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.
1a-111e Dlllly 8enllllll

Thurada~Auguat13,1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Meigs County

OUR
DOORS

-SALUTIIO tHE 1991

MEitt

Ohio Lottery

cou•n FAIR .

Pick 3:
351
Pick 4:

fair preview

0598 .

Inside today

ARE

--- - - - -

OPEN

Low tonight near 60. Partly·
cloudy. Saturday, chance of rain
70 percenL High In mid· 70s.

•
3 Soctlono, $4 Paget 25 otnta
A lluldmodll Inc. Nowa-

Pomeroy·Middle~ri, OhiQ, Friday, August 14,1992

cru·
...

431 WEST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OHIO

From stair lllld wjre nportl
A long-debated ~Ian 10 install
scrubbers at die Gavm power plant
in Gallia County has moved llllllh·
er step.forwanl.
American Electric Power will
begin wmk on ils $815 million project this fall, but 250 coal mine11
will still lose their jobs.
Gov. George- Voinovich and
American Electric Power Co. on
Thursday announced a tentative
agreement that allows preliminary
work 10 begin later this year.
Ohio Power Co., an AEP subsidiary that.operates the Gavin
plant in Cheshire in southeast Ohio,
reached the agreement ThlllSday
with the staff of the Public Utilities

er a reement reac

Commission or Ohio and the Ohio
AEP, which is trying to comply
Consumers' Counsel.
with the federal Clean Air Act, had
Richard·E. Disbrow, chairman considered an option 10 stop using
and chief executive offtCer of AEP Ohio's high-sulfur coal at Gavin
and Ol!io Power, stressed that the and switch to cleaner coal from
agreement must be approvcll by the other states.
Under the new· agreement, Ohio
PUCO.
But he said the scrubber optiOn Power would not have to close
remains viable at Gavin. Founda· Gavin's su11plier mine in Meigs
tion and other preliminary con· County, whtch has been a pan of
struction work will proceed this the non-Ohio coal discussions.
The agreement states that the
year in "a good faith effort," he
mine wllf be operated at a reduced
said.
Voinovich said that if the agree- level of about 4.5 million tons of
ment is apPR_lvcd, it will provide an coal a year.
oppcriUIIlty "for economic growth · The Gavin 'plant burns about 6.5
aitd prar.rvation of the coal-mining million tons a year, but the agreeinduslry while new clean coal tech· ment allows 2 million tons 10 be
pun:hased from other mines in the
nologies are being developed.

southeast Ohio region.
Other pans of the agreement
include:
• A three-year cap of $1.64/mil·
lion Btu on the cost of coal used by
Ohio Power at four of its general·
ing stations;
• A subsequent 15-year cap of
$1.57.Sfmillion Btu on the cost of
coal burned at Gavin, adjusu:d peri·
odically for inflation;
• An $815 million cap on the
cost of building the Gavm scrubbers.
About 800 of the 1,050 jobs at
the Meigs mine would be saved,
under the agreement. Tbe loss of
200 jobs there would be partly off-

set with the creation or 800 jobs "They will continue to pay low
during the peak of scrubber con- rates, while receiving electricity
from a plant in complete complislrUCtion.
AEP said the completion of ance with the Clean Air Act," he
scrubber construction would create said.
AEP announced last April that
80 to 120 jobs.at Gavin, as wcll as
its plan to use innovative lease
at least contract jobs.
.
Disbrow said the PUCO staff financing should make scrubber
already has approved scrubbers as installation at the Gavin Plant pan
the least expensive way to comply of the least-cost strategy for complying with the Clean Air Act
with the Clean Air AcL
"We will be committed 10 the Amendments of 1990.
construCtion and completion of the
scrubbe11 once we receive a favorThe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a permit in early 1une
able PUCO ruling," he said.
Disbrow said Ohio Power cus- for installing a lime-barge unloadtomers have electric rates that are ing facility and filling about 13
among the lowest in the state. acres or low-quality wetlands.

so

Southern Ohio officials are positive,
but cautious after AEP announcement

GENERAL JAMES M . .GAVIN PLANT
FGD RETROFIT PROJECT

advocacy on the part of a fiveSecond, McDade said the area
county
coalition
of
developmeat
will
benefit by the 80 10 120 perSentinel News Staff
leaders
(from
Gallia,
Meigs,
Jackmanent
jobs created by scrubber
Reaction from Southern Ohio
son,
Athens,
and
Vinton
counties)
operations.
officials is positive but cautious in
McDade expressed concern that
light of the announcement yester- aided in the final decision to scrub
approximately 250 coal miners
day afternoon that American Elec- Gavin.
We're glad everything turned would luse their jobs, but he slated
. lric Power' would inst811 scrubbel1
at lhe General James M. Gavin out the way it did,• Thacker said. thst without the scrubbers probably
"It has taken two years of dedica· all 1,050 coal-mining jobs would
Plant in Cheshire-.
State Representative Mary Abel lion and much hard work on the be eliminated.
Congressman Bob McEwen (R(D-Athens) described the economic pan of the coalition, but this mommg
I
can
say
lhstit
has
paid
off."
Hillsboro),
who is seelting rc~lcc future·of the area as ''very bright"
.
Thacker
expressed
mild
disaption
to
the
newly re-drawn Sixth
after the signing or the agrecmenL
"This agreement makes coal pointment with the announcement District, expressed appreciation to
from the Meigs mines the best fuel that some 200 local mining jobs the United Mine Workers, AEP.
choice for the utility and brings us would be lost in the process of PUCO and the Ohio Offtee of Conmuch closer 10 scrubber construc- scrubbing, but said that was expect- sumcrs Counsel.
"I am grateful that we have
tion." Abd said. "The desire of the ed.
','
W
e
knew
there
would
be'
some
apparently
avoided the devastation
pl!flies involvc;d 10 use Meigs coal
job
loss,
bull
think
that
it's
worth
that
could
have resulted from a
and scrub the plant is evident from
it
to
save
the
jobs
that
the
agree·
PUCO
decision
10 require a fuel
what was included in the agfcc.
ment
did.
In
the
meantime,
the
switch,"
McEwen
said in a premenL"
Abel also praised the agreement chamber of commerce and the pared statemenL "Such an action
to place caps on the price of coal development department will do would hsve necessitated the closing
everything we can to help those of the Meigs mine and allowed no
and for scrubber construction.
new conslruction."
"The agreement will make it miners who lose their jobs.•
'This offtee is worlcing on selcc·
"The baule isn't over ye~ but it
possible to save jobs in our region
tion
of
industrial
sites,
which
I
looks
much brighter now ,"
while keeping electric rates down
hope
will
result
in
more
jobs
in
this
McEw!lll
continued. "We're going
for consumers," Abel said. "While
· to continue to fight to keep good
the state cannot order a utility 10 area."
Ron McDade, president of the jobs in soulhcastem Ohio."
keep a mine open, facilitating this
arrangement has provided the Gallia County Chamber of ComCongressman Clarence Miller
mines with their best opportunity." merce and Community Improve- also commended Ohio Power' s
Abel said that while the agree- ment Incorporation, said the area announccmcnL
ment helps move scrubber con- has much 10 gain by having scrub"Installation ofthe scrubbers at
struction forward, the PUCO still bers inslalled at the Gavin PlanL
Gavin is essential to the economic
The area will benefit two ways stability of the area," Miller said.
has action to lake on the scrubber
decision, including possible by having the scrubbers built,
"In addition to preserving about
800 jobs... it is estimated that 800
appeals from groups of industrial McDade said.
First, the ares will benefit by the jobs will be created at the peak of
energy users.
"Our advocacy on behalf of the consttuetion jobs created by scrub- the scrubbers conslruction and lhst
mines before the PUCO must con- ber installation, McDade said. Ohio operation of the compleu:d scrub·
Power has estimsted thst 800 jobs her will provide an additional 80 to
tinue," Abel said.
Meigs County Economic Devcl· will be created during the peak of 150 permanent jobs at Gavin as
well as jobs for at least SO contract
opm¢nt Director Paula Thacker scrubber conslruction.
employees," Miller said.
said Friday morning that such
By BRIAN J. REED

TO LANDFILL

/

I
\

FN:IUTY

AUGUST 14. 15. and 16. 1992
..

Health reform panel asked to
ban genetic testing by insurers

...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
joint commiuee studying a major
health reform bill has been asked to
include a ban on the usc of genetic
teSting by insurance companies to
turn away high-risk applicants.
James F. Quilty Jr., chief of

Lanham

...

-·-·--

PauiiDe Atklu, Hlrrlloa'rille, oa JllldDe eatrletl
Into the flower sbow lllld domiiJitlc art depart·
ments. A total or 2,493 altlblts wen eotencl ror
exhibit at the fair.

~

~

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:
REGISTER TO WIN
:
: sso.OO.GIFT CERTIFICATE :
I
I

:~E

Phone 614 99~3636
I'

I
I ADDRESS
I
I
I PHONE

(NO PURCHASE NECESSARY)

I
I

:
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--

·~

We Invite You -...
To Stop. In -.•..
And Rece1ve A
"FREE" Miniature :~
Cone.Of Ice Cream~
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"8 Dellelou1 Flavors" l~_....
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I

By department die entries wue:
dnft hones, 37; dairy canlo. 49;
beot Clllle, 22; thee~~. 20; poullry,
23, firm crop1, 467; llowcr show I,
~2; a- show 2, 343; domestic
arts, 343, painting, 22; photography, 124; 111tina IIIII canning, 371;
gr~~~~e••• and
lbow; 16.
The fair wil officially open
Sunday night with religion• services II 7:3ll p.m. II tho pldaiand
and Will tonlillue ~f' Sltor-

bar

=·~~ 111 tho

Sprlaga

guilty

PORTSMOurH, Ohio (AP) A man was convicted of aggravat·
ed murder and sentenced to life in
prison in the shooling of a friend.
A jury Thursday night found
David Lanham, SO, of Point Pleas·
ant, W.Va. , guilty of the charge
with a firearm specification.
Membersltip and season tickets
Visiting Judge Thomas Mitchell
will remain on sale througb Thtn· of Jackson County mlellced Linclay, fair officials repclll&amp; Member· ham to an additiona1 three yea11 on
ship licbll which entillc ·lho holder the f'trearlll specification. Lanham
10 YOlo on fair board memberl are will be eligible for parole in 20
$12 while season tickets are $10. yea11.
Both tickets give· unlimited
The body of Lewis Oliver; 40,
entnnce 10 die fair and free Jlllk· .of Henderson, W.Va., was found .
ing. However, holden of member- .. found Feb. 1S in a field near
ship and season ticketa mllll PlY $3 Franklin Furnace. Authorities
ada{; ll ride Ill the camiva1 rides. believe he was shot NO¥. 8, 1991.
_r:inceu JIIIR:ude~rid!,the
Tho trial began Monday in
$5 ... lude """
Scioto County Common Pleas
llln,. boch at tho grandtlaild and Coun. Tbe jury deliberated for
on tho blllstdc 1t1ge me freo.
about six boon.

Number of Meigs.County fair
entries ~p over 1991 figure
A llllll of 2,493 Clllriel, up 191 '
ovu lilt year, have boell .npteroc~
for exhibit at the 129tb Meigs
County Fiir.
.
When regisuation closed ll 4
p.in. Thursday, the final figures
showed five dcptrUnenta with a
decreUO in die number of entrica,
seven witlt an inc:rease, and two
with tbe ame number.
Those figure• do not include
entriol by tho junior fair memben
inc:lodin&amp; 4-H. ICOUII; FFA, FFA,
and VICA.
· :

found

.J:::

Teresa Morelli, a Wintersville
maternal and child healih for the
Ohio Department of Health, told auomey and vice chairwoman of
the panel on ThUBday that recent the society's National Advocacy
advances in bioteChnology have Commiuee, said Wisconsin has
made it possible to spot more outlawed discrimina10ry underwriti~g B!ld ~veral other stateS arc conhereditary diseases
•'If they (insurers) can usc it, Stdertng II.
She said that unless Ohio enacts
almost everyone will be in danger
of being unable to obtain insurance a ban, persons at risk for hereditary
illnesses may forego genetic tests
somewhere," Quilty said
for
fear or losing their insurance.
He and other opponents of ICSIInsurance
industry representa·
ing, including a spokeswoman for
tives
were
not
asked to testi fy
the Huntington's Disease Society
Thursday
.
But
Mark
Davidson ,
of America, appeared before a Senate-House panel headed by Rep. spokesman for Columbu s-based
Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls.
Cootioued oo page J

----Local briefs-.. . .
Eastern announces schedule
Eastan Local Scbool District has announced its scbcdule for the
commencement of the 1992-1993 school year.
Teachen willleport on Friday, Aupst 28; smdents arc to re)Dt
on Monday, August 31 for a full, rquiar day of instruction (Siarting
and ending times are the same as last year). Lunches wiU be served
tho tint regular achool day 11 tho following ~: elementary stu·
dcnll (K~ $1.20, hlgh school studenil (1-12), $1.25; and ~ast,
6S cents.
.
Elementary Sllldenll new 10 tho district are to repmt to the school
nearest their lxmc on Monday, AIJ8USI3.1; new SludeiU ~ 712 are 10 reporlto the high school metune before the operung of
school between the hours of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Information reprd·
in~ fees and so forth will be furnished (II the
day of

rust

IC

Theie have boeD few changes in the diJiricl's transpDI18Iion sys-

tem. Parenllarc asked to have ~jr children mldy for ~I Clrly
because 1001e routeS may belin esrlier thin last year. Qucsti0111 can
be cllrectetlto the mperinklnclent's oftlce at98S-4292.
CondlluedOI pap'3

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en.tary
'

The Dally .Sentinel

Bush tries to reel
in the Reaganites
,...
.

WASIJINGTON- When Pies·
111 Coart Street
ident Bush Slcpped into Room 4SO
PoiDe.IOF. Oblo
of the Old Executive Office BuildDBVOTBD TO 'I'D III'I'EitaTI·or THE IIEJ08.11A801'f .AR&amp;\
ing recently, 200 former Reagan
administllltion officials accorded
, him a hero's welcome. Privately,
many Reaganites ,still regard Bush
as a traitor to the cause- at the
•
very least, an unWII'Ihy heir to the
ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
Gipper~s throne,
.
Publisher
Why this eleventh hour reconciliation after years of niutual
recriminatioli? How can they for·
PAT WHITEHEAD
CBAKLENE HOEFLICH
give Bush after he betrayed .them
General M~~~~ger
Au••nt PubllaberiController
on taxes and quotas? One ICSSQII is
that both sides smell defeat in
LE'ITI!ItS OP OPINION ""' wotoomo. They should be te11 tbu 300
NovemberwithoulaunjfiedGOP,
words. All totten 11'1 oubject 10 editing and mus! be oignod witb DIDIO; ·
The fact that 3 1/2 ~passed
eddre11 and tetepllone number. No unsigned !etten will be publilbed. Letten
before
Bush and the :Reaganites
obould be in aood wte, eddre11ing iloues, not penonaliliel.
held their summit highlights the
creeping ll8llic in both camps that
the Republicans are dangerously
close to being routed. Both sides
know thai this is liale more than a
marriage of convenience - an
elecunlonO-oightstand.
In a political Freudian slip Reagao's former auomey gc~. Ed
,
By Tbe Associated Press
,
Meese, inadvertcndy expressed the
: Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national 1ssues in frustration of the Reaganites when
newspapers across the state.
he handed Bush a book that lists
:
The Columbus Dispatcll, Aug. 10:
the phone numbers of all the Rea·
· The Bush administration's decision to reject Oregon's novel health gan alumni. ''Now you know
care-ralioning proposal illustrak:S how little consensus there is in health· where you can find us, Mr. Plesi·
care refonn.
dent," said Meese, amid an erupOregon wanted to be the ftrSt state to manage its health funds more
effectively by paying only for .those needs that are most necessary and
cqst-effective. Defming necessary may depend on whether the palient is
s&amp;
in one's own family or someone else's.
: Many states were hoping Washington would approve the experiment,
~use the experience might prove whether mtioning is an appropriate
way to manage burgeoning costs while meeting the most crilical needs,
however those might ultimately be defined.
There have been several explanations for the Bush administration
finally deciding as it did. Many in Oregon believe politics was the main
11!!150n. It is difficult to know whether that's true.
· Though Oregon offiCials are natUJally disappointed, the ground·IRak·
in'g work they did provides a mountain of information for others to mine
and improve upon some day,
There may be no more important challenge for the rest of the decade
than acting wisely on this issue.
Akron Beacoa Jouraa~ Aug. 9:
. The four Los Angeles police officers ac9uitted of neatly all State
c~arges in the beating of motorist Rodney King now face federal civil
rights charges.
Although some argue the four have been duly prosecuted, the new fed·
era! indictments are not without precedenL The U.S. S~me Court has
held that such subsequent federal charges constitute different offenses
against a different govemmenL
. The Justice Department has llrosecuted cases where there was reason
tO' b:elieve a miscarriage of justice. A case in point is the conviction of ·
Slim Bowers on federal charges - afta two hung iuries in Mississippi
state coun- in lhe 1964 murders of civil rights activists James Chaney,
Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwemer near Philldelphia, Miss.
:-· With the sharpened appreciation of justice, of the law and of the emopons that this case has generated, the burden is on all involved in the fed·
tl\1 trial, as they seek justice for Rodney King, to show that justice is fair
fD defendants and plaintiffs alike.
·
'· Tbe (Canloa) Repository, Aug. 6:
: Isn't there anything that can be done? This question is being asked
~ore frequendy.as the toll amounts in what used 10 be Yugoslavia.
•. · Added to the obvious carnage and destruction are the reports of incred·
The crisis in Bosnia has come at
~le human rights violations by the Serbs against Muslims and Croats in
a
most
inconvenient lime for Presi·
fc;&gt;snia· Herzegovina.
dent
Bush.
A1l de facto leader of the
~ l'he U.N. Security Council- at the ~g of the United Statesworld's
nations,
he may be forced
81ready has demanded in a separate acuon thai all detention centers be
either to acquiesce in the atiQCities
&lt;fpened to inspection teams.
.
: And so the machinery of diplomacy moves slowly as the killing con· the Serbs are committing against
tlnues. There seems to be no sense of urgency, perhaps because of the the BOsnians or pul an end 10 them
&amp;ilure of U.N. negotiated cease-rues or uncertainty over what to do if the by the use of IS much brute force
as necessary. ,
liOrror stories tum out 10 be true.
Still, presidents are rightly
~ ·Bosnia-Herzegovina's independence movement would have a much
expected
to make these lOugh calls,
~ chance of success if the region were a major oil producer. That
even
during
campaigns. Thus far, it
IFOuld get international attention in a hurry, just as Saddam Hussein's
seems to me, Mr. Bush has gotten
tfuust toward Saudi Arabia did.
:; · Reports of what is happening in Bosnia-Herzegovina are hauntingly it about righL Werking throul!h the
United Nations (a fig leaf ifthere
m~ruscent of Nazi atrocities against Jews and others in World War II.
ever
wiS one), and exhorting the
~ When the nighunare fmally ends, assuming no large-scale European or
major
nations of Western Europe to
t6,N. intervention, the world will not be able to say, as it did at the end of
play
the
leading role, he has
World War II, that it didn't know what was going on.
increased
the
presslire on the Serbs
:
to the point of approving air strikes
if necessary to enslll'C that humani·
tarian aid gets through to Bosnia.
At the same time, he has resist·
ed growing demands for any escalation of the JWCSSIII'C in ways that
might require the commitment of
American around troops. For one
thing, Mr. Bush knows very well
how fast American public opinion
can ·change when the bodtes of

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

il
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By Jack Anderson
and
.
Michael Binstein
lion of laughta.
Bush's IS-minute speech in the
Old Executive Office Building hit
all the right-wing hot buttons deni8f8ting Congress and deifying
Reagin. But at best, Bush is still
seen IS an Oval Office seat-warmer
until 1996 when one of the "true
believers" .more in the Reagan
mold - Jack Kemp or Dan
Quayle, for example -get their
shot
•
And it will .take a lOt more than
thetoric for Bush to woo the whole·
hearted support of Reagan himself,
who will address the Republican
Convention on opening night. Back
in February, Reagan spumed
Bush's attempt to secure a coveted
photo-op with the former president
at his California home.
Reagan opled for a private 20minute meeting wjth Bush instead,
leaving Bush without the video
footage and spund-byte that would
have magnified the meetini. Rea·
gan also skip~d a Bush-Quayle

Yt:U't11V?
IT?

