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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Cleveland
hands defeat
to Tigers

Pick 3:
2-o-3
Pick 4:
6·2·0·0
Buckeye 5: .
5-19-20-30-37

Sports on Page 4 .

a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms . Lows in
the 60s. Thursday, partly
cloudy, highs in the 70s.

•

•

ent1ne
YDI. 48, N.O. 83

2 Sectl~s, 16 Pages, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 13, 1997

Cll997, Ohio Vlllley Publishing Compeny

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pressure rises to bring
closure to UPS strike
,

GRAND CHAMPION STEER- Jeromee Cal- Alban Salser and Kristl Warner, Calaway, Beef
away's 1 ,280.pound steer took lop honors at Princess Jessk:a BarTinger and tst Queen Run·
the Meigs County Fair Market Steer Show Tues- ner-up Billee Pooler.
day night. From left are Fair King and Queen

WASHINGTON (AP) - With paid an hourly average of about $20. instead of full -time employees.
Also · Tuesday, UPS officials·
each side losi ng milli ons of dollars, To replace those wages, the strikers
Labor Secretary Alexis Herman on Thursday will become eligible for defended their proposal to withdraw
stepped up her effon,.s to get striking weekly strike benefits of $55.
fiom the Teamsters' multiemploycr
Teamsters and United Parcel Service
At Teamsters headquarters, AFL- pension plans and establish one for
officials back to the bargaining table . C!O PresideJlt John Sweeney UPS workers.
Hennan. who met separately with announced ttic creation of a multiuThe new pen sion plan would
the two sides Monday and briefed nion fund to suppon the strikers.
increase benefits by 50 percen~ the '
Pres1dent Clinton on Tuesday, was
"Because their fight is our fight , company says. and UPS would match
"'getti ng creative"' in trying to per- we're making this strike" our strike ,'' benefits for any worker who may be
suade the parties to resume talks said Sweeney, who had been on the earning more than under the compa·
aimed at ending the I ().day-old strike, · telephon e to union presidents, ny proposal.
a senior While House official said shoring up loan commitments. He
"'We want to be absolutely sure
Tuesday· night.
. added ~he coalition of unions was our employees lose nothing .'" said
The a1de, speaking on condition of . 'ready to commit for "many, many Lea Soupata. UPS senior vice presi·
anonymity, said the union and the weeks at $ 10 million a week. "
dent for hum an resources.
company were eager to resolve the
Talks broke down Saturday. Since
While the company touted the
dispute "'but they both need to find a then . the ~omp an y has unsucee&amp;&gt;ful- proposal as a boon to workers, Teamway to do it and save face."
ly sough t President Cli nton's ·I nter- sters President Ron Carey suggested
While Hennan was searching for vention. Herman rejected that option UPS had another mot ive.
a solution. the company and the again afiCr briefing the presidetU
"The company·s interest is 10 get
workers spent the day talking to during a trip Tuesday to St. Louis .
their hands on the investment income
everyone bul each other.
"1 remain convin ced that the soluM and funnel that back into their own
The company said it has been los- tion 10 this issue is between the UPS pockets."' he asserted.
ing money at the rate o[$200 million and the Teamsters,'' she said. Hcnnan
The company acknowledged that
to $300 million a week , and asserted talked with the pa1tics v1a phone with good investment performance , il
that the loss of business could force while in Sl. Louis. and again from Air would be required to contribute lcs:-;
the layoff of i 5,000 workers when Force en route back to Washin gton . but added that with poor investment
the slrike ends.
In that regard. the administration performance, it would be required to
The major issues in the strike, ·apparently has the support of most contrihutc more .
which began Aug . 4, four days after Americans. Although one of every
For most full~time retirees. the .
the old . contract expired. involve four Americans polled in an ABC pension benefit could. equal $100 a
part-time work, pensions and sub- News telephone survey Monday said month for every year' of service; for
they had been inconvenienced by the part-time workers. $50 u month per
contracting.
M9rc ihan half the nearly 185,000 walkout. two-thirds said Clinton year of ~crvicc, thl; company said.
For example. a fu ll-time UPS
Teamsters striking workers are pa~­ . should not intervene.
The survey also found that 57 per-. empl oyee who was with the compa·
time employ~~. IT)akin&amp; ..alJ.awrage
of $11 an·hour. Full-time workers are cent looked wilh disfavor on compa- ny for 30 years would receive up to
'
nies hiring more part-time workers $3,000 a month.

Shell workers ratify new contract

EW'97CHm
FULL SIZE·
CONYERS
I

From left are Fair King and Queen Alban Salser
and Kristi Warner, Watson, Beef Princess Jessica Barringer and 1st Queen Runner-up Billee
Pooler. See additional photo on Page 11.

RESERVE CHAMPION STEER - Taking
reserve champion honors at the Meigs County Fair Steer Show Tuesday night was this
1,30Q.pound steer shown . Chance Watson.

pension plan . Wunder said · the
monthly benefit per year ·or service

· Nov. 6.'2000.
According to Wunder, with ratifi· cation of the contract. .a three pcrccnl
general wage increase for hourl y
workers takes effect immediately. In

increased from $37 10 $41 .
The benefits package for the
hourly workers will sec other
· improvement s. some effective immc.
diately while 01hers will evolve over
the contract period.

sale pick
h1 judging

SPECIAL DELIVERY - A new elevator installed in the
Pomeroy Post Office opened Tuesday, allowing the building to
be entered by people wilh wheeh;hairs. Postmaster Charles Grim,
left, showed the new elevator to Meigs County Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer. Spencer said Tuesday marked the sec:ond time he
•had been in the building, and jokingly remarked that he will now
probably hava to get his own mail.
·

AS

lOW
IS
'Price lnc:llldel All Rebates to Deller

..

,

Meigs County F·air
.

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 13
(Circus sponsored by Holzer Clinic:)
4·8 p.m. - Karaoke with Jeff North - Hill Stage
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
6 p.m. - Junior Fair Swine Show - Show Arena
8 p.m. - Kentucky Headhunters - Grandstand
11 p.m.- Gates close
THURSDAY, AUG. 14
(Senior Citizens Day,
sponsored by Vaughan's IGA)
7 a.m. - Gates open
· ··
- 9 a.m. - Junior Fair Dairy Show - Show Arena
· 11 a.m. - Quick Bread Contest - Hill Stage
Noon- Open Class Dairy Show - ·Show Arena
12:30 p.m.- Flower Show Judging- Senior Fair Building
1 p.f11. - Harness Racing
.
1 p.m. - LitUe Fiddlers - Hill Stage
2 p.m. Swingln' Seniors - Hill $tage
.~
3 p.m. - Big Bend Cloggers - Hill Stage

--r--'

OPEl
MOI..fRL9·9

$At9-6

..
~ -

The new agreement will become
effective Nov. 6, 1997 and run uptil

ste~rtop

LDI:KS,TllT,CRiiiE

MON.-FRI.
SAT. 9-6

expiration of the current contract.
Novemher 1998, wages will again
'"We recognize the union for lhe increase by three percent , followed
effort they put forth to make this a by a 3.2 percent increase in Novcm·
realily, '" Wunder said Wednesday ber 1999.
morning .
Also included is an increase in the

Calaway's

AUTO., AIR, fi.ER&amp;••ss RUIINI.Ii
•aaa•s, 4 CAPTS. ·CHAIRS,
S~FAJ·E•, I.DIRECT .
li&amp;HTI.Ii,CEIITER •EAM U&amp;til S,

OPEN

APPLE GROVE •.W.Va. - Wage
increases, a pension increase and gen·'
eral improvements to the benefits
package were approved by 1he Uniled Steelworkers Local 644 when it
ralified a t!Jree-year contract with
Shell Chemical Co. Tuesday.
Dale Wunder, manager of Human
Resources at Shell. said hard work on
the part of the union and the compa·
ny made it possible for negotiati ons
10 be completed and ratification of a
new contract prior to November

•

A 1.280-pound steer shown by
Jeromee Calaway at the Meigs Coun·
ty Junior Fair Market Steer Show
Tuesday evening will top the steer
sale order at Friday nighl's livestock
sale.
Calaway. in his final year of 4-H
competiiion, took grand champion
honors in just about everything related to beef Tuesday, also dominating
the breeding heef show earlier in lhe
afternoon .
·
Chance Watson won reserve
champion with his 1.3QO.pound steer.
Olher winners in the market s1eer
show were. in order by weight class:
960·1 ,045 pounds - .Jeremy Hupp
and Jeremy Johnson ; I ,060·1, 130
.JlO~~ds ~ . James Chapman and
Rebecca Scott; 1,140- 1,190 pounds
- Jason Pullins and Joe Brown;
I ,265- 1.300 pounds - Jeromee Cal·
away and Chance Watson; 1.310·
1.360 pounds - Jeff Rankin and
Janet Calaway; underweight steerSummer Johnson.
In 1he showmanship contest.
Jeromee Calaway won grand cham·
pion followed by Rebecca Scott with
reserve champion.
Olher showmanship winners were,
in order by division : senior, class one
·- Jeromee Calaway and James
Chapman; seni&lt;:&gt;r. class two Rebecca Scott and 1cffRank.in; junior
- Wesley Karr and Josh Ervin; inter·
mediate, class one - Alison Rose
and Joe Brown: intennediate, class
lwo - Summer Johnson and David
Ranlc.in.
Judge for the event was Tom
Lindsey of Mount Sterling.

Sidelines of
the fair
Showers plaguing the
raglon skipped the Meigs
County Fair for 8 second consecutive day Tuesday, leaving
fairgoers to contand only with
the steamy climate ... typical of
southeast Ohio in August.
Alter the rabbit show held
earlier in the day, beef ruled the
lhiestoc:k area as both adults
and youngstars spilled up their
entries for various beef judging
contesta culminating with the
junior steer show Tuesday
evening.
·
This morning marked the
annual junior goat show with .
the junior swine show slated
for 6 this evening In the show
ring.

"'

While feeding the animals
at the fair can be 8 massive
chore, it's easy to forget the
work involved in feeding all the
people too. Fairgoers have
their
of food booths

~ -

ranging from traveling booths.
selling ,specialty ill)ms to the
more traditional, local booths
benefiting county groups ,
bands, churches, fire depart·
ments and athletic boosters.

�Wldn11day, August 13,1117

~~tnmentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page2

Lawmaker
seeks help
in crafting
school plan

OHIO Weather
Tblll'lday, Aug. 14

Wednesday, Augwt13, 1997

AccuWeatbe ... forecast for

The Daily Sentinel
'£sta!Jiis6Ltl in 1948
•

111 Court StrH1, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

.!1

· A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENEHOEFUCH .
Gene1111 Manqer .

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio
By The Associated Prell
·
· ' Recent Ohio editorials of statewide and national interest:
. _ Akron Beacon Journal, Aug . II
· What to do with Washington, D.C.? Car-swallowing jxJrhol&lt;;.s plague
_I~mbassy Row. The schools are a disgrace. Fear of crime grips the city. The
city 's finances are so bad, the police cars keep running shon on gas. Today,
virtually any detour away from the federal buildings and monuments is visually depressing if not dangerous.
.
lt is easy to blame the district's dire straits on the inept management of
Mayor Marion Barr)'. He has been leading the city for more than a decade,
'even discounting the time he spent in federal prison on drug charges. Much
'df the responsibility rightly falls at his doorstep.
' ' But not all. Even though Congress granted home rule to the district in
I973, it didn 't completely untie the apron strings. It retained the right to con~olrhe city's budget, dumped a massive federal pension obligation on the
city without providing any financial backup and exempted nonresident
workers- including the legislators- from city income taxes and _its own
members from property taxes. Did the city ever stand a chance?
:rbe Columbus Dispall:b, Au1. 8

· .·

The stakes are substantial in the United Parcel Service strike, not only for
company and its 185,000 Teamsters union employees, but also in terms
-a the influence the dispute couid have on labor-management relations in
this country.
"" One of two key issues is the Teamsters' demand that the nation's largest
:ihipping company reduce its dependence on lower-paid, part-time workers
If turning many of them into full -time employees. The dispute, which
~grettably has turned violent in Columbus and other cities. illuslllltes the
Jlcalating tensions stemming from the trend toward greater reliance by U.S.
~fllpanies on part-time workers.
• A reviving labor movement has seized on what it sees as a question of
&amp;imess. With the economy booming, Teamsters ask, why is it that of the
~.000 unionized jobs that UPS has created since 1993, only 8,000 are full
l:me?
:"" UPS sees the issue as far more complicated. Company officials say UPS
las entered an era that puts a premium on flexibility and speed, and partll)ners are vital to the company's ability to respond to those demands.

...
• The (Celina) Daily Standard, Aug. 7

. .
:' Gov. George :Yoinovich was moSl generous in passing around blame for
ii.e.failure of the Legislature to put together a school funding package to
J;eet a deadline to put a measure on the November ballot. .
: Sci generous that he failed to include himself in the fault-finding.
: Call it an oversight, for there is no doubt that the unraveling of this
f!locess began the day the governor 's task force released its rccommenda~ns.
·
·

-

Tree-killing in Palestine worse than killing humans
By JACK ANDERSON
And JAN MOLLER

years old," he began. "This makes and olive trees an Arab has. the betm~ shiver. To kill a man is nothing
ter the Alab's chance of k~ping the
anymore. But to kill such a tree that land on which they grow.
Unltltd Featurn
The Middle East is a place where has been there for eight generations,
Israelis no longer destroy Palesgrudges are deep and long-held. which has been carefully watered by tinian trees as a punitive act. But that
That's why there is little hope that countless men · who have sweated ·campaign is remembered, and even
Israel, even if it grnnts Palestinians a over its growth, well, this is mad- the possibility that a few more trees
separate nation. will be free of ter- ness."
might be removed near the small vilrorism.
·
·
The official Israeli explanation lage of Surif provided motivation
At ~ time when the peace process for destroying more than 25,000 for a suicide bombing last March
is stalled, Israeli and Palestinian trees by bulldozing or burning dur· that killed three Israeli women:
. security forces are concerned about ing the intifada WaE. that rock-throwOf course we believe there is no
the growing number of militant ing Palestinian youths would hide justification for · the reprehensible
· Hamas terrorist cells harboring sui- behind them.
and tragic murder of innocents. But
cide bombers. The recent twin suiBut the Palestinian terrorists who it is illuminating to discover what
cide bombings that killed f3 people now thrive in secret Hamas cells prompts the crazed to act.
. in a Jerusalem market is the latest believe the Israelis killed trees
In this case, 28-year-old Musa
because they knew it made Pales- Ghneimat undoubtedly had a long
llllgic evidence of this trend.
·
Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat tinians more angry than just about list of grievances, most stemming
knows it is crucial for him to try to anything else shon of a massacre. from a feeling of impotence over
· bring these extremists under control. (Palestinians were· not totally inno- Israel's longtime occupation of the
He arrested more than a thousand of cent of battle-driven defoliation, West Bank.
them last year after four separate bus having burned a few "Israeli forests
Since before Israel became a
bombings killed 62 people. Bur the out of revenge .)
·
·
. modern state, Musa's family has
bombers and the leaders who "toke·
Palestinians see the ownership of owned a small piece of land on
them have long hated Arafat, and ancient trees as proof of land owner- which they have grown 320 olive
have even tried to assassinate him in ship. Under Jordanian law, which trees. Unfo~unately, the land is right
the past
ruled the West Bank for 20 years, on the edge of the West Bank and
The root cause of the suicide cultivation of land was ·significant Israel -- and where the Israelis feel
bombing~ that plague Israel is diffiproof of ownership. The more fruit they need to build a road.
cult to combat: The Palestinians foster grievances that have · spanned
decades. The enmity was born dur. ing a period when Israeli overlords
dealt roughly with :the population,
and current Israeli activities like settlement-building only serve to
heighten it..'
.
And Israel is a land where vengeI
ful hatred might be rooted in the Joss
of some trees.
Our associate Dale Van At'a once
met with a much-wanted Palestinian
torrorist leader on the West Bank at a
time when the rock-throwing uprising known as the "intifada" was
occurring. Though more tllan 500
. Palestinians and two dozeft Israelis
had been killed, he only- became
emotional abo~t the death of trees.
The death of hundreds was understandable in what he saw as an ongoing war, but there was no need to kill

The confiscation process is in the
court system now, and Musa's
father, Abdel, has been fighting the
potential Joss of 98 trees. But Abdel
feels he is doomed.to lose the legal.
battle and thus, part of his !arid. It
leaves his family feeling powerless.
" We have no freedom," he told a
New York Times reponer. "They
can take any piece ofland they want.
This' kind of pressure leads to an .
explosion. The more tbey press, the
bigger the explosion.
That's tl)e most logical ••planation he could provide for the fact
that his son, a father of four, walked
into a cafe in an upscale Tel Aviv
neighborhood last March 21 and
blew himself up along with three
Israelis, wounding 12 others. In the
name of the land and trees.
It is hard to see bow to stop such
-a thing, when determined Palestinian extremists are anxious to stoke
angry . feelings with plots of
vengeance.

· ln\teed, while Meissner suggests
thai INS initiatives like "Operation
Gatekeeper" have stanched the
influx of illegal aliens along Amcrica·s southern border. her agency's
website shows that the numbers of
illegals stealing into the United
States has rcmai ned constant at
more than 300.000 a year.
Also. while Meissner claims that
· '"there is no validity to the notion
that people are becoming citizens
today who would not have 10 years
ago." a Justice Depanment repon
revealed that her agency allowed
more than 180,000 foreign nationals

Thursday... Panly cloudy. Highs in the upper 70s.
Thursday night... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
·
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs in the lower 80s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy with a. chance of showers and thunderstonns.
Lows in the mid 60s. High.s in the mid 80s.
·
Sunday ...Panly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s. Highs in the upper 80s ..

.County Court cases settled
to become American citfzens without completion of legally required
criminal background checks.
This was in addition to 71 ,000
aliens with criminal records (including I 0,800 charged with such
felonies as rape, child molestation ·
and aggravated assault) whom the
INS actually knew about, but who ·
. received U.S. citizenship anyway.

nificant- changes." But the U.S.
CommissiOn
on
Immigration
Refonn, which urges abolition of the
INS, argues that the agency is "set
up for failure." And in the words of
Bruce A Morrison, one of the commission's nine mc'mbcrs, " there are

some fundamental structural impediments to doing the job right."'

sanctions against employers who
hire illegal alien workers or fail to
comply with other immigrationrelated labor requirements.
The commission 's plan has heon
well-received by ~otli Republicans
and Democrats in Congress, who
will ultimately decide whether the
INS will be abolished. But Meissner.
concerned perhaps about her
bureaucratic legacy, has signalled
that her I 56-year-old agency will
not go down without a fight.

So Morrison and his fellow commissioners,
appointed by both ConMeanwhile, at least several thougrcs.•
and
the
president. recommend
sand immigrants without criminal
that
the
_immigration
system be brorecords obtained · U.S. citizenship
ken
down
into
four
components:
through fraudulent' means. Most
In n prepared statement released
border
and
interior
cnron.:cmcnt,
.
were clients of Naturalization Assis· .
this
lvcek, the INS blamed "its c·urranee Services, one of six private benefits and visas, wnrkplacc labor .rent problems nn years of neglect by
companies authorized by Meissner's standards. and an appeals process Congress and the White )-louse. du~­
agency to administer-tests for immi- for enforcement action .
. ing which the agency was undergrants seeking citizenship.
Under the commission's plan, . staffed and underfunded. But the
.
NAS: boasti ng a nationwide these duties would he spread over fact is, over the past decade. the
operation of more than 400 aftili- three agencies. The .Justice Depan- agency's hudgct has increased by
-atcs, went much funher than merely mcnt would set up a B'urcau of more tj1an 500 percent, while its
administering citizenship tests . An Immigration Enforccmcnf, which staff h~s doubled . Yet the perforexpose by ABC-TV's "20120," would include .the Border Patrol, . mance pf the INS has gotten worse
using a hidden camera, showed NAS inspection of people arriving at pons rather than better.
test monitors providing correct . of entry, detention of illegal aliens
The INS is simply a failed
answers to immigrant test takers. and deportations, and investigation agency. And rather than investing
Moreover, many of the rest takers of immigration-related crime.
years in trying to reform the INS, as
couldn't even speak English, a preThe State Department would cre- Meissner favo(s . Congress ought to
requisite for becoming an American ate an Undcrsecretariat for Citizen- go ahead and pull the plug on the
citizen.
ship, Immigration and Refugee agency and let other government
After revelation of each· and · Admission . It would pro.;ess visas departments assume its du1ics.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
every INS failing, Meissner has · and issue passports, while also takpromised to " fundamentally restruc- ing over the citizenship process. The for the Sa!l Diego Union· Tribune
ture" her agency and to make "sig- Labor Department would enforce and a commentator for MSNBC:

Federal task force needed on parental rights, responsibilities
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service

I\~'160'P '( t&lt;KO\N "("t\£,
LA'1'6S1' IM· "f"~ tJ.f'. ~.
SrftJ~'T'O~~

a ,.

WASHINGTON - Does this
make sense?
In St. Clair Shores, Mich., parents
are held legally responsible for the
misdeeds of their minor children. In
Montana, underage youngsters can't
get a tattoo without parental pennission.
· But
on
Florida, state
officials
arc
fighting a suit
brought . by a
·teen-ager's par«· ' .
ents who say
they had a right
"
to know their
daughter was using illegal drugs and
having unprotected sex - acts the
child confessed in a journal she
turned in to her teacher each week.
The parents never were told.
What rights do parents have? And
what responsibilities must they
shoulder?
Last week, the California
Supreme Court ruled · unmarried
females under 18 can get an abonion
without the knowledge or approval
of their parents:
·
" At a time when we desperately
·need more parents to exercise loving
authority and control over their children's lives, this decision moves us
in th~ opposite direction, " Dan Lungren, the slate's attorney general,

•

' ~~--·

,

Letters to the editor
••

Flecovflring from accident
Dear Editor
I'm writing concerning the tractor accident my husband had on Friday,
Aug. 1. He is home and doing great. God was on the scene and did a miracle that day.
.
.
. .
: We want to express our thank$ to everyone who had a part in his rescue.
ail tbose who risked their lives to dig Leon free . ·
: God will bless you all abundantly.
.
• And thanks to all the people that prayed and called others to pray. God
\!less you all. Thanks.
Cbrlsdne and Leon Sauten
P11111eroy

By The Alloclated Press
LiJW pressure and a cold front will push to the east of Ohio with show• ers ending from west to east through the day.
Temperatures will fall slightly below normal tonight as cooler and drier
air moves in behind th~ cold front. Lows will dip into the 50s in the north
with 60s over the remaiRder of the state. ·
.
High pressure will set up for pleasant weather on Thursday as sunshine
returns and temperatures start to rebound.
The record high for this dare at the Columbus weather station was for 98
set in 1936. The low was 48 in 1967. Sunset today will be at8:32 p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at 6:42a.m.
Weatber forecast:
Tonight..Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 60s. Nonhwest wind around I 0 mph. Chance of rain 30 per. cent.

It's time to abolish the useless INS

This amounts to a " no confidence" vote in . Meissner, who
promised to reforin the INS when
she took over irs reins in 1993. On
her watch, the aA!ency has not only
failed .to secure $his nation's bordcr11
from invasion by illegal aliens. it
also has completely fallen down on
. its job of preserving the integrity of
the U.S. citizenship process.

l.

Drier air spells pleasant .
conditions on Thursday

•

"I heard the other day that they
pulled up an olive tree that was 300

Doris Meissner could find herself
out of a job next year. A federal
advisory panel has recommended
that her beleaguered agency, the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, be abolished and its duties
handed off to other government
agencies.

•leolumbusl79'

Write Jack Anderson and Jan
MoHer, United Features, 200 Park
Ave., Ne~ York, NY.IOI66

trees.

By Joseph Perkins

INO.

