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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Giants
defeat
Reds 4-1

Pick 3:464
Pick 4: 3207

Cards : 6-H, 8-C
6-0;2-S
Low tonight In mid-60s.
Sa turday, partly cloudy. High
near 90.

Page4

SOUTHERN MARCHERS - The Southern
High School Marching Band, under the direction or Jeff Arnold, was a popular attraction at

MUSICAL MARAUDERS - The Meigs High
School Marching Band kicked off Wednesday's
Junior Fair Parade at the Meigs County Fair

with two songs. The band performs under the
direction of Tony Dingess.

County board asks for state help
LAN CASTER , Ohio (AP) The tru stees of Fairfield County
Children Services want the state
attorney general's office to investi gate the department 's handling of a
case in which a 4-year-old boy
died.
The trustees voted 8-0 Wedensday to request the outs1de investi gation.
County Prosecutor David Lan defeld said he ,would ask Attorney
General Lee Fisher for assistance
today.
Landefeld said that based on his
review it doesn ' t appear there wa s
criminal neglect by Children Scr-

vices but that an outside agency
should investigate.
The probe was prompted by the
rece nt arrests of John and Edna
Engle in the scalding death of their
son, Christopher, in March 1989.
The boy's body was burned in the
back yard of their Rushville home,
coun records show.
The Engles both are charged
with aggravated murder with death
penalty specifications. Their seven
other children, age 3 to 18, are in
foster homes.
Frank Binni, chairman of the
agency's board, said the Engle case
has called into question the agen-

cy's credibility in the community.
" The fact that a child is able to
disappear for over two years and to
have his family involved with several social agencies and to have his
death go unnoticed is indeed a travesty," Binni said.
" If the agency ... or its agents
are guilty of any wrongdoin g,
whether it be errors of commission
or omissiorl, I believe we must be
prepared to take the necessary steps
to prevent another child's suffering
the same consequences as Christopher Engle~ " he said.

the Junior Fair Parade at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds grandstand Wednesday afternoon.

Elvis wannabes .line up
for Memphis competition
By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Neither age , nor race, nor pitch of
voice can stop an Elvis imitator. A
fre shl y raked pompadour , a
sequined jumpsuit and it's tim e to
rock 'n' roll.
"It beats a daytime job," said
Vince Preston , one of 50 Elvis
Presley impersonators competing
for the title of king of would-be
kings.
The contest at a dance hall ncar
Presley's former residence, Graceland, IS part of the festivities surrounding the 14th anniversary of
his death.

Like many Elvis imitators, Preston, 35, maint ai ns th e pom padourcd, gold-chained look off
stage as well as on. He generally
performs in the Alberta, Canada.
area.
.
Clarance Gidden s, 36, a black
singer and guitar player from
Melfa, Va., took the stage Tuesday
night in a light pink ensemble with
dark pink trim and scarf.
Giddens said he shifted to Elvis
in hopes of boosting a sluggish
career in rhythm and blues. A
friend suggested the change.
"I said, 'You' ve got to be kid ding, a black Elvis.' But she told
me to give it my best sho~ so that's
what I'm doing," sa id Giddens .

Vol. 42, No73
Copyrighted 1991

Mal/lock-in
A Girl Scout teen mall lock-in
will take place at the Charlest~n
Tow n Center on Aug. 23 from 5
p.m. on Friday until 7 a.m. on Saturday and local girls, ages 12· 17
are invited to participate.
The overnight is being sponsored by the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council and the fee is SIS
for currentl y regi stered girls and
S17.50 for those who arc not members. The fee for adults who are
bringing a group of girls is $8. A
pizza dinner, snacks, and breakfast
are included in the fee.
There will be fa shi on workshops, dancing and activities chosen espec ially for teen interest, as
well as shopping time and a consumer awareness scavenger hunt.
Additional information may be
obtained by contacting the Girl
Scout Service Center in Charleston,
345-7722 or 1-800-926-4685.

Solid waste hearing set
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff
Citizens in Gallia and Mei gs
Counties will have an opportunity
to talk trash this weekend at public
hearings about the local six -county
solid waste plan .
A hearing will be held 7 p.m.
Saturday at the Gallia County
Senior Citizens Center. Another
hearing will also be held at 10 am.
at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center Saturday. It will be the
final opportunity for public input
about the 10-year waste manage ment plan.
The waste strategy was mandated by House Bill 592, calling for
counties to reduce their solid waste
production by 25 percent by 1994.
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,

Alfred community news
Recent guests of Marlene and
Michelle Donovan were Patricia
Sutherland and her son, Graeme, of
Surrey, England.
They toured B lenncrhasse tt
Island , Marietta Mu se um, Delta
Queen , Amish Country, Fenton
Glass, Nelsonville Scenic Railway,
Forked Run Lake and local veg etable field s. They dined with

Announce
results of
beef judging

Leaster and Wilma Seaman, Barlow: and Betty Donovan. Syracuse.
The name of Thelma Hayes was
omitted from the guest li st of
Chester High School Class of 1931
reunion.
Weekend guests of Marguerite
and Delbert Stearns were th eir
daughter. Laura Cohen and Daniel
and Leah, Akron.

Napper bridal shower held
'

lj

I
I

A bridal shower was held per, Becky Foster, Margaret
recently for Robena Napper at the Hysell, Bonnie_Arnold , Kathy
Zion Church of Christ. She is the Arnold, Mary Coleman, Barbara
fiancee of Darin Young.
Coleman, Dorothy Reeves, Freda
The social room was decorated Elam, Betty Dill, Linda Foster,
with red and white candles, bells, Sharon Folmer, Roberta Dill ,
roses and crepe paper.
Suzanna Richmond, Peggy Bole,
Several games were played with Marge Purtell , Hazel Stanley, Mary
prizes awarded to Dorothy Reeves, Davidson, Wilma Davidson, Ida
Hazel Stanley and Kathy Arnold. Murphy, and Evelyn Thoma.
Door prize was won by Linda FosOthers sending gifts were Irene
Arnold, Bonnie Miller, Beulah
ter.
Refreshments of cake, mints, Grate, Vicki, Heather and Hollie
Ferrell, Alice Lieving, Judy Young,
nuts and punch were served.
Attending were Lena Napper, Debbie Johnson, Mamie Swauger
Julie and Emily Stanley, Bcv Nap- and Kim Chapman.

HOLSTEIN SHOW WINNERS • These
farmers were awarded prizes at the District 6
Holstein Show held on Thursday at the Meigs
County Fair. Pictured, left to right, are Tracey
and Steve Deam or Deamway Farms in Gallipolis, winners of Grand and Senior Champion

Female; Lora Lee Carmichael or French Hill
Farm or Gallipolis, Reserve Grand Champion
Female; David Mills or Hannan Hills Holsteins,
Crown City, winner of Junior Champion
Female; and Renee Carmichael, French Hill
Farm, Reserve Junior Champion Female.

OUTSTANDING
BREEDERS,
EXHIDITORS - French Hill Farm or Gallipolis
and the Carmichael Family received Premier
Breeder and Premier Exhibitor Awards at the

District Six Holstein Show at the Meigs County
Fair on Thursday. Pictured with their prizes
are, Lora Lee, John, Renee and Rette
Carmichael, all representing French Hill Farm.

10W30,
UM40

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MIIai'OI

Elberfeld reunion held
''

The annual reunion the late
Jacob Bauer and Katie Mees Elberfeld family was held Sunday at the
Elberfeld Farm in Tuppers Plains.
Attending were Robert and
Charlotte Elberfeld, Pomeroy;
Scott and Julie (Elberfeld) Dillon,
Pomeroy; Steve and Beverly Elberfeld and Kate Elberfeld, Gallipolis;
and Jack and Becky Hoge , New
Knoxville; Allan and Nora Elberfeld, Barboursville; Stan and
JoAnn Coates and Josh and Bobby,
Reidsville, N.C.
Mrs. Jaco b (Beth) Elberfeld ,
Westerville; Barb and Ed Elberfeld, Columbus; Bob and Jo Ruhl,
Westerville; Jeff Ruhl and Carey
Overly, Westerville.
Ginny and Katie Elder, Columbus; Pete Dodgin and Stacy Cooper, Columbus; John Dodgin and
Debbie Brown, Columbus.
Earl Elberfeld, Logan; Harrold

Elberfeld and Andrew Elberfeld,
Sparks, Md.
George and Mary Elizabeth
(Elberfeld) Morris, Pomeroy; Jim
Anderson and Brian, Racine; Don.
Bernie, Barbie, Sahh and David
Anderson, Pomeroy; John , Joan,
Brad and Lauren Anderson,
Pomeroy; Bill Anderson Jr., Mari etta; Kri stin, Andrew and Jared
Gragan, Marietta; Larry and Erin
Sanchez, Columbus; and Michael
Anderson, Letart, W.Va.
Barbara and Gerry Dolan ,
Darien, Conn.
_
Rachael (Elberfeld) Downie,
Racine; Bill Downie, Jr., Racine.
Bob and Barbara (Elberfeld)
Lytle, Chilli cothe: and Janice
Mahoney, Allison Park, Pa.
Mik e and Nancy Siddall and
John , Marietta; Katherine, Kelly
and Karen Siddall and Katherine
Biehl.

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Includes mulller (domesiiC or

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1mp011 1 emoust p1pc and ta11 p1pe

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Or purcnase separately

dOmt15llt

Evangelist &amp; Song leader
Doug &amp; Sht'rry Shamblin

f

or 1m port ...........117

~·

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Doug &amp; Sherry
Shamblin

'

, .......................$14

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tlf£TIM! WARRANTY

From

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toretan or oomes11c

AUGUST 16, 17, 18- 7:30P.M.
SUNDAY SERVICES:
Bible School ................... 9:30A.M.
Worship Service ............ 10:30 A.M.
Potluck Dinner ........................ Noon
Homecoming Service, ....... 2:00 ·P. M .
Robert E.·Purtell, Minister
,.

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Beef cattle in the open classes
were judged Tuesday at the Meigs
County Fair.
Taking both grand and reserve
champion females in th e Angus
breed were animals from the Jim
and Jennifer Sheets Farm at Harrisonville. They also took firsts in
spring heifer calf, summer yearling
heifer, spring bull calf, cow-calf,
and get of sire. Gibbs Angus Farms
at Shade took a fust in the senior
heifer calf class .
In the Hereford competition, the
Butler Hereford Farms of Gallipolis took: both the IP"and champion
and reserve champton bull ribbons,
along with ftrsts in spring yearling
heifer, junior bull calf, spring yearling bull, and junior yearling bull.
Kristen Slawter, Middleport, took a
first in the senior heifer calf, and
Tom Karr, Pomeroy, took a second
in spring yearling heifer and a first
in spring bull calf.
Harry L. Spencer, Long Bottom,
exhibited both the grand champion
female and the reserve champion
female in Limousins, while G. and,
H. Limouson had the grand champion bull and the reserve champion
bull. Spencer also took a firsl in
spring heifer calf, summer yearhng
heifer, spring bull calf, and cowcalf class while G. and H.
Limousin took firsts in winter bull
calf and senior bull calf.
In Simmentals a first in spring
yearling heifer was won by Robert
E. Hoffman, Long Bottom, with a
second in the same class gomg to
Stephanie Lee Hoffman, Long Bottom.
In otller recognized breeds the
winner was Robert Calaway,
Reedsville, firsts in junor heifer
calf spring yearling heifer, and get
of sire. In the non-registered beef
female, ftrst places in spring heifer
calf and spring yearling heifer,
went to Walnut Lane Beef Farm,
Coolville.

Meigs and Vinton Counties were
joined toge ther to mee t th e
120,000-c itizc n population requirement laid down by the bill.
The plan took approximately 2
1/2 years to compose by SCS Consultants from Cincinnati.
District Director Lance Wilson
and Jackson County Commissioner
Dale Neal, who serves as district
policy committee chairman, will
conduct the hearing. Gallia County
Commissioner George Pope will
also be in attendance.
Provisions or the plan
• The waste blueprint allow s for
the establishment of three new
landfills in the di strict: one in Vin ton County, by Mid -A meri can
Waste Systems, Inc. , one in Jackson County, by the Sands Hill Coal
Company, and one along th e
Athens-Hocking county border by
Kilbarger Construction Company .
Hetore any new taCtltty could be
built, landfill proposals must obtain
approval from the Ohio Envuonmental Protection Agency.
Mid-American currently has an
agreement with the Gallia County
Commissioners to operate the
county landfill in Morgan Township.
.
.
At previous poltcy commtttce
meetings, citizens have quest1oned
the need for three new landfills. As
proposed, each landfill will take in
1,000 tons of garbage per day, subslantially more than the 600 ton s
per day generated by the district' s
six counties.
Neal stated in a meeting on
March 13 that out-of-district trash
would be accepted at the landfills
and would help finance the district's workings. The larger trash
intake will also keep tra sh fees
lower for in-district citizens. If permit approval is granted, the new
landfills could be m operatiOn by
1992.
• The plan also provides for a
voluntary recy cling program as
opposed to a mandatory one. However the district intends to promote
recycling through education and
the establishment of process1ng

centers and dropoff sites in the district.
The Rivervi ew Recycling Program in Gallia County cou ld be
forced to close its doors if an
ag reeme nt between the prog ram
and the di strict cannot be reached.
Marilyn Sheal y, director of the
recycling program, says the building that houses the program on the
grounds of the Gal lipolis Developmental Center will be torn dow n
next year, forcing relocation or closure.
Shealy says her program and th e
di strict have been disc ussin g several options, but, as of yet, no soluti on has been found .
Other public hearings
Hearings will also be held in the
fi ve other counties that comprise
th e di strict. A hearing was held
Thursday morning in Hockin g
Co unty and in Athens Co unt y
Thursday evening. At 10 a. m. Friday, officials will hold a meeting at
the South District Extension Office
in Jackson. The evening meeting
will be held at the Vinton County
Commumty Building in McArthur
at? p.m.
Persons wishing to make comments about the plan must register
before the meeting . Each person
will be limited to 10 minutes of
comment and will be asked to submit written versions of h1s/her testi mony.
Comments made at the six public hearings will be compiled and
printed to be di stributed to
AGHIMV policy committee members on Aug. 22. The meeting will
mark the last tim e that the plan
could be revised prior to the district-wide ratifica tion process.
The plan must be approved by
four of the six county commissions
and by political subdivi sions
(township trustees, village councils) that represent at least 60 percent of the di strict's population.
Ohio EPA officials will review
the plan again following ratifi cation. A state-approved plan must be
in place and operational by Jan. I,
1992.

Judge issues
orderinRAC
dispute

HOMECOMING
REVIVAL

:I

pjlll

2 Soc tiona, 14 Pages 25 cents
AMultimedia Inc. Newopaper

PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 16, 1991

to local comPttidon. We ,_..,.,. tht right to limit

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store hooro: 8:30a.m. to 8 p.m. Mondly th""'gh Frldoy,
8:30a.m. 10 7 p.m. Saturday, and 91.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday

GALLIPOLIS
Prte.. MOd

""'~\'r.'..~....

CHAMPION LIVESTOCK • David Smith,
left, was awarded Reserve Champion title and
Chuck Parker the Grand Champion prize at

'·

.:

!'

•

Thursday's Junior Fair Dairy Sliow (or their
Holsteins, pictured here witb the boys,

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) -A
circuit judge has issued a gag order
barring the United Steelworkers
from disseminating some information about the chief executive offi cer of Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp., the union said.
Ohio County Circuit J~dge Callie Tsapis issued the order after the
union made allegations in a news
release Wednesday about R.
Emmett Boyle, chief executive
officer of Ravenswood Aluminum
in Jackson County. The union and
the company have been engaged in
a bitter labor dispute since Nov. I.
The union on Wednesday cited
"private" court documents in a
press release about Boyle's actions
while chief executive officer of
Orrnet Corp. in Hannibal, Ohio, in
the 1980s.
The union did not say what documents it was citing or where it
obtained the materiaL
A company spokeswoman contends the union obtained tile information improperly and scheduled a
press conference today on the matter.

WINNING AYRSHIRE • The Parker Family entered the winning Ayrshire cattle in the Open C la~s Dairy Show on Thursday
afternoon. Pictured is the winner, Chns Parker.

Meigs County Fair Schedule
FRIDAY, AUGUST 16

1:00 p.m.-Pet !fihow-Show Arena

Racing
Tractor Pull-Show Arena
6: 30 p . m . - B ~ lles and Beaus
6:45 p.m.-Dairy Sweepstakes-Show Arena
7: 00 p.m.-Junior Fair Liv estock Sale-Show Arena
7: 30 p.m.-Truck Pull
8:00 p.m. - ATV Pull-Grandstand
2:00
4:00

p .m.- Harn~ss

p . m . - K i ddi ~

SATURDAY, AUGUST l7

11 :30 a.m.-Homemaker, Apple Pie &amp; Country Fair-Hill Stage
1:00 p.m.- Pretty Baby Contest
4:00 p.rn.-Quarler Horse Races
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tractor Pull
4:00 p.m.-Barbara's School of Dance- Hill StaRe
7:00 p.m.-Tractor Pull
8:00 p.m.-Outhouse Races-Grandstand
I

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Commentary

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

.I

Friday, August 16, 1991

The Daily Sentinel
lit Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARI!.'!\

~~MUlTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Asso·
elation ~d the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
word s long. All letters are subject to f"ditlng and must be signed with
name . address and telephone number. No unsigned leiters will be pub·
!I shed . Lei ters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not persona II ·

lies .

Letters to the editor
Seeks suggestions
Dear Editor:
Can you help us or have any
suggestion 's for us?
My husband &amp; I are trying to do
so me family research on Ira &amp;
Ethel (Tayler) Jones of Middleport,
Ohio. My husband is Kenneth Murray the grandson of Ira &amp; Ethel
Jones , son of Grace (Jones) Murray.
We were out to Middleport this
past June but we did not know the

names of any relatives to contact.
Everybody at the Historical Society
&amp; Library at Pomeroy &amp; Middleport were so nice to us.
We would love to hear from
anybody who could give us some
family information. Would appreciate any help.
Thank you,
Kenneth &amp; Lenctta Murray
871 Satellite Dr.
York, Pa. 17402

Will Voinovich help Meigs?
Dear Editor:
In the past year the people of
Meigs County have seen our elected government pass another new
l"w in Washmgton that IS no doubt
going to put hundreds of Meigs
Coal miners out of work.
It would seem as through our
elected government can only pass
laws that put Americans out of
work.
As for Meigs County our area is
already hard hit. You see homes for
sale everywhere and when we see
more coal miners put out of work
that just hurts even more as property value keeps going down. I would
hope that our state has big plans for
an industry to move m here soon to
gel these people back to work or
Meigs County will see even more
homes up for sale with no one to
buy them and no jobs to pay for the

ones they have.
So, alii ask is OW' state and federal government pushing as hard to
put Meigs County back to work as
it did to put it out of work in the
nineties?
The only hope Meigs County
has is for the state to build that
four-lane highway to the
Ravenswood Bridge to open up
new industrial land sites for industry and businesses.
But will our new governor come
to help Meigs County, the only
county in the state with a bridge to
nowhere.
Maybe the saying is 1111e. Maybe
we are the "Nowhere County" in
Ohio.
Yours Truly
Floyd H.
Box 144-F
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Republicans wish they

had another tax break

,I

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP) - There he went again, a videotaped Ronald
Reagan in summer rerun, lamenting as so often before that Washington
never learns not to raise taxes. A decade after he signed his big tax cut,
the Reaganomics debate goes on.
Democrats contend that the legacies of the 1981 tax cut include a system tilted in favor of the wealthy and a tripled national debt. They argue
that tax fairness demands changes to take a bigger share from the rich,
and they're sponsoring legislation to do it
That didn ' t dampen the conservative Republican celebration at the
tenth anniversary of Reagan's signing of the tax cut on Aug. 13, 1981. By
their accounting, the tax cut, along with spending curbs, was central to an
economic revival that helped all Americans during eight years of growth
with minimal inflation.
They want a s~ueL "This economy is really in need of a Reagan-like,
1981-lil&lt;e tax cut,' 5aid Jack Kemp, the secretary of housmg and urban
development who, as a New York congressman, was an original sponsor
of the 198llaw.
Kemp said the next step should be the capital gains tax reduction the
administration advocates, plus cuts in the Social Security payroll tax to
help enlist Democratic support.
At an anniversary forum sponsored by the Heritage Foundation this
week, Kemp said conservatives who pushed tax cuts despite soaring
deficits once were told they would wreck the economy. "I was called a
wi!Ch doctor, a snake-oil salesman, a dangerous river boat gambler and a
voodoo economist,'' Kemp said. "And that was the Republicans."
In a videotaped message to the forum, Reagan said "Even now the
drumbeat for new taxes is continuing on Capitol Hill. Many of the tax battles were won in the 1980s, but unfortunately the war isn't over."
President Bush accepted about $137 billion in tax increases to go with
spending curbs in a five-year deficit reduction deal he worked out with
Congiess last year. Reagan said the tax increases already are proven failures, costing jobs and actually losing revenue in the recession.
To make that budget deal, Bush reneged on his 1988 campaign pledge
against new taxes, then reinstated it. While that cost him a temporary
slump in public opinion ratings, it gained him an ag~eement that limits
Democraf.lc options until after the 1992 elections by requiring that any
added domestic spending or tax breaks be offset by corresponding cuts in
other domestic prog~ams.
Reagan, too, had signed tax increases, but passively and quietly, hardly
deriting his image as a tax cuuer. He'd campaigned for the big tax cut in
19aO, and when he signed it into law at his ranch near Santa Barbara,
Calif., he said it marked "a turnaround of almost a half a century" of
growing government, spending and taxes.
··During the 1980s, the rich got richer - but the poor got richer too.·'
Sen. Robert W. Kasten Jr., R-Wis., said in proposing a resolution to mark
the signing anniversary.
At the time of the tax cut, Reagan also was pledged to turn around federal deficit spending, although he'd backed off a Oat promise to balance
the budget. Instead, deficits went up sharply during his administration
despite the~· Republica_ns said, and say, that's because the Democratic Congress ms1sts on spending too much.
The selective use of numbers and comparisons enables each side to
make its case, so the economic debate isn't going to be resolved any time

soon.
Rep. Bill Archer of Texas, ranking Republican on the House Ways and
Means Committee, complains that "bumper sticker arguments" about tax
equity, an impoverished government and a breakdown in federal programs for the needy are being used against sound administration economic policies.
"While the truth value of these arguments ranges from moderately
incorrect to spectacularly false, proponents of the Reagan-Bush policies
are now on the defensive," Archer said in an essay in the conservative
journal "Policy Review." He said Republicans should be pushing their
side of the case, hard.
They're trying, out to reclaim an issue that has served them since Reagan. The Reagan tax cut gave GOP candidates a positive message they
could rake home to their voters, said Rep. Yin Weber of Minnesota, who
voted for it as a freshman congressman. These days, he said, "we don't
have any message like that.''
~

