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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, August f4, 1996:

'

'

.

----Community calendar----!

Beat of the Bend ...

The Commuulty Calendar is
publisbed as a free service to nonprolit groups wishing to announce
meeting aod special events. 1be
calendar is not desiped to promote
sales or fund raisen of aoy type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
spedl'tc number of days.
WEDNESDAY
SALEM CENTER -- Salem
Township Trustees special meeting, 9
a.m., Wednesday at the Salem Township Fire Department.
'

will be guest speaker at Hobson
RACINE -- Delbert Teaford
Christian Fellowship Church, Mid- reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine, Satdleport, 7:30p.m. Pastor Clyde Hen- urday, 2 p.m. with evenin_g meal.
derson invites the public to attend.
POMEROY -- Burlingham ModTHURSDAY
em Woodmen, cookout, 7 p.m. SatRACINE --American Legion Post urday, at the hall. Take covered dish,
602, Racine, meeting 6:30 p.m. visitors welcome, ~oor ,prize.
Thursday at the hall. Di~r to follow
-SUNDAY
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Rev. Bob
DANVILLE-- Weekend services, Thompson will be guest speaker at
Danville Church of Christ, Saturday, Hobson Christian Fellowship
7 p.m., Sunday, I0:30a.m. and 6 p.m. Church, Middleport, 7:30 p.m. PasDenver Hill of Foster, W. Va. to tor Clyde Henderson invites the pubMIDDLEPORT -- Tad Cuclder speak.
lic to attend.

by Bob Hoeflich
Not only does "when you're cry·
ing" bring on the rain but the Meigs!
County Fair has a knack of bringing!
.
it on also.
And so it was Monday as the fair:
opened under rainy skies with light
rain continuing on and off during the
day.
However, in spite of that the fair
seemed to get off to a good start with
a lot of people about. Of course, with
so many people taking part in the various activities, it figures there should
be a lot of hand irr spite of the weath·

commercAal exhibits of all kinds, displays of toys, quilts, herbs and dried
flowers. There will be food stands
and an antique tractor pull--and more.
The expo can only be as successful as we make it so if you're asked
to participate, pitch in and do your
thing wherever it is. Now I know
being the very cooperative person
that you are, you can help with the
local project and still keep smiling.

POINT PLEASANT -- Aaron Fry ~
&lt;jescendants, annual reunion, Sunday, ~
Krodel Park, Point Plea5an~ club : '
house 2. Basket dinner at I p.m.

Ohio Lot~ery

/

Padres,.fall
to Reds 2-1
at Riverfront

Super Lotto:
1·22-27-30-39-44
Kicker:
0-0-4-3-9-4
Pick 3:
1-8-5
Pick 4:
5-1-7..()

Sports on Page 4

HARTFORD -- Homecoming, :
Father's House, Hartford, worship 10 ;.
a.m. followed tiy Sunday School, din- '
ner at 12:30 p.m., gospel sing at 2 :
p.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.
·

Partly cloudy tonight,
IOWI In the 601. Friday,
partly 1unny, high• In the

loweriiOI.

·

·

•

en tine

A111ENS -- Descendants of Abra- •
ham and Margaret Force Wi lliarns, :
reunion, Sunday, I p.m. , Buckley ·
Run Road eight miles east of Athens
off Route 50.
VoL 47, NO. 73
~.a.ctlona, 16 1'..-

35oenw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 15, 1996

A Gannett Co. Nw8p11per'

er.

Nichole Pickens, a senior of Ohio
State University, popped down on a
quick trip from Columbus to watch
the ceremonies as her sister, Noelle,
gave up her 1995 Junior Fair Queen
crown to her successor, Amy Smith.
Nichole i~ taking 15 hours of studies
at Ohio State this summer in addition
to stepping in as editor of The
Lanlern, the university's newspaper,
besides other activities in wltich she
is involved. However, being family
oriented she made the trip down 10
the fair Monday and then hurried
back to Columbus. Nichole is a communications major and will one day
make a dandy in the field. Communications, with a particular interest in
news writing, has been her ambition
. since she was a little girl.
Weather improved for Tuesday's
fair activities and the crowd thickened.
You might want to stop by the
Turner Realty Co. booth in one of the
senior fair buildings. Dottie Turner,
owner, has on display a color photograph of herself, Governor George
Voinovich and Turner's daughter,
Charmele Spalding, an employee of
the realty company.
The photo shows the governor
presenting the two with the first place
award given the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce for its display
at the Oltio State Fair this year. The
local display, which, rm told is a
dandy, won first place in its division.
Dottie and her daughter just happened to be working at the booth
when it was selected as the winner
and the award presented.
The governor was accompanied
by a photographer who took the photo and the governor sent a copy to
Dottie.
While Julia Will was laboring
away Tuesday drawing blood for
cholesterol testing being done at the
Veterans Memorial Hospital booth,
her sons were taking in the fair.
Eldest son, Joshua, proved himsejf_
quite adept at the midway games
bringing several good-sized prizes to
Julia to R!lt in safe keeping for the
aftemoon:"'Spect" there were a good
many players who didn't win.
And don't get any ideas that with
the wrap up of the Meigs County Fair
this Saturday that the fairgrounds will
become quiet for another year. No
way. The ne•t activity on tap for the
fairgrpunds will be next month on
Sept. 21 and 22 when the Town and
Country Expo '96 will be staged.
At the expo you won't even have
to pay to get in. It's all free . I understand talented Sharon Hawley of
Middleport is planning a musical program for the expo and that should be
excellent. There will be new cars and
trucks on display, antique cars and
motorcycles, antique farm equipment. horses, exotic animals, crafts,

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Meigs grand jury issues
indictments Wednesday
Five indictments on felony charges ranging from attempted rape to receiv.ing stolen proP,Crty were handed down Wednesday by a Meigs County Grand

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Whaled "Willie" Zahran of Pomeroy was indicted on charges of attempted rape and gross sexual imposition.
Zahran is accused of attempting to rape a 14-ycar-old girl on July 30.
Anempled rape is a second-degree felony punishable by two-to-cig~t years
in prison while gross sexual imposition is a fourth-degree felony pumshable
. by a six-to-18 month sentence. ·
He is being held in the Meigs County Jail.
Also indicted were:
• Ozzi~ Blair and Haddie Rockhold of Portland on charges of cultivation
of marijuana, third-degree felonies punishable by one-to-five years in.prison.
Blair is being held in the Me1gs County Ja~l .
• Brian Hunt of Racine on charges of receiving stolen property, a fourthdegree felony.
.
•
.
• John C. Albright of West Columb1a, W.Va., on charges of felontous
assault in the beating of Terry L. Ferguson of Mason, W.Va., on July 18. Felonious assault is a second-degree felony.
• Josh Dickens of Pomeroy on charges of felonious assault in the beating
of Paul Searls of Rudand on July 3.

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FAIRGROUNDS BLACKOUT - The mldWiy on the Rock·
1prlng1 Fairground• 1hut down 1181rly an hour early Wednelday
evening due to 1 tran1former outage 1181r the Rocklprlng1
Grange Building. The outage occurred around 10 p.m. when 1
tralllformer and threa-phaH bank which operata the BatH Brother• AmuHmlntl midway went down, according to Howard Ervin
Jr. of the Malg• County F1lr Board. The outage left lOme midway
rldera 1tranded on the 65-foot tarr11 wheel for a ahort time, before
worklra hanck:ranked the wheel to unload all paaaangar1 aafaly. American Electric Po- worked until 3 a.m. to correct the
problem, according to Ervin.

