upper 60s and low 70s..
~ent.
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
1993 at Grant Hospital iJII ColumDance lessons
Post to meet
Extended forecast
bus, Ohio.
The Belles and Beaus Squ are
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
·He wu a retired maintenance No. 9053 will .meet Thursday at Dance Club will begi n new fall
classes with two free lessons on .
employee for. Turner, Rentals in 7:30p.m.
Columbus, Ohio.
Sept 6 and 13 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Born February 22, 1909 in Wansenior citizens center in Pomeroy.
Board to meet
field, be was the son of the late
The board of trustees of the Any couples wanting to learn the
Hida Marion and ElizabeJ.h Jane Meigs County Public Library will basics of western style square
dancing are invited. Partners are
Mulford Love. He was also meet Thursday at 1 p.m.
required. Call992-2947, 992-2761,
preceded in death by his wife, Cora
992-5703 or (304) 773-5505 fo r
Mae Keams Love; two brothers,
Program set
wayne and George Love and a sisA literacy program is scheduled information.
ter, Nora Baker.
for Sept. 13 IIJld 14 at the Meigs
Legion to meet
Surviving are a son, Carl Wealey County Public Library from W
American Legion Feeney BenLove, Lancaster. Ohio; a daughter, a.m. to 3 p.m. Further infonnation .
nett
Post No. 128 will meet
Alvenia Alice Casey, Columbus, .may be ob\ained by calling the
· Wednesday at 7:30p.m. Dinner
Ohio; two sisters, Mrs. Andrew library !II 992-5813.
will be a t 6 p.m. There wiJJ be a
(Sylvia) Husaell and Mrs. Richard
guest
speaker. ·
(Goldie) Wilcoxen, both of Point
Reading program
Chalmers
WD-45
plliced
foarth
In
the
4,500
Pleasant; one brother, Wyatt I,.ove,
ANTIQUE TRACTOR PULL - Showing '
The Meigs County Public
Dance announced
Cheshire, Ohio; 7 grandchildren Library will begin an adult reading
that old tractors still have plenty of pnll, IJtlrry ·· pound weight clus at the Meigs County Fair
.There will be a round and
Antique Tnctor Pul Jlrlday afternooD.
and 9 great-grandchildren.
program for people in nursing
·Keefer of Leon, W.Va., driving an Alii~Funeral services wiD be 2 p.m., homes and who are confined to square dance at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Hall on Friday from 8-11:30
Wednesday, August 25 at the Crow their homes.
p.m. with music by CJ and the
Hussell Funeral Home. Graveside
Country Gentlemen. Everyone welClub to meet
Tnck pull resulls
Athens, a 1985 truck, third.
Smith, Racine, took first in the rites and burial will follow in the
Cemetery.
The W,ildwood Garden-Club come.
Attracting hWidreds of spectaAntique tractor reaults
6500 pound class, 1939 to 1959. Suncrest
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
tors a1 the 130th Meigs County Fair
Cash pnzes in five weight clivi- traetors, with Blair Windon taking home on Thesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Dance
the home of Jwu;Uta Will.
at
Friday night was the truck and sions were awarded at the annual second, Edison Hollon, third, Dald· ·
There will be a round and
semi-truck pull.
'
antique traCtor pull staged Saturda)' las Weber, Rutland, fourth. an
square dance at th e Ameri can
Ruth M. Mack
Dance planned
Winners in the variqJ!S "C!!~e- .,. ~m~ at ~.t..fe!gs Q!unt:t F~ , :George.Stout. Albany, ftft!'·
.
Ru!h M. MaCk, 96, died Sunday,
The Belles and Beau8Western Legion Annex in Middleport on
gories were as follows: ~ ' · · on the 'in-field jiwhng .atea •of the •· ~•. Tony Carnahan, Racane, took
Thursday from 8- 11 p.m. with
5~00 pound, 4 wheel drive super Rock Springs faargroiD!ds.
.
first in the 1939 to .1959 _tracto!S• Aug. 22, 1993, at Veterans Memo- Squaie Dance Club will hold an music by CJ and the Gounty Genstocl&lt; truck: Joe Pfister, Johnstown,
In the 3500-3800 poun&lt;! ""ea~ht . 7500 poiD!d class With Brwt Wan- rial Hospital in Pomeroy where she · open dance at the Senior Citizens tlemen. Cost is. $2 single, $3 couresided in the Extended Care Unit Center on Saturday from 8-11 p.m.
driving a 1990 Ford, first; Dave- .class, models 1939 to 1959, Bnan don taking second.
for
the last two years.
l ohn Waugh will be the caller. ple. Public invited.
Howell, A\h~· a 1983 Chevrole( Windon of Po11_1eroy toQk both ~trst
Born Jan. 28, 1897, in Cheshire Refreshments available.
second: and -Paw Poston; Logan, a anc1 secp~,~d. E,diso(l Hollon, Racine,
Auxiliary to meet
to
the late Horton H. and Laura
1986,Che'l'tolet. thir\1... . ..
took firs( in th~ ~938 and un~er
The
Racine American Legion
Committee to meet
Scott Roush, .she was married to
6,000 pound, 4 wheel drive, class, 4500 pound group, w1tli
Auxiliary
will hold its family picThe Bedford Township VolunThe 'following parties have the late Fred C. Mack on Sept. 29,
stock trui:'tc: J&amp;ck WSJdien, LOgan. Roger Taylor, Letart, W. v,.,takteer Fire Department Committee nic Thursday at 6 p.m. at Star Mill
recently applied for marriage
1916.
a 1974 Dodge, fust; Rick Adams, ing second in that category.
Park. In case of ram the picnic will
She was the oldest member of will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at be at .the
SandyviiJe, W, Va.. a 1976 Ford,
In the 4500 pound class .using licenses in the Meigs County Prohome.
the
Burlingham
Modern
Woodnien
the Cheshire Baptist Chiuch, a 50second; and Mile Elliott, Gallipo- tractorS, _1 939 to 1949, the WJDners bate Court.
Hall.
Guest
speakers
will
be
Jim
Joseph Bryan 1, 54, Langsville year member of the Cheshire Order
Iis, a 1976'Dodge, third: ,
wer~ B~ Hoops, J ac!l;~on~ farst;
and
Helen L. Jacobs, 36, of the Eastern Star and active in the Gaston, Earl Goodin and Steve
5,800,ppunl!, 4 .,v)leel driv_e, Bla1r Wmdon, Pomero~_. second;
Goodin. Public invited.
modified truck: Ron -Sheets Gal- Bojl Jewen, Pomeroy, third; Larry Langsville; Jeffrey S. Jones; 35, community.
Pomeroy
and
Jill
M.
Harrison,
32,
Surviving are a son and daughlipolis 19'89 'Dodge. first· J~ Pfis, Keefer, Leon, W. Va., follflh, and
Bake sale
ter, Johnstowp, 19.96 FOI'd, secollll; Pa~ Sqtilh, Racine, fif~. · · .. . • Pomeroy; Bracy A. Ko·rn, 21, ter in law; Harold and Odella Mack
The
'Southern Charge of United
and Brya11•Boise, Mineral Wells,
In the 5500 pound class With Pomeroy and Shannon Jo Coates, of Cheshire; two grandchildren, Methodist
Churches will have a
Middleport; Bobby R. McCol- Myron .Mack of Columbus and
w. Va., 1979 Dodge, third. · · 1939 IQ 1959 traCtors, f4'st went 10 22,
bake
sale
Sept.
4 from 8 a.m. to
Mary Fulton of Wooster, and five
6 200 modified truck: Ron Danny Lawrence, Long Bottom, lum, 22, Ewingtou, and Katrina A.
noon
at
Home
National
Bank in
She~ts. Gallipolis.' 1989 Ojldge , ~nd to Dilve Wit~. Langsville, Ashburn, 20, Salem Center and great-grandchildren. Also surviving Racine.
•
farst; Bryan Boise, Mineral Wells. thud to Don Battnll, .Albany, · Kenneth E. Sorrell, 32, Langsville are two s~. Mildred Swisher of
AA
.
W. Va., 1979 Dodge, second; and fourth to Ted Smith, Racine, and and Belinda K. Johnson, 32, Arcadia, fl!L, _and Eunice Bunce of
Upper Sanduslcy.
.
meeting
Virgil Barker, London, 19,81 Ford, fifth to Jim Powell, C~Jville. Dan LangsviJJe.
Shw was preceded in death by . The Po~~_~Croy Group of AA and
two brothers, Everett and Hortie AIAnon Will meet Thursday at7
thirt9.5oo pound, semi-truck: Dan
Roush
p.m. at Sacred Heart Cathohc
Gibbs, Crooksville, a 1986 Western
Se~ices will be held at 2 p.m. Church. Call 992-5763 for inforStar, first; Kenneth Hall ,
.Units of the Meigs Count ~ Street for Delbert Pridemore to Wednesday at Fisher Funeral mation.
McConnelsviJJe, 1987 truck, sec- Emergency Medical Service Veterans; 8:39 p.m. Racine squad
ond, and Menill Shriver, Bidwell, a responded to 24 calls for assistance to Route 338 for Charles Craig Jr. Home in Middleport with the Rev.
Clinic set
Harold Tracewell officiating. Buri1980 truck, third.
· ovrz the weekend.
to Veterans: 8:41p.m. Racine'· al will follow at Gravel Hill CemeA free communitlc immuniza24,500 semi-truck: Kenneth
SATURDAY- 12:42 p.m., Rut- squad to Racine levee to assist in
Hall, McConnelsville, a 1987 land squad to Salem Street, Lena water rescue.·
truck , first:· Dan Gibbs, Carpenter to Veterans Memorial
MONDAY • 6:06 a.m. Rutland
Crooksville, 1986 Western Star, Hospital; ·s :05 p.m., Syracuse squad to Happy Hollow Road for
second; and Jacli: Gastr_on of squad, Bruce Deeter from Meigs Loretta Laudenmilt to Pleasant ValCounty ·Fairgrounds to Veterans: ley; 6:36 a.m. Syracuse Fire
30877 NEECE ROAD
"5:32 p.m., Meigs County squad to . Department to Racine levee on the
A section on State Route 124 in fairgrounds for Robert Austin to water rescue; 7:08 a.m. Racine F"are
(Just off lr..bury R011cl)
Meigs Co~ty below Hockingport Veterans: 8:04 p.m., Syracuse Department to Racine levee on
has been closed today (Monday) squad transported Ricky Blanken- water rescue.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760
due to a slip in the road there. The ship from the fairgrounds to Veter992·5379
., · closure is only expected to be for ans and at 11:05 p.m. was taken by
one day.
Lifeflight 2 to Grant Medical CenThe Daily Sentinel
ter; 8:10p.m., Middleport squad to
(USPS 113-Nt)
Street, Nola Bradshaw to
Food distribution set Grant
Publil.bed evrty afte:moon, Mooday lhtoup
Veterans; 10:43 p.m., Pomeroy
Rated America's II carpet line! STARnNG AT ONLY 99 Sq.Yd. Carpet Only
Friday, Itt Colllt St.. Po1111r0y, Ol!lo by tho
.
The Gallia-Meigs Community squad to County Mobile Home
Ohio Valley l\lbllahloa Compu.yJMu.ltlmectla
lac. , Polneroy, Oblo 4$169. Pb . 992·21:56.
Action Agenc:r- will be distributing Park for Rebecca Snyder to Pleas99
s-dcM - · paidll Po...,.y,OIIIo.
dried beans, pmeapple, peanut but- ant Valley Hospital; 11:21 p.m .
AT
Sq. Yd. Carpet O•ly
Mcmbr. The .-\I'OdlfM Pn11, IDd the Ohio
trz and apple juice to persons hold- S~use squad took Michelle SisNewap~p« Auodltion, Natloul AdW!ttiiiD&amp;
ing food ·commodity cards on Aug. son from the fairgroUnds to Holzer
continuous nylan filament carpet
Rtprwoalltln, BI'Mham NOWIPIIP• Salu,
31 at the following locations:
Medical Cenla'.
·
733 Third Avenue, New York. New Y«lr:
100t7.
Meigs County. Rock Springs
SUNDAY - 12:21 am., Middle99
AS
LOW
A$
Sq. Yd. Carpet Only
Fairpounds, Tuppers Plains Fire pan squad to High Street for Paul
POS1'MAS11!I: Sead oddna &lt;lwll• to Tho
Stauon, Pagevilfe Town Hall and Clark to Pleasant Vaile)': 12:54 ·. n.lly Senliael,lll Court SL, Porhl!toy, Ohio
&gt;45169.
the RaCine Fire Depsrtment.
a.m. Syracuse squad to faargrounds
SUISCUPI'ION RATES
Distribution will begin at for Brad Eblin to Veterans: 6:10
IJCwrl•erMot.rRa.te
approximately 9:30 a.m. and last a.m., Pomeroy squad to Lincoln
The anly carpet that, comes signed, sealed and delivered.
0.0 Week. ................................................ .$1 .60
0.0 M -................................................$6.!15
until noon or until the supply is Heights.fir Donna Nitz to Pleasant
0.0 Y. ................. ........................._ .. $13.20
Valley; 11:18 a.m., Tuppers Plains
exhausted.
guaranteed not ta stain FOR LlFEI
IIIHGLE COPY
Gallia County, Gallia County squad and Reedsville first.responftiCit
Dolly........................................35 C...ll
Fairgrounds, G-'lco in Cheshire, ders to Coolville Road for Kathy
$499 Sq. Yd. Carpet Only
Mt. Carriiel BaptiSt Church in Bid- · Hetzer to St Joseph HOspital; 2:36
- 1 1 0 1 tleoldq 10 poy tbecantermoy
...at Ia odVIDOO dlneiiO Tho Dilly S.....ol
weD and the Crown City Fire Sta- p.m. RaciDC IM!d Syracuse SQWl() to
OD tlhree., liz or lliDODth bMla. Credit will be
CONVENIENT HOURS: MON. TUES., WED. &amp; F_R1. 10:00.5:00
tion.
Broadway fill' Edward Dtle iO Vet~Clll'i4!'WIN.
distribution will begin at erans; 6:11 p.m. Racine· Fire
CLOSED THURSDAY; SATURDAY 10:00..2:00
approximately noon and last until Department to Racine levee for a No ..bocriptloDI by 1111111 permii!Od Ia ......
'2:30 p.m. or until the supply is water rescue, Roy Bailey was treatOther Hours By
...
MaaiV
ed but liot lransport.ed; 6:58· p.m.,
exhausted.
Appointment
13 - ............. _............................... .$21.8.
Persons picking up for others Syracuse Fire Department to
26 w-. ............................................. .$13.16
must bring a signed note from the Racine le~ on water rescue: 7:26 l2 - ................................................$1&gt;1.76
person in addition to their food p.m. Pomeroy squad to Pomeroy
t3 - .... _............ -...........................$23.&gt;1(1
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center ae
commodity card.
.$15.60
Bring a bag or cpntainel; for the for FranCis King to Veterans; .7i50 52 ...... -........................... ......$118.40
p.m., Middlepon squad to Page
commodi• , ·" .
·

24

I

I I•

'''

I

Meigs announcements

. Weather

Truck, tractor pulls attract hundreds

Apply for licenses

EMS UJ)its respond to 24 calls

TIM'S Custom Carpe

Road closed

•Featuring a complete line of Mohawk Carpet

.•Just in! New DuPont Stainmaster Plus
•1 00% DuPont Certified Stainmaster

$7
$11

$1 0

•Anso Crush Resister Carpet
•Commerdal Grade Carpet

-----··_...,.,=
_....,c-.,.

w-.. . . . . . . . ... . . . .

�I

Sports

I
Monday, August 23, 1993

The Daily Sentinel

'

Monda~Auguat23,1993
I

Pagtt--4
•

In theNL,

Giants stage comeback to top Marlins; Expos down Reds 7-2
By MICHAEL FLAM
Associated Press Writer
The San Francisco Giants have
won 83 games this season -· by as
many as 15 runs and as few as one.
It is doubtful that any of the previous 82 viciOries got the Giants as
excited as Sunday's 7-6 triumph
over the Florida Marlins.
Robby Thompson hit a two-out,
two-run homer off Florida relief
ace Bryan Harvey· to complete a
comeback from a 6-2, eighthinning deficit. Teammate Barry
Bonds almost made it the last home
run Thompson would hit
·
Thompson jumped in the air
when the ball left his bat, circled
the bases and was nearly ripped in
half with a monster hug at home
plate by Bonds.
"Batry almost killed me,"
Thompson said. "But I'U take it It
was fun. When you ' re in games
like this, we can't always be that
calm and collected. We needed to
show that excitement"
The Giants were down 10 their
last out - with fans streaming 10
the exits - when Dave Martinez

drew a walk and stole second off
Harvey (1-4), who blew his fourth
save in 41 opponunities.
Harvey ran the count 10 1-2 on
Thompson with three forkballs. He
threw another forkball and Thompson sent it 400 feet into the leftfield bleachers.
Luis Aquino worked.himself
into a bases-loaded, one-out jam in
the eighth to brin$ on Harvey to
face Bonds, who hit a sacrifice fly
to deep center field. Willie
McGee's single to right scored two
runs and cut the lead to 6-5, setting
the stage for the ninth -inning

Diego 5.

