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                  <text>Pega ·10-the Dally Sentinel

Po~eroy-Middleport,

Ohio

Monday, August 23, 1993

Ohio Lottery

Playoff
debate
continues

Pick 3:
0-8-9
Pick 4:
8-8-9-6
Buckeye 5:
2-4-15-18·30

PageS

Vol. 44, NO. 83

Low tonlgbt 70. Cboace of nln.
Wedlladay, blgb Dtor 90.

1 Section. 10 Pogn 35 oenl8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 24, 1993

Mulllmedloln'c.

A Mulllmeclo Inc. llewaPIII*

•

MERIT

Parliament

Filter

LOW 1 AA • MENTHOL

Mar oro
20 CL A SS A

C IGARE T·r ES

Middleport man receives
suspended sentence
Robert D. Fife, 67, of Middle·
pon, who enlered guilty pleas to
two counts of receiving stolen
property and a third count of ttaf·
ficking in food stamps last month,
appeared for sentencing before
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Fred W. Crow III Monday
af1ernoon.
Fife was sentenced to 18 month
prison terms consecutively on each
of the three charges, with the sen·
tences being suspended, and was
placed on probation for five years.
He was also ordered to pay the
maximum fine on each charge,
$2,500, for a total of $7,500, the
$1,200 cost of prosecution plus
coun costs, and to appear at all for·
feiturc hearings.
Fife was represented at the hear·

ing by Athens Attorney James
Wallace.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes said Monday
afternoon that his office's recom·
mendalion for Fife's probation was
made on the basis of his age. his
poor health, and the fact that he
would not benefit from rehabilita·
lion effortS through the penal sys·
tern.
Lentes said that he anticipales
Fife will cooperale both in solving
some food stamp trafficking cases
as well as in targeting some who
are selling food stamps. He said
that he also anticipates that Fife
may be able to help the prosecu·
tor's office solve some of the
breaking and entering cases
because of perhaps being contacted

as a source for disposal of stolen
ilems.
He also pointed out that should
Fife continue to crury on his former
type of business, it would be a violation of his probatioa and he
would have to serve his prison sen·
tence.
Under provisions of the plea
agrcemen1 entered into on July 12,
Fife will forfeit approximately
$185 ,000 and about 3,000 rifles,
shotguns and handguns seized from
his South Third Avenue home and
business on July 9. In addition he
agreed to forfeit approximately
$60,000 from bank accounts and all
personal property of which he is
unable to prove ownership.
A forfeiwre hearing was set for
10 a.m. today (Tuesday).

SEARCIUNG - Searchers looking for the
body or 20-year-old Todd Grindstaff, who fell
into the Ohio River Sanday, concluded their

search after his body was found around 9:40 this
morning. Here, volunteers search for Grindstaff
Monday afternoon near the Radne levy.
'

Man's
body
recovered
F oodbank representative
from
Ohio
River
speaks·to Rotary Club

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"Sharing the Harvest" was the·
topic of Fern Braddock at last
week's meeting of the Middleport·
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Braddock is the president elect
of the Logan Rotary Club, and is
.the Logan postmaster. She was rep·
resenting the Southeastern Ohio
Foodbank at Nelsonville, a pro gram of the Hocking-Athens-Perry
Community Action Agency.
The foodbank serves not only
the tri-county area, but also
mcludes Meigs, Gallia, Washing·
ton, Perry, Guernsey, Monroe and
Noble Counties. The impact of the

The search for a Racine man rocked by waves created by a pass·
missing since early Sunday evening ing towboat. ·
Others in the boat were Roy Lee
ended this morning around 9:40
Bailey,
Dawn Shuler, and Nicki
when searchers pulled the body of
Beegle.
After
Grindstaff fell over·
Todd Grindstaff from the Ohio
board
and
did
not come back up,
River near Racine.
the
other
three
went
to shore to get
Area officials including Sheriff
James Soulsby and Coroner Dou· he1p.
Bob Byer, ~tor (If t!'e Meigs
glas. Hunter were on the scene this .
County Emergency Medical Ser·
morning.
Grindstaff, 20, one of four peo· vice said units from Racine,
pie in a boat on the Ohio River, Ravenswood, W.Va., and New
reportedly lost his balance and fell Haven, W.Va., assisted in the
into the river when the boat was search for Grindstaff. Also called

foodbank has been tremendous,
according to the speaker.
Private non-profit service agen·
cies providing food for the needy
have JP'eatly increased their food
supphes and have been able to
stretch their.•very ·small budgets .
this has enable them to liel!er meet
increasing hunger needs in the area.
Braddock said.
During the past years, 5,581
Meigs County citizens received
over 101,681 pounds of food from
the foodbank. Meal sites and home
delivered meals were served
Continued on A-3

Man pleads guilty to armed robbery

Antique tractor show results
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The following were announced
as winners in the antique tractor
show held last week at the Meigs
County Fair.
Winners were, in order by class:
Best restored, 1938 and older Dale and Jo Kautz, 1936 John
Deere A; Edison Hollon, 1937 John
Deere A; Dale and Jo Kautz, 1927
John Deere D.
Field ready, 1938 and older Dale and Jo Kautz, 1936 John
Deere A; Edison Hollon, 1937 John
Deere A; Dale and Jo Kautz, 1938
John Deere L.
Best restored, 1939-59 - Edi·
, son Hollon, 1951 John Deere MT;
Jacob Hunter, 1955 John Deere 50;

Paul Marr, 1942 John Deere H.
Field ready, 1939·59 -Wayne
Roush, 1956 Farmall 200; Edison
Hollon , 1951 John Deere MT;
Larry Hollon, 1954 Cockshutt 40.
Oldest tractor - Dale and Jo
Kautz, 1927 John Deere D.
Judge' s choice -Paul Marr,
1941 John Deere LA.
Best single gas engine - Paul
Marr.
Best gas engine display - Roy
Grueser.
Judge's choice best equipment
piece - Dale and Jo Kautz, 1920
Vulcan plow.
Judge's choice best equipment
display - Edison Hollon.

Talent show winners named
Winners in the Meigs County
Fair talent show have been
announced.
In the category for singers, the
winners in the over 16 age division
were Missy Neutzling and Michelle
Brown, tie for first; Randall Saint
John, second; and Robin Manuel,
third. In the group for under 16 in
. singers, the flfSt place winner was
Amanda Musser, the second place
winner, Alison Rose, 'and the third
place winner, Nancy Whaley.
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In the dancer category, prizes
went fo Chelsea Montgomery and
Peggy Smith, first, and Tiffany
Qualls and Amanda Nease, second.
Miscellaneous talent category
awards went to Nathan Baloy, rlfSt,
and the Pointed Sisters, second, in
the over 16 age division, and
Amber Perkins and J. R. Rife, flfSt,
Satin and Lace, Tiny Tots, second,
and Satin and Lace, Juveniles, third
in the under age 16 ca1egory.

in for assistance were the Syracuse
and Pomeroy units.
In addition, divers from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment and the Middleport Fire
Department were on seen~. Dyer
said that the river was temporarily
shut down during the search. He
cr~led the Coast Guard for being
"trcmendou'sly cooperative."
Grindstaff, the son of David
Grindstaff and Kay Grindstaff,
both of Racine, was a 1991 gradu·
ate of Southern High School.

FERN BRADDOCK

CAA commodities
distribution set
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will be distributing
dried beans, pmeapple, peanut but·
ter and apple juice to persons hold·
ing food commodity cards on Aug.
31 at the following locations:
Meigs County, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains Fire
Station, Pageville Town Hall and
the Racine Fire Department.
Distribution will begin at
approximately 9:30 a.m. and last
until noon or until the supply is
exhausted.
Gallia County, Gallia County
Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire,
Mt. Carmel Baptist Church in Bid·
well and the Crown City Fire Sta·
tion.
distribution . will begin at
approximately noon and last until
2:30p.m. or until the supply is
exhausted.
Persons picking up for others
must bring a signed note from the
person in addition to their food
commodity card.
Bring a bag or container for the
commodities.

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A Columbus man enlered a plea
of guilty to armed robbery in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Mon·
day and was sentenced by Judge
Fred W. Crow Ill.
According to Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Christopher E.
Tenaglia, who represented the stale
in the case, Randall Scott Neil of
Columbus pled guilty to a count of

armed robbery, an aggravated Parofe Authoriiy.
felony of the first degree. Neil was
Steven L. Story of ·the Meigs
indicted on the charge after the County Public Defender's Office
armed robbery of the By the Way represented Neil.
Grocery in Langsville.
A co-defendant, John Alfred
Judge Crow sentenced Neil to a Rose III, was previously sentenced
term of nine to 2S years in prison for his involvement in the incident.
on the charge . A post sentence The two men arc also charged in
investigation was also ordered Jackson County in connection with
completed by the Ohio Adult the same incident.

Cremeens pleads guilty to embezzling
FormerOVB
manager vows to
pay back $177,000
before sentencing
A former Ohio Valley Bank
employee accused of embezzling
$177,500 and tam~g with bank
records pleaded guilty to all
charges Monday morning.
Tbe jury trial of Brenda K. Cre·
meens, 4S, Mercerville, was scheduled to Slalt Monday in the Gallia
County Common Pleas Court of
Judge Joseph L. Cain, but instesd
she changed her previous plea of
not guilty.

Cremeens pleaded guilty to one
count of aggravated theft and eight
counts of tampering with records.
All charges are second degree
felonies and carry a possible sen·
tence of two to 15 years in pruon
for each charge.
Cremeens' attorneY., Robert
Toy, said Cremeens will pay the
$177 ,SOO in restitution before her
senlencing and that OVB will recommend she be placed on shock
probation after serving 90 days in
prison.
Toy added that the bank may
ask for some term of community
service.
The defense attorney asked that
sentencing take place within 30

days.
Cremeens had been employed
by OVB since 1970 and was pro·
mated to manager of the OVB
mini·bank last summer.
Special Prosecutor George Ellis
said the state would have proven in
the trial that over a period of 10
years Cremeens had taken the
money from the bank by falsifying
teller and general ledger records.
He said she was able to do this
because of her position fii'St as head
teller and then as manager.
Ellis also said that Cremeens
admitted embezzling the money in
a written statement to Gallipolis
police.
A date for sentencing was not

seL

Local love triangle seen on TV
It is the story of local residents
It was the perfect story for day·
time television - the kind of story George and Theresa Haffelt and it
most people probably don't want aired on the Gera/do television
their children to watch. And it all show Monday afternoon.
The fact that this was going to
happened in Gallia Co11nty.

be a complex story became clear
when the theme of the show was
revealed to be "I'm In Love with
My Husband's Brother."
Continued on A-3
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Red Cross bloodmobile collects 50 units

'" "

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Cigarette
Smoke Contains Carbon Monoxide.

Ohio C01l" Co~ a subsidiary ol American Electric: Power, to Middleport VIUa&amp;e. The company
gave the Boney so that those deprived of swimmin&amp; In their favorite areek because or pumping
from nooded Melas Mine 31 would have free
access to the Middleport pool. (Sentinel Photo ·
by Cbarlene Hoenkh)

SWIM FOR FREE - Everyooe will swim tree
at the Middleport Pool until It closes ror the season on Labor Day. Houn of operation now tbat
school has started are 3 to 7 p.m. weekdays and
noon to 6 p.m. Saturday, Sunday, and Labor
·Day. The "swim for free'' program was made
possible by a $1,000 donation from Southern
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Fifty units._of blood were donal·
cd during the recent visit of t~e
American Red Cross bloodmobile
in Meigs Q:mnty.
' Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were the assist·
ing doctors with Beulah Ward, R.
N. was the charge nurse.
Multiple gallon donors included
Richard Chambers, Paula J. Wood,
and Harry D. Holter, two gallon
donors; Dennis J. Gilmore, three
gallon donor, Marie A. Bush and
Bruce Hawley, four gallon donor;
Judith K. Hunter, seven gallon
donor; and William H. Hoback, 11
gallon donor.
The canteen was served by Trin·
ity Friendly Circle. Retired Senior
Volunteer workers assisting were
Dorothy Long, Helen Bodimer,
Ruth Moore, Peggy Harris, Mary
Nease, Jac;:t and Joan Sorden, Flo·

renee Richards, William and Joyce
Hoback, Jean Nease, Betty
Spencer, Goldie Fredericks, Velma
Rue, and Gerald Wildermuth.
Donors by community were as
follows:
Pomeroy: Dale S. Thoene, Ann
Cottrill, Howard Logan, Aldine J.
Baker, Donald R. Smith, Daniel R.
Folmer, Nora K. Easbnan, Janice
H. Davis, G~ffrcy Wilson, Paul F.
Marr, Dennis J. Gilmore, Mary K.
Spencer, Billy 1. Spencer, Jodi
lmbo\Jen, Katrina R. Turner, Dr.
James Witherell, William R. Rad·
ford, David M. King, Dan 1L Foil·
rod, Gerald R. Rought, Gloria K.
Kloes, Barbara Woodyard, Roger
A. Abbott, John W. Moore, Carolyn A. Charles, and Susanna
Heck.
Middlepon: Rhonda F. Grover,
Sarah Fowler, Richard Eric Cham-

bers, David G. Dodson, George L.
Harris, Patricia A. Weaver, Bessie
M. Fisher, Donna Hawley, Gloria
J. Peavley, Norma Wilcox, and
Judith K. Hunter.
Racine: A Marie Bush, Charles
. W. Bush, David Aaron Wolfe,
William H. Hoback, Harry D.
Holler.
l.arigsville: Ellis E. Myers.
Shade: Wayne E. Milhoan.
Long Bottom: Merrilee Bryant,
Sharon Bryant, Lawrence L. Drig·
gs, Paula J. Wood, Bruce Hawley,
and Laura Hawley.
Reedsville: Terrance Smith,
Jerry Rach.
. Minersville: Kenneth E. Wig- ·
gms.
Syracuse: Heather L. McPhail.
Rutland: Marta Blackwood and
Donna M. Davidson.
Portland: Stcphan H. Nease.

�...

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L WINGETI'
Publlsber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mtlnager

MARGARET I.EHEW
Controller

LETI'EiS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonb. All lettm are subject to editing and must be sigoed with name,
addreu 111d t.lepbone number. No unsigned let!erl will be publisbed. Letters
should be in good last.,
· issues, not personalities.

Health care board
stakes out turf
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Alsociated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio Health Care Board,
which the Legislature created to work out basic elements of healthcare reform in Ohio, has had some organizational probleiiiS.
State Health Director Peter Somani resigned last week as chair·
man because he said he wanled 10 make sure the board is flexible as
it works to mng diverse interests together ·- and not viewed as a
1001 of the administration.
·
The Legislature approved in late June an amendment clarifying
· that the board is independent and not a part of the Department of
Heallh, as some officials have interpreted. .
Somani said he favors independent status.
Following a closed meeting last week, the ~tor ~nied ~ports
of a conflict with Jaclcie FUllerton, the board s execubve director.
Some members said privalely they were having procedural differ·
ences.
.
Ms. Fullerton also denied it. She said Somam has shown support
for the board and has been fully cooperative.
Some lawmakers who supported making the board an indepen·
dent entity said the Legislature. in_vited confli~t w~en !t p~~ a
supposedly independent board wtthin the admwstrabve Jurisdicuon
of the Health Deparnnent.
.
.
Ms. Fullerton,. meanwhile, announced at last week s meebng that
the board plans tO move its offices, currently located in lh~ depart·
ment, to another building in downiOwn Columbus, 10 gam more
space.
.
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Somani said the board would be charged rent, had 11 stayed 10 the
department, w~ich has been provi'!ing s~ and legal work, in addition to free 'space. However, officials wd the board has now been
provided fmancial resources that it previously !~ked..
. .
Ms Fullerton said the Department of AdmmiStrallve Services IS
worlci~g on lease arrangements' that could be finished by mid· or
late·September.
Meanwhile the board heard updaleS last week from various sub·
commitlees tb&amp;t have been assigned specific areas of study. .
One panel made a recommendation to eliminate 19,000 hospital
beds that it said are not needed.
Another recommended that all health insurance companies meet
national accrediting standards as part of a streamlined hospital and
medical review syStem.
The board, which is schedul~ 10 meet again Sept 1-2, has not
acted on either pioposal.
·
At that meeting, the board is expected to el~t a ne':" c~an .to
succeed Somani. William Ruse has been semng as mtenm chair·
man.
· ·
Under the legislation that created the 16-member pane1, It IS
directed to recommend state health-care initiatives 10 Gov. George
Voinovich and the Legislature by Jan. I.

Berry's World
COMlNG UP''It\E t-\0\..\.'fWOOD 1-\E.ID\
WATCH"

UPDATE ...

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Accu·Weather• foreeut for
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Joseph Spe(IT ·
directly ·involved in the calamitous
in-house investiptioo of the While
House travel offtce. He had been
severely criticized by the Wall
Street Journal for defending Hillary
Clinton's right to convene hor
health-care task force behind
closed doors.
He expreSsed his anxieties about
some of these things in a note he
wrote to himself and tore up. ''I
made mistakes from ignorance,
inexperience and overwork," he
wrote. "I did not knowingly violale
any law or standard of conduct."
He went on with accusations about
the FBI, the GOP, the press. " The

ARE YOU THE

BABVS FATHER?

IToledo I 90' I

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them. Standing on platforms pro- :

IMansfield Iss• l•

vided by the press, he claimed the : ·
press is Irresponsible and doesn' t :
criticize itself. Granled that the '
Wall Street Journal is a shrill, '
somelimes hysterical proponent of
right-wing causes, bu~ ·Powell's
general argument is stupid on its

C()IISidcred sport."

The culprits seem obvious:
Overwork, disappointment, the
Washington sharlt tank, press criti· face.
.
cism. Most public discussion has
Did Washington kill Vincent
centered on the last two possibili- Foster? As any student of Ameri.ties.
.
can history knows. the capilal city
. Did the press kill Vincent Fos· ~as been a hotbed of political
ter? Jody Powell, the former intrigue and savage feuds since
spokesman for Jimmy Carter, George Washington strode its dusty
seems to think ¥J. "When Vincent streets. It was ever thus and ever :
Fosler wrole about ruining people will be -and it is. the same in
as 'sport' and about journalists every capital i!l every country in .
being free to do it witboljt fear of the world.
consequences, he spoke the lnltb,"
So who lcilled Vincent Foster?
he wrote in the Washington Posl
'Not knowing him, I don •t know
Think of it this way: The Wilsh- what demons he wrestled with. But·
ington Post gave Powell a forum the record hints of a few big ones:
for bis fulminations, and he was He-was sensitive about letting
later invited on CNN to repeat down friends arid disappointing
. people in authcrity - in this case,
the Clintons - and he was obsessively concerned with reputation.
"The repl!tation you develop for
NO, HIS
intellectual and ethical integrity
will be your grealeSt ~ or your
ATTORNEY.
woist enemy," he told this year's
graduating class &amp;t the University ,
of ArkanSas Law School. "I cannot
make this pi&gt;int to you too strongly '
... Dents to the reputation in the
legal profession are irrepmable.''
These are not thoughts that are
present at birth. Somewhere along
the way, he was taught - by fami·
ly, peers, teachers, role models that if he failed friends or disappoinled those in authority or suf· ··
fered dam&amp;ge to his reputation, he ·
was an unworthy' human being. He
was infused with the feeling that ·
such standards were more im~r·
tant than li{e itself and that failing
to live Up to them revoked hiS right
to exist.
So, who killed Vincent Foster?
Vincent Foster did, but-be had a lot
of help.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise :
Associadon.

in history

Weather
Soutb·Central Oblo
Tonight, partly cloudy. A
chance of thunderstorms early.
Low around 70. Chance of rain 40
percenL Wednesday, panly cloudy
and VllfY warm.'High around 90. .
Extended forcast

EMS responds to 10 calls

By The Associated Press ·
Todsy is Tuesday, Aug. 24, the 236th day of 1993. There are 129 days
left)n lhe year.
Todsy's Highlight in History:
On Aug 24 · 1949 the North Atlantic Treaty went in10 effect, with the
parties aping .hat an armed attaCk against one would be cpnsidered
" an attac1t against them all."
On this date:
. .
1n A.D. 79,long-dormant Mount yesuvius _erupted, b~ng the Roman
cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum m volcanic ilsh. An estunated 20,000
!died.
~~.D. 410, Rome was overrun by the Visigoths, an event dtat sym·
bolized the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
.
.
In 1572 the slaughter of French ProleStailts at the hands-uf Catholics
began in Pans. The killings, which lasled until October, claimed some
13,000 victims.
In 1814 British forces invaded Washington D.C. and proceeded 10 set
fU'C to the Capitol and the White House.
in 1932, Amelia Earh~~;~t became the first woman to fly non-stop .ac~oss
the Uniled Statts, traveling from Los Angeles to Newark. N.J:, 10 JUSt
over 19 how's.
.
In 1954, the Communist Control Act went into effect, virtually outlaw·
ing the Communist Party in the United States.