••

children.
This hodgepodge of state actions
is dangerously disconcerting.
It threatens to produce rules that
vary wildly from state to state, in
much the same way commerce Jaws
once did before Congress moved to
end the confusion. Now .Washlngton
should act to bring order to the rulemaking that governs what parents

will scuttle an effort to bring order to
the disorder that now prevails. aut
we can't allow the fear of eitherto
paralyze us into inaction.
It's matters like these that made
th~ weak national government thill
grew out of tho Articles of Confcdcyation . unworkable, and tbc stro~g
central government that was
spawned by the Constitution so necessary.
•
It is absurd for a state to require
It's maUers like these tlult made the weak Mtional parental approval for children to
government that grew out of the Articles of Confeder- have their navels pierced, but !o
ation unworkable, and the strong central government allow minors to get an abonion wi·t~­
out n parent's consent. And it 's silly
that was spawned by the Constitution sq necessary.
for another to require parcn.tal
approval for a dependent child to gilt
a Qrivcr's li cense, but defend" a
can
do
with
or
know
about
teacher's decision to withhold froon
parental approval, · a bill that will
parents information about their
make it illegal for children under 18 their children.
This
won't
be
easy.
child's
illegal and self-destructive
to have their body pierced without
.
The Republican-dominated Con- behavior.
the consent of mom or dad is zipping
gress prefers to give states block
What 's needed is a federal tas~
through ·the state's legislature.
Parental responsibility Jaws simi- grants rather than laws that force · force to consider questions of
lar to the ordinance in St. Claire them to confonn to a national stan- parental rights and rcspon.&gt;ibilitieO
Shores have been approved by 37 dard. But if there is one light all and to offer the nation a workable
escape from the COnfusion that DO'!'
states, and 38 have enacted rules mothers ~nd fathers should have .
requiring minor children to get and Congress ought to ensure - it is reigns in this area.
If Washington docsn"t act soo~
parental approval before undergoing to know their child-rearing rights
an abonion. Legislatures in 26 states . and responsibilities, without having more and more states will, and thC
have parents' rights laws under con- to resort to reading a state-by-state conflictiog mix of ·Jaws and coun
directory.
actions will grow - creating a~
sideration.
The danger here, of course, is that even deeper quagmire of rules an4
Last year, •Colorado voters narrowly defeated a Parent's Rights right-wing zealots who control Con- regulations that undermine the abili'
. Amendment that was an overreac- gress will try to enshrine their beliefs ty of parents to raise their children, ;
•
tion to governmental constraints on and taboos into such a declaration;
•
the ability of parents to raise their . or that liberals, fearing such a move,
said shortly after the decision was
announced.
He's right.
When it comes to the rights and
responsibilities of parents, we are
terribly conflicted. Nothing illus"trates this more than the mixed signals we' re getting from states. Wh.ilc
California's high court has freed
minors to get abortions without

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

•

CLEVELAND (AP) - A state
senator has asked the Ohio Supreme
Court for guidance in forming a
method of school funding .
Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, RStrongsville, wr~e a letter to the seven justices and the Perry County
judge the high coun put ·in charge of
the school funding case to seek
"greater guidance" on what legislation will be acceptable.
Last March, the Supreme Court
gave the Legislature a year to create
a financing system that was less
reliant on local property taxes and
would provide more money to poor
school districts.
CONTEST HELD - Little Mister and Mlsa first runnerup; and Clinton Kennedy, eon of
Majority Republicans in the LegMeigs
County James Thomas Evans and Glen and Brande Kennedy of Pomeroy, MCond
islature recently abandoned a plan to
Andrea
Buckley, front center, are pictured whh runnerup. In back, from left, are Meigs County
ask voters to increase the sales tax by
first and second runnersup. Pictured are,
Fair King Alban Salser, Fair Queen Kr11tl
a penny a dollarto raise about $1 bilfront, Heather Cundiff, daughter of Larry and Warner, and Leonard Koenig, representing
lion annually for schools. The House
Bob's Market and Greenhouses,whlch lponDebbie Cundiff, Pomeroy, ·second runnerup;
didn't get enough votes for the plan,
sored the event and provided savings bonds
Jaderlanne Karcher, daughter of Christina
and the Senate rej&lt;:&lt;:ted a House plan
Teaford, Pomeroy, first runnerup; Ryan Beegle, to the winners,
that didn't include a tax increase.
son of Rodney and Pal!lcle Beegle.• Portland,
Suhadolnik said in hi s letter
Thursday that he understands that the
personal appeal might be inappropriHolzer Medical Center
ate.
Discharges Aug. 12 - Stacey
'"This may be a letter written out
McPeek , Caleb Petrie, Lincoln
of frustration,but it's meant to try to
Smith. Betty Bing, Leota Edington,
break the logjam," Suhadolnik, who
Mrs. Chester Combs and son, Jessi,is a member of the Senate Finance
ca
Cheney, Garnett Morris, Joan SorCommittee, told The Plain Dealer for
Cyrus Dan Crislip, 63, Coolville, died ,Tuesday, Aug. 12. 1997 at Camden, Lavina Meaige, Fhilip Globokar.
a story published today.
(Published with permission)
den-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Justice Andrew Douglas said he is
He was born .in Reedsville on Aug. 25, 1933, a son of the late Charles
consillering Suhadolnik's request
and Elsie Wilson Crislip. He was a U.S . Anny veteran and was employed at
Douglas voted With the coun's 4-3
G
&amp; C.Towing as a deckhand.
CLEVELAND (AP)- The Ohio
majoroty that found the state's fundHe attended Grace Brethren Church, Coolville, and the Reedsville Church Lottery will pay out $547,995.50 to
ing system for . schOols unconstitu- of the Nazarene.
winners in Tuesday's Pick 3 Numbers
tionai . ·
Surviving are his wife, Roma Williams Crislip; a son, Charles Daniel daily game.
"'I'm in t~e process of deciding irt Crislip ofMiddlepon; a daughter, Julia Wyatt of Washington Coun House;
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
what matter to respond, if at all," two stepsons, Wilber Burke of Chester, and Ben Gabriel of Athens; seven
$1,194,505.
Douglas said.
stepdaughters, Sue Ann Kauff, Kimberly Kauff, Sally Bissell and Kathy Riley,
In the other daily game, Pick ,,t
But Justice Paul Pfeifer said, "My all of Chester. Linda Crislip of Middleport, Karen Gabriel of Hollister, and
Numbers
players
wagered
guess is that he won' t get a formal ,Vicki Phillips of Hanford, W.Va.; five sisters, Dorothy Hall of Reedsville,
$343,832.50 and will share $76,900.
reply from us."
Alice Elliott of Shade, Carolyn Allhouse of Pageville, Lillian Richards of
$ales in Buckeye 5 totaled
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer was Parkersburg, and Margaret Raiguel ofBashan; several grandchildren and one
$328,284.
traveling Tuesday and had not seen great-grandchild.
·
The jackpot for Wednesday's
the Jetter, spokesman Jay Wuebbold
He was preceded in death by two brothers, Bob Crislip and Bill Crislip.
Super Lotto drawing is worth $35
told the newspaper.
Services will be I I a.m. Thursday in the Reedsville Church of the million.
'
Nazarene, with the Rev. George Horner and Pastor Mark Dupler officiating.
Burial will be in Reedsville Cemetery, with graveside services by the Athens
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3477. Friends may call at the White Funeral
Home, Coolville, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

Hospital news

Cyrus D. Crislip

Lottery results

lnJersection crash
leaves three hurt

The following cases were settled violence, rosts, 10 days jail susThree people were taken to area
last week in the Meigs County Court pended to one day, one ·year probation, restraining order issued; hospitals with minor injuries followof Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Ginger L. Campbell. Michael J. Conlen, Pomeroy, domes- ing a three-vehicle accident Tuesday
Phyllis E. Morris, 76, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Aug. 12, 1997 at her resAthens, seat belt, $25 plus costs; tic violence, costs, one year proba- at the intersection of Pomeroy Pike idence.
and Salisb·ury Township Road 79, the
Sarah E. Caldwell. Pomeroy, failure tion. six months jail suspended to two
A homemaker, she was born on Oct. 15, 1920, daughter of the late RayGallia-Meigs Post of the State Highto yield, $20 plus costs; Joseph days ;
way Patrol reponed.
mond Michael and Jane Hysell Michael Rupe.
.
Graci, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
Terry Day, Pomeroy, underage
Transported by the Meigs EMS
She issurvived by a daughter, Janet Manuel of Racine; sons and a daughcosts; Kenneth W. Eblin, Rutland, consumption, $200 plus costs, 10 were driver Mark T Gilkey, 36, and ter-in-Jaw. Walter and Nancy Morris of Hamden, and Roland D. Morris of
s~at·beh, $25 plus costs; Kimberly D.
days jail suspended, three years pro- his passenger, Angelia R. Gilkey, 33, Gauley Bridge, W.Va.; broJhers, Herman Michael of Pomeroy, and Cecil ·
Smith, .Huntington, W.Va., speed, · ba!ion; resisting arrest, costs, 10 both of Hanford. W.Va., and Frances
Michael of Olean, N.Y.; sisters-in-law, Virginia Michael of Pomeroy, Jack$30 plus costs; John F. Roche, Grosse dllys jail_suspended. three years proie
Michael of Middlepon, and Irene Thomas of Jackson; and nine grand4
Point Park, Mich., speed, $50· plus bation: Charles S. Allman II, Vinton, G. Reiber, 8, 32635 Court St..
Racine, a passenger in a car driven by children, seven gretgrandsons and several nieces and nephews.
costs; Ronald D. Herdman. Pomeroy, possession of drug parapliernalia, Randall D. Reiber. 51, also of32635 , She was preceqe in death by her husband, Eldon Morris, on May 9, 1989;
failure to control, $20 plus costs; $100 plus costs; possession, $50 Coun St.
a son, William Mo is; brothers, Everett "Pete," Clifford and Kenneth
Dorothy Boyer, Middlepon, failure to plus costs; -Mary E. Kirby, Pomeroy,
The Gil keys was taken to Pleasant Michael; and sisters, Thelma Moore and Beatrice Lightfoot
yield, $20 plus costs; Bobby Mays, two counts passing bad checks. $ 25 Valley Hospital, and !'ranees Reiber
Services will be II a.m. Friday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funer'
Charleston, W.Va. , domestic vio- plus costs on each. restitution; to Veterans Memorial Hospital. the al Home, with the Rev. Amos Tillis officiating. Burial will be in the Riverview
lence, costs. six months jail sus- Michael E. Stewan, Shade, expired patrol reponed.
Cemetery, Middlepon. Friends may call at the chapel from '2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
pended to two days, one year proba- operators license. S150 plus costs,
Troopers said Mark Gilkey was Thursday.
tion, reslralning order issued, rcslitu- three days jail and $75 suspended nonhbound op Pomeroy Pike at 5:40
In lieu of fl owers, contributions may be made to the Holzer Meigs Countion; Michael Bums, Pomeroy, dri- upon presentatioln of a valid "OL;
p.m. when he IUrned left and collid- ty Hospice, I I 5 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
ving under the influence, $850 plus
Karen Wills. Middlepon, passing ed with a southbound car-driven by
costs, I 0 days jail suspended to three bad checks, $25 plus costs, restitu- Jeremy E. Johnson, 16, 45160Vinedays, 90-day operator's license sus- tion ; Shane Ingle, Middlcpon. theft,
·
.. 1
gar St.. Racme.
d d
pension, one year probation. jail and costs, 30 days Ja•
Units of the Meigs County Emersuspen e ' l wo
The impact of the crash forced
$550 suspended upon completion of , years probation, restitution. restrain- Johnson's car into R~ndall Reiber's gency Medical Service recorded eight
residential treatment program:
i"ng order issued; Misty Jeffers, car. which was stopped at the stop calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
Raymond E. Sayre, Racine, dri - · Pomeroy, domestic violence. costs, sign at TR 79. according to the repon. responding included: ·
ving under the influence. $850 plus 10 days jail suspended to one day.
CENTRAL DISPATCH .
Damage was moderate 10 I he
costs, I 0 days jail suspended to three one year probation. restraining order Gilkey and Johnson vehicles, and
10:21 a.m., South Third Avenue,
days jail, 90-day OL suspension, one issued; Jerry Barney, Wilkesvollc, slight to Reiber's car. Gilkey was cit- Middlepon, Betty Hawley, Holzer
year probation. jail and $550 sus- assault. costs. six months jail sus- . ecf for failure to yield .
Medical Center;
pended upon completion of residen- pendcd, lwo years probation. restrain2:58 p.m., East Letart Road,
tial treatment program ; driving under ing o~der issued; criminal trespass.
Geraldine Webb, Veterans Memorial
financial responsibility action sus- costs only; Mary E. Sheets. Pomeroy.
Hospital;
pension, $300 fine concurrent with speed. $30 plus costs.
7:41 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
OUI, costs. 10 days jail suspended to
Pomeroy, Sally Warson , VMH,
A Rutland youth was treated for Pomeroy squad assisted ;
three days concurrent with DUI, one
minor
injuries after a one-car accident
year probation; Donald L. Armen- .
8:08 p.m., State ' Route 143,
on
State
Route 124 ncar Rutland Pomeroy, Jacqueline Justice, HMC.
trout, Middleport. two counts passing Wells reunion
f.'--~--.;;~~"-"'""-'-~-'-"·
For Wednesday, August 13
had -checks, 30 days jail suspended on
MIDDLEPORT
The annual Wells reunion. descen- Wednesday around 5:45 p.m.
Wednesday, Augustl3
·
Megan C. Drummer 16, was casteach. restitution, $25 plus costs· on dants of John and Anna Thoma
5:47p.m., SR 124, motor vehicle
· Holzer Cibtlc • Spoooor of Circus
KARAOKE with Jeff Nonh- Hill Stage
each; Bill Lucas. Dexter. domestic Wells, will be held Saturday at the · bound when she failed to slow down accident, Megan Drummer, VMH.
4:00-8:00 p.m.
for
a
stalled
vehicle
in
the
'
road,
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
4:00p.m.
POMEROY
Senior citizens building, I I a.m. to 5
according
to
a
Meigs
County
Sheriffs
Junior
Fair Swine Sbow- Show Arena
6:00p.m.
5:43
p.m.,
volunteer
fire
depanp.m. Dinner will be served at 12:30
·Kentucky
Head Hunters Grand Stand
8:00p.m.
Department
repon.
The Daily Sentmel p.m.
mcnt and squad to SR at Rock
Gates Close
11:00 p.m.
She hot the brakes and then skid- Springs, motor vehicle accident, JereiUSPSlil·-1
Thursday,August14- SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
ded almost 200 fcet in to n ditch my Johnson. VMH, Angela Gilkey,
AI_
I
Senior
Cltluos Admitted Fmo All Day (Age 60 &amp; •••r)
Published ev~ ry afternoon, Monday throuah I
befo.re striking a culvert, causing Pleasant V~lley Hospital, Randall
Sponsor- Vaughan's IGA
Friday. Ill C'oun St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by rhe
heavy damage to her 1985 Chevrolet. and Francis Reiber, Mark Gilkey, not
Ohio \Iailey Publishins Campany/(ianncll Co.,
Gales Open
7:00a.m.
She was transponed by the MidPomeroy, Ohio 457(,9, Ph . 992 -21!56. Setand
Junior Fair Dairy ShoY[- Show Arena
9:00a.m.
Am Ele Power ...................... 43'1.. dleport squad of the Meigs County transported, Middleport VFD and
class posrat;t raid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Central Dispatch squad assisted.
Quick Bread contest- Hill Stage
11:00 a.m.
Akzo ..................................,.\.... 81
Open Class Dairy Shaw- Show Arena .
REEDSVILLE .
Mt111btr1 The Associaled Press, and the Ohio
!2:00p.m.
AmrTech ............................... 67Y. Emergency Medical Service to VetNewspaper Auociarion .
Flower-show Judging· Senior Fair Building
Ashland Oil ........................... 5o'~ erans Memorial Hospital, where she
12:30 p.m.
2:0 I a.m., SR 681, Sylvia Curtis, ·
was
treated
for
minor
visible
injuncs.
Harness Racing .
AT&amp;T
.....................................
3!i,•
1:00
p.m.
St.
Joseph's
HospitaL
·
POSTMASTER: Send 1nklren corrections to
Bank One ...........................dlt:.. according to the repon.
Little Fiddlers- Hill Slage
1:00 p.m..
The Daily Sentine~. Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy,
~
RUTLAND
Bob Evans ............................ 17'1.
Ohio 45769.
Swingin
Seniors- Hill Stage
2:00p.m.
5\le was cited on a ch~r.ge of fail6 p.l. Rock Springs Fairgrounds,
Borg-Warner ....................... 53 "1. ure to maintain control. '
Big
Bend
Cloggers- Hill Stage
3:00p.m.
· Byron '\l!atson, VMH.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Champion
.............................
18'1.
4-H
Talent
Show .
4:00p.m.
D)' C1rritr or Molor Roule .
Charm Shps ............................5\
Kiddie Toaclar Pull· Shaw Arena
4:00p.m.
OIM! w'eek ........., ........................................ Sl.UII
City Holdlng ............... ,. ...........38 rr---------------------~
1 One Month, ............................................... SK.711
Dazzling Dolls- Hill Slage
5:00p.m.
One Ycar ................................................ $104.110
Federal Mogul .........................35
Kiddie Games- Hillside Stage
6:00p.m.
Gannen .................................97'1.
Little
Fiddlers· Grand Stand
7:00p.m.
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Goodyear .............................. 64',1,
Dally .................................................... 3S Cents
Youth
Horse Show
7:30p.m.
I
Kmart ..................................... 11\
8:00p.m.
Landa End .............................28'1.
SubKribcn not desirinato pay the tarrier may

Phyllis E. Morris

Meigs EMS runs

Accident injures
Rutland area teen

"Bill Of Fair"

Announcements

1

li"'""'""'""'="'""'""'""'""'""'""'""''il

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remit In advance direct to The Daily SentiMI
oo a three, sh: or 12 month ba5ili. Credit will be
given cmier each week.
No subscription by mail permilled in areu
where home t.rric r scr.'icc is •vailable.
Publisher tueTYCJi the right 1o adjust rates dur·
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chll'lges m8y be implemented by chatiging the
duulion of the s~riplion .

MAILSUBSCRJmONS
l•slde Mt:ftl• Co..IJ
13 Wteks ...., ............................................ $27.30
26 'Wtet.s ................................................. $53.142

.S2 Wteki ............................................... Silri .S6
. !lola O.bldt Mtlp c....,
11 w.cu ......,.......................................... $29.25
26 Weeks ................................................. $:56.68
nw.cu ...............................................SIII!I.n

I

ADOLPH'S

Ltd ............................. ."........... 22}z

Oak Hill Flnl ........... ,.............. 20'1.
OVB ......................................... 39
One Valley .........................(..42Y.
Pebplea .................................38\
Pram Flnl ............................... 20'1.
Rockwell ............................... 63'1.
RD·Shell ................................ ~2'1.
Shoney's ...... ,..........................5\
Star Bank ......... ~.................... 44\
Wendy's ................................ 21 ~
Worthlngton .......................... 19'!.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Galllpolls.

!t
It .
I
1

SUN. -SAT. 10:00AM -10:00 PM. 992·2556 .

9!
fl

~r,''l',''ll'f'T:i¥M\!'P'I 1 'r 1 1''r l!yM¢

I
,1

Q;-----------------~--~

8:00 P.ll!·
.11:00

EJdlo. Graodstand
Gates Close

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

·

·

TOUGH DAY - The Cincinnati Reds' Delon Sanders carries his
batting helrnat on his bat attar striking out with two runners on In
!he fourth Inning of Tuesday night's National League game against
the host San Francisco Giants, who won 7-3. (AP)

Alvarez finds wind
friendly in Giants'
·7-3 -win over Reds
By ~OB GLOSTER
catcher do all the thinking [or him.
SANFRANCISCO(AP)-Wil·
" I can't say I'm comfonablc.
ion Alvarez discovered an unex- Everything is new for me here,',' he
jiectcd ally during his home debut for s• id. "I just said (to catcher Damon
!he San Francisco Giants.
- -Bel"!)' hill). 'You call the pitches and
•! "With this wind blowing in, they I'll throw the ball,' and that 's what I
really have to hit it to get it over the . did tod~y...
.
(eace." said Alvarez. who struck out
· Alvarez also enjoyed a side benpine Tuesday as the Giants won 7-3 cfit or playing in the NL. He drove
ever the Cincinnati Reds. "Today it in a run with his first major league
was in ravor of the pitcher...
hit a ball that bounced under the
; Alvnrcz (2-1 ), making his third gl~vc or second bnseman Bret Boone
$tart since the July 31 trade that for n single.
\!roughl him to the Giants with
Hernandez said he was not surl!itchers Roberto Hcmand~z and prised by Alvarez's abiliiy at the
Danny Darwin from .the Chicago plate.
, White Sox for six minor leaguers,
"Wilson is serious when he goes
Qlowed three ~ns on seven hits in out there to hit ,'' Hernandez said.
1113 innings.
" He took batting practice in the
:: ..Alvarez said pitching in a new American League when interleaguc
\tngue is simple - he just lets his
(See REDS.on Pa_ge 5)

0:

l

.

,.....,.

«."+-• ... ...

HOME PLATE COLLISION
The Detroit .
Tigers' Damian Easley collldea with Cleveland
catcher Pat Borden •• Eaaley 1eores In the third

Inning ol T..aday night's Amarlcan League game
In Cleveland, where the Indians won i -4. Easley ·
came homa on Tony Clark's doubla. (AP)

Hargrove gets GM's backing
~efore Tribe beats Tigers 7-4
By KEN BERGER
"I appreciate it,' ' Hargrove said.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Though "He came to me before he came to
the Cleveland Indians still have you guys. I'm not immune to what I
some worries, general manager John · read and hear. It's nice that John did
Han said Mike Hargrove's job is not that."
one of them.
After dropping three of [our to
A few hours after Han said firing Texas last weekend. the Indians
his embattled manager was "just not sh·owed subtle signs of breaking out
an option," Hargrove got what he of their doldrums.
.
. . Manny Ramirez hit his 18th
needed most - a victory.
"This is Mike Hargrove's team. " Jtomer. David Justice continued his
Han sa1d before Cleveland beat the hot hilling with three hits, and th.~
~troll Tigers 7:4 T~esday mght. bullpen was solid following a twoMike Hargrove IS gomg to pull thts hour rain delay.
tea.m ·through. ThaCs.!he way we're
"We're going to the playoffs,''
gmng to approach tt.
said a confident Eric Plunk, who
Han softened his stance against pitched two perfect innings for the
H?~g~o~e nearly two weeks after victory. "When we get there. it
cnttclllng the club- and seemmg- doesn't mallcr if we've won 100
ly the manager - for poor fonda-. games ·or not. But I do think it 's
mentals and lack of emotion. Though important to build a little bit of a
the Indians still lead the weak AL head of steam."
Central by three games, they are in
Plunk (4-3), who had his fifth
a 9-17 slump. Their59~55 mark is straightstrongoutingaftcrstruggling
the worst at thts pmnt 10 a season most of the ycur, struck out thC side
smce 1993.
in the seventh. Jose Mesa, back•in
"Mike's the only manager I've the .loser's role, worked ·the ninth
had here," said Hart, who was 8-11 for his fifth save and second since
as Indians manager at the end or the April 24.
·
1989 ~eason, and became GM 10
Greg Keagle (0-2), called up
1.99 1. .. . We ve been through tough from Triple-A Toledo to start for the
limes ore. These arc tough ttmes. Tigers. allowed three runs and five
and we re gm.ng to ge'. thmug~ hits in three innings. With the rain
th~m. I ~ouldn t say that.t[ I dtdn I forcing Tigers manager Buddy Bell
thmk M1ke could bnng th•s ballclub to usc his bullpen, he hns few
back. I hope that will put to rest that options for Wednesday 's douhlcspeculation."
header.
Hargt~ve, the founh -winningcst
"We have no Iong-man. really,''
manager 10 club hiStory. who got a Bell said. "If we can't get anyone
two-year contract extens10q 1n May, here. we're going to have .to live with
smd Han met w&amp;th h1m before the what we've got; which is OK, we 've
game and offered I00 percent sup- just got to be careful."
pon.
Cleveland rookie Jarct Wright

her

Scoreboard
.•

Baseball

c

'·

.',.