AU·I¥WI5T

Chief of Staff Sam Skinner, was
received much more skeptically
than the others.
Conservatives are anxious to see
Secretary of State James Baker
swoop in and S~K:k Skinner, rescuing Bush's re-election in the process. Their loyalists inside the
White Hduse constandy repon thai
whenever the unhappiness of the
right-wing is mentioned to Skinner,
he scornfully asks: "Where else
are they going to go?"
An unenthusiastic right-wing
eould become a powerful weapon
for Clinton. "H the hard-core Rea·
ganites hadn't sat on their hands in
1976, maybe Gerald Ford would
have been re-elected," one former
Reagan administration offiCial told
our associate Ed Henry.
Heading into the conventio~ in
Houston, one question remams:
Will 1992 resemble. 1964, when
Republicans lost in a landslide, or
1948, when Harry :rrum.an
launched a come-from-behind, gtve
'em heU victory?
Conservatives are urging Bush
to take a page from Truman and
run against Congress instead of
Clinton. They even have invented a
slogan for such a campaign:
"Change Congress, Change America."' And several Republican senators recendy presented Bush with a
pair of boxing gloves - one
labeled "Democratic," the other
''Congress.''
At the Reaganite summit, Bush
volunteered that when his copy of
David McCullough's heralded
biography of Truman arrived at the
White House, he immediately
t1Jffed to the section about the
I cam~ .
But so far, Bush has mirrored
Truman in only one dubious
respect. In a recent poll, Bush' s
approval rating dropped 10 33 per·
cent, plun~ng 57 points in the 17
months since the end of the Persian
Gulf War, which smashed Tru·
. man's record for a suslained fall in
popularity. Truman's approval rat·
mg tumbled 55 points in the 15
months following the end of World
War II.
With Reagan's supporters and
Truman's tactics, Bush hopes to
take a page from BiD Clinton, who
dubbed himself "The Comeback
Kid" after last February's New
Hampshire primary.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blasteln are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

By JOHN NOLAN
Joe Oliver what could have been had ·walked . The Reds had
CINCINNATI (AP) - Los his second game-winning hit in two appeared to be out of the inning
Angeles first baseman Eric Karras days afta his three-run homer won when Brett Butler, who led off with
said it had to hun when the Cincin- Saturday's game.
a double and was sacrificed to
nati ~eds managed to lose a game
"They're in a pennant race. third, attempted to score on
m which the Dodgers committed a You've got to have that game," Henry's pitch in the dirl. Butler
season-high six errors.
Karros said. ''The bot!Om line is, was tagged out by catcher Joe OlivReds pitcher Jose Rijo started they lost a game they should have er.
Thursday's game and came away had. We tried to give it to them."
The winner was Roger McDow·
with no decision in the 4-3 loss to
"There's no excuse to lose that ell (5·8), who pitched the seventh
las~·place Los Angeles, despite game," Reds manager Lou Piniella and the eighth. Jay Howell got the
l~ltln$ the Dodgers to two hits in said. "We should have scored 10 final out for his f!J'St save since last
SJx mrungs and two runs. Tire sec- runs with the errors, the walks, the Oct6.
ond-place Reds, trying to stay close hits they gave us.
The Dodgers tied the score 3·3
"A g'ame like this should not in the eighth when Mike Sciascia
10 NL West leader Atlanta, lost two
get away from you. It's the same led off with a walk off Scott
of three games in the series.
"If you get beat two of three by old story, to be perfectly honest Bankhead. After Charlton relieved,
L.A., you can't beat anybody," we haven't hit with men in scoring pinch-ninner Tom Goodwin was
Rijo said.
position."
sacrifiCed to second.
Rodri~uez doubled with two out
Henry Rodriguez drove in three
Goodwin stole third and scored
runs with a double and his first in the mnth off reliever Dwayne on Charlton's wild pitch. Two bat·
major-league homer. Reds reliever Henry (3-3), scoring Karros, who ters later, Charlton went to his
Norm Chari!On g01 himself thrown
out of the game. And the Reds' col·
lapse, in blowing a 3-2 lead, cost
.
.
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) tiona! Speedway.
Allison died en route to Foote
Tra~edy struck stock car racing's
The Daily Senlinel
Alhson family again, this time Memorial Hospital in Jackson after
(USPI!I 1111-110)
claiming the life of second-genera- !he Chevrolet he was driving
Pub1ilhed. nery afternoon, Monday
tion d!;iver Clifford Allison.
crashed between the third and
th""''h Friday, Ill c--t Sl., Pomeroy,
The
27
-year-old
Hueytown,
fourth turns on the two-mile speedOhio by the Ohio Valley Pnbluhinr
Compiny!Maltimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ala., man, son of former NASCAR way . NASCAR officials said no
Ohio 46769, Pb. 992·2166. Second clua
Winston Cup star Bobby Allison other cars were involved and the
P'lt.ae paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
and younger brother of current cause of the accident had n01 been
Member. '1\e Alloc:iat.ecl Preu, and the
Winston Cup star Davey Allison, determined.
Ohio Newapaper Alloeialion, National
A statement issued by speedway
Advertiaiq Repruentative, Branham . died Thursday of injuries received
New1papt! Salet, 1'33 Third Avenue,
in a crash during practice for the officials said the cause of death
NewYort. N.,.Yorlt !00t7.
first NASCAR Busch Grand was severe trauma.
National race at Michigan lnterna·
Allison, who was practicins for
POSTNMTER: Send add!uo cbanpa to
The Otii!y Senlinel, llt Court Sl.,
Saturday's
Detroit GaSket 200, was
l'lnn•rey, OHio 46769.
the
first
crash
fatality in the history
Pub lie Notice
8U88CIIIPTION IIATIS
of the Grand NatiOI)al series, which
B,- Curler or Motor loate
Problle Court of Meigs
began in 1982. He also is the f!I'St
One Woet. ...........................................l.60
County, Ohio
One Month ................................,,,,,,,,.t&amp;.95
rac.ing ·fatality at the Michigan
One Year.......................................... t83.20
Estate of Hugh Cua!er,
track, which opened in 1969.
SINOLB COPY
Deceased
PBlCB
Allison staned racing in 1983.
Caae No. 27503, Dockll 13,
0.11)&lt; ............................................25 Cenll
He
began in street stocks and went
Page 391
on to drive in the All-Pro, IMSA
NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT
Bubot:ribon nol dooiriq to pay tho carri·
er IDlY remit in. advance direct to The
OF FIDUCIARY
sports car and ARCA stock·car
Daily Sentinel on a three, liK or 12
Revised Code, Sac. 2113.08
month buil. Credit wiD be Biven carrier
"On July 28, 1992, In lhe
oocl1w.k.
Melgo County ProblttoCourl,

·

.
·
·

I

.

Berry's World

·'

No 1ubecrtptiooa by mail permitted in
areu where home carrier aervice ie

Cue No. '.27503, Norma
Culler, 33458 Stolt Routt 7,

&amp;YaiJab...

Pomeroy,

lhiiS.booripllo..

w.u..........................................

I do," he knocked twice. "Count
to 10," she commanded, and there
·.
'·
were 10 rappings.
The next night, Mrs. Fox joined
vey no sense of wonder. Nobody the two girls in their bedroom.
•
goes horne from church any more When she I!Sked, "Are you a
.•
man?" there was no response.
and says "Wow!"
When
she asked, "Are you a spir·
Like today's supermarket
&gt;
labloids, the Fox sisters go\Cie it?" there was an immediate rap·
'
of
the 19''centurytosay"
owl" ping.
u•
'
As news of these strange comIn the little town of Hydesville,
'• .
munications
with the "spirit
N.Y., in 1848, the FQxes were
world"
got
around,
people from far
upstanding members of the comand
wide
made
a
pilgrimage
to the
munity. They attended the
Fox
household.
Methodist Episcopal Church in the
It was discovered that, by means
. town:
OnthenightofMarth31,1848, of a code (one rap for yes, two nips
for no, three nps for don't know),
the
two youngest Pox sisters ~~
(!) 11192 by NEA. Inc 1&amp;
Marpret. 13, and Kate, 12- told the rapper would answer questions
their mother lhey had heard strange about the future. It wasn't long
knockings in the cotiB&amp;C while they before MarJaret and Kate, who
were now jQfned by their older sis·
lay in their beds.
ttr
Leah, took up spirit-rapping on
Margaret told her mother that
a
full-time,basis.
.
when she snapped her (mgers twice
Soon
otben
were
aucmJ)ting
Ill
and insln!Cted ihe.mpper to "Do as
duplicalc the feat fi the Fox sisters,
p~rting to be ~Is tlm&gt;ugh
':
·
By Tbe Associated Press
.
wh1ch communication with the
:J'oday is Friday, Aug. 14, the 227th day of 1992. There are 139 days
In
1935,
lhe
Socill
Security
Act
beclme
law,
claling
unemployment
•
sPirit
world could be efl'ecred. Not
le.l) in the year.
·
insuranco
and
penaion
plans
fm
the
elderly.
'
,
·
a
few
were quick to sec !he finan·
: Today's Highlil!ht in History:
In
1941,
Piesldcnl
Prlaklin
D.
Roosevelt
and
British
Prime
Minister
cial
rewards
to be gained by putting
• 0n Aug. 14, l§.!S, President Harry S. Truman announced that JBpllll
Winston
Churthlll
iiSUed
lhe
Alllnlic
Chlrtct,
a
IIIICmenl
of
principles
people
iii
touch
with loved ones
hid surrendered unconditionally, ending the hostilities of World War II.
that
ren¥ced
apressloli
and
called
for
the
resumulon
of
SOY!Ireign
who
had
departed
this life.
:'On this date:
'
righla;
·
'
The
q
of
the
Fox sisttls has
jn 1848, the Orep Taritory was established.
In 1947. Palrislan became !n.-t.paldent of Brililb rule.
a Slrln&amp;C eadiaa.
in 1900, international f&lt;KCS - including U.S. Marines - enteml Bei·
In
19SI,
newspaper
publisller
William
Randolpll
Hearst
died
in
Bever·
.
Forty years after they first
jlr)i to.pot down the Boxer RebeDion, which was aimed at purging China
I
Hilli.
Calif.
·
·
,
repcxted
the myii!Crious rappinp in
o( f~n~JIICfS.
.
·
·
y
In
1962,30
yara
1110•
robl!tis
held
111?. a U.S. mail tnd in Plymouth,
their
home,
Margaret - who
In 1917. 75 years ago, China declared war on Gennany and Austria at
Mass.,
makins
olJ
wUil
IIICJe
than
S
1.5
million.
·
·
reportedly
had
taken to drink the onset of Wmld War I.
'•

.

..

Today in history

l

American soldiers start coming
home. For another, he understands
the enonnous difference between
the threat Saddam Hussein repre·
sented to the global economy in
August 1990 and the cruel but
internationally irrelevant atrocities
that occur in Balkan wars.
Perhaps the most surprising
aspect of the whole Bosnian crisis
has been the reappearance of out·
right Wilsonian idealism a:s a major
feature of commentary on the subject. The lead editorial in· the
August 17-24 issue of The New
Republic (entitled "Rescue
Bosnia") declares thai "The Unit·
ed States ought firmly to explain to
its allies that we and they have a
viral intttest in the sanctity of inter·
nationally reco2nized borders.''
Now "vital interest," as The
New Republic's editors know, or
ought to know, is a diplomatic code
phrase fm an interest for which the
nation asserting it is prepared to go

Forget.all you have heard about
why the churches are losing mern·
bers - dull sermons, too much
social activism, not enough park.
mg.
People aren't going to church
becall!t they are geaing their reli·
gion rrom the supernlllket rabloids.
"Everybody else is trying to
' " says Ed
demysu'fy every th mg,
Clontz, editor of the high-circula·
tion WeeklyWorldNcwa. "Weare
trying to do lhe opposite, 10 mysti·
fy·~· '•
r
• In relijliol! today they tell ~
pie thalllllJIICies don't really
•
pen. Bulin the Weekly Word
News Jhey 1read, 'Blind Mom CaD
See Alta Baby Gives Her a lfna,'
People read that and say 'WoWF
fcsus made ~lo say ''Wow!''
And for a whde Christianity got
people 10 say "Wow!"
· Today we Bet I!Cademic 8tliiiOilS
that may Illite good IJCIISC but con·

George R. Plagenz

Robert E. Buck,
Probata Judge
lena K. NoSiotroad, Clerk

SIM ADULT 'PMISS"'f MMNG 1tt0WS
tl.ll M. cmzuti.U.O OILDMJI U AMI UNUDI

Admllllon

'

.

GREAT DEALS WHILE THEY LAST
, CHEVY EXT. CAB 414 PICKUP
.,

1992 CHEVY CAVALIER
GM 1st TIMIIUYEIIEIAiES TO -UUI.

announcCd that the spiritualism was

a fnlud.

tfiYI

The rappings, she confessed,
were made by her trick toe!
Appearing on the stage of the
Academy of Music In Ne.w York,
on OcL 23, 1888, Margartt' got up

16900

2. 9% FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

PIIIIOIItll

tti4

1992 GEO PRIZM

1992 om CAYAUII

CHECK OUT THESE FIITASTIC DEIU 01
PROGIWI AND PRE·OWNED CIU AND TRUCKS.

S apeed, 1lr cond., 4 cyl., 2 door,
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11'12 CHEVY CAVAUER RJS •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $7910
1992 CHEVY CORSICA LT ............................................$9488
1992 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA S.................................$11,919
1992 CADILLAC.SEDAN DEVILLE .........As Low As $22,995

NOW ONLY ................ $9,621.00
fftt 1lttM ..,.,. ,... .... $IOl '

-" 992 CHM ~·I DPICIUP

According to a report, ·"By throw·
ing life and enthusiasm into her big
toe, (she) produced loud spirit rap- ·i
pings, solemnly, declaring it was 10 l
this wiy she had frightened and ·t
bewildered hundreds of thousands
of people in this country and in ·
Europe."
Margaret went on tour demon·
strating how she had worked her
fraud. But the public, which has
always wanted to be .wowed,
showed liale interest in seeing how
it had been duped.
•
Finally, "faced with l,be ever :.
urgent need .to buy wine," Mar· ;,
' garet publicly ~eoied her confes· · :
slon and went back to the.seance I;
tables. The public followed her ·'
back. It was "Wow!" all over :·

-wind.,-

"--llttM

.· •TOURING COII'l
Drive off ~howroom floor.

SAVEISAYEI SAVEl

;
:
.l

LOW RATE FINANCING
AVAILABLE ON NEW AND
USED CARS OR
TRUCKS ON SITED

1991.CHEVY CAVALER WAGON ................................. $aaas
1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPAEIIE ............................ $13,999
1992 CHEVY ASTRO ALL WHEEL DRIVE VAN ........ $14,999
1992 CHEVY CAPRICE......_
.........................................$13,Ht
1989 CHEVY CAPRICE, maroon...................................$8999
1991 CHEVY 5-10 EXT. CAB, only 23,000 ml.............. $9488
1988 CHEVY CAPRICE, beige, 34,0CMI mllel ............... $1999
1988 CHEVY CAPRICE, bilge, 34,0CMI mill ............... .
18 FORD tAURUS GL ............................................... $54i5
1181 FORD TEMP0
....................................................... $465
'

.

10 MY.IT FOI90 DAYS
POMEROY
WITH.IPPlORD CUDn
CONVENIENT HOURS: Mon•.frt. I:CJO.I:OO; s.t. 1:00-4:00; SUn. 1:OO.S:OO

.,1,1

'

'

1192 OLDS DELTAU ...................................................$13,999

.......

f#4 1992 CADillAC ELDOUDO

"I

·- . . . 1-. ------··--·· ·- . ._... _...:.,~--~..,="'·"""'"",.,.,....,..,..•.,..£,ez"""'=""='"'"'=""===::::dL6.,.....,...:.w::!'""'.: ~ -·. .--~------- ~~~:. ~==t::..=,.=L"--"""'-'--=~~-="'"'-""'-""-=--'='--"'""V;,"""'"-'1

s to choose from

N, I apeld, llr, T..._ Pkg., • lM'a••• lllkl!ll
_ , -""-"".:..."...........S10.fiiii.OO
NOW ONLY ......~ ••-$1;411.00

lnd gulli· ,!

bility explain many caea gf ~
ed ·communication with the dead,
ButnotaiL
·
We n still living witli a mys·
tery.
Georae Plaaen&amp;la • syndlcat·
ed writer for Newapaper Enter·
prlae Alloclatloa.
'

$

Sap., air, 4 cyl, 4 door.
· M8RP.....................- ........S11,te5.00

~:'oc:in:~ote~~ t;tg~!o~~tr~:~

.
Such stories of fnlud

SJM ALL ....., _ , .MSOAV LUGAifll NtOHT

DON TATE CHEV.~OLDS·CAD.·GEO
Announces '92 Mod.el Year Close·Out
.

Stodc U111

308 EAST MAIN
.

•
•I

'
:

the Dodgers have lost 26 of their :
last 33 road games. The team ;
returned to Los Angeles Thursday ,
to stan a 13-game home stand. ... ~
The Dodgers are trying to avoid •
finishing in last place for the ftrSt :
time since 1906, when the team :
played in Brooklyn. ... Thursday's •
win was the franchise's 3,000th :
since it moved to Los Angeles for :
the 1958 season (3,000-2,531) ... ·
Reds infielder Fred Benavides, ;
who did not play Thursday. has a ·
.318 batting average agamst the
Dodgers, his highest against any:
team ... The Reds are 19-19 in day
games this season. including 10-9 .
athome.
.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Taxes &amp; title ,_ not Included. Amt. Fin. $8,224, 60 monthl, 8.75% APR

:
'

PATRIOT
GAMES R
..-11.60

45769."

•

;
;
,.

Notes: Even with the victory, •'

FRL THRU THURS.

Ohio, 45769 was

(7) 31, (8) 7, t4; 3TC

Instead we are treated to endless
footage of Bosnian prisoners
grouped photogenically behind a
barbed wue fence, with the boniest
of them (one of the few, coincidentally, without a shirt) in the center
foreground. Thanks 10 the wonders
of modern science, we actually
hear one man whisper in the
world's ear thai he doesn't want to
lie about camp conditions and
dares not speak the truth.
To emphasize the parallel with
Nazi Germany still further, a Serbian expression, translated as "eth·
nic cleansing," is trotted out and
compared to "the fmal solution."
Please understand: I condemn
the Serbians' atrocities as much as
anyone. But where will those TV
cameras be, I wonder, when the
body bags start arriving at Dover
Air Force base? And how many
moralistic commentators will
remember, on that gmy afternoon,
how loudly tiley blew the trumpet
back in August?
William Rusber Is a syadlcated wrller for Newspaper Enter·
prlie ~iatlon.
.

again.

7

help of his throwing error. Bip
Roberts led off with an infteld sin·
gle and was forced by Reggie
Sanders. Sanders took second on
Aslacio's errant pickoff throw and
scored on Ladrin's single 10 right.

COLONY THEATRE

appointed Exacutor of the
ootota of Hugh Cusler, deceased, late of 33458 State
Route 7, Pomeroy, Ohio,

- · Co. .IJ,,,,,;t2! .84
t3 Weeblaoldo
...................................
26
k3,!6
li:t Weeb.......................................... t84.76
O.loltlo Mo!p CouiJ
IS Weeb.........................................t23 . ~
26 Weeb..................... .................... k5.110
1
62 Woeb. .....................................
... tss. ~

Mystery is still part of ordinaty life

·,

•

William A. Rusher

mouth and was charged with a ball. Dodgers, who entered the game last
He said something to third base in the National LeagUe with a .974
umpire Tom Hallion and was eject· fielding percentage.
The last time the Dodgtn comed . When Charlton reached the
Reds' dugout, he threw two bats mitted six errors in a game was
onto the field. Scott Ruskin fin· July 21, 1986, in a 14-inning, 8-7
victory over San Diego. The last
ished the inning.
they committed six errors in a
Charlton admitted he went 10 his time
game was June 5,
nine-inning
mouth while on the mound, but
1984,
in
a
2-1
win
over Cincinnati.
said he was angry because he
All
thtee
Reds
runs off rookie
thought Hallion had not seen the
Pedro
Astacio
were
unearned.
offense and called it because
Astacio, promoted from Class
Dodgers coaches told him about it.
"I'm not disputing that I went AAA Albuquerque to pitch Thurs·
to my mouth, because I did," day, struck out six and allowed
Charlton said. "But the umpire seven hits in six innings.
The Reds scored twice in the
didn't see it"
sixth
for a 3·2 lead on a double
Hallion said he did see iL
play
grounder
and Oliver's RBI
Shortstop Jose Offerman and
single.
second baseman Eric Young each
Rodriguez's homer came in the
made two errors for the fumbling
second after Karros reached ftrSt on
a throwing error, giving the
Dodgers a 2-1 lead.
The Reds scored an unearned
run
in the fli'St off Astacio with the
series before running the fii'St of 22
Grand National events in 1990. His
best finish in a Grand National mce
SPRING VALL EYCINEMA
was sixth last season at Bristol,
446 4524
.. "
Tenn.
The younger Allison had driven
in 14 Grand-National events this
season.
Bobby Allison, currently the
owner of a Winston Cup team,
retired as a driver after betng seri·
ously injured in a crash in June
1988 at Pocono

Crash during practice proves fatal to Allison

·

Beware of the quagmire in Bosnia
to war. One good recent example
was its use by Jimmy Carter in proclaim in$ the "Carter Doctrine,"
which nghtly warned the Soviet
Union in 1980 that Soviet military
intrusion into the Persian Gulf
would be considered an assault on
the "vital interests" or the United
States. Moscow got the message,
and never set foot in the region.
Is ''the sanstity of international·
ly recognized borders" henceforth
to be considered a "vital interest"
of the United States? Are the
' world's nations supposed !0 freeze
forever ,inside their present bo~,
on pain of war with America?
Ah, but the Serbs have been
guilty of atrocities! So, it seems,
they have. But the world is awash
in atroCities. We blithely igncre the
slave labor camps of China, the
politically inspired mass starvation
10 East Africa, the ongoing bar·
barisms of the Khmer Rouge in
Cam.bodia, and the unspeakable
cruelties of Fidel Castro: Why?
Chieny because the world's TV
came!11S have not yet been able to
!ibn them.

