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                  <text>Page-14- The Dally Sentinel

VVednesda~August17,1994

Pomeroy· Middleport; Ohio

A Family owned tllltl
Operated supermtlrket
OHering tlte best ol ser11iee,
Oualitv anti Priee, tD tlte
People ol our eommunitv

Ohio Lottery

Harness
•
racing
results

Pick 3:

186
Pick 4:
4142
Super Lotto:
4-6-22-28-33-44
567092

Page 4

•

At The corner of
Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St.•Middleport

UD

YOUR HOMETOWN
INDEPENDENT
RETAILER CELEBRATES
OHIO PROUD

Vol. 45, NO. 75
Copyright 1994

By CONNIE CASS
emerge. Democratic leaders were of racial bias. The Black Caucus
Associated Press Writn
considering:
had hoped to have racial justi ce
WASHINGTON - The three
• Reducing the bill's $7 billion ensured by the crime bill.
black Democrats' opposition to for counseling and other crime preDemocratic leaders want to send
Clinton's anti-crime bill is visceral vention program s by about 5 per- th e revamped mea sure back to
- they abhor the death penalty . cent across-the-board, and transfer- House and Senate negotiators for
But each has agreed to help revive ring it to law enforcement initia- quick approval and they hope to
the bill on the House floor.
tives, perhaps to the measure's new gain House passage by Saturday.
The trio, Reps. Cleo Fields of Police Corps college scholarships
"It is encouraging, but we are
Louisiana, Charles Rangel of New or to prison construction.
no I there yet," House Speaker
York and John Lewis of Georgia,
• Giving Congress power to Thomas Foley, D-Wash., told
are Clinton's first converts among review any future additions to the reporters Wednesday.
House members who used a proce- 19 assault-style weapons the meaThe bill also contains money for
dural vote last week to block con- sure would prohibit. The ban would building new prisons and helping
sideration of the bill. It will take expire after five years instead of communities hire 100 ,000 new
five more turnabouts to bring the the decade the legislation now pro- police officers by the year 2000. It
bill to the House floor.
vides.
requires life sentences for some
"I cannot in my conscience vote
• Strengthening a provision people convicted of three violent
for a crime bill that has 60 different requiring convicted sexual offend- felonie s, and extends the death
death penalties," Fields said ers to report their addresses to penalty to 60 federal crimes ,
Wednesday. "But I will give the authorities by letting the police including fatal drive- by shootings.
Congress and the American people notify neighborhoods of such a resRepublican leaders were workthe opportunity to debate the crime ident.
ing on their own list of demands
bill."
• Eliminating the measure's $10 that, they said, would make support
Lewis and Rangel, who called million for a crime research center for the bill bipartisan. All but II
the death penalty "barbaric" and at Lamar University in the di strict GOP lawmakers voted against the
"racist," also said they would of House Judiciary Committee legislation last week, saying it con oppose the bill itself.
Chairman Jack Brooks, D-Texas.
tained mountains of wasteful
Some other black Democrats
Some of the changes proposed, spending and was too lenient on
stood ftrm against any supper! for such as cutting funds for crime ore- criminals.
the measure. The division among
vention programs and weakening
House Republican Whip Newt
the Congressional Black Caucus the ban on assault-style weapons, Gingrich of Georgia said he
reflects the complexity of the $33 chip away at the provisions that favored $3 billion to $4 billion in
billion anti-crime package, which many in the 38-member Black spending reductions, plus tougher
blends conservative and liberal pro- Caucus like most.
sentencing requirements for armed
grams.
That puts pressure on the 10 felons and others.
Democratic leaders are weigh - Democrats in the caucus who
But while the White House and
ins_changes in the bill that they helpe~ block the bill to relent Democratic leaders were wooing
hojje w111 hire moderates of both bc;fore ihings get worse.
moderate Republicans, -they s~id
Fields said he was influenced by most GOP demands were unl'eallsparties without alienating the bill's
current supporters, who are mostly a promise from Attorney General tic.
- Janet Reno that she would work to
Democrats.
"We are not getting, as far as I
A possible formula for rounding ensure that the death penalty is not can tell, a mood of conciliation
up support was beginning to imposed unfairly on blacks because from the Republicans," Foley said.

OHIO GROWN .
YELLOW
SWEE
T
CORN
Fresh

Home Grown
In The Husk

99

Frozen•lce Cream
Assorted Varieties

SPAGH
SAUCE
26 ounce jar

:s
R

VELVET
SUPREME
half gallon carton

:s
R
FAIR'S LITTLE MISS AND MISTERAmson Wood, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Chris
Wood, Pomeroy, and Adam Wolfe, son or Mary
Dempsey, Chester, at center, were selected the
1994 Little Miss and Mister Meigs County in
competition Wednesday afternoon. lo'lanking the
winners, from left, are runnersup Sarah Dawn
Jenkins, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Steve Jenkins, Rutland; Rebecca Hanstine, daughter or

Harness Radng
Friday 12:00 noon.
Thursday, August 18 (Senior Ctll1eno Day untll2:00 p:m.)

Assorted Varieties
12 12-ounce cans

SEVEN
UP

••

I

Top choice in antique tractors

This cub tractor was first
displayed at the Meigs County
Fair in 1947 by the Meigs
Equipment Co. or Pomeroy.lt
was the first "cub" tractor to
arrive in Meigs County and
was purchased by the late
Homer Rice, father or Denver
Rice, seen above, and has
always been in the Rice family. The tractor is now completely restored, Rice said.
"Sitting idle for IS years
with a hair tank or gas, a big
muddauber's nest in the distributor cap; valves stuck in
the valve guides, and many
other things that happened
over a 47-year time span,
added a lot or problems to the
restoration process," says
Rice. And now that it is completely restored, he admits to
more than a little attachment
to the tractor which Wednesday won him the Judge's
Choice trophy in antique tractors.
At right is Dale and JoAnn
Kautz with their two-horse
walking plow, winner or the
Judge's Choice trophy for a
single piece or antique equipment
It is just one or 14 pieces
displayed by the Kautz's.
They have a two horse sixshovel cultivator, circa 1915, a
corn sheller patented in 1852,
hand powered grinders, and
special potato plows. The
entire display, also won a
Judge's Choice award. (Sentinel photos by Charlene Hoenich)

..

Valerie Hanstine, Pomeroy, and Tom Hanstine,
Belpre; Wood and Wolfe; Andrew Bissell, son or
Todd and Diana Bissell, Long Bottom· and
Tyler Little, son or Dale and Sherri Little
Pomeroy. Selection was made by a panel or out:
of-town-judges. The contest was sponsored by
Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport, with Michl
King presenting the gifts to the winners.

Meigs County Fair
4:00 p.m.
4:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.

2 Seetiono, 12 Pageo 35 cent.
A Multimedia lne. N-•paJ*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 18, 1994

Crime bill opponents
change their stance

U.S. Government Inspected
Fryer Parts

ULTRA
TIDE

en tine

·,

CHICKEN
LOVERS
·CHOICE
Park Farms

Powdered Laundry Detergent•With Bleach
(47 oz.) or Regular or Unscented•18 Uses

Low tonight In 60s, partly
cloudy. Friday pu rtly sunny,
high In upper 80s.

7:30p.m.
8:00p.m
12:00 Midnight

Hill Stage- Junior Fair Talent Show
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Hill Stage- Junior Fair Kiddie Goun:s
Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by Open Oass Sheep
Show- Show Arena
Antique Tractor Pull and Local Yokel Truck Pull
Ronnie McDowell- Grandstand
Gates Oose

9:00a.m.
JI:OOa.m.
12:00noon
!2:30p.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:30p.m
7:30p.m
12:00 Midnight

Friday, August 19
Pet Show- Sbow Arena
Junior Fair Dog Obcdieii&lt;C Sbow- Show Arena
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Ht1111eaa Rtw:ing
Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Sbow Arena
Hlll Stage- Back Porch Swing Band
Hlll Stage- Belle~ and Beaus
Truclt &amp; Semi Pull
GateaOose

See You At The
1994 Meigs County Fair

Two will split
$30 million
Lotto jackpot
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
owners of two Super Lotto tickets
will soon have a lot of spare
change in their pockets.
That's because they'll be splitting the $30 million jackpot from
Wednesday night's drawing.
The winning numbers were 4, 6,
22, 28, 33 and 44.
The lottery said both tickets
were bought in northeast Ohio, one
in the Trumbull County town of
Cortland and the other in Cuyahoga
Falls, near Akron.
One player chose to take the
prize in 26 annual before-taxes
insmUments of $576,923, while the
other opted for a discounted lumpsum cash payment of $6.7 million.
When the Ohio Lottery
announced on Sunday that the
Super Lotto jackpot would rise to
$30 million for Wednesday's drawing, sales started to increase as
well, to say the least. L&lt;Jttery officials estimated that Super Lotto
sales sizzled at $15,000-a-minute
on Wednesday,

FEED RUN WINNERS - Glen and Eric
Tuttle of Racine haul in bales of hay and bags of
reed in the draft horse feed run. Eric is the

younger man.
team or mules outpaced
rour other teams to win this race. (Sentinel
photo by George Abate)

Draft horses dodge competition obstacles
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Draft horses dodged and weaved
their way through cones and other
obstacles Wednesday at the Meigs
County Fair.
The competition forced the
horses and their drivers to balance
each step to stay within the lines
while completing a circuit in the
shortest amount of time.
While a drizzle hampered the
early contests, the skies cleared and
each team of horses and mules
hitched and rehitched competing in
log pulls, obstacle courses and feed

runs.
The log pull forced the team of
two horses or mules to pull a 10foot-long log in figure-eight fashion through cones. If a horse team
stepped outside the lines it would
be penalized.
Stan dings in the log pull were:
first, Marlesia Bovin of Athens:
second, Chuck Whittington of
Albany; third, Glen Tuttle of
Racine: fourth, Bolton Farms of
Logan; fifth, Lester Parker of
Pomeroy: sixth, Roger Hoffman of
Pomeroy; and seventh, Eric Tuttle
of Racine.

The feed runs required a team of
two people to drop bales of hay
inside targ_eted areas and bags of
feed mto bms. Dunng a return trip,
the teems then had to pick the
ttems up on a small sled balancing
the items.
Standings in the feed run were:
ftrst, Glen Tuttle and Eric Tuttle of
Racine; second, Bolton Farms of
Logan; third, Chuck Whittington
and Charlotte Whittington of
Albany; fourth, Marlesia Bovin and
Toby Curtis; ftfth, Roger Hoffman
and Sally Ervin.
trnntln.,Ad nn Pa..,,.. '\\

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l'ublisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Daily
tbt: Amcri&lt;.:un Newspaper Publisher Association

Press Association and

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou ld be less tban 300
words long . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name.
address and lelephone number. No unsigned letter&gt; will be published. Leiter&gt;
sbould he in good taste, addressing issues. not perso nalities .

Too few jobs? No,
too few workers
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP llusiness Analyst
NEW YORK - A falling unemployment rate such as we have had
over the pas! year is almost universally though t of as good news. A warning: The news isn'1 all it seems to be. . . .
.
.
One of the basic reasons for the llcdmmg JObless rate ts the slow mg of
growth in the labor force. Why is that growth slowing? Because the num ber of new JOb seekers IS barely growmg at all.
In short, says Alan Reynolds, a researcher who has dug into the .~rob­
lcm: " We arc running shon of w1lhng workers, not short of JObs. We
arc heading for a worker shonage if mancrs aren'tcorrected.
This is a another of those stories about well-mtentJOned government
programs that may restdt in more problems than solutions. It is the story
of a incentives runnmg m reverse to d1scourage people. from work mg ..
Such people have a perfectly rational reason for thw dectston: It m1ght
not pay to work. In some instances, it might actually pay not to work,
because to work means to Jose the financial and other benefits of not
working.
. . . . .
.
The consequences arc worse thru1 merely ICOniC, 1rntaung and unfrur.
Left unchecked, the situation will weaken JOb product1v1ty and compelltivcncss, and inevitably lead to living standards far below cxpectatmns.
The scenario is laid out in chilling clarity by Reynolds, who duects
economic research at the Hudson Institute, a nonprofit think tank that
prides itself on being not just academic and analytic but operational and
practical.
.
.
Reynold~ points out that the share of workmg-age population that was
working or seeking work rose dunng the 1980s, from 63.8 percent m
1980 to 66.5 percent in 1989, and then stopped nsmg ..
As the Congressional Budget Office observes, smce 1990 there has
been an outright decline in participation mtcs for workers aged 16 to 24,
and a llanening in the participation rates or women 25 to 44.
Based on this evidence, the slowdown m labor-force growth seems to
be among "secondary workers," a terrnthat shouldn't imply their work is
unimportant but that it supplements a pnmary mcome.
Why arcn 't such people working? Because, says Reynolds, secondary
income jobs are highly sens1Uvc to margmal tax rates on added fam1ly
income and to government transfer payments that decrease when earned
.
.
income rises.
In short, otherwise willing workers choose not to work. Soctal Secunty
recipients, for example, whose benefits arc cut if they earn beyond a tnvial sum. More important, recipients of the Earned Income Tax Cred1t or
EITC.
.
.
The EITC was expanded in 1986 and 1993 10 prov1de checks to a
greater number of low-income families with children. This subsidy falls
rapidly, however, and is replaced by income and Soc1al Secunty taxes, if
income rises.
.
The Congressional Budget Office explains that the EITC disappears m
the low $20,000 range for a couple with two children. Beyond that •. they
lose about 21 percent of EITC payments for each dollar of addllwnal
income earned.
To quote the CBO: "Added to the IS percent individual income tax
and the Social Security payroll tax of 7.65 percent on both employees and
employers, the total marginal tax rate on these fam1hes 1s JUSt over 49 percent."
d' · al
Says Reynolds: "The prospect of losing 49 cents for every ad 1Uon
dollar earned must discourage many spouses and older ch1ldren from
working to add to family income."
.
.
.
EITC is but one example. Several other mcenllves not to work ex1st at
the lower end of the income scale, and there are numerous others ~~ the
opposite end, often discouraging youngsters and spouses from adding to
family income.
.
.
For example, the 1990 tax bill phased out. ccrtam dcducllons and
e•emptions for two-earner families with a combmed mcome of $!08,450
while leaving them on the books for those earnmg less. Other d•smcentivcs also were imposed.

Berry's World

K

d

k

. . . ·
,
multiple, duphcauvc en me pre, enlion programs ran~mg fr~n ~he
mcntonous (e.g .•. mldmght as ~tball for wner-clly youth) to l e
indefensible, notably S!Om llllOn
for crime. studi es at a university
near the dlstnct of House JudiCiary
Chairman Jack Brooks, D-Tc~s.
Meanume, accordmg t~ mceton scholar (and Democrat) John
DilullO, urban areas With hl~h
cnme rates Will reCCJvc 20 or fc\\~r
full-tunc cops each under t c
pohce-fundlng mechamsm.'" the
b1ll, wh1ch spreads money &lt;~round
generously to suburbs and rural
areas.
.
.
. .
Instead of 1mprovmg the bill m
conference, the Clmton White
House (Jlan late last week was s•mply to f1ghtto tum around the eight
votes necessary to pass the same
rule that was defeated, 225 to 210,
ortoseparateoutthebanonassault
weapons that cost the btl! 40 or so
Democraucvotes.
Accordwg to th e plan, the
admm1stratmn and ~e Democrauc
lcadersh1p wouldn t th en seck a
separate vote to pass the assauli
ban, which might embarrass some
Democrats, but wstead would
make a 1994 cam pa1gn tssue of
fadurc to ban assault weapons,
tymg Republicans to the NRA .

IToledo I 85' I

Maybe the plan will work politically ~ the NRA provides an invit ing target _ but it still gives
America a crime bill that won't
really make cities safer Swings
from add-on prevention pr~gram s
shou ld be used to fully fund the
ROTC -like Police Corps, creating
college opportuniti es for urban
youth .
In addition, Dilulio says, instead
of spending $1.3 billion on "drug
courts" that provide ineffective
outpatient treatment for first-time
drug offenders, the government
should provide intensive treatment
for prison inmates, who can be
freed from drug dependency.
Diiulio says that the pri son building section of the bill also
cou ld be improved by offering
states an incentive to make a real istic increase in the lime pri soners
spend in jail - currently, an averageof40perccntofthcirsentcnces
~ instead of demanding that they
meet an unreali stic 85 percent
level.
On health care, Clinton is facet!
with almost certain defeat of both
the Mitchell and Gephardt bills.
House leadership sources say the
Gcphardt measure is 40 to 50 votes
shan of the 2!8 needed to pass.
Late last week, six Democratic
senators had declared themselve s
opposed to Mitchell's bill, with
several other moderate and conscrvative Democrats leaning against
him . If he loses two of those , he 'll
lose his bill, even if one Republi can joins him and Vice President
Gore is on hand to break a tiC.
Well-connected health care lobbyists say that Mitchell's main
problem is not the trigger imposing
state employer mandates if all
workers don't have health insurance by the year 2000, but onerous
regulatory items such as government-set premium caps, require ments that HMOs hire any doctor
willing to accept their fees. and
state health alliances.
Clinton needs to step in personally and work out a deal between
Mitchell and Dole, and then sell it
to Hous e Democrats . In other
....,ords, Clinton needs to do more
than fight his enemies to be a successful, winning president. He
needs to tell hi s allies to do the
right thing.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

How should the media cover zealots?
In an eerie coincidence, I happened to pick up a copy of the
February issue of GQ magazine
last month while waiting for a male
friend to try on pants in a
menswear department.
I read Tom Junod's article "The
Abortionist,'' a profile of eccentric,
69-year-old, bulletproof-vest-wearing abortion doctor Dr. John
Bayard Britton and Paul Hill, the
40 -year-o ld ex-minister who
stalked Brinon and his volunteer
escort, retired Air Force Lt. Col.
James Barren, 74. Two days later I
could hardly believe my eyes when
I picked up the newspaper and
learned that Briuon and Barrel! had
been shot to death and Hill charged
with their murder.
Like so many cases where
zealots go over the edge - David
Koresh, Jim Jones, several white
supremacist survivalists, to name a
few ~ their mounting madness
increases in direct proportion to the
amount of attention given them.
"All of a sudden, the media
made him a celebrity," National
Conference of Catholic Bishops
spokeswoman Helen AI vare, who
debated Hill on a December edition
of Ted Koppel's "Nightline," told

The New ·York Times recently.
''After the broadcast, all the prolifers we work with day to day
were saying, 'Who was that guy?

Sarah Overstreet
Where did he come from?"'
So to alert the rest of us to danger fomenting, the media is left in
the unenviable position of fomenting the danger funher. The bubbleoff-plumb folks rise to the challenge of their own publicity and
become the violent martyrs/heroes
they believe their new images
demand.
It's a real Catch-22. Of course
we have to document the scary elements in our society. But as a journalist who follows the abortion
debate closely, I wonder if documentaries on people like Hill
would have as much impact if they
were not given so much play at the
expense of pro-life's moderate,
normal members and activities?
Would a Paul Hill command so
much attention if some of us in the
media didn't have a preconceived
stereotype of the rad1cal fringe as
ic'ons of the anti-abortion move-

ment, and neglected reporting on
pro-life's other soldiers and elements'!
I can't answer that, but! am certain that Hill is not the prototypical
pro-lifer. The fact that so many of
us believe he is !roubles me: Peter
Steinfels, writing in the "Beliefs'.'
column in The New York Times
recently, drew an apt parallel to the
antiwar movement of a generation
ago:
Then, the cry was "Hey, hey,
LBJ, how many kids did you kill
today?" instead of "Baby killers!"
and "Mommy, please don't kill
me." Protesters blew up buildings
and commiued other acts of violence in the name of peace. A
speaker at a 1970 Boston rally told
his listeners, ''If you want peace,
pick up the gun!"
That powerful image of American liberalism as speaking out of
both sides of its mouth has bedeviled liberals for an entire generation.
Steinfels also includes some
interesting and little-known information gleaned from a 1990 Gallup
survey: Respondents identifying
themselves as anti-abortion "were
more likely to say they were 'very

concerned' about poverty, racial
discrim inatio.n and nuclear war
than were individuals supporting
abortion rights." Hardly the cal lous women-and-poor-child-ignor- .
ing group they've been portrayed
to be.
Steinfels also discusses a book
titled, "Before the Shooting
Starts," which debates the question
of whether democracy can survive
the polarizing differences between
anti-abortion and pro-choice forces .
How the media covers this controversy wi II mean as much to
answering that question as it did to
the antiwar movement.
Twenty-six years after the 1968
Democratic Convention, antiwar
protesters are no longer considered
the lunatic fringe and violence for
any reason is unacceptable in the
peace movement. For the same
thing to happen to the abortion
debate may be the best we can
hope for.
Copyright1994 NEWSPAPER
ENlERPRISE ASSN.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact
America Online by calling 1-800827-6364, ext. 8317.)

