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                  <text>Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday,

August16,.
199~
.,

Livestock interview winners announced
Winners have been selected in
the annual livestock interview competition in conjunction wilh the
annual Meigs County Junior Fair.
The winners are:
Market Steer: Tyson Rose,.
grand champion; Lisa Hoffman,
reserve champion; Anita Calaway
and Myca Haynes, honorable mention.
Beef Breeding 1: James Chapman, grand champion; Sarah
Roush, reserve champion.
Beef Breeding II: Stephanie
Hoffman, grand champion; Anita
Calaway, reserve champion; Julie
Brown, honorable mention.
Feeder Calf: Michele Guess,
grand champion; Anita Calaway,
reserve champion; Ann Wiggins
and Eric Monlgomery, honorable
mention.
Dairy Cows and Heifers: Nancy
Nally, grand champion; Ben
Holter, reserve champion: Kristi
Warner, Chris Parker. honorable
· mention.
Dairy Cows and Management:

WINNER • Kay Warden or Racine was recently selected as the
winner or tbe "Penny Michelle" doll donated to lhe Racine Park
Board by Lloyd Middleton or Royal Vienna Collection. or CO!IIviUe.
The doll was numbered and signed by the artist 'and signed and
dated by Mr. Middleton. Presenting Ms. Warden with "Penny
Michelle" is Dale Hart, presidenl or Star Mill Park Board.

Tricia Davis, grand champion;
Chuck Parker, reserve champion;
Paul Smith, honorable mention.
Goats: Tara Grucser, grand
champion; Ben Crane, reserve
cham pion; Patty Nally. Danielle
Grueser, Kay Hunt, Stephanie
Kopec, honorable mention.
Market Lamb I; Elaine Putman,
grand champion; Matt Pavich.
reserve champion; Tyler Johnson,
honorable mention.
Market Lamb II: Rebecca Scolt,
grand champion; Riki Barringer.
reserve champion; Patty Nally,
honorable mention.
Markel Lamb III: Jonathan
Avis, grand champion; Shawn Dai·
ley, reserve champion; Heather
Dailey. honorable mention.
Beginning Sheep Breeding:
Billee Pooler, grand champion;
Christy Drake, reserve champ1on.
Intermediate Sheep Breeding:
Rebecca Scolt, grand champion;
Jonathan Avis, reserVe champion.
Advanced Sheep Breeding:
Nancy Nally. grand champion;

A bridal shower was held Linda and Leslie Gilkey, Ruth
recently for Mindy Harris by Ms. Durst, Pam Dill, Audra and Wade
Vickie Harris and Mrs . Penny Harrison, Krisli Durst. Jan, Liza,
Brinker.
Willie and Victoria Zahran, Vicki
Refreshments were served and H;u:ris, and Penny Brinker.
games were played with pri zes
Sending gifts were Mrs. Nancy
going to Mary Parson s. Cindy Morris, Bev Roush, Monk and Nan
King, and Leslie Gilkey.
Herman. Laura and Amorcuc
Those attending were Destiny Salser, Laura Harrison, Wilbur and
and Linda Jenkins, Phyllis Morris, Tillie Rowley, Goldie Gilmore,
. Terri and Janet Manuel, Sally Hoi· Audrie Young, Stephanie, Tim and
man. Lorrctta Tiemyer, Cindy and Tiffany Deem, Mr. and Mrs. John
Misti King. Mary Roush. Lois Bacon, Jan and Chuck VanCooney.,
Jenkins, Melissa and Josh Morris, · Sandy, Marty and James Hart,
Tina Bissell, Mary Persons, Kim Kevin and Candy Uelbrick, Sandy
and Dusly Eads, Flossie Nelson, and Mike Walker, and David and
Patty Imboden, Amanda Brinker, Stephanie Roush .

Plans lor a chicken barbecue
were discussed when Star Grange
No. 778 met recently.
The event will take place on
September 19 at 11 a.m. until 2
p.m. al the grange hall located on
County Road I ncar Salcm Center.
. The meeting was opened by
. \"aster Pauy Dyer who welcome
rpembers from Hemlock Grange
who were visitors.
Susan· Oliver, Executive Director for the Meigs County Senior
Ci lizens was present and discussed
the programs and services of the
cenrer and asked for suppon of a I
Mill levy to be placed on the

November ballot. the grange went
on reel?"' as supporting the levy.
Jams Macomber. Deaf Chairman, read an ALERT on Medicare
and hearing aids.
Allan Halliday. Agrieullural
Chairman, reporiCd that the Meigs
County Fair will be August 16-21.
Patty Dyer, Fair booth chairman
reported that the grange received
eighth place on the booth at the
Ohio State Fair. She also reported
that work will begin on .the Meigs
County booth about 5:30 p.m. on
Friday. Members were informed of
what was needed for the booth.
Legislative chairman Eldon Bar-

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days bdore an event
and tbe day of that event. Items
m usl be received in ad vance to
assure publication in the calendar.

•

MONDAY
RACINE - The .Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the high school.
RACiNE • Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

have enrollmenr Monday through
Thursday from 8:30-11:30 a.m.
POMEROY · New student
enrollment at Meigs High School
will held at the high school through
next week from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

PICKiNG UP MATERIALS - New students attending Meigs
Junior High ScbO(II picked up registration material at an orienta·
lion picnic 'Thursday. Here students, accompanied by parents, pick
up a schedule.

RACINE • Schools in the
Southern LocaJ School District will

Student orientation held

Joel Lynch, son of Keilh and
Beth Lynch of MiddleP;On. recently
celebrated his fifth binhday with a
swimming party given by his moth·
• er and father, and his brothers Josh
and Jake Lynch. A T-baU cake was
served, a cookout wass held, and
.the guests swam.
Attending were paternal grandmother Delores Surface, maternal
grandmother Hazilee Riebel,
Roger, Robin, Joslin and Dalton
Riebel. Richard, Diana, Ricky and
Christopher Johnson, Rhonda and
Megan Carnahan, Renee Riebel,
Mike and Mikey Lavender, Chet
and Stephanie Wigal, Nicole Varian, Linda and Jesse Hanson ,
Tammy and Samantha Cole.
Michelle, Eddie, and Amanda
Neece. Craig Cundiff, Darien
O'Neal, Donna, Jarred, and Collin
Griggs.
Others presenting gifts were
maternal grandfather Roger Riebel,
David Carnahan, Jessica Baker,
Tyson Lee. Ray. Tracy, Jacob and
Ashlec Smith.

Observes birthday

'

cent of the stall are new-comers to
the school, he said he is very excit·
ed about developing new educational programs for the students.
Gaul then invited all guests to
sign the registtation book, pick up
scheduled and materials purchased
by the Effective Schools Team,
dine on the picnic-style supper provided by Vaughan's Cardinal, the
Meigs Junior High's Partners-In Education, and browse through the
building.

..

Computer class set
Learn the basics with of personal computers with a class to be
offered at Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
The Adult Services Department
of Buckeye Hills Career Center is
offering a class on the basics of
operating the IBM Personal Com·
puter (PC). The hands-on class is
scheduled 10 begin August 24. This
class is for those with limited e•pericrice and builds confidence by
teaching the popular Microsofl
Works Program as well as lhe Disk
Operating System.

•

Classes will 1&gt;e taught on Toes·
days and Thursdays from 6-9 p.m.
Call 245-5334 for more information.

f

\

Pick 3:

360

· Pick 4:
8fi04
BuckeyeS:

Social Security benefit estimate
adjusts for current dollars
by Ed Peterson
Social Security manager In
Athens

llol. ,44, NO. 78

1 secuon. 10 Pages 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 17, 1993

llultlmecll• Inc.

,------Kiddie tractor pull-----____,

A Multimedia

Inc. Nowspaper

PrOposed yard·sale

ordinance has first
reading by council

LEVOLOR

Long a favorite with young·
sters, the kiddie tractor pull
competition got underway
Monday arternoon at the
Meigs County Fair. Children
use a specially built toy tractor -to pull a sled, similar to
sleds used in the big tractor
pulls - only smaller. Kiddie
tractor pulls will continue all
week with a pull-off to be held
Saturday. Tractor r.ulls start
at 4 p.m. daily witb the exception or Friday when pulls start
at noon. At left, 5-year-old
Brandon Goeglien or Tuppers
Plains, son of Jody and Mike
Goeglien or Long Bottom,
weighs in prior lo the competi·
lion, Top, Jennifer Harris puts
in the extra err6it to achieve a
full pull, proving the event is
not JUSt for the boys. (Sentinel
photos by Jim Freeman)

1" Aluminum

Horizontal BUnds
59x42" 73x50"
68x84"
72x50"
71x72"
72x64"

Vinyl
Blinds

$499

.
WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

. 428·1065

The 1993 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

drive set

'
•

LIQUIDATION
SALE OF
BLINDS!

accurately. And, although you may
not be ready to retire, you will find
the benefil estimate helpful in plan·
ning your furure.
The nexr time you ask Social
The earninss information and
Security to send you an estimate of benefit estimate is easy to obtain.
Start
the benefits you would receive a1 Call Social Security s toll-free
retirement, you will find the number, I-800-772-12l3 and ask
At
Each
amount figured in "today's" dol- for a Form SSA·7004 (Request for
lars. Estimates prepared before Earnings and Benefit 'Estimate
September I 993 were projected in Stlllcmenl). You should receive lhe
"future" dollars using a I percent form in about 10 working days. It
adjustment to take inlo account will take you about 5 minutes to
MIMORIAL IRIDGI A-CII 011
wage growth for each year up to complete the form. Mail it to Social
GARFIEUI AVL, PARitiRIIURQ
age 62.
Security in the envelope that
MON.·FRI. 9·9;
When Social Securily first accompanies the form . You can
began issuing earnings and benefit expect 10 receive the report of your
SAT. 9·5:30; SUN. 1·5
statemenrs in 1988, the estimates earnings and your benefit estimate
reflected the probable effects of within 6 weeks.
continued work and changes in the
economy up to the time the worker
reached retirement age. Social
Security is no longer adding the I
pertenr factor in order 10 rnaire its
retirement benefit estimates consistent with benefit estimateS prepared
by most private and public pension
planners.
Your benefit estimate aJso will
include a yearly breakdown of your
earnings that have been )'CilOt1ed 10
Social Security and an estimate of
how much you have paid in Social
Security taxes.
It's a good idea to re·queSI a
Monday, August 16
statement of your earnings at least
every three years so that you make
4:00 p.m.-King and Queen Contest- Hill Stage
sure that your ~ings are reported
4:00p.m.- Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sllow Arena
6:00 p.m.· Hillside Stage- God's Kidz
Clothin~
6:00p.m.- Draft Horse Show
The Gallia·Meigs Community
7:00p.m.· Moto-Cross
Action Agency will hold its free
8:30p.m.· Hillside Stage- Shady River Sllufflers
clothing day for low-income persons on August 17 from 9 a.m. 10
. Thesday, August 17
noon. The agency is located in the
8:00a.m. -Junior Fair Rabbit Show- Show Arena
old school house building in
Cheshire.
·
I :00 p.m. -Open Class Flower Show- Junior
I ;00 p.m. -Draft Horse Fun Sllow
3:00p.m.- Junior Fair Parade
4:00p.m.· Kiddie Tractor Pull· Show Arena
4:00p.m. -Hillside Stage- Middlebranch
5:00p.m. -Junior Fair Board Auction
6:00p.m.· Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by Open Class
Sheep Show- Show Arena
7:00p.m. -Grandstand- Demolition Derby
7:00p.m.· Hillside Stage- Kingdom Kids
9:00 p.m.- Hillside Stage- Out of the Blue

Low tonight In 60s, partly
~!":l· Wednellllay, sunny, hlgb

1-9-12-16-29

Page4

rows spoke on forestry problems Crafi, food and game booths will
and about reeducating people oil be available. Entertainmenl will
stan at noon with One Way Slreet,
managemenl teChniques.
The Literary prograni was pre- followed by Silver Wings, Our of
sented by Rosalie Story, master of the Blue, Middlebranch Bluegrass,
Hemlock Grange in the absence of Born Again Believers, CJ and the
Jesse White, Lecturer. There were • Country Gentlemen, and The River
readings "Sure I Remember When" Valley Boys. There will also be a
by Rosalie Story; ''The Old Cov- fall festival queen, pumpkin growered Bridge" by He)en Quivey; ing contesr, and a parade. The
"The Thrashing Ring" by Wally parade will be sponsored by
Bradford; "Looking Around" by Ravenswood Aluminum Cotpara·
Muriel Bradford. A skit called lion Company (RACO) and·awards
"Who's on First" by Muriel and will be presented for first, second
Wally Bradford was also per- and third pllice floats.
formed. the program ended w1th a
Anyone wishing to ser up a
number game and Eldon Barrows booth should contact Shirley Stewwinning the prize.
art at Racine Home National Banlc,
Patty Dyer discussed National 949-2210 to reserve a space. There
Convention in November and will be a $10.00 fee to reserve a
reminded those planning to go to space. Anyone having any queslet her know so transportation and tions may contact Sam Pickens at
room reservations can be finalized,. 949-2670, Lee Lee at 949-2454, or
The next meeting will be Kathryn Hart 81949-2656 at 6 p.m.
September 4 with an officers conference at 7 p.m. and the meeting at
8 p.m. First Degree win. be put on
in full form following Junior
Grange Graduation.
'
Forty members, visitors and
juniors were present and a potluck
refreshments were served following the fl!eeting.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - American Red
Cross Bloodmobile will be at the Racine Fall Festival
Meigs Senior Citizen MultipurPose
Plans are underway for Racine
Building on Wednesday from I · Fall Festival which will be Septem·
5:30p.m.
her 25 from 10 a.m . to 10 p.m.

POMEROY - A team meeting
for the Southern High School Golf
Team will be Monday at 5:30p.m.
at the Meigs County Golf Course.

TO PERFORM • These 17 dancers, dressed in SO's attire, will
be dancing to ''Wear My Ring Around Your Neck" as they perform with the Shady River Sbumers clogging team, Monday on
the hill stage at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured L·R, rro.11t,
Jaynee Davis, Je~ica Bla~ttnar, ,Charla Burge, Marissa Whaley,
Amanda Hoyt, Enca Hanmg. Mtddle row, Judy Eichinger, Dena
Manley, Sbawna Manley, Pooch Brewer, Donna Roach. Back row,
Alice Hawthorne, Amy·· Hendrix, Lara Sayre, Libby King, Cinda
Starcher, ,Sheila Whaley. Tbe sbow wiD begin at 8:30p.m.

grand champion; Jeanie Newell,
reserve champion; Jennifer Clif·
ford, Peggy HeLzer, Rr.an Kauff,
Kindell Brown, honorat le mention.
· Rabbits II: Cheryl Jewell, gland
champion; Amy Smith, reserve
champion; Joshua Roush, Jason
Ervin, Kristen Brown, honorable
mention.
Basic 4-H Horsemanship: Jody
!hie, grand champion; Daniel
Young, reserve champion; Joshua
lhle, Tara Grueser. Whimey Karr,
.lp,s_je Jarrell, honorable mention.
Basic 4-H Horse Science: Jamie
Erwin, grand champion; Danielle
Gruescr, reserve champion; Cassandra Smith, honorable mention.
Light Horse Selection: Jaymie
Miller, grand champion; Sara
Craig, reserve champion; Sarah
Grueser, honorable mention.
The Normal Animal: Tricia
Davis, grand champion; Mathew
Justice. reserve champion; Jeanie
Newell, Susan Grueser, honorable
mention.

Star Grange plans fall barbecue

Harris bridal shower held

MIDDLEPORT - Appro•imately 250 students, parents. staff
and board members auended the
second annual student, parent,
teacher orientalion picnic held
, Thursday evening at Meigs 1unior
High School.
Principal David Gaul welcomed
those altending and introduced
each staff member. He indicated he
was pleased with lhe large turnout
of parents, teachers and students.
Since he and approx.imately 45 per-

MichCie Guess, reserve champion.
Beginner Market Hog: Melissa
Francis, grand champion; Lori Harris, reserve champion; Robert Harris, Kay Hunt, Chris Barringer,
honorable mention.
lntermediale Markel Hog:·
~abby Kauff, grand champion;
Amanda Wheeler, reserve champion; Matthew Justice, Alyson Pat·
terson, honorable mention. ·
Advanced Market Hog: Ginger
Holcomb, grand champion; Mandi
Sheets, reserve champion; Alyssa
Hoffman, Aric Patterson, honor·
able mention.
Raising Pullets: Melissa Guess,
grand champion ; Odie Karr,
reserve champion; Michael Guess,
Mendy Guess, honorable mention.
Ra1sing Broilers: Bob Hoffman.
grand champion; Melissa Guess,
reserve champion; Odie Karr, Barbara Smith, Brandon Smith,
Matthew Kirk, honorable mention.
Ducks and Geese: Rebekah
Karr, grand champion.
Rabbits I: Joseph McCale,

·ohio Lottery

Reds·
lose tilt
'to Mets

POULTRY SHOW WINNERS- Tbe rol·
lowing youngsters were named grand cbampi·
ons or reserve champions il) Monday's Junior
Fair Poultry Show. Winners sbown are, rrom
right: Alban Salser or the County Critters,
grand champion exotic birds; Rebekah Karr or
the Busy Beavers, grand champion ducks ait~ .

geese, reserve champion pullet;- Mike Guess of
All'red Livestock, grand champion pullet, grand
cliamplon market pen; Barbara Smith or the
Pioneers, reserve champion market pen; Melissa
Kirk of the Salem Center Go Getters, reserve
champion broiler; Kennilb Kirk of the Salem
Center Go Getters, grand champion broiler.

By .RM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy residents may soon
find a change in the procedure for
holding yard and garage sales in
the viUage.
A proposed yard/garage sale
ordinance received its frrst reading
Monday night at a regular meeting
of the Pomeroy Village Couricil.
Council members may vote to
accept the ordinance afler three
consecutive readings.
The proposed ordinance contains definitions and outlines the
type of property which may be
sold .
If the proposed ordinance is
adopled, individuals desiring to
hold a residential sale must obtain a
permit from the village. Permit
applicants must supply their full
name and address, the location of
the planned residential sale, the
date or dates upon, which the sale
will be held, the date or dates of
any other sales held in the past 12
months and an affirmative state·
ment that the property to be sold
was owned on the date of application by the applicant or by members of his or her residence and was

neither acquired nor consigned for
the purpose of resale.
A $10 non-refundable fee will
be charged for perm irs and resi •
dents are limited 10 two permits a
year. No sales will be permiued
except between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 6 p.m. nor for more than three
consecutive days with exceptions
being made for inclement weather.
The ordinance also details display of permits, signs and inspections.
·
· Charitable or~anizations are
exempt from proviSions of the proposed ordinance.
Endorse levy
Following a meeting with Susan
Oliver, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
council members voted unanimously to support a one-mill senior citizens tax levy which will be on
November's b3llot
"Everrone regardless of age
should have a choice where they
spend their life," Oliver said.
It's cheaper to keep people at
home, she said.
The agency has been here for 20
years, she said. I wanl to see us
here for ~0 mog: years.

.

Oliver explained the levy will
cost the average taxpayer in 'the
county approximately 4" a day.
"For all the good they do, it is
well deserved," said Councilman
Bill Young.
Reading a report from Village
Administrator John Anderson,
Mayor Bruce Reed updated council
on several on-going projects. .
Work on extending sewer lines
on West Main Street to Ihe
Marathon Service Station and the
Hutton Car Wash should begin
Aug. 3I with work being complet·
ed by the middle of OciDber, Reed
said.
'
Also, engineering is almost
completed on· the Lincoln Heights
Reservoir and Main Street Water
Line projects, he said.
A smoke lest wiD be conducted
In lhe area near the Meigs County
Public Library to detect a troublesome sewer odor. he added. Smoke
will be injected into the sewer lines
OK emergency resolution
Council approved an emergency
resolution allowing the village of
Middleport to apply for gran Is
under the Ohio Deparrmcnt of
Continued
on page 3
.

Poorer school districts funded,
but inequity suit .will progress
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The state has
paid out another $60 million to the
state's poorest school districts to
try to eliminate some of the
inequities in its scl)ool subsidy for. mula.
But the money, released Mon ·
day by the state Controlling Board,
will not stop a lawsuit filed by districts trying to get a new funding
formula in place.
Monday's allocation is the first
of two payments planned under the
state's current two-year budget.
Another $75 million will be sent
out in 1994.
Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature started the subsidies in
1992 after lawsuits challenged the
formula used for Ohio's 611 school
dislricts.
:
The suit flied in Perry County
Common Pleas Coun is scheduled
to begin trial Oct. 18. The Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy
of School Funding, consisting
mostly of officials from smaller,
rural districts, med the suit
The group contends thai the current formula does not compensate
for variations in local tax wealth,
leaving students in poorer districts
with less financial support than

those in wealthier districts.
The lawsuit asks the court to
require the state to use a system
that fills in lhe gaps and gives
every sludent equal educational
opportunity, said. William Phillis, a
former assistant state school superintendent and a spokesman 'for the
group.
Voinovich and legislative lead·
ers have acknowledged that the
currenl system is flawed, They said
the equity payments could ease the
effects of the lawsuit and perhaps
prevent a court-ordered solution
that eould take the matter out of the
Legislature's hands.
The Controlling Board approved
the request unanimously. The Legislature previously authorized the
payments by overwhelming majorities.
Two Meigs Counly school districts, Meigs and Eastern, received
allocations in the board's action.
Meigs will get $192.251 and Eastern $198,628.
·
Gallipolis City Schools were
awarded $99,969.
Other area districts receiving
money included Jackson City,
$316,591;
Wellston
Cily,
$440,659; Oak Hill Union,
$239, 756; Vinton County.