•

1PREFERRED SELECTION 1
I

~~~:l\ltiJ~-~~.D.~~CIVlc rt hiscfisali!Wb&lt;iu ~&lt; ;nrpaJ~be.
'-~nter.
Bob Dole's right arm I'm going to be

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SAN DIEGO (AP) - In the
proudcst moment of his long politi·
cal life, Bo~ Dole claims the Republican presidential nomination tonight
and launches a campaign against
President Clinton on the themes of
character, leadership and hefty tax
cuts.
"We're going to win this camBy TOM HUNTER
paign, we're going 10 win on Nov. 5,
Sentinel New1 StaH
1996," Dole declared after the conA new water use agreement ~d vention's·roll call of states awarded
pe~onnel , ~aue~ were the mam him the nomination in a frenzy of
topics of d;scusslon at the reg. ul~ ~- waving and confetti throwing.
meetmg of Ruti~.Yil!~e_ Co~ ·:':=)tObJI.iJIIUill!IGM~.ple.\lged

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THURSDAY, AUG. 15
VAUGHAN'S IGA DAY
(AD senior citizens, 60 iUid over, !admitted free all day)
4 p.m. Talent Show - Hill Stage
4 p.m. Kiddie Tractor P\IIUAdult Peddle Tractor Pull - Show Arena .
.S p.m. Hog Calling Contest - Show Arena
6 p.m. Cow Paddy Bingo - Show Arena
7 &amp; 9 p.m. Gospel Hannony Boys - Grandstand
7:30p.m. Open Class Horse Show
8 p.m. Horse Pull
II p.m. GateS Close

FRIDAY, AUG. 16
. WARNER HEATING &amp; COOLING
DAY
(AI clllldrea under U llllmitted free tiD noon)
7 Lm. Gates Open
9 Lm. Pet Show- Show Arena
II a.m. )unior Fair Dog Obedience Show -Show Arena
Nooo Kiddie 'I'rliCilll Pull - Show Arena
I p.m. Hunesa Racing

'

abortions. Dole ultimately decided·
against the idea.
Delegates said they hoped to hear
Dole speak tonight with passion and
compassion.
•
"He needs to reaffirm what he
stands for and be enthusiastic about
his program," said Cleo Atkins, vice
chairwoman of the Idaho delegation.
"He has 10 show how much he cares.
He needs to show his passionate
side."
" We have the enthusiasm and
we' re in better shape than the polls
. sbowo~id .nenise M~amara, an
-illiimil\t"~·fforiil&gt;llllu.. '
It will be a night of political
excilement but no suspense. Balloons
will cascade from the ceiling and rise
from the noor, with the help of heliurn. A seven-minute campaign video
will present .images of Dole's boyhood in the small town of Russell,
Kan., during the Depression, his
struggle as a disabled veteran and his
rise to power in the halls of Congress.
And once more, the man who
served 35 years in Congress _ and
longer than anyone else as Senate
Republican lead~r _ will attempt to

!.

•

,

define his national vision and generate excitement about his candidacy.
. · Dole faces a difficult road to the
White House.
Traditionally, Americans are
reluctant to evict an incumbent who
' can.boast that the nation is ·at peace,
the economy is expanding and jobs
~re growing. The electoral map and
polls showing concern about Dole's
age - he's 73 - suggest he needs a
comeback of historic proportions.
The centerpiece of Dole's campaign is an economic package
,P.r..orni~!~g.,to cut ,th~ in~ , :: . , tc
1

•

I'

11111$0

If

. -

~

capital-gains tax rate by half and
award lower and middle-income fam·
·ilies a $SOO-per-child tax credit.
The White House calls the program a budget-busting nightmare .
Republicans tried to give Dole a
strong sendoff as they delivered the
nomination Dole has sought for 16
'years.
· "Tonight we ask Bob Dole to
answer his country's call again and
stand a post for America - the first
post of the land - not for his sake,
but for ours," said Arizona Sen. John
McCain.

Council approved a n~w two-year his right hand."
'
contract extens1on for VIllage water
Battling to overcome Clinton's
service With the Leadm~ Cl'eek Con- persistent lead, the plain-spoken
servancy Dtstnct, With rates to Kansan closes the convention with a
remain at the existing rate.
. prime-time speech before the largest
I~ personnel matters, Counc1l audience of his life. The closely
Pres1dent Jud_y Denney subr~utted a guarded 40-minute address, four
letter conc~~n~ .a recent dec~slon on • months in the making, was rewritten
the voter ehg~bll1ty of counc1l mem- right up to the end,
ber Gladys_ Barker.
One major debate was whether
. ~e Me1gs County B?ard of Elec- Dole should mention his opposition
lions mdt~aled that a~r mvest1gatmg to abonion, or Clinton's veto of leg-·
a complamt on Barkers place of res- islation banning certain late-term
idence and holding a hearing, it has
concluded that Barker is no longer a
legal voting resident of Rutland Village, according to a letter drafted to
council by Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes on behalf ofthe
board.
It was indicated by Denney that
Barker plans to appeal the decisio!l.
She will remain on council during tlie
appeal process, or until an order is
issued for her removal from council
by the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
·
Rutland Flood Control Committee
memben Joe !John, J1m H1rchl1eld,
Abe Grueser, Mike Newell from the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District, and Rusty Rickard from
FEMA met with council to discuss
FEMA grant applications for possible
solutions to flooding problems.
Council approved applications for
assistance, which could be available
to village residents who are interested in receiving help.
CHAMPION HOGS - Greg Burke claimed runners-up Philip Hamm and Mellaaa Gua11;
In routine financial review by
grend champion tnlrklt hQII honor~, while Arlc Patterson; Junior Fair King Larry Wlllla; Swine
council,
following village fund
Patterson took reaerva champion market hog Prlnceu Kay Hunt; Junior Fair Quean Amy
balances were repor1ed for the end of
honor• at Wednaaday'l Junior Fair Swine Smith; and Burke.
June by Eskew: General Fund,
Show. From left are Junior Fair King and Queen
1\
$3,695.72; Civic Center, $2,370.00;
Police, $2,944.09; Law Enfon:ement,
$287.33; Street, $3,380.22; Highway,
$3,971.21 ; Water, $8,422.74; Sewer,
$6,143.14; Sewer Debt. S7,21S.6S;
Utility Deposit, $9,167,21; Replacement Fund, $19,588.37.
Greg Burke and Aric Patterson after claiming first in the senior Alyssa Hoffman, Kass Lodwick; 228
In other matters, council:
claimed
top honors in the Meigs (ages 17 and over) swine showman- to 235 pounds, Leslie Parker, Joey
• Approved the 1997 budget, with
County
Fair
4-H market hog judging ship di vision and advancing to the Richard. Jessica Justice; 237 to 243
total estimated village revenues for
during
Wednesday's
Junior Fair final round of judging. Claiming pounds, Aric Patterson, Stacie Wat·
Im set at $50,269.
Swine
Show
at
the
Junior
Fair Live- reserve champion showman honors son, Robert Harris; 244 to 250
• approved the July mayoi-'s repon .
was Kayla Gibbs, who advanced to :pounds. Elai.1e Putman, A,lyson Pat·
stock/Show
Arena.
in the amount of $3,629, with the vilthe
final round of judging after a first terson , Chad Hubbard; 2~S to 260
lage retaining $2,889 af~ payment
Burke claimed high honon in the
place
fini sh in the beginning (ages 9- .pounds, GI'CJ! Burke, Resse Wyant,
market swine compe~tion, with his
of the state share of $680.
11
)
swine
sho\ft!lanship division.
:Alicia Walker.
• approved purchase of a replace- 2SS-pound market &amp;ill ~~~g grand
Top
finishers
in
the
swine
showTqp lhRC ~ntrants in the vllrious
ment'ndar accessories for the village · champion market boa of the 1996
manship
•competition
classes
were:
market
swine-burow ciiSKs were:
police cruiser.
fair. Aric Patterson took reserve
Senior
(ages
17
and
over),
Kri§ti
;
21
0
to
22S
pounds, Stacie Watson,
,.approved minutes frotn the July champion honors with his 238-pound
Warner
and
Aric
Patterson;
Junior
James
McKay,
Jeremy Gillian; 228to
23 meeting.
. market gilL
(ages
15-16),
Lester
Parker
and
236
pounds,
Kass
Lodwick, Lori
'
• approved hiring of commis- · Rounding out the top ten in the
Nicole
White;
Intermediate
(ages
12Harris,
Chris
Barringer;
238 to 247
sioned officer Mark Proffit for a two- market hog competition were: Allison
14
),
Chad
Hubbard,
Chris
Barringer,
pounds,
Alyson
Pattenon,
Aric Patweek period, while Village Manhal Patterson. third; Kass Lodwick,
Matthew
Justice,
and
Johnathan
Hagaenon, Lester Parker; 2SO to 254
Bill Gilkey is on professional leave. fourth ; Amanda Wheeler, fifth; Greg
Present were council memben i· Burlte, sixth; Leslie Parker, seventh; gerty ; Beginner (ages 9-11 ), Kay Ia pounds, M~ry Rankin, Leslie Mer,
Johnathan Hauerty; 2SS to 260
Dick Feny, Danny Davis, Gladys I Maly Rankin, eight!~; Stacie Wai!On, Gibbs and Jennifer Goeglein.
Top three entrants in the variOIIS pounds, Greg Burke, 'Ihlvis Lodwiok,
Bubr, Judy DciiiiCy, Marie Bircb- ; ninth; IIIII Blaine Puttnan, IOth.
KriJti Wamer.dPonlero)' claimed market swine-gilt classes were: 210 Kim Mayle.
f!Cid and Vera Martin, Mayor JoAnn
grand cham11ion showman honon to 225 pounds, Amanda Wheeler,
Eads and Eakew.
'

me

Burke, Patterson net top hon~rs.
at Meigs County Fair swine show

·,

•
• j

Director Eli McCoy said the Division of Environmental Protection, after
John Musgrave, Mason County director of economic development, said
it issued the final air quality permit, received a letter from Goddard on July Parsons &amp; Whittemore is considering moving the project across the river to
19 "complaining about the length of the permitting process and the strin- Ohio.
gency of the review."
"They can get all the permits they need in eight months instead of eight
"We will continue to observe the fate of this permit and our wastewater years" in Ohio, Musgrave told WCHS-TV.
permit, both Clrrently under appeal by others, in order to make an informed
"Titis company chose West Virginia without huge economic incentives,
decision about our chances of successfully locating a world-class facility in ' without us competing with other states. We put them throu~h the environyour state," Goddard wrote.
mental wringer for eight years. it just shouldn't be that way," he said.
McCoy said he did not read the letter as meaning the company was dropMusgrave said he was unhappy that Mason County could lose the proping its plans.
ject. He noted that thecounty has 13 percent unemployment.
"I suppose someone could infer from that that they were not interested · "Here we've got one of the premiere operations in the country that wants
in pursuing the projec~ " l\1cCoy said. "But when I read it, I didn't say, 'Well, to come to our county and provide 600 permanent jobs, and we're having_
that's it, it's gone."'
'trouble with the permitting process," he said.
Opponents of the mill also called the WCHS-TV report premature.
Earlier Wednesday, the Division of Environmental Protection s~d it was
"!think we may be celebrating too soon," said Janel Foul of the Ohio researching how to comply with an order from an appeals board that overValley Environmental Coalition.
turned the water pollution permit for the mill.
,
Gov. Gaston Caperton, a major supporter of the proposal, was in Taiwan
The permit to regulate the amount of dioxin the mill could release mto
on a trade mission Wednesday and unavailable for comment. Spokeswoman the Ohio was "based on a faulty assumption," the Environmental Quahty
Jill Wilson said .the governor's office has not been told that Parsons &amp; Whit- Board said.
temore is suspending or dropping the project.
!cOntinued on Page 3)

Rutland · Exultant Dole outlines his plans
Council to Republican faithful tonight

Bi Rite Ble,ch 69¢ ga.

AUNT JANE'S

Brandon Todd Hood recently celebrated his third birthday with two
parties.
His grandmother, Kathy Hood ..
and parents, Todd and Sandy Hood
hosted a party that was attended by
his great-grandmother, Lois McElhinney, Jet{ and Trish Hood, Marshall
Wolfe, Tracy Collins and Robert
Strohl, Shelly Wolfe, Kayla Bachtel,
Trina Bachtel, Cathy Swartz and
sons, Cindy Stewart, Steve Radsvick
and Ricky, Roy and Rusty Laudermilt.
He received gifts from Clara Nell
Wolfe, Nora Rice, and Kandi Bachtel. Cake and ice cream were served.
The ~ec:ond party was given by his
grandpuents, John~ Oystal Hood.
Those attending were Tyson Lee,
'l)tler Stewut. Beny Reed, Scott and
Zach Buton, and his great-grandrnodlrt. Freda Hood. He also received
a gift from Edith B.arton. ~e and
ice cream were liCCYCd.

. CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -A New York company denies a televi·
· sion report that it is suspending plans for a $1 billion Mason County pulp
·mill because of problems with its environmental permits.
"I don't know where they would have gotten that," C. Kenneth Goddard,
vice president of Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y., told The
~ Charleston Gazette in today's editions.
"I have not made a decision, nor have I imparted such a decision to the
state," he said.
WCHS-TV of Charleston reported Wednesday that Parsons &amp; Whittemore
decided not to appeal what it believes are inadequate permits issued by the
Division of Environmental Protection.
· Citing unidentified sources, WCHS-TV said·lhe company sent a letter to
several ltigh-ranlcing state officials effectively saying the project proposed
beside the Ohio River in Apple Grove to be in limbo.
" We didn't say the mill was dead," said WCHS-TV reporter Bob Brunner, who handled the story. He said he reported "that Parsons and Whittemore told the stale department in the letter that the permits were not ade. quate and they were not going to appeal.
·
. "That puts everything in limbo, essentially leaves them dead in the water,"
Brunner said.
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320Z. JAR

Hood marks
third birthday

EASTMAN'S

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�--------------------------------------:- ·-Commentary

I'

. Thursday, August 15, 1996

Page2

-~

.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

be,...

lett,..,.

Lett•,. to the «&lt;ltor •r• welcom.. They mu•t
than 300 wotde. All
tubjact to ~lUng 1nd muet IH 1/gned 1nd lnducU eddrn1 •nd tei.,Mne nu,.,..
No unelgnH lette,. will be pubHehed. bite,. ehould be In fOOd t.1te, Ndrealnf
/.. uel, not ,.,..OMIItiH.

Assisted uicide
ethics de ate gives
no straight answers
By LAURA PULFER
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Jack Kevorkian, M.D., has made us think about suicide again.
Elizabeth Mercz of suburban Cincinnati was the 34th person to make the
trip to Michigan's Dr. Death, to the place he once called the "obitorium."
You have heard of him. I'm sure. Perhaps you have listened to him on
" Larry King Live." Maybe you saw photos of him in homemade stockades
and a coloma! costume. A lot of people think Dr. Kevorkian is an angel of
mercy. I think he looks like he's having way too much fun.
Since 1990, Kevorkian has been an oddball symbol, a punchline. He has
been acquitted five times in three trials. The death of Mercz, who suffered
from Lou Gehrig's disease, has been ruled a homicide. No charges have been
filed against the 68-year-old pathologist, who says nothing short of being
" hurned at the stake" will stop his crusade.
Jack Kevorkian wants us all to think about suicide, specifically suicides
assisted by a physician. So let's do it. Let's think about it. Even better, let's
think about it with somebody else. Somebody like Terry Perlin, for instance.
One of the country's most respected experts in medical ethics, he's a professor at Ohio's Miami University, a fellow ofthe.SCripps Gerontology Center. consultant to a dozen institutions including San Francisco General and
Cincinnati Children's hospitals.
All I ask. I told him, is for you to clear up this debate over dying. A thoroughly nice man, he did not laugh at me.
Instead, he tried to say gently that he cannot know what is the "right
thing " for every person in every circumstance. This, of course, is most
uncomfortable news. It appears that we are going to have to decide this for
ourselves.
" Ethical stuff is always borderline," he says. Yes, well, thanks but I was
looking for easy answers.
Finally he said, "I think suicide is a bad idea, almost all of the time."
He does not hide behind books and theories. He spends time with some
very sick people, people who are desperately unhappy., who ask 10 die. "We
Ita vc to pay attention to these people," he says. "It doesn't mean you have
to help them die. But you have to help them."
Maybe they are afraid of unbearable pain. That's one of the benefitS of
the debate, he says. "It's acceleratiol!-lhe emphasis on pain management."
OK, so what if pain is not in the equation'!What if somebody just thinks
his future is impossibly bleak, medically. He recounts the story of·the Georgia man. a quadriplegic, who won a court battle to refuse efforts to keep him
alive.
" He got a lot of attention during the trial. met some very nice people.
And decided to live."
Dr. Perlin says what we have to do is decide how we feel about life and
tell the people we love and trust. And in every available way, try to take
charge of our death. So no one else has to.
Some of it is paperwork. Advance directives, as they are delicately called,
arc documents that spell out your intentions in living wills and durable powers of attorney. But you have to talk to people, too.
If suicide is a bad idea "almost all the time," what about the other times?
What about legalizing euthanasia, as Kevorkian wants. Perlin says if physician-assisted suicide is lawful, it can be regulated. "Abuses are more like!y to be done under the table."
Until then, we still have to make up our own minds.
A few years ago, I read a tormenting book by newscaster Betty Rollin.
Her mother, who was dying of cancer, .asked her family to help her commit
su1cide. Betty Rollin did as her mother asked .
So would I. I know I would. I adore my mother. So much that I couldn't say no. And'she loves me so much that she would never ask.
Pulfer is a columnist for the Cincinnati Enquirer. Her commentaries
an: heard occasionally on National Public Radio aff'lliates. Write her In
can: of Gannett News Service, 1000 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Va. 22229-

0001.

Today in history
By The Aseoclated Press
Today is Thursday, August 15, the 228th day of 1996. There are 138 days
left in the year.
Today'sHighlightinH1story:

I

spending begins in earnest.
. It is said that by signing the welfare-reform bill Clinton acted for
political reasons and "took welfare

Ben Wattenberg
off the table," hurting Dole's chances.
Perhaps so. But I give Clinton great
credit for what he did. There is a little secret about presidents: They usually do what they think is best for
America. Welfare as we know it had
become a catastrophe. It was Clinton's six little words in 1992-- "end
welfare as we know it"-- that opened
up the debate. His own plan didn't
appear until 1994 and was limited.
The Republicans added fiber to the
bill, and on their third attempt, Clinton signed up. All hail speechwriters:
Rhetoric yields reality.
Will it hurt Dole? Well, it takes
something off the table for Clinton
too . How can he base a campaign on
the idea that Republicans in Congress
are "extremists," and then sign their
bill s on an issue like welfare, which

LeT ReaGa~

8a RIIIQG~N!

AccuWelllh~ forecast

Morton Kondracke

August 15. 1945, was proclaimed V-J Day by the Allies, a day after Japan
agreed to surrender unconditionally. In a recorded radio message, Emperor
Hirohito called upon his people to "bear the unbearable" and lay down their
arms.
On this date:
In 1057. Macbeth, the King of Scotland, was slain by the son of King
Duncan.
In 1769. Napoleon Bonaparte was bom on the island of Corsica.
In 1888. T.E. Lawrence, the British soldier who gained fame as
"Lawrence of Arabia," was born in Tremadoc, Wales.
In 1935, humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were killed when
By Dian Vujovlch
their airplane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska.
In 1944, during World War II. Allied forces landed in southern France.
Fans of small-cap funds who don't
In 1947. India became independent after some 200 years of British rule. mind taking on some risks now have
another place to invest their money In 1948, the Republic of Korea was proclaimed. ,
In 1969, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair opened in upstate New York. - China via Hong Kong. ..
In 197f, President Nixon announced a 90-day freeze on wages, prices
Guinness Right, a global fund
manager specializing in stocks withand rents.
In 1974, South Korean President Park Chung-hee escaped an assassina- in the Asian markets, recently added
tion attempt in which his wife was killed.
the Asian Small Cap Fund to its fund
In 1994. Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, the terrorist known as "Carlos the Jack- family. The fund. with an investment
al," was jailed in France after being captured in Sudan.
\
objective of long-term capital appreTen ye'IJ'S ago: The U.S . Senate voted,84-1'4 to approve a strengthened ciation, will invest 6S to 100 percent
package of economic sanctions against So~th Africa, including a ban on of itS assets in companies that have a
importing South African steel, textiles, uramum, I'Oal and agncultural pro- market cap from $50 million to SI
billion.
duce.
Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council, by a vote of 13-I, authorized
The markets in which this fund
Iraq to uport S 1.6 billion worth of oil in a tightly conlrolled sale to J!IY for will invest its asseli ranie from larger, more developed ones such . as
desperately needed food and med1cme. ·
One year ago: The Justice Department agreed to pay $3.1 million to white .Hon.11 Kong, Singapore, Malaysia
separatist Randy Weaver and hi_s family to settle their claims over the killing and Thailand, to the less developed,
of Weaver's wife~ son dunng a 1992 s1ege by federal agents at Ruby emerging markets of..Korea, Taiwan,
Indonesia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka,
Ridge, Idaho.
·

~ucrative

Dian Vujovich
the fund from her office in Hong
Kong. She says this fund is a replica
of an off·shore fund launched last
year that she also manages.
. Two small-cap stocks currently in ·
th1s fund's portfolio are Guangnan
and YOM Trading. Both trade on the
Hong Kong exchange. Guangnan,
Lee said, has a monopoly on food
distribution.
"It actually buys fresh food from
the south of China and sells· it in
Hong Kong.. .. Hong Kong is very
much dependent on China for food, "
said Lee, who expects to hold

between 60 and 75 stocks in the portfolio.
YGM Trading is a well-established high-end men's and women's
clothier. Their business includes producing brand-name apparel, such as
Daniel Hechter. They also hold the
Hang Ten franchise for all of Asia.
Lee puts a lot of emphasis on
researching the stocks sbe selects.
Not only do the fundamentals have to
make sense, but she tries to visit all
of the companies she intends to
invest in before she puts money into
any. One reason to visit is that
research on small-cap companies is
so scarce.
"Money, especially foreign money wh1ch has been comin&amp; into this
re~on . for years, has always been
g01ng mto the large caps," she said.
"So, the resean:h from the large bro•

f

!Gore was wearing an earpiece
through which he was being fed
· arguments and therefore won the
debate by "cheating."
Posner and others who looked at
the tapes conclude that a glint in
Gore's ear is a reftection of light on
.his skin, not an earpiece.
Posner also writes that it was a
pattern in Perot's UWSA organization -- where Verney served as exec-·
utive director -- that siate leaders
were unable to get their own mombership lists from Dallas headquarters, and, if they complained, were
stripped of their posts. Some quit,
declanng that those who remained
were "Perotbots."
For .his part, Verney says that i\'s
"miraculous" that the Reform Pany
has become so widely established in
one year and allle to run -- as Perot
is wont to say-- "a world-class campaign." But Perot's antics-- refusing
'? debate Lamm, denying him party
hsts,. and dominating the party
machinery-- make it a scary prospel:t
that his Reform Party could become
a significant force in American poi\tics.
Rather than a 21st-century ph~nomenon based on electronic town
meetings, grassroots decision-makin g. and open communication, t~
Reform Party looks to be a gussiedup version of an old-fashioneij
machine or a Latin dictatorship. It
could be something else if, in a tru,e
miracle, its members decided to
dethrone the boss.
,
(Morton Koodracke 1s o:ecud~
editor of Roll Call, the news
•
of Capitol HIU.)
paJIC!

ITol8dols1• I
' ..

IND.

~·
• IColumbus 182" I

W.VA.

Dian Vujo'rich Is tile -audlor ctl:
"Strai&amp;ht 1alk About Mafual :
Funck" and "StraJabt 'llllk About
lnYeltlq for Your RetlreiMIIl,"
bolla of whk:.. are JI'INI h d bJ l
McGraw HilL s-t ..,....... til •
her Ill care of t1a11 neWtpapa-. • '

I

Cleabelle M. McClure
Cleabelle Marie McClure, 63, of the Sunset View Nursing Home, died
Wednesday, Aug. 14, 1996 at the Joel Pomerene Memorial Hospital, Millersburg.
Born in Holmes County on Oct. I I, 1933, she was the daughter of Elma
M. Arnold McClure, who survives in Loudonville, and the late William S.
McClure.

' .

::Chance of rain to persist
·.through tonight in area
• By The Associated Press
Some widely scattered thunder. stonns could occur across Ohio
'_· tonight before a high pressure system
takes control of the state's weather for
the next few days.
The National Weather Service
· ·said temperatures on Friday will be

pleasant, in the upper 70s and low
SOs. The mercury will dip into the 50s
Friday night.
Fair weather is forecast for the
weekend and into Monday. Daytime
temperatures will be in the high 70s
and 80s.

r

~ Free/reduced lunch policies

··announced by area schools
Eastern, Meigs and Southern local
school districts recently announced
.their free ·and reduced-price lunch
, :policies for the upcoming school
; ·year.
' , School officials have adopted the
. following income eligibility scale for
: free meals (based on household size
including parents, child~en and oth' er household members): one · :$10,062; two- $13,468; three '· •$16,874; four - $20,280; five $23,686; six - $27,092; seven • .$30,498; eight - $33,904; for each
additional family member add
$3.406.
The scale for reduced-price meals
is as {QII9.'&gt;YS: one..,-, $14,319; .t wo$19,166; three:._ $24,013; four $28,860; five - $33,707; six $38,554; seven- $43,401; eight$48,248; for each additional house-

hold member add $4,847.
Children from households with
income at or below the levels shown
may be eligible for free or reducedprice meals.
Application forms are being distributed to all homes in a letter to parents or guardians. To apply for free
or reduoed-price benefits, households
should fill out the application and
return it to the school. A complete
application is requirea.
Households receiving food stamps
or ADC funds for a child must provide the child's name, the food stamp
or ADC case number, and signature
of an adult household member on the
applicatio~ .

Households · will be notified of
approval or denial of benefits. Applications are also available in each
school's principal's office.

.- -

··squads answer -13 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 13
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included:
•
POMEROY
. • 4:S9 p.m., Main Street, Keith
·.Day, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
7:08 p.m., Riverside Apartments,
'Connie Scholderer, VMH;
· ·. 9:14 p.m., North Fourth Avenue,
; Thomas Lavender, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
10:48 p.m., State Route 143, Char. !ene Chaney, Holzer Medical Center;
· II :44 p.m., Second Street, Herman Redman, PVH.
RACINE
· · 2:37 a.m., Carleton Street, Karen
· Newman, PVH;
. ' 4:10a.m., Rose Hill Road, Helen
Davis, treated at the scene;
: · 8:15 a.m., Apple Grove-Dorcas
· Road. Carl Rowan, VMH.
'
RUTLAND
. 3:57 a.m .• Carpenter Hill Road,
Mayford Whaley, HMC;
.
· 6: 13 p.m .. Crouser Road, Elsie
Crouser, VMH;
;· 7:01 p.m., Stonewood Apartments, Darra Yahy'a, VMH.
SYRACUSE
'
I 2:48 j&gt;.m., volunteer fire depart..

'

The Daily Sentinel ·
(USPS 213-9601
l'llbtllhed ... , ollanoott, Moncla)' _ . . ,
Mlly, It I Colin St, l'l&gt;lllaoy. Ohio, by tile
0111o Valley Publililina eon-y.-o- eo.,
...,_, Ohio 4'769. I'll. 992-2 t 36. S«ood
poXJOI ........,., Ollio.

dloo-

kerage houses in the region is mo~
focused on large cap stocks ...•.
Because there is a lack of informatioi
on smaller companies, the peopl~
who buy these companies have to
know them ,.,ell."
·
The_pros say there is plenty of
potent.lal for finding rewardin.JI
tnvestmg opportunities in Asia
specifically China. They point ou;
that econom1c growth in that part of
the world has been well above that of:
countries like the United Siates, '
Japan and the Europeans.
:

Inez ''Toots" Garrison, 71, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Thursday, Aug. IS,
1996 10 the Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center.
Born April22, 1925 in Mason County, W.Va., daughter of the late Hershel and Laura Jane Mitchell Barnette, she was a clerk for the Heck's Department Stores.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Jim Belcher; and by two
brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are two son&amp;, James (Gina) Belcher of Macon, Ga., and Charles
(Carol) Belcher of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; a daughter, Sharon (Bill) Klingler of Curtice, Ohio; three grandchildren; two brothers, Chester Barnette of
Illinois, and Roland Barnette of Charleston, W.Va.; and four sisters, Hope
Rice, Lucille Schwartz and Opal Casto, all of Point Pleasant, and Beulah
