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                  <text>Page-08-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middlepor't-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Investment Viewpoint

Meigs...

August 14, 1994

Bob Evans Farms, Inc.

Continued from 0·1
County Parks &amp; RecrcatJon Directo more restaurants 1nopcrdtion in !he tor and her fair booth commiuee
By JAY CALDWELL
We arc r.Using our investment restaumntsegmcnt and higher whole· for all their efforts to promote
rating to ··suy·· from ""Hold"" due to sale prices on increased pounds of Meig s County.
Strawberry growers
the recent decline in share price. The sausage products sold in !he food products
group.
Also
affecting
sales
were
Now
is !he time to fenilize your
fundamentals
mcreascd
sales
in
the
charcoal
and
strawberry
patch or field. Normally
remain sound.
liqu id smoke products.
we
would
also suggest irrigation
and !he stock 1S
Re,;taurant expansion during !he due 10 dry soil conditions. however
now at a tcchni·
mnquancr included three traditional nature has prov ided sufficient raincal
support rBob
Evans Restaurants. two "small· fall so far this summer. Next year's
level. Our 12 ·
town""
Bob Evans Restaurant.&gt; and flower buds arc being initiated m
18 month target
three Cantina del Rios. This brings the crown (food stomge region) of
price is S24,
which rcprc· the total restaurams in opera tion to the strawberry plant. Proper water
319 at the end of the first quancr. and fertilizer availability during
sents a potential gain of 20% .
compared
10 293 a year ago.
August and September dramatical First quaner earnings per share
The
company
said depending on ly increases the yield per strawberwas in-line with our forecastat$0.31
versus $0 .2X.a 10.7% increase. Sales weather and availab ility of sites. it ry plant. Ohi o State University
grew 10.9% 10 S197.9 million and plans 10 open 45-50 rcstaumnts this research suggests that for estahnet income increa sed 11.6% to$13.2 fiscal year which more than doubles li shcd strawberry plants, you
the number opened last year.
should apply 4-6 pounds of a 10-6mill1on.
(Mr.
Caldwell
is
an
Investment
4
fertilizer per 100 linear feel of a
Dob Evans Farms attributed !he
with
The
Ohio
Company
in
Broker
strawberry
row just after harvest
increase in sales in the latest quancr
its Ga llipolis office.)
and again in mid-August. It is no!
suggested to fertilize strawberries
in ear ly Sprin g, as soft fruit and
increased susceptibility to diseases
__:c::..
on_u_nu_e_d_1ro_m_o_-_1_ _ __
wi ll occur.
Stinging insects
written scaled b1ds. At a specil1ed
Calls
co ncerning st ingin g
umc
time
and
place
the
bids
are
opened
insects
arc
on the ri se. Hornets,
2.) Salc-By ·Uni t: (also ca lled
and
the
successful
buyer
is
selectwasps
and
yellow
jackets are all
Sale-By-Price or Sale-By-Scale):
ed.
increasing
in
numbers
!his time of
A tim ::.Cr sale in which the seller "
In
most
situauon&lt;,
thiS
form
of
year
as
their
nests
arc
preparing
to
paid a .:crlain amount for eac h unit
sa
le
produces
the
most
desirable
store
suffi
cient
food
for
the
winter.
of product cut (e.g. so many dollars
results for private fores tland ownDuring !he hottest part of the day
per I ,000 board fee t, per cord, per
ers.
!hey
become more aggrcssi ve. thus
post. per pole. etc.). Th is type of
One
must
consider
other
factors
be
careful
disturbing their nests
sa le reqUires someo ne to measure
when embarking on a timber sale.
while
painting,
cleaning the gut!Cr.s
the products harvested . These mea- Who wi ll select the timber you
or mowing the lawn. When enJoysurements ca n co me from your
ing the ou!doors. avoid using heavhave 10 se ll . what is lhe timber
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
ily scented soaps, shampoos, perwonh , advertising the sa le , and
District Forester at no charge or a
fume, colognes, after-shaves and
consu ltin g forester, who will most importantly, entering into a
cosmetics. If you can l'!ail. the best
contract w1!h the buyer. During the
charge a percentage of the receipts.
control is to destroy the nest in the
harvesting operalion, the logging
This form of sale has definite tax
late fall or winler. The insects are
site
should
be
inspected
frequently
advantage s over the former for
less active and more likely to be
10 make sure that the harvest is prolandowners co ntemplating more
dormant, lhus less likely to sting
ceeding according to the terms of
than two or three timber sales in
you. Remember these insects are
the contract and to d1scuss questheir lifetime.
beneficial as they kiU other harmful
In both lump-sum and sale-by· tions that might arise. When the job
insects.
For more information ask
is completed and all provisions of
unit stumpages sales !he sale price
our office for factshects describing
the contract have been fulfilled,
and buyer are usually determined
prevention. treatment of stings and
one of three ways. By single offer write a letter releasing the buyer
control measures.
from the contract and return the
in which case a single buyer con·
Hal Kneen is the agricultural
performance bond if one has been
tacts or is contacted by the se ller
agent
ror tbe Ohio SIJite Univerand !he buyer offers to purchase the posted.
sity
Extension,
Meigs CountyFor mo st fore stland owners,
timber at a particular price. This
selling timber is a once-in-a-lifemethod is best when the seller has a
time experience which should not
small amount of timber to sell, the
be entered into lightly . Much
timber is of low quality, or markets
thought and professional assistance
for the species for sale are poor.
Second, oral bid or negotiations will assure that you make !he best
stewardship and conservaare used when the seller or sellers possible
CHIC AGO (AP) - Amoco
tion
decisions
and reap the finanagent engage in verbal bidding or
Corp.
said it will cut4,500 jobs in a
cial rewards that are rightfully
negotiations with one or more buyres
tructuring
aimed at paring
yours.
ers until an acceptable sale pnce IS
bureaucracy.
obtained. Unless the seller is
The reduction of nearly 10 perFor additional information, conextremely informed, it is oral tim- tact District Forester, Cynthia L. cent of its wo1k force will make the
ber sales to foresters and timber Jenkins, at the Gallia Soil and nation "s fifth-largest oil company a
dealers.
Water Conservation District at 446- leaner competitor in an era of staWriuen or sealed bids are when
ble oil prices and computer-driven
8687 or stop by lhe office at Ill
potential buyers arc informed about Jackson Pike, Suite I 569, Gallipo- cost effici ency. Chairman H. Laurance Fuller said Friday.
the sale and given a penod of ume
lis, Ohio, 45631.
to inspect the timber and subm11

Reasons...

MYSTERY FARM- This-week's mystery
farm, rcatured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation l&gt;islrict, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Ga llipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gall ipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, Ill Courl St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and

you may win a $5 prize rrom the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and
lelephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to lhc newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. Inca~ or a tie,
lhe winner will be chosen by lottery. Nut week,
a Meigs County rarm will be reatured by lhe
Meigs Soil and Water Con~rvation District.

S%orr.

IS% orr.

Greg Smith Says:

Pomeroy facility is examining
health care 'situations': Lucas
By CHA RLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
While there is no conflffilation of an alliance or affiliation with another
hospita l, rumors persist that Veterans Memorial Hospilal is in negotiation
with the Holzer Medical Center/Hospital for some kind of combined services.
When contacted, VMH Administrator Walter S. Lucas declined comment on any activity toward establishing an alliance with any other hospi-

Automatic, Air Cond.,
Cassette, Cruise
Control, Tilt Wheel,
Rear Defogger,
Spoiler. ·

After $500 Rebate
and $400 Under 30
Allowance

• • • • JUST ARRIVED! • • • •

Sale Prices on Lawn U Garden Inventory
Prices On z" HD Gates f.:::B~~:S Arriving
7 Bar MD Gates
.. p 8
zs% off!
Daily Will
.. c. eavy Bunk Feeders
Seeds
Also Be
Duty Round Cattle Working AU
Reduced
Bale Feeders Equipment
Reduced!!
ZO%off!

~t1.~tll)_
;;.

3rd Avenue &amp; Sycamore

f'AIM StJm~INe.

Gallipolis, Ohio

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
The plodding process of buildin g tile Raven swo od Connector
moves forward as a public hearing
for the State Route 7 bypass will be
held at6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug.
23 atlhe Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen!Cr.
Plans for the project and the
assigned route will be available
from 5-6:30 that evening.
The plans are presently available at lhe county commissioners'
office and the county library , said
Nancy Yoacham, spokeswoman for
the regional Ohio Department of
Tmnsportation office in Marie lUI.
Ohio lost $200 million in federal funds this year because of a formula change to ISTEA, the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act
"That's a lot of money. We'll
just have to prioritize," Yoacham
said. " The project will get done.
We just don't know when."
The portion of the bypass to be
buill between Rock Springs and
Five Points has been appraised and
is now being purchased, Yoacham
said.
"ll's a lengthy process to buy it.
Some has been bought and some
has not," Yoacharn said.
The section of the connector
between Meigs High School and
Five Points was chosen because it
had the fewest areas with environmental and historical concerns,
Yoacharn said.
The bottom line for this project

* In Stock Items Only (All Sale_s Final).~~~ sales cash

'' ··

1

__)

Nol reapomible for typographical errors. _ _ __ _

___1

A changing scene---.

is money, said Steve Story, local
connector coordinator.
Story said he remains concerned
that this highway portion will just
be a bypass for Route 7 - not a
continuation of the connector.

(Ohio) doesn't spend enough on
highways," Story said. "Only 0.7
cents of every 22 cents in gasoline
tax goes to capilal projects."
A construction company will
sign a $16 miltion contract lor the
2.25-mile section by late October.
"The state has said they are Yoacham said.
commiued to the whole connecEngineenng costs could total
tor," Story said. "Our senators are $755,000. while right-of-way pur not from southern Ohio and they chases could exceed $800.000. she
should be leading lhe pack on this." said. The section should be open
U.S. Rep . Ted Strickland, D- for travel by late 1996.
Lucasville. has already worked to
The 18 .6- mile connectoracquire $4 million in federal funds which IS divided into four sec tions
for the connector, Story added. - from Rock Springs to the
Story said he has worked to contact Ravenswood (W. Va.) Bridge
U.S. Sen. Robert Byrd. D-W.Va., should be completed by 2000, she
since he holds power in the Senate added.
Appropriations Commiuee.
"Design, sale and construction
of any project depends on the avail"The other reason I believe it ability of funding - both stale and
will be buill is that Fairfield Coun- federal -at that time," Yoacham
ty is the second-fastest growing had said in a previous interview
county in the stale," Story said. with The Daily Sentinel.
"They want to see the entire road
ODOT is following stale and
built.""
federal guidelines to ensure fund Environmental studies were ing appears, Yoacham said. The
done for six to seven years but project will be 80 percent federalwere never completed or used, he ly -funded and 20 percent stale added. The state needs to plan and funded.
act, he added.
The eastern portion of the con"Pari of the problem is that nector is still having environmenlal
studies completed, she said.
"All proJects are done as funding allows. Some will have to
wait," Yoacham said. "The money
will only go so far."
Today's highway construction
process is complicated by regulations and environmental hurdles,
she added .
"The reason we're able to gel
this road now is because !he current
administration feels highways are a
tool to bring economic development. Previous administrations did
not believe this," Yoacham said.
"There are lots of hoops we
have to jump. We realize people
get tired of wailing, but we do to,"
she added.

Midway rides were going
up, some or tbe game booths
were open, and several rood
establishments were already
doing a good business Sunday
afternoon on tbe Rock Springs
rairgrounds in preparation ror
today's opening or the 131st
Meigs County Fair. Dan
Smith, fair board president, al
right in the above photo,
meets board members Mary
Kay Rose, Rick Kohlentz and
Leonard Koenig on the midway to discuss some rinal
plans for the annual six-day
rair. Over at the barns many
of the 4-Her's were bringing
in their livestock and preparing them ror the competitions
of the week. At right, Jamie
Drake is seen with her Chiangus steer Sam just after she
got him settled in ror the
week. This is Jamie's first livestock project. She is the
daughter of Tom and Debbie
Drake and a member or the
Pioneers 4-H club. Sam will be
one of many animals going on
the auction block Friday when
the Junior Fair livestock sale
gets underway at S p.m. in the
show arena. (Sentinel photos
by Charlene Hoenich)

Environmentalists seek
EPA study of pulp plant

$ $ CASH PAID $ $
FOR USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
If you are interested in buying a car here or anywhere
else - Give us a chance to buy your trade·in.

FREE lppraisals. "TOP DOlLAR PAID."

PONTIAC.

'

GALUPOUS, OHIO

ROOF REPAIRS- The Meigs County Health Department and
Senior Citizens Center is getting a new root Home Creek Enterprises will Install this polyester-based material guaranteed to be
leak-proof for 15 years, said Jim Clifford, eonstruction company
partner. The 10,000-square-foot roof bad numerous leaks, Clifford
said. The $24,000 repair uses no glue to deteriorate, be added.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)
I

. Because of the content of some ofthc rumors, Me1gs County CommisSioner Fred Hoffman provHicd some mformation about tile legal status of
the hospual.
He said that the hospiU1l was bu ilt with local wx dollars and remains
the property of Meigs County.
II was leased by the Meigs Co unty Commissioners to the Meigs Coun ty Hospllal Cornm1 ss1on 111 1964 for a 50-year period. In 1973, with
approva l from the cou nty commissioners, it was sublet 1o Veteran s
Memorial Ho spital Inc., according to recorded doc umen ts.
.
In the original lease from the cou nty commissioners to the hospital
commiSSiOn, and also the lease covering the change from the commission
to Veterans Memorial Hospilal of Meigs County Inc.. one of !he provi·
s1ons states th at th e " lessee shall not ass ign nor further sublet these
premises, and in the event the lessee should auempl to do so. then the
lessor may ca ncel th is lease."

'The state has said it is
committed to the whole
connector'- Steve Story

BUICK

1
\ 'v

lal, although he did in the same conversation make reference 10 an "agreement of confidentiality" prohibiting discussion of the issue.
Lucas did say. however. that the "hospital is striving to eva lua te si tuations which could provide quality heal th care services in the future .""
According to several national hospital publications, hospitals across
the country are making linkages so !hat !hey will be beucr able to attract
and service managed care contracts, which are cxpcc!Cd 10 be a pan of
national health care reform.
For example. in the Aug. 8 edition of the Ameri can Hospital Assoc iation News about an affiliation in Illinois, tl1e chief executive of a health
care system in that state described an alliance there as "the best of both
worlds ... allowing each to maintain autonomy and identification locally
... but be a part of a bigger system for bargaining. contracting with managed care flffils, and sharing services."

Pomeroy to host hearing
on Ravenswood Connector

'95 PARK AVENUES &amp; LeSABRES!

,.

1 Section, 10 Paon 35 COI111
A Multimedl• Inc. Nowopaper

Officials mum on possible VMH affiliation

PRODUCTS

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Tuesday, parlly cloudy, high in
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 15, 1994

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Copyright 1994

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mental agency for help.
The West Virginia Environmental Council and the Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition have
already requested meetings with
the agency's top regional official.
Gov. Gaston Caperton's administration has supponed the project,
which promoters say could bring
600 jobs to depressed Mason
County.
Federal environmental officials
were not available for comment
because their offices were closed.
One federal official said the mill
could damage the environment.
Chris Clower, supervisor of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
office in Elkins, said the mill could
hun fish, mussels and the bald
eagle.
·
In a June 29 letter, Dower recommended the Ohio River undergo
further dioxin testing before the
project proceeds.
.
David C. Callaghan, drrector of
lhe state environmental ~tection
division, said the state regtUauons
for dumping wasle are mote Slringent than federal guidelines.

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP)
- Some environmentalists have
asked the federal Environmental
Protection Agency to study the
effects of a proposed pulp and
paper mill in West Virginia.
Sierra Club lobbyist Jim Koocon
said the mill could harm endangered river mussels, destroy protected wetlands and damage federal
forests in Ohio.
The billion dollar plant would
be built just across the Ohio River
near Gallipolis in southeast Ohio.
"No process like (an environmenial impact study) is available in
West Virginia to assure adequate
public input or full disclosure of
environmental impacls," Kolcon
said in a letter.
The state Division of Environmental Protection has approved
two of lhree permits needed for
New York-based Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc., to operate the mill.
~ lhird permit also is expected to
be approved.
The West Virginia Sierra Club
became the latest environmental
group to ask the federal environ•

!

Meigs County Fair
MotoCross Racing
Tonight 7:00 pm
Monday, August 1 ,')
Kiddie Trator PuU - Sbow Arena
4:00p.m.
Hillside STage- God's Kidz
5:00p.m.
King and Queen Crowning - Hill Stage
6:00p.m.
Moto-Cross
7:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight GaresCiose

Tuesday, August 16

Junior Fair Rabbit Sbow- ShQw Arena
Open Class Beef Sbow followed by Junior Fair Beef
Breeding - Show Arena
Outoftbe Blue- Hill Stage
2:00p.m.
Kidic Tractor Pull - Sbow Arena
4:00p.m.
Junior Fair Board Auction
5:00p.m.
Junior Fair Steer- Show Arena
6:00p.m.
HiU Stage- Joy
6:00p.m.
HiU Stage- River Valley Boys
7:00p.m.
Grandstand- Demolition Derby
7:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight Gates Close

8:00a.m .
I:OOp.m.

See You At The
1994 Meigs County Fair

I

�:;

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE Ml!liG&amp;-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genua! Marutger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Pre.. Allsociation and
the American Newspaper Publisber Association.

LElTERS OF OPINION are welcome . They sboukl be !esa than 300
words long. All leUers are subject to editing a.nd must be sig ned with name.
address and ~lepbone number. No unsigned lel~n will be publisbed. Letten
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not perwnalihes .