£astrrn Di"ition

lwn

AL standings

.. Iom

:.,. Toruntm
2~~";~~.:.:::::::::::::~~ ~ -~
............ .. :'i7 60 4H7
~

Bosltm .................. :'itl 62
Drtroir ..
.."i:'i 6~

~ '

""
f'

-•••
~

~~

•
,.
"
•

•
''
r

.:

Cmtral

Oicllf!O ................. !17 -~~
Milwaukee ..... ...... 51 60
Minnt:sora ............. :'i I 67
K:tnlnt City ...... .....49 b6

491
487
4.\2
.416

WHiem Divlllion
Anaheim ................66 ~2 . ~59
Sl!.111h= .........•..........6tl ~2 - ~~9
Tc~ ................... ~i?

Oak lOlii\.! .................47

62 .4N

n

.J9Z

.1
J'

10

Ill'•,

. 9'.
2U

Scunle :l

Te~as 1!. Bouon 2
CLEVELAND 7. Octrnit 4
Kruts.-q City 6, N.Y. Yan~s. -l
Baltimore ~- Oak.l;md 0
Tommn 9, MtnnesUflt I
Chicago White SoJi It A~1hdm :'i

Oakland (Lorraine 0-0) at Baltimor~
(Muli.lirJa 1.\--4). 7-H p m.
. Minnt5otu (Hawkms 4-7) at Toronto
(Willi llf1U 7-10). 7:.1:' p.m.
Anuhe1m (Wotson 10-ti) at Chica!l.ll
While So• {Eyre 0-2). 8·05 p.m.
·

Thursday's games

An:lhdm (D. Springer 7-5) at Milwllu ket' (Merctdes4-6), 1:05 p.m
Minntlo,la {Radke 10-6) D.t BoJton
•• {Suppan 5-1 ).; 7:&amp;.1 p.m.
Detroil (Snoden 4-9) nt CLEVELAND
• {Colon 2·~). 7 :0~ p.m.
:
Kanw City (8o'_'CI2&lt;\J at N.Y. Yw.--

kees (Wells

I~·$),

Uiah

5-12

.'iH

61

4K7

64

451' . 10
·B6
I!' ·

.

.............. ..411 72

.400

.~:\

· ~5!1

los Angeks ........... M 5:'i
San Diego ..... ...... :n 62
Co11)1'"Jdo ............. ~7 6:\

479

.~JK

•m

6

17

.26 1

I'·

2' :

,,

~

n.

No -amt51oniahl

IU

Transactions

Som FraDI:ISl·o 7. CINCI,NNATI1
P1mburgh S. At larua 2
St. llwi s ~ - NY M~h 2
Houshm I J. Fldnili• 2
PhilrnJdphiu 5. Cnloradn 0
Ch1ca~o Cubs 4, Los Angeles 2
S:m Dirgo 6. Mt:ntrr;ll 4

Baseball

Today's games

fSmohz11-9J. 7:40p.m. ,
N.Y. Mets (Bohanon .1-1 ) :tt St. Lnu1s
(Stottlemyn: 11-R). !1 ·05 p m.
Floridn tFern:~nd~z 14-K) at Hnus1ur1
(Reyn('lld.\ 6-7). 7:40p.m.
Monlffal (C.Pertl. 11 -7&gt; at Los Angeles (l'andio111 8-4), !03.'i run.
CINCINNATI (Mor~:.n J - 10) m San
Diel!o {Smith 4- 2). IOH p.m

Thursday's games .
C~I C D80 Cubs (Taf_
::tni 2- I I :11 S.1n
Frull\;t5CO!Estes 14-4) . • Yi p.m.
Monlre~tl (P. Martinez 14-.S l at Los
An&amp;eles {Valdes 6--10). •:o:S p m.
CII!"CINNATI (White 1-0) ot San
OicAo (~shby &amp;-81. 5'0j5 p.m.
N.Y. Me11 (JCines 2-7) "I St . Lou1s
(Osborne 2-4), 8 : 0~ p.m.
·

-

AIMI'kan Llfapt
ANAHEIM ANGELS · S i~lh."t.l RHPs
Mich:u:l Brunet untJ Stevt Gu:en . C
R11bc:r1 Garrkk ;mt.l SS Stcvt' Ahlt'r~ 111
mitlnr-ltattiM: ~orltllll:ts .
BOSTON REO SOX : Si~n~d RHP
Chris Bll)ltl to a minllr-lnguc cunum:t.
Pl;~t:~tl Of Shune Mack on the I ~·ilit)' tlisab~tl list. rttnll.IL!1ivc to Au~, 7 Rt'callctl
' Or Jn~t' ~hluvl;' from flfWIUCkl.!t uf the~
lnh.'f"n:lli!Jnal ~UJ~Je .
CLEVELA ND INDIANS : Acli\'utt'tl
LHP Bri:~n Andtuon from 11~~.: I~·Wi)' tli ~ ­
. ahlc:d li11 otnd optioned him to Buffalo nf
the American l'mOt:lotion.
DETROIT TIGERS: Recalled RHP
Gre1 Keaglt from Toledo of ihe International !....:=ague. PllUd OF Mcl\'in Nieves
on !he J S-day di sabled list rclrooclivc to
AuJ,. 4
.
NEW YORK YANKEES : Activoled
OF Tim RaincJ from the 1$-da)' di1abled
li l t. DcsiJnated OF· DH Pe1e lneovi&amp;lia
for asisnmr:nt . Mo-m:! P J:~ke Robbins. P
Dove Dude~:k and OF James Rows(1n
from Green1boro of the South A1lan1k
league to Tampa of the 1-""Sl Mil P Tony
Arn1a1 , P Cra1g Din!m&lt;m. P O$waldo

Mairenn and OF Derek Shumpcn from
Tampa to Greensboro.

TEXAS R~NGERS' Trodod LHP Ed
Vo1blfr11 to the Florida Mll"lins fDI' RHP
Ritk HcllinJ. ·
·
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: TrMsed OF
Otls Nixon 10 the l...os Ancelu DodJe:n
fCir C Bobb)' Cripp1. Recalled OF Shan~tan StcwiWI from S)'mcutc of thr lntema·
tiontd Le:t&amp;ue.
·

Basketball
WNBA standings
Ellltm Conl~tnnce

I-.

l!

Hous10n .................16

New York .............. 1~

L

7

f&lt;l.

.696

7 .682

!ill
'

'

In C;•lgury un 11 rd1;1h a.~si,.nntelll .
SAN t-""RANCISCO GIANTS: S1gtk't.l
OF Dan M~Kmh:y Ill ;1 IWM minur ka!:IIL'
cnntmct .

Basketball
Nlltlonalltllllketball A~t&lt;AA'illlion
GO UlEN STAT E WAIUUORS :
Trad~:J F Chm Mulhn tu Jndlllll:l l"ur (."
f-.rit.:k Dom'llicr &lt;~nt.l r: Oui\1)1.' Fmdl.
MIAMI HEAT: Aq~uin.al C [.)u:mc
Cuuswdl frnm lhc SacrmiiCnlll Kin~~ 1"11r
G Ci;try Grunc.- C M:ll! Fish and a cund1-

111111:11S«lllltl-ruu,uU Jm11 11id; tn JWK.
TORONTO R.APTORS · Named [J,TI"l
Kl•lflf!Cnhur!! ll~ ~t!\t:mll."u:Kh .

gave up two runs and two hits in
three innings. He walked three. two
of which scored.
The Tigers scored twice against
Wright in the third when Brian
Hunter and Damian Easley walked
and scored on Tony Clark's double .
Cleveland made it ~-2 in the hottom
of the inning on Matt Williams' RBI
groundout.
Tony Femandez led oft' the fourth
with his seventh homer, slapping
Sager•s .first pitch onto the left-field
pavilion to make it 4-2. Omar
Vizquel singled. and ·Ramirez atoned
for two defensive blunders in Sunday's game with a 416-foot homer of
A.J. Sager to make it6-2.
The Tigers got two in the fifth off
Albie Lopez on RBI singles by
Bobby Higginson and Bob Hamelin.
Cleveland made it 7-4 in the sixth
on a run-scoring infield single hy Jim
Thome otT lefty Mike Myers.
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Fair Week
·continuecl
Have Fun &amp;
Be Safe
at the
Meigs
County Fair!
PICKENS

Footboll
N~tlional

t'oolhllll Ltltlf: Uf

JJUI+ALO IIILLS : Rd~:m·d LB
Mark Mathknl tlllU UL Mark Gunn .
CH ICA(iO I!EARS: Si~Ttc1IDT Mark
Sptw.llcr Hckm•cJ WK H:~yw.~ld kllin-s
.
KANSAS C ITY l'HIEf.l\ · W;,ivL·d
WK Tytlu ~ Wimm ~ . OT l..cshc Katl1tle. P
Nu:li. Galk:ry :mtl Fn Sh:1wn W;1lt~:r~
MINNESOTA VIKIN(iS : Mc lca~~ ~~
RO Jnmc~ StcwHft . S Mark w M;1di.ln ...
OL Kt!vin Ni!\.1 ;lm11:11 Jnsl1 Wilcnx

MASON,
W.VA.

Thund1f1111mu
Sacramento at Charlotte. 7JO p.m
CLEVELAND 011 Phoenix, 10 r .m.

' '·

9';

Phit1delrhia _(l.xurr 7-12) :11. C•llur:klo
(Wnght 6- 1), J:O:'i p.m
Chil'ttgo Cubs (JoGu nza lt! z !1 - ~1 ~~
Sao Frl.lnrisco fGardner 12-5L 4 0~ p.m.
Pi\ISburgh (Curdova ~ - 6 ) at 1\tl:mta

PITTSBURGH PIRATES : Op1im~i.l
INF Murk John~n tu C&lt;~ltary ur thl: ~-~­

1

76. Utuh :'i6
Phtx·m•
Nc:w Ymk f17
S:11..tt:unento ~I. CU ::VEI.ANl&gt; 7fl
Hu11~ton

• 17

Wu\rm Oiviliion
San Fr;mci~co ...... 67

4
4

Tuesday's scores

6'.

7..lS p.m.

Senule (Jahnaon lti-J) ill Ballimore
(KanUeniecki 7-~). 7 : ~3 p.m. ·
Oalr.lnnd (Adams 3-.5) at Chicaao
: White Sox (C. Caslillo 2-1), 8 :~ p.m.

~ NL standings

Wt.drm Coot~trlfnrt
Pb1'1CniJi ................ 11 II 51KI
L:u An,t:b ....... HI 1.\ 4J~
Sacr:unent~l .............. Y 14 ..l'J I

Tunday's scorn

Tuesday's scores
Milwau~a: . ~.

'i'

. St. Loui L .. : ........ .'\~

Dhol~ion

~ 6-2). 1.05 p m

..

..lSJ

l.l
.\I' ·

01ica~o

K;msn! City (Belcher IJ.JO) al N.Y
Yankc:e5 (lrllbu 2-2), I :05 p.m
DH: De!toil (Birur If ·~ and Di~hnum
1-01 ut CLI:-:VEI.AND (Smiley 1- 1 :tnd
Hnshi.w:r \,1..~1. ~ :05 p.m.
Te~as {Sturtze 0-0J 111 Boston \Avery

•

K•

CINCINNATI ...... :'i l •66

,

t1

.57b
:'i:'il

Pi11.~burgh

-I!U
-170

Todxy's garnes

.li

.'iO

10 . 524
I I ~22

~~11~ Cll:UI I~"I:!.U~ . Scat RHP John Erh:k!&gt;

Crnlral Diwisiun

r

..
,.
,.

Roru.la ........... ...... 6K

.sn

Omrl()fte ............. 11
UEVElAND ....... I2

!ill

.620

Huusrnn ............... M .:'i:'i

i r CLEVELANO ....... :'i'J S:'i .SIK

I
I"

f&lt;l.

-16

New Vt~~l
.. M ~ -1
Mmllrl!:r.l.. ....\.... __ 6(1 57
Phii;LJdphio:~ , ...... 41 7!1

Easttni Dlvl.too
l't l. f&lt;l.

r-o

...

l't L

_....... 7:'i

Atlanta..

Nallonol .......
LOS ANGElES DODGERS: Dt•iJ·
natcd OF &amp;i~: Anthony for aHignment .

.w arriors ship·
Mullin to Pacers
in three-man trade .

Paae4

Pirates
get 5-2
comeback
•
w1n
over
Braves
By BEN WALKER .
AP Baseball Writer
Denny Neagle was cenain the
Atlanta Braves would hold a ninthinning lead, and for good reason.·
He 'd never seen them blow one.
·The Pittsburgh Pirates wrecked
his bid to become the first 17-game
winner in the NL, however, rallying
for four runs in the ninth against
Mark Wohlers for a 5-2 victory Tuesday night at Turner Field.
Atlanta had won iii straight
games this season when leading
after the eighth, and was 133-0· in
those. spots since May 3, 1996.
"1 . was very confident,'' said
Neagle, traded from the Pirates to
Atlanta last August. "With a closer
as dominant as Wohlers, you have to
feel good. He just didn't have it
tonight."
A close call on a steal play and a
couple of walks set up Turner Ward's
two-run single. Later in the inning,
AI Manin hit a two-run siQgle off
Kerry Ligtenberg, making his major
league debut.
"It got ugly," said Wohlers, who
was trying for his IOOth career save.
" I got the first guy out, but after that
it was all downhill. Obviously, my
contrOl wasn' l there.''
Wohlers (4-5) took over to slaM
the ninth with a 2-1 lead and struck
out the first batter. Jason Kendall fol lowed with a single and stole second,
barely beating the throw.
"From my point of view, it
looked like Jason ·Kendall was out,"
Neagle said. "The throw was right
on the money. If he 's called out, then
you've got a totally different situation: two out and nobody on."
Wohlers walked the next two hitters, Dale Sveum and pinch-hitter
Mark Smith. Ward followed with a
~ingle that almost knocked ov~r
Wohlers.
" With the bases loaded, he had to
come right at me, " Wand said. "I
guessed right, gotlucl\y. got the meat
of the bat on the ball. I've been hitting a lot of line drives lately."
Neagle extended his scoreless
streak to 26 2/3 innings before Eddie
Williams homered in the founh .
Neagle's string was the longest by a
Braves pitcher since John Smaltz
had 29 straight shutout innings in
1992 .
In other NL games, San Diego
beat Montreal 6-4. Philadelphia
defeated Colorado 5-0, Houston
trounced Florida ' 13-2, St. Louis
downed New York 5-2 and Chicago
beat Los Angeles 4-2.
Padres 6, Expos 4
Rickey Henderson, whose days in
San Diego might be numbered. hit
the 250th home run of his career in
a win over visiting Montreal.
Henderson is drawing interest
(See NL on Page 5)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August 13, 1997

The Dally Sentinel
has a supply of the
commemwative edition
for Middleport's
Bicentennial for sale.
Price is $1.50,and can
be picked up at
The Dally Sentinel
&amp;om
8am-5pm
Monday • Friday. ,,

By llTEVE HERMAN
INQIANAPOLIS (AP) - Suddenly, Chris Mullin feels like an
awestruck rookie.
No one ever appeared in more
games with the Golden State Warriors than Mullin, but the prospect of
playing for and learning from Larry
Bind makes the 12-y.ear NBA ve(eran. feel like he's staning his career
anew.
"Its a great feeling," said Mullin,
traded to the Indiana Pacers on
.Tuesday for second-year center
Erick Dampier and veteran backup
·
forward Duane Ferrell.
"lbere's nol much more motiva-.
tion I need, not that I need any anyway, but that was a big, big factor,"
· . he said of his desire to play for Bind,
his former U.S. Olympic teammate
and the new coach of the Pacers..
" Having Larry Bird want me, that
still sends chills up my spine,''
Mullin said. "I've admircid alld studied him from afar. but to be able to
get educated from him on a daily
basis is something I'm really looking forward to."
STRUGGLE FOR POSSESSION - The Sacramento Monarchs'
The 6-foot-7 Mullin, who scored
Tajama Abraham (left) and the Claveland Rockars'lsabelle Fljalkows· more than 16.000 points with Gold. kl struggle for possession of the basketball during Tuesday night's en State, asked to be traded after last
• WNBA contest In Sacramento, Calif., where the Monarchs won 81· season, when the Warriors went 3076. (AP)
52 and missed the playoffs for the
third straight year. In June. P.J. Car-

Bolton-Hoi ifield's
treys get Monarchs
past Rockers 81-76

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)Despite a recent nine-game losing
streak, the Sacramento Monarchs arc
still vying for · a WNBA playoff
benh.
With Ruthie Bolton-Hollfield
matching her season high with 34
points, including six three-pointers,
the Monarchs claimed their fourth
straight win Tuesday night with an
81-76 victory over the Cleveland
Rockers.
Bolton-Holifield, who also scored
34 points two games ago. made 12
of 15 shots and sank all four of her
free throws. She entered the game as
the league's second-leading scorer
(20:6 points).
"They (tlie players) can say what
they want;" Sacramento coach Hci- ·
di .VanDerveer said. "But every
game to me is a playoff game, and
we're 4-4 in playoffs games so rar
and we're going to prepare like the
rest of the games are playoff
games.'.'
VanDerveer became the Monarchs' coach eight games ago when
she replaced Mary Murphy while
Sacramento was in the midst of a
nine-game losing streak.
Bridgettc Gordon scored 19
points and Latasha Byears had II
· rebounds and 13 points on her 24th
birthday for the Monarchs.
Eva Nemcova scored 16 points
for ·the Rockers, whose loss evened
the season series between the teams
at2-2. Isabelle Fijalkowski added 15
points and nine rebounds for Cleveland.
.
·
In other WNBA action, Houston
downed Utah 76-56 and Sacramcn-

to beat New York 77-67.
Comets 76, Stsrzz 56
At Houston. Sheryl Swoopes has
her game back.
•
ln .' her first significant game
action since giving binh seven weeks
ago, the former Tex~s Tech suir and
Olympic gold medalist scored 18
points in 21 minutes Tuesday night
to lead the Houston Comets to a 7656 victory over the Utah Starzz.
1be win pulled the Comets ( 167) ahead of the New York Liberty
( 15-7) for the Eastern Division lead
in the Women 's National Basketball
Association.
Cynthia Cooper. the league's
leading scorer, was just off her average with 21 points, 18 in the second
half, to lead·the Comets.
"We followed o~r game plan and
neltl Cooper in check for a half.''
Starzz coach Denise Taylor said.
"Swoopes gave them a big boost.
hoWever."
Swoopes had her best performance )._Of the four games she's
played slnce returning from maternity leave. She gave binh to a son on
June 25 and returned to practice July
30..
'
·.. 1 was just excited to come bac,k.
I' vc been waiting for the moment
and tonight was my night," she said.
"I'm just happy I scored more than
two points.
"Now that I'm starling to get in
the flow of things. there are some
things I need to work on, but overall I'm pleased."
Wendy Palmer led the Starn (617) with 18 points.

lesimo replaced R.ick Adelman as
coach, and last month Garry St. Jean
succeeded Dave Twardzik as goneral manager.
· "Once this scenario came up, I
got really excited, and they made it
happen,'' Mullin said. "It was something I wanted, and the Warriors
granted my wish. You don't see
things like this happen these days.
This was handled well. "
Mullin said the kind of basketball
that Bird exemplified during his
own career with the· Boston Celtics
. fits his own style of play.
" What that means to me is just
playing team basketball. relying on
your teammates, helping your teammates first off defensively; and then
offensively sharing the ball. hitting
the open man no matter who that is,'~
Mullin said. "I've watched Larry on
numerous l;lpes ... the way he playod,
· backscreening, making a good catch,
diving for loose balls, all these
· things that make a team better. Not
only do .they have the players that
play that way, but when you have the
ultimate player in Larry Bird at the
helm, that to me is the right stuff."
· Mullin, a five-time NBAAII-Star,
played with Bind on the Dream
Team at the 1992 Barcelona Games.
The trade for the 34-year-old swingmim gives Indiana a boost in scoring

HORSE PRODUCTION ·- Cassandra Smith (right) won grand
champion In the production division of Monday morning's 4-H Horsa
Show. She Is shown with 1997 4-H Horse Princess Jessica Wheeler, left.
The Pacers went 39-43 last sea-.
at small forward and bulks up Gold- ·
son
and missed the playofl's for the
en State:s size and depth.
"We've all wanted Chris here as · first time since 1989.
Last season, Mullin played 79
we watched him play in Golden
games
and averaged 14.5 points.
Stale, and no one more than Larry,''
More
imponant.
though. he was·
Pacers president Donnie Walsh said.
injury-free
for
the
first time in fiv~
"He fills a need we felt we really had
years.
·
·:
to have on our team."

.
..
with soreness in his left calf. ... Willi ·

RedS. •• (Continued frmn Page4)

.

games go• close."
Homandcz relieved Alvarez with
two runners on and one out in the·
eighth, and got five outs for his first
NL save.
,
"It's pretty tough when you face
Alvarez and Hernandez," Reds managcr Jack McKeon said. "lbe Giants
did a pretty good job picking those
two guys up. They're a dub that's
going to be · very tough down the
stretch."
Both Alvarez arid Hernandez
spent their entire major league.
cnreers with the White Sox before
joining the Giants.

"They are getting more eomfortbest-fielding team in the NL, hut
able, and it helps that they are fac- made a season-high four errors. The the victory, the Giants tied their win~
total (67) r,·, all of the· 1995 season :~
ing teams they've already seen in Reds also allowed seven walks.
interleague games," Giants managTomko (7-4) allowed five runs on ... Dcion Sanders extende-d his hitting
er Dusty Baker said. "They're just six hits and five walks in 4 213 streak to a season-high 10 games
happy to be here and happy to be in innings as the Reds had their three- with a single in the third, but struck
game winning streak snapped.
out in his last three at-hats .... The
first place."
.
"I struggled in the first inning and .Gianls won the ~ason sci-ics 7·4
Barry Bonds broke an 0-for-17
slump with an RBI double for the tried to make adjustments. And the against the Reds. San Francisco
Giants, and J.T. Snow had an RBI adjustments I made wcren 't the right went 5-1 at Cincinnati and 2-3 at
single. Jeff Kent, Stan Javier and· ones,'' Tomko said. ''I wasn't hilling hOme . ... Reliever Pedro Martinez ·
Darryl. Hamil~on all added sacrifice my spots and it 'kind of snow hailed. made his first appearance of the sea-' ·
. It gvt worse and worse as the game son for the Reds . ... Kent took over ·
Hies.
the major league lead with his Hkh
Chris Stynes and pitcher Brett went ~long ...
Notes: Barry .Larkin missed his sacrifice fly of the season.
Tomko had RBI singles for the
Reds, who came into the game as the fourth straight game for .Cincinnati

NL action .....;.&lt;C_o_n_tin_u_ed_fr_o_m_P..;ag:;..c..;.4J_
from several AL contenders, and a
trade could come this week. He went
3-for-5 as he staned in right field for
the fourth straight game in place of
Tony Gwynn, out since h~ving a kid-

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

Cardinals 5, Mets 2·
Mark McOwire broke mit of a 3for-35 slump with a solo homer and
a two-run double, leading St. Louis
\ over New York at Busch Stadium.

McGwirc hit his second home run
since being traded from Oakland on
July 31. He doubled his next time up
in the fifth inning.
Cardinals catcher Tom Pagnozzi,

sidelined since April 29 because of
a hip flexor and pulled groin. home..;
red in his first at-bat since coming oft'
the disabled list.

