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Pomer6y-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

TUeada~Augult18,1992

feoplein
the news

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Now isn'I that special?
President Bush is being accused
of provoking a military suike
agamst lr&amp;q to boost his campaign
for reelection. He, of course. denies
,this but bas indicated to the media
that he will not allow political
accusations to deter him from what
he feels is doing what is right
It will be interesting to see the
outcome and if a conflict does
occur just what the reaction of the
American people wiU be. No mat·
ter what the intention, sometimes
these things have a way of backf1r·
ing.

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ROSETIE WINNERS • Taking rosettes in
the junior division of tbt first flower show at the
Mei~s County were these tbrtt exhibitors. Left
to r1gbt, Lisa Stethem was the horticulture

sweepstakes winner, Ben Holter, the best or
show in artislic design, and Becky Taylor, the
reserve best or show in arrangements.

Junior and senior exhibitors
participate in fair flower show
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County gardeners dis·
played weli their talents for grow·
ing and showing beautiful flowers
in Monday's flower show at the
Meigs County Fair.
"A Year to Celebmte" was the
theme of the show which included
artistic arrangements, specimen
flowers, and educational exhibits,
in classes for both junior and senior
exhibitors.
Janet Bolin of Rutland, an
accredited judge of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, judged the
show. Ribbons and premiums were
awarded in three places in each
class. In addition rosettes went to
six exhibitors in recognition of
their excellent displays.
Best of show went to Betty
Dean, Pomeroy, for her reflective
design in an arrangement, "New
Year's Day", which used silver
bulbs to depict the descent of the
bali on Times Square.
Reserve best of show was
awarded to Shelia Taylor of
Pomeroy for her arrangement in
"Christmas." She used a madonna
in a traditional arrangement with
peach gladioli, fantail willow, and
branches of forsythia.
The nature, art and industry
rosette went to Melanie Stethem
for her arrangement in the class,

"Thanksgiving." Vegetables were
used with flowers to create a scene
ofplenty.
In the junior division, the
rosettes went to Ben Holter,
Pomeroy, best of show, and Becky
Taylor, Pomeroy, reserve best of
show.
Horticulture sweepstakes
awards, determined by specimen
exhibits, went to Betty Dean in ·the
adult division, and Lisa Stethem,
Pomeroy. in the junior division.
Artistic Arrangements
In the adult division, ribbon
winners in the artistic arrangements
classes, listed first, second and
third, were as follows:
New Year's Day: Betty Dean,
Panicia· Holter, and Alice Thornp·
son.
Valentine's Day: Patricia
Holter, Melanie Stethem, and
Peggy Crane, Middleport.
St. Patrick's Day: Melanie
Stethem, Patricia Holter, and Shelia
Taylor.
Easter: Evelyn Hollon,
Pomeroy; Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy; and A!ice Thompson.
Mother's Day: Peg~y Crane,
Donia Crane, and Melame Stethem.
Father' s Day: Evelyn Hollon,
Donia Crane, and Alice Thompson.
Independence Day: Betty Dean,
Patricia Holter, and Shelia Taylor.
Labor Day: Betty Dean, Evelyn

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RESERVE BEST OF SHOW· Shelia Taylor, Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts member, took the reserve best or show
rosette at the fair flower sbow Monday wltb her Christmas
arrangement. or traditional design, it featured peach gladioU, fantail willow and branches ol forsythia accented with a Madonna.

NATURE, ART AND INDUSTRY· Melaale Stetbem received
tberosette for best depletlllllture, art and Industry In her
aniDJement at the Melp County Pair ~r IP Monday. Her
tradldooal deslp combined ftnwen and veeetables In tbe Thanks·
giving themed class. Sbe ~ dahliU, feather gr1811 and cattails
With pumpkial, peppers and squaslll.

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Hollon, and Peggy Crane.
Memorial Day: Melanie Steth·
em, Peggy Crane, and Karen
Werry, Racine.
Halloween: Betty Dean, Sheila
Taylor, and Addalou Lewis.
Thanksgiving: Melanie Stethem,
Donia Crane, and Alice Thompson.
Christmas: Shelia Taylor,
Pauline Atkins, and Alice Tbomp·

son.

Specimen Exhibits
Winners in the horticulture
classes, listed, first, second and
third respectively, were lis follows:
Roses: hybrid tea, Patricia
Holter, Betty Dean, and Pauline
Atkins; floribunda, Betty Dean,
first and second, Patricia Holter,
third; gmndiflora, Patricia Holter,
Betty Dean, second and third; and
full bloom: Betty Dean, all three
places.
· Gladioli: (in classes according
to color) Betty Dean, two blues,
one white; Ahce Thompson, one
blue, two reds; Pauline Atkins, one
white; Evelyn Hollon, one blue,
two reds; Melissa Coleman, one
blue; Patricia Holter. one red, and
Addalou Lewis, one white.
~ablias: large decomtive, Alice
Thompson, .Ad,dalou Lewis. second
and third; cactus type: Melanie
Stethem, Addalou Lewis, second
and third; ball type, Alice Tbompson, Melanie Stethem, and Pauline
Atkins; and pompoms, Addalou
Lewis, all three places.
Zinnias: dahlia flower, Betty
Dean, Melissa Coleman, and
Pauline Atkins.; cactus flower,
Betty Dean, 'first and second, and
Melanie Stethem, third; small three
bloom, Alice Thompson, Pauline
Atkins, no third.
Sunflowers: large, Mary King,
Long Bottom; Betty Dean, second
and third; small, Betty Dean, ftrst
and third, Alice Thompson, second.
Marigolds: large orange, Betty
Dean, ftrst and third Melanie·Stethem , second; large yellow: Betty
Dean, Melanie Stethem, second
and third; small spray, Betty Dean,
Evelyn Holion, second and third.
Celosias: Betty Dean, fiCSl and
second, and Alice Thompson, third;
and plumed, Betty Dean, ftrst and
second.
Foliage plants: potted, Karen
Lodwick, Pomeroy, Kassandra
Lodwick, Pomeroy ; hanging,
Karen Lodwick.
African Violets: Pauline Atkins,
first and second; Faith Varney,
Portland.
Ferns: Karen Lodwick, Kassan·
dm Lodwick, no third, not asparagus fern class; and Pauline Atkins,
ftrst in asparagus class.
··
Junior Division
In the artistic anangement classes tbe winners were as follows:
Grandparents' Day: Brent Buckley, Lisa Stethem, and Karyn
Thompson.
Birthday: Ben Holter, Brent
Buckley, and Beclcy Taylor.
Groundhog Day: Beclcy Taylor,
Karyn Thompson, and Lisa Stethem.
In the horticulture classes the
winners were:
Zinnias: flowered, Karyn
Thompson, Lisa Stethem, second
and tl)ird; cactus, Lisa Stethem,
first and second, no third.
Marigolds: by color, Lisa Steth·
em, one fli'st, one second; Macyn
Ervin, Racine, one second, one·
third; Nild Lewis, Pomeroy, one
first and one third.
Sunflowers: Lisa Stetbem, f1rst
and second, and Karyn Thompson,
thin!.
.
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Roadside material: fresh: Lisa
Stethem, Macyn Brvin, second and
third; dried, Ben liolter, Lisa Steth·
em, and Ross Alan Holter; and
gourd basket, Lisa Stethem, ftrst,
no second or third.
,
A second flower will be S!Jged
in tbe senior fair building on Tburs·
day. .

Meigs County Fair visiiors can
catch a glimpse of the new look of
the Meigs County Bookmobile at
the Meigs Fair.
The unit has been painted yel·
low featuring bold stripe accents in
fushia, em~rald green and royal
blue. The vehicle is parked near
the senior fair building. Visitors
are invited to get on the unit, but no
books can be checked out-you'll
have to wait until the bookmobile
makes its regular stop-close to
you.
The Rock Springs United
Methodist ChlUCh will celebmte its
tOOth anniversary on August 30. A
special progmm is being planned
for the occasion and I'll fill you in
on those details just a bit later.

The Rutland PTO has ordered in
some neat playground equipment
for the Rutland School. The problem here is that enough Dads aren't
showin~ up in the evenine; to get
Speaking of celebrations, Mr.
the eqmpment set up on the playand
Mrs. Robert Burdette will be
ground by the time school stans.
marking
their 50th wedding
More Dads are needed and to get
anniversary
on Nov. 21. Mrs. Bur·
schedules. and hours should call
dette
will
be
happy to settle for a
992-3289.
trip to Nashville, Tenn., to mark
Dr. Ed Lewis, formerly of Mid· theevenl
dleport and a minister in New
John and Carolyn Bradford
Hampshire these days was back in
Ketchka,
former Meigs residents,
Middleport last week.
Freda Edwards of Middleport will be returning to Meigs County.
For the past several years, they
said Dr. Lewis visited at her home
near the school grounds, trying to have been in Indianapolis where
gain entrance to the junior high John bas been employed with IBM.
building so that he could show the He's been with IBM like 30 years
MiddlepOrt High School trophies and will be retiring next month.
of yesteryear to some young people The Ke!Cbkas have two daughters,
who are his relatives. Freda called Kim who is now married and Kelly
one of the custodians and he came who is in college. Both live in
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to the school, opening it so Dr. Indianapolis.
Carolyn
has
alrtady
returned
to
Lewis could show off the memoMeigs
County
and
is
worting
for
ries of days gone by to the younger
an insurance company in Athens.
genemtion.
She and John plan to build a house
-The Skilled Nursing Facility at on Cherry Ridge close to 'her par·
Veterans Memorial Hospital was ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bradthe scene of an Hawaiian luau ford. Their move will put all of the
reeendy staged as one of the parties Bradford family within a couple of
·
given by Donna Byer. Ken McEl- miles of each other.
hinny and Jackie Hildebrandt were
It takes a Meigs County Fair to
in costume for the event and Donna
displayed items from Hawaii. make you realize how many old
Everyone had a great time, I'm· friends you haven't seen for a long
while. Enjoy seeing them; and do
told.
keep smiling.

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BEST OF SHOW • Betty Dean took tbe bat ot lhow In jlrtlstiC
arrangements at the Monday's fair flower. Tbe deslp In tlie New
Year's cl1811 depicted 1 descending ball on Times Square. Silver
balls and ting•ting were used with white gladioli, holly leaf and
dried magnoUa leaves spny4cl silver In Dean's arriDgem_ent. She
also was the horticulture sweepstakes wiDoer ol tM show.

News briefs

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The Oak Ridge (!oys say singing
gospel music on a Public Broad·
casting Service special brought
back good memories of the old
days.
The Oak Ridge Boys were a
gospel group until switching to
country in the 1970s and turning
out hits such as "Elvira" and
"Luclcy Moon."
The 90-minute special "The
Oak Ridge Boys With Emmylou
Harris in Conccn" wjll be broad·
cast on PBS stations late this montb
and in early September.
Richard Sterban, bass singer f&lt;l'
the quartet. said doing some gospel
tunes on the show "gave us a
chance to dig back into our roots. It
gave us a chance to do what we
grew up doing ... "
There also is country, bluegrass
and rock 'n • roll on the special,
which was taped four months ago
in Atlanta.
The show, to be aired during
PBS pledge drives, is scheduled to
be broadcast again next spring.
GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) Princess Diana on Monday urged
people not to judge alcoholics and
drug addicts.
Speaking to the 36th International Con~ress on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse. Diana said addicts are
often highly sensitive and creative
people. .
"Sadly, many people still
regard addictions as a moral weakness," said the 31-year-old
princess. ••A number of these self·
appointed moralists even choose to
make such judgments from behind
a cloud of cigarette smoke.''
She said people with lively
imaginations often hide in fantasy
for protection from the world.
"Imaginative children lose
themselves in fantasy worlds
through stories. Later they might
chose to escape through Ecstasy,
uppers, alcohol and addiction," sbe
said. Ecstasy is the mood-altering
drug MDMA, often sold illegally in
dance clubs.
ATLANTA (AP)- Rap singer
Hammer joined volunteers in tbe
ki!Chen of a shelter for the borneless where he served up fried
chicken, corn and french fries.
The visit to the Atlanta Union
Mission before a concert Sunday
helped launch a USA Harvest
hunger relief drive.
USA Harvest, based in
Louisville, Ky., delivers donated
foods nationwide to homeless shel·
ters. Hammer became involved in
the project in May after performing
at a Hunger Relief concert in
Louisville.
"'It's been a team effort here
today just to continue with the progmm we started," Hammer said
before he began helping other volunteers unload an estimated 40,000
pounds of frozen biscUits.
More than 600,000 pounds of
food has been donated through
Hammer's eff&lt;l'I.S, Slid Stan Curtis,
USA Harvest chairman.

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Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even ITIOfe by
insuring both your car
· and home with the State
Auto Companies.
Let us tell you just
how much your savings
can be.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

~
lnaur•nc:e Co111p•nlea
St•teAuto .

Page4

Vol. 43, No. 82
C..pplghlod 1H2

4:30 p.m.-Junior Fair Parade
6:30 p.m.-Junior Fair Board Auction- Show Arena
7:00p.m. -Draft Horse Show
7:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Beef Show followed by
Open Class Beef Show- Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Grandstand -Ellis Brothers
7:30 p.m.-Pony Pull
9:00 p.m.-GriDdstand- EIUs Brothers
9:00 p.m.-Hillside State- Midnight Cloggers

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19
8:00 a.m.-Junior Fair Swine Show -Show Arena
12:00 noon-4-H Aowet Show
12:30 p.m.- Harness Racing
2:00 p.m.-4--H Style Revue - Hillside Stage
4:00 p.m~-~d(!le Tractor Pull • S~w Arena
4:30 p.m.-Utile Miss 111111 Mister Contest- Hillside Stage
6:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Sheep Show followed by
Open CIU$ Sheep Show- Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Motocross
8:30 p.m.-Hillside Stage- Hot·Point String Band

Sendnel News Stair.
. A 5-milllevy for five years des1gnated for permanent Improvements will be on the ballots of
Meigs Local School Disbict voters
in the November G~emJ Election.
A unanimous dcc!Slon to put the
five mmlevy on ':he ~allot ~as
made at Tuesday mght s meetmg
of ~e Meigs Local Board of Edu·
cauon.
mills, according to figures
prov1ded by Supt James Carpenter,
will generate $564,.000 a year- a
total of ~2.82 million over the five
yearpenod.

F~ve

cnucal areas for use of the money
-the purchase of.ne~ b~ses, new
textbooks. and bmldmg 1mprovemeniS.
About buses Carpenter said that
over half of the buse~ now on the
25 routes of the distnct now meet
th~ requirement ror replacement -:mileage of over 125,000 miles. His
proposal called for complete
replacement of the fleet over the
next five years by purchasing fiv.e
new buses each year at a total esb·
mated cost of $275,000. a year.
~roposed spending between
$60,
and $80,000 of the money

SLAVE AUCTION • Jenny Vatliey will
serve as a "slave" to someone on tile Meigs
County Fairgrounds today, after heiDI sold to
the highest bidder. at yesterday's Junior Fair ,

superintendent explained that
excess lottery money which has
been used in the past for textbook
purchases has dried up. He said
that the district desperately need 10
replace science, social studies, and
English texiS. The procedure, Carpenter ~aid. wouw. be to look at
purchasmg one sub;ect for gmdes
K-12 each year.
As for the buildings, Carpenter
said that each school bas needs and
that principals have compiled lists
of nee~ed im.P"?vements f?r their
respecuve bmldmgs. He S81d most
of the schools need blinds, many

need electrical
~ auo~s. some pnonuzmg the pro;ects and gave
s stems and th~o;v and mtercom an esumated cost of the building
Je so~e emergen ery year th~re $2~ at between $150,000 and
have to be made cy re~aJCS t at ·
,000.
•
Carpenter p;oposed a 1 f
S
Personnel Hire~
P an or . everal coachmg positions were

L eV" lS
• S0 ught b'"
J
b Jd
OQTI

filled at the meeting. Mick Childs
was hired as junior high football
coach. Others employed after it
was determined no cenified candi·
dates had applied were basketball

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to construct new buzldzng

The. Southern Local Board of
Educabon voted to place a levy on
the November ballot for funding to
conslruct a new .school for kinder·
garten through e1ghth gmdes.
It was reported that 47 pen:ent
of the construction money will
come from the state with the
remaining 53 percent to be provid·
ed by local tax dollars.
The l.evy amount which the
board wtll request remams to be
determined, treasurer Dennie Hill
reported.

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Final plans were discussed for
the opening of school next week.
Teachers report on Monday, and ·
the students begin classes on Tues·
day.
The board approved the junior
high and high school handbooks,
and hired Carolyn Robinson to
assist with a special project at the
junior high school. Sandra Baer
and Romain Frederick will be coadv1sors for the cheerleaders during
the 1992-93 school year.
·
The resignation of David Barr as

varsity assi · t foothaiJ coach ~as
accepted d John Porter has been
named to that position.
The board approved use of the
high school football field for the
first full week of July, 1993 by the
Racine Baptist ChlUCh.
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Plans were made to set up a
textbook fund for donations from
district residents.
Attendin~ were Supt. Bob Ord,
Treasurer Hill, and members, Scott
Wolfe, Joe Thoren, Denny Evans
and Tom Roseberry.
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auCtion. Members or the Junior Fair Board will
serve one hour today at tasks to be determined
~y !heir .buyer. The auction is a tundralaer ror
. JUnior ra•r board activities.
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GRAND CHAMPION STEER • Robbie
Calaway and his brother, Jeromee, are pictured
witb Robbie's Grand Champion steer following

las! night's beer judging. Tbe steer bas a listed
we.Igbt of 1,280 pounds. (Sentinel Photo by
Bnan J. Reed)

Calaway .continues family
tradition at Meigs County fair
left, Grand Champion and Robert Hoffman,
Reserve Champion. Also pictured are Fair
Queen Bobbie White and Fair King Bobby
Johnson. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

r. --~---Local
Cruise tickets available
Tickets are now available for the Meigs County Chamber of
Cmnmerce's dance cruise on the P.A. Denny stem wheeler. The
crwse w11l be held on October 8, and the Crossover Band will be
perform.
Tickets are $20 per person and $35 per couple, and can be pur·
chased at Kroger, The Shoe Place in Middleport, and the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce office. A limited number of ticlcets
are available.

B&amp;E incidents probed

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Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that deputies
were called on Tuesday evening to the Paynter Ridge residence or
Robin Rife, who reported that during the day, someone had lrnocked
a large fan out of the window. The house was entered and tbe refrig.
erator door was left open. A garden bose had been cut and a wading
pool damaged. It is believed that children were involved since an
object was at the•window where entry was made. Rucks had also
been placed in the roadway near the residence.
Paul Miller of Beech Grove Road, Rutland, reported on Tuesday
eveqing that he had been gone for two days, and when he returned,
discevered that the door had been kicked in, closed and re-locked.
. He reported that his burglar alarm had not gone off.

Men arrested, charged
. James S. Hannah, 25, Lodi, was returned to Meigs County last
week on a parole violation charge, according to-Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. He had been on parole for the burglary of a Bearwallow
Ridge residence several years ago and had been piclced up in Akron.
A hearing has been set for Tuesday, and Hannah is being held in the .
county jail.
.
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Danny Robson, 38, of Cherry Ridge Road in Pomeroy was
arrested Tuesday night on a wanant to arrest on ill!licbn~t, cbarg·
ing him with aggravated ttatr.cking in drugs: He is being held in the
county jail pending arraignment in Common Pleas Court.
21 year-old Toby Hysell of Lancaster was also arrested this

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2A Sectlo
... , t4 Inc.
Pogu
2s ..
001111
lluldmodla
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~!~o~.~o~!""'L~2.!l~~~!~.~e!~~f~~ .5-milllevy tbis fall

SHOWM&lt;\NSIUP WINNERS • Theae two
showmen were deemed most outstandlag steer
showmen at last night's Junior Fair Beef Show.
Pictured witb their steen are Robbie Calaway,

TUESDAY, AUGUST 18

Low tonight In mld-SOs.
Thursday, mostly sunny. High In
80s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,. Wednesday, August1g , 1992

'

The 1992 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule
•

Pick 3:
902
Pick 4:
8974
Buckeye 5:
14,20,23,25,37

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Two former members of the Ken·
tucky HeadHunters country band
have decided on the stage name
Brother Phelps.
Ricky Lee Phelps and his brother Doug left the Kentucky Head·
Hunters in June to form a new act
The brothers sponsored a contest to pick a name f&lt;l' the new act

Fossil records trace human
ancestors back 2 million years.
During earth's last major glacia·
tion, ice sheets, 10,000 feet thick in
places. extended south nearly to
London.

TO
H ME

Ohio Lottery

Bird
announces
retirement

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Robbie Calaway co.ntinued a
family tradition on Tuesday night,
as he walked away with Grand
Champion Marlcet Steer and Showmanship rosettes at the Meigs
County Junior Fair Beef Show.
Projects were judged and
awards given as follows: Steer
Showman: Robbie Calaway,

briefs--------.
morning on two warrants from Meigs l.:ounty Ulurt one a bench
w~t for failure to comply, and the other a warran't to arrest for
failure to appear on the charges of DWI and driving under OMVI
suspension. Hysell is being held in the county jail pending a court
appearance.

EMS units answer calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
Meigs Emergency Services.
On Tuesday at9:09 a.m., Racine and Bashan units went to Bar·
ri~ger Road for a structure fli'C at the George Moore residence. No
m;unes were reported. At 10:23 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Wetzgall Street. Violet Moriarity was talcen to Holzer Medical Center. At
I :33 p.m., Racine squad took Richard Smith to SL Joseph Hospital
from Co~nty Road 265. At 3:13 p.m., Middleport unit went to Pearl
Street Bill Durst was talcen to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:55 .p.m., Tuppers Plains unit took Amy Smith to Holzer
from the fllllgrOunds. At 6:30p.m., Rutland unit went to Carpenter
Hill Road and took Elaine Parsons to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
At 9:44p.m., Tuppers Plains unit took Anita Calaway to Veterans
from the fatrgrounds. At 10:48 p.m., Pomeroy units went to U.S.
Route 33 for an auto accident. D()n Rose refused treatment. At
11:19 p.m .. Middleport squad took Marilyn Bishop to Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital from Page Street.

Albany man injured in wreck
An Albany man reportedly sustained minor injuries in a onevehicle wreck at the junction of Ca!penter Hill Road and Dyes ville
Road in Columbia Township Tuesday around 5:15p.m.
. According to !he Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol,
• Kenneth E. Elhs, 29, was eastbound on Dyesville Road and
, attempted to turn right onto Calpenter Hill Road when his pickup
truck overturned.
•
Damage to'ElliS' 1991 Chevrolet S-10 was Hstedas light.
'No citations were issued. ·
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Grand Champion and Robert Hoffman , Reserve Champion; Market
Steer: .Robbie Calaway, Grand
ChampiOn and Robert Hoffman
Reserve Champion; Feeder Cal;
Steer: Jeromee Calaway, Grand
Champion and David Rankin
Reserve Champion; Feeder Cal; ·
Heirer: Robbie Calaway, Grand
ChampiOn and Jeromee Calaway
Reserve Champion; Breeding
Showman : Robbie Calaway
Grand Champion and Jeromee
away, Reserve Champion· An~us·
Michelle Guess, Grand champion:
Chianina: Laura Brown Grand
Champion and Robbie C~laway
Reserve Champion; Crossbred:

Cal:

Anita Calaway, Gmnd Champion
for junior yearling and Reserve
Champion for cow class; Polled
Hereford: James Chapman, Grand
Champion for two year-old heifer
and Reserve Champion for bull
calf; Maine Anjou : Robbie Calaway, Grand Champion and John
Collins, Reserve Champion; Sim·
mental: Stephanie Hoffman, Grand
Champion and Robert Hoffman,
Reserve Champion.
Sale order was determined following the award of grand and
reserve champion ribbons in each
class. The Junior Fair Livestock
Sale will be held on friday at 5
p.m.

�Wednelday,August19,1992

:(Zommentary

-----Weather-----

Page 2-the Dally. sentiriel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesd8y, August ~ 9, 1992

.,

South·Central Ohio
To~ight, mostly clear. Low in
the mtd:SOs. Thursday, mostly
sunny. High near 80.
Extended forecast:

.....•..·. .