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ShouJd ,parks foot the bill for Quayle's hooves? ~~
WASHINGTON - Horses
seem to be for Vice President Dan
Quayle what military aircraft are
for White House Chief of Staff
John Sununu. Both men enjoy riding at taxpayer expense.
The latest controversy surrounding Quayle concerns a plan that
was recently axed by the National
Parks Service to triple the number
of horse stables at Manassas
National Battlefield Park. The park,
which commemorates two famous
battles of the Civil War, lies only a
few miles from the White House
and has recently become a favorite
spot for the Quayle family to go
horseback riding.
Manassas is currently the only
battlefield park to have any stables
at all, but this year the park service
decided it needed more stables so it
could train park police officers and
Secret Service personnel who
accompany the second family on
their jaunts.
But as soon as the plan was
announced, it set off a stampede.
Historical preservationists charged
that the plan trampled on the park's
mission to restore the area to its
appearance at the time of the Civil
War. An equestrian center at Manassas in 1987 was rejected on similar grounds by National Park Ser-

vice Director William Penn Mon.
Rep. Peter Hoagland, D-Neb.,
felt strongly enough to unsaddle
the Interior Department's appropriations bill. No government funds to
build stables at Manassas are permitted under his amendment. In a
wriuen statement accompanying
his amendment, Hoagland disclosed a nlemo from the Secret Service. The memo cites the additional
stables as vital for providing
workspace for training the Vice
Presidential Protective Division.
Hoagland, a member of the Subcommittee for National Parks,
noted that the construction would
come at a time when the park service is strapped for cash. Many
parks have slashed visitor center
hours, ranger salaries are notoriously low and many Irails and
facilities are in chronic disrepair.
Hoagland wrote: "It just does
not seem right to fmd extra money
for the horseriding activities by
high government officials when the
administration tells us they cannot
fund the pressing needs of the public's parks."
A Quayle spokesperson told our
reporter Jan Moller·that Quayle had
had no direct hand in Drooosimz the
new stables, and that this controversy is less about the riding pro-

gram than the longtime fights over
the use of historic battlefield parks.
Even before the congressional
calvary came charging, National
Park Service Director James Ridenour put the stables on hold, apparently upset over the adverse publicity it was generating for the Parks
Service and the vice president. Perhaps he was remembering the flak
from last aulllmn's Columbus Day
weekend.
Those were the days of the infamous government shutdown, when
Congress' inability to reach a budget agreement forced many nonessential government operations to
shut down .for the weekend in an
anempt to save money. Though
Manassas was one of the many
parks to shut down that weekend,
the three remaining rangers on duty
were required to accompany the
Quayle family on a riding excursion through the park. The incident
led to a great deal of local criticism
of Quayle and the Park Service.
While the Quayles were out riding last Columbus Day, American
taxpayers were busy footing the
bill for the shutdown, which congressional investi~ators recently
estimated at $3.4 million.
Park Service officials, when
asked why they were so quick to

V'lEVE 60T TO

I HATE TO 5AY 1).1\S,

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BuT I. 'THINK 'THEY

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WHEN 'THEY 'THINK
NOgODY~

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WATCt\ING,

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'n\E'I 8ROU6HT IT

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)

By Jack Anderson ::
and Dale Van Atta :·
cancel the proposed stables, told us
that the project never had a high
priority to begin with. While they
vehemently deny that the project
was in any way connected with ll}e
vice president, they point to the
publicity as one reason why it was
put on hold. They now claim to be
exploring the possibility of new
sites for the Secret Service and the
Park Police to practice riding,
though it is not known when or if a
new site will be proposed.
In the meantime, it's doubtful
the Quayle family will have to hoof
it.
FAMILY JEWELS- When
and if a museum is ever buill to
commemorate the Cold War, one
exhibit may include the $9.1 billion
strategic mineral stockpile of more
than 90 items that were stored up in
case of war with the Soviet Union.
The inventory of the Natiol)al
Defense Stockpile includes copper,
lead, silver, zinc and ferromanganese. With the collapse of communism, the beltiightening Pentagon wants to .thrUw a billion-dollar garage sale. The Pentagon is
proposing to sell off approximately
$4.8 billion of commodities in
order to reduce the stockpile by
about 40 percent. The last strategic
mineral sale was of copper by President Lyndon Johnson dW'ing the
Vietnam War. The Senate Armed
Services Committee wants even
deeper slashes in the stockpile now
that the Cold War is over.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Predicting the future of the economy can
be as hazardous as predicting next
week's weather. But as we
approach the 1992 presidential
election, one thing seems certain:
The economy will not he in recession. Historically, the economy
even in weak times has recovered
at least at election time, and then
dipped back down afterward. Economic sources point out that the
Federal Reserve Board, which is
supposed to be independent and
apolitical, has always managed to
gun the money supply on the eve of
elections, to lower interest rates
and produce a growth spurt. This
has been 1111e no matter which party
occupies the White House. It's one
forecast you can count on.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
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By. Sarah Overstreet
THC, 1s avrulahlc on pill h&gt;rm. But
.

recently, I met a woman who had
fought a difficult, harrowin.g battle
to obtam a drug for her dymg son.
The drug was the only one of many
they. tned that coul~ ease the pam
of h1s cancer and rcheve the nausea
brought on by Ius chemotherapy so
he could eat. .
The drugs srde effects- and
those are slill Ufl for debate 12
years after h1s dcwh- were m1mscule m compar1son .to the rehef 11
gave. hun. And mercifully, the drug
was mexpens1vc.
So why d1d Mac Nuu, a Beaverton, M1ch., housewtfe and giandmother, have to f1ght to get hold of
th1s cheap wonder ~ug? S1mple.
The ~ove;nmem drdn t want her to
have 1t It s one of those substances
Uncle ~~m and Aun,t, Nancy want
you, to . JUSt say no to, whether
you re m mtractable pam and the
drug IS the only thmg you can find
to relieve 11, or not ..
The drug IS mariJuana, and the
govemnmnt would brook no e~cepf.lons rn liS all-out war ag8inst 11.
Smce Kellh Null dted in 1979,

U.S . Public Health Serv1ce to at
least issue "individual needs dru('
permits, called INDs, to a few 111
people :ovho can. benefit medically
from usmg mariJuana. But Mae can
rattle off more cases of se~erely ill
people who are bemg derued INDs
than those w~o ha~e them, some of
whom are sull bemg harassed by
locallaw-enforecmentofficers.
An.d she contends the governmenus absurdly stm.gy ~d cruel m
~anung those. permits. They will
lose the appllcatJon between the
Drug Enforcement A~ency ~d ~~
Federal Drug ft:~mmlslral!on,
Mae told me, . or keep. 11 for
mon!hs and send 11 back saym~.you
d1dn t fill somethmg out nght
ManJuana has been shown to
have numerous med1c.al uses,
among them easmg the paun of cancer. and other chrome d1seases,
rehe.vmg the muscle spasms of
muluple scleroSIS and haltmg the
progressiOn of glaucoma. One
explanauon the government. g1ves
for deny•.ng man Juana use IS. that
the drug s mediCmal mgred1em,

how do you kcq&gt; a rill down when
you're too nauseous to hold down
food? And sn 1 o~ ing marijuana
works faster than taking it in pill
fonn, and sufferers say the speed of
relief is sometimes crucial.
Mae and others in the Alliance
for Cannabis Therapeutics (ACT),
a Washington-based group lobbying for reform in laws governing
the medicinal use of marijuana,
suspect the real reasons are more
sinister: First, the government
doesn 'l want to admit that something it's devoted so much time and
effort into demonizing could have
at least one saving grace; second, a
powerful pharmaceutical lobby
doesn't want to see Jowly, cheap
marijuana gain ground on cxpensive man-made drugs that don't
work as Well but make the pharmaceutical companies billions of dolIars.
Mae Nuu and ACf have many
physicians squarely on their side,
although the amount of paperwork
necessary to help a patient get an
IND has caused some to throw up

theu hands and prescnbc other
medication. "One doctor told me.
'When the time comes that I spend
more time on paperwork than on
my patients, I just can't do the
paperwork,''' Mae remembers.
Syndicated Columnist Stephen
Chapman, writing on this subject
recently, cited a Harvard poll of
1,035 cancer physicians: Almost
half said they would prescribe marijuana if it were legal.
There are myriad substances on
the face of the Earth that can be
used for good or iU. We don't ban
their use in some products just
because in others they can be
destructive, and we don't deny
access to them because some peapie may usc them for no good.
What is particularly infuriating and
heartbreaking about this situation is
that marijuana use by the very ill
could be easily monitored by
physicians and responsible care
providers. Why should anyone
"just say yes" 10 unnecessary torment, when relief is so simple and
natural?

..--Local briefs----. Winners of r'abbit show
Theft reported to Sheriff

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Have you nouced how carefully,
in recent months, prominent Democratic spokesmen like House
Speaker Foley and Senate majority
leader Mitchell have tried to identify the Democratic Party with the
"middle class"?
Of coW'Se, class identification is
an old game in American politics,
and both parties arc forever playing
it, both offensively and defensively. Thus the Democrats have
always, and by no means unsuccessfully, tried to depict the Republicans as "the party of the rich."
The Republicans, in tum, are not
above hinting that the Democrats
are mostly interested in various
organized "minority" constituencies: blacks, homosexuals, and
American Indians, for example.
But the central psychological
fact of American politics is that
most voters think of themselves as
"middle class," or at least aspire
to belong in that spacious category.
The chief reason why socialism

never got anywhere in the United
States was that so few Americans
conceived of themselves as mem·
bcrs of the "proletariat" - a
"working class" exploited by its
employers. Rightly or wrongly,
most Americans think of themselves as in cont.rol of their own
destiny, and as bargaining with
their employer, who in turn is in
control of his.
This concept, decorated with a
wife and two children, a modest
house and a car, is so pervasive that
it is called "the American dream,"
and practically everyone- even
Australian aborigines and peasants
on the Peruvian altiplano - is presumed to aspire to it. (As a matter
of fact, of course, a great many
envious foreigners do.)
So both parties will tell you,
with a straight face, that they best
represent the American "middle
class." But there is clearly something going on in the inner circles
of the Democratic Party, because

Today's Birthdays: Former Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin is
78. Israeli Labor Party leader Shimon Peres is 68. Actor Fess Parker 1s 66.
Actress Ann Blyth is 63. Actor Robert Culp is 61. SportSCaster Frank Gifford is.61. Singer Eydie Gorme is 59. Actress Julie Newrnar is 56. Actress
Anita Gillette is 55. Actress Carole Shelley is 52. Actress Lesley Ann
Warren is 45. Singer Madonna is 33. Actor Timothy Hutton is 31.

I

By William A.
references to its identification with
the middle class have recently
become so standard a part of its
rhetoric that one can only conclude
a concerted campaign is under way.
The Democrats arc forever making these pathetic attempts to giafl
favorable attributes onto their
party ' s image. Remember their
1984 convention in San Francisco?
The Republicans were making
headway with the accusation that
the Democrats always wanted to
"blame America first." So some
inspired PR man equipped virtually
every del'egate in the Moscone
Center with a small American flag,
to wave at the TV cameras as an
earnest of the Democrats' patriotism.
In Atlanta in 1988, the worry
apparently was that the Republicans were walking off with the
issue of concern for "the family."
So on the last night of the conve~t10n, after Dukak1s had made h1s
acceptance speech, not only his
children but those of practically
every other aspirant for the nomination were brought on stage. to
demonstrate that Dem.ocrats had
families too.
What will the Democrats do in

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Visitors of tha Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy are being
advised to be on the lookout for bees.
According to Village Clerk Brenda Morris, the bees are plaguing
the cemetery, especially around the hea~stones.
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Village maintenance crews are now m the process ol extennmating the pests, but Morris continues to advise caution to cemetery
visitors.

ASCS ttJ. conduct program
The Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service will
conduct a referendum August 19-20 for wool and lamb producers to
vote on continuation of an agreement between the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and the American·Shcep Industry Association for a
wool.market promotion and improvement program.
, .
The agreement a11thorizes deductions from producer s pnce support payments to finance ~e. ASI's activities. These funds arc used
by the industry for advertistng and sales promot~on prog~ams for
wool in domestic and foreign markets, and for mfonnauon pro~rams on production management and market development and
improvement
.
If producers approve continuation of the agreement, up to seven
cents per pound on shorn wool marketings and 35 cents per hundredweight on unshorn lambs would be deducted for 1991. For calendar years 1991-1995, the deductions may increase up to an ~ddi­
tional one cent per pound of wool marketed and up to an add1llonal
five cents per hundredweight of unshorn lambs per year from the
prior year. .
·
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To participate, producers must have o":'ncd sheep stx month~ or
older for at least 3'0 consecutive days dunng 1990. Ballot distribution was to have begun on Tuesday, and those ballots may be
returned by mail or in person to the ASCS office on H1land Road m
Pomeroy. Questions may be directed to that office at 992-6646.

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Junior High ball practice to start
Eastern Junior High Football practice will begin on Monday at
Eastern High School from 9 a.m. to II a.m.

Meigs squads answer six calls
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1992 to intensify their idemifica- \
lion with the middle class? It's dif.
ficult to imagine; but I do have a
suggestion as to what they might
try to avoid.
Lay off that stuff about ·'the
party of compassion." Insofar as
there ' s a "compassion vote" in
this country - a great aching
desire to tax money out of those
who have it and give it to those
who don't - the Democrats have it
anyway. But as far as the middle
class is concerned, "compassion"
is a loser. The average American
doesn't want the Democratic
Party's "compassion." As a membcr of the middle class, he can
make it on his own, thank you, if
he's just given the chance.
Talk about cutting his taxes (and
don't just talk about i t - cut
them). Keep government regulalions down to a decent' minimum
(or: as Ronald Reagan put it
telhngly, get them off his back).
Small wars are OK, provided
they're over quickly and American
casualties are low.
And by the way , dear
Democrats, if you value yoW' polilical lives, lay off of race quOtas for
jobs.
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Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs Department took a theft
report on Wednesday evening.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Dr. James Conde reported that sometime within the past week, someone had stolen a nurnher of items from the pool area at his residence on Will's Hill Road.
Dr. Conde reponed that a 20 foot by 45 foot solar pool bl~~~
was raken as were approximately 25 lawn chairs, a redwood p1cmc
table anct'benches, scuba gear, volleyball equipment and a blue
umbrella and table base.

Cemetery bees poses problem

•

Who speaks for the middle class?

Blowers Union Local No. 306, and
a charter member -of Stars &amp;
Harold Dixon, 64, of LeMaster Stripes.
He was preceded in death by an
Road near Albany, died suddenly at
infant
son, Roger Dale Faulk:, and
his home on Thursday, August 15 ,
GRAND CHAMPION BREEDING SHEEP • Nancy Nally
by
two
brothers and two sisters.
1991.
received the Grand Champion Breeding Sheep at the 1991 Meigs
arc his former wife,
Surviving
He was born in Vinton County,
County Fair. She Is 11 member or the Dream Weavers 4-H .Club.
Mary
Jo
of
Columbus;
special
the son of the late Tom and Chl01e
friend,
Susie
Yarbour
of
ColumArbaugh Dixon. He was a former
bus;
children,
Kimberly
Faulk,
manager at Dundas Pallet Plant and
Tracy
Travis
and
Christopher
a retired employee of the
Faulk:, all of Columbus; two grnndCrownover Lumber Company.
childrcn,
Kyle and Kevin; three sisSurviving are his wife, Minnie
ters,
Garnet
Golding of Michigan,
Canode Dixon; a daughter, Mrs.
Ruth
McKinney
of Urbana, and
Ronald (Barbara) Bolen, Albany; a
Shirley
Friend
of
Pomeroy; three
granddaughter, Mrs. David (Lesa)
brothers, Charles Faulk and Glen
Dorst,
Albany;
a
brother,
Archie
Joshua Roush's Red New ed best of breed and best opposi tc
Faulk, both of Pomeroy, and
Zealand Senior Doe took best of were Angora, Joseph McCall , Dixon of Athens; and two sisters, Robert Faulk: of Urbana; and severshow, and Greg McKinney's senior doe, and Odie Karr, junior Elizabeth Elliotl and Vivian Perry al nieces and nephews and friends.
Champagne D'Argent Senior Buck, buck; California, Jennifer Proffiu, of Albany.
Services will be 10 a.m. SalW'Besides his parents, he was prebest opposite, in' the Meigs County both senior buck and senior doe;
day
in the Schoedinger East
Junior Fair rabbit show.
Chapagne D' Argent, Gregg McK- ceded in death by a granddaughter, Chapel, 5360 E. Livingston Ave.,
Tara
Bolen;
and
four
brothers,
In the market pens of rabbits, inney II, senior doe and 6-8 buck;
Columbus, where friends may call
Jason Ervin was grand champion, Dwarf Hotol, Joseph McCall, both Clarence, Emmell, Gilbert and today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Graveand Ashley McKinney, reserve junor buck and junior doe; Holland John Dixon .
Private services will be held on side services and burial will be in
champion, with other winners Lop, Ashley McKinney, junior doc,
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy,
bein~ Junior Rose, third, Greg
Joshua Roush, senior buck.
Funeral Home in Albany with Rev. at 2 p.m. Saturday with Pastor
McKmney, fourth, Jeremy CowMini Lop, Amy Smith, best of Jim Stewart officiating. Burial will Ronald Hagedorn officiating.
drey, fifth, and Rebecca Snowden, breed; Netherland Dwarf, Jason
be in Athens County Memory Garsixth.
Ervin,
senior
buck,
Joseph
McCall,
dens.
In showmanship, the grand
Tht&gt; Daily Sentinel
senior doe; New Zealand, Joshua
Friends may call at the funcral
champion was Kellic Ervin, and the Roush, red senior doe and black
I USPS 1411-9801
reserve champion was Melissa senior buck; Rex, Greg McKinney, home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Sat·
A 01\llfllon of Mulllmf&gt;dla, Inc .
Clifford. Winners in the categories both senior doe and junior buck; urday.
of showmanship, listed first Satin, Cheryl Jewell; junior doc;
Publishro ('lvf'ry art f' rn oon. Monday
through Frida y, 111 Court St. , Po·
through sixth respectively, were as Silver Marten , Melissa Clifford Arvin Dale Faulk
mf'roy. Ohio. bv !h &lt;&gt; Ohio Vallf'V Pubfollows:
li s hing Compa nv JMulllmf'dla .· In C'.,
senior buck; Cross-Bred: Bridget
Old Pro: Kellie Ervin, Melissa Varney, senior doe, and Odic Karr,
PomN ov . Ohi o 4~7fi9 , Ph . ~l'l - 2 1 ~ . S(' ·
Arvin Dale Faulk, 58, Colum ·
cond fla s s postaR f' ptihl a t Pomf'r O\' · .,.
Clifford, Jennifer Clifford, Joshua junior buck.
bu s, die d Wednesday . Aug.
Ohio .
· '
Roush, Ashley McKinney , and
14,1991, 31 his residence. He was
·.
Christy Cooper.
Mrmbr-r Thr AssO&lt;'I au'd P rrss . In an employee of the lnstrumenl
lewd Dait_
v Prr·ss Assorla ti fln and t hr
~ •
Yearling: Amy Varney, Jeremy
Department at Owens-Illinois.
Ohi o Nf'w spapf'r Asscr lat lon. Nat lana i ' '
Cowdrey, Sarah Cliford, Rebekah
Ad\'('r!lsln_g RPprrsPn !atl\·r. Branham
A 37 -year employee of Owens·
Nf'wspa pf'r SaiPs. 7.1.1 Third Avr nur" .
Karl.
Veterans Memorial
Illinois, he was a member of the
Nf'w York. NPw Yo rk 10017.
Novice: Billie Pooler, Alicia
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS - Quarter Century Club, the Gl"ss
Russell, Joseph McCall , Cheryl None.
POSTMASTER: Srnd addrr-ss c·han g""
to Thr Dallv Srontlnf'l. 111 C"nurt Sr
Jewell, Jessica Hamilton.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES Pomrrnv. Ohio 4~7fl9
Winners in the breed show, list- Harvey George, Fred W. Crow, Jr.,
SURSfRIPTrON RATE.'
Howard Shank, Raymond Reit8y f'nrriPr nr Motor Rontf'
mire, and Louise Radford.
Onf' WPf"k
.. S U iO
South-Central Ohio
OnP \1 onrh
... Sfi.95
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
On,. Yf'ar
$fl.1 20
Discharges, Aug. 15 - M. the mid-60s. Southwest winds less
SINGLE ('(Jpy
Roberta Chancey, Liberty Cole- than 10 mph. Saturday, part ly
PRICE
man, Charla Cooper, Josephine cloudy with a chance of afternoon
S u h~cri ht ' r " not r1£'S irtnc 1o p;tv 1h(l ca r .
Donohue, Jimmy Ellis , Edith showers and thunderstorms. High
rif'r· m ow rf'mll In ad\'i'IO&lt;'f' dlrf'c l to
The Ohio Department of Trans· Gilkey, Hannon Hager, Briuany ncar 90. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thf' Oatl~· Sf'nt lnf'l on a :1. fior 12 month
portation is now accepting applica· Johnson, Clyde Mount, Juanita
Extended rorecast:
Oa sis \rNtll will b£&gt; J;::h•pn carrlf'r f'ach
tions for grants under 11s Oh10 Port Norman, Mary Painter, Nan cy
Wl'f'k
Sunday through Tuesday
Assistance Program. Port authon· Rainer, Grace Shaffer, Karen SowShowers and thunder storm s
~o s ub.~cr lptiom b_
v mal l pt"&gt;rmlttrd In
tics, counties, and municipalities ers, Michael Stephens and Natalie likely Sunday. Fair west and a
&lt;~n·as whf'n' homr rar rlf'r .w rvlrf' Is
;n·aiiahlf'.
bordering Lake Eric or the Ohio Wallace.
chance of showers east Monday.
River arc eligible to apply for
Births, Aug. 15 · Mr. and Mrs. Fair Tuesday except a chance of
Ml\11 Suhi..rlptlon"
ln!lldt• Mf'IW-' Count)'
funds.
Jesse Blanton, a daughter, Gallipo· showers extreme northeast. Highs
u Wf'Pk S..
. $21.R4
The Port Assistance Program lis. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Cauley, a in the 80s Sunday. Cooling to the
2fiWf'f'kS .
$4.1.1fi
provides grants for planning and daughter, Oak Hill.
52 Wf'PkS ..
... $14. 7Ji
70s Monday and Tuesday. Lows in
Ouhddr Mel.,. Count ,.,.
capital projects which benefit comthe 60s Sunday. Cooling to the 50s
1.1 Wf'Pks ..
.. 12.1.40
mercial water transportatiOn of
Monday and upper 40s to middle
2fl Wf'eks ...
... $4!'1 .50
freight. Eligible planning projects
~2 Wf&gt;Pks ....... -- - .... ..... ........ SAA.40
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here arc 50s Tuesday.
include port master plans, port
land-use studies, and port econom- the Ohio Lollery drawing selecic development studies. Eligible tions made Thursday night
capital projects include construc- Pick 3 Numbers
4-6-4
tion or rchabilillition of dock facili(four, six , four)
ties and cargo handling facilities, or
Pick
4 Numbers
projects which improve the rail or
3-2-0-7
highway access to ports.
(three, two, zero, seven)
Applications must be postCards
marked by October 15, 1991
6 (six) of Hearts
For more infonnation, comact:
8 (eight) of Clubs
Carla Cefaralli, acting deputy
6 (six) of Diamonds
director, Division of Water Trans2 (two) of Spades
portation, 25 South Front Street,
The
Super Louo jackpot is $4
Room 716, Columbus, Oh10
million.
43216-0899, (614) 466-8981.