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Busioess Analyst

The ordinary folks who must get
us to that point in the road aren't at
all sure. They think differently;
they believe more in personal
observation, experience ~4 intu-

NEW YORK {AP) - A credibility gap seems to have opened
between politically orienied, professional economy watchers and
the ordinary folk, the kind who
work hard, aspire modestly and
seelc a few little pleasures.
The gap echoes with the doubts
of the ordinary folks who seem to ition, and the professionals can't
question the official numbers that persuade them.
show the economy improving and
For eurnple:
·
likely to continue unproving, albeit
Unemployment dropped to 6.8
slowly, for the rest of the year.
percent m July aild was widely
The professionals, such as cited by the pros as evidence of a
White House and some business better job outlook . .A rise of
and academic economists, say the -162,000 in nonfarm payrpll
strengthening economy will be employment during the month
reflected in improved conditions added funher documentation fpr
·
down the road for the nation's the profession•!•.
households.
Ordin&amp;O' fl)lks, however, mav

Business mirror .

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through the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. Also receiving
food through the foodblllli: were
Cal vary Pilgrim Pantry, Chester
Cburch, Meigs Cooperalive Parish
Pantry, Rejoicing Life Church,
Rutland Care Clolet, Rullllld Bible
Methodist Pantry, W. 1M GaiiiaMeigs Community AcdoltA&amp;eocy.
The only cost for tbls lelvice is
the cost of storage and delivery
which averages out at $1 for every
$26 worth of COQd.
Many chiu'Chea and other groups
of the county are supporting tbe

ex[IIIISiOII of the flteilities for the
food bank which collects, stores,
and distributes surplus food to
organizations lhal provide food for
needy people, according to Braddock. Sbe urged everyone to add
their support.
Ion Jtmin,vice president, was in
charge or the Rocary meeting. Ha1
Kneen, p~grll!ll chairman, intro·
'duced Braddock. Jack Koebel, Gallipolis, was a l!Uesl: Women or .the
church served the dinner.

Dad tbe best .
MIAMI (AP) - Do most children thinlt their father is the great-

Am Ele"Power...................,37 3/4
Ashland Oil ........................31 118
AT&amp;:T................................. 58 3!8
Bank One........................... SI 7/8
Bob Evans .........................18
Charming Shop.................. l,l 7!8
Champion Ind................... 14
City Holding........ :.............29 1/2
Federal Moswl.. ..................23 314
Goodyear 'l"'&amp;R. ..........,......40
Lands End.........................31 3/4
Limited Inc...................:.....22 3/4
Multimedia Inc .......~ ...........32 1/4
Point BancOJP.................... I4
Rax Restaurant .................. l/16
Reliance Electric................ I9 1/4
Robbins&amp;:Myers ................. 18 3/4
Shoney's Inc...................... 20 3/4
Star Bank ..................... ....... 34 3/4
Wendy Int'l.. ...................... l4 1/2
Worthington lnd................. 29 3/4
Stock reports are the 1~:30
a.m. quotes provided by
Kemper Securities, Inc., 01
Gallipolis.

est man in the world?
Gary Nicklaus, one of Jack's
sons, says he did when he was a
boy and still does. ,
• ..
"I became aware at an early age
that DIY dad was a great golfer,"
Gary said. '!I may not have known
about his tremendous stature as a
golfer," he added. "But I thought
he was just an all-around great
father."

in the Meigs County Probate Court
of Judge Robert Buck:
Kenneth Eugene Sonell, 33, and
Belinda Kay Johnson, 33, both of
Langsville; Kenneth Alan Johnson,
46, and Jane Eileen Roach, 32,
both of Pomeroy.
·

Selma Call of Long Bottom has
received word of the death of her
brother, Joseph Yahya of Beckley, .
W. Va. Mr. Yahya died Sunday m
a Morgantown, W. Va. hospilal.
Friends may call at the Blue
Ridge Funeral Home at Beckley
from 7 to 9 p.m. Wedoesday .
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at II a.m. with burial at 2
p.m. at the Sunset Memurial Gardens at Charleston, W. Va.

n1

Correction
Congressman. Ted S _tr!ctla~d
(D-Lucasville) d1d part1c1pate 10
the Boy Scouts or America dunkin~ booth at the Meigs County Fair
Fnday.
Although he did not ·ta!te his
place in the boQth until about two
hoilrs after his scheduled time, he
treated peaple to free balls and then
took a place in the dunlcing booth
and sat until the booth was closed
for the evening.
.
Participating in the duntmg
booth as a personal favor for the
scouts, it was reported that Strick·
land was the group' s largest
fundlaiser.
,
In. Sunday's l'imes-Sentinel it
was reported that Strickland did not
appear. Ohio Valley Publishing
apologizes f!ll' the error.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

. . "

Stocks ·

OUR SHOWROOM iS

- .........-.
19n 1101111 cmc

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Slpeed trono., bled&lt;, ll8leo

llareO, mom.

117.37, .....

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..
Bridge repair

--

19UFOID IIOICO

1tt1HOIIIIIO
51peedtronomllllon,

4x4, automatic tnonsmlulon,

171.96 .....

1137.27 .....

continues

air cont1itloni~ lOCal trade.

•••u ace••

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19t1

LX, 4 dciot, gray, 51peed, a~.

1tl9 DOHI CAUYU
5 paaunger, red,

1til fOIIIUifiO ISl
21lo0r,llld,
51peed,alr.

alr,ste&lt;ao.

19.63 .....

1

1243.60 .....

1990 OW CU1WS

.

Supnme LS, 21lo0r,lir,
.. _options.

1223.39 .....

199.97 .....

The Daily Sentinel
(lJSPIIZJ3.HI)

Publllbed
: Mooday
. .lhe
.
friday, Ill''"'
CoullSl,·PoDIIIOY,
Olllo-by
QUo Vllley Publilbiq CompuyJMuMI••"•
Ia,., Pomeroy, Ohio •S769, Pb. 991-2156.
. . -pold

"_,,Oillo.

,

1919 CNM COISICA
41lo0r. air, btuo.
automatlc, stonoo.

411o0r.bluo.-

151.it ... ~

1

Ro!&gt;reHDIIOI¥t, Brlllllam NeW1p- Sllel,
73~ " Tblrd A.vfllll.ue, Nn York. New Ycwt

10017.

__

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~ Tho AIIOCi.,.. rr.4 1114 1t1e Oblo
New- AlloCUitioa, Nodoaol Ad-ill

!

-~

Joseph Yabya

Divorces and
dissolutions

::

not have seen it that way. Respond- economy watchers use in their posing to questions about !heir own itive assessments. Yes, the jo~ ,
economies, heads of households numbers are up, but those number&amp; :
10Id Sindlinger &amp; Co. interviewers · say nothing about the quality of '
lhat they thought incomes and jobs jobs.
•
.
:
both were destined to fall,
.
University I of Michigan :
Such pessimism, seeminaly m economists pul it this way:
:
defiiiiiCe or economic evidence, has
•• A )ob IS a/job is a job in the· •
become a pattef!! ·in ~nt yean, nation s emplOyment count, but :
and there has 10 be a logJca1 expl&amp;- they are not lilt equal. Some pay· I
qatioo for it if one ~ to avoid ton• well and stiniulale the creation of. l
· eluding thal the public suffers from other ~bs&amp;ut our mounting job. :
' mass tlsYcboilemosls . ·
. . count u o er-weighled with low 1
nie blue mootl ~~~ be .JIJ!Il1: iever&amp;ge .19 s."
.,
tied..In ~le of postUve ,lllll1IUCS.
What ~ a low levenlge job? The :
ordinary folks waleb as btg COII!pa- son of job that has acco!lllted for :
nies execute massive jo~ term~- most of the additions to the labor :
tions or cut research or capll~l force in recent months.
,
.. spendiq. And they.•" why this II
Most of the private-sector jobs: l
· so lfthillgs m:c loolring up7 . _ ood produced since March are in four •
The explanation for thett m
sectors: restanrants and bars, Health , 11
may even be documented by the services, social services and per-· •
very numbers the profeSilona/1· sooilelsupply services.
. :

,

HanninC:,.;c'

The credibility gap:Economists vs. ordinary folkl
.

Edwardlhle

Edward Ihle, 67, Racine, died
Sunday, Auj. 22, 1993, at Veterans
Memcria1 Hospital in Pomeroy.
He was born Feb. 4, 1926, in
Racine, son of the laiC William and
Agnes Roush lble. A retired mainUnits of the Meigs County treated at the scene: 7:48 p.m. tenance worker from the Gavin
. · 1 s · e Pomeroy to Meigs Couniy Sheriff's Plant, he wu a member of the F'ust
Emergency Med tea
ervtc
Office for Donald Sleinmetz who Baptist Church in Racine.
responded to 10 calls for assistance
He is survived by his wife,
overnight. Units responding was transported to Veterans Memo- Doris Hensler Ihle; two-sons and
ode
rial Hospital; 8:37 p.m. ,Tuppers
inclM~day _ I0:20 a.m. Middle-. Plains 10 State Roule 7 for Walter daughters-in-law, Frank and Kathy
of Pomeroy and Clay Tim and
port and Pomeroy.volunteer ~Ire Perry to O'Bieness Memorial Has- Ihle
Jane
Ihle of Langsville; a daughter
departments to Ovedlroolt Nursmg pital; 10:02 p.m. Pomeroy to Statt
and
soo-in-law,
Melissa and Larry
Route 7 for Albert Mtlrtin who was
Center in Middlepon for an auto· transported to VMH; 10:59 p.m. Holsinger of Racine and five
malic alarm; 1:43 p.m. ~ Middlepon to P&amp;ge Street for Ron grandchildren.
to Watson Grove Road for aul Jeffers who was transported tP
Also surviving are t.wo brothers,
Hughes who was trans)Klrted to Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
Robert and Homer Ihle, both of
Holzer Medical Center; 4:SS p.m.
Tuesday - 1:59' a.m. Middle- Kent; a sister, Lois Moore of
Racine to Vine Street for Vera Beeand several nieces, and
gle who was treated at the scene: pon to Brownell Apartments for Racine,
nephews.
·
6:14p.m. Racine to Blind Hollow - ~~er who was transported to
He was preceded in death by a
Road for Joseph Conley Who was
brother, Charles, and a sister, Anna
ObiiZ.
Services will be he!~ Thursilay
at
11 a.m. at the First Baptist
~OLZER MEDICAL CENTER Lambert, Jennie Gilliland, Valerie
in Racine with the Rev:
Church
August 20 dlscbarJieS .- C~ Chester, and Mrs. Henry Smith and
Charles Norris officiating. Burial
Caldwell, Jeffrey UJY, Maria Hill, daughter.
_
.
ltuth Wroblewski, Irene Hanson,
AuJiust 11 births • Mr. and will follow in Letart Falls Ceme.
~· Dave Hindy ll)d son, Mrs. Mrs. Keith Dyke, daughter, Well·, lery.
Friends
may
call
one
hour
pnor
Ronald
son, Mr. SaUl ston and Mr. ~nd Mrs. George
to services at the church. ArrangeMCGuire and
hter, Ruth Cliir, Johnson,.daugl\ler, Mason.
,
men:S
are being conducted by FishHilda Smith, Ralph Perry, Bessie
AuJIUSt l;l discharges · Johner
Funeral
Horne.
Saxton, Robbie Dettie, Wayne Rus· nie Fortner, Mrs.. George John~n
sell Chester Boster, Georgia and daught~r, Amanda Jarv1s,
Ke~y. Randall McCal:ley, Mar- _ .Charles ,Wallis, Mrs. I?ave Tatman
garet Hanoing, Ellis Fairchild, and daughter, Mrs. Keith Dyke and
Luke coffee, Mrs:·Robert Wyatt daughter and Charles Chambers.
and Gerald Pope.
AuJiust 11 births ;- Mr. and
Augnst :ZQ b•rtlls : J\1r. 11nd ~s. Johnathon Raney, daughter,
Mrs. Henry Smith, dsugbter, Gal- R1o Grande.
The following divorces were
lipolis Ferry, W.Va. and Mr. ~d
filed - d y in the Meigs_County
Mrs. Dave Tatman, daughler, BidHolzer Medieal Center
Common Pleas Court of Judge
well.
·
Aug. 13 discharJIU: Violet Fred W. Crow m: Rotter R. Black,
; Aupt 11 dlscbarJies ·Barbara Delancy, Daisy Boyer, : Ethel Middleport, from bawana L.
¥l!r• Clara Skidmore,• Ang~la Smith, Thomas Clark, Alisha Black, Langsville; John Sullivan
Collins, Misty Elswick and .Mrs. ' Tucker from Viola Maxine Tucker,
.
'
Paul May and son. ·
. both of Pomeroy. Filing for a dis·
Aug. 13 blrtb - Mr. and Mrs. solution were Kathy Jean Ritter·
Paul May, son, Radcliff.
beck and Robert Lee Ritlerbeck
:..
Sr., bolh of Dexter.
.
A divorce was granted Monday
VETERANS MEMORIAL
to Mark Haley from Teresa Whitt
Monday admissions ..:.. None.
Halley. In addition, a dissolution
Mond#y discharges - Bunon was granted Monday to Bobby W.
· The State "Route 7 bridge just
north of the junction of State Route DeWees, Dexter.
Vance and Yvonne E. Vance.
'
143' will be restricled to one-lane
tcavel for at least another week,
according· tO Jolin Dowler, deputy
director, District 10, Ohio Departnient of Transpon8ti00.'
·
· Complete General Consll'liction
Company, Inc., . Columbus, is
inslalling a concrete overlay 10 the
bridge deck.
·
' This is one of seven such pro. jeyts in DiStrict 10. Complete Gen·
erill is lhe contractor on all seven.
Four of the bridS;es ·are in Athens
County and one each is in Meigs,
· Morgan,lnd Noble Counties.
,
Cost of all seven. deck overlays
is $334,033 . The completioo dale
on all the sb'UCtures is Sept. 30.

Sen.}an M. Long

.

Area deaths

thursday through Saturday:
Fair on Thursday and Friday .
Highs in the upper 80s and low
90s. Lows in the uppu 60s and low
70s. Chance of thunderstorms Saturday. Highs 85·90. Lows 65-70.

Hospital news

F oodbank... _c011:.....;11_;,.;rn_;:••_rr-~A--:-I--:--:::-:--:-:-

Two granted licenses

tee

the first state society of its lcind.
mended amendments were defeated
That same year, James Re~olds
In the Ohio state government, . in either the Ohio House of Repre- of Cuyahoga introduced a bill lhat'
women's suffrage txicame an issue sentatives .or Senate - in 1888, would allow women of Ohio to:
as early as 1857-1858. A Select 1889,1890, 1897, 189,8, and 1900.
vote in p~eside11tial elFctions. The•
Attempts at municipal suffuige bill p8ssed and was signed by Gov·~
· were also defeated in 1888 and ernorCox.
''
1894. A small victory was won,
However, liquor in_terests'
however, in 1894, when Ohio strongly opposed women's sufCommiitee of the Ohio Senate was women won the ri~ht to vote and frage, which was often associated'
formed to examine the issue· of stand for election m school board with the Temperance movement.;
female enfranchisemenl
elections.
The liquor lobby :...:. the "wets" - '
The Committee recommended
Women of Ohio were also circulaled petitions for a referen•
that the state present an amendment active on the scene of the national dum on the recently passed bill ..
granting women the right to vote in suffrage movement. In 1903, the Despite the use of fraudulent signa-'·
the next election. The Senate cast a headquarters of the National Amer· tures, the bill was submitted in ref•'
44 to 44 vote on the proposal, and ican Womart Suffrage Association erendum and voted down. '
'
women's suffrage wa$ defeated.
moved to Warren, Ohio.
The bill was reintroduced tht
Ohio women organized both
Warren remained as the head- following year, at about the same
within their local communities and quarters until 1910. The move can time that the federal debate was·
on a statewide basis. In Toledo, be Iar~ely attributed to the efforts also heating up. In the spring of
The Toledo Women' s Suffrage of Ohioan Harriet Taylor Upton, a 1919, the federal amendment half·
Association fonned in 1869, mak- close friend of Susan B. Anthony, passed both the U.S. House and
ing it the oldest local women's suf- and treasurer of the national orga- Senate al)d was turned over to the
frage association in the world.
nization for fifteen years.
states for ratification.
·,
. South Newbury residents, in
Ohio convened yet another Con' On June 16, 1919, Ohio ratified
Geauga County, also formed a stitutional Convention in 1910. A the federal amendment and also
group during this time, and left an women's suffrage amendment was passed the presi.dential suffrage
Ohio landmark as a reminder of once &amp;gain proposed, and this time bill, thus guaranteeing that Ohio
such a rich heritage. The associa- was passed by the delegation. The women would vote in the next elec-'
tion r,Ianted the "Equal Suffrage issue then went to the volers on lion.
·
Tree' which would serve as a September 3, 1912.
.
Having reached lhe end of a 70'
speaking site throughout the sufDespile the amazing mobilizing year campaign, the OWSA called ~
frage campaign.
efforts of the women activists, the for a final 'pilgrima$e to the Equal :
On a wider level, women coor- amendment II8SSed only one Con-· Suffrage Tree: Oh1o women had ·
dinated the Ohio Women's Suf- gressional district and 24 of 88 been present at the beginning of the frage Association (OWSA) in counties. In 1914, the amendment suffrage struggle and they saw it :
1869. Frances-M. Casement reorga- was defeated again by the voters.
'through to the end.
.'
nized this group in Painesville,
Women did, however, make
They had much to celebrate in
Ohio in 1885, the object, as staled inroads in regard to municijl81 suf- their personal accomplishments ·
in Article 2 of its Constitution, frage. On June 6, 1916. East0eve- and in the accomplishments of all.'.'
being "to procure the right of suf- land wrote women's suffrage into American women. As the celebra- :;
frage for women, and to effect such its city charter, and the voters l!l_ry__cover of the OWSA newslette( ;
changes in the laws as shall give approved the measure. 'But the ·read on January 1, 1920: "Blessed ·. . ,
women equal rights with men."
c1ty's Board of Elections stated that 1920, you have been a long time·"
·
At the state Constitutional Con- 'it would refuse to recognize the coming but you arc here and so are .
vention of 1873-1874, a Special female voters.
·
we."
.
Comminee on Women's Suffrage
The case went to lhe courts, and
As always, if you have com-·''
was again fonned and proposed the the legality of women's municipal ments .or questions about this or
adoption of an ainendment guaran- suffrage as written into city char- any other issue, please feel free to :
teemg the enfranchisement of ters was upheld by the Ohio contact my 'office: Senator Jan :
women.
· Supreme Court in April, 1917. Michael Long, Ohio Senate, State- •
Once again, the proposal was Lakewood and Columbus granted house, Columbus, OH 43266-0004. !
defeated. In fact, several recom- municipal suffrage later that year.
(614) 466-8156.
::

;1

(f

W. VA.

'

To~ay

I

IND.

