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                  <text>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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Com.me(Jtary
'EstllDfishei illl948
111 Court StrHI, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • FIX 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
OenerioiiiMiger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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ThufiCMy, Augult 14, 1997:

Poll shows that Clinton rules

The Daily Sentinel

.

Key items of 1994 GOP
manifesto are now law
ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - In signmg the balanced-budget bill and the biggest
tiiJl cut in 16 years and by exercising the line-item veto, President Clinton
essentially completed what Republicans staned: the "Contract with America."
Clinton has managed to put his stamp on the most popular elements of
that 1994 Republican manifesto. And il has conservative Republicans and
hberal Democrats off balance and wondering where to move next.
"The budget in a major way has blurred the distinction between Repub.·
licans and Pemocrats," said conservative activist Richard Viguerie.
He accuses House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. , and Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss., of compromising too much with the White
House and losing their political souls in the process.
"Somehow or other, Clinton and D1ck Morris messed with Gingr;ich and
Lon's minds. They really are off balance now. And I think that they are
beyond salvation," Viguerie said. "I have -not talked to a conservative
regarding this budget who was anything but furious at the Republican lead·
ership in Congress."
Morris, the former Clinton strategist, relishes the notion that his core
advice- urging Clinton to move to the center and to embrace ·Republican
themes - might have helped lead to the budget agreement.
"It's a very popular deal. I think it's one people strongly support It
makes it harder for outsiders to win, because the incumbents are doing a
very effective Job of doing the people's business," said Morris, who has also
advised Republicans, including Lott and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.
The budget agreement- if it doesn't fly apan in an economic downturn
··- will enable congressional incumbents of both panies, as well as Vice
President AI Gore, to campaign as tax-cutters and budget-balancers.
It is no coincidence that the budget deal was opposed by three members
of Congress with presidential aspirations: House Democratic leader Dick
&lt;;Jephardt of Missouri on the left and Republican Sens. Fred Thompson of
Tennessee and John Ashcroft of Missouri on the right.
Gephardt took a pass on the White House signing ceremony last week.
. "Joe Lunehbucket who is out here mixing it up 12 hours a day doesn't
:get a 20 percent break,"
·
. Gephardt said in a campaign•style appearance in Iowa, referring to the
:reduced capital-gains tax rate under the new law.
, Vice President Dan Quayle, a likely 2000 GOP candidate who is now
~based in Arizona, also contends Re_publicans compromised too much.
"Republicans win when we have' the -courage of our convictions and
:stand up and point out the difference between Republicans and Democrats,"
:Quayle said. "This was supposed to be a 'Contract with America,' not a
·'Contract with Clinton."'
Another GOP presidential hopeful, publisher Steve Forbes, grumbles that
:the tax cut so ardently embraced by congressional Republicans further com·
·plicates the tax code.
: "Why not just let people keep more of what they earn?" asks Forbes.
:who advi)Cated a smgle "flat" tnx rate and abolition of the Internal Revenue
~ Serv ice in his 1996 presidential run.
Writing in the current issue of his Forbes magazine, he called the failure
:by Congress and the administration to enacl m&lt;•rc fundamental tax and
;spending reforms "a dark cloud' ' on the horizon.
··one mus,t never underestimate the government's capacity to muck up
good times."
,
: Clinton, while dcnounc•n,g the C~lOlract with America as a political doc :umcnt, little by little climbed aboard its principal planks - a balanced budget, welfare reform, capital-gains and estate-tax relief, the line-item veto and
:the $500-per-child tax credit that Gingrich once called the document's
"crown jeweL"
. The prov1sions that finally made it into law are less ambitiO!IS than the
·original proposals, with some softer edges. But they're still recognizable.
· Whoever thought that when Republicans propounded the measures m
1994. they ' d end up having to share credit for them wnh a Democratic prcsi&lt;:lcnt?
"I think the American people for a good long time arc going to be voting
for Republican Congresses and DeJI!ocratic presidents, because I think they
li~c the way it works. and they like the way they play off each other," said
pplitical consultant Morris.
"An!! it really is checks and balances at its best. "

and 24 percent of all voters -- say
By Morton Kond111cke
A new survey confirms that Clin- that poor people should get aovemton-style centrist thinking attracts ment benefits as long as they need
big majorities of voters. But tbe them, while 66 percent of DemocDemocratic Leadership Council poll
rats and 70
also reveals opportunities for poJ"
percent of all
ulists of both the left and right
voters · favor
The poll shows that voters are
the kind of
self-declared moderates. reject both
time
limits
liberal and conservative ideas on the
included in the
role of government, and want major
1996 welfare
reform
reforms in Medicare and education.
bi II
At the same time, they are also leery
.thar Clinton
signed
and
of free trade, want fewer immigrants
Gephardt
allowed into the country, and favor
higher taxes for rich people and cor- opposed.
.
porations.
Perhaps mondamaging of all for
Conducted by Pres1dent Clinton's Gephardt and other liberals, the poll
pollster, Mark Penn, most of the indicated that Democrats overpoll 's results support the DLC's whelmingly support the 1997 budget
notion that unew Democrat" ideas agreement and will punish Democ- ·
rule the political landscape these rats who opposed it, as Gephardt
' did.
days.
Politically, that's good news for
S1xty-seven percent of DemocClinton and Vice President AI Gore, rats, and the same proportion of all
whose approval ratings are 64 per- voters, suppon the deal. Democratic
cent and 59 percent, respectively. voters say that, by 84 percent to 5
It's bad news both for conservative percent, they would be mclined to
Republicans and Demi)Cratic liber- vote for a Democratic· candidate
als like Gore 's 2000 presidential who supported the deal. but support
rival, House Minority Leader Dick drops to 55 percent for a Democrat
Gephardt, D-Mo.
As in other polls, voters give
Democrats an advantage in the
generic 1998 congressional ballot,
39 percent to 33 percent for Republicans.
·
Among DemOcrats, Gore has a
favorability rating of 82 ,percent,
while Gephardt's is 48 percent.
Fully 31 percent of Democrats aren 't
even familiar with Gephardt's name,
compared with a mere 4 percent
unfamiliar With Gore's.
More seriously for Gephardt,
Democrats overwhelmingly suppon
the Clinton position on most issues
diVIding the Democratic Party,
includmg welfare reform, meanstesting Medicare, and the 1997 budget agreement. Gephardt has more •
potenti~l SURPOrt on trade and taxes, ·
though.
Only 29 percent of Democrats --

One of the things I think I could
do really well,' if the column business went to pot, is supervise time
capsule projects.
The two enterprises are similar in
some ways. No colummst can justly
cla1m the pundit's mantle •f he or she
can't define the age, which Js also
what time capsule experts do.
There is also an art to both
endeavors, I think. You can't just
throw stuff into a column willy·
nilly, and you can't be arbitrary with
a time capsule either. You have to
choose the contents carefully, so that
a person who opens the tube in a
hundred years will be able to feel
what it was like to live in 1997, and
perhaps be moved to say something
like, " My, JSn 'tthis an extraordinary
item to include in this capsule?"
For example, it would not be tcr. ribly enlightening, in my Judgment,
to simply enclose an article about
the 22 percent of the educated and
well-read people of the United
States of America who believe that
extraterrcstnals arc in contact with
our planet, or about the sizable numbers who are convinced that Little
Aliens landed in Roswell. N.M., in
1947 and that our leaders conspired
to conceal this event from us.

Today in history
By 'fhe Assoejated Press
.
Today is Thursday. Aug. 14, the 226th day of 1997. There are 139 days
lofl in the yc:u:,
Today 's Hi~hlight in History:
· .
On Aug.. 1... 1945, President Truman announced that Japan had surrend~red uncondil!ionally, ending World War II.
On this dat~:
In 1848. thc1Oregon Territory was established.

• Motorists 1how respect for deceased
• Dqar Editor,
On Aug .. I I attended the funeral services of Mr. Charles Snodgrass at the
• Cremeens Fuq~ral Home in Racine.
In driving •1ith the funeral procession to the burial sue I witnessed some• thing that I hauen't seen in probably some 15 years. For several miles I saw
all onc01ping traffic stop and many vehicles, wbere possible, pulled off the
hi,hway. This included everything from junkers to big rigs and farm vehi• cl~s .
I was touched an~ impressed that people in that area still had respect
•enough to spare a few minutes to pause and recognize the loss and sorrow
of a neighbori1\g family.
, .
1 travel nationwide and I never see this anymore. It used to happen in
every commur;ty of our nation.
·
I'm glad th;lt I was privileged to see this again. It speaks highly of your
j,eople.
Jack Fellurt
Hurricane, W.Va.

·Anna Bry Brown

A plain news story would not do

this phenomenon justice. So I would
include in my time capsule an
exquisite quote from a New Mexico
rancher on whose property the Little
Aliens allegedly landed. He was
asked the origin o( the "Alien

By
Joseph
Spear

Slime" that he was peddling to
tourists at $2.49 ajar. and he replied:
"My kids have been making the
stuff for days."
That sort of says it all. don't you
think''
So if I started my tJme capsule
consulting scrv1cc. here arc a few of

the things I would include to define
our times:
PRODUCTS. NECCO candied
beans that say "Fax Me" ... The
idea currently bemg shopped around
Hollywood for a movie about a pope
who uses his man1al arts skills tO
foil hijackers aboard his jet ... The
condom carrymg case designed to
look like an electronic pager ... A

who opposed it.
authority. But 60-plus percent of
Among all voters, 54 percent say voters say that the United States is
they would support a Democratic " too open" to foreign products, 51
incumbent who voted for the deal, percent say that free trade "benefits
but by 40 percent to 27 percent, they multinational corporations at the
would oppose a Democrat who expense of working families ," and
voted against the deal.
50 percent say that it "encourages
Results on the budget are subject U.S. companies to move overseas."
to the caveat that only 400 voters
Sixty-seven percent of votef'
were polled on that subject, com- favor a U.S. trade policy based OA
pared to I,009 on all others.
"open markets" rather than "protecWhen asked about what role gov- tion•sm," but when asked whether
ernment should play, 52 percent of current trade policy promotes
all voters support Clinton's declared growth. 37 percent sa~ yes and 41 .
option of " helping people ~quip percent say no.
themselves to solve their own IprobThere is enough public doubt for
lems~ "
Gephardt and Pat Buchananite
In more bad news for Republi- Republicans to challenge Clinton on
cans, voters overwhelmingly sup- trade. On immigration, 74 percent
port stronger environmental regula- suppon Buchanan's view that "a
tion, spending more to help welfare slowdown or pause" is needed.
recipients find work, and higher
In other results, majorities suptaxes on rich people and corpora- port prayer in public schools (78- 18)
tiOns.
and private school vouchers (69-28)
Looking toward the administra- and think 1V violence causes crime
tion's fight this fall over fast-track (78-19). So while the public may be
trade authority, there 's both good moderate. there's still plenty to fig~t
news and bad news in the survey.
about.
Fifty-three percent of all voters
(Morton Kondracke is execuand 67 percent of Democrats favor tive editor of Roll Call, the newsgiving Clinton fast-track negotiating paper of Capitol Hill.}

Barbara Bry.
Surviving tUe two sons and daughters-in-law, William D. and Isabelle V.
Brown, Mason, W.Va., and Harry 0 . and Dorothy P. .Brown of Chester; a
son-m-law, Tommy Jenks of Louisa, Ky.; nine grandchildren and 19 greatgrandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
.
· Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her daughter. Dorothy
L. Jenks; and three brothers and three sisters.
Graveside serv1ces will be I p.m. Saturdayat the Graham Cemetery, with
the Rev. Terry Alvarez officiating. Friends may call at the Foglesong Funeral Home. Mason. W.Va.. from 6-9 p.m. Friday.

Dale W. Hill
· Dale Wallace Hill, 79, Franklin, N.C., formerly of Letart Falls, d•ed Thursday, Aug. 14, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 21, 1917 in Letart Falls, son of the late Alben and Eliza Ann
Miller Hill, he was a Iockman with th~ U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and
a farmer.
He was a member of the Pomeroy/Racine Masonic Lodge 164, Aladdin
Templi: Shrine, was a 32nd Degree Mason, and a member of the Racine Amer- ·
Jean Legion Post 602.
Surviving are four sons and daughters-in-law, Dale and Karen Hill, Marvin and Jan Hill. Michael and Mindy Hill, all of Racine, and Daniel and Kathy
Hill of Coral Gables, Fla.; three brothers, Harry, John and Dallas Hill. all of
Letan; a sister, Margie Roush of Racine; four sisters-in-law, Pauline Hill of
Letart, Inez Hill and Ora Hill. both of Racine, and Delores Casper of Colum·
bus; a brother-in-law, Carl Wolfe Jr. of Bidwell; and eight grandchildren and
a great-grandchild.
He was also preceded in death by his wife. Mary Jane Wolfe Hill; SJX broth·ers, St. Claire, Joe, Jerry, Clifford, Julian and Albert Jr.; and two sisters, Doris
:Hensler and Violet Grimm.
•" Services w1ll be II a.m. Saturday in the Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood, W.Va., with the Rev. Aaron Young and the Rev. Bnan Hark·
ness officiating. Burial will be in the Letan Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home at 7 p.m.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Racine United Methodist
Church, or the Rac1ne First Baptist Church.

BOY.
THERE'S

AUlTOF
FINE

PRINT.

Ev~

In shon, the part-time, two-job
lifestyle that has developed over the
past two decades has been only partly ass1m1lated by employer and
employee - not fully. as the UPS
strike indicates.
Jn fact , it is now entenng a new
phase- part-t1me or project work at
the employee 's rather thant employer's place of business - that is likely to require · further labor-management interpretatiOn .
This new pha•e. made possible
by computer electronics, could present organized labor with even

phosphorescent Cosmic Bowling . protest bad hair and ill-fitting shoes
ball ·... A pair of vanity specs with on some Mattei products.
plain glass and hom rims. designed
to make the wearer look like a
LAWSUITS. I would include
brainy nerd ... A sarpple of the hquid let!al actions filed by a New York
dietary supplement mude from the librarian who sued "Primary Colnoni fruit, which reportedly smells ors·: author Joe Klein because a
and tastes like vomit ... Bagels with· character in the fictional work looks
out holes.
like her ... A Call forma woman who
sued the Walt Disney compan)(
SERVICES. Articles about mas- · because her grandchildren were
sage stores that specialize in walk-in allegedly traumatized when they
back rubs ... The Florida hospital saw a J'-1•ckcy Mouse performer take
that writes a big "NO" on limbs that off his head ... Three Yemeni men in
are not to be amputated ... Grocery. the city of San'a who sued NASA
stores that offer singles' nights fea- for landing. on Mars, which they ·
turing live musicians, snacks and claimed their ancestors had w11led to
fruit beverages ... The Washington, them 3.000 years ago.
D.C., company called Cause Cclchrc, which specializes in finding
And clips about a few perfect
social causes for movie stars.
'90s people:
EVENTS, HAPPENINGS AND
•• Animal psychics who will tell
OCCURRENCES. Clippings about
you
what pets think.
Miss America's new option to show
her navel ... The possibility that
-- A group of New York doctors
"Casablanca" may be remade, with
who
will provide an e-mailcd "psy·
Scan Penn in Bogie's role ... A
ch'nanalytically
guided self-inquiry''
homber in Chandler, Ariz .. who has
for
$125
an
hour.
been obliterating portable potties ...
A Ku Klux Klan group 1n Florida
-- A Mt. Everest climber who
that · wants to adopt a highway ..
Contestants at the Redneck Games packed an espresso machine.
in Georgia who do belly flops in
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
mud pits and bob for pigs feet ...
Barbie Doll collectors who have writer for Newspaper Enterprise
mounted a Pink Anger rebellion to Association.

thornier challenges, addmg a level
of complexity to the part-time issue.
Such issues have been largely·
ignored by a weakened labor movement over the past decade, during
which time much of its emphasis
was focused on job security and
non-cash benefits.
This behavior, somct1mes praised
as the development of a more cooperative and constructive labor
approach to negotiations, was in part
forced on workers by management's
insistence on downsizing.
W1th
few exceptions, large corpo,
.

Berry;s World

rations have at least made attempts
to pare work forces and close outmoded facilities, often resulting m
mass termination of employees.
At the same time, busmesses
invested heavily in capital improvements designed to raise efficiency
and cut costs.
This was m kcepmg with their
philosophy, however odd 11 might
have sounded to labor. that such
moves eventually would provide
greater economic growth, including
more and better jobs.
While labor agrees that efficiency
is a ~eccssary goal in .an economy of .
worldwide competition, it stresseS
the input of workers in the success
of corporations, and demands they
be rewarded.
. _ Corporal.~ America is now cnjoymg the fruns of efficiency in the
form of strong and, in many
mstances, unanticipated profits. The
economy is enjoying low inflation,
Investors are getting rich.
Meanwhile, unions have the
sense their contributJons - includ'in,g acquiescence in downsizin~ have not been adequately compensated.
I Organized labor feels 'it not only
must correct lapses of the pa•t. but
simultaneously deal with emerging
issues never encountered helore.