Friday, August 14, 1992
Page-3

L-.A. Dodgers survive errors to post 4-3 win over Cincinnati

.

fund-raiser that evening in Los
Angeles, citing a previous commit·
menL The snub came on the beels
of published reports that Reagan
had privately bemoaned the fact
that Bush was irl danger of losing
both California and the general
election because Bush "doesn't
seem to stand for anything."
· Witb Bush now trailin~ Bill
Clinlon by more than ·30 points in
the California polls, Reagan looks
proohetic One membe 0 f R
gan~s fam'ily told us tb!t he ;:;
also miffed at the fact that Bush
went out of his way early in his
term to distance himseH from the
former president..
Bush's re-election, ironically,
may now hinge 011 how effectively
he courts two constituencies: Rea·
gan's followtn and Reagan's home
state of California, which holds 54
electoral votes.
Bush left riothin~ to chance in
soothing the Resgan•tes' sore feelings at the OEOB meeting, wheel·
ing oUt top right-wing guns Kemp,
Quayle, Dick Cheney and Clayton
Yeutter to follow him to the podi·
urn. All five, iucluding Bush, sue·
ceeded in charging up the Reagan
faithful and mllying them to the
BusiVQuayle '92 cause.
The sixth speaker, White House

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Page 2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, August 14, 1992

T - l Tlltt "-Not Included- All R.._to O.llr

�_ ... .
_..

..._

__ ___ _...-..........

,._ .

~~--"""-

·---·-· -·· -----. ....... - ....... .... ,... .... .
.

•
•

•

..

•

:-P~·~·~·-4__n.
__Da
__l~~
· -~~~-~------------------~--------~P~om~MW~~~~~~~dd~~~~~~O~h=~~----------------------------F-~d_a~y~,A-~~um--14~,~1~-,. ByCHUCI\MJ:LVIN
CLEVELAND ' (AP) - To
; CUries Nagy and the Cleveland
Indians, it was a ~ pme, a
chance to earn some respect •pinS!
• ~bly the best pitcher in baseTo Roger Clemens, it was busi-

ness as usual.

"I was pretty excited, but dial's
how I go at things, regardless of the
situation," Clemens said Thursday
night after he stopped the Bos1011
Red Sox' four-game losing saW:

and beat the Indians 4-2.
A crowd of UJ,797 ,largest for a
wectnight game in Cleveland tllis
late in the season since I982 ,
turned out to watch the Indians'
besi pircher 1ry to send the Red Sox
into the AL East cellar. A win
would have lifted Cleveland into
fifth place.
But Clemens (14-7) proved as
invincible as ever, twice working
out of difficult jams and ultimately
improving his career m:ont against
the Indians to 18-2.

••

.
In tbe majors•••

--

lO
53
62
.......................!3 61

..- .......6!
llil-.........60
u...ii.........--..SI

NATIONAL LEAGUE

••

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............Ill ...
-..1 .......--..63 51
d.ioop .......--..!15 S9
Sl.t.uio ....... - -.53 60
Now Yadt ............. .S2 61
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HlMMOll ·- --·-····66 ot9 .S74
&lt;:hioop.................$1 54 .SII

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MoaiNI].. ,ll:S; ~ auc.10. .312.
IUMS - DoSlololdo, llaalnal, 74;
0..,.., ""IJioto, 71; Holliao,pbla, '10;
'10; Bullor, Lao
Anpl•, 6J; Oriuoal, Woatnal, 61;

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treat, 139i:;Pj• S.a Dieao, 136;
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New Yadt ........... ..l2 62 .4!6
W!VEIAND.- ..!2 6! .452

w_.._
A1lottlo ..................61
CINCINIIA11......64
SooJ:lioto .............63
S..Fnocilco .......S!
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He lasted eight innings, allow- er and .RBI singles ~y Bob Zupcic
ing two nms and eight bits, striking and Tom BI'UliiiiiSky. All four nms
out nine, w~ one and keeping scored wiih two outs.
his league-leading ERA at 2.20. . "If you spot a guy like Clemem
JeffReardon pirched the nintll for four runs, he's goinF, to take the
his 25th save.
ball and nm witll it, • Nagy said.
"Roger is up fll' everything and "That's what he did. There was a
an~g." manager Butch Hob8on lot of hype for this one. I juS! tried
sa1d .." Even if the guy pitching . not to let it get to me. Hc·s a great
against him doesn't have Illy wins, pitcher. I knew I'd have to be on
he'll be up for it, because he's a ropofm game."
competitor...
The rndians threatened first,
Nagy (12-8) was hurt by one loading tlle.bases witll one out in
bad inntog, the fifth. when he gave the bouom ot the fourth. Clemens,
up a ~run single by ~illy Hall:h- however, got Paul Sorrento to hit
. into.a.double play.
"
"Anytime be pirches when people get on base, he sets ·meaner
than a snake,." Hobson
. said.
"You don't get many chances
BA111NO'- 'illoodlola, S =
against Roser Clemens," Cleve.341;
fti' I j ' ·a, 335; V
P t - . .329; ll&amp;lor, Lao
•
land manager Mike Hargrove said.

ll; Loaifood, s. Lao;o, :19; Sb4!'1d.
Soollioto. 29; W. a.t, loll 1'1ootioco,
2t; Voalbto, JliuollorF, 21; Oriooom,
ll-.1, 26; an.., Coiclp. 21; Boll,
PiUiblnb. 26; Pr d'•w Adaata, 26;
26.

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2.!10; c.o.. Now y... I).
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.1!92, 125: Swlado11, IINCIN!IAn, 11-l,
.617, 2.61; To..ubory, S• LooU, ll·l,
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2.10; B. Huno, S.. Diop, 12-6, .667,

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SAYES - Leo Slllidt, S.. LooU, 2S;
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CJNCINltiA n , %4; Wlttb WiWamt,
l'1ti1Molollil. 21; lleliotlo, l'lttolmab. ll;
Dilll&gt;k, I::INaNNAll,IS.

"If we score a run or t"KO there, the ter, but Clemens avoided further
gsme has a chance to tum out very da!nage by striking out Glenallen
Hill to strand l'lllliiCN at second and
dilferenL''
.
The Red Sox rllWauded Oemens third.
Hill homered in the eigllth, his
with tlle four-run fifth. With runners on second 1111d tllird and two 11th, witllno 011e on.
The loss kept the Indians from
outs, Nagy walked Wade Boggs
completing their fll'st four-game
intentionally to ge1 to Harcher.
"You have to do that," ~her sweep of the Red Sox since 1960.
Even so, Cleveland has won six
said. "You're talkln$ about someof
its
last seven series and se\'ell of
oDe hitting .340 lifetune. It always
its
last
lO games. Fans seem to
pumps you up when they walk the
have
noticed.
hitter lhead of you."
"In terms ot numbers, this
. , ~her. who had strue1t out his wasn't
the best crowd. but in terms
fll'st two times up. singled on the of excitement
and.energy, it was
first pitch, drivuig. in two runs. the best crowd
we •ve h~d in
Zupc1i: and Brunanslty followed
ears " Hargrove said. "That goea
with singles•
'10 when I was playing (in the
Cleveland scored a run in the early 1980s). Of course, we didn't
bouom half on Jim Thome's sacri· · have the team we have now. This is
flee fly to the warning tral.'.k in CCn· a real fun ballclub."

Family should begin showing 57th annual Parker reunion held ~;~
~onsideration to son,'s wife
in Tuppers Plains; officers elected ·
'.

· D~ar ADD Luders: I am
mamed to a m1111 wliose parents
think his first wife is still pan of the
fam~y. They invite "Janet" to every
~and Thanlt.sgiving dinner,
every binhday payty - you name it,
she's there.
For 10 years, rve endured stories
about Janet and have sat tllrough
home movies of her wedding to my
husbdlld, "Joe." He fmally told his
fam~y not 10 include Janet in any
parties tllat we were auending. Their
response was that Janet was pan of
tlle family bef~n I was and if it
bothmd me, I should Slay home.
To my surprise, he agreed with

C

of like that.' Now I onderstand how
(bultetball pro) Charles Barltley
feels. I would love to be Charles
Barltley, because he's a guy who
says whatever he wan($. People get
upset about i,, but, hey, ther~·s
nothing they Cllll do to hurt h1m.
That's the way I feel People can't
do anything to hun me."..
Barkley WJ1S an ou~en member of the U.S. OI)'R!Plli Team tllat
won a gold medalm Barcelona.
Smith annollnced he was returning to the team this spring, soon
after Ohio State iuked Uzelac to
leave. Uzelac accepted an $86,000
settlement that ,pays him through
April IS of next year. '
Smith acltnowledged tllat there
were some teammates who were
less than overjoyed about him leaving the team and then of. retinning
toiL
"I'll live with it, and I'll play
with it. I'm not going to try ~y
less because there m guys oil the
team who don't like me or don't
agree witll what I did," he said. '
1'hm wm stories last year that
Smith had~ classes and wu
having acadellllC diffiCulty, despite
his continued vow that he would
anend Ohio Stale's medical school.
Smith said he had missed classes,
but was on schedule to meet osu• s
admissiop requirements for medical school by the fall of 1993.

assistant athletic dirccror in charge

lhem.

of academic counseling. " He is
taking the core courses, and passing them, that will get him into
medical school."
Cooper said, " I'm thrilled to
have him back. Why do I say that?
Because Robert Smith is a phenomenal athlete. He has great wort
habits and a great auitude. ••
Smitll said he's bigger (6-foot-2,
195 pounds), stronger and faster
this year than twQ years ago. He
also said he has mlliUred u an albJere and a persoil.
"When I fll1l came·in as an 18year·old playing against the big
boys, I wasn't really sure how [
was going to do," he said. " Now
I'm much more confidenL llmow
I'm going to do better than my
freshman year. There's no question
in my mind."

When we wm ftrst married, 1

was told we had to include J1111et
' for the sake of the children." That's
baloney! Cllildren are quite capable
of undcrslanding that their diVOICCd
parents don't do things together as a
family ID)'YIIOe.
Please, Ann, tell parents of
divorced couples not to treat
former sons- and daughters-in.Jaw
as if they n still part of the family
muse they aren't. - FED UP IN
ORE.
DEAR FED: Divorce does· not
automatically amputale ·warm and
loving relationships, nor should it,
but being subjected to movies of
Joe's fiiSt marriage demonstrates a
shocking lack of sensitivity. It's

GRAVELY TAAC10R
SALES l SERVICE

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.Chester Council, No. 323,

Dlughters of America. met recent-

tUL·5P.&amp;
s.t.tUI.·I P.&amp;

ly witll Thelma White, associate
councilor, (II'CSiding.
JoAnn Baum, JPC, read from
Pslam 117. The council sang one
vme ri tlle Star Sp111gled Banner
and prayed the Lord's Prayer in
unison.
It was reported that Doris
Koenig was in the hos&amp;~· A
t!unk-yOU note was read . the

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

"He is a very serious student,"
said Larry RomiiiOfl', Ohio State's

The 57th annual Parker reunion
policy because I had'gone to
was held recently at Tuppers Plains
COOIIIII;lor for emoDonal support and Elementary. June Ashley asked lhe
guidance when my marriage was blessing before the basket dinner.
lnelting up.
Willis Parter presided at the
Can you' believe the iltsurance meeting and the group voted to
underwriters turned me down · have the 1993 reunion the first
because I sought help with my Sunday in August.
Following introductions officers
problem? Had 1 sufl'cred in silence
and tumed into a nviJig 11111111K or a were elected: Ralph Parker, jJ!l:Siviolent m1111-hater, I pillbably would dent; Sarah Parlter, viCC:presgdent;
time Joe's family showed some . have gotten the insurance. But Howanl Parker, secretary-treasurer;
consideration for your feelinu and becllllse I tried to get help, .rve been Nellie Parlter, news reporter; Keith
he should insist on iL Following a
Ashley, historian; Joe Poole, pho"family favllrite" is !JCVer easy and penalized.
tographer.
What irks me is tllatl could·have
Honored were: Lillian Lee, oldthe support of a mate can be
withheld
this
information
and
est woman; 91; Ashley DeVore,
enormously helpful.
Dear Ann Landers: LaS! year my gotten the policy. My financial youngest girl, age two; Franklin
husband wal1ted out oo me. In an future is a little dimmer ~1111se I Parker, oldest man, 70; traveled
effort 10 get on with my life I went was truthful. So thalilt )'01!, Ann, farthest, Lillian Lee and Kathryn
fll' coonseling. I'm happy to repllt for doing twO things rex- me today: Colburn, 100 miles; soon-to-be
married, Mary Parker and Steve
that I've made excellent progress and You let me gel this off my chcsi and Gob;
longest married, Franldin and
you allowed me 10 warn others. -am on my wsy to healing.
Gladyss
Parker; lar~est family,
I realized that my financial M.R.P., BUFFALO, N.Y.
Carolyn
and
Bill Whne and chil·
DEAR BUFF.: I'm glad you
situation haid changed drastically
dren,
six
altogetller.
and that I had no one io depend unloaded in my. corner. It gave me
Joe Poole took pictures of the
on but myself. I concluded that I the opportunity to ten you, and group, family branches and those
should invest in clisabilily insurance millions of others, that there is honored.
as one form of protection fll' my man: than one inslQ!ICC cOIIlpany
Present from Meigs County
in the world, and if you don't
future.
I am healthy, have never smoked like the wsy you are treated. go
and have no familial ,histol)' of somewhere else.
I agRC it's ~us to consider
bean disease or cancer.l passe(! my
people
"unstable." poor risks." ere., ·
blood and urine tests 'with flying
because
they have sought help
colors, have never used drugs and
Local members of lhe Disaster
have been completely monogamous. with emotional problems. By all
standards
they
are
in
far
better
Relief
Team of the State ConvenSounds u if I'd be a good risk for
tion
of
Southern Baptists in Ohio
s!tape
than
thole
who
have
not
had
this type of insurance, right? Wrongl
recently
assisted in providing meals
coonseling.
Wikc
up
out
them.
I wu turned down for a disability.
for displaced pCISOIIS at Marysville,
near Chillicothe, last week due to
recent flooding in that area. A total
of 6,700 meals wm prepared for
the Red Cross who then uansponed
them by truck 10 those in need.
Going from Ibis area were
Sonny McClure, group leader,
·ciJ captain, who is head of the Hope Baptist Church, Middlepon;
Ada Bisscll family.
Leda Mae Kraeuter, a member, fl81'!1dCS· reported council had been Bob Mills, Hope Baptist Church,
was welcomed bact after several m four pBI!des tllis yCM' - Heritage Middleport; Lewis (Duke)
Parade m Pomcaoy, Memorial Day Kennedy and John Wetsan, First
years of absence.
Estller Smith, recording secre- Parade at Chester, Fourth of July Southern Baptist Church. Pomeroy;
tarr, reported on state session Parade in Racine and Founder's Hank Hatton, Good News Baptist
Church, Gallipolis.
which is Monday through Wednes- Day at COolville.
Joining the local men were Jay
day at Richfield at the Holiday Inn.
Reese
and Jim Bailey from the
Betty· R. Wages, national coonErma Cleland, reponed about
the IOdJe being in Coolville' s cilor, in her newsletter 10 an mem- Columbus area churches. Several
bers of the D of A says "Our volunteers from the Chillicothe
Founder s Dly pmde recendy.
Miry K. &amp;lter, eni•ant coun- beloved order is one of die oldest Southern BaptiSI Church and Misand 111011 imponJJnt patriOtic orga- sion also helped during the week.
nizationa in existence at the present
time. If we desire and hope to keep
our «de!' functioning in the years
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
to come we ' must put forth a will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
renewed erfort to btiild our mem- at tllc high school. Public invited.
bershiP and wade IOlVIIIII a productive 1J1111111izatio produciRJ effective results through pilriotic projects, . . . paeeenling American
lla&amp;s. Christian fllgs and bibles to
ditl'caaJt·poops and think of some
new ideas to ll'y in your stale. This
can make our order interesting and
invitina Dllkilig others want to join
with us in our patriotic efforts u
we let our fellow Americans lmow
. how important 0111' coUntry and the
principals for which it stands
should be is and llwsys will be not
only 'to our organizations but to
. them u ttuC Americans if thCy will
join il! our efforts. to advance our

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Wolf Pen area
happenings

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II REGISTER TO WIN sso GIFT CERTIFICATE :
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(10 PUICHASIIECESSARYI

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PHONE

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491 WES[ 'MAIN SlREET
POMEROY, OHIO·
PHONE (614) 992-3636
;

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Mr. 101 Mrs. Robert Bailey Jr.,
Rodney, were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bailey Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Lanpvillc, wm Saturday visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp,
Michelle, Amy and Ashley. of
Nlomi Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Johnson
wm Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrl. HOy Johnson.
Sanwitha Lavender, Mike and
Halher,llld Michelle Knapp, 'fi!Csdly visitors of Judy 'knapp.
Mil:hellc.- Amy, Ashley and MeUS.
a DimeO•
• Melissa Darnell, Michelle and
Amy Johnson spent Friday evening
with Mn. Paul Darnell; their
g\'lncbolher, MicldlepGt.

.

Naomi Smith accompanied
Dorothy Reevea Wednesday to
viait with Mn. Roben Reeves,
Bnndi 11111 Jllllll[daua~. Kaylee. ·

I

a.e.er.

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MADDmeets
' no M.A.D.D. group

•

met
~nd&amp;:.:scua plana for the
Mclp
Fair. A cr011 will be ·
Ifill up fll' Yicllma of dnmt drivera
iatber than a treo.
.
Tile next meeting will be Aua.
25 at 6 p.m. at 119 Butternut

II

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Avenue.

1

We need the room for our 1993Jnventoryl
Stop' I• and IH features Ike:
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NOW BY CALLING:

• Thermopene Wlndowl • FlrepiiCel • Dlsl!wuhera
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ASK FOR DAVE

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COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
l.ocltld 6 Mllll Eut Of Rt. 33
On Rt. 50 Eatt, Athtnl, 582-1172
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,._ n /IIJf • ltw el t6t ltcrwn.M .n •.,. il•

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ASpecial Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Monday, August 31, 1992

• 2x6 Willi • R-22 Roof lnsuletlon • Steel Doora

•

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PRICE
SALE!

....., .,. J/2""" ,.

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Our already low price +~ price foundation =Great
$avlngs for you on any 1992 stock sectional home.

• •

ATIEND CAMP· The Southern Junior High Cheuleaden
recently attended a four-day cheerleading camp at Southern
Junior High School. Instructors of lht camp were Marshall Uni·
versily Cheerleaders, Kristi Kelly and Rob Halley. During the
camp lhe cheerleaders worked on tumbling stunts, a dance and
cheers to help them prepare for the fall season. Pictured, bottom to
top, are Ang•e Carleton, Nicole Hill, Kim Roush, Ranetta Wheeler,
Ashley McKinney, Amy Northup, Vanessa Shuler, Camilla
Yoacbpm, Jenny Sellers, Alicia Mulford. AI right are Marshall
cheerleaders, Rob Halley and Kristi Kelly. Advisor or the group is
Barbara Lawrence.

Welsh.

'' JDaltary,

fnrtlo .. nl;w}iiYenkiieF'IoCld Mart.

tn Pomeroy, were conducted at the atore Thuraday morning. The new establlsment olfers llhoppera a variety of
grocecy and mllcellaneoWJ ttems. Pictured, left to right, ~Art E. Hartley Sr., chairman of the board, City Ice and
Fuel Company; Terry Patteraon. aaalltant store manager. John Anderson. Pomeroy Vtllage Admlniatrator; Dinah
A. Bowers. district manager: Connie S. Brown, comptroller. Art E. Hartley Jr., president, City Ice and FuelCompany; and Vltua Ray Hartley. secretary, City Ice and Fuel Company.