Ohio women's strug-gle fQr equality
On August 26, 1920, the nineteenth amendment of the United
States Constitution was ratified,
allowing women of America lhe
right to vote and guaranteeing that
the Right of Citizens of the United
States shall not be denied or
abridged by the United Stales or
any state on account of sex.
Ohio was the fifth of then fortyeight states to ratify the federal
amendmenL Ohio did this on June
16, 1919. Though long before that
dale, Ohio had been a focal point
for the women's suffrage movemenl
The struggle for women' s suffrage went hand-in-hand with
another struggle in Ohio - that of
abolition. In the pages of the AntiSlavery Bugle, a publication from
Salem, Ohio, a firm stand for
women's rights emerged alongside
that of anti-slavery in the early
1840s.
In the same city of Salem, at lhe
Second Baptist Church, the Ohio
suffrage movement truly originated
on April 19-20,1850 with the fust
Ohio State Women's Convention.
This was the second Women's
Rights Convention in the country.
The first look plac!) in Seneca
Falls, New Yolk 10 1848. Here, the
women adopted twenty resolutions
that aimed at improvin~ the social
and political situauon of all
women.
Among the resolutions were lhe
recognition that it was "an impera·
live duty .... that they. should secure
to themselves the elective franchise," the char~e of taxation without representation, and an agreement to continue 10 meet in Convention each year.
Ohio women continued to gather annually. The 1851 meeting was
held in Akron and was the sight of
Sojourner Truth's famous "Ain't I
a Woman?" speech. A year later, at
Massillon, the Ohio Women' s
Rights Association was founded -

conditiODJ

MICH.

The sad demise of a worthy man!
WSJ (Wall Street Journal) editors
lie without consequence," he
wrote. He concluded: "I was not
mean t for the ... public life in
Washington. Here ruining people is

_co_n_d n_ued
_ trom
__
A·~t=:-=::-:::-::-:--::-:-:-::-:::-:-:--::­
ThiJ is George and Theresa's same City, seven years apart. So,
out comes the theme of the shOw:
story u they told it on the show.
and George think they' re
Theresa Wll IIJifried to DoUJ. Doug
brothers.
Doua wu ill the military aerving m
"There's no concrete proof, but
Desert Storm and this separation
there'
s something between us,"
was a strain on their nuuilge. DurGeorge
said.
ing this time, There8a started see.
Doug
seemed a little more reluc, ing her best friend's husband,
tailt
to
admit
George is his brother,
George.
.
but
George
said
it was just a feelTheresa said, "We had clicked
when we met a ciluple of years ear- ing he had and that ther both
lier but neither O!IC or ui said any- decided against DNA lesUng out
of respect for their adoptive parthing."
After Doug's return from Desert ents.
Just to show how close Doug
Storm, Doug and George met This
and
George are now, it was pointed
turned out to be rather interesting
out
that Doug is now married to
for the two men.
Mary,
who was maid of honor at
"I Diet him once or .twice when I
George
and Theresa •s wedding.
got back from Desert Storm. We
Doug
was
going to be best man,
~~ge and nn. ..,\ hit it off immebut
could
not
get leave from the
,"nouBd
military.
A7ter meetiog, Doug ant~·
George seemed to thinlt Theresa
George began noticing how much
would
stay with him. He said; "I
alike ihey arc. Th~ sai~ they
have
a
feeling in my heatt that
began completing each other s senstaying
horne."
she's
lences. George said he bad a tape
That
is
a
sad note for viewers
of a song be had written in high
across
the
country
who are dying to
school and without ever hearing it
see,
"I'm
In
Love
with my Husbefore, Doug knew the wofds 10 iL
band's
Whole
Family."
Despite the facl that GeOrge had
taken Doug's wife,.George said,
"There was a defmite bond there.
There wasn't anything uncomfonable &amp;bout it" ·
The following couples were
It turns out that Dou~ and
George were both adopied m the recently granted marriage licenses

Weda•da;r, Au&amp;o 15

Tuesday,

at the While House, he had overseen the disastrous nOminations of
Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood as
attorney general. He had been

Love...

OHIO Weather

I

Who ldlled Vincent Fosttr?
. The fundamental facts seem
beyond dispute: Sometime after
I :00 p.m. on July 20, the deputy .
White House counsel and presiden·
tial pal left his office, drove to a
secluded park overlooking the
Potomac River and shot himself
witb a revolver that had once
belonged to his father. His suicide
shauered his family, friends and
colleagues, some or whom had
realized he was depressed but none
of whom had realized how serious·
ly.
By all accounts, Foster was a
decent man and a brilliant attorney.
He and Bill Clinton had been boy·
hood friends. He and Hillary Clinton had been law partners in Little
Rock. He was the Clintons' personal lawyer.
So why did Vince Foster take
his own life?
In the six months he had worked

Tht Dally SenUnel ~· 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1113.31

.....

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CARS

�Tuesday, A~,~guat 24,1983

Sports

(

The Daily·Sentinel

•

~Indians

top Blue Jays,
-9-8 despite Carter's
three-HR fire'lVQrks

Tuesday, August 24,1993

.

·

In AL action,

Page 4

In NL affairs,

Sanders' bat drives Reds' to 6-2 victory over Mets; Giants lose
NEW YORK (AP) - Regpe
Sanders wasn'·t intimidated by the
pitches that were flying high and
tight.
"It~s all part of the game,"
Sanders said aftt2" be ·~ and
drove in four runs Monday night to
lift the Cinclnnati Reds to a 6-2
. victory over the New Yotk Mels.
Dwight Gooden was ejected for
hitting Reds rookie Brian Koelling
with the first pitch of the third
inning. One im\10&amp; Cll!"lier, Cincinnati's Tim Pugh hit Charlie
O'Brien with a pill:h.
But Sanders had the QnaJ. retaliation, cappinlJ the Reds' four-run ·
third inning wtth a tWo-run-single.
"You just have to get baclc up
~ there and not let him baclc you
off the plaiC," Sandera said. He
also gave Cincinnati a 1..0 lead ·in
the sccOIId with his 17th bollia".
Gooden (11-14) denied thst he
was throwing at Koelling.
"It's pan of the pno, throwing
iilside," he said "You Ciln't take
that away ftom a pill:her. On that
particular pitch, I was throwing
mside. Two or lhrce yesrs ago, lhey
wouldn't have thrown anybody out,

but-lhey do it a Jot quicker now."
Home-plate umpire Qary Darling ejected Qoodeo (11-14) with. out issuing a warning 10 eilher
team.
"After O'Brien was Jili and the
very fm~~a;{ the next inninll1

smolces

, it's autollladc/

·

Darlin$ said. ' Doc has always
been fair to umpires, not showinjl
them up, but I don't care who 1t
was, it could have been Cy Young
or anybody."
·
Gooden's ejection brought on
1osias Manzlnillo, who faced eight
batters before the innirlg was over,
wi.llcing tiuee and pving up a.tworun double to Hal Morris and the
single to Sanders.
Sanders .drove in his fourth run
in the eighth inning with a sacrifice
fly off Pete Schourek. the fourth of
five Mels pitchers.
·
Pugh (.8-12) allowed two runs
and silt hits in seven innirlgs for the ·
victory, and also claimed innocence on the pill:h that bit O'Brien.
"I was trying to throw a fastball
in tight and get him off the dish a
little bit There was no intent to hit

•~

- - - - - - - - - Sport Sbfleas--------· BasebaD
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)Nolan Ryan, (!laying his 27th and
final season, IS expecred to pill:h
again for the Texas Rangers. Dr.
John Conway said lhe 46-year-old
right-hander, sidelined with a
strained muscle in his left lower rib
cage, could SIIUt early next weelc.
a-baD
NEW YORK (AP) - Jack

-

McDowell of the ChiCIJ$0 White
Sox, the fml 20-garne winner in
the majors this season, is the Amer·
ican League player of the week.
McDowell improved to 20-7 last
weelc, going 2.0 wilh 16 strilceouiS
and a 1.06 BRA in 17 innings. San
Francisco second baseman Robby
Thompson. wbo hit .360 with four
homers and sevm RBis, was honored in the National League.

- ' WJ,ra.GI
*-

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Alkota ...................71 ol9

11ou11&lt;n ...............66 ll
Loo-...........64 60

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New York manager Dallas
Green felt it was the umpires who
to01t it the wrong way.
"Neith·e r guy threw at each
other," Green said. "Wily would
we throw at them? Where do
umpires get the idea that this is
beanball? I've managed a lot of
games here and we never throw
brushback pitches. Where is common sense? That's what umpiring
is all abouL"
Gooden was ejected for only the
second time in his career. He was
also thrown out on Aug. 9, 1990
for ch~g Phillies pitcher Pat
Combs
being bit by a pitch.
Both Mets runs scored on
Bobby Bonilla's sacrifice flies, one
in the thinl and one in the fifth.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 5, San Francisco ~; Moo- .
treal 1, Chicago 0; Colorado 3,
Philadelphia 2 in 13 il:lnings; San
Diego 7, St. Louis 5; and Los
Angeles 6, Pittsburgh 1.
Braves 5, Giants 3
Steve Avery has already been to
the World Series twice, and that
experience is paying off in the
Atlanta Braves' bid for a third
straight appearance there.
In the opener of a three-game
seried agamst NL WesHeading
San Francisco on Monday night,
Avery (14-4) beat the Giants for
the third time this season, and the
Braves' 5-3 victory moved them
within 6 1/2 games of first place.
"Avery tmlted this 4ame lilce a
World Series game,' manager

·-"--

2Z
!.1
36

BALTIMORJ! OIIJOLI!il: Plooedlticlt

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TEXAS RANOERS: Ploood Bu~eh
Dnil. r-n' uw, cin dto l!Jodl)' diablod

Jill. a-uod lel!H-.IalloWor.~!·- cu, ollbe An-.. Aooocil·

dNCINNATI 6. New Yadl2
San Dioao 7. su...,;.,s
Loo- 6. Pillaboqh I

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- BULLETIN BOA-RD

BosketbaU .
~ND

A.-...l.San-3

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Toclay's games

a

CAVAUI!IIS: Sip&lt;~

I

Miila. forward. 10 a fiv.you con·

Alluu (Oiavino 14-l) .. SUI - ·
.. cw6-4). 4:05p.m.

HO\IItOa (Swin4cll 9·9) at Florida

(Anm..... , . l2). 7:35 ~....

Colondo (Blair 5-9) at Pbilldc~
( J - !1-9). 7:35p.M..
•

Pi-

CINCINNATI (Luobllon 2·3l at Now
Yod:(T,....6-1217:o40p.m.
St. LouiJ (Watl«l 6-0) at S.n Diep
(Aohby 1·1). I 0:!.1 p.m.
(Woli 11-11) .. Loo Mae. loo (0..1'11). 10:35 p.m.

Wednesday's games
(Scllill01111k1).12:35 p.m.
.

Hockey

Colondo (Blair !·9) 11 Philo4elphia

Nollonol Ha&lt;key ~ue
LOS ANOI!IJ!S KINOS: Sipod Wuftlll Rychtl,ltfl win&amp; to. thftlo.)'OU OM•

CINCINNATI (Rljo 10.7) at Now
Yod&lt; (llillmalll~).l:o40 pm.
Sl lAW (Amelia 11}.4) " Su Dlo&amp;•
(Tim Wcmlll-314:05 pm.
A-. (MidduA IH) a Soa l'rml·
co (Swift &gt;7-514:05 p.m.
Houo100 (P-aol 12-4) at Florid•
(llou&amp;h 7-13). 7:35p.m.

1nd.

74e4~

loo (CondiDall·!5), 10:35 p.m.

EaolenllliTWLPd.GB
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Our

friend Ia oorry he got • . .
phoM, He'e elck of running to the
pnge every time It rtnge.

•••
It lan't whit you know thlll
counll. 11'1 wh1t you CM think of

- 9 . Qoldancl 0

a.EVELAND 9, TGIIIND I

Tual3,Baltimtn6
Now Yolt16. Chi,.ao5 (10 inn.)
~~CU..- 3. Klnlu Cilr 2 (10 inn.)

In lime.

Tonight' a games
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(Looly 1-5) ll!lMnlil (QaiiW:·
.... llkl).l:35 ;.....
Calli..... (Liop""' IU) 11 lold·
-(Muoobl2-4).7:35p.m.
Now Yadl 0... 1-0) ot Clioop CIW-IU).l:05p.m.
OUiaod (W' .. "•II)
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7 SIIOWIOOMS

11 WAIDIOUSES

Rlfland Fumlture ·

Cilr c - ~11:35 ......

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:

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1

one k&gt; the o-ln 1 more-open-

live ...

~fa ·-~

·SESSIONS
ARECOMING •••

lome people hold·both night !llld

1-7) at Milwaukee (Mirenda 2·'land
a .... t .a). 6:05p.m.
. Seaulo (HanoiJn 1~J at llMnlil (J)olwoly 1~). 7:05p.m.
Q.EVEl.AND (TaYiftl! 2--1) atTon:a·
10 {'lA 'I"' 6-9), 1:31 ......
cwr..... (FWoy 13-91 "Boi"CMo!or U). 7:35p.m.

.

CALL
NOW

of
Rltlc.tl

PHARMACY

"Germany, Long Beach among
:LL World Series' early winners

- tientinel

Dave

Monday's !ICOns

DH' OUI.aad

IN THE

By
Grate

'

ter

' .7~etd-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

r ... ........... .........64
Seoale ...................61
Califonia ................!6
~ ...............!3
Ooltllnd ..................!1

NOW
AVAILABLE
•

· dlicoao (Morpn 1·11) " MonltOII
(F..... I-3). 7:35p.m.
l'iaobuolh (Taailill 4-1) II Loo Aop-

Willen DtYIIkNI
Olico1o.....•...•.......61 ll .553
KutJu Ci1y .•••••••••6l 60 .!20

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Cbicaao (Cutillo 5-I) at Montreal

(llill7-4). 7:35_]).111.