$206,976; Fairland,$490,376; and
Symmes Valley, $391,798.
In ~ther action, the board:
• Released $110,000 for lhe
removal of asbesiDs from the basement ofthe Slatehouse, which is
undergomg restoration . Officials
said the contract is part of a $2.3
million expense not anti cipated
when the $68.7 million project was
announced in 1989.
The cost projection has now
been increased to about $82 million.
• Approved an Arts Facilities
Commission $179,187 architects'
contract for a Center for Science
and Industry project in Toledo. The
contract is with Bauer, Stark and
Lashbrook Inc .. Toledo.
. • Approved grants totaling $3.4
molhon for Edoson Materials Technology Centers that include private
companies with participation by the
University of Dayton, Wright State,
Central State, Ohio State, Ohio
University. Case Western Reserve
and the University of Cincinnati.
• Released $75,000 from the
Department of Developm ent's
roadwork development account to
the city of Shelby to help pay for
an extension of a new road into the
Shelby Industrial Park.

The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
Will be closed on Tuesday
10:30 -12 noon

For the Funeral of Lillian Truley- Moore
Wife of Board member Ferman Moore

Marda Guess, and second-runner-up was MeUs·
sa Renee currord, daughter or Jim and Faye
Clirford. Tbe other queen candidates were
Debra Frost, Ginger Ann Holcomb, Nancy
Nally, Melissa Dawn Neutzling, and Mandl
Lynn Sheets. Tbere were no candidates for
.
junior fair king Ibis year.

ROYALTY SELECTED • Stephanie
Mfcbelle Sayre, center, daughter of 'Aaron and
Shirley Sayre, Racine, was crowned the 1993
Meip County J!lnior Fair Queen In ceremonies
held Molldlly afternoon on the hill stage at the
fair. First runner-up in tbe competition was
Michele Guess, left, dauRbler of Michael ancl
~I

h~rse show at the Mel11s County fair. The Belgtan mare was. awarded Supreme Draft Horse
Champion.

\

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesda~August17,1993

'II!'!

The paily Sentinel
'

111 Court Stieet
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

,DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. ~GEIT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Contl1lller

(;eneral~anager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with nwne,
address and telephone number. No unsjgned letters will be publisbed. Letters
should be in gOO() taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

PUCO head wants better
work from consumer's counsel
By ROBERT E. WLLER
Associated Press Writer
COLillvfllUS - The chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio criticized the quality of work done by the agency that represents
consumers in utility rate cases.
.
Craig Glazer' did not mention Consumers' Counsel WiUtam Spralley,
who has announced his resignation effective Sept. 30, but S31d he hopes
the office's work improves.
Glazer last week held what he described as a media roundtable to talk
about issues involving the PUCO, and the question of Spratley's s·ucces·
sor came up. Glaz~r declined to make a recommendation.. .
.
PUCO Commissioner Jolynn Buller, whose term exprres m Aprtl, has
applied for the $89,000-a-year post. However, the Ohio Ethics Commission said she could face confltcts as the counsel because of past votes tn
rate cases.
.
Glazer declined to speculate on that question, wh ich is beins studted
by the counsel's board of govemms. The boanl, which will appotnt a successor, is reviewing about 50 apphcaoons.
Glazer was not specific in his criticism of the office..
.
Asked to cile an example, he recalled an mstance tn whtch the office
provided testimony that, if accepted, would have qualified a utility for a
rate increase larger than the one it sought.
·
"The consumers' counsel withdrew the testimony, but it was embarrassing," Glazer said. He did not identify the rate case..
Spralley said Sunday that he had no comment, refemng calls to Harold
Erdos, chairman of the agency's board of governors, who does not have a
listing in the Columbus telephone directory.
Erdos told The Columbus Dispatch in a story publi shed Saturday,
••Individuals make mistakes, but the staff has done a credible job of representing the consumer."
The board of governors earlier this month instructed Spratley to write a
history of the office that he has headed since it was created in 1977. The
board provided that he.work outside his office. ,
.
.
Vicki Payne the OCC's director of consumers servtces, S31d she could
not comment o~ Glazer's criticism because it was not specific. "We need
to know what he was talking about. Until then, we have no comment,"
she said.
Some state lawmakers have questioned whether Ohio needs a consumers' counsel, since the PUCO is supposed to prevent excessive utility
ra te increases. However, Glazer said the office has a role to play.
He said the PUCO must ensure that there is a balance among utilities,
industries and consumers, while the consumers' counsel represents con.
sumers only.
"The utilities -and industries certainly have th eir representatives," he
said.

Letters to the editor
Apologizes
To the parents and children who
attended the Gallia County Junior .
Fair on Saturday, Aug. 7, 1993, l
apologize. DK's Farm Toys was
not there for you, and I'm sorry for
that.
·
It has always been my policy to
leave when I'm no longer welcome. Friday nig ht the message
was deli vered by a fairboard member that I was not welcome, nor
would I ever be welcome or permitted to co me to your fair again.
To my customers and friends, l
as k for yo ur consideration with

regards to my early departure from
your fair.
The prize give-a-way winner
was Emily Elliott of Patriot, Ohio.
She will be contacted by telephone
or she may call DK's Farm Toys at
992-3394 (daytime) of 742-3020
(evenings).
Friends, come see DK 's Farm
Toys Aug. 16-21 at th e Meigs
County Fair. I'll be set up near the
farm antiques tent.
Respectfully
Dallas K. Weber
DK's Farm Toys
Langsville, Ohio

Another disappointment ·

•

Editor,
To the people of Meigs County,
another disappointm ent. As you
reacted the same way, when we
were flooded out. No help. About
three weeks ago I sen t out some
letters to business people, churches,
a couple of mayors and a few
friends asking them for some help
or don ations. The response was a
big zero. My husband has a very
bad condition. He's on 12 prescriptions and I'm on six every month,
He has three blbckages, two in
his legs, beside a back injury, chest
injury and head. The doctors say he
will never be better and they will
have to come off. This is because
the medication is so expensive that
he was off it for three months
beeause we didn't have the money
to buy it. He is on the strongest
painkillers they can give him, but
he says it hurts every time he takes
a step. Dr. Holley said he doesn't
know how he even gets out of bed
c~ery day.
.
I have taken up collections for
those who needed it, gave clothes .
to people and food, and much
more. I got $1,000 from one businessman for one of our friends who

·"-

~..,,'II!;

.

1

j-N" ,,

"'

Missteps plagued Clinton in passing bill
WASHINGTON (NEA) Presidential counselor David Gergen brought an old politieal dictum
to the White House in the wake of
the budget vote: When in doubt,
declare victory and move on.
President Clinton has done this
despite the razor-thin victory of a
budget package that hardly resembles the one he introduced last
February . While the president
might be moving on to health-care
reform, welfare reform and other
issues, recriminations over the budget fight will be around for a long
time. In the view of most veteran
Capitol Hill obs.ervers, the White
House faltered time after time during the budget process.
Many believe: Clinton's first
mistake was to accept the advice of
Vice President Gore to simply
ignore the Republicans. Gore
believed the Democratic margin in
the House and Senate was sufficient to overcome GOP objections,
so the minority was not invited to
the table to participate in drafting
the plan. In the end, the GOP might
still have been united in opposition,

I

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, N.Y.,
Bill Bradley, N.J., and George
Mitchell, Maine, all from North·
eastern states where taxes on home
heating oil arc critical; Boren,
Okla., and Breaux, La., are from
oil-producing states; John D. Rockefeller, W.Va., is from a coal state;
and Max Baucus, Mont., Thomas
Daschle, S.D., and Kent Conrad,
N.D., are from states where driving
distances and increased gasoline
taxes don't mix.
Says one veteran committee
staffer: "The way il was constibited the Btu tax was a non-starter
here from the very beginning. They
(the White House) just tried to
cram it through. Given the makeup
of the majority here, that was just
plain stupid.''
The original tax packa~e called
for the Btu tax to bring m about
$50 billion in revenue, and other
tax and fee increases another $20
billion. When the going got tough
in April, the president just walked
away from the Btu tax. To m!\ny on
Capitol Hill, that was his biggest
blunder. '
"We couldn't believe i~" says
one congressional budget negotian"AU~
tor. "He simply_ab~ndoned the
"11 f1n ('· idea and got nothmg m return. He
~QIIC'llfill
ri9.l. could have bargained it away_for
votes that would have ·made thmgs
easier at the end. It showed· the
inexperience of the White House
team.''
Many on Capitol Hill believ~
the'president's btggest blunder was
in not tying his Btu taX to a middleclass tax cut from the ,very beginning. Clinton campaigned on a
promise .of middle-class taX relief.
Many believe that, had he earmarked $20 billion of the $50 billion from the Btu tax for middleclass tax relief - especially to
families with children in the
$25,000-$40,000 income range he could have kept the, other $30
billion plus the additional $20 billion from other sourceS. He would
have ended· up with more revenue
than he is getting from the final
bill, while largely rendering his
plan bulletproof because voting
against it would have meant voting
against a middle-class tax cut.
Robert Wagman is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise AssociMionl.

but had they been pan of the l"'!l" successfully filibustered the bill to
cess at the beginning, there m1ght death. This showed the Republihave been a few moderate Republi- cans they could unite to defeat the
new Democratic president, and it
can votes for the plan.
also helped Republicans control
debate on the budget bill.
This eventually became a major
problem. Throuldt a series ofstumClinton's second mistake was bles, the White House sat back and
not even direclly tied to the budget allowed Republicans to con1rol the
bill. When the president inlroduced ti:nor of the debate over the budget
his jobs and CC()nomic stimulus bill biD. ~uch of the information emaIn February, two conservative . nating from the GOP in the weeks
Democratic senators, David Boren leading up to the vote consisted
of Oklahoma and John Breaux of either of overstatements or outright
Louisiana, suggested a compromise falsehoods. Nonetheless, it
under which the summer-jobs pro- inflamed much of the country and
gram would be immediately funded slepped up pressure on many in the
while decisions on other spending House and Senate to vote against
in the plan would be delayed until the bill.
after the budget passed.
' Most insiders believe the White
Reponedly, Treasury Secretary House's worst error was making
Lloyd Bentsen counseled the presi- the broad-based energy tax - the
dent to accept the deal. However, so-called Btu tax -the centerpiece
the newly fonited White House of lite plan without really looking
congressional-relations staff, head- closely at who makes up the Senate
ed by Howard Paster, W\15 sure lite Finance Committee, which must
entire package could get through.
pass any tax legislation.
Clinton turned down the comThe committee 's Democratic
promise, and the GOP in the Senate majoiity consists of Chairman

Robert}. Wagman

"WE USED THE MONEY To CUT THE DEFICIT 11 ·

Senate Bill 87, alternative fuel use
Senate Bill 87 encourages the use
of alternative fuels in several ways.
First, it creates a partial sales and
use tax exemption for the purchase
of alternative fuel vehicles and
equipment Secondly , in the
instance of the purchase of a new
vehicle, the bill provides for a sales
tax exemption which would apply
the difference in cost of the alternative fuel vehicle and the identical
vehicle equipped to run on conventional gasoline or diesel. Finally,
Senate Bill 87 exempts the purchase of alternative fuel refueling
equipment from the state sales tax.
Duriing testimony on Senate Bill
87, the issue of ~ highway use tax
was raised. Under current law, liquid fuels are taxed 22 cents a gal·
lon at the pump. It was the general
consensus that non-liquid fuels
should eventually be brought on
line. Therefore, an amendment was
adopted in committee to phase in a
highway use tax for non -liquid
fuels. Under this provision, the
state would collect user fees from
owners of alternative fuel vehicles

by means of a decal program
administered by the bureau of
motor vehicles. In recognition of
the need to fosler the growth of the

There ·are many advantages to
using aliernative fuels. Perhaps the
most important of which is the benefit to our environment. As the
number of vehicles on Ohio's roads
increase, so does our air pollution
problem. Changing to clean energy
sources can greally reduce polluindustry of alternative fuel , yearly tion causing emissions which are
nat fees would be distributed over created by gasoline fueled vehicles.
a six year period beginning July I, As many of you know, such emissions are believed to seriously
1~5.
.
Senate Bill 87 was formed care· affect air quality and conlribute to
fully to encourage the development the problem of global warming.
of alternative fuel vehicles and an
Also, increasing alternative fuel
alternative fuel infrastructure. At use wiD go a long way in limiting
the present time, we find ourselves our dependence on foreign 'oil. Cur-'
in what is often referred to as a rently, the United States imports
"chicken and egg" situation. In more oil - nearly half of our total
essence, this means thai it is diffi· supply- than at any other time in
cult to promote the widespread use our nation's history. Reducing our
of alternative fuel vehicles when reliance on .foreign oil will make us
there are not adequate refueling less vulnerable to interruptions in
stations available. At the same supply and fluctuation in prices.
time, there is no incentive to build
Finally, and equally imponant,
refueling stations if there is not is the affect that this bill will have
adequate demand for alternative on our ec!)nomy here at home.
fuels. The bill is drafted to meet Since most alternative fuels arc
both these needs.
produced in this country, Senate

Sen,Jan M. Long

Bill 87 has the potential to conlribute significantly to our domestic
job market. In Ohio alone, there arc
over 20 countri es involved in the
con version of natural gas vehicles
or in conversion refueling equip·
mcnt.
Presently, there are 31 other
states across the U. S. which have
taken steps to either promote or
mandate the use of clean burning
fuels. Tliis bill will demonstrate
that Ohio, too, is comll)itted to
improving our environment.
Senate Bill 87 was passed unanimously in the Energy and Environment Committee and has the
strong suppon of the energy industry, the Ohio Farm Bureau, and the
Oil and Gas Association, as weD as
the Department of Transportation.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614) 466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio
43215.

didn't really need it as much as us.
But that's life I guess. My brotherin-law wanted to know why our
family down here couldn't help us
out. He is on sick leave also. We
have no so-called family down
here, when you need help and if
All parties in the recent budget " deficits" that is conducted inside much reduction in real debt we got. tnllion-plus. Given the rosiest pasthey do help, they hound you to battle seem to think they have at the Washington Beltway, where
I( all economic predictions sible scenario, the United States
death until it's paid back, even to last dealt honestly with the deficit. resides a mosquito that' carries a prove accurate anjl everything goes will owe 'its creditors well over $5
the last penny.
(I'm not counting the Republicans, virus that inflicts politicians with exactly as planned, the deficit will trillion aild will be paying them
We have one son, who makes of course. The only thing they
stiU be going up at the rate of $200 interest in excess of $1 billion a
less than anyone in the family , who agree on is their solemn obligation
T
s·
biUion a year. Without the C\)mpro- day.
J
mise, it would be $300 billion a
Those are the "gross" figures.
helps us when he can. As for \0 d~agree.)
friends, my husband had a sign
Dtck Darman's bogus books are
year. That's your "reduction."
The govemmoot uses different lanmade up and it reads, "Friends won a thing of the past, they say. You the dreaded Double-Tongue dis- ,
Now COII6ider the $496 billion guage and numbers. They define
by favors .are easily lost to those might not like the taxes 'Or the ease.
we have reduced the budget by the national debt as "debt held by
wiUing to do more for them." This spending priorities, but by gum,
Start with the misnomer, $241 biUion of which will be raised the pu~lic" and refer to the money
we have really found out
you can finally trust the bottom "deficit reduction." With all the with new taxes and $2~5 billion of it takes to service it as "net" interI know this is lengthy, but I line.
huffing and puffing and preening which will come about through est. Purely by coincidence, of
wanted to ~et it off my chest. I
I say hogwash. The measure the and posturing, you would think that spending cuts. What programs course, these figures are much
guess we will have to b'Ust in God. Congress agreed on ought to hide our sagacious leaders had devised a were eliminated? Who took the lower:· The "~ebt held by the pubWe go to church and are Chris- • its face for pretending to be a giant blotter that's going to soak up hits?
lie" is about $3 trillion and the
tians, but that doesn't mean much "deficit reduction" biU, It's more a all the red ink, wouldn't you?
Well, let's see. There's $44 bil· interest on it comes to $200 billion.
to people this day and age. So ·'deceit enhancement" bill.
Think again and think of it this lion in budget cuts that were agreed
HC?w do the bureaucrats come
again, I say thanks for nothing and
I take that back. It isn't just the way: The Atlantic Ocean is a shim- to during the 1990 summit, which up With the lower 1111mbers? They
hope you people never are faced deficit reduction bill that should meting crimson sea of debt and we were counted again this time. s1mply do not count the money
with this situation. I always thought slink away in shame. It's any dis- just stuck in a medicine dropper There's a pile of spurious revenue they borrow from themselves. You
that the people of Meigs County cussion of • 'budgets'' and and extracted some. That's how . from rescinded tax breaks (which thought there .really were "trust
- "----'=--· ....
.=
are Ukel)l1.o be te"llewed-down the- ..fum13'-'&lt; forSocial-5ecUHty, governwould come through, but I was _ _ _ _ _ __;:_ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.-:;.:
mistaken.
In 1942, during World War II, U.S. Eighth Ai( Force bombers auacked road) and some welfare and Medi- ment pensions, ~irpons and highMrs. Raben Waldnig RolleR, France.
.
caid "savings" that were pushed ways? Guess ~am. Th~ b'Ust funds
Racine, Ohio
In 1943, SO years ago, the Allied conquest of Sicily was completed as off on the states. There are tens of a~e bookkeepmg dev1ces. Every
U.S., thtn British, forces entered Messina.
billions saved by "freezing" pro- dtme collected in taxes and user
In 1962, East German border guards shot and ltiUed IS-year-old Peter grams, which postpones both the · fees goes mto the general treasury
Fechter, who had attempted to cross the Berlin Wall into lite western sec- results 1111d the poUtical pain.
and th.e b'Ust funds are issued spe.
tor.
.
Let's put it another way: The cilil ~ecurities - IOUs. As they
By The Associated Press
In 1969, 248 people were ltilled as Hurricane Camille slammed into 'lawmakers who ' !reduced" the earn mterest, they are given more
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 17, the 229th day of 1993 ..There are 136 days the U.S, Gulf Coast.
.
deficit are betting that future legis· IOU~.
'
left in the year.
In 1969, the Woodslock ~usic and An Fair concluded near Be&amp;hel, lators wiU have niOre guts than lltey
Smce the. bureaucrats pretend
Today's Highlight in History:
N.Y. .
·
L
do. I think we can lake that to lite lltese borrowmgs do not amount to
On Aug. 17, 1807, Roben Fulton's North River Steam Boat, known as
In 1978, the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon flight ended as bailk don't you?
real debt, then it follows that the
the Clermont, began chugging its way up New York's Hudson River on Maxie Anderson, Ben Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their Double
'
interest paid on them is not real
its successful round-trip to·Albany, N.Y.
Eagle II outside Paris.
.
Finally, consider the national either. Subtract it and you gel
On this date:
In 1985, more than 1,4QO meatpackers walked off the job at lite Geo. debt itself, the accumulation of all "net" interest.
.
In 1863, Federal batteries and ships bombarded Fort Sumter in A. ~ormel &amp; Co.'s main plant in Austin, Minn., in a bitter strike lltat last.· past deficits, which now stands at . That'.s what passes for honesty
Charleston harbor in South Carolina during lite Civil War.
edJUSt over a year.
•
~ ~llion-plu_s ~nd eats up_$300 m Washmgton, D.C.
··
J
In I 940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt.and Canadian Prime Minister
In 1987, Rudolf Hess, the last member of Adolf Hiller's inner circle · btllion a year m mterest. This surJoseph Spear Is a syndicated
William Mackenzie King met in Ogdensburg, N.Y., where lltey agreed to died at a Berlin hospilal near Spandau Prison at age 93, haviitg apparendy real figure wilJ. still be growing, wri~r for Newspaper Enterprise
set up a joint defense commission.
committed suicide.
and by 1998 it will be fatter by $I Association.

rhe real skinny about the deficit _ _ _ __
OSep h pear

Today in history

'•

j

CRASH ON US 33 - A vehicle driven by
Dallas Cook, ~urray City, was damaged heavily
after it left lbe roadway ~onday afternoon.

pion Gelding during the draft horse sbow at the
~elgs County Fair on ~onday evening.

· SENIOR CHA~PION GELDING - The
Tuttle Brothers' horse, Ted, won Senior Cham-

Cook's vehicle struck a sign and tben a c'.'lvert
before going off the right side of t~e road mto a
ditcb (Sentinel photo by Dave Hams).

Skies will remain clear,
sunny through Wednesday
By Tbe Associated Press
High pressure will build into
Ohio tonight and remain in place
Wednesday.
Under hi~h pressure, mostly
clear skies w1ll be the rule tonight
wi!h mostly sunny skies then
expected on Wednesday. Lows
tonight will range from the lower
60s north to the upper 60s south.
Highs Wednesday will range from
the lower 80s north to near 90

EMS responds
to seven calls
judged tbe produce, and PbyUis Spencer, one of
the department's superintendents, look over ·two
squash which grew together. It took tbe blue
ribbon for freak vegetables.
·

LIKE! SIA~ESE TWINS • Freak vegetables
are always an attraction in the horticulture division at the ~elgs County Fair. Here Jim Barrett, Washington County agriculture agent, who

Area death --Local Briefs:----.
W.S. (Bill) Gress
W .S. "Bill" Gress, 85, New
Haven, W.Va., died Monday, Aug.
16, 1993 at Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 29, 1907 at Longdale, W.Va., son of the late W.H.
and Alta Mae Gress, he was a
farmer and worked in furniture
sales . He was a member of the
Junior O.U.A.M. No. 175 of New
Haven.
Surviving are his wife, Thelma
Lough Gress; a son and daughterin-law, James W. and Mary Gress
of Letan, W.Va.; a grandson and
wife, Dr. Todd W. and Shannon
Gress of .Barboursville, W.Va.; and
a granddaughter, Michell Lynn
Gress of Letan.
Services will be Thursday at I
p.m . in the Foglesong Funeral
Home , Mason, W.Va., with, the
Rev. Eldon Shingleton officiating,
Burial will be in Graham Cemetery. Frioods may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 6-8 p.m.