E. Zumbach

Eva E. Zumbach. 62, Lancaster, died Wednesday, Aug. 13, 1997 at Fairfield Medical Center.
·
She was an employee of the Fa1rfield National Bank, Lancaster, a former
employee of the J. Lynn Morse Insurance Agency, and a retired assistant clerk
of courts for Fairfield County.
Sbe is survived by a daughter and son-m-law, Diana and Richard Beatty
of Youngstown; ~ons and daughters-m-law, Michael and Gloria Zumbach of
Greeley, tolo., and David and Kim Zumbach of SuwanJe. Ga.; I I grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; her mother, Edna M. Life of
Reedsville; sisters and brothers-in-law, .Juanita and Russell Spencer of
Pomeroy, and Ida and Berl Boggs of Coolville; brothers and sisters-in-law,
Paul and Pat Life of Reedsville, and Lyle and Eleanor Life of Belpre; and
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded m death by her husband, RGbert R. Zumbach; and her
father, the Rev. Edmund,Life.
·
Services will be I 0:30a.m: Friday in the Halteman-Fett &amp; Dyer Funeral
_Home, Lancaster, with the Rev. John C. Davidson officiating. Bunal wdl be
in the Floral Hills Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 7-9 tonight

-Local News in Brief:.Woman charged with misdemeanor
An Antiquity woman was cited on mlsdemeaoor drug charges after Me1gs
County sheriff's deputies allegedly observed her rolling a marijuana Cigarette
-a! the Meigs County Fair Tuesday.
·
Kathy Stamm, 38, was cited to Meigs County Court for possessiOn of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, a sheriffs report ind1cated.
Two deputies allegedly observed Stamm and another woman on the hill
near the grandstand and saw her rolling a cigarette that on further investigation turned out to be a marijuana joint, according to the report
'

Receptacle fire causes minor damage
Minor damage was reported following an electric receptacle lire at a
Pomeroy residence around 8 a.m. Wednesday.
"
Firefighters of the Pomeroy Volunteer F1re Department were summoned
to the 323 Condor St. residence of Mary Garner and, upon arrival, found that
an electric receptacle had caught fire, causing mmor damage, according to
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle. The fire was under control by the t1me firefighters
arrived, he said.
Responding were two trucks, an emergency medical serv1cc squad and
nine firefighters, he said.

Champion hogs chosen
(Continued from Page 1)
Sheena Gilmore and Christopher
Barringer; 250-255 pounds, Mark
Guess and Rees Wyant; 260-270
pounds, Billie Jo Welsh and Nicholas
Detwiller.
Receiving participation ribbons
were James McKay and Adam
Chevalier for underweight gilts and
Billie Sellers and James McKay for
underweight barrows.

Broader issues in·the UPS strike
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - UPS officials
and employees might v1cw their
strike as a battle between labor and
management, but the context is
much larger than that.
Viewed most broadly. Jt mvolves
socioeconomic change, a reinterpre~
tat1on of "work, " an effon by labor
to reassert power and an ongoing
management style of cutting costs to
the bone.
· In that sense , the.Unitcd Parcel
Service and the Teamsters strike is
but one incident •n what may
become a parade of related disputes
invol: ing new definitions of management-labor rights.
Part-time work, for example, is
playing a large role 10 the UPS strike
diSpute. No surprise. Pan-time jobs
arc now integral to both modern
management theory and the needs
and desires of workers.
For employers, the use of parttimers may mean a smaller payroll,
!'ewer benefits, a reduction in work·
er idle time and more flexibility in
scheduling.
.
In an economy with more multiple-job households than ever, the
pan-time job can help a student with
tuition, provide a retiree with security, or enable a family to keep its
head above water.

Dale Wallace Hill

Anna Bry Brown, 93, Syracuse, died Wednesday, Aug. 13, 1997 at Holz.
er Medical Center. She was a homemaker, and attended the Asbury United
Methodist Church in Syracuse.
She was born on May 30, 1904 in Aleron, daughter of the late Joseph and

Time capsule consultant available now

EDITOR'S NOTE- Tom Raum covers politics and national affairs
fvr The Associated Press.

l,.etters to the editor

The Dally Sentinel • Pa~ i

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, Augu.t 14, 1997

2:

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPSZIJ-!100!
Published every aflernoon. Ma•day lhr~,..
Fndly. Ill Courl St., Pomtroy, OhiO, by !lie
Oh10 Valley Publi5hinc Comp,anyiOan!\e\1 C.o .
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S7C!9. Ph. 992·21Sli. Second
clus posliJJC pa1d al Pamcroy, OhtO.

M..-ber: The Auoci11cd Pre». and the Oh1o
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pOSTMASTER: Send address eorrections 'to
The Oa1ly Senunel, Ill Coun S1 , Pomeroy,

Ohto45769

SVBscRIPTION RATES
87 Carrirror Motor Ro•lt
\

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No 1ubscripdon by mail permitted in areas
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Publisher R'M:tnl thlll riJhlto ldjull rata dur·
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MAIL SVISCRtmOIIS
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· !2 w.eu..................................... .. Stlll.lll
111111 o..- Mtlp eo.c1

' !) ............................... ....................129.1!

l6 ..............:......... ............... . ......~6.611
l2-b ............................................ IJU!1.12

I

In the showmanship contest, grand
champion was won by first-year
exhibitor Mark Guess while Kayla
Gihbs won reserve champion.
Other winners were. in order by
class: senior - Kristi Warner and
Philip Hamm; junior - Kay Hunt
and Sheena G1lmore; intermediate,
class I - Kayla Gibbs and Nicholas
Detwiller; intermediate, class II Chris Barringer and Jeremy Gillilan;
beginner- Mark Guess and Jess1ca
Pooler.
Judge for the event was Tony
Reed of Ashville.
.

Stocks

Am Ele Power .........! .............43'4
Akzo ...................................... 77'/o
AmrTech ...............................68~
Ashland 011 ..........................51'61•

ATI:T.................................... 39 /w

Bank One .............................52'1..
Bob Evans ............................17'1•
Borg-lNarner ........................54'1•
Champton ...............................19
Charm Shps ..........................5'}•
City Holdlng ..........................37'h
Federal Mogul .....................34"1•
Gennett ................................. 97'/o
7
Goodyear •••••••.~ ....................64 /.

Kmart ..................................... 12%

Lands End ........................... 27"1.

JUDGING CROPS • Jim Barrett, Waahlngton County Extension
agent, looks over displays of vegetables In the horticulture/farm
crops exhibit at the Meigs County Fair. He was asslated by a
department chairman, Bob Lewis.

Horticulture entries
total 404 in Meigs fair
The 4(14 entries m the horticulturelfal'Tl crops department at the
Meigs County Fair were judged
Monday and ribbons and premiums
awarded .
Judging the crops were lim Barrett, Washington County Extension
agent. who was asSisted by Bob
Lewis, cha1rman
Displaying the largest potato was
Carne Morris, Pomeroy ; largest
pumpkm, V~rg•l Wmdon; largest
watermelon, V1rgil Windon; largest
apple, Evelyn Hollon; largest tomato, Mary King; largest peel, Elizabeth
King, Pomeroy; largest cucumber,
Cyndi King, Pomeroy ; longest
cucumber, Cody Dill; largest onion,
Michael Le1fheit; largest squash,
Jam•e Boyd; largest ear of corn. Virgil Windon. longest bean, Briar Dill;
and the largest cabbage, Mary Kmg,
who also diSplayed the freakiest vegetable. The best display of garden
produce was exh1bited by Cody Dill .
Wmnmg blue ribbons in the various classes for their exhibits were:
Grains: yellow corn, Alice
Thompson , Pomeroy; wh1te corn,
Allee Thompson; white sweet corn,
Jack King , Pomeroy; yellow sweet
corn, Kathryn Mora, Pomeroy; yellow popcorn. Alice Thompson: Indian corn, Cody D1ll. Long Bottom;
. peck wheat. PatricJa Holter,
Pomeroy; peck spnng oats, David
K1ng, Pomeroy.
Potatoes: cobblers, Evelyn Hollon,
Racine; Kennebecs, Alice Thompson;
Lasoda, Elizabeth K•ng, Pomeroy;
various varieties. Mary King, Long
Bottom.

Festival meeting
The B1g Bend Stemwheel Fesllval
commlltee meeting w11l be held Sunday at 2 p.m at the Carpenter's hall.
Council to meet
The Racme Village Council will

Auction planned
A suitcase donated by Fred Young,
guitarist for the Kentucky Headhunters, will be auctioned Fnday
evening m the show arena to benefit
the Junior Fair.
The Kentucky Headhunters performed at the grandstand Wednesday
evening. Fa1r Board secrotary Dcbb1e
Watson said this morning that the
suitcase had traveled with Young for
many years.
'
The auction will immediately precede the Junior Fair Livestock Sale at
5 p.m. Proceeds will benefit the
junior fair bUJ!ding fund. Watson

OVB .........................................39
Or'Mt Valley .............................4t\

Hospital news ~

Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19'h

RDISMII ...............................51

/,.

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quotea provided by Advesl
of Galllpolla.

wind.
By The Associated Press
Friday ... Partly cloudy with a
The National Weather Service
says a high pressure system will chance of showers and thundermove eastward out of Oh1o tonight storms. Highs in the upper 80s.
with cloudiness mcreasing as a warm Chance of raJn 40 percent.
Friday night. A chance of showfront pushes up from the Tennessee
ers
and thunderstorms early, o_thcrValley.
wlse
partly cloudy. Lows m the lowThe threat of showers will return
er
70s
•
Friday as moisture again spreads over
Extended
forteast:
the area and temperatures return to .
Saturday
...
Partly
cloudy. A chance
normal with h1ghs 1n the 80s.
of
showers
and
thunderstorms
dunng
. Skies cleared overnight in norththe
·day.
Highs
in
the
upper
80s.
·
em Ohio and Lake Erie as h1gh presSunday
...
Partly
cloudy.
A
chance
sure pushed into the lower Great
Lakes. Cooler a~r pushed temper~­ of showers and thunderstorms in the
turcs below normal, with readings afternoon. Lows in the mid 60s and
across the state dipping into the low h1ghs in the upper 80s.
,50s in the north to the mid 60s in the
far south.
Winds were light and variable
from the north and some patchy fog
developed in low-lying areas.
The record high temperature tor
this date at the Columbus weather
stallon was 98 degrees in 1936. The
record low temperature was 48 ·
degrees in 1967.
Sunset w1ll be at8:30 p.m. Sunrise
Friday will be at 6:44a.m.
Weather forteast:
Tonight.. .Partly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 60s. Light and variable

Vegetables: green cabbage,
Michael Leifheit, Pomeroy, red cabbage, Evelyn l:lollon; eggplant,
Ladona Boyd, Shade; tomatoes, red,
Opal Dyer, Bidwell; tomatoes, yellow, Mary King; tomatoes, pear red.
Mary King; tomatoes, pear yellow,
Mary King; tomatoes, cherry, Mary
King; tomatoes, bi-color, Dorothy
' Brown, Racine; green pod pole
beans, Deborah Mohler, Pomeroy;
yard long .pole beans, Bnar D1ll,
Long Bottom;,green pod pole beans,
Jamie Boyd, Shade; yellow pod bush
beans, Dale Hoffman, Racine; lima
beans, Cody Dill .
White onions, Cody Dill; yellow
onions, Michael Leifheit; red onions,
Dorothy Brown, Racine; hot peppers,
Cody Dill ; sweet peppers, Cody Dill;
beets. David King; carrots, Cody
Dill; green cucumbers, Jam1c Boyd,
pickles, Ladona Boyd; okra, plate,
Judy Bunger, Pomeroy; field pumpkms. Bla1r Wmdon. Pomeroy; p1e
pumpkin, Cody Dill ; cushaw, Ladona
Boyd; zucchini. Saundra Bush; summer squash, Jamie Boyd; patty pan
squash, Mary King; banana squash,
Mark King ; crooked neck squash,
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
Briar Dill; acorn squash, Cody Dill;
was
one ticket sold listing all six
butternut, Linda Rathburn, Middlenumbers
drawn in Wednesday night's
port; ornamental gourds, Virgil Win$35
million
Super Lotto drawing, the
don. Pomeroy.
Ohio
Lottery
said.
•
Melons: Virgil Wmdon .
The
winnmg
ticket
was
sold
at
Fruit: vanety apple, Evelyn HolTwinsburg
Beverage
in
Twinsburg.
lon, Racine; grape, concord, Roy
The holder of the 11cket will
Holter, Pomeroy; grape, Niagara,
receJve
26 payments of more than
Roy Holter; peaches, yellow, Jim
·
$1
3
m1llion
annually.
King , Long Bottom ; blackberry.
Dorothy Brown; blueberry, Dorothy
Super
drawing
is worth $4 milTheLotto
Jackpot
(or Saturday
Brown.
lion,

Student alert
New students 10 grades 9·through
12 in the Meigs Local School District
should enroll at Meigs High School
weekdays prior to Aug. 22. Office
.. hours are from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m.
QuestJons should be d~rected to t~e
h1gh school, 992-2158.

said. '

Shoney's .................................s'•
Star Bank ..........;.................. 45'1•
Wendy's ...............................22'1.
Worthlngton ........................19"f,.

Chance of showers, storms
returns to region on Friday

Lottery results

night:s~~=~!~!~~;~~

Meigs announcef!Jents

Ltd. ........................................ 22'1.

Peoptes ................................. 36'!.
Prern Flnl ............................. - 19\
Rockwell ..............................63"1•
11

Dale Wallace Hill, 79, of Franklin, NortbCarohna, formerly of Letart Falls
died on Thursday, August 14, !997 at Holzer Medical Center.
' .
He was born on August it, 1917 at Letart Falls, son of the late Albert :
and Eliza Ann Miller HilL He was a Iockman with the U.S. Army Corps of ·
. Engineers and a farmer.
He was a member of the Pomeroy/Racine Masonic Lodge No. 164,
Aladdin Temple Shrn1e, was a 32nd Degree Mason. and a member of the
Racine American Legion Post No. 602.
Surviving are four sons, Dale (Karen) Hill, Marvin (Jan) Hill, and Michael
(Mindy} Hill, all of Racine, and Daniel (Kathy) Hill of Coral Gables, Florida; three brothers, Harry (Katie) Hill, John (Erma} Hill and Dallas (Donna}
Hill, all of Letart; a sister. Margie (Harold) Roush of Racine ; four sistersin-law: Pauline Hill of Letart, Inez H11l and Ora Hill, both of Racine. and
Delores Casper of Columbus; a brother-in-law, Carl Wolfe Jr. of Bidwell;
eight grandchildren, Dolly Warden, Andrew Hill, M1chael Hill, Jenm Hill,
Lauren Hill, Jeremy Hill and Kristin Hill; and a great-grandch•ld, Crew M.
Warden.
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by his wife, Mary Jane Wolfe
Hill; six brothers, St. Claire, Joe, Jerry. Clifford, Julian and Albert Jr ; and
two sisters, Dom Hensler and V10let Grimm.
Services will be held at II a.m. Saturday, August 16, 1997 in the Roush
Funeral Home in Ravenswood, West Virgima, with the Rev. Aaron Young
and the Rev Bnan Harkness offic1atmg. Bunal will follow in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. on Fnday, Augustl5 ,
1997. Masonic serv1ces will be held 1n the funeral home at 7 p.m. .
Memorial contnbutions may be made to the Racine United Methodist
Church, or the Racine F1rst Baptist Church.

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Ada
Morris, Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 13 - Olkin
Scott, James Robinson, Ruth Woods,
Marvin Yeauger, Felicia Close.
(PUblished with permission)

meet in recessed session Monday, 7
p.m. at the municipal building.
Dance to be held
A round and square dance will be
held at tbe VFW Post9053, Tuppers
Plains, 8 to II p.m. Saturday MuSJc
w1ll be provided by Guy Thoma and
True Country.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded seven calls for assistance Wednesday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
· 8:56 a.m.. State Route 124,
Racine. Effie Black, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
I (47 a.m., Bashan Road, Long
Bottom, Ada Morris, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
2:50 p.m., SR 124, ReedsVIlle,
Laura Fox, Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Reedsville squad assisted;
9:13 p.m., Mount Ohve Road,
Long Bottom, CCMH, Ree4sville
squad assisted.
POMEROY
7:46 a.m., volunteer fire departIJlent and squad to Condor Street,
structure fire. no injuries reported .
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:25 a.m .. Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Hubert Meyer. VMH;
9:50 p.m.. Rock Springs Fa•r- .
grounds, Charles Lemley, VMH.

FRI., SAT., SUN.
MICHAEL JAI WHITE,
MARTIN SHEEN IN
SPAWN PG-13
AND
KEVIN ZEGERS, MICHAEL JETER
IN
AIR BUD PG
448-t088

"Bill Of Fair"
··

For Thursday, Au2ust 14

Thursday, Augu5114 ·SENIOR CmZENS DA1'
All Senior Citizens Admitted Free All Day (AJe 60 &amp; over}
Sponsor- Vaughan'siGA
Dazzling Dolls· Hill Stage
5:00p.m.
Kiddie Games- Hillside Stage
6:00p.m.
Little Fiddlers- Grand Stand
7:00p.m.
Youth Horse Show
7:30p.m.
Horse Pull
8:00p.m.