Pari:: ;

Auending were Ethel OJr, Faye
Kilkhart, Dorothy Ritcbio, Erma
Cleland, Thelma White, Mary X.
Holt~r. Marcii Keller, Bather
Smith; Goldie Frederick. Mary Jo
Barrinaer, Laura ·Mae Nice,
Katlwyn Baum, JoAnn Baum, Mae
McPeek, Lora Damewood, Opal .
Hollon, Mutha Durst, Sandra
White, Alta Ballanl, Jean Frederick, Betty Roush, Leda Mae
Kracuter, Virginia Lee, Betty
Young, Ada Bissell and Jean

., OLDEST AND YOUNGEST • Pldmd 1rt UJiaa Lee, qe 91;
. &amp;Dd Alllley DeVIl'e, lilt two, aldat ud JOUllltll females praeat
·at the aanual Parker reunioll held l'«ftdy all'll)lpen Plalat EJe.

~-*

Howard and Wilma Parker.
···
Attending from Columbus were · ,'
Kathryn Lee Colburn and Lillian :T
Lee; from Smitllville, W.Va., Fran·
cis Fredericki .from Elizabeth, ,~.
W.Va. , Gail NJ.jlls; Willis and~~
Bryan Parker, Ji.qJ, Brenda, Alislui· ~
and Ashley DeVere; Jemxl, D*-::~
Misha Parker, Jo•h Snodgrass i
FranldiQ and Gladysa Palter,
ersburg , W.Va. ; J:te..n Hart and
Walker, Athens County; and Steve
Goh, Knoxville, Tenn.

Team members
provide meals

Boosters to meet

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were Ralph, Jimmy and Jinny Park·
er; Jack, Jackie, Brad and Brett
Parker; Joe, Martha and Will
Poole; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Parker,
Jason and Amanda I o; Lester and
Pam Parker, Leslie and Lester H;
Mary Edna Parker; Bill and Carolyn White, Billy, Keilie, Diana
and Cindy; Keitll and Emma Ashley, Whitney, Emily and Rachel;
Homer and Sarah Parker; Albert
and Mary Parker; Jennifer Proffitt;
June Ashley; Nellie Parker;

D of A national councilor wants
a renewed focus on memberships

.

204 COndor It

Friday, AUgust 14, 1992

-:----·-·----~-------....;....----~~~:----------...;....---~-------.:..;Pa~g~e::::_5.,

OSU's Smith ~nows how it feels
to walk a·mile in Barkley's shoes ·
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP)Robert Smith is ·back on the Ohio
State football team and he hopes
Buckeye fans and others are realistic in their expectations of him.
•'I never lilted having people
think about me as the ~ Of person who wu always domg thllliS
ri$hl." Smitll said in an interView
w1th The Plain Dealer of Cloveland. "I never saw myself as a
knight in shining armor to begin
witll. That was an image that was
created. There wm parts of it that
were true, bui I never felt any
extreme ,pressure to be perfec!•
because I knew dial was unposslble."
After coming to Ohio Stale her'
aided u the cpirome of the studentathlele, Smitll has become.911 enigma to some and a pariab 10 others.
The reason was Smith's departure from the Buckeye football
team last AugusL He bolted from
the team while charging that head
coach John Cooper and orfensivc
coordinator Elliot Uzelac had little
regard for players• academics or
their health, allegations that botll
coaches denied.
SJ11ith will Jetum to tlle football
fi~ld for Saturday's first team
workoot, recognizing that the aura
be brought with him to college is
gone.
· ·
"Now that I'm unpopular with a
lot of people,.I really enjoy it a bit
more," Smitll said. "It's refresb!ng
to have people down on me. I kind

The Daily Sen~iriel

By The Bend

:C.lemens helps Boston·end skid with 4•2 win over Cleveland

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
21, 1991' .
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�Ohio

Friday, August 14, 1992

Page ·6 The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 14, 1992

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar

'Stay Tuned·' is an order that's
haid to follow with this loser ·

RACINE - SeJiers family
· C:"mmuajty Calepd~r Items invited.
reunion, Sunday, Sw Mill Park,
appear two ~YII before ID evnt
B~ADBURY • Newly formed
Racine. Basket lunch, noon. Family
aad 11M&gt; day ot .lbat ·eveat. Item
satire is on a Mad Magazine malt be reeelved weD Ill adYillce young adult ~roue at Bradbury and friends welcome.
level-only not as sophisticated to issure publlcatioa In tbe cal· Church of Christ will have special
and only half as funny.
evening Saturday, 6 p.m., at the
DEXTER - Preaching atOid
elldar.
,·
A fme example of its ~­
church. Public Invited. Special Dexlu Clurch, Sunday, 9:45 a.m.,
ticated humor is the ·Helliv1sion
music from diffmnt groups in the David Garbutt. Columbo~. Public -·
FRIDAY
aerobics show, "The Excorcisit."
REEDSVILLE' - SJ;lCCial meet- area. Short program about the invited.
-.:
Exercises included 360-de,ree in~· of Olive Township Trustees, group's aetlvities. Refreshments
RACINE - Martin arid Emma
head spins and projeclile vomiWig. Fnday, 7:30p.m., Shade River served. Nunery prqvided.
Roush
Sayre reunion, Sunday, Star
State
Forestry
Building,
to
receive
"Feel the bum,• the insttuctor
KANAUGA
•
Square
dancing
Mill
Park,
Racine. Relatives and
applications
for
ttustee.
·
says, seconds before a leotard-clad
and
clogging
a,tthe
DAV
building
friends invited.
assistant bwsls into flame.
COOt VILLE • Hunter safety from 8-11 p.m. Music by Kanawha
The movie gi'ves the iDipleSSion
BELLE VALLEY - Barnhouse
that an asPiring writer created a courses by Coolville VFW Post Valley Ramblers. Public is invited.
family reunion, Sunday, East Cen·
few skits lor Saturday Ntghl Uve, 3478 will be Friday, Monday and
tra1 Extension Center, lioutbeast of
got rejected, and strung them Wednesday at the Lions Club
SUNDAY
Bene Valley, Noble Coun!Y.
together with 1 flimsy-as-wet-toi- building. Call 667.:6348, 667-3831
LANCASTER • Dorst reunion,
let-paper plot and c:alled it 1 movie. or 667-(;657 for'lnformation.
POMEROY - Hymn sing, Hill- .,..
Lancaster
Fair grounds, Sunday,
In the midst of this vast black
side
Baptist Church, Pomeroy. the ~
basket
dinner
at
noon.
Relatives
ANTIQ{Jin:
,
Faith.
Fellowship
hole of blll81ity is oae small point
Conquerors
Quartet Public invited.
and
friends
invited.
of lillhl thai s~ to stay alive Crusade for Christ Church, Route
338, Antiquity, will bold revival
like a dying star m ~ ~· ,·
"Looney · Tunes aDI!Ditor , through Salurday at 7 p.m. nilbtly
Chuck Jones has ~ced a seg- featuring Rev. Hurst Prauer, factment of the movte in which the son. The Headed Home Singers
Knables step into a canoon as a wiH perfonn. Public invited. .
couple of mice tormented by a
mechanical, heavily-armed cat
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
whose only JIIOIIIIIIDiing is to I1U1I Gospel Church in Long Bottom
them into Swiss·cheese with as will have preaching and singing
many rounds of ammo as is neces- Fridaf at 7:30 p.m. Pastor Steve
Reed mvites the public. FeUowship
sary.
' .
But a five-minute cartoon is wiH follow.
hardly worth the time and money it
SATURDAY · .
takes to sit through this Slinker. For
LONG
BOTTOM.- S.morgasnow. go see something else at die
bord
dinner
Saturday, S p.m., Long
'movies.
Wait until. this thing is out on Bottom Community Building. C:C.
video (about two weeks from now); is $5 for adults. $2.50 for children.
rent it. fast forwatd to the cartoon
POMEROY - Sign-up for Big
segment and wau:h it. Then quickly
Bend
Youth'Footb611, Saturday and
return the cassette to the video
of August,
Aug.
22,
Big Bend 'Youth and Fitstore so they can put it beck on the
ness Center, Mechanic Street,
September and
shelf.
Pomeroy,
9 a.m. to noon. ·
It has a lot of dust-gathering to
October, and take it

StayTued
RatedPG

• (out or ftve)
Morp11 Creek Productious
(StDTts today a1 thi Sprl11g Valley
Cinema 7. C~ck local listings for
tlw)

The movie industry, in an
attempt to win a larger audience
share; has been making fun of television for years.
Form Ama•o11 Wome11 011 tlte
Moo11 to Scrooge, movies have
often shown television in a poor
light to make themselves look better.
But with Stay Tllllt!d, the industry may have shot itself in the foot.
Lame movies such as this will keep
pcople·at home in front of the television where they can wau:h stupid
stuff for free.
·
Stay Tllllt!d stars two refugees of
the Sev~nties' Bad Sitcom Era,
John Ritter {T~e· s CQmpllltJ) ~
Pam Dawber (Mork cl Milldy), as
Roy and Helen Knable, a couple
whose marriage is headed for the
rocks because Roy is too obsessed
with TV to steer it toward safer
waters.

One night. Roy is confronted by
arad!er shady salesman named Mr.
Spike (played by Jeffrey Jones of
Howard the Duck fame), who
offers him a 666-channel satellite
dish and 24-inch screen television
on a trial basis.
.
What Roy doesn't rca1izc is that .
this deal has a few cables aaached.
The system only picks up morbid
shows such as "Autopsies of the
Rich and Famous" and "Sadistic
Hidden Video.•
One night. while arguing in the
back yard, Helen and Roy .are
sucked into the satellite dish and
transmilted onto the TV shows
where they become the stars of
such shows as "Northern Overexposure," where the plot always
mvolves sttuqling to survive.
Mr. Spike, you see, is an agent
of the devil and executive producer
of Hellivision TV, where his "cus. tamers" fight for their souls while
hopping from channel to channel.
If they survive for 24 hours, they
go free. If they fail, it's a long, hot
eternity.
The Knables face hungry
wolves, a sadistic game show host
and even a gou1ish ~d version
of Wayne and Garth on Saturday
Night Dead's "Duane's UnderWorld" in their fight to stay among
the living.
Stay Twred has aU the substance
of Cheez Whiz. The television do.

•

-Names in the news--NEW YORK (AP) - Woody
Allen is suing longtime companion
Mia Farrow for custody of their
three children.
Allen and Farrow, who have
never
married but hav!l been
TERRY HENRY ID
together about 12 years, have one
son together, Satchel, 4 1/2; an
adopted s.on, Moses, 14; and an
Terry and Sbelly Henry, MMon, adoJl.ted daughter, Dylan, 7.
W.va., announce the birth of their . . ~ Allen declined through
fmt son, Terry Michael Henry m, his public relations agency to comment on the lawsuit, rlled Thursday
on May 1.
in
stale court, a source wbo would
He weighed seven pounds and
speak
only on condition of
nine ounces and was 21 inches
anonymity
said "it would be fair to
long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Fred say" that the couple is no longer
Pullins and Mary Pullins, Middle- romantically involved.
Farrow has eight other children,
port.
.
Paternal grandparents are Terry
and Sandy Henry, Mason, W.VL

New arrival

Adult class
receives name
"Ambassadors for Christ" was
the name chosen for the newly
fprmed young adult class at the
Bradbury Church of Christ which
gathered recently for a cookout and
social evening at the home of Gary
and Unda Bates.
.
All young adulls, married or single are invited to join with them to
di~uss current events and needs in
their.lives, based on biblical advice
and ttulhs.
Plails were made for an event
Sawrday at 6 p.m. at the chore~.
Singers from arotll)d the area will
perform, and a special mess~ge
concerning class plans and ideas
wiH be presented. A rcccplion with
refreshments will follow in the
church basement. The public is
invited. A nursery will be jXOVided.
Further information on the
group may be obtained by calling
Bin King, advisor, at 992-5681, or
Tom Runyon, 992-7369.

Alfred residents
make visits, trips
Sandni and Otto Marcinki,
Stephanie, Kim and Ouo Jr.,
Cloudcroft, N.M., rewmed home
afrer visiting her parents, Charlotte
and Warren VanMeter and other
relatives in the area. Other ~uests
of the Van Meters were Linrue and
Roger Wren. Mt Gilead, and Chris
and Clara Wren, Sabina.
Jennifer and Michael Evans,
Rachel and Ben, Bradenston, Fla.,
visited Jennifer's aunt and uncle,
Thelma and Clarence Henderson,
local. and her grandmother, Edith
HatJler, at ExtencJa! Care in Veterans.Memorial HOS]lltal.
Keith and Brenda Weber
ret!lrned recently from a trip to
Onl8rio, CanadL They accompani~d Keith's father, Norman
Webtr, to i lake there, but reported
that
. fisll
shing was not very good. The
weilher was cool and plessant and
the:. scenery was reported to be
beaptiful.
Recent guests of Imogene and
Lel&amp;er Keaton were his sister. Evelyn and Hairy Andrews, DlytOna
Belch, Fla. AU IIUCIIded the ICeMan
ReOnidn ll Willilmltown Parle on
Slllday. Pat and Bob Keaton were
plli~C111 and vice-president of the
reullion.
~at the Pllole-Pirker borne
were COUJins from Rockford, m.,
Mt\ and Mrs. Ralph Chaney and
. Mr! 1114 Mrs. Hecox. Chaney and
H~x 11'0 tho children of the late
(Mil Hecoll,.ftrst COOlin of the late
Wilbur Plrker.

f

..

•

all adopted except twin sons she
had with former husband, conductor-pianist Andre Prcvin. Her public relations firm had no immediate
comment

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Travis Tritt says he was stunned at
beinjl nominated for five Country
MusiC Association awards, including entertainer and male vocalist of
the year.
"This whole experience has
been a dream come ttue for me,"
Trill said Thursday aftet the nominations were announced.
Tritt faces competition in the
entertainer and male vocalist of the
year categories from Garth Brooks,
who got three nominations, and
Vince Gill.
The Veteran Service CommisOill, the only other performer to
sion will meet Thursday at 9 a.m. get five nominations, will preside
the Veteran Service Office in over the Sept. 30 awards ceremony
at the Grand Ole ()pry along with
co-host Reba McEntire. McEntire
is up for female vocalist of the
yesr.

VCS to meet

Children with .
AIDS discussed
by Asbury UMW

JONATHAN AVIS

All-American

•

RUll.AND - Dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall Saturday 9 p.m. to midnight Musk: by
White's Hill Band. Public invited. ·
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange fun night and potluclt supper Sawrday, 6:30p.m. All members, porenlial members and ·friends .
invited.
..
,.
MIDDLEPORT • All parents
and players,~ anyone Uiterested in
Meigs Junior High Volleyball will
meet Saturday, 1 p.m., at the junior
high.
RACINE - Entertainment It Star
Mill Park on Saturday at 7 p.m.
will be the Morse Chapel Siligers,
Country Sweethearts, Ivan and
Friends. Public invited.
WILKESVILLE - Willtesville
United Methodist Ch~h, Route
160, Wilkesville, homemilde'chicken noodle clblner, homemade ice
cream, Saturclay, 4-7 p.m. Public

Apostolic
Churdt or J...., c•r111 Apoo~olk
Vani'Andland Ward ltd.
Plai.Of: James Miller
School, 10:30 a.m.

WoNhip • I 0 a.m., tl p.m.
Wedne~ Jay Scf'lliu:s- 1 p.m.
Mlddlcpurl t'hun·h 1l t'hrl!oil
~lh 11nd Main
Pastor: AlllanM~n

Keno &lt;:IIUrdt nr &lt;:ttri~
WoBhip-9:30 a.m.
I

purpose of the UMW and Mary
Cundiff read from Genesis about
Abraham IDd his ttavels.
An invitation was received from
the Pomeroy Church to attend a
dinner there on Tlii;Sday.
Ann Savage read a teller from
Sine Cars.
Birthdays observed were Beula
Ward in July, Helen Teaford and
Hope Moore in August.
Twenty shut-in.calls were made.
Mary Cundiff served refresh·
rnents.

Jonathan Avis has been named
an All-American Scholar by the
United SlaleS Achievement Academy.
The USAA has established the
All-American Scholar Award program in order to offer deserved
recognition to superior students
who excel in the academic disciplines: Scholars must earn a 3.3 or
bener grade point average.
Avis, wbo aaends Eastern High
School, is the son of Tom and Judy
Avis. Grandparents are Doyle and
Doris Justice, Huntington, W.Va.,
and Floyd and Doris Avis,
In a recent article regarding eliCoolvine. Great-grandmothers are
gibility
for Job's Daughters the age
Bessie Jeffries, Logan, W.Va., and
Should
bave
read, bet'fleen 11-20.
Anna Avis, Roalde, Va.

l,astor: E.l..1marO'Bryant

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Mlddl&lt;port ~lnt lloptllll
Comer Sixth .t Palmer
l'llslo&lt;: Rev. lames A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9: I 5 a.m.
Woohip · 10:15 a.m.
Wcdne!day Servia" • 7 p.m.
Racine ~lrst Uopllst
Pattor. Steve Delver
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor:&lt;hip · 10:411 Lm ., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsdoy SciVice• · 7:30p.m.
Sllv&lt;r Hun Hapllst
Pu1or: llill Uule
. Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Ml. Unlun haptlg
Paslor. Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
livening· 6:30p.m.
1

Wcdnc.~day Services • 6:30 p.m.

llfthlehem ll•plllll
Putor: Rev. Earl Shuler
SundaySc:houi·I0:30a.m.

PDLAAIS

Worship · 9:30a.m.

Thursday StiVices · 7:30p.m.
Old llclhe ~-... Wlllllaptlst Chur&lt;h
211601 St. Rt. 7, Middlcpurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
~vcning · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Sclvi= · 7:30p.m.
HII!Mdoliaptlst Cllurdo
SL RL 143 jull off Rl. 7
P111&lt;&gt;r. Rev.)·~ R,,i\CillC, Sr.
Sunday Sdtool · tlra.m.

7 • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Wonhip- I 1 Lm .• 6 p.m.

.. Clean out yolir closet,
basemetat or garage••• and turn
your unused or unwanted
artiel•s i~tO CASH with a

SUNDAY, AUGUST 16, 1991

HOMEIIKED
TURKEY &amp; DRESSING DINNER
M11hecr Potatou &amp; Gravy,
llultWICI . . .
Hot Roll
SmaH Drink or Coff•

$49~

MEIGS COUNTY FAIR HOURS
Uon.-Wed.
Thui'L
Fri. l Sun. 1M

Culcgruvc
Sunday School - VJU a.m.

Worship · 111:30 a.m., ~10 p.m.

Wetlnelda)' ~r"'o'iCC5 . 6:30 r.m.
1J•~n

Churc:h t1 Chrltit

llmi..,..villc Rd. (RL 14J)
Panor: ln~.erim pls1ur

~omcruy ,

Sunday Sc.:hool • 9JU a.m.

Wunhip · 111:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednc!IW.y Service~ - 7 p.m.
Ur•dbury t :hunh II ehrll\5lur: Tom Kunyun
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Wooh ip · IO:llla.m.
Tuppers Plains Chunil oi'Christ
11ulur: llt'lhcrt FtKier
Sun~oh•~ Sl.:h••'l · 9a.m.
WlM'Ylip · t} : 4~ a.m., tlJU p.m .

lkxtcr ( 'hurt:h nf &lt;:twist
l'a~ur : Chri~ Slcwan
·
Sund1y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship • IO:)Ihl.m.
Wcdoc"by Scl\'iccs · 1 p.m.
Rull1111nd Churc:h tiChrht
Pastor: Eugene E. lindcrwuud

Sunday Sdtuol · 9:311.a.m.
Wcwr.hip. · W:30.a.m.,7p.m.
Ma.'lun c : hur~.:h uf( 'hrkoil
Miller St., Mallon, W.Va.

Sunday School · Ill 1.m.

Worship · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdncsdiy Servia:~ - 7 p.m.

· St. KL 124 .t Cu. Rd. ~
Pa!lltw: Derek Slump
Sund•y Sthool · 9:~1 a.m.

Wu11h1p · lll:llla.m.. 7J Op.m.
WcdncM!ay Services - 7:3U p.m.
Suc:l~

Ruad Churd• u(( 'hrist
l"aslOr: Jo5cph H. llcr5 ~ins
Sund•y Schoo' - 1.,1 a.m.
Woohir - 10 •.m.. 1 p.m.
Wcdn~d•y ScrvK:ci -7 ·p.m:·

Ubwly ( 'hrlsllln t •hurd•

lk:\lcr
l'11~1nr:

WnJd)· r~ll

Sundlly Schnell · Ill a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wcdne11d~y Service · 7 p.m.
Llnasvl~lc

HtwtkJCk (lto\'t (~ brch
Pastor: Charle• l&gt;mtiaan
Sunday ichool - 10:30 a.m.