--------------------------------------l··

ney stone surgically removed Sun- . .
day.
Greg Vaughn, who would get the
job in left field if Henderson is traded, drove in three runs.
Phillies 5, Rockies 0
.
Matt Beech stopped his streak of
·22 straight starts without a win.
pitching Philadelphia past Colorado
at Coors Field.
Beech (1-7) was winless since
·beating Atlanta in his first big league
start on Aug. 8, 1996. against
Atlanta. He had made 15 stans this
season without a victory.
Beech retired the first 13 Rockies
and allowed just four hits in seven
innings. The Phillies have won three
in a row and II of 14, while Colorado had its three-game winning
string stopped.
Astros 13, Marlins 2
· Back in mid-June. Houston manager Larry Dierker said he would
pick his lineups b~sed on deh:qsc
and pitching. and not locus so much
on hitting .. Even so, Astros batters
haven't been doing too badly.
(Continued from Page 4)
The NL Central leaders opened an
the homcstand. is hack 10 wc~1ring
11-gamc homcstand- their longest
Notes: The Tiger.; placed outthe old No . 23 he sported in Atlanta. of the season - with another highfielder Melvin Nieves.on the 15-day
When he was traded to Cleveland. scoring effort, increasing their run
disabled list retroactive to Aug. 4 so
Julio Franco had No. 23, so Justice total to 40 in four games. Tim Boghe could be with his infant son, who
took No. 33 . Franco was designated ar and Chuckic Carr homered and
was born Aug. I and remains hospitalized .... Indians center fielder · for assignment Aug. I.... The crowd James Mouton drove in three runs.
Mike Hampton (I 0-7) won his
or 42 992 - Cleveland's !90th
Marquis Grissom, hatting .247 and in
straight
sellout
pushed
the
Indi
seventh
straight decision despite
a 13-for-91 slump, got the night off
ans
past
the
2.5
million
mark
for
the
walking
seven
Florida hatters,
after playing 84 straight games ....
third
straight
year.
Justice. 11 -for-18 in live games on

The

1997 Football Edition

Is Coming August 28th

/ndians ...

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For additional ad sizes and prices, please call

992-2156

Advertising Deadline Is August 2 1st
1 Col. x 21n·
Dotted Line Box .

can 992·2155 for more Information
Dave Harrls, Ext. 104
Don rume, Ext. 105

The Daily

Sentin~l

�'·
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,..,

4DA
ONLY!
Now Through
Food&amp;Drug

·

Page7
VVednesday,August13,1997.

Cigar smoking may be chic new trend ~.. but cancer risk .still- possibility ~
ried within the year.
I would like my adult daughter to
lcnow who her real father is. Should
I take lhe chance? Will she lcm
re"""'t
--r- for me, even though my former husband isn't really in the picture anymore?
I .don't want our reputations
ruined. nor do I want Ben's children
to know their father cheated on their
mother. I would, however, like them
to know they have a half-sibling.
What is your advice? -- No Rest in
Nashville :
.
'
Dear NashvUJe: If you think you
have "no rest" NOW, just go ahead
and telllhe family that the man they
believe to be your daughter's father
is not her father at all. Too many
people would be hun by your confession. I don't recom;.,end it.
·

Ann
landers

'"'· Loo...,;,...
Ti~
and Cn:•tiH1

.

The Daily Sentinel
•

'""'""'-

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-

By The Bend
s,....s~w

Stock-Up And Save •No Coupons Or Special card Required

-J

.

Dear Ann Landers: Ov.e.r 30
years ago, when I was divoraed, I
became pregnant by a married man.
I will call him "Ben." My ex-busband and I then remarried. He
always -believed this child was his,
and he raised her.
I remained in contact with Ben
through the years. His wife never
knew about us, but when they
divorced a few years ago, I also filed
for divorce. Ben and I started seeing
· each other o~nly, and we were mar-

Dear Ana Landen: Thank you
for regularly warning your readers
about the health risks associated
with smolring.
The popular press has christened
cigar smoking the newest chic trend,
with cigars synonymous with affiuence, success and urban sophistication. Here are s9me eye-opening
facts regarding this supposedly
glamorous habit:
More than 58,000 NEW case$ of
oral cancer were diagnosed in 1996,
and 9,000 deaths were recorded.
Since 1987, more women have died
each year from lung cancer than
from breast cancer.
This is why health-care providers
--including members of the Ameri-can Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons -- continue to

encourage people to avoid tobacco
3. Smoke sni!Jler cigars. (Large
in all forms .
cigars carry nicotine equal to four or
We are discouraged when we see five cigarettes-)
celebrities lighting their stqgies in
4. Don't inhale.
ma•azines
and full-page newspaper
S. Put cigars in ashtrays or hold
~
ads.
them in your hands when not activeI hope Claudia Schiffer. Danny ly smoking.
DeVito and other celebrities who
~- Conduct monthly self-e xamiappear in photos promoting cigar nations for lumps or any irregularismoking will ask themselves, "Is it ties .
•
worth leading young fans down that
7. See a dental professional for a
hazardous path?"
semi-annual ~heckup.
For those who are determined to
Your readers can order a free oral
coAtinue smoking cigars or can't s.elf-eumination instruction care)
seem to quit, here are some guide- and oral cancer patient information
. lines: ,
pamphlet by calling AAOMS at lI. Limit smoking to special occa- 800-467·526k (v.:ww.aaoms .org).
sions.
Thanks, Ann, for providing this pub2. Hold the cigar between the lie service. -- Mary A. Delsol,
teeth, rather than between the gums D.D.S.
and lips.
Dear Dr. Qelsol: I am printing

your letter with infonnation on ho~
to minimize the risk of cigar smolcing for those who are alread~
hooked, but this does not in any way;
shape or form serve as a green lighJ
for the uninitiated to start.
:
Cigar smokers often say they
don 't fear lung cancer because they
don 't inhale. This may be true, but
they risk cancer of the lip, mouth
and tongue, which can be a hideo13
affliction. Also , cigars foul th6
breath and stain the teeth. As o~
woman wrote, "It's like kissing ~
spittoon." Enough said.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Cre:;
ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century:
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Cali(

90045

Meigs booth wins top
honors at state fair
second year in ·row

Stokely
Vegetables

JIC:kscln Ave.

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non. profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. Tbe
calendar Is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers or any type.
ltenu are printed as space permits
and &lt;annot be guaranteed to run
specifi&lt; num~r of days.

SUNDAY .
.
POMEROY -- Dorst ·reunion,
Sunday, home of Carl and Ernest
Dorst. potluck dinner at noon .
RACINE -- Manin and Emma
Roush Sayre family re~nion, Sunday,
·Star Mill Park. Racine. Potluck at
noon.

Scott open sheep
show champion
Sam Scott of Langsville swept the
open class sheep show, which followed the junior fair judging on Monday evening.
Scott took home premiums. for
first , second and third place in ewes,
two years and older;.first and second
place in ewes, one year and under;
and first place in ewe Jambs.
Rodney Stoltz of Thornville was'
the judge for the open class event.

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MI:IGS BOOTH TOPS • The Meigs County Booth was named
first-piKe winner Saturday In Ohio's Own .Travel and Touri8ITI
Compelltlon at the Ohio Stale Fair In Columbus. This marks the
leCOI1d consecutive year the Meigs County booth won first-place.
Here, Meigs County native Eric Paul Scites and Jane Leidhei..
er, comprising the musical group Falre Wynds, perform at the
booth.
,
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UNIVERSITY
MID-OHIO VALLEY CENTER

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Pt. Pleasant, WV

.;

Fall, 1997 Schedule of Courses ·
. BACCAlAUREATE

a

WEDNESDAY
PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township Board ofTrustces, special meeting, Wednesday, 8 a.m. at the township building near Portland.

'

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•

Community
calendar

14.5-1 5.25-oz.

'

the Meigs County Historical Society,
and entertainment provided by Faire
Wynds, a duo comprised of Meigs
County native Eric Paul Scites and
Jane Leidheiser who specialize in
18th and 19th century music. .•
Faire Wynds performed at the
booth the day it was toured by Governor and Mrs. George V. Voinovich.
The booth was prepared by Ed Hupp
of Hupp's Landscaping and Meigs
County Tourism Director Karin Johnson.
A plaque and $1,500 cash' award
will be presented Saturday to the
tourism office.
·

For the second consecutive year,
, the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's Tourism Office won firstplace honors in the . Ohio's 0)11n
Travel and Tourism Competition. at
the Ohio State Fair in Columbus.
In the competition, each of Ohio's
88 counties were invited to build a
booth portraying the county.
This year's Meigs County booth
highlighted the Buffington Island
Battlefield in Portland, featuring a
campfire scene complete with a tent
and · tree . The annoUncement was
made Saturday in Columbus.
The booths were judged on a variety of aspects ineluding originality,
theme, planning and/ the anention
received by onlookers. The Meigs
booth included both a prize contest,
in which passersby could sign up to
win a historical coverlet donated by

·......... Peas or Green Beans

''

MONDAY
1043 ENG 101
1098 ENG 331
1733 MTIJ 225
· NUR .305
2199 NUR 409
2498 PSY 311
2567 RST 320
2639 SOC 420
2653 SOC 520

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SATURDAY·ACCELERATJ!:D
B.A. COURSES

FlveWeobEac:b
143 EnsJish Comp. 13 hrs. (6:30-9:00)
Flnt dassllorll at 8:00 LID, aU olher class days open at
106 1ntro to Short Story 3 hrs. (6:30-9:00)
8:30a.m. and ao 11115:30 p.m.
103 lntro Slatistics 3 hrs (6:30-9:00)
1172
FIN
323
109 Principles of Busiaess Finance 3 hrs.
104 Concepts of Prof Nur. 4 hrs (4:00-7:30)
1610
MGT
460
108 Business Policy 3 hrs.
104 Nursing Research 3 hrs. (4:00-6:30)
1616
MGT
480
104 Sp. Tp: Prin. of Man. Info systems 3 h11.
IllS Dcv. !'!lychology 3 hrs (6:30 -9:00)
101 Lit of the Old Testament3 hrs (6:30-9)
COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL.
102 Criminology 3 hrs (6:30-9:00)
COLLEGE
102 Criminology 3 hrs. (6:30-9:00)
MONDAY
193 osc 104 120 lntro to Biology 4 hrs(5:30-9:00)
294 BUS· 13{) 102· Fund. of Morketing 3 hrs (6:30-9:00)
668 CMM 103 13{) Fun. of Speech Comin. 3 hrs (6:30-9} 742 COM 111 . 1'05 Communicalions13 hrs (6:30-9:00}
2511 PSY 408 102 Abnormal Psy 3 hrs. 1(6:30-9:00)
869 CT 150 103 App. to Spreadsheets 3 hrs (6:30-9:00}
WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY .
1520 LE 20i 106 Legal Env. of Bus. 3 hrs (6:30-9:00)
-836 CT 105 109 Fu~d. of Comp Tech:DOS I hr (6:30-7:3{))
2167 NUR 219 104 Nur. Asses. of lndiv.l3 hrs·4:00-6:30) 844 CT . 106 108 fund. orComp. Tech' s,.cad 1 hr (7:30-8,30)
2484 PSY 201 123 Gen. !'!lychology 3 hrs (6:30-9:00) ·
2225 or 107 109 Fund. of comp. Word Proc lhr (8:30-9:30)
. logy 3 hr•(6·30
2246 0T 236 105 lnlro. to Wa~ Proc J hti (5:J0-6:30)Thur. ~lsc
I Soc 10
2628 Soc
. 200 116 lnro
. -9·00)
.
THURSDAY ·
WEDNESDAY
368 .CHM 203 105 Gen. Chemistry 13 hrs (6:30-9:00)
856 CT 107 112 lntro.to the Internet I hr (6:30-7:30)
679 CMM 207 11 t Bus.&amp;: Prof Comm. 3 hrs (6:30-9:00) 1489 LAS tOt 105 General Law 13 h11 (6:30·9:00)
814 CDS 101 111 Computers &amp; Date Proc. 3 hrs (6:30·9) 1565 MAT 145 103 Tech Math 13 hrs (6:30-9:00)
1353 HST 230 106 "·
"3 h11. (6:30-9) THURSDAY
1709 MTH 123 108 Sel. Topicoin College Algebra (6:30-9) 303 BUS 204 101 Prine. of Public Relat. 3 hrs (6:30-9:00)
2184 NUR 319 104 Nur. Asses. oflnd. il4 hn (4:00·6:30) 2246 or 236 105 lntro to Word Proc 3 hn (5:30-6:3{)
SATURDAY
MASTERS' DEGREE STUDENTS
BSN 227 108 Human Anatomy 4hn(IO:OO-t:30pm) TUESDAY
ECN
108 · . of Micro coo. 3 hrs
pm) ·LS "0 Principalship Roles &amp; tasks (6:00-9:00)
WEDNESDAY
ED 516 Human Development(6:00-9:00)
HST 600 00 Black History &amp; Culture (6:00-9:30)

note

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..·',

�Page 8 • TtMt Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeday, August 13, 1997

Wednesday,August13,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Junior 'POUltry winners posted
r

I

·-

Kevin ·Butcher ' and Odie Karr
showed the grand and reserve champion market pens in the Meigs County Fair Junior Poultry Show in the
show ring Monday 'afternoon.
Alban Salse_r, the 1997 Fair King,
and Jessica Justice won grand and
~serve champion showman in the
sHowmanship contest.
Other winners in the showmanship contest were, in order by class:
senior .. Alban S~lser and Jenny

Smallwood; junior .. Rebekah Karr
and Christina Westfall; intermediate
.. kremy Shanks and Melissa
Houser; beginner -· Jessica Justice
and Robert Weddle.
In raising pullets cornpetttion,
grand and reserve champion were
won by brothers Michael and
Matthew Salser who also won ·grand
and reserve champion in the geese
contest.
Grand and reserve chanwion

broiler projects were shown by Odie
Karr and Mike Guess.
In the fanoy poultry project contest, grand champion was won by
Alban · Salser with. Jessica Justice
winning reserve champion. Salser

also won grand champion in the
turkey contest with Robbie Weddle
winning reserve champion.

Judging toe event was Gary R.
Over.ton of West Alexandria.

•

f

BROILER PROJECTS • Odie Karr and Mike
Guess won gr11nd end reserve champion hon·
ors, respectively, with their broiler projects in
the Meigs County Fair Junior ·Poultry Show

(

CREATIVITY AWARD • The clall "Gilligan's
Island" called for a partial underwater daalgn.
J!JdY Bunger, Pomeroy, used an ups.lda down

pineapple In water topped by red cannas and
horiatall rush to come up with an arrangement
which won the creativity award.

BEST IN. JUNIOR EXHIBITS • L111 Statham
took both the best of show and the horticulture
sweepstakes award In the junior flower ahow
at the Meigs County Fair. Har winning arrange-

ment was In the class of "FIIntstoiles." She
used rock In a circular container with butterfly
weed, 'hosta and yucca.

Monday afternoon. Shown here are, from lett:
Poultry Princess Melissa Houser, Karr and
Guess.

;Fair flower show has -m ore than 500 entries
• BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
clubs, co-sponsors of the show with
the Meigs Fair Board, helped with the
·Sentinel News Staff
Monday's flower show at the details of staging.
Featured this year were several
Meigs County Fair was bigger than
. ever and according to one arranger new designs .. the illuminaries with
"among the best ever in creativity and light showing as part of the design, a
' design" in the artistic arrangement class where plant material was actually placed under water, a reflective
classes.
class
with mirrors and shiny metals
There was a total of more than 500
to
reflect
plant material, and
, entries including arrangements, spec·
vibratile/abstract
using plant materi. imens, and potted plants, in the adult
. and ·youth divisions in the show. A als arranged to emil sound.
Mary Ellen Miller of Lucasville,
second one will be held Thursday
with judging to begin all p.m. Near· an accredited judge of the Ohio
ly 500 ·entries have been made for Association of Garden Clubs, judged
that sbow.
·
the entries.
Taking best of show in the artistic
"On the (F)air with NBC. CBS.
·ABC, PBS Floral Broadcasting" was design category was Melanie Steththe theme. The show was chaired by ern of Pomeroy with an arrangement
Pat Holte\, Belly Dean, Judy Bunger, in "Wings", an interpretive class
Dcbbje Miller and Dorothy Karr. depicting flight.
·
Members of all Meigs County garden
The reserve bc;~t of show weni to

Patricia Holter in the "Friends" class,
a two container piece while Judy .
Bunger took the creativity award with
her underwater design for "Gilligan's
Island." She was also the sweepstakes
award winner selected on the basis of
points accumulated on ribbons given
for specimen displays.
·
In the junior division, Lisa Steth·
em of Pomeroy took both best of
show in artistic arrangements and the
sweepstakes award given for speci·
mens. Reserve best of show went to
Jessi Icenhower and the reserve horticulture sweejlstakes to Briar Dill.
ARTISTIC
.
ARRANGEMENTS
Winners in the various classes,
listed fi~t through third were:
"Wings". interpretive design :
Melanie Stethern, Pomeroy; Judy
;Bunger, Pomeroy. Peggy Crane, Mid·

'

dleport. · ·
"Golden Girls", featuring yellows: .
Carrie Morris, gladioli, large
"The Waltons", antique feeling: Deborah Jones, Judy Bunger, and green or cr~am.
Deborah Jones, Pomeroy, Melanie Evelyn Hollon, Racine.
Alice Thompson. gladioli, large;
Stethern. Valerie Nottingham, Long
Junior Division
buff. orange; orange marigold
·
Bottom.
"Barney and Friends", using some
Briar Dill, gladioli large red .
"Touched hy An Angel'~ inspira- purple: Jessi Icenhower. Albany, Lisa
Addalou Lewis, gladioli large
tional: Patricia \loiter, Melanie Steth- Stethern, Pomeroy, and Alaine purple.
ern, and Alice Thompson. Pomeroy. Arnold, pomeroy.
Peggy Crane. gladioli. large mui''Dr. Quinn. Medicine Woman" ,
"The Aintstones", using rocks: ticolor.
'
using. herbs and foliage: Deborah Lisa Stethem, Jessi Icenhower. and
Pauline Atkins, gladioli. any colJones, Peggy Crane, and Sheila Cur- Natasha Mohler.
or; ball dahlia: hosta.
·
tis, Pomeroy.
.
HORTICULTURE
'
Addalou Lewis, Dahlia, dccora"Fricnds", two containers: Patricia . SPECIMENS
tive; cactus dahlia; pompom dahlia.
Holter, Betty Dean, Pomeroy,
Receiying blue ribbons for speci·
Evelyn Hollon , zinnia dahlia flow-.
Melanie Stethern .
men exhibits were:
ered.
"Gilligan's Island", under• water
Patricia Holter, hybrid tea rose in
Kathryn Mora, cactus flowen; zin·
design: Melanic Stethem; Judy red, floribunda in red; grandiflora. no nia.
Bunger, Sheila Curtis.
special color.
·
Briar Dill, small collection zinnia;
"Guiding Light", an illuminary
· Melva Tracy. hybrid tea rose·, crested celosia; plumed celosia; large
design. Deborah Jones, Betty ·Dean, · pink: hybrid tea rose, yellow, and a marigold.
•
and Peggy Crane.
rose unspecified color, floribunda in
Betty Lowe)(, yellow marigold,
pink. floribunda. no special color; large sunnower. '
miniature rose, single bloom.
.
Judy Bunger, snow bird marigold:
Lisa Stcthem. miniature rose hanging petunias, other potted plants.
spray; small sunflower; large zinnia,
Betty Dean, caladium and squash
small sunflower. roadside material. .collection . .

FA'NCV POULTRY • Alban Salser and Jessi-

ca Justice won grand and reserve champion in

the fancy poultry contest In the Meigs County

Friday, August tSth ·
Ki~'•

TOP TURKEYS • The grand and reserve
turkey projects jn the Meigs County Fair Junior
Poultry Show were by Alban Salser, . left, and

Day If the Meig• County Fair

WARNER HEATING

Attracting a large crowd at the ley Karr of Pomeroy; Russell Crab·
pull track on the Rock Springs Fair· · tree of Albany; Eric Brooks of New
grounds Monday night was the annu- Marshfield, and Marlin Evans of
Racine.
al tractor, truck and semi pull.
19,500 pound semi truck: Robert
Cash prizes were awarded in several places to the winners of the var· Hendrix of Syracuse; Paul McCarter
of Wellston; Jennifer Smathers of
ious categories .
Winners in the various classes, Albany, Bob Williams of Rutland .
listed first through fifth respectively.

and COOLING
All children under
12 admitted

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BEST OF SHOW • Ml!lanle~talhem, Pomeroy, took "best ot
ahow" in artisllc arrangemen et~day'a flower ahow for her
:~In try In ·w
_lnga" an Interpret -c • depleting flight. She used
: pink glads with caladium leave• .nd driftwood in a modern
ceramic container.
.

1· . :
#

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW • In the "Friends~· class of thll fair
show, "On the (F)alr with NBC, CBS, ABC, PBS Floral BrciadC81tlng", Pet Holter of Pomeroy used red glads and cannas with
honetsuckle vine to create the two-container design which took
reserve best of show.
·

Gerkan of Whipple, Michelle Boise·
of Mineral Wells, W. Va.; Charlie
Martin of Snowvtlle, Joe Gerkan of
Whipple. and David Staats of
Ravenswood, W. Va.
6.000 pound drive stock: Wayne
Bell of Parkersburg; Charles Miller
of Nelsonville; Richard Bailey of Lit~
tie Hocking , Jeff Parker of Tuppers
Plains, and Mike Elliott of Gallipi&gt;lis.
8500 pound fam1 tractor: J1m
Bumgarner of Letart, W Va.; John
Ohlinger of Letart. W. Va. : Eric
Wagner of Racine, Roger Bumgarner
of Letart, W.Va. , and Tim Howard of
Thurman.
10,500 pound farm tractor: Keith
Bentz of Racine, Brooke Thomas of
Letart ; Huck Wagner of Racine, John
Ohlin;er of Letart. W.Va. , and Roger
Bumgarner of Letart, W.Va.
12,500 pound farm tractor: Wcs-

Admission Do.es Not
Include Rides

P---------------------------------------------~--------~

Ohio alley Christiaa School
.

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gust I
7:30 PID
r·t~:PE•CI}ILl·· A drug that is exciting
Lre!sear-che:ro in the treatment of pain
has been formulatedintoa new prodUCt known as "Arthur ltis," and is
peing called a "Medical Miracle"by
I.some, in the.treatmentofdebilitating
conditions such as arthritis. bursitis.
rheumatism. painful muscle aches,
liu•intl!Ch&lt;:s: simple backache, bruises, 11---~
more: Although the mechanism
o~action is unclear, txperimentsinld«:atethat Arthur ltis, relieves pain
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cal which carries pain Sensations to
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O IM . S.ellrHahh~l. lllt

Come visit and take a

s

• Phonics based reading in Kindergarten
• College Prep Program (80% go to college)
• 85th percentile·average on achievement test
• Every student studies the Bible (world's greatest.book)
• Teaches are Christians and professionally trained
• Variety .of Fine arts and athletics

446-0374

Brian Bowling of Racine. ·
24.500 pound semi: Mike Smith
of Middleport; Robert Caldwell of
Vinton; J. D. Church of Kerr: Paul
McCarter of Wellston; Bill Angel of
Gallipolis; and Frank Colwell of
Vinton.

Mi1:hael Sals&lt;!r, center,
and Matthew Salser had grand and reserve
champion pullet projects and geese, respec·

noon; They are shown
Melissa Houser.

OUR ANNUAL

Back to School SALE
·NOW IN PROGRESS!!!

