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                  <text>20,1992

Ohio

County fair 'officials record increase in
horticulture entries'; Sauters takes top honqrs

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Famili

Medicine

.john C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

,.
r

Queiltion: The family next door
have gotten a trampoline for their
children. My ldds have been invited to play on it with their children,
but I'm concerned about safety. Is
it saie for children to use a trampoline?
Answer: In 1936, a circus acrobat, George Nissen, invented the
trampoline. Its popularity in the
United States and Europe increased
dramatically ·in the 1950s and
1960s,leading to an alarming number of serious injuries. The most
frightening of these were neck and
spine injuries that produced permanent paralysis.
·
As a result of the alarming nom·
ber of injuries, the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
issued a statement in 1977 recom·
mending a ban on the use of tram·
polines in public schools and in
homes. In 1981 they "liberalized"
this position slightly and issued a
second recommendation that
approved of limited use of trampo·
lines in schools but continued the
stand against home use.
The AAP position gives parents
a strong warning about the dangers
of trampolines. SUitistics from the
U.S . Consumer Product Safety
Commission reinforce the AAP
stance. These figures show an esti·
mated 14,666 people were injured
on home trampolines in 1987.
Wow - that really sounds bad!
But, let's put the numbers in perspective. During the 27 years from
1957 until 1984, there were only
114 cases of neck injuries resulting
in paralysis reported from the
entire world. So injuries are common, but caUistrophic ones are not.
This still doesn't directly answer
your dilemma. I'm sure that your
kids have been making life miserable for you over this issue. I'll bet
the neighbor children are having a
wonderful time on the trampoline
and probably have not sustained
any serious injuries. The Division
of Pediatric Emergency Medicine
at the University of Utah School of
Medicine has recently published
research that may help you make
your decision.
Most of the injuries reported in
their study occurred on privately
owned, full-sized trampolines like your neighbor's. Sixty-nine
percent of the children injured were
10 or younger, with an alarming

percentage of these under the age
of 4. Fifty-eight percent of the
injuries resulted when some part of
the person's body came into contact at an awkward angle with the
mat surface of the trampoline, so
spotters along the side of the tram·
poline would have been of no asstS·
tance.
Having more than one person on
the trampoline at the same time is
an invitation for injury. In the Um·
versity of Utah study, 77 percent of
the injuries happened when there
was more than one person on the
mat, and the younger children were
often the recipient of the injury in
these cases.
Question: What type of injuries
from trampoline use are likely to
happen to my children if I let them
play next door?
Answer: The most common
injuries, whether they occur on the
mat of the trampoline or in a fall
from it, are to the extremities.
Fifty-five percent involve sprained
or broken arms and legs. Thirty·
seven percent involve injury to the
head and neck, with concussions,
skull fractures, cervical fracture
and neck sprains being possible.
Lack of adult supervision can
also lead to several additional types
of injuries. For instance, children
can be injured while playing under
the mat as older children bound
above them on the uameoline.
Likewise, "sword fighting while
on the mat can be an open invitation to injury. Also, never underestimate the ability of children to create new and different hazards. In
the Utah study, one injury occurred
when children pushed sticks up
through the mat as others bounced
on it.
So now you must decide what to
tell your children. I'd recommend
that they on Iy use the trampoline
with adult supervision, not because
adults can prevent injuries, but
because they can erisure that only
one person ts using the device at a
time. Adults can also safeguard
against children being leli to their
imaginations to develop new and
dangerous uses for the trampoline.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O. , 250
Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteopathic ,Medicine, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio 4570 I.

Joyce Ann Sauters of Pomeroy
entered the best display of garden
produce at the Meigs County Fair
this year.
Judging of 467 senior fair horti·
culture enbies took place on Tues·
day, and according to fair officials,
this year saw a significant increase
in horticulrure enbies compared to
recent years.
Blue ribbon winners, by class,
were: ~

GRAINS • ears of yellow com,
Dale Kautz; ears of white sweet
com, Larry Cowdei'y; ears of yellow sweet com, Larry Cowdery;
ears of bi-color sweet com, Joyce
Ann Sauters; ears of red popcorn,
Joyce Ann Sauters; ears of other
popcorn, Joyce Ann Sauters; ears
of indian com, Brian Windon; peck
wheat, Pabicia Holter.
POTATOES • cobblers, David
King; Triumph, Virgil King; Keenbees, Deborah Grueser; Seneca
Beauty, Joyce Ann Sauters; Idaho
Bakers, Delma Karr; LaSoda, Virgil King; misc. varieties, Edison
Hollon.
SWEET POTATOES· Yarns,
Fred B. Smith; misc. varieties, Bill
Radford.
VEGETABLES • green cab·
bage, Joyce Ann Sauters; eggplant,
Jessica Erin Sayre; red tomatoes,
Kassandra Lodwick; yellow tomatoes, Rose Barrows; pear red tomatoes, Jim King; pear yellow toma·
toes, Opal Dyer; cherry tomatoes,
Agnes Dixon; hi-color tomatoes,
Jim King; green pod pole beans,
Jim King; yard long pole beans,
Virgil King; yellow pod pole
beans, Joyoe Ann Sauters; lima
beans, Fred B. Smith; white onions,
Delma Karr; yellow onions. Robert
Lewis ; pimentos, Joyce Ann
Sauters; hot peppers, Jim King;
sweet peppers, Lenora Leifheit;
beets, Evelyn Hollon; carrots. Kassandra Lodwick; turnips, Joyce

Ann Sauters; green cucumbers. Bill
Radford; pickles, Maxine Dyer;
okra, Joyce Ann Sauters; fie~d
pumpkin, Joyce Ann Sauters; pte
pumpkin, Brian Windon:. cush~w,
Jessica Erin Sayre; zucchw, Bnan
Windon; summer squash, Peggy
Crane; patty pan squash, Peggy
Crane; crooked nee)!;· squash, Kassandra Lodwick; acorn squash,
Peggy Crane; butternut squash,
Pany Nally.
GOURDS • dipper gourds,
Joyce Ann Sauters; ornamental
gourds, Cody Ryan Dill; penguin
gourds, Joyce Ann ~auters. . .
MELONS • m1sc. vaneues,
Fred B. Smith; cantaloupe, hales,
Joyce Ann Sauters; cantaloupe,
perfection, Joyce Ann Sauters;
misc. varieties, Brian Windon.
APPLES • Stayman Winesap,
Joyce Ann Sauters; Jonat!Jon, Rose
Barrows; Red Deli'cious, Joyce
Ann Sauters; Golden Delicious,
Joyce Ann Sauters; Grimes GOlden, Jo~ce Ann Sauters; Maiden
Bush, Joyce Ann Sauters; misc.
varieties, Joyce Ann Sauters.
OTHER FRUITS - Prune
plum, Joyce Ann Sauters; Damson
plum, Joyce Ann Sauters; Concord
grape, Opal Dyer; Niagra grapes,
Roy L. Holter.
·
LARGEST SPECIMEN • polaiO,
Kassandra Lodwick; pumpkin ,
Joyce Ann Sauters; apple, Darlene
Hayes; tomato, Larry Cowdery;
beet, Patty Nally; cucumber
(largest) Jessica Erin Sayre;
cucumber (longest), David King;
onion, Lenora Leiflteit; sweet potato. Fred B. Smith; turnip, Joyce
Ann Sauters; cantaloupe, David
King; ear of com, Dale Kau!iFrealc vegetable, Jim King;
Keifer pear, Jim King; Bartlett
pear, Kassandra Lodwick; sugar
pear, Joyce Ann Sauters; yellow
peaches, Joyce Ann Sauters; and
white peaches, Joyce Ann Sauters. .

Researchers sketch treatment
strategy for Lyme Disease
'oy CHRIS TORCHIA
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON -: People who are
bitten by mfecuous tocks m areas
where Lyme disease is common
should seek treatroent even if they
don't show any symptoms of the
illness, a new study suggests.
But where Lyme disease is rare,
patients should be treated only after
developing symptoms because the
likelihood of side effects from
medicine outweighs the smaller
risk of iUncss, researchers said.
The yearlong study, reponed in

Little Miss,
Mister named
Channing Burge and Matthew
Wandling were selected the 1992
Meigs County Little Miss and Mister Meigs County in competition
held on the hillside stage Wednesday afternoon.
Channing, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Burge, Middleport,
was one of 13 little girls competing
for the title, while Manhew, son of
John and Julie Wandling, Albany,
competed for the title with eight
others.
The contest is annually spon ·
\ sored at the Meigs County Fair by
the Middlepon Business and Professional Women's Club. Out-ofcounty judges were used to make
the selection on the basis of appearance and interview. Lynnita Newberry interviewed each of the con"'..; testants.
Prizes to the winner were $20
gift certificates from Buttons and
Bows and French Fry Radios from
McDonald's of Pomeroy.

Thursda(s New England Journal
of Medt~me, was launched ~t the
Umverslly of ~ennsylvama 1n
1990, 1argely to dispel pubhc alarm
about the dtsease.
Lyme disease causes fev.er, rashes and head.aches and m later
sta~es, arthnus. and heart damage.
It IS common m parts of several
Northeastern states, mcluding Massachusetts, Connecucut and New
York. .
. The disease can be tt:eatcd effec·
u~ely wtth two an.Ubtoucs, doxycy·
chne and amoxtctlhn. Both druj!S,
however, someumes produce stde
effects such as nausea and diarrhea.

FAIR ROYALTY. Channing Burge and Matthew Wandling
were named 1992 Little Miss and Mister Meigs County iD competi·
tion at the fair Wednesday afternoon.

Travel and arthritis
ATLANTA (AP) - For the 37
million Americans suffering arthritis, here are some basic tips to
make traveling more comfortable
and enjoyable, according to the
Arthritis Foundation:
- Begin a trip or outing well
rested.
- Set aside time to rest at your
destination before beginning activities.
- Prevent stiffness with simple
range-of-motion exercises such as
anlcle circles, shoulder ci!cles, wrist
and hand exercises and leg lifts.
- Accept help and special services when needed.
- Ask tour guides how much
walking is required.
- Do not let yourself get overtired.
- Plan ways to spend time by
yourself in case you are unable to
JOin or k~p Up With group aCUVI·
ties.

"&amp;R 6\ocK

OttetS \ncome
lal coutse\

Vol. 43, No. 84

CALL
NOW

ready
for fight with Clinton

Candidates and purity?
NEW YORK (AP)- The word
"candidate," -one that aspires til
or is nominated or qualified for an
office- came into the English ian·
guage about 1600.
Etymologists say it is from a
Latin word meaning "clothed in
white ," from the tradition in
ancient Rome of candidateS for an
office wearing white togas as a
symbol of purity.
Candidates may not always be
candid, but " candid" too can be
traced back to the Latin word for
white.
Sometimes a candidate is an
"incumbent," the present holder of
the office. "Incumbent" was
added to the English vocabulary in
the 15th century . The original
denotation of the Latin word it
comes from was to lie down.

FRI¥ SAT¥ SUN.

RAISING CANE
R
WITH JOHN LITHGOW

Tbe Meigs County Fair
put on a "really big show"
Thursday nigbt, as Mason
County, W.Va. native Lionel
Cartwright performed at tbe
grandstand. Fair officials
reported Friday morning that
last night's multitude or country music fans made for a
record crowd. Many or those
in the audience were close relatives or the country music
superstar, wbo came to see
their famous kin in an
impromptu family reunion
prior to tbe concert, above.
Others were aspiring musicians themselves, like Alison
Rose of Chester who bad two
memorable moments yesterday • winning tbe Junior Fair
talent sbow and meeting a
country music star, left.
Cartwright said be had happy
memories or tbis fair, commenting that bis grandmother
had come to the fair in a horse
and buggy many years ago. He
also said that be had been trying for several years to fit the
Meigs County Fair Into his
touring schedule. (By Brian J,
Reed)

AND

BUFFYTHE
VAMPIRE SLAYER
PG 13

WITH
LUKE PERRY

Republicans jubilant; Democratic
team heads for northern ·Ohio
Originally from
·
raised the Mississippi River,
Fansee has played the Diners Club Circuit for several years
as a soloist/guitarist playing a variety of music
.
for your listening pleasure.
~NTERTAINM~NT HOURS: ~unday, Tue!day, Wednes~ay, Thursday, 6pm-Ciosing; friday &amp;Saturday, 8~m-Cio~ng

NOW SERVINGAll LEGAL BEVERAGES
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Sunday-Thursday, 6 am-10pm; Friday &amp; Saturday, 6 am- Midnight

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
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For More Information Call:
78-tCI-063611

HOUSTON (AP) - President
Bush sets out today to sell his
vision for the next four years after
accepting the Republican presidential nomination and promising to
cut taxes if given a second term.
Rival Bill Clinton countered
Bush's convention finale with a
promise of jobs to the hurting
heartland.
"The question is: who do you
trust to make change work for
you?" Bush said in an acceptance
speech that framed the fall debate.
With fresh evidence that Bush
was getting a convention bounce to
tighten an increasingly hostile
White House mce, Clinton bied to
persuade voters that 12 years of
Republican rule -and economics
- were enough.
"In 1980, when we began our
romance with trickle-down economics, we had the highest wages
in the world, now we're 13th," the
Democratic nominee said in Michi·
gan. "We've bied it their way, it's
time to change."
With the nominating conven-

BUMPER CROP • A bomber crop or pumpkins, like these
being judged by Washington County Agriculture Extensioa Agent
Jim Barrett made yesterday's horticulture judginc interesting. 467
entries also made this year's horticulture event sucessful. (Sentinel
Photo by Charlene HoeRicb)

H&amp;RBLOC~
1-614·992-6674

RT. 33

2 Section•, 14 P1ges 25 otnle
A lluttlmedto Inc. -poper

'A really big show... ,_ ___, President Bush

[llifJ!l Expanded Houn 8r Live Entertainment

1·800·TAI·2000

mid-80s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ, Friday, August21, 1992

Copyrighled 1112

Mason Family Restaurant Introduces

• Learn a new skill
• Increase your tax knowledge
• Convenient times &amp; locations

Low tonight In mld-605.
Saturday, partly cloudy. High In ·

2001

Page4

Reunion slated
Family of the late Ed and Iva
(Litchfield) Simpkins will hold a
reunion Sunday, Aug. 23 at the
Krodel Park clubhouse beginning
at. noon . Brfng covered dish .
Friends and family welcome.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
256
Pick 4:

Meigs
harness race·
results

(304) 773-5321

MASON, WV

HOUSTON (AP) - Ohio
Republicans who have been irritable about President Bush's declining popularity and impatient for the
campaign to begin left their con.
venuon exuberant and confident
"The first team's on the field
· now," said dele~te Priscilla Mead
, of Columbus. ' Now we're going
to hit some home runs."
"The president gave a wonderful speech. Wasn't it wonderful?
He addressed all the issues," said
·Thomas Hannon, the head of the
. state party's fund-raising operation.
· "This is really going to wake up
·America," said Donna Owens, for-

mer mayor of Toledo.
Owens said she'd been feeling
edgy about the president's re-election prospects, especially when the
near-candidacy of Ross Perot
showed deep dissatisfaction with
the way the government's being
run.
" I sensed just general frustration with the nation as a whole and
people not wanting to go with the
Republicans and not wantin~ to go
with the Democrats," she S8ld.
"Now I feel when Election Day
comes people are going to realize
the seriousness of the election and
we can't afford to have less than

the kind of lcadcrship that's been at
the helm."
Ohio is considered a pivotal
state in the presidential sweepslakes because of its size (seventh
largest, 21 electoral votes) and its
history of picking winners.
No Republican ha s won the
White House without winning
Ohio.
John F. Kennedy won the presidency but lost Ohio by a margin
that amounted to less than one vote
per precinct.
The GOP has pledged to pull
out all the stops to win Ohio and
the Democrats have said the state is
a priority but not necessarily one of
the top 10.
A lot of Republicans here contend that they wiD all but have the
sUite to themselves - a contention
dismissed by Clinton state cochainnan Lee Fisher.
"The Democrats have not written off Ohio," he said. "It's more
than symbolic that they have chosen Ohio to launch both their postconvention bus trips."
The day after his nominating
convention, Bill Clinton sent a bus
caravan to the Midwest, including
soops across southern Ohio,
Both Cliqton and his running
mate, Sen . Albert Gore of Tennessee, are headed for Ohio today.
Gore has arranged a noon rally
in Toledo, after which he'll head to
Continued on page 3

tions over, the Bush-Clinton battle of his decision to break his promise
begins in earnest today. Each can· four years ago and approve a tax
didate targeted voters critical to his increase.
Bush said spending reductions
hopes of victory come Election
of $300 billion would finance the
Day- just 74 days away.
"Join me in our new crusade, to tax cuts, but he did not say which
reap the rewards of our global vic- programs he would roD back. A top
tory - 10 win the peace," Bush aide said he saw no evidence that
said in a speech punctuated at its Americans wanted this kind of
conclusion with a mammoth drop delail.
"Our policies haven' t failed;
of balloons, confetti and indoor
they haven't been tried," Bush
fueworks.
"We are the true voice for said. He called Congress the true
change," Vice President Dan obstacle to change.
For those wbo criticized his first
Quayle said in a defiant acceptance
term
for its focus on fcweign policy,
speech of his own, delivered with a
Bush
had no apologies. "I saw the
confident, combative tone missing
chance
to rid our children's dreams
four years ago.
Bush, with Quayle in tow, was of the nuclear nightroare - and I
heading to Mississippi, the first did," he said.
New polls showed Bush closing
stop of his effort to reclaim the
South from the Democrats' Dixie to within single digits of Clinton.
Ulndem of Arkansas Gov. Clinton The conservative themes of the
four·day convention appeared to
and Tennessee Sen. AI Gore.
Bush hit the South loaded with boost his standing in the South, ua;
the ammunition of his proposal to ditionally the base of Republican
cut taxes and hi s di sdain for presidential victories.
Clinton was staRing the day iri
Congress.
"It was a misUike," Bush said
Continued on page 3
.

Meigs County fair good vacation
spot for some residents in area
By~

GLAUNER
Sentinel News Staff
When· people mention summer
vacation. spots, places like Florida,
Cahfomta or Maine usually come
to mmd. For the wealthter set, cxottc Islands or European tours are
common f~.
Some Me1gs County folks. however, stay close to home, livmg m a
camper for a week at the Meigs
County Fll":r· It may not seem glam·
orous, but 11 only costs $50 and can
be more fun than the fair itself.
Gay Ann Burke, Alfred , has
cB!"ped at the fair for 17 years .and
S8ld she and her temporary .neogh·
bors have fun together. A stgn on
the s1de ofBurke's camper names
the.makeshift town: Hobo VIllage.
"We all cook togethe~: ea.t together
and have a good ume .. satd Burke:
Burke be~an campmg at the farr
because drivmg back and forth was
a hassi~, and canng for ammals ts
much Simpler when one lives only
50 or 100 feet from the barns. She
said her children, a daughter and
two sons, grew up at the fair, and
they still get excited when the fair
draws near.
A lot of excitement and fun in
Hobo Village seem to stem from
the camaraderie and interaction of
a mini-society, a microcosmic
neighborhood just outside the rair
gates. "It's a way to get to see your
old friends that you haven't seen
for years," said Nita Jean Ritchie.
Ritchie, of Tuppers Plains, and
her sisters Vickie Rood and Nancy
Collins are all Hobo Village residents, creating a family atmosphere, where everybody shares
what they have. Ritchie said,"If
someone needs something, you just
yell and someone's always got it"
As if to prove her point, Ritchie
herself lent a pair of tweezers to a
family whose toddler son had a
splinter stuck in his hand.
With so many people nearby to
lc~d a hand or a pair of tweezers,
fatr campers are by no means
roughing it. People have most
home comforts, though Collin s
lamented not having a washer and
dryer, and Burke said extra supplies are only a few miles away, in
local stores and homes.
Mary King and her husband
Jimmy of Long Bottom spend a
more primitive vacation at the fair;
sleeping in tents for the week. A
tent space costs only $25, compared to $50 C8IDJ?Cf spaces, but the
kings' outdoor kitchen has almost
everything they need, including a
refrigerator, a gas stove and a picnic table.
The Kings are IS-year fair vet·
erans, and have kept busy watching
their 10 children and more than 20
grandchildren participate in fair
events. Mary King herself won 10
blue ribbons at this year's fair with
ber produce, candy and quilts. Ultimately, however, this is the Kings'
summer holiday, and Mary King

said, "This is the only place I go
for the summer."
Mother Nature has been kind to
· this year's Meigs County Fair, but
in the past, bad weather has
wreaked havoc with fair campsites.
Bob Frey of Mansfield remembers
the 1989 fair, when a steady now
of min mired carnper·s and motor
homes in their spots. Tmctors had
to pull many campers off the fairgrounds, according to Frey. "All
we could do was back out and roll
up the hill," he said. "We were sure
we wouldn't get out"
During the drought of 1988, the
fairgrounds resembled the Depression-era Dust Bowl, according to
Frey, with dust storms blinding
vision and choking windpipes .
"The wind blew and you couldn't
sec anything," said Frer. wbo spent
most of his time clearung dust and
grit that year.
This week's weather has been
kind to fair campers, evidenced by
numerous cookouts and outdoor

gatherings. Collins said she and
other Hobo Village campers sat
outside and talked until I a.m. one
night, and on Thursday, Bwtce was
busy grilling a pile of chicken pans
for the makeshift town.
Surely, part of the reason people
camp at the fairgrounds is convenience. They can ea~ take a nap or
change clothes any time they wan~
and no one has to drive bome late
at night only to awake early the
next morning. Nancy Collins' son
John slept in a barn at the Mason
County Fair, and he told his mother
camping would make his life a lot
easier.
But Collins said she has a good
time at the fairgrounds with her
friends and family, and the late
night conversation and communal
cookout, events exclusive to
campers, add to the fun of the fair.
Collins camped at the fair for the
fust time this year, but she said, "I
wish we had done it a long time
ago."
-

--·--

--Local briefs---.
Danville B&amp;E probed
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported this morning
that the department is investigatin~ the Wednesday night bii!Jlary 111
the Shawn and Cindy Lamben restdence at Danville.
According to Soulsby, the Lamberts had gone to the fair leaving
at 5 p.m., and when they returned at 11 p.m., they discovCrect that
someone had broken out a rear window and entered the trailer
An Australinan saddle, a Marlin 22 rille with scope a~d his
Continued on page 3

·
·
'
•

�,,

Friday, August 21' 1992

Commentary

OHIO Weather
I,

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pc:»meroy--Middlepol't, Ohio
Friday, August 21, 1992

'

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVODD TO TIU llfl'&amp;RBSTS OF THE IIEIGil-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publlshe~

PAT WHJl'EIIEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

I

I'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wilb name,
addless and telephone number. No unsigned letttrs wiU be published. LetteB
should be in good taste, addJessiJI&amp; issues, not personalities.

'Fed up' group still
spreading the word
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI -The founder of the We're Fed Up Group still has
some gripes to get off his chest.
Although Andy Kopp III has .been airing grievances through his small
group for two years, some of his basic complaints remain.
Kopp, who operates a sign business in Franklin, fanned the group in
1990 to protest ordinances in Springboro and Keuering thai restricted use
of the type of ouldoor signs he sells.
He recalls a disagreement he had with a Warren County commissioner
over a law restricting use of such signs in the county. The commissioner
told him the signs were ugly.
"Oh, so you legislate beauty?'' Kopp replied.
He rails at gun conlrol, is irked by doctors who charge high fees, is
upset over homelessness and is fed up with judges who allow repeat
offenders back out on the slreets.
Kopp said his group has a core of 15 or 20 people who auend meet·
ings, and maintains a mailing list of about 300 people. He makes occasional speaking appearances, sells bumper stickers, gives interviews and
sometimes is a talk show guest
·
But he has no magic methods for protest.
'We've just been in touch with elected officials on a regular basis,"
said. "I write congressmen."
Melissa Lilly, a spokeswoman for Ohio Secretary of State Bob Taft,
said she does not know how many protest groups such as Kopp's exist in
the state. They do not necessarily have to incorporate or me their names
with the secretary of state, she S31d.
But such groups may have to file as political action committees if they
collect money and donate it to certain politicians, Ms. Lilly said.
Kopp has chosen to use informal methods. .
''I'm not really licensed as a lobbyis~ but I get my two cents in wher·
ever I can," he said.
He said he is considering working with other groups in his region to
consolidate the voting strength of those with similar views.
But he has learned that people with gripes do not necessarily have
enough in common to agree on goals and tactics.
"Half of the people are going to love you, and half are going to hate
you," he said.

Today in history
Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Aug. 21, the 234th day of 1992. There are 132 days
)eft in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
One year ago, on Aug. 21, 1991 , the hard-line coup against Soviet
~ident Mikhail S. Gorbochev collapsed in the face of a popular upris·
in11.led by Russian federation President Boris N. Yeltsin.
.On thiS date:
:In 1680, Pueblo Inclians took possession of Santa Fe, N.M., after driv·
ing:out the Spanish.
.
·
In 1831, former slave Nat Turner led a violent insurrection in Virginia.
(He was lateT executed.)
,
Jn '1858, the famous debates between Senatorial contenders Abraham
Lincoln and Stephen Douglas began.
In 1878, a group of lawyers, judges and law professors founded the
American Bar Association at t1}e Saratoga, N.Y., town hall.
In 1940, Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky, whose clashes with
Josef' Stalin had led to his exile from the Soviet Union, clied in Mexico
City from wounds inflicted by an assailant
In 1944, the United StateS, Britain, the Soviet Union and China opened
talks at Dumbarton Oaks in WaShington that helped pave the way for
establishment of the United Nations.
In 1945. President Harry S. Truman ended the Lend-Lease program
that had shipped some $50 billion in aid to America's allies dUring World
War II.
In 19S9. Hawaiian statehood tool: effect as President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed an executive order proclaiming ltawaii the 50th state of the
union.
In 1963, martial law was declared in South Vietnam as police and
army troops be~an a crackdown on Buddhist anti-government proteSters.
·In 1983, Philippine opposition leader Benigno S. Aquino Jr., encling a
self-imposed exile in the Unittd States, was shot dead moments after stepping off a plane at Manila International Airport.
In !986, more than 1,700 people died when toxic gas erupted from a
volcanic lake in the We51 African nation of Cameroon.
(
)

Is it just my imagination, or is
the pro-Democratic bia~ of the
medta more visible in this cam·
paign than ever before?
That the bias exists is undeniable. Most journalists don't even
try to deny it except in election
years like this one, when a reasonable neutrality is still - however
vainly- expected.
The first scientific demonstra·
tion of the bias was the Lichter·
Rothman repon of 1981, baspl on
in-depth interviews with 240 ran·
domly selected members of Ameri·
ca's media elite, both print and
electronic. Perhaps because the
study had academic sponsorship
(Lichter and Rothman were profes·
sors at George Washington University and Smith College respectively), the responses were unusually
candid. It ~pired that never less
than go percent of me media elite

had voted for the Democratic candidateS in the four preceding presi·
dential elections: 1964, !968, 1972
and 1976.

William A. Rusher
Since that indiscretion, the
media have become more cautious,
but there is no reason to thinlc that
their bias has gotten anything but
worse. Several conservauve organi·
zations and publications now e~ist
that are dedicated, full time, to
demonstrating and condemning it.
A glance at any repon of the Media
Resean:h Center (113 South West
St., SQite 200, Alexandria, Va.
22314) will provide a dozen recent
examples.
But, as I say, 1992 promises to
be a vintage year in the slanted-

news business. This was borne in .
upon me just the other day, when
the Gallup Poll reported that Clin·
ton was now leading Bush by 17
poin1s. 53 percent to 36 percent
(with 9 percent undecided and 2
percent still hanging in there for
Perot).
Now, this was news. The imme·
diately preceding polls of half a
dozen public opinion researchers
had shown Clinton leading Bush by
nearly twice thai much:' 33 percent
in at least one widely heralded poll.
In those circumstances, Clinton's
17-point lead, though still impressive, was an astonishing comedown.
How do you suppose the media
would have handled the story if the
names of .the candidateS had been
reversed? How did they, in fact,
handle the comparable story when
Bush's aslronomica11991 approval

Accu· Weather' forecast for

By Tbe Associated Press
Clouds and rain will return to
portions of southern Ohio on Satur·
day, but the north will remait) dty
and sunny, the National Weather
Service said.
Mostly clear skies and light
winds should prevail tonight.
Overnight lows will be in the mid·
50s in the north to the mid-60s in
the far south.
A weak upper level storm will
move cl0$C to the state on Saturday. In response, there will be a
chance of afternoon showers and
tbunderstprms across portions of
southern Ohio. Afternoon highs

.~

"A large, specially trainecl'force equipped with the latest technology is
coming to the Middle East at lightning speed in preparation for a potential
war!! ... But enough about CNN."