The Daily Sentinel

?Excerpts from other
;:Ohio newspapers
.-

I

'•

Bush's oil patch buddies have some doubts

HOUSTON - The question of
the hour here revolves around
. whether Geor~e Bush is reelectable as ))I'CSident But perhaps
an e~en more embarrassing con"
cern is whether he could even get
elected to his old WeSt Houston
congressional4istrict.
.
George P. Mitchell, founder of
ROBERT L. WINGETI'
the Mitchell Energy and DevelopPublisher
ment Corp., and a living legend
among Houston ' oilmen, thinks
Bush may find troubles here: " A
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
• PATWIDTEHEAD
lot
of my friends in the oil business
•: Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Maalgtl'
•••
may still vote for Bush, but they
••
are really disappointed. I think they
• •; LETI'ERS OF OPINJON are welcome. They sbould be leso than 300
want. him to come around, but a lot
• :. words. All lettors are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
of
them are sitting on the fence.' '
•: odd!eSi and r.lepbone number. No unsiped letters will be publisbed. Letters
The 11 -year-old Mitchell,
! :: &amp;bould be in good taste, addressing iasues, not pmonalities.
whose views on energy have been
· +-------------------------~ solicited by both the Clinton and
Bush campaigns, accuses Bush of
botching the economy and failing
to formulate a domestic energy
strategy. "The energy policy has
been to go to war," he charges.
The reason for disconrent here is
clear.
Just when Houston felt it was
. '.,.......
emerging from the oil bust of the
::. ·•
By Tbe Associated Press
1980s, the national recession dealt
-;· ;. Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national issues in
;41e.'wspapers across the state.
-:-: .
Tbe (Cleveland) Plaia Delller, Aug.l6:
:: :::At tong lethal last, the United States and the United Nations have
:-teknowledged the magnitude of Somalia's crisis by launching an intensive food relief mission. U.S. and U.N. officials must not slop with this
ftrst step: They must persist with comprehensive food distribution and
with finding long-tenn solutions to the problems troubling the Hom of
·.Africa.
~ ·• Despite the welcome measure the United States and the United Nations
:;ale finally taking, it remains troubling that the crisis claimed so many
•:Iwes - and now threatens so many more - before the international com·:·iqimity reacted vigorously. The slow response points to the low priority
·:the United States has given Africa in foreign affairs.
To change that attitude, the United States and the international community should heed the warnings about a similar crisis of starvation looming
in the Sudan. And as now appears ·to be the plan in Somalia, long-renn
solutions should be examined alon' with immediate relief operations.
i\t)other nation should not have to wnthe at death 's brink before the world
.;u!lces notice.
:• •:
Akroa Beacon Journal, Auc.lJ:
:: :: Every time George Bush walks around the comer larely, be seems to
·!nln into himself.
:~ Asked about reports that be had an affair with a former aide, the presi:=&lt;tent bristled about the sleazy doings of the mec!ia, and he's ri~t Howev·~ . isn't it the Bush campaign that has made much of "family vaiDe$,"
:-code words for Bill Clinton's all-but-admiaed inftdelity?
-~ Politics, of course, is no stranger to the abortion issue.
:. ·· In an int.erview'with Stone Phillips of NBC News ... it was Bush him:~self whb seemed divided on the issue.
·~ The president said he w0uldn 't condone his granddaughter having an
&gt;abortion, comparing i~ at one point, to a robbery, "something ~ble,"
: although he was being somewhat disingenuous sinee he resists the notion
·: tJrat those receiving abortions should be treated as criminals.
••. " So in the end," Stone asked, "the decision would he hers?"
:: "Well, whose else's," Bush responded, "who else's could it be?"·
~ · As a personal issue, and not a political one, the matter of abortion
After work, you go home io
.•becomes hitmblingly comPlex, or as Bush put it, "That's.the way life is."
watch
the larest movie release on
~ · Which is just what's so maddening and relevant about this issue, as
cable,
which you programmed to
'O!l'posed to the political insignif'ICBI\Ce of infidelity, which involves pristan
at
7:30. Later, you have to
.- ~a.te character as opposed to public character. Bush, who has sought 10
pause
the
show wben your mother
•: exploit the divisions on abortion, seems to know very well that those difcalls
and
wants to see the kids.
;. ferences are sincerely felt, which leads, it seems, to the view that such a
Sounds
impossible
or at least
;: personal decision belo~gs, in the end, with the individual. As he himself
improbable? These are some of the
•: asked: Who else could tt be?
services
that tue currently possible
:• The (Youngstown) Vindicator, Aug. ll:
with
the
latest telecommunications
;: Erich Honccker, the despot who last ruled East Germany and the
systems,
although they are not
·· builder of the infamous Berlin Wall, will finally face justice.
widely
available.
:: Now the united Gennan government will seck justice for the 18 milEquipment is presently being
: lion people Honeckcr misruled while toadying to his masrers in the Kreminstalled
in experimental housing
·' lin. A political show trial would be too much like the Soviet system.
developments
across the country
:: Instead, Gennan prose(:ulors should reveal the rot in Honecker's coven
that can show you the person to
~ system in which the hated secret police, the SI8Si, maintained files on 6
whom you are talking on the phone
.• million of his countrymen.
and
can allow you to program any
: Honecker is due no sympathy; he had none for others. By revealing the
movie
at any ume. These are also
; true nature of this residual symbol of the Cold War, the tribunal can brand
the
types
of services that Ohio tele• him for what he is: an old, broken down dictata. Whether Honecker, at
phone
companies
say they want to
: 79 and ailing, should be jailed is questionable. Better, pelhaps, to let him
provide, if only they could change
: fade into obscurity, another example of communism's failings.
how
they are regulated by the Pub•
lic Utilities Commission of Ohio
(PUCO).
Over the last few weeks, the
PUCO
has been holding hearings
••
across
the
state to present a new
:
Today In History
way of regulating the telephone
•
By Tbe Associated Press
companies
Ohio. This meeting is
: Today is Wednesday, Aug. 19, the 232nd day of 1992. There are 134 to allow thein public
an opponunity
~ days left in the year,
to
offer
testimony
in
support or in
~ Today's Highlight in History:
,
opposition
10 proposed rules. These
~ One year ago, on Au$. 19, 1991 , Soviet hard-liners announced to a
rules, as submitted, would allow
•:Shocked world that Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev had been companies
to develop alternative
:;rc]lloved from power. Russian federation President Boris N. Yeltsin, defy'
:oil)g the coup plotters, called for a general strike.
~; · · On this date:
:. :. In 1812, the USS Constitution, also known as "Old Ironsides," defeat:~ the British frigate Guerriere in a naval battle east of Nova Scotia dur•lnk the War of 1812.
;. '· In 1848, the New York Herald reported the discovery of gold in CaliLOS ANGELES (NEA) - Los
;loinia.
Angeles
County officials estimate
•: In 1929, the come{ly program "Amos and Andy," starring Freeman
that
during
the last three years, (;(,7
:Gosden and Charles Correll, made its network radio debut on NBC.
local
businesses
have closed or
;: In 1942, SO years 8JO. about 6,000 Canadian and British soldiers
moved away, with iherusultant loss
~Jaunched a ~trous 1'31d against the Gennans at the port city of Dieppe,
;France, suffenng about SO percent casualties.
of 110,000 jobs. While some closings can be blamed on the reces~ In 1955, severe flooding in the Northeast caused by the remnants of
sion,
many are the result of the
;Jiurricane Diane claimed some 200 lives.
high
cost
and difficulty of comply:• In 1960, a tribunal in Moscow convicted American U-2 pilot Francis
ing with the myriad regulations
tary Powers of espionage.
·
; In 1974, u.s. Ambassador Rodger P. Davies was fatally wounded by a facing businesses here.
With these job losses pushing
)lullet that penetrated the American embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus, during
the local unemployment rate to
tn anti-American protest by Greek C)'piots.
11.2 percent- well above the
~ In 1976, ·President Gerald R. Ford won the Republican presidential
national
average,- the Economic
~mination at the party's convention in Kltnsas City.
Development
Corp. of Los Angeles
: In 1980,301 people aboard a Saudi Arabian L-1011 died as the jetliner
County
is
trying
to stem the tide.
made a ftery emergency landing at the Riyadh airpon. .
Its a~grcssive ' 'LA Means Busi~ In 1981, two U.S. Navy F-14 jet fighters shot down a pair of Sovietness' campaign, is an elTon to aid
~t Libyan SU-22's in a dogfight over the Gulf of Sidra toward the end
businesses currently considering
era two·day American naval exercise.
;, Ten yean ago: Israel's Cabinet approved a U.S. plan calling for the moving or closing. The EDC helps
tithd!awal of Palestinian and Syriari fo~ from west Beirut In Wash- them rmd ways to stay, and tries to
it)gton, Congress approved a $98.3 btlhon package of tax and mvenue convince state and-local governihcreases. In the Soviet Union, cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya became ments and regulatory agencies that
they must find ways of satisfying
tj{e second woman to be launched into space.
·
•' Five years ago: A third convoy of U.S. warships and refla~ Kuwaiti thetr goals without overburdening
tlinters slipped into the Persian Gulf befom dawn and headed up the local businesSCB:
Recently, lhe EDC brought local
IW!terway behind a screen of mine-secldng helicopters.
s',Dall
busmessmen, .regulatory offl:; .Today's Birthdays: Author Ring Lardner Jr. is 77. Jockey Willie Shoectals
and
the medta together for
~er is 61. ActreSS Debra Paget is 59. Tennis coach Renee Richards is
dialogue.
At
Richatd
51. Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., is 58. Singer Johnny Nash is 52. Wbriel, ownerJhcofgathering,
a.
small
man!~facAJ1cansas Oov. Bill Clinton is 46. Actor Oerild McRaney is 44. Actor tunng ftr111 emplo)'lllg us,. said he
:A.ilaJn Arldn !J 36.
·
: Thought for Today: "One can live in the shadow of an idea 'Without was complerely fed up wtth overregulation and the extraordinary
gtpsping iL" - Elizabeth Bowen, Irish author (1899-1973).
111 Coart Street
;'
l'omei'OJ, Oblo
·.;:-vOTED TO THE III'I'EU8T8 Of THE 10108-IIA80N AR&amp;\

a serious blow to the city's fragile friendships in the early 1960s:
recovery. Today, the headlines James Baker and Robert Mosbachcarry harbingers of a flattening . er, two men whom Bush is counteconomy: layOffs at Continental ing,on to rescue his floundering
campaign. In 1966 these suburbs
handily voted Bush into a House
seat, where be served two terms. It
was a period malted by explosive
growth that cemented the community's consezvative core.
By 1988, this district handed
Bush 77 percent of its vote against
Airlines, Compaq computers, Democratic candidate Michael
Dukalds, a higher share than almost
Amoco, Shell and Tenneco.
any
other district in the nation .
Until recently, this town was a
Today, little seems to have
solid tiastion of Bush support Bush
had his roots it! this city's 7th con- changed in these subtubs- at least
gressional district, with its posh on the surface. Oil wealth means
Houston suburbs of River Oaks, privare schools and~ uniTanglewood and Memorial. Mter versities. Most family cars inclttdc
moving here in 1959 from Mid- a hunting vehicle (for fall outings
land, Tel!Bs, Bush earned his for- on I,DOO-plus acre ranches in South
tune, raised his family and Texas), a Mercedes or BMW.
Tony's restatnitt is still t1ie haunt
launched his poll tical career.
While living in Tanglewood, of Houston CEOs .who down $50
Bush became head of the county's Italian lunches.
This week, however, maries a
Republican Party in 1962. Nearby,
bittersweet
homecoming.
on the manicured clay coons of the
,montli,
the results of an
Last
Houston Country Club, Bush
infonnal
questionnaire
given to
forged two of ~is most lasting

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein

. 6CI

NEA-. •

Telephone rates and serv:ices

~ Today

in history

'

coLuMBus. Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Wednes·day by the Ohio Department of
Agricullulll:
Barrows and gilts: fully steady;
demand moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs., country
points, 43.00-44.00, a few 44.50;
plants 43.50-44.50, a few 45.25.
U.S. 1-2, 210-230 lbs., country
points, 41.5043.00.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs,, country

Sen.Jan M. Long
public inreresL
According to the PUCO, the
rules were recommended to the
Commission by the PUCO staff
afrer completing an informal workshop process, which was open to
the public. The PUCO called this
the "most open process we have
ever had at the Commission. During the workshops, the PUCO staff
took public and industry comments
prior to presenting their proJ)0581s
to the Commission. The PUCO has
said that these proposed rules will
not eliminate the regulatory oversight that the PUCO now has over
the telephone ·companies . Rather,
individual companies would be
able to file alternative regulation
plans.
Specifically, the goals of the
staff plan are to assure public input
and due process for all stockhold-.
ers, maintain PUCO oversight of
local telephone company earnings,maintain regulation of basic local
services and rates, require tete-

phone compmlies 10 commit to providing innovative telecommunication services and to modernizing
their networks, allow for new services to be offered more quietly.
and assure that new services affecting personal privacy will receive
special attention. Further, according to PUCO, the proposed rules
would allow telephone companies
to respond 10 competitive IJU!flcets,
encourage CCOIIOIDic development,
strengthen the manets benefiting
CUSIOIIIen, encowaKe ellicierey of
telellbone companies, ~ a
modem telecommunications network, and encourage innovative
IOChnologies to [llomote education
of Ohio's youth.
Local telephone companies are
currently ~latcd by the PUCO.
The~· rates ate subject to
the tn!ditional nt1e btie. the rate of
return regulation. This means that
telephone companies Clll set rateS
which cover their COSIS to provide
the services and which allow them
a ehance to earn a fair profit Tbc
companies' raJeS are then set in the
context of rate cases filed by the
companies. The PUCO decides
what rates are appropriate after
bearings on the rate request and
after considering all the evidence
and comments.

Seniors to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Snacks will be served and all members are urged to attend.
Klildergarten orientation
A kindergarten orientation meeting for Eastern Local will be held
Tuesday at 9:30a.m. at Chester
Elemeniary. Parents of children
who are not pre-registered are to do
so at 9 am. Orientation will be at
noon at Tuppers Elementary with
pre-registration at 11:30 a.m.
Parents who did not attend the
spring registration or who are new
to the district will need to provide a
copy of their child's birth certificate and a record of the various
vaccinations and shots already
received. Funher information may
be obtained by calling the superintendent's offiCe 985-4292.
Couutry music night
Country music night at the Lot-

coaches, Pat O'Brien, seventh
grade; Chris Stout, eighth grade;
Gene Wise, ninth 11rade; Mike
Kloes, volunteer asststant eighth
grade, and Dennis McGuire, volunteer assistant ninth grade.
Shelby Davis and Lelia Haggy
were hired as pan-time cooks on
one year contracts. Tbe vote on
Haggy was unanimous, but the vore
on Davis was split with Roger
Abbott voting "no", and Randy
Humplnys abstaining.
Employed as substitute teacbers
for the r,ear were Laura Salser,
Rick Dailey, David Deem, Bryan
Durst. Thomas Fauber, Valerie
Hanstinc, Debra Jackson, Chery I
Lightfritz, Sandra Needs, Krista
Sellers, Cynthia Smith, Janet Stiltner, Ruth Warden and Scott Gheen.
The board voted that the first
call for substitute teachers in the
district will be to those who graduated from a Meigs County high
school!.
The resignation of Myrville
Brown as a cook was accepted and
the resignation date of Charles
Chancey was changed from Jan. I,
1993 to June I, 1993.
Other BusiDess
Treasurer Jane Fry reported that
the district has Rll:etved $138,000
through the Meigs County Rural
Education Fund for the Effective
School! program.
CarjJelttcr reported that a similar
amount received last lear was
spent for planning an that the
money this year will go toward
implementing the programs which
were planned last year. He said that
the programs are handled by a
committee in each school.
Of the total amount, $68,000
will go for teaCher training through
Rio Grande and $5,000 to each
school (a total of $45,000) with the
remainder to stay with the superintendent for in-service seminars or
other activities adminisrered on a
district-wide basis.

change

The Ohio Consumers' Coonsel
has spoken out against this plan to
allow companies to submit their
own alternative regulations. A
spolccsman has said that although
the companies say the proposals
would help modernize Ohio's
aetecommunications system, these
new rules would actually allow
phone companies to raise rates
almost at will while wiping out
much of the ~tate's regulatory conuol. Aooording 10 the Cciunsel, the
comP,IIIly proposals would include
automatic lllte hikes, possibly tied
to a nalional price lndcJt.
Our lives will become more and
more dependent on telecommunicatioos in the twenty-fust century.
What the POCO does in the fteld of
regulation will ill)pact'Ohioans'
pocketbooks as well. I would
encourage aU who are interested in
this ;a 1 "01iltclld the meetings
to learn more about the proposed
rules and their ramifications for
business and residential rares.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael_ Long, if you have any
quesli«m~ts about these
or sty bthC:r ISsues. My number· is
(614)466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus , OH
43215.

Humphreys ~ht lP, the matter of accountability. ' Someone
needs to come back to the board
and report how this thing is going"

·a

c'

Robe•t ]., t.v.agman

tory burden of complying with
Southern CalillaUa's complex airquality standards and regulations.
On this SCOR, ~~:cording to EDC
president Gary Conley. "OffiCials
must act quiclcly aJid dramatically
to eliminale administrative gridlock
and oppressive rules that make
relocatiQn to less complicated
SII.ICS desirable•• '
.The c:rux of the problem, says
former Qolw. Ocorp Deukmejian,
chairmltt ol the~, is that while
publie officie!friy· ICC the antibusiness climate that has developed
here, ''there l£ 11!1 commiunent and
no sense of . , I ntitoiYe the
problem. We know what needs to
be done, but we lad: the will."
Conlef. Harrlftllllll 'aad others
involved Ill the EDC campaign say
they believe' that public-private
parlnersbips lilce the LA Means
Business coalition can do the job.
Small-business owners like Wwzel
and Schuman, O!l the VClle of giving up 011 California, •y·:tltil' BDC
elfon offers them one Jut chance.
They hope that the chua" the
EDC is, leelciDg won't come too
~ for- t11c1r. btWnesses - lnd for
lhllir ....
,Rallilrt .W . . • a ~t,per. bter1 r '· f' 1
p~j

The Daily Seutinel
hbU•htd ..-er'J' aRemoon, Monday
Ill c-t Sl, l'anllrOI,
OJUo . bJ &amp;be Ohio Valley hbll1blnr

tllmiP PridaJI

~!f!!; ·•_(-l

Meetln~ canceled
The Mtddleport Community
Assnciatilln meeting, scheduled for
this Thursday, has been canceled
due to the Meigs County Fair. The
group meets every Thursday at 7
p.m. to discuss the Catfish Festival.
Meetings are held in Middleport
Council Chambers at village hall.·

Hydrants to be flushed
The Village of Rutland will be
flushing all ftre hydrants to clean
the water lines and residents are
advised that their water will be on
and off periodically. At times water
may appear muddy and the village
recommends residents not do laundry during these times. Flushing
will take place Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday.

C0111p~,ay1Malttmedia

lne., Pomeroy,

said Humphreys. He described it as
a "well-intentioned" program
aimed at raising the self-esteem of
the students, but that the board
needs to be assured that "what they
said they are toing to do, is actually being done.
Carpcnrer said that he bas met
with the teachers, reviewed the proposals and discussed what is needed in the way of support from
administration. He said the situation now is -to get everybody
involved, not just the building team
which developed the ;agram.
Humphreys emphasized that the
money should result in benefits 10
the children of the disuict and
again said that the board needs to
be reassured that is taking place.
The board entered into a contraCt with Dodson Pest Control for
pest control service for the school
year at $342 per building for elementary and jooior high buildings,
and SS 18 for the high school. It
was emphasize!! that principals of
the various schools are responsible
for keeping the schools pest free
sinee the company under the contraCt will come and treat the buildings anytime they are called.
An executive committee was
held to discuss personnel. Attending were Carpenter, Fry, Bob Barton, board president, and members,
Larry Rupe, John Hood,
Humphreys, and AbbotL

Name winners
of hay show
Brian Windon, Pomeroy, took
two blues and Virgil King,
Pomeroy, one blue, in the hay show
held Tuesday at the I29th Meigs
County Fair.
Windon took blues for all grasses and 49 percent or less legumes,
while King's ftrst came in the class
for hay with 75 percent or more
alfalfa. Taking red ribbons in all
three classes was Roy Holter.
Macyn Ervin, Racine, took a third
in the class for all grasses, and
King a third in the 49 percent or
less legumes.
The show is co-sponsored by
the Meigs Soil and Warer Conservation District and the Fair Board.
Plaques will be presented by the
SWCD at its annual meeting and
banquet to be held on Oct 20.

Ohio 46'16111 I'lL 992-Jtll6. Secon4 clut
,...... pola'ol ,..,.,, Obio.

Results of the 1992 Draft Horse
Show held Monday evening during
the !29th annual Meigs County
Fair have been announced.
Belgian Junior Champion Mare
was John l!.ose with Senior and
Grand Champion Mare going to
Robert Ray Harris.
1n the Belgian division for
mares four years and over, Tim
Bearhs won ftrst place; for mares
three years and under four, Robert
Ray Harris received first; mare two
years and under three, Jobn Rose,
first and third; mare foal, Byron
James, first and second; three best
of breed, Tim Bearhs was ftrst and
John Rose was second.
. In the grade horse division the

Senior Champion Mare Award
went to William A. James with
Junior and Senior Champion Gelding awards going to John Rose.
Grand Champion Mare was awarded 10 Dale Teaford
For gelding three years and
over, John Rose, ftrSt, Rodney Tuttle, second, and Terry Lewis, third;
gelding under three years, John
Rose, ftrst and Lesrer Parker, second; mare three years and over,
Dale Teaford, first and second;
spring colt, William A. James, first.
In the Percheron division the
Junior and Grand ChamJ?!on Stallion awards went to Wtlliam A.
James. Junior Champion Mare
went to Chuck Whittington, with
Senior and Grand Champion Mare

Franklin Rizer

Longtime Pomeroy businessman
Franklin Morris Rizer, 71, 738 East
Main Street, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday, Aug. 19, 1992 at his
residence.
Born Oct 7, 1920 in Syracuse,
he was a son of the !are Daniel S.
and Clara G. Abies Rizer. He was a
helicopter pilot and owner and
operator of Rizer Oil ~pany .
A veteran of World War U and
the Korean Conflict, he was a
member of the Asbury United
Methodist Church, American
Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars,
American Helicopter and Pilots
Association, Aircraft Owners and
Pilots Association, Grand Lodge of
Free and Accepte~ Masons No.
164, Council No. 46, Valley Commandery Royal Arch Mason Ou!pter No. 80, Scottish Rite, Aladdin
Temple and Disabled American
Vererans.
Mr. Rizer is survi.ved by his
wife, Wanda M. (Potts) Rizer; a
son and daughter-in-law, Franklin
M. and Maria N. Rizer U, Warren;
a daughter and son-in-law, Milisa
K. Rizer and Major James Allshouse, San Antonio, Texas.
Services will be held Friday at
II a.m. at the Asbury United
Methodist Church in Syracuse with
Rev. Wesley Thatcher and Rev.
Damm Newman officiating. Burial
will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Masonic services will be Thursday
at 7:30pm. and military graveside
rites will be performed by the
American Legion Feeney-Bennett
Post No. 128, Middleport.
Friends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home Wednesday from 79 p.m. and Thursday from 2-4 and
7-9p.m.

Charles B. Berrv

Charles B. Berry, 62, 65 Kara
St., Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Aug.
18, 1992, at Holzer Medical Center.
Born June 14, 1930, in Boyd
County, Ky., he was the son of
Marie Hall Berry, Middlepon, and
the tare Delbert Berry.
He retired from the U.S. Army
and Civil Service in 1972 and was
a veteran of the Korean Conflict
He was a member of: the VFW
Post 4464; the American Legion
Lafayette Post 27, where he was
commander for three years; the
D.A.V. and Forty and Eight, Gallipolis; the Morning Dawn Masonic
Lodge 7 of Gallipolis, 32nd degree
Mason; member of the Masonic
Temple, ColumbUs; and a member
of Shriners in Columbus and Gallipolis.
He is survived by hiS wife,
Frances Jackson Berry, 10 whom be
was married Sept. 20, 1951, in
Lebanon, Va.
Other survivors include: one
daughter, Linda (Ed) Perkins of
Hanover; four sons, Don "Bob"
Berry of Bidwell, Charles Berry Jr.
of Vinr.on, WarrenS. Berry of Gallipolis and Daniel "Danny" Berry
of Bidwell; and 14 grandchildren.
Also surviving are three sisrers,
Bonnie Berry of Vinton, Billie
Maynard of Columbus and Frances
Reynolds of Gahanna.
Services will be held I p.m. Friday at Willis Funeral Home with
revs Elmer Geiser and Everett
Delancy officiating. Burial will be
in Vinton Memorial Park.
Masonic services will be held 8
p.m. Thursday at the funeral home
by the Morning Dawn Lodge 7. A
gravesite nag presentation will be
conducred by the military.
Pallbearers will be members of
the VFW and American Legion.

Raymond S. Conkle, 65, of
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Aug. 18, 1992, at the Veterans
Administration Medical Center in
Huntington, W. Va.
Born in Bradbury, on Sept 25,
1926, he was the son of the late
Ernest and Ethel Marie Bush Conkle.
He was World War 2 veteran
having retired from the U. S. Navy
where he served under Admiral
Byrd on the U. S. Glacier during an
exposition to the South Pole and
Antarctica.
He is survived by his wife,
Betty Conkle, Gallipolis; two
daughters, Susan Stewan, Columbus, and Tammy Watkins,
Pomeroy; five sons, Benson and
Raymond Conkle, both of Columbus , and Larry, Gary and Steve
Conkle, all of Michigan; a sister,
Freda Davis, Bidwell, a brother
Sam Conkle, Petersburg, Va.; a
nephew and his wife, Mike and
Sherry Davis of Rutland; his mother-in-law, Ocel Sears, Middlepon,
and several grandchildren, including Michelle Watkins. David
Watkins n. and Joshua SIO{le, all of
Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at II a.m. at the Fisher .
Funeral Home in Middlepon with
the Rev. Odell Manley officiating.
Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home Thursday evening, 7
to9 p.m.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONSMarie Pursley, Racine; Gladys Barber, Reedsville; Luvenia Hayman,
Long Bottom; and Henry Durst,
Middlepon.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Paula Brown.