Expos ', Reds l
Sean Berry hit two homm, one
inside the park, and drove in six
runs as Montreal completed its fint
winning road trip of the season.
Dennis Martinez (11-8) gave up
five hits over seven innings, 10 win
for the fust time sinee July 8.
Berry turned a soft lin.e r into a
three-run inside-the-park homer in
the fourth, added a two-run homer
off starter Bobby Ayala (5-6) in the
sixth and completed the best day of
his career with a sacrifice fly in the
seventh.
drama.
Dodgers 3, Catdinals 0
Kevin Rogers (2-2) pitched the
Ramon Martinez won for the
ninth to get th e victory for the fust time in more than a month and
Giants.
Eric Davis homered as visiting Los
San Francisco's John Burkett Angeles finished a three-game
failed in his second straight bid to sweep.
become the NL 's first 19-game
Mart.i nez (9-8) struck out six ,
winner. He gave up five runs and . including fifth-place hitter Ray
10 hits in 6 2{3 innings.
Lankford four times, and walked
Elsewhere in thre NL it was two.
Montreal 7, Cincinnati 2; Los
Astros 7, PhiUies 3
Angeles 3, St. Louis 0; Houston 7,
Jeri Bagwell and Eric Anthony
Philadelphia 3; Colorado 4, New hit consecutive home runs in the
York 3; and Pittsburgh 10, San fust inning and Darryl Kile won his

IN THE WINNER'S CIRCLE- Miss,Stolen
Flame, a six·year·old mare owned by Earl Cleek
of Portland and trained by Kelly Meeks, was the
winner of the first race or Saturday's Quarter

Horse Races at the Meigs ·County Fair. She ran'
the 300-yard race in 15 4/S seconds. Dennis HaD
was the jockey.

Scoreboard
Cati.fomia 7, Milwaukee6

- • u'aseball • -

CLEVELAND 3, Boston 2 (11 inn.)
Kansas Cily 7, New York 0
Toronto 12, Set~ ttle 7
Texas II , Baltimorc4
Oticago 1, MiMesota 0
DelrOit. 5, Oakland 3
Milwaukee 7, California 5

Eastern Dl•lslon
Twn
W L
Pltilodclpbia .....•....•78 46
St. LouiJ ................69 S5
MonuW ................66 59

PtL
.629
.556
.528

9
125

Chi.CIJ0M"''"''''"''''61

.492

}7

6]

Pittsb\qh ............. 59 . 65
Flori"' ...................52 72
New York ............. .42 ll

GB

.476
.419

19
1h

.34 \

35.5

Wtsltrn Division
San Francisco ........83 41 .669
AtlanL1 ... ................76 49 .608
u....... ................66 li .l32
LooAngel" ···········63 60 .512
CJNCINNATI. ....... 61 65 .484
Colondo ................ 47 71 .379
San Diego .... .......... 46 78 .37 1

Tonight's games
01kllnd (Karuy I ·0) at Detroit
(Moore 9-6), 7:05p.m .
CLEVELAND (Lopez 3-1) u Toroot-o
(Morris 7-ll). 7:3S p.m.
Texu (Rogers 11 - 7).at Ba lt.imore
(Valemue1a 6-7), 7:35p.m
New York (Key 15-4) at Chic ago

7.5
17
19.5
23
36
37

&lt;B= s.s). a,osl'.m.

M inn ~~ata (fapani 7 -1 2) at Kansu
City (Appier 14-6), 8:35p.m.

Saturday's scores

Tuesday's games

Allant.a 6, Olle~go 3
San Fn.ncilco 7, florida 4

(Darlin~ S-6 and Honey·
at Milwauk.ec (Miranda 2-3 ;md
Bones &amp;-8), 6:05p.m.
Scaule (Hanson 10-9) 11 Detroit (Gul·
lick.son 10--6), 7:05p. m.
CLEVELAND (Tavarez 2- 1) at Toronto (Stouiemrrc 6·9). 7:35p.m.
Califom11 (Finley 13·9) al Raltimorc:
(Moyer 8-6), 7 :35p.m.
New York (Abbott 9-1 0) at Chica go
(Alvuez 8-8), 8:05p.m.
Boston (D arwin 13-8) at Tcus (Pavlik
7-6), 8:35pm.
Mjnnesota (Guardado 3-5 ) at Kansas
City (Cone 9-1 1), 8:35p.m .

DH : Oakland

cutt

Colorado 4, New York 3, h t game;
Colon do 8, New Ycl'k 6, 2nd game

Mmtreal6, CINClNNATI 3
l.ol Angeles 8, St. Louis 4

HouJ\.00 3, Philadeltill• 2 (10 inn.)

Sunday's scores
lot Anaelea: 3, SL Louis 0
M"'aul 7, CINCINNATI 2

Houston 7, Philadelphia 3
Colorado 4, New Yod:. 3
Piwl:mrgh 10, San Diego 5
San Francisco 1 , Florida 6
Atlanta 4, Chicago 3

Tonight's games
Chicaso (Hibbard 10-9) at

NL leaders
Montr~al

(Rueter 3-0). 7:35 p.m.
Colorado {Reynoso 1·9) at Philadel·
phl1 (Greene 12-3), 7:3!5 p.m.
CINCrNNATI (Pugh 7- 12) at New
York (Gooden 11 -13), 7 :40p.m.
SL l..oui.l (O.bomc 1().6) at San Diego
(Broc&amp;il 2-10), IO:OS p.m .
PiUJ~ (Smith 3-S) at Los Ang eles

(Henhis«i· l2),10,3l p.m.
A\l&amp;ntl (Avery 13-4) at San Fnncisco
(Wibon7-4). 10,35 p.m.

Tuesday's games
Allanta (Glavine 14-5) 1t San Francis ·
cc (Hlckenon 6-4), 4 :05p.m .
HouJton (Swindell 9·9) at Florida

(Amutmng 7-12). Bl p.m.
Chicago (Cutillo S-1) at Montreal
(Hill7-4), 7,35 p.m.

•

Colorado (Smford 1-0) 1t Philadelphia
(!ack.an 9-9), 7:35 .P·ffi:
· aNCINNATI (Luebbe:rl 2·3) at New
York (Tman1 6-12), 7:40p.m.
St.. Louis (Watson 6-0) It San Diego

(Aohby 1·7), 10 ' 3~ p.m.
Pituiburah (Wtlk ll-11)
lea (Oroaa f - tl), 10:35 p.m.

Los Angc-

It

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eute.rn Division
Team
W
Toronto .................. 72
New Y«k .............. 71

L

5'3

54
Baltiinore ...............66 58
801tal ....................65 58
Deuoit. ................. ..65 61

CUNELAND .......l9 6S
Milwaukee ....... ......SO 74

Pet.
.576
.568
.532
.528
.5 16

GO

.476
.403

12l
21.5

1
5.5
6
7.5

Watern Diwlllon
Chl&lt;ogo ............. .....6B 54 .l57

Kanu' City ...........6S S9

.524

. TOlU .•...................63 60

.512

Sc.att1e ....... .... .........61

62

.496

c.uroma ••..•.•....... .S6 67
Mlnn&lt;ooU ... _........ .52 69
OJI&lt;IJncl .................~ l 70

.455
.430
.421

Saturday's scores
&lt;J.EVEI-'ND 10, 80110n S

Dcuoit 4, Oakland 3
New Yolk 3, •• su City 2

SeattleS, To~ .t'II02

JW1im.,.6, T&lt;UJ5(12inn.)
OliCoiJO 9, ~CICU 4

•

~3)

4

s.s

7.5
12.~

lB
16.5

BATTING: Gwynn, San Diego . . 355:
Jefreri es, St. Louis, .343; Bonds, Sa n
Fr ancisco, .34 0; Rob Thompson , San
Fr1ncisco .. .333: K.ruk. Philiidelpbia, .333;
Merced, Pitub.lr&amp;h • .33 0; Gnce, Chie~go,
.325.
RUNS : Dyk:stn, Ph ila delphia , \13 ;
Boods, San Francis co, 102; Gant, Atlanta,
84; K.ruk, Pluladelph.ia, 82; Blauicr, At·
Janu. 81; J. Bell, Piu.sburgh, 81; Biggi o,
Houston, 79; Mau Willi ams, San Francisco, 79.
RBI : Bo nds , San Franc isco, 96;
D1ult.on , Philadelphia, 87; Justice, At ·
lantAI, S4 ; Man Williams , San Francisco,
84; Gant, Atlanta, 83; King. Pituburgh,
Sl ; Bagwell, Houston, 79.
HITS : Gwynn, San Diego, !58; J. Bell,
PittlburWt, IS S; Bagwell, Houston, 152;
Grace, Chicago, ISO; Dykstra, Phlladel·
phil, 148; Kil\g, Pitub..gh. 144; lelfori...
SL Louis, 143.
DOUBLES : Bichette, Colondo, 37;
Pylut.ra, Philadelphia, 35; Gwynn, San
Diego, 35; Bigio, Houston, 34; Bagwell,
Houston , 3 1; ] . Bell, Pittsburgh, 31 ;
Gilkey, St. Louis , 30', Zei.le. SL LoW, 30;
Grace, Chicago, 30.
TRIPLES: Butler, Los Angeles, 10;
Finley, HOOJton, 8; Colonan, New York,
8; E. Young, Colondo, 7; Castilla, Col·
orado,7: Morandini, Philldelphia, 7; Sue
tied with 6.
HOME RUNS : Bonds, San Francisco,
38 ; Ga nl, Atlant.l, 30; Sosa , Olicago, 29;
Justi ce, Atlantl, 29; McGriff, Atbnta , 28 ;
Man Williams, San Fnncisco, 27; Bonll·
Ia, New Yorlr., ZJ .
STOLEN BASES : Col~m1n, N ~ w
York , 38; D. Le.wis , San Fnn ci:sco, 36;
Carr, Florid 1, 36; Jefferies, SL Louis, 36;.
DeShields, Monueal, 34; E. Young, Col·
oudo, 33; Grissom, Montreal, 32;' Dykllr&amp;, Philadelphia, 32.
PJTOIINO (13 decitionl) : T. Oret.ne,
PhU1delphia, 12~3, .800, 3.61; Bwkett,
Sa n Fnncitco, 18-S, .783, 3.S7: KUe,
Houtton , 14·4, .178, 3.25; Swlft, San
Francitco, 17·5, .713, 2.61 ; Avery, At13-4, .765, 299; l'lntugol, Hou....,,
12--4, .750, 2.97; QI.vine, Atlanta, 14-S,
.737, 3.34.
STRIKEOlTfS' R;jo, CINCINNATI,
118; Smeltz, Atl&amp; nta, 163; G. Maddux,
Atlanti, 150; Bene~, San Diego, 149; Hunia:ch, Houstot1, J4S; Guzm1n, Chlc•&amp;o.

'"''*•

144; Gooden, New Yoct:,I35.
.
SAVES : Loe Smith, St. Loui,, 41 ;
Bed:, San FI'IIICiJco, 31; Huvey, floridl,
37; Myett, Chicago, 36; Mitch William1,

the Rockies from · Clliss AAA Colorado Springs earlier in the day.
pitched. two-thirds of an inning for
the vic10ry.
Benavides opened the seventh
with a 421-foot llomer againSt Sid
Fernandez (24).
Pirates 10, Padres 5
Orlando Merced hit a three-run
homer and Dave Clark added a
two-run shot during visi~nJ; Pittsburgh's seven-run fOurth mmng.
The Pirates' fourth inning was
their highest-scoring inning of the
season and sent San Diego starter
Andy Benes (13-10) to ;his earliest
shower. Benes, who gave up eight
runs and eight hits in 3 '113 innings,
has allowed 23 earned runs over 15

innings in his last three starts.

~~tarter ~teve C~e (8:7)
~on his third straight deciSIOn, g~v10g up fow: runs - ~o ~ed and e1ght hits 10 S 1{3 mmogs.
Braves 4, C11bs 3
Jeri Blauser's two. ru!l homer
off Jose Guzman (11-8) tng.gered a
four-run fifth inning and John
Smollz (13-9) settled down after a
shaky start 10 lead visiting Atlanta.
Guzman blanked the Braves and
Sf!lOltz 1-9 on April~ w~en 9tis
t'luon spo_iled li!S no-hlt.btd wtth a
two-out smgle m the moth. Guzman ran his scoreless string 10 13
innings and held a 3-0 lead before
the Braves caught up 10 him in the
fifth.

Miss Stolen Flame, Bett Shes Elegant
among MCF Quarter Horse winners
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
Although there were only three
races on the schedule for Saturday's Quarter Horse races at the
Meigs County Fair there was plenty of local color to perform for the
crowd at the grandstand.

The first race, an open race, was
a 300-yard run and featured four
horses. Miss Stolen Flame, a sixyear-old mare owned by Earl Cleek
of Portlan"d and trained by Kelly
Meeks, was the winner of the race
with a time of 15 4/5 seconds. Dennis Hall was the jockey. The sec-

CLOSE FINISH - The rmal race or Saturday's Quarter Horse
Races at the Meigs County Fair featured two year old runners in a
220-yard dash. Comets Ladybug, owned and trained by Jennings
Bee~le, won the race with a ll 3/S-sec:ond rmish. Rick Cullison was
the JOC~ey. Fashions Moon Jet, owned by Earl Cleek and train~ by
Kelly Meeks crossed the finish line a very dose second with Dennis
Hall the jockey.

ond place horse was Galla Go
Easy, a four-year-old mare owned
and trained by Chuck Shields Sr.
with Rick Cullison the jockey .
Third place horse was See Comet
Go, a three-year-old gelding owned
·by Glenn Reed and trained by
Susan Sheppard. Carl Circle was
the jockey. Fourth place horse wa5
Easy ~arrie , a seven-year-old gelding, owned and trained by Roger
Linscott with Terry Cullison the
jockey.
The second race, als.o an open
race, featured a 220 yard run. Bett
Shes Elegant, a five-year-old mare,
raced to fust in 12 2/5 seconds. She
is owned by Joe Trentman and
trained by Kelly Mee1cs. Dennis
Hall was the jockey. Sunday
LaMark, a seven-year-old gelding,
owned by Susan Sheppard, captured the second-place spot with
Carl Circle as jockey. Comets
Good Bird, a three-year-old stallion, took third. He is owned by
Roger Linscott and trained by
Kelly Meeks with Rick Cullison
thejockey.
.
The fmal race of the day featured two-year-old runners in a 220
yard dash. Comets Ladybug,
owned and trained by Jennings
Beegle, won the race witll a time of
q 3/5 seconds. Rick Cullison was.
the jockey. ·Fashions Moon Jet,.
owned by Earl Cleek and trained·
by KeUy Meeks crossed the finish
line a very close second with Dennis Hall the jockey. Miss Sunday
Jeepers. owned and trained by
Susan Sheppard, finished third.
Carl Circle was the jockey.

Phila delphi a, 35; S1 anton, Atlanta , 27;
Wetteland, Monlrell, ZJ.
• ft

Sunday's scores

NATIONAL LEAGUE

third straight outing and for the
eighth time in 10 decisions at
home.
Kile (144) allowed six hits in 7
2{3 innings and struck out eight.
Bagwell hit his career-high 20th
homer with two outs in the first
against Ben Rivera (11-7), and
Anthony followed with his 15th Qf
the season.
Rockies 4, Mets 3
Freddie Benavides broke a 3-3
tie with a solo home run in the seventh inning, lifting Colorado to a
three·- game sweep, the Rockies •
fourth series sweep of the season,
in front of 70,064 fans at Mile High
Stadium.
Mike Munoz (1-0), who joined

AL leaders
BAITING : Olerud , Toronto . . 388:
Molitor, Toron1o, .327; Lofton, CLEVE·
LAND, .316; R. Alomar, Toronto, .316;
Thomas, ChiCI&amp;_O, .315; Gonulcz, Teus,
.315; Harper, Minnesota, .315.
RUNS : Palmeim, Texas, 96; Molitor,
Toronto,%; White, Toronto, 94; Phillip!!,
Delfoit, 92; R . A1omar, Toronto, 90;
Baerga, CLEVELAND. 89: R. Hendcr·
mn, Toron.to, 89.
RBI : Fielder, Detroit, 103; Thomu,
OJ.icago, 102; Delle, CLEVELAND, 9&amp;;
Olerud, To ronto, 94; Goozalcz, T cus, 92;
Caner, Toronto, 92; Baerga, CLEVElAND, 91.
lUTS : Olemd , Toronto, 167; Molitor,
Toronto, 159 ; Baerg a, CLEVELAND,
152: McRae, Kansas City, 150; R . Alomar, Toronto. 149 ; Phillip5, Detroit, 142;
Fl)man , Det.toit, \40.
DOUBLES : Olerud, Toronto, 44;
'Nhite. Toromo, 33; Palmeiro, Te~n. 31;
Puclr.ett, Minnesola , 31; Joyner, Kansas
City , 30; Anderson , Baltimore, 29; Grecnwdl , B01too, 29 ; Carter, Toronto, 29.
TRIPLES : L. Johnson, Chicago, 11;
Hu ls e, Te:us, 10; Con , Chicago, 9;
Lofton , CLEVELAND, 8; Cuyler, De·
troit, 1; McRae, Ka nus City, 1; T. Fer nandez, Toronto, 7.
HOME RUNS : Gonz-alez, Texu, 36;
Griffey lr., Seatlle, 35; Thomas, Chicago.
33; Belle, CLEVELAND. 32; Palmeiro,
Texu, 31; Salmon , California, 28; Ficld·

er, Detroit, 28.

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Frazier edges Wolfe in.final laps for victory at K-C Raceway
By SCOTT WOLFE
Selltlllel Correspondent
Blitzing from an eighth place
start, Chillicothe's own Mark Frazier blasted by Racine's Scott
Wolfeonthe2lstlapl0clairnthe
25-lap _L ate Mo~cl A-Main, his
second 10 a row, m the Autoworlcs
Fan Appreciation Nighq~rogram at

·

K-CRacew~ySaturdaymght.