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· THIRD
- Eric Wagner of Racine driving a John Deere
tractor used by his father, Huck, in past years, pulled to a third
place finish In the 8500 pound class at the Meigs County Fair
truck, tractor and semi pulling competition Monday night. Wagner went 249 feet for the third place finish.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WI·NDOWS

thoughtful look

Third &amp; Locust

SFS Truck Sales of Gallipolis; and

were:
5800 pound local yokel: Kenneth

Free
untllNoon ·

Matthew Salser, respectively. Also shown is
Poultry Princess Melissa Houser.
·

Large crowd on hand for annual
tractor, truck and semi pull contests

Sponsored by

·-]··
..
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Fair Junior Poultry Show Monday. Shown here
are, from left: First Poultry Runner Up Jennifer
Smallwood, Salser and Justice.
·

·Gallipolis, Ohio

•

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AVAILABLE AT:

Fruth Pharmacy
786 North SeeoDd Ave.

992-6491
•·

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992-5627

Middleport

�P!ge 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

WednHday, August 13,1997"

Wednesday, August 13, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Specialty license plate business
reaps_millions for state bureau

Tobacco ·companies flood ·p olitical parties with "donations
By KAREN GULLO
Astoclllled Press Writer
WASHING1UN - With hopes
pinned on congressional approval of
their big senlement, tobacco companies gave $2 million to political parli.,. in the fttst half of this year. That
was nearly five times what they
gave in the same period of 1,993 after
the previous presidential el~ction.
-..The lion's share went to the GOP.
. "~ increase is astounding,"
said Ann McBride, prcsident•of the
private group Common Cause, which
compi led the figures from Federal
Election Commission reports .
. The flood of "soft money" donations comes at sensitive time for the
tobacco companies. They have faced
accusations ttuit they hid smoking's
dangers, and they are hoping for congressional approval of a seulement
that could shield them from smokers'
lawsuits.
.Seven tobacco companies and
two tobacco groups gave nearly $1.6
mulion to Republican committees
anjj $324,461 to Democrats in the
first half of this year, according to
Cllmmon Cause's analysis .
::rt.at compares with $413,865 in
soft money to both parties for the .
sa.i&gt;e period four years ago. Such 1
donations can be used only for party'
activities, not for specific candidates,
'The two major parties received $4
otiijion from tobacco interests during I
the-1996 elec;tion year when political
fund raising was at a peak. The first
si~, months after a presidential election normally are slow for fund raisIng.
Common Cause, which advocates
ighter control over political money,
•id cigarette giant Phillip Morris led
1e pack in the first half of the year,
i'fing $673.715 to Republican comnillees and $120,823 to Democrats.
.t{. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and its
parent RJR Nabisco gave $340,000 to
the- GOP and $90,573 to Democrats.
'Philip Morris and RJR gave a total

a

•

Steelworker:s
OK WheelingP.iH contract
:wHEELING; W.Va. (AP)
Tloere was little time to celebrate the
· erld of a 10-month strike for workers
gi~en the task of preparing WbeelingPt\Sburgh Steel Corp. plantS for proddction.
• Workers were set to take over
duties today at tbe steel maker's coke
plont in Follansbee and to begin
mhintenlince on plants that have been
sliut down since Oct. I. company
ofli&gt;ials said.
The same workers were among
. thpse who voted overwhelminglf
' Tuesday to ratify a five-year labor
agfeement.
.
:",The strike is over," said Charles
Rclbideau. spokesman for the United
St~elworkers union. "We're just
lo~king forward to getting people
bock in the mills and making steel
I ,
agam
.''
oThe labor agreement was
aJll&gt;roved 3,105-to-817 by workers in
West Virginia. Ohio and Pcnnsylvanit. said Santo Santoro, district rcprejentative for the union in St.
Clfirsville, Ohio.
.
iJohn R. Schecssele, WheelingPiil's chief executive officer, cautiooed that recalling workers will
de~nd on orders.
· :"I am encouraged by the response
of pur customers since the tenlative
cottract was reached, but it will take
time to re-establish our former posttioo in the marketplace," he snid.
'rhe Slrike began Oct. I when contra~ts expired without a resolution of
key issues including pensions.
'' evolved into the _longest strike
by p major steel company in modem
history. surpassing a six-month strike
a· ~ecade ago at U.S. Steel, the
natiOn's largest steel maker, Robideau
'
said.
''It was the toughest thing I' II
• prObably have to go through," said

..

.

of just $11\,000 to tbe two parties
after the 1992 election. according 10
Common Cause.
·
The surge in donations this year is
not surprising, say campaign finance
experts, who noted the tobacco industry's image problems. Cigarette companies have been accused of aiming
ads at kids and knowing long ago that
smoking is unhealthy and covering it
up.
The companies also ne-ed to bolster support for the settlement that
could save them billions-from smokers' lawsuits. If Congress approves,
lawsuits by dozens of state and local
governments would be dropped and

that are importallt to tbem and obviously they want their voice heard,"
said Alexander.
The tobacco industry won a victOP')' in the recently passed tax bill.
While the law increases a tax on cigarettes, it allows the extra revenue to
be credited toward whatever overall
tobacco settlement comes out of
Congress.
The credit, inserted in the massive
tax bill at the last minute, is estimated to be worth $50 billion over 25
years.
" It is no coincidence that tobacco
companies are among the· largest
giver's of partisan contributions,"

..

said Matt Myers, executive vice president of the Campaign for Tobacco
Free Kids. "This is the time where
it's payback for all that quiet giving."
Philip Morris had no.comment on
the donations, said spokeswoman
Daricnne Dennis.
Maura Ellis, spokeswoman for
RJR, said the company is !&gt;eing
solicited more for donations than· it
was after the 1992 election.
Both parties had millions in debts
to pay off following last year's pres·idential election. · .
Political parties can use soft money only on party-building activities
such as voter drives and not on pro-

moting individual caodidates.
Soft money can also be trai1Sferred .
to state party comminees aod used for . .
party-building in local races. The :
funds can also be allocated to pay •
administrative expenses, such as ;
salaries.
.
In the 1996 presidential election,
both parties poured millions of dolof soft money into issue ads that ;
metimes resembled ads for Bob ·
lc or President Clinton.
:
Clinton and some lawmakers want : ·
to ban soft money. AnY changes i'n :
soft money rules would probably not
take t'ffect in time for the 1998 elections.

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along with U.S. astronaut Michael
Foale.
Shonly after the Russian team
· dm
· February, an oxygen canarnve
ister burst into flames, filling· the station with thick smoke.
Soon afterwards, a climate contr.ol
system failed, leaking poisonous .
· the
anu·rreeze fumes and overheaung
station to an unco-mfortable 86
degrres.
In the most serious accident, a card·
h
· d
. I
go sh1P s am me tnto 1 e stauon uring a practice manual docking on
June 25, depressurizing one of its
modules and reducing the station to
half power.
Plans to repair that damage were
postponed when Tsibliyev complained of an irregular heartbeat.
K
k h
h
·
·d
ozeren o, t e psyc o1og!St, sa1
today that Tsibliyev's condition
resulted from stress and a lack of
sieep.
"Tsibliyev refused to sleep until
he got everything done," she said.
· kl d ·
"As a result, he tired qmc y unng
the day and didn 't feel well; but still
refused to rest."
· During the past few weeks. Tsibliyev has been under close medical
observation and doctors said his cond.mon
· has stab.1I.1zed.
The outgoing crew is scheduled to
depart in their Soyuz TM-25 capsule
at 12:53 p.m. Moscow time (4:53
a.m. EDT) Thursday.

·.Clinton suggests Democrats to keep up
with Republicans
on
.
- fund-raising front

Bath Tissue

Sandles

like one big problem," said Olga
Kozerenko, chief of the psychological support team at the Russian Mission Control center near Moscow. ·
She said the crew made heroic
efforts to fix the numerous breakdowns, sometimes working 15 hours
a day.
"Tsibliyev . and Lazutkin have
)leen over-tire-d, literally exhausted by
11llthose accidents, and a weary perion can make a mistake," she told the
ITAR-Tass news agency.
· The latest report of trouble came
from NASA, which said the space
itation's water supply was running
low, and could run out. if the space
shuttle Atlantis doesn 'I arrive there as
planne-d in late Seplember.
. Viktor Blagov, Russia's deputy

chief of Mission Control in Moscow,
toldTheAssocl.atedPressthattheMir
currently has enough drinking water
to Iast unt1'I around Oct . 7 .
A Russian car•o
ship carrying
0
water is.scheduled to blast off for the
space station on Oct I, in addition to
the space shuttle launch, he said.
Normally. huml.dt.ty aboard Mir is
condensed and recycle-d into drinking
water. Thecrewcannolongerrelyon
that system because the water may be
contaminated by antifreeze fumes
from leaks months ago in the cooling
system.
Russian space officials said the
M'
· b · · g back
.
ou I gomg u crew ts nngm
water samples Thursday that will be
checked for contamination.
Frank Culbertson, manager of
.
·d
NA SA's shuttIe- M1r program, sa1
Tuesday that if the recycled water is
found ·unsafe, the drinking water
supplies in containers on board probably will last only until late September.
Blagov agreed, but added Ihat
Russian space officials were confident the recycled water is safe_to
drink. He said the water recycling
system has filters that could block out
far more antifreeze than what leaked.
TSI·b1·tyev and Lazutk.m can on1y
hope their run of bad luck doesn't
extend to the two new crew members,
Anatoly Solovyov and Pavel Vinogradov, who will man the station

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Meadow Gold 12 ct
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Tueaday night. From left are 1997 Fair King and
QLHien Alban Salser and Krist! Warner, Celaway,
Scott and Beef Princess Jessica Barringer:

Russian space station dwellers
make ready for trip back home
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
Aetoclllted Press Writer
: MOSCOW - Wrapping up the
most troublesome stint in the Mir's
ll-year history, two Russian cosmonauts packed for home today while .
flight controllers looked into a potential new problem -the possibility of
a water shortage.
·
· Vasily T~ibliyev and Alexander
L;lzutkin, who have been plagued by
cosmic misfortune since shortly after
their arrival on Mir six months ago,
spent their last full day on the space
station before heading back to E3f\h
Thursday.

Foodland Skim
We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps

· STEER SHOWMANSHIP - Jeromae Calaway and Rebecca Scott won grand and
reaerve champion ataer ahowman, respectively, In the Meigs County Fair Junior Beef Show

.

.

.

Keebler·~

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
license plates are no longer plain
vanilla only. ·
The state earned more than $13
' million last year by offering different
plate colors, allowing vanity plales
with up to seven letters, and giving
drivers a chance to promote Lake
Erie or a college alma mater.
"The demand has become even
greater than we expected," Frank
Caltrider. head ·or the Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles, said Tuesday.
In addition to new gold and white
standard license plate, Ohioans can
choose from a variety of specialized
and personalized plates.
.
The state charges $8 for the new
plates - in addiJion to the standard
registration fee that can reach $42.50

•

EASTMAN'S

Jo~ Panepucci, a crane operator in

Martins Ferry, Ohio. "I wouldn't
wala to go through it again. I would" •t \vant to wish it on anyone."
:J'be company has set a goal of gettint its ~o. 5 blast furnace in
Steubenville, Ohio, fired up by
month's end.
AWall Street ste-el analyst _said the
company's timetable seems optimiStic 'given the length _o~ the strike.
· "The end of August seems to be
a l~tle bit of a stretch. but it's not
impossible. They want to get up and
runping as qu_ickly as they can," said
Ric-hard Aldr,ICh at Lc;hman Bros. m
!'lew York.
According to union officials, the
agreement reached during closeddo(\1' negotiations in New York
incllldes a guaranteed pension sought
by \VOfkers and allows the company
to remain competitive.
. The pension allows someone who
retired this year with 30 years at the
company to ·receive a guaranteed
monthly payout of $1,200.
· The contract also includes a $2
• mil~on fund to reimburse medical
expenses incurred during tbe strike.
a $2,000signing bonus, a $1.50 wage
increase· and weekly $200 payments
for those awaiting recalls.

cigarette makers would pay '$368 billion in penalties.
Each election cycle, special interests pour more soft money into the
political system. Such donations are
'not subject to the $25,000-a-year
legal conuibution limit for each
donor.
"It's pretty clear what their reasoning is," said Herb Alexander, a
political science professor at the
University of Southern California aod
director of Citizens Research Foundation, a nonprofit group that studies
money in politics.
The money reminds lawmakers
that "the industry
. ;.- has some interests

RC and
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Soft Drinks

Big Bend • Buckeye
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The Dally Sentinel • Page 11. :

WASHINGTON (AP) - While
:demanding that the Republican Con: gress adopt campaign finance reform,
;President Clinton is telling fellow
·Democrats to keep pace with GOP
:fund raising. "It's OK if they have
:more, but you have to have enough,"
'he warns .
• In a day of political events that
:took him nearly halfway across the
:country ·- · and back - Clinton
:raised $550,000 on Tuesday to help
·the Democratic Nati~nal Committee
·brace for 1998 elections and trim' a
$16 million debt.
•
The red ink is due in part to legal
bills stemming from investigations
into 1996 fund-raising practices of
Clinton and his party. Speaking to
donors in Missouri and Washington,
the president said there is no shame
in raising money.
· "You have to have enough to get
your message out," Clinton said.
'' You have to have enough to be able
io answer if attacked in a way you
Consider to be unfair or,inaccurate. ''
.: Trying the minimize political
eamage caused by the 1996 fundiaising controversy, Clinton has
urged Congress to ban "soft money."
Yet he continues io raise the large
unregulaied donations given by corporations, unions and wealthy patrons
because, he says, Republicans won 't
stop.
· "My experience in this business
1\as been it's OK if they have more,
but you have ,to have enough," he
told members of the Democratic
Business Council at a $250,000 fundraiser in St. Louis.
· As the president rallied Missouri
Democrats, presidential aides trooped
iato a posh Washington hotel as headliners of a novel $300,000 fund-raise~. Cabinet and White House officials
gave cursory policy briefings loaded
with political platitudes to some 21
mayors and their wealthy hometown
supporters - all of whom paid at
least $1,000 for the pleasure.
. Shortly after returning from St.
Louis, Clinton closed the Washington
fund-raiser with an after-dinner
speech outlining his accomplishnients and goals.
· Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer,
who organized the event, said it
aCCOmplished tWO goals: educating
mayors abOut Washington policies
attd raising money for the embattled

party.
"If we want to be a viable force
in 1998 and look forward to the year
2000, we must get rid of this debt,"

Archer said.
~
Last week, the president attended
two fund-raisers in one night, picking
up $650,000 for the party.

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
On Saturday, Augull 23,
1 ~ 7 at 10:110 a.m. t~"1 Home
N••
t Ban k wIll oIIor lor
al..Iona
auction on t~ub! •at
..
~ " lot t~e
·~
bank PParkin
•
"
foRowtng vehtclea:
11193 Eagle summit, Serial
IIJE3CA411C5PIIOB3949
1891 lzuzu, Serle!
IIJAABL011.2119805712
11 d1 PI k
s lal
1-7
az
cup, or
IIJII2UF3118H0500752
1987 Dodge Shadow, Serial
•• 183Ba- ..E2HN4711783
1987 Chryaler LeBaron,
Sari t
I1~BH5&amp;E8FN2085 14
1182 Chevy _Plckup, Sarlal
11GCDC14H2CF348485
·1893 Ford Fl••t a, S•r tal
'KNJPT05H7P811B457
(8) 8, 8, 13, 15, 20, 22 ; &amp;TC
Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed propoaala for
providing 400 tone, more or
1111, of elate opeclllcatlon
404 aapholtle hot-mix In
pllct on vartoua etreeta
and location• within the
Vlllege of Syracuaa will ba
received by Syracuae
VIllage Council at the
Municipal Building of tha
aald village until 10 a.m.
Auguat 13, 1997, When they
will be opened and read
81C::::a shall be eaalld and
markldae Btd tor VIII""• of
·•
Syracuae Street Repaving
end matlld or dellverldto:
Vllllfll of Byracuat, Third
S1rMI.
Syracu11,
OH 45779.1
Attention
ot blddera
1
called lo all ·legal
. requlrementa, particularly
to
the Federal
Stendard
ProvletonaLabor
and
Davla-Bocon
Wogee,
varlou 1
lnaurance
rtqulrementll, varloua equal

In · some municipalities. The new the Pro Football Hall of Fame, have
plates replaced the traditional blue- · added $5.4 million, and the vanity
and-white plates.
plates have added $4.2 million.
More than 700,000 vehicle ownSome people even combine plates, •
ers have chosen to pay to get the new personalizing a plate with an enviplates. the Ohio Department of Pub- 1ronmental design. That adds $60 to
lie Safety said. Another 2.4 million the basic registration fee.
·
got them when they bought new or
The state allows owners to keep
used cars or signed a new lease.
their existing blue and white pl,ates if
Vanity plates that became avail- they are renewing their registration.
able last August cost $35; collegiate
"As long as the plate is still
plates are $50; and environmental usable, we don 't see any reason to
plates, such as those touting Lake force people 10 buy new plates," said
Erie or scenic rivers, add $25 to tbe Caltrider. "Unless the current plate is
registration fee.
illegible, there's no need to buy a new ·
The new plates added more than one."
$3.5 million to BMV revenues in the
But the Stale can cite a driver if the
last year.
plates become. so corroded that the
The specialized design plates, letters and numbers are _illegible.
touting scenic rivers, Lake Erie, and

Public Notice
opportunity provlllo..., ond
lha requirement for I
payment bond for 1~% of
1~1
" con"ect prtc• In ,~,
"
for'
m of a certified check,
--htert
ch-k,
or 1-r of
·
ov
cr·~lt
- upon a eolvent bonk
In tha amount of not 1•••
!han 10% of the bid amount
In favor of the afore11ld
VIINtageoboldfdSeyracuHr
may w' ullclraw
"
hll bid within thirty (30)
daya an.r the aeiUal dale of
opentngthertol.
of
Syrecuu rtHrYIIVIllage
the right
to ..-•·• any lnfo-·1"1" or
w~•
"'~
to rojaetany pr 1U blda.
J1nlct ZWilling
. Vlll;!!rkof-TSryureacuuruar
..,..
(7) 30 ., (8) 8,13
Public Notice
''
· IN THE COIIIION PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS

Public Notlca
Public Notice
Delendento. Thl1 aCtion hH foreclolld ond thef the
been aulgnoci Cue no: 117-· Ilene end/or lntei'HII In or
CV-G74, and Ia pending In on Mid
If any, be
haI ad and Iha re..
-• •
the Court of Common p•-•
mara
·
of llalge Couoty, Ohio. •·~ ~~- ttue qulated and Nlcl
' t ..~ e
object o1 the comp Ialnt property ao ld '"
-~1on and aII
demo nda 1ud gmo nt ago1nat Ioree1oeuro -·
the Defendant, Jamea R. amount• duo Plaintiff bo
Boyer, on Ita Second Ctalm ·peld rrom proceld1 of the
In tho eum or $17,845.52, ute. ·
.•
plua lnteroot 11 1 " 1' of
You oro required 10
$3.98 por day from March anawor the Complelnl
30, 1897; on Ita Fou rth within twenty-eight (28)
Claim In the aum or day a after the laat ~
$18,531.09, plua lntereat at publication of thle Notice, ·
• rata of $4.05 per day from which will be publlahed
lllarcll 30, 11197, In order to once each- for llx (8) •
forocto 11 upon mortgogaa eucCHIIve -"'- Thll..t ·'
upon real 1a1ate loceted at publication will bo made on ,, .
122 Unlon
Avenue, lhl 20th day of A1111nt.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
which
II 19117, and the IWe""'-elght
·
d
lb
'"' wilt '·
more fully oecr od 1n (28) daye for anaw•r
dlld recorded In Volume comm..,.. on !hat date. In .
.
317, Page
30 1, M• Iga the ceo• of your failure to
County Deed Recordl, and an ewer or otharwlae.
212 Filth Street. Middleport, reepond 11 roquelled by ,
Ohio, which Ia more fully the Ohio Rulli of Civil
F~~':::;:::~ 6
deacrlbod In doed recorded Procedure, Judgement by •
SAVINGS COMPANY,
In Volume 320, Page 357, default will be rendered ·
Plaintiff,
llelga County Ooed agalnat you end for the,., :
CIH No. , 7 cv 074
Recorda; end coeta of lhia relief demanded In the
action; however,
no Complllnt.
Ve
paraonal Judgment Ia Dltld thll 11 dey of July; .
Jam==ietal.,
aoughl again at the 11197.
• -~
NOTICE BY PUBUCATION O.tandant, JamM R. Boyar;
Larry Spe-~ •
~ R
R h .that the mortgagee be
Citric of Cout1a •
ta"~t ::~n8 ·,d=:uu'011
(7) 18, 23, 30;
¥
111
u nlon Avenue, 110 Help Wanted
• (8) &amp;, 13; 20; eTC
122
Pomeroy, OH 45789, and ;====:====~~'::"':-:"--::":'':::'":'"'~ ~
3218 Franklin Avenue, Point WANTED: Emergency Relief Workerl (Subatltut")
Pleuant, WV 25550, needed to work with Individuals with MR/00 In the
proaant lddrou unknown, Gallla and Meigs Counties. Hours are sc:ltedulecl
end Marion Roecll, whoM
1111 known addriiHI era as· needed; must be able to work evenings, '"
122
Union
Avenue, wHkends and some overnights. High School •.
Pomeroy, OH 45789, and
·
3216 Franktln A:~•nua, Potnt dlploma/GED, valid drtver'a license,drlthree yeara
d
P!eaaant, Wv 25SSO, llcenaed driving expertence, good
v1ng recor
~:"'a~~:::nyk=~ and adequate automobile coverage required. ...
lhot you have narnld Salary: $5.25/hr, to start. Training provided.
Dtfandanta In the action InfOrmal setting. Sand resume to: P.O. Box 604, ..
entltlld Farmera Benk ·•
Jack--., OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for
Savlnge Compeny, Plaintiff, 1 pile_inta: 8/19/!!7. E ual 0
rtunlty Employer.

\:perty,

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[iN he Carson brothers were bored out of their
d.!, minds ..It was getting dangerous. wnen ,..,
·

· parents hogged the only TV With cable they had no chmce but to wreak
havoc Quite a bit of grape JUice was sp11led on the llhag carpet

..

during these dark hmes . trust ua .Then Mr. and Mrfl Carson got cable
in the boys' room Stephen was thrilled by the natiOnal m-Ime hockey

finals . Michael marvelled al the wonders or slmg rays . And both of"
thetr 1magmalions were sllmulated by ong1nal ammatton Suddenly,
their gradefl started gomg up an achQOI The Carsons saved a lo l of
money on carpet cleaner and hved happaly ever after.
MORAl.: For next to nothmg, you can get yo ur house wtred so that everybody can jwatch what they want. where they wanl . wh.e n they wa.nl.

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Choose from brand names such as Broyhill,
Lane,
Keller, Frigidaire, Maytag, Zenith, Howard Miller, Vaughan,
and more...
.
Bedding by Simmons, Serta, and Namaco

•·$1.00/month as part of Pic-Sure

RUTLAND
HOME F·URNISHINGS

that Includes expa~ded repair service coverage!

• Connect up to 2 additional TVs
for a one-time cost of $9.95
(save uJ) to $25 .00)

••••• •• •••
675-3398 or
1-800·766-0553

Cable

Offer expires 9/7/97 . Some restriction may apply.

St. Rt. 682 &amp; 33, The Plains, Ohio
1-800.382-5657,797-4567
Mon.-Fri. 8om lil7 pm, Sal. 810 S

Free Delivery

161. Main St., logan, Ohio
380,2831,380-3308
Mon.-Sal. 8:30 t1n loS pm

"2 Locations To Serve You Better"

lill

!

�I

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

.

'
Wednesday; August 13, 1997 . :

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoi1,.Ohio

R.c·coLA

To Spy the Best Buy$ In

.Monday thr•

naca
em
•••
tWIRl
403 SECOND lYE.
GILLIPOUS, OHIO

c

IIM·IO PM .
298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards •

•Software
•Parts
•Printers
•Custom Orders
•Financing

Easy Bank Rnondng

Air Conditioners Installed 178" omonth
Ileal Pumps lnstoUed 138" omonth

"·"

THE RIGHT TO .LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU AUGUSl 16, 1997

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Thermostat ..