Yout Bugle lloy

PIICII
Dotljl.....,.... ,.......,,.. ,,.... ,.. ,......... -25 Cooto

Back-To-School
Headquarters!

8
lbtrt nol4'-lrif!l lo pay th c:mt.
• ....,. ,..., hl ...... .. dtrwd &amp;o The
t

--

Doll!\ Sonllaot

.., • lb..,., m or t2
- · c..tfl wil bo Poa-

No 1-pliGGo by OMit pomdllod to
anu wlwni home •rrter Mr'IICICI 11

...auto.

11 - ....................................... ta.ta
. - ..........:......................: .... $14,76
.

.

-

l

•'

·. -,· ·_r.·

Group to meet Aug. 25
A kindergarten orientation meeting for Eastern Local will he held
Aug. 25 at 9:30 a.m. at Chester
Elementary. Parents of children
who are not pre-regisrered are to do
so at 9 a.m.
Orientation will be at noon on
Aug . 25 at Tuppers Elementary
with pre-registration at 11:30 a.m.
Parents who did not attend the
spring registration or who are new
to the district will need to provide a
copy of their child's birth certificate and a record of the various
vaccinations and shots already
received.
Further information may be
obtained by calling the superinrendent's office 985-4292.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

... :, '

7

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Home Comfort Bills.
Dimension Heat Pump - The most efficient
single speed heat pump available.
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On Compressor

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f:ln11a ifiroliuu fur u SnJH•riu r
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ONLY DEALER Ill ALL
SOUTHEAST OHIO TO
AnAIII THIS
CWSIFICATIONI

5315 HEBIARDmm·ROAD
110

Shop 'Til 8:00 P.M.
FREE LAYAWAY

. . . . Ooulp
.............
~........................1111.40.
uuo

• w-.. . .. . . . .........................
. .... . . . .. .............
.
......................
u--..~

SHEEP TO THE SCALE - Tom Karr herds a 105- pou~
sheep iDto a scale during weigh-iu at the Meigs County Fair Mein;
day momiDg. Poultry, rabbits, steers and hogs were also weighed: _

DAVID WHilE SERVICES, INC.

992-3148

--~~:.-

....
IS W..................
,.... ,.. ,, ..........IF,.... Ql.l4

A new feature at the Meigs
County Fair this year will be the
arm wrestling competition to take
place Saturday night
The conrest will get underway ai
7:30 in front of the grandstandi
Open to the public, there is a $5
entry fee.
.
Trophies will be awarded fof
firs~ second and three in the weight
classes of men, up 10 150 pounds;
151-170, 171-190, 191-210, an4
211 and up; and the women's open
class.
·.
Registration to participate will
begin at S p.m. in the grandstan&lt;l
stage area. Mary Kay Rose is iQ
charge of the arm wrestling pro;
gram,
•,

MaHhew, Cera, Esther, Sandra, DaVId Lennox says about this family, "A superior
level of quality performance." Your home Is
too Important. Call the one Lennox says Is the
best.

IIJCultoror- ......
ll!llla OOPY

awards going to Charles Shain.
In the classes, stallion one year
.and under, Charles Shain, ftrst;
stallion foal, William A. James,
first; marc four years and over,
Charles Sbain, ftrst; mare three
years and under four, Chuck Whittington, firs~ mare two years and
under three, Chuck Whtttington,
firs~ mare one year and under two,
Chuck Whittington; and mare foal,
mare and foaf, and three best of
breed, Chuck Whittington, first in
all.
In the open class for fanner's
hitch the winners were Rodney
Tuttle, first; Tim Bearhs, second;
and Chuck Whittington, third.
Winner in the cart class was
Tim Bearhs.

Arm wrestling ·:•
at fair Saturday

--Area deaths-Raymond Conkle

POSTM.I8TIIR: s . d - chupt'to
Tho O.ttr Sonltoot, t11 Court 81.,
Plouao)O OJtio 45'781.
IR!BICIUPTIOIIJI.ATI8
Cleo W.l:........................,...... ,,....,...,$).60
Cleo ~..... ,.... ,.... ,.. ,,,•.,...... ,,, .......$6.1115
Cleo - ........................... ........,... ,$13.)0

The Dally SenUiiei-Pag~

Results of draft horse show announced

M......, Tbo Aotoc:ioled Pro., aod lbo
Ohio N....,.~Auadation, National
Adnrtlli111
atatin, Branham
Now!(lolper 8 eo, 738 Tbtnt Ami..,
Nowllln, NewYorlt t0017.

I

!: . '

tridge Community Cenrer will be
Saturday, 7 p.m. to midnight.
Refreshments are available and all
ban.ds are welcome.

Meigs ... ~c~on~u~·n~ue~d~f~ro~m~p~~~e~l~-------------

Group woos businesses back to LA
costs of doing business in the state. for claims, even if the alleged
"I just can't continue like this," stress is only 10 percent job-relalWurzel said with obvious passion. ed. Over the past four years such
' 'I'm going to Reno. They want claims have skyrocketed.
"I now pay $160,000 a year for
comp insurance," says Wurzel.
r,
"I
"My costs ire increasiDg artlielltle
of 60 peroent a year. 1 have bad 27
me. They are giving me all kinds of stress claims fded against me, aU of
incentives to come. My cost of which 1 believe were. completely
doing business will be halved. If bogus, but each sealed for between
there are not major changes here in $10,000 and $80,000 from my
the next six months, I'm gone."
insurance company, which tells me
"It's time for us to pull our it is cheaper for them to settle then
heads out of the sand," says Lee to go'to court."
Harrington, who is senior vice
Radio and television stations
president of Southern California here arc filled with ads, iD several
Gas eo., as weD as chairman of the languages, from law ftrtDS saying:
EDC business-retention effort. "Are you fccling SllesSed on the
"Over-regulation and skyroclceting job? You might becatitlcd to comcompliance costs are not just a big- · pensation. Come to us."
business problem. They are driving
The cost of WOlter's compensaout small businesses and prevent- tion insurance bas driven Judy
. ing new small and medium-size SchURUUI's small auto pans iemanbusinesses 'from getting staned. ufacttmng ftnnto the brin1c ol closAnd it is these kinds of businesses ing. "I'm in a rage owr this," saya
· that provide eight out of 10 new Schuman. "I've become politijobs m this region."
cized. I've become radicaliliCd.. I'm
For Wurzel, !IJl(l for many Cali- paying an aveJ118e of $7,000 per
fomia small-business owners, the year per employee for coverage.
main culprit is the state's extraol:di- I'm now r.old that my rares may go
narjly gencl()us worker's compen- up 152 percent over tbe neat 24
sation program. What maltes the montlts. lcat'tgooniW:thiJ."
California program almost unique
For others the problera is the
is that.it ,allows "stre$5" u a basis expense and the -~ regula-

points, 42.00-43.50.
'
Receipts Tuesday 8,300. Estimated receipts Wednesday 8,000.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 50 to 2.00 lower.
Slaughttr steers: choice 68.0074.75; select 64.00-69.50.
Slaughrer heifers: choice 67 .00.
73.25; select 63.00-69.50.
Cows: Steady to 2.00 lower; all
cows 55.75 and down.

- .Meigs announcements--

'

regulatory plans which would be
reviewed at public meetings and
then he subject to PUCO scrutiny
to determine if the plan is in the

Friday through Sunday:
Fair. Lows in the 50s Friday and
60-65 Saturday and Sunday. Highs
in the low 10 mid-80s through the
period.

---Livestock report--

constituenta by Rep. Bill Archer,
R-Texas, who inherited the district
from Bush in 1970, indicated that
57 peroent Of those who responded
disapproved of Bush's job performance. The president is shown running well behind Clinton in
Stall::wide polls.
Kathy Whitmire, Houston ' s
mayor from 1981 10 1991, sums up
the sentiment in a sentence: "Our
growth is slowing." Althou~h
Houston's recession has been mild
in comparison 10 other parts of the
country, this city has at least a case
of raw nerves from its hardship iD
the 1980s.
"Cenainly the polls represent
some dissatisftction with the president," says Whiunire. "I think the
district is still largely behind Bush,
but there are some concerns."
One exasperated oil executive
adds: '' The (oil) drill count is
down, the environmental controls
are killing ~le. the (profits) are
low. I persOOally think Bush should
withdraw, and I've been a Republican for man , many -,ears."
Dr. ~ NebliU, ()nee a Tanglewood neighbor of Bush's and
still a close friend, believes there's
too much band-wringing. "I think
the oil men are certainly bigger
men than to say, 'I'm a single-issue
person, Bush didn't help me so
let's 1101 vorc for him.' I think he'll
run very suonpy in Houston and
cenainly in ,thts district," he told
out associate Dean Boyd
George Mitchell thinks Bush
has to shake things up if be hopes
to recapture the confidence of his
oil patch friends: "He's got to be
drastic. Ftrst of all, I'd ftre Quayle
as vice president and put in
Baker." For his part, Mite hell
thinks there is a mandare for fresh
approaches to national problems,
but has some qualms with Clinton's lack of experience.
Bush, who puts great store in
personal loyalty, still commands
unconditional support from Rev.
Tom Bagby, his minister at St.
Martin's church in Tangiewood
since moving there in the 1959. "I
don't eare what they all say.! think
he •11 win again."
J~tll ADd~ aDd Mike Bin·
steia ll't s,.dlatted writers for
UaiUd Feahlft SJDdlatte,lnc.

~ay

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"SoutheNI

ATHENS, OH. 45701
(614) 594·1311

Ohio~ Lorgesl

HeatinB &amp;: CofllinB DeiiMr
\ .

'J

'

'

'

�.

The Daily Sentinel

•

Sports

Pag&amp;-4

Eulll'lll DI'Woft
T..,.
· WLPti.GI
Piu•b••ll&gt; ..............67 S2 .l63
M""""" ................64
.m
1
Otieo&amp;o..................ll 81 . ,.,2
l.l
SLl..oW. ............... .ll 62 .470
II
NcwYorl&lt; ..............l2 64 .441 13.l
PhiUdelploio .......... .lO 68 .4:1.4 16.5

ss

Wll:llmll Din.. ,
Allonoa ...................72 4l .61l
CINCINNATI ........67 ll .l61
Son ~Mao .............. 64 ll .l38
Son FnnciKo ........l6 63 .A71
"""'""' .................l3 66 .44l
LooAn...............ll 68 .429

,....

-Cbictao.l7.

STOLEN BASES - &lt;hiuom, MOXI·

..u. ~ DcSIIWOo,- 42; La·

r•

St. loWJ, :M; Butler, Lao ~
34; ._CINCINNATI, 32; fioley,
""""'"'· 31; Bigio.""""""' 30; Drk·~;., 30; Nii.GR, Alllsa. iO.
( 1 4 - ) - 0iaviao.
Aumoa, 11·3, .ll7, 2.l0; Loibnocll. At·

l.l
9
17
20
22

llnta, 10-4, .714, 3. 11 ; SwiadeU,_

CINCNNATI, 12-l, .706, 2.l6; Te.Ubw7.. S• LoW, Il-l, .706, 2.07; K.llill,
MoAUNI, 13-6. .614, 1.96; Cuac. N••
Yott.IH. .614,'2.1!; Mooptt. OO..ao,
II~ .647,l.Al
S'llUXEOUTS - CGIHI, New York,
llll Sm*- Allln\a. 164; S. Pautd•,
New Yost. 149: G. Ma.ddua, Chict,o,
143; Dmbok, Pituburp, 131; JliJo,
CINClNNATI, 129; a..,.,, S.. Dio-

Tuestlay'sOt:ores

CINCINNATI 6. Phibdelpllio 0, ht

.....

PIUI•delphi• 6, CINCINNATI I, 2nd

Atlanu S, Montroall
PluabwJh ~. Satt Dieao l
Houaon 7, St. ~..cui~ l
OUctto 4, Stn Franciaoo I
l.ol An&amp;da 4, New Yam 0

121

tt

I

OUcaao (Cutillo 6-9) at San francil.

~

, · oo (Swilll-3). Bl p.m.
." Atlan.u. (Glavine 11-3) 1\ Montreal
•: (Nobholz 1-1). 7;3S p.m.
• . San Dicao (Dclhaiel3-2) •t PitubwJh
•. (Wtlk ~). 7:3l ~m.
: ... Houston (K.ila 2·7) 1t St. Loui1
.. (c..n.;..J.IO),I;lS p.m.
• ' New York (Gooden 6-10) a&amp; l.ollvl·

.::• aoleo

• ••

Amerku Leapt
BAmNO - E. Mutittac, Seottlc,
.3?3; W.ck, MUm. . ... 332; Plack••·
~ .326; l'btottoo. Cbicoao. .323;
Hupu, NiaGNOtt, .311; taeraa,
CIJ!VEU.ND, .317: a. Alctttw,
.317.
RUNS - Pltillioo. Douoi1.19; Pt.okcu, Mi "
'· 12; "'laobl.ucb, MiMeloo

T_..,

(llconhil«l·l0),10:3l p.m.

.

... 10; 1!. - - S.alo, 10;

Thursday's eamea
s.. Di'l" (l.Cf... 12-7) .. l'ioohoqh

•

·-·

SAYES - Lm SoUtll. St. Louio, 30;
Wotolaod, Matl!e&amp;l, 1:1; D. ~. U...-'l
...., Zl; Mym, S111 0..0. ll; Cbot1too.
CINCINN'ATI, 24; hfitCb William•,
~·· q
22; lklindl. Pilllbmp. U;
Dibble, CINCINNATI, 13: A. P,, Allanoa,ll.

Today's games

CINCINNATI (Hammond 6-7)
PhiUdelploio (Ri- 2-2).1:Z,3l p.m.

c-.

T-19; 'l'ltttm.,Citieaao. 7~ MocL
- - 76; MoO.U.. Ooltload, 76;

•' (Jacksan S-11), 3:05 PJ!I'·
&lt;
cu.... (llodtoy 3-IJ) .. Sill'. (Wilson 8-tt),llS pm.

-

76. Detroit, 103; MoORBI Oticaao.
- f'teldot,
witt, OUiood. 91; 0 . lieU. quc.o. 19;

'· Atllnu (Avery 10-8) at Montreal
:- {De.Mutinez 13·10). 7~3Sp.m.
.. · Houtton (8. Henry 4-1) u St. l...cMda

Pwbu. MiMolou, 17; Carter, Toron.to,

• (l'ewiobwy 12-l), 8:3S p.m.
•
New YOlk (fcmandc::z f.9) at Lot AIJ·
: 1m (ltMattina 8·9), t0:35 p.m.

HITS- Pucbu, Miueaota, 155:
M'... - •• ll2; ...... CLEVI!LAND, 1St: !. Mlt\incz, fe~ule, 144;;
Ff)'mla, Dtuoit. 139; Maninaly, Now
Yolk, !31; lelferiol, Kanau Gty, US;

IS; Jua. OoD&amp;Il•, Tu•, IJ; 'MKwnu,

au..&gt;.JO.

.·..•

~- Milwaco,lll.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eu&amp;enl DIYkiolt
:ream
w L Pet.

' Toronto ..................70
' B•ltirnore ...............66
: • Milwlukee ........... ..63
, Dcuoil.....................sa
• Bc.~.m- .................. .5S
• Cll!VELAND .......l4

49 .SII
53 .S5S

•

"

~ . New Yolk .- .......... 54

5$

j].4

63 •• 79
64 .462
65 .4!4
•.s4

DOUBLES - E. MattiM:z, SC~tUc,

36; Mauii!Jly, Now Yolk, 32; J~eric. ,
ltoatu City, 31; Joyner, Eanou Cily, 30;
Holl, New Yott.». Clrill'oy, S - 29:

Gl

-...Tow, 29: W'utlicld, r ....... 29.
TIUI'U!S - ne.-u., Bo!tim..._ 9:
Andcnoa, Bahimora, 7; L. Johnaoa,
Chicaao. 7; Li.atach, Milwa11kco, 6;
Lolloa, CLEVELAND, 6; R. Alomar,
Toronto, 6; Sierra, Tnu , 6; White,
r....... 6; lloiooo, Clticoao. 6; Moliw•

4

6.5
13
ll
16
16

•• OU!ond .... .............72
,'

.47 .611.1
52 .563
• OU..ao ..................62 ll .l30
' OMinncsoti ..MOU"N"067

• TCli.M .................... .59
• Komu City ........ :..l4

63

....

65 .4!4

• Colilomio ...............l3 ~ .442
' Suule ........... .........&lt;48 72 .400

n....u. n: c.... T.....,n, r........

Detro;~ 2l; Bolio, CLEVEUND, 23;
Otilroy, S..ttlt, 23; Deer, iliWt, 23.
STOLEN BASES -IAioo. CLEVELAND, 40; Alldmon, Baltimore, 40;
Prii.CIIil, c.Hiamia, .o&amp;O; Uatach. Milwau·

14.5

II

19J
24J

tco,l9; a.;-, ChiaJO, 38; R. llatdcraoa. OUllad, 31; L. Jotwon, ClUcaJO,

Tuesday's scores

•

34.

PITCJDNO (14 docisioaa) - Juan
Ouattut, T....,10, 12-3, .&amp;00, 2.15; lontie

-., r ....... Il-l, .750, 4.46: Flan-

ia1, Seau.le, 1&lt;4·5, .737, 3.21: Appier,
ltoatu City, ll-5 • .
2.36; MdlOWdl.

m.

euc.ao. 16-7•.696. 3:.19: - . Bolti-

.....,11-l, .617, 2.1~

Today's games

ll-1, .612. 2.1~

• , (l)oooon6-l~7 ;3Sp.m.

' .., · Seattle (Gnat 1·3) It Baltimore
~ · - Mimelola
..2~ 7;3S
p.m.
~ 10.3) at Q.BVB.
• LAND (N•JY i2-1).~:3S p.m.
• ' Toronto (Lintol'i 1·1 ) 11 Milwsukco
•• (llooio 10-l~ lj)S p.m.
:
Teu~ (Gmnan 10..9) at OUclao (Fer.
• nondcl4-7).1:0lp.m.
,.
Dctrait (Hus 2-0) at Kanau Cily (Ap• pier I 3--5), 1:3.5 p.m.

-·Booton.

Transactions

Tbunday's aames

BaoebaU

SuWc (F'IIhcr l· l) a1 Bal&amp;imon (Slit; · cllll'e 12-11 ), 12:U p.m.
•
Tex.u (Pavlik 0.1) at aac.,o (Houa,b
• ' l-9~ I :ll p.m.
"'·

AIMI'kal'l Ltape

• (W-10-10).2:3S pm.
•
Otklllld (Dul.inl 11-1) at New YOlk
; . (Mili1ello 2·0), 7:)0 p.m.
• · ..Califomia (BlyleYcn 6-5) at 8011on
, · (Dmrin 6-5~ 7:3S pm.
.. MinttOICU (Topllli 13-7) II Cil!VE~ ' 1...AND (Nidlals 2-l). 7:3S p.m.

LcoiOsroN RED SOX - Seot T'""
Bamu, infieldlr, CJIIIri&amp;ht to PIWNdr:et d
dtc lotetutional l.otJUC. RocaUcd Eric
Wed. . catdler, from Pawcuc:k-.

MILWAUIEE BREWERS - AJlO!!I

a fcatz.ycu wo«ina apeema&amp; wttb El
Puo ollbo T.... Lcop
tD

: Major league leaders
,

NatloaaiLHpe

• .339: Knlt,l'hilodolphio • •332; v..s1,..,
· Pitllburah, .326; Butler, Lot AnJclCI,
. 324; Owynn , San Dl.oao, .321;
llcShiehl•. .lll ; em... CU..go .. liO.
:
RUNS - DeSbieldo, Montreo!, 7l;
.,. Holliru, Philaddpbia, 73; Bigio, Hftus.
• ooo, 73; BuU.., Lao AnJoleo, 73; l'&lt;ndJc.
• oon. Auon~. 72: Gwynn, S..
72;
• Grio""" Mml!e&amp;l, 71; S...dt, P i -

o;,..,,

.,. 71.

:
..

MINNESOTA TWINS - !'heed Paul
the IS-day &amp;ahled
lilt. RecaUed Mike Trombley, piu:her,
from Portland of the Pacific Cout
~bbott, pitch«. on

BA 1TINO - Sbcf'fic.ld, San Dicao,

..

RBI - Sheffield, San Dieao, 85;

O.W~Mo

Phi.l.addphia, 14; Pbl.dluon, At-

Die._

, !anLI, 79; McOrif'f, San
71; M•
•,ny, New YOlk, 70; Baa..U. Kouan, 67;
~, Boodl. PIUibu.rJ,h. 67.
• . HITS - She!6eld, San Die1o, 1&lt;47;
• Pendleton, Atlanta, 147: O•yan, San
: D:ieao, 143; DeShielda, Mmuul, 1&lt;42:
• VanSl)'ke. Pitu:bv.rJh, 140; Bvllcr, Lot
* An 1da, 136; ar.ce. OUCI 10, t:M.
•
DOUBLES - Dw&gt;con, l'bilodolphio,
'"'.33; W. Clark, San fl'lnCilc:o, 30; Lank; . roo~, s. Low. 29: Shdi'W., s... Dieto.
.;·29; VanSlyke. PittlburJh, 29; GriHom,
• 'Montreal, 21; Pendleton, Allsnta, 27;
r' Mumy, Ne:w Y&lt;D, 21.
•: TR.J.PI..ES- D. Sandal, Allna, 13;
• .Finley, llouo.... ll ; Butler, Leo Ano&lt;ta.

: t 1; Alli:a., SL l..ollia, 9; VmSl)b, ln11-

.

BALTIMORE ORIOl.ES - Ac:tivttcd
Chris Hoi.lcrt, c.tchv, from the U -dsy
din bled U1t. Option$d Mark Puet,
c.lchcr, tD Jl.ocbelwr W Lbe ln&amp;lmati.cm.l

Toronto (Well• 7-6) at Milwaukee

•

o..-.-.

STRIX..EOtrrs - Cltll'ftMI, Borum,
164; ....... New Yott. ll7; R. lobnoc&gt;n,
s..~~~o. 147: J..o 0uzmoa. r......., 137:
K. BIDWII, Tcou,l31; Ry., TOUI, Ill;
Mdlcwdl, euc.., 121.
SAVES - Edtonley, Oolltad, 37;
Apilcn, Mia.o&amp;a, 32; Mc.llamery,
Ko ... City, 30: 0~ Bo!timooo. 21;
Idfii.....U, Tow, Zl;
2l; llauy, Milwt-23.

•
Oakland (Stewartl-7) at New Yotk
, ' (1Umiaticcti2-IO~ 7:30'/.m.
•: C.lifoml• (Abbou -12) at BOlton .

••.

.
ft
Payne fi1DdSJOY
a er defeating
. . fi
Pame ID IrSt professional fight

HOME RIINS - Mc0wVo. Ookluld.
31; J\lld OOJIUlez, Teus, 30; Fiolde.r,

'
9

CLEVElAND I, Minnrooto I
0Uca10 3, Tu.u 0
TOlQ11Cil2. Milwaukee I
8oclon I, Califomia 0
Se~ttl.e I, Baltimcn. 3
New Yodt 7,o.tl.uod 3
Dcuoit 5, Konou City I

.

. BIRD RETIRES - Baston forward Larry Bird, sbOWD dunkin1
1n thitl 1984 photo, announced his rttiremeat from tile Celtks Tuesday after 13 years, three NBA cbampionships and various other
awards under his belL (AP) ·

Milwauico,6.

Wfl&amp;enll DlnilcMt

'.

La&amp;Am.E MAJUNER.S -

Sent Jeff

Sdtaeler. illfidtlto, to Ctlauy of the I'•

cific Coeal.el~ Plldiued dtc COIUIICl
&lt;iB,..IIoMc,inll&lt;lder. ftunCo!Juy.
\

TORONTO BLUE lAYS - l'l•oed
Pat Heap. pi~ . or1 the 15-da.y disabled lilt, t*Oictiw to Au&amp;- ll. ltCieallcd
Bob Mac:~~f.tdtc:r, fmu Syr~auc

... ~.lnt&lt;ntcl .