\

Baseball o.wners, players
at odds concerning format
.of expanded playoffs

s"oz.·5/$200··

ll-41, clolblodlla. s-1'111lllila,- . 10 Qaobl otiiiO Amooic:o!llu-

Minneso~ in 10 innings. Texas,
meanwhile, pulled within 4 1/2
games with a 13-6 drubbing of Baltory.
timore. Detroit blanlced Oilldand· 9"It's a shame to waste a perfor, 0.
.
mance lilce thst," Carter said MonYanks, Jays tied
day nighl after the Toronto Blue
Maybe this will be the day the
Jays' 9-8 loss to the Clevelan4 New Yorlc Yanlcees lalce sole posIndians.
session of first place in the AL •
He brolce a tie with Lou Gehrig East It certainly won't be the first
for the American League record for time they've had a chance.
three-homer games and moved
New York has made a habit of
within one of Johnny Mize's major catching
Toronto, but they haven't
leai!UC record.
shOwn the abj.lity to pass the Blue
'~''Bittersweet," Carter said. "It Jays. The two teams have been tied
wou14 have been nice to win that for fitS! seven times in the past 25 ·
one.
days, but the Yanlcees have never
"But !'ve gill the swing going led outright
·
'
now. This team needs my bat if
"It beats not being tied for . · t&gt;ISCUSSES FORMAT DEBATE- Donald Febr, execulive
we're going to hold ·on to the first," deadpanned Yankees mandirector nf and general counsel for the Major Lea1111e Baseball Play·
lead."
ager Buck Showalter.
ers Assoclition, illks about the baseball playoff format debate with
; the loss dro!!Ped the Blue Jays
The Yankees started Monday a
reporters at a ilews cnnfereace Mondar. in New. York. Tbe union
into a first-place tie in the AL East game
wants three divisions with wUdcards siilnlar to the NFL, while many
behind
the
Blue
Jays,
but
with New York, which.beat Chica- pulled even by beating Chicago 6-5
or
tbe owners seem to want four division winners and liS' many secgo 6-5 in 10 innings Monday nighL
ond-place
teams taking part in tbe new setup, slated to begin in
in
10
inrilngs,
while
Toronto
lost
a
Sandy Alomar spoiled Carter's wild one to Cleveland.
1994. (AP}
big night with a two-run single off
''Now we have to talre the next
Mart Eichhorn (2-1) in the eighth step.
we've been chasin~ people a
iqning to ~ut 0eveland ahead 9-7. long time,"
Showalter wd.
Carter s third homer, a solo shot
The
Yankees-White
game
off winner Jeremr Hernandez (4" lasted until almost 2:30 Sox
a.m.
EDT
'2), cut the Indians lead to 9·8. But due to two lengthy rain delays.
Jerry DiPoto closed the door in lhe New Yorlc went ahead in the top of
ninth for his fourth save of the sea- .the lOth when pill:her Scou Radioson.
sky' S· throwing error allowed two
. Carter's power display over- runs to score. Pat Kelly scored
In a leuer to Ravitch, Fehr
shadowed a tluee-RBI game from New York's sixth run on Wade
wrote,
"If the additional round of
By JIM DONAGHY
Alben lJelle.
B
• · 1 d 11·
NEW YORK (AP) ·- Both playoffs is a good id~a. then the
Belle hil his 33rd home run, a c~~f~ :~~~ e, an proved 10 be. a
base~layers and owners want additional round of playoffs shol)ld
"two-run shill in the first, to become
After a 53-minute rain delay
expan
playoffs next season. It's begin next year, in 1994. If it is not
the fourth player in Indians history Steve Farr allowed·baclc-to-back
the format thst could be a big prob- a good idea, then we should dis·
with 30 homers and 100 RBis in homers to Frank Thomas _ his
pense with it altogelher."
·
lem.
.
consecutive seasons. .
35th of the year and sccOIId of lhe
Ravitch said lie was "delightUnion chief Donald Fehr said
· John Olerud followed Carter's game - and Tim Raines before
Monday the union wants tiuee divi· ed" to get the letter from lhe union
Second homer in the fifth with his getting the last out for his 25th
sions with a wildcard playoff team and wants 10 negotiate soon. He
23rd of the season, the second save.
for each.league. The owners still added all the options. including
~traight game they have combined
Paul Assenmacher (2-0) was the
aren't sure of the format they want. three divisions, have been dison back·to-baclc homers.
winner, with Radinsky (6-1) taking
but ipdi~ons are they are leaning cussed by the owners and anything
. (;:Jeveland's Carlos Bac.rga. who the loss.
to f6ur division winners and four is still possible.
has the only other tbree·homer
Twins 3, Royals 2 (10)
Fehr said the players are consecond-place ~sin 1994.
game in the majors this season, hit
It was yet another one-run game
Fehr said the chances are very cerned the playoffs arid re8ul¥ sea.Jlis 19th in the fifth. '
for the Royals, and this time they
snl"all thilt the players will agree to son will be diluted if the four sec' After Candy Maldonado's pinch came out on the losing end. .
·
a playoff format inyolving ihe four ond-place teams qualify.
Single pulled the Indians even at 7Kirby Puckett lifted a sacrifice
players
do
not
believe
it is
"The
division winners and four second7 in the the sevenlh, Belle led off fly to right-center off AL saves place teams.
a good idea to conduct an additionthe ~ighth with a double and Randy leader)eff Montgomery (3 -~ ),
On a positive note, both parties al round of playoffs within the traMilliP!J reached on a fielding error scoring Pat Meares 'l':ith the wmagreed it's open to negotiations. ditional two-league, four-division
l&gt;Y thttd baseman Ed Sprague. .
ning run at Kauffman Stadium.
But til!le ~uld become a problem structure, with the eight playoff
Regg1e Jeff~n struck o~t w1th .
Larry Cas ian (4-1) went 2 2/3 · for starting the three-division con- teams being the first-and second·
both runners l1J'lvmg, allowmg l_'at innings for the win and lowered his . cept next season.
place finishers in the existing four
porders to throw Belle out,at third team-leading ERA to "0.69,- Carl
Of course, there are some base- divisipns.
[or the double Ph!Y·
Willis got the fmal out, strilcing out
. "Simply pul, the vbvious damball people who don't want to
, How.ever •. J1m Thom~ was Gary Gaetti with runners on first change things at all.
age that format would do to the
..
)'lallced mtenbonally and Fehx Fer- and second
"It's awful,'' StLouis manager nature of the divisional champi- ·
min' followed witlL ll walk to .lolld
, Rangers 13, Orioles 6
· Joe Torre said." "In the NBA and 0nship races makes this approach
. !he bases and set the stage for AlaDean Palmer likes Camden NHL you have ·ro loot in the news- untenable."
Fehr said it might take up to
mar.
.
• .
.
Yards. He liked it on Opening Day papers to see who is in fU"St place.
: "I w~ JUSt IOQting f~. a p111:h I when he hit two homers. He liked it It doesn't matter."
three months for the negotiations
eo!J!d ~~ ~n the ~und, Alomar _ Monday night when he hit anoiher.
Also, as expected following "on the playoffs to finish and he
. sa1d. · E1chhorn s ~I ways been in. fact, Palmer has liked Camden comments from the union last hopes things get started by the end
tough on .me. I ~on I re':'lember Yards just about every time he's week, Fehr said !he season was not of September, dependin~ on what
~ver getting a htt off h1m , But played there- the Rangers' third
in jeopardy of a strike since the the owners decide at· therr meeting
tonight I just stayed back because baseman has hit six homers ther~ owners a8reed not to hold a loclcout next month in Boston.
he throws a lot of junk.''
this season.
Ravitch responded there might
next spring and not to chang~ lhe
; He~dez pitched 1 1/3 innings
The Rangers used a nine-run free agent and salary arbitration be a problem with schedule
for the VIctory.
. second inning to lock up the game process for this winter and fall. changes in 1994 because teams
; Blue Jays starter Jack Morris, early. Fernando Valenzuela (6-8) Fehr said he is waiting for a few must swt io make season-ticket
who allowed five runs on eight took the brunt of the pounding. clarif!C:Itions from~ lawyers repre- plans sOon.
hits, was fC!£Ced !lUI of the game in while Kenny Rogers (12·7) worked senting the owners.
lhe fifth with mu10r nerve damage eight innings for the win.
·
The OY(.ners approved ·the .
Sports briefs
!n his right elbow.
Tigers 9, Athletics 0
change in the playoff setup at their
Anti-inflamatory drugs are
At Tiger Stadium, Mike Moore quarterly meetings last June, but
~xpected t~ solve the J?roblem and
pitcluld his second one-hitter in a have yet to officially vote on il new
Tennis
~~!" M?'fls to malce his ~xt start.
month, .facing only 28 batters ~d format. The OwJ!ers, apparently
COMMACK, N.Y. (AP) Were not about to pomt a fin- striking out four members of h1s would prefer, at least for 1994,the Third-seeded Sergi Bruguera of
ger at the pitching staff,'' Carter former tesm.
four division winners ·and the four. Spain, the French Open champion
said "This is a team effort.
Moore (10·6) retired every bat- second-place teams..
playing his first hardcourt match of
he faced until Scott Lydy lined
' "Th~ were a lot _of times last
Fehr said the union is open to , the summer, routed Alex O'Brien
year that lhe staff quned thiS team. a clean single with one out in the negotiations, but don't consider it 6·2, 6-3 in the first round of the
I'm still confident they can tum it sixth. ·
·
lilcely the players will agree to the · Hamlet Cup.
Mickey Tettleton homer¢ onto owners' .current version. The own·
around."
·
Tennis
•
In olber AL games, New York lhe roof in right-center- his 28th ers don't thinlc 11 schedule for the
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP)
beat Chicago 6-5 in 10 innings, but _ and had four RBis for the players' idea of three ·division win- - Seventh-seeded Mikael Pemfors
lhe White Sox retained its _four- Tigers. Steve Karsay (1-1), Oak- ners and a wildcard team can be in of Sweden beat Stephane Simjan of
game lead over Kansas Cuy m the land's return from Toronto in the place l:iy·nexl season. ·
France 3-6, 7-6, 7-5 in the first
The additional round of playoffs round of the OTB International. In
AL West as th!: Royals lost 3-2 to Rickey Henderson trade, took the
was established by the owners. as a women's fU"St·round match. Mar·
loss.
part of the ll!lW TV venture wilh ianne Werdel upset sixth-seeded .
ABC and )'{BC. ~ext season's Barbara Rittner of Germany 6-3, 3·
playoffs are scheduled to be tele- 6, 6-1.
vised by NBC, with ABC carrying
the World Series. ·
There also have been reports
thai
the owners might decide to
ByKELLYP.KISSEL
Monday
and
saved
its
top
pitcher
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa (AP) keep thin~s the way they are - ·
Saipan.
four divis1on winners - until the
Europe beat a team from the Far for Saipan
also could advance with
East and defending champion Long only one ,victory,
season.
but would have to 1995
"ll's
said Richard
Beach, Calif., toot a first step edge out at least one
other team on Ravitch, possible,''
the owners' .representaioward a repeat championship at a tie-brealcer.
tive. "But everyone wants to see a
the Little League World Series..
Monday, Bedford. N.H., change
: Germany turned tradition on its beatEarlier
in the playoff~in 1994."
Richmond. Va. 1-0.
ear Monday, beating Saipan 7-3.
Far East teams have won 21 .of the
Stale Auto"s already
last 26 tournaments.
low premiums can be
G~OURPHOTOGRAPHY
: "They lcnew coming in that a
reduCed even more by
european team had never beaten
insuring both your car
one before. They realize what a
· and home with the S"te
good job they've done," coach Joe
Auto Companies.
Thompson said.
, And Sean Burroughs did an
equally good job for Lon~ Beach,
Let us tell you just
~trilting out 16 in six iMmgs and
how much your savings
just missing a perfect game against
can
be.
•
Hamilton, Ohio. In the 8.0 victory,
only one bauer hit the ball hard - ·
a groundout to second. Burroughs
lilso caught a popped up bunt
•24.99
' "We can play better tblill this •
12-16 Pose
We were jus! overmatched,''
~amilton manager ·Ray Nichtig
Selection
spid.
FUn
Long Beach was opening the
·2 n EAST MAll'~
ForAUAgesl
defense of its tille won last year
(Umllcd
POMEROY
after the Philippines were disquali·
Appointments
fled. It's attempting to be the first
l
.. 992·6687
,
Available)
J1-merican team to win bact-tobeck titles.
SESSIONS INCWDE: HAIR SIYUNG, MAKE·VP, ARTISIRY, .
: Saipan wasn't eliminated with
WARDROBE ~HANGES
Auto .
its !&lt;iss, but must win Its next two
~'OINITMlltNT- (614) 992-2550
11n1ur•nce.Companies.
g&amp;mes to clinch a spot in the inter·
nlltional semifinal. Today ·it faces
OH
'
·' '
Panama, which beat Canada 6-0
.\
\
I

ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE

s~s.u
· - - - ROYAU: Ao:1iwlod
ltGi&amp;b MiDir, W'tldv •th'tw, from 1be

Moaday'a~eom
- ....II.~JOO.

Mills, Cavs OK five-year contract

99c

from Racbu* of lhe Jatoraatioaal
lh.ol Robin

TORONTO (AP) - Joe Carter
would have gladly traded his fifth
career tluee·homer game b a vic-

Dod1ers 6, Pirates 1
Bobby Cox said.
Gary Wayne (4-3) pitched one
Ore!
Hershiser put down his torThe left-bander allowed three inninf!, while Darren Holmes got
rid
bat
long
enough to end a ~­
runs 011 eight hits, wallced two and the fmal three outs for his 15th
.
g
ame
losing
streak as host Los
struck out four. He also drove in a consecutive save and 18th of the
Angeles won its fiflh straight game.
run with a double.
seasonPadres 7, Cl!rdlnals 5
· Hershiser (9-12) won for the.
That tind of performllllU was
Phil Plantier's first career grand first time. in five starts since his
just what the Braves, who won for slam highlighred host San Diego's complete-game 15-1 victory at San
the 12th time in 14 games, needed five-run first inning.
Francisco on July 26. The right·
as they pursue the Giants, wbom ' Plantier connected off Donovan bander allowed one run in 7 2/3
they play five more times in the · Osborne (10-l), who lasted only · innings, striking out thre.e and:
next 10 days. .
one-lhird of an inning.
walldng none.
,
"From the first pill:h to the last,
Pedro Martinez (3.0) earned the
Tim Wallach's three-run double
he had the concentration and the victory by pitching 3 1/3 no-hit highlighted a five-run third iMing,
energy and the focus of a big game, . . .
ignited by Hershiser' s bunt single.
which it was for us,'' catcher mnmgs.
Damon Berryhill said
Jeff BlaiiSCI" went 3-for-5 and hit
his 14th homer of the season in the
ninth inning to cement the victory. signed,'' general manager Wayne
RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) ' 'Avery threw a great game, ll!ld Chris
Embry
said in a news release MonMills, the Clcvelanit Cava·
it was really just a .mauer of too liers' top
day,
"We
have been impressed
1993 draft piclc, signed a
much BlauSer,'' Giants manager contract wilh
the team for deal with his play in our sunimer pro·
Dusty BalcCr said.
reportedly
worth
$5.2 million over gram, and we look forward to his
The Braves, who have the best five years.
contributions next season."
· .
road record in the majors at 42-24,
Mills said he's happy the con·
While
contract
tetms
w,eren
't
slalced Avery to a 3..() lead in the disclosed by the team, The Plain tract negotiating is over. "It is a
second inning off swter Trevor Dealer reported today that Mills big relief,'' he said. "I've got noth·
Wilson (7-S), who left the game would be paid $650,000 in the first ing hanging over me now ..It was
after four innings with a sore shoul- year to allow the Cavaliers to meet important we ge! this lhing .d~~ so
der.
I wouldn't m1ss any tramm~
salary cap restrictions.
Terry Pendleton singled with NBA
camp.••
Over
the
next
four
years,
the
one out, David Justice walked and paper said, his annual salary would
With Mills signed, the Cavali~
Berryhill sent Pendleton home with balloon to $84S,OOO, $1.04 million, have 11 players under contract
a bloop ~Ingle. Marie Lemlce's sac- $1.24 million and $1 .44 million in
Two players from lasI season's
rifice fly scored Justice, and Avery 1997-98.
roster- Bobby Phills and Jay
.
hit an RBI double off the right field
Mills, the 22nd piclc. overJill, Guidinger - are restri&lt;;ted free
wall
was the Pac-1 0 player of the year agents. Mite Sanders, a starter at
After San Francisco cut the lead last year, leadinJ Arizona in scor- small forward for S I games last
to 4-3 on Robby Thompson's two- ing (20.4 _pomls per game), season, and lillie-used Jerome Lane
run homer in the fifth inning, rebounding (7.9 per game) and free are unrestricted free agents.
Avery gill slrollger, retiring the last throw shooting (83.6 percent) in his
The Cavaliers have IS days to
II batters he faced.
senior year.
match
any offer Phills IX GuidinJer
Espos 1, Cubs 0
Mills will wear jersey number receive. They have no Such opbon
Unbeaten rookie Kirk Rueter 24 for the Cavaliers.
if Sanders or 4tte sign elsewhere. .
started·a triple play, and host Mon"We are deli$hted to have Chris
treal supported him wilh two double plays to beat Chicago.
Rueter (4-0) started the fielding
gem in the sixth inning, snaring a
line drive from Rey Sanchez. The
left-bander, who allowed five hilS
in 8 1/3 innings, relilyed the ball to
shortstop Wil Cordero, who
stepped on second to get Steve
Lake before tagging losing pitcher
'
Greg llibbard (10·10).
Tim Spehr had an RBI single in
lhe second . .
Rockies 3, Phillies 2
Dante Bichette's home run in
the 13111 inning lifted visiting Colorado to its fifth straight victory.
After Roger Mason (4 -1 0)
struck out Eric Young to, start the
13th, Bichette hit the next pitch .
over the right-center field fence to
snap the 2-2 tie.
·

SUNDAY'S POWELL'S AD
SHOULD ·HAVE READ
PRINGLE$ 6.0·7.5 oz.

BuebaU

NATIONAL LEAGUE

.nz

I don't know."

- • Transactions • -..:

• Baseball • -

TPhilodeJpN· .••••.•.••71 trr .624
SL lAW ...........••..69 l6
-·········67
l9 .411
.531
Chioqo.._.
_ _ _•...61 64
PlttaboqJI ...•...•..•..!9 66 .473
FloDdo •..•...•...•..•..!2 12 .419
Now Yadl ............41 12 .339

him or anything," Pugh said.
"They've bad a tough season and
maybe they took it the wrong way,

•

Call Now. For Sunday,
August 22nd
.
.

.

.

'

POINT PLEASANT
MIDDLEPORT

..J!!j St.,•

-

I

�~-

,.

-

-

'

Ohio

By The Bend

Tlte Daily Sentinel

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Tuesday, August 24, 1993
Page 6

,

The

RATES

To place

an ad
Call992-2156

COPY DEADUNI!
Monday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

TALENT SHOW WINNERS· Pictured are
· tlie first place willners iD the talent show at the
Meigs County J'alr Thursday afternoon. The
winneri were singing, over 16, Missy NeutzUng;

singing, under .16, Amanda Muss~r; mis~ella·
neous, over 16, Mathan Baloy; miScellaneous,
. ·under 16, Amber Perkins and J.R. Rile; dan~e,
Chelsea Montgomery and Pe1111Y Smith.

• Ad. oullide the eounn- your ad nuu •n•t be prepaid
• Reoebe cfitoout for IWb paid ia ad.,aoce.
• Freo Ado: Gi-way nd Fou.d ado u.d.r 15 wordt will be
nn 3 da)'lat 1110 charwe.
• Price of ad for aU capltalle~~&lt;on lo cloW.Ie ,.... of ad coot
• 7 poiDIIiDo type oaly ....!
.
• S...liaelil .... r•pouihie for enon alter rant day (c:t.ck
for..,.., r~rot day ad ..... la paper). CaD befo,. 2:00p.m.
day after·,...at.ion to .Ue correction
• Ad. that atilt he pOl in .dn.nce .are:
Card of Thelu
Happy Ado

Johnson Upton ~nd Austill T. Sayre, U to ui
months; Breana Dane Hemsley and James Dale
Hart;' 18 montbs to l years; Am.a nda Marie
Larkins and Douglas Jenkins, Jr., 2 years;
Rebecca HanstiDe and Daniel Allen Buckley, 3
years:'
·

PRETTY BABIES • Pictured are the wiDners
of the Meigs County Fair Pretty Baby Contest
with their careta~ers. The winners are Grace
Anna Hall and Brandon Mlcbael MarciDko, 0 to
3 months; Asbleigb Noelle Duffy and Cbarley K.
Pyles, 3 to li months; Meaan EUzabeth King and
Heath Dettwiller, 6 to 12 months; Gabrielle

Ia M.aoria•

DAY BI!FORE PUBLICATION

1:00 p.J11. Salutd.ay
1:00 p.JI1. Monday
1:00 p.JI1. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoclay
100 p .m . Thur.day
1:00 p.m. Friday

Tueoday Paper
Wedneoclay Paper
'l'lnln4ay Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.B-12
POLICIES

Gallia Comity

(••••P'

~.WpoH•

992-Mlddleportl

36 7-Cheololre
388-VIalon
245-lloGhade
256-Gtor.. Dlol.
643wbaloi. DloL
379-'l'alnut

Pomeroy

~

.

Hemlock Grange holds regular meeting
Hemlock Giange #2049 held the
regular meeting recently with mas- ter Rosalie Story presiding. Vada
Hazelton was reinstated. Muriel
Bradford reponed on the donations
sent to Kelly Fanns, Friendly Hills
and National and State deaf. Thank
you cards were received from
Kelly Fanns and Friendly Hills.
Special committee report stated
that a resiution is to be sent to the
State Grange regarding sendino
delegates to Ohio State Gran~e.
The legislative report was pertaming to the new budget for Ohto.
Preparations for the fair booth were
made and it was decided to meet
August 14 at 10 a.m. to set up the
exhibiL
Janitors for the next meeting
will be Ron and Doris Eastman .
Birthdays reported for August were
Naomi Reed. Election of officers
for next year was voted upon. All
officers arc to retain th eir offi ces
for one· more year. The vote was
unanimous. Sick reported were Etta
Cullums, Leo Story, Elizabeth
Rob ens, Octa Ward, Dave
McConnayhay and Bernice Hawk.
Officers are:
Muriel Bradford, Women s
Activities Committee; Golda Reed,
deaf chairman; Patty Smith, youth
chairman· Ziba Midkiff, legislative
agent; A~n Lambert, memb~rs~ip
committee; Vada Hazelton, JUmor
leader; Wallace Bradford, agricultural committee; Leota Smith, community service; Sara Cullums,
news reporter; Naomi Reed, INFO;
Harley Haning, traster; Clarence
Story, executive commince.
Contests were judged by Ann
Lambert, Vada Haz elton, and
Golda Reed.
Winners were:

Class A Quilt - Margaret Haning first place; Muriel Bradford,
sec~nd place; Class C Quilt - Sara
Cullums, first place; Craft class F Sara Cullums, first place, table
cloth; Craft class G - Sara CuUums,

Adams accepted
Nicholas Gregory Adams of
Racine, a graduate of Southern
Local High School, 'has been
admitted to Marietta College and ,
plans to enroll as a freshman for
the fall semester, which begins
. August24. .
.
Nicholas is the son of Nancy
Campbell.
It's semantics
Los Angeles {AP) - The pitching coach of the Los ·Angeles
Dodgers, Ron Perranoski, managed
a wry grin when he was told that
southpaw Steve Wilson had spent a
lot of time throwing in a spacious
baSement in his native Canada.

first place, pillow cases; Painting
·oil- Leota Smith, first place, still
life; Naomi Reed, firs[ place, sea
scape; Wreaths - Muriel Bradford,
first place; Rosalie Story, second
place; Eva Robson ; third place;
Toys - Muriel Bradford, first place;
Rosalie Story, second place; Wood
Craft - George White, first place;
Quillows (quilt pillows) - Muriel
Bradford, first place; Rosalie Story,
second place: •Helen Quivey, third
place; Wail Hangings • Muriel
·Bradford, first place; Sara Cullums,
second place; Photos - A-Patriotic,
Rosalie Story, first place; 8 -Captore the Momeilt, Leota Smith, fll'st

614-698-6500

BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeetone,
Dirt, Gr.vel1111d Coal

RIVER VALLEY ·
CONTRACTQRS

2

I would like an interest in your prayers on my
behalf. May God richly bless you, Amen!
Sincerely in Christ
David A. Ried
Reedsville, Ohio

Jn Memory
In loving memory of my son,
JIM EVANS,
who passed
away 5 years
ago, Aug. 24,

'

''
'

Sentinel
Claaaifiede

992-2156

UCINE
MOWER CliNIC
WlliEillUY

Parts alii Slnkt
Mowm • 0.. Saws
Slnttton MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Rapalr Center
PICKUP .nd DEUVERY
Houre till· M-F 1-3 Sat.
Cloeed Sunday
949·2104

.W6/tfn

Sadly missed by
mother,
Evans.