RACINE MowER

Remodeling

MIJ

FRESH SPLIT CHICKEN

Breasts •••••• ~~•••••

PORK .BUn STEAK OR

LB.

$129
$

.

1
$ . St
Pork Ribs •••••• !~.. ·1
~SC~MARR
$ l9
W1eners............ 1 ·
Roasts..............

$139

Engl1sh Roast·~··
USDA CHOIC! BONELESS BEEF . $399
NY Str1p Steaks. ·

.

Lb.

. u

ARMOUR
TREEI
12

614-992·5115 or
.614-992-6166

MAkE RARilE. .•
USE WANT ADS. .~ :

-

Breasts •••••• :~!~:7•

EKRICH SLICED .

Bologna·~·

•.••••L:-..

"NEW• ALL

$179

.RPOSE WHI~~

.Potatoes ••••••••••• ·
BORDEN SKIM
89
•lk
$1
MI ••••••••••••••••••
gal

.

BORDEN AMERICAN IND. SLICES

Cheese.~ •••••••! .c:~.
2

$159

riiNITED

Ice Cream .s.c:~~ ••••

Peanut.Butter.~·.~· .. ,_ .
.

1iuna •••••••••••••••••• 59

C

6.5oz.

WE

N

REG. FAMILY SIZE

$149

UMIT2
ADOPURCH

$1.89

MORTON FORZEN

D1nners•••••••••••••

12

$

8.75- 10 oz.

•

TIDE
ULTRA 2

CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE

OIL

PRil:ES''
Quality Window Systems
wv 10234n

192·94

oz.$

Powder Laundry Detergent

s1·59
.

·

$319

89 C
'

c

14.25'
15.25 OZ.

...

I·Gr•W" kittens, hall Siamese.
304-87S..34D alter 5:00pm.

10 in. :........ $10.00
12 in ..... ..... $11.00
14 in .. ........ $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

Bax spring a: ma\lress, &amp; rock1n'g
chair. 304-675-3734 .

..
...

Five year old black Pomeran1an
male, lady' s dog, oreal prolector.

81&lt;-843-5303 . .

Free Kiuena 2 .orange, 2 bjack,2
ilgaf 1\Jippod 614-«8-8373.
Seven week old beagleltenier
P&lt;-!&gt;r&gt;te•. 614-985-3662.

m111

•

Small Lpp Ear Rabbit To A Good

POMEROY, OH:

To Good Home Only : 112 Mmia·
lure Poodle, &amp; 1f2 Min1ature Col·
lie, Inside Dog, Female. 614·446-

-

1541 .
White and gray kittens, white
adplt female, 614· 992·6030 until
9:00pm, leaWt message 11 no an-

•
:
..

=-=·
'---------:-- _;:
60 Lost and Found

We mn wash anything
Free Estimate

lesidtntial &amp;Commwclol

JC
CONSTRUaiON

custon"l_

~

Uc. wv 011030

Roofing, Painting
Guttera
Guaranteed

Novelties
Special Designs
Wearable Advertising

G-Ift~

liiWiinmtJUhip
Free Eatlmatea

P.O.Iex215

992·9057

33051.SR U p_.y, OH

. 1614) 992-4279

.11111.1111
'itXCIIIftll
Septic Syete"'-

. Trailer &amp; I '

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

MANLEY'S

WICKS
HAULING

Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,

Llm,stone, ·
Gravel, Sand,

. Houle Sltea'.
R-.onable Ratu
· JoeN.Sayre

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Sayre TI'ICklnf Co.,

...,.

HOME IMPROVEMENT

.614-992-3470 .

Concn!te, Etc.

P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
· Oh 45614

(614) 388•9865

811Sth, 16th, 221 Oak Dn~e . Uke
New White Cradle With Eyelet
Bedding, Nurserv Accessones,
Lawnmowers,
Snowblower,
Clothe~ MuchMore!

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

;L-_ _ ___.

:1117117111

.

•.

The family of Todd C.
would like to
thank family and friends lor their support and
prayers during the difficult time for us. Todd was a
wonderful son, lather, brother and a friend to all of
us. Our family has lost a piece of our hearts.
Special thanks to the EMS squads for their
help, Fisher Funeral Home and all the caring
frlende and employees of Meigs Local Schools for
their condolences. To Derek Stump, former pastor
of Bradford Church, who spoke so movingly
about our kind and gentle son. To Harold Graham,
who wrote a beautiful tribute to Todd as a teacher.
· A special thanks to Laurel Cliff Church and
Rev. Dave Dewitt who have been so faithful to
pray and add comfort to our family.
Our family would like to acknowledge the
generous donations In Todd's memory lor the
Science Lab at Harrisonville School. Education
was Important to Todd, he loved teaching and his
students.
·
Gone too soon!
Greatly loved and missed.
Maurice, Margaret,
Scott, Karen and Seth

7.25 oz.

Quality Work et
e Fair ~rice!

• Top • Trim • ~...,.,n~'"'

550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Home Ph.

• Stump Grinding

614-992-3120

2Q Yrs. Exp. - Ins. OWner: Rick Jo&gt;tneon

Free Eorimoreo

Porta John Rentals
Septic Tanks Installed
New Aeriator Timers &amp; Motors

614·742·2566 .

Don Geary, OWn.r ·
414/lln

LOnG'S
conSTRoalon

-~

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

CORPORAL ELEaRIC

·

Big Bend Fabrication,
·. Machine.&amp;Welding Shop
250 Condor S1reet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304· 773·5861
~

1:00pm Friday.

•..

·

August 15·16, Fridav andSaturctav. eam-4pm. 394B9 s. R. 7; top

or Eastetn hilL Clothing, misc .
Nascar items, also a special 25t

-.
:~

. ...
•

•.

.

sale.

"

Friday r..nd Salurday- garage
sale, 9am·4pm. Dennis Wolle res·
idence, Vellowbush Rd., Racine.
NII&lt;E ahirts, l ike new tennis
shoes, jeans, jackets, shee11,
cralt supplies. new weed eater
and Iota or misc.

Pt. Pleasant

,-·.

Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m. · 12 noon

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992·2772
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

Call 614·843·5426

Free Estimates

··-

Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement

INSULATION
•Replac11111111 WWows
•hid Garages
•Stor11 Doors &amp;
Windows
•Room AddiHons

·~

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
· Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas

J&amp;L 51 lNG &amp;

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience;

... -- .. .....

:~

Sunda·y &amp; Monday edition· •. :

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION
2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck

ao•,s~aop

.•'•.

Advance . Dudllne: 1:00pm the
dey before Ihe ad is to run,

HOWARD'S

D. Gcaey's

..

Behind McDo,.lds.

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

.

•
:~

Mo11ing Sale: Saturday 16th, 9·3, · • •
Couch, Chair, Misc . 3rd House
.,.

814-742·2138

FREE ESnMATES

"""
..

::

..•.

&amp; VIcinity
Big Rummage Sale-Oil "87 LeonBaden Rd . Westerns. glassware,
spons cards, lots ol everything.
Fri. &amp; Sat.

80

Auction

and Flea Market
Crawford's Flea Market, Hender·
son, WV Everyday 9·6. Crafts,
•
antique£, trading cards, lurnilure, ~ · :
variety. 304-675-540-4 .

tors.

•

Rick Pearson Auction Company, .

..
•
· ...

lull ltme auctioneer, complete
auction
service .
License'H
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia:, 304·
773-5785 Or 304· 773·5447 .·

,

STOKELY'S
YE.GETABLES

99

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291-5600

614-992..&amp;479

.

StAR KIST OIL OR WATER

DIBECf

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

GOLDEN WH
MAC &amp; CHEESE

..

. . . .

''FAl:TORY

3&amp;0° Communications

SHOWBOAT
PORK &amp; BEANS

SAW CHAIN

Privacy Fences • Patio
Decks. Driveways • Farm &amp;
Heavy Equipment • Remove
unwanted dirt. mold and
· mildew • Restore the clean
natural look

Llmtltltone &amp; GnWel

150Z

JIF

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

CELLULAR ~HONES

c

~9

DREHEL'S

. House • Mobile Homes •

Chester, Ohio

113 W. 2ND ST.

$

Kittens. Phone

tllan Shephard &amp; Norwegian Elk·
hound &amp; COllie. 3J4·675-5464.

1·614·742-2925

9Ss--4422

110 Court St.
992-4119

oz.

99 C

'

Limestone • Gravel
Din· sand

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Lb.

CAROLINA TURKEY

Babt

5 Beautiful

' ,(8141.._

L..---~"""'=':.:-~ : l5 Mixed puppleL ~..f57S.3628.

(6 14) 367·0266
1-800·950-3359

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

7/22/lln

AHMOY
TOOl

Giveaway

I ~~~n.• to Giveaway (61&lt;1 446-

JIIOfNil"

GALUPOLiS, OHIO 45631

TRUCKING

(61

ESTIMATEES
. 985-4473

.'·

••v• Teu ·

40

R. L.

Joe Wlleon

FREE

.Is this your, dog?
Found In Syracuse
area. Black .
w/brown, female.
Very friendly.
Cannot Keep.

"W•

son coNVERSATION! Beaur,. •
rut wornenl t -II00 -255-07oo Ext: •
4021 , 13.99 tU in. 18 + ServU
-~ elo-&amp;45-8434.

HomeOnty. 614-2•5-9759.

•Garages
•Complete .
·Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare

c

Financing through Norw111 Flnanc:lal

Owldoar Power E; lpu ut Astodalllll: Certified 2 Cycle
• State Route 338 • At V!na • Racine, Ohio
949-2804

·New Hon;~et!l

320Z.

COUNTRY STYLE

__USDACH.OICE BONELESS BEEF

• Mowera • Chain Saws • WeediNIIera • Authorized
Dulerfvr:
·Brlgge &amp; Stratton • MTO- Murray· McCollough •
Echo- Ryobl· Roper • Rally· Hydro Gear
AND OTHERSII
.

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

'

Maaon,WV
25280

8034.

smal11, 2females, part Auslra ·

·- ··· ......,

AUNT JANE'S
HAMBURGER
S9
CHIPS

742•2925

"''-'1"•"'

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

2 mi. ·on Rt. 7
Leading CrHk Rd.

Rt 1, Box 44-C

U.ULB......... CDPJIA

0700 e.1t. 28e2 . 13.98 par.min.
Muot bo 1Byro. Serv-u eta-us-

. •Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws .
•Weed Eaters

Hai'I'J H. Houston, D.D.S.

...... &amp; Stnlllot: Mlsw Servia let ....

6.5·7.5 oz.

c

~ MASON DENTAL _CARE

u.. Glrlll C.~ Howl 1-Q00-255-

Part• and Sert~U:e/1

· Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
il14 446 9416
1-aJ0.872-5967 1391 Salford School Rd., Gallipolis, OH

CHIPS

Personals

FAMILY DENTISTRY '
304-na-ss22

1-614-441-1050-1-888-441-1050

HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING .

Custom Homes

•Computer Systems
'Repairs
•Accessories
•00 Day Same As Cash

•We Recharge Later Cartrtdgea
•We Refill Ink Jet Certrldgea
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix •

•(Paymen11 baaed on awro-ed creclt)

PRINGLE$
POTATO

FOR

•

ANNOUNCEMENTS

211ter

s.....,

:

Clossifieds.

the

PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS

WE

Don't Hove To Looll F~~r " ·

••

SUNSHINE
CHUNK DOG
FOOD

·-

18 LB.

.. .

··~
"{'

614·992~7643

$ 99

FAMILY NIGHT EVERY
· TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1, Get 1 FREE Alter 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizzas w/1 item $12.99

DOMINO'S PIZZA

Win A
BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super
Value
$300
Free Cash!
Stop In The Store
For Details

Location

.

:;

..

.

LIM IT 12 ADD PURCH. 39$

'

. New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Cuslom Slaughter &amp; Processing
Beef, Pork &amp; Lamb
W Va Sausage Co.
907 Fourth Street
New Haven, WV 25265
(304) 882-3194

NT
PROPERTY FOR SALE
POMEROY
Court Street Grill Building J ·•:i'l'''~
. . 992-3836

. (No Sunday Calls)

21121101tftt

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
Consider:

THE MAPLES
in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring wall. to-wall carpeting, with all appliances.
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements.
For further details call today ~

1·614·992·7022 ·. -

Dally Rd., Racine

90

614-949-3060

Absolute Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Co ins , Proof sets.
Oiamondl, Antique Jewelry, Gold

John Wllllame, Owner
Llceneed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Eatlmates

~. . .Will

Providing Quality

Rllldentlal Service.
24 Hr. Emergency
Service ·

FRD

Local Area Pick Up
Dlacarded Appliance•
&amp; Many Metala.
614-8112-4025
, Call 8 am-8 pm

. YOUNG'S

'•1aiPEN1tR SERVIa
'.ol'tDom Addition•
oNewGaragee
oEfeCtrlclll Plumla!g

oRoollng
olnWrlor

a

. ..

Fn•

ELIM
HOME CARE
For Handicapped
&amp; Elderly.
·. Dally • Weekly Contract
Family Atmosphere
209 S. 4th Street
Middleport
992·5042
·

1121/Wf2 mol.

...,.lntlng

Cone,._ Woik
(FREE EmMATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ul
892-8215

-

Pomeroy, Ohio

.stumP

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

a Ettarlor .

. Alao

Ma

·"ft\11'\

Lilllt things
Art Worth A lot
rn

the Cwsi{itrl Stet ion!

Wanted ·to Buy

Rings, P re- 1930 U_S Currency,
Sterling. ::tc. AcquiSitions Jewelr~
. M.T.S. -:om ShOp, 15t Second
Awenue, Gall1polis, 614 -446· 2842.

For Information
. leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone lnvo.ved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
I.D. Caller!
Contact:
Ron l. Miller
992-4025

.

~

•

Anttques. furntture. gla,ss . chma,

coins. toys, tamps, gu ns. tools.

~ -·

estates : al so ap praiS al s, Osbv
Marttn. 614 ·99 ~· 744 ·1
Ant+ques top prtcos pat d. Rtver ·
1ne Anrques . Pomeror, Oh1o,
Russ MOlote owne r. 6 14· 99 2·

$2r000 REWARD!!

•.

2526.
late ~.fodel Cars Or
Truck:s , ·, ggo "-A odels Or Newer,
Sniilh Blo iCk Ponttec. 1900 Eut·
ern Aver'l.e, Gallipolis.

Clean

·.
-

.
~.
~

•
•

J &amp; D' s .\u to Part s. Buy1ng sa l·
vage

~er.. cles. Selling parts .

304 ·

773-5033
Shepharr Logging Buyer 01 Sta ning Timbe r And Land. Pi ne. Pul p..

wood. Ar •d Saw Ttmber, 614 ·68211402.

PLOYMENT
ERVICES
. 11 0

·.

•.
•
••.

-

•.

:0
·

Help Wan1ed

..-..
'

~.

AVON l All Areas l Sh1r ley f
"'·
Spears, 30•·675-1429.
: : :'
1986 Dodge Col! w1th ca r $700
0. 8. 0. (6'4\2~632

·--.

�~ednesday,August13,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AI.LEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1S.

8RIDOII: ·

.

~·

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

31Helrvy•

Dedlllly

42Bincll

46 Pt&amp;a brlld
~

46A-.w..t
4tllb-

lnforrnMion
ACCE!S To Human

Dntlopment
Start II
I
For Thl F)lOWing
PART-TIME HOME VISITOR
MEIGS COUNTY Applrcants
MuS! H8''6 A Htgh School [)rplo·

ma, Chtlc Development Assoc.ate

Credent al. Assoctate Degree In
Early Ch1 dhood Educauon Or Re
lated FiEld Expe r~ ence Workrng
In A Pr.J School Se111ng Pre
ferred BegmnulQ Rate 01 Pay Is
17 00/Hr

MOBILE UNIT DRIVER • MEIGS
COUNT' . Applicants Must Have
A Htgh !&gt;:hoot Orploma Or Equrw·
alent, C Jmmercral On 'o'er s lr ·
cense W th School BuS'"Ciasstfr
catron And A Clean Orr\nng

Record C:xpenenc@ Work1ng 11'1 A
Pre SchOol Se111ng PreiE~aed B~
g•nnmg Rate Of Poly Is $6 25 IHr
SUBSTITU'E BUS DRIVER
GALLIA /MEIGS COUNTIES
Apphca rts Mus! Have A H1gh
School [11ploma Or Eqtlt\lalent,
Cor,'\me • c1al Dnver s l1cense
With SC.IOOI Bus Classt!•tahon
And A Claan D11v1ng Recora Ex
pauencf Wcrkrng In A Pre
School ~ etllng Pre!erred Begm
Olf"'I Ratt Of Pay ls S6 25/Hr
SUBSTITUTE HOllE VISITOR •
MEIGS COUNTY· Applicants
Must Have A H1gh School D1plo·
ma, CMd OG~telopment AsSOCISte
Credenllaf Auoc1ate Degree In
Earl,- Childhood Educabon Or Related F1eld EJtper1ence Working
In A P,._School Serung Preferred,
BegiMing Rate Of Pay Is $6 25 I

Earn •11tr1 mon•y without IN¥•
lng home . lnvue your fr1end1
over for a professtonal glamour
port•a11 party Sa!1slacl10n guar·
an1eed For 1n lorma11on call 1·
eoo 487 5787 or 1 800.,.26 8363
Expenenced Half Stylist Needed
For Busy New Salon 6H 441
1880 614 256 6336
Flalbed Step Deck OTA DmHt!S
Needed CDl l1censed Aequtred
Call ,.800~62- 5236
Full 11me pos1110n for AsSistant
Youth Serv1ces Coordtnator
Bachelors degree 1n heallh, soCial work or allied ff&amp;ld or eQUN"alent expe,1ence Must possess
e•cellen1 communtca!ton sk1ils,
ab1l11y to teach smannarge oroups
and ba a ha1son 10 schools communtly agenc1es and famtltes 35
hours per week. benel1ts (flex
llme) wtth eo.oen1nQ!wee~d work
Uust be dependable, 1nn0¥81IV8
Bnd able to work wrth mtntma! superviSIOn Reliable lransportatton
Htq\med EEOC employer Send
resumes To P:O Box 631, Pom9f'
oy Oh10 45769 No a~1Catton w.ll
be considered aller August 19
1997
Home Busmess SASE 11 00
M 0 Only, S PF lnt PO Box
347358 San FranciSco, CA
94134
Housekeeper For Disabled Prac
t1c1ng Columbus Allorney, l1ve -ln
Some Personal Care, Dnvers l•·
cense Requued, Good Wages ,
Room&amp; Board, 614 267 535-4
Need Medical PhYsiclln (M 0 •
D 0) in Southeastem Oh1o

Ht
API&gt;UCitntl For Thts Pos1t10n May
A Resume- To Jeanme
Williams, Human Resource ManTo Human Reager,
source Davelopmenl, PO Box
316, Gall1poWs OH 45631

Shou1o oe SJpeflenceo m
Pt'ty's1ca1 Medtca~ Rehab1lnat1on
Par1·Ttme H~-20 Hours a waek·
1100,000 Salar~
Call(61.)4:1&amp;-476~

The Deadltne For Acceptmg Apphcaltens Is Monday, August 18,
1997 5 00 P.M. Fot AdditiOnal l n · l - - ' - - - - - - - : : - - - l:&gt;rmanon Call 614·441·3010 8 00 , 80 wanted To Do
-5 00 P M Monday Th r u F nda y I-:-:-:::-::-=-::-:-:-::::-::-:-:---:-;-:Access To Human Resource Development Is An A.AtEEO Em
ployor.

3Bidrooma. t beth, central heall
air, city WIIOr W/2,200oq.ft. 1110&lt;1&lt;
bt111dlng In lnn. 147,000. 304 ~

541·2llllhr 300-!IIJII.D71•
• Bldroom Spl11 l-1 W.tl! 5400
Sq. FL Including Full BoHman!
Wtth 2 Car Gar.ge, Gal Heat, 2
Mllee From O.Mipol11 On Buta111tUe
Pille, On 1 112 Acre Flat Lol City
Sdloal, $1211,000 Or Boll Ollet,
814-448 0300.
5 Bedroom, Cape Cod, Ower 2
,t.crea, 7 Mtltt From Town
(814)256-11197
ATHENS MORTGAGE

llor-

COMPANY

Wilen the borl&lt; •ys no. lot
.lthanot
oay yull Let
our Iliff help you get the 6oan you
need.

Wo-lalzoln:
F.,w,.:lng lor hou- lOCI mobllo,_

SoH-Ioyecl· roftnaaclng·
Home tmpra'ltmlntt· 81ft Con·
oolldotlott- -.non1 Propor·
ty• CMh oullor ony nood.
No appllcatton fee. An levels of

80(1.12t-1&lt;02/ 81.·!112-411011
FOR SALE BY OWIER
2 Slory, 2 Ballls, 2 Or 3 Becltoam
Home, For Sale Ntce Stze Lot,
Mason, W'IJ, 304-773·5019, Call
Only Between 8 AM To 7 P:M

PINse.
FOil SALE BY OWNER:
11t V1nton Court, In Galllpolts, 1
Floor Plan, 3 Bedroc:ima, t Car
Garaoe. lot 601CUO, Call 614·3792720 For Appointment Onty Af-

loriP.II
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes
From Penntes On S t Oef1nquent
Tax, Repo·s, REO's Your Area
Toll Free (1) 800-218 -9000 Ext
H-2814 For Curtent ltS11f"'II
House and property, ap~o.: &lt;tacreJ Ideal starter home Beech
St,l'omeroy OH 304-882-2077
House For Sale By Owners, N1ce
3 Beclroomo, 2 Bolho, Utility Room.
Large Llwlng Room, Dining Room
And Kitchen Priced tn 'The Mtd
Ftlllll. Call (8U)387-0882 For
llare DelaHo

-·Make iure your lender Isn't
mlacalcl tallng ~our mortgage
and cosn •.g you tll:luundsl
-·Pro~an works on mobile hOme
loanamo
HOW?
Tha Mortgage Slvlngt

Proeraml
Call for Frw lnlormetion
Toll Fr11
HMl8-343-.736EXT.I9

P•rt dme recet::111onlstfb1lhng clerk
neteded for toea! phystctan's of·
ll~e. Computer expenence and
k,.owtedga ol lCD 9 coding and
11\Bnaged care in1urance .b1lhng
l"lllplul Ot.JaUfted applicants may
s~o~bmll reaumes to P:O 458,
Ftactnt, Oh 45771 . No telephone
lf}qUtres please

320

All real estate actverttslng in
this newspaper .s subject 10
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 whiCh makes It Hlegal
to adverttse "anv prefetence.