9:00p.m.
11 :00 p.m.
7:00a.m.
9100 a.m.
11 :00 a.m.
l:OOp.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00·8·00 p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
p.m.
11 :00p.m.

Exile· Grandstand
Gates Close
Friday, August 15
Sponsor· Warner Heallna &amp; Coollag
Gates Open
Pet Show- Show Arena
Junior Fair Dog Obedience Show- Show Arena
Hames~ Racing
Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
KARAOKE· Hill Stage
·
Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
Kiddie Tractor Pull followed by Pull of Champions •
·
· Pull Track
Truck Pull- Pull Track
Gates Close

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Pillae 4
Augu•t 14, 1997

Thursday,

By The Bend

.,

The Daily Sentinel
.

Page 5

Thursday,August14,1997

King big winner in baking, ·canning competition

GOING FOR SEVEN STRAIGHT- The Meigs
golf INm'wll be 8hoollng for Its MVenth straight
TVC chllmpionahip in 1 row when the Mllraudera

Nlcli: Dettwlller, Josh Lyj,ch end Child Folmer. In
the second row are Zlch Mudowl, Jeaon

Ofllll the -•on Friday. In front are (L-R) J.R.
Scarberry, Tommy Rou1h, Ja1on Cundiff, Andy·
Davis, Thaddeus Bumgsrdner, Cer1111n Midkiff,

er, Mick Barr, Clay Crow, SUn O'Brien, Steve

Free'*, Jo1h Price, Jelemy Genii, J8I'8CI Warn-

McCullough, Dave Andereon and coach John
Krawsczyn.

Meigs golf team to begin
defense of TVC title Friday
.

The Meigs golf team, with a
reconl 19 players, has begun pre-season preparation for its defense of the
· Tri· Valley Conference championship. Meigs has won the conference title the past seven consecutive .
seasons.
Coach John Krawsczyn, entering
. his I I th season, lost only one staner
from last year's squad to graduation,
first team aii-TVC pick Joe Hill.
Senior returnees Dave Anderson,
Mick Barr, Clay Crow and Steve
McCullough will provide a stroniJ
. nucleus for this year's edition.
Anderson and McCullough were
Ohio Division first selections in
1996 and Barr and Crow were mem-

Cheryl King of Pomeroy was the
Dale Hoffman - grape jam; pear
big winner in the baking and canning preserves; blueberry .jelly: sweet
competition held at the Meigs Coun· pickles.
·
ty Fair.
Janis Macomber, Langsville She took 28 blue ribbons on her ·strawberry jam, cherry preserves.
entries, Dale Hoffman of Racine
Cheryl King • blueberry jam.
carne in second with six blues, and strawberry preserves; grape jelly;
Maxine Dyer, third with five. In the cherry jelly; sweet pepper relish; bardepanment there were 274 entries.
be&lt;;u~ sauce, grape juice, applesauce,
Fairgoers can view the exhibits on apple pie filling.
display in the air-conditioned CoonTerrie Houser, Rutland - peach
hunters building on the Rock Springs preserves.
Fairgrounds.
Christine Sauters, Pomeroy As a pan of the baking competi- apple buller.
tion, a cookie contest was held, with
Angie Brickles, Shade - dill pick·
Jamie Drake of Racine taking first les.
with her banana split bars. Sixteen
Opal Dyer, Bidwell - bread and
entered the contest baking the cook- butter pickles.
ies from a standard recipe.
Sandra Bush, Langsville- zucchiPremiums and ribbons were ni.
awarded in three places in each class. ,
Saundra Bush - end of the garden
The blue ribbon •winners in the relish.
various categories were:
Phyllis Spencer, Pomeroy - sweet
PRESERVES, JAMS , JELLIES pepper, tomato juice.
AND SPREADS
Bernice Midkiff, Langsville Maxine
- black .raspberry spaghetti sauce.
jam; apple
Kathryn Mora, Pomeroy - black-

bers of the all-TVC second team .
Other seniors on this years team are
Sean O'Brien, Jared Warner, J.R.
Scarberry, Jason Frecker, Chad
Folmer' and Jeremy Gatrell. Junior
players are Josh Price and Josh
Lynch. The sophomores are Zach
Meadows and Tommy Roush. A
promising group of freshman include
Carson Midkiff, Andy Davis, Tllad,
deus Bumgardner, Nick Detwiller
· and Jason Cundiff.
The Meigs golf team will play an
intense and interesting schedule of
matches in the early pan of the season. Included in the early matches
arc:

• A Friday encounter at the 28-

SENIOR GYMKHANA -

Holly Milhoan (left)

end Sire Craig won grend Md I'IIMrve champion, ntlpiiCiively, In aenlor gymkhana competlllon

It the 4-H Horae Show Monday. With them is 1997
Horse Princes• Jessica WM&amp;ktr, dismounted at
right

team Southeastern Invitational at
Hocking Hills 'Golf Cotirse.
• A tri-match on Monday, August
18 at the Athens Country Club with
Athens and Alexander.
• A TVC match · at the Meigs
County Golf Course on Tuesday, By KEN BERGER
Kevin Seitzer continued the five-run 5 213 strong innings the Indians
August 19.
.
CLEVELAND (AP) - There's inning by doubling Vizquel hpme salvaged the second' game. Eric
Also this month, Meigs will play nothing like a little controversy to and scoring on a single by Sandy Plunk, a re-emerging force in the
at the Greenbrier Country Club with . spice up a d.oubleheader between Alomar.
·
·
Cleveland bullpen, combined with
Greenbrier East and Nicholas Coun- friends.
Bell called the squeeze a "Little Paul Assenmacher and Jose Mesa for
ty. An Ohio Division TVC match at
After Detroit split two games Leagu~ play."
3 113 innings of two-hit relief.
Franklin Valley on Thursday, August with the Cleveland Indians on
"Surprise?" an incredulous Bell
_The Tigers hit four homers in the ·
21. On Friday, August 22, the Wednesday night, Tigers manager asked. "All I know is I didn'rsee it first game, which saw Damion
Marauders will panicipate in the 24- Buddy Bell angrily criticized his for two years when I was over there. Easley get every hit in the cycle but
team Partersburg Country Club Invi- former boss, Cleveland manager I saw it a couple of times in the Col- a single. Willie Blair (12-5) befud,
tational.
Mike Har~ove, for using a squeeze lege World Series. though. Let's put · died the Indians and iiecame tht
play with a big lead late in the sec· it this way: You just don't do it."
founh ex-Cleveland pitcher to beat ·
ond game.
Later, Hargrove said he smoothed them in their last five home losses.
The Tigers blew out the Indians things over with Bell, telling liis The Angels' Ken Hill beat them on
I 3-3 in the opener, then succumbed friend he lost track of the score in the July 30, followed by Scott Bailes and
9-1 in the nightcap.
confusion of the inning.
Terry Clark of Texas last weekend.
Bell, an Indians bench coach in
"I wanted one more run, 11 Har·
that," .Morgan said. "Ten years ago,
Hershiser {10-5) won in his first
I used to dwell on my last stan. But 1994-95. also accused Hargrove of grove said. "But when Omar start since July 28, reaching double;
I'm 37 years old now and I've faking an injury to reliever Albie squeeze-bunted and I saw we were digits in wins for the lith time in his
learned that what is in the past .is iQ LOJ!CZ so Orel Her.ihiser could be up 7-1, I said 'Oh shoot.' Because I career.. He threw only 78 pitches,
the past, there's nothing you can do activated from the disabled list to don't run up the score on people I allowing one run and five hits with
stan game tWo.
hate, much less people I consider my two walks and two strikeouts.
about it."
"Th.at's irresponsible," Bell said. good friend . Buddy said he underIn an attempt to reverse his forThe 1988 NL Cy Young Award
tune, Morgan relied more on his fast- "It's the most blatant use of the DL stood."
winner was on the DL with a stiff
Tigers outfielder Phil Nevin was back and was taken out of several
ball, throwing it 64times in 76 pitch· that I've seen in a long time."
The squeeze J&gt;lay wilh Cleveland mad, too. But he said don 't expect July stans with a strained groin.
es. In his last stan, against the
Dodgers on Aug. 8, Morgan allowed leading 6-1 in the eighth inning of any brawls in the series finale today.
To make room for Her&gt;hiser. the
"We don't want to stan a war or Indians put Lopez on the DL
eight runs on II hits in 3.213 innings. the second game had Bell hot, too.
Omar Vizquel bunted Brian Giles· anything over it,", Nevin said. ''We between games with a strained righl
"I'm not one of the hardest
throwers, but it shows if you make home against lefty Mike Myers, have a lot of friends over there."
calf - further infuriating Bell.'
Hcrshiser came off the disahled Lopez pitched two innings on Tuesyour pitch and execute with some who threw the ball to the backstop
movement, you've got a chance," he allowing Vizquel to go to second. list and rescued Cleveland, pitching day and I 113 innings in the first
said.
game of the dmihleheadcr.
Morgan's evening ended with a.
stri~eoul of Wally Joyner, but Reds
manager Jack McKeon was not
reluctant to put the game in the hands
of Belinda and fellow reliever Jeff By DOUG TUCKER ·
mornlorium since the rule,. known n.~ they're committed, OK. let's sec
Shaw.
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) Proposition 62. was narrowly adopt- some action."
"Once they got the first hit, I got - If the NCAA trusted its schools, ed at the last full NCAA ctinvention
With Niland and other athletes
the bullpen going," McKeon said. coaches and fans, college athletes
in Januar}' and was set to take affect aiJ!uing passionately on the conven"It looked to me like they staned to could be working this fall and mak·
this month.
tion floor, passage of Proposition 62
catch up to him. I wasn't going to ing a few extra bucks.
" We want to make it happen and was widely hailed as a sign that athtake a chance."
,.
But fearful of administrative costs
we want it done right. Hence, the letes had linally gained a voice in
The Reds took a I -0 lead iri the and the possibility of widespread ·reason for the delay... Syracuse pres- NCAA policymaking.
founh when Pokey Reese, aboard on cheating, the NCAA has delayed for ident Kenneth Shaw said in a teleBut Shaw said the newly ICmncd
a leadoff double, scored on a saeri- ·one year a plan to let athletes hold conference.
hoard of directors dec ided more
fice fl.y by Eduardo Perez.
pan-time jobs.
However, the hea&lt;l of the NCAA's study was needed on the "comple•The game's only other run came
Wednesday's decision by the 15- student-athlete advisory committee. · itics or the issue ."
in the sixth, when De ion Sanders .member board of directors, in its fir&gt;t
was skeptical.
·
" We fully expect 'to have a pro- ·
scored on a single by Chris Stynes. mlljor action, was not unexpected.
. "How confident can we be?" for· gram in the fall of 1998 that allows
, · Cutcher Joe Oliver went 3-for-4 Coaches and college presidents had
mer distance runner Bridget Niland ·athletes to work," Shaw said.
· for the Reds.
'
been urging at least a one-year told The Associated Press. "If

*******

'-'CAS &amp; Meigs County horsemen
to sponsor-cash prizes at races
Cash prizes will be awarded during the horse harness racing oti
Thursday and Friday at the Meigs
County Fair.
· Roger Spencer and Sally Erwin
are co-chairmen of the cash giveaway which is sponsored by county
horsemen and the Meigs C&lt;)unty
Agricultural Society,
A total of $200 will be awarded

each day of the racing -- one $50
prize and si., $25 prizes.
Tickets will he given to those .
entering the grandstand before the
end of the second race. A drawing
will take place after the third r~ce. To
complete for the prize money, speclators must be over 14 years of age
a~d must he present ·to win.

as

CAoric J·J&gt;. am r.m.

NCAA tables right-to-work issue

AL standings

NL standings

F.ulrm Dlwillun

'

\

l! L f&lt;L

I.am

8ultimnre ................ 7~
New York ... ~ ........ 70
Tomnlo .................. ."iH
BlliiPR ................... 5~
[)etroil ............... ~

42

4~

60
'6J
6J

. 6)~

1ill

.:l'.492'·'

Itt'•:

.479

I~

-171

'II}

4\

Cmtnl OiwWon
CLEVElAND ....... 6U ~b .511
Oliu~O

................. ."iH ."i9
Milwauke.: .............!i7 60
Minnnu~a .............. ~l 6H

Kansa:s City ..........~41J 67

. Ium

Friday's comes

~

Allunll.\
..... 7~
FloriW ..................b':l
N~o-wY(wk ........... fltl
Monttt&gt;!l ........,...... 60
Pttii:Kklphi&lt;~ .......... 42

L f&lt;L

47

~0

.61!i

.H

- ~lW
. !i.~~

5M

. ~OM

n

J~9

1ill
4':

7':
11
J01:

.ws

Wncrm Oivilion
Sail Frutk:iKo ........ fi7 ~4 - ~~ol
los Angek:s ...., ......65 -~5 -~·U
San Die1o'.............. ~7 6:\ .475
Cnlor.11Ju ................ ~7 boa .471

1',
()':
10

Chic:tgo ...........~ .... .4'J 12

Wednesday's scOres
N.'r'. Yailit"T~ 9. Km18all Cily J
DH : Oman I .\ ~ CLEVElAND ' :
CtEVELAND 9. Dt-1mi1 I
Tl"~tns 7, Ro~1011 6
Toronto l Mlrtnl"UJ!n 2
Cbicaga While! Snx. ~- A~im 2
Oakland 4. Ballimon! 2

Todoy'sgameo
Anlftim ~0 . SprinFr 1·') m MiiWliU•
Ut (Mcrcccb4-6l. 2:0.'i p.m.
Minaesot~ (Radkl" 16-e) :u Burton
(-S-tl. 70lp.m.

Ddroil (Saldm 4-9) a1 CUVEL.ANl&gt;
(Nqy 11 -8). 7:M p m.

KaRNS Ci~ (8~ 2-J) at N.Y. Yrm(Welb I. .S). 1..., p.m.
Scaule {John1on 16-31 al Bollimore
(Kilrrlicnie~.'ki 7-!1). 7 : 3~ p.m.
Oaldnnd (Adam• 3-5} 01 Chicaco
Wflile Soil (Oemc)IU 0.2). R;05 p.m

-

Frlday'spmes
MinneiOia (TewtJbury 4-lll "' Botlon
tGonlon 6-9), 1:0:&lt; p.m
Kaa1111 City (RutJ;h 4-M) at Dtlroif
t'lbompiOIIll·l). HI~ p.m.
T""""" tl'mon HI at CI.EVELAND
tCaJoo.H), 7:0' p.m.
Teu• (Clark I·J) al N. Y. Yankee•
· - J-4), 7:3, p.m.
Snolle tctoudo 0.1) 11 Bolti""'"' (Key
t:l-6~ H'P"'
. AIUIIIeim (Finlt:y 12·61 at MilwAUkee

~ ··:

10
I I':
r6

CINCINNATI ....... ~2 66 .-'"'1

-

Pimburgh {Schmidt 7-6) ul Ftoridu
(Htrnartdez 6-0). 7:0:'i p.m.
Atlanta (Giavine 10-6) ar St Louis
fAybar0.2}. 8:0tp.m.
Philadelphia (Schilling 12- 10) at
Houlton (Hol17-8}. 8:0:\ p.m
N.Y. Mr1s (Reed 10-.5) ue Cnlorrukl
(Cruritln K-10). 9 :0~ Jl.m.
CINCINNATI fRrmling~ S--4) at Los
Angeles (Astocio 7-8), 10:0.5 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Trachsel ~-9 ) 111 Sun
Dic&amp;o (Hilcl'K:ock 7-71. IO:O:'i p.m.
Montr~al (Juhns'nn 0-0) ~tl San firan-

Easctrn Dh·blon

Crnt111l Dn-islon
Hoo51on ................ 6.~ ~6 .!B7
Pinsbur1h .............. ."i'J 61 .4'i2
St. Looi&amp; ................ ~ M . 4~4

.4%
.411:7
429
..t22

Wnttm Diwbion
Seaule ................ M ~2 - ~5Y
'
Anahtim .: ..............Mt ~;l .~~~
Tt11.as ..................... Sil 62 .411J
1J
Oaldantl ................. .fH H .JY7 · l 9':

I

CINCINNATI (While ·1-01 11 San
l&gt;icAo ~Ashby 6-8). :'i :O:'i p.m
N.Y. Mcls (Jont-s 12-7) at Sl . Louis
~01hPme 2-41, 8:0~ p.m.

Oakland (Haynct 0· 2) at Chicatto
White So,.IBnldwin 8· 121.. K:O!i p.m.

d&amp;eo(Ruder8-~). 10:0:'ipm

Transactions
Baseball
Amrrkan IAaaur
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Aclivnred

Wednesday's lll'Ores

RHP Ore!

Philadelphi;a 12. Cpl(lt:u.Ju ~
Chic:lf.O Cub~ b. Sam Fmnri!ll:u :'i
Piniburah 2. Atlnntu I
AorJda g, Hou5lo n 6
NY
. . Mets .~ ' St. Louis 4 t 10)
CINCINNA1l 2, San Dic~m 0
Los AnJCk• J, Montreal J

.
'
AT&amp;T t;oulnlunk'aliuns nf Obiu, In~ .
hereby Jives notice that il ha1 fth!cl
)be IORowina tariff cllan!llll 'with th•
Public l11ilillts Commislion ol Ohio.