Lewis of Southside, W.Va.
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Steven l. Carter officiating. Burial will be in
Beech Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
Friday.

IMansfield l1s• I•

..

Asian small-caps have risk
India and Pakistan.
Nerissa Lee is pottfolio manager
of the fund. She:s been in the financial arena for 20 years and manages

Inez 'Toots' Garrison

•

Now, the values issues, particuends a major federal entitlement that
larly
the ones that are directly relathas been in the deck for 60 years?
ed
to
government
policies, have been
(The same Pew poll 'shows an evenRepublican
strong
suits over the
- 47 percent to 46 percent -- Demal&gt;,
years:
welfare,
crime,
education and
crat-Republican split on a generic
affirmative
action.
ballot for Congress.)
Clinton has been masterful in his
Moreover, the high-profile results
attempt
to neutralize these issues.
of the political'struggle over welfare
Suppose
welfare is indeed off the
opens up another constellation of
table.
Both
parties claim they are
issues, clearly described in the three·
super-tough
on
crime. But they are
part series in USA Today entitled
split
on
preferential
affirmative
"The Values Vote."
action:
Clinton
says
mend
it; Dole
Consider these two sets of results
says
end
it.
And
they
differ
deeply
on
from the USA Today/CNN/Gallup
·educational
policy,
which
may
be
this
survey:
Q: Which concerns you more, the year's sleeper issue.
Dole's econQmic plan was much
nation's moral problems or the
more than that, although the emphanation's economic problems?
sis has been on his ideas for a tax cut
-- 53 percent said moral.
-- 38 percent said economic.
and faster economic growth. It
Q: Have government policies gen- included a ringing call for "opportuerally strengthened or generally nity scholarships" the new phrase for
weakened Americans' moral values "school vouchers." Dole says this
in the last 25 years?
will allow parents "to choose the best
-- 48 percent said weakened.
school for their child... the low-- 7 percent said strengthened.
income parent has just as much tight
-- 39 percent said they had no to have the best education for his
effect.
child as anyone in this room .... " This
may well be Dole's signature issue.
involving a demonstration project in
about 15 states, with S12-to-15 billion dollars in federal funds . This is
big money from the party that is
preaching less federal government.
With a Republican Congress it could
become law.
Thllt's a big reason why the election is so important. If the Republi.cans win they will control government pretty much from top to bottom
-- White House, Congress, State
Houses, probably state legislatures, a
sympathetic Supreme Court •• for the
first time in 70 years. We could find
out if big conservative ideas can use.· fully help shape the destiny of global democracy in the 2 I st Century.
It's also important if Clinton wins.
The serious conservative challenge
has led him .to declare that "the era
of big government is over" and to go
further on his quest to "reinvent government." They're talking big stuff
out there. It's not boring.
· Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise lnstl·
lute, is the author of a new book,
"Values Matter Most," and Is the
host of the weekly public televlskm
,program, "Think Tank."

percent this. year, he said, the party
w1ll be ehgtble for the maxtmum m
federal funds received by Republicans and Democrats, which this year
1s up to $17 million for primary cand1dates, $12 miUion to run a conventton, and $62 m1lhon for the general.
And 1f, as seems hkely, the party
polls between 5 and 25 percent, tt
gets federal ai&lt;.l proporti~nal to its
percentage of the vo!e. Verney says
that Perot has "generously" inquired
of the Federal Election Commission
whether he could give .his $30 million
thls year .'0 Lamm, should he wm the
nommat1on, but t.hat the FE~
dechned to reply, cla1mmg tt doesn t
respond to hypothetical questions.
. At the moment, the only poll test·
mg Lamm's voter appeal- - done by
Yankelov1ch for CNN and Time -shows the former Colorado governor
polhng only 5 percent to 55 percent
for Pres1dcnt Clmton and 35 percent
for Bob Dole.
. The same poll showed Perot getII~~ only 9, percent, evtdence that the
bdhona1re s appeal has fallen dramattcally. Lamm, after all, 1s practtcally unknown to the ~lectorate, and
Perot has nearly made himself a
house~old presence. ·
. He ~ an unwelcome one, at that,
wuh a 58 percent dtsapproval, 29 percent approval ratmg nchly deser~ed
after h1s authontartan, consp1ratonal,
and stmple-mmded performances of
the past four ye~.s. . .
..
A new book, Cntzen Perot, by
Gerald . Posner adds to the lore.
Rev1ewmg vtdeotapes of the NAFfA
d~bate m wh1ch he was drubbed by
VICe Pres1dent AI Gore, Posner
wntes, Perot became convinced that

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MICH.

Despite talk, Reform Party's boss is Ross
By Morton Kondracke
Party, entirely consistent with his
Diane Carson of Simsbury, Conn., management of the United We Stand
got a phone call from the Reform Par- America organization that preceded
ty the other day, urging her to support it, makes a mockery of his claims that
Ross Perot for president -· evidence
that, contrary to official claims, Perot is making polilical use of party vot·
er lists so far denied to his opponent, •
DickLamm.
Reform Party national chairman .the country would somehow be more
Russell Verney, who's an employee democratic if he were elected presiof Ross Perot and sometimes sounds dent.
like his echo, says the Perot campaign
He won't be elected president, of
is doing no electioneering with the • course, but in an interview, Verney
party's official list of 1.3 million suggested that he and Perot have big
members, but has merely sent out a plans for keeping the Reform Party in
postcard urging that they watch the business after the 1996 election and
party's convention this Sunday on making it a force to be reckoned with
TV.
in U.S. politics.
But Carson, who happens to be the
Verney said that getting the
mother of a worker in the Lamm Reform Party on the ballot in 50
campaign, says that the caller identi- states this year is a prelude to orgafied himself as being from the nizing the party down to the precinct
Reform Party in Dallas, . inquired level in order to affect future local,
whether she had received her presi- state and federal elections.
dential ballot, knew when she 'd '
Moreover, he said, the party will
signed up with the party through its endorse either the Republican or the
&amp;00 number, and told her, "When Democratic congressional candidate
you get your ballot, I hope you 'II ' lte in every contested race this year
for Ross Perot."
except in the handful of cases where
Lamm and his campaign manag- a Refonn Party candidate is on the
er, Tom D'Amore, say that they' d be ballot, giving the party new power in
running phone banks, too -- if the the I05th Congress.
lamm campaign could "get hold of
And. Verney said, not only will the
the party list. But they claim they've party get $30 million in federal
been thwarted at every tum.
matching money this year if Perot is
The issue of the voter lists is evi- its presidential nominee, based on his
dence that while Perot claims the 1992 performance, but if the party
American political system should receives more than 5 percent of the
belong to "the people, the owners of vote in November, it becomes eligithe country," rather than .to special ble for federal matching money in
interests, he thinks that the Reform 2000 to run primaries, a convention
Party belongs to him.
and a general election campaign.
Perot's boss rule in the Refonn
If the Reform candidate wins 25

•

•''\

......

. ..... ~ •• , ...

~

.. :'' d .... ~ . ...

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

_ The D'ally Sentinel • Page 3

Friday, Aug. 16

The Daily Sentinel Coming: Close, critical contest
By Ben Wattenberg
Impressions of San Diego:
It is said that this presidential race
is boring. Not to me. It will probably
be close. It will probably be more
important than any in the last generation, cettainly since 1980.
The poll released last week by the
highly reputable Pew Research Center showed that voters were not very
interested in the campaign. That will
change with the conventions in
August and, the campaigns in the fall.
The survey also showed Clinton
leading Dole by 10 percentage points.
This is in stark contrast to the regnant
judgment that Dole is trailing by " I~
to 20 points" (also based on reputable
polling). lf the 10-point number is in
the ballpark, and Dole gets a nonnal
"bounce" from the GOP convention
(a 10-point average for a non-incumbent since 1976), we could have a
horse race by mid-August. If Clinton
then gets the average incumbent
bounce (6 points), we'd have a single-digit race by Labor Day, when
serious campaigning and Republican

I

OHIO Weather

Thursday, August 15, 1996

'Estabfisfid in 1948

'

ment and squad to SR 124, motor
vehicle accident, Michelle Ward,
refused treatment;
9:53 p.m., Water Street, Dylan
Matson, VMH.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......... -......... -.. 42'4Akzo ...................................... &amp;&amp;\
Ashl1nd 011 ........................... 38~
ATaT .............. ;,.................... 54~
Bank One .............................. 37'1.
Bob Evan• ..............................14
Borg-Warner •• ~(.................... 37\
Champion Ind ....................... 18'1.
Charming Shopa ....................6'4
City Holding .......................... 22'4
Federal Mogul .......................17'1.
Gannett .................................69l.
Goodyear ..............................45'o
K-m•n ................................... 10'•
Lands End .............................22'o
UmHed ............................ ~ ... 19\
Ohio Vlltey Bank.............~ •••33l.
One Valtey ... _..,. ..................... 35'1.
Peoples Baneorp.................21 '!.
Prem Flnl............................... 13'1.
Rockwell ...............................54..
Royel Dutch/Shell .............. 15D'!.
Shoney'a .................................e'l.
Star Bank .............................. 75l.
Wendy's ................................ 18'.1
Worthlngton ............................ 20

POI'IMAB'I'IR: Sad id*a1 eomctiODI lo
11w Dolly Scndnct, I I I Coun St. Pomeroy,

COURAGe UNDER
FIRE"
AND

SUBSCJUPTION IIA11IS

lrContor•--

Ooo - ................................................_$2.00
Ooo ...., ............ _............................ $1.70
Ooo v...... .. .................................... SIOI.IJJ

Juanita Parker Norman, 66, Pomeroy, died Monday, Aug . 12, 1996 at the
Home Hospital in lafayette, Ind.
Born July 17, 1930 in Thacker, W.Va., daughter of the late John Wesley
and Sarah Ann Mahaffey Parker, she was retired from the U.S. government
as a naval publications employee, and was a member of the Full Gospel Lighthouse Church in Pomeroy.
•
Survivors include her husband, the Rev. Harold Norman of Pomeroy; three
sons, John Norman of Pomeroy, and Larry J. Norman and Gary Norman, both
of Philadelphia, Pa.; a daughter, Diana Buck of Philadelphia; 14 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; four brothers, Thomas Bill Parker of Red
Jacket, W.Va., Donald Edward Parker of Columbus, Ind., and Earnest Park·
er and Roland Parker, both of York, Pa.
She was also preceded in death by four brothers, Maxwell Bugene, John
Jr., Charles Everett and James Burman Norman; and by four sisters, Frances.
Turner, Elizabeth Harris, Gladys McKee and Rebecca Parker.
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the Chambers Funeral Home, Matewan, W.Va., with the Rev. Roger Hunter of Pomeroy officiating. Burial wiD
follow in Red Jacket. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Friday.

Meigs announcements
Student orientation
Flood commiltee .
Orientation for all incoming sev·
The Rutland Volunteer Flood
enth graders and all new eighth Committee will present the results 9f
graders attending Mei&amp;i Local Junior · its project development process work
High this fall will be held Tuesday for FEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant
from 6-7:30 p.m. in the junior high Program at a meeting to be held Monschool auditorium. A light picnic will day at at the Rutland Civic Center. A
follow and parents and family mem- FEMA rep~esentative will be p~esent
bers are encouraged to attend.
and residents are asked to come prepared to ask questions conceminp
Volleyball meetlna
their area of interest.
A meeting will be held Monday,
I0 a.m. for Meigs Junior High School Wilson reunion
students wanting to play volleyball.
Descendants of John and Maggie
For more information, call John Wilson will have a reunion Aug. 3I
Amott at 992-3058.
at the Syracuse Park. Dinner will be
at noon. ·

Freshman open houae

Meigs Hi&amp;h School will have an
open houso for all freshman and new
students attending this fall on Monday, 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria. Students and their parents are
urged to attend.

Homecoming plulletl
Homecoming will be .held at the
Hazel Church on Dewitts Run Road,
Long Bottom, Sunday with the service at 9:30 a.m . There will be a
potluck dinner at noon.

Meeting canceled
There will be no meeting of the
Eagles Auxiliary on Aug. 20.

Sing planned
Hillside Baptist Church will have
a hymn sing on the Pomeroy parking
lot, Friday, Sept. 6, 7 p.m. Anyone
who . would like to participate is
asked to call 992-6768 or 992-5705.

Meeting time changed
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District's board meeting has been
changed from Thursday to Aug. 22 at
5 p.m.

-·-·-

FRI., SAT., SUN.
DENZEL WASHINGTON,
IIEORYAN IN

Ololo 4.!769.

Juanita Parker Norman

Stock repons 1re th• 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adveat
of Gallipolis.

- . 11w Atoocilled ......_ ood tile Ohio

""·---·

Also sur.Yiving are by two brothers, Gerald "Bud" McClure of
Loudonville, and Hershel "Sonny" McClure of Pomeroy; six sisters, Mrs. Percy (Opal) Lehr of Wooster, Mrs . James (Eleanor) Duncan of Lakeville, Jane
Shaffer, Judy Ferguson and Mrs. David (Sandra) Stake, all of Loudonville,
and Charlotte Mowrer of Wooster.
She was also preceded in death by a sister, Bonnie.
Graveside services will be I I a.m. Friday in the Hopewell Cemetery, with
Hershel McClure officiating. The Johnston-Schlabach Funeral Home in
Shreve is handling arrangements. Donatons may be made to a charity in the
deceased's memory.

KEANU REEVES,
IIOAQAN FREEMAN

Let' us create
a memorial
Ju•t for yoal

IN

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12

Glllil County - I I y Ylld
1.1111n . .

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
The weather warmed up for Dreamers' 4-H Club.
If for no other reason you might
Wednesday's edition of the Meigs
want
to visit the Meigs Fair at least
County Fair. Tall cold drinks and fans
one
day
to see who's there. Donna
were popular items for the day.
Boyd
says
she and her late father
It was greal to see Mason Counused
to
call
the
fair the Meigs County's Bill Ward helping out at the
ty
Reunion
since
it serves as such a
Churehes of Christ booth at the fair
spot
for
people
who
don't see each
on Tuesday.
other
that
often
to
renew
old acquainBill, many of you know, is the saxtances.
And
it's
true
why
not give
ophone player with The Classics, a
it
a
try
?
group which plays a lot of the golden oldies. In the past few months Bill
I hope Brenda Johnson and Janet
has had terrible health problems and
Krider
don't think their efforts go
has gone through major, major head
unnotioed
and unappreciated .
SU!Jery. Despite that, he was on hand
The
two
have maintained beautiat the Meigs Fair and let me say that
ful
planters
at
several locations in the
the positive attitude he reflects is
Ponland
community
duripg the sumunbelievable in view of all he has
mer
months.
They're
beautiful and
gone !hrough healthwi$0 over the
many, many people appreciate your
years.
Why do I have a feeling that pos- efforts, Brenda and Janet. Where
. itive attitude is a big reason Bill is would the world be if it weren't for
people like you?
still with us? Amazing.
Also on hand at the Churches of
The Big Bend Cloggers taught and
Christ booth was AI Hartson, pastor
of the Middleport church, who com- directed by Vivian May were in
mented that the church down there is Columbus Saturday, where they
gettina all primed to launch a new danced in two locations at the Ohio
building program on Fifth Avenue. State Fair. The group wore some pretAl's thumbnail description of the ty "glitzy" costumes and were well
upcoming project made it sound like received, I'm told . That's a talented,
something we'll all be looking for- lively and ambitious group.
ward to.
I don't know how many of you
1 hope you're getting a chance to
look over the displays and e.hibits at remember George Baumgardner.
He is the son of Mary Virginia
the Meigs Fair. The junior fair building with all of its displays really Baumgardner, formerly of Pomeroy,
points up the talent of our youngsters. and now living in Columbus. George
They have nice things covering a is a Pomeroy High School graduate.
At any rate, George recently sufvariety of ability and skills in those
fered
a stroke and relatives hope that
numerous exhibits. I observed with
interest also thai some of the young lyou will remember him with a card
people's groups have used extra light- of encouragement. The address is
ing in the interior of their booths to University Hospital, I 1100 Euclid .
make the items included more visible . Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 44106 NSA.
Good idea. The building is a bit dark.
Gosh! It's real difficult to get anyBy the way, you might have
noticed a photo of Brad Bavlor. Rur- . thing on the tube but the Republican
larid, with his rabbit, "Cadbury," in Convention. This, too, ihall pass. but
Monday's Sentinel. The information soon following is ihe Democratic
listed him in the incorrect 4-H Club. one. But even with all that hoopla,
He is a member of the Leading Creek • we're gonna keep smiling.

Pulp mill firm denies
(Continued from Page 1)
The division, WhiCh ISSued the permit. "assumed that there was a zero
background concentration of dioxin in the Ohio River. This assumption was
not supported by evidence." the board said.
Dioxin, a carcinogen, is a by-product of the bleaching process Parsons &amp;
Whittemore plans to use. Studies also indicate that dioxin is harmful to human

immune 8itci reproductive aysthms.

"· · ' · ' ·

Problems arise in trying to regulate dioxin because there is evidence that
it is toxic to humans even in amounts too small to be measured.
Division spokesman Brian Farkas said the agency was unable to say how
long it will take to ~econs!der the permit.
"We will look at the Environmental Quality Board's order and go back
· to the Office of Water Resources and see if there is a way to comply with
whal the board has asked us to do," Farkas said.
The water pollution permit was appealed by labor and environmental
groups that oppose the project.
The board said the division failed to· dispute evidence of high dioxin levels presented by the Affiliated Construction Trades Foundation. the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and environmental activist Monty Fowler.
Perry McDaniel, a lawyer for the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition,
called the board's decision a victory.
.
"We have staled all along there was too much dioxin in the Ohio ,Rivcr
and the DEP can't allow any more," he said.

PREUMINARY NOTICE OF POSSIBLE IMPACTS TO
IMPORTANT LAND RESOURCES
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Aural Development
(USDA, AD) is considering an application for financial
assistance from Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District. The
assistance will be used to increase their water ~ystems
capacity which is needed to meet current and future
demands. The proposed project includes expansion of
water treatment plant from 1.2 to 2.4 Million gallons per day.
Construction of a 500,000 gallon water storage tank,
installation of 21 ,500 feet of 12" water transmission main
from the treatment plant to the proposed storage tank and
installation of 375 feet of raw water line from wellfield to
plant.
If implemented, the raw water main and transmission
main installation will directly impact .33 acre of floodplain
and .1 0 acre of wetland. In addition, the project could
Indirectly impact .25 acre of wetland and eight acres of
Important farmland located in growth corridor along the
transmission main.
The propose of this notice is to inform the public of these
possible results and to request comments concerning (1)
Impacts of raw water main location within the Ohio· Aiver
ftoodplain and transmission main crossing of the floodplain
of an unnamed tributary to Guyan Creek as well as location
of wetland and important farmland within growth corridor of
the transmission main·, (2) alternative sites ot actions that
would avoid these floodplain, wetland and important
farmland impacts and (3) method that could be used to
reduce these impacts.
Our draft environmental assessment of the proposed
project is available for review by contacting:
John B Rauch
·
USDA, ~ural Development
346 Muskingum Drive
Marietta, OH 45750
Wort Number 1-614·373·7113
Home Number 1-614·989·2327
Any person Interested In commenting on the propelled
project may do so by sending such comments within 30
days following the date of this publication to:
Unda K. Page, State Director
USDA, Rural Development

200 N. High Street, Room 507
Columbus, OH 432~ 5

·.

•

----------------------------------------------~~------~-- ---

�'... .

The Dailv Sentinel
·

'

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Comeback victories were a hallmark
of the California Angels' 1995 season. This year, all the last-place
Angels can celebrate are daily
achievements.
One of them came Wednesday
night, when they erased an early 60 deficit and beat the defending AL
champion Cleveland Indians 8-7.
"That was just a tremendous
comeback," said Randy Velarde,
who had four hits, including a
tiebrealting two-run double. "They
got a six-run lead, but it was early in
the ballgame ·and a lot of things can
happen."
·
The Angels started their come-

Reds beat Padres 2-1 in 13 innings
ally."
It was a game that had hitters on
edge for the first eight innings, then
the fans fretting in the last five.
Mark Ponugal, just 3-8 career
against San Diego, held the Padres to
three singles over eight innings. He
had thrown only 83 pitches when
Knight decided to pinch hit for him
in the eighth with Cincinnati up 1-0.
"Ponugal's elbow has been tender for a long time." Knight said.
"He's pitched through it. It wasn't a
hard decision for me."
"It's old age," Portugal said.
"It's been sore for awhile."
Jeff Brantley relieved in the ninth
and gave up a walk to Steve Finley,
a single to Gwynn and a sacrifice fly
to Ken Caminiti. The Padres then
loaded the bases with one ou~ but
Jeff Shaw retired Brian Johnson on
a fly to shallow left and &lt;Howard
threw Gwynn out at the plate to complete a double play.
. Gwynn, who was reinstated from
the disabled list Aug. 6 after recovering from a frayed Achilles' tendon,
was out by six feet.
"They're saying,that Tony's not
running well, so I thought we had a
good shot," Howard said.
The Reds then had a shot to end
it, loading the bases with two outs in
the bottom of the ninth. But Trevor

Hoffman got Reggie Sanders to fly
The only other big ovation in
out and send it extra innings.
extra innings was fot Gwynn's sinSan Diego had the next ~oring gle in the II th inning for his 2,SOOth
threat - in the 13th. Craig Shipley hit. The line drive landed in left field,
singled and Fernando Valenzuela the same area where Rose's recordreached on an infield single when he setting 4,192nd hit landed in 198S in
tried to sacrifice and no one covered a game against the Padres.
first base. Shipley took third on FinThe crowd, which was down to
ley's fly out, bringing up Gwynn.
about 20,000 at that point, gave
Lee Smith (3-2) relieved and got Gwynn an ovation as the ball was
Gwynn to ground into a double play . retrieved.
on .the first pitch.
"The respect they showed me
"This is a tou~h one to swallow
tonight was really appreciated and
for me," Gwynn said. "Lee did will stick with you bej:ause now you
exactly what he wanted to do lind got start to get the numbers you can look
the double play. You've got to show back on and say, 'I got 2,000 here,
patience in those situations. I just 2,500 here,"' Gw'ynn said.
didn 't have it. "
Notes: Padres infielder Luis
The Reds finally ended it when
Lopez will begin a 20-day rehabiliBret Boone opened the 13th with a tation assignment Saturday with
single off Bergman, advanced on a Triple-A Las Vegas. Lopez has
sacrifice and scored on Howard's missed 13 games on the disabled list
single between Gwynn and the right·
with a strained left shoulder.... Reds
field line.
owner Marge Schou £at in the front
Howard, a part-time player, had row for the team picture Wednesday
three of the Reds' eight hits and with her dog, Schouzie 02. Schou is
improved his average with runners in
suspended from day-to-day operascoring wsition to .356.
tions, but is allowed on the field and
"I j~;t need playing time,"
in the front office.... Eric Davis has
Howard said. " It's hard to come by a nine-game hitting streak, matching
around here with so many people the longest this season by a Red. ...
needing at-bats. When I go in there,
Kevin Mitchell was ejected for arguI don't want them second-guessing ing a called third strike with umpire
themselves about putting me in ·a Larry Poncino in the I Oth.
run-producing situation."

Cards pound L.A.
while -Astros win
and ·Braves lose

Casto stands among
Winners of KVD races

the players' assDciation. But to say
we' re factionalized is not true."
Kasten and MacPhail, who both
declined comment, were said to be
the most vocal opponents of the proposed tradeoff: Players would get
service time if they waive all litiga·
tion filed against owners following
the strike and release owners from
any damages the teams may have
caused.
Reinsdorf, who also declined
comment, was said to be opposed to
granting ·service time but not actively campaigning against it.
"There's always debate on all
issues," Selig said. " We're going to
focus on the issues the next day or
two and try to work through it."
Selig said the debate was not as
strong as the fight over revenue sharing, which finally was resolved in
March by a 26-1-1 vote. Selig has
been masterful at putting together
unanimous or near-unanimous coalitions to back him, and ultimately he
will make a decision on what position the teams take.
Management's new revenue sharing plan does not start until a new
collective bargaining agreement
takes effect.

Scoreboard
Colorado .............. 61 58
S..,-. Fniilciaco ....... SO 68

w ..
New York ........... .70 49

Torooco ................ 54 67
Denoil ...... ........ 42 78

fEI.

li.ll

,,_'i

7~

.488

12

.446
.:\50

17

Cmtrol DIY!olon
CLEVELAND .......72 49 . ~5
Chicago .................67 ~ . !'I~
Minnesota .............60 ~ - ~
KansusCity ........... j7 65 .467
Milwaukce ............. !'IS 66 ..4!'1!'1

PiiUburah 4, San Francisco )
St . louis 6, Los Angela I
Houlton 8, Montrenl 3

New York 8. Chicago S

CINCINNATI2. San Diegn I {1:\)

28~

Today's games
San Diego (Tewksbury 9·71 at
CINCINNATI(Burllll8-ll),I2: J5p.m.
Atlan111 (Wade 3-0) at Philadelphia

!'I
ll 'h
ISh
17

......... 61 lS .m

. Oakland .............. 60 62

.. ....55 65

1
9~

.458

1:\''!

Pittsburah &lt;Miceli 2-8). 7 : J~ p.m.
Los Anaeles (Nomo 11 -9) at St
Loois CMorcan 4-5), 8:05p.m.

Friday's games
Hou5ton (Hampton 9· 7) 111 Chicago
(Culillo !'I· D). 3:20p.m.
Co~ (RerlOso ()..f!} at CINCIN·
NA11 (Salkeld 6- . ), 7:J!'i p.m.
San Francisco (V;nlandingh01m 6-l.l) Ill Philadelphia (Williamt 4.10), 7::\!'i

New Yorkt~. Chicago I
Baltimore A. Milwoukee S
MinndOII IJ. Oakland 7
Boston 8. Toronto 6

Tcw -~- Detroit4

p.m.

KanJ;u City .\ . Seatt iC I
Cnlifornia K. CLEVELAND 7

Piusburgh (Neagle 12·5) at Atlanta
{Smoltzl9-6), 7:40p.m.
Florida (Rapp ~-12) at St . Louis
(Aody Be"" 12·8). 8.0l p.m.
New York {Wilaon 4-8 or Penon 2·:\)
vs. San Dieao {V.nz.ucla 9- 7) nt Mon·
terrey, Mcaico, 8:M p.m.
Montreal (Urtlina 7-3) 01 Los Angeles
(As11M:io6-1). 10:0!1 p.m.

Tonight's game
Baltimore (Mullina 14-8) at OD.klnnd
(A.dil~s 1· 1). 10:0!'1 p.m.

Friday's games

Transactions

LB Chuck Bullou&amp;h.

JACKSONViLLE JAGUARS: Plii&lt;CCI
S Monty Grow (1ft injured reserve . Re ·
leased OT David Bui~y .

WARNER
Come See Us At The Meigs County Fair
August 12th- 17th
,
• Inquire About Our Mobile Home Special
• Special Financing
• Payments As Low As $50 A Month
• FREE Estimates

NL '""I I I HoutiOII Asttoo RHP
Danny Darwin ror si1 aames and fined
him an undiscbed amounc fot Rlr1in&amp; a
benc:h·clwin,J bnwl wilh the Monlrul
Eapot on Aua. 12. Suspended Hous1oa
OF Job Canaelosi tnd Montreal OF
Hoary Rodri-. RHP Jell Judeo aad OF
Moi1a Atou four pnws tpieoe aad fined
litem u undisclosed amouM. Fined Mo.
u.al l 8 David Sepi for joinlaa doe allet·

Euttm Divllion

I.
46

Moahal . .. .. ....... 66
New Vorl&lt; ............. !7
Florida .................. !6
l'liiWelplllo ........... 49

lJ
6!

fEI.
.61)

Iii

.067

1
17\

.m

64 .467
72 -~

CallniHouiiOO .................6! !6 .!l7
s• t.oui• ...... - ........ 64 !6 .m
aNCINNATI ....... !8 !I ..!00
Clli&lt;lp .................$9 60

