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                  <text>Monday,

Ohio

Sentinel

31,1992

Ohio Lottery

Canseco
traded to
Texas nine

School's back in session and in
the excitement of the new school
year, many school-age children,
especially the young ones, may
forget to look both ways when
crossing the street or exiting the
school bus.

Pick 3:

966
Pick 4:
8533

PageS

IS ILilVII:nABYI
Back-to-school
time is the
perfect time
to give
all school-age

That leaves it up to you as a
driver, to be extra careful around
schqolyards, neighborhood play
areas, and departing school buses.

aI
Val. 43, No. 91

Copyrighted 1192

to revtcw these
saftcy bastes
W1th your child.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The role of the village council in
Pomeroy's downtown revitalization
program was the topic of last
night's regular meeting of the
council.
John Musser, President of
Pomeroy's revitalization commit·
tee, and Mike Stroth, a consultant
with SBA Consultants of Jackson,
approached the board for fmancial
support to the rune of $10,000.
That sum would be used to
develop Pomeroy's revitalization
plan, a document required for sulr
mission of an application for revitalization grant monies.
Stroth also distributed the

your child
knows NEVER
w accept a rldc
from someone
he or she docs
P.ot k now well.

2. Show your
child how to
usc the
telephone to
summon help .

3. Teach your child to recite hlB or
her full name, stree t address and telc·
phone number. For prc·schoolcrs,
fastening thls information insldc a
jacket ls a good Idea.

results of merchant and consumer
surveys relating to the downtown
business district, and described the
survey results as more positive than
expected.
"Things aren't as bad as I've
heard them portrayed," Stroth said.
"The problems that Pomeroy's
merchants are facing are not insur·
mountable."
All businesses in the "interior"
section of the business district were
surveyed, Stroth said. That district
includes all businesses from
Sycamore Street to Butternut
Avenue, and from Main Str~el to
Second Street. Not mcluded rs the
river side of Main Street or the
counhouse side of Second StrccL

166 consumer surveys were community is, where it's going and
completed during June's Heritage how to get there."
Weekend, and the results of that
No action was taken by council,
survey were also included in and Mayor Bruce Reed offered to
Stroth's presentation.
contact business owners who had
.$2.2 million is available through not been contacted for donations to
the downtown revitalization pro- ihe project before pledging total
gram, and Pomeroy will be eligible funding support from the village.
10 receive up to $400,000 in· matcb" I thmk there's too much mk
ing funds. The deadline for filing involved for the village to pledge
grant applications is February I. _., $10,000," Reed said. "We just
The $10,000 requ~sted from the , can't afford to put $10 000 into the
village would fund the develop· , plan in hopes or' receiving
ment plan, which Stroth described $400 ()()()"
last night as a "roadmap" for revi·
R~ed ;aid ihat he would wrile
tali~on wotk.
.
letters asking for financial support
Thts plan would d1agnose the from businesses who had not been
situation in downtown Pomeroy," contacted or who have been unwill·
Stroth said, "Jelling us where the ing to support the project

7. ReVIew your chlld' s h ome/school rou te
together choosing th e most populated
path. Avoid Isola ted and hcavtly wooded
areas, when possible.

5. Remind your child to always look
both ways before crossing the street.

Smith·Nelson Motors, Inc.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2174

KING HARDWARE
992-5020

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

OHIO

992·2104

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6472

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2635

POMEROY, OHIO

SUGAR RUN MILLS
POMEROY, OHIO

992·2115

THE DAILY SENTINEL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3394

BAUM TRUE VALUE
CHESnR, OHIO

985·3301

992-2155

POMEROY, OHIO

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
992·3471

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN·MUSSER
.
.
INSURANCE
992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

VAlLEY LUMBER AND
SUPPLY COMPANY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

992·6611

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
992·5479

992·6128

POMEROY, OHIO

Ill COURT ST.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Me-

YourBank~~·-

TOP BUYER • Buyers were recognized at
Saturday night's Annual Livestock Buyers. Ban·
quet held in the Eastern High School gymnasi·
um. The single largest buyer at the !29th Meigs
County Junior Fair Livestock Sale - 27 animals •
was Farmers Bank and Savings Co. New bank
president, Paul Reed, front, and other bank personnel, were joined for a picture with the youth
from whom they purchased animals. Left to
right, the group includes, front, Andrew Roltins,
and Alison Rose, with Donna Schmoll, Betsy

FDIC

LAMBERT INSURANCE AGENCY
SALLY LAMBERT, AGENT
992·6641

OHIO

HOME NATIONAL BANK
992·2210
RACINE, OHIO

Member

FDIC

. 992-6333
SYRACUSE, OHIO

MEIGS COUNTY LIBRARY
POMERY, OHIO

216 W.MAIN
'I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- As
attention is focused on cl~anup
efforts in Louisiana and Florida,
the State Controlling Board has
released $5.3 million in state and
federal grants for help in II storm·
damaged counties closer to home.
The money, approved Monday,
will help about 500 people who
sustained propeny loss from flood·
ing and wind damage in storms
across Ohio July 12-Aug. l.
In other action, the board
approved $79,899 to help pay for a
computerized system that would
enable truck drivers to travellmer·
state 75 from Canada to Florida
without making as many stops at
weigh stations.

SWISHER LOHSE PHARMACY
POMEROY, OHIO

992·2955

Heritage House /Locker 219 .
992·5627

OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OH.

992·7075

992·5177

GUYELY TUCTOR
SALES AND SERVICE
POMEROY, OHIO

Patrol probes pne-car accident

STATE FARM IN·SU
I

992·6685

MIKE SWIGER

· chase of gasoline and oil products
from Ashland Oil (H.W. 10 oil,
transmission fluid, muJti.Jube lithi·
urn and diesel fuel) and from B.P.
(unleaded gasoline and fuel oil).
Also approved was the purchase of
tires and tubes from Malone Tire
Warehouse (lubes and radial
tubes), Ohio Valley Tire Outlei
(new tires ) and D&amp;J Tire
(tetreads).
The board approved the pur·
chase of dairy produ cts from
Broughton Fonds Company and the
purchase of bakery items from
Storck Bakery Company .
A contract with LCI!nternational (Lilel) with their America Plus
Plan for long distance service was
approved.
Continued on page 3

Meigs resident coordinates
food drive for Andrew victims
WATH Radio with Mike Alexan·
dra the coordinator. Upon arrival in
Florida the Salvation Army will be
responsible for distributing the
items to hurricane victims. If
enough items are available after
distribution the rem~inder will be
sent to victims in Louisana.
ln addition to coordinating the
food drive in Meigs County ,
Grueser is di stributing flyers in
various neighborhoods and has
enlisted the help of Syracuse Ele·
menlary Students who will also ,
collect items at thai school. She
says any school that is inJerested in
helping may do so and information
may be obtained by contacting her.
Volunteers are needed and any·
one who would like to assist in any
way with the drive is encouraged 10
contacl Mrs. Grueser at 992-6959.

Wert

Patrol cites man for D.U.I.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2975

requirements and other programs
handle other requirements."
He said the money was made
available to qualified applicants
less than 24 hoW'S after the agency
received the paperwork.
The federal disaster dcclaralion
included the followin g co unties:
Cuyahoga, Franklin , Logan ,
Mahoning, Medina, Mercer, Ross,
Shelby, Summit, Trumbull and Van

An increase in medical insur· custodians for the school year,
ance premiums was discussed by Patricia Thomas and Karen Smith
Superintendent Richard Smith as substilute secretaries, and
when the Eastern Local Board of Richard Abbott as a substitute
Education met in regular session mechanic and maintenance help for
the 1992· 1993 school year, all to
last week.
According to Smith , the dis· be used on an as·needed basis.
tri c l's medical insurance will Margaret Cauthorn and Judy Wolfe
increase by 34 percent for the con· were hired as DPPF library aides
1ract year beginning in October for the school year, contingent
During the present contract year, upon approval of the program.
The resignation of Luke lzer as
medical insurance premiums will
total $337,443 · resulting in a assistant varsity football coach for
the 1992 season was accepted, and
$115,089 increase.
"I talked with our insurance Arch Rose was employed in that
administrator in May," Smith said, capacity. The board approved an
"and basea upon figures at that extension of Teresa Whitlock's
time, the district had projecled up unpaid leave of absence to October
to a 25 percent maximum 26.
Service contracts
increase."
The board approved the pur·
"Our budget for the current fis.
cal year was based upon that fig ·
ure. The 34 percent increase causes
great difficulty because it is nine
percent above what was projected
as the maximum increase. Our dis·
trict is going into its third year of
participation in a partially self·
One Meigs Counly resident is
funded insurance program . Premi· doing her part to assisl victims of
urns are based upon our claims his· Hurricane Andrew.
lory. During ihe past three or four
Jean Grueser, Minersville, is
months, we have suffered much coordinating a food drive in the
higher than anticipated amounts of county through cooperative efforts
medical insurance claims, thus the with Kroger's, Vaughan's Cardinal
larger than expected increase," ard Big Bend Foodland. She says
Smith said.
people are being very cooperative
Personnel
m this auemptto help the hurricane
Tbe board employed the follow· victims.
ing sub stitute teachers for the
People wanting to donale food
1992·1993 school year to be used items, water jugs wilh handl es ,
on an as·needed basis only: Valerie paper products, as well as any other
Hanstine, Bryan Durst, Sue Grace, items, may bring them to the par·
Janet Stiltner, Thomas Fauber, ticipating stores anytime throu gh
Cynthia Smith, Sandra Needs, Friday at 5 p.m.
Krista Sellers, David Deem, Ruth
The ilems will be taken to
Warden, Scot Gheen, Donna Wolf, Athen s where trucks have been
and Kimberly Maynard VanMetre. donated by Ryder to transport the
Gladys Barker and Richard goods to Florida. The Athens
Abbott were employed as substitute County effons are being headed by

Dexter man hits deer

BLUE STREAK CAB CO.
ITHE '
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

concern of merchants, Banks said,
since concessionaires and festival
activities are located on the parking
lo~ so parking for festival-goers is
being planned behind the old junior
high school building.
Last night, the village pledged
to improve water service to the fes·
tival site, as well as preparation of
the immediate riverbank aild the
levee area. Council appointed Vil·
lage Administrator John Anderson
as their coordinator for village ser·
vices to the festival, and pledged
the assistance of the police depart·
ment for traffic control and securi·
ty.
Mayor Reed commended Banks
Continued on page 3

....---Local briefs---..

BUTIONS AND BOWS
100 E. MAIN

Erik Turner, state tinance officer
for the adjutant general's office,
said the disaster aid can help repair
damages 10 homes, bridges and
roads, or provi~e basics such as
clothes and beds in counties
declared federal disaster areas.
Turner said about 500 people
qualified for the grants, about one·
third of those who applied. Each
family or individual is eligible Jor
up to $11 ,500, he said.
Turner said those who didn't
qualify were referred to other agen·
cies or r.rograms.
"Its not a case of stringent

Bill Edwards , enginee r of
research and development at the
Department of Transportation, said
the computer money approved
requiremems," Turner said. "This. Monday will help pay for "Advan·
ty'pe of program handles certain tage 1·75."
The Kentucky Transportation
Cabinet is organizing 1he plan,
which would set up computers at
weigh stations along the Interstate
through Ontario, Michigan, Ohio,
Kenlucky, Tennessee, Goorgia and
The GaUia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Pauol investigated
Aorida, which all are participating.
an accident Monday night in which a man struck a deer on County
Currently, truck drivers must
Road 10 near State Route 124. According to the report, John L.
stop at all open weigh stations.
Bass, 45, Bowles Road, Dexter was northbound on C.R. 10 when he
Under the new plan, the drivers
struck a deer that anempted to cross to the east side of the road.
would stop at one to give informa·
No injuries were reported and damage to lhe fronl end of Bass'
tion about the load and its weight.
vehicle was lisJed as ligh~
The information would be sent
electronically to the next station,
which would determine a reason·
able time it would take the driver to
T)le State Highway Patrol cited Barry A. Blazer, 45, RL 1 Point
arrive.
Pleasant, Friday night for D.U.l. following a one.car accident on
If the driver passes the next staCounty Road 5. According to the report, Blazer was eastbound on
tion in the proper amount of time,
C.R. 5 when he went off the right side of the road and into a ditch.
rthe driver would be told - verbal·
Blazer told authorities that a deer crossed the road in front of him.
ly or elecuonically - that a stop
Blazer was reported injured but not treated. Damage to the vehi·
isn't necessary. The system would
cle was listed as light and it was towed from the scene.
be repeated at weigh stations along
the interstate.
Edwards said the plan will save
time,
improve traffic flow and help
The State Highway Patrol investigated an accident Monday
prevent
accidents caused when
morning in which one car left the scene. According to the report,
trucks
get
backed up at weigh Sta·
Tennis J. Edmiston, 53, Bowles Road, Dexter, was southbound on ·
tions
onto
the
highway.
County Road 1 when a northbound oncoming vehicle w~nt left of
Installation
of the computers
center. Edmiston went off the right side of the road to av01d a collicould begin early next year, he
Continued on page 3
said.

SEARS
992·2178

Hawthorne, Reed, and Linda Kaylo•, bank per·
sonnel, and Macyn Ervin; second row, Heather
Dailey, Shannon Enright, and Myca Haynes,
with Ed Durst and John Karschnak, bank
employees, and Nicholas Detwiller and Meghan
Avis; third row, Mary Francis, Christina
Schultz, Melissa Francis, and Matthew Evans;
and fourth row, Eric Patterson, Alex Brown,
Jonathan Avis, Julie Brown, Jason Hager, Lisa
Hoffman, Amity Dixon, and Ginger Holmmb.
(Siaff photo by Charlene HoeOich)

State Controlling Board
releases money for victims

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2506

BROGAN·WARNER·INSURANCE MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES &amp;TEES
992·6687

992·2136
POM(ROY, OHIO
667·3161
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VAlLEY

POMEROY, OHIO

992·5432

Farmers
Bank
'-..J &amp; Savings Company
FB

'** · ·

Sternwheel Festival
Larry Banks, President of the
Big Bend Sternwheel Association
outlined plans' for the third annual
festival, to be held on October 9
and 10. According to Banks, the
arrival of the P.A. Denny for a
dance cruise on October 8 will
result in further festival activities
on that ThW'Sday evening.
Entertainment is planned for
both Friday and Saturday evenings,
with a fireman's parade and
wali&lt;/run from Pomeroy to Mason,
W.Va. planned for Saturday. A
captain's bonfire is also being
planned for at least 22 confirmed
sternwheelers.
Parking restrictions have been a

Increase of insurance premiums
topic of Eastern School Board

6. Instruct your child to inform you when
he or sh e goes somewhere after school.

4. Tell your ch ild where you ean be
reached in case of emergency.

2 Sections, 34 Psge1 25 011118
A llulllmedlo Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 1, 1992

Pomeroy council's role in revitalization project topic

l. Make sure

Support These CommunityMinded Businesses Just As
They Support the Youth
of Our county.

likely. High In low.sos.

•

children an
important
lesson in safety.

PLAY IT
SAFE!
Take a moment

Low tonight In 60s.
Wednesday, cloudy, showers

L

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
,I

SECOND LARGEST BUYER • The Racille
Home National Bank was the second largest
buyer at the !29th Annual Meigs County Fair
junior livestock sale which brought in $97,305
for 4·H and FFA youth. Bank President Tom
Wolfe, front right, recognized at Saturday
night's annual livestock buyers' banquet held at
Eastern High School, poses with the youth from
whom he purchased animals. They are, left to
right, front, Brant Dixon, Tawny Jones, Travis

Ltid)Ylck, James McKay, Lester Parker, Andrew
Rollin~, (Wolfe); second "?"• Josh Ervin, Mary ..
Franc1s, Kay Hunt, Mehssa Francis, Jere1ny
Hupp; third row, Kimberly Pierce, Michelle
O'Nail, Amanda Wheeler, and Jeromee CaJ.
away; fourth row, Melody Lawrence, Jackie
Buck, Billee Pooler,' Leslie Parker, and Mike
Hoffman, and fifth row, John Riley and Jllllel
Chapman.

I

I

,,

�Tuesday, September 1, 1992

Commentary
.
The Daily Sentinel
Ill COiat ltaeet

.._.,.,, Olalo

DJ:VODD 10 THE IHIW OP TilE IQJQS..JIAaOII ARBA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
l'ltblliiMr
PAT WllrrEHEAD

Asslstlnt PubllsheriController

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General MIUUiger

LI!'ITERS OF OPINION 11'0 welcome. They lbould be leSI than 300
words. All lettm are
10 edilirlc and mUll be oigned with n11111e,
addreso and lelepbooe n
. No lllllicoed !ellen will be publisbed. Lettm
should be in cood tule, oddlusina Wuos, nol penonalities.

::;!'/:'

Letters to the editor
Wants rules changed
Dear Editor:
I'm writing this leuer in regards
to the Meigs County Fair Boord.
The same boy won grand champion sleer that has won for about
four years in a row now. Think it
should be like it used 10 be. Wilen a
child wins with an animal then they
should be made 10 bring a different
animal next year. Then the rest of
the kids would have a chance.
I walked through the Sleet' ham
on Monday of the fair. I heard three

different people making remarks
about this boy that won grand
champion sleer this .year. Things
like they knew the judged would
pick him, plus other rernlllks.
Why can't the fairfick a differ·
ent judge instead o having the
same one every year? Naunlly he
remembers the name of the winners
from year to year.
Just wondering.
Karen Smith
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

The Meigs County Fair is over
again and planning for 1993 has
already begun.
Thank you to all the Fair Board,
the volunteers and youth leaders
who every year spend countless
hours with liUle thanks and no pay
for their hard work.
I would like also to thank all
those who enjoyed fruit from our
church (Rock Springs) booth, and
to C. R. Mash Consuuction, York

COLUMBUS · In the 1980' s,
Ohio and the rest of the country
experienced large increases in tax
revenues. and government services
grew accordingly.
However, when the im pac I of
failed fiscal policies practiced by
th~ federal government reached
Ohio, governmental revenues frpm
Washington D.C. plummeted proportionately. This has lead to tough
choices in the state budget process,
many of which may or may not
result in good public policy.
Reduced revenues have also
encouraged the General Assembly
and the Governor to attempt
reforms of big-ticket budget items.
The most recent proposal from the
Governor would enact a series of
changes to the state Medicaid and
welfare programs.
Governor Voinovich recently
announced a plan 10 make the following changes in the nursing
home program: I) assess a 1.5%
tax on nursing homes to genernle a
possible $26 million a year to pay
for home care programs for the

elderly; 2) restrict growth of new
11ursing home beds to I% a year for
the next two years; 3) tighten nursing home admission standards, lim·

Sen.]an M. Long
iting admission to those peo~le
who require skilled care; 4) requore
all public retirement. systems 10
offer long-term care msura~ce 10
their members; and 5) requite the
revocation of licenses from profes·
sionals who assist in the fraudulent
manipulation of a patient's ~ssets
or income in order for the paltentto
become eligible for Medicaid.
According to the Governor's
office, these changes could slow
the growth in the nursing home
industry which cares for just 4% of
the state's Medicaid recipients but
accounts for 56% of the costs and
allow more senior Ohioans to
remain independent
In order to further reform Medi·
caid spending for families, the
Governor announced his plans for
I) an increase in the reimbursement

and Sally Ingels, and O'Dell Lumber for all their help.

If you enjoyed the fair, let those
in charge know it. Too often we
only make remarks when some·
thing displeases us. They like to
hear positive remarks as well.
Thanks again for a job well
done!
Louise Radford
Rock Springs Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Enjoyed the 1992 Meigs fair
To the Editoc
I want to publicly thank and
congrstulale everyone who wmed
so hard 10 make the 1992 edition of
the Meigs County Fair a ·big suc-

cess.

I want to thank all those who
helped with the Republican Pany
booth and all those who slOpped by
to say hello.
Oh, and while we're at i~ let's
give more than a little thanks to
God for the sunny sties and mild
lemperatures we enjoyed this year.
I spent most of each of the six

days at the fair (my vacation), and
while it was an exhausting trip
from Sunday to Saturday, it was
exhilarating too.
In many ways, the fair is like a
gigantic family reunion, where we
get to see friends that we may only
see once a year.
So, until next year, thanks to
everyone for a job well-done.
Very truly yours,
Paul Gerard
Republican County Chairman
Middleport, Ohio

Mother speaks her mind
Dear Editor:

beautiful she was."Looking like her
fairy Godmother touched her with
Mad is not the word but I can't her magic ·wand and turned her into
say what I think in your paper.
a princess. Her blond hair never cut
There was a pretty baby conleSt hits her behind. She wore white
at the Meigs County Fair. My from head to toe with pink lace and
daughter was one of seven very pearls. She looked like she was
preny little girls in this so-called glowing, like an angel.
contest. Walking up 10 the judges
This did not only make me mad,
all of the girls were looked at. Then it made a lot of people made that
the judges looked at their papers. did not even know us. If I had not
The names that were marked got all already told my baby she could ride
of the attention.
the rides, we would have left! This
They did not even look at my little girl is roo young 10 understand
child again. The way I know the what went on. But she will!
na mes were marked four people
I hope this leiter will make a difbehind them saw this. The same ference in the future . An no, I'm
thing happened two years ago. The not jealous. I knbw my baby is very
same people saw it then 100.
beautiful. People in Meigs County
I could have put old dirty should know that there is not
clothes on her and they would have always fair play round here, not
made the same decision. They had just about a thing like this.
their minds made up by someone.
Thank you for letting me speak
As soon as my daughter stepped my mind.
out of the car that day, she made a
Virginia Docrfer
lot of heads turn. She got at least
42940 Forrest Run Road
one hundred compliments on how
Racine, Ohio

Praises congressman for help
Dear Editor:
On June I, while touring Europe
wi th the Meigs High School French
Club, I was pick-pocketed on the
street in Nice, France, and robbed
of all my _identification, money
and, most tmportantly, my daughter's and my passports.
We were miles from the nearest
American embassy, traveling into
Geneva, Switzerland in 12 hours,
and because we were 10 fly back to
the United States in 36 hours. It
seemed nearly impossible to
replace our passports in time to
make our flight home with the rest
of our group. I knew I would need
help at horne if we were 10 return to
the u.s. as scheduled.
After reporting the incident to
the non-English speaking inlemalional police, I phoned my hus·
band's office, explained the situa·
tion and asked that he call our government representatives to see if
anyone would help speed up the
replacement of our passports.
AJi soon as Cong. Bob McEwen
became aware of the problem·, he
rook it upon himself personally ro
help our family,
On the momin$ !&gt;( J~ 17, my

rates for Medicaid-covered dental maintain eligibility, and developing
services for children, to be financed a pilot project providing cash
by eliminating dental services for incentives of $30 to $50 a month to
adults, 2) the elimination of cover- encourage AFDC families to make
age of optional services for adults sure the children go to school and
including podiatry, chiropractic, receive basic health care.
Further P.!Oposals include estab·
and physical therapy; 3) stronger
lishing
a pilot project requiring all ·
stale laws to recover Medicaid serable-bodied
AFDC adults to partie·
vices costs from an individual's
ipate
in
job
training or public·ser·
estate; and 4) a co,payment system
vice
work
pr~grams
unless they
requiring Medicaid recipients to
contribule to the cost of medical have a child under one year of age
services, hascd on their ability to ·and establishing a work require- ·
pay. Supportets say these proposals ment for all General Assistance
will help hold down stare Medicaid recipients who are not already in
costs and save approximately $169 job training or work-experience
programs. The Governor has sup·
million in stale monies.
Other areas which are pan of the ported these changes in AFDC and
"reform" package are Aid 10 Fami- General AJ!sistance as a way to prolies with Dependent Children mote family respon sibility and
(AFDC) and General Assistance. encourage recipients to leave the
The Governor has proposed requir· welfare system.
Finally, the founh quancr of the
ing the establishment of palemity
welfare
reform package would
as a condition for increased benechange
the
way the stale manages ,
fits when a woman has another
welfare
programs.
These changes
child while on AFDC, requiring all
AFDC mothers to auend family- include contracting with private
planning counseling within a health care providers for the man·
month afler the birth of a child to agement of high cost cases such as
AIDS and neonatal inlensive care;
maximizing the state's buying
power in purchasing some medical
services, drugs, transportation, and
supplies; and expanding a pilot
program at Children's Hospital in
Columbus to diven persons seeking
care in emergency rooms to more
appropriate and less expensive
providers. According to the Governor, these rlans could slow the rate
of growth welfare spending by the
Slate.
In Ohio, Medicaid costs have
~wn almost six times the rate of
mflation in the last ten years.
Spending for welfare programs has
also spiraled out of control.
Changes in these programs ~ave
often been fraught with controver·
sy, and the Governor's package
will be no exception. However, he
has asked the Geneml Assembly to
study his recommendations to rein
in the high costs of Medicaid and
welfare in Ohio.
As always, I welcome your
comments on this or any other
++-4... issue that concerns you. Please
write to me at my office, State Senator 1an Michael Long, Ohio Senate· Statehouse, Columbus, OH
43266-0604 , or call (614)466·
8156.

Revised schedule of
Rutland festival released
A revised time schedule of
events for the annual Rutland
Street Festival has been completed.
The event will open to the public with food, games, etc. beginning
at 11 a.m. on Satwday. The event
will run until!Op.m.
Events scheduled throughout the
day include:
10 a.m.• Baked goods and
craflers to be in and set up.
II a.m. · Open to the public.
Noon • Decorated bikes judged
(open to children up to 16 years of
age).
12:30 p.m . . Motorcycle cruise·
in.
I p.m . • Belles and Beaus
Square Dancers.
I :30 p.m. · Meigs High School
Band.
2:30 p.m. · Rutland Baptist
Church Singers.
3 p.m. • Pies and cakes must be
in for conies! (novelty theme).
3:30p.m. ·Big Bend Ooggers.
4.p.m.: Pie and cake judging.
4.30-6.30 p.m. ·Dee and Dallas.
5 p.m. · Kiddie tractor pull.
Money due in for MiSier and Miss
Rutland, Prince and Princess con-

DEAR BRUCE: We love our
daughter, who is 26, but we're not
very proud of her. She lived with
us until about four months ago. She
ran up bills everywhere one could
run up a bill, and found places
where you wouldn't believe they
would give crediL And, of course,
stuck everybody in sight
One night, she just picked up
her daughter (she is a single parent)
and disappeared. I haven't any idea
where she is. Even though I worry
about her, I suspect that although
she is not very ethical, she certainly
is resourceful, and she's getting by.
In any case, my wife and I are
constantly being harassed by bill
collectors who claim that she owes
them money, and I'm sure she
does. The creditors say that we are
responsible and that they are going
to wreck our credit and take us to
coon if we don't pay.
If we had no hand in these mailers, except shellering our daughter,
are we responsible for the many
thousands of dollars of obligations
that she has incurred? My good
judgment !ells me no, and my auorney 1ells me no. Ye~ the bill collectors insist that I am responsible. READER
DEAR READER: I agree with

your attorney - in the event that
you did not in any way guaranlee
her obligatioos, the creditors are on
their own.
The one exception, in many
states, is if she collected welfare or

Bruce Williams
public assistance of some kind. In
that case, a parent under 55 can be
held responsible. It seems to me
incredible that a parent can be held
responsible for an adult. child's
actions over something he or she
has no control. Be that as it may,
with this exception, I see no liabili·
ty on your pan.
I would make it very clear to
each of these creditors that you
have no responsibility, that you
value your credit reputation and
that you will take every civil action
available to you should they irresponsibly injure your credit
As a parent, I sympathize with
your dilemma. Let's hope this
woman will someday Uck the problem . And I apP.reciale the fact that
while you don 1~ with her, you
still love her.
DEAR BRUCE: Our house was

leSIS.
6:30 p.m. • Crowning of Mister
and Miss Rutland, Prince and
. Princess.
7 p.m. • Pic and cake auction.
7·9 p.m. · While's HiU Band.
9-10 p.m. ·Jeanie and the Wolf
Pack Band.
There will be a dunking
machine all day by the Meigs High
School Cheerleaders.
There will also be games all day
as well as c:ralts.
For further information, or to
register for a craft table contact
· Margie Davis at 742-2809,Joan
Stewart at 742-242 or Kim Willford at 742-2103.

Veterans Memorial
SAlURDAY ADMISSIONS·
Danny Barrett, Dexter, and Audrey
Doughty, Middleport.
SAlURDAY DISCHARGES·
Lee Bing.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS •
Robert Bailey, Long Bottom.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES ·
Henry Darst, Audrey Doughty,
Anna Cline, Carol Wines and
Telitha Casto.

Continued from piJie 1
sian and then came back onro the road and lost control, going off
the left side and striking a ditch. The other vehicle did not stop.
No injuries were reported. Damage to the vehicle was lisled as
moderale and it was towed from the scene.

Charges pending against man
Charges are expected to be filed against a Racine man following
an accident Over the weekend.
According 10 Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, three
people were struck Sunday morning at around 2 am. by a station
wagon driven by Mark Theiss, 18, Racine, on American Electric
Power property off Yellowbush Road in Racine.
Brian Porter, 21, Racine, Carrie A. Porter, 19, Racine, and Amy
A. Stilwell, 29, Rockbridge, were hit by a 1978International station
wagon owned by KeUy J. Powell. Racine, after it traveled downhill
and went out of control. They were taken to Veleralls Memorial
Hospital, where they were treated for cuts, bruises and abrasions
and released.
Meigs County Sheriff Jim Soulsby said Theiss will be chalged
with three counts of aggravaled vehicular assauk and one comt of
conSU!"inJ underage. Other charges may be pending upon further
mvesuganon.

