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2-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio News in Brief:
Sting operation nets fugitives
CLEVELAND - Authorities have arrested 62 I rugitivcs in the
past th ree mon ths by lunng them into a sU&gt;te office building with
bogus promi ses of mcreased wel fare benefits or tax refunds.
The people, all wanted in C leve land on felony charges, were
among 5. 100 fugllivcs mailed offers of h1 gher benefits or $I ,000
' 1ncomc ta x refunds, state offi cwl s said Wedn esda y. Some of the
fu gllJ VC&lt; we re wante&lt;l for murder, r'dpe, arson and kidnapping.
"The lure of money is temptin g bait," said Ohio Auomey General Lee Fi sher.
Authorlli cs used the fu gi ti ves' la tes t known add resses for the
mailings. Those respondi ng were told to report to the buildm g in
Cl eveland, where they were arres ted.
"F ugiti ves 011 til e run , being compe nsated by swtc or county
funds - it slinks and the public doesn't like it," said Cuyahoga
County Sheriff Gerald T. McFaul. He was re fcrnng to fugitives who
continue to receive welfare benefits .
The we lfare and tax refund sting was the third of its kind in the
pas t year in Ohio. Authorities arre sted 432 people in the earli er
stin gs in C leve land and Co lumbu s. Th e fug itive &gt; had been sent
noti ces that they m1g ht qualify for pa yments as part of a class action
laws uit.
The st:lte attorney general and aud1t0r offices and the Cuyahoga
Co unt y sheriff' s department directed U1c latest stin g.

Floss escapee back in jail

,

SOUT H C HARLESTON, W.Va.- An inmate who braid ed
minty-waxed dental noss into a 20-foot rope to freedom smiled and
joked when he was captured five weeks later, police said.
Police caught Robe rt Dale Shepard on a bru shy hillside Tuesday
after he alleged ly robbed a pharmacy in Mineral Wells, Trooper
B.D. Adkins satd.
" He sa id , ' My God, l can't beli eve you caught me ," ' Wood
County Shcnff Ken Merritt said .
Shepard had escaped while awaiting trial for allegedly robbing a
post off1 cc. Now he 'II likely face more charges of escape and robbery , poli ce sa id . He also has convJCtJons for manslaughter and
armed robbery .
Shepard was returned to the South Central Regional Jail, the
y=·old , $ 12.5 million jail where on June 29, he outsmarted cameras, walkie -talkies , intercoms, computer-controlled doors, vtdeo
mon itors and more than 60 guards to become the first escapee.
Authorities said he climbed up the rope and cut through a fence
wi th a hac ksaw blade. After the escape, noss was removed from the
jail store and the Regional Jail and Correc tional Facility Authority
voted to inswll razor wtre above recreatiOnal areas.

Murder suspect will get bond
DAYTON - A woman awaiting a retrial on charges she killed
her ex -husband and his girlfriend must be allowed to go free on
bond, a state appeals court has ruled.
The 2nd Ohio District Court of Appeals on Wednesday overturned a lowe r court's dec ision to deny bond to Susan Daws of
Frankl in .
In setting a $ 100,000 cash bond, the appellate court noted that
Mrs. Daws had remained free on $ 150,000 cash bond while her ftrst
murder trial was pending.
On Jvly 27, the appeals court reversed her conviction in that trial.
The court found that Montgomery Co unty Common Pleas Judge W.
Erw in Kilpatrick did not allo'w sufficient testimony from a psycholog ist about battered woman's syndrome.
Kilpatrick sentenced Mrs. Daws , who was convicted on two
counts of voluntary manslaughter, to 23 years in prison.
Afte r Kilpatrick denied Mrs. Daws bond pending the second
trial, her attorney, David Chicarelli, turned to the appellate court
again. Prosecutors are appealing the reversal of her conviction to
the Ohio Supreme Court.
·
"We do not view granting bond to a criminal defendant whose
conviction has been revel'lied and the case remanded for further proceedings as an act that in any way interferes with the ability of the
Supreme Court to review our ruling, " the appellate court said.
Battered woman 's syndro111e. often is cited as a defense by
women charged with crimes who say they struck back only after
y=s of abuse by their partners.
.
Testimony from two psychologists was divided as to whether
Mrs. Daws fit the pattern for the syndrome. She claimed she killed
her ex-husband, Dwayne Daws, and his girlfriend, Karen Houseman, on July 16. 1992, in self-defense. She said she feared her husband because he had beaten her in the past.
- The Associated Press

activists
press ban
on tourism

Page 4

POMEROY, OH.

1·800·837·1 094

SUMMER SELL DOWN
1994

!

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1994
S·SERIES
PICKUP

tlt11

$8999
1985 FORD F150 4X4 ............................'6995
Only 47,000 mllea.

1992 S160 EXT. CAB PICKUP ........... '10,495
1989 CORSICA ...................................... '4995
1993 NISSAN 4X4 EXT. CAB ............. '13,495
1988 BUICK LESABRE ••" ..................... '4495
199~ CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ......... '13,995
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME •••••••• '8995
1991 CHEV. CAVAUER ....-................... '5995

Good Selection
of 93 &amp; 94
Program Cars.

Hurryl
They Are
Going Fast!

Vol. 45, NO. 71

3 Sectiono, 52 Pageo 35 cent.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 12, 1994

Copyright 1994

Poolside pleasure

49

ORDERS NOW BEING TAKEN

A

Multimedia Inc. N.,...p.oper

EMS relents on no news policy
lly JIM FR.:F:MAN
Sen tinel News Starr
Emerge ncy ru ns of th e Meigs
Coun ly Emerge ncy Medical Servic e will once again be published
in The Daily Se ntinel after Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lemcs
notified Emergency Services direc tor Robert By er thi s morning that
the runs arc a public record.
EMS enac ted th e no new s
release policy Monday morning,
prompting Ohio Valley Publishing
Co . publisher Robert L. Wingett to
speak out saying it violates the people's right to know.
Meanwhile, Lentes said he was
given inad equate information
before he sent a letter to EMS earlier advising them to halt the news
release of EMS run s.
Lentes said he was under the
impression that EMS issued a press
release listing the calls. Instead ,
The Daily Se ntinel calls EMS for

GET ANY IN STOCK CAR OR TRUCK AT 5
~:::ICE
•• •
OR ORDER ANY FORD, LINCOLN, OR MERCURY TO
YOUR SPECIFICATIONS AT NO EXTRA CHARGE!

the inform ation.
"They (EMS) sent me a one paragraph lettet and they didn't tell
me thi s ba ckg rou nd stuff when
th ey asked for an op inion, and I
gave them a ge neric o pinion ,"
Lentcs said.
"That' s the difference," Lentes
said. referring to the EMS providing the information without request
versus the request being initiated
by the press.

" Und er (t he Ohio Rev ised
Code) it says very few th ings arc
not public recor&lt;ls an y more. And
th eir runs, as they arc supported by
th e publ1 c tax dollars, arc public
rccorcl," he said. " ... As far as what
th ey put in th eir logs, that 's not
ph ys 1cian -pati ent (privil ege) and
wh ile they can't give 11 out. if you
ask for it, you can have it. "
Le ntes co mm ent ed th at he is
always try in g to keC4J eve r yo ne

"Under (the Ohio Revised Code) it says very
few things are not public records any more.
And their runs, as they are supported by the
public tax dollars, are public record."
Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lcntcs

aware of th e Sun shi ne La w and
public records laws.
"The pu hi 1c reco rd s law is so
broad ... that you can giv e information out un der (th e Oh1 0 Revis ed
Code) wllhnu t be1n g sued because
you arc rc~uircd 10 do it by law
now," Lcntcs sa1cl.
Bycr said a member of the EMS
board of tru stees br ought up the
legality of publishing the names of
people treated or transported by the
EMS and th e loca ti on to whic h
they were transported. The pre su mption was that the information
is privileged.
Under the current arrangement,
The Daily Senti nel will pick up
ac tual copies or the log instead of
calling EMS for the inform ation .
This morn ing the new spaper
picked up information on emergency runs dating back to the time the
policy was initiated. (See related
story- "EMS logs 41 calls")

Trustees await more library branch bids
1994 LINCOLN
MARK VIII

1994 LINCOLN
TOWN CAR

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Control, PS, PB, PW, PL, Pwr.
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1994 MERCURY
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1992 CADILLAC
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1991 EAGLE
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V·8, auto., A/C, AM/FM cassette, PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, traction assist, low
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V-8, auto., Climate Control,
PS, PB, PW,PL, tilt, cruise,
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TSJ Turbo 4 WD. 5 speed, air
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cruise, AM/FM cassette, red.

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1991

MUSTANG G.T.
S.OL V-8, 5 speed, air
conditioning, PS, PB,
PW, PL, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cassette, sun·
roof, more. Low miles.

350 V-8, auto., AC front
rear, PS, PB, PW, PL. tilt,
cruise, AM/FM
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ent1ne

Prices Quoted Include Reba1e Where Applicable. Tax, Title &amp; Fees Extra.

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di scrim ination .

"Bas ica ll y, th e boycott sti ll
stands, until the iss ue has finally
bee n resolved,·· said Caro l Lippman, spok es woman for Gay and
Le sbian March Activist s/AIDS
Coali tion to Unleash Power.
The Ci ty adm ini s tration and
Equal Rights. Not Special Rights, a
coalition that backed the amendment, were preparing to appeal a
judge's ruling overturning the ban .
Lawyers on both sides of the issue
have predic ted the dispute will go
to the U.S. Supreme Court.
U.S. Distri ct JudgeS. Arthur
Spi ege l on Tuesday ruled that the
ban - a cit y charter amendment
approved by voters Nov . 2 - is
unconstitutionally vag ue and violates the right of homosex uals to
participate in the political process.
Gay -rights advocates had sought
to overturn the amendment, which
barred Cincinnati from enacting or
enforcing law s based on sexual ori entation. It also eliminated sex ual
orientation as a basis for discrimi nation complaints under a human rights ordinance the City Council
enacted in 1992.
Tourism officials on Wednesday
began trying to recoup convention
bu smess lost before Spiegel's rul ing .. Three conventions canceled
and five more were on hold.
"We 've lost approximately $19
million to $20 million so far that
we know of," said Dan Lincoln ,
vice pre sident of th e Greater
Cincinnati Convention &amp; Visitors
Bureau. "We hope that it will
remove that as an obstacle for picking Cincinnati as a convention
site."
Tourism bureau officials
declined to identify the five organiza tion s said to be awaiting the
court case's ouu:omc, but said they
could be worth $20 miUion in revenue between 1996 and 1999.
The tourism bureau called all
five on Wednesday to tell them
about Spiegel's ruling, bureau
spokeswoman Beth Charlton said.
Lincoln said the next step is to
show convention planners that
Cincinnati welcomes everyone.
Gay-rights advocates argued
that the amendment violated their
right to lobby government repre sentatives for any legislation that
would benefit gays, lesbians and
bisexuals.
Lincoln said Tuesday' s ruling
will not affect the status of the
three groups that canceled their
planned 1995 conventions in
Cincinnati and moved them elsewhere. Those were the American
Library Association, American
Historical Association and American Speech, Language and Hearing
Association .

Ohio L o tt (TY

Buckeye 5:

C INCINNATI (AP) -G ay rights activi sts still are pursu ing a
tour ism bo ycoll aga in st the city
eve n though they go t what they
wanted - the overturn of a ban on
laws protecting homosex ual s from

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1989 BUICK
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4 cylinder, air conditioning,
PS, PB, P. locks, AM/FM caslatta, rear defogger, 44,000
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Mark Dailey, 11, chases bis 4-year-old niece Whittney Johnson with hili skateboard Thursday afternoon. The two Pomeroy
residents enjoyed the afternoon as summer nears its end. Neither jumped in the pool Thursday, however. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)

By GEORGE A !lATE
Sentinel News Starr
Th e Meigs Co unty Library
Board of Trustees have postponed
accepting bids for its new Racine
branch .
Wesa m Construction was the
only fum to post a bid when library
officials opened bids Thursday.
The Chester-based company
offered a base bid of $395,000.
" It exceeds our estimated cost
by more than I 0 percent, which
was $244,700," project architect
David Reiser said. '' I'll talk with
the construction company to sec if
there wa~~ny reason for this high
csumate.
The inflated estimate could be

due to time constraints on getting
lower offers from subcontractors,
Reiser said. But, the original estimated cost included the prevailing
wage rate , so this could not cause
the discrepancy, he added.
Another round of bids will be
accepted at I :30 p.m. on Thursday,
Aug. 25. The lack of bids - when
at least six construction firms asked
for blueprints - could be due to
the difficulty or ge tting bond bids,
he added.
Other firms that may bid during

,.

th e nex t sess io n could inc lud e
Home Creek Enterprises and A-OK
Construction.
But Re1se r sa id the al ternate
costs of extra services will help to
serve as a benchmark for tl&gt;e next
sta ge of bidding. Alternate costs
proposed by Wcsam inc luded:
• saving $3,000 by repl ac ing a
concrete parking lot with blacl: lop .
• sav ing $19,600 by eliminating
patio landscap in g.
.
• sav ing $400 by rcd ucmg the
size of trees.
• add in g $5 ,000 for an alarm

'I

I

'
-1

Cincinnati joins other baseball
cities for job action intervention
By LAURAL KARPANTY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI - Labor Secre·
tary Robert Reich told mayors of
major league cities during a teleconference to continue pressuring
players and owners to meet.
"They do have a responsibility
to the fans, public, and cities
they're in," Reich told 18 mayors
and city representatives. They were
lobbying the Clinton administration
Thursday to intervene in the
ballplayers' threatened strike.
.
The public officials said a strike
would disrupt local economies.
"There is a tremendous amount
of public investment at risk from

the baseball strike, " said Todd Partun e , a Cincinnati city council
member.
Portune and Arlington, Texas,
Mayor Richard Green arranged the
last minute telephone conference.
The call included Reich and
officials from Cincinnati, Atlanta,
Phi ladelphia, Miami, San Francisco, Denver, St. Louis, Baltimore,
Boston, Detroit, Chicago, Min neapoli s, Oakland, Calif., Anaheim, Calif., Kansas City, Mo .. Los
Angeles, and Arlington, Texas.
There are 28 cities with major
league teams.
The cities were hoping to persuade the Clinton administration to

pressure the owners and players to
settle their issues without a strike,
Portune said.
"They simply don't want to
solve this before the strike begins,"
said Philadelphia Mayor Edward
RendeU.
Rendell suggested the administration get the ownel'li and players
to talk directly , bypassing the management and player representatives.
Reich repeated the administra tion's position that mediation services and arbitration were available
if both sides wanted them. He said
he had made some proposals about
procedure that could bring both
sides to the table, but that those
su£~estions were confidential.

/:

. I

convention of the 200,000-member
National Association of Police
Organizations. which strongly supported the crime bill.
''A majority of the House
attempted to take the easy way out,
but they have failed the American
people," Clinton said after lawmakers surprisingly rejected a procedural resolution, thus preventing
the House from voting on the legislation itself. "And now I say to
them, the easy way out is not an
option."
"I want them to come back
tomorrow and the day after that and
the day after that, and to keep coming back until we give the American people the essential elements
of this crime biU ."
With polls putting crime as the
No. I issue in this election year,
Clinton had lobbied ferociously on
behalf of the bill, which would
have fulfilled his campaign pledge
to putiOO,OOO more_police officel'li
on the street.
The six-year legislation also
would have banned many assaultstyle ftrearms, provided billions for
prisons and crime prevention, made
more than 50 additional crimes
subject to the death penalty and
allowed life sentences for some
third-time felons.
House Republican leader Raben
Michel of Illinois called it an
"unholy trinity of pork, posturing

and partisanship."
In bloclcing the legislation, 167
Republicans and 58 Democrats
voted against the rules governing
debate and voting procedures. Voting in favor were !98 Democrats,
ll Republicans and one independent.
Democratic gun-control opponents objected to the firearms ban,
and about l 0 black lawmakers
rejected the bill because it expanded the death penalty and did not
include a provision making it easier
to prove racial discrimination in
capital eases.
Clinton indicated a willingness
to compromise but said any bill
must include the 100,000 police,
the assault-style fireanns ban, a ban
on juvenile ownership of handguns
and life sentences for those who
commit a third violent or drug
felony.
.
"It will take a day or two to
clear the air," said Rep. Charles
Schumer, 0 -N.Y., chairman of the
House Judiciary Comminee crime
panel and a leading advocate of the
bill and its assault-style weapons

ban.
Clinton blamed the National
Rifle Association and the Republican leadership for the defeat while
defending the I 0 black lawmakers
who joined them for taking a
"principled position" against the
death penalty.

...
,i

I

•

•

'l

front Stadium. The signs, which read "The Fans
Lose Again" and "The Boys or Summer, Boys of
Greed," were later conr.scated by ushers. (AP)

FANS SPEAK- Two fans held up signs
expressing their thoughts on the impending
baseball strike Thursday at Cincinnati's River-

Democratic leadership scrambles
-to resuscitate defeated crime bill
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - With an
angry President Clinton exhorting
Congress not to fail the American
people, House Democrats are vowing to salvage a $33.2 billion anticrime bill torpedoed by gun-control
opponents.
Democratic leaders met with
White House officials late into the
night Thursday searching for some
way to revive the legislation and
rescue Clinton from the jaws of the
worst legislative defeat of his
administration.
"We hope next week we 'II be
voting on the crime bill," House
Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash.,
told reporters after the Capitolliill
meeting.
Foley gave no hint how
Democrats hoped to placate an
unlikely alliance of gun-control
opponents, conservatives and black
lawmakers who blocked the bill
Thursday on a 225-210 procedural
vote. But he said they would be
discussing strategy with House
comminee leaders on ''how the bill
wiU come up again. "
Clinton scheduled a Cabinet
meeting this morning with the
administration's legislative agenda
upset not only by the crime bill
vote but by further difficulties in
advancing health care reform.
Later today, Clinton was flying
to Minneapolis to appear before a

system .
• adding $2 ,500 by increasing
the foundation size.
• addin g $ 12,720 by installing a
sprinkler system.
• adding $2,700 by using automatic doors .
The library does not have to
mstall automatic doors to comply
with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and does not intend to add
a sprinkler or alann system si nc e
the other libraries do not have these
amenities, library officials said.

Strickland joins dissenters
in killing crime proposal

AFTERMATH- U.S. Rep.
Charles Schumer, D·N.Y., spoke
to reporters Thursday after the
House defeated the crime bill on
a procedural vote . Democratic
leaders are working to revive tbe
bill in some form . (AP)

'The NRA, which lost assaultstyle fueanns ban votes in the Senate and the House, most recently
when the House passed it by a 216214 vote in May, called Thursday's
action a "step ahead for real safety
and genuine security."
"We Americans want precisely
the opposite of what politicians
offered them," said Tanya Metaksa, the NRA's chief lobbyist. "We
want prisons, not pork; police, not
em~ty promises; crime-fighters, not
social workers."

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON Ohio's
Republicans voted the party line
and Democratic dissenters stuck to
their guns as the House defeated
the crime bill.
Democratic Reps. Louis Stokes
and Ted Strickland joined all mnc
of the state's GOP lawmakers to
help defeat, 225-210, the resolution
that would have brought the crime
biU up for a House vote Thursday.
Freshman Strickland voted
"no" because of a pro -gun
promise he made during his 1992
campaign.
Stokes was part of a bloc of
Congressional Black Caucus that
took a stand against more than 50
new death penalty orfenses in the
bill and a decision to ax from the
final version a provision making it
easier to prove racial discrimination in capital eases.
An angry President Clinton later
told a news conference that he
understood the logic of the Black
Caucus membel'li "whose opposition to the death penalty was so
strong that they could not overcome their personal opposition."
"At least they had a principled
position," Clinton said.
He had harsh words for the
National Rifle Association, which
opposed the assault-weapons ban
included in the bill, and praise for
the Democrats who previously
voted with the NRA but strayed to

.

support the crime bill.
"There were 20 fewer
Democrats voting against the rule
than those who voted against the
assault weapons ban , so there were
20 Democrats, probably 30, who
said, 'Okay, I lost that fight, but the
safety of the people in my district
is more important than my view on
this particular issue, and certainly
more imponant than my killing this
bill on a proceduml vote.'
" They were very brave . They
stood up and took a lot of heat.
Strickland, who helped defeat
the bill beca use of the assaultweapons section, said, ·: with the
exception of the one provision ... I
would have been an enthusiastic
supporter" of the bill.
"I was rooting for the crime bill
to pass in the sense that there was a
lot in there that I like and support,"
he said. "! feel bad about what
happened on the floor."
Strickland was one of the recipients of high-level lobbying in the
final days before the vote. Attorney
General Janet Reno made a personal pitch, as did other administration
officials.
Reno also unsuccessfully
appealed to Republican Reps. Deborah Pryce and John Kasich, both
ofOhio.
•
Both had voted for the assaultweapons ban when it was -a stand·
alone bill, but said they wanted a
House-Senate conference committee to come up with a bener bill .

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

fjMU.TJMEDIA,K
ROBERT L. WlNGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen&lt;ral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland
!he Amencan Newspaper Publisher AssociatiOn

Da1ly Press Association and

LETIUS OF OPINION

ar&lt; welcome. They sbould be less chan 300
subject to edtling and mus_t be signe? with name,
address and ~etepbone number. No unsigned le tle~&gt; will be published. Let~er.;
sbou ld be in good tasle. addressi ng issues, no t personalities.

words long. All letters

~

Recovery, yes,
but a weak one

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Aug. 12, the 224th day of 1994. There are 141 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
Fifty years ago, on Aug. 12, 1944, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., the eldest
son of Joseph and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, was kitled with his co-pilot
when their explosives-laden Navy plane blew up over England.
On this date:
In 1851 , Isaac Singer was granted a patent on his sewing machine.
In 1867, President Johnson sparked a move to impeach him as he
defied Congress by suspending Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton.
In 1898, the peace protocol ending the Spanish-American War was
signed.
r-------------------~

Berry's World

0 1~ by NEA Inc

Friday, August 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Local News in Brief:

Sat urd ay, i\ug. 13
/\leu-Weathe r• forecast for daytime conditions and

Metzenbaum makes a no-strike pitch
WASHINGTON
Sen. Lion is prec luded from suing team
lloward Me tzenba um , D-Ohio, owners. If the exemption is
chairman of the Senate anti-trust repealed, player&gt; could go to court
subeomminec, re&lt;cntly held private to charge owners with restraint of
ta lks w1th th e baseba ll pla yers'
union hopmg 10 foresta ll a srrike in
Jack Anderson
exc han ge for leg islat iD n forCing
ma jor leag ue owners to co mply
and
with federal anti -trust laws.
"We offered a deal 10 the baseMichael Binstein
ball players." said one SOllfce close
to the negotiations. "Metzenbaum
sa id we wou ld pass the anti-trust trade and challenge the salary cap
leg islallon 1n the House and Senate sought by owners that 's at the heart
,f the play ers wou ld announce they of the current impa,sc.
Sources say Mctzenbaum, who
wo ul d not stfl kc. They found it
appea lmg. ·.· Although the players' apparently believes he co uld pass
un ion has not yet responded 10 the anti-trust legislation within days, is
hoping that the imminence of a seaoffer, thi s source added:
'' Th ey (players) g~ L th e hi gh son -endmg strike would be a pows1de of the argum ent . wh1ch they erful cata lyst for co ngre ss ional
arc losing. Most people think they ac ti on - but on ly if lawm akers
were convmced the passage of such
are overpaid."
Players current ly earn an aver- ' legislaoon wou ld placate the playage salary of $1.2 mil lion per year. ers' unaon.
So far. however, Metzenbaum 's
Because of baseba ll' s an tl-lrust
exemption - wh ic h has been in ano-trust bill has n't even made it
place sin ce 1922 - the Major out of comm iuee. La st June, the..League Baseball Players Associa- Senate Judiciary Com miuee reject-

By

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
.
NEW YORK - Smcc econom ic discussions more readil y lead to conflict and confus1on rather !han agrccements and solution s, nobody is going
to prove conclusively that the Clinton program'' a wmncr or a loser.
.
The President natural ly atmbutes what 1s good Ill the econom y to h1s
cffons and it is difficult to argue !he point. Inflation is low, the budget
def1cit 'has shrunk, houses arc selling, jobs arc mcrca,. ng.
.
.
The d1sp ute beg ins with the questi on of whether the Prcs 1dent ts
respon sible for the Improvements . R1ght off, you f1nd you rse lf 111 the
.
midst of a melee that resolves nsclf 11110 three camps:
1. Those who believe the economy has improved because of the WISdom of !he adm inistration' s leadership.
2. Those who declare that the economy naturally ri ses and fall s,
e1pands and contracts, inflates and deflates, and that what we are expenencing now is simply the expansiOn phase of what the economy docs natumlly.
· o f 1Ls
· 1mprovcmen
·
t. th e ccon omy
3. Those who contend that in sp1te
should be a lot bener than it has been. Included 1n th1 s cam p arc those
'who say the reason it has failed to do better IS fo und m admm1strat1on
~~.
. .
.
al '
A riot of this son will go on and on, probably d1ffenng only m qu 1ty
and environment from an old barroom brawl. But wh1le they fight, peak at
some of the numbers they are fighting about:
.
Gross domestic product has ri sen nearly 10 percent smce early 1991.
The jobless rate is down 10 6.4 percent from 7.4 percent m 1992, Inflation
is at its lowest rate in two decades; consumer pnccs arc runmng at 2.5
percent.
.
But then you starl matching overnll performance agamst the past. What
do you find " That economic performance dunng th1s recovery has been
decidedly subpar, maybe even the poorest of any recovery m more than
three decades.
.
Growth 111 th1s recovery, that IS , has been less than two-thlfds that of
the average 16.4 percent of the four recoveries - 1960-1961 , 1%9-1970,
1973- 1975 and 1981 -'.982 - since 1960. . .
Economist Lacey Hunt of HSBC Secun!ICS, who made the calculations finds that in thiS recovery the gains in living standards, as measured
by re;u disposable personal income per capita, have been even weaker..
After 13 quarters of recovery, he found the after~ tax mcome of mdlvlduals has risen only 4.2 percent, vs. an average gam of II.'. percent at a
comparable point in more typical recoveries.
.
.
It IS in such calculations that we m1ght find an explanauon for the consumer (or voter) unrest, as revealed by_ one poll after another, and perhaps
also for the inability of the admm1strauon 10 obtam cconom1c cred1bdlly.
The small gam in after-tax income is but one measure of that diSCO~­
tent, but perhaps of equal imponance are feelings not easily measured m
number&gt; and for which the admmtstrauon IS not really responsible.
A gr~at deal of job insecurity exists, for ~xample, because of the
slimmed-down mode in which many compames fmd themselves. And
many of those workers dieted out of corporate JObs have fruled to find
good jobs elsewhere.
.
.
Some of the weakness, as opponents of Chnton econom1cs declare,
might result from a destructive tax-regulatory_pol1cy, but 11 m1ght also be
a mere cyclical event or structural change m the workplace. You can
argue the point.
j
What is beyond argumept is that, yes, the economy has recovered, but
that as recoveries go, this one hasn't gone very far.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, August 12, 1994

ed t11c measure by a vote of I0-7.
Now, w1 th Major League Baseball
facing its eighth work stoppage m
the last 22 years, Metze nbaum JS
seeking to rev ive his bill.
''I'm not go in g to discuss any
conversation that I or anyone else
had wi th anybody down th ere,"
uni on head Donald Fc hr to ld us.
"We th ink the nouon of anti -trust
exe mpti on is wrong, bad for the
public, and one of the reasons we
have a strike or lock -out in every
si ngle negotiaoon."
Fehr noted he's been fighting
th e exemption for two yea rs . "I
don't think anybody believes we
lost the vote in the Judiciary Commince on merits ," he sa id. Feh r
said it 's not a fair figh t between
ow ners an d pl ayers whe n " th e
ow ners arc all millionaire s if not
bi lli onalfes ... We ca n' t hope 10
match !hat kmd of clout. "
Metzenbaum 's ch ief counse l of
the anti -trust subcommiuce, Gene
Kimm elman, confirmed th e di sc ussions wllh players' union representati ves. " Wh en it looked lil&lt;e th e

Hait\ ~•

•

strike was 1mmment Metzenbaum
wanted to check around and sec if
we could rev1ve that bill and if that
cou ld (prev ent) a strike. The
answer (from th e uni on) was
ambiguous .'' He sa1d the pl aye rs
support Me tzenbaum's bill, but
have concerns not addressed 111 the
bil l, includm g the salary ca p and
arbitration issues.
" The playe rs' biggest fear 1s
they arc go mg 10 get this (sa lary
cap) thing shove d down thc1r
throat," Kimm elman told us. "We
mtcmally arc going over our own
option s. Our goa l in looking at legIS latiOn is (to sec ) 1f we can take
care of the players' worst case
(salary cap) .... Our goal wou'.dbe
to try 10 prcvem them from strikmg
t hro~.gh th e remainder of the season.
K1111melman and others ag ree
that the clock is the enemy of a
speedy setUcment . "Our hope is to
come up with so mething that
would appeal to Congress because
it would preserve the season," he
said. "That' s the reason we hope to
do it quickly. The only way it 's
worth doing is if you do it fast....
We've just been trying 10 probe to
sec if there was anything we -could
do in Congress that would respond
10 the worst-case-scenario fears of
hoth the players and the owners in
th1s labor dispute."
" Metze nba um and Fehr work
very closely together," said one
Major League Base ball off1c1al.
" He 's (Metzenhaum) obsessed by
this .... The a nti -trust iss ue has
absolutely nothing to do with the
strike. Baske tball and football
don ' t have the anti-trust exemption
but they have strikes."
A baseball strike would throw a
curve to Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, who is retiring at
the end of thi s congressional session and reportedly passed up a
Supreme Court nomination to
remain in contention for the job of
baseball commissioner. Mitchell
has endorsed the owners' position
on anti -trust.
" A lot of good people did not
want to be hired until a labor agreement was done," the baseball offi cial told our associate Ed Henry.
"They didn't even want 10 be considered until a labor deal was done.
They'd be middled. "
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

One more huge blunder on Haiti
I thought President Clin10n had
already made all the mi stakes
mathematically possible about
Haiti (except the Big One - invasion), bull was wrong.
The Big One, in c identally,
hasn't been scrubbed, just postponed - LiU some point, probably
in October, after the health care
battle is over. Mr. Clinton doesn't
want to divide public and congressional attention between health care
and an invasiOn of Haiti . Once a
health care bill has been passed or
definitively defeated, however,
U.S . Marines will storm the Haitian
beaches.
Meanwhile, though, Mr. Clinton
and his appalling clutch of foreign
policy advisers have found one
more blunder to notch up in regard
to Haiti. Seeking to put additional
pressure on Haitian strongman
Raoul Cedras to step down, the
Clinton administration went hat in
hand to the United Nat1ons and
humbly asked it to "authorize" the
use of "all means necessary" (i.e.,
including an invasion) to force
Ccdras out.
The tax-free bureaucrats who
run the U.N. must have pinched
themselves in disbelief at their

luck. Here was the United States of
America - the world's only superpower, whose fiat, under the 170year-old Monroe Doctrine, is

William A. Rusher
"law" in the Western Hemisphere,
according to Secretary of State
Olney in 1895, "upon the subjects
to which it confines its interposition" - begging this crowd of
global hacks to "authorize" it to
invade Haiti!
As soon as they had recovered
from their astonishment, the world
statesmen assembled at Turtle Bay
graciously granted Mr. Clinton 's
request By a vote of 12 to 0 (with
two abstentions) the Security
Council somberly "authorized"
the United States, and any allies it
can scrounge up, to oust Haiti's
military junta by "all means necessary."
Well, does it really matter very
much? You bet your life it matters.
Because, for ' the rest of time, the
United Nations will claim and
exercise the right to "authorize"
- or to ''refuse to authorize" any U.S. action IOuching the interests of any other nation in the

Western Hemisphere. And it will
be able to cite as precedent the
authorization requested and
obtained by President Clinton in
1994.
Contrast this insane obsequiousness toward the U.N. with Mr.
Clinton's blithe indifference to
Congress' asserted right to be consulted regarding, and to authorize
or refuse to authorize, a U.S. invasion of Haiti.
Under Article I, Section 8 of the
Constitution, Congress is giyen the
power "To declare War." Granted,
• in the 20th century presidents have
assened, with considerable justification , the right to order U.S.
forces into action in all sons of Situations where it would hardly seem
appropriate to call for a declaration
of war. And Congress, m passmg
the War Powers Act in 1974, clearly overstepped its bounds - as
presidents of both parues have
since indicated they bcheve, by
simply ignoring it.
But don't let anybody tell you
that President Reagan's invasion of
Grenada, or President Bush's invasion of Panama, is sufficient prece dent for Mr. Clinton 's planned
invasion of Haiti.
Grenada was a Communist-con-

trolled forward base of Soviet
power in the Western Hemisphere
during the Cold War, and was busy
lengthening its airpon runways to
accommodate something bigger
than any commercial aircraft that
might want to land there. And the
dictator of Panama, Manuel Noriega, was not only hostile to the United States and in line to take full
control of the vital Panama Canal ,
but headed a regime which had just
coolly killed a U.S. officer on a
street where he had every right to
be.
President Clinton is preparing to
lose American lives in an invasion
of Haiti simp! y to keep his reckless
promise 10 the Congressional Black
Caucus that he would restore JeanBertrand Aristide to power. And he
won't ask Congress for "authority" to invade, for the good and sufficient reason that he knows he
wouldn't get it. The Constitution be
damned.
William Rusher is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
(For information on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

'Failed presidency' talk is premature
The Washington buzz is that
Bill Clinton is on the brink of a
failed presidency, but (I) he
doesn't deserve the mp and (2) he
can, and probably will, turn in
another "Comeback Kid" performance before 1996.
"Brink of failure" talk is based
on Clinton's depressed approval
rating - 42 percent, according to
Gallup as wei! as the
widespread perception that he's a
man who "can't be trusted " or
"doesn't believe in anything,"
deep unease about his foreign policy performance, and opposition 10
his health care proposal.
The daily news keeps deepening
Clinton's woes: His own pollster is
telling Democratic congressional
candidates to distance themselves
from him, Treasury and White
House aides are accused of Whitewater cover-ups, he's on the verge
of mihtary action in Haiti that the
public and Congress oppose, and
both health care and crime legislation are bogging down in Congress.
So, where 's the silver lining?
Basically, it's here: Despite all the
difficulties, Congress will pass
Clinton's crime bill, a health care
bill, and the GATT agreement;
Democratic congressional losses
may well be less than the apocalyp-

t1c levels now being forecast; and
when the press gets around to
assaying Year 2 of Clinton, it will
come to the same judgment as last

Morton Kondracke
year- withal, not bad.
Then, in this rosy scenario,
Clinton's polls go back up next
January, he pursues a "New
Democrat" welfare reform and
"empowerment" agenda in 1995
- including expanded IRAs for
the middle class, rather than tax
cuts - and he's in fighting shape
for 1996.
This assumes, of course, that the
Clintons did nothing illegal in
Whitewater and that no foreign
policy disaster occurs.
Foreign policy remains a Ooudly) ticking bomb for the Clinton
administration, but recent NATO
air strikes against the Bosnian
Serbs were a sign that Clinton has
dropped his policy of empty bluffing when adversaries act up.
If Clinton decides to invade
Haiti and makes a mess of the
particularly if
operation Congress has not authorized it his credibility might well be shot
for good, and foreign policy rna~
bolt from the bottom to the lOp of

voters' preoccupations. A success
in Haiti - that is, abdication by the
military without war - would be a
feather in his cap, but there would
still be the potential nuclear crisis
in Korea.
If Clin10n gets lucky in foreign
policy and peace prevails, he can
certainly counter the false charge
that he "doesn't stand for anything" in domestic policy.
He does, and it's evident in his
speeches and in his program: He
wants to use government to help
people cope with the chatlenges of
a new world of intense economic
com~tition . Clinton has not tried
to htde from the competition but
has passed or proposed education,
job-training, infrastructure, investment, and economic support programs to arm companies and individuals io meet it
It was wise -and courageous for
Clinton to adopt a so -called
"Eisenhower Republican" amideficit economic strategy, and it
has largely worked, despite howls
from opponents that it would lead
10 economic collapse.
Two items in the 1993 package
deserve praise that Clinton rarely
gets: his decision to use the Earned
Income Tax Credit rather than a
minimum-wage hike to take work·

ing people out of poveny and the
enactment of a differential between
the top ordinary income rate and
the capital gains tax rate, which
encourages rich people to invest
their money.
But it won't be enough for Clinton 10 let a strong stock market and
growth picture speak for themselves. George Bush got beat in
1992 despite an economic recovery, and Clinton has got to remind
people again and again that the
economy is doing well, that his
programs have had something to do
with it, and that his opponents had
it wrong.
Clinton's press conference last
week was a start on the road to better p.r., but it has to be sustained.
As Democratic pollster Peter Hart
reported last month after a series of
focus groups, voters have an
"almost complete inability to name
a major accomplishment of Bill
Clinton." '
The .fact that they've forgotten
(or never heard of) NAFfA, Head
Stan expansion, national service,
the Brady Bill, Goals 2000, and so
on is partly the media's fault, but
it's also Clintbn's. ·
(Morton Kondracke is' executive editor or Roll Call, the news·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

Mason man cited for improper backing
A Mason. W.Va .. man was cited for 1mproper back 1ng followmg an
acc ident on West Main Street, Pomeroy, Thursday afternoon .
Accordmg to a repon from Pomeroy Police. Scou DeWees, 17, backed
up to allow a semi-truck 10 make the turn after coming off the Pomeroy Mason bridge and struck the front of a car owned by Sm ith, Kline and
Beachem of Hu ntington, W.Va .. driven by Katherine Han. 35. Chesapeake. Neither ve hicle was damaged.

MI CH

IMansfield 183' I•

Tire slashing under investigation

IND.

•

•lcolumbusls7o

Tires on three vehicles were slashed ovcrn1ght Thursday on Genera l
Harti nger Parkway .
According 10 a repon from Middlcpon Po lite, two ul the tars were
parked at Ellis Service Station, and the third was parking on the stree t.
The incident remains under investigation.

I

MJHS orientation slated Aug. 22
The annual orientation for incoming seve nth grade rs and new c1ghth
graders attending Meigs Junior High Sc hool th1s fall will be held Monday ,
Aug . 22 from 6-8 p.m. The onentaoon Will he held m the sc hool auchton um and will be followed by a light piCni C.
.
Parents and fam il y members arc encouraged to aucnd the onentat1on
with their students. said Princi pal David Gaul.

Showers T-s torms Ra1n
~',a

Ice

S111ny Pt Cloudy

1\ssocwtud Pross Gtaphtcs flet

Cloudy

C 1994 A.ccu- Weather, Inc

Heat, rain, humidity add up
to steamy Ohio weekend
fly The Associated Press
A stall ed frontal sys tem will
bring more showers and thunderstorm s to Ohi o on Saturday and
Saturday night. Temperatures could
come close to a steamy 90 degrees.
More hot and humid weather is
on tap for Sunday before cooler
and drier air starts moving into the
state, the Nati onal Weather Service
said .

Lows over the weekend will be
111 the 60s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1881
while the record low was 45 in
1967. Sunset tonight wiU be at 8:33
p.m. and sunri se Saturday at 6:41
a.m.

Weather forecast:
Today ... Variable cloudiness and
warmer. A chance of showers and
thunde.Tonight..Mostly cloudy . A
chance of thunderstorms north after
midnight. Lows 65 to 70.
Saturday ... Partly sunny. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid and upper
80s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday ... A chance of showers
and thunders10rms . Lows 65 to 70.
Highs in the 80s.
Monday ... Fair except for a
chance of showers east and south
and turning cooler. Lows 60 to 65.
Highs mid 70s to around 80.
Tuesday ... Fair. Lows mid 50s to
around 60. Highs mid 70s to
around 80.

O.J. undergoes surgery
for swollen lymph nodes
LOS ANGELES (AP) - OJ .
Simpson is recovering in his jail
cell after doctors removed parts of
swoll en lymph nodes from under
his armpit to determine if he has
cancer.
Dr. Robert Huizenga said Simpson, who also has been suffering
fro m drenching night sweats the
past fe w weeks, will be closely
monitored at the Men's Central
Jail , where he is being held withour
bail.
"Thi s includes regular nursing
c hec ks ... and proper hygiene
including a clean cell and fresh
linen," Huizenga said in a statement Thursday.
Simpson, 47, is charged with
murd enng his ex-wife Nicole
Brown Simpson. 35, and her friend
Ronald Gol dman, 25. Trial is set
for Sept. I~ - Prosecutors have not
yet decided whether to seek the
death penalty.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
wa s to decide today whether to
grant the media access to crime
scene photographs and transcripts
of secret conferences during the
preliminary hearing.
Two reporters, from the Los
Angeles "l'imes and USA Today,
gave sworn affidavits Thursday
stating they couldn't fully understand testimony at Simpson's preliminary hearing because they were
barred from viewing crime scene
photos.
Simpson isn' t due back in coun
until a status hearing Wednesday.
Simpson was shuttled before
dawn Thursday from his jail cell to
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center,
known as the "hospital to the
stars" because it is popular among
celebrities.
Huizenga performed a lymph
node biop sy on Simpson's right

'fl1e Daily Sentinel
[USPS 1J3.9oll)
1\ibtiahcd every aftcroooo, Mo1d1y tbrouJ,h
Friday, Ill C(lwt St., Pomm:~y, Qlio by lhe
Ohio Valley F\lbUihiiJ Company/Multimedia

Inc . Pomercy,

Ohi6

armpit
"He had an uncomplicated
recovery," Huizenga said.
Swollen lymph nodes in the
armpit, neck or groin can indicate
the presence of viral or bacterial
infection, or more serious diseases
such as AIDS, cancer or Hodgkin's
disease.
Earlier tests on Simpson ruled
out AIDS or other infectious caus_.
-es. Simpson has a family history of
cancer, Huizenga said.
Other developments: ·
• The California Deparunent of
Consumer Affairs sent letters to
Simpson's investigators Thursday
telling them to stop working unless
they have Califomw licenses or can
prove exceptions to the license
requirement, a source told the AP.
A lawyer for the detectives said
they have not violated the law and
wiU comply with state regulations.
• Shapiro said he planned to
appeal to the president of Fox
Broadcasting Co. to delay the Sept.
13 broadcast of its TV movie The
0 -'- Simpson Story until after the
triaL

Suits filed
(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines the grievances of one party
against another . It does not
establish guilt or innocence.)
Two lawsuits by parties seeking
judgments were filed recently in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun of Judge Fred W. Crow III.
Valerie L. Wilson, Pomeroy,
and Westfield Companies are seeking a judgment of $4,141.75 plus
interest and coun costs from David
S. Parsons. Pomeroy. The suit
stems from a motor-vehicle accident allegedly caused by Parsons
on Dec. 31, 1992 on Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy.
Bank One, Lima N .A., Indi anapolis, Ind., is seeking a judgment of $3,574.36 or foreclosure
against Richard Jeffers, Clinton,
S.C., et al.

4$769. Pb. 992-21$6

Secon1 ci!ISS po1t11e paid Ill Pdmeroy, Ohio.
Member. The Allociated Prcu. and tho Obio '
Newspaper AIIOCillioo, National Adnniling ·

Repretentalive, Branham Newapap« Salel,
733 Third Avenue . New York, New Ymt

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Akw ..------~--~--.625/B

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AT&amp;T ,_,;__~-----~·--·.53 lll
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Wendy lnt'L -~--~--~--·15 3/B
WorlhlnlfD• lnd.... --~--·19 1/4
Stock reportl are the 10:30 Lm.
quotu provided by Advest o
GaiUpolls.

Senate leaders want
changes in health bill
By CIIRISTOPI-IER CONNELL
Associated Press Writer
WASHlNGTON - A grow mg
bloc of Senate moderates is
demanding c han ges 111 Se nat e
Majority Leader George Mill: heWs
health bill even as House leaders
are forced to postpone their action
on reform a week or more .
President Clinton called a Cabinet meeting today before dispall:hing 10 Cabinet chiefs and II other
top officials to lobby senators for
the health bill. It carne a day after a
stinging House defeat for his other
major domestic initiative, a $a3.2
billion anti -crime bill.
The president demanded Thursday evening that Congress keep
working on crime and said,
"Health care's not ~;oing to take a
vacation either. I thmk they ought
to stay and deal with both of

Fourteen " main stream " se na -

tors from both parties met for se veral hours Thursday and planned to
sit down again today to try to
develop a package of major amendments to Mitchell' s plan.
The II nucleus was the "rump"
them. ' '
group that pu shed it s own bill
After two days of mostly pani- through the Senate Finance Comsan rhetoric, Mitchel!, D-Maine, mittee, includin g Sens. John
said he would call the first votes Breau x, D-La., John Chafee, Rtoday on ·amendments to his I ,448- R.l. , and Kent Conrad, D-N.D.
page plan , des pite Republican
"This is the only bipartisan
objections that th ey needed more effort going on 111 the Senate,"
time to study its provisions.
Conrad said. " We need simplifica House Speaker Thomas Foley, tion and streamlining. There 's just
0 -Wash. , after hours of tallcs with too much stuff in thi s bill - too
Mitchell, White House Chief of many boards and commi ssions'"
Staff Leon Panetta and others, said and too much dem and ed of the
the House debate on health must states .
wait for the crime bill to be finOther Democrats also were rnisished and for answers from the mg que stion s about Mitchell' s
Congressional Budget Office on overhaul of the hea lth sys tem,
the costs of rival health bills.
which aims to gel health insurance
Aides said they expected at least for 95 percent of Americans by the
a week' s delay, and Foley would tum of the century. Today only 85
not rule out the pos sibility of percent are covered.

Meigs announcements
Meeting canceled for fair
Next week 's meeting of the Fraternal Order of the Eagles Auxil iary has been canceled due to the
Meigs County Fair. Next meeting
will be held Sept. 6.
Letart trustees to meet
The Letart Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
office building.
Benefit dinner to be held
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 and the Coolville VFW Post
3478 will hold a benefit dinner for
Wilbur Windland Sunday, Aug. 3'.,
with serving to begin at I p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains post home,
located off State Route 7. The dinner is being served for a donation
only and will be followed by a benefit aucuon and other fund rnising
events. Windland, injured in a lawn

Livestock report
COLUMBUS , Ohio(AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Fnda_y by
the Ohio Department of Agflculture:
Barrows and gilts: Steady to
firm.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 38.00-41.50.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points, 41.50-43 .00, a few
43.50.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: steady to .50 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 63.5069.50; select 59.25-65.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.0067.75; select 56.00-61.00.
Cows: steady to weak: all cows
48.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to LOO lower; all
bulls 62.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs : .25 to .50
lower: choice wools 68.00-73.75;
choice clips 69.50-73.50; feeder
lambs 69.50 and down: old sheep
32.00 and down.

KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
TOMMY LEE JONES,
SUSAN SARANDON
IN

THE CLIENT PQ.1S
AND
MACAULEY CUUCJN, TED DANSON

IN

ETIING EVEN WITH DAD
441011

•

•

putting action off until September.
" I ca n' t give you an answer," he
said . ''I' d like to do it as soon as
possible ."
House MaJorit y Leader R1chard
Gep hardt, D-Mo., denied that the
defeat of the crime bill boded ill for
passage of health reform. "The
timing on heal th care depends on
gellin g answers from CBO. It ha s
not11ing 10 do with crime," he said.
But even before the se tback on
crime, Gcphardt and his lieutenants
were facing what Re p. Vic Fazio,
D-Calif., acknowledged to be a
"struggle 10 round up the votes."

mower remain s a pati e nt at Mt.
Carmel Hospital in Columbus.
Racine Council to meet
Racin e Villag e Co uncil will
meet in recessed session Monday at
7 p.m. at the Star Mill Park.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admiss1ons - Virgil
Roush, Pomeroy ; Michael Hub bard, Syracuse: Icy M1ller, Syracuse.
Thursday discharges - Kimberly Follrod, Racine: Clyde Johnson,
Portland; Lettie Young, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug . II - Mrs.
Clyde Rollins and daughter, Mrs.
Donald Harden and son, Mrs.
Michael Cray and daughter, Charlotte Satterfield, Mrs. Terry Bran dau and son, Dottie Fellure, Mrs.
Jackie Nonhup and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McCoy. daughter, Oak Hill ; Mr.
and Mrs . Kevin Payne, so n,
Pomeroy.
(Published with permission)

The Dally sentlnei-Page-3

Mason County Fair
SATUIWAY,AUG. 13
8 a.m.- Fair opens
9 a.m. - ARBA rabbit show
10 a.m. - Dance contest finals
10 a. m.- Watermelon eating contest
I p.m. -Peda l tractor pull finals
I p.m. - Horseshue pitching
3 p.m. -Cheryl K. Warner
3:30p.m.- Cros.scul sa win~ mntest
4 p.m. - Wood splitting cnntest
5 p.m. - Rubert Lutton award
5 p.m. - S.U. Kang's rae Kwon llo Academy
5 p.m. - Midway dog~ns
6 p.m.- Bend Area C;ospel Sing
6 p.m. - Open horse show
6 p.m. - Nationalllarrrlllorse As.soc. State Finah
7:30p.m. - Mason County horse pull contest
7:30p.m .- The llubraps t'SO"s and '60's I
8:45 p.m .- SwHpstakes, Donnie Hill Awards
9 p.m. -The II ubcaps
II p.m .- (;ales dost·

EMS units log 41 aid calls
Un n s of th e Meigs Co unt y
Emergency Med 1ca l Services
responded to 4 1 ca lls for assi,tancc
between Sat urday mornin g and
midnight Thursday. UniLs respond mg included:
COLUMBIA TWP.
11:12 a.m. Sunda y, volunteer
fire departme nt and first res pon ders, posSible fire at Doug Lo~&gt;. !her
res idence. no injun cs reponed .
MIDDLEPORT
I I: 2\ p m. Satu rday. !\ lana
Clealand, treated at scene;
12:18 p.m. Sun day, Ph ylli s
Baker, Holzer Medical Cen ter;
7:58 a.m. Monday, Ash Street,
Martha Wolfe , Veterans Mcmonal
Hospital;
I :3 1 a.m. Tuesday, Rivers ide
Apartments, Conni e Sc holercr.
VMH;
2:43p.m. Tuesday. High Street,
Lettie Young, treated at the scene;
3:33p.m. Tuesday, Willow
Creek Road, Ronald Jeffers, O'R icness Memorial Hospiutl:
5 38 a.m. Wedn esday, Hig h
Street. Lettie Young . VMH;
10:10 a.m. Wed nesday , Rail ey
Run Road, Elber John son, HMC:
8:45 a.m. Thursday, S. Second,
Rachel Wil son, HM C;
12:54 p.m. Thursday, S. Fourth .
Tyler Simpson, VMII ;
11 :53 p.m. Thursday, Hud son
Street, Chris Rayburn. VMll
POMEROY
4:39p.m. Saturday, Kerr Street,
Harry Gannes, VMH;
7:52p.m. Saturday, Children's
Home Road, Leroy Bartrum ,
VMH ;
6:58 p.m. S un&lt;~ty, U.S. 33. Harricu Evans. HMC;
12 :17 a.m. Monday, Pom eroy
Nursing and Rehabiliuwon Cen ter,
Virginia Phalin, VMH;
3:51p .m. Monday, Peacock
Avenue, Gladys Sm ith , VMH;
8:50p.m . Monday, Village
Green Apartm ents, Nancy Ackerman, VMH:
8:25 a.m. Tuesday, Po meroy
Cliffs Apartments , Lucille Bra ley,
treated at the scene:
3:31 p.m. Wednesday, volunteer
fire department, Main Stree t, auto
fire, Rebecca Smith owner;
8:05 p.m. Wednesday. H1land

Roml, Roger Jeffers. YMII .
RA CINE
8:38p .m. Saturday, llayman
Road, Harold Hysell , IIM C;
7:35 p.m. Monday, state Route
124, Clyde Johnson. YMII;
4:42 p.m. Tue sday, llas han
Road, Shem Wolfe , YMH;
6:52p .m. Tuesday , Rambow
Ridge, Robert Burdine, VM H:
9:15p.m. Tuesday . at stJI IOn,
Cathy Osborne, VMH ;
2: 17p.m. Wednesday, Old Panland Road. William Adkim. treated
at scene;

II :42 p.m. Thursday , Co llege
Succi, Flo yd Reynolds. Pleasant
Valley Hospital .
REEDSVILLE
10:20 a.m. Tuesday, Sta te Route
124, Reedsvi ll e , Jan e Ra tcliff,
VMII .
RUTLAND
9:40p.m. Saturday, Cotterill
Road, Kevin Howard. VMH:
10:56 a. m. Sund ay, VanZant
Road. Margaret White. HMC;
4:05 p.m. Sun day, Co llege
Street, Ray Ellis, VMH;
I I: 17 a .m. Monday . Meigs
Mine 2, John H. LewiS, HMC;
11 : 19 a. m. Monday, Mc1gs
Mine 3 1 Salem Po rtal , Rich
Thomas , OMH;
7:23 a.m. Wed nesday. Huuon
Road, John Jeffers, VMH :
9:49 p.m. Wednesday, State
Route 681, Charles Gilkey. HMC.
SYRACUSE
5: 0 5 p.m. Saturday, Co llege
Road, Mike Hubbard , refused;
10 :36 p.m. Thursday, State
Route 124. Marsha Person. HMC;
2:18 p.m. Thursday, Bridgeman
and College streets, Mike Hubbard,
VMH;
8:59 p.m. Thursday, at station ,
Shirley Powell, VMH;
11 :33 p.m. Thursday, Waters
Edge Apartments, Betty Triplc!l,
VMH.

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

UTILE BIG LEAGUE

PG

STARTING FRIDAY

THE FLINTSTONES PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION 52.00
44&amp;-0923

1:20 ,9: 10 D... ILY

MATINE ES SAT &amp; SUN
I : 20 J: 10

NAT!Nil:r;S 5AT &amp; :jON

'
• "'

fi" ~ "

• ' ' •"

LION,KING
II\ IRIUMI'II

fiOM 1110 TO HEIO
IPC- 1 11
7:10, 9 :]0 DAILY

MATINF.F.S SAT &amp; SU"
I :20 J:JO
Anrnc.t.~ l lllll

rhr oUrt) u( 1hoi: lftlt
• on lUI hiWldlo

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II THI

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7: 10 ,'J :OO [)AH.Y
MTIMI!I!S SAT ' S UN

1: 10 ] :00

ANHL! IN TH£ OUHIHD
1: \0 1»JU IP.TIM2S SAT/Sir!. I : 10 I P(;l

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Q:~'&gt;

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TRUE IllS

r.II.Y lll8t1'TNDS Solfr/!1.11.1:4!. tRI

L'OIII INC SOOIIII " RLANkAAM" •
DRUC:I'! WILLIS l fl "COLOR Of' niGHT.,

GIFT CERTlACATES AVAILABLE !

�The Daily

Sports

Se~tinel~

Friday, August 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dodgers edge Reds; Phils
win; Padres stop Astros

Friday, August 12, 1994
Page-4

Players walk; baseball season may be over

l

\b.t~~

NEW YO RK (A P) - Forget and none were scheduled for today.
th e race for Roger Mari s' rec ord Th e strike threatens th e fin al 52
and perhaps the expanded playoffs, days an'd 669 games of the regular
too. The base ba ll playe rs arc on sca,on. And it creates the poss ibili ty that the World Seri es, which was
strike .
PI&lt;Jycrs walked out on one of the played thro ugh tw o world wars,
most exc itin g seasons in decades won ' t be take pl ace for the first
after Thursday night 's games, stop- time since 1904.
'' All of us arc anguishing over
ping the sport fo r the eighth time
sin ce 1972 . They we nt on strike th e season ," sa id Milwauk ee
rather than give up a system that Brewers owner Bull Se lig, chairhas i ncreascd th e average salary man of the ruling exec utive coun more th an 20-fold sin ce the free cil.
agent era began in 1976.
As th e strik e deadline neared,
" It' s just going to be weird not George Steinbrenner and two other
coming 10 the ballpark," Ken Grif- owners publicly questioned pans of
fey Jr . said aft er th e Seattle management ' s bargaining strategy
Marin ers routed the Oakland Ath - and Marge Sc hott questioned the
letics 8- 1 in the final game before ex peri ence of the own ers' chief
the walkout.
nego ti a tor. Ma nage me nt is
"Toda y was a norm al da y." dcmanlltng a salary cap and won ' t
Griffey said. " Tomorrow it will be give up the right to impose a cap
strange."
after the season , leading players to
No talk s were held Thursday feel a strike was tlteir onl y means
to force an agreement.
Donald Fehr. head of the Major
League Baseball Players Association, said playe rs were "resigned
and re sentful " because they
believed owners forced the stop land , 6 0; Col em1n, Kan111 City, .SO,
Nixon, 1! 011too, 42; K.nobl1uch, Minnesopage.
t a. 35; ll yAnd er1 on, !hltimore, 3 1;
More than half the teams,
A Col e, MinnCI'intl. 29; McR1c, K..nu1
CLty, 2!! .
including the long-suffering ClevePIT CIII N'G ( 12 Deciaiona)- Bere,
land Indian s. were still in the race
Ch1 cago, 12-2, . 8~ 7. 3.81; Key, Ne w
York., 17 -4, .81 0 , 3. 27; MCiad, C le't'e·
for this year' s ex panded playoffs.
la nd, 11 · 3. .786, 3 112; Munt111 , Ba lli ·
President Clinton pleaded with
more , 16·5, .762 , l06; Cone , K1nns
the parties to settle their differences
C n y. 16-5 . . 762. 2 .94 ; MPeJe&amp; , Ne w
Ynrk. . 9 -4 , .692. 4.10; RJoluuon. Seattle,
and prese rve a se ason that's
13-6, .684, 3.19.
already
see n a perfect game by
STRJKEOliTS- RJohnson, Se.tlle,
204; Ocmma, Oost.oo, 168, Futley, Ca.liKenny Roge rs of Te xas and an
fomia, 148; llen&amp;gen, Toronto, 147; Appt·
una ssis ted tripl e play by John
er. Kansu City, 145; Cone, Kan.au City,
Valentin of Boston.
132; Dcre, Chicago. 127; JMcDowell ,
Chic:ago,l 17.
Matt William s , who has 43
SAVES- LeSmith , Baltimore, 33 ,
homers, and Griffey Jr. , who hit a
Montgomery, Kanau City, 27; Aguilera.,
Mumeso1.1, 23; Eckenley , Oakland, !9;
grand slam for hi s 40th on ThursAy1il . Seattle. Ill; HAll, Toronto, 17; fet .
day night, were still in the chase for
lcrs , Milwaukee. 17; Rwull, Cleveland,
17.
the home run record. Tony
NATIONAL lEAGUE
Gwynn'
s quest to become the first
DA 1- rJNG - TGwynn, San Diego,
.400 hitter since 1941 may have
. 394; llagwcll, JloUilorl, .367; Alou, Moo ·
trta l, . 339; Morria , C incinnni, .335;
ended with his average at .394.
Mitchell, Cincinn1U, .326; Jcffcriea, St.
"I think the people really ought
LoUIS, .315; LWalkcr, MontreaJ, .322.
R UNS - Bagwell , Houlton, Hl4 ;
to be taken into consideration here
Griss om , Mont real, 96; Lankford, St
and I hope they will be," Clinton
louU, 89; Bmds, San Franciaco, 89; Big-

.

..

-~

SEASON OVER?- Los Angeles manager Tom Lasorda shakes
hands with Cincinnati manager Davey Jnhnson prior to Thursday;s 2-0 Dodger victory over the R.eds. After the game, the players went on strike, possibl y ending the 1'194 Major League baseball
campaign. (AP)

said in the White House Rose Garden. " There are a lot of little kids
out there who want to sec this season come to a close and there arc a
lot of not-so-littl e kids out there
who know this is the most exc itmg
baseball season in 40 years.''
Cracks in the owners' solidarity
appc&lt;Ired Thursday. Steinbrenner of
the New York Yankees said own ers should be allowed at the bar gaining table, Peter Angelos of the
Baltimore Orioles said they should
give up the right to impose a salary
cap and Jerry McMorris of the Colorado Rocki es sa id a sal ary cap
should be negotiable.
Steinbrenner s~id management
negotiator Richard Ravitch 's arguments about competitive -balance
problems were false.
" Look at Montreal, " the Yankees' owner was quoted saying in
Th e Philad e lphia Inquirer on
Thursday . " The be st record in
baseball is the team with the second -lowest payroll. So you can
shoot that theory right in the butt."

Scoreboard
American League
East Division
New York
lh Jiim ore
To mnl o
B~ton

DctrcHl

Chi cago at Lot Angel as, JJ ·OS p.m.
San Fmncuco at San D1ego. II :05

W L
...... 70 43
(,] 4'1

Pet.
619
"i63

GB
6 Jn

...... ... 55 60
54 6 1
... ........ 53 62

478
470
.461

16
17
18

Central Di vision
W L
Chicago
......... 67 46
Clcvdand
.........66 47
Kanllls City ..... .64 5 1
Minneaou
.. .... .53 60
Milwaukee
...... 53 62

Pet.
.593
.584
.5H

GB

. 46 ~

14

.46 1

ll

L

......52 62
..... .5 1 63
....... ..49 63
.........47 611
Thursd•y'a G•met
Toronto 8, New Y01k 7,

Texu
OillUld
Seattle
California

Pel.
.436

GH

.447

I
2

.438
.409

S 1/2

13 innings

Milwaukee 10, Dctroit5

roin

Dost.ool , BaJumon: 0, 3 inrungs, ppd.

Seattle 8, Oakland 1
Only game~~ scheduled
Playn1' tlrlkt dl"ecLI tht following:
Toronto (Stewart 7- 11) at Ne w York
(Kamicrucdi 1-6), 7:05pm.
MilwJUkee (Sunlan 2-6) at Cleveland (Martinez 11-6), 7·05 p.m.
California (Leftwich 5-10) at Detroit
(c;Jullicbm 4-5), 7OS p.m.
Doai.Ul (Hcak clh 8· 5) at Bal timore

(Ml1Ssin al6- 5) , 7.35 p. m.
Minnesot.a (Mah&lt;mcs 9-5) at 0\icago
(Fernandez 11 ·7). 8:05 p.m.
Texu (Pnlii. 2-5) at Ksnu~ City
(GubiC'LI 7-9), 8·05 p.m.
Settt.le {DaVlS 2-2 ) at Oakland (Van
Poppcl7-10), 10.05 p m.
S.turday'a Games
Toronto II New Yolk, 8:05pm.
Bos too at Ba ltimore, 8:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Oeveland. 8:05pm .
Cdifomia u Detroit, 8:05p.m.
Minnesota at Olicago, 8:05 p.m.
Teltu at KanaaJ City, 8:05p.m.
Scaulc at Oakland, 11:05 p.m.
Sund.y'a G1ma
MilwaWoc 11 Oeveland, I: OS p.m.
B01Lon 11 Baltimore, 1:3S p.m.
MinN:IICU at Olicsgo, 2:35 p m.

Califomi1 1t Detroit, 2:35p.m.
Teltu 1t Kamu City, 2:35p.m.
Seattle 11 Gilland, 4:05p.m.

Pd.

GB

,649
.596
6
.487 18 lf2

. ...54 61

.470 20 Ill

........... 51 64

.443 23 lf2

Central Division
HousLon

PitiOburJh

SL lAuil
ChiCIJO

W

L

........66
.........66
.... .ll
..... 53
..........49

48
49
61
61
64

BALTIMORE ORIOLES----Opllooed
Armando Be rUtez, pitcher, lo Bow1c of
th ~ Eut~ m Leagu e. O pt ione d A rtl-. ur
Rhoda, pnc her, 10 Rochester of lhe Inter·
natJorul Lea gue. Recal!ed Tom 11 olton.
p1tcher, from Rochester.
BOSTON RED SOX - Si gne4l Bnan
Rose. p1tcher . and u stgned him to Fort
Myt:rs of lht: A onda State League As·
signed Andy Tombe rlin , outfielder, to
r .wwdct of lhc lnu:ma tional League.

Alb1e Lopez, pitcher, 1o Charlotte of the
lntern1tional Lc.gue. Purchased the cooLtacu of Ruu Swan . pitcher , and Rene
GOIU.IIez, infielder, fran Chulotte.

PeL

GB

.579
.l74
In
.46l
ll
.465
\3
.434 16 1/2

West Division

Xa vier Hernandez, piteher, hom lhe 15 . d1 y diublcd lilt. Oplioncd Joe Ausaruo,
lo Columbua of th e lnt.emationaJ

r:hc:r,

~o-R

ONTO BLUE JA YS-Optioocd
Domingo CC(jeno, infieldCT, to Syra cuse
of the International l...eaSl.J e.
~atlon1l

Le.aue
COLORADO ROCKIES -O ption~
Lance Painter, r.n cht:r , to Colorado
Springs of the Ptcific Coast Luguc.

lon-Wtlkel Barre of the lntem1tion11
League.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -Op·
tim ed William V1nlandinghup, pitcher,
to Phoenix or !he P•ci.fic Coast L...eague.

BASKETBALL
N•llon1l Bukelball A&amp;loclatlon

UOCKEV
N•llon•lllockey League
LOS ANGELE S KINGS - Named
Dave Taylor ass1St.lm to the genenl manager.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTI NG - O'Neill, New York,

3~9 : Belle , Cle vehnd, .357: Thomn.

San Francist:o .... 55 60
Colondo
.. .. .. 53 64

.47K

3 1/2

to, .l41 ; WCiark, Te11as, .329.
RUNS - Thomu, Chi~;•go , 106;

San Diego

....... .47 70
Thunday'• Cam a
Loa Angeles 2, Cmcinnll u 0
San Diefo 8, Houston 6
Atlanta

3. Colondo 0

Pin1burgh 4, Montreal 0
SL Louil 8, Florida 6, 7 !Mings
Philadelphia 2, New Yatk I , 15 inni.Rga
Only gamea schedule4l
Pl•ytn' alrikt arrtell lht following:

Friday'• C.met

Pitubw),h (WhiLe 4- S) 11 Aoridl
(Bowen 1-5), 7:35p.m.
New Yext (Smilh 4- 10) 1t Monuul
(Hilllf&gt;.l), Dl p.m.
Hoult.OO (Hamiac:h l-5) It Allanta
(Mcrd&lt;or9.-4}, HOpm.
Philadelphia (MWlOl 1-S) 11 SL l..ouil
(U.boni 2-7}. g,jj p m.
Cincinnati (Sc:how-ck 7-2) It Colo..do (lla:rio l -12}, &lt;j,()j p.m.
OUe~ao

(CuWlo:Z.l) •' Loa Ana,clcl

(llenhiocr (&gt;.&lt;;), tO,OS

fJtl.

s.., Ftancil&lt;o (Swill!-7) ot San

Dirao CKJu&lt;a.. J-2}, to,os p.m.
Salu_!Cb)"• ~me~
PiUibllrJh ll Florida, 1:05 p.m.
New Yc:D ., Monlnlal, I:QS p.m..
Houi&amp;Ofllt Atlanta, 8:05pm.
Philldelphilll SL

~Ada,

8:05 p.m.

CinciMati ~~ Colondo, I:O:S p.m.

Scioto results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Don Lucio won the feature race
Thursday at Scioto Downs, pacing
the mile in 2:01 J .
Don Lucio paid $6.20, 3.20 and
2.80. Wen-Mar's Repete came in
second, paying $3 and 2.60. while
Lark's Luke returned $4.60.
Attendance was 3,275, with a
handle of $277,646.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH.

SPRING AND
SUMMER HOURS

a

MON.-FRI. 9:00.5:00
SAT. 9:00.12:00

,.BE

a . IUVELY

SYSTEM

Beck, Sl() Fnnc iaco , 28; Dlonea,

Lofton, Ceveland, 105; Griffey Jr, Selllie, 94: Phillipi, Detroit, 91; Belle, Oeveland, 90; Canseco,
Toronto, &amp;6.

Te~u.

Philldelp~ia, 1:1; Wetteland, Montre~1 ,
2S ; M c MJ ~ hacl, Athnla , 21; Myers,

88; Molitor,

RBI - Pucken. Minne 1o11 , 112;
Carter, T Gronlo, 103; Thom11, Chicago,
101 ; Belle, Clcveland, 101; Franco,
Chic1go, 98; Sicm , Oak.la.nd, 92; Griffey
Jr, Scatlle, 90; CaniCCO, Te1u, 90', Field ·
er, Detmtt, 90.

HITS-Lof\on, Cleveland, 160; Molitor, Toronw. ISS ; Belle. Cleveland, 147;
Th om as. Chic1go, 141; Griffey Jr, Seattle,
140 ; CRipken, 81himore, 140;
Knobl1uch, Minne1ota, 139; B1ergll ,
Cleveland , 139; Palmciro, D1ltimon:, 139;

Puckett, Minncsou, 139.
OOUBLES- Knoblauch, Minnesota ,
45; DeUe, Oevcl1nd. 35; Thomu, Oticago. 34 ; Frym•n. Dt:troit , 34 ; Loft on ,
Clc vehnd, 32; 81erg1 , Cleveland, 32;
P1lmeiro, Ba ltimore, 32; Puckett, Min ·
ne&amp;oLI, 32.
TRJPLES- Uohnson, Oticl8o. 14.
Coleman, K•nAI C11y, 12; Lofton, O cveland , 9; ADin, MJ!waukce, 7; M c R ~ c .
Kansas City, 6; Polonia, New York, 6;
White, Toronto, 6.
HOME RUNS -Criffcy Jr, Sealtle,
40, Thoma1, Chicago, 38; Belle, Cle't'cland, 36; Can.scco, T exu, 31; Fielder, Oc-

troi I, 2&amp;; Ctrtc:r, Torooto, '17; MVaughn.
Boston, 26; CD1vil, Califnmi1. 26.
STOLEN BASES - lorton, C le ve ·

By The Associated Press
Joe Montana and the Fox network both get their first expanded
work of the summer tonight.
Montana, making his first start
of the pre season, is scheduled to
see extensive action when hi s
Kansas City Chiefs play the Was hington Redskins at RFK Stadium .
Montana, who finished last season as the AFC' s second -leading
pas ser, played just two series
against Minnesota in Tokyo on Saturday in his only previous preseason game.
"I think Joe's right on target as
far as where we are with him at this
time," Coach Marty Scholten heimer said. "We'll open with Joe .
Then we will go to Steve Bono. Joe
will play most of the first half, and

Mashed Potatoes
Broccoli &amp; Cheese
Hot Buttered Roll
Coffee or Small Drink

Chicago, 21 ; Hoffman, San Diego, 20

-Sports briefsTRACK AND FIELD
HELSINKI, Finland (AP) Rodion Gataullin successfully
defended his pole vault title at the
European Championships by soarmg 19 fee~ 8 1/4 inches on his second attempt.
Gataullin became the second to
vault higher than 19-8 1/4. The fust
was world record-holder Sergei
Bubka, who didn't show. com plaining of tricky winds at Olympic
Stadium.
Russia won two other events to
take a commanding lead in the
medal standings with seven gold,
four silver and four bronze medals.
Britain is second at3-3-L

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - It
was baseball's last game for a
while, so the Seattle Mariners
showed off their best.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s grand slam
and Randy Johnson's 15 strikeouts
on the eve of today's strike gave
the Mariners their sixth straight
win, 8-1 over the Athletics.
"It's a shame there's going to
be a strike," Johnson said. 'We've
pulled together as a team, and no ·
one has complained about the
strike. Everybody',s doing their job.
The young pitchers are pitching
well, and the work stoppage is
going to kill a lot of streaks.''
Some scattered boos were heard
when Johnson ( 13-6) fanned Ernie
Young for the final out.
Even though the home team
lost, the crowd went wild when
Griffey hit a high ny ball into the

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Fox. meanwhile. will kick off its
coverage of the NFL when Denver
pla ys at San Fran cisco in one of
three NFL e xhibition game s
tonight. It' s a first for Fox, which
won a hidding war late last year for
th e privil ege of televi sing NFL
games.
John Madd en will be teamed
with Pat Summerall in the broadcast booth , as they were for 13
years at CBS.
In tonight' s other preseason
game. Buffalo plays at Atlanta.
The preseason schedule contin ues with 10 games on Saturday . It's
the New York Giants vs. San
Diego at Berlin, Lo s Angeles
Raiders at Pittsburgh, Detroit at

~ Rtffing !loads, lnlirectlJghlilg, Prernum Wood

Pad&lt;age,F.. CoovriJn loaded
•• Span Pamt Sclwn&amp; Addbonal

right-field scats to highlight a sixrun second inning. They cheered
again when his leaping catch at the
wall robbed Stan Javier of extra
bases.
In other games, Toronto beat
New York 8-7 in 13 innings and
Milwaukee beat Detroit 10~ 5. The
Boston at Baltimore game was
rained oat.
Griffey, whose 40th homer of
·the season highlighted a six-run
inning, said afterward he wasn't
ready to hang it up.
"It's just going to be weird not
coming to the ballpark," he said.
" Today was a normal day. Tomorrow will be strange.''
'Johnson, who grew up in nearby
Walnut Creek, wanted to pitch well
in front of his family and in memory of his late father.
"I still could feel my dad's

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HOLE-IN-ONE WINNER - Robert Hysell, left, captured the
1994 Gallia County Unit of the American Cancer Society'~ 'Uole·
In-One" contest held recently at Cliffside Golf Course. Hysell is
pictured with tournament chairman Marvin Boxdorfer. Hysell
scored his ace on the par 3, No.6 hole, a 195-yard blast. Hysell wa~
offered three options as a prize for his efforts - air tickets to anywhere in the United States, an ocean cruise to the Bahamas or a
golf resort package.

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Cleveland, Jndianapolis at Cincin nati, New York lets at Philadelphia, M1ami vs. Green Bay at Mil waukee, New Orleans at Minnesota, Chicago at Arizona. Tampa Bay
at Seattle and New ·England at Los
Angeles Ram s.
The Bills return to the Georgia
Dome for the first time since their
fourth con secutive Super Bowl
appeara nce, a loss to the Dalla s
Cowboys.
"Buffalo kind of limits you in
some of the things they do, "
Atlanta coach June Jones said fol ~
lowing Thursday's training camp
workout. "If you get real fancy
with Buffalo, there are going to be
a lot of wide open guys, so we're
just going to try to play our
schemes and be sound."

Griffey shines in Mariners'
8-1 triumph over Athletics

Philoddphjo, 14-6, .700. lU; M=ka.
Atlanta. 9-4, .692, 3. 45; PJManincz,
Monl.n!ll, 11 -S, .687, 3.42.
STIUKEOlffS- Benc., S1n Diego,
189; Rijo, Cincinnati, 172; OM.ddw:, Atlanll , 156; Sabc:rhasc:n. New Yort, 143;
PJM1rtinez, MonbUI, 142; Glavine, Atlanta, 140; Dnhcboo, Philadelphia, 129.
SAVES - Franco, New 'fork. 30;

Leaders

GB

.453 6 1!2
.402 12 l/2

39, DS1nden, Cincinn1ti, 38; Griuom,
Montrul, 36; Cm, Florida, 32; DLewis,
San Fnnciaco, 30; Bonds, San Francisco,
29. DeShldd1. 1..01 Angelt:a, 21; Butler,
Lm Angeles, '17 .
PITCHING (12 Dcelaiona)- Frc.c:man , Ca.londo, 10-2, .833, 2.80; S1bcd!a·
8CU, New Yort., 14-4, .718, 2.74; KHill,
MonllCll, 16-S, .762, 3.32; GM•ddux, Atlantl, 16-6, .727, 1.56; Dnhcluon,

Krawsczyn, Meigs Marauder golf coach ; Rick
Edwards, athletic director , and Pal O'llrien,
Meigs County Golf Course , pictured left to
right, along with the athlete s. (Photo by David
Harris)

Chiefs battle Redskins tonight

STOLEN DASES- Bigio, HOWlon,

Nallon11 Football Le.aue
GREEN DAY PACKERS-Wan·cd
Malcolm Showell, dden1ivc lineman .
KANSAS CITY CH1EF~ - SJ&amp;ncd
Wesle)' Carroll, w1de receiver Wal'nd
P1n Ev1ns. tight Clld .

Pet.
.l09

MEMBERSHIP GIVE-AWAY- A year 's
free membership to the Meigs County Golf.
Course will be given away at the Meigs Uigh
School football preview on Aug. 26. The membership is being used by Meigs Athletes as a
fund raiser. Donations are being taken by John

DOUBLES- 81ggio, Houuon. 44;
LW alker, Montreal, 44; JBell, Piu.sburgh,
35; TOwynn, San DicgG, 35; Bichc:ne ,
Col o nd o , 33; Dagwcll, Houston , 32,
Alou , Montreal, 31 .
T RlPLES- DLewia, San fnncuco ,
9; Butler, Los Angeles, 9; Moode&amp;i, Los
Angelea, 8; RS1nders, Cincinnati, 8 .
Kingery, CoJof'ldo, I; Cllyton, San FnncUco, 6; Conine, Aorida, 6; SON, OUea.go, 6; 1T'CI'!I.Indcz, Cincinnlti, 6.
HOME RUNS - M1Williama, San
Funcis co, 43; Bagwell, Uou1ton, 39;
Bonds, Silt Fnnciaoo, 37; McGriff, Atlanta, 34; Galarng1, Colorado, 31;
Mitduill, Cincinnati. 30; Sheffidd, Florida, 27; Dichcue, Colorado, Zl.

lliLAD ELPHJA PHILLIES-Op·
tioncd Mikc Uebenttal, catcher, to Sctan·

W L
.......l! 16

Loo Anaclco

'

Bigjpo,llouston . 139.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS -O ptionr.d hmat:l Valdes, pilcher, to Albuqujlue of lhe P1cif1c Coast Lesguc.

Chicago. .353; Lorton. Cleveland. 349;
Boggs. New York • .342; Molitor, Toron -

"George speaks for himse lf and
I don't think many peopl e would
agree with him, " Chicago White
Sox ow ner Jerry Rcin sdorf cou ntered.
Ange los, whose group bought
the Orioles la.1 t year for a baseball
record $ 173 milli on, said ow ners
should pledge not 10 Impl ement a
sal a r y cap after thi s se ason in
exc hange for the uni on ag reeing
not to strike thi s season or nex t.
" That's probabl y your bes t shot
right now: a quid pro qu o," he
said. "There 's no way the iss ues at
hand will be reso lved in 24 hours
or the next week."
Again , Reinsdorf di sagreed.
" The problem with Mr. Ange los is he's new in the game and not
fully aware of all the things th at
have been going on ," Rein sdorf
said.
Later in the day, Me Mom s sa id ,
"I think we could negotiate a settlement that did not include a sa lary
cap" and offered to personally go
Continued on page 5

gto, Houston, 88 ; A1 ou, Montre.l, 81 ;
McGriff, AIlana, St.
KBI- Bagwcll, Howtoo, 116; MaWt.lliams, San f n.ncuco, 96; Oichcuc, Colorado. 95; McGriff. Allanta. 94; Piuu,
l .ll.s Angeles, 92; LWalker, Mootreal, 86;
Galarraga, Colorado, 85.
IIIT S- TGw ynn, S1n Diego, 165;
D&lt;~gwcll , llous\on, 147; Bichene, Colorado, 147; MorrU , C~ncinn1ti , 146; Corune, l-l orid1, 144; Alou, Montreal. 143;

NEW YORK YANKEES- Anlnted

FOOTBALL

Montreal
..... .. 74 40
Atlanta
.. ...... .68 46
New Y&lt;lrk
..... ..55 58

Cincinnu.i

Am('fl ca n League

Named Dick ll• rt.eT anisunt coach

National League
East Division

Florida

Transactions
IIASF.BALL

ATLANTA HAWKS- S1gn ed Jim
Lc.s. guud, 10 a two-year contract.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLA ZE RS-

Toromo 1t New Yom, 8:05p.m.

l'!ut.dclphio

Cincinruu at Cohndo, 2:05 p.m.
Oticago at lol Angelr.s, 4:05p.m.
San Francisco I t San Diego. 4:05
p.m.
Pltuburgh It Aorida, 6:05 p.m.

CLEVELAND lNDlANS--Optioncrl

)'rld.y'a Gamet

WL

ll oucton at AllanLI , I : 10 p.m.
New York 1t Monu-ea.l, 1:35 p.m.
rhil1dclphiaat SL Looil, 2:15p.m

4

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CYCLING
LEICESTER, England (AP) Germany's Olaf Ludwig won the
fourth stage of the Tour of Britain
at Leicester.
Italy's Maurizion Fondriest
retained his 24-second overall lead
over Russia's Vitacheslav Ekirnov,
with Ludwig another 9 seconds
behind.

presence here," he said. "li always
meant that I have a beuer than
average game here."
On this night he was way above
average, allowing only four hits.
He finished with a major leaguehigh 204 strikeouts, and a fan hung
Ks over the second -deck railing
each time Johnson recorded another strikeout.
The Mariners batted around
against A's starter Ron Darling
( 10-11) in the second, loading the
bases twice.
8 lue Jays 8, Yankees 7,
13 innings
If this wa s their last game,
Toronto and New York made it last
a little longer at Yankee Stadium.
Joe Carter, who ended last year
with a World Series-winning home
run. connected for his 27th in the
12th inning for the Blue Jays. But
the Yankees tied it in their half on a
double-play grounder by Paul
O'NeilL
Ed Sprague led off the Toronto
13th with a home run, and the Blue
Jays made the lead stand up.
Darren Hall (2-3) was the win ner . Joe Ausanio (2-1) gave up
Sprague's lith homer as the AL
East-leading Yankees lost for the
fifth time in six games.
Brewers 10, Tigers 5
No one wanted a rainout right
before the walkout, so Milwaukee
and Detroit waited nearly three
hours while rain delayed the start at
Tiger Stadium.
Once the game began. Jody
Reed singl ed on the fir st pitch.
Both teams kept hitting throughout
the afternoon, with Reed ' s two-run
double highlighting a six -run rally
in the eighth inning.
A crowd of 18,857 saw Tony
Phillips homer for the Tigers and
Troy O'Leary connect for the
Brewers. Cecil Fielder drove in two
runs, giving bim 14 RBis in
August.
Jesse Orosco (3-1) was the win ~
ner and Storm Davis (2-4) was the
loser.

EVERY SUNDAY

.'

. '

Martinez pitched a scvcn-hiucr

Players ...
Continued from page 4
to the bargaining table.
Schott, the Reds owner, questioned the experience of Ravitch,
who led New York City's
Metropolitan Transit Authority
tluough an 11-day strike in 1980.
"I don't know if he's ever had
any experience with unions," she
told Cincinnati radio station WL W.
"I don't think so. It takes a certain
person . We'll see what he does."
The strike could end the season
prematurely for the first time since
1918, when President Wilson
demanded an abrupt conclusion
because of World War L
"We hope it's not a long
strike," Gwynn said.

•

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homered , giv in g S1. Lou1s a ra in-

shortened vic tory.
Ma rk Whit en, Ray La nk ford
and fl r rn ~ rd Gilk ey also homerett
for the Cardina ls, who arc averag ing 6.5 ru ns per game in August.
The game was call ed in the top
of Ihc eighth inning foll owin g a 7~ ­

Sports brief

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all owing two ru ns and SIX hits over
five inn ings. Ca rdinals 8, Ma rl ins
6, seven inninJ:_s
AI Miami, Tom Pagnozzt hit a
home run for U1c third con,ecut tve
g;.Hn c and thn.:c Jr ammatcs al so

for his third shutout and struck out
seven.
The Reds lost for the fourth time
tn fiv e games, bu t clmched the NL
Central 1f a strike wipes uutthc rest
of the season. Ace Jose Rijo (~ - 6 ) mtnutc ra in dcl:..iy.
To m Urbam (3 - 7) earn ed th e
ma tc hed hi s NL hi gh with 12
viuory
despttc all ow ing 10 hits in
stri keouLs m e1ght1n nin gs.
fiveplu
s inni ng s Pa t Ra]l]l (7·X)
Padres H, Astrus 6
was
the
loser.
AI Houston , the i\stros, pl ay mg
their first game with out Jeff Bag- l'hillies 2, Mets I, IS innings
At Plr ilatlelph ta, th e las t four
we ll , blew a chance 10 move rn lo
inni
ngs we re played in a stea dy
first place mthc NL CentraL
light
rain.
The Astros remain ed one-half
Only aho ut 5,000 of the original
game behind Cmcinnati . Bagwe ll ,
leadin g the majors with I lti RB is, 37 .1105 fam rema ined when Bill y
is out 3·5 weeks after breaking hrs llatchcr sco rn ! tlir winning run on
hand when he w:IS hit by a pitch Ricky Jordan's "ngle in the bottom
of the I 5th.
Wednesday .
l latchcr opened tl1e 1511• with a
Joey Hamil to n (9· 6) ov crcJm e
bunt
single and rnov ct110 third on a
two errors by shortstop Luis Lopez
wild
pit ch by Mau ro Govo (3 ·5)
and Derek Bell hit a two -run
and
a
fl y out. After two intcnuonal
homer . Greg Swin de ll (H - 9)
walks
loaded the bases, Jordan hit a
allowed fiv e runs in 2 1-3 innin gs.
1wo-ou1
smglc down the thirq base
Braves 13, Rockies 0
line.
At Denver. Fred McGriff htl hi s
Reli e ver Tom Edens (5- I)
34th homer and Dav id Ju strcc hit
up Ihc win .
picked
hi s 19th and drove in four ru ns as
the Braves pounded ou1 20 hiLs to
back Maddux .
Madd ux lowered hr s majo r
league- leadin g ERA to 1.56 with
his third shutout.
110Cio;EY
Lance Painter (4-6) allowed fiv e ,
BOSTON (AP) ~- Alan Eagle runs in three innings.
son, form er head of the National
Pirates 4, Expos 0
Hockey Leag ue ]ll ayers' union ,
At Pittsburgh , the Ex pos hardl y was indtcted on two new ch&lt;Irges of
looked like the team with the best racketeering .
Eagleson , a Toronto lawyer. wa.~
record in baseball, go ing qui e tl y
into the strike by losing 10 Zan e charged tn March in a 32 -co unt
Smith .
indictment accu sing him of rackeSmith (10-8) hadn 't won sinc e leering, mail fraud, taking kickJuly 6, only to shut down the divi - backs, embezzlement and threaten ~
sion-leading Expos on fiv e hits as ing a gmnd ·j ury witness.
the Pirates beat Montreal for only
Ea gleso n, 6 1, wa s executiv e
the second time in 10 games.
director of the NHL Pl ayers AssoButch Henry (8-3) took the loss. ciation from 1967 to 1991.

Only 47,000 miles.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992·5479
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.,

orado 0; Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 0
and St. Louis 8, Florida 6 in sev en
mnmgs.
Dodgers 2; Reds 0
At Cincinnati, Martinez (12· 7)
beat Cincinna ti for thr thi rd ti me
thi s seaso n and T im Wa lla c h
homered.

CALL:

West 2nd Street

..::=. . . _

By TOM WITHER S
Assoc iated Pre s.~ Writer
While the Mets and Phillics did
their best to ll elay the in ev itabl e,
the San Diego Padres struggled 10
get home.
After Ihc fi rst five NL ga mes
we re co mple ted Thursday , New
York and Philadelphia pla yed 15
rain y, uneve ntful innings at Veterans Stad ium befo re th e Philli es
pulled out a 2-1 win .
Mean whil e in Ho uston, the
Padr es. th eir bags pa cked and
aboard a Ca lifo rnia~ bound airplan e
followin g an 8-6 aft ernoon win
over the Astros, sat helpless ly on
the tarmac with a nat tire.
Not a bad analogy for the state
of base ba ll o n thi s 12th day of
August.
With no talks planned or scheduled, the ex traordin ary 1994 season
carn e to an abrupt stop with players
pac king up their belongin gs and
fans seeking entertainment alternatives.
Ob vio usly th e "STRIK E"
headlines obsc ured the games. but
there we re some notable performances on what could have bee n
the season's fmal day.
- Greg Maddux continued his
dommation of NL hitters and pursuit of an unprec edented third
straight Cy Youn g Award with a
three-hit shutout at Colorado. With
the Roc ki es ' planned mo ve to
Coors Fi e ld nex t season. it was
possibly the final baseball game at
Mile High Stadium.
- Tony Gwynn. trying to
becom e base ball's first .400 hitter
sinc e Ted Wrlli ams hit .40fi in
1941 , went 3-for-5 in Houston to
raise his average to .394. He needed a 6-for-6 performance to reach
.400. happy with my season,"
Gwynn said. "I hope I'm not done
for the year. I hope I get a chance
to add those six extra points to my
average."
- Ramon Martine ' of Lo s
Angeles pitched a seven-hit shutout
in Cincinnati as the Dodgers built a
3 1/2-game lead over San Francisco in the NL West
The other scores on the last day
before the strike were Los Angeles
2. Cincinnati 0; Atlanta 13, Col -

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�Page-,6-The Dally Sentinel

. , Friday, August 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reader dispels myth about s.igns of breast cancer
detect by self-examination She told
me not to worry about it because "if
il's painful, it's not cancer."
Although the pain continued, l
ignored it, confident that it wasn't a
" " I 994 Los Angeles
problem. l had my annual checkup
• r omes Synd1ca1e and
last April, and by then, I could feel
C•eetors Syndoca te"
the lump. I was again told, "If il's
painful, it's not cancer," and "S ince
Dear Ann Landers: I have an you can move it around, it' s nothing
important medical t.ale for your to worry about." They tried to
readers, especially the women. aspirate fluid from the lump ,
Please print it
assuming it Wl\5 a c ysl When they
About eight months ago, l slarled couldn't gel any fluid, they sa id it
having pain in one of my breasts. must be a solid cyst or a benign ·
After two weeks, I went 10 my tumor.
ob-gyn gruup to have 11 checked ouL
l went to a surgeon to have it
The specially trained nur se removed, and guess what .. it was
pr.JCtitioncr did a breast exam and cancer. Right now, I'm facing, at !he
found a "tinv cvst" that I could not age ,.f 38, a m111imum of a

Ann
Landers

Global inequities
may encourage
population growth
By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The world population of 5.5 billionIS more th~n twice what the Earth
can support over the long term, a
study says.
Pau l Ehrlich of St.anford University and Gretchen Daily of the Unive rsity of Ca lifornia, Berkeley
have determ ined that the Ea rth 's
maximum "carrying capac ity" is
about 1.5 to 2 billion people.
"We're unsustainable no w,"
Ehrlich said in an interview Thursday. "We want to reduce the
impact so there's hope of getting
over the top and bringing the population back down. "
The study also sa id that the
world's population would double
again before effons to control 11
take hold .
The best way to boo st th e
Earth's carrying capacity and to
reduce population is to promote
politi cal and socia l policies that
remove th e enormous inequities

between ric h and poor , men and
women and industrial and developing countries, the researc hers said.
Removing inequities amo ng
nations encourages the kind of
international cooperation needed to
control environmenta l problems,
such as global warmin g, that can
hinde r agricultural production ,
Ehrlich said.
He also said th at women with
jobs are less li ke ly to have children . "There 's a lot of ev idence
that equity between the sexes can
lower the fertility rate," Eh rl ich
said.
Other reform s, such as a fairer
distribution of land among farmers
in developing countri es, can help
increase the earth's carrying capacicy , Daily said.
"If people own their own land,
there' s more incentive to pass it on
the way they got it," rather than to
abuse it, Daily said. Land that is
well cared for ca n support more
people than land that is abused, she
said.

lumpectomy and radiation. Please
tell your readers that it can be
cancer if it's painful. The only way
to be sure is with a biopsy, because
even the mammogram l had four
days before the surgery didn't
pinpoint the problem. No name,
please. Just ·· MANCHESTER,
CONN.
DEAR CONN.: Thank you for
writing. Yours is an extremely
importantleuer. I received a similar
one in October of 1991. Here was
my reply:
I checked with three outstanding
cancer specialists, and this is what
!hey said:
Dr. Jordan Guuerman, M.D.,
Anderson Cancer Center in
Houston: "Any mass should be

investigated. While it is true that
most malignant masses do not
produce pain, it must never be
assumed that a painful lump is
harmless."
Dr. James F. Holland, MI. Sinai
Medical Center in New York:
"Please emphasize the value of a
meticulous self-examination every
month ·· pre-menopausal women at
the end of a period and postmenopausal women at the first of
every month."
Dr. Bernard Fisher, University of
Piltsburgh and chairman of the
National Surgical Adjuvant Breast
and Bowel Project: "Women should
become well-acquainted with their
breasLI. An annual mammogram is
very important, but mammograms

r---Qberlin graduate__,

GRADUATES- Marcella Chapman, Middleport , poses with
her grandson, Ted Chapman, at his graduation from Oberlin College in Oberlin recently. He is the second grandson of Mrs. Chapman to graduate rrom Oberlin. John Chapman graduated in 1·991.

are not I 00 percent accurate. All
irregularities should be looked into.
Cancerous lumps are more often
painless, but one must never assume
!hat a painful lump is 'nothing 10
worry about'"
Dear Aoo Landers: I live in
South Korea and am the mother of
two daughters. I am annoyed by
older women who keep asking
"Why don't you have a son?" Wh~
I talk: to my husband, he says he
doesn't mind that we don't have a
son and it's up 10 me. His indifferent
anilllde makes me angry.! don't need
a son now, but I'm afraid when I am
old I will regret that I didn't have
one.
I am in a confused state. U you
were m my shoes, what would you

do? ·• CONFUSED MOTIIER IN
KOREA
DEAR MOTiiER: I woold tell the
women who ask such rude questions
to mind !heir own business. The
decision to have more children
should be made by you and your
husband, and !here is no guarantee
!hat you would have a son.
Do you havt quutilln.&lt; about sa.

but no one to talk to? Ann Landers'
booklet,
and tM Tun-Agu,"
is friJIIlc and to IM point. Send a
st/f-addresstd, long , business-size
envelope and a cMck or money order for $3.65 (this inc,/udes postagt
and handling) 10: Teens, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562. Chicago,
111. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.45.)

·sex

Cub rescued on
Smokey Bear's
50th anniversary
By TOM GA RDN ER
Associated Press Writer
TAHOE CITY, Calif. (AP)A bear cub spoiled amid a wildfire
on Smokey Dear's 50th anniversary
is recuperating after its four paws
were badly burned in a futile searc h
through the embe rs for something
to eat.
The 18-month -old Nevada black
bear was first seen on Tuesday, 50
years a ft er the Forest Service
launch ed it s famou s campa ign
against fore st fires. The bear was
foraging along the CaliforniaNevada border 12 mil es 'west of
Ren o, where a 7.310-acre fire
burned three hou ses and ravaged
the bear's habitat.
"This bear is not unlike the people who lost their homes. They're
looking for their dining room table
and it was looking for its dining
room table," Guy Pence, Carson
district ranger for the Toiyabe
National Forest, said Thursday.
Wildlife officials, firefighters
and Sierra Pacific Power Co. work·

ers managed to gel a rope around
the 49-pound female on Wednesday, then threw a blanket over the
cub's head. II wasn't ~.asy.
"It put up a preuy good. strug gle," Pence sa id . "T hey are
extremely strong . Their forearms
are very muscular. But it couldn 't
run or go very fast."
The bear was taken to Sierra Pet
Clinic in Truckee, Calif. , where its
paws were treated and wrapped in
mitten-like bandages.
Keepers are mostly feeding the
bear what it would find in the wild
- branches, berries, clover and an
occasional apple.
One non-native treat is a couple
of bananas a day . The cub loves
them and they are easy to lace with
antibiotics that will help it recover.
Unlike the cub rescued in 1950
that became a symbol for the
Smokey Bear campaign, this bear
is technically not an orphan since
it' s old enough to forage for itself.
Pence said.