61

.496
.• 13~

57 .m
57 .51!

~n

\

Cllion.

A Few Of Our Dome Standard Features
• Andcnen llb Windows
....... . • Stanley Doon1
• 2JI6 ExlC(ior Walls. 16 ln. On Center
• Mlrillole CabiiiCIS
• I fool Ccilina
• 2aiOFIOOr loint,t61n. On Center
•
• 52 Oallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpeta
1
• Delta Fouc:ets
COWGill ASSUlf.D. --~
• Mutet T·loc:k Vinyl Sldln1 With Ufetlme Wllmltll}'

= t&gt;IAL

NL games...

.

~

. ,. ...

.

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

back . in the bottom of the secon-d
with five hits against Jack McDowell (I 0-7), including two-run singles
by rookie George Arias and Jim
Edmonds. One of the runs was
unearned, the result of a passed ball
by four-time Gold Glove winner
Tony Pena.
"We were just pretty much concerned with chipping away, but we
chipped away with a big four-run
inning that gave us a reasonable ·
chance to come back," Velarde said.
McDowell was visibly upset
when manager Mike Hargrove
yanked him the third inning after he
gave up a single, a double, an RBI
groundout by J.T. Snow and a walk.

"

we're improving," he said.
The only camp negative, he said,
was not being able .to schedule practices with other teams, a new trend
in the NFL. He said attempts to line
up workouts with the New York Jets
and Lions around the exhibition
games were unsuccessful.
"I think those type of pra~tices
really help you, and we 'II continue
to work on them in the future," he
said. "By and large the uncenainty
of where we'd be at hurt us as much
as anything. Scrimmaging the (Dallas) Cowboys twice made up for part
of that."
49ers: Wide receiver Jerry Rice
and defensive back Merton Hanks
are expected to sign new contracts.
but backup quarterback Elvis Grbac
could be gone after this season.
49ers president Carmen Policy
said Wednesday the likelihood of
keeping· Grbac when his contract
expires at the end of this season is
"rem ate" because he could be an
NFL starter elsewhere and make
considerably more money.
Grbac, in his fourth year. earns
$375,000 a year.
Policy expects to complete Rice's
revised contract soon after Sunday's
pre-season game at Jacksonville.
Rice makes $2.1 million a year but
will get a substantial raise "guaran-

(Continued from Page 4)

eighth and finished for his second
save.
.
Martins 2, Rockies 1
' ' AI Miaini,'Kevin Brown (11-10)
·tied a career high with I0 strikeouts
and Joe Orsulak broke a 1-ltie in the
eighth with a homer off Curtis
Leskanic (7-4). It was Orsulak's sec: _
ond of the year and first since April
20.
Brown allowed three hits, walked
nan~ and hit one in eight innings.
Colorado has lost nine straight at
Joe Robbie Stadium.
AslnJS 8, Expos 3
At M'ontreal, Shane Reynolds
( 15-6) became the third 15-game
winner this season, and Jeff Bagwell
and Sean Berry drove in two runs
each.
Reynolds, who added two hits,
• allowed eight hits in seven inning~.
giving up a three-run homer to Mot·
ses Alou.
Rhea( Cormier (7-8) lasted just 3
2/3 innings ...,... his shonest outing in
25 starts this season- allowing four
runs and seven hits.
The teams completed their threegame series in peace following Monday's nasty brawl and Tuesday's
,·11 areup.
Mets 8, Cubs 5
At New York, Bobby Jones ( 10-

7) carried a shutout into the eighth
inning before tiring and Carlos Baerga drove in three runs as the Mets
took an 8-0 lead.
Jones ( 10-7), who left his pre vious start because of a strdined right
shoulder, scattered eight hits in sev_en-plus innings, leaving after Mark
Grac~ ·s three-run homer.
Chicago closed to S-5 in the
ninth before stopper John Franco tinished for his 26th save with the help
of shonstop Rey Ordonez. Ordonez
made a diving stop up the middle
and scooped the ball with his glove
to second base, starting a double
play.
Jim Bullinger (S-10) was tagged
for six runs and seven hits in 2 2/3
innings.
Pbillles 4, Braves 1
At Philadelphia, David West (I·
I) and three relievers scattered nine
hits as Philadelphia stopped a fivegame losing skid.
West, making only his third start
of the season since coming off the
disabled list Aug. 3, allowed one run
and six hits innings in his first win
since beating Pittsburgh on July 6,
1995. Ricky Bottalico got three outs
for his 24th save.
Tom Glavine (12-7) allowed four
runs and seven hits in six innings.

JJ

Warner Heating and Cooling Recomends Electric Heat Pumps

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

The 1993 Cy Young winner departed without waiting for reliever Kerit
Mercker and refused to make eye
contact with Hargrove on the mound
or in the dugout.
"I don'tthink we take them any
differently than any other team, but
it's just a little something extra
when you play the defending American League champs," Snow said.
"And coming from behind like that
shows me a lot. We 're not giving up
and we're not just going througfi the
motions."
Mercker gave up a game-tying
RBI single to his only batter, Jorge
Fabregas, and Velarde hit a two-out
double off the center field fence

Greg Gohr (S-8) earned his first
against Julian Tavarez to drive in two
more and put the Angels ahead 8-6. win for California, allowing a run
The six-run deficit was the largest and eight hits in four innings after
the Angel s have erased in a victory relieving substitute starter Jason
since July 15 at Texas, when they fell . Grimsley. Grimsley filled in for
behind 7-0 against Bobby Witt and Mark Langston, who missed his
the Rangers before pulling out a 10- tum because of irritation in his right
7 win.
knee.
Omar Viz.quel scored in the sixth
It also was the largest lead the
Indians have squandered in a loss. when Manny Ramirez beat the relay
They blew a 7-2 advantage at Min- from shortstop Gary DiSarcina on a
nesota on April 17 and lost 9-8 in a potential inning-ending double-play
grounder to Gohr. The run pulled
game started by Charles Nagy.
"It's tough to lose one like Cleveland within 8-7, but third basetonight, because we usually don't man Arias made a diving stop in the
lose when we score six runs," Har- hole on Mark Carreon and threw him
grove said. "But when you play 162 out, stranding the tying run at secgames, you're going to run into ond.
things like that."
Troy Percival pitched a 1-2-3

ninth for his 29th save after Pep Harris, a former Indians prospect mak·
ing his major league debut, escaped
a sixth-inning threat and allowed one
hit over 2 113 innings .
" I was a little nervous, but you
can't be nervous up here," said Hlirris, who fanned Kenny 1.-ofton,
Albert Belle and Carreon in a span
of seven batters. "It isn't too often
you strike out Albert Belle and Kenny Lofton in the same game, so
that'll be a great story for my kids."
The Indians scored their first six
runs in the second inning on two-run
doubles by Jeremy Bumitz and Pena
aganst Grimsley and RBI si ngles
from Jim Thome and Albert Belle
against Gohr.

.

teeing his -presence on the team and
his retirement as a 49er."
Hanks, a six-year veteran and AllPro last season, is considered one af
the best free safeties in the league.
He makes $700,000 this year, and
Policy hopes to sign him to a longterm pact.
Bengals: Guard Kevin Sargent
was placed on injured reserve with
a herniated disc in his neck, which
was successfully operated on Thesday.
Sargent, a fifth-year player, will
likely be out for the season. The 6foot-6, 285-pound offensive lineman
started I 5 games each of the past two
seasons.
Sargent, 27, complained of numbness and stiffness after an Aug. 3
exhibition game against Indianapolis. He later reported numbness and
tingling down his left arm when he
bent his head forward.
Panthers: A brief burst of opti·
mism faded Wednesday as running
back Tshimanga Biakabutuka's holdout stretched into its 26th day.
When the Panthers reopened
negotiations with Biakabutuka on
Tuesday, team president Mike
McCormack expressed hope that
the latest attempt to sign their top
draft choice from Michigan would
lead to a quick resolution.
But by Wednesday afternoon,
McCormack didn't seem nearly as
upbeat. ·
"There's nothing new to repon,

nothing to talk about," he said.
Biakabutuka rejected a sevenyear, $12.5-million contract that

includes a signing bonus of more
than $5 million. He was expected to
help a team that finished 20th in

rushing in the 30-team NFL last seaso~.

THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 17TH ONLY!
SALE EXCLUDES FOOTBALL AND VOLLEYBALL SHOES

·sAVE $5 ON SHOES UP TO $50.001
·sAVE $10 ON SHOES fROM $50.00 TO $100.001
-·sAVE $15 ON SHOES OVER $1 00.00!

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SOCKS-CAPS

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SCHOOLBAGS

THE
219 N. SECOND AVE.

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992-5627

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LAZY DAYS OF -AUGUST·
Complete Heating &amp; Cooling System

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ENTERPRISE • NAGLE

Oar Prices An The Lowelt In Tbe Ara.

Come Visit Us and Enjoy The Fair!

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COLORAOO ROCKIES: A&lt;livoled
OF Larry Wllbr aad UIP Mit. Mfrom llle 15-doy diflbled list Dplooed
OF Aoael Echevllrio ood RHP GIIVII

•
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy IS·
uthorized to accept your new
1·p~~c1ript:ion card. You only pay the CoIf you have any qu~tions, see your
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
Ron. We welcome your

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Model Home vn1nc Houn 1:00 ·5:00p.m.
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Heat Pimps, treat, cool and savel

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.

(Holzer Health Connection-_HMO)

• Armstronasotarian.Roornte

ATLANTA BRAVES: Recalled OF
Alldruw Jooa from Richmond of the I•
ltnlllioaal lnaue. Optiolled LH, Brad

4\
121
IJ

~

Community Health Plan' of
Ohio Members

NolloooiLHaw

-Atlanla ............... 7l
»:

.'

NOTICE

Heating and CooJins, Inc.
St. Rt. 7 Chester, Ohio

Baseball

NLstandings

w.......6!s.o DieiO ..............

Stokca, DL Troy Bailey and Janxs Baron.
WR Deamond Belloe and Mi&lt;:hael London, TE Dan Latore, LB Mart Byers. PK
Gmt Adair llnd P David WinJ.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: W•ived

AmtrkuU...,.
CAUFORNIA ANGELS: Opoiooed
LHP Jim Abbonto VMCOUver of the Pacific Coot i..£1&amp;1£. Rtc.111IIN RHP ~p
H.llllris from Vancouvtr.
SEAITLE MARINERS: Acquired
OF Mart Whilfll from tbe Atlanta Braves
ror RHP R - Blanco.
TEXA.S RANOERS : Oeai1nated
RHP Gil Hacdia for ulianment.

{Naly 12-4), 7:C~ p.m.
California (SprinsrrJ at Boston (Waker~eld 10-10). 7 : ~ p.m
Sentlle (Hitchcock 11 ·!'1) :w New YOJk
!Key 9-9). 1J5 p.m.
Toronto (Guzman 9-8) at Minnesota
(Radke 8-IJ). 8 :0~ p.m.
·
KansoiCity (Haney Y- 10) at Tuas
(Burten 1-0), 8:l1 p.m.

..... Aafda ...........6J

DuviJ and Ryan Ori11oa, OL Barry

·

1 and Eldoed 2·2), 2. 6 p.m.
Detroit (l1n 6- 10) al CLEVELA ND

~ ..............Sl

Baaketball
National hlkdball Auodltton
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES ' S;gocd
F Roy Roam to .o. thnle- yeAr contract

FootbaU

Notional FOOiboll ~DETROIT LIONS: Waived RB E4

•,

(Hunon 1-0), 7 :0~ p.m.

Wednesday's scores

OH : Bal11more (Ericbon 6-2 and
Kri11da 2-4) a~ OU.Iand (Wudin 7-~ and
JOOn.s 6-11 ). 2. E\~ p.m.
OH Chicago (Tapani 11·6 otnd Alvara 14-6) at Milw:wkce (McDonald f().

L.eaa!ie.

FLORIDA MARLJNS : Announced
1hc retirement of OF Andre Dowson, effective at the end of the 1996ason.
PITISBURGH PlRA'ffiS: Op&lt;ioned
C Angel Encarnocion ro CalgAry of the
Pacific Coast l..eague.

slump with style in the fifth . Aftet
Willie McGee reached on a fielding
error, Gantlaunched his 23rd into the
upper deck in left off Jsmael Valdes
(II -7) to put the Cardinals ahead 3'
I.
" It was a bigger blow mentally
than physically," Gant said of his
shot.
"I'll tell you the truth, I don'tcarc
if it hit the top of the fence and
bounced over."
Luis Alicea drove in two runs and
Brian Jordan had two hits for the
Cardinals, who sltlycd within onehalf game of first-place Houston in
the NL Central.
Elsewhere in the Nationnl
League, it was: Pittsburgh 4, San
Francisco 3; Florida 2, Colorado I;
Houston 8, Montrcal3; New York 8,
Chicago S; and . Philadelphia 4,
.Atlanta I.
Pintes 4, Giants 3
At Pittsburgh, rookie left-hander
Chris Peters supported his first
major-league win with his first hit
and first RBI. Peters, winless in four
prior starts with a 7.83 ERA, allowed
six hits over 7 113 innings.
The Pirates had lost five straight
and nine of I0.
Shawn Estes (2-3) gave up four
runs and nine hits in six innings.
John Bricks struck out Glenallen Hill
and pinch-hitter Rick Wilkins with
the potential-tying run on third in the
(See NL Q!l Page 5)

I :O:'i p.m.
Colorado (WriJhl 3·1) at Florida

San Fnuw:ik!o (0. Fel'rulndn :1i-12) at

.492

Als1on 10 Colorado Sprins• of the Pacific
Coaa~

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
Having managed sluggers Jose
Canseco, Mark McGwire and Greg
Luzinski, Tony La Russa knows a
long home run when he sees one.
After watching Ron Gant nearly
hit a ball into Illinois last night, La
Russa calculated the distance in his
own mind.
Somehow, he came up way short.
Gant hit a shot into the upper
reaches of St. Louis' Busch Stadium
- measured at 442 feet - to snap
~fifth-inning tie that sent the Cardi·
nals to a 6-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
When told how far Gant's shot
had traveled, LaRussa demanded a
recount.
"Whoever measures that thing is
going to have to readjust the meter,"
La Russa said. "If that ball's 442,
somebody's not adding the extra 40
feet."
Gant's homer helped make a winner of rookie Alan Benes, who
pitched a five-hitter for his first win
since July 19.
Benes· performance quieted a
Dodgers team that had averaged seven runs in its previous five games.
"Last night we had five hits in
one inning," Dodgers manager Bill
Russell said after Los Angeles' fourgame winning streak came to an end.
"No one really hit the ball well."
Gant broke out of a 2-for-17

(Schilling~-~~

WettemDinAon
.. ......... 69 ~2 . ~70

California...

IJ

Philadelphia 4, Atlnntn I

.~

~

Boston ................ 59 62

s...ote

.424

Wednesday's scores

Ium

Te•u ..

th

AoriW12 . Colorado I

Eutem DivWon

Ballimore ............. 62

--~IJ

By The Alloclated Preas
The Houston Oilers completed
what is expected to be their last training camp in San Antonio on Wednesday, and coach Jeff Fisher could not
have been more pleased.
"If this was a game, I'd say we're
going into halftime with a touchdown lead," he said of the progress
made in his second training camp at
Trinity University and the team's
sixth.
The Oilers are expected to train in
Tennessee next summer, possibly in
Johnson City, wi.th their eventual
move to Nashville.
"We wanted to improve, stay
healthy, have a good tempo and
maintain our focus. For the most part
we had that," Fisher said. ·
Houston begins single practices
on Monday at its training facility
1\fter playing the Detroit Lions on
Friday night in the Astrodome.
"Camp is not over, we're just
changing the scenery," Fisher said
with 2 112 weeks before the Sept. I
season opener with Kansas City.
"We'll go into one-a-days and continue to install things. The intensity
will go up because we're working
with less people."
Fisher said the roster cut to 60
players by Thesday will be much
tougher than last year. "That shows

HE'S OUT! - Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubenaee (right) brings
the tag down on the head of San Diego's Tony Gwynn to foil Gwynn's
attempt to score In the ninth Inning of Wednesday night's National
League game In Cincinnati, where the Reds won 2·1 In 131nnlngs.
(AP)

Service time issue stalls negotiations
ing to convince owners to support days is not unusual. In fact, it is routhe intended deal, management tine. As you near finality on a deal,
sources said. Owners both for and a lot of work is necessary on both
against trading service time were sides to rellfh closure."
said io be 1lobbying acting commisAccording the several sources, all
sioner Bud Selig to support their speaking on the condition they not be
side.
identified, seven team heads have
"There's been some speculation said they are against giving the
that the labor negotiations have . union service time for the 75 regustalled. There's no truth to that," lar-season days wiped out by the
Levine said in a statement. "What is strike: Stan Kasten (Atlanta), Andy
going on now and over the last few MacPhail (Chicago Cubs). Jerry
Reinsdorf (Chicago White Sox), H.
Wayne Huizenga (Florida), David
Glass (Kansas City), Carl Pohlad
(Minnesota) and Claude Brochu
(Montreal).
If they are prepared to vote
against an agreement, it would take
Kevin Robinson of Winfield, WV, won the pro division at Kanawha ValIcy Dtagway in Southside, WV, Saturday. Robinson took the win in his '77 only one more vote to block a deal.
Unlike the past, when a simple
Monza, followed by second-place finisher Sheldon Gerlach of New Haven
majority
was required, 21 of 28
('90 Spitzer) and semi-finalist John Donnegan of Scott Depot, WV ('65
teams
are
needed to approve a colCorvette).
lective
bargaining
agreement.
In the modified division, Jeff Fultias of St. Albans, WV, drove his '64
Levine.
according
to several
Nova to victory. Glen Watterson, Jr., of Point Pleasant took second place
sources,
remained
confident
the deal
in his '74 Duster, followed by Wayne Adkins of Syracuse, OH, in his '72
Demon.
will be completed by the end of next
· Jim Saunders of Eleanor, WV, won the street division in his '68 GTX. week.
"Reports of a fallout or split are
Wayne Pearson of Henderson, WV, was the runner-up, driving a Monte Carincorrect,"
Selig said, adding that
lo. The semi-finalists included Jill Wade of Culloden, WV, and Chuck Roach
of Proctorville, OH.
just because clubs were. against serIn the junior division, Mason's Ciji Casto won fiTS! place, followed by
vice time didn't mean they would
Marisa Snodgrass of Patriot, OH, and Jonathan Clay of West Hamlin, WV.
block a deal. "These clubs have
strong opinions on the issues, as dOes

,.

Oilers relocate training camp; 49ers seeking to retain Hanks

In other NL action,

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - While
baseball players and owners still
aren 'I back at the bargaining table.
owners are doing plenty of talking
among themselves.
At least seven teams apparently
are against giving service time to
players, keeping baseball's labor .
talks on hold Wednesday.
Management negotiator Randy
Levine worked the phones, attempt·

..

In NFL pre-season activity,

On baseball's labor scene,

ALstandings

.

Angels eras~ early deficit to notch 8-7 win over Indians

Page4
Thursday, August 15, 1~

Because of Howard's clutch single,

Baseball

.. '

Thursday, August 15, 1996

Sports
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tony
Gwynn has another ball for his collection and a couple of laments to go
with it.
Gwynn got career hit 2,500 and a
nice ovation Wednesday night in the
same stadium where Pete Rose set
baseball's hit· record. He also got
thrown out at the plate in the ninth
inning and later hit into a double play
that ended a San Diego rally.
The two failures gave the Cincinnati Reds a chance to pull ·out a 2-1
victory over the Padres on Thomas
Howard's run-scoring single in the
13th inning.
"To me, that kind of supersedes
everything else," Gwynn said. "It's
the time of year when winning
games is the most imponant thing."
The Reds blew several chances
and escaped several Padres threats
before rallying in the 13th against
Sean Bergman (5-8) to extend their
season-long success against San
Diego.
The Reds are 7• I against San
Diego this season and have won their
last five against the Padres. This-one
topped them all for drama.
"We've shown tremendous
resilience all year long," manager
Ray Knight said. "Tonight was a
breakthrough game for us emotion-

......

•

'

'
'

- --- -· --

�I
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

· :Thursday, August 15, 1996

Thursday, August 15, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7
'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MUFFLER SHOP

992-2196

NOTiiJNG RUNS . . .
UKEADEERE' . .

Parts
See Steve Meadows

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992·2196

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See Jeff Clark

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Starting at '79.95

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
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New Summ81 Hours Mon. - Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

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~~~

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s

992·2825

•

DAVE'S
Small Engine Repair

St. Rt. 7• Pomeroy, Oh

992-3422
GRAND CHAMPION SHOWMAN - Krlatl Warner, Pomeroy,
claimed grand champion swine showmanship honors at Wedneaday'a Junior Fair Swine Show. Pictured with Warner are Junior
Fair Queen Amy Smith and King Larry 'Willis, and Swine Princess
Hunt.

GRAND CHAMPION BARROW - Alyaon Patteraon claimed
grand champion market barrow honors at Wednaaday'l Junior
Fair Swine Show. From left . . Junior Fair Queen Amy Smith and
King Larry Wlllla, Swine Princes• Kay Hunt, and Patterson.

RESERVE CHAMPION BARROW - Kess Lodwick claimed ·
reserve champion market glh honors at Wednesday's Junior Fair
Swine Sh-. From left are Junior Fair King Larry Willis, Swine
PrinceSI Kay Hunt, Lodwick, and Junior Fair Queen Amy Smith.

•

II\ ti••l• ,.,....

Profile

-IN-••"''-··
Allllol•te Loweat
Prleet~o•NI­
Deu Your Tum,
My commentJ are concerning
Jock Moncll'aletter About the

Weekty ranklngs by NASCAR Thll Week writer Monte Ounon_Last
week's ranking is in parentheaea.

1. Dolo Elmhlr&lt;l1(3)

13. -by Lll&gt;on•l13)

No one else coutd have done It

Uttle brotho&lt; did watt. too
14. Jimmy'- (12)
Hey; tt was a road course

2. Tony Lobon.. (1)
Wl'en·a 1lle laSt 111110 tl1il guy ,._ I
wrong move?
A qulollciHth ot !he Glen
4. Dolo J1....,(4)

~- atltle 1111

What happened to M•. Road RICOf'l

6. Emlo Lrvon It)
Hard ttmes at the Glen

7. Slo&lt;tlng Ml&lt;tln (7)

21 .

9.-lllflln(l)
Third's tough 10 swallOw afler three

GRAND CHAMPION GILT- Greg Burke claimed grand champion market gilt honor11 al Wednesday's Junior Fair Swine Show.
From left are Junior Fair Queen Amy Smith, Burke, Swine
Princess
Hunt, and Junior Fair King
Willis.

RESERVE CHAMPION GILT- Arlc Patterson claimed reserve
champion market gilt honora at Wednnday'a Junior Fair Swine
Show. From left ara Junior Fair Queen Amy Smith, Patteraon,
Swine PrlncaSI Kay Hunt, and Junior Fair King Larry Willie.

straight w'ns
10.C*HBodlnl(17)

GOAT SHOWMANSHIP- Daniell Grueaer and Brian Hupp were
.named grand and reaerve chaniplon showman at the Meigs Coun- :
ty Junior Fair Goat Show Wednesday. From left are Fair King Lar- ry Willis, Grueaer, Fair Queen Amy Smith and Hupp.
'

From the outhouse to the penthouae
11. Johnny lleftoon Jr.(10)
Nothing dlahooorable at&gt;Ot.415tn

12. Kon Sch..-(11)
Bad luck come knocking egan

1996 FOOTBALL PREVIEW

Dato

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28TH

7rh &amp; Plum St.
Parlcer•burg, WV

FEATURING

304-424-5337

•

fienr 1M pro/•N~ .,.,/

• MEIGS MAUUDERS
• SOUTHERN TORNADOES
• EASTERN EAGLES
• WAHAMA WHITE' FALCONS
• OHIO STATE
• OHIO UNIVERSITY
• CINCINNATI
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MORE

CHAMPION GOATS- Ben Crane and Patty
Nally had the grand and reser:ve champion
goats, respactlvely, in the Meigs County Junior
Fair Goat Show Wednesday. Crane won grand
champion with his Lamancha entry, while Nal·

-

.._n

lhophord (22)

Gradually regai'ling his form
22. Joo -hoti(Unro-)
Impressive at the Glen
23.111EIIIot1 (21)
Oidn, oven drive

Pos.•

Sill

Dll)1ono Beadl, Fla. Mul

Feb. 11 Busch CLash
Feb. 18 Daytona 500

--

Oaytonllleach. Fla. Eamhardl Jarrett
Goodwrench 400 Rockingham, N.C. T. Labonlo Earnhardt
T. Labonte
Rlcllmond, Va.
Pontiac 400
Earnhardt
Hllfni)ICn,&lt;la.
Benson
Purolator 500
W. Burton
T•anSouth 400 D....ngtoo. S.C.
Monln
Gordon
Food City 500 Bnttoi,Tonn.
Aprll14 Firat Union 400 N.W-..N.C. T. Labonte T. L.obonll
Oaven
Mllrtinrlvllle, Va.
Apri121 Goody'o 500
Mo&lt;IOl
lrvan
Af&gt;rll 28 Winston 500
Til~ AIL
T. labonte Waltece
MayS Save Mart 300 Soromo. C.llf.
M. Waltrip
Concc&gt;ol, N.C.
Go&lt;don
Moy 18 WlnoiOn Jarren
Gordon
May 28 eoc.coto BOO Concc&gt;ol, N.C.
Gordon
lloYtN, Dol.
Gotdon
J.... 2 MH..r 500
Gonlon
J1111 18 UAW-Gr,l 500 LOng Pond, PL
R.Wallace
Hammon
Brooldyn, Mich .
J...,e20'~
Martin
Daytonllleodl, Fla. Goroon
Jliy6 Pepa1400
IMin
• Craven
LDI.don, N.H.
Jtjy 14 Slick 50 300
Martin
Walace
Long Pond, Pa.
July 21 Miller 500
Moytlotd
Gonlon
T..._,Aia.
July 28 DieHard 500
Jarrett
lncllnapotl&amp;
Aug. 3 Brid&lt;ya•d 400
Aug. 11 Bud II tho Glon Watki"ts Olen, N.Y. Earnhardt Cl. Bodlno
(B. Labonte) (B. l.Abonto)
Alilj. 1e GM Good. 400 Brooklyn, Mich.
(T. L.alx&gt;nto)
(Marlin)
Sriakll, Tenn.
Aug. 24 Goody's 500
(Andrant)
(Gordon)
Dlllllngton, S.C.
Sept I Southom500
(Eamharot) (Waftace)
Richmond, Va.
Sept. 7 MUio• 400
(Gordon)
(Molt)
ll&lt;M!i. Dol.
Sept. I 5 MBNA 500
(Go&lt;oon)
(Eomha.tt)
Mal11na'JIIe. Va.
Sept. 22 Hanes 500
5o!&gt;t. 211 HOlly Farms 400 N. W I -. N.C. (M\rogrove) (Marlin)
(Marlin)
(Rudd)
Oct. a UAW-GMSOO Cooconl, N.C.
(W. llu&lt;ton)
Oct. 20 Ac-Delco 400 Rocl&lt;lngham. N.C. (Stricklin)
(Rudd)
(Ellen)
Oct. 27 DU&lt;a Lul&gt;e 500 Plioonlx
(O . Wa~) (Eamhanlt)
Hampton. Ga.
l'lov. 10 NAPA 500
• Names in parenlhesealndlcate 1995 pote and race wtnnera.

Feb. 25
Mar. 3
Mar. 10
U... 24
U... 31

w.._

-

.

ly won reserve champion with an Angora. FrcMII
left are Fair Queen Amy Smith, Crane, Goat
Prlnceas Danlelle Grueaer, Goat Prince Alban
Salaer, Fair King Larry Willis and Nally.

:!iTIHL•
.................
: ...,.~

See us for Your
Stihl•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248

Chester 985-3308

1996 pointe standings
.

-TOOl CUP
1. Ttny LIDOOlt, 2.907.
2. O.lt Etmtltrdl, 2,881 .

...,..

TIIUCK

1. Dlvld GrMn, 2,134.

1. Mb Skimtf. 2,200.

2. RI. . UJOII. 2.805.

2. Ron HomMII.y, 2,2$4

3 .... - . 2.....

3. Todd Bodne, 2,162.

a.

8. Jtft P\IMI, 2.011.
7. Juoni&lt;Miel'. 1.018.
11. Phi p....,.., 1,111.

10. Ernie lrvan, 2,421 .

10. D6dl TI'ICNI, 1,12!.

3. ~ ~. 2.207 .
4. D•w Rezendn, 1.e21 .
5. Mlktlllu. 1.895.
8. Rletl; Clrlill, 1.821 .
7 . .Armly~.1.11».
a. Butch Mlltf, 1.1111.
I . BiylnRelfnlr, 1,744.
10. .btRI.anln, 1,7:».

4. 0.11 .wr.e. 2.120.
5. Mtltl W.rtln, 2,522.
8. Ak:ty Audd, 2,476.
7. Ster11ng Mtrtin. 2,480.

4. Cllflt~MrtNm. 2:1oe.
5. ..11110....... 2.088.

RullyWW.C.. 2,4a7.
If. !lenny Sc:hraatr. 2,-429.

I. M. ~.1.154 .

The l•d time out
Gn!at pit strategy helped Gooft
BOOina get Into vtctory lane to&lt; 1t1e
llrst time this season Sunday at
Wltldnl Glen, N.Y.
'Bodlrlo went 1n10 tilt race planning
only two pit • .,.,. and ho
l'tlld to tnat stralllgy,
piddng up valuable track
polttion while the re1t of

Call:

' JEFF

WARNER

....

.

.

111 ...... . _ , _ . , Ott.-nt

Olllce: 11:1-11471

--1-1110-742-

Fu: a1.-...11

....................
_,.........,_..,

FEED RUN - One of the contests In
Wednesday's dralt horse show at the Meigs
County Fair was the feed run, In which contestants must place bales of hay and feed bags
at designated locations and then retrieve

them • .._, L111111r Parker of Chester drove his
horaea through the couree, while Kevin Gra·
ham of Pomeroy handled the 'feed. • other
events Included the log pull and wagon obstacle course.

Tractor, semi pulls dra~ crowds
to pulling track at fairgrounds
• The tractor and semi pulls at the
Meigs County Fair always attract a
large and enlhusiastic crowd, and this
year's event was no exception.
The bleachers were filled to
a~p~City Tuesday night, and fairgoers
in lawn chairs lined the track to get
1 good view of the action. Four classa of traetors, field and pro stock, and
cwo of semis in weight classes participated in lhe pull and six places for
cash prizes were awarded.
In lhe 6000 pound field stock,
wilh prizes rangina from $150 to $5,
listed ftnt Jiuouah sixth, were David
Hively, .Gallipolis; LeSIU St Clair,
New Stnlitsvillc: Conard Hudson,
Gallipolis; Tom Fox. Columbus; Jeff

Brown, Long Bottom. and Marlin
Evans. Racine.
In the 8000 field stock class,
David.Hi-:ely of Gallipolis took first;
Conard Hudson, second, Earl St
Clair, Logan, third; Eric Wagner,
Racine, fourth , Marlin Evans, Racine,.
fifth. and Jeff Brown, Long Bottom,
sixth.
- Coming in first in the BSOO pro
stock class was Jimmy Staker of
Duncan Falls. Ban Johnson, Junction
City. took second; Dave Hill,
Greenville, third: Richard Manzey,
Po~eroy, fourth; and Eric Wagner,
Racme, fifth.
In the 9,000 pound field stock
with turbo, first went to Conard
Hudson, second to Eric Wagner of

Racine, and third to Marlin Evans,
Racine.
Bart Johnson, Junction City took
ftrst in the 10,000 pro stock class,
with Jim Staker, Duncan Falls, taking
s~ond, and Richard Manzey of
Pomeroy, third.
.
.
In lhe semi pulls, the wmners .m
lhe 198,500 class, flllllhrough sixlh
respectively, were SFS Trucking of
Gallipolis, Everett _ Gilmore of
Pomeroy, SFS Trucking, P. A. Trucking, Racine, Bob Williams, Rutland,
and Brad Maynard, Gallipolis.
Winners in the 24,000 pound class
were J. D. O!urch of Kerr, ftrst; SFS
Trucking, second; Tom Myers,
langsville. SFS Trucking, founh and
fifth, and Gary Gilmore . .

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Advertising Deadline
Augut 21st
Gall Dave or Bob At
992-2155 For More Information