Overhaul of elections
panel stalls in Legislature
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
.
.
COLUMBUS - Campaign finance reform IS no! the only elecuon
issue stalled in the Legislature. Also in limbo: an overhaul of the Oh10
Elections Commission.
1
Voters may want to take nott: as campaigns heat up for the Nov . 8 elec·
tion.
h
1·
That is because the commi ssion is the panel that ears comp amts
about candidates accused of lying, misrepresenting thetr records or fruling
to disclose who is bankrolling their campaigns.
.
The Senate on June 30, 1993, unanimously approved a btll that Sen .
Betty Montgomery,R-Perrysburg, sponsored to add members to the com·
miss ton and tum tt mto a more mdcpendent agency . The panel now oper·
atcs with support from the secretary of state 's office.
.
Montgomery is challenging. De':'locrauc Attorney General Lee Ftsher
lhis fall. She introduced lhe lcg~slauon at the request of Republican Secretary of SL1te Bob Taft.
. .
.
Montgomery's bill remains pendmg m the House Elect1ons and Townshi ps Committee.
.
.
Separate House and Senate proposals to reign m costs of runmng for
office and limit inOucnce of b1g money contnbutors are stuck to a JOlnL
con ference committee.
" I believe what's happ;ened is this bill has gotten stalled because of
campaign finance reform, ' Montgomery said when asked about the commiss ion proposal.
. .
.
House Elections Chairman Jerome Luebbers. D-Cmcmnatt. blamed the
volume of other business.
His committee handled bills that deal with township-municipal annexation and state compliance with a federal voter registration law.
·'For me it was a matter of time. When I was ready to perhaps have the
opportunity to start some further w~rk on her bill, then came the last
minute hurry-up get motor-voter out, Luebbers satd.
The' elec tions commission has five members. A secretary of state
appoints four members, two from recommendations of each maJor political party. Those four select a fifth member who serves as chat~an.
Montgomery·s bill would create a seven-member panel, wtth a gover·
nor appointing six of them from nommccs selected by legtslauve leaders.
Those silt would appoint a seventh member who could not be affihated
with a political party.
.
The legislation proposes several other steps to speed up heanngs, pro·
vide for an independent mvestigabYe lawyer and create a panel to dtsmtss
frivolous cases.
Montgomery said she remains. convinced that the s1;3te needs a more
fair and effective system of rc8olvmg elecuon law vtolauons. .
.
Gregg Haught, an attorney from Columbus ~d the outgomg commission chairman, said lhe system may need fi~e-tunmg, but not ~n overhaul.
'' One of the things I did while I was chatr was try to exped!Uously hear
every matter. We promptly considered them. We scheduled special hearings during the election season last year, parttcularly m false statement
cases.'· Haught said.
.
''The biggest danger that I've seen is the frivolous filing of an elecbOn
commission complaint alleging a false statement," he said.
Haught"s term expired in July. His successor is Charles Schneider, also
a Columbus lawyer.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, August IS. the 227th day of 1994. There are 138
days left in the year.
Today 's highlight in history:
.
Twenty-five years ago, on August 15, 1969, the Woodstock Music and
Art Fair opened in upstate New York.
On this date:
.
.
In 1057, Macbeth, the King of Scotland, was slain by the son of King
Duncan.
· land o f Corstca.
·
In 1769 Napoleon Bonaparte was born on the ts
In I88S, T.E. Lawrence, the British soldier who gained fame as
"Lawrence of Arabia," was born in T~emadoc, Wales. . .
In 1918 the United States and Russta se•ered diplomatic ues.
In I93S humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were killed
when their ;w.plane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaslca.
In 1939, the MGM musical "'The Wizard of Oz"' premiered at the
Grauman's Chinese Theater in HoUywood.
In 1944, 50 years ago, d,uring World War II, Allied forces landed in
southern France, between Cannes and Toulon.

WASHINGTON - lntemation· we come to peace, lhc more we are tion and desperation of radical
al terrorists have sent the world a in danger from the brutality of Islam has produced an unprece·
message about the tragic price of in ternational terrorism. Although dented surge of terron st actiVIty
peace in the Middle East.
the most recent terrorist incidents directed at several Western nauons.
According to several sources,
Less than a year after the Pales·
terrorist
agents - with ties to M1d·
tine Liberation Organization made
By
Jack
Anderson
dle
Eastern
governmen ts - are
its dramatic peace with Israel. King
operating
in
large
numbers in Ger·
Hussein of Jordan joined the club
and
many, France. Central and So uth
by fonnally recognizing the state of
America. and particularly the Untl·
Israel.
Michael Binstein cd
States. Most of these terrons ts
Yet just one week before Jordan
arrived in the West as legal immi·
and Israel settled four decades of
hostility in a White House ceremo· happened in London and Buenos grants, their ties tD terrorism nearly
ny, th e enem ies of peace were Aires, investigators warn that impossible to detect from thetr v1sa
bombing the Amia building in America cou ld easi ly be th e next applications. Lacking the reso urces
to investigate each appltcant thor·
Buenos Aires, the headquarters of target for these attacks.
Wh ile the vast majority of the oughl y, immi gration offtctal~ tn
Argentina's Jewish community, in
an incident that claimed more than world's Muslim s are peaceful, a these countries normally have httle
relatively small number of radicals choice but to admit them.
90 lives.
Although Argentinian officials are conducting a campaign of ter·
' 'These radical extremists have
have not cha rged anyo ne in th e rorism with support from the high· been able to set up a vast internabombing, intelligence officials here est levels of governm ent in Syria, tional net work of s upp ort ers
say it bears the fmgerprints of Ira- Sudan and espec iall y Iran. Their throughout the world . espec ially
nian terrorists. Investigators believe primary goal is the destruction of the West, where they have amassed
the bombing is the work of an Ira- the United States, Israe l and other mon ey and weapon s, establi shed
nian cell of the Hezbollah terrorist nations they view as enemies of re cru itment ce nt ers, and even
group. which is headquartered in Islam.
es tablished command and control
After years of decline following facilities," one international terrorLebanon's Bekka Valley and is
heavily supported by the Iranian its zenith in the 1970s and early ism expert recently told a House
1980s, world terrori st activity is panel. "In the United States, the
government.
The Argentinian incident high· once again on the rise. Although Gamala lslam iya, Hcz bollah ,
lights an unfortunate paradox of the Middle East is still the hotbed Hamas, Islamic Jihad, tD name just
modem-day geopolitics: The closer of terrorism, the increasing isola· a few, have established elaborate

THe &amp;8 DoL.e ~N
CbN'T

GeT SicK.

support systems. The same goes. in
varying degrees, for Canada,
France, Grea t Britain, Arg entina
and elsewhere. "
Fighting terrorism can be a lot
more difficu lt than combating more
traditional national security threats.
Hezbollah , for example, is organi zed into cells that arc normally
divided by tribe or vi ll age, some.
times even by family . Anyone outside the cell , unless he is an official
of the umbrell a Hczbollah organi.
zation, is automatically shut out
from all clandestine activity. This
makes the cells nearly impossible
to penetrate by conventional intelli gence-gathering means. As a result,
American offic ials usually don't
learn about terro ri st attacks until
after they happen.
The dece ntrali zed nature of
these ce ll s also helps conceal the
true id ent ity of their spon sors .
When a group clai ms responsibility
for a terrorist act, they often usc a
temporary name. which they then
discard in an allempt to throw
investigators off the scent.
Despite these difficulties, American counterterrorism officials are
taking the Argentina bombi(lg quite
seriously. In t11e wake of the blast,
the U.S. State Department se nt
down several of its top antt·terrorism experts to help with the probe.
A tea m of FDI agents, including
veterans of the World Trade Center
investigation, arc also in Argentina
to search for clues and to provide
counterterrori sm training. These
investigatnrs, we have learned, are
now virtually certain that the gov ernment of Iran is ultimately to
blame for the blast.
Government officials who have
studied the problem of counterter·
rorism believe the only long-term
solution is to go after lhe sponsoring government. But that tactic has
been tried repeatedly in the past,
often with scant success.
As moderate regimes in the
Middle East continue to move
toward peace, radical clements in
that region appear to be escalating
lheir efforts against Israel and the
United States. Winning the new
"peace'" may be as challenging as
fighting some of the old wars .
Jack Anderson and Michael
Dinstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Orange j~ice war against 'bad' ideas
The National Organization for
I asked First Amendment
Women has been taking celebrato· authority Floyd Abrams what he
ry credit for the Florida Citrus thought of the jihad against Florida
Commission's refusal to renew tiS orange juice that eventually ~ot
$1 million advertising campaign on
Rush Limbaugh's radio program.
Nat Hentoff ·
The commission denies that
NOW's boycott of Florida orange
Bryallt ftred . "The boycons of Caljuice had anything to do with its ifornia grape growers," Abrams
decision. NOW docsn 't believe the said, "are against actions by those
commission. Neither do I.
employers in their business NOW, however, should share when they resist workers' anempts
some of the credit - for punishing to get a fair wage or violate collecLimbaugh's ideas - with the tive bargaining rights. But Anita
National Education Association, Bryant is being boycotted because
the NAACP and the National Fed- she has engaged in speech, political
eration of Business and Profession· speech, that has nothing to do with
al Women's clubs. All called for a her work advertising orange juice.
boycott of Florida orange juice so If this kind of boycott against an
long as the boisterous Limbaugh individual happens often enough,
was one of its spokesmen.
there has to be a dangerous inhibit·
Boycotts are a classic American ing effect on a lot of other people's
form of protest. For a long time, I speech."
. .
would check Cesar Chavez's list of
Patricia Winters, a colummst for
proscribed grape growers before I the New York Daily News, notes
would buy any grapes. So did accurately that NOW - in the
many others in my neighborhood, Limbaugh boycott- is "using the
and in time, most of those scorned kind of tactics often favored'' by
grapes disappeared from the super- such fundamentalist groups as the
markets.
Rev. Donald Wildmon's American
But there are two basic kinds of Family Association. Wildman - a
boycotts. This became clear in the grand master of economic wars
late 1970s when a number of out- against "bad" ideas and "bad"
raged groups around the country expression - has deployed his
also boyconed Florida orange juice troops against "The Last Tempta·
because its spokeswoman then. lion of Christ," "N.Y.P.D. Blue"
Anita Bryant, had - on her own and many more bearers of his ver·
time - denigrated homosexuals.
sion of unchristian values.

NOW, the National Education
Association and .Wildman have. of
course, the First Amendment right
to go into combat against First
Amendment values. So have count·
less other enemies of free expression, but the damage they do can
go far beyond their immediate tar·
get- in this case, Rush Limbaugh.
Paul McMasters of the First
Amendment Center at the Freedom
Forum in Nashville tells me it's
ironic that the NEA, the nation's
largest teachers' union, "should
utilize this particular fonn of First
Amendment action - the boycott
- to protest another pure form of
First Amendment action, Rush
Limbaugh giving his opinions. I
would expect teachers especially to
fight ideas with ideas - not with

economic weapons.''
The lesson plan of the NEA for
students around the country is:
replace the marketplace of ideas
with the marketplace of economic
forces.
Limbaugh's ideas should indeed
be debated and dissected, and Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting
(FAIR) is doing just that- as
Howard Kurtz reported in the July
I Washington Post. And, as a fairly
regular listener to Limbaugh, I
have yet to hear him really answer
FAIR's charges.
Meanwhile, NOW - not a
notable champion of free speech,
except for its own - is on a roll.

Escalating the war against ideas it
dislikes, NOW intends to "pressure lhe roughly 600 radio stations
and 220 TV stations that carry him
to either drop Limbaugh" or pro·
vide equal time. NOW will also
threaten major advertisers wilh the
warning that "profiting from hate
will cost them the business of
thinking consumers."
Leaving no stone unused, NOW
also intends to challenge TV and
radio license renewals.
When the boycotters of opinions
declared war on Anita Bryant, Ira
Glasser, executive director of the
ACLU, said: "She has taken public
positions, and certain people who
disagree with those positions are
trying to punish her economically. I
see no difference between black·
listing people through Red Chan·
nels during the McCarthy years and
blacklisting Anita Bryant now."
Or Rush Limbaugh. When Ed
Asner, an ardent liberal, was star·
ring in a television drama series on
the free press, right-wing forces
pressured the sponsor to drop the
program. Just like NOW.
Nat Hentorr is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill or Rights.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext 8317.)

I

'I

the most that the big central
bankers can call upon to protect the
international financial system.
Cumulative foreign investment

offered to the stockholders or to
itself; the national interest and
~erican workers are of secondary
Importance.
What is evolving is textbook
Hodding Carter Ill efficient. Open markets and thrivtotals some $5 trillion worldwide, ing international finance are, in the
about a trillion dollars less than the conventional economic wisdom
total amount of foreign trade each "good things.·· So is plant locatio~
year. American companies that in economically depressed regions
once moved their plants southward and nations. They may even evento take advantage of lower wages tually prove more beneficial to the
and tax breaks now routinely aban- great majority of mankind than
don the United States altogether. they are hannful to the minority.
In the meantime, however, they
They are not alone. And the United
are
the proximate cause of
States is not simply a supplier of
capital. British, Dutch, German, immense pain for millions of peoHong Kong, French and Japanese ple. The immediate consequence of
companies have opened or acquired international competition for
thousands of American-based oper- investment dollars and trade is the
devaluation of labor - $12-anations.
Rather than ''following the hour employees in developed counflag," trade and investment have tries must compete with 50-cent·
virtually nothing to do with it. an-hour workers in less developed
More and more American corpora· nations. Given the vast pool of the
lions' annnal reportS include phras- unemployed or underemployed
es such as .the one I encountered in around the globe, what de~esses
Michigan a few years ago. '"Com- the wages of the better-prud does
pany X is an international corpora- not automatically mise the wages
tion headquartered in the United of the poorer. There is always a
States.'' Management loyalty is cheapes place to do business, which

makes it easier to resist pressure for
higher wages.
There are always less regulated
places to do business as well. No
more off-shore dumping in the
United States? OK. let's go to more
hospitable climes where industrial
pollution looks and smells like
money to venal politicians.
.
The triumph of international ·
capitalism was not the only reason.
but it was not purely coincidental ·
that real wages in America fell 18
percent between 1972 and 1990. ·
Nor has the recent recovery done ·
much to make up for lost ground. :
As Secretary of Labor Robert :
Reich recent! y conceded in a tallc at :
the Joint Center for Political .and •
Economic Studies, the 2 million ,
new jobs created in the 1993 to :
I 994 period were "mainly for low·
skilled or entry-level jobs... (many
of which) do not pay an adequate
wage."
Hoddiog Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, edi·
tor and publisher, is president of '
MainStreet, a Washiogtoo,'D.C.based television production com·
pany.

The Dally Sentlnel-f'age-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths- - -Local News in Brief:-

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Aug. 16

Paul J. Frisch

MICH

Terrorists hitting hard at the new peace

There is a specter haunting the
working men and women of the
world and their governments. It is
international capitalism, pursuing
efficiency and profit with a singleminded,
unregulated
zeal
unmatched since the industrial revolution.
As most will recognize, that
opening line is a rough paraphrase
of Karl Marx. His "specter" was
communism, which he had invented and which he sincerely hoped
was haunting the crowned heads of
Europe.
Today, the inescapable truth is
that the most blindly powerful
global force is not '"world communism" or nation-state impelialism,
but free enterprise capitalism. It has
dissolved nabonal borders into fig·
ments of the cartographer's imagination and as frequently transformed presidents into impotent
figureheads.
The torrential flow of capital
around the globe is part of the .
story. Incessandy seeking the high·
est return, a trillion doUars are estimated to move abroad from New
York City each day. By contrast,
about $200 billion is reportt4 to be

THE MASK

Monda~August15 , 1994

Monday,August15, 1994

Capitalism seizes worldwide power

Berry's World

f

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

IToledo I82" I
•

IMansfield In o I•

PA

IND.

{)
•

Word has been received here of
the Aug. 10, !994 death of the Rev.
Pa ul J. frisch, 86, Fort Wayne,
Ind ., former rector of lhc Trinit y
Evangelical Lutheran Church, Mis·
souri Synod, in Pomeroy.
He IS survived by hi s wife, Eliz.
abeth Titus Frisch; a son, John of
Avilla, Ind.; a daughter, Paula, of
Fort Wayne; and five grandchildren. Oth er survtvors include a
brother-in-law, James R. Titus of
Syracuse, and a nephew, Bob Titus
of Pomeroy.

She was preceded in death by
two sons, a daughter and a brother.
Gale Hysell.
Services will be Wednesday at
II a.m. in the Bradford Church of
Chri st, with Derek Stump official·
ing. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery. Friends may call at the Fisher
l'une ral Home in Middl epo rt on
Tuesday from 7-9 p.m., and at the
churc h one hour prior to services.

Mary L. Rickard

Man cited in crash
A 19-year-old Pomeroy man was uted on three charges following a
three-car crash on State Route 124 in Ru tland Saturday around 9:51 a.m.
According to a report from the Gallia·Mcigs Post of the Stllte Highway .
Patrol, Brandon S. Roush. Pomeroy, was eas tbound and struck a parked
1984 Ford Tempo. The parked car spun into the road and struck a west·
bound car driven by Roger R. Black, 44, Middleport.
Roush was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Rutland
squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. He was later
transported to Holzer Medical Center where he was treated and released.
Roush's 1984 Chevrolet Chcvette sustllined heavy damage, while dam ·
age to Black's 1990 Forti Fit:slll was listed as moderate, the patrol report·
cd.
Roush was cited on charges of driving under tl1e tn lluencc, fa~ lure to
control and failure to wear a scat be lt , the patrol reponed.
The crash remains under mvcst1gation.