One injured in wreck
Two vehicles incurred moderate
front end damage in an accident at
1.0:52 Monday morning on West
Main Street, Pomeroy, at the bridge
intersection .
According to Pomeroy Police,
Lera Walters, 45 , of Mason, W.
Va. had stopped in the turn lane to
make a left turn onto the PomeroyMason bridge when her 1981
Chevrolet was struck by a 1988
Chevrolet coming onto West Main
from the Dairy Valley parking lot
driven by Julia Thornton, 26, of
Racine.
Mrs. Walters was taken by the
Pomeroy unit of the Meigs County
Emergency ~edical Service to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was treated and released. There
were no citations although the accident is still under investigation.

The Daily Sentinel

Offices to close Thursday

County offices will close at noon Thursday so that employees
can have a chance to suppon the fair, County Prosec utor John R.
Lentes said.
Offices participating include clerk of courts, treasurer, auditor,
prosecutor, recorder and juvenile/probate court.
. .
The practice of county offices closing early on Thursday dunng
fair week is a long-standing tradition, Lentes said.

LCCD offers new service
To serve area water haulers, Leading Creek Conservancy District
how has an automated water salesman machine located at the rear
of their office at 34481 Com Hollow Road, Rutland.
The machine will be available for use 24 hours daily, accepts
only quarlers and does not give change.

Fall registration set at university
Open registration for fall quarter at the University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community College will be ~onday, Aug. 23 from
noon until 6:30p.m. in the E.E. Davis Technical Careers Center.
·
Fall quarler classes begin Aug. 24 anb end during the first week
of November.
In addition to regular daytime classes, the evening course sch~
ule has been expanded to approximately 50 offerings after 6 p.m.,
many in required subjects such as mathematics, biology, chemistry,
history, communications, composition and physical education.
Also in fall, a large number of non-credit classes are offered
through the Office of Continuing Education in areas ranging from
asseniveness training to computers, Tae Kwan Do to Red Cross
first aid training.
For more information on admission procedures, contact the
Office of Admissions at (614) 245-7208, while information on the
non-credit classes can be obtained from Continuing Education at
245-7325. The toll-free number in Ohio is 1-800-282-7201.

Vehicle wrecks on U.S. 33
A vehicle driven by a Murray City man sustained heavy, disabling damage in a crash on U.S. 33 in Salisbury Township Monday
afternoon, the Gallia-~eigs Post of the State Higl\way Patrol reponed.
Dallas W. Cook, 17, 45523 Long St., was nonhbound when he
drove off the left side of the roadway. He struck a sign and then a
culven before coming back on the road and going off the right side
into a ditch. ·
The accident report listed unsafe speed as a contributing factor in
the crash.
The driver and one passenger, Brenda L. Ash, 11980 Bishopville
Road, Glouster, sustained minor visible injuries. No citations were
reponed.
The vehicle was towed from the scene.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency ~edical Service were
kept busy overnight responding to
I 7 calls for assistance, with several
calls coming from the Meigs County Fair. Units responding include:
Monday - 10:07 a.m. Middlepan to State Route 124 for Geraldine Parsons who was transported
to Holzer Medical Center; 10:57
a.m." Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department and Squad to West
Main Street for a motor vehicle
accident in which Lera Walters was
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Edna Knapp and Julie
and Rex Thornton refused treatment; 11:32 a.m. Racine to Racine
Water Building for Jim MeHaffey
·who was lransponed to VMH;
1:10 p.m. Pomeroy VFD ,
Pomeroy Squad and Syracuse
Squad to Peach Fork Road for a
motor vehicle accident in which
Brenda Ash and Dallas Cook were
transported to VMR; 3:42 p.m.
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Pike for
Emma Carleton who treated at the
scene; 4:18 p.m . Racine and
Reedsville VFD to State Route 124
for Karen Johnson who was transported to HMC;
6:13 p.m. Pomeroy VFD to fairgrounds for a camper fire; 6:43
p.m. Tuppers Plains to fairgrounds
for Nancy Bagmore who was transported to VMH; 7:1 4p.m. Tuppers
Plains to fairgrounds for Joann
Brown who was transported to
VMH; 8:52p.m. Tuppers Plains to
fairgrounds for Christopher Swanson who was transported to VMH;
9:06 p.m. Meigs Squad 1114 to
fairgrounds for Jason Hickson who
was transported to VMH; 10:40
p.m. Tuppers Plains to fairgrounds
for Herben Whaley who was lransported to VMH; 11: 17 p.m. squad
1114 to fairgrounds for Glen Hielman who was lransponed to VMH;
11:30 p.m. squad 1114 to fairgrounds for Manuel Arnold who
was treated at the scene; II p.m.
squad 1 I 14 to fairgrounds for
Brenda Gibbs who was treated at
the scene.
Tuesday- 12:02 a.m. Pomeroy
to East Main Street for Sam
Wi11iams who was transported to
VMH; 6:05 a.m. Tuppers Plains to
State Route 124 for Barbara Baker
who was transpaned to VMH.

To meet Wednesday

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26 Wecb ...,..... ,... ,...................... ,....... ,.... $43.16

l2 Weeb....... ..........................:.............. .$84.76
Oullldc Mclp CounlJ

13 Weeb....... ...... ....................................$23.&lt;40
26 W.llal .........................................$15.50
52 W.llal .........................................$88.40

Middleport Village Council will
meet Wednesday night at 8 p.m. for
the transactipn of routine business.
There was not a quorum at last
week's regularly scheduled mee ting of Council.

Hays graduates from
banking school
Randall C. Hays, loali officc;r of
People's Banking and Trust Co.,
~ecently completed.his second year
of study to graduate from the 40th
annual Ohio School of Banking
sponsored by the Ohio Bankers
Association.
Hays was among 97 banker-students who completed the course at
the week-long session held at Ohio
University June 13-18. The school,
designed as a professional development program. offers bankers an
opporrunity to enhan.ce their skills
in all areas of bank opemtions and
management.
. .
Second-year srudents parllctpate
in a computerized bank simulation
prognim. Student teams, confronted with typical bank problems, are
required to make management
decisions based on a computer-simulated model economy. ,The team

'

Deadline Thursday

decisions are then analyzed and
teams are ranked by performance.
The Ohio Bankers Association
is a non-profit cooperative owned
by the commercial banks of Ohio.
For more than a century, OBA has
been providing education, communication, cooperative buying and
governmental services to its members.
.

Re sidents are remind ed that
Thursday at 4 p.m. is. the deadline
for the filing of petitions of candidacy with the Meigs County Board
of Elections. All petitions with the
exception of those for the Meigs
County Board of Education must
have 25 valid signatures. Those for
the Meigs County Board of Education must have 150 valid signatures, Rita Smith, director of the
Meigs County Board of Elections,
said today.

Hospital news

HOLZER ~EDICAL CENTER
Disc-harges Aug. 16 - Courtney Shriver, Dustin Thaxton, Davtd
Harris, DoMa Peck, James Harrts,
'Mary Swann.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Veterans Memorial
Graham, dau_ghter , Jackson; Mr .
~onday admissions - Russell
and ~s . David Sands, daughter, Meadows, Pomeroy.
Gallipolis; Mr. a~d Mrs. David
~onday discharges - Mildred ·
Smith, daughter, Plmy, W.Va.
Caslle,Pomeroy.

Hospital news

\,

south.A stationary front extended
from western New York state
southwest into Ohio then west into
the central plains. This front will
slide south of Ohio by this evening.
A high pressure system will build
into the Ohio Valley tonight and
then remain in place on Wednesday.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1988
while the record low was 48
degrees in I98 I. Sunset tonight will be at 8:27
p.m . Sunrise Wednesday at 6:46
a.m: and sunset will be atll:25 p.m.
'
Around the natioa
Thunderstorms and showers
were scattered from New England
to the Rockies early today, downing 1rees and power lines and causing some flooding in the Midwest.
Heat advisories we're posted
again in the southern Plains.

Houston broke a 42-year-old
record by on.e degree Monday
when the thermometer hit 101. San
Antonio, Texas, is two days away
from tying its all-time rainless
streak of 54 days.
Thunderstorms pounded Indianapolis and Omaha, Neb., early
today. Severe weather was expected to develop again this afternoon
across much of the Midwest
In Cloverdale, in west-central
Indiana, about 25 homes were
evacuated and eight motorists had
to be rescued from their vehicles
after up to a foot of rain fell,
authorities said.
Flood warnings were posted in
Iowa along parts of the Cedar and
Iowa rivers. The Iowa River crest
at Marshalltown ·was expected to
be more than a foot higher than the
record flood of June 1990.
Hail, damaging winds and tornadoes were forecast for the Dakotas

------------VVeather----------South-Central Ohio
Tonigh~ partly· cloudy. Low 6570. Wednesday, mostly sunny.
High in the upper 80s.
Extended forecast:

Thursday through Saturday:
A chance of showers or thunderstorms Thursday and Friday. Lowl'
in tjle 60s and highs in the 80s. Fai
on Saturday. Lows 60-65. High.
80-85.

Proposed.... continued from page 1
Transponion 's Elderly and HandiIn other action, council:
1
capped Taxi Program. The village
- Approved minutes of tht
of Middleport serves as grant July 19 regular meeting.
administrator for the Blue Streak ·
- Approved a request from tht
Taxi Company which also serves Oldies But Goodies Car Club t
Pomeroy.
hold a car show on Oct. 30 in th
Council discussed the feasibility lower parking loL
of constructing a walking path
- Approved a resolution placalong the Ohio River from Nye ing a one-mill, five-year fire prr:l
Avenue to the Pomeroy Parking tection levy on the November.
Lot
· Present were council membe~
Reed said an eight-foot-wide, John Blaettnar, Larry Wehrun
asphalt path would cost approxi- Thomas Werry and Bill Young
mately $28,000.
Also present were Reed and CleriC
Reed commented that he would Kathy Hysell.
be contacting several people to see
It was commented that Council'
if they would be interested in woman Betty Baronick is recover·
donating toward such a path.
ing nicely following a fall late last '
Other action ...
month.

-Meigs announcements-Guest speaker
Dr. 6&gt;wcn Watson of Jamaica
will be the guest speaker at the Mt.
Union Baptist Church, two miles
so uth of Carpenter on Sunday at
9:45 a.m. Dr. Watson oversees several church, schools and universities in Jamaica. Public invited.
Dance planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will hold a dance Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by
the Smokey Mountain Drifters.
Public invited.
Pool to reopen
·
Repairs at the Middlepon Pool
have been completed and the pool
will reopen Wednesday. Hours during the fair will be noon [0 4 p.m.
After school begins the hours will
be 3-7 p.m. with regular weekend
hours of noon to 6 p.m. The pool
will close for the season after Sept.

6.
Seniors to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet Aug. 24 at7 p.m. at
the townhouse. Bring snacks. All
membe'rs attend.

Food drive
The Women's Support Group of
USW A Local No. 5668 is conducting a food drive for the United
Mine Workers currently involved
on the labor dispute. Food and supplies can be dropped off at Local
5668 Union Hall in Ravenswood
anytime ·between now and Aug. 26.
Deliveries to mine workers will be
Aug. 28. All contributions will be
welcome.
Board meeting
The Eastern Local Board of
Education wiU meet Thursday at 6
p.m. at the high school to di sc uss
. personel matters.
Homecoming
Bethel United Methodist
Church, homecoming, Sunday.
Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. with
afternoon service at I :30 p.m. with
Rev . Robert Sanders, speaker.
Afternoon s inging by local talent.
Public invited. Sunday school, 9
a.m. and worship at 10 a.m.

SPRIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
Flowers For All Occasions

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy

.-;:g_
clfii
'

446 ·4524

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I

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SpOrts

The Daily Sentinel

•

.

•

In AL affairs,

Tuesday, August17, 1993

Tueeda~Auguet17,1993

Page ·4

.

Jays' win over Tribe marked by
Ojeda's return; M's ground O's
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bob
Ojeda has become a starting pitcher
in the major leagues all pver again.
Five months after he nearly died
in the Florida boating accident that
killed two teammates, Ojeda joined
the Cleveland Indians ' rotation
Monday night in a gutsy 4-1 loss to
the Toronto Blue Jays.
He pitched five innings and
allowed three runs and seven hits,
striking out one and walking none.
The numbers mattered little to him.
" I want good results, but the
fact that I was out there was weighing heavily on my mind," he said.
" And the way the people responded has been greaL "
Ojeda. 35, rece ived standing
ovations from the crowd of 25,546
when he wallced to the bullpen for
pregame warmups and again when
he took th e mound for the fir st
inning.
His wife, Ellen, was watching,
a long with their two -year-old
daughter, Katherine, and Ojeda's
three children from a previous marriage. Al so in th e stand s were
Roger McDowell, the Los Angeles
Dodgers pitcher who had con vinced him to keep playing when
he wanted to quit, and Patti Olin , ·
whose husband, Steve, died with
Tim Crews in the March 22 accident in central Florida.
"I was ready to chuck everything and just run away from it
all," Ojeda said. "It's a lot easier
to walk out than to deal with this.
Without Roger, I wouldn't be
here."
Mrs. Ojeda got teary-eyed as her
husband stepped on the mound.
"I didn 't see the first inning real
well. My eyes were a little blurry ,"
she said. "Right after the accident,
I never thought I would see this
day. I was hoping."
Predictably nervous, Ojeda (0-1)
got off to a bad stan, yielding a single by Devon White and consecutive home runs by Robeno Alomar
and Paul Molitor.
"Once the game sl3rts, the com-

petition begi ns," Molitor said.
" But I think what Bobby has gone
through has been a lesson for
everyone. It puts wins and losses in
perspective. Compared to what
he' s gone through, that's all they
are - wins and losses."
After Molitor homered, Cleveland pitching coach Rick Adair visited the mound, and the pitching
instincts Ojeda had developed in 12
years with Boston, the New York
Mets and Los Angeles soon kicked
in. He held the Blue Jays scoreless
for the balance of his five imings.
" I was trying to put a lot of
things out of my mind and just
focus," he said. " It's the biggest
battle of my life to do what I'm
doing, and to do it in front of people. At the time, it' s hard to put a
big value on getting people out."
Ojeda was added to the Indians'
roster I0 days ago and appeared in
relief in Baltimore and Milwaukee
before manager Mike Hargrove
gave him the staning assignment at
home Monday.
He will remain in the rotation
for th e rest of th e season but is
makin g no commitm ents beyond
that.
" I've got six weeks left in the
season to compete to the best of my
abi)ity, and then at the end of it. I'll
take some time and evaluate where
I' m at and what' s happened,"
Ojeda said . "I'll certainly digest
how much my life has changed in
the past five months."
John Olerud also homered for
the Blue Jays, leading off the sixth
inning against Bill Wertz with his
21 st of the year.
Toronto starter Juan Guzman
yielded six hits in seven innings
and held Cleveland scoreless until
Sandy Alomar drove in an
unearned run with a two-out single
in the seventh . Guzman struck out
seven and walked none - his first
wallclcss game of the year- as the
Blue Jays won their third straight to
move a half game ahead of New
York in the AL EasL
Guzman is 6-0 lifetime against

Scoreboard
- * Baseball * -

bott 9·9), 1 p.m.
Milwaukee (Mitand• 2-2) u OU.land
· CD•rlin$4· 6), 3:lS p. m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Balumo~

Eulem DlvUJon

Team

W L

"'iladc:lphiL . .....75

son 10-8), 3:35 P·'fl ·

PeL

CB

Toronto (Stoulcmyre 6-9) at ClEVE-

LAND (Loper. 3- 1), 7:05 p.m.
Otic.8? (8~ 5-4) 11 8011011 (DMWin

43

.636

SLl..c1.Jis .............. ..66 52
Montrul.. ..............62 56
Chi,.go, ..............58 59

.SS9

9

.52S

13

.496

16.5

Pittsburgh .............. 56 63
Aorida ................... 51 67

.471
.432

19.5
24

New York ............. .4 1

.347

34

17

Western Division
39 .669
47 .605
51 .5\1
58 .504
CINCINNA11. .......59 62 .488
San Diego ........ ..46 73 .387
Colon1d o .... ....... .43 7S .364

San Fnnc isco ...... ..79
AtlantA ................... 72
Houatm ............... 61
lol Angele~ ........... 59

12·8), 7; 35 p.m.

Karua~ City (A~ier 1~6) at
ta (l'ap.~ru 7-I 1), 8:05 _p.m.

Dco-oit (Bolton 2-S} at CAW"omi.l (Fm-

- * Transactions * 18

195
21.S

33.5
36

Monday's score

Tuesday's games
DH: Monuea l ( M•nine:r; 10-7 ilnd
RUCI.C:r 2-0) at Oticago (Guzman 10.7and

Harkey 8-6), I :OS p.m.
San Francisco (Bw kett 18-4) at Pitts·
butah (Cook ~ 6-7 ), 7 :35p.m.
New York (Gooden 11 · 12) at
CINCINNATI (A y.ala 4-S), 7:35 p.m.
U. An geles (R . Martinez 8-7) at A t1an1.1 (Smoltz I 1-9), 7 :40 p.m.
Florida (Rapp l -3) at Houston (Ki!e

12-4), &amp;:OS p.m.
Sa n D iego (Bene' 13-8) at SL Louis
(Cannier 5·6), 8:35 p.m.
·
Philadclph.ia (Ri ven 10-6) at Colondo
(Reynoso 8-8) , 9 :0S p .m_

Wednesday's games
Montreal (Hill 1 · 3) at Chicago (Hib ·

bard 9-9), 2:20 p.m.

Baseball
American League
MlNNESOT A TWINS: Acquired Erik.
Schullstrom, pitccher, from the BaJtirnore
Oriole. to complete the Mike Pagliarul o
tn dc.
NEW YORK YANK.EES: Signed Matt
Drew s, pilcher, to a 1994 minor-league
conuact.
OAK L AND ATHLETICS : Ph ced
Teny Steinbach, cucher, on the t·5-day
disabled Iiiii. Recalled Henry Mcrccda,
c.1cher, from Tacoma of 1hc Pacific Coast
Le.tgU&lt;.
SEA TILE MARINERS : Act ivated
Rich Amaral, infielder, from the 15-day

disabled li11. Optioned John C umminp,
pitcher, to Cl!,gary of the Pacific Coa11
League.
TORONTO BL UE lAYS : Optioned
Mik e Timlin , piLChcr, to Dunedin of lhc
Flon da S ta te Leagll e. Recalled Scott
Brow, pitcher, from Syracua:e of the Internationa l W guc.

Los A n gel c.~ (Hcn t'l!ser 8 -12} at At-

ian\.1 (Avery 13·4), 7:40 p.m.
fl orid a (Armstrong 7-12) at Houston

(SwLndell 8·9). &amp;:OS p.m.
San O icg n (W h ite hurst 4 · 6) at St
Louis (fc:wksbury 12-7), 8:35p.m.

PHOENIX SUNS: Sig11cd Joe Kleine,
ccmcr, to a fow--yu.r contracL
S A N ANTONlO S P U RS : S igned
Ch.rU Otild1, guard.

Phil adelp hia (Gre ene 12· 3 ) at Col -

orado (Blair S-9), 9:05p.m.

Falcon i fo r a n undiscl osed 1994 dnlt

AMERICAN LEAGUE

pick.

Eanern Division

Tu m
W L
Toro nto ..................69 51

Pet.
.S7S

GO

1\ew VorL .......... 68

.571

S

Bouon.................... 64 53

.S47

3.5

R a h.~.m orc ............... 6J

.529
.S04

5.S
8.S

Dct.roit.................... 61

6d

Cl.£ VELAND ....... S5
Mr.lwaukec ............. 4!1

63

.466

l3

70

.407

20

3.S

Tuu .... ................. 60 57
Seattle ................... 58 60

.SiJ
.492

4
6.5

Ca Ufomia .............. .S4 63
Minnaou ............. 52 63
Oakland ................ .48 68

.462
.4S2
.4 14

II
15.5

tO

Te,_ u at New York, ppd .• ra in
Touxn o 4, CLEVEU\NO I

Oakland 4, Milwaukee 1
Seattle 8, Btltimon: 6 •

DeU"Oit 7. C. lilomil2
Today'• aama
·
DH: Teu 1 (Drown 9-8 and Ro_gus 107) 11 New York (K ey 14-4 and ~ 6-10), 4:05, p.m.
Toronto (Morria 6· 11 ) at CLEV ELAND (Kr~mtt S -2), 7:05p.m.
Chicago (Mc DoweU 18·7) I t Boston

(Sele 6-1 ), 7:35p.m.
Kan1a• City (Haney 7·S) at Minna:c:u

(Oeaha.ia 11 -10), 8:05 p.m.
Mil waukee (Navarro 7-8) at Oakland
(Xaruy 0-0), IO:OS p.m.

Owoit (Bolton 2-S) at California (Fartoll 2· 10), 10:1!5 p.m.
.. JZUf.!a 6-7 ) at Seattle

(Bosi oS-7), 10 .....5 p.m.

