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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monda~August15,1994

Motocross
action at
Meigs Fair

Flower shows will highlight Meigs County's 175th anniversary
By BETTY DEA N
Meigs County Fair
Flower Show Chairman

fea tured. A creati vc mass design
(Barn Raising) is a large grouping
of lots of plant material in a creative conta1n er to form a large
closed Silhouette. Open spaces will
create a mass effec t, and the design
will be a large m:ss enclosed with-

and an unusual container or no con- of plant materials and other anicles
tainer at all . Plant material is used by which a story can be told, more
in an unnatural fonn , such as a root by the obJe cts than the flower
as lin e material and not a root. arrangement. Objects must be true
PO MEROY - The two flower
Thin gs can be a freak of nature . to size (not miniatures) and funcshows at the Me1gs County Fair to
curled by wind or water, disease or tional . The objects are more imporbe staged Monday and Thursday in
spray ing, enlarged o r stunted by tant than the flower arrangement. A
the sen ior fair bui fd ing wi ll high- in a free- fonn area.
nature. They can be altered by clip- still life is usually staged on a base
lig ht Meigs Co unt y's 175 th
Group small fl owers to make pin g, cutting, stripping, be nd ing, with objects, flowers, fruit or vegAnnive rsary.
large areas of co lor. Large leaves folding or painting of dried materi - etables etc. placed in groupings to
So Je t's d1g out ou r anu ques or Oowers could be used m another al.
tcII a story.
an d make th e an n1 vcrsa ry co me area. There may be more than one
Unu sual placing, upside down ,
A Sat ellite Design (Doubl e
alive.
The firs t show focal area and more than one point sideways, hanging or moving. To Wedding Ring) is a design with a
will fea tu re th ings our anceswrs of emerge nce. The des ign is not abstract is to change from the natu- smaller design of the same color,
di d in the ou t-of-doors. The second abstract.
ral to a new line, shape or form . form or texture , placed nea r it s
show wi ll fea ture thmgs which arc
Abstr ac t des igns (Outd oo r The eye should dart from one area base, having a connective line that
done around the home.
Plumbin g) are des igns with no · to another in the design.
beco mes a vital part of the wh ole
Some sr cc ia l des igns will be foc al points, no radial placement
A Still Life Design is a grouping · des ign. The arrangement should he

in a tall container with the plant
material rising from the top. A connective line of plant or man-made
material rn ust be placed in or near
the top and extend down in a Curving line to the small des ign. The
sam e material should be used m
both parts. It has been said that you
could compare the des ign to th e
moon with a small pi ece broken
off.
The entire show should take vou
back 175 years to wagon wheels,
flatboats, outdoor toil ets, Ind ian s
and little red school houses. Reli gious interpretations arc a fa vorite
of the public. Ma ss des igns and
flow ers and fmits and v e ~ela bl es

()hiH

are typical of the county frur. Can di es, baskets, wood and horse
shoes lake us back in time.
Juniors are a 'big part of our fair
and they will tell us about pitching
horse shoes, jumping rope , school
days and their morning prayers .
Two new vari eties of annual s
will be featured. An yone grow ing
(Lady Lavender) or Sunrise or Sun set sunnowcrs are being urged to
enter them .
Shade Valley Club will have a
display of handmade rock contain ers on display. These were made of
sand, concrete and peat moss by
th e club and pl anted with plants
suitabl e for Ute size of the con tain -

Lotterv
L

Pick 3:
991
Pick 4:
8129
Buckeye 5:

PageS

2-7-11 -32-36

Low tonight in 60o,;, clear.
T uesd ::~y,

partl y doudy, h i~ h in
the m id 80s.

•

ent1ne

ers.

Singaporean author 200 take part in car show; winners announced
calls U. S. teen's
punishment 'torture'
SING APO RE (AP ) - The home in Kettering, Ohio, on June
author or a new book on the flog- 22 after spendin g 83 days in jail.
gin g of Ohi o tee n Mi chael Fay He maintains hi s innocence.
likencs Si ngapore's caning Jaw to
Abo ut I ,000 people are caned
"state-sponsored torture."
each year in Singapore. In addition
'' The book is very much my bit to vandalism, lashing is mandatory
towards the abolition of th1s law," for such crim es as robb ery,
Gopal Bhara uun told a news con - attempted murder and rape.
ference today.
Women, men over 50 and those
" The Caning of Michael Fay" sentenced a:&gt; death are exempt from
is unusually bold in criticizing Ute flogging.
auth oritarian government for curbBharatam , a well-known neurolllg civil libenies. It hit the stands surg eon and fi ction writer, said
Saturday along with anoUter book even the caners he interviewed for
on the Fay affair by Asad Latif, a his book told him they opposed !he
JOUrnalist with the state-controlled punishment.
Straits Times newspaper.
" It IS state-sponsored tonure,"
Latif' s book, " The Flogging of he said.
Singapore: The Michael Fay
His book note~ that the caning
Affair, " chronicles how Singapore Jaw was expanded to include vanresisted pressure from !he United dalism in 1966 as a way of controlStates , which condemned Fay's ling left-wing opposition panics
caning.
who campaigned by writing antiFay, 19, received four strokes government slogans on public
with a rattan cane on May 5 for walls.
allegedly vandalizing cars. He was
The People's Action Party has
originally sentenced to si x lashes ruled Singapore for 29 years. The
but !he sentence was reduced after years have brought economic prosPresident Clinton appealed to the perity, but often at the price of civil
Singapore government.
rights abuses, Bharatam said.
Fay returned to hi s father' s

Ohio prepares for
new area codes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - As
if Ohio ' s four area codes aren't
enough, more could be on the way .
The 216 area code in northeastem Ohio and the 513 area code in
the southwestern part of the state
are becoming overloaded because
of fax machines, cellular phones
and computers.
The 216 area, which includes
Cleveland, is expected to reach its
capacity by 1998. It likely will be
followed in 2002 by the 513 area,
which includes Dayton and Cincinnati.
An area code hits capacity at 7.8
million telephone numbers.
The prediction is made by Bellcore, a Livingston, N.J., organization established in 1983 to administer the 4 7-year-old North American
Numbering Plan.
The problem is that there are no
new area codes, said Bellcore
spokesman Ken Branson. They
used up alI 144 mathematical possibilities envisioned in 1947 when
the numbering plan was created.
All existing area codes have
either a I or a 0 as the middle number. But the last number of that vintage, 610, was given to the
Philadelphia area in January.
Bellcore, which works with
I ,600 telephone companies in the
United States, Canada, Bermuda
and 15 Caribbean countries, has
come up with 640 area codes utilizing middle numbers ranging from 2
to 9.

Branson said he cannot predict
what the new Ohio area codes will
be or exactly when they will be put
in place.
Ameritech Ohio, fonnerly O.hio
Bell, first signaled a logjam in telephone numbers in May when it
announced that as of Oct. I, callers
in the 216 area wiU have to use !he
· area code first when dialing longdistance numbers within the area.
Callers currently can dial I and the
number.
Long-distance calls within the
other three area codes will have to
include the area code beginning
Jan. I.
Ameritech spokesman David
Kandel said the company has more
than 3.5 million access lines in
Ohio - 270,000 or 8 percent more
than four years ago. That does not
include the boom in cellular
phones.
"It's certainly an indication of
the explosion of telecommunica. lions, such as fax machines, cellular telephones and computers,"
Kandel said. "That trend is going
to continue, probably at a greater
clip."
Bellcore has assigned six of !he
new area codes to take effect next
year and in 1996. They are: 630 in
Chicago, 334 in Alabama, 360 in
Washington (except Seattle), 520
in Ariwna (except Phoenix), 540 in
Virginia and 562 in southern California.

Names in the news
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - David
Cassidy's autobiography is sparking a Partridge Family feud .
Cassidy, who played heartthrob
Keith on the ' 70s TV show,
explains why he didn't pursue costar Susan Dey: " She lacked the
slutty aspec t of a fema le that I
always found so attractiv e," he
says in "C'mon Get Happy."
Dey didn't.
"I found it to be a tremendous,
terrible violation. And tacky. Real
tacky, " Dey says in the Aug. 20
JSsue of TV Guide. "My ftrst reac tion was, 'That poor, desperate
soul,' because I was asked to write
a book like that years ago and I
said, 'No, that's not what I .;.ant to
do." '
Dey said Cassidy's book won't
affect their relationship. "There is
no relationship."
MYRTLE BEACH, S C. (AP)
Billy "Crash" Craddock
blames poor publicity for wreclcing
a steady gig at the Myrtle Beach
Opry.

Opry co-owner Jack Gregory
says it's Craddock's fault for never
selling out a single show during
almost a dozen performances in
May.
"We made a major blunder
bringing in an anist who hasn't had
a hit in 20 years," Gregory said.
"He's a has-been that did not
draw."

Craddock's career peaked in the
1970s with a string of hits that
included "Knock Three Times,"
"Ruby Baby" and "Easy As Pie."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Alan Jackson might just have found
a cure for the summertime blues.
He's expecled to receive multiple nominations from the Country
Music Association Tuesday,
including single of the year for
"Summenime Blues."
Other possibilities: entertainer
of the year, best male vocalist and
album of the year for • 'Who I
Am.''
"Ev~body kept telling me last
year, 'Tins is your year,' so maybe
this is my year," Jackson said.
"But I'm always happy to be a pan
of them, and not sad if !lose ... I've
learned to swallow any way it

"If Billy Gnaham came to Myrtle Beach and no one knew about it
people wouldn't come to see him •;
said Craddock, who is suing the
opry's owners for canceling 103 of
his shows, which were scheduled to . comes.''
~
run through October. He's seeking,
The awards will be broadcast
$120,000 plus punitive damages.
Oct. 5 on CBS.

•

Ex actly 200 automobiles were
on display Satunday at the Gallipoli s parkront for the annual old car
show spon sored by the Gallipoli s
Ole Car Club Inc., and the Gallipoli s Retail Merchants Assocmtion.
Ole Car Club show offi cials said
185 cars were entered for judging,
while an additional 15 were shown
by members of the local club.
Award winners were:
Trophy winners
Antique Cars, Non -Ford, Open
and Closed Through 192 9 Harold Gremer, 1928 Reo, fir st;
Julian Hensley , 1929 Franklin, second.
Model T Ford, Open and Closed
Through 1927 - None entered.
Mod el A Ford, Op en and
Closed, 1928-31 - Rick Akers,
1930 Ford, ftrst.
All Classic, CCA or AACA
Through 1948 - Peggy VanCuren,
1933 Auburn, first
Production, Open and Closed
1930-36 - James Burdette, 1932
PI ymouth, first; Keith and Madeline Stanean, 1932 Ford, second.
Production, Open and Closed
1937-42 - Ken Dean , 1941
Chevrolet, first; Curt and Irene
Fouse, 1942 Chevrolet, second.
All Orphans, 1945 -up Howard Castle, 1953 Packard, ftrst;
Mack Scaggs, 1952 Hudson, sec ond.
All Foreign Through 1978 None entered.
Production, Open and Closed
1946-51 - Oscar Bragg , 194 7
Buick, first ; Tom Morgan, I 950
Pontiac, second.
Chevrolet, Open and Closed

1952-57 - Le on Shafer. 1956
Chevrolet, first; Denver Jobe, 1954
Chevrolet, second.
Production , Open and Clo sed
1952-57 - Darrell Massie, 1954
Oldsmobile, first; Hubert Castle,
1956 Mercury, second.
Musc le Cars Through 1978 Doug Ford, I%7 Shelby, ftrst; Bob
Jarrell , I968 Chevrolet, second.
Camaros and Firebirds Through
19 78 - Karen Tillis, 1969
Camara, first; Jim Blazer, 1967
Camara, second.
Mustangs Throu gh 1978 John Kirby, 1967 Mustang, first;
Wayne and Carolyn Jackson, 1966
Mustang , and Lowell Carrico, 1969
Mustang, tic for second.
Corv ettes Through 1978 Wanda Cross, 1967 Corvette, ftrst;
Roger Trusty, 1974 Corvette, scc·
ond.
Thunderbirds Through 1978 Leo Davis, 1957 Thunderbird, ftrs~
Lucille Bums, 1961 Thunderbird,
and Pat Akers, 1956 Thunderbird,
tie for second.
Convertibles 1958-78 - Gary
Tillis, 1961 Chevrolet, and Russell
Huffman, 1972 Oldsmobile, tie for
first; Lee Boyce, 1970 CheveUe.
All Production 1958 -6 I Randy Spahn, 1958 Ford, first;
Jack Vance, 1959 Rambler, second.
All Production I%2-66 - Bob
Lightle, 1962 Impala. and Don
Ringwald, 1965 Caprice, lie for
first; Gale Blattner, 1964 Falcon,
and Mike and Donna Moore, 1965
Falcon, tic for second.
All Produ ction 1967-71 Bobby B. Smtth, 1970 Monte
Carlo, fir st; Ralph Fultz, 1971

Cadillac, second .
All Production 1972-78 - Dave
Allen , 1972 Cougar, fir st; Ro y
Meredith , 1972 Oldsmobile, se cond.
Utility Through 1956 - Dal e
Hamilton, 1951 Ford, ftrst; ).l urlile
Oil Co., 1939 Chevrolet, second.
Utilit y 1957-78 - Dick and
Jackie Cayot, 1967 International,
ftrst; John Shafer, 1973 Chevrolet.
Bikes/Sc ooters/Motorc yc les
Through 1978 - Rick Akers, 1958
Cushman , fir st; Pat Akers, 1948
Cushman, second.
Lead Sled - Gaylen Cisco,
1950 Mercury, first; Tom Nelson,
1954 Ford, second.
Street Rod Coupe - Bob and
Bonnie Miller, 1934 Ford, first.
Street Rod Sedan - Gaylcn
Cisco, 1933 Cadillac, first; Angela
Payne, 1948 Lincoln, second.
Street Rod Open - Mike and
Marie Johnson, 1931 Ford, first;
Raleigh Robinson, 1923 Ford,
Mike Lcgg , 1932 Ford, Keith Powers, 1934 Ford, and Pat Powers,
1932 Ford, all tied for second.
Street Rod Commercial Linda Aliff, 1929 Ford, first; Bill
Holcomb, 1930 Ford, second.
Street Machines Top 10 ~
Ro£er Stover, 1952 Chevrolet; Jim
Payne, 1955 Chevrolet; Mark and
Becky Robinette, 1972 Chevrolet;
Leon Aliff, 1955 Chevrolet; Tim
and Su5an Wilson, 1972 Chevrolet:
Gene Cherry, 1966 Dodge; Teresa
Gleason, 1969 Corvette; Rick Holley, 1969 Chevrolet; Gary and
Linda Hoover, I 950 Chevrolet;
Zeke Cofer, 1986 Chevrolet.
Mini-Trucks and Two-Wheel

Vol. 45, NO. 73
Copyrl~ht 1994

Drives - Oscar Hill , I99 I GMC ,
fir st; Ri chard Chil de rs, 198 9
Chevrolet, second.
Four -Wh ee l Drive - Ancil
Cross, I 977 Chevrolet 4x4, flfSt;
Brian Hill , 1979 Ford 4x4, second.
Competition - Tim and Diane
Julian , 1967 Chevrolet, first.
All Production 1979-K6 Terry Ross , 1984 Chevrolet, ftrst;
Jeffrey Leming, 1984 Chevrolet,
second.
All Production 1987-94 - Jerry
and Dec Fran z, 1992 Chevrolet,
llrst; Ray Redman, 1989 Che..rolet,
second .
All Tractors Through 1947 None entered .
All Tractors 1948-64 - Cross
&amp; Sons Farm Equtpment, 1952
Ford, first; Henry Myers , 195 I
Oliver, second.
Mod el Car - Scott MacClinchy, 1967 AMC, first; Eddie
Barnette, 1994 Chevrolet, second.
Pedal Cars - Gene Moore,
1961 Pedalcar, ftrsl
Special awards
Merchants Choice - Tom and
Evelyn Shea, 1955 Studebalcer.
Jud~ e s Choice (Antiques
Through 197!!) - Burlile Oil Co.,
1939 Chevrolet.
Judges Choice (Modified, nonstock) - Mike and Marie Johnson,
1931 Ford.
Judg es Choice (showroom
stock) - Terry Ross, 1984
Chevrolet.
Judges Choice (Antique Tractors) - Cross &amp; Sons Famn Equipment, 1952 Ford.
Car Club Most Represented Lancaster Old Car Club.

REDA names executive director

director.
"And , we think we have the per. son to do the job," Jackson County
businessman Jim Kessinger said of
vet eran economi c planner R.V.
"Buddy" Graham.
lly LARRY EWING
Graham, formerly vice prcs1dent
OVP Managing Editor
of boU1the Huntington Area Devcl·
RIO GRANDE - "All REDA opmcnt Council and th e Hunting wants to do is stimulate everyone ton Regional Chamber or Com to pull in the same direction ," the merce, will formally assume the
pres ident of the Regional Econom- po sition as REDA 's exe cuti ve
ic Development Association said director on Sept I .
Monday at the University of Rio
Announcement of the appoint ·
Grande in announcing the employ- mcnt carne during a public meeting
ment of the group's ftrst executive d csi~ned to outline the organiza.

Development
veteran to aid
counties' efforts

But it wasn 't aU peace and love
in this instant city of 350,000.
Some who bought the $135 tickets never got in, stranded in parking
lots miles from the site when shuttle bus service unraveled. As many
as 150,000 people gol in free as
security slackened.
Others fled bad vibes.
Gail Tosh, 26, of Baltimore
arrived Saturday morning and left
just a few hours later without seeing any of the bands.
"It's violent, it's scary," she
said by telephone from her mother's house in Syracuse. ·'There
were no signs telling you where to
go and what to do . People are

falling down on the ground, and
people are closing in on top of
them. There was no form of crowd
conlrol. And it was a nasty crowd,
not a nice crowd. ' '
Finally, Woodstock '94 was
about the music. Counting the allnight dance raves and small bands
that played till dawn, it was essentially non-stop rock 'n ' roll for
almost 72 hour.&gt;.
Most of the 40-odd acts put on
memorable shows, from Joe Cocker's reprise of his classic performance at the 1969 Woodstock to
Salt 'n ' Pepa's slinky stage histrionics.
Peter Gabriel closed lhe show

early today with "Biko," his trib·
ute to the martyred South African
activist, Stephen Biko.
With people ankle-deep in mud
and awash in a kaleidoscope of tiedye, !his Woodstock resembled the
original on Max Yasgur' s farm in
Bethel, 55 miles southwest. But
there were obvious differences .
"It's Yuppie Woodstock. It's
high tech," said Rob Meager of
Baltimore, who won four tickets to
the festival from a radio station. "I
used a cellular phone this morning
to call my mom and tell her I was
fine."

PEDAL! -That's the secret ror success in the weeklong kiddie
tractor pull event. Here, Jacob Hunter or Racine gives the pint·
sized International Harvester his best shot. The kiddie tractor pull
will be held each day at 4 p.m., with the exception or Friday, when
the pull will be held at noon. The event culminates Saturday at 4
p.m .

Foreign nannies a nightmare for some families
CLEVELAND (AP) - Fearing
for their safety, Ben Wolozin and
Daniclle Murstein locked themselves and their two young daughters in a bedroom each night for
two weeks.
The Columbia, Md., couple was
afraid of their Austrian nanny.
The nanny became enraged
when the couple complained about
her frequent tantrums, inattention
and jealousy of the children, they
said.
Nightmare stories of child
abuse, emotional trauma and theft
plague programs that pair foreign
nannies with American families ,
The Plain Dealer reported Sunday.
Since 1986, American families
have hired more than 40,000 au
pairs to provide up to 45 hours a
week of live-in child care for up to
a year.
Au pair is French for "on par
with," meaning that au pairs are

treated as family members while
receiving room and board for help
around the house.
The number of matches that do
not work are not available because
the U.S. Information Agency,
which is responsible for monitoring
the programs, does not require
problems to be documented , the
newspaper reported.
The eight au pair sponsoring
organizations say their failure rates
arc small. They also cite the many
au pairs and American families
who have developed warm, longlasting friendships.
However, The Plain Dealer documented hundreds of host
family/au pair problems.
- In the Cleveland suburb of
Shaker Heights, Ann and Steven
Sords asked their English au pair to
leave in 1990 after she bounced
$2,000 in checks.
- In July 1993, Stefan Kahl,

26, a German au pair sponsored by
Au Pair in America, was deported
after he was convicted in Mas-

304·773-5333
Dr. Danny &amp; Kim Westmoreland

The Meigs County Board of
Education approved bus driver certificates for the upcoming school
year at its recent meeting Thursday.
Bus drivers approved were, by
district:
Eastern Local Elnora
Bernard, Flossie Dill, Gary Dill,
Glenn Easterling, Darlene Reed,
Carolyn Ritchie, Nita Jean Ritchie,
Archie Rose, Ron Thompson,
Robert White, Keitha Whitlatch,
George A. Wolfe and Edward
Holter;
Meigs Loca1 - Esther Black,

Debra Burns, Teresa Cremeans,
Evelyn Hobbs, Juanita Lambert,
Emily Faye Manley, Ida Martin,
Carrie Morris, Linda Morris,
Steven Morris, Donna Stacy.
Delores Surface, James Vanaman,
Charles Williamson, Ronnie Wood,
Wanda Jean Wood, Lois Wyant
and William Capehart;
Southern Local - Bobby Dudding, Wendell Ervin, Julian Scott
Hill, Roger Hill, Charles Lawrence,
James O'Brien, Don Smith, Larry
Smith and Faith Varney;
Carleton - Jerry Holley, Kath-

Ronna Reeves
Wednesday 8:00 p.m.

Moto Cross Racing
Tonight 7:00pm

Tuesday, August 16

Monday, August 15
4:00p.m.
Kiddie Trator PuU - Show Arena
5:00p.m.
Hillside SThge- God's Kidz
6:00p.m.
King and Queen Crowning - Hill Stage
7:00p.m.
Moto-Cross
12:00 Midnight Gates Close

4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
I2:00 Midnight

Kiddie Trator Pull - Show ~na
Junior Fair Board Auction
Junior Fair Stea- Sbow An:na
Hill Stage- Joy
Hill Stage- River Valley Boys
Grandstand- Demolition Deri&gt;y
Gates Close

9:00a.m.
10:00 a.m.
II :00 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
2:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:,30 p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Junior Fair Goar Show- Show Arena
Drart Horse Contest- Inf.eld
DazzlingDolll- Hill Stage
4-H Rower Sbow- Jwlior Pair Building
Guys and Gall Sheep Lead Clw- Sbow Arena
Hameu Racing
4-H Style Revue- Hill Stage
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sbow Arena
Utdc MilS and Miller Contest- Hill Sta1JC
Kiddie Garnes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Swine Show- Show Arena
Open Clus Horse Show
Ronna Reeves- Grandstand
Hone Pull
Hill Stas•- Midoi&amp;bt Clogcers
Gatea Close

Wednesday, August 17

Tuesday, August 16
Junior Fait Rabbit Sbow- Sbow Arena
Open Oass Beef Show followed by Junior Fait Beef
Breeding • Show Arena
2:00p.m.
Out of tbc Blue- Hill Slage
4:00p.m.
Kidie Tractor PuU • Sbow Arena
5:00p.m.
Junior Fait Board Auctioo
6:00p.m.
Junior Fair Steer- Sbow Arena
6:00p.m.
Hill Stage- Joy
7:00p.m.
HiU Stage· River Valley Boys
7:00p.m.
Grandstand- Demolition Derby
12:00 Midnight Gates Close

industry and JObs.
REDA was fanned last September when a coalition of nearly two
dozen business and industrial leader;; from throughout southern Ohio
and northwes tern West Vir gini a
organized to form an assoc iati on

devoted to the expan sion of ec onomic development in the region .
Th e formal org anization of the
association (REDA) came foll owing a series of mee tings at the uni versity designed to explore the feasibility of promoting the area on a
regional basis.
"The bottom line of our success

... the questi on that should be used
in judgin g our effort s is. ' How
many JObs ca n we br ing to the
area?'," Graham said Monday.
" RE DA is trul y uniq 11c," he
sa id. "I t' s the onl y such gro up I
know of that crosses state borders
... and , that arrange ment o ffers
uni que opporttlllJttCI\."