W011hip · 9:10a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School: 9:31\ o.m.
Worship Sc!Vicc: 10:)0 o.m.
Bible S.udy, Wcdne&lt;doy, 6:30p.m.

Chrisli an Union

Motriah Haplllll
l'wnh .t Main Sl., Middlcp&gt;n
l,tnor: Rev. Gilhcn. Cr.ia, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wunhip • I 0:45a.m.

"'"""'"'-"'l'.rlltln

Antiquity llapllst

Even ina · 7 p.m.
WcdntMII)' Services -7 p.m.

l,aswr: Kcnndh SmiLh

9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Scrvioc• · 7:30p.m.
Rutland ~·roe WUI!Iopllst
Solan St
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Sdtoul· 10 a.m.

Urilll• liokiO
Ptuur: 'lltcn• Jlurh1m
Sunday Scho•~ · 9:30a.m.

Hartfu&lt;d l'llurdt ofChrllllin
l'hrlstlutlinkiO

ll•nfutd, W.Va.
MC\1. 01vid \1cMU1il
.Sundoy S..'ho•~ · II a.m.
Wunhip · Ulla.m., 7:30p.m.
l»a~tor:

Wedftc~dly

--

"""'c•.- t.'llltrdl

M_!llbcrr~}Avt., Paneltl)', 9'12 ·!1191

PallOr:
Waller t;. lleiol
. Sat Con. 4:45-S:Il p.m.; Mau · l :lOp.m.
Sun. Con. • 8:45·9:1la.m.,
Sun. Mus · 9:30a.m.

l'ulm: Kc ... . ll.\lid Ruucll

Sunday So:h..,land Woohip· 9:30a.m.
livcnin~t Scrvitcs- 7 p.m.
W cdnc~day Scf'llicc~ - 7 p.m.

Church of God
MI. \1urlah nu1rdl nfGnd

Kidnc l•a~unr:

Kc\1 . James Satterfield
Sund.y Schnt~l · 9:45a.m.
l ~vtninK - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvi ce~ - 7 p.m.
Nulland ( ·hurch tl (~ud
l'• ~ltlf : Jnhn F. (\I(Ulrln
Smdlll)' St:huul · Ill a.m.
Wunhir - ll1 .m., 1 p.m.
~cdnc~d•y SeN ice~ - 7 p.m.

l~as10r:

Deroo Newman

Sunday Sehoul • 9:45 o.m.
Wonhip - II a.m. •
Wednesday Scf'lliccs - 7:30p.m

( ·hunoh nrc :ud ., .. l'rnphtl-y
O.J. While M..J . uHSt . M.t. lfil
l'•~lnt : 1'161 llcn~)f'l
Suntllly Schuul - 10 1.m.
Wnnhir . II a.m.
Wt·dnc~day Scrvic.-c~ - 7 p.m.

EntcrpriSl!
Kcilh KaUer
Suntilly School · 10at.IT1 .
Won;hip - 9 a.•R., b p.m.
Tuc~day Scrvil:CS . 7 run .

\t'"'' l.lf't' Chun·h rl God
Chc, lcr
l'•~hif : (i•ry llinc!l
Sund•y Schnol - 1,1 :30 a.m.
w~'"'hir - t. p.m.
Wedncsd•y Service• - 7 p.m,

1astor : Kcilh ielklcr
Suntlty School • 10 11.m.
Worship- ll1.m., 6 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Episcopal
(;r..:! •:pl~t~p•l Ctturrh

326 h. ~am St, Pomeroy
!)••tor: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers
Sunday 'th,lul 1nd wui'Jhir - II a.m.

1I111SLor:

Fliil"'t~HJs
1

l:urcst Mun
Pastor: Dcmn 1'\cwm•n
Sund11y S\:hwl - IU 1.m.
Wur.;hir . g a.m.
Thursd•y Scl'\liccs - 6:30p.m.
H••lh (Middlt'Por1)
l,astor: Fntnk Sm ith

Sund•y S.:huul · 9:30 1.m.

Holiness
IIIJne (;run lnb~ HnllftKlll (llurrh
1/2 milt &lt;tf! KL 32.5
l'11~1ur: Kc:v. O'llell Mtnley
SunJ11y Sdk••l - 9:30a.m.
Wo,,hip - IIUfh .m., 7:30r.m.
Wcdllt'~ dll)' Sc:rvi~.:c - 7:30p.m.
WNy•n IUblt' HuUneH!I Church
7~ I'&lt;•~ St ., \1Kldlcpon.
l'•~hw : M.cv. MtJY McCany
Sunday ~~o:tK•tl - 9:30a.m.
W\w,hir · ICl:JO a.m., 7:30p.m.
WcJnc\J~ y Scl"''icc • '1 :30 p.m.
Hy~·ll

Mun tlulint'!IS Church
l'astur: Mut1ert 'i•nley
Smd•y Schl.;.ll - 9:30a.m.
WuNtlip - IU: 4~ 1.m., 7 p.m.
Thursd11y ~rvict · 7:30p.m.

11aarrlst..,Uk•ll1•1ina'i l :h1plcr
Po~shlf: Kcv. luhn ~cvillc
Sunday S~o.'ht•lt Ul1.m.
Wnr'lhlp · ll1.m., 7:30p.m.
WedncMI1y ScNic.:c · 7:30 J'.m.

Latter-Day Saints
lleoii'Jianlxl&lt;l Church of J.... Chrbl
In !.alter Doy Salnb
l'unllll1d -KIIt:inc Rtl.
W11liliiTI Knu~h
Sumby Sd~11•l · 11:llh.m
Wmshir · IIUn ...m.
Wcdnc~dly Service~ - ?:30 p.m.
1 1 ~\lur:

Wonhip · 111:30.a.m .
Wcdnctd•y Se rvices - 6 p.m.
Mln~rs\lllle

Pmor: De ron Newman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wu~hi p - 10 a.m.
Pe11rl Ch11pel
I,11Uor: 1·1 orcncc Smith
Sund•y School • 9a.m.
Wor5hip - 10 1.m.
l)umcroy
l'aslor: Eunh•e (Grace) Kce
Sund~:~y Sc.:hool - 9:15lll.m.
Worship - 10:10 1.m., f'l p.m.
Wednesday Scrvit:cs - 7:30p.m.
Rotk Sprin~s
r.~wr : Kcith RIIJcr
Sundav School - 9:15a.m.
Wu"hip · 10 a.m.
Wcdnc~day Scrvi~s - b p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Arthur Cnl'tn:r:
Sunday S~ hool -9:30a.m.
WoBhip - 10:30 1.m.
Thund• y Service.• · 7 p.m.
Salem Cmter
Pt~tor: .Ron

Wo"hir

Sl. J•tt~n l.ulht.'f'lft Churt-h
l~nc (imve
Pastor. Laura A. teach Shn:fTlcr
Worship · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 o.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Co-PulOr: Pauiaa and Richard Bonds-Kru g
Sundoy Sehoul · 9:30 a.m.
Wonttip- II a.m.
Sl. Paul Lutheran Claurth
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., i'crncruy
r.uor! Laul'l/\. Leach ShrdOer

Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Wotship - II a.m.

Umted Methodist
Graham UnHed Moihoolol
Wo1Ship . 9:30 o.m. (Ill .t 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl .l 41h Sun)

Wcdne!day Service · 7:30p.m.

- 10: 1~

1.m.

Sntnnlllr
Putor: Florence Smith
Sunday Sehoul·· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

ll&lt;lhMnf
11utur : 1\cnnelh lbkcr
Sund11y St:hc'll.d · 10 a.m.
wun~hir - 1.,1 • .m.
Wcdne~day S4:Nicc ~ · 10 a.m.
&lt;:armel
Kcnnelh ll1kcr
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.
P11~1ur:

Paswr: Ol11rlcs Joocs

Sundsy School · 9:30a.m.
Wor1h:f.
' • !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Thurs y Services· 7 p.m.

Mc!ia!l Coopcrall\le P•rlsh
NorUu:ut Clur4er

Alfr&lt;d
J'h...Pastor: Sharon llaum~an
VSundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.• 6:30p.m.

Ch.,1or
Pa5lor: Sh1run llau sm10
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehoul · 10 a.m.
lhumlly Scr.t icc• • 7 p.m.
'

.lupp11
l'u tor : Hrcnda Wchcr
Wu~h i p • ~:30 1.m.
Sund11y Schuol - IOJU 1.m.
Wcdncsd11y Scrvic.:cs - 7:30p.m.
(, on~

Uuttom

,

Pastor: Kev. Seldon Johnson
Sunday Sehoul • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
W cdnc~day

Services · 7!3(J p.m.

Kct.odsvllh:
Pu tor: }{cv. Seldon John1on

Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sundty School- 10:30 a.m.
Wcd,ncsd•y Services - 7.:30 p.m.
Tuppers l~11lns St. P11ul
1-. ~tur: Sh• MIIausm•n
Suntlly School - 9 1.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tuckl•y Services -7 :30p.m.

O.ily Man - 8:30 1.m.

Pu tor: Kev. IJoyd ll Grimm. k
Sunday School - IJ:JCI a.m.
Wur5hip - IU:3U 11.m., ft:JU p.m
Wednesday Serv1u.:~ - 7 r .m.

Ret'lbvlllt Felk•w""lp
, Chun-h tithe 'u.armt
Putor : Juhn W. l)t•uK,IU
Sunday Schuvl · 9:10 a.m .
Wullhip · 10:4S 1.m.. 1 p.m.
Wedncsd1y Scrv1w ~ · 1 r .m

Syncusc t:hurl'h 1llllt ~a1.1rmr
l1utor: Rev. Glenn Mt.: \1illln
·Sund11y Schuni - IJ:JU a.m.
Wunohip - IU:JUa .m., ttp.m.
Wcdncsdll )' Sc rv i U!~ . 7 p.m.
Jlumc.'fuy Chunh ullhf 'u.arf'flt'
11ulllr: R&lt;.'V. ' lht~na~ \o1LOun1:
Sunday Schut.•l · IJ::\flun .
Wordlip • IO:JIIa.rn. and ft r .m.
Wednc~dll)' Scr.o1t:es - 7 p.m.
ChcMrr l 'hunh uf the ~UirtRf
11.,tur: Me.... llcrhcn Grate
Sun...t.y Sc.:hut.tl - 9:30 a,m.
Wur~hip - 11 1.m., 6 p.m.
Wtdnesd•y Scf'llice1 - 7 p.m.

Murnlna St•r
Pa5lvr: Kenneth lbkcr
Sunday Sehoul - ~ : 4~ 1.m.
Woohip - 10:10 11.m.
Thursday Scrvioc~ . 7Jfl p.m
SuUnn
Kcnnelh U;~kc r
Sundt)' Sc.: hool · 1):10 a.m.
Worship · 10:4~ t .m. (I ~• A.1rd Sun)
Easl IA'tarl
P1s1ur: Ro~tct &lt;ir~~.:c
SundH)' SclJt,.,l · I(] a.m.
Wnr ~hip - t) a.m.
P1~ Wf:

k;uint:
Jtogc.:r (~t iiiCC
Sunday Sd1oul · IO a.m.
~lM'~ hip · II a.rn.

l.aurcl &lt;:lilT Free M\of.huditit.t :hunh
l'ulor: l'eter Tn:rnhlay
Sunday Schuul · 9:30a.m
Wo"hir · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wcdnc~day Scrvitt~ · 7 p.m.
Rulllllnd IUhiL• \h-lhodlst
l'11 ~1ur: Kcv. lv1n 'Aye""
Sund•y School · 9J H a.m.
Even in!£ - 7 p.m.
Wcdnc5day Service~ · 1 p.m.
Coulvlllc lnltl'tl Mt.'lllndlst l••rl!&lt;ll
l1u tor: ll11ruiJ E. /\Uu··••ay -11riddy
Otuh·UI~ Churt·h
Main &amp;.l;iflh Sl .
Sund•y School · lll1.m.
Wnuhip · 9 a.m.
Tue~y Scf'lllt.J.:5 · 7 p.m

11&lt;11"'1 Chur&lt;h

Town~ hip' Kd., ~loiC

Sund•y Schtx,l . I) 1.m.
Wllf~hir • Hl un.
Wcdnc~Jay Scrvicc5 - HI a.m.
Huddngpnrt ( 'hunh
Grand Sl rtc.'l
Sund•y St;t'AA.1I · 10 1.m.
Wuohir · II a.m.
W cdnc ~day Scrvi~~ - Kp.m.
'l'nrdt Chun·h
C&lt;&gt;. Rd. 1\1
Sund•y S~o:houi - I) : ]Ua.m .
Woohift · 10:111 a.m.

Nazarene
Radnr t1nl nlun:h •If I he Suartnt
l,151nr: 'lht~na~ 1.. 011c~. II
Sunday St.:hml · IJJO a.m.
Wunhir · lll:)(h .m., b p.m.
Wctine5d~roy Scrviu.:~ · 1 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hcrmttn Unlted lk'elhrtll

In Cbrlot Cbun:h
Teu' Commmi1y uff CR K2
l,uluf: Muh:n S..ndcl'!l
SutW11 ~ ~h••ll - 'l::ln 16 .m.
Wonhip - 111:3Ua.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsd11)' Scl'\licc~ - 7:30p.m.

,.

Eden Unltc.'d Krethren In ChrbA.
2112 mile~ nurth uf Kcccbville
on .:i111c Rolllc 124
Panor: Kc:v. Kohcrt \brklcy

"

Sund•y School · 10 o.m.
Wun hip - 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsd l6)' Services - 7:30p.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wel.lnc ,dlly Service - 7 p.m.
· Full Gospel Ll~hlhuusc
33045 lliland Ro11d , Pomeroy
l'aoor: Ruy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; lnunoliy · 1:30 p.m .

'

New Sl'llkmcnt Chun:h ·

Sunday Woohip • 2:311 p.m.;
,,Ursdl)' ICf'lliCCI •7:30 p.m .

Rutland &lt;:hur..:h uf lhf S11..1rene
l'a~ t ur': Slll1lucll4a~ye
Suntby St:ht'll.l! · 9:30 1.m.

South Bethel New Tcslamcnl

Wonhir - IU:'\(1 a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wo.lnc ~day Se rvi ce~ - 7 p.m.
.P.Iflland First ( 'hurch ttl the l'triu.arenc
l'•~hlf: William Ju~li•

Silver Ridge
Pauor: Duane SydcnsLrid:er
Sunday Sehoul · 9 o.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncllby Scr.oicc - 7 p.m.

Sund•y S.:houl · 9:30a.m.

Carldon lnterdcnumlnatlonal Church

Wonhip - 10:40 1.m., 7 p.m.
WNinc~day Scl'\'iccs · '1 p.m.

Pas lOr: Clyde W. llcndenoo

\f'W Hann ( 'hurt.'fl of IM !'t11.1rene
i••~ltM': (ilcndon S1ruod
Sund11)' Sch••" . t~Jn a.m.
Wu~hip . 10:30 ~. m., 7 p.m.
Wcdne~day Scrvi"• -7 p.m.

Kingsbury Road
Sunday Sehoul · 9:30 Lm .
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednc!day Scrvtoc • 7 p.m.
t'reodlllll Gu'l'ci Mission
ll•ld Knob. un Co. Kd. 31
Putur: Rev. Ruger Willrord
Sundl)' School - 9:30a.m.
WoNhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi~ • 7 p.m.

Other Churches
llotrNoahatw Churdl
1'1~1nr:

Kuhell Vance
Suf'kby Wn"hir - IOa .m.
WcJnC\tl..y . td() r .m.
Trinity C:,lfll.rt'lallun•l Churth
Pl\lttr: Kt•v. Kul»nd Wildman
Omrt·h tl :l5 a.m.
Wtlf ~htf1 · !11:1fl • m.

Cuulvillc Road
l'aslor: Rev. \'hillip Ridenou r
SunJ•y School - 9:30a.m.

w... hip . 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
F11lnlcw lllhle (:hurch
l.ct11n, W.V1 . KL 1
l'1•1ur : J1mc~ Le wis
Suod•y School - 11 1.m.

Tht• Sal\ ~tllun Army

ltuncmlll Ave ., l'omcroy.
Sund16)' St:tlml · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · IU:lll a.m., 1:30 r .m.
Mlddll~trl ( 'ummunlly Church
n. l'cul St ., :'¥hddlcport
P• ~ tur : Slllrn Anderson
Suntlll)' St:h ... •IIO a.m.
l ·: vmin~ . 7Jnp.m.
WL'IInc' cl")' ~rvil:c - 7:30p.m.
'hhernaclr Churdl
lbiley Run Road
l'• ~hM' : Kc\1 . l·:mmctt Rawsnn
Sund11r S&lt;.:h1•'l · IU:m a.m.
:vL-nm~ 1 p.m.

•·•ilh

I hut"b) S ~rvu.:c · 7 r .m
Syrar.L'U"'-' \11sslun
1411 ltnd!l.cm•nSt, Syracu§e
l 1 a~tor: K11YC'iik c) Thompon
Suntll1y ~·tit•" - In a.m.
Evl'nlll~ h r .m.
Wcdrtl''day ."k·rvtcc - 7 p.m.
tfut•l c·~tmmunlly c:hurrh

011 Rt. 124
1'16\lnr: hhcllbn
S4Jilllll) Sch••" . IJ ·l() a.m.
W,ll',hiJ' · IU:.lfllll .m., 7:30p.m.
( .~lfnmunlly c•urth
Sundll )' ~:h\lllll · ~Ufla.m.
Wuflihtr IOJO a.m., 7 p.m.
llurllniEiun ( 'ummunil1 Church
))) I'll' Ilk'

..,.,-

White's Ch!*pcl Wc.'Sicyan

II~

Wonhip . 10:45 1.m. (2nd &amp; 41h Sun)

I'II §IUf:

MI. Olive United Methodist
Of! 124 behind Wilk01viUc

Mlddlopurt Church otfth&lt; ~ ..~r•n•

J:icrCc

Sunday School · Y;lla.m.

Lutheran

Stf'\'iccs ; 7:30p.m.

Evenins · 7 p.m.