.,•
I

2
CLASSIFIEDS .. .
Your Key to Great Buys

Catch Great
Buy'slo The

Cla11ifiedsl

)

ASpecial Edition In
The.'Daily Sentinel
Wednesday~ September .1,·1993

CLASSIFlEDS
... This Way

••

•

I

I
I

•

·'

'

In Memory

;

1

992-215.6
ASK FOR DAVE or P.J.
'

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST. 25, 1993

I( I

Time to Check
Great Buyo ...
$bon Clasajfiedt

In Loving Memory of
CHARLES F.
PYLES SR.
who pa..ed away
Aug. 24, 1988.
It'• been live year•
eince you pueed
away.
I etlllthlnk of you day
lifter day.
The eorrow and taare
I hold lnelde.
lt'e etlll hard not to
break down and cry.
Your memory etlll
lingere on,
And in that alnca,
PAPA
You'll nav•r really be
gone. .
Sedly milled by
your granddaughter,
Suzanna Evan•

1 Card of Thanks
THE FAMILY OF
CLIFFORD HILL
Wllh tO thank all thOH WhO IUpported Ul
during hlalllnen and death.
A apaclal thank• to thole who took the
time to vtalt, aend ca;·de, ftowere, memorial
glftt, food and prayer..
Thanka to the Rev. Ken Malter and the
Rev. Ken Baker for their com-forting worda
during our molt difficult time.
we wlah to thank Coach Howle Caldwt!l
and the 82·83 Southam Tornldo blekltball
team lor the autographed ball and Coach
for acknow-lldglng the '33 ball t•am.
A apaclal thank• to the Home Health
Nura11, the Racine Emergency Squad and
the doctor• who cared for Clifford during
hlalllnaea.

'

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CAL(ING:

SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Road
POIIttfCiy, Ohla
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992-3470

7nltln

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top to
Bonom

PH. 742·2217
6-3t&gt;-1mo.pd.

OWNER: Jtff Wlck•sitGII
611

13-- I!UW'aDCe
14-- Butineu Traiaiq
15- Scbool• A: hutruction
!&amp;- Radio, TV .t CB Repair
17- Mioc:ella_..
IS- 'I'an loci To Do

, I

In Memory of
JACK F. KING, SR.
Died Aug. 23, 1987
Still missing you,
Wife, Joan

In Memory Of
CHARLES F.
PYLES, SR.
Fathar, I am only
human. I need the
touch of human
companlonehlp.
Sorely, I mill thoaa I
love who are with
Thee.
I pray, 0 JIIUI, that
· Thou wilt reveal to
meuntaen
pra11ncee. Hllp me
to know how cloll
my loved omit ar.•
For If they lfl with
Thee, and Thou art
with me, I know that
they cannot be
far away.
,
Make r.al for mt that
contlct of eplrlt with
aplrlt that will reeltlbllah the loet
fetlowahlp lor which
myhtartyeame.
Give to me filth
ehlnlng through my
eara. Plant paace
and hope within ·my
heart.
Point mt with Joy to
tht gr.at r.unlon.
But until than,
enable me to live
happily and worthily
of tholl who are
with Thae. In the
Name of Him who Ia
tht Lord of Uft, I
pray, Amen.
Sadly mlelld by
family.

Hoy 4 Grala

41- Ho""' for Reat
42- Molrile Hom• for Real
43- F•nu for Rent
44- AparlnMHil for Rmt
45- Fumi.hed 8001111
46- Spaee for Rant

AuiDiforSale
Ttuckl for Sale
v.~" 4 'I'D'o
Motorc)'c._
Boat.t 4 Moton for Sal.
Auto Paru A: Acce010rieoJ
Auto Repair
Ca.. piq~-DI

Saocl.tF~

.

53--Aotliq...
54- Mloe. Mon:luondioo

SS- BuiJdiac Supplieo

Independent Mary
Kay Beauty
Conaultantl
Carolyn McCoy
1182-5082
Sandy Hendaraon

(614)
667·6628

Eloclrieal 4 R.fo·lpnotio~
General Baulintl
Mabile Home Repair
Uphobtery

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

982·3647

4-19-93-lln

~

~

1n11mo.

812183

POOR BOY TIRES
ORIGINAL EQliPMENT REPLACEMENT nRES
2Cis-71R11"11gor Pmrlmll RWL
205-75Rt4" 11a- P.w X11IJ RWL
215-751 5" Flreatone OWL
235-75R15" Flentlotw OWL
-CALl FOR PRICING"EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS" 81281113

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

7ntmo.

446-7612 .
Fax/Voice 446-7612

....

~,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
.aoom Additione
-Gutter Work
-Eiectrlclli •nd Plumbing
.aoollng
-lnlllrlor &amp; Extwlor
P•lnting
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215
Pom81'0y, Ohio
ll-lt&gt;-112~ln

WHALEY'S AutO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
IIW I 1111 Pllrl JOI
.W UIIIIIIOtiU

992·7011 or
992-5551
or TOll flEE
l.aOD-141·0070

DUWII,OHIO
7131/91/tln

FREE ESnMATES
Taka the pain out of
painting. Let me do II
foaou.
VERY R SONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·985-4180
811218311 mo. pel

~ii
EAGLE LAIIES
'/,

~

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5-1 0 pm
Fri-Sat 5- t1 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM••d
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
'
BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD 'nES
12-30-92-lln

po

EuanW.C

52- Sporllrtc Gooclo

,..

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

....

Plwabla1 4 B ..llrtl

Toarfrll

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

INTERIOR

"Ad Specialtiee"
In Memory

3S- Lo10 .t Ac...,.

CaUTodQior

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE.
WORK

LINDA'S
PAINTING

622 Jay Drive, Gllllpolil, Oh.

2

~
WaDted to Buy
Li.....k

.....

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

),

32-- Mobile Ho- for Sal•
ll- Fonoo for Sale
34.- B..a- Buildlap

(304) 773·5533

RICHARD ROBERTS

1988.

J

.

.

or

WICK'S HAULING

11- Help 'I'anted
12- Situolio01 'IV etecl

WeHtattrs

I

•

12·5-tln

,\ I I I I ' I • 1&lt;

4.7- Waatecl to R•t
4.8- Equipmeat for Beat

Authori:Nd: Brtgga &amp;

It

Refer to King James Version,
Romans 8:28, Acts 2:17 and Habakkuk 2:2
I thank God for giving me a new wife in the
Lord, and blessing us with a lovely daughter.
I'm tru~ting in the Lord, for my other lovely
daughter, to restore visitation rights with.
God gave me a· vision of this child, appearing to .
me a lovely lady of approximately twenty-eight .
years old, in Heaven.
It is my desire, my life will prove out faithful to
have the privilege of being there also.
And we know at all things work together for
good to them that love God, to them who are cal).ed
according to His purpose ..
Refer to Romans 8:28
And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith
God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and
your sons and your daughters shall prophesy and
your young men shall see yisjons, and your old men
shall dream dreams .. :
Refer to Acts 2: 17
And the Lord answered me, and said, write the
vision, and make it plain upon tables, that he may
run that readeth it.
Refer to Habakkuk 2:2

Uoennd end Bonded

PH. 614·9f2·5591

to place your order or
more information

l

Trusting In Jesus

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

VIDEO TRANSFERS

•

.

B&amp;G
Trucking
614-698-3290

Call

'
Master SgL and Mrs. Searle L. NelLEE NELSON
son
of Route I, Point Pleasant,
Marine Lance Cpl. Lee A. NelW.Va.,
recently reponed for duty
son, daughter of retired Air Force
with Headquarters and Service ~at­
talion, Camp H.M. Smtth, Hawan.
The 1987 gt'aduate of Point
Pleasant High School of Potnt
Pleasant, W.Va., joined the Marine
,
Corps
in March, 1990,
·
place; C-Grange Connection, Le~ta
Smith, first place; D-Famtly
Album, Leota Smith, fll'st place; E·
Echoes From .the Past, Rosalie ·
.
.' .
Story, fiJ'St place.
During the lecture Jesste Whtte
read "The Windows of the
Grange"; Rosalie Story read "Difference Between Growth and
Aging"; and Vada Hazelton· r~ad
"The Building and Wreckmg
Crew". Skits were performed _by
Muriel Bradford and Helen Qutvey.The meetmg
· cIose d m
. regu Iar.
form and refreshments were
served.

9- Waateclto Buy

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

sE~~1m:Es

2-lnMOOiory
3- A.nnouocemen\11
4-- Givoaw•y
S- Happy Ado
~Loot and Found
7- Loot and Found
S- Public Sale .t
Auction ·

667..CooMUo

BUU.OOZING

KIDDIE TRACTOR PULL WINNERS ~ Winners or the
week-long kiddie traclor pull competition at the Meigs County
Fair were,1rom left: Stacy Smith, second In the 35·55 pound class;
Trav~ Willford, first in the 35-55 pound class; Ryan Sloblirt, rarst ·
in the 56-75 pound class, and Deana Pullins, second iD tbe 56-75
pound class. First-place winners won a $25 gift certlficate·rrom
· O.K.'s Farm Toys, a trophy and hat from Sugar Run MillS and $10
from the fair board. Second-place wiDners won $5 from tbe .fair
board and a hat rrom O.K.'s Farm Toys. Sllown also is Brent
Zirkle, left, from Sugar Run MillS, and Dallas Weber or O.K.'s 1.
Farm Toys.
,

895-Lotart
937-BuiTalo

742-lludaad

Painting, Experienced
FI'M Ellimatas
61281
61 4-446-8568 1mo.

In the service

882-New Dnen

949-Rac:lDe

I I I;\ I 'I I' I' I II '

'

GET RESIJl,TS • J'A&amp;T!

67 S-PI:. Plea••nt
•US-Loon
576-Applo Goove
773-Muon

985-Cheoter
843-Portland
247-Lotart Falo

p.,.forSale
M..kaii.,........,
Fnoito 1: Veptableo
For Salo or Tndo

_ _ __, 36-- Real&amp;.... w...~oc~

Me14!1 County M880n Co., WV

Rernode6ng and Repair

FHA
AWARD • Melissa Guess of Tuppers
Plains won the reCOKJlition of outstandiDg FHA member, and was
presented a troplly by Janice Weber, llome economics-teacller iD
the Eastern Local School District, at Saturday nigllt's youth recognition program at the Meigs County Fair.

Bulletin Board-w.$6.00/lnch per day
f--,----~~;c;=;;,..._______,_

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Yard Sal•

1993 Meigs County
Fair Memories
Order Video Tapes of
the following event:
Demolition Derby ·

Over 15 Words
$4.00
s .20
$ 6.00
$ .30
$9.00
's .42
$13.00
s .60
$1.30/day
$.05/day
RateS are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

charged for each day as separate ads.
Buolnno Card-.w.$17.00/lnclt por momth

Clouified pages cooer tlae
follOUiing telephone e:~&amp;changes ...

• A eluoillod adoenil'""••t plae&lt;od Ia tbe Tbe Dally SontiDel
Cluolflod Dloplay, Buala- Card or I..pl
Noticeo) wlllaloo appeula tbe Polat Plouaat Ropter aad
tlte Callipolie D.ily Trib1tlle, reacb.iat; onr 18,000 boJna

MARKET LAMBS • Macyn Ervin and Rebecca Scott were
named graud champion and reserve champiop, respectivel;y, in the'
market lamb category iD Tuesday's Metgs County Jumor Fair
Sheep ShoW. Sbcnrn are, from left: Ervin 1993 Junior Fair Queen
Stephanie Sayre and Scott.

Rato

Days
Wonls
1
15
3
15
6
IS
10
15
Monthly 15

ASK FOR CHRIS

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable •
Rates
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3-4-83- 1 mo.

Sllade River Saddle Sllop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

. Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406
318/lln

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EVERY THURSDAY
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This ad good lor 1
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Lie. No. 0051-342

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • .Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
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111241112/lln

614·949·28.0 1. 949·2860
or 985·3839
(Ho S•ntlaJ Calla!

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..::;

2/121821tfn

QUALITY WORK
&amp; GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLQ
(614) 992-7474
Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 189

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
flumblng
.......

..

;a~
:;:;:.

38904 Le•dl•l

CreekRHd
Middleport, o•io
614·992·7144

4/29/93 tftt

H WAR
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
•nd T!IACi&lt;HOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES eel
TRAILER SITES
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMEBTOHEwTRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838 :

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paln1 Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing

fREE IIIIIWEI
50734 ....., ......~~.

lo•• ....... 0 .. 45741
985·4181
8-4-83-tfn

PRIVATE
MATHEMinCS
INSTRUCnON
"Mathematics is the
alphebet wnh which
God has written the
Universe." • Gali/eo
By Topic
By Appointment
949-2814
7122/1mo.pd.

ROIERT BISSEll
CONRRUCTION

~ward L Wrflesel

•New Homes
eGarages
.Complete
Remodeling
' Stop. &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

NEW-REPAIR

9·5·4473

949-2168

7122193

Middleport, Olllo 45760
(6 I 4) 8U·5264
&gt;W3111n

ROOFING
,...,.,..1

Ur•

We hiiVo • l~~rge etock of
n•m• brond
•nd
If WI don't hiiVI, - can get II.
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MABON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL

Gutters
. DownaJ19utB
G\ltter Cleaning
Painting

304-773-5533

2nd Location c.. l Lon Neol
~eon, W.Va. 304.f75-333t
Maelilrcard and VISA IOC-t»tad.

FREE ESTIMATES
3-11-13-tln

1+tf1t

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

' "'

••

l

\

�'
Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

rt, Ohio

Pomeroy-.Middle

An 110 unce 111 e11ts

34

' 44

BuiiiiMI
Building a

1983

Apartment
torRent

.The

1983

Autoa for Slle

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

3 Announcement•
DoiMII -

--

.....

Yow A-. 1•IONII 5010 Ex·

--8o11Yrs.Pr-Co.
- · 12.01 ..... eoz.
llln.

Loto &amp; ..,.... tor home conolrucllan on Rayburn Ad,
- " " ' llllrlctliiM, county

wller, lnfonnallon IMIIed on ,...

q.-, S04-17J.1212,

ple8M

tlnglo- trolllro.

L.Aina·Holr, To Good H-,_ 114{
halo"-lo good homo. •••
•*4414040 .
Frot To Good HoM In Country,
Port llonmon Shophord, Port
NotWtglon Elkhouncl, Very
~"'t With Chlldron, 114-3

~117.

36
"We give big pensions so em ployees won't sa~.
what's on the ir m inds at their

ret~rernen t party .

t=========:'l--............................::1

Fumllhld
Room1

no

. t--·
-

Child coro n-d

Real Estate
Wanted

Rentals

Merchandise

Port Cl- Dog, 3 YNro Old,
Watch Doai lled&amp;um
Sized, lllxocl DoG- To Good
Homo In Country, 1114-245-1148
Good

B-••••·
6

Lost&amp; Found

Found: Raccoon Crook Pork,
Small Black Male Dog, White

Chttt, 1144'19-8318.
Lost: female "BNOII, top of
Kono/ lothtn Ad., rM-815 4407.
Loot: lloltlrith s.tt.r Loot Soon
In Bladon, lltroorvlllo Road 6
Hamlnon Rot~d AtN, 81~
2921 Doytlmt: 614-446-4748

Motor Starters Wllh 115 Yon
Control, Control Dlvlc• Such
AI Eytt And Proximity

SWh-. 111111 8o Ablo To Rood
El.-tricol Drowtngo. Knowledge
01 PLC'olo Doolroblo. Poolloiit
On Stcond And Thlnf Shift. Pty
Aott SIOjl To 10.55 Dtpandlng
Evening~ .
On Exporionco. n lnloroott&lt;f,
Loot: On Bladon Rood, 1 Llrgo Plout Sand Rnumo To: Tht
Molo Dog, Light Br"'!fn NHd Plllobury Company, P.O. Box
Mtclcatlon For Ear~; t Female 151, Welleton, Ohio .t5682, An
Dogallue HHiar, Black &amp; Grey, AA!EED Employtr.
.
114-258-11160.
.
FLATBED
DRIVERS.C.nflnol
Frolghl Ctnlors hu on ·
Yard Sale
7
tunKy tor tlttbed drlvtro thlt It
uconcl to nonel Do you DWn

21

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

drfver ....

rou _.,. lnttrnted

In? Thon col Conflnol today tt
HOG-92H222 end ook tor nm.
ALL Yon! Sllot Mull Bt Ptld In WE
HAVE IT ALLI
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the day before the ad le to Nn.

auction

service.

Ucenud

1168,0hlo 6 Wnt VIrginia, 304'17:1-5765.

l.ocol V.ndlng Routo: t1,200 A
-~354.
Potnlll. Se11. 1 Vondlna Aouto: For IIIII.
lllrong. Solid Colli Buolnoot.
High 'Traffic, l.ocol
N&lt;iW Equlpmont. 1.-.214Ytnd.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Now Common:lol- Unlto,
lrom SIH.OO, ~po, L.ot-,
Ac-, monlhty PI~•
tow u S18.00, catl tOdty FREE
NEW . ~ Cototog, t-...&amp;2- ·
t1117.

l.oi:tt-.

Junk hi Stll Uo Your Non-

Wortdng· Major Appliances,
Color
TV'1,
Refrigerators,

fi'MDrl

VCR'a, Mlcri'M'IVIS,

Ak Condhlonors, Gultor Ampt,
Etc. 614-256-1238.

Tellphont Sklllo, Some Wonl
Procaolng 6 Typing, Fui~Time.
Sind Anwno fo: CLA 213, c/o
Oollloollo Dolly Tribuna, 8211
Third Avon .., Golilpollo, OH
45631.
T-h« Noodo BobJolttor In
Own Homo. Cloy School AMuat Have Aeterllhell. 114-2511011.
.
&amp;

TRUCK
DRIVERS
Umfttd
J &amp; D'e A...to Parta and S.IVIgl, Opanlngo Whh Jocllaon County
alto buying junk cart &amp; truc~a. Trucking Compan_y. No On!'
304·773-5343.
night Tnovtl. An Excolllnt OpFor
L.ong.llnn
Junk cars, any condhkln, 614- ponunlty
Employment
For QUiollflod
992·7553.
c
Drtvarw. B.nefH• Anllabte.
Wanted atandlng Umber, top Sind Rttume To: DRIVE'!,~,
prlc11 paid, fr• a1tlmat11, P.O. Box 101, Jocllaon, un
llcenae 1: Cll'llflad logging, 45640.

304-895-3055 01895-3838.

W110ocl to buy- goocj uoocl clr·
culatlng natural g11 heater, 1141192-2529.

w.roocl to buy: good, uoocl tur-

nlture, 61...,992·7508.
Top Prlc• Paid: All Old
Coins, Gold Aln~•· Sliver Colne,
Gold Coln1. II . .S. CoIn Shop,
151 Second AlltniJII, G1UipoU1.

u.s.

18

make any such pra1a~nca.

.

This newspaper wll not
knowingly accept

advertisements for real 811111
which Is In vlotallon .. tho
' law. OYr readers are hlraby

,._r

lntonned thtt olldWallngl
advertlsad In this
opportunity basil.