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A
young fighter trying to make a
name for himself deals with boxing's weirdness Ill the time. He
fights in small towns on makeshift
cards. He is asked to make odd
weight by changing his training
regiment·and diet.
For former Akronite Kenny Ray
Payne, his rllSt professional bout
was an outlandish affair.
As Payne was geuing his hands
wrapped the matchmaker stormed
into his ~g room, telling him
he was f1gh1mg Kenny Paine.
Payne looked up, saying "but I'm
Kenny PaYm:." ·
The confused matchmaker did
an abrupt about-face. It seems the
match was Payne vs. Paine.
He nearly scratched the fight as
he scratched his head. Then, Payne
and Paine came looking for some
answer - 81!d their paychecks.
So, the fight went on as scheduled. And Payne, a Buchtel High
graduate, stopped Paine in the second round to win his professional
debut.
"I was supr,&gt;se to be fighting
someone else, ' said Payne, who
won his first seven fights before
losing to Leroy Bryant in
Longview, Texas, on March 23. "I
thought, 'What a way to start.' It
was uuly weird.
"I was pretty confident I could

beat the guy. 1 hit him with 8 left
hook that put an inch-and-a-half
cut over his eye. They had to stop
the fight"
Payne, 24, was the Akron GoldenGioveschampioninl985.
Payne, who trained under the
tutelage of Akron's Doyle Baird
enjoys the fight game. However'
the strange goings-on are some:
times plizzHng.
"lt (boxing) hasn't been what!
thought it would be,'' said Payne.
who sometimes earns $75 a round
in a six-round bouL "There's a lot
of politics and crooked stuff going
I
f
A 01 0 people are gelling
used, especially if they don't have
a good manager. It's a real tough
business. Climbing in the ring is
easy, but you have to have someone you can trust to manage you. ••

on...

Payne trusts his father, but he
said working for Kenny Payne Sr
can be a pain, 100.
"It's tough," Payne said. "A
lot of things I do, I do for him
Most of the time I say, 'Yeah'
because I don't want to upset him.
"I have thought about finding
another manager. Before I do thai
I'll make some of my own decisions. I don't want to follow everything he says, because if it doesn 'I
work out I don't want to be upseL"

Lcope.

NllloMI IMIUt
MON'I'JU!AL EXPOS - Sou A"hi
C.iantroceo. infielder, md BiD Sampea.
piLcbcr, 10 IDdianapoli.l of cbe Antlrlcan
Auoc:istion. Recalled Grea Colbn&amp;nn,
catchmo-WI.elder, fi"'Oft lndianapoli.l. Jlo..
Al114 Tim Laker, catcbu, from Haais·
boll of tho eo- Lcope.
!AN DIEOO PADRES-~
a tWI&gt;yut werti.na eatonsicn with Las
Voau of lhe Pacific Cout Lua~e

HARVEST

By HOWARD ULMAN
BOS.TON (AP) - No .more
amazing no-loOk passas. No man:
reckless dives to save the ball. No
more miraculous game-winning
lhree-pointe:s.
No more Larry Bird playing
basketball like no one else can.
The visions flow swifdy like a
dream come true. Finally, the
walceup call came; Bird, seemingly
superhuman in his best dliys, really
is just a mere mortal.
For two seasons he tried to fight
that reality, playing for the Boston
Celtics with an aching back that
caused him great agony. Increasin~y, he couldn '1. So it was no sur·
pnse that he gave in to the painful
trulh.
Bird mired Tuesday after a 13·
year career that was one of the
greatest in NBA history..
"It's something that had to be
done," he said. "I've had enough
(pain) 10 last me a lifetime and I
can't sllalce it
"l1&gt;u1 my bodr through living
hen for 17 years,' said Bird, who
slaiTed at Indiana State.
He lacked great speed and leapina ability. But he was a creative
genius, thinking several steps
ahead of his opponents. And he
was a tough·mmded warrior who
drooled at the prospect of competing with - and beating - the best.
"I played against some of the
best baslcelball playeiS in the world
and I did pretty f1111' against them,"
Bird said.
One of them was Magic Johnson, his adversary in three NBA
championship series and his team·
mate on the United States team that
won the Olympic basketball gold
medal 11 daysago.
"Lany was the only player in
llieleaguelha!Ifeared,andhewas
the smartest player I ever played
against."Johnson said.
"Larry Bird has helped to
define the way a generation of basketball fans has come to view and
&amp;P,Preciate the NBA," NBA com·
miSSioner David Sttnl said.
Playing on &lt;?PJX!Site coasts, Bini
and Johnson jomed the NBA in
1979 and were instrumental as it
grew 10 new heights of popularity
throughout the world. Salaries and
TV revenues also soared. ·
Few played better than the country boy from French Lick, Ind.,
whose hick-like manner and sometimes tangled syntax masked a
suong willandasharpmind.
· He was the college player of the
year in 1979 and the NBA rookie
of the rear in 1980. He won the
first o his three NBA titles in
·1981. He was the most valuable
player in the 1982 Ali·Siar Game.
From 1984 through 1986, he won
three straight regular-season MVP
awards.
He added a new dimension to
the forward position. At 6-foot-9,
he was a pca-less passer who made
his teammlll.eS better.
He averaged 24.3 points, 10
rebounds and 6.3 assists per game.
Only I 0 players have more than his
21,791 points, and all had longer
careers than his .
His swted in 1979, one year
after Boston drafted him on the

first round afte: his junior season.
The Celtics were 29·53 the season
before he arrived and 61-21 in his
rookie year.
"When the definitive hiSI(l'y or
basketball is written," Cellics chief
executive offiCer Dave Gavitt said,
Bird "will occupy a special place
in the top five players ever to play
this game."
''God may have not granted him
an all-world body, but from the
shoulders to the top of his head and
from his wrist to his rJ11gertips, he
played the game better than anybody's ever played it and he played
it with a.hean five times as big as
anybody else I ever saw."
That heart was full Tuesday as
he barely managed to keep his
composure throughout a 45-minute
news conference at which it also
was announ~d he would lalce an
administrative position, advising
Celtics management and making
pubHc appearances.

·
·.
·
·
.

Sports briefs
Tennis
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) I ohn McEnroe .Was selected to the
U.S . Davis Cup doubles team,
hours after ~omplaining he was lir· .
ing of awaiting word.
U.S. Davis Cup captain Tom ·
Gorman said the confusion
stemmed· from a July 30 news ·
release that said Jim Courier and ;
Andre Agassi were on the U.S.
team and doubles would be named
later. Gorman always intended to
include McEnroe on the team.

Support "

The
Meigs

County
Fair
AUGUST

17th·22nd

Pickens
Hardware

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - Ac.,.w..i BIOIIlattW, lafieldcr, from the
Montrecll!.t
r.. Oil lleredio, pUdter.
Placod 1...
en the U-

bribo, .......,,

MASON, WV.

NEWSPAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE·
POMEROY AREA.
,,

992-2156

..

SILK FLOWERS

30% OFF
POTTERY 25% OFF

"
"

NOW CARRYING IONEAU SUNGLASSES
SEE OUR SELECTION OF
GNOMES &amp; PRECIOUS MOMENTS
WE WILL ,CLOSE AT 2:00P.M.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 20TH FOR
· Till MEiiS CO. FAIR

..

.,
..
It ' :
.' !
1,' I &lt;

:·'·pRESCRIPTION SHOP
s

f

t,

I

25J N. 2ND

MIDDUPOIT

----------_A'..--.---------.....-------·
'i'

992-6669

,

pounds during the poay pulls at the 1291b IIIIDU·
al Meigs County Fair Tuesday evenin1.

OVER COST ON ANY
1992 HONDA IN STOCK

+

YOUTII POLES - Darla Staaley comj,eted Ia tbe youth pole
class or the open horse show at tbe 119tii1111DIIII Melp Couaty Fair
Tuesday evellillg. Speed 1111d control the borse are crucial for the
winning lime.

or

•
APR FIXED UTE FOR 60 MONTHS
AT.HENS

HONDA CARS

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"

LOG PULL.- Rodney Tuttle ran a perfect course for a perfect
score in Tuesday's Draft Horse Fun Show at tile 1991 Meigs Couty
Fair. Several unique eveall were reatured.at the tue &amp;bow.

810 E. State St. • Athens,Ohio
'8Pl. 59-H555
Used Car

DRAFT HORSE FUN SHOW- Jolm Rose is pictured here with
his team of draft horses as he attempts the log pull in the 1992 Draft
Horse Fun Show at the 1191h annual Meigs County Fair on Tuesday
afternooa.

DOMINO'S PIZZA
992·2124

Sports briefs

.....
-==:::::::::::::::=:::==".·

-

diablcd lilt. Jlocollool R.,... C.ytca,
thorUtap, from Pb.Ux of 11M Pacific:
Ccu.L..p
'

SUCCESSFUL PULL - Tills poay team or
Wes Farler was successful ia Ill. pull or l,SOO

MAIN RREET•POIUIOY

CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL
AT .992·2155

"""'PI,..

c~o,

COI~MBUS, QHIO (AP) Scioto DOwns results for Tuesday.
Weather, 76 and clear. Track, fast.
First .Race-$1 ,400 Claiming
Pace.War Shadow (Hawk) 35.20,
14.60, 6.20; Lethal Weapon One
(Dv Miller) 5.60, 4.20; Redwood
Fo~ (Mouser) 6.60; Time-1:59
35 Also Raced-Sneaky Brei, Lu
0~. Breezy Caleb, Dragon Flyer,
Win Sum Flat Out, Silent Hawk,
Welcome B. Trifecta (9-2-4)
$1,592.40. Perfecta (9-2) $198.80.
Second Race·$1,800 Condition
Pa~e.Hot'Tonight (Riegle) 3.60,
3.20, 2.60; Bubbly Hanover (Paver
Jr.) 5.20, 3AO; Moira Almahuist
(Haston) 4.20; Timc-1:59 35 Also
Raced-No D~~on, Costly Sum,
. Sweet Valley Miss, Lively Town,
Justic, Ho Ho, Princess Perfect.
Perfecta (6-8) $22.00
Third Race-$1,400 Claiming
Pace.C'Mon Faye (Hawk) 6.60,
3.60, 3.00; Forever Flying (Cullipher) 4.20, 3.20; Social Tempo
(Coven Jr.) 3.00; Time· I :59 Also
Raced-Spool Writer, Wynshear, Tri
Five Bird, Good Bye Lady, Sid's
Style, Princess Missie, Special
Jessie. Trifecta (4-2-10) $71.40.
Perfecta (4-2) $29.20.
Fourth Race-$2,400 Condition
Trot.Wink (Maupin) 8.00, 7.80,
6.00; Jonni Dru (Weaver) 45.40,
12.60; Town Action (Paver Jr.)
4.00; Time-2:01 Also RacedRobere, Lucky BIBU, Gaynin Fast,
End Of The Game, Rachel Rain,
Roast'N Ears. Perfecta (4-6)
$347.40.
. Fifth Race-$1 ,400 Claiming
Pace.Fritz Kincade (Hawk) 8.20,
3.60, 2.80; ThaiS Charley (Dv
Miller) 3.40, 2.80; Triple K Sw
(Noble Ill) 2.80; Time-2:00 35
Also Raced-Peggy's Dream Boy,
East One Block, GQ Kirk, Ben
Had, Sydney's Top Gun, Night
Long Miracle. Scratch-Charlene's
Charlie. 1st HaH Twin Trifecta (81-6) $20.90. Perfecta (8-1) $27.20.
Sixth Race-$2,000 Condition
Pace.Lenda Penny (Prickell) 3.60,
3.00, 2.80; Country Traveler (R
Holton) 5.20, 5.00; Boss Of The
Road (Coven Jr.) 7.40; Time-1:57
Also Raced·Mosher Hanover,
Floatacross, Rising Eagle, Tinker
Day, Don't Tell Momma. Scratch·
Payday AlmahUISI. Trifecta (2-1-4)
$178.00. Perfecta (2-1) $18.80.
Seventh Race-$2,000 Claiming
Pace.A J's Special (Hawk) 12.60,
5.60, 3.60; Cimmaron Sid (Fout)
5.60, 3.20; Willy Bob (Cullipher)
4.20; Time-1:58 25 Also Raced·
Raw Jade, Good To Be Here,
Accordance, Lifetime Guarant£e, B
I Hawk, Royal Flier N, Colt Creed.
lsi Half Twin Trifecta (1-2-3)
$10,991.10. Trifecla (1-2-3)
$216.00.
Eighth Race-$3,000 Condition
Pace.Private Treasure (Buxton)
30.40, 4.60, 3.80; Lady Pacifist
(Noble lll) 2.60, 260; Nola ChriS·
tine (Dv Miller) 5.00; Time-1:58
15 Also Raced·Fancyt Boots, Fair
Tucson, Wouldilietou, Our Impatient Lady, Spring Sapphire. Perfecta (4-2) $85.60.
Ninth Race-$1,800 Claiming
Pace.Krishna (Gregg) 10.20, 5.20,
3.40; Streaking AI (F9u1) 13.00;
8.00; I'm Fancy Free (Coven Jr.)
4.80; Time-1:59 25 Also RacedPhantom Slide, Spons View, Bye
The Way, Fritzie Shilo, Broadway .
Nick, Pme Lane Willie, Buckshot
Style. Superfecta (5·7-1-10)
$3,817.20 Perfecta (5·7) $157.40.

Bird announces
retirement

bup, 9; oa...a, t.o. AaasJ.•, 1:
MonadW, phil..t.lpioie, 1; DeSJUtlck,
_ . , . Siadboli.Chicgo, 7.
110MB RtlNs-~ S.. Di'lo,
27; Sll&amp;fftalcl, Sm DieJo, lJ; Dtuklm,
Phllodclploia, 21; ..... Pi..IMJb. 20:
L Wolbr, II; lWooo. Loo An·
P'"· 17: Patdlolool. Ao-. 17: D••

NATIONAl- LEAGUE

Scioto Downs
race results

Wednesday, August 19,1992 •

Sco1·eboard
In the majors•••

1992

I

i~

"'

.:

,l

,,.'l

tI

Tennis
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)John McEnroe beat Jan Apell6-l,
7-5 as the Volvo International
fmally got under way.
The start of the tournament,
rained out Monday, was again
delayed two hours by rain.
Tenth-seeded
Alexander
V.olkov, lith-seeded Brad Gilben,
No. 12 Amos Mansdorf, No . .(4
Andrei Cherkasov and No. 16 Paul
Haarhuis Joined the ninth-seeded
McEnroe m advancing to the second round.
No. I~ Jakob Hlasek and No. IS
Omar Camporese were the only
seeded players beaten. Hlasek lost
to Chuck Adams 7-6 (7-S) 7-6 (75) and Camporese fell to Manin
Damm 4-6, 7-S, 6-2.
Swimmine
MISSION VIEJO, Calif. (AP)
- Olympic gold medalists Mike
Barrowman won the 200-meter
breaststroke, and Angel Manino
took the 100 freestyle at the
National Swimming Championships.
Barrowman, who set a world
record of 2:10.16 in Barcelona two
weeks~· won in 2:13.52.
Maruno, a U.S . 400-meter
freestyle relay gold medalist,
pulled away from Michelle Jesper·
son and won the 100 freestyle in
56.06 SCCOilds.
.
Angie Wester-Krieg, another
'92 Olymvian, claimed her first
national IItle, winning the 200merer butterfly in 2:11.92.
Also Winmng events were Kristine Quance in the women's 2()().
mete: breaststroke and Paige Wilson in the 2()()..meter butterfly.
·Alyn ·Towne tooll; the men's
100-meler freestyle in 50.60 sec·
onds, Derek Wcltherford won the
200-meter bacbtrolt:e in 2:00.39,
and Ray CareJ was victorious in
the men's 200-mctcr butterfly in
'2:00.67.
•&gt;'

\'

'

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PEPPERONI
PIZZA

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DELIVERY

ASpecial. Edition In
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day, August 31, 1992

JEANS
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Wednesda~August19,1992 :

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Page-7

~·~------------------------------------~--------------------~~ .

More than 300 exhibits entered in domestic Couple announces birth ~
arts contest at fair; winners announced·

DLAND

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

. INSTANT

FOODLAND SPECIAL CO U PON

COFFEE

; Rosettes for best of show
exhibits in seven categories were
awarded following the jud!\I'ng of
11\e 343 domestic arts exhtbits at
tile !29th Meigs County Fair. ·
:' Receiving the roseues for beSt
.OJ show exhibits in the various cateiories were Deborah Grueser,
"fiomeroy, in sewing, a lady's sui~
. P,amela Hager, Coolville, needle. craft, for her handmae!e dressed
doll; Barbara Murray, Pomeroy,
lchitting, a baby sweater set; Mer-

-

REGULAR or SPIUL 1

12 OLJAR

Maxwell

Kraft • ·1I
Macaroni I
&amp; Cheese .1

House

99

5·7 oz.
BOIES
1

Limit 3 With eo'"upon and $10.00 or More Addltlonlll Purch...
. Good Auguat 16 thru AUguat 22, 1882

L-------------~--------PURE CANE

FOODLAND

I
I
I
·I
I
I
I
I
1

rilee Bryant, Pomeroy, counted
cross ·stitth picture; Opal Dyer,
Bidwell, crocheting; Pauicia Jones,
Shade, a quilt; Elma Louks, Syracuse, an afghan; and Linda Gillilan,
Pcim'eroy, woodcraft display.
. Taking blue ribbons in the 108
classes of the domestic arts division were the following exhibitors;
Children's Clothing: Child"s
play dress, Terrie Houser,
Pomeroy; better dress, Margaret
Weber, Rutland; child's shorts,
Terry Houser; and miscellaneous,
Terrie Houser, blue.
Child's Clothing, 7 to 12 years:

'

.J

SLB.
BAG

SUGAR

play dress, Terri Houser; better
dress. Deborah Grueser, Pomeroy;
better dress, Deborah Grueser;
painted t-shin, Juanita Lodwick;
plain t-shirt, Juanita Lodwick;
sleepwear, Juanita Lodwick; and
miscellaneous, Deborah Grueser.
Adult Clothing: lady's dress,
cotton or blend, dressup dress,
adult shorts,lady"s suit, and lady's
miscellaneous, all Deborah
Grueser; lady· s formal dress,
. Juanita Lodwick; lady"s fancy
apron, Pauline Atkins. Rutland.
Needlecraft: embroidered pillowcase. Evelyn. Hollon, Racine;
crochet trim pillowcase, Maxine
Dyer. Bidwell; painled pillowcase,
Evelyn Hollon, Racine; cross stitch
. pillowcase, Opal Dyer, Bidwell;
counted cross stitch cushion,
Melissa Coleman, Long Bottom;
pre-l;'rinted cushion, G1111:e Holter,
Racme; patchwork cushion 1
Dorothy Brown, Pomeroy; ana
miscellaneous cushion, Joyce
Gillilan, Pomeroy.
.
Painted tablecloth, Melissa
Colemru\; embroidered tablecloth,
Rose Barrows, Pomeroy; handmade dressed doll, Pamela Hager,
Coolville; purchase doll, handmade
clothing, Vivian May, Pomeroy;
pot holders, Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy; stuffed _toy, Merrilee
Bryant, Long Bottom; stuffed animal, Karolyn Welsh, Tuppers
Plains; huck weaving, Grace
Holter; miscellaneous, Joyce
Gillilan.
Crochet: granny square afihan,
Babara Murray, Pomeroy; npple
afghan, Pauline Atkins; shell
afghan, Vivian May; mixed stitch
afghan, Dorothy Brown; miscella-

Jason and Amy Smith announce
the birth 'bf a son, Cody Eric, at
Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and 11 ounces and was 21
inches long.
Malernal grandparents are r.{r.
and Mrs. Bernard Shrivers, Bradbury.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Evereu Smith. Pomeroy.
Great-grandparents arc Rev.
Robert and the late M. Eloise
Smith, Pomeroy; Mr; and Mrs.
Melvin Drake, Long Bottom; Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard Shrivers and Mr.
and Mrs. Percy Lyons. both of
McConnelsville.
Great-great-grandmother is
Maude Smith, Rutland.
There is another child at home, a
boy, Bradley, age four.

neaus afghan. Alma Louks, S)'lllcuse; bedspread, Opal Dyer; c:rochet trim hankie. Pauline Atkins;
doily 14 inches. Pauline Atkins;
doily, over 14 inches, ~axine
Dyer; crochet pot holders, Opal
Dyei; baby afghan, shell. Copnie
Moyer. Reedsville; miscellaneous
afghan. Connie Moyer; Purse or
tole bag, Addalou Lewis; miscellaneous crochet, Linda Gillilan.
Knitting; baby sweater set, Barbara Mwtay.
Quilts: COWlll patchwork, Patricia Jones, Shade; painted quilt, 1
Addalou Lewis; outline stitch
embroidered quilts. Barbara Murray; pre-printed quilt, Jill Holler,
Long Bouom; applique quilt, Grace
•
Holter; miniature qutlt, Jorce
•
Gilllilan; patchwork wall hangmg,
'
\
Pauicia Jones; and pre-primed wall
••
hanging, Dorothy Brown.
The charter was draped for Wednesday at Marieua.
::
Hobby Corner: counted cross Bernard Ledlie at the recent meetNonnan Will thanked the chap- ·,
stitch picture, Merrilee Bryant; ing of tlie Harrisonville OES with ter for the fruit sent to him while he :
purses or tote bag, Jill Holter; associate matron Pauline Atlcins was in the hospital.
•
slained cenunic, Jill Holler; wood- and worthy patron Larry Well in
Bob Reed gave table grace ·•
craft, Melissa Coleman; woodcraft, charge.
before the group entered the dining ~
7 to 18 inches. Linda Gillilan; plasA poem was read for Ledlie and area where potluck refreshments '
tic canvas for household article, the group prayed the Lord's Prayer were served.
·
Sharon Riffle, Racine; Christmas in unison.
•
decoration. Opal Dyer; suucture, Jo
Pauline Atlcins ftlled in for wor· Parson guests named :
Ann Gard, Loog Bottom; structure, thy matron Pat Arnold who was
Recent 'guests of Mrs. Margaret :
7to 12 inches, and Jean L. Ratcliff. with her daughter who was under·
Parson were her fanner students, :
Reedsville.
going treatment in a Columbus Mrs . Maron Halley , the former .:
Crocheled basket, Jill Holter; hospital.
Thelma Snyder and son, Dr. ~
basket under 15 inches. Karen
Masonic Friendship Night was Richard Halley and Michael Hal- '•
Werry, Racine; decorated straw announced for Aug. 28 with ley, Wilmington. Del., and BMiice :
wreath, Addalou Lewis; wreath. potluck refreshments.
Snyder Spaulding and granddaugh- :·
other material, Joyce Gillilan,
Roberta Circle will be held . ter, Athens.
·'
P0111eroy; gift wrappings for a holi'
day, Joyce Gillilan, a wedding and ; .
a birthday, Terrie Houser, for '
Christmas, Addalou Lewis, and for I
•,
other times, Linda Gillilan.
'

....
'•

·'

LIMIT 1

,-

.-•
•

FOODLAND FROZEN

ORANGE

JUI(E

.

Harrisonville OES meets

'•

12 oz.
CAN

SPRINGDALE
C!Mi&lt;wn j

,~RiN~

•
•

CHOCOLATE
GALLON
. DRIN
KLEENEX

BATH
TISSUE

, ROCKING GRANNY· This handmade porcelain doll created
·by Pam Hager took a best or show rosette In the domestic arts divi·
sion judging at tbe Meigs County Fair. The 343 exhibits in the
;department will remain on display In the senior fair building
•through Saturday.

4 ROLL
PKG.

••
•

~a residents

named
to• Ohio U. dean's list
'·

220z.

~----~---"'
.:
~

Rib Steak ......
USDA CHOICE

···... TENOERBEST

PEPSI
COLA

~meror.

:~~~~~ $s1
~?
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'Hopeless ·
Pork·

• 399
La

SWEET HO.NEY DEW

MELONS..........&amp;
t••U80A

99

C

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r

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BANANAS

COOKED HAM

SJ 89
r•w • •·

33' LB.

fronl

BROUGHTON'S

.

BUTTERMILK

99'

TRASH BAGS
5

1.4920n

VIrnA

HOT DOG SAUCE

.$529
·

3/51OO JOOL

OFFER GOOD AUG. l7th·22ncl
CLOSE~ THURSDAY

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

D&amp;M Pizza AND Subs

YOU ·caN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'

24 PAK, 12 OZ. CANS...........

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

Not

•
•
•

I'

SJ oo Off Any Large Pizza

YzGAL

We Reserve The Risht To Limit Quantitiee

~

Fait Weelt Special

RUFFlES IOUL

BOnLE .

•

'

VERNON MANOR

-~--·

41 -

1

..

7:30P.M•

39' •.

o

,

MOTOCROSS
RACING

CHICKEN
LEG QUARTERS

~s

EA•.