Fremont s Scott Miller took the
lead from Jimmy Stins.on .on the
moth lap en route 10 wmmng .th~
Super,Spnnt feature, while Chill•co the s Bob Crace Jr. won the
UMP Modifleds and Circleville's
~arl Coleman wabbed the Super
Street SIOCk mam.
Despite it j11st being a regular
race nij!ht, cars from Ohio, Pennsylvama, Indiana, Kentucky and
West Virginiaweteonhand. Thirty
Super Sprints were on hand, as
well as 2S Late Models, 28 S11per
Streets and 18 Modifieds for a 10tal
of 101 cars. .
Due to near-drought conditions
in the area during the past month,
the usually . super fast 3/8 mile
speedplant was unusually dry, cutung speeds somewhat, but not
crimping !he close racing aclion .
The only setback came from a hu;ger number of spinouts that prompted necessary delays in the close
competitive action.
In the Late Model feature, _Sco~t
Wolfe'a McDonald's of Galhpohs
Rocket Chassis blasted into an
early lead over polesitter J.T. Lloyd
of New Haven, W.Va. Wolfe's
Mark's Auto Sales, lnc./Baum
Lumber/Precision Automotive car

going high into the air and grazing Wilson.
B-Main: Bill McElfresh, Jerry Denny..
·
the flagstand before coming to rest
Super Sprints
Hemming, Rob LeMaster, Dick
A-Main: Carl Coleman, Tracy
in the infield. Dul)Stith was shaken,
Heat: Scott Miller, Mark Good- Grimm, Terry Downing, Barry Ross, Beasley, Reaser, Hemming,
but his car was much worse.
Deisch, Bob Teeple, Dave Snell
Brisker, Rick Owings, Richard McElfresh, Coleman, Steve Day,
Earlier in the year, Fremont's
Heat: Charlie Fisher, CJ. Hoi - Johnson, . Bob CallahanL Bob LeMaster, Terry Downey.
SconMillerappearedtobewellon ley,JirnmyStinson, HarryGarrett
·his way to a feature win at K-C, but
Heat: Todd Cramer, Rick Hoi00 ef aD
Jg DIDg faCIDg
mechanical difficulties slowed the ley, Mark Christman, Mike Bowl~
former Econo-Sprint Champion. ing.
.
.
Se &amp;Of a Uf ay 3
aceway
Saturday night, nothing slowed the
B-Mam: Ross Roge~s, Tracy.
.
yeat's USAC event at KC. Hewitt's
young charger as he defeated sev- Hoover, Btll Bnan Jr., Mike Imler,
Some of the best ·names in open
driving
style has prompted numerera! hard hitters en route 10 his first Dave Dickson, Mike Adkins, wheel racing will come to KC
ous slogans about the outspoken
K-C win. .
.
Dewey Ca~sell, Mark Imler and Raceway near Chillicothe Saturday star including the saying, "He rides
Young Jtmmy Stmson broke JunmyLewiS. .
.
when the non-winged USAC 'em high cause he's not aftaid 10
into .a huge lead from the point
A-Mato: Mtller, Teeple, !l1ll "Thunder and Lightning" division die," a monacher that illustrates
after taking starter Daryl Owens' Brian, Holley, J:loover, Fisher, sprint cars come to town for a big Hewitt's all out charge to the front
green flag. Stinson was fast and Christmao, Bowling, C.J. Holley, 40-lap feature. The non-wi nged
USAC and its stars are best
smooth, but Miller, who started Garrett.
sprinters wi)l be joined by KC's know of late from their regular
lOth, quickly cut the deficit as did
UMPmodifieds
Super Street Stocks on the racing c overage on ESPN's Saturday
rim -riding Bobby Teeple. Teeple
Heat : Bob Crace Jr .. Randy card.
Nighr Thunder programs. USAC,
pressured Stinson along the top
Madden, Tim Wilson, Ron Carter,
Headlining the entry list is two- once a stepping stone 10 IndianapoHeat: Rick Williamson, Jerry time USAC champion and former lis, is now becoming an avenue to
side for three circuits, but in the
heat of battle, Miller slipped iniO
Bragg, Jim Penuset, Dave Thacker. All-Star Champion Robbie Stanley, the NASCAR-WinsiOn Cup series,
the inside groove and was able to
Feature-Bob Crace Jr., Frank Indy 500 veteran Johnny Parsons where fonner USAC stars Kenny
sneak past both for the lead.
Luchini, Bragg, Mike Huntley. Jr., Four·time USAC champ Steve Schrader and Jeff Gordon have
Stinson's mount began to fade
Gary Buck, Thacker, Mapes, Per- Butler, Tony Stewart, Tony Ellion, graduall:d
before finally stalling completely in
tuset, Ron Smart, Wilson.
Eric Gordon, Tony Jarrett and Gary
Gates open at 4:30 with racing
turn three, thus ending a hard
Super Streets
Cameron.
slated at 8 p.m., following Time
charge. Although Miller was quick
Heat: John Reaser, Steve Bobo,
The Team Valvoline sprinters of Trials at 7 p.m.
on the hotiOm, Teeple and PennsylDarnell Beasley, arian Hammond.
Californian Cary Pass and IndiKC is located on Blaine Highvanian Bill Brian Jr. were in hot .
Heat: Steve Day, Chico Cole· ana's Dave Darland are also slated way pff \l.S. 23 just six miles south
pursuit .
man, Bob Trego, Rob Lemaster.
to be on hand along with "Can he of Chillicothe at Alma.
As lapped traffic came into the
Heat; Dean Osborne, Carl Cole- do it?'; Jack Hewitt, the multi-time
picture· six cars were in contention
man, John Remy, Fred Hartlbarger sprint car champion who won last
to win. Brian. Teeple, Rick Holley,
Tracy Hoover and Charlie Fisher
all bunched~ behi~d Miller, but a
good move m trafftc gave Mtller
some breathing room as he rolled
to the.win ..
Teeple was second, followed by
Brian who came all the way from
15th after having to run the Bmain. Brian, a recent World ofO.utlaw winner, had earlier been an
accident victim in the heat. Holley
moved from ei~thth 10 fourth, and
Tracy Hoover charged from 14th to
fifth. Rounding out the lOp 10 were
Fisher, Mark Christman, Mike
Bowling, C.J. Holley and Harry
came in 15th.
Garrett
Winston Cup racer Terry .
Heats went to Miller, Fisher and
W.Va., running in the stock class. Casto's 1979
FIRST PULL - The rrrst omcial puU at the
Labonte, who started second, had Todd Cramer, while Ross Rogers
Ford puUed the sled 297 feet and two inches.
Meigs County Fair Truck Pulls held Friday
steering problems and completed claimed the B-main.
night was made by Dana Casto or Ravenswood,
155 laps. Hut Stricklin had engine
Soon-to-be track champion, Bob
problems and dropped out after 38 Crace Jr. kept his perfect string
laps.
intaet as he stormed from lOth 10
The race often times resembled ftrst in just five circuits to claim his
a demolition derby. There were 12 ninth feature win of the year. Bob
caution flags and many accideniS. Mapes was the early leader, howBy the end, only six cars were on 'ever, Mapes faded as Rick
the lead lap and 25 still were run- Williamson momentarily slipped
ning.
into the lead. While Williamson
Pressley blamed drivers of slow- battled Mapes, Crace tip-toed by on
er cars for the problems.
the inside and was off and runmng.
"They just wouldn't give a bit
Williamson overhauled second
of room ," he said. "The slower
on
the eighth lap, but on the final
cars put a lot of good cars out
circuit looped it in tum four. Frank
today.
Nemechek, who set a qualifying Luchini was second, followed by
record by. turning in a lap of Jerry Bragg, Mike Huntley, Gary
124.875, and Pressley managed 10 Buck, Dave Thacker, Mapes, Jim
avoid the trouble. They traded the Pertuset, Ron Smart and Tim Wil- ·
inch engine, pulled the sled 188 feet at the Meigs
son.
DODGE POWER - They may be old, but
lead for the fust I46laps.
County
Fair Truck Pull Friday night.
Heats
went
to
Crace
and
they have plenty or power. Jim Blosser of Logan,
Jack Sprague sneaked into the
Williamson.
driving a 1961 Dodge pickup with a 440·cubic·
lead on lap 147 after Pressley and
Carl Coleman claimed the
i
. Nemechek pitted, but his time at
always
exciting
super
street
Win
by
the top was short. Sprague sustained front-end damage on a leading all 15 laps, coming home
restart and never was able to get ahead of Tracy Ross, Darnell
back in contention . He finished Beasley, John Reaser, Jerry Hemming, Bill McElfresh, Chico Cole20th.
Pressley opened an 11 -seco nd man , Steve Day, Rob Lemaster and
lead on Nemechek following a Terry Downey. Hemming's charge
restart when Nemechek's belt prob- was all the way from a 13th place
start.
!em became apparent.
Heats went to John Reaser,
The final caution period- from
Steve
Day and Dean Osborne,
laps 214 to 218- gave Nemechelc
while
Bill
McElfresh claimed the
time to fix the problem, but not
B-main.
enough time 10 catch Pressley.
Saturday will see some of the
"This was probably the easiest
best
names in open wheel racing
race we've run here," said Pressley, who finished second in last coming to K-C in the fonn of the
year's race. "The car just drove by United States Auto Club (USAC)
"thunder and lightning" division
itself."
Griss6m's finish allowed him to and the USAC non-winged sprints.
keep the points lead. David Green, The stars of ESPN's· Saturday
who finished ninth, held on to sec- Night Thunder will join the best of.
ond position, while Pressley Ohio and KC's regulars, who will
remamed third and Nemechek take off their wings to dual with the
national stars.
moved iniO fourth.
Summary
The viciOry was worth $33,875
Late
models
and was Pressley's biggest payday.
Heat: Paul Coyan, Rod Evans,
Don Kennison, Charlie Seymour.
Heat: Jackie Boggs, Bob Adams
Jr., J.T. Lloyd, Clark VanHouten.
Heat: Mark Frazier, Scott
Wolfe, Tony Throckmorton, Greg
Stevens."
B-Main : Harold Redman Sr.,
Barry Bragdon, Mike Wilson, Red_.
fourth with 1,261 pomts .
man Jr., Gary Krug.
Unlike Flori.da Sta!e's 1988 and
Feature-Frazier, Wolfe, Redman
1991 teams, thiS years ~tub seems Sr. , Rod Evans,Adams Jr., Boggs,
more comfortable. handll!lg the No. Coyan, Throckmorton, Bragdon,
1 preseason rankmg as It prepares
for a tough schedule.
"We know that each and every
game, Y'e have a target. on our
THIS SPACE
chest\, ~uarterback Charhe W:rrd
$16.00
satd. It s.~n that way smce I ve
THIS SPACE
A veteran Rock Hill team
been here.
, .
Ward, the schCJ?l s smgle-sea- defeated Meigs 12-0 in a varsity
$8.00
s~n record-holder .m IOta!. offense, football scrimmage on Saturday
wtU have 8:" expene.nced line and a morning at Bob Roberts Field in
stable ?f gifted recetvers and backs Pomeroy.
Despite the loss, first-year
retummg to an offense that averag~ ~o~ than 600 yards and 61 Marauder head coach Mike
pomts m !IS final three games last Chancey was pleased with hi s
team's performance. "We played
sca;;,on. . .
.
.
~astcally we JUSt expenmen!; hard," Chancey commented after
the contest "Rock Hill was a good
ed wtth tb~t.offense last. ye~ ••
THIS SPACE
ful_ll~ck Willi~!"! Floyd S8ld. It s football team, we dido 't execute
. $12.00
gomg 10 be. w1de open and fun 10 well at times, but I feel that these
problems
can
be
corrected
with
watch .. I thmk I can e~en see .~e
hard worlc and coaching."
gleam 1!1 coach ~owden s eyes . .
First-year senior Jeremy Grimm
Flonda State s schedul_e, ~htch
called
the signals at quarterback for
features seven of the nation. s top
the
Marauders.
"I thought that
26-ranked schools and three m the
Grimm
played
well
in his first
Top 10, does c~ncem Bowden who
scrimmage,"
Chancey
stated. "He
nevertheless hkes to take on all
recieved some good experience. I
c~.w·. e ade our name playing also thought are defense played
ev m
d ·f
11
to.ugh sc~edules, a~ 1 '!'e ever weU.
Meigs will host Morgan Friday
wm a national champt~nshtp one of
evening
in the annual football prethese years, no ~ w,tD, able to
sa'/ ~~ backed mto 11, ~o.wd~n view in preparation for the season
wd. . If we end up do•?~ It, It will opener on Sept. 3 at home againSt
Gallia Academy.
be wtth a great ballclub.

rocketed into what appeared an
insurmountable lead through the
early ~oing, sitting on the point
throughOut !he fust 18 laps, when
the first of three cautions slowed
thefield.
On the f'ust two .restarts, Wolfe
got a good jump, despite a slijtht
peak from runner-up Mark Frazter,
who n~ up on the inside in his
Tecumseh Inn/Fnwer Accounting
Rayburn.
Aft~r a!lother .spinout on the
20th ctrcult, Fraz1er again nosed
under Wolfe, but Wolfe led the
next two circuits in a great side-byside dual .. Going iniQ turn num1&gt;er ·
one, Frazier, who was faster on the
bottom,
beat
Wolfe's
M c Don aId' s I 0 ' Brien
Produce/Eber's Citgo machine into
the apex, then rolled to a .five car
length lead at the finish after the
two battled tooth-and-claw the last
three circuits.
Another great race was shaping
up back in the pack as Tyler Mountain, West Virginia driver Harold
Redman kevt a straight ·fast line in
coming from l(ith starting spot 10
finish third. Redman, the. former
West Virginia State Champion
defeated another fast Mountain
Stater, Rod Evans and perennial
Skyline Champion Bob Adams Jr.
Rounding out the top ten were
Grayson, KentuCky's Jackie Boggs,
who~e a strut early in the race,
Paul Coyan, Tony Throckmorton.
Barry Bragdon and Mike Wilson.
HeatswentiOCoyan,Boggsand
Frazier, while Redman Sr. claimed
the B-main. Joey Dunseith climbed
the front chute wall in the B-main,

•

'Th
t

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

.100, 3.04.
STRIKEOUTS : R. Johnson, Seattle,
226; Guzman, Toron to, 152; Cone,
Kansu City, l4S ; Langaton, California,
14 3; Appi~?r, Kanus City, 140; Clemens,
Boston. 140: Perez. New York, 139.
SAVES : Montgomery, Kansa s City,
38; D . Ward, Toronto, 34; Russell,
Boston, 32.; Olson, Bahimore, 29; Henke,
Teu1, 29; Eckersley, Oakland, 29; R .
Henundet, Chicago, 28; Aguilera , Min-

nesota, 28.

- * Transactions "' Auto racing
IndyCar
INDYCAR : Announced the resign&amp;·
tion of William Stokbn, chainnan 1nd
chief executive o£ficer.

•

Baseball

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

Ame.rlcan Leaa.uc
ROSTON RED SOX : Acquired Rob
Peer. outfielder, from the Detroit Tigers
!or a pl1yer to be named l ater. Placed Luis
Ri"era, infielder, on lhe IS-day disabled
liM.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS : Recalled
J.T. Snow, first bucm1n, from Vancouver
of the P•cific Com League. Op.ioncd Ty
V1n Butklco, first baseman, to Vancouver.
DETROIT TIGERS : Activated Bill
Krueger, pitch er, from the 15-da,Y d is~
abled lilt. Pl1ccd Kun Knudsen, puc bCJ,

•

992-2156

on me tS- da~ dinbled lilt.

N1llona1 Lttgue
COLORADO ROCKIES : Activated
Andrea Oalarraga, firl\ bucman, 1nd
BNCO Hum. pitcher, from \be lS-day dil·
ablcd liat. OptiGied Cwt Le&amp;k:anic, ptdter, to Colorado Sprin&amp;• of the Pacific
Cout Le.apc. Rcc:•ll•d Mik~ Munoz,

·ASK FOR DAVE or P.J.

pildlcr, fi&lt;lrn Cotondo Sprinp.

AD DEADLINE WE_
DNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1993

MONTREAL EXPOS: Waived Mite

Oardlnct, pitcher, for lho pupoeo d &amp;iv·
ina him nil WlCXlllditional releue..
NEW YORK METS: Sillled flold&gt;et
Bat.ea, aul&amp;lde:r,

I

•

Pressley wins New England
Chevy Dealers 500 flag
By FRANK BAKER
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - While
45 drivers started the New England
Chevy De3lers 250, it was apparent
early that the cars driven by Roben
Pressley and Joe Nemechelc were
the ones to beat.
And that's how it came out.
Nemechek, the pole-sitter and
defending chainpion, and Pressley;
who started third, led 231 of the
250 hips that comprised the
NASCAR Busch Grand National
race.
In the end, Pressley edged
Nemechek by .75 seconds .after
averaging 89;560 mph around the
1.058-mile oval at New Hampshire
International Speedway.
.
"Joe was running real good and
so were we. We just knew we had
to be patient," said Pressley, who
won for the third time this year and
lOth in his career.
Nemechek, who had to pit late
to g,et a rear-e_nd cooling belt
rcparred, was satiSfied With the fin-tsh.
. "I think we're getting that monkey off our back now," said
t-~emechek, the defending Grand
National points champion who has
yet to win this year. "I'm happy.
Hopefully we'll start getting some
good fmishes now."
. Bobby Dotter, driving a Chevrolet, finished third, followed by cutrent points leader Steve Grissom in
a Chevrolet and Tommy Houston
in a Ford.
Five-time Wins10n Cup champion Dale Earnhardt started seventh,
but collided with rookie Hermie
Sadler between' turns one and two
6n the fustlap and,sustained steering damage. He dropped out after
36laps.
Since the track ope·.1ed in 1990,
no Winston Cup racer has won a
Grand National event at New
Hampshire. The best fmish among
the four Winston Cuppers in Sun·
~ay's race was Bill Elliott, who

BULLETIN BOARD
NOW
AVAILABLE
IN THE

Florida State, Alabama
top two college football
powers in pre-season poll

STOLEN BASES : Lofton, CLEVE·
LAND, 49: Cllnis, Caliromia, 44; Po1onia , California, 40; R. Alomar, Toronto,
39; R. Hcndenon., Toronto, 36; L John ·
son, Chicago, 31 ; White, Toronto, 24.
PITCi-DNO (13 decisions): Key, New
York. 15-4, .789. 283: Guzman, Toronto,
10-3, .769, 4.06; Mu.nina, D1l1imore, 124, .750, 4 .45 ; McDowell, Chie&amp;go, 20. 7,
.741, 3.4 0; Wick:man, New York, 10·4,
.7 14, 4.45; Fe~andc~, Ch.ic1~o, lS-6,
.714, 3.05; App1et, Kansas Cny, 14 -6,

d
d L" ht • '
S t d
t KC R

By BRENT KALLESTAD
: TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)Florida State's players had one
thing on their minds after learning
t~is weekend they would begin the
season as the nation •s top-ranked
team for the third time in stx years.