Mary L. Rickard, 85, Mason,
W.Va., died Sa turday, Aug. 13 ,
C-o-lu-m-bu_s,_l-so-o~l
1994 tn Veterans Memoria l HospiMildred I. Hysell
tal.
Born Dec. 31, 1908 in Graham
Mildred I. Hysell, 80, Pomeroy,
died Sunday, Aug. 14, 1994 at Stlltion, W.Va., daughter of the late
Smith ami Julia Ryan Rickard, she
Overbrook Center in Middleport.
The Belville Construction Co. of Waterloo was recently awarded a
Born July 24, 19 14 in Meigs was a retired Ohio schoolteacher
contract tD replace a bridge on State Route 681, 1.03 miles west of State
Route 7 near Tuppers Plains. the Ohio Department of Transportatio n
Cou nty. daughter of the late and a U.S. Army veteran.
Howard T. and Verna Russell
announced .
She was a member of St.
W. VA
Hysell, she was a former seam· Joseph"s Catholic Church. Mason,
The $257,857.81 project is sclt cdul ctl to begi n around Aug. 29 and
stress with the Fabric Shop , and a and the Ohio Retired Teache rs
should be completed by Oc t. 31. The proJect wi ll resul t in a 6()..day road
closure, wi th Sumner Road serv in g as the detour route, said ODOT
retired cook with Northwestern and Association .
Survi vi ng are a sister ·in -law,
Meigs Local sc hool di stricts and
spokeswoman Nancy Yoacluun.
Veterans Memorial Hospital in Maxin e Rickard of Mason; a
nephew and his wife, Edward and
Pomeroy.
She 1s survived by her husband , Caroly n R1c kard of Middleport:
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
The Meigs County Board or Comm iss ioners and the trustees of BedDwight L. Hysell; three daughters, two nittes, Mrs. Kim (Mary Ann)
ford, Chester, Columbia, Lebanon, Lcwt, Olive, Orange, Rutland, Salem,
©1994 Accu·Weat har, Inc.
Vivian Jones of Pomeroy, Emma Neal, and Mackie Lavender, both
Sali sbury, Scipio and Suuon townships will hold a special meeting at the
Roush of Pataskala, and Clara Mae of Mason; two foster sons, Howard
Meigs County Muhipurpose Senior Center on Aug. 24 at 6:30 p.u&gt; . to
Hy sell of Albany; five grandchil - Sisk of Mason, and Raymond Sisk
consider a propo"ll for establishmg rural enterpri se zones in the county.
of New Haven, W.Va.; and several
dren and four great-grandchildren.
The meeting is open tD the public.
Also surviving are two brothers, great nieces and nephews.
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
Noel Hysell of Columbus, and Nor·
man Hysell of Danville, Ill.; three by a sis ter, Anne Rickard, and a
sisters, Marjorie Wilt and Eleanor brother, Edward Rickard Sr.
A Pomeroy youth was treated and released from Veterans Memorial
Weather forecast:
Services will be I I a.m. TuesHoover, both of Middleport, and
Hospital Saturday fo llowing a one-car acciden t on State Route 143 in RutToday ... Partly to mo stly sunny. Donna Blanock of Morino Valley, day in St. Joseph's Ca th oli c land Township, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway Patrol said.
A slight chance of morning show· Calif.; and several ni eces and Church, with Father Melvin Aver Tabitha Swearingen, 16, 300 Mul berry Ave., was taken to the hospital
ers ex treme northeast. Highs in the
man officiating. Burial wi ll be in
by the Meigs EMS.
nephews.
70s.
St. Josep h's Ca tholic Cemetery.
Troopers said Swear ingen was southbound at 10 a.m. when her car
Tonight.. .clear. Low 50 to 55.
Friends may ~a ll at the Foglesong
went off the right side of tl1c road, came back on, went acruss the road and
Tuesday ... Most ly
sunny
Funeral Home tonight from 7-9.
struck a ditch , causing the car to overturn onto its LOp.
north ... Partly cloudy south. Highs
A Rosary service will be held in
The car was severely damaged :md Swearingen was cited for failure to
VETERANS MEMORIAL
in the upper 70s north to the lower
the funeral home tDnight at 8.
control.
Saturday admissions - none.
80s south.
Saturday discharge - Betty
·J II&gt;'
•" ...
Triplett, Syracuse.
r
Extended forecast:
Saturday admission - Emma
Wednesday and Thursday ... Fair. Duffy, Pomeroy.
'
"I
~- )
Lows upper 50s to lower 60s and
Saturday discharges - none.
highs 80 to 85.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
'I
......
~
Discharges Aug. 12 - Nora
Friday ... A chance of thunder·
stonns. Lows in the 60s and highs McMillin, Mrs. Kevin Payne and
""
in the 80s.
son, Misty Crews. Marlene
0' Brien, Mrs. Paul McCoy and
daughter.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mulholland, son, Middleport.
Discharges Aug. 13 - Jackie
lization. six months probation;
Jeff Stone, Pomeroy, theft, three Sanders.
Discharges Aug. 14 - Bridget
days jail suspended, restitution,
Mulholland,
Jessica Marcum, Milcosts; Clyde Sayre 1!, Racine, seat
dred
Kearns.
of Waverly, left, and Linda Bennett of Jackson,
SELECTING THE BEST - After the 307
belt. $25 plus costs; Jason D. John,
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Thcrill
both home economic teachers, was lo the select
entries in the domestic arts department at the
Sacramento, Calif., speed, $30 plus
son,
Gallipolis.
Clagg,
the
best of the blue ribbon winners for the best
Meigs County Fair were judged Saturday aftercosts; Brian E. Salyman. Fairborn.
(Published
with
permission)
or
show
award.
noon,
the
next
job
for
judges
Mandie
Vulgamore
speed, $30 plus cost~; William J.
Steifer, Middleport, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Harold E. Lawson,
Mason, W.Va ., assured clear distance, $20 plus costs; Lannis E. Wrecks leave 4 dead
Gilbert Jr., Oak Hill, seat belt, $25
By The Associated Press
plus costs;
Four people died in traffic acciJeffrey W. Floyd, Proctorville.
. speed, $30 plus costs; Steven W. dents on Ohio roads over the week·
Woodyard, South Point, speed, $30 end, the State Highway Patrol said
plus costs; Marissa A. Gray, Mid- today.
The patrol counts weekend traf·
dleport, seat belt. $25 plus costs;
Tony Rood, Reedsville, disorderly fie deaths from 6 p.m . Friday
·
conduct, $25 plus costs; Arthur through Sunday.
The dead:
Petrie, Pomeroy, disorderly conSUNDAY
duct, $50 plus costs; Gerald W.
IRONTON
- Kenneth Ray
Howard Jr., assault, $250 plus
Crabtree,
29,
of Huntington,
costs, I 0 days jail suspended, one
W.Va.,
driver
in
a
one-car accident
year probation. restraining order:
on
Ohio
775
in
Lawrence
County.
Billy G. Jones. Long BottDm, fail·
FINDLAY
Brian
Patrick,
36,
ure to control, $30 plus costs; John
of
Kenton,
driver
in
a
one-car
acciibe chore of making a decision or which was best
JUDGING - After selecting the blue ribbon
G. Richards, Racine, no motorcycle
dent
on
a
Hardin
County
road.
or
show. II turned out to be an animal study in
winners
in
tbe
various
categories
of
the
painting
endorsement, $!00 plus costs, three
SATURDAY
sbow at the l31st Meigs County Fair Saturday
oil by Louise Eads of Rutland.
days jail suspended if valid motor·
NEW PHILADELPHIA afternoon, Judge Carolyn Potter of Oak Hill had
cycle endorsement obtained within
Thomas
E
.
Grimm,
41,
of
60 days; speed, $4 5 plus costs;
CarrieR. Reitmire, Pomeroy, Uhrichsville, driver in a one-car
Lifeguard lessons offered
reckless operation, $100 plus costs, accident on a Tuscarawas County
Signup for life-guard training is
$150 forfeited to Meigs County Jail road.
EATON- Leslie Marcum, 16,
taking place today at the London
Fund; failure to dim lights, costs
of Camden, driver in a one-car Pool. Price of the lessons is $40.
only; Hank C. Rood, Reedsville, accident on Ohio 732 in Preble
possession, $50 plus costs; Thomas
Grange to meet
D. Grady, . Racine, passing bad County.
Racine Grange 2606 will meet
checks. two counts, $25 plus costs
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the hall .
on each charge, restitution within
seven days, three days jail suspendPomeroy Group AA to meet
ed; Kevin B. Jewell, Langsville,
Pomeroy Group of AA will
operating a motor vehicle after
Am
Ele
Power
.......................
.30
111
meet
Thursday at Sacred Heart
underage consumption, $250 plus
Akw ........................................62 3/4
Catholic Church. 7 p.m.
costs, three days jail, 60-day OL
Ashland 011 ........................... .36 3/4
suspension, one year probation,
AT&amp;T ..........................., ........53 318
$250 of fine and jail suspended
Bank One ................................33 318
upon completion of residential
Bob Evans ............................... 19 3/4
Champion Ind ..............................23
treatment program:
.: .:
Charming Shop .................. .8 15/16
Sherolyn M. Butcher, Pomeroy,
City
Holding
................................
.32
DUI, $1,000 plus costs, six months
!Hours M-F R-5 Sat8-121
Federal Mogu! ........................27 318
jail suspended to 30 days, three(
FORREST SUMP
)
Goodyear
T&amp;R
.....................
.34
718
465 North Second Avenue Middleport, Ohio 45760
1:00 9:t ~ UULY MJIT.MI'/1Ut.1 +00, 1:4 ~ (PG1 l)
year OL suspension. two years ~ro­
K-mart .................................... 17 118
t N THI RRMY NOW
balion; driving under suspensiOn,
110,9:20 Oo\ILY MJd', SNI'/9.11, 1 :10, J:lO CPCI
Lands End .............................. 18 7/8
$100 plus costs, six months jail
Limited Inc ............................. 19 1/8
THE tiTTLE RRSCRLS
7:20 9 : 10 lliULY 19lf,Sitr/!Dt . 1: 20 1: 10 IPGI
suspended to 30 to run concurr~nt
Multimedia Inc ......................29 1/4
CLERR RND PRESENT lftNGER
with DUI, one-year OL suspensiOn
Point Bancorp .............................. 17
oo ••uc• '"'-•· ".,'
1:00,9:45 DULY WI!' .SNr/9Jtt. 1100,l: 45 (I'C1l)
Reliance Electric .................... t9 7/8
concurrent with DUI, two years
Robbins &amp; Myers...................l9 1/4
probation, forfeiture of motor vehiL20,9:l0 WLY,~.:'r:..~l :lO,J:lO (R;1)1
Sboney's lnc .......................... .t3 7/8
cle; James Hess, Pomeroy, speed.
TRUE tiES
Slar Bank ...............................41 3/4
$23 fine suspended to $13 plus
9:45 MILY JMDaS &amp;M'/Il.le. )l45 (R)
Wendy lnt'L ........................... 15 3/8
costs· William R. Adams,
RN6lll IN THE OUTFIELD
Worthington lnd ..........................lO
1:10 DML't MI'DII!S SNl'/EUt.1 : 10 PGI
Reeds~ille, assured clear distance,
Stock reports are tbe 10:30 a.m.
DtSNtY S tiDN KIN&amp;
$30 plus costs;
quotes provided by Advest or
7:10 9:00 UULJ r«r .Sit!/Q, 1: 10 l : OO (G
Lenora R. Garnes, Pomeroy,
COMING SOON I •Bt.AiflMAII" I
Gallipolis.
BRUCB WILLIS in •coUOR OF MIGHT"
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
GIFT CEAnFICATiB AVAILABLE!
suspended to three days, 180-day
OL suspension, one year probation,
$250 of fine and jail suspended
upon completion of residential
treatment program; no OL, $25
CABLE TV
plus costs, 10 days jail suspended
Thr~at
to three, concurrent with DUI; one
year probation; defective muffler,
$25 plus costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Kei~h
Baum, Williamstown, W.Va .• failure to contrOl, $70; Bruce Bonecutter Point Pleasant, W.Va., speed,
$70· Shawn M. Schofield, Little
Hocictng, seat belt. $45: Cliff FerSalle Ill ....., Drive
guson, Springfield, two charges
Pt. .......
passing bad checks, $115 and
$59 .48;
Donald
Goheen,
Cd 30M71-1144 IDr lppt. ar lalonaetlaa
Langsville, passing bad checks,
MtMittr of lttaa PPO &amp; Federal
PPO

.-I

Bridge contract awarded

Officials to consider REZ proposal

Showers T-storm s Rain
Via Associstod Pr9ss GraphicsNol

Lows in the 50s to be
felt in state tonight
By The Associated Press
High s today will range from
near 70 in the north to near 80 in
the far south. A widely scattered
shower is possible in the lakeshore
counties this morning. Olherwise
skies will be partly sunny
statewide.
Tonight will be clear with the
low ranging from 50 to 55 . Tues·
day will be partly cloudy with
highs in the upper 70s north to the
lower 80s south.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 95 in 1944. The record
low was43 in 1964.
Sunset tonight is at 8:30 p.m .
Sunrise on Tuesday is at 6:44 a.m.

Pomeroy youth injured in wreck

Hospital news

... .,.

""-·

-

r

Meigs County Court
The following cases were
resolved Aug. 10 in the Meig s
County Court of Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien.
Fined were: Susan L. Roush,
Syracuse, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
James R. Roush , Syracuse, seat
belt, $!5 plus costs; Patricia Mulherin, Racine, seat belt. $25 plus
costs· John V. Bacci, Valley View,
speed, $30 plus costs; Brian
Tschaner, Upper Sandusky, assured
clear distance, $20 plus costs;
Penny J. Eads, Langsville, left of
center, $20 plus costs; Raymond
M. Litchfield, Rutland, driving.
under financial responsibility
action suspension, $500 plus costs,
180-days jail, eight month opera·
tor's license suspension, 60-day
vehicle immobilization; fictitious
registration, costs only; seat belt.
$25 plus costs;
James Litchfield, Rutland,
wrongful entrustment, $25 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended;
Steven C. Taylor, Long Bottom,
driving under the influence, $1 ,000
plus costs, six months jail suspended to 30 days. 180-day vehtcle
immobilization; driving under FRA
suspension, $100 plus costs. six
months jail suspended to 30 days
concurrent with DUI; Roger E.
Tallhamer, Racine, seat belt, $15
plus costs; Christopher Kruskamp,
Athens, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Keith Ratcliff, Grayson, Ky.,
speed, $30 plus costs; ,
Joseph Motowsli. North
Charleston, S.C., speed, $30 plus
costs; William Parsons, Charlotte.
N.C .• speed. $30 plus costs; Larry
Smith, Bidwell, speed, $30 plus
costs; Charles B. Williamson, Rutland, DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three, l80..day0L
suspension, one year probauon,
three days jail and $250 of the fine
suspended upon completion of residential treatment program; no tail
lights, costs only; Ethel E. Adkins,
Racine wrongful entrustment,
$250 pl~s costs, three days jail suspended, 30-day vehicle immobi-

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(USPS 10·961)

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�The Daily S~ntinel

Sports

Monday, August 15, 1994

Monday, August 15,1994

Page-4

~===---.====--------------------------~~------~~--=====~====

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - There was no rush to settle the baseball
strike on a lazy summer weekend.
Management leader Richard Ravitch played tennis and listened
to mustc on Sunday . Unton head Donald Fehr went to his office and
answered mail .
'_' It's a sad, lonely. but peaceful weekend," executive council
chrurman Bud Selig satd by telephone from his home in Milwaukee.
No new talks were scheduled for today, the fourth day of the
strike. The stdes, whtch met separately with federal mediators on
Saturda~ . said they intended to speak by telephone today but didn't
kn~:V tf 11 would result 10 a bargaining session.
No comm~mcatwn across the planelary space," said Eugene
Orza, the umon s No. 2 official .
Forty-two games were wiped out on the first weekend of the
baseball players strike. If ,the walkout continues through Friday, it
would become the sport s Second-longest in terms of canceled
games.
Ravitch repeatedly says he will "leave no stone unturned" in an
effort to arrive at a settlement.
Speaking of Stones, Mick Jagger even took time to comment on
baseball's eighth work stoppage since 1972.
·
"We're the only sladium act that's not on strike" he said as the
Rolling Stones played Sunday night at Giants Sladium in East
Rutherford, NJ .
Players, meanwhile, fanned out across the country. Many went to
golf courses over the weekend and worked at their favorite leisure
activity.
"I'd say the chances are better of me breaking 90 today than
hitting .4~," San Diego's Tony Gwynn said as the weekend began.
In Spnngfteld, Ill., for a horse auction, New York Yankees
owner George Steinbrenner backed off from his statements earlier
in the week that owners should join Ravitch at the bargaining !able.
Stem brenner and Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris both
satd management should have people at the table who have invested
10 the game.
"It was merely a suggestion. That's Bud Selig's decision to
make," Steinbrenner said. "I'm a trooper behind him."
A former owner, Charlie Finley, predicted owners won't get the
salary cap they're demanding from the union. He said owners will
need cash to repay bank loans.
" I foresee enough owners to be concerned about making
payments on thetr clubs that they're going to have to give in at the
end," Finley said. "They've done it so many times before."
In Washmgton, Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell said he
doesn't think the Senate should consider stripping the sport of its
anlltrust exempuon.
The Senate Judiciary Committee in June voted 10-7 against a bill
that would have removed baseball's antitrust exemption in labor
matters. Mttchell, a Mame Democrat believed to be the favorite to
become commissioner, was asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" if
the Senate should reconsider.
"No, I don't ~lieve so!" Mi~hell said. "We're dealing with
health care and cnme, wh1ch we re gomg to have to deal with
which will lake all of our time."
'

\\
.~·

·,•

BREAKS TACKLE- Indianapolis running
back Ronald Humphrey (25) breaks a tackle by
Cincinnati defensive back Lance Gunn (ldt) on
his way to scoring a touchdown from six yards out

in the second quarter of Saturday night 's NFL
exhibition contest in Cincinnati, where the Colts
won U-21. (AP)

In NFL exhibition action,

Bears blank Cards; Browns
top Lions; Colts beat Bengals
By The Associated Press
This time, Buddy Ryan's "46
Defense" came up with a zero.
And so did the Arizona Cardinals'
offense.
" To me it' s unbelievable that
we played 30 minutes of defensive
football and did not get one
turnover, " Ryan said following a
16-0 loss to the Chicago Bears.
"We had one sack, a couple of
opportunity for picks ... but that
was it.
"You can't win in the National
Football League if you don't get
turnovers."
Instead, Arizona turned the ball
over, allowing the Bears to win
their second straight exhibition
game.
"The Bears are a good defensive football team, but that's no
excuse for not scoring on them,"
said Ryan . whose defensive
schemes were largely responsible
for Chicago's Super Bowl championship in 1986. "You can pay your
team to play, but for them to excel
it has to come from the heart. There
wasn't a lot of heart out there
tonight."
In the Cardinals' initial preseason game last week, Ryan's first as
head coach, the 46 Defense was
responsible for six sacks and
scored a touchdown off an interception in a 17-7 victory over the
San Francisco 49ers. The 46 could
only manage one sack Saturday in
the game at Tempe, where Kevin
Butler kicked three first-half field
goals and Robert Green scored on a
34-yard run for Chicago.
In other NFL preseason games
Saturday, it was the New York
Giants 28, San Diego 20; Pitts·
burgh 29. the Los Angeles Raiders
17; Seattle 29, Tampa Bay 6;
Cleveland 16, Detroit 7; the New
York Jets 34, Philadelphia 24; Indianapolis 26, Cincinnati 21; Minnesola 21, New OrleartS 17; Miami
31. Green Bay 24, and New England 28, Los Angeles Rams 10.
The NFL preseason schedule
continues Monday night with Dallas playing Houston in Mexico

I

City.