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The
Dail
Sentinel
~~------_.----~----~!

1

.,

. ltle~­

evoryore- hid to pit
once more for gu.

Mechanlcsbuf11, Pa.

TOP10
I . GeoiiBodlrlo

2. Terry Labonte
3.Mwt&lt;Manln
4. Jell Go&lt;don
5. l!obby Labonte
6. Olio Eamhardt
7. Michael Wa~
6 . JoeNemechek
9. Molgln-nl
10. Wally Daltonbacll.k.

STAR OF TH! RAC!: Ha

c:amo In atxlll ptaco, 1M
DlloEimhardt•WfYOM • thklg Of hVO
ollOut ccuroge. driving tfle

--·
--·lghtl.

whote road race with a
Eigtlt other cars used
G. locllnl
the ume strategy, bul
oolart&gt;onoltld.
Bocllna was able to got by._ al,
THI! 110 IUIII'Ailll!: Joe
taking !he load lrom Kenny
Sctw- on lap 83 and- hotdi1g
THI! 110 DUD: Ruoty Waloce.
oil Terry Llbonte to win by otrout
trw bel1 road 1Ker on thll circuit,
light cat Lengttw.
llnlohod 33rd.
Bodinelo from ,_&lt;by Chomung.

.Mhll anmASCAFI Thlt w.lk

Chad Little drtvea a Pontiac for Buach -rea -

Mark Ryplen.

Chad Little

_,lowed

Chad Little
$580.~ lit eamlngtl.
• WHAT I DRIVE OFF THE
TRACK: 'Conversion van,
Busch Grand National: 85
hla pride, went back to
1996 Ponllac Bonnevtlle.
starts,
6
wlna,
1
pole,
24
NASCAR'a Butch Grand
1996 Harley Davldsoo:
top
fives,
33
top
1
OS.
Netlonlll -lea and
1 FIRST SPEEDING
• LAST RACI!: Anlshed
~lnecl hla reputation ••
l1CKE1! When he was 18
271h In Kroger 200 at
an •poand-COmlng driver.
years Old In Spokane.
Indianapolis Raceway
Lmre. now 33, made hie
• WHAT I DO TO RELAX:
Pall&lt;.
Wlneton Cup debut In
Wool&lt; out, run, play with
• FAVORITE DRIVER: 'I
1881 and raced alrnoat
the dogs.
don't really hava one
full-time In the •rtH from
favorite driVer. Ilike drivers • WHERE I GO ON
111110 through 11192.
VACATION: Cayman
for afferent reatl0r18. I
Among the car o - .
Islands ol Spokane, Wash.
admire Darrell wanrlp and
• WHAT I WOULD DO IF I
Dave Marcts because
who hired Lmle - • Dick
COULDN'T DRIVE A
Moroao, Harry Melling and
they've been able to race
STOCK CAR: 'I'd have to
competluvely
for
so
long_
I
care Yarborough. ,
wolf&lt; outside In some
admire Rusty Wallace and
Here'e more abotrt Lmle:
capacity. I'm not a 'sit .
Mall&lt; Martin beca•se
behind the desk' person."'
they're so knowledgeable
1 AGE: 33
about
chassis
seltJps.
I
•
WHAT I'D UKE TO
• SPOUSE: Donna
CHANGE ABOUT
also admire people Uko
a CHILDREN: None
MYSELF: 'I'd be
Ricky Audd and Terry
1 CAR: No. 23 Pontiac
more patient with o1hers."
Labonte because of their
Grand Prix owned by Greg
1
MY
PERSONAL MOTTO
consistency.
Thoea
g•ys
Pollex and Mall&lt; Ryplen
IS: 'Set your goals high
are always ruMing up
1 HOMETOWN: Born in
enough that they're not
front Idon't want to forget
Spokane, Wash., now lives
easily reached. Then make
Earnhardt and Jeft
In Charlone
·
whatever
aacrlfleea are
Gordon.
You
have
to
• RECORD: Winston C•p:
necessary
lo attain those
admire
!hose
two
because
88 starts, 0 wins, 0 poles,
goals.'
they're juat plain good:
1top five, 2 tops 105.

Around the

Our Your Tum.
I am I~ and a big fan ()(Jell
Gordon. I am w sick and liftd or

hearing people mUe run or him.
Why do you cllll him • c.:ry bllby?
Well. le1 ~tell you people:
Youjuslun'c handlo lhc f~e:llhal
a 24-year-o/d can bealthoft
other rtK:Crs. ChAnge your Wll)'.~ .

and root for Jeff Gordon .
lloalhlr
Carlisle,

I you've got 1 q-tlon or
1 comment, write: NASCAR
Title WMic Your Tum, c/o
The Gaaton GtiHIII, P.O.
Box 15:18, G..tonlo, N.C.
21053. Your Tum 1110 may

be fNChed

Hnllllng

car.
Here's the

NASCAR This Wee~
WATKINS

kicker!

OLEN. N.Y.-

Dale &amp;mhnrdt's finest moment
occurred in the hills of upsttlle
New York. 11 wo.s there d10111
Eamhudttumed in his mona!
10 card ll!ldjoined Pnul Bunylll1,
Santtt Oous, Btttman and olher
legends.
On • cool Friday aftemooo.
&amp;mhudt climbed into his black
Chevrolet Monte Carlo and
1umed the 2.4~ 111iles of Walkins
Glen lntemntion:d in I minute.
I1.054 !econdS. II WDS .2
second Ctuter !han Wlyonc hod
ever tmveled that pru1iculor
disumce in o Winslon Cup stock

Earnhardt
didil with
his sternum,

or breast·

~race,

bone,
splil in two,
~-:-""'::'--'""" and his left

Paradise
Archery, Clothing,

814-992·7988
814-992-6759

-

Eamhlrdt

collllfbotle

broken. A

Earnhardt

doclor hlld sugges1ed il would be
impossible ror Eamhordt to steer
with his len Qllll . Steerins with
the left arm is pretty imponant
on atmck where the right arm is
occupied ! hilling LIW'·
That Earnhardt would go on to

himself Jl"SSCS them.

rell tall over themselves pnaisi ng
Eamlwdt, the man's man and
lost of Lite cowboy•.
···He's one tough son of D gun,"
said Ken Schndeo, genernlly

considered 1111011ter one.
Sc:hndc:r once sliced D finger

AITENTION ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise oh this age

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Bob Atwood Ext. 105
For More Information

N owt

'97 Pontiac!

Grand Prix GT
See It Today At..

SMI!B
Buick-Pontiac
• 1900 Eastam GaiHpolis

Super Lotto ·
&amp;All Lottery
Games
Five Points
Express
Drlve-Thru
Carry Out
Pomeroy, Ohio
at
Five Points

•

I

l

l

I

I

lltllough Rusty Wallace
IIIIo won trom 13th.

"To do it ot o roac.l ~:ou rsc . it's
tOugh. When 1hc:y lnbcktl him
with 1hat Iron Man llcal, it wou
no bull .
"You ' ve seen hirn lk1 tuu many
things 100 rnaoy times tu he
surprised ab()UI anything he

passing along compliments and
knowin&amp; how grudpngly

In

- won a Winston CtJp
raca at Watkin• Glen by
from fUrther back.

two days IDler thus become
inevito.ble. despi1e oil the: deniai !O
and cnutionary comments. As his
alleged rtlief driver, David

Ckherdriv~.unu~lo

'hl

Bodine the edge he
needed to wln the Bud al
the Glen deaplla starting
only 13th. No one has

off tmd drove the

hlm OUI ur that CW with a
wrecker."

J

they g&amp;'/8

complete the Bud at the Olen

Green, said. ··vou couldn'l pull

•r',LIH• J '.' •

• Geoll Bodine's craw, led
by chief PIUI Andr8wa, stuck
wlh hlrn through almost two
lui years of Mlllly. By
ltldLing 10 a preraoe plan at
pitting only twJee dullrlg the

Earnhardt adds to his toughness legend
lrlllllllllttttM

1

Crew If tile Week

••r•••

Call 9.92·21- 5

:'

•

tilt liold plttod during •
c:outlon on Lap 54.
Bodine moved to the
front, stuck 10 his ptan t;,
stop 1a•r and then took

Joe

WI,.,...

Ja""n

!

Ray &amp; Pam - Owners

10 see oil the restrictor phues
taken away and alllhe com plaininaabout bumping Mopped.
What did you do in 1hc 1970s
when Cllie YJU"borough. the
Allisons, RichW'd Pc:lty and
Oo.vid Pearson were all dukins il
OUI - 50mc:timellitcrally1 Or
weren't you true fans bllCk then?

Aeeulte, schedule

H1

h A.•

Bowhunters

And while we're al il.l 'd like

24. Kyle Polly (23)
Drove few lust a few laps
25. Alck Mill (24)
Bet on II: He'll get his chance to
shtre next year

J(

and I believe was the winninsesl
sty}c: or car in the hislory of
NASCAR.

you? No, you did not.
Aa far• l' mconcemed. l
would like to KC the old Monic

Moyftlld (20)

1&lt;.

~,j,or

Carlo biiiCk, which I might odtl,
whipped up on the Thunderbird

19. Jill lur1Dn (11)
Glad to be oft the road

-..y

r , l!

'.1tnd

Taxidermy, Deer
Processing, Bait &amp;
Tackle •· ' 1
249 West Main Str~t
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Open 7 a.m./9 p.m.
7 Days a week

NASCAR llkina from the Fords
and &amp;ivina: to the Lumina, did

,... «&gt;&gt;&lt;koclng ...... kid

1 l"J l(j

ll' , d · ~·1'flll()l\\

The lultwo yem before lhe
new MUIIte Carlo, you didn 't see

18. Alolly Cll-(11)
·EvOfYihlng went wrong
20.

ThroUitl wllh thOSe dam road
cou ....
8. Ricky Rudcl(l)
Early caaualty in brand-new car

-·

body stock when the from llir
dtm i s lowered, the rear dec::k lid
Is rnise lUld they chDnaed 1he
roof. The fact is, they keep
·o.way from lhe Cheva Wid a:iving
lo the Ford.

Went as far as car would take him
17.Tect .....,.,..(17)
Once egan, a nonentity

.,,

11 . ' •

I would like: to know how the
Fords on the trock can be true

16. Willy Dllltonboch Jr.(11)

5. Rutty Wati1C8(5)

f

Ctw:vys und the Fords.

15.lllchlol Wollrlt&gt; (15)
Brooght Wood Brothers home 7111

3. Jill Gonion (2)

t'!an A Trueka -

OCill

day

does.'"

"He 's definitely trying to sc rw.J
a sllltcmcnl." mid Jeff Oon.lon .
·· He 's mying, "I'm not giving up
ju.~t be&lt;:ousc l'rn hun .' Thai's the
besl wny 10 do it ··

~~
llil1•il&gt;ultK!Ily

Trt..Stllt. Water Syat.m•, Inc.
the wMet treMment company
COfdiatty lnvllea you 1o participMe

In • tree, no obMgallon,
compreMniM water tnatysla
We wMI tnl tor lhlt lolowing:

TDS. MMal H81dneaa. Iron. PH
, ..... call AalnSoft 116t.C ·992·
44n Mlcki"PPft or 814·886·4488
ProctoMIIe to sat up 'fOUl ffee
wMer 81'\etysis.

Even Geoff BO&lt;Iine, on old ll!ld
fierce rival, spoke ::tdmiringly or
Er&gt;mlwdt. "laues• we'll hove to
call him Iron Olc:st rrom now
on," sllid Bodine.

aENBIGH GMUlETf INC.
244 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 26271

Bus. Phona (304) 372·3673
1-1100.964-FORD
Come In and reoister for the G·JOdy's 500 NASCAR
Wm1on Cup race on Saturday, August 24, 1996 at
Bristol International Raceway
Stop In and say 'HELLO' to Mike Bing and Tim Hill
·. who Mlcome alllhelr past customers, and look
folw•d to serving lhefr new one's wHh genuine Ford
parta and service. Bring in lhls ad and receive a
10% discount on Parts &amp; Service.

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�Page 8 • The ~ally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 15; 199fi

What is proper way to handle dog bite etiquette? · i
·

Ann
Lander

S

199'· ..., ,,,.,..
!':'s=.., c...
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Is there such a
thing as dog-bite etiquette? My husband and I are having a disagreement. We hope you will tell us what
to do.
We were spending a week in the
home of friends wh,en their dog bit
our son. Because of the bleedi!tg and
puncture marks, we decided to take
him to the emergency room and

about the ms~ce problem !i"d
hand them the b11l. In my opmm~,
they should have offered to pay 11 m
the first place. ~~ have agreed to
ab1de by your dec1swn, Ann._What 1s
n? -- Stytrued m Mmneapohs
Dear Mpls: I agree thai the hosts
should have offered to ~ay the emergency room ~111, but s1nce they did
not, I wouldn t make an 1ssue of 11.
. It could be _that your son antagomzed the dog m some way. I recommend that you ~ay the bill and not
nsk the friendship.
Dear Ann Landers: You printed
some stories about dogs attacking
children. Can I get in the "dog
fight"? Some of your readers need
educaung. The problem 1s not the

have the btte looked at. It was
cleaned up, and . fortunately, no
stitches were necess~. The ch1ld
did not seem traumatized m, any
way. We _returned to our fnend s for
the remamder of the week, and they
kept ,the do;!! away from our son. We
d1dn t realize at the t1me that our
msurance had lapsed and the .emergency room VIS II was not covered.
The bill came t~ $160.
.
I say our friends should pay 11.
My husband says we should pay ~e
bill and wmt unbl our friends bnng
up the subject and hope they wiii
offer to cover it. He feels it's not
their fault that our insurance lapsed.
. _I say since THEIR dog did the
b1tmg, we should JUSt tell them

dogs, it's the owners.
under control at all times is essen- defend themliCives the only wax
No one should own a dog unless tia(, especially with large dogs. they know how, by misbUsting all
he or she is prepared to teach ihat There are scores of excellent books people.
.
dog good manners and the basics of on the correct methods for training
Neglect means leaving them tieil
obedience. A well-trained dog is a dogs. 'They should be studied before up so they can't exercise. It mean~
happy dog. -- East Coast Reader.
getting a pet. Also, make the dog a not providing a shelter in bad weath;
Dear East Coaster: Amen, broth- pan of the family. Train it, love it . er, not feeding them regularly or
er. Keep reading for more on the and teach children to be gentle with replenishing their water bowls ana
subject:
the dog. 11 will respond in k.ind. -- not providing veterinary checkupS:
Dear Ann Landers: This is in J.C., Pensacola, Aa.
The worst neglect is ignoring them.
response -to the letter about dogs
Dear Pensacola: Thanks for the -- T.J., Beacon, N.Y.
attacking children. The dogs were of wise counsel. And now for the closDear T.J.: Thanks for the excelthe large variety, such as Rottweil- er:
lent windup. Your comments were
ers, but the problem is not the breed,
Dear Ann Landers: I volunteer at right on.
Ann, it's how the owners treat, train an animal shelter and believe NO
and care for their pets.
dog is bom vicious. 'They are taught
Send questiolll to Ann Landers,
Dogs need attention, discipline , to be vicious by owners who abuse Creaton Syndicate, S777 W. Cenand affection. Training a dog to them. When dogs are neglected, tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los An1eles,
respond to commands and keeping it their trust is , violated and they Calif. 90045

----Community calendar----The Community Calendar is Danville Church of Christ, Saturday, Hobson Christian Fellowship a.m. followed by Sunday School, dinpublished as a free service to non· 7 p.m., Sunday, I 0:30a.m. and 6 p.m. Church, Middlepon, 7:30 p.m. Pas- ner at 12:30 p.m., gospel sing at 2
profit 1roups wishing to announce Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va. to tor Clyde Henderson invites the pub- p.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.
meeting and special events. The speak.
lic to attend.
calendar is nol designed to promote
ATHENS -- Descendants of AbraRACINE -- Delben Teaford
sales or fund raisen of any type. reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine, SatRUTLAND ·- Rutland Youth ham and Margaret Force Williams,
Items are printed as space permits urday, 2 p.m. with evening meal.
League pool pany, Sunday at the reunion, Sunday, I p.m. , Buckley
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
Syracuse pool. All players, coaches Run Road eight miles east of Athens
specific number of days.
POMEROY -- Burlingham Mod- and families invited.
off Route 50.
THURSDAY
em Woodmen , cookout, 7 p.m. SatRACINE-- American Legion Post urday, at the hall. Take covered dish,
POINT PLEASANT-- Aaron Fry · MONDAY
602, Racine, meeting 6:30 -p.m. visitors welcome, door prize.
descendants, annual reunion, Sunday,
MIDDLEPORT -- Meigs Junior
Thursday at the hall. Dinner to follow SUNDAY
Krodel Park. Point Pleasant, club High School Volleyball meeting
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. Rev. Bob house 2. Basket dinner at I p.m.
Monday, 10 a.m. for students wanti·
Thompson
will
be
gu•st
spe·Ler
at
HARTFORD
-Homecoming,
ng to play volleyball. For more inforDANVILLE -- w.ee kend ser:v•ces,
.
•
""
Father's House, Hanford, worship 10 mation, call John Arnott at 992-3058.

Horticulture projects results at fair announced
Claiming top honors for the best
display of garden produce was Dar. lene Hayes of Pomeroy, with Karolyn
Welsh of Tuppers Plains finishing
second. Deborah Mohler of Pomeroy
finished third, and Mary King of
Long Bottom finished fourth. All gar·
den produce displays inclUded at least
a dozen different garden vegetables to
meet judging requirements.
In the largest and longest category, blue ribbon winners were,, Cody
Dill, longest cucumber and bean;
Rebecca Cotterill, largest squash and
cantaloupe; Adam Chevalier, largest
ear of com; Everlyn Hollon , largest
cabbage and apple; Maxine Dyer,

""" amateur paintings compeOUTSTANDING EXHIBITOR -In the
tition at the Malga County Fair, Gina Tillis was the top award winner. She not only received beat of show but four blue rlbbone for
her exhibits. Here she displays the stllliHe In oil which won the
best of show rosette.

,
"f"'"

largest potato; Abbie Chevalier, zucchini, green cucumbers, pear red
largest tomato; Lenora Leifheit, tomatoes.
largest beet; Brian Dill, largest
Rebecca Cotterill, Pomeroy cucumber.
• name variety melons, green pod pole
In the freak vegetables category, beans.
Alice Thompson of Pomeroy took
Blair Windon, Pomeroy - canfirst place.
teloupe.
Blue ribbon winners in the various
Cody Dill, Long Bottom · pie
categories were:
pumpkin, sweet peppers, lima beans,
Roy Holter, Pomeroy . Concord yard long pole beans, green pod bush
and Niagara grapes.
beans, indian com, ornamental
Debbie Brown, Rutland - keifter gourds.
pears, carrots.
Adam Chevalier, Pomeroy - sumDarlene Hayes, Pomeroy - Stay- mer squash.
man winesap apples, Jonathon
Brian Dill, Long Bottom - beets,
apples, Rome Beauty apples, Grimes hot peppers, cherry tomatoes, dipper
Golden apples, cr?Dked neck squash, gourds.

Maine shop's mummy
has people all wound up
By JOHN LARRABEE
USA TODAY
WISCASSET, Maine - Antique
dealer Terry Lewis wants to sell his
mummy.
No, not that mummy, but the
3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy
padlocked in a glass case in his
store's comer, where it scares tourists.
But since he put the mummy up
for sale for $20,000, customers aren't
the only ones spooked by the mummy in the Nonesuch antique store.
The retail relic is rattling skeletons
in closets all over Maine. Scholars
and museum curators are up in arms.
Government bureaucrats are checking law books. And Mainers are
recalling century-old rumors about
their grandfathers plundering ancient
tombs.
"Having a bndy lying out for people to gawk at is just not respectful,"
said Stephen Whittington, director of
the Hudson Museum at the University. of Maine at Orono.
"Beyond that, this is a piece of an
archaeological site that's been tom
out of context. It's lost any value it
might have had to people trying to
reconstruct that era of history."
Over the past tWo weeks, the shop
has been visited by a state attorney
general's office investigator, a health
inspector, and a U.S. Customs agent
who left behind a seizure notice that
forbids Lewis from selling the mummy until the Egyptian government
decides whether to contest ownership.
Lewis, a self-described "angry
white male," said the criticism is
motivated by "political correctness."
He said investigators are descending
on his shop because they were embarrassed by recent newspaper stories

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW - Carol Bachtel received the
lre••en1e best of show award In the painting contest at the Meigs
•~(lunw Fair with this portrait In paatels of two great-nephews.

Tillis takes top ·honors
in amateur paintings
Gina Tillis of Rutland took best
of show in amateur painting competition at the Meigs County Fair.
Tillis also won four blue ribbons
on her paintings. She took the ribbons for oil paintings iulandscape,
animal study and picture from life,
and an .acrylic painting in lloral
study. She also took a red ribbon
for picture of life in acrylic.
The blue ribbon in oils in lloral
study went to Bette Edwards of
Rutland, who also took red ribbons
for landscape, animal and picture
from life in oil. Cheryl Jewell of
Pomeroy took a blue for her picture
from life in acrylic, and Tiffany
Green. Albany, took the blue in oil
picture from life in the junior division.
In pencil, ink and
ings, the blue went to

Pomeroy, and the red to Tiffany
Spencer of Coolville, in the junior
division; while in the senior division, the ribbons went to Elizabeth
Bearhs, Pomeroy, blue; Sheila
Spencer, Coolville, red; and Jerrod
Clark, Pomeroy, white in th~ adult
. division.
Other ribbons in oils went Anna
. Cleland, Rutland, third places in
landscape, lloral study, and picture
from life in oil; Irena Pickens, third
in animal study and second in flo'!11 study in oils.
Carol Tannehill iook the blue in
other media, a class for those who
have taught or sold a painting, and
also was awarded the reserve best
of show.
ribbons were
places in the

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Mon.·Thura. 9-5

Friday 9-6
9-4

about the exhibit.
"One female repontr looked me
in the eye and said, 'Don't you think
you're exploitlrig·women?' I told her
the mummy would be wonh a lot
more if it was a male."
The mummy was found during the
excavation of King Tutankhamun's
tomb in 1924 and taken out of Egypt
by an eccentric New Hampshire
businessman. Lewis said he acquiied
the artifact three years ago at an estate
auction because no museum would
have it. He said he paid "about the
same price as a low-end new car."
But the controversy has been
fanned by gossipy stories of mummies tucked away in attics all over
nonhem New England. Legend has it
that Maine paper companies imponed mummies by the ton in the 1800s.
The bodies were unceremoniously
discarded, legend says. .
Folklorists have tried to debunk
the tale, but archaeologists insist
there's truth to it. "A family in Bangor has owned a mummy head for
years," Whittinmon said. "They take
it out every Halloween to frighten
trick or treaters."
Government officials say they are
required to investigate reports of
bodies.
"There are 9uestions as to
whether it's legal to have a mummy,"
said state Attorney General
spokesman David Lauren. A state
investigator photographed the mummy and referred the case to federal
authorities.

Mary King, Long Bottom - pick.Ies, yellow onions, bi-color tomatoes,
green cabbage, red cabbage, yellow
tomatoes, gold nugget sweet potatoes, white com.
Cyndi King, Pomeroy - white
onions, cobblers potatoes, kennebec
potatoes, lasoda potatoes.
Judy Bunger, Pomeroy -egg plant.
Abbie Chevalier, Pomeroy - red
tomatoes.
Brian Windon, Pomeroy - peck
wheat.
.
~avid King, Pomeroy - peck
spnng oats, peck barley.
Alice Thompson, Pomeroy - yellow com, white com, yellow sweet
com.

133n1 Meigs County Fair

Truck Pull- Friday 7:30p.m.Thursday, August 15
4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
7:30p.m.
8:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
ll:OOp.m.

Kiddie Tractor PuiUAdult Peddle Tractor Pull
-Show Arena
Hog Calling Contest - Show Arena
Cow Paddy Bingo - Show Arena
Kiddie Games - Hillside Stage
Gospel Harmony Boys -Grandstand
Open Class Horse Show
Hone Pull
.
· Gospel Harmony Boys - Grandstand

Gates

Friday, August 16
WARNER HEATING AND COOUNG DAY
All CbDdren u!lder the age of 1Z admitted free WI NOON.
7:00a.m. Gates Open
9:00a.m. Pet Show - Show Arena
I I :00 a.m. Junior Pair Dog Obedience show -Show Arena
I 2:00 noon Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
I :00 p.m. Harness Racing
4:30p.m. Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
5:00p.m. Junior Pair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
7:00p.m. River Bend Tappers- Hillstage
7:30p.m. Truck Pull
II ;00 .m. Oates Close

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Phone (1114) 446-1711

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Multiple chemical
sensitivity surrounded
by controversy
.

Grange holds
meeting·

.

ByLE.OHMAN
Iowa City Preaa-Citlzen
The story of multiple chemical
sensitivity is full of controversy.
It's not a story of right or wrong
but of the limi.tations of medical sci·
ence, the frustrations of people who
become violently ill when exposed
to various chemicals, and the physicians who can't find a way to help
them.
Those who believe in the disor·
der, also known as MCS, say it's a
reaction to dust, molds, pollens and
various chemicals or pollutants. The
degree of the reaction depends upon
the individual.
But many physicians think the .
disorder exists only in a person's
mind.
The major reasun: the symptoms
vary so much from person to person.
A physical exam rarely turns up any·
thing wrong, said Dr. Hal Richerson,
a professor in the University of Iowa
internal medicine department.
If you can 't see something
wrong, how can you fix it, he asks.
Dr. Donald Black, associate pro·
fessor in the UI psychiatry depanment, is even more adamant.
"I maintain that there is no evidence to verify its existence," he
said. "I'm not say·ing that they (people complaining of MCS) are not in
distress or that they don't have
symptoms. It's a misdiagnosis."
Though he doesn' t espouse the
it's-ali-in-your-head theory of MCS,
Black said research shows that many
people who complain of MCS also
have diagnosable psychiatric problems. •
The people who say they have
MCS - people like Sondra Lewis
of Coralville, Iowa - know this
interpretation of their symptoms all
too well.
"I was having a lot of symptoms
where physicians were saying it was

all in my head," Lewis said. "A lot
of people don't recognize (MCS).
They just think it is in your head, but
it isn't."
When she l)egan to experience
headaches, muscle BChes, dizziness
and lack of concentration, doctors
couldn't diagnose an illness. Finally,
Lewis took a leave of absel'tce from
woriC, thinking a rest would help. It
didn't.
" I would walk into my work·
place and within 5 minutes, I was
throwing up," she said.
In I988 Lewis left her job of 12
years. She now stays at home and
has built a buSiness around her illness. She publishes a newsletter and ,
wrote a cookbQok called "Allergy
and Candida Cooking Rotational
Style."
It is not always clear how MCS
symptoms develop.
There are two types of sufferers,
said Dr. Nyle Kauffman, an Iowa
City, Iowa, internist who recognizes
MCS:
- Those people who have a
number of standard allergies and
become hypersensitive.
- Those who become hypersensitive after a major exposute to some
chemical or pollutant.
Douglas Earls of Coralville fits
into the second category. He was a
perfectly healthy nurse and college
instructor in San Diego but became
ill in I995 after an accidental ingestion of"cie81ling sanitizer.
After that, Earls became increasingly sensitive to sanitizers and now
has a bad reaction to colognes and
fragrances (such as those in laundry
detergents and fabric softeners),
cleaning products and some inks.
Earls tried to avoid exposure to
cleaning splulions and asked coworkers not _to wear perfume, but
that didn't work. He was forced to
leave work.

MCS - Douglas Earll, Ia 1hown above with hll dog, Maggie In hie Coralville, Iowa home. Earle
became multiple chemical sensitive alter accidentally lngeatlng cleaning 11nltlzer.

"I believe that I was exposed to
toxic chemicals approximately 80
percent of the time I was in the
workplace," Earls said. "You cannot
control exposure."
Earls moved to Iowa, hoping the
cleaner environment w,ould ease his
symptoms. And he has felt better,
but not well. Earls says he was once
very social but has changed his life
to cope with MCS. He stays in more,
and at times will take drugs such as
Dramamine before leaving the
house.
·.~If I go out, I know what the consequences can be, but it's a matter of
choice," he said.
Lewis also stays inside more than
she used to. But she said the disorder
has changed her life in more ways

than that. She spends a lot of time
attempting to alleviate the symptoms, including cooking most of her
food from scratch because she has a
reaction to many processed foods .
Both Lewis and Earls have run
into disbelief and ridicule from doctors. "One doctor told me I should
major in drama," Earls said.
Kauffman said the doctors who
believe MCS exists are the ones
"who listen to the patients and try to
decide what their symptoms mean
instead of just dismissing them
because they don't understand the
cause of them."
There is no good diagnosis, and
there is no good treatment.
Kauffman said the best he can do
for MCS patients is to help them lig-

Cotton claims best of
show photography honors
Donia Cotton o.f Middlepon
· claimed best of show honors, while
: Pomeroy's Jane Walton took reserve
·best of show at the annual amateur
,photo~hy sho'Y ~ c'!mpetition ~ .
··the Me1gs Co~nl}' Fmr.
· Around 120entries were judged in
the competition, with Cotton's photograph of her daughter in a pumpkin
patch claiming top honors in the portraits and personalities category. Waf-ton's photograph won in the landscape and seascape category.
Winners in the snapshot !lize, col: or category were asfollows:
.
Animals: Lori Hayes, Pomeroy;
. Robert Bailey, Long Bottom.
Landscape and Seascape: Car·
olyn Nicholson, Middlepon; Donia
Cotton, Middlepon.
..
.
Ponrans and Personaht1es: Doma
Cotton, Middlepon; Melame Steth·
em, Pomeroy.
Abstracts: Karen Werry, Pomeroy;
Roben Bailey, Long Bottom.
Nature Closeups: Judy Bunger,

Pomeroy; Marilyn Spencer, Long
Bottom. ,.
·
Miscellaneous: Deborah Grueser,
Pom~roy; Anita Musser, RI!Cine . . ."
. Wil!.n~ln the enlargement, co\.
or cateJOIYt'fere as "follows:
•
Animili: Deborah Orueser,
Pomeroy; Carolyn Nicholson, Middlepon.
Landscape and Seascape: Jane
Walton, Pomeroy; Carolyn Nichol,
son, Middlepon.
_
Ponraits and Personalities: Anita
Musser, Racine; Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy. ·
Nature Closeups: Cheryl King,
Pomeroy.
Miscellaneous: Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy.
In the special Meigs County Fair
Happenings category, depicting
scenes from the I995 Meigs County
Fair, Deborah Grueser of Pomeroy
claimed first place, while Allee
Hawthorne of Long Bouom took
second place honors.

By KATHRYN HANSLER
Tlie S.n Bernardino County Sun
The lazy days of summer beckon
us outdoors. Picnics in the park or by
a lake and backyard barbecues are
indispensible pans of the season.
Trouble is, we tend to become too
lax and forgo safe handling of our
food, which can lead to food poisoning.
We often leave the potato salad
.and grilled hot dogs out on the table
·to bake in the searing heat with the
.idea we'~il!l&gt;le on them later. Or,
·for convenien~. we place the cooked
burgers on the plate that contains the

raw hamburger meat juices. And all
too often, we fail to cook the meat
thoroughly.
These examples of poor food handling illustrate why the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture sees an increase
in the number of cases of foodbome