Anne and Nan track obsolete typewriter ribbon for Royal
By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
Quite some time ago, I had a for mula for restoring dried-out typewriter ribbons. Because my Royal
Portable is obsolete, l cannot buy
ribbons for it. A store here. however, was able 10 sell me one of a
general make but it was also dry. I
cannot find !he formula . Can you
. help? - GEORGIA R. ARLOWE,
Roseburg, Ore.
DEAR GEORGIA: We couldn't
find the formula to resurrect typewriter ribbon s, but we bel one of
our readers will come 10 our aid.
We did find a man who is a

whiz at solving anc ien t typewriter
ribbon probl ems. Art Griffin of
Huntoon Business Machines, at 89
State St., Rutland , VT 05701, says
that if you have the spools he can
fi nd a new functioning ribbon for
th em. The fee is 54.50. plus
post.age and hand! ing.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN:
would like an address on how to
gel pen pals from other countries.
I've been wanting to do thi s for
years. Also can you tell me how I
can find other people who collect
Avon boules? My grandfather has
a garage full plus a porch fulL DAWN D. HIEBER, Salem, N.J.
DEAR DAWN: International

Pen Friends was founded in 1967
and has 300,000 membe rs. It' s for
peopl e who want to correspond
with folks from different nations
and cultures. The correspondent s
are matched by age, sex and lan guage. Partic ipant s live in 188
countries and include speakers of
five languages: English , German,
Spanish, French and Portuguese.
The se rvice also offers casseue
exchange se rvices for blind or
handicapped participants. Write to
International Pen Friends at P.O.
Box 290065, Brooklyn, NY 11229.
As for your grandfather's Avon
boule collection, we sugges t that
you write to the National Assoc~a-

lion of Avon Collectors Inc. at P.O.
Box 7006, Kansas City, MO
64113.
According to ',' Malon ey's
Antiques &amp; Collectibles Direc tory
1994-1995" (Wallace-Homestead
Book Co .. 1993), this national
association of Avon collectors has
members throughout the United
States and Canada. It publishes a
monthly newsleller with buy and
sell ads.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: SOS
had a product on the market a year
or so ago called "SOS Jr s." I
thought they were great - not so
big - and one usually could usc it
several times, and it dido '1 rust like

the larger ones. So my problem is
the "Jrs. " arc not avai lable in this
area. Arc they sti ll making them? I
cannot find an address for SOS or I
would write. - JO RUSSELL,
Waterloo. Iowa
DEAR JO: We' re sorry to report
SOS Jrs. are no longer available.
Miles Inc. of Chicago recently sold
the division that makes SOS to the
Clark Co.
The customer-service representative we spoke to had never heard
of SOS Jrs ., and said they weren't
making them.
Write to "A sic Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Ouestions of general interest will

ASK ANNE Ill NAN

•
Friday, August 1

1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Se

Second
birthday
celebrated

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
In the heat of the summer, what Southern High's 1993-94 drafting
a job it must have been to dlsman - class, Mike Elberfeld, Racine Planlle and transport by truck the Cross ing Mill. Valley Lumber Co. WagMill building which .was located on ncr Hardware, David fizcr,
th e former MG M property in Richard Wamlcy, Doug and Cindy
Pomeroy.
Sands, Gilbert Hart, Joe Swain,
All of the piece s had to be Charle s Yost. George B. Cross.
marked so that it can be reassem- Racine Area Community Organi7.abled and preparations arc now tion, Donald Manuel, Paul and Sue
underway 10 repai r the beams for Marr, Guy Rose, John Holman, Bill
reconstruction as soon as the foun - Maynard, Associated Fabricators.
dation is laid. By the way, at Star Tri-County Sanitat\on and Rose's
Mill Park in Racine where the Excavating.
building will become a muse um,
the buildin g wi ll be two stories
II will be a year in September
in stead of l11e former three, I'm since Major Glenn Rummel (ret.)
told .
Na tur ally. all of this costs left Meigs Co unty to make her
money and contributions arc still home at Salvation Army accomobeing accepted at the Home - dations in Asbury Parle, N. J.
National Bank in Racine on the Quit£ active whi le tn Me1gs County, Major Rum mel, of course, missproject. Checks sent to be bank
es not being here. She keeps up on
shou ld be made out to the Racine
Museum/Cro ss Mill Project. By yo ur act ivities through th e The
Dai ly Sentinel which is provided
the way, anyone donating \. 100 or
for her by her niece and her husmore will have hi s or her name displayed on a plaqu e at the park. band, Janel and Harry Lefflc.
I'm sure Glenna who has been a
Also volunteers arc really needed fne nd to many of us over the long
at this time for the reconstruction years wou ld appreciate a more per·
process. Anyone hav ing any ques - sonal contact, however. Mali wi ll
tions about the project call Dale reac h her at Salvation Army R.O.R.
Han at 949-2656.
320, 210 Fifth Ave., Asbury Park,
The project has drawn wide N.J .. 07712.
auention and support to gel this far
along as you can tell from the list
My' !tiS a small world.
of .contributors who are the HomeIn an earlier column this week I
National Bank, Geraldine Cross, mentioned a story in the July
John and Lynn Cross Nichol s, "G uid eposts" about Jerry Mercer of
Della Cross, Gerald and Shirley Columbus and his air carrier ser·
Simpson, Ora Hill, Harold an d vice. It turns out that Clair Morris,
Marjorie Roush. Vietor and Alice son of Mt. and Mrs. Carl S. Morris
Wolfe, Roger and Marvcne Beegle, of the Racine area, has been a pilot
John and Marth a Dudding, Vinas with Jerry's serv ice for the past
Lee, Clarence and Inez Roy, five years. Many of you will
Robert G. and Marlha Lou Beegle, remember Clair as a forme r resiFrank and Delores Cleland, dent. He got his llying training at
Clarence and Carolyn Adams, the aviation school at Ohio UniverThereon and Mary Lou Johnson, sity.
David and Terry Shain, Patricia
Shain, Ruth Simpspn, Mildred CarCan that really be "fall" in the
'nahan, George and Beulah Neiglcr, air? If' n so, where did the summer
Laura Cozart, Thomas G. Beegle, go? Do lcccp smiling
Racine Legion Post 602 Auxiliary.
Bernard and Opal Diddle, DaVid
Bob Hoenich is a former genand Dorothy Sayre, Gamel Roush , eral manager and regular columGrover, Jr. , and Dortha Salser, nist for The Daily Sentinel.
Eileen Buck, Robert and Libby
Fisher, Frank Porter. Jr. . Kathryn
POOL HOURS
Philso n, Don and Donna Ros e,
London
Pool at Syrac use will
Raymond E: and Mary Lou Profits
operating
hours during
shorten
fill, Ronnie and Joyce Quillen,
fair
we
ek.
The
pool
will
be open
Mary Kay Yost, Bertha Johnson,
Don and Lois Bell, Edison and from Ito 4 p.m.
Mabel Brace, Dale and Kathryn
Our minister says lhal his congreHart, Sugar Run Flour Mill, Jeffers gation
has a very low pam threshold
Excavating, Facemyer Lumber Co., when it comes Lo giving till il hurls.

The second birthday of Angel
Lemley on Aug. 6 was celebrated
recentl y with a party at the home of
Kurti s Lemley and Rebecca
Authcrson, Pomeroy. The birthdays
of Scou Authcrson and Linda Pradcr were also observed.
Others anending were Ja son
Authcrson, Mike Warencke, Junior
Prader, Amanda Lemley. Doris
Lem ley, and Laura Autherson.
Later in the day LR . and Florence
Weatherholl and a friend, Ja so n
Mayes, visited.

Submitted weekly by
Meigs County ministers
Special to !he Dally Sentinel

Will just any faith do?
God 's Word to public opimon
lly PASTOR PETE TREMJesus said it this way:
BLAY
John 14:6 ... I am the way, the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
truth. and the life: no man cometh
Ch urch
I'd like to answer the 4uc stion . unto the Father, but by me. (KJV)
"W ill JUSI any faith do'l"
"Jesus' Will J U ~~ a.~Y r~~d get
ANGEL LEMLEY
1
The pcpular notion t&lt;Xia y is that 111 c to Hcaven°
No, Jes us
"a ll roads lead to heaven". The answers, "Not unless it's My way."
poliucally correct idea 1s that "any How arrogant it is to suppose God
faith will do, just have faith" Let' s should adjust to our ways. If we
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham be honest about 11 , we wouldn't insist upon our own ways then we
Modem Woodmen , meeting Sat ur- l1 ve our liv es with that sort of 1dca. have 1;1adc ourselves god.
Cons id er thi s I'm go 1n g to
"Jesus, Docs it matter what I
day, 6:30p.m. southbound park on
Athens
today.
I'm
going
1
0
get
into
bel
ieve?" "Yes:· Jesus answers. " II
U.S. 33 near Darwin Camp to fur my
car
and
JUS!
choose
any
road
I
matters
what you believe . Truth
ni sh sandwiches and melon.
happen to l1ke . Let me ask you exJSls, and I am that truth." It tS
RACINE - Mu sic at the Star thi s, "Will just any road do" Wdl no nn ego tiable . It 's not up for
Mi ll Park. Racine , Saturday , 7 just a ny road at all get me to debate .
Athens"" How ridiculous 10 believe
"Jesus. will all peop le get to
p.m. Bring own lawn chairs.
that JUSt any road will gel me there. Heaven''" "~o. sadly no," answers
Just recenlly I watched an inter- Jesus. "on ly those who come to the
SUNDAY
view
w11h Cardina l O'Connor of Father by faith 1n Me." There's
POMEROY - Song fest at fair New
York,
a cardtnal of the Roman only one road 10 Hea ven and His
ground s Sunday, 7 p.m., 10 open
Meigs County Fair. Special music, Ca tholic Church. The interviewe0r name is Jes us. THERE IS NO
group singing. Sponsored by Meigs asked, "Why IS the church so ngid OTHER GOD; TH ERE IS NO
Why won't it chan ge it's views on OTHER WAY TO FIND ETER Cou nty Ministerial Association.
scxualny, abortion , and the lik e''" NAL LIFE .
The interviewer in effect was askDo you have faith in Jes us
MONDAY
ing,
"Why
won't
the
churc
h
he
today
o Wo n't yo u cumc to the
RACINE - Southern Junior
politically
correc
t?"
I
thou
ght
it
High football players, 4 p.m. MonFather God by Hi s Son Jesus" Pray
day at the high school field . Physi- wou ld have been interesting to tum with me.
cals and medi cal release form s the tables on the reporter and ask.
"Father forgive me because of
needed prior 10 practicing. Ques- "W ho do you suppose shou ld set Jesus . Make me your child . I give
tion s, call Coach O'Brien, 992- the standards"" "Who do you ha ve my life to you. I trust yo u arc the
in mind tlult is better qualified than only way 10 Heaven. Change me
238 1.
God'" When the church liste ns to and gtve me eternal life. I believe
public optnion more than it li st£ns Jesus died for me and rose from the
10 the Word of God it ceases to be dead. Amen."
the ch urch.
I hope yo u prayed that prayer
Building, Mulberry Heights,
In the nineteenth ce ntury , the and placed Jesus on the throne of
Pomeroy.
issue was slavery. Many churches
Residents should register as fell in line with public opin ion and your life where He belongs. If you
soon as possible due to class size allowed, some even endorse d the d1d, wnte to us at Laurel Cliff Free
limitations with the Health Depart- practice of sla very. They ceased to Methodi st Church, Laurel Cliff Rd.
ment, 992-6626, ind icated a prefer- be the church. Those that fall in Pomeroy, Oh io 4576. If you don't
ence of Tuesday or Thursday night. line today in accepting the murder have a church we invite you 10 visit
with us on Sundays at9:30 a.m. for
of the innocent unborn by abortion, Sunday Schoo l, 10 :30 a .m . for
HOUSEWARMING
Mary Porter was recen tl y hon - or condone deviant sex ual behav - morn ing worship , or 6 p.m. for
ored with a surprise hou sewarmi ng ior, have ceased to be the church. even ing worship. Our Wednesday
at her home on Morning Star Road Their st.a ndard has changed from se rv1ce 1s at 7 p.m. You are always
welcome.
in Racine.
She was presented gifts. and
refreshments were served. Attending or sen ding gifts were Peggy
Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Houdashelt, Many Struble, Corky
Kennedy, Janet Duffy, Ruth Dou Sands' in the past.
glas, Irene Bailey, Doris Grucscr,
Pinson's off the wall.
Diana Karr, Carole McLaug hlin,
Debbie Cooke, Annie Knight, an d
Hilda Frecker.

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar is
published as a free service lo
non-profit groups wishi ng to
announce meetings and s pecial
events. The ca lend ar is nol
designed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. ll ems
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM
Hymn
sing. 7 p.m. Friday, at Faith Full
Gospel Church, featuring Mountain
Top Smgcrs.
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The South ern Statesmen wi ll be featured as
special sin gers Saturday at 7:30
p.m. at Ash StTect Freewill Baptist
Church in Middleport.

-Society scrapbookWEIGHT CLASSES
Six week classes for weight control will begin next week at th e
Meigs County Health Department.
The classes will be held on Tues days and Thursday nights begin ning at 6 p.m. with those enrolled
to auend only one of th e ni ght s
each week .
Each c la ss wi ll las t for tw o
hours and will incl ude nutritiOn
educat ion, stress management,
weekly weigh-ins, relaxation techniques. recipes , diet recall sheets.
exercise techniques, and other
phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
·number of people wh o can be
admmed to each series of cla sses
which arc to be held in the conference room of the Multi -Purpose

appear in the column. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

l
I

First birthday
celebrated .
Daniellc. Nicole King rece ntl y
celebrated her first birthday party .
The dau ghter of Ton y Ktng and
Stephannie Thomas of Middleport
had a party at the U.S. Route 33
roadside park.
Auending were gra ndparent s
Paula Ashley and Ruby King,
great-grandparents Jim and Ann
Thomas and Ruby King. Others
allending in cluded Amy and
Mal!hew Yonker, Bob and Virginia
Arbaugh , Joe and Alberta Loftis.
Belly Ann Wolfe. Gina, Whitney
and Caill yn Thomas, A.J. Thomas,
Jeremy King, Debbie and Heather
Riffle , Paula and Ashley King,
Misti Brewer, Brandon, Samantha,
Bobbie and Greggie King, Darla
and Kyle Boggs, Rhcu, Carla and
Shane Milhome, Kcesha Counts,
Donnie Wood, Brandon Smith and
Carl Jennings.
Unable to aue nd but sending

I

New Mexico's Lt. Gov. checks out restaurant give-away
YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio
New Mexico 's lieutenant
governor made a stop at Carol's
Kitchen to inquire about plans to
give the restaurant away to the winncr of an essay contest.
Contest org a ni ze r Ro sa no
Miller- Wethington said Lt. Gov.
Casey Luna pulled up to the restaurant in his motor home about I a.m.

(AP) -

Thursday and knocked on the door.
One of the workers who had been
baking let him in and served him a
piece of pie, she said.
Anne Uhring, Luna's press secretary, said the restaurant giveaway
has gotten a lot of attention in New
Mexico. She said an Albuquerque
radio station has been promoting
the contest and has interviewed

Luna about it.
Luna, who wa1 in Ohio to take
pan in a sprint car race, decided to
slop at Carol's Kitchen 10 check it
ou~ said Ms. Uhring.
"He told me it was a real folksy
place," she said.
Ms . Miller -Wethington said
Luna is involved in economic
development and wants to try to

i

promote the contest tdea in New
Mexico. She said he picked up several hundred contest applications.
Contest entrants must pay a fee
of $I 99 apiece and in 250 words or
less explain why they want to own
Carol's Kitchen and what they will
bring to Yellow Springs. The winner receives the restaurant mortgage free and up to $I 00,000 in
start-up monev.

,,._~ . , '

l

save.

-------Family reunion-------GILKEY -HUDNALL
The 24th annual reunion of the
desce ndants of the late Tommy
Gilkey and Milda Jane Hudnall
Gilkey, was held recently at Dar DANIELLE KING
gifts were Danny and Cindy King ,
Nan cy and Greg King, Rachael
Jennings, Mary Wingett, Shilo
Moore, Amanda Well and great·
great-grandfather T.A. Riley.

wm .

Auending were Ri ck Gi lkey,
Courtney Gillccy, Daniel Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. Garold Gilkey, Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Gillcey, Terry Mar·
garet Gilkey, Dana Gilkey, Mrytle
Gilkey, Athens; Mt. an Mts. Frank
Gilkey, Glena Wade, Bill Wade,
Lenora Hudnall, Mt. and Mts. Sheb

Rullcr. Ed Green, Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Bingman,
Kyle Bingman, Je sse Bingman,
Brook Bingman, Amesville; John
East, Cindy Gilkey, Shawn East,
Brandon East, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Willison, Katie Pierc e. Jackie
Grodt, Kayla Grodl, Shelly Davidson, Columbus; Mr. and Mts. Kermit Gilkey, Justin Gilkey, Thomas
Gongaley, Mr. and Mrs . Tim
Gillcey, Amanda Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Duncan, Joan Duncan,
Jarni Duncan, Jordan Duncan, Dar-

win .
Martha Varner, Duncan Falls,
Earl Gilkey, Scoll Hayes, Charles
Gilkey, Sr., Charles Gilkey, Jr.,
Milissa Gilkey, Glouster; Pauline
Gi lk ey, Lancaster; Ray Judson.
Lisa Scou, Mr. and Mrs . Joe Judso n, Gary Hogue , Kelly Hogue,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore,
Danielle Moore, Kayla Moore,
Malta; Mt. and Mrs. Dwight Sturgeon, Brandon Sturgeon; Anthony
Sturgeon, Miner sville ; Mike
Thomas, Middleport; Kaycee Ped-

cock, New Marshfield; Mr. and
Mts. Ivan Stanley, Miranda Maffin,
Steven Maffin, Brenda Young,
Nelsonville; Iva Powell, Mary
Bealcy, Glen Faulk, Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Gilkey, Edgel Gilkey, Taylor
Gi lkey, Pearl Gilkey, Mt. and Mrs.
Junior Wiblin, Pageville; Raymond
Briclcles, Radcliff; William Young,
Sheryl Thoma, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Thoma, Mr. and Mrs . Darrell
Young, Shade; Josh Hogue, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Gilkey, Desirea
Gilkey. Trimble.

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At the movies: 'Corrina, Corrina' proves to be more than just a love story
By DOLORES BARCLAY
AP Arts Editor
Riding the crest of the summer
movie tidal wave of bullets, animals. computer gimmicks, blood,
guts and bus crashes is an endear·
ing and irresistible linle film.
"Corrina. Corrina" is not just a
simple love story. It's a love story
that finds its heartbeat ami'd the
complications of death and bigotry,
made even more special by an
almost boy ishly appealing Ray
Liolla and a sassy but restrained
Whoopi Goldberg.
The time is the 1960s and Liotta
is the rec ently widowed Manny
Singer, a jingle writer. He must
find a housekeeper 10 care for hi s
daughter, Molly (Tina Majorino)
- who has decided to stop communication with the world - so he
can return to worlc.
He runs through a legion of misfits, seuling on the delightfully
wacky Joan Cusack as a nanny who
decides she should reap all the benefits of running a home, including
beddinf the boss.
She s out in a blink. Enter Corrina Washington , complete with

pointed spikes, cinched waist and
dangling cigarene. On her first
VISit, she ma~age s to get a small
w1sp of Molly s closely held attention. , .
She s hued. .
.
But Comna IS no ordmary cook,
nanny and housekeeper: She's a
college graduate who's trying t.o
crack through the mustc mdustry s
prejudice against women and
blacks. She wants to be a mus1c
writer and shows a particular flair
with liner notes. She's also helpful
when tl comes to Jmgles.
.
She loves Jazz and claSSical
music and she also loves poetrythree of Manny's passiOns.
Corrina slowly tears down
Molly's barriers and helps her conquer her anger and guilt over her
mother 's death . Molly, m turn,
holds up Corrina as a mother fig ure. When she goes to school and is
required to draw her "family," her
~1cture oop1cts a large~ brown C_ornna holdmg hands wtth two pmk
figures - Molly and Manny.
A classmate's sharp retort that
Molly's drawn her maid and not
her mother causes Molly to avoid

school. Corrina allows Molly to
play hooky for a few weeks and
lakes her along on her housecleanmg JObs.
Molly also spends time with
Cornna s meces and nephew, a
precociOus but m1scas1 brood who
do not in the least resemble their
paren~ or Goldberg (part_ of Hollywood s mslttuuonal ractsm when
casting black families). The oldest
child is a chubby youngster whose
weight becomes fodder for mean
jokes - a totally unnecessary elemcntthal adds nothing to the film .
Corrina's sister is openly hostile
to Corrina's arrangement with the
Singers. In fact , Molly is about the
only person who 's happy about the
budding friendship developing
between her father and Corrina.
Their relationship grows slowly
and quite naturally. It is comfortable and sweet, as they discover
just how much they share and have
t~ common. ~?d desptte ~e attenliOns of a~ ava!lable wh1le
woman sh1pped h1s way v1a the
good intentions of his parents. it's
Corrina that Manny really wants.
He courts her in his own wav

and Corrina responds in kind until
Manny learr s she has kept Molly
out of sc hool and explodes in an
angry and racist fit.
But don ' t worry, there' s an
upbeat ending that makes this one
of the season' s feel -good film s.
In the end "Corrina Corrina"
(a title borr~wed fron: the so ng
title) is not a story of interracial
love, but a fable of the human condition.
11 was wriuen, produced and
directed by Jessie Nelson, who
works with the camera very well,
beginning at" a wake with opening
shots of shoes and legs from
Molly 's point of view as she hides
under a table. Nelson ' s direction of
the actors also is subtle and sure.
Manny is a wonderful role for
Liotta, who gives the character a
natural and shy charm. Goldberg 's
• 'whoopisms" are held in check
and a more graceful side of her
emerges. Majorino is an appealing
child who shows much promise.
Besides Cusack another weicome surprise is th; appearance of
the late Don Ameche as Manny's
father, Harry.

"Corrina, Corrina " IS a New
Line Cinema release, produced by
Nelson, Steve Tisch and Paula
Mazur. IL is rated PG.
Motion Picture Association of
America rating definitions:
G - Genera l audiences. All
ages admitted.
PG - Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be

suitable for children.
PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may
be inappropriate for young children.
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult guardian.
NC-17- No one under 17
admitted.

State liquor agents make
69 arrests at Polaris
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Department of Liquor
Control is investigating complaints
of violations at three Polaris
amphitheater concerts, the
Delaware Gazeue reported.
Sixty -nine concertgoers or
employees have been cited for
alleged liquor law violations, the
newspaper reported Thursday.
Undercover state liquor agents
also cited the amphitheater for
three alleged liquor permit viola-

lions, two involving -beer sales to
people, the newspaper
satd.
.
"We have received some complaints. We were following up on
that," said Patty Haskins, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Liquor ControL
Fifteen people were arrested at
the Janet Jackson concert July 24,
16 at the Meat Loaf concert on July
26 and 38 at the Spin "Doctors show
Aug. 5, she said.

1.•

Am'. Your True Voice:·

u~derage

•savt: I0'\1.J o n hills of $2'i o r less. Cumpari.'M.lll to O hio lk:lb toll .~t:hcdll lt: B. .;uhjt.•l"f

to hilling avaibhili1y Not :lV.tibhl~ in Mt. Vt-rnon. Fredericktown. Danvilk. G;.~mhier.
M:lftinshul).t. l ltica. Homer. amJ O:nu..: rl1uq.: ~rea~. Prnrnotion end' \01j .l / 94

© 1~9 4 AT&amp;T

•
'

�Page 11 The Dally Sentinel

v

Friday, August

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CHURCH
DIRECTO
S11n MaH - Q 30 a.m
Da lley MD.S s - 8:30a.m.
or J esus Chr ist Apostolk
Van.Za.nd t and W11 rd Rd.

Pastor· James !v1iller
Sunday Schoo! - 10 .30 a.m.

'Y•:dn&lt;l·,.:
v,dc,ru,vng
- 7·30 p m.
V"
Servtces - 7 ·30
Uberty Assembly of God
P 0 Bo:t 467, Dudding Lane

Ma son, W.Va
Pastor G rtg o ry A Johmoo

Sunda y Sd10ol - 10 00 a.m.
Cluh1n.: n's OJUrcb • II a.m.
Wonlup - II am. &amp; 6
Btblc

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Church or Christ
212 W M3m St
i •a~ t u r Am.h t:w Mile s
Sunday Schoo l · &lt;) 30 a.m

Wurshq&gt; \0 30 a m , 7 p.m.
Wr Uncs Jay ScrvJa:s · 7 p rn
Pomeroy Wt'sbidc Chuni• of Christ

Sunda y sc hool 9.45 a m

Wors hip · II am and 7 p m
W e dn e~ da y Scrv t ct~

7pm

free Will Bapllst C hurch
Ash S1rce t, Middl e ~rt
Pa sto r Lc s /layman
Saturday Scrvtcc 7 JO p m
SunJa y Se houl - 10 a m
Wu nlup II am,

Wcdncsduy Scrvtcc-7 30 p rn
Rutland Flrsl Baptist Church
Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 am
Worsh1 p · 10 45 am
Pomeroy First Baptist

Pastor· PauJ Sl!nsoo
Ea st Mun St
Sunda y S chool - 9 30 11m .
Worship · I 0·30 a m
F irst South('f"n Baptist

41872 l,omcroy f•ik e
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Rryan l
Sunday School · 9.30 am.

Worship- 10·45 • m, 7.00 p m.
Wednesday Scrv 1ccs- 7 00 p.m.
First Raptlst Church
6th and Palmer SL, M1ddl eport

Sunday School -9.1S..m.
Worship-10 15 am,7:00p m
A.B.Y. - 5.30 p.m.
L.ord's Supper I H Sunday of every month.
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7 00 p m.

Racine Flrst Baptist
Youth Pas tor· Aaron Young
Sunday School · 9.30 a.m.
Wors hi p · 10 40 a.m, 7 00 p m.
Wedn esda y ScrvKes · 7 00 p.m.

Pastor. Alllartsoo
Youth MmJ sle r: Bill Frarier
Sunday School - 9·30 am
Worsh1p- 8 15, 10.30am., 7 p.m.
Wcdne sility Sc rvu.::cs · 1 p m.
Kl·no C hurch

or Christ

Won hip · 9·30 a.m.
Sunduy School - 10:30 a.m
Bearwa \low Ridge Churclt of Chrtst
fl D.Stor. Jack Colegrove

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonh1p · 10:30 am, 6·30 p.m
Wedn esday Services - 6.30 p.m.
Zion Church or Christ
Pomeroy, llam s ~wille: Rd . (Rt.J43)
Pas1or Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9·30 am
Wonh lp - 10 30am,7.00p.m.
Wedn esday SciVI CC S - 7 p m
Tupp('rs Plain Chur ch o( Christ
Pas1o r: I:JtU Wwe s
Sund ay School - 9 am .
Worsh1p - Q 45 am . 6 .30 p.m.

Bradbury C hurch cl Christ

Pastor· Tom Runyon
Sunday School- 9.JO • m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m.
Youlh Meeung - 5:30pm.
Evcniit&amp; Service -7 p.m.
Wcdnc~day, Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Rulland Church or Christ

Pastor· Euger~e E Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worsh•p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd
Evange li st Derek Swmp
Youth Minister: Mark NOlter
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.

Worship - 10 a m.. 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Serv1ces -7:30

Hillside Baptist Church
SL RL 143 juS! off RL 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. AO"cc, Sr.

Wednesday Serv1ce! - 7·30p.m.
Hickory Hills Church or Christ
Pa stor: Joseph B lloskm!

Sunday Sehoul - 9 am.

Wednesday Se rv1ces- 7 p.m.

Langsville Christian Church

Sund•Y School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 am., 7:30 p.m
Walncsday Servia: 7;30 p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp

Sunday school - 10:10 a.m.

Wonhip · 9:30am., 7 pm.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor· Philip Stunn

Vktur' Baptist lndependant

Christian Union

Pastor Jwncs E Keesee
Wonhip - IOa m , 7p.m.
Wcdne&lt;&gt;day Scrvic:r:s · 7 p.m.

Hortford Churdl or Christ in

Fallh Bapllsl Church

Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Wonrup -9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 10 u.m.
Worshi p - 11 am ,6pm.
Wcdne:sday Services -7 p m.

Chrlstlan Union

ll•rtfonl, W.Va.
Pastor. Rev. David McMarus

Wednesday Service• - 7·30 p.m.
Hobson C hrlstJan Union

Middleport, Oruo
Sunday &amp;:hool, 10 a.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor · Anui Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worshtp · II a.m

Sunday evening. 7:30p.m.
Walnesday, 7:30 p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main SL, Middlepon

MI. M..-lab Church or God

Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Cnig, Jr.

Pastor. Rev. James Satterfield

SWJday School - 9;30 a.m.
Wonh1p - 10:45 a.m.

Anllqulty Baptist
SlDld•y School - 9:30am.
Wonhtp • I0:45a.m.
Thunday Semces -7:30pm .

Rutland Free Will Baptlsl
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m
We:duesday Se:TVJ&lt;:el- 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Hearl Catholic Chun:h
161 Mulbcny 1\ve., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor. Rev. WaJter E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4;45-5:15pm; Man- S:JO p.m .
Sun. Con -8:45-9:15 a.m.,

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mrll \'1 01k
Coh on el Mo&lt;rnp
Syracuse

992 3918

Church of God
Racine

SWlday School ·9:45a.m.
Evcnmg - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.
Rutland Church cl God
Pastor. G regory L. Sea rs
SWlday School - 10 a.m.
Worship ·· 11 a.m., 6
Wednesday SeMces - p.m.

,.m.

Syncuse Chun:h of God

Apple and Seoond Su.
flastor. Rev. David RusseU
Sunday School and Wonrup- 9:30a.m.
Evening Services· 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servit;e~ - 7 p.m.
Church of God or Prophecy
OJ While Rd. off S1. RL 160
Putor: Pat Henson

Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship - II a.m.

,
6

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 I Maon Sheet
992 -3785. Pomeroy

rtnc Grove lllble Holiness Church
l {l mile off Rc 325
Pastor: Rev . O'DcU Manley
Sunday Sl:hool - 9.30 a.m.
Wors htp - 10·30 a.m .• 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Serv~ ce - 7:30p.m.

We.deyon BIMe Holiness Chur&lt;h
15 Pearl Sc, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school - 9:30a.m

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday SeMCC - 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church

Pastor: Rotx:n Manley
Sunday School - 9·30 am.
Wonhip · 10 45 a.m., 7 p m .
Thursday Scrv1ce ·7:30pm.
Laurel Cliff free Methodist Church
Pastor. Peter Tremblay

Sund•y School - ~ : 30 a.m.
Worshtp . \0·30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wcdneiday Service - 7.00 p m.
Rutland Community C hurch

Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
SWlday School · 9:30 a m.

Sunday Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganlted Church fl Jesus C hrist
of Latter D1y SalnU
Ponland-Racme Rd.

Pastor: Janice Danner

Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Lutheran

Wonhip - 10.45 a.m ,7 p.m
Wednesday Servtcel · 7 p.m

Central a ·uster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: De ron Newman
Sunday School - 9.45 s.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday ScrvJ~,;Ci · 7.30 pm.

S )ral·use Church ol the Nazarene
Pa stor Rev . Rt ck St urgill
Sunday School - 9 .30 a.m.

Wonhip - 10·30"am .,6pm
Wedne sday Servtu:s - 7 p m .

Enterprise
Pastor: Kcnh Rader
Sunday School - 10 am
W o n~up - 9 a.m .

Pomeroy Churc:b of the Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Thomas McClung

Sundoy School - 9:30a.m .
Wonhtp · I 0:30 L m . and 6 p.m.
Wcdne~day Services - 7 p .m

Flatwoods
Pas tor: Kwh Radel
Sunday School · I U am.
Worsh1p - 11 a.m.

llta~cpor1)

Wedne.sday Services - 7 p.m.
New Haven Church of the Nazare ne
- Pastor: Gle:ndon Stroud

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m, 1 p.m.

Putor: FJore:nce Smith
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · I0 a.m.

W ednaday Services • 7 p.m.

Other Churches

~ Pomeroy

Putor: Robert E. Robinson

SLOnd•y School - 9:15a.m.

Wonh1p - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

Rutland
Pastor· Arthur Cral1.ree
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worshlp-10:30a.m.
Thursday Services . 7 p.m.

Morning Won hip: 11 am.
Evenmg Wonhip: 1 p.m
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m

Salem Center
Pastor: Roo Fierce
Sunday Scllool - 9: 1S a.m.
Worsh1p - 10: 15 a.m.

Sunday -9:30a.m . and 7 p.m
Wednesday ~ 7 p.m.

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

End time House or Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robcn Vance
Sunday wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wednesday aeMoe - 6:30p.m

Bethany

Trinity Coogregatlonal C hurch

Snowville
Pu1or: Florence Smith

Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Churdo- 9·15 a.m.

Worahip - 10:30 a.m.

Morning Star
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

East Letart

Racine

· Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship- II a.m. "'d 7 p.m.

Pulor: Edsel Han

Dyesvlle Cm~munlty Church
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm .. 1 p.m.
Chrlstlon Fellowship Center
Salem SL, Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sundoy School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip- 11:15 Lm., ?p.m.
Walncaday Service -7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
G11nd Suut
Sunday Sfhool - 10 a.m.
Won hip · II o.m.

Chester
Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Wednesday

Servi~s

Morse Chopel Chur&lt;h
Lany Fow, Superintendent
Sunday sdtool- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.

• 8 p.m.

Torch Church

Sunday School - I0 o.m.

Co.Rd.63

Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Wedne5day

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 un.

Joppa
Panor: Bob Randolph

Racine folrst Church or the NIZII'ene
Pastor: Scou Rose
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30o.m., 6p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

SWlday School· 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Pastor. Rev. Otarlu Mash

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WoniUp - I0:30a.m.

·I p.m.

Lons Bottom
Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m.

Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7·30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Lire Church

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.
Chu rch of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
114 milt: pas t Fon Me1gs on New lima Rd .
Paslor: William Van Meter

Sunday-7:{)() p.m.
Wednesday-7·00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.
Qiflon, W.Va.

Sunday School - IO'a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
SL RL 124, Racine

Pastor: Williom Hobodt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Everung - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Middleport Pentecostal
Puwr: Rev. Qark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.

Wcdnesd1y Service• - 7:00p.m.

Pastor. Lawrence Bush

Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m.

~id-- FLORIS'

RAWUNGS-COATS

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adnntlst

Mulbeny Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy lawimky

Salurday Services:

Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hennon U1lted Brethren

In Christ Church
Texas Communiry off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Suden

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7:30p.m.
Eden United Drdlrren'ln Christ
on Stae Route

124
P1110r: Rev. Robert Morldey
Stmdoy School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip -7:30p.m.
Wednes&lt;ioy S&lt;mce~- 7JO p.m.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

Me~ Co'"''Y~ Oldea1

Middleport

--

06 Bttterltl

GRAVELY

P. J.
204

Condor St .

Pomeroy, OH .

992-2975

P~ULEY,

·

Auguat 15, 1994. Thlo
PUBLIC NOTICE
prollle Includes data on
Tho
Educational otudont
domographlca, otall
Management Information domographlca,
financial
System (EMIS) County
resources,
and
Board Prollle for Fiscal Year expandltureo.
Anyone
1993 lor the Melga County view this profile moy
by
Board ol Educallon will be Inquiring at lha Melgl
available to the public as of County Board Olllce at 320
1/2 Eaat Main Stroot In
2
In Memory
Pomeroy.
Carola J. Gilkey
In Memory Of

SHERMANL.
TILLIS
Who Passed Away

n111 18 Pomt&gt;rov

_Veterans
.__ Memorial Hospital

Aug. 13.
Since

you

went

to

Heaven, Dad
Somllllmu II 1881111 ao
long,
But II'• really bean a
ahortllme
That you've bean gone.