Giants 28, Chargers 20
Dave Brown ran for one touchdown and threw for another in his
first game as the Giants' No. I
quarterback, leading New York (12) over San Diego (0-3) in an
American Bowl game in Berlin.
Brown, who beat out Kent Graham in the battle to replace Phil
Simms, got off to a shaky start,
throwing two passes that should
have been intercepted and fumbling
to set up the Chargers' opening
score in the ftrst quarter. But he got
his game together, completing 15
of 21 passes for 187 yards and
leadin~ New York to two secondquarter TDs. He ran nine yards for
the first score, then hit Aaron
Pierce with a two-yard pass.
Graham also performed well,
going 3-for-3 for 47 yards on the
drive that gave New York the lead
in the third quarter, then hitting
Omar Douglas with a five-yard
. scoring pass in the closing minutes.
Steelers 29, Raiders 17
Neil O'Donnell and Mike Tomczak directed a pair of scoring
drives apiece and Pittsburgh
rebounded from deficits in-each
half for a home win.
Victor Jones, Pittsburgh's
fourth -team fullback, 3cored on
two one-yard runs in the fourth
quarter to prevent the Raiders from
opening a preseason 3-0 for the
f rrst time in II years.
Jeff Hostetler and Vince Evans
threw touchdown passes to Darryl
Hobbs in the first half for Los
Angeles (2-1), but Pittsburgh (1 -1)
raUied with mostly reserves on the
fteld.
Seahawks 29, Buccaneers 6
Rick Mircr passed for his first
touchdown of the exhibition season
and rookie defensive tackle Sam
Adams scored his ftrst NFL touchdown as the Seahawks beat Tampa
Bay (1-1).
The Scahawks (1-1) were forced
to move their exhibition home
opener against the Bucs to the Uni·
versity of Washington's Husky Sladium because the Kingdome is

New Orleool ..... 0 2 0 .000 Zl

Tum
W L T PF PAPct
Miami ............... 3 0 01.000 7' f1
lndianapot;t ..... 2 0 01.000 39 30

N_cw Yodr. Oiun• 21, San Dioao ZO
Pialbui)I'J!i,l.A. Rcillon 17

01.000 52 16
0 .SOO 20 38
0 .500 47 50

•
'•

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21, New Odcanll7

Hooston ........ ...

Newi!I!&amp;Jind ll,l.A. ltamllO

0 2

W•tunDINioa
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LA. Raidcn ..... 2 1 0 .~7
Seattle ............... I 1 0 ..500
Donva .............. 1 2 0 .333
San Oi.eao ......... 0 3 0 .000

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31 19
62 61

4080

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Elllml Dh1Jioll

W L T PF PAPct.

Am•l\0 ...-........
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N.Y. OW.. ......
AUledclpiU ......
wullinI"'" .. ....

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1 1 0 .soo 36 36

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~ ORLEANS

SAINTS: Claimo&lt;i

Pau Evan~, tialJ,ta1d, off waivca (rqn the
Klnlu Oty Chiero.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Waived
Anlboay Bell. linebacker: Tun Burton
tipt atd; and o.n.t Cnwfonl. liAohodl:
er. Siped Duin Jcrdan.lineiNcbr.

GETTING BY Detroit defensive back Derrick
Moore (31) is Cleveland rookie punt returner
Derrick Alexander (85), who churns his way
quarterback Jay Schroeder led the
Bengals (0-2) to three second-half
touchdowns and intensified the
pressure on struggling David Klin·
gler.
Vikings 21, Saints 17
At Minneapolis, Warren Moon
and Andre Ware each threw touchdown passes and Scottie Graham
scored the game-winner on a fiveyard run late in the third quarter for

Minnesota (2-1 ).
Moon, who played II seasons
with Houston, struggled against the
Saints, completing 9 of 20 passes
for 131 yards and a touchdown.
Jim Everett, released by the Los
Angeles Rams last year, connected
on 14 of 22 passes for 182 yards
and two touchdown s for New
Orleans (0-2).

Dolphins 31, Packers 24
Irving Spikes, who signed with
Miami as a free agent after being
ignored on draft day, rushed for a
touchdown and set up two others
with kickoff returns of 71 and 51
yards as the Dolphins beat Green
Bay in Milwaukee.
The Dolphins (3-0) return to
Milwaukee County Stlldiurn in four
(See EXHIBITIONS on PageS)
•

.

p.m.

Week 3 exhibitions
Thundl)'
Wuhinl""' o1 Now ~· 7 p.m.
Sanl'nndlo&lt;&gt;otSanDqo,Bp.m.

0 .333 62 61
0 .000 30 46
0 .000 25 30

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!.A. Rami ........ 0 2 0 .000 16 42

A.._,tt~30p..m.
~a.," New Odeono. 1 p.m.

II-....
6p.m.
Tanpallay
f p.m.
S.tllrdaJ

fodianapallo

ot Milllli,
CINCINNATI u PIIUodolphia, 7:30
p.m.
Buft'lllo VI. HwatM II San Aruooio, a
p.m.
New York Oianta a1 New Yolk Jeu,l
p.m.
LA. Raidcntt L.A. Rama.IO pm.
Mimolotaat Scaale. 10 p.m.

SundaJ, Aua.lt
0env« It Dall.u,l p.m.
MondoJ,A... 22
OliciF at KIRIU Ct1, I p.m.

A Special Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, September 1, 1994

FOR HOI.I EO\'JI JERS IIJ S URAN CF

illfINSURANCE
WARNER r'l
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•••IICI

West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992-5479
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............ ...., DIIIMIII,otatll

992~2156
ASK FOR DAVE OR BOB
AD DEADLINE THURSDAY, AUGUST

2s, 1994.

PRICE WINS TITLE - Zimbabwe's Nick Price holds the PGA

Champion~hip trophy sh?rtly _after claiming the title SuDday. He shot

a 3-~nder-par 67 to clarm brs second major tournament championshrp oftbe year. (AP)

Dream Team II hands
'· Russia 137-91 loss
to capture WCOB gold

Chang defeats Edberg
in ATP Championship finals

upfield for a 75-yard return in the fourth quarter
of Saturday night's NFL exhibition game in
Cleveland, where the Browns won 16-7. (AP)

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Saturday's scores

Eng.lmd .... 2 0
Buffalo ............. I I
N.Y. Jc:u ....... I I

Transactions

AW.nu 7:7, Buffalo 7

[ukrn Dll'iaton

~ew

4~

Su fn.nciloo 20, Denvu 3
K.UI&amp;I City 11, Wa&amp;hin&amp;UJn 14

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

'
••

l

..

.,

Friday's srores

NFL exhibitions

••

~-

Scoreboard

•

Football

·'
•

closed until its ceiling is fixed. A
crowd of 43,633 turned out to see
the Seahawks play only their second home exhibition or regular·
season game outdoors.
Browns 16, Lions 7
At Cleveland, rookie Derrick
Alexander returned a fourth-quarter
punt 75 yards for a touchdown and
Cleveland's defense dominated the
Lions.
The Lions (1-1) struck quickly
on their frrst possession, but then
took Barry Sanders out of the game
and didn't get past midfield again.
Detroit's only touchdown came on
Scott Mitchell's 48-yard strike to
Herman Moore less than three minutes into the ~;~me .
Quarterback Vinny Teslaverde
was 8-for-13 for 91 yards in the
first half for the Browns (2-0). The
loss was the Lions' ftrst in the preseason since 1992. They were 4-01 last preseason.
Jets 34, Eagles 24
At Philadelphia, Boomer Esiason threw one touchdown pass, left
the game, then came back to throw
another for the Jets (1-1).
Esiason slarted and got the Jcts
their first touchdown on a nineyard pass to Rob Moore early in
the second quarter. But after Jack
Trudeau went three-and-out on the
Jets' next possession, Esiason was
back in and led New York to its l!Oahead score, a six-yard reception
by Johnny Mitchell.
Esiason finished 7-for-13 with
128 yards against the Eagles (0-2).
Colts 26, Bengals 21
Rookie running back Lamont
Warren, filling in for the injured
Marshall Faulk, led the Colts (2-0)
to two second-half touchdowns at
Cincinnati.
Warren, a sixth-round pick out
of Colorado, ran for a 71-yard
score midway through the fourth
quarter and took a pass from
Browning Nagle and sprinted the
final 50 yards of a 62-yard touch·
down play with 58 seconds left
Faulk, the No . 2 pick in the
draft, went out with a bruised lower
back in the first quarter. Backup

Price captures PGA
Championship title

Quiet highlights baseball
strike's first weekend

By TERRY KINNEY
MASON, Ohio (AP) - Michael
Chang won his second consecutive
ATP Championship on Sunday,
routing his former nemesis, Stefan
Edberg, 6-2, 7-5 in a reprise of last
year's final.
While Edberg was lethargic at
ftrst, Chang was relentless, winning
the ftrst II points and never letting
Edberg back in the match.
"He's beaten me bad. He shows
no mercy," Chang said. "If a
guy's off that day, you lake advanlllge of him."
Edberg, also a two-time winner
at the ATP Championship, said he
was mystified by his slow start.
''For some reason, I found it
very tough to get going today,"
Edberg said. "He got the first set
very easily, and you can't afford to
do that against Michael."
Edberg called the first three
games, in which Chang broke his
serve twice, "a nightmare."
"I was frustrated, almost embarrassed," Edberg said. "But I kept
going. Things got better. At least in
the second set, things got better.''
Each player held serve through
the frrst I 0 games of the second set.
But Chang broke Edberg in game
II and served out for tbe match.
Match point was a line call that
Edberg disputed .
"You can see the mark on the
court," he said.
But he did not argue the call.
"The match was over," he said. ·
"There is not a lot you can do. The
guy in the chair isn't going to
change the call from there."
For more than a decade, the
ATP Championship has beeh a
haven for Edberg. He's played the
past II years and has never failed
to reach at least the quarterfinals.
He's been in the semifinals eight
times, and Sunday's match was his
sixth final.
Chang, a five-time winner on
the ATP Tour this year, is the tournament's first repeat titlist since
Mats Wilander captured the crown
in 1983·84.
Edberg has an 11-6 career
record againsl Chang, but Chang
has won the past three meetings
dating to last year's ATP Championship.
Edberg went into last year fmal
with little rest; after beating Pete

Sampras in Saturday's semifinal,
he played a doubles match that lasted well past midnight. He won that,
and played two championship
matches Sunday, losing both.
He had ~excuse Sunday.
"I was pretty pumped up
because of last year," Change said.
"I thought Stefan would be out for
r~venge.''

Chang didn't relax, even after
blowing away Edberg in the first
set
"If you look at his record wbere
he's down and is able to come
back, it's incredible," Chang said.
"You may think you have him on
the rooes, but a lot of the times you
don't~.-

Chang said he never relented
because Edberg often wins without
playing his best tennis. Edberg
acknowledged his tendency to win
despite starting slowly.
. "Normally, I can get away witb
ll and play myself back into a
match. But you can't do that with
Michael," Edberg said. "He made
very few errors - that's the
suongest part of his game - and
he served very well.
. "If you're ~oing to beat a guy
hke tbat, xou ve got to be more
consistent. '
Alex O'Brien and Sandon Stolle
of Ausualia won the doubles title
beating Wayne Ferreira of South
Africa and Mark Kratzmann of
Ausualia, 6-7 (7-4), 6-3, 6-2.
The singles title was worth
$245,000. Each member of the
winning doubles team got $49,000.

;...._Sports briefsGolf
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) Wendy Ward won the 94th U.S.
Women's Amateur when she
birdied the toughest par-S on the
course and her opponent, defending
champion Jill McGill, bogeyed the
easiest one.
Tennis
MASON, Ohio (AP) - Michael
Chang beat Stefan Edberg to win
the ATP Championship in a reprise
of last year's fmal.
Chang, a 6-2, 7-5 winner. is the
$1.72 million tournament's first
repeat titlist since Mats Wilander
captured the crown in 1983-84.

By BILL BARNARD
one of the previous seven games,
TORONTO (AP) - Not even and all were close after five minthe original Dream Team had a per- utes. But the Americans scored the
flrst nine points and led 25-10 ftve
fonnance like this.
Dream Team II scored 42 points minutes into Sunday's game.
in the frrst 10 minutes and 73 in the
With I 0:41 left in the first half,
first half on the way to a 137-91 it was 42-16 am!_ the U.S. team was
victory over Russia in the gold- 16-for-17 from il\e field.
"We wanted to play our best
medal game of the World Champi·
early, and it was no contest,"
onship of Basketball.
Scoring 137 points in a 40- coach Don Nelson said.
Russia, which lost to the United
minute 11ame- which was 10
more potnts than Dream Team I States 111-94 Friday night, was
ever managed - is the equivalent coming off an emotional 66-64
of 164 in a regulation 48-minute semifinal victory over favored
NBA contest. Sunday's outcome Croatia, a game that ended just 15
gave the Americans a 120.1 scoring hours before tip-off Sunday . The
average for :he tournament, eclips- Russians also played without their
ing the original Dream Team's best big man, Andrei Fetisov, who
was not in uniform because of an
117.3 in the 1992 Olympics.
But Dream Team I was more injured right ankle.
"Last night's victory took
consistent, winning by at least 32
points in every Olympic game. everything out of us ," Russia
This year's team had three lacklus- coach Sergei Belov said. "The
ter performances, although the desire was there, but we couldn't
closest margin in eight games was do it. Fatigue took away our
15 against a weak team from Spain. strength, which is defense. But
"The U.S. has the best players ' stavin_g with these players for 10,
in the world, regardless of whether 20, 30 minutes is an achievement."
it's Dream Team I, II, Ill, IV, V,
Dominique Wilkins, the oldest
VI or VII," said Derrick Coleman, American player at 34, led the
who led the big early burst that United Slates with 20 points, while
gave the Americans a 26-point O'Neal had 18 points and I 0
advantage. "Comparing Dream rebounds. Alonzo Mourning scored
Teams means people are just trying all of his IS points in the second
to divide us."
half, and Shawn Kemp finished
Shaquille O'Neal, who averaged with 14.
18 points and 8.5 rebounds for the
Sergei Babkov scored 22 points,
tournament and was named Most Mikhail Mikhailov 19 and Sergei
Valuable Player, said the teams are Bazarevich 17 for Russia, which
hard to compare because their finished 6-2 in the tournament,
makeup was so different.
with both losses coming to the
"We're different," O'Neal said. United Slates. The former Soviet
"They were older and more experi- Union handed the Americans their
enced. But I still think we'd beat most infamous defeats in the 1972
them."
and 1988 Olympics.
Dream Team II trailed early in

Frazier beats Grossman
to win ~Virginia Slims crown
By BETH HARRIS
MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif.
(AP) - Amy Frazier defeated
childhood friend Ann Grossman 6I, 6-3 on Sunday to win the Virginia Slims of Los Angeles in a
baseline struggle of little-known
Americarts.
Frazier's fifth career title and
first this year was worth $80,000,
her biggest payday in four years as
a pro. But the quiet 21-year-old
from Rochester Hills. Mich., didn't
react when Grossman's service
return sailed beyond the baseline
on match point. Sbe hurried to the
net, where Grossman put her arm
around her friend.
"Amy's intensity is more
inside," her coach, John Cook of
Cincinnati. said. "She has a
tremendous ability to control her
emotions. I've never seen anybody
like this who has that kind of con-

(&gt;

.

as the leading player on the planet.
" It was ve ry di ffi cult , sleepin g
on the lead every night." he said.
" If I had not won, th ere would be a
big ques tion mark on my charac ter.,.