illnesses every summer.
"'Many times you don't pay as
close attention to food safety, especially when you are at a picnic or
when you are grilling outside," says
Sara Beck. a public technical informational specialist for the depanment.
Concern about food poisoning

ROSETTE WINNER - Donia Cotton of Middleport won the
rolette lor the belt of show In photography at the Malg• County
F•lr. Hera 1he dlaplayl the picture of her young daughter, Morgan, In a pumpkin patch.

panicularly salmonella, has caused
many of us to take greater care in the
kitchen and follow safer food handling procedures. We wash counter
tops with a disinfectant and scour cutting boards and utensils that come in
contact with raw meat in hot, soapy
water.
However, as temperatures soar
well above 80 degrees, we need to
take additional measures to avoid
food poisoning.
This often means changing old
habits. Most of us know the two-hour
limit; food expires after this time. But
hot weather cuts this time in half.

" Bacteria grow very rapidly
between 40 and 140 degrees. So
when outside temperature is below
80, food is safe no longer than two
hours. But when the temperature rises above this, it drops to one hour,"
Beck says.
Barbecues can lead to a bevy of
potential food poisoning situations.
For example, Beck says. whenever
we use raw meat, we have to be careful of cross-contamination. Plates
and cooking utensils cannot be used
with raw meat and then come in conwith

Some of your favorite summer pastimes may be a breeding ground for
food poisoning. Barbecues and picnics are synonymous with summer.
The food we eat, though, can
become contaminated if we do not
follow safe food handling proce:
dures.
Even a trip to the grocery store
can be hazardous to your family's
health if you fail to adhere to proper precautions.
Use these simple guidelines
. from !he U.S. Dcpanment of Agri·
culture when barbecuing, picnick. ina or srocery shopping ~o ensure
: the safety of your food:
. BARBECUING
- Marinate raw meat, includ- ·
: ing fish and pouluy, in a glass dish,
:and always place the marinatinJ
: food in the refriserator.
- Do not marinate food at
:room temperature, because bacte.ria for foodbor!'e illpesses grow
:rapidly in those conditions. If you
·plan to use aome of the marinade

He acknowledges that physicians
who recognize and treat MCS are a
minority. But he 's optimistic
research eventually will solve the
puzzle. His optimism stems from
animal research showing that levels
of some substances produced in the
body change after exposure to
chemicals.
"There hasn' t been a good measure for explaining how this (MCS)
could happen. I think someday we' ll
have a good explanation for it."

By BILL NICHOLS
USA TODAY
JACKSON, Wyo. - To judge
from President Clinton's professed
level of interest, you wouldn't even
know the Republicans we.re having
their national convention in San
•· Qiego this week.
• And to judge from the level of
interest of residents and vacationers
who flock to this tesort paradise at the
base of the 13,000-foot Teton Range
every summer, you wouldn't know a
presidential vacation is going on
either.
"People here are a Iittle bit more
relaxed with the idea of ·having a
president around," says Angus Thuermer Jr., editor of the weekly Jackson
Hole News, noting that this . is the
Clintons' second straight summer
visit to Jackson Hole.
The lirst family's one-week summer break in Jackson Hole - they
return to Washington on Saturday has been unlike any other week in the
Clinton presidency: low-key, private
and publicly deferential to Clinton's
political foes.
Reponcrs have tried for days to
get Clinton and the few staffers who
have accompanied him here to give
some son of reaction to the goingson in San Diego.
The closest thing to a comment
came late Tuesday when a group of
youngsters shouted a question about
GOP vice presidential nomincF Jack
Kemp to Clinton as he finished the
18th hole at Jackson Hole Golf and
Tenni s Club.
"I like Gore." Clinton shouted
back.
But behind the scenes it is an
entirely different story than the nonchalant image the White House has

tried to create.
- The White House and Democratic National Committee are working overtime to try to counter the
GOP's rhetoric in San Diego, and
Clinton is being kept abreast of
ev'eiy twist and turn by key .ai~es,..
· - Clinto1,. did two p~bflc eVIl 11
- announcing an end to a gold mining project in Yellowstone National
Park and signing legislation favorable
to the oil and gas industry - to pro·
vide some symbolic counterbalar.ce
to San Diego.
- And Wednesday the White
House, in perhaps the best-kept secret
of this presidency, announced Clinton
. has written a book, "Between Hope
and History," that will he published
next week.
But Clinton himself has stayed
most_ly out of the public eye, spendmg time w1th lirst lady Hillary Rod·
ham Clinton and daughter Chelsea
and maintaining a low profile.
That's been easy for the first fam ily to do because of the spectacular,
4,000-square-foot estate on the Snake
River where they arc staying this
year, a property even some of the
wealthiest Jackson -Hole natives talk
of in awe.
Owned by financier Max Chap·
·man, the propeny, the Bar B Bar
Ranch. sits on 800 acres and offerf
horseback riding, a full gym, a rockclimbing wall , wilderness trail s and
even an observatory.
Chel sea, aides say, has been nosing around the observatory, and the
Clintons have spent most evenings a!
home , rather than at the nonstop
stnng of soc1al evenings they enjoyed
.last summer with the likes of Harri .son Ford and other notable Jackson
Hole residents.

Fair "Thank You" Ads

Food Sq,fety tips
later as a dip or a basting sauce, set
aside a portion ' llf the marinade
before you place'the meat in it. If
you wish to use a Jllarinade that has
touched raw meat~ boil the marinade far several .minutes to kill off
any bacteria from' the meat.
- Pr~ooking food is OK, but it
must go immediately from range or
microwave to grill. Do not precook
or panly cook meat or poultry and
then wait a while before placing it
on the grill. Bacteria can grow in
the interim, and grilling might not
kill it all.
- Use a clearr·piate IO hold
cooked food. Bacteria that may be
in juices of raw p\-odilcts CJlllld
spread 10 cooked food if ihe
cooked food is placed on plates
that held raw meat.
- Thoroughly cpok all meat,
poultry and flsb. It is best to use a
meat thermometer to cbeck for
doneness. Large cpts of beef, such
as roasts, may be cooked to an
internal temperature of 145 degrees
for medium rare and I60 degrees
for medium. Whole poultry should

ure out how to avoid the chemicals
that make them sick, to be sure that
their symptoms are not pan of some
underlying disease, and to help them
keep as healthy as possible.

"August" was the theme of the
program presented at the recent meeting of Star Grange 778 held recently
at the hall.
The program was given by Pat .
Holter, lecturer of the visiting Rock
Springs Grange. Readings were by
Roy Holter, "How Farmers Joined
Tog~ther in Old Days"; Francis Goeglein: "Did you Know"; and Harold
Blackston, "Success." Jokes were
told Helen Blackston and Bill Radford. A Grange quiz was held with the
topic being the Meigs County Fair
Tab. Holter closed the program by
singing a song.
Whitney Ashley graduated from
the junior,grange to the senior grange.
Patty Dyer, master of Star Grange,
recognized Connie White of Star
Grange. for being selected to sing the
Star Spangled Banner at the Cincinnati Reds Ball Game on July 28, as
pan of the Ohio Federation of Soil
and Water Conservation District's
iannual summer meeting. The group
Iattended the game and two represen.tatives were selected to sing.
i Eldon Barrows, legislative chair.man reported on the National Weath1er Service warnings.
Janet Morris, women's activities
chairperson, read a thank you letter
from the Meigs Cooperative Parish
for the donation of food and health
items to the food bank in July.
Donations were made to the Deaf
Fund in Memory of Neva Nicholson,
past deaf chairperson, the Kelly Farm
Fund and the Friendly Hills Camp
Fund.
Dyer reponed on the prescription
drug program being sponsored
through the Ohio State Grange.
Final plans were completed to display at the Meigs County Fair and it
was reported that the Grange received
sixth place on their display at the
Ohio State Fair.
It was note that fun night ~oYili not
· be held this month due to the Meigs
County Fair.
1
Next meeting will be Sept. 7, at
the hall with a potluck supper at6:30
p.JR. followed by meeting at 8 p.m.

Clinton: What GOP convention?

Before you lift,the lid on the basket, make sure the food is safe

The San Bernardino County Sun

Peaches for canning, freezing or
just plain good eating - Tree Ripened
Yellow Freestone Peaches from the ShenandDah Valley, Va.

wv

Thursday, August 15, 1996

By KATHRYN HANSLER

PEACHES

1/4 ~ North of
Pomeroy/Milan Bltdge
.Malon,
" ' - {304) 773-5721

.

2 Columns x 5 Inches·
Solid Line Box

register 180 degrees.
- Hamburgers made from beef
should be cooked to 160 degrees,
and ground chitken or turkey to
165 degrees. Undercooked hamburger patties made from beef or
poultry carry harmful ~~leria.
PICNICS
When planning a picnic, follow
these food safety tips:
- Keep all salads with mayonnaise in an insulated cooler pBCked
with either ice or ice packs.
Replenish ice when it stans to
melt.
Raw foods should be
wrapped securely to prevent leakage. Separate raw foods from
ready-to-eat foods, such as fruits.
Juices from raw foods can leak and
contaminate ready-to-eat foods.
- When transponing the cooler, do not k.eep it in the trunlc of a
car.
- Avoid repeatedly opening
any cooler container . with raw
foods in it. If necessary, pack beverages in a separate cooler.
-Place cooler under a tree, out

ssooo

1~--------~-----------------,
2 Columns x 3 Inches
1
Dotted Line Box

1

1 Col x 31nMulti Line Box

$1500

'3000
Want to ahow your appreciation? Fair
exhibitors ''Thank You" ada are available at
theae slzee and prices. Ads muat be paid In
advance by mail or delivered to:

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For additional ad sizes and prices, pleaae call

992-2156

'

•••••••••••••
••• 1 Col x 2 in•• Dotted Line
Box
••
••
•••••••••• ••••
•

�(

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

15, 1996

Thureday, August 15, 1996

Ohio

~ Top

rabbit
:exhibits .
:honored

Poultry
judging
•
w1nners
named
By TOM HUNTER
SentNI News Staff

CAGING THE COMPE11110N - Judge Bob Johns of F1'11m01'1t
took a good look while Inspecting poultry during the Intermediate Poultry ahowman clellll Monday's Junior Felr Poultry Show.
Awaiting the judge's word were, from 11ft, Odie Karr, I!Aellaaa
Houser, Mendy Gue11 and Jessica Amott. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel
photo)

G11U1d and reserve champion honors in six poultry classes and categories were awarded during the annual Meigs County Jpnior Fair Poultty
show Monday afternoon at the Junior
POULTRY SHOWMEN CHAMPIONS- MelisFair Poultry Show. From 11ft are Junior Fair
Fair/Livestock Show Arena.
sa Houser and Kevin Butcher wera named
Poultry Prince Odie Karr, Butcher, HouMr and
A total of 32 youths competed in
grand and raaerva champlona, reapectlvely, In
Junior Fair Poultry Prlnceaa Merldy Guesa.
four different age ciiiS§Cs in the Poolthe poultry Judging during Monday's Junior
tty Showmanship judging.
Winners in the categories included senior showman (ages 17 and
over): Alban Salser, first place;
Melissa Guess, second place; Junior
showman (ages 15-16): Matthew
King, first place; Mike Guess, second
place; Intermediate showman (ages
12-14 ): Melissa Houser, first place;
Odie Karr, second place; Beginner
showman (ages 9-11 ): Kevin Butcher, first place; Jessica Justice, second
i
place.
I
Claiming high honors in poultty
showmanship were grand champion
1- 'I
Melissa Houser and reserve champi'
on Kevin Butcher.
A total of 24 market pen weights
were inspected by judge Bob Johns
. of Fremont, with grand champion
honors going to Kevin Butcher's
12.5-pound market pen. Edward Dill
took reserve champion honors with
his I0.25 pound market pen.
The following order of the remainBROILER CHAMPIONS - Mike Gueaa and
left are Junior Fair Poultry Prince Odie Karr,
der of the market pen judging were:
Eric Runyon - e selected grand and reaarve
Runyon and hie father Danny Runyon, Mlka
Matt Kirk, third; Mike Guess, fourth;
champions,
rHplictlvaly,
In
broiler
Judging
durGuaaa
and Junior Fairy Poultry Prlnceaa
Melissa Guess, fifth; Odie Karr,
ing
Monday's
Junior
Fair
Poultry
Show.
From
MandyGueaa.
sixth; Roben Johnson, seventh; Alban
Salser, eighth; Brent Butcher, ninth;
Jeremy Shanks, tenth; Brian Hupp,
lith; Robbie Weddle, 12th; James
Westjohn, 13th; Matt King, 14th;
Brad Runyon, 15th.
In the pullets class, Odie Karr took
grand champion honors, while Sarah
Houser took reserve champion honors. Other pullet entrants earning "A" .
ribbons included : Melissa Houser,
Rebecca Ho~ser, Roben Johnson,
Matthew Salser, and Michael Salser.
. In the broiler judging, Mike Guess
claimed grand champion honors
while Eric Runyon took reserve
champion honors.
Other broiler entrants earning "A"
ribbons included: Melissa Houser,
Brent Bu'tcher, · Ke¥in Butcher,
Edward Dill, Ashley Graham, Melissa Guess, Rebecca Houser, Sarah
Heuser, Brian Hupp, Robert Johnson,
MARKET PEN CHAMPIONS - Edward Dill Show. From left are Junior Fair Poultry Prince
Odie Karr, Rebekah Karr, Matthew
and Kevin Butcher - e aalected grand and Odie Karr, Bobble and Kevin Butcher, Edward
King, Jessica Amott, Matthew Kirk,
reaarve champions, rHpectlvely, In market pen and Lisa Dill, and Junior Fair Poultry Prlnceaa
Melissa Kirk, Steven McDaniel,
judging during Monday'a J11nlor Fair Poultry MandyGueaa.
·
Brand Runyon, Alban Salser,
Matthew Salser, Michael Salser, Jere- claimed grand champion and reserve Edward Dill, Odie Karr, Kevin
Geese, and Turkeys class were Alban
my Shanks, Robbie Weddle, James champion honors respectively in the Butcher, Brent Butcher, Christina
.Salser, grand champion, and Matt
Westjohn, Kenny Zuspan, and Fancy Poultty class. Other entrants in Westfall, Brian Hupp, and Jessica
Salser, reserve champion. Other parMendy Guess.
the class were: Rebecca Houser, Amott.
·
ticipants in the class were Michael
Jes~ica Justice and Alban Salser Melissa Houser, Sarah Houser,
Claiming top honors in the Ducks, Salser and Carrie Wiggins.

.,
-

FEEDER CALF SHOWMEN- Jeromee Calaway and J81011.Pu1Una were named grand and
reaerve chemplon feeder call ahowmen,
reapectlvely, II the 11116 Feeder Call Show at
the Melga County Fair Tueaclay afternoon. In
addition, Pulllna and Calaway ahowed the
grand and reserve champion feeder 11eer and

-

halter, rnpectively. Calawa~ ehowed the
grand champion cro11brad
lng, followed
by Pulllna, who received .....,. champion In
that contaat. From 11ft are Fair King Lany Willie,
Celaway, Pulllne, Fair Quean Amy Smith and
Beef Prince Josh Hager.

.

'

•C

. ..h
TOP SENIOR SHOWMEN - Mellase Gueaa and Alban Salser
received first and second place honors In the senior showmanship poultry judging.

TOP JUNIOR SHOWMEN- Mike Guess and Malllmr King took
first and second place honors In the junior showmanship poultry judging.

MAINE ANJOU WINNERS - Sarah Clifford
and JerorMe Calaway, reapectlvaly, ahowed
grand and raaerva champion .Maine AnJou at
the Malga County Junior Fair Breeding Beat

contaat Tuaaday afternoon. From left are Fair
King Larry Willis, Beef Prince Joah Hager, Cal·
away, Clifford and Fair Quean Amy Smith.

• By TOM HUNTER
· Sentinel News Staff
Meiss County Junior Fair Queen
Amy Smith and 1996 Junior Fair
Rabbit Princess Michelle Hupp took
top showmanship honors durin&amp;
judgins at the 1996 Meigs County
Junior Fair Rabbit Show, held Tuesday momins at the Junior Fair Livestock/Show Arena.
Smith claimed grand champion
showman honors, after placinslirst in
senior division (age 17 and over)
showman judging. Hupp took reserve
champion showman honors, after
placing first in intermediate (ages 1214) class U showman judging.
Entries saw great increases this
year, with the various breeds of rab. bits judged in showmanship, best of
breed, best opposite, and market pen
categories by visiting judge Paul
Molyneux.
Best of breed winners in individ~ d~~Sses w~.~-' . ~~ Houser, calIfornian and mini lop; Stephanie
Burdette, champagne d'argent; Billie
Jo Welsh, checkered giant and holland lop; Sarah Clifford, dutch;
Bethany Cook, french lop; Michelle
Hupp, jersey wooley and satin;
Rebecca Houser, mini rex; Alban
Salser, netherland dwarf; Jennifer
Harris, new zealand; Amy Smith,
palomino; Julie Spaun, rex; Amanda
Tobin, silver fox; Becky Karr, silver
manin; Susan Tobin, crossbred.
Best opposite winners in individual classes were: Counney Kennedy,
californian; Carrie Mayle, champasne d'argent; Billie Jo Welsh,
checkered giant; Becky Karr, dutch;
Summer Johnson, french lop; Jaymie
Osborne, holland lop; Michelle
Hupp, jersey wooley; Jillian Cochran,
mini lop; Rebecca Hbuser, mini rex;
Brad Baylor, netherland dwarf; Lori
Harris, new zealand; Amy Smith,
palomino; Joshua Rathburn, rex; Jenny Smallwood, satin; Jimmie Putman, silver manin; Jessica Pooler,
crossbred.
Claiming best of show honors was
Michelle Hupp, with her satin senior
doe. Jenny Smallwood 'took best
opposite of show honors with her 618
· californiiln satin buck.
John Krawsczyn took grand
champion market pen honors, with
his three rabbit pen wei&amp;hins in at 13
pounds. An Tobin claimed reserve
champion-market pen honors with his
. three rabbit 9.4 pound.lllll'kel pen.
Rounding out the top ten in market pen judgins were: Counney
Kennedy, third; Becky Karr, founh;
Jenny Mayle, fifth; Jenny Clifford,
sixth; Michelle Hupp, seventh;
Andrea Neutzling, eighth; Amy
Smith, ninth; Robby Smith, lOth.

'Kiddie pull's
results posted

CHAMPION SHOWMEN - Amy Smltl\ and
Michelle Hupp claimed the grand and reaarve
champion ahowrnan .JIW&amp;rdl, reapectlvely, at
Tuesday's annual Junior Fair rabbit Judging

and ahow. From left are Bunny Prlnceaa runner-up Bethany Cooke, Smith, Hupp and Junior
Fair King Larry Willla.

READY TO RACE- The pit araa at the Go-Kart racetrack waa
bullllng with nolea and acUon Tuesday afternoon •• participants
got their machines raady and Hned up for racing action. Hera, raeera prepare to enter the track.

GETTING READY- Youngatera ware busy Tualday prepa_rlng
atMrl, halfara and calf In preparation tor 4-H beef breading and
ltHr ahowa. Julie Brown, abova, put the finishing touches on her
anlrllnt, Pauly. Thla le Brown'a laat year to participate In Junior
fair evantl.

BREEDING SHEEP SHOWMEN - Aaron Yost and Rebecca
Scott were named grand and raaerve breeding ahowmen,
rHptetlvely, In Monday nlghra Melga County Junior Fair Sheep
Show.From 11ft are Sheep Prlncaaa Krlatlna Kennedy, Scott and
Yost. Scottalao won grand and reaarvaln Suffolk ewa and grand
.:~:.; In Suffolk ram c011npetltlo•n.

Kiddie tractor pulls are being held
each day at the Meigs County Fair.
Winners Monday in the 35 to 55
pound class were Jacob Hunter, first;
Jenna'Hupp, second, and Josh Hupp,
third; and in the 56 to 75 pound class,
J.H. Hupp, first; Adam Grosnickle,
second; and Shane Milhoan, third.
Tuesday's winners were in 35 to
5~ pound class, Jennie Hupp, first;
Heather Grimm, second; and Josh
Hupp, third. In the 56 to 7S pound
class, first went to Reed Boster, second to Erin Sellers, and third to
Matthew White.
,,
Pulls will be be held at 4 p.m. each
day. with the exception of Friday.
when it will be held at noon. On Saturday at noon, the final pull will be
followed by a pull of champions.
Adults will have the chance to get
in on the action Thursday when an
adult peddle tractor pull will take
HIS BEST SHOT - Justin Cotterill's best ahot· at peddling 1
place in the show arena.
· dlllance fall short of winning In Tuelday's kiddie tractor pull contnt 11 the Malge County Fair.
/

..._;/
:SUi$
TOP INTERMEDIATE SHOWMEN - Odie Karr and Melissa
Houser took flrat and second place honors In lntllnnedlate poultry judging.

PIONEER CRAFTS - Featured thle fair week In the log cabin
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds are p~ crafts. On Tuesday,
Charlotte Elberfeld worked with the children .o n malting l8ed ploturea. Heather and Amber Whltlt o1 Long Bottom wera among
many who particlpatad In the craft program. ·

PUUET CHAMPIONS - Odie Karr and Slrah 1touMr - .
selected grand and rHirw c:hamplona raapac:tiWiy In pullet judgIng during Monday's Junior Fair Poultry Show.

Price shatters
state fair record

,
•

. GRAND CHAMPION MARKET PENS- John
Krawaczyn and Art Tobin took top honorl durIng rabbit market pen Judging II Tunday'a
Junior Fair Rabbit Show. Kr.awaczyn claimed
grand champion honora, while Tobin took

raaarve champion honora. From left ara Junior
Fair Queen Amy Smith, Junior Fa I, King Larry
Wlllla, Krawaczyn, Tobin, Junior Fair Bunny
Prlncaaa Michelle Hupp and Junior Fair Bunny Princess Nnner-up Bethany Cooke.

Gannett Newa Service
. COLUMBUS - Shattering the
olcl record mark by $7 .SOO. a Laurelville girl's grand champi.on market
lamb sold for $27,500 at the 29th
Junior Fair Livestock Sale of Champions at the Ohio State Fair on Monday night.

Fair's open class beef show winners posted
Winners in the Meigs Cpunty
Fair Open Class Beef Show held
Tuesday were, in order by class:
,
ANGUS
Spring heifer calf- Windy Hills
Cattle, Pomeroy;,Spring bull Cllf- Windy Hills Cattle; 1\vo-year-old
bull - Royal Oak F,11111, Pomeroy;
Grand champion bull, Royal Oak
Farm;
Reserve champion bull, Windy
Hills Cattle.

;h

1

'

.

TOP BEGINNER SHOWMEN - Jeaelca Julllca lrld 1C8v1n
Butclw took first enciiiCOitd piece honors In beginning pc»
tryjUdglng.

•

•

FANCY CHICKEN CHAMPIONS - A11Mn Belair and latelca
.luatlca _ . IIIICIId grand and FIIIIW champloll8 raepKiivea;::-ICY clllclclli judging dUring llonday'e Junior Flir Poultry

,

'

MAINE ANJOU

Spring.CII(- Wmdy Hills Pann,
Lakeview Farms of Reedsville;
Junior Cllf- W'Jndy Hilb Fum;
Spring yeartiDI· hei&amp;r - Windy

DUCKSIJURKEYS CttAIIPIONS - Alban Salatr and IIIII
Salaar,... ul1c~id and renrw ~..._...
ly In pullaiJudfllno
~Junior Fllr
- - - PIDo
turacl wllh the champlona Ia Jun Fair Poultry Prtnce Odie ec.r,
left.
•
I

-

HiUsFarm;
I

·

.'

.

Grand and restrve champion Windy Hills Farm.
·
LONGHORN
Sprins heifer - Valley View
Farms, Langsville (first and second
place);
· Cow-calf - Valley View Farms
(first and second place);
Two-year-old heifer - Valley
View Farms;
Cow class - Valley View Farm~;
Grand and reserve champion Valley V'~ew Farms.

CHAROLAIS
Winter heifer calf- Walnut Lane
Beef, Coolville;
, Grand champion- Walnut Line
-Beef.

SHORTHORN
Junior heifer calf- Windy Hills
Farm·;
Junior yearling heifer - Windy
Hills Farm;
Winter bull calf - Windy .Hills
Farm;
Grand champion shorthorn heifer
- Windy Hills Farm;
Reserve champion shorthorn
heifer - Windy Hills Farm;
Grand champion shorthorn bullWindy Hills Farm.

ANY BREED
Junior heifer calf- Windy Hills

Fann;

_

Grand champion Chianina Windy Hills Farm.

NON-REGISTERED
Spring heifer calf ~ Susan
Pullins, Coolville; Rankins Club
Calves, Tuppers Plains; Rankins Club
Calves, Tuppers Plains; Lakeview
Farms;
Junior heifer calf - Susu
Pullins, Rankins Club Calws, Lake·
view Farms:
Spring yearling heifer - Walnut
Lane Beef, Susan Pullins;
Cow-&lt;:alf- Walnut Lue Beef;
Grand champion
- S~~Ju Pullins;":''
.

non-repsteled

_ =~:;:_noa-repsteled

~

BElT RABBITS OF ~W - Jenny 8lnliltwaad, .... MC1

=·~~J:':!,~..:'=~·~:::,~

...--,A'&amp; Hupp took bell of IMw ~ will her llilln 881M 11u111,
Junior heifer Cllf- Oleryl JewWillie ..-.....a all took bell of oppoe... lhow' llonon .... hir
ell of Pomet'C'y.
·
Min buck.
·
'
'
HEREFORD

.,
'

�----_.....- ----

:·

..

Thursday, August 15, 1996

"OW OPE"
AUGUST MENUS.

MEIGS SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Oven Fried Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Peas
Bread
Apricots

THURSDAY

Beef BBQ on Bun
Cole Slaw.
Green Beans
Apple Cherry Crisp

26

27

Beef Tips in Gravy
on Noodles
Mashed Potatoes
Buttered Corn
Bread
Pine~ple Chun)f.s

Chicken . Patty
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Applesauce

Sausage Gravy
on Biscuit
Hash Brown Potatoes
Orange Juice
Hot Applesauce

Baked Steak
Mashed Steak with
Gravy
Carrots
Bread
Watermelon

·oven Baked Fish
Skin on Potatoes
Carrots
Bread
8antalope

Hungarian Style
Por-k Chops
Parslied Boiled
Potatoes
Buttered Broccoli
I•
Bread

FRIDAY

31801 Amberger Rd.

ott FOI'Ht Run

949·2057

22

21

20

19

BING'S
AUIO
REPAIR

MIKE liNG

Ham and Scalloped
Potato Casserole
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Hot Cinnamon
Peach Slices

111111 mo.

Tammera
CoDlltruetion lne.
RtmodeUng
Room lddltions
Roofing
Garage's, Deck's,

Spaghetti with
Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad with
Tomato Wedges
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

Painting, Siding

1-800·470·2559
10% off all quaNflng bids

Meigs Senior Center
August Activities
The Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games,
pool. Weekly activities are Chorus
Practice on Tuesday at 12:45,
Knitting Circle on Wednesday from
10 to 12, with Physical Fitness held
on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11:15
to keep participants "fit and
limber".
•
A representative from the Athens
,• Social Security office will be at the
Center on Wednesdays, August 14
and 28 from 10 to 11 a.m.
Friday, August 16 - The Arthritis
Support Group meets from 10:30 to
noon.
Tuesday, August 20- RSVP will
present a video "Listen Up, Wise
Up, Hang Up" about telemarketing
fraud at II :00.
Thursday, August 22- the monthly
Blood Pressure Clinic will be held
from 9:30 to II :30.
Thursday, August 22 - the
Alzheimer's Support Group will
meet from 1 to 3 p.m. with Dr.
Edward Black speaking aboqt _
"Stress and Chronic Illness". The
meeting is open to the public,
anyone interested in health issues is
invited :o attend the support group.
Friday, August 23 - trip to

Marietta and the show on the Becky
Thatcher showboat.·Call the Center,
992-2161 for further information.
Thursday, August 29 - the
monthly birthday party will be held
with seniors celebrating birthdays in
August honored.
Friday, August 30 - the Mason
County Senior Center will host the
monthly tri-county bingo at 10:30
a.m.
Trips scheduled by · the Senior
Center for 1996 with seats available
are:
Friday, October 11 - Bob Evans
Farm Festival, Rio Grande, for the
fall Arts &amp; Crafts Festival, cost
$5.00, with dinner at your own
expense.
Friday,
November
15
Parkersburg, Grand Central Mall
and Walmarts for shopping, cost
$5 .00, with dinner at your own
expense.
Thursday, December 5 - Oglebay
Festival of Lights, Wheeling,
includes also maiBion tour, Winter
Fantasy Laser Light Show,
shopping at St. Clairsville Mall and
!he Oglebay Garden and gift shop,
cost $35.00, with meals at your own
expense.
Call the Center, 992-2161, for
further information or to make
reservations for a trip.

Lktnll411swt4. ......

·'

FAftOIY

Howard Excavatin

-

All Kinds of Earth Work

... . Mitlous

' '

Jaly 16, 1996 to

Find out about their

gifted Powerll

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

Drapes By Design

•tMw G~r~get
•Eiectrlul &amp; Plumbing
•Aoollng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
PllnUng
Alao Concrete Work .
(FREE ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG Ill

;AdditionI

1/Wo

•NewGaragn
•RIIftOdellriO
·Siding

•Roofing
•PIIntlng
FAll EITIIIATES

tt2-es35

742·2935, Ask tor Kip
7111111n

Let a Psychic
Answer you_r
Questions!

$3.99 per minute

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yn.
Serv-ll (619)-845 8434

Getting Ready for the Fair
-

=
=
-

:itt IIt It I till Itt tIll II tilt Itill II Itill II IIll IIt II II IIIt III II nr.

'.

Senior citizens celebrating their birthday• at the June
birthday party were: Polly Eichinger and Dorothy Downie,
Pomeroy. Back Row • Reuben Collins, Middleport, Clarence
Story~ Darwin, and ~larence Wickline, RIICine.
WE HONOR

BfiJ
MEROY,OH.

992-3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARI)S .

Wednesdays
Senior Citizem Day
Storewide

..

..
TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO ALL
SENIOR CITIZENS
Watche,s • Diamonds • Jewelry
Cameru • Photo Finishing.• Old Photos Copied

422 2nd Ave. 446·1615 Galli

SENIOR
Every Wednesday Storewide Savings

Save 15% off everything in our store.

15o/o off

Sale
Merchandise
Not Included
r)

1
•

"l

· .r 1 ,'.&amp;Fr ;~:~r'r·~ R ···

lis~

The. . voice atudents of Ms. Bhlron H1wley en1lertlln•sd
the June birthday perty with the Mnlor citizens .nendlng
snjoylng having the young pereons share their tllent.
Ptctursd It the plano Ire Sheron Hswley, Middleport,
atandlng - Mariana Staats, Middleport, Monlctt Zurcher,
Lttlrt, W.VI., snd Adsm and Jordsn Shsnk, Pomeroy. A110
1lnglng 1 ssleetlon was Pam NHCt, Mldclleport.

Ohio

HIYitiG TROUBLE
THAT FIT CORBCTLY?
CALL

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
446·2206

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

1·800·44 5· 2206

and wbite fudle.
:Cheryl Kins, ipple, cherry, peach

St. At- 7

know??

l\Jpptra PlsiM, Ohio 45713

Large black malt cat, good with

,;,.;.:,.,;,;.~---,;;,··.;,·,._.._,;;,.,.....,..,;,___, ward
lost Bracetet 11 Captain D's Ra·
eu-.ue-2158 or 614-U6·

~

JONES' TREE SERVICE

GUYSIII

.

Gins are waiting to
lk t
ta LIVoEylolu
1•900-446.2626
Ext. 5843

Found:.Biock I
oeo3.

Whllt Young Fe·
male Dalmatian. Rod Coller,

.COIIOIUaiOII
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop • Compare