Wednesday's 2ames
Teu • (Pnlit 6-6) at New Yod: (Ab-

I

le; and R ro~an AndcrJOn, Piacck.ickcr.
CLE V E LAND BROWNS : Traded
George Williams, dd"cntive ucklc, to the
New England Patriou for Rob Mc:Golrcm,
linebacker. Rd eu ed Fred Fogaic, defen -

sive back.
•
GREE N BAY PACKERS : Signed
Tootle R obbins . ofrc n1 ivc ta ckle, to a
ono- yeu cootrtcl. Rescin ded the ri,ghta 10

Wes tern Dhlslon
Chicago ..................64 53 .547
Kanus City ........... 61 51 .517

Baltimore ('

CI NCI NNATI BE!NGALS : Waived
Muk Duper, wide receiver, Ray Bcnl.ley,
linebacker, K.ili Scnfford, offenaive tad;-

"Monday's scores

·

Football
National Football Lf.&amp;&amp;ue
CHICAGO B EARS : Traded Stan
Thomu, offenaive lineman, to the Al.lant.a

R.on Hallnrom. offensive guard, making
hlJTI. 1 free agenl. Waived O.n Fik.c, offcnlive lineman; Tracey Sanden, corn't!bac.i.;
Llltin Berry , runninJ back ; Rory Onve~,
offen1ive tackle; Orlando McKay, wide
recei ... er; and George Rookl , defen1i'o'e
m d.

HOUSTON OILERS: SiJned Dn id
Williams, o fren~ ive tackle, to a tw~yar
contnct.

MIAMI OOlPI-DNS: Waived Mit.chcll

Ben~oo , nose tactic.

Humon potential illiko a 104ptod bika.
llott ol• havt goor~we nntr uu.
•••
I
Our lritnd Nya butinott io to quilt, jOU
can hear tho ovtrhtod pilt up.
•••
KCongrno can pay ,..,.,. not to raiH
crops, why can't wo pay Cong,.N not
to raiH laxq?

•••
Pljchologloll 111 l 'o not good to keep
too much to you ..eK. The IRS ttjtlht

ba ck : J im J oh nson, tackle ; B r ian Kozlowsk i , tight end; and Norrit Thomu
and Thom Kaume)lct , dcfenli.ve t.cks.

PlllLAOELPHIA EAGLES : Ao ·
nounccd the retirement of Michael Caner,

noae tackle.
PHOE NIX CARDINALS : Waived

Scan Snyder, punter. Darren StohlmaM
and Dexter Bul(:her, wide mce:ivor..

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:

Siancd Eric Cuny, defensive lineman, to
alivo-)1011' rontnct.

Hockey
N•Uonal Hockey Leap

ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS:

A,-eod to tcnna with Denny Lambert, left
Wlnl• gn a ono-yMr contnet.
NEW YORK RANGERS: SiaJ!ed Dar-

ren Langdon, left wins.

•••

K jOU think lht Ton Commondmtnll on
two atone lobltlo 11ft herd to foAow, bt
lhonklul 110111 didn't ralum !rum lht
mountain with 1 couplt ol floppy dilka.

•••
FAIR SPECIAL

NEW YORK GIANTS : Waived Eric
Bruun, pun ter : Tico Duckcn , runnina

Clip lhls ad and save $50 on
any purchase over $500. TV'a
and appliance• excluded.
One coupon per · purch81e.
Nol valid with any other
discount

HE'S OUT! - The New York Mets' Jeromy
Burnitz (left) finds himself an out victim after
Cincinnati backstop Joe Oliver puts the tag on
him in the second inning or Monday night's

game in Cincinnati, where the Mets won 6-2.
Burnitz advanced on a . Ryan Thompson
grounder. (AP)
·

•••• n ..... n.,.

c............ "" kill
7 SHOWROOMS

II. WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt.

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r-

sp

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9.7

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N.Y. Mets down Reds 6-2 to hand
Cincy seventh consecutive defeat
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -Dallas
Green had a big smile as he ate his
post-game meal, a thick tomato
sandwich.
"Things are better when you
win, aren't they?" the New York
Mets manager asked.
Better off the field, maybe. The
Mets weren't much different on the
field Monday, bumbling around
before managing to finally win one
for Sid Fernandez. The left-bander
pitched 7 i /3 strong jnnings and
singled home the tie-brealcing run
in a 6-2 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
"It's great to get a win- any
kind of win," Fernandez said, sipping a drink as he quietly enjoyed
his ftrst win in four months.
On the other side of Riverfront
Stadium, the post-game meal was
as bland as ·!he game once again.
.The Reds lost their season-high
seventh straight with another night

of lousy defense and hitting.
Manager Davey Johnson stood
behind his desk and tried to find
something worthwhile say. He
couldn't.
"This is really getting tiring,"
he said,
·
Both learns played the type of
baseball that has tired out their fans
all season. The Reds made two critical errors, misplayed two fly balls
and let in a run on a passed ball.
The Mets gave up a run on a wild
pitch and ran themselves out of at
least two runs.
The only difference was a fourrun seventh inning that let the Mets
laugh off their mista:kes while the
Reds stewed over theirs.
Fernandez (2-3), victimized by
the Mets' poor offense in his last
three starts, finally go! a statistical
reward for his good pitching. He
had made three impressive starts
since returning from arthroscopic
knee surgery, but was 0-3 because

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300 promotion to benefit the team's trip to
Hawaii this December. Tbe other four winners,
who were not present, were Ernie Saxon, Gallipolis; Dr. Keith Brandeberry, Gallipolis; former Red men Coach Art Lanham; and Cecil
Parker, Medina.

On the NFL scene,

Esiason's nomination as starter,
Duper's release among top items

the Mets couldn't score more than
two runs a game for him.
"Being frustrated doesn't sblve
anything," Fernandez said. "All
you cail do is work hard between
your sl3rts and do your best"
His best at-bat of the season
provided the pivotal run.
Errors by left fielder Randy Milligan and starter Larry .Luebbers (23) left the Mets with runners at ftrst
and third and none out in the seventh, the score tied at 2. Fernandez,
just 1-for-12 with five strikeouts,
fouled off two bunt auempts, forcing him to swing away.
He also had failed to bunt and
struck out in the MelS' two-run second.
"I blew a chance earlier to help
myself out," he said. "I just tried
to put the bat on the ball."
His single to center - only his
second RBI of the season - made
it 3-2. Todd Hundley added a sacri(See METS on' Page S)

I.

ASpecial Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, September 1, 1993

Five people split the grand cash
prize of $12,000 in the first Redmen 300 promotion drawing Saturda y at the University of Rio
Grande , held to benefit the Rio
Grande 's men's basketball team' s
trip to Hawaii in December.
Each wiming $2,400 in the split
were Michael Sorbello, Gallipolis;
Ernie Saxon. Gallipolis; Dr. Keith
Brandeberry, Gallipolis; former
Redmen Coach Art Lanham; and
Cecil Parlcer, Medina
For a $100 donation , ticket~
were presented to lhe donors, ma:k:
ing them eligible for the drawing,
with cash ptizes awarded to the
holder of the ftrst ticket drawn, followed by every 1'01)1 ticket. The
holder of the tOOth ticket won
$250, the 200th $300 and the 3001h
ticket the grand prize.
"The effort behind this endeavor
was beyond our wildest dreams,"
Assistant . Redmen Coach Earl
Thomas told more than ~00 people
who attended the banquet that precC!Ied the drawing.
Spea:king on behalf of Coach ·
John Lawhorn, Assistant Coach
Jeff Lanham and the team, Thomas
expressed his thanks to the numerous community residents, businesses and supporters of Re&lt;lmen basketball who donated to the promotion.
· Bill Gray of Ohio Valley Bank
served as master of ceremonies,
with the acwal drawing of the tickets conducted by Dr. Barry M.
Dorsey, president of Rio Grande;
Redmen basketball great Clarence ,
"Bevo" Francis; Ohio Valley
Supermarkets owner and Rio
Grande Board of Trustees member
Bob Eastman; Charles Adkins,
chief executive officer and presideni of Holzer Medical Center and
chairman of the RiQ OGIIIde Community College Board of Trustees;
Gallipolis attorney. and Municipal
Court judge candidate Richard C.
Roderick Jr.; and Robert Medley,
father of Gallipolis Municipal
Judge William S. Medley.
Larry Coleman, Gallipolis, won
$200 as the first ticket drawn,
while Brad Munn, Jackson ,
received $250 for the IOOih ticket.
Richard and Delores Barr, North
Canton, .won $300 for holding the
200th ticket.
Holders of every lOth ticket
drawn who won $100 were, in
order, Ron Jackson, Gallipolis; Edy
Cunningham, Gallipolis; Paul
Lloyd, Oak Hill; Harold Montgomery, Gallipolis; Bob and Terri
Caldwell, Vincent; Steve Hewler,
Bollcins; Mike Northup, Gallipolis;
Betty Call, Gallipolis; Brad Munn,
Jackson; Dean Evans, Gallipolis,
and Jeff Halley, Crown City ; the
Rio Grande Office of Admissions
staff; Mike Beaver, ·Gallipolis;
Frank Cremeans. Gallipolis; Paul
Simon and Pat O'Brien, both of
Pomeroy;
Bevo
Francis,
Salineville;
'
Gary Renner, Chillicothe; Annie

By MICHAEL FLAM
signing bonus.
out MVP Steve Young, who has a
Associated Press Writer
·
Jets
hairline fracture of his left thumb,
Michael Carter retired and Eric
In a not-so-surprising decision, and Bill Musgrave, who sat out the
Curry signed.
Boomer Esiason was named New game 'with sore ribs. During the
Boomer Esiason was told he York's starting quarterback.
offseason, the 49ers traded Joe
will stan and Mark Duper was told
Coach Bruce Coslet said many Montana to Kansas City,
he will no longer be needed.
factors led to his choice of the 10Rookie Elvis Grbac came off the
Jim Lac hey, who has been hurt, year vete'tan, not the least of them bench to direct two second-half
will miss the season and Steve being Esiason's edge in experience scoring drives for the 49ers and
Bono, who has been healthy, sepa- over Browning Nagle, last season.'s Mike Cofer kicked a 37-yard fteld
rated his shoulder.
staner.
goal on the final play of the game
Rick Mirer doesn't know
Bengals
as San Francisco beat Denver 16whether he's signed or not.
Marlc Duper simply isn't fast 13.
Monday was anything but bor- enough any more.
Grbac drove San Francisco 77
ing in the National Football
A three-time Pro Bowl selec- yards in 13 plays for the winning
League.
·
tion, the 34-year-old Duper was field goal, which sailed over the
Carter a three-time Pro Bowl signed by Cincinnati last month left upright and which the Broncos
selection with the San Francisco when the Miami Dolphins waived argued was wide . .
49ers, signed with Philadelphia in him after 11 seasons.
Lions
the offseason to help shore up the
"Mark had worked hard, but I
A 37-yard interception return by
Eagles run defense. But the 32- don't know if he was able to show Mike Iaquaniello to Houston's 3year-old was bothered for "!uch of · whal he showed in Miami during yard line set up Chuck Long's
training camp by soreness m both his career there," Cincinnati gener- , touchdown pass to Vernon Turner
knees and an aching shoulder.
aJ manager Mike Brown said. "He with 8:46 to play, rallying Detroit
''He just said he wanted to go no longer had that tremendous to a 24-20 victory.
home," Eagles coach Rich Kotite burst or speed ... "
AI Del Greco kicked two field
said after practice Monday afterRedskins
goals, and Warren Moon and Cody
noon. "He had had enough. The
Lac hey, a Pro Bowl offensive Carlson threw touchdown passes as
spark was gone. He said it was tackle, probably will miss the sea- the Oilers moved ahead 20-17 after
time. 9-.
son after he was diagnosed with a three periods.
: Curry became a part of Tampa tom ligament in his left knee.
But a ·pass by Carlson was
Bay's defensive future by signing a
Red.skins trainer Bubba Tyer tipped by Dan Owens of the Lions
contract that reportedly ma:kes him said a magnetic resonance imaging (2-0-1) and laquaniello grabbed it
!he NFL's highest-paid defensive exam Monday showed that the to· set up the decisive points. Long
rookie after a 22-day holdout. anterior cruciate ligament was completed aU five passes he threw
Terms of the agreement were not completely tom. Although a second in the drive.
Mets win ...
1'Cieased, but it was believed to be opinion will be sought, Lachey wtll
Houston's defense was burned
(Continued from Page 4)
worth slightly more than lhe deals likely undergo surgery next week.
badly in the first quarter on a 60fice fly, and Eddie Murray hit a
Marvin Jones and John Copeland
49ers
yard touchdown pass from Rodney
-· the defensive players drafted
two-run homer, his 19th, to comOnce quarterback-rich, th~ 49ers Peete to Brett Perriman. But a goalahead of Curry - received from sustained another loss when Bono line stand by the Oilers (0-2) stand
plete the rally.
the New York Jets and Cincinnati was hit by defensive end Darren late in the second quarter preserved
"A couple of defensive misBengals.
takes cost Luebbers," Johnson
Drozdov when he released a pass. a 13-10 halftime lead.
The Bucs project Curry as an Drozdov landed on Bono as they
said. "The defense let us down and
Seahawks
immediate starter at right end. His feU; separating his left (non-throwQuarterback Rick Mirer, the No, let him down.
agent, Eugene Parker, had been ing) shoulder. Bono will miss five 2 pick in the 1993 draft, ask~ that
"We're missing three outfieldseeking a deal worth more than. $6 to eight weeks.
an arbitrator decide whether NFL
ers (because of injuries). I'm trying
million, including a $3.2 mtlhon
San Francisco already was with- commissioner Paul Tagliabue was
some other guys out there. It's just
right in rejecting his contract.
not working out. It's frustrating to
The-NFL Players Association,
me and to the fans.''
acting on Mirer's behalf, sent the
So is the offense. The Reds have
request to the NFL Management
been shut out in three of their last
Council, said Richard Berthelsen,
five games and have scored just
general counsel for lhe NFLPA.
two runs in the other two.
Mirer's agent, Marvin Demoff,
Fernandez ·allowed just five hits
By JOE KAY
· · He'll have to wear a splint for
CINCINNATI (AP) - As he another two weeks, ending his sea- said Mircr can continue playing
and struck out seven in his 7 1/3
finally gave in to the inevitable, son.
before yielding to Mike Maddux,
while the appeal is decided. . ,
Barry Larkin wished he could have
The Reds ~e 21 1/2 games out
Tagliabue struck down Mtrcr s who got the last four outs for his
held out just a little longer.
of ftrst place m .the NL West, ~ave contract last Friday, calling the 59 fourth save.
The Cincinnati Reds shortstop lost a season-htgh seven stratght, bonus incentives a " sham" and an
Fernandez knew the Reds were
had his severely injured left thumb and are on pace for their worst fin - obvious attempt to get around struggling, but he treated them lilce
placed in a cast Monday, ending ish since at least 1984. Another rookie pool restrictions set forth in a dangerous team. The way the
his season. He's played most of it player would be glad to get away th e collective bargaining agree- Mets have been playing, that was
in severe pain - a tom ligament in from it; Larlcin wishes he were sull m'ent.
wise.
the thumb made it hard to hold a in there.
.
.
"We're 21 out and flailing rembat some days.
Teammates and friends had bly," he· said . "The timin g
urged him for weeks to call it a sea- couldn't have been worse." •
son and let the thumb heal. But
Larkin, 29, knew he'd have to
Larkin played on, batted .315, led get a cast eventually to ma_ke the
the team in hits and was voted the thumb heal. He hoped to ftmsh the
starting National League shortstop season first, but team consultant
for the All-Star game.
Dr. Richard Jolson advised him
"There were plenty of times Monday not to wait.
Larkin. went on the disabled list
when maybe I should have sat
down," Larkin said. "Anybody earher thts month ~d. had a ecruwho's been around a while knows sone shot that dtdn t do much
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20 - 6-11 p.m.
that 's just not the way I do it."
•good. That f!!ade complete rest the
On a doctor's advice, Larkin only alternauve.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 21-3-10:30 p.m.
reluctantly agreed Monday to have , "It was going to hallr,ln. It ~as
the thumb put in a cast for a month. JUSt a matter of when, he sat~.
"After the last ume 1 aggravated 11,
I. got the cortisone shot and we
Gallipolis, Ohip,
didri 't get any kind of results that
AL games...
State Route 35 &amp; '1'60
we were looking for. The medical
staff
was
thinking
I
was
susceptible
• (Con!inued from Page 4)
Camping Available- Call1-614-446-4120
to going out and doing more darngame, striking out four and walking age.••
two.
Doctors don't think he'll need
DON'T MISS IT!!!
Tigers 7, Angels 2
surgery.
After
six
weeks
in
a
cast
Bill Gullickson (9-6) allowed
two more homers, increa'sing his and a splint, Larkin will begin
season total to 19, but hung on to rehabilitating the thumb and see
ADMISSION FREE!/!
~
win his third consecutive start for how it responds.
Larkin's determination to play
visiting Detroit.
RAINORSHINE -- INOROUT
Alan Trammell, Mickey Tettle- lhrougb the injury was one of the
ton and Chris Gome.z had early most amazing aspects of the Reds'
BRING CHAIRS- SOME SEATING AVAILABLE
RBI singles off Hilly Halhaway (4 - season. Second baseman Bip
CONCESSION STANDS
2), who lost for· the first time in Roberts, who suffered a much less
severe
thumb
spmin,
went
on
the
seven starts. Hathaway allowed
For Information Ca/1446-2546
four tuns and eight hits in six-plus disabled list Aug. 4 and has been
allowed to go home for the rest of
innings.
the season .

r.

GOSPEL SING

J'3

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

GALLIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

992-2156

30 PLUS GOSPEL GROUPS

Oh.
..

J•

ASK FOR DAVE or P.J.
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1993

3RD ANNUAL

'iGALLIA COUNTY.

•••

/

'{i

Thumb injury puts Reds'
Larkin on DLfor rest of '93

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Fur1iture

same thing.

!'\~

SHARING THE PRIZE- Michael Sorbello,
Gallipolis, len, is congratulated by Earl Thomas,
assistant coach or' the University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team, following the drawing
that made Sorbello one of five people who
shared •the top cash prize in the first Redmen

By

year coo tn ct.

'17

The·Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Five to share top priz~ in first
Redmen 300 promotion draw

•

~·.
'

n;_

Basketball
Signed And re Spencer, forward. w a one-

~

2:~7

(See AL on Page 5)

Nallonal Baskelbalt AuotlaUon
GOLD EN STATE WARRIORS :

~1

1 ~2

Nallonal l.eaJlUI!
MONTREAL EXPOS: Waived Cl.ilf
Huntley, pi1cher, for the putp01e of givin g him his \lllconditional relcue.

S1n F rancisco (W ilson 6- 4 ) at Pitts -

burgh (Z. Smhh 3·4), 7:3S p.m.
Ne w York (TanAn a 5 -12)" CJNCfN .
NA11 (Pu g)&gt; 7·11), 7:35p.m.

S6

Minneso-

1ey 13-9). JO:OS p.m.

1.S

New Yorll 6. CINONNATI 2

Sl

(Moyer 7-6) u Scutlc (Han-

Cleveland.
Tony Castillo pitched a scoreless eighth, and Duane Ward fin ished fa- his 32nd save.
In other games, Seatlle beat Baltimore 8-6, Oa:kland beat Milwaukee 4-1 and Deuoit beat California
7-2. Texas' game at New York was
1 rained out
Mariners 8, Orioles 6
This time, the Baltimore Orioles
didn ' t get hit with punches, only
with another loss.
It was back on June 61hat Baltimore dulced it out with Seattle, a
20-minute brawl that led to seven
suspensions. These days, the Orioles are fighting to stay in contention. Monday night's 8-6 loss at
Seattle extended their losing streak
to seven and dropped them 5 1/2
games behind ftrst-place Toronto in
the ALEast
''Our ballclub has hit the critical
stage," Baltimore manager Johnny
Oates said. " We've got to get it
back in gear."
The losing strea:k is the Orioles'
longest since an eight-game slide
from July 19-27, 1989.
"We're just not playing well
right now," Oates said. "We went
to Detroit and got shellacked. In
New York, we got great pitching
and no hining. We're just giving up
too many runs in the first innings.
We put ourselves in a pretty good
hole again tonight"
Home-plate umpire Greg Kosc
warned Orioles starter Rick Sutcliffe (9-9) and both benches ~fter
Sutcliffe hit Bret Boone on his left
arm with a pitch in the first. The
crowd of 34,077 booed Orioles
runner Mark Parent for lowering
his shoulder and throwing an elbow
at Mariners starter Dave Fleming
(8-2) after being trapped off third
base on a fielder's choice groundout in the seventh.
"It was no big deal," Fleming
said. " I th ink he was just trying to
knock the ball out of my hand. ' '
Sutcliffe lost for the seventh
time in eight decisions, getting
tagged for eight runs and seven hits
in 3 2(3 innings with five walks. He
has allowed 44 runs in his last 49
2/3 innings, a 7.97 ERA.
"It's been the same story for the
last month," Sutcliffe said. "A lot
of pitches, a lot of mista:kes, four
runs in the first inning. I put the
team in a big hole. It ma:kes it a
struggle."
Fleming gave up three runs and
seven hits in 6 2/3 innings with six
strikeouts and two walks. Randy
Johnson, in his second career relief
appearance, pitched I 1/3 innings
for his first major league save. He
struck out four.
Athletics 4, Brewers 1
Rookie Todd Van Poppe!
allowed two hits in 6 2/3 innings to
win his founh straight stan as Oa:kland stopped a four-game losing
streak.
Van Poppe! (4-3) struck out one
and walked five in the longest outing of his big-league career. Dennis
Eckersley got four outs for his 26th
save, finishing the four-hitter at the
Oa:kland Coliseum.
Rafael Novoa (0-2) pitched a
six-hitter for his second complete

' \7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

..

p

Roach, Gallipolis; David Wiseman,
Gallipolis; Jim Kessi ng er , Oak
Hill; Bob and Bev Ream, Aleron:
Greg Carter, Rio Grande; W.R.
"Dick" Brown, Gallipolis: Mike
Haines, Gallipoli s; Ed Wolford,
Jackson; Dale Royce, j'ranlclin Furnace; Gerald Hyland, Seaman ; and
Roger Hubbard, Racine.
J&gt;toceeds from the promotion
will' assist in meeting traveling
expenses f0 r the Redmen, who will
compete in the Hawaii Pacific
Honolulu Shootout Dec. 20-21 ,

marking lhe first time a Rio G~de
basketball team has played outside
of the continental U_.S.
Thomas, an asststant professor
of communications at Rio Grande,
said donations to .the promotion
will be sought annually, with the
proceeds to help finance scholarship s and special needs. Every
fourth year, he explatn~d , the
money will be used for a tnp to an
overseas tournament, which will
assist with the team's recruiting
efforts.