There are no ques tions. Any earli er question s were answe red a
month ago in the British Open.
But there were indica ti ons he
was settmg new largets, new goa ls
for him se lf. Asked to defi ne a trul y
great golfer, Price quickly n:plicd:
" Win all four majors.' '
Only Gene Sarazen , Ben Hogan .
Gary Player and Jack Nic klau s
have done ·that. Price am ended his
slatcment to include Byron Nelson.
Sam Snead , Arnold Palm er and
Tom Watson .
" Another prerequi site," Price
said, " would be that a pla yer dominate the game for a period of time,
that he win and win cons1sten1ly
everywhere he goes, in every cor·
ncr of the globe."
Th e fir st qualificatio n co uld
serve as his targets - the Masters
and U.S. Open.
The last qualification sounds
very much like Price, who has won
around the world. now ranks No. I
and is, without question , the best in
the world .
"We always want to be No. I,
deep down in side ourselves " he
said. " But if you start looking at
No. I too hard . we forget to look at
go If tournaments.
" We have to go out and pla y
golf the way it is. Not like we think
the No . I player in the world
should play. but scratch and scramble and claw at times if we have to·
•ust play golf l1kc it is. "
'

According to Litke,

Price proving himself
as new force in golf
By JIM LITKE
TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Some
surprise.
The PGA, billed as a champi·
onship, became a coronation
instead.
Nick Price so thoroughly rules
golf's domain that not only did he
finally wrest the world No. I ranking from good buddy Greg Nor·
man, but based on his earnings the
last two years, his caddy deserves a
spot in the top 10 as well.
So convincing was Price's wire·
to-wire win that Southern Hills
Country Club now joins the exclusive list of courses that since World
War 0 can claim to have provided
the stllge for the defining moment
in the career of one of the game's
greats.
This was Price's second consec·
utive major championship, a feat
last accomplished by Tom Watson
in !982. It was his second PGA in
the past three years, a feat last
accomplished by Jack Nicklaus in
1975.
For some context, think back
most recently to Nick Faldo missing just ftve greens en route to capturing the fourth of five majors in a
five-year span at St. 'Andrews in
1990. Or if you like, think all the
way back to Ben Hogan winning
the third rnajor of the 1953 season
at Carnoustie, his play so nerveless
that the Scots hailed him as "Wee
Ice Mon."
That's how dominating Price
was here. Over the course of 72
holes, arrayed against the strongest
field of the year, he made all of
seven bogeys. In one of his few
lapses Sunday, he three-putted the
18th green Sunday; the fact is, he
could have eight-putted the thing
and still won by a stroke.
"I felt like I won the 'B' flight
this week," said Corey Pavin, who
finished second at 275 . "It was
Nick and everybody else. It's as
simple as that."
Price shrinks from historic comparisons. But so considerable are
his powers that he is willing to
entertain the notion that he may be
the Hogan or the Byron Nelson of
the moment.
He has 16 victories in 82 starts
since 1992 and every indication is
that his game is only improving. In
every major championship and
every minor tour stop for which he
gets his entry in on time, Price has
to be considered the chalk.
"I think Nick has only now
realized just how good a player he
is," said swing guru David Ledbet-

ter, who counts Faldo and emergmg star Emte Els among his stable
of clients.
. " He is only now coming out of
hts shell. He ts playing like Nicklaus and Hogan when they domi nated the

gam~ -

nnlv il'l;' h'lrr1M

now because of the great number of
outslanding golfers there are on Ute
tour now .''

It's funny the wa y thing s
worked out. Spoiled by Jack Nick·
laus' incredible standard s, we
began lamenting the lack of a dom .
inant golfer almost the moment he
slipped into the twilight of his
caree'r. Since then, howev er, we
have seen Watson's 10-year reign ,
Faldo's five-year reign, and now
Price's, for however much longer it
extends.
This rushing to history is nm
always a good thing. If Ledbetter is
right, brilliance such as Nick Price
is now displaying will be suslained
for shorter and shorter periods of
time.
We had better learn to savor
each one while we can.

-

Sports briefs--

Baseball
MEMPHIS, Tenn . (AP) Mtchael Jordan will have his
injured left shoulder examined
today by prominent orthopedic surgeon Dr. James Andrews in Birmingham, Ala.
Jordan, who plays outfield for
the Birmingham Barons, sprained
hts kft rotator cuff Friday night
makmg an awkward dive in left
field for a ball he missed.
Golf
.
WOBURN, England (AP) Sweden's Liselotte Neumann shot
a final-round 72 to capture the
British Open by three strokes.
Neumann's countrywoman
Annike Sorenstam, and Dotti~
Mochrie of Osprey, Fla . shared
second place with 2B3s.

DOWNING CHILDS ~
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE
111 Sec:ond St., Pollltii'Oy

YOUR INDEPENDENJ
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

trolovertheir
feelings."
Frazier's victory
completed her · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
best week in a major tournament.
She didn't drop a set in six match_&lt;c_onu_·nu_ed_from_Page_4l_ es, including a 6-2, 6-1 victory over
sixth-seeded Anke Huber tn the
soe threw two touchdown passes third round and a 6-4, 7-6 (7-1)
late in the second quarter as the quarterfinal upset of Wimbledon
Patriots handed the Rams their sev- champion and top-seeded Conchila
enth suaight preseason loss.
Martinez.
Bledsoe fmished with nine com"Now that it's over, I can look
pletions in 16 attempts for 139 back and enjoy the week," said
INSTAllED
yards for New England (2-0). Frazier, who first met Grossman
Backup Scou Zolak threw a three- during a junior tournament at
Stop by our booth at the Grange. Checkout our Fair
yard touchdown pass to Richard Columbus, Ohio, when Frazier was
Special. Register for FREE Windows.
Griffith midway through the foonh 6 and Grossman 8.
quarter to complete the scoring.
"We have this understanding
Jerome Bettis, playing for the between us that when we go on the
fii'SI time in the preseason, gave the court, we're here to battle and
Rams (0-2) a 7-0 lead by scoring we're not going to take anr,thing
POMEROY, OHIO .
110 COURT ST.
on a one-yard run early in the sec- personal." Grossman said. ' It had
ond quarter.
992-4119
1-800-291·5600
nothing to do with my friend out
there,
0
•I

Meigs County Fair Special

NFL exhibitions ...
weeks to face the Packers (1-1) in
the regular season. The teams combined for 41 second-half points.
Spikes, who had the fourth-best
rushing average in the nation
(149.5) last year at Northeast
Louisiana, provided Miami with
the winning margin when he scored
from three yards out to give the
Dolphins a 31-17 lead with 13:59
lefL
Dan Marino, making his second
appearance since rupturing his
Achillea' tendon Oct. 10, completed six of seven passes for 60 yards.
Patriots 28, Rams 10
At Anaheim, Calif., Drew Bled-

Frazier showed no mercy
toward Grossman, who remains
winless in nine fmals since turning
pro six years ago.
Asked what it would take to
finally win a title, Grossman
replied, "I guess someone to break
their leg."
Frazier hurried through the frrst
set in 28 minutes, breaking Grossman three times while losing just
nine points on her own serve. The
entire match lasted just over an
hour.
She dictated from the baseline,
using her Monica Seles-like forehand to hit 23 winners to Grossman's six. Many of them kissed the
lines before skipping out of Grossman's reach.
"I was a little fried and I just
couldn't get things going," said
Grossman, who had twice beaten
Frazier in three sets

By BOB GREEN
TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Golf
isn't easy.lt never is.
But it's getting easier for Nick
Price.
"All I have to do is go out and
play ," he said. " I don't have anything to prove to anyone.''
Emphasizing the point, the ami able product of Zimbabwe went out
and played better than anyone else
has in recent history in the PGA
Championship.
Price proved he is the besJ player m the world today , winning Sunday by a six-shot margin with the
lowest medal score ever posted in
an American major championship.
269.
Price, who led or shared the lead
throughout the tournament , became
the ftrst man since Tom Watson in
1982 to score consecutive victories
in golf's majors when he threw a
front-running 3-undcr-par 67 at an
overwhelmed field at Southern
Hills.
Corey Pavin was a dislant second at 275, with Phil Mickelson
ne&lt;t at 276. Greg Norman, Nick
Faldo and John Cook followed at
277. No one got closer than two
shots over the last 18 holes. and
after Price scored consecutive
birdies on the third and fourth
holes, no one was closer than four.
Price's victory came on th e
heels of his triumph last month in
the British Open at Turnberry,
Scotland, and marked his third Big
Four title.
The string - he calls it ''my
second career" - started with his
1992 PGA victory. It now includes
16 worldwide triumphs in the last
24 months and has established him

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

$200°

0

QUALITY WIIDOW SYSTEMS

II

'

'

�Monday, August 15,1994

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Read the Best Seller

Page-6

Monday,August15,1994

Everyone needs a little help sometimes

Beat of the Bend ...

By Ed Peterson,
Social
Security
by Bob Hoeflich
managff in Athens
Eve ryo ne needs a littl e help
once in a while. The help could be
and as a panic ipant you learn about from a friend or co-worker, from a
Rt·n~&lt;.:mb'-·r lh'"-' o ld SLln~, "YLHI
Ouiht l Ll r . .· In Pu.:tur~..;" '.' \\'el l . good nutriti on. You'll find that bank or credit union . And some tim es th e help co uld even come
:\.tlh~tn ll.tl~_l~ ot PonH'WY, IS 1n hea lth department personnel can
hel p you in many ways if you arc· from Supplemental Secunty
p1 cturrs.
N-tr ha n sn agg ~.·d a role as an panictpating in the program. If you Income (SSI).
ntra '"the fi lm , " Bnt of the hav e any que stion s about taking . In _the rea l world, for example,
Bc,t'. pans of wlltch arc bemg shot pan JUSt call the health department •ndt vldual s who arc not earning
in the \·icm1tv of an old brick plant at 99 2-6626 and you can get in much money may find themselves
m Jackson . Fnr h1 s rnl c :.ts a nco- touch with slllff members who arc responSible for an elderly parent, a
Nan N:Hhall h:~d to und ergo a working with the program. They'll d1 sablcd child , or another relative
"hav ;n 1.1. 1)! h1.; head. but that 's be glad to Uilk over your situation, who is blmd or disabled and are no
oL1v . 5,,lll~ arc do ing that now I' m sure.
longer able to care for themselves.
any;;..ay and they aren' t even in a
If yo u arc co nfronted by any of
Th e Veteran s of Foreign War th ese cn cum stances, or simi la r
movie.
Nathan spends aheut 15 hours a Po sts at Coo lvill e and Tupper s ones, you should ex plore the availdoy in JJ,·kson and receive s $35 Plains will be staging a benefit for ability of SSI benefits.
plus meal s lo r th e endeavor. Shoot - Wilbur Windland on Sunday, Aug.
SS I pa ys monthly checks to
ing of the film wh1ch stars R. Lee 2 I, at the home of Post 9053 in individuals who arc 65 or older, or
Emory and Phillip Rhce '' expert- Tuppers Plains.
A dinner for donations will be
ed to be wrapped up next Saturday
se
rv
ed beginning at I p.m . and
and th e mov ie is expec ted to be
relcasedll:tliOnwtclc ahou t mid-year there will be an auction and mhcr
fund raising events held throughout
of !995
\ Scc•ng an advertisement for the afternoon.
Wilbur is a lifelong res ident of
Hundreds or entries ._..r
r nras Jn an ar ea newspaper,
A total of I ,75 7 cntnc s were
Nathan responded and was se lected the Alfred-Guysville area and is a
to he in the film. He believes there brmher of Margaret Parker, pres i- made in the 14 areas of exhibit at
ma y be one other Meigs Countian dent and active member of the the 131 st Meigs County Fair which
Meigs County Pioneer and Histori - run s throu gh Sat urday.
~-.kmg part but doesn't have a name
cal
Society.
The tot&lt;~ represented a decrease
10 pass along.
He ha s been in Mt. Carmel in the total of 439 from last year's
A grad uate of Meigs Hi gh
Schoo l a co upl e of springs ago, Medica l Center since July 29 and 2. 19fi entries.
Nathan is planning to enter the U. has undergone several major, major
Entries in the various departsurgeries. He is paralyzed from the ments th1s year were draft horses,
S. Air Force come February.
chest down and it is unknown at 28; dairy cattle. 23; beef cattle, 32;
Do you know about th e WIC this tim e how much movement will sheep, 18, poultry, 19; farn;t crops,
Progra m of th e Meigs County return to his arms and hands . He 321; hay show, 18; Mondays flowremains in intcnsi ve care.
Department of Health?
er show, 287; Thursday's flower
His address is Mount Carmel show, 267; domesti C arts, 307;
Perhaps, you do and perhaps,
you've eve n looked into it and Medical Center, 793 West State St., pamtmgs, 31; photography, 152;
found that your income was too Columbus, Ohio 43222.
hi g h to parti cipate. Well, the
I hope Congress can patch up
in com e figur es have been
the
anti -crime legi slation . With
increased. In other words, you can
now have more income and be eli- crime running rampant it seems
th_at some action would certainly be
gible 10 participate in the program .
WIC supplies food for pregnant appropriate. You don't need to be a
women, new mothers, infants under rocket scientist to know that some
one year and children one to five of this stuff has got to come to a
The Meigs County Hi sto rical
years old. It provides proper foods screeching halt. Protect yourself
Society will sponsor a re-enactment
and do keep smiling.
0f the Battle of Bullington Island
in Portland the weekend of Sept. 911.
Weekend acllvities will begin
with a cruise on the P. A. Denny up
I
the Ohio River from Gallipolis to
Portland. Members representing
Civil War re -enactment groups

blind. or have a disability and don 't
own much or have a lot of income.
Monthly checks can also go to disabled and blind children. If a person qualifies for SS I, he or she may
also be able to get Medicaid, food
stamps, or other social services .
To qualify for SSI, you, your
family members, or individuals you
care for, don't need to be destitute.
You may work, own a car or home,
or attend college. Generally, if the
applicant lives in the household of
another, the basic SSI benefit is
reduced as much as one-third.
If you' re working and think that
your earnings may be too much to
allow you to qualify for SSI , you
should be aware that under SSI, not
all mcome is counted in detenmining whether you 're eli gible for benefits.
For examp le, we don 't count:

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Misleading Advertising
Many people beli eve that you
have to pay fo r services from
Soc ial Securit y. Well . that just isn't
so. All Social Security services are
offered free of charge. That means
that if yo u marr y and wa nt to
change your nam e on your Social
Security recor ds. yo u can do so
absolutely free. If yo u need to get a
Social See unty number lor your
newborn child, there's no charge.
And if you want to chec k your
earnings or ge t an cst•matc of what
you r retirement benefits will be,
you can do so without p-Jyin g anyone else a fee to do '' lor you .
Unfortunately, some unscrupulous
businesses do charge a fee for services you ca n get for free from
Social Security.
To take advantage of any of
Soclal Securny's free serv ices, just
call 1-800-772- 1211

% the 'first $20 of most income

received in a month ;
% the first $65 a month you earn
from working and half the amount
over $65;
% food stamps
% most food . cloth ing, or sheller
you ge t from private nonprofit
organizations; or
% most home energy assistance.
If you arc a student, some of your
wage s or scholarsh•ps you receive
may not count.
There are many rules that determine your eligibility for SSI. You
should realize that you are not the
best judge of your eligibility. If you
are doing the best you can and still
need help, call us at 1-8 00-772·
1213. We may be able to provide
the assistance you need. Rem ember, everyone needs a littl e help
once in a while.

985·4473
Public Notice

Log Cabin demonstrations
The schedule for demonstrations
at th e log cabin on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds ha s been
announced by Patty Cook and Roy
Holter, co-chairmen.
Today foom I to 5 p.m . Mildred
Gaul will be demonstrating needlework and quilting, and from 5 to 9
p.m. Charlotte Elberfeld will be
quilting.
Tuesday is flower day with
perennial flowers to be shown from

'

I to 5 and flower arranging by
Janet Bolin from 5to 9 p.m.
Wednesday' s schedule will be
dedicated to herbs and their uses
with Donna Nease, Bobbi Karr, and
Karen Werry handling demonstrations.
Thursday will feature Retired
Senior Volunteers (RSVP) quilting.
In that group will be Golda Radcliff, Vinas Lee, Jean Nease, Kathleen Scott and Mary Roush, while
that evening, Dave Gloeckner will
be showing things of the Civil War.
Needlework by Kathy Reed will
be demonstrated from 5 to 9 p.m.
Friday, and on Saturday, quilting

I

i'

t

.,

Perrin birth
announced
Amy and Jonathan Perrin ()[
Middleport announce the birth of
their first child, a daughter, Emma
Rose, on Aug. 6, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
She weighed seven pounds, four
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Grandparents are Cathy and
Don Erwin of Middleport, Gay Perrin of Pomeroy, and the late Rev.
W. H. Perrin. Clarice Erwin and
Margaretha Wolfe of Middleport
are great-grandmothers.

and Sunday at 1:30 p.m. The Ohio
Village Muffins will be playing on
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. in the Portland Park.
An afternoon, roundtrip cruise
in the Ponland area, aboard the P.
A Denny will be offered on Saturday and a twilight cruise on Saturday evening. Civil War soldiers are
expected to be aboard for the twilight cruise. Cost for these cruises
is $10 adults, $5 children. The boat
will depart back down river on
Sunday at 4 p.m. Snacks will be
provided for the downriver cruise
and costs are to Rae ine - $25,
Pomeroy - $30 and Gallipolis •
$33. Tickets for all cruises are

Center, Mulberry Heights, In

Pomeroy,

Ohio , for

purpose

or

the

hearing

statements on the proposed
Resciss ion Relocation and

Establishment of Limited
Access of portions of State

Route No . 7 located In
Meigs County.
An Open House will be
observed the day or the
hearing from 5:00 p.m to
6:30p.m. at the hearing site.
Viewing ol exhibits and
asking of questions are

encouraged.
Proposed, the rescission
of a portion of the alignment

of State Route No . 7
including establishment of
limited access as recorded
in Volume 47, Page 355,

Daled April 25, 1962. $aid
Alignment being situated In
Salisbury

and

Chester

Townships, Meigs County,
Ohio.
And being more fully
described as follows:

Beginning ol a point In
the alignment of State
Route No . 7 (as recorded In

Volume 54, Page 899, dated
September 19, 1969, of the
Director 's Journal), at Its
northerly junction with State

Route No. U.S. 33; lhence,

in an easterly direction

along said alignment to a
point In the center of
existing State Route No. 7
and there terminated. Sold
point being 0.5 of a mile,
more or less, aa measured
northeasterly along State

Route No . 7 from Ito
junction with Meigs County
Road No. 26 Said described
Rescission having a total
length of 3.0 miles, more or
less.