IN FRONT OF THE
GUNDSTAND
AT THE
I 29th MEIGS
COUNTY FAIR

PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO
949·2550

• )enmfer layne Arnold; Da"id
Jennings Beegle, Nancy 1. Parker
Campbell. Patrece Blame Circle,
Mary A. Warner Findley, Kaihryn
Louise· ihle, Michaella Ann Jones.
Greta Lynn Riffie, Michelle Eileen
WinebreMer, all of Racine.
' Mark Allen Mwphy. Kirk Dean
Reed, ~ville.
~: Daniel Scou Kennedy. Lisa Gail
Miller. Rutland.
Ellen Ruth Waugh, Shade.
• Chezyl A. !'ape, Syrtllluse,

SJ~~

Boneless
Ribeye Steak • ·
ltaf•oof'o

; Lori A. Harris, Andrew Alan
L11w, Amy Lou Morgan, Amy
Joanne Penick, Jennifer Marie
~Jel!han, all of Coolville.
.
• Dave Gene Dodson, Susan Ehzibeth Houchins, Melissa Lynn
' MiddleJ)ort.M
•
L •
·Y(ood.!Kri
'
stin
M..king,
anssa L ee.
Lbng, Nancy A.R. Nally, Sandra L.
Carleton Needs, Leigh Anne Redovian, Angela Kaye ~loan, MQnica
Layne Turner, Amy Lynn WBrth,
~ysan Renee' Young, all of

$499

TENOERBEST

..

are:

. MT. DEW,
PEPSI FR~E, 7·UP
Diet or Regular

HEAD
LETTUCE

'

TONIGHT

WAID CROSS'
SONS

·: Ohio University has announced
ti)e names of stUdents making the
Qeap 's List for spring quarter·
; To be named to th~ hst, a stu· .
dem must b3ve earned a grade
P,Oint average of 3.3 or better on
Scale of 4.0 for the quarter and
Have earned 16 hours, 12 of which
,.i,ere taken for a letter grmlc:
'
'. Area residents named to 'the list

Shout Liquid
$229

SOLID
FRESH

BIG WINNER • Deborah Grueser or Pomeroy took the best of
sbow and nine blue ribbons on sewia&amp; projects entered in tbe
domestic arts competition at the I 29th Meigs COUDIJ Fair. The suit
sbe displays here was the best or show IIWIIrd willaer•

NANNY READS STATEMENT • Kristi Grolske, 23, nanny to
Mia Farrow and Woody ADen's chUdren, reads 1 brier Slatemeat
from Farrow to the press outside the couples Bridgewater, Conn.
home Tuesda,f.Io the statement, Farrow reiterated htr desire not
to give intervtews and not to.bave her case tried in the press. Allen
charged Tuesday tlial be was falsely actused ot molesting his two
youngest childrea.

SYUCUSE,OH

•

�~· 8 ~ Dally Sentinel

_/

Wednesday, Augtist19, 1992

The

Community
calendar

Dall~nei-P!g~..!.·

ADVflliiBIIllll I'OUCY-Eieh of ldverliMd MIITII II ,.quired 10 be
reodiy -M:b!c lot lllo In uch Kroger S!Dit, excopt 11 _,ally noiM in
d1io od. If we do JUn out of an adv..- ~om. we wll offlr you your chalc:e
of a ~ Item, when ovoUab!c, rlflec:tlng the 11111eiiVingl ot • rainchock which wll ontltle you to pure haM tho advertloed ~am at t h e pm. willlln ,3() days. Only one vendor coupon wW be """""""' por ~em
purcholod.

'

Commanity Caleadar items
appear two days belon 10 e'eat
and the day or tbat eftnt. Items
must be ·received weD iD advaace
to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE • Tent revi,al,
Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, Route 124 in Reedsville ·
through Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly
with Rev. Jim. Kittle, Winchester,
Ky., and The Sisson Family, Gal·
lill&lt;lilis. Nursery pro'ided. FeUowshlp after each service.

we Cilaa/V
Accept Your

Fecleral Fooa
Stamps

• POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m., at the high school. Public
invited.
THURSDAY
RACINE • Racine American
Legion Post 602 meets Thursday,
7:30p.m. ·

,.I•
,.

,.
,.
,.,.

...,,
,.

Family

Pack

POMEROY - Veterans SeNice
Commission meet Thursday, 9
a.m., Veterans Service Office,
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT· ~eigs Junior
High Volleyball praCbce, Thursday
and Friday and Aug. 24-28 from
4:30-6 p.m. at the junior high.

California

•'

FRIDAY
RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Liberty
Mountaineers perform Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

I

.,.

PHOTO DISPLAY • All 124 eatrics ia tbe pllatopapby COOipetition at tbe Meigs County Fair will rellllin 1111. exbibit iD I'! Coon·
bunters building tbrougb Saturday for tbe tnjOJ!at•t or fU'gctefS.
Here Katie Nally looks at tbe best or sbow IJid reserve best of sbow
in photography.

e
ectarine
•I

MIDDLEPORT · Ballroom
dance, Friday, 7-11 p.m., Middleport Legion Annex. Mus1c by
George Hall. Cost, $8 smgle; $15
couple. Refreshments available.
RUTLAND - The Leading
Creek ConseNancy District will
close Friday at n~ so emplo&gt;:ees
may enjoy the Me1gs County Faar.

Cowdery captures
top photo honors

U.S. No.1 All Purpose Round
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Liberty Mountaineers perform Saturday at the senior citizens center
in Point Pleasant. W.Va

'

RUTLAND - Facemyer Forest
Product and Ball Logging, softball
tournament, Saturday and Sunday.
Call 992-5385 or 992-5654 for
information.
HOCKINGPORT · Free dance,
Saturday, 8·11 :30 p.m., Reynolds
Building, Route 124, Hockingport,
featuring Tom and Carol Wreston
(Country Sweethearts).

.. t ~

I

Buy o...
.. • :t Get OM FrM
· ~ \UP

.: i!:

. .'. .

o aloes

I

............._ ""'"_A\IGUSJ 16

rom··.,

:1&lt;

i

~

The 22nd aMual Cozart reunion
for descendants of the late Joseph
and Eslella (Pease) Cozart was held
recently at Bill Cozan's river camp
site in Racine.
There were 101 family and
friends in attendance. Prayer was
by Bill Cozart before the meaL .
Families came from Miss1ss1pp1,
Texas, Illinois, Florida, W~shing­
tGn D.C., and all parts of Ohio. .
The largest family was the children of Roscoe Cozart. All six chi I·
dren were present
Traveling the farthest was Patty
(Cozart) Campton, Florida , and
Marsha Lange, Texas.
The oldest was Audra (Cozart)
Nice . The youngest was Kayla
Marie Graham, great-granddaughter of Libby (Cozart) Willford .
Games were played and music was
provided by the family of Roscoe
Cozart.
Next year's reunion will be the
third Sunday in July at the same
location.

:.
1.61

~

lo6l

"

H. J
.~
Orange Juice
p,..ur~riud

NfT .. FL OZ. f2

•

VQIM

•

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00

....

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CCkSUWUt ~ ..,..,._. ........,. t....M ,., .,.. 1M...., • -. ........ Ill~

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ran e
64 oz.
Ctn.

17.3 io 179
1Boz. Jar

l tmd S Por Family With $10

ltmtt I eer famil y Wtth S I0
Fvrcnost (exduOit:"S item~

pn&gt;hibdod by lOw)

prohibned by iow)

oz. Box

•

'..

Regular

Borelen
Elsie ...
Ice Cream
"?ill

Go lon
Ctn .

198

[

and ice cream.

·

-~' ~'r.
·~ ..... _
.,;:a
__ ;

c~litornia

Sliced
Bacon

Thompson White

·J

•

. AttendiDJ were Everett, Char· .
lotte and Michael Gran~ Raym~
Evans, Pam Smith, ~hayne DI!:VIS,
Eleanor Delben, Ttm alld EIJU·
beth Li'Waon, Marsha, Charlc~.
Adtia and Marie Frecker, Lew1s
and Elva Hudson. Harry and Jean
Roush Craig, Brenda and Megan
Venoy and Rick McKnight and
Tammy Cline.
· ·

J

-

- ~Ji)iJ.

r'flil!

't ,u

·seedless
Grapes

2 ql. low

'

.

· - -~
·~
. .'
. - ~ - . ~- n,..et:: - •

\

-.

..

.. ....__

•+ •

{

f

Freezer Pleezer
Twin Pops

.. ''

'

BDr Dne set Dne

BUy Dne Cet tine

SAllE .. . $1.79

0057

KROGER ASSORTED
VARIETIES

~ ~nl .

........

~

.992-6657

.

PREE!
"IN THE PRODUCE DEPT. "
ASSORTED FLAVORS

.RifE!

7"'

!Books

6.5-oz.

suttercrust Marzetti Salad •
Dressing ·
Bread
20-oz.
Jar
lilY lne eet Dne sur Dne cet lne

_;:;

Sfrf!d

REGULAR, SOUR CREAM &amp;
ONION OR CHEDDAR

12-ct.

·- - -.,..,

()'\\iff

Buy Dne cet Dne .

Keebler
O'Boisies

C.'llllstcr
Set

f~ : ·

-~

93 Mill St.

• •

vne

FROZEN

6-Pak

12-oz. cans

ORDER DEADUNE FOR CHRISTMAS
GIFT GIVING IS SEPTEMBER 20
Available At

•

9·1 0 oz. Box

VI

1.,,''b; P.tcg.

,.,, ,,,,

•Many Styles aa Sizes
•So•• Pieces Ca• It Personalized

Michelinas·
-~ Entre&amp;s

21b. Jar

1·/b. Pkg.
l''ef A

A

.wr vne

/~~

Your Choice

Grape
Jelly

·

1

1 qtlow

1

- - - , - ..

· Food Club

THOI?N APPLE VALLEY
•mour
SLICED TURKEY BREAST OR
A
Sliced
Sliced Bacon cooked Ham

~

c~,;.O&lt;lvl

samuel Ray Evans, so~ of Mar·
lin and Debbie Evans, Racme, celebrated his first binhday recently
with a cookout followed by cake

,,,

---

Peak ol The

Fqst birthday

THIS IS NOT A BUY ONE-CET ONE FllEE ITEM!

FINE HAND PAINTED STONEWARE

'

En~v Th.,.

SAMUEL EVANS

Ground Beef .

Village
Traditions

l•mit I Per Family Plea$e

Buckeye Brand

16 oz. Pkg.

U.S. INSPECTED 100% PURE

lh•

."

Mounta Top.
Che .Pie 26

HOUSIINERROWlllt:?
ClEM If WIIH
ttASsm ADS .I ..'

lb.

'

•

UICe

Portraits: no lim, Steve Bowen,
second, no thin1.
Pictoral: Karen H. Werry.
Nature closeups: Kim Kithas,
Long Bottom.
.
.
Miscellaneous: Dav1d Harris.
Color EDJargemenls
Landscape: Steve Bowen, Debra
Shelton, and Gene Chaney.
Animals: Gene Chaney, Steve
Bowen, and tie for thind, Deborah
Grueserand Delr.l Burke, Racine.
Porllllits: Steve Bowen, Tracy
Lee Card. and Lori Thomas,
Cheshire.
Abslracts: Su:ve Bowen, Debra
Burke, no third.
Nature Closeups: no fUSl, Gene
Chaney, Debra Burke. . ,
.
Miscellaneous: Dav1d Hants,
DebraBurte,andGeneChaney•
Black and Wbite Enlargements
Landscape: Bethany Mayer,
Pomer0y; Patty Dyer, and Kim
Kithas.
Animals: Kim Kithas, Steve
Bowen, no thin1.
· Portraits: Larry Cowdery,
Bethany Mayer, and Steve Bowen.
Pictoral: Steve Bowen, no second,nothini.
Nature closeups: Kim Kithas .
Miscellaneous: Larry Cowdery,
Kim Kithas, and Steve Bowen.

~rah ~~~~~~d White, Small
: Landscape and Seascape: Larry
·Cowdery, Opal Dyer, and Karen H.
'Werry.
Animals: Karen Werry, no sec·ond, no third.

Tropicana Pure Premium

Jif Peanut
·Butter

-:====.._......::.:::::::::::.:~

va;

(I.CI to 12.81)

Macaroni
&amp; Cheese
Purchase f..dud·~ ......

s..... P'rtct

In

Simply Jif or

Boxes

...

to $2.89) II:
S&gt;lil: . tOo ;j!

(up

Krui• Dinner

5 7.25o~2

Ruy One I~
0.1 One
. F'" ,;,

"'

..""

Reunion held

I

\U . .. ... ;

~~~~~~...
"

POMEROY • Joann WeUington
at Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, Saturday. 7 p.m. Call Pastor Pete Tremblay, 992-5326 for
information. Public invited.

129:2

Larry Cowdery of Long Bottom
took best of show in the photography judging at the I 29th Meigs
County Fair. His erury was one or
124 in color and black and white
· entered in the competition.
: Taking reserve best of show
was Gene Chaney, Racine, with
Patty Dyer winning the rosette for
the picture best depicting a Meigs
·county Fair happening.
: Ribbons and premiums were
·awarded in three places. Winners
'listed ftrst, second and third respeclively, were as follows:
Color, Snapsbot Size
Landscape and Seascape, Pauy
·Dyer, Bidwell; Faith Varney, Portland; and Karen H. Werry, Racine.
Animals: Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy; Karen H. Werry, and
Debra Shelton, Pomeroy.
Portraits and Personalities:
Robert Bailey, Long Bottom.
Karen Werry, and Debra Shelton.
Pictoral: Tracy Lee Card,
Racine; Gene Chaney, Racine; and
tie for third, Amber Blackston,
Pomeroy, and Karen Werry.
Abstracts: Robert Bailey, Joyce
Sauters, Pomeroy, and Tracy Lee
Carel.
--.. Nature closeups: Debra Shelton,
Steve Bowen , Coolville, and
Robert Bailey.
Miscellaneous: David Harris,
Pomeroy, Robert Bailey, and Deb-

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, DIET COKE, SPRITE OR

. 'i'

coca Cola Classic

KROGER

.

THIS IS NOT A BIIY
. ONE-CET ONE RlEE lf'fll/

cosmetic
Puffs
,

,

!DO-Ct.

Cit,

RilE!

FROZEN

RiCh'S Glazed

Donuts
14-oz.

. ,,

Cit Dlle

�Sentinel

Ohio

llayes takes grand champion
:honors in fair's 4-H horse show

,.'.

.,.,,

••

II

'\

...·'
I'

•
) Results of the 1992 4-H Horse
•: Show for the Meigs County Fair
~ have been announced.
'
Senior Division Grand Champit on is Lori ·Hayes with Reserve
~ Champion Dee Canter. Junior Divi•, siori Grand Champion is Kyle Ord
~ with Reserve Champion going to
; Jayme Miller. Dantelle Grueser
~ received Novice Grand Champion
:. and Lacey Bunting received
Novice Reserve Champion ..
: Participants in the show, appear; ing in order of placement, are as
1
· follows:
; English Showmanship - Susan
' Grueser.
; · Western Showmanship. age 9; 13, horse • Jay me Miller, Holly
• Milhoan, Sara Craig.
: Western Showmanship, age 9·
: 13, pony- Sandy Smith.
'
: Western Sh~wmanship, age 14. 18, twrse · Lon Hayes, Dee Canter,
' Donnie May.
~ Novice Western Showmanship·
• Danielle Grueser, Lacey Bunting,
· Pamela Neece, Brandi Hysell, Matt
: Milhoan, Jamie Erwin, Stacey
: Mills, Tiffany Hickel and Beth
· Bay.
: Saddle Seat Equitation, age 14·

18, horse· Susan Grueser.
Western Horsemanship, age 9·
13, horse • Sara Craig, Holly Milhoan, Jayme Miller.
Western Horsemanship, ase 9- .
13, pony • Sarah Grueser, Sandy
Smith.
Western Horsemanship, age 1418, horse ·Lori Hayes, Dee Canter,
Donnie May.
Novice Horsemanship, all ages,
horse· Danielle Grueser, Beth Bay,
Jamie Erwin, Matt Milhoan,
Pamela Neece.
Novice Horsemanship, all ages,
pony . Bmndi Hysell, Tiff Hickel,
Staeey Mills.
Western Pleasure, ages 9-13,
horse· Sara Craig.
Western Pleasure, age 9-13,
pony - Sandy Smith, Sarah
Grueser, Tiff Hickel.
Western Pleasure, ages 14-18,
horse. Dee Canter, Donnie May.
Novice Western Pleasure, all
ages, horse, Brandi Hysell.
Novice Western Pleasure, all
ages, pony, Tiff Hickel.
Reining, ages 9-13, horseJayme Miller.
Novice Reining, all ages, horse Lacey Bunting.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Umestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

Trail, ages 9-13, horse • Holly
Milhoan.
Trail, ages 9-13, pony • Sandy
Smith, Sarah Grueser.
Trail, ages 14-18, horse . Lori
Hayes, Dee canter, Donnie May.
Barrels, ages 14-18, horse .
Kyle Ord, Kyle Ord.
Poles, ages 14· 18, horse • Kyle
Ord, Kyle Onl.
Speed and Control; ages 14-18,
horse • Lori Hayes, Dee Canter, .
Donnie May.
Speed and Conuol, age 9-13,
horse, Jayme Miller, Holly Mil-

To place an ad

c8n992-2Is6
Mo~.

thru FRI. 8A.:I1.·5P.:Il. • SAT.B-12
Ct.osw Sn 1u Y
POLICIES
• Ada oul.lide the county your ad runa mual be prepaid
• Rec:ehe di.Kount for ada paid in adwuw:e.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad1 under 15 wonh -will be

STATE FAIR QUALIFIERS· Jayme Mlller,
a member or the Young Riders 4-H Club, lert,
and Lori
a member or the
. 4-H

run 3 days at no charfe.
• Prk~e of ad for all capllalleUen i1 double pr ke of ad cot.l
• 7 point llne type only used
• Sentinel 11 not re.peruibk for error&amp; after rir&amp;t day (che.::k
lor erron fint day ad run t in pt~per). Call before 2:00p.m.
d ay after publication to make correction
• Ada tha.l mwt he paid in ad .... nce are:
Cud of Thanlu
Happy Ada
In MemortaJR
Yard Sale~
• A clauifled adverti.ement placed in the Callipolia Daily
Tribune (except Clauifted Di1play, Buainua Card or Legal
Notku) -willal1o appear in the Point Ple.uanl RegMter and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching o"er 18,000 homes

Pleasure Riders, represented Meigs County at
the Ohio State Fair recently as they qualified to
show at the state fair horse show.

01\ Y BEFORE PUBLICI\TION
HXlp.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
HXl p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesda y
100 p.m. Thwsday
HXJ p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
TUC!;day Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thu«&lt;lay Pap&lt;r
Fnday Paper
Sunday Paper

Classifred pages co~er the
foUou:ing telephone exchanges ..•

Days

Words

I

3
6

10
Monthly

Mid.. eport, Oh.
Jot Custer

614-992·2213

f.allia Collllty 11eig&amp; County ~la...n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code .104

Jer~ Custer

15
15
15
15
15

Rate
$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00

·H{)...(;&amp;IIipoli•
:167-Chethire

992-ltidcUeporll

388-Yinton
24 5-Rio Grande
256-Cuyan DML
643-Arabi• Dill.
379-W•Inut

Pomeroy
985-0ae.te r

675-P\. Plea.. nt
458-l.eon
576-Apple Grove

843-Portl•nd

773-M..on

247-Leaart r.u.
949-Racine
742-Rutl.nd

rtun1blng
....
,.
;ij

882-1\'ew linen
895-l..etnl
937-Bulfalu

667-Coolvi.Ue

$ 10

56-- Pets for Sale
151- MusieallnttrurnenLI
21- BusiMSS Opportunity 1st- fruiLI &amp; Ve1el.abka
22- "oney lG l..o.n
59-- ForS.leorTnde
23- Profes•ion•l s~-wicet
F \1\\1 ~li'I'LIE~

$ JO
$ .42
$ .60

$13.00

HE\I.I·::O. T\TE

8. 1.1\ ESTOCh.

1

·.·.
.,

C:::IASSIFIEDS
.... ST!
GE'I' RESULTS ...ft •

~

1\f. \T \I.S
i 41- Ho.... for Reot

,.,.,.,~.,

•

,.

SENIOR DIVISION CHAMPIONS • Lori
Hayes, 1 ight, was awarded Senior Division
Grand Champion Horse, and Dee Canter, left,
. was Reserve Champion at Tuesday's 4-H Horse
·.•

Show during the 1991 Meigs County Fair. Pic·
lured with the champions is Susan Gr•eser,
1992 Meigs County Horse Princess.

.. •

~

•'

·-

r

Champion went to Jayme Miller, righL Pictured
with them is Susan Grueser, center, 1992 Meigs
County Horse Princess.

With Olympics'
close, NBC slips

HAMPim&lt;s • Danielle Grueser,
right, won Grand Champion Novice in Tuesday's 4-H Horse Show at the Meigs County Fair.
Lacey Bunting captured Reserve Champion.

Pictured with the novice champions is Susan
Grueser, Horse Princess for the 1991 Meigs
County Fair.

i Celebrates second birthday
j.'

i

,;
·
•
:
&lt;;.

~

Jake Allen Lynch, son of Keith
and Beth Lynch, Middlepon. celcbrated his ftrSt birthday recently at
Pleaser' s Restaurant
A Duck Tales theme was called
out with a decorated cake.
He also received his own personal cake.
Games were played and winner.;
were Joel Lynch and Ashlcc Smith.
In addition to ~is parents, ~!her

guests included his brothers, Josh
and Joel Lynch; paternal grandmother, Delores Surface, Roger,
Robin Riebel, Jessica, Justin, Diana
Johnson, Ricky Christopher, Renee
Riebel, Rhonda Carnahan, Donna
Griggs, Jarrod, Darien O'Neal ,
Tracey Smith, Jacob, Ashlee.
Sending gifts were his maternal
grandparents, Roger and Hazilee
Riebel .

JAKE LYNCH

-

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS
vaulted back to the top of the television ratings in the week after the
Olympics, when NBC surged
ahead, audience figures released
Tuesday showed.
ABC had an impressive one-two
punch as reruns of its powerhouse
sitcoms, "Roseanne" and "Home
Improvement," notched ftrst and
second.
NBC's season premiere of
'' Blossom,'' coming in sixth. was
thai network's hi~hest-rated show.
Continuing tiS pre-Olympics
winning ways, CBS toted up a 9.9
rating for the week ending Sunday,
Aug. 16.
NBC, which had outrun all
rivals during its exclusive
Olympics coverage, fell to second
place with 9.1, with ABC coming
in at 8.6 and Fox at 7.1, according
to the A.C. Nielsen Co. Each ratings point represents 921,000
homes.
CBS' share of audience aver·
aged 19 percent of all sets in use,
with NBC scoring a 17 share;
ABC, 16: and Fox 14.
Here are the top 10 shows, their
network and rating: "Roseanne,"
ABC, 16; " Home Improvement,"
ABC, 14.8; "CBS Sunday Movie:
'Good Night Sweet Wife'," CBS,
14.4; "Coach," ABC, 14.2; "60
Minutes," CBS, 13.8; "Blossom,"
NBC, 12.8; "NBC Monday Night
Movie: 'Settle the Score'," NBC,
12.8; "Street SIOries," CBS, 12.7;
"Murphy Brown, " CBS, 12.5;
"Murder, She Wrote," CBS, 12.4.

-1 -=u=R==(-=~=oo:-1--

SAVE 20¢

·. ..

Good

Good
on any

flavor of

I

I
I
I
I

HAM

POMEROY, OHIO

PIL 992·2556

I

51- Houaehold Good.
52- Sportins Good.
53- Antique.
54- Misc. MeN:handlae
55- Buildinc: Supplia

.

BALLROOM DANCE

~~ · ~ ~' ·~

11- Auto. for Sale

72- r ..... for Sole

173--- Yaru &amp;: 4 'I'D'•

j14-

AUGUST 21, 1992, 7 TO 11
Legion Annex, Middleport, Ohio
Music by GEORGE HALL
SS.OO SINGlE-$15.00 COUPLE
FOOD &amp; ICE AVAILABLE

D

Office, School &amp; Art

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

Speclah , Typln,,
Laminating, Copy, u
&amp;Notlt~ Servlc•
CIIECK OU SELECTION
AND PAICESS FIRST
..11.'82·1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

CALL

614·992·6949
7121W211 mo. pd.
Howard L Writesel

KEVIN'S lAWN
MAINTENANCE

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

949·2391 or
1·100·131·1460

Gutters

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

R11k1Mt~l

6 Cofni'Mr'NI
FrM Eltlmtt11

7128/'92Jtfn.

6-26-'12-tfn

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

FREE ES11MATES

UMESTONE
FOR SALE

SIZED

Call614-992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cltes.irt, OH.

•HIItdlllllrs
• Convertible Tops
• Custom Carpets
• Custom Seat
Covers • Also Boats

NOWOKI

CIIIJILIII ura
IPIIIIolftiY

45633 ST. Rt 124

AlB

Fill ISTIIIATIS

!ftWY

MaiiSt. . .

(304) t73· 60
7117/111\G.

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

New HOtne11, Roofing,
Room Addillona,
Kltchena, Porehea and
lllllha.
COMPLETE
REMODELING SERVICES
F'" Eo~· 2Q Ytw &amp;p.

773·5684 or
992·5249
7R11'1211 mo.

CURIO
BARN
RAONE

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9-"
•• W171Pd.
WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS
County Ad. 18Peaehlork Rd.
m-7093
Uon.-Sun. ' - ....

See •• lor ye• hurt1iftg
and bock to ochool

nHdo. - ·· 1•1"1
uloctlon of mltllory
ourptuo -·• 1117pd.

f7;_. &amp;au &amp; )loton for Sale
11- Auto Repair
78-- C.RI~ns Equipn~enl

~FH\

ICF:'

8

por
Plumbin1 &amp; Heating
~ ~ E~~:ca"atin~~:

182-

M- Eloclrieal &amp; Rehiflero&lt;lio1
Ceneral Haulin1
)tobile Home Repair
Upholttery

Real Estate General

lARGE 3 STORY COlONIAl
lOME FOR SAlE
12 rooms, 3'1&gt; baths, scenic view of
river. Located on 110 High Street In
Pomeroy. Available for Inspection by
appointment. Contact Millie Midkiff
at 992·2133. Sealed bids can be sent
to Bank One, P.O. Box 586, Pomeroy.
Bids will be open on Wednesday,
August 26th. Bank One reserves the
right to reject any or all bids.

MICROWAVE OVEN
ood VCR REPAIR
IUMAIEI
lri•J.IIIa Or We

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

KEN'S APP lANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or

Specializing In Cuslom
Fra• R•clr
NEW &amp; USED ~ RTS FOR
All MAKES &amp;MODELS
992·7013 or

915·3561

ar TOll FREE

tkU~

992·5553
1·80CJ.I48·0070

...... , _ .....Ilk.
217L-..1St.
POIIIIOY, OliO
·312319211fn

COUNTRY LOTS
FOR SAU
1·5 ACRES
Approved Townahlp
Roed (blaclctop), 1/4
mile from Rt. 7,
located between
Cheater and Tuppera
PlalnL
Each Jotle partially
wooded with ucellent
drelnage. Service by:
T.P.C. Water Co.;
Columbua I Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
and up
Owner Financed

(614)985·3594 Dr

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31f91/lln

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
P.O. Box 894-Wallar Aller
RAONE OHIO
(For-ty &amp;!1e'lidgo S.all
!tttittel
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowers • Cltait Saws
• Weedeaters

614·949·2804
•:

Tyr11

:~• • N•• ~ i--__,...,...=;·
G
• •

.......
• •

985·3~

S.l

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Sidiog
New Geragts • Rtplacemeot Wintlows
Room Additions • Roofing
tOMMERCIAL •nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATI:S

GALLIA PERFORMING ARTS
PAnYFELLURE

Classes in: Ballet &amp; Tap,
Toe, Jazz, Baton Twi~ing.
Rogiolration Aug. 22, 10 AM-3 PM
55 Court St, Galllpolle
For mo,. lnfonnation call245·9880

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls!

NORTON
CONTUCTING
CarJIItlhJ Eltctrlc
Plunlttg RepltK••llf
Rooflltg
Wlltlows

117-1101
Free Estilates •low
Rates for Selliors
No .loll Tao 5llall
Mmt-.pl.

WICK'S
HAULiNG SERVICE
36970WR• ....

,_,.,ow.

~

PICTURE
PERFECT
PHOTO
CLIPPERS
E1ro $75 te

$125 ,.r..,.
Worlrwit._...

"......,.,

Celuytiole:

I·IG0-643·1345
BISSELL &amp;BUill
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
oGINIIS
oComplltl

••~not~•r••

Stop&amp;Co..,...

FIIEE ESTIIIlJ'IS

915·4473
667·6179

2-7·92-lttt

wsooROOnNG
AND EVERnNING UNDERNUTH
GAUGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
•• Onfi" ..,,,.~ Coafracte,.
20 Yr. b:p.
C.ll AI, 614-742·2321
1117111n

RED HILL FARMS
PRODUCE
FRESH SWEET CORN
5
Now 1.50 doz.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19
4:30 p.m.-Little Miss and Mister Contest - Hillside Stage
6:00 p.m.- Junior Fair Sheep Show f9llowed by.
Open Class Sheep Show - Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Motocross
8:30 p.m.-Hillside Stage - Hot Point Siring Band

1

THURSDAY, AUGUST 20
(Senior Citizens Day)
9:00 a.~.-Junior Fairy Dairy Goat Show - Show Arena
10:00 a.m.-Junior Dairy Show -Show Arena
11:30 a.m.- Homemaker Pie and Country Fair- Hillside Stage
12:30 a.m.-Harness Racing
I :00 p.m.-Open Class Dairy Show - Show Arena
1:00 p.m.- Aower Show Judging
1:30 p.m.-Mic)dleport Bluegrass Band - Hillside Stage
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractor Pull -Show Arena
4:00p.m.-Talent Show - Hlllside Stage
6:00 p.m.-Kiddie Games- Hillside Stage
7:00 p.ni.-Hlllslde Stage- Llcksklllet Band
8:00 p.m.-Horse Pull
8:00p.m. to 9:30 p.m.-(lrandstand - Lionel Cartwright

=a

DRIVE

oualiz
Stone o.

w. ..

17f't- Aulo ParLI &amp;

Real Estate General

The 1992 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

................
FlEE 15n11AllS

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

614-992-7144 1:

~oton::ye~

NTHE

.'

1
.

• I

.. I
I

card of Thanks

•'

· Special thank• to
Racine Squad 121,
Gene and ·Richard
Lyona. Tha.nka lor
your help. Special
thanks ,to Tammy
Randolph, Betty Ward
and Satlly Dallay for
:your apeclal help.
Spacial thanks to
'trlenda and nelghbora
Mil Rev. BIU Juatua.
The hul Arthur
Faml

- --·~---r---- -- .

I \II· I\( II \\DI:-F

BUWnN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICAnON

WITH FRIES...... $2.19
n.. Eat! of the P - y .IIR ..W."

;

Bl' LLFTI ~ BO.\I{ Il

$1.49
"It

I

14- Buaine.a Training
15-- S~::hool1 &amp; lntlruction
16- Radio , TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miacell•neoua
1
18- WantH To Do

you want lt ...
you ·ve got it ...

Special of the Week!

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALlEY

•. .J

11- Help WU.lftJ
12- Situaliona Wanl.td
13-- lnaur•nce

3-- AnnuuncemenLI
4-- Cl .. c iiWtl)'
S- H•ppy Ad•
6- Lo.t and found
7- Lo.t and round
8-- Public Sa~ &amp;
Auction
9- Want~ to Buy

'

JUNIOR DIVISION CHAMPIONS • Kyle
Ord, left, was awarded Junior Division Grand
Champion at Tuesday's 4-H Horst Show of the
U9th annual Mei2s County Fair. Reserve

'
•''

•'

42- Mobile Ho•es for Rent
43- Far,.. for Rent
~Apartment for Henf
4.5- Furnished Hoom1
46- Sp•ce for Rena .
47- Wanted to Renl
43-- EquipMent for Kent
4 9-- For Leue

Tl! I \'I 'O I!T \TIO\

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

HOlE lllllltlld

OFFICE SEIYICE
AND SUPPLY
112
,a ltrHt
Polltrey OH, 45769

Spray • Rol • ll"'s~

Wile. Dotldsll :.

Fl\\\(1\1.

i
!

-IMUoDollltt r.-

992-3838

POIUIOY,OL
8·11082·1 mo.

loterior • bltrior
~
~

"TTl:e!N,. Otl 01 ,....,

IIUU.DO~IIACIOIOE
onct TRA
WORK
AVAJI.IIU.
SEPTIC SVI1EIII,

lh• ',... 614-915-4110

992·7553

PROFESSIONAl
HOUSE
PAINTING

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

38904 Leatl•g
Creek Road
Middleport, Oklo

Over 15 Words

~
:.

&amp; co.

.EXCAVAnNG

HAVI llfllllKES

IWOIIAIU UIU

Supplies, Offlca

i

UNDA'S
t9PAINTING

UUES10NE-l1IUCIQIICI

Fumlture~ertlalng

614· 92-3159 ·::

31- llofRI!!:I for SaLe
$1.30/day $.05/day
1
32- )1obile llomn for Sale 61- FuM Equipment
62- 'I'anted to Ouy
33- F'arlftl for Sak
63- u . .atoc:k
Rates an• for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
34- Duineu lluildi~
1
~ llay &amp; Crain
charged for each day as separate ads.
:15- l.L.ll &amp; Auu,:r:
6~ Seed &amp; fert.ili1er
-,------;=~=mcmn.i~---- 36- Rul [dale V..nmd

r'

us.oo .........

(6141 it2..J76

1300 Vine Stnlt

RATES.

-

DILIVIIT SIIVICI
S•lll Dour Work

12-5-tfn

P~TER l

'

..

-·~

DRIVEWAY
Rl
1.. UIIERONE

614·992-5591

CUSTEI\~
STUCCO
;·

''

....
..

SMAll DOZER

LICENSED ond BONDED

PH.

hoan.

Novice Speed and Control,
pony, aU ages -Brandi Hysell.
Groom and aean . junior division winners: Holly Milhoan, Sara
Craig, Sarah Grueser. Senior division winners: Brandi Hysell, Susan
Grueser, Mall Milhoan. These two
teams are now eligible to participate in state competition in October. Other teams in the junior division were Sandy Smith, Pamela
Neece and Stacey Mills; and Jayme
Miller, Chelsea Wallace and Beth
Bunting. The other senior team '
consisted of Garry Neece, Donnie
May and Dee Canter.

CHARLIE'S

Card of Thanks

A SPECIAL
THANKS
The family of
Cella Hlte would
like to expreu
thanu for the klndn••• and support
you •h-Ill during
the lllneaa and
recent death of
Cella. Thanks to Dr.
Mansfield, Vttel'lllll
Memorial Hospital .
end Extended Care
Unit and D1lor11
1Vr•• for taking
care of Cella. If we
forgot your name
on paper we
haven't forgotten
you In our htarta.
Thanks Again,
Jack Hlte, husband
Vlolll Balin, alllll'

----- - -- -·- -+-.....,·---- --·----·-.....,_

~-- f -

·2259 .

608

.

EAST MAIN
.

~OMEROJ, _OHIO'

.

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

LAURELCUFF·1988Skyfine 24 x 42 manufactured home.
·uke New" condition oHers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. central air,
appliances, skylight. sleps, underpiooing. $29,900 Make an
offer!
NEW LISTING- Pomeroy- t floor frame home with 3
bedrooms, 1 112 baths, patio, C81port, storage building,
enclosed porch, full basement with linished rooms, appliances, well insulated. $44,900

$19,95 A DAY AND UP
CALL (614) 4,46-9971 (Kelly)
KE~SAU~OCENTER
264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
TRY OUR IIEW
SREL IIISUURD
RAISED PAIIL GAUGE DOOI

NEW LISTING- Doxler·1 t/2 story frame home 7 roams, 4
bedrooms, newly painted indudes cellar and garden space.
large front porch. Asl\ing $16,000
.
NEW USTING- LETART •93&lt; IICrlls ,.;lh a llloor.frame
fann home ...;111 2-3 bedrooms, 21irepfaces. well &amp; cistern,
includes barn, equtpmeot building, corn a-ib, lriut traes,
good road and .• . RIVER FRONTAGE! As~ng $53.500
PLEASANT RIDGE Very nice 11/2 story Irame home with
3 bedroomshlocaiOd on two lots 50 • 100 each. Very cute

IIRIWI PIICIS

aHoradable orne. $18,900

9x7-$275.00 16x7-$4H.M

BLOCK PLANT RD.·Onelloorframe home with vinyl siding
2 bedfoom. bafl. c:arpon, basemen! on 2.29 acres. Peae&amp;M country 1811ing, Y8l doo&amp; 10 town. ASKING $24,900

Qwallty HI Effldeacy
Ai' ~tiolen, Heat

WE'RE AT THE MEIGS CO. FAIR...WE'RE LOOKING
FOR YOU I STOP BY &amp;NO SEE OUR DISPLAY IND ASK
US HOW WE CAN SELL YOUR HOUE FOR YOU I

P1111p1, hl'IIIKes &amp;
Now Water Heate~

'

HENRY E. CLELAND.. - ...- ....-...- ..................tt2-41t1
TRACY BRINAGER.........- ..:.•• - ................ t411-243t
JEAN TRUSSELL.....-·----··-·-·---............t4t-2te0
OFFICE..............~ ..............~ ... - .........................H2·225Q

·

- -=-- ---- ---

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Com, String Beals,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, EtL
LOCARD CORNER OF IT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY BY·PASS
992·5114

Bennetts Mobile Home Hea,ling
1H1Stll•4 Sd!ooiU. ~
Gllpolt, OltJo
Col (614) 446-941hr 1-100-172-5967

-·

.

OPEIEU IIRAWD-~ IP-$210.01
With 2 Tnlllllllllln
Witlt Purcn11 of

her"- o, ••.,

�12-The Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce BeaUle

Announcements
3

42

Announcements
Froo Adult Talk Llno.
1·114-251-2601
Uvo, Ono On Ono.

1

Old

Cu.

Ft.

Part

German

44

Shophord, Noodo A Place To
Run. 614-44Ut6t.

17

Household

Wednesday, Au ust 19, 1992 ·
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

73

Goods

Vans &amp;

Utlod Wulwr I PrYor Salol 1100
AI Sold With Warranty.
Tho Wo- I Dryer Shopl",
751 Second Avenue, GalllpoU1,
614-441-2944.

a· Up,

Apanment
for Rent

Frost

AolrigiiiiOI, 614-446-9582.
3 Montt1 Old Famalt, Black
fWhlla Puppy, Cute. Look1 Uke

74

OhiO

BORN LOSER
LITTl.£~!

4 WD's

1977 Chevy Chtytnne 4l4 truck,
~~~ PB, runt good $GOO. OBD,
- ·773-5!175.
197a Ford Cargo Van, E-150,
Good Condition, $'1,200. 614·446·
a834 .
1087 Chevy 314 ton 4K4, exc:
cond, 304-675-5724.
1989 Plymouth Voyager, rtd
with woOd grain, 1988 Plymouth
Voyager, grey, PW, PO, Air,
AMIFU stereo, excellent condlliDIL Can b' uen ar Harris
Farms, Po1111nd, Ohio