"Th iS rc g i n ~~&lt;~l cffon will succeed beca use of th e dcd1cati on, ~1 c
vision , and Ute hard work by a solid
team of com muni ty, education and
business leaders," Graham added.
"They arc not onl y be hind thi s nro(Conlinued un Pa~e 3)

R.V. 'IIUDDY'

COLUMBUS
(AP)
Youngstown, East Cleveland and
Lorain will receive the most money
set aside by state lawmakers to help
equalize per-pupil spending.
The State Controlling Board on
Monday approved an Ohio Departmcnt of Education request to distribute $75 million among 269 or 44 percent - of the staLe's 612
sc hool di stri cts.
The Con1rolling Board approved
the request 7-0.
Amounts ranged from $302 in
the Pa1rick Henry district of Henry
County to $3,030,512 in
Youngstown.
East Cleveland of Cuyahoga
County will receive the secondlargest amount, at $2,985,422, followed by Lorain of Lorain County .
at $1 ,593,166.
Other districts to receive more
than $1 million include:
• Canton, Stark County,
$1 ,404 ,251.
• Marion, Marion County ,
$1 ,374,703.
• Springfield, Clark County ,
$1,2 73,288.
• Lima, Allen County,
$1 ,242,234.
• East Liverpool, Columbiana,
$1,238,059.
• Western Brown, Brown County,$1,040,038.
State law requires the department to distribute the equity money
in August. Districts can use it
toward repairing or renovating old
buildings, new construction, textbook or equipment purchases, personnel costs or however they see

GRAtiA~ l

fit.
The amounts are determined
through a formula that tak es into
accoun t the worth of a di strict's
ta xable real estate and its student
enrollment.
State money for schools comes
from income, sales and other taxes.
Local districts produce most of
their revenue through real estate
taxes.
Inequalities occur because some
districts have more valuable property than others. and identical tax
rates generate different amounts of
money. Disparities among diStriCts
were behind a lawsuit that more
than 500 school districts filed in
Perry County to change the state' s
current school-funding system.
Common Pleas Judge Linton D.
Lewis Jr. ruled July I that the system was unconstitutional. Attorney
General Lee Fisl1cr filed a notice of
appeal Friday in New Lexington.
The Ohio Public Expenditure
Council, a nonpartisan tax study
group, said in its August newsletter
that per-pupil spending among
Ohio schools in the 1992-93 school
year ranged from $3,478 in Botkins
to $12,870 in Cuyahoga Heights.
The statewide average was $5,030.

ROYALTY NAMED - Christopher Harnm of flarinr, ri~ht ,
and Michele Guess of Tuppers Plains, center, were named Mei~.s
Junior Fair King and Queen in ceremonies held Monda)' nigl1l al
the l31st Meigs County Fair. First runner-up was K!'lle)' Jean
Grueser or Pomeroy, left. Michele, a 4-H member, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Guess. Christopher is the scm nf Mr. :md
Mrs. Torn Hamm and a Racine-Southern FFA member, and Kelley is the daughter of Danny and Debbie Grueser :md a 4-H mem ber.

day at the Meigs County Fair-...
/
f

Board approves driver certificates

Meigs County Fair

at 224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio will be dosing. We
apologize for the Inconvenience to our patients. We have
found It Impractical to conUnue maintaining the Pomeroy
office due to harassments by a few local Individuals. We
will conUnue providing full service at the Mason, wv. office.
I also at this lime want to thank the persons who have so
aggressively rebuked the terr1ble and untrue statements
regarolng my practice, my. wife's selling of her phannacy
corporation to Rite-aid and the like. Again terribly untrue
and cn~el. We will look forward to the close relatlor)shlp as
always with our friends and patients. And again we
apologize for the Inconveniences.
All medical i'ecords will be forwarded to our Mason, wv.
office, located at
Westmoreland Family Care Center
Rt 1, Box 44-B
Mason, WV 25260

sachusetts of a felony count of sexually abusing his host parents' 8year-old son.

•

As of September 1, 1994 the Pomeroy Health Care located

lion' s goals, explain the need for
employin g a REDA director and
describe the Center for Economic
Development at Rio Grande.
The meeting was also driven by
the group's need to seck public and
private support from governm ent
and business throughout the region.
Kess inger stressed that the role
of REDA 's executiv e director
would be to "supplement, not
replace" development efforts in Ute
individua l counties. Graham will
work out of the Rio Grande center
to coordinate, supplement and
as sist regional efforts to attract

State controllers OK
equalization funding

Curtain falls on Woodstock's next generation
SAUGERTJJ:S, N Y (AP) Its energy spent. Lhc Wood stock
Nation of 1994 lumbered home
today from the sloppy festival
grounds like a column of walking
dead.
They died smiling.
For all the rain and mud , the
fi lthy toilets and lack of showers,
the delays and organizational
foulups, there were few regrets.
Tired, wet and hungry, people left
in a son of grwnbling bliss.
"It's been awesome. This is
going to go down in history," said
Joe Walsh of Richfield, Conn. ''I'll
remember it - how long will I
remember it? Forever, I guess."

1 Section, 12 Pageo 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. N-apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 16, 1994

8:00a.m.
I:OOp.m.

.I

See You At The
1994 Meigs County Fair

teen Morris and Patricia ?ape.
. In other business, the board
h1red Farah Jalali as a school psychologrst and Chen Bauman and
Frances Shrimplin as mulri-handicapped teacher and aide, respectively. In addition, Mary E. Roush
was accepted as a substitute teacher
for the ABLE program.
Present were board members
Raben Barton, Howard Caldwell,
Jeffrey Hams, 1.0. McCoy and
Jeanette _Thomas and Treasurer
Carole Gtlkey.

RepO(ted shock
injures area boy
Thaddeus Bumgardner, II, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bumgardner, was treated in the emergency
room at Veterans Memorial Hospital Monday evening after being
taken there by the Tuppers Plains
EMS unit from the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The youngster was kept at the
hospital for a couple of hours so
that he could be moni10red because
of prior heart problems.
He reportedly was shocked
while getting onto a ride. The ride
was shut down and an inspection
by !he Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
electrician found a minor electrical
problem which was immediately
corrected.
•
Monday, three ride inspectors
from the Ohio Department of Agri culture had inStJCI:ted the rides and
found everythmg in good condition.
"As can happen to any equipment; things can ha!IPCn," said Dan
Smith, fair board president, said.
"Bates is known for having safe
rides, they even have their own
electrician," said Smith.

The first day. or the Meigs
County Fair Monday saw the
Rock Springs rairgrounds
turn into a mini-city of aclivi·
ty. The miniature roller coaster was whirring aU day at the
rair (above). Weather cooperated and stayed cool through·
out the day. The ride was one
or several that include swings,
go-carts and carousels. Meanwhile, it was a little more hectic as Racine's Stacy Wilson,
12, chased a lamb around the
midway for about five minutes
(at right). The pesky lamb,
owned by Wilson's sister, had
jumped clear over a three·
root-high gate. To ensure the
animal did not go for another
joy jog, rair officials put a
wooden gate over tbe top of
the lamb's cage. (Sentinel pho·
tos by George Abate)

~ -

•'

•

�Tuesda~

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

fjMU..TIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl•ber
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHAKLENE HOHLICH
General Manager

A MLMB ER of The Assoc1a1ed Press, Inland Dally Press Assoc~&gt;"on and
the Amcncan Newspaper PubLisher Assoctalton

U n"ERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be tess ohan 300
words long All \etters arc sUbJec t to ed1tmg and must be ugned w1lh name.

address and ielephone number No unSigned letlers will be pubhsbed l..etiers
should be ln good taste, addressang 1ss ues, not personalities

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By 1 he Associated Press
Excerpts of Ohoo edotonals of statcwodc and nauonal onterest·
The Columbus Dispatch, Aug. 15
The ho gh-decobel debate on health -care rdorm , slowed for now '"
Congress struggles to fashoon a passable cromc bol l, os all but overl ookmg
one cnucal element· How much would It cost0
Many arc concerned, and nghll y so, that costs arc getting scant ,lltcn
uon on measures put forth by Senate MaJOnty Leader George J Motchell,
D-Mame , and House Majonty Leader Roc hard A Gcphardt, D-Mo
In the areas of costs, the now-ognored Chnton boll had at least one
favorable provo soon, that whoch sought tn control expendotures through a
system of managed compeutoon. When the boll sank because ot was too
complex for most people to understand, lhe csumable managed-compeution concept was lost also.
Yes, a consoderable part of !he American health care system os onadequate and needs fixing. But on !he conunumg debate, the pnce tag ought
to be vosoble to all. If thos natoon , so deeply m debt, os going to enact
another cnutlement, ot should be done woth everyone knowmg the cost.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Aug. 14
It os easy to feel sorry for Presodent Clmton , who had so much ndmg
on the cnmc boll, and so little mklmg that ot was 111 dorc troubl e.
But ot' s hard to shed too many tears For one thong, the boll mogh t stoll
be resurrected For another, despite ots cnonnous soze, ot never seemed
nearly so powerful a weapon agamst crome as Chnton has conmlcntly
claomed.
By lhc ume ll reached us final form ,'lhe sox·ycar, $33 bolloon p.1ckagc
had evolved onto a bulky assemblage of dosparate provosoons - so me
wosc, some stupod.
The en me boll that never made otto lhe floor last week was a messy try
that probably would have done more good than harm. On balance, 11
seemed wonh approving.
It would be a shame, however, of Clinton's presodency is senously
JCOpardozed by legoslauon whose value was so uncertam and pnce tag so
high. Clinton deserves credot for conunuong dunng hos presodcncy, as on
Ins campaogn, to focus on fighung cnme.
Chnton must contmue to usc hos bully pulpot, m powerful and creauvc
ways, to address !he culture that contnbutcs to cromc.
The (Port Clinton) News Herald, Aug. II
Socoety seems to have taken hold of yet another old idea and reonvcntcd ot c hastot y
The "True Love Waots" campaogn, whoch began on a Nash voile, Tenn.,
church, asks students to sogn pledges of chastoty unul marriage. So far,
more than 211,000 pledge cards have been sogned by young Amcncans.
ltoS""a chmce that should be lauded and the commotmentos admorablc.
But we must be reahstoc.
Chasttty pledge cards must not supplant basoc education and onformauon on AIDS and pregnancy.
To do less than gove our choldrcn such onfonnatoon would not pamt an
honest picture of the world on whoch they love.

Letters to the editor
State following double standard
the people have- to play !he games
on the lottery run by the state government, whoch was at one umc lhe
people, but no more. No wonder
they don't want the cnme boll to
pass, you could fill the Jaols and
prisons up wuh all the crooks m the
government.
I really blame a lot of the crime
m this country on the leaders for
some of the laws they make, most
of which are made to benefit themselves, or how much k.ickback !hey
can get. We should get behond the
Rutland American Legoon and suppan them, they have done a lot on
our area and they deserve our backmg - somethmg they won't get
from our government.
Robert Burton
Pomeroy

Officers worthy of respect
Dear Edotor,
I am wnung thos m response to
the letter that Captam James Stacy
of the Pomeroy Pohcc Department
wrote.
1 am so grateful that the nght
person was at the right place at the
r~ght tome and most of all, he
wasn't afraod to get involved. If
there were more people willing to
get onvolved, maybe wings would
be dofferent in thos cruel an&lt;l,wiolcnt
4
world.
There arc people who have the
attitude that a police officer knows
what comes woth the job, before
they take it, but does th~ Jop;tify the
brutality !hat goes wtth ot too?
A pohce officer is loaded down
with protecu ve gear - but they
aren't allowed to use any of it.
They JUSt have to stand there and
take what's handed them. If a
drunk man so wishes to spit in their
face, they have to take it
There have been a couple of
tncidents in Pomeroy where the
offocers have had to use Mace to

'

Tuesda~AuQust16,

1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

break up a fight and charges have
been foled m both mstances for
pohce brutaloty. Now , I thonk ot os
pretty bad wl1cn a poloce officer has
no protcctoon for hom self at all.
I know Captaon Stacy, and he
has been one of the finest, most
honest, compassoonate pohce offi cers that has been m Pomeroy for
quote some tome.
I know there are several officers
working m Pomeroy who need lhe
stuffmg kicked out of them, but [
assure everyone, Captam Stacy os
not one of them.
If these people who cause the
problems, and tf beaung a polleeman os lhe only way they can feel
like a macho man, they would be
more macho of they would only
take the ume to get to know Captam Stacy. They may be surpnsed
at \Vhal a really great person he is
and they will find he will walk that
extra mole -if you wiU only walk
with him.
Barbara Stahl
Pomeroy

·' daily md cx" of ho s attitude
toward runnong for office, an ondex
1ha1 see ms 10 have rosen lately as
th e Clonton admono stratoon shows

do w1 th 1l

Morton Kondracke

Me.on wlu le, GOP profc ssoona ls
,trc hopong Powell wol l accept thcor
viCe prcsulcnt1al nod despnc Powel l\ 1nsostcncc that he' s an Independent
So far. the movement consosts of
.1n agree ment sogncd by a well-connected GOP consultant to beg1n
cn ll cct on g money dnd organ111ng
for a Powe ll corrHnlltce
GOP so ur ces say ot 's an
''exp loratory co mmottcc" under
federal electiOn law, meanong thai
ol has 10 be authonzed by the cando date, as opposed to a "draft" com mittee, wh och can be ondcpendent
Powell 's spokesman , Boll
Smull en, saod Powell " had heard
somethmg, hut IS not aware of any
onotoatovc and has not approved or
endorse d an y " Other fro end s of
Powell say lhcy'vc heard about formauon of "Draft Powell Commot
tees" on 30 states, al so unautho nzed
Close fncnds of Powe ll' s claom
th at, even to them, Pov.ell declares
homself to be an "Independen t "
The se frocnd s sa) they take a

sogns of confusiOn
Whole so me Powell assoc oates
asse rt the fonncr chaorman ol th e
Joont Chocfs of Staff would never
consoder ac ccptong the voce preso dentoal nommauon, others say he
would take ot - an eventuality
devoutly hoped for by many profes sional Rcpublocan s, who say
he' s "everybody's for st chooce" for
the JOh .
ror mstance, former Republocan
Natoonal Committee chaorman Roch
Bond says that " regardle ss who
our nomone c os - Bob Dol e,
Lamar Alexander , Dock Cheney,
Pete Wol son, Phol Gramm - you
add Cohn Powell and ot becomes a
dream ucket . a bonanza."
Dcs potc th e fact that a Powell
nomonatoon would make hom the
r..,t Afrocan-Amcncan on a major
natoonal tocket, Bond added, "ot's
not because of race . I doubt that
he'd attract many blacks to the
Republocan Party, though any
omprovcmcnt would help. Hos talent, hos temperam ent, and ho s mde-

pcndence would attract moderates
and mdependcnts, whoch IS 30 per
cent of the elec torate "
Bo nd thonk s It unlok cly th at
Powe ll could won the GOP prcs1
denual nomonauon on 1996 becau se
he ' ll be oc cup 1cd sc ll1ng hos S6
molloon au10b10graphy wcl l1ntO the
fall of 1995, a pen od wh en mos t
presodcntoal candodatcs Will be furo ous ly organozong and raiSin g
money
Whol e Po"'cll woll ge t a hu ge
lavorablc publo coty boost from hiS
book, Bond thonks party lc,,dcrs,
pnmary voters, and the press need
umc to exa monc crou cally Po" cl l's
characte r and oss uc po sotoon s largely unknown at th e mom ent
The penod from late August 1995
through March 1996, when key
GOP pnmanes arc over, osn't long
enough
GOP opcratovc Ed Rol lon s
agrees . " From Super Bowl 1995
throug h Super Bowl 1996, a candodate has to raose betw een $20 mol loon and $30 molhon on botes of
SI ,000 maxomum. That take s a lot
of umc and a lot of orgaomatoon
Th e ru Jc s don ' t totally apply to
Colon Powell, but ot 's pretty h,ord to
fogurc out how he'd do ot '
There os a remo te po ss obohty
that Pow ell. after se llon ~ hom se lf

Accu -Wcathc r~ forccasl for dayumc L-OndH lons antllu!_!ll IL'Iltpcr.llurc~

Genevieve Reinhart

€1::1SI"eitl ·q~

a:.::;o; ~­
~!&gt; - ~a

Powclj' s froend s descnbe hom as
a "Hamilto noan who beloevcs
there's a rol e for government on
ge tung thm gs done " and who also
th onks thai oncomc on Amcnca os
"onequotably dostrobutcd " These
odcas toll hom to the left of most
Republocan poiiucoans.
On the other hand, he os both an
exemplar and an exponent of trado uonal famoly value s, tcllong audiences that Amenca needs to restore
"a sense of shame" to rem m personal conduct.
Possobly Powell' s greatest con lrobullon moght be to hea l th e
nallon ' s racial dovosoons, most
clearly evodent of late on the 0 J.
Sompson case, where lopsodcd
maJoritocs of wholes assume Sompson os guolty of murder while most
blacks thmk he's been raolroadcd
by whote society.
In hiS Howard Umversoly commencement address thos May, Powell acknowl edg ed continuing
racosm on Am croc,o and advocated
"racoal pndc" ,unong blacks But
he al so dec lared that ' ' racosm os a
d1sca se you '-"' cure by standong
up for you r roght s and by your
commument lo excellence and performance," .111d urged blacks to
JOIIl - not draw away from - a
mullo -ethnoc Umtcd States.
"Calm Powell has never saod no
when asked to serve, " one of hos
close fnends saod It's a conch he'll
be asked agam.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper or Capitol Hill.)

GOP ambushes independent counsel
If you're wondenng what really
went on when a panel of federal
appellate JUdges suddenly sacked
Whllcwatcr mdependent counsel
Robert Foske, you moght get a lot
closer to the truth of you ognore
what the magostratcs themselves
said
They saod they replaced Foske
woth Republocan panosan Kenneth
Starr to avood "perceoved" connoel. Foske had been appomted by
Attorney General Janet Reno durong a penod when the mdependent
counsel law had lapsed, and now
that a new law was in place providmg for court-appomted prosecutor s, ot was bes t to be squeaky
clean.
"As Foske was appomted by the
mcumbent admomstratoon, lhc coun
therefore deems 11 on lhe best mterest of the appearance of mdependcnce.. that a person not affiliated
With the mcumbent admomstratoon

be appomted. ·'
Well, forgovc my chutzpah, your
Honors. but !hat's a lot of baloney.
What we witnessed on the late

Joseph Spear
afternoon of Fnday, Aug. 5 was a
pohtocal ambush so brazenly perpetrated that the capotal city is still
stunned and solent from the shock
of it.
The very premise of the ruling,
that Fiske moght be perceived as
boased m favor of the admmtstration that appoontcd him, is ridiculous on its face . Raben Fiske os a
Republican, a fonner prosecutor, a
thoroughly professional attorney
who, had he been reappomted as
independent counsel, would have
reported to the coun - not Attorney General Reno.
The only thing Fiske dod wrong
was to come up woth some judg-

ments that did not please the extrachromosome roght wing of the
Republican party - espccoally the
fmdong that Whote House deputy
counsel Voncenl Foster's death was
a su1code. So 10 members of the
House of Representatives, led by
Rep . Dan Burton, R-Ind., who
appears to have stropped a few
gears on his obsessive drive to find
a Foster consporacy. wrote to the
three-judge panel that selects the
mdependent counsels and asked
that Foske be fired. Focrcc Chnton
foe Floyd Brown, father of the
1988 Willie Horton commercial,
also contacted lhe judges.
Amazingly, the judicial panel
agreed. Well, perhaps it is not so
amazing when you consider the
presiding JUdge of the panel is
Davod B. Sentellc, a staunch conservatove and protege of Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., who was appointed
to the federal bench by Ronald
Reagan in 1987.

Thos os the same David Sentelle
who wrote lhe majonty opmion m
the decisoon to overturn Oliver
Nonh's lran-contrn convoctoons. In
a ruling that bordered on the preposterous, Sentelle and another
Reagan-appomted JUdge, Lawrence
Silberman, tossed out the North
convictions on the grounds that
witnesses and JUrors may have
been mflucnccd by North's immumzed tcstomony before Congress
- despnc we fact !hat North was
found guolty only of lhree felonies
he acknowledged commottmg
This is the same federal appeals
judge who now says that Robert
FISke must be replaced to avood lhc
appearance of conflict. I tell you,
the absurdoty of 11 boggles the
mind. If Judge Sentellc os truly
concerned with potentoal conflicts
of onterest, the f1rst thing he
should've done was ask some ower
Judge to sit in for hom on the Foskc
deCISIOil.

Woodstock Nation, then and now
Last week , Newsweek's cover
story made the starthng claom that
we are, desplle appearances to the
contrary. now IIvong m Wood~tock
Nauon . No, Richoc Havens osn'tthe
presodent. We don't hoppoe-dancc
naked on parks, or wear bell-bottoms and flowers to our data-processong Jobs It's more subtle !han
that.
"The Doonysoac tnad of sex,
drugs and rock and roll now dominate pnvatc hfc and popular culture," Davod Gates wrote. "The
principle that laws are for killJoys
has been onto practice everywhere
from lhe mner city to Wall Street"
Well, let me see. Do sex, drugs,
and rock and roll dominate private
hfe and popular culture? They certainly don't dominate my private
hfc, unless cable televosoon counts
as a controlled substance.
As far as popular culture goes,
well, maybe. We seem to sec the
bane bottoms of male movie stars
more than we used to. But I think

today's female sex symbols, your
Madonnas and supermodels, your
Sharon Stones, have their cultural
root~ m Jayne Mansfield not in top·

fan Shoales
less hippoe chicks. We don't go
around blamong Jayne Mansfield
for today's sorry state of affairs, do
we? Maybe someone should write
a thesis on the role of peroxode in
the renting of the social fabric.
As for rock and roll, well, I hate
to break it to Newsweek, but rock
and roll doesn't even exost any
more. All we have are speed-metal,
hip -hop "and Michael Bolton.
Mochael Bolton os the Tom Jones
for the millennium. There is nothing even remotely Woodstockosh
about him. True, there's been an
increase in the number of sensotovc
singer/songwriters recently, but the
timely application of earplugs
should mp this contagioq in the
bud

Today in histo·ry
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, August 16, the 228th day of 1994. There arc 137
days left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
One hundred years ago, on August 16, 1894, George Meany, !he forst
president of the AFL-CIO, was born in New York City. In a career that
spanned nearly six decades , Meany became one of the nauon 's most
influential private citi1.cns as the cogar-chompmg, sharp-tongued symbol
of the Amencan labor movement. He died in 1980 at age 85.
'

•

. As for Gates' other claom, that
hopptes somehow evolved onto
crack dealers and stockbrokers
well, I wonder what he was on:
Maybe there's a commune at the
offices of Newsweek, but on most
areas of American life, the comm unc has been replaced by the
committee.
Recognizing that Woodstock
'94 was on pay-per-voew, feature
metal detectors, and a zero tolerance for drugs and alcohol is a useful first step in recognizing the difference between the '90s and the
'60s. As a second step, let me offer
a helpful chart. We did not have
helpful charts in the '60s. If we
had, things might ondeed have
turned out doffercntly, if we'd been
straight enough to pay attention to
them.
THEN NOW
Hippie dancmg. Power walkmg.
Staying up for days speculaung
about the existence of Atlantts.
Dieting.
LSD. Pro:zac.
Toe-dyed shorts. Power ties.
Summer of Love. Bad hair days.
Rap sessions. Talking pomts.
Free sex. Safe sex.
Getting the dog stoned. Reading
"The Hidden Life of Dogs."
The phrase, "Far out." The
phrase, "Doesn't suck."
The drum solo. Expert testimony.
VW microbus. Lexus.
Flower power. Floral arrangement.