31 Homes for Sail
2monl.ltM-1171--.
bed- - . lull .3 Bod,_. FA, Anochocl
Gof191, 2 11:., lulldl'!ll _~fto,
G•rdan AOUie 110 Aru, f12.100,

I'M 311 IMIOI.

3 lied,_., 2 llolho, 2 Cor AI·
tochod Ooroge, Outbuilding,
Bldwoll-llchool-,lt431JI.71104.

holl 111111 ol• 2 cor
........ nice rwighbo~aod on

nlc:e ltvtl lot. For oppl. 114-446cltan homM, ~ c.ll 11+ 8317.
1192·7030.
COUNTRY HOliES /ACREAGE
Cutlo-flng, oldlng, Mphoft Extra Llrg8 Contom:pory Homo
Wantad to buy: UMd mobile Mlllng, palnDn~ery. On 17.8 AC- 11/L WHh 2 lomt,
FrM &amp;tlmltll.
or Pool, 2 Pondo, S110ii000; 4 Bodo
homu. 814-446-0175
17M422.
"""" - . 2 112 otho, Llrgo
Party Room, AI On 4 Acroo 11/L
E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. TOI&gt;I&gt;Ing, 1140,000; 110 Aero 11/L Form
Trimming, TrM Remov11, ~ge Whh Bom • 30 nttolllll. S11 o ooo;
Employment Services Trimming. F,.. Ettlmetn1 614- .. Acrlll MIL $30,000j All 01 The
3BHV5TAftor 4p.m.
Above WHhln 3 Mlloo Of Rio
Oenorot Molnttnonco, Polnl!ng1 G..- • PI- Coli am eon.
11 Help Wanted
Yard Work Wlndowo Wunta noll AI Donno SUmmtro :.-::
Gutta,. ClaaiHid Light Hauling, For lloro lnlwmotlon. I
AVONI All ortoo. NMd t!drt Commtrictl, Atoldtnllll, StOYO: 112111.
monay or want a caf'Mr, tither 6t4-441-tl56.
Gollloolll .....,., oM brtck, 3br.,
way-call MarUyn. 304-882-2645
tun buement, comer lol, _..
or 1-800..992~356.
Goorgn Portable Sawmill,
port, now ook ooblnoll In
haul your 1oa1 to the mill Jullt kh-.
ctlllrol IINdnglcoodna.
10 Demons1rators NMdld To coii3Q4-67S·ih7.
·
Somorvlllo Attly. :J04:117So30:10
Sell Toys &amp; Gltts For Christmas,
No Colltctl~ Or Dtllvtring, Home care lor your loved one In or 304-1714431!'
$500 Kit Sup td Coli llory 6t4- t1mlly core holno In Mlddloport, Llko Now 2 . . ._
Homo,
814-992·5042.
446·921i4·9 .11.
t31,500, a...,.m $4,000,
AVON I All Aruo I Shlrlty lntartor/axtlflor painting, root 1310.21 Monthly Poymonl, 114Spurs, 304-ll75-t429.
painting, hlndwnh hoUIH a 441-1111~ N, Or 81Wt4 4101
mobil homoo, odd )olio. 15yro An.r7P.M.
Cardinal Freight Carrlers.O.T.R. 11p., IXC. tefa. frM eMimatea.
Drivers wanted tor a new ter- 304475-4933.
Ranch oty1o brtck, 13 largo living.- &amp; kncr-, 3br,
minal In Hurricane, WV, mutt
have 1yr. O.T.R. experience pull· Mise Paula'• Day Care c.nt• 1 1112 botho, -hod gorogo, tun
lng a van traUer, good a1anlng Block Wtlt 01 HMC 0!1 Joallaon , . _ , ., otoroge llillldfng, 11pay, lite model equipment , Blue Plkt M·f 6 A.M. -5:30 P.M. If boy born~. Rl 2, rlptoy Ad,
Crou Blue Shllld, Inc., ltop ott Quathy And Exparionco II Tho 4ml " - Pt. ......,., .30W711pay, lay onr pay, breakdown f1 Concern For V0411 Chlkl'•
poy, company paid ptntlon, 401 Care. Call Ue For A Vlelt. Infant
k plan, home most WHkenda. /Toddlers Bt4-44W22?. p,... 32 Mobile Hom••
Call Boyd Adklnt, 600-929-6222. chooltrs /School Ago 114-446for Sail
11224.

don'

--

Ea rn FuU-Tlme Ply For P1rt~
Time Work As A Chr'-'mas

Around
Tho
Worid.
Oamonltralor. Fr• $500 K" No
Collecting Or DeUverlng, Aleo
Booking Panltt, Coli 614-2465039.

Woroocl to do- bobytlttlng In my

t185.14 .... _,.., 14'home on Nicholas Roac:t, eel• mobile homo, lncludM dtllvory,
tlllocl nur- old, 114-111241107.
oomplolt MI.YP, oklrtlng, ltopo
•nd e monthe lal nnt, 1-aoo.
Will bobytlt In my home, • - 127-6621.
to .chools, hive reterencea.
304-675,.2184.

'111 SchultZ, 12!~-~- bed...,.,

=·

cent,.l •lr, rw:rnpralor ana
otovo, wuh«, dry•, undlntln~ condhlon, 114-M•
1113 Palm Hlrbour, 21XU, klCil

drywall, ThermGPIM wlnclowe,

Ml.up 8ncl
m.- -lola,,_.,_,
delivery,

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

....,.n

33 Fanna for Sale
30ocro_lor_ 2112out A.. GnndL 111111 Ail.

~- -~~-=·

11o-'

.:zse-1111.

'

=

Upright .Ol"- - · 1Unt

•potll

a uiiiRioo. ~-~-.em

llll-

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

-i""'"'

J.C. PonnyFluto,
llu
114(1100.
INIIIy 1100,
Wll 1011 hlr $400. . 77W432.

61 t=ann Equipment

=-

n·na mooo,looit,
eMl

•s

.JIOU

17

tKt17U

QJ 10

+ID 7

1512

•u

can.

23lldl14 '"*-II
•• , .....llone
32Goll_.

3 ActofNoniD
4 Traploll

34 Pltl(llllnl

dlllltf

.olet.-t .

36Pro- (lor
the 111M

.AKQI5Z

1:30P.U.
Plcii.Up, Cttt 111m 3243 An.r

22 Nllal*arot

33 TJP~Offtlll

SOliTB

t4

• Cllul

betnt)

+AQJD

Welt
p. .
p. .
p. .
p. .
p. .
p. .

HE CAN'T STAND
WHAT TH' REVENOOERS
DONE TO HIS STILL !!

PAW'S BIZ.NESS
IS AT A
STANDSTILL

7 ..;. -

omc.

.

::==::::·.:.::...:::,::::::·--

•=

10xf. 1':7

.\lg

•LlPPI•·

c:"J.'...

-0

a!"

$210. -

7

~ cone~.,

01•-

-lrlc,

- .............. _

····-

=!r..

318-8311.

:,P,EANUTS
MA't'BE I COULD ATTAC~

MISS DAVIS QUIT TEAC~ING
TWO 'TEARS A60 ..SI-IE GOT
MARRIED, AND ~AS A NEW BAB'I'

MISS DAVIS 15 GOING TO
6E SURPRISED WI-lEN S~E
6ETS ~IS BOOK REPORT ..

A ''CONGRATULATIONS"
CARD TO TI-lE REPORT:.

11181 - k l 414 LTD, bolt
drlvo, 3100 mlloo, IIIIa , _,
11600, .14-112-77111.

NOT IF '(OIJ'!(E ST AllTING WIT~

Yomoht Blootor :100, 1182
KDX 1'/S Kow-kl dlltblko. 111-3m.
;
250 Hondl ~y 1810
Evonlngo: t14 3118-ttU.
:

Allp881

IwiJDted to bear.

sur.

12 Fl. AlumiNim iloot Wllh Ill·
tory, Troy llotor, Otro, h2f,
. .ztWISZ Aftor I P.ll.
.
1411. Y-bottom otumlnum

''

J

. ..

S·24

'

)BORN LOSER
~ 51(,1(, ex
51.#1111~1~

4
. 48

:318=8~~~~
· --------4-

'

TilE. ICJ'ltJI.Et.l

:, 4

If Y()} fm. ll\to.T
~V~WJ'i

IT...

!
.i
;

\o.E~

ENM?

..

,..
. 'If}(:( WEU., ~...

WMYotl'l'

M01t players would wiD the flnt
trick and .Immediately start drawiDC
trumps. But when tbey break 4-1, the
brakes come oa. Suddeuly tbey realbie
there Ia DO way to recowr. Two ma·
jor-sult tricks must be loet.
U there Ia a trump Joaer, tbe COD·
tract baa but two chances: an lllllllr.ely
tda&amp;leton spade lr.IDc. or the player
with four trumps bavlDg the spade
lr.lug and at moet tbree diamonds.
The lr.ey play II to ruff a dl•tnoatl at
trick two. Draw tbree I'OIIIItlll of
trumps. er- tod:,:a witb a club
and ruff tbe last
• Cub all the
clubl before pvlDg West tbe lead witb
1 trump. U your luck IIID, be will bate
to lead a spade any from the lr.IDc·
Keep an eye 0t1 bow the cards may
Ue.

