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                  <text>Times-Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

Farm Flashes

A special thanks to all who
helped make '91 fair a success
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Gallia County
Extension Allent,
Agric:ulture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS - Returning to the
"normal" routine makes us more
aware that drought conditions still
exist in much of Gallia County.
The "Damage Assessment Repon",
filed August 2, did not ask for
emergency livestock feed or haying
oe grazing of set-a-side acreage foe
Gallia County. The Governor
declared a Drouf!t Alen foe all but
10 of the state s 88 counties on
July 26. D~unage to crop in Ohio is
wi&lt;lespre8Q but spotty.
Drou~ht sttcss during the silking
and pollmation period has the most
drastic effect on com yields. Yields
can be reduced by 30 to 40% during the "blister" stage of develop·
ment and 20 to 30% during the
"dough" stage. Com kernels oflen
abort from drought Sttcss. Kernels
near the tip of the ear are most likely to abort during severe stress
because they are the last to develop
and are located the funhest away
from incoming nutrients and water.
·Alfalfa stands may be stunted
with only 6 to 8 inches of accumulaled regrowth, due to inadequale
soil moisture and potato leafhopper
damage. If the alfalfa has started to
flower, we recocnmend clipping or
mowing the alfalfa at the standard
stubble height (2 inches) and
remove the forages as hay if warranted. When alfalfa begins to
flowc:c there is essentially no additional dry matter produced by that
stem oe shoot Mowing or clipping
the alfalfa at this time (flowering
stage) will stimulale new growth of
the basal buds and improve the
yield pou:ntial for the next cutting

which should be anticipated during
lhe flfSt week of September. Field
scouting for potato leafhoppers
should be continued when 2 to 3
inches of new growth has accumulated.
Cow- calf producers with dried
up pastures, low hay yields , and
limited waler supplies have some
options that they may want to consider. Research has shown that
calves over 200 pounds or 3
months of age can be successfully
early weaned. In fact early weaned
cow- calf pairs consume about 25
percent less feed than normal
weaned pairs. It is more efficient to
feed calves directly than to feed
cows to produce milk to nurse
calves. Dry cows require 60 percent as much water as lactating
cows.
Aphid populations in Tobacco
has been high this year. Some of
the red aphids appear to be resistant
to "orthene". Thorough spray coverage is essential to obtain satisfactory aphid control since most
aphids are found on the underside
of leaves some wowers have used
"Thiodan 3E" to control aphids
when orthene was not getting lhe
job done. There is a 28 day limit
until harvest on products containing endosulfan (Thiodan). Be sure
not to spray these products in the
heat of the day. Read the label!
Good news is that topping
removes the succulent terminal
growth that is preferred feeding site
for tobacco aphids. Some entomologists believe that if aphids are present in large numbers at topping
they have already done their damage and anempts to kill them would
only be a "get even" strategy. The
major insects to watch for between
topping and housing are grasshoppers and hom worms.

dry, OSU Forage Agronomists sugBy .)obn C. Rice
gest you go ahead and properly
Mei&amp;s County
prepare the fields for planting with
Extais!on Agent,
needed tillage - then wait for the
Agriculture
POMEROY • Drought and precipitation that will eventually
Summer oe Fall Forage Seedings... fall. Panicular emphasis should be
to seed or not to seed that is the placed on fmning the seed bed with
question. Paul Henderlong and a cuhlpacker before seeding is
John Underwood of The Ohio State attempted. Don't rely on rainfall to
University have issued the follow- properly firm a loose seed bed.
ing comments.
Where possible use a band-seed
Should I attempt planned sum- press-wheel drill to band 45 to 60
mc:c seedings of perennial cool sea- pounds per acre of fertilizer
son grasses and/or legumes such as (lOOibs of 0-46-0 equivalent)
alfalfa or red clover? The answer below the seed for alfalfa seedings.
may be entirely different for fann Pure stands of forage grasses can
oporators even within many Ohio be seeded until about September 20
counties. This is due to the present with a cultlpacker seeder.
wide variability of soil moisture on
Drier overaU soil moisture confarms due to the spotty nature and ditions may slightly slow the
. variable precipitation received degradation of some herbicides
from thunderstorms during June used with the previous crop in the
and July. Soils on many fanns are rotation. It is therefoce important to
very dry down to 4 to 6 inches or follow re-crop intervals specified
moce, whereas on others, not many on herbicide labels and summamiles away, reasonably adequale rized in tables in the 1991 WEED
levels of soil moisture may exist to CONTROL GUIDE, OCES Bulthese depths.
letin. 789. This publication is availA second major consideration able through OSU-OCES county
may be the urgency of need to Extension offices throughout the
make replacement forage seedings. state.
Many fanners, for example, who
Another farmer for no-tillage
lost major alfalfa fields from dis- establishment in sods is to spray
ease during the past seasons now Roundup on existing vegetation
have a very great need to reseed during September or October using
this August This is especially so if low-rate technology. This includes
wet soils prevented making seed- use of less than 10 gal/A water carings this spring or where spring rier, flat-fan nozzles,and the addiseedings failed. Other farmers with tion of .5% non-ionic surfactant
fair but not good stands can more
The killed sod will prou:ct lhe
easily defer new forage seedings soil during the winter. Drill the forinto 1992.
_
age seed in !ale March-early April
The reality is that atlempting to as soon as the ground is dry enough
seed soils that lack adequate mois- · for the proper operation of the noture in the top 4 to 6 inches carries tillage drill.
risk. Showers may !X'Ovide enough
moisture foe plant emergence, but
not enough for the continued
growth to ensure successful stand
establishment Seeding failures can
result in significant economic loss
in dollars and labor. Where possible,delay seedings until precipitation has provided adequate soil
moisture down several inches or
you can be certain of receiving an
incb or more of rain right after
seeding. Do not auempt summer
scedings in northern Ohio after
September I and no later than midSeplember in southern Ohio. These
times are important to ensure adequale seodling establishment before
winter. Do not graze or clip stands
the fUSI fall.
Even if your soil is extremely

Trout is named SA
manager in Middleport
LEXINGTON, Ky .. Mark

Trout IIIli been named manager of
the SuperAmerica stoce in Middlepgrt ICCOtding toR. D. Davis, east~ vice president of Super's Southern Division.
rmut'i.t responsible for operalillll of the 2,034 square foot store,
Y(•ich iJ located at 497 General

lflrlinler Pllbt&amp;Y.

=

. A native of Gallipolis, trout

joined ibe company in 1990 as an

•auilllllt store manager. He is a
of Southeastern Business

'·

PROMOTED • Bradley
Yoho or Gallipolis bas been
promoted to maintenance
superintendent at Appalachi·
an Power Company's Moun·
taineer Plant, New Haven,
West Virginia. A native or
Charleston, W. Va., Yobo
holds a bachelor of science
degree In electrical engineer·
lng f'rom Ohio State Unlversl·
ty. He bqan hb utlllty career
in 1979 u a perfOi'DIIDce eng!·
neer at Mountalaeer. He was
promoted to performance
eogloeer senior ln.1983; pl.i.nt
engineer iD 19g5, performance
supervising e11glneer In 1986,
and production superintendent maintenance Ill 1987. ·

Pick 3:824
Pick 4:2050
Cards : Q·H, Q·C

K-D;K-S
Super Lotto:
7-12-33-34-36-43
Kicker: 060232

Page4

TRAVEl, CLUB • Members of the Farmen Bank Travel Club
took their nfst trip In June to Cinclunati. The bank has announced
the guidelines for the new program, which will ofl'er a trip to Ohio

New club offers low-cost trips for bank customers

ANNOUNCE NEW SERVICE·
T b e
McCoy-Moore Service centers, McCoy-Moore
Funeral Homes, Inc., Gallipolis and Vinton,
announce the iutroductlon of The 21-Hour Obit·
uary Doe. By diiiJIDg446·NEWS (446-6397), one
cu bear the obituary ~PIn the GallipolisGallla County area with funeral service time,
place and date, as weD as the time, place and
date of visitation. "We have realized the need for
readily accelillble obituary Information for 501ne
time. We are proud to proVIde tlils Innovative

NAMED AGENT • Gallia
County
resident
Chris
Copela!Jd (formerly Mariam
Christine ,(\rmstrong) bas been
appointed an 11gent for the Pru·
dential Insurance Company in
the Gallipolis a~ ea. Judy
McGrail, sales manaler of the
Parkersburg District 'Office,
made the announcement 'last
week. As a Prudential repr'l!·
sentative, Ms. Copeland will be
engaged in the sale and service
orlife, health, home and auto
insurance and financial ser·
vices. Prior to her appointment,
Ms. Copeland bad a successful
agency in Grand Island, NE.
She is active in cburtb work
and resides with her mother,
Margaret Armstrong, in Crown
City.

service to our community," said Jay Moore who
wiD up-elate the "Obituary News Line" daily as
information is released. In addition to friends
and family members who seek service schedules,
this service will be helpful to florists, pastors,
fraternal organizations, and other busluess associates who provide services to families during
the funeral service period. For additional information, contact tbe Servic:e Center, 446~852, or
388·8321. Pictured above are Jay Moore, seated,
and Herb Moore.

JOINS OHIO COMPA·
NY -Jay Caldwell bas joined
Tbe Ohio Company as an
account executiv.e in the Gallipolis omce. A aatlve or Gal·
llpolls, •e received a Bache·
lor's degree from Marshall
University. Prior to Joining
Tbe Ohio Compuy, Caldwell
worked for Blunt, Ellis and
Loewl. His Involvement In the
community includes vice pres·
ident, (lf the Gallipolis Area
Chamber.or Commerce, secretary of the Lions Club and a
commissioner. on the Gallia
County MetropOii.tan Housing
Authority. He resides in Gallipolis with his wife and three
children.

POMEROY - The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company of
Pomeroy has announced the initia·
lion of 'The Fanners Bank Travel
Club", which will offer trips at low
cost to all Farmers Bank customers.
According to Farmers Bank
Vice President Bruce J, Reed, all
customers of Farmers Bank
(account holders and loan customers in good standing) will be
eligible for the trips, regardless of
age or account balance.
The bank ~ponsored a trip to a
Cincinnati Reds game in June, and
44 customers attended.
The club's next trip will be to
Sugar Creek (Amish Country) on
October 8, at a cost of $52 per person.
The trip will include tours of the
local bakery. shops and cheese
house, a local winery, and the
World's Largest Cuckoo Clock. A
tour of Warther's Carvings in
Dover will also he included in the
trip.
'The Farmers Dank Travel Club
goes along with our slogan, 'Your
Bank for Life'," Reed commented.
"We are very pleased about the
club and the opponunity it gives us
to serve our customers, regardless
of their age or the amount of
money they have in tbe bank."
"At Farmers Bank," Reed said,
"all of our cuslomers are impor-

VOl. 42, No. 69
.Copyrt;hted 1991

Kidnappers urge freedom for all detainees
However, diplomatic activity intensified in the
hours before the leiter's release. A U.N. spokesman
S31d U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar
met in Geneva on Sunday with a top adviser of
Israel's defense minister.
Former British hostage John McCarthy personally
delivered the leiter to Perez de Cuellar on Sunday
during a lelevised ceremony in Britain.
Pro-Iranian Shiite groups freed McCarthy on
Thursay and two more Westerners on Sunday Frenchman Jerome Leyraud, 26, and American

By DONNA ABU·NASR
Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon - The United Nations today
released a letter from Lebanese kidnappers that said
freedom for remaining Western hostages hinges on
the release of "our freedom fighters" throughout the
world.
The broad demand by the Islamic 1ihad could
dampen prospects for an immediate settlement of the
hostage crisis, stalling the momentum gained by the
captors' release of one American and two other
Westerners in the past five days.

COLUMBUS - The Farmers
Home Administration (FmHA) has
implemented a new program to
asststlow to moderate tncome rural
residents to become successful
hof!leowners. This program will
asstst those persons and families
who can not meet the terms of a
conventional loan.
In addition to its direct housing
loan program, the federal agency is
now authorized to guaranlee commercia! loans to purchase singlefamily housing. ''This expands our
ability 'o provide financing for
homes in rural areas," according to
RETIRES • Jack H. Shi·
net retired August 1, as a Shift
Stale Director Allen L. tumbull.
Operating Engineer at the
Undc:c this new program, FmHA
Ohio Valley Electric Corporaguaranu:e a loan made by a qualition's Kyger Creek Plant after
fied lender against a percentage of
36 years or service. Shiflet
possible loss. "FmHA has
joined OVEC in 195S as a
approved several lenders to make
Barge Attendant in the Yard
such loans . including some
Department. During that same
statewide lenders," said Turnbull.
year, be transferred to the
A list of approved lenders can be
Operations Department as an
obtained from any FmHA office.
Auxiliary Equipment OperaApplicants wilh low to model:ate
tor. In 1972 be was promoted
income may be eligible for lmin
to Unit Supervisor; in 1979, to
guarantees, and low income appli·
Assistant Shift Operating
~ants may &lt;jualify for the agency's
Engineer; and in 1990, to Shift
tntercst assiStance programs, whteh
Operating Engineer. Shinet, a
brings down the cost of the monthly payment. "Loans may be guarannative of Point Pleasant, West
Virginia, served In the U. S.
teed for up to I 00 percent of the
Navy from 1944 to 1946. He
cost of acquiring the house," stated
and his wife, Elizabeth, reside
the State Director, who added that
at 34951 Likens Road Rutthese are 30 year, fixed rate mangages.
land.
Individuals interested in the new
guaranteed loan program for rural
The northernmost settlement in the areas should contact their local
48. contiguous stales is Angle Inlet, Realtor or the local Farmers Home
Adminisuation County Supervisor.
Mtnn.

CARLENE THOMPSON
local author of

BLACK FOR RIMIMBRANCI
Ms. Thompson will be in our
store on Saturday, August
17, from 1 to 3 p.m. to
autograph her bestselling
title!

'Tiie .9L{cove
17 Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
Open M-T 11 Ill 8- F &amp; S 11 1118:30

_··;_,~U1W~BS SH~E\ . 'fJle_ Roc"

here as It wu being~~ )'~ercia,.-Rid,. .will
operate from 1 to 4:30 and 6 ~q 11 p.m. on,Mob·
day, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; Wednes·
day from noon to 4:30 and 6 to 11 p.m. and Saturday from noon to Sand 6 to 11 p.m.

Sprmgs Fairgrounds took on a aew look Sunday
as the midway rides we~e movtd into place In
preparation for the ofi"ICial opening or the 128th
Meigs County Fair today. Always popular with
tbe fair crowd Is the "Super Trooper" pictured

Holter wins 2

top domestic
arts awards
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Grace Holter of Pine Grove
Road, Racine, captured two of the
eight "best of show" rosettes
awarded in the domestic atts com·
petition at the I 28th Meigs County
Fair which officially got underway
today.
The 189 entries ~ere judged
Saturday by Kathy Reed and Ann
Sisson, home economic teachers,
and are now on display for viewing
by fair goers in the senior fair
bujlding.
The rosettes went to Mrs. Hailer ·
for best of show in needlework and
best of show in afghans.
Others winning "best of show"
rosettes were Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy in clothing , Kathryn
Meadows, Pom eroy in wreaths,
Rulh Moore. Pomeroy, in crocheting, Dorothy Downie, Pomeroy in
knitting, Muriel Bradford,
Coolville, in quilts, and Kay Cullums, Pomeroy in picrures.
In addition to the special
awards, the rosette winners captured numerous other ribbons.
Dorothy Downie, Pomeroy,; took
eight blue ribbons and a red; Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy won four blues,
eight reds, and two whites; Grace
Holler, Racine, one blue and one
red; and Muriel Bradford,
Coolville, a red, in other classes of
lhe competition.
Winners in the various divi sions, listed fll'st, second and third,
respectively, were as follows:
CHILDREN'S CLOTHING
Better dress , (size 6 or under):
Margaret Weber, Middlepon, Maureen Hennessy, Pomeroy, no third.
Better dress, (7 to 12): Deborah
Grueser, Pomeroy, Pat Wolf,
Pomeroy, no third.
Child's shorts: Deborah
Grueser, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Sleepwear: Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Other clothing: Deborah
Grueser, Pomeroy; Pat Wolf,
Pomeroy, no third.
ADULT CLOTHING
Lady's dress: Maureen Hennessy, Pomeroy, Marganet Weber,
Middleport; no third.
Lady's dress-up dress: Deborah
Continued on page 3

DOMESTIC ARTS JUDGING • Kathy Reed, left, and Ann
Sisson, home economic teachers judged the 189 entries in the
domestic arts competition at the Meigs County Fair Saturday
afternoon. Tbe ceramic pig being judged here won a red ribbon
for Alice Hawthorne, Long Bottom.

Meigs County Fair Schedule
MONDAY, AUGUST 12
1:00 p.m.-Open Class Flower Show

4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Arena

6:00 p.m.-Spats Barbershop Quartet-HUI Stage

· 6: 00 p.m.-Draft Horse Show
7:00 p.m.-Rutland Church of the Nazarene-Hut Stage

7:30 p.m.-Antique Tractor PuU

8:30 p.m.-Shady River Shu!flers-Hlll Stage

7:00 &amp; 9:00 p.m.-Vogues- Grandstand

TUESDAY,AUGUSTU

9:00 a.m.-Junior Fair Beef Show followed by
Open Class Beef Show-Show Arena
9: 30 a.m.-4-H Horse Show
1:00 p.m.-Open Class Flower Show
1:00 p.m.-Draft Horse Fun Show
1:00 p.m.-Jr. Fair Rabbit Show
2:00 p.m.-Sr. Fair Poultry Show
3:00 p.m.-Jr. Fair Poultry Show
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Arena
4:00 p.m.-Talent Show-Hlll Staee
7:00 p.m.-Demolition Derby-Grandstand
8:00 p.in.-Jr. Fair Swine Show-Show Arena
9:00 p.m.-Midnight Cloggers-Hlll Stage
I

.•

Edward Tracy, 60.
As expected, the cap10r's letter sought to shifL the
focus in the hostage crisis to Israel and its allied militia in southern Lebanon, which together hold about
375 Arabs. Israel also holds thousands of Palestinians
from the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
The letler to Perez de Cuellar said:
"In view of our belief in the need for action to
secure the release of our freedom fighters from prisons in occupied Palestine and Europe and also to
solve the question of the detainees whom we are
holding and the problems of their families, we call
upon you to make a personal endeavor, within the
framework of a comprehensive solution, to secure the
release of all detainees throughgout the world.''
"In such an eventuality we would be perfectly
willing to complete the process that we began today
and to release the persons whom we are detaining
within 24 hours."
Perez de Cuellar had no immediate comment,
although he expressed regret Sunday night that lhe
letler did not contain " very precise" details.
U.N. spokesman Pierre Mehu in Geneva conftrmed that Perez de Cuellar held a one-hour meeting
late Sunday night with an unidentified aide 10 Israeli
Defense Minister Moshe Arens, at a hotel outside
Geneva
Reports on Israel radio said Uri Lubrani, a specialist on Lebanon, had flown to Geneva for the talks.
Arens said he could not confiJ'ID the reports.

Redistricting
to be chamber
topic Tuesday

Jo Ann Williams has been
named Coordinator of the Farmers
Bank Tra-.:el Club, and any customers interested in registering for
the trip can contact her at992-2136
during regular business hours.

New horile
loan program
·underway

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc:. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 12, 1991

tant."

Come meet the author•••

50 YEARS SERVICE • Pomeroy Attorney J.B. O'Brien was
honored neatly by the Ollio Bar Aasodation for SO years In the
legal field. The plaque wu presented at the OBA 's convention In
CfiiCinllattl. O'Br•, IDd hil wile, Roberta, reside In Pomeroy.

Cloudy Iooigb I. Low to mid60s. Tuesday, hlgb In mid
80s.

Amish Country in October. Jo Ann Williams bas been named
coordinator of the program. (T -S Photo by David L. Harris)

Meigs County Agent's Corner

To seed or not to seed,
th1}t is the big question

Ohio Lottery

Padres drop
Reds into
fifth place

--------------------~

The importance of retaining
local representation in the U.S.
House of Representatives in the
face of almost-certain redistricting
will be the subject of discussion at
Tuesday' s •flill•.metnbeBIIip"!!lt:et·
ing of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce.
Bob Reintsema, an Adminisuative Assistant from the office of
Congressman Clarence E. Miller
(R·Lancaster) is uaveling throu~h­
out Ohio's lOth District, discussmg
the latest action on the stale level
on the subject of re-districting,
which will reduce Ohio's number
of U.S. Representatives from 21 to
19.
Miller addressed the issue of redistricting in a recent editorial in
The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
"To paraphrase a popular
expression," Miller said, "the district that stays in place will maintain its place in the councils of government. Said anothc:c way, united
we stand, divided we fall."
Chamber Director Elizabeth
Schaad also emphasized the importance of maintaining the lOth district in the August issue of the
chamber's newsletter.
"We don 't want to pay the price
for the loss of populauon in Northeasu:m Ohio. We want to continue
under the representation of those
whom we elected. We wish to
remain in a district bound together
by common inlerests and common
concerns," Schaad said.
The meeting will be held at
Overbrook Center on Tuesday at
noon.

EDWARD TRACY

Coal official says
MSHA statements
are contradictory
H\lNTlNG'I'ON, W.Va. (AP)

- Coal industry officials say everchanging federal standards are
compounding their problems in
defending against U.S . Labor
Department allegations of
widespread tampering with mine
dust sampling.
"It's like trying to hit a moving
target," said one industry official
who did not want to be identified.
''It keeps changing.' '
Legal documents made available
to The Associated Press indicate
lhat the sworn stalements of a federal Mine Safety and Health
Administration technician appear
to conflict with public comments
by top agency officials.
MSHA accused 504 coal companies in April of "widespread
·cheating" in the program intended
to gauge miners' exposure to the
dust that causes black lung disease.
Labor Secretary Lynn Martin said
the agency was accusing the companies of submitting more than
4,700 fraudulent samples taken at
847 coal mines, representing more
than half of the nation's under·
ground mines.
The agency said the companies
will face aggrega1e fines of $5 mil·
lion to $7 million.
Tbe sworn statements of Robert
Thaxton, supervisory industrial
hygienist at the agency's Mount
Hope laboratory, differ from public

alatemento by other ap,ency &gt;Offi-

cials in several regards, including:
-The characteristics of faulty
samples that were deemed to be the
result of accidental mishandling as
opposed to deliberale tampering;
-The numbers of faulty samples that were presumed to indicate
a willful attempt at defrauding lhe
system.
Thaxton's sworn statements
were taken as part of the legal
"discovery" process, in which
lawyers for the coal companies
review the agency's procedures in
preparing their defense.
MSHA spokeswoman Katharine
Snyder declined to address the
specifics of Thaxton's statements,
and agency officials objected to
lheir publication.
"Depositions by their very
nature in the legal process are not
to be public," Snyder said. "It is
clearly unethical for someone to
pass depositions to the media, and
the use of such material is not fair
to any of the parties and will disrupt the legal process."
In his sworn statements, Thax·
ton said he was responsible for the
"fmal determination" of which filter samples were determined to
have been deliberately altered and
which were considered to have
been accidentally allered.
The MSHA laboratory in PittsContinued on page 3

Gallipolis Ferry woman dies
following Saturday accident
A Gallipolis Ferry woman was was standing beside Bill R.
killed following an accident on Sat- Austin's 1977 Dodge . He also
urday night, according to a struck the right side of the Austin
spokesman for the Mason County vehicle and came to rest with Mrs.
Sheriffs Department The accident Austin entangled between the vehiwas adjacent to the Mason Family cles.
Damage to Smith's vehicle was
Restaurant on U.S. 33 following a
estimated at $1,800. Austin's vehicar show. ·
Sharon A. Austin, 44, of Gallipolis Ferry was killed when she
was pinned between two vehicles
during the 9:50 p.m. accident. She
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the New Haven EMS,
a sherifrs spokesman said.
According to the repon, Jerry D.
NEW YORK (AP) Smith, 17, of Bidwell, was exiting BankAmerica Corp. and Security
the Mason Family Restaurant park- Pacific Corp. today announced the
ing lot, via the Mason Exxon park- largest banking merger in U.S. hising lot, and entered U.S. 33 to pro- tory, creating what would be the
ceed west As Smith entered U.S. nation's second-biggest banking
33, he apparently accelerated caus- company. with assets of $190 biling the rear of his 1967 Chevrolet lion.
to begin skidding 10 the right He
The West Coast merger
apparently began "fishtailing" announcement comes only weeks
uncontrollably traveling into the after two pairs of other large banks
eastbound lane and thel! back announced mega-mergers in the
across the roadway. Smith traveled rapidly consolidliting banking busi·
offthe right side of the roadway ness, where strength in size is
where he stniCk Mrs. Austin, who becoming more critical to compete.

cle received $400 damage.
Austin was the daughter of Kermit Bailey of Huntington and
Goldie Hatfield Bentley of Barboursville. In addition 10 her husband, Bill. she is survived by two
daughters, a sister and a half-brother.

BankAmerica, Security
Pacific plan to merge

~

.

~t monlh, Chemical Banking
Corp. and Manufacturers Hanovc:c
Corp., with assets totaling $135 billion, agreed to combine their opera.
lions, and NCNB Corp. and C&amp;SSovran Corp., with assets totaling
$118 billion, agreed to merge.
Under the laleSt agreement, each
share of Los-Angeles-based Security Pacific .common stock will be
exchanged for. 0.88 shares of San
Francisco-based Bank America aad
the Security Pacific name· will
become history.

·•

�..

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 12, 1991

Page-2-The baliy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

. Monday, August 12, 1991

Library program registration open

Computer viruses becoming even more lethal

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON

AR~

'~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Association and thP American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All lett-.s are subject to Pdltlng and must be slgnl'd with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
II shed. Letlers should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personali-

ties .

Voinovich claims he kept
pledge to hold line on taxes

J

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich authorized about $280 million in new taxes in Ohio's recently adopted, two-year budget after his
"read my lips" campaign promise not to raise taxes.
Voinovich used President Bush's famous pledge at least once - in a
speech in Dublin before the Ohio Federation of Republican Women but later said simply that he would not raise taxes.
In an interview in his office, on the budget and other undertakings of
his seven-month-old administration, the Republican governor insisted he
did not break his promise.
The Legislature rejected money-saving and loophole-closing provisions in his budget proposal that could have made the increases unnecessary, he said.
"I'm unhappy that we had those revenue increases. On the other hand,
we did not have those major taxes that other states bave had. As far as I'm
concerned. I've kept my pledge," he said.
Voinovich referred to his proposals to tum Ohio's retail liquor stores
over to private operators, which he said would have saved $33 million,
and ending a discount received by retailers for collecting the state.sales
tax. The discount costs the state about $109 million a biennium.
Those items, along with the use of some of Ohio's $300 miUion "rainy
day" fund and some other smaller retrenchments, would have precluded
the need for the increases, he said.
"Had the Legislature gone along with those recommendations, some
of these other things that were done - detective agencies and a whole
host of other things that they threw in at the end - would not have been
considered,'· the governor said.
In the budget Voinovich signed July 26 were extensions of the 5 percent sales tax to lawn and gardening services, equipment purchases by
cable television companies and detective agencies - all of which are
likely to be passed along to their customers.
Voinovich vetoed only one of the Legislature's tax increases affecting
furns that have research contracts with the federal government. But he let
the other increases stand.
Overall, Voinovich said he fared pretty well with his first budget as
governor, and that he can "look the taxpayers in the eye."
He said, " If you look at our budget, compared to other budgets, we've
kept the rate of spending at inflation, whereas in previous administrations
il was double the rate of inflalion.
1
"What we've done with this budget is control state spending for the
first time in a decade. And we will force various people who benefit from
taxpayer dollars to work harder and smarter and do more with less.
"I can say to taxpayers: 'You're getting a bigger bang for the buck
with George Voinovich than you did with the previous administration.' I
think that overall, we' ve gotten good marks from the people who are
interested in responsible government.''