Prtoreu1ve Long -Term Care
F1~1hty Spec1ahzlng In Alzhelm
ef',. Care, At W.ll AI Sk1lted
AnP Reh81b Sentttel Haa Re·
'lllafdlng Pqs1t10n1 Open For AN's
LPN'~ fuii·T~~~ Or Patt·Tima,
All $h1h1 Appl- In Person At
Sc,n1t H1lls Nurlt~g Center, 3t1
fluj:ktidge Rd Bici..ll, OH

g,

11m1tat1on or discrimination
based on race, color, ret'OkJn,
sex fflmlllal status or national
ortgin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,

""lllllo Acqount I:X•cutlv.· Rare
op,ortuMy to ste~ 1n1o an ettab
~~~~ account hS1 LOOking fro an
e•f'enanctd Aa4lo Account E•·
e~vuve whc,t 1S a sellslartar w11t't a
prfved track record $30,000
AI~ 5 annu•IIY to 1~art Pl..-ase cal!
prjor to, undtnli ruume Call
!JJ4)286-~23 Lltw Dov11, Jack·
sof'l County BrOiadcalllng, 295
Ealf tnaiM Street, Jack.son. Ohao
45f40. E.O,E

c""

1 TIME ONLYI
B L·O·W 0 U·TI
$499 OCJwn on aetect Stngta sec
oon
Down on select multi·
aectlont 2-3 or 4 Bedroom roodels a-rc•table OakWOOd Home'
Ntlf), WV, 304· 755-58~

sg•g

1g71 Kmg mobtre home, 60112,
nrce cordttiOn, must see to apprectate 6U 992 ·3129 or 614·

992·2203
1971 two oearoom 121t60, In ·
cluaes c.mcrele&gt; steps, underp•n
mng, sto Te. retngeralor, new carpet m l'lf !lway and master bed
room s;·9oo, call 6U·898-003t
and leave massage

---=---1972 V.rtonan 14170, new carpet throughout, new lurnace and
heal pvmp, good 11ove and refng
era\Of, $7500 614·992 2217

1979 14•70 Schult W1!h Expando
l1111mg Room And A 1986 12•42
Add A Room Four Bedrooms. 1
112 Balt1S, Family Room, New Fur nace, He~r Pump, And Carpehng
614 245 !.i565
1979 Fa1·mont Total Remoctele1ng
All New t=loof5 New Appliances,
Must Setl614,:.l67-05t5
1987 Storllno 1'41170. 3br, 2ba, all
etectrtc, ' ange, retngera1or, dtsh
washer, porch &amp; underptnn1ng
304 578-2201 aher 6pm

Pflrt-Time ~smon a11atlable Relatl
Furniture Store Apply Tope's
F~rnlture tSt S•cond Avenue,
Qalllpohs. tO am llll1 pm No
PflOI'le Calli

REifAB SP~CIALIST
Q'll1a Mejgs
Is saekmg 1
F\11t!'t1abilttatlon slrecl&amp;lllt for thl
dtttlia Couruv a • to work on •
cgprractytl b11~1 dmg property
'"'pect1o., Ellpflf'lence In con·
slruct•oni~USI~ tradeS , preler·
at&gt;ty HUD 0 ( go\4,rnmenl funded
ort 9rams Ability to procen pa ·
perwork QflO scr~~&amp;n contracton
J.At,~ll po11eu w.,al1d drtvera ll·
ce.nae H•ph School diploma or
e~llil&amp;lent. Appll~tlonllreaumet
wllh reference~ accepled tl
Clleat11re otfice tt'jrouoh OB-22-g7,

Mob!le Homes
for Sa!e

Ltvtngston·s basement wa'ter
prooftng, an basement repatra
done, tree estimarea. hfet1me
guarantee t Oyrs on tOb e11per1
ance. 304-675 2145
I· l•lliiiliiiillililli1111i•llllilii
I

umttauon or discnm1natlon •
This newspaper will not
onowongly accepl
actverusements for real ntats
which 1$ In VIOlation of the
law OW readers are l"lel'ebY
irlfoml&lt;!d thai a! -'"Ill
aMtllsed In 1111s nowspaj&gt;OI'
are avatlable on an equal
opportunity bulo

....~·---111111111111~

.•

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale
3 lleclroom l!ouoo w/2 Cllf got11ge.
t/2 to 31• acre, ln good location,
wJc.ty water in letart. 304-895-

:!5U6

3 10 4 Bedrooms Opnonal Family
Room, CA, Pool Approx1me11~ 11
2 Acres, 3 Minutes From HOIPtlll
~OE
and Town, Bittersweet Dr~ve
$73,000 (01•) 448... 173 61!"1 IO
$1lepha ' d Loggo~g Anyono E•·
parltnct Wltn Cham Saw, Alao 8pm
SllidiiOr OporoiOf, f14-e82-8402.
Rolllng Acres. 4 bedrooms. 3
li•lp Wtnted T•llflblt' Cuuer 110 balha, tamdy room, I1Y1ng room.._, 2
'-t Hour, Load"' Oper~.,r, Slllcl- gorogaa, 3 112m11ea OUI Sondi!HI
q,r, E xperiencll~ Only Need
304·675-5403
AIMJiy, Col614-~·7&lt;55

l1m1ted Offer ! 1997 doublew1de,
3br, 2batl!, $1799 down. $2781
month. Fres dehvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Home~. Nitro

wv 30&lt;-755-5885

New 1~7 1•x10 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE llt rent
Onl~ S181 86 per montn with
$1050 down Call 1·800 837

3238
OhiO Valley Bank Will offer lor sale
a 1994 Clayton lnnsbrook MIH
Seual fClU059t45TN Publtc
8UChOn Will be held II the QVB
Annex, 143 Thtrd Allfi , GallipoliS,
OH on 8123197 at 10 00 am MIH
Will be sold to tughest bidder ~as
ISM Without expressed or tmphed
warranty and may be seen by
callmg Ketlh Johnson at 441 ·
1038 OVB reserves the nght to
accepJ or reJect any and all bidS,
ana wuhdraw property !tom sale
pr1or 10 sale Terms ot Sale
CASH OR CERTIFIED CHECK

340

Business and

1989 PreiDOe 2116 walls. rwo bedroom. fiN bath laundry room atr
cond1ti0nmg, S14,000 or best oller, 614·6r~8 3803
1991 Sunsh,ne 16•80, Three
Bedroon Two Balh Total Elec lrtC, E11c •llen t Cond11Lpn S17 coo
Ftrm C;H 16UJ379-213J Alter
300
1993. Mobtle Home 3 Bedtocm, 2
Full Bath. Central A1r Fully Furn.sl"led. New Fumture Must Sell
(614)245-9366
1994 14dl0 3 Bedrooms, 2 lull
Baths Decks , C A1r. Extfa5
Must Movet 614 441 0155, Bt4 ~6 2706
New - 10~7 14 W1de-t bath, $6991
down. S 139/mo, w1th appro111ed
creciL Cal 1 800-691 -6777

1 $995
1997 1•11:70 2 or 3 Bedroom
dtwn, $195/mo Only at
Oakwooc Homes.. Nmo, WV 304-

755 58B5
1997 1 tx80 3 or 4 B&amp;droom.
St.359 cown. $229/mo Free 111,
Sktrt1ng, I deliVttfy Only It Oakwood Homas N1tro,W\I 304-7555885
tSil97 d0.1blew1de StUS down,
1229/mo Free delivery &amp; setug
1·900-l!Q ·6777

1sa01 Fherwood

14X52 2 BA

Like- (614)·992·5428

Yearling pony mule JICk S250,
2112 year old buno JaCk, $400. 3
J'•ar old wh11~ tack donkey, ..00;
all very gentle and k.1d broke, two
16. EngliSh nd1ng uddles StSO
each, 12· Red Ranger ~nv saddle and bndle $150 each, two
used boy race style btkea $25
each one new blanket saadle,
$50 , 1981 Ch,ysle' Ct:udoba,
11000. 61•·7&lt;t2· 1117

Small lhrlv1ng buStneu Baby &amp;
-chlldren·a Items $17,000+ Inventory 18,000 Senous mquu1es
only 33&lt;4-6 75-4571 alter 5pm

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

1 112 Acre lot For Sale Cora
Road f6t4)24&amp;-51ll8

~·M

1 2 acra lot 1n Syracuse $15.000.
6t4·992 4561

360

Concrete I Platdc S.p1ic Tanka.
Furn1shed Apartmtnt, One Bed- 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
room, Upst&amp;Jrl, All Ullttltl Paid, Evans Enterpnstt, Jackson, OH
No Pets, 854 Second Ave. , GaiK- 1-800·537-9528.
polls 614.,.4fi·9S23
Four 24 barstool$, 130 each ,
GraCIOUI ltwl~ 1 and 2 bedroom 38••80" table With 8 chBifS, S600,
apartments at Village Manor and 7 doors wllh cas 1no. h1nges &amp;
R1vers1cle Apartments 1n Mtddlt· knobs, $30 each . 61.11 992 •560
port From $238-$304 Call flU- after 7 PIT
992 5064 Equal Hou11ng. Oppor

FARM SUPPLIE S

610

P•ano - tunmg &amp; repa1r$
.~;~~;~·~~~~·~~-C~•:II~8:1~4~- ~ Grubbs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
Dr '514 446 &lt;4525
Modern 2 Bedroom A.partmenl,
614·4•6-0390

plano

JET

AERATION MOTORS

One bedroom apartment 1"
Aepal eel N- &amp; Aebu1tt In Stock
r
.....
Pleasant Furn11hed Ver~~ clean
,..
••
.,
pets.
304-e7SCall
Ron t:wans. 1 800-537-9528
1
&amp;
0

New Holland 78., F'orane Har
~
•
vester ElectriC Con!rols 2 Row
Var 1ab1e Wtd !h Corn Heaa, 2
Wi,ui,~~~ P1ck Up, New Knwes
614 388-9875

aB&amp;

.... 'l

Up 5ta 111 Ap•rlment For Renl .
$ 300 00 Month. Musr Pav For
'
Gas &amp; Phone • New Kllcl!on One
large
Bedroom
• l1vlng
Room
And Bath·
hcellant
Cond1hon
No Pets Depo!ll Required Can
Be Seen At 1403 Eastern Avenue, Galttpalla, Call6t4_..8-41514
For Appc111wnent.

King Stow Input Rating 50 000
BTUIHR, Min Bv Pass, Input rat I~=~:::!::.:.~::::.::;~-ong-25 ,000 NaMal Gas Sell Fo, 630
Livestock
150 16 14 1446-4 70S
•
Kllchen Gorset $6 SO Sale on all
room l1Zn ca•pets Mollohan Car
Goats lor sale, 614-94i·l494
::::6-..:7..:•.:.":.._-,-::::-c-::
11pe::::1S~(:61:.:•:'·~..
1~
Holste1n Heders &amp; Bull Calves,
f;1dmg Mower 18HP 44• Atso Crosses 3 Days To 3
Furnlshecl
450
3 yurt old e11ce1tent cond1
Momns Call61• 245 546•
With grader blade, wheel
Rooms
weights, and cha1ns, and wagon 640
Hay &amp; Grain
(614 ).WI3-6822
Sleeptng rooms With coolung. $1200
Mixed hay, aquart bllll. 12.25
Also trader space on nwer All
hook-ups Call alter 2 00 p m, MUST ~Elll couch old war - P&lt;l&lt; bale. 304-1175-1025.
:lrobe ·could be antiQUe· old
304-773 5651 MasonW'IJ
tlereo " cabinet &amp; r.nany m1sc
TRANSPORT A T ION
nems Co nact 304 6 75 2995
460 Space for Rent
Full Silt&gt; truck topper S45 new
Mobile home tlte a111allable bet- portable phone w111 sell at 112
wHn AIP'Iena and Pomero~. cat! pnce, $2~, 61&lt;4 -949 2045
814-385-43117
71
Autos for Sale
Solid oa. table &amp; cha~rs S150 &amp;
Mobile Home Space State Route up, 3 u e tra•ler 18 low drag
1930 Ford V1cky Corwert1ble SB
1•1 &amp; Roure 775 .lroo, Groen lo- $900, w11 Cleal. 614 985 3700 or
350 TH&lt;OO $1 •. 000 30··675·
cal School Diotnct. 61--..o53
5403
614-985 =1:.:0:-7-::-~-=--~::­
SUMMER SALE Central Atr
1983 Mercury Grand Marquis,
MERCHANDISE
Cond1110ners Full 5 Year Warran·
pnce negotiable, ull 114-882ty ·11 You Oon t Call us We Botti
5519 leave menage, Will call
loset• Free Esumatesl Add-On
back
510
Household
Heal Pumps Onty Shghty H1gher
1984 Camara Z-28 wfl~. 3~
Call Us Today 1997 Is ThE
Goods
barrel engtne, runs great, need
Twenty Seventh Year In Th€
wlndshteld &amp; one rear aJtle.
18.2 Cubic fHt Upright Freezer, Heatl'lg &amp; Coohng Bus1ness! e 14
$1 000 OBO 30•·675-57&lt;0 ask
30 1nc11 Elocolc Range (81&lt;)446- 446.fl306 I -600 29t 0098
fo( David
1418
:=-:.:...:-:c7-7-"77""7.-: STORACE TANKS 3 000 Gallor
198&lt;4 Mercury Lyn11 $350 304·
Upnghl, Ron Evans EnterpriSes
675 7112
Jackson. Jhlo 1 800-537-9528

I~~~~~~~~~~=

Real Estate
Wanted

.

o

I

Casn Pa1d lor Land tn Gall1a
County Send Pr1ce, loca11on &amp;
Descnpt1on to Blackb\Jrn R~alry,
PO Bo• 783 GalllpOits .OH I~~~~==~--.,.-- Two 40 (,anon Gas Water Heat
&lt;45631 or can (B 14 )·•46-0008
l:•':.'.::l6:.;t:.:41~·.:.:46;_-4_;:;25:.;5:.;A.:.I1er::_5;_p:..m.:.__
5Pc Mauve Sectional, 8 Chatr
Farm tOO Acres More Or Less. Dinning Room Table, Mtcrowtve Used VI/:JOo games 614 992
House Ana Farm Eqo1pmem, \5 Table, Super Single Water Bed 3481
t.AIIes 01 R1o Grande 937 773· (11•1• 1304
Wood a11 d Coal Burntng Slovt
3209
Appliances
Recond1troned used twu seasons $400 0 8 0
Washers, Dryers. Ranges. Rein- (61&lt;4)388-.a532 Call after 4 p m
RENTALS
orators, 00 DIY Guarantee!
Building
French Clly Ma11ag, 814-446· 550
7795
SuppUes
410 Houses for Rent
AUGUST SPECIAL.
3 Bedroom at edge o town $295 10~ Dlac:ount On Many Of Our Block. b• 1Ck sewer p1pes Wind·
plus deposit and ut1I1U&amp;S pnona Appliance&amp;, This Includes Retng- ows, lml.ols. etc Claude Wtnlers
~1o Gra·1ae OH Call 614 245 ·
(6 I .fl).46- 1340
eratora. Rangn, ,Washer, &amp; Dry- 5121
era. Wt Have A Bargain For Yaul
House m Pomeroy lor sale or
Skagoa Apphanea, 76 Vtne S1, 560
Pets for Sale
rent. 61-t-992-3090
Galhpol11, 814-44.8-7398 1-888·
81~128.
A Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng
420 Mobtle HQmes
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Sheets 3;3 Georges Creek Ad
for. Rent
Waahert, dryers, rtfngerators,
614 446 0231
12x65 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths, Arr rangee Skaggs Apphances. 76
Cond1110ned In Chesh1re After 6 VIne Street, Call 614 446 - 7398. AKC Be 1g1e pupp1es trt color,
1.110(1.499·3499
PM .814 367-7671
champll'Jl blood ltnes male
S100. females St25 304 -6752 &amp; 3 t:tedroom mobil&amp; homes ~ICe Scanner, Cordle11 Phone, 6746
$260 $300, sewe1 water and Color T.V. Washer Dryer, Reteutrashtncluded 614 992 2167
gerator, Freezer. Atr Compressor. AKC Mtrt Dachshunds 6 Weeks
Power Tools, VCR, Microwave. Old Had Shots &amp; Wormed $250
In Hartford lurmshed or unlur- Mi~,814·25&amp;-1238
814·388·'1194
ntshed, no pets, gooa locnuon, 2
bedroom, respons ible people
P&lt;&gt;ll(o &amp; Uood Fumhuro
AKC Poneran1an Pups Stlots &amp;
only :l04-llB2 2955
2101 Jollotsoo""'
Wormed, 614 · ~46 -8253
Open 9:30 s:oo Moo-Sat
Three bedroom mobile t10me lor
30+675-SOFA 17632)
AKC Re jl!t~red A1redal~ Pup
rent no pets S14 992 585tl
p1es $2CII BlacK &amp; Tan Ready AI
let Augt Sl 25 1997 614 388
Two tted,oom motJ1Ie home on 2 Used Furmture Slore, 130 Bula·
8692
acres $275tmo , $200 aepos1t VIlle Ptke, Gas /ElectriC Cook
Sto~~es, Automauc Washer, Mal
call 614 992 2886
AKC Registered Ped1gree Ger
tresses, Beds, Dmeltes, Hide-A- man Aottwe1ler Stud Servtce
Two bedroom. total elec;tnc, on Bed Couches. Telev1s1ons
304 662·3556
New l1ma Ad. 614-742-2al3
Desks Typewflters. Baby Bed,
Gilt Shop, 614-446·4782, Hrs 10
AKC Reglslered Pekmgese pup·
4
440 Apartments
:»~es CKC Reg1stered Rat Ierner
Jupp1e1, 614·843-5-175 alter 5pm
for Rent
530
Antiques
ll' anyhme weekends.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur·
Butcher
Block,
Maple
Completly
HAppy JAC:KS St(!N BALM
n11hect and unf\Jrntshe&lt;l. securtty
Checks sctatch109 relieVes hot
deposu ,equ1red , no pets, 814· Reftn1shed, Walnut Wardfobe,
C1rca 1870 Call For More lnlor
spots ana lffltued sk1n w1tnou1
992 22t6
manon, &amp;14 446-79-t3
steroids Promotes healing and
halt orowth on dogs and cats I
1 bedroom apartment •n M•ddleBuy or sell R1venne AnttQues
Available 0 -T C JO NORTH
port. aU ullllttes pa1d, $270 per
1124 E Ma111 Street, on R1 124,
PRODUCE 614-446-1933
month &amp; $100 depoSit. call 614Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
7806 8am-5pm
am to 6.00 pm, Sunday 10010 Jack Aussellteffler pupp1es, 7
1 bedroom furn1shed apanmen1 tn 6 oo p m 614·992" 2526. Russ weeks old, f1ra1 shots, wormed
Moo'• owf'191'
and lalls docked, $300 each, 614Midolepon, 81•·992·2178.
6967055
The
Chesture
Cat
On
Aouta
7,
2 Bedroom Apartment At Rio
Grande. All Ul!ltlles Furnished CheShire, OhiO lnvttes You To Um1ature Collie (SheltuJ~ male
S3001Mo. Plus Oepos1t, '814-388- See tts Ntce Setecuon Of Anttque puppy tor sale $125 614 742Furn11ure !Glassware
2050
9948
Thru
Saturday
2 ~rooms, 74 Coi.Kt Street. Ga~
1 00· 7 00 Ral Terners AKC RC(:IIStcreCI Fe
ltpohs, CA. Stove &amp; Refrigerator
Guv Call 614 male 3 Yaars Due To Have Pup pees Male 12 Weeks S70 Both or
Included, 61~·448-2583.
S60 Each (614)256-li904
2bdrm apll, total ai&amp;Ctrrc, ap· 540 Miscellaneous
Reo We1maraner pups ta11s
phances lurntshed, launc*'y room
Merchandise
dOt~ed de&lt;:laws removed, ready
faCilities. close to school 1n la«n.
AppiiCattons available at Vtllage 1985 Chevy p1ck up 14f1 John 10 go 9·6 97, 21emales 4males,
$250ea :104 B95·36t5
Green Apts 149 or call 614·092·
boat OuiSlde coal/wood furnace
3711 EOH
4011 extension ladder 24" wtnd
I liybrids Male Poodle Husk·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT pw tan 1s• blecktwhlle TV Gttls 1es, Samoyeds, Chows, Alaskan
Ualamute!i All Ages, P~ppy Pal·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON cJothes !rex 304-675-1780
ace Kennels, 614-388-0429
ESTATES 52 Westwood Ori111e
S Deluxe rtver ralttng packages
from $260 to 1334 Walk to shop
Value $110ea Will sell ror $400
570
Musical
&amp; mov111 Call 6 "·44p· 2568.
304·675-2827
EQual HOUIIOQ Clpporllll&gt;ty.
Instruments
Are you buytng new lurmture? I.,---.,..---.,-~----::Tara Townhouse Aparlmentl, Sell )'OUr used futMura to the Po- Bundy alto suop,...,ne. exce ent
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2
Thrift Shop There 11 11 real I :'o:;nd::;:ltlo:;•:.:·.:."':;50::;_6;_1_4:;9.:.92:.:;.39:.;B:;t:.__
Floors CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Car- ·-···· •-· couches, breaktast and
FOR SAL.E
peiBd Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
IBIS We also buy
CONSOLE PIANO
PatiO. Start 1350/Mo No Pets
strollers playpens
Aespon!tble Party Wanted To
Lease Plus Secunty Oepoa1t Ae· l1o.O.i1..
seats and walkers
Make low Monthly Payments on

1985 Dodge A.nea, Needs Work
$400 0 B 0 (814}386-8532 Coli
Aher 4 pm
1986 Cad11tac Fleerwaod, 81,000
m1tes $3,500 304·675-5424 aftef
5pm
1987 Ponttac 6000 $500 304·
675-t272
1988 Cad1hac Brougham, 82.000
m1les excellent condiuon, garage
kepi, $569~ 614-985-337• .
1986 Dodge D·50 ... • Crh.-.
5 Speed, New AIC, $4,200; 1&amp;88
T Btrd, loaded, $2 850, 814·4467e16
1988 F+rebtrd 54.000 Mrles, Ex·
ce11en1
Cond•uo"
$4,500
(614)448-4051
•
1989 Plymouth Sundance, Auto,
A1r. Runs Good looks Good
$1600 f614}«6-jl552

&amp;

1985 S-10 Blazer Tahoe 411:4,
black, 2 Bl, 1111, etutse au10, extra nee $3,450 304-675-4893:

446~~~;~~~~T~u:a~•d~a:y~l:h:ru
at 220 East

Thre&amp; bedroom apartmenl for
11n1, Tl!ord Streel Racono, 13001
By Atdwlng, Chippewa,
mo plus utilities and depolll. 614- 1 Rocky Tony Lama Guaranteed
247-&lt;;!g2
L.owoSI Pr~os AI Sl1oe Cafe Gal
Tw1n Rrt~ert TowEW, now accepdng
I
for 1br HUD aubtld·
apt. for elderly and handl·
capptd. EOH 304-675-6671.

FACTORY DJIECT
Two bedroom apartmenlln Mta NO MIDDLE MAN
dloporl no pel~ 614-992-5858.
SAVE 1$$$
New Baall Aepo'•l Only 3 left, Two Bedroom Apt 1385 Month
own'' flnancano avatlabla 304- $100 Depo11~ All Utihbes Paid, No
755-7191
P&amp;t1, Pnone (814)-446-3437

Mpolil.
Buck stove, fru stand 1ng, wood
burner, bran legs, Window on
doo~.rval nice, 814·992-5181
8Uwt1191PorlO Cll'llll
1 w1ll buy any Ehtas or new D•a·
mond Ktngl If ~011 have cardl to
sell, let me know Call8 14·9•&amp;·
3098

f it &amp;
ru 5
Vegetables

,-..,..,.--::::-:::::-:::-:-:::::::-I
Blackbernes $3 50qt $13 OOgal
304 458-1667

CANNtNOTOMATOES
S3 Par Bushel Ptck Your Own,
Bnng Conl8tnera, bon A H1ll Le
tart falls. OH 81• 2•7 2S32
Swett corn, peppers and IO·
matoes 10am-? W1lhsms Farm
Syracuse, Oh1o, 614-992-3985
days or 614 992-5866 evenJngS

BARNEY
ANY OF YOU

• K 9
•106432
t A Q 8 5

Kld37 Nllghbor ol Fr.

SEEN

West

North

Pass

MY MAN LUKEY ? ?

7 ElC8111VIIy

13 Fom~lo

oondplper
18 Suporlor
20 Deported
21 Cottle group
22 Mexican

Mtt•lcltn ohrub
10 Denomlnallon
121ntrlcltlo

NnciWich
23 Operatic

prince
24 Parrot
25 1-Domlnl
27 Br•k

--

21 Bronll

Pass
Pass

Jono-

30 SII!Krocker
(II.)

32 Well

Opening lead: • 3 .

...,tllotod

34 -counter

A
ing
the inevitable

39 OUt ollhl

way

40 Made angry
41 Servile

n111erer

By Phillip Alder
James Russell Lowell, an American poet, essayJSt and diplomat,
cla1med that "there is no good m
argumg with the inevitable. The only
argument available with an east wind

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

42 GretuHy

43--lhe

AI the bridge table , though, sometimes you get a chance to cheat the
meVttable, to make a contract that
seems certam to fa• I. Take th1s deal,
for example. How can South possibly
avo1d losing two hearts and two
clubs? Remember, from the openmg
b1d South knows East has the club
ace
North's two-d1amond cue-btd
showed a high-card heart raJSe.
South's four hearts was brave
because the contract made, 11 would
have been foolhardy tf West had led
a club

1995 Totota Tacoma, 4WO, piCk·
up, PS, P8, a1r, bedltner DiarT1lnd
Plate toolbox. 5 so., $12.500 614·
992 2580

The declarer was Javed Khalil,
who was playmg for Pakistan in the
Zone 4 Champ1onsh1ps The opening
diamond lead was covered by the

Motorcycles

1987 YZBO Yamaha $500 Many
New Patta. (614}367-7753
1991 Kawasaki 500 EX NtnJ3 Motorcyde 10,000 Miles, $1,500 Or
Besl Ollet, 614-388-114113

jack, ktng and ace. South played a
trump to dummy's ace. judging from
the appearance of the king from West
that trumps were breaking 1-3, not 22. So, Javed continued w1th a diamond to hts queen, a d1amond ruff in