•

IToledo I 83" I

ratings of 90 percent or even higher
began to fall~ We were told, with
suitable dramatic emphasis, that the
Bush ratings had "plunged" (or
"plummeted") from 90 percent to
"only" 62 percen~ or whatever.
Yet the lead paragraph of The
Associattd Press story reporting
the new Gallup figures began as
follows: "A national opinion poll
brought more bad news Saturday
for President Bush, showing him
trailing Bill Clinton by I7 points." .
Not a word about earlier polls; not
a hint that the Gallup figures
showed Clinton losing a full half of
his lead over Bush before the
Republican National Convention
even began.
,
So I invite you to watch the
media's antics when the Republi·
cari Convention is over 111d the fli'St
post-convention polls come in,
showing the predictable "bump"
in Bush's su~port and a corresponding drop mClinton's.
Never mind if that bump knocks
Clinton's lead down another 10
points, into the single digits. The
media will tell you that "the
Republican Convention failed to
give George Bush the boost he des·
perately needed to pull ahead of
Bill C6nton." What a pity we can't
watch the autlton of such tortured
junk as they cast their votes for
Clinton on Election Day!
So batlen down the hatches and
stand by for a hurricane of media
humbug. Every Bush speech will
"fail to ignite' his audience; every
Quayle talk will contain "yet
another gaffe''; the Bush campaip,'
will be in chronic "disarray ';
every day another "111onymous
White House aide" _will confide
something to the discredit of his
boss. Meanwhile Clinton wiU be
depicted as going- from strength to
strength.
There is a name for that sort of
thing, and it isn't journalism. It's
lying.
William Rusher is a syndical·
ed writer ror Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

•lcolumbuslaa•

I

Winners named

Rain
Via Associated Press

Rebecca Scott of Langsville
· exhibited the grand champion ram
and·Rex Robinson of Coolville, the
grand champion ewe, in the judg·
W.VA.
ing of open class Suffolk sheep at
the Meigs County Fair this week.
Taking reser~e champion
awards were Robinson with a ram,
and Scott with a iamb ewe. Robinson also took a first place with a
two year old ram, a second and
third with year old rams, a second
with a ram lamb; a third with a year
old ewe, and second and third with
lamb ewes.
B,J. Ervin of Racine took a fust
for
his flock of sheep, along with a
80-85. Chance of rain 40 percent.
third
in lamb ram class, and a sec·
Extended forecast:
ond
in
the two year old ewe class.
Sunday through Tuesday:
Shawn
of Racine took two
Warm and rather humid with a secondsDailey
for
ewes
he exhibited.
slight chance of afternoon or
evening thunderstorms each day.
Highs in the 80s. Lows in the 60s.
Veterans Memorial Qospital
THURSDAY ADMISSIONSJerry Taylor, Bidwell and George
Molden, Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Imogene Freeman, Jewel Welch
and Louise Gloeckner.

handling of Iraq is fraught with al life. The GOP attack dogs are
military as well as political peril. already snarling: Clinton is enatic,
When we ask.ed one hard-eyed he's in over his bead, be was mly
strategist for Bill Clinton what the governor of a small state and he
wouldn't know how to perform as
commander-in-chief.
After initially responding defen·
sively. Clinton scored a stunning
counter punch - with one sound
byte - by mentioning tbe obvious:
Ronald Reagan was once a gover·
nor, too, and George Bush and
James Baker wouldn't have jobs
today without him. It was the Bush
impact Iraqgate would have on the and Baker team, they will argoe,
presidential election, be replied:
that coddled the dicwor whom tbe
''I'm n!Jl..a real believer in silver president later compared with
bullets, but in terms·of bringing .. Hitler."
-.
down Bush's positive in foreign
This coddling wrought Iraqgate,
policy and scratching off the comprised of several sandals with·
Teflon on his foreign policy exper· in scandals: the deliberate doctor·
lise. this is doing that''
ing of documents by the Commeroe
At this point, the Clinton camp Department regarding exports to
would settle for a draw on the for- Iraq; the deliberate misleading of
eign policy debate, since they're Congress by U.S. government offi.
counung on routing Republicans on cials; and administration ltnowl·
domestic affairs. Foreign affairs is edge or complicity in loans to Iraq
any incumbent presidt!nt's trump in the 1980s by the Atlanta branch
card- particularly Bush's because of Italy's Banca Nazionale de
of Desert Stonn. But if Gonialez's Lavoro, which may have been
ongoing investigation unmasks any diverted by Baghdad to its military.
criminal wrongdoing stemming
Gonzalez plans to subpoena the
from the Bush administration's mastermind of the BNL-Iraq con·
pro-Baghdad policies, the Gulf nection, Christopher Drogoul, to
War victol)l will lose its remaining testify before the congressional
luster.
committee this fall - setting the
The Republican National Com - stage for some of the most explo!f!ittee h~ res~.onded. fitfu~ly by sive teStimony to date.
Drogoul pleaded guilty earlier
mvoking trust as an ISSue on foreign affairs, a clear reference to this summer to some 60 counts surallegations about Clinton's pe~n- rounding the massive bank fraud,

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

but Jusiice Department officials
kept him from testifying publicly
on what U.S. officials may have
known about his activities.
Even if the investigation does
not uncover any more details,
enough is already known to
vide a powerful indicUnent o the
Reagan and Bush adminisuations.
Documents obtained by Congress
illustrate that starting three years
ago the White House and State
Department had full knowledge of
Iraqi arms procurement networks
working in Europe and the United
States - including ones for nucle·
ar and chemical weapons.
At its core, the question under·
lying Iraqgate is: Did the Reagan
and Bush administrations violate
laws in creating a Middle East
monster, and then engage in a
cover up after Saddam invaded
Kuwait?
As Republicans gird for a new
round of congressional )lllbes into
lraqgate, Democrats smell blood and they may move in for the till
this fall. If they can strip away the
trophies Bush has won for foreign
affairs - and given his administration's deanh of domestic successes
- the specter of renewed congressional investigations this fall could
make Houston a shOfl·lived honeymoon for Republicans.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated Wl'iters
ror United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
around 65. Chance of rain 10 per·
cent. Saturday, considerable
cloudiness. A chance of afternoon
showers or thunderstorms. High

Ruth Lyman, one of the last of
the Proper Bostonians and a mem·
ber of my parish, once told me of
the time her maid knocked on her
door to ask if she might come in
and sit with her for a while. The
maid said her bunions always felt
better when she was with Mrs.
Lyman.
Many of the unsung clergy in
the United States have this same
calming, restorin~ effect on their
parishioners, judgmg from the let·
ters I have received in response to
two recent columns. I asked readers
to tell something about their local
clergy members who labor long
hours in the Lord's vineyard for lit·
tie compensation and almost no
acclaim.
More than a few of those reply·
ing appear to have found the' same
qualities in their cler~ that Glenda
Jeansonne has found on her priests
at St. Peter and Paul Catholic
Church in Scott. La.
"Our pastor, Father Fred Swenson, always makes me feel at
peace," she writes. "Even when I
can see in his face that he is strug·
gling with some problem, I feel a

peace in my heart when he is
around."
The assistant at the parish,
whom she refers to simply as

George R. Plagenz
Father Tommy, has the same quieting influ~nce on her. "Just the
presence of these two men of God
malces me feel the peace and pres·
ence of God close by," she wntes.'
That may be the fonest compli·
ment anyone ~ pay a minister better than saying he or she is an
inspiring preacher, a trusted counselor or an able administrator.
The reason this is so is that
peace is God's greatest gift to us.
That is why we hear it in nearly
every benediction the pastor pro·
nounces over the congregation:
"Now may the peace of God which
pass'etb all understanding, that
peace which the world can neither
give nor take away, be wilh you.
..." Or, "May lhe_Lord bless you

and keep you ... may the Lord lift
To be mistaken lOr Jesus - or
up the light of his countenance to remind people of Jesus- is the
upon you and give you peace."
highest honor to which a member
The secret of Jesus' appeal was of the clergy may aspire. Those
not so much in the things he said who come closest are for the most
but in his presence and in the peace pan unheard of and unsung.
that it conferred on people. "My
A recovering alcoholic once
peace I leave with you," he said to said about the person who had
his followers before he died. That meant the most to him in his recovwould be his blessing to them. .
ery: "He never counseled or critiSome members of the cle~gy cized me. He just stood by me, a
and they are often the most unsung silent, affectionate reminder of bet·
men and women- have this quali· ter things. He'h never know how
ty that remindS people of what God much he helped me."
must he like. Or Jesus.
The unsung clergy, in many
There is the story of a mission· cases, iire like that. They are sel·
ary who went to China. As he told dom great preachers or pastors of
the local people about Jesus, they big, successful churches. But to
said, "Oh, we know Jesus. He their people they are loyal friends
lived here once. We buried him on and reminders of the beuer things
a hill not far away."
in life. They will never know how
It turned out m.t. a few years . many people they have helped, or
earlier, another missionary had how much.
·
come to Ibis Chinese village and
(You may send your nominahad also told the locals about Jesus. lions to: Unsung Clergy, P.O. Box
ButthisistheintereStingthing:He 1951, Columbus, Ohio 43216·
had so embodied in his own life 1951'~
what he had said to lhem about
George Plagenz Is a syndlcat·
Jesus that they just naturally ed writer for Newspaper Ellter.
assumed that be was this very prise Asodatioll.
Jesus.

The record-high tempelature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1936
while the reco1d low was 43 in
1940. Sunset tonight will be at 8:21
p.m. and sunrise Satorday at 6:50
a.m.
·
Around lbe nation
A cold front from Canada
pushed into the northern Plains and
Rockies early 'today, bringing rain
and . chilly weather to a heat·
scoJthed region.
Forecasters predicted the front
would drop temperatures into the
50s today in Montana, down from
readings in the 90s on Wednesday.
Temperatures were cool early

today in the Northeast, where
warm, sunny skies were forecast
for later in the day.
Thursday evening, slrong thun·
derstonns along the Canadian front
drenched eastern North Dalcota,
nonhwestem Minnesota, Wyoming
and western Montana
Showers and thunderstonns in
the Southeast were scattered from
the lower Mississippi Valley to the
southern Adantic coast. Rain also
fell over parts of south Texas and
across the Southwest and Colorado.
The rain-swollen Northeast
Cape Fear River overflowed its
banks for the second day in south·
eastern North Carolina, where it
has flooded homes and closed
\' '

..

•• •
•••

••

roads. Rain this weekend was
expected to bring more flooding.
Forecastt.rs today called for tern·
peratures in the 50s in the northern
Rockies and northern Plains; 60s in
northern Minnesota; 70s in the
Northeast and tbe Northwest coast;
and 80s throughout most of the
Southeast, the Appalachians, the
Midw!s~ the inland Northwest and
the rest of the Plains. ,/
Highs in the 90s were expected
in south Aorida, south Texas, most
of tbe Rockies and most of California, with readings in the I00s in the
Southwest
The high in the nation for
Thursday was 116 llegrees at Bull·
head City, Ariz.

•

:

,

'

•
'-

1.

1

t
I

'

,,
._
.

,•-

Hospital news .

t.

FAIR NAP • Camping at the ralr means one Collins takes an afternoon nap arter a day or
can eat, sleep or shower anytime. Here, John caring ror steers, calves and heifers.

_ _ _ Local briefs.. --.....,
Continued from page 1
wife's purse were reported missing.
Soulsby urged residents to be on the alert and report suspicious
persons.
"Getting the license plate number of any suspicious vehicle is the
best thing that a person can do," Soulsby said.

EMS units answer calls

reo-

Unsung clergy reflect G.od's peace

wiD be 80-85.

._
·'•

-----Weather-----

Iraqg.ate strips the TeOon .from Bush
WASHINGTON- The White
House is hunkering down on two
separate frontS for war over Iraq
during this fall's election: one in
Baghdad concernin~ weapons
inspections, the other on Washington involving the mushrooming
"Iraqgate" scandal.
Tbe latest Iraqgate banle staned
when the Bush administration
rejected the House Judiciary Com·
mittee· s request for a special prosecutor to probe the administration~s
"tilt" toward Baghdad starting in
the mid-1980s at the height of the
lnm·lraq war, and continuing until
the eve of Iraq's invasion of
Kuwait two years ago this month.
House Banking Committee
Chairman Henry Gonzalez, D·
Texas, is set to conduct a new
round of hearings in connection
with his ongoing investigation into
Iraqgate. Last week Gonzalez
issued " the first of many" subpoenas to examine classified lraqgate
documents that have been withheld
up to now by the Justice Depart·
menL
" For the first Lime, the committee is issuing subpoenas for documents from the Justice Department,
the CIA, the Defense Intelligence
Agency and the National Security
Agency," Gonzalez said. These
documents, which the Bush administration has refused to provide,
could offer the smoking gun evidence.
From an accolade to an
Achilles' heel. President Bush's

The Dally Sentinei-Page-3

Southern Ohio may·get some rain Saturday

Saturday, Aug. 22
MICH.

Will m.e~ia go to work against Bush?
Ill CoUrt Street

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

HOG DRIVER • Andy Reed drives his grand champion bar·
row pig around the Show Arena during Wednesday's Metgs Coun·
ty Junior Fair Market Hog Show. Reed also won all-around
reserve champion market bog.

Goat, dairy results announced

Meigs Emergency Services units answered 18 calls for assistance
on Thursday and early on Friday.
On Thursday at 11:47 a.m .. Middleport squad went to Grant
Street and took Gene Imboden to Holzer Medical Center. At 1:37
p.m., Racine squad went to Fifth and Pearl Streets 111d took Paul
Harris to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At I:54 p.m., Rudand unit
went to New Lima Road. Jeff King was taken to Veterans. At 2:21
p.m .. Racine and Pomeroy units were sent to State Route 7 and U.S.
Route 33 for an auto accident. Carrie Barker and James Farrell
refused treatment At 3:56 p.m., Racine squad went to Forked Run
State Park and took Jerry Taylor to Veterans. At 5 p.m. Syracuse
squad went to East Main Street in Pomeroy and tool: Maria Foster
to Veterans. At 6:34 p.m., Middleport squad took Catherine Mees
from West Main Street. to Veterans. At 8:54 p.m., Middleport uint
went to Oalc Street. George Molden was taken to VeteranS. At 10: 18
p.m ., Middleport unit went to the Pomeroy Police Department 111d
took Richard Stewart to Vetenms. At 10:37 p.m., Rutland squad
went to State Route 124 for William Anderson, who was taken to
Veterans. At 11:06 p.m., Pomeroy squad took BiDie Jo Pherigo to
Veterans from the fairgrounds. At II :27 p.m., George Lemley was
taken to Holzer from Bradbury Road.
On Friday at 3:47 a.m., Rutland unit took Clarence Tinkham
from Meigs Mine No. 2 to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital. At 5:05
a.m., Life FUght 2 took Jerry Taylor from Veterans SCU to River·
side Methodist Hospital. At 6:57 a.m., Syracuse unit went to U.S.
Route 33 for HaZel James, who was taken to Veterans. At 7:18a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Kecbaugh Road. Robin Dorst was taken to
Holzer. At 8:42a.m., Pomeroy unit went to Spring Avenue. Audrey
Arnold was taken to Veterans. At 9:46a.m., Racine squad went to
Trouble Creek Road. James Hinkley was taken to Holzer.

The following. are the results of nized Breeds: Kay Hunt.
Thursday's Meigs County Junior
The following are the results of
Fair Goat Show. Winners are listed Thursday's Meigs County Junior
in order of placement
Fair Dairy Show.
.
Continued from page 1
Yearling Showman: Ben Crane, • Old Pro Showmanship: David
Billy Crane.
Smith, Chuclc Parker.
Detroit campaigning· in Detroit, chanted.
Novice Showman: Kay Hunt,
Yearling Showmanship: Chris before heading to the Rust Belt on
"I'm ftxin' to," Bush said, and
Tara Grueser.
Parker.
a bus trip with Gore. "Clinton is he tested m111y of his attack lines
Experienced Showman: Tricia going to make this a great debate before the supportive crowd.
Grand Champion Goat ShowDavis, Kristi Warner.
man: Kay Hunt.
on the economy," said Clinton
Bush described Clinton as big
Novice Showmanship: Patty strategist Paul Begala.
Reserve Champion Goat Showspender, bigger taxer, a product of
Nally.
man: Ben Crane.
The Clinton campaign labeled a the Democratic Party's McGovern
Grand Champion Dairy Show· broad-based tax cut irresponsible at wing who waffled on whether to
Dairy Kid: Billy Crane, Ben
man: David Smith.
Crane.
. a time of record deficits. "It's support use of force to oust Sad·
Reserve Champion Dairy Show· nothing but a blatant attempt to buy dam Hussein from Kuwait. Or, to
Dairy Goat Production: Ben
man: Kristi Warner.
Crane, Alban Salser.
this election," said Clinton com- hear Bush tell i~ even worse:
Grand Champion Female Hol- munications director George
Grand Champion Dairy Goat:
"We tried this once before,
stein: Tricia Davts.
BenCnme.
Stephanopoulos.
combining the Democratic gover·
Reserve Champion Female HolReserve Champion Dairy Goat:
In an acceptance speech that nor of a small Southern state, with
stein: David Smith.
BillyCnme. .
lasted nearly 111 hour, Bush pound· a very liberal vice president and a
Grand Champion Ayrshire : ed away at Clinton and the Democratic Congress. America
Grand Champion Meat Goat:
Chris Parker.
Alban Salser.
De moe rats.
doesn't need Carter II."
·
Grand and Reserve Champion
Grand Champion, Other Recog"Hit him again! Hit him again.
Like Bush, Quayle called for
Female Jersey: Chuck Parker.
Harder harder," the delegates "Congress to geL out of the way"
Dairy Sweepstakes Grand
and on voters to force them out,
Champion: Tricia Davis.
borrowing a line from Gore' s
The Daily Sentinel
Dairy Sweepstakes Re se rve
speech to make his
acceptance
(U8P8 Jls-960)
Champion: Chuck Parker.
point
"There
is only one thinl! to
Continued
rrom
page
l
Publi1hed ellery at\ernoon, Monday
say
about
the
spend-everyth10g,
lln""'h Friday, 111 Co•rt s~. Pomeroy,
Cleveland, where another Clinton
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publlohinr
block-everything,
Meigs announcements bus caravan is being launched in Democratic Congress:know-nothing
Company/MuUimedla Inc., Pomeroy,
It is time for
Ohio 467691 Ph. 11112·31116. Second clut
the afternoon.
..,....., pala.at Pomoroy, Ohio.
them
to
go,"
Quayle
said
.
They'll address the congregation
Staff meeting
Around
HoustQn,
·the
day
Member: 'n\e Allodated Pnu1 an~ the
at the Olivet Institutional Baptist of the convention meant afinal
There
will
be
a
1993
Meigs
final da,Y
Ohio NewtpaptT Auad.aUon, Natianal
Marauder yearbook staff meeting Church and speak Saturday at a of protests, with three dozen anuAdnrUriftl Repn~antlltin, Branham
Monday at noon in room 31 0 al shopping mall in Youngstown abortion protesters anested at clinic
Newopapcr 8-!!"t 733 Third A...,..,
Now York. New IGr11l0017.
Meigs High Schon!. Ali staff mem · before moving on to Pennsylvania, blockades.
bers are urged to attend.
POSTMASTER: SOlid acldruo cbl,... to
the campaign said.
The Dally Senllnel , Ill Court St.,
Free clothing day
The Bush campaign says it, too,
Pwuesoy, OHio 45769.
The Gallia·Mei~s Community is pulling together an Ohio
SUBBCIUPTION llATB8
Actton Agency will hold a free itinerary for next week. Events in
By Carrier or Motor lloola
clothing day Aug. 28 from 9 am. the GOP strongholds of southeast
()ne Week. ........................................... l .&amp;O
One MonU. .........................................$6.116
to noon at the old high school and southwest Ohio are being
One Year........... ,... ,...................- ...,U3.20
building
in Cheshire.
planned.
SINilLI: COPY

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................33 1/2
Ashland Oil........................23 518
AT&amp;T................................43 3/8·
Bank One...........................43 118
Bob Evans ......................... 19 318
Charming Shop..................30 1/2
City Holding ...................... 18 3/8
Federal Mogul.. ................. 16 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................66 3/4
Key Cenrurion ................... 19 1/8
Lands End.......................... 31 5/8
Limited Inc ....................... 21 112
Mullimeclia Inc..................24 1/4
Rax Restaurant.. .......... .......9/16
Reliance Electric................ 19
I/4Robbins&amp;Myers ........... 16 1/2
Shoney's Inc...................... 20 718
Star Bank ...........................30
Wendy Int'l........................ ll 5/8
Worthington lnd................ 23 3/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. q uoles provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.
In 1952, tbe Tuskeegee Institute reported that, for lbe first tUne in 71
years of tabulation, no lynchings oc·
curred In the United States during the
pmrlous year.
·

Brian Justice
top blue ribbon
poultry winner

Brian Justice, Pomeroy, was the ·top blue ribbon winner in poultry'
judged at the Meigs County Fair by
Harold H. Kneen of the Meigs
County Extension Office.
Brian took all three places for
ribbons and premiums in the clivisian for Cochins, pen of one or two
pullets and one cockerel. He also
took a firSt for a pair of pullets of
any breed, a fust and second for a·
pen of one or two pullets and one
cockerel and a fust for a pen of one
or two hens and one cock.
Delma Karr, Middleport took
two seconds for her exhibits in the ·
recognized breed chickens.
In bantams, Jacob Hunter of
Racine was the winner of fus~ second and third place awarded IQ a
pen of one or two pullets and one
cockerel, and ftrst and second in
the category for a pen of one or two
hens and one cock.
For her exhibit in Muscovy
Delma Karr
a ftrst

President...

Republican ...

PBJCE
lloity.............................................,:l6 Conto

Board to meet
noldeat,rt,_ to pay tho oani·
The Meigs County Public
,:.~·~~~~':,.orr; Library Board of Trustee' will
oatU.i!M8. Cndit wUt be tlvon comer
meet Thursday, Aug. 27 at I p.m.
.... week.
at the library in Pomeroy
No oubocripdOIIO by mall ponnlllod In
Srvacuse elementary CbangeS
areu wbere home tarrier aerrice Ia
avotW.le.
yracuse Elementary has
Mall&amp;obocrlptto 110
revised its daily schedule for the
1""c1o Mot., eo.a~;r
' coming year. School will begin at
13 Weeto......................................... t3t.U 8:30 a.m. All students will be dis·
26 Wetb.......................................... $43.16
. ssed
2 30
. b 'd
62Wetto.......................................... f84.76
mi
at : except usn ers,
Oototdo Motp C..•DI7
' who will be picked up at 3:30 p.m.
t3 Weeto..................................,....... W.tO More information about this new
26 w..u.......................................... k!i.l50 '
hetl I ·u
a weeto.......................................... IBI.tO sc u e wt be sent bome on the
first day of school.

D.il';rS:it:J•

COLONY THEATRE

FRI., SAT., SUN.

RAISING CANE

FRI. THRU THURS.

R

~(

WITH JOHN LITHGOW

0

IBJ®~

-:.:-~.;;'"-='

AND

BUFFYTHE
VAMPIRE SLAYER
PG 13

OIIE IVIIIIIG 5110W 7:JO
ADilsstO!t $1.10

WITH

446ottfi

LUI£ PERRY

,•

CHAMPION SHEEP. The market lamb
to Chr·i&lt;tw
Drake, lert, is Grand Cbampion Lamb and that
Sheets,
right, the Reserve Champion for 1992. The Junior Fair Lamb
Show was held on Wednesday night. Also pictured are 1992 Fair
King Bobby Johnson and Queen Bobbie White.
SUI Ali Mo\TINIIS a TUUOAY LfoMQil trNMf
SUI"*' 'DfiMSSIOH MIIMMIMOWI

�The Daily Sentinel

~ Sports

I

Friday, August 21, 1992
Page-4

I

LOCAL COLOR MAKING ATTEMPTBrooks Sayre, third from right, makes an
attempt at a first-place finish in the 10 race for
three-year-old colt pacers during Thursday's
harness horse races at the Meigs County Fair.

He is driving Happy Butler, owned by his sister,
Wilma Styer of Watedord. Metric MaD, OWDed
by Dean Fleming and drive&amp; by Ron Newhart,
captured first place iD the race. Sayre did, bow·
ever, capture second place In the fourth race.

Friday, August 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally 5entlnei-Page-5

·cleveland posts 2-l ·victory over Minnesota in 10 innings
fin;t-piace Oakland in the AL West.
"It's pretty embarraSsing how
we' re functioning," Twins manager Tom Kelly said. 'Thin$S have
got to turn around. 1 hope 11 starts
tolnorrow. It's not good, sound
baseball that we're playing."
Kevin Tapani (13-8) lost despite
limiting the Indians to three hits in
9 1/3 innings. Tapani, who had
never pitched beyond nine innings
before, walked Albert Beile with
one out in the lOth, and Sorrento
followed with a double into the
left-field comer, scoring Belle from
nrst.
Cleveland's only other hits were

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP)- Usually,
you ex.pect to wm when you .set
eight hits more.than the OP!JOSIUOn..
Usuallr,. you e.xpeet to wm ~hen
your.Pit,cher g•ves up two hus m
nme mnmgs.
.
.These are unusual umes fm the
Minnesota Twins.
.
The Cleveland Indians beat the
Tw1.ns 2-1 Thursday mght. completmg a three-game sweep when
Paul .sorrento doubled home the
wmn~n~ run With one oul m the
IO,th mnmg. The loss was Minnesota s s~ason-wor~t fifth sttai~ht,
droppmg them Six games behmd

Sorremo's single in tile fifth and
Mark Whilen's nimh home run
leading off the seventh.
"Obviously, it's a little incentive playing against your old
team," said Sorrento, who was
traded to Cleveland in March after
spending parts of three seasons
witll the Twins. "As far as being
vengeful or anything like that, definiteiy not.
"Ho.(Tapani)pitchedgreat The
last mrung, he JUSt happened to get
a pitch up. lknew it was a double,
and at worst we'd have runners at
second and third. It took them a littie while to get the ball in."

·

The.win i!llproved the Indians to
20-10 m the!! last 30 games. They
have the best record m the AL East
(20-13) smce the. All-Star bre!l'&lt;,
and the(re 7-3 m extra-mmng
g~.es th1,s year.
You ve got lo throw the ball
pre~ty ,good to hold that ci.~b do~
orli"!!t them"! three hits, Tapanl
said. I was usmg all of my puches
tomg~!· I had pretty good comm~d.
,
.
, H~ was fabulous, Kelly ~d.
Yo.u ve got to, feel bad for him.
We ~~st couldn 1 get any runs for
him.
. . ,
Tapam didn tallow a ball )Jast
tile mf1eld unul the founh mnmg,
8l_Id he. took a 1-0 lead and a onehi)ter mto the seventh. Wh!len,

howe~er, led .off tile innin~ with a
ho~e run, lifung a low, mside slider mto the upperdeck barely inside
the foul pole m nght.
"The pitch to Whiten was probably a mistake. He handled it pretty
weil," Tapani said.
Whiten nearly gave the run back
in the eighth. He bobbled Randy
Bush's double in the right-field
corner, letting Bush go to third
with no outs. Three Clevela~d
pitchers - Rod N1chols, Kevm
Wickander and Eric Plunk worlced out of the jam, Nichols getling Kirby Puckett on a grounder,
Wickander getting Kent Hrbek on a
grounder and Plunk (4-2) striking
out Shane Mack.

Nichols lasted 7 1/3 ,innings,
allowing one run and nme hilS.
Minnesota out-hit Cleveland 11-3.
• 'I have nothing personal
against their pitchers tonight,"
Kelly said. "But to expect Nichols,
Wickander and Plunk to shUt you
down or hold you down is a litlle
embarrassing. They!re majorleague pitchers, but a team of this
caliber should be able to score
mo~thlmone~againstthattype
of pitchmg. We didn't get any hits
when we needed them."
The Twins' only run scored
when Chuck Kuoblauch and Puckett doubled in the fifth inning.
Kuoblauch had four hits, 11181Ching
his career high.

FAMILIAR SIGHT- Tbis
is a familiar sight for harness
horse racin~ fans at the Meigs
County Fair. It is tbe sight
before each race as tbe horses
prepare to give it their ail. This
was the start or the get-away
race - the final race - for

two-year·old filly trotters
Thursday afternoon. Shamrock
Kate, owned by J. Asher,

Columbus, and ·R. Asher of
New Holland, went on to win
the race witb a lime of2:16 4/5.

owned by Esther, Cheryl and Lundy Crownover
of McArthur and driven by Earl Owings, raced
to the first place spot with a time 2:13 2JS.

RACING SCENE- This was scene at the
finish or the seventh race for two-year-old colt
trotters during Thursday's harness horse races
at the 1992 Meigs County Fair. Donald Duck,

At Meigs County Fair,

Donald Duck, Cobs Golden Hawk among harness racing winners
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
Two and three-year old ttotters
and pacers on the River Valley Colt

.
·' ...
In the majors

Circuit gave it their all at the harness horse races at the I29th annual
Meigs County Fair on Thursday
afternoon.

Major league leaders

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Tum

Eutt111 Dl•kloll
W L Pd.

I'll....... ..............69

52

.57()

S6
61
SLI..ouiJ ................57 62
New York ..............53 C.S

Montral ................65

.Sl7

4

Chiclao..................59

.4n

9.S
tl

PtW.dd,... ..... ......Sl

.449
.429

68

.479

14.S

17

w....... ol••""'

Atlanta ...................13
CINCINNATI ........67
San Dqo ........ ......64
San Fn.ncisco ....... j 7
Howton .................53
Lo&amp;Angcl.CI ...........S2

46 .613
S2 S63
.S29

6
10

64 .471
68 .431
(/} .430

11
21
22

57

Thursday's scores

Saturday's games

CINCNNAn atMonuW,I :JS p.m.
Ho.i.non at Phillddphil, t:JS p.m.
0\iCII!,O II Lot Angda;, 4:05p.m.
New YOlk 11 San Diego, 4:05 p.m.

PiuabwfJh 11 San Francisco, 4;(l:$ p.m.
St loWs at Aaltnta, I :OS p.m.

GB
]

4.S

115
14
1.5
IS

Wtsltrn Division

Oli.land ................. 73 48 .603
Minnea;ota .............67

S4

.S54

6

"" Chiclgo..... .............63

56

..529

• Tuas .....................60

64

.484

9
14.5
11.5
18.5
24.5

Thursday's scores
81ttimcm 2, Suulc. 1, 10 inninp
Tu:u 6. OUca~ I

Milw&amp;ukcc 16. Toronto 3
a...EVELAND 2. MiMel.ota I, I0 in·
:
'"

~lilomia 2. 8011a1. 0

Oakland I , New York 6

Tonight's games
California (Valera 6-9) al New York
(Hillegat 1·1). 7:30p.m.
. Seauk: (Johneon 9-12) at Booot! (Viola 10-9), 7:35f..n1:
Ott.Jand (Downa 3-3) 11 Baltimore
.. (M~Iinall - S), 7:H p.m
Te1111 (Ryan 5·6) at CLEVELAND
~ (Coat 4-S). 7:33p.m.

:

I
I

•

I

L~

Satunlay'saames

S..uJe (Hanlan 1-15) ll 801tan {Hittoll 6-'l. I &lt;IS p.m.
Taua (Wiu 9·11) at CLEVElAND
~ .. 13). 1:3Sp.m.
.

I

''
!