Kansas.

That was the response from
nearly all Seminole players, who
e~pected to be No. I heading into
the season and Saturday's date in
tfie Kickoff Classic against the Jayhjlwks.
. •'This game will show the world
1ha1 we are either contenders or
retenders," defensive end. Todick Mcintosh Said.
"This game is the ftrst rung on
he ladder," senior wide receiver
{cvin Knox said. "We can't be
etoured."
·
, The Seminoles, who have fin·
shed no lower than fourth in the
1
•ast six seasons, were a clear
ravorite in the preseason balloting
. 62 writers and broadc.asters on
•s panel to win their fust nationJ title after a series of near-misses.
I Florida State received 42 of 62
irst_-place vote~ and 1,522 of a
IOSStble 1,550 pomts.
Defending national champion
Alabama ranked second with 14
first -place Votes and 1,472 points.
Michi an followed in third 'with
. three ~rst-place votes and 1,413
points, while Texas A&amp;M was

.
f
l

~

cientintl

CALL
NOW

Rock Hill defeats
Meigs in preview

992·2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Call Now For Sunday, A'ufiust 22nd

!'t

'.

,

�,

•
OhiO

By The Bend .

The Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace
'

Monday, August 23, 1993
Page-6 .

Looking back at the 1993 Meigs County Fair

RATES

To place

an ad
Call992-2156

•

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
(:LOSJ;D SUNDAY

POUCIES

• Ade niiWe the eoUDt)' your ad nma mmt be prepaid
· • Reeei" ditcouat for ad. p.W ia adnDCe.
• FreeAcllr CiWII..w&amp;y aad FouDd. ad. under IS word• will be
na 3 da11 at ao charp.
• Prlee of ad for alleapiW let,... le doahle price of ad coot
• 7 pebdllao type o..Jy....!
e S.liDel Y D.Ot H1poD1lb&amp;e for 81TOI'I after fll'll d.y (check
for U'I'GI'IIint day &amp;d.run• in paper). CaD before 2:00 P·•·
doy allor pahlieallop to Make correetioa
' Ad. tMt MUll M paid iD advance are:
Card of Tlwlk.o
Happy Ad.

Ia M....ariam

Yard Sal•
• A clutillelad...W...oat placed iD the The Dally SeatiDol
(..eept Cta.Uiod Dilplay, BUilD... Card or Lopi
Noticeo) willaloo appear iD the Point Plouant R.p .. r ud
.... Callipollo Dolly Tril&gt;-, nachi"' OYOr 18,000 bemeo

GOAT SHOWMANSHIP- Pictured from
left to rigbt are Meigs County Junior Fair grand
. champion goat showman Ben Crane, Fair
RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - Burlile
Oil and Citgo Stations purchased lbe Reserve
Champion L!lmb from Rebecm ·Scott for $9.25 a
pound at the 4-H Junior Fair Livestock Sale at
the Meigs County Fair on Friday night. Pictured

front, Rebecca Scott, Wool Princess Christy
Drake, Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre. Back, Ohio
Director of Agriculture Fred Dailey, J!ob
Burlile, Steve Little and Keith Rochard, all of
Burlile Oil/Citgo Stations.

,e.

l

.,

446-Galllpolla
367-Cbeal.lre
388-VIntoa
245-Rio Crude
256-Gayaa Blot.
643-Aralola Dlot.
379-Walaut

992-Mlddl.opo.tJ
Pomeroy
985-Cbettor
843-Pordaad
24 7-Lotarl FaDa
949-RaeiDe
742-Rudaad
667-Coolvllle

CARPENTER
WORK
Remodeing 8fld Repair

-,

Pa~ting,EXpertenceq

'

FIN Ellimates 61281
614-446-8568 1 mo.

If enough Interest Is shown, )

Line Dance instruction will be t
given this fall In Pomeroy,
' ··
Ohio. For more Information
call (614) 992-5858.

PRIVATE
MITHEMAnCS
IHSTRUCnON
alphabet with which
God has written the

1993 Meigs County
Fair Memories
Order Video Tapes of
the following event:
Demolition Derby
Call Video Transfers to
place your order or
more information
614-441-1168
614-446-6939

RESERVE CHAMPION POULTRY Mead Paper of Chillicothe purchased the
Reserve Champion Poultry from Barbara Smith
for $2~0 at the 4-H Junior.Fair Livestock Sale at

Universe." - Ga/ileo

By Topic
By Appointment
949-2814
7ml 1mo•.p&lt;I.J

Arnold's
Plumbi•g,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

Vetetans Memorial Hospital provided priZes or
$!5 for first, $10 for second and $5 for third
place, for the pie baking contesfheld nYjilii1 or ··
the 130th Meigs County Fair.

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

the Meigs County Fair on Friday night. Pictured
are Gene Walters of Mead Paper Company,
Barbara Smith, Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre
and Eric Roush, Mead Paper Cotnj11my.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

Community
.Calendar

EAGLES
CLUB
Special Earty Bird
$100 Payo"
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051~2

tion.

_,

-c·.·

~

... .

~lli:i'.- ---- .:--:- -

CHAMPION FEMALE HOLSTElN • Pictured (lel't) is Tricia
Davis both the grand and reserve champion female Holsteins of
the Meigs County Junior Fair. The graad
is a five year
old cow and the reserve cbampion is a senior
beiler.

POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- .
ty Board of Elections will hold a
special meeting Tuesday at 9 a.m .
to certify the validity of the petitions.