Harold Dixon

GRAND CHAMPION SUFFOLK RAM • BJ. Ervin, rl&amp;ht,
won Graad Champ!on Suffolk Ram at the 1991 Meigs County
Fair. He was assisted by Sbawn Dailey. They are members or the
Meigs County Shepherds 4-H Club.

Marijuana can be good medicine
.
Mae s work has helped force the

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Through a magazme ass1gnment

SHOWMANSHIP- Kristi Warner look Grand Champion and
Tyson Rose Reserve Champion in Showmanship at Thursday's 4H Junior Fair Dairy Show at the Meigs County Fair.

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Six calls for assistance were answered on Thursday and early
Friday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
On Thursday at 11:28 a.m., Rutland and Columbia Township
units went to Carpenter Hill Road for Edward Maksinzak. He was
transported to Holzer Medical Center.
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At 2:10p.m., Pomeroy unit responded at the Rock Spnn.gs Falfgrounds for Oscar Price. He was taken to Veterans Mcmonal Hospital. At 6:45 p.m., Racine unit went to Portland for KCith Musser,
who refused treatment At 6:46 p.m., Middleport unit went to Village Green Apartments. Betty Templeton was treated but not transported. At 10 p.m., Pomeroy squad took Angela White from the
fairgmunds to Veterans.
·
On Friday at 1:07 a.m., Pomeroy unit went to Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center. John Larkin was raken to Veterans.

judging are announced

Hospital news

ODOT now taking
applications for
port grants

Lottery numbers

The 1991 Junior
and Senior Fair Schedule

Victory Baptist Church

-Meigs announcementsMeeting slated
.
.
There will he a meeung pertaming to Middleport's Catfish Festival
on Tuesday at 5:30p.m. in Middleport Council Chambers.
Church picnic

INVITES Y,OU TO SERVICES

The Trinity Church family p,icnic will be held Sunday at the
home of Alice and Phil Globokar
beginning at 3 p.~; There will be
games and actmttes and dmncr
will begin at 5 p.m.

SUNDAY MORNING-AUG. 18
SUNDAY SCHOOL 10:00 A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP 11:00 A.M.

----Pomeroy Court news---Four were fined and nine others
· Forfeiti~g bonds were Steven
forfeited bonds in the court of Ray Foster, Middleport, $375,
Pomeroy Mayor Richar4 Seyler DUI' Detnu Roush, Racine, $113,
Tuesday night
publlc, intoxication; Jil.l Reynolds,
Fined were John Randolph Pomeroy, $43, obs1111CUng the flow
Qualls, Pomeroy. $~3 and costs, of traffic; Benny Bryant, II, Long
driving under suspcnston, and $163 Bottom, $71, speeding; Robert
and costs, giving false infonna~o" Buc~. Williamson, W. Va., $49,
to a police officer• Raymond speedmg; , Ronald Clonch,
Litchsfield, Syracus~. $163 and Pomeroy, $43, left of center;
costs FRA suspension; Troy , }Jarold Dewh~rst, Rutland, $43,
Yanlnins, Pomeror. ~3 .and"«&gt;sts.. in)Jl~r backing; Robert Jo~d~,
(ailing .tb keep ht(vehtc.lc unde~.&lt;~ \A.~ -G~~· Vf• Va., $63. c!ri~tng
c;pnti'ol; and Terra Sc~oon.ovcr\"tJ~ under auspenston; De~a I;lonng,
Rutland, $46 and costs, ~ng. ' · J!Qineroy, $213, petty theft•
~

_

·-----··-

,; , .'r~t'

u

.......;._,--.. ~ ·-·

__._.:;~:.;:,.;-~~~--

-··~ .

Weather

FRIDAY, AUGUST 16
6:30 p.m.- Belles and Beaus
6:45 p.m.- Dairy Sweepstakes- Show Arena
7:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Livestock Sale- Show Arena
7:30 p.m.-Tntck Pull
8:00 p.rn.-ATVPuli..(Jrandstand

S.\TURDAY, AUGUST 17
II :00 A.M.-Homemaker, Apple Pic &amp; Country FairHill Stage
I :00 p.m.-Pretty Baby Contest
4:00 p.m.--Quarter Horse Races
4:00 p.m.-Kiddie Tt:actor Pull
4:00.p.m.-Bart&gt;ara's School of Dance- Hill Stage
7:00p.m.-Tractor Pull
8:00 p.m.-Outhouse Races--Grandstand

Special Gospel Singing By

"The Caplinger Family"

SEE YOU THERE!

SPECIAL SPEAKER

WAYNE FAIR-MISSIONARY TO
PAPA, NEW GUINEA
525 N. 2ND MIDDLEPORT
PASTOR~ JAMES E. lll~ESEE

- .... ... ..
~-

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Friday, August 16, 1991

rfhe Daily Sentinel

Sports

Parrish's homer helps Angels post 9-1 win over Minnesota

Friday, AU!lUSt 16, 1991

Pag&amp;-4

B1 The Associated Press
Caltfomia keeps winning with
big home runs.
On Wednesday night, Dave
Winfield hit No. 400 in a 7-4 vict(}ry over the Twins. On Thursday
night, Lance Parrish hit No. 300 in
a 9-1 rout of Minnesota.
"It's something I've been looking forward to for a quite a while
now," Parrish said. "But wins and
losses are more significant to think
about."
Parrish became the 64th player
to hit 300 homers when he connected in the third for a two-run drive
off Scott Erickson (15-5). Parrish,
who had only 16 hits in his previous 108 at-bats, has homered in
three consecutive games.
Mark Langston (15-6) allowed
two hits in seven innings, struck
out three and wallced three in his
ftrst victOry in four starts since July
26. Chris Beasley and Mike Fetters

:·Rijo-Sabo scuffle overshadows
Reds' 4-1 road loss to Giants
By BEN WALKER
AP BasebaU Writer
The CinciMati Reds are fighting
mad. And after beating themselves
on the field, they turned to beating
up on each other in the dugout.
Pitcher Jose Rijo and third base·
man Chris Saba had to be separaled
and restrained Thursday night in
the Reds' 4-1 loss in San Fillllcisco, their 25th defeat in 35 games.
In the third inning, Saba's tw(}out error enabled the Giants to
score twice against Rijo. As the
Reds prepared to take the field in
the fourth, Saba and Rijo began
: arguing and it took manager Lou
· Piniella and several players to
break it up.
"Go fight the other team, don't
fight among yourselves," Piniella
said after a closed-door, post-game
meeting. "It was frustration more
than anything else. This club has
not handled winning (last year's
World Series) too well, I can tell
you that."
Saba declined comment on the
incident. Rijo would not speak
about it directly, either.
"We're playing terrible," Rijo
said. "I don't know what it is. We
can't win no matter what."
Paul McClellan (3-1) pitched
five perfect innings before Carmclo
Martinez led off the sixth with a

home run. That was the only hit
McClellan gave up in seven and
one-third innings, and Dave
Righetti finished with one-hit relief
for his 19th save.
Rijo (8-4) allowed four hits in
seven innings. He struck out seven
and wallced two.
The game was scoreless in the
third when Kirt Manwarinj! sin~
and Jose Uribe wallced. RiJO ba
the runners into scoring position,
then got two outs. But Robby
Thompson's grounder went off
Sabo's glove for an error that
enabled Manwaring to score, and
Will Clark followed with an RBI
single.
In other National League games,
Houston beat Los Angeles 6-1,
Philadelphia stopped Pittsburgh 64, San Diego defeated Atlan!.1 1-0,
St. Louis downed New York 4-1
and Chicago edged Montreal 7-6.
Pbillies 6, Pirates 4
Dickie Than's lhree-run double
off Neal Heaton (3-2) highlighted a
five-run fifth inning. John Kruk hit
an RBI single and Darren Daulton
walked with the bases loaded for
the other two runs.
Jose DeJesus (9-4) gave up three
runs in the first inning, but settled
down to win his fourth straight
decision. Mitch Williams got six

..:~
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In the majors ...

~

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•

Eulmllltvllloo
TW L PeL
PriTSIIURGH 67 46 .$93
St Louia .......... 61 l2 540
Chiuao
......... l7 l7 500
New Yod&lt;
....... 57 57 .500
Philodolplu. .. ..... 54 6() .474
Monuool ......... 46 67 .407

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..... 48 66 .421

Tbui'Sday's scores
· t.~uc

saA

Plllla phla 6, Pitllburah 4
SL Lo.Us 4, New Yodt 1
Sa• fnndlco4, ClltdnnatJ 1
iloult011 6, Loo AJ!Id&lt;o I

cr••••dtt
....... cr...tto '~~ 7:35 , ....
Holuton (Kilc S-7) at Lot: AnJclCI
(llaahiler &lt;1-2~ IOOS f.'"Atluta (R.eJIIOIO -0)
Saa
a~

Di~ao

HI), IO,Ql p.m.

Clnclan1tl (Kip Groa 4-4) •t San
Francla&lt;o (Blact 9-U~ Jt:35 p.m.

Satunlay's gomes
Phil1deJphia (Mulholland 11 - 10) at
Cbi&lt;aao(Biclo&lt;IDII-7),=p.m
Clncl•natl (Scutlder 3·3) a&amp; San

Fraactoca (BurkoU 9-4~ US p.IL
Ntw York (GoHtl 11·') al PUb·
llurah (Z. Sdltl .. ,), 7:t5 p.&amp;
St. Loud (DeLeon 5-1) l l Montrul
(Demia MutioRII -7), HS p.m.
Atl&amp;n~.t (Lei
(Huut 14-5), IO:OS

1t

10.11)
p.m.

Lc. AtJael•
11

San Dicao

Sunday's games
New York at Pltldlui'Jh, 1:35 p.Jn.
Phi1adclphia at OUcaao, 2:20p.m.
All&amp;nla ll Sm Dicp, 4:0.5 p.m.
Houlton It l.ol Anaek11,4:0S p.m.
Clnclnutl at Su Francllco, 4:35
p.IL

AMERICAN LEAGUE
IMUnDI•laloo

Tun

WL

T......,
Danoi1
Bm""

~

Gl

......... 63 53 .543
........... 61 55 .!1:16

2

..........

Milwa.W.

......

Now Yodl

.......

S7 51 .496 S.l
52 6! .4S2 10.5
51 62 .451 10.5

Baltimcn
........ 41 67 .417
CLEVELAND
37 76 .317
Water~~

Tc&amp;N
Minnel&lt;u

DlvWon
W L PtL

....... 61 41 .586

Clticaao

......... 66 49

Oakland

......... M
.. ......... 62

Sattle

tw.u City ..... .. toO 53 .m

California

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57 S5 .s09

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DOUBLES - Jo•e. St. loui1, JS;
Boo lila, Pltl1bu,..a., .Hi NcReynoldJ,

New Yctk, 27; Morril, c:J.clanat~ l'i
fianl, Atlanu, 25; T. Owyan, San Di.cao.
2S; S.bo. CIMtnutl, lA; Pawllewn, At·
Wt10,1A;
Now y Cldt, 1A•
TRIPl£1 - t..nldord, St Louia, II ; T.
Gwynn, S1n Dicao. 11: L. GonzMcz,
Houlton, I; Finley, Houston, 1; v ..
Sl)tt&lt;. Pltllburail, 7; Oriaam, Moou.ai,
6; W. Cbrk, San Franciloo, 6; Kruk,

l-.

Phil.a4olph.ia, 6;

C•ndael~

Hounon, 6;

Felder, San Fraaciloo, 6.
HOME RUNS - G1n1, Atllllta, 27;
Johnson, New Yodl: , 2.5; Mill Wlllianu,

Sar~ Fnocilco, 24: McGriff. San Dieao.
24; W. aut, San FtliU:ill:o, 2.3; Kevin

"'~

SVAC football

Teu• {BrMrn 7-9 and B. Wilt 3-5) at
C~vclaad (kina J., 1nd York l..C), 2,

Chi.cep (Aivua 1-o} 11 New Yotl.(P.
PaelHI),7,30p.m.
'
Toronto (Xey 12·7) 11 Detroit (Cerutti

1-4), H5 p.m.
City (S•baftaaen 1-6) 11 801ton
(a-to 11·1), 7:J5 p.m.
oulbo .!Moo"' 11-7)" Mlnnctota

x..n.u

(Tapiall()-'(!!1~

at MilwuIt

10,3S p.m.

Seattle

Satunlay's1ames
K111t11 Cit{ (Aquino 5·2) It Boston
~ p.m .
Tau (Jo11 G•liiiB 7~5) AI Clen-

(Hmill·ll).

la ... (Nicloolol-lt~ 7:0 p.oL
Chiolao (Mc00M1114-4) at New Ycd

(Ta,lo.S·7), 7:30p.m.
Toronto (Juan Guzman ...2) at Detroit
(Al.u.d Q-1), 7:35p.m.
OU:llncl (Wcleh 10-7) It Minncaou

(Monill&lt;l-9),1:05 ,....

Ballimale-~ '-6) at Wilwau·

koo (N-10-f), 1:35 JUII-

Callfomil (fial~y l'f"') It Stattle
(DrLuoia J()-7), 10:05 ,....

Sunday's pmes

Kanou City at o- I :05 p.m.
Chie~ao at New Yolk. l :30 p.m.

- FAMILY

Oo' .
. -1, ·

RESTAURANT
FRIED CHICKEN

$

5 99

63; Oritaom. Monlt'Cil, .51; DeShielcb,
Mornreal, 44; ColetiUia, New York, 37;
BOttdl, Pllbllurp, 35J B~tler, Loo An·
aeteo. 34; Lallklonl. SLLOUU. 29.

Soup &amp; Salad
e
Or Try One Of Our Other Great Menu Items!
OPEN SUNDAY, 6:30AM TO 10 PM
/I Cany Out Orders AvaUabte (304) 773-5321 II

pu., 9-4, .692, 3.2l; DowN, s.. fnnci..

VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPmD

Mitchell S1n Fnaeiuo, 23; O'Neill,

ctnet...t~ 21; a Bell, Chiup. 21.
STOLEN BAS!S -

Nimn., Allantt,

PITCHING (10 decilion•)- Hurst,
San Dieao, I .. S. .737. 3 .32; Carpenter,
Sl Louil, 1-3, .7'1:7, 4.SO; O.vna, HOUJton, 1-3, .700, 2.14; Dclc.~. Philadcl·
co, 9-4, .692, 3.37; Avery, Atlant1, 13·6,
.614, 3.S7; Glavine. Allanu., 1.5·7, .612.

2.1A.
STIUKEOlrrS - Cone, New York.
1.55; Glarine, Atlanta, 142; OoGdtn, New
York, 141; 0. Maddu1, Chiea1o, 139;
H1misch, Houuon, llS; Huul, S•n
Diop, 114; a-, Son ~.113.
SAVES- Lee Smitlt. St. Louia. 31;
Dtbble, Clndllnll~ U t Mitch Williaml,
PIUI..teiphia, 22; F""'"· New Yod&lt;, 22;
R.ipoui. San FnneiJ.co, 19; Lef'fau, San
Dicao, I i; 11=11""• AL1on10, 17

Don Tate Chevrolet-Oldsmobile
Cadillac Geo

American League
BAITING- Palmeiro, Tex.u, .343;
Rosas, B011.0n, .340; Fnneo, Texas, .335;
Molitor, Milwalliec, .313; Tart1bul1,
Ka11111 City, .330; C. Ripkcn, Baltimore,
.32l; Puckett, Mlnneaou, .!23.
RUNS - Molitot, MiiWIUkce, 94;
Pllrneiro, Tex.u, 86; Unscco, Oakhnd,
82; Thomas. Chicaao. 80: Sicrn, Te.u1,
80; White, Toronto, 10; Franco, Teus,

POMEROY, OHIO
1·800·837·1 094
614·992·6614

79 .

RBI - Fielder, Daroit, 100; Thomas,
Chinao, 8?; C•n•c"o• Oakland, 87;
Caner, Turvnw, 17; Sicnw. Tcxu, 8J; C.
~~om,

lipkcn,

II; Joyner, Caliiomis,

32; Nmciro. Te1.as, 32: C. Ripkcn, D•lti-

Today'• games

(1Ctuotor9-S~

bniO, 11A; Som...J, Lao Anpl... 11A.

e~~ MASON

DOUBLES - Cuter •. Toronto, 34;
Bous, 8011on, 34; R. Alomu, Toronto,

CaJilomil9, MinnCI'Otl 1

kee(Atliut .. S) 1:35p.m.
Cllilornil (Gr1he 1· 3)

lanLI, 71; 0. Snailh, SL Loula, 71; Bonilla.
Pluaburah, ft •
RBI - W. Clark, San Franriac:o, 89;

13l .

Bahirnore9, Tuu 2

p.m.
8 - '(II. 1 - :1-4)

R.UNS - Bu&amp;ler, LCN Anaele•. 71;
Jol!naon, New Ycd., 76; SandbcrJ, CUe~ ·
ao, 76; Gtn1. Allam•. 74; Pauilcux:a, At·

c.ood's AhvaJ'.t

Pt.lmei.m, Tuu, 1.56; C. Ripken, Bdti·
more, 149; Puckcu, MiMci:Oll, 1-46; Sian, Tout:, 10; Franco, Tcus, 141 ; Vcatura, CUuao. 1JS; Greenwell, 80fllon,

New YorkS, KanuJ City I
Toeoa&amp;o4, MilwallkNI
Soaalol, Ookw.l6
Daroil6, Qig 0 4
Boa!oo 6, Cla~nol l

.

•

Su Die1o,
.337, l01e, Sl Louit, .327; PaMIJ.eton, Al·
lin~ . .32!!; NixOA. Atlanu, .Jll; Morrll.
Cincinnall, .313: W. Cuk. San FttnciJ·
co, .311; Bonilla, Plltaburall. .312; But'"'· 1.o1 AA 1o~eo..!02.

more, 32: Sierra , Tens. 10; White,
ToJCW~to , 30.
TRlPLES - Molitor, Milwaukee, 10;
White, Toroeno, I ; McRae, Kanau City,
1; R. Alomtr, Toronto, 7; Devereaux.,
Bahimoro, 7; Polonil, Calirotnil, 1;
Wlllltn, Cltvtllond, '; Pucteu, Miftnelo.

ll , 6; GlldciCJI,

Minncso~ .

MICRO
CLASS
.
- Brian Bartlett or New
Marshfield won the micro mini class, a class ror racers in the 4-7
year-old age group, in Thursday's racing action at the Meigs County Fair. At press time results or tbe races were not available, but
they wiU be available at a later date.

6; Raines,

Chiuao.6.
HOME llJNS - Fi£1dcr, Detroit,

~;

C•n•eeo. Oald1nd, 31; Carter, Toronto,

21;.C. DavU,·.Wiu~. 26; T•rubllll.
Kui'to City, 2Sj 810hn«, S..lllo, 24; C.

.•
IW.Ore; 24; D. Htodcnoa,
1A•

~c.:;

STOU:N BASES - Roinoo, Olic:a&amp;o.
3~. R. H - Ooltland, 37; R. Ato-

mar. TotOIIlAJ, 36; Polmia, Calilomia, !3;
Olyler, Detroit. 30; White. Toronto, 21:
Franco, Te&amp;II,Z4.
PrTCHINO (10 deci.siou} - HeMe·
man, Dctroil, 9-2, .Ill, 2.72; Ericklon,
Mim-.,
7l0,119; Klinlt, Oilt·
bnd, 1-l, .1V, 4.04; LanPton, Calilor·
.... ll-6, .714,!.30; OullidtiGI, Dcuoi~
IS~•.714••.
NcDowoll. Oticar· 146. .7110, 3.!2; Th~ ChiuJO, 7- . .700.
!.19; Fu&gt;ley, Calii...U, 14-6; .700. 4.C17.

u.s..

oo.

STRIKEOUTS - R lobnaco, S..ulc,

175; Ckma1a, B'"""'· 159; Ryan. Te.w,

14S; McDowtll, Oticap. 137; Swt-,
Clevelald, Jlot; Llapton, C.utomil,
134; Candioai, T-133.
S~VES- - · Eolta~le,. Oaltlud, 33;
A1uHera, Minn.,ota, 31: le;udon,
lloabl, 30; lluvoy, Calilomia, 27; Thiapca, Oticaao, 27; llcoko, Ton•uo, 26; 01·
aon, Bulim..., 25.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
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finished the six-hitler.
In other games, Toronto beat
Milwaukee 4-1, Detroit beat Chicago 6-4, New York beat Kansas City
5-1, Seattle beat Oakland 8-{), Baltimore beat Texas 9-2, and Boston
beat Cleveland 6-2.
Blue Jays 4, Brewers 1
Toronto stopped its longest losing streak since 1987 at seven
games behind Kelly Gruber's tworun homer off Dan Plesac (1 -5),
who was making just the second
start of his six-year major league
career.
Todd Stottlemyre (11-5) gave
up four hits in seven innings .
Duane Ward pitched the eighth and
Tom Henke pitched a perfect ninth
for his 26th save in 27 chances.
Tigers 6, White Sox 4
Lou Whitaker and Alan Trammell drove in three runs each.
Mark Leiter (5·2) gave up three
runs and six hits in ftve innings and

Mike HeMeman got five outs for
his 19th save. Jeff Carter (0-1),
called up Wednesday night from
Class AAA Vancouver, gave up
five runs and four hits for the
White Sox.
Yankees 5, Royals 1
Don Mattingly was benched for
refusing to get a haircut, and Scou
Sanderson pitched four-hit baD for
seven innings.
Sanderson (12-8) gave up one
run, struck out five and walked one
before Greg Cadaret finished.
Matt Nokes and Bernie
Williams each drove in two runs
against Mark Gubicza (7-6), who
allowed live runs and eight hits in
six and two-third innings.
Mariners 8, Atbletk:s ll
Jay Buhner hit a g(}-ahead sacrifice fly in the seventh. Ken Griffey
Jr. homered and doubled twice.
Ron Darling left after five
innings with a 6-3 lead.