Dcuoit (Dohelt7 4·2) a1 Milwaukee

... (Na¥aao 13-1), 1:05 p.m.
1 · Tarcna (Swalanytt 1·1) 11 Minncao.,.. t1 (Smiley IU),I:OS p.m.
~
JCanau Cil:r (AQuino 2·3) at Oticago
~. (McC"'ri" 9-1}. ·a:tiS p.m.

I

()ak1and (CalnpbeU l-1) '' Balwnore

(LoW

I-4).7mi-11'-

.

Kania City (Piciwdo 1.-4)at Cbieaao
' (Hi- 1-l). 7j)S p.m.
'
Calil'...,;. (FW•y 4-9) II N&lt;W Yod&lt;
• (~'moo ,_13).7,]1) PJ!I.
: • Dcl&amp;roit (fta&amp;M 11-7) 11 Milwaukee

•

(I!W&gt;odl-l).tm~.m.

TOIOlliO (MonU 15·5) at Minnao&amp;l

• . ·(W.al•l).lj)S I""·

•

•'
•

•
•
•

Shd!icld, Sua Diqo, IS; Paulletu~, At·
lan11, 79; MeCiri.ff, Sua Olaf?. 71; Mur--ray, New Yolk, 71 : Bqwell. Hou.aan. 68;
Bondi, PitllbwJb, 67: V1nSiykc. PiiU·

Moait. Taronta, 1!5·S, .150, 4..46; FlamUta, Suule, 14-S, .737, 3.21; Appiu,
Kaow City, 14-S, .737, 2.21; Xmcacr.
MiMOIOU, UM, .714, 3.90; McDowelL
OW::IJO, 16-7, .696, 3.29; Mlwina, Balti·
mote, 11-S, .617, :u~ B • Milwaukee,
11·5, .617, 3.77.
S11UKE01JI'S - Clemens, Botton,
164: Penz. New York. 151; R. lolwot!,
Seatde, 147; Juan Outman, Toronto, 137;
Appi11r, Kta1u City, 132; K. Brown,
Tuu. Ill: J010 Ouzm1n. Ttlll. 131:
Ryan. Teua, 131.
S~ VES 7" Eckcnley, Oakland, 38;
Apilen, Minnuou, 32; MOf1tJomery,
K.aa1u City, 30; Ollon, Btltimon:, 21;
Jdl' R•Rll. TRU, 2'1; Reudon, Bolton,
25; Henry,
13.

......_,,.

Mil··•ee.

II; A1icu. 5L l.oWo. 10: V..Siyte.l'iao·

burah, 10; Offerman, Loa Anaelea, 1:
Moi'Uidini, Ptailaddphi1, 7; DeShielda,
?.

Transactions

........._,,....,..,a;.....

Baseball
._...
........
CAUFORNIA ANGELS - c.IIod "P

HOM!! RI.INS -lolc&lt;lrid; S.. Di&lt;co.
27; Sheffield, San Dicao, 1$; Dtullon,
Phil1ddphia, 22; Bondi, PiUibwJh, 20:
l. Wilker, Manueal, II; Kuroa.l..al An·
aelct, 17; Hollina, Philadelphi~ , 17;
Ptndlaal, Allulu., 17; Dawson, Oticaao.

Tim Salmon, oullid.cler, from Edmon~e~n
oldie Plcific eo., Lapc. Waived Van

"'""·-·

11.

TORONTO BLUR JAYS - Pheed
R.t.nd~ ICnou, e~~tc:ber, G'1 lhe 15-dly Ilia·
abled lin. Recalled D1vid Wctthcrs,
piscber, from Syncute olthe lntemllianal

STOU!N BASES - Oriuom. Mon·

""'- 61; DeSio;.)., ..........., 42; s•.

lAI ....d ... 36&lt; LontfoN, 5L ....... JS;
Robcna. ClNCINNATI.l2: Mclay, u...,.
ton, ll; Biyio, HoWilon., 30; ~1kma ,
Philaddphi.a, 30: Nilon. Atlanta, lO.
PITOUNO (1.4 decilimt)- Glavine.

leo"'·

conu-act with WCMQ-AM 10 onJinatt
Soonilh·l&amp;np.. lnldcuu ill I!l!ll l!ld
I"' with an option lluuuah 1996.
NEW YORK METS - Sianc&lt;! p,,.
Jilin Wi.ltM, thUd buanan-outflddc:r, to
I minor lciJ\ICcoalnct.

hnla, 10· 4, .714, 3.11 ; Swindell,
CINCINNATI. 12-S• .706, ~: K.llill,
Monoal, 13-6, .61J4, 2.96; Cone. New
York, IJ.6. .684, 2.15; Mcqan, Chicl&amp;o.
11-6, .647, 243.
STRIKEOl!TS - Cone, New York,
ll 0; Smolu, Allanta, 164; S. Fr.manda.,
New York, ISO; G. M1ddu, Chic1,o,
14]; Drabek, PitublltJh, 138 ; liJO,
CINCINNATI , 129; Bme., San Di.cao.

Football
NotloMI FOOiboiiLeacut
I'IIILADELPIIIA EAGLES - Sipood

Duck, owned by Esther, Cheryl and 10 second-place finishes in both 215 and 2:19. The second-place
Lundy Crownover of McArthur. races.
horse in the fifth race was Posl
Earl Owings was the driver. Bryan
In the fourth ·and lOth races for Date, owned and driven by Mike
Weaver drove Emmo, owned by three-year-old colt pacers, Ron Sowers, McArthur. Second in the
Donna Anderson of Circleville, to Newhart drove Metric Man, owned 11 til race was 0 V Elaine, driven
second-place finishes in the first by Dean Fleming, Lowell, to the .by Robin Greene and owned by
and seventh races.
winners circle for the blanket tto- Jack DeVore of Dover.
·Owings again drove Esther phy by Lambert Insurance Agency
Bryan Weaver drove Shamrock
Crownover's winning horse, with times of 2:06 3/5 and 2:08 1/5. Kate, owned by J. Asher of ColumCrown Time Discovery, to the win- Loi:al driver Brooks Sayre drove bus and R. Asher of New Holland,
ner's circle in the second and Happy Butler, owned by his sister, to first-place finishes in the sixth
eighth races for two-year-old colt Wilma Styer of Waterford, to the and 12th races for two-year-old
trotters with times of 2:14 and second-place spot in the fourth filly trollers with times of 2:16 3/5
2:16. The second-place horse in race. Second in the I Otll race w~ and 2:16 4/5. The trophy blanket
those races was Idle Acres Boss, Crown Time Andy, owned by was provided by Davis-Quickel
owned and driven by Carl Thorn- Esther Crownover and driven by Insurance. Second in the sixth race
ton of Canal Winchester.
Owings.
was Dancy's Dream, owned by
Cobs Golden Hawk, owned by
Misty K Lynn, driven by Brent Ursula McGaha of Freepon and
Frank Johnson of Hamden, cap- Davis and owned by Roy Mac driven by Ron Newhart. Second in
tured first-place finishes in the Davis of Zanesville, raced across the 12tll race was Eastern Express,
tllird and ninth races for three-year- tile fmisb line for fltst place in tile owned by L.E. and L.K. Hawkins
old colt pacers with times of 2:07 fifth and lith ·races for two-year- of Centerburg and driven hy Teuy
3/5 and 2:08. He was driven in the old filly ttotters with times of 2:23 VanRhoden.
tllird race by Mike Sowers and by
Kevin Johnson in the ninth race.
Terry VanRhoden drove D S Dart,
owned by F. Boyd of Vienna,
W.Va. and M. SwalZei of Vincent

204 CondorSl

~THE
GIVE IT ALL YA GOT - Strength. That's
what it takes and that's what Ibis team of hors·
es, owned by Douglas and Sons, bad during

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Andre Wttm, ..Cet7, 10 I I~)'CU conW1iftd Dcnnil 'MeKNJbt, offcnliYc lineman, md Dan Onrton, runnina

--

Stock IGM483

Mobl&lt;y. tiah• "'~

CINCINNATI, 24; Mi1ell Willi1m1,
Ab.ladelphi•, 22; Belinda, PittlbwJ,h, IS;

NEW fORK JETS - Wai¥cd Don
Boyd Od. .id. de!enliYC 'click, from 1he
phyCoal)y ""'blc .. omMm Iii&lt;
SEATILE SEA"HA WKS - Placed
Lmy Stayner, tiJhl .. d, on injiUOd rc·

Dibble, ClNCINNATI, IS; A. Pa\1, Allan&amp;a, 15.

Economy

Hockey

RUNS - Philli , Ocuoi1, &amp;9; E. Mat"""·
&amp;2;
... Minn&lt;sou. 12:
~web, Minnetcu, I I; Caner, Tr.ronto, 79: MeOwire. Oilltnd. T1 ; R1inca,

~

1aluy forl991 ·92 wu 1361,603 and lhll
Ric NatltOit and SteVe Kc.uuyd, .Wt1116mcn. were di&amp;iblc ror froa aaeney beeaua~~lhlir talari. fell below tltiC ••cnao.
N1ttnu, who ••• wilh tho Toronto
Mtple Leaft, ha1 tianed. 1n offa thcol
wid&gt; ... l'biloololpllio l'!,....J&lt;oM&gt;rd lou
~siJned. with tllil Harteen Vlhalan.
LOS ANOELES KINGS -Name&lt;!

Oriu&amp;o, 77.

Rill - Fielder, Deuoit, 103; MeG·
wim, Oakland, 93; 0 . Bell, Otic.ao, 91 ;
Pucllett, Minne.~. 88; Camr, T0«1n10,
86; Tbonw, Otielp, 12; }\WI Oonzala:,
Tnu, 12; Deveroa111, Baltim~n, 12.
HITS - Puckett, Minnuo11, 160;
Malek. Minnetot.a, 153; Bu:rp, CUVE·
UNO, IS \; E. Mutinu, S"eaula, l!il ;
Mlt&amp;inaly, New Yotk, 143; Fryman, De·
uoit, 14&amp;. Mclit.or, Milwaukee, I31.
DOUBLES - E. Martitlu, Sctu.le,
37; Mattinaly, New Yo!k, 33; Griffey ,
Set We, 31; Jetrcriu, Kanu1 Ci1y. ll;
Hall, New Yor:t, 31; Rcima. Teut, 30:
Joyner, K.wu City, 30; Winfield, Tr.ronlO, 30.
TRIPLES - DeYIIfUu.J;, DalWnon:,
10; Anderson, B1ltimorc, I ; Lol\on,

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lOW IAJI HIWICIIIG '

O'DEll lUMBER 'CO.

.

LET US SHOW YOU IIIIW
WT IT IS TO OW!I A
,,:11 EW

'Best Utile Lumbel Yard In Town'
634 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5500
Mon-Fri 7-5:30; Sol. 8-5
I'

.

.

·

1989 FORO TEMP0........................................................... 54,495.00
Auto., eir, power Jockl, 4 door.
·
1989 OLDS II REGENCY BRIX!GHAM............- .......... $11,499.00

ttl 1992 FUll SIZE PKIUP

You Don'1 Have To Look Far

$9,888

PROIRI• URI 8 ftiOCKS.

.

JENNINGS

1992 CHEVY CORSICA LT
til- DULl OI ·PIE-OWIID

c:yt., end Jock brokeo, po-

•Siagg«od

wlootllor
oasy

1992 METRO CONVERTIBLE or
1992 GEO PRIZM or 1992 GEO STORM

WhalGilor Mlllt lion...

Cl.EVI!I.AND. 7: L. ~- Oriut~ 7;

$19

w

1992 OIM IIRETTA

1992 CHM CAVAUER

loolta.

Mony colors lo
choose hom

20 Year Warranty
Class "A" lire ratino

$14,444

v.-. rear wheel drive.

10.98 gal..

e4hp

flcdaik Ju. dafit winJ.
TORONTO NAPU! Li!AFS - Acql.litW SJ:!:~cbvN, •cfcnseman,
frQm she
c.nadialJ fot I t!Wd•
n:amd ~choice ia 1994.
WASIIINOTON CAPITAU- Ac·
q\litcd YYan Conivau., ld\ " " fronl
tho Kud"ant Wbalm 10 comp1de lha June

1992 CHEVY CAPRICE

Trim Stain

un 449.95

~e,~R:'~~f;oct

\hal 1111\

$24.89
$34.95

Fiberglo~s

MODEL SZ1ZPM

Ri&lt;kNEWYOUISUNDHRS
Knch dift&gt;aot olmodla - -11·

IS t.radei

G

V-6, automatic, much,
much more.

optnif"QI. s-Ganon Can.

Nlllooal H..Uy Ltqut
Nm.. - AMtu~cad that an arbilntor
h1d dettlnnined Lhc ~~~~~c't 1\'CtlJO

.31\.

19 969

Int., Y·&amp;. BeautWul otyllng.

1992 OLDS 98 REGENCY

Br9llenslhl .. ati'Mred, old SlfOOih

WASHINOTON REDSKIN$
W.Uvod Gcnld RiuJ.rumin&amp; b&amp;ek.

Mimcao&amp;a, .321: Thomu, OU.ctgo, .319:
R. Alcmar. Toronto..316: Hatpc:r, Min·
netou , .312; Bacrsa. CLEVELAND,

STARTIIG IT

2 900

1992 OLDS TORONADO
Loaded, 6,000 mlleo, leather $

s.Jr1aca roolir9. A8o ptObrlp.lla
an:1 seall flfll aadU and small

.....

American League
BAITING - E. M1ninc1, Suttle,
.331; Puckeu , Minncaota, .330; Mack,

•

Aluminum Roof
Coatings

MIAMI DOLPIIINS - Sipol Onon

PICKUP ar
DELIVERY

GREAT DEALS WHILE TREY LAST

.....

$77.20

6"' 10'

SYSTEM

99

.

'

f==.:==':=:,\

GRAVELY

Thursday night's draft horse pull at the 199i
Meigs County Fair.

LARGE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS·CAD.·GEO ·
Announces '92 Model Year Close·Out

OR PAINT

Aluminum Round Columns
6" '6'
$48.14
6"' 10'
$59.61
a·, a·
$63.64

MAIN nREET•POMEROY

,_..,, Oh.

Spri11g 11111 S••er Hours
McilldiJ thru Fridty
9Ul·5P.M.
511•.9 ..... 1 , ...

White Double 4"

NEVER

SCRAPE

DOMINO'S PIZZA :

GRAVELY TRAC10R
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sports briefs
Tennis
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Jimmy Connors staved off another
youngsler in tile $1.4 million U.S.
Hardcourts, upsetting fiflh-seeded
Wayne Ferreira 6-3, 6-2 to advance
to a quanerfmal for the second time
in as many tournaments.
Connors, who will turn 40 in
lwo weeks, lost in the quarterflnals
at Los Angeles two weeks ago.
He's ranked 37th in the world, and
seeded 11th.
In other third-round matches,
top-seeded Jim Courier topped
David Engel of Sweden 7-6 (7-2),
6-2; No. 2 Pete Sampras, the
defending champion, took out
Todd Witsken 64, 7-5: and No. 3
Boris Becker outlasted No. 13
David Wheaton 7-6 (9-7). 6-1

light division or the draft horse pull Thursday
evening at the 129th an11ual Meigs County Fair.

992·2124

U'Ict.

Wc:ucllnd. Mattreal, 21; D. Jcn., H001·
...,, 27: "''"'' SUI Die&amp;~ 25; Owl...,,

Saw~

..

No~..,.lwa

FLORIDA MARUNS - SiJned a

Allania, 19·3, .164, 1.41; T11wk.lbwy, SL

123.
SAVES - Lee Smilh, St. Lou.ia, ]I ;

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Cdi!omia ...............ss 67 .451
Suule ....................49 7J .402

PITCIUNG (14 deciaiont)- Juan
Oumiu, TO!UIIIo. l:Z..3, .100,2.35; Jmrie

LoW., 13-!, .121. 2.03; Lei.hrandl, At·

Sunday's games

~

34.

Sandbat, Cbkaao.l3S.
IJOIJIILES - llw&gt;&lt;ln, PltiWie!oiUo.

•
Pinsbw'Jh CDr-be&amp; 9·9} at San Fran ·
• cisea (Oiivcn~l 0.2), 4:05p.m.
~"
Haus&amp;on OJamilch 4-9) It Pbiladelphla
. (MWholllnd 11· 8), 7!05 p.m.
St. Louis (Clark 2-6) at Atlanta (P.
Smhh 2-0), HOp.m.
•
CINCINNATI (Swindell 12·5) n
Monuul (Dames 4-4), 7:3S p.m.
~
OUeago (Bu.llin~ 1-3) n Lm Ange, Ia (0....6-12), IMS p.m.
·
Ne• York (Seho11rdi: 3·S) It San
. DieBo (HIIllll2·7), 10:05 p.m.

.451

Pblmia, Californi8, 40; Listaeh, Milwau·
teo, 39; R...., 0Uoo10o 38; R. lfa&gt;d&lt;o.
aon, Oakland, 31; L. Jolmlon, OU.cap,

s.nDaulton,
- .. 72.Ph.ilade1phil, 16;

33; Lankford, St. Lolli&amp;, 31; W. Clui,
San Francilco, ]1; Sbeffield, San Di.cao,
29; VanSlyke. Pitubw.tP, 19; OriaiOm,
Montreal. 21: Pend10lon, Atlanta, 27:
,...,.1,New Ym,n .
TIW'l..ES- D. Sanden, AtlaiU, 13;
Finley, Howtan, 11: Butla, U..Anallll,

65

LAND, 40: Anden:ora. Baltimoro, 40;

Ow,.n,
a.Bl -

Friday's games

... Ktnw: Cil)' ...........55

HOME RUNS - M&lt;Ow;n, Ooldand.
31: Juan Goaulcz, Tnu. 31: fieldct.
Dcwil., 27; Cuter. Tondo, 27; Tcalaon.
Odroit, 25; Belle, CLEVELAND, 23;
omr.,., """I' 23: o-, Do&amp;nod, 23.
STOIDI BASES- Lolloo. CIJ!VE•

.319; 8\ltlcr, t.c. AnJde&amp;., .319; ~
ton, Atlanu, .309; DcShieldJ, MontNII,
.JOO.
RUNS - Hallinl, Philadelphla, 76;
DeShields, Moatrul, 1S; Biglo. Hov.a·
1011, 75; BUller, 1M AnJd•. 73; Oriaaom,
Mot~treal, 12: Pendle1oa, Atlanla, 71;

Dieao, 145; OeShiclda, Montroal. 1.43;
VanSlyke, Piu.burJh, 143 ; Butler, Loa
Anpl01, 136; Lankford, S1. l.ouil, 135 ;

CI NCINNATI (Belcher 10-11) 1t
Monucal (Gmlner 11-8), 1:JS p.m.
HtwU~n (B. WillWtu 4-4) 1L Philadcl.·
"""(A&gt;hby HI). 7,3j p.m.
St. Louil (Osborne 9-6)at Atlanta
(Smolt.t.I4-B), 1:40p.m.
OUeago {0. M.ldd11a tS -9) at Lo&amp; Att·
aelel (0jcda6-S), 10:3S p.m.
PiutburBh (Wakdi eld 3·0) at Stn
Fnncileo (Bwk.eu I 0-6). 10:35 p.m.

•

~

RJTS- Sheffield, San Dieao, 149;
Pendleton, Allln11. 141: Gwynn, S1n

Piusbwp7.SanDie'o I

•'

to. 6;. Sicm, Tuu. 6; Wllitc. Toruuo, 6;
R.aUa, Oiap, 6; Molitor, Milwauk-.

BA TTINO .- Sh~field, San Dicao.
.337; Kno&gt;., l'hiloddphio. .33~ V..Siyte.
Phuburah, .327; Cwinn, San Dieao.

Clieago 6, San FT'II'Icuco S
Mmtn:al3, Alhn\1 2
St LoW~ 3, HWilOn 1
New Yolk ll , l...o1An~Jclai4

Easltm DlvWoa
Tum
W L PeL
TOtol'llo ................ 70 Sl .S79
B•ltimon= .. ............. 67 S4 .5S4
Milwa~cc ............. 6S SS .S42
Dcuoit. .................. .SI 64 .-475
CL.EVELAND...... ..S6 6S .46]
Bo1Lon .....................5.5 66 .4SS
Ne w YorL .............5S 66 .4.5S

W&lt;ocb. Mlwoukee. 6;R. """""'· r .....

Natloall Leope
GB

Racing to flrst-place fmishes in
the first and seventh races for twoyear-old colt ttotters, with times of
2:13 2/5 and 2:13, was Donald

MAKING THE PULL - Tbe Barnes pu16ng
team is shown making a successful pull in the

&lt;\I

amsu

Like new - muot aae.
.
1981 GMC JIMMY ............................................................ $10,947.00
4X4, Y-8, troller pkg., eutomatlc, Joeded,
1985 FORD BRONC0........................................................ $5,995.00
4X4, eutomatic,air, 2 tone point.
1989 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC................~ .................... S9,486.00
2 to chOOIIItom- VB, outo., olr, mo111.
1810 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ........- ......................... $1,112.00
2 Doer, V-1, 111110., olr, • - ·

PAYMENT FOI tt lAYS
308 EAST MAiN 1 1110WltlllPPROfrt
Cllf!ll' '

f lpiEIOY
'

�Friday, August 21, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Friday, August 21, 1992
·
Pag~

'Two dummies' try to stump Ann
DeDT Readers: /11111 on WlCatwn,

bl&lt;l I ~ llft bthilld som.e of my
favorite collimlls tliiu :;ou may have
missed tiff first time IJTOIIIId.l hoilt
1011 enjoy tllem. - AM Laiultrs

'
'

Dear Aaa Laade111: You are
supplied to be a smarrcilokie. Can
you flgllfC this oilt?.l bet my wife
SlO you'd flunk just as we did.
The parent or a Houston high
school pupil _recej~ , ~ message
from the IChool p:incipal concerning a special mcC;ting on a Jl!oposed
new educational pioPJ.
The ~ read: '•our school's
cross-gnlded, mbltiCthnic, individualized learning ptogram is designed
to enhance the concept of an
open-ended learning program with
emphasis on a continuum of
multiethnic, aCademically enriched
learning, using the identified
intellectually gifted child as . the
agent or director of his own
learning. Major emphasis is on
cross-graded, •mullielhnic learning
with the main objective being to
learn rUpee! for the uniqueness of a

''

l

·-'
'\.'
'

''

person.•

log technique used in (!'eating fans from waU
paper, material, and wrapping paper. Ri~bon,
lace,-flowers and beads are \*(~ to decorate the
fans.
,

DEMONSTRATION - Charlotte Elberfeld Is
o11e or seoeral Meigs Countians who are demonstrati•• lbeir crafts in the old log cabin during
tile Me1gs County Fair. Here she shows the fold·

r""

t ""'

•

_(.-..~_.

••

-&gt;

the float judging tontest at Tuesday's Meigs
County Junior Fair Parade.

CANOE FLOAT • Members or Chester Boy
;•...~Scout
Troop 235 row their way to third place in
..
.~-

i•

I
!
'

•

The parent responded: "Dear
Principal: I have a college degree,
speak two foreign languages tind
know four Indian dialects. I've
auendetl a number of county fairs
and 1hree goat ropings. but I haven~
the faintest idea as to what the hell
you are talking abouL" OK, Arin, do
you knQw ·What the principal was
trying to say? ·- lWO DUMMIES
IN FORT WORTH
DEAR FRIENDS: I don't think
you are dummies. That principal
needs to ' Jearn how to express
himself in simple terms .
What he means is: ·we are
planning a program for students of
all races, which we hope will
encourage the brighter ones to
move ahead at their own speed.
Grading will be geared to the
learning level of the student. In
this way we hope to teacll and grade
each student according to his abiUty
to Jearn." P.S. Pay your wife the
$10. Or better yet, send it to your
favorite charity.
Dear Ann Landers: Amidst your
pile of kooky letters, this isn~ going
to sound like much, but it's a
complaint I've heard frotll other
secretaries so it isn't just myself I
am writing for.
I work for a riiiD of busy lawyers.
One of my responsibilities is to
handle the phones. When I tell Mr.
Hossenfeffer that Mr. A is talking
on another line, you wouldn't

Philathea ladies
hold mee.ting

The Philathea Ladies pf the
Middleport Church of Christ held
their poolside August meeting at
the Gerlach's in Middleport with a
basket dinner.
Donna Hartson presided at the
meeting and gave devotions by
reading from Luke, "Special Gifts
of Love."
Prayer was given for those on
the prayer list itfcluding Joe Bishop, Hartwell Curd, George Pickens
family and Barb Betzing,
Attending were Nettie Boyer,
Thelma Boyer, Dorothy Roach,
Ella Mae Daugherty, Faire Cole,
Donna and Carrie Hartson, Teri
and Amber Hockman, Missy Frazier, Nancy Freeman and Kathy
Wilfong.
A special program was given by
Teri
Hockman: "A New You"
Band marches down the racetrack at Tuesday's
BAND PERFORMS • The Meigs High ~hool
makeover.
Meigs County Junior Fair Parade.
Plans were discussed for atlending Ladies Retreat at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly on Sept.
18-19. Meigs County Chun:hes of
Christ will be hosting this. The
The Rutland Garden Club will bloom; flowering plant in bloom; ern 1111Ullgemem including distOned · main speaker will be Pam Perry
present ils annual nower show foliage plant, can be a hanging bas· material. ' Division 6, junior arlls- from Kentucky Christian College.
"Discover Autumn Beauty" on ket; cacti and or succlilent. Divi- tic, beauty of goldenrod, you( The theme will be "Tune Up Your
Aug. 31 at the Rutland United sion , 3, junior horticulture, favorite design. Division 7, educa· Heart."
Methodist Church from 6:30-10 marigold, any variety; fresh flow- tlonal, display of gardening and
The meeting adjo!U1led with a
p.m. The club will also observe its ers, one stem. Division 4, senior arran~eing books and extension prayer and seven! or the members
artistic, members only, "beauty of material; fade Junior Garden Club, enjoyed the pool.
open
OOuse.
.
1
d
D.
.
.
I
Classes me u e: tvtston , majestic hills," a tallii11Ullgemen~ show and teU.
The September meeting will be
All horticlilwre .classes, as weU · held at the church with flower
sealor horticulture, hybrid rose; "beauty of orcha:rd and garden,"
rose, Olher than hybrid tea; zennia. including vegetables and/or fruit; ,liS the invitational classes, are open arranging by Debbie Toundus, prolarge flowered, one stem; zennia, "beauty of li country lane," mass; to the public. Mrs. Joe (Janet) gram preaenter. Teri Hockman will
small ·no we red, one stem ; "beaut( of a sunse~" modern and Bolin will be judging at 8 p.m. be in charge of the devolions and
Entries are to be in place 4 p.m. Nancy Freeman will be hosting1he
~ld,large type, one stem; any specia class. Dlvlson S, lnvlta·
on
Monday, Aug. 31 wllh oral meeting.
annual; ceiosia, any variety, tional, open to the public, "beauty
lone s1em. Division 1, container of nature's imperfections," a mod- judging.
plants, African violet in

Apostolic

''

lI

Ann

Milke It A Long Cool Summer/
WITH A HOT
SPRINGS SPA

FROM BAUM
WMBER

6:00 AM·3:00 PM

BAUM LUMBER
"'· ... 241, c.....,

915-3301

992 ·31147

Baptist
•.,.,. Wlllllopt~t Chun:h
Ash Strecl, Middlepon
P11s1,0r: M11rt. Murrow
Saturc.Jay Service · 1:30 p.m.
Sundly School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.,
Wednesday Scrvice -1:30 p.m.

Mlddh:pt1rl Churt:h 1ICI1rilll
5th •ntl Main
Panor: 1\llllrttun
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wunhip · M,ll, 111'31lo:m.. 7 p.m.
Wetlncsday Sc!f'litts · 7 p.m.
Krno ( ~hurdl of (~hrkt
Wonhir-Y:JO 1.m.

The 1992 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule
FRIDAY, AUGUST 21
4:30 p.m.- Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
5:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
6:00 p.m.- Hillside Stage- Belles and Beaus
Square Dancers
7:30 p.m.-'IhlckPull
8:00 p.m.-Grandslalld- Blitz Kreig Band

SATURDAY, AUGUST 22
(Youth Day)

Sunday school · 9:3q a.m.
Wonhip - )0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnc~day Service - 7:30p.m.

10:00 a.m.-Ronald McDonald Activities - Hillside Stage
10;00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.-Antique Tractor Show- Barn Stage
10:30 a.m.-Antique Tractor Small Engine Judging-Bam Stage
12:00 noon-Antique Tractor Pull
1:00 p.m.-4-H Fun Show
1:00 p.m.-Pretty Baby Contest -Show Arena
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractor Pull Championships-Show Arena
4:00 p.m.-Quarter Horse Race
5:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage- Barbara's School of Dancing
6:30p.m.-Tractor Pull
7:00p.m.-Youth Night- Show Arena
7:30 p.m.-Grandstand- Arm Wrestling

:i'.Jun t :hurch til' t:hrl!ll

Tuppcn Pl•l•!i (:hun:h ol Chr~
l,ashll': Rt&gt;hcf1 l't,.lcr
SunJ11y Schuul -IJ ~&amp;. m .
Wordlip . 9 : 4~ M.m., fdU p.m.
lk!tilcr Chun:h uf Christ
l 1at~~or: Chri~ Stcwarl
Sunday School · 9:3U a.m.
Worship · IU :JU a.m.
Wcdnelday Scrviocs · 1 p.m.
Rulland Chur(h tl Chrlsl
l 1 a~1or: J:uacnc E. L.'nderwood
Suntlay Sch!..,J • 9:30a.m.
Wonhir · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Ma.liotHI &lt;:hurch •I Christ
MillerS!. , Mawn, W.Va.
Sundly School · If) a.m.
WoN:hip · II a.m., 7 P·':" ·
Wc.Jnesday Service:~ · 1 p.m.

llcrek Slump
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
WoNhip - J(l:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Services - 1:30 p.m.

Uclhlchcm llilptht1
J&gt;u1or: Rev . Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 11.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m.

SuC&lt;.'CHS Kuld l.'tlun:h uf Christ
l'a~tor : Joseph H. lloakiJu
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship -' 10 1.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdn~llay Scf\11ceJ . 1 p.m.