FAST-PACED ACTION- Around 120 riders raced in 16
motorcycle classes and two four-wheel classes before a packed
grand stand Monday night at the Meigs County Fair. The races,
held by the American Motosports, Inc., is part of the 1993 Ohio
County Fairs Motocross Championships. The stop at the Meigs
County Fair is one of 26 in the series. Results of the races will be
published at a later date. (Photo by Dave Harris) ·

'

FOUR-WHEEL ACTION- Two four-wheel classes were held
Monday evening at round 16 of the Ohio County Fair Motocross
Championships at the Meigs County Fair. The races were held
before a packed grandstand along with 16 classes of motorcycle
races. Results.of the races will be published at a later date. (Photo
by Dave Harris)

The 1993 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule
1\tesday, Augusll7
4:00 p.m.- Kiddie Trac10r Pull-Sbow Arena
4:00 p.m.-Hillside Stage- Middlebranch
5:00 p.m.-Junior Fair B.oard Auction
6:00 p.m.-Junior Fair. Sbeep Sbow foUowed by Open ClaS£ Sbeep
Show- Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Grandstand- DcmoUtion Derby
7:00 p.m.- Hillside Stage- Kingdom Kids
9:00 p.m.- Hillside Stage--Out of the Blue
Wednesday, August 18-Kiddle Day unllll:OO p,m.
8:00 a.m.- Junior Fair Swine Show--Show Arena
8:00 a.m.--4-H Horse Show
10:00 a.m.-Draft Horse Show
t2:00 noon--4-H Aower Show
lounediately foUowing Swine Show- Junior Beef Breeding and Open Class
Beef Breeding
1:00 p.m.-Judging of Farm Trac10rs and Equipment-in Display Tent
2:00 p.m.-Harness Racing
2:00 p.m.--4-H Style Revue- Hillside Stage
4:00 p.m.- Kiddie TraciOr Pull-Show Arena
4:30 p.m.-Little Miss and Mister Contest- Hillside Stage
5:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Beef Sbowmnnship followed by Junior Fair Steer
Sbow--Sbow Arena
7:00 p.m.- Elvis Impersonator
7:00 p.m.-Open Class Horse Show
7:00 p.m.- Hill Stage- Born Again Believers
8:00 p.m.-Horse Pull
9:00 p.m.-Elvis Impersonator
·9:00 p.m.-Hill Stage- Midnight Cloggers

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Ohio

By The Bend

•

The D_
aily Sentinel

•. The Area's Number 1
Marketplace·

!uesda~August17,1993

Page-6

Education council honored

MEIGS COUNTIANS COMPLETE REAP
- Studen.ts from Meigs County who completed
th.e REAP Sl!n'lmer program attbe University or
RIO Grande and RIO Grande C9mmunity Col·
lege are, from left, Jacqueline Nave, Pomeroy;

Bo Willis, Syracuse; Rhonda Smith, Pomeroy;
Belinda Goode, Middleport; Courtney Riggs,
HarrisonvUie; Susan Coleman, Rutland; Kathy
Evans, Middleport; and Jackie Whitlatch,
Coolville.

Area students complete REAP
classes offered at Rio Grande
Young and adult students have
• completed the REAP -summer program offered lbrough the Universi~ ty of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
~ Community College, marking the
~ seventh year of the progran:t's exis~ tence.
!:..,
REAP (Rio Early Action Pro~· gram) is designed to assist high
(; school students with a potential for
t higher education enter college. PreC: v ious academic experiences have
kept students from fulfilling that
~ potential, Dr. Edward R. Sofranko,
1: REtheAPpr?gram' s di~ctor, explained.
•
S miSSIOn IS 10 ShOW the StU·
E dents that college is possible for
~ them. he added.
::
"Students participating in the
: program were given'intensive train:; ing in communication skills, both
• oral and written, as well as coun,N
seling in career and life planning,"
;: Dr. Sofranko noted.
"Because of the pro~ 's sue-

e

e

•

cess, the University. and the Community College expanded the offering four years ago to include potential adult learners by creating
REAP II," he added.
REAP II - the Rio Grande
Educational Awareness Program
- acquaints adult students who
have been away from education for
several years with the benefits of a
college education, Dr. Sofranko
explained.
More than 40 students, including many from the Comm4nity
College service area of Gallia,
Jackson, Vinton and Meigs counties, in addition to students from
Franklin and Greene counties, participated in this year's REAP offerings. Over the years, curriculum
changes were made to address such
areas as mathematics and communications skills.
"We will continue to mak e

alignments to REAP as needed, but
with the eagerness to learn demonstrated by the students, as well as
the continued institutional support,
REAP will be available again in the
summer of 1994," Dr. Sofranko
said.
Each of the s'tudents received a
certificate noting the completion of
the classes at a ceremony attended
by Dr. Sofranko; Dr. Barry M.
Dorsey, president of the University
and RGCC; Dr. Janet M. Byers,
acting vice president for Academic
Affairs; and members of the Cross·
roads Program based at Rio
Grande.
More information on the tuitionfree REAP can be obtained from
the Office of Admissions, University of RiO&lt; Grande and Rio Grande
Community College at 245-7208.
The toll-free number in Ohio is J.

800-282-7201.

Nicholson reunion celebrated

.
•

The descendants of Corinna and
Philip Wilkinson Nicholson .recently held· their 59th reunion at the
home of Norman and Allegra Will ,
Rutland. An abundant potluck meal
was served to family members and
friends.
Officers elected were Bill
Nicholson, president: Danny Will,
vice presiden~ Carolyn Nicholson,
secretary/treasurer.
·
This years horseshoe champions
were Bill Nicholson and Dave
Ciare, Several games of bingo were
played with prizes that were
brought by family members. Family tree records were updated with
the recording of several marriages,
binhs, and deaths recorded.
Those attending were B.J.
Nicholson , Miranda Nicholson,

••

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•

•

•

",..,.

••
"
•

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Norman and Vivian Hamilton ,
Many Nicholson, Dorothy Nichol·
son, Judy, Anthony and Lisa (Lar·
izza) Ortiz, Tony Larizza, Norman
and Allegra Will, Neva Nicholson,
Benny and Fern Stafford, Vance
and Donna Higgins, Danny and
Linda Will, Randy Carpenter Jr.,
Bobby Carpenter, Waid Nicholson,
Bob and Betty Musser, Sonny
Nicholson, Ethel Nicholson. Mike
and .Margaret Clare, Dave and
Kathy Clare, Moyna and Tom .Hudgens, Roger Riggs , Jason Riggs ,
Roger Davidson, Christopher
Jacobs, Larry and Joy Clark, Helena Riggs, Alan and Marta Black.
wood, and Hazel Oliver.
Special plans are being made for
next years 60th reunion which will
be held the first Sunday in August.

Those who served as charter
members on the Meigs Community
Education Council "were honored
with a dinner and awards in appreciation for their service.
.
Janet Bolin, director for the
local commun ity proje.c t, gave
framed certificates of recognition,
"We Car" pins, and shirts to the ·
following members in ~tlendance
Ruth Powers, Susan Oliver, Kimberly WillfOrd. Mary Powell, Ralph
Werry, Roland Wildman, arid Suzy
Carpenter. All other advisory council members were invited, as well
as all of the members of the Meigs
Local Board of Education as
guests.
The Pomeroy Public Library
provided the meeting facilities. The
award shirts, designed by Suzy
Carpenter, secretary to the council
and liason for the Meigs Local
Schools, in cooperation with Midqlepon trophy and Shirts, featured
the theme "Community-BusinessSchools-Services, Meigs Comm11·
nity Education-Lifelong Learning

Public Notice

-

REBECCA SNYDER

. ~ snyder

fbirth
I

~• announced
&gt;

·'~

'
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,
:
•
:
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Ms. Norma Snyder, Pomeroy. is
announcing Lhc birth of her second
child , Rebecca Lynn Hal es Snyder,
born rece ntly at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The infant weighed seven
pounds, four ounces, and was 20
and one hal f inches long.
Pa ternal grandparents arc Mr.
a nd Mrs. Norman Hy sel l of
Pomeroy.
Ms. Snyder has anoth er daughtcr, Tabitha Jean, age four.
The infant was al so dcdicmcd
rccc ml y at Life line MinisLri cs.
Point Plea sant, W.Va. by Rev .
Gharlcs Birchfield and Rev. Belly

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY •. American Red
Cross Bloodmobtle Will b_e at th e
Me_Igs_Senior Cibzen Mulllp)IIJJose
Butldmg on Wed nesday from 15:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
CLIFrON, W.VA. ·Evangelist
Ray Laudermilt, speaker, Thursday
at C\if(on Tabernacle Church at 7
p.m. Pastor M.E. McDaniel invites
the public.
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group

of AA and AIAnon will me e t
Thursday at 7 p.m . at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Call 992·5763 for
information .
.
POMEROY. Revival at Believcrs Fellowship Ministry (formerly
Elberfeld' s Warehouse}, Mechanic
Street, will be Thursday through
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. nightly with
Jeff Couerill, evangeli st. Special
si nging nightly. Rev. Margaret
Robinson iovites the public . Call
992-2463 for information.

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

SPECIAL

Public Notice

quarter, Drat olx montho and
twelve montho ended June
30; 1993:
THREE MONTHS • JUNE
30: 1993
1992 (B)
REVENUES
$7,372,229 $8,487,159
NET
I N C 0 ME
$(136,841)
$148,114
S H4- R E EARNINGS
$ (.03)
$ .04
AVERAGE SHARES
OUTSTANDING
4,230,494
4,204,786
SIX MONTHS • JUNE 30 :
1993
1992 (B)
REVENUES
$21,891,131
$21,572,666
NET INCOME
·Conllnulng Operations
$1,589,509 $1,812,244
·Changeo In Accounting
PubliC NotiCe
Principles • Net s -s
(234,608)
·Net
Income
PUBLIC NOTICE
$1,569,509 $1,577,636
The Boord of Dtrec:toro of SHARE EARNINGS
National Gao &amp; ·Oil
·Continuing operation
Company released tho $ .37
$ .43 (A)
following consolidated
·Changeo In Accounting
earnlngo lor lha second Prlnclpleo • Net
$ ·-

$
·Not Income
.37
$ .38 (A)
AVERAGE SHARES
OUTSTANDING
4,230,494
4,204,786
NATIONAL GAS &amp; OIL
COMPANY
08113193
, TWELVE MONTHS • JUNE
30: 19113
1992 (B)
REVENUES
$38,618,503
$36,822,250
NET INCOME
-Conllnulng Op.,atlono
$ 2,368,888
s 2,212,339
·Dlaconllnuad Operallono
$ (364,395)
$ (14,319)
·Change• In Accounllng
Principles
Net
$ $ (234,608)
·Net
Income
$2,005,273
$1,963,412
SHARE EARNINGS
·Conllnulng Operallon
$ .56
$ .53 (A)
·Conllnued · Operallono
S (.09); $ (.01)(A) •
·Changes In Accounllng
Prlnclplu
·
Net
$ ·-; $ (.05)

'

POLICIES
• A.d. outlide tbe county your ad

day .rter publication to mU:e correction
• Ad. that rnUit be paid iii acl•ance are:
Card of Tbanluo • Happy Acl.o
Ia Memo.riam
Yard Sale.
I! A elu•ified advutilement placed ill the The Daily SentiDel
(except Cluallled Dilplay, BuoiDeu Card or Lepl
Notic:a) .Ulal.o appe~~r in the Point Pleaaant Repter and

(A) Restated lor 7% Stock
Dlvldand luued In
December, 1992.
B) Ellecthie January 1,
1992, tho Company adopted
Statement of Financial
Accounting Standard•
(SFAS) No. 106 "Employwo'
Accounting
lor
Poatrellrement Benefits
Other Than Penolono" and
SFAS No. 109 "Accounlln~
lor
Income
Taxoo'.
Accordingly, . the 1992
earnlnga reflect the
adoption
of tho ..
Standards. Figures In
parenlhHes are loaaea.
NATIONAL GAS &amp; OIL
COMPANY
John B. Denison
VIce PrHldent
and S.C.otary
(8) 17; 1TC

PUBUC NOTICE
The annual report Form
IIIIOPF for the Kibble
· Foundation, Bernard V.
' Fultz, TruotH, lo avaHable
· lor public lnopectlon at
Bernard V. Fultz Law Office,
1111/2 W. Second StrHt,
. Pomeroy, Ohio 457611,
during regular bualneoo .
. · hourt lor a period of 150
·: daya aubo•quent to
:. publication of thla notice.
• • (8) 13, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 23

..&lt;71c
'

(8j 3, 10, 17 3tc

-----~

, PUBUC NOTICE

Sealed b\do will be
.; rac:tlvad and opened by the
; · LAadlng CrHk Conoerv•cy
. ; Dletrlct at their office, 34481
· . Corn Hollow Rd., Rutland,
~ · Ohio until 5:00 P.M. on
· · Auguot 31, 11113. Bldo ahall
&gt; be lor the entire job of
.. cleaning, de-waxing,
. oandblaolfng, and painting
. · of the Interior and •••rlor
· : of one (1) ·100,000 gallon.
' · 2T OD x 24' Hl, ground
· · etor•ge tank located on the
; : SOCCO ·coal conveyor line
. · and C.R. 2 (Brl• Ridge Rd.)
· In Rutt.nd townohlp, Mel111
: County, Ohio. ·
. Additional information
:. end opeciDcationo may be
. obtained at the Dlalrlct
·: office al34481 Corn Hollow
· Rd., RuUind, Ohio, 45775.
Each bid muot be

50% OFF REGULAR PRICES

'~ encloeiiCf In an envelope

ON REMAINING STOCK ONLY
ODDS AND ENDS
Starting At ·

•LOVES
EATS
.

SALE

Reg. $499.00

$299

LA·l·BOY, LANE, lASSEn

•RECLINERS .

At

Starting At

00
~--

5198°

0

$399°0

· which lo aealtd and plainly
. marked TANK 11 PAINTING.
' Such bid anvelope muot
• 111ao contain the lull name of
· every
firm
and/or
• ; corporation with lnterosl In
· , the ..me and muot be
' -ompenied by 1 100% Bid
Bond In the lull amount of
. each propo•al to the
. ' eatlolactlon of lhe Dlotrlcl
; . Board ao • guaranty thai II
,. the bid lo accepted, •
;:l contract will be entered Into
.. end Ill performance
; eecured. On bid• thll lte

• rejected, the guaranlee will
.' be promptly returned to lhe
blddere. On tha bid that lo
•: occeplad, ouch Bid Bond
;, will be ielurned to tha
· ~ eucceeoful bidder upon
, execution of the c:ontracL
·· An lnopectlon tour of tha
'. tank will leave from the
•• ofke on Auguot 18, 18113 to

$89900

THRU AUGUST 21ST

I

•856 Third Avenue in GaUipolis- ~hone (614) 446·3045
Shop Daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
J•Fre~ ' Dellvery
Shop Friday Only 9 a.l)'l. to 8 p.m. •Free Parking
Subject to prior sale.
•Financing Available

44- Apertnteal for Rent

4-Ci-t·•way

c..,..

5-HappyAdo
5- Loot and Found
7- Loot and Found
S- Plobllc Solo A
Auction

9- Wan!ed lD Buy

We welcome VI•• C..d,
MIIolerCard or Diocover C.d

PubliC Notice
PUBLICATION NOTICE
"To ell poreono ln18ruled
In the Htall of LINDA GAIL
BAILEY, deceued, loll of
:i 1866 McCumber Rood,
Langevllla, Ohio 45741,
Melga County Probole
Court, Case No. 28020. An
appllcltion hao been Iliad
eoklng to relieve the •tala
from odmlnlotrallon, •aylng
that tha aaoeta do not
excee.d SIS,OOO end tha
credltore will not be
prejudiced thereby.
A
heorlng on lhe appllcoUon
will be held Friday,
September 3, 111113 11 1:30
o'clock P.M. Pereono
knowing eny reaaon why
lhe oppllcaUon ahould nol
be grontad ohould oppear
end Inform the CourL The
Court Ia located on the
eeoond floor of the Court
Houoe on Court end S..ond
StrMte, Pomeroy, Melgo
County, Ohio."
Robert E. Buck,
Proba.. Judge
uneK.NHoolr.,.t
Clerk
(8) 3, 10, 17

8

Lordy, Lordy
. Look who turned
'•
40!
Happy Birthday
Randy
RoiHirt, Pmay &amp;
Bob

3818603

I '

~ii

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) n3-55B5
'SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.·Thur 5·10 pm
Frl-Sal 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEJ)NE:sDp;v

Makecw•
Independent M~~,ry
Kay s'nuty
Consultants
Carolyn MeCoy
982-5082
Sandy Henderson
992-3647
8121113

Public Notice
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
•on July 211, 11113, In the
Melgo County Probata
Court, Caoe No. 28018,
Jam• W. Hobll81tei', 33222
Dext• Road, RuUand, Ohio
45775 Wll appointed
Executor of lha eatate of
William J. Hobatetttr,
deCIIaaed, !ale of Box 22,
RuUand, Ohio 45775."
Robert E. Buck,
Proba.. Judge
Lena K. Neaaelroad
Clerk

(8)3, 10, 17
Public Notice
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
•on July 30, 11113, In the
Me\ge County Probate
Court, Caoe No. 21022,
Muln• Griffith, ~440 .....
Route 7, PomeroJ, Ohio
4571t wao oppolnted
Admlnlotrelor of the ufllte
of Ch•rleo E. Griffith;
dtCeletd, (ale of 34440
elate Route 7, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45768."
Robert E. auck,
Problte Judge
una K. H•illroacl
Clerk
(8) 3, 10, 17

11- Help Wanted
12- SittaalioDII Wanted
13-- ln1urance
14-- Buaineta Tra~ag .
IS- Schoola &amp;: In~truetion
16- Radio, TV &amp;: CB Repair
17- Milcollaneoua
IS- Woated To Do

1 ~- · u.·

•.

a GraUl

Seed A Fatllb.

45--- Fumllhed Roo... '
46--- Space for Rut
47- Waated to Real
48.-- Equipment for Rent
49-Fort:..u

\II 1:1 II\ \JJ\~1
51- HO...bold Coocl.o
52- SportlaJ Goocl.o
5:1-Aat;q54- Mite. Merchandi.e
5:&gt;- Buildl"' Supp~..

v•n~ a: ..,

wn·.

74-Motoroycleo ·
75-- Bo.ta A Moton for S.J.
75- AulD Paru .t Aec-rie.J
11-'- Auto Rep-.lr
7S- Campiaf Equipaeot

'-IH\ltl'-

.,...._..

•

PlumbiaJ 1:

Heat1a1

Exca-..linf

a

Eleclricol llef1rip&gt;roti&lt;&gt;~
Cllfteral Hauline:
Mobile Home R.,.ir

Upholotery

~
~

RICHARD ROBERTS
·~d

Specialtie•"

622 JIY Drivt, Glll\pol\t, Oh.

1

44&amp;-7612

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Llc. No. 0051-342

The conolgnor 11 In the proce•• of aelllng their
farm and the following antlquee and coliectlblel
have been moved to our •uctlon facllitle1.

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do it
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

Fax/Voice 446·7812

614·985·41 80

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

B&amp;G
Trucking

811211311 mo. pd

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

(614)
667·6628

614-698-3290

or

Shade River Saddle Shop

4-19-93·lfn

614-698-6500
7f7ntn

ttl2419211fn

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BUU.OOZING

· Howard L Wrltesel

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER I
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS I
HOMESffES .
HAUUNG: LimNtont,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

NEW -REPAIR

U011nud •d Bonded

PH. 614·992·5591

12·6-tfn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addldono
-Gutter Work
·Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing
-tn18rlor &amp; Extarlor
Painting
(FijEE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pom•oy, Ohio
!l-t().82-tfll

ROOFING
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
{614) 992-7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

•New Homes
-Garages
.Complete
Remodeling
Stop l Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
712'l/93

Porches,
Patio$,
Sidewalks
992-7878
7ntmo.

One horse buggy; 36 ln. 5 roll lop desk; 2 pc. pine
corner cupboard (as found); claw footed curved
glass china cabinet; claw looted sideboard; oak
dressers w/rnirrors; washatands; 9 lin pie sale; paint·
ed 48 in. khchen cabinet; twin highback iron bed; oak
round table wllhree Jeavet; arrowheads; atone jars, 2
Wlfreehand; stone chums; qui~s and tops; anvils;
forge; depression glass. See full ad in August 16th
Antique Week.

alphabet with which

Term•: Cuh, check or travelers chack w/politlvt
10. Food available. Cltllt amoJca.free envl·
ronment.
Auctioneer Merle Hutchlnaon 814-8111-8708
Llctnotd and Bondtd In Ohio
Buaine11 Panner F111nk Hutchineon 6t4-5112·43411

God has written the
Universe." • Galilso
By Topic
By Appointment
1149·2814
7122/

PRIVATE .
MATHEMAnCS
INSTRUCnON
"Mathematics is the

RIVER VALLEY

CONTUCTORS

H WARD
EXCAVATING
BUUDO~~ 1.!'ACKHOE

and TRA""""E WORK
AVAILABLE.
. SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlE BITES and

TRAILER BITE!!,
LANDCLEARIN10
DRIVEWAYS INSTALlED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 742·2217
6-30.tmo.pd.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
t2-30.!12·11n

GREEN·UP

RECLAMATION
SERVICE
Dr lVI w.ry';

Pnnd•;
~+'!'dllrq &amp; r.ltJir hlii&lt;J
lrr•t Hr·rll!t'o'dl
tlnlllt";Jtf•S

Phone Evenings

614·985·3373
"211~)/qJ/t fn

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Alumin~m Siding
Power Washing

Fill ESTIMATES .
son4 litter lltlt• •~.
le•t hltata, 011. 45743

HAULING

GENERAL
HAULING

•••••

JOE N.SAYIE
SAYRI TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3-4-83·1 mo.