cake were served.
District Annual Day wiD be held
September 16 in Marietta. It was
noted rhat Lee Lee has been asked
to serve on the District UMW nominating committee. Festival of
Sharing kits should be brought to
the annual church picnic, August ·
23, which will be held at the new
shelter house at 6 p.m. Everyone
attending should bring a covered
dish and table service.
The UMW will have a booth,
serving soup beans and cornbread
at the Racine Fall Festival September 25. A donation was given to lbe
festival and a $100 flood donation
was voted on.
Refreshments were served by
Carla Wallace and Chris Hill. Get
well cards were signed during the

~~~lbe~lbe~~

accompanied by Ruth Steams.
The secretary and treasurer's

~~oc~~~g~V:;e~r. 8:r%s~~~

dence _was read, the penny fund

~!~~~~o~::d~~~e~~1 f:~~~aJ~}

News policy

'

"Women Called of God" was ·
the title for the program presented
by Vickie Hill at rhe July meeting
of rhe Racine United Methodist
Women. Women prophets of lbe
bible such as Deborah, Miriam,
Anna and Hullab, were discussed.
The old testament consists of
writings of rhe prophets. The new
testament does not contain words
and acts but quotes from the old
testament. A true prophet is one
who does not speak for himself or
herself but is God's instrument in
communicating a message to the
people.
Lee Lee, in opening the business
meeting, welcomed Jane Molter
the new minister's wife. The group
repeated the UMW purpose and
Jane Molter gave the opening

UMW song was sung by rhe group

RACINE - The Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Star Mill
· Park. New members welcome.

,·

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL
Rea so• able
Ratts
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614•742•2138

. Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Consultants
Carolyn McCoy
992-6082
Sandy H•nde1'80n
992-3847
812193

ll- Help 1Vantod
12- Situatiou 1Vaated
13- ln•uraae;e
14-- B111iDe1• Trainlat

HOOPS - 1nd rabbits tbat
'clean their room' were among th'e several entries in the most talented pet category at tbe Meigs County Fair Pet Show. Here, a dog
named "Cody" demonstrates the canine art or hoop jumping.

business were attended to and Lee
Lee thanked Martha Dudding Etta
Mae Hill, Sharon Hubbard and
Chris Hill for planning the welcome party for lbe new minister
wife_ and daughter. The progra~
conststed of several readings and
~oems and vocal solos by Judy
ape and Jennifer Walker. A gift of
1

}~': ~:0~~e~d~~~~:n:

from ihe church members. Refreshments of homemade icc cream and ·

- II II

I

qalpoMa

Waatod to S..y

1

Li.-ealock
Hay.t:Craill

Swd .t: FerUllo.

VaDI &amp; 4

lVD'•

Mo&amp;o,eyclu,
Boall &amp; Moton for Sale
Auk! Par,. 4 Acc•ao·~
Au\o Repair
Ca..piDI ·E&lt;Juip-DI

\111:1 II \\ 1)1:--&gt;1 :

15- School. &amp;: IDitrucUon
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

17- MilcellaoeoUI
IS- Wantad To Do

51-H....... IdCoodo
s2- Sportia1 Cood.o
5$-ADti&lt;J-

54- Mloci Merchandi.o
5$- Buildi., SuppU•

·GENERAL
HAULING

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutten
DoWnspouts

Gutter Cleaning

Pslntlng

FRU ESTIMATES

949-2168 .
3-1~93-tfn

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

'

(614)
667·6628

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

.... 19-93-lln

7n/1roo.

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

•Painting Services

Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes

and Aluminum Siding

Power Washing
FREE ESTIMATES

•..,. Rd.

a•. 45743

985·4181

~·:~·tw:

REMOVAL

EAGLE LAIES

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WI/
(304)773-5585
'SUMMER HOURS'
S~n.-Th~r 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNE:SDAY

12-30-92-tln

8-4-93-tfn

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM••II

USED RAILROAD TIES

Attending were Margie West,

Roush, Carla Wallace, Gladys
Shields, Chris Hill, Alice Wolfe
Vicki Hill, Frances RobertS, Ruth .
Stearns, Martha Dudding, Jane
Molter, Mariam Bell, Tammy Hill,
Karen Walker, Opal Diddle, and
Lee Lee.
The next regular meeting will be
held September 27 at 7:30 p.m: at ;

DOWNING CHILDS:
MUllEN MUSSER
I

'

111 Second St., Po11erol

YOUR INDI:PENDEN
"'
•
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY ..
i
' ·
· SINCE 1868 ·
'

.

=

==' Complete
Medical/Surgical
Care
f
or Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including"

I

BESSIE HEIDRICIS

In Memory
/11 Lorl11g Menwry of

BESS HENDRICKS
,.,,.,,...,.., 23,

Johna.A. I

'i

- II lllll8r Dill&amp;
Pt. "I Fll&amp;l, WI.
l
CaD ....,._1144 far Int..• llllaaa•!ln t'
r.;of..;.;,;a.;;t;,;;;•;,;;,•.;,P.;.PO;.:&amp;;.:.;:
li•;:•H:rtl;,::.l:.:::•:I.:;P:;PO:_..J
.

•--•-•.•_IM__

. '

PubliC Notice

from our u~, like a

'

,.

]911(1

PUBUC NOTICE
The annual report Form
IIIOPF for the Kibble
Foundation, Barnard V.
Fultz, TruatH, le avallablo
for publio lnapaatlon at
Bernard V. Fulb t.w Offlca,
11111~ W. Second Stree~
Pornoroy, Ohio 457111,
during regular bualn•••
houra for a period of UO
daya_ aubaaqueilt to
r.;blloaUon of IIIIa notice.
) 13, te, 17, II, 111, 20, 23

·

Our lip1 111«1 11111 speak
wlle11 our llearts
moum lhte~nly,
For ftUfojtell 1wells
when il rf!ldorn is
. WIIIIIA.,,

CIJildr•ll "

Qrt~~~dehlldnll

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3470

985·4473

NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
OWNER: .ltH Wld!•Notlce Ia hereby .,Ivan o.----~51;;;.,;.;10193
that on lhto 2811! day o July,
111.113, Beverly Croeby,
Executor of the Eatate of
Virginia Stali-rth, late of
3342 103rd str..t, Corona,
Qu..no County, New YOrk,
flied In thlo Court tindor
Docket N. C••• No. 27801
an authorttlc•tad copy of
Letter• of Admlnlatrllllon
Porches,
laaued to·h• by the Slate of
New York, Surrogate'•
Patios,
Court, County o' ou..na.
Nolc• ill furlhar given lhat
Sidewalks
all oredllora of ealtl Milot•
dealr• to •••art lhelr
992-7878
llano on the r•l .. 111111 of
7f71
aald decedent located In
~iilm•tee,te shall pr-t lhllr
••
duly sworn to, lo
lhla Court within alx monlha
RIVER VALLEY
ell• the filing ol uld lellllro
In this Court, or their uld
CONTUCTORS
Ilene ehali forever be
barrad and
FREE ESTIMATES
R*rtE. Buck
All work guaranteed.
Judge
LowCost ·
16, 23, 30 3tc
Inside, O,utside; Top to
Bottom

We do 11111 forget her,
w•to~· ~twr to deorty,
For~ rnenwry to fade

dnam;

•New Homes
-Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

36970 Ball Rln Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,

7122193

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addlllons

WORK

. Public Notice

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT IMiga County, Ohio, 45'760."
.
Robert E. Buck
OFROUCIARY
Pr*teJuctge
"On Auguat 11, 1113, ·In
Lana K. Neaallrolld
Ill• ..... County Probate
Clerk.
Court, Caaa No. 21040,
(81
16,
23,
30
Dnltl Cal8on, 11110 Patty
Placa, FL Wayna, Indiana,
4"04 ••• appointed 2
In Memory
Admilllatr- of the Mhlla
of Adrian A. Careon,
da...a~. lata of 35352
In Mamo.y of
ntua Road, Middleport,

2

ROBERt BISSELL
COHSTlUCTIOH

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE

------=---

INSUUNCE ·

C':.l::a::,;ra~M::.::;ae~S::a:;;rg~e;;:n:,:;t,:..::M~ar::,:ge:
1
·
- · r~y-========·

PubliC Notice

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE ,

&amp; FILL DIRT
Public Notice

~~

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

DurMothar,

You era not lor1got1:•n I
on ••rth
no mor•: Still
lnMtmo.y you •r• whh
M you •Iwaya -••
I !mora.
Low. Art,
Marya

7111

II

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Lat me do It
lor you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
1112111311 mo. pel

WHALEY'S AUIO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
lEW &amp; ISII PAll'S fOI

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

or 10lL FREE
1..01-141-0070

AU IIAIII IMOIIU

EXCAVATING

BUUDOZE.J! 1_!1ACKHOE
and TRACI\noE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEII\S,
HOlE SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

6-30.1 roo.pd.

~

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
num)lng
......

. ~- .~

'W!rDOD

38904Lndi•t

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad Specialtieo"
122 Joy Orin, Gallipoll•, Oh.

CrHkRH.

Mltlllleport,o•a.

448-7112
Fu/Volce 448-7612

614·992-7144

4/29/93,.

8-+1111

I

Middleport, Olllo 45760
(614) 843·5264 5/14193Mn

POOR BOY TIRES
ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
205-75R15" Tiger Paw X1M AWL
205-75R14" Tig• P- XTM AWL
21S:.75t5" Flrntone OWL
235-75RI5" A818tone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 6121W3

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(3041 773·5533

ASK FOR CHRIS

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

992·7012 or

Chester, Oh. 45720

992~555J

985-3406
3/tlltfn

DAIWII, OHIO
7131/91ilfn

t-1D-i2-1111

HOWARD

lox 189

614·985·4180

-Gutlllr Work
-Eieclrlcal and Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
PalnUng
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. 742·2217

..

W• h.ov• a large atock ol•-•1 name brand tir• and
II we don't haw, - oan get It
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL ·
304-773-5533
2nd Locllllon call Lon Neal
Henderson, w. Va. 304-67$-3331
Malllrcard and VISA~;;~,;

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

50734 lit..,
Long lotte11,

Howard L Wrltesel

3-4-83- 1 mo.

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

Wariler received the Sandra Harden Mtmo,rial
Award. Pictured wllb them are Mrs. Robert Lee
and Mrs. Maxine Rose.

'Women called of God' presented

HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the townhouse. Bring snacks. All members
attend.

In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the GaiJipo)is Daily Tribune and Sentinel
will not accept weddings after 60
days from the date of rhe evenL
All club meetings and other
news anicles in the society section
musi be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birlbdays must
be submitted wirhin 42 days of the
occurence.
All material submitted for publication is su bject to editting.

11124192111n

Classifieds
SPECIAL AWARDS- Nancy Nally, second
from left, received the Bob BiD Lee Award prior
to the start Ill the 4-H Junior Fair Livestock Sale
at the Meigs County Fair on Friday nll!ht. Krist!

·" I 1\ I

41- Ho.... for Real
42- MoLile Homa for Real
43- Farm• for Heat
oM- Apartment for Rmt
45- Fu.mi.lh.ed Room•
46- S,-ce for Rent
47- Wanted to Reut
48- Equlpmeat for Reat
49-For.__..

6:45p.m.

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - A tent revival
will be held through Aug. 31 at 7
p.m. near Eastern High School oil
Route 7. Rev. Joe Beasley, Fresh
Oil Ministry, Vincent, will be ministering. Special singing nightly.

TUESDAY
REEDS VILLE - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire Station to receive,
consider and inact a zoning resolu-

HAULING

CaD Toda,- fer
Your lui
Makeovw

IN POMEROY

. Community Calendar items
· appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.

MIDDLEPORT- Volleyball
. practice for girls in grades seven
and eight at Meigs Junior High will
begin Monday at 3:30p.m.

Auclion

9- Waaood 1o Buy

"Mathematics is the

PIE BAKING CONTEST WINNERS Selected as the best in the contest were lbe peach
pies made by Marilyn Spencer, Long Bottom,
fjrst place; Brenda KeDDedy, Pomero1, second
olac1!: and Donna
Rutland, third place."

2-Jo.Moaory.
3-- Aaaouncemeata
4.---CiYuway
:;... Happy Acb
6- Loot and Found
1- Loot and Found
S- Puhlic Sale 4

675-1'1. Plouant
458-l.ooa
576-Apple Grove
773-MMon.
882-New Haven
895-Letarl
937- Bull'alo

PoUforSala
Muolcall..- , .
F..U../tV...... Iao
15!1-- For Sala or Trada
111 : 11 '1''1'111.

Queen Stephanie Sayre and reserve champion
showman DanieUe Grueser .

....__,

~·-

15
15
15
15

Over15 Wordo
$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$ .30
$9.00
$ .42

Gallia County Meljp County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

~t;;/

;~

1
3
6

Rate

GET RESULTS - FA&amp;l'f

Cla.111ijied page• cover ihe
foUolf!ing lelephone exchanges ...

·~o:j
cl'
-:_~~ .. r'

.&lt;
,.

Word•

10
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
51.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runS, broken up days will be
31- Mobile Ho- for Sale
charged for each day as separate ads.
~3-- Far.,a for Sale
Burinen Card-...517.001 Inch per momth
M- Buai-lluildiap
BuDdin Board....$6.00/inch per day
3$- Lo,. 4 Ac._
1'---------==--====------1 36-- Real Eatato Wanted

DAY BER&gt;RE Pllli~ICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. MD!I&lt;!ay
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
IOOp.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m . Friday

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

D.ayo

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

B&amp;G
Trucking
We Haul Grave,,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290

or

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndowa
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2860
or 915·3839
IHo Sundar C..l•l

614-698-6500

2/121821tfn

7f7Afn

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

RIC EXCAVATING

Parts 1111 Senkl
Mowen - CHII Saws
w.-.,.,s

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
. WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUI,ING: LlrMaton•,
Dirt, GIIIVel and Colt!

Announcement s

BULLDOZING

WALKER ALUY

Aulhorlmd: 81'::,I.
Stl811on MTD,
,
I.D.C. Rapalr Centar
PICKUP .,d DEUVERY
Hour• 116- M-F t-3 S.L
Cloaecl Sundlly

949·2104
.412Wn
I

u-•ed ;~•mt•d

PH. 614·9 2·5591

12-5-tfn

OIALitll

-eoo-- ,

UYEIIt 14 HRIIDAYIII

TALK ONI ON QHIJ 1

-

lxl. 1004 .,........ ... ~

le11Yra.Proaaneo.- •

. . . . . . .11.
..""''" ·~
u.. 14 Houre lllawlll Tall
:

="=~~ ~ • arT: ,

le 11 Yro.
0111. 1

Proan eo-:...'t!!'
• - •....,. .
J

�p

The Dall Sentinel

4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
35 loti &amp; Ac....ge

Giveaway

Apartment

44

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGI:

torRent

' klttenl6 . . . . , . .. 304 3m,

......
..........
_
.......
__
,..... _.

w-

s Kmono: 1
Old, 1 Bloc!&lt;
With WNto Feol, 4 Gray Whle, 1
~·To Good H - 114-

Bolullful CoUll Daa

0

AalOII

, Trallor Lot For Solo, 114-211-

IMIAitor I P.M.

36

to good

-only. 304-471-1724.

PHILLIP
ALDER

Reel Eatate
wantecl

..... , . . to good · ...
110114040
• F- To 0ooc1 Homo In Country,
Port .Cio ...... lhlphonl, . Nolwo~
Etldlound, Vflf'/
Good 1fllh Clllldren, 114-3"11-

zm:

W.nlld To Or lluy: AudR
Couplo -ko Oulot Troltor
~peDe, Phone: 114 441 23M

45

Fumlahed

1172 Cho¥r 111 TOIIIIO 4 11111.. 4
BoM, AT, .,... P!o N:;, 1."11 .....
$3,!100, Oou 11rldll
2308.
(1

t ,,
••u-.
"""._''"'1

MW

DMUM 1

~========:::;:===:·:.,:':"':"':;.::
. . "':·~ ;~:na &amp; 4 WD'a
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,1171 CJ.7J- VI,

Merchandlae

6 Lost &amp; Found
=-=--=--==~-:::==
Found: Pua Typo On Eaotom 503e.
"tl,..oo""'d,..od-:-::-7""Poa-p,...lo-:1-:-200--:A-:W'"'...,-:Avenuo, 11~.am.
Found: .Vory Vacol
Hound, PI- Coli And ldonllly,
Alk For Jonlco Or Tony, 6144M-1354.
Lot!: tomolo BNglo, top , of
Kenol Baohon Rd.,l14-i-..ct7.

8•-

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

ALL Yotd Soloo.Muot 81 Poklln
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

•PM1onco

REAL ISTATE CORRESPONDENCE COURSE: ooonplolo WV
NqUiremente .. your own piCe.
No Umo loll off JoO, FullY oo-

· origin, or ony tntlnlton to ·
mateo any IUCI1 prororonco,
lmnatton or ollocmtnatton.'

CLASSES:Cho-on Oct. 41SIIa~lnoburv Ocl 1.. 21.1 -.
71e.«nNorilloulom Collogo
JockKotly

=

"low. 0... raadore are horeby

w.

Don't Junk HI Sell Ua Your Heft..

Working

Major

Applloncoo,

Color
1Va,
Rafrlgll'aton,
FrMZirl\ VCA'1, Mlcrowav11,
Air Conaltlontl'l, OuHer Ampe,
Etc. ~~25~1238.

J &amp; D'e -'uto Plrte and Salvage,
alto buying Junk car. l tNG!i ..
304-773-5343. Junk Clra, eny condHion, 114--

992·7553.
Wantld atandlng timber, top
pric.. -paid, frM attlmat..,

ltconood

c:ortlliod togging,
304-895-3055 or 895-3831.
Wanted to boly· good uNd clr·
&amp;

cul,.tlng naturtl g11 heater, 814992·2529.

Wanlod IO buy: good, UNd fur·
nlture, 614--V92·75D8.

Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
Coina, Gold Rings, Sllv1r Coln1,

Gold Colno. M.T.S. Ccln Shop,
151 Saeond Avenue, Gallipolis.
Wanted to buy: uHd mobile
homu.61~75

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON! All areas. Need extr1

money or want a eerwr, elthlr
way-call Marilyn. 304-482-2645
or 1-8D0-992-6356.

10 OtmoMtrato,. NHd.cf To
Sell Top &amp; Gltra For Chrl.t:MII,

No Collecting Or Oollvorlng,
$500 Kft SUpplied Coli Mory 614446-921g 4-9 P.M.

AVON I All Aro.. I Shirley
Spoo,, 304-675-142e.
Cardinol FIVighl C.rrlo"'.O.T.R.
Drivers Wlntid for 1 ntw ler·
mlnal In Hurricane, WV, mu•

have 1yr. O.T.R. experi.nc. pula.

lng a van trailer, good lt•ttlng

pay, 1111 model ~uipmtnt, Blu.
Crou Bh.•• Shield, Inc., ltop on

pay, lay aver pay, breakdown
pay, company paid pension, 401

K plan. hom• most wHktndt.

Call Boyd Adkins, B00·92W222.
Child .. ,. nNdod lor ohlft·
worker, momlngt &amp; evenings,

some wMktndli, agH 12 &amp;14.
304-175-734. '"" 5pm.
Easy World Excellent Pay! A•
semble Product• At HOITII. C.ll

Toll F-, 1.a0G... 6H511, Eal.
313. .
ELECTRICIAN
lmmtdlate Optnlng1 For In·
dlvldual Who POUMIM Balle

Knowtodgo or Eloctrlclty And
Working Expo~onco ·With 4BG
v.n Powor Dlotrlbutlc&gt;n Equipment, loth AC And DC Molen_
Motor Startere Whh 115 Voh

rou

;

roomm~te

lo

bedroom trahlr, no

no

utllhloe, 1150
monthly, t14-tm.:lt48.
Nlco mobllo h«noo lor IWII
lllllll"llll1210/mo., ond opoc11 ·
II 111/""!•t otuo dOpooh.
Country MoDIIo llomo Poril, 114002-2187.

-

Ale&gt; Grandi 12XIIO 2 Bld100mo
BNutllul otono otylo On Conl"'l AVInuo, Cloen, No
- . bo~- ... 21111 botho, ~Dopoolt, - . ,,..
~

LA, den wf81one fh

~!a 'I,

·

4-

C:,

w-.

=·

olppl-.

--AIM,

lho&lt;lght oboUI bolylng your own
tractOr? I• boing o cornpony
drtver what
trt lnter... ed
In? Thon col C.rdlnol todoy II
1-80o.92i-6222 and aek for Tim.
WE HAVE IT ALLf
Molhor /Collogo Studont With
Four Chlldron 'NNdl Holp With
HouHWork And OccatJonal
Blb)'lltntn;.
Non-Smokor
Prolorrod. Ply Nlaotloblo. Good
Job For o..m STudord, Aportmont Wfth-ln Wolklng Rongo.
Bend AeeponN To: CLA 214
cia Oolllpallo DollY T~buno, aizi
Third Avonuo, Cl.otllpallo, OH
U831.

utUhllo.

llrgo kHchon, leto of cllllnoto, 44
A
corport, 10'1(0'- lift.
panment
tina on 2.1 .... acrae, liM..._
tor Rent
lulfy londocopod, en Umo
Rolcl nNr IIUtllnd, Ohio, Load- ~2~
n nt1 I
I~Crook - · ond coblo o¥111-m.
"
oy,
~ oponma
l250i lniller lot
•
114-1112-27211.
lor ront. cioN to town, U31mo.;
COUNTRY HOMES /IM:REAOE
514-tm-1331.
Ealro L.orgo ContornJIIIIY Homo 1 • 2 lldroomo Fumlohod
On 17.1 ACrw MIL With 2 lomo, ~rtlilonto
In
Pcman&gt;y,
Pool, 2 P - . 111\000;
Roflrlnco &amp; Oopool, No Pots,
room Homo, 2 112 lho, LI_IVI 814-4411-11351.
Porty Room, All On 4 1111.
1140,000; 110 Acn 11/L F- 1 llld"""" Unlwnlohld Apo~·
With 11m • 311 Tllloblo. 11~1 000; mont, Stovo &amp; Rolrlgorotor, No