loll: blut nylon backpack containing home health nuratng oup·

. =d~:~::'.'~~~~~ng s... Rd ..

Femato
Whilt
wuh
iI Lott
Long Hair,
Pugc.,
Note,
Vlc:nlly:'

. Third Avenue, 61•·••6·7169,,
61•·-1008.
! Loot gold ring, lolllll11196, Po·

Owner: Ronnie Jones

1

367-0266-1-800-950-3359

.meroy/ Mason YiCinlly, reward ,

L.-....~Fi.;.rH,:;.::..:E;.::Bo:,tl::.:;m;;;a;:ttif:e;:B;__ _ _ _ ___. · &amp;14-11112-2008.
'Loot mate Boxer pup, Middleport
vicinity, no cottor, cllMd'l pat 61•·

In memory of our
father,
PEARL G. KOEHLER,
wh!l p•sed away 20
ye~ra ego loday,
August15, 1996.
Dad; this laluat to let
you know we haven't
forgotten you.
We miM you 1nd
love you.
Your Children:
Janet, Marilyn and
Ra

THE

1192-2508.

LOST: Malo Brlnany Sptnltl,
oronge &amp; while. GrHr Ad area.
300-675-54111 Of 30H75-1320.
LOST: Mall Shellito (Collie) Jim
Hill Rd tr&lt;tl. 30~ · 67S - ~~19 or
30H7!H3Zl.
70
Yard Sale

luy Whole111le

TIM'S CUSTOM
New World

CARPET

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNEA

rhe da~ before rM ad fa to run.1
Sundly ldltlan - 2:00 p.m. Fridoy.
Mondlly Mfllan • 10:00 a .m. Sit·

Mf.2512

Utday.

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Waattoltlp
Yo till

NEW·Rt:PAIR

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Solei Mull Be Paid In,
AdYinte. DEADLINE ; 2;00 p.m.·

$19.95/Month

LIVE PSYHICS

ROOFING

• It's Walling

1·888-goNWNET

Saltl &amp;
lastallatloa
614-992·5379

985-447~

Howard L Wrlteeel

.

SAVE

FREE ESTIMATES

Augull 15ih, 10ih, 17th . 9;00
A.M.Corner Of S.R. 588 +Texas
Rd . Inside. C lothing. G'IIIIWi re .

Housei'Oid.

Let them tell you
sbout the future Ill

Gutters ·

Downapoutl

Furniture, Books, Toyt l Morel

3rd Drive Nor1h

01 Clay
On Rt. 7 Fti&amp; Sal II- 1..

1~100

Gutter CINnlng

Palnttnv

From 9· 5. 4607 S.R. 850 In Bid·
well. At Jerr.,ro Residence.
Moving Yard Sale; 11118, 11111. At
7 S. Turn On Orcllanl Hilt Road, 1
Mile. Storm Ooon. W1ndow1 .
Doors. Woodburner, Bicycle. Fur·
nlturo. 8 Gun Ctblnet. At! Slreo

Aaclna, Ohio 45T71

Mf.3013 Phone
Mf.2011FAX

Mutt be 1a yra.

..... _

8arv"U(611~458434

5116'14TFN

Clothing, Old Aecordl, Nlntando

H&amp;H

Game. Tapes, Misc.

Portable ·'-IHwMI
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
MiddlepOrt, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; f'e9gy B~tdes

,...••

•

TFN

'

Rollback - Wedge
Open - Enclosed
Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Day or Night

'

.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

AftJri 814-182-7074

CANNING AND BAKING CHAMPION - Cheryl King

won 23

blue rlbbona with her exhibits In the baking and canning division
at the Melga County Fair.

and raisin pies, chocolate cake:, white
cake.
Darlene Hayes, pecan pie.
Donna Jenkins, Rutland, brownies, oauneal cookies, choco181C chip
cookies, peanut butter cookies, baking powder biscuits,
Linda Rathburn, Middleport, plain
susar cookies, pineapple drop cookies.
Sandra Bush, Lanpville, banana
nut brad. ~hinni bread, yeast rolls.
Judy Bunaer, Pomeroy, iced
brownies. '

,

News policy
In an effort to provide our readership with cun;cnt news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddinp after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must
be submitted within 30 days of
occurrence. All binhdays mUSI be
submitted within 42 days of the ,

occurrence.

DOl Sllllll
992·2735

I/12JIImn
.

HI Fhere,
F&amp;J Curio larn
Is lackl

IIIIIIIOI·ImiiOI
FREE ESTIIlATES

Mstlte,... ... ef
palatl... let •• Ills It

'"'"'

a:

992-3051

,

.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

45633 SL Rl124
Racine, Oh. 45n1
10:00 til?
Clothe•
What-notl

~BIIGIIIU

IIRBfiBICU
614-HI-4110

onnmo.

4'11010.1111.

LL HOLLOI

EASY

TRUCIINI

IUFCH MAICI.I
IS lfADf
IOWIII

DUMP TRUCK

1-1100 1145 4400
Ext. 3124

~·Grrtel

SERVICE
Dlrt•Send

$2.118 per min.
Must bt 18 YIIPioeall Co.
(102) e54-7o420

11111422

.

•

At Silv8f' Btidge Plaza
LIQht Turn Towards Rivet
Go StratgM To L111 Trailer
On leh Bolide

.

The Altetationa Shol).
Sorunloy AH hems
WIM Be Halt Pric:el
Items. Ollered : Buckets, Display
Stands, Large T1erecl Revolving
· Bin Unit, Oiahu. Glusware

Reading Mattrlol, Houlthotd
Goode, loll Mite. 11omo, loado
Ollldo For SkiHota, Pan1, Diot:e~
Bring Your 11om That Needo A
Lid, 8IW Ponat:lo Table T.v., B&amp;D

Siding New

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

.JU811n: 814-247-4411

tnsui'IICI
We ban the now FR12
Low Colt Replacement
for AatGmotln R12.

.

~ew Homes • Vlny'

Mill: 814-247...ae1

Serv.tce.

-

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.

1-800-279-3147

Melp Rafrtgeretlon
Air Conditioning,
Heal pump, Fumscas,
Refrlgerlllora,
lnatallatlon and

· ·'lard Sale: Thurs. Fr:. Sal.
Au gull 15th, 18ih, 1nh
313 Upper Rt. 7.

We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-1173
FAX T7HII1
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV
.

·~

IDIICD

25c Each . lots Mise Merchandi&amp;e l Chn&amp;tian Construction. 1403
EaStern A';ol8f"IA.

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too Small"

614-742·2193
- - ..

Saturday 1111 7th. 9·3. All Cto1has

Autnorized AGA Dlstrtbutor
• Walding Supplies • Industrial Gues • Machine Shop
SeMc8S • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps -Stalra, Railings, Pallo Fum~ura, Fireplace
hems, Planter hangers. TreHises &amp; lots of other stutfll

SAWMILL

··-

School

Mov1nQ Sale: Augull 16th, 17t h,

2115413 BASHAH RD.

Exl2469
$3.88 per min.

FREE ESnMATES
949-2188

e••·

3118-II930.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Emeritnce
• Imured
-r

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 Yrs.

101111 IISSELL ·

P.M.

c:hlldron. 300·075-5101 .
Plastic Culven- Dual watt and Regular 8" 1hru 36"
4" SltD. perf. -solid pipe
4" It 6" Flex pipe
Long Haired Silver Mixed Doe.
4" &amp; 6" Sch JS pipe
t12" &amp;. 3/4" C. P.V.C. pipe Very Friendly, 2 Long Haired
Rabblll, 1 Female Tobby Kitten.
I t/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
81 ..38&amp;0321 .
3/4" It t" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (iOO' roll's 1hru I.000' rot!'•)
Small c.- Sponltl '"" .. QDOd
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
home, 614-11112-32.0.
8" GraveleSA Leach pipe
Two
caltco klnena to good home.
Oas pipe t• 1hru 2" - Fiuings : Regulators· Risers
1
614-040.2898.
t;utt assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fining• &amp; Wa1er fiuings
LF,.u_n_ti_ne_o_r{:;.i_st•..m,.._se~
-~~
. i~~-"~w-·~~~~-'~··Ofll~g-•-'a-nk'"'!s.~""!"'~ · 60 Lost and Found

1400.189·3943
r- - - - - - -

(UmeStoM-

Bft)ro 900

ffM-., coli 01.,.11.0·271V.

114-985-3813 or 614-667-41414 ·

Residential - Commercial
Rooting - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
35 r..,.. Experience

(614) 992·2364

88110

I &amp; WPUSIICS liD SI"LY

BIB RDOftll and
CDIS!RUCtiDI

Baking, canning projects judged
Cheryl King of Pomeroy with 23
blue tibbons was the top award winner in the baking and canning competition staged at the Meigs County
Fair.
In preserves she took all four
places, in jams she took firsts in
strawberry and blueberry, and in jellies, her first was in apple. She also
took blue tibbons in tomato juice,
grape juice, canned peachCs, pears,
cherries, lima beans, peas, cabbage,
pork and beef in the canning division.
Other blue ribbon winners in the
canning division were;
Mary King, Long Bottom, raspberry jam, blackberry jelly, sweet •
pepper relish, canned whole and
sliced beets, shell beans, carrots,
com, sweet potatoes and whole while
potatoes, green tomatoes, vegetable
soup.
Dale Hoffman, Racine, a first in
grape jelly, cherry jelly, blueberry jet:
ly, catsup, chili sauce, spaghettt
sauce, applesauce, and apple pie filling.
Saodra Bush, Langsville, a first in
blackberry jam, end of summer relish, barbecue sauce.
Lenora Leifheit, Pomeroy, bread
and butter pickles.
.
Cyndi King, Pomeroy, sweet ptck·
lcs and canned whole tomatoes.
Darlene Hayes, dill pickles and
canned qwirtened tomatoes.
' Karolyn Welsh, Tuppers Plains,
canned blackberries
Debbie Brown, Rutland, canned
kidney belns.
Pamela Haser, Coolville, canned
snap beans.
.
: Maxine Dyer of Bidwell took a
fi!ll in lfiPC jam.
Baked goods division
' ~~ blue ribbons in lhe com·
pelitiOfl were: .
: Dlrlene Hayes, chocollle fudge.
; Miry KiiiJ, peanut butter fud&amp;e

e14· 448·

Dryer, Htetlrl, Blcyclea, T.V.'s
And Record Playera , B14·44G ·

•
•

Giveaway
2Cdc:o- 30H75-5081.
Adorable Tlaor Slrlpod Klneno I

1

WICKS
HAULING

doll are Eva Robson, Geraldine Cleland, Sarah Hull

-

40

lrllntd, """ - · prtltr It&gt; givt
to home with adulll. 30•·882·
20CMI.

In Memory

-=
=
=

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Calico kitten , 8wka old, Ill.,

71311116 1 mo. lid.

L.owRates)

,

•TIIt·ln

•Doubfe Hung
•Transferable Warranty

HEAT PUIIPS

Serv-U (819) 645-8434

614-992-3470

craft classes, several volunteers:
·have been busy making a supply oL
the dolls to sell at the fair.
·

s11Mrmopane

8am-8pm

Hand1ome Male Cat,

1·900·255-0500
Ext. 5266

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

citizens about services available,
and selling crafts, knives and
cookbooks.
Following the wooden block doll

manymetall.
614-992-4025

3703.

Psychic tells you
things you may not
even want to

Gravel, Sand,

volunteers will be distributing
brochures of various programs,
filling out Golden Buckeye Card
applications, talking with senior

$19500

•Up ta 84 Unhecllnches
•In Wood Window Opening

UNEXPLAINED
POWERII

Umestone,

The Senior Citizens Center wi II
have a booth at the Meigs County
.Fair again this year. Staff and

FREE
Pick-up discarded,
appllancn, bltleltn, &amp;

lnllslled'

IN8TAUAT10NS.

AW Caultlaatrs

•NewHom11

Pomeroy, Ohio

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

AI Low AI

. trllllllclwlllllow

~ llulldtng .......... .

982-1215

'""

Pictured doing an assembly line to make a finished
and RSVP Director Allee Wolfe.
.

SOLID VINYL •
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Ai'Cmlll••n.d
AIIHa Heat Pustps.

IIIII~TE

SMITH'S
COIISIRUCIIOII

1·90D-868-4900 !
Ext. 7625
·~

Must be 18 yrs.

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

I

46 State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
614 446-4199
800-441..0099

•Aoom Add111ona

Call
1-900-484-1515
Ext 1985
ISioRV·U (619) 645-8434

•

'ON 1ltl! IPOY FINANCING
evolllllleloOUAUFED
IIUYEIII
'LAROE IIVIHTOIIY fOR

,

EVEN POLICE
USE
PSYCHICS!!

I 1 1

??????

Body wortc, car truck &amp;
truck palnUng, minor
mschanlcal rspalr.
Tune-up1,
011 Chsnge, Wu,
Buffing
Long St., Rut11ncl, Oh.

eS'- han &amp;witdaws

•

Mini Blinds,
Verticals,
Pleated Shades
and much morel

992-3838
...- .... . .

537 i:IRYAN PLACE

..... G.¥

I

30%·40°At OFF

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

614-982·2772 .
8:30 A.M.•3:30 P.M.
...... I I Wlatlows

I

SALE

Trucking.
Umestone
Bulldo7Jng end
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSUUTION
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 15,

Pomeroy • Mldd_leport, Ohio

--....-.,..-----...-....-----..............

.....

- .. ·-· ~ ~~---~~-----.,..---~--..-

,

Elecb'ic Weedeater. Trailer Steps, "
Kitchen Utensils, Bean Baskets ,
Tomato Batktlt. Antique Sew ing
Rocket", 04d Kraut Cutlef, PHnuta
Gluaea, Longarm Westerns, 3
Aluminum Ooara (35x84, 32•75,
31 112•80) , Ttlltt, 2 Six OL
Prtsture Cookers, 2 Etecttic Sk1l·
ltll, latge Col~ Coatef, Need
Sewing Wchi ne With Se,ger,
Mircowavt And Adu ll Clolhing,

CaN Geo~o Smilh 81 ...•0·0002.
Yard Sale Will EU Under Shade.
Terms Cuh . No Chtckl. All
Sale• Final. No Aell:ndo. Not R•

aponsible For Accldtnll. Every -

ant Welcomtl Come And Bring A

Friend I

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Ail Yard Sales Mull Bt Pa1d In

Advance . Oeadt1n1 . 1:OOpm the
dar betore the ad '' JD run , Sun·

day &amp; Monday od:uon· 1:OOpm
Fr:day.
Gara~e aalt· August 15·1&amp;, rain
or 1h1ne, 41000 laurel Clifl Rd .

~.

uam-epm. Two glrl'o blcyclu , _,
garden tiller, lawn mower, lingle
bedo, to1 of ptuo otro clothing •'
kid'o, """'~
.
· 80
Public Sale
~
1nd Auction
'

-·
)

Rick P.ar10n Auction Campan~.
lull time aucrionet r, compfelt

'

auction
aervlce. Ucenaed
lte,ONo I Wtll Virginia, 304 ·
773-!7115 Or 30H73-S..7.

90 Wanted to Buy
Abaolult Top Dollar : All U.S.

SU·

D_.,
Jewelry, aotcl
Rm"
Pre-1uo u.s. currency
S
, Eto. Acquililioni
vet And Gold Co lna, Proofttca

Anllquo

~
• II.T. Coin Shop, 151 S.Concl
- - Gol~ .... et4-44e-2842.

•

'

I

...,,

�:

.

..Thursday, August 15, 1996

The Dally Sentinel• Page 15

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHn..LIP

-I!IHII

311Velll~

ALDER

41 Bailie aouncl
44 Briny
41 L8llln

pltHAnq
• Carry
OAK HLL COMIIUNTY
MEOICll CENTER
JOB POSTING

large Amounts SO's. 80'1 45
RPM Recorda, Alter 8PM 513875-2930, 4339 Jasper Ro ad,
Jamestown, OH •5335
Clea n Late Model Cars Or
Truck s, 1990 Model s Or Newer,
Sm1th Bu •ck Ponua c t900 Ea st·
ern Avet"1Je. Gathpohs

Temporary, Full·r.ne

Bil~ng

Filla room house wnh bath 1n pg..

Clerk

Poail1o n Open In The Home

Health Department At Oak Hill

Community Medical Center. Reapont •bllities Include · t.Aanagu
Otf~e e,

Monthly B111ing, And Sec-

rtlanal Outlet. Oualilicallona InJ &amp; D's Auto Part s Buy1ng sa l- clude: A H1gh School Diploma Or
vage vehicles SeHmg parts 304 -

773-5033

'

Non -Work1ng Washer s, Dryers,
Stoves, Refngerators 1 Freezers,
A1r Conditioner s, Color TV ' s,

VCR's, Also Jonk Cars. 814·256·
1238
Top dollar- antique s. furnnure,
glatt, chtna, clock s. gold, S1lver,
cams, watches, estates, old sto ne
jara, old blue &amp; wh11e d•shes, old
wood bo xes, m1lk bottles, Me•g s
County Adver usement, Osby
MarM. 614·992-744t
Wanted To Buy Junk Au los With
Or Wnhout Motor s Ca ll l alfy
love~

81&lt;-386-9303

Wanted · vmtage Barb1e dolts,
clolhe s and accnsson es ( 1958·

1972), calltll4-890-0819

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110
AVON

Help Wanted
I

All Ar eas I Shtrley

Spears. 304·6 75 1429
Able Av on Represe n1 a11 ves
needed Ea1n money lor C hr~ s t ·
ma s billS at home/at work 1 800·
992·6356 or 304 862 264 5, lnd

Rep
Ambitious mmded people• $1000
weekly potenuat Many pos111ons
available Start now. no expen en ce nec essary Call 7 days,
407-875·2022, &amp;It 0598H33
Amblt•ous Mmded People! $1 ,000
Wkly Potenual Many Pos111ons
Ava•lable St~n Now, No Expenence Necessary Call 7 Days

oi07-87S.2022 E&gt;t 0528 H33
AmbroSia Ua chtne Inc Lookt{lg
for machtn1st, Syrs expenence
Call 304·675 1722 Monday -Fr1 ·

day 7 30-300
CLERK POSITION
Ctencal pos1110n available the
nghl candidate must po ssess.
typ1ng 55 wpm f1bng, telephone.
record keep1ng, and the ab1l1ty lo
ut1l1ze lOTUS 123 and M•crosolt
Word 5 5 Po s111on requ~res sell
' starter Ma11 worl( htstory to P:O
Box 209 , New Haven. W Va

25285
Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hours 20K To SSOK tVr 1·

800-348-7188 X1173
DENTAL HVGIENIST
Now acc;;eptmg application s for

rhe poslrlon or Dental Hyglenisr,
available 1mmed•are1y Please
send resumes ro Dental Hyg1en•st
Route 2. Box 857A. Pt Pleasant

wv 25550

Oom1no s P•zza ol Pomeroy now
hl nngdflvers, 61-'1 ·992 2124
Earn E11tra S$$ In Your Home
Wh1/e You EnJOY Increased Ener·
gy &amp; Decreased Suessll Cat To -

Equ•valant. Prev1ous Office Expe&lt;lence Prelerred, Knowledge Of
Medical Terminnology, Computer
Skills Requ•re&lt;( And Expenence
In MediC&amp;Id And Med1ca1e Bllhng
Are Prefe rred Please Apply In
Person 0 1 Send Resume To Oak
H11t Communi I)' Me&lt;hcat Center,
Atln Brend a McKenz1e , 350
Charlone Avenue. Oak H11l. OH

45656

Earn What Vou Are Worth! EnJOY
larg e Income Worl(tng From
Home Toll Free 1·888 200 7591,
614·44&amp; 1236
Easy Wo rk' E~~t c ellen t Pay• As ·
semble Product s at Home Call

Toll Free 1·800 467 ·5566 EXT
12170
Exp enenc ed Carpent er have
own tool s, mu st be able to run
re s•dent1al butldmg lrom ground
up, heatmg and coohng ex per ience IS an asset. pay negouable,

614·985-35\1

I

I

EJipenenced Roofers · Truck 1
Hand Tools/ Refer ences A Mu st
Wages Based On E x per~ e n ce
Apphcauon s Are Availabl e AI
1403 Eastern AOJe , Monday f n·
day, 8·5 Cal l 614 446 4514
work From Your Home Ea rn A
large Income. 6 14 &lt;141 0 16 7 Toll

Free \ ·888 823 8522
HOME TYPI ST PC users nee d
ed $45,00 0 mco me poten11 al
Call 1 800 513 4343 Er.t B 9368

An real estate advertiSing .,
tNs newspaper Is subject to
111e Foaeflll FaJr Housing Act
ol 1968 whlcll makes Hlllogal
to adveftlse •any preference,
llmitaUon or dlsCrlmlnatlon

based on filet, color. religion,
sex lamiiat status or national
origin, or any Intention to

make any such prelererce,
llmllatlon or dlscr1rmnallon •
This newspaper will not
knowllngly 80081ll
advertisements lor real estate
which ls 1n vi&lt;Matlon of the law

Our raaders are herel&gt;y
lnlormed !hal all dwellingS

Olf1ce ManagM Computer Proft·
c1ent, Payroll , Accounts Payable
Re sponsibility, ARply At. Tope
Furn1ture, 1 51 Second Avenue,

advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

opportunlly basis

Galijpohl No Phone Calls Pleese

Overbroo l( Center IS now taKing
applt cal•on s lor a Nurse A1de
tra1nmg cla ss Pleas e come m
and hll oul an apphca11on by Au ·
gust 21. 1996 11 you are tnterested
or comact Jacl(•e Cremeans 111
6t4 ·99 2·64 72 lot more lnlorma t•on
Pan-T1me Housek eeper We Wtll
Tram Apply At Econo lodge, 260
Jackson Pike. Gaft1poi 1S
Parl· t•me rec ept1on1 st. lor Phy s•·
c1ans olf1ce, olf1ce &amp; ~computer ex
peflence a must
Ass •stam nur se wt expertence ·
needed Se nd tesumes 10 PO

Bo• 220. Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Part ·Ume Sliter fo r 9yr old, alter
school. snow days, etc: north Pt
Pleasant area Call 304 675-6990
9am-4pm
Sales Person Wtth 2 Vears Mint·
mum Exp e r~ence In lumber And
Hardware P1ck Your AppiiCallon
Up AI Thomas Do-lt Center, 176
McCormick Road Gallipolis
WANTED Tr uck dover, 2 years
expeuence, mu st have COL II ·
censo 1·61 4-992 3752

180

Wanted To Do

Any Odd Jobs. painting, carpen·
try, lawn care, etc 3:)4-675-7112.
Ch1ld Care Prov1der Opemng
Soon In local Area 24 Hours A
Day, 7 Days A Week , Compeutrve
Pl'lces 614-25S 6342
Georges Portable Sawmttl, don't
haul your logs ICJ the milt JUSt call

304·615·1951
Hauling Limestone, Gravel, 5and,
Co at F~tewood. Top so1l, Con
suurt 1on D@brts And Morel 614 ·
388-8879

11 you woLJid ltke Avon delivered
to you m the Syracu se area. call
614 -99 2 7769
l ike To Do BabysiRing My Home,
Spnng Valley Atea, C P.R. TrainIng Experience, Interest Call 614·

446 8340
Mother Of Two Children Will Ba bys i t In Her Home, Green Ele mentary Area, Centenary, 614 ·
441 0321
Proless1onal Tree Servtce, Stump
Removal , Free Esumale!l In ·
surance, 81dwell, Oh•o 614· 388·

Sun Valley Nursery School
Chlldcare M-F earn- 5 30pm Ages
2-K, Young School A.ge Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per Week M1n1·
mJm 614-446-3657.
W1ll Clean Out Garages &amp; Bas•
ments Reasonable Rates . L1ght
Hauling Ava1lable, $32 Per load,
614-446.()364

FINANCIAL
21

o

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bUll ·
ness wllh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma1l unhl you have mvestlgated
the offer1ng
Bu111nessper son or Bu1lder , Na tio nal Manufacturer aeek1ng to
qual1 fy DEALERS 1n some se lec t
open areas S1ee1 bu 1ldmgs as

low as $3 00 sq loot Call (303)
758·4135.EXT 1503

Newly Remodeled State Route
218, Mercerville , Oh10 614·446·

0418

By OWner Green Township, C1ty
Schools. Sanders Dnve, CA.
Ranch, Vtnyt Sidmg, Recently Remodeled, l R , 0 R, 2 Ballls, 3 Br ,
F101shed Ba sement, Wllh F R

$69,000 614-448·9324.
3bed room, bath , hvmg room WI
hardwood floors, kllchen &amp; d1n1ng
area together new roof. garage,
on R t 2 304 6 75-4139 or 304 67S-7326 a her 6:30
Middleport, country hv109, two
bedrooms, two large outbu1ld1ngs,
extra hool(up, secluded, well tak ·
en care ol, 614-992-5333
Three bedroom home 1n country,

Willes H1! Rd . Rutland, one ball.
•n..ground pool, 614-992-5067
Three bedrooms. new cafpel,
kttchen, baltt, Mtddeporl, t29,000

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12tc65 2 Bedroom Tra1ler, Excel ·
lenl Cond1t1on New Carpet, And

Telemarkete rs Needed Fo1 tm
mediate Opemnga At l ocal Bus1
nell Expene~e A Plus. But Nol
NectiSiry. For lntef\l lew, Please

468 ' Or ' ·218- 782 ·2575
230 Professional
services

bttck &amp; stone work , 30 year s ex·
penence, reasonable 1a1es 304·
89 5-3591 alter 6 OOpm, no JOb to
small or to BIG WV-021206
Sid1ng, WindowS, general bulld•no
Bumoamer·s General Contracting

WV020 229 304·882-3342 or
304-882-2816

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes lor Sale

reletenc• ,.,.,, ere requued

28 72 Thtrd Street, Syracuse, 2

2605 Mt Ve~no n Av e-love ly 1
floclr home With lull basemen!, 3-4·
bedroom s, 2 full ba ths , above
ground pool -lence&lt;l level lot 304 -

wl\lt ...,UC.Iioll. A9PIY '" person loll 112 acre tota l, 4 BR, lR, FA,
beCWHft !Clam I 3pm M-F SIUd· OR, k•tthen, ut~lly, new bath, new
.,11 dlll IUC.ctlllully complell plumbing, overloo ~ ng OhM&gt; RIVtr,
!he TCE doll wil 1M tiig111Mt tor available September u~ 545.000.
:::_.:;-- A...,illlllr no llhone 814-992·5008 or 814-992-7498
3 Bedroom completely remodeled,

Pari•Time MyllefJ Shoppt rt

NMdld For LOCIII Slolel. '10.25

Par H""r frH Proctucl. FrH
&amp; ,..e1 CIIIIDW llt-7!118542.

food

$500 TO $\,000/Mo , Plus

Utli1hes, No Pets, Write ClA 393,
cJo Galhpohs Da1IV Tubune, 825
Th1 rd Avenue, GallipoliS, OH
45631 For Appointments

&amp; Refngerator Fur"shed Oepo~t.

1988 Oa kwgod t4 x72 3 Bed ·
rooms, -1 112 Ba ths, large Ftonl
Kllchen, Newer Carpet &amp; Wallpa per, 8x20

Oe&lt;k. 614·446 1125

1997·2 &amp; 3 Be&lt;lroom. $995 down,
$195/mo Free dehvery &amp; set·up,
only al Oak Wood Homes, N1tro

wv 304-755-5885

Galllpohs Ferry, 1966 14x76 Hoi·
teypark, 3 bed1oom, 2 balhs,
wooden porch, 2 storage build -

'ngs. 718 acre lot. $28.500. 304 875-1 213

Sectlonals By Schult, Clayton
And Norns Must Make Room For
New Models Save Thousands
Free Oehvery And Set Up French
Ctty Homes. Galhpohs, OH 614·
446 9340 Or 1·800-23t -.4 467
Secuonal s Bi g Schul t Ot spt8y
Sale Gom On Now Save Thou 9
sands Free Oeltvety And Set Up
Included French Ctty Hom es,
Gallipolis, OH 614 ·.1146· 9340 Or
1·800-231 ·4467

S

' car 01'101. lanced 1n bado. yatd,
cen1ral aH, 2,500 1q fl. lyon 's
Adsh t•on , Muon WV Aslung

$56,000. 304-773·91113 or 304·
773-8171

340

Business and
Buildings
I

II

sublease l ocated at 509 S
Street. Middlepofl, OhiO Excellent
fo r phy stc•an olltce or teal est ate
spa ce Ampl e street pe rk1ng
Available 1mmed1ately Con tac t
R.L Kunz, 614·593·3375 collecl

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
3 acres of land tor sate tn Hen-

derson 304 ·6 75-5956 or 304 .
875-2445
Parcel s on Ray Durn Rd Water,
paved road , reasonable rest fl t
t10ns 304· 67 5· 5253 (nO Single·
wide •nqulfes please)

State Street &amp; Th~rd Avenue, Galhpolt s The Former license Bu reau LocatiOn Cal814-4.&amp;6-4839
Now tak1ng applicatiOns, Country
lane Mob1le Home Park, Gall1po

lis Ferry. 304-eiS-5421

MERCHANDISE

lnstalle&lt;l, Stalrglldes, Uh

Household
Goods

Go -Cart, 5hp, very gbod c:ond•·

... s..ao

West

Call Ron Evans. 1·800-537·95211.
K1mbaA pane $350. quarter karat
d1amond nng, $200, 614·

992-7828
K1ng wood and coal burnet wllh
blower. $300, 8\4-949·2297

814·949·3403

Lennox turnacG , rattng 20KW
also heal pump rated 3 112 ton ,
814-949-3185.

Good Cond1tton, $5,800, 6t4-44&amp;4316Aher5P:M
, 1

7 Ft K1ng Cutter HD Bush Hog
GOOd Concl111on, $950, 080 614·

1991 Silverado. Call 304-f?lf ·

4A6·10J2

2359 aher 6prn.

N1ce used woodburnmg heater,
$225, real nice 65.000 BTU natu·
ral oas heater, s.csa 50. 11 14 · 742·

W111 Haul Catlle &amp; Ftalbed Trad -

1994 Full Silt 2 WD, Ooago
Trudl, 318 Aula, Loaded, 32,000
M1les. $12.500, 080 814 - ~Bll·

251\

Drag D1sc &amp; Couple Smgle Plows.

r

Queen SIZe waterbed. sola d1!
nena s.et w•ltt 4 !Wlvei chalft. lml tat•on electnc hteplace Elt 4-949 -

127g,

N1ce 2 Br., Mob1le Home, Hwy.
160 Evergreen. $3001Mo Plus
Sacu11ty Oepos1t, 614 -446-6189,
614·446-6865
Two and lhtee bedroom mobtle
homes, sla t ting at S240-S300,
sewer water and trash mcluded.

614·992-2\67

7795.
Bedroom Suite SpanisH Style
Hutch Ore11er, Htghboy Cheat,

N1gh1 Tal&gt;!• With Warerbed S385,
614·387-0638.

New Idea 706 01esel Un1Sys1em
Wtlh Combine &amp; Gra•n Table

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

~saddle

Apartments
lor Rent

USED APPLIANCES

Wathen, dryen, refngerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances , 76

V1ne Stree~ Call 814-446· 7398,
1-800-499-3499.
Handmade D1nno Table Wllh De·
con &amp; Benches, S250, 6t 4-256 ·

8\23, 8\4-256-6040

lr-~•ng100m /Hall Rugs 17~~:5, 13x9

1 Bedroom, Super Ntce. $2661
Mo , Plus Uttliues, Usually
Something Ava1lablel Sun Valley
Aprarb'nents, 614-446-2957

Sculptured Gteen $50, Bedroom
Rug 8x8x10 Sculptured Blue $30,

Uti~II&amp;S

Coffee Tables. Tables, Typewrtt ·
ers, Beds, Couches, Relngerarort, Washers , Oes~a. 814 -446 ·

2 Bedroom Apartment, Ah

Paid, $425/Mo, 2 Room &amp; Bath All
Ul!til1es Patd S22S'Mo , 513· 574·
2539.

2 Bedroom Bnck Townhouses, 35
west Apartments, $2951Mo. Plus
Oepostt, For More lnformallon

814-448-6515
2bd rm apts. total eleclrtc. ap pliances furmshed, laundry room
fac1lit•es, close to school 1n town
Appli cat iOns 8valiable at V•llage
Green Apts lf49 or call 614 ·992·

371\ EOH
3 Rooms, Bath, Washer tOryer,
A11 Cond1t10ner. D1shwasher. Utili ·
haS Pa1d, Good Ou1et Neighborhood, No Pets , Referen ce JDepos11. 614·446·1370

614-446-4017.

Used Furnllllre 130 Bulav111e Pike.
4782

VfRA FURNITURE
814·446·3158
Oual1ty Hou!Mti'Qd FumiUre And

ApplioriCOS Great Deals on
Cash And Carry! RENT-2-0WN
And Layaway Also AvailaiiMI
Free DeliVery Wtthin 25 Ulles
Whulpool Washer $95. Hotpomt
Dryer S95; Kelvmalor Frost Free
While Refngerator, $150, Whtrl ·
pool While Refrigerator, L11(e New
$295, Wh~rlpoot Washer l1ke

New $205,

Wh~rlpoQI

Chest Type

Freezer 4· Ft $100 · Maytag
Washer &amp; Dryer Set $ , 75 Each,
Skaggs Appliances , 76 Vme
Street, Gallipolis. 6t4·446-7398

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 530
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Or~v e

Duple• 550 T+lird A\lenue, Galli·

Antiques ·

Buy or sell R1venne AntiQues.
1 t24 E Ma1n Streer. on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to e·oo pm. Sunday 10010
6 00 p m 614·99t· 2526 , Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Year Old large Trampolene
Good Shape $250 , Even1ngs,

polis. 2 Bedrooms, LR, OR, 614-448·8384
Fenced Yard, Available Now.

S3tS/Wo, 1 Uonth Secu,lty DePOSII, Apply At : Tope Furn. 151

Sacond Ave., GoUipolis, \0 A.M. .

4P.M 1Yrleate
EIIJCI8ncy AIJar.tment Across
Ftom Unlversny Of A1o Grande,

Table tan $2 00, Ctrcular floor fan
$5.00; canmng pmt 1ars S 1.251doz
Wh1te Sidewall ure $4 oo. door

wllh hinges &amp; knob, $5.00, 304675-8743
Watet Well s Onlled . Fast Rea sonatH SerVICe 614-886-n11

World Book Encyclopedia \Ntth
Chtldcreft 2 Vol Dtct1onary And
Cycle Teacher $ 165, Canmng
Jars, P1nts &amp; Ouans, 6H · 367·

Carpet &amp; VInyl Sale On Room 550
S1ze I Stock Mollohan Carpets,
81 -448-7444.

GOOD

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
mshed and unfurnished. secunly
depo sit requ~ted. no pets. 614 -

304-e75-3838.

0838.

Country FufMure 304-8 75-6820
Rt 2 N, 6m1las, Pt Pleasant. WV.
Tu ... Sal 11-11, Sun 1 1.;.5.

17. 500 BTU A.r condiltoner. ex cellent con~. only used 2 yrs

AKC Sh1h-Tzu puppies, 7wks old
304 675 1589
Beaut1ful Whue Full Blooded Eng
ll sh Setter Pup, 6 Weel( s Old ,
6 14·446·0106
tOga! tank se1 up specials F1sh
TanK &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Pomr Pleasant 304 · 675·

2083
Four AI&lt;C reg1stered Rot1We1l er
pups, shots &amp; wormed . $200

each, 614·843·5175
Groom Shop -Pel Groomtng Fea tunng Hydro Bath Don Sheets

Call8\&amp;-446·023t
JACK

PARACIOE

SHAMPOO· l&lt;•lts adult male &amp; female fleas &amp; ucks Checks Doggy
Odor and Hot SpoJs Conlatns

NO pyrethr~nsl O·T·C at 875 ·
2780 HERALD DISPATCH
Jack Russell Tamer pupp1es for
sale, 10 lb s lull grown , $250
each, 614 74 2 2050
Pet s Plus, S1lver Bodge Plaza

(10'"4 011 E•ery Th1ng, E"'ry Day')
614·441 ·0770.
P1onus Parrot, 5 Ft Ball Python ,

Iguana Scarlet CMsted Parakeet.

Palace Kennels, Board1ng ,
Stud Serv1ce Pupp!es, Groom1ng ,

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade. All Breeds
Payment s Welcome, 614 -388-

Aher3PM

0429

Grac•ous hv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V•llage .Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments 1n M1ddle-

350 Golden Rocket Motor $150 ,
350 Olds TransmiSSIOn $50 .
Queen S•ze Waterbed 175. 614 ·

Reg1 stered BeaQl e Pupa, Bold
Stoke !Rocky Mt Blue Ttck Excftl·
tem Gun Dogs StOO Each, 614 ~

Newer large upslatrs apartment.
stove. re1r~gerator. wid hook-up.
ba ck lawn, on 681 lour m~e1 west
ol Tuppe rs Platn s, $300 ptr
month plus depos11, 614· 985 ·

3504

Newly Remodeled 2 Bedroom
Apartment, Crown Clly, 614 -256·

8495,614-256-1249

Newly remodeled upstairS apt ,
new carpet., furnace &amp; 110\18 304-

875-e\98

.f'emodled Futn1shed 3
Apanment At 051 Second
Avenue Next To Bossard L!Drary,

Any11me

Amtsh Made P1cntc Table , 8U ·

388·9416
Reg 111ered Chow Puppies, Cute.
Cuddley And Growmgl F1rst
Sholl. Papers, $t50 Each. 61 ~

245-9821

••

Regi stered Slame1e k1rtens , all

..tes, 814-992 51l73

Automollve AC Recovery Recy cler W1rh leak Detector 4d Pic-

S1lver Manms Rabbtls 8 Wee .. s