Letters to the editor
Baloney sauce!

I

,j

To the editor.
I read with interest ODOT
deputy director John Dowler's reasoils for building the Appalachian
Highway along U.S. 50 from Marlena to Athens, Ohio.
The main purpose, it seems, is
to ·enable HIM to get from his
home in Athens to his office in
Marlena in less time. TOUGH! The
rest of us have been traveling on
two-lane roads for an inestimable
number of years to get to our jobs.
Why doesn ' t he move to Marietta
to be closer to his job?
Even worse is the fact that Mr.
Dowler is going to spend EIGHTY
MILLION of the taxpayer's dollars
to solve his problem and "To save
the driver a little bit of time and
make the Uip safer.''
When the Appalachian Highway
is completed, those traveling to
Athens, or Cincinnati Ohio from
points East will travel through Virgitiia and West Virginia and spend
their tourist dollars in those states.
They will , no doubt, spend the
night and eat dinner in Parkersburg,
West Virginia and fill their gasoline tanks there before departing
for. Athens, or Cincinnati, Ohio the
following day. No help for Ohio
business from that quarter!
If the Appalachian Highway
were extended to reach Cambridge,
Ohio from Athens, Ohio, travelers
would be spending those same dollars in Ohio. Also many commer-

cia! vehicles (trucks and buses)
would find the Appalachian Highway as invaluable link between
Intestates 70 and 77 (in eastern
Ohio) and Interstates 71, 74, and 75
in the Cincinnati area. Cincinnati
would then become the gateway to
the South and to the West. Additionally more indusay could come
into Southeast Ohio because there
would be a much better highway
for transporting goods.
Before Mr. Dowler even considers building any more roads, he
should do another job that he was
presumably hired to do and that is
to repair existing roads such as
State Route 266 between Stockport
and State Route 60 in Morgan
County. This highway has been
~ losed for approximately TEN
MONTHS! When I called the Ohio
Department of Transportation in
Marlena (and this is Mr. Dowler's
department) my call was transferred AT LEAST four times! No
one could tell me what was happening to State Route 266. In fact I
am not even sure if they know that
the road even exists.
When Gov. Voinovich was a
gubernatorial candidate he said, "If
I am elected, I will do all that I can
to help Southeast Ohio." And then
he appoints something like THIS as
deputy director of transportation!
Baloney sauce!
Si'nf~~:rcly,
.
Hazel M. White

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Aug. 12, the 224th day ofl991. There are 141 days
left in the year.
:roday's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 12, 1898, Hawaii was formally annexed to the United States
after Congress passed a joint resolution. Hawaii was granted territorial
sr.utus in 1900, and became the 50th state of the union in 1959.
On this date:
In 1851, Isaac Singer was granted a patent on his sewins machine.
;In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to unpeach him as
he defied Congress by suspending Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton.
In 1898, the peace protocol ending the Spanish-American War was
signed.
· -In 1915, the novel "Of Human Bondage," by William Somerset
Maugllam, was published.
. In 1941, SO years ago, French Marshal Henri Petain called on his countrymen ro give full support to Nazi Germany.
.In !953, the Soviet Union conducted a secret test of its fmt hydrogen
bomb.

WASHINGTON - When the me again" is displayed. Rude mesworkers of a Washin~ton , D.C., sages materialize when the names
company arrived at thetr office one of several prominent politicians are
morning and switched on their typed. (The authors of this virus
computers, they found an amusing mtsspelled the names.)
message flashing across their terThe authors of the virus called
minals: "Your PC is now stoned. "Sunday" apparently crusade for
Legalize marijuana."
leisure time. Their vtrus, which is
Then came the sinking realiza- triggered when infected files run on
tion that it was no joke - but any Sunday, flashes this message:
rather it was a way of computer " Today is Sunday! Why do you
hackers saying: Gotcha. All the work so hard? All work and no
computers at this Wa shington, play make you a dull boy! Come
D.C., firm had their memories on! Let's go out and have some
wiped clean and internal files fun!"
dest:royed by a computer virus The lighthearted names belie the
the deliberate sabotaging of a com- fact that viruses are lethal to the
puter system.
nation's private and governmental
An infinite number of viruses computer systems. Experts estimate
have been employed, and most that computer crime costs the U.S.
even have names and aliases, and economy upward of $50 billion
are used more than once. This par. annually. These are typically "perticular virus even has aliases that fect crimes" in the sense that
include ''Hawaii,'' ''Marijuana,'' detection is difficult and only one
"New Zealand," 14 Smithsonian," out of every 22,000 computer
or Harno."
crimes results in a conviction.
Other viruses are known in the
Winn Schwartau, executive
trade by aliases that include "Fri- director of the International Partday 13th," " Frog's Alley," "Fu nership Against Computer Terror·
Manchu" and "Shake." Accord- ism, believes that an estimated 521
ing to the Virus Dictionary, the Fu viruses have been identified, and
Manchu virus is activated when that an average of 12 new computer
certain keys are pressed, then the viruses are being imrodueed every
message " the world will hear from day.
11

It happens with startling fre quency, though only some of the
more celebrated c~ses hit the headlines. Such as the estimated Sllfi
million spent repairing damage
caused by a "worm" virus insened
into the nation's largest computer
network by a Cornell University
student in 1988. And the $100 mil·
lion to clean up the effect,s of the
so-called " Columbus Day" virus
of 1989.
Sources told our associate Dean
Boyd that the computers of America's private sector are at even
greater peril than those of the government. Last April, we reported
that many U.S. government computers are easy prey for saboteurs.
A recent example involves a Dutch
hacker group that evaded U.S.
authorities for nearly six months as
they peneuated the computer systems of the Kennedy Space Center,
the Pentagon's Pacific Fleet Com·
mand and the Lawrence Livermore
National Labratory.
What's the solution? Experts
believe that Americans tend to ueat
their computers like small-town
residents treat their cars. They
leave the doors unlocked and their
keys in the ignition. Many sources
argue that the current apathy of the

Regisualion for the "Always a River" book discussion program
is now open at the Meigs County Public Library. The program
begins on September 9 and runs every other Monday evenmg for a
total of five sessions.
According to Library Director Ruth Powers, the·program is free
of charge, and J,l&amp;rlicipan~ may pick up the books required for the
program at the nme of regtstt8110n.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

EMS answers seven calls

federal government toward com·
puter security has spiUed over into
the private sector.
Until this new breed of micro
chip-terrorists can be foiled by prevention and prosec:ution, the crime
wave will go unabated. According
to Winn Schwartau, it is "safer to
commit a computer crime than to
drive your car to work."
CHRISTMAS IN AUGUSTThe Federal Communications
Commission recently delivered an
early Christmas present to Madison
Avenue and the television indusay.
By delaying until January new regulations curbing the number of
commercials during children's programming, the gold-mine period of
the weeks prior to Christmas can
still be mined.
Critics charge that the FCC
abdicated its authority as. the cops
of the airwaves. The Children's
Television Act was passed by
Congress last fall. It hmits commercials on children's TV to 10 1/2
minutes an hour ·on weekends and
12 minutes an hour on weekdays,
while encouraging more educational shows. But Congress also left
wiggle room for the television lobbyists to tum into a huge loophole.
The FCC had freedom to draft the
specific rules and until it does,
advertisers can go hog-wild - and
probably wiU.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Deregu·
lation, the miracle drug of the
1980s, has once again shown its
darker side. The airline indusay is
undergoing massive consolidation
(that's what polite people call
bankruptcies). Pan Am ts bcin~t
devoured by its competitors and
now TWA recently announced it
will be entering Chapter II reorganization. We suppose consolidation
will start to get a bad name when
the country is left with one or two
price-gouging airlines. That's not
to scoff at airline deregulation.
After all, it has produced wonderful
benefits to travelers who are will·
ing to make their reservations a
month in advance - with hefty
cancellation penalties - and still
face the prospect of being
"bumped" by an oversold flight.

Seven calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services.
On Sunday at 6:42 a.m., Pomeroy units went to a motor vehicle
accident at Burlingham. Alfred Robinson was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital from the Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment.
Allen Ward refused treatment. At 1:32 a.m., Syracuse squad went to
New Hope Ri&gt;ad. Otis Casto was taken to Veterans. At 11:54 a.m.,
. Middleport unit weot to Hysell Street for a stove fne at the Coleen
Duncee resideoce.
. At 5: 17 p.m., Rutland and Scipio units went to Mount Union
Road for an accident. Deanna Brogan and Richard Cooper were
treated but not ttansponed. At 9:18 p.m., Syracuse squad was sent
to College Road. Patricia Houdashelt was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 6:16 a.m. on Monday, Syracuse unit went to South Fifth
Street for Kathy Pierce, who was ttansponed to Veterans. At 8:12
a.m., Racine units went to Bashan Road. Pauline Rose was treated
but not transponed.

•Stolen vehicles recovered
Two stolen vehicles were recovered near the Meigs,IAthens County
line on Sunday morning after an
accident on U.S. Route 33, and
four male subjects face possible
charges.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, his
department received a report of a
two-car accident on U.S. Route 33
and was told that subjects left the
scene on foot before getting a ride
in another vehicle.
Pomeroy Police Department
officials were notified and took
four subjects into custody: an adult
• Alfred Robinson of Pomeroy. two
Pomeroy-area juveniles and two
juveniles from Franklin County.
At that time, the sheriff's office
was notified that a vehicle had been
stolen from William Martin of the
Shade area just a few minutes earli·
er.
According to Soulsby, Martin· s

fact ordered Schwarzkopf into Iraq
and successfully ousted Saddam
Hussein, neither Congress nor the
Security Council would have
uttered a word of protest at his
technical ttansgression.
Maybe so. But who says the
conquest of Iraq and the ouster of
Saddam Hussein would necessarily
have been quiclc, or easy, or cost·
free?
Apparently these Mondaymorning quarterbacks haven't
looked at the weather charts for
Iraq lately. Mr. Bush announced a
cease-fire on Feb. 27. Suppose,
instead, he had ordered our troops
to march on Baghdad? The Iraqis
would very probably have defended it far more desperately than
Kuwait, which after all was conquered territory. The fighting could
easily have lasted for months, in
temperatures that by June would be
averaging I05 degrees every day.
And just how easy would it have
been for us to capture or kill Saddam Hussein? Do we think we
could have surprised him working
at his desk? No; he would have left
Baghdad long before we got there,
and hidden himself like a needle in

Sharon Austin

By William A. Rusher ·
a haystack.
So, as both the temperature and
the casualty lists soared, Mr.
Bush's critics would have begun
savaging him for exceeding his
U.N. mandate, not to mention his
constitutional authorization from
Congress, and plunging America
recklessly into an open-ended war
- a war costing thousands of pre·
cious lives, waged for obscure and
inadequate reasons.
And when it was over, Iraq
would have been an even worse
mess than it is today, with the difference that our troops would still
be occupying it and our taxpayers
would be financing its reconstruction.
Bad as that scenario is, it isn't as
bad as the one the enthusiasts for
continued economic sanctions (i.e.,
most congressional Democrats)
tried to talk us into. They, you will
recall, could see no reason why we
had to go to war at all. Let economic sanctions do the job, or at least

give them a chance. Over a period
of 18 months, or even longer if
necessary, sanctions would bring
Iraq to its knees and force it to disgorge Kuwait.

Carolyn Fletcher, 89, died Sat·
urday evening, Au!!· 10, 1991 at
the Arcadia Nursmg Center in
Coolville.
Born in Wirt County, she was a
daughter of the lade David and
Eliza Hodgen Allen. She was a
member of the Coolville Senior
Citizens Club and she attended the
Vanderhoof Church.
She is survived by six nieces
and one nephew.
Besides her parents she was pre·
ceded in death by her husbanjl,
Edgar Fletcher in 1977. two sisters
and six brothers.
Services will be held Wednesday at I p.m. at the White Ethridge
Funeral Home in Belpre with Rev.
Cecil Morrison offictating. Burial
will be in Rockland Cemetery in

These second-guessers are sec·
ond-raters. If Bush had taken their
advice and things had gone badly,
they would have been first with
their pious condemnations.

The Daily Sentinel

he wrote. " That agreement
is a lie and a fraud.' •
The accord contains the usual
fantasies about a surging economy
and falling interest rates, but
includes a couple of creative touches as well. First, it calls for $143
billion in " proposed Savings" over
a ftve-year penod, but assigns $108
billion of that amount to budgets
that won't have to be passed until
after the 1992 elections. All those
who believe those cuts wiD actually
be made, P,lease signify by saying,
"Yo, Joe. '
Hearing no Yo-Joes, I move on
to creative touch No. 2: The 1990
deal rnised the limit on the national
debt from $3.1 trillion to $4.1 tril·
lion. In other words, another thousand biUion dollars can be piled on
without so much as a "thank you,
fools'' - plenty of room for
maneuvering until after November
1992. All who think our leaders
will then tackle the debt problem,
please stay to hear about my new
time-share Lunar Resort.
I think the Democrats got sandbagged on the debt issue .. Jt is a
mud pie mixed up by Ronald Reagan and the Republicans ought to
made to eat it. The Gipper, of

course, disagrees. One of the
media's "charges that are so
false," he said in a recent interview
with the Washington Times, is
''the one that I am responsible for
the deficits." He added: "I never
got a budget that I pre sen ted to
Congress ever , accepted by
Congress.''
It's wonderful being an actor,
isn't it? You can just make up your
own little world and tiptoe la-de-da
through it. The b'Uth is that Reagan
never submitted a balanced budget
proposal to Congress. The truth is
that he requested a totai of $48.1
billion more than Congress let him
have. The truth is that he cut tax
revenues by 25 percent in 1981 and
increased defense spending by a
third. The truth is that in nearly two
centuries of national existence prior
to 1981, the United States had run
up $997 billion in debt- and Reagan tripled it.
. George Bush has managed
things no better. His last mid-year
budget review put the 1992 deficit
at an incredible $348.3 billion
which will drive the national debi
slightly above $4 trillion. The gross
interest on the debt this year will

(USPS 14!-tiiOI
A Dl\llt.lon of Multimedia, Inc.

By Joseph Spear

Publlsho;i

'•

\

afternoon. Monday

Ohio.

Mt&gt;mber: Thfl Associated Press, In·
land Dally Press Association and thfl
Ohio Nf'wspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, Nf'W York 10017.

POSTMASTER: send address changes
to Tile Dally 5entlnel, 111 COurt St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;1.

Herbert Hart
Herbert Hart, 70, COOlville, died
Saturday Aug. 10, 1991, at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital in Park·
ersburg, W.Va.
Born in Westville, he was a son
of the late Harrison and Ferol Bran·
debury Hart. He was a United
StateS Army veteran of Wocld War
II and was wounded while serving
in France. He was past commander
and lifetime member of both the
Disabled American Veterans and
the Veterans of Foreign Wars No.
34 77 and also the AM VETS of
Athens.
He is survived by his wife,
Anna Rudisill Hart, one step-son
and daughter-in-law. Alvie and
Sally Turner, Vincent; and one
aunt, Doris Sweeney, Stewart.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by a brother.
Chester Hart.
Services will be held Tuesday at
I p.m. at the White Funeral Hmne
in CoolviUe with Rev. Harold Prid·
dy officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Monday) from 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

William Will
William L. Will, 69, of 36188
Texas Road in Pomeroy, died Sunday, August II, 1991 at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis following a brief illness.
Born in Meigs County on
February 16, 1922, Mr. Will was
the son of the late William A. Will
and Edna Garen Will.
He was a member of Shade
River Lodge 453 of Chester for 47
years, was a member of the Scottish Rite and was a 33rd Degree
Mason.
Surviving are his wife of 4 7
years, Juanita Thomas Will; one
daughter, Mrs. Jerry (Drusilla Sue)
Wysong, Thornville; two sons,
William Michael (Marcella) Will
and Daniel Thomas (Julia) Will,
both of Pomeroy; a brother, Montgomery of Canal Winchester; three
sisters, Mary Kilpatrick and Flo-

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cost us $292 billion - $800 mil lion a day.
And who among our noble leaders gives a hoot? I can't remember
the last time I heard a Democrat
other than Sen . Hollings express
concern over the national debt.
Republicans rant ad nauseam about
money wasted on sweet potato
research and fish farms. Meanwhile, a single day's interest on the
national debt would pay for 2,000
years of sweet potato research and
296 fish farms.
I recently gave myself five seconds to think up a one-word
description of what the taxpayers
get from politicians every day of
the year and I got the answer in
one: Screwed.

,I

•

Sharon Ann (Sherry) Austin, 44,
of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died
Saturday, August 10, 1991.
Born July 4, 1947, she was a
daughter of Kermit Bailey of Huntington and Goldie Hatfield .Q4:ntley
of BarboursviUe.
·l
Survivors include her husband,
Bill; two daughters, Joyie Austin
and Crystal Austin, both at home; a
sister, Karen Rhodes of Morganhill, Calif., and a half-brother,
David Bailey.
Service will be held on Wednesday, August 14, at I p.m. at the
Wallace Funeral Home in Barboursville. Burial wiU be in Green
Valle~ Cemetery.
Fnends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.

~

men~"

Belpre.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9p.m.
·

Carolyn Fletcher

Never mind the sheer -implausibility of that scenario. We have
recently discovered that Saddam
Hussein was far closer to building
atom bombs than our intelligence
people estimated before lite war. If
we had fooled around for 18
months, trying to enforce a global
blockade, we would in all likelihood bave found ourselves, at the
end of that period, facing the ftrst
Arab nuclear power. What suggestion would George Mitchell, the
Senate's Democratic leader, bave
had then?

What taxpayers get. from politicians
- I recently gave myself 20 seconds to think up three subjects that
are not likely to be debated during
the coming elections and got the
answer in 15: Congressional pay
raises, the savings and loan debacle
and the soaring budget deficit.
Pay raises and the S&amp;L crisis
came to mind readily because both
political parties are culpable and
have tacitly agreed not to talk about
them. But why the deficit? Same
reason. They've cooked up a tidy
deal to keep this malodorous matter
off the table until after November
1992. Then it will be back to business as usual for the tax-and-spend
Democr,ats, borrow-and-spend
Republicans and pay-through-theno!e taxpayers.
The deal of which I speak is the
budget accord that Congress and
the White House agreed to last fall
- the one that was supposed to
have the country splashing around
in black ink by 1996. Astute
observers saw right away that it
was a hoax, and Sen . Ernest
Hollings, D-S.C., openly blew the
whistle in an op-ed piece for The
Washingtoll Post on Marclr II. "I
hereby break the bipartisan Cod!f ,qf
silence on the 1990 budget agree' "·

Holter wins two... ...:.c..:...on_tin_ue_d_rro_m....:.p-=ag-e1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Grueser, Pomeroy; Maureen Hennessy, Pomeroy; Marilyn Spencer,
Long Bottom.
Lady's formal dress: no first,
Kathy Parker Moore, Pomeroy;
Maureen Hennessy, Pomeroy.
Lady's blouse: Dorothy Downie, Pomeroy; Marilyn Spencer,
Long Bottom ; Addalou Lewi ~.
Pomeroy.
Adult T-shirts: no ftrSt, Deborah
Grueser, Pomeroy, no third.
Adult shorts: Deborah Grueser,
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Adult slacks: Marilyn Spenc~r.
Long Bottom, no second, no third.
Lady's practical apron: Dorothy
Downie, Pomeroy; Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no third.
Lady's fancy apron, no first,
Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy, no third .
Lady's miscellaneous clothing:
Marilyn Spencer, Long Bottom ;
Deborah Grueser, Pomeroy; Patty
Dyer, Gallipolis.
NEEDLECRAFT
Embroidered pillowcase: Patty
Dyer, Gallipolis; Ruth Moore,
Pomeroy, no third.
Crocheted trim pillowcase :
Maxine Dyer, Bidwell ; Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy. no third.
Cross stitch pilowcase: Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy; Judy Molden,
Pomeroy, no third.
Counted cross stitch cushion:
Grace Holter, Racine; no second,
no third.
Crocheted cushion: Maxine
Dyer. Bidwell; Rose Ellen Barnhouse, Middleport; Opal Dyer, Bidwell.
Pre-Oprinted cu shion: Gladays
Cummings, Pomeroy, Opal Dyer,
Bidwell, Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy.
Candlewick cushion: Sarah E.
Caldwell, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Patchwork cushion: Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Embroidered tablecloth: Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy; Celesta Coates,
Middlepon. no third.
Dressed doll: Pamela Hager,
Coolville, no second, no thinrd.
Purchased Doll: Sarah E. Caldwell, Pomeroy, no second. no third.

-----Area deaths-----

•Bush's Iraq decisions defy scrutiny
President Bush's critics know
very well that this country's swift
and decisive victory in the Gulf
War will be scored to his eternal
credit by the American people. But
they also know that the situation in
Iraq today is a mess, and they arc
trying hard to use that fact to dilute
his triumph.
Even some of the president's
most loyal sup~ners, for that mat·
ter, openly w1sh he had ordered
General Schwarzkopf to drive
north to Baghdad and "finish the
job" by capturing or killing Saddam Hussein. But they have simply
not thought the matter through.
In the ftrst place, bear in mind
that the military objective for
which Mr. Bush obtained the backing of the U.N. Security Council
was carefully limited to the liberation of Kuwait, and most defmitcly
did not include an invasion of Iraq
or the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. And the same is true of the
cautious resolution that the Republicans and a minority of Democrats
narrowly managed to push through
Congress.
Mr. Bush's critics dismiss this
point by arguing that, if he had in

1989 Oldsmobile was being driven
by Elmer R. Robinson, 15 , of
Columbus. He struCk the rear of a
1987 Chevrolet, which had been
stolen in Franldin County and was
being driven by Alfrd Robinson.
The Oldsmobile landed on the
guardrail and the Chevrolet landed
in a ditch. Both cars sustained
heavy damage.
. Alfred Robinson was taken from
the sheriff's office to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Pomeroy
squad fa- ueaunent
Traffic citations will be issued
to the drivers for a later appearance
in Meigs County Court. The subjects were later transported to
Athens County to answer possible
theft charges, and Franklin County
will have auto theft charges against
the Meigs County pair involved in
the theft of the Franklin County
car.

Mall SU-Ipltoaa

tul&lt;le Melli touotr

·

13 Weeks ... ............. ...... ....... ..... ~1.114
26 Weeks .................................. $43.16
52 Weeks .................................. $14.76
..,~.,&lt; •~ , · ' OUIIIde M..p Coolllr,
, .c :';I~
.··• •. ·' ,13Weeka ....... :............... :......., .. $23.40 :
c-..
26 Weeks ....................... ,.......... J45.50 ·
'
52 Weeka ......................... .......'.. S88.40

· w

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

renee Ferrill, both of Columbus,
and Betty Loucks of Lakewood,
Fla; and seven grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by five brothers,
Roland, John, Victor, Philip and
Milton; and one sister, Louise Fisher.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with Robert Sanders
officiating. Burial will be in Mt.
Hermon Cemetery.
A Masonic service will be held
at 6:30p.m. on Tuesday.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.

Accident probed
An accident Saturday afternoon
on Mill Sueet resulted in minor
damage to two vehicles but no personal injuries.
Middlepon police reponed t1lM
Shawn M. Games, Langsville, had
stopped to make a right tum onto
South Fifth when his vehicle was
sb'Uck from behind by a car driven
by Susan Houchins.

Stuffed animal: Pany Dyer, Gallipolis; Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy;
Jill Holter, Long Bouom.
Miscellaneous knitting or crochet: Grace Holter. Racine; Nina
Robinson, Coolville; Dorothy
Downie. Pomeroy.
CROCHET
Afghan, granny squares: no
first, Rose Ellen Barnhouse, Middleport. no third.
Ripple afghan: Elizabeth
Bearhs, Pomeroy: Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell; Opal Dyer, Bidwell.
Miscellaneous afghan: Sarah E.
Caldwell, Pomeroy: Ruth Moore,
Pomeroy. no third.
Bedspread: Grace Holter,
Racine, no second, no third.
Vest: no first, Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no third.
Hankie, crochet trim: Dorothy
Downie, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Doily: Dorothy Downie,
Pomeroy; Maxine Dyer, Bidwell;
Ruth Moore. Pomeroy.
Doily, over 14 inches: Maxine
Dyer, Bidwell; Ruth Moore,
Pomeroy; no third.
Crocheted pot holders: Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy; Maxine Dyer,
Bidwell; ()pal Dyer, Bidwell.
Baby afghan, granny squares:
no first , Rose Ellen Barnhouse,
Middleport. no third.
Baby afghan, miscellaneous:
Maxine Dyer, Bidwell; Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy; Opal Dyer, Bid·
well.
Cape : Dorothy Downie.
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Miscellaneous crpchet: Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy;Connie Mayer,
ReedsviUe; Opal Dyer, Bidwell.
KNITIING
Afghan: Dorothy Downie ,
Pomeroy, no second, no thinrd.
Slipover sweater: Dorothy
Downie, Pomeroy; Marilyn
Spencer, Long Bottom ; Ruth
Moore, Pomeroy.
Cardigan sweater: Dorothy
Downie, Pomeroy; Ruth Moore,
Pomerny, no third.
Baby Sweater set: Rose Ellen
Barnhouse, Middlepon, no second,
no third.