The problem isn't more people

.
~by

~
NEA. Ine

"Look' The clothes have no emperor.

What follows may sound like tion Conference scheduled for are bearing only 1.3 children per
some facts you may have read in Cairo in September.
woman. Japan is at 1.5 . Korea at
It is a very interesting docd- 1.7, which is the aggregate rate for
this column over the years:
"Population is growing more ment. It maintains that world popu- the "More Developed Regions.")
slowly than previously expected in
It is through calculations like
both the more developed and less
this that the U.N. gets to its near- !0
developed regions.''
Ben Wattenberg billion tigure that we will hear
"Between 1990 and 1994,
trumpeted by the population
world population grew at 1.57 peralarmists.
That level, we will be
cent per annum, significantly lation will grow to 9.8 billion peo- told, will threaten the world as we
ple
by
the
year
2050
in
its
"medibelow the 1.73 per annum at which
lcnow it, replete with famine, pollupopulation has been growing for um fertility-variant projection."
tion, species decimation and war.
(And
a
flat
!0
biUion
in
2054,
they
the past decade and a half.''
(Of course, there are tragic wars
say.)
It
gets
to
that
figure
in
curious
"The population of Eastern
ways,
including
setting
the
"medion in places with both growgoing
Europe has declined by !.1 million
ing
populations,
and wid1 shrinking
um"
criteria
well
too
high,
as
persons between 1990 and 1994."
"Evidence increases that a detailed in an earlier column. populations - Rwanda and
broad-based fertility decline may Moreover, U.N. sratisticians main- Bosnia, for example.)
A more realistic estimate is a
have begun in Sub-Saharan tain that the global medium variant
Total
Fertility
Rate
(lifetime
births
top
global population of about 7
Africa."
per
woman)
in
the
growing
nwnber
billion
to 8 billion people by 2050,
"New data indicate that a rapid
of
modem
countries
will
GO
UP
which
may
then actually proceed to
fertility transition is occurring in
decline
moderately.
That will occur
substantially
from
now
to
2050!
Iran .... Past fertility declines are
continuing in Bangladesh, India This, mind you, in a world (today) in a world growing wealthier, some
where fertility is falling rapidly of which wealth will be used to
and Nepal.''
provide technology to reduce pollueverywhere!
The strange thing about these
tion.
U.N
.
They
Why?
Ask
the
quotes is that they do not come
Now, this is not to say that in
believe
that
countries
will
somefrom anti-alarmists like me, but
how
not
allow
their
fertility
rates
to
some
areas of the world population
from a new United Nations press
release, issued in conJunction with stay below the "replacement rate" growth is not a problem. It is; proba new data volume, • World Popu- of 2.1 children per woman. But just ably of a minor-to-moderate
lation Prospects: I994 Revision." about every modem country in the • dimension. Such was the concluThat data collection, in turn, is world now has such below replace- sion of a distinguished panel of the
me.nt rates. (Italians and Germans National Academy of Science some
de~i~ned to serve the U.N. Popula-

"'
•

•

The Rarely Herd Band of
Athens will lead the entertainment
at Racine's annual Fall Festival to
be held Sept. 10 at the village's
Star Mill Park.
Also performing will be the
River Valley Boys of Lancaster,
the Dixieland Jazz Band of Athens
and Meigs County's own Middle branch Bluegrass Band.
Middlebranch will kick off and
end the entertainment with perfor
mances at noon and 7 p.m. The
Rarely Herd w1ll play at 1:30 and
5:30 p.m. The River Valley Boys
and the Dixieland Jazz Band will
play at 3 and 4 p.m., respectively .
A pumpkin growing contest will
be held with trophies awarded to
the largest three pumpkins in each
of two age groups, 0-18 and 19 and
older. In addition, a kiddie tractor
pull will be held at4 p.m.

•

Clinton will fight for crime bill
M

eMULTIMEDIA,INC

Racine slates bands
for annual fall festival

Page-2· The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 181 1994

.
People sa y that Bill Clin.ton delayed-trigger mechantsm to prodocsn't fight for anythtng. Its a v1de umversal coverage by the year
ridiculous charge, given the past 2000.
.
banles over his cconomtc program
Alternauvely, he could work for
and NAFTA and the lon g list of
e nemie s he' s made. Now, the
House's defeat of his crime bill and
OT(On On TaC e
the pro spec t that Congress will
reject hi s health care reform bill a measure resembling the House
give him another chance to prove bipartisan bill sponsored by Reps.
the charge is wrong . . .
.
Roy Rowland, D-G a., Mike BiliClinton ca n and Will fight hke rakis, R-Ra., Jim Cooper, D-Tenn.,
hdl . for a crime bill (with the and Fred Grandy, R-lowa, adding a
Nauonal R1flc Assoc1at1on and Mitchell -like trigger for employer
Hou se Republican leaders as his mandates.
foils) and for un1versal health care,
One reason Clinton is losing his
but he also needs to be smart, top legislative priorities is that he
which involves compromising with let congressional Democrats work
his adversaries.
th eir wi ll with minimal White
Specifically , Clinton ought to House invol vement. As a result, the
cut as much pork as possible out of crime bill grew fat with Great Socithe defeated cri me .bill and usc it to ety add-ons and both leadership
pay fm community policing, meet- hea lth bills, Mitchell 's and Rep .
ing the legitimat~ Rep~blican Dick Gephardt 's, D-Mo., were
objeCtiOn that the ongmal btl! actu- freighted with bureaucracy.
ally paid for 20,000 full-time
When the House Education and
police, not the 100,000 Clinton Labor Committee last year threatclaimed.
ened to turn Clinton's education
And on health care, he ough1 to standards bill into a liberal spendengineer a deal to pass a measure ing measure, Clin ton threatened to
that resembles Senate Mmonty veto his own bill if its soul wasn't
Leader Bob Dole's, R-Ka~ .. pro- restored. He should have done the
posal in 1ts admuustrat1ve s1mphc1- same with crime.
ty and adds Senate MaJonty Leader
The bill that emerged from a
George Mi tchcll' s, D- Mame, House-Senate conference contains

few years ago. Moreover, I believe
the advanced nations should help
individuals everywhere to control
their own reproduction as they sec
fi~ just as we America~s have such
a right. I even think America
should pay for some of it
But what we wiU hear from now
to Cairo is souped-up harumscarum driven mostly by environmentalists and U.N . officials.
Whf They are seeking - what
else. - a higher spot on the global
agenda and more funds for their
programs.
I had the honor of serving on the
U.S. delegation to the last U.N.
Population Conference in Mexico
City in 1984. Believe me, it ends
up more as public relations event
than policy conference.
The alarmist, gloom-and-doom
argument has been going on for
decades, even thou~h the predicted
cataslrophes haven t happened, are
always pushed out further into the
future, and keep changing (from
"ice age" to "global warming").
In fac~ by most serious measures,
the world has done preuy well
while th~ population "exploded."
I beheve we shall survive and
prosper. If we don't, it won\ be
hf.r.~usr. nf 'on manv h\lm~Jl l\Pinuc::,

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

•

PA.

IND

• lColumbus ls6' I

B6'

•

Craft and food booths will be
available when the festival opens at
I 0 a.m. Parade line up will be at
10:30 with the parade to stan at II
Crowning of d1e festival queen and
princess will be at 11:30.
All activities will be at Star Mill
Park. Anyone wishing to set up a
craft booth should contact Chris
Smith at Home National Bank.
Fees arc $10 for a 10-foot space
and $15 for a 20-foot space and can
be paid in advance at the bank .
People wanting to se t up a food
booth should also contact Smith. A
limited number of electric outlets
will be available . Set-up will stan
at8 a.m.
More information will be availabk as schedu lin g permitS. For
mformation contact Sam Pi ckens at
949-2670 or Kathryn llart at 949 2656.

Horse pull results listed
Ice

Swny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
01994 Accu-Weath~. Inc.

Vta AssociaiiJd Pr9SS Graphir:sN91

Typical August weather
to prevail through Friday
By The Associated Press
Typical mid-August weather is
on tap for Ohio, forecasters said.
Most of the state will see panly
cloudy skies with highs in the midHas on Friday. Scanered showers
and thunderstorms are possible in
northern Ohio.
Skies will be partly cloudy
tonight over all but the northwest.
where clouds will build up in
advance of an approaching upperlevel disturbance. A few showers
or thunderstorms may slip into the.
area by daybreak_ Lows will be 60-.
65.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees in 1940
while the record low was 48 in
1962. Sunset tonight will be at8:25
p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:47
a.m.

Weather forecast:
Today ... Patchy dense fog until
mid morning ... Otherwise partly
sunny. Highs from around 80
extreme northeast to the middle 80s
southwest.
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. A
c hance of showers or thunderstorms northwest ohio toward daybreak. Lows 60 to 65.
Friday ... Variable cloudiness
with a chance of showers or thunderstorms north. Partly sunny cenlral and south. Highs from the
lower 80s northeast to the upper
80s southwest
Extended forecast:
Saturday ... A chance of showers
or thunderstorms. Lows 65 to 70
and highs 80 to 85.
Sunday and Monday ... Fair.
Lows 55 to 65 and highs 75 to 80.

Meigs announcements
Christian School sets open bouse
The Rejoicing Life Christian
School will hold an open house
from 12-2 p.m. Sunday. Public is
welcome.
Hillel Church reunion
The Hazel Community Church
will host a homecoming dinner at
noon Sunday at the church. Bring a
covered dish and guest singer
Linda Danewood will come.
lnservice to be held
There will be an inservice on
Aug. 22 at Southern Junior High at
9 a.m. for the staff of Racine and
Letart Elementaries. Lunch will be
provided. Any teachers from Syracuse or Portland Elementary
Schools are also invited to attend.
Weekend revival to be held
Zion Church of Christ, Route
143, will be holding a weekend
revival Friday through Sunday, 7
p.m. each evening. Don Kennedy
will be the speaker and there will
be special music. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m. Sunday; potluck at non,
afternoon program 2 p.m. Public
invited by Roger Watson, paootor_
Ice cream social announced
Columbia Township Volunteer
Fire Department Auxiliary will
have ice cream social Aug. 28, 4 to

Draft horse
(Continued from Page I)
The mens' obstacle race standings were: fll'lit, Bolton Farms; second, Chuck Whiuington; third,
Glen Tuu!e; founh, Eric Tuttle; and
fifth, Toby Curtis.
The womens' obstacle race was
won by Marlesia Brown and Pam
Parker of Pomeroy finished second.

Tlu~

Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ-IIA)

Publiabcd . every afternoon, Monday lhrougli

Friday, t tt Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio by !he
Ohio Valley Publilhioa CompuyiMultimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-:HS6.

Scroad clul poataae paid 11 Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: lbe A&amp;lotllled Preu, 111d the Ollkl
Newtpllpa' Allociation, National Adwrtisiq
Repruentalive. Bruhlm NewJplfiPer Sales,

733 Third Aveuue, New York. New Ycwt
10017.

8 p.m. at fuehouse on State Route
143 near Carpenter.
Southern Schools delay opening
Southern Local School students'
fU'St day will be Sept 6 because of
an asbestos abatement program at
the senior high school, Southern
Superintendent Bobby Ord said.
Teachers will meet Sept 2. Vocational students will leave the high
school at 8: 15 a.m. and return at
3:!5 a.m., beginning Aug. 29, he
added_

Richard Douglas of Coolville
and KeiUl Allender of Cambndge
won first place honors in the
lightweight and heavyweight class,
respective! y, at the Mc1gs County
Fair Horse Pull Wednesday mght.
Douglas was presented a trophy
in memory of his father, the late
Hank Douglas, and halters donated
by McCullough Drugs. Allender
received a trophy in memory of the
late Clarence "Tommy" Henderson
and halters by Warner Heating and
Cooling. The trophies were nrc-

scnted by family member s of the
deceased .
In addition, the two each won
$ ISO prizes.
Other winners included, in order
by class: lightweight - Bob
Young of Uricksv illc ($125), Bob
Midkiff of Shade ($ 11 5), McGuire
and Sons of Bidwell ($95); heavyweight - C.L. Mitchell of Georgetown, Ky. ($125), Dick Shriver of
Bidwell ($115), Bob Klamforth of
Canal Winchester ($95).

Water firm cites concerns,
but not appealing pulp plant
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- West Virginia-American Water
Co. filed a letter with the state
Division of Environmental Protection· expressing concerns about a
proposed pulp mill in Mason County.
However, it did not appeal the
waste water discharge and mdustrial landfill permits the state agency
has issued to Apple Grove Pulp &amp;
Paper Co.
Apple Grove Pulp is awaitin~ an
air pollution P.ermit for the m1ll 1t
wants to butld beside the Ohio
River near Apple Grove. The company is owned by Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y.
Opponents are concerned about
dioxin from the 600-worker plant.
Apple Grove Pulp says releases of
dioxin, a toxic byproduct of paper
bleaching, will be too infinitesimal
to notice.
In a letter of public comment,
West Virginia-American Water
expressed concern that the $1.1 bil lion mill, 23 miles upstream from

Dance to be held
Round and square dancing will
be held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
8 to I I p.m. Saturday. CJ. and the
Country Gentlemen.

Huntington, could taint the source
of the city's drinking water.
"One cannot assume that these
limits will be met at all times.
Thus, degradation of the stream
water quality is quite poss ible,"
said the lener wriuen by Thomas
Holbrook, the company's water
quality director.
Eli McCoy, deputy director of
the division, said he stands by his
agency's work .
"This permit is extremely protective of the water quality standards," he said Wedncslhly .
McCoy said Huntington's drinking water already is protected by
tough standards for plant releases
into the Ohio.
Huntington Mayor Jean Dean
filed a letter of suppon for d1c pulp
mill.
"While no one wishes to sec an
environmentally unsound project
perrniued ... I believe that Parsons
&amp; Whittemore is prepared to comply with safe and sensible regulations," Dean wrote.

EMS units log six calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reported six calls for assistance
Wednesday. Units responding
included:
BASHANVFD
9:14 p.m., assisted Racine Vol-

Sayre reunion set Sunday
The descendants of Martin and
Emma Roush Sayre will meet at
noon Sunday at Star Mill Park in
Racine.
Wesleyan Bible school
The Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Church, 75 Pearl St, Middleport,
will hold a vacation Bible school
from 7-8:30 p.m. Aug. 22-26. All
are welcome.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................_.30 1/4
Akzo ·-...................................... 62 718
Ashland 011 ........................... .37 1/8
AT&amp;T ,_, ............_................... .52 7/8
Bank One_,_,,._,_..,. ................ .33 718
Bob Evans ............................... l9 718
Champion Ind ........................22 1/2
Charming Shop........................S 3/4
City "'oldlng,__ .,,_ .................33 1/2
Federal Mogul ..........._.. ................ 28
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................34 114
K-mart-...-............................. 17 718
Lands End .............................. ISS/8
Limited lnc................................... 20
Multimedia Inc_ ...................29 1/16
Point Boncorp ......... _....--.. -...........17
Reliance Electric .......................... 20
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... IS 1/2
Shoney's Inc ................................. 14
Star Bank ----.........................41 718
Wendy lnt'L ........................... 16 1/4
Worthington lnd ......_............. l9 3/4
Stork reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of
Galllpolls.

Sorority to meet
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will have
a progressive dinner Aug. 25
beginning at 6 p.m. at Carol
Adams' home in Syracuse.

County board
approves bus
driver, salaries
James Stout was approved as a
school bus driver for the Eastern
Local School District at this week's
meeting of· the Meigs County
Board of Education.
The board also adopted a salary
schedule for certified employees.
The same base pay was approved
although the board added two additional steps for pay increases, 17
years and 22 years. Non-cenified
employees were given a 2-1/2 percent salary increase.
1bose two items were not earliec
reported from the meeting of the
MeigsBoanl.

untcer Fire Department with structure fire on Old Portland Road.
MIDDLEPORT
8:10p.m., West Main Street,
Pomeroy, Holly Green, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
9:30 p.m. , Park Street, Bert
Peters, VMH.
RACINE
7:21 a.m., Cross Street, Harry
Hughes, VMH;
9:12 p.m., volunteer fire depanment and squad, Old Portland
Road, structure fire at John Coffman residence, treated at the scene
were Mathew Richards, Damon
Fisher, Boyd Bailey and Ralph
Fisher.
SYRACUSE
9:21 p.m., assisted Racine with
structure fire on Old Portland
Road.

. , Cant .. 81' Motor ......,
Ooe Week ................................................ .SI-'0

-lh. ...............................................$6.9S

0"
Ooe Y............................................ SINGLICOPY

..$83.20

PRICI

Doily......................................... _ _ ]S Ceob
Sublc:ribcn uot cbiriq to pay the Clfricr may
remit Ia 84vaoce dim:t to The o.Hy Seatinel
011 I tbree, Iii or 12 IDOIIth bali&amp;. Credit Will be
.; vea Clfrier each week.

No IUbJCripUODI by mail permitted ill
-bomeani&lt;l' oenk:ella•all&gt;ble.

•eu

MoliS.bouY'=

lnoldoM.... c_,.

n w..a......................................... -.....$21.14
26 ................................................ .$43.16
S2 W«b ..... _......................................... .$14.76
O.UW.MdpC..IJ
tl
.$23.40

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

s
A
oRAL
T
E
L
:t~ ·.
L '· It; \

~

ROBERTS~

.c;b

2 8 -.........................................$45.50
62 w-.........................................sae.o10

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions William Reitmire, Pomeroy;
Mamie Swauger, Middleport;
Benon Peters, Middlepon.
Wednesday discharges ~ none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 17 ~ Eliza­
beth Gillenwater, Roy Beanie,
Margaret Cavender.
Birth ~ Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Porter, son, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)
You will find !he phrase "God helps
!hose who help themselves" no! in th e
Bible but in Aeso~·s Fables. Actually,
Ae sop said "the gods,'' but otherwist
it's the same saying

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

THE FLINSTONES PG
STARTING FRIDAY
MEL GIBSON, JODIE FOSTER,
JAMES GARDNER
IN

MAVERICKPG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2-00
44~

""'*""'"9

Harness Racing
Friday 12:00 noon.

TltE
Thursday,
4:00p.m.
4:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.

1·800-277-8212
~l · ~·
t 11 :::: nun-.-n.,-.-Rn

7:30p.m.
8:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Meigs County Fair Special

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

s2oooo .

INSIAllED

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

QUALm WINDOW SYSTEMS
110 COURT ST.
992-4119

RESERVE CHAMP PULLET- Bill South won reserve champion pullet.

AND

POSThtASJER: Seod lddra&amp; dlllllle&amp; to The

Daily Seotioet. Ill Co1KI St. Pomeroy. Ohio
•S769
SVBSCIIIPI10N RATII:s

RESERVE CliAMP FANCY POULTRY- Odie Karr, of Busy
Reavers, won reserve champion fancy poultry.

POMEROY, OHIO

1-BOG-291·5600

9:00a.m.
II :00 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
4:30p.m.
5:00 p.Dl
5:00p.m.
6:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
12:00 Midnight

August 18 (Sealor Ciu- Day 11DUI2100 p.m.)