Old Mother Placed 2nd In Pu r·

BAHAMA CRUISE ! 5 GayS/4
mghts, Underbookedl Mull Sell!
$299/Couple L1m11ed Tickell
Some Ra11nct1ons 1-800-035·
9999 ext858D
Boo t s By Redw1ng , Chippewa,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowest

Excellent Temperment May See
Parents, $200 Each, 614 -388 -

9220.
570

1~1 GMC Suburban 4X4, heat.,
3/4 lon, V-8, automatiC, atr, ster.:
runs and drives e•celltnt~

1998 Dodge 314 Ton 4•4. t.oaillllll
May Trade, 814-888-7311
;;~\
740

Motorcycles

,

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

•

1900 Suzukt motorcycle, e~~tceUW\t
condition, DR 350 4 stroke, vert

O,Dt~ FO,
. • iWtLVt ,OL.IG~MtN/

L.OOt:/ ylf tfAVt AN

m1leage, $2250. tall 614·992't
aher 7 00pm

o

Autos tor Sale
1973 Corvene. red. L-48, 350ci.

1977 GIIC Van; 1977 Ch..y 314
IOmlllt

Chevene, 304-882-3844.

1980 Pontiac Trans · Am Au ·
toma11c, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
Good SMpe, &amp; Partl Car, $1,500

304-875-4841 AFTER 8 P.M
1982 Olds Cullass Cru1ser.
1nspectM&gt;n. S400. OBO.

l'i(i'(:ii;;;k,l;;i;;:c;;;;;i;;";;,"~;i
I:

-Is

bow, StOfeo, exc. condlbon -ms•dt

&amp; out, oM equip lntludJ&gt;d, E-2

wtalum1num

Musical
Instruments

Bundy Clannet Reasonable Ruger
44 Magnum Ruger 22 Au1omat1c
S&amp;W 357 Magn um Li ke New,

1oa9

$4,000:
good~~~~~~-.....--...;....;
760 Auto Parts &amp;
1981 Chevy Capnca Wgn, runs
Accessories
good, w/403 Oldo eng1ne. 1400,
080. 304-1175-3573
440 Motor Stael Crank Balanced,
8 PM
1985 Bu•ck Summerset, $1 ,000 , I!!~~
614·256·6123, 614· 256-6040

Budget TransmiSSions, Used IRilt-

1985 Monte CarlO SS, too much
to hst' Nice! 304 . 675 . fi 139 or
304-B95-3627

built. All Types, Accen•bl., To
Over 10,000 Transm•ssion, Also
Overhuat KIIS, 614·245-5677

t985 T-Bitd (2 Dr) 89,000 Ongtnal

Posllracton un.t lor 1978 Camara
$tOO 2 alumtnum brake drums for

PriCBS AI Shoe Cale, Gallipolll.

814-448-9835

·-

' \_'0 ·~ (,OMING UP!··
l

t .

23 Sole or lroul

Pass
Pass
Pass

-

ONf I&gt;OZtN
C.OP·I~$/

o,,..,FandE.BobTOAOl
... '"' T"~e'SCOM'Ks
~ - mal

l

WN-lfTOfiND~

woro ilW"'~

!&gt;Yt-IOI'-IYf'.IO.f.l Wlrn1\l£.
\..JOro .5'(N()N'(~·

1986 Park Avenue, lull power,
climate control. new Ures, battery

11 Ft Truck Camper Self·CO(I·
taned. Excellent Shape! 61.4 -44·

ze -

.

1986 Z-24 Cavahef. 2 8 V6 rrulli ·
port Fl, loaded. mce car, $2,400
or trade for 4x4 304-875-2074.

$8,200, 8\4·44\· 1212

1987 Camaro. one owner, Hops,
$2000 1963 Datsun 280
load·

1984 Ntssan Mtrage motort1otnei
ileeps 4, stove. smk, &amp; ref11gera·

z.

28Sty

Obi
Pass
DbI.
All pass

35WIIIer

Anlta 38 Cllrw frull
40 Some

Ub - 42 Spealt
43 Antelope
44 Abet'•
broll1er

Some people never 6eell1 to age; then
suddenly you bear thai they have died.
One example is Paolo Frendo, who
passed away last April at age 73. He
was one of Ilaly's best players, winning
the European Championship in 1969.
North's two-heart cue-bid showed
game in his own hand: a very strong
one- or two-auiler. Frendo, South, with
some values and expecting his partner
Ia have good spades, opted to bid his
three-card suil The problem arose with
South's pass over five hearts doubled,
which showed a second-round heart
conlrol. Expecting a singleton heart iri
South's hand, Norlh happily leapl to
seven spades. !Frendo didn't think his
spades were long enough to rebid!l
Frendo slarted with 12 tricks: nine
spades and lhree aces. One possibility
lor number 13 was to lake the club fi.
nesse. 8ut given West's opening bid, it
didn't seem likely t~ work. Anyway, il
could wait because West had led the
diamond king, suggesting another
possibility to South.
After winntng wtth dummy' s dia·
mond ace, declarer overtook dummy's
spade six with his queen .. Now came
the diamond jack: queen, spade seven,
diamond eight. Frendo returned to
hand by leading dummy's carefully
preserved spade two to his three.
When the diamond five was ruffed in
the dummy, yea, the 10 did nutter
do1111 from East. Back to the club ace,
declarer cashed the diamond nine, on
whicb he discarded dummy's heart
seven. Well playeil - or whalever it is
in 1\alian
Paolo, we're all going to miss you.

45TYJMoiDOde
47 COnatructlon
45

949·2644 ...... $\550
1987 Dodge Omm, 5 Speed, AC,
Good Condlllon, Asking $700,
814-367·74110

=ng

50 T-.lword
51 A1coltollc

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by
y

WTHBJLST

QPZJ

ZJF

YIZLMW . '

OMPZZFS

DLII

LD

DLM

PSWZFYU

OPRWLS .

I L RP S

'=~~, ~@1l4!lA-L£i.zr~·

1988 Sun bud, ps pb, ac, ttl/,
cru1se, Sorrt am-1m cassene, from
wheel dnve, great 1n the snow
111,000 m1les. S2.000 080 304 ·

BASEMENT
t
1
WATERPROOFING
••
Uncond1ttonal l1 feume guarantee.•
Local refere nces lurn1 shed ~~ -:

ltttera . of 1M
0 a-range
lour acrambltd -d• be-

low 10 form lour _,u,

SPYHOS

NALCK

I

G U MA T

..

!~
=,'

0

Complete the ctluclde quoted
by l.lltng 1n the m1umg word 1

J.-..J.l-..1......J you do•elop from lltp No 3 below

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LITTERS
TO GET ANSWU

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS
Mohair - Watch • Thank · Bnght • WITH HIM
Sovlnes You'll Find In rht
Cloul(led Sect1011.

\r

Granny always told me that you can'l hold a man down
withoul staying down WITH HIM

AUGUST15I

~7~73~-9~\~04~;;(il.'Ss;;d3Q.Z§"7"-I 0870 Or 1·800 287Call0576(614)Rogo£oo
.11 .
4ft ..
~••

1988 Tempo Gl , 5spd
2578

Waterprooltng

1989 Bu•ck leSabre, ercellent
runmng conditiOn, V-6, PO, PS,
AC . power WindOWS, $3800, 614·

949-2045 or 814·949·2203..

Apphance Parts And Strv1ce .g~
Name Brands Over 25 Years E -'
penance All Work Guarantet ~
French City Maytag, 814 4ff;•

1989 Ford Tempo GL. New Look·

7795

•no Garage Kept, S1lvlf' Wuh Ma roo n lntenor, 7g ,soo Milas,

C&amp;C General Home Maitf·
tenence· Patnung, v1ny l stdmg:
carpentry, doors, Windows, baths.
mobile home repatr and ~re For
lfH e sttmata call Chet. hi4·992 63ZI

1989 Muilang GT, tow mtlea, ex·
cellent conditiOn, adult drrven, 4

speed ma"'J&amp;I, garage kept 304773-5381 .•
1Q92 Bu •ck leSabte, exc cond .

loaded, $10,500 OBO 304-7735965
1gg2 lincoln Conllnlal, 81,000
M1les, Excellent Condition,

•

•

1

I

ASTR0-GRAPH
·,

OAYWAll
Hang, fintSh, ropalt
:'
C e~ ll ng s textured. pl al!er repau
Call Tom 304·675·4186 20 years
expenence

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Ron's TV 5e!'V•ce, spec•al•zmg 1n
Zemth also aerv1 c1ng most other
braf'ds House caUS: 1-800· 797--

-oy.,.,

i300

Fridly, Aug. 18,1898

Lucll mlghl play a more prom1t IIIII role in
your affaire lr\lhe yw aliNe!. In lacl.
something lortunalt could c:ome your
way like a bell from lite ltfUe.
'
L~O (oiUif li-AII· 22) Tile procluctl
1181181 II d ill' J10Uf ~~· II I wtl I1IW
prolllable po~~alllillllet IOdiY· II you do
1lllnOa ~- lhclrllllt ~ . .
Cllld. Gel a Pftli on . . IIW ~~
ing lhe ~ IIIII fiiMin y!l!lln . .
yeat ·~ 'lend .tor ,_~rap~~

"!i"

results today , 1ry 10
to Aslro-Graptl , c/o lhll newspa· don't disclose what you have 1n your
par, 'P.O Box 1758, Murray Hill S\a!lon, hand until your opponen1 reveats'wh81 he
New Vorl&lt;. NY 10158. Make sure to slate or she has
your zodiac sign.
PiSCES (Feb. 20-Mardl 20) You might
VIRGO (Aug. 2~. 22) Two current have 10 mediate a slict&lt;y siluat100 1oday
alluatl008 appear 10 be urvela\8d. Aclually, belwMn two close lrlends. Do not avoid
they'DfiJse together nicely and today you respons1bihly, because you can resolve ..
can ute!M link to your advanlag8.
lhis crisis.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Your lnllincla ARIES (MIIrch 21 · Aprll 18) Today . do
and logic will botlt operate at lull Ioree not delay when pursUing an ObjeCiive 11181
1oday Thele attributes will enttance lh8 Ia vital 10 your success . The favorable
probability or success, espeCially in com- condlllons whiCh extst presently will be
merc1a1 affalra.
only temporary.
ICORliO (OCt. Z+Nov. 22) Try ,IO be a TAURUS (April 20-118y 20) Today you
good n11tner today when diiCUIIing may have I chance to raclily I misunder·
bualnesa with lrtencll. You might team • standing you had wilh a close friend. II
1omethlng aubetanllal from a chance w11 be lmporlantto act wltlil you are In a
r-nt madl by 1011-11 you .clmire.
forgiving frame ol mind.
IAOmARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) In GEMINI (lley 21·June 20) II you deal
r.gard to your finan!:iel all8irl, you will do wflh aubordlnales lns\aad ol going to lite
bell• lod!IY than you wii!OIIIOII'OW, 10 head honcho directly, you win nol get
don't be .too eager to 11op working II detlra,. resulla . Stay In tune with lite
you're on"a roll.
.
peopllln·power.
CAI'IIICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 11) Time CANCER (.kiM 21-.luty 22) U you leel
11*11 on IOCIIIIIQMIIel will not tte WUI· u H you've had enough lime to think
eel time lodey. In lllcl, you miglll dleCowt through a decl1lon carefully today, act
men oppollunllleUIIrougll lrlendllhln according to reaaon. Do not yield to
you WOIAd haw at !he.olftee.
impulaM.
'AQUAIIIUi (...... 2HW. 1t) For best

i
"

~---------------------------------- - -- - -

WOlD
IAMI

....;,.;,;;.;;.;__.;.__ l.ilo&lt;l loy ClAY I . POUAN

·..•.

810

BRYT

WZYKF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' In art economy Ia always beauty." - Henry James.
"Greal art ia an'lnatan1arres1ed tn etemi\y."- James Gibbons Hunek8r

•

ITHURSDAY

Sharp, Auto loaded. 112.000
M1le,, Runs Good. $2,900, 61 4
446·3334
"

prnent

PRINI NUM6ERED LEnERS IN
IHE SE SQUARES

THE !&gt;ELA'(~
WH'i SflOVLDtfT I 1-lAVE
rrt OWN tlOLIDA.,-?
lOTS OF PEOPLE
HAVE THE11!
CDLVt1BUS. .. .
L.tN(OL.N ..
'{OU ...

Overs1ze PopUp Camper 6J 4 ~
441 ·1003

.

y

PW

IYMZW

PIWZMNHFSZW

W~T~

1993 Jayco Camper 26 F1 • Full•
S1ze Bed, Plus Bunks &amp; Couc;;h ~
ltke New, 614·446 0643
'

Home
Improvements '

Lula C1mpoa

Olflbrlly Clphef ~.,.., cretled from ~lonl by !•moue peopll. put n
hd't
in,_ gpt,.r tlaldl IOf enother Todty'l cW N equM, U

BIG NATE

..

SERVICES

way

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

1· I

1982 'fJinnabago Motor Home;
A.C, Generator, low Mllea~

1988 Dodge Daytona. Red Very

-m
~=·I

lntrallOn · A counlerlett e r
buys tnk, paper, printmg press
and runs off a few lhousand~~-E-N_N...,.V""I,.....,T,...--,1 and loses · · · · . 1"

eo, Hops, $3300 DBO: 614·949- tor, $2,800 1990 V1king pop-upi
2126
sleeps 5. alf. stove. smk. sur~ ~
304-e7S.2!149
'•

1987 Cutlass Cala1s, maroon w1
maroon velour tntenor, 124.000
miles, recovered theft, no damage 614 9.4g 2311 days, 614 -

Krlngle

27 Poilll around

L.

.

Do - othen

24

s I I
I
I
_.JI
__..J.__

790

2583

-of

18 StarWJn
prlncaa
22 Cunlng

:ltSpum
31 L8ui11Avy

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1986 Dodge 600, Excellent cond1110n, S1.ooo. 814·245-0904.
&amp; leather 1n1en01 304-875-3284

g an-ntal

East

Miles. Ask•ng $2,000, 6\4· 448 - 1978 Malibu $25 304·895-3579
7612

$12,500, 080, Call Kim 614·441· 0015, wv 304-576·2308.
0410
Clarinet W1th Case &amp; Mus1c
qutred No Pe ts Allowed , Ralerilnce Reqwe&lt;l Call Jod)' Or Deb- Brand New Walker Nev• Usod, Stand Call Ahe r 4 PM 810·446- t9i3 Plymouth Sundance. Au · 840 Electrical and
$50, Bedside Commode Wllh 7498.
tomalic. Air, Rae' Spoiler, 52,000
Retrlge.rauon
Scemc Valley, Apple Grove, boo 8\4-448-7323.
Butktl And Lid $25: 814-379MIIOI, A1l10ng $4,lQO 080, 81&lt;·
beaut•1ul 2ac lo ts, public water, N1ce two bedroom aparlment in 2728 Dr 304-037-3383
New. never bee n used KX15 am- 258-8340, 814-258--e487
C~de Bowen Jr. 304-576-2336
piW
IOr, poid 1135, wo! sell lor 1100,
pelt, 8\4-llll2·5858.
1994 Dodge Slla- ES, 2 Door,
Moving Salt . Clothes, Books , 814-992-2765
One bedroom aparamtnt, lur· Some Furniture, Misc . Corner
4 Cyl1nder, 5 Spetd, Air, 1\MtFM
RENTALS
nlshed, 1n Pl. Pleaaan~ no pelt. Po11um Trot Road &amp; Addison P1ano &amp; Trumpet , both •n good Catatllt, 58,000 llllos, Alkll'lg ·
- - - - - 304-875-1381!.
IUOO 0110, 814-~0. 814Pb, Sat 17ft Aug, Sun Aug 18111. cor6tion 304·675-e515 '
410 Houses for Rent
258-11487
• 14-387-0838.
Trombone
For
Sale,
Good
Condi·
Ont bedroom 'apanmont In Pl.
2 lledtoom house br sale or tent Plee .....l 811-0112-511511.
Concrtlt &amp; Plaltic Stplic Tanka. - 814·446·4999:
~-8 75- 2722
300 Thru 2,000 Gollont Ron
FruHs &amp;
Roommate wanltd, 1200/mo., in- evant Entt&lt;priHI, Jackoon, OH 580
3 Bedroom. ac. utdruas not ildud- du4et II ulililio&amp; l(jngridgo, l l-.s37-t52&amp;
Vegetables
ed. 350/mo, relefanc.. &amp; steunty WJ. 304-45&amp;.1057 ... lor Ed.
deposi t roqu•ed. 304-773-589&amp; '
ar.lte aatllllte tytltm, FlshortYa·
Twin Riven Towor, ,_ accopjng hamll lttriO ·IJ)Nkert, ltciiOnBI
n... --., duplu,
~. appllctliono lor lbt. HUO tllblicJ. wilt rocliltr couch. 304-882-3448
uulldaa, HUD IJIIHOYIII, no pelt, lztd apt, lor elclerty and handl·
8\&amp;-742·3033.
Cll)l)od. EOH 304-875-88'/V.
~-S350/Mo , Pluo $350 DepoSit Rt-

~- ~

I:::::.::..:.:..:..:..::..::.:.:..:;.___..;.

779\.

"" Tablo, 814 -388-8304 , 814 - lltlred Doe AI Fair, 814-38J-7016
$3, 500 614 -379-2728 Or 304·
I
388-9981.
Two Female AKC Rdttwetler, 4 937-3383
Months. Shots tWorme&lt;l Update
Bags ol boy's clothet, size s-a,
814-1143-5453

US SOME
LUNCH ..

Be Seen At Gallipolis Dally Trib'
une. 825 Third Avenue . Galhpori$
OhiO

tabhshed 1975

388·9331

$10 each, toddler car seal, t10 ,

,

Ton Truck, 1984 Two Door Au ·

814·448·21302

6\4 - 37g·~OO

TRANSPORTATION

good cond S8.000 30A-675 -

Poodle pupp•es, t1ny 1oy, shots
and wormed , 8 weeks, 6 14·66 7-

4 Piece Bedroom SUIIe. K1ng Size
Waterbed , All Accessones In ·
eluded . Muu Sell $600 OBO,

wagom. 30H75-Itll7

AKC Reg1stcrcd Ba sse t Pupp•e'
6 Weeks Old. Wormed. CFA Blue
Pomt Siame se Ktnen 614 · 367·

1987 Grand Am $1,750 , Amen ·
can Saddle Breed Geldmg
$1,300; Elecmc Pole New 70 Affl)

porl From 1232-$355 Call 614- 446-9575

WENT TO 6ET

mHes,'$8900, 614·992-4111; •

71

All Tamed, Healthy, ~u s t Sell !
8\ 4·388-032 \

2 Sets Golf Clubs 2 PW, 3 PW,
One 3-5 Woods , 6 14-446 6235

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw, square baled In f1eld, on

304~75-\814.

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

l THOU6J.IT

1989 S 10 4 WD, New T•es, Ne.j
72,000 Milos, $4,000. OBO C,an

AKC Cocker Spamel Pup s 304
\792

HAPPV

\985 Full size Bronco •••· ,300

6cyl, automalte. runs good, tOrfle
IUS! $3,500080 304-675-7741 ~ 1

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-3so!

Slr8W For Sale, 614·245-5002.

AKC Reg•stered Cocker Span•el
Pupptes. Shot s. Wormed Askmg
$200, Between 9 A M . g PM
614-446-3275

Pass

Pass
Pass

8384

E111haust, $3,500,614-446.0744.

Regtstered polled hereford bull I
thll years caves, 614-949-2257.

a em au -

Opening lead: • K

M1n1ature Horse For Sale, 614 ·

512\

7705

lilies, $12,500, DBO, 814·388·
9104
•

8\4-800-6028
245-9227

10JoU
12 tlorM guldH
17W.

7 LlllgU01'

3'1

By Phillip Alder

$2 50 lloJe, 8U-446-1062.

675

A1rbags, Alum1num Wheels, ed·
liner, Tawney Cover, 34,000

3 ..

5+

\ Kid Broke Pony $300 814·245- \978 Jeep Trudl 3eO 4 Speed, 31
5087
4 Ton 4X4, Good SMpe, 814·448-

Round Bales Hay For Sale,
Stored In Barn, 614·245-51 17

Adorable Chow pupp1es, excel ·
tent d1sposmon. vet checked. f~rst
shots and wormed . 61.4 -949· 2328
aftet 6 OOpm

ON MY
THINKIN'
CAP II
PUT

Wesl

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs ·

Good Al1alla Hay On Wagon ,

Pels tor Sale

LET ME

\995 Chevy S-10 Extondod·:Cat&gt;
LS, 5 Speed, AlltFI,I ..Ca~tf,
AC, CruiSe, PS, Anllfoil!
...

,.,

South
Pass

Livestock

S tock bnck, sewer pipes, Wind ows. lintels. etc Claude W1nters.
R1o Granda. OH Call 614 - 245·

560

1233

Lucky forgetfulness

Gu1neu 3 Weeks Old St 25
Each; Old Gutneas $8 00 Each,

-

_.

• Dla1rlbuled dll

engine)
4 MIAIIellp
(2 Will.)
5 Hobgoblin

lnalru-

Ings, 6\4-258-8513.

Chidren, 814-446·1778.

(by

-.1 of mouth)
2 Slllde of blue
3 z-e (Ill

Vulnerable; North·South
Dealer: South

1

175. 304-875-1925

Geldtng Pony With Bridle And
Saddle, GenUa, Etccellent With

1 VIva -

32 Flallegga
33 Ending tor
novel or eoclal
34 Immoral
38 Electrically
cllqed
flllrllcle

• A Q6

man Boom 50 fl + Reach Even-

630

3

., 4 J 2
• J 9 52

$3.500. New Idea 2 Row Corn
Boom Trudlt975 Ford F-750 .PII·
PK:ker$\,000, 814-245-5515

6.40

Building
Supplies

All Uuht,es Pa1d, I2251Mo , 814· Braker Bor, $80; 275 Gallon 01l 3404
388·9946
Tank. $50 . 614-387-0219 , 614 Puppy
367-7272
.

FurniShed EUteclency Apartment
Central Heat &amp; Att Condllton1ng,
Alll111h1let Patd, PrMitlt Park1ng,

Hydrauhc Hoses, Made To Order
S1der's Equ1pment Co 3011 -67S-

Refngerators, Stoves , Washers
And Dryers. All Reconditioned
And Ga uranteedl $100 And U~,
Will Deliver 614·66g.6441

Atr Conditioners, Refr~gerator ,
Freezer, Washer, Dryer, Stove,

Mobile Home For Rent, 614·446·

614-379-2720 AFTER 8 PM.
7421

ences , 814 ·4•8·8172. 814 -2568251

Appllanc;;ea ·
Recondltlcnad
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri ·
gralore. 90 Day Guafanteel
French Clly Maytag, 6U -U6-

ers. 614·245-5002

1

• K es
• 10 8 8
•t098743

.. Q 4

1991
F·t50Custom300 &amp;
Cyli nder. 5 Speed, 88,000 llilelj,

11 -and Wmllgannenl
13 Portent
50 Legacy
14 Macaw genu• 5Z Muelcal
15 Underground
thOrne
53 lnhaiiHalit
16 Hitting
(auf!.)
18 Store ladder
54 Yale etudenl8
20 Tlleelrlcal
55 Bye.Oye
couple
58 ShintO temple
21 Cr11va1
57 Raft
23 Nuclear
58 Thing In law
reaction
25 - In Cincinnati
DOWN
2t TYJM of can

30 Bliae dye

.. 5
10 9 8

tKQ74J
• K J s
South

610 Farm Equipment
300 gallon plastic farm cheml·
cal tank, on sled wtlh hose, $75,

East

•• Q J

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Repaued, New &amp; Aebu1l1 In Stock.

Suburban wood bu rne r $125

VCR, 614·256-1238

• 2

304 as2 3554 ·

JET
AERATION MOTORS .

sohta~re

08-15·116
10 9 8 7 8 2

'I A 7
t A

day. $475. 304-895-3248

nopy Bed like New. 61.4 -388·
98 78

For Rent Or Sale land Contract
70 xt4 Two BR All ElectriC, CA ,
E111cel tent ConditiOn, On Rented
lot, Between 2 To 6 PM 614 ·
446·2003, 614·446·1409

• AK J

Go -cart , 2 seater, 5hp , used 1

2328 aher G·oopm
510

Nottb

«8-7283.

2 Bedroom Trailer, 6 Miles Roule
21,8, $220/ Mo + Oepos1t, Re1er-

New 14x80 Only make 2 pay ·
ments &amp; move·1n no payment alter 4 years, tree set -up &amp; dehv&amp;fy

Sale Big Sav1ngs On S1ngl .. And

Commercial Space Approx . BOO
Square Feet Located Corner 01

Ll~

Upnght, Ron Evans Enterpn1es,
Jackson, Ohio, 1 800 S37 9528

Don't let Thts One Sttp By large
~ eed room Wuh lots OF Extras
AIC, Washer. Dryer, Dishwasher.
S10ve, Refugerator Included $400
Depo sit, S4S01Mo , Centenary
A1ea, 614·446·2205

Older Schultz hOme, owner occu·
p1ed, 2 bedroom, excellent lor
young or rettred. couple, priCed on
1nspecuon 304 ·675-~4

rooms wllh cook•ng
Also trailer space on nver. All
hooK-ups Call after 2·00 p m .
304-773-5EI51 , Maaan WV.

Car

Chalrl, Call For Brochure, 61.11 ·

3 P1ece While Pos1er Bedroom
Suite, Cheal Mtrror fOrasser, Cl·

from 5244 to S315 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 .448-2568
Equal Houstng Opportumry

NEW• Bank Repo'a, only 3 te ll.
suit under warranty, free dehvery
&amp; set-up. 304· 755- 719 1

814·«8·9580

Electr •c
Scooters
And
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van I

Oe po s•t &amp; Refe rences, You Pay
All Ub~lles, 614·388-9162

llm•ted Offer! 1997 doubl ew•da,
3br. 2bath , $ 1799 dow n, $2791
month Free delivery &amp; se tup
Only at Oakwood Homes. Nnro

304 755-5885

Room• lor rent · week or month
Starung al $120/mo Gatha Holel .

l ease Required No Pets, 61• - 1-,...,...,..,--,-..,..,..,.--~~=-=446·2266
1\
13 Cubte h Refngerator 304-682·
2 Bedroom Tra1ler In Porter Area, 2252

t bedroom furn1shed apartment 1n
Middleport, call 614·4&lt;16·3091 or
614 992·2178 or 614 -992· 53l4

1980 Skyline 2 Bedrooms, 1 Balh.
Remodeled, New Pamt On Etcten·
or, New 2 Ton Furnace, Heat
Pump, Installed 1995, 8x12 Covered Deck . 4•8 Uncovered, Excellent Condition, S1tuated On Pfl.
vate Secluded lot Or Move 614·
256· 1011

t.~e)lderson

1 Bedroom Mobile Home 1 M1le

12 x70 Gregory on rented lot, 2
bedtoom. new gas furnace. m
etude s sk1r11ng 1011120 porch and
awmng $5,500 304 773 5738

500pm. 304-ei S. 1069

Room tor tent wlknchen , man or
woman $12Sfmo 1st house
acro ss tracks on Mud Run Rd

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

1 2~5:.:7.::8 '----------

Free Brochu re Call t -800 248

875-3433

-oy.

H&amp;\le 3 Houses For Renr Or
Sale In 3 Weeks, Can Be 3 Or 4
Bedrooms. Good Locations. Price

Mtddleport, North 3rd Ave 5
Room unfumtshed apt, also, 2
bedroom furmshed apl Oeposn &amp;
relerences. 304·882·2566

HutH Aide Tra1mng Programfloc:lllprirlgl flehal&gt;iitalion C8rlter
will be oftlltine ttllninQ clasMs in
of Soptombor Apphc:a·
doni .,. now being acceputd 11
:1111!11 ~Rd. ,

Clall alze It Umltod. Three (3)

Will

Deck 614·441 ·1 998

t969- 12xSO , ono bedroom, large
lmng room. $1,000 Call after

us-2501 or 614-387-0612. Etr•c•ency Rooms, Cable, Ak'i' Phone,
Microwave &amp; Re frigerator, Taxi
Service 112 Pnca For Motel
Guest

460 Space tor Rent

Cen1ra1 Soder Is Currenlly look· 3_3_0_F_a_rm
__s_f_o_r--,.a_le__

Call\&amp;-441·1975

.,. mon.,

448-1930.

092-5064. Equal Hous10g Opporturdes
·

HARTS IAA SONARY . Block,

Needed lrnrnedlately

shower. 1410 Lewts St $200/mo
&amp; aecurtty depo111 required 614·

Ran~

1'=',...,."":"!,...,.:"""::""::~~-=~~
Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 81~­

Sleepm~

992-22\8.

mg For A Ouahty Dealer In Thi S 110 4 Acres, house . barn . out
lmmedtate Ar ea For lnlormauon
on Becommg A Dea ler Or For A bU1id1n9 s &amp; equ1pment 304-fo 76·

441-1975.

304·773-5\83.

440

45769 EOE

Servi ce Man Fo r Va ccu um
Cleaner Company ~u s t Be Nea t
tn ApPearance And Have Expen
ence Wtth Electri C Mo tors Wttl
Train The R1ght Person Catt 61 4

Small hou se S2751mo $200 de·
posit, no pels 304 -773-9192 or

negotiable, 8\4·992-37&lt;9 lloyd
Gnmm No Sunday calls

Bu s1nesspetson small s1ze Con!factor. Na t1onal Manuf acturer
award1 ng local DEALERSHIP for
steel buildings B1g Profit Polenllal
on sa le s and constr uction (303)
759·3200, ext 2 ~

lmmed •ate pOs1t1on ass tsl ant
manage' tor small res ta u1an 1
lood serv1ce expettence a musl
pay biSed on quahhca t1ons Call
614·667·66 14 be tween 9 OOam &amp;
12 00 noon for tnterv•ew

New rwo bedroom, two bath du·
plex. $400 plus ullhlles. HUO apprcNed. r&lt;&gt; pel' 8U-742-31Xl'l

From Downtown Gallipolis Range

Beaury In Bl'lck· Well Butlt Home
W11h 3 Or 4 Bed rooms, Fam •ly
Room, Large D101ng Room, And
K11chen No Water B1Us With A
Very Good Well , County Water
Available, 614·245-5486

lnmed.ate lull wne RN, 1t 7 poSl
non ava•lable for p1ogren•ve Re
habllilat•orvSkllled ICF facility EX·
pertence ptelerr ed bu t w1tl co n
11der the noht candtdate Must be
Mllmg to work as a team member
w1th an excellent st alt of thera
ptsts and nurses Excellent bene
~~package Call .6 14 992 6606 01
send resume 10 Rockspnngs Ae
hab1htat1on Center, 36 759 Roc K
sp11ngs Rd
Pomeroy Ohto

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Efl 1c1ent
And lowes t EmiS SIOn s Outdoor
Wood Fu1nace On The Market

446-8423, 614·446·7550

420

wv 304-755-5885

Business
Opportunity

HouiG For Rent: With1n City limill, 3 Bedrooms, Baumen1, No
Pets, Re1erence s, $350/Mo . 111 4-

Sman tl,ouae lor rent , 2 bedroom,

EOE

day Fo r FREE AudiO lape l 1800-927-2527
E&gt;t
4552 9648 6\4-367-7010
CTAw1100DS6

meroy, off atreal parlung lor one
car, clean, deposit and raferenc•• required. no pets , 81.t-QD2 3090.

.,

~ CNr-......,

ACROSS

•

�'s.ntln~

Page 16 • The DallY

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

RESERVE CHAMPIONS - Theee glrle,
Chrissie Gregory, Christine Miller, Pam Neece,
Erin Gerard, Cynthie Cotterill, Jemie Drake, Billy Jo Welsh, Thereu Baker, and Rel:heel Marria took reaerve champion• ewerda on sewing

proJecte. They modeled their clothing In
Wedneedey'e etyle rewa at the Meigs County
Felr for a lerga crowd Bll8mbled before the hill
lllge.

Thurlday, August 15, 1998

FASHION BOARD NAMED - A1weya e highlight for 4-H membere telilng clothing projecte
le to be eelected to eerve on the fahlon board.
Selection 11 baled on modeling ability, the garmente worn, end polee end penonellty by e
panel of Judgee. Named to the 111811 board fol-

X-rays ,
diagnose
pulmonary
disease

1owJn9 Wedneedey'e

atyle I1IVIew on the hill

1teg1 et the Melge County Fair --.left to right,
Jeulca Juetlce, Whitney Alhley, Cynthie Cot-

terill, Bridget Vaughan, Jamie Drake, Chrlety
Drake, Billel Pooler end Pam ~-

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: What are the
symptoms of COPD, and "'hat tests
are necessary to determine whether
or not I might have the disease?
DEAlt READER: Chroni~
obstructive pulmonary disease is a
term that includes several related
lung disorders, including emphysema, chronic bronchitis and asthma.
The common denominators are
obstructed breathing in conjunction
with permanent lung damage .
Patients with COPD suffer from
breathlessness, cough, slow forced
exhalation , and over-inflation of the
lungs.
The affliction is a common consequence of cigarette smoking and
chronic exposure to air pollution,
low-grade infectiOn, and asthma
(revers ible narrowing of the
bronchial passages).
The diagnosis of COPD depends
on pulmonary tests that show airway
obstruction (despite intensive therapy), diminished blood-oxygen levels, and X-rays that demonstrate
uneven hyper-inflation of the lungs.
Without treatment, COPD usually worsens over. the years, resultiAgm severe d1sab1hty.
Therapy includes bronchodilator
drugs (Proventil and others), inter:
mitten! .a~tibiotics, .avoidance of
mhaled Irritants, respiratory therapy
(to lessen bronch1al secreuons and
maintain an appropnate level of

PETER
GO'M',M.D.

llr
AMJFM CUI, tilt, CNIH,
PS, PB, PW, PDL,
uet, more.

GRAND CHAMPIONS - 4-H club membere
named grand champion of their respective
eewlng projecll were recognized et the Melge
County Fair Wedneedlty ettemoon following the
atyle review. Pictures In the ~te they mere
are from the left, Je11lce Juetlce, Whitney Aeh-

V&amp;, auto, elr cond, AMIFII

cau, tilt, CNIH, PS,
PW, PDL, Pwr uet.

ley, Billee Pooler, Kelley Grueeer, Bridget
Vaughan, Krletlne Kennedy, Chrlety Drake with
her IIIIer, Tine Drake, e nwlng for othere proJect, Tiffany Heneley, Racheel Morrllend Becky
Taylor.

State fair

exhibit abuzz
. S~CRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) The buzz about one act at the Califomia State Fair is caining from
100,000 honeybees.
Norm Gary, known as "The Bee
Man," is a former entomology professor from the University of Califomia at Davis who covers himself
with the honeybees while playing
jazz on his clarinet.
"I'm not as nervous as the audience is," he said.
Gary has been stung more than
50,000 times and says he gets a halfdozen new stings during each performance.

activity),
oxygen (in severe cases), aggressive
treatment of heart failure (a compli1cation of COPD), and the judicious
use of surgery (to remove isolated,
non-functioning portions of lung).
Most ~ases of COPD can be diagnosed by X-mys, pulmonary function tests and anerial blood gas •
analysis, under the supervision of a
pulmonary specialist.
To give you more information, I
am sending you a copy of my Heahh
Report "Living With Chronic Lung
Di sease." Other readers who would
like a copy should send $2 plus a
long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY I0156. Be
sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTI: I'm a diabetic and suffer from neuropathy, especially at night. The pain in my feet is
like hot needles. I' ve seen a stimulator advertised on 1V at a cost of $80.
Does it really relieve pain and would
it be worth the investment?
DEAR READER: Diabetics suffer from nerve malfunction (neuropathy) because, over time, the disease inhibits circulation to nerves
which, in tum, causes tingling and
pain.
Several' recent studies have
· shown. that the symptoms of neu.ropathy C8ll be lessened if the diabetic cari keep his or her blood sugar
' in a inore normal ranxe. This
. involves close aiiCntion to diet. rexphysical activity and the usc of
·sugar-lowering P,ills (such as
Micronasc, Glucophage and others)
or insulin.
StimulatorS, vibrators and similar
devices are not COIIIidcncd to be
helpful in this rcprd. Therefore,. I

'ular

auto,

VI,

Save
physi~al

1995 FORD
TAURUS SE

1995 FORD
T·BIRD

20% OFF PULSAR
AND SEIKO

WATCHES
va,

.....

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE

l)ft /o

Fine Jewelry
91 Mill Street
992-6250

Middleport Dept. Store
li· ' · ·

'

'.'

; '

r'

va,

MAR~ VIII

auto, -elr
AMJFM c:eu, PS,
PW, PDL:; Pwr uet,
CNial, lt.utlr.

YlCQV.ISITIOg.{S -

0

price everyday.

auto,

etr
AIIIFM c:eu, tilt, eru11...
PS, PB, PW, PDL,

20% Everyday

Save e mlnlnun of 20%
of manufacturefs list

1994 LINCOLN

va,

1uto, 1tr

AMIFM c:eu, tilt, ...,,,..
PSi PB, PW, PDL,

.....

• •

1989 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD
Formula, V8, auto,
cond, AM/FM c:en,
PB, PW, PDL, Low MUte.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WNDOWS

s

00

1990 FORD
RANGER 412
3.0L • 8 cyl, auto,
cond, AMIFM c:e..,
PB, much II!Cir..

1989 FORD F250
SUPERCAB

va,

auto, elr cond,
AMIFM c:eea, tilt, crulu,
PS, PI, PW, PDL

• Up to I01 United inches
• In Wood Double Hung Opening
•mt In • Thermopane
"' Double H1ag
· OHer Good Fair wttk Oily
Option available at adclil-.ldlcqe

suggest that you save $80. You ~Ill

·,achieve niore ux:cess by addms~ng
the issue wilh your doctor and following hilldvice.

'

•'

.

'

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