Chesler, Oh. 45720
985-3406
318/lfn

205-75Rt5" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
20S.75R14" Tiger Paw XTM RWL
215-7515" FlrNtone OWL
23S.75R15" Floratone OWL
-CALL FOR PRICING'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 612&amp;'113

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERClAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 • 949·2860
or 985·3839
(No Sundor Calls)

21121821tfn

~~·pt!C Sy•,lr'lll·;

915·4181

........1.

36358 SA 7

Oot•.·r &amp; B:H:kh'w Wnrk

992·3138

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

CUSTOM SADDLES,
. LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top to
Bon om

3-16-93-lfn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

We have a t.tge olock of eevoral name brand llrH and
II we don't have, we can get It
•
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL..
304·773-5533
2nd Location cell Lon Nul
Henderaon, W. Va. 304-175-3331
Mao18rcard end VISA accepted.
&amp;+4tn

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

SUNDAY, AUGUST 22 AT 10:00 A.M.
ALBANY, OHIO

INTERIOR

'\WOOD

BINGO

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
. ANTIQUE AUCTION
45 ·mn.. eut of Chillicothe
Preview 8:30a.m. day of auction.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

·~~In

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Take US 50 ~ 32 Weet of Athena, Ohio end exit
onto 50 Weot towarde McArthur. Auction I• a
quarter of a mila on the left. Sign• po1ttd. Out of
atate chacke require a bank letter for acceptence.

20%

OPEN MON.-FRI. 9:00-5:00; SAT. 9:00-1:00
0~ CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

thoae who call and mue an
appointment before 4:00
P.M. on Auguol 16, 111113.
The tank will not be !!rained
lor thlo lnopectlon.
The Loading Creek
Conaervancy District
reoerv• lhe rlghlto wolve
lnformalllleo, to reject any
and all bldo or to eccepl
ouch bid thai will boot HMI
the DlatrlcL
LEADING
CREEK
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
By: Robert F. Snowden,
Preeldent ·of the Board of
Dlrect~re

Many Styles and Colors to Choose From

VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
165 Main SL
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Mgro ..

42- Mahile Homu for Real

2-lnMeaory
3-- Announcementl

........

W•nu.d to Buy
Li...t.oek

Au... for Sole
Trucka for S.le

43- Fu•• for Rent

458-1-a
576-Apple
773-M•on
882-New Haven.
895-Letarl
937-Bolfalo

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTON(, TOP SOIL
&amp;. FILL DIRT

Toarli:B

Public Notice

1

•ALL PATIO

Struting At

POMEROY
Melg11 County Dloplay Yard Near
Pomeroy·Maoon Bridge
Jam• A. Buoh, Mgr.
992·2588

I \I i \I 'I I' \'1 II ,
,\ I I \ I ' I I I I (,

41- HoUMI for Real

Ple.1ant

EAGLE. liliES

CaUTodQior

i

•SECTIONAL$

LOGAN MONUMENT C.O.

67~Pt.

36970 Ball Run Road

OWNEI: Jtlf Wldtw,._
L...-----!61~10183

Public Notice

•SOFAS

SAVE UP TO

992-Mlcldleporll
Pomeroy
367...a-bire ·
985-Cioeater
388-Vlatoa
843-Porlland
241&gt;--llo Graade
256-Guyaa Dill. 247..LetaJt F.U.
643-Aral.ta Dllt.
949-llacl.ae
7 42-llolload
579-lVolnut
667..C...t.llle

ForS.IoorTnda

li I \ I \I -.

GaiBa County Metp County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-GalllpoHo

Fnnu a v...taloloo

32- MoW. Ho.... for Sole
33-- Fan11for S..le
M- BUiineu Buildinp
3:&gt;- L.ou ot Ac""P
r------.;q;,....~&lt;;;;;rw:;;;;:;;::;;n;L'----1 3&amp;- Ileal E.otatelVa~Jed

Clauified pages Cotler the
following telephone e:cchanges...

992·3470 .

.

•BRASS HEADBOARDS
•LIVING ROOM TABLES
•LAMPS/POTTERY

11

Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

AVERAGE SHARES
OUTSTANDING
4,217,640;4,204,573

20% TO 75% STOREWIDE

•Tables
•Umbrellas

Th~yPaper

rWll mual he prepUd

• Recei"N di.eoUAt for &amp;de paid in adnoce.
• Free Acll: Ci•oaway aad Found •dl11ncler IS wont. will be
run 3 da,.. at DO cbarp.
• Price of ad for aU capilalletten Y double price o( ad COil
• 7 poi.atliDe type oaly u1ed
• SenLiDel ill not re~pon~ible for error• after fll'tl day (cbeck
for error• far1t day ad ruaa in paper). C.U before 2:00p.m.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedntoday
100 p.m. Thwidoy
I :00 p.m. Friday

P... for Sale
M•lcaiiii!....O.,.

Income

·sAVINGS OPPORTUNITY' AT
OUR SEMI·ANNUAL SALE.

: Baker.

A cor n roa st and pi cnic were
held a t th e hom e of Da le and
Ka thryn Hart, Racine, on Aug. 5, to
mark the birthday of Linley Hart.
Atte nding were the honored
guest and Mildred Hart ; Ronald
; and Hilda Hart, Gilbert and Audrey
, Hart, Monty, Travis and Jona s
, Hart, Rollic and Shirley Stewart,
Suzanne Evans, Robert and Lil•
Hart, Robert and Martha Lou Beegle. Edison and Mabel Brace ,
Dorothy and David Sayre, Shauna
Manuel, Mark and Sharon Harvey,
Kevin and Kimberly !hie, David
Fizer, Aimee and Charlie Pyles,
Lorene Pyles, Le gi na Hart and
Dale and Kathryn Hart.

• Net

SALE!

•GHders
•Folding Furniture
•Lamps
•Cushions
•Chairs
•Chaise
Cafe Sets •Children's Chairs

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

S .47; S .47 (A)

Semi-Annual Clearance

•SIMMONS BEDDING SALE
•DINETTES

Call 992-2156

COPY DEADLINE
Monday·Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper

Days
Words Rate Overl! Words
1
15
$ 4.00
$ .20
3
15
$6.00
$ .30
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
10
IS
$13.00
S .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Buolneao Card......S17.0011nch per momth
Bulletin Board.....$6.00/inch per day

Public Notice

LIFESTYLE FURNITURE'S .

SAVE

To place an ad

the Gallipolil Daily Trihuae, reaehiD.f1 over 18,000 home.

$ (.05)

,

·Hart
:birthday
observed

RATES

Crime and juvenile problems were
lessened when self esteem
increased. This video is available to
all interested civic and school organizations, by contacting Mrs. Bolin
or Mrs. Carpenter, who recently
returned from two weeks of train·
ing and observation; of the Flint
community project. They encouraged others·to plan to participate in
this training by excellent presenters
and activities. Several members of
the advisory council discuss.ed the
need for more local involvement
and support of the community education project including that of the
local school and board·of education
personnel. Mrs. Bolin invited any
suggestions and panicipation from
anyone interested in becoming
active in this project to better life
for all local people. Mrs. Bolin
noted that together the community
can accomplish many things if we
do not concern ourselves with who
gets credi_t.
·

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
SPECIAL MEETING OF
THE MMHA BOARD OF
DIRECTORS
The Melgo Metropolitan
Housing Authority Board of
Dlrectoro will meet In
Special Santon on Auguot
18,1993 at 12:00 p.m. In the ·
Middleport VIllage Council
Room al VIllage Hall lor the
purpose of oubmlaolon of
funding
oppllcollon
appro¥al and authorlzallon
and other buolnHo ao moy
be neceooary for the
operallon of the Melgo
Housing Authority.
Jean Tru11oll
Executive Director
(8) 17; 1TC

~

••

For All". Mrs. Bolin suggested thai
members 'wear these to promote the
comm unity education messag e,
especially at the upcoming Meigs
County Fair. The group plans to
have a display at the fair, with
council members giving information and brochures about the pro·
ject and til e upcom ing classes,
which will start this fall.
Following the dinner catered by
Suzy Carpenter, the video "To
Touch A Chilli" was shown. This
program tells how the community
of Flint; Mich., solved many of its
problems and filled many needs
through the inception of a comm unity based schools project with the
public owned schools being opened
to all members of the community,
including evenings and weekends,
not just for the regular school day
for grades K-12. This led to more
cost effective operation, fulfillment
of community need s and more
involvement in the schools by the
gene.ral public! increasing th eir
posibvc percepuon of the schools.

The

11-t-113-tfn

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878
7nl1mo,

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC
WAllER ALlEY

Parts alii s.rm
Mow111 • ~ Saws
WHdtaters

Authorized: Brlgge &amp;
Slrelton MTD, A'y111,
J.D. C. Repair Center
PICKUP 111d DEUVERY
Hours 96· M-F 11-3 Sal
C\ooad Sunday

949·2104
4126/'lfn

HOUSE OVERROWINC?

CARPENTER
WORI
Aemodeing end ~air
Painting, Exparionced
FI'H Eatimatoo
614-446-8568 ~~-

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; ISO PAm fft
All lUllS &amp; ~W

992·701hr
992-5551
•TOLL fill
1·100.Uio0070
DAIWIN, OliO

CLEAN UP WITH

ClASSIFIED ADS

83

..

e

713t/9tllln

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY
Life • Medicant. • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119

Ml••leport, o•1o 45760
(614) 143•5264 6l14183mn

'

�17, 1993

Ohio
44

32 Mobile Homea
fOr Sale

Apartment
for Rent

17, 1993 .

The Dal

Autos for Salt

71

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.... lylck Conlt.ry Condition, .,.... . . . . . .,, 111

1354.

-·

.

-lld.-P.--

ALDER

IIIOMtlry

33 Tra¥+1 on

~=on .,

34NaeiiiYI

horHback

.........
12 .......
O!lftge

Caonpony,

35=.....

paH.,.
31 lllllk: hallo
37 Apportion
38 Clun to
hlvebad luck
40 Indian weight
41 Felry
430na - -

Bing
13 ll8dlo.cll..

eleiMnt

+AS 2

Jlylllo - : llolll On
- h, 1 l 2 Am.._!_lf. CINft
R - , HBO. An IM71
Wookly. Call -231 5112.
Whllo llolo Ago 23 L.MI!!t Fer
Single Whlto Fomalo Ponpal
Ago: 17 112 ·24, Prolw Nonamour • AJcohol Free, s.nc:1
A - To: P.O. Box 5I, Oalllpotlo, OH 45131.

. A QJ8
+to 4
+ J84 s

,.:·:::

.

Uma

44 Not wlda
48 Ptlrl of

Delllhlon

EAST

11 Allglllod

+KQ!t

lkateton

21 8NII

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Giveaway

4

14 llllllc (IIOUp&amp;
15 Pllotogr..
pller'l toolt
18 Author JIC·

1-1~11

NORTH

52 PtlmltiYt
53 Oueltlon

O!lllftllml

24 Acbe11 c.lclw811

27 Old Portvll!leMIIIClMJ

SOUTH

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DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
West

8 ilalwa

1 Oermanllrt.
2 Electlfflecl
p&amp;tllclae
3 Of 1 awa!Nng

28 Field ol gran-

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Am•• te Puculaaa,...

32 Varva

1 lnlpoee

PHILLIP

OINLIIII U¥1111 24 HRS .W.YIII
TALX ONE llH llHEI 1 - - . . 11 y,., 102..31.....

Senti

7Wn
COMMMd
a--IM

·=-~

10 lltfOnl Wid.

•

11 lltltllllllny
lbbmtdon
12TVM~

17Co,...pL
ZOIMaw. .

111111111

z1 I!Otlllng

~=.-'

Openilllllead: + A

ltltlltlon

Z4a- .....

zsoxr.-

Mauritiusmagic in the ocean

1m Chevy 112 Ton 310 4 bbl. 4
Boll, AT, PS, PI, AC,~. 3.73 Pool
$3,500, Or OBO ur Trlldel
Phone: 114-441-2308.
,
1::i:::80~F=-=1::110:,-:..;F,:.III.:,I:;::,SI;_..--=~. I
Cylinder, 3 Spood, $2,300 oliO,
aM-25S.a277
1il7 5-10 Dunngo, high mllago, • '
....
but -·
304- •'
NHMI.

.

II-

RO'fANNE ~ Wl-lAT
A SURPRISE !

I NEED TO TALK TO
YOU, C~AR L ES .. DO YOU
1-lA~ E TIME TO 60 6ET

DO '(OU

LIKE ME.
CI-IMLES?

A C~OCOLATE SUNDAE?

11185 Ford F150 4 · - drlvo,
$3500. 304.a7&amp;-2241.
.....

One
bedroom · apartmente,
$225/mo. lncludoa utllllloo, $100
MCurlty depwh, no pitli 814H2-2218.

Real Estate

Roome lor rant - wook or month.
SJ:~I:2' at Jl201mo, Galllo Holol.

tyDIWIII .... carpet, w..-holr
I lift, and mo111.

Sarvlco - ...... odvortlood loy
Pall! Ho...,-llu on -un!IY
lor on Individual In ·tho Polril
Pl.....,. l llooon County aroo
Noldanllol, -orotlon, cloonlng

butln.e. Fln1nclal ...lltanae

All Yard Saleo lluol h Paid In
Doaclllna: 1:OO!lm tho
day bolo&lt;o tho od Ia lo run,
S..ndoy odhlon- 1:00pm Frtday,
llondoy
odhlon
10:CJOa.m.
Saturday.

ovolloblo, payrnont to
qualltlad buy«. Coli lit. Hlr*lo
uoo 444 1711.

Adva-.

Wanted to Buy

ol1968 wh~h makes II Illegal
lo advertise ·any preference,
Nmltallon or dlscr1mlnatlon
based on raCe, cok&gt;r, relglon,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any 1n1enUon to
make any sucn preference,
limitation or c;l lscrimlnal lon:

knowingly accept
advertlsemenls lor real eslate
which Is In violation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

Rick PM NOn Auction Company,

77U7811.

the Fed.fral Fair Housing Ad

This newspaper wll not

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

full time auctlonMr, complete
aucUon
nrvlce.
UctnNCI
IOM,Ohlo l Waot VIrginia, 304-

opportunity basis.
Truck Driv. . , pilid VICIIIlon &amp;.
halld~p, home WMUnde l
eome during w•k
Hnd
qu1llticltlon• lo Poll"tt PINNnt
Regltter, Box C..11, 200 Main

31 Homes for Sale
12x60 whh ex_pando ltvlnl room,
good condition, on 31 acra,

Ploaoanl, WY fruh lrMI, 91r1g1 I 1m111 buildIng, 114-1'12·341f.
Yaconcy Phyalcll Thoroplot 2 bedroom houH, luU ba. .
Ouollllcollono:
Phyoclal ment. 304-675~1486 .
11Hi2-1'141.
Thoraplol Conlllcotlon Notify:
Decorated atOMWIIN, Will tea. Supt. Office, Oallla ..Jackaon 3 Bodroomo, 2 Bath•, 2 Cor Alphona, okf •mpe, old ther· -Yinlon JYSO, P.O. lox 157, Rio lochod Gorogo, Outbuilding,
momM. ., old ck&gt;Ckl, al"'llqui Grando, OH 456111. 81" Auguol Bldwall Porter "SchOOl Area, e*
367-7504.
tumhw&amp; Rtvwlne Anllquee. 31, 11193, 114-245-5334, EEO.
Ruse Moore, owner. 114-182·
WANTED: PcMttlone A.. lllble At 3bdnn. houao &amp; garoga, Apple
2521. w~ buy eatat11.
A Communhy Group Hom~ For St, SyncuHl. 1110 3bdrm.
Don, Junll Ml SaU Uo Your Non- Poroono Whh IIAIDO In Gat- houee on LM street, Sf.racUM;
Working Major Appllancoo, llpollo. Houro: (1) 40 Hro Nik, 3 coli Roclno Horna Nat 1 Bani&lt;,
Color
TV'a,
Rahlg~rators,
·11 P.M., Su rw ITII: 4 -11 P.ll., II 814-11411-2210.
FrMzera. VCR'e, Mkrowavea, ITu ; (2) 33 Hro Nik: 2 ·I P.ll. 7 room, brkk, 1 1J2ml off
· 2:30 .. :30 P.ll .. :ru rw /Til IF. Sandhill Ad, lyro Old, I 112 both,
Air CondhloMrw, Guitar Am.-, Sath
Hlg
School Dogtoo, Valid ~..., room, 10 aern. tn,eoo.
Elc. 614-2541-1238.
Driver'• Lk:lnM, 'n1r• YHrl 304.a2t0.
J &amp; D'a Auto Parta and Sllvag1, Driving ExporlaMo, And Good
al10 buying Junk car. &amp; truc~a. Driving
Record
Roqulrod. Buutltul Mont r1nch .tyle
304-713-5343.
Salary: $5.00 !Hr, To S1art. Sand houee, 4 badroom, 2 full bathe,
Rnume To Cecilia Baker, P.O.
Junk CIII'S, any condition, 114- Box 804, JacQon, OH 45640. larga LR, den wlllone tlreplac•,
larga kitchen, lola of cabinllla,
m-7553.
Doadllna For Appllcatlono: J..car carport, 30'x40' prage 1ft~
Equal Oppollunlly tina on 2.1 ltvel 1cr•, bitaudwa..ad .tanding tlmbtr, lop 81201V3.
tulfy londocopad, on New Limo
DJicea peld, h'M 1-hMIII, Employer.
A01d nur Rutland, OhJo, Lead-llconaod • cortlllad logging,
lng Creek water •nd cabaa avail304-1115-3055 or 8i5-3138.
17 Miscellaneous
oblo, aM-1112·2721.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S. Sldo by oldo ·rolrlg., Admiral
Colno, Gold AI"P., Sllwor Colno, $150. T.V. antenna and tower Houoa For Salo: Land Conlrocl,
Gold Colno. II.T.l&gt;. Coin Shop, 1125. al4-317.0240.
$2,000 Down Locatod hlwoon
151 Sacond Avenue, Galllpollo.
Conlarvllla And Ook Hill, On
Routo 219, Coll814-2-5.
Wamod to buy: uHd mobile 18 Wanted to Do
In
clooo 1o ochoolo,
· -75
::;Wl:=ll-::do~bo-.-b-,...=.~~~~.--m-y""h_O!_ma_, onelllddlopoll,
atory, central alrlthree bedChMter arM, full time, pert room, 1 112 btuhe, 1 vlng room,
after Khoot, all age., 114- family room, kitchen, dining
Employment Services time,
111-4212, llary.
room, front porch, deck ott
bocll, flncod In yord wtth
Babyolltlna In lly Homo, ortvacy
tonco, 114-1192-3411 a~
Antlq~• and UHd furnltur., no
hem too llirp or too email, will
buy one ~ or ~mpltt•
houaahold. call Ooby llallln,

11

AVON! All or-. -

oxtro

money ot want a c1,..,, lllt.r
wo~all llarltvn. 304 8112-21-15

or t.-.m.ease.

Stroot,

25550.

Polnl

ChMhirt "rea, 11441"1~7841 .

Help Wanted

Cut••= raatlna, ekUna, uphatt
...u~g. palnflng, carpentlfJ.
Frw &amp;tlmalH. 104475-5701 or
a~22.

ovalloblo, oil - · Rut·
AYOH I All - · I Shirley Daycore
~nd 1rea, for lnfomaeUon call
Spaon, :JOU'I5-1428.
114-11112..:1411 , IMVI m1111ge.
Eam Ful-llma Pll)' For 'Paii- Hurry,- llorto ooeot.
T1,.. Work AI A Chrlltrnae
Around , Tho
World. E&amp;R TREE SEIMCE. l~
Troo Aornovo~
Domonotrotor. Froo $500 KM No Trimming,
Froo Eollmotoal 1
Collocllng Or Dollv«lllllo Aloo Trimming.
387-716TAft«
4p.m,
Booking Parlloo, Coli 114-2465031.
0.....1 Malntono-.
Yonl- W l - W
oun- Cloonod Light Houllng,
Commortcal, llooldonllal, llovo:
114-441-11511.

Pal::.

4\fl\
111111

~

a

All real estate advertising In

to atal1 their awn aonunerelll,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

9

74

I~~~~~~:::::: 61 Fann Equipment
.. 2000
Ford Tractor tz,3111; 5000
Ford ,t2.315i. 240 lntomollonol

:-=-:-- -:--.,---..,.,.. I~
lhls n&amp;"'flap&amp;r Is '"'b)ecl lo

Ourpe Port..... laWII'IIII don..

lloul toao to tho min )uol
caii:IOW'II-1tl7.
Horna cora tor y-lovod ona In
flmiiJ con ltaina In llldd'-1,
114-11112-15042.

ter 4pm, anrt,lm. WMkende.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1-

11N.M par month, now 14' wldo
mobllo homo, lncludoa dollvory,
complolo oot-up, okllllng, olopo
ond • montho ... rent,
137-M25.