HiD Stag&amp;- Junior Fair Talent Show
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
HiD Stag&lt;&gt;- Junior Fair Kiddie GatiiOi
Junior Fair Sheep Sbow followed by Open Oau Sheep
Show - Show Arena
Antique Traclor Pull and Local Yol:el Truck Pull
Ronnie McDowell- Grandstand
GatesOose

Friday, August 19
Pet Show- Sbow Arena
Junior Fair Dog Obedience Sbow- Show Arena
Kidiie Tractor Pull- Show Arena
Harness Racing
Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
Hill Stag&lt;&gt;- Back Porch Swing Band
HiD Stag~ Belles and Beau•
Truck &amp; Semi Pull
GatesOo~~e

See You At The
1994 Meigs County Fair

I

�The Daily Se.ntinel

Sports

Thursday, August 18, 1994
Page~

Thursday, August 18, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

On baseball strike's seventh day,

Montreal, N.Y. Yankees first·to announce staff layoffs
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - As the baseball strike completes tiS fir~t week today, teams are starting to make
cutbacks.
The Montreal Expos became the first club to
announce layoffs, and the New York Yankees said
Wednesday that more than half their staff was sent on
vacation.
Thiny -five Expos employees put on vacation this
week will be laid off when their vacations end after
next week.
" After that, for the duration of the strike they will
collect unemployment,'' Expos spokesman Richard
Griffin said by telephone from Montreal. "They 're
mostly in the deparunents like the ticket office and
accounting , where there 's going to be the least activity
going on during a strike. They had been warned about
the possibility a couple of months ago. They were
officially notified last week ."
The Yankees sent slightly more than half of their
staff of about 100 on vacation, team spokesman Rob
Butcher said.
Butcher said the employees are taking as much

----- -- - - -.--- -------'.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

time off as they've accumulated. He said the Yankees
hadn't decided what to do with employees when vacations end.
The total of canceled games rose to 86 today,
matching the 1972 strike for the second-longest walkout behind 1981, when 712 games were wiped ouL
Union head Donald Fehr and management negoliator Richard Ravitch said Wednesday no negotiating
sessions were scheduled.
"We're maintaining contact with parties at all levels," mediator John Martin said by telephone from his
offic e in Boston . Asked when talks will resume,
Martin said: ''It's too tough to caU.''
Rep. James Traficant, an Ohio Democrat, said on
the noor of the House of Represenatives that negoliators should be locked in a room with no windows and
air conditioning, and should be fed "baked beans,
fried cheese, hard-boiled eggs and chocolate kisses."
" In eight hours, they'll be pleading, 'Play Ball!"'
Traficant said during his speech.
While phtyers remained at home, with many spending their days on golf courses, the minor leagues provided some unusual replacements.

Mujibur Rahman, a Bangladesht novelty store
owner who ga_med fame wnh hts .~ppearances on
"Late Show wtth Davtd Letterman, was stgned by
the Sioux City Explorers of the Nonhero League and
started Wednesda~ mght agamst the St. Paul Saints.
The 39-year-old nght-hander, whose store ts on the
same block as the Ed Sulhvan Theater where
Leuerman tapes his show, made one pttch - whtch
went over the head of St. Paul Samts batter Doug
Kimbler and catcher Tom Cardone - tn the
Explorers' 8-6, 13-inning win.
"It was the first time I have played baseb~ll ,"
Mujibur said. "I used to play soccer and croquet
On a more serious note, legtslauon was mtroduced
in the U.S. Senate to estabhsh a nauonal commtsston
that would regulate basebalL The btl! sponsored by
Sen. Dennis DeConcini, an Arirona Democrat, would
establish a five-member panel that would have one
player, one owner and three prestdenlllal appotntees.
The commission would have the power to submtt
labor disputes to binding arbitration and would be
given a $1 .5 miUion budget
"Once again, the players and the owners have

betrayed the American public and put thetr own selfinterests above those of the fans,'' DeConcini said.
"While developing this commiss ion, 1 envisioned a
panel which could act as an impartial commi ssioner of
the national pastime. Unfortunately, baseball does not
have a comm issioner at this time despite the repeated
promises to appoint one."
The negotiators, who haven' t met formally since
last Friday, were content not to sc hed ule a bargain ing
sess10n.
. "Is Dick happy7 " Fehr asked reporters during an
mterview in his office. "This is play in g out to his
scnpt. He ought to be pleased as Punch.''
. Fehr says owners arc attempting to break the umon,
glVlng players no cho ice but to strike because of a
threat to tmpose a salary cap after the season. He spent
Monday and T uesday speaking to congre ssmen constdenng legtslatton that would remove ba se ball' s
antitrust exemptiOn.
,
Ravttch satd the ruling execu ti ve council would
convene by telephone conference call today.

On the NFL training camp scene,
HURTLI NG HORSES- Tbe harness racers
are seen from the starter's car during the fourth
race, which Pomeroy's Ralph Calvert Jr. won.

Calvert, who owns and drives Our Miss Mandy,
finished second in the ninth race of tw&lt;&gt;-year-old
fiUies. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

DEAD HEAT- Two dead heats were tallied
at this year's harness races- tbe first time in tbe
fair's history. Pictured bere are, at left, Syracuse
resident Brooks Sayre, who rode Bye Bye Sidney,

and Ron Newhart, who rode Federal Sahbra,
along with the 1994 Horse Princess Susan
Grueser. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Harness racers carve niche in record books
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The morning rain ceased just in
tim e fo r hi sto ry- making at the
Meigs County Fa ir harness race ~
Wednesday afternoon. For the frrst
tim e in the 13 I years of the county
-: fair tw o ra ces finished in dead
: · he&lt;! IS.

·

The first race of the fair ended
in a tic between Bye Bye Sidney
and Federal Sahbra, driven by
Brook s Sayre and Joe Hensler
respec tively. Sayre, a Syracuse resident, went on to capture the stxth
race in this two-year-old colts and
geldings category . Bye Bye Sidney
is owned by Wtlma Styer of Waterford . Federal Sahbra, owned by
Roben Hensler of Wellston, placed
· founh in the sixth race. Captain 0
Captain, driven by Ty VanRhoden
and owned by Jim Coffman of
Prospect, placed second in the sixth
race.
. · · But Sayre's spoils did not end
: with this category. He also won the
.ninth race and placed fourth m the
founh race driving Here's Nukey,
· which is owned by Wilma Styer.
The other winner in this two-year. old filli es class was Our Mi ss

Mandy driven and owned by Ralph
Calvert Jr. of Pomeroy. Our Miss
Mandy placed fim in the fourth
race and second in the ninth race.
The other dead heat featured in
the fifth race was Terry VanRhoden, driving Noble Choice, and
Ron Newhart, driving Sky Streaker. Sky Streaker, owned by Johnny
and Shirley Stant of Circlevil-le.
also won the lOth race of two· yearold fillies. Noble Choice, owned by
Wilma Styer, placed second in the
lOth race.
The two-year-old colts and geldings raced second and seve nth.
Even More Better, driven and
owned by Ron Newhart of Marietta won both heats. Brew Master,
dr'iven by Terry VanRhoden and
owned by Diana Malone of Waterford, took second place in both
heats.
The three-year-old colts and
geldings raced third and eighth.
Crown Time Patriot, driven by Earl
Owings and owned by Esther
Crownover of McArthur, won the
third race. Over Pride, driven by
Dennis Reed and owned by Roben
Caudill of Circleville, finished sec-

·Timberwolves fire Lowe
owner Glen Taylor's summer
By MIKE NADEL
I
·
· tant
NEAPOLIS
(AP)
housec eantng were assts
MIN
and
Chuck
coaches
Jim
Brewer
Unable to stop his players from
d
Davisson.
bickering, unable to pro uc e
"I was willing to ride with
enough victories, unable 10 draw whatever (general manager) Jack
: enough fans, Sidney Lowe was McCloskey's decision was," said
· fired only 19 months after the Mm- Taylor, who on Aug. 5 agreed to
: nesota Timberwolves made htm the buy the troubled franchise from
: ·NBA's youngest head coach.
, original owners Marv Wolfenson
Also swept out Target Center s
(See LOWE on Page 5)
;:;~~: as part of new ...,_

ond in the third race . Hesadude,
driven by Don Spencer and owned
by Robert Pugh of, Barlow, won the
eighth race. Arnte s Bay, driven by
Terry VanRhoden and owned by
Jackson Wentz of Vincent, placed
second in the eighth race.

Quarter horse
races canceled
Quarter horse races scheduled
for Saturday at the !31st Meigs
County Fair have been canceled.
A lack of entries made the move
necessary. according to fair officials. Only nine horses were
entered for the races by the deadline.
·
With only that many entries, the
most in any one race would have
been three horses , with only two
races having that many, officials
explained. The other entrants were
lone ones at their respective distances.
It was reponed that the cost of
renting the six-horse starting ~ate
and of the photo finish servtces
remain the same, whether 10 races
or two races use them. Therefore,
the superintendents decided that the
expense of the races was not justified for so few participants.
Quarter horse racing officials
expressed appreciation to the fans
who have enthusiaslicaUy supported the event and to the businesses
who have sponsored trophies in
past years, and regret the lack of
mterest on the part of horsemen
which forced the cancellation of
the racing program.

,.,

OUTRIDER - DaoleUe Grueser, the harness
race outrider, parades tbe contestants in the fifth
race in front or tbe viewing stands. This race,

which featured two-year-old fillies, finished the
second dead heat of the day. (Sentinel photo by
George Abate)

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

Plummer gets to hit old teammates in Niners-Chargers bout
By The Associated Press
For San Francisco linebacker
Gary Plummer, it's an exhibition
game with some real meaning .
Also. Sa n Diego running back
Natrone Means.
For eight seaso ns, Plumm e r
plugged th e middle for the San
Diego Chargers. Tonight, he will
be on the other side when his 49ers
face the Chargers in an NFL preseason game.
"lt 's going to be exciting,
another reason to gel fired up about
a preseason game," Plummer said.
"These arc guys who at times you
played against in live scrimmage
sitl1ljtions, and there's a lot of bantering going on back and fonh over
the eight years that I was there. So
it's a chance for a couple of guys to
maybe get back at me."
One of those is Means, who
remembered when Plummer "used
to get on us rookies all the time.''
" It would be good to come
through and and give him what you
owe him,'' Means said.
Plummer, who now plays inside
linebacker for the 49ers, will catch
up with his old teammates at Jack
Murphy Stadium in one of two preseason games Thursday night. In
the other, the New England Patriots
play host to the Washington Redskins in Foxboro.
Means was a rookie last year,

and Harvey Ramer. "He hired Sid' ney and it was between them." .
McCloskey said the team, which
lost 55 of Lowe's 135 games by at
least 10 points, needed new direction . And, he said, he hoped to
name Lowe's replacement soon.
Training camp begins Oct. 6,
and the season starts less than a
month later.
Asked if it would be only a matter of days before the Timberwolves name their fourth head
coach $ince joining the NBA as an
expansion team in 1989,
McCloskey told WCCO-TV: "I
would like to talk minutes because
I think it's imperative the sooner
the better. But that's not going to

1·800·837·1 094

International League
standings

1994
GEO

METRO
56999
1985 FORD F150 4X4 ............................'6995
Only 47,000 mllu.

1992 S·10 EXT. CAB PICKUP ............'10,495
1992 DODGE DYNASTY "nice" .............. '9999
1982 BUICK LeSABRELDwm~~te,~~a~~t .......'3495
1991 OLDS CALAIS. Hurry! ................... '6995
1991 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ......... '13,995
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ........ '8995
1991 CHEV. CAVALIER ......................... '5995

L

.584
.492
.492
.459
.4 11

Monday's game

Transactions
Baseball
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1994
GEO TRACKER
"t11

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NOW

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of 93 &amp; 94
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RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
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Tolcdo(Oct) ............ S2 72

.ll2
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MONTREAL EXPOS : Named Bill
1.5
4
9
18

Wednesday's scores
Syncuae 1, Roc:he.uer 4, li
"in
Toledo 3, Pa wtuckct 0
Onawa 10, O uarlate 3
COlUMUUS 6, Norfolk 2

AD DEADLINE THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1994.
'

Norfolk al Richmond, 7 p.m.
Pawtucket al Toledo, 1 p.m.
Scranton-Wil.k.es-BUTC at Syracuse, 7
p.m.
Rochester al Onawa. comp. of ausp.
gam8. 6:05p.m.
Rochester at Ottawa,
COlUMBUS at Charlou.e, 7:30p.m.

Friday's games
Norfolk at Richmond, 1 p.m.
Pawtucket 11 Toledo, 7 p.m.
Sq-anton-Wilkes-Rarre at Syracuse, 7
p.m.
Rochester 11 Ottawa, 7:05p.m.
COLUMOUS at Charlou.e, 7:30p.m.

NFL exhibition slate
Tonight's games

Wuhington at New ~gland, 1 p.m.
San francilco at San Diego, 8 p.m.

National Bukelball Auoclalloo
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES·
Fut:d. Sidney Lowe, cou:h, and Jim Brewer and Quck D.1vWon, assilunt coachQ.

FootbaU
National Football Leaaue
DALLAS COWBOYS: Waived Tim
D.1nicl wide receiver; hme1 Parrish, offensive' udlc: Oresr. Scharp, tight end; Alfie Burch, ufety; lecith Wagna, tac~c;
Mark Muon, running back: Ga~n~l
O ladipo, ddcn~ive tackle; and Rtchte
CwuW.o)wn, pb&lt;Wckor.
DENvER BRONCOS: Waivod Shawn
M~ IJUartc:rblck, and Todd Jones, offc:n~ive lineman.
GREEN BAY PACKSRS : Wai..-ed
Kurt Wamer, quarterback ; Chules Arbuc.kle, light end; Adam Walkcs_, nmnin8
back; Daryl Fnzier, wide rccctvcr; and
JOOn Fillhcr, center. Claimed t...nce Zc:no,
center, off waivcn from tho Allanta Fal -

co"'

MIAMI DOLPHINS: W•ived Roben
Davis, come:rbtck.
SAN DIEGO CIIARGER.S: Slfned
John Kidd, punter. Waived Kcnl SuJivan,

punlc:J.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: W•i..-ed
Jerone Davi~m, fullback, and Rod Moore,
wide rece.iwr.
TAMPA BAY BUCANEERS:
Claimed Seou Sia10r1., kicker, off waiven
fn:m the New EnsJ.Uld Patriot~.

Azi7.ona 11 Detroil, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta at CLEVFLAND, 7:30p.m.

Green Bay at New Orlcan~, 8 p.m.

Saturday's games

lndiliUpoliJ II Pittabwah. 6 p.m
Tampe lJay 11 Miami, 1 p:m.
CINCINNATI at Phlladelphi1, 7:30
p.m.
BufJalo n. HouJlon at S111. Antonio, 8
p.m.
N.Y. Giarw alN.Y. Jet~, I p.m.

..•

Domilator Batteries
Prices good with exchange
Everyday Low Pr!ce

Bo ni ol their top kicker by l: uttin g
ht s compet1tor, R1 chi e Cunning ham .
Dolphins
John Offerdahl, the oft- inJured
middle lineback er so cr ucial to
Miami's defensive prowess in th e
past, signed an in ce ntiv e- lade n
contract.
Broncos
Quarterback Shawn Moore was
cut by Denver, leavin g Tommy
Maddox and Hugh Millen as John
r lway' s backups.

Sublaro

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Tonight's games

Friday's games

ASK FOR DAVE OR BOB

Gelven, director of player dev~lopment,
and Ne.tl Huntington auistant director of
pbyer development . Fired Ken_t Qualls ,
director of minor league ope~uona : and
Henn Sturctte, director of mmor league
ficld operati~•-

1n innings,

Football

992-2156

Cha~lon

Batteries

Sunday's game

11.5
11.5
15.5
21.5

Wenern D1v111on
Oladotte (Ciev.) .. .....70 &gt;I .565
Richmond (At1.) ........ 68 55 .553

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

specialist Dr. George Pianka could
make Moore avrulablc sooner.
The Jets said they hope Moore
will play in four weeks.
Bears ·Chicago's depleted rece iving
corps took yet another hit Wednesday when second -yea r rece iv er
Terry Obee broke his leg and dislocated his ankle. Obee will need
surgery and is out for the season,
the Bears said.
Cowboys
Dallas made rooki e Chris

59~!

Denver at Dallas, Rp.m.

PeL GH

PaWiucket (Bos.) ....... 7J 52
01 ... , (Mu.) ............61 63
Syracuse (for.) ........6 ! 63
Roche.'lter (llal.) ........ 56 66
ScraniOn- W-D (Phil.)51 73

$16,995
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Oticago at Kann1 City, 8 p.m.

Eutern Division
Team

414

Philadelphia running back Charlie Garner, the team 's seco nd round draft pick, will be out of
action indefinitely with a stress
fracture of the first rib.
Jets
Receiver Rob Moore underwent
surgery Wednesday designed to
speed up the healing process for his
broken left wrist.'
Moore was injured last Saturday
at Philadelphia and it was reponed
he would have to wear a cast from
4-6 weeks. But the surgery by hand

LA. Raidcn 11 LA. Rtml, 10 p.m.
Minnesou at Seatlle,IOp.m.

Baseball

1994 GMC
Y2 TON

11

happen. Hopefully wtthin a week to
10 days."
But Taylor doesn't want to
make a rush decision.
"There isn' l a lot of time, but
we have to take enough time to
make sure we make the right decision," he said. "I realize the
importance that this selection has
for the long term."
The longest -term Minnesota
coach to date was Bill Musselman,
who guided the team through its
first two seasons. Jimmy Rodgers
lasted less than a season and a half,
and now Lowe is gone after compiling a 33-102 record since Jan.
II , 1993.

Scoreboard

SUMMER SELL DOWN

New England coach Bill Parcell s said creating turnovers is a
key this sc&lt;~son for the Patriots.
"When a team starts doing
things, it usually builds on itself,"
he said. ''We are emphasiz ing it. ··
The Redskin s, who have lost
their two games by a total of five
points, have no returning quarterbacks for the first time in club hisLory. Heath Shuler and Gus Frerotte
are draft picks and John Friesz was
a free-agent signee .
Eagles

Lowe fired ... (Continued from Page 4)

POMEROY, OH.

614·992·6614

gaining 645 yards as Marion Butts'
backup. Butts was traded to New
England in April.
"Gary's definitely a threat
we're going to have to watch out
for because he played here for a
while and he knows our schemes,''
Means said of his former teammate. ''I'd just like to check him
out and see what he gets going.' '
San Francisco broke camp in
Rocklin, Calif. , with three offen sivelinemenandoncdefcnsivestar
nursing injuries that will keep them
out of tonight's game .
Starting center Bart Oates (hip
strain) and starting right guard
Ralph Tamm (strained left arch)
will both miss the game, as will
reserve guard Derrick Deese
(bruised bone). Defensive lineman
Dan Stubblefield ~lower back
strain) also is out
The Patriots, meanwhile, have
made a habit of turning turnovers
into touchdowns this exhibition
season. They hope to continue that
trend against th e inexperienced
Redskins.
The Patriots have recovered six
fumbles and made two interceptions in their two exhibition victories so far, and have not turned the
ball over. Five of the takeaways
have led to touchdowns, including
three in a 21-point third quarter
against the New Orleans Saints .

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�Ohio

Reader reminds smokers of emphysema

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wulf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

FEEDER CALF SHOWMANSHIP- Jason
Pullins and St(•phanie Hoffman were named
grand and rcscr\'C champions, respectively, at
the Me· .
4-11 .lunior Fair Fcede~ Calf

Showmanship contest Tuesday. Shown here are,
from lei'!: 1994 Fair King Chris Hamm, Pullins,
t·l11llman afi1 .1994 Beef Princess Chastity Jude.

.,

BREEDING BEEF SHOWMANSHIP Anita and Jeromee Calaway were named grand
and reserve beef breeding showmanship champions, respectively, at the 1994 Meigs County 4H Junior Fair Breeding Beef Showmanship con-

GREAT -GRANDDAUGHTER
SHOULD GROW UP NORMAL LY, DESPITE LUNG DISEASE
Question : My great-granddaughter was born with hyaline
membrane disease. I know that it os
some type of breathing problem
because they had her on a breathing
machine for a couple of days. The
doctors kept her in the hospital a
few extra days, too. Now she is
home and seems fine except they
have her on a monitor. I don't
understand much more than this
about hyaline membrane tliscase.
Cou ld yo u please tell me what
caused this and if it is something
that she will outgrow?
Answer: Hyaline membrane disease is a breathing problem that
afflicts about 20,000 newborn
babies in the U.S. each year. The
basic problem is that the lungs are
not sufficiently mature and healthy
to let the baby breathe satisfactorily
on his or her own. This condition is
much more common in children
who arc born prematurely as well
as in full-term babies who have a
low birth weight. As you would
expect, in both of these conditions
the babies arc born with increased
risk for many problems. Hyaline
membrane di sease is actually a
subgroup of a broader collection of
breathing problems labeled respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). and
it is among the most life threatening of these.
Babies bom weighing between
500 and 1500 grnms (about I to 3
pounds) arc in the group al high
risk for RDS. In fact, about 20 percent of these low-weight infants die
from breathing problems despite
the best care available today. Fonunately, the remaining 80 percent
don't About 78 percent develop as
totally normal children with no
breathing or other related problems. So, the chances are qulle
good that your great-granddaughter
will "outgrow" her hyaline mem brane disease. Only 2 percent of
infants that survive RDS continue
to have breathing or other health
problems as children or adults.

test Tuesday. Shown here are, from left: 1994
Fair King and Queen Chris Hamm and Michele
Guess, Anita Calaway, Jeromee Calaway and
1994 Beer Princess Chastity Jude.