EffectiVe Aupst8, 1997, AT&amp;T
chll\f&lt;d !II&lt; priCfl or callq coni &lt;Ill
billed 10 Commm:ial Cr..tit/CiiarJC ·
Cmla. For lnOn information, I*'•~~"
call your ATAT l('f'Yk'c&gt; tf'IWN.'ftlativt'
\1 I !IXl 222-0300.

from lhc l S-dlly dis·

Natiunall.Na~~e

3rd and 4th 5th and 6th ·
Slgnups at the following dates and times

ChicllJO Cubs (Tof:tni 2- 1) m San
FraDCiKet (Ef.lell"-4) .• : J~ p.n1.
Monrreal (P. M11rtincr 14-.5) at Los
Anrdct (Valdes 6-10), 4 : ~ p.m.

HOnCI TO AT&amp;T
OHIO CUJTOMIRI

H~nhikr

abled list Placed RHP Albie l.opcl en I~
1 ~-day diYbled list
KANSAS CITY ROYALS; AclivUI\!d
OF h:rnuint Uyc from 1M U -thty tl•~ ­
ttbled lisr. Pl11~o't."\\ OF Joe Vi1icllu on the
I:'i-day disabled list.
MilWAUKEE BREWER~ · AgrceU
1n1emu witll OH Julio Fmrl\:1.1.
NEW YORK YANKEES: RcrallcU
RHP Hidrki lrahll from Cohmlhu~ nf 1hc
lntcrnulil)lllll L..:a,:ue. OfllioacJ RHP Jim
Medr 10 Culumbus . Acquirl!iJ DH ·C
Mike Stnnk:y ;uKJJNF Randy Brown frum
the Bos1on ROO So11. fl1r RHP Ttlfly Amm~
nnd a pbyc:r tu bl: Rimtc:\1.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Pl:1ced
RHP Brad Rigby un 1hc l:'i-dny di~1hkll
lilt retmaclive tu Aui!. It Rccallt:U lHI'
Andrew LomUnt rnmt Etlmontun uf 1hc
PCL.
TEXAS RANGERS : Anir;rtcll nF
Mik.c Simm• outriJhl tu Okl11huma City
of llx: A~rk:m As!ii.JCiatinn
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Rcti&amp;lbJ .
OF Shannon Stcw&gt;~rt and /Nf Tom:1s
Perez from Syr-.&amp;cu!le nl' thl.: lnl~o-ruutinn;•l
l..caJuc. Placed SS Alex Gtmzalc7. un till!
JJ.Jay di~ablalli 8t.

Big Bend .Youth Football League

• Today'scame!l

•
.

**************************************

.I

.j

Scoreboard
Baseball

Cheryl King - zuchi nni bread:
Blair Windon, Pomeroy .- yeast
rolls.
CAKES
Carrie Morris. Rutland - chocolate.
Cheryl King - white.
COOKIES
Maxine Dyer· oatmeal.
Linda Rathburn - sugar. uniced
brownies.
Mary King, Long Bottom • chocolate chip.
Opal Dyer - peanut butter.
.Sandra Bush. brownies.
PIES
Dale Hoffman - apple, pecan.
Kathryn Windon - cherry.
Valerie Nottingham - peach.
Cheryl King - raisin.
CANDY
.
Janis Macomber · chocolate
fudge.
.
Maxine Dyer -. peanut butter .
fudge .
Melissa Co.leman - white fudge .

Tigers .and Indians split DH

August 14th, 15th, 16th
D.A.R.E. BOOTH
Meigs C:ounty Fair
Saturday, Auguat 16, 1997
10:00 to 1:00
Locker 219, Middleport
Health Aid Pharmacy, New Haven ·
1Ueada~Auguat19,1897

Syracuse Ball Fields 8:00 p.m.
Conditioning
·

"--

CtJI .ClRAl&gt;O R&lt;K..' KIE.&lt;i: Sil!ucJ INF
Terry ShumrcM :mtl ru.:.~ i gn1.~Y.l himl!l NI.'W
H;1¥Cn uf IIIC'

EJt~ lcm

l.clll!UC.

'

I.OS ANGEU~ S l.&gt;O OG I~ RS : Sent
RHI1 Mall t-k-f1-&gt;t:S In S:m An1m1111 nf 1hc
Tello ;,~ l.c:t~uc :

SAN l&gt;llmO PADf.I ES: Tnulcll OF
Rickey Ht-nticrS&lt;.IM lull\c: Annl.c1m 1\n~cl~
fur RHP Rya11 Huncuck. I.HI' Sicvcn~ml
A£1Uto :mtl a player tn he. named. ActtY;I1·
cd Of Rut.:n Rivcrn from lf~e: fJO -llay d i~­

DAtLAS cownov s: l'hll'ctl &lt;:II
· J11hn Reece n11 u~nl'l.'d rco;ct n·
IJENVER IHHlNt;US . Hde:Jsetl RU
J11c Ahlk11111h. 1.11 Ken llrnwn . 'IE Jeremy
lhuk-:11 . Cll D~l l un S1111 1 11Hil ~. DT
, Sylvester S!anlcy . DE Ken T:J\ann:1 :u,Hf
IJI! RnDL'fi Turu11r

ahlctllj~l .

NEW ENfi i. I\N D 1'1\ THIOTS Re ·
ll!ascd WR Chris OrUf. WR Shawn Tllru ·
n . Qll Chm 11r~'11ilh : m . 1.11 Chml R L·rvc~
:mtl en l &gt;w;~ync l'ru'Yt.: Si,IIIWd en 1\11:111
J :~~:bun .

National t'outhall Ln~ur
NR.: l'in(d Denver Rmnc!ls 1.11 !Jill
· Runwmuwski S20.()()() fur ilft illcf(al hil 1111
C:1n1lina f'tlflllk.'fli (jU Ko:rry Cullin ~ in :1
pn:St:IISOII J!iiiiiC Auf . IJ.
CHICAGO AliARS: Rdc:1 so:d 1.11
l&gt;olfridt 8n1W11I11W .

N~o·dncy

YORK lETS: l 'l:, imcll K Jnc
nil' w;1ivcrs lmm iiP.!&lt; Miilmi l&gt;nl ·

ph in.~ .
PHII.ADEI.I'ml\ [AfiLFS R~.:k .•&gt;ed
WI:( Alan Aile II. HI Urad H:lllll' r. DE

IJ;mlimt (.'!lnrer, DT
Ynncl Jnud mn. WR
Thllmu~ ~h:G autthc y

DtiiMll'.
K1w1 . S
ouuJ Cll Alllh uny
S !iiJ.:..:f

.

by Bob
Hoeflich
.

Rice.

Friday, August 1Sth
Kid't Day at the Meigs County Feir

Sponsored by
WAHNER HEATING

illli...O!!'!l!IIQ*
done.
'
And, by the way: Paulette and
mosl everyone who knows me al all
is aware that the music used in the
"Made in America" show is just not ·
my kind of music. For the most pan
I went out of timing with musiC in the
late 1940's and have accepted few of
the songs offered up since that time.
However, I'm prepared to accept the
fact that it is 1997. and music has
changed. While it's not my cup of
tea, I can readily accept the new beat
and especially when it is presentedjas
well as it was in Tuesday nigl\t's
, and lherc was an enthusiastic cast. county fair show.
The show was well planned and well
received by the large crowd on hand. - Spea~ing of. the Meigs County
While the audience received all of Fair, I have found it quite refreshing
the numbers, well, they seemed to this year in the junior fair building
especially like the Swinging Seniors thanks to the . new strip lighting
who were perfectly costumed for installed there. For a change you can
their number with newcomer Sally actually see all of those excellent
Ingels doing the vocal on · "If My junior fair exhibits which the young
Friends Could See Me Now" and the people spend so much time in prepartakeoff Roger and Mary Gilmore did ing. The new lighting makes a world
·
on' Sonny and Cher. I have never of difference.
been a big Sonny and Cher fan but
And you might want to make a
the Gilmore version was e•cellent.
The appearance of Bill Crane as a note.
Chester and Sylvia Rice of Union
vocal · soloist ·in several numbers
City,
Georgia, and Denver and Nora
came as a pleasant surprise to me, I
Rice
of
Middlcpon will be entertain· ·
had never heard Bill sing before. If
ing
with
a reception and open house ·
he was nervous in. his presentations.
from
2
to
4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 31 .
it didn't show. He performs well.
Guest
of ·honor will be Belva
The musical 'served as a great
Willard
of
the Rock Springs Roa~ '
showcase for local talent--and·there's
who
will
be
observing her tOOth
a lot of it around. Seasoned performers on local stages as well as binhday. The open house will be at
newcomers were among the 120 cast the Meigs Senior Citizens Center on
members who really pitched in to pull Mulberry Ave .. in Pomeroy. Mrs.
the show into a most pleasant pre· Willard is the only living aunt of
Chester and Denver. You're invited
sentatiOn.
Paulette who had to work long and to be on hand for the celebration_.
.hard to plan. direct. costume and
If yoo won Wednesday night's
stage the show was honored with a
$35
million
jackpot would you keep
bouquet of roses from the cast at the ·
me·in
mind?
f need !O borrow a COU·
close of the musical, a nice ftnishing
pie
of
bucks
and I do pay interest.
touch in recognition of a job well
Thanks and do keep smiling.

4 cyl, 5-tipeed;WAS $11,682

Convertible, WAS $27,797

, 10

C:BOOSJE FROM

Loaded

1997

WAS $29,885

*
**

Now$27 017 !

ve, auto, air, 2 - door, Stock 138004
WAS $18,456

91 CHEVROLET ·1/2 TON 414 :

* Now$14,996
**

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

and COOLING
All children under
12 admitted

**

t

..-

Sunday. home of Carl and Ernest
Dorst. potluck dinner at noon . ·
RACINE -- Marlin and Emma
Roush Sayre family reunion. Sunday.
Star Mill Park. Racine. Potluck at
noon.

RACINE -- Special services al the
Red Brush Church of Christ, Bashan
Road. Saturday, 7 p.m. Sunday. 10
a.m. and 6 p.m. Speaker. Denver Hill.
Foster. W. Va.
MONDAY
LETART ·• Letart Township
trustees, Monday 6 p.m. at the office
. building.

**
*

1

.

V6, auto, air. PW,

cruise

1990 GRAND PRIX

*
ss,600
*
UuY. St•ll and 'l'•·•tdt• in fht• ** NotTax&amp;ntle
Included.
All Rebates
*
Classified St•(·- icttl! ** To Dealer.
*
·****

SUNDAY
POMEROY

Free
until Noon

9 am- 4 P"!

The drawing power of local talent
as a grandstand attraction at the
'Meigs County Fair was cenainly
shown Tuesday night when Paulette
H~rrison presemed her "Made in
America" musical.
·
The show was excellent and
played to. a packed "house" not
counting a pan of the audience
which was seated on the race track
for the presentation. A lot of creativity went into the production.
Dancing was grea1, costumes colorful and outstanding, lighting and
sound handled quite professionally

The Community Calendar is
published as a free servk:e to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeling and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promore
soles or fund raisen of any type.
Irems are printed as space pennits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
spe&lt;ific number of days.

K~.•v1 n

AdmiSsion Does Not·
Il\clude Rides

9am-8 pm

Community calendar-

NI ~ W

Football

**
** Mon• UP TO 60IMONTHS
** "Saturday APR FINANCING
**
A UMITED TIME!
**
**
***·
*
*
***
**
*
*
1998
C
HEVY
MONTE
**
**
CARLO 1·34
1996 NEW Zl!28 *
** 1997 CHEVY 5·1 0
**
CAMARO
**
*
* Now$9,869
**
•ow$23 985 *
** ro
**
*
;. .,_,__.
1998 OLDSMOBILE
**
AUROU
1996 BUICK
!
**
**
ROADMASTER
!
PONTIAC
$35,985
*
* GUNDAM
Fri

Beat of the Bend ...

Reds notch' 2-0 win over S.D.
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Mike Mor- surgery for a kidney stone on Sungao wasn't perfect, but he was day. "He always gives it everything
awfully close.
he's got. His record doesn't reHect il.
Morgan, 0-5 in his last six stans and he gets hil around once in
with an ERA of 5.?4. pitched a per- awhile, but he's usually in the ballfeet game for six innings and com- game.
bined with 1wo relievers on a one-hit
"This wasn'l a situation where
'shutout Wednesday night as the you can really talk .ibout how bad we
·Cincinnati Reds beat the San Diego did. It was just his night."
Padres 2-0.
Morgan, lifted in favor of reliev. Morgan (4-10), who picked up his er Stan Belinda after the seventh, tied
first win since a 4-2 victory over the a season high with six strikeouts and
·Houston Astros on July 4, had his bid walked just one. He threw 76 pitch·
for a perfect .game spoiled with one es, 50 for strikes.
.out in the seventh when Mark
Morgan's winless streak had been
.Sweeney singled to center.
his longest since he opened the
' Sweeney, a former teammate of 1994 campaign with seven straight
Morgan 's while with the St. Louis - defeats while with the Chicago Cubs.
Cardinals, was making just his sec- Coupled with lhe fact that he lost his
pnd start of the seasun.
final two games of the 1993 season,
"I've seen him do it !'&lt;'lore," said the skid ultimately reached a careerSweeney. who staned in place of . high nine games.
Tony Gwynn who underwent
"I don't worry about stuff like

berry jelly.
·
CANNED FRUIT
Cheryl King - applesauce, apple
pie filling, peaches, pears, cherries.
blueberries.
Cluistine Sauters - blackberries.
CANNED VEGETABLES
Bernice King, Langsville · whole :
beets, whole tomatoes.
Linda Rathburn , Middlepon ·
quanered tomatoes.
Opal Dyer - sliced beets, shell
beans.
Cheryl King, lima beans, kidney .
beans, cabbage, carrots. com. ·peas,
sweet potatoes, whole white potaloes,
green tomatoes, vegetable soup.
Karolyn Welsh. Tuppers Plains snap beans.
CANNEQ MEAT
Cheryl King - pork, beef..
Karolyn Welsh · deer.
BREADS
. .
Kathryn Windon. Pomeroy - loaf
w~ite bread.
Terrie Houser, Rutland - banana
nut bread.
.. ____ __

Dorst reunion ,

2 Door, V6, auto
*air, red
·

1995 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT
V6, tilt, cruise, auto, air$15 3 0 0
4X4 114069A
I

1993 CADILLAC SEDAN SEVILLE
va. leather, all power,
low miles

$14,900

a-edit, no a-edit? Let
as show you how you
C1lt drlvt uku•

llwl AJk for Mr.

�.