•

IToledo 179' I

and hos book on TV tall shows,
could be placed on early prunary
halloLs and trounce lhc field, crealong ovc rwhclmong mo mentum
10ward nomonatoon
But not even DwogiH Eoscnhowcr accomplo shed tho s fea t, dcs pote
the esteem he enJoyed after World
W,II II In 1952, Eosc nhowcr had to
defeat Sen. Raben Taft (Ohoo) for
the GOP presoden toal nomonauon on
a hard-fought organ11.atoonal battle.
Powell's path to the prcsodcncy
- of that IS where he wants to go
- sce mon gly would fl ow mo st
smooth ly through the vo ce prcsodcncy, wh ere he cou ld have an
1nflucncc ove r both foreo gn and
domesuc polo cy
Clearly, he's most cxpencnccd
at forcogn affwrs, so the voce presodency mo ght uffer an opportunlly
for tramong m domcsuc polocy and
econom1cs

Huchhikmg around the country
gettong one's head together.
Seclhmg m gndlock
Candles Track hghung.
Thru stock. Espresso decaf.
Granny glasses 1 mted contacts
Tomothy Leary. Davod Letterman.
Fun-lovmg dazed young people.
Morose dazed young people
Scratchy LPs. Dogotally rcmastered scratchy LPs.
"False consciousness will be
"That constitutes the 10 segments
that woll be replaced by global fall
mto thos area. I woll be happy
consciOusness Power to the to
make the 3,000 documents available
People!" to the committee."
OJ. running. OJ. on the lam.
Sure, there are some overlaps.
The Grateful Dead are still out
!here. We still pay attention to The '
Rolling Stones. Young people are
stoll a problem. But it's probably
not too late. We can still get ourselves back to the garden. if we
own equity m our own home. One
thing I've learned, of you want to
be a hippie, you've got to amortize.
(To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1·
800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, •con·
tact America Online by calling 1800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)

PaQe-3

--Area deaths-- Meigs land transfers

Does Colin Powell really want to run?
Woll Co lon Powell run on 1996'1
Already, a Rcpublocan "Col on
Powell for Prcsodc nt" movement os
und er "ay. alth ough th e putau' e
(,Uld!Cldtt: dm ms he has noLhmg to

The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday , Aug. 17

OHIO Weather
MI CH

I

Dear Edotor,
I read on the paper where the
state government has put the
screws to other groups of mdlVlduals, namely the Rutland American
tegoon for selling so-called ollegal
tops - trymg to keep its head
above water and keep the post
gomg.
If the state had !heir hands on ot,
ot would be legal. What os the dofference between playmg the up
board and the lottery? Nothong,
except the stale has control of the
louery and that makes Illegal.
All of these people fought for
theor country and thos os the way
they are bcmg treated. Maybe they
found out who the real enemy os.
The state wants we Rutland post to
stop the bon~o games probably so

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

August16, 1994

PA

'''''

dd

WVA

~
' ' ' ' '
lctJ

Showers T storms Ratn

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
© 1994 Accu Wo ,l!'"'or Inc

Via ASSOCI819d Press Graph1CSN8r

Rain in forecast tonight
By The Associated Press
· Raon os forecast for tonoght ,
mwnly m southeast Ohio
There woll be a chance of ram
later tomght over the rest of the
southern regoons, and cloudoncss
woll mcrease in the north .
Lows woll be from the upper 50s
to middle 60s.
Showers and lhunderstonns woll
spread through most of the state
Wednesday. Northwest Ohoo
should escape the rain. Heavy ramfallo s possoblc m eastern regions.
The record hogh temperature for
thos date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 in 1913. The record
low was 46 m 1979.
Sunset today woll be at 8:28
p.m Sunnse Wednesday will be at
6:45a.m.

Weather forecast.
Today ... Mostly sunny lncrcasmg cluudmcss soullo thos afternoon.
Hoghs 75 to 80.
Tonoght. .Mostly cloudy. Ram
lokely southeast Chance of ram late
southwest &lt;llld central. Lows m the
upper 50s and lower 60s
Wednesday .Partly c loudy
northwest Showers hkcl y and possoblc thunderstorms cast. Cha nce of
showers and thunderstorms southwest. Hoghs on the m1d 70s to
around 80.
Extended For.cast:
Thursday and Froday .. Fa1r.
Lows 60 to 65 and hoghs m the 80s
Saturday .. A chance of thumlerstorms. Lows m the 60s and h1ghs
m the 80s. "'

REDA executive director
(Continued from Page I)
JCCl, !hey are commotted to mak.mg
economiC development work ... and
thatos cxaclly whatot takes."
As the assocoauon 's executove
director, Grdham wdl report directly to REDA's 10-member board of
dorectors. The directors represent
Gallia, Jackson, Mcogs and Mason
countoes Admomstratovcly, REDA
operates under the university's
Center for Economic Development
- a scrvoce-based umbrella organolallon desogned to provodc a
focused approach to cooperative
cconomoc development.
"The Center for Economic
Development serves as a neutral
liaison between -and central meetmg place for - localities and business leaders in the area." Rio
Grande Presodent Barry M. Dorsey
said dunng Monday's public meetmg.
Dorsey said that through the

center the umversoty could olfcr ots
support as a non-lhreatenmg, nonahgned and scrvocc-oncntcd center
". not hmotcd by lhc boundancs of
the Ohoo Rover"
In addotoon to REDA, two other
orgamzatoons - th e Wood Focu s
Products Group and the Southcastern Ohoo Rcgoonal Councol - arc
alhed woth lhe center
Roo Grande woll provodc &lt;UPJJOrt
services - mcludmg physocal offocc
space and professional assistance for REDA 's executovc doreetor.
The posouon os currently bcmg
funded by pnvate donauons. Future
REDA operatoons, board members
saod, would rcqurre a combonauon
of pubhc and pnvate funds . The
center, approved last year by the
umvcrSity's board of trustees, has
received $16,000 m stanup money
provoded by grants from AT&amp;T
and Buckeye Rural Electroc Coopcratovc.

Chester, TP kindergarten
orientation set for Aug. 23
A meeting wdl be held at 9 a.m.
on Aug. 23 at Chester Elementary
School for kindergarten orientation.
In addotion, a meeting will be held
at II a.m. on Aug. 23 at Tuppers
Plaons Elementary School.
If you have not pre-registered
your child for kindergarten, please
plan to be in auendance, said Eastern Local Superintendent Ronald
D. Monard.
Parents who did not attend the

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admtssion - Lmda
Brunby. Racine.
Monday doscfiarge - Vorgol
Roush, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 15 - Mrs.
Thenll Clagg and son, Nancy Fra·
zier, Edna Ohlinger.
Birth - Mr and Mrs. Randy
Crews, son, Gall110lis.

------,

TI1e Daily Sentinel
!USPS llJ-!IQ)

Pubhihed every afternoon, Monday through

fr1day, Ill Court St, Pomeroy, ctuo by the
Ohio VaHey Pubhsh.III8 Company!Multtllll'.dla
Joe, Pomeroy Oh1o 4S769, Ph 992 21S6

Sewnd clau jXlstage p81d at Pomeroy, Otuo
Member The Auomted Press, and the Ohio

Newspaper AuoctatJon National Advertia!Dg
Repruentalivt, Branham Newspaper Sales,

spnng regostration or who arc new
to the dostnct will need to provide a
copy of !heir student's b111h ceruficatc and a record of the vanous
vaccinations and shots already
receoved, he saod
For more mformatoon, contact
the superintendent's office at 9854292.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... .30 518
Akzo ........................................62 518
Ashland Oil ........................... .37 i/8
AT&amp;T ............................., ......53 318
Bank One ............................... .34 118
Bob Evuns ..........................,.20 118
Champion Ind .............................. 23
Charm lng Shop .............................. 9
Cliy Holdlng .......................... .JJ 112
Federal Mo,;ul... ..................... 27 318
Goodyear 1 &amp;R ..................... .34 112
K-mart .................................... 17 118
Lund&gt; End .............................. 18 314
Limited Inc ............................ 19 114
Multimedia Inc ....................29 1116
Point llancorp ..............................17
Reliance Elcctrk .......................... 20
Robbins &amp; Myers ......................... 19
Shoncy's Ine ........................... 13 7/8
Star Bank ...............................41518
Wendy In!'!.,.,,,,, ............... 15 112
Worthington lnd .......................... 20
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest or
Gall! polls.

133 Th1rd Avenue, New York, New YOJk

Word has been rccc oved here of
the death of Gcn cv1evc "Jan" Remh,IIt , 90, of 1\ew Losbon, lnd, who
do ed Tuesday , Aug 9, 1994 1n New
Losbon
Born Aug 15. 1903 on Pomeroy,
daughter o{;hc late Pe ter and
Susan Weber Rconhan She rcurcd
on 1963 as a physoca l cduca toon
te.oc hcr 111 Detroot She moved to
New Los bon fro m Detroot and
Upper Traverse Coty, Moch.
She os survovcd by a nephew,
Robert Reonhart of Athen s, two
great-nephews and three grca tmeccs.
She was preceded on death by a

brother and soster-m-law, Wolham
and Dons Remhart.

Mildred I. Hysell
Callong hour s for Moldred I.
Hysell, HO, Pomeroy, who doed
Sunday, Aug 14, 1994, woll be
today from 2-4 and 7-9 p m at the
Fo shcr Funeral Home on Moddleport
Servoccs woll be Wednesday at
II a m on the Bmdford Church of
Chnst woth Derek Stump offic oat ong Bunal wo ll follow on Mol es
Cemetery r ncnds may also call at
the church one hour pnor to se rvt ccs

Meigs announcements
Film to be shown
The film, Eye of the Swrm, woll
be shown at the Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene, Syracuse, Sunday,
6p m
Parent meeting called
A mccung for the parents of
fo rst and second graders on Letan
and Raconc Elemen tary Schools
wol l be held Tuesday, Aug. 23, at 7
p m at Southern Hogh School.
llymn sing planned
The Hollsode Bapust Church,
Pomeroy, woll have a hymn song on
the Pomeroy parkmg lot, Sept. 2, at
7 p m Any gospel group, soloist,
ducts or troos who would Joke to
song arc asked to call Dr. James R
Acree Sr., 992-6768.
Discussion planned
The Board of County Commossooners of Mcogs County and the
Boards of Townshop Trustees of
Bedford, Chester, Columboa,
Leba non, Letart, Olove, Orange,
Rutland, Salem Salisbury, Scopio
and Sutton Townshops woll hold a
specoal meeung at the Meogs County Mulupurposc Senoor Center on
Aug 24 at6·30 p.m. for the spccofoc purpose of conSidenng a proposal for cstabl1 shong enterprise zones
on Mcogs County.
Williams reunion set
Descendants of Abraham and
Margaret Wolhams will hold a famol y reunoon Sunday at the South
Sodc Park m Athens located on
Daory Lane.

Curtis reunion scheduled
The annual Curtos famoly
reunoon woll be held Sunday at the
publo c hbrary on Church Street,
Alexandna. A basket donner woll
begm at 12: 30 p m All Curuscs of
Meogs Cou nty arc on voted
Dance to be held
A dance woll be held at the
Scnoor Couzens Center Saturday
from 8 to II p.m George Hall woll
pruvode the musoc. Admosswn os
SIS a couple
Durst reunion set
The annual Durst reunoon woll
be held Wllh a dmncr at noon Aug.
21 at Martm Dur st's home on
Shade.
Modern Woodmen bake sale
The Modem Woodmen's youth
group woll hold a bake sale on Sept.
3 at the Burhngham Hall. Proceeds
go to communoty proJeCts.
Church homecoming
The annual Hysell Run Hohness
Church homecomong woll be at
9:30a.m. Aug. 21 at the church
Donner woll be at noon, wllh warshop at 10:45 a.m. A spec oal servoce
woll be at 2 p m. Sunday and
evenmg scrv oce at 7:30pm.
Zion church revival
The Zoon Church of Chnst. Harnsonvolle Road, woll hold a rcvoval
at 7 p.m. Fnday and Saturday .
Homecommg woll be observed at
9 30 a_.m and 2 p m. Sunday scr
v1ces. Lunch woll be at 12 30 p.m.
Sunday. Don Ken nedy, former
monoster, woll be a guest speaker

EMS units record runs
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medocal Servoce reponed 20 calls for asststance between
modmght Fnday and modn1ght
Monday. Unots respondmg mcludcd·
CHESTER VFD
6·55 p m Saturday, assosted
Pomeroy squad at two-car wreck at
Pomeroy Poke and Flatwoods
Road
MIDDLEPORT
5:06 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Center, Mary Rickard, Veterans
Mcmonal Hospital;
7· II p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Center, Eber Lewis, VMH;
9:09 p.m. Sunday, Village
Manor Apartments. Melmda JustiCe, VMH;
9:22p.m. Sunday, Chestnut
Street. Arlana Quick, Holzer Medical Center;
9· 10 am Monday, farrgrounds,
Jessoca Barringer, VMH.
POMEROY
11:22 am. Saturday, Union
Avenue, John Lamben, VMH;
3:04 p.m. Saturday, State Street,
Terry Stobart, VMH;
4:16p.m. Saturday, Rose Holl,
Tona Koser, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
6:55p.m. Saturday, two-car
wreck at Pomeroy Pike and Flat·
woods Road, Crocket Roush, VMH
pendmg transfer to HMC:
7:01 p.m. Satunday, Peach Fork
Road, Charlotte Crack, VMH;
II 52 p.m. Saturday, Lynn and
Mam streets, Dale Tribble, HMC;
6·24 am. Sunday, Pomeroy
Nursmg and Rehabihtatoon Center,
Emma Duffy, VMH;
10:17 a.m. Monday, Main
Street, Helen Maag, VMH pending
transfer to Grant Medocal Center
voa LofcAoghtll,
12:03 p.m Monday, Blake
Road, Lorean Gorrell, St. Joseph's
Hospotal;
8:21 p.m. Monday, Coolvolle
Road, Jason Reed, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
RACINE
1.29 p.m. Satunday, Fifth Street,
Jack Sargent, treated at scene;
12·11 a.m . Monday, State Route

338, Samuel W1lhams, treated at
scene,
12·50 am Monday, Syracuse
station, Brian Doehl, VMH;
4:55 p m. Monday, volunteer
fire deparuncnt to Perry Run Road
for a smoke odor.
REEDSVILLE
I. 17 p.m. Sunday, Hudson
Road, Chfford Jobe, VMH.
RUTLAND
7.46 p.m. Sunday, New Lorna
Road, Joshua Bolon, PVH;
4:57 a.m. Monday , Rutland sta·
toon, Nelhe Haggy, PVH;
1:18 p.m. Monday, State Route
124, Lucy Chipps, PVH;
5:01 p.m. Monday, State Route
143, vfd and squad to one-car acci dent, Jess and Craog Howard,
VMH;
7·21 p m Monday, State Route
124, Beulah Grate, HMC;
8:16 p.m . Monday, Coolville
Road, Jason Reed, treated al scene.
SYRACUSE
7:04p.m. Saturday, two-car
wreck at Pomeroy Pike and Flatwoods Road, Gabe Farley, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
9:06 p.m. Sunday, State Route
681, Teena Rose, St. Joseph's Hospital;
9: II p.m. Monday, fairgrounds,
Thaddeus Bumgardner, VMH.

POSTMASlER Send addreu changes to The

A Long Bottom youth was cored
for no operator's license and faolure
to control on a one-car crash Monday on Pomeroy Pike, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Hoghway
Patrol said.
The patrol said Joseph S.
Nicholson, 17, 61700 State Route
124, was eastbound, 1.3 miles west
of Flatwoods Road, at 6:16p.m.
when he lost control of hiS car on a
right-hand curve and struck an
embankment off the left sode of lhe
road.
There were no injuries and damage to the car Nocholson drove was
slight, lhe patrol said.

Meigs County Fair Special

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
Sut.aibcn aot dca1nog to pay the earner may

mrut ID advance direct to The Dally Sent10el

oa a three, Ill or 12 month buu. Credst wdl De
JJVen awner each wML

No subscnplions by nwl perrrutted
wbere home earner servtce 11 available

111

areas

$200°

0

INSTALLED

Stop by .aur booth at the Grange. Checkout our Fair
Special. Register for FREE Windows.

QUALITY WINDOW SYS,.EMS
110 COURT ST.
992-4119

tr1cl, Ruti and, 51 23 ,ocrcs,
Roght of wa y, Romd
dll d
Dclons J. Cremeans 10 LCCD Rul
J,md . 12 25 acres
Roght of 1.\Uy, PcarliC r Jewel'
Jr 10 I,CCLl, Rutl,md. 25 '"res
Ro):ht ol "" Y· Brencl.1 ~I 11 )" 11
to I.CCD Sahshu ry,
Dee d Bodfd o l Counl y ( on1
nHsstonrrs to Cr,ug E ~md llrLrHL1
K Vcnoy, Chc"-lcr, rcsol u!ron

Dee d, Fl ora !Je ll Gru l'S t' r 1"
Dehr.J Gnlac h, ~1 oddl cpnrt p.i!cc ls
Ucc&lt;l. V '"c"·' K .1r1d Jcllrn
Brown, Chester, ) KW7 acres,
Aff1davl l, Sandra I. H.1cr
dc cc.tscd, to Charl es W B.oer, Su i
to n , 7H6(J &lt;tcre,

Ccriolocatc, Davod Ken ne th
Yonker , dece ase d, to Sar.il 1
Yonk er, Rutland parcel,
Certofocatc.
Arthur
M
Shumway, deceased, 10 Mold red L
Shumw,oy, lknl ord tracts,
Deed, Rochard D and llclcn G
Ca rter to People s Bankon g and
Trust, Ohvc;
Ccnof, caoe, Donald R Harros ,
dece ased, 10 Shorl cy M , M.mch c·
Dr,mc dnd Melissa Dawn fl at n s
( )r.m gc p:1rccls,

Cn til1cat e , E Jeanne Braun
dccedse d, 10 Kenneth K Braun
Becllord,
Dee d, Terry R. and Lynda F
Cu llums 10 &gt;arne, Bedford p.tr.cls,
Deed, Janocc R Keslncr, rt ,II
to JaniCe R. and Step he n M
Weber, Chester, 1 2fi2 .ocrcs,
Roght of way, Dao sy Vorgono,o
Frecker, et al., to Janocc R Weber
et al , Chester easement

Livestock report
CO LUMBUS (AP) - Ohw
d1rect hog pnces at selec ted buyong
poonts Tuesday hy th e Oho o
Department of Agnculturc
Barrows and golt s wc&lt;tk to 50
cents lower.
US. 1-2, 230-260 lbs, coun try
poont s 41 00-42 .50, plants 41 504100
US 2-3, 230-260 lbs , country
poonts 37 50-41.00
Proces from The Producers Love stock Assocoatoon
Cattle steady to hoghcr.
Slaughter steers· chmcc 62 006S 75, select 59 00-64.00.
Slaughter hcofcrs: choocc rl2 0066 50, sclectSS.00-62.75.
Cows· steady to 1.00 hogher; all
cows 50 00 and down.
Bulls: steady ; all bull s 58.00 and
clown.
Sheep 'ond lambs: 6.00 lower to
5 00 hoghcr; choocc wools 62.00 73.00, chooce chps 62.50-71.00 ,
feeder lambs 60 00 and down, aged
sheep 31 00 and down

[

FORREST GUMP

)

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IN THE RRMY NOW
I 10 'I 20 t».ll.Y ""T SAT/~ 1:10, ) 20 (I'(;J

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ANGELS IN THE UUTIIElO
1 10 ~ILV I¥.TII'ti:S SAT{!Uf I 10 ~ ~~

DISNEY S LION KING
7 IQ, Q 00 tllllLV M\T SAT/9.J'ol l 10 ,

j

GIFT CERTIFiCA fE~ AVAILABLE•

POMEROY, OHIO
1-BOQ-291-5600

Ronna Reeves
Wednesday 8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, August 16
4 00 p.m.
S 00 p.m.
6.00 p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
12.00 Midmgbt

00 (( , I

COMi"G SUU" i HHLA NI~N" I
IUWCE WIL LIS In Ht.l.JLOH 0. /Il CHT"