Lawyers in Simpson case clash
over missing murder evidence

FEEDER CALF STEER - John D. Collins
and Randy Burke entered the grand and reserve
champion steers, respectively, at the Meogs
County 4-11 Junior Fair Feeder Catr Steer con-

FEEDER CALF HEIFER - Lacey Hunting
and Juliette llruwn had the grand and reserve
champion heifers, respectively, at the 1994
Meigs County 4-H Junior Fair Feeder Calf

test Tuesday. Shown here are, from left: 1994
Fair King Chris Hamm, Collins, Burke and
1994 fleer Princess Chastity Jude.

Heifer contest Tuesday. Show'! here are, from
left: 1994 Fair King Chris Hamm, Bunting,
Brown and 1994 Beef Princess Chastity Jude.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Deputy District Auorney Marcia
Clark could barely contain her
anger.
The defense in the OJ. Simpson
case had just accused her of deception. and her credibility with the
judge and potential jurors was on
the line - all because. she suggested. Los Angeles police apparently
dropped the ball.
''We have done nothing
improper," she said at Wednes day's hearing, her voice wavering
with emotion. "We are in violation
of no order.''
The defense wasn't happy and
neither was the judge when they
learned that police, without Clark's
knowledge, failed to send two
swatches containing drops of blood
found outside Nicole Brown Simpson's condominium and on the
driveway of Simpson's mansion to
a Maryland laboratory trying to
match Simpson's blood.
That means that genetic tests of
some blood samples might not be
ready in Lime for the Sept 19 trial.
In a case that could well be decided
by such evidence, a mishap involving a couple of blood drops takes
on great im portllnce.
Defense lawyers accused the
prosecution of playing "a shell
game" and suggested that prosecutors should be held in contempt.
The prosecutors accused the
defense of trying to impede DNA
testing. The judge suggested he
may have been misled when the
prosecution told him there weren't

enough blood samples to be split
between both sides for testing. and
ordered another hearing Monday to
discuss the issue funber.
The revelation came as both
sides scramble to prepare for an
unusually speedy trial. Jury selection was set just a liule over four
months after the June 12 killings of
Ms. Simpson, 35, and Ronald
Goldman, 25.
Rarely does a murder trial,
much less a potcntial capital case,
move through the pretrial process
at such a pace.
"As we're geLLing closer to trial,
tempers are flaring, " said Myrna
Raeder, a professor at Southwestern University Law School. "There
is clearly a lot of pressure on both
sides to bring a case of this dimension to trial in such a shon amount
of Lime."
Adding to the pressure. she said.
is the fact that the hearings &amp;re
broadcast nationally. reaching
potential jurors.
Even more important, Raeder
said, is Clark's need to maintain
her credibility with Judge Lance
llo.
'The judge has a number of discretionary rulings that he's going Lo
make in the course of the trial. He
needs to be assured that he is getting proper information," Raeder
said. "If he starts really disbelieving what he's being told, the prosecution could be in deep trouble."
The judge said he had been led
to believe there were minuscule
amounts of blood available for test-

in g. Now, he said, Clark was indicati ng there was enough to allow
more tests by a state laboratory in
Berkeley.
"This indicates to me that the
samp les may not have been so
small to begin with," said Ito. " It's
now a more complex issue than we
thought it was."
Cormi&lt;·
S di&lt; TC()

J&lt; •If
COildWd y

Deborah

tucker

A World

Wide Piclures Presentation

See It Sunday, August 21,
6:00 p.m. at Syraose

Church of the Nazareae,

The "breathing machine" you
mentioned is standard treatment for
babies with RDS. The machine
helps the baby bread•e until his or
her lungs are sufficiently mature
and healthy to breathe on their
own. Your great-granddaughter has
apparently had a mild case of RDS.
Perhaps that is because her mother
received a medication, dexamethasone, when she started in labor.
This medication greatly reduces the
chance Lhal a premature baby will
have RDS. and. if he or she docs
develop the disorder, it is likely to
be a mild conditio n. Or perhaps.
she only had a mild case even
though she wasn't premature or of
low-birth weight.
Babies with RDS don't suddenly become healthy. The "breathing
machine" is used dunng that tome
when the lungs alone are unable to
gather sufficient oxygen from the
air to sustain life. As the lungs
mature and heal, the amount of
assistance with breathing can he
reduced. After a time the infant
gets strong enough to go home, but
it is still necessary to keep a close
watch on the breathing for a while.
That is what the monitor you men~
tioned is doing. IL keeps track of
her breathing so that if she stops
for more t.fian a moment to take a
deep breath or a sig h, the alarm
goes off to summon help.
This "high-tech" health care was
not available when you were hav ing children. It has made it possible
to help many babies who have a
difficult start grow into healthy
adults. This is what I'd expect for
your great-granddaughter. One
thing that hasn't changed though, ts
the need for much love and nwturing for mom and baby. In this
regard. your new great-granddaughter is also lucky . She has
three generations of family to care
for her.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Dear Ann Landers: Why is it
that when the hazards ''of smoki ng
are brought up, the only disease
discussed is cancer? Why is it that
no one ever brings up emphysema?
People who smoke cigarettes will
get emphysema sooner or later. I am
well acquainted with all the stages
of this disease. My grandmother,
who was otherwise a very healthy
woman, died a slow and painful
death from emphysema brought on
by years of smoking. My stepfather
will die the same way. He is now
tethered to an oxygen tank that is
his constant companion. IL is the only
way he can keep his windpipe open.
My mother. who is also a smoker.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. 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 run a
specific number of days.

---JJYMII.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA, Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred
Hcan Catholic Church.
RACINE - Racine Post 602,
American Legion, Thursday 7 p.m.
at the post home preceded by a dinncr at6:30
EAST MEIGS - Free children's immunization clinic by Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine 9-11 a.m. at Tuppers
Plains Shake Shoppe; Reed· s
County Store from 12-2 p.m. and
Chester Shake Shoppe from 3-5
p.m. For more information call 1800-&amp;44-2654. Bring previous shot
record.

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Film, "Eye of
the Storm", Symcuse Church of the
Nazarene, Sunday, 6 p.m.
SHADE -

it '"'

C1Hilp:m..,., 1, hi

nh111 1\t:Jr, roll ...~heduiL· ll Suhll'&lt;l

\o·r rl&lt;Jn . Fn.:di..Tilkt1M'I1 , J);mvillt:. G:unl•1v :

\li llill'l'tlrg. lr' '·' ll••t ' ll'f'. .md t .c n:niiiiiJC .lfl'.l'&gt; PronrcJ! ron L'lld' 10/ jl/ 94.

'

.

••

Dorst reunion Sun-

~~

BILL AND ANNA MCFARLAND

50th to be celebrated

~-- -

Bill and Anna McFarland of New Haven will celebrate their golden
wedding anniversary on Sunday, August21, with an open reception from
2-4 p.m. at the home of Cecil and Shelby Duncan, 115 Fourth Street. New
Haven.
The observance is being hosted by their sons and daughters-in-law,
Charles and Sandra of Bidwell. and Raymond and Becky of Mason. They
honored couple arc the grandparents of four grandchildren, Daron, Travos,
Trevor and Tracy.

Dog owner rnay be
forced to get rid of
her overweight dog

I

1 11

is in the early stages of emphysema.
She has this terrible cough that gets
worse every year.
Younger people who &gt;make boast
that they can jog several miles and
never geL short of breath. They don't
understand that the cells in their
lungs arc mutating. For my sake and
thetrs, will you please prim another
letter on this subject?-- ALASKA

day. Martin Dorst home at Shade,
Dinner at noon.
POMEROY - Hysell Run
Holiness Church homecoming Sun-

Feeling pressured to ha•e se~?
How well-informed are you? Wrile
for Ann Landers' bookJet "Sex and
the Teen -ager." Send a self-addressed, long, business-siu en vela~
and a check or money order for
$3.65 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Tuns, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicagv,l/1.
60611-0562. (In Canada, und
$4 .45)

day, 9:30a.m. with dinner at noon.
Worship at 10:45 a.m. andspecoal
service al 2 p.m. wnh cvcnong service at 7:30p.m.

TUPPERS PLArNS - Benefit
dinner for Wilb ur Windland. Sunday, Tuppers Plains VFW. eo-hosted by Coolville VFW Post. Auction
and other fund raisers in afternoon.

THE PLACE FOR WORK AND WESTERN

290 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

~ LEVI'S, LEVI'S, LEVI'S
Infants, Toddlers, Girls, Boys,
Students, Men, Juniors and Missy.
Best selection of Levi's
for miles around.
Belts, Boots, Shirts and Hats also!

CARHARTT
It's Going To Be
Scarce Again this Year.
Buy Early or Lay Away to
Insure Your Selection.

Dan's Is AMaior Dealer In
Chippewa Featuring The
New Leathers In Minus 40
and Arctic 50.

Dan's Is Big

On
Red Wing Steel Toes,
loggers and
Insulates.

BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE
SERVING YOUR AREA
FOR THE LAST
49 YEARS

RESIDENTIAL,
COMMERCIAL, INDIVIDUAL
&amp; FARM SALES &amp; SERVICE

WANT REliABiliTY
AND SERVICE?

NAZARENE

A1&amp;T. Your True Voice:"

·•r: 111 11, ,,, '~"

a~d

T1mes .S'tlndiCate
C1eators Syndcale

of Racine Church of the

Check your phone bill. You may be surprised at how much you're paying for some
calls from home. You'll probably be surprised to learn that you now have a way to save
on these calls. Now when you're calling from home, just dial 10-ATT first when making
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c:mbridge
)
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a toll call within the 614 area, and you can save 10%.
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,,, •,,]1_ ,,\: .ll.l!Lii•lll r . \,,, .11. 11i.ilol, · 111 \lr

, "1994 Los Angeles

A~.' j

FRIDAY
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency free
clothing day at old Cheshire High
School from 9-12 p.m.

BAS HAN - Bashan Church of
Christ services. 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. Denver Hill, Foster W.
Va .• speaker.

Dial it and save.

Ann
Landers

air polluuon, cnvoronmental factors
such as dust and asbestos and a rare
hereditary condition.)
The message is clear and
irrefutable. Smoking is a crippler and
a killer.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Racine Grange
2606. Thursday, 7 p.m. at the hall.

POMEROY - Revival, Zion
Church of Christ, Harrisonville
Road, 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Homecoming to be observed at
9:30a.m. and 2 p.m. Sunday.
Lunch at 12:30. Don Kennedy, former pastor, guest speaker.

St. Rt. 124, Syracuse.

DEAR ALASKA: It is not
necessarily true that all smokers will
develop emphysema. Not enough
studies have been done to confmn
this.
The surgeon general classifies
bronchitis and emphysema together
as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (C.O .P.D.) . Before
·smoking became common. these
were rare diseases. Now C.O.P.D.
is the foutth·rnnkmg cause of death
in the United SUites.
According to the American Lung
Association, smoking is responsible
for 82 percent of the C.O.P.D. deaths
in the United Sta tes. (The
remaining 18 percent is caused by

Community calendar

DANVILLE- Danville Holiness Church, second annual outdoor sing, Saturday, 6 p.m. featuring Teh Joyful Noise Quanet from
kshnoals, Ind., adn the Keith Waggoner Family, Frankfort, Ind .
Afternoon 1 to 4:30 games; 5 p.m.
cookout

''~.11•

The Dal

ATs.T
Qt994 Alli&lt;T

NORTH RIDGEVILLE, Ohio
(AP) - A condominium is taking a
· dog owner to court, saying that the
· dog is too fat to live there.
The Muirwood Village Condominium Association is suing one of
· its residents for having a dog that is
over its weight limit.
A ~caring will be held Friday in
Lorain County Common Pleas
Court.
Carolyn Justice, the owner of a
5-year-old mixed breed named
Cleo. bought a Muirwood condominium and moved in last fall.
John Ertle, a lawyer for the
association, said Ms. Justice failed
to adhere to the association's rule,
which bans dogs over 40 pounds
and requires dog owners to submit
a certificate from a veterinarian
stating the dog's weight

I

FOR

9:30 Sunday School
at Church
11 :00 Concert at
Forked Run State Park
(Sheher 12)
Afternoon recreational
events planned.

4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU
Rutland,Ohio • The Plains, Ohio • Torch,Ohio • McDonnelsville, Ohio
WE ARE NOW THE lARGEST INDEPENDENT PROPANE DEALER
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AUGUST 31 I 1994

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I

WITH APPROVED
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•

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Rutland Furniture &amp; Bottle Gas
614·742·2511

FAMILY OWNED

1·800·837·8217

•

�.P~~eroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pag~~T~h~e~D~a~lly~S~en~t~ln!e~I------------------------------~P~o~m~e~r~oy~~M~Id~d~le~p~o~rt~,~O~h~lo~-------------------------------T-h_u_rs_d_a~y,_A_u~g~u-s_t_1B~,~1~9~~

Grueser
photo nets
best of show
\

f

I

''

r

~

.

'- ' i

BEST OF BREED AND REST OPPOSITES
- Winners were named in the best of breed and
best opposite categories. The best of breeds from
16 categories were judged and one overall best
of breed was chosen. The winners ~ictured with

THE CHAMPIONS- Grand and reserve
champions were chosen in the showmanship category of the Junior Fair Rabbit Show at the fairgrounds Tuesday. The winners were from left to
right: Jeannie Newell, 1994 Rabbit Princess;

the Rabbit Prince and Princess are: Rabbit
Prince Joshua Rousch, Best O~posite Amy
Smith, Best of Breed Odie Karr, and Rabbit
Princess Jeannie Newell. (Sentinel photo by
Amy II. Potts)

HEATING &amp;COOUNG

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
With more than !50 entries in
the amateur photography competition at the Meigs County Fair, Kelley Gruescr's photograph of her
father building a fence was awarded the best of show.
Grueser' s winning photograph
was in the portraits and personality
category.
Reserve best of show went to
Kim Cowdery of Long Bottom.
Winners in the snapsize, color,
category were as follows:
Landscape and seascape: Phyllis
Spencer, Pomeroy ; Eric Montgomery, Langsville: and Kim Cowdery. Long Bottom.
Animals: Kim Cowdery , Lisa
S tethem, Pomeroy, Ph y II is
Spencer.
..
Portraits and pcrsonahues:
Nancy Gard, Middlcpon: Deborah
Gru es cr, Pomeroy, and Phyllis
Spencer.
PiciOral · storytelling : Karen
Werry , Racine; Cheryl King,
Pomeroy; Deborah Grueser.
Ab stracts: Kelley Grueser.
Roben A. Bailey, Tracy Card.
Nature closeups: Kim Cowdery.
Karen Werry, Gene Chancy.
Miscellaneous: Kim Cowdery,
Tracy Card, Ruben A. Bailey.
Winners in the enlargement,
color, category were as follows:
Landscape : Deborah Gruscr,
Kelley Grueser, Ruben A. Bailey.
Animals:
Lori Thomas
Cheshire; Gene Chaney, no third.
Portrnits and Personalities: Kelley Grueser. Nancy Gard, Debbie
Spencer.
Pictoral: Gene Chancy, Deborah

(Come On Over)
Our lol has been full of cars from
Ohio. And we enjoy having you.
Many ask, "How long has lhis
been here? We didn1 know
about this! This is OK! We didn't
know you had all this over here!"
They're talking aboul SHAWNEE
INDIAN PARK - Indian Trading
Post, The Indian Museum, Big
Indian Tepee's, etc. 4Y. mi. past
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant on Rt.
62 s.
Open Daily 10:00 a.m.-5:00pm.

1

BEST IN PHOTOGRAPHY- Kelley Grueser of Pomeroy won
the best of show in photography with a picture of her dad, Danny
Grueser, building a fence at their home at Enterprise. She titled
her photogragh "Will It Work?"
Grueser, Kelley Gruescr.
Abstracts: Kelley Grueser.
Robert A. Bailey, and Gene
Chaney.
Nature closcups: Gene Chancy,
Debbie Spencer, Roben A. Bailey.
Miscellaneous:
Deborah

Grueser, Kelley Gruc scr, Gene
Chaney.
In the special category entitled
"Meigs County Fair Happenings"
the winners were Karen Werry,
first, Kelley Grueser, second, and
Ruben A. Bailey, third.

Jenny Clifford, Grand Champion Rabbit Showman; Jessica Clifford, Reserve Champion Rabbit Showman; and Joshua Rousch, 1994 Rabbit
Prince. (Sentinel photo by Amy B. Potts)

t.,, ;'
through 1959, field ready; Dale and Joann
Kautz, 1938 and older, field ready, and oldest
tractor; and Denver Rice, the judge's choice in
antique tractors.

Crops, horticulture department judged

I

""

&lt;"l~&gt;&lt;")lO:'.t.~· ,,

.~1t1 0 S C:O UHI 'I
•, , "
\ P I ,._ !I '

MARKET PEN WINNERS - Market pens
were judged at the Junior •'air Rabbit Show
Tuesday. The winners are shown with the Rabbit royalty. They are: Joshua Rousch, Rabbit

Prince; Jenny Mayle, Reserve Champion Market Pen; Jeannie Newell, Rabbit Princes.~; and
Amy Smith, Grand Champion Market Pen.
(Sentinel photo by Amy B. Potts)

Fair rabbit show winners awarded
The I994 Meigs County Junior
Fair Rabbit Show was held Tuesday morning at the fairgrounds.
Judge Kathy Backus of Atwater
judged the rabbits in showmanship,
various breeds and market pens.
Jenny Clifford was named the
grand champion rabbit showman
and Jessica Frederick was the
reserve champion rabbit showman.
Best of breed winners were: Jennifer Allen, Californian best of
breed: Stephanie Burdette, champagne d'argent best of breed; Ann
Kauff. champagne d'argcnt best
opposite; Ryan Kauff, checkered
giant best of breed; Od1e Karr,
checkered giant best opposite; John

Curtis. dutch best of breed: Christie
Cooper, dutch best opposite; Ryan
Kauff, nemish giant best of breed;
Bethany Cooke, french lop best of
breed: Rebekah Karr, holland lop
best of breed; Sarah Houser, mini
lop best of breed; Odie Karr, mini
lop best opposite.
Kristin Brown, Netherland
dwarf best of breed and best opposite; Josh Roush, New Zealand best
of breed and best opposite; Amy
Smith, palomino best of breed;
Beth Call, palomino best opposite;
Andrea Burdette, rex best of breed;
Stephanie Burdette, rex best opposite; Cheryl Jewell, satin best of
breed; Rebekah Karr, satin best
opposite; Ryan Kauff, silver fn&lt;

best of breed and best opposite;
Odie Karr, silver martin best of
breed and best opposite; Amy
Smith, cross bred best of breed;
Sari Putnam, cross bred best opposite.
Odie Karr won best of show
with his silver martin doe, and
Amy Smith won best opposite with
her cross bred buck.
Amy Smith was also named the
grand champion marlcet pen. Jenny
Mayle was named reserve champion market pen. The rest of the
ranking was: Ann Kauff, third;
Kerry Allen, fourth; Susan Tobin,
fifth; Elaine Putnam, sixth; and
Sarah Grueser, seventh.