'

~.

~~~~A~u~g~u~~21~4,~l~M~7~----~r-----------~--------p~~~~·~M~I~~~~po~~~O~h~~~--------,r--------n.
___o_a~lly~Se--~_M
__I•_P_a~~!_

4 cyl, IUtO, llr cond, PS,

V8, auto, llr cond, AM,IFM

PI, PW, · POL, . crul..,
AIIIFM ca., men,

~t\-~1lllQ..
..,IOU'IH_

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Gallipolis
Acroes from GaJiiaAuto Sales on old Ate. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3
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l997 FORD
TAURUS GL

812·2111

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s..st-Mfldowa

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1997 FORD
CONTOUR

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LOW MILES

Xoc:t*nloo'l • • ~ Mexicln
RIIIUifi; 100111c1 an tht POI1er 8trMI
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Alrt
o1?' Brfdgt. A&amp;lot.IIW'IhN't ....

-----___..................
,_ . . .
..11/ltTO--Iol-Dllrolt,...,"'

.. Olfll iCIII iQ

CHAMPION HEREFORD • Cheryl Jewell showed the grend
champion He• wfotd, In this r.ase a Junior yearlln9, at the Melge
tounty Fair Junior Feeder CaH Show.
.

~·

CHAMPION CHIANINA • J..t Calaway ahowwd the grend
-champion Chlanlna caH at the Melge County Fair Junior Feedar
.CaH Show Tllesday.
·

Jeromee Calaway swept showmanship and other honors in Tuesday
afternoon's junior feeder calf show at
the Meigs County Fair.
Jeromee Calaway was named
grand ~lwnpion feeder calf showman
with Jeff Rankin winning reserve
champion honors.
Jeromee Calaway and Joe Brown
Y'On ~rand and reserve champion,
resp.=ctively. in both feeder calf steer
and feeder calf heifer compelition.
Jeromee Calaway and Josh Ervin
were named grand and reserve champion breeding beef showmen, n:spectively, in the breeding beef showmanship contest.
·

:·

ANJOU • J . . . - Calaway and Janet Calaway showed
·tjla grand end reaarve champion M•lne Anjou famalwe, reapec·
tlvwly, at the Melga County Fair Junior Feeder CaH Show TIMe·
diiy. The two also ehowed the grand :and ......,. croaabrwd
calves.

Oiher winners were, in order by
class: senior ·· Jeromee Calaway and
Laura Brown; junior -- Josh Ervin
and· Cheryl Jewell; intennediate -Janel Calaway and Joe Brown.
Janel Calaway look grand champion Chianina with her calf enuy
while Cheryl Jewell's junior yearling
won grand champion Hereford.
Josh Ervin's Simmenial cow won
lop Simmenial honors while Jeromee
Calaway won beSI shorthorn.
Jeromee Calaway and Janet Calaway look grand and reserve champion, respeclively, in both Maine
Anjou and crossbred calf compeii·
tion.

Nine
exhibitors receive Best of Show
.
~wards in domestic arts fair judging
..

-.
IV CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Reedsville, tree skin; Krisli Boston,
Reedsville,
wall
decoralion;
Josephine Hill, door decoration.
· Oiher crafts: Melissa Coleman.
Long Botto[ll; any new hand crafi;
Jamie Drake, Racine; handmade jewelry; Maxine Dyer, plastic canvas, tissue cover; Merrilee Bryani, plastic
canvas, any other.
Besl dressed goose, rabbii or bear:
Becky Rader, Pomeroy, summer fun ;
and Addalou Lewis, miscellaneous.
Scrap art: Josephine Hill. made
from lefiovers; Melissa Coleman,
oiher art.
·•Ceramic: Dale Hoffman, Racine,
non-fired painled; Sharon Lawn:nce,
non-fired dry brush; and Melissa

·----~.
kit.lili
.......
111 ............ - .
....... .

1996 MERCURY

ESCORT

COUGAR XR7

3 Dr aport, 4 cyl, auto,
•r cond, AM!FM C811,
PS, PB, apollar.

VB, auto, air cond, AM/FM
cue, tilt, cruise, all DOtllf· l
ar, leather, moonroof.

F01 Homeowners
Insurance

:~::R
.......,.....,__tjii- ,

,_,_

111 . . . . - . . _ . . . . . .

-~
'-: 114 - - 1

IN

ETC.

va, auto, air cond, AJII/FI~W

J\lollel•te ...........

can, tilt, crul.., PS, PB,

Kenny Wallace____

Wid . . . . . . . . . 10 ~- Ct-* ylU leal ......:

....,

--

1997 POINTIITANDINGI

1. .IIIII C'bdl:ln, S,otl
2. Min ...... U10
:J. DIIIt...,..,ll,nliJ

4. T~..._., :II,710

.. Jill Burean. 2M7
e. 0. ~ 1.0011
7. 8otlbr LllborM, U113
I . .-.m, ...,..., ll.S1S
8. Alaky Ruclcl. 2M2
10. 81 Ellol. :~,m

_...,_ __ -----. . ---IOio.DIIo
FROM LAIT VIE£1(

...

---:
-·
---- --·-No-1. .
....

- C U P: Joi!Goldon

to wtn hll 27th rllee, the Bud at h

, . rwt """ . . . . tw:Jie.

Glen, H..- Gordon'allr1t rOido
...... W:ID&lt;y.
Gordnn...-to ... wln, - . g
--OIOI!Boclnlby
81.35 HCDnCII. Thrle-tlml

,_,. dornNion wilt a vii:Dy •
liiiOrtc Fllrringkln s;
Wii 1n NM

-ill'.,.
reoe.

.... .
..'",.................

PROFILE

bV lVE IW'CI NASCAR YMI lllal. llmel

_...,.Aully __ _
.-.

1995 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA

woylido ..... In 1he
Jot NtmecniiC led Nltf, tlUt ran
orr the CCiliM. Wl»f DllltnbEh Jr.
had • wretched pit atop .00 faded to

PW, PDL, P Sot.

..... Homodoy

TMWinWIIIbittiids&gt;'l....tl C'l

1M ...on, lildhln

* ...

lla'tlltldhl . . . . . . . . . .

--)ul1-111.10o

but HI . ...
. . ""' - · '-1!11
""""'""

Weekly ranklngo by NASCNilhiiWMic- Mon1l
'NMk'a ranking illn parenlheNI.
•

·lOW MilES .

1. ..., Gordon 111

e. Jo118ur1Dnl')

-

Angry-......
7. Dolo Elmlllnllf7)

roadwantor
z. Dell l2l
Michigan-ready
a. Mori&lt; Millin (3)
Mr. Con~s1oncy
•• Ricky Rudel l•l
Bod luck ailhe Glen
5. 'hrry ...._ (II

·'·'

··'

....

Coleman. multi-pieces.
Woodworking: Jamie-Drake. piece
under 12 inches; and Frank Jones,
Reedsville, piece not over 24~liiches .

-

., .........

___
_
__

l!onnr_il ..
_....,IIAIICAII'
.... o....................
.. ..., .... ,
,... ..............,,.......

-__
---...._
-··Clip
__. . . . .

e. Au.iy Wli- fill)
COining toga1iler
t . Emil inron (II

hla 001

1

]

'

. . .

-CIIpllr1io.i1Diilli

I~

..,

10. 811 (II
Four.otrolglrt lop 101

1-ln eiiCICIIMia. ftiMid

__ . 1_...
-·-.....- -........
--- ---,_.... ·-Kim
T.,_
.....

... t . dlnlai!WIIAidgrlllil
...,.., .............. Tnt..
bl I
WI ...... MlrtDocl,

ON THE SCHEDULE

--l!onnr•lldo ....
........, .... _ .. CliO . .

"""

· ·~· -(10),
llrlndjll), a...., (8).
8 CAR: No. 81 Squire 0 Fold

-- -- ·(1\-)
)

'

'(B._.,

auto, air cond,
AM/FM caaa, tilt, crul..,
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
Loaded.

V8, auto, air cond,
AMiFM can, tilt, cruise,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, Pwr

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MilES

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PS, PB, PW, PDL, P. SaiL

4 cyl, auto, air corid,
AM!FM . C811, PS, PB, 4
n- tiraa. Tahoe pkg.

lEATHER
1993 CHEVY
3/4 TON VAN 1
350 VB, auto, ·air cond,
AM/FM cau, . tiH, crul..,
PS, . PB, · PW, . PDL,
Lolldld.

CONVERSIO

......
FII.MAR.....

_

IIIIOingl.
8 LAIT RACE: Flnlohod 271h
• the Bud at the G6an
• GROWIHCI UP tN YOUR
I'AIIII.Y, WAS THERE EVER
IMt OOUIT THAT YOU

8 WHAT ATl'RAC'TED YOU TO
'Wehad IIIOd ........ gooll.

WOUUIIECOIIEAIW:E
CAR DFIIVER'I'I'Vo -yo

Cup-· I,_. 1111111 my llrs1
...... lnWinltonCup
becauH It ~ my firlt
ctlance 'fNI a team that wu

· With
my dad
..........
Rusty
and and
M...rrrtIIIOo
lng, we_. II

-IM&lt;Y

In Sll.aull, - I n

trieD 1n 1811. Thole were
tough-· l&lt;lm illilwllol
- -lng two fobl jllll"' .
keepuagolng. SCimltil••we
would haw to lllep In I'll car
whit going to race~. I won a
few reoN .00 wu fNIIy hav·
lng laml IUCCIII. •
8 WHAT DID YOU LUIIN All
A WIIIITOii CUP ROOKI!
IN1111S1,_aVIIuoille
~there. Thillla te1m
ond ... )ul1 _,~.

_,._

"-RoclngwontediO'IfiW
Into 'a Wlnlbn Cup team 111&lt;11

-'lng togothor.•

D1ft11
Lib the Wm&amp;ton, lhc B~
NASCAR This Week
. Sbooeout wiD have alead·lD race
Budweiser hu aapplaniCCf.
beaianlna next year. Prior to the
Buscb 11 NASCAR's ..official
Shootout, a 2S·lap open rJCC wiD
bur," which will hlve tbc pncti- be beJel. with Its winner IIUSfer·
cal effcd of challJiDI one of the rlna into lbe main ewnt.
Winstoo 01p Scrica'IWO 1111-lllr fiUH.ROttl Gary Becbtel il tbe
races.
lllelt WlniiOtl CUp team owner
What has been kiiOwn uthe
, . . t i o g a - - for the
Busch Oash will bcmme tbc
1998 leiiOIL
Bud Sbootout next February. 1bc
Tbe Clnoon NeiWOft wUI end
~ llllnually matches pole win- · ita ~year relationabip wilh
' ncrs from tbe previoua yw. The
Bodltel'l Diamond JUd&amp;e opera.
WinatoD May 'a all·star event, iJ doll at the cad of tbc . . , .,
a mltCh~p ~f tll: rDOit recent
Brdltel and Kim McQIII.Ikea, dte
race winners.
u·NFL quar1Ciblck wbo IIJ'VOS

11 -

ETC
1993 CHEVY S

BLAZER
4 Dr, Tahoa U, VB, auto, ·
A/C, tilt, crul.., PS, PB,
PW, PDL, AM/FM cau.

lOADED!

·-------------------------------·
I

NASCAR WhisfAoa . . - , Sertoo -

a

RKmc e~.., SManioy aiptl

I

1

a

1
I

1

u vioc prcsid_ent of Cartoon Network En1erpnses, announced the
decision last week.
NEW TRACK: International Speed·
way Corporation officially
announced plans to build a new
sUperspecdway on land near
Kansas City, Kan.
Teclonicaily, '!'hal tSC
ann!Jllnced is the establishmc.nl
of 11 six-month exclusive nesotia·
doo period wilh official a of the
Kansas Cit~, Mo., ~burb. Two
sites are bema collSidcm!.
The tr~. wh.ic:h will be larg~r

be. C?~s~nacted at a ~t of$~
m11l10n 10 bod) pub\Jc: and pn...atc
fundJ and is scheduled lo open in
late 1999 with 75,000 scats.
WANDERING DAVE: The ubiqui· ·
toUI Da\lid Otarpenticr has ~ur·
faced as the crew chief for car
owner Butch Mock and driver
Rick Mas!.
'
Charpentier is the engineer
whom Fetix Sabates hired away
from Ricky Rudd in 1995, thu.1
setting.off a lepl dispute.

than a mile 10 circwnference, wUI

u"' c:..J~SOO ..A....t;.
"'~shiP ~

~kb •
Rac:.tng

,.,..A
3'r . ,.

C~ tO VJinli """ ,.....:.~•••• ••••••••

Oo1a
_,:30
Hot Lops ·7:00
'11c111U$10.00 Rocm&amp;• -8:00
Kkil12
Au-

==
·----------------------I

I
I

$2. jll'·,,ne 14 1

FAST FAMILY FUNII

·. FREEl

2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, OH
614-992-6520

Ill

Ronold E. Dink
Cawkor c~. Kan.
DearNASCARfan: .
-NASCAR has several plans
designed to reward leading: teams
aod tboo&lt; thai compete on the
whole Wulston Cup Series. Tbcac
rewards are iocluded in the pumc
as bonuses. for Such dri11ers
and/or teams that qualify. This is
the reasOn for disparities between
money won and finishing poSition.
Driver contracts vary widely,
bui suffi&lt;:e to say that few dri·
vcn, if any, receive an the money
that they win. A negotiated pcrc:enllp is included in their oon·
tract~. f~ of which iU'e publicly
released. Drl\lers'IDcorrH!I are
based oo a salary pillS a percent·
age of winninp in mosl cases.
Dear NASCAil This Week:
I am 12 years old and I have
been following'NASCAR for
about three yean. J.h.a..,e one
question that has puzzled me (or
quite 1 while. How would
NASCAR go aboul placing two
dri\lcrs if they received lbe
EXACf pole time?
NldloiiiA.Riillr
Raddlll, Ky.
Dear NASCAR fan:
In the e\lent that two dri~~ers
post the same time, the higher
positi911 goes to the dri\ler who
recorded his time tint.

Valley
Lumber&amp;·
Supply Co:
555 Park St.
Middleport .

992-6611

H ycju•,. goto . . - o r •
oommtnt. write: NA8CAA Thle
WNk Your Tum. C/O The
O..ton Gultle, 2100 l. Frenkilnatvd.,Go11onlo, N.C. 210111

'~

'•

.
"

·IIIIIP'e - : Thlo"""' ·
beglna a ,_ 11111ure on
NASCAR This WHk. The

·-

,_-vall-

page will
DUO racing -

on the .

lfte:IRACE .

Wob'odl-:
-.lrace.com

~--. ComptehellltA

f'f1QIOrlpOrt8 ol!e, with

« :ca'lent NASCAR cover~

•=...

pDinla: A il1ile ' -

.poiliiCilily .COI\'8CIIh8n

NASCAfl's o111e1111111e.
, Wtek pOint: Ulualty a day

« eo behind 111e mom'""

_..

\

ATTENTIONADVERTISERS!!

Cal-l 992·2155
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• 1111 WD, .
lACING ON

ARitiiNO lHI GARAGI

Budweiser crowned NASCAR's King of Beers

EXPLORER Xll

•"~~~

Dear NASCAR This Week:
~ being 62 '""" of age, have
been a NASCAR fan tor as tona
u then: has been NASCAR, And
I have had aJJd do hive a ques·
tion that only you can IUlSWCr.
Please •xplain to me how a driver flniJbiilg further back in the
'pack than some will·get mote
money, and also, are all drivers
paid or do they just receive part
of the p&lt;IIK1
If any of this type of material is
in mapzines and you could leU
me whicb one, I woold be bappy

' .

1994 FORD
Cyndl King, Pomeroy
Best of Show • appllqued quiH

eo.-&lt;1, N.C.
8 RECORD: 108-. 0 wins,
t polo, 110p flwl •• top 10a,

-IObeiiMnltonCUp

- - · - . . , Fll&gt;art
• -IOWII: 11om IIIOd
-

' r

11mo1t 12 milliOn In '*""

ruluat.,_...

~. -1

VIllAGER

go1!lng
lllno.i-d!Mngllloho&lt;1

eu.att CRnd

8AGI:33

WINDS TAR

--ride

IWIIWIO _ _ ..,orilil

J. -

1995 MERCURY

WNkend. lt'a not eurprillng
..., I - 1 0 drive. Rocin1l
ill Wftl ot lie tor .... 1\M bien. tt't bltn a rafll

NASCN!Thll-

1.111

Fiuslr1118Ci

Oecen1run

Dyer, Bidwell,
Beat of Show • afghan

~-

RfA!lERS
ASK 1l!E
········ ................
, ...

lO 8Ub&amp;cribe to iL

Jo:-""

TOP 10

1995 FORD

St. Rt. 248

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1996 FORD

al .........

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VNIW.toro.com
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V8,euto, climate control, tiM, crulae, ell

..._. _..,_iii'MI

3 p.m. • Ffidly • ESPN2
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1995 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

Ridenour
Supply

~

• Wlnlbl rrw ~ 4DD O!Aif)lt•

•

Sta. WIIIIOn; 4 cyl, lutO,
llr concl, AM/FM C811,
tilt, crulla, PS, PB, PW,
PDL

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St. Rt. 248

1995 MERCURY

.

.. Willi .lltOf'dltlle. Do
1011¥ thl F'-'*'g

~up. dWQ

"'-~-). ·

Calaway dominat~s
feeder calf show

.4

panis, shin or blouse.
Sentinel News Staff
Aduli clothing: Brenda Neutzling,
~ Best of show awards for out- Pomeroy, suit or dress &lt;md jacket,
t_tanding displays wen: pn:sented to shons and blou'se; Beuy Edwards,
nilie exhibitors in the domestic· arts Rutland, dress.·
d~artmeni at the l34ih Meigs CounCrochet: Belly Edwards. baby
"ty Fair.
sweater set, toy, shawl or lap robe;
More than 210 entries were Doroihy Brown, Racine, doily, 14
.judged by a panel of judges to come inch or under: Brenda Neulzling.
up wiih lhe besi of sbow from the adult sweater.
i'&amp;Speclive areas o( exhibii. The
Afghans: Maxine Dyer. ripple;
':bests" received rosenes and $3._ Melinda Smith, Racine, granny
while 1he firsl, second and third ·square; Betty Edwards, variation of
places in each class received ribbons cr&lt;icheied and cable p(lllel; Ru!h
and premiums.
. Smilh; Racine, any shell or variation.
: Best or show awards wen1 to baby afghan, kniued afghan; Opal
Joanne Vaughan, Pomeroy, for a Dyer, Bidwell; mile a minute; Melinclhild's play ouifit; Bene Edwards for da Smith, Racine, afghan.
~ dress in the aduh cloihing; Dorolhy
Quilts; Cyndi King. Pomeroy.
Brown, Racine, for a crochcied doily applique; Palricia Jones. Shade, child
and for a dressed doll; Maxine Dyer. orcrib quilt; Debbie Brown, Rutland.
Bidwell for an .afghan; Cyndi King, paichwork. ..
J&gt;omcroy, for an aJ?pliqued quilt;
Rugs: Mary King, Long Bonom,
Sharon Lawrence, Long Boliom for loomed rug.
crewel necdlccrafi; Ru1h . Smith,
Needlecraft: Jessica Smilh,
Racine, for a cross stitch cushion: Racine. cross slitch; Sharon
Dale Hoffman; Racine, for a non- Lawrence, Long Bottom, crewel;
fired painied ceramic piece; and · Ruih Smilh, Racine. counted cross
Jamie Drake, Racine, for her exhibit slitch; Sharon Lawrence. needlein.woodworking:
point; Patty Dyer, embroidered pil. Firsl place winners in ihe various low case; Merrilee Bryanl, Long
ca1egories were as follows:
Bottom, painled pillow ca&lt;;e; Ruih