Calvin Jones 0-1) was the winner and Mike Schooler got the last
out for his fifth save. Steve Chitren
(1-4) was the loser.
Orioles 9, Rangers 2
Jose Mesa (5-8), recalled from
Class AAA Rochester earlier in the
day, pitched a three-hitter, struck
out a career-high nine and wallced
two.
Chito Martinez drove in four
runs and Leo Gomez hit a three-run
homer.
Oil Can Boyd (0 -4) allowed
nine runs and 14 hits for Texas.
Red Sox 6, Indians 2
Ellis Burks hit a two-run triple

Trophies and rosettes were
awarded to gilllld champion horses
in Belgian, Percheron and grade
classes following judging at the
Meigs County Fair.
In the Belgian division, took the
trophy for gilllld champion stallion
with John Rose, Long Bottom, taking grand champion mare and
junior champion mare. Rose also
took three seconds and a first in the
judging. Senior champion mare
was awarded to Tim Bearhs of
Pomeroy. who also took five first
place ribbons.
Charles Chancey of Racine took
first· and second-place ribbons in
the judging. Byron James of
Guysville took first, second and
third ribbons in the judging. Tom
Karr of Pomeroy took two thirdplace ribbons. Robert Ray Harris
· won a flfst-place ribbon.
In the Percheron Division,
Charles Shain of Pomeroy won
grand champion stallion. junior
champion stallion; gilllld champton
mare and senior champion mare.

Shain also took two flfSt-place rib- the farmer's hitch class, while in
bons. Junior champion mare was the cart class, Bearhs took flfSt and
won by Chuck Whittington of James took: second and third.
Albany. Whittington also took
GRAVELY TRACTOR
three ftrst-place ribbons and a second-place ribbon in the judging.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
James won a first-place ribbon in
the judging.
Spring and Su•mer Hours
In the grade horses, Dave Cohen
Monday thn Friday
of Guysville won junior champion
9 A.M.·S P.M.
mare and gilllld champion gelding,
Sat.
9 A.M.·l P.M.
with Bearhs win senior champion
gelding. Cohen .also won a first~THE
place ribbon. Bearhs also won two
first-place ribbons and a third-place
ribbon in the judging.
Terry Lewis of Le!.1rt, W.Va .
won a sec'ond-place ribbon in the
judging, with John Rose winning a
third-place ribbon. Mike Brothers
of Pomeroy won ·first· and secondplace ribbons, while Lester Parker
of Pomeroy. captured second- and
third-place ribbons in the judging.
In the open class division winners in first, second and third
places were R.D. Tuttle of Racine,
Bearhs and Karr, respectively, in

GRAVELY

SYSTEM

and rookie Mike Gardiner (5 -6)
aUowed one run and five hits in six
innings.

Dave Ouo (1-3) g_ave up three
runs and _se~en hilS m seven and
one-thlfd mnmgs.

Are You Looking For Value?
1991 Carrollton Sabre Supreme
14x70

$21,900

$17199 5

SALE PRICE •••••••••••••

Draft horse show results announced

McArthur colt wins harness race
in record time at Meigs County Fair

10;·CDavu, Minnee&lt;:U, 10.
HITS - Molitor. Milw1Llkec. IS1 ;

. ,,., ,....
:'•
:.

Leape

B•IIJa. Pllllbu'lll, IU; Pa&gt;dle1011, At-

Philadolphi1 (lbf'fin 3-3) at Chic•ao
(S,IdiiTc:IA), 3,20 p.m.
St- Louia (Tewksbury 7·1) 11 M.mue&amp;l
(Nabl&gt;olz :lA), 7,~ p.m.
New York
1-1) It Plttl·

HCII\Uteln (BoWCIIIo 2-2)
(Ojoda H~ IC:J;'"-

National

B~1TlNO- ~ - Ow~n,

om.

Today's aames

(1looco

Major league leaders

Bondi, Plllabureh. U; John1on, New
Tat. 10: r.w.... Cilia..,; 71: 'McQHI,
!"' !);..... ~ 0...;-Ailal!t, 74; II&lt;WIIlli,
Pllllllurail, 7J.
HITS - T. Owynt~, Slli D;OJo, ISS;
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Tororno •tDauuit,l :3S p.m.
Tau II Clt\'lland, 1:35 p.m.
Baltimclrc: al Milwaukee, 2:JS p.m.
Calilcwnia at Soaa.lc. 3:35p.m.
O&amp;kland at MimCIIOU, I:OS p.m.

outs for his 22nd save.
Astros 6, Dodgers 1
Steve Finley hit a three-run
homer as Houston kept Ramon
Martinez and Los Angeles skidding
at Dodger Stadium.
Martinez (14-8) has dropped
three straight decisions for the first
time since 1989.
Pete Harnisch (7-8) stopped his
four-game losing streak, pitching
five-hit ball for seven innings. Finley got four hits.
Martinez gave up six runs and
six hits in fi:ve innings.
Cardinals 4, Mets 1
Rhea! Cormier won his maJor
league debut
Cormier, replacing the injured
Ken Hill in the rotation, became
the first Cardinals left-handed
s1.1rter to win since last Sept. 25.
Lee Smith pitched the ninth for
his league-leading 31st save. Wally
as Finale Jacque, driven by Don Spencer and
LOCAL WINNER - Local color raced to
Whitehurst (5-8) was the loser.
owned by Roger Spencer or Pomeroy, crossed
first place in the sixth race for two-year-old colt
Padres 1, Braves 0
trollers during Thursday's harness horse races,
tbe finish line.
Greg Harris pitched his second
straight shutout and pinch hitLer
Oscar Azocar singled home the
only run in the eighth inning.
Harris (4-3) held Atlanta to
three hits. He struck out s1x,
wallced one.
John Smaltz (8-13) lost despite
A new track record was set at fourth race for two-year-old colt Steve Moore and driven by Moore,
a four-hiller. He struck out nine
Thursday's
Harness Horse Races at trotters. Second place was captured captured second place in the race.
and walked two.
the
Meigs
County
Fair. A record by Blackberry Jam. driven and
Tiananaman Square raced to
Darrin Jackson singled to s!.1rt
time
of
2:04.4
was
captured
by
first
place in the ninth race for twoowned
by
Walter
Young
of
Barthe eighth, took second on a
year-old colt trotters. He is owned
groundout and scored when Azo- Crown Time Stoney in the seventh nesville.
Local color raced to first place by Roger Rutherford and Sharon
car, batting for Dann Bilardello, hit race of the day for three-year-old
colt pacers.
in the sixth race for two-year-old Selman, New Holland, and was
a soft single to left field .
The horse was driven by Earl colt trotters, as Finale Jacque, driv- driven by Stever Moore. The secCubs 7, Expos ll
Owings
and is owned by Esther en by Don Spencer and owned by ond place spot was captured by
Ryne Sandberg's sacrifice fly
capped a three-run rally in the Crownover of McArthur. The horse Roger Spencer of Pomeroy. Floyd Adonno, driven by L. Shoealso raced to first place in the sec- crossed the finish line. Easy Ty, maker and owned by Pauy Mills o(
eighth iMing.
Shawon Dunston opened the ond heat to win the trophy blanket owned by Marilyn Havens and Grove City.
inning with a double for his fourth by Swisher Lohse Pharmacy.
Racing to flfSt place in the flfsl
hit of the game. Jeff Fassero (1-4)
walked Rick Wilkins, Chico Walk- race and second in the fifth race for
er hit an RBI single, third baseman two-year-old filly trotters was
Tim Wallach made an error that Triple J's Star, driven by Ron
C:
allowed the tying run to score and Newhart with David Palone of Rice
Landing, Pa, the owner. Second in
Sandberg put the Cubs ahead.
Paul Assenmacher (5-4) was the the flfst race and first in the fifth
winner, even though he gave up race was Kamtastic Score, owned
two runs on five hits in three by Vera Cross of Canton, and drivinnings. Chuck McElroy pitched en by Robert Ogg.
Second place wiMer in the secthe ninth (or his third save.
ond race· for three-year-old colt
pacers Wl\S Sydney's Bushwhacker,
owned by Diana Malone of Waterford, and driven by Don Spencer.
preview August 23 Second
place in the seventh race
was Bay Flap, driven by Terry
RT. 33
MASON, WV
The SV AC footbaU preview will VanRhoden and owned by RayNEXT
TO
FAST
4
U
AND
MASON
MCYIEL
begin with the Oak Hili-Hannan mond and Beulah Moore, Dresden.
Sunday
lhru
Thursday,
6:30
am10
pm:
Fnday
&amp;
Saturday,
6:30 am-11 pm
Trace scrimmage on Friday. Aug.
Ron Newhart drove Swtique to
23 at 6 p.m. on Kyger Creek High first place in both the third and the
Make Plans To Have Sunday Dinner With Us
School's field.
eighth races for three-year-old colt
North Gallia and Southern will pacers. The horse is owned by the
Featuring
take the field at 6:45 p.m., and driver and Ray Newhart of MarietSymmes Valley and Eastern will ta. Banjo Bandy, driven by Terry
meet at 7:30 p.m. Southwestern VanRhoden and owned by Tom
and the host Bobcats will play in Poulton of Croton, raced to second
Mashed Potatoes/Gravy.
the finale at 8:15 p.m.
place finishes in both races.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults
Choice of Vegetable,
Earl Owings drove Lead the
and S2 for children.
Wave to the ftrsl place spot in the

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

AS LOW AS............................ $203.38* Per Month

NOTHING BUT

TROUBLE

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KEVIN COSTNER
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Autuet Z41h.11t1o

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
Located 5 Miles East of Rt. 33
On Rt. 50 East, Athens 592·1972

Puerto Rico beats U.S.
cagers 73-68 Thursday
By JOHN NELSON
AP Sports Writer
HAVANA (AP)- The U.S .
men· s amateur basketball team is a
loser again, and this time there's no
• tomorrpw.
.
'
The Americans lost 73-68 to
Puerto Rico in the semifmals of the
Pan American Games tournament
Thursday night, extending their
string of losses in major international tournaments to five.
The next time the team goes to
l)aLtle in the 1992 Olympics in
Barcelona. Spain, though, the gun
will be fuUy loaded. No more 19ycar-old coUege players.
Next time, the team will have
NBA players.
"When they bring in the NBA,
everybody will be fighting for second place on down. It'll be no contest once these guys start playing,"
Puerto Rico coach Ray Dalmau
said.
Dalmau's team had eight former
U.S : college players on the roster.
three of whom now play professionally in Spain and two of whom
used to play in the NBA. And he
· recognized this as his last, best
chance to beat the United States.
That realization does not dawn
,.. altosether ,happily upon the mem.• . ·bers·of thts U:S. teanl. Gold was
. ::. their aim, and they missed. Now,
.:,. they have to play Cuba for a bronze
'.; medal on Saturday. Mexico beat
' · Cuba 93-87 in the other semifinal
: and will meet Puerto Rico for the
;-, gold.
:
"People back home are just
;: going to say, 'Let's get Jordan and
·• Johnson out there and a bunch of
:. · 30-year-old,~uys_. and let's beat up
:· · somebody, srud Chnsllan Laet·: tner, a member of Duke's NCAA
.: : championship team. "That's fine
:-: with me if that's what they want,
·:· but I don't think that's what this is
:: all about."
With just three days left in the
games, the United States held a
• commandinp;_lead of 307-234 over

Cuba in total medals but still trailed
in golds 118-115.
America's baseball team returns
to action this afternoon with a shot
at adding to the medal count. But
ftrst it will have to do what the basketball team couldn't - beat Puerto Rico. Cuba plays the Dominican
Republic in the other semifmal.
"We're ready to get this thing
going and get it over with and
hopefully come back with a nice
medal," U.S. coach Ron Polk said.
· The U.S. team beat Puerto Rico
10-3 last Saturday, but the Puerto
Ricans have won three in a row
since.
The United States had only four
of its 12 fighters alive in the boxing
tournament after two fights Thursday night. Kenny Friday, at 29 the
oldest man on the U.S. team,
fought his way into a gold-medal
match Sunday by beating Amulfo
Castillo of Mexico in the 125pound divison. The other Ameri can Michael DeMoss, lost a dCCJ·
sio~ to Chris Johnson of Canada in
the 165-pound division.
Friday will meet Arnalda Mesa
of Cuba in Sunday's finals.
While the United States was
looking to add to its medal count,
Peru had one taken away. Pedro
Oatcia, a silver medal-winning
shooter, Thursday was named as
the third athlete of the games diSqualified for taking banned subs!.1nces.
.
Garcia's tests showed traces of
the drug propranolol, a medication
that slows tho heartbeat and could
help a shooter improve his aim.
Experience. size and the absence
of U.S. swingman Jim Jackson,
·who had been averaging 18 points.
were the determining factors for
the Puerto Ricans on Thursday
night.
A bone scan on Tuesday
revealed that Jackson had a hairline
fracture in his left foot, and doctors
decided Wednesday to immobilize
the foot in a cast.

:~: Mattingly refusal to get haircut

·: earns him fine, seat on bench
'·

the hitting coach, the pitching
coach and run everything, maybe
he should come down here and take
some of the blame," Mattingly
said.
After a strong-showing in June
and early July, the Yankees have
lost20 of their last26 games.
Mattingly, hampered by back
problems the last two seasons, also
revealed that he asked Michael in
June to be traded.
Mattingly, who has a $19.3 million contract through 1995, said he
asked to be traded because the
Yankees are not close to winning a
championship.
"Stick was talking about a five·
year plan and I told him I 4on 't
have five years to wait," the 30year-old MattinjtlY said.
"We met pnvately and he asked
about being traded," Michael told
MSG network Thursday night.
,. urn.
"He wondered about the direction
•'~ "U Sti~ (Michael) wants to be of the team." "

By JIM DONAGHY
· ·
AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Don Mattingly doesn't want to be known as
another Yankee Clipper.
::
Manager Srump Merrill benched
·• Mattingly on Thursday after he
:; : refused to set a haircut and said the
~ • team captam will stay in the dugout
until he gets clipped.
: ·
It seems Mattingly's problems
· ~ with the New York Yankees can't
:~, be solved by a barber. After the
: • Yankees' 5-1 victory over Kansas
· : City, it became apparent this is
::, about more than just a simple rules
; violation.
0:
Mattingly, who was fmed $250,
: ·• says the haircut order came from
· : general mana~r Gene Michael and
::. Merrill was just a go-between.
:· With .Georgc Steinbrenner out of
::: the picture\ there may be a pow~r
· ~ · struggle gomg on at Yankee Stadi-

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�.. -

Page-6-The Dally

Friday, August 16, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Senunel

r
••

-~

Apostolic
·-t~~uh:lt or J..... Christ .(p.isto!ICF~th
New Lima Rd., next to FL Meigs P.rk
Pastor: Robcn W. Richards
SundaySthooi - IOLm.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneld&amp;y Service• · 7 p.m.

Mlddlep&lt;&gt;rl Chu,.. of Chrill
5th and Main
·l'Mur.AI ........
&gt;'uhday"Sdtool - 9i30 a.I&gt; ..
Worship - 8:15,10:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services · 7 p.m.

Belrwollow Rldst Cbur&lt;h of Christ

Paslor: Junes Miller

Sundly School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Service•- 6:30p.m.

Assembly of God
UbertJ A....,.bly or God
Duddin&amp; lane, MalOn, W.Va.
Puwr. Dan S. Eaten
Sundly Worlhip - 10:30 p.m.
Thulldly Services - 7 p.m.

Baptist
blllnd Flnl Bapllll Churrh
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - 10:45 e.m.
Pomeroy First Boptl5t
Eall Main Sl.
Pauor: Steve Fuller
Sundoy School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedne1dl)' Services - 7:30p.m.

First Southern Bopdst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
hrtor: E. Llrrw O'Bryant

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worlhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Service&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Middleport First Bapdst
Comer Sixth &amp;. Palmer
Paswr: Rev. James A. Scddoo.
Sunday Sthool - 9: I 5 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:15 a.m.
Wedneidoy Service• - 7 p.m.
Racine Flrll Boptlll
Pastor: s.... Deaver
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-10:40a.m., 7:30pm.
WednesdoySeMc:ea -7:30p.m.
Silver R11 Baptlll
Pu10r. Bill Liule
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wonhip · II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Servicea -7:30pm.
Reloldnl Lite Bopllol C . 3U N. 2nd A&gt;C., Middleport
Sundoy School - I 0 Lm.
Eveoina-7p.m.
Wedneidoy Service• - 7 p.m.
ML Uoloalllplbl
Putor. Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School - 9:4S Lm.
Bvmin&amp; - 6:30 p.m.
Wedneidoy Services - 6:30p.m.
lledrlellent Bapllll
Putor: Rev. Eul Shuler
Sunday Sdtool· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm.
Thulldly SeMc:ea - 7:30p.m.
Old Bet1re Fne Wll Bopllll CHrth
28601 S.. RL 7, Middlepon
Sunday Sdtool - 10 Lm.
Evmin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Serviceo -7:30p.m.
Hillside Baptlsl Churrh
S.. Rt. 143 jwt off Rl. 7
Putor: Rev. lunu R. A~;ree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wonhip- II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.
Hope Bopdst Chopd

570 Gran1 SL. Middlepon
Pa-= O.vid Bryon, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 Lm.
Wonhlp- II a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Servicea - 7 p.m.
VldorJ Boptlst
525 N. 2nd SL, Middleport
Panor. Junes E. Keesee
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.
Fallll Bapdst Church
Railroad Sl., Moaoo
S~mday School- 10 Lm.
Woohip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednetday Services · 7 p.m.

Forell Run Bopllll
Pallor: Rev. Nyle llordcn
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 2:30p.m.
ML Morilh llopllst
Fwrlh .t Main SL, Middlepon
Putoc Rev. Gilben Croia.lr.
Sundly School- 9:30 a.m.
Woohip - I0:45 a.m.
AntiQUIIJ lloptlll
Pastor: Kenneth Smilh
Swdoy Sdlool- 9:30 o.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thundoy Servioc1- 7:30p.m.
Rulllnd Free Will Bopllst
Solem St.
Pulor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evmin&amp; -7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p.m.
Aa Sired F.....UI Baplbl
Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Wedneadoy Service · ?:30p.m.
Sawrday Service - 7:30p.m.

Catholic
Sacnol Heart Collrollc Churdl
161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
l'u10r. Rev. Walter li. Hein1
SaL Con. 4:45-5:15 p.m.; Men - 5:30p.m.
Sun . Con.· 8:4~-9 : 15 o.m.,
Suo. Mou - 9:30 . ....

Church of Christ
•·. Daily Meal· 8:30a.m:
,_..., Clrrlrdl ofChrlll
212 w. Mains..
l'u10r. Androw Miles
Sunday Scbool · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip ·10:30Lm., 7 p.m.
Wodnoldoy SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.
Par

.=

'tf::llliMe
CHrdl of Cllrlst
3
QWdren'a Home Rd.
W

w

992·3847
Sdaool- II a.m.
-10~ .• 6p.m.
Semceo·7p.m.

Zl.., Ch.urrh of Christ
Pomeroy, Huri•onville Rd. (RL 143)
Pas10r: Rober E. Punell
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Brodbtlry Church of Christ
PL!lor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Tupptrl Ptolns Chu,.. of CilrUt
PaJLOr: Robert Foster
Sunday Sthool - 9a.m.
Worship- 9:45 a.m., 6:30p.m.
l&gt;ellter Churth of Christ
Pastor. Roger WaliOn
Sundoy Sdlool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip - 10:30 o.m.
Wedne1day SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.
Rulllnd Chur&lt;h of Christ ~
Pastor : Eusene E. llnderwood
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mason Church or Christ
Miller SL. Mll&lt;lll, W.Va.
S~mday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneldoy Services -7 p.m.
Bradford Church or Chrlll
S.. RL 124 .t Co. Rd. 5
Putor: Derd&lt; Slump
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Servicea- 7:30p.m.
Succesa Rood Church or Christ
Paslor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sundoy School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.
Liberty Chrllllao Church
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sundly Sdtool - I0 Lm.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service- 7 p.m.
L1111svlle Chrllllaa Churrh
Sundly School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service 7:30 p.m.
Htllllock Gro" Churdl

Putor: Ot.arler Dorniaan
Sunday IChool - I 0:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm. 7 p.m.
Olcl Dater Bible Cllrllllaa Churc•

Pu10r. Jack Cle1ond
Sundoy School • 10 IJn,

Christian Union
Wedneadoy SeMc:ea -7 p.m.
H - Cllurdl of Cbrilllll Cltrllllu
lin loa
Pallor: Theron Dumam
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Eveoina-7p.m.
Wedneidoy Services - 7 p.m.
Hll'lford Churdr ol Christ lo Cbrllllaa
lin loa
Har1lord, W.VL
Putor: Rev. O.vid McMani1
Sundly School - II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.

SL Joha Lulllena Churdr
Pine Grove
Pallor: Lauro A. Leech Sludller
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm.
Sundly School - 10:30 Lm.
Our Saviour Lullleraa c•urth
Wainut .. d Heruy Su., Rovenawood,

w.v•.

Pastor: Rev. Georae C Weiric:l:
Sundly School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- II Lm.
St. Paul Lulllenn Church
Comer Sycamore .t Se&lt;:md SL, Pomeroy
Pallor: Laura A. Leech Shroffler
Sundly School - 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip - II Lm. .

Methodi st
Gnbam llalted Mellrodlll
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. (Ill A: 2nd Sun), 7:30
p.m. (3nl .t 4th Sun)
Wedneidoy Service -7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive llnlled M&lt;tllodl5t
Off 124 behind Wilkerville
Pas10r. Charlet Jmea
Sundoy School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thulldly Services - 7 p.m.
Melp Cooperad•• Parlslt
Northeast Cluller
Alfred
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sllrldoy Sthoo! • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Cbester
Pas10r. Sharon Hauarnan
Worship - 9 o.m.
SW~day Sthool - 10 Lm.
Thunday Services- 7 p.m.
Jopp•
Puror: BRndl Weber
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm.
SundaySchooi - IO:JOo.m.
Wedneidoy Servicea - 7:30p.m.
ParlOr. Charles Ealon
SIDiday Sthool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m.
Wedneidoy S.rvicer ·7:30p.m.
Reedavll!e
Pastor. Rev. Chulea Eatoo
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm.
Sundly School- 10:30 a.m.
Wedneidoy Servioca · 7:30p.m.
Tuppcn Plalna St. Paul
Partor: Sharon Hauarnan
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
W'!_'Wp • 10 Lm.
Tueidoy Servicea - 7:30p.m.

C011tral Cluller
Albury (SJHeuot)
Po1tor: Waley Thatcller
Sunday School - 9:45 Lm.
Wonhip- II Lm.
Wednesdly Servicea -7:30p.m.

Put!:~

Roder
Sllrlday Sthool - 10 Lm.
Wonhip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueidoy Services - 7 p.m.
Flatwoodl

Keith Roder
Sundly Sthool - 10 Lm.
Wonhip- II o.m., 6 p.m.
Thuraday Services - 7 p.m.
ForeiiRuo
Putor: Waley Thlldter
Sundly School - 10 Lm.
Wonhip - 9a.m.
Thursday Servica - 6:30p.m.