Phone rate reduction approved
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) recently
authorized two-way, non-optional, rneMU!Cd·rale telephone l1etYice
between Cheshire and Pomeroy, meaning a COSt reduction in calls
between the two towns.
PUCO ordered the service to be instiruted as
as possible
within 12 months. It will save custorneB in the
ire exchange
of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company about 90 percen~ and customers in the Pomeroy exchange of om North Inc. will save about
70percenL
Ohio BeU serves about 913 customerS in its Cheshire exchange,
and G11l serves about 4,195 customers in its Pomeroy exchange.

on the market for a long time. We !ems that no one would notiCe on a
finally found a couple who not only regular walk-through. Now , it
wanted the house, but could qualify could be argued that these things
are your responsibility. I would
for a mongage to buy iL
They were moving into town ar~ that unless they locate these
three weeks before the closing, due thmgs, it is a question of the buyer
to a job transfer. They asked us if being aware of his or her responsi·
they could move into the house and bilities, and that's what home
rent it so that they wouldn't have to inspections are all about
But it's the nit-picking SlUff that
go through a double move.
We, like fools, allowed them to would drive me crazy.
Well, it's roo !ale for that now.
do so. Now, they have found about
30 things they think are wrong with As you've indicated, you had a
the house, which they believe we hard time selling the place. I would
should pay for before the closing. swallow hard and try to ncgotiale
They would have never noticed with them. It may be that you could
these things if they weren 'tliving forgive the rent for the three weeks,
and that might do it
there.
In the furure, if there is another
So, for being a nice guy and lak·
ing $600 in ren~ we are now faced judgment call of this kind, never let
with a couple of thousand dollars them move in until the day the
worth of repaira that we would not closing takes place, and the monies
have had. Do you have any S~SBeS· have been exchanged.
(Send your questions to: Sman
lions? -B.N., Alexandria. r.v;.
DEAR B.N.: I'm afrai4 I'm Money, P.O. Box 5202, Hudson,
locking the barn door after the FL 34674. Questions of general
horse has been stolen. But my sug- interest will be answered in future
gestion would be never 10 let any· columns. Due to the volume of
one move into a house before the mail, personal replies cannot be
closing, for exactly the reasons that provided.)
Bruce WIUiams Is a syndicated
you have outlined.
Once they're in there, they find writer for Newspaper Enterprise
the little cracks and min~r prob- Association.

J '·•

Showers forecast for parts of Ohio tonight :
By The Associated Press
Another dry day is in store
today.
Sunshine is expecled Stalewidc
this afternoon. Highs will range

formly they cool; and how well
they can cope with adverse condi·
lions. Also tmportan~ the capabili·
ties of the meat-keeper and the

Consumer report
crispers and the speed of ice-mak·
in g.
Most of the refrigerators leSied,
whether plain or fancy, performed
well in key leSIS.
To choose a refrigerator, deal
with larger questions frrst. What
configuration do you want - topfreezer? How large a box do you
need? How much can you alford to
spend? Then, in the stores, you can
deal with smaller -(though not

received. from Cong. McEwen and
we will always remember that he
was there to SU.JlP.Orl us when we
desperately ~ sonieone.
I had the pleasure of meeting
Bob McEwen for the first time, a
few weeks ago, and I saw fusthand
the concern and enthusiasm he has
for people.
Mary O'Brien
Pomeroy, Ohio

unimportant) questions - do you
want glass or wire shelves? Sealed,
controlled crispers and meat-keepers? Other amenities, like extra
storage compartments or an in-door
ice and water dispenser?
· ts
h1
Th ese generaI pom
can e p
you narrow the selection:
Top-freezer models dominate
the market primarily because they
· lhan
arc sr1ghtl y 1ess .expens1ve
other styles and because they lend
to be slightly less expenstve to
operale. They also make the most
efficient use of their interior space.
Top-freezer refrigerators from
Sears, Whirlpool, Amana and
Magic Chef have had a better
repair record than other brands,
·cularl Frigidaire and General
parU • y
'th
b d
Elecutc. But WI any ran , an
automatic icemakcr significantly
iiiCI'C8808 the chance that pro!llcma
wi~~:~g more doesn•1 necessarily !&gt;uy better performance. But
it will buy m&lt;n amenities that may
make the refrigerator easier to live
with. The extras leSiers c.onsider
desirable include: crisper drawers
with seals to retain humidity and
meat-keeper drawers that have a
lemperature control and seals; cantilovered RWS sbelveR: Aliin•••hl•
door shelves or bins; "snugg~rs"
_ adjustable stopS 10 keep-thmgs
in place on the door shelves; extta

C

EMS units answer 10 calls
Ten calls for assistance were answered over the weekend by
units pf Meigs County Emergency Services.
On Saturday at I: 15 p.m., Pomeroy unit we~~t to Stale Routt 7.
Arthur Heiney was treated at the scene. At 3:35 p.m.. Rutland squad
was ·sent 10 County Road I. DaMy BlllTetl was talcen 10 Veleralls
Memorial Hospital. At 9:14 p.m., Middlepon squad went to
Stonewood Apartments. Audrey Daughty was taken to VeleraiiS. At
10:03 p.m., Rutland squad went to Titus Road. Andy Doczl was
taken to Holzer Medical Cenler. At 10:25 p.m., Racine units went to
State RouleS 124 and 338 for a rnoi(¥Cyelc ICCiden~ Oleslcr Flllll·
cis was taken to Veterans. He was la!er taken to Gnnt Medical Center by Life Flight. Clvi~ Adams was treated at the 1ce11e.
On Sunday at 2:27 a.m.. Racine and Syracuse units went to Yel·
Iowbosh Road for an auto accident Brian Porter, Amy Stillwell and ·
Carrie Parler were taken to Vetenlns. At I 1:21 am., Porneroy squad
went to Village Green Apanments. Nancy Ackerm111 was taken to
Veterans. At 5:49 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry Aveme
for Roger Buleher. He was treated a,t the scene. .
At 6:53 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Un10n Terrace. 1Gerald
Riter was taken 10 Holzer. At 11:13 p.m., Columbia Townsllip unit
went to State Route 689 for a triiiSC01111« fire atlhe Ellis residence.

I;

lights, espe&lt;:ially in the freezer.
With any model, features to
look for include: sec-lhrough drsw·
ers and compartments; door-shelf
retainers or bins that you can
remove for cleaning; controls that
are easy to reach and read; doors
and drswers with s•nns; door han·
-•
dies that won't pinch your fingers;
plenty of traxs ·and bins for ice,
eggs
and thethelike.
·
. . Among
basic models tested,
the General Electric mHI81P topfreezer model, $610 on average,
least
performed well and cost the
10
operale. It was convenient to use,
. with sensibly laid out sbelves and
· useful features. Two other models
made by GE, the Hotpoint
CTX18EP, $505 average, and the
RCA MTX18EP, about $550, may
be slightly betttr sui~ for house·
holds in the South. In tests, the
HOtpoint and RCA were better able
to stay cool in the fatC! of high heal.
The deluxe top-freezer models,
the side-by-sides and the Whirlpool
bottom-freezer model performed as
w.ell as or better than the betler
basic top· freezer refrigerators in
several key tests. BUI they all cost
more to buy. And the side-by-sides
and the bottom-freezer model cost
more to run.
Submitted by the Editors of
Coasumer Reports to Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

warm, humid air. Temperatures weather was expected in the inleri·
will be in the mid 70s 10 mid 80s.
or Nonheast and the Great Lakes
The reconi high lemperature for region.
this date at the Columbus weather
On Mo.nday evening, strong
station was 99 degrees in 1953. The thunderstorms were scattered over
record low was 42'in 1967.
the ce11lral Rocky Mountain region
Sunset tonight will be at 8:04 and in Kansas, Texas, southern
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at Aorida and New Mexico.
7a.m.
Showers and a few thunderAround the nation
storms also were scauered from
Fog shrouded the South today, Nevada 10 Northern California and
while a warm front moving through Oregon.
the Plains dumped rain in nortbem
A thunderstorm in Carlsbad,
Texas.
N.M., produced tennis ball·= hail
Scatlered showers were fttecast ·that injured two airpon employees
throughout the Plains IOday. Cool and dumped 3.8 inches of rain in
90minuleS.

from 70 to 80.

A warm tront will approach the
state tonight. Southerly winds will
return and clouds will increase
from the southwest. There will be a
chance of showers and thunderstorms southwest tonight.
Overnight lows will be in the lower
50s to lower 60s.
Showers and thunderstorms will
increase Wednesday, followed by

RESCUE TRUCK DQNATJ(~N •
dollatlon U1 been
!Bide for the purchue lila new resne truck for the VIUage ol
S)TIICiise. Pictured are, Jell to right, Eber Pickens, Sr., a~t~lstant
nre chief; Frank Bright, who made the donation; and nre chief
Jack Peterson.

THIRD LARGEST SINGLE BUYER •
Gene Whaley of Wlllley'allled Can parc:IIMed
nine anImals, Including two champl0111, at tile
Meip County Fair junior lh'tltCM:k 181t. BuJft'l
were honored at tlle Annual Llveitock BuJft'l'
Banquet held at Eastern Hlah School Satutday
nlaht. Here Wllaley and his wife, Shei'-, poee for

Julius Preston

Clifford Young, Sr.

Julius Preston, 67, of Jackson,
died ·Tuesday, Sept. I, 1992 at
Holzer Medical Cenler.
He was born on Aug. 27, 1925
in Richardson, Ky.. son of the late
Elzie and Alka (Ball) Preston.
He was a former owner of Evelyn's Restaurant of Jackson and a
member of Paul's Chapel Church
in Jackson.
Survivors include two sons,
Julius Preston Jr. of Gallipolis and
James Preston of Bidwell; two
daughters, Linda Johnson and
Joyce Jividen, both of Gallipolis;
eight grandchilrdren; and two sisters, Janice Cook of Gallipolis and
EIDiice Fill:hpalrick of Middleport

Clifford E. Young, Sr., 74, 532
West Main Street, Pomeroy, died
Monday, Aug. 31, 1992, at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital.
Born July 9, 1918 in Meigs
County, he was a son of the late
Earl and Sylvia Smith Young. He
was parts manager at Pat Hill Ford
Company in Middleport. He was an
Army Veleran of World War II and
was a member of American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy.
Mr. Young is survived by a son,
Clifford E. Young, Jr., Athens; a
special friend, Violet Morarity,
Pomeroy; a grandson, Michael
Young, Athens; a sister, Dorothy
Ackley, Coolville; and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents he was pre·
ceded in death by his wife, Marie
Morarity Young, and a brother,
Hobart Young.
Services will be Thursday at I
p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. Roland Wildman officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
horne on Wednesday from 2-4 and
6-Bp.m.
Military graveside services will
be performed by Drew Webster
Post No. 39.

Services will be Thursday at 2
p.m. at Paul's ~I Church. The
Rev. Willis Tomblm will offiCiate.
Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Friends may call the EisnaugleLewis Funeral Home of Jackson
Wednesday from 4 to 8 p.m.
Friends may call at the church one
hour before services begin.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... 32 1/4
Ashland Oil........................22 718
AT&amp;:T................................42
Bank One. ......................... .43 1/8
Bob Evans ................. ....... .19 1/4
awming Shop..................30 1/8
f::ity Holding ......................17 3/4
Federal M6gul... ................ 15
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................63
Key Centurion ................... 19 1/4
Lands End.......................... 29 78
Limiled Inc .. ..................... 22 3/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 25
Rax RestauranL.. ................. 7/16
Reliance Electric ................ 18
7/8Robbins&amp;:Myers ......... .. 15 1.a
Shoney's Inc.................... .. l7 3/8
Star Bank ...........................31 1,a
Wendy Int'l ....................... .ll 3/4
Worthington Ind................ 21 1/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
am. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl ol Gallipolis.

1 picture wltlltlle 4·H and ·-FFA youth from
wllom they pun:bued animals. In the aroup are

ltft to rlabt, front, Jamie Hupp and Kacy ErviD,
leCOIId row, BiUy Schultz, Sara Ervin, and Belly
S~ell

POLICE DONATION • Frank Bright recently made 1 $500
donation toward the purchase ol a new polic:e cruiser for tbe VU·
!age of Syracuse. Pictured with Bright, center, are Mayor Jim
Pape, lefl, and Pollc:e Chief Jim Connolly.

--Area deaths-- -Meigs announcements--

Pomeroy...
Continued from page l
and the committee for their "hard
work and· dedication" toward
improving the festival each year.
Councilman John Blaettnar
complained that parking on village
sidewalks was P.romoting a safety
hazard for children walking to
school.
Council also:
· Agreed 10 postpone paving of
a section of Wesl. Main Street until
afler a water line extension project
is completed;
• Authorized repairs on transmission of the Ford Taurus police
cruiser;
• Commended Police Chief Ger·
aid Rought and the police depart·
ment for recent drug enforcement
and other police activity;
• Approved the Mayor's Repon
of fmes collected in August, total·
ing $4.870;
• Endorsed the one-mill replace·
ment levy request filed by the
Meigs County Health Department
Present were Council President
Larry Wehrung; members Thomas
Werry, Bill Young, Scott Dillon,
1o1m Blaettnar and Betty Baronick
and MayOr Reed.

Court news

.I

Afternoon thunderstorms over
northern Arizona spawned toma· - :
does near the Grand Canyon and ;
Samt George. No injuries were
reponed.
Te!flperatures today were fore·
cast m the 60s for the interior
Northeast and the Great Lakes· the
~ in the rest of the Northeas~ the
Midwest, the northern Plains and
the Rockies; the 80s in the mid·
Atlantic . coast region , the
Appalachtans, the southern Plains
and most of the West; the 90s in
the Southeast and most of the
Southwest; and over 100 in southweslem Arizona.

.·

What to consider in fridge purchase
There's nothing mysterious
about a refrigerator - until, of
course, it's time tb replace the one
you have. Most people buy a topfreezer-l'!lfrigerator with a claimed
capacity ofabout 18 cubic feet. For
thiS report, Consumer Repons test·
ed 15 relatively basic models with
a modest assorttnenl of features but with no antomatic ice-makers,
in-door wa1er dispensers, or other
top·line extras. Also tested: four
fancier top-freezer models, two
side·by·Stdes and one bottomfreezer by Whirlpool.
Tests were designed to deter·
mine how well a refrigerator can
maintain ideal lemperatures of 37
degrees Fahrenheit in the main
refrigerator compartment and 0
degrees in the freezer_; how uni·

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-;-3

Hospital News

,---Local briefs...---,

Daughter, 26, didn't .pay her bills

daughler, loy, ana I had one hour
in which to check our bags at the
Geneva Airport, take a taxi downtown to the Consulate's office to
try to get our passports replaced
and return to the airpon to catch
our flight home. I was really afraid
we wouldn't make it. However,
when we arrived at the Delta lenni·
nal, their employees called us by
name and were aware of our problem. They knew that we had 10 get
10 the Consulale's ofrtce, and they
also said our flight was being
delayed IS minutes. They smiled
and said "You're going 111 ~e it"
Upon arrival at the Consulate's
office, there were IICVeral jleople,
Americans, waiting in line abeld of
us. We were beginning to think that
we would not make our flight.
However, we soon found out that returned to the airport in time to
the Consulate was waiting for us make our flighL
Had it not been for the efforts
and would not see anyone until
and
codcern of Congressman Bob
after we arrived as he was aware of
McEwen,
I'm convinced my
our situation and knew we had a
flight to catch. The American Con· daughter and I would not have
sulate .was so very gracious and made our scheduled flight but
kind 10 us and he was very compli- would have had to remain in
mentary of the communications he Switzerland at least an extra 24 to
had had with both my husband and 48 hours.
Cong. McEwen. Soon, with our
My family is very ap~iative
passports replaced, Jpy and I of the personal assistance we
i}.,.

60percenl.
South-Central Oblo
Extended foreeast:
Tonight,. i~creasing cloudiness.
Tbur!Jtlay
tllrou&amp;b Saturday:
Low around ro. The chance of rain
A
chance
of
showers and thunis 20 percent. Wednesday, showers
and thunderstorms )ilcely. High in derstorms each day. Lows in the
the low 80s. The chance of ·rain is 60s. Highs from the upper 70s to
the mid-80s.

Nursing homes target for budget savings

A job well-done
Ucar Editor:

---~-Weather-----

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September 1, 1992

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

and third row, Grea McKinney, Keith
H••t. Jeff Raailn, Del Christine Schultz.

Assistant prosecuting auomcy
Qeorxe P. McCarthy said Timothy
Davi&lt;lson and David Spangler were
bound ovet to the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court at a prelirni·
nary hearing conducled by Judge
Patrick O'Brien on Friday, August
28.
Both men are chalged with robMy and face a maxilillim senleiiCC
of IS yean in prison and a $7.SOO
fine if convicted. The char,es
result from an incident occurnng
earlier in the week in Pomeroy.
Charles H. Knight represents Span·
gler, and John Lentes represents
Davidson.
Prosecuting attorney Steven L.
Story said Davidson was also
charged with havin~weapon
under disability. The c c carries
a maximum penlllty of I months
in prison and a $2,500 fme.
' '.'I

Manley reunion set
The descendants of Emmett,
Loo, Carl, Nan (Frazier), Corbette,
Mertie, Alshire, Ed and Lena Manley will hold their third family
reunion at the Star Mill Park on
September 12 from Ito 4 p.m.
Meat and table service will be
provided, and those attending
should bring any information on
the Manley family. No alcoholic
beverages wiD be permitted.
VFD plaas barbecue
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Depanment will hold its annual
Labor Day barbecue on September
7. Serving wiU begin atll ::lO a.m.
Anybody interested in panicipating in the parade should contact
B.D. Myers at 985-3826 for more
information . There will be an
antique tractor pull and trophies
will he awarded for oldest tractor
and most attractive tractor. Trophies will also be awarded for best
float and for largest group. A gar·
den tractor pull is also planned.
The parade wiU begin at 1:30 p.m.,
and all fue depanments are invited.
Auxiliary to form
Any ladies inlereSted in forming
an auxiliary for the Syracuse Fire
Depanment are inviled 10 auend an
informational and organizational
meeting tonight (Tuesday) at 7
p.m. at the fire station.
Church yard sale
The Middleport Presbyterian

will have a yard sale~ Friday and
Saturday at the Owens residence,
located on the road under the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. All pro·
ceeds will go into the church general fund.
Preaching and singing
The Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have preaching
and singing Friday at 7 p.m. with
David Dailey aad the Dailey Family. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
public. Fellowship will follow.
Smorgasbord dinner
There will be .a smorgasbord
dinner at the Louridge Community
Center Sunday from noon to 1:30
p.m. Cost is $5 for adults or $2.50
for children under 12. The public is
invited.
Practice set
Ruffles and Flourishes Baton
Corps will have practice Saturday
at II a.m. to prepare for the CatfiSh
Festival in Middlcpon. All members atlend.
Services slated
The Old Dexler Church is continuing services with special
singing Sunday as well as guest ·•
speakers other Sundays. David
Garbou will be the speaker Sunday.
public invited
.'
Trustees to meet
The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the township hall at
Rock Springs.

Barbecue and tractor puB
The Scipio Volunteer Fire
Department will hold a chicken ·.
Continued from page 1
barbecue and ttacta' pull on SaiurA conuact with the Stale Audi- day . The barbecue will be held ·
tor's office to assist the district in from II a.m. to 6 p.m. and the COSt .
the preparation of an annual finan· is $4 for adults and $2 for children. . ·
cia! report that,~;Qnforrns with gen- The menu includes chicken, potato :
erally accepted accounting princi· salad or cole slaw, baked beans, ...
pals, and amendments to the dis- rolls and drink, with dessert extra. . ·
trict's appropriations were also Tractor pull weigh-in is at 5 p.m. · .
approved
and pull at 6 p.m. Classes for the ·~
Other business
pull include, 800 for children, and
The board authorized the with · 900, 1,000, and 1,100 for adults ..
drawal of the request from the slate There is a 50 percent payback on .
auditor to conduct a cash analysis the pull There will be someone at • ··
for the 1993 fiscal year.
the ftte station at 1 a.m. Saturday
A request from the athletic morning if further information is
boosters to increase the "pay to needed.
play" rate was approved, as were
Lecturer
gale admission prices as follows:
Dr. James E. Davis of Ohio UniVarsity boys and girls: $3 for versity will present a program at
adults and $2 for students, and for the Meigs County Public Library in
junior high boys and girls, $2 for Pomeroy on Thursday at 7 p.m . .
adults and $1 for students.
concerning childrens' right to read.
Mathematics instructor Nancy
Larkins discussed a new and innovative course offering regarding an
'The Daily Senlinel
entrepreneur program at Eastern
High School. Mrs. Larkins and
(USP8 JlUIO)
high school principal Charles
Pob11thed nery afternoon, Moa4ay
&amp;hrwch Frt4&amp;y, 111 Com1 SL, PwaaaG)
Moore have pursued grant monies
Ohio by U.e Ohio ValleJ Puhli•hini
to fund the projecl This year will
CompanyiMatUmedia lac;,t Pome!'O,:
be primarily a planning period,
Ohio 411769, Pb. 993-21156. - d d..i
poetap pmd ll PameJoa,, otrio.
with implementation expecled next
school year.
M...toor. Tho "-ialod PnN, ..... Ill•
Obto N81npapu .Miodattoa, Na~
The next meeting will be held
MYft'tilinJ Ra)NH.ak\in, Branhana
on Wednesday, September 16 at
New~pa.per Salea, 733 Third Aftr.tae,.
6:30p.m. in the high school cafele·
New York. New York 10011.
ria. AUending were: Ray Karr,
POS'I'MAS'l1IR:- ,..._ to
presiden~ Jim Smith Vice Presi·
'l'tle Daily S.nUnel, 111 Coqrt B'
l'unonly, 0Hio411769.
·•
dent; and members Bill Hannum
and Mike Martin.
SUB8CIIIP110N IIATU

Increase ...

.........

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA ,...,
446 4514

B:t Oarrter or Motor Bnt.
OMWMt. ..........................................$1.60
OM M...th ...... ...................................$11.911
OM Year.................... ,...............- ..$83.10
IINOLBCOPY
PRlQ
Doily. .......................~ ....................u C..to

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ibno nol ~ lo (lOT t1oo &lt;Oni.

er may remt\ In 1ch1ftce . _ . t, Tlllll

or tl

Daily BmU•otl ,. • - . u

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-~~~ -

· Ctodll will

bop.-

No •at.cripti0111 by ...U permtt.W 1111

areu whm home cerrier

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I,

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUesday, September 1, 1992
Page-4

Montreal beats Cincinnati 8-4 to trim idle Bucs' NL East lead
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - That
thud in the NL West is the sound of
the Cincinnati Reds dropping out
of the race. The silence .in the East
is Montreal creeping up on Pittsburgh.
" We don't talk about pennant
races," Expos manager Felipe
Alou said after Montreal beat
Cincinnati 8-4 Monday night to
pull within three games of the idle
Pirates . "I have never had one
meeting where I mention it"
Alou is just trying to hold his
young team togelher for a September run at Pittsburgh.
"We are underdo~s , picked to
finish last," he said. 'We need to
have another good month, but we
don't need to put any pressure on
ourselves. We JUSt need to do what
we do. ''

It helped lhe cause when larry
Walker drove in a career-high five
runs with a two-run homer, a tworun single, an RBI double and
another base hit.
"Everybody's pitching in, try·
ing to pick up the slack for Delino
DeShields," Walker said. " I hit
two balls hard and had two lucky

'

ones.''

DeShields, part of Montreal's
one-two scoring punch with Marquis Grissom, is sidelined wilh a
strained muscle in his side.
."1 haven't been driving in runs
like I wanted to in a while," Walker said. "But I'm the kind of guy
who goes tip lhere backing."
Walker hit his 201h homer - a
career high - and pushed his RBI
total to 73 - another ~ high.
"It's been tough on him. He's
been playing with injuries," Alou
said.
The treatment list includes an
infected foot, a contusion on his
arm, strained rib muscle, strained
quadriceps and strained groin. He's
missed some games, but bas stayed
off the disabled list.
Mel Rojas (5-1) shut down the
Reds with 4 1/3 innings of two-hit
relief, his longest stint of the season.
"He's one of the nastiest pitchers in the league," Alou said.
"He's got the stuff and the control
and the cold blood to be a stop-

per."
He was that Monday night,
coming in with the bases loaded to

strike out Chris Sabo in the fifth.
The Reds scored twice in the
Sabo homered twice, but was dis- fourth off starter Chris Nabholz on
gusted with himself for that at-bat.
a single by Barry Larkin and
"I didn't come through when Sabo's lOth homer, and once in the
we needed it. That makes my two fifth when Bip Roberts drew a twohome runs rather meaningless," out walk, went to third on Reggie
Sabo said.
Sanders' single and scored on
It was the fifth straight loss ftw larltin's infield hil
the Reds, their longest losing streak
But with the bases loaded, Rojas
of the season. It dropped Cincinnati came in to pitCh to Sabo, striking
6 1/2 games behind Atlanta, which him oul Sabo homered again in the
swept a doubleheader in New .eighth, but by then the Reds were
York.
·
done,lilce their pitching.
Tom Bolton (2-3) made it
·oreg Swindell - who led the
through the Montreal lineup the Cincinnati staff with· a 12-6 record
ftrst time allowing just OI)C hi~ But and a 2.58 ERA - was put on the
Spike Owen doubled to lead off the 15-day disabl~ list, retroactive to
fourth, and one out later Walker Aug. 23, because of a stress frachomered. One out later, Greg Col- ture to a rib.
brunn hit his second homer of the
"Right now, we're a little shon
season to make it 3-0.
of pitching," said Reds manager
'·'I felt good. I'm a better pitcher lou Piniella, who reactivated SteVe
than I've shown," Bolton said. Foster and will send out Tim Pugh
"This was lhe third straight start I in his major league debut tonight
against the Expos.
dido 't have a breaking ball.' '
Dennis Martinez (14-10) will
The Expos added two in the
start
for Montreal. ,
fifth on walks to Tim Laker and
Elsewhere
in the Nl it was
Owen, a hit batsman and Walker's
Atlanta
7,
New
York 5; Chicago 2,
single. They got three more in the
seventh off Scou Bankhead on an los Angeles 0; Houston 9,
RBI single by Owen, a double by Philadelphia 2; and s~ Louis 6, San
Diego2.
Walka- and a single by ColbruM,
Braves 7, Mets 5
It didn't take long for Jeff Reardon to help the AUanta Braves.
Reardon , acquired Sunday to
defentive back ; Pnll Br)"ant, runnin&amp;
bolster a beleaguered bullpen,
back: nm Jcnnin1•• 1umt; R011 Goat and
bailed Atlanta out of a bases-loadStephon Weathcnpoon, lineb•cien ;
Cflia J:ludlm, tiaht end; and Pellpm. Me·
ed jam in the opener, then earned a
Daniela, defenaive end. Placed William
save in the second game Monday
K.i.rboy, ~«,1111 injured n!ICI'Yll.
night as the Braves completed a
LOS ANGELES kAIDERS Waived Via011 Evans 1nd Antltony Oil·
doubleheader
sweep of the New
wes. quarterbacb; Tom B~nron,
York
Mets
at
Shea
Sladium.
litlebacli:u; Ron. Brown, Daryl Hobba and_
Tyrone Mo11\1omuy, wide receivers;
Terry Pendleton, David Justice
Napoleon McCallum and Kevin Smith ,
and
Damon Berryhill homered in
f\lllbecb; Rory Onvc., 1oel Ptucn, JMh

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

OAKU.ND A'nn..E11CS - Traded

Jose CaaiiCCO, outfielder, to lhe Teua

NATIONAL LEAGUE
[uttm Dlwlllon
Te•m
W L Pd.
Pittsburah ............ .14 56 .569
Monm:a.l ............. ..i I 59 .546
Chlelgo..................67 63 .515
St Louis ................64 63 .496
New York ..............60 ~ .46S
Philou!dphd ...........ll 16 .411

lO.l

Wtilern Ol"Won
Atl•nta ...-..............77 52 .59'7
CINCINNA1l ....... 71 59 .546
San ~ .............. 69 61 .531

6.5
8.5

Houston ......-.........61
San FnncDco .•......59

70
71

"""An""'...... ...ll

GB

3
7
9.5

13.5

.466
.4S4

17
II.S

18 .&lt;O.l

2l

Monday's scores

,.,.Atlanta 7, New Yor:k.S.
'
2nd pme

Atlanta 8, New Ym:il 6, 14 innings, lit

Mootrcal I, ONCINNA114
OliCIISC 2. Lol Anlc!CI 0
HOUILOII 9, Philldl:lfilia 2
St. LouiJ 6, S1111 Di£so 2
l..ol Anaclel (Cmw~ 0.1} at pric•ao
(Horkey 4.0), Ul p....
Montre1l (Mutinez t•·lO) 1l
CINCINNAn (PI&gt;cto().()). Hl p.m.
San FnnciJea (1kulu:a. ll·1) 11 Pitt~-­
....... (1.._ 6- I t), 7:ll p.m.

Ath.nu (Nied 0·0) n New Yoti

(Whl""""
lo~!' r·m
· 11 St. L:.uil
San 0U.
0-11)

(""""'" t-'7). I:Ol p.m.
PhilldclpU (Brantley l·!) at Hcunon
(Willlomo ,.),l:llp.m.

Wednesday's games
Atlanta (l.ailmndt li·S)al New Yui.
(Schcurtk 3-6), 1:40 p.m.
L&lt;MI Anaelea: (Ojeda 6-6) 1t Chie~ao
(M"''onl1..), 2:20p.m.
MCntreal (Oardna 11·9).-at CINCIN·

NATI (Rijo 1'"), i :l5p.m.
San FtuWoo (I lad. 10-4) " Pituburali(W-._1),7:llp.m.
Su Diea• (HW~tl3·7) al St. Loui•

t:m ,.~~~.