; Children's cloihing: Terri Houser, Smiih, cross Slitch cushion: Maxine
Rudand, dress and infant's wear; Dyer. crocheted cushion; Addalou
Jeanne Vaughan. play outfit, boy's Lewis, Pomeroy, preprinted cushion;
Merril.i · Bryant, crewel cushion:
Kathy Pullins, Pomeroy, paichwork
cushion.; Beuy Edwards. Sluffed animal in two classes.
Dolls: Merrilee Bryant, cloth doll,
and doll of mixed maierials; Betty
Edwards, porcelain doll; and Doroihy
Brown, dressed doll.
Holiday craft Sharon Lawrence.
handmade omamcniS; Kathy Fortney,

not

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Don Riffle Ext. 105
For More "'Information
'

f.

'f" ..

''

-

DEMIIGH GARBETI' IN£.
.Ripley, WV 26271 "
Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1-800-964-FORD.

•

..

'

RL 21 at the Rlplay-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All Your

Parts and
. Service Needs

-_-,
..

�..

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Thursday, August 14,1997

GallipoliS
6 VICinity
AlL Yont Soloolluot
10l&gt;oid In Ad-.
DE~t!f:a:ao,.m.

"" liOiol. .......
to 1o N"- Sundar

FIIICB CIIY
403 SECOID lYE.

•Computer Systems
•Repairs
•Accessories
•90 Day Same As Cash

•Software
•Par1s

1

•Free Digital Thermostat ..

MOBILE DV'!UO:.
HEATING &amp; COOLING

won
Qnte,
plc:tullld took third and won $50, and
Kelll Bailey, left, placed fourth.

· Serving SculheMiem OH &amp; YN
1~

John Krawsczyn and Rebekall
!Carr will head the salebill for rabbits
at the Meigs County Junior Fair Livestock Sale on Friday. Krawsczy;n's
market pen took grand champion and
Karr's reserve champion at rabbit
judging on Tuesday morning.
Andrea Neutzling and Alban
·Salser were named grand champion
and reserve champion showmen,
respectively. Salser's Netherland
Dwarf doe was named best of show,
and a Dutch buck shown by Pamela
Neece was named best.opposite.
Harry Rice of West Ponsmouth
was the judge for the event
Winning best Qf breed and oppo'
site, respectively, by breed class,
were: American Fuzzy Lop, Sarah
Houser, senior buck, and Rebecca
Houser, junior doe; Californian,
Sarah Houser, doe, and Sarah Houser,

buck; Checkered Giant, Billie Jo
· Welsh, junior buck, with no opposite
showing; Chinchilla, Amanda Tobin,
senior doe, n.o opposite shown;
Dutch, Pamela Neece, senior buck.
· Sarah Clifford, senior doe; French
Lop. Summer Johnson, senior doe, no
opposite shown; Himalayan. Robbie
Weddle, doe, no opposite shown;
Holland Lop, Billie Joe Welsh, junior
buc)&lt;, no opposite shown.
Hoto, Alban Salser, junior doe,
Pamela Neece, junior buck ; Jersey
Wooley, Michelle Hupp, junior doe,
and Michelle Hupp,junior doe; Mini
Lop, Bethany Cooke, senior doe,
'JYier Whitlatch, junior buck; Mini
Rex, Rebekah Karr, senior doe,
Rebekah Karr, senior buck; Netherland Dwarf, Alban Salser, senior
doe, and Joshua Rathburn, senior
buck; New Zeland, John Krawsczyn,

senior buck, John Krawsczyn, senior
doe; Palamino, Sari Putman, senior
buck, Sari Putman. senior doe: Rex,
Julie Spaun, senior buck;· Rebekah
Karr, junior doe; Satin, Rebekah
Karr, senior buck, Jenny Smallwood,
senior doe; Silver Fox, Art 'robin,
senior buck, no opposite shown; Sil·
ver Marten, Andrea Neutzling,junior
doe, Andrea Neutzling, junior buck;
and Crossbred, Andrea Neutzling,
senior doe, Nikki Roush, senior buck.
Placing for market class, in addi·
tion to Krawsczyn and Karr were, in
place order, Gary Kauff, Andrea
Neutzling, Ann Kauff, Jennifer Harris, Kerry Allen, Ryan Katiff, Counhey Kennedy, Brandon Black, An
Tobin, Stacey Ervin, Beth Kauff,
Counney Haines, Robby Smith, Jen·
ny Mayle, Susan Tobin, Ryan Stone, .
Becky Taylor, and Amanda Tobin.

JUDGING • Mary Ann Miller, Lucaavllle,
right, an eccllldltecl judge of the Ohio AeaocJ.
lltlon of Glrden Clubl, judged the mora than
500 entrlee In Monday"s flowar .trow at the

Gina Tillis of Rutland was winner
of both best of show and reserve best
of show in the amateur painting
competition held at the I 34th M~igs
County Fair.
For her eight entries in the show
of 42 pieces, Tillis won six blue ribbons and two red ribbons. Both of her
top award winning entries were in oil
.. one a landscape and the other a still
life.
Ribbons and premiums were
awarded in three places in several
classes in oils, acrylics, water colors,
and otber media in both a junior and
adult painting division.
In the junior division, the winners
Tiffany Green, Albany, first in
oils, animal study; Scou Needs,
Pomeroy, first in oils, picture from
life, and Green, second; acrylics,
landscape, Holly Williams, Pomeroy,
first, and Megan Harrison. Cheshire.
second; pen, pencil, ink or crayon,
Joyce Weddle, Ponland, first; and
Jenny Long, Pomeroy, second.
In the adult division, the winners,
listed first through third respectively,
were:
Landscapes in oil: Tillis, first: Lin·
da Well, Long Bottom, second, and
Patti Williams, Rutland, third.
Animal Study in oil: Patti
Williams, Tillis, and Bette Edwards.
Floral study in oil: Tillis.
Williams, and Anna Cleland, Rut·
land.

Open class poultry
winners named
·SHOWMANSHIP • Andrea Nautzllng and
Alba11 Salsar, second end third from right, ware
named grand and ra1erve champion rabbit
llhowmen Tueeday morning. Also plctullld, ara,

front, J111111111 Thoma• E;vana and Andraa Naut·
zllng. Beck, k, ara Fair Queen Krlstl Warner,
Quean runner up Jlillae Pooler, Rabbit Prince
Odie Karr, and Rabbit Princess Bethany Cooka.

Photo show contest winners are announced
r

•

: From the nearly 200 entries in the classes in snapshot and enlargement
amateur photography competition, sizes.
Debbie Spencer ofPom~roy captured
The winners, listed first and sec"best of show" for picture of a child, ond respecoively, in the snapshot
and Donald Vaughan, Pomeroy, took size were:
"reserve best of show" for an animal
Landscape and seascape: Roben
photo he took in Kenya, Africa.
, Bailey of Long Bottom, and Christine
~ This year's photography show is . Sautcrs of Pomeroy.
one of the biggest since the contest
Animals: Dehbie Spencer of
was started more than a decade ago.. Pomeroy, and Don Vaughan of
ltosettes and premiums of $7 and $5 Pomeroy.
for the best and reserve best of show .
Adult Ponraits: Gina Tillis of
were awarded, along with premiums Rutland. and Josephine Hill of Long
a.ld ribbons of $2 and $1 in seven Bottom.
Children's Ponraits: Don Vaughan, Denise Arnold of Pomeroy.
Nature Closeups: Don Vaughan,
Peggy Crane of Middlepon.
Spons and other sporting events:
Jo )\autz of Pomeroy, and Robert
Bailey.
Flowers and insects: .Debbie
:: Producers Livestock Market Spencer, Peggy Crane of Middlepon.
Meigs Country Flood Happen·
R.epon from Gallipolis for sales conings: Jo Kautz , and Debbie Spencer.
ducted on Wednesday, Aug. 13.
. Feeder Cattle-$2-$3 lower.
. 2()().300# St. $85-$96, Hf. $79$90, 300-400# St. $82-$92.

Gallipolis
!;vestock
results
-

st6~~fs;~t~~s:2f~i:,~;. ~~~:

$70; Hf. $60-$67.
.
(Feeder Cattle sale is the second
Wednesday of each month)
Cull Cows-$1-$21ower-wcll.
~ Well MuscledJFieshed $42-$56, .
Medium/Average $33-$37.
'fhin/Light $30-$34, Bulls $40$56.
· Back To The Farms;
• Cow/Calf Pairs $350-$600; Bred
Cows $325-$875; Baby Calves $25'$145: Goats $25-$65.
Upcoming Specials · Special
Feeder Cattle and Yearling sale,
Wednesday, Aug. 27. 12 p.m.
.For PLCA loan rates and current
rates. please contact Doug Evans ar
J:8()().641·PLCA, For free on-farm
visits please call614-446-9696..

The winners in enlargements
were:
Landscape and seascape: Vaughan, Delani Cummins of Reedsville.
Animals: Don Vaughan, Pat Wolfe
of Pomeroy.
Adult Portraits:.Cheryl King.
Children's portraits: Debbie
Spencer, Ruth Graham of Pomeroy.
Nature Closeups: Robert Bailey,
Don Vaughan. .
·
Flowers and insects: Cheryl King
and Ruth Graham.

Diamond Clusters

20%oH
Retail Prices

Pulsar Watches 20% Off

){CQf(JJSITI09{$
'

fiN_'£ J'EWU!K.§

TWO LOCATIONS
Comer 2nd at 0111pe, OIIHpolla, Oh 448-2842 ,

81 Mill St, Mlddllport, Oh. 11112-8250

The following were winners in

the Meigs County Fair Open Class
Poultry Show held Monday.
Winners were, in order by class:
Class I American peh · Donna
Neece: Asiatic pen · Elizabeth
Bearhs; English pen · Elizabeth
Bearhs, Carl Salser, Carl Salser;
Continental pen • Elizabeth Bearhs,
all three places; Any other standard
breed . Elizabeth Bearhs; class II pen
- Donna Neece; Old EngliSh game ·
Douglas. Hunter, Douglas Hunter; .
Banram pen • Douglas Hunter, Carl
Salser, Douglas Hunter; class 2 pen
. Carl Salser; Bantam, feather leg ·
Elizabeth Bearhs, Elizabeth Bearhs,
Carl Salser; geese • Carl Salser, Carl
Salser; ducks . Donna Neece, Donna Neece.
Public Notlca
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tn l1lt M- of C.lltn
Cllrtlllne Bulla
C.ll No: lt-200
NOTICE
Rovl --~ Cod e....
rn7.01 (~) .,...,
Notice 11 hereby given
that Celltn Chrtettne Buill,
Cote No. 28·200 ol 50287
Poplar St, Tuppara Plalna,
Ohio, 45783, hee applied to
the Common Pleae Court,
Probata Dlvlalon of Metga
COunty, Ohio, tor an order
to change her name to
. C.lln Chrillltna Roctd!olcl.
Bald application will be
heard In Hid Coun, Ill :30
p.m., on the 15th day ol
Sept. , 11187, 11 Melga Co.
Probata Coun.
Jamie RockhOld
The State ·ol Ohio, Melga
County.
Paraoll,ltty app~~racl before
ma Judge.Robart Buclf and
made aotamn oath IIIII the
nottca, a eopy ol which Ia
hereto attached, waa
publlahld one lime, to wit:
on the 14th day of Augull
1tll7, (baing 11 IIIII thirty
daya prtor to the hpt. day
ol 15 1tll7, the date the
application 11 to be hHrd,
· ae mentioned tn aald
notice,) In t.he Deily
Bentlnel, 1 newapaper ol
glflartl circulation In the

'

COUnty.IIOIWIId.

'

-

-

134th Melge County Fair. Sh4i was a11l1ted by , .
Suzy Carpenter, canter, Malga County contact
·chairman, and Janet Thalli, • garden club
member.
·

Remodeling

II 8 I

Jamta Rockhold
sworn to balore me and
atgnecl tn my pr-nce. thla
12th ctay of Augull 1197.
Judith 8111011, Cllrll
(8) 141 tc

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
l1lt ...... County Budget
Commllllon hal complttecl

Ita epportlonmenta ol

Picture from Life in oil, Tillis,
Williams and Cleland.
Landscape in acrylic: Joseph Hill,
Long Bottom, Tillis, and Melissa
Coleman, Long Bottom.
Animal study in acryiic: Tillis,

Po 1nt Pl emo nt

614·742·2566

11 o Court St

•

August 15· 16. Friday and 5atur·

day 8am-4prn. 3g489 S. R. 7, IDp
of Eutern hill. Cl othing, misc.
Nascar Items, elsa a special 25C

oala.
FridaY and Saturday. garage
aa~. Gam·4pm. Dennis WOlle res·
Ide nee Yellowbush Rd., Raclne.
NIKE 'shlrlt, like new tennis
shoes, jeans, jackets. sheets,
cralt su,•plies, new weed eater
and loll cl rriiC.

Pl. Pleasant
6 VICinity
Big Rurr.mage Sale-Oil 87 Leon

Baden Rd. Westerns, glassware, ·
sports cards, lois of everything.
Fri. &amp; Sat
Carport 'iale·Starting Thurs. Eve·
rything 7Ju!lt go t 87 Burdeue

----------

~ ....

. Auction
and Flea Market

80

0

Crawford's Flea Markel, Hender·
son, WV. E~o~eryday 9·8 . Crafts,
antiques, trading cards, furniture,
toys, varie!Y. 3Q.4-67S.S404.
Rick PeE.rson Auction Company,_
full time auctioneer, completa.
auction
service.
licensed166,0hit &amp; West Virginia, 304·:
773-5785 304· m-5447.
•

"'"'rnn.

Ohio

WV1023477

August 15, Qam. acro;s !rom New
Haven post cfftce.

uc. wv 011030
992-4025
Roofing, Painting
o.
Guttara
Riwersida Flea Market Opening·
ANNOUN CEMENTS
Fn, 8112tl, SR 7, 218, SOmething
Novdties
Guaranteed
For Ever JOnel Vendors. 61•·256·
Spcdal Designs
Qvallt)l
1722. 7A.M. ·7 P.M.
Peraonals
005
Wearable Advertislag
111Jttp
90 Wanted to Buy
P.O. lex 215
Frae Eatlmataa
Live Gl~ll Call Nowl 1·Y00·2550700 OXI. 2902. $3.8i pe• min. Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
33058 5I 33 P.-.y, OH
9057
Mull bo 18yro. S.v·U 819·645- ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
9
92
(614)992-4279 I L-__ _·__•;;;;M;;,;.11....... IICM.
Oiamond1, Antique Jewelry, Gok:l
.

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

"FACTORY
DmECT
PRICES''
Quality Window Systems

Rings, Pre-1930 ~ ·.~· Currency,
Sl&amp;rling, Etc. Aequ•stuons Jewalry

• M.T.S. :om Shop, 151 Second

Avenue, l~allipolis. 614-&gt;446"2842.

-

CELLULAR PHONES

Any
·
Eap.
Fre11 erlgh•al UO 1r US C-41 precess rells.

CUSTOM

•Exhaust•

See One Of Our Clerks For Details Of The Fuji
Tru Color Film Club Card
Have 6 Rolls Developed And Get The
Seventh Roll Developed FREE

Shodls
Struts • Tune·ups
Brakes •

LEWIS TIRE

'f!l · Try U1 Out For All .

WANTED: Emergency Relief Workere (Subltltutee)
needad to work with lndlvldutll with MRJDD In the
Gallla and Melge Countlel. Hours are acheduled
aa nHdad; mu.t ba able to work evening•,
wHkends and tome overnights. High School
dlploma/GED, valid drlver'l llcenH, three yaera
llcenl8d drlylng experience, good driving record
and adequate automobile coverage requlracl.
Slllary: $5.25/hr, to start . Training provided.
lnformll lttllng. Sind rtlume to: P.O. Box 604,
Jack1011, OH 45640; ATTN: Cacllla. Dtadllne for
a canll: 1/19/97. E uel 0
rtunlty Empl er.

JC
CONSTRUOION

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

New Aerlator Timers &amp; Motors

Any
Exp.

Public Notice
Public NoUca
Undlvided
Local 01'11nge ........................ l.11"
Govornmant Revenue and Autllnd ....................... I,IJI%
Undivided
.Local S.lem •••••••••:................8.81%
Government Revenue Sollllllury .................... e-28%
AAIIUIIICI fundi for 1....
Sclplo.........................8.24'lfo
The.. revenu11 are . Sutton .................:;.... .t,m
~
1
balld on groiiCIIone from
o01111ii0%
the 01110 Hlce ol Budget
~Government Fund
and Management and are County .............. $201,812.00
only 1111m1t11 of the Townlhlpe .......... 155,184.00 .
amount ol revenue · that Vlti...............;... 15!!.JM.OO
could ba raoltved by Melge
TOIIII $517,2811.00
County.
Vlllag•:
Tlla following Ia 1 Mlddteport .......... Ro,335.54
comptata brllkdown ol the """-Y ............... 150,015.80
projoctlctrevt~nue:
RICina ................... 18,13t.14
P-nt Rutland ................. 10,381.81
County ........................... 40'lfo SyracuH............... 1§.'111 71
Townahtpa ..................... 30'lfo
• . TOIIII$1156,184.00
. -...
"""'
~ownaho.....
'
V11t ..,.l
-.- ...,.....................
"
...,..
Total 100% Bedlord ...............$13,381.34
Vlllagea:
C......................... 18,815.88
Mlddtaport ................ 38.1111% Columbla...............11,483.112
Pomero~ .................. ,32.23%
Llblncin................ 15,510.48
RICine ....................... 10.40'lfo L,t8n. .....................7,805.48
Rutlancl ....................... l.tlll'lfo Ollve...................... 15,875.32
SyrecuH ................... u.m Orange .................. 12,585.42
·
Total 100'lfo Ruttand ................. 13,438.83
T-"tpa:
Selem ................... 13,438.83
Bedlord.......................8.81% Sellellury.................8,741.511
Cheller ..................... 12.17% Sclpto.................... 12,787.11
· Columbia.................... 7.40'lfo Sutton ................... 10,11!5,Q
L.tblnon....................I0.04%
TOIII $155,184.00
. LA!IIn. ..........................5.03%
Local Govlmmant
Otlve ................,.::;
.. ·:::;·--:.
..1;,;:0:;:.23%:.;;...1._ _.:,R::evenue;.:: 11 o Help Wanted

992·5535

992·2753

Porta John Rentals

Advanct. o..dllne: 1:00pm the
flay behr• th1 1d le lo run,
Sundey &amp; Monday edition·
1:OOpm f. rlday.

$2,000 REWARD!!