RuUond Churth ot God
Putor: John F. Corcoran
Sundly School- !Oa.m.
Worlhip- II Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednuday Service• -7 p.m.

Healll (Middleport)
Pa110r. Frmk Smith
Sunday Sthool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Wednelday Services - 6 p.m.

Syncuae F1nt Churth of God
Worship- 10 a.m.
Sundly sd&gt;Ooi · II o.m.
Eveoina - 7p.m.
Wedncadoy SeMc:ea - 7 p.m.

MlnenYIIIe
Pa1tor. Wesley Thucher
Sunday School · 9a.m .
Worship- 10 Lm.

Episcopal
Wedneidoy Service&amp; - 7 p.m.
Gnte Epilcoplll Church
326 E. Main SL, Pomeroy
PlltDr. Rev. Dr. RoyC Myers

Holiness
II a.m. June - Ausual
Pille Grove Holln• c•urch
1/2 mile off RL 32S
Pa110r: Rev. Ben J. Waau
Sundly Sdtool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidly Service-7:30p.m.
WelleJan Bible Hollnea Church
75 Pearl SL, Middleport.
Pao10r. Rev. lv .. Myen
Sunday 1chool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Service -7:30p.m.

Pearl Chapel
PaslOr. Aorencc Smilh
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 Lm.

PomeroJ
Pastor: Don Meodow1
Somday School • 9: U a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m.,6p.m.
Wedneadoy Servicoa - 7:30p.m.
RaSprinp
Paswr.Ketth Roder
Sunday School- 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednuday S.rvica -6p.m.
Rutland
Paator: Arthur Crsbtru
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30o.m.
Thulldly Servicea - 7 p.m.
Salem Cenler
Pallor: Ron Fien:e
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip- IO:IS..m.
Snowville
Putor: Flom!ce Smith
SundaJ Scbooi-IOa.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

H7ot11 Run Hollnta Cburdr
h110r. Rohen Manley
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Middleporllndepondant Holln•
Chur&lt;b
75 Pearls..
Putor: Rev. Ivan Myers
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Servioe - 7:30p.m.

J'OfilUP: to i:m., 1 p.m.

Thur~dly

Service• • 7 p.m.

Mornlnc Stir
Putor: Kenneth Boker
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:30 a.m.
Thulldly Services - 7:30 p.m.
Sutton
Putor: Kenneth Boker
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 s.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m. (hl.t 3rd Sun)
EuiLdlrt
Pastor: Roaer Gnce
s...dly School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 o.m.
Recine
Pastor. Roser Orace
S11nday School - 10 o.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
Laurel Clltr Free Melhodlll Churrh
Pu10r. Willilm Williams
Sundoy School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 s.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 7 p.m.
Rulllnd Bible M&lt;tllodlst
Pulor: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Evmina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servica -7 p.m.
Coolvlllellnlted Melllodlst Perish
Puaor: Huold E. Alloway-Priddy
CooiYille Churrh
Main .t Filth Sl.
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Worship - 9o.m.
Tuesdoy Services - 7 p.m.
Betlld Cburcll

Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday SChool - 9 a.m.
Wonltip- 10 o.m.
Wednesday s&lt;Mc:ea - !0 a.m.
Hocld...,.n c•urclt
Grind

su..t

TorcllChurdl
Co. Rd. 63

Scbool-

of tilt Nazarene

D. Grimm, Jr.
9:30Lm.
~~dn':~,:~~:-:6
'ol
SeMc:ea -7 p.m.
p.m.
Syratuot Cllun:b of llle Nuoreoe
Pa110r: Rev. Glenn McMillon
Sunday School-9:30a.m:
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncrdly Servicea -7 p.m.
Reedavlllt Fellowship
Churth olllle Nuarene
Puwr. John w. Douall•
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
Puncroy Chun:Jt rllhe Nuarate
Putor: Rev. Thomll McCiuna
Sunday School - 9:30' a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. end 6 p.m.
Wedneidoy Servicea - 7 p.m.
Chell.- Chu,.. or111e Nazarene
Pallor. Rev. Herben Grote
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip-11 Lm., 7p.m.
Wedneidoy Service• • 7 p.m.
Rulllrod Cllurclt olllle Nazarene
Po-= Samuel Boaye
Sundly School • 9:30 l.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm .. 6:30p.m.
Wedneadoy Serviceo - 7 p.m.

P-rey

786 NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDlEPORT. OHIO

SJHCUotMialon
1411 Bridaanan SL, Sy111a11e
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bveoina - 6p.m.
Wedneaday Service -7 p.m.
Had Communlt7 Church
Off Rt. 124
Pu10r. Bdael Han
Sundly School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
DyavUie Community Church
Sundly School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Burll111ton Commonlly Churth
Burlin ham
Putor: Roy eudennilt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Wedneidoy Service - 7 p.m.
Chrillllll Ftllowshlp Center
Salem SL, Rutland
Putor: Raben E. l',lwser
Sunday School- IOo.m.
Wonhip - II :ISa.m., 7 p.m.
Thulldly Service - 7 p.m.
Moroe Cha~ Chur&lt;h
Pallor: O.vtd Curfman
Sunday school - IOo.m.
Wonhip -II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Fallll Gaoptl Churrh
Lon&amp;Bouom
Sundly School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 Lm., 7:311 p.m.
Wedneidoy 7:30p.m.
ML Olive Community Churrh
Putor: L.awrmoe Bush
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
E•eoins-7p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.
Rl. 7 on Paneroy By-Pou

Pu10r: Rev. RoiJen E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncidoy Service- 7 p.m.

· Ecclelbt Ftllowsblp
128 Mill SL, Middlepon
Paator: Chuck McPhenon
Sundly Sthool- 10 Lm.
Eveoina-7p.m.
Wedneidoy Service - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel UchlllOUJt
33045 Hi!..d Road, Pomeroy
Putor. Tom KeUy
Sunday Sthool - I 0 Lm.
Eveoina7:30 p.m.
Tucsdoy 4 Thursday-7:30p.m.
N- Setdement Church
Sundly Wonhip- 2:30p.m.;
Thulldly services -7:30p.m.
South Bellltl Now Tallmenl
Silver Rid&amp;e
}»as\Or: Duane Sydenslricker
Sundoy Sthool - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wedneidoy Service - 7 p.m.
Carleton Interdenomlnallonal Churrh
Kinasbury Road
ParlOr. C~. Henderson
Sunday
1- 9:30 Lm.
Eveoina - 7p.m.
Wcdnerdly Service - 7 p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mlssloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Pastor: Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday Sthool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne~dly Service- 7 p.m.

White's Chapel w..leyan
Coolville Rood
Pas10r. Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wedneidoy Sel\'ice- 7 p.m.
Falrvkw Bible Church
Lctan, W.Va. RL I
Pastor: James Lewis
Sunday School - II Lm.
Worship· 9:30a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

,!

·'

. .•'

Cal .. ry Bible Chur&lt;h
Pomeroy Pilce. Co. Rd .
Pas10r: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip I 0:30a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wedn.,day Service - 7:30p.m.
Spiritual Faith Church
State 338, Antiquiry
Pastor: A. Stewan
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Evmina -7:30p.m.
Thursday Servlce · 7:30p.m.
Calvery Pllarlm Chapel
Harrirooville Road
Pastor: Re\i. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- II a.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

''

(

,,'

'.
,.

.

.~

.-. ·

RESERVE CHAMPION MARKET STEER Jason Pullins was awarded Reserve Champion

Market Steer at the Meigs County Fair. He is a
member or the Better Beer 4-H Club.

Harrisonville
community news

Pentecostal
Thuridoy Service - 7:30 p.m.
Pentecostal AJsembly
SL Rt. 124, Recine
Putor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Bvenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday SCMces- 7 p.m.

Presbytenan
Wednelday Service&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Horrisonvllle Presbyterlon Chorch
Wonhip- 9 o.m.
Sunday Sthool - 9:4S Lm.
I

I
i

I

,.

Worship- II a.m., 4 p.m. (lat.t 3rd Sun.)
Seveniii·DIJ Adventist
MulbeiT)' Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Pu10r. lklb Snyder
Sallbath Servicea:
Sailbath Scllool - 2 p.m.

614-446· 3837

814-992-8292

SPECIAL GOSPEL SINGING

BARNETT
FAMILY

Buy One Sundae and Get One FREE
Lots of good flavors to choose from.

..·l.

'" -~

GRAND CHAMPION RABBIT SHOWMAN • Kellie Ervin, a
member of the Country Critters 4·H Club, won Grand Champion
Showman lor Rabbits allhe Meigs County Fair.

Eden llnlled Brethren Ill Christ
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Worohip -7:30p.m.
Wednesdly Servicea -7:30p.m.

POMEROY

614-992-6248

SUNDAE

.l
·I

Wonhip - 3 p.m.
ML Remon Unlle\1 Brtllrrenln Christ
Churdl
Texll Canmunity off CR 82
Pa110r: Robert Sanden
S~mdoy School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy SeMc:ea -7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS

AUGUST 18 (Sunday Only)

'
.,•
,'I
.,
,j

.'

United Brethren

3U Eaat Main St.

MIDDLEPORT

avert the transplant," said Dr. Donald Trunkey, chairman of I he
surgery department.
"We have not pinpointed where
!he break in procedure was. It will
lake three or four day s to track
down," he said.
The hospital released a stalement saying, "Everyone involved
feels very badly this has_happened.
We arc doing everything tn our
power 10 provide emotional support
for the patient's family members,
who are understandably dis·
tressed.''

AUGUST 18-23
OHIO RIVER
VALLEY
CAMPMEETING
AND GOSPEL SING
7:00 P.M. NIGHTLY
HEAR NIGHTLY
DR. BILLY
McCLAIN

In the service

Gen. Hartinger Pkwy ~79 Jackson Pike

.,'
,~

Seventh -Day Adventist

The man . id entified only as
bcmg from the Penland area, was
past !he danger of immediate rejccuon , doctors said. They were cautiously optimistic he would survive
to receive the right lype hear!,
which mighl be found within days,
Coganoglu said.
The man has type 0 blood, but
received a type A heart, mistakenly
identified as type 0 .
Lab technicians discovered the
mixup when they checked a tissue
sample hours into the lenglhy operation, "but nol soon enough to

By CAROL ANN RIHA
Associated Press Writer
PORTLAND , Ore. (AP) - A
man given a mismatched heart in a
transplam was recovering as if the
mixup in bloodtypc hadn't
occurred and doctors were hopeful
he would survive 10 receive a second transplam.
The transplanted heart was beating on its own early 1oday and the
recipient was in critical bu! stable
condition, said Dr. Adnan
Coganoglu , who performed the
surgery Wednesday at University
Hospital.
" The posloperalive course has
been one of the mosl stable 1ha1 I
have seen in the past two years,"
he said .

McClure's Family Restaurant

"
••

Syraeuoe Flrstllnlted Prabyterlan
Sundoy School • 10 Lm.

AND

CAPLINGER
FAMILY

OTHE~

WELL KNOWN GOSPEL
QUARTETS
•AMPLE PARKING
•NURSERY PROVIDED

DOUBLE BACON CHEESEBURGER
WITH MEDIUM FRENCH FRIES

$319

LOCATION: NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY,
ABOVE POINT PLEASANT ON RT. 62

JUST FOR COMING IN!
Nolhlng to Buy,
No Purchase Necessary!

COUNTRY UVING

Wedneaday Servic:ea : 7 p.m.
Trinity Conarea•llonal Churrh
PaSI&lt;&gt;r: Rev. Roland Wildmon
Chun:Jt-9:15Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
The SaiYitlon Amy
liS Butremul Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:00o.m.. 7:30p.m.

'

"AMERICANA"
FURNITURE SALE!

..

~-111111!1

•

I

PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992·....
214 E . Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

RAWLINGS.( OATS

171 llorth

aldtleport,

992-5141

s.c.....

ow.

264 South 2nd

I..--,J

.t~.
-~

Country Living, "Americana"
Wing-Back SOFA

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Th•s warm cozy sola lcatures. ruffled
sk1rt s. P•ltow arms . h1gh . button-luftcd
back and seat s w•th carved woootnm
all upholstered m an easy -c are labr•c

lovescal. ......... 5278 Ch,w ... .. .. 5198

MHitlltporl

298

8

.,

•
-~

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SAlES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

Second Au.

I

EWING FUNERAl HOME
nnJ ·"'-'"'i•·,. .-ll11·n~· A··

~ \

61-\

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.
John F . Futu, Mgr .
Ph . U2 -2101
Pom&lt;"roy

(row's Family Restaurant
"'"'"'"' 1/.ul•eiv ,,,,; CA/eh~"

· ·IJi~nily

Established 1913

. 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-2121

992-5432

n~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
W• Fill

Doctors'

Prescrtption~

,., 2915

·.

~r

Pomeroy

GRAND CHAPMION MARKET PEN· Jason Ervin, a member
or the Country Critiers 4-H Club, wa,s the Grand ~ham pion winner for Market Pen Rabbits at the Metgs County Fatr.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Top video sales

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

Homelite Saws

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

!Boor.s

(\\\;({ 81rW
93 Mill StrMt
Mldtloport, Ohio 4&amp;780

181 4)992-88157- 1998-00KS)
CHURCH SUPPLIES a BIBLES

' \
Nationwide Ins. Co.
ot ColumDu•. o.
104W. Maon
9f2· 2311 Pomeroy
\

POMEROY, Olfi0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL

.

By The Associated Press
The foUowing are !he most pop·
ular videos as !hey appear in next
week's issue of Billboard magazine. Copyright 1991, Billboard
Publications, Inc. Reprinted with
permission.
VIDEO SALES
I. "The Terminator" (Hem dale)
2. •'Robin Hood" (Disl)ey)
3."The Jungle Book" (Disney)
4."Teenage'Mutant Ninja Tur·
lies ~J : The Secret of the Ooze"

ONLY
AU 3 And Save!

Fla
CREDIT TERMS

·I;;
-~

noon .

Recent vi sitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Mahr were Helen ThrockMarine Lance Cfl. Phillip W.
martin and daughter and family of McCourt, son o Crystal S.
Gahana , Debbie Foley and sons, McCourt of 149 S. Seventh Ave ..
Columbus; Dave Rose, Tennessee, ' Middleport, recently returned from
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Rose and grand- deployment to the Middle East in
daughter, Wesl Virginia; and Mr. support of Operation Desen Stonn
and Mrs. Gary Foley, Syracuse.
while serving at Marine Corps
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alklfc, Base, Camp Pendleton, CA.
Racine, vi sited Mr. and Mrs. Bob
The 1988 graduate of Meigs
Alkire on Sunday evening.
High School, Pomeroy, joined the
Mrs. Juanita Richards, Dayton, Marine Corps in September 1988.
and Grant and Drew Gibson ,
Columbus, spent a few da ys with
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dill and chilMrs. Virginia Gibson. They aucnd dren,
Syracuse , visited Mr. and
ed the Ha yes, Youn g reun ion on
Mrs.
Sam
Sticnmentz on Sunday.
Sunday.

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
P1110r. Rev. Clerk Boker •
Sunday Schoo! - 10 Lm.
Evmina - 6 p.m.

Middleport PresbJierlon
Sundoy Sthool - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd A: 4th Sun.)

A bake sale will be sponsored
by !he fire department ladies auxiliary beginning at 10 a.m. Anyone
wishing to donate baked goods for
th e sale should have them a! the
fire station by 9:30a.m.
Door prizes will be awarded
hourly.
There will also be a Little Miss
and Mister Ru!land contest as well
as a Prince and Princess Contest
For furlhcr information on lhese
co mes1s con1act Joan S1ewar1 at
74 2-2421.

Oregon transplant patient gets wrong heart

.

SUvemllle Word of Fallll
Pu10r. Gary Holter
Sunday School9:30 o.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

judging will be al 2 p.m. ·me pies
and cakes will be auctioned at 4
p.m. The cake decorating contest is
open class.
Entertainment lhroughoul the
afternoon and evening will feature
Dec and Dallas and the Counuy_
Misfits.
There will be a turtle race in lhe
afternoon and games will begin al
noon .
Th ere will be a dunking
machine all afternoon and a kiddy
tractor pull will be in late after-

The Third Annual Rulland
Street Festival will be held Saturday, Aug. 31.
There will be a fish fry throughout the day, along with other
refreshments, hotdogs, sloppy jocs,
popcorn, ice cream, and snow
cones.
Craft tables are available for $5.
To regisler for a table call Joan
S1cwart at 742-2421 or Kim Will ford at 742-2103 .
There will be a cake decorating
co nlcst and a pie baking conlcsl.
Entries should be in by noon and

Other Churches

Mitldl-1, Ohio

~.·~;:~~

Felli! Tlbemade Churdt
l!oiley Run Road
Paoor: Rev. EmmCll Raw100
Sundly Sthool - 10:00 a.m.
liveoins7p.m.
Thundly Service - 7 p.m.

;s

Rutland street festival slated Aug. 31 ··

Hvenina -7:30p.m.
Wodneidoy Service - 7:30p.m.

New Hav.. Clturdl of the Nazarene
Putor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School • 9:30 l,ffi.
Wor.lhip ·!0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

106 Multtrry Au.

Veterans
"7Memorial Hospital

l'~:s.n~

Siiiiiliy~Rr.wit.

Portlaod Fine Cit- ollbe Naarene
Pa1tor: William Ju11111
Sundly School· 9:30 •.m.
Wonhip- 10:40 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea -7:30p.m.

172 North

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

'

United Fallll Cbur&lt;h

Sunday Sthocl - 10 a.m.
Wonltip - II o.m.
Wednesday S.Mc:ea - 8 p.m.

Lone Bot-

Wedneaday SeMc:ea- 7:30p.m.
ML Moriah Chu... oiGod
Recine
Pastor: Rev. Jamc~ Saucrficld
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Evenina -7 p.m.
Wedncadoy Service• - 7 p.m.

Churth ol God of ProphttJ
OJ. While Rd. off SL RL 160
Paator: Pat Henaon
Sundly School - 10 un.
Wonhip - !ILJD.

~-9o.m.

Sentinel:~.
Friday, August 16, 1991
Page-7

Middleport Community Churrh
S1S Pearl Sl., Middleport

Cam &lt;I
Putor: Kenneth Boker
s...dly School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:4' o.m. (2nd .t 4th Sun)

Pas10~

Church of God

Southern CluAppltGruve
PaltDr. Cor! Hickl

llethlnJ
Putor: Kcnncoh Boker
Sllrlday School · 10 o.m.
Wo11hip • 9 o.m.
Wedncidoy Service• - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Jack Col~grove

fMi\
-=-

115 I......triel Dr.
992-2104

Latter-Day Saints

Keno Churtb of Chrlll
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
Sundly School - 10:30 a.m.

Churr• of Jesus Christ Apootolk
VonZandt and Ward Rd.
Sunday School - 10:30 o.m.
Evenina -7:30p.m.
Wedneaday SeMc:ea - 7:30p.m.

Horrloooovllk Holl- Clloplft'
P1110r: Rev. Eul Fidd
Sundly School 10 LJD,
Yl.co:PiP · II ~.l~p_-

The Daily

By The Bend

'AUJ

Furniture &amp;

90DAYS

...

~

�~The

Page

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, August

16, 1991

Friday, August

.:..:!A!::ct::::::o:..:.:.:rs:..:::p::::..!la~n=nl:=..n-g-p-la-y-w-it-h-re-a-l--li£_e_w....:e=d=di:!-n.::.::.:g::.::r;~:..;.;i~d;:-e_o_s_to_r_e_s_a_g_r_e_e_t_o~/i~m:.:.:.:i::::.:t~;.;.....;..;...-~
BATH Matne (AP)- Two
actors arc stagmg a play later this
month that features a dastardly vtl
la m lov ely ma1dens and a hero
That part s JUSt a play but ll w1ll
climax wtth a real weddmg- thetr
own
Alice Kua and Mark Manneue
both of Pordand carne up wtth the
1dca of miXI ng a play w1th a real
we ddmg ce remony m Feb ruary
when Manneue proposed
We re both kind of Uniq ue
mdtvtduals and not exactly trad1

uonal so we thought th1s would be
a un1qu e way to ex pre ss our
se lves Manneuc says
The co upl e says the play wtll
have all the mgredtents for a long
runnmg stage extravaganza wtth a
wtckcd vtllam and a happy endmg
when the stars arc umted m matn
mon y
Kua and Mannette aren t saymg
much more about the plot except
thattt reveals the evotuuon of the1r
relauonsh1p But one twist - a lcid

nappmg of the bnde and bndes
matds - ts fictiOnal they say
Although the play ts sure to be a
h1t the one ume performance on
Aug 25 won t be open to the pub
he About 150 to 200 guests are
expected
Wh1le Manneue and K1ra are
both veterans of the stage se veral
performers m the play will be mak
mg therr ftrst appearances
All my fnends mcludmg the
bndesma1ds are making thw stage
debut Krra says

rentals o.f tapes deemed obscene
HAMIL TON Oh10 (AP)- A
ctttzcn group says an agreement by
But ler County v1deo stores to
restnct rentals of adult tapes and
remov e ce rtam tapes deemed
obscene docsn 1 go far enough
The group C1112ens for Commu
nny Values IS pressmg for removal
of all sex ually exphctt v1deos from
the county
The stores have agreed to rent
adult tapes to
21 and older

But Leslie ProfiU founder of the
group s Mtddletown chapter sa1d
the age rcstncuon amounts to say
mg 1f you rc 21 11 s OK to rem
obscene matenals
The agreement was worked out
m a closed meettng Wedne sda y
n1ght between Shenff Richard
Holzbcrgcr and 14 v1deo store
owners and representatives Details
were released Thursday
Butler County IS better off

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announ c e m en ts

3

•

16, 1991
35

not bl r11pon1lble tor any

&amp; Acreage

Price Reduc1d 12 112 Acre• 2
Largo Bams.t. Troller Hook Up
Rural Water tobacco B111 3041113-8196

debtl Olhlr 1han my own Mark
W Holley

4

Lots

Merc•r Bonom Sub-dlvltkwt
one acre loll Rl 2 frontage,
prtce reduced city water 304576-2336

Announcements

To whom it m~~y concem I will

today than yesterday Holzberger
sa1d It s a begmmng
The agreements term s went
mto effect•mmedmtely Holzberger
satd
He srud he s obtaJmng the utles
of tapes mvolved m mne recent
obscemty cases m Franklin County
The Butler County v1deo store
operators have agreed to remove
tapes that have been ruled obscene
mother Otuo counties he srud

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Giveaway

Trall1r Lot For R1nt 10 Mllee
From Gallipolis On Sl Rt 141
614-3711-2501.