'73 Forroot Porfl, 2 bod"""",
good -~ton, 11WII2-3711,
-louo lnqlllrloo only.
'111 Schultz, 12d5, 3 bod""""
-rol olr, rolrlgorolar iiiiil ·

=··

Newly
lached

conMructed,
gan~gt,

2br,

It•

fal~~d•

area, Paint PINunt.

75-

2523.
Nlco1 2br,_houM, Apple Grovo.
304~75-1ro1 or 175-1m attar

11680.

Slooplna

rvomo

wlh ~ng.

A.lao trallw apace. All hoolc-upe.
Clll after 2:00 p.m., »1-773-

5651, MIIICHI wv.

47 Wanted to Rent

Spm.

Th- bedroom all oloctrlc
double wldol good neighborhood In Rae na, &amp;2:00 dapoell,
$300/mo. lncludH water/ garbage/ - r . 114-11411-2217.
ThrM bldroom, Mlchrqy Drlva, ·

New Hovan, WY: 1250/mo., $300

dapooll,
5:00pm.

114-lli2-8981

oi!Or

Merchandise

:=========:.
· Household
51

Goods

42 Mobile Homes
. for Rent

1a,ooo BTU Air Condhlonor, Comp..uor, 1 Yoor Warranty,
$2i5, Skogg'a API&gt;IIancoo~ 71
Ylno Slraot, 614-441-73N "' 1·
10X60 mobllt hOITIII, ·2 bedfoom, 1100-41111-34119.
820 Fourth Avo, Galllpollo. $325
wll« and trash paid 814-448YI'RA FURNITURE
4416 attar 7 p.m.
· 814-441-3151 Or 114-446-44211
'90 DAY SAllE AS CASH
2 bedroom tumlohod mobllo OR RENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSIT)
homo, 304.a75-6512.
2 BMiroom Moblla Home Alto
Downst11r1
Apartment,
Aateranen &amp; O.poelt, No Pill,

814-446-1158.

2 bedroom trailer, rafarence &amp;
dapoatt,· At 1, Locuat Ad, on
right, Paint Plt111nt.

2 btitroom, located In Haw
H1v1n, WV, $215Jmo. + UIIIHIII.
304·773-511al.
For rent, need roommate to
ahara 3 bedroom trall•r, no
dtpoelt, no uUIItlal, $150
monthly, 614-lli2-31149.

Nlee mobile homaa for r.nt
alartlt:~g II $260/mo., and . .CH
II $85/mo.
piUI dtpoalt,
Country Mobho Homo Pork, 8141192·21a7.

Rio Orondo 12x110 2 Bodroomo

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Toblo W/4 Cllol,.;
Fon Back Rocking Chair $511:
G1rden Arch Way'1 ttat.OO

King aJu w.lorllod whh .._.
l comforlo&lt;, 1100, aM-1112-3411.

Lont

woodburnor w1 00,... &amp;
~M dooro, trfpla plpo, $450.

...w•:.,

wUhor, •
--:
twin
1
nga 1 ""'"'"'·
~~. coli • ., lp.m., 814-H2- 1~113:;;7-:-;;;-a-:.==--:-:--::c-:-:
,:;;.;::,:-.,,----...,.------ , IJ.D. 45 Combine Lito llodol
Roolllllc cor oloroo - · amp, Wllh 234 Corn Hoado, Rully
110 wolto, llco now, $45, aM-m- Good Condhlon, 114-24&amp;-15824.
2354.
King Cut1or, I Fl. Flnloll - .
Royoi'Oak llembon:::c;r Salo: King Cutlor, 5 R. Bruoh Hoo,
II lntataolod Call
73·1lli Both 1 Yoor Old, I HP Go-Cail,
Allor 1:30 P.ll.
114-3118-11082.
S1roll«, bobybocl, wollcar, hlalt- N. . Holland 717 lonogo harvchalr, c• ooal, . .11)9, !IIIII. glill lOr WI both hoodo, 3 boM_
Ickay Mou• v1nny MI. 304- far.ge wagon, New Holland T
175-4548.
hoy bind, Gohl g~nderlmlxor, 12'
lranapott diK, AC no tUe com
Surplua army camallluge, new planter, Oliver 1800 tr1ctor, all
ohlpmont combo! boc(o, troo good cond. 304-:z73.4215.
borko. Sam SomoMlla'o1 . by I~::::::7-.--::::-=..:;:.:::,.----,­
SandyvUio Pool Olflco. Fn-SatPlllllc tonka, 211 gal, 2" volvo,
S..n, 12:0ClpnHI~. othata polloblo &amp; dwobiO. Groot lor
doyo &amp; houro. :104~.
watot or ony lklllld. $10. 304525.a301 or 304-1113-4838.
Troller: I'•" wldo 1a' long, ton- 1"",;...;;.=.;.;...;;.;;..;..;..;;;...;,:;;;;:;.._ _
dom OJIO, 1,000 tb. ••Poclly, 63
Livestock
•lUG, aM-114WI04.
I==~~-~==-..,.­
WATER LINE SPECIAL: :114 Inch Yoo~lng
Hampohlro
Ram
200 PSI $11.15; 1 Inch' 200 PSI I;PIIono;:::-;-"~;:1::4::4:;
41::-1-;1::51111.:::-:--:132.50; Ron Evono EntortHiooo, Rea. Umoulln bufta 1cr oalo,

Joe"""'!, Ohio, 1.aoo-537-0521.

aM=ta.a1110.

Boddlng ·Twin lieU Sol sn, Full WATER STORAGE TANKS 1;;:~=-;-:--;--===­
$119 Sal, Quoon $141 Sat; 4 Abovo And- Ground FDA Y:a nice bnlod oow, 114-IIIIIDraworChoo1144.M;Cor8otl'o, APPIOVod Fer Poloblo Wo1er. 3M or114-1192~54.
Sunk Bed'a. Poet.,. llede. FuU

Llno Of South-om Ya911111"1! AI Uo.oo: lndlono llony

Shope o l Slloo Stoning AI
$5.00. 2 Locatlono ·Booldo Auto
Auction Or 4 lllln Out M1.
Opon I A.M. To 8 P.ll . llon -Sal.

Ent•w.:••· Jack•
1

Ron Evana

55

Building
Supplies

re

•eoo

BORN LOSER

.J

~

75 Boats &amp; Motors
fOr Sale

? ,__..._

fiOO..IIIII-34

.

8

7

"*z.

$310,114-~

Oldo Aoylllo, P8,

Mna, one male,
ona tomlllo, I woaliii old1 1250
At .... 114114 4177.

_ '

I

Dollonnon AKC !loillo..rod
PupploO, All 81-., ........ On
- - . 114-2141-MIG.

AC,

a-•
,
~......__ •·~- Z,
~•-• •w14,000 II
Ellc- C4ond~
lion.' Aoldng: $3,200, 114-44f.

1117:

_n_

~'!l!".....! door,
1161
outo., 111100. ...,....w112.

1111 ..-tn Town Car, lurgundy Whh Burgundy Interior,
ExceAanl
.OOO, fM..

CondltJOn:..

IUCC - h To- pupplao,

PI,

........ _ , wl-.nocko,
oupar c;l'!lcall 114-114t-2041 o.-

..,....,.~1111.

email, non-e~':

ohopo,

1 - Ford EXP, good -.d,
6opd~lrl!,l!11""'!, lm/lm, 11200.
304..,,...."" or IT&amp;-1577.
-

J T R K F

R L

AJ

TII(Y DI6UP
RHINE.~TONE~

XP

XHSFPA ' LHI
XTM

CBRKFYPM,
XHBF

GWNNPPA.
TWKJYPM-

N Z K' J

RJ

W G 1'

( N H

NHKKAP

NTWKD .

L H B

ZKNTHa)

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The best way to avoid ballplayers Is to go to a
good res1auran1. " - (Former MaJor League player) Tim McCarver.

WOlD
lAIII

THAT DliL1
PUULII

AIM FLY
I

II

II

I~

I
I

BRUCM

.:..r:l-r:ll..:..;_,.l--j .

..........,._..1

'--'---'-..!.....~--'·

Aug . 17, 1993
Today is the 229th
da y of 1993 and the
58th da y of summer.

XRYY

'·
•

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

1---TL~U~V;....,.A~D-r::E--r--ll

I I I 1I

-

6

L..-L.-.1....-L-

"I can't believe you're in the
hospital!" the 'guy consoled his
friend. "I saw you dancing with
a beautiful woman the other
night." "Thai's just it," sighed
the patient, "so did -- ---- '"

Q

Complete the c ~uck l e ~:~uo r e d

~ Y I dling in th e missing words

-'--'--' you develop fr om step No. 3 below .

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in

11-1e PICTUREB
EIQ.Je 01.-rr.
I'IJT Fi&lt;aA 'THE
SOUND...

I'D5AYIT'6

01&lt;: A NEWS

DOCUMENTARY

510RYABCUT
·6RIDLOCK

ern-ie:!&lt; A
ABOUT

ONlHE

M~TIN6r

FREeWAY.

eeese ...

~f. Ho~l&lt;

1807, Robert ful ton 's s teamboat, the
Clermo nt, made a successful run up
th e Hudson Rive r , markin g th e be·
ginn ing of commercial steam -powered
navigation.,

TODAY 'S BIRTHDAYS: Da vey
Croc ke tt (1786· 18361, U.S. frontier s· ,
man -pol itician ; Mae West 11892·19801,
actress; Ma uree n O'Hara 11 920·1, ac- ~
tr ess. is 73'

Jloll&lt;

i

104~ t!Gtll&lt;
IWI&lt;

; :;::
·"&lt;
, •..,
1o • •

'~
·::'t

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
s ·"
Hermit - Livid - Venus - Unfair - FIRED
"Please buy something lady," pleaded the salesman.
"It really is a fire sale. If I don't sell something the boss
say's I'll be FIRED!"
·

-

ITUESDAY

.

ROROTMANe

AUGUST 171

-~.

.

ll''S IN 111E.
PHOiO(Ofli;;ti

7
' -'::::-::~=,.:,:.:7:,--:--~ ~ Dod
••••
go, 4dr., 311, olr, now
11-, cloan ~ mill, $12,000
ftnn, aM-M 4
•
tiel~ Comouo, 305 outo, 12000
010, S14.fi2-2023.
i8ll Chlf."'« La Boron 2*.
1~~
W PS
ji
•~n
,
, PB, AC 1
Oleelrlc, ohopo, 131100;
1m lulci 2dr. 400 - · ongino, 8 now tlroo, Sl75: 1m
CorNir camper, 17112', ....,. 4
or I, bathroom, cook ..owe,

~="!a=.t""'

, R

.

Autos for Sala

::=~~~-=-=-==-=.., ,~
=~·· ti·=cirt=
..,, 3DM75-7101.

bi-.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebril)' Qphtlr Ct)'ptO(ti'MM IN ~ frOm qiiOII'dol• bV fll'ftOW peoptl, PM1 .net ~t.
e.:tJ lett• In 1M olpMr .tlndl tor IIIOtt*. TOIMy'l t:IIM: F lqUIM K.

Wy N E L

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
r
:1i;:BI:-_-::1N=7-;;0I:::d::-o-;;Cut::::t.=a~221=:=v_.-:- ; ~;
Englno
Pano Oidia :Mil ·

.

Servtces

1i11 lulcl&lt; Elodn 221, AC,

Pets for Sala

411Conat..~
50 Ellllld
11 cunr 1111er

lour. Declarer sboul&lt;! have won with
the ace and led the heart queen to take
~.~::~~- finesse and guarantee an
:&lt;
However, Bhatt was happy.
drew trumps immediately and .
Icla,imE!d his contract.
Ni~~-d, llfr. Bhatt.

Wl. 501UOf. ..

~11P£NP\II'v\

56

Wlr
47 Skin problem

l-..:r,~r.,.:.....;;,;_;:::,r.l5~

76

owner

I~

~K.S Ai-ID ALL

1m Cry- - · 111i2 Choll)' ·
cullomlled van, reel w'-llftr
lrlm. tak• ov.- paymenta. ~~
441-0404 Of 304-171'2207.
1m 17 Fl. Contury loot Whh
115 .., Outboard -or And
Trellor, Good Condition Phone:
114-3711-2171 Coli Eo;\l llornlngo Or l.ololn bonlngo.
'
1181 4 Winne 180 horizon 18'1•, • •
opon - · 205HP, 114-11112-31117. •
24' Tunnol Craft pontoon w/11191 30HP, Yamoho mc4or,
$2500, 114-1'12·2041 or II •
Lono Oak Compgroundo, oouth
or Wnt Columbia. W.V.

Tronaml- aM-251-1012.
Cltovrolll
305
-or 1
Transrnlalon V-1, 114--281 •••
Bluo/ollvor to-. naodla npalr, tho tullolze Cltovy true!&lt;,
550. 11+388 ltot.

LIKE A (£OLOGIST,
"'YOUTf\AT
KlolO'.J, DI66C NG OP

W{) POOT 5AY5 HIS DAD
IS A G€J!\01..061~T...

18' 1m Saa St&gt;rllo II HP
Johnoon And 11M Troll~ Excoltwrt Condition, 814 ue vall.

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

48 NorM lOCI of

: :·:·:'··:·:--~~~o-4::::.::.:·~:._·~~-~~~--J · :e:t~~.;c~~~rn~!:O:~~t7~!·:e~~i
AoJ ~

L::::~~~~=~~~~·~==::~~==~~====·:··~·

19115 114-1112-2241.
Hondla 711 lh- · - ·
1400,
OUten . . . ..... ._., 1200.
304..&amp;75-1272.

PUT YOIJ IN TOIJC::tl
WITtf ,tAI..ITY.
w\£-t. ~
Alt.t
TO tiAI'IG UP \f ·
~ viAI'IT T01

Brown Lova S.t, Good Condi-

tion, SilO, 114-44a.8038.
GOOD USED APPUAHCEI
Waahoi'IL. drya&lt;o, rotrlgoroloro,
rengoo. ""~'" Appttancoo, 71
Ylno S1-H au aM-441-7311, 1•

good condition, 814--MI-

12&gt;110 New Coi'IIOI, Wolot Hoeler,
Eloctrlll Box fnclucllng: Porch,
~=.nlng, CIA $4;ooG, a14-

/

1981 Ul&lt;o N.- Hondla 110 3
Who-.
Or Will Trodo,
S14-251.a277.

226~

71

~·,., GOING TO

Motorcycles

• - Tnnamloolono, Uood l
iobulM, oil rypoo, 01anln\01 5119:
8'14-245-567'7.
14..J71.

Transportation

"!&gt;"· Ohio, _ . 't521.

Groom ond S..pply llltop-PII
Grooming.
All
olyloo.
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
Julio Wotib. Colll14
Ul 0231.
245.a'li5.
Complalo
homo tumlolilngo.
2bdrm., tumlaMd, good condl- Houro: llor&gt;8ot, W . a14-44e- 4 llonlN Old llolo Block Lob 1
3 mlloo out lulovllla Nd. MalamuiO lllxod, - · $25, 114lion, good location, 1 child. no 032:1,
446-1111.
palo, $250/mo., New Hovan, 304- F- Oollvory.
ll82.:!48tlanyllmo.
Mollohan Co~, A1. 7 N. aM- AKC Boxer pu-. malo •
446-1'144, lx1 Carpal 160. Ylnyt -110; lownlblk · miu, roady
44
Apanment
$4.41 Yd.
Saol 10, , _ loldng dopooho,
304.e7t-3841
for Rent
Now Oak FumHIQ: Tobloo l
·
Cholro, Curloo, Cutvod Olooo AKC Dalmotlon pul'l, tomola,
1 IRroom N•r ·Holzer ~lr China
Etc. Rlvor V.ltoy Oak 12Wko. old, oholo 1 wormod,
Condhlonod, SUPER NICE! Fumnure,
Oto:
CI'Mii: RIMd, 1200 • trade for equal valua,
1345/llo. aM-441-21117.
Galllpoll8, Oh~ ~ 111 1311.
1'14-632·1203.
1 Bodroom Unlurnlohod ApanPICKENS FURNITURE
AKC lllnlature Plnochoro, llwko
m.nt, Stova I Aafrtgeralor, No
Now/Uaod
old, J171 .... 3 olloln. 304-511Palo, 118Mio Wal« lncludod, tumlohlng. 112 mt. ~444 , ,
$100 Dopooh, 614-448-3817.
Jorllcho Ad. Pl. PloiiMnt, W'l
coli
304-1'15-1450.
' AKC Poodleo Coclcar Spaniol,
1bdrm. apartment In Pomeroy
Cairn Torrlot,
Pugo, Hollon
for ren1, 114-lli2..5858.
SWAIN
Greyhound, IIOmoM olio. 1141bf. opart . .nll In Point AUCTION I FURNITURE. a 441-0404 or *-171-2207.
Pluunt, fumlthecl or unfur· Olivo St., Go!Hpollo. New l Uood
nlahed, very ciNn, no .-t•· 304- tumhuro, '*!~.._.1_. :!'f!!fom l AKC Rog. llbollon Hlllky PupWork boolo. e - . ..
pleo, Oni $125, Rool: $1110; AdU.
1'15-1381.
Fomllo Un-. $21, 11.. Eyoo
'
2 Blclroom Apartmerd, Slave, WoollerL Drvw, llolrlgo.'ltor, 114 441 liZ~
Fumlahtd, Color 1. Y. Froizor, Air ConAlfr1gerator,
Co11u AKC roglol- Collla pupa,
Locolod: 34 112 Srnllhata Oa~ dlllonor,
llpollo, $150 ~. $1lu/llo, llolrlgoroto.-, ~~-... 114- :104.e7W2M ••• 4pm,
114-441-311711,
251-1~ 38 ·
AKC f!oglol- -!oro,
Wa-/dryor, 6400 oot, Tollo Doiollod, Dow C1owO
- l l o. 114 3111 1401.
A - , 81-. l Wonnod
On C.ntrat Avanut, Clean, . No
Ptla, Deposit, Refiii'IOCII, 814-

Whh Corn ~lonlor u,m; 110
II•F~uoon
Sharp,
$3,550; 1100 Ford $2,7!15; a1421111522.
Eatolo Auction Solo lor Hottle
1 Priddy of Arllucklola concollod.
Hay conveyor, Now HoUond, 72'
WI electriC malor, IXC. CCN'ld.
II
Wood
lawn Farm, 304.

=

.a'IU022.
•- wr1

•ove, wtlhtr, dryer, underpin.

10 • 110 mobile homo, 13400
IM-1192.a732.
'

FRANK AND ·ERNEST

1182. Ford XLT, 4 whool dnvo, •.
30,0001nl, outo., 113,000. 304- •
411-1101.
'

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

2 Bodroorna, a lllln From
Chnhlro On 554, 814-386-11813.

At. 12, ttnl !;oulh of Am-la,
21111 I
22nd. FumMIKO,

mN-":4 ••c.

.

41 Houses .for Rent

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VlclnHy

1·
I

1H6 Foid E150 CUotom Yon, ·'
moo. 31JoH7&amp;- . oond., •,
1181 Ford Rongar XL, Aololng: :
$3.500, 814-4414731.
~
19H Oodgo Corovan SE, Hlah
lllloogo But Eacollonl Conil~
lion! U,500, 814-441-20118 After t ..
P.M.

Rentals

8

)

1161 Rod Chell)' 1 - 4x4, '
Yory Concllllon, PI, PB, . ·
Automollc, Y.a AMIFM eo. .

loadod, 85K

4ZActorF~

of the Indian Ocean. lspeut a couple of
weeks working with the loa~! bridge
teams. Tben I produced the daily bulletins at the Bridge Federation of Asia
and Middle East (and now Afrl~)
Championships.
My favorite deal from the tourna.
ment was this one. With only the opponents vulnerable, what opening bid
would you make as Sou\11?
Most Souths opened five diamonds.
But one, K.V. Bhatt from Kenya,
passed!
opened with one no-trump,
IsboJwirtg 12-14 points. East bid two
Landy convention Indicating
in both majors. This was a poor
with 6-4 shape. Now Bhatt kept
up his smokescreen, jumping to three
n0;trump (wbicb would have made).
West, not knowing whose deal It was,
bid lour spades.
Finally Bhatt mentioned bis suit.
West was delighted: he bad the A-K of
clubs and surely his partner had a
trick or two. He doubled. Bhatt
redoubled.
With certain players, this redouble
• would cause the aroma of rat to walt
strongly across the table. But it didn't
happen here.
. West led the club ace. Now only a

PEANUTS

111111 Ford Bronco 4 dr., i
auto, p.o., p.b,
doloy .
· · - f1200 114-441-7132.
.
1113 Dodge Rom Von, Auto ·
Trana, Good Condhlon, 114-311811121.

~

...
ar

41 lbould1r

. I' have juat returned from nearly
lour weeks In Mauritlua In the middle

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

....., $4,200, IM47'1-273l

34 Form JurJ lilt
frOIII
35 WhaiM
351ht81

By PldJUp Alder

.100.

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

co•po&amp;Mid
21 Downr duck
2a Odd
.
30 IIndow

IIASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonal llholme -

1M. Local referencM tumtshM.
Call 1oiQ0.21Y.o171 Or IM-2S'JI.
041~

l

Home
Improvements

81

!logoro Wol-fing. Eo-

tobUol,.ol tm.
Davlo -ng llocltlno And

.'
_•

-

ASTRO - GRAPH

.