AuQ. 24, 1993

~~~U-~![i~~~~

ITODIA1!"S HISTORY: On this day in
British forces invaded Washington, D.C., burning the Capitol, the
White House and most other public

,....,,_.;,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _"riT,nnAv··~ BIRTHDAYS: Malcolm
~E

euT M( PET LIZi&gt;I&lt;D UIC:Ee&gt;

ALWAY6CRIE:6

WHEN 'THI:'T" 8ECDM5
e.XTINCT.

iOW.ATO-I Dtf-lC&amp;lUR
N0VIe6a-l 1V.

PREviOUS SOLUTION: "I'm In the bell lhllplt of my ll!e, and that
lncludeo my brain." - (Philadelphia Phllloo oulflelder) Lenny DykllrL

Rearrange . letttrs of
0 lour
ocrombl!td words

Campera&amp;
t,totor Homes

1173 Dodgo motor homo. eome wCMlc, aaoo. m.G.a4.
21' Cloto A llotor - .
Oontrotor, Air Cond, . . . _ e;
-Condition, ..,500 , , . _

L AR P 0 l

I~ i i \ I
I " r I I I )..
0
1T

K I L S Y

I

A PRINT NUMBERED
.::1' LETTERS

(1898-1989), editor and writer;
Cooney (1956·), boxer, is 37;
Guttenberg (1958·), actor, is 35;
Ripkin Jr. (1960·) , baseball player,
33c Marlee Matlin (1965·), actress, .
28; Reggie Miller (1965·), basketball
player, is 28.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in
Davey' Lopes of the Los Angeles
'Dodgers set a major-league
by
38th

-·

..

ASTRO-GRAPH

-na

Dovto
lit- Ancl
Vecuum. C..Mt ...,..,, ,,..
Plck.Up· And OeUwerY: G••e-

Crook Rood, 114

~114.

ox- :.:":.r=
2414152.

:::.~.
• .., .-

82

Plumbing &amp;
Hilling

84

Electrtcal I
Refrigeration

T~l

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

_...lzlna

Ron'o TV llwvloo,
In Zonltlt olio -Inti moil
othtr brondl. Houoo .... IPIIIIInOI .......... WV
30W7HIII Ohla IM'141-1411.
Septic Tonk PUIIIDintl . . Cloltll
Co. RON EVANS lNTEAPitiSU,
Jeo-.,OH-:174121.
•WII build pltlo - , ~

. .

'

(Feb. 21l-March 20) Your compet:'

envelope to Aslro·Graph . clo lh:s newspa·
per. P.O. Box 4465, New. York. N.Y. 10 163.
Be sure to state your zochac s1gn.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl._23) Ideas and con·
~epts that are of SIQM111cance to y~u at th1s

today than usual. 11 someone throws down
the gaunllel, you're not likel y to ignore the
challenge.
.
ARIES (March 21·Aprlll9) tn order 10 grat·
i1y your mental and physical restlessness,

,...

'' .DOING."
~· -

. $1.25 and a long, self·addresse~ . stamped tive spirit could be aroused much easier

ume are also rele vant to persons With whom some type of intensive activity migh t be
you are involve d. Be sure everyone treats required today . Try things th~t olfer ale-

them w:th the respecnhey deserve. .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your l:nanc:al
!rends looK lavorable today and you .shculd
be able to do spmeth:ng worthwh:le thai

.

mowr .

~'Birthday

••

ments o1 friendly competition .
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Today you
might do bener tor yourself in joint endeav·
ors than you will with your independent

could be of benel1t to you matenally. Make It incursion s into the commerc i al wo rld .

a priority.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov : 23-Dec . 21)
Independence Will be Ol :mportance IO you
Ieday. so don't tel others establ:sh or lay out
Wedneodoy. Aug. 25, 1993
your agenda for you. Do what you want to
do when you want to do rt.
. .
vf.,ur probabililie&amp; tor Increased earnings CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-~an. 19) Ma:nta:n
l~ok very good lor the year ahead . You contact with Ieday's events, but do not try to
s hould fare well whether working for others manipulate them . II_you lei na ture lak.e !IS
course. your probab:hlles lor success w:ll be
or for yourself .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapl. 22) You may have greater.
an opportunity today to finalize a ma.rter thai AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Ftb. ,19) This Is a·
affects you and others to everyone s !IIlilS· good day to touch bases w:lh two fnends
taction .. II will fi e up to you . however. to you haven't seen too much ollately. Ideally
&lt;lesign lhe blueprint. Virgo, tteal yourself IO . it would be very nice il you could arrange
a · b:rthday gift. Send lor your Astro-.Graph , something for all three ol you to get logeth•
predictions for the year ahead by ma:llng e~.\

"

I

I'

· SCUM LETS ANSWERS
Medi~m • Bogey • Lobby - Redden - BE DOING
Alter sitting through a lengthy panel discussion lover·
heard one bored fellow comment: "Conferences are a
, Place where people talk abou1 things they should BE

BASEMENT
WATEAPIIOOFINO
UncondhloMI Hlollmt ......,..
110. Local ........... lurnlohod.
Coli 1-t00.217-Gill Or t14-2n0411 Aaalrl WllotpiOOfti'IJ. btobllohtd' 11178.

.

by filling in the missing words

Co~'ley

Home.

.

Complete tho chuckle quolod

l......L-..L.......I-..1..-''--' you develop from stop No. 3 below.

Improvements

..,

I

ME S U B E
~-''TI....:::."'I•.::...:;I:...::;.,hr=--~r--l 0
1
•

Serv ices

CUrtlo 1-0tlliWII&amp; No
Job TO. lla Or Smell, YM,. Ex·
aerilnDI bn Oldlr INIWr
H-. Addft-, Fo-tono,
Aoollng, KllchtM lllolho. lnourod, l'roo EOIImt'"' 114-21J.

Two fellows were standing

at the bar. The first fellow says:

"Boy, your hands really shake.
How much do you drink?" The
., second fellow replies: "Not
much. I -··- -·· of ~."
7

1332.

81

the

be-

low to form four words.

I

11

.ru...,.,.AND WINTHROP

llow goo tonkt, one ton truc11
whttlil. ,.dlltoro. _.,
14c. Di R Auto. AIDiov. WV. 372-3931 or 1.-m:tal.
nRE EXPRESS: Ouollly l*d
nrtt Guor- 'TIMiuetnde
To Cl.oOOo From Our 211h Y-,
Wo Woro To Ao/Tiro You MYlar &amp; Alholll, OH.
-

79

PU.

p. .

A crucial skilllD bridge II visloa. ID
trylug to anticipate .,..lble map, I
- pictures lD my llliDd'a eye !ritb the
cards ptllltloned lD a particular way.
But wbatever worts for you ll·flne. .
To test your visiOQ.Iry powen, COV·
er the Eut-West cards. You reach Ills
beartl and West leads tbe dlamoad
queea. Piay oa.
Tbe auction w.u good, If sllchtly
convoluted. North couldu't liw an ImND
ILR
RPH
DFCHA
mediate poaltlve to two clulis, becallltl ·. ' I Z A
· bla l(llde suit W&amp;lll't good enoaah·
Three dWnODdl w.u fourtb-sult forc- · vLIJI
I Z A
ND
z CJZGH I PH A H
IDI, aaldDI for more lnfonnatiOD. Af.
ter Soutb bid tbree bearta, Nortb tem· W L FIE
CHLCJH
LI
YLRP
porized wltb four clulte. When Nortb
bid four hearts, Soutb kDew tbat bla
DNOHD
EHR TZNTHO
zao
,;,;,tnJer had spade lolien, 10 be cue-bid
~pades. That .,.a all Nortb
XNJJHO.'
ALDD
CHALR.

1~~ . N\t:i$ OF POMPtl\,

75 Boats &amp; Motora
tor Salt

02711.
11111 Flbtrglloo 11'Sklllool, 1:10
HI'\ 110 Djion $1,960 114.«h Aft &amp;'30 1-:J -;.~
or : ' '""'"r

p. .
p. .

By Pltllllp Alder

.

4.1 Mercury motor, lnllllli',oovor, tptro tin. i:ID404-'-4iiU.
1727.
I
16 Pt. lUck Croft, t10 HP EvlnNell, Juot Tunoct.up. .,.._

Pia

ine~~s?

ExtendM Cab, ..~ .......

251-6434.

1!'.ul

How do we• learn

11188 Fold _ XLT 'U~ __ •i4
Automatic, Running ..,,...,

cc,

.
at the

Opening lead: +Q

1983 11-10 811-, Good ~
'""" 12,1100, 614-446-llt29.
'
1891 Ford Ranger XL, Atldnil:
'P,5DO, 814-441.cJ731.

210 Whlll Troctor 14! 1~; 11io 614-1124122.
.
11F $3,150; lOt Ford ,..,~&lt;mo­
tor P.I50.._Trock l.ooclor, 12,150, Now von, aood . .,, 114-94"
King Wood i !lOll St... Uood 1 114 216 to;r2
2202.
8oUon 11211, 8wtmmlng Pool
Motorcyc•3'x111' Wllh All Aco
rioo, Fonnoll Cub tractor wllft. billY .,.A
.._~.;;.:,:.;.;:.:.;;,;,,...~-­
Some Chtml-.11, Uilor, -!t. toot hhch w/ conry oiL .:.'..;'
Uood 2 -ho, 1125, ........ :10447o-t72l
'83 Hondl 600 ot.l
1810.
Altce Cholmor D-7 bull - . drtvo, wotor c:oolod, t""'- IIIII
runo good, 114-84•21111.
'
- •v~oo, lumo Ill your 300hro. :104-4111-1140.
outlllo lnlo 1 pllone King Cunor, s Fl. Flnllll - · 1884 Hondo lnltf08Pior 1000,
Jockt. For lnlormlllon, phOne 1· King Cutter, I Pt. Bruoh Hog, OlC. cond., 12100. :104-41 ..101i.
211-141-2141:
Bot~ 1 Yttr01d,014-3U 11112.
1881 SUzuki All-121, 14G0. 30,1Picnic To- For Llbor Dor.M Holland
7f7tarogo
ho,..._ 418-t7711 or 1175-1211.
TI'Mted be'e I' hli 1'• ...,,
o,...~y Wood Splllor I4GO, 114- lorwl-hotdo,Sboollr
11188 CA 210 A Dirt IIIIa,
Holltnd 12'
T $1,200,
31l'711t2.
....... 3013
hlr ilnd, Gahl grl,nderJmlx•,
dloc, AC no tile corn
Roolllllo o o r - -~ lronoport
Gold
pllinter, Oliver 1100 tractor, .., 1811 KX210; 11184 10 Wino, IIIIa now, tu, 1
Wing; 1178 Kowo- 610, 114good cond. 304-2?:1-4211.
2314.
King 81Zo W.l!lrbocl f4tl, No
HMI•. 114 Ill 1107.

USED APPLIANCES
W.-L.drytro, IOITigollt ....
Apptl- 71
dlpotlt, no utllltloo, SIIIO r o -.
Vlnt ~'r'tilfiiiiM-446-7391, 1·
monthly, 114-112-3948.
1100-4
•
For ..-. 2bdnn. tnoller In
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Pomeroy ar•. tot1l electrle, Complolo home tum......
114-H:I-2312.
Houro: M....Sot, N . I~
Nt.. moblll " - o tor rom 0322, 3 mil• out Bullvllo Rd.
otutlng ot S210/mo., ond opoc:H F- Dtllwny.
It 1811/mo
ptuo dopoth. Lilla Now 3 CUlliton •• Cor- 11ovo1 Ook llomborolltp 1or _ , 63
Livestock
Country lloli11o Homo Pork, 114- duroy Couch By A- Bull H l'nlor.ottd Coli IOI-t73-11H
H2.zt87.
2 112 Yttr Old Raglot•rocl Molno
S2SOi 1 AICIIi11r, $80, Rockar Allor 1::10 P.ll.
RociiMr S7!!c. auoon Sized Btrolll!f', bobrbod, ..,,_; hlah- =sJ~ ~~~ieJ~; IM44 · Apartment
Wottr Bod wnh Six en-. chalr, car Mat, ewing, doultle
Bolow.l14-441-28110.
It ~•-, ~- ·~·
Athono Uvootock Soloo •-lot
for Rent
· - · ~ •..--...
Foil Foodor Colt - . S..(;.i.yl
SUrpl.. army camtftougo, , _ ~~~~~ 29, 1993, At 1 P.M. AI
(2) 2bdrm. apartment• In
ohiiHMnl oombol booro, 11M Broodo Feodor Ctl- AcctoPOmwcu-, 1221-- 5250; trall•r lot
bolllo. Slm Somtnrillo'o, br ltd. CtiUo Acctpeocl Stortlng o\t
for rent, cloa to town, $75/mo.;
Now Ook FUmiiii'Ol To- &amp; Slndyvillo Pool Ollloo. fMioi.. 4 P.ll. On frldty. All Con114-992-5333.
Choirs, Curloo, CUrwd Cllott Bun, 12:tltlpln4:00pm, olonmont. Wolcomo, 114-192·
1 &amp; 2 Bedroorna Fumlahed Chino Etc. AI- Volley Ook .dl:::yo=.::i:_:hou;;:'":;.:·:IDW7WW.:;::;;:.::;;:::,_,. Zlll2, Or 114-698 3&amp;31.
~mente
In
Pomaror, Fumhuro, G - Crook Flood, ~W'•':rEA LINE SPECIAL • •• •--• ~,._,_..,.. l O.poatt, No Pete, Golllpollo,
Ohio •14 441 me.
A
: ~ ·-·lo
Htutlng:
Anytlmo,
&amp;14-446-naa.
200 PSI 111.11; 1 lnoh :100 PSI Anywhtro. PLA Rllltboro Ohio,
PICKENS FURNITURE
$32.110; Ron E - E1118rprtooo, Evory llondly. Chuck Wllllomo,
1 bdnn. •rtment In Pomeroy
Now/Uoocl
Jocllaon, Ohio, 1~21. · Tripto Crook 'rrucklng, 114-245tor ..... 114-112~56.
Houoohold lumlohlng, 112 mi. WATER trTCiRAOE TANKS 1018.
FDA
1br. 8ptrlmtnll In Point Jerricho Ad. Pt. PI-nt, WV, Above And ~owed ""' P - Wltor. Rail ~ Slmmotol · Crooo,
Pl.... nt, fuml.tt.d or untur- colt 304-e75-14110.
~~nl .. Cll-.
nllhld, very clun, no .,..._ 30+
SWAIN
Ron 1'""" E-~. J 3
175-1316.
·
oll7llAUCTION i FURNITURE. 12 - · Ohio, 1-...J7...21.
Olive St., Goltlpollt. Now &amp; Uood
64 Hay &amp; Grain
2bdnm. IJMI., totol tloctrtc, •P' fumhun, IIN~tll'l
Wootom i 55
Building
plio-• fumllhod, llundry Wllfll - 0 1
Hty hlr ooi•IO n111nd boloo ol
room llclllloo, ct- to ochoot I
Suppllaa
olllltto ond orchtnl, 120 round
In '"""· Appllcotlono ovolltblo w.-L Oryor, Ralrlaorator,
ot: Vlttogo Groan Apeo. 1141 or Color 1.V. F.....r, Ali Con- -BlOck, brick, - • ptpu, win- boloo.olclovor, timothy, lnCI 0!"
IIIIo. Wt will
coli 114-112·371 t. EOH.
dHionor,
Compor
Slzo - · lnttlo, .... Clo. . Win- char\
.
Retrta••tor, Microwave, 1'14- .... Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114- toocl, 14-94
3 Room Apartment Ground 25e 1231.
245-llt2t
Floor, All Privott, 1~-3351.
•
Fumll!hed
EHtctoncy:
107 53
Antiques
Pets for Sale
Second, Golllpollt, Sho,. Both, ..,;_____.:...,_,_,__ 56
Transporlation
Utllhloo Pold, 1185/llo. 614-441- Buy or ttll. Alnrlnt Antlq~»~, G"""" ond SUDDIY Shoo-Pol
4416 Aftor 7 P.M.
1124 E. lloln lllrott, on Rt. 12~ Grooming. All (,.:~ otylot.
Pomoroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:oo
02f1.
Fumlohod Elllcllncy 7 112 Noll, o.m. to 6:00 p.m., lundly 1:00 Julie Wetib. Ca\111
Gotii!"IIO, Utllftloo Pold, SIB5, lo 1:00 p.m. 114-112-2921.
AKc aotoott puPJ&gt;ioo. e woou ,n,....,,...Aut..:;:.;o,.:s...;.fo.:.r...;.Sa:...:;;,la::..._....,.
114 441 441Uftor7 P.ll.
okS, 1100, F.A. llen.clum, 114-- '71 Chevy lmpalll, NM aood,
Fumlohod 1Br Apt., 7111 Fourth, 54 Miscellaneous
IIJ.3181. ·
body -llont ohopa" 16011; con
GoiHPGtlo Shoro Both, $200
Mercha· ndlse
AKCBo
~ mtto&amp; bo-.tt31141loll143or
UtiiHioo Ptld, 614 446 4411 Afttr
pu mtlk,
'
- ot 114-1112-2310.
flmlllo; ••
flwnlbl
rotdy loovt - o ·7 P.M.
1.1 Lltor E - -1150· 1mt Sopl 10, toklng dtpoolbi,
Suzuki Tx·125 t1110; Aiding 304oll78-384&amp;.
Apollmont lor rtnl In Pt. Boola, SIS, SID: 10, 114-245PI....nt, 114-H2-5858 •flllr 1111.
AKC lllnllturo Pl,..ho':o.';'ko '10 Chny Covollor, taooo, 114lpm.
"!.dJ $171 N ., 3 motto.
711- 0124311 or 114-992·2114.
10 Fl. Alum. lltoh, Sototl18 Dllll 2444.
:5~~FUPLRI~=~~MJ:J:~ &amp; Atetlvtr, 614-441-1731.
AKC Aoglll...t Booor pupp!H, 1t7t Oklo Ctrtl- Suprorno, VB,
•uto, $2300. ~2141.
ESTA"!,~. 531 Jocllaon Plkt 18' lloCuttoch Choln low 11,500 3 flmiiiH, 1 =~ $210, rMdy
lhc:Jtl. 304- 11175 Buick Eloctro 221, AC,
!ram ....,/mo. Walk to ohop 6 BTU,_Ko,_,. Htttor, Uttltl Ul· ftDW1 . . u. bo
071-10430ftor5pm,
movln. CttiiM-441-2518. EOH. ton Mlc,..,..... Ootn
• . . , c-no, 41,000ml, "'"""
24' Ponti Door • J1111, e
AKC
Raglotor!td
L l - ~1 llllobto &amp; comlortobll,
8-h St., Middleport, Zbr, fur- 0254.
nllthld
IPI!r1ment,
al•
1111-, Ytllow i lllck · -· 304o11711-710t1.
olllcloncy, depoth &amp; rolo., 11177 Dodot llotor - · AKC Wonnod. 111 S~o, t171 Eoch, 1178 - · Corio, $7110. 1111
trttlhloo paid. 30W82·2591.
Aoglotn Young -on Tor- 114-256-4731.
Cougo~ no thlt, 1600. Antloue
Firol Hotzor A p e - 553 rior, Block, Whht, Parrot Whh AKC Aottwtllor puPIIIoo. Qor. JVC"VCA, 20y,. old, $260. 304194
- . . ! Avonuo, NoW Avolllbll Cogo,114-18:Z.7I30.
mon i champion · &amp;looilllnu, 1: =75-1::
:::...·- - - - - For Ooouponcy, 2 Bed...,... 11181 ...,. 11 HP llldng - · •••· tompnmtnt, S:IDO, dlpotll 1178 Corio T~- block
Unho, Aongo, Aa!_rlgor:oi"'J AC, Good Condition, Aoklng 1100, will hold, Alhono. 114 441 3711 lftllrtor, 30S outo, olr, low
c;orpo~ lnc:omo Aootrlcloa, 1!1- 1122, Prlc:e Will DtcrooH t10
lftor lpm or lnJIIme -undo. mlloo• noocl8 oomw - . SIIIOO.
o.ty, Dltobloci=Htncllcoppocl, /Day TIII .Sold. Coli 114-44W7t?
Filii Tonk, 2411 Joe-. Avo. :304=4:..:';..14.:32:.:,:4·~=---.,...
·-1·1800,
""' Houtlna 1A
;ft::;o::.r.::•~::.II=·~:--:-:,.,,--- Point Ploooonl, :11)4.171.2013, 11180 Corvetll, La, txc. cond.,
Opporlunltr Fll
A.
2 Ton Truck Load Of F I - lutl llna T....,...l lllh blnfo, mirror 1-lotl!. ~3,000 mlloo, :ID4o
1
Firot Holztr Aportmonto, Flrol Grovel Hou,::'
To 10 Ton A tmoll•nlmtlo ond
675-2?14 or -4711-1177.
. And Codor St, GoltltiOflo. Lotd, 114-2 1 .
HAPPY
JACK
IIANOE
LDIIOH:
Sonl~, Dlublod, &amp; Htndtcop. 24 Pt. Round Pool ~ Now Promotoo Httllng And Htlr 1110 Atbbll 1 nlqo oar, JUno
aood,
lrantmloolon work,
Growthlo Any M~, Hot llpot, 1600
C'd:·~~
R;:,.,rtct"&amp; Untr)
Wfth All flrm or troclt. 304-11711-3542.
Or
Fung,.
On
Docie
i
Hoio•
Houoollold Income. Applllnooo, oorito,
. 114-31l'7t;13.
Whhout- i'volloblo ~T· 1111 Oldt Culton, , .... good,
Ctrpa~ On.Sht Llundry, IIJC. 30 a 1~ Dol~ 1 E~ -~
C J D NORTH PRODUCE-.
'1600. 304-4118-1732.
AMI.nl Payo El.-trlc UtiiHy
'•
.,,. Only. Flrot Hotztr Apartmtnto lftg, Townhouoo, Ofhor fttmo,
KK'o
P"!!~Ht,..
Doell1982 Dl- Chovtllo, 00011 runAro NoW ~ For 0.. Btoutlful Shtpt, 1200, 114-441113
lllund
~)&gt;
Coo,_
P:f;;
nlng
cond., 114.f82·2ta.
cupency. For (ntorm•tlon Or To
7..
, Aoquool An Appll-.llon Col 600 ! got. g-lnt llortgt ~lo Fox, 11' Jl¥l'~";l
&amp; ·1894 Oklo Flrondzo, 4 cyl., kpd,
114-441·1800, Or Wrtt• 1et Holier tan~1 felt,one
manwto lluch llore1114.ft?.Q11T.
olr, noodo oomt wo[ll, JUno
Aportmtntt,
553
Stcond oprooclor..
·
aood, mokt aood wOrk cor,
·167S.:ID4-t7So3l24.
Avonuo, Oolllpollol OH 831 w - mlo,onl~cao. wotcomt ~bird &amp; .....
Vouchoro ond Ctrt flcotoo, Hud
--·
21
Approvocl. Equtt Houolng Op- tocomo-. l
4UII8
•
1994 EltP, 4 cyt, lot&gt;d. llr, omllm
portunlty.
55gtt. -~um WI otond &amp; .,.. Robblto, lllnl Loti. Mini Aox, 1111 -tt4to, ounroot: 304-11711-2?14
........ can .. hen: 1014 ll•t• ., SCM-e15-117l
Fumll!hed Aportmont In 0.~ -oorloi, 101M lllh, PD. :ID4o
150• •~c~wo~t, Ohio.
:19:.,94::-:,0I,::dt,.:.::A;:.or.::.•.,.to,-=Ps"',""p"'a'"",..,.Ac"',
llpolll, locurtt~ Dtpotlt, ..... 175-3112.
441·M23 Afttr 6 P.M.
lloglottrod. Hlmoloyon cruloo, - r wln-.nocko,
Cot; I Yoo,. Old, Spoytd And oupor oor, ooll 114-94•2045 or
NIC8Iy Fumllllod Aporll!ltnt,
Docl-, 110,
C.IIIM-441416.614-:;,:tlot94:::•::2Bm~:__·--..,---,,1br, MXI to Ubr•ry, perking,
.
1~
central heat, •lr1 _~nce , .
lchnouzor mlnloturoo, puppl• ,18U Ford Tompo, oood cond~
quiNd. 814-4464....
IIIII oclufto, Poodle pup- · tlon, $500, 114-843-5310.
AKC
Aoglot...t
Mlnlol.,.
Rod
.....
oh.
llntl, . me Ctmoro, lcyt. outo, t~op,
Fuml- oftlcllncy, 1111. Doohohulwl pupploo, mt1o IIIII tooMtll, 114-1117-3464.UtlthiM paid, 701 Fourth Avt.,
57
Golllpollo 114-441-4411 oftor 7 lomllo; 11+t8Willol.
Musical
-· -p.m.
hlh Tub T - I VonltJ, Instruments
1191 Dodot Doyt- Tullio 2,
Qrocl- living. 1 oncl 2 bocl- Gottauba, 111 1111 1111
AIC, 1111 IVhlll, RMf o.n.t,
fOOIII opartmtnto II VIllage
lundJ Alo ouophono~ uc. ~' PB• PL, ..,300, 080, 114Minor
tnd
RIVOrola..
oond. 304-e711o4111 ollw Tpm or -·1651.
Apon.-o In lllddlopor( Ftom
175-3224 anytime.
1202. Coii11W12•1818. EOH.
11111 Ford Tlunlo, 4dr., PI, PI,
lrsnd now rogutollon ola ,.... lundJ n-..., s JN,. old, AC, wiA llkt poyoll,
Mlddloport,_ Ohio, IIHch Sl., 1 llblt, IIIN 1ft -on, $700, 114- 1100, 114-llla-1321.
condition, 11447M:tttl.
room ..,.~
lumllhod 112·10n.
Kimball llplnot plano, IIIIa .-, 11111
~LUIIIIIOo llllld, rot• •
Don. II,
CONCAm BPETIC TANKa, ~=a. oolllng for tMOO, 8~ PI, PI, PW,
Pdopoelt. - - - - ·
.1.~ Clotlon, 1321; JET
...
INI8; Cli-o Conlral, " - r
MociMn 2 1111*0011" •penmente (No 8ond Filler II .,....,
tn. P-roy tnd lllddloport. I· t1,4tll; Ron Enno Enllrlirllo&amp; Aacllford Punch 110 Am~tt Lockt, Elo. AllofU I t - eo..
Joo-., Ohio 1-.e#ila. . ltlllwotor 11" ~ Pyramid
kh-,
:.:d
7 Bond ..- . JY\i Cli-o ExcOIIonl
requlrid,
lonl Loolla
I oftor 1:00pm.
Coucll 131, Choir SIS, lloollnor Dick, 11447MII4.
... Hid• a t.ll Couoti *71. ...._
Alldna:
1:4,711. · 4223.
Allor
I:GII P.a.
MI. A.., V t r y - Omol 44WI7I.
llplnol Conootl plano. Wonted lumlohod oportnttnf, 1br, - r
~l.tolltOkotow
!!'!J!!Oio 12221 pha
no Coucll I oholr, aoroiM blko, month
. ... tocotly. 1111 VoiUw gan t.tc....,
~HUD,rel&amp;dep.304o , tnlded roan 111e rug. old
.... aoH -~·-rd
lep.,
71,0101Ml.
UCI11nl: OOINIUOn,
Zenith
owuale
....._.
IUII·IUIIM •IUIIIIEII
42A1. - - . , · 11200,
lALII
0no
btdiOIMI
-manto,
~
lnctudM uen•too,
._, '-T¥,114-..a ..... .
Hummlngblnlll..lo Conlor
1117 . _..., Caugor, -uriiY ....._" no ..... 114- Couoh ond - · 0111 ,,..._
· Ja ~lEu " ONe
,.....;
etrmuocwn O.dUoii, taO.
182me....,... ·
I 7171 lll)'llmo.
:ID4.f12.2172.
.
~===------.
GOOD

-·

11178 CJ.7 J-. ve, :ID4_engtne,
11100. 2914 ............ 30W71-

WHAT ARE YOU
SAD ABOUT,
LOWEEZ.Y ?

111110 Aoln&gt; Chevy ..... 111,500,

Cit.

.__..
11110. oue

.

to

'Mx70, ....., tft.
ctudM oklrtlna. ...... blocllo,
5yr. wlft'aftly, -homea...,. ~
oursnco, lind I ol frio lot
....... fDr ..., . , , _ , ... 1·
-37-3231.
11M

Classifieds

OUTSIDE ,
FUANISIINOS:
- 0 moblll home 2 bedroom Wrouahl Iron Tlblo W/4 Chtlro;
1120 Fourth A,.., (i;lllpollo. ii2S Fon lock Aoctdng Choir $18;
wotor ond trslll paid 614-446- Go- Arch W.y'o St21.DO
441hllor 7 p.m.
Bocldlng ·Twin 11111 SOt sn, Full_
2 bedroom fumlohtd moblie HI So1._ Ouwn 1141 lot; 4
home, 304-1175-Mt2.
- r ..,_ 144.11; Ctr Bod'o,
Bunk Bod't, - - Ful
2 bedroom, k&gt;cotocl In Now Lint
01 lout-om V..oo
Htv!!!.:.. ~L 1211/mo. + utllhloo, Stortl"'!! 41 $20.00; lndlln8llony
"-304;:-;-.:.·t~
r......,:;:_:.;:..,-·-:-:--:-:-.,......, f)hopa• I Slzoo Bllrtlng AI
:;;;
·looldo - ·
2br, oil - . Allton Upland 16.00.
Auatlon2 Locotlono
Or 4 Milot Oul 141.
Ad, $171/mo. pluo
~ 8 A.ll. To I P.ll.llon -Bot.
dtPo8ll &amp; Ulllhlo&amp; 30W7
•

=

ara avalable on an equal

I b1droom trick home, 1 112
Mth,
Rnlllhed
be •nt,

Wanted to Do

.....

EAST

1m Chnrotll Httvy Duty IPt
Ton TI\ICII1 4 WD, Auno ~
IIIIo /Troot HOO, 11Wf7.,_,