---Hospital news--Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Howard Shank, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Carl S. Monis and Heinz Coats.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS George Harvey, Gallipolis, and
Fred W. Crow, Jr., Syracuse.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Martha Haggy.
Holzer Medical Center
Friday, Aug. 9
Discharges - Beverly Cunningham, Judy Hutton, Gina Johnson, Pamela Johnson, Anna Leamood, Sybil McKean, Angela Oliver, Fred Smith, Eileen Spires,
Emily Spires, Mrs. Barry Sturgill
and daughter, Deloris Unger.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Clagg, Crown City, a daughter; Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Powell, Middleport. a daughter.
Saturday, Aug. 10
Discharges - Deanna Cook,
Mrs. Michael Dorst and son; Mrs.
Leonard Frye and son; John Lep·
J&amp;;&gt; Julie Wolfe.
fiirths - Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Beasley, Evans, W.Va., a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Glass, Jackson, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Krebs,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., a son; Mr.
and Mrs . Terry Reynolds, Long

--Meigs announcementsPomeroy Merchants to meet
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will meet Wednesday at
noon in the conference room at
Bank One. All members are urged
to attend.
FOE to meet
The FOE Auxiliary will hold its
anniversary dinner on Saturday,
Aug. 24, at 6:30 p.m. A $5 deposit
must be made to Becky Mankin or
Ann Cale on or before Aug. 20.
Curtis Family reunion
The 84th reunion of the Curtis
family will be held Sunday at the
Long Bottom Community Building. A basket dinner will begin at
12:30 p.m. The hosting family are
descendants of Sonoma (Curtis)
Osborn McNickle. Members are
urged to bring family pictures and
mementos to share. All Curtis fam ily descendants are urged to au.end.
For further information contact
Mrs. June Ashley at 247-2344. The
family is collecting information for
a future publication of the famtly
history.
Sortball tournament
The Gallipolis Parks and Recrc-

Mis.:ellaneous: Dorothy Downie, Pomeroy, no second, no third.
QUILTS
Baby quilt, embroidered: Nina
Robinson, Coolville, Cyndi King,
Pomeroy, no third.
Pieced baby quilt: Marilyn
Spencer, Long Bottom, no second,
no third.
Cotton patchwork quilt: Muriel
Bradford, Coolville, Ruth Moore,
Pomeroy, Sara Cullums, Pomeroy.
Embroidered quilt: Ruth Moore,
Pomeroy, Esther Frecker, Racine,
Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy.
Tied comfort: Judy Molden.
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Patchwork wall hanging: Patricia Jones, Shade; Debbie Davis,
Pomeroy, no third.
Pre-printed wall hanging: Sara
Cullums, Pomeroy; Amber Warner,
Pomeroy; Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy.
HOBBY CORNER
Candlewick picture: no first,
Celesta Coates, Middleport, no
thinrd.
Counted cross stitch picture:
Kay Cullums, Pomeroy ; Grace
Holter, Racine , Susan Sanders,
Pomeroy.
Colored embroidery picture:
Esther Frecker, Racine; Dorothy
Downie, Pomeroy, no third.
Needlepoint picture, no flrst, no
second, Celesta Coates, Middle·
port.
Crewel picture: no ftrst, Celesta
Coates, Middleport. no third.
Counted cross stitch picture:
Debbie Davis, Pomeroy; Kay Cullums, Pomero;, Judy Molden,
Pomeroy, no third.
Purse or tote bag: Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy; Mary King, Long
Bottom; Esther Frecker, Racine.
Stained ceramics: Jill Holter,
Long Bottom; Alice Hawthorne.
Long Bottom; Kristen Heines,
Pomeroy.
Glazed ceramics, Kristen
Heines, Pomeroy, no second, no
third.
Woodcraft, under six inches :
Carolyn Nicholson, Middleport;
Juanita French, Middlepon; Elizabeth Bearhs, Pomeroy.

Bottom, a son.
Sunday, Aug. 11
Discharges - Mrs. Jeffrey
Clagg and daughter; Stefanic
Deem; Mrs . Michael Glass and
daughter; Mrs. Lawrence Powell
and daughter; Mrs. Terry Reynolds
and son.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Beaver, Northup, a son; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Duke, Northup , a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
George, Rutland, a son.

Woodcraft, 7 to 18 inches:
Frank Jones, Reedsville; Carolyn
Nicholson. Middleport; Juanita
French, Middleport
PLASTIC CANVAS
NEEDLEPOINT
Household article: Judy Molden,
Pomeroy; Maxine Dyer, Bidwell,
Opal Dyer. Bidwell.
Christmas decoration: Judy
Molden, Pomeroy; Sarah E. Cald·
well, Pomeroy; Opal Dyer, Bidwell.
House or sb'Ucture not over six
inches: no first, Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no third.
Crocheted basket: Carolyn
Nicholson, Middlepon, no second,
no third.
Market basket: Miranda Nicholson, Middleport, no second, no
third.
Other basket: Carolyn Nicholson, Middleport, no second , no
third.
Wreath : Kathryn Meadows,
Pomeroy; Carolyn Nicholson, Mid·
dleport; 868.
Holiday wreath: Jill Holter, ·
Long Bottom ; Addalou Lewis, ·
Pomeroy; no third.
HANDMADE JEWELRY
Necklace : no first, Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy, no third.
GIFT WRAPPING
Wedding: Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy. no second, no third.
Birthday: Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Child's: Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no second, Opal Dyer,
Bidwell.
Christmas: Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, no second, no third.
Other: Mary King, Long Bottom, Deborah Grueser, Pomeroy,
Muriel Bradford, CoolviUe.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ............. ..... 29 l(l
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 7/8
AT&amp;T... ............................. 39 l(l
Bob Evans ........................ 18 I(l
Charming Shop.................. 23 5/8
City Holding ..................... 14
Federal Mogul.. ................. l6 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ... .38 3/8
Key Centurion .................. 15
Lands' End ....................... 17 7/8
Limited Inc ....................... 30
Multimedia Inc ................. 28 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................. 13/32
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 31 1/4
Shoney's lnc ..................... l6
Star Bank ...... .................... 21 3/4
Wendy lnt' 1.. ..................... 9 3/4
Worthington Ind ............... 25 l(l
Stock reports art the 10:30 a.m.

quotes pro•ided by Blunt, Ellis

and Lotwi of Gallipolis.
Goodyear is ex-dividend today.

Coal
...
Continued from page 1
burgh, where all samples are initially mailed for review, "was
actually pulling filters that were
questionable, whether they exactly
fit the protocOl as it is listed or not,
because the final determination of
those filters would be made in
Mount Hope," Thaxton said.
"If (there were) any doubts as
to what was potentially wrong with
the filter, that filter would be then
transmitted on to Mount Hope for
the final determination to be made
by myself," Thaxton said.
Yet in his deposition, Thaxton
said the laboratories determmed
that some samples had exhibited
"dislodgment" of dust which "for
the most pan'' could be considered
an "innocent" phenomenon.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

' ·: :, ..

U .DO BMiiAIN *TJNEES SATUIIMY &amp; SUNDAY
Sl .OO IARQAIN NIGHT TUESMf

,,,
7: 00,9 : 2() DAILY
SAT/SU~ MATIH££5
J :00.1:20
('~ - U)

'"·''".'"" 1-:~:l!i:

SAT/S UN lti.TINUS
1: 20. 1· 1[)
t.rs·ll)

,

-

.-

•

ation Department will sponsor a
men's D and E flight softball tournament Saturday and Sunday in
Gallipolis.
The entry fee is $50 per team
plus A.S.A. sanctioned softballs.
Call the recreation dep31UJ1ent at
446-1424, ext. 37 during the day,
or Tom Hopkins at 446-8755 in the
evenings.

Weather
South.Cenlral Ohio
Tonight, increasing cloudiness
with the low 60 to 65. Ltght and
variable winds. Tuesday, partly
sunny with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms. High
in the mid 80s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday
Scattered areas of showers and
thunderstorms each day, mainly
during the afternoon and evening.
Lows in the 60s and highs in the
80s.

The 1991 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule
MONDAY, AUGUST 12
6:-00 p.m.-Spats Baroershop Quartet-Hill Stage
6:00 p.m .-Draft Horse Show
7:00 p.m.- Rutland Church of the Nazarene-Hill Stage
.
7:30 p.m ..,.Antique Tractor Pull
8:30 p.m.Shady River Shuffiers-Htll Stage
7:00 &amp; 9:00-Vogues-Grandstand

TUESDAY, AUGUST 13

9:00 a.m.- Junior Fair Beef Show follow
Open Class Beef Show-Show Arena
9:30 a.m.--4 -H Horse Show
1;00 p.m.-Open Class Flower Shop
1:00 p.m.-Draft Horse Fun Show
1:00 p.m.-Jr. Fair Rabbit Show
2:00 p.m.-Sr. Fair Poultry Show
3:00 p.m.-Jr. Fair Poultry Show
4:00 p.m.-kiddie Tractor Pull-Show Arena
4:00 p.m.-Talent Show-Hill Stage
7:00 p.m.~Demolitiop ~rby-G~stand
8:00 p.m.-Jr. Fair Swine Soo~.,.Show Arena
9:00 p.m.-Midnight Ooggers-Hill Stage

.

SEE YOU THERE!

. I

�-~-·

.....

___ .............. -

.....-""

..

'

_

" .......... .....

~·

---~

--

~

.. . .

The D·aily Sentinel

Sports

.

Alvarez's no-hitter propels White Sox to 7-0 win _over O's_

Monday, August 12, 1991
:Page-4

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Wilson Alvarez had pitched in
the major leagues ~fore. He just
bad never gotten anyone oul
But on Sunday, Alvarez turned
his ERA of infinity in10 invincibility. The 21-year-old rookie threw
one of the most improbable no-hitters in history, shocking his new
Chicago White Sox teammates and
shutting down th~ Baltimore Orioles 7-0.
Alvarez, called up from DoubleA on Saturday, pitched the sixth
no-hitter of the season in just his
second big-league game. His other
appearance was for Texas on July
24, 1989- he started against
Toronto that day and faced five hit-

Bones leads Padres to 13-0 win over Reds
By The Associated Press
Armando Reynoso and Ricky
Bones have already had an impact
on tile race in tile National League
West.
Who are Annando Reynoso and
Ricky Bones? The Hous10n Astros
and Cincinnati Reds found out on
Sunday.
Neither Reynoso nor Bones
pitched quite as well as Baltimore's
Wilson Alvarez, but tlley weren't
100 bad in tlleir rnajor league debul
Reynoso pitched two-hit,
shutout ball for six innings as
Allanlll beat Hous10n 3-1 10 move
within I 1/2 games of Los Angeles.
San Francisco completed a three. game sweep witll a 4-3 vic lOry over
tile Dodgers.
''He was exactly what our
· scouting reports said," said Allanlll
manager Bobby Cox of Reynoso,

who does not speak English.
"Sneaky quick, a lot of off-speed
stuff and lhrows strikes. He 'II start
again on Friday against San
Diego."
San Diego got a great effort out
of Bones, who pitched two-hit ball
for seven innings as the Padres beat
Cincinnati 13-0.
The defending world champion
Reds stayed 7 1/2 off the pace, and
are only in the running because the
Dodgers have been losing.
"It's hard to comprehend the
situation, but when you see it you
believe it," said Cincinnati righthander Jose Rijo, who was a 1-0
loser Saturday 10 the Padres.
The win over the Dodgers
pulled the Giants to .500 for the
first time since they were 6-6 on
April 21, and 10 within six games

of Los Angeles, the closest San
Francisco has been 10 first place
since they were 5 1/2 games back
on May II.
Meanwhile in the East, Piusburgh opened up a six-game lead
with a 6-4 vic lOry over St. Louis. It
was also Philadelphia 5, Montreal 4
and Chicago 3, New York 2 in 14
innings.
Giants 4, Dodgers 3
San Francisco completed its
sweep of Los Angeles as Darren
Lewis' run-scoring infield single
off Kevin Gross (6-9) in tile seventh inning snapped a tie. Will
Clark hit a two-run homer for the
Giants.
Kelly Downs (9-4) was the winner in relief.
Braves 3, Astros I
Ron Gant, Keith Mitchell and
Terry Pendle10n each hit home runs

Scoreboard
w. C1odl, Son FnocUco, .302.

Ai&amp;h• BJ'o ~ Lcdcn Lode.
Trifuu (4-1-1) $697.80.
Pal- (4-8) S37!.40.
Socood Roco-$4,000 Ooimin Pace.
Trim Rel&gt;d (Bulloo) 25.:W, 1.60. 4.6():
Billy DolilCI (A,..) 3.80, l80: Bod Cool·
ncc:tion (Sizer) 2.10. TUTJe&gt; 1:,7.
A.llo Raood-Bold Tank. Brct San, Solie·
itor Walt, J J Rom11..
Paf..,.(4-3)$t02.8U
Thin! Rooo-$3,500 Coocblion Pace.
1 T a... (Hoow) 15.40, 6.80. •-40: T1m0
And Tide (Crotl) 9.10, 6.80; Snookio'a
Dn&gt;om (IIOfFIU) 4.60. Tim~tol12-l .
Aloo Raood-SuoUin, Swift Lqund, Falcon's Lair, Sure Upon, 0 K Spunky,

u

SandbaJ., Chicago. 123.

lrnnlrid.

Bonlll1, Pltllburah, U; McReynolds,

:::

7.5
1.5

..... 46 64 .418

tl

In the majors...

RUNS ~ Butler, Loa Angeles, 77;
S1ndbcrg, OUcago, 7S ; Johruon, New
York, 74; Gant, Atlanta, 71; Pendleton,
AtJanu, 1(); 0 . Smith, St. Louis, 68; J.
Bell, Plttsburah. "; V1n SIJII.t., Pills·
burth, ": N'taon. Albn1.1. 66.
Rfll - W. Cla.rt, S•n Francisco, IS;
Bondi, Pltbburah, 79; Johnson, New
Yolk, 71; O.WIOO, Chie~go, 74; Gant, At·
lan1.1, 71; Bonilla, Pltllburah, 70; G.
Boll, Oticaao, 10.
HITS - T . OwyM, San Diego,_ 149;
BUller, lAO Anacla. t:U: Gnco, Chicago,
127; JOIC. SL Louia, 126; Pmdletoo, At·
1tn1.1, 123; Samuel, Los Angela, 123;

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eulull Dl"lllon

Team
W L Pd.
PrMSIURGH
64 45 .517
SLI.•W.
.......... 58 51 512

GB

New Y«k
...... 57
~· . .... . . 55

7.S

6

53 .SIR

=r- . • • • ~ ~ m~~
55 .500

9.5

Wedern DIYlaion

y..,.

W L Pet.
lAo An&amp;deo ..... 61 49 .555
Allanta
.... ..... 59 50 .541
San FranciJco ...... 55

•

55 .500

~~ATI' . ·: ~ ~;
Houlton

GB

DOUDLES -

New Yod:, 27; Morrb, Clncinnall, l6;
Gant, Atlanu, 2S; Pendleton, Atlanta, 24;
1ft tied with 23.
T1UPLES - Laakfonl, SL I.nuil. 10; T.
Gwynn, San Dieao. 10; L. Gonzalez.
Houlton, 8; Finley. Houslon, 1; Van
Slyk~ Pluaburah. 7: KNit, Philodclphil,
6; Candacle, Hou.Jton, 6; Felder, San

s

Sunday's scores
Philadelphia :S, Mot1CJW 4
Pit&amp;Jbur&amp;h 6, SL Loull 4
Atlln\1 3, Houswn I
San Dlqo 13, CJndnaad t
San Franciaco 4, Los Anaclcs 3
OUc.go 3, New Yotk 2, 14 inninp

Francisco, 6.
HOME RUNS - G1nt, Atlanta, 25;
Mau Williams, San Fnncisco, 24; JoM·
•m. New YOlk, 24; W. Cad:, San Fran·
cisco, 23; Kevin Mit.chdl, San Fnncii-CO,
22; G. Bell, Chicago, 21; O'Neill,
Clndnaatl, 20; McGriff, San Diego, 20;
Sand.,.,_, Chicago, 21l.
STOLl:N BASES - Nixon, Atlam• ,
63; Grissom, Montreal, SO; DeShiclda,
Montreal, 44; Coleman, New York, 37;
BondJ, PU&amp;aburgh, 34; Butler, Los An ·
geJ.e~, 32t Lankford, St. Louis, 29.

Today's games
New Yori (Gooden 12·6) at Chicaao

(Bicl&lt;di 11 ·1), 2o21l p.m.
Montreal (Dc:nnia Maninez 11 -6) a1
Phil-delphia (Mulholland 10- 10), 7 :3.S

p.m.
SL Lcub (DeLeon 5-1) at Plttaburah
(2. Smith 10-1), 1•35 p.WL
Houston (J . Jonet 6.7) at San Diego
(HUJit 14-5). 10:05 p.m.
Ailinll (lcibnndt 9-tl) II

Jose, St. Lou ia, 3S ;

PITCfUNG (10 decisions) - Hunt,
Dieao. 14· S, .737, 3.23; Rljo,
Cl'ntlnaall, 1·3, .n7, 1.19; Avr:sy, At·
1anta. 13--S •. 722, 3.43; OIUtla, Houston.
1-1• .100,lt8: Corpa=. St Louu. 7-3,
.700, 4.66; Downs, San Francisco, 9·4,

s.n

San fnnci..

ro (Biact 9-9), tlloOS p.m.
ClndnnaU (Myen $.9) al Loa Aqela
(Ojedo 9-1), it,JS p.m.

Tuesday's games

.692,lJ'7: 5 U&lt;tied .Olh 661.
STRIKEOUTS - Cone, New York,
lSI; Glavine, Atlanta, 137; G. Maddux,
ChiCIJO. 134; Gooden, New Yetri., 134;
Hamuch, Houston, 121; Hurst, San

Philadelphia (Co• 4-4) II Pllllbuflh

(DrabdllO-ll), 7•35 p.m.
Montreal (Gardner 6-1) It Chicago
(Damy JoctOM 1-3),1,()5 p.m.

Dieao,lll'l: u-.s.. Dicao, tos.

New York. (Viola 12·1) at St. LoLli&amp;

SAVES - Lee Smith, St. Louis, 28;
Dibble, Clntlnn1ll, l4; Franco, New
Yodl,_ 22; ~LCh Willia~, Philadelphia,

(Oliv..., 4-4), 1:35 p.m.
Hou1ton (Bowen 1·2) u San Dieao
{Ba\CI7·10), IO:OS p.m.
Cincinnati (lrownlaa ll-1) al Lo1
Antt:la (Morpn JU).JO;J! p.m.
Atlanu (Glavinc: 14-7) at San FruciJco
(Bud&lt;ott 9-S). 10o1l p.m .

21; Ri,cau, San FranClKO, 18; Ldterta,
San Diqo. 17; 8. lAndrum, Plltaburah,
U; One Smith, Chicago, 16;
At.lanu, 16.

Bcrcnaucr.

American League
BATIING- Palmeiro, Teaas, .348;
Boqo, Boaon, .342; Fnnco. T..,., .119:

AMERICAN LEAGUE

-

I

!u&amp;ml Dl•..lon
Turn
W L PtL
T..,...
......... 62 so .554
Octroi&lt;
........... 58 54 .lli
Bmlm
.......... .53 .57 .482
New York
... SO 59 .459
Milwaukee
.. .. . 49 62 .441
.. ...... 43 67 .39\
CLEVELAND
:W 73 .33t

''

Westft'ft Ol"ldon
W L PtL

Team

'I

l

;I
~

M»ms...
.. .....
Chicago
.........
Oakland
.........
Tau
...........
Kansu Ci&lt;y .......
Saute
..........
Califonuo .........

61
6l
64
51
51
58
53

45
4l
48
lO
52
53
57

11

U.S
GB

.598
.591
.571
.531
.521
.521
.482

...•
.•

Minneobta

TRlPI..ES -

s. s...u. 2

ta, 6; Raines, Chicago, 6.

Blue Scoou:r (Coven Jr.) 7.80, 5.20; Eams
Kooh (Collino) 9.20. Timo-LS8 t ·S.
Alao Raocd · Heu Trim Twa.tcp, Orca·
con Hill, Kash Ace, All Mack, Fritzie
Cwnnl. Coh Cr-t, Cary'• Treuu.re..
Trifecu (6-5-2) $2,811.60.
No winncn Twin Trifeaa. Canyover

122,550.97.
Eighth R•ce-$3,.500 Cmdition Pace.
Big Red Osborne (Rwocll) 4.60, 3.00.
3.00; Sam'a Brolher Cy (Riegle) 3.80.
3.80; Crown Time Rocky (R Tharp•)
4.80. Time- U73·5.
Aloo lUced·SupatOndu-. llc1 Bone.
Try Saint Jude. Deadly Breeze, Dapper' a
Time, RK'1 Baby Mapc.
Triluu (S-3-2) W.IO.

- - (l-3) $2l21l.
Ninth Rocc-$45,000 Op&lt;rl Pace.
Aleatory (Wallen) 5.40, 3.10, 2.10;
RIYal Co!l (Bolyonl) 1.60, 4.40: Zophod

Bcablc Broa (Size~') 4.20. Tmo-1 :56.

A1oo llaced-Looie, Sh""""' Swift, l&gt;tiatet Falcon, Buc Back Writa.

.

--.~~$40.:10.
10,000 lnvit~~ti.Mal Pace.

Bavaro (A~.er) 1.40, 5.40, 3.00; Mike
Tomar (Bolyard) 9 .10. 3.40; Thunder'•
lmoae (l)v Milia) l40.

Tim«&gt; I :S4 2-5.
Also Raced-Shannon Brook&amp;, Candy
Super S11r.
Fafec:u (1 ..) $61100.
Elcvcouh Raoo-$2.000 Ooimin&amp; Pace.
Tempo• (FuUer) 9.110, 4.60, 4.00, Oul·
bnve (C..,..) 3.80, 4.40: Eumotl'rinAz
(C&lt;&gt;llino) 6.80. Tuno-tol'l 3-5.
Allo Raced-Golo Shol, Ad A Tag. Bo
Bo. Ak:r\ Casey B, Win Sw:n expraa, 0

Yea, R Bi&amp; Parlay.
Supcrf- (6-t-9-10) $4,7116.60.

Pal- (6-1) 151.40.
Attendance -

6,674 . Hudle

$53!1,436.

!1; C. Davis, Minncaota, :26; C. Rir*cn,

Tonight's games
Chicl&amp;o (McDowell 14-6) It Baltimore
(Mcllmold S-6), 1:15 p.m.
BOlton (Ocmcm 12-1) at Tmxuo (JuUl ~
Quzman4-2), 7:35p.m.
California (Finley 14·6) at Minncaou

Blltimote. 24; D. Henderson, Oilland,

24; Thomas, Ch icago. 23; Tartabull.
KansuCity, 23; Teulc:too, Detroit. 23.
STOLEN BASES - Raines, Chicago.
37; R. Henderson, Oailand, 31; R. Alomar, Toronto, 35; Polatia, California, 31 ;
Cu.yler, Detroit, 29; White, Toronto, !7 ;
Franco, Texu, 24.
PITCHING (10 dcclSlons ) - Henne·
man , Dclloit, 9· 2, .818, 2.64 ; Erickson ,
Minncaou., IS-4, .789, 2.65; Klink, OU ·

land, 8-3, .7V, 3.24; McDowell, Chicago,
14-6, .700, 3_. 30; Thi~. _O ritago, 7-3,
.700, 3.11 ; Finley, Califoma, 14-6, .700,
4.06; Langaton, Cl!ifomia, 14-6, .700.
3.43; Gullickson, Detroit, 14 -6, .100,
4.02.
STRIKEOUTS - R. Johnson, Scatlle,
163; Clerncns. Botton, JSK; Ryan, Te.u.s,
145; McDowell, Chicago, 131 ; Langnon .
Califomi1, 13 \; Swindell, Clneland,
131;Candioni, Torooto.l29.
SAVES - Eckcnley, 01kland, 31;
Aguilera, Minnesota , 30 ; Reardon,

Tuesday's games
Karws City (Boddickcr 9-7 and Apptcr
9·7) It New Yo&amp; (J. Jdmsm 4-S and Ei·
land !-4), 2, 4:30p.m.
Texu (Bohanon 1·1 and J01e Gumw~
7_.) at BallimoR (Milldci 7-6 aDd Undecided), 2, 51)1 pm.

Iofton (M, \'ouna3.J and Mort.o.~l 2) 11 Clt:veland (N•p 6-11 and Gouo
0-t),l, 5•15p.m.
Chie~ao (Fernandez 6-A and Hibbud 7 ·
I) at Odroit (fanana g.g 1nd Gillic::kson

Bocton, 27; Thigpen, Chica&amp;o. 26; Har-

t4-6). 2, 5:15p.m.
Torm10 (Cand.iotti 9- 11) at Milwaukee
7-6).1:05 p.m.
Calif...U. (I. AbbOaiD-8)" MinnCIOII
(Bonb 1-(J). 8:Ol p.m.
OUlmd (Stewan 9-6) at Seattle (Hoi·
man 9-11), 10:35 p.m

vey, C•lifontia, 25; Henke, Torontt~, 25;

cw.....

Olson, Baltimore, 24.

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) - Scioto
Downs resuha for Sat urday, Aug. 10.
WeaLhcr clear, uack fall
Fust Race--S I ,800 Conditi.on Pace..
I~ Lair (Crou) 23.00, 9.20, 4AO; Anaia True Tcm (Taubert) 16.10, 6.10; Jim
Hood CRieal•) 2.go. Tlnoo-U1 1-5.
Al10 Raced-Sydney's Top Gun. Fluent
Lohc11, Pbt The Wood, M1 Stippeo.

Major league leaders
National League
PcndJaon, At.lanLI, .335 ;
T . Ow1nn, San Di.eso • . :US; lose, St.
LoW, .324; NiAon, AL!atu, .318; Morrk,
Clncln...&amp;~ .J17; Bigio. Houlton, .305;
BA'ITING -

c....

j

SHOP MONDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

AT

ANOERSON ~s
DOWNTOWN PO MERO Y, OHIO

,

Trilcell (l·l-4) $481.40.
- - (l·l) $61.10.
Sevcouh Roc.13,SOO Ooimin&amp; Pice.
Stant (Slur) 17.60, 1.20, 6.60; TnL

HOME RUNS - Fielder, Detroit, 32;
Canseco, Oakland, 31 : Cuter, Toronto,

TauS, Milwauk.Q: 4, 10 innings

Milwaukee (Navarro 9· 9) at Tcua (B
Wiu l-4), 8:3S p.m.
Oakland (Welch J()-6) at SuuJe (DeLu cia 9-7), lO :OS p.m.

I

MDlil.or, Milwaukee, 10;

Toron1o, 7; Mc:Rac, Kanaaa City, 6;
Whiten, Clt:veland, 6; Pudr.cu, Minneso-

(Moais 13·9), 11ll p.m.

II

BOlton, 32; R. Alomar, Tormt?,

R. Aloma.r, Toronto, 7; Dcvc:re.aux, Balli·
more, 1; Polonia, Cdifomia, 1 ; White,

Oakland 3, California 2

11.259:10.
Pa!ecta (4-2) ISO'l.21l.
Sixth Raco-16,000 Open PactAtphcus (R HotlOcl) tO.OO, 5.60, 3.80:
Torre~~·, TK (Dv Miller) 6.80, 4.40: w..
Her l.i&lt;e (Diet) 1.60. Time-t:S1.
Also Raccd-C U Alcr, Jack Your Jaw,
Heuty Wol&lt;:om~ Jllonho... Beach.

Tenth R

8~,

nlnp

Pal- (1-5) $tl.IO.
fifth Raco-$2.800 Claimina Pice.
ShiMon- (Co!lino) t1.21l, 1.40.
7 .20; O.arlenc'a Charlie (Bw.u.n) I 0.40,
1.00; Willin&amp; To Win (R Tha~} 7.40.
Timo-1:584-S.
Also Raccd-Eapre.asive Feeling,IB'•
Eacon, Banyan Bay, Hobby'• E•cort,
Rakbndl Romeo. Summer Bid, Tre..ury.
ht half Twin Trifecu (4-2- 8)

Trifecu (1-5-2) $259.21!.

3J;Cartu, Toronto, 30; C. Ripken, Balli·
more, 30; White, Toronto, 29; Siern,
Tcxu, 28; Oren, Katuu City, 28 .

Kanna Clly 3, Clutland l, 13 In·

3.00: E1plooive Sound (Noble ID) 2.60.
Timo-t :S4 3-5.
Aloo Raced-lullin Suinp. lligl&gt; Tunber, Rickey Panonl, Bi.a Wmnc:r.