(Mvl~olllnd

PhiladelJ*ia

H~con

12·1) at

(HaNildl 5-9), 1:3$ p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dhld.Jn
T...m
W L PeL
Toronto .................. 75 57 .S68

Gl

8altimrn: ...............73 58 .S57
Milw&amp;ul-.~ .............70 61
.534
Dctroit....................63 fEj .417
New Yort..............61 71 .462
Ba~tcn ....................60

1.5
4.5
12

14

71

.4S8

14.S

CLEVELANIL. ....60 71

.4S8

l4.S

WMlern Dhldon
Oakland ........ -.......19 52 .603
Minnaw ..............i3 59 .5S3
Chieaao......... - .......6&amp; 61 .S27
Te~u ................... -6S tiJ
.4BS
Kan .... City .......... .S9 71 .454
C•lifornia .......-..... .S9 73 .441
Suulc .................. "55 71 .417

6.S
10

I S.S
l!l.S

20.5
24.S

Monday's scores
Toronto 9, Chica&amp;o 2
MinnCIOtl 5. Deuoit J, l 0 inninp
Mil wlllket4. New York!
K;~nsu City S, Tcxu 2
Sattlc 1~, BOJI.On 2
HalLimore 4, OU..Iand 0

CLEVELAND 4, Cllifomi• J

Tonight's games
O.icago (McCulti119· 10) at ToroniO
(Morris: li-S), 7:35p.m.
Minnaou (Trombley 0.0) " Detnrit
(Doheny 4-J). 7:35p.m.
New York (Pcft;z 11· 13) at Milwaukoc
(Navarro 14·9), I :OS p.m.
Tcua (Ryan '·ll) II Kan1u City
(Pich•nlo &amp;-5). 1:3S p.m.
Baltimara (Milae.k.i s.7) at Oakland
(Siu.11rU.i S-4), I O:QS p.m.
Bocton I.YOW18 0.3) II Seattle (Fisher
2-I),IO,Jl p.m.
CLEVELAND (Cook S·6) 11 C•lifor·
ni• (Fonuaoo

1 -I ),JO:l~

p.m.

Wednesday's games
Baltimon: (McDonald 12· 10) al QU..
land (Moore 13·10), 3:15p.m.
Chl¢1_SO (Hibbud 9·6) 1t Toronto
(Key 8·12), 7:35p.m.
Minneaou (Erick.ton 9·1 0) al Detroit
(Tanana 11 -8). 7:3S p.m.
New Yorll: (Sandcnon 11·8) It Mil·
WILlhe (Eidm! S-1), 8 :0~ p.m.
Te111 (Brown 17·8) 11 Kan111 Cit'
(R.d 2-l), i :JS p.m.
Boaton (Clemen• 16-1) It Suttle
(Luty6-6),tO:!ll pm.
. CiEVBLAND (Annurona S·l-4) at
California (Finley4-ll),l 0:3! p.m.

Transactions
B-ball

. •-.~.o....

•

RAtnMORE ORIOlES - Acq"""
• Cr•i&amp; Lcfferta, pilchcr, from the San
Dicao Padtet ror Erik Sehttlhuom, pildt·
•.. er, ahd a pla)'ft 10 be. DlmCcllala'. Delia·
nated Tooun, JIUIJda, IDii.WDr, for U·

· ·~oN uo -sox - 'A•!•lml
SCin a-. ...n • and NIICI Miildlcy,
I

•

piltbcr. hell ltie AtlarU ~nw. \o com·
the _.lei
~rdon pitcher.
Anil"'ll R0111 liMI Minc:hty to PaW'I;uckct
pleu~

s.n

"""-IM....

I'Ion:bolol ...

........
MILWAUUI BJBWERS -

&lt;l "- .,_, pildw,- Pow·
Re·

calltd· Alo. Diu. intllklcr, hom Datftlr
or lhe Amrd111 ~ . Opdonod

B-Ridllo..-.•-·
MINNBSU'I'A 'JWINS .-. Tnded Bill
...

Nalloftlll Lt•cue
ATI..ANTA BRAVES- Oait;n1ted
Mark_O.viJ, pildaer, for ulignment.
CINCIN'NATI REDS - Plactd
Grtt Swindell, pUcher, on the l!·cbr
dl•abltlillll, Rtttlltd Dan Wlllon,
catclltr, t'rom Nuhllle ot the Amerl·
e:an Alloclatkwl. OpUoned Rick Wrona,
calchrt, lo NUhwlllt.
NEW YORK. MBTS - Plud!lled Lh•
contnct ol.Mik• B.i..dr;bed!., pitcher, from
Tidewater of the lnlemltional Lea,uc.
O,Uonod Jell McKni&amp;hl, infi6ldcr, 1o
T!dewaiCt.
PITI'SBURGH PIRATES - Rocalled
Cub o...a.., infielder, from Bllf'fllo of
the American Auoci1tion. Ani&amp;ned
Stc¥e Coote.. pi.IC:het, 10 Saktn ol the Cer-

oliMI..ouoe.

TIOiay'sgames

{Cici. 3-7),

Ranaen for ltuben Siena, outfielder.
Bobby Win and Jeff RUIMD. pi&amp;cben, and
an vndiacl01ed,amount or moner. Optioned Tc:.dd Revtnia and Mib RacU.a,
pitcbenl, to Taooma of the PacifU: C0111
Leaave. Duisna!.Cd 1ohn Bri.aco. and
Brw:e Wal10n •. P.~~chen, for a..ipmenl.
Siped Sh1wn H.illelu. plteher, 10 I C&gt;M·
tnct with TICCiml.

e.,..

I~~Mp, "'"""· .. .,. ~o~ ...r
frw Dilmli ll.eed, aulfieWer. lbiCilla:llT.
B..-., cu~, fft"llll Portl•lld of the
Pod&amp; c.ut Loop.

SAN OJEGO PADRES- Phced Kun
Stillwdl,. infielder, en the lS·day dillblod
IUc.. tdrUICiiYc w Aua. 2A. Ra:al.lcd Jeff
Gardner, infielder, from Lu Vepa of Lhe
P,cifu; c.ut Loo-.
ST. LOUtS ctRi&gt;JNALS- Rot.a.d

Jo1e DeLeon, pilcher. Rec:alle4 Todd
Zeile, tiM! buanan, from Lovilville of
the American Auoc:iltion. Acti.Yited P&amp;o
dro Ouomro, fira blnrnan, JON Oq'*l·
do. 1ocoad bueman , and Joe Maar~nc
and BI)'R SmiLh, phchcn, hom ihe U·da'
diublcd lill Puichued the eonUICII of
Rod Brc•er, fmt buaun, 1nd Ozzie
Canuco, outfielder, from LouitYille of
the Amerir.an AMociatiOIL

Football
Nadonal FOOibaiii...Uiaue
ATLANTA FALCONS - Placed
Jlim Lde, linthld:er, and Tr~cey Eaton,
ufetr, an i.aj\I.J'lld n~e~e. W1iYed Tim
Paulk, O•eu Gilea and Darryl Hardy,
linebackers; Rcuic Dwisht, tiaht end;
and Fred Fouie, comerblck.
BUFFALO BIW - Agftlld 1o tcrm1
with Comcli~ Bcnneu, linebac.k.a, on a
multiyeu t OJltract. Wa iYed Brian
Baldin&amp;Cl'. Mike BrtMan and Joe Staylni·
U:, of!Cnlive linemen: O.rrick Brownlow
and Eric Fairs, lincb•cken; Dwisht
Dmne, Eric Coleman and MIM)' Hcndri1,
dc!ensiYe bacb; ChriJ Wallh 1nd CuniJ
M•yfield, wide rccei~; Guy B•ldinscr,
defauiYe lineman; Howud Griffith, Nn·
nin&amp; b1ck ; and Vince Marrow •nd Ed
Thomaa, tight end1. Placed l1me1 P1tton,
nose tickle, on injured rt.SaYe.
CHICAGO BEARS - W1ind Glen
Kozlowski 1nd Eric Wrilhl, wide rc·
ceiYen: M1uriee Doualau, defcnsiYe
b1ek; Mike Stoneb reaker tnd Jim
Schwantz, lincblckcn; Paul lullin, quutcrback; Todd H.arrit:on, tight end; Eric
Kumerow, defenaiYe end; and Jamea
RD~Me, fullbrock.
CINCINNATI BENGALS Waived Erik Wilhelm, quarterback;
Eric Kailua, tlaht ~nd; Cr•ll Taylor,
runnln1 buk; El1lon Rldale •nd An·
dnw Stewart, ddenal-ve enda; John
Earle and Chid Gumer, au•rds; Ulc
Shaw, lln~batkerj Orn1r Solo, runnln11.
back; Mntul Shipp, urtty; Mlchard
l,.llh, ~~¥ide rcctlnr; and L1ncc 01·
bercUnA, tackle.
DALLAS COWBOYS - Wa i-ved
O.le Helle~tue. center; Gerald Alphin,
Tony Lmuck and Derrick Shcpud. wide
neceiYer•; Michael Bculey •nd Cbuci
Weathcnpaon, runnins b1cka; Rcu ic
Cooper and M•urice Crum, lincbacltcn:;
Chad Fonune and Fullon W1c:uey, li&amp;ht
endJ; Jason G1mtt and Cnig Kupp, quar~ekl; Kevin Hatril, deienlive ct~d ; 111d
Tom Myolio,.ld, '"'"' ·
DENVER BRONCOS - Placed Ron·
nic Haliburton , lineblckCI', on injuml ~
aerva. Wa ived Stanley Moraan, Bany
John1on and Cedric Tillman, wide re·
ceiven;; Sun Farrell, offeuiveJuud ;
Tim Lucu, John K1chenki an John
Sullinl:,lineblck.en: Jeff Ale11nder. fuU·
btcl:; Nick Subil and JUn .John10n. offenaiYe linemen ; Rob Aw1ll, light end: and
Don Gib1on, Mull Flythe and Ro n
Oeater, ddcmive lillcmen.
DIITROIT UONS- Waived l.eon1rd
Bunon ~nd hcl: Linn, olfen1ive litlemen:
E.tnest Field•, Andre lone• 1nd John
Derby, linebacken; Eric Lynch, J\lnnina
bac.i; Derek Tennell, tiaht end; Jeuy
Wooct., defcn1ivc end; Ed Ti.llilon, !'WI·
nina bide; Cr~wford Kct, Mike Jlirwunt
and Denni1 McKn iaht, auud1; and
Bt.m~tG Wil1on,note uckle. '
GREEN DAY PACKERS - Waived
Miko Tomcuk, quar1erbaek ; Scott
Stephen, linebacker, O~~:a Bell 1nd SteYc
Anry, ruMina ba.:kl; Seb11ti1n Barrie,
dr:fenri¥ftnd; Jerry En111 and DuryllnBr•m , ti&amp;hl cnda; Mike McDonald,
linebacker; Fnnk Kma, defen1in line·
man; David Vilene., otrCNiYII Ulck)e; 1nd
l.oYi1 Check, oll'enlivelinem1n. Placed
Joe &lt;laMa, offllnliv• lineman, on injured

.......

HOUSTON Olin$- W;ived

V~t·

tor Jonea, runnln1 back: Mario B•iley,
M.-my Haurd, Wide Hopkin~ and Elbert

Tumu, 'fridc R:Ceiven; 'Oeora,e Bethune
1nd Blij•h A11Jtin, d•fentive end•;
Bem1nl Dafncy, olfetlli.n tackle; Terzy
Ot.y and Erik Nara•rd, prda; ChariCI
l'tlltml •nd Culton Lnce, n!eliu; and
BWy Bell tnd Emenuol MuWI. comer·

'""'·

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS - Waived
Albert Bentley, Brian Lattimore 1nd Mau·
ry Toy, Nnnin&amp; b..ckt; Quin1ua MeDon·
aid, Ray Sange and Mau V•nd&amp;~beck,
linebatken; A\1n Cnm, delauive back;
Sammy Mutin, Mito BcllamJ, Reuie
Thomton and. Eddie Brinon, wide rt•
oel.ven; Pat Tal1balin, Mltk Tucker 1nd
Drown, oJTcnsiYalincmea; Mich1cl
Brand.cn, defensive end; Tun UNIOn. ciJ.ht
end; and Michael Heldt, ocntcl'. 1
. KANSAS CITY CIDRFS ...J Waived
Robb Thoma•, wide recdwr, Joblllau,

J.,.

Taotoai 1nd Rich Stepltena. offenaive
linemen; Doua Reed, Ferric Collons and
A.J. Jimenon, defen~ive linemen; and
Cunia Cotton and Robert McWri&amp;hl, de·
fcn~ive back•.
LOS ANGELES RAMS - W1ived
M•n:us Dupree. Drerak Laville and Ernie
Thompson, nannin&amp; backl; Glcnell
Sandct1, Bri.aa Town1end 1nd Thomu
Homco, linebackers; Jim Skow and K.ul
Wibon, ddenlive enda; Ricky Jonc•,
ufety; Joe Domin~o•, p\lnler; Vance
Hammond, delcnltYe tackle; Chule•
Franta and Eric Buckley, defen1 in
bleb; and Frank Hartley, tig,hl end .
MIAMI OOUHINS - Waived Fred
Banb, wide xcciver; Chril DraKl, Or·
1cr1 Mobley &amp;ftd O.we ~ tiaht awil:
X.uneno Bill ud Bernie Pumalee, IUtl·
nina backa; Kevia Robbias and Blaine
Roll , offenaiveliitemen: E.J. Junior,
llneblc.ker; Mike hquaniello, ufety;
l&gt;ou&amp; Pedenon, quarterb•ck; Michael
MNrucler, cornerback; and Sh1wn Lee,
dcf'e111ive lineman. Placed Pat Swoopt,
dcf'eniJi.wc end, Gn in~ reterYC.
MINNESOTA VIKINOS - WaiYed
Dlrrin Nel.110n and O.uclt Enna, Nnning
blclu; Midi. Duabahelr., David Bavuo and
Ed McDaniel, linebacker•; Brent
Novoaclliy 1nd Mike Jonc., ti,tlt end•:
D1ncn H~e,'!::· Mike M1yca and
Solomon w·
, deienlivc. bacb; Carl
Parker, Terry Obcc and Joe R1ndolph,
Mde receiven; 1nd Scott AdarnJ, guard.
Placed Todd Kalis, pard, on injvrcd tc·

....

the nightcap that ended at 12:59
a.m. EDT for a 7-5 victory. lonnie
Smith, Ron Gant and Jeff Blauser
homered in the first game, which
the Braves won 8-6 in the 14th
inning on Otis Nixon's two-out,
two-run double.
The Braves ended the Mets' season-best seven-game winning
streak in the first game and went
won its ninth straight at Shea, dating back to last season.
"It was nice to get into both
games and help out, " Reardon
said. "We were going nowhere in
Boston, and to come here was
great. I've made up 21 games in the
standings in two days."
Atlanta took a 6 1/2 game lead
in the NL West over second-place
Cincinnati, which was swept in
four games in New York during the
weekend.
Reardon, obtained from Boston
for two minor leaguers, pitched one
inning to save the second game. He
is baseball's career saves leader
with 355.
Pete Smith (4-0) gave up nine
hits, including Jeff Kent's first
home run for the Mets, in 6 2/3
innings for the victory in the nightcap.
Mark Wohlers (1-2) worked
three innings and Mike Slanton, the
sixlh Allanla pitcher, pitched the
14th for his seventh save in the
opener.
Cubs 2, Dodgers 0
At Wrigley Field, los Angeles
was shut out for the fourth time in
five games as Greg Maddux
pitched a five-hitter . .Steve
Buechele broke up Tom Candiotti 's

no-hitter with a two-out single in
the seventh inni~g ~nd Chicago
then scored two unearned runs.
Buechele, who stole second,
scored whon first baseman Eric
Karras fumbled Derrick May's
hard hit grounder. May stole second and came home on Dwight
Smith's single.
Maddux (16-10) allowed five
hits, walked one and struck out six.
Astros 9, Phillies 2
At the Astrodome, Eric Anthony
hit his second grand slam of the
season and drove in a career-high
five runs.
Butch Henry (5-9) pitched an
eight-hitter.
Houston scored Ci ve times in the
sixth inning. The Astros loaded the
bases with walks to Craig Biggio
and Steve Finley, and an infield
single by Luis Gonzalez before
Anthony hit his grand slam.
Andy Ashby (1·3) was the loser.
Cardinals 6, Padres 2
At Busch Memorial Stadium,
Bob Tewksbury pitched a sevenhitter and Andres Galarraga hit a
ho111e run. After the game, the
Padres traded losing pitcher Craig
Lefferts to Baltimore.
Tewksbury (14-5) is 3-0 with
three complete games against San
Diego this season.
Tewksbury lowered his major
league-leading earned run average
to 2.01. He bas walked just 16 batters in 201 innin~s. and has not
walked a batter m 17 of his 27
starts.
Tracy Woodson and Geronimo
Pena drove in two runs each for the
Cardinals.

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - If National league realignment occurs, it
won't be untill994.
Baseball officials said Monday
that commissioner Fay Vincent bas
effectively abandoned realignment
for next season because of deadline
pressure created by the Chicago
Cubs' lawsuit. The league said it is
planning a schedule without
realignment, and one owner said it
probably would be with the socalled "balanced" formula used by
the American lca~e since 1979.
Deputy comm1ssioner Stephen
Greenberg said the commissioner's
office had given NL president B.ill

White ~rniission to "issue a 199.3
draft w1thout the realignment Vincent ordered on July 6. The Chicago Cubs, one of the four teams
affected, obtained a preliminary
injunction in federal coun blocking
realignment, and Vincent's appeal
is not scheduled to be heard until
Sep~ 30.
The Major league Baseball
Players Association, which already
had pushed back the schedule
deadline a month to Aug. I, refused
to grant a second extension.
"We understand that the union
is pushing for a schedule and that
they have a contractual right to a
schedule," Greenberg said. "What

-

we have done is take the commissioner's office out of i~
"We have notified Bill White
that under the current slatus quo the
Cubs and the Cardinals are in the
East and that if he issues a schedule .
with the Cubs and Cardinals in the
East we understand thaL"
Greenberg did not completely
rule out realignment for next year,
but time pressure would almost
certainly prevent i~ Because of the
need to finalize the schedule for
television, the commissioner's
offJCe would not attempt to impose
a switch for 1993 even if the 7th
U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals lifts
(See NL on Page S)

STEELERS

-

CAM YOU IMAAIMI

WHAT A DIFPIIIINCI

IT WOULD MAKE

IP

Waived. Jeff Kemp, quarterback; Aoyd
Dinn and Kenny 1actson, wide re·
ceivcn; Thomu S111den, l\lnnina bact;
and ~ianl8'111l&amp;y,lincbacker.

PITTSBURGH

Waived Ride Suom, quanerblct: Sc«tie
Ortham, rvMina back; Mart Didio •nd
D11ric.i Owen1, wide nsceinn; Dau
Hubo\U', tiahl end; Dun C11iguire and
Tom Rickcttl, offensiYe linemm; Garry
Howe 1nd Tom Gib1on, ddcn1ive line·
men; Matt Jaworski, linebacker; and
Kevil! Smith, Todd IC!wnm. S1mmy Lilly
and Mickey Wuhinl\(lll, dclensivc bleb.
SAN DlEOO CHARGERS - W1ivod '
Johnnie Bame~, Yancey Thir;pcn, Robe:rt
Claiborne and Waltat Stahley, wide roctiven; Ton)' IAIIc:iJRC. halfblclt; Peter
Tuipll""' ....,;,1 '""'' T..., s...r..~
lana Pmb.h and Jc!f Walia, olfenaivc
linemen; Ches Clark, linehlckcr; Cedric:
M1c:k, cornerback; and Arthur PtW and
Tonr Sanae, dcfcnfive tickles. Placed
Kevin UWe, dcfftllive end, m injumd re.

THE YOUMA PIOPLI

INOWID TNI IAMI

....

~

SAN FRANOSCO 49ERS - Waived

Hatty Sy4ncy, ninnina b•ck: Todd
Bowlet, aal'ety; Mark Sc.ay and Odean
Turner, wido Jeceiven; 1oe Prokop,
punter, Mm LaB011nty, defensive end ;
Martin Huriaarl, Rcuic McKenzie and
Uiol.-hllk, linel&gt;oclten; 0,., lodoon,
defen•i.ve linomu; Tom Neville and
Ricky Si.aJar, alfnivc linanc:n; and Dut)'l Pollard. camcrbacll.
SEA'ITl.E SI!AHAWXS - Waiv ed
NCIIb)' OlaaJOW, ufety; Brian BladoJ,
as-t; Elk: Hayt~ and Mike Flier, defca·
aiv. linanen; llick Newbill and Chico
Fnlcy,lineboc:tm: Brod l.qaou. C...ta:
M;ke Oliplwl1 ond Mulwnmod Shomoid·
Dcen, NMin&amp; back•: Anthony Hamlet
· and Jolin MacNdJI, defensive end~; Drz.
wia Brower, Bri1n
and Jhxl
Moc:n. wide recei.vlni Ma co1m Fnnlr:,
owowlodl,oad!WM!RoiMoonondloe
Metom. dd'lftll.vt bKb.

iNTNUIIAIM FOI

TNI VOTIM8 IOOTNt

Trea!•

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS W1ind Elijah AltJtlnder,linob.cJter;
ChriJ B-. Joe Klnt""d Morll B~,
dc:f'ftvt btcb: Willie Od; !JFt, Willie
Olowley,ldll'lll:er ond L&lt;Otie Sheph&lt;n.
wide fti!CGvtn; Mule INcbaa and Jl.hca
H.U, dJenaiw linlm•; R111dy Grim.,
centa; ancl Stanfcd 1-nnp and MWo
R
. bodu.
~S=ON REDSKIN! W1ivcd Alria Wehon, llfe,y; X.tbh
WWil, delwive Old: 0., Will:ino, lith~
Old; ....

Register and Vote .

Sidney-.--

lnternttianai.Amcialion ol Clerls, Recorders, Election Ollitia ls ond Tremrers.

,

Tlle Dally sentinel-Page 5

Clev·eland edges California 4-3 to end four-game losing streak
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)- Rod at-bat. I was going to throw the
Nichols didn't have much trouble rutStiest forkle I've ever thrown in
with the California Angels' lineup, my life. But it floated in there and
except for Ron Tingley.
he got a base hit."
Tmgley, who caught him in the
That single knocked out the
Cleveland organization a few years right-hander and led to a procesago, had three of the six hits sion of three relievers. Ed Plunk
Nichols allowed over seven-plus restored order after the Angels narinnings Monday night. It wasn't rowed the gap with a pair of
enou~ as the fndians held on for a eighlh-inning runs and earned his
4-3 VICtory that ended a four-game third save.
losing streak.
"The way Rod's history has
Tingley entered the game in a 0- been, when he gets up to 80 or 90
for-18 slump.
.
pitches, you have to watch out for
"Tin~ley's the best hitter in him " Cleveland manager Mike
b~all, ' Nich~ls (3-3) said. "He Har8rove said. "I like the way he
htt some bad pnches, a.nd I really pitched. He made ?nly one bad
wanted to embarrass h1m h1s last pitch all night, 10 Tsngley the last

iime up."
Ted Power forced in a run with
a bases-loaded walk to Angel rookie Tim Salmon and another came in
on a groundout by lee Stevens,
narrowing the gap to 4-3 in the
eighth. Rookie Damian Easley singled off Plunk with one out tn the
ninth, putting the tying run on base,
but he tried to steal second and was
thrown out by Junior Ortiz.
"That's part of Damon 's
game,'' A;ng~ls m~nag~r Buck
Rodgers said. 'If be s gomg to be
of value to us, he's going to be on
his ow~ . He felt he had a good
enough Jump and that he was safe
at second. If there were no outs, I

would have bunted him over. But
with one out, we needed a guy in
scoring position.''
Cleveland rookie Kenny Lofton
left the ground in the sixth inning
to make the defensive play of the
game, robbing Salmon of his fii'St
Anaheim Stadium home run with a
leaping grab above the center field
fence.
"I didn't think it would go out
coming off the bat," said Salmon,
who hit his only major league
homer at Yankee Stadium on the
An~els' last road trip.
'I was just hopmg it would go
over his head and carry off the

wall. The next thing I knew, I saw
him leaping. I really didn't expect
it to carry that much. I've beard the
ball doesn ' t carry well here at
night. I was runn ing hard, and I
think I was just about rounding second base vhen he got it."
It wasn't Nichols' frrst look at
Salmon, who had ·impressed him
before.
"I have all the respect in the
world for that Salmon guy, because
I saw him play when I was sent
down to Colorado Springs,"
Nichols said. "I know what kind of
bat speed he's got and what kind of
power he's got."

The Indians scored in each o(
the fmt three innings and built a 40 lead against Bert Blyleven, who .
failed in his second attempt at his
287th career victory. Carlos Baerga
opened the scoring with a sacrifice
ny, Glenallen Hill has a run-scoring groundout and Carlos Martinez
added a two-run single in the third.
Blyleven (7-7) allowed seven
hits, two earned runs and three
walks over seven innings while
striking out two.
The crowd of 18,013 was the
smallest at Anaheim Stadium since
June 4, 1979, when 16,979 watched
the Angels play Toronto.

Oakland trades Canseco to Texas for Sierra, two pitchers and cash
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)- Jose
Canseco, the embodiment of the
Oakland Athletics' brash, bruising
style, took the news quietly.
As he readied for a first-inning
at-bat Monday night against Ballimore, Canseco was called back for
pinch-hitter Lance Blankenship and
m the runway manager Tony La
Russa told him he had been traded.
"I feel awkward and strange
right now," Canseco said. "It real-

Iy hasn't hit me yet.

"I'm disappointed I won't be
around to enjoy the A's the success
the remainder of the season. I can't
really feel any positive emotions
when I've just been traded from the
(organization) I've been with for
10 years."
The deal was one of three Monday nighl
San Diego sent left-handed
pitcher Craig Lefferts to Baltimore
for minor league pitcher Eric

Schullstrom, and Minnesota moved
left-bander Bill Kruger 'to Montreal
for outfielder Darren Reed.
All players will be eligible for
post-season play because they were
placed on the rosters of their new
clubs prior to the midnight deadline.
Canseco, a two-time Al home
run champion who was hitting .246
this season with 22 homers and 72
RBis, was sent to the Texas
Rangers in exchange for outfielder

Ruben Sierra, pitcher Bobby Witt,
reliever Jeff Russell and cash.
The fmt-place A's sought more
experience and depth in their pitching staff for the pennant stretch
run, and they gave up one of baseball's most dynamic players to get
it. Sierra is expected to replace
Canseco in right field.
"It wasn't one of my happiest
days, telling Jose he was involved
in a trade," LaRussa said. "But I
think we're taking our best shot at
finishing off the division, and if we
can fmish it, this sets us up for the
postseason better.
"I think our club understands.
We've seen Ruben Seirra compete.
He's a two-time All-Siar. We've
also seen the pitchers. llhink we're
going to be OK."
Canseco, 28, had begun the
night playing right field in the
game, which Baltimore won 4-0.
After he was told of the trade,
he cleaned out his locker. He sa1 in
the locker room for several minutes
in stunned disbelief and - still
dressed in his Oakland ooiform addressed a news conference in the
basement of the Coliseum.

a person you are. When you spend
a lot of time in one place, it's Jtind
of hard to swallow."
The A's are taking a chance
because Sierra is currently out with
the chicken pox. He also is a free
agent at the end of the season and
will be looking for more lhan $25
million over five years.
Sierra, 26, is hitting .278 with
14 homers and 70 RB!s.
The 28-year-old Wit~ 9-13 with
a 4.46 ERA, gives the A's a muchneeded starting pitcher and Russell
will be used as a set up man to
Eckersley.
Russell is 2-3 with 28 saves and
a 1.91 ERA.
Witt was 17-10 in 1990, but bas
often had control problems in his
career.
Canseco entered lhe season with
209 career homers and 647 RBis
over his first six full years with
Oakland.
He is in the second year of a
five-year deal signed with the A's
in 1991. The right fielder is making
$3.6 million this season and will
earn $4.1 million in 1993. Canseco
will make $4.4 million in 1994 and
$5.1 million in 1995.
,_:..:&lt;C..:.;on;;.;;ti;;:nu:;;;ed;..;;fro""m::;..P;_;;ag:g;e:.. .:4.t. . )- - - - - - - - - at lhe request of six teams using hi.s issue and lhe Giants issue up in the
"best interests of baseball" power air for lhe '93 season, most people
under the Major league Agree- feel 13-I 2 is the way," Giles said.
men~
Under the format used since
Nl spokeswoman Kaiy Feeney 1969, Nl teams currently play
said the league was proceeding on divisional rivals 18 limes and :
plans for a schedule without teams in lhe other division 12
realignment, but thr ~ lhe proposed times. That formet must be abanmove of the San Francisco Giants doned because the Nl is expanding
to St. Petersburg, Fla., complicated to 14 teams next season, adding the
Colorado Rockies and Florida Marscheduling.
Philadelphia Phillies owner Bill lins.
Cubs chariman Stanton Cook
Giles said the league was leaning
toward the balanced schedule in and White did not return telephone ·
which teams play divisional oppo- messages left at their offices . :
nents 13 times and teams in the Feeney said the league lqled to gel :
a draft to clubs soon.
.
other division 12 times.
"Hopefully days, not weeks,"
"Nobody particularly likes it
this way, but with the realigrunent sbe said.