Patrol cites
area youth

10017
Daily Senhhel, Ill Court Sl , Pomeroy, Oh10
4.1769

The following land tran sfers
were recorded recently "' the office
of Meogs County Recorder Em magene Hamolton
Aff1davot, John W. Scarbrough,
dece ased, to Phyllis Mc Mollan,
Lebanon,
Deed, Margaret Grossnock lc, co
al to Albert M and Sharon Won tcrs, Ohvc, 2 23 acres,
Deerl, Good New s Monos tro cs
Inc to Mt Zoon Properties Ill , Scopoo parcels;
Aff od av ot, Cou lt er Shul e r to
C M Shuler,
Deed, Robert A Durst to M.lrJOfiC A. Durst, Sutton , 60 acres,
Deed, Bon01c J and Jam es I.
Jarvos to Robert L and Silaro11 II
Jewell, Harnsonvollc lot, '
Correctovc aflodavot, Edward II
Kelly, decea sed, to ll clen Jun e
Kelly,
Deed. Marvon C Walker to \l cr
non and Mary Lee Maxcy , Orange,
Roght of way , Whot ed T~rc
Rccyclong In c, Howarc1 L and
Karan Whoted, to Tuppers Pl,lllhChcster Wat er Dost ro cl, Scopoo ,
24 93 acres,
Deed, Ross J and Gcnrude M
Stewart to Kelly D. Stewart and
Marlene D. Chaffee, Rutland,
l 174 acres;
Deed, Joseph W. and Barbara F.
Master s to Mochael Owen
Woebusch, Olive lot, I acre,
Deed, Lcttoc F. Young to Barbara Aorcz, Moddleport parcels;
Deed, Donald W. and Mary R
Barnett to Bolly W. and Martha E
Elhott, Rutland, 8 775 acres.
Deed, Donald W. and Mary R.
Barnett to Albert and Claudo a
Pelkey, Rutland. 5 acres:
Deed, Rankm Ray Pockcns DO
to Wolham R and Deborah J Haptonstall , Pomeroy parcels,
(
Deed, Wonfoeld Hard1ma~. to
Evelyn Smallwood, Salem, 1/2
acre;
Certofocate, Beatncc Lo slc,
deceased, to Lawrence P. Losle,
Rosetta Losle Redovoan and James
W. Losle, Syracuse parcel. 4 55
acres;
Deed, Rosetta and John Rcdovian to Lawrence P. Losle, ct al ,
Syracuse parcel, 4.55 acres,
Deed , Wolham D. and Jud y
Howard to C C. and Lena M
Howard, Scopoo parcels;
Deed, Rex A. and Robm Hoov er
to Lee Roy Sompkons Sr., Rutland
parcels;
Deed, Roger G. and Jan et E
Theoss to Charles E. and Komberly
S Stevens, Lebanon parcel,
Deed, Patrick L. and Juloe Law son to Mochacl S. and Tracy L.
Chapman, Coii1mboa. 2 acres;
Roght of way, Jame s C. and
Delma J. Ooler to Ohoo Power
Company, Salem,
Right of way, James S. and
Connie Rucker to TPCWD, Olove,
205 acres;
Right of way, Charles M and
Jenme Bass Canter to TPCWD.
Sutton, 26L 7A;
Roght of way, Frank E and Elsoe
I. Dodderer, Glove, 133 acre s,
Right of wa), Wolloam and Teresa Lemons to TPCWD, Ol1v e,
68.7 S acres;
Roght of way, Ernest A
Wmgctt, deceased, and Robert
WmgettlO TPCWD, 46.1404 acres,
Roght of way, Mochacl L and
Edna L Woll to TPCWD , S.dl sbury, 1.005 acres,
Deed, Charles F. and Margaret
Rae Yost to Joseph Jeffrey and
Beth Ann Brown, Sutton, 6.6449
acres;
Rtght of way, Joyce Frye to
Leadong Creek Conservancy Dos

Kiddie Tractor Pull - Show Arena
Jumor Fair Board Auction
Junior Filii' Sieer- Sbow Arena
Hill Stage- Joy
II ill Stage- River Valley Boys
Grandstand- Demohtion Deoby
Gates Close
Wednesday, August 17 1Kiddlo Ooy) ta.oo 1112 P·• ·
9:00a.m.
Junior Filii' Goat Show- Show Arena
10:00 Lm.
Draft Horse Contest- Infield
II :00 a.m
DazzlingDoll.o- Hill Stage
12:00 noon
4-H Flower Show- Junior Fm Buolding
12:00 noon
Guys and Gals Sheep Lead Class- Sbow Arena
t2:30 p.m.
Harne" Racing
2:00p.m.
4-H Style Revue- Hill Stage
4:00 p.m.
Kiddie Traclor PuU- Show Arena
4:30p.m.
LitUe Miss and Mister Contest- HoU Stage
5:00p.m.
Kiddo.e Games- Show Arena
6:00p.m.
Junior Fair Swine Sbow- Sbow Arena
7:00p.m
Open Class Horse Sbow
8:00p.m.
Ronna Reeves- Grandstand
8·00 p.m.
Hone Pull
9.00 p.m.
Hill Stage· Miwigbt Cloggers
12:00 Midmgbt
Gates Close

�The Daily

Sports

Tuesday,Au~ust 16,1994

S~ntinel

Ent~rln~. baseball strike,'~ . ~fth day,

Feels unsure&lt;about status

Tuesday, August 16, 1994
Page-4

of player-owner negotiations

~ilers defeat Gowboys 6-0
1n south-of-the-border tuneup
By MI CHAE L A. LUTZ
MEX ICO CITY (AP ) ~ T h e
largest crowd in NFL history got a
bad game. The Houston Oilers and
Dall as Cowboys got a bat1 fi eld.
So 11 went as the NFL played an
exhib1tion game in Mex ico City on
Mond ay ni ght at A1 tcca Stadium
with the Oil ers posting a 6-0 VICto ry.
AI Del Greco kicked fie ld goa ls
of 37 and 26 yards in the first half
for the onl y scoring, but that didn' t
seem to matt er to the cro wd of
11 2.376 fan s.
They enjoyed the entire prod uction from start to fini sh and most of
them were still in the stands when
the final seconds ticked off in the
sta dium where they usuall y come
to wa tch major leag ue soccer.
Heavy rai n be fo re th e gam e
turned the stadiu m surface into a
muddy mess.
" We should have been planting
corn in stead of play mg football ,"
Dallas coach Barr y Switze r sa id .
" It' s reall y hard to give a solid
ev aluall on o n how we pla yed,
because it was a wet track."
But the constant blaring of loud
mariachi and rock -and -roll music
kep t th e fa ns ent ert ained e ven
when the action didn't.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

" Wh en I hear NA FT A, I wish Emmitt Smith out of th e ga me
th:lt it stood fo r ' North Amen can because of the poor condition of
Football Trade Agreement," ' Cow - the fi eld.
boys fan Dav id Ibarra said .
" ! talk ed to Coac h (Barry)
"We've been wai lin g years for Sw itzer after warm ups and we both
this."
felt that the footing wasn'l going to
The Oil ers ex tended th eir suc- be good enou gh, " Smith s iad.
cess against the Cow boys to II VIC- ' 'I'm really disappointed because I
tone s in th eir las t 12 mee tin gs. was loo kin g fb rwa rd to fin all y
mcl udmg a 2-0 record in the reg u- play ing some."
lar season.
Da llas quarterbac k Troy Aik Cody Carl son, who completed man played into the second quarter
II of 16 passes for 120 yards and
before tu rnin g th e gam e ove r 10
pl aye d th e first half, gu1ded th e Rodney Peete . who drove the Cow Oilers to the Cowboy 20, highlightboys to a missed 21-yard fi eld goal
ed by a 19-yard pass to Pat Coletry
by Richie Cunnin gham in the
man, pn or to Del G rec o 's 37fin
al
seconds of th e second quarter.
yardcr.
'' It was probably a great game
Oilers cornerback Darryl Lewi s,
recovering from kn ee surgery that fo r th e fan s here in \1 exi co,"
Switzer sa1d . " It wa sn' t a good
cut short las t sea so n, stopped a
ni ght for exec uti on or making solid
Cowboys drive at the Oil er 17, setting in mouon a drive to the Dallas personnel evaluations.''
Ai km an compl eted three of
nine and Del Greco's second kick .
seven
passes for 12 yards and had
" Th e field wa s in pretty bad
one
intercepuon
before leaving the
shape but bo th team s have to play
game.
Carlson
played
the first half
on it." Oilers running back Gary
ami
completed
II
of
16
passes for
Brown sa id . "It' s been exciting.
120
yards
and
was
sacked
twice.
The Mexican people really deserve
The
attendance
broke
the NFL
somethin g lik e thi s. We want the
record
set
in
194
7
when
the NFL
crowd to go away and be happy. "
champion
Chicago
Bears
pla yed
Brown played most of the first
the
College
All-Stars
in
Chicago'
s
half but Switzer kept running back
Soldier' s Field.

GRAND CHAMPI ON PERCHERON ~ Four­
year -old Ginger , owned by Wanda Tearord or

Portland , won the grand champion percheron
title.

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Players and owners
didn ' t plan to meet today as the baseball strike
entered Day 5 and tbe total of canceled games
reach«! bO,
I&lt;'ederaJ mediators said they didn't know when
negotiations will resume or If th ey' ll join the
parties at the bargaining table.
"At this time, we're going to keep in constant
communication with the parties," said John
Martin, the point man for the mediation team,
said Monday f'rom his office in Boston.
As the strike went through its fourth da)',
union head Donald Fehr spent the day 1n
Washington nod management negotiator Richard
Ravilcb was at his office in N11w York.
Martin, 59, is a commissioner in Boston for the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. He
has kept iu touch witb the sides since owners
reOpen«! the collective bargaining agr~ment on
Dec. 7, 1992. lie also mediated the ll·day NUL
strike in l992.
. . . .... .· · . ..
During the SO-day bastbal(st~l~e in 1981,
O).edlator KennethMoff~. tt was a ):oustant .
presence, setting up bargaining se.$sions and
carrying messages betweeu the s.ldes. Martin
didil't envision mediators inuillidiately filling the
same role in these talks and wasn't sure whether
tbey w()Uid attend bargaining $t$$i011s;
.·
·\ ·~It's~ early to tell at Ibis time," be said.
. ·.·.·.. Me~!lwbiki, tile Chicago Cllbs optioned pitcher
Steye /(rase bel to Iowa &lt; ~' tl!e &lt;\merlca11
~$~diH~n in tht rirs.t player movesin~e the
stJ'ike began: Tbe.cubs were o~or eight teams at
tlli!i2S..lJian roster limit. his ril\ive to the minors
lcl't762 players op sti'lke. .,
.·.. .·.
: . .•. _
'Tlll here just to ti'y to keep myserr.in sh~pe,''
Trachsel Slltd after lowa's 6·4 loss to the

Indianapolis Indians. " It wa s my option.... I
tbou&amp;ftl about it lor a wbilr and figured I wuuld
probably be better off In the long run and come
bt're and continue to get in somt work."
While Trachsel is pltdllng, Martill is workillg
to find a solution along with Brian lo'lores, the
FMCS ru~tional representative and the agency's
former acting director. Flores, 59, worked with
Moffett during the air trallk controllers' strike
e-o~rly in the Rt!llgau administration.
" They' re seasoned guys," MoiTett Sllid f'rom
Washington, where be Is assistant to the president
of the National Association of Broadcast
F.ngineers and Technida111i. " I tbink the fact that
they're in there is a lot better than the situalion
before."
.
.
Moffett beeame in\'olved in the baseball. talks
in 1980, when the .sides reached au agreement that
put orr a work stoppage until the roDowing Jear.
Martin and Flores !Det with botb sides for,UJe
first time on Saturday aud arejost acqullilt~i!tll &gt;
themselvelj witl( lhe Issues. .
&gt;
"U ~~!l!ti'!~. bad been called in bcrore; ~)' ;
amid ll"y!l sn~ Ideas, Sutb as extendlnjft~e
contract, ~ritiglng in a panel to study," Mort:e~t...
said. ~"J'het'e WjiSD'I lillY mediation team In there
btfort andtbeyjust bumbled into this stupid

ON ALL FOURS~ Quad races were also held
during Monday evening's Motocross races held at
the Mei~s County Fair. P.J. Hill of Racine was one

of the four-wheelers racing in front of the large
crowd.

sti'lke."

&gt; . ,; /

. __

.-.••.-

.Motrett liit~F $il&lt;:cetded

•.

Marvin Militr ii$
executive dlrt;tt?r of tile M~r League Bas~baJ!
Players M$ilct!lti(ln1 but Wll$.1()l:&lt;:lld out by pla,Y~I'$ .

In
1983 neg&lt;~tiatmns
and re·. hl. ~ed.
Y...•.'.•..·- ·e.. ~~.·. •.'--•.·.•.·.tl'om
·.••. ·M
.·. ·. offett·
·.$··.·a... '.-·._ ~_._.-·
basebaU
are• . ·.b.•differ~nt
all ·uther
· ·p

'YP,~~~d~~~c..~~t;iii!~id. ~~t~t~ ·-

statement.

every press release ;;,..:,; U~ytbilig "7 is .

for r.ub1ic toosumpt!Qil. ln lD~t ~~iatl~

rou

don t hear peep until tllere'sl\ ~etiJ!!Iitent." .....•.. - -

Will trouble plague Iowa squad
breaking in new quarterback?
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
IOWA C ITY, Iowa (AP) ~
Iowa is breaking in a new quarter back thi s year and that usually
means one thing for the Hawke yes.
Trouble.
Althou gh Matt Rodgers took
Iowa to th e Rose Bowl, th e
Haw keyes were just 5-6 in his first
year as a starter, 1989. Jim Hartlieb
foll owed Rodger s in 1992 and
Iowa tumbled from 10-1-1 10 5-7.
Last se aso n, senior Paul
Bunneister's first as a starter, Iowa
went 6-6. fini shed last in the Big
Ten in scoring and offense and
averaged fewer than 300 yards a
gam e for the first t•me m coach
Havden Fry 's IS seasons.
Now comes 1994 and Fry has
fiv e candidat s to suc ceed
Bunneister. But e feels better than
he didll ypii-ago because the wmner of--lhlquarterback battle should
have a stronger supporting cast.
Burmeister was on the field with
nine other new starters. This year,
eight starters are back on offense,
including all but one Imeman.
"Overall, we're certainly in better shape at this time than we were
last year," Fry said. "The quarterback is the big hangup. We have
got to have a quarterback come on
as fast as possible. It's going to be
very delicate because it's very easy
from a coaching standpoint to give
a quarterback too much."
Sophomore Ryan Driscoll goes
in as the No. I quarterback, with
redshirt fre shman Matt Sherman
right behind. The other candidates

are senior Jefferson Bates, junior
Mike Duprey and Southern Cal
transfer Corby Smith, the son of
former US C and now Mis souri
coach Larry Smith.
Fry plans to name a starter prior
to the Sept. 3 opener with Central
Michigan.
"Frankly, I would love to sec
one of the guys that' s got two or
three or four years of eligibility
become No. I because our success
here has been with quarterbacks
that we keep over a period of time
rather than just having a one- year
shot," the Iowa coach said.
"They're all good quarterbacks.
I'm convinced that with the supporting cast, whoever we have at
quarterback will be a good one.''
That case includes Ryan Terry
and Sedrick Shaw , who return at
tailback after rushing for I ,225
yard s belween them last fall.
Harold Jasper and Anthony Dean
are experienced receivers and Fry
hopes a year of seasoning will produce a better line, which surrendered 4 2 sacks last year.
Iowa fans arc eager to see two
highly touted newcomers, running
backs Tavian Banks and Tim
Dwight. Banks, a rcdshirt freshman, set an Iowa high school
record by scoring 42 touchdowns
in 1992. Dwight broke that record
last fall , scoring 43.
Both led their teams to state
championships.
"That's not Big Ten football,"
Fry said. " But they've proven thev

can run, they're q'uick and they're
strong."
Some retooling is needed on
defense , which lost seven starters .
Tackle Chris Webb and Parker
Wildeman return after fine seasons,
but they no longer have all -conference tackle Mike Wells around to
occupy the offense.
John Hartlieb and Bobby Diaco
arc the only experienced linebackers. The secondary is a litUe better
off, headed by returning starters Bo
Porter and Damien Robinson .
Newcomers also could help the
defense, notably linebacker Vernon
Rollins and cornerback Eric Thig pen . Both were ranked among the
nation's best at their positions as
high school seniors last fall.
"Hopefully, they're going to
motivate the guys in front of them
to do better because if not, somewhere around midseason some of
those freshmen kids could be playing," Fry said. "They 're all hig
and strong."
Iowa, which won only three Big
Ten games last year, is picked for
another second-division finish this
season. That, plus humiliating 1993
losses to Penn State (31 -0), Illinois
(49-3) and California (37-3), supply the Hawkeyes with plenty of
motivation.
"Obviously, those big losses
last year hurt us a lot," Hartlieb
said. ''But if you get kicked around
enough, you're gonna get ticked off
enough to do something about it."
Next: Wisconsin

GETTING WAY - Houston running back
Todd McNair (37) StiiTarms Dallas cornerback
Clayton Holmes (left) while also gelling away
from safety Rill Rates (40) durin~ Monday night 's

NFL exhibition game in Mexico City, where lhe
Oilers won 6-0 before the largest crowd ever to
watch an NFL game. (AP)

NCAA to give athletes voices in council _
OVERLAND PARK, Kan . (AP)
- In keeping with it s aim of
devoting the next convention to
student-athletes, the NCAA Council has decided to sponsor several
items aimed al giving athletes a
greater voice in NCAA policy.
The proposals will all be voted
on in January by NCAA schools,
which Lend to follow the council's
direction on legislative matters.
Mu ch of the legi slation came
from a special commiuec reviewing welfare, access and equity for
athletes, the council said Monday.
One commiuee propo sal
endorsed by the council would add

two student -athletes 10 NCAA
commiuecs dealing with academic
requirements, financial aid and
amateurism , minority opportunities, recruiting and women's athlet-

Grant program.
The council said it would also
support a proposal that allows
sc hools to give local transportation
to athletes in inclement weather.
ICS.
Previously, under the so-called
Another measure would require extra benefit rule, schools could not
a student-athlete advisory commit- provide athletes transportation not
tee on every campus. Many schools available to students in general.
already have such campus commit- The relaxed rule would permit
tees.
transportation to and from resiOth er legislation forwarded dences and classes "on an occafrom the special commiuec and sional basis" in dangerous situaendorsed by the council would bar tions or bad weather.
schools from reducing financial aid
Additionally, the council voted
based on athletes' receipt of federal to suppon a proposal allowing athentitlement money under the Pcll
(See COUNCIL on PageS)

GRAND CHAMPION STALLION~ Fourmonth-old Chester, a foal colt, woo grand cham·

pion stallion honors. Chester is ownfd by Byron
James of Guysville.

Salary cap taboo subject to NHL executives
By ROB GLOSTF.R
BOSTON (AP) ~ Just mention
the words " salary cap" and watch
hockey officials try to hide.
Mindful of the problems caused

by that phrase in ba~cball, hockey
officials sought to d1stanc e them selves from those words Monday at
the NHL's annuar mecungs.
Hockey, like baseball, docs not

Bengals release Robinson and Rembert
CINCINNATI (AP) ~ The
Cincinnati Bengals on Monday
re lea sed two wide receivers,
Pauick Robinson and Reggie Rembert, to reduce the roster •.o 64 players.

ll was apparently the Bengals'
last go-around with Rembert, 27,
who had chronic problems with
alcoholism and was released in
October !993 after a drunken-driv ing arrest, his third during his Bengals' career. Rembert also spem 28
days in an NFL-ordered alcoholism
treatment program during the I 992
season .
Bengals general manager Mike

Brown had brought Rembert back
this preseason for one more try to
make the team.
Rembert, a former West Virginia star, hurt his cause in Saturday's 26-21 exhibition loss to Indianapolis by failing to catch a pass
for a two-point conversion and also
a third-down pass that could have
produced a first down.
The New York Jets drafted
Rembert in 1990 and traded him to
the Bengals after failing to sign
him.
In three seasons with the Bengals, Rembert caught 36 passes for
437 yards and one touchdown.

Scoreboard
Football

Gt= Bay ........ t t
Tampa Ray ....

Walern Dlvt1lon

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eukrn Division

Allaw ............ 2 I

0 ,(:Jj7 64 61

:San francisco ... I I

LA . Rama ....... 0 2

0 .500 T1 20
0 .CXXI 16 42

New DrleaN _ . 0 2

0 .000

W L T PF PAPcL
Team
Miami .......... · 3 0 01.000 IS 57
Indlanapolia ... .. . 2
New England ... 2
I
Buffalo ... :.. .
I
NY Jeu ... .

0

01.000 39 30

0
l

01.000 l2 16
0 .500 20 38
0.500 47 50

I

I I

0 .500 38 37
0 .500 23 45

23 45

Monday's score
Hooston 6, Dallas 0

Oevcland ..
llooston ......
Pitt.sburgh ... .

2 0
2 I
I I

Cincinnati .. .. ..

0 2

01 .000 40 Zl
0 .667 l4 TI
0 .500 .43 41
0 .000 37 43

Wedern Dlvhilon
Kuuu City ... 2 I 0 .667

l048

0 .667 fll 70

Seaule....... .

1 I

0 .SOO 38 19

Denver....... . .. I 2
San Diego... . . 0 3

0 .333 62 61
0 .000 4080

Tt•m
Ari&gt;ono ..

O.lln ....
....
N.Y. Gia nu .
P'luhdelphia ...
Wash ington

I I

0 .lOO 17 23

I
I
0
0

0
0
0
0

Central
2
MiM'*"' . . 2
!kaoit...... . . t
Qllcago .

2
2
2

2

.333 36 42
.333 62 64
.000 30 46

.000 15 30

Dhillon
0 01.000 l8 6
I 0 .1&gt;67 &lt;f1 41
I 0 .lOll JJ 29

and Shelt~ule~, linebact.er.

Baseball
American Le.xue
SEATll.E MARINERS : Signed James

Rowton, outfielder, and Eric Clifford,
Nallooal Lupe
CmCAGO CUBS : Optioned Steve

Tnchld, pitcher, to lowa or the American
Auocillim.

Football

Eutun Division
W I. T PF PAPcL

MitchcU Price and Da v~d Wilton, defcn ·
sivcbads.
MlAMl DOLPHINS : Waived Johnny
Dixon, nfety; Todd Dixon, wide receiver.

tight end and Phil Brown, runnina back..
NEW ENGLAND PATRtOTS c

Natlon•l Football Luaue

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

DETROIT LIONS : Re-1igned Mark
Rodenhauau, center.
LOS ANGELES RAMS : Releued

Transactions

piLCher.

LA. Raide.rl ..... 2 I

ClEVELAND DROWNS : Waived
Hamza Hcwiu, offC111ivc tackle; Bobby
Olive: and David Jooea, wide n:ceiven .

MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Waived
David Pool, cornerback; AI Nasa, dcfc:n·
1ive end; Chri• Croom&amp;, aafety; Tracy,
Bold, offensive lineman; Tony I..erucignc.

C l'nlraJ Uhislon

ARIZONA CARDINALS : Relused
Chuclt CeciL ~afety, and Duian McKinney, tight end .
Al'LANrA FALCONS: Waived Oinl
John1on, wide receiver; Tim Paulk,

linobacbr; Mike Ructhder, center;
Lemuel Stint()n, cornerback; Oni.d
Wilkins, d.clcmive end. and Lance Zalo,
IJUI'd.
BUffALO BILLS : Waived Phil
Bryant, Nnnins baok.
CINCINNATIBENGALS: Waived
R~agie R:embert and Patrick Robinaon,
w1de~.

. .GRAND CHAMPION MULE - Maggie,
;owned bv Debbie Lewis of Letart, W.Va., earned

Robinson, 24, a talented kick
returner who set a Bengals' team
record last season with 43 punt
returns, faced stiff competition
among a group of receivers bauling
for a roster spot this year. The Bengals claimed him off waivers in
August 1993 after his release by
the Houston Oilers, who had drafted him in the seventh round from
Tennessee State.
Robinson last year returned 43
punts for 305 yards and 30 kickoffs
for 567 yards.
NFL teams must cut their rosters to 60 players by Aug. 23.