Old lltthe Fr~ Will U.11ptlsl Church
28601 St. Ro. 7, Mid~lcpon
Sunday School - 10 ll.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
lllursday Scr\'iccs · 7:30p.m.

LlbL'f'ty Chrisli•n &lt;:hurch
l&gt;c•te:r
l 1 1 ~1or: Woody Call
SunW.y Sehoul · 10 a.m.
Evcnina • 7 p,m.
Wc:tlnt5th•y Scf'/K.:c · 7 p.m.

F11ith ll11pli,~l Church
lhiii'Oilll St, Mason
Sunday Sehoul · 10 1.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrviocs · 7 p.m .

•

Forest N: un B•pllst
lJaslOr: Arius llurt
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
. Mt. Mnrl•h ll•ptist
Fourth &amp;.. Main St. Middleport
l'anor: Rev. Gilhcn Cr~ig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship -10 :4S a.m.

Anll'tuily Uaptlsl
Kcnnel.h Smilh
Somd•y School • 9,30 o.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m .
Thursday Serviots · 7:30p.m.
l 1~&amp;wr:

RoUnd f'rtt WIU Bopdll
Salan St.
Pulor: Rev. 11aul TayloJ
S..ndoy School • 10 o.m.
F. venin&amp; -7 p.m.
Weftsday ~Mall · 7 p.m.
Alii Sir... ,•..._.M Bopllll

"On~ credit WARNING:

dHIQned 10 bl

~-...

lfllW alralnlng OOUflt, For Nftty and ~ lf1'0rmltioh!

~
-

1H your dlallf 01' c.IHPolari&amp;IOII-Irtt 111-800-342·31&amp;4.

..

I

.1.

-

-

_, ..

'r-

'I

RIVERFRONT HONDA
UPPER RT. 7 • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Pa~tor. Charles D&lt;wniaan
Sunday school · 10:30 a:m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m , 7 p.m.

Rttdnlllo Ch""'~ of O.rht
Pa.uor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Servia:: I0'30 a.m.
Dible Sutdy. Wcdncsd•y. 6,30 ~m.

Chrtsttan Union
·H.._ Ctoor&lt;• orc•rilt 1n
Cllrillloo Voklll
Pattor: Thcton Durham
Sundoy School · 9,30 • .m.
Evct.ina . 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCCJ · 1 p.m.
HarU'or• rhurth u( (' hrblll"

Chrt.llu t:oklll
Hanford, W.Va.
Pa1tor. RIC\'. David Mc~hnis
Sunday School · II o.m.
Wonhip • 9,30 o.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wednesdoy Senoictl· 7JO p,m,

Church of God
ML Moriah Clltlrdl II (;ttd
N:acinc
Pastor: Rev. James Sancrfield
Sundoy School . Nl o.m.
Evcnin&amp;· 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Scf\licc:s · 1 p.m.
Ra~lland U111rch uf c:ud
Pa~lor : John F. Cun:uran

Sundoy School · IU o.m.
Wo,-,hip - II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 1 p.m

Church of Christ

_..,c
......
212 W. Main St

O(CIIrbl

llas1or: Andrew Mile:t
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor~ip · IO:JO 1.m., 1 p.m.
Wednc:ulay.Sc_I'Vic:es. • 7 P·'!' ·

1S Pearl S1., MiJdlep.ut

Rutlamd
1\rthur Cr~htrce
Sunllay School · 9:30a.m.
Wor~hip · 10:30 a.m.
Thu~d11y Scr\'tC:CS · 7 p.m.
P11~1nr :

Ntw Ute Church fl God
0\esler

Jlanur. Rohcrt}Amley
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Wor!hip · 10:45 a.rn.,, 7 p.m.
'lburstiay Sct'Yicc - 7:30p.m.

S11lem Center
Pastor; Ron Fien::e
Sund•y School- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip - 10:15a.m.

Harrisonville HoUnc5oi Chapter
Putor: Re.... John r.icville
Sunday SchOOl 10 a.m.
Worship- II Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnclday Service · 7:30p.m.

Soow¥111e
Pastor: Florence Smith
SWlday School · 10 a.m.
Wu~hip · 9 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

llcthttny
Putur: Kennelh Baker
Sund11y School· 10 a.m.
Wof!;hip · 9 a.m.
Wcdne~lby Scr'Yiccs · \0 a.m.

R""lonlud Chumi or J...,.Chrl"
In Lauer Day Sainlc
l'onland ·Kacinc Rd.
I·
l'a.~IOf: William kuush
Suntlty Sct.ool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scnicc~ · 7:)0 p.m.

(~annel

1•11stor: Kennelh Hakcr
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;: 4d! Sun)

Lutheran

Murnlna Star
Putor: KcMclh Uaker
Sunday s~huul · 1.1:45 a.m.
Wor~hip · 10:30 a.m.
'lhuru.L.y Servir.x:s · 7:30p.m

St. John t.uthfrln t'hun:h
Pine Cinwc
Pastor: I.aura A. Leach Shreffler
Wors hip· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sctlool - )0:30a.m.
Our Saviour l.ulhcran-t'hurch
Walnut and llcnry Su., RaYCn:twood, w.v~ .
Pastor: Rev . Goorcc C. Weirick
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11a.m.

Gnham United Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (I st &amp;. 2nd Sun ).
. 7:30p.m. (3rHo. 41h SWI)
Wctlne~day SeJVice - 7:30p.m.

Meigs Cuoploratln Parish
r'\orthc11sl Ch1stcr
Alrn.'CI
PMslor: Sharon I hau ~ m11n
Suntlay School · 9J() M.m.
Wonh ip · II il.m., 6:30pm .

Utlhcl Church
Town~hip H:d., WC
Suntl~y Sch1••l · 'l a.m.

c: h\.'Stcr
Pll~lur : Shllrtlll I lausm11n
Wor.; hip · 9 a.m.
Sund»y School · I 0 a.m.
"lllursday Services - 1 p.m.

Worship · 10 a.m
· Hla.m.

Wetlnc ~Ja)' Service~

HIK'kin~:lk~l (:hurc:h

Gr»nd S.rtct
Sunday Sehoul - 10 a.m.
Wor~hip • II a.m.
Wetlncstlay Scrvi«.l!s · 8 p.m

Juppa
Pa~ lur : Hn:nd11 Wchcr
Wo~h•p · 9:3Ha.m.
Suud•y Schu.1l · 10:30 a.m
Wc dnc .~day Scrv1ces - 7:30p.m.

TttN:h t:bur.:h
Cu. K~. ltJ
Sunda)' Sehoul · 9::..0 a.m.
Woohip • 10:3tJ a.m .

l..on~

lltllium
Pu tor: Rc'll . SclOOn Johmoo
Suntfay Sehoul · 9:30 ll.m ,
Worship · \0:30a.m.
Wednc1.d11y Services- 7:30p.m.

Nazarene
lbrlnr Jolnl ( 'hun:h 1,f'lhf ~IJ.Jmlf
l'tnor: 'llllmu 1.. (iales, II
Suntl11y Sthuni - IJ:30a.m.
Wunh1p · 10:30 1.m., 6 p.m
WcJnc ~Jay SerVice~ · 7 p.m.

Hl'l.'dSYIUC
Pu tm: Rev. Seldon John son
Worship · 9:)0 a.m.
Sund ay School - 10:30a.m.
Wcll ncsday X 'rviccs -1:3tl p.m.

Middll'PHrt t :burt·h uftht ~uarC'nt
l'a~tur: Rc~ . IJuyd D. (irimm, Jr.
Sunday Sclk"tl · 9:3() 1.m.
Wt)f\hip · .IUJlla .m., 6:30p.m.
Wc.inc~d•y Scrvtu:~ - 7 p.m.

Tuppcn; l,.ains St. P11ul
l1u lor: Sharon llausman
Sunday School · 9 11.m .
· Worship - 10 a.m.
Tue sday Services · 7:30p.m.

K«.•CbiYIII~ Ft!lluw!ihlp
( 'hurt·h ci 1M r\u.arm~
l1ul0r : John W. l&gt;uuglu
Sunday Sdn1l · i.J :JI.l a.m.
WoN-hip · 111: 4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wc tlne~day Scrv•u:s · 7 p.m.

t:cnlr11l CluSI~r
Asbury (.Syracuse)
Pu10r: lk run ~ewnum
SunJ11y School · 9:45 a.m.
Wun hip · II a. rn .
Wctlncsdll)' Sc,... iccs · 7:10p.m.

f.'IIIIYIIIIKI!i

.
I
1\.)
,

Furcst Kun
lkrun ~ ewm111n
Sunday School · 10 • .m.
Worship · Q a.m.
lllursday Services · 6:30p.m.

Ch~er

Heaub (Middh.'pur1)
l1aSII)f: Frank Smith
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wo.lncid•y Scrv1ccs • 6 p.m.

Ru1J1nd Chrch fllht Nwrfllr
Pulor: Samuel Has)'e
S..ndoy School · 9JO •.m.
Wonhip·I0'30 o,m,, 6'.3 0p,m.
Wednesday Servia• . 7 p.m.

601 EAST IWN

POMIIOY, OliO

!&amp;or.s

..,.Jut

PRESCIIPnON SHOP

992·""
211 llortlo
5ecllltl
IIMi,.rt,
Ollie
\

SNOUFFER
fiRE I SAFETY
SillS &amp;SEIVI(E

992-7075

17! IMrth 5ecllltl Au

T' I 'r~art, Clio

of

0.

The SMIY•IIon Anny
II 5 Hultcmut Ave., I\Jmeruy .
Sunday Schtxll · 10:-30 a.m .
Worship - !O:OOa.m., 7 :30p.m.
MlddleportCommunlly Churdl
l75 Pearl St. , Middlcpon
Paslor: Sam Andcnoo
Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi~ . 7:10p.m.
F•lth Tabern1de Ch11rdl
Railey Run H.oatl
l1utor: ReY. Emmctt Nawmn
Sunday School . \fi:(XJ a.m.
Evening 7 p.m
Thur~day Service - 7 p.m.
Syncuse MI~Hn
14111tridRcman St,S)'.-.:u~c
Putor: Roy (Mike) "lltllfi'IJKun
Sunday School - I0 1.m.
Evening · fl p.m.
Wednesday Service . i p.m.
Hazel Community Chun·h
orr Ka. 1:!4
Panor: EJ~clll1r1
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:10a.m., 7:30p.m.
llytsYIII~ &lt;:ummunlly Chwr("h
Sunday Sc hoc ~ · 9:311 a.m.

Wonhip -10:30 •. m., 7 p.m
llurllnalon Communliy Church
·
Hurlincham
Pastor: Ray L..udcnnilt
Sunday School . I0 a.m.
Worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
Chrl~ian

Jo'ellowshlp Crnlcr
Salem Sl, Rutland
Pastor: ROOcrt E. Muucr
Sunda)' Schn&lt;~ · 10 1.m
Worship · II : I5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesd11y SeJViu: . 1 p.m.

F•ilh GUNptl Churc:h
Lonel\nttnm
Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30 r .m
Wcdne1day 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive- Cummunlly (:hurch
11aswr: l.awrcna:: Uu~ h
S..ndoy School · 9,31) o.m.
Evening . 1 p.m.
Wcdncd•y Sef'licc - 7 p.m.
Unllcd Jo'alth &lt;:hurch
R1. 7 on l'omcru)' lt)r-l'•u
JlaJtor: Rev. Kohen E. Smilh, Sr.
Sunol•y School · 9JO a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne1d~y Servioc · 1 p.m.

While's t:hapcl Wc:slc:)'an
Coolv1lle Road
l'a~ tor : Rev. l)hillipRitlcnuur
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

Full Gospcll.l.:hl huwse

33045 llilan~

KOlO~ , I'oo1c roy

l&gt;aslor: Roy lluntcr
Suntlay School · 10 a.m.
liven in~ 7:30p.m.
Tucsda)' &amp; Thuuday - 7:30p.m.
Ncll'IC Scltlcm l!nl Churth
Sunday Worshtp · 2:30p.m.:
Thund»y scf'licc:s · 7:30p.m.
So~tlh

lkthcl New Tt.oslllmcnl

Si\'111::r Ridge
Pmor: Du~a ne Sy_dC!u•rid:er

"'''\.
.;'~"
'..
.

.