RBI -Fielder, Detroit, 93; Canseco,
Oakland, 17; Thomas, Chicago, 86;
Cuter, Toronto, lA; Siem, Tau, 81; C.
Dn·ia, Minnc::~ota, TI; C. Ripken. Bahi-

New Ymi 12. D«roit 6, l1t game
New Yolk 10, Detroit 8, 10 iMing1 ,
2nd game
Chioo1o 7, Baltimore o
801ton 9, Toronto 6

Sunday's scores

MakiD' Plan• (Wallen) 2 .!0, 2.60,
2.40; Q\nct Brown Fo1 (Crou) S.20,

land,14.

....._76.
HITS - Palmeiro, Teus,IS2: Molitor.
Milwauk ... t52: Puaou. Minnca.... t41:
C. Rip;cn, Baltimore, 141; Franco, Texu.
140; Sierra, Texu, 136; R . Alomar,
Torontc, 131
DOUBLES - Palmciro. Tcxu, 32;

~

.

4
8
lO.S
ll.S

I
1
7.5
i.l
i.l
t3

•

.•.

GB

Ballirnore

l:

Mohtor, Milwaukee, .334, Tartabull,
K1ruu City, .331; Puckett, Minneaoll,
.329; Thomu, Chieaao•. 323.
RUNS -Molitor, Milwaukee, 87;
Palmciro, Texas, 13; Canseoo, Oakland,
82; Thomu, Otic;ago, 78; Franco, Tcua,
78; While, Toton&amp;o, i1; Sic:m, Teus, 74;
Fielder, Deuoit, 74; D. Henclenon, Oa.k-

Trifecu (8-t"') 17t8.10.
Pafecu (8-t) $202.20.
Founll Roco-S4.000 Condiu'"' Pace.

() i' [ ~ 1\Hl N J /, • \ I c; H T T ! L B P ' ·.'1

Transactions
Baseball
American latut
CfDCAGO WHITE SOX - Roalled
WJ.laon Alvarez , pitcher, from Dinnin&amp;·
ham of the Southern League . Optioned
Ramon GIICla, pitcher, lo 'Vancouvr:s of
U1e Pacific Com Loogue.

TEXAS RANGERS - Reulled Terry
Mathews , pitcher, (rom Oklahoma City of
Lhe Arm:ncan Auociation . Placed Rich
Gouagc, piLChc:c, m the IS-day ctiaablc:d

lin
Nalion•l Leaa11e
All..ANTA BRAVES - Placed Kent
Mercker, pitcher, and Sid Bream, fint
bueman, on the tS-&lt;iay disabled lisL RecaUed Tony C11tillo, pitcher. and Jerry
Willard. c:atchct, from Richmond of the
ln~t.ionali...e.guc.

NEW YORK METS - Acuvated Wal·
ly wttitehu.nt, pitcher, from the JS-day
dinblcd lisL
PlTfSBURGH PIRATES - De&amp;igno&lt;·
ed J01e Gonzalez, outfielder, for aii:JgJI ·
m&lt;nl

SAN DIEGO PADRES -

As1igned
Pat Ocmcna, pitcher, to I...as Vegu of the
Pacific Cou\ l..c:ague on a medical rcha ·
bili~.aUoo ua.ignmcnL

off Darryl Kile (5-7).
Reynoso ( 1.0) allowed two singles, walked three and struck out
four over six iMings. Marvin Freeman pitched two innings and Mike
StaniOn finished for his third save,
giving up Mike Simms' RBI single
in the ninth.
Padres 13, Reds 0
Bip Roberts went 4-for-4,
including two of San Diego's clubrecord five home runs. Darrin Jackson, Tony Fernandez and Thomas
Howard added homers.
Roberts had a pair of solo shots
off slllrter Kip Gross (4-4).
Bones (1.0) allowed two hits to
Carmelo Martinez but never
allowed a runn·er to reach scoring
position.
Pbillies 5, Expm 4
Philadelphia won its 12th
straight game as Charlie Hayes
scored on a wild pitch in the eighth
inning.
Mike Hartley (3.0) got tile last
out of the eighth for tile victory,
and Mitch Williams pitched the
ninth for his 21st save.
Pirates 6, Cardinals 4
John Wehner hit a go-ahead
two-run single and fellow rookie
Orlando Merced added a run-scoring single in Pittsburgh's four-run
sixth inning.
Roger Mason (1-0) got the final
two outs in the sixth in relief of
starter Randy Tomlin. St. Louis
right-hander Bob Tewksbury (7 -8)
was the loser.
Cubs 3, MeiS 2
George Bell led off the 14th
inning with his 21st home run of
tile year.
Bell's game-wiMing blow came
on a 1.0 pitch from Pete Schourek
(2-3),the Mets' ftfth pitcher.
Shaun Boskie (4-8), the Cubs'
fifth pitcher, was the winner.

All-American
Soap Box Derby
winners posted
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Paul
Greenwald of Saginaw, Mich.,
edged two other racers Saturday 10
win tile Junior Division of the 54th
All-American Soap Box Derby.
The competition attracted 170
racers from four nations and drew
17,500 specllliOrs at Derby Downs.
Danny Garland of Studio City,
Calif., won the Master Division
with a time of 28.09 seconds. Garland, 14, recorded the day· s fastest
time in a qualifying race when he
covered the 953.75-foot course in
28.03 seconds.
Will Long of Kansas City, Mo.,
and James Rayle Jr. of Washing100
finished second and third respectively in the master's race.
The Master Division, open for
12- 10 16-year-olds, features more
aerodynamic cars while tile Junior
Division, for 9- to 16-year-olds,
features cars built from official
kits.
Greenwald, 13, covered the
course in 28.89 seconds 10 defeat
Kelly Miller of Winston-Salem,
N.C., and Heather Flurry of Tallmadge, Ohio, in a phOIO finish.
"I only think of winning," said
Greenwald, a three-year soap box
competitor. "I just look for tile
front wheels (of his competiiOrs)
and stay close. I'm very excited.''
Garland, a soap box racer for 2
1/2 years, said he competed in tile
master division because of the
challenge of building his own car.
He started construction of the car
on Chrisunas vacation.
In tile International Round, Bonnie Cumock, 14, won tile Master
Division in 28.17 seconds and Amy
Ovenden, II, won tile Junior Division in 29.92. Cumock and Ovenden are both of St. Catharines,
Ontario. The Phillipines and Germany also were represented in tile
international competition.
Jacob and Jessica Fehrman,
brotller and sister from Anderson,
Ind., both finished in the 10p nine
of their respective races. Jacob, 12,
placed fifth in the master race
while Jessica, 10, was sixth in tile
junior evenL
Garland was awarded a $5,000
college scholarship while Green·
wald received a $2,500 scholarship.
Botll also received family vacation
cruises. The lOp three finishers in
each division were awarded scholarships.

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL! !

Sl 00 OFF
ANY SMALL, MEDIUM or LARGE

PIZZA

CLOSED THURSDAY FOR THE FAIR

D&amp;M
·
P
IZZA
·
SYRACUSE, OHIO

. 992-7287

Monday, August 12, 1991
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
The Dally Sentlnei-Page-6
, .. ,_....;.;.....;;~~.;.;.;.-------------.;....-----------------....;..--.......;;.__

ters without retiring a single one,
giving up three hits, including two
home runs, and two walks.
"A couple years ago, I dido 't
have too much experience,''
Alvarez said. "That happened too
quick. They call me up after I
played just three weeks of AA ball.
Right now I feel more comfortable."
Five days after losing tllat disappointing debut. he was traded to the
White Sox with Sammy Sosa and
Scou Fletcher for Harold Baines
and Fred Manrique. Alvarez went
back to the minors and stayed there
until the White Sox decided last
week to promote him from Birmingham, where he was 10-6 with a
1.83 ERA.

Alvarez became the first rookie
to throw a no-hitter since Oakland's Mike Warren in 1983.
In other games, Minnesota beat
Seattle 5-2, Boston lOpped Toronto
9-6, Oakland defeated California 32, New York swept a doubleheader
from Detroit by 12-6 and 10-8 in
10 innings, Kansas City got past
Cleveland 3-2 in 13 innings and
Texas beat Milwaukee 5-4 in 10
innings.
Alvarez struck out s.even,
walked five and survived two close
calls.
In tile seventll inning, Cal Ripken hit a bouncer in front of the
plate. Catcher Ron Karkovice fielded the ball but threw past fll'st base,
allowing Ripken to reach second.
Official scorer Phil Wood

Cleveland Browns hang on to win
16-10 tuneup game against Giants
By The Associated Press
While the NFL exhibition sea. son doesn't mean much in the
standings, there are plenty of individual races going on. The quarterback jobs with the New York
Giants and New Orleans Saints. for
instance.
With the Giants, Phil Simms
· and Jeff Hostetler are battling for
· the No. I spot. Diuo at New
. Orleans, where Steve Walsh and
: Bobby Hebert are going head to
. head.
Following Saturday's 31-20 viclOry over Green Bay, Walsh seems
10 have lllken tile lead over Hebert.
The Giants' quarterback derby,
however, is another story.
"I'm not sure what the situation
is," Hostetler said following a 1610 loss to the Cleveland Browns.
"I don't assess my own performances," Simms said.
The quarterback race for the
defending Super Bowl champions
wasn't advanced much, with
Simms going 4-of-7 for 35 yards
and Hostetler -5-of-1 0 for 42 yards.
Simms, however, threw a two-yard
touchdown pass to Howard Cross,
while Hostetler lost a fumble that
led 10 a Cleveland score.
Both quarterbacks have won
Super Bowls for the Giants.
Meanwhile, Walsh guided three
IOuchdown drives in a little under
two quarters against Green Bay at
the Superdome. Walsh completed
10 of 15 passes for 131 yards, two
touchdowns and one interception.
Hebert, a five-year slllrter who sat
out last season in a salary dispute,
did not play because of a strained
groin.

SHOWS MUSCLE - In llis major league debut in Suaday's
game against tbe visiting Cincinnati Reds, San Diego hurler Ricky
Bones showed plenty or muscle against tbe Rbinelanders, as be
pitched seven innings to help tbe Padres bold on to their 13·0
blowout win. (AP)

In other games Saturday, it was
Dolphins 29, Buccaneers 13
Miami 29, Tampa Bay 13; Kansas
Scou Mitchell threw touchdown
City 19, the New York Jets 10; passes of 30 and 5 yards 10 Freddie
Washington 27, New England 6; Banks to fuel a 19-point final quarPhiladelphia 29, Cincinnati 24; ter by the Dolphins.
Seanle 17, Indianapolis 7; Buffalo
Chiers 19, Jets 10
21, Detroit 16, and Minnesota 34,
Mark Vlasic threw two secondDallas 24. In Sunday night's game, half touchdown passes to rookie
Phoenix beat Chicago 12-10.
Tim Barnett 10 lead Kansas City in
Tonight the Los Angeles a game in which tile Jets made five
Raiders are at Dallas, and the Los turnovers.
·
Angeles Rams play host to San
Redskins 27, Patriots 6
Diego.
Terry Hoage scored on a 45Browns 16, Giants 10
yard interception return I :31 into
Mike Oliphant's 14-yard touch- the game and Washington built a
down run in the fourth quarter gave 21-0 lead in handing New England
Cleveland its fll'st victory under ex- its 16th straight loss and 24th in 25
Giants assistant Bill Belichick.
games, including six exhibition
Oliphant scored the winning contests.
touchdown two plays after rookie
Eagles 29, Bengals 24
Michael Jackson caught his second
Keith Jackson caught two !Ouchlong pass of the night, a 48-yard down passes and William Thomas
gain.
returned an interception 20 yards
Saints 31, Packers 20
for another score as Phi lade I phi a
Walsh, acquired from Dalla' in overcame a 14-point deficit at
a trade last year, had one of his best Cincinnati.
games for New Orleans as the
Seahawks 17, ColiS 7
Saints scored their most points
John L. Williams, playing his
since a 35-7 victory over Tampa first game after a contract dispute,
Bay in the ninth game of last sea- scored one touchdown and set up
son.
another for Seattle at the Hoosier
Bills 21, Lions 16
Dome.
Jim Kelly shook off effects of a
Vikings 34, Cowboys 24
nagging hamstring injury and threw
Hershel Walker rushed for 107
a 10uchdown pass in his first game yards on 15 carries and caught five
since the Super Bowl. Kelly played ' passes for 41 yards, all in tile first
I 1/2 quarters and completed six of half, as Minnesota defeated Dallas.
11 passes for 43 yards, including Walker scored on a 13-yard touchan eight-yard TD to Keith McK- down pass from Wade Wilson.
eller.
Cardinals 12, Bears 10
Backup Gale Gilbert led a 53AI Del Greco, who earlier had
yard scoring man:h for the Bills in missed two field ~oals, kicked a
the third quarter and added a 13- 41-yarder wtth no tune left to lead
yard TD pass in the fourth.
Phoenu over Chicago.

.Forget wins ATP Championship
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
MASON, Ohio (AP) - It lOOk
Guy Forget nine years to earn a
return match on the sllldium court
at the ATP Championship. But. oh,
he did it in style.
· As a promising teen-ager from
France, he lost to John McEnroe in
1982. Forget didn't speak enough
English to fully understand as
McEnroe harangued a linesman,
but the incident is fresh in his
mind.
"It was my first pro tournament
where I really did well," Forget
said.
"I beat Roscoe Tanner, who
was 11 Ill in the world at the time.
Every match was a surprise. I was
in the quarterfinals, playing McEnroe in the center court, and I was so
excited just to be there.''
In his triumphant return Sunday,
Forget beat U.S. Open champion
Pete Sampras 2-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-4 for
the most prestigious title of his

WINS SOAP BOX DERBY - Danny Garland, 14, rrom Studio
City, Calif., stands with his pareats - Frank (left) and Melanie
Garland - and holds tbe champion's trophy following bis victory
in the All-American Soap Box Derby, held Saturday in Akron,
Ohio. Garland will recetve a $5,000 scholarship, among other
prizes. (AP)

110 MECHANIC ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
992·3279

i.. ,.:f
Dr. # A. Jackson
Bailes, Optometrist,
announces the establishment of new office
hours which began August 1, 1991. The
new hours are: Tuestlay, Wednesday and
Friday-9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and is also
open the first and third Saturdays each
month from 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon.
Dr. Bailes provides total optometric eye
care, fits all types of contact lenses and
provides low vision care. Assignment is
accepted on Medicare; and all major eye
care insurances are honored.
You may phone 992-3279 or stop by the
Qffic:e at 110 Mechanic Street in Pomeroy
set up Y'?W' appointment.
I

- - ...

Texas reliever Kenny Rogers (87) was tile winner. Brewer reliever
Julio Machado (0-3) was the loser.
Royals 3, Indians 2
George Brett singled home the

winning run in the bollom of the
13th inning.
Tom Gordon (8-10) pitched four
innings in relief for the victory.
Steve Olin (2-4) was the loser.

CELEBRATING NO-HITTER - Chicago White Sox pitcher
Wilson Alvarez (hidden from view) is mobbed by catc,her Ron
Karkovice second baseman Joey Cora (top) and two other teammates ron~wing Alvarez's no-hitter in Sunday's game against tbe
host Baltimore Orioles, who fell 7-0. Alvarez was called up from
Class AA Saturday and was given the ball for his first major league
start this season. (AP)

Sunday, he had won just five sin"Until the tiebreaker, I could
gles titles, including Sydney, Aus- have lost the match. I thought to
tralia, and Brussels. Belgium, this myself, we can be playing another
year.
hour or it can be over in five minOne win, at Toulouse, Frdllce, in utes.''
1986, continued a periodic family
Forget lOOk the tiebreaker with a
tradition. Forget's father Paul won mini-break on tile nintll point and
tile same tournament in 1966. and won his next two serves with a volhis grandfather Pierre won it in ley and a passing shot. The only
1946.
other time he broke Sampras' serve
Forget said he played so well at was in the lOth game of the tllird
the ATP, including a win over top- set, when Forget returned a triple
ranked Boris Becker in the semifi- match point serve for a winner.
nals, because he didn't expect to
"I started off real well, returnwin.
ing well," said Sampras, who beat
"I just came back from holiday . second-ranked Stefan Edberg to
I was going 10 lllke the tournament reach the final. "I tllink in the secas a preparation for the U.S. ond and third sets I was content
Open," Forget said. "Every match just to return his serve and wait for
I won was like a bonus. I dido 't him to make a mistake. I wasn't
have any pressure on myself.''
being the aggressor.
Sampras won two service breaks
"I knew he was going to raise
in tile fll'st set, but Forget refused to his level of tennis - he has one of
buckle.
the biggest serves on the tour "I was a bit tight, and Pete was and obviously he's a very hot playdominating me,'' Forget said.
er right now."

career.

A. JACKSON
BAILES, O.D.

-- -· -- -

looked at several replays before
ruling the play an error.
In tile eighth, Chris Hoiles led
off with a sinking liner that center
fielder Lance Johnson dove for and
caught inches off the ground.
Alvarez started the ninth by
retiring Mike Devereaux on a routine fly and striking out Juan Bell.
After walking Ripken on four
pitches and Dwight Evans on five,
the left-bander struck out Randy
Milligan with a nasty breaking ball.
Frank Thomas hit his 23rd
homer and drove in three runs .
Dave Johnson (2-4) was the loser.
Red Sox 9, Blue Jays 6
BasiOn won for the third straight
day at the SkyDome, scoring five
runs in the first inning on two
errors by right fielder Joe Carter.
Mark Gardiner (4-6) stopped his
five-game losing streak. Jeff Reardon got his Z7th save when he
retired Carter, who earlier hit his
27th home run, on a fly ball with
two runners on base to end the
game.
Jimmy Key (12-7) gave up eight
runs, four of them earned, on II
hits in five and one-third innings.
Twins 5, Mariners 2
Kevin Tapani won his fifth
straight decision.
Tapani (10-7) pitched a four-hitter, struck out three and issued his
only walk in 33 and two-third
innings.
Kent Hrbek homered and drove
in three runs and Shane Mack also
homered off Bill Krueger (9-5).
Athletics 3, Angels 2
Willie Wilson's line drive was
turned into a two-run triple by left
fielder Luis Polonia.
Joe Grahe (1-3) lOOk a two-hitter and 2-0 lead iniO the fifth. But
with two outs and two on, Wilson
hit a line drive that Polonia let sail
over his head, and Wilson then
scored the go-ahead run on Grabe's
wild pitch.
Mike Moore (II-7) overcame
early home runs by Gary Gaetti and
Luis Sojo.
Yankees 12, Tigers 6
Yankees 10, Tigers 8
Mel Hall's two-run homer in the
IOtll inning completed New York's
doubleheader sweep.
Don Mattingly's two-run, pinchsingle in tile ninth inning tied the
game at 8. After Steve Sax singled
with one out in the lOth, Hall hit
his 16th home run off Paul Gibson
(5-6).
Steve Farr (3-2) was lhe winner.
In the opener, Randy Velarde
and Hensley Meulens each drove in
three runs for the Yankees.
Greg Cadaret (5-4) pitched eight
innings. Dan Gakeler (1-4) was the
loser.
Rangers S, Brewers 4
Juan Gonzalez singled home a
run in the lOth.

II

.'

"To win on tllat same court is a
very special moment," Forget said,
''10 be on that court and win a lOurnament, where before 10 play just
one match was tile biggest joy of
all.''
The viciOry was a breakthrough
for his countrymen. No French
player had ever beaten an American in the fmal of a men's tournament in the United States. Nol
since Yanniclc Noah beat Argentinian Guillenno Vilas at lhe WCT
Tournament of Champions at Forest Hills. in 1986 had a Frenchman
won any 10umament in the U.S.
With $2.5 million in career
earnings, Forget has made a comfortable living playing tennis. But
until the past few months, he never
realized the expecllltions placed on
• him a decade ago.
The $170,200 ATP check was
tile biggest of his career for Forget,
26, who has played on tile French
Davis Cup and Olympic teams, but
until this year never cracked the lOp
I 0 ranldngs.
"The hard thing is just to ~o
into a tournament thinking, 'I m
: . j!Oing to go through hell this week,
' n's going to be 100 degrees. and
' I'm going to have tO fight five guys
and PlaY a lot of 7-6 games,"' For·; gctsaid.
.
-• ' "In the past, l' was not ready 10
• go dtrough that ftghting every day,
and my level of tennis would drqJ
• drama~ically. Now I am more
. relaxed and more confident and I
!., can keep· up mylevet of play
' · · klligcr;thiri I used 10 "
:: ' ._F&lt;qel's fol'le
been doubles,
: . 1finning 22 tournaments. Until

baS

---·-·----

-~

ASpecial Ed-ition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, August 28, 1991
RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
WINS AT~ CHA\YIPIONSHIP the ATP champion's trophy aloft a.rter beating
pras W, 7-6, (i.4 in Sunday's ATP
Ohio. (AP)
f'

AD DEADLINE·WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1991

�.....
Monday, August 12, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

•

-'

By The Bend

..

Readers plead for mercy for stray dogs
DEAR K.M.: You and thousands
believe the heartless letters from of others. Read on:
Dear Ann: I was incensed by the
people wllo thought it was perfccdy
OK to shoot dogs that were allowed letters from readers who applauded
to run loose in the neighborltood. the gun nuts who shoot dogs for
So they did their business on tJespassing. Are they crazy?
somebody's lawn. Big deal. Is that a
It sickens me to see a dog cross·
reason to shoot them?
ing a busy street or chasing a car. I
Dogs aren't wind-up toys that was once driving on the highway
eat, sleep and play with children. when a beautiful golden retriever
They don't know it isn't "right" to a~ out of nowllere and started
defecate on lawns. When nature to run alongside my car. I couldn't
calls. they respond. Shoocing them believe my eyes. How could an
won't teach them anything.
owner let a magniftcent animal lilce
Use a phone, for pity's sake. Call that run loose? Closer exlunination
your neigllbor and tell him either to revealed that he had part of a chain
follow his pet and clean up its fastened to his collar which indicated
messes or keep his pet off your that the dog had broken loose. For
propeny. It is not the animal's fault that he deserves to be killed?
if he is allowed to run loose. It's the
The man who shot those two
owner"s fault
dogs sttould be evaluated by a
I am 16, an animal lover, and psychiatrisL He sounds dangerous.
letters like the ones that I read in What is even more frightening is that
your column make me sick. -- K.M., so many of your readers thougllt
ZURICH, Ill..
it was an OK thing to do.
HORRIFIED IN CONN.

·~

Monday, August 12, 1991:
Page--6 .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Births announced

~c)., r·

·'!! '

Dear Ann Landers: I could not

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"tiel, Loa Anrelee
Tlmeo Sfa4cale aad
Creaton Syndicate.''

Dear Ann: I have had three dogs

-- all Gennan shepherds. I got the
first one when she was a puppy.
She lived to be 14 years old. Her
"daughter" lived to be 15. The
granddaughter is now 13 and in
pretty good shape. These dogs were
like the children my wife and I never
had. If anybody had shot them, I
would not have hesitated to get a
gun and kill the murderer. -VANCOUVER
There are 53 public schools in Gar·
land, Texas.

Classified

The Daily Sentinel:

MEGAN and AMBER TRIPP

POliC IES
'Ad s o tot , td c Mctg$. G allt ;t or M a$ on counlt 6"&gt; 1111o st b u pr ~
pa ut
'A cceNtl $ &amp;0 dos count t o r adt patd to ;utv ,tnc.:
"Fu:c ildS
Gtll e dvway l'lnd Found ad s l.l lldt:"f 15 w o rd SV'IIItll b\·

Rodney and Stacy Tripp are
announcing the birth of twin
daughters on July 5 at O'Bieness
Hospital in Athens.
.
Megan Danielle weighed five
pounds and six ounces and was 19.
mches long.
Amber Nicole Tripp weighed
five pounds and 13 ounces and was
19 and one-half inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Newell.
Pomeroy. Maternal great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
Rothgeb, Ocala, Fla.; Mrs. Alva
Newell. Middlepon. Maternal great
great grandmother · is Mary
Yankuns, Boston, Mass.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Alvin Tripp, Chester.
Paternal great grand~arents are Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Smtth, Pomeroy;
and Fred Tripp, Mason, W.Va.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketpla'e

RATES
Days
1
3
6

Words

15
15
15

Monthly

20

s1 30 t dav

'Pn ce ot ;ut lot all Cilpttalll!lt~r s •s double p11 Ct! ot ad co s1
'7 punt! lme IVIJC only used
' S e nlnu:olts not responsible tor e11or s o:~Jl c r ltrst dort ICh eck
l or errun f11 s t day ad "r uns 111 papm) Citll bdor e 2 00 p m
11if'; al! t!r tJUbh CaltOII 10 tnak~ CO / teCIIOH
'Ads that rnust be pcud tn advan c e ar~ !
C aro..l oil h ank:.
Ho:~p\)y Ad ~
11 1 Mumo,.am

Y &lt;trd S &lt;tlt."5

' A c l.tSs•ht.&gt;tl .ldv e ftl st!nH.'Ilt ~l .u: oJ tlul lh c Da•l._ Stmtt~•t!41 e ll
c~pl
c i.ISSiht.od dtspliiV 8rJ511li.!S!i Coud .md lt.'11ill nott ce sl
vwoll ,,h;,o • 'Pt.u~ ar 111 I he Pt P lcoiS iUII Rert•!i h.'f ouullh t! G ;~lh
pohs Oouly T1obu nc . wo~chon ~ o ver 18. 000 honu~s

COPY DE ADUN E
MONDAY PAP !: R
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NfSDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
•HIUAY PAPER
S UNDAY PAPER

DAY BEFORE PUBUCAltON
11 00 A M SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 P M TUESDAY
2 00 P M WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY
2 ~0 PM FRIDAY

BULLETIN BOARD

4-H'ers to
Consider this ...
publicize
county
bloodmobile

petition. Tbey received a group trophy and eacb
girl received a participation ribbon. Pictured, 1r, are Corey Williams, banner boy, Sbauna
Manuel, Tiffany Williams, Lena Yoacham, Juli
Bailey and Adma Williams, banner boy. Back,
Suzanne Evans, Tonia Nazarewycz, Dena Sayre,
Carty Crow and Kelli Bailey.

OHIO STATE FAIR COMPETITORS·
These members or the Twirlers On Parade Pom
Porn and Baton Corps recently competed in a
competition at the Ohio State Fair in Columbus.
The group placed third In show teams and fifth
and dance twirl. This was lbe group's first com·

Auxiliary installs officers
Officers were installed at the
recent meeting of the American
Legion Drew Webster Auxthary
Unit No. 39 held at the home of Iva
Powell.
Installed were Julia Hysell, pres·
ident· Iva Powell, first vice-presi·
denr' Veda Davis, second vice·
president; Mary Martin, secretary·
treasurer; and Catherine Welsh,
chaplain.
Guests were Sharon Squirer,
Eighth District Presi~ent, who
installed tile new offtcers, and
Freda Irion, Wellston.
Veda Davis, V.A . and V.R.
cllainnan, completed plans for the
veterans party to be held at Athens
on Tuesday. Several members will
be attending.
All unit members are urged to
pay their dues early as membership
drive is being held.
Mrs. Squires gave a brief outline
of ller plans for this year. An early
mcmbersllip goal for the District

Eight is desired. The national
!heme is "Desert Storm Privates
Up" and the depanment theme is
"Because We Care."
Membership eligibility in the
group is determined by your grand·
father, father, husband, brother or
yourself if served in the service.
For further infonnation contact Iva
Powell, 992-5780 or Veda Davis,
992-2913.
Corsages were presented to Mrs.
Squires and Mrs. Hysell, Mrs.
Powell and Mrs. Davis.
The next meeting will be a
poduck dinner at the home of Mar·
jorie Felty on Aug. 27 at 7 p.m.
Meat will be furnished. An executive meeting will be held prior to
August meeting· for preparing the
new budget 1991-92 and auditing
books. The place and time, )Will be
announced.
All members remit dues to Mary
Martin. secretary-tteasurer.