For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller!
Contact:
Ron L Miller

.

All Y•rd 9eln Must 81 Paid In

.1·614·742·2925

"Stop putting off those much needed
laome improvements." Call Today!

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck
Septic Tanks Installed

.

• DECKS
• ROOFING
• SIDING ·

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•REMODELING
•GARAGES

TRI-COUNTY SANITATION .

2nd Set .Free
EVERYDAY!
JYa" Dou.les
99 $ 99

Yeur Photollnishi

..amo"•'
• s\\l~rf\o
•"
Gf\fl
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

HOWARD'S

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center

,"(f\nl

10·14. Girts 1(). a, .

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp;VICinity

10 in .......... $1 0.00
12 in .......... $11.00
14 in .......... $12.00
16 in .......... $14.00
20 in .......... $16.00

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION

JoeWIIaon

t 1198 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

(614) 367·0266
1·800-950·3359

tqa.

. Arizona, lev~ a·.

DREHEL'SSAW CHAIN

GALLIPOUS, OHIO 45631

• State Route 338 • At Vine • Ffaclne, Ohio
949-2804

"Build Your Dreana"

Melanie Stethem, Pomeroy, and Hill.
Floral study in acrylic: Cheryl
Jewell, Pomeroy, and HilL
•
Picture from Life in acrylic: Tillis,
Elizabeth Bearhs,
and Hill.
Other media: Tillis

25260

• Mowere • Chlln S.we • WHdeatere • Authorlzacl

• TOP

~ : S.R. 141,

~

JOlES'

Dealer for: .
·Briggl &amp; Stratton • MTD· Murray· McCoii0111Jh •
Echo- Ryobl· Ro~r • Rally· Hydro Gear
AND OTHERSII
lrltiB• &amp; Stnttt~t: 11asW Sorvb Todo u

\ · Thur1. Fri, Inside CadrrKJS School

MilO", WV

Financing through Norwell Flnanclll

o.ttloar Powtrltulp•nt Assodatlotl: Cart111a412 &lt;yde

Tillis wins six blue ribbons at Meigs fair

were:

~

eu 448 ana

Custom Homes

Krawsczyn, Karr rabbits win top fair honors
.'
.'

-

-1-888--441·1050

742·2925

Ri 1, Box 44-C

U. . L .. ....... C:DPJIA

Part1 and SerDke!!

1391 Sallord School Rd., Gaftlpotta, OH

---

,.__..

1·1

FAMILY DENTISTRY

304-773-5822

p.m.

-to:Oo Lm. Sahlnla'f.
. •Small Engines
8115tt\. 18th, 221 oak Drive. Uke
New Wll1te Cradle With Eyalet
•Lawn Mowers
Bedding, Nursery Accesaorill,
.Chain Sawa
lawnmowers,
Snowblower,
"Clothes, Much Morel
•Weed Ester•
2 mi. ·off Rt. 7
Moving ~.ale: Sao~•day 161h, 9·3,
·
C __.; Rd · ; Couch, Chair, M1sc. 3rti House
Leading r_,. •
Bellind McDDna~•
.
.

Ba, B. Houston, D.D.S.

•Printers
.Custom Orders
•Financing
;Wa Recharge La11r Cartrldg81
•Wa Refill Ink Jet Cartrldgee
•Wa Re-lnk Dot Matrix

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty

BEST BAGGERS •
IGA bagger
ICCnCI big In the Ohio .
ASIOCiallon
"belt ~~~taaers• competition held -u, It lhe
Buy-AbStore In Akron. Roberta Young, pic·

~ MASON DENTAL CARE

GILLINUS, OHIO

a~

odttlon .

Fildey. Mondoy odltton

742·2792
011i91 pd.

Neecls
MAKERARIE...

USE WMT ADS. .:.''
AHANDY
TOOl

ROBERT BISSELL
. CO.SlRUCTION
•New Home&amp;
•Garages

360° Communications

2528.
Clean l.ate Model Cara .Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, ·
S!Tiith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Averue. Gallipolis..

POMEROY, OH.

614·992~5479

'"Remodeling . '
stop &amp; Compare ·
FREE
ESTIMATEES
'•

Antiques, top prices paid, Ri~h
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Oh10r .
Ruu Moore owner, 614·992;

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

•Comp{e!e

Antique!:. tumiture, glass, china.
coins, tcys, lamps, ~uns, 1ools,
estates . also appratsals. Osby
Martin.614-992·7441.
~

J &amp; D's 4ulo Paris. Buying sal-

'

985-4473
I

..

RooOng, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Biclwell,
· Oh 45614

(614) 388·9865

• Top • Trim • Removal'
• Stump Grinding .
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

Free Estimates

D.Geaey's

a Fair ~rlcal
'
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
,
Home Ph.
'.
' ..
614·992·3120
'
i
Don Geary, Owner

'

.

-

.

LOrtG'S
COHSTROCTIOrt

. 537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
m-2n2
8:00 a.m.-3.:30 p.m.
•RepltKemenl W"llllows

Call 614•843·5426

.

To the ambulance
staff, ER staff,
clergy, neighbors,
friends and faml·
ly:
We would like to
take this opportunity to thank
you for your
thoughtfulness of
food, prayers and
support during
the Illness and
death of our
sister, Rose Many.
The Raub Famll

··'i '.

I'

Custom Slaughter &amp; Processing
Beet, Pork &amp; Lamb
W. Va Sausage Co.
907 Fourth Street
New Haven. WV 25265
(304) 882·3194
INVESTMENT
PROPEATY FOR SALE
POMEROY
Court Street Grill Building

..

DIICirded Appllancll
&amp; Many Metlla.
81 4-9112-4025

THE MAPLES

Calllam.Spm

in Pomeroy, Ohio
Rents are computed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring wallto-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 ..:;,.

· YOUNG'S
'1;AmNTER SERVKE

. 1·614·992·7022
'

-

31t7JIMITFN
,.

.

·--

.'

Free Klttent 2 orange, 2 blacK,2
11g« olrlppod 814-&lt;146-11373.

. 1185-31172.

Metal roofing to give away. 304·
P,upples : lab, DalmaUon Mix 7
W. . . Old, 814-4&lt;46·Y334.

OHIO VAllEY
HoT PRESSURE ClEANING

5eYen week old beagktfterrier mix
j&gt;uppin, 814-885-3862.

House • Mobile Homes • ·

Small Lop Ear Raltbll To A Good

Privacy Fences • Patio

Homo only, 61H&lt;fi-g75Y.

Decks, Driveways • Farm &amp;.
Hc&amp;Y,f Equipmen1 • Remove
unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore the clean

To Good Home Only: 112 Minia·
tuta Poodle, &amp; 112 Miniature Collie, tnlide Dog, Famale, 81 ...&lt;&amp;1541.

natural look

White and gray kittens, while
adult female, 61-i -992-6030 until
9:00pm, leave meu&amp;ge il no an-

"""'· Lost and Found

60

Chos'"' a110. 814-9$5-4387.

R.L. ·

TRUCKING

Found: Poulbly A Shtep Dog
Bl•ck With No Tail, White Neck
Brown Legs, While Pawl. Green
~~.'·. ~14·245-5110 C1ll Ahar 5

DUMP TRUCK

LOST: 8/t 1 Blacll plastic bag of

clolhOI.
. ·2970.

SERVICE
· Limest!Jne • Gra~el
Dlr:t • Sand

REWARD!

30•·882·

Reward : Red Cocker Spaniel.
lost in 1at St. area, PI Pleasant
:io4-e75-593Z.

985·4422

70

Yard Sale

Chester, Ohio

-

- . . . AddltiOIII ·

•,..., GU8QM '
•Eiactrlcal &amp; Plumb~g

.•Rooting

.

. .

.- AJao concri• wot'lr' .
(FREI! ESTIMATES) .
. V.C. YOUNO Ill •
992-8215 ..

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

o.

MOBILE UNIT DRIVER • IIEIG~
COUNTY: Applicants Must HaveA High SchoOl Diploma Or EQuiv-·
alent Commercial Driver's licen;~ Wllh School But Classifi._
cation And A Clean Driving•
Record. Experiance Woridng In A
Pre-School Setting Preferred. Be(jmng Aale 01 Pav Is $6.25/IV. · ·
SUBSTITUTE BUS DRIVER ~
OALLIA /MEIGS COUNTIES:
Applicama Must Have A High .
School Diploma Or Equivalant,
Commercial Driver's Ucenae·
With School Bus Classification
And A Clean Oriwing Recon:t Ex·
pe nence Working In A Pre:.
Sct)ool Sliming Preferred. Begin·
nirrt~ Rato Of Pa,-ls SS.251Hr.
SUBSTITUTE HOME VISITOR '
MEIGS COUNTY: Applicanll .
Mus1 Have A High School Diplo·
ma. CMd DINetapment Associate
Credential Anociala Degree ln ..
Early Childhood Education Or Related Field. Eaperlenca Working

P•elomod,

H•.

For Handicapped
a. Elderly.
· Dally • Waekly •
Contract
Family Atmoephera
209 S. 4th StrHt .
Mlddlaport
. 992-5042

111 This Veer, -i Family Yard Sale:

·

Little things
ttre Worth Alot
1n

Applicants For This Potlilion UaJ .
Submit A Resume To Jeannie .
Williams, Human Resource Man•ger, Access To Human Resource Oe~o~elopmenl. P.O. Box ~
316, Gallipoij~ OH 45631 .

LOti Of Nics Things! r:rl, Sat,

151h, &amp; 181h, 9·? (Rain
· L...., Garlield Ext

C.n&lt;:elo)

3 Familf: Inside, IOullide, 81171h,
Noon-? Lois Home lnt8rior, An·
tlquea Collectablu, Grlawald
Wagner Ski. Kettles, Hounhold
11em1, Clothes, Mite. lt1m1,
Priced To Go I 1 Ulle Out Dry
Ridge Road, Off Stato Roulo 2S3

Fo• 1n1o cau 814-3711-23811 •

' ·'

PART· TIME HOME VISITOR •
MEIGS COUNTY: Apptlcanll ·
Must Have A High School OIP,ID· ··
ma Child Development AsiOCiate
Crtdential, Aasoclate Degree In'
Eany Chil&lt;tlood Ed\Jcadon
~
Ia ted Field. E•p8rience Working
In A Pre-School Setting Pre·
!erred. Beginning Rate Of Pay II
$7.00/lk

In A t&gt;.e-S.:hool Selling

olnWrlor &amp; Etterlor.

..,.lntlng

ACCESS To Human Resourc8 .
Oevetcpment IACCESS Head
Start Is Accepting Application•
F9' Tho FotkiWing Po~ lion:

Beginning Rata 01 Pay Is $8.25 J

na
Local Area Pick Up

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
·consider:

PT. PLEASANT
MOOSE LODGE
"FINE LINE BAND" ·
With Robin on the Sax
Fri. 9-1, Sat. 8:30·12:30 JiJ!J\:~JI;j

l

Dally Rd., Racine

John Wllllama, Owner
Llcenaid Electrician
~ · Work Guarentaed
Fm Eetlmates
Providing Quality
,. Realdentlal Service.
614·992-7643
·
24 Hr. Emlrgenc;y
L..---!:.(N::o:..:S:.:u;;.;n~da:;;;y:..C~a;;;;l;.;;ls~)-....::";::12/l2/lfn;~!
Service

,_':. ~===·~L:o:ca~t=io;n=~~

Nancy Pertcer Campbel
Metga County Auditor
(8) 14; 1 TC
Card of Thanka

. I

Found· beautilul brown coon dog,

614-949-3060

Bltem ...................... 4,723.42
Blllabury.................3,425.30
sctplo ...................... 4,494.34
suttqn .......Tob'i$54~

.

Free Estimate

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garag•s • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIA L and RESIDENTIAL
,
FREE ESTIMATES

RUIIIM ................... 4,723.42

.

Residealill &amp; Cnnntrdal

Llblnon .................. 5,478.12
L.etM ....................... 2,743.S1

FAMILY NJ&lt;&gt;HT EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
Buy 1·, Gel1 FREE After 4 P.M.
2 Large Pizzas w/1 iiem $12.99
DOMINO'S PIZZA

~

.

PLOYMENT
SERVICES

949·2168

Windows
•Room Additions

CORPORAL ELEORIC

Orange .................... 4,423.44

NEW-REPAIR
Guttere
Downspout&amp;
Gutter Cliianlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATE;$
...

icles. S&amp;lling parts. 304·

Wanted .Ta Buy · Used Mobile
Home. Cill 614-446·0175 or~ 675-5965

Howard L Wrftnel
ROOFING

We con W11Sh tinything

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

Oltvt ........................5,579.75

... _.

~o~et

773·5033.

•Build Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;

Bectford.................$4.886.15
Chelter •..••..•.•••..•••.• l,637.89

Columbta ................ 4,031. te

.

..

J&amp;L 51 lNG &amp;
INSULATION

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
~ Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Townllhlpe:

...

··-·
FREE ESTIMATES
· ·-·····.0· - - .

'

(614) 446-4759

HOME IMPROVEMENT

--

.
Jlo4~Shop
'
.
'
Quellty Work at

Affordable Tree Work
G II II Ohl 45831

MANLEY'S

.

vage

the Classifitrl Section!

4 Family Yonl Salt: Augull 1Olh,
Clothes, Men't Garage ltema.
Etc. Addison, Upper Roule 7, 1
lllo Nor111 0 1 - Sldo Roll
8 Family Yard 1Garogo Sale: 7
MIIH Oon 211, Loll ClolliO~ Furniture, FrM Pupp .... Misc. heml,
8114, &amp;'15. lVII, 8 A.M.·?

Tl'le Deadline For Accepting Applications Is Monday, Augusl 18,
1987 5:00 P.M . F()( Additional Information Call e14-441-3010 8:00 .

-5:00 P.M. Monday Th'" F1iday. •
Accau To Human Resource O·•
velopment Is An AAJEEO Em·
~oye..

ATTENTION
$300 ·$500 Aw...

Average Earnings

Branch Outlet Has NumeroUI
Openings. No Experience Neces;ary. Call Monday &amp; Tuesday, &amp;I

18ih, 8 8119111, 9-5.
614--446-7441
Avcn SB -$18 /Hr, No Ooor ·To •
Door Ouido: Cash, Fun &amp; RelaJI·
ing,n'-eoo- ~.0168 ind'slllrep.

�Tbui'Riy, Auguat 14, 1.-r

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• Thul'8day, Auguat14, 1997
~· ~ooP

BIUDOJ: ·

NEA Crossword Puzzle
110 Edglnl

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

==ctlll

42Meutmont

... ~-..
411up

10~

41 Groom
51 t!-1011

._..,..,

12 t!ggcllll
141Ype of

f t,RI.1 o;UPPLil S
&amp; 11\lSlOCK

Compultf Utero NHdod. Work Chorgeo l'ofloblo Sowmll, dOfl'l
own houro. •2011 IG 111011/)&gt;r 1.

a

3t111M 11101..

lao• to ll1t mil jull colt

lloul -

li4 Willi Mctton•
1sewlth H~lool
56 Blologl&lt;el
1S Hlgh-achool
cet•g~;tee

30H7S.Iffi.

Computtr Uooro NO&lt;I!Ied. Work Hawks Tauoolng Call 81&lt;4·368Own Hro., I20K To ISOI&lt; !Yr. I· IM421 A.M. ·1 UlO P.M.

· DIIEClOII!I Of' OIIIAA110NI

' .

Golllo 111[01 CAA lo INking 0
dir~10r al ()pojdono. Rosponsl·
bllo'" lnc:iodo -~ tho fi•
Cll ~.lono ilnd gront monag..
mtf'tVWrlting. Oegrte in Finance
or r•tec~ ,_ or 5 r•ra ••P*ri·
onco working required. Sond re·

f'rollltlonOl TrH Sorvlce, Srump

&amp; d!lltOUS .. .

Removal, Free Estimates! tn-

aurance, Bktwell, Ohkl. .814-388·
Will B•by-'1 t.fy Home 2• Hou11
A Otoy, 7 Ooyo A WHk. Cartiftad

11..-18Ue.

sumt Wtth 3 prafenional refer·

OfiCM 10 Goltio loletgo CAA, P.O. Wm Bobytlt In My Home. Agu 3
And Up, Ref~rences Available,
ao. 212, Chethlro, Ohio 45620. 114-3118-()0011.
Application Deadline 081221e1
. .m atr11 money without IH¥Int hoflltl. Invite your friends
OMr lot a·..,rafauional glamour

twulh cua.... on Ill•
Equi_,. 90U7S.

FINANCIAL

Experienced Hair Stylist N&amp;eded
For Buay New Salon. 614·4-41 1810, 814-256-&amp;336.
-

'i

II

Flatbed Step Deck OTR Dri~ters
Netded, COL Licensed Required,

Coli 1·000-462-52313.

•J.Ikwood Homea

11Hg Ct evy

0 .8.0 . (8 ·• 1251H!109

Business

Opportunity
!NOTICE I
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bualneu with people ~u know, and
NOT "' lind money through &lt;hi
mail until you have invesligated

1ho ollaring

304..75-183'7.

Windrow .Pick-Up, New KniYII,

1985 $ · 10 Blaz~r Tahoe 4•~
blac~. 2.8L, tilt, cruise, au1o, e~:

- - 304-YSS.5885.

Field~.

G14-388-UI7e.

4KJto ·ao

t TMEONLYI
8-L-O.W·O.U-Tl

YEP II

Hf'S OUT IN
TH' YARD Pl.AYIN'
HlDE-AN'-SEEK I I

1988 ChtY)' Conversion Van
3!50 11·8, Loaded, $5,500 Fir"''
11~ ·446·8280 Allar 5 P.M. 61f
4&lt;11-1859

$499 Down on select &gt;;ngie JOe·
Don.
Down on se1tc1 muiH·
nc:tions. 2-3 or 4 Bec;-oom rmdets avaiiable.Oakwood Homes

sm

~.o.

Pass

tro n~e . S3.450. 304 ·675·4893.

.
1991 Jeop Wrangler Sspd,

wv.304· 755-5685.

1971 Kmg mob1le home. 60X12,

nice condition, mull see to ap·

'

36 Cor fuel
37 New Zealand

condrtiO II, high mileage, $7195,
~"'OOS a ll er 6pm.

1993 Chevy lu mi na 1 Pa ssenger
Mark· Ill, TV, 68,000 Miles $7,500

'

1996 Blazer LT 4 Doors Two
Tone Pslnl Black Lealher LOaded
t21,500,014-24S-9008. ,;
~ .

1i96 Food Explorer Sporl -17,600
Miles AM/FM Cassefle And

One Owner (8141)446-2911

livlngaton'a basement water·
proofing, all blltmant repairs
Home Rusin ..• S.A.S.E. 11.00 done, fret estimates, lifetime
11.0. Only, S.P.F. lnl. P.O.
guarantH. 1Dyra an job expeti·
347351!, San Franciaco,
oroco.3047S.2145.

cp

, ;

1996 Grand c3.ravan 8 Passenger. 22,000 Miles. V·6, Aulo, Loaded, Undtr Manufaclured Warra'n-

1M1:U.

:1!.1~-~.1~. 8. 0. 614-256-12~2.

HoutokHpor For Dlllblad
11cing Columbuo Aaarnoy, U..ln.
Some Peraonal Care, Drivers U·
cenn Required. Good Wagaa,
Room IBolrd, 814-21!7.5:15&lt;.

1995 To)ota Tacoma, -4WD, pick·
up. PS, •PS, air, bedliner, Diamond
Plate too.lxur:, 5 sp., $1 2,500, 614·
992-2580.

1183 Mercur., Grand Marquis,
price negoliable, ull et•·992·

Needllldlcel Phr ' I• (II.D.D.O.IIn - -. . lltllo.

Should .. _
in
Phyolcal ..-It llohabilation.

5511, ieavo mouoga, will· oan

740

back.

1987 VZ80 Yamaha SSOO, Mahy
New Par,, (614)367-7753 .

1~ C1m11oo Z·2e wN·tupt, 350..
barrel engine, runs great, need

wlndahield
one rear axle.
,1,000
080.l 3CM·IS76·5740
ask

-Timt1WOIIouno-

blliMd.

$!00,000 - ,.

Motorcycles

. J'HE BORN WSER
I JJ~T u:Nf.
Sf\OPPING 00

,

~

Tfl.£ INT~\!