BILL QUICKEL

~~~! !~1

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011.
992-2975

Prescriptions

992 ·2955 .

.. .... •'.'

Ca.lviU"y Uihle Chun:h
l'omcroy Pike, Co. M.d.
l'»stor: Rev. lll~tckwoud
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wet.1nesd11y Service· 7:30p.m.

IAWIINGS·COATS

"IJil(llil ~·

992-5141

786 NoiTH SECOND l VE.
MIDDLEPORT. OttiO

Mitlolltpert

trnd St•rril't'

Established 1913
992-2121
106 Mv!Mrry •••·

.,_,.,

..
'

"
'

Pentecostal
l'en....,..IA ....,.bty
St. RL 124, Racine
Pu tOI': Williillllllohac.
Suntl11y School • 10 a.m. f
EYcning - 7 p.m.
Wednestl&amp;y Services -1 p.m.
Middlcpur( l1t.'flll'tUStal
'lltird Ave.
P11 stor: RcY. Cl:.uk l111kcr
SunJay Sch...,l . 10 a.m.
EYcning - 6 p.1n.
Wcdi'Jesday Scr"Yiccs • 7:30 p.nf.

Presbyterian
HMrrisonYIIIe Preobytcrlan Cburch
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Su~ay School · 9:45a.m.
Midllll-purl l1 n'Sbylcrt.n
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wo,.;hip · I 0 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th Sun.)
Synt·usc ~1r.ot United l..,_'"ibyh.orian
SunJ~&amp;y School - I 0 • .m.
Woohip - II a .m . ,~ p.m. (lu• lrd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sf¥enlh·Day Ad~l!llld

M•lhcny II". Kd .• l'umc:IU)'
P11s1ur: Roy L.awinsky
S..turday Services:
Sat-ft.lh Sdtool · 2 p.m.
Woohip - 1 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hcnnnn Unllrd Urftlwl"ft
In ChriSI C ~hun-h
TcJ1s Communit)' off CR IU
l't~lor: W:ob,:rt Sanders
Sund•y SchOO · IJ:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ScrvK:cs - 7:30p.m.
~:drn

Unltl'tlllrdhrM 111 Chrhl
2 112 milu nonh ul RccckYillc
un Slllle Rnuae 124
JJmor: KeY . Kohen Markley
Sund•y Sdtoc.M · 10 a.m.
Wu,-,;hip · 7:30p.m.
Wcdrwm l•y Scn'll'CS · 7:10p.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hamehte S.tw\

e. Main

6.hl
\27'

Veterans
Memorial

115 (. Momwlot Dr.

992-2t04

I,

'

Kejold11~ l.lre Chunh
:500 N. 2nd AYe., Middleport
Putor: ReY. Michael ~an1io
Sunday School - IU a.m.
Wcdrx:sday Sen-ices • 1 p.m.

992· 5I30 Pomeroy

Alu·a:r~ "

'.
"&gt;\

StlYc:rsYIIIt Wurd uf 1-'ailh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Sehool9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
lbumlly Service - 7:30p.m.

214

EWING FUNERAL HOM£

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

••
~,.

C11lw.ry l•ilatrhn Ch11pcl
J Iamson viiie Road
Paslor: Rev . ViclOr Roush
Sunday School 9:10 a.m.
Wur~hip - I I .a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsl!Jt.y Service · 7:30p.m.

''lttMI•IKnl.,kg Fllti CM11"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

'

.,.•
·•
'•

Spirihull haith Churtb
StiiiC 13K, Anli4u i1y
l)a slor: A. Stcwar1
Sunday School - 10 11.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
'llturstl.ll.)' Service - 7:10p.m.

(row's Family Restaurant

Pomeroy

•,

•
F11irYiew llibl4: Church
••
l.c1an , W.Va. Rt I
Paslor: Jamca l.cwis
Sunday School · II a.m. ·
:
Wo rship - 9:30a.m. , 7:30p.m. .,
Wcdnesda)' ScJViCC · 7:30p.m.

Jo:ct~.

Jo'e-lltiW!Itlp
128 Mill St, Mickllepon
Pastor: Chuck Mcl~non
~nday School · 10 a.m.
EYcnin~ · i p.m
W e tlnc~y Scrvux: · 7 p.m.

..

Jo'reedum Guspcl MIS!iiun
Ibid Knoh. oo Co. Rd. 31
Pmor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday Scttoo\ · 9:30a.m.
Wor ~hip· 10:4:5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sci'Yia:. 7 p.m.

Murse Ch11pd Chun:h
Supt.: Mike Mahon
Sunday school · Ill a.m.
Woohip · lla.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sci'Yicc . 7 p.m.

POMIROY, 01110-992-6677

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

\
(

Columbl.l~.

804 W. Matn

GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES

264 Sooth 2nd

Trinily Conarea•Uonal t'hurch
l'utor: RC'II. Roland Wildman
Ourch · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Nationwide tns. Co.
992-2311 Pomerov

Pom~ror

lltriiiiChotw Chordl
P.stor: Kohen Vance
Sunday Wor5hip · 10 a.m.
Wednesday . 6:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

Ph . 992· !101

Other Churches

..

Church oflht T\aurl'nl'
Pas1or: Rev. lie then Gr~tc
Sunday Schoof -9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., tq, m.
Wednesda)' Services _- 'p.m.

l'a ~ \or :

John F. Full~. Mgr.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 •.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

~

Carll'lnn lntcrdcnuminalloaull Ch~
Kingsbury H:OMd
•'
PK stor: Ciydc W. llcnJersoo ·~
Sund11y Sch~.AJI · 9:30a.m.
Evenin~ · 7 p.m.
,
W cdne~day Sci'Yicc · 7 p.m.
"

l,.uncroy 0 1urch cl the Nu.armc
11utur: Rev. 'll'llm•s McOung
Suntlay School · 9:30 1.m.
Wur~ip · 10:31la.m. and 6 p.m.
WcW'Ic1tl1y Servia:~ · 7 p.m.

,

1•mor: Keith Radl!r
Sunday School · 10 • .m.
Woohip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
lllursday Services · 7 p.m.

COOIR, INC.

Nt'W Hnen&lt;ft.urch of lilt N11..rrnl'
Pa••or: Glendon Strood

.

.....
'

SuntlMy S~::hool · Ya.m.
Wo,-,;hip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneuhay Scrvicc · 7 p.m.

S)ntusc ( 'hurdt uf lhf \11.armc
Pa~tor: HeY. Cilcnn McMill111
Sunday Sthool · \1:30 a.m.
Wu~ hi p · Hl:30 a.m., 6p.m.
Wedncklay Scrvi~1 • 7 p.m.

EnlcrpriSt!
l'anor. Keith Rader
Sund11y School · 10111.111.
Won: hip . t) a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuc~d•y Services· 7 p.m.

Mlddloporl, Ohio 4&amp;760

~

HMc:lnc
Roacr Grace
Suntlay School · 10 1.m.
Wonhip · II a.m ..
l'll.~tor:

l'uuhlllc lnllrd \trlhudl!d Pari~
11astUf: llaruld E. Alluway-l'riddy
eutllwlllr ('hurdt
Mam &amp; Fifth St.
Suntl•y St:huul · 10 a.m
Wu~hip - !,I a.m.
Tuc5tlay Scrvir.x:s · 1 p.m.

16141992·6867 - 1998 -00KSI

-

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

Rulhtnd llibk&gt; \1l'thudlsl
11ulor: Rc'll . i'll&amp;n \1)'en
Sund1y School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedne~li•y Service~ · 7 p.m.

Mt. OliYC Unilt'CI Mdhudlsl
Ofr 124 beh ind Wilkesville
~swr: Charles Jones
1 Sund.11oy Sch1x~ · 9:30 a.m.
Won;hip - 10:30 a. m., 7 p.m.
1l1Ursday SeJVices · 1 p.m.

93 Mill SlrHI

MEIGS nRE .

~:O.sl l..c11rt
l 'a.~lor: Kt't1cr (ir~e

l.»urel CIIIT Frt'f' M~thodlst Church
l,utor: IJc1cr Trcmhlay
Sunday Sehoul · IJ:lfla.m.
Wor~h i p · I0:10a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednestlay Scf'lltr.x:s · 7 p.m

· United Methodist

C\\ill 5rrltl

· ~ .\

.Sullun
l'•stor: Kenneth B~akcr
Sund~y Sd•uul · i.J:JU a.m.
Wonhip · 111:4~ un. (I ~tic Jrd Sun)

Sl. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Socontl Sl., Pomeroy
Pas10r: Laura/\. Leach Shreffler
Sund1y Sc;hool - 9:45a.m.
Worship · 11 un.

Ul~

1 " 1,, " l1

•0 HMI2 POIIrlllnck.l&amp;trltl L.P.

H•ktdl GronCh•rth

t:hurdt of God·~ Ph&gt;phto:)
O.J, While R~ - ulf St . Rt. 11&lt;0
l,astor: P•t llensun
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhir • II a.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 1 r.m.

~a•lUr: MCY. Waller li. Heinz
Sal. Cm. 4:45 - ~ : IS l':m. ~ ~au · 5:30p.m.
. Sun. Ctm. - M ~ 45 -9. 15 a.m.,
Sun. M111 · Y:30 1.m.
Daily M•:~~ · &amp;:lO •.m.

ATV'a can bl n&amp;llfOouiiO opll'ltl. Thtlt art lull· liD mlthintl

""""~"'

I.MnKS"III" t:hrl"'l~n Churd1
Sunday Sch!..ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • HI:JU a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ScMc:c 7:30p.m.

161 MulhcrTY AY&lt;:., Puorn:IU)', 992 -51198

,_,.. onty by Mtultl 18 ancl older. For yow- ._.ty: Alwayt wtlll nelmtt, •r•

on difficult ltn'aln.
'"" """Poll ria riCOTIITIIo
· ..
ICIIIhal au ATVCOtilul
rtdtrl

l,.sl~ :

SfniCU!tf t:t111n'.. of Gud
Apple ai'MI Sco.~t~li St.1 .
l1a11or. Reo.- . Davitl Muucll
Sund•y Schooland.Wonhip· 9:)() a.m.
EYcnina Scrvie~ · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7 p.m.

S.cntl Htart &lt;:al!Mtlk Churdl

Buy any new Polaris ATV
during the Choice
Deals on Four
Wheels months
of August,
September and
October, and take it.
home with no money do1111n.
Polaris StatCard, we're offering 90-day free
r...,... . ] financing and no payments for
,. .
90 days. Now there's no easier
' ::··'c··:·, -·- ·· way to own a Polaris. Your
participating dealer has the details. Or
you can have your choice of $200 worth
of Polaris cloihing and accessories - FREE.

Ur~~odturd Church of Chrhit
St. Rt. 124 &amp; Cu. K~. 5

Mt. Union U~optlst
Paslor: Joe N. Sayrt
Sunday School · 9:45a .m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wcdncsd~&amp;y Services · 6:30p.m.

Victory ll01pllsl
525 N. 2n~ St.. Miu.Jicpurt
l'aswr: James C. Kccsc:c
Wonhip • 10 a.m.,7 p.m .
Wctlnesday Scrvicc1 • 7 p.m.

Hock Sprln~s
l,as1or:Ke1lh Kader
Sundav School · 9:15a.m.
w(•,hir ·· lo •.m.
Wcdne5llay Scf'llu:cs . 6 p.m.

Hysell Run Holhu."'-" C:hun-h

Uradbury Church ., Christ
Pa~IOJ: Tt1n1 Run~
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Hope Uapllsl Ch.11pt..
S70Granl St., Mitldlcp.&gt;n
11ulur: Oavitl llry11n, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wunhip · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wetlncstiay Scrviu:s · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
llastor: Eunhae (Gntcc) Kee
Sunday School - 9:15 11.m.
Wuuhip - \11:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WedncRIII)' Scrvice5 ·7:30p.m.

l,11stor: Jack ColclC~ve
Sundly Sdlool • 9:)() 1.m.
Wurship . to:3UI.m .• &lt;dOp.m.
WcdnesW..y Ser¥icc5- 6:30p.m.

Pomcr•'Y First ll ~ptlsl
lras1 M11in St
PaslOr: Dr. Lee Morris
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Hillside llaptlst Ch urth
St. Rt. 143 ju~t ofr Rt. 7
Pa~1or: RcY. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - !I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Holiness
l'tne (iru"f Hlb" Httliftt!t!l Church
ll2mileoffR1. J~
l'anor: Rev . O'Dell Manley
Sund.y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -IO:)Oa.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeN icc . 1:30 p.m.

Put or: Rev. H:uy Mc.:Cany

Portlaftd Flnt Ch1rclt f#tht N1111renc
Pallor: WiUimt Justis
S..ndoy S.:hool · 9,30 •.m.
Worship - 10:40a.m.,7p.m.
Wednesday SciVices . 7 p.m.

1•e11rl Chapel
l'a~tor: 1 ·1(, ren~ Smilh
Sundll.y S~.:hool - IJ11.m.
Worship ·IO~.m.

lletlrwallow Rldflt Church ur Christ

Hut111nd lolrst llaptl:;l Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wun;hip · 10:45 a.m.

Middleport 1-lrsl ll11pllsl
Comer Sixlh &amp;. Palmer
Pa slOr: Rev. James A. Seddon
Stmday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10: IS a.m.
~cdnc sday Services - 7 p.m.
heine J.1rsl lhlpiiSI
Pulor: Slevc DCIYCr
Sunday School - 9:30 ll.m.
Wonhip · 10:40 11.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m

GrKt Epl1t0p1l Churdl
326 E. Main St, P&lt;mefQ)'
J•uwr: Rev. Dr. Roy C.. Myers
Sunday r.chooland wonhip · II a.m.

Weslr,tn Rihlc HnUnm; C:hun-h

Pomeruy, llarriwnville Rtl. (RI . 143)
Paslor: Interim puwr
Sunday School •.9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m~. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

First Southtorn Uaptlst
41812J'omcroy !•ike
l&gt;auor: E. I.amllrO'IJryu\l
Sunlby School ·9:30a.m.
Wm~hip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Mlnernllle
11 anor: Deroo Newman
Sunday School - 9 a. m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Episcopal

S..ndoy Sdkxl · lOJO a.m.

Slhcr Run Uaptlst
Pas1or: llill Litllc
Sunday S4.:hool • 10 ll .m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p .m.

MILLIE'S RESTAURANT
Will be observing new
hours .beginning .
August 24th.
Open Daily

,Assem_blyoi'God
W.Va.
Pastor:
S. Ealon
Sunday Wor1:hip . 10:30 p.m .
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

What's in an eraser?

br

:adler
lli'fn•

l'umeruy We.&lt;Uide t'hurrh of Chrlsl
33226 Olildrcn's llune Rd.
Suncby School • II a.m.
Worship . lU~a ~m . , h p.m.
Wc~cr.li~Ay Services - 7 p.m.

your call."
Confidential io He Promises to
Change, But Will He?: Don't bet
the rent. il11lre is no evidence that
a wedding batid will serve as a
tourniquet to SlOp a man's circlilatkin. If he's ruMing around during
courtship, he11 probably continue to
run after Jl18lTia8e.
Do you have qiU!stions abol&lt;l sa,
believe how many times rm asked. b1&lt;1 110 ont 10 talk lo? AM Lil!tdtrs'
"Can you tell me how kitlg he will booklet, "Su and the Teen-Ager,"
~· MOst of the people who call . is friJIIk and 10 the point. Send a
here are not yokels, AnlL They are. stlf-addres~d. long, business-size
'business executives and other envelope and a check or money
attorneys. Sometimes I get so order for $3.65 (this inciKdes
irritated I want to scream, "How in postage and liandling) ro: Teens.
the world do I know?" Can you c/o AM Lanilers, P.O. Box 11562,
suggest a dignified ~nse to this Chicago, Ill. 60611 :o562. (In
absolutely crazy question? -- Canadll, send $4.45.)
.
ERNESTINE
,
DEAR ERN: A competent
secretary can usually gauge the
NEW YORK (AP) - Pencil
importance or the caller (to her boss) erasers
are made from synthetic
compared with the person he's rubber and pumice, a volcanic
talking to. If the caller is more glass, plus a soybean-based filler.
importan~ she oould say, '111 slip
It's not the rubber that erases
Mr. X a note telling him you are errors, as is commonly thought, put
on the line, and he will .either pumice that actually scratches ·out
conclude his call or get back to you mistakes.
shortly." She can then let her boss
Another surprise for you might
decide what he wants to do.
be that the "lead" in a pencil is not
If it's a run-of-the-mill call, lead at all. It is a mixture of
the secretary should say, "I really graphite and clay. As for why most
don't know. Please leave your pencils are yellow, no one seems to
number and 111 ask Mr. X to retum know.

Rutland to present annual flower show

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

�,.

Friday, Augus121, 1992

The Dally Sentinel
- Pub.llcNollce

1~

· Public Notice

II;ba=n~d:.A~let11r:~=~~

llio 1
band. A 1 - eelllllllhlng ~11M
-utllll line of cndlt, In the allltld -unt, from 1 bonk.
1111111 - n t , llrOIII a banll, doing ""•In- wllhln the
doing buainMa wllhln the acor- of the Banking Iowa,
aeopo of tho Banking 1..., wiN ba -.1111 • comply·
wiH ba
ooonpty. lng with tho bonding
lng with tho bonding requl..-onL
NqUirenoent.
Aa a pror-lalto lor bfd.
Ao 0 proroquiolll tor bfd. ding, only CONTRACTORS
only CONTRACTORS thot .,. .wlfllll ODOT bid.,. qlllllllocl ODOT bid- don . . bo oonoldorod.
wll ba conaklerecl.
Co'ntroctoro submitting
Contrectora aubmlttlng blcfa for the bridge
blca lor tho brldgo ropl- mont projaet oholl lumlah
mont projecl ahotl lumlah thne alii of detlollad *1•
lhrao Nil "' dalalllll dr8W· lnga oNiod by a llconalll
lngs -lod by o Hconood prolooalonol onglnoer,
prolooolonal onglneor, olong with 1 1tatomont ol
olong wllh o allllllllont of oompllonoo wllh lho HS-20
compll.,... wilh tho HS-20 loadlng •
Tho IUCOOOIIUI conlroclor
ro.clng.
Tho oucc-lul contractor moy ba r-lrlll to lurnlah
may bo requlrlll to lumloh ony lob work lor .....rtaclng
any lib work lor JMurfacing proj- • required by lho
projaeta . . r.quilod by the Molgo County EngiMw.
lloigo County Enam-.
Tho .,volopo, containing
Tho .,volopo, contolnillg oach bid, 01uot ba plolnly
- h bid, muot bo plainly markod, "Round 5 Projocll
markod, "Round 5 Projaell - Job·t3·1 C-3 Loodlng
- Job-93·1 C-3 LNdlng CrHk or Job·l3·2 C-10
Creek or Job-t3·2 C·10 Mount Union or Job-IS-a C.
Mount Union or Job-13-3 C. IIICinpbury llridge".
18 Kingobury Brklgo".
Bid Spodllcationo moy ba
Bid SpocificatloM may ba picked up at lha Molgo
picked up at tho Molgo County Engln-'a Ollie&amp;
County Engi-'a Ollie&amp;
Tho liolga County
Tho Mol go County Comml11ion. . r...,o tho
Commloaloftlfl ........, llo right"' --rot or Nfoclllll'f
right to aecopt or retoct •Y or al bide, or any pollthore
bido, or ony , . . thoro of ond may roqu11t lho
of ond may roqueat tho Molgo. County Engln- to
Molgo County Engln- to pro cud by Forco Account.
llory
prooolll by Forco AccounL
llwy Hobo-,
Clark
Clark
·
Bo•d ofMotgo County
ll&lt;?ard of Malga County
Commlaolonora
Comrnlsolonots
(8) 21, 28 21C
(I) 21, 28211:

'""'""lid •

Cttloe
luiMiocl progr-a~=~
•

.................

'llleCounty. . bootlglllle

torS11t,IIOD.IIIcil.,.....,_
1112 aJIIQ . . . ."' provld-

.... Countr_..,....

collie=
. roquto . . .....
0.. · . 11,1111,
1 ....

..... . bill . . . _
. hold II ... IIWge ~iy
Cauillu u 1t p!OVIda dtJ.
. . . ... , . •••• lllfonM.
- - -............. h...
dallni!Md II 111M '-~111
111111 1lie Co••loaiOII-

IA111'1ioat .......

_... I

crione

tor FY'D2-..dl4:00
o'. . . P. II. .cin Auguot 11,
1112. ......... ...,...lion.
•i tlllldOIIAtv•ant . . ba
... Is alii bJ Ito Bolld ond I
lnot ....... h. . ~. wll ba
hold on Slf•bor I, 1112,
ot 1 o'clock P. II. at which
tlmo . . Boord. . . .,_....

Wltlclt llftiiOCII ... ba lndudlllln llle Caunty'a appfl.
calion tor ......
Tho pulttlcla lnlltlllto II·

,,

ondllller.rlngOIISipllmtlf I "'prooldolholrlnput on
he Cowat(l .... •don.

IIWgeCounty
eo.nloalonoro

'

0I

.I

!.

Mary........_, Cletll
8) 21, 21; 2TC

'

t

PubliC Notice

'

1110 NOliCE R)A
DESIGNAlED ISSUE 2
(ROUND AVE) PROJECTS
1H IEIGS COUNTY, OliO
Bid poop •+ tor II work
!-•rlbod In lito Court
louse. Pa••rOJJ Ollio unll
1o A.ll. on the llh cloy ol
1112.
Tho A.ll.
lrll bo oponlll
a110::111
tho lth day of
1n
1te2 and read

""-'*·

lop--.
jloud.

~.. ntCIIIIrJ to COII'Ipletl

oork lor - h project "

ollowa:
Job-fl-1 C-3 Looding
:rook RMUrfacing Project
rom St. 7 to C-12.
Job-13· 2 C-10 llount
Jnion Road RHurloclng
'ntjoct froM C-1710 T-14.
Job-13-3 C-11 Klngobury
~ Raptv m•t Plojoct
L7 oniloo Eaet of the Jet. of
iL 143 and C-11.
' Each blcldor
filo a
10% porlonttanco bond ot
;hi limo of the bll Ill ond
Jho 1 - l u l bicldor muol
I

Hobo-.

doacriblll horlin will bo
,....,... by lho Boord. of
llalgo County Contlnlaaionin tho Court Hou11,
Po.....,, Ohio until 10:00
A.ll on the 11th cloy ofllopt.,
1112. Tho Bldo wll lhon ba
oplnod at 10:15 A.ll. on the
llh day of Sopl, 1112 ond
rolllotoud.
THE PROPOSAL WILL BE
FOR THE FOLLOWING
WORK:
1 - Romovol ol old tanka
-piping.
~ - Tho inotallotlon of a
undorground lull otor·

...,.

......

Each bidder muat file a
10'!1. porformonce band at
tho tinto ol the bidding the IUCCMiful bicldor mUll
lllo a 100'!1 performance

Help Wanted

11

•l

or"'

BID NOTICE FOR
UNilERGROUND STORAGE
TAMKS REIIOYALANO
REPLACEIEHT •
Bid PfOPDiolo tor II work

, The prapos+ will be an
It placo bid; including al
lbor, oquipon•t. ond-

"'"*'

rett*•

Public Notice

'"*

FULL nME • 12 HOUR SHIFTS
7P.L • 7 A.M.
EXCELLENT BENEFIT PACKAGE,·
INCLUDING SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL
CONTACT
SHARON SIIDM~RE, RN,
DIRECTOR OF NURSING AT
PLEASANT VALLEY
NURSING CARE CENTER
POINf PLEASANT, WV
(675·5236)

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYS'IEIIS,

HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTOIIE-TRUCK*G

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
aGartltts

•Co11plete
Reinotleling
StOll &amp; COIIIIIDrt
F.IE ESTIMA'rES ·

985·4473
667·6179

lOW OPEl

OPEN MON.·SAT.
_,

9••

8/17/Pd.

~JAYMAR
- A illgl4-5 blll1110111 home willi 2Y. ballis, basement.
and ono car 11111111t· Tho home comas willi 2 lob, tencod
bock yard, 4 polthes, ond ""otly h a - floors.
$47.100
AOCK I.II.IGS ROAD- An older h«no ttat hu bHn
ClDI'I\IPI£111}· dr{J.-.:1 downstairs. Hu an II'IOtmOUI IMng
"""" with 2 boy windows, a boautifU kitchen with an
ialond. a cliW1g 1110111, 3 -..oms willi laogo Wllk~n cto•·
Ill. o nioo iNploco. a wrapamund pordl, ond
mony autbuildngt. titling on 1Y, acres of land. S55,000

RUILAHD -

A 2 IIOiy homo willo 4·5 bedrooms, nico
11on1 tilling pon:h, .....,.,._ cutot litlle play houM lilting in
aloneodbod&lt; yon!. Home hal a brand ..w roof ond ~­
toro, centrol air, 101111 new c.rpeting, ond SIOII!II build·
ing.
$28,100

.DIILEPORT- Colo 1-1- A wry woll klpl1 :r, st«y

110m1 witt vinytlidng, 2 biiiiiiOIIIS. FA NG lumoco, luM

$28,100

ROcK SPIIIIGI

ROAD AT FLATWOODS ROAD Tllnilic lacllion - A 241A8 Skyline homo oiltinlj on 11.
Hu a gigonlic hing n&gt;am, dning oreo, noce calli·
neto it l&lt;itiNn, 3 .,.,._,.,, 2 balho, • n~ bock tilling
pon:tt and a 111111 o1orog1 builditg. Would conoidar lnid·
a ...... it tgwn, •
$41,5011

'""ttW

-A 21101y tramo home willi 4~.
Hu 1 -coal and wood lumoco for choopor

36970 lal R11 Rolli

~

•SAND -GRAVEL• DIRT
•UMESTONE

(614) 992·3470

7/101'02/tfn

MICROWAVE OVEN
aad VCR REPAIR

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SAlE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Ches.ire, OH.

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FlEE ESniiAns
HAVE REFERENaS

lalaro 6 p•.lantlas~~t~

Ahw 6 ,... 614·915·4180
111711111- p4

NORTON
CONTUCTING

Electric
PI-Ing Replac.mtnt
Roofing
Windows

Free Estilates • Low
Rates for Se~lon
No Job Too Small

ca•~~~on~am

&amp;

l Notary Sarvlcu

CHECK CUI ' BELEC110N

AltD PIICESS FIIST

·11·'11·1-.

614·949·2i01 or 949·2860

IPIIIoi'I'IIY

Fill lniiiAIIS ·
Mtlfn St. llllll!l!t WV

(No S•dey Calls)
2112192

(304) t73·9560

7117/1 mo. pel

li

WIDD
SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Molitg. and a

1001111, -

lornilr """"·

witlt1111g1,

dining """"· and 3 boclrefrigoiiiiDr, YOUher ond dryer,

123,000

IIODL.EJ'()RI' - A commen:ill cornor building wilh
lfJPIIIX. 2800 aquantlaol Cquld bo 2 otoroo or onolargo
· Hal one boll and clolato 11M city por1dng. ,000
137

Come See

u,A, The Fair

DOmE TiJRHEA Brokor...........................'.......lt2·51e2
BRENOA JEFFEili ..................................,.... lt2·305e
OARLINESTEWAAT......................................It2-8385
SAHDYBUTCHER............................................iil2·5371
' IHERYLWALTERS.Cheohir&amp;......................... ,:Je7-o421

JERRY SPAADLINC .............................(304) U2-34tf

I&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeotone,
Dltt, Gravel and Coal
LICfNSED lnd SONOEO

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5-lfn

USED RAILROAD TIES
4·4-92·tlo

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

Howll'll LWritesel

New Ho11111, Rooting.

NEW-REPAIR

-ROOFING

Room Adclltlon1,
Kitchen1, Porcheo and

Guttii'S
DownBpouts
Gutter Cleaning

Batho.
COMPLETE
REIIODEUNQ SERVICES
F- ElL· 20 Ynt Exp.

CreekRoad i
Middleport, o•io i

7121111211 -

COUITIY LOTS
FOI SIU
1·5 ACRES

Will.. Dnltlt.. :;,
614-992.7144 :;

concl, 304·1ll.a724.

CHARLIE'S

PS, PI, AC, AT,

...,:~ wou
and LIMESTONE
DELIYEI'f SERVICE
SMall Dollt' Work

Each lot Itt f*tlally
wooded with excellent
d111lnege. Service by:
T.P.C. Wiler Co.;
Columbu1 l Soutllem
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
lndup
Owner Ananced

915·3~

ALL Y a n l - - II Plld In
DEADLINE: 2:90 ......
tho day boloni tho Ill II 10 non.

&lt;'

SUnoloJ
- , ldltlon
• 2:00• ,....
FI\IIIY. _
2:00
p.........y.

cHico~_._~,.

know~

Tom&amp;"~hl

\;d

614-992·69..9

Homllnl....
Etc. ·
V4 11110
OUt Cora iilu St
ROlli,
011581.
Solurdly Augull Z2nd. 1Z .. '·
S,........ Strolll, " " - Sltitll
And -.1:00 A.ll. To I P.M.
...

Pt. Pleasant

·•

&amp; VIcinity

LOCAIED COINER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY BY·PASS
992·5114

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR lEW W,tq nc
Wdync
· Dallon STEEl INSULIIED 0JIIun
RAISED PINEL GAUGE DOOR

RAONEMOWER
CLINIC

P.O. le1lt~W..• Jlty
IIOHf,. OliO

lhi•lr lotio .... w
Eajllt)
PAm &amp; SERVKE
lowers • a. Saws
•Weedeaten

614-949·2804
'

...

=r-T.:y-~i-"~·~·~·!.!!"""!!.

i •
~

[!]

- N·· •1--=..·: .

i

.,..;-.

OPENERS IISTAWI-Y. IP-$200.00
DMr Pin Opt11r

01110 y~~USIING co.
"""'"'""nolo that ,... do -.nth poopto JOU .._, and
NOT 10 lind _,., t""'"9h tho
moil,..i JOU- -igllocl
tho ollorlng.

5651, lllton

..

--ContorWii-Yau
-lloublo,- Wol, - Sopllc,
Slnall
. , _Or
,
tton a DrtvMay, Allin 0no Loan
......... '-- - . Opon Lata
l.ighlotl 1.fM-7lZ·
1Z2CI.

10n

Clra

Coordinator.

Rentals

31 Homes for 5ale

Me. wrtt. aa. C-30,
care al Paln1 Plauanl: Regis~•,

Pomeroy,

200 lllln St. Potnl Pllnant •wv.
25550.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

2021 ............ 5 ,... .......
IIID

I

..

. .

---=
...., __

'-4
:_::.•' a

- ......
ut 't ....

II •
;:::,-:~-.

=

0

1114 GilD

:.S::Wu.~jA~1
3 OJ lira g I, Felllp

Auguol 24, .., Loll Pomer~

on

124

ca..

In

11'-sviKa. llooka. cllolhing, zs·
color TV, - . . . . col1oo
table, etc.

PubllcSale

8

&amp;Auction
Rick PaarsDn Auotlon Cue ; Jny,

lui 111111 - . _,....
auc:tJon ...._
Uaa twd
III,Ohla
a
Ylrgtnla,
77U7III.

.'

9
Don1

Wanted to Buy

'

.,

Ratp Q.-.To: 8ol CI.A233, C.O

WOfldna

Third Avenue, G•llipolls, Ohio

GultW' Ampo,

....... .','

loon '*111111,

DobJ - . 114·1192·11141.
Wanloct To luy: Jri Autoa
With Or Wlthaul ........ Ctll
l.any Llvaly. 114 3U 7'11

. and furnlturo,

-·
,

,.

-

=--v.i: ;:;::;: tu 1; 4

n

·

2 I 1oom ho-,

pa~ly

~Ad~
SIMI
Aoont Cot·

tntiJ-;.r

=

-114--

42 Mobile Homes
~=-==::~;;:=
~
"": '"'p11"•11 -. ?/., 1
for Rent

: ; : - ...... 151,5011. -

~
mmt ' '

tg.

S. II AI. 2 U Jd..
a.1t 1111.
-··~• HDUSE fOR•••r
-·~
~
II 7 leal Ar8 Clmtr Lal • Ill

2 ..._ ..... ,_,r AK~Mi 3
- . . . - . , -143, 2m1.

- , , l:.wp

2 lA ~~~-. fur·

on Lillo •

__
---.....
.....
r-.r-,~.::

.,_,_,

lroMP:

0)1,; 1*"2-1151.

2 t I I OOM mobile home, unfur,

~ ':~ ~~nlceyerd,M

,

-

n , : ......
- ; ; ~ c;g after
...,.. ~

.

In Vinton

·--~·-

,, ....
1

.... A

• Dopolll

~

W.nlocl: -

C0mmunlty Sorvlco Organlu-

-

loci Tim Of Judy ol

ZT.!-5112,

or write to: Wayne Coun1,-

Nflfgorlll-

.'

Employment Servtces

.._Far
,_._zz
.... __ _
jif'_:.!:aa!lgii.'J..'"'J:
~;lill~~~~-t-~~~~
OIR
olld.,IOI-Dr,

~ cior _,.
....::..

t • 1 - apart_, In Pt.

-no-o,-

751 Second Avenue, Gllllpolit:,

614-446-2844.
VI'RA FURNITURE
6-3151
Rant.Z.OW»
Waahor And Drt•r $17.68 w..k.
Bunk Bod Complete, $6.29
- · 4 O..Wer ChiOI $3.t2
Wlllt, Racllnor $5.24 WHk,
Solo And Chair $10.38 Wnk.

CASH
AND
CARRY
1-304.f75.f04Z. AlfrigoriiOII Starting AI $399,
1PI Br ni,W.V..,emct.ncL.;poort·
WV 25570. EOE
tur· Rocllt1111 1141, 216 Bunk Bodo,
G - ,
J .JI&amp;~ Old, J W. -~
~·
Ut. Dlnotto Sll With 4 Plddad
Siding.
1
1IZ
~.........
..q.Hood.
IM12
Situation
Chain, $129. OPEN: - j l
......
_
2Carcw-.~
Wanted
Pwrp. . Cllr
1 t 1. ca.. turnllhecl . . . Thru oatunloy Ll.ll. To 6P. .
On Sundar. LOCATED: 4
~ ca~~· _,.. No Hud, ..t a dip, Clooocl
lllln 011 R - 7 On Aouto 141,
Babysitt•r nHCied. p1rt time,
In Conl-ry, V4 IIIII On UnPomeroy,
Klngtbury
arN,
Nfwencn pnferred, 6,_.9$1:2. 32 lloblleHom!l
, .................... lpla., cotQPikl
3161.
Colli ..-.a
tor Sile
~n T' o."' Socanil 53
Antiques
tlon, Inc. P.O. Box 216,

Wa~.

*ao•

G=.

Help Wantld
·..

18

l.iO"-:c;;;i;;~-;r;;;i;;:
-·

Wanted to Do

14110 C
..,
Will Babyolt In lly Home. f ... .. ..- - - - .

I"

homo,

EAA TREE SERVICE. ~~
· ,
Trimming, Tree Removal,
Trtmmlng. Frw EedrnatMI I
317-711STAftor 4P,.m.
bparllncad pllnlll ond .,..
will atvo 'IHIOOI In my
• f14-8f2~2 . .

-a:........,-

- I oct, hi liZ 2110.
$2201Mo. 458
111f, fwhlohocl, Gill_._
Soc
-..-.
,......
·
Dapoalt l A I WICI. fM-44122M.t1t t•atL
2
IQ
Air cond, FWMI

=~ooqutred,no
I

I

~---::-=:-'--:-':"::~Buy or 1111. Rlnrl,. Antlq..o,

1124 E. Main St-~ on Rt. 124,
Pomoruy. Houn: II.T.W. 10;00
a.m. lo 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. l14-lm·Z521.

54 Mscellaneous

Merchandise
2 Lets l Vaulo, Cltok:o, tn 01t1o
v~~~~r .....,. oa-. can
(ProCior'flll) 114 IIIII 1501.

g.,::

n~,o:,'s~•,•::.,.~~o~.,"~
l'lfl.llll.
2· 14" now roolvanto, $30 oach;

=bll=·~=

1: 0111 lrala ...,..orr, f1Di 114:

ttZ.szR

=-~ ~=...,!;

.......
.,....
••

•

•

••
•

•

etlld

t

Wood.

window, tn. F~100 1181
Ford pickup. 125.00. Wttho
· $10.00 IICh. Call 88Z.z1111.

61 Fann Equipment

~

,,

11811 Oklo Clam AIIIFII CoiL 4
Dr C:~ Tl~, AIC&lt;Ercol. Cond.
61411 •ft•• '·
1891 Chivy Corsica LT 3.1 V-t,

•

Ron's TV SIIVI~. •J*Iallling
In Z.nh.tl •tla urvk:ing most
ott.r br1nd1. HouM calls, 1110

135 MF Tractor, 700 HeM's,
Sharp, till IIF Dl-, Nlco; 281
aomo appllonco 11palro. WV
IIF WHh loldori 85 IIF With
304-616-2398 Ohio 61.-446-2454 . "·
Built Hog.IM-Zio 1522.
Air, All Power, 20,000 Mu.., E•· Septic Tank Pumping $10, Gtillla
7ft. King Culler, hloooy duty cotlonl Condllon, 614-256-1257 CO. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES, .. ·
bnolhhoa. uood •OI'J Uttlo, $800, Anytlmo.
Ja&lt;:kaon, 0H t.atl0-537·9528.
114-IMII-315.
11111 Chhy Corolco, 4do., Tripi• Roofing 111
&amp; •
BruiMogl, bocfc blacloo, boa automatic, elrbag, At;, IX~IIInl Npilrl, rtmodellng. dtc 1, let . , ,
condlllon,
31,000ml.,
ooklng
- . -lal 4ft . ..... hhog,
Ouanly work, frH ..umttea, _
$8000, 61..1148-2934 onytlma.
. . . 114.a43-5211.
WV02038S, 304-175-5528.
5614.
J.D. 34 Chopper, 2 Silage 11111 MUlling LX. 4cyl.. 8500 Will build patk) cov•rs. dec~a .
T... to.ondloo of ahlnglll, SIO; " " - llotlglr Sllloo Blower, •mllll, loodld,l'14-912·5082.
scrNMCI rooms, put up vinyl .
lorgoo gila plltlar I~ Ill 7Q CIIC te Ft. Dump C11ln Bod. 1013 a.o Melro, 7UOOmL, !Oldlng « tralllr ol:lrtlng. 814- :: ·
(tor undwlchol, Nlado), H;
245-0152.
'
58mpg, SIOOOi 114-n2,2601.
iM-892·7173.
.
Holltnd M hoy bll•r
'hD ,.. 14'" .... aida wall WcPTO drive, Naw ldll hoy :nh =~=er~.350,· 4 ~~ 82
Plumbing &amp;
tlr.a on rtm. tor m, 114-112- -lonor, llluey F~f:ton ~ouworo, ..,., 12500. 304-175-1331.
Heating
hay rakl, Ill non good,
. tO&lt;
5503 ... f14-IIZ·7V75.
Ill lcamaro RS, T•opa, V-1, --:C.-rt,...or':"'a-:Pl,...u...;m;.,bl-ng-- ••
1Wo ll«m wlndowo, $10; llono Ill, 304-882-32111.
4!,000 mlln.._ . whHa.
Founh and Plna
1ua $7; otono ....... $8· QE.CI Tractor, Accu.arin 53 Ford •!!!.!o
Galllpotla, Ohio
wlh anlenno, S30; l;wa=7173. JubiiH, Good Coniillon ; 1Ft. $tow. Aftor lpm 304.f10o7323.
614:44&amp;.3888
Blade, &amp;Ft. Oiac, 12 ln. Plow,
W.tor HaollrSOII 52, 40, 30 Go~ New
1Ft. King Kutter Brush 72 Trucks tor Sale
ion and 40 Gallion
Natural gu. Y'ourw choice. Hog. &amp;14-4-0.
tflll Chovrolll 314 Ton Pick.Up 84
Electrical &amp;
$118.illl Womoldorff • Tttomu 63
Livestock
HardwarL 114 ••• 011!1
,....,,...,...,..,.....,...,..--,,.,..-- go:m&amp;,!!;'~~ T:,:,F:,t;: 1,....,..,...R...,...,af_rl.:g...;e_ra_t...;lo_n..;.·_,
Woodburnlng S - f« Solo,' 2 Holllllln Hllltw C.lvn, 2 1434.
Rool.nllel
"'""marcill ' ·
114-245-61M3.
. llont._ Old, $450 For llolh. 114· 1115 cnov 414 ....-. ~.llllll; wiring. or :::~:•... .
tl8l Dodgo Aim 50 $3,115; lilA otor U - Glon.
_!441~4;m~;o;;;;'kT,;u;;w~
Eloctrlcol, WV000301, ..
55
Building
2 Horoo aomnaek Trottor With 1181 Nlolln P.U. $2.11111ci,.~M7 lllzdo P.U. $2,1N; 1NI
S. 304.fll-1711.
"
10,
P.U.
lUIS;
ChovB
1-10
.
·
•
Supplies
~;~=·
1 11uor sc.ns·t1181 Ford ronco 85 Gtl'ltrll Hauling
""
Z4x40118 two car
2"11 ~lriOontl,. Fund, $1,100. K p;IN; ttN ford F-150 P.U.
.,
$2,711• 1- Cttov. S.10 Auto, WI Do Hautlno ~lma,
1-3'
ontry, z.
Z.
2d Windo•a, IMWitld root, Rtg~6iiid AngUI catt .., I bul'-, P.U. $'2,2tl; till !JodG! P.U. ~. No Joll Too llg Or
_ . . . _ ~·· --~
3 ........._ 1 cow. Priced upon St.IM; tM1 Fonl P.U. -.~~~~ Too Uttlo. I
etnnlno, ..;
lnopoction. 114-'1112·3033.
II&amp;D Auto latao, 11wJ
·
.
My Klndl 1,.: •
Mlln N. Of U.l. Jl, 114-446- 37W2TII Anytlma.
~·
,
I,
~~-. ;J;,~fo"ton''- -Fpotooro- Raglllold-Pon~-artarHor oo u..~, ...l
S o - Sollbool. Naw. c ....
plllo. 1500. 304.f7s.tll)4.
Tappan lllc,_avo Ovon, Vory
Cloan. Phona: 114-441-2311,150.
Tamco Nil. g11 tumoco, aood
conclltlon, $1110; 114-1112-510t.
Twin II...., tor 150, 3 Lloyd
lown chllro, $8 IICh, 614-V82·

tyr.•

---17Z6.

or

11111 -.,

:=

C':'
111

r.:::= ..:.:r:a:. C:,. ,:

21"'1'ngMwoa laDr lftOCitl1 DOlor

'"1124. New tn-

CrHk Road, 114-446o02M.

loll $1,185; , . lion: ~· ----~-J~E~T------- ;
XR? $1,115; 19113 Pulllr Ml'ltkHI Motors, repaired. New·..
$115; 1815 Chn Clvali• 11,111;
BlD Auto Salle, Hwy. 160 4 I r•buiH motors in •lock, RON
111111 N. 01 U.S. 35, 114-441, EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800537-11528.
INS.

~

o-..-

4

11 5

brick, _

24UI2t.

OIG

.

ce:= ~
w1nrv.--.2 ............ ~
IIIII. 111211. JIMoi7I.IAs or t-.., ill:"~· OH
.

tant ToddlorCIII,I14-44U22l

~~ ~Oilll~: ~

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

RALEIGH PROOUCTS. - 1
orlcoo. frldlr.. l SIIIO'day.
Fllncl1 500 F
llloklt. Dolo

~

Before, 1ft1t tchool. Dtop-ine

i\

.,=-:=-:--=-=,.,.-

a..lc Y•l at&amp; 1NI To 1112 ... .--.
,._
yr
.. ar•, ma
SIQOcal--.
B.-, IM-m-SS41, or StudCott, 304.fl5-408Z. .

Mial Paula'l Doy C.. Cwtfwo.
Solo, allordabll, chlklcono· llf.F
I ' ·"" • 5:30 p.ni. Agio ~10.
welcome. 114

.

boat :J04..675-3156.

•

Used Wulto&lt; a Drvor Sal•l S75
l Up, AI Sold With W.rrs,.y.
Till w.- • Dryor Shop,.,

Paid: All Old U.S.
Calno, Gold Rinas. SW. ~.
Gold Calno. II.U . Coin Shop,
,. ~ Gottljoolto.
Wonlocl: 4 11211. tollIMoth ::. ..,.,.,
alntondoalar,IMI4~1

lS...

$500,

l?:'iar r::'t-oocf:-iu

tumlture, huten, WISiem &amp;
Work booto. 814-441-3159.

ftoun of tr11ning' on hcnr to
provlde IIHtorM care to IM hil
ar, a- O..O.It.- .....,
,
s. 1ft aw1•• .._ ._
A r renca
elderly. After .UCC.Iful compltollon of lho training, JlPA - ' - . • - . .... Fill qooloooi.NoPD. . . . . o52l.
IIIII wUI you In finding t.Oi . llr - · ~ P.ll.
amploymont through yow Phoill: 111 •• 1171 ..... 3:31 44
Apartment
county'&amp; llldicald
f«
lor Rem
more fnfotmldan.
a• can-

Top -

Spider

co_.....

w.-.

\

:-:--:-~:----:--:--=

Qwallty HI Efflcle.cy
Air Colclitlllers, Heat

s.•

rani in

cxw 1111 c:ar, trucll.lloll. 181C.an
~ 1
. . - ,. _
tago In T_.. CIOio To G.-y
- .11! o.t.o, G 5 ' I W. ~ LM ndlry~P1'lvlt1 And
- . 2 ....
f0oo1,

a WV roaldlnl, and ,...
lncomo '
ollalbllltr
auid.tinH. "'ou will mcrln 3&amp;

::101 _ , .

Rt

Condlllon1

loolh, a' hd " " : ; lolgo

JT~A

=·IIICttOiuiO

1391 S.H114 SdtMI
G...... Olio
CrJ (614) 446-MU w1-aoo-tn·5967

I •

..... tor
POIIWOWJ ,.
_ _ ..,..._,1/Z 17H5111ttor.....
- _., ........
-

da~

~- ...................... 1

I B1mnetts Mobile Home

E

......_ JM..441.11t22 AfW' 7:00
P.M.
tn-lon.

45631.
•fll 2 N. Pl. ............. 2 IR WOULD YOU ENJOY WORKING ....., I lA, 2 - . FR, CA, Ito! -~
WITH THE ELDERLY? Till Job
Toalnlng Partnarohlp Act Oldar
Worltor Prog~~m lot oltorlng lroo ~
c:l..sroom training to individuals 55 y.1r1 ol age or ol·

CorYIIr

BIIGII Pupa, 7 -ka Old, 13(1 Toyota IIRZ Porto Or Whol•
Eacfi.l14-3n.ot08.
Cola, Phonl; 614·387·7034.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Country lloltllo H- Palk, Rt. For Sail: IIIIo A-ll• I
BNglo pupploa,
33N., under new ~1. llonl._ Old, 1171; 1111 Ford. t2wka. old, toh&lt;oto iond wonnod, 1975 Pontiac T11na·Am. 400 big
Accessories
Loll, 115; ronlalo, $235; Econollna Van, 1200. 114-371- 114-1012-3114.
block motor. runs great. NIMKI•I
2751.
1114-lllrl-2167
back glau. 1800 neg. 304-675- 1M1 321, INn Bored 30 Over, ~ , ~~: ;
2260.
350 Tr~n~mluk)n, $500. 614-441· ~...
0111co s-. uoo oq. 11., 2nd Gu cook otovo l g11 hoe water llolmaCionpploe lor 11le, 3
0618.
,,
matt
lo chool1 tram.
- · kay locllton In Pomaroy, hlllor, 150 oach. 304-773-a424.
DOS: o t5/V2. ContiCI: eon 1977 Oldsll8, runs good 1.l1,100. =-:c==-::::-:=-:--" .., ,
304~75-595&amp; ll't1r 7:00PM.
3 eunroofl, 400 turbo l11n1., ..
11WIIUI77.
Gono11a NutrKion I'Riducta Hyoal, 614-1192-5104.
mite. n Chev. van ptll'tl. 11+ · ·'' '
lollurtng Amino Acid Body Drlgonwynd c.ltery: CFA P•r· 1979 Chtvrolet . Plck..Up, Front 446-31f5
. .
··'
1 n., lpm.
Building', Wllaht and 111
1 Slam~~: 1 Kmens. 614- Ends BHn Wrec.ktcl, 11,000. 814·
. ,
Merchandise
burner fornd"aa. Availll*i IX·
·::,'.o&amp;:=;.t8:.:..-:--::-:---:-:"7."-:- Budall T11namloalono, Uood • ·: ·~:
clllllvoly II Alto Aid Phannacy. 446-3844 Aftor7:00 p . m . "
.,
11buln, llartlng 11 1111;._ ~onl . •
The ... war to dllt.
1171
Olda, tully loldod. Alto 5 whHI drlvo otartlng 11 oo18.00 .. '
Flah Tank, 2413 Jackson Av•.
... •,
Point Ploaunl, 304-175-2013, Unted Vln windows. 18x32. 304- 6l4-245-5Ci77, ~2263.
G11pa W111th Baoklllo, Etc. lull
Household
675-a8113 or 3Q4.67S.23101.
.
51
llno
Tropical
tlah
birds,
1
Doc011tocl Or Undoc011tocl For emallanlmala and aupphu.
New g~a tanka, boctJ
0118 ....,_,.
Goods
198G Buick LISMnt. 304-882· ton lruck wheelS. radl.tora,- ., .
-lnlormlllon,I14-2SI·t353.
2823.
lloot' mata0 ale. D I R Auto, • ' •
Poodle
p
u
loyo,
AKC;
1110
10,500 BTU Air Conditioner, 110 HaO'VIOI gold Cllblon rot • 30" minlalurw · 9chr1auzw puppl11,
Plug In, Vory Nlco, 614-256-6161 g11 range, both $171. aood .. n and pepper, COolvlllt, &amp;14- t9B3 Chivy Covallor, dapoon· ~ Wv. 3(14472·3833 "' I• . ·"
..S585.
.
dable, high mllugt, runs good,
Evonlngo.
concl. tAl Hondo 110 lhroo 167-3404.
$650.
3(14-182·3107.
'
Robul"
310 VB
lor 1m .'
..
$175.
304-671-2610.
2 Piece laiMI: Uving Room
Hay .,.. oalto, lt/bllo; 101• Pot bolllad pig to good homa, 1983 Honda Civic 4 Door, Good Ford F·IIO. Al!t.,lllo thin 3,000 ., ' 1
SO~ 150; Largo Panaaonlc
lllc.-.. OVon $60· II" COlo&lt; lllf'lklt• and box, afu 7, good h.tl lttter tralnlld, 4 m«1lh1 old, Condition, $1,600. 614-3 88•9816. :~-=- ~ tranemlllion. ..
T.V., $70; Othlr iltsc. ..,.,., 614- ·•·- •••· 614-lltJ5o4477 ahar $100, 304-773-574&amp;.
--.-• ..-,
1983 Uncoln Town Car, Air 311.o631.
5pm_,_-:·,.-,---:--:-::--::-...,-1 Puppy Palace Pill Shop. S1orao(MAII Powu, Sliver With 79
tampers &amp;
3 Pc. Wllorfatl Boctroom Suna, OC"
Hoooltallypa bod IIIIa, adluata l.oclloclln G.C. II•_,_,
- ,..., Co. Ga~ Block
I Fuol lnj. Auto, Ov•r·
Mot
H
•.
114 us 0551.
1o tft twin to qu.n ala Meta, llpol•. Opening aoan. 1514--441• drive Top, Excellent Condition, ---::,.....,,.-...,o,...r-=o-m_e:-s":-::- , ,,
S100i 114-112·5561.
0404.
Naw T1r11, Ntw Banery, Vary ;g70 Phoenix Travel Trailer - : ,
Snlngo On All VInyl &amp; Cor·
Konmoll
dryor,
aotd,
good
cond
Rabbit
Baa,.ala
....
1111
«
llada,
Clllnl
$3,200. 614-44&amp;.3561.
/Camper, Soli Contalnod. 17 Ft. • oi
StcCII. ~.00 Up. llollohon
plgtiM $75. SOlid brlu $100, 614- 2-2 635 "' 6l4·992· 1983 Dtda llolla 88 Royale 1850.114-446-2071.
·
... 114-441-11144.
oncllrono 120. 304.fll- 5855·
88,000 II lin, $1,700. 614-446- 1m T•ny 11 Ft. Self Contaln.d, • .,.,'
G.E. Eloctrtc Alnao And ..21~
Raglllorad Pn Bull pups, ohoea 4523 Alto• 5 P.M.
SIMpt I , · Good CondiUan, • ~ .....
RolrtQorator, $125 Eaclt, cadar
King woodl'coel Move wlblower and wormed, rNdy In 4 WMkl , 1985 Ply. Trlsmo AMJfM Cass $1,200.114-~·· 1818.
.... .
War&lt;foobo $100, 814-446-6310.
axe concl $300. fllnkUn wood now taking dopoa"a, 114·992· $800. 814-245-5371 Ahar 7.
1m Chevy eo.chnt~n Motor·
GOOD USED APPUANCES
1986 Bultk t..Sabre Umlttd, All nom., Clla C, 21 n., mu.t ._
Walhtra. clryen, r•trigeratora, burner never bMn u..ct $25G. ?821.
SunrlN KennelS, AKC Rogla· ~lono, Low lllluga. 814-446- to apprecilte, trades conrangas. SkaQao Apptlancoo, 76 114-441-11821.
•-•- wllor Condnlono ' ~• t
- Chow Chow Pupploa, Cur·
14 "•nar 1:00·
aldoroci,IM-1012·ZZII.
VlnO St-. CiUIM-446-7398, 1· ,~Y
ronl Ptwlk:at And Sholl, 614·
~lfi.34V8.
Ban kon, ~lr, 150. -~.
t186 Chovotto PS, PB, tilt, air, 1978 Nomad Self Contalnecf -.
looU good,
18.
auto, real clean car, na rust, 1 With A.C.IM-367-11165.
•
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Musical
ownor, 304-675-1584.
Complllo flloml tumls~~ llln'a ,loothar coa~ llkl "";j 51
18ft Z5 A. Coachftlln .lloluxo •
Houro: - I t , 11-5. II
125
Instruments
&gt;988 Chrysler Now Yort&lt;or, Er· (PuiQ1,Extra'a. b - Cond~. "
0322, S ma. oul Bulnille Rd. bla::.:.,-.,:"/l~~n.
:
111!J.
cotllnl Condition, High llllng•. lion, ...ooo. fM-441-3750 .
F-Dotlwiry.
Bundv ano aaroptoona, $100, $2,000 O.B.O. 1988 Plym...h
1887
Nomad
24ft
I111Uer
18,000.
Rtlllnt S11tion Wagon, Gaad
Round Dok Tablt, (Claw Movie Clmtrll and Pf'Oitclor 114-Sott-2727.
COndlllon, $3,200. 814-256.f251. llkl now, 304175-3353.
Feat, 2 Llava, 4 Ollie Arrow- .$60; arardoo blkl, 135; ~ omad
back Chalro). $715. Oak China truck toot bax, 1011111, $30: 114- Bundy trumpol • $50. · Bonn 1886 DtHa 88 Olda, local owner, 1991 J1yco roll-up camper,
trombono- $200. 304-175-6021
C.blnllla, Slartlng: $195. 114- 1192-5282.
exc. cond. $5195. 6......,.4&amp;.3i68 delul •eriM, •nlrtot b.lt.ry, ~~
an.spm.
--4311.
ahor 8 p.m.
$3,000. ·Zf25.
. •
Mufti Purpoao A~.::P Exorclslr, Soani Vory
Condf. Clllrlnlt, good condhion. H..
PICKENS FURNITURE
••
Oklamoblle
Roylle
lion, Hav. OWnlrl lllnuol $10. ,_ ...,... m; 8M-tm.eo7ll 1SIBI
NawiiJoad
Services
•
Brougham
2
Door,
Black,
evenlnge.
Housahald tumlshing. 112 mi. 114 t41 2380.
•
Lo1ded, 75,000 Milas Excellenl
Jenicho Rd. PL Pl•nnt, WV,
On Sill now lnt- flol IIIII For Silo: Uood Tnompoot Wlih COndltlonl $4,995. Phono: 614call304175-1450.
...... $1.V8 gal, . . , _ ""' ca.., 114-387·10124.
446·J01111, 114-441-4223.
Home
Rocllnlng chllow, mopll tabla, latu palnl $'13.111 gal. 5 lfll Snarl drum ptld, ltlnd and 1981 Plymouth Rlllant LE, 4cyl., 81
alumn fiberttted Pllnt $25. Palnl
Improvements
caN
In Sth g11cto bond Z.Z Iller, PI, PS, cNIM, stertol
COMing jars; 132 a....... .
~
PIJS4o::l5 Joe'-' Avo, only)
hi MW II Tho Plocl CIIHtll, 614·992·5382,
f
.
Barnell
Home
lmprovtmtnts.
Plpar. 85011.
: : : . :.... fllozors,
Room Adclnlono, GallgH, Er1987 Dod!J•, PB, PS, aUla, 1
~.,., Air Conditioner, Color Ono gllllon · - jug, $7;
- I lntlrlor Palnllng, Ez. :
35/mpg
$1,150.
1187
Plymouth
kKehln
tabla,
$10;
nlco
-trlc
58
Fruits &amp;
patloncod, IMurad l.ocltod Lo- ,
T 'o Etc. 614-256-1231.
Horizon,
40
m~.
AIC,
$SISI5.
304,
t-=:~ $10; EuNiul 8Wilplr, $5;
Cltlly. 614 441 1588,
..
675-2440.
Vegetables
-7173.
Rofri9wllor, Fooll Froo, Top I
••
Froozor, $150; A•h'lg... tor, 2
BASEIIEHT
Planlll Junlor Go- Cultlvat«, Conning tomatoaa, $4/buahll 188B Ford Eacort GT, Bilek,
WATEAPIIOOFIHG
•
good Brian ohoft angina plckad, l3ilo&lt;olhot yooo pick, Loadlld, 11~.
A~l"~ on
UncondMianll Hfwlirn. guaran, .,
tl, $25fi1U87--3262.
bring own container, Marshall
1888 T11ns Am. t~- loodld, '"' ~ ratnnc• fumlstltd .. ....~
AdiJM,
lAtart
Falla,
114·247·
dnlonar,
11251.
14,000
BTU
Air
Condltl-.... 1150; GE w.-, Pintle And - 1 Culworl81neh 2055.
58,000111, $6885 llrm, 114-1192· F- 1111ma1oo. can cotitet 1·
195; GE uryor, $15; lllyiiOf Thru
114-~. day
... night.
3481 .... lpm.
60
Inch
In
Stock.
Ron
Walhw Uke New. $150; ElectriC Evana, Jackaon, Oltlo. , _
"
-.....
w.
•.,.....
HaH·nmner
beans,
$8/bulhel,
Range, 30 lneh $15; Skaggs Ap. 537-8528.
11188 Dodge Omnl, 5 Spaod, Air, tlng.
Blue
ltka
.
boano,
$'Mouohol,
Alii GoOd Condttion, '-pUINiciS, 7!ii Vine Street New
Hours 8.f Monday Thru ~rlday; PortatM CD Ptatpr, Remala 01nnlng tomat-. $3.501bushol, 111111, $2,700; 111811 Plymouth CUrt~ Home lmpronm•nts :
1 To 2 P.M. Saturdry. 114-446-. Control fvlly Progllmmabll, you piCk, bring own contaln•r. Aolllnl, Auto, Alt. ~~ Mlloo, Yeara Experllncl On Oldtr I
Slablrt F1rmt1, At. 124, lum
73N1 1-800-48W491.
Hoodpltono, RCA Jock Roehl~ 11g1tt 11 Portland olgn , 111 Good Cond"ion, oo,&lt;W. IM- NM1r Homes. Room Addtllons,
•'
FOIO!dalion Wolle, Rooting,
256-t25l
goabll Banory, Ukl Naw, Altai: hOuoo on loft.
KKc..,. And Bathe. Froo EOSolid wood S pc bodroom suit•. 1239, Will Soli $150. 614-446tuM liu s.ru manress &amp; 4423 Or Ewonlnp: IM-441.f704. Sl_lvtr Queen Corn: Pick awn, tin Nlolln Sont11, Auto timet~! Rotwonen, No Jol&gt;
ooprlnga, $450. 3114-675-1504.
11.25 doz. Bring own conlsin.(. $2,995; 11118 " ' - Sontll 6 Too Big Or Smalll 614-367-0516. : •
Radio and TV tubN, 1T 35 ~)~on Rd., SI.At.5S4. 614· Spaod, ~.5illl; 11187 - · OISnd
SWAIN
Am U,wn; 1.1U SUbaru 11,711; Davis Sewing ...china And ~
spoaklll, 150; loolhor WOfk
.
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 62 lhoM, $5; boby awing. $5; 114- 245
11111 Ford LlD I $1,1111; INI Vacuum ~Nrwr _Rtf)lh', Fr• ..
Otlvo so .. Gattlpollo. Naw &amp; Usoct 361-77211.
PlckoUp And Dollv•ry, GoO&lt;gn •

't

Kltchon, L . - . ,

For-

.-,

c:pe.
Gllllpotlo lloly Tribuno, 825 IHVAC.7 ~
... 11

Color TV~a, . . _ _

Old _.....,

--witt

Coplocl toil~ . Woclnaoday, bo
,...
.,
I, tttZ. For oddMional liolofml.
lion _ ..., p - "'""'' wv
S c - lor ... !loot 100 ...
Blind, 301 Ellt lllln 91. A,.._
ney, WV 26751. Tsllphon1: 304822-4813 or 304-122-4111.
W.nlocl: Part-11mo BartFor l.ocll Prlvllo Club. E-.
lonl
-king
CondK..._
Woolo- Nlghto Only. Sond
County,

""'* IIIII
U. Your lllior 'ppMa • "

:.lint-....-.
=---·t..,., -

Tho WOII VIrginia ~ lor
thl Doaf and lho Blind .,. curronlly occopllng appllcotlono ""'
Pa,... Advlsoill to wan an •
part~lmo blalt wtth proKhool
vl•ually lmpand chlkhn and
t..... llmllloa In ...... c-.ty.
All - r y tnlnlng will .,.
PI'&gt;Yidod by lhl Waol "'"'"""
S c - .... tho !loot .......
1111111. ~ant• m...t haw a
collogo di-ln oclucation « 1
10111011 IIOid muot Hvo
wlhln 1 25 mill radlul o f -

Johnton llator, $1,500. Good

71

A 4 loci. No PilL fM-446-1734

f « - Or Sail On Land Con- 1 1 Z - 1 C t r lnld: 2 . . _ .. ca......_
0..3IIIGOiiii1Bat~Pieada
towogo. Ftont ....
Soooo R-.g; Ono S BodSi&lt;lng.
- . 2 ....... , LMgl Kltchon,

towanl

1964

Autos tor Sale

Cond1Uon,I1H41·10Z5.
Wanlocl: Boat traitor lor 14 ft.

!!:.!'&gt;'".,.

- :1: Or,

aprlngo Rood, 1-11.

P.,.ll.,.-::--:--,...,...,--AKC Aaglllorocl Schnauzer, 2
11
YNIS olcf. $150. 304-m-5424.

Transportation

====:;..:.;,=.:=.:.::,. "-===----- .••'

............ a lit' ;; I L • 311r, Ga,'ll 'r, Clau Chun:h,
SctDol,
Ubrory,
1325111o.
R I woco, SocUrily Dopolll

Auaull 21, 22. 31211 Aocll·

Puam.. 114-245-1224 Ahlr 4

-Of

R•SfX&amp;

pn:~a~alng,

AKC Raglllarad Cocker Sp0olel

1165 Allao Ski bolt, 1711. lona,
7511p. ....... 1600; 614-118$-4251. " .'
111111 Joltnoon Boot, 50 HP •

,._rt,,

albllttloa Include Plannl~~g lloy
care Prog111m To MMt The lndlvldUII l l - 01 Till p.,.
tlclpoont; Baina A Uullion W'oh
CommunKy A'aoncloo And Suporvlllon
or Stall. Sond
Reaume Bator.
11
To OIHII c-y
On
Aalng (Stnlof CltlzM. cantor)
P.O. lor 441, 1117 State At. 160.
Gollipollt, Oltlo 45631. EEO

114-24S.S817.
Babyolnlng: in my
Chuhlro: 614-367·7598.

Now Water Neaten. ,

, .., ·,

••r.

--·

Real Estate

linn. Good
-dlclltion,
- - - . . .. . llrick
qulood.
~.

'A_. AUAREASI-. your
wtth • · You'l 10vo tho

Pllll!pS,f..-.s&amp;

~~.:.

:::=:::.:.:-:-:::---...,..,=-=-

Land f« Silo: 11 Acno, M,OOO,
--OIOhla-,Phono:

at PomerDf Nu,..ng &amp;

RohabiiHation Cantor. EOE.
POSITION AVAILABLE
AppUcatlons BtlngAc•r""cop""todocl
For Part.Tfmo (10 Hours IWaokl
AN /LPN Polftion AI Adul Day

wv.

SIOIIIIng Roomo: nolfancy, BUT Elld:ric SunbiAm llwn mower,
CLEAN, 3 or 4 nights conseeu- 3hp, tB" twin bllcloo, ctoublllntlvtlr 1~ rates. lnterutld? 1ulotad, $50,1M-m·2638 ·
114441 3314, AlpiiMI Mol...
For or tnodoo nlco, young
coon hound, 1100, caH 514-N:f·
2635 or 614-~5155.
46 space tor Rent

ooq-.

304.f7l.f2li1

R.N.D.O.N. II 114-912.f801 I«
an application ., oppty In par.

SocroiMy • Aocoptlonlll, ....

11