Moyer takes blue ribbon in baking, canning
Connie Moyer of Reedsville
was the top blue ribbon winner in
the baking and canning competition
at the 1994 Meigs County Fair.
she won 13 first place awards
in the categories of canning,
grapes, dill and sweet pickles, catsup and tomato, spaghetti sauce.
barbecue sauce, tomato JUICe, grape
juice, applesauce, green tomatoes,
and beef, and bakmg, zucch101
bread and baking powder biscuits.
Other winners in the baking and
canning division and the categories
in which they won were:
Pauline Atkins of Rutland ,
strawberry and chili sauce; Maxine
Dyer of Bidwell, black raspbetry,
shell beans. corn, and vegetable
soup; Deborah L. Grueser or
Pomeroy. grape and strawberry
exhibits, and banana nut bread:

Steve Barnett of Pomeroy, blackberry and blueberry exhibits;
Cheryl King of Pomeroy, appleclass 10, blackberry-class one, and
apple exhibits-class 16.
Sharon Riffle of Racine, apple
butter, whole white potatoes,
chocolate. and peaches-class 19;
Lenora Leifheit of Pomeroy, peach
honey, sweet pepper, pears, and
sliced beets; Peggy Crane of Middlepon, bread and butter, whole
wheat bread loaf, white bread loaf,
and oatmeal; Rose Barrows of
Pomeroy, zucchini, snap beans,
carrots, peas, whole tomatoes,
yeast rolls, .chocolate fudge, and
white fudge.
Nancy Gard of Middlepon, end
of the garden exhibitors; Mildred
Gaul of Pomeroy, peaches-class
32; Shelia Taylor of Pomeroy,

whole beets: Robert Smith of
Racine, cabbage, and sweet potatoes; Opal Dyer of Bidwell, quartered tomatoes. Joanne Vaughan of
Pomeroy, angel food exhibitors:
Donna Jenkins of Rutland, plain
sugar-no icing, chocolate chips-no
nuts, peanut butter, brownies-iced,
and brownies-not iced.
Jane Walton of Pomeroy, peanut
butter fudge; Karen Werry of
Racine, pumpkin cookie contest;
Donia Cotton of Middleport, cherry
exhibitor; Jim Sheets of Pomeroy,
pecan exhibitor; Linda Rathburn of
Middlepon. raisin·exhibitor.
Eloise Watkins of Pomeroy and
Sharon Hudnell of Pomeroy both
won first place in the miscellaneous category; Watkins won the
first place mystery award.

I would like to give a
special Thank You to
all who have apon·
aored me over the past
years. Especially this
year In the Pythlan
Sisters Bowl-A-Thon
for Arthritis.
Eagles Club 12171 of
Pomeroy, G&amp;W Plastic,
Ken's Appliance Service, Powell's Super
Vatu, Kenny Utt, C.P.A.;
Bank's Construction
Co., Chateau Beauty
Salon, Teaford Real
Estate and to all my
Pythlan Sisters and
Brothers.
Again IIBy,
Thank You
Patty L Young
Longbottom, Ohio

The best, the largest, the longest
and the freakish were judged and
awarded ribbons in the crops and
horticulture department at the
Meigs County Fair this week.
Taking the ribbon for the best
display of garden produce was
Peggy Crane of Middleport, with
Joyce Sauters, Pomeroy, taking
second, Lenora Leifheit, Pomeroy,
third, and Delma Karr, Middleport,
fourth. A requirement of the displays was that there be at least a
dozen different vegetables included.
In the largest and longest category, the blue ribbon winners were
Opal Dyer, Bidwell, potato; Blair
Windon, Pomeroy, pumpkin;
David King, Pomeroy, watermelon;
Evelyn Hollon, Racine, apple and
tomato; Lenora Leifheit, beet;
Cody Dill, Long Bottom, largest
cucumber; Joyce Sauters, Pomeroy,
longest cucumber; Lenora Leifheit,
onion, sweet potato, cabbage, and
longest bean: David King, squash;
Blair Windon, cantaloupe; Larry
Cowdery, ear of com.
In the freak vegetables, Ronald
Wood of Pomeroy took f~tst place.
Blue ribbon winners in the various categories were:
Larry Cowdery, Pomeroy yellow com, white sweet com, red
tomatoes, sweet peppers.
Alice Thompson - white corn,
yellow popcorn, zucchini.
Roy Holter, Pomeroy - yellow
corn, peck wheat, beets, Concord
grapes.
Eric Montgomery, Langsville bi-color sweet com, red pear tomatoes.
Joyce Sauters- white popcorn,
red popcorn, lima beans, pimentos,
golden delicious apples, prune
plums, Damson plums, sugar pear.
Cody Dill - Indian corn, yellow tomatoes, carrots.
David King, Pomeroy - spring
oats.
Don Smith -Racine, barley.
Cyndi King, Pomeroy - cobblers, Lasoda, miscellaneous potato, bush beans, summer squash,
patty pan squash.
Ladona G. Boyd, Shade - Kennebecs.

•

992-7434

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
BUY-SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Melge County
Tuea. Thru Sat. 1-6
Name Brand Toole,
Toye, Fenton.
Coma and 588.

One mile out At 143
from Rl 7.

Cement mixer w/elec-

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY
992-2096

550 Page Sl, Mldchport
FrMEallm-

Topping. Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yean E"''""lotnee
992-4447 or

Seems like I've been neglecting
you, but I've been overwhelmed by
activities at the annual Meigs
County Fair.
Weather, as of Wednesday, has
been most cooperative and hopefully will hold out for the rest of the
week. Usually the Rock Springs
fairgrounds are steamy for the fair
- they've been quite comfonable
this year. If you haven't visited the
fair yet, you really ought to plan an
outing. You may see people at the
fair you haven't seen in years and
it's great seeing them again. You
know as well as I do that old
acquaintance should not be forgot.

f

Attending were Bruce and
Marie Stewan, Medway; Doug and
Pam Bubo, Westerville; Bess and
Junior Miller Jackson; Michael
Rodgers, Erie, Mich.; Lawrence
and Mildred Farrar, Newark; Bill
and Bobbi Farrar, Oak Hill; Brian
and Cindy Burkhamer of Syracuse;
lvor and Betty Farrar, Pomeroy;
Don and Jeannette Bobo of Jackson; Chuck, Lai, Morgan and Taylor Farrar of Logan; Terry Farrar,
Pomeroy.
Ralph and Marilyn Farrar, ·

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

742·2443
811111 mo.

5'1 Toucfi of Cfass

Custom Window Coverings
Blinds • Verticals • Shades
Shop AI
h's not just a way to
Home
cover a window
Service
It's a way lo
Day Or
light up a room
Night
992-5311
50.55% off
Blinds &amp; Verticals 1-800-BLIND-11

...--.~- ,_.,

Guaranteed
Lose Pounds and Inches
Natural Herbal Tablets

1·800-796-6321

CLUB

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
F.REE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342
II-

And here's your clue for tune II
in the "What'sa Name of that
Song" contest:
"Ev'ry day for breakfast, there's
a dish of scrambled stars,
"And for luncheon you'll be
munchin' rainbow candy bars,
"You'll be livin' alamode on
Jupiter or Mars."
And to help you along, you
might want to think Perry Como.
Just send your answer to Box
727-B, The Daily Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy, or drop it by
the Sentinel office. One thing to
watch on this one, however, is that
your title must be identical to that
on the sheet music.
My good friend, Esther Frecker,
is attempting to locate the son or a
relative of Norris Davis, grandson
of the late Emmett Peoples and the
great-grandson of the late Judge C.
E. Peoples. If you can help Esther
out, please give her a ring at 9927361.
The Middlepon Farmers Market

is getting a foothold. Farmers are
taking their produce to the sale spot
and the public is showing up to
buy. Seems like a good combo to
me. The sale of produce starts at 8
a.m. each Saturday and is held in
the area between Diles Park and the
Family DoUar Store.
I've been waiting for you to
phone to tell me that you did win
the $30 million in Wednesday
night's lottery drawing. Maybe my
phone is out of order. I'm just not
getting your call. Do keep smiling.

The River Valley Herbalists met
on Aug. 2 at Connie Hill's summer
cabin in West Virginia.
Members enjoyed a cookout
and river cruise. The Herb Fest is
in the final stages of planning and
will be Sept. 24 at the Dave Diles
Park in Middleport.
The Middleport Arts Council
will be selling refreshments. Members are selling rame tickets for
several herbal prizes. First prize
will be a large garden basket filled
with herbs, second prize will be an
Everlasting wreath, and third prize
will be a mini-Longaberger basket
with a dried arrangement.
At the close of the meeting
members put together "Woodstove
Potpourri," which will be offered
for sale at the Herb Fest
This spicy blend can be simmered in a potpourri pol or a pan
on the stove, or on a woodstovc.
Herb-of-the-month was mullein,
which is mainly used for respiratory disorders. Mullein combines the
expectorant action of its saponins
with the soothing effect of its
mucilage, making this a most useful her for the reatrnent of hoarseness, tight coughs, bronchitis, asthma and whooping cough. A tea of
the nowers is reputed to be sedative and can be used for insomnia.
Olive oil in which the nowers arc
macerated for several days has
been used for earache as eardrops
and rubbed in to rheumatic joints to
ease the pain. Mullein leaves make
an excellent poultice for boils and
sores.
The September meeting will be
at the home of Jan Hawk at 6 p.m.
The program will be a live herbal
arrangement by Sheila Curtis and
herb-of-the-month will be golden
rod by Eva Robson.

•viSIT OUR SHOWROOM•

110 Court St. Pom9rcy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"
992-4119AI Tromm Ow1er 1-80G-291-S600

Water hauling

Announcements

Backhoe Service

3 Announcements
MIO YEAR RESOUJTION
7 -Day Diet Plan . Lose Exc..s
lbs For Good. I Lost 20 LDI . In
5 Wks. Eating Right Without
Dieting. 3 Min. RKordM:t u..
sage. $1.95/Min Mu11 Be 18 To

Call. 1·900-255-5533.

nn, 304--675--6204,

8 year old ptrt Collie, p,..t.r to
country home, 614-W:I~l.
Kit1en, To Good Homa, 614-:J79..
25115.
Male Beaglt Tri-Colored, Regl•
tered 2 112 Y11r1, 614-446-6881.

GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable Rates

FOR SALE
Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feooers,
Boom poles,
Par1s &amp; service

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
liMESTONE
Delivered

Locally

992·3838

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room Additions
-New garage•
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Palnllng also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, ~~~o92 ·nn

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOI

S~ecializing

ALl MAlES ' MODElS
992-701l01
992-SSSl 01

TOll fll(( I·IOG-141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

TRI·STATE K-9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience, '
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel service, pups &amp;
young dogs for sale.
Ronweiler. &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt. only
614-667-PETS

•

Howard
Excavating-Co.
Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe
Service
Complete House &amp;

Trailer Sites
Driveways, Septic
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
Lines, Land Clearing
Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill Out, Top Soil
Reasonable Rates
Estimates

992-3838 """'

Side
Rutland, Ohio

742-2455

Help Wanted

WANTED
Experienced
Service Technician
For Propane and Heating Installation.
COL and HazMat required. Full time
position with salary and benefits.
Send Resume to:
P.O. Box 185
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Black Tame Chicken
614-441..o720.

•

Found: Kooler lldi' Nice One
Fell Out Back ot NCk Out sl
Rt. 160, Near Senior Chlzens
Center, 614-446-0626.

Found: email female dog, black
wttan markings, big eare, short
logs. 304-875-6894.

Found: young dog, blonde
possibly piir1 lrlah Sette!L car:
rles red ball· fetches w.ll, Mason
area. 304·77'3-5907.
LOST drlvo ohaft from hay lottar, a304-89S-3833.

lost- while male PeklngeH
adopted from Meigs dog pound
t~mlly pet, rew~~rd . 614443-5416:
614-94~2957 even

1ngs.

Lost: Cockatiel, Uaaon area.
304-7TJ-5238.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;.VIcinity

ALL Yard Saito Must 81 Poklln
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day belor-. the ad
to run.
Sunday edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frlday. Monday edhlon • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

a.

Basamant Sale: Saturday 8-:J 66

Carman Drive, Tara Eatat... 3
Families, S.burg Juke BOx
Wash81and, lots Of Everythlngt'
Comer 01 Clark Chapel And
· Porter Road, August 1Uth 20th
21si,9A.M.-?
'
'

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

Equipment
Hill Road

6

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

985-4473

Morris

land.

7

Manco-Go Karts

!21211!•

11

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

FOR SALE
New

B/4,1 1 m o.

Puppies, bl~aNblut tick. at the
end ol Bowhunter Rd In Rut·

Sears Riding Lllwn Mowar For
Parts, 304-882-2024.

Joe N. Sayre

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

7131,glfTFN

Giveaway

3 glr1 pupplet, 6 wks old to a
good homo, motharltather CQ""

LIMESTONE,

742·2455

Herbalist
club holds
meeting

windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

HAULING

liNGO
EVERY THURSOAY
EAGLES

replacement

992·4103

614-742-3090
3o4-n3-0545......,

614-367-0302

• Solid vinyl

4

Happy Hollow Rei

Call Uo For An Eotlm1te

Ampe, Gultara, Strlnge,
Keybo•da, DNma,
Plano &amp; Guitar L.eeaona.
Cheehlre, Ohio

Made

ENTERPRISES

NewHomee,
Addltlone, Siding,
Painting, Garageo,
Porchee, Pole Barne

STAR GUITAR ·

• Custom

GRACE

lldcloport, Ohio 45760

The 23rd annual Farrar reunion Logan'; Martina Farrar, Logan·
held recently at Bess and Junior Nick, Michele and Madison
Miller's farm in Jackson was iskas, Logan; Deborah Farrar and
attended by 52 family members Deric and Kalie Hartberxer, Logan;
Franc1s and Midge Farrar, Logan;
and friends.
A covered dish dinner was Chuck and Susie King, Columbus·
enjoyed by the group and prizes Don and Juanita Clark, Jackson;
were awarded to P.L. Stew an, I00, Hazel and James Farrar, Jackson;
the oldest attending, and Taylor Bob Farrar, Jackson; P.L. Stewart
Renee Farrar. 19 months, the Jackson; Lori Farrar-Michael, Jack~
youn11est. A prize also went to son; Wanda Farrar; Oak Hill; DenDenme and Kara Miller Dundee, nie and Kara Miller, Dundee
Mich., for baveling the longest dis- Mich., Vicki and David Emerson:

tance.

•

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

33151

Lose Wllgllt Lit •Crazy"

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Home
Improvements

trlc motor, exerclee

bike, glaee chandelier, vaeaa, flower
pota, canner, pole,
pana, portable eewlng
machine • no cabinet,
pictures,
framee,
books, lampe, dlahee,
grinder, com cracker,
roller for tile, porch
awing, mlac. hardware, Chrlatmae decoratlona.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERClAL and RESiflENTIAL

KINGS'

Man:

low onions, crooked neck squash.
Blair Windon - green cucumbers, two varieties of melons, cantaloupe.
Ben Holter, Pomeroy - okra.
Jarnie Boyd - field pumpkins.
Alan Holter, Pomeroy - pie
pumpkin.
Linda Rathburn, Middlepon acorn squash, butternut squash.
Opal Dyer, Bidwell - Keifer
pear.

Free Estimates
Residential. Commercial
and Industrial

811111 mo.

Farrar descendants gather

Lenora Leifheit - sweet potatoes, red cabbage, white onions, red
onions, hot peppers.
Rose Barrows ~een cabbage.
Maxine Dyer, B1dwell - pear
yellow tomatoes.
Connie Moyer, Reedsville cherry tomatoes, pole beans.
Linda Rathburn, Middleport hi-color tomatoes.
Peggy Crane - yellow pod
bush beans, pickles.
Kass Lodwick, Pomeroy - yel-

Cal Westen Aato
997-551 s

NoChecb

· Seventeen of you came up with
lhe correct title on song number 10,
which was "Embraceable You."
It's a George and Ira Gershwin
number that was first copyrighted
in 1930.
Those correctly identifying the
song are Margie Weaver, Racine;
Gussie Hostottle, Pomeroy; Ruth
Young, Middleport; Pauline Wolfe,
Racine; Ann Lambert, Pomeroy;
Rita White, Cheshire; Mary Roush,
Racine; Joy Ann Anderson, Rutland; Louise Gloeckner, Pomeroy;
Lorena Beegle, Pomeroy; Betty
Denny, Middleport; Betty Curfman, Syracuse; Mildred Milburn,
Middleport; Ramona Hawk,
Pomeroy; Martha Hoover,
Pomeroy; Mazie Hannahs,
Pomeroy, and Marie Boyd, Racine.
-The name coming out of the hat for
the $5 prize is that of Betty Denny
of Middleport. I believe Betty has
been taking part in the contest ever
since it staned and she never misses coming up with the correct title.

BEST GARDEN DISPLAY - Peggy Crane of Middleport"
poses with ber basket of garden produce. She featured 14 varieties
of fruits and vegetables in a wicker basket accented with sunnowers and berbs. (Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

Solttonol
lutalatlol

QUALm WINDOW IYiftMI

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

2/12112/t1h

by Bob Hoeflich

TRACTOR TROPHY WINNERS - Taking
first place in classes or the antique tractor judging Wednesday afternoon were from tbe left,
Edison Hollon, 1939 through 1959, best
restored, 1938 and older. best restored, and 1939

..

Card of Thanks

GARAGE SALE
47065 Morning Star
Rd., Racine,
Co. Rd.30
Saturday, Aug. 20
8A.M.·?

Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

Beat of the Bend ...

.

.

DoCII'IItfvt

RSES &amp; EPA

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

~

-

F...... C'!ol.
UM·WHd

MORRISON'S

Price
Construction
Co.
26 Yean Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
For Free Estimate
Call 742-2303
7nDII mo. pd.

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

Alter 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

l/25.194

Sato:

Garage

544

Soc:ond

Avenue, Frlday, Saturday, D-5.
Lincoln Pike, Household heme
Shower Stall, Oak Medicine
Cabln11, Like New Womena
Mane Clothos, Etc. Folow Th~
Signs. Salurday Only.

Moving Salt: 173 Burithart Gal-lipolis, Sa(urdayL Auguat '201h,
10:00 A.M. Baby J-umlw-e Toys
Clothing, Etc.
'
'

Moving Sale: bema Galore!
Augual 201h, 21ot, ~ P.M. 37
Klndlawood Drlvo, (Behind Dr.
Strauss Office).
Rummaga S.la: Augu• 18th
19111, 9--51. 7815 Bull Run Road'
Vinton, Graat School Clottwa'
Glrta, 8-10, Young Ilene Clo4ho0:
Bicycles, Lnua nke Tobie
Khchon Sal 6 T-r Totter'
Hou•hold hems.
'

Wlll- Valley II!Aion TMft

Slora, Oownlown VInton. 180
Hwy. Bulldlng Sold llovlng.
Giant Yard Solo, Frldoy, Satur·
day.

8

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Rlck Poo..on AucUon CompenJ
time •uctlonMr, compllll.i
auction
•ervka.
Ucen.ed
-,Ohio
773-5785. 6 Will ""-'nil
..,... I 1104-

tun

AucUOfWOf Col. Oocar E. Click,
754-94 6 Bondod

Llconso I

304-8!15-3430.

"DAZZLING
DOLLS"
BATON CORPS

Coon, Bissell to wed

1. Must want to make excellent money

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coon of
New Haven, W.Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Bissell of Tuppers
Plains announce the forthcoming
marriage of their children, Stacy
Coon and Royce Bissell.
The open church wedding will
be 2:45 p.m. Aug. 20 at Faith Baptist Church, Mason, W.Va. with
music beginning at 2:15 p.m. A
reception will immediately following in the fellowship hall of the
ChiU'Ch.
A second reception/dance will
be held from 6 to II p.m. at the
American Legion Hall in Middleport.
The bride-elect is employed by
Gallia-Meigs Head Start. Her
fiance is employed by Avalotis
Painting Co. Following their wedding, the couple will reside in New
Haven.

unlimited income potential!
2. Must want a permanent job with an
aggressive organization.
3. Must desire advancement.
4. Open Floor-Sell Both New and
Pre-Owned.
5. Must have professional attitude and
appearance.
6. Must be willing to learn and follow
instructions.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO

GALUPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
BOX CLA 107-825 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Now accepting new
studenls. Girls Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
lasti'IICior· NolKJ W. Swartz
Classes
beginning
September.
Cal 992-3796

Howard L. Writesel

ROORNG
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
Guuer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
&amp;'16'14 TFN

9

•

Wanted to Buy

Cloan Ulo lloclol c.,. Or
Trucka, 1!187 lloclola Or Smnh Buick Ponllec, ...0
Eastern Av.1ue, O.IYpola.
llocomed It~ ...... pi\OOM, old Iampo old umo--. old ~-;;ntlquo

tumh....