Waive-d Scott Sinon, kieler; Bernard
Buharn, dcfcnlive end; Jean lloyd, aile·

ty; Bill Durk.in, guard; Don Rcynolda,
nOic:llcklc; Eric Stcphena, COJ'IlClb.ck and
J&lt;m&gt;&lt;J Wu~Unaton, """'"'s""&lt;kNEw OR!EANS SAINTS: Waived
Br.d Lobo, Q\Wlelbl.ck.
NEW YORK GLANL'S c Sipcd Jurod
Bunch, fullbaok.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS , Claw"'
Alfhonao Ttylor, defen~ive u.cklc, off

fnm \he l)enVQ: 81"00001.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS c
Waived Joo AJliJon., kieker.
WASIDNUfON RED.'iKrNS : Waived
Nate Di.nacl, linebtc.ker; Pierre WU.om,
dd'c.niJive Lackie; Guy Etrlc., offcn•ivc
Lacklc; Willie Hinchclllf, wide receiver;
Jeff JJCkc., kidl.ct, and Richtni Fain, corncd&gt;adL
WliVCfl

Hockey
N•Uonal Jlocker

Laaue

1\NAHEIM MIGIITY OtJCKS : An nounced the raianalion or Marc Sc:rrio,
corurollcr. Signed Olea TvcrdovU.y, defa~~CI'Tilll,lo 1 muJli-ycar contncl.

the grand champion mule award.

Sports briefs
Tennis
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ~ Jeremy Bates needed just 61 minutes to
beat 11th-seed Jaime Yzaga 6-4, 63 in the first round of the RCA
Championships at the Ind1anapohs
Tennis Center.
No 13 Alexander Volkov, No.
16 Thomas Enqvlst and No . 14
Richard Krajicek also won.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) ~
Marc Goellner relied on a strong
serve to upset 14th-seeded Richard
Fromberg 7-6 (7-4), 6-2 in the
opening round of the Volvo Internationaltournamenl.
No. 13 Andrei Chesnokov, No.
16 Stefano Pescosolido and No. I I
Malivai Washington were other
seeded players to advance.

A Special Edition In
•
The Daily Sentinel
...
Thursday, September 1, 1994

GOING AIRBORNE- Pomeroy's Brian Buffington goe.s airborne in Monday evening's Motocross races at the Meigs Count-y
Fair. ·Buffington raced in the 2SOcc class and was one of seve~alloeal
riders to race in the Ohio County Fair Motocross champ10nsh1ps.

With ONDDU You Don't Have To Tear Off The Old Baal
dllecuy over extsttng root
'a Put Up I ·New One• •• Goes
Helps save envuonmeni- No d umptng
~---------------,

16-PLUS CHAMPION - Six-year-old Polly, owned by Racine's
Mike Tuttle, won the grand champion draft horse mule lb hands and
higher. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

992-2156

.
"
,,,

ASK FOR DAVE OR BOB
AD DEADLINE THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1994.

•

•

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

].

NCAA Council ... ~(C~o~nu~·n~ue:!!d.!!fr~om~Pa~ge~4!L)- - - - letes to earn as much as $1,500 in
outside employment in excess of
the full scholarship value.
Another suggestion that the
council will sponsQr, from the
minority opportunities and interests
committee, would allow schools to
participate in the Martin Luther
King Classic without its counting
against the maximum number of
basketball games.
The Division II steering com:

mittee of the council will support
legislation to ban spring football
practice in Division II as part of a
cost-cutting program.
The council declined to lake a
stand on most legislation proposed
by member schools, includin~ a
measure to create a fourth divisron
of major programs. The council
will have another opportunity to
endorse or oppose legislation when
it meets in OciOber.

curre ntl y have a collective bargaining agreement between players and
own ers. The NHL and the NHL
Players Association arc scheduled
to meet Thursday in Toronto, the
first talks between the sides since
March 16.
Though there is no immediate
threat of a strike by NHL players,
the league is press in g for a new
collective bargaining agreement.
The last one expired Sept. 15,
1993.
The mention of a salary cap,
which has bel:omc the main stum bling block between baseball owners and their striking players, made
some hockey ofncials quickly head
for the clcvutors at the hotel hosting the meetings.
" It' s a taboo subject. It 's not
good for anybody if we're quot ed,'' Boston Bruins general manager Harry Sindcn said. "You can sec
what' s happening in baseball. You
get in the way of the negotiators."

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'

�Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, August 16, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aufjust16, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page- 7

"

VANILLA

-

Dairv., Lane
IC~

CfU:.&amp;M

5 QUART

.-

~

. us

........-.-

~~s ~so~
~.

pound

pound

CHOP SIRLOI
PATTIES

SUGAR CREEK
SLAB BACON

$ 69

$ 19

F1rm
20 pound bag

16 ounce package

IDAHO
POTATOES

KAHN'S
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$ 9

$ 59

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Van Camp's
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PORK

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$

FOR
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ROTISSERIE
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page--9

_ Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlci

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday,August16, 1994
Pag~

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!
For As Uttle As
$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

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......

', .. r

I,,

'

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T
~:
.

,.,.
..

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tho matter of the
chango of name of Eric
Scott Smith,
No.

'

28588.

~

8F:ST OF SHOW- Louise Eads of Rutland displays her paint: ing entered in the Meigs County Fair painting judging which won
. best of show. Her entry came in the category of oil paintings, ani. mal study, a srenic of Canadian geese near a lake.

POLE CLASS COMPETITION - Kyle Ord rodt his borse
through the pole class of tbe 4-H Horse Show competition Monday
afternoon at the show ring. Ord was named tbe Senior Grand
Champion of the show •

HORSE SHOW COMPETITOR- Sara Craig rides her horse
through the barrel competition in the 4-H Horse Show at the show
r_ing o~ the f~irgrounds Monday afternoon. Craig won the competition wUh a lime of 19.436 seconds.

:Best of show awarded Cf$U mobile imaging unit coming to Meigs
c i s
·
· • · ·
:in fair painting judging
Louise Eads of Rutland captured
the best of show award in paintings
at the 131st Meigs County Fair in
judging held Saturday afternoon.
The 31 paintin gs in the show
:were judged by Carolyn Potter of
Oak Hill with ribbons and preml tans being awarded in three places.
• Eads' best of show award carne
from her entry in oil paintings, ani mal study. a scenic of Canadian
~sc ncar a lake.
Winner of the re serve bes t of
show award was Belle Edwards of
Rutland, who won for her oil painti~g in nora! study.
· Other winners in their respective
categories were as follows:
Oils
: · Landscape : Belly Edwards,
Rutland , first: Louise Eads, Rutland , second, and Paui Williams.

Rutland, third.
Animal study: Louise Eads.
Patti Williams, Bette Edwards.
Floral stud y: Be tte Edwards,
Rutland ; Patti William s, Louise
Eads.
Junior animal stud y: Kass Lod wick, Pomeroy, second .
Pencil. pen and mk, m crayon:
Jcrrod Clark, Pomeroy.
Acrylic
Landscape: Thi rd pl ace only ,
Anna Cleland.
Pencil, crayon or other
Rebecca Edward s, Long Botrom, first.
Adult painting experienced
Juanita Lodw1ck , Chester, took
all ribbons, second in o il ~ first in
acrylics and other media, and third
in water color.

Smith wins spelling title
. - Brian Smith, 13, a seventh gradat Jane Lew (W.Va.) School,
was th e champi on at the rece nt
S·ixth Annual Scripps HowardWeston Democrat Spelling Bee.
He is the son of Curtis and San!lra Smith of Jane Lew, and the
~randson of Harrison and Ruth
Smith of Racine.
· Bnan won the event in competition with 22 other spe llers from
schools throughout Lcw1s County,

er

W.Ya. He received an all-expense
paid trip to Wa shington , D.C.
where he compcred in the National
Spelling Bee.
In addition to th e trip , Brian
rece ived a set of Encyclopedia Britannica, The Smnucl Louis Sugarman Award, a SSO U.S. Series EE
Savings Bond, and Merriam Webster's Third New International Dicti onar y. He al so won var1ous
awards in Washington.

Harrisonville news
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atkins of
Washington spent a week here with
lli s mother, Stella Atkins, and aunt,
Mi ss Ruby Diehl. Other visitors
:Were Mrs. Atkins' granddaughlers,
Mrs. Li sa Carcfoot Burlington ,
Ky ., and Mrs. Linda McConnell of
Fairbanks, Alaska.
· Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
spent two weeks in Florida visiting
his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Abc Preece.
Mrs. Esther Brandon , Jackson,
and Mrs. Lola Clark, visited Mrs.
Ora Carsey Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Frances Alkire visited Mr.
and Mrs . Dan Sydenstricker of
Mason, W.Va., recently.
Mr. and Mrs. How ard Day
Gilkey, Co lumbu s. visited Lola
Clark and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire
S,unday.
Mr. and Mrs Gary Foley and
grandson, Justin ~ f Syracuse visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr recently.

Area calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
aimouoce meetings and sJlecial
efents. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to ~un a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
RACINE - Ra cine Grange
2606, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the hall.
· POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
ol AA, Thursday, 7 p.m . at Sacred
~Catholic Church.
Between !990-91 lthe most recent
., ,ars lor which figures are available&gt;.
lt."~

BRIAN SMITH

To help women m Me1gs Coonty have access 10 early detection of
breast cancer, the Meigs County
Health Department has scheduled
h
b'l .
.
. f
h
t e mo ' e 1magmg_unit rom l e
Oh10 State Umversny to come 10

1931 Chester
CIass
. ·n recently
has reu nlo
Chester High School Class of
193 1 held its annual picnic at the
Chesler Firehouse on July 31.
John Bailey asked the blessing
before the basket dinner. The class'
first reunion was in 1942. In 1951
they began meeting annually.
The group spent the afternoon
reminiscing and taking pictures.
Th ey made a donation to the
Chesler firemen for the use of the
building and thanked Opal Wickham for her preparations for the
[licnic. Deaths reported during the
past year were Henry Beaver,
teacher, and Edna Warner Childers,
class member.
Teachers present were : Bertha
Smith, Pomeroy Route and Earl
Knight, Middleport. Class mem-

Davis reunion held
The 76th reunion of the descendants of Orlando and Katherine
Sheline Davis was held recently at
the Old Legion Hall in Middleport
A basket dinner was held at
noon, with Gary Holter giving the
blessing. The business meeting was
conducted by Mary Kathryn
Holter, protem.
The 1995 reunion will be held
the first Sunday in August at the
Rutland Firemen's Park in Rutland.
Officers to serve for the 1995
reunion are: Gary Holter, president;
Jim Davis, vice president; Sharon
, Riffle, secretary; and Mary
Kathryn Holter, treasurer.
Gifts were presented to Glada
Davis, oldest woman present and
also having the most family present; Holley and Shawna Davis, the
youngest; Clyde Davis, the oldest
man present; and Gary Holter, ltliV·
eled the farthest. Garnes were conducted and prizes awarded to the
winners.

YOUR KIDS ARE WORTH IT

Reioicing Life Christian School
Grades K thru Six
94·95 School Year
We offer lowest tuition in the area. Our
Kindergarten is only 170.00 per month.
Entering our 9th year of operation. References
available upon request. For a High Quality
Education combined with teaching of good moral
values, Call 992-6249.
P.S.: Our High Quality Kindergarten Reading Program
will enable most children to graduate kindergarten
with 1st or 2nd grade reading skills.

fastest-growing area of health care.-

specialty outpatient facilities.
which g1ew by 17.4 percent By con-

W11S

·.rast. the most stable costs were exp~rieoced

by dental laboratories ,
wbich increased by less than t per·
cent

Me'1gs
Th- da
oun Yon
urs y, ept.
8·
.
.
Any mterested Meigs County
residents may contact the Health
Derartment to be placed on the li t
b
.
f
s
Y ca 11 mg 992 -6626 rom 8 a.m. to

Also, our smaller classes enable teachers to give
each student individual attention.

bcrs present were Fred Smith, John
Bailey , Virgil McElroy, Pauline
Rid enour, Irene Parker, Nellie
Parker, Opal Wickham , all of
Meigs County; and Betty Davisson
of Mechanicsburg. Others present
were: Mary Buck, Henrietta Bailey,
Will Poole, Martha Poole, Erma
Cleveland, Thelma Hayes and Mildred Caldwell, all of Meigs County; Kenneth Davisson of Mechanicsburg; and Virginia and Norman
Fell of DeGraff.
Next year's meeting will be at
the same place on the last Sunday
in July.

4 p.m. Ask for _e1ther Conme L1ttl~,
R.N. , or Phylhs .Bearhs, women s
health care techmc1a~.
.
The mob1le 1magmg unll travels
h
h
.
·
·
I roug the state of Oh10 to prov1de
mammogram s and interpretations
for $55, which is much lower than
the typical rale charRed for this ser·
vice. Goal s of thi s service arc to
reach clientel e who are over 35,
have not had a mammogram in the
past year, and who do not have any
symptoms of breast cancer. It is
dcsigned as a screening clinic for

c...

NOnCE

Revloed Code, Sec.
27t7.01(A)
Notice io hereby given
thai Penny Elam, C.oe No.
28588 of 3t21t Pine Grove
Road, Racine, OH 45771 ,
hu applied to the Common
Pl ..o Court, Proboto
Olviolon of Melgo County,
Ohio, lor an order to change
her aon·o n11111e to Eric Scott
Pierce.
Said oppllcation will be
heard In oald Court, at tO:OO
a.m., on the 16th day of
Sep...,ber, 1994, at Melgo
County Probate Court,
Courthouoe, Pomeroy, OH.
Robert Buck
Judge
(8) t6; 1TC

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTIC£
Tho Vlll1111• Council lor
the Village of Middleport wtU
hold a public auction on lhe
30th day Of Auguot, IIIIW 11
4:00 O'Clock P.M. ot tho
Middleport VIllage Council
City Hall Building, Roc~
Stroot, Middleport, Ohio
45760, lor tho following
deocribed real ..tate:
Lot Number 26 of tho
Philip Jonoo Eototo
Subdiviaion excepting 3.43
acreo owned by Or. Jamoo
Schmoll and deocribed in
deed Volume 289, Page 13D,
Moigo County o.. d
Recordo . All of loto
Number 27, 28, U, 30 end
3t of the Phitip Joneo
Eotato Subdivioion .,d all
real eotata being currently
owned by tho Village of
Middleport excepting the
real eatate deocrlbed In
Volume 234, Peg• 257,
Molgo County Deod

YOUNG'S
UIPENTER SERVICE

LINDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let ua do it
lor you . Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave

FREE ESTIMATES

·Room Addition•
-New garagea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting aloe concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES!
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-4103

985·4473

992-6215

HAULING

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Water hauling

ROBERT BISSEll
. CONnRUCTION

Backhoe Service
ENTERPRISES

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

GRACE

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

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Pomeroy, Ohio

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; US£0 PARTS FOI
AU MAKES &amp; IIOOOS
99HOUOI
992-SSSJ 01
TOUIIEI l-ID0-14H070
DARWIN, OHIO

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 PayoH
Thla lid good lor 1
fREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

II-

113118 I /'TTN

314193 1 MO

Lase Wol~ Like •ercoy"

--------Guaranteed
PubliC Notice
--------Lose Pounds and' Inches
Recorda.
None of tho above Natural Herbal Tablets.
described roal Hlate ohall
1-800-796·6321
include any property
currently uoed lor cometary
purpooeo by tho Viii~ of
Public Notice
Middleport
Termo of Sale: C•h at
two-thlrdo ol the appraloed
oale.
Sold r..l eatato woo value.
Dewey M. Horton, Mayor
appralaed al $4,680.00 Md
(8)
16,
23; 2TC
will not be aold lor leu than

..DAZZLING
DOLLS"
BATON CORPS
Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up . Develop poise
and self condidence
and have a great time.
lull'ldor- Na•cy W. Swartz
Classes
beginning
September.
·

Cal992-3796

FOR SALE

Statrstics from th e National
Cancer Institute md1cate that one of
nme women will develop breast
cancer. Early detection through
·
·
program s such as self-exam and
regular mammograms arc important to successful trea tment of
breast cancers.
For additional information on
mammogra ms res idents may contact the Me igs County Health
Departme nt at 992-6626 or the
National Cancer Institute at 1-8004-CANCER.

26 Yearo Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
For Free Estimate
Call 742-2303

SENIOR DIVISION CHAMPIONS
Champion winners were named in the senior
division of the 4-H Horse Show at the fair·
2rounds Monday afternoon. The winners, shown

with 1994 Horse Princess Susan Grueser, are
from left, Kyle Ord, senior grand champion, and
Jamie Erwin, senior reserve champion.

712011 mo. pd.

Howard L. Writesel
ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
Guners
Downspouts
Guner Cleaning
Painting

446-2342

675-1333

2

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
. •viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St. Pom!l,or. Ohio

Lines, Land Clearing

"Look for tile Red and White Awning"

Trucking: Limestone &amp;

992-4119 AI Tromm Owlet' 1-800..291-5600

Fill Dirt, Top Soil
Rer~sonable

Rates

992·3838 '""'"

Boom poles,

Parts &amp; service

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio
742·2455

STAR GUITAR
614-367.0302
Ampa, Guilaro, Strlnga,
Keyboarda, Drumo,
Plano &amp; Guitar Leaoona.
Cheohlre, Ohio

ffi~

DOG
- .-; GROOMING
)\

•

BUY-SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Meigs County
Tuea. Thru Sat. 1-6
Name Brand Toola,
Toya, Fenton.
Coma and Ses.
One mile out RL143
from Rl 7.
811111 mo.

by
Susaa Gilmore

o;-,

•••

~~~ )\992·5316
•

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

ALL BREEDS

....

t.

0

~

-

Foadng r ...

u•-wood

Do•rarfvo
Salas llltl
...,..arloto

CaD Weslera Aulo
992-SS1S
Free Estimales
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
6-IJ.1 rm

MORRISON'S
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434

JUNIOR DIVISION WINNERS - Winners
in the junior division of the Meigs County Fair
Horse Show, Sfen with Horse Princess Susan

KINGS'

Home
Improvements
3315t Happy Hollow Rd
Middleport. Ohio 45760
NewHomea,
Addltlono, Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchaa, Pole Barna
Call Ua For An Eotimata
614-742-3090
304-nl-9545

1/Wn

~~

'·.·'

. .. _ .
NOVICE WINNERS - Winners were
announced in the novice division of the Meigs
County Fair Horse Show. With Horse Princess

. '
. . . ...,,

~

... •..~ t ;..... .
.

- ,,.. :· •..

....

,.

.;r:.
'

Susan Grueser are, from left, Jessica Wheeler
novice grand cbampion; and Amanda Wheeler'
novice reserve champion.
'

land,
And left us
dreaming
how vary fair
It naad8 must ba,
slnca she llngere
there.
So think of har
faring on, as daar
In the love of There
as tha Jove of
Hare;
Think of her atiU
as tha same, I say:
She Ia not daad she Is just away.
From Frlancb
and Family.

MID VEAR RESOLUTION
7 -Day Diet Plan. Loee Exceu
Lbs For Good, I Loot 20 Lba. tn
5 Wl&lt;s. Eallng Righi WhhO&lt;II
Olallng. 3 Min. Recorded ......
saga. S1.gs !Min. Must Be 18 To
Coil . 1-900-255-5533.
Pirate• Cove Fnturlng Plzu

Special: Two 12 Inch Ptue'l
Wllh Evoryrhlng, $12.91. Fr•
Local Delivery, 614-388--9823.

Plratn cove Open From 1 A.M.
To 9 P.M. Monday Th'l'
Thursday, 6 A.M. To 11 P.M.
Friday And Saturd8J, 1o-&amp; Sun•
day, 9819 State Route 160, VInton, 614-388-9823.

Giveaway

3 Gray And White 6 Week Old
Kittens, To Caring Home Onl'f
614-446-Q3H
•
AJN Magazines '89- '93 614-4462380.

Four cult pupplee, 814-992-SOBS
or 614 -992-4015.
Free puppies, part Boxer, part
Collie, 3 female, 1 male, 614-742-

2486 after 5pm.

Kitten, To Good Home 614-~
2585.
•
long Hair~ Calico Cat, Good
On The Farm, 614-441-1638.
lovely pupplat to giveaway.
30H7S.3029.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Between Centerville

An•

Rio Grande, P~ Bull Mix PupPJi
Wearing Cot tar, No Taga T~
Claim Call 614-245-5917. ·

Found: Black F1male Scottie
BetwHn Porter And EvargrMI\

614-446-9369,

Found: Kooler Lid, Nice One
Fell Oul Back Of Truck Out si
Rt. 160, Near Senior Citizens
Canter, 614-446-0626.
Found : ring In minipark In
Pomeroy, call to 10, 614·992"·
2155.

Found: young dog,

614·992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
.V1 Z11llltn

blonde

possibl'f part lrl•h !tetter: car~
rios rod ball-lolchoa ...,II, Mucin
area. 304-71'3-5907.

Losl. Mixed Brood ~. Lool on
SR 321 N, Noar Rio Granda,
Husky Build, Small Whha Spoto,
Soh Floppy Tan Ea.. Rtd
Leal her C~or 814-24~5062:.

Loot: black Sp~ngor.Chow mbr

dog, "Shooba-, and Engllrll•
Spnnger, 6-7moa. otd puppy
"Roc~y" . R1. 2 &amp; Thomu Rldg.;
Roward! 304-695-3913.
lo8f: Cockatiel, Muon
304-773-5238.

7

I cannot say,
and I will not say

Into an unknown

Gemleman Looking FOr
Laay, Companion, Friend. 814446-7201.

Found: small female dog, bltek
wflan marklnga, big •rs. lhort
legs. 304-675-6894.

. - ·:~

That she Is dead she Is just away.
With a cheery smile,
and s wave of har
hand
She has wandered

Ellgl~•

Siamese cats, 614·94g;.2911.

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

-

3 Announcements

To good home- half grown pan

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

__ -

Announcements

4

LINDA LOU

--- ...
---·· .......... . .
Grueser, are f'rom left, Sara Craig, junior grand
champion, and Whitney Karr, junior reserve
champion.

7t21~1n

QUALrrY WINDOW IYiftlll

Trailer Sites
Driveways, Septic
Systems, Water &amp; Sewer

949-2168

In Memory

11112-2096
SL, Mldrleport
Fr•Eatim-

550 P -

IMm

Service
Complete House &amp;

HEATING &amp; COOUNG

In Loving
Memory of

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

FREE ESTIMATES
5111114 TFN

CALL NOW....
PT. PLEASANT, WV

Howard
Excavating-Co.

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,

Price
Construction
Co.

••
,_
••

GALLIPOLIS

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel aarvica, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ro~weiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614·667 -PETS

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yearo Experience
992-4447 or 742-2360

TRI-STATl K-9
ACADEMY

3 H.P. &amp; Up
Parts &amp; Service

742-2455

-II

AllEA TEJ .. EVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATUHESEVERY WEEI( IN THE
TV TIMES

811111 mo.

3125194

FOR SALE

Side Hilt Road
Rutland, Ohio

\

TV TIMES

742·2443

After&amp; p.m.
614-995-4190

Manco-Go Karts
Morris Equipment

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!
ADVERTISING IN THE

.. message.

New

Yeaugers have reunion
of Enon; Amy Kuhn and Robert
and Joshua Hanning of Cheshire;
and Pearl , Lena, Wayne and Susie
YeaugerofCharlcston, W.Va.
Alfred Yeauger was the oldest
present at 88. Mcgann Halley was
the youngest at two. Wayne and
Susie Yeaugcr came the farthest,
and the door prize was won by
Steve Halley.

Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

Estimates

women.

The annual Yeauger reunion
was held recently at the Silver Run
Baptist Church.
Those auending were: Robert,
Gerri, Justin, Sarah and Alex Halley of Cheshire; Steve, Ashley and
Mcgann Halley of Middleport;
Lawrence Yeauger of Gallipolis;
John and Ruth Ann Carsey of
Athens; Alfred and Hilda Yeauger
of Racine; Gene, Sanlea Ycauger

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

.,.a.:

Yard Sale

5I 'Toucli ofCfass

Custom Wintknv Coverings
Blinds o Verticals o Shades
~~~

ShopAt
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

~·s

not just a way to
cover a window
h's a way to
light up a room

992·5311
5().55% off
1.SOO.BLJND-11
Blinds &amp;. Verticals
483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Vard S.toa Mull Be Paid tp
Advanco. DEADLINE· 2·00 p rll
the day before the ad ~ to ~n··
Sundoy odlllon • 2·00 p m'·
Friday. Monday odHion • 2: 00
p.m. Saturday.
·- ·
Tuos, Wod, Thura 337 l'oll~h
Mota! Coko eamo'r Hand Gat!'
don Tools, Booko Or; Anllquoi:_
Old Monoy, Pocket ~
~lolhlng, Mloc.
_
Wodn"":r ~uat l'lth, 1.00
~MPto ~... P.M. Spring Yaliow

=

8

Public S81e
&amp; Auction
Rick,__, Aucaon
1\111 tr- •uct"'"-r:
••
auctkwl
HrYk: •
~- l Wflll"vwp,.·l.!"tco~~304-lloil .