tt58.

Giveaway
V•r

51

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR: water, htth paid. 1 mi.
from Holzer hospital. $225/mo.
pluo dopooH. No Poll. 614-44~1354.
Small Trtllar For Rent Located
In Gallipolis, U!liltloo, ilotoronco
' Dopoo1t Required. 114-441·

REDUCE; Bum Oft Fol Whllo
You Sill!&gt;. Tako OPAL A"llablt
At: Fruth Phannocy.

4

Wednesday, August 19,1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

He:~ .

(£E ••.

AAVE llWI

I HOPE:

6m HO.\'E. .•. r'U.
tiJI1DER HIAI. ...It.l.
TW. HL'\UIIB

~~

HE'S
PJ.I.. RIGHT

flO\\ Ulla ... flE'U.
i!WtT 'ffil5 W..Y!

AAV€ A f:m&gt;

loWT TIU.IlE

N.O... rle:'D

8

~

I

B I Ns u M

IIII1
1

~INO

I:OO!IIe IIJe &lt;lle 1111111

ae o ~~ewo

CD llquorw One 1V ~

=-

~~:wQ

e-

Why Doqs Are the Most

a World Toclly
S PCIA Tour

8

~

lletmon
8:05 Ill I Love Lucy
e:301Ile o NBC ..... c
()) Now It C.n le Tolir

Superior of All Creatures

44H33!1.

8

WED •• AUG. 19

J;"' EXCJ.l£!

Motorcycles

Spuds McKenzie In Face. 614·

Television
Viewin2

On Land , Sea and Sky
and Maybe Space .

I

P RU E P

Granny to 1mpa11ent fellow
wa111ng 1n line, "I've noted thai
;:- no matter how much pattence
, . . . . - - - - - - - . : ......., a person has they usually preT H R U NE
fer never to •·· ••;·

I

f--,1:.....;;.1....:...1,;;3,..;.,1-1

a.

llle &lt;lleAac .....
CD Wild Allltflcl Sip). Q
(f) Sq.... One 1V .~

~~ A~Qc;::.......... Q

IQ

1--T,
;.......:.;.,..;.;.,,;;5,...:.:;..1.:..,.1-1
\
L.-.l..-.1.-.J.L....L._L
. .....!.

Complele the chuckle quoted
by f dh n~t 1n the m1ssmg words
you develop from ~ep No 3 below

Doo

II) 8cooby

0~
~New onoQ

8:35 Ill AndJ Qrtfllth
7:00
IIJ Wheel of FOitune

111•

Registered Malt Butt colored Secretary ~ Aeceplionlst, law
Cocker Spaniel , 2
old, 304- tlnn. Good secretanal skills r-..
C6,.:
75-·38=.11'. -,---;--;--,- • qulrad Typing, d1ctat1on, word
Ustd tires In good shape 10 procassinq, ate Write Box C-30,
giveaway, call61~-992-3511.
cart of Pomt Pleasant Register,
200 Main Sl. Pomt Pleasanl,WV

iJS Nlaht Coun c

rrs

3 Bedroom Housa Tra1tar On
Same Lot, Good Rental
Property, 641 Third Avenue, Gal·
llpolls 614·256·1646.
7 room farmhouSI, on 1 acre
25550
lol No fllumblng C1t~ water
6 Lost &amp; Found
:----:-::--.--.-::--.-.~~I Store Manager TralnN lor su- available. Sae at Rl. 2 &amp; 87 Jet
Lost Purebred Femall Collie, ptrmarkel rn Southeast Oh1o, on L1Hie M1ll Creek Rd
Answers To Prlssy, Child's Pel. department management ex·
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
c::-'1::161:-:4-4
'-'-4='6::·1::10:::4::
. :-- -:-c I porlonco protorrod with add" Historical Area Corner Lot ~ 816
losT
REWARD
Lost tlonal exparitnce rn managing Main St. Pt. Pleasant, W Va,
driveshatt to baler on Lincoln and training paoplt. Salary anc1 Completely Renovated· 2 Full
Pike 8J1019Z. It found on lhl benef111 negotiable, graal work· Baths, 3 Large Bedrooms, New
road, please call614·256-1411.
lng atmospllere, conduslvt to HVAC, New Carpet. Available
families. Send resume to: Store lmmedially 614·446·2205
Managt~r, 405 Pearl Street, M1d·
Yard Sale
7
Gallipolis City; Well Maintained,
dlopoll, Oh 45760.
Great Location, Basement,
Taking applications tor part• Garage, large Rooms, Possible
Gallipolis
time aask clark: midnight snttt Financing Or Trade. 614~256·
at Econo Lodge, 260 Jackson 6855.
&amp; VIcinity
Pike, Gallipolis
Home For Sale In Chashlre VII·
3 Family Yard Sale: Homewood Wanted Part-Time Bartender lage,
9 Rooms, &amp; bat,, Lg Fla:
Drlvo, In Potter. Thuraday, For Local Private Club Excel· Lol By OWnor, 8-3:30 P.M
Friday, Saturcta~. V:OO To ?
lant
Working
CondLtlons1 Phone 614·446·6878 Aher 3:30
AntlqUII, Fumhure. Dollt, Toys, Wookond Nights Only. Sana PM. 614·441·0425.
To. Box CLA 233, CIO
CD't, Rac«dtc Junk... 1432 Respon$1
GalllpoUs Dally Tribuna, 825 Newer home, 22 wooded 1cres,
Brick School Hood, (By Ad· Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio garage, deck basement, large
daYIIII) Frl, Sat, 614-367&lt;0240.
yard, nur Meigs High, price mld
45631.
$70's, 614·992-2454
Garaga Sale-August 20, 21 &amp; 22,
Starts 9 a.m. Gt11swara, 12
Situation
Off Raccoon Rd, 105 Ann Or,
Clothes, P1ano, Chord Organ,
Gallipolis, 3 yrs. Old, 3 BedWanted
Something
tor
avtryone.
rooms, Gray Vinyl Siding, 1 112
Rasldence of Phyllla Muthotand,
Babysitter nudld, part time, Sath, 2 Car Garage, Large Ottk,
Wllkav!Uo, Ohio.
Pomer6y,
Klngsbu~
area, Heal Pump, City Schools
Saturday August 22nd 62 reflrencas preferred, 614-992· $54,900. Call Moore's 614-446~
4850.
Sycamore Str.ei\.Jeans, Shirts 3161.
And lllsc. 8:00A.M. To 6 P.M.
Wlll ea,. Far Eldertv In Thera 32 Mobile Homes
Home, Experienced And Cer·
Public Sale
8
tilled 614-367-7123
lor Sale

&amp; Auction

18

Wanted to Do
Rick Purson Auction Company,
tull Umt auctioi!Mr, complete W1ll Babysit In My Home. Fen·
auction 11rv¥:1.
Ucanud ced In Play Area. References
16&amp;,0hlo I Wut Virginia, 304· Avallabkt. Rodney Area Catt
614·245·5887.
773-578!.
Babysitting: In my home,
9 Wanted to Buy
Cheshire. 611(.367·7598
Okl marbl1s, toys, comic books, E&amp;R TREE SERVICE Topping
lantarns, plcturll, Iron skltl1ts, Trimming, Trn Removal, Hedge
and furniture, Olby Martin, 614· Trimming. Free Estimates! 614·
992·7441.
367-795TAftor 4p.m.
Wtnl to buy 10 I Jon Boat In Experltncad pianist and or·
good cond, 304-67&gt;4ll82.
ganlst will give lessons m mv
flame, 614·992-6232.
Wonted To Buy: Junk Aulos
With Or Without Motors Call General
Houst
Cleaning
Larry LIYIIy. 614-388.;.9303
Reasonablt Rates, 614·388-9414,
II No Answer, 388-9229.
Top Prien Paid: All Old US Gaorges Por1able Sawmill, don 't
Coinl, Gold Ring!! Silver Coins, haul your logs to the mill just
Gold Colno. M.b . Coin Shop,
call304-675·1957.
t5t Second Avonuo, Gallipolis
t.tlss Paula's Day Cart Centar
wa..ed: 4 112ft. loft-llandad Sate,
ch1tdcara. M-F
mobil• home bath tub, prater 6 a.m.affordable,
• 5 .30 p.m. Ages 2\o?-10
almond coiiH', &amp;14.a43-5165.
Btlort, aher school Orop~lns
welcome 614·446-8224 New In·
Employment Services lant Toddler Care, 6t4·446-6227.
Someone to pour cement In
basement,
6H·985·3986
anytime
11 Help Wanted
lopping &amp; trimming lilt·
•AVON• ALL AREAS! Share your TrN
perltnce,
tlmt With Ul. You'll IOVI tht a95·3486 tree 15!1mates, 304·
compony. 1.aG0.992-6356
To Babysit In My Home,
Are you •ggressivt, sttr Want
Anr, Hours, Havt Excellent
motiYited, willong to ap~y
youl'lllt to 1 very rewarding ob Ra arencu, 614-446-8011
wllh many added Mnatlts? e Will Babysit In My Home, R10
1r1 looking tor managar Grande, Naar Umvers1~ 614·
trtlnHs tor 1oc1l business. 245·9661.
•
S.nd your resume to Box C-17
cart Point Pleasant Aeglster1 Will Do Housecleaning, In Gal·
200 Main St, Point Plaasanl, Wv llpotls Area, Ha ve Ralertnces
614·446·8t99
25550.
AVON I All Aroas I Shirley Wilt take care of elderly or In
people In their homes, 5 days a
Spoaoo, 304-&amp;75-1429
waek, dayt1me, 304-675-4569.
Director Of Nursing Needed For
Progrtaslvt 1'16 Bed Long Term Will taka care of elderly person
Ctre Facility Long Term Care In my home. Ex pe r~ en c ad ,
And Management Experience A IDv1ng care, good references,
Plus. COmmpttltlve Salary 614-797-4855
Benellll
Available
Send
&amp;
Tobacco
Work,
Ruume And Salary History to Yard
Adlmlnstrator, Plnttrt&amp;t Cart Housecleaning &amp; Pa lnt1ng
Center, 170 PinterHt Drive, Gal· Referencas .fvallable 614-446·
6790 After 3.00 P.M
llpollo, Ohio 45631
Euy World Excellenl Pay' AsMmble Products AI Home Call
loU Froo, 1-800-467-5566, Ext
313.
Exeaollent Earnings, As A
Christmas Around ' Ttle World
Demonatralor, FrH $300 Kit 01
Christmas Items Alao Booking
P..loo 614·379-2502.
Experltnctd Adult To Cart For
1nt1nt In Our Homt. Reftrenca
Roqlt!rod. 614-446-3a38 Ahor
a.ooP.M.
Experienced qrlll cook • steakt,
1M food, family cooking. Even·
Ina hours, call Ken 304-173-5321
atfer 5:00PM tor an lnttrview
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRING. ~~&lt;000 • 172&lt;000/Yr. 1·
805-814-&amp;ow• Ext G•968 For
lmmtdlate Rupontt
Holr St,tloh nooded. Guranlaod
~·· Pd. Vacation . 6t4-446lmmldiatt openings availablt
tor tull·tlme ana part-time
LPN'o. Competitive wag11. Oil·
teranllal wilh txperltnce, flexible ochedullng IVIIItbtl. Contact tht J)lrtctor of Nur.lng,
Ptnecl"'lt cart Clnttr, 170
Phwcmt Drive, Golllpollo, OH
46131. 114-44&amp;-7112. Equal Opport,unl1y Employer.
Male a female coach lor tumbling otudl'!t_'!Ill troln rlghl por·
eon. 304-8IH782 or 304·52&amp;321&gt;.
Man txptr'-nced In water works
ob. llvo In Mlddlopon. It
nt.,..ted 11nd resume to:
Board of Public AHalro, 237
RICO Stroot, PO Box 113, Mid·
dltpln, Ohio. Jun Null, Clork·
Board ol Public AHolro.

l

Ml'""" Gilman lo looking lor 1
...,.... Country Muolclon, 304171-1513.
Produce Oepartm1nt Managar,
It lent 3 J'Hfl tXptrltftCI In
praduce
Exc.ltent
poy IIICf
1. Supormarilot
tocttttlln Soultiooot Ohio, grool
....,. , .....,.,_, -duolvo to
,.,Uioo Sind · rooumt to:
llanogor, 405 Poo~
....., llfidd!opOrt, Oh 457BO ·

'C.':P:"""I.