Proposed, the rescission

o't

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

Salisbury Township, Meigs
County, Ohio.

abandonment

of

a

portion of State Route No. 7
established by ·entry In
volume 47, page 355, dated

Lose Wal~t Like •Crazy"
Guaranteed
Lose Pounds and Inches
Natural Herbal Tablets

1·800·796·6321

point being 0.3 of a mile,

extend along Interchange
crossroads In accordance
with the Transportation

designated

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL

&amp; COAL

Joe N . Sayre

Public Notice

LImIt ad
etong existing State Route Department's
No. 7 southwesterly from Ito Access Polley.
At this hearing , maps
junction with Meigs County
Road No . 26; thence, showing the proposed
northeasterly along existing changes and alternate
State Route No. 7 to a point locations and designs to the
In the center of State Route highway system will be
Tentative
No. 7 and there terminate. dlo pI aye d.
Said point being 0.5 of a schedules lor right-of-way
and
mile, more or leas, as acquloltlon,
measured northeasterly construction will be
along State Route No. 7 discussed as well as the
from Its junction with Meigs Relocation Assistance
Program.
County Road No. 26.
A copy
of
the
Proposed, the relocation
ol a portion of State Route environmental document In
rorm
of
an
No . 7, same to
be the
established eo a limited Environmental Assessment,
access highway and 11 well 11 mapa, drawings,
altuated In Salisbury and environmental Information
Chester Townohlpo, Meigs and other pertinent data
developed by the Ohio
County, Ohio.
ot
And being more fully Department
Transportation, and any
described as follows;
Beginning at a point In written comments received
the alignment of State a1 a result of coordination
Route No. 7, said point with state, federal and local
being at the northerly officials agencies, and
junction of State Route No. public advloory groups will
7 and State Route No. U.S. be made · available at the
33 as recorded In the hearing and for prior
Journal of the Director of viewing at the Ohio
of
Transportation, Volume 54, Department
Page 889, dated September Transportation's District
19, 1969; thence, In en Office, Musklngum Drive In
easterly direction with a Marietta, Ohio. Copies of
environmental
tangent, a curve to the left the
and a tangent for a dletanee document may be viewed et
of 0.9 of a mile, more or

HAULING

Reasonable Rates

described as follows :

Beginning at a point In

Specializing in Custom
Framo Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS JOI
AlllllAKIS &amp;MOOilS
992-70U 011
992-SSSl 01
TOll Filii I·IQ0-141-0070
DARWIN, OHIO
713111111TFN

And being more fully

more or less, as measured

in the Meigs County Senior

avarlable at the Meig s Co unty
Museum, 144 Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio (614-992-3810) or
the Meigs County Park District,
200 East Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio (614-992-2~39).
Programs are planned for Saturday (speakers to be announced) and
entertainment by the Saxton Comet
Band. A dance and old fashioned
weiner roast will be held on Saturday evening. Guided tours of historic sites in the Portland area are
also being planned.
Furth er information may be
obtained by contacting the Meigs
County Historical Society at (614)
992-3810.

1962 . Said

States Code, the Director

publi c hea ring at 6:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, August 23, 1994,

New class in arm wrestling
A class for those who are lefthanded has been added to the arm
wrestling which will take place at
the grandstand Saturday night.
There will be no weight divisions
for the left-handed class. Entry fee
is $5 with registration to begin at 5
p.m. for the 8 p.m. competition.
Trophies will be awarded in
first, second and third places in
each class.

25,

the alignment of exlatlng
State Route No . 7. said

Transportation will hold a

will continue in the evening, and
the afternoon demonstrat ion will be
on basket weaving by Linda Braderick.

April

abandonment
being
situated In Chester and

In accordance with the
provisions of Chapter 5511
of th e Ohio Revised Code
and pursuant to Section

128, Title 23 of lhe United
ot
The Ohio Departmanl of

Meigs Historical Society to sponsor re-enactment
of the Battle of Buffington Island September 9-11
from Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee and the
Carolina's are expected to participate in the weekend activities, with
several boarding the boat at Gallipolis to be brought to the battle
site.
The cost for tickets is $38.00
from Gallipolis (includes lunch);
$35.00 from Pomeroy (includes
lunch) and $25.00 from Racine.
Ticket deadline is Sept. I.
The camp will open to the public at 10 am. on Saturday and 9
a.m . on Sunday. Demonstrations
will be presented throughout both
days, with the Battle reenactment
taking place on Saturday at I p.m.

Public Notice

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING
CONTRACT SALES LEGAL
COPY NO. 94-516

1994 Me;gs County senior fair facts
bakin g and canmng, 250; and
grange, 4.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

locations,

tau, to a point of crooolng Including the Meigs County
Meigs County Road No. 25, Library, Office of Malgo
and continuing In an County Commissioners,
easterly direction along a and the above mentioned
tangent, a curve to the right, ODOT Dlatrlct Office.
Anyone wishing to oubmlt
and a tangent, for a
distance of 1.6 mllea, more a written statement of
or tess, to a point In the exhibit concerning the
center of ulotlng State Environmental Aoseoament)
Route No. 7. Said point or other Items of the
being 0.2 of a mile, more or proposal may present It at
leas, southwesterly along the hearing or mall It to tho
existing State Route No. 7 Ohio Department of
from Ita Junction with Melgo Tranaportatlon Dlotrlct
County Road No. 26 and Deputy Director, Box 658,
there terminate. Said Marietta, Ohio, 45750. Tho
described Relocation final date for submlsston of
having a total length of 2.5 otatemento or exhlblto will
miles, more or leao. Sold be September 2, 1994.
Jerry Wray
Establishment of limited
Director
Acceu Ia to Include all
Interchange areee and (8) 10, 15; 2TC

'SAYRE

TRUCKING

·_Cancer society to
host celebrity dinner
Plans for a celebrity dinner have
been co mpleted by the Meigs
County unit of the American Can·
ccr Society.
The dinner will take place Friday , Aug. 26 ., at 7 p.m . at the
Royal Oak Resort near Five Points.
According to a local spokesman
for th e Meigs County unit, the
object of a celebrity dinner is to
have fun while supporting the
American Cancer Society. Several
local persons will be waiting tables.
Jack Slavin, Meigs Local
·£chool District retired teacher, will
:be master of ceremonies. He will
be assisted by Cancer Society
Board members in toasting, roast·
ing and introducing the celebrity

waiters and others attending the
dinner.
The evening will also feature an
auction of gifts donated by local
businesses and services provided
by some of the celebrities.
Tickets for the dinner are available for a $20 donation to the
American Cancer Society. The
tick e ts are available from the
American Cancer Society located
next to the post office at 444 Second Ave., P. 0. Box 813, Gallipolis, or from the celebrity hosts and
hostesses and committee members,
Scott Dillon, Pat Carson, Kathy
Hood, Barbara Crow, and Dianna
Lawson .

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar is
pullllsbed as a free service to
·oon·-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
(lesigned to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
can11ot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

tions, call Coach O'Brien, 9922381.
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
office building.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council, recessed session. Monday,
7 p.m. Star Mill Park.
RACINE - All seventh and
eighth gradefl! interested in playing
football for Southern Junior High
MONDAY
School, 4 p.m. Monday, at high
RACINE - Southern Junior school field. Need to have physi1-figJI football players, 4 p.m. Mon- cals and medical release forms
day at the high school field. Phys• - prior to practicing. For more inforcals and medical release forms mation, students may call Coach
needed prior to practicing. Ques- O'Brien at 992-2381.
f

'

ADVERTISING IN TilE

TV TIMES
ADAM PAPE

Papes announce
birth of third child
Mr. and Mrs . Allen Pafe of
Racine announce the birth o their
third child, a son, Adam Lee, on
June 10 at the Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, eight ounces and was 20
inches long. Mr. and Mrs. Pape
have another son, Josh, and a
daughter, Chelsea.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Larry O'Brien, Racine,
and paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. John Pape, Racine.
Maternal great- grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Marshall Adams,
Racine , and Rex O'Brien,
Pomeroy. Paternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Nial Salser,
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Roush, Racine.

FOR SALE
New
Monco-Go Karts
3 H.P. &amp; Up
Paris &amp; Service

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

742-2455

STAR GUITAR ·
614-367 .()302
Ampo, Gultara, Strings,
Keyboarda, Drumo,
Plano &amp; Gul..,. LMaona.
Cheohlre, Ohio

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

You're getting to be a really, truly
old-timer ir you can tell us what a kid
yelling, "Extra! Extra! Read all about

Howard L. Writesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
611 &amp;'1M TFN

Price
Construction
Co.

MORRISON'S
HEATING &amp;COOUNG
RSES &amp; EPA
Universal
Certified Sales,
Service &amp;
Installation
Free estimates.

992-7434

TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience, ·
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel ae'lvlce, pupa &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ronweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Service
By appt only
614-667-PETS
J:/1211Jn

BUY-SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Malge County
Tuea. Thru Sat. 1-6
Name Brand Toole,
Toya, Fenton.

~)l

OFFICE 992·2259
NEW LlSTtNGtl LONGBOTTOM- New Hope Rd.- 19118
Manufactured home with 3 bedrooms and 2 ba"-, al
carpot9d.Large bath in Master badJOOm. A110 tndudel, dect,
blinds, mlrigorator, JangO &amp; hood, otonn doots, windows &amp;
screons, carpel and vinyl ftooring, eletric heat pump, C&amp;S
alae., TPC water and a 2 car garage.
ASKJ-IG $43,500
NEW USTINGII APPLE GROVE- Do""'o· t acnr of vacant
lots, utilities available. ASKING $7,300 per lol IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION II
NEW USTINGII MIDDLEPORT- SR 124 - 7+ IICRII of vacant
ground. 60' +wide.
ASKING $5,000.00
NEW LtSTINGII MDDLEPORT· Bra&lt;llury Rd.- 2 llory lnune
homw on 5 acms. Home indudes 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, double
hung windows, carpet &amp; wood flooring, N.G.F.A. heal C &amp; S
eiiiC., LCCD water, partialy 18modelad &amp; lrM gao.
ASKING 135,000
NEW USTtNGit IIDOLEPORT· Bllldbury Ad- 11177 Double
wide on 2+ ..,.,_ Home hM 3 badJOOma, 2 bafla, penna
payne windowo, paneling, electric hHt ~ (3 Yl8 old)
patio, 18frigerator, 181108, otonn doots &amp; windowo, AIC, IIICI
also an above ground pool.
ASKING $311,800

EVERY WEEI( IN TilE
TV TIMES

SYRACUSE- Roy Jonee Road- 111611 Wtncllor mobile home
12x60 with a 10x10 addtd on 100m. Unit air, F.A.F.O. h•t
Syracuoe 'water, JanQO, 181rigeralor, hood. Appfox. 1fl at:l8
tot.
ASKING $12,000
LONGBOTTOM- Dewiltl Run Rd.· 1 will one floor
fmmo home that haa 3-4 BR'o 1 bath, , . _ bout. gao
lumaca, drilled WBIII, ohad &amp; wood ohad. MAKE AN
OFFERII
ASKJ-10 1111,800

CALL NOW....

/

MIDDLEPORT· localad 011 S. 5th Sl.· T1111 1 1fl AllY lnune
homo leatul8s 3 bedJOoma, fwnily room, living room, llik:hen
with office area, u~lily area, IMit tn book ahelwa, cellng IMI,
cantral air, NGFA MM, nice front pard!, llloo Melt &amp; lidl
pon:heo. Cement wollo, privacy llncing, lui ~l Cull
ptace ...lots oiJOomt
ASKING 521,000
STOP BY OUR BOOTH AT TIE FAIR AND ReGISTER
FOR ANEW COLDA lELEYIBtONIII
HENRY E. ClELAND---- ·------~IIIU111
mACY BRINAGER..----------.141 at•
SHERRI HART---·---·--------·7424117
HENRY E. CLELAND 1L--·------~IIIU111
KATHY
111

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

CL£LAHD.-----------..,.....
OFFICE.-------..- - - - - IIR

992-2156

it!" means

'

Mom.
I Love You
Greta
44

Together for 40.
Oh Lordy!
Happy
Anniversary
Love Deb, Tim &amp;
Girls

DOG
!:!/,_-)GROOMING
.l \ I All IREEDI

•• .

'~
, ..

I, Sasa1by
I

Gilmore

•-; '-c,'' 992·5316
S·

Apartment
for Rent

Free Estimates

• $200 lnslalled

Call

For Details

rJoucli of Cfass
Custom Wintfow Coverings ·:
Jl

Blinds • Verticals • Shades ,,,,;
Shop At
k's not just a way to
Home
cover a window
Service
It's a way to- ,
Day Or
light
up a room •
Night
992-5311 '
50-55% off
Blinds &amp; Verticals HIOO-BLlNf:M1
4113 REECH ST. MIDDLEI'ORT OH : ...
.'' ".

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New :·
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing · :·..:
COMMERCIAL and RESIJ)ENTIAL-

FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

Howard
Excavating-Co.

(No Sunday Calls)

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

Announcements

Service

Complete House

Yard Sale

7

&amp;

Trailer Sites
Driveways, Septic
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
Lines, Land Clearing
Trucking: Limestone &amp;

Fill Dirt. Top So il

Reasonable Rates
Est1mates
lllMJo

KINGS'

Home
Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Rei
Midclepofl, Ohio 45760
NewHomea,
Addltlone, Siding,
Painting, Garagea,
Porchea, Pole Barna
Call Ua Fot An Eatimate
614-742-3090
304-n3-9545 .,..,

ftndng Cloln

u•-w...

....

DtPII'a11Vt
s.los en4
lllst.a11o!J

Cal Weste111 ADio
992-5515
Free Estimates
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
S-0.1 mo

NOW RENTING

3 Announcements
Ellglblt Glnlleman looking For
lady, Companion, Frtend. 614446-not
MID YEAR RESOLUTION
7 -Day Diet Plan. loee Excess
lbs For Good. I Lott 20 Lbs. In
5 Wko. Eating Right Wllhoul
Dieting. 3 Min. Rec:Qfdtd Mes-sage. $1.95 IMin. Must Be 18 To
Call. 1·900·255-5533.

Plmlaa Cove Featuring Pizza
Spacial: lwo 12 Inch Pizza's
With Everything, $12.99. Froo
Local Delivery, &amp;14-388-9823 .

Pirates Cove Opgn From 6 A.M.
To 9 P.M. Mondly Thru
Thursday, 6 A.M. To 11 P.M.
Friday And Saturday, 10-6 Sunday, 9819 State Route 160, VInton, 614~3811~9823.

Giveaway

4

2 dogs, mixed brv'!d. 304-773salO.
2 Male Mixed Doberman &amp; Rot·
twaller Mixed, 614-381~503.

AJN Magazines '89--'93 614-44&amp;.
2380.
Black &amp; Whitt Male Cat'rApprox .
1 1/2 Years Old, FrN o Good
Home, 614-245-5622.
Female Garman Shepherd pup,
614-992-6l37.
Four eute puppies, 614-992-5083
15_:_
~, 614-992._-4_:_0_:_
· _ _ _
Froe puppies, part Sour, part
Collie, 3 female, 1 male, 614·742·
2486 a her Spm.
Kitten, To Good Home, 614·379-2585.

Equal Housing Opportunity

742·2443
111111 mo.

lues, Wed, Thura, 337 fitunh,
Melal Coke Carrier, Hand- Gar-

dan TOOls, Books On ~e;truJauas
Old Monoy, Pockvl. ;.;ptveo'
CIQihlog, Misc.
'

a

Public sate
&amp; Auctiott:::

Rick Pearson Auctlort;O.,.ny,
full time auctioneer; eaflllblate
aucllon
sarvica.
tftlMd
166,0hlo &amp; Wast VIrginia 304773-5785.
. '

Ciaan lata Model Cars Or
Truekl, 11NJ7 Models Or Newer
Smith Buick Ponllao,- 19oci
East am Avenue, GallipOlis••
O.Coralad stoneware ·.tii.Jltal•
phone1, old lampsks
.~ olc:ithermomete~, old cloc ' antique
tumhure. Riverine Antfrlue ..