Wcolnc!day Scrvia:s · 7 p.m.
Alh Slrnl •....,... lloplltl
Middlcpoll
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.ni.
~~~":~~:s.~..
~~i« ·7:30p.m.

Asbury (Synacu.OriC}

Bradrnrd Churth tlf('hrl!iit

RHdnHie nt•rth tl ehrl!51
Pa•lur: Philip Siunn

Sto~doy School·

Al'!'lc and Sc"'nd Su.

Pa~lor: .J.ck

Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.

•

Central Cluster

Barw1Uuw KldJe ('hunh uf ( 'hrl~

elU'l'itl.11n l:hurch
Suoo;ily XOOul - 9) 0 a.m.
Wor~hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:3tl p.m.
WecR~day Servia: 7:30p.m.

M~

This Is your Invitation to sell any Item lor $100 or less end advertise It FREE. Simply clip this
coupon (photo copies not acceplecl), 1111 In your ad and mall It to us or d(op It off at our
olflce. Your ad will run 10( 1 week.

Sunday Sehoul · 10:10 a.m.

Wednesday Sctvio:ca · 7 p.m .
Hope Baptist Chapel
570 Gran! St.. Middlepon
Puwr: David llryan, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Worshtp · II Lm., 7 p.m.
Wcdncsdly ~ices • 7 p.m.
Vktury Hapllst
525 N. 2nd SL, Middlepun
Pastor: llfllCI It Kccscc
W9rship · !0 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednc!day Sclvia:s · 7 p.m.
Fallh D•ptl!d Churdl
lhiiMd Sl., M•son
Sunday School· 10 i.m.
Wcdncnlly Services - 7 p.m.
~·....,.. Run lloptlst
Pntor. Arius llurt
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Correction

SW{1JJilt]' S!PECIJU

'

Rutllnd Flrstlbpllst Chur&lt;h
Sunday Sdtuol· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Pumeroy First lbptlst
East Main St.
Pas1or: Or. Lee Morris
Sunday. School · 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:30 a.m.
First Suuth'"' U•ptlst
4187Z l'umcroy Pike

Marie Houdashelt discussed
children with AIDS at the recent
meetinJ of the Asbury United
Methodist Women, Syracuse.
She explained they need love
~ support. She also read scripture
from Psalms 23. Helen Teaford and
Mary Lisle also took part in the

JIIO.f.:in~ting opened with the

Sunday School . 9:10a.m.
Worohip · M
':l5, 10:30 a.m., 7p.m.
Wcdne5dly Service~ -1 p.m.

•

RIVE,RFRONT HONDA
RT.

Ptslor: Andrew Miles

S101day School . 9:10a.m.
Worship · IO,lO a.m., 7 p.m.

l'vm•ruy Wost-lde Ourdlo( Christ
33226 tnil&lt;lrcn'• ll&lt;~ne Rd.
'1'12·31147
Sunday School · II o.m.

· ·On appi'OYICICI'd. WARNING: ATV'a can bl nazaroous 'to operate. These are fyll·size machines
dtllgn«&lt; to~- only by ldultl .18 llld · For yout oaloly: Alwayo - r a hllmol. eye
1)101- IIIII , _ cto11lktg. Bo pofllculany carelu1

UPPER

-.y
(:hurdt "'l'llrlll
212 W. Main St.

Wcdne~day Scrvi~Xs · 7 p.m.

home with no money down. With the
Polaris StarCard, we're offering 90-day free
financing and no payments for
90 days. Now there 's no easier
'
. way to own a Polaris. Your
participating dealer has the details. Or
you can have your choice of $ZOO worth
of Polaris clothing and accessories - FREE.
on dilftcult \trrain. Polatllltcommtnds that Ill ATV riellfl
like a lrllnlng """""· For 011a1y and lralring ln!Otlllalion,
ooe your diller or call Polario loll·lree al l -8(10.342·37&amp;4.
0 1992 Pollrisl~tries L.P.

Church of Christ

Synu:U!tf Church ntGOO

Wonhip · 9:30a.m.. 1:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
C•lvary lllble Chun:h
llomeroy 11ikc, Co. Kd.
l111tor: Re\1. IU•ck wood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:311 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeN icc - 7:30p.m.

.'

Spiritual fallh Church
State 338, Anti'luny
l)ulur: A. Stcw•n
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening -7:30p.m.
Thursday Serv ice · 7:30p.m.
Calv•ry Jlil~rim Chapel
llanisonvillc Ro11d
l1anor: Kcv . Victor Roush
Sund11.)' School9 :30 a.m.
Worship - II 1.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdne1&lt;0ay Service - 7:30p.m.

·,

--.

Slhcrs ~lllc

\\'urd uf F11llh
l'anur: Dlllvid Dai ley
Sund•y Sckool9 :30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Thursday Scrvi\.1:- 7:30p.m.

Rt.'juicinu l.lft.• Churt.'h

llurl•n~hlm

..

SIMI N. 2nd Ave., MKldlcpun

l 1uh•r : KM)' L1udcnnih
Stmt!.) ~·tK.•ll · Hla.m.
wm,h•r - 7 p.m.
WctltWMiill)' St·rvicc - 7 r .m.

l,auur: Ke\1. Mich16ell'angio

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday SciVicct · 7 p.m.

.

Pentecostal

C'hrl!iilllln h·llt"'~lp t :enlrr
Salc."m St, Mu1l1nJ
1•11slur: ltuhcn E. Muner
Sunt.ll)' S&lt;:hotlt · 10 1.m.
Wnnhip - II : IS 1.m., 7 r .m.
WcJnc~d •y Scl'\lif,l! - 1 p.m.

'

l'&lt;niKUStol A,..mbly
SL R1. 124, Racine
11u t0f : WiUiaun IIOO.ck
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
WcJncsdllly Services - 7 p.m.

\hr!it' ( 'h11pri ( 'hurt:h
Sur- .: \itl.c \1i11hlln
Sunt.ll)' ~ L'h••" - lfl11.m.
Wu" hir. · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnc"• •Y Scl'\litt · 7 ~.m .

Middl~o.•purll'cnlcct.li!bl

'lhird Ave.
P11stur: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 ~.m .
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wcdnc~d•y Service~ -1:30 p.m.

Fallh c;usprl ( 'hurch
!Jif)tt UoiiiMn
Su n~ L•y St. ·h~-.,J · 9:W a.m
Wur, htp . IU:4~ 11 .m., 1:30 p.m.
W~"llnc~d•y 7:1U p.m.

\tt. CHht ( 'ummunlly Churt"h
l.,., lur: l.o~•· n.•nu: Hu~h
Stt.-..la)' St:hnul · ~:1{) a.m.
l ~ 'llcmng · 7 p.m.
Wcdm,l•)· ."iocl"'l tt.:e - 1 p.tn.

l"nllt'Ct •·•llh ('hurch
MI . 7un l'nmcn~y lly - 1; "~
l'•'lm: He'll. H,,.t.:n E. Smith, Sr.
'\unJ~ty S..·hu1ll · 1,1 ;]0 a.m.
Wm~h •r - IU:.'\CI a.m.. 7 r .m.
W~:dnt•\d~)' Scl'\licc · 1 p.m.

.'

Presbyterian
l,r~byterl1n
Wor~h i p - 9 a.m.

HMrrlsunflllc

Church

Sund11y School - 9:4S 1.m.
Middlcpnrl l1rcsbylcrillln
Sundlly Schl)t.)i - 9 1.m.
Wonhi p - 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;. 4lh Sun.)

Sync.-u!if f.lrsl Unilc.'d J&gt;rfSbyl~:rh•n
Sutoday School · 10 o.m.
Wor5hir - II a.m., 4 p.m. (1st&amp;. 3rd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventist

',

Seventh-Day Ad\ll!ntlllit

•:n·h""a hollu.. "'lp
I~H \t1ll S1 ., \ott tMicpurt
l'a ~lt•r : ('ht ll' k .\1 t: llhcnon
Surtdl6y St;h,w.ll - i(h .m.
S..lun.l ly Scf'llit.:cs:
S1hbllth Sct".)l" · 2 p.m.
Wor!lhip • 3 p.m.

Mulberry Ill•. Rd ., I'OOICroy

'

.

..

11astor: Koy l.awinsky

."

~'

,.
.

•

' '
(Note: 15 Word ·Limit and Your Selling Price Mult Be In Your F.REE Ad)
(Sorry, thla cloea not apPly to Yard Sales)

'

RACINE PLANING MILl

·,

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __

Mall To:

.

'
•
·,
•

,,

POMEROY, OHI0-992-61171

•

BILL QU ICKEt ,

-·•

.

111 Court St. ,
"
Pomeroy, .OH ·45769

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

·~· fI

I

1

Jonn F. Fulu , Mgr .
Ph, ..,.,101
Pomeroy, .

Brogan·Warner .
INSURANCE
; SERVICES
214£. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

Crow's Family Restaurant
"FHtfltlntl Kentucky Frt.d Chlclren"

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

'992-5432

.
..

•n-6669
f

"

271 ltorlh

SocttMI
Mhltlloport,

..

Dhtt

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

.fM;\

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

·~!

115 I. MomO&lt;iat Dr.

AGENT .

•

P. J.

•

Nationwide Ins. Co .

•

I

Pomtroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dil(nit~·

and Serl'i('('' Alu ·n.v ~"
E sta bll~hed 191~

992-2121

~~~~! r~~
PrncnphoM

.,, nss

Pomfroy

t
.I
~

·~

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~lES &amp;

SERVICE

992-7075 '

•
••
•

(offtr ...... 1/31112)
'·

..

RAWLINGS·( OATS

' '

MEIGS nRE
~ ' CENTER, INC.

...'

.,:

212 E. Main Slleet
992-3785. Pomeroy

ft

••

The 'Daily S~ntin.el
•

Mill Wo1k
l·.·r..• \"; !''I
Cabinet Makin~ W ·'·· ...,
Syracuse
992 ·3978 .

..

Phone I : - - - - - - - - - - - -- , - --

'

· K&amp;C JEWELERS

-I

'

\

\

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

••miiOMD PEADUNE

7

Now

Chality HI Effidelcy

BABY'S GOT BACK
CONTEST
FRIDAY NITE

Bennetts Mobile Home

45

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrichl

Announcements
I' '

LOTS
SALE
1·51CIES

Approved Townahlp
Road (blacktop), 1/4
mile from Rt. 7,

locmcl bel-.
Ch11ter lll'ld TuppeN

ATIENTION TRUCK DRIVERS
Discussion of Driving Regulations
Time: Sat., Aug. 15, 1992,
7:30pm
Place: Univaraity of Rio Grande·

1'1111....
Each lot .. pertlally
wooded with ljlcellent
drainage. SerVIce by:
tP.C. Water Co.;
Columbu1 I Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
end up
Owner Flnenced

Woods Hall

Speakers: P.U.C.O.
Representative
Chief, Tom Yeager
Rap. Jamea Montgomery
Sponsor: Cremeans Concrete &amp;
Supply Co., Inc.
Frank A. Cremeans, Pres.

rnuel contain the Ful 1111111a
of tho J*IY or ...,._ .,._
milling lila propoulltld all
Middleport, lhlgl County, pereono ln,._lad lhereln.
Ohio In tho office ol the Each blddor rnuat lurnloh
u.ror,
VIllage Hall, evlclenoa of uperlonce on
Middleport, Ohio, unlit 4 ''"'"" oonotrucaon proP.M., Augull 24, tWo!, lor ~n::!r':J"!~':

NEW-REPAIR

PUBLIC NOTICE
SUiocl propoello wilt be
r..:elvad try the Vlllaga ol

Gutters

992·5114

Ita 894-Wttlw Alley
RAQNE, 01110

(F-.Iy ~ llllp s.l
Ujllol

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • Cllall Saws
• Weedealers

614·949-2804
•
~

S:L.INSULAnD
RAISED PINEL GIUGE DOOR
IISWUI PIICES
9x7•$275.GO 16x7·$450.GO
OPEIIIS IISIILLEI-~ HP-$200.00
With 2 Tntnamltlll'l

TyfM

w•••rAIIer

i •
~

•

Willi PwrciiiH Of

[!]

• N • • r'----::!':"';:;.•
•• .

Door Pill O,.Hr
Trl•

........ .

;

. . . _ """'Ptoplo~, 811
Hour DriYs. Witton,
1'01'11.
i12o21J Wot!OJ!, Six People,
. PwdJ; 811 Pooplo, 1240.
Joy Cha~ ... 41WMo
:1151.
111n. opoill hub cop oncf,
nmo
8....
UnHI And mou!WIIIII bnlcilll lor Ofdo Dlllta

e

=

HOUSE

C.mJIIIIIlllfiCIIIom ..JOhlpa. IJio.

PAINTING

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

FREE ESnMATES

CALL

949-2168

614·992·6949

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
.KENNY'S AUto CENTER

Gutter Cleaning
P1lntlng

Conotruc
of light (I)
All opecllcatlonl and bid
otnglo lerntly, thrH bod· dooullllnlo .,. ..,.....,1 at
7121/''¥JIIfn.
room ho••• to be con·
•otruclod on village property • coet ot $35.00 (nonNfund.
t'""'lod o1 Fifth - Palmer ablo) at the Ofilco of the
SINIIo, turown u the "Bet- u.ror, Vlll•g• Hall, 237
oy R-" project
Race Stroot, lllddloport,
· Tho homM muat be con- Ohio.
atruclad In aoconlltnco with
A public bid Opining wtl
949·2391or
Ferrnora Horne Adrnlnlotr• be hald al4:00 P.ll on Aug.
Uon apoclllcatlona. Thtoa 24, 1H2.
1·100.137·1460
wtl oonolat of (I) tha atruc·
The VMIIIIJI rMMY• the
Lawn Mowing,
Mal engln-lftg bulletin ..._,till rajlct any or all proFertilizing,
Weeding,
No. 715 deled June 13, poo•ll and to waive any
end Seeding.
1885, u loouecllly tha U.S. lnlorrnallllla or lrragularJ.
Shrub•ndTree
Dlparlmanl ol Houalng and 1111 In the propooato
Urbln Devalopmont, •• roc•Mid.
Trimming &amp; Removal
•ppllcable; and (2) tho Frad Hollman,lhtyor
Reeldentill a Commerclll
Ferrnora Homo Adrnlnlotra- 'VIUagaoiMiddloporl
frN ElllrMI•
&amp;.2&amp;-'82.U.
tlon lnotrucllon 1824·A, (I) 7, 14,21
Exhibit C, and FIIHA 1.:.;;:.;;,;..;..;:.;;,;...________
lnotrucUon 1824-A, Exhibit
PubliC Notice
D, conotructlon atandardo
NOnCE
concerning thermal ln•ul•
Nolle• Ia herlby given
lion and conforming Ill II• that lila undlnlgnad Iliad In
1112 Notional Elootrlc•l C.. No. 275U, appllclltlon
Codo lind lila 1m Ohio 1 a to tho Comnron Pluo Court,
2 Family DwoiHng coclo.
Prob1te Dlvlalon of llllgo
The projoot will ,_,,. County, Ohio, lor an order
tho bldcflr to anllr Into an to chango her n - to Carol
agroomant with tho VIIIIIIJI A. Slnllh.
ol lllddlaport to rooelve · S.lcl appllclltlon will be 2
In Memory
poymant of -h 00111ptolod h-d In ..ld Court, at 10 I;====~==;
homo upon
by o'clock A.ll., on the 14th II
thovltagoto lhe "-buy- cloy or Sop....,bor, 1112. at
In lo 'ng memory
er altho 111111 olwaCh FIIHA tho llelgo County Court
VI
Aurollbne Loan cloelng.
Houae.
of
Tho ouoc11olut bidder
Carol A. Lucu
RUSSELL B.
rnuat be - an Equal (I) 14, 11D
Employment Opportunity 1---------11
RADCLIFFE
Employer which prohibita
NOnCE
who passed away
diiCrlmln•tlon becluoo of
Notice 1' herlby glvon
August 14, 1991.
raoo, cread, color, national that tho Ulldenlg tad llad In
origin, llll,
handicap, c.. No. 2713 lf~loollon
Sadly missed
political IIIII
or IMIIIfs. ~,.'.:..
llY wife,
01 lllklllllport 11 c:oun ~1o lor
The
Vlllago
Golda
Radcliffe,
•n Equal Employment
ty, vn ,
an
Oppoitunlty Em..,_.
to ch•neo taot namo to
relatives and
Tho oonetructlon ol tha Kinnan.
fr1'ends.
S.ld appllclltlon wiN be
'·l
elg hI homH In .to.. mua1 hoerdln oeld court, •110:30
be completed by tho con- A 11
th 14th do 0 1
tractor no l•lor th•n · · on •
Y
February 25, 1113, with
IH2, at llllga 5
Happy Ads
panolty lnlpooad lor cleley County Jwan~~nnan ___...;.::;.:;.:~..:...-ol the project Tho propoaal (I) 14, ltc

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINnNINCE

GET SOME BREAP
WIJH AWANT AP

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

dead.,_,.,

C:O:::: ;t

..,...,bar,

Real Estate General

FREE ESniiATES

7121182111110.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCYION
elltwHOIMS

.c;.,
••••
.Complete

Reillotleliag
Stop &amp; Co1111111r•
fiiEE ESTIMIIIS

985·4473
667·6179

OFFICE SEIYICE
IND SUPPLY

112 w. ••• llrHt
.....~ 01.45769

HYSELL RUN ROAD - Two nico laying 2 acra loll.
:n- would make bllutiful homooites. $1,000.00 eoch.

614·949·2101 or 949·2860
(llo Su•••Y Calls)

New Ho.,.., Roofing,
Room Addltlona,
Kltchena, Porchea •ncl

Bllhl.

COMPLETE
REMODELING SERVICES
F- Eot • 2D Yra Exp.

773·5684or
992·5249
7f'lti'RJ1

t!V~l~ng

~

NG

--·

.

.

a IIIMne 111111 a coto1~ , - . ,

Uood ...... - · Colt 114-'
~
WI- To lur: Jri Autoo ,

IIUMI•••Ipm.

With Or ........ Coil
~ Livol)'. 114311 llu:l.

4~lfi'!Yod.
" old - ·dooGorman
.......
J04.t7$.7m, 1:00 I I:Ofllll•

!Of -

114-IIU417 ...,. 4:30pm, 114-

Pilei: All Old 11.1•
cotno.- Colno,
Cotno. 11'-llT.S.·Coin
lhop,

Concnlo ltocllo: Filol Como 1 1 1 - A - , Clotllpoh.

FirM Ooltloollo DillY
Tribune. 1211hlnf , ....... cw. Wlnlod:_IIM..,...,..oro
Upotlo, OH 4M3!.
=~~ npa'nhh ooitd, 304IUift~n
81... Top Mood,
KI1CIIonOven,
8lnlr,
Rabblto, Hampotora, 114-2451213.

w-.
f~7100.

Ftmllo C.llco Kit- I Wooa
Old,
To Good - .

Employmenl Servtces
11
-':::::=:H:oi-e~lp::W:::a::n:-::ted==

'AVON' ALLARWIShoro JOUr
Gorman
DUOOioo, 4 111M wlh •· Yau'l tho
........... mllll, ....tweit. ••...,•. 1400 - .,..

....,..rd

co.
"Tab1h , . O.t 01 ,.,.,
&amp;

-Itt

20 fl Wlldlmtn cam,.,, El· ::
oetlon1 Candlllon, PhoM: 114-

u, O.lt lor y.,•

• • •·

Oao-PO!IIIIIola-~dan,

hlul , _

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

toao to tho

call :IOW71-1llt

mil lull

•nd TRAC~ WORK

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME liTES ltld
TRAILER~.~

•UGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

·EXCAVATING
BULLDOZE£! I-II}CKHOE

AVAILABLE.

LANDCLEARINIO
DRIVEWAYIINBTAilED
UIIESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3831
WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

,....,.

earp.!ry Ellctllc

Ft l.. R.,ran•RI

~

•SAI~D

-GRAVEL • DIRT
•UMESTONE

(614) 992-3470

lotll21 .......

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

4+92·tfrt

R&amp;C EICIYITIIIG
BUllDOZING ·

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umealone,
Dirt, GI'IVII and Coel
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614•992-5591
12-5-tfn

Home

i;;;;ilm~p~rov;;-em~a;:nt;•;;;:;;:·· ,
larnll floiM lrnprDifiiMIIfl.

1
PI

....

- •-lntor1or
- · ,_,..
a..._ ExEx- ••
•.
1orlor
polioncod llwurld ~ill ...,_. •

lplrtment In Pt.

d 1 W.Va.. 1.JD4.171..1CM2.

....,.. ,,. he au1,

.

-~2.

_, -loll.

....... to
......,... fA.tn ....
~-lniOCMI

aIR ,..-otn llldd-,
tow 11111h1H,
no polo, 12211 1&gt;01' month,

W d • ~ to gluw44
Filii flro1 . . . . Qol.

...... NqUirod, t14.ee2-2381

lpolll DoJtr Trlbunl. as Thlnl
..... OoiiiJiollo.
.

""'"

Lolt .. Found

-:--I

11':::::1 ~

pill" DII

GallipoliS
&amp;VlclnHy
a
Mn• OUI ' , n '" PIM , ...
fit. 7, ,...,, lal"'*r, Clollwo,

c a&amp; fit HolM

-

-

.. _ ... 14111.

=.~llodntJ liirotr II lr

-ion-.~· ·

K l - And 111ho. FJM £i' . '
tlnllllll As fa • : , Na Job •

Too lit Or -IIMoWJGN.

:

Dnto lowing - . . And _
a.... llapolr, F,..
PlcWt&gt; And Dol~~
CrMk Aolcl, 114 ·~·
- .

-

- . ,... -lot.-..
Yard Sale

..Undi'y

'" . Clrl 1-Atl1o.avoltoblo
II:
'ltloal
il41 or
colt JM.II:I.mt. EOH.

~ In LIIGilloda lltvd. - Or
· ..
FtOIII 1:311 To 7:00 11'1 ,
.,..._.,,, .. t201.0r*"71-

-ion ........

..

JET

'*"* -

7

lumlehld,

--~-~·­

lloodod: llobplt• Far IYr. Old

Ton
IIIII
"'-·-.,_Color,
cat!»
••.• P.ll.l111tl • rT.
1100 _.. lor opoelol ..,,
...... Cl"
loll ..
0111 oollolj I'M •1110• 114112~or1M-1001.

---AddM,__

Curtll Home lmg:u•:•nta: · '"
,..,. Exporlol100
0tcW I · '

adlm. epll., Ioiii _,.lc, OP'

=
*o..:
-=""*·--·- -·

8

tlul!doJ'
• P,lll.
~odi1ton · ·2:oo

-11.1'1'111'

:

Air cond, _.,t
- - rat I dol&gt; -lrid, no

ALLYonl--11-ln
......... DUDUNI: 2:00 ,.....
1ho otoJ lloloN tho od II to run.

oHNdllnere

t

z badt_,,

TGPJ Owft till
lnteflor, Ito.

• Convwtlble Tops
• Custom C1rptll
•CustomSNt
Covera• AIIO Boltll

'

.

Serv1ces

114/t21J

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
f REMOVAL

'i

.

Aft• 6p&amp; 614-985·4110

36970WI•IHII

Free Esliuales ·Low
Rafls for Selllan
No.loH•s.l

Old....-. •.,..--.,.,.

IRE! ISnMAns
HAVE IEFIIINaS
t.fwo6p&amp;t.e . ...,.

mo.

WWows

LINDA'S

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

2112192'

CIIIJI.I'I'IIIft

------llil.
==-

Ftnancial

ropoilod . ....