Rlvortne ·-Ani ~quite.

Ruse Moore, owner. e-....aa.
2526. w. buy ........

J &amp; O'o Auto Palla and - also buying lunk carw 6 truc:b.
304-Tn-5343.
Wanted Buy: Good Uaod AI&lt;

ComprMtor; For Solo:
Chevy True• Porto; VW
614-448-4217.

11113
Bug,

Old clg11111o llghtoro, mill belltiN, fountain peiW, all.._..
marbla, llonewarw, rniiGIIIIr-:.
Star Wars and Star TrU et-.;
Osby Martln,I1H112-JII41.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auloe
Wllh Or WllltOUI llolcn, Call
Larry Uvoty. 614-388-11303.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Ringo, Sl- Cotno,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 SocondAnnuo,Gtlllpolla.
Wonted IO buy: uaod -81~7'11

Wonted To Buy: Walking~.
814-:Z.1583.

I

�1994

Thursday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentlnei-Page--11

ALLEYOOP
50MET~ING H"PPENED TO HIM
BETWEEN T&gt;lE T!ME I SAW HIM EAALIEJO::

NEA Crossword Puzzle

""""-' I'D LOVE TO KNOW

WHAT WENT ON IN THE
PMACE W~EN HE VISITED
KING WIZER AND HIS
NEW LADY Fl&lt;IEND'

'HI/ 5 A.F"TERNOON , A.NO .JUST NOW'

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
Employment

Services

44

2 Room• &amp; Bath, Ho Kitchen,

$20Dillo. All UIIIHioo lncludod,
AVON I All Aroao I
Spoaro, 304-615-1429.

814-446-7n3,

Shl~oy

albllltlel equal your captbllhlas,
fnMI product wtth alg~
Marilyn 304-882·2645 or 1

1192-6356.
Accepting

Appllc•tlor. For
Subsll"ufa Postal Clerk. Must
Be FlelltMa For Varloue Houri,

Pretartnca GIVIn To Applicant•
With Knowledge Of Pcmal
Regulations. S.nd Reaume And
Letter Of lnterut Batora Augu.t

31, 1894 To Phylllo Muon, Ofroctor Of Human Rasourcee,
Unlverehy Of Rio Grande, P.O.

Box 96St, Rio Grande, OH 45674,

EEO IAA Employor.

1:30

1114 4411 4411 Aft• 7 P.M.

Appllcetlona are being ~pted
tor In-home careglvere. The
succeAful candidate• ehould
have home health aide certlfkatlon 1nd two ynl"l axperlene~~
In providing dlr1C1 Mrvlce care
to oldll' acfuh1. Mwt have Nl'-'

oblo lranoponallon and lol•
phono In tho homo. Appllcallono

Betw•n

-&amp;:00.
2bdrm. apia., lola! tfoclrlc, appllancoo tumlohod, loundry
room tocllhiH cioN lo ochool
In lown. ADDI!citlono ovallablo
11: Vlllaga ·croon A~tto. 148 "'
caiiiM-9112-3711. EOH.
Fumlohod Efflcloncy 5150/Uo.
Ullllloo Paid, Shanl Balh, 807
Socond Avo.,. Galllpollo, 814-4464416 Allor 7 ~.II.
Fumlohod Aportmont 2 Bodroomo, $295/llo., Ulllllloo Ptfd,
701 Fourth Avo.'pGalllpolla, 814440-4418 Aftor 7 .II,
Fumlshod Aportmont 1 Bodroom, 131 Second Avenue, Qal.
llpollo, $2110/Uo. UIIIHios Pold,

All arNt. AVON umlng poa-

''H e wanl s hr s steak really ra

th e hand dryer rn th e mr.n's room for a mmute."

Wanted to Do

18
-=------::c-:,--=Chrtatlan Lldy will Care For

31 Homes for Sale

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 638 Jockson Plkt
from S22:lto $28&amp;. Wolk lo ohop
&amp; movloo. Coli 114-446-21168.
EOH.
Fumlahec:l 3 Roome I

Bath,

CINn, No Pota, Raforonco l
•r• 1vall1~e It the Malge
4 Bodroomo, 1 Balhl K~chon, O.pooH Roqul19a. 114-440-1518.
County Multlpurpou SeniOr
hlldren, Any Shift, Hear LR, DR, In Good Locat on, Qoee
Conlor,
Mulberry
Holghlo,
c 1 Ch urch; oH To Schoola, Bualn. . Section Nlcaly Fumlahod Aporlmanl,
llz.~beth hapt~
1br, noxt lo Ubrary, psrltlng,
PQm.roy' Oh. An EOE employer/ 218.
614-441 ·1487
814-440-7325,
304-786-7111il e«~tral
provider of earvlcu.
hMt, 1lr, Nfw8nc1 ,..
$35,800
Nogollablo.
Exporloncod LPN Wanlo Prlvalo
qulrod. 814-4411-0338.
Duty, Oayohlft, 614-255r8106.
8 Room Brick Wllh Full Bo...
Ettlcloncy
AVON S$ SALES
ment, And Central Air, In Oal- Fumlshod
Potonllol $200 -$2,000 Monthly. G1neral lblntenence, Palnting1 llpolle, Price Reduced, 114-441- Oownotalra, All Utllllloo Paid,
$18!/llo. 118 Bocond Avo., Ga~
hntastlc Dlacountal Benefits! Yard Work Wlndowa Waohoo 1828.
llpolla, 114-44WMI.
Flnlblo Hooro. TonHory Op- · Gutttro Cloanod Llghl Hauling,
Commsrlcal, Rnldonllal, Slovo:
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Ilona!. 1-800.742-47:18.
614-446-4148.
Elctflonl Locallon On Second Gracious living. 1 and 2 bodBabyomor Noodod In lly Homo,
Avonus, Within Walking Olo- room aponmon111 11 Vlllogo
and
Rlvoralaa
3 Younll Chlldron. Could Bo Goorgos Portable Sowmlll don'l tance ot DcMntown, Large llaUve-ln Poolllon, 614-245-0908 haul your toa• to thl mill just Living Room, Dining Room, Aponmonto In lllddloport F10111
call JO.H75·1l57.
AHar 11 A. II.
KHchon, UIIIHy Room, Balh $232-QM ' Coli 114-112-!858.
Roome, Garage, 3 ThrH led- EOH.
BabpHtar needed In my home

2-3 dayo por wHk lor 2 omoll
chlldron, 614-742-2257.
Eam Thousands Stuffing En·

volopoo. Rush $1.00 Namo, Ad-

drHI Slamped Envelope To:

Hall'o Entorprlsoo, P.O. Bo1 152,
Applogrovo, Will VA 25502.

Um up to $1000 w•kly ltufflng
IOYIIopa II home, lllrt now,
no4Xperlance,
rr...uppllea,
tre.lnformatlon, no-obligation.

Sond SASE: C.scado Dopt-110
P.O. Bo• 5421, San Angolo, TX
1111102.

ElpoBakar
/Cake
Docorolcw Naodod. llotrloon'o
HoopiiiiHy Gr""!', Unlvorolly Of
Rio Grandt, 8M~4S-5660 Or
Slop By Sludonl Cantor Anno•
11-F BA.II. -4 P.ll. EOE.
Ollila Academy High SChool
Sludonllo BabVOH Allor SChool
II-Th 614-448-0tl:!e.
Help Wanl.ct Retail Jewelry
Solos, Part-Time To Fuii·Timo,
Elpon.nc..t Promrod But Not
Roqulrod. AIIPik:allono Takan
lion .f~, 10 llll. ·1 P.ll. AI AI&gt;
quloHiono Flna Jowolry, Gal·
llpollo, OH No Phone Colla.
LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE?
CCRH -chid ear. R•ource

-orll

lo A Frw Community

Service Which Would Aa lst

Handy man, lnt~rlor/exterlor
palntrng, light hauling &amp; car·

ectlon wtih contractorsi operation or am~.ll on-aft• MW9

plan!. W- l bonoiH pockago
Ia compiii:Ttlve. Send mum• or
apply a1 38758 Rocksp~ngo Rd.,
Pomaroy, Olllo 45769. EOE.
Noodod lmmodlaloly Rocoptlonlll, BookkHpor, Ofllca

•;-c
llu81 HIVe Computer
Kl--go, Solary Pluo ComBenefit•,

Send

-mo To CLA 324 clo Ga~
llpollo Dolly Trlbun!,. 825 Third

recomnwnde lhat you do bual-

From SaiM And Conatructlon.
(303) 751H135, Ell. 1600.

Great bualrwM opportunity, . .
tablllhed bualnua, ame{l I~
ve~tme.-., owner wanting to
rek»cate. 30W7S..10GO evenlnge.

3br., 2 bath, on 120x50 lot, Hen-

dallwry &amp; Ml up, owner financ-

Ing avallablo. 304-755-11588.
NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 Ioiii

Never lived In, atiU hae new
home warranty, tree delivery &amp;
Mt up, owner financing avail·

lor
the
vanlfllltbed division, profhabla
pey progr1m, ICCU~t• w ..kly
wtUemente, medkal ln .. avall.tHI, rider program and time
home, no up front money to

loooo on. Coli Boyd, 1-100.220-

2421.

Ook Hill Truc!clng Compony
E_..,ICOd Stml Trsclor Tralllf Drlvoro CaTR) Excollonl Poy, 114482...13.

Real

clou 1o a blacktop road, 114-

Estate

31

-.

Annau,_.aoora
Soc.compur.r

_.or, IMoiUIMIIrlfal.
&amp;o• - · Non
Bond

-

lo CEO WBGSJWriO,
P.O. 21550.
Bolt 410, Point - ·
wv.

13

Insurance

AMERICAN NATIONAL INIURAHCE
YICKJE CASTO, AGEtn'
HOIIEOWNERS ' AUTO DfS.
COUNTS

UFE' HEALTH
3041. 4217

Trucks for Sale

=:·

"Kick llo Whllo I'm Oown"l
OWnor Mull Soli Nowl "lol'o
Talk Bual-."1 BNutlful, Lsrgo
Two Story On Cornor Lol. fiB
llaln Sl. Pl. Ploosanl, Throo
Two

Full

B11h1,

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

2 Bttfroan Noar N.G.H.S. Stove,
AolrigsraiO&lt;. Walsr And Truh
Pold $325 Pluo $325 O.potfl,

2 B o d - Air, Cabla Avtflablo, Ovarlooldng Tho Ohio
Rlv.r, fn ICanafltiL llopoolt,

AlliN! OSialt _,ltfng In
lhlo nowspopor lo oubjtd lo
Ihe Federal Fotr Houo1ng AU
"' 11168
"lllogat
lo adllltllse •any ptOI...,.,

Ro
--flequiM.
-···
lloblto
H
Pori!, 114-446-1102.
2 Bod1oam lloblto . _ For
Rant, ..,.., Lano, 114-446117511.

which-

C.metary Iota, Kirkland
Mamorlal Glrdena, $900 for

~ e."''"""'~

both. Huntlnglon, 30U23--71148.

mit &amp; 2 winter llrae (mourited)

$4,000, 614-048-2083.
0

•

rn-.

·--·tor-OUr-..
Tflfo n o - wll IIIII
knowllnglr _,..,.

wlidllo I n - Df blow.
hotlby
lnformod IIIII al ct 111'\go

In'* na

•FeJ*
on an oquat

opporiUray-

Goods
01·
tomon, fiiO."'="~~&amp;aHar
Bluo ptold

llpm.

Ofnlng,_ Ill, podotlal lablo
w/2 loo-, I chalra, boautlful
hutch, pint, $700. 304-6711-2163.
0000 USEO APPUANCEB

a-n vinyl couch • chair $100;
oondlllon, 18 Star Craft
fold-out camper l800i 304·~
5163.
Collor ID box1 14 momory, brand
new, $43.85, oM-11112-11188.
Commotto.. 121 Wllh Olddala
Prln!tr, Koyboord, Disk Drlvo,
Compuler O.k. Sever11 Oleks,
lncludod Tho Print Shop, 814258-11832.
56 Pets for Sale
Co,_rl Tlckllo: 4 Tlckalt To ;;G::roo:::m:-:a:-nd7-:S~u=p-::pl:=:y=;;Sh~o-t4-:~:-::
Wynonna In Akron Auguat 30th, Grooming. Julls Wobb. 81
flO Each, 814-24UOM.
0231.

Dodge

Caravan

Automatic, Dellvary Van Nc;;
Wlndowe, 12,700. 614-256:1518

114-2!8--1252.

'

1888 Toyota 4x4, $4,500, 6144-48-11858.
19611 Dodgo Rom Van 10 000
llllto, $3,7UOO· Con Bt Soon AI·
Gaiiii&gt;OIIo Oolly Tribuna, s:z5
Third Avonuo, Gllllpollo 6144-48~342.
'

61 Fann Equipment

Concrato I Plaallc Sopllc Pamporod Polo by Sonya, dog
Tanks,. 300 Thn1 2,000 Gallono grooming, bathing, all broods.
oon, OH 1-1100-637-9528.

loail Whh Root, 114 ~46-11212.

74

304-882-3130.

10110x8 dog konnol, 1111.95.
Paint Pluo, 30~5-4084.

63

Livestock

Baby Plgo, 114-24S-11248.
Uvoolock Houllng, Anytlmo,
Anywhoro. Producora Hlllobon&gt;
Evory Monday, Coil T~ppto
C..ak TNCidng, Chuck WI~
lame, 114-a41-1008.
Potlod -

BH-311V7.

64

71

bull, 1800. 304-

Apanment
for_Rent

1 and 2 bodroom aptll_,.o,
fumlthtd and u n t u -urfly dopoolt
'
filii. 114 112-2211. roqutroct, no
Nice J br. apl. tn llfddl p ~
114112 . . . . . .

•A 10 7 5

-- =- '

~.-:. 1511.
53
Antiques
==,.,.-==i-:-===:=:OONALD SIIITH ASSOCIATES:
Wook- 8

l

DIDN'T SLEEP
WELL LAST N I 6~-IT
I COULDN 'T GET'
COM~OIUABLE ..

llotorqclo, KXBO $500, &amp;14-379Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale .

m12

'

n

30+

111811 Four Wlnno Boot 11 112 Fl.
Long 1~ ~ij Low Hourw Garago

111811 Font Eteort LX, 4 Door
AulD, Air, Tltl, Cntloo, AIIIFU
Caotolls. Exira Cloon, 114-446-

SWAIN
AUCTION ' FUAHITUAE. fl2
DIM 81, Galtlpolle...... ' Uaod

3 NT

PEANUTS

t-.e.

control molor: $3500. 114-912·

18811 Font Fsoltva 40 IIPG Vary

29 Religious poem 66 Classified items

33 Part of TGIF
34 Platform

DOWN

36Jacob's brother
37 Waterproof

1 De s tiny

2 Con cept
3 Never (poet)
4 Relied on

139 Buns againsl
41 Profil on bank

5 German "o ne··

acct.

6 Dissipated man
7 To whom - concf!rn
8 Wander

91reland
10Woe is me!
11 Midwestern
college
19And not
21 Plant juice

Pass

Pass

23Former

r-m-,"""..,.,.,.....,

Russi an ruler

25 Newls
rr-+---l- + -126Aid in
diagnosing
27Fishing reel

-+---l-+~ 28 Old name tor

Pass

Thailand

Opening lead: • Q

30 A continent

Bid boldly,
win more points

32 Speechless

31 Auld - Syne
35Smoke and

f,..-+----+- 1-..J

By Phillip Alder

Oonoii115Y2FIOOA, $5,700. 304-

18811 Hondo Acoont u 2 o-.
Hatch 8 Spood AIIIFII c a - .

171-1DI.

F-Ootlwry.

I WAS ASKIN'
HER TH' CAPITAL
OF FLORIDY ! !

4-48·1058.

Autos for Sale

111811 Flnoblrd, loodod, T·Tops, '(.
I lui!!._ $7,011a. - oond1 304-

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo homo tumlshlngo.
Hour.: llonollal, .... 114-4460322, 3 mlloo DUI lulavllfe Ad.

SHUX!! ALL
LITTLE BOYS PASS
NOTES TO THEIR
SWEETIES!!

Condhlon, Lot• Of Extraal 1114-

14' boot, 40 horas Evlnrudo
motor, 114-112-2395.

Hollow Bodr Good Condition Nice Cor, 4 ' - · Now Tlrao
~ Holt Slock Amp. lloroha!i Pofnl, AIM'Il CD $1I 115'I
Lanoy 4•12 Coblnot 1850 OI0,114-245-M21,
111 441 0010 After s P.M.
'
~ Dodaola Doyl-, d~voro
Spinal-Con- plano. Wtnlod, ·-· tanlor domogo, 83,537
..oponttblo porty to makl low mi._, I op., _,. wlgray lnlormonthly -monlt. Soo locally. lorl ~1 _PB1 PW, AC&gt; $1700, 1141-1100-321-3:145.
114.......,
ovontngo. asyo .. · - • -

ta,e--.o.

TH' TEACHER CAUGHT
ME PASSIN' A NOTE
TO SAIRY II

1

IIFG
Cop~co
lnloutboord, 140hp llorcrulat,
opsn bow, full whHt csnvu
covar, wnrallar. 304-77:1-9540.
17ft. Tlf-flaul bOll, opon bow,
111n 140 Evonrudo, lncludoo 1111
oklo, Coot Guard oqu~
1117'11 CadHioc Coupo O.vlllo, lackota,
PM, make reaaonable offer.
A~:~OrTrodtFw 3o4-IJB2·3325 or 304-77:1-5565
Guna,
1135.
btlwoan 11-lpm.
1117'11 Ponlloc Trono Am 400 En- 1888 Cltackmato 16ft 80hp Mergino, Auno Good 11,500, Nogo- cury outboard, lraller Included,
llablo, 814-446-1888.
12,300. 304-1711-1272.
111711 Chov. Scotlodalo 10, __4 1888 18ft. Ah Loo Pontoon bOll,
- · good ohapo, 112011....... • p Evemuct., drive on trailer,
!1711-21!5.
$3000. 304-175-4403 1her lpm.
1984 Chrytfor E-cloH Good 1888 P.cw, 15 112', Tri·HuU
Wortt, car $1,200, 814-446-8253.
llborglaoo boat, 711 hp.
1984 Pontiac . Floro, Robuln llorcury olt lnjoctod, 28 lb.
thruet, Mlnnkotl trolling rtmote
Motor, 12.200. 114 441 8253.

EJ&gt;Iphono Shoraton Guhar Som~

BARNEY

nelda 110me worl(, 1225, 614-

!111&amp;-4235 bofo!W 2:30p.m.
1882 Honda Goldwlng, Good

614-379-2233.

111811 Otdomobllo Culloao Clon-e,
Good T1rso, No Ruot, laking:
f1,800, 1114-24f-e171,
1117 Pl~h Ration! 4 o::=,.~.~.:Oro;:':·:!: EIIcottonl
Condition, TIH WhMI'
Tra-luaro. Colt llu'o, Your Crulea,
Hlah Ill'-•- .. 'ftft0
=Frlond. ae Yeata El· 114 411 .....
-v""'l .... ._.
'· 114-2M 1844 11 No
"liP Trying.
1867 Trono Am GTA Brlghl Rod
Roglotorod O.lmatlon puppfos. 350 Tuna Poll, Fuot lnlocllon'
LDedld, 2 Door, Aulomlllc, La..i
304-11711-11&amp;53.
Than 10,000 lllfoo, 814 146 4818.
IHI_,_Tirwo&amp;
Musical
Brakloil Elcollonl Condhlon
High flooga, $2,11115, 814-4411:
Instruments
1118.