-

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22Jin o rder lo tunc· PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) You are

Vacuum "CINrwr Repllk, Fr• l
Pick-Up And Dallvoryi, -goo i
Cr.H Road, 814 • te 0214.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Aon'o TV Sorvlco, opoclolll:lng

In lanhh aiM) Mrviclng moM

Olhlr brandt. HouM alia at.o

oomo

oP!&gt;II- _.,.,· wv
Ohio a14-44f.2414.
llaptlc Tonk Pumping MOeOllila ;l
Co. AQH EVANS ENTERPRISES
Joolooon, OH 1.aoo.arHAII, · '
304.a711~!N

Wlll build patio - . docko

-

roomo,

~~ traitor

82

vtil;l
ulr11ng. 1ioio:
(lUI

up

Wodneeday, Aug. 18, 1993

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

°F-=mon=:::·o:":H::::oa:::,:::,"I!:-::O:~~~':d-::C~oo-.M:-nn-a..

: ~
lnolollallon And
leo. ASES '
Certified. Relidlntlal, Cammer- . ,,.,.

~ ·l_' l

ciii. 81WM-1111.

Electrical

a.

Graph, cto this newspaper, P.O. B6x 4465, calls lor a team elton. You 'll be able 10
New Yo rk . N.Y. 10163. Be sure to slate your · your own weight without hindering or i
zodia~ sign.
turb ing the progress of te amma tes.

......"

;::;:::::Re:::::-fr..:lg'=e_rat-::lon~~ , ,..,..

":JE'"' '"

llooldontlal
or
wfftng,
new ..mo.
or
lrt. .,,,'
lleotor Uoonaod olan.
Aldonour Eloctrlcol, WV0011301 '"'"
304..,._1111.
' '* r..~

t io n efl ectively to day . you need a quiel alwa ys endowed with great patience to fuss
atmosphere so that you can hear yo urse lf over small d elails, but tod ay could be an
th ink. DiSturbing. oulside influences co uld exception. Take advantage olthis and get

gel you oft track.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The lriends with
whom you'll feel most al ease today will be
1hose who share your same ideals. 1nteres1s
and standards. Oth er types will have little to
off8r you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Us ually you'll
pursue objectives with a come·whal·may
attitude, but today you might be reluctant to

those tedious. neglected Ji"le chores out ot
the way.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 191 Es s entia lly
you'll be in a friendly mood today, yet you'll
be desirous of spendi ng your time produclively ev en when socializing. Idle discourse

Robeflo Our'" vs. Sean Fitzgerald

could drive you oft.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Homeb ody

acti vities usup.lly provide you with a comfort
take chances and thi s could lessen your zone, and today is no exception, Focus your
possibilities for success.
·
invol vem en ts a,ound your family and gar-

In the year ahead you will hl!ve new oppor- SAGITtARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21) Don't tor- den.
tunities to build valuable relarfonships. Some gello be philosophical. as well as practical. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Men tal assign·
might be con structed with pe mons with - in your involvement s with friends and asso- ments should be ralher easy for you to han·
whom you lelt you had nothing In common.
ciates today. This combination will help you die today. Try to catch up on your pape r·
.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You'll !unction best sail smoothty over the shoals, _
' work and correspondence or organize an d
in siluations or endeavo rs where you can CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) Try tc clear away the ctuner on yo~r desk.

use your initiative and leadership qualities. If
relegated 10 111e rear ran ks, today could be a
downer. Leo. 1reat yours ell to a binhday gift.
Send for yo ur Aslro·G raph predictions lor
the year ahead by mailing $1.25 and a long,
sell-addressed. stamped envelope to Astro-

"

spend some time tOday evaluating your pre· CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) The good
sent ass~t In detail. Much to your surprise, thi ngs that apP, eas e your emotion s and

you might discove r you have more going tor appetites will appeal to you today. yet you'll
you !him you thought.
let yo ur prac1icality and common sense dis·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Yo u could be cipline poor behavioral characterislics.
a big plus today !o r any development thai

\

[

.,

�I

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Reds
end long
losing spell

Pick 3:
447
Pick 4:
8675
Buckeye 5:
3-12--21-28-32

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 78
Multimedia Inc.

ment at the Meigs County Fair. She's pictured
her with "George and Georgine", her floppy
eared rabbits seated on a miniature school desk.

NEEDLECRAPI' BEST OF SHOW • Francis Roberts of Racine took the rosette in the
need,ecraft division of the domestic arts depart-

FUN IN THE PUMPKIN PATC.H . Enjoying his outing at the Meigs County Fair Monday
was eight month old Briar Dill, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Dill, Long Bottom. He appeared

delijlhted with the blue ribbon which hi~ broth-.
er, Cody, won on the pumpkin be exhibited at
the fair,

Rosettes presented for-top domestic arts displays
Rosettes for best of show dis· · exhibits judged by Mandie K. Kil- Racine; handmade dressed doll,
plays were awarded . to eight gamdi e, June Alley and Bunny Pamela Hagen, Coolville; purexhibitors in the domestic arts Kuhl, were as follows:
chased doll, handmade clothing,
Children's Clothing
department of th e I 30th Meigs
Rhonda Frank, Pomeroy; stuffed
County Fair.
Child's play dress and child's toy, Trisha Ann Spencer, Long
The top awards went to Deborah better dress, Margaret Weber, Bottom; stuffed animal, Francis
Grueser. Pomeroy, sewing; Francis Pomeroy; child 's shorts, Shirley Roberts, Pomeroy; misc. no clothRo~crts , Racine, needlecr.aft;
Smith, Pomeroy; other, Brenda ing, knitting or ·crochet, Jane Ann
Trisha Ann Spencer, Long Bottom, Kennedy, Pomeroy; better dress for Aanestad,Pomeroy.
knitting; Merrilee Bryant, Long ages 7-12, Rose Barrow s,
Crochet
Bottom. pictures; Linda Gillilan, Pomeroy; child's shorts, ages 7-1 2,
Granny square afghan, Barbara
Po meroy ; croche ting; Patricia Brenda Kennedy, Pomeroy; sleep- Murray, Pomeroy; ripple afghan,
Jones, Shade, quilting; and wear, Rose Barrows, Pomeroy
Rose Barr.o ws, Pomeroy; shell
• Michelle Harris, Racm e, hobby
Adult Clothing
afghan, Linda Broderick, Pomeroy;
comer.
Ladies dress, cotton or blend, mixed stitch afghan. Barham MnrThe blue ribbon winners in the dress-up dress, formal dress and ray ; misc. afghan, Elma Louks,
various categories out of the 354 blouses Deborah Grueser, Syracuse; vest or sweater, Rhonda
Pomeroy; adult t-shins, Marilyn Frank, Pomeroy; doily 14 inches or
Spencer, Long Bottom; adu:t !·shirt under and doily over 14 inches,
painted, Brenda Kennedy. Mary Shoulls, Racine; babi es
Another Season I am Blue
Pom eroy; adult shorts , Trisha sweater set and two crocheted pot
Oh the rain is falling down, very Spencer, Long Bottom; lady's suit holders, Linda Gillilan, Pomeroy;
slacks or skirt, Marilyn Spencer, granny squares baby afghan,
gently to the ground
As I sit and think of you, anoth- Long Bottom; lady's practical , Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy; mis c.
Francis Roberts , Racine; men's baby afghan, Ruth Pullins, Racine;
er reason J'U be blue.
misc., Trisha Spencer, Long Bot- miscellaneous, Marilyn Spencer,
tom;
ladies misc.; Marilyn Spencer, Pomeroy.
I wonder if you feel the same,
Long
Bottom.
Knitting
the lonely feeling of the rain
Needlecnaft
.
Sweater
or
vest, Trisha Spencer,
And this hurting in my heart,
Embroidered
pillowcase,
Patty
Long
Bottom;
pre-printed baby
since you and I have been apart
Dyer, Bidwell; crochet trim pillow- quilt, Patricia Jones, Shade; couon
And I think about that first time, case, Connie Moyer, Reedsville; patchwo rk quilt, Patricia Jone s,
painted pillowcase, Merril ee Shade; painted quilt, Addalou
I taught you how to kiss
We we re both so young and Bryant; counted cross stitch cush- Lewis, Pomeroy; cross stitch quilt,
ion, Debra Kennedy, Pomeroy; cro- Esther Frecker, Racin e; outline
innocent, all that love I miss
cheted cushion; Connie Moyer, stitch embroidered quilts, Barbara
But there is nothing I can do, Reedsville; quilted/preprinted cush- Murray , Pomeroy; applique quilt,
ion, Francis Roberts, Racine; misc. Grace Holter, Racine.
another has the love of you
Murray,
Hobby Comer (pictures II X16 or
But I stiU love you everyday, as cushion, Barbara
Pomeroy; painted tablecloth, Marunder)
you pass my house away
ilee Bryant, Long Bottom; embroiCounted cross stitch picture,
As I sit here distantly, and think dered tablecloth, Esther Frecker, Jane Ann Aanestad, Pomeroy; colof aU those memories
The tears start falling from my
eyes, just like lhe rain is outside

Poet's comer

\.

I

I' · '

BEST AFGHAN • Capturing the best of show in afghans in
domestic arts displayed at the Meigs County Fair was Elma Louks
of Syracuse. Her winning maroon afghan ~n tbe neld-of:~ineapples
design was one of three she made to enter m the compet•t•on.

Now the rain is falling down,
even faster to the ground
And I sit and think of you.
another season I am blue.

ored embroidery picture, Merilee
Bryant, Long Bottom; painted nocanvas picture, Trisha Spencer,
Long Bottom.
Pictures over IIX16
Colored embroidery picture ,
Esther Frecker, Racine; painte&lt;l. nocanvas picture, Merilee Bryant,
· Long Bottom; cre wel picture,
Grace Holter, Pomeroy; counted
cross stitch picture, Merilee Bryant,
Long Bottom .
Others
Purse or tote bag, Merilee
Bryant, Long Bottom ; s tained
ceramic and glazed ceramic, Melissa Coleman, Long Bottom; woodcraft under 8 inches, Linda Gillilan,
Pomeroy; woodcraft 7 to 18 inches,
George L. Wolfe, Pomeroy; household article, Terri Bishop ,
Pomeroy; Christmas decoration ,
Dania Renee Cotton, Middleport;
structure not over 6 inches, Terri
Bishop, Pomeroy; structure, 7 to 12
inches, Ruth Pullins, Racine; eracheted basket, Linda Gillilan,
Pomeroy; basket, under 15 inches,
Shirley Smith, Pomeroy; basket,
over 15 inches, Barbara Murray,
Pomeroy; decorated straw wreath,
Debra Kennedy, Pomeroy; wreath,
other material, Nancy Gard, Middlepon; wreath. decorated for any
holiday, Linda Gillilan. Pomeroy;
gift wrapping, Sharon Bryant, Long
Bottom, recycled craft, Delma
Karr, Middleport; anything not listed, Michelle Harris, Racine.
All of the exhibits are on display
in the senior fair building for the
enjoyment of fairgocrs.

BULLETIN BOARD

Louise Ead's oil landscape
which took the best of show in
the amateur painting exhibits
also took the eye of these Meigs
County fairgoers, James Clifford, left, Mary Lee Maxey and
Sean Maxey, Tuppers Plains.
Here they admire the Rutland
woman's art work.
The reserve best of show in
paintings went to Chester artist
Juanita Lodwick. Her still life
was painttid from a picture of a
flower arrangement which
designer Peggy Crane of Middleport exhibited in the 1992
Meigs County Fair flower
show.
Thirty·five paintings are
displayed in the Coonhunters
building this week for
enjoyment of fairgoers. ·
· At left, pretty little Jefinifer
Smith ponders the 'jars of
canned fruit on exhibit -in the
Coonhunters building. She is:
the four-year-.old daughter of
John and Glenna Smith of
Shade. The canning and baking
department has 534 entries, up
163 from last year, making it an
outstanding exhibit this year.
(Photos Charlene Hoeflich.)

..

c

ROSETTE WINNER • First time open class exhibitor Trisha
Spencer of Long Bottom won the best of show award in knitting in
the domestic arts department at the Meigs County Fair. Here she
displays the attractive pink, white and gray sweater she knitted.

St. Paul willing workers meet
The St. Paul Willing Workers
met recently for th e August meeting and was ope ned by scripture
reading and prayer. The secretary
and treas urer's reports were react
and approved.
Plans were made for an all day
work session in September with a

meeting in the afternoon and plans
were for an October outing to Burr
Oak State Park were finalized.
The group made 37 sick call s
and sent a fruit basket to member
Mary Vineyard. A thank you card
and donations were received from
the Edith Harper family.
.Readings were given by Mildred
Brooks, Glenna Sanders, Mary
Vineyard, Doris Koenig, Edna Harmon, and Mildred Caldwell. The
meeting was closed with a friendship circle and the Lord's Prayer.

Graveside services were held at
the Wells Cemetery on July 21 for
Mrs. Lydia Ball, formerly of Harri sonville.
Out of county relatives auending were Harold Ball, Charles Ball,
Carolyn Frasure, Charles D. and
Christine Ball, Mary Wood yard,
Ruth Welsh, Kenneth Woodyard,
all of Columbus; Tamara and
Ri chard Gearheart of Cincinnati;
Kei th and Tina Woodyard , St.
Louis, Mo. ; Elizabeth Woodyard,
Kalamazoo, Mich .; Donald and
Martha Burrow s, Matthew and
Maria Buriows, Cleveland. Several cousins, nieces and nephews
who reside here as well as friends
were present for the services.

NOW
AVAILABLE

IN THE
iunhnJI ~im:es - i:entin.el
BREEDING SHOWMANSHIP - Rebecca
Scott and Michele Guess were named grand
champion and reserve champion, respectively, in
the breeding showmanship event at the 1993
Meigs County Junior Fair Sheep Show. In addition, Scott's name will be placed on lhe Jack Sei-

CALL
NOW

A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Mines awaiting word
on injuction request
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
There has been no word from
the U.S. District Court in Columbus regarding Southern Ohio Coal
~~.'s _requ e~t for a preliminat&gt;'
IOJuncnon agamst the federal Env1·
ronmental Protection Agency and
the Office of Surface Mining.
U.S. District Judge Sandra
Beckwith said at the conclusion of
last week's hearing that she would
rule on the preliminary injunction
request this week. At the conclusion of that hearing she granted a
seven~dliy extension on a restraining order which permined SOCCo
to continue pumping. That order
expires Friday at midnight.
B.J. Smith, public affairs director for the American Electric
Power, Fuel Supply, said Tuesday
afternoon that "Southern Ohio Coal
cannot predict the outcome of the
federal court proceedings."·
"However, we believe the company clearly presented its case that
the plan it has implemented meets
the dual needs of remov iilg the
water quickly to preserve the mining jobs and doing so with the least
environmental effect," said Smith.
The preliminary injunction
would prevent the U.S. EPA from
issuing an administrative order to
halt the pumpi_ng of water from the
Meigs No. 31 Mine. The company
. took the legal action after U.S.
EPA said it would order that the

pumping cease, according 10 Smith.
The company on Aug. 4 was
granted a temporary restraining
order against the U.S . EPA in
which the court stated that "the
defendant U.S. EPA's threatened
action is based on grounds .which
were considered and addressed by
the Ohio EPA and which are subject 10 ongoing review and monitoring by the Ohio EPA."
In remarks before the coun, the
federal EPA said it continues to
maintain enforcement authority
even if the state is acting.
SOCCo initiated its water
removal plan July 30 under an
order from the Ohio EPA which set
strict standards the company met,
Smith said.
.
In court Thursday, SOC Co
attorney D. Michael Miller said, "If
the preliminary injunction is not
iss ued. the mine will be lost, and
jobs lost and all that ·wiU be accomplished is that the U.S . EPA will
have won its jurisdictional suit.
"If this was really about the
environment, rather than this jurisdictional snit that the government
is in, I wiU ask the question I asked
yesterday: Where have they been?
The situation has been going on
now since July 11, and if they were
concerned about the streams and
the people along the streams, w)lere
have they been? This wasn't a
problem until the phalanx of
lawyers from the government got

involved with this," he added.
" We believe the Ohio EPA
acted in a reasonable and expedi ·
tious manner to help develop a
solution to this unique emergency
situation," Smith said. "We contin·
ue 10 meet with OEPA and other
state and federal agencies to seek
additional ways to minimize any
short term environmental effects."
The approved plan involves
pumping the water to nearby
receiving streams, notifying area
residents, monitoring the streams
and includes a commitment to mitigate any temporary effects on the
streams. The streams do not con·
lain potable water and do not pro·
vide public drinking supplies,
according to Smith.
The mine was idled July 11 after
water from an adjoining, closed
mine entered Meigs .31. Currently
about 300 employees a'le out of
work due to the excess water
underground.
Ohio EPA, ecological experts
and company environmental specialists are continuously monitoring the streams, Smith said.
"The company has pledged to
mitigate any shon·term effects on
the streams to speed up their natural restoration," Smith explained.
She said that the streams are
expected to begin recovering within a few days after pumping ends.
Ecologists predict no long-term
environmental effects, Smith said.

Southern board approves pact with URG

Gilben L. Fitzwater
Vinton, Ohio

Graveside
services held

2 Sectiono. 12 Pageo 35 canto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 18, 1993

----Fair scenes-------..

i.ow lonlgblln 60s, sunny.
Thursday, sunny, blgb In 90s.

denabel Memorial Plaque. Shown are, rrom left:
Wool Princess Christy Drake, Wool Prince
Jonathan Avis, Scott, Jean Seidenabel with the
Jack Seidenabel Memorial Plaque, 1993 Junior
Fair Queen Stephanie Sayre and Guess.

The Southern Local Board of
Education has signed a contract
which provides that the district pay
$25,200 for services from the University of Rio Grande during the
1993-94 school year.
The money is to be paid from
the Urban Rural Grant with the bal·
ance of the $60,2 15 in that grant
fund to go toward other programs
in the disnict. This is the third year
for !he money to come into the district from the Ohio Department of
Education.
According to the contract, there
are four facets of the URG assistance - teacher training, assistance
with effective sc hool projec ts in
each building, helping to develop
programs both during the summer
and regular school year, and evalu·
ating effective school projects.
The board, meetin g Monday
night at the high school, approved
participation in the High School
Athletic Association for both the
junior and senior high schools at
$25 a sport, approved the Title 6
(learning disability) program 10 be
paid for with $41,150 in federal
funds, the DPPF (disabled pupil
program fund) at a cost of
$33,907.20, and lhe Title I reading
program for $199,591.
Bids were accepted from Reiners for bread products, Parts Plus
for anti-freeze, Malone Warehouse

for tires, Raven Hocking for coal, Bradford as substitute cook and
Snouffer for fire equipment, Ash- custodian.
land Oil for fuel, oil and grease,
Financial problems of the disBorden Valley Belle for milk prod- trict were discussed and lhe board
ucts, Best Office Machine for approved having lhe Ohio Departequipment maintenance; 'Mic hael ment of Education and the state
of Jackson for ice cream, Standard . auditors in to determine if the disFood for lunchroom food.
trict needs to go into the loan proThe handbook for th e high gram.
school was approved, and hiring of
Attending were board mem bers
a study hall monitor for the junior Sue Grucser, Joe Thorne, Tom
high school was approved. C. T. Roseberry, Denny Evans and Scott
Chapman was employed as junior Wolfe, treru;urer Dennie Hill and
high football coach, and Rebecca superintendent Bob Ord.

Ohio State Fair on target
toward 800,000 attendance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Doh 't hold your breath waiting for
the traditional Ohio State Fair ceremony honoring the millionth visitor. This year's new honest-count
attendance policy likely will prec tude such an event.
However, attendance so far for
the Au g. 6-22 fair is well on its
way to a goal of 800,000 set when
the revised crowd-counting plan
replaced the inflated figures of 3
million-plus used in the past
"We quite possibly will not get
to a millionth visitor. But we will
have an accuraie count, and a more
accurate
of the fair,"

Tammy Knapp, director of public
relations, said Tuesday.
Arrival of the alleged millionth
person to pass through th e gates
triggered mini-celebrations in past
years with fair officials on hand to
distribute gifts and pose for photos.
Figures released by the fair
pegged attendance so far this year
at 580,435 from openin g day
through Monday. The exposition
continues through Sunday.
"We've set the goal of 800,000
for this year's fair. Every indication ·
so far is we're going to be able to
reach that,'' Ms. ~!IPP s~d.

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Birthday observed
Samuel Ray Evans, son of Mar. tin and Debbie Evans, Raci ne,
recently ce lebrated hi s second
birthday at the home of his parents
with ice cream and cake.
Attending were Everett, Charlo lie Grant, Raymond and Ada
Evan;, Charles, Marsha, Maria and
Adria Frecker, Delbert, Eleanor,
Elizabeth and Tim Lawson, Pam
Smith, Shayne Davis, Lewis and
Elva Hudson, Harry and Jean
Roush, Craig, Brenda and Megan
Venoy, Brian and Lindsey Bailey,
Rick McKnight, and Tammy Cline.

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WALLPAPER &amp; BLIND SHOP

M•f 9·9
MEMORIAL BRIDG~ APPROACH SAT. 9-5130
AT GARFIELD-AVE., PKSBG., WV SUN. 1·5

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428·1065

Call Now For Sunday, August 22nd

MARKET SHOWMANSHIP- Michele
Guess and Rebecca Scott were selected grand
champion market lamb showman and reserve
champion showman, respectively, in Tuesday's

Melgi County Junior Fair Sheep Show. Shown
are, rrom lert: 1993 Junior Fair Queen
Stephanie Sayre, Guess, Wool Princess Christy
Drake, Wool Prince Jonathan Avis and Scott.

DREAM
- Despite all the excitement
around him during the Meigs County Fair, little
Winston Burke, son of Willie and Janie Burke,

1

took Monday evening as an opportunity to catch
up on bls rest. His bale of hay proved to be a
· quite sumdent bed.

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