I ...- mo1oro In aloe.. A0N

EVANS, JA~, DH. 1 -

'""" :\ 0""'

,..~ • I . Dati InChllllla.
1:00
- - n,Pt. PL
Part-Time lnllnctor, Aooount-

-

Wollpaoorlna,

c-

-And

"''' Mrn 111

J

'A::r

!!Ill
' ' In·~
Cl
licheior'l
'DilDY idi!l
CI'IA RoqYnd.- ...
- . - 2D To llo. Phytlll
.....,.. ..,.,..,... Otffoer, .
u-..r Of Aio Gronds. P.O.
... Ill, Aio Clnonclo, OH 4Mlll.
PIIII·Tlml Jonl11111at -ikM
- - . Flnlbll - · · In
Looatt
... - To: .
a..a-tcn
I lnlonnadan
CU. loX ZIZ, C.O ClolllfJolll :
DillY Trlbu~, ftllhlnl-uo, .
lloiltlolto. "" 41At.
.-

Soptlc Tn '""""""no~
Co. -EVANS ENTEAP
,
Joot.on,OH t - . . s 7 WII polio - · ~~
.....- -,_ li&lt;tntna.
""' up •
=:&amp;:

.

•
~

''

fill IITIUIII

..DOLEPORT - Lincoln Stroot -Look Ill 1118 price on
tlio 3 bodooo.n honHI, 2 otory homo on • nice otllll Hu
llllin1lnlncl"" li&lt;lflll lllld l1orago garage. $11,000.00.

Tlrll'tft!ftA'
'

SYRACUSE - 4th lllre.t - Hood .. extra income? You
c.. haw HII you buy IIIII 4 bedroom, 2 beth dupln
~ oloM to tho poolltld park. Aloo Included Ia ..
-IIWier lot
521,000.00.

DOTTIE 1\IRN'1!!z!lrok«.................... ,............."2-5ft2
BRENDA JEFFI:K11............................................"240541
DARUNE8TEWART..................................,........"2.f365
SANDY IUTCHER..............................................":Z.I371
HfiYLWALT~~- ....:..............:.....3eNI421
JERRY IPRAD
..............................~304) U2·MN

llew Ions • Yiarl Sidiag
New Garc~ges • Replacenat Wiadows
Room ldditioas • Roofiag
tOMMERti.U ud RFSmENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

A.l I

1\IPPERI PLAINtl -Rice Run Ro•d - lnllandy
~ II 1111 3 bedroom moclll•r with 2 baths. You'j
love to come homo to oook auppor In IIIIo bHutilul
klll:hen lllld then lllu In front of tho fir8place. Thla lo
oiltfng on "PP!""'· tv.! ..,..,..
MS,soo.oo.

'
IIIDOIJlPOATlllple llrlll- A nice home with 2
bedroom• upataira, • out. lcltchM down with a dnlr~~~
roam and • lovely living room. It eloo lila on a QrMt
oornerl50xt00 lot Evan hu • lillie garden opal
$11,100.1111.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

..,,.•.,.....

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

11.114·111~.

1noli .....,
w..ldwfdo ...... llouah1 And Sold:
llotao11ont.· Colt 101tlon ...,.
work u.s. And ca- ,_ :'"'no:!'~·
:
•tuo. ...Novot,.,
m,.,
7SICSO or 101 Btl 2203. Fr• Ollllpollo. Ohio 45131, 114-44&amp;. '
-~~ lnlannltlon JOIIIJ. 7282
WI.
Don1 o1u1* Rl Sal Uo Your flori.
Wlnlod: Ldy Companion To Worlllna llalor ADoillrlOIII,.,
U..tn N01r Tho Holur
TV's. VCA'o, IIICiowl-. ,
Hoopltat, Any Ago. 1114-44114411, C..
Ak Condlllonorl, Etc. 114-allMct&lt;omoYI S~illm Goopal 1231.
&amp;lito Thoatra PolniPI-nl
Main 81. Nov ilh. IP.II. $1. 114- . . . , _ plctUrlo, '"'" ollillolo, .
441-&lt;2tt:IG, 3Q+mo1tlt, 30W7Io and fllmiiUfo, OOIIf llonln, 114- ·

~::::::::::::::
:::::::::::::~:~~M~··~·------------•
4
Giveaway

O:cttr'~
s:lt:~N
AND PRICER FIIIT

..,....

Don't set off the
smoke alarm with
all of your can·
dies. Happy 40th I

264 UPPER RIVER

Office, School I Art
Suppu.., Ofllct
Fumlture1 Advertltlng
SpecllltiM, lYPing,
Lllml1111llng, CoJIY, Fa

Rooftla

Sis,

*%9e95 A PAY AND UP

l614) .h 2..UI

NORTON
CONTUCTING

OFFICE 882-2886

205 North Stcond Av1.
·-~d!,lp,ort. OH ·
POMEROY- Beech Stroel- You nNd to ... this
beaudful brick home. Has 3 bedrooms, largo living 100m,
ful bl-tltld one car garage.
534,11011.00.

Chooe"

laterlor • btirior
Spray • Rol· Br~s•

Downspouts

"*'·

$1.50 doz.

Hown LWrltesel

ROOFING

II Pllld In

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

(6141915·3594 or

' Public Notice

-

*r _,. 1ho od t:OOpnt1ho
II I• run.
lluillor - odlllon1:OOpnttO:OOI.rn.
!1o1111oJ

LOCAHD COifiEI OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY IY·PISS

:IC,

1391 Sallw~ SdoooiiL
Cal (614)446-9416wl-100-172-5967

FALL&amp; WINTER LEAGUES
Now Fonning·At
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
Openings available on Men's,
Women's and Youth Leagues
Call 992-3432 or 992·2403

r:l!n

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Of Swut Corn, String Beaas,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

Now Water Heaten. '

(304') 675-5789

·

Help Wanted

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESAlE SALES

Air ea.•llolen, Heat
P••· Fsnaces &amp; ·

Great prizes and Surprises

--·
-·=
_,
All Yonl -

FRESH SWEET CORN

ProudlY' Presents
Back By Popular Demand

plolo lhe projecl.

11

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-9

Ohio

&amp; VICinity

PRODUCE

ARNIE'S SPORTS
LOUNG6

llolallo~t

YarciSall

14, 1992

Pomeroy,

.RE·D HILL FARMS

"IUCAnON

Public Notice

Friday,

lolddllpOrt

.. 4:30 P. a DAY IEFOII

,.

Friday,

Business S

Hl Ll.l·.ll\ BO.\R I&gt;

.'

14,1992

F.. r·1, Suppi •'
S. Ln.L&gt;c,l~:--h

CHARLIE'S
Stone

Lordy, Lordyl
Station 4'1
Squad Chief

Ia 401
. · Happy Birthday,
Marcial!

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE ·

Call614-992·
6637
$1.11. 7

c.....n,

MICIOWIH OYII
••YCIIIPAII

...-,: .. ••

AU.MIIU ·

EleCtrical I
RefrigeratiOn

....... 111111

-Of=
-

llllleir - UCIF~I~
!!lrlnl.
-

Pt. Pllallnt
&amp;VIclnHy

liii'S~CE

0... ............... .
Ava, 'lot, 11!!1 11, 1:00. J:OO,

H2·5335or
915·3561

Pomeroy,

SIIVICI

84

. . . . . ....
'J

Ellclrtcot, W'il

J04471-t711.

II,

....... unlinlt,...,., boola

'

Mlcldllpcin
lVIclnlty

Aoalna

:=s.,- """ -....

111
Alllll

.,....AIIhoo~

Cll -

1:00 ,...., -

-.-wv.

.... ._.,,

......
='!lie

UpiiOIUei'J .

--·

•

lI

1
~

~- -~
I

�'

.

.

•

, i

1o-i111 Deily Sentinel

Pomttoy Middleport, Ohio

Rain, cool weather forecast for this evening·

OHIO \'JeJther
14

By~ Aqocjlfld Prell

fcncut

A cbilly, 11iny night was fore.
cast for: Oblo IOIIigbt. And the rain

Flower show to
be presented
The Rulland Ganlell Club will
present its annual flower show
"Discover Autumn jleauty" on
Aug. 31 at the Rutland United
Methodist Church from 6:30-10
p.m. The club will also obscirve ill
open house.

•!columbus!7'.r'

I

W.VA.

------Weather----s..tii·Ceatral Ohio
Tonipt, mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Low near 60.
Cl1lnce rl. rain SO percent Sarurdly, showers likely, thundentorms
. ~~e also pouible. High near 75.
Chance rl. rain 60 perccnl

Extended forecast:
Sunday throagb Tuesday:
Chance of showers Sunday. Fair
on Monday and Tpesday. Lows in
the mid to upper 50s Sunday and
Monday and around 60 Tuesday.
Highs in the mid to upper 70s Sun·
day and Monday and around 80
Tuesday.

--Local briefs---.
Coadnued from page 1

EMS units answer four calls
Four calls for assistance were answered on Thursday by uniiS of
Meigs County Em«gency Setvices.
AI 2:05 p.m., Middleporl squad went to Srooewood ~cuiS
for Dana Longslreth, who was liken 10 VCimnS Memorial Hospi·

tal. AI 2:24 p.m., Tuppers Plains unit wcnl 10 Owl Hollow on a
brush fire. At 3:14 p.m., Racine squad went to An!iquity. and lOOk
Byftlll WIISOIIIO VC1cr811S. At 3:26 p.m., Tuppcts Plains sqUid lOOk
Shu! Rollins to Camden-Cl&amp;rk Memoriai"flospital from the sta·

'

CJasses include: Division 1,
senlar bortlc11lture, hybrid rose;
rose, other than hybrid ~ ZCIUiia,
large flowered, one stem; zcooia,
small flowered, one stem;
marigold, larBe type, CliiC stem; any
other annual; cciOsia, any variety,
one stem. Division 2, container
grown plants, African violet in
bloom; Dowering plant in bloom;
foUage plsnt, can be a hanging bas·
ket; cacti and or suc:culent. Dlvl·
slon 3, junior horticulture,
marigold, any variety; fresh flowers, one stem. Division 4, senior
artistk, members only, "beauty of
majestic hills," a tall arrangement;
"beauty of orchard and garden,"
inclucling vegetables and/or fruit;
"beauty of a countty lane," mass;
"beauty of a SWISCI." lliodcm and
special class. Dlvlson 5, lnvlta·
tlonal, ~n to the public, ''beauty
of nat~R s imperfections," a modern arrangement including distorted
material•.Dlvisioa 6, jDDior artil·
tic, beauty of goldenrod, your
favorite design. Division 7, educa·
tiona!, display of gardening and
arranjlcing books and extension
matcria1; Jade Junior Ganlcn Club,
show and telL
All horticulture classes, as well
as the inviWional cl•sses, are open
to the public. Mrs. Joe (Janet)
Bolin will be judging at 8 p.m.
Entries arc to be in place br 4 p.m.
on Monday, Aug. 31 wtth oral
judging.

Stocks
Am Elc Power .................. .33 1/8
Ashland Oil... ....................24 3/4
AT&amp;.T................................43 1/4
Bank Onc. ..........................44 3/8
Bob Evans ......................... 19 1/2
Charming Shop................. .31 1/8
City Holding .;....................19 1/2
Federal Mpgut................... 17
3142 Goodyear T&amp;.R .........67 1/4
Key Centarion ...................19 3/4
Lands End ......................... .33 1/8
.Limited Ipc. ...................... 20 3/8
Multimedia Inc............:.....25 7/8
Rax RestauranL...................9/16
Reliance Eleclric................ 18
I/8Robbins&amp;Myers ...........17
Shoney's Inc......................22
Star Bank ...........................30
Wendy lnt'l... ..................... !! 3/4
Worthington Ind...........,....23 5/8

Stock reports are tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by ·Biunl,
Ellis and Loewi rl. Gallipolis.
Ashl4nd Oil Is er-dlvldend

today.

Area death
William (Bud) Staton
Wiilism (Bud) McCcllon Sta·
1011, 76, of Vinton, died Thursday,
A!IJ. 13, 1992 11 SL Mary's Hospi·
talm HatingiOII, W.Va.
He -born on April 16, 1916
Ia Froeborn, Ky., son of the late
· s-llnd Alva (Casdc) 5181011.
. ·He was a coal miner for 33
. yean before retiring in 1965. He
:- a •mbct of the United Mine
·WOlken Local 1204 u well as of
: 1M Vialon BapliSI Church and thc
:v-.MIIonicLodgeNo. I31.
He wu preceded in death by
OM bMio« and line sister.
· Sarvlvors include his wife,
:loll •, Vanle (May) Staton; two
; 10111, Teddy Douglas Slllton and
Mc:Cellon StatOn, both of
· Vlntoa; lhrcc daughters, Sheryl
; Ann Pilch rl. Vinton, Mls. Vitgirua
: Lya• (Nickle) Swain of Mer- .
· e«Yillo and Mrs. Pat Dunford of
' Wadlnd, Mith.; nine grandchil·
dml - four areat·pandchildren;
J1me siJ&amp;en,lista Estep or Welltton, BerW Blactbum of MoAn·
....,., Ky• ..t Mq1me of Siimi
VIlle)', Calif.; and two brothers,
lllpiiS...ri.Valclll, W.VLind
O..y Pial Statoll of Wcstlalld,

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Aug. 13 discharges- John
Clark, Basil Higley and Michael
Sheets.

was likely 10 continue on Saturday,
albog with cooler than ncxmal tcm·
peratures, lite National weathcr
Service aald.
The men:ury could dip into the
low 50s IICIOa Ohio tonigbt. Highs
·Slllllrday probably woo'l ~out of
the low 70s, forecm~crs said. . .
The reconl-hilh lallperablre for
this date a1 the Columbus wcatber
station was 96 degrees in 1959
while the record low.was 45 in
1964. Sunset tonight will be 818:30
p.m: and sunrise Saturday a1 6:43

a.m.

Veteraas Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS •
Malilda Rowley, Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
Luther Bartoc.

, 1M
aervlcc will be
:S :tJq •. 8:~J1-111, by die VInton
J'AAM l..cldle ff9, 131. Public 11«·
·'rice~ wll1 be Suliday, AIJI. 16 • 2
'p.-. • Vlml Baptilt Charth. The
.leY. W.Vin Sallee will officiate.
1utia1 wiD be • Vinton Memorial

;111!.

.

• Prlcndlmay &lt;:all McCoy-Moore
l'l II Hollie Sllunlay from 2 10 4
~ ... ,_ 610 9 p.m. The body
wil 1o • - one hour before the

t1 a •

I

11)00

7 7T

I

BIG BEND HEALTH 8 FITNESS CENTER
(Old Elbertekfs Warehouse, Mechanics Street, Pomeroy, OH)

-open To All Sill• .r Graders In llelgs or Mason Counties
Wishing To Play Football or Be ACheerleader.
(Cannot Be AtjJ 13 Prior To September 1)
Forltf.,..ln,......tfon••

c.u

-~~~~~

(J) VIctory-

1111·-·
l!ll·11210 KlciiMagl

01 Doub1a Den.
• Ren cdtllng and

~Budweiser Grand"=

Indianapolis from Zlonsvtlle,
Ind. (l)
8New&amp;oa,
0 1lie Ylrglnlall
12:3G(2)0 Roggln'a-

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Cll JIIDII 7

7

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CIIOOOM,CI7•

oer-

WITH SEARSCHARGE DEFERRED PAYMENT OPTION.
(There will be o ~nonce charge far o.l.rrol Period!.

Aslt for details.

...

WI illllhql.

....

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50.10 531.10
IIUO lt4.19
12.41 141.n
13.00 44Ut
11.00 12Uit
15.13 314.13

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411.19
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517.34

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564.19
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21101 71tl9 ....19
lUI m.ao 304.19
5.10 2tl9 11.19
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25.10 144.tt 111.19

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....
.......

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161.19 139.19

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SUI 2tt.l9 241.19

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HURRY•••THRU AUGUST 31ST ONLY!

13301

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~~~-

...

w.

30.00 161.19 131.19
220.00 141.19 129.19
45.00
40.10

161.19
364.19
364.19
264.91
554.19

34.44
15.10
MJI
115.00

104.19
!7(19

4S.OO

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31.00
15.00
40.00

!7(19
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us

134.19 104.19
IU4 14.19
17JI 65717 551.19

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•

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....

~
~ ToclaJ Joly
RlnCher Nor1hwlll Nationals
In Seattll .
Auto 11ac1ng Flraaicno
lnCIJ Uglrtl ChampionShip
lrom Toronto (l)
Ill New&amp;,IOn ?lie Menu

a

•'stPN

OllgYaley
3::10(l) Wa a~c:F&gt;O:.I!I- Riel&lt; ·

-a-.

•

411011)~­

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CD
CD

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2

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wtnaton Cup

ri8CIIna Hlghllghll Budw81ser
11 the "Gieii from Watkins

Ill
...111,FR) . . . . T(Jl • ...,,._

Glen. N.Y.

o T - Thnltwey

Clilmpionllhip, semlftnala
lrom Cincinnati (l)

SNewe/Y.... - Y
4:001J)0 Q ,lpoiiiWartd NFL
.
Cluartllrtllcl&lt; ~ (part
1); NFL'S Fa- Man; balch
VOIItyblll (l)
.
()). II). lltcli .....
F _ . 1112 World'&amp; IIIII
•.. Rollin Ltlch, IY- Trump,

Sha-.

William
Dowootown
Julie Btownln&lt;l ·, . . . , . hlghllgfrt
the bill -apaa
·
rdOrtt. mtsnnntl,