•
t ..
NL reaIIgnmen

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS -

Wah•e4 Muvin Allen, runnins ba ck:
Wayne 1-bwk.ina and Kelvin Mun1, wide
rcceiYen; DIYid Di1on, no1c tu:kle;
Steve. Gordon, c•ttlllfj Scott Bowlu, offmlinlineman; Ben Jeffenan, taci.le;
Alu Johnson, wide receiver, Rob Me·
Oovcm. Regie Clalk and Troy Wiliea:.
Unebttkc:n;-Eric Berae.on, ufcty; Tim
Ed ..arda, dcfcmiYc a~d; md AI Gotdm,
tiJ)oI a\d .
NEW OIU..£ANS SAINTS - Waived
Buford Jordan, fullback; Ca:ry Blanchard,
kicker, Xul Dunbar, defeftl.iye lineman;
Donald Jone1. linebacker; Marcu•
Dowdell, wide ftiCCiycr, Orq Scale~, tight
End; and P1ul Jetton, M.iie.X.eim and
Mike Giller, cti'CNivc lincmm.
NEW YORK GIANTS - WaiYed Ot·
tis Anderton and Anthony Lynn, Nnninl
b1ckt; Jeff Cad1011, quarwbsclr.; Gary
Reuon~ and Bobby Abnrm:, lincblcl:cn;
Mich1cl WJIFt. Rosa BrvMI. and Brian
Allred., dcfcnliYC backs; SUiccy OiUard,
M11r11y Oun:tt and Dcnnil Tripp, dcfcn·
1ive linM\en; Eric Bruun, punlcJ; Ted
Pop&amp;m, tiaht end; N(c:k FlMinaanofo and
Jeff Novak, olfenaiw Ulddet; and Charlet
SwiM, Yrilkl roceiva.
NEW YORK lETS - Waived JohMy
Hcaor and Lauy Kinanl , nmnina back•;
Mike Haisht. olfen1ive lineman; Troy
Taylor, quarterback; Bill Pickel and
W•yne Wickl, defauive lincmftl; Troy
Joiwcr~, Rickey Anchwa and Keo Colem•n, lincbl.tken; Pat BU~ch, lighl end;
RJ. Xon, dcfWive ·bad::; •nd RcaJie
Moore, wiclc receiver.

EAGLES

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NL realignment delayed unti/1994

~

PHILADELPHIA

Tuesday, September 1, 1992

ON THF; WAV OUT -

the injunction issued July 23 by
U.S. District Judge Suzanne B.
Conlon.
"The principal effect of what
the commissioner has done is to
enable the National league to give
us the schedule they owe us," said
Eugene Orza, general counsel of
the Major lea~ue BasebaU Playen;
Association. ' And we expect that
they will do that yesterday."
Vincent's realignment ordered
the Cubs and St. louis Cardinals to
the NL West next season arid the
Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds
to the East. The Cubs had blocked
realignment on March 4 by using
their power under the Nl constitution, but Vincent overrode the veto

'

Jose Canseco drives

Monday night's game against the Baltimore Orl·
. oles. He was told or tbe trade while on the on·
deck circle during tbe game. (AP)

away rrom the Oakland Coliseum shortly after
bearing or his being traded by the Athletics to
tbe Texas Rangers ror some pitchers during

Eastern setters to host Warren Local
in first volleyball match Wednesday
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Even with just two returning
starters, the Eastern Eagles volleyball team of fii'St-year mentoc Don
Jackson are loolting forward to the
upcoming I 992 campaign which
begins Wednesday, September 2 at
home against Warren local.
Jackson will be iri his fmt year
after coaching junior high volleyball under head mentor Pam
Douthitt for several seasons.
Douthitt stepped down as head
mentor after many successful seasons and several championships.
Jackson stated, "After losing
four girls from last year's squad
due lo gradution or moving, we are
looking forward to rebuilding a
new, successful squad. With experience at our setting positions,
we're hoping it will give us a big
boost toward success."
Graduated were all-SV AC, allDistrict 13 and all-state competitor
lee GilliHan and sll-SVAC, allDislrict 13 honorable-mention

Amy Well among the EHS losses.
The schedule will allow us to get
Eastern has two returning used to playing bigger better
starters in junior Jaime Wilson, a schools in our transition to the Trisetter, and senior hitter/passer Car- Valley Conference next year."
rie Morrissey. Also returning from
Jackson indicated that this
Texas will be sophomore SVAC year's team is one of the tallest in
honorable-mention
player recent years at Eastern and hopes to
Stephanie Otto, who should anchoc use thts to the team's advantaJe.
the front line foc the Eagles.
"This should bolster our front line
"With Stephanie returning to the play and hoFfully give us some
district after a year out, we're hop- good breaks.
ing for some big spikes from her.
Returning varsity players are
After some experience and game junior Penny Aeilcer, passer-setter;
time, I'm also hoping senior Sherri sophomore Becky Driggs, hitter;
Smith will be seeing some setting sophomores Heidi Nelson, setter,
action," said Jackson.
and Jessica Radford, setter. Others
Jackson also stated , "We've seeing action will be junior Kathy
been wocldng very hard, but have Bernard, hitter; junior Shelly Hento be more consistent and we have dricks, hitter; junior Wendy Rach,
to gel better team movement and hitter; and freshman Jesaica Karr.
rotations. This should come with
Reserve players include Nicole
experience."
Nelson, Jamie Ord, Jessica Cheva"I'm looking forward to the sea- lier, Michelle Maynard, Rachael
son. Our schedule is one of the Hawley, Valerie McGinnis, Melistoughest we have had the past few sa Guess, Michelle Schultz, Amy
years and wilh no league we have Redovian, Kellie Ridenour, Beth
to shoot for a win in every game Bay, Rebecca Evans and Brandi
and get. ready for_th.e tournament. Reeves.
Paul Brannon will coach the
junior high squad and says, "We
are looking forward to thts year's
season vert much. The girls have
been working very hard and can't
wait to begin the season. "
Rowe, Tabitha Willford, Marcy
Four girls return to the junior
Mathews and Jodi Caldwell. high squad: Penny Aeilcer, Amanda
Andrea Moore, a sophomore Milhoan, Martie Holter and Crystal
rounds out the line-up.
Holsinger. The four first-year playWith a good mix of youlh and ers are Traci Heines, Kim Mayle,
experience and a strong junior class Joanna Gumph and Michelle CaldSouthern has the makings of a ~ood well. Jessica Brannon and Molly
team . The team starts out w1th a Heines are managers.
full schedule of three games this
The junior hi~h opened Monday
week.
night against Me1gs.

"From their view it makes a lot
of se~~e from a business point of
v1ew, Canseco said.
Canseco's awesome power
helped the A's win the the Al pennant 10 1988 and a World Series
title in 1989. The A's also won the
Al pennant in 1990 but were upset
in the Series by Cincinnati.
Canseco has often had some
controversial moments with the
A's, including this year when he
left a game at Oaltland in the eighth
inning causing lhe ire of several
teammates. His off-field demeanor
has also been controversial as he
received a number of celebrated
speeding tickets and had some publie domestic problems with his
wife.
·
But Canseco's contributions on
the field were enonmous.
"It's a sad day really, " A's
reliever Dennis Eckersley said.
"As a team, I think we'll be a better team becau~ we needed pitchmg and we got~~
"But he's. a great player. I feel ,
sorry for hsm because I know
ther~·s a lot of emotions that go
wilh it, regardless of how strong of

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-*

Southern to start volleyball
season tonight against Warren
Beginning her 13th season as
head coach of the Southern Tornado volleyball squad, .veteran coach
Suzanne Wolfe is anxiously looking to tonight's season opener at
Warren local.
last season SHS was 9-11, but
lost four senibrs to graduation.
Four seniors, however, return
for a strong nucleus in 5-foot-7
. senior Megan Wolfe, Christi Maidens, Angie Swiger and Kim Jenkins.
Wolfe remarked, ''This is one of
the most enthusiastic groups I have
ever had. The attitude and enthusiasm about the game bas been there.
The girls have practiced hard for
the past two weeks and I have seen
much improvement in our blocking
and hitting."
Wolfe ha.!l had numerous SVAC
and tournament championships to
her credit, but is excited about the
hopes for a very successful 1992
campaign.
· Despite optimism, she is conCerned about the difficult indepen·
dent schedule, which left Southern
without a league as a result of the
demise of the SVAC.
"We are playing a very tough
schedule this year since we are no
Ionfer in the svAC. livery game
wil be a challenge. This shoul(l
give us lot of experience in
preparation for the tournamen~"
- Seven Juniors round out the
Southern line-up: Aimee Manuel,
Jenni Hill, Brandi Mallory, Rasche!

a

3 Oz. Pouches 12 Pack

99
SAVE

S8.28

~

SNUFF

1.2 Oz. Cans 10 Pack

Is now accepting students

l J.lt

for the 450 hour
OHIO .PEACE OFFICER
BASIC TRAINING CLASS

8012nd Ave., Gallpals, 011
Roull7131, Kanauga, OH

MISt .. at least 18 ye•s of age cMIIave a
~lg~ sdlool ~- or GED. No Crimlltil Record.

271 w. IMI St., Pomeroy, OH
101 Jackson Pk., Rt. 31, Gallpals, OH
81 St. I Jackson Ave., Pl. Pleasant, WV
Ill Gen. Hrilger Pkwy., ldclaport, OH

.

Cla..es will H tvt1l111 11d wHklldt.
CALL (614) 446·00 11 MONDAY IHRU FRIDAY
1:00 IJL TO 4:00 P.M. - Ask for Terri.

Ortttlzlllolltla.etllt Sept. 12, 1992 If 10:00
A.M. &amp;IIIIa Count Co1rtllouse, Stco1d Floor
'·

1.2 Oz. Cans 10 Pack

99AVE

GALLIA CO. POLICE ACADEMY

JUillOIIIS $1,000.00

1.2 Oz. Cans 10 Pack

SNUFF

'•

Credit C.rdl May a. lJHd For All
Purcha~~t~ Excluding lotlory

Ani! MOMy Ordora
Wo Aooervo The RIQhl

To Urn" Ou1111tltlot

OF AIHLAND OIL, INC.

'

�by Qob Hoeflich
:: ~ Now isn't dial spc1Cial7

•:· the Ohio Sllle Fair for only about
. eight nlolltlls, has apin proven tllal
· -an employeo.-no matter on what
level-is better off not to make

:-:waves.

Inmon seemed to have started

.. die WIVCS that did him in when he
-· made a $2.6 million de~l with
; Pepsi.Cola giving Pepsi eJclusive
:-· pouring rights at the fair. After
·' that, the waves ncvellet up and the
· Ohio Expositions Commission
: .. which hUed him couldn't even wait
· until a meeting scheduled ~ Sept.
, 16 111 get rid of him. They met in
•. special session Friday to shed
·· ··lhemsetves and the fair of Inmon- iust couldn't get rid of him fast
~- enouah.

family' had only a little clothilig
with them when they were moved
to Tampa. Family members are
now at the Patrick Air Force Base
north of Tampa with the exceptim
of Scott who has been kept in
Tampa.
All of the family's personal
effects and fumishinas were lost as
wen as most of their clothina. The
family will visit here with WiUiam
and Nancy Kimes of Racine in
November. If you would like to
assist you can call Mrs. Kimes at
949-2488.
.
Here are some sizes: Scott, 3636 IIOUSers, extra large shirt; Lorie,
18·22 women's sizes, nine shoe;
Ashley, size seven, three in sbocs;
Justin, 24 months; Mrs. Stewan,
women's size 24.

;. ; ·• Miking waves probably should
The Women's Auxiliary of Vet·
. be an exc:eplion to the rule. Howerans
Memorial Hospital will be
ever, ewn though you end UJ1 get·
staging
a fund-raiser in the form of
- ling drowned in the deal, waves
a jewelry sale from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.
::: Often are a ncecssity of life.
Friday, Sept. 4, in the hospital's
The Farmers Bank and Savings conference room. The public is
Co. has laken the leadership in pro- invited auxiliary members will be
; • viding help for the hurricane vic- on hand to escort visitors from the
. · .tims ill Florida and Louisiana. lobby to the sale location .
.: Through 3 p.m. Thursday you can
Congratulations to Mrs. Belva
···leave items in the main bank lobhy
_ or the Tuppers Plains branch. The Willard wbo will be observin&amp; her
·" Salvation Anny will handle dcliv- 95th birthday anniversary on
: cry of the collection to the desiK· Thursday, Sept. 3. Her mailing
naiCd areas. I don't believe you 11 address for cards is Rock Springs
, ·have any problem in coming up Roads, Pomeroy.
. : with appropriare items to send.
Remember the many Burma. Speaking of the hurricane, you Shave signs that used to be along
might want to help a local family the highways? Opie Cobb has a
whole collectim of them. Here are
caught up in the severe storm.
. The family consists of SgL Scott a couple:
.. ·Kimes, his wife, Lori Stewart "Henry the Eighth, sure had trou:· JGmcs formerly of Syracuse, their ble; Short term wives, Long term
- two children, Ashley Megan, five, stubhte». Burma-Shave. "If hua·
: :·and Justin Ryan, about 12 months ging on hi&amp;hways is your sport;
• old, and Lori's mother, Linda Trade in your car for a davenport."
The signs faded from the scene for
•'Stewart.
;· " The family was living on the the most part years ago-about the
' lfomcstead Air Force Base which time we p vehicles that would so
: ~ was evaclllled. The on-base house so fast, we could no longer read the
--~-occupied by the family was verses. Do keep smiling.
·: destroyed by the storm and the

Pet Sem 1811 T
Rated Ra
wo
**Ill (out of five)

Paramount Pictures
(Now playing at the Spring Valley
Cilltma 7 Check local listings f01'
lillttJ
·

CODY ORION SPENCER

Spencer birth
announced
llrian and Nancy Spencer
Pomeroy, announce the birth of
their first child, a son, Cody Orion
Spencer, on May 10.
The infant weiahed seven
pounds and six ounces and was 20
mchcs Ions.
Maternal grandparents are
Norma Baker, Pomeroy, and the
late Larry Baker. Maternal areat:
grandparents are Nellie Moore,
Syracuse, and the late Millard
Roush and the late Seldon and
Nora Baker.
Paternal grandpatents are Judy
Di~on, Pomeroy, and the late Mar·
vin Spencer. Paternal great-grandparents are the late Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Spencer and the late and the
late Dr. and Mrs. I.A. Hewitson.

It's rare indeed when a movie
sequel is better than the original.
But then again, Ptl Stiii4/Qry TWo
doesn't have to try vuy hard to top
its
eJeaSed in 1989, the original
Ptt Stmatary was based on the
Stephen King novel of the same
name.
To its acdit, the film was ttue to
King's novel and managed to keep
too much HoUvwnnd from seeping
in to "improve~ hiSCTeation.
The problem was, King's style
is very cerebral and a lot his the
narrltion and character development can't be transfemd to film.
King had nothin~ to do with
Two, which picks up m the town of
Ludlow, Maine a few years after
the Creed family lost its bailie with
the ancient Indian burial ground
that has an annoying habit of tnna·
ina back to 6fe whatever (or whoever) is buried there.
Edward Foclong (TerllliiiiJior 2:
Judgment Day) stars as Jeff
Matthews, the son of a separated
actress and veterinarian..
When his mom is electrocuted
while filming a QKJYie, Jeff and his
doCtor dad move to their.summer

r=essor.

·

RevlByew
REVIN
PINSON

home in Ludlow to get away from
Los Angeles and the bad memories.
Jeff befriends Sheriff Gus
Gilbert's step son, Drew (Jason
McGuire), who innocently draws
him into a bad situation when the
sheriff (Clancy Brown) shoots
Drew's dog for trying to set at his
rabbits.
Drew enlists Jeff to help him
haul the dog up the hill behind Pet
Sematary to the Indian burial
arounds, half hoping that the legends about the area's restorative
powers are true.
They are. Zowie the doa returns
home the next night covered in
blood and earth and sporting a new
attitude. We're talking Cujo 10 the
tenth power.
Zowie gets revenae on his killer,
and the boys bury the sheriff m .the
hill, hoping he '11 come back to life
before anyone finds out what happenedTh.e new an d .tmprov ed I'JVJng
.
dead sheriff is the high point of the
film.
Witb eye$ rolled halfway back
in his head and a lopsided beyond·
the-gr~ve grin, he's a cross

I

between a young Hennan Munster
and Jack Torrance, a Ia Jack
Nicholson in T~ Shining.
Altogether tt s a better package
~ the original, but Two still has
a few b!Jgs '10 work out. One problem is the uncomfortably jerking
plot. caused by jumping from one
an~ooist to ailothet.
F1rst it's the resurrected dog,
then the resurrected sheriff, then
Jefr s resurrected mom, then the
resurrected bully, and then Jeff's
resurrected mom &amp;glin.
Ob)', the antapist is IICtually
the burial ground with its seductive
promise of immortality, but the
mm still doesn't provide • focal
poinL
The audience needs one repre·
sentativc of evil to boo, kind of a
cinematic version of a conaress·
man.
.
There is sucb a thing as too
much of a ~ thing, 110 too mucb
of a bad thing is really aoln' over·
board - parts of this film JJDitate
the back room of abutcher shop.
Movie makers today fail to real·
ize is too much of a dependence on
blood and gore doesn't scare an
audience, it revolts them.
Maybe the producers should
have buried Alfred Hitchcock
behind ~ Sematary•
He would have come back 10
life at ,least Ions enough to tell
them SIUI'fiiSt is the llatiiC of the
pme, not a mutilated face or i box
&lt;i chewed-up kittens;'
'
.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement wrndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-9C9·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
(No Sllllday Calla)

To place an ad

Call 992-2156
Mo~.

thru

FRI.

8A.:II.-5P.lt.- S.\T.B-12

POLICIES
1

•

•
1

•
•

•

•

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1.00 p.m. SaiUrda y
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. T"esday
1:00 p.m. Wednesda y
100 p.m. Th"rsday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thl1May Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

CLOSEU SDDH
Ad• ouUide Lhe county your ad run• mu.l be prepaid
Receive dilcount for ada paid in advance.
Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ada under 15 word1 will be
run 3 day• at no chars«~·
PrRe of ad for all capitalletten i1 double prM:e of ad COil
7 point line type only u1ed
Sen lind il not re~poneible for error• after firat day (cheek
for error• far1tday ad run• in paper). Call before 2:00p.m.
day afll:r publication to make correction
Ada tlw.t mual be paid in achance are:
Card of Thanka
Happy Ado
In M~oriam
Yard Sa.lr.
A dauitled advertitemenl placed in the Gallipolil Daily
Tr1bune (except Cla.. itted Duplay, Bu.ineu Card or l...esal
NotM:u) will alto appea r in the Poinl Pleannt Regilll:r and
tho Daily Sentinel, reach1ng o~er J8,000 homet

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchonges ...

416-GoiUpoUo
367-Ch..hire

992-lliddleporli
Pomeroy

985-Ch..,er

388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Cuyan Dial.
643-Arabia Di.tl.
379- Walnul

843-Portland
247- Letart Fall•
949- Racine
742-Rutland
667-Coolville

CHARLIE'S
DEUYEIY SERVICE

S•oll Dozer Work
$25.00 hr Hotr

992·3838

,.

: Racine Grange elects officers
. Officers were elected at the
.. recent me~ of the Racine
• 0nnge No.
held llthe p~ge
· • hall.
• Officers are: Dorothy Smith,
· in aster; Chuck Yost, overseer;
-~- ~ Adams,ltx:twu, Launl Cir• ele, sreward; Helen Pickens, assis· ·18111 srewanl; Geraldine Cross, lady
. assistant steward; Mary Virginia
Easterday, chaplain; Jean Alkire,
secreta_ry·treaaurer; Nita Yost,
-. Ceres;
Mary Kay Yost. Pomol)ll;
..
.

Shirley Sayre, Flora; J.A. Smith,
gatekeeper.
The meeting opmed in ritulliJ.
tic form with Pledge of Alqiance
given in unison.
Pomma Grange will meet at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall on Fri·
day. A potluck meal will lqin ll
6:30 p.m. followed by the regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Athens Coun·
ty Pomona Grange will be guests
and will conduct installation of
offiCers.

County Rd. 19Peachfork Rd.
992-7093
Mon.-Sun. I - pm
S.. ua lor your hunting
and back to achool
n•ada. Aroo'a largMt
1•lacllon of military
,aurptu,o ltemal 1/17pd.

JOEL ROBERTS

Davis of Ohio University will prePOMEROY • American Legion sent a pro~ at the Meigs County
Drew Webster Post No. 39 meets Public Library in Pomeroy on
; Tuesday. Beef stew dinner at 7 Thursday at 7 p.m. concerning childrens • right to read.
· p.m. Meeting at 8 p.m.

TUESDAY

RUTLAND • The Rutland
POMEROY · Meigs Local Band
·· Boosters meet Tuesday, 7 p.m ., Township Trustees will meet
· high school band room . Parents Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut·
land Fire Station. Public invited.
uraed to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Orange
REEDSVll.LE · Eastern Athlet·
Township
Trustees will meet
_ ic Boostm meet Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
Thursday
at
7:30 p.m. at the home
· high school cafeteria. For informa·
' lion, call Sandy Bowen, 667-6785. or the cleric, Patty Calaway.
MIDDLEPORT - Catfish Festi·
; · . SYRACUSE · Syracuse Ele. mentary wiD have an open meeting val planning meeting, Middleport
:, Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the school to Community Association, Thursday, .
· di8CUSS the program changes being 7 p.m., 'at Middleport Council
Chambers.
; made this year.

WEDNESDAY
,,

POMEROY • Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet 7:30 f..m. Wednes·
•day at the hi&amp;b schoo . Public invit·

ed.
..;: SYRACUSE • Sutton Township
. lfraaees meet Wednesday, 12:30
porn .. SyriCUSC Municipal Building.

THURSDAY

MARlETTA • Post Polio Sup·
port Group, Thursday, 7, p.m. East·
er Seal OffICC, Marietla.
RACINE • Regular meeting,
Racine American Legion Post 602,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY • Meiss County
AmVets and VVA will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at Smitty's.

_I,~IDDLEPORT

• Evangeline
.l:IIIJII« No. 172, Order of the East,em: Star, Middleport, will meet
''lbllnday at 7:30p.m. Past matrons
pea parrons will be honored.
~will be served.

:·an4

·'· ' POMEROY - Dr. James E.
(

Community Calendar llems
appear two daya before aa event
ll!d the day or tbat..event. lteiiiJ
milt be received weD In advance
to aaure publication In the cal·
endar.
(

boldine Daniel Foreman, Thomas Foreman,
holding Jonalhaa ForeiiiJn, and Mrs. Joy Foreman, Mason, W.Va., holdinl Lacey Foreman.

CONSTRUCTION

thweln rendered,
being C.. No. 12-CV-130 In
uld Coul1, I wlll oHer for
ule, II the front of the

Court Houat In Po1111roy,
Ohio, on the 211111 clay of
Sept.mlllr, 1812, •• 10:00
o'clock A.M. the following

BARON DUMMITI'

Dummitt birthday
celebrated
Barm Dummitt, son of Bill and
Tammy Dummitt, celebrated his
first birthday recently.
Joining the party were his
matemal Jl•~nts, Harley and
Kathryn Johnson, paternal grand·
mother, Eula • Dummitt. Also
attendina were Stella Dummitt,
paternal great-grandmother, Jerry
and Cheryl Holley and sons, Calvin
and Justin, Mary and Cody Sheets,
Jason Cummitt, Ida Murphy, Pe88Y
Bole. Sending gifts were Tevf and
Debbie Johnson and Elaine Downs.
Chocolate cake and cupcakes
with ice cream were served.

Foreman) Roberts, Glenville,
announce the birth of a son, Joel
Thomas, on July 7.
The infant weighed eiaht
~ and ten ounces and was 21
mchcs long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Foreman,
Mason, W.Va.
Paternal pandparents are Bobby
Gene Roberts and Edna Roberts,
Glenville, W.Va.
Great·grandJlarents are Mrs. Joy
Foreman, Mason, W.Va., Rolfe
Lee, West Columbii, W.Va., and
Mrs. Marshall Miller, Glenville.

recently held their annual reunion
at the home of Norman and Allegra
Will.
A meal was enjoyed under the
newly constructed ~icnic shelter
which had been bu1lt by Several
family members this summer on
what was the original Nicholson

farm.

Sixty-two family members were
in attendance.
Officers elected were Mike
Nicholson, president; Bill Nichol·
son, vice-president; Carolyn
Nicholson, secretaryi\mlsurer.
Enterlainment was presented by

Door prizes were awarded and
the 1992 Horseshoe Champs were
Bill Nicholson and MSonny"
Nictdson.
.
Pictures were laken of the dif·
ferent branches of the Nicholson
family tree by Carolyn Nicholson.
· Next year s mwon will be held
the ftnt Sunday in August at the
..;W,;,;ill~residt.n._·iiiii;,;ICC.;;,;,;,_....,_ _.....
r

Gilmores host visitors
Guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James Gilmore over the week·
end were Mrs. Lisa Dorst, Darbi,
Arimas and Jordan, Deanna Dorst
and Sandy Gilmore, Colu!DbuS.
Mr. and Mrs. Mick Howell are
the parents of a baby girl.
Darbi Dorst is spending a week
with her great-grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Gilmore.
Mr. and 'Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwa·
gen spent the weekend wit_h Mr.
and Mrs: R1chard Beach, Sabma.

Widows' support group meets
mae

Twenty-two meniberi and two 3777 to
arranaements.
guests of the Meigs County
Attending the luncheon were
Widow's Support Group met Pauline Mayer, Cecilia Mit&lt;:b,
recently for a luncheon and short Marie Hauck, Chlrldene Hannlna.
meelin( ~t . the Stowaway Restau· J- Wilton, Mlna Swisher, Marge
rant in oauipolis.
Reuter, Scottie Hayes, Jean Ann
Widows of Meigs County are Bradbury, Marpret AndreWI, Kate
welcome to attend the rncetin&amp;s of Brown, Bva Desuur, HeleA Hood,
the aroup and join in the fellowship Rose Silson, Lillie Hubbard, Ruth
and lllldtntand1na.
Ebersbacb, Kate Jarrell, Abbl
The liext meeting will be Sept. Sll'IIIOII, Marvcne Lowuy, Marce •
II at Dale's Smorgasbord in Gai· Ia Durst, DOria Carder, Dorothy
lipolis at noon.
Davis llld peas, Olga Gaudin and
Any new widoW who would lite Clara on.
to attend Ia encouraged 10 call 992·

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs
and Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson
spent Wednesday in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Johnson
announce the birth of a baby air!,
Samantha.

Summer
Merchan•i•e
REDUCED

25%
MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
STORE
'

Iandi IIIII -

... 10 wit:
Sltullaln Section 3, Town

2, Rona• 12, Sutton
Townahlp, Mtlgt County,
Ohio, _, to.lng port of One
Hundred Acre Lot number
1201 baing mor• fully
ciMcrlbH alollowo:
Com~ngll

the ilorlh-t -

• point in
Ofallid

can be.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
99H687

..

'

,.

Oh, lan't It nifty, that
J.W.'1 501
Oh, hMVen, ahe only
47,
No walt, she'• 48...or
II It 49?
II really
doesn 'I
matter,
fhls it julll a ailly
birthdiiY rhyme.
And
since
it's
revenge I'm 11eking,
Her age I am not
leaking Ill
And Sis, don't think
I'm thru
I'll haunt you till
you're 5211

Love

lots!

DEED REFERENCE:
Volume 2et, -p·;,'lle 151,
Molgo County Dud
Recorda.
Th• obovt ciMcriblld reol
Nlala II ldtntlftlld In tho
recorda of the Malga County
AudliOr by Paro,l No. 1100471.
laid r11I Mille •••
appraMd Ill: 14,000.00.
T....,tofS.:Coah
, Real Mlalt cannot b•
.Old fDf ... thlon two-lhl. .
of the appralalld valua.
JMIM Ill. 8oulaby
llhoriff of llelga County,
(8) 25; (I) 1, 831c

FREE ESTIMi'rES

985·4473
667·6179

WITH BAIIMIS

ROOFING

WI DO
AND EYERnHING UNDERNEATH
GAUGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS

Slolo Ro.-o 554, Bldwoll. Indoor: Soclta- Large Selac:Uon Ot
Nikki, Slouch, crow, Boot,
Anklllo, Olhtro $1.00 A Polr 1

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

WID'i' IIOUIUEnHOUIIG
12711twft, Newlin-. W'l

......... DttGnl kJ

nC11111140r-

Pll. 304-112·3421

1/2/lfn

2·7-92·Ifn

NOW OPEN

NORTON
CONTUCTING

CURIO

F&amp;A Till 11!1
IIIIEW lllmCE

Tr~=·-•11
20%-30%
111.;:;

L.,.

-'•fs..H.

Fr•ll1irllh,..)42·2360

Carpe~~try

Electric
Plumltlng .., .."_.
Roofing
Windows

BARN
45633 ST. RT. 124

187-1101

RACINE

Free Estittates • low
Rates for Seolon
No Job TOD S11111V

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9·"• • 8117/Pd.

1111121MO.pd.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

BILL SLACK
992·2269

HAULING: Umestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED lncl BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

USED RAILROAD

12·5-tfn

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

AIID SUPPLY

tt2W. ..I•Street
,._"" 01. 45769
(614) it2o6176
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Laminating, Copy, Fax
&amp; Notary Servlen
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AND PRICESS FIRST
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MICROWAVE OVEN
a1d VCR REPAIR
ALl IIIIlS

lll~ti•OrWe

KEN'S ala~IANCE
SERVICE
992·~335 or
915·3561

At,.•
r... Ptlt Olflra
217L ...... It.