Rizer named All-American
Kelly Rizer has been named an
All-American Scholar by the United States Achievement Academy.
The award program has been
established in order to offer
deserved recognition to superior
students who excel in the academic
disciplines. Scholars must earn a
3.3 or better grade point average.
Rizer graduated Magna Cum
Laude.
Rizer who attended the University or Rio Grande was nominated
for this National Award by Dr.
Larry Spees. She will appear in the

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The VIllage ol Pomeroy
W1ter Depertmanl h.. com·
pleted the monitoring cycle
for volatile orgenlc cheml·
cala (VOCe) 11 required by
chlpter 374$-81 of the Ohio
Admlnlatradv• Code (OAC).
Upon completion of 11ch
VOC monitoring cycle, etete
reguleUona llao require the
o - or operllor of • pubUc water eupply to notify h1
oonaumen of the evlltabUIty ol thl .VOC lnllytiOII
reaulta for the period !ailed.
Peraone wentfng_to revllht VOC reaullt ahould
contact:
.loltn A. Andoroon,

All-American Scholar Directory,
wllich is published nationally.
The Academy selects All-American Scholars upon the exclusive
recommendations of teachers,
coaches. counselors, and otller
qualified sponsors. Once awarded,
the students may be recognized by
the USAA for other honors.
Rizer is the daughier of Glenn
Rizer, Racine, and the granddaugh·
ter of Gertrude Rizer, Racine.
She is employed by the Athens
City School Districl

Public Notice

Pomriy, OH 45709
(814) WZ-3121
(8) 12, llo

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

next to the tennis courts on Monday at 6 p.m. Bring a covered dish.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Cross country
practice for Meigs High School
will begin Monday at 9 a.m. Stu·
dents in seventh and eighth grade
who are interested in running in
junior high races are invited to
anend practices. Practice sessions
will be held at the high school.

TUESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet Tuesday at
I 0 a.m. at the council chambers.

RACINE - Southern High
School students wishing to play on
the golf team are to meet at the
Meigs County Golf Club on Monday at 5:30p.m: For more information call949-2534 in the evenings.
MIDDLEPORT • Students in
grades seven or eight at Mei~s
Junior High Scllool interested m
playing football should report for
an organizational meeting at 6 p.m.
on Monday at the Meigs Junior
High School stadium. Parents are
urged to anend.
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
an organizational meeting for girls
in seventh and eighth grade at
Meigs Junior High interested in
playing volleyball on Monday at
6:30 p.m. at t.he junior high stadium. Parents are urged to attend.
SYRACUSE - The DAV and
Auxiliary will hold their
annual picnic at the Syracuse Park
La~ies

Public Notice

Public NOtice

RESOLUnON 628.91
PUBUC NOTICE
Ohio Rollwey Company, end
BE IT RESOLVED by the Addington, Inc., 0431 US. J.W. Coughenour. The trll
Council of the Vllloge of Route 60 Weal, Ashland, ancompaaaH 7.5 ecrea end
Pomeroy, 111 members Kentucky 41102·9527, haa lo loclled tpproxlmoleiJ 1.3
concurring:
oubmllled en eppllc1llon to mllel north111l or Chnhlrt.
Wrlllan commenra con·
Thettha Clerk/Treoaurer of trenafer the lollowlng cool
the Vlllege of Pomeroy, mine permit 11om Jeymar earning trenafer of the p•r·
trenafer In the Cemetery Coel Company, Inc., Route mil mey be eubmllled whhln
Fund S2,T32A2 lrom C.pltal 11, Cheshire, Ohio 45620:
10 dey1 titer publlcatlon.ol
Oulloy to Suppllea end Permit ~. The permll thla nolle• to the lollowlng
Meterllla.
Ia loclled In Mtlga Counry, tddreaa: The Division of
Thla resolution paued Sellabury Township, Lola Reclemellon, Founltln
Aug.S,1gg1.
392, 385; 388, on property Squere, Building H-3,
ATTEST
owned by Jeymer Cot! Columbus, Ohio 43224.
Brenda L Morrla, Clark
Comfl'lny, Chlla1peake &amp; (8) 1211c
APPROVED 1 - - - - - - - - - 1 - - - - - - - - - - j
Rlchlord Seyr., Mayor
Urry Wahrung. P'".
(8) 12. 19 21c

Read the Best
Seller.
·
I

Opntor

320 E. Mlln SL

CLRSSIFIED
RDS
•
I

Important Project ••. The 4-H
Junior Leaders of Meigs County
are planning to undertake an
important project for the 1991
Meigs County Fair. Their booth
this year will be devoted to publi·
cizing the neJtt county-wide blood·
mobile, which will take place at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter on August 21 from I p.m. to
5:30p.m.
According to County Home
Economies Extension Agent Cindy
Oliveri, the group usually high·
lights their own activities at the
booth. whicll is located in tile
junior fair building.
This year. however. tile group
will be distributing literature
regarding blood donation and the
upcoming local evenL This will be
a tremendous help to the blood
drive effons in Meigs County and
the group and their advisors are to
be commended and thanked.

DARWIN • The Bedford Town·
ship Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the town hall.

POMEROY - Mary Ann Sorden
will speak on her 1990 trip to
Cllina at the monthly meeting of
the Women of SL Paul and SL John
Lutheran Churches at 7 p.m. Tues·
day at St. Paul Lutheran Church-,
231 E. Second Ave. Margaret
Blaettnar will have the devotions.
Refreshments will be served following Mrs. Sorden 's talk and slide
show. Women of all faiths are
invited.

Tbanlcs! As you may have read
in The Daily Sentinel, another work
camp has chosen to devote time
and energy to improve the Condor
Street home or the Meigs United

Correction

MIDDLEPORT· The Meig-s
a recent anicle penaining to
County Chamber of Commerce tileInbirthday
dinner for Evelyn
will meet in full session Tuesday at · McCaskey, the names of Randy
noon at Overbrook Center in Mid· Lucille Allen should have appeared
dleport. A representative from as Randy and Lucille Oliver. The
Congressman Clarence Miller's names were uninlentionally misoffice will be the guest speaker.
printed.
POMEROY - Rellearsal for the
County Chorus, which will perfonn
Oct. II at 7 p.m. for Sternwheel
Weekend. will hold its first
rehearsal on Tuesday at 6:45 p.m.
Anyone interested in singing with
the choir is invited to attend.

l"lll 'r•r

tlrr •

folio will/{ I r•/r•Jihr;,.,. r•xdlllll/{1'.~ -- Gau,.., Count._
Area C ode 61 4

M•n gs C ounty
Are a C o d e 614

Mas on Co . WV
Area Cu d e 104

446

Galhpoh s

99 2

367

Ch•hu e

67 5
458
576

388 Vmton
245 R1o Grande
256 Guyan D•st
643 Arabi•D•st
J79 w.enul

Mtddlt!Por-1
P O illtl'IUY

985
843
24 7
949

Cheste r
Portland
let;~rt hils
Racme

Rull•nd
Coolvtll e

EAR-NOSE·THROAT
ALLERGY

the entire area including all of the ··;
shops, restaurants and studios; spe- ,~: - !
cia! pick-up and delivery at all of . J
Columbus" major downtown llotels ,.,
for groups of eight or more; an ·
assistance in acquiring breadfast, : :
luncheon or dinner reservations at - ~
restaurants in German Village or . 1
the Brewery disUict.
Hours of operation are Monday . ,
through Friday from 10:30 a.m., I·'
noon and 2 p:m ., Saturdays at
10:30 a.m.• noon. 2 and 3:30 p.m. ,,,
and Sundays at noon, 2 and 3:30 •
p.m.
. .,
Ticket prices are $5 for adults, $3 for children ages 5-15 and free ··•
for children five and under. Tickets · ·:
may be purchased at the German . :
Village Society Office, 588 South . Tllird or Hausfrau Haven, 769 ·.
South Third Street
, ·•
Further information may be
obtained by calling Jami Goldstein ':
at the German Village Society,
221·8888.

&gt; ...

.'
"

L--------.....1 ..
,:,

Sometliing (jooa's J6Jwags Coofjng .PI.t
''

RESTAURANT ....,.-

BOARD CERTIFIED

Located on Rl. 33 beside Malon Euon -'ld Malon Motll, MIIOI'I, WV
Sunday lhru Thunday, 6:30 am-10 pm: Friday &amp; Stturdey, 6:30 am-11 pm

HOIUESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS
Monday Friday. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

MONPAY -Cheeseburger, French Fries, Salad Bar

•Hearing Aids
·
•Recurrent Ear Infections

TUESDAY -Meatballs, Choice of Potatoes, Soup &amp;Salad Bar

·li ·Children

•ASthma

•Headaches

•Ru~Nose

•Snorm1
•Management of Skin &amp;
· Facial Lesions

MIDIWEAS~ ACGPnD

... ·.•.. 675~12.4

s,lte 112. v•r Dr., Pt. Pltasalt

.

.

'"

SPECIAUZING IN
•Adult &amp; Pediatric Allergy

WEPNESDAY- Turkey Club, French Fries, &amp;Soup
THUBSPAY · Chicken Cacciatore, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FRIDAY- Mushroom Burger, French Fries, &amp; Soup

mm•

11118DAT. ~T, CIIILD~R
12 BAT l'ltA
FROII CIIILDUI'f"811Dl'U•.IEXCLUOES DRINK A DESSERJ1

LD0T 1 CIIILD JIICil ADULT

He1o Wantud
Slluat•on W ant od

\3
14

Insur an ce
Du Sifl 8S§ Tr a muu1
Sch ool s &amp; ln s trl;Cl•o n
R a d 10 . TV 8o C S R c ~hl tr

15
16

17
18

•

36

41
42
43
44

H ou l;6s lo r R e nt
M o bil e Ho m tn l ot A t•nl
F;um !li l o• R c nl
Apaum ent for A1!11t

45
46

Furm s h cd R oo m ~
S pa ce t or R l!n l

47

Want e d lo Reut
Equ1pm en1 f o r At.' '''

48
49

M,u on
New Ha¥t!n

l et out
Buffalo

w .mtlld To Oo

52

IIUtiUij€11
P10 IOS ston a1 S tf ii ! CI!!&gt;

BISSELL
BUILDERS
PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4-16-86-Hn

GROOM
ROOM

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT ss.OO PER DAY

Complete Grooming

For All Breeds
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy, Ohio
Public Notice

H a-. &amp; G t dtll
Se t ~d R. I "'''to "' '

I 1
I J
/1
74

A ul n&lt;; l nr S .tlo!
1 ' o t.: k • lot S.t l ••

/ !,
]I)

Bu &lt;~t ~ &amp; M o l o r ~ tw S .lh!
A\ II U Pill I&gt; &amp; A u : u:. ~ uro ~

17
78
!'I

C .t111p1ng Equ1p111 c nt
C urnpm~ llo M o 10r t1u n u ::.

Trans ortalion

L e ast~

V. m s K. 4W D ~

Mo 101c yc lo;:o

A 1Ji u Ao ~ p .JH

liJfUQ4W

Hou :wh u ld Goo d s
S porting Goo&lt;ls
AniiQUtH

H1

Ho m e ltn p1ovum en1 -:.

8~

ti ]

Plum tJu •n l!o H t1itl m 11
E •t. .rvdllll! j

H4

ll u C111 c al

8 ')

G , · n t!"lt~ l Hi1 11 h nq

57
58
59

f ruol s &amp; Vegut d b l ~
F at Salt! or Tr ade

8 6 M o l11 lt! Hun11.' R r ll.-t n
B 1 U ph u i 'O t t ~ f v

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE
laslalha_g Cellular
Phones, Car Stereos

or Radios, CB's

On SHe lnstaDatlon

FrH Estimates
742·2656

7/tf/1•-r'-

&amp; A t• f,q ut.ll •u n

90 DAY WAIIAIIn
WASHEIS-$t 00 up
DITIS- )o• up
11£fiiGEIATOIS-$1 00 up
IAHGES-Gao-IIK.-$125 up
fi!EZEIS-$t25 up
"
MICRO OVENS-$79 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
~0~ . 5335

or 985 -3561

Acro11 From Post Ofliu
POMIROT, OHO
10/30/'89 ""

J&amp;L
INSULATION

YOUNG'S

SIGNS

BILL

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

CAREER POSITION AVAILABLE
b

992•3471.

B.

Now /n.
Stock//
AIR CONDITIONERS - HEAT PUMPS ond
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

....... ... . .. .... . .. ........... . .
'

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

located On Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141
(6141 446-9416 or 1·800-872-5967

4 -29 -91

USED APPUANCES

A&amp;B
Ohio end hold ..Id rlght-ol·
wey lnvlolell for public
COMPLOE AUTO
hlghwey purposes end per·
•Vinyl Siding
mit no algna, poatera, bill·
UPHOLSTERY
•Replacement
boerda, roedaldt atanda or
Convertible
Tops.
Windows
other privet• lnatellellona
Carpets.
Headliner
•Roofing
within the right-of-way lim·
•Insulation
Ito; and
&amp; Seat Covers and
(c) Place end melntaln 111
JAMES KEESEE
Minor Auto Repair .
trafftc control devices con·
992-2772 or
MAIN
ST., MASON, WV .
forming to the Ohio Monuol
742-2251
of Uniform Trtlllc Control
1-(304)539 B7Van Place
Devices en the Improvement
Middleport. Ohio
In compllenc:o with the pro·
773-9560
11-14-Hn
vlalone of Section 4511.1T
and related aectlona of lhl
Ohio Revised Code; end
(d) Reguleta perking In the
cuatlllt
following menner:
NEW
USTING
1974
New
Yor1&lt;er
Home
on
.69
acre
.
CARPENT£R SERVICE ·
SECTlONV
Home includes 5 moms. 2 bedrooms. 1 balh. an 8x24
-Room Additions
(Right-ol-woy, Utility
axpando with an additional room. Front &amp; rear porches. 1
- Guner wortt:
Reorrona-nt end Damoge
car garage. ASKING $17,500.
by ~lck molt1Wf
- Eieetricel •nd Plumbing
end Uablllty
- Concrete work
Raaponalbllltlot)
CHESTER-REAUV NICE HOME! - 2 slory brick &amp;
- Roofing
· a~rby
(1) Thll Ill IXIItlng lll'Ml
frame home 9 rooms. 5 bedrooms, 2'~ baths. Large
- lntertor &amp; Exterior
ond public WIY rlght-of•WIJ
Painting
master bedrOom and bath. storage room. fruil cellar,
.
~UALITY
.
within the Vlllege which Ia
apple
trees,
workshop
in
basement.
2
car
garage
all
on
!FREE
ESTIMATES)
necotaery lor the eforoteld
4~ acres I ASKING $73,500.
. Point Pleasant · 67~92 ' :
Improvement, shell be m•d•
V. C. YOUNG Ill
avallabletherelor.
THIS
HOME
IS
PERFECT
lor
a
couple
wilh
child
or
for
992-6215
(b/ The! the Stele will
older individuals. The 1 floor plan home fealures 2
ecqu re eny tddltlonel right·
Pomeroy, Ohia
Public
Notice
bedroom~~. 1 balh. nice kitchen cabinets and n1ce front
11 -14-'90 tin
of·way •equlred fer the conporch to mlax on. ASKING $19,500.
atructlon of the eloroaold
lmp7ovemenL
ORDINANCE NO. 1243·91
MIDOLEPORT - Here is a really nice remodeled 2 story
(c) Thetarrangementa have
An Ordinance to Estabflah
home in town with all the exrrasl Carport. equipped
SHRUB &amp; TREE
been or will be mede with
o Refuse Fund end
kitchen.
2
AIC
units,
new
plumbing
&amp;
wiring
.
MANY
end egre1111an11 oblllntd
App7oprlale Funds lor Ito
GREAT FEATURES! Asking $42,500 COME TAKE A
TRIM and
lrom oil public utility comp•·
Operation for 1gg1 .
LOOK
AND
MAKE
AN
OFFER
nloo whoae linea or atruc·
Be II ordelned by the
REMOVAL
turea will be effecred by the
Council of the VIllage or
WE'LL
SEE
YOU
AT
THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
aald Improvement end aald
Middleport oa lollowo:
•LIGHT HAULING
FAIR THIS WEEK!
companies heve agraed to
Sec. I. Thll tho~e Ia hereby
make any and ell ntcaoaory
•FIREWOOD
ealabllahacf o Refuu Fund
ptent removtll or reerrongeHENRY E. CLELAND .........................................992-619t
wllhln the treasury of the
menta In such menner u to
TRACY BRINAGER...........................................949·2439
village.
SLACK
be cleer of eny construction
JEAN TRUSSELL ............................................. 949·2660
Sec. 11 . That all receipts
called for by the plono of
JO HILL. ............................................................. 985-4466
related to the !rash pickup
992-2269
oervlce
within
tho
village
uld lmp7ovemanl
ond sold
· ··:···:···:···:···:··:···:···~···:···:···:··:.. ·:···:...:..·:--·:···=--=·!19:2:·2:2::59= ahall be depoolted In thla USED RAILROAD TIES
companies
heva egraed
to ~~=O:F:F:IC:E.:··:···:··:
meke ouch necessary rea•·
6-1 2·90-lfn
fund end all npendllurea
rangementa lmmedletely oft·
Public Notice
Public Notice
shall be paid from this lund.
11 nollflcatlon by 11ld
Ill. Thot there Ia hereVIllage or the Depertment of (I) That the Installation of poauge end epproval by bySoc.
appropriated lunda In the
Transportation.
111 utility facllltlea on the the Moyor; otherwlee, II omount of $45,000 for tho
(d) Thalli Ia hereby ogroed rlghl·of·way ahall conlorm ohall toke aflact ond be In calendar yur 1991.
that 1ha VIllage shall be ot with the requirements cl the fo•ce from ond titer the ear•
Sec. IV. Thla Ordinance
Ito own expenll, make ell Federal Highway Admlnl· Unt period tllowed by low. shall
taka effect end bo In
rearrongemanta of wtler atretlon Polley and Pro· Pooaed: Auguat5, T991.
Ioree
from
ond oftor tho ear·
Roofing, Vinyl
melna, aervlce llnu, lira cedura Memorsndum 30·4 Alleot: Brenda L Morris
Ileal
dala'permllled
by law.
hydrants verve boxeo, aanl• "Utility Relocations and Cle•k
Poaoed
the
22nd
day
of
D. Seyler July, 1991
tary •-~~~ or other munl· Adjuatmenta" end the
siding, Painting,
clpelly owned utlllllaa . Depert-ment of Trans-porta·
Mayo• Anast: Jon P. Buck, Clerk
end/or eny eppurtanencaa llon"a ruleo on Utility
U.rry Wehrung
Dewey M. Horton and Home repairs
therero, which do not comp· Accommodltlon.
P7aaldent ol Council
President
ol Council
ty with the provlalona of (g) Thet the VIllage hereby (812, 19, 2tc
667·6681
(8) 1211c
Dlrtcllve No Dft.P·P-411.
egr111 to occepl roapon(1) That lht 'Conllructlon, albUity tor eny end all dam·
After 7:00 p.m.
raconetructlon, end/or r..r. egaa or clalmo for which II
7-:ZS I mopd .
rangemenl of both publlcl7. It logeHy llebla arlolng 11om
end
utll· ere,
the negligence
of Ita
Ilea, Prlvetely
referred toowned
In aubaecemployee•
andofflc·
or ..-----~1=1===W=a:n:ted===----,J r---~==~--1
Ilona (c) end (d) ebova, shell •p•nll In the performanc~t
·
CHESTER
be
done
In
euch
•
menner
o
lhl
Vlllega"a
obligation•
COUNTRY
CLUB
11 not to Interfere unduly mede or egread to In
with the operetlon ol !he S.Ctlont (a), (b), (c), (d), (e),
Golf
conlnlctor constructing the
llerllllllboVI.
Front End Manager position requires a
Lessons (6) .... 155.00
Improvement end ell back· ·
ordlnence Ia hereby
I
I
f
5
f
•
3
f
$4 00
filling of trench•• made diCiered to be en emergen·
m n mum 0
years 0 expertence, 0
New Grips............ ·
ntcllllry by IUCh utility OJ motaure by
of the
which being in a supervisory position. Pay
Woads ................ 122.00
rllrrtnll!,",.1nll ahe
be
fj
d
,
lrom .................. $14.75
1dllnbc'• IIMdlortJtpedltlnghlghwey
perform... n -ecoo •
Improvements to promote an
ne tiS ase upon expenence nng
p IRS
with the provision_• of the hltlhwey hlety, end provld·
•
RE A
Ohio Depertment or ..fltMOIIv•lhe efllrmeuve resume to Vau~an's Cardinal Supermarket
Used 11om ............ ss.oo
Trenaporllllon Colittrucdon vote ol two-thlru of the
iddl
OH
ed W00 ds
$7 00
end ilaterlll ,Specification• memberl llecled to Councl~
in
eport,
•
Us
......... •
end thlll be aubltct to It thlll takl -lfftcttnd be In
AWARDS
epprovalllf
1111 Stall.
1~ lmlftldlete.y upon 111
8·9· 1 mo .
..,

d

64
0~

a....

Busines Services

Real Estate General

'""on

f &lt;t rrn l lj u tpm u nl
w .ull .,d t o
lt vt!\ l od o..

MI SC M Ote h andiSC
But ldtng Sl!pph os
Pe t s l o r Sale
M us•calln s t ru lllcn b

56

2 1 Bus lfl t!SS O p pmt un1t y
22 Mon e&gt;t 10 l o a n
2)

f Of

6]
6)

Merchandise
51

54
55

77 3

&amp;I

I;GilJOQI

53

Appl t! G ru~o~ t!

M o btl u Ho rn es lo 1 S , ol o·
B us111055 Butldn•u:.
I 0 11o &amp; A c tt! olYf
R edl ( s ta t e W o~• • t t: l l

M•s ce-l l~tflt:O I J s

THE

••

r olr m:; t or S al e

l t~ on

Thursday, Aug. 15, 7:00 P.t.1.
Pleasant Valley Cafeteria
Topic "Open Heart Surgery•
Call 875-4340, Ext. 387
For More Info.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Neme of StrHI: Main StrOll
Route No. U.S. Route No. 33
ORDINANCE NO. 800
An emergency o•dlnence
tniCIId by the Vllllgl of
Pomeroy, Melga County,
Ohio, In the mellor ol the
herolnefler deecrlbed
Improvement, end to request cooperation from the
Dlractor of Tranaportallon.
WHEREAS, the Vlltaga h..
Identified the noed for ond
proposes the Improvement
ol 1 portion ol the public
highway which It doacrlbed
•• lollowo: the raaurleclng
or u.s. Roull No. 33 within
the village llmlta beginning
0.10 mile eut ol Stall Route
No. T24 end ending 0.08
mllaa weal of the uat corporation limit at the weot
edgo of the Pomeroy Bridge.
Said portion of hlghwey
within lhe municipal corpo·
ration lmlll being herelnaft•
er referred to •• the
lmprovemen~ end
WHEREAS, the vllltge lur·
ther dealrat cooptrlllcn
from the Director of
Tranoportetlon In the pltr&gt;nlng, dtalgn end construction of aald lmprovemenL
NOW THEREFORE, Be II
ordolned by the Council ol
the Village ol Pomeroy,
Ohio:
SE~:llON I (Cooperation)
Thlt atld Vllltgl hereby
requests the cooperation of
the
Director
of
Trenaportallon, In the coal
or thl tbove dllcrlbed
Improvement •• followt:
SECTION1·A
That the lump aum of so.oo
to hereby 1pproprlated for
the Improvement of the
hlghwey •• dtecrlbed here!·
nobove, by the VIllage.
SEcnoN 11 (Consent)
That II Ia dectered to be In
the public lntareal thet tha
consent of 11ld VIllage be
end such consent Ia hereby
given to the Director of
Tranapor'-llon to construct
the eboVI deecrlbed
lmprovemen~ In eccordence
with pllna, apaclflcatlona
end eatlmataa •• approved
by lha Director.
SECTION Ill
(Authority to Sign)
Thll the Moyor of aeld
Vlllege, Ia hereby tuthorlzed
to enter Into m1lntenence
end parking egr-.nenta ond
epeclel ccntreclutl obllg•tlona.
SECTION IV
(Mtlnllnence.z. Perking
Traffic Control :slgnelt end
Devlcel)
Thet upon completion ol
eald' Improvement, eeld
Vllloge, will lher ..ner kup
uld hlghwey·open to traffic
tllll IIIIIN, end
(a) Uelnteln the lmp1ov•
mentln eccordonce with the
provlelone of the etatutM
relating thereto end make
emple flnencltl end other
provlalonl for auch melntenance; end
.
(b) Ueintaln the right-of·
WIY and kNp It frH of
obatructlone In ,1 menner
utlelaotory 1o the State of

H om us f or Sal t

]]
33
31

P t Pltl aset nt

882
89 5

9J7

74 2
66 7

11
1]

] 1

JS

Services

Heart to Heart Meeting

Public Notice

~

JOHN A. WAD~ M.D. INC.

Hi11JlPY Ad s
6 l os t and Fouml
7 Y;ud Sill e (pilld •n ;utv an t:t!l
8 Pubhc Sal e &amp; A•• Cllo n
9 WantOO to Bu y

~f!lll[Qyment
C/n .~.~i.fir•d 1m~r· .~

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

~

"4J Reasonable Prices"

Take care, enjoy the fair and
STAY COOL!

I MASON FAMILY

4 G•v eaw•v

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Methodist Cooperative Parish in ,,
Pomeroy. This facility is. a. real 'l
asset to the commumty, gmng a ~
lland to those in need, and often ~·
those who "fall between the ;
craclcs" of the system.
';
Thanks to a group made up •·•
mostly or adults from Union Coun- ::
ty, and most recently a group of ·:
kids from Tennessee and Illinois, ·:;
the clothing bank, located on the •
second floor in the building (which, ::;
ironically, was once a brewery!) :'!
will now be "usable" year-round, .'
thanks to wallboard !hat was .:
installed by these groups.
•
In addition, the whole building ;:
got a fresh coat of paint.
·~
So. thanlcs to those groups, and •
also to those local follcs who devote "
so much time and energy themselves working at the parish office.
It's a great project!

WANT
ADS
·WORK!