CuttOI.,ooli"ll, oldl"ll, oophoft 1 0 - MIL 110,000; AI urTho Podo, . 1189/Mo Wot• lncludod,
-ling, potnnng, corpontory. Al&gt;ova Wlhln I Mlloe Of Rio 1100 Oopoolt, 114-44J.3117.
FrH Elitlmatea. 304-171-1701 or Orondo • PI- Coli Bill .Ccnnoll AI Donno SUmmon R - 1bdnn. apa~mont In Pomon&gt;y
67Mt22.
For In-Ion. .,..,.. lor ..... 114-m.aaetl.
EIA TREE SERVICE. l~, 121e.
tbr. .,.nmanta In Paint
Trimming, Troo RomoYII,
For
Sole
by
.
201
llldlnf
PI-nt,
lumlohld ., unlurn
Trimming. Fr11 Eollmololl e
II&lt; HI- Ill&lt; brlok, lorgo "~evwy cloln, no poto. 304317·TIIITAftor •p.m. ..
llvlngroom, kH~' I IA•hy, 1· 171·
112 liltll, lull ala -~~~.. 2 2bdnn. opto., totll otoctrlc, .,..
cor -..e. ¥lOY , _ pl-., . lumlohld, lllundry
encl cII d In aaway. 121x177 room t.dlhJ." claM to echoOI
let. Opon lun ~.zz, 2- In town. A;;;n..,;;lono ovollabll
llpnt or clll 304-8112-3581 lor ap. 11: VI- ~Mii Aplo. 148 or
colll14-ft:l·37tt. EOH.
0-.!11 Poftobll Solimlll don1 palntmont.
houl your ' - to tho mil juot Llko 2 Bodroom Homo, I ;F~u=m:::I•:::....,-:7-:E::tl;'-lc~lol-',.--:y-:-:1107::;:
coii30W75-1ll7.
138,500, B o - 14,000, Socond, Oolllpotlo, Shoro Both,
14- lliiHioe Pold, tl85111o. 114-44eHolM C8re tor yaur loved one In ~.21~~hiY P?t::t' 4111111
....., Or ~· •
4411 After 7 P.M.
family care hoine In UkHta.port,
Allor 1 .M.
I ::-=:,.....,;=;.;---=:-::-7.""7
814-tm-5042.
Ronch otylo brlc~lFumlohld Entcloncy 7 112 NoM,
lnt•rtor/txt«&lt;or ..lntlng, root "''/: llvln•room •
, ·~.I OoiiiJ&gt;ollo, Lnlftloo Pold, 11fS.
-· 114 44&amp;4o11AIIor7P.M.
painting. hondwooh ho.._ •
bothl,• ottochod l""'tll,lul
mobil homol, odd )obo. 15yno 1bo-nt,
lloroJII
tiUIIdrng,
s. Pumlohld tlf Apl., 101 Fou~h,
IXp., IXC. rtfll. frM l .. lmattl.
bo~
bi~Rt
2 ~d• Oolli~, Shore loth, ..
..,00
..
...:....
304-17S-4e33.
4m
Pl
-·
Utlllt
Paid, 11• HI H18 Arter
7 P.M.
Mloo Pouta'o Ooy Con Conlor 1 35114.
Btac~ Wool 01 HMC On Jocklon Ranch olylo homo, 3 ....,......,
Apo~mont
lor ront In Pl.
Plko 11-F I A.M . .-6:30 P.M. H 1 Mth, attached . . . . New Pl
. . .nt, 114-tm-58111 oltor
Ouotny And Exporlonco to Tho AIKioo-•
control olr, Spm.
It Concom FOr Yow Chlld'o
· 304-77UUIO. Avalloblo Soplombor 111: CINn
Caro. Call Uo For A Vloh. lnllnt Failor 8~ IToddll"' f14-4M-1227. P - Smoll tbdnn. Poo- 2 lldroomo, Ftimlohld Mchln,
choolo"' /School Ago 1 - 81., ,.,._ oy, ou llllllltoo, lorgo CloM To Spring Yaney Area,
8224.
let, U800; - . .. . houoo on 1331/Mo. Pluo Do'r"J: llopooh
lorgo let In l.olo~. Ohio. gclll!l Pluo Rolonnoo II
11-8157 A~
Wonted to do- bollywmlng In my ooiidltlan,
$1100, O'Brien &amp; torS P.M.
home on Nleholu AoaG, cer- C!ow -~r. 114-002·2721.
tified nur. . aid, 114-"2·3607.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Will bob)'llft In my homo, c - Smoll lor lila In Clifton, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 1538 Jockoon Plko
to echoole, have rer.....a1. ::.,~~ or two, 112.000. hm
1201/mo. Wolk lo ohop 6
304-175-2784.
mc•loe. Coli 111 Ul 2581. EOII.
32 Mobile Homee
1-h Sl., Mldd._., Oh., 1 I 2
Financial
bodroom lumlohld aportmonto.
fOr Sale
Aleo 1 room 1fflc. apertment,
$1115.14 por monll, now 14' wldo utltntoe pokf, ~ • ..fa.
21
mabllo homo, lnclucloa doll'lory, 304.al2·2588.
Business
complolo oot-up, llll~lng. otopo
FirM Hollllr Ap~~rtmanta, 153
Opponunlty
ond 1 monthl tot ront, 1-. Socond Avanuo, Avolloblo
837&gt;11125.
For Occuponcy, 2 Bod""""
INOTICE I
OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO. '1'1. S.hullz, "IZde, 3 lloc'room Unle, Ringo, Ro!rlgorotor1 AC,
rocommondo thlt you de bull- C«dl'lll air, re"""ator 8iMI Carpet, tncomo Rootrlctoc, Eldorly, Dl•blod Hlndlcoppocl,
""' wllh pooplo you know1 ond olovo, wnhor, dryor, un ~~n­ 114-441-1800,
i!..U..t Houal"ll
11 1- o~unhy FMHNRA.
NOT to Nnd monor tltrougn tho
good condition,
mall untH you hovo lnvootlgalod
tM offering.
tflll Flliltwood Totll Eloctrlc, Flnt Holur Aportmanlo Flrot
Locol Poy Phono Routo: $1,200 Cont"'t Air, Outbollldlna. O.Ck And C.dlr Sl, Oothllollo.
A WNk Potontlal, P~ To All lnctudod, Excolllril. Con- Bini"!!: Dlooblod, I Hlndicoppod, ••HA lncomo RoMrlclo_!f1
dft"!'lf14-44t-t021.
Soli. 1.aQIJ.48&amp;.7132.
llordo Boeod On 30% "'
Locot Vending Route: $1,200 A 111112 Ookbrock M'~se· 2 Bod- Houoohold lnccmo. ADDIIoncoo,
WNk Potonttol. Mull Soli. 1-. ""'"''· Cloon" W.ohor, Dryor, Corllol, On-1111 L.oulidry, AIC.
Contnl Air, Porch, Undorpln- Rooldl,. Po)'ll Etoctrlc UINHy
155-4354.
nl"ll, fi,OOO, 114-4411-1352.
Only. Flnt Holur Aportmordo
N'"" Your Own 1 . _ Moko 1813 ·Polm HI-., 211153, Ioiii Ato Dllonod For Qo.
cuponcy. For fnlonnotlon Or To
F~uno At H«n~, Own BIJII.
drywoll, Thlrmc- wlndowo, Roqlllll An At&gt;DIIclllon Cotl
• - · Proth O.llya~"'nllld. Ill-up ond dollvwy, muot 111 to 114-441~~100, Or Will• 1• Hotur
F- Ootolhl, 212·
00, Ext.
lpproclolo, 1-IOIJ..I37-112S.
Apo~mlnle,
1113
Socond
211l
A..,..,
Oolllpollol
OH
45131
Vondl"ll Routo: For Solo. 1tt4 Rid... 14170, - . . .• ln- Youc...,.. •nd Cert nc.t•, Hud
cludloe
okl~l"llh
otopo,
blocko,
Slrong, .Solid C.oh Buolnooo. &amp;yr. warranty, ;om ouunarw Jn.
Equot Houoi"ll OpHigh 'Trofflc, LAiool Locollono.
pMunlty.
8Yrance,
and
1
yee,r
of
frll
tot
NoiW Equl_.. t-214Vond.
. Nnl, 111 tor My 8'1771mo., can 1· Fumlohod Apllllmont In 011800-637~238.
llpollo, S.oullty Dopoolt, 114A 1.&lt;11 I Trollor,l14-281-1148 AI- 4M-1423Aftorl P.M.
Rea l Estate
tore P.M.
Nlcoty Fumlohld Apllllmont,
1br, nut to Ulnry, parting,
central Mit, 1ir, ....,.nee ,.
31 HOmeS fOr Sale
qulrocl. 114-441-4338.

Central, Ccnl10t O.vlcn Such
Ao Photc Ey11 And P101lmfty
SwltchM. Mu•t Be Ab41 To ANd
Eloct~col Orowlngo , KnoWiodgo 2 bodnoom 110-, lull Of PLC'a Is Deelrablt. Po.hlona
31M On Socond And Third Shift. Poy mont.
~·--·
Roll $10.15 To 10.55 Oopandl"ll 3 lodrooma FA, Altochod
On .IJIJM~rfenc:e. tf lnttrHt:ed, Q.,.ge, 2 JJ;;, Building Sltt,
PIMM Send Rnumt To: The Garden Route 110 ArM, Aa,IOO,
Pillsbury Ccmpany, P.O. Bel 114-381 81101.
151, Wolloton, Ohio 458e2, An
AAJEEO Emptoyor.
3 ·lldroorno, 2 lolhl, 2 Cor AI·
tochod o.._, ~lldlng,
FLATBED
DRIVE~rdlnal Bldwotl
114Frelaht Carrltrw hu an oppor~ 387-7504.
tunlfy lor ttatbod drlvorolhlt Is 1-::=-':-':..:..:;--:---..,....MCond to nonal Do wou own 3bdnn. houM • gerage. Apple
your own tn.ci:or'l H•v• rou

~-· ·

F« rent, n.d

l ..._. 3
dopoolt,

lnlonned thollill dweltngs
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
cwortunll)' basis.

s.-...,

moiMI~. old ClocM, antique
tumhure. Rlvtrln. Antique..
Aut:l Moore, owner. 614482..
2521.
bur ........

=lJ':a§. dopoolt I

knowingly IICClllpl
advartlsemenls tor realesllde
wl"khls 11 violatiOn ollho .

St.,

Syn~CUM.. illlo

:lbdnn.

colhoulolRoconlnoLoou __'!'t ~l-Ion•;
~ Not
..,
1
I ,!14-b;t4j;8;22t;moli.fiOj;:;;;;i.;;;;-!iiZ
I a bod-u ' homo, 1 112
balh,
flnfllhed
b•••ntanC,
oloctrlc hoot ond~~ 2 oor
progo, nlco
on
nlco IIYOIIot. For opjil, • t38'7.
5 rocmo ond both In Pomon&gt;r,
t~ and IICiudMf, aU e14-112:e

,.lg.,.,_

Fumlohld offlclorlcy, fiBS.
UIIIHioo paid, 101 Foit~h Avo'/
33 Farme tor Sale
Oolllpollo 114-441-4411 .....
10 ocro linn lor oo]o, 2112 mM• p.m.
out Rio Orondo. f14-241oe227.
Oroctouo living. 1 ond 2 biCf.
room opa~- 11
41.71 Acroo 2 ltcry Form Monor
R
Hou•, La. 6orn, 2 Millo From ,Aportmonto InondMlcldlltlllrl.
From
Mo-.1110. T - Mtoc. Out BIAidl"l!l31,000, aMI 1202. Colll14-llz.eut. EOH.
211-1171.

.!:'tS:

34

Bulldl"ll For Solo
Or LMII, 331 8ecoitd AVtrll.le,
Phonoo: 114-441-21122, 10 A.M. To
I P.M.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

1 Aero Fill, 17,-. Col Aftor I
P.M. 114-441-8114.
Lata l acnlll for home conllrucllon "" Roybtlm Rd,
7 room bride, 1 112nt1 o1 nooeonoblo roalrlotiOno, oouniJ
Sondhhl Rei, lyno old, 1 112 bilh, water, lntorm.llon llllilld on ,.
quo~~, 10W71-1213, plll11 no
ecrMn room, 10 10,...,
al"l!lo wklo trelloro.
304-171-1:.0.

m.eoo.

r

OUTSIDE

FURiaHIIOS:

W""'''hllnln Tlblo W/4 Chal,.;
Fon Bock Rocking Choir ...;

o-. Arch W.,'a t121.oo

Boddl"ll ·Twin Milt Sol tat, Full
,00 So\. 1148 Sol; 4
Drawor .,...llt4...; Car lld'o,
Bunk Bed'e, Po.ter leda. Full

Llno or Southwootorn v Stortl!'ll At 120.00; lndloll!lllany
Shopo o • sa. 8te~tna Al
11.00. 2 Loootlono ·Bwldo 7&lt;1Ao
-lon Or 4 Mlto. 0111 141.
0pon 8 A.M. To I P.M. Mon -Sot.
U~ht

g-~

- . - . , , """

114-811li-IIT7.

0000

USED

1
aoo...00-34w.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Ccmploto hOfno lumllhlnao.
Hou"': Mon-911, .... 814-oM&amp;0322, I mloo out Bulll•ltlo Ad.
FN~Dollvory.

Llko 3 Cualllon 10" Corduroy Ccuch By i l - luff
HSO; 1 Rocllnor, 110, Rlickor
Rocllnor 171; o.-n llzod
Water sO.r With' Ita Drallelow.l14 141 2880.

Mollohln C.-e. AI. 7 N. 1144M-l'141, 81"12 Corpot 110, VInyl
f4.18 Yd.
Oof&lt;, Fumlllft: Tolllll I
Cholno, Curloo, CU'l'ld Ota•
Chino Elc. Rt.w .,.,.., Ook

Furniture,
Rolld,
0elllpolla. Qaa,...
Ohio 114 Crwli
... ,,.,

PICKENS FURNITURE
NI&gt;o'UNd
tumlohl- 112 ml
•-~·•··••
"
;1n;;w~;.:. P I -, WV,
BWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE. 12
Olive Sl,, Oolllpallo. • UOid
lumhuno, holtoro, WOIIII'n 1

won boola. 111

53

*""*"•

e:

u-.

ppod
gorogo,
• - . . . . roqiArid,

•MI. v.._.' ""'Avo,
•1:00pm.
• ..., nloa omol

t •• 31M•

Antlquea

.Buy .. 1111. R - Antlq-.
1124 E. Moln Slnoat, on Rl 12,4,
Pcmoroy. Houno: M.T.W. tO:tiU
a.m. to 1:00
1:00
to 6:00p.m. 1
21121.

cr:e:undllr

54 Mlscellaneoue

Oo Kill• I . . I up, opoclol ""
8 HP, In atocll, MorriO EqUipmont, 114-1112-24111 or 114-1112·
21110.
Holt 2 112'Ton Hool Pump,lnotlllid 33,481, 114-44W308.
Huffy 12 S - 121 Sorloo,
Bllclt I Whho, Mon'o 150, 114-

441...223.

SUM· SUMM ·SUMMER
SAU:I
Hummtn;blnl Muolc Contor

58

59

King • Colllton Uood 1
SooOon tt21, BwlmmJne Pool
3'115' With All Acc-o,
Somo Chomlcolo, u,.,

Uood 2 Montho, 1121, 114-2168110.
.

$3500.

30U76--.

114-112..f122.

·

&amp; Ltvestock

61

Fann Equipment
210 Whlto T,.ctor II 850; IBG
MF 13 150; 6111 Ford WOfkmllter u,UO, Track Loader, $2,850,

:.Uior~~= =~0~~1:7
24' Ponot Door 1 Jorn, e
0254.

11177 Oodao Motor Homo, AKC
Rogloloroil Young -on T.,..
Mr, Block, Whbe, Porrc1 With
Coso. 114-182·7130.
t. . IN,.11 . . Rldll)g llftw,

~ ~'W~ ~::1..~

/Cloy Till Sold. C.H l-.e717
AltoriP.M.
2 Ton Truck Lood or Flrwwood
OroYOI Houlod Up To 10 Ton A
Lood, 114-246&gt;11227.

10 Iloilo I Eltlro ClothJne,
Towill GUII1
Other
Blillutttut s .. po, 3300, ,,...._
113l
100 pl. paollne otorogo
tonk,ttMt..,.....

tt..,._

'""'""'..e.

wagon.ml•.antkl•a. •looml
eM..Z41-11N

to OCHN

lllvll· oqtallum wl otend •
~;W.on.i,

17&amp;-311113.

10-

eome tiM, teO. 304-

11!1 wooden otongo buldl3385, dlllvooy • aolup, ....
Olhor al•o avolloblo. lldoro I·
qui-nt, Hondwoon. 104-171111121.
AKC Roglot•od Mlnlltu"' Rod
Oochohtii1d pu-. ..... ond
-lo; 114-M2'11124.
Bolly bod, llo!ll In, -1lrlll, podding. .... lnoluclod,
-wood, 1121• - d o l tar, now~. iiiO; two H gotion drume, 1101•.; od .,..._
1317 anvttme ar •v• m1 aga
loth Tub, Tollol I V.nly, Mona
Ooi1Chmo,l14 Ul 1111.

-llul-

Wlddlna-

Wom, 110. 114-

lnond now ngu- olao pool
llblo, oiiH In _.,on, 1'100, 114-

•·101S.

-..

CEDAR VACB- buying -

Roln- -para. .Plying:
1).3 wllh .. ~~~~--~..
flOG.- D-4 wllh .. -

eNG

lend

74

Surpl,. ormy co-lllugo, now 2 1/Z V11r Old Roglotorld Moina
ohlpmord oombol - · · troo ::J~ Butt PrlcO: 11~0; 114blrko. Slm Somorvllo'o~ ~
5311 Or •-~=.
s....o..vnto .._ Olllco. F •· •
·-•
Alhono LIYM!ock SoiH s-111
~;'8 1 'r!,.,oc:"~~~horo Foil F - Colt Solo, Sat:wdoy,
Auguot 2t. 1003, At 1 P.M. All
Water llld Llko Now 1300, BrNdo F - C.lvOo AccopPhono: I A.M . .a P.M. ~14-37t- tid. Cattto Accoptld Starting AI
·
4 P.M. On Frkloy. All Con.tanrnanta WelCome, 114-582·
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 lnoll d2, Or 114-181 3131.
200 PSI flUS; 1 lnoll 200 PSI
132.50; Ron EYIOI Entorpri111, Cottle
Hioull"ll:
Anytime,
Jocklon, Ohio, NJ00·13J.IIU8.
Anywho,.. PLA Rllobon&gt; Ohio,
WATER STORAGE TANKS Evory' Mondoy. Chuck Wllllomo,
Above And Bilow Ground FDA =~ Crook Truoklng. 114-2•~
Approved For Paloblo Wotor.
Ron Enno Enll""'"'!_l!, Jock· Rod A"lluo Slmmotol Crooo,
8011, ~~. 1-100-1f7.11~.
2yra oll£~!'rowa nice cel¥11.
304-175-'-.
55
Building
64 Hay &amp; Grain ·
Supplies
Hoy lor lllo- 50 round boloe of
Block, brick, lllpoo, win- alfalfa ond orchord, 120 round
- · llntoto, ole. Cloudo Wln- blloe of ctovor, Umolhy, ond ortono, Ric Orondo, OH Coli 814cllllrd,
boll. Wo will
241-112\
lolcl, .,......2114.

56;;;;-P"iet:ndsifo;;jr;iSiYa'""ileu;;;:p;
TransportatiOn
Groom ond su~~ Shop Pot
Grooming. All
a, otyloo.
Julio Wo6b. Colt 114 Ul 0231.
71 Autos tor 8ale
AKC Boololtl_upploo, 8 Wilko
F. lJonldum, 814- '711 Chivy lmpoto, runo aood,
body IICIIont lhopaBI!Oir, COn
bo ..., ot 3854f I R 143 or
AKC Be- puDDioa, molo I ...
v. runge at 114-i'112·2310.
lomolo; llwrlllllk · muk, rlldy
Sopt 10, now toklng dopoofto, '81 Oklo CIAtua iupn1mo, air,
304-171-1848.
12000, 114-m-2023.
'
AKC Mlnllluro Plnocho..,, twko '10 Chovy C.votlor, 13000, 814lm-1318 or 114-002·2114.
old,
2444.1171 "·· :1 """'· 304-171.
1871 Otdo CutiNo S u - . VI,
AKC R19llllllll loxor puPPioe, IIIIa, U300. 304-175-2141.
3 lomoiH, 1 moll, 1250, ~
1m Iuick Ea.etra 225, AC,
now, IIIIo bobbed, ohotl.
amlfm ea...ne, •e.oooml, eome
1711-1043 oftor Spm,
ru_!l, rolloblo &amp; COfOiorloblo,
AKC
Roglotorld
Lobrodor ''""· 304-176-7101.
RIIM•n, Yollow I Block
Wormed a 11t Shot•, $'175 Eech, 1880 Chovotta 81,000 Mlloo, .
114-286-171:1.
Wolll $700, Coli 114-317·
AKC R-.ltor pupolll, Ooro
mon I cllllmplon litooilt- 1181 Dodgo Arln, body • tntor·
••· torn-inant, hOO, ~ lor aood, n - ongfno, 1400
wiU hold, Alhonl. 114-441-37111 OliO: 104-175-7118.
oft or epm or onylimo --anda. 1881 Oklo Cullloo, , _ good,
Floh Tonk, 2.111 Jocklon Ava. 1100.104-458-1732.
Point PtoeNnt, 104-1'11-2013
lull llno Tnlplcll lloh,_,blniO:
ornollonlmoll ond auppt111.
HAPPY JACK MANGE LDnON:
Promot• Nllll"ll And Hllr
Growth to ,.,., Mongo, Hollpol,
Or Funguo On Doao I Hall•
Wlthoui llloroklot.C.ottobla ~T·
CJ D ~PRODUCE-.

0

w.=.•

=

.

~::.rd

...... 1250.-

304-

1NI IJclda OoWiono, s s - .
Coil Aftor ~ P.M. 114-441-72U.
R-o_. Mlnll.ctl, Mini ROI.L.Mix
lreld, can Be SMn: 1064 :;qla tfiBI c-o, lcrt. outo, 1-top,
Routo 810, Blclwol~ Ohio.
good concr., nooo. 104-4111·
1121. •
Roalllorld Fomota Hlmalayon
eor, I Y•no Old, llpayod And - !!odll' Ooylono Turbo 2,
Ooct-.110. Colt 114-441-GIItl. MJ, T11 -~ Roor 0.,_,
Schnluur mlnlltu,.., puppl• : . . : ;.PL, f4,300, OBO, 114ond lduho, oloa Poodlo Dido- Oolta II,
ploo, eh. -~";~- llnoo, Coolvltll, 114417
•
Brougham, PS, PB, PW, Power
Sooto, Cllmolo Control, P-r
Whllo Oonnon 8hoaonl ptll)o ~. Elc. AMIFM 8 1 - C..
piM, lp,M.
110. SOW"II-7711 - - Loododl One Oomor
3pm
llouaht Cor, To. Sold
EloOJIInl
Ccndlttonl Lacko
57
Musical
Good, Aaldna: 1;4_,711. · 4223 """ 1:111 P.w.
Instruments
holc-k.
Iundy A11o ....,....... 01c.
oond. 104-1711-41111 oftor 7pm or ~·
171-3224onyll~00, 114-tm-2121 or 114-la:
4241
"
Utonor HI, I y1110 old,
• 114-1112-2321.
'
1117 Dodao Dnllll 43,000 Millo,
12.200114471-2114.

,... Vel""'"-'

-:=..-:.one::."!.':•

=W

11,.111; -

111;
Hld1
I bid
Couch
Couch
"'·
Choir
"'· *71.
- 114-

441~175.

eo... pllno.

i5,;14il
lplnot

Wontld
' 'lory Good
t o - low 1117 lllanouoy Lyniil
L looloooly. ~ 11,200, I N o LM'fl M
Ill'• 114-111-1111.

3 PrlciDUI

36 FIIOIIIIIndl
whlrtw~td

~

. 37 Powerful

II AlletriCt

IO~k

TY'tO....
11111*1,1n

11 BntbllarTy

artt.ln

ruler
40 CIIIMII by

1II'MII"'*tr
2 - IU, llnltt

12 lnltl
17 lltlo4't

7 In

1t0t-

8111pptd

IS ONE WAY,
URIAH!!

31- ZAtdOrl

If overbidding,
!be lucky

e:-1.•i

1854 Hondo lnloroaplor - .
IXO. oond., $2100. 101 111 ~

1811 Hondl 70 ltv. wt; ltlif,

Troltor, 1175. 114-441-1718.

·pEANUTS

.

..

;

f.IOR5E5 ME RELATIVELY

EA5'r' TO TRAIN .. MULES ARE
EASIER TO TRAIN Ti-l AN
DONKE'IS ..IT TAKES

DON'T ALWA\"'5

't
.

FEEL JT'S
NECE55AR't'

1

HP Evllt. p. 114-441•

1817 Flbor;- 11' 81&lt;1 - · 110

ee:, :::-

tl!'! 110.1...o,&gt;on
.... •
Aft•- 5:30,

3188 0.)'11.

DONKE'r'... A MULE IS

ONE·I4ALF PONKE'I AND
ONHIALF 140R5E ..

•.
1
,

i
~

YE-5 ·NO· rtS
NO- Yet·
·:-

• •

·,.BORN LOSER
~WIIAT 111'£ loliU. rut FLIGIIT
:~..AAD.

•

•

..
•

•

.

I

cluba.

I I
u I

Lead a spade to dummy's queea, i
1 cub
the apade ace and rull a 1pade In

•

band. Play a club to dummy'a 10, rulf

I

the lut spade ill band and return to
dummy with a club to the ace. Draw
Eut's two remalnln11 trumpe, dlacard· .
iDII your dlamODd loaen, and run the

•,.

P'

DATE BOOK
Aug. 23, 1993
TODAY'S HISTORY: .On this day in ·
1927, anarchists NiColtl Sacco and Bar- ·
tolomeo Vanzetti were electrocuted
for murders committed during a rob··. rf at South Braintree, Mass. Doubt
as to their guilt created a worldwide
protest.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Oliver
Hazard Perry (1785·1819), U.S. naval
hero; Edgar Lee Masters (1869·1950&gt;,
poet -novelist; Gene Kelly (1912 · ), ·
dancer-choreographer-director, is 81;
Vera Miles (1929·), actress, is 64; Mark ·
Russell (1932·), comedian, is 61 ; Sonny
Jurgenson &lt;1934·), football star, is 59;
Barbara Eden (1934-) , actress, is 58: ,

j

111 tonko, ono lon whlolo rallotoro, -o;
etc. Di R Auto, RIPIOY, WV. 304-

~

79

NE EWI&lt;Y NISHT
AT BEDTIME.

BUT IF HE'5 LAIE 1"'01&lt;
60NL-It-6:, HC. READS ME. TI-le

HE U5LJALLY
READeMF!iA
FAIRY TALE .•.

610CK ~ RE:rul215.

Campers&amp;
MotorHomea

1881 Wlldom- 34 Ft. C.mpor, j
IB,SOOI.o!~ , Mora~
lLoldldl
nx Wagon
11,
tlae Ford LTD WaN.':::: L.oldld.

11,100, 1m v~.

car,

m:

B1

YOU KNOW
WHI&gt;;T WE NEED?

l!ROP.DEN DUR

Improvements

l(lRilONS ...

j

low to form four olmplo wards

I

EMMUDI

G0 Y B E

•

I I' I I
8 L 8 0 y

After sitting through a
lengthy panal discuSSion I
~ 5
~ overheard one bored fellow
·
•
•
•
•
~ comment: "Conferences are a
. - - - - - - - - ' . . ; . . . , place whare people talk about
DRE END
things they should .. ··--·."
~
Completo the chuckle quolod
by fiWng In lho m;aing words
L.-.1..-.L.-..1.-..1.'-..t.'-..J you dovolop
from step No. 3 below.

I

t--T.--=-r:=-i~nr---1

I

II

1 I 1

I I

I

I
17 G

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Injury • Favor· Kinley - Obtain • VANITY

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unccndhlonot lllollmo guo
1M. local ,.,_,.11 fumCall 1-8~-C111711 Qr t14-~l­
Oo186 Roan Watorproonng. ~
tobllohocJ 11175.
,

H•

First lady: "I didn't realize you wore glasses." Second
lady: "I've needed them for a long lime, but I reached
a point Where my curiosity got greater than my_v ~NITY ,."

AUGUST23I

11\IINI'1 lltto.'i'VE

e

WE ~~D 10

Home

:::

the
be-

IMONDAY

Cu. ln. lt,500, 10 Fl. II...,.,
Truck C.mpor, 1100, ~·
Ccnoldonod, 114-351-1733, 1,....
lll2·22tl:

Servi ces

O four
Rocrra"ll• Ionero of
ICfCimblod wordo

e.-. ........,., ,...._

QIEHI.EfT

MY~REAOOro

_T:-'_uT_z:-'_u_'~'_S_@_.~~~~-JJ.~S·

Tbe only-· with thiJ retmlt Ia that
North will cootlnue to overbid. Nest
Ume, you mlpt not be 10 lucky.

FORAAIIOUR
~ loiE AAYEM'r

"11WJ!ti

TIRE EXPREA:, Quollly uell(
Tiroo, Ouoront~ TMI•nda;
To ChooN From &lt;M 2111h v-,i
Wo Wont To RaiTiro You -~
woon Mitior I Athollo, 0H.
~