1 Norge 1utomatlo hHvy
washer 814-7112 2754

112 bl1ck Lab and 112 amall Col
lit Very friendly male Alao dog
houae 614-085-3338

Rentals

2 Pup• To Olvaway To Good
Home Friendly Wllh Children
614 388-81~

45

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Furnished

Wnght

Rooms
Rooms tor rent week or month
Slartlng at $120/mo Gallla Holel
514-446-V$80

1g74 Ford 112 Ton P U 300 4
Spood Good Wori&lt; Ttuck $375
614 37V 2258

SIHplng rooms with cooking
Alao traller spac:e All hook upa.
Coli aftor 2 00 p m 304 77311851 M11on WV

46

197!11 Ford Rangar F 100.1. Truck
Cub Cap With lgJ"6 Y~ ~nglne
112 Ton PS PB Ant Two OOort
With Lay Down Back S.at Fair
Condition Call Anytime 304
4581816

Space tor Rent

Country Mobil• Horn• Park
Route 33 North of Pome roy
loti rantal• parts salos Call
814 ~21117V

1078 Chevy 112 ton pick-up
truck atandard $500 4 t4 84~
2934 enytime

Uobl'- horne spaces Reule 2
and 62 at •y• 304-676-3816

198t F 250 lruck 300 6 cy l
S1SOO 1919 Ford Van 351 en

2 yellow male klttene 8 weeka
old. outdoor• good mouse
,~ ... rw 30H75-6118

gin•
3978

Merchandise

$1000

Phone 304-G'TS-

Household
Goods

Classified
TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992 21Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 AM to 5 PM
8 AM unhl NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
q~

G.t l

il

Shih l'l:u Peklngeu puppies 7
wks old also mother Shih llu
304-676-2302

RATES
Day s
1

3
6
10

20

$400
$6 00
$900
s 13 00
S1 30 day

30
42

60

05 day

Ritt s a c tor con secu trve rl ns bf o kenup d~s w II be c h.itged

o M a !&gt;o

to uach d~ as sep o11 ale ads

I

Announcements

Over 1 5 Wo rds

Rat e

Words
15
15
15
15
15

Monthly
Mt

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

1 CJrd ol Thanks
1 In M e 1 orv
3 A nou cem t..~ ll s
4
~

G 'ltaWiY
Happy Ad 5

6

lo s a •d Four t

:J 1
32

Yatd Sale (pol d
I'll a Ct!
P bl c Sitl o &amp; A c 1 o
9 Wat tt:d to 8 v

( /11"1

{u t1

filii{ I ' 1 111'

r I lu

Ill!-[

I ,.J,

fiiWIII

G d I o~ Cou y
Ar u.t C d c 6 14

M l! 1 ~ County
A Cit Code 614

446
36 7

991

I

I

..
3

u/11111p'

CIIPV Ill AOl tNt
MONOAY PAPt:.R
lUI SOAY P APER
W I ON .. S OAV PAPLR

HtUR SO AY PAPER
~HIIJ AV

PAPlA

S UNDAY PAP[R

OAY HI::FORf PUUl C AT ON
11 00 AM SATURDA Y
'J 00 P M MONDAY
2 0 0 P M TUESDAY
2 0 0 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THUR SD AY
2 0 0 PM FRIDAY

BULLETIN BOARD
BULLE11N BOARD DEADLINE
4·30 PM DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
D 1abetes Support Group
Tuesday Aug 2Q-7 00 PM

388 V 01on
2 4~ R o Grand t!

256 Guyan 0
643 Anb ;~ 0
379

st
st

Walnut

Mots
Co WV
Au,. C It! 30 4

2

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bld1 will be
received 1nd OJIIIned by the
Tuppen Plalna Chuter
W1tor Dfalrlcl 11 lhofr office,
31581
Blr 30 Road,
Reedsville, Ohio until 11:00
A II on September 4, 1881,
co-lng the p1in~ng, both
Interior 1nd Exlerlor lor one
71 500 g11fono 12 x88
111ndpl)lll water link locll·
ed on Co, Rd 44 In Melga
County
Adclldomll lnlormallon 1nd
•pecfliclllou m•y be
oblltned at the office oflhe
Dlolrfcl II 38581 811 30
Road, Raadntlfe, Ohio
E1ch bid mual be
onclo1ed In an appropriately m1rked and
envel•
ope and mu11 cont1fn the
lull n1mo of avery person,
ttrm end/or corporollon
lnter111 In lhl ume 1nd
mual be accompanied bT, a
100% Bid Bond In lho uti
amounl ol ooch propo11t to
lhe l&amp;tllflclion of the
Dlllrlct Boord aa 1 guoranly
that lithe bid lo accepled, a
con1r1c1 will be enlered lnlo
and
Ita
parlormance
aecurod On bld1 th11 1r1
re(tK:ted the guarantee will
be promptly returned to the
blddora On the bid thot lo
accepted, ouch Bid Bond

•••led

1 Clrd Of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
1fN fllllly tf luntl~

Wtls~ wbhs to thank
ntry- wlto ~elptd ill

our tfllt tf sorrow, for
Row•s, •011y, food lllld
cards. We tspidt.ly w•t
fo tW tilt paiiiM•trs,
choir,
frlt1d1
11d

n~s. Sptdttl t•uli•

W

for t . .
werds fr•
RtJ. a-Its Norris •d
uslstut, R". Iris

r,.-... u.u....••f

the llrc.Reld f11eral
H••• 111 IIYtr
forP.tl&amp;

lit

.., Gill .... , ....
Wift,D.WIItll

Clildr~~:

c..m. &amp; Wils,

1"-t&amp;Stly

hlul&amp; ......

L..y&amp;AMI
llllllllt ' .,..,..
Alii GraM &amp; Grtat·

••w••

•

43
45

FaH11S tor Rtuu
Apa II 1t.'IU for R t: I
ft n shtKI Roo :.

46

Spa£u to

47
48

W a t1 I n R u t
Etl p t! t to R

49

F

Trans ortalion
1

II

Re~1

ll

7

17

&amp;~o

'"79

~]

HI

Pomt:n&gt;v
9 8 ~ Chesle r
84 3 Portland
24 7 l e tut Fo~lls
9 49 Rune
741 Rutl•rut
667 Coolvll

4 ~8

luon

B2

576
773

App

~4

••

89S

Mason
New Havu
l ela t

937

n

Buffalo

2]

882

Public Notice

will be relurned lo the auc·
ceasfuf bidder upon execu
lion of the Conlracl
Inspection tour oflhe lank
will leave
lrom the Office
on August 27 at 11 00 AM
lo lhose who call and make
an appolntmenl on the 26th
ol Augual bolore 4 00 PM
This Ia to allow for draining
ollha Tank lor Inspection
The Tuppers Plalna-Chea

ler Water Dlolrlct reoerveo
the rlghllo waive lnlormall·
Ilea to reject any and aU
bld1 or lo accepl auch bid
that will beol aerve lhe
Dlalrlct
Tuppers Plaine Chesler
Water Dlslrlct
By
Horotd Blackaton
Prasldent of the Board ol
Dlrecloro
(8) 16, 21 21c

Help wanted

Front End Manager position requires a
minimum of 5 years of experience, 3 of
which being in a supervisory position. Pay
and benefits based upon experience. Bring
resume to Vaughan's Cardinal Supermarket
in Middleport, OH.
992·3471.

In Memory af

CURTIS JOHNSON

ALL Yard Salt a Must Be P1id In
Advance DEADLINE :Z 00 p m
the day before lhe ad Ia lo run
Sundar edition
2 00 p m
2 00
Friday. Monday edlllon
pm SOturdly

.8
~9

Garag1 S.l1 209 Evergreen
Aoacf. Thuraday, 6 Friday Furni
ture Clothing Morel

Yara SOlo Saturdly V-6 177
l.GG11ndo Blvd Gallipolis Vory
Nlco Clothing Coats/ Children
And Adulto Toys &amp; M sc

Business Services
CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Golf
lessons (b)

sss 00

New Gnps ........ .... $4

00
Woods
522 00
lrons .•.....••......•.. $14 75
REPAIRS
Used Irons •••••••••••• $S 00

$7 00

AWARDS
891mopd

~~

THE

,

GROOM
ROOM

i;;\ &gt;......
·~...... _.s.r.J

For All

Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner

&amp;

614-992-6820

Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painting,
and Home repairs
667·6681
After 7:00 p.m.

or

N1ght

Gutters

Pamtmg

USED RAILROAD TIES

949-2168

61290tfn

71691 1mo pd

Yard Sale 2316 Jefferson Ave
Friday and Saturday lots of
nlcathlngs

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Additions
- Guner work

•TUDE

Pomeroy,

- Eiectncel •ltd Plumbing
- Concrete work

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 00 am 6 DO pm

Middleport

- Roof•ng

&amp;

- ln1erior &amp; bterlor
P•nting

742-2421
2'1t

Yara SOla 123 Engl l s~ Road
Friday and Saturday tO 00 trll
500PM

YOUNG'S

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

V. C. YOUNG Ill

M1 outside

All Yard Sal• Must Be Pa id In
Advance Daacllne 1 OOpm the
day befor~ the ad Is to run
Sunday edition 1 OOpm Friday
Monday
edition
10 ooa m
Saturdly

992-6215

lema Rd.
5109ttfn

Pomeroy, Ohto

1114 90

tin

W1y ......., .... lertltr;,

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

Remembering
LINDA LOU

Spectal111ng m
Custom frame ltpmr

NEW &amp; USED PARTS

STEWART

OFFICE

passed away
18 rears ago
16.

HOME

FOR

992 2886
992 5692

POMEROY - Nye Avenue - ThiS two s tory 3 to 4 bedroom house has a newer floor furn ace wnh a lull base
ment It could make you a good rental Pr ce was
$10 000
NOW $7 000
PORTLAND- Big Lol- One story home A CUIB 5 room
2 bedroom home Wllh att1c space for more rooms One
cat garage level lot well nsulaled lot economiCal liVIng
$22 500

Tht angels • • softly
flll'ding a qu111 111d u1ent
f'GYI,
lor 11 tl l1t1 a prtdous
one we loud but could
IO) SGYI.
tktngs you always
did for tiS,
I t•ialc oltveryday.

Tht

They htp you ••• and

dtar to us l~aug~ God
called you GWII'f.
I oh111 lit 111d think of
you,
speak of ~ow
you
To
you lid not say
goo.. bifort you dose~

aacl
tltd.
lhialc

y,

~ours

111d

days wll~ p1l1, your
troubled 1igllts • • put,

••m

Anti • IIY l!llllllt
1
know JOI llan IWIII
1111 at rast.
But • • • swttt day
we'll •tt agall .., ..
tlis tollllld strife.
Wt1 dtsp tad! other's
OIKt •or• and hav1
Etlllllllfe.

a

llald

Always loved by
Family &amp; Friends

'"· 949-2801
949-2860

MIDDLEPORT- Main Slreet - Th s home has n1ce s•ze
rooms 4 bedrooms 2 story home wnh wrap-around
porch lull basemen! Sllllng on a 50x100 lot Owner
wants an offer
$28 000
POMEROY - Oak Slreet - Nice cozy 3 bedroom 1 y,
stOI}' home w11h a pralty open stauway gatage and a
catporl N1ce Slarter home or rental property
$10,000
MIDDLEPORT - Pega Slreet - A mce 3 bedroom home
With a I car garage and 3 lraJier lol Let the rent from the
lots pay for your home
JUST $32 500
TUPPERS PLAINS - Rlgga Crtll Menor - Want a
baaublul home al a great pr~ce? Check lhiS one out A
one floor plan 3 bedroom house 1 y, bath and a lam ly
room With a fireplace detached garage w1th a bam and
outbuildings All on approx 21\ acres
$53 000

90 OAT WAIUNTY

and Till FLOOI CAll
•Reasonable Rates
•Ouahty Work
•Free Es11mates
•Carpel Has fall Dry
T1me
•H•gh Gloss on T1te
Floor F~n1ah
MIKE liWIS Ownlf
Rt 1 Rulklnd OH

742-2451

:t 14-91 tfn

..........
AlL IUDS

Wt

992-5335 or
985·3561

BREATHE THE CLEAN COUNTRY AIR - Th1s IS a mce
3 bedroom home on Scout Camp Rd If siDrage buildings
are your weakness - then this a lhe place you wanl II
also has a basement and a garage You can have all lh•s
and more on approx 41\ acres Pnce was $35 900
Now$31,800

Across

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury Ro1d - Counllhe Extraa Just a glance and you Will know 11 s a community whare
people care A newer ranch style home w1th 3 bedrooms
above ground swJmmJng pool hghled basketball court 2
storage bu11d1ngs dog kemel and a woodbumlllg stove
All FOR $48,500

BOB JONES
EXCAVAnNG
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

LOOKING FOR A COMMERCIAL LOT? Jus1 of lhe mam
s~eet You realy need to check th1s one out Located on
3fd Sireet Middleport Has an Income
S10,000

DAR LIME STEWART
BRENDA JEFFERS
SANDY BUTCHER
SHERYL WALTERS

' ' 6365
9n 3056
992 5371
367 0421

Polt OHict

217 I. Second St.
POMROY, ONto
316/90/lfn

(614)
696-1006
66

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992 5335 or 915 3561
Acron from Posl OffKo

•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
o)niUIBtlOn

5 lt 90

I'OCUS,
CISTERNS, ETC.
1,625 GAL- $35·$45
lt.

Mmor Auto Repa1r

MASON, WV

1-(304)-

CONSIRUCTION
992-6648 or

.••

POMEROY
"POSTAL JOBS"
S1U8414 80 tw No oxp nNdad
For exam and application Into
call 1~111-967-68119 7a m tOp m
7daya
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excellene
Pay
Benefit•
Trantportatlon
401 292-4747.
Ext
571
h m lOp m Toll
Ralundld.

Sfookl/

BENNETT'S ~:~~=6'
lec11twd
Safford School Rd. off
141
On

(614) 446·9416

Rt.

or

1·100·172·5967

,'
•

•

23

GET PAID tor Compiling Names
and Addresses $500 per 1 000
Call 1 900 246 313t j$0.99/mln)
or Write PASSE 31Y 161 South
Llncolnway North Aurora ll
60542
Hous lit keeper /Com p a nlo n
needed for 9'7 year old a dy w lh
good m nd and good home
fdoally need and older lady to
make her home w11h her Other
arrangements
considered
Phone collect 614 698 2765
(Albany!

County Appliance Inc Good
uMd appllancee T'v seta Open
8 1m to 6 p m Mon -sat 614
446 1699 627 3rd Ave Gal
llpollo OH
Professional
Services

Custom Butchering 6 days 1
week Cows Hogt DHr 304
882 2353
HEAT PUMP S.le1 &amp; Servin
304-675-3099 or 014-445-6308

EARN MONEY Raadlng Books
$30 000 yr Income Potential
De1alls 11) 805-962 8000 Ext Y
10189

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Raducad To SOil 2 Slory 3br
Comor Lot In Chas~lfl Ohio
ExcellenC Cond lion Fiananelng
Available With Pay Points ~
932-6959 g()4 932 7670 614-361
0649
2 bedrooms full basement
enclosed porch garage 2220
Lincoln Ava $30 000 304 6755301 or 675-6416

42

Mobile Homes

FrMzer upright axc cond $200
30-4-675-2128 evtnlnga

for Rent
2 BR tumlshtd or unturnla had
good clean collc;tllion New
Haven 304.a&amp;2 24&amp;e
2 BR tumlshed washer/dryer
central air $250 plut deposit
614 992 5800
2br Air Cable. New Carpet Nice
&amp; Clean Btaulltul Rlvar VIew In
Kanauga Foster a Mobile Home
Potk. S14-446 1602
3 btdtoom double wide private
lol 2 full bathl air cond family
room dining room c.nt1111 h1at
utllltr room front porch wllh
awning plenty of yard epace
Nlco neighbor~-!, Galllpols
Forry, $325 304-67.,.308l Must
S.1 To Appreciate

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahera dryer• refrigerator•
rangoa Skagga Applloncos
Upper River Rd B1tldl Stone
Ctoot Mo1ol Call 614-446-7398
Largo Couch Chair Floworad
Dealgn $150 2 large O.luxe
Bar Stools $30 Eacfi Antique
Tretdle Sewing Machine $65
Other Mlscl614 245-5085
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home fumishlnge
Hours "ft?n--Sat 9-5 614 44t5
0322 3 miles out Bu lavlle Ad
Free Delivery

Receptionist fer 1 chemical
Bas ic
dependency program
oHtce sk1lls 12 15 hours week
Send resumes to FACTS Rl
2 Boll: 273 A B dwell OH 45614
Deadline Aug 30 1991 M Fn-t
EOE
Someone to care for 4 mo old
preferably In my home beg1n
ning Sept 3 non s moker ref
raq 6t4 992 3542
Truck Dnvers Needed manu
hauls wllhin 200 m111 radius of
Pomeroy Sand resume to P 16
c/o Point Pleasant Rag1ster: 200
Main Strtot Point Pleasant WV
25550
Wa II Pay You to type names
and addresses from home!
$50 00 por 100 Call t 900 246
3131 ($0 99/m n) or Wnte
PASEP 31Z 161 S Llncolnway
N Aurora IL 60542
well groomlld
t)lperienced
Salts person the Me gs Co
area 614 992 2689

14

Business
Training

Retra in
NowiiiSoutheastem
Business Collage Spring Valley
Plaza Call Today 614 446-4367''
Raglsteratlon 19().05-12748

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home
Anr.lme
Rodney
Area
Ra orences Available Call 614
245 5786

Dunlavy Waldmg Shop Will do
small jobs and manufacture
small II ems 304 937 2733
Expert Tree And Shrubbery
Trimming Removal Planting 23
Years E ~~: per encal Reference
And Estimates Availa~e Call
Roger Broyles 614-446-4866
Georges Portable Sawmil l don I
haul your logs to lhe mill jusl
ca11304 675 1957

Lady, 37 yrs old would Ike to
do house cleaning cooking lor
room and board w1th gentleman
40 to 50 for compamonsh1p and
will help w th expanses Wnte
to P 0 Box 97 Pomeroy Ohio
45769
Miss Pau la s Day Care Center
Safe affordable ch ldcare M r
6 am
5 30 pm Ages 2Y:-10
Bofore ahGr school Drop Ina
welcome 614-446 8224 New In
fant Toddlar Care 614 446-6227
Want to take cara of alderlv par
son housecleaning or babys it
ling In Po nl Ploasant Loon
area days only Call 304 458
1532 or 458 1915
Will baby sll In my home c lean
environment week days only
near schools referenc:u 304·
675 1145
Will do house cle aning paint
yard work ca e tor elderly and
smal l errands 304-675~258
Will Do Ironing In My Homo Can
P ckup &amp; D111i ver Have Roleren
cas 614 388 8i13

Would like to babys11 small
babies young toddlara anyt1mt
614 992 3242

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

Spoa, 304-675-142V

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hlri~MtrVWom•n Up lo $600
WM
Transportation ~ou s
lng
U NOW 1 206 736 7000
EJii 151785

Arthur 1 Chain Link Fenc•
Resi dential Commercial In
dustrlal FrM Est1mateaf Com
plela lnslallat on Phon• 614
384-6277

IT! ACREAl DEAl
ClAlllfiED ADl

54

PA Equipment 81k1
Scat-Kat Mini 81k11
Swing Walar Pump
9709
Pittsburgh Paint lnlerlor llal wall
paint $10 49 gal Interior semi
glose $13 gg gal oxtarior flat
flouso pa int S13 99 2415 Jack
a on Ave Point Pleasa nt Pt Pit
304-675-4084

I'll

Jim 1 Farm Equipment SA 35
Wosl Galllpolla 614-446 9m
W de 11lactlon new &amp; used farm
tnctore &amp; Implement• Buy
sell trade 8 00-5 00 weekdayl
Sat 1111 Noon

Recondlllonad Washers Dryers
Guaranteed prompt service for
all makes modtlt The Washer
Dryer Shoppe 614-446 2944

l ate Modal 135 MF Tr~ctor
$4 550 165 Wllh ~eavy Duty
loader $5 950 T030 Ferguson
WI~ 4 Ft Buoh H09 $2 395
1800 Oliver $2 895 Owner W1l
Finance 614 286-6522

Sears Craftsman 12hp 36 -cut
riding mower 3 yrs old ika
new $600 614 Sl92 2601 or 992
1112t

Refrigerator 2 door with top
free11r Whirlpool almond Ice
$275
304-675-2128
makor
ewenlnga

Pro

For Sale Corn Plckors 1 And 2
Row PTO Manure Spreaders
Fertilize Spreader• Massey For
guson Lever Disk Wht~l Disks
Cull lpackars Post Hole D gger
Wheat Orilla Other Field Ready
Equ pmentl
Howe 1
Farm
Machinery Rt 124 And Mayhew
Road Jackson Ohio 614 2tl65944

Ntw Factory Reltcl Jeans ali
l izuil uve $$\... Fnday Saturday
132 ullernut l"'omeroy &amp; 6086
RodFotd Rd Alhona OH

Surplus
collectables
army
leather boots
camoutlauga
clothing (rental surplus clothing
$3 per garment) Sam Somerville 1 belsda Sandyvllle Post
Office Frl Sal Sun Noon 6 00
PM other days hours call
baloro11 OOAM. 304 273 5655