~~~- o0fti.IOH7HZM.
I - Old F - , a" - - CUio. ...... Ukl
In F -· 114-

.. •""'

1580.

stMolna wnh cooking.
AtaOIIIllor ...... All hook-upa. Etoctrtc Knchon Range, 30" 175.
can after 2:00 p.m., 304-773- 114-446-8720.

Agency.

:&amp;-••prlablwoond,JD4..

Announcements

.,. •

S.=

7128/t211111D. pel

$1.50 doz.

I •

R - I« IIIII ·-or month.

fiM SlloUp And Dottvory. , . 2-1,.....-8-u-s-iness----1 51N7t0.
Oppon nlly·
";;i-At;;;;t;;;;;p;;;;i;Ej:
U
Land Do-n101•, Ef.

?::"
":~"'l..':rt
call ·~·=·'Y·
C.rol
Kanowolsky,

s.zs.'112-tln

FRESH SWEET CORN

Pure•••• of

="'Sail: SolunlaJ, Auguat
22ot, ?-Coaf,IIIIM, ,..
Boyo Clo41111
Slu 1-10, ,...
w-et«flll Stu 1-\~".''!11
All CtoiiiH, N - ...._
Hot ...., ...,.... And •.,..

--..
CAlL

~!:'

NocKsary, Also
wnh c.r For Ughl Sinal ...... prinling .,. zL
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
llolivory olk, Gas Allowlneo, Enrything you , _ to 11011
Apply In Pa110n ONLY (No IOII.ott- to 1 ICIW rioor lronl lo4a on Ohio
Phone C.llo) Mrs. carter, Sun• aaz.-oriiZ-3137.
.d.:.~~~.;','!!:'.::!!
112, Econo ~ llalol, Go~
llpollo. llondly Augull 24th, t ~ RaUTE: Got lllcll llriclgo In llolao County, A.M. -11:30 A.ll.
Oulcll? No Woyllkot W.- A - ... 114-IIS-31111.
Good, SINdy, Altofd'1bl1, IJusi.. Aaelge avlilablt tor home
Pomeroy Nursing &amp; RehabililaUan C.nlw t.s an Immediate - . Wonl ..__ · - - -ruction on lllyllum Ad,
,. l'llltrtcUona, wltll',
apenl~ for full tlmt LPH, 11- 8361.
lnfoormlllon . .ltod on

A-..111&amp;~1

FREE ESTIIATES

•'

- - .... llo!lOJ Down, . Stlrll:lll $12Dhno. Gollla Holol.

:u-

•nd Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimmlngl Removal

LL FARMS
PRODUCE

Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

W«k

Olflco

No
Hood

Lawn Mowing,

l1terior • Eiterior
Spray • Rol·lns·

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Corn, String Beans,

of

par
-11.
medical •••

:.="~:;

Financial

Now Taking Appllclllons At:
Ooml- Pliu, Gauipotls.
Part limo tvolot lor pltyslc:lan'a -

mlnoloaY, 'computer, ond patfocChatptul but n o t 11ry.
••• RSond
I owsumo to: PO lor
-· ac na. ,
Paaplo For Good
Paying (Ovor ~ Hou~ Vory

r.rtillzlng, Woedlng,

..

114-24- '

Drive,
tn - ·I:GOTo?
· 'lltunday,
Friday, lllunlly,

949·2391or
1·100.131·1460

(614) 915·3594•

c;

3 Fll'ltlly Yard Sale: llamewood ' . '

7121/''IJ/Un.

ROFESSIONIL
HOUSE
PAINTING

V~,

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

UINIENINCE

Chmer n Tuppera
Pial no.

SMALl DOZER

ld

. •1" 1
11187 GMC S-15 Jimmy, 4 WD, • ~ •

1987 Honda XR80, nlca 1500.
~6·~··~··!:;·~2~5~.- - - - -

.lmi'S LAWN

Approved Townohlp
Rolld (blacktop), 1/4
mile from Rt. 7,
loc:atad belwMn

~

1a8'7 Chevy 314 ton 41'4, IXC •

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

949·2168
pd

t

in• ""'~

u.car.

bcallonl CondKton,
OWner, 114-441-0108.

Yard Sale

FRE£EmMlTES

773·5614or
992·5249

38904leatl~

1

Painting

t ....

14,000 liMn,

74 · Motorcycles

1117/lfn

WHALEY'S AUIO
PARTS

7fJtf8tllln

11141.

CIH-11114.

1

c.,.van

108'7

FIIIIII=;.:.'Porl;.;...;;;;lo;;;nd;.:.,Olt.;..;..lo.;.;..__~ • ..- Il 'l
;..

20 Yr. Exp. , I C•llll, 614-742·2321

614·992-2213 i
Jerry C11dtr :;,
614·"2·3159 :;

992·7013 or
992·5553
or lOLL FUE ·
1-101-148..0070

175--t843.

Port•, Ohla, 114-

Loll: Purolorod F.... Collie,

S

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

MIN(;.

••c.Uenl

ced In Plly Aru. Aefarwncn
A\l'ailabltl. Rcdiay Arwa. Call

Fra~~tRepalr

-

'""'

\~

AI-. To Prlaoy, Child .. Pal.

ccu•••·'• • ·w

SpecWizlng In Custom

Route 554, At

A':&gt; ~ !6
rf M""/;S,

'•

·• o,.,;, ..._,.,,..,,.,.,.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Wit•

...

TROMM BUILDERS

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

l
1300 Vi•• .......

DARWIN, OHIO

__,. = .r-..s.

30oW75-4Z41,

GAUGES •IDDIDONS • SIDING

WELLCH10WN ROAD
-

0

304-m.H71.
lrnl Ford Cotgo Van, E•IIO,,
~ Condlt.k»n, $1,200. 11ot-446- ... ' "'
·
.. ,\r
trnl Cht1IY LIN_4~4~.For Sill,_ :,r;
Troclo, f« Yin, .......,... Truc:lc, ,. 01
::$1::-,200:-:. 11_4:-:4:-:414=332.-:-:-=-:-::-:--- .;8
11184 Ford F.Z50. 4 - ckl.... l"''

1881 Plymouth Voyag«, ,...· " '1
w"h wood g11ln; tNil Plymouth ' " 'l
Voyager, Ql'l)', PW, PD, Air: "'i
AMIFU II••,
cond~ " ...r

AND mRYTHING UNDERNUIH

PLASTER

JoeCusttr

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

to82.

-

-·

MiHit,.,tr Olt.

"

tvn Chivy Choyonne 4x4 kuclc,

PS, PB, nono good MOO. 080,

6 . Lilsl &amp; Found

FlUE ES'11MATES

917-$275.00 16•7-$450.00

tlfli
STUCCO ~ .~ ·

~aglll-

Moll Buff colalld
CoCkor s,ontat. 2 ,.. old, 1104111-3171.
Uood ..... tn aoool ....... to
gtvoawoy, ... .._~

3 Chovy lruck rl-. $10; 1o1go
woodon box wlllol. SIO; now
For Rant, Upllllro, Wllor Fur· - · SIO; 614-112·7173.
n - . v~Clun, Ill Cedar
30 g-. floll oquortum with
,_
t-1:• and....,_ flltw, all like
F....- Aportnwtl, SmaM 1 MW,$71,1*llt2-ml.
Bedroom. till ~~:IN Paid, 4 llcUII To Till In ClnlVt Foullll, Gatti
• ~- dMIIti·Voluo 180- Aaldng:
$40,
441t Aftor 7p.m.
Calll14-44t.oi1L
.U.K
AIIIIOid
llltlrlalt:
RallroMI Tin For Sa~ Stat•

0

0

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Fumllhod Apartment

1 -

-Ill• oav-

3Itl.

COMMERCIAL aDd RESIDENTIAl.

WHh 2 Tranatllln.re

112 W. .... SlrHt

umlnating. CoJIY, Fax

. New He•s • ViaJI Si.iag
New Gart1ges • Replace••t Wiaclows
RNMAd.itio•s • Roofi•g

INStALLED PIKES

1.11112 t .... ,..

CUSTER'S

Furnltur., Advattlelng
Specllltleo, Typing.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

-..,..I.

Carp~~~try

OHIO

UPPER RIVER ROAD

Ill

Now

'Ta6t 7H P• Orr 01 ,..,,
-Itt u, Do It For y,.•

OFFICE SERVICE
'--'"' 01.45769
1614) ~92o6U6
Olllce, Schooll An
Suppllel, Office

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S Auto CENTER

•Headllnere
• Convertible Tops
• Custom Carpets
•Custom Seat
Covere • Also Boats

3123/92/lfn

LINDA'S
ts'PAINTING
&amp; co.

• ..

Merchandise

.................... -Loll
In Pt. P~ Twin T__..,

RED

NMIIOY, OliO

1/2/tln

AND SUPPLY

'I9.9S A. DAY AND UP

Mon.-sun. • 1111-e pon
SN ua lor your hunMng
ond bock to ochool
nuda. Aroa'o lorgMI
ooloctlon ol military
ourpluolt.mal
1117pd.

POIUROT, OH.
8·11·'92·1 mo.

217Lioro.. Sr.

'~

.........

992·7083

992·7553

AlMa,,.. PHr.Oiflco

......-

AUTO RENTAL, INC. l,.........
,..._..
COCIIor IPinllf lObi. :IM411-

IWOIIIIU UTU

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
'992·5335 or
915·3561

ttaorttarna.
....

- -.
COOitlna. E-·
lng houOO, CIK _,
aftor 5:90 Plllor
Full nrM Podion Op••• Far
~ary In Day &lt;:On COntor.
General Secrelllrill Ail I p g r
llbllltloo In AclciMion To Itt&gt;
counto R.....ll&gt;fo And Poyll&gt;fo
Record Knpl. ~Of
Oftlco
Equ~.
lllood
P r - And Compulorl ~
qul...t.
tn
~- Sclonco p-_
Provlouo Ell&gt;lri.,... WKh ..,.
School Chlldron Highly Daotr.
abll. Send lnloroll l.lnor And
AnuiM a.tare Dudlln. ot
Augual Zl 11112 To Phyttlo
........ PHR, Ollicor,
Un-y 01 Rio Grlndo, P.O.
Boxlll8, Rio Granda, OH 45QI,

K~tw~ar-. '
Block • calico, ...
lnaUIN.
.141
· "''
114-:MI SIJS.

f&gt;Hchfork Rd.

$25.00 Par H-

AU MillS

H·92·tln

RACINE

lllldd'-t. OH
•DDLEPORT - Walnut Stroet - Enjoy tho Roominess

WICK'S
HAUUNG SERVICE

Pick .....

4S633ST. RT. 124

205rbth s.-,ct Ava.

origin, eu, age, hlnclcap,
polltlcalollllladon or bollela.

lrt.. II Ia Or Wo

BARN

OFFICE 992-2886

a

3Q4.C71.71tt.

County Rd. 111-

:;Jj'

CURIO

Real Estate General

-orctonc.

Uttor tnlnod d• clla ..d1 , . . .

WILSON'S ARM.Y
SURPLUS

flumblng
II PAll

FREE ES'llMATES

RN CHARGE NURSE

atruct.d on vUiagosroperty
locatacl at Flfth on PaiSirNII, lrllown • tho "Bot·
oyR-· projecL
Tho homM miMI ba CDflo
atructlll In
with.
Farmoro Homo .Admlnlotratlon opoclftcoUona• lheso
wiN conalat ofl1) th1 ttructural onglnoorl!lg bulletin
No. 715 datocl June 13,
11185, .. ilaUIII by lhl u.s.
Dlportlllent of Houolng 1nd
Urban Devolopment, 11
oppllcablo; and (2) tho
Farmoro Holllf Admlniotralion lnetructlon 1124-A,
Exh!blt C, and . FMHA
lnotructlon 1t24-A, Exhibit
D, construction 1llnd1rda
concornlng ' lhormol lnoul•
tion ond conforming to tho
19t2 Notional Eloctrlcal
Codlanct the 1m Ohio 1
2 Family Dwelling codo.
Tho project will roqulro
tho blddor to onter Into an
ogr11111ont wilh lho Yllloge
of Middleport to rocolvo
poymont ol each completacl
homo upon dHd tranoNr by
. vUiago to the homo buy·
ar 11 the limo of woch FMHA
Rurol Homo Loan cloolng.
Tho ouccooolul blddor
muat bo 1n Equal
Employment Opportunity
Employer which prohibita
dlacrlmlnodon bocauae of
race, creed. color, natlon1l

tor Rent

b..-=--11
......
-f7WU1
an-...