Aftor 4P.II.
,
1171 1 Ton Dodge loud v.h
1'1;200 Firm; 1173 314 Ton Cllewr

73 Van1 I 4 WD'I

,..,=.._,=::-:--....,.,.,.,.-

lipolia Aru For All Shlfta, Apply
In Per.on, Mond1y Thru Frkfaj,

..,;..,...,,;,;.,;;,;,;.;..;...;.;;_.;,.._,Chrlsllan waman w•ntlnt to

I

- w-. -

Wtndy'o NoW Hl~ngln Tht Qol.
2-4P.M. EOE.

. -====r======~===~
~~·~,.~.,~-~~"'~
w ... ..,..,.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

For Nnt, riMd NOmmate to
lh.-. I bedroom trailer, no

imllollon or ~tlon .'

IBookkH~r: Mu.t Hli¥1 Emil._,.. Organ~lonel Accounting

L.~~"

llpolto Ctr Coll.-tlon For Solo
Or Trodt For Cor. Coli Aftor il
P.ll. (Aichord) 114-318-1117.

I-~:::;::~-, I=.rr:am

Wanted to Buy

Dtcoratld 11onaware, wall te.phonn, okt lampe old lhtr•
momMera, old clock.; 1ntlque
tumlturt. Riverine Anliquee.
Ruu Moort, owner. 11~992·
2526. We b1.1y e11at11.
Don~

Rea l Estate

oPhono:
..........
Por 12-2 · - ·
1.6QG-783.at61·5233,
Or

304-4:za.am 11on-T-.
Aoglotorocl liLT For A Fully E·
Antique• and uHd ...,nhura, no qufppad Lob, No Shih Work, OH
Hem too large or too amall, wiU Holldoyt. Apply In Poroon At
Medical Plaza, 131 Slate Routt
buy one pltee or c:ompl.te 160,
OotNpolio
houetholdL call O.by Mar11n,
614-H2·111&lt;1.
Stcmory
/llloplllchor

9

. 110tltleiiKII
20 Kllowlldll

.,...,, IIIIQ. , _ · -

~.

' For Sale
or Trade

Noodtd 7 Poopll $200 A Wook,

full tlma auctlonMr, compllte

11AC.. IIwtf
17 Ca•PIII pt.

tAll
+Ket

· B~RNEY

Alt real estlle advertising tn
this ne-er Is subjod to
the Federal Fair Housing Ad
011968 which makes l l logal
to advertise •any preference,
lmltallon or dltcrlrnlniltlon
based on race, color, relglon,
nx famPial st.tus or nallollll
origin, or any lnlentlon to

azs

TJ!:EK AND MEEK .

BusiiiiSI
Opportunity

Mother /College., Sludent Whh

Sunday oclhlon • 2:00 p.m. Four Children._, Http Whh
Friday. Monday oclltlon • 2:00 Houo•wolic And Occoilollll
p.m. Saturdly.
Bobyolttlng.
Non-Smoker
Prollrrocl. Poy Nogolloblo. Good
Moving Sale: 111 Bastian! Drlvt, Job
Dorm Sluc:lent, Apan24th, 251h 1 26th, 9·? Wollt Ton- ment For
Whh·ln Wilking Range.
nlng Bea, Karount Halter, Sind Atoponoo To: CLA 294
Toole, 10 Pc. Solo, Etc.
c/o Golllpollo D!llly Tribuna,
Thlnf Avon,., Oolllpollo, OH
Public Sale
8
45631.
&amp; Auction
NHd blby.ltter In my home, .
Mon-Frl. 304-175-3448 tftor
Rick PNrwon Auction Company, 5pm.

...

llldllltpelltt

14 LlllotOII. 11 ...... ICI!ool

VUlnerable: Nortb-l!outb
Dealer: Soutb

your own tractor? Have you

thought about buying your own
tractOr? lo btlng o company

12 DoMie .
13 ltlrcll ....

NOB'l'll
.Q11U

·!

1m C~cny 112 T., 110 4 bllt. 4
lot!&lt;~T; _,.. "! II:, 1.11 .....

tfl Wanted to Rent
W.nilng to ..,.. 2 or s bed""""

W.- To AMI Or Buy: Audft - ., ln - n ond good-~
Couple Soolla Oul14 T,.llor lion. prolw prtmo Ml1lna. ....
8t*o, Phono: 114-441-nol.
182.Z.421, It no an-..: jlla•
INVI me1..ge on macltlnil.

114 . . ~·
.
(

72 Tl'ucka tor Sail

81ooplng with - - ng.
AIM oftor 2;00 p.m.,
Allhooll.ypo.
Coli
304-7756181,-WV.

foi llllft·

_,, wookonclli, tgoo t2 &amp;14.
304-t75-'1349 oftor apm.
Eloy Wol'l\1 Excetltnt Ptyi .Motmblt Producll AI Homo. Ctll
Toll Frot, 1-I00-417.a5111, Ext.
313.
ELECTRICIAN
I!Omoclloto OpOnlngo For Individual Who P - - lotte
Knowttdgoo 01 Ellctrlctty And
Wortdng Exparitnet With 490
Volt Powor Dlotrlbutlon EquiP'
monl, Both AC And DC Mot....

~080,

wlclllrJ

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=..:·::,~

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worker, momlnge &amp; evenlnge,

(1=:~.~-=1

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"
" Ford Tona• OL
4IM;... :~
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45

I KhtOM: I Woolla Old, 1 Block
Whh Whho Fell, 4 Gray Wino, 1

ScrsJ&gt;
6 un, lluot
Tokt
All
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Couch'-Yord
Solo
htmtl
114-318 9524.

--... - ·
--

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P.ll. 11~ 14i 1114.

Giveaway

1111111-

PHILLIP

35 Loti I Acruge

IJve 24 /Oaylll Tllll To
Olotolll1.f00 M04771
bt. IIDU U.ll Per 111n. 8o 11 'ln. Procoll Co. IOU31·
01111.

4

An dM tePiSa?l I ......

laO II

Guya &amp; Olio 1ft

Operate where you feel the strongest
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take stock
your recent affairs and activities and lry
bring balance into your lite. 11 you've been
playing too much. work harder. 11 you've
been working too hard. stop and have some
lun.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) In order to feel
gralltied today there must be a purpose lo
your lite. Setecl meaningful objectives and
work toward tllem as productively as possi·
ble.
,
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Today you might
become a bit bored if you do the same
things with the same people. You need a lit·
lie variety. Try something new with different
friends .

J

..

�Sentinel

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Bartrum
•
survives
cut

Pick 3:
5-4-4
Pick 4:
6-2-0-3

Buckeye 5:

+

4-9-11-23-26

P!ige 6

SESSIO

Low tonllbt 70. Chanre of rain.
Thursday, hl&amp;h near90.

rr'S SCHOOL ,.IME AGAIN, SO REMEMBER
,.0 DRIVE WITH CAUTION•
.
Bfl•RA CARE MAY SAVE TBE.LIFE OF A CHILD
.

VoL 44, NO. 84

· Uulllmecb Inc.

1. Be prepared to stop quickly when

Officials receive grants to extend water lines
Meigs board
.initiates program
to purchase locally

near schools and playgrounds.
2. Adhere to speed limits in school
zones.
3. Show extra caution when driving in
bad weather. ·
4. Use common sense when picking up
or dropping off children in school
areas.
5. Do not pass a school bus that is
loading or unloading children.
6. Be watchful of children darting out
into the street.
7. Look for and obey school
•
zone s1gns.
8. Make sure your car is in good working
order. Don't let a mechanical
malfunction cause a tragedy

Ingels Furniture
992·2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy
992·6491

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Shoe Place/
Locker 219
992·5727

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Downing·Childs·Mullen
Musser Insurance
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Baum True Value
985·3301

CHESTER, OHIO

Adolph's Dairy Valley'
992·2506

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5141

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Quality Print Shop
992·3345
•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff ·
A program geared to .keepi.ng
Meigs Local laX dollars m Me1gs
County by doing more local pur·
chasing was initiated at Tuesday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local
School District's Board of Education.
Board President Larry Rupc said
that about $100,000 a year is leaving the district in ou1S1de purchasing. He s~id some of that money
can be kept here if lbere IS better
communication between board
members, school personnel and
local businessmen.
· Rupe said the schools go to the
local businesses for money. and he
feels that local businesses should
have a chance to "meet" prices on
items which the schools purchase.
It was the consensus of the board
members lbat purcha~s should be

.

RACINE, OHIO
949·2210

SYRACUSE, OHIO
992·6333

(row's Family Restaurant
992·5432

POMEROY, OHIO

THE FARMERS BANK
AND SAVINGS CO.
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
985·3385 .

992·6611

Ewing Funeral Ho.me
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Daily ·sentinel
liTHE

GRAVELY
SJYBTEM

. POMEROY, OHIO

992·2115

DR. BARRY M. DORSEY

992·3308

992·3785

The following people were
selected as potential jurors for the
September. 1993, term of the
Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas Pettit Jury.
ALBANY - James Carrol
Hayman, Maxine Hope Haning,
John David Gillogly, Patricia Lee
Arnold, Leonard K. Brooks, Dolph us Burke Jr .• Nancy Carol

CHESHIRE, OHIO

a fine arts concentration in the College of Education's masler' s degree
program was approved by the Ohio
Board of Regenl.'i in May. Enrollment in the concentration began
this summer, he added.
Additional degree program proposals are being prepared for submission to the Regents, he added.
Some of these new programs could
be offered as early as fall1994.
"I also want us this year to make
a thorough review of all our technology programs and to detennine
if there are other associale degree
programs that we should offer.
because there is a market demand
and a ileed for the programs in this
region," Dr. Dorsey added.
At the same time, Dr. Dorsey
said groundwork wiD be laid for an
improved evaluation process and a
beuer registration and academic

Phillips.
Mary M.
CHESTER GiUilan.
COOL VILLE - Clara M.
Follrod, James Allen Radcliff.
DEXTER - Monica Lynn
Perry, John Roben Hamilton.
EWJNGTON - Brenpa Sue
Vickers.
GUYSVILLE- Dave Weeks.

LANGSVILLE - Ronald L.
Williams, Carol F. Pierce, Linda
Sue Puckett.
LONG BOTTOM - Christi
Dawn Hensley, Oris Lee Smilh ,
Okey Theodore Pullins. Jane Ann
Coates. Ester Louise Pitzer, James
David Louks, Pauline Myers.
MIDDLEPORT- Elizabeth J.
(Continued on Page 3)

POMEROY, OHIO

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees

POMEROY, OHIO

992·6128

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GRAVELY TUCTOR
SALES and SERVICE
992·2975

OHIO

..

I

New initiatives for the 1993-94
academic year reflecting the
expanding service role of the University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College were
outlined Monday by the institu·
lions' president during a meeting
with faculty and staff.
Dr. Barry M. Dorsey listed such
goals as preparation of new programs, successful re-accreditation
and efforiS to promote the area's
economic development during his
remarks at an onentation session
held prior to the s!arl of fall quarter
classes.
"I look forward to wmking wilb
you as a colleague and friend on
these important endeavors," he
said.
In preparing new courses and
programs thai meet the needs of the
community, Dr. Dorsey noted that

.· Potential pettit jurors named

POMEROY, OHIO

·K&amp;C Jewelers

Vaughan's.Cardinal
1

992·6687

Ridenour Supply

POMEROY, OHIO

992·3471

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sugar Run Mills

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Prescription Shop
992·6669

year. There are also unexpired
terms 10 be filled in Chester and
Salem townships.
All five village councils, Middleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine
and Rutland, have four sealS to be
filled. All are four year tenns. In
Racine village the unexpired tenn
of mayor is open,•and in Syracuse,
Racine and Middleport there are
four year tenns on the Boards of
Public Affairs to be filled.
As for school boards there are
two four year tenns on lbe Eastern
Local and Meigs Local Boards of
Education, and three on the Southem Local Board of Education to be
filled. On lbe Meigs County Board
of Education, there are three four
year Jenns and one unexpired term
to be filled.

Area officials met with Governor George Voinovicb Monday to
receive grants which will be used
to extend water lines to area residenl.'i without waler service and to
enhance existing water systems.
Meeting with Voinovich were
Commission President Robert
Hartenbach, Commissioner Manning Roush and Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton.
The Pageville area and the village of Racine were named the primary beneficiaries of a $429,000
water and sanitary sewer grant
announced recently.
· The grant, from the fiscal year
1993 Water and Sanitary Sewer
Competitive Grant Program, was
received through the Ohio Dep8!1mcnt of Development's Local Government Services Office.
The grant will be used by the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District to supply water service to 69
households in Pageville. Many of
the households in the area are
served by cisterns and water
haulers because of possible groundwaJer contamination.
The :rP&amp;.C-Pageville project
picked up $268,000 of the grant
while Racine's share amounts to
$156,000.
Part of the grant to the village of
Racine wiD be used to inslall water
meters, Thornton Said.
Thornton said the Ohio Environmental Protecti011 Agency is requiring the meters be installed because
of the age of the well and the quantity of water being pumped per
month. Due to the grant, village
residents will not have to pay for
their meterf'i' the coSt of ms!allauon.
Thornton said village residenJs
currently pay $12 a month for
water.
"We're the cheapest in the county. probably the state," Thornton
said. "If we didn't get this grant,
the village water would have dou·
bled."
"Besides the meters, we are
putting down a new water well,"
Thornton said. "Af1er 40 years, it's

AREA OFFICIALS met
with Governor George
Voinovich In Colimlbus Monday to receive grants for
improving or adding water
systems to Meigs County residents. Above, Commission
President Robert Hartenbach,
left, and Commissioner Manning Roush receive a grant for
extending water service into
the Pageville area. Below,
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
receives the village's share of
the grant.
time for a new sysJem."
"We are also putting a new
water line out Yellow Bush Road,
he added. "This will help these
people and make this area a place
for economic development."
The village received $156,100
of grant money and is ma!ching it
with'$76.905, Thornton said.
This grant is the third reeeived
by the village in the last two
monlbs.
"It takes people working togeth(Continued on Page 3)

. .Rio Grande president outlines goals for new academic year

Swisher &amp;Lohse.Pharmacy
992·2955

When petitions of candidacy
. were reviewed by the Meigs Coun·
1y Board of Elections Tuesday.
, three failed to pass the reqmre. menl.'i to be placed oli the Nov. 2
ballot.
·
The petitions which the board
did not cenify as valid were those
of Victor Perry as a candidate for
Columbia Township' truslee, Walter
Jewell as a candidate for the unex&lt;'' p'ired term of trustee in Salem
Township; 3J1d Charles Barte)s as a
candidate for the Eastern Local
Board of Education.
In the November general elec·
tion two 1rustees wiD be elecJed in
each township for four year tenns
with the exception of Chester
where all three seats are open this

Brogan Warner .Insurance

Valley Lumber

992·2155

made locally if the prices are comparable in support of the local
economy which supports the
schools.
Rupe and Roger Abbott volun·
tecred to serve on a committee to
get the program going. Local business persons with merchandise or
services which the schools use are
inviJed to contact Jane Fry. Meigs
Local treasurer, 992-5650, so that a
meeting can be set up to discuss the
local purchases program.
Personnel
Carol Ohlinger, teacher at
Pomeroy ·Elementary School, met
with the board to discuss library
aides which were not re-hired for
this year due to a lack of funds.
Supt. Bill Buckley said that he
is working on a program where a
persen could be hired to rotate in
the three buildings were library
(Continued on Page 3)

Three petitions'jail to make ballot

Home National Bank

POMEROY, OHIO
992·21

1 Section. 12 Pill" 35 cente
A MuldmHialnc. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 25, 1993

....,.

l "..

TAKING SHAPE- Under construclioa is
the Meigs Motel, located north or Pomeroy on

the State Route 7 bypass. The motel is due to
open at the end of September. .

advising system.
Citing Rio Grande's periodic reaccreditation next year with the
North Central Association as "an
extremely important activity for
this institution," Dr. Dorsey said
work by various committees
involved with the re-accreditation
wiU swing into action this fall, led
by Dr. Janet M. Byers. the acting
vice president for Academic .
Affairs and lbc co-chairpersons of
the institutional self-study, Dr. Nat
Daniel and Dr. Larry SJ?CCS. A selfstudy of the universtty and the
community college is required
prior to the North Central accreditmg teams • visit on campus in the
fall of 1994, he said.

Dr. Dorsey said a North Central the importance of a college educa·
team visited Rio Grande's Japan tion to younger students - will
branch campus this swnmer, which continue through the new year, Dr.
he described as a "positive experi· Dorsey said.
ence" that "puts us in a position to · "This project is important if we
have a successful academic pro- are ever to increase the college"
going rate in southern Ohio, which
gram there."
Noting the importance of creal· lags behind the rest of the stale, and
ing jobs for future Rio Grande significantly behind the national
graduaJes, Dr. Dorsey said that Rio rate in the percentage of high
Grande has begun working closely school ~raduates who go on the
wilh area business and industry to college.' he remarked.
Dr. Dorsey also noted the
try to increase economic developimportance
to lbe institution of priment. "This effort cenainly will be
vate
fund
-raising
efforts and
accel erated in the new year," he
described
the
planning
that is
said.
occurring
for
a
major
capital
camThe Belter Infonnation Program
paign
to
increase
the
endowment
- a volunteer effort by faculty,
students and staff designed to stress
(Continued on Page 3)

Eligibility scale listed for free,
reduced-price benefits in districts
The i'ncome eligibility scale· for
free or reduced-price benefits for
the 1993-94 school year for EasJem ·
Local School District, Meigs Local
School District and Southern Local
School District has been
announced.
Children from households with
income at or below the levels
shown may be eligible for free and
reduced-price meals.
Children from two member
·households. are eligible for free
meals if annual household income
is less than $12,259 and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
1\ousehold inGome is less than
$17,446.
Children from three member
households with annual income at
or below $15,457 are eli~ible for
free lunches and elig1ble for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$21,997.
Children· from four member
households with annual income at
or below $18,655 ate eligible for
free lunches and eligible for .
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$26.548.

Children from five member
households with annual income at
or below $21 ,853 are eligible for
free lun ches and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$31,099.
Children from six member
households with annual income at
or below $25,051 are eli~ible for
free lunches and elig1ble for
reduced-price meal s if annual
household income is at or below
$35,650.
Children from seven member
households with annual income at
or below $28,249 are eligible for
fre e lunches and eligible for
reduced-price meals if annual
household income is at or below
$40,201.
Children from eight member
households with annual income at
or below $31.447 are eli~ible for
free lunches and eli~1ble for
reduced-price meals 1s annual
household income is at or below
$44,752. .
'
Children from households with
more lban eight family members
should add $3,198 in annual
income for each additional family

member for free lunches and
$4,551 annual income for reducedprice meals.
Households may apply for benefilS anytime during the school year.
If a household is not currently eligible or if the household size
increases or income decreases
because of unemployment or olber
reasons, the family should contact
the school to file a new application.
Application forms are being distributed to all homes in a letter to
parenl.'i or guardians. To apply for
free and reduced-price benefits
household should fill out the application and return it to the school.
Household will be notified of
lbe approval or denial of benefiiS .
If a child is approved for free or
reduced-price benefilli, the school
must be infonned when the household's income increases by more
than $50 a month or when the
household size decreases.
Under the provision of the poli·
cy the building principal will
review applications and delennine
eligibility. If a parent or guardian is
dissatisfied with lhe decision, then
a formal appeal may be requested
before Me1gs County Superintendent of Schools John Riebel.

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