3br Large Kitchen L R Laundry 2br Tra iler In Cheshire 614 367
Single Garage Rodney VIllage !.7=56=0=A=fto;:•;;4;:p:;m.
:::=====
t2. $31500 6"14-44&amp;-1358
I·
Apartment
Flatwoodl Areal. Pomeroy 2 44
Story H01111
NIW Kitchin
for Rent
Bathroom &amp; Carpeting
17
Acral 6t4 446 2359
1br Apartmenll Waler Saw•g•
For Sail By OWner Ouall1y G1rbage Pala O.posll ReBrick Ranch Close To liolzar quited: Call 614-446-4345 Aftor
Hospllal 4br Full Bastmant 5pm
Largo Shadad l.ol 614 446.0647
SOlo On All Corpa1 &amp; Vinyl Floor
Nicely Furnlahtd 2br Garage Covering In Slocld Mollohan
after Sp m
Apal1menl No Pets C.nlraRy Clrpals Rt 7 North 614-446Gallipolis
Nice
Hom• In Located 514-446-2404
1114~.
Oos lrablo l.ocallon 1 1/2 Baths 2 Room Furnished Apartment
Full Ba..m.nl Qaraga, Pos. Downslalre All Utllllle• Paid
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
albl• Financing 614-256-6855
$175/mo 919 Sec:ond Avenue
Olive St Gallipolis New &amp; Used
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 614 446-3945
furniture heaters Western &amp;
(U Ropalrl Oollnquont Tax 2 BR aptrtmenl In Middleport
Work bcota 614-446-315G
Propertr Ffepossuslons Your S.curlly dep&lt;MJit required 614
Aru ( 1 805 962 8000 Exl GH
VI RA FURNITURE
992 2218
614-446-3t58
101ag For Currenl Repo Llsl
4 BR apar1ment In Middleport LIVING ROOM Sola &amp; C~olr
HOUSE FOR FREE" Must move $200 monl~ 3-BR Mlddlopofl $1119 oo
Rocllnor
$149 oo
oH lol In Middleport Fill In
Swlvol Rocker ~~ 00 Coffu &amp;
basement t ltd and straw Must $200 month 1 BR Pomoroy $t50 End Tablol $89 00 Sot DINING
sign contract! 2 BR large LR mont~ 614 992-6712
ROOM Tablo Wllh 4 Paddad
DR Bath has new roof and gut Apartment tor rent In PcHnt Chairs $149 00 Country Pine
ter new copper and PVC plumb- Pleasant $175 oo Clean n1w1y Dln1111 With B1nch And 3
Ing need some work You pay dacoralod Call416-446 2200
C~alrsl. $299 oo
Malc~lng 2
for the moving! Only serious
Door ~Itch 1349 Or $589 00
ca llers! Ca I 614 992 2011 after BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sol Oak Tablo 42x62 Wll~ 6
7 OOpm
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Bow
Chairs
Back
ESTATES
536 Jockoon Plko $62g 00 BEDROOM Postot Bod
Unique 3 bodroom house on tO
from $192/mo Walk to ehop &amp; room Sullo (5 pc ) $349 00 4
acres extras 1 mila from Mid
moviea Call 614-446 2568 EOH
Drawer Chest $44 95 Bunk
dleport Low 30 s 216 395 2399
Bad $229 Comploto Full MaH
Efficiency
Apartment
Fur
SOt $t05 00 Sol 7 pc Cedar
nlshad
Depotlt
&amp;
Referenc•
32 Mobile Homes
Bedroom Suite $899 00 OPEN
Rgquired No Pets 614-446-4879 Monday Thru Saturday, 9a m to
for Sale
Efficiency ltova raf
bath 6p m Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p m 4 Mllos Off Routa 7 On
$500 RabaleOn Any 1990 Or wlehower ale all elect full ear
1991 Lot Modal At Elsoa Homa peled HUO eccpted 304--675-. Aoule 141 In C.nlenary
Center Frat Set Up &amp; Dol vary 6200
Ca l 1 800.589-5710
53
Antiques
For rent 1 bedroom lptr1ment
$225 utllltlea Included. dtpoalt Buy or aell Riverine Antiques
required no J»tl 6'W 992 2218
1124 E Ma1n Street Pomeroy
Hours MTW 1000am to600
Furnished
Apartmenl
1br p
m Sunday 1 00 to 6 00 p m
Share Bath 701 Fourth Ave Gal
614 992 2526
1986 Fleetwood 14x72 3 bed
hpolla $185 Utilities Paid 614
rooms 2 baths utility room 446-4416 After 7p m
a eclric centra l air 2 decks
54 Miscellaneous
$13 000 304 675-7122
1br
Furnished Apartment•
Merchandise
$225 Ullllllos Pold V20 Foutt~
1991 14xn Sunshine mobile Ave &amp; 607 Second Ave Gal
113 carat
ladles diamond
home sal up al Quail Creak lot llpolla 614-446-4416 ahtr 7p m
solitaire pa1d $850 w II sail
53 D1nlng room larga kllchen
$550 304-675-2861
hvi ng room two -bedrooms Furnished Efficiency $175Jmo
bath with garden tub (nice) Utilltl01 Paid 701 Fourth Ave
$17000 304 425 9245 675 4827 Gall1polle 614 446-4416 Attar 10 n sato lll1o diSh 304 773 5129
a tter 5 00 PM
after 5 pm
7pm
10 HP J ocobun Riding Mowet
Groat Soloct1on Of Pro Owned Furnished Etllclency $165/mo
Mo bile Homes Small Down Ut11itlea Paid Share Bath 607 Tabla Saw 100 Amp Woldor Ex
Payment Financing Ava Iab le
Second Ava C1lllpo Ia 614 446- tans on Ladders 1981 Dodge
P1ckup 614-446 8568
Free Setup And Deli very Call 4416 Aher 7p m
E sea Home Centor At 614 m
1962
Ford 1 ton dump 1 uc k
Furnished efficiency w/stove &amp;
1220
refrigerator Sha re bath 919 2nd wortca good good farm true k
Ave $100 ptr month A I Uti Illes $300 10 ft V Sonom boat troll
34
Business
lng motor seats $300 614 992
Pold 614-446 3945
60111
Buildings
Gracious living 1 and 2 bed
1980 Whoelhorso tractor 0 250
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on room apartments at VIllage 4--cyl
1g.HP wator..coolad front
and
Aiveralae
2nd Ave Gallipolis Close lo Manor
1
Apattmanls In Mlddlopott From ami rear hydraulic• and
Court Hous1 1 room 2 rooms
50-Inch Woods brush hog runa
3 rooms 4 rooms All nice ly $198 Call 614 992 778l EOH
good $1600 614 843 5151
dec orated
air condllloning
Lafayette Mall 3br 2 Balht All
you water &amp; aawer b1ll are paiCI
2 New Chain Link Fonce Gatot
Utilities Included
$425/mo
Make your cholco now No Deposit Required No Pttl 614
7 x6 With Hardware 614 446
quolll over fhe phone you 446·7733 614-446-4222
t943
must S 81 them Phone for an
Wanted To Buy Standing Tlm
New Haven 2 bedroom fur
appomlment 614 446-7699 day
nlshed apartment deposll and ber Tracy Johnson Logging
446 9539 tv•
614 367 7518 After 7p m
reference 304-882 2566
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Complelly Furnished mobile 40ogll boUle gas hoi water tank
lot 1010 $100 614 992-5514
home 1 mile below town over
loti &amp; acreage available lor looking
riVII
No
Pill
CA
614
new home construction on
Baaset crib car ual awing
446.0338
Rayburn Road Paved road
walker playpen wooden hlgfi
county
water
reasonable
eh1lr ba11lnel ~-675-4548
reatrlctlon1 Complete lnforma
Bicycles and unicycles 614 446
lion mailed on request 304 6758093
5253 John D Gerlach no
tingle V(l de trallars please
Centr~l Air
Nearly New 1 112
Non~ 4thl Middleport Ohio 2
12)155 mobile home 11 acras
bedroom urnlshed apl deposit Ton Condeneing Unit UNd
Only t Man1~ $300 0 B 0
blacktop road city water pas
and reterenc1 requir~ 304 882
Serious Callera Only! 614 446
ture
good hunllng
Leon
2566
444l
$33 000 304-458 1521 serious
One
1nd
two
bedroom Cherry twin bad with boxsprlng
calls only
apartments tor renl Ideal ror &amp; madre•• 3 children s safely
2 Building Lots Off Rt 7. In email tamllln and elnglel 304
.... 614 245 5786
Clearvlew Subdivision One Has 675-21153 or 675-4100
Water Tap Ci14-4411417 After
Co11t To Coast Membership
One
bedroom unfurnished
6pm
Ptrk In Ohio Roy11 01k
garaga aptrtmenl gae hut air Hom1
2 Bedroom• 2 Bathe Tra111r On concf. private ver~ nice quiet R110rt V1ry RNsonabll 517
1
63$-6828
314 Acre Lot Approx 2 Ml 11 nolghDOfhood $250 month 304
From Holzer CA Eltclrlc Htat 676-1550 Of 814-446-0985
Concrete &amp; plasUc upllc lanke
Wllh WB $16 000 Call Aft01 6
One
bedroom
unlurnlshld Ron Evans EnterprtHa Jack
p m 614-446-4236
oon OH HIOO-a37 9528
apattmont 1• all ullllllu paid In
House and 4-mobllt hom•• on eluding Tv clblo Ovortooldng Gold Kenmore Eltctrlc StOYe
one lot Good locallon Good Ohio Rivar 1xtra rMce New Commercial Exhaust Fan, Ju81
condition Appror $900 per aptrtment suitable for one per
Llko Now I Child o Slrollor &amp; Play
month lncom1 Will return In
sonb$350 per month Reference Pon, Llkl Newt 614-446-2222
vestment In 5 yaara Now Haven &amp;
opool1 roqulrad 814-446WV 304 1182 2466 anyllmol
4368 attar 5 p m
Good Uoad 3 Dooro 136 Wldlh
232 Wld1h 614-446-o595
Small
Fumlehed
Apar1menl
For
Meadowhlll Subdlvlelon
2G
Ront 614-44&amp;-3358
Grovoly 8 HP Wolk Behind 30
mllae out Sand Hill Road haa
Inch Mower Excellent Condl
reatrlcled building lOCI tor 1111! Wadgo Apto 500 BurdoHo St
tlonl $850 814 388 9032
as low 11 $6500 and one acre
Point
Pleaaarrt
no
pete
1
1nd
2
lois for slnglt wldee available
bedrooms 304 675 2072 oftot Gravely walk behind mow1r
also 304 675'3460 or 875-4100
500
814 1192,7653

Farm Equipment

Merchandise

Slcklebar Mower 3 112 HP Self
Propeled 34 Cut Good Cond
tlanl $500 614 245 5879

RENT20WN
614-446-3158
VI ra Furn1ture
Soft &amp; Chair: $1110 Wook
Reellner $5 47 Week Swivel
Rocker S3 63 WMk Bunk Bed
Complate $8 41 Wuk 4 Or~war
Cheat $3 26 WMk Poster Bed
room Suite 7 pc $16 67 Week
lncludea Bidding Country Pin•
Dln1tte Wllh Bench 6 4 Chalra
$10 96 WHk OPEN
Monday
Thru Saturday Va m lo 6p m
Sunday 12 Noon Till Sp m 4
Mll11 011 Route 7 On Roulo 141
In Centenary

61

Miscellaneous

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Household furnishing 112 ml
Jerricho Ad Pl Pluaanl WV
ca11304-675 1450

Needed
Immediately
cooklwaitress Apply In person
Country K1tchen Racine

INOllCE'
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl
ness w1th peopll you know1 and
NOT to sand money througn the
mall until you have Investigated
the otferlng

AVON t All Aroao I Shirley

5 1 22 / ttn

MOBILE HOME

All arue Call Marilyn

ADDRESSERS WANTED lm
mediately!
No
Experience
N«&lt;111ry
Procoso
FHA
Mongago Rolundo Wolle At
Homi Clll1-405"21 3064

742-2328

.. .. ..

Help Wanted

w..... 304-812 2845

TROMM
BUILDERS
FlEE ESTIMATES

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FUiffACES FOI MOllE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

Employment Services

AVON

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

Years Experience
Homes and
Custom Remodeling

TOjl Prlcoo Paid All Old U S
Coln1 Gold Rings Diamonds
Silver Coin• Sterling, Go d
Coins. M T S Coin Shop 151
Stc:ond Avenue Galllpolle

11

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI

-.-.
•

7 24 lmo

•Remodeling end
Home Repa1rs
•Roofing

FULLY INSURED

1, lox 71·A
RUTLAHD,

Buy Tobacco Slicks

Call Anyllmo. 614"8&amp;-8769

OHIO 45775·9626
614·742·2904

773-9560

•20

•Siding

Wanted To

HAULING

Converttble Tops
Carpets Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and

•Qualtty

•Palntirig

11n

WATER

UPHOLSTERY

WE DO

corl Pony or GT wtno or blown
motor 614 992-6166 anytime

APPALACHIAN

Da ry Fa m Workers Wanted In
surance &amp; Pa1d Vacation Send
resume to P 17. c/o Polnl
Pleasant Rag ster 200 Matn
Street Potnf Pleasa nt WV
25550

Wanted to Buy

Good condi11on 86-88 Ford Es

985-4473
667-6179

COMPLOE AUTO

639

698-6864
91

&amp; Compare
Free Estimates

A&amp;B

MAIN ST

9

Stop

l/2f(lalfl.

JAMES KEESEE
992 2772 or
742-2251
Bryan Piece
Middleport

ltmode~ing

742·2656

POMEROY, OHO
10/30/19 lin

•V~nyl Siding

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Fro111

HIIIGIUTOIS-S 100 up
lANGEI- Goo~" - $125 up
flfEZE15-S 125 up
Mf(IO OYENS-$19 up

J&amp;L
INSULATION

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII
Bring It In Or
"'k Up.

WASHdS-S 100 up
DIYIS-h• up

Rick Pearaon Aucllon Company
lull lime auC11onH~ complete
auction eervlce licensed Ohio
Wast VIrginia 304 77:J.5785

•Complete

Oa SltelutaDatlon
Frtt Esllmafts

Public Sate

&amp; Auction

•New Homes

lnstalliaJ Cellular

NO SUNDAY CAIIJ
3 11 lin

8

•Garages

Phones, (ar Stereos
or Radios, CB's

USED APPUANCES

IJIDE"NDENT
CAIIP'ET ClEANERS

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

or Res.

71 31 1 91 lin

BROKER

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New H - s lullt
Free l:sttmatea

01 TOLL flEE
1 800-141-0070
DAIWIN, 01110

NORTH SECOND AVE
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
TURNER

All MAKES &amp;

MODELS
992-7013
or 992·5553

205

DOTTIE S

yavr eyes.
Ytur w~

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

VIcinity

4 mile oul New Lima road from
Rutl1nd Watch for algns Aug
1516

!FREE ESTIMATES!

Rutland on New

7251 mopd

4 t686 Hn

992-2269

FREE ESTIMATES

VIcinity

Hugh Yard Sale Fri and Sat last
house on right Sandy Hts
Lewis
Lane
Draperies
bedspreadt
blankets
rugs
cloth11 books radios camera
pictures
tools
gun rack
motorcycle heJmal dog bad
dlshll lawn aota tables old
refrigerator antlqu11 wooden
lawn rocklr muctl mise

BILL SlACK

Gutter Cleanmg

Pleasant

Garagt Sale 1 day only Sat
Aut l1 Nlko-L A Goar (1t0 112)
clott1H glassware sweeper
appUanc.. mountain bike 1
mile out Sand Hi ll walch for
s lgns

•FIREWOOD

Downspouts

•BUY •SELL

pt
&amp;

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

Wr1tesel

NEW- REPAIR

Pomeroy, Oh1o
l 11 9t Hn

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

L

ROOFING

Operator

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

".1,1 Reasonable Prtees"

Howard

Complete Groom•ng

BISSELL
BUILDERS

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

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

&amp; VIcinity

Garage Sale Thuraday, 8115 g.
4 8T16 12-1 Loll Chlldrens
Clolhll Horne lnlerlor 218 Or
c~atd Hill Rood Gallipolis

Day

pasMIIIIWII'f S y..s
ago, Aut. 17.

57

1 11

M o uy to Loiln
p o ftJSSI9 al S~rv CC:&gt;

,H. 949-2801
or Res , 949-2860

Real Estate General

Gallipolis

83
84
8.
86
87

~6

u~u Oppo t

21 B s

Yard Sale

"

~2

0111

Found

76

t

"

uG

A

73
74

Merchandise

7

&amp;

LOST Navy SObago bog lift
outside Lafayette Mall Please
call 814-446-4222 daya 446-2174
lVII

Pt Pl t!Ol'dfll

In Memory

wha

Ho ~s tor Re t
Mobile Homes t r R

lt

Lost

LOST 1 black chow 2yrs old
named Roxy ICHt In 9edlord
Township 1r01 814-992 7647

41
42

6

Used Woods

Public Notice

R !!al Est1h: W;trltcd

675

CAREER POSITION AVAILABLE

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5 00 PER DAY

J&amp;

t(:&gt;

M ddl epu t

Public Notice

11

Pleasanl Valley Hosp1tal
Communrty Room
Speaker Ricll Eddy· Pharmacist
TopiC D1abetJC MediCatiOn

B s 1eu Bu ld t
l o ts &amp; Acu aoe

6

4

18
Gal pol s
ChliSh• e

fur Salt~

3I
35

44

2

I

/o/Juu

t :S

e;rmma

Empl oymenl
Ser vi ces

I.JV Ct clo.
2 0 01

Hu1

Small Type Dog To Giveaway To
Good Home Frltndly With
Children 614 388.$132

Moll! It: Ht n u,. tor S
3 3Fctn5lnSall!

7
8

I

Farm Suppli es
&amp; Li vestock

Rea l Estate

Dairy Farm Manager Wanted
Supervise a I aspects ol dally
operation Insurance &amp; paid
vacat ion Send resume to P·18
c/o Point Pleasant Reg s ler 200
Ma n St reet Pont Pleasant WV
255 50

New Holland Super 717 2 Row
Chopper
Oliver
16 foot
Transpor1-Disc
c lean
wheat straw
614 992 7302
IVenlngs

63

2 Horse Gooseneck Trailer
large DrHslng Room $2 500
New 12 F1 Stock Trailer $1 N!i
March 16th 1989 AQHA Sorrell
Flly With One H11ter Point
February 14th 1990 Chestnut
Filly Sonny o... a., Blood Llno
614 266-6522

ThrM 400 watt high pressure
sodium
GE
powertlood
lloodllghll mounting hardware
osklng $300 304 876-5306

64

Wa1er Bed Sterao Saw ing Ma
chin• Wild Eater Carpet
11x12 Desk Dresser Trunk
614 446 3521 6t4 446
M sc
8240

&amp;

Grain

Last Chance last c utting Alfalla

Transportation

Building

71

Supplies

1967 Camoro 304 882 3235

Autos for Sate

1968 Mustang

exc t how ea r

304-862 3395 attar 5

oa PM

Groom and Suppl)' Shop-Pet
Grooming All breeds slyle&amp;
lamt Pet Food Dealer Juhe
Webb Call 614 446-o231 t 81l0352.0231

AKC Golden Retriever puppies
$200 lemalet $175 males 614
593 3739 Athen1

AKC Registered Basaet puppill Ready to go I $100 Francis
Benedum 614 867- 3856
Australia
Shephard
Pups
Registered
Una Bred
For
Ouahty All Shots Breaded
Since 1976 614 678 2527:

1987 S 10 Blazer 4x4 T•hot
Package Good Condition Will
Saerafice For Pay Ott 614 256
6000

74

Motorcycles

=,...,,......,..~.,..:.--:.:.

75

Boats

1983 Dido Della 88 13 400 304
675 4008
1984 Buic k Skyhawk sun roof
euto tront wheel dnve 304 675
183t
1984 Chrysler New Yorker 19tl7
Ford Tempo 614 388 9916
1985 Dodge Charger Shelby
Turbo 5 &amp;pled 70.000 miles
spor1y. sharp redltillver $2 995
304-675 5306,

Poodle pupplos toys and tea
cups AKC Champion Bloodline
Coolville 614-667 3404
Re gistered Beagle pups lor
salt 614 742 2086 or 742 2421

&amp;
1985 Ninon 200 SX Ssp
loaded excellent cond call 614
V92 7651 after 5pm

Vegetables
Canning P1aches now avtilable
also B1rt1111 P11r1 and Prune
Plums later In August Call 1
S00-447-3760 tor prlcos BOB S
MARKET Maaon or Gallpolis
OH

1986 ChaveHe 4 Speed Air
Condlllonod Good Condllion'
$1650 614 256-6251
1988 Manto Cano S S 614 367
714t

C1nnlng
tomaotos
atroady
picked or pick your own at
Johnaon • !arm 614 247 2961

&amp; Motors

for Sale
1966 Runabout 14h SO hp Mer
cury motor 304 n3 5129 a he
5 OOPM
1985 Rlnkor 18 fl bow rldor in
board outboard w/1raller uc
cond must sell 304~75 5814 ar
ter 5 00 PM Friday or anytime
wMkends
1989 Playboy Ponloon boel 20
fl tong, 30 HP motor $3700 304
675-7758
Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories
Transmiuions Used &amp;
rebu 11t st~rtlna al 199 Auto
Par1s
614 245-56n 6t4 3792263

79

&amp;

Campers

Motor Homes
1960 motor home echool but
complete ready to camp runs
good. $1 500 musl IH 304 576
2V1l

Services

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional lltelime guaran
tae local references furnished
Fro• estimates Call collect 1
614 237 0488
day or night
Rogers Basomant Watarproe&gt;
ling

1982 Olds Cus llass Supremo
New Tires 60 000 Miles $1600
614 446 9709

Know whal happens to fleas &amp;
tick s when sprayed with HAPPV
JACK OROPOEAO FLEA TICK
MIST? They drop dead! For
dogs &amp; cats Water based A&amp;C
FEED &amp; SUPPLY 614 992 2164

__

t981 Honda CB 750 K axe
shape 1400 mills mu st Stl to
appreciate $150 or best oHar
304-675 7534

1980 Pinto Slallon Wagon low
m leage $1200 OBO 1975 lin
coin excellent running eondi
t1on $1100 080 614...949·2804

19111 Monl• Cario 304 675-1506

Fish Tank 2413 Jackson Ava
Point Pleasa nt 304 675-2063
lui lme Trop cal llah birds
small ilnimals and aupphes

For Sale Rid Raspblrri11 Pick
Vour Own 814.-245-5064

1986 Ch.evy S101 automat c 4x4
45 000 mllos &gt;6 200 304 675
3433 Of 875 7109

81

1982 Camero V.a $2 000 1988
Madall on air Ill cruse S2 800
304-675-7834

Dragonwynd Cahery Parsian
Siamen and Himalayan k1t1ens
614 446 3844 attar 7 p m

Elfra Good Canning Tomato..
Call 304-882-2231

1985 Ford Bronco II exc cond
only 63 000 miles 304 675-17'14
or 675 5164

1979 Monza 1975 Olds Cutlau
1974 Ford p1ck up w ut lly bed
304 n3 5129 after 5 OOPM

1980 Thunderbird 6 cyl runs
good real good cond $900 call
a her 4pm 614 698 2529

Blue Pont Siam11• Kittens 2
Female 1 Male Excellent Blood
Lines Info 614 256 1425

Ctnnlng lomatotl l5 bushel
!I
Syracuse
W•
deliver
Pomeroy and Middltpor1 614
94g 2388

motor• 5 epetd transmission
all tor $300 304 576 2917

197g Ctuysler Cordoba 360
auto new everything $1400
dayt 614 992 215~. anar S 30pm
call 304-675-6gs5

AKC Pomeranlum puppies
s holt &amp; wormed 304-675-2193

Canning Tomatoes I Picked $4 a
bus hel Picked own $3 Silver
OuHn Corn Ia ready Raymond
Rowe 614 247-4292

1018 Subaru runs good 2 extra

Bud~el

1978 LTD Ford Air Ctulso
AM FM Good Running Carl
$695 614 446 7055

s

1D78 JMp CJ 7. auto v e good
engine &amp; running gear $700
304-458-164l

1973 Plymouth Valiant AC
Automatic $295 614 245 5183

Ford LTO 4 door AIC
cru1se runs good $400 or bast
otter 304 67&gt;3462

WD

1978 CJ 7 Hard Top 304 $27"00
614-448.$138

76

tun

&amp;4

1978 Chevy Van, $800 0 B 0
Coil Rob S14-446-1609

19n Cutlass 350 good motor
transmiSsion $250 or w II trade
for good 305 molor mu sl run
good 304 576 2917