~

"'Di!(nir,

601 EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2259

Ufl(l s ('r!

~~~~~! ~
Pre\&lt;r•pf•on'i

9'J 1911

in• -1/wn\' .\ ..

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Established 191J

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

992-2121

992-7075

106 Mulbtrry Ave.

l

Ile nod

CLASSIFIEDS

EWING FUNERAL HO,.,E

AGENT

111

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

BUY-SELL· TRADE
Something New For
Meigs County
Tuea. Thru Sat . 1-6
Name Brand Tools,
Toy1, Fenton.

TRI·STAT£ K·9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement.
personal protection,
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
RoHweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS
IZ/21U"

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

112 Norlh Setond Ave.
Ohio

Pomt&gt;ro"

Price
Construction
Co.
26 Yaan Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windowa
For Free Estimate
Call 742·2303
71W/1 mo. pd.

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
fi/1&amp;94 TFH

And !hill twinkle In
your IY•• of blue,
Bull c111 - fhlllln my
children
The beby upeclaHy
rN1111blea you.
You're allll the beat
Dad
A glrf could IVW Willi
And
even
though
you're not h•• In

p•aon
You'll •lw11Y8 live In my

heart
Sadly mland by wife,
chUdran &amp; funlly.

614-367~302

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES

Manco-Go Karts
3H.P.&amp;Up
Parts &amp; Service

Ampa, Gultara, Slrlnga,
Keyboard•, Drum1,
Plano &amp; Guitar Lea1on1.
Cheahlra, Ohio

25 Yeare Experience

992-4447 or 742-2360
Jl&gt;/1m

Morris Equipment

lose WoiW.l Ullt "Crary"

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Guaranteed
lose Pounds and In ches
Natural Herbal Tablets
1·800·796-6321

742-2455

992-2096
550 Page Sl, Middleport

Fr•Eotim7121Ain

liNDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.
lnlerior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain oul ot
painting. let uo do 11
for you .
on able.

Very

Announcements

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

rea&amp;·

3 Announcements

Free Eslimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
"'message.
Alter 6 p m.

614 -995-4180

ChrlatJan lady, whlle, blonde
hair, Wl .135, ...king male Christian companion 44-55 yeat'! of
aga, write wllh addr ... to: The
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729--C,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Backhoe Service
GRACE
ENTERPRISES
992·41 03

S Wks Eating Right Wllhout
Dlaflng. 3 Min. Recorded Message. $"1.95 /Min Must Sa 18 lo
Call. l·!Kl0 -255--5533.

Friday, August 12 and Saturday,
August 13, Baum Addition, la st
house on right, 6l4-98s.4369.

PAR~
Spedalizing 1n Custom
F1ame Repair
NIW &amp; USED PARTS 101

AU MAUS r. MODUS
992-701301
992-SSSl 01
TOll IREl 1-100.141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
7/l1t91fTFN

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair
Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,

Gutters, etc.
742·2443
811111 mo.

FOR SALE
Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; seNice

local Delivery, 614..:!a&amp;.9823.

Plrat .. Co11e Open From 6 A M.
To 9 P.M Monday Thru

Thursday, 6 A.M. To 11 PM

Friday And Saturday, 10-6 Sun day, 9819 State Route 160, Vln ·
ton, 614· 386·9823.

Dec.rllln

w.....

lnll.llllolt

Cal Westen Auto

992-5515
Free Eslimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
&amp;-D-t mo

Lordy, Lordy
Our Baby
Turned "40"!
Mom, Dad
&amp; fa,;Jhs

New Manage ment Featuring
New Daily Speclal!ll 614-388-

4

Auction••• Col. Oscar E. Click,

m-5785.

Giveaway

9

Stale Route 566, Gallipolis .

2 Kittens To Good Lov1ng
Homes Litter, Trained, No Fleas,
614-446-2393 Attar 2 P.M.
l

Mhu:.c~ Doberman &amp; RolMixed, 614-388-8503.

Don't Junk 111 Sell Us Your NOJto

Working Major Appllancas
Color
T.V.'s!.. Relrigeralon'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additlona
-New garegea
-Eiaclrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
,
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

Condltlonars, Washera'
Dryers, Copy Machlnea, Elc:

BIIIGO
EVERY THURSOAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Spec Ia! Early B lrd
$tOO Payoff
Thla ed good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
11/MIIIIIn

614-256-1238,

Female German Shepherd pup,

614-992-6t3l

J &amp; D's Auto Pans and Salvage
also buying junk cara &amp; trueka:

Female, halt Baagl•hall Cocker
Spanlal
housedog,
good
w/chlldren, landlord •ay• one
mus1 go! 304-675-2709.

304-m-5343.

Old c lgarahe Ughtera, milk bot·
ties, fountain pans , tllverwart

marbles, stoneware, magazines:

Gorman Shephard type puppy
to a good home, 614·992·7562.

Slar Wars and Star Trak hama·

Osby Martin, 614 -992-JI41.

Iris root s lo glv•away, 614-94S.

Wanted To

2653,

Kittens, 614-446· 1619.

Employment Services

freon, 614·1'l2·2m.

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

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Whhe klnens,

304-675-6922

6

cute puppies.

11

Lost &amp; Found

AVON I All Areas I Shlr1ty

Found:
female
German
Shophord pup, Mlneravlloo area,

AU areas. AVON earning po._
sibilit1es ~qual your eapabllitla 1 ,
trao produc1 with slg~
Marilyn 304-882-2645 or 1

614-992-8137.

FolJnd: Jewelry Must Identify,

419-641-5m.

992-6356.

Found: Spuds McKinsey type
dog, rtear Fairground. l04-67S.

Attenllon mature Individuals
with extra t1me on their hand• If
you'rt

Malga County
Board of Education
(8) 9, 12; 2TC

44

Apartment
for Rent

992·5311
1-800-BUND-11

483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

992-6419 or 949-2012
TDD 800-750-0750
Equal Housing Opportunity

nO

llvo wages, paid blnhdayo o11
frliMI unltorms, automatiC rate

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

lncraase In 90 daya, very liberal
pilld vecaJtlon plan ...ev~~n tor
pan41moro. II lnlorostad, otop

2997 Mill Creek Road, August

111h, 121h, 131h, B-5, Old Books, by McDonald's of Henderson or
Gallipolis and pick up an appllcollon.
3 F.mllr.: Thurm•n, Augu .. ~h 1
13th. C otMa, Infant SIZM AI'ICI Autlam SONI- Contor, HunUp. Largo Woman• Clotho~, tington Meklng Individual to

Dishes, Furniture, Ete.

wort!. IPPf'OXIma111y 8 hra per
WMk In Pt Pl.. aant, New H•ven

Mens Clolhlng And Plenly u

Olhersl Craha, Home lntertor,
Turbo Grall• VIdeo Game Wlth 2

aru •• Penonll CaN Atten-dant. Dulin Include working In

client'• home 6 e..lstlng Whh
dolly living talkl • 111111portlng
to lppointments, \4 year old

4 HousehOlds, 4 COUnlln, 2
Stoles,, Thlo Ona lo Blgl 1.8

Milas North ot Hospital On 160
Turn Right On Country lane

cllari whtt phytleal dl . .bllhlea.
Mu.t hive a ear and vaUd
drlverw license. Relmbu.._..l

1366, Lodloo 1 Chlldrvno ClothIng, Houaonold, Whoi-Nota, for miiMge. Flexible

holH't.

Saturday, June 13th, 8-8.

Send ,..umt to: Peraonnel P 0

cela.

Fanteatlc Discounts! BeneUtal

Box 507, Huntln;lon, WV 2S1iO:
5 Fomlly Yord ~all1 Saturrloy, 0507.
Com11 01 Nolghoomood Rd &amp;
218, Adun And Chlldraow ClothAVON S$ SALES
lng, Vorloua SIZII, Roln COn- Polonllol $200 -$2,000 llonlhly.

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Route 124, Syracuse, Ohio
Senior Disabled Handicapped, one bedroom
npartments, range, refrigerator, air conditioned,
Fully carpeted, energy efficient. Community
room, on site laundry. Water, sewer, trashproject paid. Electric paid by resident.
Rent based on 30% of adjusted monthly income.
· 2 apartments with rental assistance.
2 apartments at basic rent of $269 or greater.
Hurry in &amp;apply now! 4 apartments available .
FmHA
HUD accepted

WV and Gallipolis, OH cur,..nuY
has tun and part-llmt posltlone
available batwHn 5am.11pm.
We're exlr01'118ly flexible about
tailoring hours to tit your ne-.:11
ln·house training progn~m eo
exparlence 18 requlreCI, competl-

Discs.

NOW RENTING

tonl~r

looking tor. McDonald'• R..-

Yard Sale

It's not jusl a way to

cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room

retired

taur~~nf location• In Henderson

hi. 60448 Ask For Robin .

7

a

housawlt.!husband, etc., yoU
may be just the parson we're

Lost: Cocker
Spaniol On
Chatham Street, Older Doa
White &amp; Blonde Color, 61444e&gt;:

Blinds • Verticals • Shades
Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

Help Wanted

Spears, 304-675--1429.

65g5

Custom Winaow Coverings

Buy: Junk Autoe

Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, S liver Colna
Gold Coins. M.T.S Coin Shop'
151 Second Avenue·, Galllpoll•. '

Kitten, To Good Home, 6t4-379-

2585

Refrigerator to giveaway, needs

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

'

With Or Without Motora. C.ll
Larry Lively. 614-388-9303.

Killens· 3 + 4 Month Calicos &amp;
Black. Ei14·446-o865.

JL 'Toucfi of Cfass

Your Brothers,
J. &amp;}.,
Mom&amp;Dad

VCH's, Mlcrow1 v11'

Air

6610; Aftor 2:00 614-446-1642

Lot!e,

Wanted to Buy

2 dog3, mixed breed. 304-7n5610.

Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio
742-2455

2/tVU/Ifn

Happy
Birthday Erin!

'

License I 754-94 &amp; Bonded
304-89S..3430.
'

2 Aut omati c Washers, Heat
Pump All Need Repair, 6929

Morris Equipment

KINGS'

3315t Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlckleport. Ohio 45760
NewHomea,
Addltlona, Siding,
Painting, Garage•,
Pon:hae, Pole Barna
Coil U1 For An EaUmate
614-742-3090
304-n3-9545 IISIIfO

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Freezers,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Home
Improvements

8

Rick Pearson Aucllon Company
full 1im11 a uctioneer, completl
auction
service.
Ueensed
#66,0hlo &amp; Wut Virginia 304--

Pirates Cove Rnlaurant Under

Fandng C'ltln

Uolt·Woorl
1114

Rd , Pomaory, Ohio.

Moving tal• August l(JJ. 8amPirates Cov• Featuring Pizza 3pm 11Q Bro.dway, Haeine.
Special: Two 12 lnctJ Plua't Furnt1 ure,
a ppllanc...
With Everylhln9. $12.99. Free household goode, c lothn.

9823.

WHALEY'S AUTO

Hops, 614·949-24n.

MID YEAR RESOWTION

7 -D•y Diet Plan. L.oaa Excess
Lbs For Good. I lost 20 Lbs. In

Water hauling

familyl Ya llowbush Rd.,
Racine, AUQUII 13 D:OOim5 OOpm. Lots to go through In-eluding a 1992 Camaro RS, V-8,

3

Family yard sal• August 12-tl
9:00am-3.00pm. 33795 Hiiar1d

. 3125194

8 Years Ago on

I ml11 your amRa and
your r11111Urlng pr•

SWlSHER &amp; LOHSE

~~::J'

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

One mile out Rt 143
lrom Rl 7.
W1111 mo.

Treuurer

aenca

~\

992-7434

STAR GUITAR ·

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

New

Public Notice

And I'd know warything w.. okiY.

_.;'
.~ inthe
,.,I,..~~~

HEATING &amp; COOLING
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
installation
Free estimates.

Come and See.

Associaled Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - If you smoke and gel lun g
can cer, you can't blame your genes, says a new study
hy American researchers.
The study of 68I male twins who smoked and
d1 ed of lung cancer found most of their lwin brothers
d 1d not, challenging the theory that certain genes
make people susceptible to cancer.
" A smoker mighl believe he won 't gel cancer
because his parenls smoked and didn 't get lung cancer. But I belr cve that's a fatal mistake," sard one of
th e researc hers, Dr. M. Miles Braun of the National
Cancer lnslitu tc in Bethesda, Md.
Abo ul 80 pcrcenl of smokers do no1 get lung canerr, tl10ug h man y die of hcan disease, diabetes or
olher smoking-related diseases.
The Amcrocan Cancer Sociely predicts lung cancer wil l kill 153,000 men a nd women in the United
Stales in 1994. The number of lung cancer dealhs is
riling all over the world.
The new study surveyed 681 twin s born in the
Uuotcd Sw•cs between 1917 and 1927. All 681 died
of smokmg-related lung cancer, bui in 1hc overwhe lming majority of cases, their brothers, who also
smoked . did not.
Most of ihe pairs of twins smoked for about !he
same number of years and about as many cigarettes a
day , Braun said .
Lu ng cancer k1IIed 282 men with an identical
twin, but only 10 pairs. It killed 399 men wiih a fraternal twin, but only 2 1 pairs.
" I was somewhat surprised because the hunch
was !hat even for a strong environmental carcinogen
such as smoking, there would be some inherited predisposit ion ," Braun said .
The slucly, done wilh scientists al lhe National
Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., is published in ihc Aug. 13 issue of The Lancet, a medical
JOurnal.
Sir Richard Doll, !he scientist who confirmed !he
lmk bel ween lun g cancer and smoking in I950,
called ihe findings ''helpfullo clarify the soluation."
Doll said previous Siudies suggesting !his form of
cancer runs in families were flawed because Lhey did
nol ~'Ike smoking habits iniO account.
Bu l Dr. Harmon Eyre, chief medical officer of
The American Cancer Society in Atlanla, was nol
convinced !hal genetics don't play a part.
Fyre, who had not seen The Lancet anicle, said
on-: siudy cannot prove genes do not play a role.
"Overwhelmingly the most important risk factor
rs whether you smoke," Eyre said ., "And !hen additional risk factors appear to be related 10 diet and
thirdly is still the suspicion of a genetic link. This
study would suggest !his (genes) is not the case, bull
don 'ilhink ii's big enough 10 rule it out."

- -.. IT'S RAINING
~
BARGAINS ...

992-5432

111 E. Memorial Dr.
992 -2104

Na1tonw1de Ins . Co
of C otumbu \, 0
804 w M&lt;t1n

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

352 EAST MAIN
POIEROY, OHIO 457611
11112·2644 or 8112~2111

Pomeroy Flower Shop

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
. SERVICES

Flon.1

SAYRE TRUUING
614-742-2138

By RAND! II UTTER EPSTEIN

Public Notice

Middleport Presbylerlon
Sunday School - 9 o.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

2l23fl mo.

Syncuse First United Preobyltrion
PaslOr: Rev. Kriuna Robinsm
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip - II om .
Harrisonville Prallyterlon Church
Wonhip - 9 Lm.
Sundoy School -9:45 o.m.

HAUliNG

No genetic link to
...
smoking-related lung --.:-.
•··cancer, study says

But ell II took wu a Ut-

Crow's Family Restaurant

985-4111

Presbyterian

2 l{l mileo nooth ol Reedsville

Ml. Olive Communlly Church
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
- 7 p m.
V~edmE:vdeaninygService
-7

2141Maln
992 -5130 Pomeooy

~.

Serv~o:

Fallh Gospel Church

Nazarene

Worship -9:30am

Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 1 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WoniUp- 10:30 o.m., 7;30 p.m.

Worsh1p - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Surxlay School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Bailey Run Road

OffRL 124

Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Pastor. Sharon Hausman

Rejoicing

500 N. 2nd Ave , Middlepon

Third Ave.
Faith Tabernacle Church

Hazel Community Church

Bethel Church
Townsltip Rd., &lt;168C

Northe,sl Cluster
Alfred

Evcrung - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Meigs Cooperallve Parish

Stmday School - 10:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St., Sy111euse
Pastor. Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.

Pastor: Ken Molter

Tue5day Services - 7 p.m.

ItS Bunemut Ave., Pomeroy

Syracuse Mlssloo

Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30am.

Pastor· David Dailey

SWJday Schooi9JO a.m.

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Churclo
57S Pearl SL, Middlepon
Poator. Sam Anderson
Sunday School I0 a m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servtce- 7:30p.m.

MW. &amp; Fifth St.

WorshJp - lO:JOa.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Sllversvllle Word of Faith

The SalvatJon Anay

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9 45 a.m.

SlUtday School - 10 o.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.

C lifton Tabernacle Church

Carmel
P;ISlor: Kennet.h Baker
Sunday School . 9·30 am
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Paslor: Rev. Ralph Spin::s

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel

Pastor: Lawrence Fon:man

Harrlson\lllle Communlly Church
Paslor. Theron Durham

Coolville United Methodist Parl&gt;fl
Pastor. Helen Kline
Coolville Church

MI. Olive Unllcd Methodist
Off 124 bch"'d Wilkesville

Pastor- Rev. Frankhr1 D1ckens
Serv1ce: Friday , 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Sunda y, 2:30p.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Kermet.h Baker
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (lSI &amp; 3nl Sun)

Old Dexter Blbl• Christian Church
Sunday School : 10 a.m.

Fa ith Fellowship Crusade for C hrist

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

327 Mecharuc St., Pomeroy
Pastor. Rev. Margaret J. Robmson
Serv1ce1: Wednesday, 7:30pm

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sl., Paneroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding

Worship- 9:30am (In &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Worship· ll a.m., 7:30p.m.

The Believers' Fellowship Ministry

Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip -9 o.m.

Pomeroy Pike, Co Rd
llaslur· Rt:v. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9·30 a m
Wo~h 1 p 10:30 a.m., 7·30 p.m.

Long Bottom
Pastor: St.c:vc Reed

Worship - 10 am.
Youlh FcUowship, Sunday - 6 p.m

Graham United Methodist

Ca lv.ary Bible Church

llamsonvillc Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Sunday School - ~: 1 5 a.m.

PaSior: Ken Moller

Sunday School · 9.30 a.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church

Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p m

Paslor:Keith Rader

United Methodist

While's Chapel Wesleyan

Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m

Rock Sprlngs

St. Paul Lulheran Church

Worship . 1l a.m.

Pastor· Rev Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9·30 am
Worsh!p - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday SeMce - 7 p m.

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: James Lcw1s
Sund ay Scllool · II o.m
Worsh..ip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed.nesday Serv1ce · 7:30p.m'

Worshlp -6:30p.m.

Peart Chapel

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd 3 I

Rutland Church of tht Naz.arene
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School · 9:JO am.

Sunday School -10.00 am

Sunday Scl.ool -9 o.m.
Wors~op - 10 a.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission

apr•yer

•Reaaonabla Rat&amp;~
•20 Yearo E.1Perlence
•Free Eotlmatea .

Bachelor and Birthday Parties
Welcome . No Cover Charge.
(304) 675-5955
GIRLS· GIRLS- GIRLS

Carlelon lnttrdenomlnatlonal Church
Kingshury Road
Su nday School · 9.30 a.m
Evt.ning - 7 p m.
\\l eJnesday Serv1ce · 7 p rn

Worahip - 11 a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeiVIce• - 7 p.m.

Portland First Ch urch ot the Nazarerte
Pastor· John W. Douglas

Minersville
Pastor: Deron Newman

Stiver Rtdge
Pa sto r. Duane Sydcnnn cker
Sunday School - 9 a.rn
Wo rs hip - 10 am, 7 p m
Wednesda y Scm cx: - 7 p m

Worship · 10 30 am.
Wednesday SeMct: · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p.m .

Pastor· Vemagayc Sullivan
Sunday School - 9 .30 am
Worship · 10 30 a.m.

SOUTHFORK INN
SHOWBAR

South lll'thel New Testament

Coolv1lle Road
Pastor: Rev . Phillip Ridenour

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

oCarpentry
· •Painting
Q•Power W11hlng •
clean• all exterloro
wllh high prenuro

Nease Settlement C hurch
Sunday Worsh tp · 2·30 p m,
Thurs day scrvtces - 7.30 p.m.

Chester Church of the Naurehe
Pallor: Rev. Herben Grate

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.

Forest Run
Put or: De ron Ncwman
Sunday Scheol · 10 am .
Worsh1p - 9 am.
Thursday Strvtces · 6·30 p.m.

COlliNS
ENTERPRISES

Ev erung 7:30pm
Tues day &amp; 'll10rsday - 7 30 p m

Chat-cb ol the Nazarene
l' astor: John W . Doug!"
S unday School - 9:10am .

Thursday Services. 7:30 pm.

Sunday School -9:45am.

PuLor: Roy Hunter
S unday School · 10 am .

Rel'&lt;k•llle Fenowshlp

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va
Co-pastors: Revs. Richard &amp;
Palricia Bonds-Krug
Sunday School · 9.30 a.m.
Worship · II am.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Rood, Pumeruy

Wednesday SeiVIctS • 7 p.m.

SWJday School - 10 a.m.

SWJday School - 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Scmcc · 7 p m .

SWJday School · 9:30 om.
Worship · 10:30 uo., 6:30p.m.

Jlastor. Kenneth Baker

St. John Lutheran C hurch
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn_Spalding
Wonhtp - 9.30 a.m.

264 South 2nd

BILL QUICKEL 1
. 992-6677

93 Mill Street
Mlddlepor1 , Ohio 46760
f61 992 -6667 OOKSI

Rose or Sharon Hollnesii Ch urch
Loding Creek Rd , Rutland
P11stor Rev . Dewey King
SWJday school · 9 .30 am.
Sunday worship -7 p m
Wednesday prayer mccung- 7 p m.

Worship - 10:30 Lm., 7 p m

aay,

WWTADS

S,rw 03ool;s

Sunday schoo l · 9:30am.
Sunday worsh tp · 10.35 am &amp; 7 p m
0\tldrtn's church · lO 35 am Youth 6 p m
WedneS£by pn~ye r serv tce · 7 p m

Pastor. Rev . Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

I mill the qulel llmu
together
You had few word• to

are buuln' In the

0\\;({

llollrtess C hurch
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor· Rev Rick Maloyed

Dexter

Pa&lt;&gt;tor. Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m
Thu rsday Scrvi~,;C - 6.30 p.m .

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p- Ita m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\olCCS -7 p.m

Ra.:l lroad St , Mason

Oan~llle

llberly Chrl&lt;llan Church

SWJday School: 9.30 a.m.
Worsrup Semce: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

515 N. 2nd SL. Middlepon

Grace Episcopal Churdl
326 E. M.am St., P&lt;rneroy
Rector: Pr Olil Lyle

Holiness

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor Joe N. Sayre
SW1day School-9:4S a.m.
Evcrung - 6·30 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces- 6 30p.m.

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 Sc Ro. 7, MiddlepM

Episcopal

United Faith Church

RL 7 on Pumeroy By-Pau

Mlrtdlcpor1 Church of the Naz.arene
Pastor: G~gory A. Cundiff

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pasto r. Sharoo Ha urman
Su nday School • 9 am
Worship· 10 am ,
Tuesd ay Scmccs - 7 JO p.m.

Middleport Church ofChrlst

Wonhop - 8·ooa.m.,l0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Racme , OH
Pastor · Rev . Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10.30 a.m.
Worship - 9.30 a m.
Thunday Services · 7.00 p m

Nt·w life Church or &lt;~ od
Chester
!)astor Gary Hines
Sund ay Sehoul · 9.30 am
Wonh1p · 6 p.m.
Wedne sday Services - 7 p.m

llol) Euchans t and Sunday School l l am
t: ll ffcc hoot rollowmg

Sil ver Run Baptist
l}as10r· Btl l L11tlc
Sunday Schoo l - lOam
Wor sh1p · ]Ia m, 7 30 p m .
Wedne sday Scrvlccs - 7.30 p m

llelhlehem Baptist

Wedne sday SetvJCCS · 7 p m

JJ226 Cluldn:n's II orne Rd.
Sunda y Schoo l - II am
WuJ\ hlp IOa.m, 6 p rn
Wedn esday Sc rvJ cc s - 7 p.m

5th and M8111
Hope lhptlst Church (Southern)
570 Gnu\\ St , Mnhllepon
!' astor Kcv DaVld Hryan

Re-edsville
!~a st o r ReY (..l uarlcs Mash
Wonh1p - 9·JO am .
Sunda y School - IU 30 a.m
UMYF s..,d,y 6 30 p.m

12, 1994

All
Y1rd Sales Must B• Paid In
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the day tMfore the ad 1• to Nn.
Sunday edhlon • 2 :00 p.m.
Frida~. Mondoy ldnlon - 2:00

p.m. aturday.
Augull 11th, 12th" !i/10 IIIIo 011

~:!t'~~~~;~~~hory

OW&gt;-

I;;-:;:=-:-;:;-~~:,.::=--­

Babyallter needed In my home
2·3 daya per w.. k tor 2 amaU

,_c_h_lld_ron,
-'---:C:61C4-:'
: '·A,::2:.·22
:::,57.::·_ _ _
COOK WANTED

1

l5 On laft t-ork HOIId, Clothea,

Plneereat Cart Center ll Look·

True~ Air Comprntor, 250 e

Of Dietary Experience In HeiHh

Antiquo Fumnura, 1968 GMC lng FO&lt; A Coo~ Wllh Dna Yoar

QIJILin WINDOW SYSTEMS

Cylinder Englno.

Friday, Saturday, 9-5. Acrou

From Windmill At Bob Evan•

• Cuslo~n Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates

• $200 Installed
Call For Details
•VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Po~rn~c:,oy, Ohio

"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tro• 0wllt' 1·80G-291·5600

Farm, Clothn, B&amp;W T.V. Gr1..

Trimmer, Bike 6 Etc.

C.ro Silting. Mull Be Abll To
Won

Some

Weakonda

And

Holldayo. Suporvloory Sldllo,

Of Dietary R•
qulrt~menls, And Commun~ ..
tlon SkNis A,. EaunUal For
Knowledge

Thil Pooltlon. High !lc:hool
Hll 325 From Rio G11ndo Thon Gr~duolo PNioiTOd. Apply In
554 2nd Drlvoway on Loft, PeNOn 8:00 A.M. To 4·. oo ft.ll.
Thurs ·Sat
wookrloyo. E.O.E.
~
large Yerd• Sale &amp;

Moving

Sale, Tu•• ·Sat, 1569 Neighbor-

hood Rd.

Tar1

Subdlvlalon

Addl10n.

Dill

ry

F

u-

•rm ~lper Muat Hav.

Exporilnco With llachlnary &amp;
Milking
Cows
Ra..,.ncoo
PrefetTed,

Salurday, Augull 131h, 8-&lt;4 P.ll. Evonlngo.
Children's Clolhlng, C.oolng
Jars, Misc., Household heme

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
4-Fomlly Yon! Sal•lllllor St.,
Muon. wv, Aug 12·13, !lltm-

614·245-6047

DIETARY AlOE

Plnac-1 caro cantor .. ~.
lng For A Ololary Al&lt;lo. Dull•

o.-. And

~lldr!;'t'.:~ t_~
lnCIUcll - - ·

lng. I'Nior Exparlonc:o In lleofth
Cliro Silting. lluat 81 Ablo To
Wortt Some Wookonde And
5 Oay Moving Sola, 12!1 Lowls Holldttr.. Apply In p.._., 1:00
St, Ntw Haven. Z car8, loola, A.ll. o 1:00 P.ll. Wllkdayo.
EOE.
fvmhure, txc cond.

.tpm, rtln or ehlne.

•

�Friday, Augu s l

Page -10- · T he Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-

12, 1994

P om eroy-

M iddleport, Ohio

Middlep ort, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

• ALLEY OOP

NEA Cro ss w ord Puzzle

BRID GE

sickness fly
41 Oven
44 Hard mine ral
46 Med ic rna! root
50 Highway edge
52 Withered

ACROSS

t Law (lat.)

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEATTIE BL VIJ.'M by Bruce Beanie
,

11

41 Houses for Rent

O.nc.rw l Top pay, 19 1nd older,

2 br. hou .., $253/mo. plus
utlih loo, $100 dopoo~. 304-61555118.

no nudhy. 304-675-Sass Tammy.
bm Thousa nds Stuffing EnYIIopu,. Rush $'1.00 Name Ad·
dr.ss Stamped Envelope' To:
Hall's Entarprlsaa, P.O. Box l!i2,

E111y Work! Excellent Pay! A•
Hmble Produets AI Hom. . Call

Tall Froo, HI00-467-6566, Ex!.
313.

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom houM nea r

Home Care Alde a
Home cer. aldM needed for
homo vlolto In tho Gllllpollo

6~111 2.

"Tho s reso n os so r~lzy, we even have s ta ff who
will wr1 te you r pos tca rds ho me '"

For Certified Nurst Aldn. Competitive Wagn, Olttarantal With
Expertanc., Sign On Bonua
A.,.ll.lble, Equal Opponunhy
Employer.; Contact The Aal•

31

I..()()I(ING FOR CHil[) CARE?

Spring
Avonua,Pomoroy,
$30 .000, 614·992-2913 or 614992·7304.

Ha ve References , 614-446-8600.

Maintenance /Cour ler1 Positions

Available, Apply: Onlo Valley
Bank. Main Otfice, 420 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631. E·
qual Opportunity Employer.

Malnt1n1nee man needed at
Pomaroy Nursing &amp; Rehabllatlon Center. Duties Include:
kMplng racords, conduc: llng
fll'l &amp; emergency drillsllralnlng;
day to dly malntanance &amp; Inter•
tctlon with contractors ; opera.

Uon of amall on ... ltt ..was•
plant. Wage &amp; benefit packaiJI
Ia comp1tltlve. Sand rtsurne Of'

apply ol 36759 Rocluopr1ngo Rd.,
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769. EOE.

dependable bllbysltter
"-ccad kJ care lor lour year old
&amp; new born ln my home, call alter 5:00 or leave message, 614IN2·7582.
llolgo County Board ol IIIRJD[) •
school age instructor needed to
INCh at C.r'-lon School. Must
haYti current valid Ohio O.p't. of
Education teaching ctrtrflcatt
and t.ve or be eligible to obtain
tlhlo llop1. ol Education muni·
htndlcepped certification. Send
MltUI'8

return• by August ,6 to : Car·
leton School, 1310 Carleton
S1rHt, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse,

Ohio 4577'9.
NNd Babyahter In My Home,
Matu,.

Non-Smokar,

For

1

Child, 614-44&amp;-4611.
Need Babysitter In My Home,
Mtture

For

Non-Smoker,

Chlid,l14-4464819.
Needed-

blbyahter

for

1
two

ehlldrwn In my home or Darwin
·~1 rtfe,.nen necnsary, can
Sw-otl-1153. '-•v• m111age.

Needed: Clr Audio Installer And
Engineer,
Bob's
El.ctronlca, Upper Route 7, Galoiipalll.

Sat1Uh1

New Terminal
carc111111 Frolght carrlors ''"'· le
hlrtng
experienced
owner/operators
tor
tha
vanlllatbod dlviolon, prolhabie
pay program, ac:curat• WHkly
HttJimln'•· medico~! Int. available, rider program and tlma
home no up front money lo
iolae on. call Boyd, 1.aGO.:z20.
Z4n
ownerl()perators
Cardln.l Freight Carriers la
hiring experienced OTR'ato run

fla,tMcf,

Nm

p4ilrCIRtl,g1

Of

grou ,.Vtlnua pulling eompiny
fralll,. Of pulllng own trailer,
tt.nh IIWuranca w/dental I viIlion IVIIIIbll, bill platH
available, bob-tall Insurance
avallaba., tu.l card system,
wMkly
settlements,
rider
~ram ,

Urne home. 1-300.220-

Pirt-tlme

Veterinary

Asst.,

prater axperianced person.
Send Jnuma: Box R·9 c/o Pt.
Ptoaoont Rogiolor, ZOO Main St.,
Pt. Pioloon~~ 25550.
Peraon To Uv•ln Housework &amp;
Cooking,
6
Days
Wook,
Rotor- Roquirod, 614-4464G26.
Reatawant Mgra.·hlgh hourly
r11t1,
paid
vacatfon,
fr•
unltorma, frel tood, and meny
btnllhs, very

Ollhlr fringe
rwooonobla

hoapltailzotion

management

available,

II•

portoneo highly dHirablo bu1
not required. Let ua be your
employ•
of 1st chcHee. PlnH
oonc1 _ , ol inlorost and
rnumo to Boa R·29, cJo Pt.
PtMoont Rogiolor, 200 MaIn Sl ·•
Pt. Pioloant.~ 25550.
Someone to milk cows, hourly

pold

vacation,

oond

nama experience 6 rererencn

-to P.O. Box 312, Hondors011 , WV

moe
a--

to

_,__

work

on

grwndlothor clock, 614-742•3165 ·
Town of J(aw Htlven will be aecoptlng appllcotiono lor lho
poolllon o1 can
polico
potrolrnon,
applfct~tJone
be p[cked
up tt
City Bulldlng,II·F, 6-4:30.
Wllntld: Individual or company
to bury CATV 11rvlce drops,
mutC
h•ve
own
liability

Georgu Portable Sawmill, don 't
haul your logs to the mill just

cal l 304·675·1957.
Handy

man,

1n11rlor/e1Cterlor

painting, light hauling &amp; c:ar·
pantry. Aula body work 6 paint-

ing. 304·895-3630 or 304.S757Sll5,

Prohlsslonal Tre~ Strvk:e, 30

Insurance

AIIERICAH

NATIONAL

IN-

SURANCE

VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOIIEOWNERS I AUTO lliS&lt;XlUNTS

UFEI HEALTH
304 Be&amp; 4251

18

Wanted to

Do

llv

Home,
Chahlre A",_, e14-31')'·1'MI.
Bobyoittlng

In

Chr1otl.ln Lady will Coro For
ChUdron. Any Shift, _ ,
Ellzaboth CNipol Church; oH
211. 614-441-14417

Gonorsl Molntonance, Polnl!ng1
Yord Work Wlndowo Woonoa
Guaoro Cltlonod Light Houling,
Commorlcol, Roolclonllal, Stovo:
614-44&amp;-4148.

H omes for Sale

Mobile Homes
for Rent

In K1nauga. O.potH,
Referencee Required. Fo.t er't
Mobile Home Park. 614-446-1602.

52

land, 2 br, coli lor appointment,
614-IN2..1126.
2 Bedroom Trailer, $250/Mo. 614-

446.SIJ58.
2 Badrooma, AC, No Pela,
Oepoah
And
Rtferwncee,
$400/llo., Wuho1 [)ryar; 2 Bod·

3 bedroom~~, 1112 baths, 2
llreplaces, full beument, hut
PUJOP w/CA, carpat.d, pitlo,
garage, 60x200 lot, Horton St,
Mason, 304-71J-5885.

room Houu, ~umlshld , No
Polo, $350/llo. Popooh , 61HV7·
4346.

3br. ranch w/deck. lanced yard,
move In cond., owner anxlou.

2 · Bodroo'"!l

11

All real - • advortlolng In
lhll no_.,IIIUbjo&lt;t lo
lllo Fodtlll Flllr HOUIIng Act

o l 1 9 6 8 - - lllogal
load¥- •onyp1111...,.,

lmltltion or41cr•••iii611•
buod on .-. color, rollglon,
aulamiiii ....UI or RIIDMI
origin, or otry lrtontlon lo
moke otry ..., prsl-.co,
lmllollonor-lon."
Thll n o - wl not
lcnowllngly aa:opl

aiiYortioomanla

(Or,..,_,

whlcllllln- olllllllw.

ourrw--. .. horWby

Wormedthll .. d' 11rtg1
advortllod In lhllna-r

""' ..,_'"' an oquol
opportunty -

·

Elactric,

3 Bldrooma, 2 Batha, Near Pol'·
tor ArM, Qn 180, Popooh, You
Poy UtliHioo, 814-l611-et62.
Nlco 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobila

homoo In lliddlaport, 614·1192·
58S8.
Nlcli 2 Bedroom Trailer, City

School Dillrlct, Nico Yard, 29
P.reh

111'13.

44

str....

Kanauga, 61~

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom tpar1mentt,
tumlahld

•nd

untumlahed,

-=why clopoolt rwquirod, no
polo, 614-0i2-2218.
1br. apartment, 8e1Jem11d Adcntlon, lllwl)' remodeled, no pata.

30W7S.1368.

1br. duplei. 2br. &amp; 1br. aftor~
darble rent, eome utlltl 1H In-

cluded. 30W75-4100 or 6752053.
2 bedroom Hud approved, no
J)ltl, 1 year ...... Vallty Apt,
M..on, WV. Appllcallont avalttble, E.R.A. Town &amp; Country

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

La=

All

$250/Mo. 814-:!01'7802.

Rooity.

Z Roome

.

Beth, No Khchtn,

Antiques

==::-::=,.,:. ,===-:- 1---56

Gaa

Furnace,

80,000 BTU Gae Furnace, 1
Ustd 3 Ton Package Air Con~
dltloner, 1 Ustd Electric Fur·
nace, Metal Door Fram8S, As~

oortod Sizoo, 614-44H300.
2 [)rafting Tabloo, 1 Wood, 1
Stool, Wllh lol tlrowonl1 Loroy
Set &amp; Or~wfng Suppl as, 6,4.
2!16-6413.
2 Lawn Mowers: Br1gga And
StraHan Engine, 20 lncft -Classic
$70, 22 inch Murray $120, Cali
A~or 6 P.M. 614-14&amp;-722\
23 Cu. Ft. Frazer $90, 614-4464141 After 6, Or On WHktnds .
Air Condltlone1 for Sale, also
washer,
Dryer, Refrigerator,
Freezer call 614-2S6-1238.

Brand now klng-alze waterbed,
slept on 1 w•k, call for detaiiJ.
304-1175-2385.

Ctller 10 box, 14 rn.mory, brand

now, $43.95, 614·982-11168.

Can Davia 20+4
dltcher,

tour~whlel

hydraulic-front

baek tUI blada, excellent

concU~

$20WIIo. Ail UIIIHiu lnciudod,
114-446-7733, Botwoon 9:30
·5:00.

lion, r..dy to work, $2500, 614992.65114.
Chlid'a Swing Sot, $50, 614-44&amp;-

2bdrm. •pt1., Iotti electric, ep-

731TT.

In tOW'n . Appi/callona awallable

Commodore 128 computer w/all
acc11aoriea, $275. 304-t75-1484.

pllanceo lumiahtd, laundry
room tacUitiH ciON lo achool

11: vtilago Groon Apta. 14i or
coil 614.0112-3711. EOH.
I =2br
:. -.[14-=., ::$37=5/ccm
-"o-'..,.in-c.,.lu-d:01- now
appllancoa and ali utililioo,
newly rorlocorolod, rol1roneoo,
dopooll. 304--1175-46!10 or 3048JH1118.
Fumlahocl Elficloncy $1!10/Mo.
Utllhta. Pold, Sharo Bath, 807
Socond Avo,. GollipoMo, 114-44114418 Allor 7 P.ll.
Fumlohod Aportmont 2 Bodroome, 1215/Uo., Utllltlee Pald1
101 Fowth Avo., Oaliipalia, 814448-4418 Aftor 1 P.ll.
Fumlshlld Apartment 1 8.0.
room, 131 Second Avenue, Gal--

lipalia, $260/llo. UIIIHioa Paid,
614 44~16 Aftar7 P.M.
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jsckaon Plko
lr&lt;&gt;rn $222 to $285. Walk to ohop
&amp; movloo. Coil 814-44&amp;-2sp0.
EOH.
Nicely Fumlahed Apartment,
1br, nex1 to Ubrary, pt.rklng,
centrwl he1t, •lrL~ference ,..

quirwd. 814-448.0;t;~~~.
Fumiohod
Efllclo~
Downotolro, Ali Ulllllioa Poi ,
t1115111o. 111e Socond Avo., Oa~
lipalio, 1114-44&amp;.111145.
Orscloue living. 1 and 2 bodroom apartmentl at VI liege
Menor

and

RlveraiCSa

Aportmonto in llldclloport. From
123Z-$355 . Coli 114-m-56511.
EOH.
Nlco 2 Bodroom, 4 112 lliloo
From Gollipoll.l, cny Schaolo,
Stove, Rolrlgorll"!1 Wotor Fur·
n-oia$254)/Mo. no PliO, 614-

Concrllo &amp; Plalllc Saptic
Tanka 300 ThN 2,000 Gollona
Ron Evana EnterprtHa, Jackton, OH 1-IOQ.ll37-i528.
Cnftamon Saw And Jolnor Wllh
Ertro Blodoo call 814-448-1831.
Diamond Sal&gt;l&gt;hlrw Ring 1200,

6~250&lt;4 l.a.¥11

u•••.

[)ry walnut Iurn.,_, 110 conlo por
1001. 30..a82-l872.
Evona l Jonnlngo Elaclric
Whoolchair a Chairgor, ~
Choir, Uko Now, 814-4~
French Provincial dlnlngroom

I;;:::..:.:::..::-==-=
==
1WD
bedroom
opanmont,
utllhloo pold, prlvoto porting,
rtv.- view, $350/mo., $200
dopooll, no polo, 614-992·5724.

45

Orange And Purple. Teylor'a

Borry Polch, Korr Road, 614-24511047.
Gtl cook

etOVI,

IXellltnl con-

dhlon, 614·142·2578.
JVC Homo Sloroo RCA Z8"
Con.ale T.v.. RCA. VIdeo Dlec

For Sale

Farm Suppl1es

&amp; Livestock

lloftroao &amp; apr1ng ooto, ldng
$45, lull-olza $35. 304-t71i-22110.
llayto:&amp;:'~ngw wuhor w/pump,

$121. :

75.611114.

llatol canto Racko For A Fun
Siu Chovy Pick.lJp 1187 Or ()1.
dor, $126, 614~5&amp;-16~.
llini bilnda and drspoo, 6' polio
door, 6' window block, 814-11112·
6!37.
llurray 16 Horoo Riding Lawn

61 Fann Equipment
111t3 Tractor - . . . Blaclo,
lkllll Hog, sa,ooo, au

Chain

saw trar. 1

cholna to 1n
· Boot prlcM In

olmoot ony .,.., Sklonr Equl-. 304-

Nlct 2&lt;4' Above Ground Pool, All

Now $3,000. Stop In And Talco A
l..oclc AI It At: 5i Pon:h Stroot,
Kllnauga, 114-446-7473.

~:~';' o1 $120Jmo, Oollla Hotol.

au- Slza, Soft Sldw Colllornla Walorbocl Soml WavoloM
Llnor Only. 614-245-11053. $110.

11880.

1~:...:..,:...:;~:.._-:::::::"'C::---::--

Slooplng Rooma $15 Por !loy.
Conolruotlon Worbn Wolcomo,
Wanlod to buy· or moro Efticlonoy
Khchon,
Froo
- - . oullablo to build on and L.o""*r, 814-lU-1121.
lo a blocldop - · 114- SIOODina 1141.:1411.
whh cooking.
Ateo. tra.ter apec1 on river. ~I
36 Real Estate
-~Coil ahor 2:00 p.m.,
Wanted
,llo_, wv.

Aefrtg•etora, StovM, WaahiN
And Dryoro, All Rocondltlonod

And Oaurs11oodl ttoo And Up,
Will Doiivor. 814-e&amp;N-441.
s•1 machlno, Soora plno twin
canopy bed w1manrw1, S.re
wolghl bonc:h wlololr cllm'*.
304-11711-e8IHI.

46 Space tor Rent
STORAGE TANKS S OliO Oollon
Nice llmlly 1 - bod,_,_,.to,.11orbuy, I R-.. Olllco Sullo Wllh Upright, Ron Evano Ento1311,000 nongo. Pnlor ClrootOr Prlvola Tollol In llodorn Aro Jacklon, Ohio, 1.-.a31-0121. ·
Proof Bldg. Coli llorrla Haoidna Tandy DIIP 133 Gol-llrrlrlrr
printor, $75. 304-e1W121.
B14-446-Z1131 Or 114-448-2512.
Two IIIII horN traitor with lack
Rentals
dopartnHKd,~,814-t112-7251
tnllor, ;;;;;;!
or 81~102·7158 IMve m. .ege
~.:L..'!fl WI- otrlpo, ll20Q.
_,_81:1.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
41 Houses for Rent
zoo PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 2011 PSI
llorflarl Rontol I Storogo Unha, $3?~1 ~on Evanar Enton&gt;rlooo.
2 I• dlroorn Flrll Avenue, 011- 11.110..!0111!IJ_10X18,
·
10X2~, IOX30. 81~1130 Joe"-'. Ohio
Stovo, Rolrlgorltor, 304... 75.:1400.
DIDootl.1.. NO PliO,
Building
55
$215/Mo. 14-2!1-lSr.v.
Q Wanted to Rent
Supplies
Ono cow riOdy to hovo call: 1
2 B o d , _ - 48 Ch._tro
Rood, CJIINpalla, full Boa•-•· Rooponolblo
Proloaolonoi Block, brick, _ . , olpoo, wln- hollw duo lo tiovo call; 1 hoi'tN
c:arpotoct, Goo Fu,_, No Couplo Looldng For Yory Nice 3 dOW8, Mntela, •tc. Clluda WJn. col~ 1 Harlan! BuN Z yra. old; 3
Pe~1 .J~o.
Dopoolt, Bodroorn Or t:argor Houoo To toro, Rio Clrando, OH CoM 114- !!eagMJ fiUIIIJ a 112 montH; 1
,_
Ront. lluot Bo Clciod Concltlon
llooiila pup • -.tho; · - 322111~~11113.
.
•
814 448 4031.
• 245.st21.

~·--"*-·

=

~"""~-=·
iliio'flrn:':
-

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

•:zoo

PEANUTS

SORRY [ CALLED '1'0U 50

1188 DodQII Caravan
V.fl,
Automa,lc, Delivery Van, No

Transportation

71

King.cab 4WD
lruck, original paint, no ruat,

Windows, $2,7110. 814-256-1616,
614-25&amp;-1252 .

Autos for Sale

~'M""'Ch::-ryol....,.o-r"'N,..ow-,~'"orlc.,..or-,2"'."'2"'1h,-rt
turbo, p. wlndawa:, PS, PB, lilt
whee(, lronl wh11l drive, 88,000

miloa, good condHion, call 614-

i85-41t• after Spm.

SOME TIMES I CAN'T
SL EEP, AND [ NEED TO
TALK .. l LOVE TO TALK

LATE LAST NIGHT, CHUCK
I 6UE55 [ TALK ED YOJR.
HEA D OFF, HUH ?

S OME TIME S
SOMEONE

Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Galllpolla, 114-

I JUST NEED
TO TALK TO ..

straightforward cxampl l'
\' ou art• 1n t hr ee no trump Weq
lra rt s th r d1 &lt;-1mo nd s1x· fou r . I fl . pck
Huw do you con ti nue··
W1th sf' vcn top t ri cks \lhret' s pade ~.
t wo heart s. one diam ond
on the
IL' ad - and nne club •. you ne ed two
1~o re tn cks So. eve n tf the heJrts arr
J :l. t hai s ur t wrl l prnvi dl' o n] ~- one
more tn r k You mu s t g o afler t he
clubs However. if F:asl wms an ear l y

440·2342.
1D91 Ford F·150, Good Condl·

tlon, CD Player, XLT Package,

11186 Honda Civic 4 tloor, s ....

_~,:.8.,14-4-,-ote..,-3118
_1_.-,.~-=
1 .11186 Oldo Dolo 68 4 Door, PS,
PB, P'TWl N;, B Cylinder, ClC,
114 448 4 11
"
118&amp; VW Goll 6 SDMd. Air,
1tli~ un... &lt;lood shapo,
300 814 448 7523
f.S2.:...:..,.-:•.,.,.._ , ,..-:-::-· -- ..,-118&amp; whlla F«d Tompo, otondan!, g19ol cond., $1'1110. 304I'IJ.1473.

I::=.,:.;.:,.:;::...:....,--,:-::--=
1187 Clrroytor L.oBuon 2.2
Turbo, New Turllo, Now
Radl8tar, New Bauary, Good
Condition, 12,'1110,114-3884725.

1187 OEO ~groat,
hlthmllogo.
•
1187 Pl~h Sundonco,
11,000 0111H, ...,_, wlnwoon
~~.

PI, PI, AC,

~.

4

owl. aut-lc:. lliO!I, 114-114fl.
tlaya or 11'1-114fl.21144

-"'• eomu,
IIIII Bluo

Good

614-446-0352.

7'• Motorcycles
::"::-::::-:":':":-::::--"=-:::::::-:-::
'87 Yamaha Warrior, 350cc, 2
whMI drive, new front tire, eH
new tnglne one ye1r -so, $1800,

till Dodgo Shodow, good
ochool cor S111M. 1m Goo
lloro, high mlioo,
1m
CNivy COi'alco lTZ S4.HB. 1ill0
Cltovy lumina Ewo IUIB. 111111
Chov S.10 $4,100. 11117 Chovy
Blazor loodod $4,100, Five old
cars 1ndor $1,000. oach.
Scon~: ~
C.,., Now Hovon
WY.
-3712.
'

wtll ~o down with thi:; layout
ln qcad . yo u s hould re tu rn to ha nd
with J spadr jor heartJ and lead a S('C·

d o. j'OU

ond lo w c luh . Whe n Wes t puts up t he

Wln11d To Buy; Four WhHIIfl, ;
Dirt Bikas, Or Moto,. Any Con.. .
d~lon,

75

k tng. ca ll for

BORN LOSER

tor Sale
18ft. Bayllner bowrlder wn:raller,

engine

w,urbo

THE. F?IJI.fJ,MAC I

'------ -, --·....,

11n . Tri·houl boot, opon bow,
1177140 £•nru•. lnclud• lite
lackota, oklo, Coat Guard oqulped,

mak1

;!8Two - - trme
29 Mr _Ziegte ld
31 Haz ies t
35 Sly look
38 Lrlle the
40Locll of ha~r
42 Beg ~n n r ng
430nce
upon - 44 Golf cry
45 Path
47 Ea rl y Brr ton
48 War god

NO\-J TH E T\JO OF TH EM

ARE HANG.I NC. OUT To·
\,ETHER , G.04 N(, TO C.A/'1( 5
IOGETHER ALL Of ~ £
5 Ut&gt;1&gt;E.N THEVRE ALL

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

Budget Prk:.c:t Tranaml11lona, :
Uoocl &amp; robuln, ali lypoa, otort. '
lng at $6lj owner 814-245-5877, ·
614~379-2135, 614-371-2263,
1
tenka,

one ton

CHUMMY '

truck .:

whoolaJ rocl1alora1 lloor milo,
otc. D • R Auto, Rlptoy, WV. 3043r.t·39ll or 1-:173'1132e.
·

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes
Pop-up camper, ll11pe 8, 2 new.
tlroo. Color computor 3 Tandy

w/monltOf, keyboard, print.-, ·•
clak drive, aoftware. 011 furnace.
Firwwood. Computer lot' 1066 o
Dodgo 600SE, 2.5 now. 304-8112- o

ZIIIO:

aqua, tinted wt,..

hoodllahl- '*ala,
21,iiiilrn
.. tau - paymanto.
304-67fl.4t•g nDnlngl.

IFRIDAY

ROBOTMAN

SINCt Tl-\10 ~'N~
Of Tih\I)I'·AloJK\NV
HI&lt;S LOOI&lt;~t&gt; \JP !IT
BIROS liNt&gt; DREAMW

I
I

..

Services

1 DON'T KNOW. l'MuSUA.l\.Y
SO TELl US,POLLY, WtiA1 1S
TOO
\l\JSY LOOKING llOWN /INV
IT L\KE ? 1'-Jri/I'T'S IT R'tA\.'l'1
WONDEII.IN6 WH r...T IT'S LIKE TO
LIKe 10 FL"1' ?
Pl i&gt;-Y HANDBALL

Of rl\GI'IT ..

I

-----------------.;
81
Home
1
Improvements

'

BASEIIENT
WATERPROOANO
Uncondhlonol lllotlmt guonn-

,.ferenc• rumlahld. •

Coil 1-IIIIO-Z87.0511 Or 614-2ll'&lt;··r
0488 Rogoro Wolorprooftng. ~ j
tabllahod 11175.
Oonoral

Horne

Maintenance.. wallpaper, storm
docn, roonng and cornplotoo.
homo ropolr, comploto wln-

~~;;;;;;!!!!~~~~::~~~~

L

·· . ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Curtle Home lrnPfOVIIMI'Ita. No
Jab Too Bla Or Smoll, Yoors Ex·
....... bn Older /Newer
llon.o. AddHiono, Foundau-,

Rooftng,
KM-..
/Botha,
lloploc- Wlndowo. lnourwd
Frw Eottmot• 114-311.osre. .•

-"''lzlna

~ropalra, WV •
Ohlol14-44f..2454; '
Plumbing

&amp;

F-man·a Hooting And Cooling.
lrlotollallon And Sonrlco. E""
Cortlllod. R.-,iol, Corrrmor·
clal. 814-261-1811.
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

ween yo u

yo ur

Matchrnakef 1nstantly reveals which Signs · mal e should be resolved 1n pnvate todily
are roma nti ca lly pe rf ect lor you M arl $2 and not ane d rn fro nt a t f rr enas If an
to MatchmaKer. c1o thi S newspape r. P.O
arg ument res ulls eve ryone prese nt could

Bo• 4465. Ne w York, NY 10 163
be emba rrass~d
VIRGO (Aug . 23· Sept . 22) Gua od . PISCES (Feb . 2D· March 20) Ail hough

"PIIr, ~eau,. wuhl~ .,.,..
mobil.llromo npoir. For no 01(!
tlmato call Chat, 6~• .

84

C&lt;''Nll&gt;l~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c ....

·vr· . : ''"~ , ,., ,' ., .tl•·fl too..-., '1L. &lt;.1 ,. ' • I ' •
! "• , .• ,. •' tl\ " r phr· · ,,. •1 · ''" ,.-.,I'"" ' ,.

P I V A

I S

H IT A J

T A

R M K

R M TA J V

R M K

E I Y 0 H

H K 0 0 C YK H

C"" ;•· •

p.o·,: .or&gt;&lt;j P''' , .. ,.

E I YA M

MC H

TP FI V VTLOK

E K V K

R M K W

L

·''"' (' ,.,,., ' " C

H I A K

l K S
0 I Z T V

l KKA
Y K
H

l YC AH K TV
PREVIOU S SO LUTION I o ppncd lhr door tor a lol at pconiP. and they JU S!
ran t hrou g h an:l left me ~1 C idlfl (] lh e -.:flab
Ro 01dcllcy

'~!:t:~' S©RolllA-~ttf~"
_,y
lcfit•d

letters of
0 foRearrange
vr Krc mbled wo rds

WORD

GAM I

CLAY R. POLLAN - - - - - - -

t ke
be·

low tc for m fov r ..,._O,d1

VABH ":E

t e nt decla r ('r spend s a f ew m o m ent s

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUl
OF STUFF

BIG NATE

A
W

Heating

1e113 Pontiac Gnnd Aln, ..v...
AulomotJ!1 Loodod, 1UOO Mlloa,
11,250, •1'1-2N-1811 Or 614-ZM1252.

- or lon ge r ~ workmg ou1 he r or ht s
sequ e nce or pl~ys

Z691.

CIC

I

1-- M,.,.--Ar-D_E.--F..---ll.

1e94 4hp John.an, 1994 Min•
kot• trolling motor. 304..fi75-

1241.

1e112 C0r1ve~lbla L.oBoron, low
mlioa.lltW71-111B7 anor 5pm.

ONE,~
CDMI ~ ' UP 1

1968 Chockmalo 16ft IOhp llor·
cury outboordJ trsllor included,
$2,300. 30Ul'J&gt;.tm.

'"· Local

payme nt

304-713-5565

Of

82

1e112 Bulc• Rogoi, looclod, 614IN2.&amp;137.

Afte r the d ummy appears. a ro mpe ·

1i85 Glouport, 11ft opon ~.
2.5
CNIV
4
cyl,
ln..
lull
IC&gt;p&lt;•.
boordloutboord,
ss,zoo. 3114-67&amp;-51115.

New au

51 Press f or

co\lrc t nt lca.-; t 10 tricks

Cf.AY,OO..Y .

betw8en 5-lpm.

76

49 G1ve up
50 Acce lerate
(a motot.)

i

ruaonable otter.

1m Pontiac ~no, AMIFII
Radio, Coli Aftor B P.ll. 114-4411-

1e81 Dodao Spirit ES, 4 Door, 6
Cyllndor: l.ooclod, GoGel Cond~
tlon, B5,W6, 114 m ZJOO.

to

G\V£~00£~ F~

prop,

$3750 nog. 304.e7S.1711.

304-682-:1325

luw ca rd from th e dum

~ eb ss tr &lt;tvo id anc(' p lay
You r diamond krng is s &lt;:~ fc fro m attack
a nd you have all the irme 10 th e world

Boats &amp; Motors

85hp

iJ

my
Thi s 1s

614-44H21 t

Ron'o lV Sorvlco,
In Z.nlth olac oorvlctna motl.
otMr ...,., HouM c:allil, 11.. ,

11M Baretta,

yo u s hou ldn't cas h th e clu b ace If yo u

llrm, 014-992·2382.
Hondo Supor Sport 400cc, 4cyL, ·
lapel., $650 OBI:&gt;. 304.e75-4452. ·.

1m E - 4 Door SIOUon
wagon, Automotlc. 4 cvnnctor,
Air Conditioning, AMIFI( Rodlo
Cooaotto Ployor, Cioo'!. .. ~
CondRionl Aoldng Poy urr. 3046711-a!S.

-

p lays

eondhlon, show or go, $10,500

11311

11188 Ford Footlvo 40 IIPG Vory
Nlco car, 4 Spood, Now Tino,
Now Paint, AMIFII CO $1,0i5,
OBO, 8144411-114ZII.

thr king . let ht m wtn the tric k
But let ·s ass ume he plJys low You fi
ncs"e dummy's quee n Wh en it wm s.

1985 Suzuki 250 4 Wheeler,
$1,000, 080, 614-lllll-3l37.
1987 Har1oy Davlds011, FlTC, :
25,000 actual mliq, excellent .

Cond~

11188 Ford Eacort CiT 5 Spood,
AIU'II 81-, ll,BOO, I~

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

304~1S-61f7.

tion, v~
M~ooo 111oa,
Nftly l"lintod, Hooponolblo
0Wnor. l14-441~114.

1nr k. hr wtil pus h a diamond t hrough