Annouc ement s

;~ d s

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

German Village bus tours offered ..
German Village, located in
downtown Columbus, is presendy
testing its new public bus tour program through Oct 14.
The village is a 233-acre
restored 19th century Gennan com·
munity comprised of private residences, shops. restaurants and gar·
dens. It is the largest privately
funded restored historical area in
the United States and is listed in
the National Register for Historical
Places.
The new public tours are a way
to get to know the village. Every·
one is welcome and a personal
guide will take you on a tour
through the brick streets lined with
quaint shops, artist studios, restaurants and beautifully renovated
homes.
All or the tours include a multimedia presentation of the histo~,
architecture and restoration of thiS
internationally famous historic village; a printed guide and map of

.60

J

. 05 t day

By Brian J. Reed

Hot••• A new solar sensor system
devised for use in automobiles lias
been devised by GTE in an attempt
to harness the sun's awesome
power for use in car climate control.
More interesting than the invention, llowever, was information
regarding the 2400 watts or solar
power that are deposited in the passenger comparunents of our vehicles every sunny day.
·
That wattage, believe it or not,
has the capacity to run four air conditioners. three toaster ovens, four
washing machinges, 16 television
sets, two irons, two toasters OR
four swimming pools. And all of
this time, I just thought it was hot.

Card of Thanks
In Me mory

IIIII) dil'f S ill flO Chillge

'•

Consider it done.

.30
42

1
2

R011 tes ouc lor conse cut•ve run ~ bo o !.enup d .., s w oll bech .. ged

lor each dily as sep •rat e

Announcements

15 Words

$4.00
$6 00
$9.00
$13.00

16

10

Ov~r

Rate

15

ROOFING

WE DO

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

,JROMM BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES
•20 V ears Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custom Remodeling

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or
698-6864

742-2328

5/ 22 / tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates

985-4473
667-6179
5-31 -"90 tfn

6 -14- '91-tfn

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING
POOlS,
CISTERNS, ETC.
1,625 GAL- S35-S45
Rt. 1, Box 71·A
RUTlAND,
OHIO 45775-9626
614-742· 2904

7-24 lmo

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER ond
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

6-6-'91

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
ILl MAKES

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-533S or
985-3561

AcroSI frem Post Office
217 I. Sacend St.
POMEIOY, OliO

3/6/90/Hn

Howard L Wriltstl

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7·15·91 · 1 mo. pd .

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
tBUY •SELl •TRADE
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday

10:00 am· 5:00 pm

742-2421
21f2 Mi. outside
Rutland on New
Lima Rd.
5-tO-'!Hin
INDEPENDENT
CARPET CUANEIS
and TILE FLOOR CARE
•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Eotimates
•Carpel Has Fast 07V
Time ·
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKE LEWIS, Owner
Rt. t. Rutland. OH.

742-2451
3· 14.'91 -tfn

•VINYl SI01NG
•ALUMINUM SIDING a
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION y

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
llaw Nilmts lullt
""Free Estimates"
PH. 949-280 I
or las. 949·2860
NO SUNDU CAW

3·11-«n

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
Specializing in
Custem Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USEO PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS

992-7013
or 992-5553
01 lOU FlEE

1-aoo, ..a.oo7o
DAIW.. OliO
7131 1'91

tin

Gel Quick Bestlltsl Place A S5 Per Day ·Bulletin Board - A1Jvertisement In The Daily Sentinel Classilied Sect1o n.
.,

,,

�,.
' "'~

.'

"..,_
'
•
,~

~The Dally Sentinel

Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

34

Announcements
4

Business

44

Buildings
OFACE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Avo., Galllpcllo. Cl011 tc
Court House. 1 room, 2 rooma,
3 rooma, 4 rooms. All nicely

Giveaway

1 112 Year Old Al11bn Spite

Mole. 514-448-452l

decoraled, air conditioning,
your water &amp; aewer bill are paid.
Make your choice now. No
quoe.. over tha phonelo you
mu111 ' " them. Phone r an
•ppolnlment. 61~76i&amp; day,

1-tamale klnan to glvaway, 614-

94i·2m.
4 KIUana, Black &amp; Grey Tiger,
All H&amp;'il Whlla fHt. lflter

Trolntd. 614-379-28l2.

446.05~9

lVI.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Apartment
for Rent

71

Wright

Manor
and
Rlveralae
Apartment• In Middleport. From

$196. Call 014-ggz-7781. EOH.
Llloyotto Moll: 3br1 2 Bolho, All
Utllllln lncludoa. $425/mo.
Dopoolt Roquii'ICI. No Pill. 114-

2934 1n~lme.

Lost &amp; Found

North 41 hlulllddiaport, Ohio. 2
bedroom mlohod opt, dopotfl
and reference required, 304482·
2565.

Found-1-mala Coon Hound,
blaeklbrown on Sumner Rd.,
614·985-4188.

Found : Llrga Ooil In

On• and
two
bedroom
aportmonlo lor ront. ldlll lor
amoll lomllln and olngiiO. 30467S-2053 or 675-4100.

Bula~llla

Addison Are~ . 614467..0403.

Lost-Gold Bulova Watch near
Clarks' Jewerty tnd Pomeroy

Polt Office,

LOST-part hound, young, mala,
Rutland, black &amp; white on chest,
tact &amp; feet, ona blua aya, one
brown 614-742-2201

7

31
M1dlc1l
Technologlst/Medlcll
Laboratory
Technrclan:
MT

Yard Sale

ASCPl,
liT
(HHS),
liT
AlfT)il.tLT (ASCP). Plrt-Timo
osition • 32 Hours Per Pay
Poriod~ Ahor 811floll1, Starting
Saloriol Will Bo $12.42111.47 Par

~

G aIll po II S

I

,.,...,..,.~&amp;~~~~-.,....,..,.~ Given
Hour. For
Conalderallon Will Be
Prevlou. Expertance.

~

ALL Yard Sotoa Mull Bo Paid In Shin DIHorontllil Ar1 $.60/$1.10
Adv1nce. DEADLINE: :Z:OO p.m.

thl dly bllol'l tho ad 11 to run.
Sunday ldlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday odlllcn • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
Bullvilll Tcwnttouoo: Onl Doy
Onlyl Augull 12. Good Scl1ocl
ClclhH, And llorol i·?
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard SaiH Mull Bo Paid In

Per Hour For Afternoon And

Midnight Shlno. Coli O'Bionoss

Memorial Hosplt1l, Athena, OH.

614-593-5551, EOE.
OT COTA Full Tlmo Plenant Hill
Manor A 201 Bod Modem HoaMh
Cart Facility l1 Soaking A
Rtglllorod Cartlllod Or Car·
tlllcotlon Ellglbll Poracn To
Provide Occupatlon1l Therapy
S.rvlcn
To
Our
Moatly
Gerl•ctrlc Cllentll. Thla le A
H1nd1 On Poahlon Tr~lnlng And
Supervlalon Available. "Com·
p«allva Salary And Benefit
P1cklg1. Reply By Rnume Or
Phone To Mr. Llnd1m1n By

Advtnce. Deadline: 1:OOpm tha
day before tha ad Is to run,
Sunday Hltlon- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.

8/18/111. P.O. Box 334, Plkllon,
OH 45681, 014-28i-2394, EOE.

Saturday.

Part·Tima Saln: 10·18 Houra A

Wllk, Acqullliono JIWIIry, 151

8

Second Annue, (Tope'1 Fuml·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

tu,. Building) Golllpollo, OH.
Apply Clnly1 i-11, Monday,
Tuold.ly, Woa,..dly.
Rick Pooroon Auction Company,
With
full time aucUonMr, complete Rocoplloniii/Socl'ltary
audlon urvlce. LlcenMd Ohio, Prov111 Offici Skllll, IBM Per·
10011 Sylllom Comptllor!Word
Wall Virginia, 304-Tn-5785.
Pr..-. llutl Enjov Milling
And W«klng With Poople.
9 Wanted to Buy
PIIIMnt Working Condltlono.
Sind RHumo By Augull 16th

8 (5 or 8") lumld porch poata.

Phone 304a87'5-5871,
To Buy: UMCI 1991
Hilll Nur.lng Books,

To: R.ceptlonlat/S.crabry, Box
465, elo The Galllpolia ArN
Chamber Of Commerce, Gal·

Upollt, 0H 45631.
614-388-1751.
Shoney'a will ba t1klng ·~
Wanted all Junk 1nd acrap mat- pllcatlcns Friday, S.turd1y, and
II, 304405.jo36,
-=su_n_d...;•Yc..·--:-----::-::---:7
Wanltd to buy, Standing timber, Someone to care for 4 mo. old,
Bob Willlama &amp; Sone 614-9Q2-

5449.

Want.d To Buy: Tobaeeo Stlcks,
Call Anytime, 614.-388-f76i.

Top Prlc10 Paid: All Old U.S.

Coins, G~d Ringe, Oiamonds 1

Sllvor Colnl, Stifling, Golo
Colnt. II.T.S. Coin Sl\op, 151
S.c:ond Avenue, CliUipolla.

Employment Services

f)l'llerobly In my homo blgln·
ning Sapl, 3, non.. moker, ,.,,
l'lq. &amp;14-gg2-3542

groomed,

well

experienced

Salas par11on the t.lalgs Co.
aru, 614-i92-268i.

14
Rllraln

Bualn•• College, Spring Vtllay
PIIZI. Call Todly, 614-446-438711

Help Wanted

$2,500 CREDIT CARD!
Guaranteed ume diY approval!
AIIO qualify lor NO dopos~

17 Miscellaneous
Hand-woyen ruga tor 1111 or
do weaving, 81(..ii2·309D.

will

'JISAIMC and euh advancea. 1-

800-279-2000 Ext. 2524.

18

AVON • All 1r111, Call Marilyn

2-Fem111 atud1nta 181king a
pereon who commutn to the
Urnvaralty of Ric Grande and

Wuver 304-882-2645.

ADDRESSERS WAN'TED lm·
modlololyl No Exporloncl
FHA
NocoUiry.
Procou
llortgog1 Rotundo. Work At
Horne. Call1-405-321-3064.

m.

Al .m.-10p.m.

Unlv~ralty,

Toll

Rolundod.
AVON I All Ami I Shirley
Spoaro, 304-67S-142i.
Bobyoltter: My Homo Only, For 2
Chlldrtn. Rllloblo, Punctual,
Wontod Long Tormlll Rllol'ln·
cea Required: 614-441..0723 .
Be on TV many needed for

commercials. Now hiring all
agn. For casting Info c1ll 61577G-1111 ext. T-237.

wtllfng to hllp

w/gll monoy. 614-ii2·:C463.
Mil

B1by11t

Anr.lme.

AUSTRALIA WAN'TS YOU
Excellent
Pay,
BonoiHo,
Tronopcrtotlon,
407-292-41117,
Ext.

Ohio

Wanted to .Do

In

My

Rodnay

Home

Area.

AI erencn Available. Call 514-

245-8786.
Dunloj Walding Shop. Will do
small obs end manufactura
small heme. 304-i37·2733.
Georgn Portable Sawmill, don't
haul yow loQa to the mill just

coli 304-e75-tl57.
Have Room For 1 Elderly Per·
ocn In My Homo. II Or F. 614448-2114l
Indoor/Outdoor JN~Intlng, l1wn

work 1nd h1uling, 814-H2·2492.

Ext. 161784.

Lady, 37-yra. old, would like to
do hou11 eiHnlnoJcooklng for
room and board wfth gentleman
40 to 50 tor companionship and
will hlfp wfth llpen... Wrfte
to: P.O. Box '11 Pomeroy, Ohio

EARN MONEY Roodlng Books!

Miss Paula'• Day C.rw Center.

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring Men/Woman. Up To S&amp;OO
WMkl y. Tnmsportatlon, Hou•

lng. CALL NOW 1-206-736-7000

457111.

Income Potantlal.
afford1bl1, chlldcal'l. M·F
Dotoll1. (1) 805-1162-aotiO Ext. y. 1s.r.,
a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 21'&gt;-tO.
10189.
Beier., 1her IChool. Dro~lna
THE
BIGGEST wlicomo. 814-448-8224. Now InEARN
font Toddler Caro, 814-448-8227.
PAYCHECKS
IN THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY
CAST Drivara C11h Some Of W1n11o 11k1 Clrl of akilrly ptr·
Tho Blggoll Poychocko In Tho oon, h&lt;MIIICieonlng, or babyoltIndustry. We Ale Currently tlng In Point Pl11sont, Lien
Hiring
Experl~
Truck 1r11, day• only. Call 304-4511- ·
Crivera And Reeent G111d1 From 1532 or 458-191{.
Trucking Sc:hoola. It You Have Will build patio ccv.,., docko, ·
No Experience, Check Out Our ICrHned rooms, put up vinyl
P1yblck Driver School Progr11m aiding 0&lt; troller oklrtlng. 614Thlt P.. l You On Tho Rood 245-6557.
Eamlng Top Dollerl Within 3
Will De Bobyllttlng In My Homo.
w..u.
Como In And Chlc:k OUt Tho 1 1/2 IIIIo Out At. 218, Rof.,.,.
Bonllht That Wo Ollor:
.... 114-4~7565.
•Top Ply
Will do brUIII flog and flnloh
•Gre1t un..
mowlnQ, Point P11111nt a~1.
• - Nc Toueh Fr~lghl
• P111olon And Profit.Shorlng 304-875-87111.
Pl..
Will do hpuM cl11nlng, point
•lnll.l'ance
yard wort&lt;, Cll'l tor lldtrly, and
Quarterly omallorrllldl,
•
Gulrontood
304475-4258.
Bon.,_
• Job Socurlty
Pcoitlont For Exporionc«f
Frnanc ial
Ortv.,., Sludontll And Trolnooo
Ar8 Op1t1 lmmedlltlfy - N You
ouallly•~ on Ttw StiOI Hiring.
Business
Come l'l'lpii'ICI To FIH OUt Ail 21
Aj,ptlcltlon.
Opponunlty
HOLIDAY INN, CIVIC CENTER
Exit 58b, Off 1-M
INOTI0£1
Chllflllcn, wv
OHIO VALLEV PUBUSHING CO.
Tuoodly, Augull13th, 11101
recommenda that you do bull2PIII 7PM
n - wHh pooplo you k~ lnd
wod.-oy, Auguot14th, 11101
NOT tc 11nd money through tha
VAlli 4PII
111111 untU you hovo lnvHtfgotod
· Unablo To Atlond? Catillcndoy tho ollorfng.
ThN Frldly, I Lm. To 4 p.m.
Arthur'• Chain Link Fonco.
HIOCI-733-2771.
CRST
-d!ontlol, Commorctol, lnEqual Opportunity Emptoyor • duotrlat, Frw Elllmat•l Compllfl lnllllllltlon. Pllono: 814mil.
3844217.
$30,000/yr.

41

Ona
bedroom
untumlahed
garage apartment,
hut, air
concf., private, vary nlce qullit
nolghborhood. $250 month. 304-

au

Houses for Rent

675-1550 or 614-446-5.
Furnished
Rooms

dnlrable location, new root,

new 3&lt;ar Qlrlge,lnterlor nHdl

finishing, 28951 Bashan Rd, 3 bedroom llouM Pork Drlvo,
Raclno, OH, $17,000. Call 514- Point PINoonL Roloroncoo &amp;
V92·7305 or 949-2784.
Dopoah, 30W76-1242.
2·BR houu, :Heres, 3-ml from 3 Btdroom Houoo For Rant. Gal·
Chollor, OH. 614-iSii-3920.
llpcllo City Umlta. 513-1164-3440.
3br Home, 25 Acres, 1 Mile From
City Limits. Will Consider Trade.

614-446-1340.

3br Large Kllc:han, L.A. Laundry
Single G1uge. Rodney Vlll•ge

12, $37,500. 614-446-1358.

4 bdrm hOUM, 23 IC~I 3J4
baHmlnt blrn, utillta dl1h,

.-Imming pool, 2 ctr gar~ge, 5
mllea from town on paved road,
city water, cistern, drlllld well,
new roof, 11MI. siding, oulbulld·
lng, wae appraiHd $2i,OOO will

ooll $25,000 phone 614-949-2163
5 room cozy home, extrl 101,
Clition, alumn siding, tront.lblck
porchll,

mnaag1.

3()4.m-!i235

IIIVI

3

Bedroom

City

Ranch,

Sci1Colo, $300/mo. 014-388-8305
Anor 5 p.m.
3br, 2 Bath~1 Z C.r Qa,.ge, 8

MIIH From tl_9lillt' Medical Canter, On 160 Acrou From North

Golllo High School. $400/mo.

o~~·a• l&gt;epoett. Aeterenc11.
07'06.

61

810 26th Slrttlb 2 bldroomo,
living room,
ath, kitchen,
family room, vinyl siding, cor-

pet, cedlr clollts, eltctrlc hut,
air cond., chain link b1ck fence,
excell•nt location, low 30's. 304875-5416 appolnlm1nt only.

bathe, living room, modem
kitchen w/appllancea, large
Florida room, 12x14 tocl·shed,
car port, 70x100 lot, $49,900.

Contact 614-992-7855.
For Sale By Ownar: Quality

Brick Ranch CloH To Holzer

Nice
Home In
011lr1b" Location. 1 112 Bathe,
Full Basement, Garage, Poe·

Galllpolll,

olblo Flnonclng. 614-25~655.
GOVERNIIEN'T HOMES From $1
(U Ropolr). Dollnquonl Tax
Proper1y. Flepoaesalona. Your
Area '(1) 1105-962-8000. Ext. GH·
1018i 'For Curranl Repo List.

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobile Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeray.
Lote, rentala, parte, 111M. Call

614-lliZ·lltl'V.

Merchandise

An appU1nces. · $475 month.

required.
Sacurfty dopoolt
Avolloblo Sopt. 1, 1991. 304-87687111 or 676-3615.
Nlco 2 bedroom ll'lillr1 largo

St .. Kanaugo, OH 614-441i-111l3.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom trailer on Rt. 588,

2br, Air, Cablo, Now Carplf, Nlco
&amp; Cl11n, Booutllul Rlvor Vlow In
Kanauga. Foattr'l Mobile Home
Pork. 614-446·1602.
3-bdrm, 1·bath ckKJbto wldo, lg
yard, 2-elr glrage,

a ml back of

Roclno $375 mo, $275 dlpcolt
rot. roq. 814-843-5228.
3br Tr11IIM For Rent, On Morgan
Siller Rood. 614-31'9-2311.
llobllo Homo, fumlshod, 2 bid·
roomo, $175 pluo utllltlll. $100
dtpollt. 304-875-8512.
MobUa HomM For Rent, con·
llructlon workll'l and Hud wol·
como. 614-446.0508 or 446-8321.
Nlco 2 bldrcom mobllo homo,
large private lot, wfcentral air,

Galllpollo Forry orN. 304-875·
1226.
Nlco, Good. Location, Clean, No
sign con1rac11 2· BR, Large LA, Polo, On Privata Lot, With 2
OR, Bath, haa new root and gut· lrlilero, S50 Dopoolt, 614-446ter, new copper and PVC plumb- 0130.
Ing, nMd some work. You pay
tor the moving! Only Hrlous Very Nice, t4x60, Air Condition,
callol'll Colt 614·992-2071 ohor Cobia Avolloblo, Dopcoh &amp;
7:00pm~
Rolori'!CH Roqulrod. 614-4460527.
Llko Now, 2 Year Old, 2br,
llobllo Homo, Pormanotly Sot, 44
Apartment
With 14x70 Covered Patio/Car
Port, And Storage Building On
for Rent
Llrgo Lot, In Oai Hill Ohio. City
Ulilllin, Appllancn Included. 1br Apartment, W11er, Sew1g1,

•••d

614-882·7518 For Appolntmanl.

Garbage

On• atory brick ranch etyle
ho~• wllh three bedrooma, •t·
t1ch;d two Clr garage, 1 • 112
bathe, hot wafer l:aHboard
hHt, g•• furnace whh cen1r11
air. Tha roome lrt large 1nd
roomy, hal a marble fireplace,
carpel and 'lllnyl tloon, with

~p.m .

Paid.

O.poalt

A..

qulrocf. CaM &amp;14:.46-4345 Ahor
2 Bedroom• Both
Khchln,
Uvlng

Upst1lre,
Room,

Refrigerator, Stove Fumlahad.
L.uae, 6 Deposit. No Pete. 450
Fll'lt Avenue, 614-446-3444.

space for onlca. Thl1 qualhr.
homo 11 locatod at 724 McCu •
loch Rood, Point Pl11unt, WV,
1nd slt1 on 2 beautiful lois. Apartment tor rent In Point
Prlco Rtducod. Tho l1ou11 Ia Pleuant. $175.00. Clean, newly
located In ana of the beat docorolod. Call418-446-2200.
neighborhoods In the ai'UI. For
lurtltor Information piNM con- BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN'TS AT
tact C. 011111 Klyaer, Executor, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
II (304) 675.&amp;440 or 675-8595.
ESTATES, 538 Jockoon Piko
$19umo. Walk to ollop &amp;
Unique 3 bedroom houee on 10 from
movlll.
Calll14-446·25&amp;8. EOH.
acraa, axtru, 1 mila from Mid-

32 Mobile Homes

Slooplng room• wllh cooking.
Alao tn~llar apace. All hook·upa.
cau ••• :z:oo p.m., 304·J73..
5651, 111100 wv.

gal'llgt, fireplace In family room ..

HOUSE FOR FREEl! Must move
oH lot In lllddloport. Fill In
blument,
and straw. Must

dleport, Low 30'• 216-3i5-23Qg.

Stirling 11 $120/mo. Gollil Hotll.
614-44f.9860.

ranch whh 3 bldroomo, dcublo

Galllpcllo. Colt 304-675-57011 or
614-44&amp;-2133.
Flltwooda Aroo Pomoroy. 2
Story Homo. Now Kltchon, 2br Fumlahld, 4br Unfumlahad,
B1throom &amp; Carpeting. 17 On Coro IIIII Rood, No Polo.
Acl'lt. 614-446-2359.
Dopoah Roqulr1d. 814.,245-5622.
Florid• retirement home, West 2br
Moblll
Homo
N11r
coast. Quiet strut, close to Evorgr1on. 614.3711-2678.
water and golf couraas. 3-BR, 2·

Roome for rent • week or monch.

Meadowbrook Drive, all brick

yard, comer of Rand ana Perch

1ft1r Sp.m.

Nowii1Southul1em

436i aher 5 p.m.

Rentals

Reduced To S.ll: 2 Story 3br
Comer Lot In Cheahl~. Ohio.

Exc:ellent Condillon. Fl•nanclng
Avolloblo With Pay Pclnta. !104i32-«li5i, 904·932-7670.
12 yr ~d, 3-BR, 2-blth home.
Oayllghl buemenl, 1-ac:re,

untumllhed

oportmont all utllltiH plid In·
eluding lV coblo; Ovorlooklng
Ohio lllvor, oxtro nice. Now
apartment eultable lor one per·
'""b$350rr month. Reference
&amp;
opoo requlrod. B14-44&amp;-

Homes for Sale

Hospllal. 4br, Full Basement
Llrgo Shodtd Lot. 614-446.0547

Business
Training

Reglstaratlon tto-0&amp;-1%748.

11

bedroom

One

614-94~2630 .

EHiciency

Apartmanl,
Fur·
nlahed, Dl~h, &amp; Rtfarence

Roqull'ld. No P111,114-446-487i.

EHiclency, Move, ref bath
wlahower1.1/c 111 elect, Juu Clr·
$500 Robat.On Any 1190 Or polod, HuD
occpttd, 304-67S1981 ·Lot Model At EIMI Home 6200.
Center. FrH Set Up I O.livtry.
Colt 1-600-5119-5710.
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment,
S225
utiiHIN lncludod, dapoalt
10 Ac:r•, 1980 81yvlew, 14x70, l'lqulrod, no poll; 114-9i2·2218.
7x21 Expando, 2 Full B11hs,
New Carpet Throughoul, 1ix20 Fumlahed
Apanmant,
1br,
2 C.r Gtrage, $18,000, No Land Share Both. 7V1 Fourth Avo, Gil·

for Sale

Controcta. 614-379-2i48.
llpclll. $185 Utlllllll Paid. 6144411-4416 After 7p.m.
12x60 Contr1l Air, 514-446-0845.
Fuml1hld Apanmen11,
1br,
14x70 trail• tor 1111, 3-BR, 2- $225 UtiiHI11 Pold. m Founh
bllh, wlexptndo. 114·742-2910.
Avo, 6 1107 Second AVI Ga~
1i&amp;a 121150, 1br, Fumlahtd, Ex- llpolla. 814-441-4418 oftor 7'p.m.
cellent Condition! $2,500. 614- Nlclly Fumlthod Aponmont,
361.cJ832.
1 br, nert to Ubrary, s-rklng,
'*1tra1 l'lllat. air, reference •

51

Household
Goods

1-ctork plno coptalna' bod, 1·
whho twin oz bid, whlto dr-r
wtmlrror, whito chill of
drawora, 514-1112·2i01.
2 Supor Single Wot• Bodo,
Compllll. With Drawll'l Under·
n11th. 614 446 0065.
County Appllonco,_ Inc. Good
ulod oppllonCII, T.v. toto. Op111
6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon ..SII. 814o
44tl·t6gg, 627 3rd. Avo. Gal·
llpcllo, OH
GIIIIIBI'III dlnotto, FIOXIIIol
oolo, trundle bod, dou and
drHMr, 114-1112-51163.
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES
W11h1,., drye,.., refrigeriiOfl,
rongH. Sklggo Apptlonceo,
Uppor River Rd. B11ido Slone
Crootllolol. Call 614-446-73118.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complsto homo lumlohlngo.
Houro: lion-Sot, 9-5. 614-4450322, 3 mila• out Bulavllle Rd.

F,.. O.llvery.

PICKENS FURNITURE
~ousehold

New/U11d
furnishing. 112 mi.

Jorricho Ad. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
call

304-675-1450.

REN'T20WN
614-446-3158
Vl'ra Furniture

Sola 6 Choir, $11.10 WMk;
Roc:llner, $5.47 Wnk. Swlvol
Rockor, $3.63 Wnk.Bunk Bod
Ccmploto 18.41 WNk. 4 Drawer
Cho81, $3.21 Woek; Pollor ltd'
room Sullo, 7 pc., $11.57 WNk,
lncludn Boddlng.Country Plno
Dlnolll With Bench &amp; 4 Chlll'l,
$1Ui Wook.OPEN: Monday
ThN Saturday, k.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
lllloo OH Route 7 On Route 141,
ln Cantonory.
Sl1i1 on All Co~l &amp; Vinyl Floor
Ccvorlng In toe kl II cllolton
Car,rts, Rt 7 Ncnh, 614-4461114 ~
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
0IIvo St., Golllpollo. Now &amp; UMd
lumlluro, hootor:o, WHitm r.
Work boola. 814-446-315i.
VI'RA FURNITURE
611\.446-3158

LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Choir,

Monday Ttvu S1turdly, Oa.m. to

6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 111111 OH Ro ..o 7 On
Routo 141 lri Cantonory.