~~Col.
Oocar
....... '7M-ll4.
304-8M-3430.
9

i...cr~
'·

Wanted to Buy

Clean Uta 11oc1o1

c.

·

Trucka, 11187 llodotro Or : . . : ,
SmHh Butcll Pontiac, 1tOCI
Eaotam A-uo. Oalltpotls.

-·--·····-··---·.

I

�Tuesday, Augustt6, 1994

Page-10-The Dail y Sentinel

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
44 Dealers '
temporary
handouts
46DIHtcult
48 Cantoned
49Meadow
51 Eternally (poet.)

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

14 -

ln. .\ ITIE llL \' 1&gt;.'" h y Bruer Br,.tt ir

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry

Oecoratoli s1onewu "e, w all lele-

41 Houses tor Rent

pho rw• , o td tamps, old thern•omglers old clods, anttque
It ··r L.Jr•'
rl rv orme
An llqlleS
1-l..o~-. 1/wro. owner
61 4 9 9 2"'i, I \'w[l hll~ ::tS i a\ AS

" S. D

Camp Con ley, 3 badroom, 2
baths, $.300 plus dapos ll , 1 yr
lease, 304-675-3812

s Aulo f'la~t s and S.rlv 1')n

.t'' c tn'J 1n g Juni&lt;. cars.\ t r uc ks
:01''3~J -iJ

C'!-1 c1gcuoth1 11g hrers , mt!k. botIIU'&gt;

',JlJ:JL1, 1 ;"1 9115

ff\ I fbi(&gt;&lt;,

~I

If

(...':,t

........ ' olllO S tar Tr ek .roms ,
y M..!tllll,ll:-1 992 7&lt;1-11

ttfti To Buy
Wt\!J •..Jr V.'tlhou1

T

I'

Junk

P.ttd

o;o.,

;

'" '·

C ·'i C

Mu' •r&lt;;

A ll O ld U:::;

c'

'

.'~'

, fJuy

. ,:,

ng

W. 1l l&lt;.

II

vou 10

yoqurt wr!ll

11
A

•.

s, "Jl~.

All Aroas I Sh 1rley
)04-6 75-1429.

---AVON earn1ng pos-

A ..~mas
s• 11l lfl" Mlurtl y:) ur capab 11illo s,
I "
tr·tduc l With Sign-up.
M 'I'' J'14-062·:ZM5 or l-800-

g•,

l

II

·~ ·AHO

J'lfl

Acc roQ1tod Agoncy

~'I"' 1ct l l/ll g

In

Substance

At ·.o r-Jcro vory Has The Folk •\ ··; '. 1t mc tas In 1t Meigs
(

l

'JI: 1/l llll

Help Wan ted

•J

,.,

L'P.

POSITIONS FT.
ll ·,HrFTS Ot~allt • callons

"'J' • .

1,.~ , ,

co

L
, LPCC . LSW, LI S W,
L C [) C O r In Process And 'Or

Counselo r Trainae Orug And
Alcuhol Exporlonce Prolurrod
Cre dontHIIIIlg Track Importa nt
Ploaso Sand Re suma And latlar
Of Interest To Health Recovary
Serv1c es, Inc AMn Nancy Dot so n, P.O Box 724, At hens, OH
4 5701
Sa lary
Raqulremllnl s
Commensurate Wilh Edu cat ion
And
Ex perience
EE0
Employer

---

-----

Accepting
Applications
For
Subs111tute Posta l Clork Must
Bo Fln1ble For Various Hour s,
Preference Given To A.ipticanls
With Knowl edge 0
Postal
Regu lations Send Resume And
lo11or Of lnt orost Before Au9ust
Jl, 1994 To Phyllis Mason, Director Of Human
Resources,
Unit~ers1ly Of Rio Granda, PO
Sox 969, Rio Grande, OH 45674,
EEO fAA Employer

Aut1sm Services Center, Hun·
t1ngton saeklng lndrvidual to
work approxim ately 8 hrs per
woek In Pt Pleasa nt, New Ha ven
area as Porsonal Ca re Attandant. Oul1os mc ludcr working In
clie nt's home &amp; assisting with
da1ly liVIn g tasks &amp; transpor11ng
to ap po illlment s, 14 year old
c1ranl wtlh phys1ca t disab1lit1es
Mu st 1'1 ave a car and valid
dr iVOI"j; 11 ce nse Rolmbursemenl
for mileage Flex 1ble hours
Sond res ume tu Personne l, P.O.
Box 507, Huntmgton, WV 25no..
0507

AVON $$ SALES
Potential S200 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fanta sti c

Discounts!

Banefltsl

Flex ible Hours. Territory Optiona l. 1·800·742-4738.
Babysitter Needed In My Home,
3 Young Children. Could Be
Uve-ln Pos ition , 614·245~909
A Mer 11 AM .
Babys itt er needed In my home
2-3 days per woek tor 2 sm all
chi ldren, 614·742-2257.
Dancers! Top pay, 19 and c;~lder,
no nudity. 304-675-5955 Tammy.
Gallla Academy High School
Sludent to Babysit Aller Sc hool
M-Tti614-446-0026 .

11
Help Wanted
1----.:....
___.:___
POSTAL JOBS
Start $11.41/hr. tor exam and
ilppllcatlon Info. ca ll 219-7698301 ext W\154B , 9am-9pm,
Sun-Frl.
Registered long-term care Nurs·
lng Assistants need&amp;d fOf parttime rotating ahlhs 68-bad !lkll·
lod
nurs mg
lacJHty,
EOE
Ca reHava n of P1 . Ploasant, Rt l,
Bor 326, PI Pleasant, WV
25550, )04 675-3005
Somsono to milk cows, hoully
wage, paid vacation, send
name, export once &amp; references
to P.O Box 312, Hondarson, WV

25106
Wanted : individual or company
to bury CATV service drops,
mu st
have
own
lia bility
lsuranco,
equipment
and
vehicle. Send bids : 1410 JeHer·
son Blvd. Box 106, P1 . Ploasanl,

WV 25550, ATIN Mark Kley nen.

Insurance

AM ERICAN
NATIONAL
IN SURANCE
VICK IE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DISCOUNTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH
304-586-4257
18

Wanted to Do

Chrlstlan Lady will Care For
Ch ildren,
Any
Shin,
Near
Ellz.aboth Ctlap91 Churc h: off
218. 614--441-1467

Experienced LPN Wants Private
Duty, Dayshlh, 614-256·6106 .
General Maintenance, Palnllng
Yard Work Windows Washod
Gu"ers Cleaned llg1'1t Hauling,
Commartc al , Residential, Sta'lfe :
614 -440-4148.

Gaorges Por1 abtu Sawm il l, don'l
haul your logs to the mill just
call 304-675·1957.
Handy man, Interior/exterior
palntrng, light hauling &amp; car·
penlry. Auto body wor K &amp; pa intIng. 304 ~895- 3630 or 304-675-

7595,
Professional Tree Servi ca , 30
Yoa rs Experiunca, 614-388-9643,

614-367-7010.
Oualily Cleaning
Affordable
Prices, One Time !Weekly
!Biweekly, Yaars Of Experlance,
Free Estimates, 614-379-2199.
Sun Vallay Nursery School.
Childcare M-F tiam-S ::JOpm A~es
2·K, Yaung School Age Durrng
Summer. 3 Days per Weak Min·
lmum 814-446-~65'7.

Immediate Opanlngs Available
For Cor1illad Nurse Aida•. Comp€11itlve Wagas, Olfferental With
Experience , S1gn
Bonus
Avai lable, Equal Opportunity
Employar.; Cont act TN Assistant
Olr&amp;etor
Of Nursing,
PlncrAst
Care Canter,
110
P1nocmsl Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio
456 31 614-446-7112.

Babysit In My Home,
Cheshire Area, 614·367-7541
References Available.

LOOKING FOR CHILO CARE?

Financial

on

CCFI N -C h ild Care Resource
NotwCN'k Is A Free Community
S8rv lc1 Which Would Assist
You In Locating Care To Meet
Vour Neads. Caii1.S00-577-2276
To See How We Can Help.

Maintena nce man needed at
Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rahablllta·
tion Cantcrr. Duties lncludo:
keepi ng records, conducting
lire &amp; emergency drills/training;
day to day maintenance &amp; Interaction with contractors; operation of sma ll on·sitl sewage
pla nt WaQe &amp; benefit package
1s eompat1t1va Send rosuma or
apply at 36759 Rocksprings Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . EOE .
Mature dependable babyslner
needed lo caro tor tour year old
&amp; new born In my homo, call attor 5.00 or leavo mesa.aga, 614992 -7562
NeGd Babysitter In My Home,
Mature Non·S moker, For 1
Child. 614·446_ -46
_..:
19_ _ _ __

Now Terminal
Cardina l Freight Carriere Inc. Ia
hlrrng
experienced
owne rloperalors
for
lhe
~anJIIa t bad di'lfislon, profitable
pay program, accu rate w"klr.
un t;manla, medical Ina. nal·
abla. rldar program and lime
home, no up front money to
leiiM on Call Boyd, 1-800.2202421

Will

Will do backhoe work, 614-9925858 or 614-992·:1173 .

Cardi nal Fralght Carrlort Ia
hiring experienced OTR'a to r\10
tlal bed , aarn percentage of
gross rovan uo pulli ng company
ltaii ~HS or pulling awn trailer,
heallh Insur ance wldental &amp; vision availa ble, base plates
available, bob-loul Insurance
available, fuel card system,
weekly
aan lements,
.rlcllr
program, time hom.. 1-80~2202421.

- -- Veterinary
- - -Aast.,
Part.flmt
experienced

person.
Send rnuma: Box R·O c/o Pt.
Pleasant Register, 200 Main St.,
Pt. Plea..nt,'NV 25550.
Parson To Ltv•ln H o uuwo~ &amp;

21

Business
Opportunity

NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
lha offoring.
Beat High lumber Cost. Steel
Building Oealersl'11p
Opportunity. Will Selec t Oua lilled
Builder !Oealer In Some Open
Areas . Potential Big Profits
From Sales And Construction.

(303) 758-4135, Er1 1600
Great business opportunity, es-

tablished

business,

smal l ln-

\1Htmln1 , owner wanting to
relocate. 304-675-1990 evenings.

3 Bed room Ranch 6 112 Miles
Nor1h On 160, Vary Nice Home
Good Condl1ion, $55,000, 614~

Real Estale

---- - - -- -

-

to advertise •any preference ,
lmhallon or dillc:ltnlnllion
based on race, color, relglon,
sex !amiNal status or national

origin, or any lrtentlon to
maJ&lt;e any aucll prof.....,.,
lmltaiJOn or cllcrtmlnallorl."

TiltS newspaper wll not
knowi&lt;9Y

Star1 t11.41 Mr. For Exam And
Apptk.allon Into. Call (219) 7698301 Eat. OH561, 9 A.M. -i P.M.,
Sun -Fri.

lldvortloedln IIIIo , . _ ,
are a'llalllbte on an equal

opportunity basis

Nice 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile
homes In Middleport, ti14-992·
5858.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

100,000 BlU Gas Furnaces 92%
Efficiency, 80%. Efficiency 1·

800 -282-6306, 614-446-6308. '

44

150,000

Apartment

BTU

Gas

Furnaca

80,000 BTU Gas Furnace

1'

Coo-

for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apar1ments,
and
unlumlshed,
lurnlshed
socurlty deposit required, no
pets, 614-!HI2· 22'18.
1br. apar1menl, Bell11mead Addl·
lion, newly remodeled, no pats .

304-675-1306.

Used 3 Ton Package Air
dltlonar, 1 Used Electric Fur·
nace, Metal Door Frames Assortod Slzee, 614-446-6308.'
16 Ft. Flat Dump Bed 614-2566629.

2 air conditioners, 5,000 and
10,000 BTU. 304-8/l2-2225.
2 Amana Window Air Condlllonars, 1 Year Old, Under
Worra my, $225, St75, 614-2459502.

3br. ran ch wtdeck, tencod yard,
movo In cond ., owner anxious
to sell, $56,000, Milton Rd.,
Camp Con ley. lnterastad party
ca ll co ll ocl 216-864-1229.

2 Bedroom Ups1airs Apar1ment;
300 Fourth Avanua, GalllpoUs,

tl75; 30 Inch Elactrlc Stovo
f150, 614-256-61111.