your kmg If \\'est ha:-. lt- d fro m a fi vt_•·
ca rd su it. you will l ose one club an d
fo ur dicHno nd trick s You mus t fig ht 10
krr p F.a sl off 1ho· lead
AI trrck two. lead a low rl uh If West

614-IN2-6511.
1983 Honda Shadow SOOcc, exe. '
cond.

sog hl

t tmi n g. as 11 ts known If you. sJy. take
a fi ne.'ise too ca:-ly nr too IJ lf' . 11 m1ght
:-. pe ll di s a ster TodJ y':-o dt•;_JI is a

r-----

1981 Dodge Ram Van 60,000

Miioo, $4,~00; can Bo Soon At:

23 Ac tor Krrs totterson
240r gan s o f
26Newts
27Sca rce

p&lt;'lent altornt~y l'J n rkLt .\ a lr1al !or
rnonth . .; o r Yl'd""' ,\ compe!Pnl ;llto r ·

30H7S.1564.

ms.

2 Y- 01c1 Black 1 WhHo Pony
And Aloo Ciuartor - . 81437WII38.

Vans &amp; 4 wo:s

SA, AC, PW, now tires &amp; whHis.

evenlnge.

Livestock

9 - · - page

22 Dull s

llv P h illip ,\l dr-r

depen ds on tlw o.;equl'nre of play, - the

190i Dodgo llortono, drivoro
lront lonclor tlamogo, 13,537
mi"!._ 5 op., blooll wlgrsy lntor·
g , ~. PB, PW, AC, 11100, 8141140.:ZS00 tlaya or 814-114fi.Z644

or coctar atoln $3.11V gal. Paint
Pl .., 30H15-40114.

IOOpp ol NNW
12 Go rn
t 7 Actor - Parker
,g Author Ferber

Timing
is critical

1185 Niooan

gra11. 304-1175-3960.

Pharaoh Quail $1.50 Each, &amp;14256·1671.
PIHsburgh Ptlnta be8t ceiling
p~int t'T.H g1l. Lttex redwooc1

=---=-~~====-:::::­
Roomalorronl· - k or month.

I HAD ENNY
I'D BE PLAYIN' 11

Square bel... $1.2! to $2.00 per
bile, alhllta, clovar, orchard

ue 3040. zeoo

Annuli Cho,_ chain oolol
Mooon Cowrty Fair Wook Qnly
Slcloro Eq.._t. :!Q4.t75.'J1121,

4 Newspaper
deltverers
32 Obese
5 Fru• ty drink
33 Fib
b Type of code
34 Cut
7 New Krds - 36 Singing sy llab le
Block
37 Greek peak
8 Dumb -

30 - iily

Sahara

lf

TH' CHANG E
WILL DO YOU
GOOD II

nev can dr lav onP cvrn longer ..
in hndgc .· succf'ss or failurt· often

P.ll. 614-448-11162.

:::-.,.§.

or Trade
1i85 John Doono Lawn Troctor,
1Z HIL.Excolllnl Condition,
~ rorw, Extro Ballo, $800,
0r Trodo For Orwvoty 01 EQual
Voluo,ll4-44t-1013 Aftor 6 P.ll.

Ployw, W 121 llovloo. Choot 01
tlroM~ c.t910. Ill' Exorcl•
Biko uoadmMI, Nonol.lclrtc,
114 C48 4044 lion lnla.

Furnished
Rooms

1

I WON 'T BE
PLAYIN' CAR DS
TONIGHT,
MAW

J . .p CJ-.5, 304 standard
tranemlt~lon , $2500, 614-992~
5532.

11184 Ford Tompo 4 Cyllndor1
Frorrt llrtvo, Clooa
Two Bundy lnlmPII• ono lair Socond car, Runo Goodl Wll
condHion, l150; one good con- Saorlftoo. 61444s.o71Z Anw I
dhlon,
LaBlanc muto, $15; P.ll.
614.e&amp;l'
11186 Honda Accord LX z lloor,
Hotch a s.-F A~WII ca_,.
58
Fruits &amp;
&amp;~a.'istrt;: 30•

44 6
1::
,:,:8~7·--:--;-:::-c::-"""'0 Mower, Rune Good, 5700, 814-- 871-lltZ1 .. ,~;
Nlco 1 br. opl. In Mldclioport, 388~028.
Felgus:n 30 Tractor With NN •
814-1112-1858.
Now 5x8 Tim-11 UIMhy fl. 1nt. B..h Hoa t2,11M, 114~~~~=7~~~~ Trailer, $1,300, 814-37a-2152.
.,.....11011,
e-..l'187.
llnlr I bod-m apt, 125

Colo s~. lllddtoport, ohio, &amp;14•·7811.

o cap 13500, 81HI2·2DB2

tm

Instruments

59

eram

2 Facr lrl ate
3 Dec ho liday

r\1 1pa ~s

Good Alfatfa Hay, Never BHn
Wilt, 12.50 A Bolo, Ctll Aftor 6

7n8507.

Gtrdtn Mums: Yellow, Whlta,

1 Fu ture atlys

East

73

1183 Buick L.o Sa'* Umhod,
2dr., 33,00Ciml., $155110 llrm. 304-

truck, $100. 304.&amp;75-4034.

\ 1ort h
.l \T

Hay&amp; Grain

1081 Eldurodo Ctdlilac $2,100,
Rogiot- molo Chihuchuo, 1 flOOd ohopo, 304.e75.ell86.
'I'· Old, $100, 1114-38'1'7847.
1e82 Olclomoblla as Rogoncy,
Roglatorad Sholtla mole ,PUPPY, 64,000 lllloo, All Pow"!l.Supor
aatilllwhle. 1250; ,.,_terea Cloon, Will Talco &lt;Juno, oroot1 _qr
Peralon IMII kitten, grey, $150, Pool Tol&gt;lo In Troclo. 614-....,_
6413,
call 814-·2107.

Vegetables
Connl"l. tomot-, Wlllamo
Form, ,wl·-~10, 814-IN2·
151168 or •

Ill, t1bl1, 8 chall'll 1 chine, $500.
Sot 14" whoolo &amp; tiroa lor S.10

64

455 high pwformen~ eriglne.

=

DOWN

39 Sleeping ·

Evc! lr .J Younge-r :-.a1 d ·An tnrom

Floh Tonk I Pot Shot&gt;, Z413 Al.o, Mlvy duty car trailer. -,o.a.
Jackeon Ave. Point Pktuant, 615-71111.
30W7ti-20tll.
111711 Ponllac Grond Prix, Block
llala umbntla Cockotoo, $800 On Black. New Brtkes, a Trar..,
lncludM oxtro lorgo wrough1 "Unclor 100,000 llllln, Excellanl
Iron cago, 614-1112.&amp;fll4.
Fromo, llull Soil, $1,000, 614448-4785.

Musical

victor y
57 Camping need
58 Mao - tung

Opening lrad • 5

Power Pa cuge, Sunroof! Sport
Package, AC, 19,000 H1ghway

AKC
Roglatorod
Boaor
P"PP,Iowno and brlndioa, bolh tm Dodao Coronot 44,000
poronla on prom'-, champion orlglnoi m~oo1 4 now tlre1, Iota
podlg-, 8M·li42·2ZOI.
of new p1rts, l900 firm. 304-675AKC
roglotorwd
llinlatwo 1504.
Ptnochor, liiW7H71V or 1175- 11171 tlodgo Aopon, Slant 6 Enme.
gino, Runo Good, $495, 6J4.:Jn.
AKC Roalat- Walmaronor 2720 Aftor 6 P.ll.
_ . . . , Jil4476-Tllt0.
11171 lloroeocl01 Bonz 300[)
$7011. 1i62 Chovy Cavallor $7110.
CFA Roglal- Himalayan Kll· 12D
Lewis St, New Haven. 304-tono, 2 -atuo Potnto l 1 Sool 882-3Z60.
Point I2SO Eoch, 614-441-cmt.
Collio Pupa, Purobrod, Fornola, 111711 Chov. 4 door. 3114-675-1502.
614-~1058.
.
1871 Pontiac Formula Flreblrd,

'!i1

Wt•s t
l ';t;-,:-;

t ~T

BARN EY

1993 Toyota 4 W[) X.Cab SR5 y,
8 Cyllnder1 5 Spnd, Cruise,

- - --

AKC R,illorwd Booglo Pupo, 8
Wooko nd i Wook llol.l $55,
SleYI Stap..lon 61~172,
614-258-1611.

10 R .~,
lj li

56 Symbol ol

30H7H 206.

00NAL[) SMITH ASSOCIATES:
Pets for Sale
FINE ANTIOU ES- American art,
china, art glasa, aUvw, furniture, Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
McCoy Roseville, etc. COLLEC. Grooming. Julie Webb. 614-446TIB LES~ prints, poeten, tools,
0231
poHery, crock s, boxn, Jars, bot~ 1:=.::.·--:-=---:-,.---.,.lios, books, lo~1 • ~tc . AlWAYS Pomporwd Polo by Sonyo, dog
BUYING ARROwHEADS. Top grooming, bothlng, oil bnooda.
dollar paid. One piece or one 304-882·3730.
hundred. APPRAISALS, 40
years experience. Buy or ull. 1Dx10x6 dog ke~ $190.15.
Please call614·992-2822.
Paint Plus, 304-67
,

BTU

t

ol.j

So uth

Chevrolet, Ford, Dodgo- pickup
bods. Shorl or long. No ru st.

Z AKC Rogillorwd llalo Ooldon
Rotr1ovors, 6 Wooluo Old, $1!10,
614 446 6651.
Z You Old Rod H - Fomalo
Dog, 614-37fl.2838.

,,

53 Sea eagle
54 La rge b rrds
55 Wi nt er veh tcle

Vulnerable Ea s t Wc' l
DPail'r South

-----

"

\j

II

~~

SOITIJ
A ,\ K Q
¥ h I ti ~

Milos, 614·245-!1053, $20,000.

150,000

J

:) 4

.&amp;. K 7 :1

e venings , Raymond Cotterill.

Wfl.llt\11

drlve

a

.1. K

ah&amp;r

682·2570,

C 199-' t,.. NEA. Inc

Merchandise

•4 J

~~

• K .I :!

1990 Nlssan pickup truck, AJC,

J- -"'4'1

54 Miscellaneous

¥10 H

1990 Ford plck-u p, V8 XLT,

Sporting Goods

53

EAST

auto., a lle. cond ., 1 own or. 30 4-

w ~h

(J ;, I .,

• .J

S -10 Automa tic 50 ,310
Mllet $4, 500, 6 14-446.(1 924 .
..

Vary nlca oak dining table, 8
chalre w/mauve eushfont, large
etllna n blnet, $1500 080. :Kf4-

675·2464.

614-992·7546

~

A 1 (I H

1987

Olive 91., Galllpolle. New &amp; UHd
fumftuJa, heate,., Westam 6
Wort!. boots. 814-446-3159.

2 Bodrooma, Air, Coble Aval~
ablo, OVortooklng Tho otoio

1181 Sunshine trailer In Rut·

3 bedroom, all electric home,

Years Experlenc., 814-388-9643, to • •II, $58,000, llinon Rd.,
Ctmp 1..4nley. lntemtad party
614·367·7010.
call collect 216-864-1221.
Quality Cleaning Affordable
Prices, One Time IWeakiV 45ac., wooded, approx. O.e.
/Biw18klr., Yura Of Exparltnc:l, clearwd, county water, reduced.
5.24 ac., Juat a tew mlnutn from
FrM Est maiM, 814-'IJt-.2199.
town, county w.ter, beautiful
Qualhy Cloaning At Alfordable building aHo. Somorvllla R•ny.
Prien, One llrne, WMkly, 304.e7S.:JD311 or B7S.l431.
BlwMkly, Monthly. FrM EsFor Sale Or l.u.ae: 4 Bedroom
timates, 614-3~2191.
Brick Home, In Rio Grande, 814Sun Valley Nur'llry School. 440-4344.
Childcoraii·F 6111&gt;6:3Dpm Agoo
2·K, Young School Ago [Juring Now Houu For Sola 3 llodSummer. 3 Oap per Wtek Min ~ rooma, In Country, On 3Acra, 5
Mlnutn From Rauoon Plrk,
imum 614-44&amp;-:1657.
Rural Water, Prlv•te, $58,000,
Will Babysit In Mv Home, 614-:Jn.2240.
Chtthlre Are~, 614-387·7541
Spacloua mld1n'ry home, Rol..,
Reterenc• Avalleble.
lng Acr• Subdlvlalon, approL
Will blbysh, family atmotphere, 24no aq.ft., 3-4br., 2 112 both,
GrMnbrfer Eltal .., any hOUr.. flmlty room, malntenence fr•
304.e7H666.
exterku-, level kJt wtprtmary
fence. BD'•· W1t100 R•ny
Will do l&gt;lckhoo _ , 614·1N2· Company,
304:i75-3433.
sasa or 114-1192-3173.
Two
atory
Sbrth Avenue,
Wlii do houlokooplng, mor· llliddl-rt·home~..
4 BK Kving room,
nlnga. 30H7H141.
dining room, iciichon, utlihy
room, bath &amp; 112, lull booomont,
glanld In porch, gal furnace,
F1nancial
woodbumer,
large
ltorage
building, new paint and root,
$36,501J, 814-14Z.Z7110.
21
Business
OpportunHy
32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
INanCEI
1972
14x70
trailer. 2T round
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recorri'mende thet you do bull· •bowe ground swimming pool,
nooo wllh 'ptoplo you know, and ovorythlng Included; 81WUNOT lo oond monoy lhrO&lt;Jgn tho 5350.
melt untiJ you hawe lnvntrgeled
1m Bucldv 2 Badroan F«
tho olllring.
Solo, 814-44&amp;-MOO.
Boat High lum'* Coat. Stool
Building Doolorohlp Ot&gt;t&gt;or· 118&amp; Rldm•n 14170 0.. Furtunny. WIN Soloct au.illllod naoo, CA, Whi~pool Both, 2
Buiidor /Doallf In S..... Opon Bodrooma, 2 Bot'!, Pon:hoo,
Al9u. Polontiol Big Prolho $11,300, 614-4411-ZOow, e - .
From Sal• And CoriltNCIIon. 6120.
(303) 7511-413!, Ext. 1800.
1i87 Rivorviow 14x80 Total
Bualnna For S.le: 8Nuty Eloctrlc Wllh Holt Pump, 3 Bod·
Salon &amp; Tonnlng Buolnno Pt. roomo, 2 ~1tho 1 ~nlumllhod,
Ploo11n1, lully otockod, 101dy to Sot On Rontod r..ar, Roody To
opan dooraJ. • ttatlona, 2 tan~ Move Into, Located 7 Mllea On
nlng beda. :tand letter of inter~ SR 180, Coil Aftor S P.M . 614111: Box A·11. cJo Pt. Pleasant 388-1172, Or 614-446-1010.
Reglttar, 200 Main St., Pt.
1987 Schun 14'a711' Whh Ex·
Ptuaant, WV 25550.
p1ndo loaded with ext,.,,
Dry Ciolnor &amp; Laundry in Gal· refrigerator, stove. waahlf',
lipolilo Aroa. Ellabllohod Van central air. Set up In Quail Crwek
Route. Ex~llent Condition! 614- on comar lot. Will not oall oo
682-7302, 61H82·311i Ahor 6 land contrsct. $18,500.00 614P.ll.
24HCII 3
Great bualnen opportunity, n- 1968 14x711 Royal Covo, Z br,
tabUthld bUIIniU, email In~ holt pump, porch lncludod,
vntmert, ownw wanting to 100a100 lot In lliddloport,
ralocate. 304-675-1tQO evenings. $15,000, 814-tliz.7223.
T·Shirt, Ho~ Jockot Buolnooa. 1968 Ook Wood molblo homo,
14170, 2 blclroome, exc cond,
Two Pm. ., 1912 Trallef With 304-G7HW.
Ughtl, Corpel And lnvantory
Soii·Up For Bali Toamo, An~ 2+ acroo, mobil homo wllront I
Cr1fl Show•, $81500, Or Trad1
2
bock porchoo,
gorogo,
For A S-10 Blazer. 614-:167-0506. outbuilding,
AI 35,cor
SoUiholdo.
304.&amp;75.a34f olor S:30pm.
VENDING ROIJTE: Won1 Clot
Rich Cluick. Will Oot A St•dy Bocl1 o1 Now Hovon, caah incamo. Priced to Soli. 1800~2fr6782.
~·.
::-ppln la.-,Holghtw'i.r,.,,....
-'
~m. S.887~~e.. 113,500, terma
ovollablo. 304-882·3!03.
Real Estate
UMITED OFFERI Now l4all0
only . .teo 2 poy..,nto, no
poymonto oftor 4 yoara, !roo
31 Homes tor Sale
dolivery I oot up, ownor Hnanc"Kick llo Whilo I'm Down"l lngavollablo. 304-785-B51111.
OWner Mull S.l Now! "lll'e NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 loftl
Talk Bu.. ne•"l S.utl"'l,
Two 91
~ Cor
lot
Novor hod In, oUII hoa , _
ory Pt.
~· P-rw.
nor 111,.
· 6 ,_,. wrra11y, lrlo dotlvory I
lloln St.
Bodroomo, Two Full Botho, ... up, ftnonclng · Khchon, Dining, Uvlng, Family ~304-71&amp;-~81.
Aooma, Ltrge Utility Roc:m. A(r 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
CondHionod: $1111,11110.00. 814448 •2205 ·
40 120.000 614-3111'71164
1 112 Story, Full Boaomon1 " - t..oovi ~
1
slble 5 Badrooma, 2 Aeru, River
y near Byracuu,
Lifetime
VInyl Siding,
Tllt
WI-.,
SoinoSkylights,
lniOrlor ocnr lot, 201140 building wtth
ronovotorl ono _ _ , aparl·
Finiahing,
Pool,
Building,
SlrNm, ::Z O.Cb, Prlv•le, klael mont, S2e.BOO. 1114-1i8-1002.
For Chlldron, $55,000, 614-3]S. Sandhill Rd., 27••· (woododl
Z58-8.;;;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;~ Faclont
-ora~ mobil
bulking o11aa. ten
hOmo and cornrnon:iol garogo :11'138' county
wotor. &amp;Omoivlilo R;.hy, 3CJ4.
171-30311 or .loan Ctato 87113431.

Jau,.nce,
equipment
end
vehlele. Send bid•: 1410 Jefferaon Blvd., Boa 10!1 Pt. Ploooom,
wv 25!150, AnN: urk Kloynon.

13

&amp; ,......,.. roqutrtcl,

4:30pm.

rat.rencea. 614 ~256-6089 .

Nuroing, 18 Wanted to Do
j)Jncrat
C.r• C.nt1r,
110 - - -- --,.-.,.,-- - Pinocroot [)r1vo, Gliilpalil , Clhio
Experien ced
Houtecleaner,
45631 &amp;~71 1 2.

You In Locating Ca re To MHI
Your Needs. Call 1-800-Sn-2276
To S.. How We Can Help.

ellen, no peta,

speed,

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62

141GO 2 Br, 1 milo South ol
Eureka, on 51. Rl.7. No pet e,

ot

Would Ass ist

72 Truck s for Sale

5598.

.I

w ~sr

• /1. Q

''

1984 Ford F150, " " "· 351 V-8, '4

River,

Immediate Openi ng• Awallabla

446 -4425.

Oueen wal e rbed , $1 50. 304-E7$-

42

ll'rtctor Ot Nursing, Plnecrast
Ciua Canter, 170 Plnec ras1
Dr1vo, Gllllpall1, Oloio 45631,

ol. ,. \

Wtllt e Uncofn Town Car 198 8,
Loaded! Automatic, U.ather
Seats, Excellent Condl11 on, 1
Owner, 80,000 Mllea, S7,000, 614·

tum ls~I~C·

homa

I)

-;

614-4 467500

lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compl ete

~

• .- \ ,) -1

1979 Ford F-150 V-8 Auto, 54,00(1
Mil e•, $4,500, 614·379·2601.

6Moi92-3010.

Whh Experience. Equal Oppor-

Which

Shape AM!FM radio. Caasett e
and Disc cl.a ng sr. $16,000.00

Fraa Delivery.

d--"

t unity Employ•r. Contac1 The

Service

Carpel $5.00 Up VInyl $4 .49 To

•

Chest11, Available Mid .l.uguat
$275/Mo. Dlpoeh, Reference•,
614-8e1-4888
s.

e.rpetld &amp;

Compet ltva Wages, Dltftrantlal

.

92' vtpor LS 4 DR. Perfecl

$6.50 In Stock, 614-446-i'l44,
Mollohan Carpeta.

Passes
ll lde ntica l
13Mideast Gull
14 Harvest
god dess
15Stra rght - ar row
16 Without lease
pay m ents
188ed canopy
20 1n fro nt
21Food
23Gra in o1 corn
25 Antrtoxms
29 Cook on a
grid dle

Autos tor Sale

Hours: Moo-Sa t, 1-5. 61
0322, 3 mllea out Bulavlllt Rd.

Unlumlohod Z bodroom houlo,

lmmtMjlate Openings FOf Part
/Full Tl me AN, S hiff S upervisor.

CCRN .Child Care Rn ource
Network Is A FriKI Community

71

Rocino, 814-1112·5858.
Romodotlng 3 Bodroomo in

.,ft.,

lr... lily lead to full-lima position with benallt a. C.. ll 614-561J..
4171 to apply.

Oiroc:1or

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by t a rry W r ight

Hou s ehold
Goods

camp Conloy, 3 bodroom, 2 GOOD USED APPliANCES
bathe, $300. plut deposit, 1 yr Washers, dryera, refrig erators,
ioloo, 30-H7S.l812.
r~nges . Skag gt Applla ncet, 76
Now condHion, 3 bodroomo, rei, Vine Strt et , Call 614416-7398, 1·
600-49H499.
dop, no polo, 304.e7S.5!62.

Applegrovo, Woot VA 2S502.

toni

51

4 Mafia chief

8 Autho r John -

An swe r I a Prev rous Puule

'Your
CJtirthday

Saturday. Aug

IJ . J994

aga rnsl rnchna iiOns to lip your hand pre: · you 'll analyze srlua lron s ca ref ully lod ay .
ma turely rn vou r b u smes~ negolta tl ons you m rgh t s trll m ake bad Ju d gm en ts
tod ay Kee p you r aces close to your vest · owrng to prec on ce rv ed vr ews Keep a n
·and don' t play them unlrl you 're sure you open mrnd.
canoverpower lhe tiltll€
ARIES (Mar c h 21-April19) E ven rf

liBRA (Sept. 23· 0&lt;1. 23) Try to la ke a

asked today !honk lwoce be fore becomong

brea th er fr o m yo ur wo r ld ly co ncerns
todav to en1oy.so m e ol the wonde rful
thrngs lrle ha s to off er There's a lol mo re

rn volved rn the problems a h rend has cult1 va te d fo r hrm/ h e rself _ nu s s rt ua lro n
could be thornre r than 11 appea rs

10 iovon g tha n atle mplong lo earn a dolla r
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov 22) You moght

TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) A dosagree·
menl moghl deve lop today be tween you

wea r oul you r ·we lco m e ver y q u rck ly _ and so meone you reall y lik e. Alth ough
t o d ay rf you ' re ·d rc tat o r1a l wtth y o ur ~·au may not be the o ne who precipttates
lrte nds Make ·,, a po rn! to be pleasa nt . it. brte the bu ll et and m ake amends for

Significant relatlon sh rp s m tght develop ;n not pu s hy . wh en tnv olved wrth pals.
the ye ar ah e ad wolh tho s e wh o share SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec . 21) In
your career ambitions _An e nlarged social order to

grafrtY

your ambitious 1nclma uons

the sake of the relationship.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Others might
be w1lhng to help you today. provided you

life could be one ol the peripheral bene· today . you might be te mpted lo use melh· · ask the m noce iy ons 1ea d ol demanding
fits

ods that aren ·t rn keepmg wrth your high· · they do so. Don 't pre ss your luc k with

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Don't be ras h or e s t sta ndards . You could end up wonn1ng
ompulsive today on an important matter and iosong at the same lome
you're hoping to finalize . Posrtrve results CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Abras1ve

pals
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Do a iol ol
comparrson shoppong today ol you 1n1end

rr.usl take p reced ence over speed . Do mdr vtdu ats are lrk ely Ia rrrrl a te y o u far to purc ha se sortie brg·lick et merc han ·
everything w1th care. one step at a trme mo re tha n usual today. Be ca reful you do 1 dtse . Ge t o ut and loo k ar ound t o see
KnoW where to look for roman ce and not respond rn krnd Avotd confrontattons. what you can save. or you may regret rl
1

you 'll

fond

ol .

The

As lro ·Gr a ph AQUARIUS

(Jan .

20· Feb.

19) . later

I'm not agamsl hop1ng and

:::!:

L-.J..Is_L.,_ L.,_ L.6
,...J ~ ~~~~~ ~guf~~~~t~c~!'~~~~~~~~~ee
r----=-------, th at you must work for the
N

ETMEC

I

th1ngs ···· you · · ·•

1--rl-::7-~r-...,..1-,1--lrB-1 E)
.
' - - - '-

e

•
...L.-

•
•
.L.--1-

_
_
..L__j

Compiet,.. the d oud le qunle d

b y l.l:,"g on the m •nong word~
yov d evel op l rorr step No 3 below

1
PR INI NlJMBEREC
LEITERS IN SQU ARE S
UNSC RAMBlE
AI&lt; \ WfR

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Forage· Knack· Motif · Pucker · IMA GE
The mom wa s try 1ng to 1mpress upon her son how to
act on dales "When you are out on a dale :· the mother
told him. "your behav1or IS the m ~rror tn wh1c h you will
d1solav vo ur IM AGE "

AUGUST 12l

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U~S. ponders pre-invasion, warning to Haitian
leaders
or
lly G~ORGE GEDDA
demanding me departure of HalO s three wp m1lttary leaders and the remAssocmted Press Wrzter
.
_.
. .
statement of deposed Preszdcnt Jean-Bertrand Ansudc.
.
WASHINGTON - 11•e Chnton admmJStrauon " sound1n g out oihcr
'' These term s are non -negouable,'' sazd one offictal, who lzke me oihcrs spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity .
.
U.N. Secunty Council mem~r s on Ute posszbility of dell vcring a Imal
The offzcials sa 1d 1t IS zmportant for the mtemauonal community to
pre-mvaswn warnmg to HaiU s mtl1tary rulers 10 surrender power, U. S.
offtctals say.
.
.
. ..
.. _
. . .
speak w1th one voice. They added that1t was not clear whether the Sec uri. The 1dea IS parU y a1med ath?"dmg of! free lance d1plomauc '""'"·
ty Council in 1tiative would take the form of a mzss •on to Haiti by a delet1ves that could encourage lla•u s _leaders to believe the) could ncgot•ate
~at ton of ambassadors ur a lcucr to the Ha ttJall lcadcrsh•p.
conccss•ons, accord1ng to th e offiCials.
_
.
.
~ The Sccunt y Counc•l_ has authonzed the use of mtlttary force to restore
They expressed annoyance wtth a Venez uelan clfort that deviates s•g·
con sutuuon al rul e to Hmu . The Clinton admm1strauon has been Iaymg the
n1ficantl y from Secunty CounCil policy. In hopes of hcadmg off an :n v~ :
groundwork with oihcr countries for an invasion , bu t off•c ials clearl y
ston , Venezuela IS proposmg the departure of arm y ch•cl Raou l Ccdras
hope that cconom•c and d1plomauc pressures wtll mduce Haiu 's leaders
and ihe convcnmg of new clecuons. .
10 step down voluntanly.
In contra st, the Secunty Council last montli approved a rcs.olutton - ~~ been tead ti
nin of a lobal trad mbar o a in st
- ~t.. ···::.it~.
-

Bill closes
assistance
loopholes

li th, 12th &amp; 13th

IVERDALE

Toney was last seen cashing a
paycheck at a grocery store on July
8. Toney's van was discovered
wrecked after it was involved in a
shootout with police in northern
Kentucky , but the driver escaped.
Authorities were told how to
find the body by Roy Stanley
Pearce after he was told ihey were
building a case against him, said
Boyd County Commonwealth's
Attorney J. Stewart Schneider.

FREE

Horooos
&amp;PEPS!

HOMES
(

'.

NEW 14• WIDES ON DISPLAY STARTI GAT

$
.'
,•

t ,,~f'

13lst Year

'
NEW HOME PAYMENTS
st,rting at

'I

$

97
Per Mon.

144 Mons. - 10.25% APR - 10% Down

SPECTACULAR * PRICING
* ON ALL HOMES *

FAcronr
IIEPSON
DUTY

JUNIOR &amp; SENIOR

9 SECTIONAL HOMES ON DISPLAY
WITH SPECIAL SHOW FINANCING

"Nice Selection Of Repos On Display"

SEEOVR
SELECTION
OF USED
HOMES

Inmate's tip
leads police
to man's body

now.··

=

MISS THEEXCITEMENT

Jwait.in g PrcsKicnt Cl inton 's SlgnJ-

PRINCESS, Ky . (AP) - Guided by a man jailed in Michigan, a
search team discov ered a decom posed body believed to be a
Catlemburg contractor who has
be en missing fo r more than a
month .
Law-enforcement officers found
ihe body on a remote plateau Tuesday night after a four-hour searc h
behind an industrial park in Boyd
County.
Coroner Mike Neal said clothing and keys on ihe body matched
a description given by Thomas
Toney' s family. But Neal said he
could not be certain that the body
was that of Toney, an Ironton,
Ohio, native.
"In a way, we thought this was
how it was going to be," said
Toney's stepdaughter. Melanie
Clark. " It' s far from good news ,
but at least we can put him to rest

lour-wheel-dnve vehtcles. and other

lie The border has been me weakest hnk m the embargo.
.
·The U.S. officials said 1m invasion is not imminent because the_admm istrntion is still working out arrangements wllh other countr•es wtl lmg to
send troOps to accompany American forces.
.
.
The Bahamas and Belize have offered troo~s along wnh a thlfd
Caribbean country that does not want w be Jdent1fted for ihc ltme bemg.
Argentina also is expected to participate, and the admmzstrat1on hope s
anomer South American country wtll send troopsaswell.
One offic ial said u1c admini stration wants to limtt ihe number of c~u~ tries volunteeri ng troops. If too man y nauonahues arc represented, u s
more of a pain than a blessing ,'· he saJd.
-==~~=~~==~~=ijl

--sl"-=--: v- · -=

lly JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASIIl NGTO N - Thousand s
of alcohol and drug abusers will be
removed from the federal d•sahility
roll s after 36 months w1th no guarantee of treatm ent under legJS iau on

turc.
The bill , whi c h pa ssed th e
House 431-0 Thursday , also end s
unsupervi sed _c ash paymcnt"' to as
many as 250,000 add1cts who collect Social Sec urity bendtts . It
passed tl1e Senate earlier. _
Clinton is expected to szgn the
bill next we ek . within day s ol
Soc1al Secunty's 59th binhday. Its
main purpo se is to separa te the
agency from th e Ucpartment of
Health and Human Ser vi ces by
Marc h 3 1. 199 5, bu t also wa s
dcstgned to save $808 million over
five years by ughtenmg the rules
for addicts and alcoholics.
" Thi s measure wi ll get cash out
of the hands of many addic ts and
alcoholics fo r whom the disability
che c k ha s become th eir ma in
source of drugs and alcohol ," said
~en . Bill Cohen, R-Mrune.
But Rep . Robert Matsui, DCalif. believes ihe 36-month time
limit on cash benefits will lead 10
more home lcss ncss and human
misery.
"An effort to appear tough will
res ult in a greater home lessness
problem in th e inner citi es, th e
urban Cllies, across the country. "
Matsui sa1d. " It 's a very bad dec ision .
Lawmak ers believe separating
Socia l Sec urity from the department will strengthen its leadership,
insul ate the $325 billion domestic
program from partisan politics. and
rebuild fai th in a reurement system
that - unless changed - will run
out of money by 2029.
Under the measure, Social Security will be run by a commissioner
and overseen by a seven-member
bipartisan advisory board. Th e
commissioner will serve for six
years and can be removed only for
wrongdoing.
The agency will be allowed to
take its budget request directly to
Congress. instead of first going
through the White House Office of
Management and Budget.
Lawmakers believe ihe changes
will allow Social Security to fight
for the resources and work force
needed w run a program mat sends
monthly checks to one in four families and records ihe wages of 135
million workers.
Social Security has had 12 com mis sioners in the past 16 years,
undergone six reorganizations or
realignments since 1975, and lost
one-fifih of its starr in ihe 1980s.
Lawmakers say the revolvingdoor leadership and upheavals have
made 1t tough for the agency to
focus on its long-range mission as
the Baby Boom generation ages,
adding to mounting demands.

Haiti, including the recent dispatch

u.s. eq uipment whelp sea l off Haiu s border w1th the Domzn zcan Repub-

TRADE·INS WELCOME. We'll take AFFORDABLE FINANCING

. ,,.'

mobile homes, cars, trucks, boats,
jet skis, motorcycles or anything
that doesn't eat for this promotion!
Bring your cash, checkbook, piggy
bank or trade-in title! This is the sale
you have been waiting for!! There
will never be abetter time to buy!!!

SPECIAL FIRST·TIME
HOMEBUYERS PROGRAM
SS84 TOTAL DOWN
*180 months -11.75% APR
Includes: Appliances and
delivery to your lot

RIVERDALE
HOMES

~---- , - --

66-1

/
95

- - -- -

We Recommend
The Electric Heat
Pump With All
Our Models

It Heats
It Cools
It Saves

s
'

HOURS:
**Thursday Till 9:00 **
**Friday till900 **
**Saturday Till900 **
Closed Sunday

A Special Supplement To The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 199-1

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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U~S. ponders pre-invasion, warning to Haitian
leaders
or
lly G~ORGE GEDDA
demanding me departure of HalO s three wp m1lttary leaders and the remAssocmted Press Wrzter
.
_.
. .
statement of deposed Preszdcnt Jean-Bertrand Ansudc.
.
WASHINGTON - 11•e Chnton admmJStrauon " sound1n g out oihcr
'' These term s are non -negouable,'' sazd one offictal, who lzke me oihcrs spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity .
.
U.N. Secunty Council mem~r s on Ute posszbility of dell vcring a Imal
The offzcials sa 1d 1t IS zmportant for the mtemauonal community to
pre-mvaswn warnmg to HaiU s mtl1tary rulers 10 surrender power, U. S.
offtctals say.
.
.
. ..
.. _
. . .
speak w1th one voice. They added that1t was not clear whether the Sec uri. The 1dea IS parU y a1med ath?"dmg of! free lance d1plomauc '""'"·
ty Council in 1tiative would take the form of a mzss •on to Haiti by a delet1ves that could encourage lla•u s _leaders to believe the) could ncgot•ate
~at ton of ambassadors ur a lcucr to the Ha ttJall lcadcrsh•p.
conccss•ons, accord1ng to th e offiCials.
_
.
.
~ The Sccunt y Counc•l_ has authonzed the use of mtlttary force to restore
They expressed annoyance wtth a Venez uelan clfort that deviates s•g·
con sutuuon al rul e to Hmu . The Clinton admm1strauon has been Iaymg the
n1ficantl y from Secunty CounCil policy. In hopes of hcadmg off an :n v~ :
groundwork with oihcr countries for an invasion , bu t off•c ials clearl y
ston , Venezuela IS proposmg the departure of arm y ch•cl Raou l Ccdras
hope that cconom•c and d1plomauc pressures wtll mduce Haiu 's leaders
and ihe convcnmg of new clecuons. .
10 step down voluntanly.
In contra st, the Secunty Council last montli approved a rcs.olutton - ~~ been tead ti
nin of a lobal trad mbar o a in st
- ~t.. ···::.it~.
-

Bill closes
assistance
loopholes

li th, 12th &amp; 13th

IVERDALE

Toney was last seen cashing a
paycheck at a grocery store on July
8. Toney's van was discovered
wrecked after it was involved in a
shootout with police in northern
Kentucky , but the driver escaped.
Authorities were told how to
find the body by Roy Stanley
Pearce after he was told ihey were
building a case against him, said
Boyd County Commonwealth's
Attorney J. Stewart Schneider.

FREE

Horooos
&amp;PEPS!

HOMES
(

'.

NEW 14• WIDES ON DISPLAY STARTI GAT

$
.'
,•

t ,,~f'

13lst Year

'
NEW HOME PAYMENTS
st,rting at

'I

$

97
Per Mon.

144 Mons. - 10.25% APR - 10% Down

SPECTACULAR * PRICING
* ON ALL HOMES *

FAcronr
IIEPSON
DUTY

JUNIOR &amp; SENIOR

9 SECTIONAL HOMES ON DISPLAY
WITH SPECIAL SHOW FINANCING

"Nice Selection Of Repos On Display"

SEEOVR
SELECTION
OF USED
HOMES

Inmate's tip
leads police
to man's body

now.··

=

MISS THEEXCITEMENT

Jwait.in g PrcsKicnt Cl inton 's SlgnJ-

PRINCESS, Ky . (AP) - Guided by a man jailed in Michigan, a
search team discov ered a decom posed body believed to be a
Catlemburg contractor who has
be en missing fo r more than a
month .
Law-enforcement officers found
ihe body on a remote plateau Tuesday night after a four-hour searc h
behind an industrial park in Boyd
County.
Coroner Mike Neal said clothing and keys on ihe body matched
a description given by Thomas
Toney' s family. But Neal said he
could not be certain that the body
was that of Toney, an Ironton,
Ohio, native.
"In a way, we thought this was
how it was going to be," said
Toney's stepdaughter. Melanie
Clark. " It' s far from good news ,
but at least we can put him to rest

lour-wheel-dnve vehtcles. and other

lie The border has been me weakest hnk m the embargo.
.
·The U.S. officials said 1m invasion is not imminent because the_admm istrntion is still working out arrangements wllh other countr•es wtl lmg to
send troOps to accompany American forces.
.
.
The Bahamas and Belize have offered troo~s along wnh a thlfd
Caribbean country that does not want w be Jdent1fted for ihc ltme bemg.
Argentina also is expected to participate, and the admmzstrat1on hope s
anomer South American country wtll send troopsaswell.
One offic ial said u1c admini stration wants to limtt ihe number of c~u~ tries volunteeri ng troops. If too man y nauonahues arc represented, u s
more of a pain than a blessing ,'· he saJd.
-==~~=~~==~~=ijl

--sl"-=--: v- · -=

lly JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASIIl NGTO N - Thousand s
of alcohol and drug abusers will be
removed from the federal d•sahility
roll s after 36 months w1th no guarantee of treatm ent under legJS iau on

turc.
The bill , whi c h pa ssed th e
House 431-0 Thursday , also end s
unsupervi sed _c ash paymcnt"' to as
many as 250,000 add1cts who collect Social Sec urity bendtts . It
passed tl1e Senate earlier. _
Clinton is expected to szgn the
bill next we ek . within day s ol
Soc1al Secunty's 59th binhday. Its
main purpo se is to separa te the
agency from th e Ucpartment of
Health and Human Ser vi ces by
Marc h 3 1. 199 5, bu t also wa s
dcstgned to save $808 million over
five years by ughtenmg the rules
for addicts and alcoholics.
" Thi s measure wi ll get cash out
of the hands of many addic ts and
alcoholics fo r whom the disability
che c k ha s become th eir ma in
source of drugs and alcohol ," said
~en . Bill Cohen, R-Mrune.
But Rep . Robert Matsui, DCalif. believes ihe 36-month time
limit on cash benefits will lead 10
more home lcss ncss and human
misery.
"An effort to appear tough will
res ult in a greater home lessness
problem in th e inner citi es, th e
urban Cllies, across the country. "
Matsui sa1d. " It 's a very bad dec ision .
Lawmak ers believe separating
Socia l Sec urity from the department will strengthen its leadership,
insul ate the $325 billion domestic
program from partisan politics. and
rebuild fai th in a reurement system
that - unless changed - will run
out of money by 2029.
Under the measure, Social Security will be run by a commissioner
and overseen by a seven-member
bipartisan advisory board. Th e
commissioner will serve for six
years and can be removed only for
wrongdoing.
The agency will be allowed to
take its budget request directly to
Congress. instead of first going
through the White House Office of
Management and Budget.
Lawmakers believe ihe changes
will allow Social Security to fight
for the resources and work force
needed w run a program mat sends
monthly checks to one in four families and records ihe wages of 135
million workers.
Social Security has had 12 com mis sioners in the past 16 years,
undergone six reorganizations or
realignments since 1975, and lost
one-fifih of its starr in ihe 1980s.
Lawmakers say the revolvingdoor leadership and upheavals have
made 1t tough for the agency to
focus on its long-range mission as
the Baby Boom generation ages,
adding to mounting demands.

Haiti, including the recent dispatch

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A Special Supplement To The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 199-1

�1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Three
Page Two-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Plenty of action on tap for 1994 fairgoers
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
So vacation ' s over, the kids
are bored, and somehow you feel
stuck in that dull interlude
between the end-of-fun summer
activities and the beginning of
school.
Cheer up, for next week 's fair
offers plenty of action.,-activities
just right to help shake those doldrums which have set in.
From horse racing to arm
wrestling, from cooking contests
to cattle judging, from professional entertainers to local performers, from carnival rides to
clown antics , the 131 st Meigs
County Fair oiTcrs it all.
And one of the nice things
about it is that you can enjoy six
days of fun for a $12 season tickcL
That ticket entitles the holder
to gate admission, Monday
through Saturday, free parking,
viewing of all the exhibits in all
of the buildings, participation on
numerous activities, as well as all
the cntenainmcnt and events taking place at both the grandstand,
on the hill stage, in the arena, and
on the race track.
Gates open at 7 a.m. and close
at midnight each day of the fair.
General admission, for
those planning to attend only a
day or two, is $5 except on
Wednesday which is Kiddie Day.
That day from 7 a.m . to 2 p.m.
everyone is admiued for $3. And
that "everyone" means every one,
not just kids.
For those paying the daily gate
admission, there is no charge for

carnival rides. ··However, holders
of membership, season or 4-H
tickets must pay $3 at the ride
booth each day to ride.
Senior Citizens day is Thursday and those over 60 will be
admitted free until 2 p.m. Proof
of age will be required at the
gate.
Again this year the Middleport
Pentecostal Church will be handling parking for fairgocrs.
And a word of advice from
Dan Smith, president of the fair
board, to parents who let their
kids go oiT and have fun on their
own. Make arrangements before
hand to meet them somewhere at
a cenain time because there will
nor be a paging service on the
grounds. So making advance
arrangements can save a lot of
frustration for children and their
parents.
Grandstand Evening Events
As in previous years the kickoff to the fair will come on Sunday evening with a religious service at 7:30 p.m. at the grandstand by the Meigs County Ministerial Association.
A wide variety of entertainment has been scheduled, so there
is sure to be something for everyone.
If you're into high energy
events, with thrills and spills,
schedule Monday and Tuesday
evenings at the gmndstand.
Monday night there will be
plenty of excitement as
motocross participants thrill spectators with their screaming
machines and aeriel antics.
The demolition derby is set for

.

THE MIDWAY SCENE - What's a fair without a rerris wheel, a carousel, the cars
tbat go round and round. The I994 fair will have those and lots more when the action begins
Monday. Hours for the carnival rides are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, I to 4:30
and 6 toll p.m.; Wednesday (Kiddie Day) noon to 4:30 and 6 toll; and Saturday noon to S
and 6 to II p.m. Holders or membership, season or 4-H tickets can ride all day by paying $3
at the ride office. A daily admission charge of $5 includes the rides.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. and always
pulls an overflow crowd as it
continues year are year to be one
of the most popular events at the
fair. With the high prizes offered
again this year, it's expected to
pull in plenty of cars.
Wednesday night's grandstand
feature wiU be the rising country
star Ronna Reeves. She has
gained a reputation for dynamic
stage shows and a unique style
of singing.
Ronnie McDowell, known for
sound-alike Ellis voice, will perform on Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
grandstand. He was selected by
Priscilla Presley to do the music
on ABC's television series,
"Elvis", on the early years of

1994 Meigs fair dedicated to
Clarence 'Tommy' Henderson
The 1994 Meigs County Fair
is dedicated to the memory of
Clarence "Tommy" Henderson,
who SCIVed on the Meigs County
Agricultural Society for 28 years.
He was fust elected to the Board
ofDirectors in 1965.

In a tribute to Mr. Henderson,
the board members praised him
for his "excellent energy and his
steadfast dedication to the Meigs
County Fair". .
For many of the years he
served on the fair board, Mr. and

Elvis' career.
Friday night's grandstand feature will be the truck and semi
pull beginning at 7:30 p.m., and
on Saturday night at 8 p.m. the
arm wrestling tournament will
take place.
On the hill stage
Numerous local entertainers,
as well as a couple of out-of-town
groups will be performing on the
hill stage.
Monday fairgoers can hear
God's Kidz at 5 p.m. .just before
the Junior Fair king and queen
crowning takes place.
Tuesday has been designated
gospel night, and the Racine duet,
Pauy Hensler and Dorothy Bailey, who perform under the name
of "Joy" will have an hour's concert using guitar and studio tapes
beginning at 6 p.m.
They will be followed at 7

p.m. by ·the River Valley Boys of
Lancaster. At 2 p.m. that day
"Out of the Blue" will perform.
Making their first appearance
at the fair will be Nancy Swartz'
"Dazzling Dolls", a baton group,
who will present routines at II
a.m. Wednesday.
That evening at 9 p.m. the
Midnight Cloggers under the
direction of Bruce Wolfe will
present a show 'titled "Midnight
Majestic" which Wolfe says will
feature the cloggers in sparkling
costuming with special lighting
and other effects.
The popular "Classics" who
specialize in the old familiar
songs will be on the hill stage at I
p.m. on Thursday, while Friday's
schedule has the "Back Porch
Swing Band" on stage at 5, and
the Belles and Beaus western
square dancers there at 6:30 p.m.

Mrs. Henderson operated a 226
acre dairy farm. They sold their
dairy herd in 1986 but for all of
the years before then, Mr. Henderson milked the cows before
daylight and arrived at the fair by
8 a.m., ready to start a hard day's
work, according to the tribute
from the fair board.
"In the evening, he went home
to milk the cows apin but always
returned to the fair to wort wherever he was needed until the last
cunain went down and the stage
was closed and the carousel and
its calliope were still.
"Only then would Clarence
go home to catch a few hours'
sleep before the routine commenced again and again until fair
week ended," the tribute continued.
PHONE NUMBERS
Senior Fair Board
~-6954

Junior Fair Board
992-992-405 I

Clarence 'q'ommy" Henderson

'Youth
Making a Difference,'
theme of this year's junior f ·

RaceOffiCC
992-4052

POPULAR FAIR SPORT- Horse racing, both barness
and quarter bone, bas always been a popular sport at county

rain, and Melp County Is no exception. Fairgoers wiD be able
to watch harness races on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday
beginning at 11:30 each day, ud quarter borse races at noon on
Saturday.

Style Show
Always a highlight of fair
activities is the style show, set
this year for Wednesday at 2 p.m.
on the hill stage.
Many of the over 60 4- H
members who had clothing pro·ects this year will be modeling
J
d
their garments on a stage ccomted with the theme "Fashion
Aashbacks".
At the style revue, the 1994
Fashion Boar d mcm be rs WI II be
announced. The board is a small
group of girls who were selected
on the basis of their poise, modeling ability and total look. During
thc year they serve, th~y have
opportunities to part1c1pate m
special activities includmg educational workshops, and to help
develop the theme and decorations for the next year's annual
style show.

· g a $2 fee. Prizes are $15, $10,

andT~S~n there's the traditional

~e. ~ight for kiddies which will
. on the hill
1 kc . ace at 6 p.m
d.
f 1
stage and surroun mg area o lowing the talent show. There
will be games for dlffere~t age
groups and prizes for the wm~ers.
There is no charge to part1c1pate
and all children at the fair arc
invited to participate.
· ·
Also on the al!enda of acuv~ties is the "slave't' aucuon. That s
where board members sell an
hour of their time to the highest
bidder with the proceeds going to
benefit the many progr.~ms sponsored by the Meigs County Jumor
Fair.
The auction will take place on
Tuesday at about 5 p.m . or just
after the juniorfair steer show.
Cleaning livestock pens and
working in food booth stands. arc
just a couple of the kmds of JObs
Guys and Gals Lead Class
which the board member perWednesday afternoon will form.
offer a repeat of a successful new
event from 1993.
Guys and Gal s Lead Classes
are scheduled to begm at noon m
the show arena. This competition
is for anyone ages three through
adult.
Contestants wear outfits that
contain a percentage of wool or is
entirely made from wool fabnc
FAIR ROYALTY_ These 4-H members were selected to represent their respective aniand lead a breeding sheep or marmal project interests at the I3Ist Meigs County Junior Fair next week. _Tbey are, lert t~
ket lamb. Lambs may be borright, seated, princesses Leslie Parker, swine; Melissa Guess, pout~&gt;:; Jean~e Newe.ll, ~un~y,
rowed from junior fair or open
Chastity Judd, bed; and standing, Susan Grueser, horse; Kr1st1 Warn~r, da1ry, M1.t~
class exhibitors.
Guess, poultry prince; Josh Rousb, bunny prince; Tara Grueser, goat prmcess, and R1 •
The judges base their selection
Barringer, wool princess.
on costume or outfit worn, 50
points; poise and appearance, 25
names of the 1994 royalty remain points; and conttol and presentaBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH zens, that they have pride in w~at a secret until then.
tion of the animal, 25 pomts.
they're doing and what they re
Sentinel News Starr
The couple to represent the
. -about.
"Youth-Making a Difference"
Pet activities
They are there to allow the fair in that capacity was selected
is the theme of the programs, rest of us to share in their accom- last month by a panel of jud~es
Something new in this year's
on the basis of their partic1pauon schedule of events is a 4-H dog
exhibits, and the parade at the plishments and that pride.
1994 Meigs County Junior Fair to
It is, indeed, a time where in activities, poise and personali- obedience show.
.
The show will take place on
be staged next week on the Rock young people have the opportuni- ty.
The 1993 queen, Stephame Friday at II a.m. in the show
Springs Fairgrounds.
ty to show that they are "making
Sayre of Racine, will be on hand arena
Hundreds of youth in 4-H a difference".
to participate in the ceremony
4-H boys and girls v.:ith dog
Clubs, FFA, FHA, girl and boy
wh1ch will kickoff a busy week projects will take theu dogs
scouts, and members of the VocaYouth Night
tional Industrial Clubs of AmeriPublic recognition will come for the new king and queen who through basic commands, and a
ca will be taking projects to the on Saturday night at Youth Night will be attending all major junior series of patterns and other techfair.
to be held in the show arena at 7 fair events and presenting ribbons niques for the show spectators.
and awards at many during the
All are designed to help them p.m.
But before that at 9 am. in the
week.
learn new skills, build leadership
arena,
the Junior Fair Board will
At that time each of the orgaqualities, develop good citizen- nizations exhibiting at the fair
have its annual pet show.
ship, and explore career options.
The show is open to all Meigs
will recognize outstanding youth
Parade
For many of them the county in their respective groups and
·County
residents and the cateAs in previous years, the
fair is the highlight of their pro- present them with trophies and parade is expected to be a high- gories include best dog, cat,
ject work, the culmination of other awards. Those boys and light of the junior fair activities.
rodent, most unusual, best bird,
numerous spring and, summer girls who were selected t&lt;? ta~e
It is scheduled to take place at best dressed, best fish, and most
activities.
their projects to ~ state fBI!.w1ll 3:30 p.m. on the race track and talented animal.
It is a special place where also be given spcc1al recogmu~.
Plaques will ~ awarded in. the
will feature marching units,
STATE FASHION BOARD
young people show what they
various
categones to the fust
It will generally be an ev~mng floats, and visiting royalty from
grow and sew, prove what which will showcase the achieve- Southeastern Ohio counties.
place winners and rosettes to the NOMINEE- Kelle1 Grueser,
a member or tbe Me1gs County
they've learned through demon- ments of Meigs County youth.
Meigs C?u~tr princ.es and second and third place winners.
strations, display their creativity
There is a entry fee of $1.50 Fasbioo Board, was selected as
princesses w1ll JOin the king and
and confirm to others their perand the deadline to enter a pet is the I994 nominee to the Ohio
. queen and their court in the Wednesday.
Royalty to be nam~
State Board. Her she models a
sonal growth and development
Again this year .the Juruor F81r parade, after which the visiting
pants suit witb matching bat
through it all.
dignitaries will be guests at the
It is a special time since it pro- king and queen w1ll be crowned qucen's reception.
Other activities
which she made as her 4-H
vides young people the opponu- on the opening day of the fair.
A talent show has been sched- clothing project tbis year. It
A special invitation is being
The announcement and crownnity through their participation to
uled
by the Junior Fair Board for took grand champion in tbe
issued to former Meigs County
let thousands of fairgocrs know ing have been set for 6 p.m. on Junior Fair queens to join the Thursday at 4 p.m. on the hill category, "Clothes ror High
that they've accepted t~e ch.a~­ Monday night, the opening day of
stage. Anyone can enter by pay- School and Beyond".
lcnge of being producuve c111- the fair, on the hill stage. The parade.
.
•.... ... ..... "'.,.to' ....... ............ _............. . ~--· ..
' ' '

JfiJ····~·:

�Page Four-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Five

Season fair
Country singer Ronna Reeves to passes
on sale