53

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antlquee,

1124 E. Main Stroll, Pomeroy.
Hcuro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sundoy 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.
614-lliZ-2526.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1-ehllr, t1bl1, S..
cholrl, 1-chHI1 1-dr-r, mloc
Homo, 1 montn old" 494111 SA
338 Lltort Ftflo, 814-•47·2600
1·Davenport,

54

Canning Tomotonll Picked $4 •
1981 Toyoto Pick-Up, Automollc, bulllol. Plcktd own $3. Sllvor
Now lfondl \000 0..-tor, OUIIn Corn lo l'lldy, Raymond
SGOO; Ooooo a-yo, So..go 22 Rowo, &amp;14-247-42i2.
lllgnum, 814-446-8111.
Wontod To Buy: Slondll)g Tim- g)["=-~lng Tomotooo,
blr, Tracy Johnoon Lcigglng,
614-367·751i Aft• 7p.m.
For Sole: Rod Roopborrlos, Pick
Your own. 114.:145-8054.
4 r1t1y wheele, ri~a, cepe, tlr11,
one 3~30 Wlncheeter carbelm

Half Runner

Bean1, For Sale.

rille, 304-Cil8-CIH5.
114-388-W31.
40-!lll bottle goo hot wllor tonk Pick Your OWn Canning
for lale $100, 1*112.ut4
Tom1toea, Bring Cont1fnera,
$3.00 Buohot. Boughman Form·.
Concroto 1 p11ot1c ooptlc tanko, 814-:158-8 535.
Ron E..,.. &amp;nto.,.._ Jock·
11011, OH 1.aoo.&amp;S7-h21. ·
~Niver Q.leen com, $2.00 doz,
King coat-woodbumlng llovo,
wH~'::::..J":P."r
llko rwwk $300, homo 814-742·
fiblrgielo - - WID alii 20118 Wet ·lltZ.:I421
ooporotlly lor 8110.00 uch,

=

=.

~~lor~~21101 lor Information

Flrowood lor ule, 814-fil-3517
after I:GOpm
=-=---':-:-:-:-:::--:---=:----:--:For Solo: Hide-A-Bod, Bluo, 11444tl-353i.
FrHur BMf For Sale, Uve

Weight .70 Canto A Pound. 1143711~118.

Gr1vo1y wolk blhlnd mower,
814·1112-1853.
IBM Compodblo Computer, EGA
Color
llonhor OINt
Ol'lphlco. 30 Mg. !Wd Ortv1,
L.Oidod
wH~
Sollwlro
(oducotlon, buol,..o, go .......)
:104475-8852.
Nlco, - n llognovox 70"
conoclo otor10 wlth AMIFII
r1dlo, 8 track llpo ptopr, 30487S-11125.

Jlt2t.

Sogo Olnllft Entortolnmont
Syllom, ptuo olx gomoo, $150
614·V92·2441
Thermal Wlndowa, 1 Picture
Window, 1 Patio Door, Six
3ft.x3n. Wlndowo, S125. 114-311111828.

55

Building
Supplies

Fanil Equipment

D-17 AC, 011111 Tl'lctor With
Cunlvotor And Grain Drill,
12.560; D-14 AC, With AC
L.oidor, $2,ggs: 7030 AC, Supor
Shorpl SU50: 424 lntomotlonol
011111 Tractor With 5 Ft. Bush
~.
$2,ggs. . Ownor Will
Flnorico. 614-268.&amp;522.
Fer Salo: CO&lt;n Plckoro, 1 And 2
Row PTO U1nura Sprudara,
Fertilize Sprudera Ua111y Far·

Liver Olak, Wh11l Dlah,
Cutllpackera, Post Hole Digger,
Wholl Drills, Other Flold Roady
Equlpmantl
Howe'•
Farm
Machinery, Rt. 124 And llayhow
guaon

5M4.
Jlm'a Form Equlpmont, SR. 35,
Will 01111110111, 814-446-9777;
Wldo -ion now I UMd firm

Chopper,

-tlllraw,

16-foot

Oliver

clean

614-ii2-T.l02

IVIningi.

63
Livestock
:--::---:--:--:--::-:-.
Br1odlng llock. a.... onlh old
Polled-Kareford bull. Angu•Pol·
Jld•...,..ford crou 15-month
old. Glntto, 114-lliZ-11158.
UMd 4 H - G-kTr1111r
$1,ggs; 12 Ft. Hone And Stock
Troller, tt.m·br3 HorN Slant
L.ood With
llling Room,
54,95; 18111 Big AOHA Rod
Romo 111111 ShoWn By 10 Y11r
Old Boy· Nico 2 Y11r Old Olfd.
l11g, 30 bilyo Riding limo And
Stfown In Honor; Bill. Fobluory
14, 1ggo Clleotn~~l:i Yoortlng
Point Filly. 814-2
.

"Transportation

Pets lor Sale

tm Pontile V1n1ura, 350Chevy 111glno, $500, vary
dopondlblo. 814-IV2-2Dn or
lli2·'JI478,
tml Ctvyoilr Cordoba 360,
auto, now ovorythlng, $1400.
doyo814-1112·2155. oftor 5:30pm,
coli 30W715-ctl55.

lml Z-28 $1400; flblrgllll topper lor. 111111111 pickup. 304-ctJS.
AKC Ooldon Rotriovor puppl11, 7830
$200 le1111le1, 81715 moill, 1145i3-373i, Athont
1i80 Thundlrblrd, 8 cyl. runo
good, real OOOcl cond, 1900 c111
AKC R,ltlorod Poodle Pupo, 2 ohar4pm, r14-laW52i.

11111.
Aullrlill
Shollherd
Pupa.
Roglllorod,
Lf,._BI'ICI For
Clullhy. All Shell. Broodld
Slnco1ml.l14-178-252l
Dog ond Cat g,_,lng oil
brMdl

arco,:niO:~Ie~ ~~:.

304,'1M332.
Drlgonwynd CaHory Portion,
Sl•- and Hlm1ioyln ldttono.
114 411 384~ aft• 7 p.m.

Filii Tonk, 2A13 JlckMn Avo.
PIM11nt, 304-C711-20tl3,
lull llno Troplcll 111111 btrdo,
omollonlmole ond ouppt•.
Poodle put&gt;DI"' top and 111
cupo, AKC 'Champion .Bioadlirll,
Coolville 11447-3404.
f!oglttorod Cl.- Cl.- PuDIIIIO
For Solo, Croom, lluo I llick.
S200 Each. 114 441 ' "·

Point

'
'

.:

PIUNnl.
1i87 Plymouth Voyager L.E.,...
Excellent Condition, V-6, 12,000 •

(l) S.vlng Nature Focusing

74

on lour ecosystems including
wetlands. rivers. woodlands

Motorcycles
=~=--~~-::-~=-~
1i82 Kawaukl 750, Full Oro•'~. :
,

1985 Low Rider Harley Davison, _.,
~

76

Auto Pans &amp;

Accessories
•~~
,.,.,......,.-...,...,......_-;&gt;--,-___.,

1i81 Cad. Coupo CoVIll. Runs

~=! .~Or~,' el:.~

otii1

11111 Monto Carlo, 304-CI75-1508.
11111 PCifltllc Gr1nd Prlxil Good
Condition, \41, • ~1 P , Ono
Owner, 11,150. 61~1478.
ti118 ChlvoHo1 4 Spood, Air
Condn=s liood
Condlllonl
$1,680.
8-825!.
tall8 Rod Floro1 L.oodod,_ TIH,
CrulH, Sunroot, Low Mllll.
Uorelt14-44W187.

tal7 Audl 40009, gr1y

14" whotll. w/W tlrao, Pontiac
opoko hubcaps, Grand Prix
porta. 304-875-7.!63.

2263.

79

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

•'"r•

30jt. long with owning, 2 cylln·
der genal'lltor,
a,

bathroom'lhower, roo
AIC,
33,000 mll'!li exc. cond, Nil for

$4500,114-Mi·2163

,.

Services

tOiniOIII

plclt

or

Cllrlldy

your own

Joltnoon'l firm, 114-247-2111.

II

1

.•·

eL.lT I U.. PRQeoAJ!!.L.Y 65
TOO OL.D TO 6T.AND THE

EXCITEMENT.

Home
Improvements
BASEIIEN'T
WATERPROOANG

Unccndltlonll lifetime gu•ran·

too. L.ocol rolel'lncH lumlohod.
Fr11 llllmotH. Call colllcl 1·
night.
Rogera Baument Wtterproo-

614--237..()488,

d1y

or

tlng.

of aU ~ ·
CaN . ·

anytime, 614-742·1400 or m-· ·
3440.

~

Compl1t1 Mobile Home Set-Upa. .k..,
R•r'"i Commerical, R•ldan- 1
lmprovementa. Including: •

Plumbing, Elec::trical. lnaurance
Ciolmo Ai:coptld. 814-256·1511. ,

Curtle

Home

(!2)•

lmprovementa:

a Lerry King Llvel
Beauty and the Beaot Q
9:30 iiDl liJ) Gl Delfgnlng Women

BARNEY

!t- 12-tl

• 9764
t K 85

+ K 10 3
PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST
IJ 2
.Q 10 8
tJI042
+A Q J 5

+n

.K .1 5 2
• Q963

+964

SOliTH
+AI09 86 3
• A3

A violinist
and bridge player

+A7

+8 7 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

By Phillip Alder

Soulh

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
One of the world's top violinists,'Ai · 1 1
Pa ss
Pass
2+
Iredo Campoli . died in March at 84 . 4 1
Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Music was in his blood : His mother
was a top soprano who was particularOpening lead : • 2
ly admired by Verdi, and his father
was a professor of violin at Rome's
prestigious St. Cecilia Conservatory .
AU redo started to play the violin at
5. and by 13 he had won so many com- mum as a passed hand and at least
petitions that he was asked never to three spades in support of South .
enter again.
It was clearly necessary to keep
His music career blossomed. but af- West off the lead. so Campoli ducked
ter he learned bridge in 1928. he al · the first trick. He won the heart reways checked out the location of the turn. played a trump to dummy's
local bridge club wherever his busy queen. ruffed a heart in hand, went
concert schedule took him . For exam- back to dummy with another trump
pie, in 1953 he made his New York de- and ruffed the last heart. Next came
but at both Carnegie HaH and the Cav- the diamond ace, a diamond to dumendish Club.
.
my's king, and a diamond ruff . Having
Campoli's bridge expertose can be , eliminated the red suits. Campoli led a
JUdged from today ·s deal. Cover the club and inserted dummy's 10. East
East-West hands; then plan the play in won with the jack but had to concede
four spades. West leadtng the heart either a trick to the club king or a ruff
· two and East putting up the queen.
and discard. Whichever he chose,
North's two-club response was the Campoli would lose only two club
Drury convention . promtsin~ a maxi- tricks. thus making his contract.

I

FERGIVE ME FER
NOT GITTIN' TO
CHURCH SUNDAY,
PARSON

DHI!

New Orleans, Mary Jo
decides to go wild. (R)

I'M DRETFUL
SORRY I

IT WAS A
POWERFUL
SERMON,
LOWEEZY

Stereo~

MISSED IT II

537·~8.

Ron'a TV Service, tpecllllzlng
In Zlnlth 1110 urvlclng most
oUter brande. HouM calla, 1110
soma appliance repalra. WV

304-878-23i8 0/lio 814-446-2454.

where to look lor romance and you'll
find It ~ The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO..Fall. t9) Problems
you may run Into today are likely to be

instantly reveals which signs are roman-

of vour own making, a result ot some..

thing erratic or Impulsive you'll do with·
out thinking . Keep a cool head ~
lope to Matchmaker, c/o this newspa· PISCES (Fall. :ZO..March 20) II you
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. OH haven 't yet tidied up your old bills. lhls
44101-3428.
is not a good time to assume new finan BERNICE
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bapt. 22) II you are In· cial obligatlona. Don't let whims tor inBEDE OSOL different about money matters today, stant gratification put you in the red .
you might let an opportunity that could ARIES (Marett 21·AprU 1g) Usually, you
have been profitable slip right through pride yourself on your independent nayour fingers. You'll regret it later.
ture that Is not easily swayed by others.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're a pret- Today. however, you might be unduly
ty good promoter today, and you have influenced and follow the bad advice of
the ability to arouse interest In others. a ·pal.
Unfortunately, you might not be an TAURUS I April :ZO..May 20) II you have
equally good closer. thereby letting to work with people who don't grasp the
essence of Ideas as quickly as you do
your prospects off the hook .
SCCIRPIO (Oct. 2.4-NoY. 22) You may today, be patient and tolerant. It won't
be a trifle more talkative than usual to- hurt you to repeat lhlnga tor their
day, and this Won't aeivoln your bestln· benefit.
Aug. 13,11181
terHt; you could blurt things out that QEMIHIIMI!y 21-June zO) Sometimes.
It's adYIMble tO· like I C81c:ulated riSk
be kept confidential.
The cowse you've been st-Ing 1;011- SAQITT~· llilcltr. 2Niec:. 21) You - li it.can Ml~-,..
at intertlnues to be the right one lor you In tl1e may be at1reCI8d today to unique mer- ests. But todey It 'l!lltM be wile not to
year ahead. Thera are rewardo for yoli. chandiH and strange gadgets. II you go do anything that's a departure from tra.
at the and of the road, but tt you make...lhopping, thtre'a a good ch..,ce you'll ditional procedures.
sudden cltangee, .you c:ould ~yourself' buy 101118thlng you'll ne- u11.
CANCER (JUM
22) Neither you
back.
· CAPIIICOIUI (Dell. 22........ 11) Usually, nor your mate lllould make major, do·
LEOioiUIJ21-Aug.2Z)YO\ir~hlblta . your !11111City llll!biel you to stiCk to
mesttc · dacl~on1 todAy without flrat
migl)t not be up to par todey .,nd, H you your QUf18 unto you achieve your objec- talking thlngl over. II things go wrong, It
~ try to get bywilth "allcllllndapoOtriiH," t~. Today, however, you may drop out . could produce a lingering 8Md tor
It could produCe (!!ldellllbtcl. IIMIItt Ill the laa1 minute, ever).though the Qoal argument.
i and. may pur
lob II)~. yOIJr
.
. '
'
. Knoow; ~ !I within your.reach.
.
tically perfect tor you. Mall $2 plus a
long, sell-addressed, stamped enve-

I tplld, PS, PL, PS, PB, PRF,

z.

fl

""ould

CIOII'ImeiCtal ,, ,,

.,

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

21\'JIIIy

..

O

10:00 (!) NIWI
(]) Malorleogue Baoaball
Atlanta Braves at San
Francisco Giants (L)
Ill ll2l Ill Northern Exposure
Maggio cons her father into
believing Joel is her
boyfriend. (R) Stereo.' Q
OJ) Gl S._r l'rek
G Amarlca'a Cup '92
Senlng Sail lor San Diego
a World News
0 700 Club W1111 Pat
Robertoon
10:30121 Crook and ChaM
11 :00 (I) • (]) (J) • iiDl liJ) Ill
liJ) Newa
(!) Twilight Zone
(l) Nawawatch
OJ) Gl Araento Hell
IIJ Crime Story
121 Rock 'N Country Stereo.
Ba11beU Tonight
a Sportl Tonight
Ql) Sclt.-crow and Mra. King
11:30!IIIt IIJ) Tonight Show

Answer to Prevlou• Puzzle

32 Firearm
owners' or g.

1 Extracted by
cajolery
7 Excite
(2 wda.) •
13 Space
vehicle
14 Dismay
15 Leaders in

33
34
37
40
41

Salamander
Uproar
Ma11hes
Cry of pain
What tailors

do
43 Negatives
45 ·Superlative
suffix
46 Hurricane

power

16 Far away
17 Chemical
suffix
18 Toer
20Ad21 Sorleo of
eco)oglcal

center

47 Woman In
U.S. Army
(abbr.)
48 Constellation
51 King olthe

~•tau••

While on a convention in

Foundation Work, Rooting,
Wlnctcwo 6 Siding. FrM Eotlm11MI ReftrlnCII, No Job To
Big or Slnlllt 114-441-G225.
JET
Aeration Moton, ropoii'ICI. Now
6 ro-buln motoro In otock. RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-600-

mllolll~

(T)

0

YNrl Experience On Older &amp;
Newer Homes. Room Addltlone,

or

NORTII

+K Q 4

0

discovers Elizabeth is dating
a Marine. (R) Stereo. 0
9:00 (I) It liJ) MOVIE: 'Winnie'
NIIC Monday Night et the
Movltal2:00) Stereo. C
(!) MOV E: Buckaroo SheriH
of TtXII (1:00)
(l) (!) Amaricen Maatara
Violinist Yehudi Menuhln in
discussion and performance.
Stereo. C
iiDl
Murphy Brown Jim
allows his co-workers to
read a novel he has been
writing. (R) Stereo. t:;1
IIJ WWF Prime Time
Wrestling
121 Nuhvllle Now Stereo.
@ Fow·Man Beach
Volleyblll From Clearwater,
Fla~

Carpent~ and remodeling
torte. Reaaon1ble rain.

t11

preserves and other natural
areas are shown. (1 :00)
(!) Adventunt Stephen Pern
hikes the mountains and
forests ot Japan. t:;1
Ql) Sala of Champfono (1 :00)
OJ) Gl MOVIE: A Little Sex (A)
(2:00)
l!2l Gl Evening Shade Wood
finds himsell testifying
against his lather-in-law. (R)
Stereo. 0
IIJ Murder, Silt Wrote 0
121 Rack 'N Country Stereo.
G Worid Water Siding From
Indianapolis (T)
a PrimaNIWI
0 Beauty and tho Beaot 0
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Smokey and the
llendlt (PG) (1 :55)
8:30 (I) It liJ) Bloaaom Anthony
helps a lriend stay sober. (R)
Stereo~

1975 Southwlnd Motor Home

81

BRIDGE

GJ e Ma]or Dad The Major

wlrliJV, now oorvtco or rapoll'l
Malter Uoenuct llectrlcl111:·
Aldoflour EIIClrlcat, 30W75· •.
17118.

plcUtl

cn.n

SUProS£ ...

Budget Tl'llllsmlsslons, Uud &amp;
r1bullt, otartlng at $99; Auto
Parts. 614·245-5677, 614-3711-

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

Canning

'Ttt!

350 1Utom1tlc tr1nsmlsslon, AI

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

7p.m.

and prairies, Illinois' nature

,,...

andHutlng
Foll'th and Pine

Ulltllill Poliil, 701 l'owltl Avo,
O.Uipolll. IU 111 14'11 After

(L)

•

new tiM~, biHery, 1t1rtar,
$8,000. lrlln, 304-876-1621.
Davia
Sow·VIC
SINico
til7 Cadllllc Sovlllo, 4-DR, Goorgoo Crook Rd. Pona, ouPl'
$1\600. tatll Buick Cantury, 4- plln, pickup, and dollvory. 514-\ .
:sg_•xtroo, ct11n cor, 814-378- lot4CI=.O~Z94:-.- - , . . , - - - - do remodeling,
1m ea111110 lroc
omtlm, building, 11'11 trimming
Ul t
loeded Sa 1 10 1
removal, houM painting.
o. rana.,
·
P" fret nllmat•, c111 George at 1·
Slud 11 - h Old apneilto.
7
T~opo.
304-578-2S8
&amp;14-m-5752.
Whlto 6 BUll Coeur Sponlll, afterlpm
Hal Producod 2 LH.,. AlrMdy,
814 441 1011. .
1181 Uncotn Town Car L.oodtd, 82
Plumbing &amp;
42,000 Mllee, 1 OWner, Excellent
57
Heating
Conclltlonl 114-44i-ct157 Ahor
Musical .
5p.m.
eart.,•a Plumbing
Instruments

441t123.
illlololtay, 1171/lM.

-~)

1960 Ford F-250, 4 whHI driv~ :
$1,0011. 304-675-3185. 2207 .•
W11hlngton
Ave.,
Point ·~

=----.--:--:-::::--:~
Groom ond SUpply Sllop.Pot

Grooming. All bl-. llvtoo. 71 Autos lor Sale
lama Pol Food Dllfor. Julio .::::::-::~~-=----:'':'""--::'
Wobb. Call llo4-44CI-0231, 1-600- 'tiMIIIIullln(l Coupo, fllr cond~
352.0231.
lion, $1.000. coll304-o76-2720.

0

e

SatUIINo«t.
Now Hoilend Supor 117 2·Row

Tranaport-Oiac,

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Revoke - Imply - Quest - Hinder - MOVIE
After sitting through a long and dull picture, I overheard one patron say lo his companion, "I guess it's
best not to judge a book by its MOVIE ."

0

7:05 (]) The Jtf11110n1
7:30 !IJD liJ) Jaopardyl 0
(!) Andy Ortffi1h
(]) GJ Ent-inmant
Tonight Stereo.
(J)
Ma11111'a FamHy
Ill Wheel of Fortune 0
()])18 M'A'S'H
121 Be 1 S._r Stereo.
G lntemotlonel Outboard
Orand Prix From Winnipeg,
Canada (T)
a Crouflre
7:35 (])Andy Orilllth
8:00 !IJD liJ) Fresh Prince of
Bel Air Will takas a shy
housegueat to a hlp dance
club. (A) Stereo. 0
l!l MOVIE: CaiHomill
Firebrand (1 :00)
(]) (J). NFL PreHaaon
Footlllll Los Angeles
Raiders at Dallas Cowboys

.•

Low lllltol 55,000. 614-446-2495.

PRI NT NUMBERED LETTER S '
IN IHE SE SQU AR ES

e

1978 CJ-7, Hord Top, 304, $2,700. ::
614-446-8136.

111111. &amp;14-446-3281.

f)

a Monayllne

.

&amp; 4 WD's

II

0 Scltrecrow and Mra. King

~

..a. $1,300. 614-367-7296.

the

G SportaCanter

Chevy 8-10 P.U., tt.295,i 1887
Chovy C-20, 4dr, P.U. &gt;2,500: •
11178 Ford Bronec $2,000. B&amp;D .'
Auto Sale, ~lghway 160 N. 614: ~
4411-l!ll65.
'
1990 Chovrolot S-10, 4 cyl., 5 '
oi&gt;Hd, good condition. Sacrlllci ;
SS,OOO. 304-456-t54l
.,

1i80 Dodal Ram Ch1rger, V-8,
auto., wUFii f1ctory snow plow,
good condition. 304-675-3354 or
675a+\37.

of

IIJ Mac(fyver

tr'lctor. • lmplamtntl. Buy1
1111, trade, e:oo-5:00 wHkdaya,

245~\

AKC Qotd111 Rltrlavor llmole
pu11Dfoo. $1715 tiCh. 114-446ao.~ ot 448-t31l

NawaHour

Chevy 5-10• P.U., $1.795j 1982 '

Vans

letters

ocrambiod wordo bt·
to form four simple words.

PRA

Ill GJ e Cunent Allalr 0
OJ) 18 Night Court t:;1

Chevy 8-10 Blazor, $5,995; 1964 :
Ford Bronco II $2,995; 1964 •

~-

64 Hay &amp; Grain
ptpoo, wln- Good hoy, round bllea, 614-843dowe, lfnlela. etc. Claude Winto,., Rio Grandi, OH Cal 114- 5218

AKC Am•lcln Cock• Spaniol
Pupo W---• Firat Sholl 1
11.' 2 ~-.
'
Bu
Goldin BuH, 1 Whho &amp;
Buft.' 114-448-8088.
AKC Boxer PuDIIIoo, rudy to
go. 304471-t55CI. ·

(]) (J) 8 lnolde Edition
(l) (!) MacNaii/Lehntr

Chevy S.10 P.U. $2,195i 1966

Block. brick. -

56

(J; Night Court £;!

1116a N1111n 4x4, P.U. $4,695:
11188 Nl111n 4x4 P.U., $4,6115; .
1988 louzu Club Cab 4x4, P.U.,
Nlco;_ tV97 Chevy 5-10 P.U.,
$3,4..: 1986 Ford Rongor Club
Cab; 1i87 Ford Lariot P:U. j 1085 ·

73

61

8:00 !IJD (]) (J) lit Ill 112llll
ll2l News
(!) Andy GriH!th
(l) Club Connect
(!) Reading Rainbow 0
OJ) 18 Andy Orifllth
IIJ Certoon Expr. .o
G S._r Shot Clay Target
Shooting Game
a World Today
0 Rln Tin Tin, K-8 Cop
Sterao. t:;1
8:05 (]) Bewltchad
8:30 !IJD ll2l NBC Newo 0
(!) I D'"m Of Jeannie
(J) (J) 8 ABC Nowo t:;l
(l) Wild America t:;1
(!) 3-2·1 Contact t:;1
ill
CBS NtWI 0
OJ) 18 WKRP In Cincinnati
G UpCiooo
0 New Zorro Stereo. t:;1
6:35 (]) Andy OriH1111
7:00 \3/U ll2l WhHI of Fortune

~~~~.Cyclo, 4opd, $3,600. ,

loodtd, 17,500 mlln. 304-875-

Road, J1ckaon, Ohio, 814·286-

Plnoburgh Palntlntortor tilt wall
point $1D.4i gal, lntortor 111111·
gloll $13.11i ~gal oxtorlor flet
ho,.• point $13.88. 2415 Jock·
ocn Avo, Point P,_nt, Pt. Pn.
304-871-40114.
Portlbfl tlgltlod changooblo lot·
tor
olan
1121111.
Fr11
dollvory/loltoro. Plllllc 1111.,.
$47.50 box. 1.-&amp;33-3463.
Rocondnlonod WUiwlll, Dryora.
OUII'Intlod prompl oorvlcl lor
au moho. modlft. Thl Woohor
Dryer Sh-. 114-448-21144.
Sooro c ..noman 12hp 36"-cut
riding m"'"!'1 3 y,. old, llko
now, $600, .,....gg2.2Cifl1
ct lli2·

naoo: ti89 Playbouy Pontoon,
boot, 20 n. long, 30 HP motor
$3700; 1086 FOrd 314 pickup',
$750. 304-875-7758.

~~~xu~~

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

to-·

Cirpol, ""Pllt,l14

,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

I~

AUG. 12. •

(!2).

Goillpollo, Ohio
114-446-3888

1a10 WhNihoroo tractor D-280,
4-c:yl, 11-HP, water-cooled, ..ont
and roor hydn~utlcl lnd PTO'o,
~nch Wooda brulh ~ runa
good, $1600, 114-M3-11!7.

ANV

SPECIAL
WAV?

1086 S-10 pickup, V-8 auto., air, ,
ground effects, now paint,

58

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

quii'ICI. 114-4*0338.
Fumlthod
Aparlmonl:
All
UtiiMIII Plld, t llod100111
u...-, 1ooon41 Av-. ,~

SEVERE BOOTS
OF DEPRESSION !