Groenbrler Estates, split Ioyer,
3br , 2 1f2 bath , lluge lfvlngroom
&amp;
diningroom,
lamilyroom
wtflroplaca, double car garage,
In-ground pool, 3.65ac, A-1 condition. Somerville Reany, 304·
~~~~~~~- or Jean Casto, 304Spaclous mld~ntry home, Rc;~ll ­
lng Acres Subdivision, approx.
2400 s q ft , 3-4br., 2 112 bath,
familY. room, maintenance free
e:rler o r, level Jot w/prlmary
fence, ao·s. Watson Raahy
Company, 304-675-3433.
Two story homeL. Sixth Avenue,
Mlddlepor1· 4 BH, living room,
dining room, kitchen, utility
room, bath &amp; 112, h.lll basement,
glassed In po~ch, gas furnace,
woodburnar,
large
storage
building. naw paint and root,

$36,500,614-742-2790.

32

Utlllllu, 614-446-1171.

614-446-1637.
2 Rooms &amp; Bath, No Kllchen ,
$200tMo. All Utllhlos Included,
614-446-7733,
Botweon 9 :30

2 Lawn Mowara : Brlgga And

425 Gallon Plastic Water Tank

450 Case Dozer, $5,500; Internationa l l11.1ck And Trailer, $2,500

Both; lnsloy Backhoe, (Cablo
Model) Fair To Good Condition

-5:00.

$2,500, 614-258-1683.

2bdrm . apts., total alactrlc , appliances
fumishad,
laundry
room facllhles, close to school
In tawn. Applications available
at: Vlllag• Green AJ)t s. 149 or
ca ll 614-992. 3711 EOH.

5x8 tilt-bed utility trailer. 304675-50'14.

Furnished Eftlclency $150/Ma.
UU!Itles Paid, Shan~ Bath, 607

Brand new king-size waterbed,
ale~ on 1 weak , call tor details.
304..&amp;75-2385.

Second Avo., Gallipolis. 614-4464416 After 1 t-".M.

'

for Sale
1968, PMC, 12x50, 2br. 304-6754406.

54

61 Fann Equipment

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEDS. New Commercial- Home
Unite from $199.00, Lampslotions- Accasaorlea. Mc;~nthty
payments tow as $1a.oo. Call
TodayFREE
NEW
Color
Cal alog, 1-800-462-9197
Super Single Black Race Car
Waterbed, $150, 614·24$-0518.
Two stall horse trailer with tack
department, $1000, 614-992-nsa
or 614· 992·7159 lean message.
Wanted Room Mate Must Pay

t/2 01 Ront f130, 6t4-441-ll6 53
WATE R LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
200 PSI f19.95; 1 Inch 200 PSI
$32.50; Ron Evan• Enterprises
614-286-5930 Jackson, Ohlo
'
Young Bronze &amp; Soma ~ad
Turkeys Registered Mala Beagle

Dog, 614·256-6314.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, briek, sewer pipe s, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Wintar., Rio Grande, OH can 614-

245-St2t

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop--Pet
Grooming. Julie W•bb. 614-446-

0231.

304.082·3730.
10x10x6 dog kennel, $199 95 .
Paint Plus, 304-675-4084 .

2 AKC Registered Mala Golden

Gravely Trac1or Attached Slckal
Bar Mower Rot ary Plow, Cultivator, Brush Hog t.Aower
Gravely Parts, 614--446-4149.
'
Massey Ferguson SOC Backhoe
Great For Snow Removal This
Winter, $9,800, 614-446-6591.

Massey Ferguson T035 Tractor
Wllh Bush Hog, And Blado,
$3,850; Massey Ferguson 65
Wilh Plow And Cuhlvator, And
Post Hole Digger, $3,995; 135
Massey Ferguson Diesel, With
Loader, $6,350; 614-286-6522.

lipolis, $260/Mo. Utllltlos Paid,
614-446-4416 After 7 P.ll.

71
1m

&amp; Grain

Autos for Sale

73

vans

&amp;4

446-2342.
74

Motorcycles

1982 Honda Goldwlng, Good
CondHion, Lota Of Exlrasl 614446-1055.
1983 250 Honda Oddosy $500 Or
Boot Olfor, 614-319-2131, 81437V-2.854.

75 Boats

Pontiac

Fiero,

RebuiH

Motor, $2,200. 814 446 11253.
1985 Hondo Accord LX 2 ~.

LIMITED OFFERI Now 14.&amp;0
only mak1 2 payments, no
payments aher 4 years frH
delh1ery &amp; sat up, owner finan c-

Ono br. lumtohld apl. In Mid·
~zia~415/mo ptuo dop, 614-

Ing available. 304-755-5566.

lwo

bedroom
apartment,
Ulllhill patd 1 privati parking,
rlvw view, 1350/mo., $200
dopoolt, no pate, 6~V.Z- 5n4.

Mobile Home: 2 Bedrooms,
Bath, OU1bulldlngs, Garage On

1.51 Of Aero, $20,000, 614-446-

45

Navar lived In, still has new
home warranty, tree delivery &amp;
set up, owner financing avail·
able. 304-755-7191.

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms tor rent • •ek or month.

Starting at $120/mo. Gallte Hotel.
6 - 0-

SIMplng Roomo $15 Ptr Day.
Conatructlon Workara Woicomtl,
Efflclency
Khchen,
FrM

Mini blinds and drapes, 6' patio
door, 6' window black 814· 992·
6137.
'
Moving! Furnhure For Sale:
Sofa Llke New, Oak Table, Four
T-Bick Chaira, And Uorel 614-

Splnet-Con.ola plano. Wanted,
reepcN:talbla party to make low
monthly Pl!ymanle. See ~tty.

446-1504.

1-800-327'~346.

New 5x8 Tlmb.rwolf Ulllltv
Tralllr, $1,3011, 614~11-2152.

58

Nice 24' Abovo Ground Pool All
New $3,000. Slop In And Take A
Look At It At : 61 Perch StrHt

Kanauga, 614-446-74TJ.

'

Plnsburgh Paints best eeUing
paint $7.~ gal. latex redwood
or cedlr ataln $3.99 gal. Paint

Lllundry, 114 388 8720.

Plus, 304-675-4084.

For sale 42 acres of hunting
ground tor dear &amp; wild turiley,
614-687-3718 call uriy momlng
or late ev•nlng.

Slooplna roormr whh cooking.
Also 1riliM apace on river. All
hook~pe. call etter 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5651, Maoon WV.

Queen Size, Soft Sider California Walerbad Semi Waveless
Mattrtse and Liner Only. 614-

Wanted to buy· two or more

46 S

f

R

I::-~~pac.;;,;~e=-o;.;r~.;e;.;nt.:..,=

acros, suitable to build on and
cioN to 1 blacktop road 814- 3 Room Office Suite With
1149-2481.
'
Prlvato Toltll In Modern Rro
Proof Blda. Cott Momo lillklno
36 Reai'Estate
114-44&amp;-zQI ar 114-44&amp;-2512.
Big 314ac. lot, IlL Alto aru,

Wanted

btOcktop . - , 811 utlltloa,
Nice fomlly _ . th- bod- ochoot buo rauto, $11/mo. 304room horria to rart or buy IM-3MI.

S35.000 - . Pretor ChntOr
'"'I-~ wRI conaldor othlra

114--.0731.

'

Rentals

Eaoottl,.

76

Auto Parts

614-319-2935, 614-3711-2263.

Houses for

Rent

4br. hGmo, CA, ltltchlll IP.
flflancoa, baooment, nice yard.
~.082-2447 or 182-24011.

For

Ront,

Will Dollvor. 614-66!HI441.
SOara rototlllor

5 hp,

'

614-11411-2698ottor 2:30pm.

247-4m.
59

'

Sofa &amp; IOVIIIII, good condition, S75; Mersman coffM &amp; end

lablo, $50; antique white wicker
rocker,; 614-992-.5083 or 614·992·

'
ForSale
or Trade

~ont

tlmn, x-condll 1on $250 firm

camlng

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Campers

61

Fann Equipment

1950 .John Dllra Ill Tractor
Loaka Good, Rune Good, $2,800

Firm, 3U-8771.

47 Painter of
ballerina s

49Tardy
50 Selves
52 Rant and -

anll countmg, they can usu -

54 Abound
55 Butter
substitute
56 Russian 's
" no "

58Hwy

59 Container

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebroty Co pher c ryplograms ani crealed lwm quota 4tOns by lamous ~ople pas I a'ld
Eactl lo!l ot m tllo ctphm stands lor ano the r Today s c !uc '' f'(l'-"'~ r

' X J N G

X J N G

LJNNCAF ,

N C F G

J M

L I CD . '

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

BIG NATE
HOW !&gt;.!lOUT 1\ 1&lt; 155
GOODNIGHT FOR ~OUR.
OLD MAN ,

V G A P D

IJAWMGIIJB .

PREVIOU S SOLUTION

and lhal ba ll os out ol he re No. II'S nol Yes 1t IS

No , rt's not What happened?"- (Broadcaster) P h1 l Ar zzuto
C 1994 b~ NEA Inc
16

WOlD
GAMI

0

Rearrange letters of
four Kromblod words
low to form four words

II

H ly3

1·T I

I
I'"':'

.--..,..---;:--;-:--;-~-,

.

foND lAT\t-1 ...

1!187 Honda Accord LX, 4 Door

Dodge 600SE, 2.5 naw. 304-882·
2560.

_

_

_

_

A bumper st1c ker

~

__

.--....,..-~-.,.,----.., wear saf e ty b e lts to av01 d Iaii AS H UI T
lmg out w1th the~r - - - - - - - - "

I

~-..,~r-::7-rl-..,.-1-,a"lr---.-1--1 G)

Co mp lete !h e chudle quote d
by i dl~n g 1n the m· ~~·ng words
L._.JL--1--'--..L.-J---l you develop !rom $1ep No 3 bel ow

.

.

@

.

.

.

_

_

1
PRIN l NUMBERED
tEllE RS IN SQUARES

UN SC RAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Annual- Leech - Inept - Impair - CA ME IN
Alter put11ng a defective appl1anc e back mto 1t' s
ongmal carton my neighbor s1ghed. "What I really n eed
1s something thai outlasts the box that 11

CAME

Services
81

1!187 Trano Am arA Bright Rod
350 Tune Port, Fuot lnltlctlon:
Loadod, 2 Door, Automatfc, Lau
Than 60,000 Mll11, 614 446 4616.
1N8 llorotta, Now Tlraa &amp;
Brokoo Eacottant Condllon
Hlah Mlillgo, U,M, 614-446:

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

Unconditional lifetime guan~n­
tH. Local rofarencu furnished.

Wagon, AU1omatlc1 4 CVIIndar,
Air Conditioning, AMIFII Radio
cuaotto Playar, Cloon.._ Good
Condhlonl AMJng Pay un. 304671i-6855.

111811 FORI Eaoort LX, 4 Door,
Auto. Air, nn, Crul-, AMA='M

CU.otta. Extra Cllln, 114-446·
10116.

Radio, Colt Allor I P.M. 114-44611241.
1atlt Toyoea Conry, 4 cyt, 4
~~-~- gao mllagl.

1atl2 4 Door, Acoonl, Ea.
Olttlnt ConcfMion, 6 SPMCf,
AIIIFII Storoo Co-o, AC,
Now Tl- 35 MPO, 11,000
111111-Y Milo.'; 114 441 0028.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Call t -l!00-287~576 Or 614-237Rog•~ Walerprooflng.

tabllahod 1975.
Gener11l

E•

304-078-2]98 Ohio 614-446-2454.

82

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

Cortlllod. Rasldonllat, Commorclat. 614·256-1611.
·

84

Electrical

HHt Pumpa, Air CondHion-

FumtcHt. Melttr Electrician

614-446-6&gt;08, 1-800-287-4308.

or

'

commercial

wiring, new urvlce or repairs.
Master Ueensed electrician.
Ridenour Electrical WV00030G
~-675-11116.
'
'

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Some1h1ng
you 've been unable lo accomplish on your

taken care of long ago

'W'~~rthday

• repay a favor

· t1on

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) To enJOY

TAURUS (Aprii2D-May 20) You could be

what thi s day has to offer, 1t's best you do

1n lor a pleasanl s urpnse today when you

not take yourself or events too senously If
you let go and relax . your eiCample will

d1 scover a f nend whose loyally y o u' ve
been quest10n1ng 15 1n fact a staunch alty

encourage otllers to do so as well
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 21)
type of comfortable career adjustment that
F1nancoal tre nds look encourag1ng today ,
c ould offer you greater rewards th an
so 1f lhere IS somethtng pos1ttve you can

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Someth,ng
you've ,Reen wanlong to change, but have
been afraid IO try . could suddenly ma~e a

In the com1ng year. you mrght make some

come about 1n a umque way.

Refrigeration

Rnlcllntlal

~'Your

you're presently recetvtng ThiS may aU

&amp;

zO&lt;Mc s1gn
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept . 22) A mo re

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 231 A led1ous but / ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) A sotuatoon
ex tremely rmportant ObJeCtive ca n be you usually handle rout1nely could turn out
1
ac h 1eved today rf you apply yoursell It to be a source of problems today in order
pe rta1ns to an old matter you should have [ to c orrect · this maner, trace lito 1ts 1ncep·

VVednesday Aug 17. 1994

FrHman'a Heating And Cooling.
Installation And Sel'lllco. EPl

thrng 1s runn1ng s moothly. put your toolbox
away. because th1ngs don't need f1xrng

Handle lh1s m aner l actfully

tlmatl call Chot, 614492.0323.
Ron's TV Sarvlc., epeciallzfng
Zenith alao aarviclng mosl
other brt~nde. HoUH calla, al.o
some appliance ,.pain. WV

Box 4465. New
York . NY 10163 Be s ure lo stal e your

a ppeaiiOQ ac tiVIty m1ght capture your · own can be ach•eved Ieday through the
a ttent1 on today and ca u se you to good ausptces of an old frrend He/s he
rearrange p la n s lhal 1nvolve ot h ers i has bee n lookmg for an opportunity to

Homo

Malnt•nanc•- waltptper, 8torm
dooq, rooting and complete
homa repair, complete window

In

ahead by m a1l1ng $ 1 25 to Astro ·Graph , rela te to your malenal well-bemg lf every ·

clo thts newspaper. P 0

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Somethong you
lelt would be a snap today could lurn out
to be rather doffocult, while some1h1ng you
thougllt would be rather diffocult could turn

out to be a snap. Go f1gure

Leo , treat

sh1ft today due to outs1de I actors over
wh1ch you have no controL The results

do to generate a prof1t, g1ve tl a go,
whelher ot be buy1ng or selling.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22--Jan. 1g) Victory os
1nd1cated loday. but tl mtght come alter a
struggle Do not get doscouraged if ea~y
md1ca1ors appear to be gomg against you

AOUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 19) Do not
yourself to a borthday gift Send for your rock the boal at thiS tome on sotuat1ons that
Astro-Graph predocllons lor lhe year

1

should ple.ase you
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If you expect
others to adm1re you today, you must
have self-esteem. There os no reason for
you to compare yourself unfavorably to 1

your associates
CI994NEWSPAPERENTERPRISEASSN

t

on a local

truck gave m e a good la ug h It
read " Tree surgeons need t o

Ctaan, $5,200, 814-245-6617.
1!187 Plymouth Rollant 4 Door
Eacotte,. Condition, Tlh Whlot:
Cluloo, High Mtloago, 11,750
814 448 8568.
'

CP G

BC F XB J P H V

5

OIC::Lr.li\ .,S 'Nirll~\

C A F

C I I

HVJTWV

pro~enl

five

I 1 I I I"

~:

M J It J B

NT X H

N G A

&amp;

Pop-up camper, sleeps 8, 2 new
Urea. Color computer 3 Tandy
wfmonltor, keyboard print•
disk drive, software. o'u fumec.:
Firewood. Comput•r for 1081

18111 Buick Regal, toadod, 814atl2.0137.

Wanted to Rent

43 Yew or p1ne
45Comedian

Motor Homes

Chrayllr LaBaron 2.2
Turbo,
Now
Turbo,
Now
Radiator, New BtH•ry, Good
Condhlon, $2,700, 114-368-8125.

1885 John Deere lawn Tractor 1 • Ford Teurae ehow car, •••·
12 HP.._ Excollont CondhtOn: ~- 304-182-37S2 or 182Good m•, E11ro Bott~1 18001
Dr Tradl For Grovoty ur Eauar
111811 Pantlac lallana, AIIIFM
Vatuo, 114-441·1013 AAar 6 P.!l.

4015.

38Mauna 40Biggest

otc. 0 &amp; R Auto, Roploy, WV. ~
372-3933 or 1-801l-:17'H329.

repelr, pre11ure washing end
moblla home rapalr. For tr.. n-

your own,
$3/buehel, bring container 614-

31 R o man road
32Perm tt s
35 01l ato ry

New gas tanks, one ton truck
wheels, radiators! floor mats

19811 E - 4 Door Stotlon

pick

s tomach

GENAB

Chevy Bod, Chevy Motor &amp;
Othor Parta On Lah Fork Road
(Gallipolis).

C&amp;C

Thursday·

ICNQ.I ll\Pa.

'

Nice Cor, 4 SPMCI, Now Tlraa,
Now Palm, AIIIFM CD tt,atl6,
OBO, 814-24~.

This WMk only untll"and Inc hid·

~IIOOL. I.E
~TO

Budget Priced Transmissions
Used &amp; robutn, all lypae start:
lng at $69; owner 814-2-15-5677.

1188 FORI F11tlvo 40 MPG Vory

lng

1--11\ffi I loll6 11-1

&amp;

Canning tomatoea, pick your
'

BORN LOSER

Accessories

0481!

Portland,Oh.

0

,,

115 Mariner Englna, Excellent

1118.

own. $3/bulhel, bring container-.,
Slobart
Farms

I,

CondMion, Garage Kopl, 614446-4128.

Canning tomatoea for aale, pick
your own a lome alrNd~
picked, bring your own conlalnare, 11-24,·2961. ,

tomatoee,

Refrigerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
And Gaurant11dl $100 And Up

&amp;

Vegetables

tlpolla.

47
41

Olflca

!locond Avanuo, Noll To Olftce, lnqulra AI: Cothoun Law
Otflce, 444 s.cond A.venua, Gaf..

245-5053. f110.

Fruits

..

((~ALITY

1988 Checkmala 16ft OOtlp Mercury outboard, trailer Included,

18 Ft. HI Lo All Molal Compar1
$2,700, 614-387-7891.

Auto, Tr11n1, BIK Mil•, Extni

GOVT.

Of VI,TUAL.

$5,200. 304-675-5815.

1166 VW Goll 5 Speed, Air,
1011,000 Millo, Good Shapa,
$2,305, 114-448-7523.

Eplphone Sher1ton Guhar Semi-

s.

1985 Glauport, 17ft open bow,
2.5
Chav
4
cyl,
lnboalrdloutbolrd,
full
tops,

79

Hollow Body Good Condition
l-450j Hoif Stack Amp. Morahali
Haaa Lanoy 4xt2 Coblnoot $650,
614-446-0070 Aftor 5 P.M.

u.

Htwe•n~Wpm.

1081 Oldsmobile Cutlau Clerra
Good Tlr•, No Ruet, Asking;
$1,800, 814-245-9171.

Vemon Ava., doWnltalra. 304875-28111.

28Tubeto

hearts and lhree c lub s Any thought s'
When partn e r leads a g ua r anteed
smglet on at tnck one and yo ur play in
the su1 t IS orrelevant. you sh ould make
a su ot -prefe r ence sogna l That 's why
East p layed th e club two H1s lowest
card s ho wed a lop diamond and de ·
nied a lop spade Yet West obvtously
wasn ' t con f11J ent about the s 1gnal
hence h iS ques tio nable ho ldup of the
heart kong until h e c ould sec a disca rd
from hos partner Easl" s club four was
a second suit preference s1g nal
Ea s t d od n ' t c ount the d e f ens ive
!rocks Afte r th e hea rt k1ng , the dia mond ace and a c lub ruff, two spade
tn c ks w ere needed He h ad t o assume
Wes t h e ld th e spade a ce So . Ea s t
shoul d ha ve swolched to the spad e
queen before g ovi ng t he club ruff. This
de feats th e contract

FEl&gt;~,AL
D~P A((T MtNT

lackota, okla, Coaat Guard oqulped, make rNsonable otter.
~.082-3325 or 304-773-5566

Large 2br., partly lumlshod, AC,

1987

P&lt;.~ ss

his king for nme tncks one spade,

17ft. Tri-tlaul boat, open bow,
1977140 Evenrucll, lnclud.. Ute

1906 Buick Skyterk. 304-6756668.

Newly lurniohld 1br. uppar
duolox,402 2111. ill., no pota, no
HliO, ,275/mo, 2 U;llhiM paid.
Atao, email lumlahld apl., lit.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

$1150 nog. 304-675-17tg,

mH355 . c.11 &amp;14-1192-5859.

304.075-7783.

Pass

P&lt;Jss

a lly fin d th e n ght plays lo de fea t' a d e
[eatabl e co ntracl
In toda y"s de a l. South should p ass
three diamond s, but t hat con tract is
bea l en if West r eceiVe s a cl ub ruff
Agaonst thre e h earts, W est led th e
c lub queen t hree. two. ace Declarer
continued wtlh t he heart ace four, 10,
three N ext Soulh led t he hea rt queen·
five , spade SIX , heart Jack Then came
the hea rt nme k m g, spade seve n . c lub
four
We s t swotch ed t o a doamond Eas t
won woth the are and gave ho s partner
a club r uff However. now West had to
open up th e spades so South scored

16ft. Bayllner bowrlder wttrallar,
85hp englrw wllurbo prop,

14.1170, 2 bedrooms, exc cond,
304-615-6653.

HUD approved, Pt. Pleasant.

PEANUTS

0

Riverside

EOH.

;1 •

Pa ss

pl et e info rmation Hu t h y Slg nalon g

&amp; Motors

Manor

Apertmenta lnlt.llddlepor1. From

Pa s~

25Choose
26 Wo rked on the
com puter
27 Pleasant

Keep your
eyes open

;

&lt;

for Sale

good ohapo, 304-675-61188.

1084

2.

L OUIS -

1985 Suzuki 250 4 Wheller,
$1,000, OBO, 614-386-8337.

19110 Procran 18 Ft. Rah &amp; Ski,

1g82 Otclo Omogo PB, PS, AC,
Auto, AMIFM Con.ii$150, OBO,
614-446-1608 laaVI - -

East

P&lt;.~ ss

place

23Si upety

29Shoe part

'

S4,croo; con Bo Soen At:

1m Pontiac Trans Am 400 En-

1181 Eldurado Cadillac $2,100,

Nice 3 br. apt. In Middleport,
114-NI-118S8.

NIGHTMARE!!

1988 Dod~ Caravan
V-8,
Automatic, Delivery Van, No
Windows, $2,700_ 614-256-1618,

$2,3011. 304-675-1272.

1rnl Chov. 4 door. 304-675-1502.

Nor·th

Opening l ead •Q

$&amp;,500, 614-245-ll122.

1988 Oak Wood molble home,

New Hav1n, below
Halghts,
3br.
w/appllancn,
washer/drytr,
bam, 5.887ac., $13,500, terms
available. 304~882-3503.

"J ...

THAT WAS MY

1987 Ford Full Size Van Com·
pletely WhHI Chair ACCISSible
And Drlveablo, Many Extra•

Hatch 5 5Diod AMIFM Cluatto
Storoo"- AC, ~og Lights, 30+
MPG, .-s.200, &amp;14-245-5053.

Back of
Haven

YOU NEED TO
FI ND A PURT't
LITTLE GAL AN'
GIT HITCHED!!

WD's

Guna, 614-4-te-9635.
gino, Runo Good $1,500, Nogoflabte, 614-4-46·1888.

Graclouo living. 1 and 2 bod·
IVOm a.-rtment. at VIllage

3br., 2 bath, on 120x50 lei, Henderson, WV. 304-576~024.

TERRIBLE
OVERLY
NIGHTMARE, LONESOME,
DOC 11
WI LFERD

~

304-675-6286.

14' boat, 40 horH E'lflnrude
motor, 614-992·2395.

Cadillac Coupe Deville
Raaeonabiy Priced Or Trad• Fe;

Efficiency
Downatalrw, All Utllltl11 Pakt,
I18&amp;'Mo. ill Sacond Ava_, Gal·
llpolla, 614-446-31145.

back porches, 2 car garag1,
outbuilding, Rt 35, Southside.
304-675-5346 alter 5:30pm.

YO'RE JEST

Chevrolet, Ford, Oodg• pickup
beds. Shon or long. No rust.

Galllpoll• Dally Trlbuno, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-

Transportal ion

Efficiency, Central

aAd

I HAD ME A

Wif'st
1•

carefu l!)

13 New Hampshlt11 Red Hens, 1
112 Years Old $2... 6M-W6-t585.

Hay

-rr+-1--+--l

1994 Toyota T-100 (Full Size) OX
Package, Tilt Whee l, Air Conditioning, Sliding Rear Window,
Chroma Package, 614-44HJ237,
614-446-5502, Ask For Mike
Simpson.

Mll10,

-614~37-11113 .

19 Watering

De fens tve plt.~ y ts dtfficult beca use
both partne rs mu st work w1th mcom -

1989 Dodge Ram Van 60,000

Square bal... $1.25 10 $2.00 per
bale, alfalfa, clover, orchard
grus. 304..&amp;75-3Q60.

Fumlahed Apartment 1 Bedroom, 939 Second Avenue, Gal-

Fuml•hed

'

South
I•

RARNF:Y

Package, AC, 19,000 Hiahway
Mlloa, 614-245-5053, $20,o00.

Livestock

One cow raady to have calf~ 1
halter due to have calf; 1 helfor
cal~ 1 Herford Bull 2 yra. old; 3
Beagle pupa, 2 112 monthe; 1
~~e pup 6 montha; 814-9D2-

170ktnawan
seaport

6 Cylinder, 5 SPQOd, Cruls•,
Powor Packag•, Sunroof Sport

63

Llvulock HauUng, Anytime,
Anywhere. Producers, Hillsboro
Every Monday, Call Trlpple
Creek Trucking, Chuck Williams, 614 -245-5096.

10 Parad tse
11 Be defeated

7 Swoon

1993 Toyota 4 WD X-Cab SR5 V•

614-256-1252.

2 Small Quarter Horan, 1 Small
Gated Paint Gelding, 614-4464110.

9 Retrnue

By Phillip Aldt•r

Two 1700 Bushal Behlen Com
Crlbo, Stondlng $600 E-ach, 614446-2412.

Good Alfalfa Hay, Naver B88n
Wot, $2.50 A Bote, Call Aftor 6
P.M. 614-4-46·1062.

7V1 Fourth Avo., Gallipolis. 614·
446-4416 After 7 P.M.

Hoot lAir Condhlonlng, Privati
Parking, Utltlill Fwnfthld, Eacepl OWn Etoctrlc. &amp;14-446-2602.

1988 14x70 Royal Co'lle, 2 br,
heat pump, porch Included,
100x 100 lot In Middleport

Ford 8N Tractor &amp; Many Extr a
Parts, 614-446-6591 .

64

Furnished Apartment 2 Bedrooms, $295!Mo., Utilities Paid,

Fumlehed

or 1~2n·l9t7.

895-'llm.

qul...t. 11-t-448~338.

1987 Schult 14'a:70' With Expando loaded with extras,
rufrlgarator,
stove,
wastier,
central air. Set up In Quail Creek
on cornar lot. Will not sell on
land conlract. $16,500.00 614245-5013

67~1'121

81nl et

5 Author
Umberto 6 - Zumwalt

Seaso n s
4 Auth or K1pllng

Dea ler Sou th

1992 Nlssan king-cab SE, V6,
5spd , air, cruise, tilt. 304-675-

Polled Hereford bull, $600. 304-

Retrievers, 6 Weeks Old $150
ti14-446-6651.
•
'

Nicely Furnlahed Apartm1nt,
1br, ned to Ubrary, parking,
centr111 hlat, elr, ,.flrenca ,...

1972 Buddy 2 Badroom For
Sale, 614-446-1400.

Chain Saw bars &amp; ctlaint to Ill
almoiJI any saw. Bast prlcaa In
area. Side,.. Equipment, 304-

1 Optimum

2 Oltve genu s
3 - - for All

V ulne r·a ~l e Neither

7858.

Dopoolt Roqulraa. 814-446-151g,

304-675-5043.

_,A K J I ll

1990 Nlssan pic ku p truck, 4/C,
wltM a cap, $3.500, 614·1112-2082
evenings, Raymond Conarlll.

Furnished 3 Rooms 6 Bath,
Clean, No P1t11 Ratarenca &amp;

1969, 1-1x6Q mabll home, good
shape, extras Included, $3500.

SO! ITH

8, Automalk: Transmission, FullTime 4 WO, 614 -388-9680 Aher

DOWN

33Bro's s1b
J4 Social-c lub lees
36london gallery
37 Envtr st udy
39 A c tress Carter
41 Obta1n
42 Stat1on

... H fi .) 4 'l.

• .J

304-675-7961.

Pampered Pate by Sonya, dog
grooming, bathing, all breeds.

6 A. Truck Toppar, Soat'l
Troadmlll, Gibson Guitar &amp; Amp.
614-446-6591.

JO Showery month

• " 4 .!

•Q

63 Wide shoe s1ze
64 Actual bemg
65 Dos patc hed
66 W1tty remark

26Dig up

¥ r\{}\JR6 2

1989 Chevy S-10 pick-up, 5spd.,
70,000ml, a xe. cond ., $5000.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jackeoo Pike
from $222 to $285. Walk to ahop
&amp; movlae. C.ll 614-446-2568.
EOH.

Mobile Homes

aocop

lnlormod that 811 dwellngl

2 Bedrooms, All Electric,
$250/Mo. 614-367-700:2 .

hundrad.
APPRAISALS,
40
ye•,.. experience . Buy or aell.
Plene a~ tl61 4-992·2822.

t 7 II 5

COOK![';

Trucks tor Sale

n .ooo

OONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:

BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
dollar paid. One piece or one

• K 7 5

NJJ

62 Rara -

22 Dance step
24 You . formerly

E,\ST
• Q J 1
•J 3

·~

11178 GMC 4x4 Short Bod 350 V-

1988 Ford F-150 XLT Super Cab,
a· bad w/11bargtass topper,
miles, loaded, excellent
condition, fH4·992-n16.

Antiques

Stranan Engine, 20 Inch Classic
$70, 22 Inch Murray $120, Call
After 6 P.M. 614 -446-n2t

our readers are heraby
POSTAL JOBS

2 Bedrooms, AC, Na Pets ,
Deposit
And
Referanc11s
$400/Mo., Waska!, Dryer ; 2 Bod:
room House, ~urnfstwld, No
Pets, S350/Mo. Deposit, 614-7974345.

• A I !I H

Miles, $4,500, 614-379-2601.

china cabinet, S'1500 OBci. 304675-24114.

3 bedrooms, 1112 baths, 2
fireplaces, full baumant, heat
pump wiCA, carpated, patk&gt;,
garag•, 60x200 lot, Honan St,
Mason, 304-m-5885.

40 Acroa $20,000 . 614-367-1054
Leave Messag1.

ol 1968 whk!h makes nllegal

446-6 958.

fv1 1U&lt;

WEST

197'9 Ford F-150 V-8 Auto, 54,000

Very nlca oak dining table, 6

FINE ANTIQUES- American art
ctl lna, ar1 glass, sliver, furniture:
McCoy ReNville, etc . COLLEC.
TIBLES- print&amp;, postan, tools,
pottery, crocks, boJ ... Jare botIIH, books, toy., etc . ALWAYS

l RAIV
COT()f

6PM .

chairs wtmauve c ushions larga

2 bedroom Hud appro'IIIMi, no
pels, 1 year lease, Valley Apt,
Mason, WV. Applications available, E.R.A. Town &amp; Country
Roalty.

35

All real estate adverUslng In
!hiS newspaper Is subfed: lo
the Federal Fair Housing Ad

&amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive St., Galllpolla. New &amp; UMd
lumlture, hNlltl, Western &amp;
Work boola. 61-4-446-315g_

2 Bedroom Garagt Apartment,
Stove, Refrigerator, No Pet s,
$250/Mo. $100 Dopoalt, Plus

NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 lohl

800-ll21)-4353.

AUCTION

53

10~18 2

• K :,

-

3 bedroom, all electric home,
Spring
Avenue Pomeroy
$30.000, 614-992 -2913, or 614~
992-7304 .

Cash Income Priced ta S9ll. 1-

which Is In YlolllUon of the law

4921.

2 Or 3 Bedrooms, 3 Miles From
Gallipolis,
Country
S.tllng,
large Kitchen, 614-379-2343.

97'16, leave Mess age.

Referenc" R1qulred, 814-446-

Days

1 112 Story, Fu ll Basoment 1 Pos·
si ble 5 Bedrooms, 2 Acres,
lilo1ime VInyl Sid ing , Skylights,
Tilt Windows So ma Interior
Finishing,
Pool,
Building,
Straam, 2 Decks, Private, Ideal
For Chltdran, $55,000, 614-3792566.

VENDING ROUTE : Won't Got
Rich Quick. Will Get A Steady

a(t.lertlsements ror real estare

6

72

2 Bedroom Trallar, $250/Mo. 614-

2+ acras , mobil home wltront &amp;

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CD.
recommends that you do business with people you know, and

Wook,

Cooking,

304-67~5'12.

0322, 3 mll. . out Bulavlllt Rd .
Fr" Otilllvery.

"Kic k Me Wh ile I'm Down"!
OWnar Must Sell Nowt "Let's
Talk Bu si ness"! Baautltul, Large
Two St ory On Corner Lot. 816
Main Sl. Pt. Pleasant . Three
Bedrooms, Two Fu ll Bath s,
Kitchen, Dini ng, Living, Fam ily
Rooms, large Ulil ity Room. Air
Condlllonod $69,900 .00. 614·
4&lt;16 -2205

$15,000, 614-992-7223.

Ownart()paralors

ptlftr

446-4425

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

- - --'::=c--SWAIN

l I-lAD A SeRE ~T
l(£STERDW PiVD 1.1Y
f. IJTlf2E HMO GROUP
MAD: A 1-UJS£ CAi..i..

While lincofn Town ~r 1988,
Loaded l Automatic,
Lsather
Seats, E.:callen1 Condition, 1
Owner, 90,000 Miles, $7,000, 6t4-

home fumlshlngl.
Hours· Mon-Sat, 9-S. 614-446-

14.:60 2 er, 1 mila Souttl ol
Eureka, on St. Rt.7. Na peta,
refarencas . 614 ·256-6089.

Homes tor Sale

2395.

ranges. Ska8ga Appliances, 76

tK(/

horses

20- - Clear
Day
21 Dollar bill

... 'I 7 :1

1-jEI\LTJ-1 CARt;. IS
G£Tn li&lt;'S CRAC-(

81 El C•m lno pick up, 614-992·

Complete

----31

388-9616,

Wanted . Labor's On Roofing
Crow, EJperlonce Helpfu l, Must
Have Hand Tools And Own
Transportation, Start $5 An
Hour, 614-446-4514, 8-5 Monday
Thru Frl::tay

13

t,•tll· •to.., 111 1i

1252.

f\ IIi ~4

All 'i 1;
¥ 1 ()

H "K &amp; MEEK

sg,2so. &amp;14-256-1&amp;18 0r 614-256·

Small, 2br, fuml shad houso,
par1 utilities paid, $100 deposit

2 Bedroomt, Air, Cable Avatlabla, Ovarlooklng The Ohio
River, In Kanauga. Oapos11,
References Req uired . Foster 's
t.Aoblle Home Park, 614-446-1602

tlertll h CO'l'l(l('tlc;, tn t• rP &lt;., lr o? erl

Household