"-'····

F,..E.tlmat•

t9

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
P.O.Io1 894-W..• Ally

I ACINI. 01110

(f.,..!y !oiM .... w

.....
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
[

)

LINDA'S
• CHitt Saw'
. . PAINTING Mowen
•Weedeaten
1 co.
614·949·2804
,.•• 7h,. O.t 01 ,.II.. I
•
-,_., u. o. '' F•
.••

n'J'.!:l"9

....... l,

r.·
INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

3890C Le•diag ·
Cretk Ro1d
.ldtlle~rt, Ollio

, 2 7144
6....
't"
•

3123192/11n

.

8/31/92t.. '

FIH nnuns
HAVI IIFIIIIKES
••,....... Lon.......

Aft• 6...._ 614·915-4110
.- Bn8/W1

1..---==:.!::J

:

:

··-•

W1lkttAHey

•• · N··';

s

[!]

..- •
.-..;-5·14-92·111

WV,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

4

Feel free lo lake any ol the
Items slUing out front ot
auditorium, 230,0 lincoln Av•,

Pt. Pll.

Froo to good homas, 4 puppies,

will bt
7398.

s mal ~

dogs, 304·675-

=-9...,.w_ant.,...ed;_to;..B_u;_y:__
De .,, Junil HI Stll Ua Your Non·
1Vori11ng llllor Applilnc~o,
Color TV'a. YeA'•, Mlcrow•y..,
Air Condlllonoro, QuHar Ampo,
Etc. 614-256-1236.
.

tlma with us. You'll faye ,the
company. 1-800-992-6356.

W1ttl Computar, P one Skltrs,
Public RaiiUana, Exl*lence

Proltrrod But Will Train Righi
Person. A~!lly: Holiday Inn, &lt;ralllpollo, No Phone Callo.
Duko Cloonoro, Point Pltloant,

l'l&amp;ponllble peraon Mleled1 no
txperitnce necauary, apply It-

tor 1:OOPII Tuoo thru Fri.
Eloy Wortl Exctllont Payl A•
Mm~• Productt AI Horne. Call
Toll Froo, 1-800-467-5566 Ext.
•

Femala to llva In, take care ot

eldlt'IJ lady, referencn pr"ar·

rod, 614-96s;39211.

.

Hourtw Clinic Aide NHded Part·
Time -To Work In Family JUannlng Offices In Meigs, Gallla
And Lawrtnee Couniln. Must
HIYe High School Diploma Or

Equivalency ; Good Communlc:•

Ennlngs And Sllurday HOurs
Are To Be Expected. Trav.. Paid
To Otd 01 County otflcn. Sind
Latter Of lnlarest, Ra.ume ~nd
Two Employment Aelarerv;:ts
To: Planned Paren1hood ... Ot
Southeast Ohio, 396 Alchltnd
Avenue, Ath1ns, Ohio 4570! By
Wednesday, Sept. i, 1112. ..,
lmmtdlllt Opanlng• Availlble

Williams, AOON, Plnecr..t Clrt
C.ntar, 170 PlniCrHt DriYe, Galllpollo, OH 45631. 614-446-71)2.

MAJOR TELEPHONE COIIPIINY
415.75 - · Now Hl~ng.
TIChnk:ians, lnstaUers, Acc:Qunl

Service

4-lamllyLS.pl. 2·3. 2ml. on Flat·
woodo Moad hom Rt. 1. Mon's

Rapresematlvu,

OJ*oloro. No Exporitnco
N.cessary. For Information Call
1·219-736-!MI07 Ext. 1'6432 9
A.M. -ll P.M. 1 Days.
'
Natd EK
irl Monayl (School
Fun, Savings, Or Christmls):
s.n Avon, C.II1-800.S51-48ot
Needed: 15 people tor telegb9ne
work, must read Will, 2 ·shifts
available: 8-3:30pm or 4·9pm.,
good wagu, plue bonu11s
apply lo 216 E. Main Sl '
Pomoroy, '""' 101m.
' .•
RN Charge Nut'H, full lime 12

hr lhlho, 7:DO Pll to 7:00 All

exe bentlh pkg, including thift

difflrtntlal.

Contlct

Shlron

Skldmoro, RN, Director of Nur~­
lng, Pleasant Vai'-Y Nu~ng
Care Center, Paint Pleasant WY.
304-675-5236.
'
I

Secretary With Accounting_ 'E•poerlence Nelldecl. 8 Month PDtl·

lion, Raapond To: P.O. Bo• :jOB
Chashlrt, OH 45620, EOE..

'

and
childreN
clothla, StU Avon All Areu. Call 614..
howehokl b.m1, truck parts, 446-3358.
tlroo, wolghl bonch.
Someone to milk cow In modem
5-lamlly ull, Soptt-3, 9-? 1047 milk tacilltlet, hourly WJtgn
rnume to P.O. Box 94'
S. 2nd., lllddilport. Loto ol und
Point Pleaent, WV 25550.
'
ctothtl, houMhold Items.

685 Gononl Ho~lng..-, Mid· 14
dilport. Auauot 31· S.pl. 3.
Home

Good used tires to giveaway,

0

$7.80

dllhts, 10fll 1 chair, knick
knackt, end many mlac . Hems.
Tom ThQ rnJdence 2 mlln

Ad. Old ICIIH, AYon, etc.

blk wlwhllt, weaned ready to

OFFICE SERVICE

Golloollo Forry,

otrou hom k Lllmbor.

ol Southam High, Ri. 124.
3 llmlly, S.pt. 1-4, 1.5 mlln out
Hospllal, Any Ago. 614-146-3419. Sl.
Rt. 143, 181 haute Belley Run

go, 304~75·7354 .

9C9·2391 or
1·100·137-1C60
Lawn Mowing,
Fertllizlng, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R10ldlnlill6 COinmt&lt;Cill

mon.

1111

Giveaway

lk:..,ud

&amp; VIcinity
Yord Sola, S.pl 1,2,3. J11no
liz• 3,1~2.
quln topo,
cuahlont, IWIItlrl, bike, Nino- For Ctr11llod Nuroo Aldo. S\•rl·
$4.80 Por Haur. Sign On
tendo, IJido clothtl, toyo, much lng
Bonus AVIIIable. Con1act Jackie

Wanted : L..dy Companion To
Llv•ln Nur The Holzer

3 kmg haired kittens, calico &amp;

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Pl. Pleasant

Ylrd IJI...sa P"'II SJ.,
1117/lln
lllddllport, l'llto.·Wod. S.pl. 1·
2. CIOtlllng, dllltto, · axor·
elM blkl, numeroua other
Ito mo.
Announcements
2 Fomllyc Stot. 3 6 4, roln or
ohlno. •umlturo1 cor ~tr
clothto, boby clotnoo, mloc. 2M
Rutllnd SIIMt, llldclitpor1.
3 Announcements
3 family gor1go Nit- Sept. 1ot,
2nd,
3rd. Clothing ol 111 olzoo,
Ada Nunn Smllh, Pto110 Call ex Cullom
soo Hondo ,....,.
Kim Hammond At: 702-~7-3708 cycla, 1!10 Suzuki, $150 lar both
Or 216-466-0658.
or $600 NCh; 9Dtcl motor tor
Suzuki, '88 or 'li7 modal, 1150;
Free AduU Talk Line.
Corborotor lar 7!10 Honda, $!10;
1-114-251-2$!6
Uve, OnaOnOnt.

11rvlce.

Thwo Fri, 2ncl Rlaht North On lion Skills; Accuracy With
160, lnor N.G.H.S. Lg. Boyo, Flgum; llodlcol otflco ·ex.
Girls, wo ......rw. Mlac. Toys.
pa~anct HtlpM· Will Troln .M•
tum Individual Who It Sensitive
Wod, Thur1, Frl, Euroka 41h To
Reproductive Notdo 01
Drive On Right, Blue Houst,
Cllentt. looking For Somtone
loll Baby Htmo, Iliac.
Who lo Soii·Mollvalod And Can
Yard Solo: About 1 Millo On Grow In Tho Position Ao Nitd
n5, Coming From Town, Thuro ArlHt. POIItlon Roqulrod Roll9/3192 Old Furnoco &amp; llloc. able lransportatlon. WMkdey,

___ •A 011•lity Assured Co•;,.,,.,.
20 Yr. bp.
Call AI, 614-742·2328
For•p...• O•ly

auction

166,0hlo l Wnt Vlrl(lnlo, 304773-5785.

Scaln, Hundrldl Small tlems!
S.plombor 2nd, 3rd. 1-5, 14128 313.

Yard Salt: Wid &amp; Thurs. 145

St. Rt. 7
Cltesltire, OH.

Ohio

WANT ADS

All-Pill

-Portor Schocl Coolo Koybolrd,
ln-wrher, Records, Tapti,
Wotorbod Chonglng Tablo
Mony Baby llomo, Much Mlacf
Hldo-Bod.
S.pl 2nd 3rd. lltlwttn Bowling
Al\tl, Drive-In Waahoro 1 Dry••,
T.V. o Stove, Air Conaltlontro
Blkao, Trllcoo, Guno, Knlvn, O&lt;a1

Woodland Drive.

Quality
Stone Co.

Call614·992·
6637

....... 12-11·77.

how much your savings

lltlur1nc1

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

record.
O.crlpllon lor tha abov•
tr~et IMina lhl reaulla of a
aurvey ftllde by Richard C.
Glugow, R.S. N 0. 5161,

let us tell you just

$t1teAuto r

Public Notice
South along a lin• and
p11oing the north lint of
otld On• Hundred Acr• Lot
Number 1208 at 1320 IMt
more orlan p11olng tho
granmra northeut property
cornar at 1712 IHt mort or
lno • total dletanc• of 2070
fMI more or 1- to an Iron
pin In the gr.,IOrt _, properly lint _, the rHI point
of beginning lor tlMI land
herein ciHcrlbld; thenc:e S.
0 degr- 22' 28" E• .rona
tho grantoro _, property
line, 211.73 ,_, 10 ., Iron
pin In tho grantore
lllulh-t property coJner;
thtnCI $ , 61 dii(JMI 48'
Ill" W. along U.. II'*"IOra
aouth property lint and
puling an Iron pin II 37.58
IMI Md flllllftiiM Iron pin
Ill 16t.tl '"' a total dit·
..... ol271.00 ...... ll'lil·
rolld aplllo In tho granloro
ooulhwtat profl*lly corner
Md the oxiallng etntertlna
of County Rolld Number 28;

••Y• and ua1m1n18 of

raduced _,more by
insuring both your car
' and home with the State
AulD Companies.

.I!J CIIIIIP•,.,.•

•New Homes
eGar•ges

Section 3; lhanct Eaal
along lila north Nne of aeid
· hcllon 3, 1320 IHt mora or ...... N44 dll(r- 3r 20"
Ina to 1 point; thence W. along tho gr1ntora WMI
profl*lty lint Mel lila axlot·
ing ctnlarllne of County
Road Number 28, 1114.51
5
HappyAds
IMI 10 1 railroad aplko;
thane• N. 53 degreM 08'
40" E. along a Una and
p.. atng an Iron pin at
273.53 fMI end puolng an
iron pin II 415.11 IHl a lOIII
dlolonct of 474.57 IMt 10
1111 point of beginning 1nd
oontalnlng 1.171 ..,..,
Sub)lct 10 ·ali 111(11 high·

Slale Auto's already
low premiums can be

:£111

1391 Sallor4 SdJoal Rll.
~als, OWo
Cal (614) 446-9416 •1-800-872-5967

~JAYMAR

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

Roberts birth
Nicholson reuriion held recently
announced
Descendants of Corinna Cornell Bridgit Nicholson, Donna and
Mr. aad Mrs. Jeffery (Robin and Philip Wilkinson Nicholson Vance Higgins.

Community calendar
··

'*"'

II'IHt

Bennetts Mobile Home

Nil time 1uctlonMr, complete

AVON I All Araaa I Shlnoy
S.pt 1, 2, 3rd. tO-? Clothing, Spurs, 304-67$.1421.
Baby harna, Iliac. V4 Milt Nottb
On r~ Past HaHalto Carpet, Otok Clark Wonttdh Knowltdgo

Crwam Stparater, Other lltml
Tao Nurnaroua To Malon!

P1mps, F1111G(es &amp;
Now Water Heaters.

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

R DUCEDI

PubliC Notice
N011CE OF SALE
By vir!H of an Ordw of
Salt I11ulld out of the
Com•on Pleaa Court of
llelga County, Ohio, In the
. . . of Thto Hom• National
Bank, PlainliH, ogolnol
Delmar Grady, at 11.,
o.J...ctanla, upon • judg-

And Claro Str... ln VInton, Startt
T- UntU S.turdoy.

ctstt, Ex.cutlvt Otsk, O.·L.wal

O..lity Hi Efficie~cy
Air Caoditioaers, Heat

•

Thlll'll S.pl tot 2nd, 3rd. 10 Old marblts, toys, comk boNa,
A.ll. Till ? Nlco Cloan Clothing, ..nttf'I'IS. pictures, Iron skltltla,
CUrtllna, R"'la, Bodaprtada, and tumhurt, Osby Martin, 614· Houothold homo, Good RN 1112·7+1t
:
llorllll htma, Too Much Too
Uotl S.venl Fomllln, Don~ Wanlld To Buy: Junk Autos
WHh Or Without Motaro. Call
llln Thlo Onal
Lorry Ll..ly. 614-388·1130l.
In Eurwkl Acra.t From GaiUplls
Dim. Wtdnooday And Thuradoy Top Prien Pold: All Old ·U.S.
Tho 2nd And 3rd 01 Saplombtr. Co&amp;na, Gold Ringe, Sll¥11' Colnt,
Gold Colno. 11.1.9. Coin Shop,
Movlna Sola: Sopl3rd I 41h. 811 151 Second Avenue, 0.111~.
FolrfloTd Church Rood, Doublo
Bod, Couchao, Choir.
!loving: 11-7, 8f111 1118 llortll Employment Services
Strett, Bktwtll, n111 Ta Post
otflco. Collch /Chair, Conoole
T.V., Bolly C1othto, Jocuul, 01r1 11 Help Wanted
Dlvll. Nlco Clothing!
==..,.,.,;~==-Porch Slit: Comor 01 Jocklon 'AVON' ALL AREASI Short your

Hem1. Rain Or Shtnt.

""""*"

Martha and Warren Elliott home.
enjoyed a uip to Florida in late
Nina Robinson Clara Follrod
July. They toured the Orlando area, Osie Mae and Clafr Follrod Kathy'
Ft. Myers and West Palm_ Beach David, S_tacy and Alan Watso~
where their granddaughter lives.
atlended the Follrod reunion at
. ~~te and Delben.Stearns Grove City ~ntly. Others allCnd·,
VISited ti!ett _daug~ter, Apnl Neely ing from this area were Bob and
a~~ fam1ly m ~airborn. Another Janet Robinson, Belpre; Otto and
VISitor was the1r gra~dson, Chad Leola Swartz, Shade; Bill and Rose
Le~1s, ~ho was on h1s way from Follrod, Athens. The reunion was
Cal~fomta 10 attend Massachusetts at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Doug
lnstituteofTechnology.
Wallace. Mrs. Wallace is the
Cora and Samuel Michael, Port· granddaughter of John Follrod
land, visited the Poole-Parker
·

Eototo Slit: S.pl 1-5th, 2 Milas
141 At 1853 Nalghborhoocl Road,
Hou10hold Momo, Antlquoo.
Gor~;• Soil: Rt. 21s a Rt. 'IS1113192114102 Thurol Frl, DTIIIS.
HUGE Rro1 Time Evor Yard

Anllquas, Store Shelvt:S, Show-

FREE ES'nMATES

992·7553

4

Under; GlaiiiW'art, Fumhure,

UMESTONE-TRUC~NG

uru

IWOIIAilE

Hutert, Misc.

Sept 2-5th. Across From Bidwell

011 Ill ' "

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Gar~a• Sale: t2 Milts Out 218,
112111~, S.pttmbor 1, -41h. Oddo
Ends,
Furniture,
El.ctrl~ Rick Ptlroon Aucllon company,

Watch t'Ot Signs.

BULLDOZE_J;! I;.B}CKHOE
and TRACMUI: WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEP11C SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

Tnt prlco 1111 i&gt;Oin .. $88,900INIICiriQ of 141 1o 110% of
IIIII)' be .,.._,., quoWying pot•
101110 buy '"IY
homo on 31\ acno In
Rlclno. 4 SR. 3 blllll. 2 - · · lll'ltd1
BR ""·. P~- 4,80Claq. ft. linn
bldg.
Cll614-ll82·7104 ror t

Elliotts enjoy trip to Florida

Trilll

EXCAVATING

SMAll DOZER

ATIENTION 1992
GRADUATES
The Senior photographs
used for publication of
the "Graduation"
insertion are now ready
for pick up at the Daily
Sentinel. Office hours
are 8-5 pm Mon.-Fri. and
9:30-Noon on Saturday

PRI

Door PI•• OpeHr

Witlt hn.aH of
Receive

OH., wv. ' H.U.D.

WORK.
DRIVEWAY WORI
•lid UMISIOIIE

Celebrates birthday

HAYRIDE - Pack 23.5 Cab SCODts alld Troop Boy Seout.l aud
~ their , . . . llelll a llllyrlde alld wlentr I'OIISt recently at tbe home or
:, Boll aid Pat Keaton. The scouts helped the Webelos, Den l, set up
· ttllls. Spendlag the nigkt Ia Ients were Wes Crow, Kevia Keaton
·JIIItia Brewer, Jol111 Cooke and Derek Winebrenner. Boy Scouts wcr~
. Joey Weeks, James CUirord, Bobby Keaton, Mall Keaton Lamar
:: Ly0111, Travis Brewtr alld t•etr leader, Pat Clllford.
'

With 2 Transmitters

,\TTE\lTION

ANfHONY PUTMAN

.

9.&amp;7-$275.00 16•7-$450.00
OPEIEU llnAWD-Y. IP-$200.00

\ lol&gt;dl' ,\ I )&lt;JtJhl&lt; 11 it!&lt;· llollll'

IULUnNIOARD DEIDUNE
4:30 P. a DAY.iEFORE
PUiliCAnON

FOUR GENERATIONS- Four ~e~~tradoas
of the Foreman ramlly rece~ttiY gathered for a
are, rr-left, Lawrence Foreman,
picture.

675-Pt. Jlj•·••• nl
458-l....eun
576-Apple C. rove
773- MMon
882-New lla ... en
895- l.etart
937-BufTalo

r~~

Anna
Kerwood't
RHidlnce 33 Smlthalli Strllt,
Oft Eutem Avenue, TUN, Wed,

IISIILUD PRICES

Gallia County Meigll Counly Mason Cu. , WV
Are11 Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code :1114

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

S.le:

TRY
NEW
stEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GAUGE DOOR

Bl'LLETI\ BO.\RD

run

---

Anthony Riehilrd Putman, son
of R(chard and Linda Putman,
Reedsville, celebrated his first
birthday recendy with family and
friends.
Auending were grandparents,
Dollie Pierce and Don and Msrlene
Putman; great-grandparents, Dora
Pieree and Charles and Evelyn
Bm; Johnny, Stephanie, Samantha,
Brandon, Tammy and Randy
Baku, Tabitha, Jessica, Kathy and
Allen Haynes, Matthew, Derek,
Whitney and Tami Putman, Joann
Baum, Kaye and Jill lett, Wayne
and Crystal Vogelsong, Johnathan,
John and Sue Douglas.
Sending gifts were areat-grand·
parents, Rodney and Dorothy
Pierce and great-great-uncle, Hor·
race Bair.

..

The

Pet Sematary Two' turns tts back on
suspense in favor of blood an4 gore

Beat of the Bend...
~. ·• Billy lilmon. gencnl manager of

TU88day, September 1,1992

Ohio

sentinel

lnl.-lor,

blby

Business
Training

hems,

clothing, miK:.

Ret rain
Nowii!Southtulem
614·992·3511.
778 Oliver, Mlddlepor1. Sept. 2, Buslnass Collega, Spring Vtttey
4. ~1 Go-cart, parts; ca·... Piau. Call Toda~, &amp;14--446..t367!!
Kltlons, 3 Months Old To Good 3.bull,
antenna'&amp; Rtg ~•-••t~•
Homt. 614·381J.8TJ4.
t-; goomoblln
r1ngt, hoallng
ot...., ;.;,;,::;;·•,;,;·~:.::.~.::•:.;•·•::·_ __ _
blu'e
oxorclu,
rogulor
tooo•o s Wanted 10 Do
Kittens, 4&amp; 7 months old, litter
poptrbtck booko, Chrlotmaa 1
trolnad, 614-1185-4311
rnongor oconory, Whlnpool Will Babyoll In lly Homo. Fon·
Lost or stolen : flmale Walker, both; loll morol
black, white &amp; tan. Ught gr"n

collar, Rutland area, 614·992·
5889.
One Gerbil, with 8 more mdy to
go In 6 wks, 304-458-1896.

Yellow Retriever Looking Puppy,
6-8 Weaks Old, 814-441-1114.

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found : Yellow A.tritver Look·
lng Puppy, 6-ll Wooko Old,

Vicinity: Chn hlro ArN. 614-141·
1114.
1

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1065 111Oll.,. Rd. Bldwoll.tot rd
north of lnttr Mellon 111160 &amp;
554 SH olgno Nice Boby,
children. · women's plus tlza
clolhlng. B1MIIIH cordi Jlo?

c:ld In Play Artl. Relarancu

lllddloport. Available. Rodney Aru . Call
Auaull 28th- Stpltmbor 51h. 614-245-5887.
Beading
curtains, drapes,
child coro provided In
llntno, )twolry, dl-. polo, Cortlllod
my tlomt, tot s of love, IMming

110 South

Stcond,

pant, tmall appli1nces, fumi-

IUN,Iotl of misc.

ldlvlllea, great playground •
qui pmen~
hot
lunctltt

2 optnlngt
All Yord S.ln llusl Ba Pold In pro~lded, only
experience
&amp;
Advance. Deldllne: 1:OOpm the ava.table,
daW' blfora tha 1d Ia to run, retlrtnc:e provided, e1ce1"nt
kacallon. Druma
Plek.l nt
Sundoy odhlon- 1:DOpm Frldoy, Provider,
614-192:·7532.
. '
Mondoy odHion tO:OOa.m.
Saturdtw.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping
Bob Roy retldenet, Racine. Trimming, TrM Removal Hldg~
Trimming. FrH Eslimatisl 614·
S.pl. 2 I. 3, nice boyo glrto, 367-795TAner
4p.m.
t..n clothing, hou11hokl hems.
Portlr.bla Sawmill, don't
lluh&gt;llmlly, S.pl. 1·2, Horrioon- George•
vllle. SA 164, Vanct Road. Adult, haul your logs to the mill just
Clll304~75-1957.
kkls Clothel, piUI toll JnOfel
1-5, 36001 Sl. Rt. 143, 8 Mist Paula"l Day Ca re Center
·F
mliet toward H•rrlsonvlllt on Soli, lffordoblo, chlldcon. M
6
o.rn.
•
5:30
p.m.
Agoo
2..,10.
rfaht. Baby hems, clothing,
Before* •h•r tchool . ~\ns
mloc.

Sept,

walcomo. 614-446-8224. Now In·
Sept. 111·11h, 8:00-4:00. TOOls, toni Toddilr Coro, 614-14&amp;-em,
kids cla11w•, mlsc. II:MII. Bat 8,
Mobile home work, level, hOokS.ltm Stroot, Rutlond.
ups (except tlectrfc)lsm•ll conS.pl912,3
Sopl. 2 l 3, 1m Union Avo., 9- ltructlon tobs, odd oba, paintplumbing, etc. Vary
Rumm191 Soil: Friday, S.p- 4pm. Cocktail tablla, clolt.a, Ing,
reasonable n1tt1 , 614-992·531t
t..bor 4th, 8:30 A.ll. -3P.II. aquarl"", lots of rnllc.
Groco UnMod llothocllll Church, Sapl. 2nd l 3rd. 1:110-I:DO, 1118 anytime, or lel vt m•M~. ·
Ellaboth Clrclo.
Lourol Strlll, lllddllport.
Will Bobyslt In My Holnt
Eltmtntlry Scl;tool
3 Fomlly Soil: Roln, Shlna, Bid- Yordlgorogo 1111, S.pl. 3, 1, a, Wtshlnaton
'
well. A...,, Antlqun, Dlohtol ,.In or ehr~1.1ota: of evarythlng. Aroo. 61'4-446-4005.
R.,.
Polnto-whlpplt
Rood.
S..-.ot, loti HOUHhokl html
S.p11-71h.
Financial
S.pl. 41h II GIW Plaatlco In
3 Fomlly: 114 IIIII ott Bulovlllt Tupptn Plaint. Seqrll flmiiiH
Ramo. Can-d II
OnF" 5Gtorgoo Crot, Nod, Thuro, donollng
rains.
n , lpt 2-4th.
21
Business·
5 F1mllln: Sopr \ 2, 3,4Jh. S.ptambor 111 l 2nd, hm-4pm,
OppOrtun lty
Chlldrtn't Clothn, Chrome Woll Pon Rd. off Rt. 143, third
pliCa
on
lth.
Chllp
lo
frlt.
W-o. Tim For Toyolo Trvck·
INOTICE!
camero Bn1i Oddt &amp; Endt, Ali Rlln Canctli.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINCI eo.
Slzt Clothing, Rolno'o Cllorry T _ . Plllna, Arbough Ad· reeot;nmenct. thM you do busl·
SlrMt, VJnton.
with pooplt you kMW ond
dHon. Blocll Jlrd Nil. Sopl. noot
NOT
to
aand monoy'throuah 1 ~0
415.
l-4pm.
FumHuro,
ontlque
Ba Pold In
mall until you hive tnvistfgittd
2:DO p.m. quiMing "'"""clothing, mila. the
offering.
•1
td Ia to run. Yonl l BalJa S.Jt. Sopl, lllh II
• 2:00 p.m. Jht CoononunJty Chun:h, Pao~ • Pay Phont Routt • Now Aval&amp;.
odltlon · 2:DO St.,
Yaur Aru, Call 1-80o-7U·
lllddllporl. TIWity Fomlly abltln
2600.
Slnglll Will bt 1har1 .

,

I

�Tht Dally Sentinel

Page 8

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

21

54

BuSiness

OppC)nunlty
Melli

BullclnG

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Merchandise

Gonoroi

as

2iiCu. FoOl HOipolnl Chost
Froim, Runt Good $99. Coli
614-367·7'1115 II No Anawor,
Ltovo Mttugt, 614-367-7'1115.
275 GaL Fuol OR Tank, With
Slond, 150, 114 446 0893.

Estate

31 Homes for Sale

(.(#.j~ TO VI~T IA.E:

11177 Dodgt von, runo goOd
. - ...,. wOftl. $500. ot wll
lradt, :J0+875-31168.
1184 Ford V.n, High Top Long
Whlol S..o, 4 COI!Ioln SNit
Wilh louniJO, Elcolionl Condlllonl lolo Ellrul 12,000 IIIIH,
114-441-2551.
1181 Allro Convorolon V.n,
17,000 Milot, 17,150. Coli 114388-8711 After 8:00P.M.
1187 Clravan 84}00 Milot, In
Elcaflonl Conalllon, Local
OWnor, 8144111.Q101.
1187 Plymouth Voyogor LE Ex·
collonl Condition, l.oW Mlltogt,
Loldld, 57,500. 114-446-11&amp;1.
1181 .. Loodod, laking:
$7.1100,114-441.o'131.

Happy Jock TonakOit: Liquid
lood aupplomanl contalnt ...
unUal nulrilntl to tllmiMtt
dull coot, dry skin, - n a1 &amp;
Hchlng. ...,. doat &amp; coli. RaG
Fotd &amp; Sply, 614=m-2184.
Hayward Dlllomlt Eorth Pool
IIKor, thp, $75. 304-87_.3.

74

•

1:00 (J). (J). (I).

ceo .....

4 Good Aluminum Windows
4'x3' With Storm Wlndowo Addid $20 EliCh Colt 514-446-983g
Or 614 44&amp; 31112.
IMI odd lol placoo Polrlclln pot.
tem WHgiWCXJd china all 7
pes wlsmall tlawa, 1100. 304675-31110.