Russ Moore, owner. ~-992-

2526. Wa buy estatee: "
J &amp; D's Auto Part• and Salvage
also buying Junk cars &amp; lrucli.•:
304-'173-5343.
· ~
Old cigarette lighters, milk botlias, tountaln pens, altVilnlnll'e
marbles, atonewa1111, magullll'a'
Star Warw and Slar Trlli; 1 ftvms~
Osby Manln, 614 -992·7tl41. ·
'

Wanted
To Buy Junk, ~··
With Or Without MOt~ Call
Larry Lively. 614-J88.g:J03_'
Top Prices Paid: AII ..Gtd ·u.s

To good home. half grown part
Siamese cats, 614·04!i-2911.

Coins, Gold Rings, Sltvw0olns·

White khtena, cute puppies.

151 Second Avenue, Oa~Jpollo,

Lost &amp; Found

Wearing Collar, No Tags. TO

992-641 9" or949-2012
TDD 800-750-0750

ld In
p.m.
the day before the ad .._.. run .
Sunday adhlon - ~ p.m.
Friday. Monday edttTOn~ 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
~
'

Kittens, To Caring Homo Only, 9 Wanted to Bu
,,'v
614-446.()317.
~=-=--:-:--:-:-.,-,-.:..f!.!!"'~:-

Found: Bttwaen Centerville And
Rio Grandt, Pit Bull Mix Puppy

Specializing In
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.'

.'

Pan Chihuahua, 014-446-91112.

6

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair

All Yard SakJs Musf
Advance. DEADUNt'! :

3 Gray And While 6 Week Old

304-675-61122.

F-Eotlm.
7121""'

Galllpou.=;..
&amp; VIcinity -

2 Male Pupa, Pan Pomeranian,

Lovely puppln to giveaway.

982·2096
550 Page SL, MlddlepJ&gt;rt

5 o;r. Moving Sale, 129 Lewis

St, ew Haven. 2 cat~, lools,
fumhure, exe cond.

882-3688.

304-675-302!1.

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

1 Cockatiel to giveaway. 304·

Long Haired Calico Cal, GOOd
On The Farm, 614-441·1638.

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Route-124, Syracuse, Ohio
Senior Disabled Handicapped, one bedroom
apartments, range, refrigerator, air conditioned,
Fully carpeted, energy efficient. Community
room, on site laundry. Water, sewer, trashproject paid. Electric paid by resident.
Rent based on 30% of adjusted monthly income.
2 apartments with rental assistance.
2 apartments at basic rent of $269 or greater.
Hurry in &amp; apply now! 4 apartments available.
FmHA
HUD accepted

1

FOR SALE

992-3838

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

windows

Instructor- Nancy W. Swartr
Classes
beginning
September.
can 992-3796

·Room Additions
-New garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting olso concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

TRI·STAT£ K·9
ACADEMY

Solid vinyl

and self confidence
and have a great time.

Interior &amp; EJdarlor
Take the pain out of
painting. Let uo do it
tor you. Very reasonable.
Free Eotimates
Before 6 p.m. leave

Y.l/1 "'

1

BATON CORPS
Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

614-985-4180
312S/94

Cuslom Made

"DAZZLING
DOLLS"

liNDA'S
.PAINTING &amp; CO.

..message.
Alter 6 p.m.

1

replacemenl

'112l/t21Wrt

712011 mo. pd.

26 Yearo Experience
Roofing, Vinyl Siding,
Porches, Vinyl
Replacement
Windows
For Free Estimate
Call 742-2303

QUALm WINDOW SYSTEMS

BINGO
EVERY THURSOAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POUEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thlo ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers,
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service
Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio
742·2455

One milo out RL 143
homRL7.
8111/1 mo.

I~EATUUES­

675-1333

992·4103

Come Bnd SH.

AllEA TEtEVISION
LISTINGS AND

446-2342

ENTERPRISES

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Vuro Experience
992-4447 or 742-2360

5

••
,_
••

PT. PLEASANT, WV

GRACE

3t419J 1 MO

Real Estate General

-II

GALLIPOLIS

Backhoe Service

614·742·2138

\

CELEBRITY DINNER PLANNED - Here Kathy Hood,
celebrity dinner committee member, conrers with Jack Sla!in,
retired Meigs Local school teacher, on plans ror a _Cancer Socrety
celebrity dinner. Slavin will be master or ceremomes for the fund
raiser.

Water hauling

Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shdl&gt;:
Wanted to buy: usiJ' 111~hl)e
1

homQ. 614-44&amp;-0175

· ....

. 0'

Employment Servtces

Claim Call 814-245-51117.
Found: Black Fomato Scottta 11 Help Wanted: ·c.
BetwHn Porter And Evergreen
----=--~.:.:;:;,..:;._;_
614-446-9389.
• All oms. AVON urntng pooFound:
female
Garman
Shepherd pup, Mtnersvllae anaa
614·992-«1137.
'
Found:

slbllltles aqual your capa6111tlee,

tree product with alg~
Marilyn 304-882·2645 . ,or......,~,.,!
u
992-6356.

S-

ring In mlnlpart In

Pomeroy, colt lo tO, 614-992- A JCAHO Accrodhod Agoncy
Specializing In
2155.
AbuH Recovery Mia· !ltt: fct.
·towtng
'loclncl• In · \ ilolga
Found: St&gt;Ud• McKinooy typo
·· . ,
dog, near Fairground. 304-675- County Olllco.
6595.
COUNSELOR POSITtON$-" FJ:
loat. Mlxad &amp;rood Dog, Loot on VARIED SHIFTS, Quonf161~'
SR 325 N, Noor Rio Grancloi, LP.C., LP.C.C., LS.W U.S .
Hutky Build, Small Whho Spoto1 C.C.D.C. Or In Procooii.AOII. '
Soft Floppy Ton E.., Roa Counwlor TrolnM. Druci' -~.,
l.aothor ColOr t!4-.24W062.
AlcqhOI Exporlanco 'llr'MLmct
loat : bl•c:k Sprtnger.cnow mix C,.ilanllollng Tnek lmpoolont. .
dog, "Shaabl", and English PtHM Send Resume AMf1:..;,
Spitngor, 6-7moo. old puppy, Of
lnttiUI To H811th Recovery
"Aoc~y·. At. 2 l Thomu Rldgo,
S.rvk:n, lnc. Attn. Nllncy Dofl.
Rowordt 304-8115-SfiS.
oon, P.O. 801 724L Al~no._ 0H
loat: Coekor Sponlal On 45101. Sotory Hoq~
Chothom SlrHt, Oldor DoQ Commonouralo With Ed!IQJion
Exportonco. ,., .E.E.O.
Whht &amp; Biondo Color, 614.&lt;f411: And
8610; After 2:00 614-..46-1642 Employor.
.,,,
Ext. 11044 BAlit For Robin.
')

.,

'

' ' II ! '

I

�Monda~August15 ,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-S--The Dally Sentinel

Classified Line Ads

Over

3 papers

3 days
6 days
10 da~s

Tribune 446-2342 Sentinei992-21S6 Register 675-1333 .·
11
1

vN

Rentals

BEATTIE BLVD.'" b y Bruce Beallie

Help Wanted

41

• All Areas I Shlrloy
-104 -675- 1429 ,

,&gt;:lf''

1,,.1,~• rn

a

as Pe rso nal Ca rt AUen·

&lt;:.u 1 l \ 1ies include working In
!..'o'H·I• t.oma &amp; a!&gt;sist ing with
o,uty 1i-..1ng ta &lt;; ks &amp; transporting

N.., eondltlon, ' bedrooms,,..,,
dop, nc
&gt;OHTS-5162.

'*"'

tc lppom lrn&lt;-nls. 14 yAa r old
,- •onl w ith ph)SIC al disa bilities.

'Ja...-e

a car

and

R.clne , cn• .o~...say

valid

Re •rnbur.&gt;omenl
u r ·· ·l oage r:ox •blu hours.
~o 11U ~s urnu . .J Parsonnel, P.O.
f·~~ ~,::.•

1 Bedrooms In
Cn..ter, Av.llabloa Mid 4ugu.t
$:27'S.·Vo . O.postt,
G..~l-4886 lf'lw .S..

Hvn t••.glon. WV 2571 (.}.

t ior&gt;d; 1-800-742-1730 .

c.at~ad

614- 99:2~3090

42 Mobile Homes

-----,-

eanv~lt!or lhl&amp;d 9d if~· my

home

~' 1 d~v " p4H wegk tor 2
t. hil~•on, 614 742-2'.157

for Rent

sma ll

:z

·---

~a1,111 firi1p:tra t'iom•. Serv ing In
lha !ril}' L1n e : And D1s hwa sh·
lng i';efe • Experience In Health
LHB Sett1 .19 Must Be Abla To
WorM o.; .,m11 WAekonds And

j1J·s

AM

Appl y In Parson, 8:00
o ·1.00 P M. Woo kdays.

E: O~

------- ·

ru'' 11 rna pers on for y11rd work &amp;
,.._..,r ""'~ · Plaasanl Valley Apts,

· ,.,. ::.·,•fJr ~tBI'ln Dr, Pt PH, WV__ _

(.., ,, l&lt; .d

Ac ademy

High School
Babysit Allor School

':·f:.J(•&lt;~H I 10

rn li1·:-4 46-0026 .

-------::---::-Openings For Part

-

~~I!T'&lt;&gt;diJI8

l-ui ' TO"nf'l RN, Shift Supervisor.
( on .• HHih· it Wages , OIHerential
Vlith r Hlarlenc8. Equal Oppor·
!l,, ,~&gt;, Em ployer. Co ntact Tl1e
C. uo. :or 0 1 Nursing , Pinecrest
- ..r-. Cenler, 170 Plnoctos1

Ohio 45631,

C&gt;rt vH Ga llipolis,
t'l-l·l &lt;lli-7ll 2 .

:~. - .. , qst

Center,

170

Drive, Gallipolis,

Ohio

Ca re

Di,'H!wrsr,t

rl:==========-r.·--------~
11

Help Wanted

Wanted: Labor 's On Roofing
Crew, Ex perience He lpful, Mu s1
Have Hand Tools And Ow n
Transportat!on, Start S5 An
Hour, 614-446-4514, 8-5 Monday

Thru Friday.

13

1.&gt;6:! 6\-1-446· 1'112.

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DIS.
COUNTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH
304-586-4257

Community

:ier.ko Which Would Assist
VJu ~~. Locating Care To Meet
YJIJ I ~h~9dS. Call 1-800..577-2276
T.J ~M How Wa Can Help.

M;ir-1~-;;;,-;ce man Meded at
Pon .uroy Nursing &amp; Rehablllta·
tlon

Center. Duties lnctudt:
k~~Bping
records, conducting
i\'"e &amp; emergenc y drllls/1ralnlng;
day to day maintenance &amp; lnlera~1io n with contractorw; opel'l·
lion of small Ofl·Site aewage
l ar~l Wa9e &amp; benaflt package
• compot1tlva. Sond ros uma or
apply at 36759 Rockspringa Rd .,
Pom9roy, Ohio 45769. EOE.

r.

Matura d11pendable babysltlor
needed to carl tor fo ur year old
&amp; new born In my homo, call af·
tar s·oo or leave message, 614-

1192-7562.

18

School. Must

have current valid Ohio Oep't. of
Education teaching cer11tlcete
and have or be ellgfbla lo obtain
Ohio Oep't. ot Education multi·

Children,

Any

Experienced
Housec leaner,
Hav1 Refal"'ncn, 614-446-8600.
General Malntan1ne1, Painting,
Yard Work Window• Washed
Gut1ers Cleaned Llghl Hauling,
Commortcal, Reslden1111, Steve:

Chi ld, 614-446-4611t

NHded- babysitter for two
ch ildran In my home or Darwin

araa, rsterancta nec:Hsary, call
li14--69&amp;-1153, leave measaga.
New Terminal
C.dlnal Frvlght Carr lel"' Inc::. Ia
hiring
experienced
owner/operator~
tor
the

v•nlflatbad dlvlalon, profhablt
program, accurate w•kl(.
eeltlemente, medleal Ins. aval·
abM , rider progrem and time
home, no up front money to
INM on. Call Boyd, 1-80~2202421.

pay

No Salesmen Wanted! &amp;tabllshed Local Co . Looking For
3 People to Help Us Grow Into
Tha Fu lure. ElceUent Opportunhy 1nd W1gn. Call Monday

Only, 10-5. lmmedla1e Slarta Are
Avallabla 614-446-4553.

- ---,-----

Ownarl()porttOI"'

Ca rdina l Frelgnt C.rrtare 11
hlrtng axpartancad OTR'a to run

natbed, Nm percan•ge of
grou rtVIRUI pulling company
traller1 or pulling own trailer,
health lnsuranc. w/dental &amp; v~