1971 Camara whita with red In
tarior looks &amp; runs real good
614-446-8052

Pets for Sale

----------

Fruits

Vans

gan Farm Rl 35 304 Sl37 2018

24X24X9 2 IIHI OVIrhlld 1 3
t1 1ntranc• door 1rectad
Precis ion
Pool
$3849 00
Bulldarw 614-992 3541

58

73

S2 50 bale grass $2 balct Mor

Block

56

Hay

First cuttmg hay for sale Call
614 742 2083

Weight S11 Bench Press Knee
Cur( Crow Bar Trlcepts Bar 2
Dumbell Bars
400 Pound
Weight $150 614 379 2111 After
6pm

55

Livestock

Extra Good 1980 lntemslional 2
112 Ton Truck 404 Engine 5 &amp; 2
Spood t7fl Flatbed With Log
Bunks 310 Caae Dozer D t~el 6
Way 8 ade AI moat New Undar
carriage Super MaJor Fordson
Tractor Diesel Industria l End
Motor Dirt Bucket Log Forks
614 256--1922

1986 Oldsmobile Cutlast Cierra
4-dr 6-cyl A t condtllonl $3500
814 992 3194
1187 Audl 40009 GillY mttalllc
5 spood PS PL PS PB PRF
new 111'11
t.Hery, llarter
$8 000 Btlan 304-676-1621
1187 Camara lroc Z. 1mlfm
aulo trans loaded S.1 to appreciate T-tapa 304 576.2587
after 5 pm
1987 Oldo Delta 88 62 000 Milos
All Pow.r Air E•c•llenl Condl
tlon. 614.,.4&amp;.4225 After 4p m

Home
Improvements

Com plate Mobile Hom• Set Ups
Repalra Commerlcal Reslden
tlal Improvements Including
Ptumblng Electrical lnsurtnce
Clalml ACcepted 614 256 1111
Curtis Home lmprovemenls
Years Experlenc1 On Old1r &amp;
Newer Homes Room Additions
Roollng
Foundation Work
Wlndowo I Siding Frat Eo
llmatu! Reler•nc11 No Job To
Big Or Smalll 614-441.0225
E I R TREE SERVICE. To1111lng
Trimming TrH R~moval Hadgt
Trimming Fr11 Estimates ! 614
3677957:
JET
Atrlllon Motors r1p1irld New
6 r.. bullt motora In stock RON
EVAt;S JACKSON OH 1 800.
5379528
Ron 1 TV Sorvlco opoclallzlng
In Z.nlth also 11rvlclng moal
othor br~ndt HouH Clillt alto
some appliance repiilre WV
304 576 23118 O~lo 014-446-2454
SOptlc Tank PumDina $90 Gallla
Co RON EV.t.NS ENTERPRISES
J ackson OH 1-800-637-9528
Davie
Saw Yac
Service
Gaorgn Creek Ad Parte euppllos pickup and clollvory 614
446.02114
Will l:lulld patio cov.,. decks
tc:rHned rooms put up vinyl
1lding or tralllr aklrtlng 114
245-565l
Will do r•modellng rooting
building, h•e lrlmmlng and
removal houM palnllng For
frH IStlmltM Clll George II 1
814 1192 5752
Plumbing

&amp;

Heating
Corter 1 Plumbing
and Hoollfltl
Fourth and Pfno
Gallipolis Ohio
614-446-3888

Hall Runntr B11n1 For Sale
614 388-11939

1987 Plymout Horizon auto air
crulu AUIAIJattreo $3 500
614-446-ll751

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1981 Lincoln Town Cor Excot
lint Condlllan Loadadl 81t 37V224Uftor5pm

84

lUI Omnl 12400 198e Reliant
$1700 1963 Cha•y convorwlon
van Ucioo For sale or trade
514-2118-1270

ReeldtnUal
or
comme«:lal
wirtng new atrvlce or repairs
MISter UcenMd IIIKirlclen
Ridenour Electrieltl 304-e75
1766

61

Fann Equipment

Dairy Equipment 4 Oolaval
Mllkera Pululor Vaceum Pump
Pipe Llno 814 246-V525
Ford Traelor 801 Power Ma111r
New Tire• With Full Hydraulic
Front End l.oadlr $5 500 6143792Jil5

19119 Dodgo Oaytono ES Good
514-446-111184

Cond~lanl

1981 Plymouth Aclalm B ooo
Mltoo Air Condl11onad 1111
Crul11 AMIFM Casuna Ex.ten
ded Warnnly
Like New!
$12 500
Or
Toke
Om
Paymenle 614-446-6152

.,.

Electrical

&amp;

Refrigeration

ff7

::--~U.:;:p~h,:0.::1 st:.:e=ry.!..__ _
Mow11y 1 Upllolstoring ..,.,lc
lngtrl county area 28 yeare Tht
blst In fumhure upholstering
Call 304-675-4154 lor ltao ootlmatH
~

�.-

'

Friday, August 16, 1991

'

Sunday

75 cents

Max
Tawney
describes
trip

-- .

·Meigs County Fair livestock sales- D-1
1991 Meigs fair appears to have been
successful • Beat of the Bend · Page B-3

B-1

Grandma Gatewood's 1950 hiking feats
recalled ·James Sands · Page A-6

Inside
Along the river .............. Dl-7
Business ............................. Dl
Comics.........................Insert
Classified ....................... D2· 7
Deaths............................... .A3
Editoral ............................ .A2
Farm ............................... Dl-8
Sports............................. Cl-6
Weather........................... A-3

0 I

•• I -

,

I

I 0 I

I 111 I

l'.tr th &lt; llltrlh
Partly cloudy. High In mid-lUis.
Chance or rain SO percent.

•
tmts
Vol. 26, No. 28
Copyrighted 1991

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, August 18, 1991

15 Sectlona, 120 Pagea
A Multimedia Inc. Newopoper

197 Meigs Mine employees affected by layoff
, I

GRAND CHAMPION POULTRY· Mary Nally was Grand
Champion winner or both showmanship and poultry breeding at
the Meigs County Fair. She is a member or the Dream Weavers 4·
H Club.

RESERVE CHAMPION MARKET PEN • Ashley McKinney
was awarded Reserve Champion Market Pen Rabbits at the Meigs
County Fair. She is a member or the HiUtop 4-H Club.

ALBANY - Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs Division
announced Friday the layoff of 197
employees from its underground
mining complex in Meigs and Vinton counties.
The action, which is part of the
operation's long-term mining plan,
will reduce costs and improve the
mine's overall productivity,
according to Jim Tompkins, vice

BEST OF BREED . Bridgett Varney won Best or Breed for rabbits at the 1991 Meigs County Fair. She is a member or the Country Critters 4-H Club.

Nally, Kirk winners in
poultry showmanship

president. and general manager of
the division.
"The layoff is necessary 10 keep
mining costs down and maintain a
high level of efficiency," said
Tompkins. "The operation now
will focus ,Primarily on longwall
mining, whtch is the most economical way to produce coal in loday's
competitive market."
Tompkins said employees have

been aware that a reduction in the
work force was coming. The layoff
affects 137 employees represented
by the United Mme Workers of
America and 60 salaried employees. Retraining and placement
assistance will be available to
affected employees.
With the reduction, the Meigs
Division will have approximately
I ,050 remaining in its work force.

B.J. Smith: spokeswoman for
AEP's Fuel Supply Department in
Lancaster, said the layoff is not
connected with the current controversy concerning AEP's Gavin
generating plant in Cheshire.
Smith said the layoff was part of
a long-term mining plan which was
in place "long before the Clean Air
Amendment of 1990 was adopted."
High-sulfur coal from the mine

-about 5.7 million rons a yearis burned at Gavin, which pr(l\iuces
sulfur and other pollution thar must
be substantially curbed by 1995,
under the act.
The 1990 Clean Air Act requires
AEP's compliance with clean air
standards, forcing the company to
either usc scrubbers or cleaner coal
at lhe Gavin Plant. If the utility
decides to use low-sulfur coal for

power generation, the Meigs mines
may close.
Smith said under current conditions, the long-range mining plan
does not call for any more layoffs
other than the recent 197.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. is a
subsidiary of Ohio Power Company, one of eight electric utilities in
the American Electric Power System.

AEP nixes clean coal
facility at Sporn plant
I

Mary Nally was grand champion and Kennith Kirk, reserve
champion in showmanship at the
poultry show held at the Meigs
County Junior Fair Wednrsday.
Showmanship awards went to
Kennith Kirk, yearling; Mary
Nally, novice, 13 and older, and
Rebekah Karr, first and Odie Karr,

second, in novice, 12 and under.
In the breed show, Mill)' Nally
took grand champion with her
Light Brahmas, and Kennith Kirk,
reserve with his cornish hens. Placing third was Rebekah Karr with
her Muscovey Ducks, while fourth
and fifth went to Odie Karr for
Light Brahmas.

I

.. I
•'

• t

Community calendar
I
•

I

:I
I
I

I

,I
I

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
FRIDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gallia Meigs
Community Action Agency will
have a free clothing day on Friday
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Cheshire.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing on Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring the Dailey Family . Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public.

lunch will be served at noon.
PORTLAND - The Hazel Community church will have homecom·
ing on Sunday. Covered dish dinner. Rick Weaver will be the
speaker and the Grubb Family will
sing. The public is invited.
LANCASTER - The annual
Dorst reunion will be held Sunday
at the Lancaster Fair$f00Dds. Dinner at noon. All relauves are invited.

LONG BOTTOM - 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
SATURDAY
hosting family are descendants of
WILKESVILLE
The Sonoma (Clll1ls) Osborn McNickle.
Wilkesville Methodist Church will Bring family pictures and memen·
have a chicken-noodle and home- tos to share. For further informamade ice cream supper on Saturday tion contact Mrs. June Ashley at
at 4 p.m. Cost is $4 for adults and 247-2344.
$2 for children under $2. The
church is on Route 160 at
MONDAY
Wilkesville.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High yearbooks are in and may be
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis picked up at the junior high school
Parks and Recreation Department on Monday between the hours of 9
will sponsor a men's D and E flight a.m. and noon. Extra copies arc
softball tournament Saturday and available for $10 each.
Sunday in Gallipolis. The entry fee
is $50 per team plus A.S.A. sancPOMEROY - The 1992 Mautioned softbaUs. Call the recreation radcr yearbook staff will meet
department at 446-1424, exL 37 Monday at II am. in Room 310 at
during the day, or Tom Hopkins at Meigs High School. All staff urged
446-8755 in the evenin.ss.
to attend.
SUNDAY
PORTLAND - The Morse
Chapel Church on County Road 35
wiD have a hymn sing on Sunday at
2 p.m. featuring the Gabriel Quartet. Pastor Dave Curfman invites
the public.

DARWIN - Descendants of
Dannie and Flossie (Meeks) Brick·
tes will be held Sunday at the Old
Holiday School Grounds, Gilkey
Ridge Road, Darwin. A basket

SYRActrn!·- The 'MeigsUiun:
ty Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities will
hold its August board meeting on
Monday at 7 p.m . at the board
office.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
The Board of Trustees of Colwnbia
Township will meet in special session on Monday at 8 p.m. ar the fire
station to discuss an addition to the
machinery building.

Elvis faiihful gather
for graveside vigil
By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)
Bearing candles and Oowers, Elvis
Presley's ever-faithful fans filed
past his grave today to mark the
14th anniversary of his death.
"ll's for my love and for his,"
said Susan Hobbs of Arlington
Heights, IU., who cluoched a single
red rose.
The annual candlelight vigil
began late Thursday at Pres ley's
home Graceland, and continued
today: Early on, police estimated
the crowd at 12,000.
The rock 'n' roll pioneer was 42
when he died Aug. 16, 1977, at
Graceland, which draws more than
600.000 visitors a year.

IN'ttRstcl-u:iN·woiirc coMPLETED.
A muc;b quicker &amp;lid earlier traffic now is being
enjoyed by nioto.rlsts at the intersection or U. S.

Presley, his mother, father and
grandmother are buried in a small
garden beside the mansion's swimming pool.
The vigil is the most popular
event of Elvis International Tribute
Week, which includes fan club
meetings and a concert. Many fans
rerum year after year.
"The love that surrounds me
tonight tells me that Elvis is
home," said Shelly Reynolds, of
Austin, Texas.
Alma Holland of Ft. Payne,
Ala., brought silk flowers for her
idol's grave.
"I think they're pretty and I like
to leave something homemade,"
she said.

·BEST RABBITS· Joshua Roush received Best or Show ror rabbits and Greg McKinney received Best Opposite or Show for rab·
bits at the Meigs County Fair. They are members or Hilltop 4-H
Club.

Demonstration contest
results announced
Results of the 4-H demonstration contests held earlier this month
have been announced by the Meigs
County Extension Office.
The winners in individual
demonstrations were Billee Pooler,
grand champion; Billy Crane,
reserve champion; and Erin Smith,
honorable mention.
Team demonstration winners
were Michelle Laughery and

Nichola Pickens, grand charrpion;
Ben Crane and Emily Asbcck,
reserve champion; and Billy Crane
and Darrick St. Clair, honorable
mention.
Selected as state fair participants
were Billie Pooler, Michelfe
Laughery and Nichola Pickens,
Ben Crane and Emily Asbeck, and
Billy Crane and Darrick St. Clair.

RESERVE CHAMPION POULTRY· Kenneth Kirk, a member
of the Salem Center Go·Getters, received Reserve Grand Champion for Showmanship and for Breed Chickens at the Meigs County
Fair. He is pictured with the winning Cornish Roasters.

Weekend Specia/1
FRIDAY, AUGUSt 16, 1991
FISHTAIL SANDWICH PlAnER........ $3.19

French trias, Choice ot Cole Slaw, Macaroni Salad or Baked
Beans.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 1991
STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS •••••••••••••• $4.29
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Homemade Gravy, Buttered Corn, Home-made
Hot Rolla, Small Drink or CoHee, Regular

OPEN 10 A.M.-9:30P.M.

Teen fined for grabbing
principal's hairpiece
SAND SPRINGS, Okla. (AP)
- A teen-ager was fined $77 for
pulling off his high school principal's toupee and tossing it on the
ground.
Jason Jackson pleaded no contest ro the misdemeanor assault and
battery charge. He was fined $77
Thursday - which he had already
paid in bond - but was told the
crime wouldn't go on his record.
Don Moore, Charles Page High
School principal, said he was
unhappy with municipal Judge
James Munn's ruling.
"I want the jerk to have this on
record," Moore said.
Jackson was accused of grabbing the toupee Feb. I during a
scuffle. At the time , he was

COLOI'JV THEATRE

Route 33 and siai~ 'Rou'te 124 in Pomeroy these
days. Work on the Intersection was completed
last week.

Already in use,final touches being
made on new highway intersection
POMEROY - Meigs County
residents have been using the new
intersection of U.S . 33 at Nye
Avenue and S.R. 124 since early
July, although finishing touches are
still occurring at the project.
When it comes to the work of
Ohio's Department of Transportation, "people often just think of
orange barrels and traffic delays,"
observes ODOT District 10 deputy
director John Dowler. "But here in
Pomeroy we've got a job we can be
proud of from start to finish."
Planning and design work to
improve the intersection began several years ago, but it was accelerated after an old stone culvert collapsed under S.R. 124 in February
19990. ODOT was suddenly faced
with the need to restore a major
transportation artery as quiclcly as
possible, while maintaining public
safety and convenience.
"We
with some

major headaches out tnere," recalls explains district design engineer
district construction engineer Mike Victor Wolff. "The expense of a
Lang, "but our contractor and pro- bridge that large was prohibitive,
ject management team did a super and we would have shut down the
job under trying conditions." Con- road completely. We felt we could
struction plans had to take mto destgn a new culven that would be
account the deep and sometimes less expensive and still eliminate
unstable fill beneath the roadway, the flooding problem, while main·
presence of a main waterline feed- taining traffic flow through the
ing into Pomeroy, the historic area.' .
nature of nearby buildings, and the
Envtronmental concerns also
need to keep traffic flowing on the had to be addressed pnor to con·
only state route between Pomeroy struction. A group of three
and Ravenswood.
sycamore trees and small plaques
The deteriorating Kerr Run cui- between S.R .. 124 and the Ohio
ven, built by the railroad in the late Rtver, memonals to World War I
1800s caused some initial recon- veterans from Kerr Run, needed to
sider~tion of the project scope. be avoided. Buildings that would
Occasional backwater floodmg be removed to make way for the
above the culven suggested that a new intersection had to be
bridge across an open channel researched and documented for
might be better than a filled-over thelf htstoncal value. Sot! and fill
water passage.
in the project area also had to be
"We calculated that it would tested for the presence of haz·
take a b
120 feet long," ardous waste.

expelled from school for allegedly
carrying a knife.

Shaver Repair Clinic • All Brands

$395
Same Day Servi'e
All Parts Extra

Included: Cleaning
Oiling
Adjusting
Greasing

TUESDAY, AUGUST 20th
4:00 'til 7:00 p.m.
RAZORS MAY BE DROPPED OFF IN ADVANCE

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

CHAMPION MARKET HOG ;
Patrick Gibbs, lel't,
Grand Champion Market Hog Show·
manship at the Meigs County Fair and Melissa Guess, right,
received Reserve Champion Market Hog Showmanship. Gibbs is a
member or the Country J,Jumpkins 4-H Club and Guess is a member of the Alf'red Livestock C:lnh

,,
.,

.,,

\

COLUMB US - American
Electric Power Corp. has decided
not to build a commercial-style
clean coal technology operation at
the Philip Sporn plant in New
Haven, the Columbus Dispatch
reponed in its Saturday editions.
The utility giant made the move
because it has chosen to delay
expansion of its clean coal setup on
display at the Tidd Plant in Bril·
liant, Ohio.
"Right now, we have to conccn·
trate energy and fmancial resources
and engineering and design capacity on the Clean Air Act." Richard
Disbrow, AEP's president and
chief executive officer, said.
AEP is looking to pressurized
rtuidized bed combu stion as a
means of burning the region' s
high-sulfur content coal more
cleanly and meet the dictares of the
Clean Air Act.

Extra charge
for shows to
be reviewed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich said he
wru&gt; furious when he learned about
a ~ admission for Ohio State Fair
shows, but said fairgoers have not
complained to him about it.
Nonetheless, the policy will be
reviewed after the fair wraps up its
18-day run Sunday.
Shane Jenkins, fair director of
public relations, said all aspects of
the event will be eXJIITlined.
"It's something we will discuss:
whether it w.orked, whether it' s
something we want to change,"
Jenkins said.
Regular adult admission to the
Continued on A-3

Disbrow said AEP still has
"great confidence" in PFBC, but it
may be until 2000 or later before
the the company needs the capacity
the system can offer. The process
may never be instituted at Sporn,
he added, and the flflll is considering demonstrating the technology
in a new plant.
To meet federal regulations for
cleaner air, Disbrow said he
expects AEP to rely on scrubbers
or fuel -s witching, the Dispatch
reported.
Jacqueline Bird, direetor of the
Ohio Clean Coal Techflology
Development Office, said AEP's
decision to delay the project may
have been prompted two years ago
when it applied to the U.S. Energy
Department to establish the technology at the Sporn plant. AEP
said at the time that acid rain legis-

lation might interfere with tts plans.
The Sporn plant, which is 40
years old, was expected to gain 25
more years of life if the pressurized
nuidized combustion bed system
was instituted there .
The entire project was to have
been built with a $195 million con·
tribution from the Energy Department and $3 million from the Ohio
Office of Coal Development.
The Dispatch reported that West
Virginia law, which forbids AEP
from recovering its costs for Sporn,
which was tO have been a.research
and development project, was a
factor in the company's decision.
"If we had assurance if we completed the unit we would be
allowed to recover our investment,
operating expenses and a reasonable return, the answer is, 'Yes,'
we would do that," Disbrow said.

Ten
awarded Carleton
•
Memorial Scholarships
SYRACUSE · Ten Syracuse residents have been
awarded 1991·92 Carleton
Memorial Scholarships to
assist with their costs of
attending college, it was
announced Saturday.
Scholarships awarded Ibis
year totaled $3,000, bringing
the amount provided by the
Carleton College Board of
Trustees for higher education
to over $30,000 since inception
of I he fund in 1981.
Those awarded scholarships, and the institution or

higher learning where they
are enrolled, are:
Shannon Counts, Ohio
University; Lori Ann Crow,
Ohio University; Eric E. Law.
son, University of Rio Grande;
Jennifer Lee Lisle, University
of Dayton; J . Todd Lisle, Ohio
University; Cheryl A. Pape,
Ohio University; Robyn A.
Stout, Ohio University; Tamara Theiss, Ohio State University; Misty K. Swisher, University of Rio Grande and
Jane Ann Williams, Ohio Uni·
versity.

Commission studies
revisions in charter
By KRIS COCHRAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS- On a 3-1 vote
Friday , the Gallipolis City Com miss ion placed on first reading an
ordinance to revise sections of the
74-year-old ciry charter.
Revision s must be approved by
the commission 60 days prior 10 the
Nov. 5 general election.
Proposed revisions include:
• Payment of commission mem bers in the amount of $3,600 per
year beginning Jan. I, 1994. Commissioners currently serve without
compensation.
• Appointment of the judge of
the Gallia County Court of Common Pleas to fill any commission
vacancy in the event commission
members fail to fill the position
within 10 days. Trustees of lhe
sinking fund c_urrently fill the
vacancy.
• The city solicitor shall be a
practicing attorney at law. The city
solicitor presently is a practicing
attorney at law, and a resident of
Gallipolis.
• The city solicitor approves to
form any proposed ordinance submitted to the City Commission.
• To discontinue the Sinking
Fund,Board of Trustees.
• Each member of the city com·
mission , for a least three years
immediately prior to his or her
election, will have been, and during

his or her term of office shall continue to be a resident of the city of
Gallipolis. Members currenLly have
.to be a resident for five years.
Casting the dissenting vote was
Commissioner Lloyd Danner.
Addressing the revision to discontinue the Sinking Fund of
Board of Trustees, Danner said the
board "created a balance.''
"The Sinking Fund Board of
Trustees revision is a major change
and removes safeguards citizens
are entiLled to," stated Danner. The
Sinking Fund board currently provides appointments to fill vacancies
on the commission, while the pro·
posed revision would place that
power in the hands of the common
pleas judge.
Danner said he objects to the
revision because it lends a political
slant to the filling of a vacancy.
City commissioners are currcnLly
elected on a non-partisan basis
which also forbids them from
active campaigning. This provision
gives the selection of city commission candidates a unique slant
because it represents a "silent"
election.
"It changes the total concept of
the city charter," commented Danner. "I don't agree with a lot of the
charter revisiOils.M
"We unfonunately had to fill a
vacancy throu~h death and we
Continued on A· 3

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