PI,,.,..

I

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnve&amp;t lgated
tht oHering
VENDING ROUTE Got RICh
Quick? No Way I But We Have A
Good, Sltadv, AHordable, Busl·
ness Won 1 last 1-800·284·
8363.
Vanding Routt · local We Havt
The Newest Machines, Making A
Nlct Study Cash Income. 1·
aoo.gss.o354

Real Estate
31

Homes lor Sale

1 112 story house, Middleport ,
2bdrm , bathroom and kitchen
remodeled, close to schoot and
clty park, Gravel Hill aroa, 614992-m2 after Spm , 614·992~
3679 ahar 9pm
2 s1ory brick home, good cond,
6 rooms, bath, clly wattr, bas•
menl, central air, gas furnace,
Buck stove Fenced tot, walking
distance from G ood~tar &amp;
sct1ool dial, 304·576·2381 after
5.00PM.
home, 3bdrm , 2-bath,
kitchen, living room, sitting
room, basement, ga• ,eat,
23,000BTU air condilloner,
electric atove/refrlgera1or, 2 lots
wit, chain link fence, garage,
nlct nelghDorhood, 809 Maple
St., Middleport (Corner ot
Haadloy), 614-992·3468.
2117 Kolloy Dr., Gallipolis, Ohio
45831, Tolophono· 614-446·3385,
Price: $52,000.00. Living Room,
3 Bedrooms, Family Room, 1
And 1!2 Bathrooms, 1 Car
Garage, Brick Front With Cedar
Sldlng.
2~story

197'1 Flamingo trailer, 3 bed·
rooms, 12x65, new carpel, raat
good ccnd, $5,500 304-675·6001
ask tor Jim.

75

newly remodtltd, low utlllll••.
no peta, $220 per month,
deposit roqulrod, 614-992·2381
dayo

54

2bdrm. apta., tolll tlectrlc, ap.
plianc8• fumhd•d, laundry
room facllltlts, clou to school
In town. Applications avallabl•
11: VIllage Grftn APis . • 49 or
call614·992·311 t. EOK

1972 Quachlt• 17' aluminum
cane. 12215. Phone 114·446·&amp;416
attar 5 p.m.
2 Lots &amp; V1ulls, Choice, In Ohio
Valley Memory Gardena Call
(Proct.,..lllo) 614-886-8506.
2 Westtm Saddles, Both Good,
1 Junior, 175, 1 Adun 1125. 614·
379-9885.
2· 14" ntw roof vents, $30 each;
1· coot Iron lavAoty, SID; 614992-5282

3 room unfurnished apt, nice

ntlghborhood,
stove
&amp;
refrlgerator furnished. Dep I rat
required. 304-675·1090.

Fumiahltd Apar1mtnt, Ulllitlas
Paid, 1 Bedroom, Upstairs,
Stcond Av1nu1, Gallipolis, No
Poto1 Excollenl Condition, 614·
446-9523.
Comptelly Furnished, 1br, next
to llb11ry, parking, hill, air,
re.blrencel..deposit r•qulrad. 614~
446'.0338 ttetore 7p.m.
Furnished Apartments For Rent,
In Gallipolis, 1 Bedroom, Call
614-446-1423 After 6 P.M .

Looking For A Coal? Consider A
Pre-Owned Mobile Home, Large
Sotect1on, low Money Down,
Free Set-Up And Delivery 1-800·
589·5110
Land /Home Development, El·
sea Home Center Will Show You
Howl Your New Smgle Or
Doublt.L Well, Sepuc, Founda·
lion &amp; ur~veway, Allin One Loan
Package, Low Rates, Open Late
Wllh llghted Homes. 1·614·7Tl·
1220

33

Drop leaf table, chairs, 1100;
vecuum cleaner, $25, AJC
vacuum pump, 160; lools, 150;
614-1'42·2006.
Dune buggy, dual por1 100hp
englnt, fUll -gauges, lltrto, all
lights, tow 6ar lncluCitd, 3Q4.
895-3081.

Furnished
Rooms

For Salt. Heavy Duty Black And
0ecker Drill Big Sharpener,
Good Condlll.,, $95. 614-446·
4316.
Fer Sale· Mate Rottweiler, 9
Months Old, $175; 1978 Ford
Econotma Van, $200 ti14·379·
2756
Gas heater, 65,000 Btu,
IUiomatlc, blowtr, $85; ski ma·
chlne axerclser, heavy duty,
$45; 614-992-5664.

Rooms tor rtnt· week or month.
Starting at 1120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
614-446·9580.
SleepinG rooms with cooking
Also tra1ltr space. All hook·ups.
Call 11ter 2 00 p.m., 304·7'735651, Mason WV.
SINplng Rooms: not fancy, BUT
CLEAN, 3 or 4 nlg,ta conucu·
lively spacial rates. lntertated?
614-446·3384, Alplno Molol.

46

Genesis Nutrition Products
featuring Amino Acld Body
Building, weight loss and tal
burner f01mufas Available ax~
elusively at Rllo A1d Pharmacy.
Tho sale way to dlel.
Grape Wreath Baskets, Etc
Decorated Or Undecorated For
More Information, 614·256·1353.

Space lor Rent

Farms lor Sale

Country Mobile Horne Parle, At.
33N., under naw management .
In Rutland, 24.8 acru, 2 bad· Lots, $85; home ranlals, $235;
room
housa
wlflreplace, 614·992-2167
serHned In porch, tree gas,
largt barn, truft tr..., prlctd on Office Space, 1100 aq ft, 2nd
Inspection , Bill Wllllamson, 614· Uoor, key location ln Pomeroy,
614-992-66n.
1112·2001

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

55

Day-bed pink frame wlhaant,
has pop-up unit, bllddlng In·
eluded, paid $439, sell S200.
Sundy ctalmet w/case like new
$2oo 304-&amp;75·3811

Merchandise

WANTED TO BUY· 4-5 Acros,
V1cant Land, Private, Cheshire
Or Addison AroL 614-245-9503 51
Household
Evenings
Goods
Acreage available for home
construction en Rayburn Rd, 16,500 BTU Air Conditioner, 110
reasonablt rntrlcllons, water, Plug In, Very Nice, 614-256-6161
Information mailed on rtquesl, Evenings
304-675-5253.
4 pc Early Americ1n livlngroom
Land For Sa-: 16 Acres, $4,000, aulte, vary good cond, $300
Ntct VIew 0t Ohio Rivtr, Phone: 304-675-4587 during morning
614-367-7034.
hours
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Rentals
Washer~, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 614-446·7398, 1·
800-499-3499.
41 Houses for Rent
King 1lzt bedspread, rd tabla
2 or 3 bedroom house In cover, 2 pr Prlsclllas, all match ~
Pomeroy, 1300/mo., deposit 1nd lng, $85. 304·675-5022.
references required, 614·9853997.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compltll
home lurnlshings.
2Sdrm. ,ouse tor rent, heat HOUI"': Mon-Sal,
614·446•
pump, new carpet, large yard, 0322, 3 mllet out 9·5
Bulaville Rd
country 11ttlng In llashan, FrH Delivery
$250/mo. dtposit and releren·
ces r.qu 1rtd, 614-843-5135 after Maylag
wringer
woshar
6pm
wldouble rinlllubs, good cond,
1150. 304-675-1383.
3 Bedroom Brick located Cion
To Town $500. 3 Bedroom Naw Round O.k Tablo, (Claw
Ranch Located Approx. 0 Mil•• F11t, 2 l.etvH, 4 Oak Arrow·
From Town. $425 RetamtcH back Chalra) $795 Oak China
And
Doposll
Roquilod. Cabinets', Starting· $195. 614·
Wiseman Real Eslale, Inc. 614· 4-316.
446-3644.
Over stuffed mint grean love
3br, Gallipolis, Clost Church, teat I 1ofa, $500. like new, 304 ·
School,
Ubrary,
1326/Mo. 675-3893
Retaranct, Stcurlty O.posll
PICKENS FURNITURE
Roqulood. No Poto. 614-446-1734
New/Used
Mornings.
Household tumlahlng 112 mi
4 rooms &amp; bath, nice neighbor· Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleannl, WV,
hood, ,., &amp; dtp requintd, 304. coli 304-875·1450.
675-10N.
Refrlgtrator, Frost FrH, Top
House for rent In Pomeroy, r• FrMzor, St50; Aoklgorator, 2
qulrld security deposit, 304· Door, White, $95· Upright
1'73·9587 1f11r 9pm.
Froozor 5g5; 1,000 8Tu Air COn·
dHionor,
St25 14,000 BTU Air
Ntwtr 2 bedroom home, p~rtly Condltlono~
$.50; GE Wuhor,
tumlohod, hoo Dlltbldg, good
GE uryor, 195; llay1ag
cond, Joflcho Ad, 304-529-21105. 195;
Washer Uke Naw, $150; Electric
Rango, 30 Inch $95; Skaggs Ap·
42 Mobile Homes
plitncat, 76 Vlnt Stret~ New
1-loul"' 8--6 Monday Thru trlday;
lor Rent
I To 2 P.M. Saturday. 614·446·
2 bdrm. trailer nu.r Racine; 3 7398, 1-800-49g-3499.
bedrm trailer on Routt 143, :Zml. Solid wood 5 pc bedroom suite,
from Pomoroy,; 614·992·5858.
full 1111 Serta maHrtsl I
2 BR mobile hD"JI for ,.nt. Fur- opringo, $450 304-675-1504.
nished. 1100 dopl:lsH. Call after
SWAIN
6pm. 304-675-1512.
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 62
Two 2br, Mobile Homta, Olivo Sl., Goillpotlo. Now l Usod
Rtltrtnc.. A Dtipot:lt, R,. fumllure, h,alerw, We•t•rn &amp;
Wolft boolo. 614-441-3159.
qulrod. No Polo, l14-146-0527.

I

Livestock
,.....,..._,....,,...,.,......,...-2 Holsltln Halter Calves, 3
Months Old, 1450 For Both 614·
446-4053.

Hont Goostntck Trailer With
Two new 14" while aide wall 2Largo
·orooalng Room, Shaop,

Applo II Computor, With Prlntar,

Bassett Loveuat, Anllqua Sin·
ger Sewing Machine, Regulation
Size Ping Pong Table, camel
Brown Rocker, Recliner Chair,
Ch ina s ot, Elact .." c wtlod Eotor.
614·44U199.
Capoha~ AMIFM MPX B~rack
slereo
player,
turntable,
SIM!aktrs, plus tter.a/casstttt
adapter for 8-track, $40; 11..
992·3477:
Commercial Steel Garaga Door,
lnsulallon.J. El•ctric Opener!
12xt2. OXCII!Ont Condillon
$500 614-446-8613, 614·4464503

63

Tomeo Not. gao lurnaco, good
condition, StUD; 614·992-5706.
Twin llroller for SSO, 3 Lloyd
lawn cNira, $8 each, 614·992·
5194. •

3 Chivy truck ~.... 110, largo
wooden box wllld, $10; new
electric huter, $10; 614-992-7173
30 gallon llah aquarium with
heater and whisper fllttr, au llkt
new, $75, 614·7112-2795.
A&amp;K
Railroad
t.tattrlala:
Railroad Titl For Sale, State
Route 554, At Porter, Ohio, 614388-9iS46.
446-4005.

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

NewaHour

Ill

12,550; Big 1988 AOHA Serre!!
Golding, lncantln Fund, 11,500.
614-280-6522.
Reglattrld Angue cattle, 3 bulla,
3 !leiters, 1 cow. Priced upon
lnapoctlon. 614-llt2-3033
Roglstorad AppoiODII colt:
black with whitt. blanket 614448.0529
Regiatarld Poll Hertford Cow &amp;
Calt1 1 Roglsterad Yearling
Hailer, Dna 7 Month Old Bull
Colt. 614·258·1365.
Registered Quar1er Horse Mare,
4 yr old Ponlt Mare, 5 mo old
S1ud Colt, 304-675-4092.

a••·

Building
Supplies

24 x40xi two car garage: 2·9x7
stHI door1, 1·3' slHI entry, 2·
2xl window., Insulated root,
IDmflll gutter, trectld price
$8450·, 4Dx72x14 otora- barn:
·- 1·3'
1ax13 opllt olldlng door,
lliontry door, oroctod prico
$14 0; Precision Post Frame
Bu I trs, 614·992·3541 or 304·

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay lor sale, Round balea $20.
each, square balee $2. I up.
304-675-3960.
Mulch hay tor ule, 304-6715086.

1773-5348,:..::..::=.,·- - - - - - Block. brick, HWtr Pipet, windows, linltll, tic Claude Win·
lera, Ria Grandt, OH Call 614·
1.2 ;;.,4;.;;5.;;-51.;;2;.;;1'------I
56 Pets for Sale
Groom and Supplr Shop-Pal
Grooming All braads, stylas.
lama Ptl Food Deller. Julia
Webb. Call 614-446-0231
1===~~.:.:...:.::::..,.__
22 month female Cocker
Spanitl. whitt with buH spots,
AKC Registered, paid $:250,
oolll$t00, 614-1192-7138.

Old hoy In born 11 Richard
Glenn Abolo, 49780 Bold Knob/
Stlvarsvlne HOld farm Will sell
tor best otter, 614-949~264.
Round bales straw. approx 20
sq balos,l25. 304-675-2288
Want ad To Buy. Tobacco Stlcko,
&amp; Tobacco Batt To Be Transttr·
red To My Farm. 614-446-1052.

AKC Cockor Spaniel pup, 10
mos old, lemalt, $100. 304-Sn.
2223
1::::::;:.:·-=-.,---:-:-:-:--::-AKC Registered Almlata Pups,
$100 Eoch1.Excollont Bloodllno 2
......, 5 Months Old, 614·2566413.
I , - - - - - - - - -Booglo Pupo, 7 Waoilo Old, $30
Eoc~. 614-367.0108.
1-==:...::..:c.c.:.:.:.._ __ _
Copper•nosa Bllgle puppies,
12wkl. okl, Shott and wormed,
614-1112·31 14.
Dalmttlon puppies tor 1111, 3
mall pupplu to choose from
OOB: O'l15112. Contacl Carl
Hyooll, 614-992·5604.

1964 Corvalr Spider $500,
Toyota MRZ Pano Or Whole
Coro, Phono: 614·367·7034.
1977 Oldo 96, runs good, $1,100.
304-67S.Sg56 after 7:00PM.

Transportation
71

1978 Buick LISabrt, 61,000
Miles, runa great, 304-675·5951
after 5 OOPM.
1978 Camara, V-8, auto, air, naw
point, 304-675-2074.
1979 Chevrolet Plck.lJp, Front
Ends Bean Wrecked, $1,000. 614~
441-0618
1981 llonto cano Chevy, good
cond, no rust, 304-895-3480.

Drtgonwynd Clttary. CFA Per·
slana I Slamt11 Kittens. 614~
I446,:.::~-3::114;.;4;.::A:::ft::or:.;7;.::.0::D~p:::.m:::·:___

Harvest gold Glbson ret &amp; 30"
gas range, both $175 good HAPPY JACK CEDARCIDE: All
ccnd 19"83 Honda 110 three new organk: deodorizer and flta
wheeler S175 304-576·2610
rtpellant tor dogs &amp; doa beds
Biodagradable. R &amp; a Ft~d
Hospital typo bed rolls, adjuSis s~p::IY!:'.:61:.:4..:.gg::2::·21:::64.::...._.,-__
to hi twin to queen size beds, 1
1100, 614-992-5561.
Pot bolllad pig to good homo,
half litter trained, 4 monthl old,
Ken mora dryor, gold. good cond 1100, 304-773-5748.
needs pigtail $75 ;Jolitl brua 1-.c..:.:....:.:.:..c.c...;.;;;_ _ __
fireplace andirons $20. 304o67s. Pot Bally Pigs And Rabbht, 614·
2213
388-9345.
or

1974 Johnson Boat, 50 HP
Johnson Motor, $1,500 Good
Cond11ion, 614·44H025.

76

1967 327, B11n Bored 30 Ovar,
350 Transmission, $500. 614-441·
0618.
Budget Transmissions, Used I
rebu1n, starting 1t $99; front
wheel drive alar11ng at $119.00
6t4·245·56n, 614·379·2263.
C,rome bumper off 1989 Dodge
truck, very good condition,
$100, 614-992·7841
New gas tanks, body parts, one
ton truck wheels, radtaiDII,
lloor mats tic. D &amp; R Auto,
Rlploy, w'J. 304-372·3933 or 1·
aoo-273-8585
Rtbuill 360 Y8 motor tor 1973
Ford f·150 Air, lass than 3,000
mlltt. AlsoJ C6 transmission
614-992-5530.

79

trade,

axe cond $300. Franklin wood $100, 614-.,..2·2635 or 614·992·

burner never been used $250 5855,
614·446·9625
Roalllorad PH Bull pupo, ohoto
Like Naw 3 Speed Free- Spirit ana wormed, ready ln 4 w•ks,
B1cycl1 $80, 614-446-0893
now taking deposita, 614·992·
71121
Like New Ct\ltd's Red Wagon,
Wagon Master, $30. 6t4-446- Sunrlu Kennell, AKC Registered Chow Chow PuppJet, Cur·
0893
ront Phyolcal And Sholl, 614LlndSiy Wtter Conditioner &amp; 388-1121g.
Ban Iron, nttds repair, 150.
looks good, 304-518-2288.
S7
Musical
Movie camtfl and projector,
Instruments
$60; exerclu blkt, $35, amall
truck tod box, metal, $30; 614· For Salo: Usad Trumpet With
992-5282
Cou, 614-367-7424.
New (never uatd) push lawn S8
Fruits &amp;
sweeper $35 or lrad'e tor cheap
gun 304·675·6813 affor 5.00.
Vegetables
Naw Weight Bonch $30; !Fool
Half Moon Bar With Swivel Canning &amp; ..una lomaiOII,
Stoots, $40; Or But Otter, 614· .wHI. ,._ pepper-. ellv1r quttn
COI'fto $\ldozen, 2 112 mll11 on
379·2428
St . Rt. 246, Chootor, Ohio.
Old organ stool, $25; Cratlman
tool 1!1111, S~OL1 112 ton chain Canning tomatoee lor aalt, pick
come·a·long, J;,5; 614·992·7173. your ow~, $3/butilol, alooady
picked. ~lbushal, bring con~
On Sate now lntarlor flat latex talnooo, 614-247·2i61.
paint $9 .99 gal, uterlor flat
lomatoaa, $4/bushel
latex point S13.9g gal. 5 gal canning
picked, 13/buohol you pick,
alumn tlboratad polnl $25 Paint bring
contalntr, Marshall
Plus, 2415 J1ckson Ave, 304· Adams,ownUtart
Falla, 614~247·
675-40114.
2055.
Ont gallon atone jug, $7; Sliver OuHn Corn. Pick your
kitchen table, $10; nice tlactrlc
Bring own container. 35
heater, 110, Eurtka •weeper, S5, own,
Tycoon
Rtf., St. At. 554.114-245614·gg2·1173.
6134.
Patio lurnl1urt, couch I chair,
tablt &amp; 4 chalrt, gat grill. Clll VtiY nlct blut Hadlau grapet,
table, Jelly or Julct 50 cent1 lb.
614·448·0143
Min. 20 lba. SOON white &amp;. blue
Planet Junior Garden Cultivator, -dod gropoo.._ Lolly, julco or
good Briggs sldt shaft engine wino. 304"-675-31rJ2
on It, $25; 114·617~3282~
Plastic And MedaJI Culvert &amp;Inch
Farm Supplies
Thno 80 Inch In Stock Ron
&amp; Livestock
Evano, Jock-, Ohio. 1-80053~g528.

Aodki ond TV tubol, 12"
opoako~1 $50; lolthll w.,k
sh-, ..; boby owing, $5; 114- 61 Farm Equipment
367-7729.
135 MF Tractor, 700 Houro,
Room alzo air condlt'-, good Shorp, 180 MF 011111, Nlco; 285
tor compor or tmlll apartmont IIF Wfth Loodor; 65 MF With
$10; 114-992-7138.
' Buth Hog 114·288-1522

f

Stereo

NORTH
• A 10 4

8RIDGE

!;I

U3

Ill

e
e

E!!!ft181nlltlnt Tonight
stereo.~
Ill Moma'a F111tlly
1111111 WIIHI ot Fonune Q
i121e FomiiJ Feud
aD le o Star Stereo.
0
Luaue laHball

-

1\!fiOr

!Ji ir.ooaftrw

7:35 Ill Sanford • Son
I:G0&lt;2Je 11J Unootv.ct
Mrllefllo Real-lila felony
cases and unclaimed
fortunaa ere explored. (A)
Stereo. C
()) MOVi!l Tho Right Stull
(PI 1 ol 2) (PG) (2:00)
Ill
(I)
Wonder
Kevin and Wlnn~ help eaCh
other get dates tor the spring
formal. (A) Stereo. Q

e

ALLEYOOP

e

y..,.

CD I!J PQJNBC

Covlrqe/1192 Norr Political

Convention Tom Broltaw,
Robart MacNeil and Jim

~ehreriam up lor tills news

event.

ille

e MOVIE: 'Tho

~Team' CIIS Movie
~I (PG13) (2:00) Stereo.

ar.

a.verty 80210
Dylan ond Kelly decide to
keep their romance a secret

1977 Chtvy Coachman Motor·
home, Class C, 21 h., must sta
to appreciate, trades considered, 614-742~2219 .

~r~

1978 Nomad Sen Contained
With A C. 614-367·7465
1981 25 Ft COachman Otluxe
(Put1)1 _Extra's, Excellent Condl·
lion, ... ooo. 614-446-3750
1987 Nomad 24h trailer $8,000
like now, 304-675-3353.
1991 Jayeo roll~up camper,
delux series, awning, battery,
$3,000 304·882·2625.

a~ a!:"'Chow:- Q
c

Qlllepubtlcan Nollonal
Convention (3:00)
~ llonenu: Tho r:Git

WHER€.'D

l-1t: ro

rr...

Willi Love (2:30)

How-.

1:30(1). (1). Doogle
M.D. Ooog~ saves the life of
Q"Y~ rider (A) Stereo.

Star Craft Por,.Up Camper Has
Air Condition ng, Haw Canvas,
&amp; New T1rts, 61(.256-1 385

o Salnleld
Post.Qiymplc Prev~w)

t.oo!IIe

Gaclf!!l and Jerry are
quea

Services

. (PI 2 of 2)

Stereo.

Home
Improvements

YOW OCIN'T KA.'v'a

MY UNCL£ E!a&lt;r

eveRY HOUR, A WHALE

POPe cur AND taLJRSLC$

TO WIND IT. •• IT
I&lt;UNe OJ WA-n:R.

80LJ6HT~ER
N~WQ.OCK.

THS TI,MS.

we •Jill
lmpro_,
sets up a
pottery class In Tim's
gar~gt. (R) Stereo. E;!
llll• Mtlroee Ptoce Sandy
gets a job In a slasher movie;
Billy tricks AIISOII. Stereo. !;I
II) MOVIE: Lldyklller (2:001
Stereo. C
8 Nllllt\llte Now Stereo.
Scarwcrow oncl Mre. King

e

e

'

9:30 (2)
IIJ Wingo He~n. Joe,
Brian and Lowell try out a
vldeo-d~[lg service (A)
Stereo.

!'

Ill •

• Amtlllng

lle!Mtvtor Officers Bill and

BARNEY
HE'S
COMIN' TO

The big sleep
is costly

HOWDY,
Doc

COLLECT!!