60White House

Ireland

nickname
18Merils
61Cans
20Simplesl
22 Baseball player 62 Mama - Ellioll
63 Ocean
Mel 64Rat- - . 24 Bark
25 Put into words 65 Aide labbr 1

Vulnerable : North -South
Dealer: West
South
West North Easl
l ""
Pass
1•
Pas s
I NT
Dbl.
2t

12 Ft. Aluminum Flohlng Boat
Good Trailer, Trolling Mctor,
Battery Life Jacket•, $400 Firm

111811 Ford Tompo, 4 cty., 2 - .
autoJ.. ucotlonl oondHion, 814llll2-n88.

plan I
58 Type ol duck

16E pluribus 171sland oH

•Q 8 2

Motorcycles

Transportation

=~~.§. ~~J.rs';:

1 Fish limb

4 Actress - Garr 48 Racket string
material
ol wood
49Vernal 121Fruii•t' drink
53 Strengthen a
levee
141rritate
57 Western marsh
15 Type ol shtrl

covering

• 6 5 2
aK 7 6 2

:18::81::-:Y::a~m-::ah:-a~85C=:-:_:..:r.:.un.:o_good_,

75

1117'11 Font llutlang Cobra Porlocl car 302 Ana Robuln C-4
Nice lntorlor, ~' 080, 114440-3781 Aftar 8 P.M.
111111 Oldo, ~ 4511 onglna.
30HI711-1284.

·1-4

SOUTH
•A 9 7

2240.

Hay &amp;Grain

•J 108 5 43

Answer to Previous Puzzle

44 Boallie-up
46 Oulfil

20111 llonctay:fridoy, Bam-4pm,
oak lor Jody.
Kapf,l

CONG~ts.r ION At.

ANOTtifll GOOP TtiiNG
/If T~AT I PON'T

STAfF
OFf I(,~

m

3
!j_

I=NOW V~,y MUC~. ~
'"~
SO I ttAVt

NOw til/li/IIG

-;

L-OTS Of
DENIA,ILITY[

A PPl.- Y ~f,~ -:&gt;

~

~
0

•'
\\--lAvE$
¢;l 1'19&lt;1 o~ NEA lr&gt;e

BORN LOSER

g-18

"

,.

v-DREADFUI.LYSORRY TO H£f\R.'"I

I~ YOU'U..OC 1-if&gt;NTI'-IG

/J.OOJ\ '&lt;OUR.l.ITILE. MI5HN",

~OFF?

/T-,.-----11

1838.

1880 Procroft 18 A. Floh &amp; Sid

115 llarinor Engine, Ellcalloni
CondHion, Gorogo Kopt, 6144-48-41128.
Hawellan Punch 22 R., Dar
Cndaer Jet Boat, 480 Ford

'AHANDFUL

Jotovolor JVC CO Playor, 1,000
Walt Audio Syetem, Tandem

Axis Trallor, Mull Soli, $4,500,

Firm, 814-441-0835.

76

OF CASH
IS BETTER

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Tranamlaelon1,
UNCI &amp; rtbullt, all typee, atart·
lng .. $69j owner 814-245-5677,

THANA

814-31'11-2935, 614-371-2263.

Chovy Bod, Chevy llolor &amp;
Othor Pano On Lsfl Fork Road

GARAGE-FUL
~~oF STUFF

CGalllpolla),

Naw gaa tankl, one ton truek
whoolo, rwdlslorol 11001 malo,
ole. 0 a R A~tploy, WY. 30437:1-3933 or 1
273-0328,

79

Your left-hand opponent opens one
club, your partner passes, your right·
hand opponent responds one dia mond, you pass, LBO rebids one notrump, and suddenly your partner
comes out of the bushes with a double.
What does his double say'
To pass on the first round and lhen
to double on the second shows a re ·
spectable hand w1th length and
strength in the first suit bid: here,
clubs. And it reveals length in the un
bid suits: here, the majors .
After Easl retreated to two dia monds &lt;he had responded one dia mond in the hope of improving the
contract without gelling overboard!,
what would you do with that South
hand' Hoping his thin diamond holding would prove sufficiently strong,
South jumped to three no-trump'
It was the winning bid I though if he
had settled for two no-trump, North
should raise to three!. West led lhe diamond queen, trying to force oul
South's stopper while retaining communication with his partner.
South discarded the heart three
from the dummy and ducked in his
own-hand. Now West switched in vam
to hearts. Declarer finessed dummy's
queen before playing a club to his
queen and West's ace. Back came the
heart king. Declarer won with dum my's ace, cashed the club king, played
a spade to his ace, finessed dummy's
club nine and had 10 tricks when the
spades broke.
Oscar Wilde claimed, "The basis of
action is lack of imagination. It is the
last resource of those who know not
how to dream." Well, ! think you will
agree that South showed no lack of
imagination in this deaL

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

18 Ft. HI Lo All Molal Compor,
$2,700, 814-357-Mtl.

!THURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

11411-30Bl

JUS! ~ ?£1 P££~E ..

10111.

llln Sfcrlark, 11 112 II, good
condhton, phons allor 5:00, 614'

1111
Otdollltlbllo
~
8upromo Elootlont Cond~lon. 1
OWnar, P/W l Door Locka. lift
Cruloo. Air, C8,000 llflot, :i\ooO
llllao loft On Wtrnnty1 .. 800
114 411 1218.
.,,
I

Pop.up campor, o l - 8, 2 now
llroo. Cotcw computer 3 Tandy
wlmonHor, keyboard prinlor
dltk drivo, sollwaro. oll tumoco!
Flrwwooct, Computor tor 108&amp;
800SE, 2.5 n.... 304-tl82o

'0\.()CK ON IN

•

1 I&gt;.LW~~S PUT $UN

·&lt;UI.

tog
38 Slowest

~+---1-..J

40 Most acidic
43 Noisw

-+---l---l~

45 Hwy.
471talian opera
49Singer James
50 L.:!ave
51 Arm bone

Hardware, 614-446-8093.

,.,-+-1-~

..,-+--l-~
,.-+---J-~

52 Dec . hol1day
54 Passport

endorsement

55 Pieced out
56 Afternoon

parties
--'--1-.J 59 Kind of curve

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Celebnt·r C1pt1er cryptograms are created I rom Quota !Ion s by lamous people p&lt;'l st and pre sent
Each leiter rn 1'1 e c•1-her stand s lor ano ther Tocta v's clue Cequals R

XJ

'X PM
Y M D P L

XPM

I KM

FGRFPIFLMB

GDBXCGMCEH

D B

ZXPBIFPIEH

MTZDIDPL

0 B

XJ
K F I

OFUDPL

GDBZXRMCDMB

F

F

ODE PM .
PREVIOUS SOLU~ION "1\'s tougher lha. n go1ng up the fallop•an lubes to get a

show on televrston . - M1chael Monarty

T::!:~;~' S©\\~~-~£tr~~~
llllltacl lty CLAY •. POLLAN
0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled wards

I

WOlD
GAM I

low to form four words

AIRRYT

EPEIC

II

I' 1 l
5

I

"
I~

We had attended a b1g party
for our neighbors One of their
I 16 I 17
son'sgavethistoasttohispar•
•
•
•
•
• ro
ents. " Any wedd1ng anmverr---------. sary is always a testament to
;;-Kr;;-O,T--,.C..::E,L::......,r--11 people. s - - - - - ....."

I

I E GNT

~

I I I I I0
e
I'
8

.

m

19
.

•

•

•

•

.

Complele the r h"cklo Qooted
bv lriJong In the m•l~mg words
you develop !rom step No 3 below .