the dummy, a spade to the king, a
spade to dummy's ace, a spade ruff
m hand, another diamond ruff tn the

19~

Harley Oav•daon Spor1star,
Loll Of Extraal $6,700, 814 256-11012

1996 Honda 4 wheel dnve •
· 304-l!75-6256
Four wheeler- 1995 Yamaha Tlm·
berwotf, S2700 , great cond111on
614-992-4561

alave

THIS.

'101&gt; wHAT
:&gt;HE'S

!tULLY

38113.

L..lk:E

I

Everyone was down to four cards.
Dummy had a trump and three clubs.
East and South each held two hearts
and two clubs.

Suzuki 125 AM, needs rebu11t
$150. 304·675-4843

Javed exited with a trump, East -the player, not Lowell's wind- took

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

his two heart wmners and the club
ace Yet then -- at lucky tnck 13 --he
had to lead the club Jack to dummy's
king, declarer's lOth trick
N1cely done!

PI!:ANU'I'S

""""'

50 The (Gor.)
52 -Tin Tin

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CMabriy cv.r e~,eogr.ms at• crealecf from quota!IOI'II bv farnow!t peopte
standi fer
r
EICfllefter ., 1M ~r

RPN

anolhet

DJ Kl

'RPNFN'o\

D J N

L DV

VJXZNFAN

GNFRIXJ

DE

IKWDVo\

past ana PTe5flfl1
odoty's dud 0 ~Is P

GDFJNF

G I J

XCOFDZXJV

LDVF

RPIR'o\

DHJ

DE

SN

I J W

o\ N K E

PYUKNL.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "HOUSES. nothing more lhan fancy nozzles atlachtd

WOlD
T=~~;~'
S~\\.Q{llA-~r.~s·
lAM I
-----I . I'OILAN _::.__ _ __
I~IM~ ~y &gt; CLAY

0

Rtarrange lettera of
four scrambl.d words
low to form lour simple

V0 0 DRE

F 0 MT I

I I I P
r------, . .
I I ~ El AlE s 1-.!,.
•

•

•

•

15
•

.

..
l've_notice
busy the hours

whenyou're
speed by, but if

~===-::;=:;:~::_, you have noth1ng to do m1nutes
,,. L y B R F E llast------~-,~.::6:.....;1r;_lr;,'l:;-7.:,~--j Q Complele the chuc&lt;le quolotd
•

•

•

•

bv f1ll1ng 1n the mtsstng words

L_JL--1--L..-l---1-'----J you develop from step No 3 below

I

TI-lE LEAVES ARE STILL
ON THE TREES .•

A PRINT NUMBEREO !ETTERS
W IN THESE SQUARES

i) ~~iC:~~!~~ lETTERS

TO

IIIIIIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Katser- Blush - Tease - Dollar- ASK me ABOUT

Oass Boat Aslro
F1shhnder Acces N~d Sell !mmed1a1ely An
$1 SOO 0 BO 614 4141

Some very good adv1ce my Mom gave me. was that
I shouldn't tell my k1ds what I wouldn 't want the netghbors to ASK me ABOUT

IWEDNESDAY

11.~ ~L~~RONte%
~ fUL\.'1
IH~UL~1\:;01

t&gt;.R~i\1 T 1~~?

ASTRO-GRAPH
18' Coar.hman,
6t4 7&lt;t2 '.2.77

to sail,

E.RVICES

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Thun;day, Aug. 14, 1997
In the year ahead, if a trusted associate w11h an env1able track record
Servtce All
25 Years ExGuaranteed,
May1ag , 614 446

comes to you with a busmess proposal, hear hun/her out. The proposition could have real ment
LEO (July 23-Aug. :Z2) Ifpossible
today, try 10 devote some ~tme to a
hobby of yours that you ve been

1868 Chevrolet 1 ton truck 327 ...
spoed, !a\1&gt;1&lt;1, graon bed, &amp; _,.
11deboards mcluded, good cond1
non, 13195, 304-773-5305

1gnonng lately

l:lectrlcal and
Refrigeration

1981 GMC half Ton P1 ck Up
(614)3BIH)567

-·~=-~.,­
Resident a! or commerc1al 'lll'mn~,

1984 Ford f-350, Crew Cab
$2,700.1968 OumD Truck $800
814-37&amp;-2370

new Str\ICe or repa~rs Mflter l•·
cens.ed electnc••n R1danour
Electrlct: I, WV000308 , 304 675
171!6

The change will

prove refreshmg
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22) Your

outstde entanglements
PISCES (Feb. 20-March

probabllllles for success are excellent
today because your energ 1es and

Today. you 'II have a marvelous way
of relatmg your ideas to other.; that

your passtons will be fully focused on
what you hope to achieve.
•

w1ll capture their 1magmat1on and
reveal how they can part1c1pate as

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Cond1·
tions are favorable for you 10 final1ze the 1enns on something that 1s

welT .
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) A
sh1ft m position or a sudden chan$e

owed to you . Seek a full d1sclosure .

today could tum out to be personal-

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) You
won't be on an ego trip today if you
thmk your way of deahng with a

ly advantageous you . Don't let anything escape your attention.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The

comphcaled matter IS supenor to that
of your associates. Assume control
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2)) Financial trends look favorable
for you m th1s cycle. If you are enter-

people you associate with today wtll
have a marked effect upon your attl·
tude and outlook. Select companions
who are positive lhmlcers.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

pnsing and resourceful , personal
accumulatiOn is md1cated

Developments that could produce
additional mcome for you look more

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-lan 19)
Something quite lucky could happen
to you today through your personal
contacts. Stay on the very besl of
terms with fnends of both genders. •

promising today than do your customary sources. Don't treat side ven·
tures tnd1fferently.
CANCER (June 21-luly 22) The
same conditions your companiOns

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19).
The results you're deSirous of achiev- 1
mg today can be attained. This can
best be done 1f you free your.;elf from

find disturbmg will be taken in stride
; by you loday. Your examp(e will
1encourage them lo treat matters like·
• wtsc

.

.-.'•

to II"! muntelpal h~draulic s~stem."- R. Buckmtnsler Fuller

_

I THOUGHT '(OU WERE
601NG TO MAKE SOME
MONEl( RAKIH6 LEAVES ..

;

41-Horl
47 Portlelo
41 Flnnloh 11m

dummy, and a second spade ruff in
hand.

SHOWS

Handa CR 125 recently rebutll,
runs graal S2,000 Days 304·
675-4&amp;956 E111en1ngs 304-882-

.

ground floor
44 Anglo-Saxon •

1s to put on your overcoat."

ROBOTMAN

1912 3/4 Ton Chevy P1ck -Up
camper Spec1al Or~g1na1 Eno1ne,
Air Cab Automauc, $650, Bt•
256-6854

t

5 Cowboy movlo
6 Compllto

ftbor

P..S

1993 8u1ck Regal $7,500, 080
8 14 44S 9661
1993 Saturn Sl-2 sunroof auto,
lea lher mtertor, 59,850 miles
$8,990 304-67S-2711

8TraplcolboiMI

4 -Pen Alloy

East

Pass
VARMINTS

1isa8 Grand Caravan 8 Passenger, 2.2,000 M1k11, 'IJ·6, Aula, Load·
ed, Under Manufactured Warranty $15,600, 0 B 0 61&lt; 256· 1252,
614·256-16t8.

1976 TaylotCrall 17ft open bow~
90hp Johnson motor, &amp; tra11er
$1,000 negotiable 304-675 5019
aher 5:30 or 198ve m&amp;ssage
'

3 Howl

33 Aetlnuo

I t

1998 Ford Explorer Sport 17,600;
M1laa AMJF ... Caueue And CO.
One OWner (81·)--2911

740

DOWN

SlluH - llorlo
- n chlrocter I Token ol
lllectlon
Poln
2 Sllloty ogcy.
Dlcl8torolllp

35Liby8nrno..y
31 Jizz player

Pass

11193 Chev~ Lum1na 7 Passenger •
Mark Ill, TV, 88,000 M1tes $7,500 •
(814)256-1270

1990 Chevy Cavalier, two door,
automatTc, red, 4 qlmder,
100,600 m1les. runs and looks
gOd. 12200. 614-742-2357 leave IT:.;.:...
message, we11 catl back

p 1ano
, Sea Local ly Call 1 800·
268 6218

5SO

South

1991 Jeep Wrangler 5apd, &lt;4cyl ,
soh top, chrome wheels, good
cond Price reduced 30-t 882 ,
1893 Chevrolet Lum1na Van, 7
paaaenger aeat1ng, e11cettent
conditton, h1gh m1leage. 17195,
304-773-5305 alter 6pm

25
25
211
31

.,.,..,.,

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: East

19g1 Geo Tracker 4x4 98,500
m11ea. 14200 614-742-2574 after
Spm.

2657

11 Tonty
20 Entwl•
22 Scribble ploce

(DQet.)
58 F.W..tul

• 8 4

1988 Chev~ Conwerston '\Jan
350 V 8, leaded , S5.500 F~rm ,
61• 4•6·8280 Alter 5 PM 61-4
4t41 -1659

11

qu+rea,
61•·446-3481, 614
0101

South

'85 Toyota truck. extend cab. 4Jt4,
treated wooden be'd, good work
Uucl&lt;, $800 0110, 81 .. 7&lt;2-2050

1985 Ford Range' 4114 wrecked
304-875-1837

• Q 8 52
" Q J 8
o K962
• A J

• 10 7 3
• Q 10 7 6 5 3

4r-WDs

1979 Chevy Van, W1ndow Van,
6c~l For more mlorma11on $800 •.
0.8.0. (814)2-t()g

ulnl

East

•K

12
14 &amp;-..
LIIIAt - · - 53 COnalder
...lglon
54 Megulne
15 Otiiii'Ve
hot.hoi
11 Actor Mineo
55 At no dmo

11 Sllllor'o pwon

4 K 92

Wen
• J 74

1tG3 Chwy 1500 wt, 6 cty. With
topper, eJCc:ellent conditton 614Vans

A 10 6 3

• J 4

11JB9 FuJI Size Blazer Stlwrado,
loaded, 120K, Well Mamta1nect
814-388-0311

730

Husqva rna &amp; Green Mach1ne
tnmmers &amp; brush cu!ters on sale
now s 1der s Equ 1pment 30 4 675
7421

•

111-IS-17

• A9 7 S

1981 Ford XlT Automattc , A1r, •
302 Engine, Runs Good, Looks · r
Good, $3,500 F~rm, 814·1Ut2· r
5135
~

Farm Equipment

Farman Cub !facto' w lh culltva·
tors and s1de dresser new motor
al 1 o 25 gallon sprayer . 614 9.119
3420
1

Modern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart· Horses, ()OOfl Camng Jars, 61•
ments tn Maddleport aJc &amp; 4_. 6-0639
kitchens, references

Ncmb

va.

fjgl-7285

12hp Bolans garden tractof w/
snow blade. plow. diSC. &amp; 46.
mower deck. also has chatns,
good cond S850 304 675-382•

large Mtrror. Couch &amp;
:'""::.:.:'::"'::._.,'-:-:--,-,----,-I Freezer
Chau, Out Doer Cha•n Saw

1087 F150 Ford h4, auto.
fuel Injected, 11r. new pa1nt.
btdllntr, OUIIIW Mag Whtall
30ol-875-2884

&amp; LIVES T OCK

fi,,,

Buildings

Apple Gro ~e -S cemc Valley
Baaut1lul 2acre lots publtc water
C Bowen Jr 3014· 576·2336 or
Wedge Realty 304 675-2722

·'S..O $25,001).$75,000 or moral

1-----------

3238

Three bedroom, two bath, on
large corner lo1, louted 33164
New lima Ad., Rudand, 135 000
080, 941 -357 -2854 even1ng1

,..,, IOOI'Ktfl

Now accepting resumes for matntenanc:e man. Must be able to do
Business
210
atactflc, plumbmg, pa1n11ng and
Opportunity
mowing Please contact re11dent
mana;.r, Elmwood • Terrace
!NOTICE I
Apart ents, Aaclna, eu-94sa·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
2012
recommends 1h1t you do bull·
OHtce Pefsonnel needed, PDmll'· n111 w11h people you know, and
oy area, parHme, potslbty lull· NOT to send mane~ through the
you hawe Investigated
time. Genetal olllce duties teki'·
phone skills, ume cards, tn~olc- l:.;::;;;;;;;;:::.~--:---:--­
es-payabla and receivable, correspondence, computer e11pert·
ence, drafting sk1ll1 a plua. rrunor
tax work Qnjy mature. e•P•"· I-.,.,=--,===,.,.-:::--::anced need apply Send resume,
UASONARV · Block,
stone work, 30 weara ex references and wage requtre·
ment• to Bok G~-12 clo Point pefience, reasonable rates 304Pieuant Register 200 Ma1n St 895-3591 aher 8:00pm no jOb to
pt Pleaunt. WV 25550
omall ono BIG WV-02 t 206

Latge seteeuon of used home 2
or 3 bedrooms Starung at $3&lt;495
Ou1ek del•wery. Call 1-800-~37·

3 Acres Redmond R1age Hen
darson WV $15 000 304-675·
5056 or 304 675-24•5

Use Tha t Mortgage Payment for
Something Bener Tre.n lntefetll
-•Pay your morlgage of! 5-15

FINANCIAL

IT'S BIG 1997 •BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE $1 ,949 DOWN,
$3191110 FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES NITRO WV 304· 755·
5885 umrtecl o11er

Sec110nal 3br, 2bath, lg kttchen,
heat pump, on 4acres 1n Flatrock.
304-875-58110.

Three Ek&lt;lrooms, One Balh, One
Car Gar Jge On Bulav1lle Pilote
Road $~6 000 Phone (61 41•46
9280 Before 5 p m Or (11114)446
8982 After 5 p m

h:;;;;;;~;JiViuhd;;;ift,

TRO, W'1300-755-588~

etedll welCOme to appty
CaA today for II free an&amp;lySISI

on~

Now aa:eoung resumes for mamtenance man Must De able to do
electriC, plumbtng,
1
and
mow1ng Plea~e
manager, Waters Edge
men1s. S~racuse, 614·992-64

Oakwood Homes 11 the only
dealer In me tri-state atu that
builds and ulls their own
hamea For t.ctory dtrect PflCII,
ol!op OAKWOOD HOliES. Nl·

51Hitfd.henclld

20)

AUGUST13I

' I

..
..

�O.hio Lottery
Super Lotto: .
5-6-21-35 44 45
Kicker:
4-1-3-o-7-7
Pick 3: ·

Indians split
twin bill with
Tigers

0-1-9

Iowa
the upper
Friday, partly clou
Chance of rain. Htghs
the upper aoa .

Pick 4:

Sports on Page 4

4-9-2.()

•

entine

"

•

'
W.41,N0.84

2 Secllono, 12 Pogoa, 35 cento
A Gennett Co.

-•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 14, 1997 .

01117, Olllo valle)' Publllhlng ComPinV

Ju·dges nix respons~
to call for assistance
COLUMBUS (AP)- A senator
who asked the Ohio Supreme Court
for guidance in putting together a
new school funding package says a

plan to ask v01ers to raise the sales tax'
by a penny per dollar may not he
dead.
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer and

,.

.)

'97CHEVY

SIZE
I
AU I D., AIR, FIBE~LASS RUNNING
BDMDS, • CAPTS. CHAIRS,
· gfA/BED, INDIRECT
..I&amp;~N&amp;,CENIER BUM l.HIS,

HEADHUNTERS PERFORM- Country roclutra The Kentucky
Headhunters. rocked a packed grandatand Wednesday evening
at the Uelgs County Fair. Despite a steady rain that fell for most
of the ehow, tha large crowd for the most part lltayed until the
end, with etarga number crowding In front of the ataga and dancIng In the mud. {Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

LDCKS,TILT,CRUISE

Judge Linton Lewis of Perry County, who presided over the trial that
'resulted in the Supreme Court declar.ing Ohio's funding system unconstitutional, both said Wednesday that .
they could not respond to the pl~a by
Sen. Gary Suhadolnik. .
Suhadolnik, R"Strongsville, said
.Wednesday that he believes the Legislature may resurrect the taX increase
that the House voted down. He said
a package could be in place by
March 24, the Supreme Court's deadlit.e for a new plan. .
"My guess is that we may try to
have a plan ready to go to the May
ballot," Suhadolnik said by telephone from Sttongsville. "The closer the (I 998) election gets, I think, the
more latitude you'll see."
The court said the state's reliance
on local property taxes created disparities among the 611 school districts and resulted in a failure to pro,vide a "thorough aod efficient" edu·
cation for each child.
LaWmakers on Aug. 2 abandoned
GRAND CHAMPION HOG - Jessica ~ua­
the plan that would have raised about
tlce'e 25D-pound gilt won grand champion hog
$1 billion a year for schools. The
In the Melge County Junior Fair. From left arv
Senate then rejected a House plan
Swl~~t~ Prince and Prlncen Chris Barrlngar and
that would have guaranteed a certain
percentage of the state's general fund
for schools.
·
In his letter last Thursday,
Suhadolnik suggested the Supreme
Coul'\'s instructions .were too vague
for lawmakers to follow.
-- ~·unfortjltratt~l~. bOth .,of these
solutions are based not' on any concrete knowledge of the court's specific wishes, but on rumors aod speculation . ... I wonder if it might be possible for you to give the General
Assembly greater guidance on your
expectations?" Suhadolnik wrote.
Lewis said in a telephone interview from his office in New Lexington that he wrote Suhadolnik a letter
Monday saying it would be inappropriate for him to address Suhadolnik's concerns.
"I didn't feel like I could respond
to it,11 Lewis said.
Moyer wrote to Suhadolnik on
Wednesday, saying he appreciated the
Legislature's work in trying to package a funding plan. But he said the
high court has no business telling the
Legislature how to do it.
•
"He is asking us to give an advisory opinion. Supreme courts generally do not do that," Moyer said in a
telephone interview.
Suhadolnik was disappointed with
the jud~es' decjsion.
In June, Lewis forwarded to the
Supreme Court a request by the '
Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy asking for a timetable for legRESERVE CHAMPION HOG - Reserve
islation leading to a funding plan.
champion
hog honors in the Meigs County
Last month, the Supreme Court
Junior Fair Swine Show were won by Beth Farturned down the request without
ley's 235-pound barrow. From left are Swine
comment.

Rutland lays plans for its first-ever
homecoming celebration on Sept 6

II
lll
II

..
I' •

"Come Hoine to Rutland" will be
the theme of the first-ever Rutland
Homecoming Celebration. scheduled

for Sept. 6 from noon to 9 p.m.
The event is being planned by the
Rutland Civic Center Committee and

Meigs County Fair

'Price Includes All Rebates to Dealer

THURSDAY, AUG. 14
(Senior Citizens Day,
sponsored by Vaughan's IGA)
4 p.m. - 4-H Talent Show
4 p.m. - Kiddie Tractor Pull -Show Arana
5 p.m. - Dazzling Dolls - Hill Stage
6 p.m. - Kiddie Games - Hlllalde Stage
7 p.m. - Uttfe FiddleR - Grandetand
7:30 p.m. - Youth Horae Show
8 p.m. - Horse Pull
9 p.m. - Exile- Grandstand
11 p.m. -Gates close
FRIDAY; lUG. 15
(Sponsored by Werner
Heating • Cooling)
7 a.m. - Gates open
9 a.m. - Pat Show - Show Arena
.
11 a.m. -Junior Fair Dog Obedience ShoW- Show Antna
1. p.m. - Haman Racing
.I

-

,,

some of the events tentatively scheduled for the day include a pumpkin
growing contest, watennelon eating
contest, hog calling and a boxed
lunch auction.
In addition, Veterans Memorial
-Hospital and the ~igs County
Health Department will be doing
health checks, while the Meigs Coun·
ty Sheriffs Department will fingerprint children . .
Other events include a Goldwing
Motorcycle Club display, pie baking
and cake decorating contests, il cow
patty throwing contest, games, a
senior citizens dance and plenty of
food .
The event is being sponsored by
the Modern Woodmen and proceeds
will help fund improvements to the
civic c.enter building. People are
~ to bring lawn chairs for seating.
The Rutland Civic Center Committee is also selling T-shins with the
Come Home to Rutland 19971ogo on
them commemorating tjte event. For
more information, contact the Rutland Civic Center Committee, in
care of Marcia Elliott, P.O. Box 129.
Rutland, Ohio 45715 .

Kimberly Mayle, Fair Queen Krlsti Warner, :Jus- •
lice, Fair King Alban Salser and Queen run- ~ •
nerup Blllee Pooler. ·
'

Prince and Princeaa Chrl1 Barringer and Kimberly Mayle, Fair Queen Krlsli Warner, Farley,
Fair King Alban Salser and Queen runnerup
Blllee Pooler.

Champion .
·hogs chosen
for fair's sale

Grand and reserve champion market hog honors were won by Jessica
Justice and Beth Farley, respectively,
at the Meigs County Junior Fair
Swine Show held Wednesday night in
the show arena.
Justice took overall grand champion and grand champion gilt wllh
her 250-pound entry, while Farley
exhibited a 235-pound barrow which
also won grand champion barrow.
Reserve champion gilt and barrow
were won by Nicholas Detwiller and
Billie Jo Welch, respectively.
·First- aod second-place winners in
individual classes were, in order by
class:
Gilts weighing 210-225 pounds,
Kassandra Lodwick and Kayla
Gibbs; 230-240 pounds, Stacie Watson and Elaine Putman; 245-248
pounds, Nicholas Detwiller and len, nifer Goeglein; 250-255 pounds, Jes·
1sica Justice and Chad Hubbard; 260,
· 270 pounds, Philip Hamm and Mark
. Guess;
.
Barrows · weighing 212-230
pounds, Kerrie Hetzer and Nicole
White; 235-240 pounds, Beth Farley
and Jessica Justice; 245-248 pounds,
{Continued on Pege 3)

GRAND SWINE SHOWMAN - Mark Gueaa won grand cham- : ~ · :
pion ewlne showman In Wedne~y'e Melg1 County JuniOI' Fair -: :
Swine Show. Thl1 marked Gueea first year showing swine at the
fair. From left •re Swine PrlnCIIS Kimberly Mayle, Fair King Alban
Salnr, Gueaa and Queen runnerup Blllea Pooler.

.

_...._

-.
..

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