Nlco Mobile Homo Conlral AI•

Porlor Aru, $250 Pluo S.curlly
DaDOIIt, IM-44UtU, 114-448-

61165.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlllorlcat Area Corner Lot • 816 44
Apartment
Main St. Pt. Pltaunt, W. va.
Completely Renovated: 2 Full
for Rant
Batt., 3 La~ Bedrooms, New
HVAC, New Carpel. Available 1 bid"'""' oponmont In Pl.
lmmtdlllty. 61+446-2205.
Plaaunt, W.Va., 1-304-llS-6042.
By owner, Hickory Hills Es11111. 1 bldroom opartmonl, partially
Rl ~ N. Pl. Plttsanl, Brick fumiMtd, no anlmale, dtpolh,
r1nc~, 3 BR, 2 blth, FA, CA, lot 114-lt2.e&amp;n
•lz.., 150-190. Shown by ap- 1 ..._
tumlthld •pi
pointment only. 3G4.S75-1441 or
ullltiiH paid, 304-175-n83.
'
304..75-4030.
For Nit by owntr: total electric 1 Bldroom Living Room,
hath,
$225/Mo.
epllt · llvlf home In nice Kllchtn,
Syraeun neighborhood. Fulty Deposit, Reftf'llnca Rtqulrtd.
~ul~pld
almand-colorad 6144111 0640.
ldlchjln, dining room, 2-3 bed· 2 bldruom, Air cond, gound
roomlllargt family room, oftlce 1'- opt, rat &amp; dap requlrld, no
ap~ct,
ltundry room, sun
porch, suppltmtntal woodbur· pet•, 304-175-.SI62.
n• '" bas.mtnt, 2 car garag~, 2 BA oportmonta In Mlddloporl,
fenced In backyard. Owner newly remodrtltd, low u1111Ues,
anxloue tor quick nit, 614-992· no pt11, $220 per monlh,
61170:
doDOIIt required, 814-li2·2381
doya
Good 3 Bedroom Momt: G11
Fumac., Small L.at, All City Z Or :S Btdroom Apartmant, Par·
UtllltiH,
Owner
Financing llotty Fwnllhld $350/Mo. PIUI
$4,000 Down, Bank Rate On !ltPOIII lncludtt Wllor, s.-.
Loon! 114-146-1157 Ooyo.
Traitor LOI For Rolli, $110/Mo.
Wat1r, S.Wtr Furnlahtd. Both
Homt Fot Solo In Chtshlrt VII· l.oclttd AI: Htnm~n Tract
lagt, I Room1, ' bath, lg. Flat SchoOl Dltlrld. 114-258-11131.
Lot By OWnor, 8-3:30 P.M.
Phono: 114-441-6878 Aftor 3:30 2bdrm. opll., lOIII tloclrlc, opplllnc:tt lumlthtd, llundry
P.M. IM-441.o425.
roam facillll• cloat to echoOl
Soc:iudtd 3 bodroom homo 8 in lawn. Appl(cation• available
ocm, 2 mltoo 0111 Sand Hill Ad, It; Village OrMn AptL 148 or
304-87U252 or fiS-:1150.
Cllt614-1112-3711. EOH.
for Sale
12x8CI Mobllo Homo, 2 Bidrooms,
Good
CondRionl
Wllhorl..Drvor Hoott.Up, Quoit
Cratlc, *".500 1~44-mt, 114245-81U.
1184 14x60 2 BR, 2 both, pluo
oxtrao. $1000. 3l)4.87S.76n
tile 14x7D 2. M*oom, 2 bllh,
goo tut. ,;.! olovt, IM-H2-8981.
11117 Mxii On Ronttd lot Httl
Pump
~~';tJBultdlng In·
ctudad.l
Aftor 4l&gt;.M.

'":I

1181 14rlV Redmon 2 Bod·
rooms, 2 Blths, Undtfploolng
$17,100.114 ...1·1627.
L.ooklng For A DNI? Cansldtr A
Pr..own.d Mobllt Home, Large
S.ltclkxt. low Mont~ Down,
Frat Soi.Op And Dtllvtry. 1.8CJO.
589-5710.
Ooklond,_ 3br, 1·V2 Bolhii Pint
strHt Hio Granda On ..,led
Lol. Will Soli For Poyotf. 814245-5~ .

Farms for Sale

30 Acn farm wllh beautllul

lodgt atylo homo. 4bdrmo.,
grul room, 1 112 bathe, bam
piLIII shed, pond, &amp; above
ground ~ i 161,000, call 614'1112·2011.
32 Acre Farm, 3 Bid room House
WfB111ment, Bam, Qaragt With
Toblcco L.Dtmenl. 614·256·1362
After 4:00.
68 acre coun1ry 11ta11 with
pond, VInton. Colonial farm
houtt newly remodtlld. 2 llrg•
bamt, aummer houH garage,
s1udlo, hunting e~bln. 8y owner.
Agwtta wllconw. R1duced! Oan
Bfock, &amp;14 311 1210.
HouH And 23 Acrtt, HouH Has
3 Bodroomo And 2 Bllhl And
UIIIHy Room. 2 Bunt, Cliior
Wl1h Room Overhud, Wood
Shod, Stockld Pond, Mo~llo
Homo Hooll Up. Coli 614-2566544 Antwtrlng Machlno, Will
Colt Bock.

35 Lots a. Acreage
4 acrat, T.PJChtsttr wattr1
eltc1rlclt~, propane tank, tna
taltllltt diah, 5 mlnutH from

Roclno. All lor 13500, 614-949'
2117 or 614-84i-2436.
Ac:reagt available for homt

con1tructlon on Raybum Rd,
rtatolllblt rtttrlctlona, watar,
informaUon mailed on r.qUHt,
304-875-6253.
Fohh, WV, now vlttoge 11 born.
Public wllor &amp; oloclrlc, lovol
litH, lot owntra IIIOC, Ntldln·
tLII onl_y, Ohio AIVIf lc.t n~mp
1: pknk: II'NI h,500 to 15,800,
molt lolt 14,ilciii lo 14 ,~00. Two

lti'MII for 1ralln 6 doublt
wldu onty, two ltf'llltl tor
doubtl wide I hau- ~~·s'IC·
celltnt lnvlltmtnt,
71-

2894 tor apt&gt;Oi-.

Rentals

41

w.-

Lodlot long Block GonuiM
Ltothor Cool, Slzo: 18, Brand
Ntw, Mtkt Nict Gift, S55,· 11438 7-726'1.
lArgo TV cablnll, wlradlo a
rocord player, no acralchlo,
mutt - · $75. llrm. 304-8752315.
Lutr Computer,

IBM Compallblo Wllh Prlnlor &amp; Hin1
Drlvo l Dlokt, $100 Q.B.O. 114446-4005.
l.allhlr booll, $50; rubber
boola, $15; movlt .......,
proiactot, $50; Fwd tKinator,
$15i 614-992-5282.
l.althlr Harloy O.vldson Bog
Thll Flto On Front Forkl 01
Blkl end H.D. Glovoo 125, 114446-6730, 614-448-30150.
Ukl Now Racllnor Plaid Choir
150 -Liko Ntw Chair WHh
Topootry Maltrlol WHh Wood

Auto Tift Chllnt 115; Bootboll $45, 6~92·7808.
Cords $1.00 ShHI 18 Cords Ptr
Little loye Clolhll Site~: 2, 3,
Camplttt holM fumishlngs. Shlat; T.V. Ant ana $35. 614-446-- 4, And 5, 110 A Bog Colt 114-4412857.
MoUra: lion-Sat, t-5. 614-44&amp;-.
0322, 3 mllot ovl Bullvllio Ad. Boby waktr &amp; tlroillr $5.00 6810.
FreoDallvory.
uch. One milt out Jericho Ad, Mac lmpot gun, t12"drlvo, S25;
uo stond with 112tld, 135;
Now Round Ook Tobia, (Claw watch lor algn.
picnic tabla, S20i 814-taFMI, 2 Loo- 4 Qak Arrow- Barn type BX10 ft storage bid;,
7:1.
bock Chain). $NS. Oak China tolld Wood, $500.114-448-11625.
Cllblnllo, Stoning: $195. 114Mon'o Gtnulno Shatp _ Skin
446-4311.
Bilek IINI tool box In ~ Coot, Ronchtre Lan!llh Slzo 40,
Good Condition! $1110. 614-441PICKENS FURNITURE
::~~~~;:0~~6~:1:.~·
2380.
NtWIUIId
HouHhokl fumlehlng . 112 mi. Soya X-Larao Football s-1 MediUm alzt upright rafrlgtrtor,
.llrricho Rd. Pt. PlNatnt, w-1, Shlrta 1• $1.00 Eoch, (Oitftrenl frost "" frltzer, 195; van tNt,
call !104-675-1450.
TNm rum..~ 6M-446-Ca93.
$25; 514-949-2526.
3 room apt, stove • ret fur· I ~~=~~=-::::--::;-:-­
nlohod, nlco
dtp Rttrigtlllora, Fretzora, W11htr, Bund~ tlutt, $100; Rio Grandt Men'• black boota 11 112B, S20;
Z•aulta, 37F38, ISla; tutde cost,
a ref requiNd,
&amp;.1010.
Orver~, Air Conditioner, Color nursing uniforms, sla 10.12,
$10; 2-llghlt w/3 giobot, $1601.;
$15; 614-985--123!1.
T.~.'o Etc. 114-2116-12311.
614-992-5217.
3 Room Fumllhld, Central Htat
lAir, All UII!Hiu Fwnllhod1 Ex· RutUc bunk btde w/matlrtnll Cedar bedroom ut, couch &amp;
Clip( El.c:trlc, Oft Strttt Paralng, $100,., oftor, 304-578-2808. chair, roll·a·way bed, dNp New 180 1120 BI&lt;&gt;Wnlng rolltr
II'HZ:t, concrete tools, 304·458· chain w/conntdlng llnkl, 10 n
614-446-2602.
s.... Coidtpol rat 150. Sunrey 1862.
oach. 145. lor bciih. 304-6755 room• upstalra carpeted, ltlc range $50. Kllchtn llbtt all
6813. glau,
4
cloth
eaat
chairs,
Chair
&amp;
couch,
axerclse
tHke,
ltOVI &amp; rtf, UIUititiiCibtl ptld,
prlvatt tntn~nct, tvanlngs. 3()4.. rogulor $2,000. toll lor $300. wa1tr blkt, 304-882-2716 ahtr Now droRing toblo 6115. 304-152·
2755.
*-882-2855.
8:00PM.
675-1616.
Attractive new apt 1 ~»~:~room, Solo &amp; Choir, In Good Condi- Chtlr/11~, $30; cortllltnd New never ultd 12 voh 100 wan
lumlahld kllchln, olr cond , dop tion, Porch Deck For Salt Also loblt, 155; baby bid, $30; hl- slrtn dual IOUnd $100. 304-875&amp; ,..,, 304-&amp;75-4132 or 675-3914.
chllr, S25i floor lamp, S1Di 614-- 6813.
B14-44S.7311.
912-5217.
Nice 8' Bar ShtlvH In Btck And
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sttamtr/Julctr for frul1a and
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON vegetabltt. $35.00 614·446·7413 Chait, Bunk Bed, And Mattrsl· 5 Bar Sloolo Ltolhtr, 614-448... For So~ $75. Coli 614_..8- 3613$100.
ESTATES, 536 Jocklon Plkt Cost $90.00 Ntw
4860 Aft or 5 •.M.
lrom $112/mo. Wllk lo ohop I
Old pol belly catt·lrcn stan
SWAIN
movlot. CIII&amp;M-446-2561. EOH.
Sand 1100. exc cond. Good gr•n
AUCTION • FURNITURE. 62 Color :Z.nllh T.V.
3 Room Fumlahld Apertmtnl Ollvt St., Oalllpolll. New &amp; Used RtiiPOnM: CLA234 c/oGalllpollo living room chair $80. 304~75For Rtnt, Up8tth, Watar Fur· tumlturt, hnttrs, Western &amp; Dolly Trlbu'!'! 1 825 Third Avonut, ~430::'.:.:.
(·;::-:--,..:---:--:--:-:-- l
;:
Galllpolle, ut1 4563'1.
nlthld, Very Clton, 81 Cldor Work boola. 614--146-3159.
0na
Enlartalnmtnl Sound C.n·
St., 614-3118-11163.
ler, 195; One Pair Mtn'l Tennis
Ultd Washer &amp; DryiN' Salt! $75 Commercial exhaust fan, $60;
FumlahN A.psrtment, Small 1 6 Up, All Sold With Warrr.nty. maple 1ablt, $60; g11 c:lrculat· Shott, Siz.t 12, $5 Worn Once.
BodRH&gt;m, $195 UII!Hits Pold, Tht Wuhtr 1: Dryer Shoppe, lncHINtor, $75; rocllntr, $25. 614-416-4171.
701 Fourth, Golllpollo. 11+448- 758 Second Av1nue, Gallipolis, 13~ Bunernut, Pomeroy.
Plastic And Medal Culvan &amp;Inch
4418 After 7p.m.
614-446-2944.
Compact dorm aizt rtlrigerator, Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Complllly Fumlshtd, 1br, next VI'RA FURNITURE AND AP· llkt ntw, Uled only one quartw, Evant, Jackson, Ohio. 1~
537·1528.
to. llbl'llry, parking, hut, air,
PUANCES
115; 114-'1112·2931.
,.,.,.ncet..dtpollt rsquirtd. IW.
614--146"1428
Powdered rille, $145, 614-i02·
514-448-3158
Couc~ $100; Motchlng choir,
4.f6.0338 titfron 7p.m.
5282.
RENT-2-0WN
$50; 11blo lompo, 120; omllm
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bid· No Doposll . GRANO OPENING tlorao, $100; coll614·192·3458.
Professional Concrwll Mixer
room apartment• at Villagt Nothing Preowntd Or Used,
Dltr lttnd and ladder, $25; Spra~ Paintll', Curing BlankiCI,
Manor
and
Rlvarelae Ev•.
ltltl cab.., $8; push snow plow, 614-446-0081, 8-5.
Apartments In Middleport. From
15: Chevy attrler, $20; 111 It
111111. Cllt1614-1112·n87. EOH.
Radiant camping hultr 2 bur·
Bunk Beds Complelt $5.88 122 Muiborry.
ner,
24,000 btu used twlc• cost
Watk;
Sola
And
Chair
$10.93
In Mlddltporl. N. third Avo. 1 BR
tumlohtd epartmtnl. Dtposll &amp; Wttk ; Lamps $3.31 Wetkj Elldrlc acrwbbtr I rllaher lor 1130. Hll$60, !J04.t7S-61113.
Recllners $5.52 Week; Clntltt hardwood llooro $2 . 13" color
304-882·2566.
Ranga 30'' Gas LPN Na1ul'lll Eye
With 4 Chairs 17.25 Weak; Or TV nOI working 110. 304-675Lavtl Ovan Storage Space, Ex·
Modem 2bdrm., 2 bath, equip- 'Table With Btnch And 4 Chalra 2315.
calltnt ConciUon, $100 1 614-44fi.
pod kltchon WID hookup, In WIMatchlng Mutch $20.19 WNk;
1358.
$11.22
WHk; Ergo O..lgn Rowing Machine,
Middleport. Aoltrtncot, dopotH Refrlgtra1or
raqulrld. 614-taS-4448 after Washer &amp; Dryer Sel 116.85 Ercollonl Condition, $61, 614· Ruga b 1111, 1 112 yardt,
Wetk; Electric Range With 25&amp;-8038.
8pm.
110.25; 614-'112-2488 Of 614·992GlaSt Door $11.22 Week.
3923 bttw11n Q:DO.m-12:00
Extn:IHI'
roller,
ISO;
Amcor
N. 4th Ave, Middleport, Ohio. 2
noon.
Ionizer,
$50;
Cislo
•ltctrlc
or·
room efficiency apt, utllitiH CASH ANO CARRY • Sola And
ond ollnd, $100; 114·742· S.•rs Clr~ IUQDige Clrritr
paid, dopostl &amp; ret. 304-8112· Chair $199; Limps Starting At
2566.
$50. Mens elzt/46-gray ttathlr
$19.95 Eac.~; Tabla Wlih 4 Chairs
Sll; nasher &amp; Dryor $599 Filhlr.Pnco
monlto~
120: jacket $50. Dlnettt ut $50. 304Campl.tly Fumlshtd mobile $129
Rtfrlgeralor $399; Electric Bf'llntWood COIIrack, '20; TV· 675-5115.
home, 1 milt bllow town O'llf'• Sit; Gu
RanQM Available.
. llbio, $2~; Worl- En·
lOoking river. No Ptll, CA. 614· And
remote conlrol jltp, $30;
located
•
U"pper
Rivar
Road
cylclopldll, $50; wrought-Iron S.art
446.0338.
S.art air hockt~, $75; men's le.
Below Silver Bridge Plaza Or 4 poelo, 6115pr., 114-192-li694.
tklltt, 120; 614-'1112-2317.
Out 141 In ~tnttnary On
en. badroom tumlahtd apt, Miles
FJve Iron whett1, ont 54", two S.ga Q..,enla wltwo gamn, txc
utllltln paid, $250. month, 304- Lincoln Pika.
31"', two 28"; 5 naw mtlal polls, cond, $100. 304-576-2808.
675-31611.
Wood trundle btd wf3 bultt·ln $40; 614-002-6664.
Oflt tum'td., Ont unfum'td: drawers $100. 2 single maltrts·
Fofdlng_ Bicycle, Excalltnt Con· Signa: Portoblo llghlld tlgn
NCh 4 roomt I bllh. No polo, an $25. tach, 304·675-3631.
dHion,
175; linch Rockwell Sow $299. Willt11rt. FrM dtiiVII')'.
qulol. Rtl. &amp; Sac. Dap. 614-448$'100;
Emtraon
Console Sttrto Plullc tetta,. $47.50 bo1, 1-80052 Sporting Goods
0444.
533-3453.
150. ~1+44&amp;-3934.
Solid Plnt Gun Cabinet Bottom For Sate: 31" Whlta Alum. Stonn Sl~tr Sowing Mochlna In
45
Furnished
Storage $175; Belgium Brown·
Cob•nttc Strolghl And Blind
Door WRh Auto Cl- $40 Colt Slilch,
lng 16Ga. 24" Slug_ S800. Brown· 614
&lt;ig-Zig, $40. Colt 114Rooms
416 8072.
lng B.P.S. 100.. $525, 514-446367-7264.
For SeJa: Couch &amp; Chair, Tan Slove blower 2 speed llkl new
Raama tor r1nt ·week or monlh. 7357.
Stoning 11 $120/mo. Go !Ill Holol.
-color In Good Shope! 1100 worb.
on any t~pt •ov• $15.
Firm. 814-388-1132.
et4-446'1158o.
53
Antiques
Whltlborrow 135. 304-175-4331.
Slatplna room wlcook)ng &amp; TV ~A7nt:;:lq::-:uo:-;;llo:-:w::-:t:-r::.,:-:.n::d:O:bo=au-::11::-1\J-::-tty For Solo: l.orgt Malo! Dttk 136· Super 1 movll camera, movie
lounge by w•k 01 month, 304~ e~rved , dat• F•b. 1908 carved in Dttk Choir With Rollora $10:
projeclor I IY!Ovlt tcrttn, all lor
U24400 New Havan, WV.
eland, mua1 ... $75. 304·675- Colt Aftor 5:00p.m.l14-371-2162. 150. 304-675-3631.
SIHplng ro0R111 wRh - n g. 4331.
Full Silo Clmpor Top $30; Baby
· Alto lrallor lplco. All hookoUpt. Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiques, 811111101 $25; Ntwbom Boby Tondy DMP 2100 24 Pin Printer
Colt ofter 2:00 p.m., 304·77:1- 1124 E. Main Strut. on At. 124, BIHpora, .SO. Each. 114-446- 814·448-0139.
IMIBt, llllaon WV.
Pomaroy. Howra: M.T.W. 10:00 3318.
Talascop~
$50. Stlrt rug
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00
$100.
AntJqut
Full Size MaHrtaa And Fola'KII· shampootr
lo
6:00
p.m.
614·992·2526.
46 Space for Rent
d11k $100. Bfcyclni100.
lion, 150, Antiquo - · 1100; .school
Cradlo 150; Fancy Iron toch. Porl·a·pOI 160. 304-875Country Mabllo Homo Pori&lt;, Rl. Chair csnlrig, half ott suggested Woodon
Btdlrlmo
$15; Slotp Sola 175· 2191.
rallli
llbai
during
Sept
on
33H., u•r new management.
Racllntr
$50; 30" EtactrJC
Loti, $85; home f'llnlale, 1235; Porch Rocktrsl 304-675·2538 or
60x31x30 woodtn cablntta
Range, $75; MtglliVall St.,.. In Ten
614-258-1616.
114-192-2167
Clbfnll 175; Roll Top Dttk, wltwo sliding doore, from old
O.J. Morrlaon ator1, ISO. each
$350; Konmoro Sowing Mochlnt 304-682-3251.
Trallar lot tor r.nt, nur Rol- 154 Mlscellaneo
'
In Clblntl $50; WHiom Flyor
llntvlllo on AI. 2, 304-.llgs-3833.
U
Blkl
150;
SwiM
Tondom
Blkt
Toppar for S.to pickup, 1100; 1
Merchandise
Tralllt loti tor rent In Racine
$80; Tondr 1000 SL 640K Wllh car tap carrier, $30i &amp;14-742·
614-1112-5656.
' 10 horu commercial gravely Dual I I Ouorltr Drlvo AGB .2068.
mower wllh oqulpmonl, $1500: Color MonH.~, DNP 133 Prlntor,
Tub .C11t Iron, WhRo Clnmlc
1975 Ford LTD, nelda repair, And OMk $1100. 814-446-mq.
Merchandise
Tub -Fivt FMI Long, Coil 114·
$300; 114-84i-20&amp;e.
a •• cook lllovo, 38" Coppar. 446-8263 Evonlngo, flO,
11• Hornellle wtedtattr, llkt lono, 135; 114-'112-211111.
Two ko__, hlolora, 125
51
now, uold very IRtlt, $75; 614·
Household
G..,.. NUirhlon Produelo MOh; 32" aluminum etarm door,
192-&amp;387.
1
fulurtng Amino Acid Body $15; 614-'112-21131.
'I
Goods
11 cubiG,.-1001 gonoral EIICirlc . Building w.lahf ' - ond ill
trott fret r~frlg•r•tor frlezer, bwrMr . ~muf'at. AVI!IIibll aiC· Two olddl... $11M., toll lllndJ pc Uvlng room sulit, $150. ~copptrlont color, good ccnd., clullvoly II IIIII Aid Phlrmocy. ~'J~IIIiron ftropiiCo, $35 114256.
•
304-112·2441.
1110, 614-1115-4440.
Tho tofa way lo dllll.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

.

,.,.,.nee.

Houses for Rent

-•loci,

'"'"" C...ntry_ Homo, O.ltt,
Socludtd=Aa~~ Stove,
&amp; Re1orancot,
Clrpot,
y..h fio Palo. I -2$8-1711.
lmoR ,umllhod J A-. Col·
litO In Town, Cloll To Grocery
Arid Laundory, Prlvoll And
Qult1.114-44f.2102.

Two SchoOl Tvoo Dnl&lt; Choko,
$20 Eoch.I14-44B-1839.
Unldtn Solltlll Dish And 1Wo
Rteolvoro, All Excottonl Condilion, You Hout Away, 1100, 61444&amp;-6fl3.
Vldoo Smono L.tornlng ul fn.
cludtl

7 educational

wlcaat 175. 304-67H465.

tapti

VHa Malltr llll&lt;lto blkt, good
condhlon, $20; two boHbOo111
hutlfe, $20 uch, 614-1'12-2931.
Wollr Hulor 911152, 40, 30 01~
ion oloctrlc and 40 Gallion
Natural ga. Youre choice.
1111.16 Womoldartf &amp; Thom11
Hordworo. 614-448-0V65
Wtlalolondbo~ h wRh wolghto,
gooil c
.. . 304..75-383l
Whllllor Spaclrum 2SE tri-band
rodor doltdor, hll X, K, ond KA
bond, llko now, $60; 614-992·
5317.

0065 NEVER DO ANnHtNG ... ALL

(

(

.,.._........ - ·-· -··· ... . . .,.-,.,... ,....,_-...... ,. _,_ .... ... · I'···- . . .

_, _. ,. ~

. . . __._. . .

~.. . ~ , . ;

. ·-. ... . .... . .

75

TI-IEV EVER REALL't' DO 15 SLEEP'

Motorcycles

Boats

-::::":""'::~:-;..;..:..:~...,...,..,
Yoor Qld PIQ Brad p 51..,.11111 Honl Bull a 3 Pin
1 ds
10 lm-ol Bull CIIYOo For
Spring Sorvleo, IM-251-t402 A~
lor 5 P.M.

5

55

Club Co_. _ Hall• Broko,
SIHra And Holltra Prlvolo
I,..lr. Sold Champion At Galllo
county. Champion AI Porry
Stock, brick, . .., - · · win- CountY: Alto Moina CroM Buill.
· llntola, ate. ctaildo Win- ,_l::--~=-321,'=".:.11.:.4-::4-:41;--4.:284=-:.:.C7"::
~~ Grandi, OH Colt 614- 1Fot Solo: 8 - . Swtoe Bull Colt
Two Waakl Old, Eall.~ llrlln,
56
Pets tor Sale
Good 11WBB-IM2, Alldii(J $110.
-_;_.;_:.;..:..;..:....:,:;.;_ _
fad Horalord ~
1 Chow pup, bllck malo, 5mot. Grain
8001bo.; .,. Angua H
old, $100, I ...H:I-1:147.
CroM bull
ciood olack,
Building
Supplies

Groom and SUpply Shop-Pit

AKC Aog. Cocker Spaniol pupplot, 4 milt, 3 tomolo, buff
~ortd, 1hot1 and wormed, 11
Autos for Salt
$150, 614-1'12-2233 anytl1111..
1811 Che!llral.t ll!'flllla; GDod
AKC Rogllltrld BHglt Un- Condlllon, Runo Wall; Polonllll
lralntd, Good Pot Or Bretdlng Antiquo Coflactor'o Cor. Vlluld
$60 Call Steve Stapleton 81~ AI $1,500. 614-448-4443.
256·161g Or 6---ltn.
11171 Bulcll Skyllrfl, runo good
AKC Roglslored Chow Chow nelda Nlr-end, 1300. or belt of.
Puppln, Current Phy. I Shott, far, 304-773-5822.
$160. 614-388..e21t.
1171 Qkle; Cutll•, 260 \14, no
"'!'J
,_ r.."'-~aoo. 304-458Drogonwynd
Clllory:
CFA
Ptr·
alana &amp; Slameu KJntns. 614- u .. lfttr :00 ....
448-3844 Alter 7:00 p.m.
11171 Buick Rlvllrt, 2dr., tp011
Alh Tank, 2413 Jackton Ave. ooupo, o1 optlonl, ,_llret, 3.8
Polnl PIUIInl, 304-6)5.2013,
v.e turbo, · - · $1200, 114lui lint Tropical lllh bl111t, 11:1-1711
tmallanlmals a..t •uppdn.
11171 Oklo, good lhopo, 1800,
Goldin Retriever Puppln, $50, cafll14"12-f1162 afllr 4:30pm.
614-:1118-82111.
1180 Ford M-ng, I Cyllnclar
Pooclll puppin, to~1, AKCi alu Engine, A.~omatkJ,- Run. Good,
miniature · Sc::hnauzar puppite, t7GO, IM-44f·1025.
•
nit and .-pper, CoolviUe, 6141184 Pontiac Florro, Bilek
IMil'-!1404.
72,000 IIMM, 4 Spold, Air, PW,
POl bolllld pig, lamolo, 4 PO, AIIIFM Tope Slonao, IM4tll201
monlho old, $100, 304·773-SM.
Puppy Potact Pot Shop. Cloryolor LIHr H II $100.
Locattd In G.C. Murphy Co. Gil· :J04.17541114 aftor 6:00PM.
tlpc&gt;~lo. ~lng toon. 614-441·
Pontiac Parlolonno 111111on
0404.
w.-. AU Power Aile I II :riel,
.....!"";;:.... ,.
.. ~ - 1 Tirll, - · Afllr
IP.II. -W7lll.
- Dodao 0mn1 QLH Modt1 1
Spaid, With Bl....., Elcollonl
Candll1011, ~7311.

1

N..O.