Public Notice

Tho Vlllago of Middleport Ia
on Equal Employmonl
Opportunity Employer.
The conotruction of the
eight hom• In Ioiii muot
be complotlll by lhl con· ,
t'ractor no later than
FobrUII"f 25, 11113, with
Public Notice
penally impotod lor dtlay
PUBUC NOnCE
of tho protect Tho propoaal
Sealad propotlll will b1 muot contain lho Full n1111a
rocelvod by tho Vllage ol of tho parly or ...,UN tubMiddleport, Malga County,
Ohio In lho office of lho
Mayor, · Village Hill,
Mlddlepon, ()hlo, until 4 1~r,:~~c~
P.M., Auguot 24, 1112, lor I•
lho following projlct
Conotrucilon ol light (8)
olnglo family, lhroo bod·
room homN to bo con·

992-3838

bo-1 will otoo.r. ond 2 full bllho.

==~~~=t~s~~~~=-------~==~====~~~~==~~~~~~--~~~~==~~~~~
11 Help Wanted
·NAFU® by BI'Uft Battit
44
Apartment
54 Miscellaneous
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
-------- ~

1992

Public Notice

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ctlt

,64,..,.....,-H....;ay:..&amp;,...G..,..ra,.......,ln,..,..,.._
300 blloo of miXocl hay, UO par
boll, IM-IMII-2t'IS.
.

UphOlstery

"

'
'•
'
\

I

~

!
l
I

\

'·
i
I

'I

'r

'

~
I

1
:

:
I
'

~

•~
1

~

J

j

1
'
o

~

1
A

J

~

:

if

~

IIIII DtHoongo S.1D lnoclc, 24,000

1fT

pa,_.to,
.
-~~~
~·- • Ford • .....-.
.........., ,..,..
- . 11to11 or tong. Ill

-..,·a Uphollllrfng
- Tho ·~ ~
....
atH 27 ,.....
In ~" .... ...,_
....... , ,;
Ctll ~54
... ...,;·,;:.··.'
"

oytio4'~••,;;~~~=-~··IIU
4~:;:owo:::r trt_,
~m!llll~··~44~
"""';:r. 304.fTU211.

.

tlmat

-.

f

.

,.,,1

• A"~~J
oh d.

jj

•?· ~

\

"''

�I

Paga 1Q-1ha Dally Sentinel

~Holter

receives
best of show
.
:honors during second flower show
'

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SatiDel News Stair
. Beautiful flowers arranged in
traditional, contemporary and
abstract designs by Meigs County
gardeners will remain on display in
the senior fair building through
. Saturday night when the !29th
•Meigs County fair closes.
More than SO arrangements
plus hundreds of specimen plan~
and house plants, are included in
this second fair flower show staged
this week by the Meigs County
Garden Clubs As$ocialion in coop:eration with the fair board.
. "A Year to Celebrate" is the
·theme for the arrangements which
· fi_lled classes depicting tho~~t spe·
ctal events of life from birth to
retirement at the Thursday show.
Arrangements of the first show
held Monday were exhibited
through Wednesday and then
removed 10 make way for fresh

flowezs.
Mary Ellen Miller of Scioto
County judged the sbow entries,
assisted by Peggy Crane and Alice
Thompson, show chairn&gt;en.
The best of show in artistic
design went to Patricia Holter,
Pomeroy, for her abstract arrangement in the class "Belling" V.:ith the
reserve best of show gomg to
Melanie Stethem, who depicted
"Heritage Weekend" by combining
flowezs with a railroad lantern.
The nature, art and industry
rosette went to Betty Dean who
used a metal container and sleigh
bells with flowers 10 bring in the
three elements. In the junior clivisi~n Ben Holter was best of show
wmner, Becky Taylor, reserve best
of show winner, and Lisa Stethem,
sweepstakes award winner for her
specimen exhibits.
Artistic Arrangements
Ribbon winnezs listed filS~ sec-

-/J

,,
.I

BEST OF SHOW • OutstaDdin&amp; arriDgcr Plltrkla Holter took
the best or sbow in artistic arraagemeniS at tile aecond Melcs
Couaty Fair flower sbow staged Thursday. ID tile class, "BeiUag''
tbe abstract design featured twisted llone.fSUckle vine, multicol:
ored glads, and plilladeadrum.

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two daya before 111 event
and tile day,ot that eveat. Items
must be received weD Ia advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE · Tent revival
fellowship Church of th~
Nazarene, Route 124 in Reedsville
through su.nday: 7 p.m. nightly
wtth Rev. J1m Kittle, Winchester,
~Y '! !llld The Sisson Family, Galhpoths. Nursery provided. FeUowship after each service.

I'

FRIDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA. ·The Liberty
Mountaineers perfonn Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
MIDDLEPORT · Ballroom
dance, Friday, 7·11 p.m ., Middle·
port Legion Annex . Music by
George Hall. Cost, $8 single; $15
~ouple. Refreshments available.
: RUTLAND · The Leading
Creek Conservancy District will
close Friday at noon so employees
may enjoy the Meigs County Fair.

RUTI.AND • Facemyer Forest
Product and Ball Logging, softball
tournament, Saturday and Sunday.
Call 992-5385 or 992·5654 for
infonnation.
HOCKINGPORT • Free dance,
8-11:30 p.m ., Reynolds
Building, Route 124, Hockingport
featuring Tom and Carol Wres10~
(Country Sweetfleans).
POMEROY · Joann WeUington
at Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, Saturday, 7 p.m. Call Pastor Pete Tremblay, 992-5326 for
infonnation. Public invited.
Sa~ur~y .

LOITRIDGE · Country music
night at the Lottridge Community
C~nter will be Saturday, 7 p.m. 10
mtdmght. Refreshments available.
All bands welcome.
SUNDAY
POINT PLEASANT - Weaver
family reunion, Sunday, West Virginia State Farm Museum, off
Route 62 north of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., shelter house No. 2, picnic
lunch I p.m.

: LONG BOTIOM · Faith Full
&lt;;Jospel Church , Long Bottom,
POMEROY · The Conquerors
preaching and singin~, Friday, 7:30 Quartet, Ripley, W.Va., will perp.m. featuring Dav1d Dailey and Conn Sunday, 7 p.m. at Freedom
the Dailey Family plus other local Gospel Mission, County Road 31.
sin~ng talent. Pastor Steve Reed
Roger Wilford, pastor, invites the
invttes the public. Fellowship fol- public.
lows.
MONDAY
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT
- Meigs Junior
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
High
Volleyball
practice,
Monday·
Liberty Mountaineers perfonn Sat·
Fnday,
4:30-6
p.m.,
junior
high.
l,lrday at_the senior citizens center

I

I

'I

I
I

in Point l'leasant, W.Va.

I

I

.I

'

I

ond and third, were as follows:
"Golden Anniversary", featuring
yellow; Evelyn Hollon, Pomeroy;
Melame Stel;hem, Pomeroy, and
Addalou_LeWIS.. ~eroy.
"B~llmg". VJbraule movement
PaUtcta Holter, ~etty Dean and
Karen Wezry,Racine.
"New Baby", the us~ of two
contamers: Addalou Lewts, Pegzy
Crane, Middleport, and Melame
Stethem.
"Quilting !3ee", mass arra~g~­
ment: Melante Stethem, Patrtcta
Holter, and Peggy Crane.
."TGIF', creative mass: Patricia
Holter, Donia Crane, Middleport,
and Betty Dean.
. "Stem Wheel Festival", featur·
mg weatlteled wood: Alice Thompson, Pomeroy, Pauline Atkins, Rut·
land, and Evelyn HoUon.
"April Fools Day", pop art Eve·
lyn Hollon, Patricia Holter and
Betty Dean.
'
"Gradualioo", line arrangement:
Melan~ Stethcm, l&gt;atricia Holter,
and Karen Werry.
"Retirement Party", including a
candle: Donia Crane, Peggy Crane,
and Alice Thompson.
"Family Reunion", ptcntc
arran~ement: Melanie Stethem,
Patricia Holler, and Pauline Atkins.
"Church Homecoming", religious: Belly Dean, Donia Crane,
and Pe~ Crane.
"Hentage Weekend", including
an antique: Melanie Stethem, Evelyn Hollon, and Alice Thompson.
"Country Fair", including fruit
or vegetable (junior class): Becky
Taylor, Pomeroy; Brent Buckley,
Pomeroy , and Lisa Stethem ,
Pomeroy.
"Sundar School Picnic", in a
basket (juniOC class): Becky Taylor,
Lisa Stethem, and Brent Buckley.
, "World Series", a favorite
design (junior class): Ben Holler,
Lisa Stethem, and Niki Lewis,
Pomeroy.
Horticulture
First, second and third place
winners for specimen exhibits were
as ronows:
Roses: hybrid tea, Betty Dean,
all three places; floiblllda, Patricia
Holter, Alice Thompson, and Betty

0

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ROYALTY· From left, Meigs County
Fatr Queen Bob.bie White aad King Bobby

Johnson wave to tbe crowd during Tuesday's.
Meigs County Junior Fair Parade.

.......

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FAMILY WINNERS· Melanie Stetllem and
her dau~hter, Lisa Stetbem were top willnm at
both Metgs County Fair flower sham. Ia nursday's show, Melanie. won tile reserve best or

GCI

show tor ller arrangement in "Herlta~t Week· ·
end". Her daugbl!r, Lisa, took tile junior sweep- .
stakes award tor her specimen ellbibits.
·

Turllw

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plela the project.

All a.,.clllc.Uona and bid
documanta .,. av~labla at
I CHI of S35.00 (nonrafun6abla) 11 tha Office of the
MI!Yor. Village Hall, 237
Race StrHt, Middleport,

Ohio.

.

A public bid opening will
ba hold al4:00 P.M. on Aug.

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NEW ITEMS IN
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Thou11nda of people laarn how to pnpare lncorna tax
returns from H&amp;R Block and than aarn money aa
lncorna tax preparera. H&amp;R Block, the world's largest
lncorna tax preparation service, oHera Ita lncorna Tax
Cour• atartlng Sept. 14th. Morning, afternoon, evening,
and weekend claaaea are available.

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~ New Ylftkll Worlllhop

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clinger. Sllrlo. 1!1

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tr11a to hllp LIVema's
h~ l'ti!IZI nil drum .

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11r1H Brldgeatone Potenza
Supercar Series, from Miami.

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RMIGtluau•tuaQ
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Thou lnteraatad In more Information about H&amp;R Block
Tax Course may contact the Toll Frae Phcine No.
· 1·•00·fAI•2000 or call814-882-6674.

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Char11s.

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Qll EVInlllld Novak
1:110 (21• Marl You KMw
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New Orlelna Saints (L) 1;1

1:00(1) U.S. flflll Report

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Greg Valentine, Big Van
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hot butterlld roll, small drink or cottee.

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1:110 (I) DuclrTalll

SUNDAY SPECIAL
SUNDAY,IUGUSI 23, 1992
HOMECOOIED ROASY IEEF DINNER

1

Corrllpondlnll/

(!) No

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D Nice Trllt!lton From Nice,

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lporla

Clounnat Stereo.

.
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Author/photographer Charles
Alshlemer exp1om the

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T-aWirl

r:.e-..
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(l) Cabin CountrJ

8DeJIINik

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Ill'•
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Again

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Wkll wolld of
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GymnaiiiCs Specllcutar.
ax!lltllllon gymnelllca from
Detroit (T);TIIV81'1 Stakoa
from Slrltogl SDrl..l , N.Y.

11:01 Cll World ol Audubon
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1:00 (J). Mr. CIIIDan

7:10 (I) 0 PI$ IJI

poaala and to wolve any
lnformalllioa or lrrogularl·
tlaa In the propoaala

The aHordeble fH Includes textbooks and auppllaa.
Graduatn receive Certltlcetea of Achlevarnant and continuing aducatlon unlta (CEUa). Qualified graduatea or
the course may ba offered Job Interviews with H&amp;R
Block but are under no obligation to accept
amploymenl
·
•

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• • • • ,. . . . Lighl
CNp .... lllll'all 1 "'

D Or1llt Outdoore Willi

(2:00)

Mountain, Ga.
8Niwi/ICIIRC1and
TIChnologr Wllk
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lll1alng Budolnlnr lndllna
Gcwemqr'l CUp from
Mldleon. Ind. (A)

~ ··'"

4:05 Cll MOVIE: 8kylackld (PG)

Bogga goes bow hunting fer
whllltall dllr In Pine

1::10(1) AI In ... '.......
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11J1 NIC lllglllllltll

~~~--

ID Gunamaka

(2:00)
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bJIS!dl

(I) . . . . . . .

right to rljoct any or all pro-

·

ID

::r*

The Village rHorvH the

Ideal tor people who want to Increase theIr tax knowl~
edge, the course taachea atudenta how to 11ve money
on their taxes and also prepares them tor a rewarding

IDr ............
ru t1
ID "(lit) ll1llt Wolf: 1!111ng

Dlp1tCn111

24, 1992.

H&amp;RILOCI OFFERS INCOME TAl COURSE
IN POMEROY, OHIO

(WI) IIIII 11 11up1M

o•
II 0 f1l

••

••

~

Flllotda

11

(Continuod from P• 8)

ID

llJ. Jllnlllontl "'·
0 Itt +I bI ., Hound.

TALENT SHOW WINNERS • These are tbe
ifannabs, tirsl place. Second rpw, 1-r, are the
winners ot their respective age classes Ia the
members or Ultimatum: Paul Briles, Sean Will·
Meigs County Junior Fair talent sllow, beld 011
ton, Trevor Petrel, Josh Bar5els aad Jason
Thursday at the bill stage. Pictured front, 1-r,
Black, aecondltbird (tie); Missy NeatzlinJ, secare Sarab Houser, second place; Alison Roae,
ond/third (tie); and Jodie Sission aad Stacie
first place; Whitney Ashley, first and second
RRee~)' fll'st place. (Sentinel Photo by Brlaa J,
place, Rachel Ashley, second place.i;,.and_Ash_leii.y_ _ _n~
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. , .

Gidget
7
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All

and Ron Slmmone.

MORNING

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WEEKDAYS .,_

Report

. -._,_

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fAll

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MORNING

·SATURDAY.

Cll•l I

I.-A

Ll

Dean; ~. Betty Dean, ftrst

career.

..._
WYAM

Experienced lnatructora teach tax law, theory, and application. Claaaroom dlacuulon and practice prqblema
provide atudanta with a thorough undel'lllndlng of aach
tax topic Included In the couraa. Students leirn how to
handle lncreulngly complex Income tax altuaUona aa
the course progresaea.

II

71

Ill

and third, Patricia Holter, second;
full bloom, Betty Dean, all three

Gladioli: Betty Dean, one fliSt,
two seconds, one third; Alice
Thompson, two ftrSts, one second;
Patricia Holter, one first, two
thirds.
Dahlias: Alice Thompson, one
ftrSt, one third; Addalou Lewis,two
firsts, four seconds, and three
thirds; and Peggy Crane, one ftrSt.
Zinnias: Belly Dean, two ftrst,
one second; Peggy Crane. one filS~
one second, one third; Alice
Thompson, one second.
Sun flowers: Belly Dean, two
firsts, one second; and Alice
Thompson, one third.
Marigolds: Betty Dean, two
fliSt; three seconds, and one third;
Alice Thompson, one first.
Celosias: Alice Thompson, one
firs~ Betty Dean, one lirst, two set:·
ond, and one third.
Junior Horticulture
Zinnias: Lisa Stethem: two fliSt,
one second, one third ; Karen
Thompson, one second.
Marigolds: Lisa Stethem, one
first, three seconds, one third;
Macyn Ervin, Racine, one fliSt, one
second; Nilti Lewis, one fliSt.
and Karyn Thompson, one third.
Sun flowers: Ben Holter, one
first; Ross Alan Holter, one first,
one second; Lisa Stethem, one
third; and Karyn Thompson, one
second.
Roadside material: Lisa Stethem, fliSt; Macyn Ervin, second, and
Karyn Thompson. third.
Roadside material, dried: Ross
Alan Holter, first; Lisa Slethem,
second and third.
Gourd Basket: Lisa Stethem,
first.

775

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Stereo.

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lllcllijj From Slruota, Fla.

(T)
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Tlltlnalagy Wllk
12:40!11 MOVII: 8upanMnlll (PO)
(2:55)

1:00 (J) . , . . -

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Ten POOIILIII l'ltwlea
Colc:ltllllld p(IYM frOm

Miami, WUitlngton, Florida
Sll1t, Non Dime, TexiS
AIM, Mleltl(rln, Florida,
Ptm Sta1t, Allblmllnd

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(J)01'81d PIOIIIILL
(I) Flltlijj Line Ml Ylng-Jeou
dlacu- lite Republic of
China va. Cltlna's ntllnilnd.
II:DO NFL 1'11111Jan
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survey ,.....Is thl hlrdtal
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thl undefealed 1972 Milml
Dolphins; Joe MOILtana.
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11J MOVII: W-Ill V(2:00)
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D NAICAA Aldng Chevy
Delllra ot New England 250
from Loudon, N.H. (L)

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Flltlt Clndld InterviewS wl1lt
Robin Wlllilms and Elton

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disappe&amp;ll after trying to IIIII
a !ft&amp;P to a loll allv11 mine.

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divisionS Ill lnaiyzed; I
rtc~p or on--1011 della; a
sumntlry of lhe college drelt.
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400 IS h!ld It Mlcltlgan
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of r1clng's' premiere
shoWpilcea, Brooldyn, Mlclt.
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a noe
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Clltll Rock, Colo. IL)

C

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thllndurtng fltrtl ol M..-,rt
MCIILI!II, obelried thriJI9t

500 from

DTennleVolvo
mt.rriltlonll, ftnel frOm New
H1ven, Conn. (T)
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5:00 11)0 (J). lnllmltiOnll
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B ' : , Mich. (T)
(lJ
lily: A 848erllllltltilfrote&lt;LIIIIIIIIII
olouiiLIJ Anecdotea, fllm clips
and newarall IOOtlge
highlight a profile of Doris
Day. (1 :00)
(!) Mcl.llugltllri Group
IIJ My Two Dldl

........,
FurllD 1. .

5:30 (I) Tony lroMt'a Journll
IIJ llaeom .lddlla
5:31 ~It" IIICIIIte

.....

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1:0611) Nallanll Qlogrlplllc
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DIIHDince
Stereo.
Ql Clmpalgn USA '12
10:001DiillwiQ
t-:VII:
Manon of 1M
(PO) (2:00) Stereo.
(I) Amlflc8n MaLin Helen
Hayes ell-S her long
carHr~her pai10ILIJ fHe.

8111'10.
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Donna 1nd Mll'lndl der:lcll
to aunbltrte In tlte nude to
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OCouldc:abb
• T1illlllllllbln
$820,000 B.A.S.S.
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Jake (The Snake) Roberta,
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8:30~= ~:t.~~
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!II Little HouH Oft lite
l'rllrll

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10:30 0 • ._. till 8ltonl WILen
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City, Z1ck Ia lucky at .
gamblllijj. Sllrto. C ·
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AIDing Highllgltta or lhe
Cltampion Spartc Plug 400
frOm Brooldyn, Mlclt.
10:40 1D llllfilltL lleptbJ
11:00 &lt;ll 0 11)0 (I) 0
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IHkl refuge wl1lt the guy~
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ae

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Deaacll Rick Melli

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I:GO (I) 0 (I) 0 (J) 0 II:DO
(I)

highlights from

Det
0 Hol~-.~.ooc!IOOCI I Pollllcl

EVENING

81~R.N.

.........

Rldollla knocked out by a
burgilr and IICimltted to lite

0 0 . . . Tld'l bcllllnt
~ IIIII and Tid try
to uve lite Prealltl1s ·

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0 ololtn ArtkoariMg

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8 WOIId Tod!y
0 Tltlt'a Mr Dog
7:05 Ql Arnertcln 8par1l
CnllcHe The NHRA Mop1r
Parts Mlla-High Nationals
tram Denver. Colo.
7:30 ® Twilight zlll et.eiiO Clr lllop Stereo.
11J1 0 TNe Colan Tarry and
lester blby·alt Connie's

8-:l::htll.

(R)

Stereo.
•

8uncley
0 WIIIMd Bcotl'a ArtoNur
Hour
1:00 (2)0 GJ I Wltntll Vlcllo A

lon

coupll try to capture a nt1il
thief; parents
thllr
nanny. Stereo.
()) MOVIE: 11tlo at Qirlfll
(2:00)
IJ) Lll1ll HouH Oft lite
Prllrle
11l0 (J) • Anlerlce'a
Funrtlelt HGrrtl VldeM
Baakatblll p(IYM make
baskets lite hard way; ftalt
Lnd lowt~JRI Stii'IO. Q
rn
(I) E
at PopL
Stereo.
11110 II:DO M-, 1M
Wralt Jeaslca wondell
whether a newcomer In town
Is capat::tmurder. (RI _
Stereo.
0 . In
Color "
bloopers alLow featu111 skill
and Duttakes ot cast
members. (R) Sw.o. Q
11J WWF lu!MWSIIM
Ill TCIIDUI!r WNF Chlmplon
Miello Min Rtndy Slvl(ll
and Ultint1te Warrlo4' VI.

Na~Boya.
II
Lllp llnbLI

St. Louis Clrdlnals 11 Atllnta
Br1vea (L)
Pilu4tlc:waQ
1:3011). (J)·~··
Furtnlwt People Chlrtll thl
Chimp pblforms; an
11 ·yea~ comic. (RI
Stereo.
IIllO . Roc decklll to
buy 1 car lltd Joey gill to
ltay It ~I condo.
Stereo.

e

..... ••••n

0 1111at
Q
1:00 (I). Ill ......,....htlllfth

=:.~r:.~

ioiiiOVII: .......
Tllllule' A8C lwldl !!IIIII
llowlt (2:00) Bllreo. "ri

llold Cltlllplanbltlp Grlrtd
1'1111
3:311 (J) MOVII: Pllnet l!llth
(1:30)
4:00&lt;11eiiiT.... u.s.

8:06 (I) I LO'II Lucy
1:30(1)0 aNICNIWIC
ID Now II Ctn II Torir
11l0 (I) 0 AIC Notwl C

0 Jtllt ... Ten of U1 Q

5:0611) Tam llld .reny•,

(I)

m"•

h ;I u 11iKi~oo
........1

The Wltll'llboull ol Buell
Kat1w'oijj oorttinuN to .

=ar.~w
Mlllllu .liNd' Cllll!!diY

Mowte~Staieoo Q
o•
.. Willi
ct•dren ,.. IJnctonlartl

111111 a dull. (R) Sllllo. C .
D liiiiiiA T_, Dlvlllon ~

liD e II:DO Cll NeWe Q

Ql l\llwlfllllldllullnltll

11:31 I]) Plkl ,,. . ."
(I). Ro;aln'l linn
1110 CUINILt Affair 1!xtr1 Q
IIJ) • lllkll • l!llerl

12:00

e On 8oent: Ent~~gt~LCY
R11p1111

0

GJ AlnMICIII GlliCIIIION
0 IIOI) WI ad IIIIICIIr
18 Truoldn' USA
01111~ al Tonlgltl
0 Nlwi,IWOIId Report F1n11
I titian
10 ololtn a.12:30 (I) 0 D Plld Plograrn
ID MOVII: CarlbiiRI (2:00)
(1)0 II:DO Ellllillllonttrtl
Tonltlht Stereo. C
(J). ~- 1i lite Rlclt

,,_

.._llnl

00 lupLr110)
D llold Till
!D Feed ... Cltlchn Willi
Leny .lollll
12:31 (I) World T-IOA
1:00 (I) 0 llonte lltapplt og

.......
.....

0 • · - lite 13th: TILe

a Wlmerl Driver or the
Deaacll Rick Melli
• I!JqMdltlon Earth
(I) Pilei Progl ILLIL

1:01 (I) PLid ProgriiLo
1:30(1)......
.
(J). Growlllll Pllne Q
• • Pilei Pragrlm

.

==Dring
.............

.

Amlr1c!: Side

2:00 (1)0 (I) 0 World NIWI
Now Stereo. Q
1D OIIOVII: 11tlo Hiloillllllllllltlltalll
Pllllln(2:00)
D Clllro pII blltlp ltodlo
From Mllqutte, ttxll.
OIJII Cu o11r
1
2:30fl) Pilei .......
OilpoftiL.IIINWtt
2:31 (I) , ...... Cltllclllrl Wltlt

LllfY olortll
3:00 II) ....._..,
1110 Up " ... lllnull
0 Polo lnlll rtltlonll Open
from Pllm Btlell, Fla. (R)
• lullt .... Wlllt ......
ollckiOII
3:01 (J) Pilei Pnlgrlftt
1:30 ID lllw1•0111tr ·

IIJ ............

............. w....
3:410NI•-Q
4:00(1) '~ ..
IIIIIIIPPiililnllog

~ iiOOI"t: llodJ . . .._

;Grand1:Pibc

Q1P A8Dina Millin
of Aoed Amtrica
from Ellcltart l..lkl, W... (R)

::.~ltilry

4:01 (I) wcw ......_

..... A • IlL louiDII

•

r~xillllil1 Tonlgllt

===-

Stereo. Q

fL..
Crtrllt T1rllt Alllt l't1rllt
Tlrllt Slim.

:=:·

11:31 (I). 01 Tonlgltllltow Willi
Jay~~.Q

L=·
Q .

1:00 (I). IIJ Fiult !'llnoe Ill
1111-AJr Will lltd Clr1ton IIWitt
two Frtnclt gl~s over Phil is 1w1r. (R) Stereo. C
()) MOVII: Monty 10 llurif
(1:30)
(I) D (I) 0 AIC MottdQ

• lrtllde Polltloe . .
12:31 &lt;11 • a Lall ...... Willi
Dlvld IAttlrll1llt
.
(1)0 LoYI CoioltCIIoit

• • Nlgltl c..t Q

1:05

.......

f.:orhlllftl TDnl;ltl
.

8ilpoftiTOnlgltt

o•t••

11:30(1) To ... ~tereo.
(1)0tlglt••
IIIO'Fwa'*
Cllntt

CMIIa
Cl). Moniii..W Ill

1:40 111• CNN

(I) .IIpari: VOic:M Frarn lite

Land TILe beauty and
dlve111ty or J1pen's
landacape; a Buddltlat prlaat,
1 allk wuver, a bullnesantan
and aJLrdtn daalgner. (1:00)
Stereo.
(!) Our V1nlaltlng F_, The
dlbatt over lhe U.S. FOIIII
Slrvlol'a policy. (1:00)
IIID II:DO MurpltJ . , _
Murphy Ia In hot Wlltr with
lltllli~f
lhe Slnate. (R)
Stereo.
OWWF
8peallcular WWF Champion
Macho Min Randy Slvage
and Ultimate Warrlor vs.
Nasty Boye.
18Nntwlle• 8urttng Plpellrtl Mlatt11
from Hawaii (T)
• Lall) King Uvel
elcl-llld ..... King

..

Tnt.:!:~
Stereo.

N1W1
2:00f.:C,~W' ..... Now

Stereo. liJ..

0 I

Polltlca'81

12:31 (I) 0 Ill 1.811 Nlgltt Wltlt
Dlvltl..__.

TILe Over-tfii.HIII
Gina (1:30)

(I) MOVIE:

11Je .._
(2:00)

(I). ""'"' .lollll

II:DO l'erllot looN
D Tuu ~11 Nlgltll'lgltii(RI
Tod!y

a._.,

aoN:C. ·

Ql

Tlllllgltt

1:30RO ArMniO Hill Stereo.

lo Now ~ Cln II TOld

.On .....

II tpi.IIICtnllr

Qllll........ Updltl
01'81d ........
1:31(1)0 01 LIW Willi loti
Collll
(I) • Monlll Wllllml
1:401110 CNN l\llwl

2.-Gtlf.!o~~

..... -

•Club"• RLIILILinti .,ad Rtclng
0 Wortdwldoo lluldtle

111700 Club WHit Pit
llobertlon
2:06 (2). HGrrtl ..Dpplrog
(I) MOVII: Capltlb I II
(2:00)
GJ IIIIC Nlgltllltla
2:10
Up 10 tiLl Mlnull
2:30 ID 0 MOVIE: llllnt Mo¥11
(PO) (1 :30)

a•

Ol,a IICIOIII
• 8par1l Lalllllgltt

2:31f.:o~r ..........
3.-GO (J) Dlnnla Miler
0 MOVII: T1tnt (R) (2:00)

OUpCiole

OCiollllre
Ill Pllltl l'iogram
3:300 Oolf·Frtd Meyer

. Ch&amp;lllrtge, final round

Portland, Ort. (R)

rrom

e ...... Ovemigtal

3:4111 Newlioonc Q

4:00fl) MOVIE:~ . . Olttr
. . . . . . (2:00)
0 0 MOVII: Merta: A Tntl
_ , (1'013) (2:00)
• LllfY King Uvel
4:06 (]) ,.. I
4:31 (]) Allin lite ,.....,

lor••-*'

()) Cltarlw ~~

lib:P
..
g

lltlldl 1M POA T8 World Today
1D IItman
1:011 (I) 1Love Lucy
8:30 (2)0 11J NIC ..... C
()) Now It Ctn . . Tolir
llle (J)OAICNIWir::l..
(I) Wild AnMic:a SI!!,IO. Q
(I) Square Onl TV ,t;jl
1110 tD. Cll ..... Q
1D 0 Anc1r 0r1111e1t
D ICOOIIJ Doo

ID UpCiole

IONiwZMi'OQ
1:31 (]) Anc!J GrHIItlt
7:00 ~. GJ Wlllel of For1trnt

:.tt.:~JL Q
~~~

(I)

L M&amp;litaCI ... Willi
Rl~:tQ

p~lnmtnl Tonight

=~
ID 11tlo W1ttona

7:05 (I) II•IAJ HBIIIIItoa

7:30~U::t:""' 1;1
~01!'111"""'- Tanlgltl

(J)'VMa""-'a FILLILir
Qle WltHI of Fllftttltt Q
II:DO F1m1ty F....
18 II 1 Stir Stereo.
@ Four-Man INCh
Vohyben From Denver (T)
Ql Croaallre
7:31 !II Banford • 8on
\
1:00 (I). GJ UniOLVed "
MrllliiM A woman
Clillppeall; two IISIII'I
-rclt ~tltelr Sibling. (RI
Stereo.
()) MOVI : 11tlo Seduction ol

.toe Tynan (R) (2:00)

(]) l'llplllontlt" 13-natlon
aumy ltalps to I'8VIIIIhe
ptiiOILII and global
consequences of
, OVIIJIOPUiatlon. (1:30)
11). (J) 0 Wondlr YHfl
Kevin likes Paul w111t him to
lite llkl to try and lind 1 lolt

~~R=r~ CornedJ
lp 1111 TILe comedlltn
dlrlctu hlllhlrpowlttad lOng

parocllea Lnd pointed

0 . lllvlriJ 1111, 102111
Studante prepare fer 1
aprlng dLnce; Brandl and
~n make love. (R) Stii'IO. .

aJ Mlerdar, ... Wroll Q
• Cntolc lnd a....