Oonny are decOys In 1
prostitute-sting operation
Stereo. Q
10:00 (2). 1m O.Ciolon '12: TIMt
Rtpubllcon Natlaltal
ConVH!Ion U\'11 coverage of
the 1992 Republican National
Convanllort from Houston.
(1 :00)

By Pbiltip Alder
Professor Noam Chomsky wanted
to wnte a sentence that was grammatically correct, yet had no meantog He produced "Colorless green
tdeas sleep fur1ously "
Most of the ttme at the br1dge table,
11 doesn't pay to sleep, whether fun ously or calmly You must keep your
eyes and mmd awake. There are a few
hands you can make "in your sleep,"
but moot of the t1me a qutet nap wtll
prove expenstve
,
North's biddmg sequence showed
exactly what he had a good stx-card
club sutt wtlh about 10 htgh-card
pomts It ISn't clear what South should
btd now - tf anythmg - but three notrump suffers from two dtsadvan·
tages. South doesn't hold a guaranteed
spade stopper, and the smgleton club
ace blocks the sutt The b1d would be
much better tl South held two clubs
and one fewer dtamond
West led a spade to East's kmg, and
he returned a spade to declarer's
queen South unblocked the club ace

ACROSS
1 Irishman, e.g.
5 Whale
9 Tiny amount
12 Actor
llfonland
13 Inter-:
among
olhtrs
14 Wood sorrel
15 Uon'a nack
hair
16 Unt on map
18 Sltndtr
plnnocle
19 Mra.ln
Mad~d

20 Young hawk
21 Hamburger
garnish
23 Hurry
25 Tanar
26 ContecUon
30 Boutonnl11e
32 Jungle anolte
33 Al~lnt Into
34 Friend

1 Plont pa~

2 Turn to 1111
3 Sl. Pettraburg, onco

Night 111M Movtn (2:00)

C

1J 700 Cfub With Pat
Rab1rtlon
10:30. On 8taae
leHball Tonight
10:35 Ill MOYIE: Maximum
OVitdll.. (R) (2:00)

a

YDUr 10genU1ty regarding ways to make
or save money - for vour associates,
as well as lor yourself - could be rather
lmp&lt;esslve In the year ahead. Put your
gills to use to brighten the financial
future.
LEO (July 23•Aut. 221 The basis lor a
solid relationship can be established
w1th a verbal ayreement today Howe~­
er, weigh your words carefully when
making your proposal. Trytng to patCh
up 8 broken romance? . The Astro·

Graph Matchmaker can help you under- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) A potenstand what to do to make lhe relation- ttally diHtcult development can be pia·
shiP work Ma11 $2 plus a long, sell- cated today through the eHorts of a loyaddressad , stamped envelope to al ally who IS w1111ng to work on your
Matchmaker. clo this newspaper. P 0 behalf Let th iS tr~end get tnvolved.
BOK 91428 , Cleveland, OH 441G1-3428
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) It's been
VIRGO (AUfl. 23-S.pt. 22) Try to chan· said that "Noce guys l1nlsh last. " How·
nel your artistic urgesloday toward the ever , you can disprove this axiom today
beautification ot your surroundings by achieving your objectives through
Ne11hor you nor others w1ll tire of the fa1rness to others
touches you'll add.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 11) YDU might
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The conver- not have all the ideas yoursell today. resattonal buzz humming behind your garding how to gel things done . but you
back today will be complimentary Sev- Will have access to others who can till In
eral friends who know you well will be the missing pieces.
exlqlllng your virtues.
TAURUS (April 20-MitJ 20) Success tn
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~NoV. 22) You can be your endeavors Is probable today, you 'll
very clever at this time In moving your know how to use your Imagination and
resources around In ways that make It resourcefulness to skirt obstructions
possible tor you to get things you Impeding your progress
lhought you couldn't aHord
GEMINI (MIJ 21·Juna 20) Associates
SAGtnARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) If wtll lind you an exhilarating ally today;
you're sailing ptoducta whiCh you truly yDU'II set the type ot example t~ot will
believe In, thla could be a rewarding day encourage tnem to utilize their aneta.
tor yo.u Sincerity Is the lngredlant that ·too
closes the sale
CANCER (June 21-JUIJ :12) YDUr apCAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jon. 11) Don't proach to managing another's compll·
be reluctant 10 make concessions today cated business problema will be Clever
- it you feel they can better your posl· and ettecll"'. You may even receive a
tlon . You 'll get most of what yDU want, modest reward 'or your eHorte.
but not everyThing.

11:GO!IIe llle we

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortb

2•
3.
Pass

Opemng lead • 6

L--------- --J
and playe&lt;J oft three rounds of hearts
East won the last of these wtlh the 10.
cashed the heart queen and ext ted wtth
the dtamond Jack However South
wnggled, he couldn't come to mne
tncks
As often happens, declarer was dozing peacefully at trtck one Under
East's spade kmg he should have un·
blocked the queen What can East return' If a su1t other than spades, the
spade ace sttll stts tn the dummy as an
entry to the club wmners. And tf East
plays back a spade, declarer wms m
the dummy. cashes the second top
spade and dtS(artls the club ace.

©

t-

MIWPAPB INTIIIPitlll Allfl.

9 Comedian
Blahop
stonoo
tO Vegetable
8 Uontssln
1t Caps
Born Froe
17 Listen to
7 Unclo (Sp.J
19 Comforted
8 Conaume
22 Charged
atom
23 Animal toot
24 Baseball
game
divisions
25 Mar,le genus
26 Swmmlng
aids
27 Humlllatton
28 Unimportant
person
29 Film director
Jacques31 Male cats
35 Brought
about
37 Paradise
40 Beginning
41 Swear
42 Needle case
43 Pull to plecot
to
'llr+-1-+--+~ 44 Additions
houses
46 Cut
48 Sign at tell·
out (abbr.j
49 Debtor's note
50 Thing In law

Clyde: Tho TRM Slary' Fox

Stereo.

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soutb
1•
2.
3 NT

4 M10- lung
5 Heap or

DOWN

lllle MOVIE: 'Bonnie oncl

Aug. 20, 1992

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer South

36 Buya back
38 JaponeaeAmtrlcen
39 Collage dtg.
40 City In Utah
41 Wax
44 Annapolla
gr1d
45 Mounlalno
(abbr.)
4 7 lmploments
50 Harntll port
51 Hoavenly
body
52 Function
53 GraHtd, In
htrlklrr,
54 Comad1n
CaONr
55 Expol
56 Eye lnlecUon

the 1992 Rapubllcon National
convention from Houeton.
Texas. (1 :00)

'fl.l!jJ/'Birthday

.A

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

coverage Uva coverage o1

'

tKJl09
• 76

SOUTH
.Q2
.AK763
tA7642

I

(I). ill).
Repultlk:an Con-'kln

(IJ •

tft'Your

EAST
• K75
• Q LO 9 5

.

=·

())NewoC

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

WEST
.J9863
.J2
tQ5
.9542

Eplaodeo

1:05 Ill MOIJIE: From Ruoalo

LODI&lt;Y WHO'S
COMINr!!

PHILLIP
ALDER

7:30~!.:~=""' Q

THI5 IS GOING TO TAlC~
FOI'EII~f1/ C.Ar-J'T vJE MAICEIT NON· EuCJ..IPIAN J

I

.KQJL083

a

FRANK AND ERNEST

l·ll·tl

• 84

" 8portiCentir
lnalcll , _ . '12
~ Tho Wallono
7:05 Ill Iaverty Hlllblllleo

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

&amp;14· 1:-:---:-U..:p~h.,..,..,.e;.,.ry.:...;

•

IIJ MocCJJVWQ

1970 Phoenix Travel Tra1ltr
/Camper, Sen Contained. 17 Ft
$950 614·446-2011

81

Q.

e Mantoel ... With
Enterlllln~~~~nt Tonlgh1

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Bernett Home Improvements.
Room Addl11ono, Gmgn Exterior &amp; Interior Palntrng; Ex·
1983 · UncOfn Town Car, Air ptrlenced, lnawld Loeatld LoSter.o1 All Power! Sllv•r With cally. 614-446-8588,
Black uat Fuel In . Auto, Over·
BASEMENT
drlvo Top, Excollant Condlllon,
WATERPROOFING
New Tires, New Battery, Very
Uncondltlonll llfttlmt guartnCloanl 13,200 614-448-3561.
tH. Loc11 rtferencn lumlshed
1983 Olds Della 88 Royale FrH ntlmatu. C.ll coiled 1·
98,000 Mllu, 11,700. 614-446· 614-231.()488, day or night.
Rogert BaHmtnt Waterproo4523 Affor 5 PM
fing
1986 Sulek LtSabrt Umlled, All
Options, Low Mileage 614-446· CUI1i1 Henne lmprovemtnts.
Yaara Ex:perltnct On Older &amp;
9284 Altar 6:00
Newer Homat. Room Addillone,
1986 ChevtUt PS, PB, 1ilt, 1lr, Foundation Work, Rooting
auto, real clean car, no rust, 1 Kltchena And Baths. Fr.. Ea:
owner, 304-6J5.1564.
tlmatesl RlfarencH, No Job
1888 Dolta 88 Oldo, local ownlf, Too Big Or Smolll614-387.0516.
oxc. cond. $5195. 614.o\46-3968 O.vlo SIVring Machlno And
after&amp; p.m.
Va~uum CINner Repair, FrH
Plck·Up
And Dollvory, Go"'goo
1186 Dodge Arl11: air, crul11,
good cond., $1,600. 614-44f.. Cretk Road, 014-446.0204.
9552.
JET
Motora, repaired. New
1988
Oldsmobile
Aoyalt lA1111lon
r•bullt moron In llock, RON
Brougham 2 Door, Black, EVANS,
JACKSON, OH . 1-800Loaded, 75,000 Mlln, Excellent 537-g528.
Condftlonl $4,995. Phono. 614·
446·7479, 614-446-4223.
Ron'a TY Servlct1, SPICiallzing
In
Zlnlth 1110 11rvlclng mosl
19a6
Oldsmobllo
Royale other
House c:alla, also
Brougham V-6, AC, P~, PB, PW, aom• brande
appliance l'lpalra. WV
Power Slats, AMIFM Stereo 304-678-2396
OhiO 614-448-24&amp;4.
Cassette. Loaded! AU Black,
111,000 lllloo. 15995. Coil Pat Saptlc Tonk Pumping IN, Golllo
Boyer 614-448-7479, 614·446- Co.' RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
4223.
Jacklon, OH I-800-53HB21. '
1987 Dodga, PB, PS, outo, Trlj&gt;lo Roollng oil typos &amp;
35/mpg 11,850. 1987 Plymouth rtpalra, nmocfellng, d.:ks tct
Horizon, 40 mpg. AJC, $995 304· Ouallly Wotk. frH attlm'atll
675-2440
WVD20386, 304-67S-552g.
'
1987 Ford Bro!!_C01 good cond , Will build poliO covooo, docks,
$4750; 1 1987 uoag• Daytona, ICrtenld rooms, put up vlnyt
$2500i 1984 5·10 Blazer, $3000; siding or trailer skirting. 614614·992·11167.
245-11152.
1981 Ford Mustang GT, 5!,000
m1111, good cond., $6,850. 614· 82
Plumbing &amp;
448·13D4
Heating
1g88 Ford Eacon GT, Black,j---;:=:::;:--;::-.;.:--Loodod, 614-448-2300
Cartoo'o Plumbing
Fourth and Plna
O•lllpolls, Ohio
1981 Dodao Coravon LE AC,
Elootrlc Windowo, 4 Cyllndar,
614-448-3888
75,000 Mlioo, 19,000 614-446- l - - - - - - - - 2125.
1991 Chivy Corslco, 4dr, 84
Electrical &amp;
IUiomallc, alrbag, AC, IXCIII1n1
Refrigeration
condlllon, 36•000ml., aoklng !;;-::;:::::::::--=~:.:;:.:;~~
$8000, IM-14i~i34anytlme.
Rtaldtntlal or commercial
wiring, new ~~Nice or repair•.
19G1 MUitang LX, 4c~l, 6500 M1ster UcenHd alectricl•n.
mlln,loodad, 114-992-5082.
Rldonour Eloctricol, WV000306
304-675-1711.
•
72 Trucks for Sale
11174 Chmolll 3/4 Ton Plck·Up 85 General Hauling
Dump St~OO Or Trodo for ()uns
Do Houllng Ailmo
Or Opan Valve Boat, 1514·256· Wo
Anyplace, No Job Too
ol •
6434
Too LHtlo. Baoornonl Cl ntng, ;
Work, Anr Kindt 61~
1982 Chovy Silverado 4x4, now General
'
350, auto, tlr, tin, AMIFM caaa, 378-227a Any11mo.
tlntod 1111o, 304.ag5-301t.
87
0 181
1985 Chivy 4x4, 6 2 Dluol
__
448-BilM.
llowroy'o Upholllorlng oorvlc·
lng trl countr anoo 27 yurL Tho
Chovroltl, Ford, Dodgo- plckuf. bolt In lumhuro uphotllorlng.
bado. Short or long. No rut . Coli 304-871-4154 tor lr• 01•
304-675-6286.
thnaln.

Ftmale Pure Blooded Beagle, 11
w::,::•:::ili:.:S40::=
.0.:0.:61::4:.:4::46::7730:.:::__
1
FIM Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, 304-e75-2063,
full lint Tropic11 flahl ~rdt,
emallaniJMis and auppll&amp;.

King wood/coal ttova wlblower Rabbit Beagle tor sale

Autos lor Sale

12 ft V bottom boat, 1! h trailer,
4hp Evenrude molor, trolling
motor, Mlnkota, 304-675·7413.
16Ft. Invader, open bow, excellent condition, t1lt trailer, 1op,
75hp Chry tnglne truns but
needs w01k), $1350, 614-949·
2185.

"Daddy • asked the little gtrl "do all la1ry tales start w1th
Once upon a t1me?' "No dear ." lhe dad replted. sometim es
they start w1th ' If I am ELECTED '

m~=IQ
IDe

1·18 Ft. aluminium canoe.
$395.00 Excellence condition.
614-446·1615 Or 614-446·1243

tlroo on rims tor $75, 614·992·
5ao3 or 614-992-7075.
Two atorm windows,. $10; Slone
jug, $7; olono !OfOCk, $5;_GE.CB
wiTh 1nlenn1, $30; '14·9112-7173
Water Heater Sala 52, 40, 30 Gal·
lon tltctric and 40 Gallion
NaiUrll
YouN choice.
$159.95 Womotdortt I Thomas
Hafttwara. 614--44&amp;.o9&amp;5
Woodbumlng Stove For Salt,
614·241-51143.

&amp; Disks, $500 Or Best otter, 614-

Fumlshed Apl 1br, $235/Mo.
UtiiHIII Paid, 607 Second
Avonuo, Gallipolis. 614-446-4418
Afler?p.m

45

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Calves · Ltmtt · Weave · Parade · ELECTED

Ill e1n1~~~e Edrton c
CD (f) MacNeii/LthiW

:2 BR apartmenta In Mlddt.port,

GraciO&lt;Js living. 1 ond 2 bad·
room apar1men11 at Village
1973 12x60 Peerless Like Ntw, Manbr
1nd
Rlvarslct.
Through Out Now Carpet, New Apenments In
Middleport.
Doors, Gas Heat,$6,950 6t4· 1196. Coll614-992-7787. EOH.From
446.0175
N. 41h Avo, Mlddlopo~. Ohio. 2
1975 Windsor 12x65, total alec, room
ttflcltncy apt, utilitln
$3,700 304-675·3698
paid, deposit &amp; rei 304·882·
1982 Windsor 14x70, 2 · bed· 2566.
rooms, CIA, total alec, under· One bedroom furnished apt,
penning, 8x20 treated wood vary clean &amp; nice, no pgts, 304.
porch, 8x20 alumn awmng &amp;
railing wfscrolls, everylhmg exc 675-1386.
cond, ont owner, 304·675·5149.
Ont tum'ed , On• untum'ad:
4 rooms I bath. No pets,
t987 14x72 On Rtn1ed Lot, Heat each
qulot.
Pump, Storage Building, Undtr· 0444 Ral. &amp; Sec Dop 614-446plnnlngJ. lncludtd, 6t4-446-8706
After 4 I"'.M
Wodgo Aptt, 506 Burdotto St,
Polnl
Pleasant, no pets, 1 and 2
1989 Skyline mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
304-675·2072 aher
baths, 2 bedrooms, 304-675· 5.00
3397.
f
1991 Sunshine 14x70, 2 Bad.
rooms, 2 Baths, CA, Low Price'
614·379·2590, 614·379-2840.

8•18

=•

@Newa
())Tilt Koner(l) N•••walch

IIJ New Mike Nlmmar

8 Croalt ond CltiH
Dlpa IIIC.tler

aCon-'1011
Ropullllaon Nlllonll
Wllp-Up (0:30)
~

lll1mln

11:30 ~ ~ Nlaht In

2f"" 1112

(0:30) Stereo.

11:.=.9

'NDIOA

' COftwentlon CoWIIIII Uve

con111f1119n=
, (O:o16)
Ql Clpllll

Ill MOVII!:
11 :311 (2)

e

IJold 12:00)
11J Tonlgii!IIIOW Willi

tr.~.Q

'R.

a.n-

11:00 Ill '• """
AIWiki Nil Stereo.

il LaW li'r· Pn IIIOW

8 Naill• Now~·

•

N H B 0 L

LSPPDKDOUD,

woao
XZD

XZ D
DOL

LRDF

DOL

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I X

NCX
R p

XZD

a

WI I D

LRDFO ' X

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UKDIXIYD

VKIIUDFF.

L.OI
DHUIK.
PAEVIOUS SOLUTION: "Some peraona make promlaea tor tho pleasure of
breaking them " - William Hazlltt.
e t"2 "' NEA. one.

19

••

----------------------------------~- ~
;

'

�OhiO

COCA·COLA·.
PRODUCTS

Lowly Phils
jolt Reds 9-3

12 PAK 12 OZ. CANS .

STORE HOURS

s

Mo"day fhw Sunday
8 AM-10' PM

.

298 SECOND ST .
. ' . POMEROY, O'H.
'· .
Wi RESERVE .THE .RIGHT TO LIMIT ·QUANTITIES .
PitiCES . . . SUN., AUGUST 16 TliRU AUGUST 22

.,

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

566
Pick 4:

3837
Super Lotto:
11-12-22-23-43-44
Kicker:
923749

Page 4

69

SUNSHINE

DOG
FOOD

Vol. 43, No, 83
CoprrlghiOd 1V92

Bush to accept GOP
nomjnation tonight

s
Pork R1bs. . . . . . . . . . . .1a.

129

HOTDOG
SAUCE
10 oz.

Bologna. . . . . . . . . . . . . LB.
Pic·o·Chick.._.._.,_La. 89c
KA~N'S

~Pork Loin...........-.11. s149 Sliced Bacon.~~~-·~~·
.USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast.. . . . . . .LB.
KY. BORDER

Wieners. . . . . . . . . . . . .12 oz.

$139

s

Scioto County, Ohio officials are
looking for physical evidence to
indict a second Mason County man
in the murder of Lewis Michael
Oliver, 40, of Hendewn.
Jim Shaw, assistant prosecuting
auomey in Scioto County, said
Ohio authorities do not have the
physical evidence required to convict Worthy G. Siders Jr., 47, of
Henderson, of aggravated murder.
. Siders was arrested .in February
with David L. Lanham, 50, of Point
Pleasant on fugitive warrants from
Ohio. Lanham was arraigned and
extradicted to Ohio. Siders refused
ll!fllignmenL
.
.
Lanham was found guilty of ag·
gravated murder with a firearms

SAUSAGE
5 OZ. CAN

s

.

79· (

and banrered with reporters.
In an apparent reference to congressional reluctance to approve
many of his proposals, Bush said
his big speech would contain "a lot
of ideas that haven't been tried;
that makes them new."
Asked ff he would propose a tax
cut, Bush jokingly thumbed
through his speech. "It must be in
here somewhere," he said. Aides
discounted talk of any bold stroke
to revive the sluggish economy at

the root of Bush's political troubles.
Not long afrer Bush left the ball
for a prayer breakfast, the government released another dose of bad
economic news - and bad politi·
cal news for Bush. Weekly unemployment claims were at a 10-year
high. Clinton was up early too,
heading to campaign in Michigan
afrer saying a change at the White
House was the IDnic the economy
Continued on page 3

Evidence sought by Scioto
officials for Siders indictment

ARMOUR
VIENNA

$169
·

HOUSTON (AP) - President
Bush accepts his nomination for
four more years in tonight's
Republican convention finale, the
staning gate for a 75-day sprint to
November against Democrat Bill
Clinton amid a national yearning
for change.
The president was up early, vis·
iting the Astrodome to tour the
speaker's podium where he will
·appeal to the nation tonight for a
second tenn. Bush smiled, waved

VIETTI

$149

ECKRICH

2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo 25 oonto
A Multlmodio Inc. Newopopor

. Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ, Thursday, August 20,.1992

20 LB.·BAG '

FRESH BUTT Sl!AKS or COUNTRY STYLE$

Low tonight In mld·SOs.
Friday partly cloudy. High In
80s.

This old fashioned
carousel at the Meigs County
Fair (above) attracts plenty or
riders: Here nte Ashton
Bush, three year old daughter
or Kenna and Kathy Bush or
Pomeroy, prepares: ror yet
another ride on her favorite
horse. Ah, the run or fair time!
Meanwhile, Joyte Ann
Sauters (right) Is into the·more
serious side or the fair. Win·
nlng ribbons! In 1991 she took
the blue ribbon ror the best
display or garden produce at
the Meigs County Fair, and
this year made hersell a twotime winner. But there was
more. Sauters won 20 first
places in the horticulture and
rarm crops classes. As the
week rolls along the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds contin·
ues to rock with activit!. from 7 in the morning 'Ill 11
at night through Saturday,
when the 1Z9th Meigs County
Fair closes. See story on page
12. (Pbotos by Charlene Hoe·
nicb)

DR·.

or 7·UP
2 Uter Bottle

CARNATION

/

specification by a Scioto County November 8, 1991, wben he reporjury last week. His sentence was tedly got into a vehicle with Siders
life plus three years. Lanham will and Lanham.
Extensive inquiries on the
be eligible for parole in 20 years.
vehicle reportedly used in the mur·
Siders was held in the Mason der have been made, Shaw said.
County Jail for 92 days awaiting Authorities are also looking for the
extradition or indictment. He was gun and Oliver's clothing.
Shaw said ·Scioto County
released in May after Scioto
County did not lake any action on authorities would like to be able to
indict Siders. He added it was
the case.
pretty
clear that Lanham did not
Acconling to Shaw, Ohio law
work
alone
in the murder.
prohibits Siders from being convicShaw encouraged anyone with
ted on Lanham's testimony. During
a taped confession before his arrest, statements or any information on
the case to contact SciotD County
Lanham implicated Siders.
authorities.
He said if there are any
. Oliver's nude body !&lt;as found
leads,
authorities
are ready to fol·
February 15 in a field in Franklin
low
them
up.
Fumance, OH. He was last seen

EVAP. MILK
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Commissioners review grant applications
Wedne,sday was the deadline for
1992 Community Development
Block Grant application submission, and a list of app)ications ·was
reviewed at the regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioriei'S.
The following JI!Oject applica·
tions will pe cons11lere4 for fund·
ing: Scipio Volunteer Fire Depan·
ment for fire equpment, $7,189.42;
Meigs Soil Conservation Service
for nine dr)! fife hydrants, $6,435;
Senior Citi:i:ens Center for a Hot·
shot meal delivery vehicle $24,308;
Bashan Volunteer Fire Deparunent
for frre equipment, $3,120; Rutland
Village for water line replacement
on Mullberry, College, Hill, long,
and Locust Streets, $36,912.15;
Middleport Village for sidewalk
and curb installation on North Sec·
ond, $21,724; Letart Township
Trustees for paving of Manuel
Road, Rowe Road and Mill Hill
Road, $1 5,786.93; Sutton Township Trustees for paving of Coun
Street, $21,391.28; Tuppers. Plains·
Chester Water District for exten·
sion of water lines at Pageville,
$58,000.
.
Project applications for this year ,.
total $194,866.78. $100,500 i$
available for CDBG projects, with
a maximum of six pro1'ects to be
funded. The board wil announce
on September 9 which of those projects· will be submiued to the state
with recommendation for funding.
The board also approved two
resolutions on behalf of the Meigs
County Metropolitan Housing
Authority, authorizing the agency
to apply for housing funding on ·
behalf of the board.
Present were Commissioners
David Koblentz, M~nning K.

;

1

TOP
above are, from left,
grand champion market bog winner Amanda
Wheeler and reserve champion Andy Reed. In

the rear are, rrom lel't, Meigs County Junior
Fair King Bobby Johnson, queen Bobbie White
and livestock princess Lisa Hoffman.

Junior fair para4e
big hit at Meigs fair

HAPPINESS IS • bugging a i.mb. Jlllt Ilk Veronlb Rickard,
4, or New Haven W.Va. Veronlb, dl•l~ of Llu Rickard, ~­
tlclpated in the ''pee-wee" lamb shoW darlaa WedHidjly Dl&amp;bt s
Junior Fair Sheep Show. The Jamb, lndden~ly, belonp 10 Ierocl
Cook or Pomeroy. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
·

The Meigs County Junior Fair
PBlllde was held Tuesday afternoon
on the mcetrack at the fairgrounds.
Top floats in the parad~ were
Chesler Boy Scout Troop 235, third
place; Han:isonville 4-H, second
place, and Girl Scout Troop 1309,
fust place.
Also participating in the parade
were the 1991 Meigs County Fair
Queen, 1992 Meigs County Fair
Queen and King, 1992 Mason
County Fair Queen, Little Mister
and Little Miss, Alfred.Livestock,
Pioneers 4-H, Pomeroy. Brownie
Troop, Middleport Boy Scout
Troop 245, Chester Cub Scouts,
Chester Brownie Troop, Letart
Junior and Brownie Troops, Cub ·
Scout Troop 249, Meigs High
School Band, Pleasure Riders and
Young Riders.

.,

•

1

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