&amp; Motors

-

.r"'

e

II]). Mltor LHgut

HYPOTI'4ES'IS'
. THAT MON~Y
CAN'T 8UY
Ell~ ~YTI'IING

e

J

(R) Slereo. C

Clle

(I) • 'f:ull Houae Joey
Is mesmerlzld by Danny'6
sister until Iter monkey
dlsappea11. (R) Stereo. Q
(%) (!) Nove New 118Cf811i
1bout the sun re¥941ed

~~~~.fw ecllpae o~~~1 ~

• • ii"•RHCIII:I11A

ill) Young Rldlra" ljl
1:30 (J) • (I). S1lp br S18p
Cody t1111 martla~lf1s skills

RV or truck aida mirrors $1. par
pair, 304..82-2l'IL

bar. (R) Stereo. t:;1
1:00 (J). iiJ I WIIMH VIdeO
Dnunken drivers; mistreated
livestock: a vldeota!!!!!f
pardon. tRI Stereo.
Clle Clle Rolli- Dan
helps Mark out alter
romantic probleml wftlt

!i!

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

111&lt;1 VIking Pop-Up Clmpor

s:c12

Sl=6, Sjlf Cofitalntd, 11,500,
m1.
6

;----;--,-..,.,.....,-....,....1- ~~.t'1ilup s-ta, 4

~l:!l·~~~ lP.;.!..,~:":I/4ton~
t117~':• Qypoy pkt, AC,

~-

- A n d ...........
Mlftlft lprl 1 a, l11dna,
CUIIpacll!n, And Dt.U, Dlhor
Fa'"' E.~p mtlll, - · · Form
Mocillnory, ollckl&lt;n, Ohio 114-

1112 Sllrrl 31,000 Mille, Grut
goo Mllotgo, Ill 1111011 Afllr
I P.M.

211-6144.

.

:104-tll :JOn .... 7:00

==-:.:.

;;;::=-:---=-"~--

llzo, Fifty

• • Jl2). '.IKII tho
111pp1r (Pt2 o1 21' cas
Tt11ldl£il (2:00)

sweo.

Home
Improvements

JII)Na
Now
ta Lilly King LMI
Fllhlr Dowling Myotenes

8

Barnett HarM l~lta.
Room Additiona,
ragee, E•·
tlrlor &amp; Interior Pointing, Ex·

1:30(1)• (l)eCoech Hayden
and Christine lace the
hardlhiJll of a !ong-&lt;llstanoe
romanoe.(R) Stereo. Q
10:00 (J)
iiJ Ollllllrot NIC
Slngie-parenl families 1nd
moihe.-. who are Infected
wftlt AIDS. Stereo. C
we (I) • Qolng ~

f.o.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINO
Uncondlllonal llilllmo guononIM. locll nalannc• lurilkhld.
Freo llllmlloo. CIH 1114-237.Q488, doy ., night.
Rogoro 8o•mtnl Will.._
Ong.

c._,.,

e

(Premiere)
Studarttl attend medical
school On a Caribbean
laland. Stereo. Q

BARNEY
LITTLE AZ.ALIA JUNE
TOLD ME ALL

ABOUT YOU It

THROWtN' PINE
CONES AT

A LITTLE
BITTY &amp;ALII

WHY DIDN'T YOU

(I) (f) URIIIIIIII

TELL ME YOU HAD A
NEW SWEETIE?

ffT

m

Upholstery

-"'Y'I Uphoilttrlng lng lrt _,.., .... 21 Yl". ...
" Thl
IMiill In fumllure ~erlng.
Clll !104-t7Hf84 lor ... ...
tlmiiH.

By Phillip Alder
On some hands you are faced with a
guess in a suit Sometimes you will
just have to hope that you get it right
But more often your play is influenced
by other factors, as in today's deal.
After North made a limit raise "in
spades, showing a( least four !rumps
and about II total points, Easl might
have risked a take-out double. However, he let the prevailing vulnerability
dissuade him.
Wesl led the heart Jack, East win·
ning the first two tricks with the heart
king and ace before switching to a
diamond.
Declarer won wilh the diamond ace
and played a spade to dummy's king.
East's discard was a shock. Now Soulh
played a spade to his ace, lollowed by
a finesse ol the club queen. HoJIIever,
it lost to the king: one down. South
spent some time grumbling aoout his
bad luck when he should have been
apologizing for his bad play.
The contract should be made even if
the spades are 3-0 (which they will be

Wett
P..
P-

Soutb
1+

1•

East

Norlb

3•
Pus

Pa,;
Pass

Openilll lead: • J

L------------l
almost one qurter of Ute time) and ..
East holds tile clull kiag.
.". :',.
The correct play 11 trick four is the '"•.,
spade ~ce. U tu\ tliscards, declarer : .;
bas no trum' J.er aDd can try the .• c
club finesse for u Overtrick. But sup: ··;-:
pose West tlilcards. Now declarer :
plays a spade to the king, ruffs dum- · · ·
my's last beart Ill biJ band and cashes : ~­
his two remallllDC diamond tricks. Fi- 7 ',
nally be exits wltlt 1 spade, endplaying : ~
Easl. He mlllt ellber lead a club Into -· .
dummy's A-Q IIMce or play a red-suit'. .;,
card, which 11lon declarer to ruff in ·. ' •
hand and diac:atd dummy's dub queen. : -;
lleJIMts .,. ..,., ,. ~ CCTJ.pJ.y q,.._ \ '
tiom to Pbil/ip AJM-, 111 are of W.9 ~per.
They Cln be ....wedlltl/1 ........... 1M colwnn.

©111&amp; WAU ""'.ILUIMI A. . .

.'· ...,,

Tbe World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle

... t .•

ACROSS

36 Utah okl
rllort
37 Snakollkt
fish
38 Sllpl up
40 Porgr and 4 t Colllgo deg.
42 Terra44- Molnll
45 Race
46 llarrlago wow
(2 wdt.)
48 Rulor's roelm
51 Wrockor (2
Wdl.)
55 Unlocked
56 Loulslona
Fronch
57 S11 birds
58 Rows ol
ohrubt

I Counterfeit
7 Whlt'1ln

--?

12 toct1111Kill
13 M1k111IIIP
110111
14 SDrue• up
15 Without meal
or milk
1 6 - - my
brother'•
kaeper?
t7 LP speed
18 Flrnrm
owners' org.
21 llacebre
23 - degree
Flr~t-ralo

26

12 wdt.l

enI

DOWN

28 Furrow•
29Ughl-flllhll
30 Forbids
31 Smaller·
minded
33 Golf club

1 Even (poet)
2 Norma3 lira. In
Madrid
4 Leal-culling

t3 Pllll
18 Silled

6 Wecklor

1 Pottle loot
8 Stondlld
g Exist
tO EnlfQW unit
t 1 U\1\gUigl

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

factor In your materltllaffalrs In lhe year
ahead. There are Indications you may
subtitanllally profit 11om oomelhlng In ,
which you'll play but a email role.
VIRGO (A... 23-ltpt. ·22) II you're '
shopping lor a lu•ury household Item ·
loday, don't settle lor the llstad price. A .
bll ol splrltad bargalmng might (lilt you
a discount VIrgo, tr"t youreall to a ·
birthday gilt. Send lor Virgo's AstroGrsplt predlcllons lor the year ahead by

,_

"

s
.

(1) . . . . . . .
Ari1n1o

I

magnete- - , ., '

~,....,....,.., .

liluiiiOCh
t3 Fllltflld
24- fty
25 Penocutt
27

- .
''

. ·,..,
.

~lellll

....

12 Actor-

"

Hunter
14 Gill
II Pt1111d

..
,.
·· ..

41110nhiP
41 Pilei ol

·• '•

""""

:· -~

47 Wulndebt.,. , ; ,
lo
. - ..
48Dawn
~ .WSpMclm. .
1111"1 (abbr.)
•

••

IOPod
tegttlbll
82
Gllr tooth
Ullltt

· ••

.,...,...

\ •..

.. '"

14 Lltll matter · . -.
'"' .,

Stereo.

.,

Sterao.

Cllml

T11M Afllr MM terao. Q

iiJ Tllelllcltlllllll'

JII)HIIh.tieNow
ta Nlwlllllght

Olonllwi

!2:0111 =•Ai., Q
12:30 (J) MOVI!i. lUll (PI 1 of 2)

~~)~lo...-

IIJ lily . . . "" .,......,
ta lnllda Poll; 1 't2
12:35(1). iiJ L8tt Night Willi

)

'

.

Let..,_.

.

·'

1••-

,.r

.,t ,~,.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
~ Clphlr CI'WIOIIJI'IMIIMI cnltlcl from
b)' III'I'IIM ...... -

• r'

...• ..

__ .,.., __ .,. _ _r...-.-1..,.._

LT·.

• • ''-•••

..
•~"I I

·,

Mol..,....

12:00(1). """ ~

,

'

~~ ··

·

11:35(J)e iiJ Tonight Bilow With
Jay~ Siel12. Q
(J). Cftttll_ljl
Witlt

Olvld

.

.. .•

• u.e. Open L8tt Nlglll

.

'

"
. ·~ :

rocordl
-.. ,
22Ne......... - '" '

Qll 8pOIII Tonlgltl
Ill) lclrecnlw end Mre. King
11:30())
Kojllt
(%) To .,.

-&lt;

tl Soulldad Mke •. '•
lion
....
lO Hlllorlcll
., • '

3L"It~n9..
ill) Cnlolt III1CI CIIIH

mailing $1 .25 plus a long , sell-ad· PISCES (Fib. fiO:.March 201 Plans you
dressad. stamped envelope to Astro- establish mlghl be subjeCIIO revisions
Graph, c/o this newspaper , P.O. Box loday. You'll remain In conlrol - if you
91428, Cleveland, OH 4410 t-3428 . Be keep In mind that you CAN master shift·
sure to slate your zodiac sign.
lng conditions.
UIIRA (ltpt. D-Oct. 23) Choose your ARIEl (March 21·April 11)
words carefully todar whtin conversing to your advantage today your
wJih a sensitive l•iend: this pal needs spotting polenllal problems. Antlclpal-1
encouragement, not crlllclsm. Say whal lng what mlghl occur could lleiP you
cumvent abrasive deve(opments.
you would like others to say lo you .
SCORPIO(Oci. 24-Nov.22JOneolyour TAURUI (Aprli20-M87 20) In your II·
friends might display some petly lralts nancial dealings loday, be
I
today that could get under your skin. mlndlul of small details. Tltese are the
Don't l!lt this Individual inlluence your JI!Ctoril that could Sj&gt;ell the dHierence
mode ot bilhavlor.
' * - proflt and lola.
SAGITTARMIB (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't GE .... (llaJ 11..,_ lO) If you meet
be reluetsnt to Uk a trlend you helped . someone new today, don't lei a negapreviously to Intercede on your behalf tlvo 11.-.1 lmpreMion overly lnlluence
today regarding 10methlng you're un· you . Given half a ch8!1Qe, thla
able to do on your own . Your pal will be 'COUld turn out to be a good lrlend.
glad to reciprocate.
.
CANCER (olune 11-.luly 22) lnalead of
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan.11) You can · driQI(ng your feet today, plunge Into
add luslar to your Image today by ellOree around lite houee thai you
bOoSting othere lnslead 'of trying to . need atlenllon. You'll enloy being promend their waya, even II their faults are , ductlve, not Idle.
glowingly apparent
LEO (JIIIJ 23-A... 22) An lneecure
AQUARIUS (...... _..._ 11) If lhOH friend might come 10 you lor advice toyou're wllh alart to speak dllf)araglng(y . day. You can help lhlt Individual by
about one w110 illi't preMIIt today, . palnllng a positive, rosy piCture; unald·
change the subject Your stonco wlllt ad, yOur pal sees the· world as
make them aware ollhelr pelllnets. , blellk .

.~.

tuffll

5 MoUI

With . . - - (1 :00) Q
taWOIIdlleWI
ill) 700 Club Willi Pit
I
11obemon
10:30(J)NeWIC
IIJ • To lie AnnouiiCeCI
0 Tlllflla (Cont.) Q
JII)On8tlgl
al Major LNglll Banb811

ASTRO.QRAPH

Chance may prove lo be an lmportanl

HoUII!Ig An.Jiilllo,
~. No Jolo Too llg .Or
Too Llltlt. la11n111111 ca.amna.
Oonorot wor11, Anr Klndl

Dealer.~

(l)NeWiwMCh

'Your
'Birthday

Do

..·,,

Vulnerable: East-Wesl

to Anllllcl

tt:OO(J)e we (I)•
aeo .....

Sept. 2. 1112

WI

This way
and that

(L)
10:35(1) MOVIE: Da11H (2:00)

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

General Hauling

.

IIOOTII
+AH74
.QI
tAlQ
+862

~~

••

Forleii:
ComPicl!lla-ldeo
- aond
· · S7N211 Anytime.
And QIJvor
F1111111f H Tractor ......
tlo_bod, A.OOO-mi.-llil

Wlih 3 Polnl Hltoh, NOw -

Becky oceur.iRI
(Z) (f) llordlltllll
(1 :00)

..

Services

Cunlo Homo lmJIIOV-nlt:
YMro Exparlonca On Oldor a
Nlnr HameL Room Addklonl.
Foundllion Work, Aooll!!g,
KKchlnl And hlho. Freo &amp;a;
limaiMI Ralw- No Jo1o
Too Big Or SmoRIIM-311li.Q811.
O.vle s-Ing Mochlno And
Vacuum
Repair. Frtt

.AK54
+10874
+KI0543

to rescue Dana from • biker

Undor vohlclo troller hRch !II"
wldl 150. Sltp bumpar lor
Chovroltl pickup $20. 304-7135346.

85

by

;r=~R~':.reo. Q
Ql Pltmlll- g_

truok, to4 411171l
1m ~ ~ 11ow Tlra•

-::":.:.34::,.·

Q

8111baH Sin Francisco
Giants al PittSburgh Pirates
(L)
D Fomlly Feud
0 Tonnle U.S. Open, men's
and women 's opening
rounds from Aushrg
Meadow, N.Y. (L)
ill le 1 filar Star .
ID MIIOr Lllltlue leaebell
(L)
Ql Cfoullll
7:35 (I) ...... ~ lellbllll
Adanta Br1ves at New Vorl&lt;
Mats (L)
1:00 (J) e (IJ Secret Slrllce A
manhunl for a woul6-be
8688811n: a c:omputer vlnus .

i;6i;;
:OO:::P~M~.:;--;7""::;--:::--

parloncld, lnourld localld
callr. 11t Ut 1111.

tQ a2
'J1093
• J9 6
+J97

ALDER

...
EAST

WEST

PHILLIP

Stereo.Q

ROll liora for lh1H1 bod Cloovy
plck·up $50. 304-458-1532 ofter

t::il.'Tt~ ";.:·:~

l::.t= '.:: ~v.r,:=: =~ . . .~~~
Farm Equlprllllll

hQ

(I). Mallll'l F1mlly
9)
WhMI of Fortullll

TH~

..

US!

w•

wE'D 1..1~~ A F~P~ML
/
GMNT TO TEST

No. 3 below .

NOiml
1·1·1!
+11:10863
.711

BRIDGE

Chicago Whitt Sox at
T()f01110 BIIIB Jays (L)
Enterlllnrnlnl Tonight

NATIONAL RESEARCH
FOUNDATION

"'iSiing words

111111111

tn11r

holf1·1ttlck 'llctim Is nushad

In oampor willa..; 111rnoco, ,., ·

by tilling in h

-·-

-~

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
• ·"
Hearth · Lunch • Vocal • Gunman • OUT MUCH
"This is the most pleasant restaurant I've been in," I
.'
smiled to the very glum waitress. She 8IIIJI)II8d back,
"Well, you don't get OUT MUCH
do you?·
r - _.,:._,.
_ _ _ ___,

:.'fn.~JL Q

to the hospllll

1m lloclgo :114 ton lolng cab,
.a v.., aUla, elr, iii, Pa; llklo 84

"

UNSCRAMBLE fORI
ANSWER
.

c
IJ) Milot LHgtte a.liblll

0

--------1
61

C)

Ill) Llfl CloM On Stereo. t:;1
7:05 w lewenr llllllllln
7:30 (J). aJ Jtoplit'dyl

'"'"' ilt4 m •2zs. 114-448-'11171.
JET
Stud Sorvlco: AKC Rag. Cocker 11111 T..,. •- l'opt •··""ld Aoratlon Mot-, rapalred. Now
Sponlo~ bull colonad, g,.,.,..
:....'!'~1 '
' ' a r.OUIK rnolora In stock, RON
1Hd litter, 180, YIIY genua, 114- !!~I, ..... llrm, &amp;14-m· EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1 _,
aft•lpm.
531'1528.
'1112·2233 onytlmo.
Fwd Proloo ar, liking
Sunriu Kennels, AKC R-.. 11111
Ron't TV Sorvlco, opocllllzlna
lared Cloow Chow Pu-, e.~ $6,- 11+44t-om.
In Zenith •leo ~Icing MOll
rant Phyolcll And Shott, IM- 1111 Oklo Clam AIC Cruloo v. othtr brando. colla, 388-1211.
e'-•t...l!r,.AII/FM ~J $6;ilo0. oppllonca repol"" WY
1..........71 Afllr 7 P.M.
304-IJW398 Ohio 114-441-2414.
51
Musical
71 Clmoro, Z21, A·1 ahlpo, 350 S.pllc Tonk Pumping 1110, Cllllll
Instruments
hi-tll·rlorma
· _,..., 12100; 614-m- Co. RQN EVANS EN1£RPRISES,
1104o.
Jocklon, OH 1-I00-6!17-M28.
Conn Trombono Good CondJ.
uon, Uud Two Yurw 1100· eon
AUTO INsURANCE
Will build polio co..,., do ~
Bltwatn 7p.m. And ap.m. Dlvl• Qulckol Agoncy, 614-m· roomo, pu1 ..
PI-: 114-441-7531.
_u-:-n-:.:· - - - - - - I ~~J':1 5 f tralllr Oillrtln9. 1
Conn TramboM, Good Far A 72 Trucks lor Sale
h;lnner, $50,114 311100"1.
82 Plumbing &amp; ;
Soinol.co.-!o plano llll!llln. 1172 Ford hi~ lon lliokup, $400.
Heating
Wanetd: Aelponllble pll'ly to .. - - · 304-tll-1212.
mab low mondllr payment• on 111i Dadgt 4x4, !104-t'IU104.
Clrlor'o Pturriblng
olono. Con bo - n = Cit!
FowtltondPino
llr. WhRI at: 1 ul. 1m c-eo Chovt t 112 Ton
Gllllpollo, Ohio
101.
TN!:k, WHh llrlln lid, Elcoliont
114 4413181
Cond..... 114-241-1528.

Farm Suppl1rs
&amp; Liv es tock

.

Qll

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Condl-

•

....
.

e LPRINT
NUMBfRED I'
ETTER S
.

IIJ) WltHt of Fortu1111

a

~-- . . ·~ m v" Crook
Pick-UpRotd,
And"'4
Doll~-4~M. ~

-~
e, .,;;~
Loldld, E -

.I

OEidl

Jotp Pane Trant I Trone -Ftrr

81

.I

I I u

Stereo.

2
Goodyoor
F-32
olzo
P155110R13 on Chlvatlt rims
$40. Acc&gt;lylono Gtguoo I llpt
150. 304..?1-4331.
Budgtl Tranomlulono, Uold &amp;
rabulll, ttanlng o1 199· ~ont
whotf drlvo tlo~lng ol h11.00
114-245-SITT, 114-3711-2263.

79

After listening to an official
give his latest findings I've

1-...1..-1-...l........JL-...l...-' you develop from ..,

..

C:"•
:::it:"'2-317V.

Transportation

5

have always contributed more
,...~-K-A_R_B_Y_E--,1 ~~-~~-~-amusement than to our
I I'
Lomplete me Cfti.ICk~ quoted

=r:.~llt'lllll
With
!IN
Coult~tereo. Q
1121. !
Tonlglit

-""·· 114-112-lllaa.
Grooming. All IIi-, llylot. Rog-... Hollloln butl, 23 CaM &amp; Aunand. 61+446-7568.
lome Pol Food Daaltr. Julll nooitlho,coiii14-112·T.Zel
Wtbb. Colt 614 ...8-0231.
~ ol Ill
2 Ptdlgreo Solin braod young YIIUII(I •MJ
buck rabblte. 1 copper and 1
kl,
chlcll·
block, 15 each; 114-1112·2150.
Hay &amp; Grain
AICC Chihuahua Puppin. 3 64
M•lot $125 Each, Toklng
O.paaltsi AKC Dl,chthund, 2 Hoy lor tolt, Round bolot $20.
Ytore Old, Femlll $100, Phono: -h. _ , . bolot $2. &amp; up.
to4-47WI80.
614-!1117-1'1011.
AKC UINah•• · Collie Shahlt
IM-38'1-0Z12.

1

•

~~/LIIni

::-;::'-;:-;;;;--.:::-:-:::--:--

76

1'

6

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1

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I I r I I . :~:rn~e~te ~a:~

Ill) Nlw Zono Q
1:35 (I) Andy Orlllltll

7:00 ~ •

00

D I WW0

~L(I)~~-~
(!) Square OM TVQ
111• a• CIS 14iW1 Q
II]) • Andy Grltftlh

for Sale
John DMro Grain Drill $100; 4 1::::::-:::-:::-:7::~~=-:-Row Com Ptanter, $500, 614- 1m 14 Ft Johnson• Flbtrglau
258-eott
Boot, 50 HP, Johnoono IIOior
Trelllr, &amp; Extno. 11,210. 614-441·
63
Livestock
10211.

i

Ir t I

ta WOIId fodly
ill) Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop Q
1:06 (I) I .__ Lucy
1:30 (J) e 0 NIC NIWI C
IJ) Now It Can le TOIG

11ae Hondo 250 Fourtror, 304675-2443 '""4:ooPM.
1181 Hortoy Dtvldoon, 1200
Good . - kR lor Alllo Sportatr, Erctllonl Condhlon,
ChalmiR W.O., 4 118~ bore, IIIII LOw MIIMgo, 814-245-8137.
- ; ,76, 114-lfl.:l282.
AUTO INSURANCE
Gravoly -hmonlo Sulkty Dovl• Quickel Agency, 614-m$10. R-lon - . $10. .ae:.;n::,·:-:-:-:-:--;-::---:---:--:
~::':f.,.-:.~~~~· Pull fllhlnd Bruth Hog For A 4
Whlolor, 48 Inch Cui, 8 HP II&amp;S
J.D. 34 ~ 2 Sllogt :61=1...;4~48...;75.;;.68~
. -:-:---114-256-17:18.

'

ill.

a Runnlna IIMIII8clng

81RD5 ARE JUST AS
BAD.. ALL T~EV EVER
DO 15 FLV AROUND.

Farm Equipment

Wagana l1dgtr SJI1111 ltoww,
JV GMC ta Fl. Dump Grein Bid.

. ''

T I E I NG

e
Q
oc-e.pma

PEANUTS

1988 4 WIMII 205 s..-ner
Cuddy Cobin. 1 OWnor, 76
Houra, Cultom Eaole Tandem
Traitor, 230 HP V.f., 1/0, Ltok
Swl
Plltf
~-m
orm. -otguo111
Equip. O'Brian Sill TUbi In·
500 lb • - vary gtrollo, $42$. lllllblo "Bullol" Porlopolty,
304-458-1013.
AIIIFII Sltrao Cl-10. Clnvll
Cockpk Covor Plus Full Clmpor
~UI YMrilng Hollar Solo, Clnvat Dual hHtrloo, Gtrago
Wlilo Unlfonno, Droll Pant ~~.f"' 5 TO I Month Full Kept Slonad In Wlnl•• Gray,
SuHt, Slzo 14, Good -EKcolllrol
Horeford BuH. 614-441- Block, And Yellow, 113,iillo, 614·
CondHion, $5 To f8 Each. 614- _1,040::-1_.- : : - - - - - - - :;;2":::="".::41:;:·=--:-::7.""-=-...,448-23&amp;0.
S.rtt Davit Brad GIK And Sou boat, trollor, 55 . hp
WlncloHtor m- 37A lholgun, ::.-ion Solo. Durocl, Yorkl, Yomohl, tiki now, IOd lacklr,
$7$; 22col. rlllo, Hllli-lutomlllc,
mpodittCrooobrl!ll ·Brad Gino, tlorago1 llvawtU, oXIreo, !104$15; Craftsmen tockot toll, $6- ~
a, &amp; a..,. Soplombor :17S-::'11-::.;tt~SMI0::·~=7."--:---::-:
$20, 614-1i2·1173.
.
~ 1112, 7:30 P.M. Feyatto Co. ~
"'"'rounds,
WUhlnaton Fot Solo: 19110 Chackmllt Ski
Windows llnttd plato gl111 Couit- Fot lnlanr!Ollon Ball, 22 Fool 221 Evlnrudo
42148" doublo pano, $40. nlco. Colt Sliva, ilt4-152-2JI11 Or Mlkl MOior, JockP/ota, Eilcalltnl
304-875-1504.
614-117-2202.
Condnlon, 614-286-3311.

g:._

s

' . , . _ houll, 1275. cornplololy
rei • dop ...
guirad, lnctulre 1100 Jon....,
Blvd.or22il N. Main Bl.

'

$100. 3l)4.875-7946 ofttr 5:00PM.
For Sate: No Fr081. Refrlgsralor
Freo•L12.4 Cu. Ft. Good Con·
dlllonl .-.so, 614-256-1651.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wtahtn dry•ra, rtfrigautora,
rongH. Skogge Appllanctt, 76
Vine St,..., Caii614--446·73H, 1·
800-4-19.
Hot Point Waah.,, Huvy Duty
$15; Hot PcHnt Dryar $D5;
MIYII; ,
Naw Modtl
1175; Whirlpool Washlr Ntw
Modt1 $til; Kenmore Dryer 175;
Fngklllna Dryer Naw Modal,
$15; Uprllll!l Fraozor 195;
Rtfrlg~~r~tor Sldt 1 Sldt $26.5;
Gee Dryer $15; Retrigtr~lor 2
Door,
Froll
Fro~
$150;
Rtlrlgtrllot let l Woltr Dltlnd- •1265; 30 Inch
Eltdrlc Range 6 To ChOOH
F1&lt;&gt;m $95. Sillggo Appllanctt
76 Vlno St-, Galllpo11~1 614·
446·1'118, Or 1-t00-4111-34n.

KILLS FLEAS I
Bur ENFORCER Fl• Kilian For
P•t•, Homa I Yerd.. Guaranteed
Etfactlvol Buy ENFORCER At:
Thom11 Do-H Clnlor, 176
llcCormlck Road, GolllpOIIo.

""::Bl';;rhood,

32 ,Mobile Homes

33

Chest, drllllf wldoublt mlrrow,
night ltand, dark wood, all for

7.2 cu. ft. chool IYPI datp
lretzt, nme good, $50; 614·992·
7BBO.
84pe. punch bowl lit, $30;
35pc. punch bowl Ill, $15; both
uts m~tch, 614--182.'1113.
AlumJnum Porch Glider, MatchIng Rocktr $15i Artllqut Parlor
Table $30; Ofd Pomeroy
Postcards, $5 &amp;Up. 614-44&amp;0116.
Aluminum atorm windowa, $10
IICh with ICrNns; 514 ~892·
3540.
Am•le~n Flyar Tl'lllna Uodt1
314AW StMm Englnt $150;
Modll 377,378 Dlostl $300,
Modo! 130Caboooo $40, 614-4463934.
Antiquo School Dtsk, 1100;
Storm Door $10; Luggogo 115
Up; ExtrciM Gym 1100"; Pori-A·
POl $60, 304-87S.219l
Armidlllo awing alldt ut, wl1h
doc~
lira pole, merry-goaround, 1100. flrm. 304-6756485.

Merchandise

•

(!) Reldlna Rlln
II])
Ful JlauH

::175-::::20:::'111::..~-::-:-:--:--::::-

61

the
be·
low to form four simple words.

""~

1184 Hondo 3 wloHior 200 Big

Miscellaneous

Rearrange leffen of
0 four
krambled wards

())
(%) CtiiiiH
llquln OM TV

IXClhaft
cond,drive,
304.

54

- - - - - ldllod br

. EVENING

batwttn
4:00$100.
18:00
PM. . ~~~~~~====r.:::::====~ NftiH.
$1,000,
r:u':""
pump
!ICJol.l7ll.
Rtd, aloe
starl,

Hub copt, all olzu, I!L lovllory,
$4; oxerclw blko, ,..5; pockll knllo, $30; 114-li2-1282.
J.C. Hlgglno Pump Gun, 12Ga.
1125 Firm. Elhl Datra Layer
12Ga. Pump 2 Borrolo $221, 114379·2233.
.
·J.C. Ponnoy Ponoblo Sowing
Machlnt, Ukl Now 140, Phono:
614·388-11482.
Kid't clolhH 6x-t2, loyo, $1_!!;
baby owing, $5; radio ond "
lubea, bagful!, 125; 114-387m9.

TUE .. SEPT. 1

11177 DT·100 Yomahl Dirt Blko,
614 448 063'f. Alllr 5 P.M.
1111 Suzuki GS550L 111850
MIIH 1480 Flrm.lt4-37!1-22:u.

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TIIAT Ulll C.~
PIULII 0~

Television
Viewing

""

&lt;.0051~. I~~.

I:'&gt;

Eloclric boCtlo ga fur-

Homo1Ht140 GPIIconlrlfuaol .2"

BORN

,.IA.Y

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Air
Condlllonoril naco, ttoo, 114 843-5321.
$11; Boby Bid An
Gino 20" bicycle $30. lib ,_,
........ 150, 814--146-41135.
304-87US.O.
2 ·14" Illig. WltMio For 1983
Chlttongor $35, Tiro Chains, L· Glrla 3 llptld ~loIn olCOI78-15 New hO, 114-256-1619, tont -ion, t ht blue In
'cotor, l40i 614--~Z
6'14-448-4172.
2 Mono Both Roboa, (Ntw) Size: Good I Ft. Aluminum Picture
42, 16 Each; 1 Conon, 1 Flannel, Window WHh Storm Windows
Addod $100 CIU 114-448-311:1 Or
614 446 0193.
114 441 1839.
2 Wolnut boerdt 3"x6''x6112"
grNt tor gun ltalks $50. both. Gravoly llowor, Dull Whlll,
ExorciH blkl $30.304-675-5880. Elactri!: Stan, 30" Gn11 Mowor,
Surry, 1475, 614-44UlV7.
a· RCA c:onooJo color TV; $65;
coli aftor ~pm., 614·992·2633.
341 Uncoln Slrlltl, Middleport,
Ohio.

$18.00. Colt ladly, FREE NEW
color catalog, 1-100-228-6282
Real

Miscellaneous

Tuesday, September 1, 1992

~,OOOBTU'o

ntu. Won"t LISt. 1-800.284-

law

54

Window

Vtnd.
Vondlng ROIIIt: Local. Wo Hlvt
Tha -~~ Machlntt, Moklng A
Nice StNdy C11h lncomL 1·
800-653-1383.
WOIH Tonnlng Btds
New commercial-Rome unfls,
from $199.00. Limps, Lotlons,
Jllymente

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

11" Ponabio Color T.V. $100;

Manufaclurtr

Stltotlng llmol1 /Lorgo Bulldor
IOHior In Somo Opon Arau.
h ProiH POionlial. Acctpllng
But O.lllllld. 303-759'
;
I Ext. 2401.
VENDINO ROUT£ : Got Rich
Qulc~? No Wayl Sui Wt Ha-. A
Qaodi Stu~. Affordable, Bual-

Monthly

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

quoiiiiOM

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Politicians make strange b~lll..
lloi..I"'IWt."' lluJ they Ill
lharo fhe aame bunk." - Edgar A. Sholfl.

. . .')

...

~·'
, ,.~

1

________;__________

-

I

~------

-

o1 ....,..

.. •••

;.,~r:

�Page-10-The .Dally Sen.lnel

· Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Tuesday, September 1,1992

Area Girl Scouts receive awards Woman plagued with sleep problem
The following were recipients of
Girl Scout awards at the 1992
Meigs County Junior Fair.
Daisies
- World of Well Being: Rutland
Troop !~. Jane Wiseman; Letart
Troop 1334., Anna Norman.
World of People: Pomeroy
Troop 1292, Brenda Neutzling.
World ofToday and Tomorrow,
Troop 1204, Jane Wiseman; Troop
1334, Anna Nonman; Racine Troop
1020, Sharon Cleland.
World Out of Doors: Troop
1204 1 Jane Wiseman; Pomeroy
Troop 1292, Brenda Neutzling.
World of Girl Scouting: Troop
1204, Jane Wiseman; Troop 1292,
Brenda Neutzling.
Brownies
World of Well Being, Group
Projects: Racine Troop 1259, Beverly Moore; Pomeroy Troop 1271,
Terrie Houser.
World of Well Being, Individual
Projects: Troop 1259, Travan~a
Moore, Jennifer Walker, Jam1e
Stemple; Troop 1271, Emily Stiver,
Sarah House. Rebecca Houser;
Letart Troop 1004, Macyn Ervin,
grand champion and Vicki Norman, reserve champion; Syracuse
Troop 1120, Jennifer Sayre; Mid·
dleport Troop 1254, Britni Bevan,
Amanda Neece, Angel Stone,
Rachel Taylor; Chester Troop
1067,Erin Taylor.
World of People, Group Projects: Troop 1004, Teresa Wilson.
World of People, Individual
Projects: Troop 1254, Amanda
Neece, Rachel Taylor, grand champion Chastity Fowler; Troop 1067,
Sara Mansfield, Julie Bailey; Tuppers Plains Troop 1316, Nancy
Pickens; Troop 1271, Sara Moon;
Troop 1259, reserve champ•on Travanna Moore.
World of Today and Tomorrow,
Group Projects: Troop 1271, Teme
Houser; Troop 1004, Teresa Wilson; Troop 1254, Carin Taylor;
Troop 1316, Karolyn Welsh. ·
World of Today and Tomorrow,
Individual Projects: Troop 1004,
Jenny Norman, Vicki Norman,
grand champion Macyn Erwm;
Troop 1254, Amanda Neece, Kanndies Lee, Angel Stone, reserve
champion Rachel Taylor; Troop
1067, Erin Taylor.
World of Arts, Group Projects:
Troop 1316, Karolyn Welsh.
World of Arts, Individual Projects: Troop 1259, Jennifer Walker;
Troop 1271, Jennifer Roberts, Sara
Moon, Stephanie Burdette, Andie
Burdette, honorable mentiOn
Rebecca Houser, grand champion
Sarah Houser; Troop 1120. Jennifer Sayre; Troop 1254 , Angel
Stone, Amanda Neece; Troop
1220. Meghan Haynes: Troop
1067, Cinda Clifford; Troop 1316,
Nancy Pickins, Lisa Smith,
Danielle Spencer, reserve champion BiUieJo Welsh.
World of Out of Doors, Group
Project: Troop 1254, Carin Taylor.
World of Out of Doors, Individual Projects: Troop 1259, Travanna
Moore, Amanda Huddleston;
Troop 1271, Rebecca Houser, Sara
Moon, Jennifer Roberts, grand
champion Sarah Houser; Troop
1004, Brandi Lane; Troop 1254,
Amanda Neece, Angel Stone;
Troop 1316, Deidre McCartney;
Troop 1120. reserve champion Jennifer Sayre.
World of Girl Scouting, Individual Projects: Troop 1067, Holly
Broderick; Troop 1254, grand
champion Amanda Neece; Troop
12 71, reserve champion Sarah
Houser.
Juniors
World of Well Being, Group
Projects: Pomeroy Troop 1309,
Brenda Neutzling; Letart Troop
1290, Anna Norman: Harrisonville
Troop 1276, Pat Bissell.
• World of Well Being, Individual
Projects: Troop 1309. Bethany
Cooke, grand champion Autumn
Phillips; Troop 1290, Heather Dailer; Troop 1276, Kelly Dalton;
M1ddleport Troop 1039, Melissa
Holman, Brandy Stevens, Ashlee
Vaughan, Stephanie Roberts,
reserve champion Bridget Johnson.
World of People, Group Project
Troop 1039, Denise Holman.
World of People, Individual

Projects: Troop _1276, Jennifer
Morris: Troop 1290, grand champ•·
on Heather Dailey; Troop 1309.
reserve champion Bethany Cooke.
World of Today and Tom()(I'Ow,
. Group Projects: Troop 1309, Brenda Neutzling; Troop 1290, Anna
Norman; Troop 1039, Denise Holman.
World of Today and Tomorrow,
Individual Projects: Troop 1309,
Autumn Phillips. Michelle