entertain fair crowd Wednesday
Ronna Reeves, rising country
star who has finally come mto her
own, wtll be performing at the
Metgs County Fair grandstand at
8 p.m. on Wednesday.
Long known for her dynamic
stage shows and her way wilh a
ballad, Reeves has combined an
adventurous mix of songs with
her most compelling vocals to
date for an album sure to cap her
JOurney as a nsmg country star.
She has ~.ecently finished a
new ~.lbum, What Comes Naturally . and says she thtnks it
showcases her as well as she's
cver been showcased. It shows
her full range as an artist, sizzling
wtth a self-assured at_titude and
smoldenng wuh achmgly reoder~d ton:h songs as well.
A lot of people. have always
Lhought of me as thiS sweet httle
smger who can d~ ballads really
well, and when LhJS c~mes on, tCs
like~~· a whole.~ifferent atutude, . Ree~es says. It grabs your
attenUon nght awa_y and I think
people arc really gomg to like il"
. Reeves pndes herself on her
hve _shows_. Wilh Lhe combination
~f sunmenng energy and powerul ballads •. the show has won ~er
an mcr_easmgly loyal followmg
even wtlhout Top Ten hits to Lhis
pomt.
..
1.!(' to stay very real," she
says. purposely stay away from

a choreographed show, focusing
on dehvenng my energy straight
to Lhe crowd just as it comes out
of me. I try to stay spontaneous
and keep the audience involved
as much as possible."
Reeves has played at Radio
City Music Hall and was pan of
the TNN Christmas special
"Home for the Holidays," with
Joe Diffie, Lorrie Morgan and
Doug Stone. She was in a documentary celebrating Lhe influence
of Patsy Cline on a new generalion of female country singers
and was featured in a CBS television special, "Women of Country
Music."
With a strong sense of social
commitment, Reeves has used
her increasing visibility to make a
number of positive contributions.
She has done point-of-purchase
stand-up displays and posters to
encourage responsibility in consumption of alcohol. She has also
taped public service announcements for seat belt use in a projoct led by Garl.h Brooks.
Her music renects this concern for olhers. The song "Staytng Gone" deals with spousal
abuse and she sees the im ortance of her commitment to ~esc
issues.
Ree ves ' hard wor..'- smce
·
she
was I I years old has paid off
When she was 17, she had an 18:

month gig opening lor George having. "I want people to get
StratL Soon after that, she was Lhctr money's wonh, to feel like
openmg for acts such as The they ~ere entertained," Reeves
Judds, Garth Brooks, Randy says. I want them to leave and
Travts, Reba McEntire, Lee say, 'That was wonh every cent
Greenwood and Ronnie Milsap.
that I paid for the show."' She
V tbrancy Seems to run Lhrough also says she'll guarantee that
her show and songs. She says it is she'll give Lhem evcrylhing she's
JUSt a reflocuon of Lhe fun she is got.

Season passes and member·
ship tickets for the Meigs County
Fair on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds next week arc still on
sale.

The Little Miss and Mister
Meigs County contest will be
held at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday at
the hill stage.
Only one boy and one girl
between 4 and 7 years will be
awarded titles in the contesl To
participate children must be four
years of age by Aug. 15, 1994 but
not more than 8 years of age by
Aug. 15, 1994 in order to compete and they must reside in
Meigs County.
The judging will be done by a

Dan Smith, president of the
Metgs County Agriculture Society which stages the fair said that
membership tickets in addition to
granting admission to the fair
give Lhe holder voting privileges.
The membership tickets sell for
$13, and are available from the
Sugar Run Aour Mill, Pomeroy,
or any board member. They are
avatlable only to individuals, not
compantes or organizations.
. Regular season passes, which
gtve gate admission and free
pa~king. for your car during the
enure fatr, are $12.
Those tickets are on sale at
Joe's Country Market, Main
Street, Rutland; Waid Cross
Sons, Racine; Baum Lumber Co.,
Chester; Sugar Run Aour Mill,
Swisher-Lohse
Pharmacy,
McDonald's Gloeckner's Rcstaura_nt, ~II of Pomeroy; Nita Jean
Ruchte, Tuppers Plains· Whaley's Grocery, Route 68i. Darwm; Helen Baer, Syracuse;
Dorsel Larkins, Long Bottom;
Dans 290 North Second St., Middleport; Five Points Express,
Route 7, near Aatwoods Road .
and Reeds Country Store,
· Reedsville.

RONNA REEVES

Annual pretty baby contest Little Miss, Mister
Contest set Aug. 17
to be held last da of fair

School exhibits on display

Baby, baby, baby!
Following tradition, the fair
board will again stage Lhe annual
pretty baby contest.
The pretty baby contest will be
in the show ring at 9:15a.m. Saturday, Lhe final day of Lhe fair.
Breakdown on the various categories are: birth to three
monlhs, must be Lhrce monlhs old
before Aug. 15, 1993; three
monlhs to six monlhs, cannot be
sill months of age before Aug. 15,
1994; stx months to 12 months,

cannot be one year of age before
Aug. 15, 1994; 12 monlhs to 18
months, cannot be over 18
months of age before Aug. 15,
1994; 18 months to two years,
cannot be over two years of age
as of Aug. 15, 1994; two years to
three, cannot be three years of
age as of Aug. 15, 1994; three
years to four, cannot be four
yearsofageasofAug. I5,1994.
One girl and one boy will be
selected winner from each age
category by out of county judges.

To All The People Who
Have Worked So Very Hard

To Make The 131st Meigs
County Fair Possihle.

WE ARE ·PROUD OF
OUR COUNTY FAIR!

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
AUGUST 15TH THRU 20TH

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Hundreds of students across lcal.her cratt, weavmg, kniuing,
Meigs County will be exhibiting needlework. paintings, or ceramprojects in the areas of science ics.
Only students enrolled in
and arts and crafts in Lhe annual
Meigs County schools last year
schools
exhibit
in
the
senior
fair
All entries will receive a pantciare eligible to display for compepation ribbon. Winners in each building during fair week.
The science exhibits will be tition . Judges will judge each
category will receive gift cenifidirectly related to topics in exhibit on its own merits and
cates.
award a blue ribbon with $1.50
All babies will be registered health, conservation, earth sci- premium; a red ribbon with $1
ence,
biology,
botany,
physics
or
the day of the ~ontest between
premium, or white ribbon wilh a
8:30 a.m.-9: 15 a.m. Each entrant chemistry. while the arts and 50 cent premium. The judging
crafts
exhibits
have
a
broader
must pay a $1 fee.
will be done on the basis of
All ages are to be dressed in range and will consist of handi- appearance, originality, and edushorts, sunsuits or play clothes craft, woodworking, metal work, cational value.
only.
Twins will be judged as individuals and out-of-county residents will be the judges.

Sweet Greetings Bake Shop

r-~-----------MEicscouNT¥-iA!R---------------1

UTILE MISS or LITTLE MISTER CONI'EST

NAME•------------------------------------------------BOY
l'looae No._ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I

a________

GIRLa_

CONGRATULATIONS

panel from outside the county
and will include an interviewing
session with each child.
Twins will he judged as indi viduals.
Children must be regi stered by
noon on Saturday to complete
and the registration form mi.tst be
accompaniCil by a $1 fee. Superintendent of the contest is Carolyn Ritchie, with Mary Rose as
chairman.
All contestants will get a (ibbon for entering.

BIRTH DAT''-------------------------------------------

PAR~'N~•--------------------------------------ADDRESSa

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• Cookie Bouquets
• Fresh Baked Breads
Pomeroy, OH

992-6632

MEIGS COUNTY

eo- Eatrya (Chec:k)
&lt; &gt;u111e tu.. eo-

) IJIIIe Mloler Coa·s...lappll...aioa wlllo tl.OO
each eltild ea....... lo
Cualya Rltcltie. 47976 !haae lb. 681, Reealmlle, 08 45772, (614) 667-3882.

AUGUST
15th- 20th

~-------------------------------------------~
Grange exhibits to
Best Wishes For
be judged Monday

"Don't Miss It"

&lt;

"Doorway to Communily
Action" is this year's theme
which :Lhe Granges will carry out
in preparing Lheir exhibits at the
!31st Meigs County Fair.
The exhibits will be judged on
Monday at 9 a.m. using a point
system ~ 20 points for origmality, ideas and materials; 15 for
attractiveness, the ability· to
attract and hold auention; 10 for
appearance and neatness, visibility and lettering; 2S for Grange
teachings, ideas and principles of
the grange; 20 for a~hicvement
goals and community service; ·
five for farm products, and five
for handicraft displays.
Rules specify that the closed
Bible and nag may be used, but
Lhat no other regalia is permitted.
All articles exhibited by a Grange
must be produced or made by
members of that Gran~c.
Each grange exhibtting wiU be
awarded $75.

ror

Another Soeeessfol
Meigs County Fair
Congratulations
To Ill The People

Who Work So
Hard to Make Our
County Fair A
Huge Success!

FRED HOFFMAN
MEIGS COUNn COMMISSIONER
Hope To See You At The Fair!
Pel. lor by FIM Hollman, 251 8o. Fourth Ave., lllddl1p aIt, 011. 45710.

•MUSIC
•FOOD

-GAMES
•EXHIBITS

PLUS MUCH MORE .••

After You .Visit The Fair
Stop By and See Usf

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
LOCATED AT THE END OF THE POMEROY BRIDGE
992·2556
POMEROY, OHIO

�Page Six-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Theme announced for
Monday's flower show
"!75th Anniversary, Meigs
And while variety is the spice
Co unty " is the theme for the of life, it is also true in arrangeflower shows to be staged at the ment style.
131 st Meigs County Fair under
The classes lend themselves to
th e cooperative sponsorship of the usc of specific flowers in certhe Meigs County Agricultural tain desi~ns giving arrangers an
Society.
opportumty to demonstrate their
The first show will take place aesthetic as well as technical
Monday and the second show skill.
will be Thursday with both in the
This year exhibitors will be
senior fair building on the hill .
displaying designs which delve
Addalou Lewis is the superin- into themes of yestcryear in cartendent and Pauline Atkins, Janet rying out the county's !75th
Bolin, Alice Thompson, Belly anniversary - classes like
Dean, Peggy Crane and Karen "Native Americans", using the
Werry are co-chairpersons. The Indian influence; "Lillie Red
slhows give gardners a plac e to School House", featuring red;
di splay what they grow and "Circuit Rider", the religious
demonstrate what they know intcrpretation; "Harvest Dinner",
when it comes to arranging flow - incorporating fruits and vegetaers to fit criteria set by the sched- bles with flowers; "Outdoor
ule ..
Plumbing", an abstract design.
There are classes for junior
Open judging of the exhibits
and senior exhibitors in both the will take place at I p.m. on the
horticulture and artistic arrange- day of each show and will be
ments divisions.
done by an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden

McDowell to perform
Thursday at Meigs fair

DEMONSTRATING ARRANGEMENTS- Alice Thompson, tert, and Peggy Crane,
demonstrate arrangements suitable ror two classes in the 1994 Meigs County Fair nower
show. For "Native Americans", Crane uses an Indian figurine with pampas grass and colored corn, while Thompson shows a design which would fit into the"Log Cabin" class.
Clubs. All entries must be in
place by noon.
Ribbons and premiums ranging from $2 to $1.25 will be
awarded in all classes of both
shows with the exception of the
non-competitite educational

RONNIE MCDOWELL

classes.
arrangements, and horticulture
Special awards will also be sweepstakes will be awarded .
given in each division.
There will also be creativity
In both the senior and junior rosette to be awarded in the
divisions, a best of show and senior division. Premiums will
reserve best of show in artistic range from $1 to $3 for special
awards.

Squads will be at fair
The Meigs County Emergency Byer added.
Squads will be on the g.,und
Medical Service will be at lhe f311'
in full force to handle unexpected from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.
The schedule is as foUows:
medical emergencies and accidents which occur on the Rock
Monday: Tuppers Plains and
Springs Fairgrounds during the the Reedsville first responders .
Pomeroy fire department will
131st fair.
EMS administrator Bob Byer stand by for moiOCross.
said that a unit will be on the hill
Tuesday: Middleport with
and that when the horses are rae- Pomeroy fue department covering, the tractors are pulling, and ing the demolition derby.
motocross, thrill show, and
Wednesday: Racine.
Thursday: Pomeroy squads
demolition are going on, a squad
will be in the centerfield across with Racine fire department covfrom the grandstand ready to ering the tractor and truck pull
assistance.
show.
Friday: Rutland and Columbia
About 60 EMS voluntcers will
provide services at the Meigs first responders, wilh Middleport
County Fair, Byer said.
covering the truck pull.
In addition the mobile comSaturday: Syracuse with Syramand post wiD be on the grounds cuse fire department handling the
all week. It will be stationed tractor pulls in the infield and the
beside the senior fair building arm wrestling.
Byer said that Pomeroy will
and personnel wiD be on hand to
not only dispatch emergency ~r- cover calls to the grounds when
sonnel and squads but to provtde · there is not a unit already SIBinformation on the county's tioned there. Back-up covera11e
emergency systcm, and give rou- will be provided as usually dtstine first aid and medical care, patched in the event a squad is
take blood pressures, and general- unavailable to cover their
ly provide service to fair$oers.
response area, he said.
He also said that where extra
This year, a booth will be set
up in the new commercial build- coverage is needed to cover the
ing where pamphlets about harness racing and the infield
injury, sickness, storms, weather events, personnel from other
and other safety instructions will squads will be used. However,
be distributed.
Byer said that it will be up to the
A demonsb'ation of the coun- squad who has the responsibility
ty's amateur radio communica- for the day to request extra coverlion networlc should also be held, age.
"·

Fair to offer voter registration and mock elections
Meigs County fairgoers can fairs , being held stale wide, and at
register to vote and also partici- 35 of those fairs, mock elections
pate in a mock election being will also be held. Meigs County
conducted by the office of Secre- is one of those fairs where both
tary of State Bob Taft
will be offered.
Voter registration wilt be carFairgocrs may vote on these
ried out at 65 of the 87 county issues:

- Should students have to
pass a proficiency lest to receive
a high school diploma?
- Do you approve of the new
law requiring a five-day waiting
period for the purchase of a handgun (the Brady Bill)?

- Do you agree with the
"three-strikes-you're out" proposal for punishing criminals?
- Should the school year be
lengthened?
Those over 18 will also be
asked"

- Do you plan to vote in the
statewide general election on
Nov. 8.
Results of the mock elections
will be available from the local
boards of elections at the conclusion of the fair.

Take Your Family And Enjoy

THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

AUGUST 15th- 20th

Serving The Areas Of
Mason and Jackson Counties in WV • Gallia and Meigs Counties in OH
675-3398

1410 JEFFERSON BLVD.
POINT PLE-4-SANT

RESERVE CHAMPION
- Kristina Kennedy took
reserve champion In ''Clothes
for Middle School" for this
outfit. It Is a long-sleeved
princess style dress in noral
design with a crocheted vest.

, To model at
state fair

• ••••••• ••

(LOCAL CALLING AREA)

Ronnie McDowell, who was
the singing voice on the ABC-TV
movie "Elvis and Me" in 1988,
will be performing at 8 p .m.
Thursday at the Meigs County
Fair.
McDowell, one of 10 children,
never performed in public
because of his shyness until he
joined the Navy and finally got
up on stage aboard the U.S .S .
Hancock to sing to his shipmatcs.
Since then, McDowell has
developed many abilities. He has
appeared on television, recorded
songs, created videos, given
interviews, painted, produced and

(OUTSIDE LOCAL CALLING AREA)

1-800-766-0553

1994·

Thirteen Meigs County 4-H
111embers wiD travel to Columbus
Thursday to model in the style
revue at the Ohio Stale Fair.
The 13 were selected from
more than 60 Meigs 4-H members who did clothing projects,
and participate in the annual local
style revue last month.
All received grand cluunpion
awards on their projects.
nie group includes Melissa ·
Barringer, Triffany Hensley,
Bridget Vaughan, Amanda
Neece, Pamela Necc:C, Jill Lemley, Kristina Kennedy, Kelley
Grueser, Christy Drake, Noelfe
Pickens, Anna Wolf, Denise
Shenefield, and Heather WeD.
~ I

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Meigs Co.
Fair
AUGUST
15-16-17-18-19-20

SEE YOU THERE

QUALITY PRINT SHOP
255-Mill ST.

MIDDUPOIT
992·3345 oi992·3394

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perfonned live on stage.
Priscilla Presley to do the music
McDowell has recorded the on ABC's television series about
audio on many tv commercials the early years of Elvis ' career
for Miller Lite, Red Lobster, title "Elvis."
Kentucky Fried Chicken and the
McDowell performs with a
King Candy Company in Hol- four-member band called "The
land.
Rhythm Kings."
Most people will remember
him for his connections witft
Elvis Presley. He sang 36 songs
on the soundtrack "Elvis", was
the voice for the TV -movie
"Elvis and the Beauty Queen,"
was the singing voice for the
ABC-TV movie "Elvis and Me,"
and was personally selected by

See you at the Fair!

Elm St.

Racine

949-9200

MEIGS COUNTY

August
15th- 20th

•FUN • THRILLS •ATTUCTIONS
Support The Youth of
Meigs County.
THE

~e4_
THE OHIO !'ALLEY

ure Joilf~fJif
ehw;ole,t ()frk q£()

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1994 Meigs. County. Fair.Editioo-Page Nine

Page Eigbt-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Trucks and tractors; not ·ust farm tools
Trucks and tractors, a necessary tool on today's fanns, also
constitute a major ingredient in
fair activities.
Trucks and tractors will be in
the spotlight once again this year
as they are featured in five different events: the antique tractor
pull and local yokel truck pull,
the tractor pull, the truck and

Hospital
personnel will
be at '94 fair
In conjunction with their
pledge to community service,
personnel of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will again be at the
Meigs County Fair.
Healthcare personnel will
offer blood pressure and blood
sugar tests to the public free of
charge. Personnel also will distribute souvenirs as well as health
care literature including the latest
information on cancer to visitors.
Visitors to the hospital's booth,
which will be located in the
newer Senior Fair Commercial
Building, arc also invited to register for four door prizes to. be
awarded after the fair. The door
prizes will be $25 gift certificates
at the Pomeroy Kroger Store.
The hospital b.ooth will be
operating from I to 9 p.m., Monday through Friday.

semi-truck pull and the kiddie
tractor pull. In addition, judging
will be held on the antique fann
tractor and equipment exhibit.
The truck and semi truck pull
will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m.
on the pulling track. Classes and
entry fees are as follows: 6,000
pound 4-wheel-drive stock, $15;
5,800 pound 4-wheel-drive modified, $20; 5,800 pound 4-wheeldrive super stock, $20; 6,200
pound 4-wheel-drive modified,
$20; 19,500 pound semi truck,
$20; and 24,500 pound semi
truck, $20. Prizes range from $25
to $800.
The tractor pull will be held
Saturday at 8 p.m. on the pulling
track. Classes and entry fees are
as follows: 6,000 pound field
stock, $10; 8,000 pound field
stock, $15; 9,000 pound field
stock w/turbo, $15; 8,500 pound
pro stock, $20; 10,000 pound pro
stock, $20. Prizes range from $5
to $255.
The antique tractor pull and
local yokel truck pull will be held
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. on the
pulling track.
Trae tor classes arc as follows:
1938 and older, 4,500-pound;
1939-59, 3,500-pound; 1939-59,
4,500-pound; 1939-59, 5,500
pound; 1939-59, 6,500-pound;
1939-59, 3,800. Entry fee is $10
and prizes range rrom $10 to $75.
Prizes in the local yokel truck

PULL~G T~UCKS - Locked axles and lots or power; that's the key to a successful pulling
truck. WU'ehead s Toy, a 1961 440-powered Dodge owned by Jim Blosser of Logan is shown here
during last year's truck pulling action at the Meigs County. Fair.
'

pullpnge from $15 to $100 with
an entry fee of $50.
Judging for the ·antique farm
tractor exhibit will be at 10 a.m.
Wednesday with judging being
held in the following classes:
tractors, 1938 and older, wheel
and crawler type, best restored;
tractors, 1938 and older, wheel
and crawler type, field ready;
tractors, 1939 through 1959,
wheel and crawler type, best
restored; tractors, 1939 through
1959, wheel and crawler type,

field ready; oldest tractor; judge's
choice tractor; best single gas
engine; best gas engine display;
judge's choice equipment piece
(non-tractor); judge's choice best
equipment display. Prizes range
from $5 to $50.
Kiddie tractor pulls will be
held each day at 4 p.m., with the
exception of Friday, in the show
ring on the hill with a pull-off for
each day's winner on Saturday at
4 p.m. in the pulling area.

The event will consist of two
classes: Boy or girls 35 to 55
pounds, and boys or girls 56 to 75
pounds.
Entry fee is $1 with a registra·
lion deadline of 4 p.m. the day of
pull except for Friday when the
deadline is at noon.
Each participant will receive a
ribbon and a trophy will be given
to the winner each day. A grand
champion trophy will be given to
each class winner on Saturday.
Prizes arc $2 and $I per class.

Pet show
popular
event

Post office branch
a first a Meigs fair

How about that pet of yours?
Can it perform interesting tricks or
wear costumes?
If you answered yes to any of these
questions, you should enter your pet in
the Meigs County Fair Pet Show at 9
a.m. Friday at the show arena.
Classes are best cat, best dog, best
rodent, most talented (12 years and
under) and most talented (13 years and
up), best bird, most unusual, best fish and
best dressed pet.
No animals over 150 pounds arc permitted in the show. Contestants must
enter only one pet per class and no animal may be entered in more than two
classes. Those pets that can be led must
be led, and those that cannot be led arc to
be suitably contained.
The entry fee is $1.50 per class and
must accompany the entry blank. The
entry blank must be returned by Wednesday.
All pets should have had rabies shots.
An award will be given to the winner
in each class, a roseue to the second and
third place winners in each class, with a
ribbon to each participant

For the first year ever, there
will be a post office branch at the
Meigs County Fair.
The county's post office
offices will set up a booth and
distribute literature about the
postal service, said Jim Hudson,
Long Bottom postmaster.
"We're excited. This is one of
the few chances we have to show
what we've got and that we 're
community-minded," Hudson
said. "We're proud of the fair and
Meigs County."
To show their pride, the local
post offices will have a collectors' item edition pictorial cancellation. The cancellation will show
the map of Meigs County and a
steamboat, with "Meigs County
Fair 1994" over the top. Since the
cancellation will only be used the
week of the fair and then
destroyed it will be one-of-akind.
"I've had a lot of help from
the other post offices. Hopefully
it will come off without a hitch
and we'll do it again next year,"
Hudson said.
The booth in the new commer-

BEST FRIENDS - Matt Krawaczyn or Pomeroy
and his 8-year-old golden retriever Sbilo share a
moment. Matt and Sbllo partidpated In last year's
pet show.

r----------------------------------~---------,
ENTRY BLANK
I
Friday, Aap.t 19, 1994 9a00 a.m.

a-.---------- Type

J Pea•·---------

Y.-N..-._________________

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~·--· ----------------------------------------------u.. ....... lo ........ (!I I a - ... 'd eJ..

Aft~ A Long Da~ At The Fair ·•••
Stop B~ Bob's Market For An le~ Cold Watermelon,

As Well As All Your Produee Needs •••
BOB•s HAS BLUE RIBBON CANNING FRUITS
IN SEASON THRU AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER
Coming Soon - Yellow Freestone Canning Peaches
AVAILABLE AROUND
THE END OF AUGUST ...

BOB'S STOCKS A FRESH SELECTION
OF PRODUCE INCLUDING ...
• Homegrown Tomatoes
• Juicy, Sweet Cantaloupes
• Homegrown Sweet Com
•Fresh Greenbeans
•And Much More

BARTLETT CANNING PEARS
~ST~PRUNEPLUMS
~

,

CALL ~·800-447·~760
JI'OR AVAD.ABO,JTY .

1/4 Mile NorUJ.
ol Pomeroy/Mason Bridge

Mason,m
Phone (:.14) n3·5721

·

..-ao .wde t., ......... n1ea.

~-------------------------~------------------J
Bob Lee Award
to be presented
.We Are Proud To

91 Mill Sl

D~IFAI

"BEST PRICES IN THE AREA"

Gallipolis
• . · . · .·~·.·.· . ·. · . ·. · .· . · . ·. ·.

OH

Large•t Selection of
Broyhill and .11a-Z-Boy Furniture
In The Area.
FriKidaire and Maytag Appliance•
Bottled Co. Service for Cookins &amp; Heatins

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)

August 15th thru 20th

UJ.ef~
Middleport
992·6250

151 Second Ave. 446-2842

Exclusive

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Salute The Young
People of
Meigs County during
the 131st
Meigs Co. Fair
,~1 9/apU4iBom
""

Singer Sales &amp; Service
McCall &amp; Simplicity Patterns

·• •SEE II f\ll•• ·

SEND ENTRY BlAND PUJS 11.50 ENTRY FEE TO:-::TBE=::-:M=E::-1G:-:S:-:EX=·I-'£N-S-ION--O-m_CE,_ BOX
32, POMEROY, 0810 45769, ON OR BEFORE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1994..

DEUCIOUS APPLES

Largest Selection Of Fabric In The Area

...__..::M~A:::::S..:.:TE::.R.:::S:...:T~U:!.!X::EDO=S~D~E=:.A~l:_ER:.!.....__.
Phone 992-2284
110 W. Main
Pome

Sip......

Every year at the Meigs County Fair a special award is given in
memory of Bob Lee&lt;who was an
advisor of the Meigs County Better Livestock Dairy 4-H Club.
A plaque is given to a member
of lhe Meigs County Better Livestock Club with the selection
being based on the member's
knowledge and skill.
Since lhe award was started in
1986, the winners have been
Jerry Smith, 1986; Joe Parker,
both 1987 and 1988; Jill Taylor,
1989; Jeff Rose, 1990; Paul
Smith, 1991; Tricia Davis, 1992,
ancJNancy Nally, 1993.

THE FABRIC SHOP

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I wlola 1o pudcl,.._ Ill doe Melp c.-a, F.U Pel Shonr. I

131" Meigs County Fair

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1994 Meip County Fair Pet Show

cia l building will feature chil dren's colorin'g books, pamphlets
on express and priority mail ,
information on rates for first class
mail , books on stamp collecting,
safety tips to ensure children do
not get trapped under mail carrying trucks and pet data to protect
from dog bites of carriers.
Special envelopes for rural
route residents will be distributed
that can be sent to the post offices
and will then be returned the next
day with stamps, Hudson said.
Small businesses can also lake
a course on how to get reduced
rates, he added. All citizens can
learn how to bar-code and
address mail to speed up delivery.
The following county offices
will set up at the fair:
Monday - Middleport and
Langsville
Tuesday - Syracuse and Rut·
land
Wednesday -Chester and
Racine
Thursday - Pomeroy and
Long Bottom
Friday and Saturday - all
post offices in the county

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IUFUND IUINIFUII CO.
"H•m• '' lht '"''
l•r•"
lllfUIJ, OHIO

742·2211

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�1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Eleven

Page Ten-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

First Meigs fair held at Laurel Cliff 141 years ago
The first Meigs County Fair
was held in 1853 in the neighborhood of Laurel Cliff on Thomas
Fork ncar the old Radford Mill
which was destroyed many years
ago.
This location proved to be so
unpopular the fair was moved to
Racine around 1858 or 1859. In
1860, a new fairgrounds was
established on a ten acre plot with
buildings and other fixtures.
About IS70, the officials of
th e Meigs County Agricultural
Society purchased a twenty-acre
plot where the fairground is now
located. About 1900, the Fair
Board purchased an additional
plot of ground on the hill above
the present race track.
The name of the fairground
came from the springs found to
the right of the upper tum of the
race track.
At one time, Rock Springs
was famous for its fine drinking
water. According to the Harris
Hi story, the community around
the fairground was called Rock
Springs because numerous soft
water springs were in that area. It
has been said that the fairground
area was the best watered square
mile of land in the state of Ohio.
The famou s springs, now maintained by the Rock Springs
Grange, were on the late Dr.
Jacob Schaefer farm.
The race track was probably
cut from the sandstone rock in the

18llO 's. The original track was
onc·thtrd of a m1lc but after a few
years was lengthened to the present half-mile oval.
The sport of harness horse racing became the main attraction of
early fairs, and the Meigs County
fair was no exception featuring
harness racing most of its 130
years.
According to a history written
by Michael Swatzel for the Meigs
County History Book, Volume I,
the introduction of harness racing
to the fair took place more than a
century ago, and has attracted
thousands to view horses speeding around the track to prove
which is the fastest. It was
inevitable that certain individuals
from Meigs county would follow
the sport with much interest and
success.
In 1885, the races were held
with many local horses compel·
ing for purses ranging from $10
to $100. The fastest race was the
County Trot, open to any horse
that had never beaten three minutes in public. The time was 2:58,
with Nellie, owned and driven by
John Capehart, taking top honors
of $15. J.A. Rumsey of Middleport won the county trot on the
second day with his horse, Long
Branch, defeating Capehart's
Nellie. Other area horsemen participating that year were George
Bowers, Charles McQuigg,
George Fowler, Fin Eastman, and

D.W. Heatoo.
A newspaper account of that
fair closed with these comments:
"The whistle of the steam thresher, the ringing of the judge's bell,
the rauJe of the drum corps, and
music of the Rutland Band made
things lively. The dust was dreadful. The society must have lost
thousands of dollars of reaJ estate
which people carried away on
their clothing. D.L. Lewis got his
buggy smashed."
In 1899, a small ten-year-old
boy from Racine climbed into the
sulky to commence a driving
career which would span 59
years. Harry W. Spencer drove
one of his father's horses that day
and later would drive for Leroy
Eichinger and Sidney Spencer,
both of Pomeroy.
John Batey·, aJso a small boy
from Racine, was a lover of
horseflesh and began work as a
stable hand for C.E. Baker. In
1900, he moved nearer to
Pomeroy and trained race horses
at Rock Springs for 66 years.
As a trainer, John developed
the locally famous pacer Lady
Miller owned by J.M. Spencer of
Racine and dri vcn to win at the
Ohio State Fair. The most famous
horse John Bately broke, trained
and raced in 1949 and 1950 was
Sarah Napoleon. After two very
successful racing campaigns,
Sarah was sold to H.M. Fuller of
McConnelsville. As a broodmare

she produced the exceeding fast
Fulla Napoleon, 1:57.1/5, winner
of $582,461 and Irish Napoleon,
2:00.3/5 winner of $250,252.
Besides taking it easy in his
later years, John Batey developed
the perennial fair favorite Pete
Direct, who raced at eight consecutive fairs at Rock Springs,
winning a record I 0 heats. Pete
Direct was owned by the late
Leroy Eichinger of Pomeroy.
The top attraction for the 1914
event was the largest and fastest
trotting ostrich in the world
which was to travel around the
track twice daily. Another highlight of the fair was the balloon
ascensions made every day.
Vic Eiselstein and Charles
Radford of Pomeroy were training and racing horses at the fair·
ground in the 1930's. In 1935,
William Reese of Nyc Avenue in
Pomeroy reached the finish line
first with his trotter, San Wise.
LegaJized pari-mutuaJ betting had
first been used in 1934.
In 1939, two fairs were held
because premiums were not paid
for the 1938 fair and another fair
society was formed in addition to
the old society. The old society
held one fair on Aug. 29-31 at
Rock Springs and the new society
held the other fair on Sept. 14-16
at the Middleport Pythian Park.
The top attraction was Billy
Twinkle · Charlie Chaplin's double.

In 1940, two fairs were again
held with poor results for both.
The old society was finally dissolved by the courts in 1941 and
a two-day fair was sponsored on
Oct. 2-3 at Pythian Park by the
new society.
In 1943, there was an interest·
ing show of exhibits of clothing
and food set up in the gymnasium
of the Pomeroy Junior High
School. One evening program
was held. Livestock consisted of
ten head tied to a row of posts on
the old practice field behind the
high school. According to C.E.
Blakeslee, the total income and
expense was in the neighborhood
of $100.
After a four-year absence, the
fair returned to Rock Springs in
1945, with 21 horses participat·
ing in the first horse race since
1936. Rutherlee, a nine-year-old
pacer, owned by O.C. Silvey of
Dayton, romped down the stretch
to set a new track record of
2: 10,1{1.
From 1948 to 1957, Herman
Warner, the Pomeroy barber,
served as the presiding judge for
the harness racing program.
In recent years the loca l
favorite was the late Sidney
Spencer. Racing his first horscm
1946, he gained early fame w1th
his consistent pacer, Peter S.
Direct who in 1954, won mnetcen
races and earned the award as
(Continued on Page 11)

We Salute the 131st Meigs County Fair
Home Buyers See Us Before You Buy.
Come See Our All American Home. You Get Quality and Low Prices.

FAMILY HOMES INC:
Model Home Located at
Intersection or Rts. 7 &amp; 33

Pomeroy, OH 614-991-22478

First Meigs fair
,(Continued from Page 10)

Ohio's Leading Pacer in a number of wins. In the next two years,
he won 21 races and ended his
racing career with 53 wins in 98
heats of racing. "Pete" aJso held
track records at McConnelsville,
Proctorville; and Rocksprings.
During the late 60's and early
1970's, Sidney owned horses in
association with Jacob Weinberger of Gallipolis, and his brother
Roger Spencer. Two trotters
owned by the trio and driven by
Sidney won in excess of
$ IOO,OOO in purses with Painted
Doll being voted Ohio's TwoYear-Old Trotting Filly of 1970.
In 1973, their trotter, Yum Yum
Girl, was voted Ohio's ThreeYear-Old Trotting Filly award.
Yum Yom later won the Governor's Cup at the West Virginia
State Fair being driven by Sid-

4-H style revue
to be held
Wednesday
Everything from flannel nightgowns to fancy formaJs created
by 4-H Club members will be
modeled in a style revue to be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday on the
hill stage.
Winners of grand and reserve
chiunpionships and those receiving honorable mention were
announced this week.
They were:
Fun with Clothes: Melissa
Barringer, grand; Rebecca Houser, reserve; Jessica Dillon, honorable mention.
Adventures in Clothing :
Rachael Morris, grand; Kerry
Allen, reserve; Jennifer Allen,
honorable mention.
Topping Your Outfit: Tiffany
Hensley, grand; Chelsea Mont·
gomery, reserve; Theresa Baker,
honorable mention.
Joyful Jumper: Bridget
Vaughan, grand; Whitney Ashley, reserve; Nancy Pickens and
Jessica Justice, honorable mention.
Time out for Clothing I:
Amanda Neece, grand; Christina
Neece, reserve; Justin Hoschar
and Christopher Neece, honor·
able mention.
Time Out for Clothing II:
Pamela Neece, grand; and Rainy
WaJker, reserve.
Time Out for Oothing III: Jill
Lemley, grllnd.
Clothes for Middle School:
Jamie Drake, grand; Kristina
Kennedy, reserve, and Andrea
Neutzling, honorable mention.
Clothes for High School and
Beyond: Kelley Grueser, grand,
and Melissa Dempsey, reserve.
Active Sponswear: Christy
Drake, grand; Billee Pooler,
reserve; Andrea Neutzling, honorable mention.
Spectator Sportswear: Noelle
Pickens, grand; Alina Wolf,
reserve; and Cynthia Cotterill,
Jeannie Newell, and Melissa
Houser, honorable mention.
Lounging clothes: Denise
Shenefield, g1and; Billee Pooler,
(Continued on P~~g~~ 27)

ney's son, Donald Spencer.
In I959, Sidney, a former
mayor of Pomeroy, drove Yankee
Volo to a trotting uack record of
2: 10 at Rocksprings. The feat was
very remarkable due to the fact
that Yankee had raced the day
before and won two heats, then
came back the next to trot the
record mile of 2:10 which still
stands today.
Sidney reached national
prominence in 1971 when he won
the United States Trotting Association's driving title for 100-199
drives category. The death of Sidney Spencer meant the passing of
one of the most successful trainers and drivers to uain at Rocksprings.
In 1955, the Humphrey brothers joined the sport and have
enjoyed success in racing and
raisin~ horses on their farm located adJacent to the fairground. It
was their great-grandfather, Lore
Davis who designed and supervised the erection of the solid oak
majestic grandstand which is still
used today.

A LOCAL FAVORITE- The late Sidney Spencer was a local favorite with fairgoers.
Racing his first horse in 1946, be gained early fame with his consistent pacer, Peter S.
Direct, who in 1954 won 19 races and earned the award as Ohio's Leading Pacer. In 1959
Sidney drove Yankee Volo to a trotting track record of 2.10 at Rock Springs, and in 1971 he
won the U.S. Trotters Association's driving title. The Spencer name in horse racing continues even today with Sidney's brother, Roger.

A SALUTE TO THE
YOUTH OF
MEIGS COUNTY
MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR

FROM
THE

AUG. 15th - 20th

DOWNING - CHILDS
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANCE
111 E. SECOND

POMEROY, OH.

992-3381
Bill'- Jeanie ... Mary- Don -John- Dottie- Gloria

ENJOY THE FAIR/

�,

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Thirteen

Page Twelve-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Meigs County Fair grandstand

one of a kind

...'...
The grandstand at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds is unique
among all others in Ohio in that it
curves with the race track.
Designed as a half-moon on
the first tum in the mid-1880's by
Lore Davis, it was listed on the
National Register of Historical
Places in 1983.
Deterioration through the
years raised the question of safety
in the 1970's and early 1980's
leading to extensive renovation.
The old structure was raised
and placed on a concrete platform, reinforcement braces added
and a new roof and drainage system installed - all steps to
ensure the structural integrity of
the over I 00 year old structure.
For convenience and safety,
handrails were installed along the
seating aisles, and concrete walkways were poured.
The registered dairy heifer before the drawing takes place.
In addition protective cables
give-away program will once Artificial insemination will be were instaUed across the front or
again be sponsored by the Farm- donated by the Parker A.l. repre- the grandstand.
ers Bank and Savings Company.
sentative Leland Parker.
Applications to participate
may be picked up at the dairy
food stand in the dairy bam at the
fair. The selection of the winner
is scheduled for Friday, Aug. 19
at 4:30 p.m. at the dairy sweepstakes and the winner must be
presentiO win.

Dairy heifer give-;~way
program slated Friday

Don't Miss the
Meigs County Fair!

The rules specify that boys
and girls must be at least eight
years old to participate but not
more than 18 as or Jan. I, 1994.
They must also be eligible 10 join
the Meigs County Better Livestock 4-H Club and have intentiO
exhibit a dairy project at the 1995
Meigs County Jumor Fair.
The fiiSt heifer calf born 10 the
one given at the fair must be
donated back in10 the program.
All applicants will be inter\(iewed to deWm.ine eligibility

August 15•16•17•18•19•20

Kenneth R. Utt

Meigs County Fair Days

August 15th thru 20th
Complete Line Of
Satellite Dishes and Equipment
Systems Updating
Videoaipher Desaambler
Complete Repair and Installation

LARRY'S SATELLITE SALES
992-6173
HOBSON ROAD

MIDDUPORt OHIO

VISIT OUR BOOTH AT
THE MEIGS CO. FAIR!
Ever Since
You Were a
Kid You've
Wanted
to Try lt.
Now ou can.

st~

J)MNG

Certified Public Accountant
"Serving Businesses &amp; Individuals"

THE DIVE SHOP

992-7559

Po,meroy, Ohio

216 1/2 East Main

Pomeroy

614-992-5238

Schedule of
remaining
fairs for '94
The Week or August 14
Muskingum County Fair
(Zanesville)-Aug. 14-20
Huron County Fair (Norwalk)Aug. 15-20
Meigs County Fair (Pomeroy)Aug. 15-20
Holmes
County
Fair
(Millersburg)-Aug. 16-20
Jefferson
County
Fair
(Smithfield)-Aug. 16-21
Allen County Fair (Lima)-Aug.
19-27
Darke County Fair (Greenville)Aug. 19-27
Defiance County
Fair
(Hicksville)-Aug. 20-27
The Week or August 21
Monroe
County
Fair
(Woodsfield)-Aug. 22-27
Lorain
County
Fair
(Wellington)-Aug. 22-28
Columbiana County Fair
(Lisbon)-Aug. 23-28
Lake County Fair (Painesville)Aug. 23-28
Portage
County
Fair
(Randolph)-Aug. 23-28
Sandusky Courilty Fair
(Fremont)-Aug. 23-28
The Week Or August 28
Noble County Fair (Caldweii)Aug 30-Sept. 3
Morrow County Fair (Mt.
Gilead)-Aug. 30-Sept. 5
Stark County Fair (Canton)Aug. 30-Sept. 5
Hancock County Fair (Findlay)Aug. 31-Sept. 5
Montgomery County Fair
(Dayton)-Aug. 31-Sept. 5
Richwood Independent Fair
(Union Co. )-Aug. 31-Sept. 5
Van Wert County Fair (Van
Wert)-Aug. 31-Sept. 7
Geauga County Fair (Burton)Sept. 1-5
Mahoning County . Fair
(Canfield)-Sept. 1-5
Fulton County Fair (Wauseon)Sept. 2-8
Washington County Fair
(Marietta)-Sept. 3-6
The Week or September 4
Highland County Fair
(Hillsboro )-Sept. 4-10
Morgan
County
Fair
(McConnelsville )-Sept. 6-10
Hardin County Fair (Kenton)Sept. 6-11
Albany Independent Fair
(Athens Co.)-Sept. 7-11
Belmont County
Fair
(St.Clairsville)-Sept. 7-11
Wayne County Fair (Wooster)Sept. 10-15
Williams County
Fair
(Montpelier)-Sept. 10-17
The Week or September ll
Hocking County Fair (Logan)Sept. II -17
Guernsey County Fair (Old
Washington)-Sept. 12-18
Wyandot County Fair (Upper
Sandusky)-Sept. 13-18
Bellville Independent Fair
(Richland Co. )-Sept. 14-17
Delaware County Fair
(Delaware)-Sept. 17-23
The Week or September 18
Ashland County Fair (Ashland)Sept. 18-24
Tuscarawas County Fair
(Dover)-Sept. 19-25
(Continued on Page 14)

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

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
IS PROUD TO BE A LONG TIME
SUPPORTER OF THE YOUTH
OF MEIGS COUNTY AND
THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Last Year Vaughan~ Cardinal not only purchased
the Grand Champion Steer, Pictured above, But
also the Grand Champion Hog at the fair.

,,

WE SALUTE ALL THOSE WHO HAVE WORKED SO HARD
THROUGHOUT THE PAST MONTHS TO MAKE THE 1994 MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR POSSIBLE!!!

A Family Owned and
Operated Supermarket
Offering the best of Service,
Quality and Price, to the
People of Our Commu~ity
At The Corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St. • Middleport

.

�Page

~'ourteen-1994

,

Meigs County Fair Edition

'Joy' to perform at fair on gospel night
The popular gospel duct,
"Joy", will be perfonning at the
Meigs County Fair Tuesday at 6
p.m. on the Hill Stage.
The duct, Patty Hensler and
Dorothy Bailey of Racine, will be
using both $Uitar and studio
sound track m their hour-long
performance, and they'll be
singing songs which they have
wriucn as well as some of the old
gospels.
Together for more than 10
years as "Joy", Patty and
Dorothy's song, "The PardQ.n" is
included on a newly-relell~ed
Clearwater label disc which features gospel music from 14
artists . You 'II be hearing that
song in selections presented by
"Joy" at the fair.
The song was wriuen by Pauy
about three years ago, and was
recorded at Harvest Gospel in
Huntington, W. Va. several
weeks ago.
"Joy" is rising in the gospel
music field and the singers are
watching as the Clearwater disc
goes to nearly 1900 radio stations
across the country.
Gospel singers for the new
disc, all professionals except the
local duet, were selected after a
review of tapes submitted by the
artists. The Racine singers are
scheduled for songs on two more
discs, one this fall and another in
the spring.

Prior to doing the disc, "Joy"
has had a couple of tapes, one
called ''The Pardon" on which six
of the 10 numbers were wriucn
by Patty who has now been
accepted into the BMI writing
guild. That agency takes for
review all of the music she
writes, keeps what they feel will
sell, and sends it out to other
artists.
Some of her published songs
are now being used by other
artists on tapes and disCs, which,
of course, means that royalties
arc coming in.
Plans arc also in the works for
Joy to make another tape this fall,
using only original songs.
Dorothy, while not as prolific a
song writer as Pauy, has wriuen
several pieces which will be
included on the new tape.
Meanwhile, the gospel singers
are becoming more popular and
with that comes more bookings in
an ever expanding area. In addition to the tri-state area, they are
doing some performing in Tennessee, and they are moving out
from churches to county fairs,
concen halls, and even television.
Things really began moving
for the gospel duct in 1992 when
they sang ''Teach Me Lord", written by Patty, in a talent search in
Nashville. The song almost
immediately started being aired
in the Bible Belt, Patty said.

Schedule of
remaining
fairs for '94
(Continued from Page 13)
Barlow Independent 1:""
(Washington Co. )-Sept. 23-2'i
The Week or September 25
Brown
County
'"""
(Georgetown)-Sept. 26-0ct. I
Coshocton County l::t ir
(Coshocton)-Sept. 30-0ct. 6
· Tbe Week or October 2
Loudonville Independent Fair
(Ashland Co.)-Oct. 4-8
The Week Of October 9
Fairfield
County
Fai r
(Lancaster)-Oct. 9-15

New contest
"JOY"
Patty Hensler and Dorothy Bailey
At that time they were mostly
singing in local churches. Now it
is not unusual at all for "Joy" to
do a dozen or so concerts a
month in two or three different
states.
Their concens always include
ori~inal numbers like Pattfs
"I m Going to Be Ready ', "God
Gave His Love", and "Church,
We've Looked Away".

. New to ~ Meigs County Fair
hneup th1s year is the best
dressed concrete goose contest.

The categories of costuming
for the contest to take place in the
Defining themselves as "strict- Coonhunters building are Christly gospel" in their music, both are mas, Easter, Halloween, Patriotic,
active members of the Mt. Olive and Miscellaneous. Prizes of $2
Community Church at Long Bot- · for first, and St. SO for second
tom.
will be awarded.
. Don't miss their Tuesday