AFFECTS lfOli
IN

'I'ES. IT TENDS
TO CAUSE

1----------..,.---------~ -:JS-=351..,--4._~..,-,.,.----

r:~~~ock~~~:::oo; ~~:.~ :~-:. Oid~;·E!c:~ial.
End Tobloo, 189.00 Sot.OINING
ROOM: Tobia With 4 Poddod
Chalro, $149.00; Count'X Pin•
01 nolto WIIh Bone h nd 3
Cholro~, $2i9.00; Matching 2
Door nltch $349; Or ~i.OO
Sot; Dok Toblo, 42XI2 Whh 1
Bow
Back
Chalre,
182a.OO.BEDROOM: Potter Bod·
room Su~o (5 pc.), $34i.OO; 4
Dr1wor Choll, 544.15; Bunk
Bod, $22i; Complllo Full lion
Sat, $105.00 Sll; 7 pc. Cadlr
Bedroom Suhe, $8ii.OO.OPEN:

PVTTIN6

.'
1981 F·250 truck 300 6 cyl.• ' :
$1500; 111711 Ford Von, 351 on: :·
$1,000. Pllono l04-ct7S- :
:"".:.:-,,---,--,---,,..---..,. ,•
l964 IZUIU, 4 cyl., 4 opood, ••
AMIFII cooollto, 65.000 mll11, .'
Hood body, motor, &gt;2100. 304- "

1::;:

""'· ""

~ ..: . ~f ..»

n.IAT TJ.IREE

1185~311hftor 5pm.

a

~

DO lfOU FIND

1m lntematlonal Tr~nas11r U ':
Mml, model 40708 400 Cum· ·
mings, ere cond, $6000, 01_.. ·

WV. EOE 304-862-3121.
Complllly Fumlohod moblll
home, 1 mile below town overlooking rlvor. No Poll,
614-

Rearrange

EVENING

Cub Cap With 19711 V.f •nglno. ·
112 Ten, PS, PB, Ant. Two COon "
Wllh Lly Down B1ck Stat. Fair :.
Condition, Call Anytlmo. 304- ,
4511-1818.
11178 Chovy 112 ton pick..,~ ·
truck, llondlrd, $500, 614·9411-1.

diM&amp;led t-?pll· Low Income
may qualify If income ll under
$11,350. y11r. Electric, water,
garb1g1 Included with m1t .
Rent 11 30% of adjusted lncoma.
River Bend PIICI, New Hlven,

.0 four

0 R E CH E

1975 Ford Rang11r, F-100.1. Truc:k ::

Nice clean currently avall1ble 1
bedroom apt, lor Independent
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PREVIUU:. ;:,ui.UTION: "Drama Is life with 1111 &lt;lull bill left out."
Allied Hitchcock.
)

�Pag~10-The

Prison helping Environmental guide says Oregon tops .
'
By
CHARLES
CA.MPBELL
ards
and
state
policies
put
togeth~
. The I~stit~te of S?~the~ Studaging inmates
Associated Press Writer
by tbe Institute of Southern Stud- !1:8 des_cri~ ttself as dedi~ to

Beat of the Bend ....
events over the years. I will always
remember his support of the dance
recitals given by his daughter, Judy
Fraser, and her students over the
years. Dale was always right in
there creating all sorts of stage
props for the recitals and loved
doing iL By the way, I undellltand
several of the Jacobs children
located at various spots about the
country have been in for a visit
with their folks quite recently Judy included. By the way, Judy
does not teach dance anymore. She
and her husband, Ernie, left Meigs
County a number of years ago and
make their home in Stevensville,
Montana

It will be one-third easier to get
a drink of water at this year's county fair, thanks to the Farmelll Bank
and Savings Co.
The bank has installed another
water cooler on the grounds this
year -.- this one outside the secretary ' s office. The bank earlier
installed two otber similar coolelll
on the grounds - one outside the
new commercial building and one
at the grange hall.
And you might even find a seat
around the grounds without having
to take your own. Bob Fry of Fry's
Pizza and Ribs concession has provided materials for two wooden
benches for tbe grounds and Arlene
I ran into Dale Jacobs grabbing Rhodes of Somerville donated
a quick lunch the other afternoon materials for a third bench. Fair
and asked him about the Meigs Board President BiU Radford conCounty Fair. Sure enough, Dale strucled tbe benches in his "spare"
has entered some of his an work in time - all three new benches have
the fair competition. Dale says his been placed on the grounds. So
stuff isn't all that good this year. have a seat and let the rest of the
However, win, lose or draw - and world go by.
- -he normally is in the winner's cirTry
not
to
take on the problems
cle - I have a lot of admiration for
Dale's staying right in the swim of of the world this week - forget your
things as he always has. Dale is an troubles, come on get happy - and
octogenarian, you know. He's been enjoy the Meigs County Fair. I'll
such a supporter of the Meigs Fair be checking you out to sec if
and so many other community you're .smiling.

How's your news IQ?
How much do you remember
about the stories that have been in
the news recently? If you score
fewer than five correct answers,
you have been spending too much
time on the crossword puzzle. If
you get ei~tht or more right, you
might constder desktop publishing.
All correct? You would make Joe
Pulitzer proud.

I. Iraq admitted having: (a)
secretly conducted germ-warfare
research for years; (b) produced a
small amount of plutonium, though
not enough to make a nuclear
bomb; (c) both of the above.
2. Following these disclosures:
(a) tbe Security Council said economic sanctions on Iraq would be
lifled; (b) relief officials said lifting
sanctions now would avert famine;
(c) the Security Council said there
was still no justification for lifting
sanctions, with the ~ssible exception of a "one-time' oil sale.
3. Did you know that the 17th
World Scout Jamboree had opened,
with some 20,000 scouts from 120
nations unrolling their sleeping
bags at a huge campsite in the
Sorak Mountains of: (a) Ecuador;
(b) South Korea; (c) Kenya.
4. Democratic Party leaders said
investiga,tions into allegations the
1980 Republican campaign
schemed witb Iran to delay release
of American hostages would be
assigned to the House and Senate
committees on: (a) foreign affairs;
(b) ethics; (c) campaign procedure.
5. A report from the National
Commission on AIDS referred to
needle-exchange programs tbat let
drug addicts swap used syringes for
~clean ones and: (a) endorsed such
programs to reduce the spread of
AIDS among drug users; (b) said

such programs offered no clear scientific evidence of being effective;
(c) advocated keeping laws that
restrict tbe sale of syringes.
6. To encourage us all came a
profile of the irrepressible John
Allen, at 9 I said to be the oldest
mayor in the United States, whose
fellow citizens say he's the right
man for the right time, in: (a)
McColl, Idaho; (b) McGill, Fla.; (c)
McAnn,N.H.
7. Energy Department officials
predicted that by the year 2000,
barring a dramatic breakthrough or
change in policy involving conservation and domestic production,
net oil imports would reach about:
(a) 25 percent of U.S. oil consumption; (b) 40 percent; (c) 70 percent.
8. According to a Gallup Poll
commissioned by the Wheat Council, most Americans: (a) still know
very little about the foods they eat;
(b) now have a very sophisticaled
knowledge of nutrition; (c) think
rye is whole-ground wheat.
9. The Internal Revenue Service
commissioner's annual report told
us that last year, compan;d with the
year before: (a) fewer mdividual
rewrns were audited; (b) fewer corporations were audited; (c) rich
mdividuals were less likely to be
audiled.
I0. The Soviet sportsman Sergei
Bubka was in the news when he:
(a) dropped out of Soviet ice-hockey to sign with the Los Angeles
Kings; (b) won his third gold medal
in track and field events at the Pan
American Games in Havana; (c)
broke hts own pole-vaulting world
record, becoming the ftrst man to
clear 20 feet outdoors, in Malmo,
Sweden.
ANSWERS: I.e 2.c 3.b 4.a S.a
6.a 7.c 8.a 9.a IO.c.

NELSONVR.LE, Ohio (AP) A medium security prison has
made some changes to help older
inmates ease through their golden
years.
The Hocking Correctional Facility, which opened in 1983, houses
more than 300 men age 50 and
older.
"We didn't set out initially to
accommodate tbe elderly, but just
to ~et them away from the younger
prtsoners who could prey on
them," Deputy Warden Bruce M.
Brunswick said.
"We didn' t have staff who were
trained
in
gerontology,"
Brunswick said. "But as we began
to get more elderly inmates, we
began to make some changes."
The prison is localed in southeastern Ohio about 20 miles northwest of Athens.
For example, prison staff now
go through a four-day Ohio Department of Aging program to learn
about issues facing the elderly, said
Faye Saunders, unit coordinator.
She acts as liaison among different departments in the prison to
assure prisoners get the services
they need.
In June, the prison's chaplain,
psychologist and social services
staff began holding counseling sessions on death and dying.
"We felt it was very much
needed," warden Carole J.
Shiplevy said. "Fear of dying in
prison is one of the things that most
bothers prisoners. And for those
who are reaching advanced age,
death is something they have to
begin to deal with."
Hocking is different from other
Ohio prisons in other ways.
The dormitories and hallways
are color-coded to make them easier for inmates to remember where
they belong and how 10 get there,
Ms. Saunders said.
Hocking also is the only Ohio
prison that allows its prisoners
access to elevators. Use is limiled
to those unable to negotiate the
Stailll.
The prison clinic is equipped
much like a nursing home and is
staffed around the clock, Ms. Saunders said.

ies, a public interest advocacy
research group in Durham, N.C.
WASHINGTON (AP)
"There's a message of urgency
They're not going to like this in
for
states that rank low," said Bob
Oregon.
Hall,
the institute's research direcThe state known for trying to
dissuade newcomers· from crowd- tor. "Citizens in those states need
ing into ecotopia ranks tops in a to take a club to the heads of their
new nationwide survey of environ- lawmakers."
The Green Index published
mental conditions and policies.
today
by Island Pres~. added up
Alabama came out last in the
measures
of air and water polluGreen Index, a compilation of 256
lion,
toxic
and other waste disposindicators of environmental hazal, energy use, population density
and the like to place Oregon third
behind Hawaii and Vermont for
pleasant and healthful conditions.
For strict environmental laws,
Oregon ranked second behind California, but the strong showing
pushed the state into first place
overall.
'
Maine took second place in the
total standings, followed by Vermont California and Minnesota.
S~uthern states dominate the
bottom of the table, with Texas,
Mississippi, Arkansas and
Louisiana joining Alabama in the
last five spots.
NEW YORK (AP) - A month
The South is ''a region where
ago, Julie Warner was doing dog- the environment is under presfood commercials. Now, she's on sure," Hall said. "It's also the
the marquee with Michael J. Fox in region where the lawmakers are
"Doc Hollywood."
very laclduster in their altitudes to
"I'm not saying I'm good. But I the environment."
was lucky," Warner says in People
Pat Byington, a spokesman for
magazine's Aug. 19 issue.
the Alabama Conservancy, called
Warner, 26, plays a small-town on the state's leaders to take irnmeambulance driver who deters Fox diate action.
from the glamorous life as a plastic
''The best thing about tbe Green
surgeon in Beverly Hills.
Index is that it points out where our
The actress beat out 80 other weaknesses are," Byington said.
hopefuls for the part - which "We're calling on our political
included a sultry nude scene.
leadership and the people of AlabaWarner had been doing com- rna to heed these warnings and
mercials for Alpo.
come up with a plan to protect our
Advertising might just be in her environment."
blood. Her father, Neil Warner, is a
The state Department of Envijingle composer credited with the ronmental Management Jl(Cpared a
Tic Tac and Dunkin' Donuts dit- 11-page response to the index,
ties.
defending Alabama's environmenSUPERIOR, Wis. (AP) - A tal ~licies.
'The Green Index does little to
few
years
ago,
Arnold add to informed debate on signifiSchwarzene~ger told his University
cant environmental issues due to its
of Wisconsm-Superior professors use of outdated and, in some
that one day, everybody would instances, incorrect information
know how to spell his name.
its subjective analysis in rankThey told him he'd have to and
ing
certain
parameterS," the statechange it before folks could
ment
said.
remember it.

Actress
goes from
dogs to
'Doc'

Meteor shower to be visible
NEW YORK (AP) - The Perseid meteor shower makes its annual rewrn to the skies of the Nonhero Hemisphere next week.
The best time to see tbe shower
is after midnight Sunday and into
early Monday, and after midnight
Monday into early Tuesday.
The shower is expecled to peak
at about 1 a.m. Tuesday.
Meteors, often called shooting
stars or falling stars, look like
bri~ht streaks of light in the sky
lastmg a few seconds. They result
when dust left over from passing
comets collide with the Eartb's
aunosphere, heat up and create a
shining trail of vapolll.

f

t
I

II

I

I''I :
I

I;

Ayers claimed second place
Sunday in a seven-woman field,
behind Paula Tyler, who threw not
only her heart and squl into her
call, bqt also a bucket of water.
, Tyler wpn $325 by attempting
to awaken her "napping" husband.
With a mop in hand and a bandanna on her head, Tyler shrieked at
her husband and then asked the
audience to chime in.
When all the shouts of "Donald! Dooonnalld!" got her
nowhere, Tyler tried a bucket of
water.
Steph~n Spangler of Newark
won $75 and his second straight
hog-calling conteSt by warbling a

Hank Williams song, then hitting
the hogs with a series of high pitched "Sooooeyl" calls.
"There's a necessity to have a
skit and appeal to your audience,"
he said. "'ro go out and make a
loud,
guttu raJ hog sooe y is not
enough."

mvesugaung ~conomt~: en~tron- _
mental and soctal condtuons m the
South and throughout the U.S." •
Hall said the group "takes a populist approach." .
The criteria for the Green Index
reflect a sweeping view of environmentalism - giving credit, for
example, if the state unemployment
rate is low and if wearing seat belts
ts mandatory under state law.
.
"We wanled to loo~ at the envtronment broadly, not JUSt the naturaJs ecosystem, but at the manmade .
environment and tbe J!Ubltc health
~ys~m," Hall said. ' We includ~
mdtcatOrs that reflect the comnutments of states to protecting public ·
health and public safe~."
Most of the categones are more
closely related to measures of pollution, such as pounds per capita of
toxic waste .releases or perce~tage
of nvers flUimg to meet nauonaJ.
water quality standards.
Alabama's rivers and streams
rated fairly high- fiftb J?iacebut the state's total rankmg was
dragged down by dismal showings
in such categories as infant mortality, quality of shellfishing waters
and safety violations at nuclear
power plants.
•
Oregon won points for its vigorous·recycling programs and for reiatively low acid levels in its abundant rainfall . It survived poor
scores for oil spills and forest
preservation.

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Middleport council
discusses waste plan
By CHA~LENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
.
A_ plan as approved by the Ohto

Envtronmental Protecuon Agency
for opera~ng .the s1x:coumy Sohd
Waste Dtst~tct whtch mcludes
Ath.ens, Galha, Hockmg, J.ackson,
Me1gs and Vmton Counues was
preseMed to Mid~Ieport Village
Counctl Mo~day DlghL . .
. ~ Wilson, the .dtstnct execu~ve director, met wtth counctl to
discu.ss the next step to~ard ~mplemen~ng th~ plan - rauficauon by
public officials. .
. Wtlson expl.runed that the plan
ts the culmmauon of two years of
work by the pohcy comm1ttee comP.osed of.representatives from all
st~ counues: He referred to, House
BiU 592 which was passed m 1988
to address the problem of Ohio's
~wmg garbage Pn;&gt;blems. Populauon "!'as. a d~ter!'unmg. factor .m
estabhshmg distncts, Wtlson Sllld,
noung that tbere ~approXImately
l82,000 restdents m ~e .sn~ counues which m~ up .this distnct.
The execuuve director S81d that
the proposed plan covelll a 20-year

FAIR SCENES Elizabeth Bearhs (below
right) competed Monday
evening in the Draft
Horse Show at the 128th
Meigs County Fair. She
is pictured with her twoyear-old mare following
judging. Meanwhile,
Chris Barringer (above),
was happy to settle for
the colorfully dappled

district may be looking through
"rose colored glasses."
W~son explained that the lower
fee for in-district trash would be
balanced by a higher out·of-district
charge for trash. He said that now
about 600 tons are being accepled a
day at the two operatin landfill
1
whereas 2400 tons co ldgbe
s,
ed once the three fa~iii(esacee(lt1
10
operation.
are
Recycling and its role in the district plan was discussed by Wilson
who noted that there is a legislative
requirement for mandatory rcduction of 25 percent of the amount of
tra sh in t 989 to be rcc cl d b
1992. He was complcm~n~ 0~
Manle 's rec clin 0
· ry
noted ~at so~e f~ndfne:a~~~~da~~
available for curbside rec clin
W~son said that dec} on g.eed
to be made in Septembe~ ~nds ~at a
60 percent approval rate is required
to put the plan into action. Once the
plan is ratified, then it will be resubmined to the EPA for final
review before implementation
Wilson said.
'
(Sec picture on page 3.)
Continued on page 3

.Meigs folks show talent at flower show
Artistic arrangements
"Spacious Skies", modern free
style: Betty Dean, Pomeroy; Peggy
It takes talent to grow beautiful Crane, Middleport; Alice Thompflowers and arrange them in aurae- son, Pomeroy;.
tive and unsual designs, and many
"Am~r Waves of Grain", dried
Meigs countians have that talent as and fresh plant material with
was apparent at Monday's flower grains: Melanie Stethem, Pomeroy;
show at the Meigs County Fair.
Evelyn HoUon, Racine; Sheila ToyDespite the dry weather, there lor, Pomeroy.
were dozens of specimen flowers
Purple Mountains", tall vertical
in the competition, tots of well- design: Melanie Stethem, Pomeroy;
groomed house plants, and elegant Gladys Cummings, Pomeroy; Eveand novel designs in the arrange- lyn Hollon, Racine.
ment categories.
"Fruited Plains", arrangements
"America the Beautiful" was tbe incorporating fruits and grains:
theme of the first of two shows to Patricia T. Holter, Pomeroy; Dale
be staged at the fair. The second W. Hoffman, Pomeroy; Allegra
show will take place Thursday.
Will, Rutland.
Winning rosettes in the senior
"America, America", depicting
division for their outstanding a favorite spot: Melanie Stcthem.
exhibits were Pat Holter Pomeroy Pomeroy; Betty Dean, Pomeroy;
best of show 1n arra~gements; "_ AII.~gra Will, Rutland. ,
. .
Betty Dean, Pomeroy, reserve heist
. God Shed Hts Grace , an msplof show in arrangments; Dale w. rauonal des1gn:. Betty Dean,
Hoffman, Pomeroy, nature, arts Pomeroy; Patnc1a T. Holter,
and industry award; and Jean PoTeroy; Alle~.Will, Rutland.
Moore Middleport horticulture
Brotherhood , two conllllners
sweepsiakesaward. '
in a single design: Patricia T.
In the junior division, the win - Holter, Pomeroy; Betty Dean,
ners were Lisa Stethem, Pomeroy. Pomeroy; Peggy Crane, Middlebest of show; Rebecca Taylor, porL
Pomeroy, reserve best of show; and
"Sea to Shining Sea", moribana,
Maycn Erwin, Racine, junior horti- water showmg: Betty Dean,
culture sweepstakes.
Pomeroy;, Evelyn Hollon, Racme;
Ribbons and premiums were Alice Thompson, Pomeroy.
awarded in three places in each
"Across tbe Wilderness", using
class. The winners, listed first wood and roads1de matenal, (Jumor
through third, in the divisions of class). Rebecca Taylor, Pomeroy;
the show were as follows:
Karyn Lee Thompson, Racine; Lisa
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair

,Jwpe&amp;Otan.oldoef'.uh·
ioned carousel, a timeless
feature of every county
fair. The Rock Springs
Fairgrounds came alive
for an extra day of fair
fun yesterday, where
children and adults alike
took in the sights, the
smells and the tastes of
the Meigs County Fair,
which continues through
Saturday night. (Sentinel
Photos by Julie E. Dillon
and BrianJ.

Hay show, grange results announced
Here are the results of some of
the judging in competitions that
took place Monday at the Meigs
County Fair.
Hay show
Hay judging took place Monday
afternoon in the annual hay show
held at tbe Meigs County Fair and
sponsored by the Fair Board and ·
the Meigs Soi I and Conservation
DistricL
Premiums of $20 for ftrst, $15
for second, and $10 for third were
)!warded in the tbree classes of the
show.
The winners in the class for 75

penod. He sa~d that tbree compames have permits. for landftll operaeons and are wruung for acuon on
the plan by the stx-county distr1ct
and final approval from the EPA
before movmg ahead:
The new facthues would be
located m V1~ton County, ~ear the
Athens-Hockmg County hne, and
m Jackson County, with a transfer
st.auo~ m Me1gs County.
W1lson satd that the companies
have guaranteed a dumpm~ rate of
S13 per ton for m-distnct trash for
the next 20 yC8Ill.
Currently, Roger Manley, who
handles trash pickup m Middleport
1s paymg $16.95 a ton to dump at
the Galha County landftll. Manley
was present at the meeting and
~xpresscd h1s support for the plan
because of the $13 per ton rate."
He went on to say that while he
does not think the olan tS nerfect. 11
1s a place to stan, particularly if the
$13 rate can be guaranteed m contracts wtth the landfill operators.
. Counc1lman Paul Gerard quesuoned how any company can guarantee $13 a ton for dumping over a
20 year penod suggesnng that the

percent or more alfalfa were David
King, Pomeroy, first; Herbert
Ervin, Racine, second; and Darrell
Henderson, Tuppers Plains, third.
Winners in the class for all
grasses were Chris Baer, Racine,
first; Tom Hamm, Racine, second;
and Roy Holter, Pomeroy, third.
In the class for 49 percent or
less legumes, first went to Brian
Windon, Pomeroy, first; Herbert
Ervin, Racine, second; and Howard
B. J. Ervin, Racine, third.
Grange judging
Starr Grange took ftrst place in
the
competition judged

Monday at the Meigs County Fair.
Second place went to Hemlock
Grange, with the Rock Springs
Grange taking third . All three
received $75 premiums for their
exhibits whi ch carried out the
theme "The Good Earth".
Judging was based on originality, attractiveness, appearance and
neatness, Grange teachin~s,
achievement goals and commumty
service, farm products, and handicraft
Also exhibiting was the Starr
Junior Grange which received a
$25 premium for its display.

Stcthem, Pomeroy.
"America, the Beautiful " a
favorite design ; Lisa Stethe~.
Pomeroy; Susie Francis, Tuppers
Plains; Kathryn Mitchell, Pomeroy.
Horticulture
Hybrid tea rose: Patricia Holter,
Pomeroy, all three places.
Fioribunda rose: no first, Jean
Moore, Middleport; no third,
Grandiflora rose ; no ftrst. Jean
Moore, Middleport; no third.
Miniature rose: Carrie B. Morris, Rutland; first and second, Lisa
Stethem, Pomeroy.
Full blown rose: Jean Moor~
Middleport; Patricia T. Holter:
Pomeroy: Betty Dean, Pomeroy.
Large gladioli: Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy; no second, no third.
Decorative dahlia s: Alice
Thompson, Pomeroy; Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy; Melanic Stethem
Pomeroy.
'
Cactus dahlias: Betty Dean
Pomeroy, first and third, Addalo~
Lewts, Pomeroy, second.
Ball dahlia: Judith N. Avis,
Coolville; Alice Thompson
Pomeroy; no third.
'
Pom-pom dahlia: Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy; no second no
third.
.
'
Flowered zinnias; Evelyn Hol lon, Racine; fust and second, Beuy
Dean, Pomeroy.
Cactus zinnias: Addaiou Lewis
Pomeroy, first and second Alic~
(See pictures page 6.) '
Continued on page 3

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the course teaches students how
10 save money on their taxes and
also prepares them for a rewarding career.
The affordable fee includes
Mr•l,..•t

testbooks and supplies. Graduates receive certificates of
Achievement ani! ,continuing
education WJits (~U's). Qualified graduates of the course may
be o1rered job interviews with
H&amp;R Block but are under no
obligation to accept employmenL
Those Jnterested in more
information about the H&amp;R
Block Income Tax CoUille may
contact the H&amp;R Block. office at
992-6675 in Pomeroy.

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Course In Pomeroy
Thousands of people learn
how to prepare income tax
returns from H&amp;R Block and
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preparers . H&amp;R Block, the
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Income has Course starting
Sept. lOth. Morning, aftemoon 1
evening, and weekend classes
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Experienced instructors teach
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Classroom discussion and pracUc.k.7•t-ua

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1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cento
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

I

Every Action wan Saver®, Rocker and Swivel Rocker!

·· ~

The Perseid shower can bast be
seen after midnight Sunday and
Monday, In the nonheastern sky.

Variable clooudlness overnight
wllh a chance ol thunderstorms.
Low aroun 65. High Wednesday
In mid 80s.

Page4

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DOWliNG CHILD1
MUlLEN MUSSER

Perseid Meteor Show er
Meteors, or shooting stars,
appear as bright streaks of light
lasting a few seconds. The
streaks appear to be coming from
a single pan of the sky. called the
radiant of the shower.

Dodgers beat
Reds 3-2

The Green Index can be ordered
from Island Press, 1-800-828-1302.
if it ean't be found in local bookstores.

Double your savings! .. . Double your comfort!

Astronomers name meteor
showell~ for the consteUations they
seem to be near. The Perseid shower is ne&amp;I'·Perseus, which is sky's
northeastern quadrant, towards the
constellation Cassiopeia.
The Perseid shower actually
consists of p311icles tiny as grains
of sand. The particles are remnants
of the Swift-Tuttle Comet, which
appeared in 1862.
Dennis Davidson of the Hayden
Planetarium in Manhattan recommends going to a dark spot, away
from street lights and buildings,
and giving your eyes 20 minutes to
adapt to the dark before looking for
tbe meteor showers.

Be it ~og calling or husband
calling, the trick is the shtick
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) - Be
it hogs or husbands, the winning
taetics were the same. Champion
callers at the State Fair said you
goua have a gimmick.
"Husband! I need a husband!"
Shayne Ayers of Springfield yelled
in the husband-calling contest.
1'l'm 29, I have a career, I make a
lot of money, I need a husband! •'

;

.

by Bob Hoeflich

You know I keep aeUing you it's
a small world out there and again
it's been proven by Carol Fruth
Latta of Kansas City, Mo.
Carol formerly operaled a beauty shop in Mason County, W. Va.,
and at one time resided in the Rock
Springs area of Meigs County. She
is the daughaer of Glenna Fruth of
Mason.
At any rate, let me tell you
about the small world. Recently.
Carol went from Kansas City to tbe
St. Louis Airpon to put her children on a plane. As she was leaving the airport, Carol stopped at the
U. S. Air ticket counter to ask a
question. A young man witb a full
beard was behind the counter.
Carol says that she felt instantly
that she knew the individual. She
asked him a couple of questions
and the man turned out to be one of
her former classmates as Wahama
High School, Larrr Frye, whom
Carol had not seen smce graduation
in 1968 - that was 23 years ago.
When Larry and Carol realized
they knew each other way back
when, Larry hopped the counter
and there was a lot of bugging
going on. It was a nice reunion.
Incidentally, Carol and her husband are botb in real estate sales
tbese days in Kansas City and they
love it out there.

Monday, August 12, ~991,

Poineroy-Middieport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

type back, padded roll
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~ .ti, pillow type arm pads, knife
/ edge seal and padded
ottoman.

FREE DEUWIU'

INGE.LS
FUR.NITURE .&amp;·JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT
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,.,..,,,,....,E. TRACTOR PULLS • The
antique tractor pulls were beld Monday evening
at tbe Rock Sprmp Fairgrounds. The pulls were
a feature of opening night of the 1991 Meigs
County Fair. Pictured Is Brian Windon_.~s be

competes wltb
liltlque Case tractor. WIDner
in the 4,500 pound class for 1938 traetors was
Roger Taylor, Letart, W.Va. Winne~s in the
4,500 pound class for tractors dating from 1949·
1959 were Dan Smitb, rll'st; and Brian Windon,
second.
\

BAKED GOODS JUDGED • There's only
one way to slice It, as these judges of baked
goods discovered at yesterday's Meigs County
Fair Baking and CanninR competition. Debbie

... .

r

•

Rose, Lenora Leilbelt and Pamela Hagar were
awarded first, second and third places In tbe
white bread category,
I

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