and,..,.,.
c:o.Hine; ~:J,• I7Mtlf8nd
~~~-~~~~
(l)

Caal•ll Sltrao.

r ..

(J) ...... In?lieWartdll
llsi?Sino . .

81:t!A.PR&amp;olni
X·1R .
-.....Fla.
{T}
D ·llowl/llllllt C?a Up

.,......

' 200 lrom

..

T. . . . CDIIIIICfQ I

=:~c~~MrJ.n:..r

Ill !IPN'o tpntwnl

Blanche gl- a party;
Sophia hopes to L a
curaa.(R)Stereo.

()) • II). Juat
The host of a plush nlaort

makes aure ""' guosta pay
for tl1elr lndlscretlon8 and
wlclted deeds. ~~1:1
(l) Aualln City
~tereo .
(J) . . ...,. Speak Out

-·

1110 IIJO Nfl PNsaa'a aa 11 Cleveland Browns
11 New Yort&lt; Giants (L) 1;1

I!JIO COPS (Season
Pramlaral A naked man Is
aulldooed after a~ at

olflc:ers. Stereo. Q

IJ'!Cl131 (2:00) Stereo.

I

-II
=)··PQAQoll

4::10 \'Q Pllllflll Ooi

11\'T-

II WI

.

Stereo.

Ma Ill ·

ADEll lilc CL:iltiiJIDfllhlll

.....

lt~WIIIh

1:00 II)

Nlllonalslrom

-

.

Sonoma,

•0".'-....- \:.P.· 1:30. Clrancl or. CprJ Lift
S1na .
t:oo(J)O O!,_NMtHany
hal a personality change;

Btlbara tao:klll • d!tP;Jle ..
(R) Stereo.Jl
.

w•
lll•~Targe~
Chance putt himself In
danger as an Inmate at a

~":ws:li~
l!lla ~ 3 &lt;Sauon

llontallls•l:l

=VIE:-~~·
- : Con
lhl Culll of RIYI

..

m=t~u.

m.-.

11 . . . .,.. Llla7J

•

IJl Aullln City UrNta Stereo.

=·

a

7

•••] 7

(I)

111

7:30(2)0 IIIOC&amp;I?i Errhalou
()) 0 Now II Can Sa Told

Stereo.

·

(J) W011t1J1ul \fartd of

....

8

iiJ. Baywalqb

C&amp;ltl. (l)

vor• (2:00)

7 ...

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4 ....
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Ill

!Ill. 01 .... ,.,..., , .
Next ..........

Beverly Johnson, Ashley
Richardson. (2:00)
(J) Uolaoilnl 1 0 -

Klenlcli
3:00 ([I MOYIE: Deap IllIt

!lle ....... aulllal

())•HHI!h

(f)LAIWNOCtWalti

D NHRA IIIICina Auloll18

8 Relu ••lng·and
aa--.ToclaJ
8 Nawi/IIJ$I With Ell&amp;

NAG&amp;Id

())a I n - Edl?lon Eltnl

(l) 3-2-1 Conllct EJtrso
Stereo. 1:1

$2&amp;0,000 Ford mbdellng .

Ill~
2:3G (l) 01 Jtit of JIPIIIIIIIIJillllil~a'll

• tllllll ......

0

t ,__..,_

(!)
.....
tiiOD

=;rr·~
'?

•
,.
eCMil&amp;llle

Atlanl8 Braves at Pittsburgh
Pirates (L)

contract. Hoilll: Walt Wiley,

...... Flreetone Flll?llwk
Endurance ChampiOr::hlp
from Allanta.

.., I a• ; : : . ..,,
11)0 .........
1 SPII

on ·s
z eea

, . .Ill tiiiiiiA . , _. .

BRANDS-[::!!:], .,... -

~)~~/Ill~) MORE CHOICES!-

1. .

Ct 7 7

(J)-

~IE~\ //5)~ MORE

--

' I

M(J)W

_,.lll,

Chicago White Sox (L)

• ()ply la:'tnTgt

I!JIO- . . .
B PLIMWic/8' FII'Ca'

I

7:00~11\f-ol

Wartd 1112 -from 37

WIIIIU...,_I;I

•

II

00

....

•

::-• a

CA

IT

(J)-o\V8Citlona
Stereo.

9 MOYIE: Rlllloiil Atl.lona

coumi1ea COii~J~tlllor I ·

Btl• u•H&amp;tauh
-Ill
4110(11 . . .111,FR)- 'rf

116.77 701JI S34.1t

115.10 411.19 314.19

t

87. · -

• • ,, 7 .,,

171111&lt;11,
Ill

Expect Great Service- We offer lut minate in- .
store lllltentions to
fttl

Ill (llt._1'51T-

. .&lt;11 . . . . ....
(J)W

~ :liJ,I'III "

lll lFit . . .,......

1

145.01 540.00 314.19

(I)• •rpinnadJI Dille

111

(I)

11'-01 ....
IJ11N ....

ll "J :,1 I I C I !::1.1 II L tv1S I'·J Sl OGK '

Die (2:00)
(l) . .Will Willi lllinaJ

....
,._ - .. PQA

l:a(Jl. . .

Ill

1JJ 0 MOY?I!: AI .........

''D'

. .&lt;1110...~--­

BUY NOW...NO PAYMENTS 'TIL NOVEMBER

t CliMe Willi

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SAVE 10% OR MORE

7
Houston A8troe II Chicago
CUbs (L)

.,..,CIOJ
. . . .lV.W.liiiiN''o'

en I a 2 7

ON ONE·OF·A·KIND AND DISCONTINUED ITEMS

a:oom Major Lusua am•

OOTIIIUb

.?' •

o• .....-• ..

SAVE BIG

Satoinlar~

0 WEIII"!!'Tiiln

(J) "'""I. .

7

ill

Cteve Couer, Mo. (L)

I .....,..,

=. . . . .

7 -

. . (1)5

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(J)
(J) (WI)IIJI I ;of

~=.::t.'..::

110

It

Pakf Prf9•n

\II New YlnkM W~
iChampionShip.
0 IIJ 0 POA Oott PGA
3td round

la'l8d lor

fe'!';,lll) 7lljDr I! II

·-·

•
::r

(J) •

7

!llS100.000 F - HUn!
1JJ D Ill 0 ABC Newt C..
(l) A,.nca Stereo. 1;1

1:00 (2). IIJ Oaldali Qll7o

1::10 (l) Qul7llna lor ?lie 'lh

_11) _ _ .....,..

z

Ill!
" 7

llllaa&amp;Dey

USA

1:......!.0::'1;1

1:30 (]) 0 0 NBC New. 1:1

l!piiDdll

ID Danger (2:00)
• Clialnallclnlli Rodto

.11011-----

. ,. .

····calo • .:... .....
M

!-

I !a~~:

••

Rao:tng--

Alabama Stakes from
Sara=, N.Y. (l)

9Ma~-E;J

(!) llometllft!.,.. -

II

15:41~-·
7·11)··~

01 Kldo
9 eoum.r.?rlko
Ill

D 8par1tCtntlil
Ill Capllal Gane/Ne'ft
0-lllel.aal

F~.i'exas.
D
Racing DoJrolt
Gall&lt;el 200 from Brooklyn,
Mich. (L)

_,
·-~
71111111'- ... ,..,..
F 5

Stereo.
11)0 .... 8Q!ona E;J

••

Melt

IJ) Major L8&amp;gue 118-11

~ Oraat -.-lcln Quilt

WI£ lllGi

l:a&lt;IIO-

I ',.

l!ll•
....
o..-llon
iiJ Wlda w

David Hale and Harold
Kr:IQht hunllor wild lultcey.
Ill I - and -

111•

.

a&gt; New !wplar~r~ StaiiO~
(f) Wild Ametlca Stereo. 5:1

lllM$rT..g...aaotb&amp;ll
New Yort&lt; Yanlcaes at

c

::c.:.._Qiar.,. _c.

(J). 11110
IIJONaaa
lllCiilriMinChai!MoC

F-

1:00 (2) 0 01 NFL I'NEEIIOII
Flllllbd Denver Broncos vs.
Miami Dolpl&gt;ina at Berlin (L)
lll81rae? JUIIIce
1JJ MOVIE: Orca (Pill (2:00)
lleaUIJ lftd ?lie IIMII

7

e ••• •...,...,

Ill New.~

8 CINat- Outdooll

7

lncfuc1oto c-.any Taped
from Detroit. (0:30)

ONewZorroQ

0 llunawaJ Willi ?lie Rich l

c n

g

1111• IIJ 0 CBS News Q

11210 Uke!JIIofy E;J

Cl&amp;lallr~-

.=-.

Ill •

!lle GD0 .... 7
• e ....
(J)

$1F,A/IlS Mlddt.port, Oh.

~m~=

·o • 0

Ill (lit I

7 ,_

ft"

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s'a

(l) Tlila 07d HouM
(J) Club Connect

8:00 (]). ()).

(l) l'nlm I Coun7JJ-

.·-....
.......
._._
--=It·.,. .....

l!plt'Gdll
5:3G (I) AlidJ Clrllinh

EYE NINO

CJJaHa-a_

:

w.sa•: \ Bfg
· Man va.
Skinner; amola, Undertaker,
Money Inc. and Ruor.
Ramon ; an Interview with
WWF Champion MachO Man
Randy Sa•age; SummerSiam
,..,art. .
9MJTwo Dada
Ill Eao1yPoione
0 llonaliQ: , . Loal

S&amp;tunlaJ/Naal

lll~'f'raln

• 1111

111 (11111

Way

lllD 8en1011

'

(l) T1llo 07d ~
CI)DIGf_.
of

IIllO

lluddlll
8 Coiinlry IIIII
IZI Motanporta Hal of Fame

12:00~:.~ -~~

CI) ~ . . . . ,

,,

IIJ -

8 CCI..gl Footblll Pltwtew

Cll (lllt-......
.•... .....-...........
.
...
........
..........

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(1)1

992-S• alter 5 p.m.

Pilla locate, call and hunt
wild lurl&lt;eys. (PI 2 of 2)
Flilfl&amp;l Oo;;m;et s -.

AFTERNOON

··-=--·~·

l:tiiJ) I ' - LIEDJ

SA11JRDAT, AUGUST IS 8 AUGUST U

Apln
·
~--vu.··(l) Csobln Counb y Dave llid

lll tllll!"

.

1:11 !JlO..: IT
11)011111111

t):OOA.IIIL•NOON

111.•

8 Oalitg

m.-,:..;1
Ill (Ill .....

CIIJlt

YOtJTR FOOTBAJ,I,

OUitiDII Jeft Hart
DOll to northuu1at Colcndo
lo lly flah lor trout.
lllllewt/8CI?eliee and
T-1011111 WMk
0 ao-.u: ,. Loal
IJIIU clu
, 1::10
IIJ ....... "' ?lie ... .

D 8part1C1nW

=---

tWCil tllli . . . F

soc:ial by the Bashan Ladies Auxil·
iary were finalized lhc $roup's
recent meeting. The soctal will
begin at Sp.m. Sandwiches, bonic·
made pic, ICC cream and drinks will
be available.
Tent revival
There will be a tent revival at
the Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, Route 124 in Reedsville,
across from Forked Run Slale Palk,
Tuesday through Aug. 23 at 7 p.m.
. ni~htly with Rev. Jim Kiltle,
Wmchester, Ky., and The Sisson
FB!IIiiY, GaUipoilis. Nursery provided. Fellowship after each ser·
vice.

=::.

• 1121 ~Dienly'&amp; 001111

• tw.1IU'IIt? ••

City Ice and Fuei Company; Terry Patte..-, .
assistant store maaager; Jobn Aadersoa,
Pomeroy Village Admlulstrator; Dlua11 A. !low"
ers, district maaaJier; Conale S. Brown1
comptroller; Art E. HartleJ Jr1 preildent, City,,
Ice and Fuel Company; and Vltus Ray Hartley,
seci'l!tal,. City Ice aad Fuel CompanJ.
~

MOll NINO

•

I

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Ql ""CIII?b

lloGIIJ) . . . . . . . .

2171

'

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us

041111"
......

.....""',.......

'

lllOII
........

,._

RIBBON CUTI'ING CEREMONIES • Rll•·
bon cuttlna ceremonles for the new Riverside
Food Mal'l, West MaiD Street 1u Pomeroy, were
conducted al the store Th1rsday mornJna. Tbe
new establlsbmeat·olfen aboppen a variety of
grocery and mlscellalleoua Items. Pictured, l·r,
are Art E. Hartley Sr., cbalrman or the bolu'd,

8AT.. AUG. 15

WEEKDAYS

Dtiiiiii--. . . NA

'-fllllMiill

Yice.

""

•

FMI

D

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1,......-w

POMEROY • 992·2214

..., 9

t'ls

•

D cnt.-.liU'IIt..:

79115
37211 $.... ""' . . .

THE .FABRIC SHOP

,

wrAP

=--...
·:ga:::t
·--,

71251 .ts,.IIIM-W
71141 ~~·•..-w
77011 I,IGIII!IIIr c.&amp;

$34" COMPUTE (Exclur , ...,

! I
. a.

11M

•••••

79121 IUIOIIIM-W

AI The Latest Styles •d th Low Prkt of

---- -. •
..
-- -,...,
WVMJ

.,.!JlO AW.liU'IIt-

,s- .

..... "'-lc

was 'expected have tcmpenllUCS in
the 90s.
On Thursday, storm~ poun~
central Nebraska wilh l1l1ll and hail.
damaging crops, breaking windows
and stopping a concert by countty
singer Ricky Skaggs at a county
fair in 011\Ild Island. Tennis ball·
size hail fell a1 Wolbach.
In Southern California, an
intense downpour flooded fiv~
homes ncar Big Bear City. Even as
rain poured, thc men:UI)' shot up in
lhe Los Angeles Basin and inland ·
ci~. hilling 107 in Santa Clarita. •

Aroalld the utloa
Rain drenched several Eastern
cities early today as cool air from
Canada clashed with warm. humid
air along the Atlantic seaboard
Fall-like weather wa.i expected
today in the Great Lakes region and
the Northeast, and rain and thunderstorms were cxpeclcd to contin·
ue along the Atfalitic Coast. It
rained early today in New York,
Boston, Phil&amp;delphia and Portland,
Maine.
More hot weather forecast for
the WcsL Inland Washington state

-Meigs announcements-

lion.

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F~da~Auguet14,1992

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Come rain or shine, it is fair time in
. Meigs County ~ Hoeflich • Page B-6

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Mason County livestock sales
Stone markers record floods, fever
deaths in Gallipolis· Sands- Page A-8

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· THE FIRST WEEK OF
ATT~N~'f CAMP..

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future is
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Vol. 27, No. 28

BRIDGE

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Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

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By Phillip Alder

Soalb

There are certain declarer·play
techniques that are often overlooked.
Today's deal contains one of them.
South took a rosy view o( his hand
during the auction. After showing his
majoo;s and receiving strong jump support for spades, South used Blackwood. When he learned that his partner had three aces, South jumped
directly to seven spades.
The unimaginative declarer who
isn't used to counting his tricks or
for alternative lines of play
decides that he needs the club
work. If it wins, he feels vindicated; if it loses, be complains that
he never gets a break when he needs
one.
A more perceptive declarer, who
knows that a finesse is only a ~0-~0
proposition, will look for something
better. With dummy's trumps being so
strong, be considers a dummy reversal. He sees that If the opposing spades
are divided 3-2, which will happen
more than two-thirds of the lime, he
won't need a finesse.

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The theme is ,
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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff

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FER · · •

RESTROOMS RENOVATED • A major
improvemeut For Meigs Couaty falrgoers Ibis
· year
be the restroom facilities. The ones
· located In the stone bulldiag bebiad tbe Rock
Sprinp Grange building have beea completely
renovated. The floor bas been raised two feet to

will

After winning with dummy's diamond ace, declarer cashes the spade
10 to check that the trumps aren't ii-0.
T~en he ruffs a diamond in hand and
plays a spade to dummy's jack. U the
trumps split 4-1, declarer must hope
that West holds the club king. But
when both opponents follow, the play
continues: diamond ruff in hand, heart
to dummy's 10, third diamond ruff in
hand and a club to dummy's ace. Now
declarer draws the last trump, discarding the club seven from hand, and
runs the heart suit.
Don't forget the dummy reversal.

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16 Secllono, 148·Pages

AMulllmedlalnc. Newspaper

129th Meigs County
Fair to begin Monday

.AJ 10
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.AQ43

PHILLIP

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Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, August 16, 1992

.Copyrlghlld 1192

Fiol!lf - Affix - Vocal - Zinnia - FINANCIAL
ovemeard one dumb cutie discussing lhe nalions
economic slalus wilh anolher nol so bfighl culie:
"Money is bener lhan poverty, if only for FINANCIAL reasons. •

m·•1-m

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DESSERT
II

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

eliminate standing water problems, the· walls
have been painted, new doors installed and each
side now bas two show~r stalls, two lavatories,
and four Rush toilets. New signs were the finishing touch and Bill Radford, on ladder, assisted
by Tim Bearbs, took care or that Friday.

Solid waste plan may get another
look by Gallipolis commissioners
whi·le , Carol O' Rourke and
By KRIS COcHRAN
McCreedy ·voted againsuatificaTimes-Sentinel News Staff
tion. Dovel Myers was absent at
.
'
GALLIPOLIS - The Athens- the time of the second reading.
During a recent phone conversaGaiiia-Hocking-Jackson-MeigsVinton Solid Waste Distric1 plan is tion, McCreedy spoke aboui why
001 dead yet.
.
his views on the plan have talcen a
Tuesday evening, Gallipolis different tum.
City Commissioners may once
"I can't see somebody else comagam address the issue during a ing into the county and telling us
special meeting.
what to do." said McCreedy.
The solid waste plan has been
The "somebody else" McCreedy
placed on Tuesday's agenda, at the referred to was the Ohio Environrequest of commissioner P.O. menta~ Protection Agency, who
McCreedy.
will implement its own J?ian if the
During a regular July meeting, six-county district fails •n its seccommissioners voted 2-2 on the . ond round of ratification by the
plan's second reading. Voting for Aug. 24 deadline.
ratiftca1ion were commissioners
"If OEPA s1eps in, there wiD be
John Taylor and Wilma Brown, no more tipping fees, just as they

(OEPA) did in Erie-Huron." added
McCreedy.,.
OEPA is currenlly writing a
plan for the Erie-Huron district
which failed to reach ratification.
McCreedy also indicated he has
a problem with the possibility of a
tax on improved property, one or
two ways the district would he
funded if the six-county plan fails.
"The citizens do not want another tax," said McCreedy, referring to
the financial condition in area
schools. "People are against paying
another tax."
If action is taken again on the
plan during Tuesday's meeting,
Brown and Taylor have slated they
will continue to vote for ratificaContinued on A·2

More youngsters attending immunization
clinics according to county health department
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - With school about
10 begin and requirements thai
youngsters be immunized againsl a
variety of disC"ases, the Meigs
County Health Department bas
seen an upturn in the number of
roungsters auending their regular
unmunization c6nics.
Usually held on the second and
fourth Tuesdays of each month,
immunizations are provided free of
charge to everyone regardless of
income. The hours are 9 to 11 am.
and I to 3 p.m. and appointments
are not required.
As pointed out by Norma Torres, R.N., the Hellith Department's
nursing director, immuniutions
start at about two months and continue right into adulihood.
The one shot DlP (Diphtheria,
Tetanus and Pertussis) protects
chiidten against the serious diseases of diphtheria, lock-jaw, and
whooping cough. It is given at two
months, four months, six months,
18 months and just before beginning school. Every 10 years there-

after, a tetanus booster is given to
adults to continue the protection.
The polio vaccine is given in the
form of semi-sweet drops, squirted
direclly into the child's moU!h,
beginning at age two months, then
four months, 18 months, and again

POMEROY - The quiet, often
deserted, Rock Springs Fairgrounds
has come alive as preparations are
being completed for the opening of
the !29th Meigs County Fair.
The fair with plenty of variety in
entertainment and exhibits will
open at 7 am. Monday and run for
six days, closing al II p.m. on Salurday.
Religious services, traditionally
held on the night before the fair
opens, will be at 7:30 p.m. tonight
at the grandstand. An old fashioned
hymn sing under the direction of
the Mei~s County Ministerial
AssociatiOn will be held and an
offering will be taken for that
group's humanilarian work.
There has been a flurry of activity on the fairgrounds over the past
several days as the fmal tpooming
of the grounds and sprucmg up of
the buildings take place.
Commercial building 2 has
never looked better. It has been
painted inside and out.
And you won't recognize the
old.restr()OIII in back of the grange
buildiJIB. It has been completely·
renovated. On both the men and
women's sides lhere are now two
shower stalls, two lavatories, and
four flush toilets. The floor has
been raised IWO feet to rnalce it less
apt to flood if the rains come.
Traveling to the fair will be a little smoother this year also. The
Meigs County Highway Department has just completed putting hot
mix black toppmg on the road
which leads Lo the main entrance of
thef~unds . .
Friday and Saturday commercial
exhibits were put into place as well
as many open class exhibits and
junior fair displays. Delivery bUcks
were on the scene as concessiOnaires began stocking up for hungry
fairgoeis.
.
Today the midway will be transformed as carnival rides go up, and
the game and more food booths are
put into place. The barns are being

'.

PATIENTLY WAITING· Fair week Is a fivo~itc time for
youngsters around Meigs County and tbe nitlng illlmost over.lt
happens tomorrow! Six-year- old Jordan Stotts who loves the carnival rides and cotton candy patiently waits for the adioll to begin
wbile his mother Terri Stotts assists in setting up one fl the commercial booths.
readied for animals, and the final - two at II a.m., one at noon, and
hookups and connections for the two at 2 p.m. - from lhe hillside
sound system, the electrical ser- stage that day. The ·bicycles have
vice, 11nd the water supply are been donated by the Fair Board, the
being made by fair employees.
Rates Bros. Amusement Co. and
New to the fair Ibis year is Sat- · McDonald's of Pomeroy.
urday's Youth Day featuring
Another new feature this year is
Ronald McDonald in morning and the antique tractor show. In previaflernoon shows. Kids under 12 ous years. antique tractor pulls
will be admitted to the fair free have been held but this year a show
from 8 am. to 2 p.m. and will be has been added. The show will be
able to purchase ail-day ride tickets held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. in the barn area The pull will
for $3.
Five bicycles will be awarded
Continued on A·2

just before the beginning of school.
Adults, over 18 years old, normally
do not neea this immunization,
according to Torres.
The Ohio Depanment of Health
recommends that MMR (measles,
Continued on A·l

Scott decision upheld
by Fourth District Court
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY · The Founh District Comt of Appeals has upheld a
1990 conviction from the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, the conviction of Joses P.
Scott· on charges of attempted
aggravated murder and aggravated
burglary with fli'C8TIIls spccificatiops was affmned this week . .
Scon was·convicted. of the 1990
shooting of Ron Cremeans of Mid-

dleport, and was sentenced to a
prison term of 10 to 25 years, with
three years of actual incarceration,
stemming from the firearms specifications on each count
In his. appeal, Scott argued that
he did not enter the Cremeans
home with the culpable mental sltill
necessary to be convicted on the
charge of aggravated burglary. He
further asserted, ~g to Story,
that he did not enter the home \vith
forte, stealth or deception.
The court, Story said, foiDld that
neither of these issues was meritoContinued on A·2

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"A reol otar h11 to have a motor tome1111ng

hurrying Undorlllltll the hood." -

Dore Schary.

'

CONSTRUCTION CONTINUES .:_l'roarell
aty alfk:ulture
• bulldiDI aear the Gallla Count7 Junior Fair·
· growuls at thelntersectlon lA Jackson Pike and
Clllltlallfi 011 the •lew G..III

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Oblo 160. Workera have installed tbe trame,
roof and two seetloaa or the outside wall. The
bulldin&amp; Is nptcted to open in Deoonber•

. TAKING IT IN STRnlE -1\vinsJ•stin and
Jordan Reed,lS inontll old 10111 of Mr. and 'Mn.
Bruce Reed, got their DFT sbois durin&amp; Thurs·

"

· day's immualutlon clink: at the Melp (iouaty
Health Department. Here Mrs. Reeds bold•
Justin as T. C. Ervin, R. N.lfves him the allot.
'

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