Entries are to be in place Satntght concert - 6 p .m., just urday by noon and the judging
before the Southern Gospel Quar- will take place in the afternoon.
tet, the River Valley Boys, mak- The judging is closed to the puhmg It gospel mght at the fair.
I'IC.

EWING
FUNERAL HOME
''Dignity and Service
Always"

992-2121
Established 1913
106 Mulberry Ave.
-

Pomeroy

------------------------------------ -----------------

FASHIONABLE OUTFIT- Jill Lemley or Rutlalld
looked just right in her black and white outfit - a baby doll
style dress and knit vest she created for her 4-H sewing ~ro­
ject. She put it all together with a suede bat, black leggmgs
and buckle shoes.
'•••oo

' • e o _ _ _ _ _ _ ..,

_

__

L .__ ... .,

····-~··-

See You At The
1Jht Meigs County Fair
August 15th- 20th

1994 Meigs County Fair E;dition-Page Fifteen

Midnight Cloggers
to present fair
routine Aug. 17
"Midnight Carnival", a 55
minute song and dance tribute to
music, dance, festivals, fairs, and
street parties from around the
world, will be presented by the
Midnight Cloggers of Wolfe Productions Entenainment at 9 p.m .
Wednesday on the hill stage at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Described as "electrified
magic" the show captures the
imagination of show director,
Bruce Wolfe of Walt Disney
World's Magic Kingdom Entertainment, in a unique mix of
country, bluegrass, pop, techno,

and specialty music.
It will feature such selections
as "Chattahoochee', "Go Away",
"Use It Up and Wear It Out",
"Oklahoma Swing", "Foggy
Mountain Breakdown", and "I
Feel Lucky", just to name a few.
After II months of planning,
"Midnight Carnival" is the end
result of the efforts of Wolfe and
team directors, Betty Smith and
Margie Wolfe, both of Meigs
County. The director uses colorful costumes and special effects
to enhance the perfonnance.

,#,, ·"

MIDNIGHT CLOGGERS- The Midnight Cloggers will perform at 9 p.m. Wednesday
on the bill stage at the Meigs County Fair. In tbe group are front, left to right, Katie Jeffers,
Chelsea Montgomery, Peggy Smith, Sheri Cummins, Delano Eichinger, and Renee Bailey;
second row, Shirley Simmons, Mary Woods, Marge Wolfe, Betty Smith, and Linda Roseberry; third row, Stephanie Sayre, Betty Latbey, Alice Lawhorn, Melanie Dudding, Lisa
Honaker, Sheryl Thoma, Myrtle St. Clair, and Judy Clark; and back row, Rochelle Lawless,
Ben Fontenot, Bruce Wolfe, director, Des Jeffers, Linda Montgomery, and Tudor Gerlach.
Other members not pictured are Leann Cunningham, Karen Smith, and Sherry Bailey.

Horses a reQular
feature at fa1r

we
to

Once again this r.ear, the
Meigs County Fair w11l feature
almost a full week's worth of
horse racing events.
Harness racing gets underway Wednesday at 12:30 p.m.
with the two-year-old filly pace
followed by the three-year-old
trot and two-year-old trot. Racing begins Thursday with the
two-year-old filly trot, the threeyear-old pace and the two-yearold filly trot.
Friday's races include threeyear-old filly pace, the threeyear-old filly trot, and close
with the Ohillco trot and the
Ohillco pace events.
Entry fees for the Ohillco
events are $20 and purses range
from $3,918 to $800. USTA
rules will govern the events.
Quarter horse races will be
held Saturday at noon on the
racetrack and consist of five
classes.
Classes include: 220 yards,
any age; 220 yards, two years
old; 300 yards, any age; 550
yards, any age; 880 yards, three
years and up Rock Springs
Derby (Quarter Horse-Thoroughbred Challenge).
Entry fees are $100 with a
$1,200 purse for the first six
paid entries in each division and
a $50 entry fee with a $600
purse for all other races . All
entries must be paid by Aug. 13.
Horses will stan from a six·
horse starting gate and jockeys
must be at least 16 years old and
wear racing colors. Owners are
advised to bring their own jock·
eys.
Judges may disqualify unruly
horses and wmners must submit
to a blood test by veterinarian.
Trophy blankets will be awarded and competition is open to ·
other breeds.
Other horse events include
the horse pulling . contest
Wednesday at 8 p.m., the draft
horse contest Wednesday at 10
a.m. in the track infield and the
draft horse and mule exhibit
with judging at6 p.m. Monday.

Bank One in Pomeroy is proud to support the 1994 Meigs County Fair
through livestock purchases.

Bank One salutes the youth of Meigs County and
wishes everyone the best of luck!
Fair passes are now on sale at our Gallipohs office at 352 Second
Avenue. And our 24-hour Bank One ATM machine is available when
you need cash anytime!

BANKSON£
Whatever it takes:·

.....

B:\,\ '1\ Ol\lf:. Al HO\'S, .'\JA :\kmhn FDIC

-A
ORRUS.

•Plus

;,s.. tem

..

�'

~

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Seventeen

'

Page 'Sixteen-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Popular gospel\quartet
on stage Tuesday

4-H demonstration
winners selected
Grand and reserve champions
for 4-H projects were selected in
one of many judging sessions to
be held before the Meigs County
Fair opens next week.
Recipients of grand champion
roscues were Josh Hager, junior
division; Vincent Broderick and
Michael Leifheit, team demon·
stration in the junior division; and
Crystal Smith, senior division.

Reserve champions were Jes·
sica Amolt and Crystal Bennelt,
team demonstration in the junior
division; Jeanie Newell, senior
division; and Crystal Bennell,
junior division.
John Costanza and Carol
Brewer judged the projects which
consisted of demonstrations on a
variety of subjects, ranging from
treating crash victims to kitchen
safetv tios.

Ohio FFA Center
isn't woolly, but
sure is wonderful
The !41st Ohio State Fair is
promising all visitors a "Wild,
Woolly and Wonderful" time,
and the Ohio FFA Center will
take part in the festivities by
being open to the public through·
out the stale fair.
The Ohio FFA Center will be
open to fairgoers from 8:30 a.m.
to 6:30p.m. each day of the Ohio
State Fair, which closes on Aug.
2 I . Located on the north end of
the fairgrounds, between the
Lausche Building and the Rhodes
Youth Center, the Ohio FFA
Center is home to 66 years of
FFA and agricultural education
history in Ohio.
The Ohio FFA Association
was one of the first charters of the
National FFA Organization,
founded in 1929. Today there are
over 18,000 of Ohio's young people involved in the FFA. By tour·
ing the Archives and Hall of
Achievement, visitors to the Ohio
FF A Center can follow the history and development of Ohio's
FFA from its early beginnings to
what it is today . Visitors learn
about FFA Camp Muskingum,
stale and national FF A officers,
FFA contests and Ohio's winners, the Ohio FFA Foundation,
Inc., and the FFA 's affiliation
with other agricultural groups.
Also on display are early versions
of the FFA jacket, which was
founded in Ohio, as well as many
other unique and interesting photos, records and memorabilia.
A large conference room
which serves as a meeting place
for the state FFA officers and
various other agricultural-related
groups will also be open to the
public.
The Ohio FFA Center was
dedicated on Aug. I, 1986, and
was built through contributions of
the Ohio FFA Association and
many businesses, companies,
groups and individuals. Nearly
$650,000 from 26,000 contributors led to the center's creation.
Since its opening, the center
has been an interesting and educational auraction for Ohio State
Fair visitors, attracting appro..ximately 1,000 fairgoers daily.
The FFA is a national youth
organiz.ation dedicated to preparing young people for careers in
agriculture. FFA activities and

award programs complement
instruction in agricultural education by giving students practical
experience in citizenship, cooper·
ation and leadershin

"River Valley Boys," a south·
em gospel quartet, will be performing at the hill stage at 7 p.m.
Tuesday as a part of gospel music
night at the Meigs County Fair on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The quartet is made up of
Jamie Price (lead), Steve Hayes
(tenor), Terry Peters (bass), and
Steve Peters (baritone).
The quartet has been averaging over 180 performances a year
since its formation four years
ago. Their bookings have allowed
the group to travel extensively
throughout Ohio and to various
states sin~ing for a wide variety
of orgamzations at numerous
functions.

-...
-

GRAND CHAMPIONS - Vincent Broderick, lert, and Michael Leifheit's program on safely lips
in the kitchen for beginners cooks in 4-H demonstration won them a grand champion rosette. They
stressed thinking before acting, reading directions, using the proper equipment, proper use of a
microwave and knives, and safety around the stove. They received grand champion rosettes on their
demonstration.

~;did

Stop By and See Us At

Support the Youth of
Meigs County
Support the 1994

Meigs County Fair

Meigs County Fair
August 15th - 20th

MEIGS CO. HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
Mulberry Hgts.

Ken's Appliance Service
217 E. 2nd

The 131 st Annual

992-6626

Pomeroy

MEIGS COUNTY

'River Valley Boys'

Grange group theme for fair
"Doorway to Community
Action" is this year's theme
which the Granges will carry out
in preparing their exhibits at the
131st Meigs County Fair.
The exhibits will be judged on
Monday at 9 a.m. using a point
system - 20 points for originality, ideas and materials; 15 for
auractiveness, the ability to
auract and hold auention; I0 for
appearance and nearness, visibility and leuering; 25 for Grange

teachings, ideas and principles of
the grange; 20 for achievement
goals and community service;
five for farm products, and five
for handicraft displays.
Rules specify that the closed
Bible and flag may be used, but
that no other regalia is perm itted.
All articles exhibited by a Grange
must be produced or made by
members of that Grange.
Each grange exhibiting will be
awarded $75.

During their brief existence
the River Valley Boys have per·
formed by invitation with such
gospel professionals as "The
Florida Boys," "The Nelons,"
"The Perrys," "The Harmony
Boys," "The Lewis Family," and
"Crimson River." The group also
performed in the "Alive Youth
for Christ" concerts at Canal Fulton with such contemporary
artists as Steven Curtis Chapman,
Cindy Morgan , D.C. Talk, The
Newsboys, Mark Price and John
Schlill of Petra. This four day
event saw an auendance of over
15,000 youth.
In addition the quartet has
worked with Bob Harrington

(The Chaplain of Bourbon Street)
Crusades, Sam Dalton Crusades,
The Living Word Outdoor Drama
(Ohio's Passion Play) including
performances at the Ohio State
Fair and a multiple of other
regional county fairs and festi vals.
Their endorsements include a
selection as "Best Gospel" by the
Ohio Country Music Association
and finalist in the "McDonald's
All Ohio Gospelfesl. To date they
have had three recording projects,
and are receiving airplay on several Christian stations, along with
appearances on various Christian
Television Networks.

Showtime for artists and shutter bugs
Artwork
Mei~s County artists will be
displaymg their work at the amateur painting show to be held in
the Coonhunters building on the
fairgrounds during next week's
fair.
Carolyn Ritchie is chairman of
the show which is divided into
junior, those under 18 years of
age, and adult competition.
Works will include oil painting, acrylic painting, water color
and other media. Class divisions
are landscape, animal study and
floral study.
Special awards include a best
of show and a reserve best of

show as well as cash awards for
the top three places in each class.
Prizes range from $4 to $1.50.
Closed judging will begin at 2
p.m. Saturday with the exhibit to
open for fairgoers' viewing at 8
a.m. Monday.
Pl!«&lt;fography

Picture 141jng buffs will have
their chance to display their work
in the arnareur photography show
at the 1994 Meigs County Fair.
Debbie Spencer is the chairpefflon of the show which will
feature two ;~ccial awards • a
best of show lind a reserve best of
show. Exhibitors will also have a

chance to win ribbons and premiums in the individual classes.
The show will feature color
photos in ~everal catego{.ies of
competition including landscape
and seascape, animals, portraits
and personalities, pictoral ,
abstracts, nature closeups and
miscellaneous.
There will also be a class featuring photos taken during the
1993 Meigs County Fair.
Entries must be in place by 12
p.m. Saturday, and closed judging will take place Monday. Photos must he mounted with at least
one and a half inches on all sides
and he ready to hang.

Don't MisS The
Meigs County Fair!

Pomeroy

992-5335

See You At The Fair
.I 0 IIt I
.t

l\11 (I

Aug. 15-16-17-18-19-20

11./F-

ENJOY
THE
FAIR!

/1('/1',

.~I fOil,!.!.

roit't'
.I i,.
." imiiiH'/'11 Oltio.
JOHN KNAUFF is someone wbo can get things done for
Soulbern Ohio in the stale Smale. He's experienced, tough oo
aime, and will belp us get our fair sbare from stale government as
a full-Lime stale senator.

STOP BY AND SEE OUR SATELLITE
DISPLAY AT OUR BOOTH

RIDENOUR'S

FOR STATE SENATE

985-3307

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
CHESTER,OH

The best way to fight violent crime in our community is to avoid drugs and to
seek a good education.
As we prepare for the beginning of another school year, remember to support
your local schools and community groups in service to our youth. Through
enriching activities like 4-H, Scouts, VICA and Junior Grange, our young people
learn the importance of hard work and dedication.
•

These values are important to our community's future.
Have a fun and safe Fair Week!
A public service message from

JOHN R. LENTES

Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
'.

(

�1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Nineteen

'The Classics' to
entertain fairgoers on
hill stage Thursday

4-H foods judged; champions named
More than 50 boys and girls
who belong to 4-H clubs selected
to work in the categories of food
preparation for their projects this
year.
They baked, made treats, did
meals and menus for outdoors,
prepared "quicky'' dishes, came
up with meals to make life easy
for husy parents, and creative egg
and dairy recipes ..
As a part of their food projects, the 4-H members demonstrated how to properly set a table
and presented to the judges, a
completed project book on food
values and nutrition, displaying
charts to show their skills.
During the recent judging
interview at which time prepared
foods were evaluated, grand and
reserve champions were named.
The winners in the various categories were as follows:
Let's Begin Cooking Michael Leifheit, grand champion; Rachel Morris, Reserve
Champion; Jessica Arnott,
Michelle Hart, Amber Snowden,
Miranda Stewart, Susan Tobin
and ~illy Jo Welsh, honorable
menuon.
Tricks for Treats - Barbara
Smith, grand champion; Ashley
Hager, reserve champion;

Rachael Chapman, Carrie Crow,
Tiffany Hensley and Julie
McGuire, honorable mention.
Meals for Easy Living •
Christy Drake, grand champion.
Meals Outdoors - Billee Pooler, grand champion; Cynthia Cotterill, reserve champion; Mendy
Guess and Crystal Smith, honorable mention.
Food, Friends and Fun - Chris
Parker, grand champion; Jeanie
Newell, reserve champion.
Quick Meals - Dorothy
Leifheit, grand champion; Anna
Wolf, reserve champion; Ben
Crane and Alison Rose, honorable mention; Quick Breads ·
Allison Hayes, grand champion.
Yeast Breads - Nancy Nally,
grand champion; Stacey Kimes,
reserve champion.
All American Foods - Jamie
Drake, grand champion; Josh
Hager, reserve champion.

Fit It All Together I - Jessica
Arnou, grand champion.
Fit It All Together II - Crystal
Smith, grand champion; Kristina
Kennedy, Matthew Morrow and
Megan Swearingen, reserve
champions.
Extraordinary Eggs • Amy
Smith, grand champion; Tara
Rose, reserve champion.
Science Fun With Dairy
Foods - Michelle O'Nail, grand
champion.
Selected to represent Meigs
County with their projects at the
Ohio State Fair were Michael
Leifheit, Barbara Smith, Ashley
Hager, Christy Drake, Billee
Pooler, Cynthia Cotterill,
Dorothy Leifheit, Anna Wolf,
Allison Hayes, Nancy Nally,
Jamie Drake, Crystal Smith,
Kristina Kennedy, and Amy
Smith.

"The Classics", a popular area
band, will entertain on the hill
stage at the Meigs County Fair,
on Senior Citizens Day, Thursday
at! p.m.
Their musical repertoire spans
the top tunes from the 30's
through the 60's and features Bill
Ward, New Haven. W. Va., on
saxophone;
AI
Windon,
Pomeroy. drums; Joseph White,
upright bass, and his wife, Rita,
both of Kyger, on keyboards.
"The Classics" have performed at numerous functions in
the Bend area including Gallia
and Meigs Senior Citizens Centers, the P.A. Denny Cruise, Veterans Day observances, alumni
banquets, the West Virginia State

Farm Museum, the Point Pleasant
Stemwheel Regatta, Gideon banquets, Ravenswood Festivals,
area rehabilitation and nursing
centers, Star Mill Park in Racine,
Coolville Founders Day, jamborees, heritage day program, and
private parties.
Their music includes something for everyone as they move
from all-time standards and the
Big Bend era to country, early
rock and roll, waltzes, polkas,
gospel and even a bit of blue
grass.
Those interested in taking a
musical walk down memory lane
will want to be on hand when
"The Classics" take the stage
Thursday.
DAZZLING DOLLS TO PERFORM - Tbe baton corps or
Nancy W. Swartz will make their first appearance at the Meigs
County Fair. The group will present routines on the bill stage at
11 a.m. on Wednesday. The new group has performed a~ sever~!
community events over the summer i.ncluding J:Ientage m
Pomeroy, the Middleport July 4 celebration, and Po.mt Plea~nt
Stemwheel Festival where they took a second place m marchmg
units. In the group are rront, Whitney Thoene, and left to r!gbt,
Kim Johnson, Mirinda Davis, Bethany Amberger, Dan1elle
Thomas Hannah Woolard, Codi Davis, Nikkie Phillips,
Michelle 'Thomas, Emily Hill, Samantha Cole, and Katie Reed.
To participate in the rair program but not pictured is Ashton
Brown.

CREATIVE CONTAINER- Billie Jo Welsh who belongs
to the Alrred Livestock Club got an honorable mention on her
first project in roods. She created a pig replica rrom a water·
melon and filled it with rruits in the "Let's Begin Cooking"
class. She used cherries ror the eyes, and limes ror the reet and
tail or her pig container.

Nutrition
news
available

Meigs County Fair
SEE YOU THERE

Nutrition information, food
safety and budgeting ideas will
be featured in a display in the
Senior Fair Building by the
Meigs County Cooperative
Extension Service Nutrition Educators.
.
.
Linda King, food stamp nutntion educator, and Sharon Smith,
expanded food and nutrition educator, have developed the display
and will be sharing it with fairgoers all week.
The information is free of
charge to the public and the nutriAITRACTIVE SALAD TRAY - First year 4-H'er Rebection educators will be on hand ca Houser made an attractive salad tray ror her cooking properiodically throughout the fair to ject. To bold the dip ror lhe vegetables, Rebecca hollowed out a
squash. She Is a member or "The Bombers" Club.
answer questions.

DR. A. JACKSON BAILES
OPTOMETRIST
• ~·Eye Examination Including Tests For Cataract ahd

Glaucoma
• Fanily VISion Care-Adults thru Children

•
• Contact Lenses, all types, FREE Contact Lens Trial (one week)
• Large Selection of Frames
• Financing Available

11 0 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Accepting Ohio &amp;WV Uedk:llid &amp;Mecicate

ill

•

228 Upper Hlver Rd.
Galltpol,s, O~lo · ·'
Evening Appolntmenla AvaUable
Saturday Appointmenta Available

~i .•

AUGUST 15-16·17-18-19-20

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE
ON THE "T" IN MIDD,EPORT

Kenny's Auto Center
And
A&amp;A Auto Rental

•

THE CLASSICS - Rita White at the keyboard, Junior White, bass, Bill Ward, tromb~ne,
and AI Windon, drums will take their listenen at the Meigs County Fair Thursday on a mus1cal
walk down memory lane.

Members of the Meigs County
Junior Fair Board will be auctioned off to the highest bidders
at an auction to be held at 5 p.m.
Tuesday, just prior to the Junior
Fair beef show in the show arena.
Junior Fair Board members
represent 4-H youth groups •
Future Farmers of America ,
Future Homemakers of America,

Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Voca·
tional Industrial Clubs of Amenca and Grange groups.
Members auctioned off will be
available for an hour of service
agreed upon by the member and
the bidder. Last year, members
performed jobs such .as c!eaning
livestock pens, workmg m food
booth stands and digging trenches.

DENBIGH·GARRE
JaeJison
New
Truek Conneetion •••
Count~

Yolir

Car l:l

Plus Qualit' Pre.Owned Trueks l:l Cars

264 Upper River Road, Gallipolis

Proudly
Salutes The
Meigs County
Fair
August 15
Thru
August 20

'Slave' auction Tuesday

SALUTES THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
FORD

MERCURY

"Drive A Uttle,
Save A Lot!"

Bank Financing
Available

See Us Before
You Purchase
That New Car
Or Truck,
We'U$ave

You Money/

See U1 Before
You Purcluue
244 South Church St.
Ripley, WV

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

Spencer, WV

' ,, ~o a••••••• •••' '' ' ' ''' ''''' " ''' '' '''' ''''' '''' ' '

Call
372-Ford (3673)
1-800.964-FORD

TluUNewCar
Or 7ruck,

We'U$ave
You Mon11!
••

�Page Twenty-1994 Meigs

Fair Edition

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Twenty-one

Scenes from
the 1993
Meigs Fair

Scenes from
the 1993
Meigs Fair

1994 Meigs County

1994 Meigs County
Fair Schedule

Fair Schedule
Thursday, August 18

Saturday, August l3
12:30 p.m .

Domestic Arts Judging - Senior Fair Building

1-3:00 p.m.
7:30p.m

Sheep Weigh-In
Religious Services,
Meigs County Ministerial Association-Grandstand

Sunday, August 14

Monday, August 15
7:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
9:00a.m.

Gates open
All Livestock must be on the grounds
Weigh-in poultry, rabbits, steers, and hogs
Groom and Clean Contest followed
by 4-H Horse Show
I :00 p.m.
Junior Fair Poultry Show followed by Open
Class Poultry Show - Show Arena
I :00 p.m.
Flower Show Judging - Senior Fair Building
3:30p.m. Junior Fair Parade
4:00p.m.
Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
5:00p.m.
Hillside Stage - God's Kidz
6:00p.m.
King and Queen Crowning- Hill Stage
6:00p.m.
Draft Horse Show- Show Arena
7:00p.m.
Moto-Cross
12:00 Midnight - Gates Close

.I'-

'

'

(Senior Citizens Day until 2:00 p.m.)
4-H Horse Fun Show
8:30a.m.
Junior Fair Dairy Show - Show Arena
9:00a.m.
II :30 a.m . Homemaker Pie and Country Fair- Hillside Stage
Open Class Dairy Show - Show Arena
12:00 noon
Harness Racing
12:30 p.m.
l :OOp.m . District 6 Holstein Show - Show Arena
Hill Stage- Classics
1:00 p.m.
Flower Show Judging- Senior Fair BuUding
l:OOp.m.
4:00p.m. Hill Stage - Junior Fair Talent Show
Kiddie Tractor Pull -Show Arena
. 4:00p.m.
Hill Stage- Junior Fair Kiddie Games
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m. Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by
Open Class Sheep Show - Show Arena
7:30p.m.
Antique Tractor Pull and Local Yokel Truck Pull
H:OO p.m .
Ronnie McDowell -G randstand
12:00 Midnight - Gates Close

Friday, August 19
9:00a.m. Pet Show- Show Arena
II :00 a.m. Junior Fair Dog Obedience Show -S how Arena
12:00 noon
Kidd ie Tractor Pull -Show Arena
12:30 p.m.
Harness Racing
4:30p.m. Dairy Sweepstakes - Show Arena
5:00p.m.
Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
5:00p.m.
Hill Stage- Back Porch Swi ng Band
6:30p.m.
Hill Stage- Belles and Beaus
7:30p.m.
Truck and Semi Pull
12:00 Midnight - Gates Close

'IUesday, August 16
8:00a.m. Junior Fair Rabbit Show- Show Arena
I:OOp.m. Ope n Class Beef Show followed by Junior Fair Beef
Breeding - Show Arena
2 00 p m
Out of the Blue- Hill Stage
4:00p.m
Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
5:00p.m . Junior Fair Board Auction
6:00p.m. Junior Fair Steer- Show Arena
6:00p.m.
Hill Stage- Joy
7:00p.m.
Hill Stage- River Valley Boys
7:00p.m
Grandstand - Demolition Derby
12:00 Midnight - Gates Close

Saturday, August 20
(McDonald's Day)
till 2 p.m.
9:00a.m. Pretty Baby Contest - Show Arena
10:00 a.m . Ronald McDonald Activities- Hill Stage
12:00 noon Quarter Horse Races
I :00 p.m.
Hill Stage- Big Bend Cloggers
3:00p.m. Go-Karl Races
4:00p.m.
Kiddie Tractor Pull Champions - Show Arena
7:00p.m
Youth Night- Show Arena
8:00p.m . Tractor Pull
8:00p.m.
Hill Stage - Pure Country
8:00p.m.
Grandstand- Arm Wrestling
12.00 Midnight- Gates Close

Wednesday, August I 7
(Kiddie Day)

$3.00 til 2 p.m.
9:00a.m. Junior Fair Goat Show - Show Arena
I0:00a.m.
Draft Horse Contest- Infield
II :00 a.m.
Dazzling Dolls- Hill Stage
12:00 noon
4-H Flower Show- Junior Fair Building
12:00 noon
Guys and Gals Sheep Lead Class - Show Arena
12:30 p.m.
Harness Racing
2:00p.m.
4-H Style Revue- Hill Stage
l :OO p.m.
Kiddie Tractor Pull -Show Arena
4:30p.m.
Little Miss and Mister Contest- Hill Stage
5:00p.m.
Kiddie Games- Show Arena
6:00 p.m.
Junior Fair Swine Show - Show Arena
7:00p.m. Open Class Horse Show
8:00p.m.
Ronna Reeves- Grandstand
8:00p.m.
Horse Pull
9:00p.m.
Hill Stage - Midnight Cloggers
12:00 Midnight- Gates Close

• c • • '" ••• ••• ••• .. "

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�Page Twenty-Two-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

...

/

Thrillseekers be prepared

1994 Junior Livestock
Sale
5 p.m. Friday
Show Arena
1993 LIVESTOCK PURCHASES
NO. TIMF.S
ROUt; ItT
]I

11

'I
'

PlJRCHAS[R

TOTAl.
MONU

16,898. 15
15,698.61
8.248.80

r •r-n U.a.k

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S,68UIO

Mid-7 Moc:S.U..ry

foodl..d

t ,as1.t0
4, 169.55
3.118.70
3,6.51.40
3,)44.60
3.2U.68
1,913.50
1,896.20
1.285. 11
1,976.61
1,nuo
1,764.00

1

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I

1,731.95
1,632.95
1,551.00

'I
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s..u..c-L.. '
11o- Notk.•l t~.

Tri-Couaty M•l

F•c-,_r.......,_
WMMJ'• A•~ao P1rt11
McDo•.W•
c~..w -Api S.du

Ja,•• ,.

Ride..-'• S111pply
w-• eo ..u--t.io•
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TOTAL

NO. TIMf.S
BOUGHT

I
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Hola• H ..pi .. LICW.ic

S89.80
589.35
S60.35

s-,...

Mo•'•
boud
Porlu, Little, Sbe. ..

......

Howtl..or• l...oginc
Dr . Dout:J.• llu11t•

414.00
411.80
464-00

Rig~

s--nMW R...... ,..,
fvlb A 1f•r- At~aor•r•

430. 10

Pull!~

413. 10 M•ip c-••J O..r A-w.u..
401.90
ltlf
IMvrsne.
R.d, Mi•
400.00
390.00
c._..J C..lrDCt.i"',

w.,_.
r.,.., a••

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a s•.dhlutan1
a•._.. r•• il,.
v... , r.,. s,..,,,
Fry• Pi••ID.. Tu, I~ .
P·~:=:~

3M. to
384.00
379.50
374.00
372.80
351.50
349.50

snJ..raMLot-

Citr lc. a r..r
Rh·enld. Food M1rt

·----

v........ Me-w.l u..,ill.l
Jodp F..dri&lt;k C..wl

2

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1,163.40
1,10.00
1,110.)5
1,111.60
1,101.00

)

1,099.10

I

1,091.00
1,036.00
967.90

)

a....-.1 v. f.Jll

W...&amp;.yT.--~Uatl

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Rl•• a~ r~ Slply
O..WE . .... T..- ...

s-•- rna
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lllho ,..... Colo
s.., ·-,._ ....
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M•l WtiN

Litli OUu'• O..t Staop
LiN. w.r_,.,
.A.J Wolf• Acco-t.int

311.00
30&amp;.00 Fot~ed R- Spotlll•••'• Choh
295.00
Hupp Lo..d-pint
212 .25
J•k- eo...,,
270.00
Sayn~ Prochtu
266.70
U.d. W•r•r
259.90
FndW . c,•• r ..
259.60
Poor
S.r•ir•
251.30
Pnu'• M•t Proc:-iDC
251.30
c~,

u-*•

a.,·, r.,.,.

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713.00
7UIO
701.01

Tokcc:•

•••• "-1;: A Tnckl.f

U...WOIIAC..

..,_
-·.............
.....
--·IWp,

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

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617.50
611.50
599.85

J.dp Patricia o·on.

201.00
200.00

Micldl.pwVP-.-oy Rotary

o..,.........." ..
s,.u.,uwr.....
o..T, ..

u.,s..... c,....,.
L...Lc..p..,

Hl7.00
90.00

as.oo

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o~•

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a u.. w.,
J...lp a •••.,t &amp;ucla

c.-•·. ewe...

planning to enter the race, must
be accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian. Everyone attend-

40

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80.00
30.00
30.00

Larry s,...,.

FEED &amp; MILLING HEADQUARTERS

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Tolal - lll0,016. 14

See You At
The Meigs
County Fair

AUGUST 15 -AUGUST 20
VISIT US AT THE

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
MOBILE UNIT
'

AUGUST 15·16·17·18·19·20

Watch for the schedule of times for the Individual
Screenings in the Mobile Unit.

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyster Shells and Grit - Fertilizer - lime- Cement and
Mortar- Stock Salt- Water Softener- Remedies- Salt- litters- VaccineRoofing Paints - Red Brand Fencing - Baler and binder Twine Sprays .
Gates- Straws

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

264 s. Second

Middleport

992-5141
I I It f If I

I I Iff If

I I I I

Stop by for Free educational materials on: Cancer,
Diabetes, Exercise and Nutrition, Lung Disease,
Blood Pressure, anci more.

PH. 992·2.115
Mulllerrr Awe.

I I I I 1 I I I f I I !

) I I

I I I I I'

I I I'

HOURS
TUESDAY THRU
SATURDAY

2·8

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

SUGAR RUN MILLS

'

-~ ···.'·'~'Partners. In .Change,_A~ .We Continue The Holzer Tradition."
o • • • • o 0 •' •

It&lt;

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'

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&amp;

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I 14 1 1 o 1 . 1 1 4 1 4. I

.

....

1 1 1 1 ,

0 0

' :•

, ·, · 1 1

f

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Twenty-Three

WE WIU 'BE LOOKING FOR YOU AT THE

[~...,_,

I I If f I

·~

ing the event must enter the
grounds and/or the race at their
own risk.

~

I I I I I I I I I I

I' '

The Fair Planners - Board of Directors, Meigs Agricultural Society ,

MOTOCROSS - Motocross action returns to the Meigs
County Fair as the 1994 Ohio County Fairs Motocross
Championship hits the dirt at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 15.
Here, Jason Stewart thrills the hometown crowd in another
year's race action.

COR~ORATION

t

!'

THE FAIR PLANNERS
- Plans are moving forward
for the 13lst Meigs County
Fair to be staged next week on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds . Members of the
Board of Directors of the
Meigs County Agricutural
Society and officers pictured
here are, left to right, down in
front, Rick Koblentz, Leonard
Koenig and Jennings Beegle,
vice president; front standing,
Kenny
Buckley, Roger
Spencer, Virgil Windon,
Addalou Lewis, Mary Kay
Rose, Carolyn Ritchie, and
Debbie Watson, assistant secretary; and back, Dan Smith,
president; Brent Zirkle, Ed
Holter, Tim Bearhs, Bill Buckley, and Jim Watson. Secretary Laurie Reed and Treasurer, Paul Reed are not pictured.

Enjoy the 131 st
Meigs County
Fair

f It t

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r., •
Enn. r•• a,. r.,.,.
c. T. a..,._ r..a,

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a c r••.u./!'l

c-pu,-

249.75
249.50
241.50
2)6.00
214.20
210.00

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s.;.&amp;~.a"-••

1,490.00
1,364.22
1.271.93
l,lJ-.4.75
1,174.05
1,166.31

PURCHASER

MOIUI

The 1994 Ohio County Fairs
Motocross Championship returns
to the Meigs County Fair this
year as riders in several classes
launch their machines skyward in
a heartstopping demonstration of
airborne antics.
The AMA sanctioned event,
slated for Monday, Aug . 15 at
7:30 p.m., features the following
classes: 125 pro, 250/500 pro,
Micro-mini (4-7 years old, 50cc
bike), Micro-mini (4-8 years old,
50cc bike), 65cc (7- 11 years old,
65cc bike), Mini-jr. (7-11 years
old, 80cc bike}, Mini-sr. (12-15
years old, 80cc bike), Schoolboy
(12-15 years old, 125cc bike},
125B (intermediate), 125C
(novice), 250B (intermediate),
250C (novice), Open 500cc B/C,
17-24 (17-24 years old, no A riders), 25 years plus A&amp;B, 30 years
plus, 40 years plus, Women,
Quad 2-stroke, Quad 4-stroke and
Quad pro class.
In addition, a $100 prize will
be awarded to the winner of a
freestyle jumping contest over the
pro-zone.catapault. Crowd cheers
will determine the winner of the
jumping event.
Awards are guaranteed to the
top six places in every trophy
class. Over 20 riders in each
receive one award to every three
rides to 10 places. Also, awards
will be given to all micro riders.
Quads must have a working
kill switch attached to the rider
and rear number plates. Quad riders must be at least 16 years old.
Anyone under 18 years of age
on the day of the race, who is

! :

�'

1994 Meigs County Fllir E;qitioo-Page Twenty-l'' lve
Page Twent ·Four-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

131 ST ANNUAL MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
6 Bi Days- Au ust .15·16·17·18·19·20
•••TO ALL THOSE WHO WORK SO HARD
AND VOLUNTEER SO MANY HOURS OF
TIME, WE ''THANK' YOU" FOR MAKING
THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR GREAT•••

A PROUD SUPPORTER OF THE YOUTH
OF MEIGS COUNTY AND THE
1994 MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR

'
1

!--'fl.

·

"You'll Find Something For Everyone/"

.«&lt;•
Jeff
Warner
Insurance
S
·
1·
·td
R
!! 992-5479
POMEROY, oH.
ummer 1e s este~urant
1·800·742·3868

Crow
and
Crow
anoRNm 11 law
992·6059

POMEROY, OHIO

Ohio Valley
Plumbing &amp;Heating

.
992·2036

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C Jewelers
992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

· Rose's Excavating &amp; Trucking

985·3857

CHESTER, OHIO

'

Ch ancey's f ood Mart

992·6542

RT. 124, SYRACUSE, OHIO

Don Tate
Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, GEO
308 E. Main Street

614·992·6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
992·21 55

POMEROY, OHIO

State Farm Insurance

THIRD STREET
RACINE, OHIO
MIKE SWIGER
OFFICE: (614) 949·2493
HOME: (614) 843·5340
• ....__ _....;D;.;.ON.;;RO;:.SE-_;.Ow::n•::_r~-~~992:.:·6=685:..__ _ _~.:M:IDD~LEP:
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SEE YOU THERE!
AUGUST 15TH - 20TH

HOME NATIONAL BAN
Racine

Syracuse

949-2210

992-6333
,

�1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Twenty-Seven

Page Twenty-Six-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

Pioneer homemaking skills
will be demonstrated during fair

Horse events one of many Meigs fair highlights

..

Horses events arc highlights of
county fairs all over this state,
and the Meigs County Fair is no
exception.
Let' s consider the big horses
now , rather than the sleek fast
ones which run on the track.
Th ere' s the draft horse and
mul e e xhibit on Monday at 6
p.m., the draft horse infield con·
test and the horse pulling contests
on Wednesday in the senior fair,
as well as the 4-H horse show on
Monday and the 4-H fun show on
Thursday .
As for the horse pulling con·
test which will take place at 8
p.m. the emphasis is on the horses ability 10 pull and the capacity
of the animals to endure sus·
tained efforts. It is a time when
the draft horses are really put to
the test.
According to the rules the
objective is 10 determine the sustained maximum pulling capacity
of each pair of drart horses. These
tests of strength reportedly provide valuable scientific data on
the relationship between form
and function in draft animals and
stimulate general interest in the
breeding and use of good draft
horses.
Animals are weighed in after
5:30p.m. and the teams draw for'
positions of pulling order. The
contest is "open to the world"
which means that horses and
mules from anywhere, owned by
anyone, arc eligible to compete in
the contest if they qualify in all
other rewccts.
A sled loaded with cement
blocks is used in the pulling contest, and each team is permitted
only one driver but is allowed 10
have two helpers in hitching.
The horses are pulled in
weight caiCgories - hghtweight
teams, 3200 pounds and under,
and heavyweight team, 3201
pounds and over.
The prizes 10 the winners are
$150 for first, $125 for second,
$115 for third, $95 for fourth,
$80 for fifth; $65 for sixth, $50
for seventh, and $40 for eighth.
Teams of draft horses are also
used in obstacle and course work
to demonstrate the capabilities of
the horses as well as those of the
driver and his control of the learn.
That will take place ~n the
infield on Wednesday atiO a.m .
The demonstrations will

Arm wrestling
returns to the fair
Arm wrestling, which has
proved popular with Mei~ County fairgoers will return thiS fear.
It will be Saturday mght's
grandstand attraction at 8 p.m.
Both men and women can get
into the act for a $5 entry fee.
Trophies wiU be awarded in fJrSI,
second and third places.
The weight classes for men are
up to 150, l5110 170, 17110 190,
191 10 210 and 211 and up. For
the women there is just one open
class.
Registration 10 participate will
begin at 5 p.m. in the grandstand
stage area.

include the log pull, the wagon
obstacle course, the feed run, and
the ladies wagon obstacle course.
The prize money is $100
divided into five places.
Judging of the draft horses
will take place at 6 p.m. Monday
in the show arena. Ribbons and
premiums will be awarded for
Belgian and Percheron, geldings
and stallions according to age and
junior champion, senior champi·
on will be given rosettes and
grand champions will be present·
ed trophies.
The premium for first in all
categories is $20, for second,
$15, and for third, $10.
There is also a category for
mules with the same premium,
rosette and trophy schedule.
The hill:h classes are cart and
farmers' hill:h, with first places 10
receive trophies and $25, second
place, $20, and third place $15.

Again this year pioneer homemaking skills will be demonstrat·
ed during the Meigs County Fair
in the rustic lot: cabin constructed
in 1829 and moved from its original location on old Slate RouiC 33
to the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
in 1987.
Patty Parker Cook, as a mem·
ber of the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society, is chairman of the demonstrations at the
cabin which will be open to fairgoers from Ito 9 p.m. each day.
Local residents will be on
hand to demonstrate skills such

4-H style revue
to be held
Wednesday

London pool to reduce
hours
The London Pool at Syracuse
will shorten its hours during fair
week. The pool will be open from
I to 4 p.m. each day of the fair.

GRAND CHAMPION GELDING -John Rose is pictured here with a horse which brought
home the rosettes in the 1993 fair and is expected to compete again this year. The gelding was not
only grand champion but also junior champion gelding.

4-H horse show sends
three to '94 state fair
The Meigs County State Fair
4-H qualifying show for horses
was held recently at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds and three
young women were selected to
participate at the State Fair.
The youth selected were Sara
Crail(, Jamie Erwin and Whitney

Karr: Sara is 13, daughter of Fae
Craig, is a member of the Meigs
County 4-H Pleasure Riders.
Jamie, 15, is the daughter of
Steve and Carol Erwin and a
member of the Young Riders, and
Whitney, also a member of the
Young Riders, is the daughter of
Tom and Diana Karr.

See You At The Fair

L

OM.iff Strou.t a3oofts

MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT
614-992-6657 or 99B-oOKS

1994 MEIGS COUNTY

FAIR
AUGUST

Attend The Meigs
County Fair
August 15th thru 20nd
Enjoy All the Exhibits
and Rides!

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL ·HOME
MAIN ntEET

RUTlAND, OHIO
PH. 614-742·2333

"Caring For The People and Also For DetailsYour PreNeed Spedalists"

15TH- 20TH

SEE

YOU
THERE!

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Aulae
nar ur •r
•rno
1.1111 DISl:OU~n PfiiCU

788 N. 2nd

MSiEW

Middleport

992-5515

il

Credit Cards Shown Accepted at Participating Stores.

..

GRAND CHAMPION ·John Krawsczyn, of Chester, shows a
judge how he grooms his dog Champagne, a golden retriever. The
(Continued lrom P.ge11)
dog show was held July 29 at the Megis County Fairgrounds.
Krawsczyn won all three categories dog care, grooming and han- reserve; Patty Nally, honorable
mention.
dling and obedience.
Coats and Jackets: Sarah Lod·
wick, grand; Crystal Smith,
reserve.
Sewing for Others: Heather
Well, grand; Pamela Neece,
reserve; Dorothy Leifheit, Amy
Winners in the 4-H dog show
In dog care the reserve cham· Smith, and Cynthia Cotterill,
have been announced by the pion was Amy Smith, with hon- honorable mention.
Meigs County Extension Service. orable mention 11oing to John
Dress up formal: Heather
John Krawsczyn took three Witherell and Kmdell Brown. Well, grand.
grand champion awards - dog Jenny Friend 100k reserve for dog
care, dog grooming and handling, grooming and ~ling. . .
In dog obedtence trammg,
and doll obedience training.
Taking grand champion in the Amber Perkins was reserve
dog guides for the blind was champion and Sara Clifford, Beth
Call and Melissa Clifford
Billee Pooler.
recei~ed honorable mention.

Krawsczyn captures three
awards in 4-H dog show

Work of local students on display
Hundreds of students across be judged at a time announced b}
Meigs County will be exhibiting John Riebel, superintendent
projects in the areas of science ----~----------------i
and arts and crafts in the annual
·
schools exhibit in the senior fair
building during fair week.
The science exhibits will be
directly related to topics in
health, conservation, earth sci·
ence, biology, botany, physics or
chemistry. The arts and crafts
exhibits have a broader range and
will consist of handicraft, wood·
"A Movie That Families Can
workin$, metal work, leather
craft, weaving, knitting, needle·
See Together-And Come
work, paintings, drawings, letter·
Away From Saying They Had
mg or ceramics.
A Good Time."p[QPL[IoiAGAl'"'
Only students enrolled in
Meigs County schools last year
are eligible to display for compc·
"Lightning Jack Leaves
tition . Judges will judge each
'Em Laughing" .
exhibit on its own merits and
·PEOPLI MloGAIINE
awatd a blue ribbon with $1.50
premium, a red ribbon with $1
premium, or white ribbon with a
Open Monday50 cent premium. The judging
will be done on the basis of
Saturday - 9-8
appearance, originality and edu·
cational value.
10 Tanning Sessions
All entries close at4 p.m. Fri·
day and exhibits must be in place
For $20.00
by 4 p.m. Saturday. Exhibits will

NQW AVA1LAB LE

Located In the old
Gaul's Market Building
State Route 248
Chester 985-3569

as needlework, spinning, weav·
ing, quilting, chair caning, and
the use of herbs for seasoning and
decoration.
Visiting the log cabin which is
furnished with some pieces dat·
ing back to the 1800 s is a real
lesson in history of Meigs County's early pioneer families.
The cabin is more than 160
years old and consists of two
rooms with a stone ftreplace and

a narrow stairWay leadl"ng to an
attic.
It was the homestead of the
Edward Fosler family who came
to Meigs County in 1816.
In the spring of 1987, it was
dismantled and reconstructcd on
the fairgrounds and since that
time has been opened every year
to fairgoers who have enjoyed a
variety of demonstrations of pioneer skills and historical exhibits.

Draft horse fun how promises laughs
The infield attraction at 10 wagon obstacle course, feed run,
a.m. on Wednesday is sure to and ladies wagon obstacle course.
The fun show is open to all
provide plenty of laughs as well
draft
horses and the contest will
as thrills as draft horses show
their capabilities and drivers their be staged by the fair board with
the assistance of the Draft Horse
control of the horses.
The draft horse fun show will Association.
Teams may be brought in just
feature four categories with $100
for
the day of competition .
to be divided in each contest in
According
10 the rules, only one
five places.
The classes are log pull, driver can be used.

MEIGS CARPET &amp;
DECORATING CENTER
MILL DIRECT

•support Tile

I994

Meigs County Fair"
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Salem, Armstrong, Horizon, Philadelphia, Mohawk
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Hobson Road • Middleport, Ohio

1994 Meigs Co. Fair
AUGUST 1S-16-17-18-19-20
SEE YOU THERE!

,•

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Portable Spas

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BAUM
LUMBER COMPANY
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE
PHONE 915·3301

CHESTER, OHIO

�Antique tractor pull combined
with local yokel truck pull this year
The antique tractor show and with major accessories and must open headers.
pull returns to the Meigs County have an exhaust system with no
Entry fcc the event is $50.
Fair this year Thursday at 7:30
p.m . in the pulling ring. This year
the event is coupled with the
local yokel truck pull.
The Meigs County Junior Fair Guess; FFA, Chris Harnm,
Old tractors cannot pull the
Board
is composed of members Stephanie Sayre, Rob Hofl'man,
enormous loads dragged by modof
the
4-H
girls, 4-H boys, FFA, and Randall Burke; FHA, Amy
ern trucks, so they haul only a
FHA,
girl
scouts, boy scouts, Smith, Crystal, Melissa Guess,
normal load when entered in pull
Vocational
Industrial Clubs of Jessyca Hatfield, Devon Hill,
contests. No extra weight or
Angela Young, Todd McDade,
America,
and
the Grange.
engine power may be added to
The
1994
officers
are
Michele
Shelly
Sinclair, and Riki Barthe tractors at the Meigs County
Guess,
president;
Todd
McDade,
ringer.
Fair. They must pcrfonn as they
vice president; Matthew Morris,
Girl scouts, Michelle Bissell,
did decades before.
secretary;
Ginger Holcomb, trea- Kristen Hill, Bethany Cook and
To ensure this, antique tractor
owners make sure their machines surer; Chris Hamm , news Andrea Neutzling; boy scouts,
arc authentic, down to the origi- reporter; Andrea Neutzling, histo- Scan Maxcy, B. J. Workman,
nal color, parts and decals. Trac- rian, and Sean Maxey, parliamen- James Clifford, and Mike Frymyer; VICA, Chrissy Taylor, Trish
tors only qualify as antiques if tarian.
On
the
board
of
directors
are
Mchaffie, Matthew Morris, and
they were made before 1960,
members
representing
each
of
the
Kcawana Qualls; and grange,
according to Fair Board President
organizations.
Peggy Smith and Ginger HolDan Smith.
They
are
4-H
girls,
Anita
Calcomb.
To preserve the historical
Ed Holter and Dan Smith are
aspect of the event, all tractors away, Michele Guess, Christy
Drake,
and
Mary
Nally;
4-H
the
senior fair board members
must have stock block and must
boys,
Jason
Ervin,
Jonathan
Avis,
who
assist the junior board.
resemble original in year of manChance
Watson,
and
Michael
ufacture. All tractors must have
original
front end and operating
BEST AFGHAN - Elma Louks or Syracuse was tbe
brakes.
WHERE SERVICE
winner of tbe rosette in afghans at last year's fair for ber
Standard treads must have the
field-of-pineapple designed afghan. It was one of three
I
'&gt;'!!j.
factory fenders . The wheelbase
WITH A SMILE IS