~~~~=-~~_,~-,--~~~~~~~-

clube.

VOU IIEAA WE'VE. e£E.N FLVIM'

FW?

·

=~::z=:=

.t

m .....

2213.

·

bymeanlofadummyrevenalthese .IOKaDTCLTFI
CTYYW
LWNEKFH.
I.S trieD mi&amp;bt be available: the AnQ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I jull love, llnDinll In lronl
~· Galhtr
of spades, two apade rulls ill baDd,
oome people In a -~ ond I d ilng- lor lhtm. - ( op llngorl
lour hearts, the diamond ace and lour
Robin S.

.'!'

Budlll! T"'nomtoaloow, . _ a
robolln, olll'lpoo, otlllllng ot ~
114--24WI77,

"".,_..

vents moderatim from acquiring the
II I think, tltlr.deltdenln&amp; effect of a habit.•
lort-In bridge, thOIIIlh, II you bid to l!l&lt;·
H F"-"t
ownn' org.
ceu, you must bope that the oppoelll&amp;
10 Notwtt
carda Ue ill a kindly laablon. Otherwlle
12 Lump
.
JOII1" partaer will tiDd the of
ee
aun
11011
miDua tte0re1 bard to take, prelerrln&amp;
17 - Minuuto
the eallvenlq effect of a plt11ocore. 11 '--'"~riCt
Today'a deal II a good enmple. r •
How would you try to mate 1111ven
bearts? Yes,10rry, seven bearts. West
leads the dlamoocl lour: queea, kin&amp;.
ace.
'D'II
I I
ITEK
E U HAT
KUT
DY
Obviously North's bid of seven
bearts wu dubious. He knew that the
OYPCOLTE
KUHK
HYL
ma:rtmiJIII combiDed COIIIIt wu 34: not R W
C D I T •
enoup lor IIIIV8II with two bal•ncw! R w IF HOY.'
lumcla. Still, II North bad bid only lib:,
there would have beell ao story.
For South to collect 13 trieD, the i· , I A U D C H L T C AU D H
A U D C C D T E

4 Eoglo OT pluo 4 11" tina;
ao,ooo ~~~~~••
m •••
owner

541::"
.......tntfnllll

spade " - muat be working. Then

t
••

Acceasorlee

t

:

"'

Auto' Pans&amp;

r

TO MAKe
CONVERSATION,
MARCIE ..

PATIENCE TO TRAIN A

'

c::d :t

a2 Jotrmty

on occaalon Ia eshllaratlng. It pre-

•••

78

·~~=--k
51 !Uol_.tlon
dniCt

Somenet Maugbam wrote: "ll!hr+bave not been afraid of ezceu: El' eu

,\iO'VW. On

.......17

410...110Ntr
47 Oppolltt of

W.

-om

11 Ft. Slick
rudo, JUII Tu
0271.

3ll LP IPitt!
42 lltbrn Qod

By Pllllllp Alder

1881 Uko Hondo 110 &gt;I
Whoolor, 1100 Or Will Tnade,
814-256-1277.
.
.

2
1y
24 Foot
21 For
.)

. atltupldr-'ft_,~., 31 l!nleltllrler
-ltlrMC
33 ..... turk.,
3681111
36 IIP1*J filii

Open!Dg lead: -• 4

Motorcycles

-;-;:;;:::~;-;;::::;:;:::7.=:::.;
Form Fltttd

Allar . AllfUINcl)

lvano 1n1or001oaa.
Jockoon,Ohlo1~. -

UH--THAR

•i

•••ttY "'·

.._
.,...,In
ec-:=:~~·

bed

34 TV'II
P1111111

ae-,....

2202. •on, ;oocf dN~ 114-ML
1

1400, 114-lll2·2241.
.
:
18U SUlUkl Rll-121, ltoa. lilt
114-1522.
458·17711 or 171-1211.
-r
Long - - wl • F.,_ll Cub lroator w/ Sft. boiiY
~::"~ triple plpo, - · ~ lut hnch w/ corry oiL 1117 Suzuki 100 am . . ei,
good cond. S04-f7l.377l.
1
Now ilovlco1 lwno oil yc&gt;ur IOt470o1727.
Dlrl 11kt
lllctrtcot OUtlolo lfllo a pllono Allco Chotmor D-7 bull lfozor, 1188 CR 250 R $1~ 114 441 3083
I
Iacko. For lnlormlllon, phOno 1· IOOhra. 304-458-1540.
211-141~1147.
Kl"ll Cunor, s Ft. Flnloh Mower, 18U KX210; 11184 Picnic To- For L.obor Cloy !'tt King Cunor, 5 R. Bruoh Hoa, Wl"ll; 1111 Klwollfll 110, 114lrMt8d 2d'l 8' $H; 1'. 1~J~~0, Both 1 VNr Old, I HP Go-Coil, 388-1358.
.
:S';.-=.Wood sp~mor 1400, 114- 114-388-11182.
19811 KlWINill 4Sol LTO, ' btl!
drl... 31100 mll11, llko , _
Now Hollond' 717 tonogo hory. . 11800,
814-ie2·7758.
. I
ANII.C~ car atereo power amp, tor WI both hNdO, 3 bootor
8G WIHo, llko now, 148, 114-lm• lonlgt w•gon, N.w Holland T
hay bind, Gehlgrtndlr/mlxer, 12' 75 Boats ·&amp; Motora
~0
1ranapor1
~lee, AC no tilt com
Rorol Ook Mombonohlp lor Solo: plantlf, Oliver
tor Sale
,
1100
trwc:tor,
all
II lntlnlotld Colt IOI.a73~1118
good · - · 3114-2"13-4211.
12 Fl; Aluminum Boot With
Aftoi '"" P.M.
tory, Troy ·Motor, Oono az&amp;
; : 11:: -rcl-:1:'-.,-',.;.bo;_;by,=:-bod,....,..-WI-..,.Ikor-ochlahn,-,- Tobocco Stlcko .181 Each, 1500 814-246-8152
Aftor 1 P.ll. ' · -- -r
-2000814-446-1518.
ohllr, cor - · owl"llo tmlo gill
14 Fl. Aluminum V
~
M•llc.... t .
304- 63
Livestock
Rotld For 25 H!?,_~ Wit

~

32 TeniPGIIIY

-

·-

For Sale
or Trade

,

Vulllerable: Both
Dealer: South

1

Hondl Shadow
Spc~o Cor Colloctton For Solo, '83. ,
- ... - . Icc ln4l
Or Trado For Cor. Coli After o rune good, I'M.........
..
P.M. CRichord) 8-.am,
1171 Hondo XL 121 - And Looko Ooodl321, 111W712133.
Farm Supplt es

Kina 81zo Watorbod 140, No
Halw, 114-3U.a507.
·

.KQJI

' :so ..,....

_.,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

28111.

27~

•a

tton, 12,aao,
18111 Ford Fteo • -

1868 · Ford XLT Y-l..t 4114
Autornlllc, Runnl"ll. -nla,
cc, Ealondld Col&gt;, 141,100, 11f
2111-1434.
18110 Altn&gt; Clifty nn, 111,100,

tornltoll . tor ula,
brtng own contalnan, 11+24.,..

• o\J10t
• o\63

-

IS

·,ea a-1o ·~ntlood ..~
1810. l'ord " - XL, Alklng:
$3,$)0, I'Mo44141il.
I

Can.,J~.II

·--71
.V5
SOUTH

~- -.,.._AM.~

JacUcm, Ohio

814-216-8688

t K 101

104_~

372·3833or1~

to Fl. Alum. Mllh, Sotoltho Dllh
• - · - · 114-441·1731.
11' McCulloch Choln Slwt1,1011

lumlohld 1111~mon1, 1br, - r
-.~­
12221 pr.. - . no
o, nc HUO, ref I dop. 304- CONCRETE IPETIC TANKB.
1 000 Clollon, 1321; ..,. . .
11.

at::

-----'-----1

'20/por

Merchandlae

441"'201

llodem 2 bldloom
In P-"'1' lnd Mkkt-'" E·

APPUANCEI

Wa ......L. dlyoro, l""lgoNI"'!.
"
.,._
Applloncoo, 10
Vlno' -·
Stpill114-441-7381,
1·

81• 711, -

Buelness
Building•

corn.....lol

. Wlntl&lt;iil
Fl-ood P10p1,. Par
Will So - - Whon Cc
Woothor Arrfvll, Doll-, 1142111·1311, 814-317-7021 Evorwngo.

304-u~.

2br,
- · Alhlon
Uplond
Rd, Ill1171hno.
pluo ....._
' dopaolt • \IIINIIoe. aot.e76-40A.

OOMolt

·--·

2 - - lumllhld mcblll
....... 304-e76-8112.
2 lloc'rccm, tocatod In ~ow
Hlva,!!,. !JL 1215/mo. • utltnloo.

This nawop- Ml not

qu~

=•lzlllonol

mol&gt;llo hcmo 2 bodroom
1120 ~h Avo, Ooitlpallo. l32il
wot• ond lnoh pold 81t-MBOW11 llllor 7 p.m.

MX famiAal statUI or nellonAI

APPR~L

od M
. LT For A Fully 1Lob, No Shih Work, 011
• APt&gt;1Y In Po.- At
sundly ldnton • 2:00 p.m. Hot
Friday. Monday edhlon - 2:00 Modlclil Pllili, ll3l Stato Rout•
150, Clolllpollo .
p.m. Saturday.
/Oiopalchor
Public Sale
8
18ook11Mpor: MUOI HIVI Elcolo
lint
Acccuntlng
&amp; Auction
I Til
Skllli, Somo Wonl
P
n
g
•
Typing,
FIA~Timo.
Rick Peerwon Auction CGmpt~ny,
full time auctioneer, complete Sond R11umo To: CLA 283, c/0
auction
aervlct.
Ucen...t Oolllllollo O.lly Trlbolno, 121
166,0hlo • W11t Vlrglnlo, 304- Thlnl A...,., Qotlpalll, OH
451531.
77W78$.
T-hor Nlldo Slby-r In
9 Wanted to Buy
Own H«no. Cloy Bchoal Aru.
Mull HIVI Roloroncoo. 114-21125 Or 30 Oilton Ccppor Appll 1011.
Buttor Konto, 814-245-51211 Or
Wondy'o Hlri"llln Tho Clo~
614-245-5835.
llpollo Aroo For All Shlfto, ADIIIY
AntlqLIII and uud furniture. no In PI!OOObMondly Thru Frfcfoy,
Item too large or loa 1m1111, wiU 2... P.M. E E.
buy on• piece or complela•
household, uH O.by Martin, 18 · Wanted to Do
614·992·lll41.
Chrtat.. n WC~~U~n wanting to
Decorated atonew~rw, •II lal• clean homM, p1eu1 call 114phonn, old .timpo 1 _old thor- m-7030.
IM day beforw the ad Js to run.

ettreo,
tablolllmp combo, 21" color
1 - TV,I14-111-3813 ofllr 4pm.
DP Cholnnoil tiiii'Ctoa mochlno
wnh lnotrucllon boaklol ond
tapo, ucolllnt condftton,

t~O

Allroollllalo -totng 11
this -lo11Jbjod to
tho Fodenll Fair Housing Acl .
&lt;&gt;11968 wiiiCh matots llltQII
to a-toe •onyphlloronco,
lmnatton or diiCI1mlniuon .
biSICI on race, color, relglon,

~~lf:Y.! Lockor, 1.111111,
WV. : . . . - -

onodlod.IIASIC

Zantth

MusiQal
Instruments

Couch I ohtfr, ueraiH blll.t,
bralct.d rooCii alza rug, old

tor Rent

OUII'&amp;ntood Pot 12-2 Alii - d ,
Phonol: 1-.m.eiBW233, Or
304...2t-eml - T - .
fllldod-2' - • ·