. ,............ c

10 llalllnu: 11MLoll
!pltadn

1:30(1)0 (1)0Dooaltii0WIIr,
M.D. Doogla and Wllldl
e1ac:11re war OIL lhe rntdlcll
t1tabllshntlnt. (R) Stereo. Q
(I) olulll Cltlld It Ill Julia
Child celebrlteS her 30111
y..r aa tlllwtalon's French
chef. (0:30)
(I) 811111na A combination
ot comedy, satire and mullc
wiH LPPNI to I wide Ylfiety
ot people. (0:30)

paa(R, SiaNo. Q

11Je

THURSDAY

Pro Stock ~from
EnaMihtllwn,
N.J. I

• War1tl•ltllo

1D 7GO C1tib

Pit

Ralnrtlon
2:01 (I) 0 Holltl .. ap;l 111
(]) MOVII: Mlltdli It 40,1100
FMII(2:00)
IIJIIIC NFigl irlati:OIIItiCMII
2:101110 Up1g ... . . , _
2:300 0 MOVIE: aun- IIIII
lA) (1 :30)

a 8po tecanlw

QllpO!JI I.IIIJMgltl

2:31f.:C,~tf N1W1 Now
3:00 ()) Dlnnlli Miler

II UpCiole

ec.-n,e

D Pilei IIIPrOIOII'IIIIIOILm

DLIIgnlng

M1ry Jo tr111 to
decide OIL 1 final candidate
latltllltoOd. (R) Slim.

3:30 1D Goll Fred Mayer
Cltalllnal. 111 round from
Portland, ON. (R)
. . . . . . Ovliftlgltl

10:00 ID M1Jor 1 naue lluu•
Chicago Cubl at SilL Oligo
Plldr1s (L)
(I) 8tory Ill Annl Allliltllhl
~ry Soviet poet Anna
Aklimatov~1 :00) Slim. Q
(!) P.O.V.
1110 tD NoiiMll
l•po11111 Maggie lltd Joel
lflforced to Wit I ~

3:410 Not•- Q
4:00 ID-MO'IIE: ~ICbl Wanlar

~: IICivll: TILe Young

Lonlr (2:00)
• Llny King Uvel

4:01 (I) The lloueymoaftlll
4:15 (I) AI In lite • ....,

C •le•t4'""-pnt

90 II:DO • • n lite
Fl1nlln McCabe battlts I

f'ncr.,.

12:00if!t.==L.

ball bondllllln wtoo'a trying
clear h!r client. (R) Stereo.

Molly Wlllll 10 lind out more
lbout 1M llllent llndlord.

12.

aJ 8111 ...._ sw.o. Q
a Amlrlc n f1blc lllop
II W....'l Pnllleliclt
Vollerbel World SlriH, final
1r0m Pismo Btlell, Clll. (R)

1Pt2otot)C
90 ArttldCaro GIIWitleIIIIITillllurna
0 . ArMnlo 11111'1·
Wellllild Jim Stereo. C
D 0 WICIIP Itt Clnc:lnniti

........ lrOI.

• Wortd Notwl

0 " - Faatllll Artnl
Bowi(T)

10:01 !II u.s. OIJmplc Qold u.s.
Sumnt11 Nltlonll Swimming
Ch&amp;mplonlhlpa (T)
10:30
Cocte 3 Flrellghtlln·

==-~··

o•
raacue two Yictlma; a plol

12:311 (J) li WWF Wru • 111
Qlhlijjl Tlllnkll VI.
Sklrtnll; Mountie, Hlglt
Enwgy, 8arzt11cer, Vlrgllllld
Ruor Ramon; SummaiSIIm

linda In lite dlrtc. Stereo. Q
11:00(1)0 (1)0 (1)0 • •
IDO IIINtwl
(I) Actwlli.... Olllobln

rtpQr1.

Mood

ill 0 MOVII: 1M I 1nlllr

dliO COPS Ali olflctr
1111111 In two altoOttnga; a

Ill Zall Levta

(!) Club Dill

~L .......

:a

WOrnLn ltlr-tndl I polloi

car. Stell0.9._ ___ :_

~~as-.

~

OOplyMotiiiQI

Tanlahl

• llton/lllll'l fonl;lll

..

11:06 (I) IIOVII: DMtlly 1M •
(2:00)
.
'
11:30(1)0111 ............
Llvl Tom Hllllcl. (R) Stereo.
Cll• WICIIP In Cllliltalllll

(J). An. . .RGI1fi1Drt

(!) Cltib Dill

1;01 (I) MOVII: Nlgltt loltOII (R)
(1 :41)

z-

1:30 1D Tw11a1t1
OOCfiiNNIWI
8 tiiUJIJIIIii ICII
2:00 ID III.UIT 1

•

THU.1 AUO. 27

•

II

tlwouglt ~ ....

lootagl
-·
loll birth Lnd
In 18011o
1122.frOm
:00)

(1

.On ....

o•

11:00(1)0 (J)O 00
IIJI\IIwl
ID 'lite MlloiDOiei11,11101•a,...,.,
IIlNIWIWIIDit
~· AtllniO Hll SIIIIO.
aJNewr.aellannlr
• Cnlok lild Cltue
OilpoftiTonlgltl
Olltmln
11 :06 (I) Plopllllorltlt A 13-rtlllon
survey h!lpl leo IIWIIIIIte
p8fiOILII

Lnd global

overpopulltlon. (1 :25)

11:30 ()) Kajall C

fi) ~.De.....

Mon.lor

FOOIILIII
Disneyland skin Cilllllc:
TeKII A&amp;M VI. Stanford It
Analtelm, Cllll. (L)
(I) Jtttll Cltlld . . Ccintplny

II
;::;::S'c-·
Crlntl Tlrllt

HolitllniprO'o'lllnln
Tim trill to Dive loJ
lnstruetlonl fn lite line art of

~ MOVI : 11tlo ltttlllft

(I) •

datlna. (R) Stereo. C
(I) MOVIE: T1o1 Falililoua
Dorilyl (1 :30)
II:DO 2000 lllollllu
llold Jacte thinks her flmlly
may be her only Sllvatlon
while
Q
0 MO 1!: Tlot Tiki {2:00)
Stereo.
Ne
Now Stereo.
a Larry Klrttl 1.1ve1
ScaiiCIOW and Mil. King

a•

1niswea.

a

8

1:30 (I) 8 01 Wing a Anlltl11o Lnd
Helen pose as an engaged
couple to loollmmlglltlcn.
(R) Stereo. C
(]) People 110mb A I 3-natlon
survey it8lpa to reveal t1te
personal and global
consequences of
overpopulatlcn. (1:35)
(I) Julil Child Lnd More
CcintplnJ

(J) 0 Amlmeallltlrlloijjoallltrowlof Bll
gets cold teet at lite thought
of a vacat1cn a1on1 w111t
Connie. Stereo. Q
10:00 (J). 01 u. • Onllr
P1lnful rnemorlll return
whan a wont1n recalla her
friend's murder. (R) Sllleo.

~Ntwa[]

(I) Julia did lnd CompenJ

(J) 0 Clvtl Wlfl E1i
represents t1te wile of a
crlntt boll In I di'IOrCe caM.
(R) Sllrlo. Q

a• DOiiiiiUIA

hkldln camera expo••• the

a·

wtoo IHk IIOd hold
puDIIc olllce. (0:30) Stereo.
8 0becomes
D 0 lite carnpue
Dorm
.toe
ltearttlorob which ditma'd

llt'VIcll.
IIJ)
• Hullllr

Q

Ill World
0 700 CtUII Wlllt Pll
. Robartaoit
10:30 (I) JuUa Child 1nd liON

• Cltib DlftOI

«&lt; NIIIIA Aec:ln; lludweillr

0'

Ntw OrtNn'a inllulftce on
Loula 'Amtatrona 1e M!tlcll'l

(L)Q

1:00 (I). GJ hlnltltl Jany
1111111 In Ul1drtllliCI ~

one lnera at lite man and

Zack and Lulu. Stereo. g

(I)....,._ In Naw

consequanceaot

..... ot phone ~ lltd

'""•=•

-·

Complny

D ~ LHgut IIHIIIII

0 Pilei 'il:og..m

1'.301DNIWII:J

Stii'IO.

(I)Nelilawaecl;
D Nlw Milia llilllilillm.IIILIMIIr
• Cnlok . . ClleM

0 Notwlllgl4 Upditll
1:31(1). Ill Llllr Will lob

Night lt.J!.te Mowlta (2:00)

01$1 IUCellllf
• Clpltll Glnt/NIWI

a•

=~~acNI
Cltllllnge from
(T)

(Pt 2 of 2)' NIC MondLJ

0 0 COPS Two auapec:te
lfl lllttled tor tltrtlllnlrJII.
1n lntorinant. ,~. Q
• a..nd 011
Live

10:31 (]) MOVIE: Stlncllrijj TIH
(2:00)
•
11:00&lt;110 lllO (1)0
II:DOIIINIWI

lo Now II Ctn II Told

vialt frOm VIOl l'rllkllnt
Oulyle. (RI Statio. Q
1:00 (]). Ill 'lalk:huod It lllr1ll

a• o.,......,....

(L)

1:30 ~. AtllniO Hll Stii'IO.

I

!fn at11

II Mljor Lllgue llubll

OPLidPuogrent

C

0 ....,_ T1ol Lott

DOn811;e

0 8ltowllz TodiJ

aClrnp
• HoiMiter
oo ...,
DIICI
prlpllll fer

1111~11

o•~~~~n~J...,

8WorldNIWI
1D 700 Cltib Wltlo Pit
Ralla1110n
10:30 1D 0 Major Lllp
l111bel Plttaburgh Pirates
at Loa Angells OOdgera (L)

a

II AWIA W-Itting

0

Ill
10 Anllltca
Wilt . . Moyera (1 :00) Q

(I)

1:00 ()) MOVII: .ret Plot (2:00)
(I) 0 ""'"' .lollll
II:DO l'erllot loin
D Ilolly 111d lnllder
llatln! Clowlll: A Lall
Night lllllllh.... ,..
Gr1mmy wiiLIMLI perfol noa his
hits II I Nlahvllle nlghtdub.
(1:00)

Show Sid Nltlonlls from
Janesville, WI;§.
.
Ql PrlntiNIWI
ID lort&amp;nu:
Loll
l!pl1ad11
8:06 (I) MOVII: 11tlo Long Hoi
llttnoMr (4:00)
1:30(1)0 QJ IIDLIIIft Blos11011t,
Alotltony lnd Joey aN
experience relationship

SATURDAY

Chicago Cuba It San Diego
Padres (L)
11)0 (I) 0 Covington
Cloll (Special Preview)
Eleanor runa 1way to aVOid
an arracrriage.
Stereo.

Deptrt, Wll. (T)

ID 0 MOVII: Cobrta !AI
(2:00)
0 llurdlr, 8111 Wtoll Q
• Cnlok . . Cltue

a

10:00f.:O.~ NIC
()) Malar""L..aue ........

D otfRoed.Aallng From

Herman'a decllbiOII to - ' t 11
lhe j)lrlor. IRI S1trto. Q

tD •

e

ao Ctiient Atlilr Q

c

12:05 (I) • Nlgll• •
1110 Clillnt Allilr .Q
12:30 II:DO "'--I
D ~Jc.~ db I'J T'ltllllr

1:0if.:C,~

1:301DiillwiC
(I) 0 (I)
COIDio Ch~stine
II Ottered In IILCitOr ~
In New York. (R) Stereo. Q

12:301110 ........
11J lily lradbuty Tltllllr

a•
WOOd Lnd MIIQifll aupport

IIJ ..... tlr..... 8ltow
D Nu1tv1111 Now Stereo.

successful ellllrtllrtllls
111n frOm lriendllnd homily,
lnducllng performance clips
ShOWn In lltelr IILUrtty. (1 :00)

6

(I). INIIIgllblta••ne• C

SoliiLdl The lgllall bellrty
or thl TtXII Plnhlndle In
Plio Duro Clnyon Ia
celebraled In a compotltlon
at symphonic mUIIc. (1 :00)
111 • I!"'*LII lltliCie

u...~"'- Wlllt
12:00 (J) • ollny . .....
Qllta•llll;hl

I!VI!NINO
1:00 (I). (I). (J). • •
tD. Ill Notwl

CoioltCIIoit
.• • Nlgltt ~ Q
1:00 ()) MOVII: No Pllloew Llltd

Flglttl (L)
• NoiiMie Now Stereo.
Ql Lilly King Uvel
Ill HIOW Lnd lrlrl. King

12:0111) MOVII: lunllurn (POl
(2:00)

==r

cr.~,. Q

D TtMIIay

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75 cents

Meigs County livestock sales

life' at fair

PI MARl

Dale Russell headed drive for 1968 war
monument in park· Sands· Page A-8

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ME A TRAFFIC REPORT'
I DON'TOWN ACAR! I
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l-~l.:_:;lp.,:6 :..,;j1~-l
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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Vol. 27, No. 27
Copjffghtod 1892

Grassy · Leafy · Group • Jostle · YOURSELF
A new employee bragged about how 1well he could do the

(J);.'fn'e~ r;l

job. "co·worker mused, · Praise is a valuable assel as long
as you don't aim 11 at YOURSELF .

~-~
CIIIIihn

BRIDGE

NORTH
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Montreal Expos (LJ

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+6

Soutb

In a Peanuts cartoon, Charlie
Brown has been hit by a line drive.
Schroeder runs to the pitcher's mound
with an offer of first aid. Lucy sug·
gests that second or third aid is quite
sufficient.
.
The same idea applies to bridge
deals. The second· or third·best play
might be sufficient to bring home the
contract. But sometimes the declarer
really mast use the best medicine.
Against four spades, West leads the
club ace and follows with the club
king. How should declarer handle the

(L)

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Dilly A bloctc chlulleur Is
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Southam women. S181'19..l;l

cards~

When South jumped to four hearts,
he realized he could be getting out of
his depth. But he had such a promising
hand that he hoped North would have a
lit in at least one of the majors.
Declarer rufled the club king at
trick two. played a heart to dummy's
jack and took the spade finesse. How·
ever, West won with the king and
switched to the diamond two. Realiz·
ing his partner hadn't led his fourth·

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'

no longer combine items such as
refrigerators, freezers and air con·
ditioners, with its trash pickup,
accooling to Sandy Leedy of SCS.
In a letter to Gallipolis City
Manager Glenn Smith, Leedy out·
lined the options Gallipolis resi·
dents have in order to properly dispose of their appliances.
.
First, the'/ resident must contact
SCS by cal ing 1·800-752-6760.
The resident will make a $15 pay·

ritent and in wrn, they will receive

a receipt

After payment is received, the
item can be taken to lhe city
garage, located at the corner of
Chestnut and Berl!er Avenues in
Gallipolis. The reSident must produce their receipt in order to drop
off the item.
If a resident is unable to haul an
item to the garage, SCS will pick
up ihe item and deposit it at the

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

By Pbillip Alder

Wesl
2t
Pass

t+

4'

North
Pass
4+

A Multimedia inc. Newspaper

garage for $35, which includes the
disposal fee.
SCS employees are not permit·
ted on private propeny, therefore,
residents must have their item at
the curb for pick up, said Leedy.
The garage will not accept any
appliances without a receipt, stated
Smith. Garage hours are 7 a.m. to
3:30p.m. Monday through Friday.
The city receives no money
from charg~ to dispose or pick up

garage.
the appliances, Added Smith.
According to Leedy, SCS
According to Ron McDade,
releases the appliances to Jackson CSP area manager, CSP has conRecycling and Star Recycling, both tracted with American Recycling
of Jackson, companies contracted Centers of America (ARCA), 10
with SCS to properly recycle the pick up appliances, at no cost, for
items.
residents unable to haul items to
Columbus Southern Power the garage. However, the resident
(CSP) and Ohio Power are also still pays the $15 disposal fee.
providing another option for Gal·
Residents can have an appliance .
lipolis residents who are unable tO, picked up by ARCA by calling 1·
haul their appliance to the city 800-288-7646.

Relatives are shocked
of possible link in deaths

Easl
3t
All psss

Openmg lead: +A

'-----------.....J

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The relatives of five men who may
have been shot by the same person
say the deaths remain a shock. ·
"Who in the world would have
thought that someone would go
fishing and get shot twice in the
back?" said James Bradley, whose
son , Gary, was killed in Noble
County. "What has happened is
som~g 1can never forget"
.QiiTY-- Bradley, 44, of
Williliinstown, W.Va., is one o(the
five men kilfed iri ruraf, eastern

highest diamond, East worked out that
the two was a suit-preference signal.
He won with the diamond ace and led
the club queen, promoting West's
spade 10 to the setting trick.
West's sequence in the club suit
made it clear he had started with the
A·K doubleton. If South had thought
about the possibility of a trump promotion, he would have realized that he
needed to cut the defenders' communi·
cations. That could be done by discard·
ing the diamond five at trick two.
Then it would be impossible for East
to gain the lead. South could draw
trumps in peace and make his
contract.
® tm. .....AIDiWISU

Cloudy. High io mid-80s.

13 Sections, 142 Pages

Mlddieport-Pomeroy-Galllpoll~olnt Pleasant, August 23, 1992 ,.

By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Seatlnel News Staff
GALLIPdLIS • As of July I,
Section 608 of the Clean Air Act
became effective, prohibiting the
venting of ozone depleting com·
poundsintotheatmosphere.
This new law local must be
complied with by local landfills.
Sanitary Commercial Services
(SCS) in Jackson, which sezves ~idents in the city of Gallipolis, .,..m

EAST

tKQ9&amp;42
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~J:o~-~ Toniglll
(J). M:l:..·. ,•...,

PO YOU

WEST

Along the river . ............ BI-8
Business/Farm ...............D1·8
Classified ....................... 02-7
Deaths..............................A-3
Editorai ...............-.......- ..A-4
Sports........................... Cl-8
Weather, ......................A-2

SCS sets ,guidelines to comply with new law

!lleMe- ... -

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Inside

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19

8
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. ....J.1

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New fairgrounds facility may be named
after Bob Hoeflich ·Beat of Bend- B-8

D -1

,,

Ohio. Federal, state and local offi.
cials say the deaths could be
linked.
The others are Donald Welling,
35, of Strasburg; Claude Hawkins,
48, of Mansfield; Jamie Paxton, 21,
of Bannock; and Kevin Loring, 30,
of Duxbury, Mass. Each was hunt·
ing, fishing or exercising alone in a
secluded area when he was shot to
death. ·
The slayings occurred in Belmont, Coshocton, Muskingum,
Noble and Tuscarawas counties

'-~

between April!, 1989, and April 5
this year.
A task force from the FBI, conn·
ty sheriff departments and the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
Division of Wildlife has linked the
slayings.
"The deaths appear to be random," said Dave Hanna, senior
supervisor in the FBI's Columbus
office. "They were victims of
opportunity. No other motive can
be established at this liV't-'.' .
Family members S&amp;ld the deaths
are baffling.

RAUM.

(I)

IIIG ID"e MajOr lied Mac
end Polly overcome en
emergency base alert to be
merrlid. (R) r;l
1:00 (J). (I). lltnoull'l
Charlene uses her COllege
money to]" talking goat.
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ACROSS

talking horta
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unit
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14 Long time
15 FlooUng
structure
18 Pert
18 Citrus drink
18 Lay11 of soli
20 Southwott·
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21 Red Sea
counlrr
23 Front
25 Set tltmly
28 Clgetalto
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30 Gad obout
32 Uncoln'•

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MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
NO, WAlTA
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HE ~'IS IT
FEEa.SLIKE
FIFlY YIO"Re.

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BARNEY

(15

1 5PRAINT MY
WRIST, LOWEEZ.Y,
AN' 1 NEED ME A
HELPIN' HAND!!

chow 11

hll11

53 NaUvo of
Edinburgh

DOWN
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5 British actor
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s.n~~mem~~ .~oumtr

Mec:dolel, film cllpe and
nowareel footage highlight a
profile of Ooris Oay. (1 :00)

HELPIN'
HAND

FER
T?

politically energized her heavily 8nd children at the Cleveland Chil·
Democratic neighborhood.
dren 's Mus.cum, whi~h prese_nted
" I think he has been able to do them with Idles for theu own kids.
Saturday was the second of a
that, he's sparlced an interest that
hasn ' t been around for a long two-da!Jbcam~ai n swing through
.
led "buscapade"
time," she said ·
e
Ohto.
The politicians toured inner-city came as new polls showed Presi·
neighborhoods with Clevehmd dent Bush's popularity climbing
Mayor Michael White and Rep. after last week's. Republican
Louis Stokes, P·Ohio, who grew National Convention.
A Los Angeles Times poll of
up in the public housing project
where the candidates answered 1,186 registered voters put Clinton
ahead of Bush, 49 percent to 41
questions for about 25 minutes.
ClintOn and Gore also planned percent. In the newspaper's l'oll
to eat at a Parma restaurant that taken just before the convenuon,
specializes in ravioli-style Polish Clinton held a 23 percentage point
.pirogi and hold a rally at a shop· lead. The poll released Saturday
was taken Thursday and Friday and
ping center near Youn~town .
The candidates' WIVeS, Hillary has a margin of error of 3 pen:ent·
Clinton and Tipper Gore, cam- age points.
paigned among about ISO adults

CLEVELAND (AP)
Democrats Bill Clinton and AI
Gore campaigned Saturday across
heavily Democratic mxtheast Ohio,
promising to make jobs and urban
ISSues their priorities if elected.
" You need president who
wakes up every morning thinking
about your problems," Clinton told
ma-e than 200 senior citizens at the
Louis Stokes Community and Day
Care Center.
"Our most urgent task has ~ot
to be to get this economy movmg
again,'' the presidential candidate
said. "I'm going to give you a program that brings this economy
back.''
One of the Seniors at the meet·
ing, Roslyn Razor, 6-2, of Cleveland, said the Arkansas governor

54 Sign It fuM

hoUH(Ibbr.)
58 Stop- - I
58 Clan

and the "softest rabbit iD the world",· as well u
to lind out more about Gallia Conaty tourist
attractions, according to Kim Sheets, Ohio Valley Visitors Center director. Tbe booth, which
was co-spoosortd by tbe OVVC aad BEF, will
remala on display at the Science, Industry,
Technology aud Export building until today.

Clinton promises urban
priorities in o ·hio visit

51 Pop's wlfo
52 Old form ol

nlckn1m1

20/20 Stareo.

Anewtr to Pnvtou• Puute

artlal
38 Cllms
38 Ia concomod
38 lloldo40 Wllkt
painfully
41 Hall of dl
« Hatp
45Arooe-roll
47 lnttlllblt
50 Chlckon

1 TV'I

l&gt; ALL I. A ON DJSPLA Y • Oae of tbe most
popular rounty booths In the "Ohio Owa" competltlou at the Ohio State Fair wu tbe Gallla
County booth featarlngtbe Bob EYIDS Farm
barnyard: Thousands orratr visitors slopped by
the booth to IDOl at the auimall iDcludlng baby
ducks and chicks, a VIetnamese potbelly 1_1lg,

OTiieHIII:IINicor

aWorNNewe
Ill 700 Clull With Pal
Roblrtlon

10:30(1) MojOr IMguo llllbiR
Chlcego Cubs It Lao
Mgtlea Dodgers (L)
l!ll•llghlll~~t"' Dallas
'""*I' Ia IOrmli otad by I

PURCHASES POULTRY • Athens Live·

"ock purchased the only poultry available dur·

lng Friday's livestock sale at tbe 1992 Meigs
Couaty Fair. The pea cl chld:eas brought $200
tor Odie Karr. Pictured with Karr are Jim Ator

ot Atheas Livestock and Livestock Prince
Michael Hoffman, PriDcess Lisa Hoffman, Fair
Queea Bobble White and Fair King Bobby

Jobnson.

~=~p-tlon.

0 ttQ Ll.u.y '"-"'
D MojOr Lt1g11e .._..

Bossard Library
hours restored

.AIIIIIn!-.

ASTRO-GRAPH

(LJ

10:31 (J) MOYIE: Tllo ~ ol
11ea1s which sig ns are romantically per·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1t) II you're

teet for you. Mall $2 plus a long, self-ad·

negotiating an important i.greement to-

dressed,
stamped
envelope
to
Matchmaker, cto this newspaper. P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland , OH 44101 ·3428.

dav. be mindful of the small print; you

might be held to very exacting terms.
Know what you 're getting Into.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) If you do PISCES (Fob. :ZO.March 20) Unless you
whal needs doing without focusing at- plan ahead properly today. you may
tenllon on yourself, you'll encounter
less opposition today. Aim high, but

work very hard and have little to show

ed frl8nd might tell you things today in
confidence that this Individual would
never reveallo ~thers . Be sure this per-

have an opportunity tOday to prove to
someone you love that you are pre ..

lor it. You wouldn 't try to build a bridge

withOut a blueprlnl, would you?
stay In the shade.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) "n old, Irust· ARIES (Morch 21-Aprtl 11) You might

son's faith is justified.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Falling
short of your mark today could be the

result of your methods and procedures.
Aug.22,1112
Working hard Isn't the only solution;
· the st m- repro you must be smart, too.
SomellltOIIS fr om
..,,
painful memorieS,pa
but In "'tha year• SAGITTARIUS (NO¥. 23-Dtc. 21) Even
.,....., you lhould begin to profit from though you'll know better. there Is a
exper-. This will put you a possibility you might repeat an old mis·
few atepslheld of the group. .
take today - because your wishful
LIO I.IUIJ zs.Aug. 22)" new endeavor _think ing could lead you to believe there
........I bout 1 hi n 1 look as will be a diNerentending.
,ou're '"""''" 1
mg
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 1t) Things
good in rtalltjl u It dOH on peper.
Study' this manerlurther, before gelling you should be taking care ol personally
more deoiiiY llrtoiYed. Know where to might be unwisely delegated to others
lor, ..,,.,.. and you'll find K. Tho today. "nd their performance could be
Astro-QrliPh Matclimaker·lnstanlly re· well ~!flow your standards.

°

I

I

,. .

pared to stand by this individual with
your resources, aa well as your words.
Don 't miss the boat.

rAURUS (April 20-Mily 20) If you lack

prudence, this might not be one of your

better days as either a buyer or a oeller.

Don 't treat material Involvements with

Indifference.
GEMINI (Mor 21·.tuno 20) Regardless
of how painful II might be to you or your
companions, have the courage to be

forthright today - If you hope to win
the respect of your pHrs. ,.

CANCER (Juno 21-Jutr 22) If y011 fall to
think lor yourlfllf and usurp the Ideas of
associates, oome1hlng Is likely to be 1~1
In the translation. What works tor them
may not work tor you .

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11:00 ()) • Ill • &lt;ll •
oe GJNIWI

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e ArMnlo HIH Stareo.

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MOVIE: A NJh!pltald

........ In DlngJ... Hell

(2:00)

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E!llfKA
TALKING OVER DESSERT- Glllllpolil
City Muaaer Gleu Smith, left, aad ComailliODer WHma Bnnra, rlcJlt, aloaa .n.. members
of tbe Glllllpolll Pollee Departmnt COIYtrse
·over D.A.R.E. (llru&amp; Abuse ReslsWiee Education) desserts at ille Gallipolis Dalr]t . Queet~. City
D.A.R.E. officer Wayoe Sweeaey il¥iled tile

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'I'TOMCYH
VTPPIAV.
PREVIbUS SOLUTION: "Mary Pickford was the girl every young m811
wanted to hovo - u his lister." - A\lttalr Cooke.

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D.A.R.E. Blizzard or Breae me~~th at tbe Dairy
Queea. The D.A.R.E. desserts CODtaiD lll'lwberriH and Oreo cookies. (Times-Seatlnel plloto •,Jim Freemau)

'

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f

j

eatouraae to try ·• D.A.R.E. BIIDard or Breae

at tbe reatauraat Friday afternooa. Aaaut II

•

GALLIPOLIS - The Dr.
Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
·Library in Gallipolis will be open
seven days a week, from 8 a.m. to
9 p.m., effective Sept 2.
Library hours and some services
were cut or reduced after • renewal
levy was defeated last November.
The levy was successfully
passed in a special election earlier
this year with the understanding
that services would be restored.
"With school opening, we are
happy to be open every day so that
sctiOol children can use the library
anytime they need to," boanl member Robbie Jenkins said.
"I would like 10 thank the staff
for carrying the increased work
load in fewer hours," librarian i'
Jonathan Louden said. "The
board's support hu been invaluHEIFER WINNER - Bn Holter tbe wlaHr ot 1 llllly
able in guiding us through these
heifer
ill
the
dairy
IWttJIItMel
01
Frldll7
ewall&amp;
IPOID'ed b7 ,
times. Most of all thanks to the
Farmers
Blink
Ia
Pomeroy.
Plct.red
wllll
Hoher
Ud
1111 prla II
public's SII{JPOI:l and understanding
Nora Eastman, Melp Fair Dairy l'nt-.
that makes tt aU worthwhile."

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1

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