~~~_t~U~Iu~a~C~Ia:s~s:ic:W~I~th
Behind Trailer,

11

1991 Kawasaki 500 EX Ninja Mo·
11185 DodQe Aries, NHda Work torcycle 10,000 Miles, $1,500 Or

Coii(I141QI.G7A

~

1400 0.8.0. (8141388-ll532 Call Best 01,.,, 614·388-8483.
Allor 4 p.m.

,.)..r::__:~&gt;l...lL--1

1994 Htrlev Oav•dson Sportster
lOIS Ot 1:x1rasl $6,700, 614 ·25a~

;

t

AI~----~!

~::JJ:=:====::::I •

RIG NATF.
AHEI1 ~ ..

50 WHEN
Al1 I

GOtNC, TO

•.

1'\EET
'l'OLIR
SISTER?

Nonh

29

Pass

loaded,

AMEM!

lr

Auto Parts &amp;
Acces,sorles

A Nltd A Cor? No Credit. Bad
CriCNI, Bankruptcy? We Can Help
R•Estabfith Credit! Must Make
1150 Week Taka Home, 15%
Down On Ca1h Or Trade To
Guallr., For This Blnk Financing.
No C'edlt Turn Downs! 81~· 441·
Cle07.
19BO·I~CtrsFor$100111

Soil8d And Sold
locally This Month.
Trucb.

4x4'a. Etc.

1·801).522·2730, X 3901 .

1994 24' camper, air, microwave.
TV, full bath. queen bed, c:oucf:t
and chair, awning, SBSOO, 614·
98S-4418.

1994, 24' camper, air, microwave,
TV, full bath, queen bed couch
cha ir. awning, se.soo. e't4· 985:
4418.
Ver~ dean "Trotwood, 17 112", with
re!ugerator, sto'o'e, toilet, sleeps
"'· 614·992·2319.

Home
Improvements

ASTRO-ORAPH
'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Upton Utod Cart At. 62-3 MllesJ----=~=:':':,;,:.:;.::.._
South of Leon, WV. Financing
Avalla~e. 30o1·•58-1009.

720 ll'Ucks for 8ale
188D 5•10 rod, 4cyl. 5spd, rally

whHis, tinted wlndowl, 1tereo.
SHARPI $2.Ufl5. 30H711-27U7.

11111 Chtoroltt 1 ... lrUc:k, 327. ·IA;;;;,~;p:;.-;:-;;;-;;;;;;;:Aij
vtln bod, &amp; wood
- r d l lt¥1udad. good condl·

tpoad.

11-.

lon.l31e&amp;. 304-773-5305.

Klf!G Stave, inpol AIII:E,OOO

·BTIIIHR. II ln. By Put,

·lng·25,000 Noturol Got

t 11~
I For

,::•50::.:;18.:..14.:;)~.;.:_.:..105:::...._ __

Yoorllng ponr mulo jock, 1250;
2112 roor old burto jac~. 1400: 3
, _ old. jock """""'· 1400:
oil ...., gentlo ond kid btoka; two
HI"' Engtltll riding eoddloo. •1110
OIICII: 12" Red Ringer pony tod·
dlo and bridle, 1150 ooch; two

uMd bot race •trl• bike•. 125
e1ch; ont new bllnJil•t aaddll,
150: 1811 Chryalor Cordobo,
11000;814-742·1117.

exam
44 Heating
'
apparatus
46 Colo
47 Author
Gardner
48 Jacob"•

eon

50·Guldo'a high

note
52 Comparative
suffix
53 Flower
necklace

/

CELEBRITY CIPHER

j

by Luis Campos

Celetlrlty Cipher rypiOgfiWM an~

M~aled

Irom quotaloora b-, farnDI.I5 people, pas t .a nd p resen l

Eacn Iefler In the copher _stanM lOr another Tod.iy"s cltJfl · F squats U

'BCXRV

W H II I

CRSHYG

B N J

G WI
G WI

GWHG

YIAGFJT

IANGCNAHX
GDIAGCIGW

NSIJHV

ACAIGIIAGW.'

W HZ

B N J

YNAVGHAG

XHRLIJG.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There's only one corner of tho universe you can be

cerlaln of improving aod that's your own seH.' - Aldous Huxley.

'::~~~, S©tt~lA-l££trs··::::
POLLAN

__;;.;,:::.:;:.:....._;:~ 1410o4 ~y CLAY

Rearrange litters of
0 four
icrambltd words
low to form four simple woor01 .1

E NC U D

·I~13 .:;.-I.:.rl=-TI-l

~

-rN;;...;:I_T;....:,O_;Ji---11
~..'.
~ 1 1 1 I

The biggest
of installment buying. is by
time you are tired with what you
bought .. • ···it

I

wE R 0 N N e
.\L_L_L_L_s_L_s_l~
•

ITHURSDAY

1~=--:---'----­

-Bio'* Roller Motor Runs e .5o 118 010
Mile, e.t61~245-93S4

38 Ltghl--

G WI

c/msifred~

Motor Homes

Chev1 Wonza Drag Car, Jegs1er
SERVICES
Chaa1e. 5:,3 Dana, Power Glide
Transmi11lon. 377 c.i.d. Smaii':-::--------1

33 Slrelchod
dphl

42 Repa.,
tamllla•ly
43 Future altys."

•

•

Comolele lhe chuckle quoled

by tolling in the mining wordi
vou develop from step NO. 3 below.

-

·---lbul/ be (looting on o cloud with
the buys yi&gt;u'" find In the

18' Coachman, prlced to sell,
614·742-2277. ,.

.w8---4015.

31 BottiHip
removera

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

1DeS Pontiac Bonnevlile, loaded
wilh lealher 18111, llf'ld auto moon New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
roof, like new 46,000 rriiitlll wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; A Aulo
Ripley, WV. 304.· 37.2-3933 or 1:
(8141317-7060
000·273-9329.
1095 Saturn SC2, Automatic, Air,
Campers &amp;
Cruise, AUIFM Cassetta, Trunk 790
(SerioUs Inquiries Only!) 614-

Olonts

28 Furtive

transml111on
ayetem
41 English
school

After winning the first trick with
the club ace, Cronier led a trump 10
. the king and ace. East switched to his
singleton diamond queen. Declarer
won, drew trumps (West threw a
spade), and played a club to dummy's
nine and East's !0.
When East exited whh the club
king (West throwing a second spade),
rather than with another diamond,
dcdarcr fell sure that West had begun
with four diamonds. Playing on that
assumption, Cronier ruffed the cluh
king, cashed the spade ace , played a
spade to dummy's king, and ruffed
PAROON
ME' IS1&gt;1T . the spade cighr in hand.
,
THE
Now.
at
trick
II,
Nonh,
South
and
PROI'ER
..West were each down to three dia·
PI;I~E
•u.N I
monds. Cronicr led the diamond two
HELP
from her hand, endplaying West
. YOU&lt;'"
when he won with the I0. He had to
lead from the jack-seven into South's
king-nine.
·
Nietzsche's first name was
Friedrich.

pamts and supplies, also glass,
tight assembly. Oxygen and acetylene tanks filled and exchanoed,
614· 742-,2792.

Rlllase, 112.000 Col Alter 5 P.M.

27 Procious

leatllor

can vanish.

like Fu_ll line ol auto body panels,

HIJ-:!452.

.

25 Altowo

40 Meuage·

Pro 17' Bass Tracker, 25 hp,
I the extras. $3200, 614 ·992·
5181 .
5'&gt;

1885 Chryolor Cirru'

'22111-

East
34
Pass

.

new condition, 28,000 miles,
112,.000 or trade for truck, 614·

lot •

-or two

24 Kind ol moth

glimpoo
29 Sole

.. . -:- -

760

orwelk
20 Young ntmon
21 Opening
DiiMI. e.g. .

Me Enure
12Tlny-lng
13 Moo - -tung

parrot
39 Shadowy

By Phillip 'Alder
Nietzsche (what was his first
name7) led a tough life. Yet he did
write solne amusing lines, including:
"A few hours of mountain climbing
tum a rascal and a saint into two prel·
:ty siinilar creatures. Fatigue is the ·
shortest way io Equality and Fraler·
nity •• and, in the end. Libeny will·
surrender 10 Sleep."
·
To fit in with the French "Libene!
Egalite! Fratert\ite'" niotto, here is a
deal featuring wide-awake card read· ·
ing by Bcnedicte Cronier, who is one
of France's lop women players. li
occurred during the European Open
Pairs Championship.
It looks as though South must lose
·one hcan , two diamonds and one
club, doesn't it? But bridge' is so great
1
because of the way apparent lricks

1993 Chavroler lumina Van ' 7
passenger seaung, excell~~~

TRANSPORTATION

18 Ending for Ullk 23 Take down -

8 - Romoo (car)
9 Skillful
n Singer

34 Cltpture
35 Hord lfnlsh

Which way
to turn?

&lt;tc~.

(614)256 ·1210

6 UK·llmo
7 SmoiiHI

30 -Rico
32 Trlongular ull

Opening lead: • 6

soH top, chrome wheels, got¥~
cond. Price redu ced. 304·88!·
21!57.

preciare. 61&lt;4·892·3128 or 614·
1192·2203
.

'

• Q

Weol
Pass

1985 Ford Ranger 4x4 , wrec:ked.

New Holland 782 Forage Har·
Yeater Eleclrlc Controls 2 Row

Variable Wid1h Cor~ Head. 2

Nitro,WV

210

26 ObUllned

. · 27 Moll conlor
abbr.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

'
Van, Window Van

ecrt. For more information saoO

portrait parry. Sarisfaetion guar100-417-5787"' 1·000 ..21!·8363.

23 t!dglr - Poe

4 A 7
&amp; Gr11n Machlnt

•nteod. For lnformaricn call 1-

one

• A K 9 2

E.o.e.

1 Flral.,..te
( 2 -.)
2 Jungle cot
3 Sllplllkl - 4 Dtuncumbor
5 Actor Glbeon ·

• 20 llberlce, lor

South
• A9
9QJ763

Daycare Provider, Call A.nyotime,

DOWN

complololy

'f A 9 4

" 8 5
• J 10 7 3
.. 6 2

1648. 814~7- 7010 .

57 SUllr part

17~

18 Salllly

• K 10 2
.• 8 65 •
• Q9 5
Eosl
We~
• Q J 5
.106432

-·------rrsHOUD

IDQ.3o6.7111X111S.

aubj.

OI·IU7

North
• K87

Friday, Aug. 15, 1997
Even !hough you may be happily
employe&lt;f in another area, don 't dis·
•outit entrepreneurial endeavors in
lhe year ahead. You will be less
.restricted than )"'U think.
· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you're
Intolerant today. you may treat others
r,brasively. Be careful, and remember
.,hat life is ~ two· way street. .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Your emotions ruin the arranger tent before
sage advise will he heeded by others you have a chance to wo1 k with one
today, but it might he ignored by you, another.
PISCES (Feb. 20·14arch 20)
especially if lhe suggestions you
Avoid
the company of a friend who
offer relalc to resource management
likes
10
manipulate orhers S/he mighl
LIBRA(Sept23-0ct23) In your
secyoil
'as a choice prospect today haste to settle a 1esty issue. you may
move lOO quickly for your own good · make rhem look elsewhere.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Do
and create fu&lt;lher ·complications.
Slow down and lhink things through. not take anything for granted today if
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Do you're in a situation rhal requites a
not use veiled threats or pressure tac· vole. Allegiance from cenain associ·
lies in your dealings with otherS ates isn't as strong you 'might think.
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) Your
today ·· this kind will produce
work
could suffer today if you don't
. extremely undesirable results.
schedule
your assignments properly.
. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
Don't
leave
anything until the last .
21) If you lend something you cherish 10 an irresponsible individual minute.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
roday, there is a good chance you may
ge.t it back in a sorry state. Use dis· Someone with whom you are very
close does not want you probing too
cretion .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19} deeply into his/her affairs today.
Do not pur yourself in charge of oper· ' MainUlin a discreet distance and
ations today in activities with friends. • don't as~ questions.
CANCER (June 2! -July 22) Do
The majotity might have another can· ,
not
bring up an old, unresolved
didate in mind:
,
AQUARIUS (Jtin. 20-Feb. 19), domestic issue rhat irritates both you
Today you might have to deal with a and your mate. Neither will have rhe
person you dislike. Don't lei your patience to deal with iltoday. .

Overdo .. Motif· Erase · Belfry • FOREVER
I've notice that when you're busy the hours speed by,
but if you have nothing to do minules last FOREVER.

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