57

54 Miscellaneous
42 Mobile Homes

••us

'

~~~---

H~~

EAST
.J1H

,.... tlr•
a-to, ve, •"'!'· lhortbod,
e
11100. 3JOt

17 •:::::! .,~-=

22 ......

.A1U

18BG F-150 FIAt 81.. ~
Cylinder, 3 Spold, 12,310 0 ,
114 211 1m.
,

~ 1
nonl ~to

m·~~·~""-.
Merchandi se

tQ&amp;

~ ~EK AND MEJ£K_

1,......_

wv.

IWII· 2 or I ....,_.,
""""' - n ond goodlion, "'"""privole lotting, 114182-4421, If - piMM

.KQII

72 Truc:Q for Slle

47 Wantecl to Rent

toeve

a

-.1..Aclr. . ......,.

NOIITII
• AQ71

1111, 111101'1

10

~lloiMII

Roome

... 110111110

..

Howl
Ukt (llltl.)

. . _ . . . . _ . .h~
All9trolor - · A I h~~
C.U oft• 2:00 p..m.,

Eam Fut~nmo Poi For Pill·
Timo WOfk AI A Cllrlollllll
An&gt;und
Tho
World.
O.monotrotor, F- 11100 Kl No
Collocll"ll Or DIIIVIri"ll, Aloo
Bookl"ll PerliN, c.tt 11+2u.

...

QIUII

Rentals

lllgtotorld SlamMI Coli, 1
YNI Old 2 Moloe I 2 FomatM1
C:O.: 1200 Each, Spodo Ana
Noutonod, . , _..8428.

1 l!ntrul
' 4llalllll
n' na

I'

'

.

41 TUIIIIIM ruler

~v
VIRlST.

11\lRT

.
l

•

••

Cu~io Homo 11111110-. No
Job Too Big Or Smou,
e..
........ 'On Older m_.Hornoo. Addllono, Foundll-,
Roctlng, KIIC:ho,. /Bothe. lnIUIWd, F- Eotl. .teo. 1_,_

v.,.

0811.

are

ASTRO·GRAPH

',

•

O.vlo Sowl"ll Machine And
VRuum c•ner Repllr, Free

Pick-Up And Ooll¥1"1, CIOorgoa
Crook Rood, 114 tii-OH4.
Ron'o TV Sorvlco, -'ollzlng
In Zanfth oloc llrvlillna othor brondL Houoo oa6o,ocmo ollllllonco rot&gt;lln. WV
304-a711~3H Ohio 814-441-2454.
'
Soptlc Tonk Pumpt"ll flO 0.1114'
Cc. RON EVANS ENTIRPIIISES,
Jocklon, OH 1-.&amp;37-1121.
Will build poCio ....... .....

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

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

pul .. ;o;;;l

oldl"ll or trolllr okllllng. "I*
24SotlS2.

82

Tueaclay,' Aug, 24, 1993

Plumbing &amp;
· Heating

,

F-mon'o Hloll"ll And Ccc1Ja~
lnotattodon And Slrvlco.
,'
Clllllllod. RoolHntlot, corn-.,.
1111. 114-2111-1111.
:::-~:::--:-::--:_ _ _.....,

84

Electrical &amp;

.•1

Refrigeration

''I

Rootdlnllll or oom""'~~llt
Wllll)g, now oarvtoa Oil IHifn.~
Molnr UOiftlld o!Mfrlotanf'.
Ridenour Eloclrlcll, WVI lilt,!•
304-176-17111.
.• .

-

'I

you .

unfamiliar tools

~

$2 and a long, soll,addressed . stamped I or materials today . because there' s a .
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa· chance you COIIId gum up lha wor1&lt;s .
,
per. P.O. Box 4465, New Yoll&lt;. N.Y. 10163. ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Innate impuls· l
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 An acquainlanca · as that u1ge you to taka a chance could be ·
ol yours who Is a btl of a trouble maker rather strong today. Untonunately, your ,
might taka something completely out of judgment mighl not be that good, nor will
context lhat was expressed by an old pal ot • the judgment of counselors you'll seek to
yours. Don't accept what he/she repeats as 1· advise you.
tactual.
I TAURUS (April 2D-Miy 201 Where a cnti·
SCORPIO (Oci. 24-Nov. 22) Something or.j cal goal is concemed today, don'l bring a
someone mighl sland in your way today 1. late comer Into the act It could lead to your
and bar your path to an eagerly soughl f downlall , because he/she won 't have a
objective. Blowing up mighl make you teet o: proper grasp of the predicament
I GEMINI (Miy 21-Juno 201 There are cer·
better. but ~won't resolve the maHer.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·'0oc. 211 Be . • lain persons with whom you'll be dealing
extremely careful as to wllat you affix your '; today about whom you should be a bit
signa1ure1oday or wllat you put in writing.· 1 skeptica l of what they have to say .
You could be held accou. ntable in both~
· 1 However, do nollhink everyone is trying to

~~ICORN

•·

=~:u(June

· Some tylll of Important change where youri .
(Ole. 22-Jon. 111 Outside ,
21-July 221 Basically, you
career is concerned is indicated tor .the .
ou'll make help upon wllich you are depending mi!11t l · are a reasonably .good manager ol your
1 r
year ahead. The 8 tara Ions Y
nol be forth coming today. 11 you plan tor ! reBOurces, butloday this valuable charac·
st&lt;&gt;uld prove extremely beriaticlal.
VIRGO (Aug. 23n9op1. 221 This might not this contingency, you cou ld ride out the 1 l teriStic might desert you and you could do
i! some deficit spending. . ·
h · hi daY to tackle an ass1gnment · slorm.
be t 8 "~ h you know little or nolhing
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 191 Your inter· ! . LEO ~July 23--Aug. 221 Don'l take lhlngs
0
about w 1 leal reasomng powers may \ esls might have to take a back seat lo the ~ out on yoor tamMy loday It you feel ovlir·
Elren yo~r ogh help Know where to took intarasla of your companions today. lttooke powered or outmaneuvered when dealing
' not be 0 muc nd you. •11 lind It The Astro· lll&lt;e everyone might hive a baHer reason 1" with persons In the real wot1d. They're on
lor_romance
a
·
. ·.
, 1or doing thl ngs the'"way ~
:, • yoursIde and want to help .
, Mlltcllmaker
inatanlly reveals
whiCh
oooan you do.
G:~ '.. .
.
. PISCES ~F•b. 2CJ..March 20) II mlghl be I
'i

.... ....,.

1

1;

I\

I'

\
, •I

l

I

1

••

�Pega ·10-the Dally Sentinel

Po~eroy-Middleport,

Ohio

Monday, August 23, 1993

Ohio Lottery

Playoff
debate
continues

Pick 3:
0-8-9
Pick 4:
8-8-9-6
Buckeye 5:
2-4-15-18·30

PageS

Vol. 44, NO. 83

Low tonlgbt 70. Cboace of nln.
Wedlladay, blgb Dtor 90.

1 Section. 10 Pogn 35 oenl8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 24, 1993

Mulllmedloln'c.

A Mulllmeclo Inc. llewaPIII*

•

MERIT

Parliament

Filter

LOW 1 AA • MENTHOL

Mar oro
20 CL A SS A

C IGARE T·r ES

Middleport man receives
suspended sentence
Robert D. Fife, 67, of Middle·
pon, who enlered guilty pleas to
two counts of receiving stolen
property and a third count of ttaf·
ficking in food stamps last month,
appeared for sentencing before
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Fred W. Crow III Monday
af1ernoon.
Fife was sentenced to 18 month
prison terms consecutively on each
of the three charges, with the sen·
tences being suspended, and was
placed on probation for five years.
He was also ordered to pay the
maximum fine on each charge,
$2,500, for a total of $7,500, the
$1,200 cost of prosecution plus
coun costs, and to appear at all for·
feiturc hearings.
Fife was represented at the hear·

ing by Athens Attorney James
Wallace.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes said Monday
afternoon that his office's recom·
mendalion for Fife's probation was
made on the basis of his age. his
poor health, and the fact that he
would not benefit from rehabilita·
lion effortS through the penal sys·
tern.
Lentes said that he anticipales
Fife will cooperale both in solving
some food stamp trafficking cases
as well as in targeting some who
are selling food stamps. He said
that he also anticipates that Fife
may be able to help the prosecu·
tor's office solve some of the
breaking and entering cases
because of perhaps being contacted

as a source for disposal of stolen
ilems.
He also pointed out that should
Fife continue to crury on his former
type of business, it would be a violation of his probatioa and he
would have to serve his prison sen·
tence.
Under provisions of the plea
agrcemen1 entered into on July 12,
Fife will forfeit approximately
$185 ,000 and about 3,000 rifles,
shotguns and handguns seized from
his South Third Avenue home and
business on July 9. In addition he
agreed to forfeit approximately
$60,000 from bank accounts and all
personal property of which he is
unable to prove ownership.
A forfeiwre hearing was set for
10 a.m. today (Tuesday).

SEARCIUNG - Searchers looking for the
body or 20-year-old Todd Grindstaff, who fell
into the Ohio River Sanday, concluded their

search after his body was found around 9:40 this
morning. Here, volunteers search for Grindstaff
Monday afternoon near the Radne levy.
'

Man's
body
recovered
F oodbank representative
from
Ohio
River
speaks·to Rotary Club

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"Sharing the Harvest" was the·
topic of Fern Braddock at last
week's meeting of the Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Braddock is the president elect
of the Logan Rotary Club, and is
.the Logan postmaster. She was rep·
resenting the Southeastern Ohio
Foodbank at Nelsonville, a pro gram of the Hocking-Athens-Perry
Community Action Agency.
The foodbank serves not only
the tri-county area, but also
mcludes Meigs, Gallia, Washing·
ton, Perry, Guernsey, Monroe and
Noble Counties. The impact of the

The search for a Racine man rocked by waves created by a pass·
missing since early Sunday evening ing towboat. ·
Others in the boat were Roy Lee
ended this morning around 9:40
Bailey,
Dawn Shuler, and Nicki
when searchers pulled the body of
Beegle.
After
Grindstaff fell over·
Todd Grindstaff from the Ohio
board
and
did
not come back up,
River near Racine.
the
other
three
went
to shore to get
Area officials including Sheriff
James Soulsby and Coroner Dou· he1p.
Bob Byer, ~tor (If t!'e Meigs
glas. Hunter were on the scene this .
County Emergency Medical Ser·
morning.
Grindstaff, 20, one of four peo· vice said units from Racine,
pie in a boat on the Ohio River, Ravenswood, W.Va., and New
reportedly lost his balance and fell Haven, W.Va., assisted in the
into the river when the boat was search for Grindstaff. Also called

foodbank has been tremendous,
according to the speaker.
Private non-profit service agen·
cies providing food for the needy
have JP'eatly increased their food
supphes and have been able to
stretch their.•very ·small budgets .
this has enable them to liel!er meet
increasing hunger needs in the area.
Braddock said.
During the past years, 5,581
Meigs County citizens received
over 101,681 pounds of food from
the foodbank. Meal sites and home
delivered meals were served
Continued on A-3

Man pleads guilty to armed robbery

Antique tractor show results
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The following were announced
as winners in the antique tractor
show held last week at the Meigs
County Fair.
Winners were, in order by class:
Best restored, 1938 and older Dale and Jo Kautz, 1936 John
Deere A; Edison Hollon, 1937 John
Deere A; Dale and Jo Kautz, 1927
John Deere D.
Field ready, 1938 and older Dale and Jo Kautz, 1936 John
Deere A; Edison Hollon, 1937 John
Deere A; Dale and Jo Kautz, 1938
John Deere L.
Best restored, 1939-59 - Edi·
, son Hollon, 1951 John Deere MT;
Jacob Hunter, 1955 John Deere 50;

Paul Marr, 1942 John Deere H.
Field ready, 1939·59 -Wayne
Roush, 1956 Farmall 200; Edison
Hollon , 1951 John Deere MT;
Larry Hollon, 1954 Cockshutt 40.
Oldest tractor - Dale and Jo
Kautz, 1927 John Deere D.
Judge' s choice -Paul Marr,
1941 John Deere LA.
Best single gas engine - Paul
Marr.
Best gas engine display - Roy
Grueser.
Judge's choice best equipment
piece - Dale and Jo Kautz, 1920
Vulcan plow.
Judge's choice best equipment
display - Edison Hollon.

Talent show winners named
Winners in the Meigs County
Fair talent show have been
announced.
In the category for singers, the
winners in the over 16 age division
were Missy Neutzling and Michelle
Brown, tie for first; Randall Saint
John, second; and Robin Manuel,
third. In the group for under 16 in
. singers, the flfSt place winner was
Amanda Musser, the second place
winner, Alison Rose, 'and the third
place winner, Nancy Whaley.
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In the dancer category, prizes
went fo Chelsea Montgomery and
Peggy Smith, first, and Tiffany
Qualls and Amanda Nease, second.
Miscellaneous talent category
awards went to Nathan Baloy, rlfSt,
and the Pointed Sisters, second, in
the over 16 age division, and
Amber Perkins and J. R. Rife, flfSt,
Satin and Lace, Tiny Tots, second,
and Satin and Lace, Juveniles, third
in the under age 16 ca1egory.

in for assistance were the Syracuse
and Pomeroy units.
In addition, divers from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment and the Middleport Fire
Department were on seen~. Dyer
said that the river was temporarily
shut down during the search. He
cr~led the Coast Guard for being
"trcmendou'sly cooperative."
Grindstaff, the son of David
Grindstaff and Kay Grindstaff,
both of Racine, was a 1991 gradu·
ate of Southern High School.

FERN BRADDOCK

CAA commodities
distribution set
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will be distributing
dried beans, pmeapple, peanut but·
ter and apple juice to persons hold·
ing food commodity cards on Aug.
31 at the following locations:
Meigs County, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains Fire
Station, Pageville Town Hall and
the Racine Fire Department.
Distribution will begin at
approximately 9:30 a.m. and last
until noon or until the supply is
exhausted.
Gallia County, Gallia County
Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire,
Mt. Carmel Baptist Church in Bid·
well and the Crown City Fire Sta·
tion.
distribution . will begin at
approximately noon and last until
2:30p.m. or until the supply is
exhausted.
Persons picking up for others
must bring a signed note from the
person in addition to their food
commodity card.
Bring a bag or container for the
commodities.

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A Columbus man enlered a plea
of guilty to armed robbery in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Mon·
day and was sentenced by Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill.
According to Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Christopher E.
Tenaglia, who represented the stale
in the case, Randall Scott Neil of
Columbus pled guilty to a count of

armed robbery, an aggravated Parofe Authoriiy.
felony of the first degree. Neil was
Steven L. Story of ·the Meigs
indicted on the charge after the County Public Defender's Office
armed robbery of the By the Way represented Neil.
Grocery in Langsville.
A co-defendant, John Alfred
Judge Crow sentenced Neil to a Rose III, was previously sentenced
term of nine to 2S years in prison for his involvement in the incident.
on the charge . A post sentence The two men arc also charged in
investigation was also ordered Jackson County in connection with
completed by the Ohio Adult the same incident.

Cremeens pleads guilty to embezzling
FormerOVB
manager vows to
pay back $177,000
before sentencing
A former Ohio Valley Bank
employee accused of embezzling
$177,500 and tam~g with bank
records pleaded guilty to all
charges Monday morning.
Tbe jury trial of Brenda K. Cre·
meens, 4S, Mercerville, was scheduled to Slalt Monday in the Gallia
County Common Pleas Court of
Judge Joseph L. Cain, but instesd
she changed her previous plea of
not guilty.

Cremeens pleaded guilty to one
count of aggravated theft and eight
counts of tampering with records.
All charges are second degree
felonies and carry a possible sen·
tence of two to 15 years in pruon
for each charge.
Cremeens' attorneY., Robert
Toy, said Cremeens will pay the
$177 ,SOO in restitution before her
senlencing and that OVB will recommend she be placed on shock
probation after serving 90 days in
prison.
Toy added that the bank may
ask for some term of community
service.
The defense attorney asked that
sentencing take place within 30

days.
Cremeens had been employed
by OVB since 1970 and was pro·
mated to manager of the OVB
mini·bank last summer.
Special Prosecutor George Ellis
said the state would have proven in
the trial that over a period of 10
years Cremeens had taken the
money from the bank by falsifying
teller and general ledger records.
He said she was able to do this
because of her position fii'St as head
teller and then as manager.
Ellis also said that Cremeens
admitted embezzling the money in
a written statement to Gallipolis
police.
A date for sentencing was not

seL

Local love triangle seen on TV
It is the story of local residents
It was the perfect story for day·
time television - the kind of story George and Theresa Haffelt and it
most people probably don't want aired on the Gera/do television
their children to watch. And it all show Monday afternoon.
The fact that this was going to
happened in Gallia Co11nty.

be a complex story became clear
when the theme of the show was
revealed to be "I'm In Love with
My Husband's Brother."
Continued on A-3
'

Red Cross bloodmobile collects 50 units

'" "

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.

Ohio C01l" Co~ a subsidiary ol American Electric: Power, to Middleport VIUa&amp;e. The company
gave the Boney so that those deprived of swimmin&amp; In their favorite areek because or pumping
from nooded Melas Mine 31 would have free
access to the Middleport pool. (Sentinel Photo ·
by Cbarlene Hoenkh)

SWIM FOR FREE - Everyooe will swim tree
at the Middleport Pool until It closes ror the season on Labor Day. Houn of operation now tbat
school has started are 3 to 7 p.m. weekdays and
noon to 6 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, and Labor
·Day. The "swim for free'' program was made
possible by a $1,000 donation from Southern
';

\

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Fifty units._of blood were donal·
cd during the recent visit of t~e
American Red Cross bloodmobile
in Meigs Q:mnty.
' Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the assist·
ing doctors with Beulah Ward, R.
N. was the charge nurse.
Multiple gallon donors included
Richard Chambers, Paula J. Wood,
and Harry D. Holter, two gallon
donors; Dennis J. Gilmore, three
gallon donor, Marie A. Bush and
Bruce Hawley, four gallon donor;
Judith K. Hunter, seven gallon
donor; and William H. Hoback, 11
gallon donor.
The canteen was served by Trin·
ity Friendly Circle. Retired Senior
Volunteer workers assisting were
Dorothy Long, Helen Bodimer,
Ruth Moore, Peggy Harris, Mary
Nease, Jac;:t and Joan Sorden, Flo·

renee Richards, William and Joyce
Hoback, Jean Nease, Betty
Spencer, Goldie Fredericks, Velma
Rue, and Gerald Wildermuth.
Donors by community were as
follows:
Pomeroy: Dale S. Thoene, Ann
Cottrill, Howard Logan, Aldine J.
Baker, Donald R. Smith, Daniel R.
Folmer, Nora K. Easbnan, Janice
H. Davis, G~ffrcy Wilson, Paul F.
Marr, Dennis J. Gilmore, Mary K.
Spencer, Billy 1. Spencer, Jodi
lmbo\Jen, Katrina R. Turner, Dr.
James Witherell, William R. Rad·
ford, David M. King, Dan 1L Foil·
rod, Gerald R. Rought, Gloria K.
Kloes, Barbara Woodyard, Roger
A. Abbott, John W. Moore, Carolyn A. Charles, and Susanna
Heck.
Middlepon: Rhonda F. Grover,
Sarah Fowler, Richard Eric Cham-

bers, David G. Dodson, George L.
Harris, Patricia A. Weaver, Bessie
M. Fisher, Donna Hawley, Gloria
J. Peavley, Norma Wilcox, and
Judith K. Hunter.
Racine: A Marie Bush, Charles
. W. Bush, David Aaron Wolfe,
William H. Hoback, Harry D.
Holler.
l.arigsville: Ellis E. Myers.
Shade: Wayne E. Milhoan.
Long Bottom: Merrilee Bryant,
Sharon Bryant, Lawrence L. Drig·
gs, Paula J. Wood, Bruce Hawley,
and Laura Hawley.
Reedsville: Terrance Smith,
Jerry Rach.
. Minersville: Kenneth E. Wig- ·
gms.
Syracuse: Heather L. McPhail.
Rutland: Marta Blackwood and
Donna M. Davidson.
Portland: Stcphan H. Nease.

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