afghans wbicb Mrs. Louks made for tbe competition.
cannot be altered.
The antique tractors and their
OUR EVERYDAY
\~
drivers will compete in six classes: 1938 and older, 4,500-pound;
STYLE.
1939-59, 3,500-pound; 1939-59,
Your
Waiting
4,500-pound; 1939-59, 5,500
pound; 1939-59, 6,500-pound;
For those who enjoy sewing, basis of appearance, 10 percent; 1939-59, 3,800. Entry fee 1s $10.
knitting, crocheting, quilting, or workmanship, 50 percent; style,
The local yokel truck pull is
ether types of crafts, the domestic 10 percent; and materials, 30 per- limited to road licensed trucks
arts display in the senior fair cent. They will be displayed on with tires no larger than 33XI2building is a must visit sight to the walls and tables so fairgoers 16.5. Trucks must appear stock
see at the Meigs County Fair.
can see them.
Ribbons and premiums in
Kay Frederick and Karen Lod992-6471
wick are the chairpersons for the three places, ranging from $3 to
172 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
show, which features I09 classes. 75 cents will be awarded in each
Divisions include children's class.
In addition to the individual
clothing, adult clothing, needlecraft, crochet, knitting, quilts and class judgi'ng, best of show
Again this year the Meigs
hobby comer. The hobby comer rosettes plus premiums of $3 will County Ministerial Association
adds versatility to the display in be awarded in the categories of will conduct religious services to
that there are classes for Christ- sewing, needlecraft, knitting, pic- open the Meigs County Fair.
mas decorations, baskets, tures, crocheting, quilts, afghans
Plans call for the 7 p.m. Sunwreaths, gift wrappings, ceramics and hobby comer.
New work and new ideas will day services to feature a song fest
and woodcraft.
Items are to be brought to the be given preference in awarding at the gra_ndstand to include spesenior fair building between 9 premiums. Any items winning Cial . mus1c and congregational
a.m. and noon Saturday since the ribbons within the past two years smgmg.
The Ministerial Association is
are excluded. The Saturday afterjudging will begin at 12:30 p.m.
Judging will be done onthe noon judging is closed to the pub- an ecumenical group of Meigs
County ministers.
lic.

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Twenty-Nine

Hundreds of fair exhibits by scouts
Boy and girl scouts take a girl scout booths at the fair.
and crafts, collections, hobbies
prominent role in the Meigs
The boy scouts will be exhibit- and crafts, ropes, camping,
County Junior Fair and their pro- ing in 28 classes and their pro- wildlife, frrst aid and safety, elecject displays will be in the junior jects cover a wide range. There tricity science, ecology, welding,
fair building.
are classes for Indian costumes photograph, and pets.
The girl scouts will be exhibiting in seven group categories.

Junior Fair Board officers

I
.
•
=-LJ

•I' ...-·- I{B~

Domestic arts to
show variety of skills

Car Is

See You At The Fair!
Need A Ride Call Us ....

BLUE STREAK CAB CO.

Reliqious
serv1ces Sunday

The World of Well Being will
have displays focusing on physical and emotional health, nutri tion and exercise, interpersonal
relationships, the home, safety
work and leisure.
The World of People will feature projects on heritage and
international friendships, as well
as needlework and service project
displays.
The World of Today and
Tomorrow will emphasize projects on ecology, science, carpentry, photography, and macrame,
while the World of the Arts will
have its emphasis on fine arts and
sculptures, non -nature collections, and miscellaneous crafts.
WINNING EXHIBIT - Sarah Houser, a fifth year
scout, will display ber outstanding exhibit at the junior fair
building. Sarah built a wooden doll bouse from a vegetable
crate, put on a cardboard roof, and furnished it witb furniture she created or bought at yard sales.

Meigs County girl scout are
represented in the project judging
wh1ch w1ll take place at the Ohio
State Fair next week.
Scouts and troops participating
Rachel Taylor and Bridget Johnson, Middleport juniors; Andrea
Ncutzling and Bonnie Rutter,
Pomeroy cadetes; Billie Joe

Welsh, Tuppers Plains juiors;
Bethany Cooke, cadctte, and
Missi Houser, Sarah Houser, and
Rebeca Houser, Pomeroy Juniors.
Meigs Countians visiting the
state fair arc invited to stop by
the Lausche building and take a
look at the projects from here.

-

CHRYSLER

HARnNGfR
PARKWAY
MIDDlEPORT,
OHIO
992-6545

VISIOft&lt;Xn
&gt; I

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446-0842
You'D Like Our
Quality Way of
Doing Buslneoe.

r:tf/rS

/!!1f:il88M;1.BE A
CARS fRUCKS /MPORfS

15th • 20th

DON'T
MISS IT!

lllfrle~crtJif ~

FURNITURE, TV's, APPLIANCES,
FLOOR COVERING
PHONE 992-3671
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

See You At The Fair

Our healthcare personnel will be providing blood pressure and
blood sugar testing free of charge. We will have a variety of
healthcare literature for you as well as souvenirs. And do be sure
to register for one of our door prizes--four $25 gift certificates
from the Kroger Store in Pomeroy.
MEIGS CO.
FAIR

I 31st Year

MEIGS CO.
FAIR

We're Proud To Support The
1994 Meigs County Fair
August 15-16-17-18-19-20
Fun For The Entire Family"

11

•

Your Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge Truck Dealer·

GAN

~

Participating in the annual Meigs County Fair is a part of our
pledge to community service. Our booth will be staffed from 1 to
9 p~ m., Monday through Friday. See you?

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

RNER~

Norris Northup Dodge Inc
UPPER RT. 7-fASTERN AVL

I

We surely hope so. We look forward to greeting you at our booth
in the Senior Fair Commercial Building.

MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR DAYS
August 15th - 20th

AUGUST

Scouts exhibit at state fair

Support the Youth
of Meigs County!

The 131sr
Meigs County Fair
See You There

The World of the Out-ofDoors will present projects on
crafts and activities, nature collections, and health and safety.
Both group and individual
projects will be included in the

MEIGS COUNTY

surance

~!vices

Pomeroy

115 East Memorial Drive

GAUIPOLIS, OH.

992-6687
214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2104

�Page Thirty-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Tbirty-onf

Go kart racing, a first for the Meigs Fair
Go kart racing makes its debut
at the Meigs County Fair this
year Saturday about 3 p.m. as
members of the newly-formed
Meigs Kaning Association Kart
Club take to the kart track near
the grandstand.
Racers can be boys, girls, men
or women aged six to 60 and up,
promoter Chuck Clark said. The
races will start as soon as the
quarter horse racing is over.
A purse of $2,000 has been set
up to be distributed between six
first places, six second places,
and six third places.
Racing will be held in six
four-cycle classes: Yard Kart run for fun, ali ages; Rookie eight to 12 years old, 235 pounds
minimum weight for kart and
rider; Junior- 12-15 years old,

280 pound minimum weight;
Adult World Karting Association
legal stock, 320-360 pounds minimum weight; Adult Stock
Appearing (claim) 330
pounds; Adult Open Modified 345 pounds.
Clark said the club is currently
trying to promote a two-cycle .
event wi!h classes including Mac,
Yamaha stock, Piston Port, Reed
Rotary and 100cc Open.
Racers must have proper safety equipment including a full
coverage helmet, neck brace,
driving gloves, a jacket of leather,
vinyl or abrasion resistant nylon
and full-length pants or driving
suits, Clark sa1d. In addition ,
karts must have front and rear
bumpers and double nerf bars.

AUGUST 15TH - 20TH
SEE YOU THERE!

..

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•

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•BLOCKS •MORTAR•CONCRETE •
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TOOLS•FIBERED
1\fr_,/ CONCRETE•EITENSION
·\7'
MATERIALS•LIMESTONE
I

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.

RACERS- When tbe go kart races debut at the Meigs County Fair next week Travis Adams,
12, left, and Scottie Brinnager, 14, both ol Racine, will be on the track. Pictured here with tbe racers is Alva Clark, vice president of the Kart Club, who wiD be assisting at the fair races.

Bicycles and prizes to be awarded Saturday
Four bicycles and numerous
other prizes will be awarded Saturday morning at the Meigs
County Fair in observance of
"'McDonald's Day".
The program stans at 10 a.m.
and will cominue until noon at
the hill s1age.
From 9 a.m. to noon, children
12 and under will be admitted
free at the $ale. At that time they
will be g1ven a ticket from

McDonald's for a free sundae at
the Pomeroy store.
Each child will be registered
for the prizes which will be
drawn staning at 10:30. To win
the boys and girls must be pre-·
sent
Drawing for the bicycles will
be at 10:30 a.m. , II am., 11:30
a.m. and noon.
The bicycles and other prizes

are being provided by the Meigs
County Fair Board, Bates Bros.
Amusement Co., and McDonald's of Pomeroy.

.
•

FOREST RUN READY MIX
992·2067

SEE YOU AT THE FAIR
MERCURY
LINCOLN

Fun For All!

SEE YOU AT THE FAIR!

Lambert Insurance Agency

HOME OF THE

S49ovER

INVOICE

I

M RYDAY! CUSTOMER KEEPS REBATE

SALLY LAMBERT, AGENT

SALUTES THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR!

992·6641

~J ~~~LS

POMEROY, OH.

MILLIE'S RESTAUUNT
AND
PRODUCE
Millie &amp; Stan Duncan, Owners

Remember... With Our Product Line And
Our Pricing Policy - It's Hard To Imagine
Anyone Not Buying From Us ...
However, If You Don't. Buy From Turnpike ...

• MUSIC
• HARNESS RACING
• 4-H EXHIBITS

• GRANDSTAND ENTERTAINMENT
• FARM ANIMALS
• DEMOLITION DERBY

"A Proud Supporter Of The Meigs County Fair For Over 82 Year:s"

Your Bankfn~···

PLEASE BUY AMERICAN!

Open 6:00 A.M. • 8:00 p.m. Monday- friday
6:00 a.m. • 3:00 p.m. Sat./Sun.

Support The
1994 Meigs County Fair

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

Good homecooked food daily~Bakery goode made from .cmch

Catering eervic~ provided • Special Ordere

CALL FOR ORDERS • 992·7713
Bradbury Road

• CONTESTS and RIDES
• FLORAL DISPLAYS

Middleport, Ohio
Member F.D.I.C.
't. '' ..••

'

211 West Second Street
t.;J..Jaj P. 0. Box 626
· Pomeroy, OH 45769
6!4·$92-2136

Route 7

P. 0 . Box 339

Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783

614-667·3161

~

w

~
~-­
LENDER

�Flurry of activity on fairgrounds in
preparation for Monday opening
With the opening of the Meigs
County Fair just a weekend away ,
there is nurry of activity at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds in
preparation for the six -day event.
Renovation of the secretary's
office has been completed, five
large trees ncar the hill stage area
have been cut down, and a new
access road into that area has
been constructed and the buildings and barns have been repaired
and cleaned.
The secretary's office has
taken on a new look with .paneling, ceiling tile and flooring
inside, a new siding and a new
roof on the outside. And it's more
comfortable with a new air conditioning system.
Electrical woQk is being completed and new lines installed to
handle computers in the office.
This will be the first fair where
computers will be used to handle
project registrations and judging
results.
The Meigs County Agriculture
Society contracted with Ray
Smith Construction to do the
work on the secretary's office,
and Eblin Electric to handle the
electrical work.
All of the rest of the work is
being done by Ted Smith, fairgrounds maintenance foreman,
and his crew.

7:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
8:00a.m.
9:00a.m.
1:00 p.m.

The large trunks from the trees
which were cut down were
hauled over the hill where they
will be used as demo derby
bumpers around the area inside
the race track.
While some of the trees had to
be taken down to make way for
the new access road, others were
taken out because they were "old
and rotten" and posed a safety
hazard, according to Smith.
There has always been a problem for entertainers to get to the
hill stage because of the congestion in that area when the carnival
rides and game and food booths
are operating. Smith said those
problems have been alleviated
with the new access road.
The senior fair building has a
new roof as does the hog barn, a
new manure pit has been erected
near the horse bam, and some
areas where trailers are parked
during the fair have been leveled

3:30p.m.
4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

By order of the Meigs County
Health Department, the old toilets
have been tom down and portable
ones will be used in their place.
General mowing and cleaning
up of the grounds is underway
and will continue up until the
time the 13lst Meigs County Fair
opens Monday. Smith said.

REFLECTING - A longtime familiar face at the race track of the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Brooks Sayre, sits down on what remains of the old toilet outlide the honebarn to
renect - just renect. The old toilets on the fairgrounds have aB been ftlllOf~~Cll'der of the
Meigs County Health Department, and porta-potties an beln1 mowd In for the
.

FUN DAYS ARE FAIR DAYS •••
DON'T MISS THE 1994
MEIGS COUNTY IRI

Racing events offer Meigs
fairgoers chance •to win cash

The Matching Fund Associa- $25.
Only those over age 14 arc elition, which was formed last year
to promote attendance at the gible to compete for the money
horse racing programs, will give and winners must be present to
claim a prize. Winners can only
out $200 each day of the races.
Anyone entering the grand- claim one prize a day.
This promotion is sponsored
stand before the end of the second race will be given a ticket. by the Meigs County Horsemen
The drawing will begin after the and the Meigs County Agriculturthird race . One ticket will be al Society.
worth $50, and six will be worth

,.,, 1 55 NORTH SECOND

AUGUST 15-16·17·18-19-20
FOR ALL YOUR PRESCRIPTION
NEEDS•••SEE SWISHER-LOHSE
FOR DEPENDABLE SERVICE.
•TOYS
•COSMOICS
-GIFTS •SUNDRIES
10%

Itt

• • • 61 • •

WE'RE PROUD OF ALL THOSE WHO Discount On
Presalptlons
WORK SO HARD TO Ml\KE OUR
For 1hose60
COUNTY FAIR GREAT!

F~~~~~t Ri66aK6

. Ta
·yee..SkiW

&amp;Over

ENJOY TQ;'@I\ "994
MEIGS COtmTY FAll\!
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.

Wf DO IJ RIGHT TH£ fiR~T TIM£!
• •

•· ~· •• • •• •

••••· •·•

••

••••

•

••

•

•••

•••

PH. 8112-21166

PRESCRIPTIONS
EAST .MAIN ST.

• •a•• •

ChariM Riffle, R. Ph.

RONALD HANNING, R. PH.

•••

·

•

•

•• •

•- •

•·

Friendly Service

otiO

Monday, August I ~
Gates Open
All Livestock must be on the gmunds
Weigh-in poultry, rabbits, steers, and hogs
Groom and Clean Contest followed by 4-H Horse Show
Junior Fair Poultry Show followed by Open Class Poultry
Show-Show Arena
Junior Fair Parade
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Hillside Stage- God's Kidz
King and Queen Cmwning· Hill Stage
Dt·aft Horse Show·Show Arena
Moto-Cross
Gates Close

2:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Tuesday, August 16
Junior Fair Rabbit Show-Show Arena
Open Class Beef Show followed by Junior FAir Beef
Breeding· Show Arena
Out of the Blue-Hill Stage
Kiddie Tractor Pull • Show Arena
Junior Fair Board Auction
Junior Fair Steer- Show Arena
Hill Stage-Joy
Hill Stage- River Valley Boys
Grandstand· Demolition Dtl'rby
Gates Close

9:00a.m.
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
2:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
9:00p.m:
12:00 Midnight

Wednesday, August 17
Junior Fair Goat Show- Show Arena
Draft Horse Contest·lnfield
Dazzling Dolls· Hill Stage
4-H Flower Show· Junior Fair Building
Guys and Gals Sheep Lead Class- Show Arena
Harness Racing
4-H Style Revue· Hill Stage
Kiddie Tractor Pull· Show Arena
Little Miss and Mister Contest· Hill Stage
Kiddie Games- Show Arena
Junior Fair Swine Show· Show Arena
Open Class Horse Show
Ronna Reeves- Grandstand
Horse Pull
{(
Hill Stage· Midnight Cloggers
Gates Close

8:00a.m.
1:00 p.m.

OUL

~~IIOI.T TIDPIIIS t !

Marathon Welcomes the
1994 Meigs County Fair

COLD

BEER

12:00 Midnight·

Thursday, August 18
(Senior Citizens Day until 2:00p.m.)
4-H Horse Fun Show
Junior Fair Dairy Show- Show Arena
Homemaker Pie and country Fair- Hillside Stage
Open Class Dairy Show· Show Arena
Harness Racing
District 6 Holstein Show- Show Arena
Hill Stage- Classics
Flower Show Judging- Senior Fair Building
Hill Stage- Junior Fair Talent Show
Kiddie Tractor Pull· Show Arena
Hill Stage· Junior Fair Kiddie Games ·
Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by Open Class
Sheep Shpw -Show Arena
Antique Tractor Pull and Local Yokel Truck Pull
Ronnie McDowell· Grandstand
Gates Close

9:00a.m.
11 :00 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Friday, August 19
Pet Show- Show Arena
Junior Fair Dog Obedience Show • Show Arena
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Harness Racing
Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
Hill Stage· Back Porch Swing Band
Hill Stage· Belles and Beaus
Truck &amp; Semi Pull
Gates Close

9:00a.m.
10:00 a.m.
12:00 noon
1:00 p.m.
3:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00 p:m.
8:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Saturday, August 20
Pretty Baby Contest- Show Arena
Ronald McDonald Activities· Hill Stage
Quarter Horse Races
Hill Stage· Big Bend Cloggers
Go-Kart Races
Kiddie Tractor Pull Champions- Show Arena
Youth Night· Show Arena
Tractor Pull
Hill Stage· Pure Country
Grandstand- Arm Wrestling
Gates Close

8:30a.m.
9:00a.m.
11 :30 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:30p.m.

s:oo p.m.

•Hot &amp; Cold Sandwiches
• Fountain Drinks
• McHappy's Doughnuts
• Movie Rentals
• Otis Spunkmeyer
Cookies
•Ice

• Super Lotto
• Pick 3
- - · Buckeye Five
• nstant Games

RIVERSIDE FOOD MART
431 west Mafn
..

..

,

Pomeroy
'.

'

�Page Thirty-Fm,ar-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Thirty-Five

Support Our Youth!

Attend The Fair!

Saluting Meigs County Youth!
1'•-

Your Elected Republican County Officials
v-.fl'· -

~lt!
COOKING PROJECTS - Numerous 4-H cooking projects
will be on display in the junior rair building at the Meigs County Fair next week. Here in pre-rair judging is Jessica Dillon, 9,
or The Pioneer 4-H Club explaining her project "Let's Begin
Cooking" to judge Gloria Adams, Athens County 4-H advisor.

COMMON PLEAS JUDGE FRED W. CROW Ill
JUVENILE-PROBATE JUDGE ROBERT E. BUCK
COUNTY COURT JUDGE PATRICK H. O'BRIEN
CLERK OF COURT LARRY E. SPENCER
COUNTY RECORDER EMMOGENE HAMILTON
COUNTY TREASURER HOWARD E. FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
COUNTY ENGINEER ROBERT EASON
COUNTY CORONER DR. DOUGLAS HUNTER
COMMISSIONER ROBERT HARTENBACH
COMMISSIONER FRED HOFFMAN

SEE YOU AT THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR!
TRIPLETT
ENGINEERING
SERVICES

Pd . for by Meigs County Republican Executive CommiHee,
Gene TripleH, Chairman. 106 Holley Cane, Pomeroy.

Eugene Triplett, P.E., P.S.
Ohio, lndana, Kentucky
and Weal Virginia

P.O. Box 449 .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Business ~614) 992-2194
Home 614) 992-5276
FAX 614) 992-5689

1994 MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
SEE YOU THERE!

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
•FREE ESTIMATES
BUILDING

PHONE (614) 992-5009
REMODELING GENERAL REPAIR

INTERIOR • PAINTING • EXTERIOR
SPECIALIZING IN WINDOW &amp; DOOR REPLACEMENT

MEIGS COUNTY

August 15th thru 20th
"We Salute AU Tlao•e Involved"

KING SERVI!iJ-JIR HARDWARE
992·5020
405 IOITH SECOND

992·3741
MIDDLEPORt OHIO

TEAM UP WITH
McDONALD'S TO
SUPPORT THE YOUTH
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
McDonald's of Pomeroy urges ALL area businesses
to support our most valuable resource (TilE YOU1H
OF MEIGS COUNTY) by purchasing an animal at the
1994 Meigs County Fair Livestock Sale, Friday,
August 19th at 5:00 P.M. These young people use
these earnings to further their education in their chosen fields.
If you cannot attend the Livestock Sale, and would
I.ike to support the youth of Meigs County by
purchasing an animal, please contact Roscoe Mills at
home (992-5072) and we will be happy to make all
arrangements to place a bid for you. .

Thank You For Supporting
Our Youth
McDonald's of Pomeroy

7£-..£____ 7_;,~
Roscoe Mills
Owner/Operator

Meigs has exhibit at Ohio State Fair
"Where the Road Meets the
River" is the theme of Meigs
County's 1994 exhibit at the
Ohio State Fair.
This is the third year the county has taken an exhibit to the state
fair , and this year's contribution
commemorates the county's
!75th annivers..ry.
A large, wooden 6 1/2-by-4
1/2 foot map of the county forms
the focal point of the display with
the leuers in the words "Meigs
County" being made of different
types of wood.
The colored map shows ::11

state highways, historical sites
and boat ramps, said Meigs
County Park/Tourism Director
Mary Powell. The booth also features local industries , tourist
attractions and enlarged pictures
of various festivals within the
county, she added.
The booth, a project of the
Meigs County Park/Tourism
office, will be on display until
Aug. 21, manned by volunteers
working half-day shifts. In return
for manning the booth and handing out Meigs County literature,

Peach pie contest and more
A pic baking contest will be a
feature of the annual "Ladies Day
at the Fair" program to be held
Thursday at II: 30 a.m. on the hill
stage at the Meigs County Fair.
Women arc inviiCd to prepare
their pies and have them at the
site not late than the starting lime
for the program. No advance registration is required.

The actual judging of the pies
will be at noon following a
demonstration featuring uses for
peaches by Cindy S. Oliveri,
Meigs County extension agent.
Cash prizes will be awarded at
12:30 p.m.
The program is sponsored by
Vctcrans Memorial Hospital.

Support The 1994
Meigs County Fair!
SALES • SERVICE • SYSTEMS

SNOUFFER
FIRE AND SAFETY EQUIPMENT
PHONE 992·7075
GARY SNOUFFER 992·7446
172 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

volunteers receive passes to get
into the fair and parking passes,
she said.
About 50 people have volun·
leered, she added.
The map and leucrs were cut
out by Dale Han of Racine with .. ·
the assistance of Forrest Nciglcr,
also of Racine. Mila Raymond
did the art work and wood for the
display was donaiCd by the Facemycr Lumber Company of Middleport, Powell said.
Also on display arc products
from local greenhouses and farmers, crafts and a mine display. A
~-vacation package from the Royal
Oak Resort is being offered as a
GOVERNOR VISITS MEIGS BOOTH - Gov. and Mrs.
door prize.
George Voinovich visited the Meigs County llooth at the Ohio
· The booth is located in the State Fair this week. They pose ror a picture here with Mary
Buckeye Building.
Powell, Meigs County Park/Tourism director.

l

_,._

PROUD TO BE A
SUPPORTER OF THE
131ST MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR
AUGUST 1Sth-20th

CROWS FAMILY RESTAUUNT
228 West Main

Pomeroy

992·5432

FAIR DAYS
WE MAKE
SHOPPING EASY
AT FRUTH

Enioy The Meigs County Fair
AUGUST 15·16·17·18·19·20

Then See Us
For All Your
Building and
Remodeling Needs!!!

"'"' PHARMACY
From Perfumes
that'll make your
nights sizzle to
coffee makers to
.
get you perking In
the ·momlnga, you'll find It at Fruth Pharmacy.
We carry all the big and little ttema you'd expect
to find In a full-scale department atora at a better
price.
So make one atop tnatead of ten Shop at Fruth
Pharmacy.
·

786 N. SECOND STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6491 .

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
PH. 992·6611
555 PARK ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�Page Thirty-Six-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Thirty-Seven,

Baking and
canning, hot
fair feature

s

Hundreds of entries have been
made in the baking and canning
division at the 13Ist Meifs County Fair and fairgoers wit be able
to see them all next week in the
Coonhunters Building on the fairgrounds.
Judging will take pla~e at I
p.m. Monday in both divisions.
Exhibits
of
homemaker talents are always
popular with exhibitors as weU as
those visiting the fair.
There are categories for pre-

Complete

Don't Miss the 1994
Meigs Count~ Fairf

ra eOf

WAID CROSS and SONS
GROCERY
OH
.
Aacme,

ear's Fair!

414 Pearl

949-2550

See You At The 1994
Meigs County Fair!

rolls.
chip, peanut buuer, and brownies.
In the cake category, there arc
Pic classes are apple, cherry,
classes for angel food, choeolatc, pecan, peach, and ra1sin, and 10
and white cakes, and in the cook- candies , there arc three classes
ie category, there are classes for fbr different kinds of fudge.
oatmeal, plain sugar, chocolate
All of the baked goods under-

MARKETING INC.
AGENT- DON SWISHER

THE 1994

--...

992·5111
sr. RT 124

Ashlsnd

~

POMEROY, OHIO

VALVOLINE MOTOR OILS ·- GREASE
ANTI-FREEZE- DIESEL ENGINE OILS
HYDRAULIC OILS- FARM AND INDUSTRIAL FUELS

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

COUNTY
FAIR
AUGUST

6 BlG OA1S!-

15-16-17-18-19-20

TO ALL THOSE WHO HAVE WORKED SO
HARD TO MAKE THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
POSSIBLE WE "THANK YOU!!"

"SEE YO

INGELS

THEREI"

INGELS

Furniture &amp; Jewelry

Cut Rite Carpet

992·2635

992·7028

106 N. Second

Middleport,

o•.

169 N. Seco1d

,SUBWAV'

Middleport, Oh.

SALUTES
THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

AUGUST 15-20

ON YOUR WAY HOME FROM THE FAIR
STOP BY FOB SOME•••

LATE
•. p

BITES.
lAP ?UH ..P. ! 3 . ¢.2 s "'!

,,...__

MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR DAYS!

I

AUGUST 15TH·- 20TH

AUGUST

1994.

The Daily Sentinel
POMEROY

go the "taste test" by a panel of
judges.
Ribbons and premiums will be
awarded in three places, with $2
for first, $1.50 for second and $1
for third.

MEIGS

ASHLAND BRANDED

ATTEND

PHONE 992-2155
111 COURT STREET

serves, jams, Jellies, spreads,
pickles, relishes , catsup, and
sauces, as well as for canned
fruit, vegetables and meats.
Entries are to be in place by
noon on Saturday and cannot be
removed from the display until
after the fair closes Saturday.
In the baked goods division,
exhibits arc to be in place by
noon Monday with the judging to
take place at I p.m. No frozen
products for those made form box
mixes are permitted. Baked
goods are to be brought in on disposable paper or aluminum pie
pans.
There are classes for breads,
whole wheat, white, banana nut,
and zuchinni, biscuits and yeast

15th thru 20th

Support The Youth Of
Our County!

Subway's got the best tasting subs under the stars. All your tavonte
meats piled high on fresh baked bread - topped w1th lree f1x1n·s
Want a late n1ght bite? Make 11 Subway ton,ght

WHILE VISITING THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
STOP BY OUR BOOTH

HOURS: 10 ~.M.- MIDNIGHT. SUNDAY-THURSDAY
10 A.M.-2:00A.M .. FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

WARNER lilTING AND COOLING
CHEnii,OHIO

915·4222
..

;.

': .,

·,

'· '·

'

'

'•

\

·,

...

26th Street &amp; Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasont, WV

303 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, OH

813 W. MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH

Phone 675·5390

Phone 446-6483

Phone 992-6426

�Page Thirty-Eight-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition
1994 Meigs County Fair Edition-Page Thirty-Nine

fruits and vegetables in fair display
Frosted pumpkin cookie Grains,
Good quality and maturity, noon Monday since the judging cucumbers, rrom beans to beets,

contest set for Monday
Something new ror the Meigs
County Fair in the baking division is the cookie contest
The reature cookie is a rmsted
pumpkin cookie.
Exhibitors are to make cookies
using the rollowing recipe and
bring six selected ones on a paper
plate to the Coonhunters building
on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
Monday berore noon. The judging will take place at I p.m.
A $3 premium will be awarded to the best or show pumpkin
cookie, with a $2 premium ror
the reserve best or show.
The recipe is as roUows:
Pumpkin cookie
I cup or brown sugar

I cup shortening
I cup pumpkin
I egg beaten
2 I /2 cups flour
I tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
I tsp. cinnamon
I Lsp. vanilla
Cream sugar, shortening, pumpkin and egg together.
Add dry ingredients and mix
well . Drop by teaspoon. Bake at
350 degrees ror 8 to 10 minutes.
Frost with 2 tbsp. melted butter, 2 Tbsp. milk or cream, 4
Tbsp. brown sugar, and enough
powdered sugar to thicken.

KELLERS
CUSTOM BENDING

and not necessarily the largest,
will be the criteria used in judging grains, rruits and vegetables
entered in the rarm crops and horticulture division at the Meigs
County Fair.
.
Exhibits are to be m place at
the Coonhunters building by

will begin at I p.m. Ribbons will
be placed and premiums awarded
in three places, $2 ror ftrst, $1 ror
second, and 50 cents ror third.
The exhibit will rcature grains,
rrom buckwheat to winter oats,
potatoes or all kinds and vegetables ranging rrom cabbage to

rrom tomatoes to turnips, along
with gourds, melons, apples or
many varieties, and many other
rruits.
.
Included in the department ts a
class ror best display or garden
produce, which must include 10
dirrerent varieties but not more
than 30 items

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS CO.

''Proud To Be A
Supporter Of The
Meigs County Fair.''

"Complete Exhaust Systems"
Monroe Shocks Installed

RUTLAND, OHIO

THE PLAINS, OHIO

TORCH, OHIO

McCONNELSVILLE, OHIO

Support The 1994 Meigs
County Fair...

WALKER

RODNEY KELLER
OWNER

r=-,....~iiiiill

985-3949
2 MILES EAST
ON248
CHESTER, OHIO

COME TO THE

Peoples Bank ·

WE ARE NOW THE LARGEST INDEPENDENT PROPANE DEALER IN
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO AND SOUTHWESTERN WEST VIRGINIA.

August -1Sth - 20th

MEMBER FDIC

See You There!

3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Your Local

ST/Ht:
Dealer

STIHL .. ,. ·

SALES - SERVICE -

PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SECOND
STREET
MASON, WV.
773-5514

2212
JACKSON AVE.
POINT PLEASANT,

wv.

4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

JUST GIVE US A CALL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

5th STREET
NEW HAVEN,

wv.

"Your Homelite Dealer"

985-3308

.....-

Chester, Ohio

....

• .. . ' ... · ·· ··' . . . . .. .. .. " ' -. ... . . .• ... -· ~ ,. •• " "'' •• - • • "' ... ,. ~ • • ' .. ........... . .......... ~.' ' • " ..... • .... .. ... . .. ,. ~ . ...... - ~ - · • .• • • ..

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GAS

AND

992-2135

675-1121

1·800·837·8217

(ft14) 742-ZS11
Jl

"Famn, Owned"

,.

Rutland, Ohio

~Ji

\

�•'

Scuba diving:
Taking the
plunge
·Featured on page 81

HMC gets $700,000 gift

Hi: 80s
Low: 70s

-PageA3

Rutland school demolition on hold

on PageA2

-Page As

•

mtts
A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

Mlddleport·Pomeroy-Gallipolla·Pt. Pleasant. August 14, 1994

Vol. 29, No. 27

Meigs fair opens Monday

will find the Back
Porch Swing Band
at 5, followed by the
Belles and Beaus
western square
dancers at 6:30p.m.
Wrapping up hill
night with the local
stage activityonSatpopular " Joy ,"
urday will be the Big
Patty Hen sler and
Bend Cloggers at I
Dorothy Bailey, at
and Pure Country at
6 and the River
Rp.m.
Valley Boys of
Vanety is the spice
Lancaster at 7 p.m.
of grandstand attracWednesday will
A ROAD FOR CONVENIENCE- No longer will entertainers have tions and there is
find the Dazzling to fight their way lo the hill stage lo unload their performance
plenty of that on this
Dolls twirling ba- equipment. A new road has been built which goes in from a gate near
ye a r"s schedule .
tons on stage at II, the dog pound, down behind and around the grange building, up to the
Ronna Reeves on
and the Midnighl hill stage where there is space for parking, and exits onlo a midway
Wednesday and
Cloggers at 9 p.m. road. Here Dan Smith, president of the fair board, confers with one of
Ronnie McDowell
In between, there the equipment operators working on the road.
on Thursday, both
will be a contest to
considered topname the I'194 Little Miss and Little Mister Meigs County . fli ght performers. will pe rform at ~ p.m.
The Classics will presenl the old tunes at I p.m. ThursFor those IIIIo loud noises and fast motion, there ' s
day, a talenl show at 4 p.m. and kiddie games at r\. Fnday
Continued on page A2

Fairgrounds change as Midway takes shape
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - With the opening of the I 31st Meigs
County Fair just a day away, the Rock Springs fairground'
is a changing scene as the midway takes shape.
Carnival rides are going up, booths are already serving
food, many of the exhibitors arc adding lhe finishmg
touches to their displays. and the judging in several
deparlments took place Saturday .
As early as Friday, aclivity was seen in the commercial
buildings, with equipment, supplies and olher materials
being moved in as businesses prepared to promote their
wares and services to Ihe lhrongs of passersby attending
the fair.
While the fair officially opens at 7 a.m. Monday, the
kickoff comes at7:30 p.m. Sunday with religious services
at lhe grandstand. An old-fash ioned hymn sing with
special music from local church groups will be featured,

and an offering will be taken for the association 's benevolent work.
Over the past few weeks, workers have spruced up the
grounds, painted, re- roofed and renovated some of the
buildings, tore down some old loilels and replaced them
wilh more sanitary portable ones, and built a road to
provide better access to the stage for the entertainers.
Several large old trees had to be cut to make way for the
road. which got a final load of gravel Friday. The road
enters beside the dog pound , circles behind the grange
building, and then across to the stage. exiling into the area
near the secretary's building. There is adequate parking
and adequate unloading and loading space for the entertainers beside the stage, alleviating the problem of having
to deal with the midway traffic.
The schedule for Ihe week on the hill slage offers variety
at its best. Monday will be God 's Kidz at 5 p.m. followed
by the king and queen crowning at 6. Tuesday is gospel

_-::--

Ohio board of education presiclent dismayed

Middleport facility expanding

State appeals school funding
ruling; Voinovich directs action
From AP, Staff Reports
include more than 500 of the stale 's 612 school districts,
GALLIPOLIS - Shocked. Dismayed. Astounded. including lhe Gallipolis City Schools.
Those were some of the nicer wurds used to describe the
William Phillis, coalition director, said the group probway lhe stale on Friday began appealing its loss of a ably would challenge the appeal. It has IOdays to respond.
school funding lawsuit.
"The governor's fingerprints arc all over Ibis. Once
Atlorney General Lee Fisher filed a notice of appeal in again political agendas are inlerfering wilh the right of
Perry County Common Pleas Court, where Judge Linton children loa quality education," Phillis said.
D. Lewis Jr. on July 1 de"The State Board of Education made a conscious deciclared lhe syslem uncon- sian ... not to appeal. It is absolutely unconscionable for
stitutional due to dispari- other stale officials to ignore that conscious public aclion.
lies in per-pupil spending I don'l see how il could be legal," he said.
among districts.
An appeal to the decision was urged by Ihe Gallia County
To the dismay of Oliver Local BoardofEducalion in June. Galli a Local Schools are
Ocasek, president of the a member of the Alliance for Adequacy in Funding, a group
State Board of Education, of more than SO well-endowed dis]rjcls which fears the
Fisher appealed on behalf possible loss of local control implied by Lewis' decision
of Ihe board - even and lhe impact a change in lhe funding system mighl have
though the board voted 6- on their systems.
Voinovichcalled legislalive leaders to his side Friday for
5 last month against parlicipaling.
a news conference lo announce lhe appeal.
Fisher appealed at the diVoinovich contended lewis' decision would result in a
reclion of Gov . George tax increase of $1 billion lo $13 billion and mean the end
JoAnn Davidson
Voinovich, who is not a of local control of schools. He said the decision ought lo
defendant in the case.
resl with the Ohio Supreme Court instead of one judge.
''I have no problem with the atlorney general appealHouse Republican leader JoAnn Davidson, stumping
ing on behalf of the governor, but I'm - - - - - - - - - - - - through southern Ohio Friday in supaslounded lhallhis scenario would be
porlofGOPslatehousecandidales,said
broughl to pass,·· Ocasek said in an "The governor's finger- the appeal centers on the local control
interview.
prints are aJ/ OVer thiS... ISSUe.
"I was very upset. 1 wasn't con"There's a very strong argument for
suited. I wasn't a party 1o it It' s a most once again political the loss of thai control behind lhe apregretlable, mosl unforlunate thing," agendas are interfering peal," the seventh-lerm Reynoldsburg
he said.
lawmaker said.
Also included in the appeal despile With the right Of Children
Davidson argued that statehouse Relheir opposition were Slate School to 8 quality education., publicans have lried to resolve equity
Superinlendenl Ted Sanders and the
problems. The pending release of $75
Ohio Department,of Education.
Coalltlo~~~~a%d~~~:~~! million in additional aid lo 269 districts
Joel Taylor, Ihe outside counsel
helps, she added.
Fisher hired 1o handle lhe slate's case,
"While lhis may not be a final solusaid Ihe appeal was filed on behalf of all defendanls in lhe tion, ilisamajorsleptowardresolving Ihe issue," Davidson
lawsuit. To do olherwise, he said, could produce prob- said.
lems in carrying oul subsequent court orders.
Districls raise most of their money through real eslale
The board, Sanders, the departmenl and the state are taxes . Spending differences occur because properly is
defendants in a lawsuillhallhe Ohio Coalition For Equily more valuable in some districts than others, and identical
&amp;AdequacyofSchool Fundingfiled.Coalilionmembers tax rales yield differenl amounts of money.

Page Forty-1994 Meigs County Fair Edition

e're Going
to the
Coun FairI
A lot of people put a lot of time and effort into making the Mei~s County Fair
the finest in Ohio. Pleasant Valley Hospital salutes the people behmd the scenes
for making Fair Week a joyous celebration of youth, agriculture a~d community.
To those of you who will attend this year's festivities, we say en1oy the fun and
games, the music and the exhibits. But be ~areful_a~d use good ~om_man sense
when choosing the activities in which you w1ll part1c1pate and m01ntam healthful
eating and drinking habits. Our hope for oil is a safe and fun Fair Weeki

Commission, legion post discuss
anonymous tip on illegal •tipst

)

Stop by and visit with us at our booth
at the Meigs County Fair
August 15·201

. By JIM FREEMAN
Times-sentinel Staff
.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Commissioners met Fnday
with a delegalion represenling the Rulland American ~gion_ Posl to discuss
lhe post's recenl citalion by lhe Ohio Atlorney General s office.
.
Group spokesman Andrew Phalin said the posl was c11ed Monday for selling
illegal"lips," or cash payback gambling tick~ls.
.
Phalin said an investigalor at the scene said the raid was the resull of an
anonymous lelephone calllhal same day.
.
Phalin repeated rumors Ihat Commission Pres1den1 Fred Hoffman and Stale
Sen. Jan Michael Long had acled in concert to shul down bmgo .at the Rutla~d
posl to ensure larger profits for a game operated by the Middleport Fife
Deparlment -of which Hoffman 's so~ is..a member.
,
"I had no idea about it," Hoffman said. Of course, the rumors are false.
A spokesman for Long's office also denied the rumors.
"II had to be somebody in lhe county wilh enough clout 10 (get the attorney
general's office) in one call," Phalin said. "Why single oul Rutland when all
these places sell lips?"
. ,
"ll's not fair," he said, adding !hat the R~tland post may lose Its license for
bingo, which forms lhe bulk of the post's mcome.
Hoffman said he would check on lhe SIIuaiion.
A sidewalk projecl for the village of Racine may fac.e a. tw?·week delay due
a bidding question, it was further revealed al the commission s regular--:eekly ·
A bid opening scheduled for Friday al I Jl.m. was canceled, .w•lh lhe
unopened bids rejecled. One inleresled conlraclor said the bid specifications
were inadequate, said Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton.
.
.
Commissioners and Thornton agreed to contacl the Buck.eye H1lls-H~kmg
Valley Regional Development Dislrict to have the b1d slX'&lt;:Ificaiions clanf1ed.
After that, the projccl will once again be advertised for bids.
In other matters, the commission:
,
• Discussed the issue of bereavemenl pay for counly employees:
• Approved a letter of support for the Meigs County Housing and Urban
Development Office for 20 addilional renl vouchers. .
.
• Approved paying an animal claim of$275 lo Paul Erwm, Racme, for a steer

,.. Cholesterol &amp; Blood Glucose
Tuesday 6-9 p.m. &amp; Thursday 2-5 p.m. &amp; 6-9 p.m.
..- KidCare™ ID
Wednesday 2-5 p.m.
.
,.. Blood Pressure &amp; Pulse Oximetry
2-10 p.m. Monday- Friday

Information on health issues
and services offered by Pleasant Volley Hospital

IJI.I ·PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
l_j-1

The family of professionals

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Valley Drive Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550 (304) 675-4340

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BOAT LAUNCHING FACILITY- The Middleport expansion projects calls for installation of a Ooating
launcb, widening of the ramp and paving of a new boater parking lot.

Officials explore land acquisition
By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT- Middlepon officials will soon be
conlacting landowners near lhe Ohio River boa! launch
lo discuss possible prices for land needed for a new
parking lot - part of an expansion of lhe Middleport
boal launch.
The expansion is paid for by an Ohio Departmenl of
Nalural Resources grant, said Jean Trussell, village
grants coordinalor.
Appraisals are currently being made of six cily lois al
lhe easlern corner of Walnul and Fronl streets owned by
four individuals and should be complete within two

weeks, Trussell said.
"It's to (the property owners') benefit so we can offer
them a fair market price," Trussell said. "Any lime you
get into acquisitions you have to jump through a lot of
hoops."
The floating boa!-launch project is expected lo cost
$142,800, but with village labor, it may tolal just
$I 20,000, Trussell said.
TI1e ODNR grant funds IWO-thirds of the project, up
lo $94,900. The grant was received by the village lasl
July, Trussell said. The project must be compleled by
July 1995, she added. The engineering portion should
Continued on page A2
'

News capsules
Strickland: vote on
revised crime bill

GOOD MORNING

Bridge repair on S.R. 7 to delay traffic near plant

Today's Times-Sentinel

14 Sections- 148 Pages
CHESHIRE - MOI'fllng and evening trllflc on Stile Route 7 near the
Kyger Creek plant may become elowtrlf work begins Monday on the
Business
08
wldtnlng and paving of 8 nearbY brlqe, an Ohio Department of TranaFrom AP, Staff Reports
d
J1011111on
apoktsptiiOn
..,d.
·
Calendars
p Ll S
P
82&amp;3
GALLI 0
resi ent
COnatruc:tiOn wHI k dOne on half of the span at a time, Nancy
Classifieds
Clinton is offering stern assurances Voacllam of ODOT'e Dlatrlot 10 office In Marietta aald. One-lana traffic
03-7
lhat Congress will reverse course wlllbemalntalnlld.
Comics
Insert
and produce a crime bill, but he 's
lnenelforltoh8ndletrllflc11ow,ODOTwtlluaealgnalaprogrammed
Editorials
A4
leaving il up to his Capitol Hill to allOw lOnger green IIIJhta In each dlracllon during dally high-volume
allies to figure out how lo deliver. traffic perlofja, Yoaehom llkl.
Local
Democratic congressional lead"H WOitt cloft not llaltonMOf!day 18 antlclplltecl, Hwlllltart u aoon
Obituaries
A6
ers are assessing what it would Iller Mo;idty 18 poaalbii,"IM lddtel.
Sports
take 1o revive lhe $33 billion crimeBelvllll C4!nllrUCtiOn (:o... Wlltei1DO, hlllhe $508,642 contract on the
Cl-8
fighting package next week in lhe Job. The completion date le .July 31., 1195.
Along the River
81
wake of a surprising House vote
Weather
A2
that blocked consideration of lhe measure.
Crisp's fate still uncertain 1- - - - ----..:.=:_
Sixlh Districl Congressman Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville,joined 57 other
POMEROY - Court officials mel
Democrats and a majority of Republicans Thursday in defeating a procedural Friday to get an update on the slat us
Columns
molion lhal would have allowed the crime bill conference repon to be voted of Jack Crisp, former director of Ihe
on in Ihe House.
Leading Creek Conservancy District
Strickland said there were lwo reasons for his no vole. Primarily, he said, In February, Crisp was sentenced to Fred Crow
A4
il was a vote againsllhe ban on semi-aulomalic weapons.
18monlhsinjailforfivemisdemeanor Bob HocDicb
A6
"Gun ban activists say the will would have banned only 19such weapons," counts of receiving improper com- Jjm Sapds
IY
Sirickland said late Friday. "However, the vague language of the bill would pensation for bonuses.
Chuck Slone
A4 •'
have allowed many more firearms with minor cosmelic modifications lo have
Due to ill heallh, Crisp has not
C ltt4. OWo VaUty h.~ Co.
been banned."
begun his jail term. He remains free
Slrickland further cited "legitimale concerns ... aboutthe overall costofth~ on bond, residing in Kentucky.
bill" in his rejeclion of the measure."
.
.
On Friday, Morgan County Judge Dan Favreau allowed special prosecutor
The freshman Ohio congressman said he is hoping for an Improved billlo Bob Toy to end his duties on lhe case. Crisp's atlorney, William Eachus.
relurn to lhe House floor next Thursday or Friday.
presented the court with a new opinion from a state court that if an attorney
"The House and Senate can now get back together on this one and come up has handled criminal case.~ in a counly Ihen thai atlorney cannot acl as special
with a betler bill," Strickland said.
proseculor, said Meigs County Prosecutor John Lentes.
House Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., predicted Friday that lhe Dell)oIn a slatus hearing set for September 20, Judge Favreau could decide when
cratic majorily would "pul lhis bill over lhe top" after 6 years m which Crisp will begin his sentence. The judge will likely resolve motions that Crisp
Congress has not produced a crime bilL Republicans said they were open Ia claims indigency or that sending him to jail would be cruel and unusual
compromise.
punishment, Lenles said.

expected thiS Week

•

'

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