Kennedy, grand champion Bethany
Cooke; Troop 1276, Tiffany Richmond; Troop 1039, Melissa Hoi·
man, Bridget Johnson, Ashlee
Vaughan, Stephanie Roberts,
reserve champion Brandy Stevens.
World of Arts, Group Projects:
Troop 1309, Brel)da Neutzling;
Troop 1039, Denise Holman.
World of Ans, Individual Projects: Troop 1309, Andrea Neutzling, Amanda Miller, reserve
champion Bethany Cooke: Troop
1290, Jennifer Morris; Troop 1276,
Janie Hobbs, grand champion
Michelle Bissell; Troop 1039,
Melissa Holman, Stephanie
Robens, Stacey Brewer.
World of Out of Doors, lndivid·
ual Projects: Troop 1309, Bethany
Cooke, reserve champion Melissa
Houser; Troop 1290, Jennifer Morris, Heather Dailey; Troop 1276,
Michelle Bissell; Troop 1039, Gin·

ger Darst, Stephanie RUbens, grand
champion Bridget Johnson.
World of Girl Scouts, Group
Projects: Troop 1309, Brenda
Neutzling; Troop ·1290, Anna Norman; Troop 1039, Denise Holman.
World of Girl Scouts, Individual
Projects: Troop 1309, Amanda ·
Miller, reserve champion Bethany
Cooke; Troop 1039, grand champion Bridget Johnson.
Seniors
World of Well Being, Individual
Projects: Troop 1261, grand champion Linda Chapman; Troop 1208.
Anita Thomas, reserve champion
Debra Frost
World of People, Individual
Projects: Troop 1208, grand champion Debra Frost; Troop 1261,
reserve champion Sherry Johnson.
World of Arts, Individual Projects: Troop 1261, reserve champion Linda Chapman, grand champion Sherry Johnson.
World of Out of Doors, Individual Project: Troop 1208, grand
champion Debra Frost
Girl Scouts who earned more
than one A were Amanda Neece,
Brownie Troop 1254, six; Bethany
Cooke, Junior Troop 1309, six;
Sherry Johnson, Senior Troop
1261, two; Linda Chapman, Senior
Troop 1261, two, and Nancy Pickens, Brownie Troop 1316,two.

Fifth Hudnall reunion held recently
The fifth family reunion of
Lenora McNutt Hudnall, Albany,
and the lare Ernest W. Hudnall was
held Aug. 2, 1992, at the home of
Howard C. and Kathy Hudnall Sr.,
Albany.
The youngest attendee was
Tracey Bailey, daughrer of David
and Mary Bailey, Albany. The old,
est was Raymond Brickles, Albany.
There were 143 present at the
reunion. There were three births
and no deaths since last year's
reunion.
Nine surviving children of
Lenora and Ernest Hudnall Sr.
attended, and son David L. Hudnell
Sr. is deceased.
Also attending were Lenora
McNutt Hudnall, Frances Hudnell,
Howard and Addie Hudnall, Addie
Hudnall II, Sheri Hudnall Cooper,
Scott Cooper Sr., Scott Cooper Jr.,
Mary Hudnall, Glenna and Bill
Wade Sr., Bill Wade Jr., Charlotte
and Jim Hudnall Sr., Bill' and Chad
Hudnall, Jim Hudnall Jr. and
Stacey Thomas. Clinton Sanders,
Kate and Chelsea Sanders, Lillie
Randolph, Gerald and Linda Douglas; Keith, Scott and Melinda
Douglas; Robert Hudnall, Edna
King, Rob King, David L. Hudnell
Jr. and Connie Phelps, Tonya Hud·
nail, Kenny Hudnall, Amy West,
Roger Hudnall, Delbert and Nancy
Sanders, Patty Taylor, Jack Hudnall Jr .• Mindy and Joey Taylor,
Roger and Sharon Hudnall, David
and Mary Bailey; Stephanie,
Stacey and Tracey Bailey; Carlos
and Opal Rutte_r_, Jason_Starcher,

Charlie Carsey, Howard C. Hudnall
Sr. and Kathy Hudnall, Howard C.
Hudnall Jr., Harold Clark, David
and Teresa Sanders, Tony King and
Bob Phillips, all of Albany.
Joan King, Jennifer King, Jamie
Jeffers, Jeff King, Julie King and
Dave Reeves, HarrisonviUe.
Gloria and Jared King, Lloyd
and Penny Hudnall; Randy, Lloyd
Jr., Eric and Richard Hudnall;
Charles Lee. Rass Lee and Scott
Stalder, Shade.
Junior and Evelyn Wiblin, Tony
Reeves, Tom Lee, Abe Lee, Angela
Lee, Tim Haning, Page ville.
Katherine Wright, Akron.
Lavada and Kaycee Pidcock,
Joe and Mary Christy, Diane and
Sami Burkhart, Raymond and
Bessie Brickles, New Marshfield.
Carol Wines, Middleport; Haze
Hudnall, Alfred and Becky Hudnall, Mike and Michelle Hudn;ill,
Hebbardsville.
Betty, April and Lisa Blankenship; Darrell Lee, Robert Pickett
and Ruth Stiffel, Pomeroy.
Bernie and June Sharpe; Chrisy,
B.J. and Bubba Sharpe; Opal
Sharpe; Sharon, Major and Stacie
Sharpe; Joann and Grove Willard,
Mina Willard, l.ula Belle Clark,
Dale McBride, Joann Lee, Frank
Wingrove and Vicki Jones, Athens.
John and Delbert McBride,
Bonnie and George Douglas; Juanita, Kelly,. Sam, Sam Jr. and Kathy
Douglas, Stewart
Mary Willard and Arthur Willison, the Plains; Don Randolph,
Coolville.

f

Willard and Linda Hudnall;
Abby, Rebecca, Mickey, Faith,
Linda and Sharon Hudnall,
Dyesville.
Music was played and sung by
Jr. Wiblin, Raymond Brickles,
Jared King, Mary Christy, Joe
Christy and Lloyd Hudnall Sr.
The date for next year's reunion
will be announced in July 1993.

Donahue reunion planned
The family reunion of Homer
and Amanda Donahue will be held
Sunday at the Community Center
in Letart, W.Va. There w1ll be a
potluck dinner.

Haleakala, a dormant volcano on
the island of Maui with large, colorful
craten, was designated a national
park in 1960.

Ann

at the Minnesota
Regional Sleep Disorder Center at
Hennepin County Medieal Center
in Minneapolis. He said there are
a number of disorders that can
cause the behavior you described,
and mOSI are treatable. It is Dr.
Mahowald's opinion that you may
have been misdiagnosed, and he
suggesred that you try another clinic.
He is optimistic about your chances
to get help if you follow through.
For information or refenals, wrire
to the National Sleep Foundation,
122 S. Robenson Blvd., Suite 201,
Los Angeles, Calif. 90048.
Dear Aaa Llladers: I'm a 35year-old single male, never married
and considered attractive. The
problem? I can't seem to find a
woman who will give me the time
or day.
I've answered personal ads, joined
singles groups, gone to church
activities and even tried nightclubs.
The only women I've met who
show any interest are extremely
overweight and don't can: about the
way they look •• or they are deeply
religious and just want to be friends.
The attractive professionals are all
busy and have no time to date.
For example, last week, I asked
out a smart young business
executive, and this is her schedule:

football
tabloid

Monday, pottery class. Tuesday,
ietobics. Wednesday, night school.
Thursday, volleyball. Friday.
softball practice. Saturday and
Sunday. weekend church retreat.
Another woman who answered a
personal ad I had placed riikl me
she works _late every night and
goes home to see her parents on
weekends.
Are there any women left who are
physically fit and have time to date?
Why is everyone so darned busy all
the time? I'd like some answers. -·
FALLS CffiJRCH, VA.
DEAR FALLS CHURCH: With
all the women out there who are
eager for men, you can't get a
date? Yes, you do have a problem.
I can't reD you what it is because
I don't know you, but believe
me, something is defmitely out of
kilter.
Obviously, no one will level
with you so I suggest tluit yoo see a
counselor.
You need an objective, unbiased
professional who will evaluare your
personality and explain to you why
you keep bombing out. Good luck.
Gem of the Day: By the time a
person says, "To make a long story
shon," it's usually too lare.
Is that Ann lAnders column you
clipped years ago yellow with age?
For a copy of her most frequently
requested poew and essays, send a
self-addressed, long, busilltss·siu
envelope and a check or money
order for $4.85 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Gems,
c/o Ann Landtrs, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.87.)

Vol. 43, No. 92

Copyrighted 1992

AT UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

•No Deposit for September
On Rent· To·Own!
•Free Balloons for the Kids
This Week Only!

.,,
'

Forest Run UMW meets
Carolyn Salser was program Mary Nease, Evelyn Hollon, Katil·
leader with the topic "Literacy . leen Scott, Faye Wiggins, Edith
Coping with Words," when the · Sisson, Erma Roush and Mary K.
Forest Run United Methodist Roush.
Women met recently at the home
Edith Sisson presided and
of Mary Nease.
the meeting by reading
opened
The pwpose of the program was about Methodistism.
Devotions
to enlarge the understanding of the
were
by
Kathleen
Scott,
"Who
meaning of literacy and to partici- Touched Me," from Guideposts.
pate and become involved locally
Officers repons were given and
and globally in effons to eradicate
several
announcements were made.
illiteracy,
District
UMW &lt;:\nnual Day will
"Praise Him" was sung and
be
held
at
Grace
Methodist Chun:h
readers included all members,
in Gallipolis on Sept. 19. A conference on Leadership Enrichment for
District Officers will be Oct 3 and
District Leadership Enrichment
To qualify for the dean's list, a Day at Richland Unired Methodist
student must have a grade point Chun:h in Athens will be Oct. 15.
There were 39 sick ealls report·
average of 3.5 or better. Beegle, a
senior, was one of 95 students with ed and refreshments were served
a4.0GPA.
following the meeting.

\

A FLOWER BED, LITERALLY· Zelma
Gilmore, 32715 Hiland Rd., Pomeroy, took the
idea or a flower bed literally when she plant~
begonias and impatiens in this iron bed. Gilmore

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
second electric company has challenged rate decisions by stare ~tgu­
lators involving costs of a power
plant conversion.
Columbus Southern Power Co.
on Tuesday appealed 10 the Ohio
Supreme Court for a larger rate
increase than it received in May
from the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
The utility had requested an
increase of $202.5 million, or 28.4
percent. It was allowed an increase
of $123 million, to be phased in
over three years.
Cinc;innati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
on Friday filed suit in the Supreme
Court to obtain a $204 million rate
increase. The PUCO in May granted the company an increase of
$1 14 million over three years.
Columbus Southern, CG&amp;E and
Dayton Power &amp; Light operate the

1. J992

DIET PEPSI
12 Oz. 24 Pack Cans

99

Paving of State Route 7 through the Pomeroy business district
(Main Street) is set to begin this week.
According to Nancy Yoacham of the Ohio Department of Transportation, the two-week project will begin on Thursday at a cost of.
$177,579. The work will be performed by Tom Mayle and Sons of
Bartlett and Shelly Company of Thornville.

SOFA AND CHAIR

Pool schedule announced
The Middleport Pool will operate on an adjusted schedule in
light of the beginning of school.
Hours are 3:30 to 5:30p.m., Monday through Friday, with $1
admission, with regular hours on Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
The pool will close after Labor Day.

Ft. Bags • 100% Premium Landscappers Mulch
OIILY

Judgment sought

$10 93

A judgment action has been filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Benson Pump Company, Rockford, Jl ., against
Edward E. Kitchen, doing bustness as Pool People of Ripley, Middleport, in the amount of $8,090.09.

PER WEEK

Patrol probes one-car accident

Cash 'n Carry

The Gallia:Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol investigated a
one-car accident Friday afternoon on State Route 681. Phyllis W.
Hetzer, 71, State Route 124 Reedsville, was cited for failure to control afrer she ran off the road and sauck a ditch.
· According to the repon, Hetzer was eastbound on S.R. 681 when
she lost control and ran off the right side of the road. Her. vehicle
then went back onto the roadway and ran off the len side and into a
ditch.
.
Damage to the vehicle was listed as heavy and the vehicle was
towed from the scene. No injuries were reported.

SOFA AND

CHAIR

$199
LAMPS
PER WEEK

$19

95

EACH

UPPER RIVER ROAD
Below Sliver Memorl1l Bridge
GALLIPOLIS • 441 4428

SAVE

.so

WE ACCII'I A ·........ ·•

....

-~ ~::.~:· ~~

New regulations outlined
•.

New Federal regulations effective July I, 1992, under section
608 of the Clean Air Act, prohibit releasing ozone-depleting corn·
pounds used as refrigerants into the atmosphere while maintaining,
servicing, repairing or disposing of air conditioning or refrigeration
equipment.
Consequently, it is now difficult to properly diS)!ose of refrigeraContlnued on page 3
~;

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)Officials for an East Liverpool,
Ohio, hazardous waste incinerator
plan to begin rests soon, despite a
court document showing federal
oifiCials do not expect to permit
test burns before October, a
spokeswoman said.
"We certainly anticipate a startup and trial bum in short order,"
said Julia Bircher, a spokeswoman
for Wasre Technologies Inc. "We
don't see thai today's action has
any real change or effect in our
operations . Short order doesn't
mean October."
In court documents filed in U.S.
District Court on Monday, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
said it would be at least mid-October before Waste Technologies
receives approval for a trial bum.
Waste Technologies and West
Virginia officials were in U.S. District Court Tuesday on Auorney
General Mario Palumbo's motion
seeking a temporary restraining
order. The order would prevent the
plant from conducting any tests.
Chief Deputy Attorney General
Richard Goulieb said his office
thought the EPA was ready to issue
a permit "any day."

$3.6 billion Zimmer power plant in disallowed cannot be considered in
Moscow, near Cincinnati. The determining rates.
The disallowance would erase
companies requested mre increases
the
company's savings and affect
to help pay for the plant's conver·
services to customers, said Thomas
sion from nuclear to coal power.
PUCO spokeswoman Anne-Stu- McCaffrey, Columbus Southern
art Baxter said appeals are not president.
The company said state regulaunusual in major rate cases. The
tors
illegally modified a 1985
agency will defend its decision in
agreement
about the Zimmer plant
the Columbus Southern ease to the
coo
version.
court, she said.
The agreement said Columbus
The Ohio consumers' counsel
would decide whether to file its Southern's portion of the disal·
own appeal to the Supreme Court lowance would be $219 million,
or take other action, spokeswoman utility spokesman Tom Holliday
Beth Gianforcaro said. The con- said. The $165 million disallowed
sumers· counsel, which represents this year was in addition to that
ratepayers in utility cases, was amount, he said.
Ms. Baxter said the PUCO anareviewing Columbus Southern's
lyzed
the 1985 agreement before
appeal.
Columbus Southern is challeng- ordering the disallowance in May.
Columbus Southern serves
ing the PUCO's disallowance of
S165 million of its investment in ahout 560,000 people in 25 central
the Zimmer plant. Costs that are and southern Ohio counties.

Paving to begin

The Southern Local School District is seeking a 5.3 mill bond
issue to fund construction, remod·
eling and furnishing of building
sites within the district, as well as a
half-mill tax levy 10 assist in funding that project
The following local local issues
will also be decided: Suuon Town·
ship, .4 mills, five years, maintaining and operating cemeteries; Rut·
land Township, .3 mills for five
years, maintainting and operating
cemeteries; Syracuse Village, i
mill, five years, current expenses;
Racine Village, 1.7 mills, five
years, current expenses; Middleport
Village, 2 mills, five years, fire
protection; Scipio Township, ·half
mill , one year, fire protection;
Letart Township, one mill , five
years, operaJing and maintaining
cemeteries; Rutland Village. 2
mills, five years, current expenses.

"When we found out that the
EPA was not going to issue a permit until some time in October,
there was really no legal need for a
(temporary restraining order)
because in effect we gained the
same thing," Gottlieb said.
No restraining orders were
issued by the judge. But the two
sides agreed the plant must give a
week's notice before any hazardous
material is brought to the plant sire
and before any test burns are conducted.
The seven days' notice, would
give Palumbo time to ask again for
a temporary restraining order
before any test bums are conducted.
Palumbo's request for a temporary restraining order, which was
filed last week, said even limited
test burning at the plant on the
Ohio River could pose a serious
hazard to residents and the environment
Stamp schedu led an Oct. 13
hearing on Palumbo's request for a
preliminary injunction against the
planl
Palumbo said the EPA had
appeared to change its position
with documents filed with the court

on Monday.
"Back in July they told WTI
they had authority to conduct a trial
bum," Palumbo said. "Now as a
result of this motion, they now
have told WTI they can't do anything.
''I'm very encouraged that the
EPA is taking another look at this
situation," he said.
Meanwhile, at least two more
opponents of the plant who have
been staging a hun11er strik.e the
past six weeks sa1d they were
pleased with the agreement and had
lunch.
"We at least have a stipulation
that nothing will be happening until
we will have our day in coun,"
said BeckY Ammon of East Liverpool. "We will not turn our sights
away from the plant They have not
lived up to any promises yeL"
Palumbo filed a federal lawsuit
in April alleging the plant will pose
a health hazard to West VirginUills.
It also alleges the Ohio and U.S.
EPAs improperly issued permits
for the incinerator.
''We consider that frivolous and
without merit, and we hope that is
thrown out as soon as possible,"
Bin: her said.

Dozens of agencies involved
in Hurricane relief operations

Death toll
climbs in
Nicaragua
MASACHAPA, Nicaragua (AP)
- At least 30 people were dead
and dozens missing today after
tidal waves triggered by a powerful
earthquake in the Paciftc swept
away homes and inundated islands
along Nicaragua's west coast
Officials feared the death toll
would rise rapidly.
Hundreds of people were
injured by the walls of water up to
30 feet hi ~h that slammed into
communities along nearly the
entire coast Tuesday evening,
destroying beachfront hotels and
sendill8 boatS and vehicles Oying.
Thousands of people were left
homeless.
"The sea took us by surprise.
All of sudden, I was swimming
inside my own home and all my
furniture was Ooating around me,"
said 47-year-old Socorro Lopez,
who lost two grandchildren to the
surge in Masachape, a beach town.
"This huge wave swallowed us
house and all. Now I' II never be
able to !iring my grandchildren
back," the woman said, sobbing, as
the recovered bodies of the 4-yearold boy and 2-year-old girl were
laid out nearby.
The quake measured 7.0 on the
Richter scale, sttuck at 6:16 p.m.
and was centered 75 miles southweSI of Mlnaaua. according to the
National Earihquake Information
Center in Golden, Colo. It was followed by two strong aftershocks.

William R. Wickline.
Meigs Local School District
voters will decide the fate of a proposed five-year, five mill levy for
permanent improvements. If
passed, that levy will be used for
building repairs and improvements
and textbook purchases. $581,535
would be generated annually if that
levy were to pass.
The MR/DD board will once
again place a levy on the ballot ·
this time a 1.8 mill continuing levy.
That levy would generate an estimated $402,655 per year, and
would prevent furthcr cuts in programming and services.
A county-wide replacement levy
of one mill for five years for the
Meigs County Health Department
will be decided. Those funds would
go toward current expenses and
continuation of services now in
place.

Agreement calls for
7-day notice on waste

said her husband eame up with the idea when he
saw the bed in Portland and subsequently
bought it at an auction.

..--Local briefs-____,

"Everything New ... Nothing Pre-Owned!"

PER WEEK

,,

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
When they go to the polls in
November, voters in all three of
Meigs County's local school districts will decide tax issues as well
as a county-wide tax levy placed on
the ballot by the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation I
Developmental Disabilities.
Voters in the Eastern Local
School District will vote on renewing an existing five mill, two year
levy for current expenses.
Approval of that levy two years
ago has prevented the district from
entering the state loan fund this
year, and has improved the district's financial status, according to
Superintendent Richard Smith.
Based on the most current land valuation available, that levy would
produce an estimated $158,000 per
year, according to County Auditor

Columbus Southern Power
appeals Zimmer decision

RENT-TO-OWN
BUNK BEDS

3 Sections, 38 Pogea 25 cenll
AMultlmedlo Inc. Newa,-per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 2, 1992

.Meigs voters will decide
several tax issues this fall

SUPERAMERICAs

Of Vi'ra Furniture's New Location!

Low tonight In mid 50s.
Thursday, rain. High in low-80s.

•

Specials Good
September J Fltru

GRAND OPENING

Buckeye 5:
9-13-15-20-33

Inside today

BGSU releases dean's list
Bowling Green State University
named 213 students to its summer
semester dean's list, including
Melanie Beegle, Racine.

Pick 3:
354
Pick 4:

8647

SuperAmenca Group. Inc.

Hayman reunion
held recently
The annual reunion of the late
George R. and Vera Mae (Craw·
ford) Hayman was held recently at
Portland Park.
Dan Hayman had the blessing
before the basket dinner.
Attending were Focie Hayman,
Lil and Rob Hart, Beverly, Olivia
and Zak Cunningham, Jonathan
Hart, Ted Hayman, Phyllis Young,
Keith, Leslie and Shane Hayman.
Virgil, Dolores and Mathew
Ours, Tricia Balder, April, Bryan
and Ben Case.
Beryl, Ruby, Rhonda, Kindra
and Jennifer Wolfe, Calvin and
Vicki Osborn, Brandy and Linka
Dean, Nick Tsavaris, Jason Brill,
Lewis, Lissa, Jerrod and Jonathan
Wolfe.
Margaret, David, Karen, Ron·
nie, Nina, Shannon, Chris, Cory.
Curtis and Nathan C~ter.
Gladys, Gary, D1ane, Brian,
Eric, Bruce and Michele Richardson, Beverly Stilber.
Dorfs Rogers, Dan, Donna, ,
Danny, Dena, Bryce, Brian,
Bethany, David and Julie Sayre.
pan and Kim Hayman; April,
Erin and Mallory Roach.
·

Dear Aaa Laaden: I am a 45·
year-old woman and have been a
sinsle parent for 15 years. My
car= is flourishill8 and I should
be oo top of the world. So why am I
miserable? rve been diagnosed as
having "night terrors."
These aa.:ks have plagued me
for almost 13 years. I've brolcen
bones, scared my family half to
death, and almOSI killCII myself.
With night u:rron, you jUplp out of
bed and literally run for your life.
While still asleep, you scream, can't
breathe and think you're dying. This
is very frightening for the family and
no fun for the victim.
I was diagnosed years ago at a
sleep disorder center. They claimed
I have the sleep patterns of a
13-year-old and what I am experiencing can be dangerous. I was
put on medication, which did not
help. In rae~ the drugs made me very
tired and more susceptible to these
aa.:ks.
I'm beside myself with anxiety
and don't. know where to IUm. If
you can help me, Ann, I'll be
forever grateful. ·· LONGING
FOR NORMAL SLEEP IN
PHILADELPHIA
DEAR PHILADELPHIA: My
office spoke with Dr. Marie

Ohio Lottery

1992

WASIDNGTON (AP) - After
criticisms that the federal juggernaut took too long to creak into
action, several dozen agencies
ranging from the Defense Department to the lnremal Revenue Service are going to work in stormdamaged south Florida.
Pitching tents, tending wounds,
dishing out meals and finding jobs
- the hurricane relief effon is the
government's largest logistical
operation since Desert Storm.

· "All the red tape has been
slashed to ribbons" to expedite
relief, said Kathryn Gaddy of the
Government Services Administration, the main supplier to federal
agencies.
''We won 'tleave until the job is
done," President Bush said Tuesday from Homestead, Fla., one of
the communities hardest hil last
week by Hurricane Andrew.
But private aid also was still
needed in the massive cleanup and

rebuilding effort in Florida and
Louisiana, Bush said Tuesday
night.
.
"I encourage all Amencans to
pi!Ch in in any way you can," the
pres1dent sa1d m a broadcast
address. He said people ~illing to
help could eall the Amencan Red
Cross, and he gave the toll-free
telephone number: 1-800-8422200.
The Pentagon as of Tuesday had
Continued on page 3

APpetition check shows
label law q~alifies for ballot
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Checks by election boards in 86 of
the state's 88 counties show backers of a right-to-know law concc;m·
ing toxic chemicals appear to have
eonugh signarures 10 put the measure on the Nov. 3 ballot
An unofficial tally by The Associated Press of figures provided by
Secretaiy of Stale Bob Taft showed
Tuesday that Ohio Citizen Action
had at least128,743 names of registered voters, e~ceeding the
104,330 minimum the group needed.
Organizers of another petition
drive to put political term limit
issues before voters have almost
one-third of the sigparure total they
need, and could reach the goal

'\

when tabulations from the state's
largest counties are completed.
Taft's office does not expect to
release official results of the petition checks until after Labor Day.
Citizen Action submitted petitions with a preliminary total of
179,618 signatures.
ThP. group, which previously
submitted 104,330 names to h&amp;ve
the measure introduced in the Ohio
Legislature, needed another
104,33010 qualify for t1\e bellot.
With repons still to be received
from Franklin and Hardin counties,
the AP Ially shows 128,743 signa·
lures were valid and 33,908
invalid.
In addition, Citizen Action met
a distribution requirement to sub-

mit valid signatures, grearer than S
percent of the 1990 vore for governor, from 44 counties. The requirement apparenlly was met in at aeut
71 counties.
The right-to-know law wou14
require warning labels on food an4
other consumer products that contain certain chemicals that cause
cancer or birth defects.
Election boards face a deatllinc
Friday for completing checks ll&gt;f
petitions submiu.ed by Ohioans for
Term Limits.
·
The group delivered petitioas
with 585,881 signatures on bdla1l'
of Its proposed constitutional
amendment, and needs at 'l cut
347,71$~ valid sipaturea of rep.
la'cd VQter$.

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