PRINT NUMBERED
lfTTERS

t)

~~~~E~MBLE

fORI I I I I I I I I ]

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Yearly· Bigot· Oaken· Jounce- BACK to YOU
I was very surpnsed when a friend got a dog since she
seemed to favor cats. She explained that a dog would
come when you call him but a cat would take a message
and get BACK to YOU.

AUGUST 181

PA\&lt;KIN6 LOT'
11-1!\\E IT
S~\Jl) GI IC\\S
SKIN ' ,...,.,.'--....-

g:.r

Services
For Sale
or Trade

RIE ANTIOUES- Amsrlcan lrl,
china, Ill . - . olfvor, "'mfllt'O,

lloCor - - , COLLECTIBLO- potn1t, pot1101, toola,
IIOIIory, oiooU, lloa&lt;oo,)ora, bot·
lloo, boob, loyo, olo. ALWAYS

1811

Home
Improvements

John - . Lawn Trwclor,

12 HP-" __Exoollonl Condtlon,

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans ~niii'!Nioot,
JacltOon, Oltfo, 1-800-53'»528.
Sunquoot 028 ProiMalonal
Tonnlng Bod, Elcollont Sbal'l 2
Yoarw Old, 2 Foco Tannora, Tal.;
Ovsr Paymsnlo, 32 0 $107.11,
814-441 4023.

Good ...... biro Ball, $800,
Or Traclo For Grwvoly Of EQual
Value, 114-441-1013 Aftor I P.lll,

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Supar stnalo Block Raco car 61 Fann Equipment
Walorllod, f150, B'14-2c54518 .
1810 John o..,. lit Troclor
Trsodmlll I Eurcloo Blko, New, ..-o,t~Auno Good, 12,100
814-388-11251.
.
Finn,
.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondhlonal llftlfmo gua!Wn•• Local rsftltonc• tuml-.
can 1-1100.267-0571 Or 814-2370488 Rogo!W Wai-ting. blablf-11175.
CIC
Clonorat
Homo

ASTRO-GRAPH

dooro, tooling .,d complolo
homo -lr, complate wlnropslr, _ , . waohfng ond
moblto homo rwpslr. Fol' ftH ootlmolt call Chat, 111-41112-11323.
Ron'o TV Banlloo, opoclallzlng
In Z.nllh 1110 - n g moot
othor lnnda. caflo, alto
IPPIIanca _,,._ WY
304-1J711,13!18 Ohio 114-446-2454.
Plumbing &amp;

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Hao1 Pumpo, Air Cond~­
FumacaL llallor Eloctrlclan,
814 418 1.... 1-800-267-41308.
'

Aooldonlfal or ~
wiring, , _ aorvlce or
..
llootor u - n .
Rlclonout Eioctrlcal, W¥000308. ·
304-6711-1788.
'.

Ihe year ahead Send for your As l ro~ i lhtngs you can do w•lhoul
"raph pred1CI1ons today by maili ng $1.25 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Try to
to Astra-Graph. c/o this newspaper. P.O. avoid competitive situalions, both socially
Box 4465, New York, N . Y. 10163. Be and in the commercial world.

sure lo slale your zod&lt;ac S&lt;gn .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Malnlenance-- wallpaper, storm

clol. l~lie-1111.

44

aA Q9

V-6

18110 Bronco, Eddlo Bower, full
tfu, fl 2,000. 30oH75-3376.
Joop Flborglsn Top W IOoon
Sot Baja 5 Fl. Hall Oro Wi

Kina Wot..-, IIIITOft,
CSiilnolo, 11100; llop llochlno

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'

Two 1700 Buohol Bahlon Com
Cribo, 91sndlng 1800 Each, 114446-2&lt;t12.
Two Now Holland Solago
Wagons, Power TaU ott &amp; u-n-

IIOMIII-MII.

54

CF R.f&gt;61ARI S M

1887 Ford Full Size Van Completely WhMI Chair Accessible
And Drtvaable, Many Extra 1

good

=-..:.:-s..~A,;'r!C"18

HIS PIJTOB/CXRAA--IY

•KJ 9 63
EAST
"'J 10 3
"J 9 8

WEST
•B 4 2
"K 7 4

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1088

Pllloburgh Pllnlo - ro:=~
polnl 117.11 aal. lalu
"' - r otiln $3.111 gal. Palm
Pluo, ~75-4084.
Prtmaolar BototiHo Dlah For Bolt
$100, 814-441-11802.
a.- stu Waterllod 5150, 11431'11-2728.

AIJD l.()f\5 ACCUSED

.

18,500, 814-245~22.

Vlno Bl-, Cill 114-440-73i8, 1-

BUVtNO ARROWHEADS. Top
dollar paid. Ono ploco or ona
hundrod. APPIIAISAUI, 40
yotrtl . ., _ - . Buy Of Hll.
--1144112'll22.

304-IJ75-IJ2a6.

prlcod. ~7Wt73.

Owr 10 Pallsrna KH- Csrpol
In Stoak, liO Pallome Vlnvl In
s:r~Mollohan Csrpol, At•.., N.,
I
1'144,

RDR G.H HE- JUST VJR01£

ChovroiOI, Ford, Dodgtt- pickup
bede. Shon or long. No rust

•

dllrd-elu wlndowl, pula 1 emaa
pon;:h
awning,
riiiORibly

a1amonc1 annlvsrury ring, o1u
.. $300. 304.en-61137 .....

•AQI03

611 Ford Rangor wflh loppor bed

I Fl. Truck Toppor, Ssoro
Troodmlll, Glboon Gullar 1 Amp.
114-418-65V1.
8 aluminum swnln(ll1 tHo otan-

non-motorlzod Jono Fonda
lroodmlll, will dotlvor, 1yr.
guaronly,
$300.
112kai&lt;ll

...

8·18-94

•K Q 6 5

Packego, AC, 19,000 Highway
11 11M, 614-245-5053, $20,000,

Frooman'o Hooting And Cooling,
lnataUollon And Sorvlco, EPA.
Corllllod. Rooldonllll, Commor-

lmllellon or -knfoollon.'

are ..-

Household

..r c.,.,~Pr'

llonol Tnd And 1rollor, 12,&amp;00
Bolh; lnstoy Backhoo, CCoblo
Modal) Fair To Good Condtlon,
12,500, 114-2!8--1883.

Ron t.v1n1 En1II'PI'tue, Jack·

NORTH

304-tn,:

Heating

lnl- lo

WiertiMd

51

vs

1893 Toyota 4 W0 X-Cob SRS y.
I Cyiii'XMr, 5 Speed Crulea
Power Package, Sun~f Spo~

450 Coso Doztr, '!,!00; lnltm•

""'

Merchandise

~ I fHINK"'

82

lmlllldon or ltsci~••lll6wt
basod on roco, oob-, nrllglon,
101 tomflalallluo or nllk&gt;nll
origin, ... any
maf&lt;e any ouch

Olllco

air, eruiM, tiH ,

r(IOV'&gt;f- C!2ii;IM CoNfi IS

2

Ront,
Socond A- Noxl To Ollfoo, lnqul,. AI: cau-n Low
Olllce, 444 Bocond A-uo. Ga~
llpoiiL

048~481.

Homes for Sale

BedJOOJM

Elootfllll

~
Prota.alonal
Couplo l.aoltlng Fol' ..ry Nlco 3
Bod,_,. Or [argor Houoo To
Rant. lluot Ba OOocl CondHion,
e11 ue 4034.

Wanlod to bur- .. mars
acroo, auHablo lo build on and

Pl. P - ,'"WV 26550.

~,::Or,

fiVMoji!_

n':llll.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

......

tm.11.5,

of

111 ue 21131 Or tM-441-2812..

1fT Wanted to Rent

Khchan, Dining, Uvlna, Family
Roomo, Largo liiiiHy R_,, Air 114-388-11681.
CondHionocf. $61,800.00. 114- 2br., baMrnent, Hendenon. wv,
4411-2205.
WO/mo.I14-440-8SU.
0Wnor/OI&gt;Ifa10111
1 112 Story, Full llaMmon11 Poo-- camp Conloy, 3 bodn&gt;Ont, 2
Cardlnol Frolghl Conloro lo albla 5 Bedroomll, 2 ACNI,
$300. Dfuo "-'!, 1 yr
hiring uporloncod aTR't lo Nn Uftllmt VInyl Siding, Skvtlghlo, bolhl, ~
llolbod, oom poroontago of Tlll W I - Soino lntorlor
graa ,._
_pulling compony Flnlohlng,
Pocii, Bufldlngl For rwnt· hou. In Rutland, Nf.
fral ..rw or pulling own trailer, StrNm, "1 O.CU, Privata, ktee I dop. Mqulrwd, no polo, calf
Mlhh lnouranct wldon!al a vi- For Chlklrtn, $51,000, ~~ 114-JI2·illlll.
lion available, baH plat• 25ell.
avallab6e, bobtail lnaurance
New condition, 3 bedrooma, ref,
anla.ble. fuel c.rd lfllam, 2 Bodroomo AI Eurake Rlvor dop, no polo, 304-1175--11112.
wwklr ........,... rider Vlow, Now Roo)1 !1fclng, Slcwogo Pt. Pleaaant, 3br., 1 112 bath,
Bul~alng, m,...., Cllallo Ollar)
~ram, tlm1 home. 1~~
$800/mo. 304-733-1201 loovo
1114 1411 4033.
m...1p.
Po_, To Uve-ln - r k &amp; 2 Larp Bedroome, 1 Bath,
Cooking, I
O.yo Woolc, laflle Uvlng R-.tL Lsrgs SALE OR REin' 3 bodroom
R o - - Aoqulrod, 114-446- Dfnfng Room, Fot :oolo Br. houu, all electric, lAtart, WV.
41121.
Owner, 34 VInton Avenue, Ga .. $300. pluo dapoo~. 304-11112-3121.
llpollo, 114-440-1625.
Roglotorod long-lorm cal9 Nu,._
Small, 2br., tumtohod houoa,
lng Aoslotanto -.cl for pori· 3 Bedroom R•nch 8 112 Mil• pori utiiHioo polcl, 1100 "-'!u- rotallng ohlllo 118-bod old~ NMh On 110foVory Nlco Homo, 304-IJ7Utll2.
lod nurolng laciiHy, EOE. Good Condh n, $55,000, 114Unlll'nlthtd 2 bodn&gt;Ont houoa,
CoroHavon of Pl. Plooosnl, At. !t 381-9816.
c.rpotlld ' ctoan, no 11011,
Box 321, Pt. P.....nt, Wv
roqw.ct,
211650, 304-175r3005.
3 bedroom, •II electric horne, " - " ' .... _
Spring
Avonuo,P-roy, 114-112-30110.
Wonlod: horoomalwldsr, porl- $30.000, 114-111124!113 "' 11411- on my tsnn. Sond lobor ol 112-7304.
42 Mobile Homes
In!- lo: Bo1 A-11, clo Pl.
P I - Roalotsr, 200 lloln Sl.,
for Rent

Wonlod: Individual cw compony
to bury CATV Mrvk:a drapo,
muot hovo _, llabfiHy
....,.,_
oqulpmenl
and
wlllclo. ilond bldo: 1410 Joflor.
_, Blvd., Bo1 111!1 "!· - ·
WY 21550, ATTN: 111r11 Kloynon.
Wontod: Lsbor'o On Aoollna
CNw, Elportonco Holplul, llutil
Havo Hand T- And Oorn
T...._.allon, Slarl SS An
Hour, 114-441--41114, ... Monday
T1wu Friday.

Wornnly, S221, 117&amp;, 114-24611502.

lsflle 211r., ponly tumllhod, AC,
HUD opprovod, Pl. PlooMnl.

ablt. 304-75S-TI!I1.

experienced

WIGS am 1030, Wln'G

n

.,v!-1" to:r;;'~ Y•vr&lt;- 5e "'S~&lt;

doroon, WV. 304-6-4.
Big 3/w.
Arlo .,..,
' alt Ullthloa,
UlltTED OFFER! Now 141180 bflclttoll
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11

54

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42 Church council

' PISCES CFeb. 2D-March 20) Usually you

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Subordinates make cautious assessments of s1tuations
might not be too good at keep1ng accu- before gening involved. TOOay, however,
rate records today . DoUb le-check the1r
figures and al so be sure they're doing

you might impulsive ly jump in on the
advice of someone less informed than

lhtngs as you 1ns1rucled.
you yourself
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Genera ll y ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Be rea hslic
speaktng, lhtngs mtghl come ralher easily loday so lhal you don't labor under lhe

A

for you Ieday, but th1s could turn our to be 1illusion that an influential friend is going

'Your

WJ'Birthday
Friday, Aug. 19, 1994

a disadvanlage, because you mighllake l'o back you up 100 percenl.
an opportunily for granted and tai l lo Unfortunalely. he/she may be looking lhe
develop 11 properly.

other way when needed.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Today you TAURUS CAprll 20·May 20) You and
might have a greater propensity for mak-

1

your mate might not feel an identical

1ng mlslakes than usual. If you do make sense of urgency regarding a specific
correcllhem promptly and proper- objeclive loday If you lhink it is crilical,
errors,
Some of lhe changes you've been hoping
lo make '" your bas ic lilesly le mighl ly, ralher than sweeping lhem under \he ' be prepared lo Iackie il alone.
,
GEMINI CMay 21-June 20) You're
become realilies in the year ahead. What rug.
previously restricted you may no longer SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your famous tor being able to juggle several
hunches mighl not be a ll thai accurale assignmenls simultaneously, bullhis talbe eflective.
so don'l rely upon them loo heavi- enl might no\ be operative today. If you
loday,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're nol apl to
duck making difficull dec&lt;sions today, ly. If your inlellecl is in conflicl wilh your a«empl loo much, lhe root might cave in
on you.
because you might view them lhrough intuition, trust the former. not the laner.
rose-colored glasses. Unfortunately, lhe CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Ahhough CANCER (June 21-July 22) Today your
pink cloud hovering over your judgmenl is you're likely lo be money-conscious I. curiosily mighl be peakmg. This is well
nol an ally. Gel a jump on l~e by under- loday, this slill isn't liable lo prevenl you and good, provided you don't start poking
standing lhe tnlluences governing you •n from spending beyond your means tor your nose inlo olher people's aflairs.

••

i

�OhiO

Rotarians
are briefed
on project

(;R ,\NDEST STEER- Jeromee Ca laway's
steer stole the show Tuesday night. It took grand
r hampion status in the steer showman and mar·

RESERVE MARKET STEER -John
Cullins' steer won the reserve champion market

RESERVE STEER SHOWMAN- Chastity
Jude' s steer earned reserve champion steer

ket steer classes. Calaway's steer weighed 1,275
pounds . Pictured with Calaway is 1994 Meigs
Cou nty Fair Queen Michele Guess.

steer tille Tuesday night. Pictured with Collins is
1994 Meigs County Fair Queen Michele Guess.

The Belleville Hydroelectic Project, known as Ohio Muni ci pal
Electric Generating Agency Joint
Vemure 5, will be coming to !his
area in the ne&lt;t few years, Janine
A. Moon , sen ior vice-president of
American Municipal Ohio, told the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
at its regular Monday night meet·
ing at the Heath Methodist Church.
Mrs. Moon was accompanied to
the meeting by her daughter Lara.
While the generating plant will be
located at the Belleville-Reedsville
Dam, the transmission line will
stretc h across Meigs County for
nearly 25 miles to the substation at
Rutland, where it will join the Ohio
power grid, Moon said.
The application for !he project
was submitted by !he city of Jackson in 1983 and was approved by
the Federal Energy Reg ulatory
Commission on Sept 27,1989. The
project is a joint venture of 42 Ohio
communities. When completed, the
project will provide the communiti es with an additional so urce of
long term, low cost, reliable power,
according to the speaker.
The major Meigs County benefits from the transmission line will
be an estimated more !han $1 million for purchasing land and easements for ri~ht of way, Moon said.
This transmission line may also be
used as an inducement for industrial development as current transmission lines are inadequate for this
purpose, she pointed out. And, of
course, there will be the necessary
tree trimming and maintenance, she
said. Across the river, jobs will be
a r.art of the picture. The company
w1ll make annual payments to !he
county in lieu of ta&lt;es.
Moon pointed out that there are
three maJor power suppliers in
Ohio. AMP Ohio is one of these,
made up of some 77 of !he municipal power and generating facilities.
Middleport at one time had its own
local facilities , it was noted. The
olher two types of generating and
transmission facilities are !he pri·
vate industrial companies owned
by the stock holders and !he rural
electric groups which are owned by
the consumers.
Municipal electric companies
got their big boost during the 1920·
30 period when electricity was
coming into wide usage, according
to the speaker. Currently AMP
Ohio has their local office located
on East Main Street in Pomeroy on
a part time basis.
Jon Perrin, Rotary president,
welcomed Randy Haye s of the
Farmers Bank as a new member.
Robbie Shields, office supervisor
for the Pomeroy Office of Ohio
Power Co. was a guest of the club.
The women of the church served
!he dinner.

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
Ads

showman Tuesday night. Jude is this year's beef
princess.

first!

Calaway steer named champion
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
Steers from around the county
stepped out to try to earn !he grand
. oa mpi on honors in the ~arket
s1.c r competition Tuesday mght.
.t ut when all was said and done,
Jcro1 nec Calaway's 1,275-pound
stee r &gt;t n away with both grand
champi L " lor the steer showman
and marh · steer.
Calawa , said that he worked
hard w1th the ;tccr year-round. This
steer was kept in a refri gerated bam
thi s sum mer, but would not grow
longer hai r. he added.
The dai ly routine for this black
bchc m01h tncluded a hearty diet
and free rein of one of the family
rarrn s' fields, Calaway said.
Th e re se rve champi on steer
showman went to 1994 Beef Queen
Chastily J udc . The reserve champiun market stee r was won by John
C\1lltns.
The market steers were ordered

by we1ght category. Here is t~e
judging results by Mount Sterhng s
Tom Lindsey.
Under 840 pounds - first,
Melissa Clifford.
900 to 990 pounds - first,
Jared Hupp; second, Shawn Dailey;
third Jeff Rankin; fourth, Bobbie
Butcher; and fifth, Dezra Wrikeman.
1,045 to 1,130 pounds - frrst,
Myca Haynes; second, B.J. Erv~n;
third Jason Ervin; fourth, Jesstca
Barringer; fifth, Cha stity Jude;
sixth James Champman; seventh,
Bria~ Hoffman; and eighth, Billee ,
Pooler.
I, 140 to I ,225 pounds - first,
Josh Ervin; second, Chance Wat·
son· third Joe Brown; fourth , RanBurl&lt;~; fiflh, Matt Evans; si&lt;th,
Billie Butcher; and se venth,
Christopher Jude.
1,240 to I ,275 pounds - frrst,
Jcromee Calaway; second, Jason
Pullins; lhird, Julie Brown; fourth,
Willie Burke; fifth, Jamie Drake;

dali

sixth, Alison Rose; and seventh,
Mauhew King.
1,280 to 1,335 poun$- frrst,
Alex Brown; second, Tyson Rose;
third, Janet Calaway; fourth, Wes·
ley Karr; fifth , Laura Brown; sixth,
Anita Calaway; and seventh ,
Robert Hoffman.
1,360 to 1,485 pounds - frrst,
John Collins; second, Candance
Bunting; third, Lisa Hoffman;
fourth, Jeremy Hupp; fifth,
Stephanie Hoffman; sixlh, Brandon
Buckley; and seventh, Andy
M
.-y•e•rs··- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

ATTENTION
Meigs Local School Employees
Swisher &amp; Lohse Phannacy is authorized
to accept your express prescription Drug
Card. You Only Pay the Co-Pay.
We Welcome Your Prescription Business.

Fair manager claims
steers tampered with
COLU MBUS (APJ - Five of
th e top 10 steers exh ibi ted at the
OhiO Stat e Fai r may have been
1ampered with, the fair's general
manager sJ id .
"Some of the testing has result·
ed in a si tuation where we have to
do furth er testing," Ri c hard
Frenette said Wednesday.
An unknown substance was
fo und on five of the carcasses 4ur·
ing a ro utine investigation after the
Junior Fa1r steers were slaughtered.
It wa s un clea r how the sub·
stance got there, Frenette said. It
was possib le the substance found
was a legal medication improperly
applied.
Frenette would not say whether
there is a relationship among the
five steers being investigated.
In 1992, a fami ly from Fostoria

was banned from showing at the
fair for three years after officials
found that up to a quart of veg·
etable oil had been injected into
one of their steers.
The uil , injected under the skin,
made the animal appear better
rounded.
People involved in tampering
face banishment from exhibiting at
the fair for a minimum of three
years, or possibly for life, Frenette
said.
None of the exhibitors has been
disqualified.
" No decision wiU be made until
we' re sure we've done everr,thing
we can to get all the results, ' said
Paul Mechling, chairman of the
livestock committee of the Ohio
Exposition Commission, which
oversees the fair.

EXP~ESS

MJ.SCRIPTS

•
M)N()

Prescription Drug Program

GAOOP"'

GAOUP,._
VAllO OATES
EUOIBIUTY VEAIFICAHON

'""""'

Ohio Lottery

Flower show
champion in
4-H judging

Pick 3:
895
Pick 4:
7653
Buckeye 5:
7-11-16-22-37

Page6

1994 MERCURY
COUGAR XR 7

1993 FORD
TAURUS

V·B, auto., A/C, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass., PS, PB, PW,
PL, pwr. seat, much more.
Local trade

4 Door Sedan, V-6, auto.,
A/C, AM/FM cass. , PS, PB,
PW, PL , pwr. seat, lilt,
cruise.

$16,449

$13,949

Low IOnlghtln 60s, partly
cloudy. Saturday partly cloudy,
high in upper MOs.

•

en tine
VoL45, NO. 76
Copyrlghl 1994

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 ce nts

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 19, 1994

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Trotter creates new record ~Trying to win a bunny----in Meigs Fair harness race
Results, Page 4
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
A Kooler King began his reign

1993 FORD CROWN VICTORIA LX
V-8, auto., A/C, AM/FM cass., all power, dual pwr.
seats, leather. Much more!

I 992 MITSUBISHI
ECLIPSE
DOHC/6V 4 cyl., AC, 5
speed, PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass., sun·
roof, etc.

Turbo 4 WD, A/C, 5 speed,

I PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass., more, red.

$12,949

1991 FORD
ESCORT LX '

1990 GEO
PRIZM GSI

PS, PB, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette, more.

This 3-year-old colt cut through
the hazy heat in the fastest harness
horse time in !he 13 1-year-history
of the Mei gs County Fair.
Driven by Terry VanRhoden,
Koolcr King finished the mile-long
eighth race in two minutes, two
seconds. This two-lap pace clipped
the old record by more than a sec·
ond.
This record- setting horse has
won 12 of its last 17 races, placing
second twice and third three times
in the balance, said owner Tom
Poulton of Croton.
''I' m thrilled to dealh," Poulton
said. "It's a thrill 10 have this horse
here."
TI1c King had won !he fust heat
at two minutes four seconds coasting in, driver VanRhoden said.
. " Thi s horse is ready to race
every time. Once you go toward .
the gate he 's all business," Van -'
Rhoden sa id. "The idea was to
come around the first turn real
good. You have to know when it's
capable of breaking a record."
VanRhoden said he's toppled a
number of track records during his
29 years of racing. Seven years ago
he set the Rock Springs track
reco rd with another horse, he
added.
"It' s always a thrill," the 50 ·
year-old trainer and rider said .•
"Last Dec. 4th I feU and was tram·
pled on by four horses. I wonder
sometimes why I do 11. It JUSt gets
in your blood."
VanRhoden's eyes twinkled as
he talked about his champion

1991 EAGLE
TALON TSI

$12,449
2 Dr., 4 cylinder, auto., A/C,

Thur ~da y.

5 Dr. Hatchback, 4 cyl.,
auto ., A/C, PS, PB, PL,
AM/FM cassette, rear defogger. Only 40,000 miles.

--- RECORD SE'ITER - Kooler King nies past the finish line in
record time at Thursday' s Meigs County Fair harness race. The J.
year-old colt is an example of the joys of this sport, trainer Terry
VanRhoden said.
horse, Kooler King.
"He learned ea rly . He always
wanted to go and go," the Mount
Vernon-based trainer added . "You
can get a clown {to drive) it if it's a
good horse, but not many can actu·
ally train them ."
While the trainers spend countless hours training, grooming and
caring for these fleet-footed creatures, it remains a business, VanRhoden added.
VanRhoden ' s brother-in -law
hought this horse for $900 - one
of the last ones in the three -day
sale near Columbus. Now buyers
have offered $17,000 for Kooler

1993 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB XLT
4.0L V-6, 5 speed, A/C, PS; PB, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette. More I

1992 CHEVROLET
G20 VAN

1992 PLYMOUTH
ACCLAIM

Tiara Conversion, 350 V-8,
AJC, tilt, crulae,
cassette, PS, PW,
19,000 miles.

4 Door, 4 cylinder, automat·

""''"L..

lc, air conditioning, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cassette,
PS, PB. Morel

sa,449
i 991 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS
· V-8, auto., air conditioning,
PS, PB, PW, PL, Pwr. seat,
tilt, crui•e, AM/FM cassette.
Clean one owner.

1991 BUICK
CENTURY

McDOWELL PROVES POPULAR HERE -The pack~d
grandstand and the hundreds more who filled the race track 1n
front clapped and cheered in appreciation of ~onnie McDow~ll,
who performed Thursday at the ~Jlst ~ergs &lt;;ounty Fa1r.
McDowell ' s popularity bas soared s~n.ce h1~ s.elec!1on to do the
voice of Elvis in a movie and a televiSion m1n1-ser1~. McDowe~
was backed by a four-member band, The Rhythm Kmg~, for hiS
performance last night. (Sentinel photo by Chprlene Hoen1ch)

cylinder, automatic, air
PS, PB, PW,
PL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cas·
Clean car.

contdltlo~nl~lg,

$10,449

Meigs County Fair

1991 DODGE
DYNASTY

1988 PONTIAC
GRAND AM

4 Door, V-8, automatic, air
conditioning, power ateerlng, power locks, AM/FM
stereo, more.

Door LE, 4 cylinder,
automatic, air conditioning,
power steering, power
brakes, AM/FM caaaette.

Go-Cart Racing
Saturday 3:00 p.m.
Thursday,
4:30p.m.
5:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
12:00 Midnight

$5,449
/;

9:00a.m.
!O:OOa.m.
I:OOp.m.
3:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

August 18

(Seulor Citiaeuo Day uatil 2o00 p .m.)

Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Uvestock Sale· Show Arena
Hill Stage- Back Porch Swing Band
Hill Stage- Belles and Beaus
Truck &amp; Semi Pull
Gates Oose
Saturday0u~t 20
(MeDonald's lJay) till 2 p.m.
Prcuy Baby Collle8t· Show Arena
Ronald McDonald Activities- Hill Stage
Hill Stage- Big Bend Ooggen

Go- Kart Racea
Kiddie Tractor PuU Cbampio01- Show Arena
Yooth Night- Show Arent
TnaorPull
Hill Stage- Pure Country
Grandlland- Arm Wrestling

•

Gatc~Oose

See You At The
_1994 Meigs County Fair
'

..

King, he added.
Ohio's harness race purses are
less than half of those in Chicago
or in the Northeast. But, as a busi ness, Van Rhoden has sold his horses to these large markets where
they have stolen away shows.
"It's a business deci sion . You
sell !hem because vou can't afford
to keep them," he added. "B ut you
really do miss them."
As president of !he River Valley
Coal Circuit of harn ess rac ing,
VanRhoden said he would lilce to
see his sport ge t the respect it
deserves.
"This is a sponlhat's not recognized," VanRhoden said, unless it's
about the small portion of rotten
members. "There's a lot of good
memories in this bus iness , even
when you fall down. But our sport
doesn't get that much publicity."
He added he tried to convince
his son not 10 enter the racing business, but his son was already
hooked.
"It's not fun like it used to be,"
VanRhoden said. "Now with better
quality horses and everybody wanting to win it's competitive. It used
10 be family-oriented where people
would come down wilh lunch baskets and only race against the same
horses."
Today, since harness racing
streiChe~ from May through October on a circuit the drivers barely
know each other, he added.
"They call these dumb animals.
He knows when he's supposed to
go," VanRhoden said. "They're
just lilce children. You correct them
when !hey do wrong and treat !hem
when they do well ."
The third and final day of the
fair's harness racing begins today
at 12:30 p.m . and should run until
at least 3 p.m.

Michael Taylor, 10, of C hester tries to get the ball into a noating pad at the Float Game Thursday morning. The game, sponsored by Wasko Concessions, is giving away baby bunnies as one of
the prizes. Kids must have their parents' permission to take one if they win and must throw the
ball into a special red circle to get their choice or a bunny. (Sentinel photo by Amy B. Potts)

White House orders Cuban
refugees sent to Navy base
W ASH!NGTON , (AP)
Alarmed by a s urging tide of
Cuban refugees in South Florida,
!he Clinton administration abruptly
shifted policy and said today that
refugees picked up at sea will be
taken to the U.S. Navy base at
Guantanamo Bay in southeast Cuba
for processing.
Additional U.S . ships are
expected to be sent to the waters
between Cuba and Florida to help
intercept refugees who have been
making the treacherous 90-mile trip
on makeshift vessels, said senior
administration officials, speaking
only on condition of anonym1ty.
There already are thousands of
refugees from Haiti at Guantanamo.
The official sai d there are " a
number of available sites" for processing Cubans who have special
status under U.S.law and cannot be
returned involuntarily to their
homeland.
He did not name the additional
sites, but said they were not in
other countries.
The Coast Guard has picked up
more than 2,700 Cuban refugees
!his month raising fears of a repeat
of the 1980 Marie! boat lift in
which 125,000 Cubans reached
U.S. shores in five months.
The administration's decision
- reversing lhree decades of U.S.
policy - followed a day in which
it endured a drumbeat of criticism
from Florida Gov . Lawton Chiles,
a fellow Democrat who is up for

re-election.
ChileS~ interviewed this morning
on NBC and ABC, said the move
sends a finn signal from the U.S.
government that could slow the
exodus from Cuba. Cubans should
be encouraged to stay home and
" bring about the fa ll of Cas tro
ralher than escape," he sa1d.
The announcement contr asted
with the administrntion's stance
earlier Thursday when Reno gave a
cool response to pleas for help
from Chiles and said the situation
was under control. Chiles earlier
Thursday had declared an immigration emergency in Florida.
"This keeps Castro from being
able to call the shots in regard to
immigration policy ," Chiles said.
He said Florida officials were prepared to help provide any additiOn·
al detention fac ilities that might be
needed.
Administration officials said
President Clinton wa s expected to
make a more detailed statement
today at an afternoon news conference.
Refugees who reach U.S. shores
would be processed as they have
been since 1966, a senior administration official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. Since that
time , Cubans arriving in Florida
have been released to relatives or
other sponsors in !he United States
upon their arrival, after being interVIewed by immigration officials.
The only exception is for suspected
felons or !hose believed to be car.

rying communicable diseases.
Reno did not indicate how long
the refugees would be held . She
said the new policy would apply to
those Cubans already being kept at
a detention faci lity at Key West,
Ffa.
In her statement at the White
House. Reno said: "In an effort to
deter more Cuban s from risking
thei r hves, effective imm ediately
the Immigration and Naturalization
Service will detain all individuals
interdicted . The detention of these
people will continue pending a
determination of how !hey should
be proce ssctl by th e INS." She
an swered very few questi ons and
essentially declined to elaborate.
One option was to take those
refugees picked up at sea to the
U.S. naval base at G uantanamo
Bay , Cuba, temporaril y wilh th e
poss ibility of relocating them in
other nations, the senior administration official said. The Guan·
tanamo base, located at the southeasiCrn tip of Cuba, already hou se{
15,000 Haiti,ms seeking asylum.
Another administration offic1al
said the detained Cubans could be
kept in existin g facilities in Florida
already being used for detention , of
Haitians primarily.
Clinton was presented with a
series of options at an afternoon
national sec urily meeting, said the
senior official. He said the administration was motiva ted by the
humanitari an aspects of a tide of
refugees.

Cause sought
for Portland
house blaze
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department is investigating the
remains of a two-story frame struc·
ture that burned to the ground
Wednesday night, Sheriff James
Soulsby said.
At !his time !he cause of the fire
has not been determined, according
to a Racine fue officiaL
Bill Eakins, who lived in this
Old Portland Road home, nor anyone else was injured by the fire.
The structure was owned by John
Coffman, according to the sheriff's
department.
A nearby structure, owned by
Buck Smith, was damaged by the
intense heat, Soulsby added.
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department got !he ftre call at 9: 12
p.m. Wednesday and the Bashan,
Ravenswood C"N.Va.) and Silverton
rw.va.) fue departments respond·
ed to the seene.
Treated at the scene were ftre·
fighterS Mathew Richards, Damon
Fisher ~ Boyd Bailey and Ralph
Fisher.

./

PORTLAND FIRE - Firefighters battled
this blaze at an Old Portland Road horne
Wednesday. The pre's cause remains unknown
and tbe Meigs County Sheriff's Department is
investigating the Incident, according to a Racine

fire official. Fire departments and squads from
Racine, Basban, Ravenswood, W.Va., and Silverton, W.Va., responded to the scene. (Photo
wurtesy of Dennis Wolfe)

•

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