~~~~gg _ all 614-446-nga, 1-

Mobile Homes

"'

1993 Pontile Grand Am V-6 ,
Au1omatlc, L.olded, 11,000 M11ea,

oT

{},'f"'

Pl . Plea sant, 3br., I 112 bath,
$600/mo. 304-1'33-1201 leavtt
message.

tor Rent

-~yment Services

51

Nice 2 or 3 bedroom house nea r
Rae/no, 614-992-5858

42

Cool ~r ,

If IXSib,V&lt;'C

GOOD
USED APPLIANCES
Wu hera, dryera, refrigeratas,

614-992-3090.

m o bila

~M\'IIIfE ~ iAl~ 13-VIl-D IN ~ ,

'ft-4-10,:

Autos lor Sale

53 Mount (2 wds .)
57 Sum o l
particulars
60 Actor Ron 61 G1ve lips on

China

150cean
16Shows one's
powe r
18Garden flower

Wrighl

71

Merchandise

Goods

t::arpatad &amp; clean, no pets ,
deposh &amp; refaronc:os r~ulrod ,

A,nr cJO Ga l li~lts

.

New condit ion, 3 bedrooms, raf,
dap, no pets, 304~75 - 5162

Unfurnished 2 b&amp;droom housa,

R·ngs. Stl v or Coi n s
•• M T S Com Shop,

V• ,tr 1n I ·.-.. huy LStl d
• ~',
-l- -l hi·Ol75
:~

Call

J

''j

1r. 1 _,,

\

Autos

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�Page-12- The Dallv Sentinel

Tuesday, August 16,1994

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Domestic arts winners named; exhibits to remain on display
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sen tinel News Starr
Bes t of show rose tt es were
awarded in seven categones of the
domestic arts depanment Monday
at the !3 1st Meigs County Fai r.
The over 300 exh ibit s wh rch
show an abundance of local talent
will remain on displ ay for enJOYment of fai rgocrs through Saturday .
Takmg the hcst of show .awards
were De borah Gruescr of Pomeroy
in sewing, Nancy Gard of Middlepan in needlework , Mildred Gaul
of Ches ter in croche tin g, Linda
Grllil an of Pomeroy in afghans,
Patricia Jones of Shade in hobby
co rn er. Eli za beth La wrence of
Long Bo tto m in p i ct ur es~ nd
Ju anita Lod wick of Ches ter in
recycled craft.
Wrnners in eac h class, li sted
first, second and thtrd respectively,
were as follows:
Children's Clothing, up to six
Child 's pl ay dr ess: Brend a
Kenn edy, Po meroy; Marg are t
Weber, Mi ddl eport, and Merrilee
Bryan t, Long Bottom.
Child 's better dress: Margaret
Weber, Brenda Kennedy, and Rose
Barrows, Pomeroy.
Child' s shorts: Margaret Weber,
Merrr lee Br ya nt, and Brenda
Kennedy.
Child ' s slec pw ear: Brenda
Kennedy, Rose Barrows, and Merrilec Bryant.
Mi sce llan eo us:
Brenda
Kenn edy, Eli zabeth Lawren ce ,
Mcrrilee Bryant.
Children 's clothing, seven to 12
Play dress: Brenda Kennedy ,
Sheila Taylor, Pomeroy ; Joanne
Vaughan, Pomeroy.
Better dress: Deborah Grueser,
Rose Barrows, and Brenda
Kennedy.
Decorated T-shin: Juanita Lodwick, Sharon Riffle, Racine , no
third.
Child's shorts: Juanita Lodwick,
Brenda Kennedy,Joanne Vaughan.
Sleepwear: Juanita Lodwick,
Joanne Vaughan, no third.
Miscellaneous: Kelley Grueser,
Brenda Kennedy. Joanne Vaughan.
Adult dothing
Dress: Deborah Grucser, Brenda
Kennedy, Rose Barrows.
Dress-up dress : Brenda
Kennedy, Deborah Grueser, Rose
Barrows.
Blouses: Deborah Grueser, Kel·
ley Grueser, Rose Barrows.
T-shirt: Brenda Kennedy, no
second, no third.
Decorated t-shin: Sharon Rifne,
no second, no third.
Shorts: Brenda Kennedy, Deborah Gruser, Rose Barrows.
Slacks: Kelley Grueser, Brenda
Kennedy, Rose Barrows.

Suit. slacks or skirt : Delma
Karr, Middlepon, Joanne Vaughan .
Practical apron: Pauline Atkins,
Rutland, Merrilee Bryant.
Fan cy apron: Rose Barrows,
Addalou Le wis, Pomeroy; Pauline
Atkins.
Men 's mi sce ll aneo us: Bre nda
Kennedy, Sheila Taylor. no third .
La dy's mi scell aneo us: Ke ll ey
Gruese r, Brenda Ken nedy. Debo·
rah Graese r.
Nerd lee raft
Embroidered pillowcases: Opal
Dyer, Bidwell, Maxi ne Dyer. Bid·
well ; Mcrrilcc Bryant.
Croc het Trimm ed pillowcases:
Max ine Dyer, Opal Dyer, Connie
Mokyer, Reedsvil le.
Painted pill owcases: Maxi ne
Dyer, Mildred Gaul , Opal D)::GL
Patchwork cushion: Rose Barrows, no second, no th ird.
Misce llaneou s cushons: Linda
Gillilan , Rose Barrows, no thud .
Handrnade Dressed doll : Debo rah Gru eser, Mary A. Bradford ,
Racine, Sharon Riffle.
Purchase d doll , handm ade
clo thes: Merril ec Bryant , Kath y
Herdman, Pomeroy. Connie Mouyer.
Pot hold er: Alice 1 hompson,
Pom eroy, Mild red Gaul , Op al
Dyer.
Stu ffed toy: Bett e Edward s,
Connie Moyer, Brenda Kennedy.
Stuffed animal: Nanc y Gard ,
Middl eport, Delma Karr , Bette
Edwards.
Miscellaneous: Merrilec Bryant,
Mary A. Bradford, no third.
Crochet
Granny square afghan: Merrilee
Bryant, no second, no third
Rippl e afgahn: Maxine Dyer,
Opad Dyer, no third.

Shell afghan: Mildred Gaul , no
second, no thrnl.
Mixe d stit ch a fghan: Be tt e
Edwards, Lin da Gil li lan, Connie
Moyer.
Miscell aneo us afghan: Mcrn tcc
Bryant , Adda lou Lewis. Mary A.
Bradford.
Bedspread: Mi ldred Gaul, no
second, no third.
Croc het tr im hankie: Pau ltn c
Atkins, no second, no thi rd .
Doil y under 14 inches: Mary
Ann Shoults. Rac ine, Opa l Dye r,
Connie Moyer.
Doily over 14 inches: Rose Barrows, Co nni e Moye r, Mary Ann
Shoults.
Baby's swea ter se t: Mi ldr ed
Gaul . Opal Dyer, no third.
Crocheted pot holder: Rose Barro ws, Mi ldrcd Gaul , Merr i Icc
Bryant.
Baby afg han. gran ny squ ares:
Merril cc Brya nt, no second , no
third.
Baby afg han , mi sce ll a rco us:
Opal Dyer, Mildred Gaul , Max ine
Dyer.
Mrsce ll ancous: Li nda Gillil an,
France.&lt; Imboden. Rutland, Connie
Moyer.
Knitting
Afghan: Linda Gill ilan, no sec ond. no third.
Baby sweate r se t: Linda
Gillilan, no second, no third .
Quilts
Embr oid ere d outlin e stit ch:
Freda Vanlnwagen, no· second, no
third .
Appl ique quilt: Mil dred Gaul ,
no second, no third.
Mi scellan eous quilt : Mildred
Gaul , no second, no third.
Miniature quill: Patricia Jones,
no sec ond, no third.

Ti ed com furt ; Sharon Rt fftc,
thi rd onl y.
Patchwork wa lt hanging: Patr icia Jones. firs t only.

Pre- printed wall hangin g: Mildred Ga ul , no second , Delma Karr.
Hobby Co rner
Counted c ross sti tc h pic tu re:

Jua ni ta Lodwic k , Na ncy Gard ,
Eli1;r hcdr Lawre nce.
Co lorctl cmb!oid ery pi ctur e:
~terri Icc Bryant , third onl y.
Needlcpo rnt pict ure, Na ncy
Gard, no seco nd, no third.

Pai nt ed pi ctur e: Mcrr il ec
Bryant, two firs ts; Eli1abc th
Lawrence, third .

Crewel prctur e: t lr za bcth
Lawrence, no second, no third.
Co unted cross st it ch picture:
El iza bcth Lawre nce, Merr i Icc
Bryant, no third.
Purse or tote: Merril ee Bryant,
Dclam Karr, and Brenda Kennedy.
Stra in ed ce rami c: Elizabe th
Lawrence, Mcrri lcc Brya nt , and
Brcncla Kennedy.
Glaze d cera mi c: Bre nda
Kennedy, no second , no thrrd .
Woodcraft: Linda Gil lilan, Mcrrilcc Bryant, no third .
Woo dcr:ilt, large: Linda
Gilllilan , Mcrritcc Bryan t, no third.
Croc il ctcd ba sket· Rose Rar -

ro ws, Conni e Moy er, Linda
Gillilan.
Croc heted basket under 15 mches: Rose Barrows, De lma Karr,
Nan cy Gard .
Larger basket: Alice Thompson,
Addalou Lew is, Joanne Vaughan.
Decorated straw wreath: Connie
Moyer, Cheryl Kin g, Pome roy,
Mary Ann ShaulL&gt;.
Gi ft wmpping: Mcrrilcc Bryant,
Eli zabeth Law rence, Co nnr c
Moyer.
Misce ll aneo us: K;rrc n We rry,
Eli zab eth La wre nce , Linda
Gillilan.
Recyc led craft : Ju ani ta Lodwick, Delma Karr, Nancy Gard.

,Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture ===---==:. ._j
Don't marry for money. You
can borrow it cheaper.

.. .

If your income is below
average and your spending is
above average , don't ·worry.
You're average .
•• •
No matter how low the dollar
latts, it witt never go as low as
some people witt stoop to get
it.

...

Neck: a part of the body
which, il you don't stick it out,
you won't get into trouble up
to.
• •
Key chain: a device that
permits us to lose several
keys at one time.

•••

1 SHOWROOMS

NE-EDLEWORK, BEST OF SHOW- Nancy Gard's costumed
teddy bear won the rosette for best of show in needlework in the
domestic arts department at the Meigs County Fair.

CROCHET, BEST OF SHOW- This ecru bedspread cro·
cheted by Mildred Gaul won for her in judging at the fair Monday
the best of show in competition with several other entries. She had
18 exhibits and won 10 blue ribbons and six reds.

NFL

Pick 3:

training
camps

246
Pick 4:

6040
Buckeye 5:
3-5-12-31-37

Page 4

------- ··--··-------··--·- ·---'---· --.--·

•

Low toni ght in 6(k, cha nce of

rain. Thursday part ly cloudy,
hi gh In HO,,
·~------------------~

enttne
By

AFGHANS, BEST OF SHOW- Taking the rosette for afghans
in the fair's domestic arts was Linda Gillilan who displays here the
old rose afghan which she made.

Ohio Lottery

11 WAR£HOU5£5

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, Rutllllll, Ol

742·2211

Vol. 45, NO. 74
Copyright 11194

_,'

D~mo

2 SecUona, 14 Pagea 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 17, 1994

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

drivers display penchant for punishment

Organizer feels event
growing in popu /arity
By JIM FREEMAN
Sen lind News Starr
The demolition derby has a
certain, undeniable allure. For
some, il may be the fascination
of seeing a car like the one you
drove in high school terrorizing
the derby pit. Others may sim pl y like the crunch of heav y,
American metal. Regardless of
the attraction, the derby is one
of the most popular features of
the Meigs County Fair.
Jim Wilcox of Paulus Demolition Derbies of Piqua said the
derby generally draws a good sized crowd. Wilcox said Paulus
does six demolition derbies a
year with the others being held
in Athens, Shelby and Auglaize
counties.
This is the 6-year-old company's fourth year at the Meigs
County Fair, he noted, adding
that attendance at the events has
increased since then, both in the
number of people auending and
cars entered.
About 30 cars were entered
in the fair's 1990 derby, he said.
Tuesday night, 60 cars were
entered; most of their drivers·
vying for the $1,000 feature
jackpot.
Heat winners were, by heat:
I - G Ienn Miller, Dennis
Rucker and Scott Brinker; 2 Moose, Delmas Goff and Roger
Hoschar; 3 - Jason Goff, Ben
Coppick and, tied for third,
Steven Reitrnire, Fred Kittle and
Mike Williams; 4 - Scotty
Ervin, George Reitmire and
Mark Moore; consolation James Keesee, Billy Williamson
and Brent Wood.
Heat action was marked by
occasional fires and the injury of
Robert Harrison in the third

heat. Harrison was transported
by the Middlepon squad of the
Meigs County Emergency Medica l Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where a hospital
spokeswoman said he was tre~t­
cd and released.
Chad Wolfe enter ed a 4cylinder car in the fourth heat
which was punished by the larger cars. The small Ford was
back for the feature with a different driver, Scott Brinker.
In the feature , Jason Goff
jackdrove off with the S I
pol after a ruthless
of

sec ond -pla ce Glenn Miller .
Mike Williams came in third.
In the mini -car competition,
winners were, in order, Brent
Wood , Bill Morri s and Matt
Fry. The little cars had a lot of
altitude, in som e cas es even
going airborn .
Wilcox commended area volunteers for their assistance in the
demolition derby. The Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Dcpanment and
rescue unit was on hand, putting
out engine fires and occassionalty watering down the derby pi t.
Also on scene was the Middleport EMS squad . The Ohio Pallet Company provided two fork
trucks to clear the mangl ed
heaps from the pit, keeping the
duration between heats to a mintmum.
DERBY ACTION -The demolition derby is one of the Meigs County Fair' s more popular
events. Here, Pomeroy firefighters and Greg Wilcox of Paulus Demolition Derbies watch the
action during the first heat.

CONSTRUCTIVE PRE-CRUSHING - Prepping the car is
an important part of every derby. Here, Steven Reitmire of
Pomeroy uses a sledgehammer on the roof of his stationwagon
to insure the rear or the car crumples properly. Reitmire and
his car made it to the feature derby where they were eliminated.

DRIVERS' MEETING - Before every derby, Paulus Demolition Derbies holds a mandatory
drivers' meeting to help ensure a safe, exciting derby. Here, Greg Wilcox or Piqua stands on a car
to conduct the meeting moments before the derby.

Capital punishment ballot issue
language will undergo revision
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Opponents of
a Nov. 8 election issue to trim lime
off death penalty appeals have
scored a modest victory over how
the language will read on ballots.
A state board that writes the
questions voters will see modified
the Secretary of State' s proposed
description of the capital punishment constitutional amendment.
The Ohio Ballot Board on Tuesday approved language for the
appeals proposal and three other
amendments dealing with crime
victim rights, prepaid college
tuition, and a new state soft drink
tax.
Chan~cs in the texl and explana-

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Your True Voice."

tion of ihe death penalty amendment came at the request of Benson
Wolman, a lawyer representing a
coalition of amendment opponents.
The amendment would elimi nate automatic state appeals coun
review of capital cases, sending
them directly from trial to the Ohio
Supreme Coun.
Wolman predicted voters will
mistakenly believe that the proposal, known as Issue l, will substantially speed up an appeal process
that now takes at least 13 years.
The appeals being eliminated take
one to two years.
"Issue I is a play for that portion of the public !hal has a welldeveloped sense of the jugular,"
Wolman said .

Meigs County Fair
Ronnie McDowell
Thursday 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, August 17
4:00p.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
l2:00 Midnight

\

Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sbow Arena
litUe Miss and Mister Contest- Hill SIBge
Kiddie Games- Show Arena
Junior Fair Swine Sbow· Sbow Arena
Open Class Hone Show
Ronna Reeve•- GTandstand
Hone Pull
Hill SIBge- Midnight Cloggen
Gate&amp; Close

Thursday, August 18 (Souivr Cllbouo Dar""'d 2.00 p.m.)
8:30a.m.
9:00a.m.
11:30 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
I :00 p.m.
I :00 p.m.
I :00 p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.

ATs.T
© t&lt;f&gt;4 Al&amp;T

7:30p.m.
8:00p.m.
l2:00 Midnight

4-H Horse Fun Show
Junior Fair Dairy Show- Sbow Arena
Homemaker Pie and Country Fair· Hillside Stage
Open Class Dairy Show- Sbow Arena
Hameu Rocing
District6 Holstein Sbow- Sbow Arena
Hill SIBge- Clusica
Flower Show Judging -Senior Fair Building
Hill SIAge· Junior Fair Talent Sbow
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sbow Arena
Hill SIAge· Junior Fair Kiddie Games
Junior Pair Sbecp Sbow followed by Open ClaJS Sheep
Sbow - Show Arena
Anlique Tractor Pull and Local You! Truck Pull
Ronnie McDowell- Gnut&lt;htand
GateaCiose

Gov. George Voinovich
endorsed speeding the process in
his State of the State speech. Legislators placed the amendment on the
ballot.
Wolman . won approval of a
change in the explanation of the
amendment to show the change,
while saving time at the appeals
court level, may increase the Ohio
Supreme Court's burden and
caseload in handling mandated
appeals.
"The result of the ballot board
action is a more truthful and accurate representation of what the proposed amendment will do, " he
said.
Wolman said opponents might
have filed a lawsuit over the wording had the board not agreed to a
modification.
"Ultimately the real issue is
whether this amendment decreases
the accuracy of the truth-finding
process in death penalty cases and
we believe it does," he said.
In other action, the board
scrapped the Secretary of State's
proposed description of a constitutional amendment dealing with
food taxes. Instead, it adopted
wording that Voinovich's budget
office submiued.
The Office of Bud~et and Management said the revtsed description more accurately shows voters
that the amendment would repeal
an existing penny-per-can tax that
raises $67 miUion a year.
A text Secretary of State Bob
Taft's office proposed did not mention the pop tax.
It dealt with the amendment's
intent to block legislators from
imposing future wholesale taxes on
food, food ingredients and food
packaging, and to define food as
including nonalcoholic beverages
such as soft drinks and fruit juices.
Donald McTigue, a lawyer for
the Stop. Taxes on Food Commit·
tee, said the text Taft proposed was
more balanced. He satd the administration description was excessive.

KENO FIRE - Chester Fire Chief John
Ridenour pulls down the walls of this trailer that
burned to the ground Tuesday morning. No one
was injured in the blaze, Ridenour said. Located
just south or Keno on Bashan Road, occupant
James Smith was not home at the time the fire

started. The cause and initial point or the blaze
remain unknown, but it started about 11:12 a.m.
and was under control within 10 minutes of the
arrival of the Chesler and Dashan volunteer
departments, Ridenour said. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)

Lotto jackpot
year's biggest
at $30 million
CLEVELAND (AP) - If history and high hopes are any indication, Ohio Lottery ticket sellers are
in for a busy day leading up to
tonight's Super Lotto drawing for
$30 million. The jackpot is the
biggest of the year.
Ohio's biggest jackpot was $50
million won Oct. 10, 1990 , by
Richard Hovis of Erie, Pa. Three
winners split a 1989 jackpot of $35
million; $32 million jackpots were
split two ways in both 1988 and
1993; and there have been two earlier $30 million jackpots, one of
which was split two ways.
Sales were running at 4,120
tickets a minute and had reached
$2.6 million since Saturday's drawing. The Iouery seUs 50 percent to
70 percent of its Super Lotto tickets
on the day of the twice-weekly
drawing .
Bonnie Fox of Cleveland said
she would cash her paycheck today
"nd malce sure she placed a wager.

MI~DLEPORT BREAK - M!ddleport Water Supervisor DiU
Browmng works on a water mam that broke in North Second
Street near the Citgo station before noon Tuesday Council Presi·
~en.t Bob Gi~more said. ~ater from Mill Street to ihe corporation
hm~ts ~as dtSrup~ed unttl ~:30 p.m. Tuesda_y because a tap on the
mam hne burst, vtllage mamtenance superviSor Mike Ralston said
Those residents are asked to boil drinking and cooking water fo;
at least three minutes. A boil order remains in effect until further
notice, a village official said. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

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