baae

platta
&amp;'o'allabll, DotHall Insurance
a'o'a iLa ble, tu11 card system,
w.akly · Httlementa,
rider
~~~ram , unw home. 1..SOG-22G-

Part-t lma
Vatarlnary
Aast,
prefer experiancod p1r10n.
Sond resume: Box R-9 c/o Pl.
Pleasa nl Regls1ar, 200 Main St.,
Pt . Pleasani,"WV 25550.

or (jscr1mlnllllon ."

cwortunlly basis.

614-446-4148.

man,

Handy

Interior/exterior

palntlng1 light hauling &amp; carpentry. Auto body worli; &amp; paintIng . 304-895-3630 or 304-67575~5,

Prof8sslon1l Tret Service, 30
Yeare Experience, 014-388-9643,
614-367·7010.
Cl.. nlng Affordable
One Time IWHkly

Quality
Prices,

/Biwookly, Y11r1 Of Exparlance,
FrM Eotimal.., 614-379-2199.
Ouollly Cloonlng At Affordable
Prlcea

One

~me,

W•kly,

Biweekly, llonlhty. Froo Eo-

tlmatH, 614-379-2100.
Sun Valley Nursery School.
Chlldcare M-F llm.S:30pm Agu

2-K, Young School Ago During

Summer. f D•y. per Week Min-

Will

Bobyall In

My Homo,

Ch•hlre Area, 814-367-7541
Referenc. Available.

WUI do backhoe work, 614·992·

laton School, 131D Carteton
Straat, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse,
Ohio 45779.

Need Babyshter In My Home,
Mature Non-Smoker, For 1

8"'J such prflf9f9flCB.

This newspaper wll not
know1lngly a""'flf
acttertlsernerts tor r&amp;al eslale
which Is In vkltatton of th8 llllw.
Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellngs
a&lt;Nertlsed in lhls newspaper
are avallab+e on an equal

Near

Shift,

5858 or 614-192-3173.
handicapped certlllcatlon. Send Will do housokaoplng, mor·
,-.eume by Augull 16 to : Car· nlngo. 304.e75-4149.

available,

make

Wanted to Do

Imum 814-4*-3657.

"'•lgs County Board of MRIOD •
school age Instructor nHded to

si ::m

ol1gtn, or any 111entlon to

.,.,--,-,...--,.-,.--:::--::---:Christian Lldy will Care For

Georgu Portable S.wmlll don'1

"'let wOf k Is A Free

Carleton

to advertise "any pref erence,
lrntallo n or dlsa1mlnallon
bAsed on race , color, mlg6on,
sex famllal status or natk&gt;nal

Hml1atlon

LClCK IN G -:F:::O-:::
R- :C::H
:::I:L-0;--:C
:;cA
;-;R:::E:::? haul your logs to the mfll jus1
calllil4-615-1957.
::.C IH" Chlld Ca re Resource

toach at

All real estale acttertlmg In
this newspaper l:s "-~bted to
the Federal F!Ur Housilg Ad
ol 1968 wl11ch makBs ~ llagal

Financial
21

31

Homes for Sale

bedrooms, 11f2 bathe 2
tlr11placos, full bsHment, heat
pump wiCA, Cllrpeted, patio,
gan~ge, &amp;Ox200 lot , Horton St,

3

The Dally Sentinei - Page--9

448-4344.

Company, 304~75-3433.

Two story home Sixth Avenue,

Middleport- 4 BR, living •oom,

room,

dining

room, beth

knchen,

utility

a 112. full ba,sement,

glaaaed In porch, 911 tumace,
woodbumer,
llrge atorage
building. new paint and root,
$38,500, 814--742-2790.

~lster,

200 l..ln St., Pt.

hNt

pump, porch lncluc:led,

100x100

lot

In

Mlddloport,

f!S,OOO, 614-fli2·7223.

Ort~at bualnea opportunity, ntabllahed bualnea, ama(l ln- 1988 Ook Wood 111&lt;1lblo homo,
vntmenl, owner w•nting to 14x70t 2 bedroom., eu cond,
rtlocate. 304-07&amp;-1880 evenlng1. 304.e W853,

VENDING ROUTE: Won' Got 2• ecr-. lnObll home wlfront I
Rich Quick. Will Gol A Sloody back pon:hoo, 2 gorogo,
Cash Income. Priced to Selt 1· outbuilding, Rt 35, Solilhlldo.
1100-620-4353.
304-675-6~ oftor 5:30pm.
3br., 2 bllh, on 120150 lot, HonderaOII, WV. 304-678-4024.
Real Estate

31

Bock ot Now Havon, bolow
Hovon
Holg11to,
3br.

Homes for Sale

w/appllance~,

•pta.,

tot•l .electric, ap-

plllnc:oo fumllhad, llundry
room locflhloo, • ' - to ochool
In taorn. Appllcollono ovallablo
II: Vllllgo Croon Apia. 149 or
coii814-M2·3711. EDII.
Fumlohocl EHicloncy f150/llo.

Utllh'- Paid, Sharw Bath, 607
Second Avo"' Oolllpollo, 614-4464416 Aftor 7 ~.II .

Wlahtr/dryw,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1131 Jockoon Pike
from $222 to $281. Wolk to ohop
I movloo. Coli 114-446-2508.
EOH.

Parkll)g, Utllh._ Furnr.hed, Ex·

00111 OWn Elool~c, 114-446-2802.
Fumtol1od
Eftlclonq
Downolol,._ All UU!IIIoo Pold,
SIN/Mo. 1111 Avo., Gil·
llpollo, 114-4411-3l46.
Graef- tlvtna. 1 ond 2 bodroom apo~monta 11 Vlllogo
Ill nor
ll1d
Rlvorlldo
Apo-o In Mlddloport. From
Coli 114-9112-5859.

Nowty fumlohociSo 1br. uppor
duplox, 402 2111. ·• no polo, no
HUD, $270/mo, 2 ulllhloo paid.
Aloo, omoll lumllhad opt., MI.
Vomon Avo., downololrw. 304~2551.

Nlco fomlty ~ thrM bodroom honio to ,.,. or bur,
138,000 nngo. Prolor C11ootor
1M will ..,.ldor ot1wo,

Appllcallon lnlo. Call ~219) 111118101 Eort DH581, g A. . ~ P.M.,
Sun -F rt.
- - - - -,-,----,.,-:---

POSTAL JOBS

Start $11.41/hr.

application inlo.

8301

for .. am and
call 21 9-769-

ext. WVS48,

Dlm·9pm,

Sun·Frl.

- - ----,------,:,-Reg(3tered long-term care Nura-

lng Aaalst1ntl nHded for pert·
lime rotating shlttl 58-bed aklllod

nv,.tng

lacllny,

CareHaven of Pt. Pleasant,
Bo~: 326, Pt. Pln••nt.

255SO, 3~5-3005 .

EOE.
Rt. 1,

WV

Somaona Ia milk cowa, hourly
waga, paid vacation, Hnd
na mo e~~:perlenu &amp; reftrtnctl
to P.O. BoK 312, Hendanon, WV
25106

to
work
on
grandtathvr clock, 614-742~3165.
own llablltty
equipment
and
vehlciCI . So nd bids: 1410 Jeffll"son l:llvd., Box t06i.l Pt. Pleassnl,
WV 25550, ATIN: ark Kleynen.
havt

lsun nco,

au-

l

dO.:.bt.

dhfon. Somorvllle R•nr. 3046711-3030 or Joon Collo, 3041711-:1431.

"*

Real Estate
Wanted

•;:"W2
I
-6731.

Warranty, $225, f17!1, 614-2459502.
2 Lllwn Mowera: Brlaaa And
Stratton Engine, 20 lncFi-cl. .lc

cf:.':' Wk&gt;wl~

Block. brick. ....-c,llntoto, ole.
1 - "lo
OH
~

Grl-.

CoD

114-

Inch Electric Slovo
f!SO, 614-25HJII1.
5x8 IIH-bod utllhy tralllr. 304675-51114.
Bra,nd new klna...tze

w... rbtd,

•
lor
111
~ on 1 wook, coli
doll .
7
-6 5-2385.
Colto• ID box1 14 momory, brand
now, $43.95, 014-~-611!6.
Case Davlo 20+4 fgur-whoot
drive

:r.":

112 y..,. a.lu-,e-....1US.

dltcher1

hyd,.uUc-front

ond

computer.

0231.

Hay&amp;Graln

printer,

10x10lll doa luiMfll. l19i.U

._1012.

=--

PolntPiuo,~.

4 Hlmotayon klllo,., 304-451111112.

AKC Roglolorod lleoglo Pupo, I
Wooko And I Wook IIIIo tal,
Slovo Sloptolon 114-448-4172,
014-2511-16111.
AKC
Roglolond
lour
pupo,flwno ond brfncloo, both
.,.,.nlo on promlooo, champion
podlgreo, 114-'N2·2209.
AKC Roglolond Slbortan Hoaky
Pup, Forillll, Bluo Eyoa, 0ny I.
Whlto1 Booutlf\11, Cotm, SiiiG,
614 4..
1127.
AKC Roalolond Wotmon111r
pupploo. Sb4.e711-71110.

~r,

71

Autos for Sale

'14 Clvyllor Now Yortor, 2.2 b
lurllo, p. wa-., PS, PI, Ill
w-. Irani -ldrlv8,18,000
mlloo, aood condition, ooU 1141181-41A oft•lpm.

Compurid

Hunt•

1980
Ford good
~.arao,
, _aood
-·
·
, _ ,..,..,
gu
-~:~. 1\1110 good, AOtt. JM1111 •

Musical

Instruments

58

Fruhs &amp;
Vegetables

=.

""*
~-­
Thla- only Unlllond lncludConning
·lor .....
rour own
I 101110
.....,

lna

Thurodo,.

ARE YOU

l CANT SLEEP l&gt;JAIT A MINUTE ..
SO I T~OU6~T I T~INK THERE'S
I'D READ A BIT SOMEONE Af
THE DOOR .

1187 TlaM Am GrA !lr!g!ll Rod,

1983 250 Honda Oddosy $500 Or
Boll Offor, 614·379-2133, 614·.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

379-2854.

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --

~

"' '!'.
~~ ~

Dirt BIU., Or Uotot'l Any Condhlon. 814-448-02'11.
:

1 ~

r

.,

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

,,

.

=--c:
l-~.:~:....~=
1~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===---------~~~~J:I
·~

,.\..101-J 1Tfl~T WOOU&gt; &amp;. ~T.

BORN LOSER
"tM TOYit-16

wrrn N-IIDU FO~ "'

IIIIU"0~NU

0\1£F. .. BU\ 110W

o..:R I'Fl:lOO:TIVITY ..

~ITCJ.\ TO WOR~t-16

WOOL.D WTII~
OJR flOURS lf'.l
HN..F D0~\ 7

fW..F~Y5 !

~

,.

NO,

~

NO .. 1-\N...F Ot\Y5 .. YOU
OOW .T&gt;JE.LV£
OtiT OF T\o.DIWrou~ 1\00~ 1

BIG NATE
C MJ WE
GET ONE 7

floor mat•,

&amp;

1llno ....... ...... liijoollon,
Motor Homes
~ z Door, ....._ . . , ' 'llloniO,IIIIG llleo, . - . . . .. ~p camper, -'"P' 8, 2 new

11111 Ford Footlva 80 IIPO Vory
Nlco Cor, 4 SPIOCI. Now 11rw0,
....... AIIIFif co tl,IN,
OII0,114-241-414a

Farm Supplies

tlrM. Color computer 3 Tandy,.

l ftll

Cl1lln Sow

a.. I

-

to II

· prlcoo In
·
-...,--Equl-.1711-111111
or1~

-

~

• Door 8tdan

~..=:~

81

c ..... ....... Claln. Good
c.. mr nl Alldng Ply Oft. :!04-

llleeer l'lrguaan TOIIlnGiw
With ..... Hog, .-.
fargt I I R . .
With
A Cull¥alo&lt; And
Digger, ta.iil; 11111
111-r . ""-~WIIh
LoecW, IUIO: 1M -...a22

.,....;.! :d'

63

Livestock

-

ON 11\E.

IT

\'it~

-

tabtlohooJ 1171.

'!;"

.

~

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron-. TV llorvlco, opoclollzlng •
rn· Zlnltll oloo -lng mool
bnondo. Hou• coHo, ~

~ro:l:'::-. : ,,
Plumbing &amp;

I

Heating

"-'o Hootlna And Cooling.

IM'•htlon And Servke. EPA
Certltl8d. AHid•ntltl, Commtrolol 114-2111-1811.

If,!

-

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
P - . Air Condou-,

Rllldlnllll or com11111ft:lll
!!1tlng. -.leo or ropol,.,
• - U-...r otoctrlclon. "'
....,_ Ellolrfoal, WV000308

. . . . . .'1711.

All pass

441n lorm tlfiOf1

ag c y
45 Month ly
o bltga t1o n
, 46 M s . Ad am ~

47 F:umer 1n
lh c -

50 l tKc (Sufi )
51 MOV'Iflg

Celebn t ~ c, J&gt;/11-'r

CELEBRITY CIPHER

cryp1og rams are creat rxl !•om qvo1 .lfoO•&gt;s fly
.n the np h~H

Eact111lt1£!1

J,,n ou,. l'' '"l'''

1· , ',,.,., 1 ,, ,,, 1

stanCis to t -•'10111('• rro.11,, ''I'' 111 , ..1, ,· ., 1

vo td .&gt; And it worked - Wes t, a multi·
time world champion. led a heart
True, Eas t's four-hea rt bid was ill·
advised: A s imple five diamonds mus t
be bett er But it took co urag e by
North to call seven s pades . Bids like
that des erve to succeed.
The femal e gambler called Honlas '
To he r fri e nds she was known as
Poker Hontas.

AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE-FUt
-.OF STUFF

~ :u..,,...-

'

Tuesday, Aug. 16, t994
In lhe year ahead, condittons.look more
favorable than usual where your material
interests are concerned. Money from a
second11 source is possible, as well as a
raise from your primary wori&lt;.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Subordinates
might resenl it today W they feel they're
being unduly pressured by you. Instead
ol doing what you demand, they may do
the exact oppos~e . Know where to look
lor romance and you'll find ~. The AslroGraph Matchmaker instantly reveals

J T Z J

Z K A

TP BP
KH

R G

R G

K H J

R J ' G

TZEEPKPA?'

ET RY

c z y y

R J · G

K H

K H J

H W

H L

J

M P G

RJ

X T Z J

CBHZANZGJPB)

BR. OOWJH .

P R EVIOUS SOLUT ION "Most of !he lh1ngs worth domq 1n Ill~ world t1.1d IJ ~&gt;f' n
LoUis D 81 ,mdPl S

dec lared 1mpos s 1ble before I hey were d o ne ··

T~~:~:~' S@R~1A-~£~S®

WORD
GAM I

Edited by CLAY lt.

Q A:eorronge

letters of
four Krombled words
low to form fou r wor ds

I

I

ECLHE

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTER$ IN

IHE St SQUARES

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Behave · Antic ·Famed - Cement . THAT you NEED
I'm not against hoping and WIShing for spec tal things
inlife.lwastaughtatavery youngagethatyou mus(work
for the things THAT you NEED .

AUGUST 15
IT'S t:rrn£R n1\S
C1&lt; WATOI I'II()R£

CO'IERIISt: Of
Ttlt OJ SIMP5cN
TRII&gt;.l .

..:.;:_::::~:.:__ _:_~_..::.:__s!::!~{::.6~w~h~iccth;'ss,;Qg;;ns;-;;a1.re

Curllo l m - o . No
Job Too Bla Or Smoll, YNra Ex·
...,.._ bn Otdw IN-r
lion-. Addhlono, F-lono,
!!oaftng, Kll- illllho,
R Fl •not~ Wlndawt. l111urwd,
FNo Ellllrllat.,;IM-381.o518.

84

East
4¥

•

-Radio,Ponlloo
~. .AIU'II
Gonorol
Homo
Col Allor. .
I.
Nl
_ . C&amp;C
lllfnllnlnc. w•hptper, atonn
clocn, roonng and complett
homo ropolr, complolo win,.,..,, .......,. Wllhlng lnd
homo Npolr. For lroo 1-o 0111 Chol, IM-992-tm. •

82

1tlfS£ Sl&gt;.lllt&gt;

10N5S AND STill NOT
fttl A 1\.IIN6

0~~ ~~
:::. -w~

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
, . . _ 30 TI'Mior- Now 4 1J1.11811.
U11C01111Hionll llollmo guoran- ·
A. lnl. lluoh Hog ta,lll, 114Looll roloroncoo lumlahod. -·
. . FoNt Tlur. .... - . uo. 110.
44H801, 114-448-7711
CIA 1.aotl-287-0576 Or 614-237--..mz ... - 0481 Aoaoro WallfllrCOIIng. Eo- ,

=--

~S LEEP

LOO\\ l CAN tiJ£N PII'IC~

COUCH IN A WEIRD
POSITION ANI&gt; NOV'J liltS
Htl\.t{) IS 'TOTAllY NIJM6

.

Services
61 Farm Equipment

No rth
4+
7•

ROBOTMAN

w"'--lor, keyboard prlnlor,
dlok d~vo, ooftwora. o\ltumaco. .
Flrwwood. Cclmputor tor 1086 '
Dodao OtiOSE, 2.5 now. 304-ll82·

211111:

&amp; Livestock

lea tur e '&gt;
3 t Fa t o f -;w1 oe

\\'('o;t

, most
seven
likely than
!Although
. a times
pnori.more
a singleton
is ala·

d:l

MfGAC.O~P

-

Berry P1tch, Kerr Floed, 114--241-

1 Window part

16 Cooked in oil

2+
5•

o

!:!::-

{ ~
11 ~

Campers

23Chiet
24La - tar pit s
25B iockheads

114
4 NT

i :&lt;
&lt;8

-----i

f..lrm
~·~614-~~~..23==n=·--~---:::
',
Wanled To Buy: Four WhHiera;

79

Press

raise th e auc tion to a sui cid al leve l.

ole.

or Trade

~

~8 P11rt OI 11H' r-ye
29Fac tal

22 - Sc hol"'

South

psychs carry a hi gh ris k eleme nt.
Gaylo r Kas lc produeed a beaut iful
bluff that wasn't a psych per seat the
Cavendish In vitat ional Pairs, held last
May a l th e Loews Ho tel in New York
City.
Look only at lhe Wes t hand
After South opened one spade. you
would probably ove rcall with three or
four dia monds. but West bid only two
North 's fou r diamonds wa s a splinter
, bid. s howm g at leas t game va lues m
spades with at most on e dia mond
What is your opening lead''
' Whe n he jumped to seven s pade s.
Ka s le hop ed Wes t would assume he
had a diamond void, not a singleton

~
D R A":::(plly, WV. 30+
:l73'0328.
112-31A or 1

For Sale

~0

27 Young 8 1rr1

20 Possessed

9 PrOhibit

35 V1!a l par Is
37 Beard o l gr.l •n
380 1 medi Ci ne
39 Mall untl s
42 Memm en!
43 Feels poor y

Bluffing is an integral pa rt of poker
In brid ge . t ho ug h. bluffing is rar e
True. occas tona lly a playe r will psyc h
make a bid that ove r states th e
strengt h of his hand. or th e length of
th e s uit bid . or both . But si nce part ·
ne r. taking the bid al face value. might

614-192-Gsn

racbtora

(abbr .)
8 Dinner co urse

cheat to win .

Motorcycles

F~lllllor Eloct~don
11t ... ~ 1.aoo-287-t301. •

•

WH ~

f ~ORN I,'i &amp;:

Budael Priced ln.nsmlaalone,
Uoocl I nbuln, oil lypoo, otartlna 11 1111: owner e«-245-5677,
~. 114-379-2263.
t.nb. one ton truck

~~~""*-­
59

IT5 T'HI.t E o'C LOCK
IN TeE

a::;.:=

..,_,.,
247-42111. llilng - - · 114-

7 Numbers

He rolled the dice
and won

TI1REE O'CLOCK
IN THE MORNIN6?~

bolrdioutboard,
lull
tope,:
SS.200. 30W75-5815.
1986 Chockmoto 16h 80hp Mar·
CIIIY outboard, lrollor Included,.
12,300. ...1272.
•
19110
PRICrah
18
Ft.
Rah
&amp;
Ski,'
11111
vw - • ~1..-~'
IIII,IIIIG ...... GaoCI ......,., t11 Medner Engine, Excellent ,
$2,311, IM-448-712S.
Condition, Garago Kopl, 614.,
.
11111 .... "-1 T - . ...,._ 441-41121.
1004
4hp
Johnson,
1994
Ltlnn~ - . . 11'100. :!04kall troiUng motor. 304~752891.
1117 Ct..,lor &amp;..Boron 2.2
Turbo,
Aodlolor, - Now """"'· .... 76 Auto Parts &amp;
Condltlaio, $2,7QO,
Accessories

........

6 We - The
World

might not know that th e bes t woman
player wa s call ed Hontas . And s he .
unlik e many of the men. dtdn ·t need to

CAL LI NG ME AT

1185 Glaaport, 17ft open bow, ~
2.1
CheV
4
cyl,
k'l.i'

loto ol

Now 5r8 Ttm'*-11 UUIHy
Trollor, 11,300,114-371»1112.
Nlco 24 , Abo.,. Ground Pool, All
Now SS,OOO. Slop In And Tolw A
Look At 11 At: 61 Porch StrOll,
Keneug1,0~r.,~

&gt;1! , MARCIE . DO
YOU kAVE AN~T~INb
GOOD TO READ "

V-6,

1177140 Evenrudo, Includes life
J•ckltl, tide, Coast Guard equiPid, make r~asonable offer.
3o4-liB2·3321 or 304-rn-5565
bltften 6-lpm.

er- -· 114-37W341

57

TH' 81TIN'
TODAY!!

AG'IN?

'87 Yamah• Warrtor, 350cc, 2
wheel drive, new front li re, all
new engine one year ago, $1800,

75

31 Mauna -

32Roman 56
3311 precedes gee
34Tolal

Open in g lead: ??

DONE

PEANUTS

Many Extras

10ft. Bayllnor bowrldor wnrallor,.
85hp onglno wnvrbo p•op;
137!0 neg. 304~5-7719 .
17ft. Trl-houl bool, opon bow,.

a-, 1

~lln~-btondo,

MAILMAN

condition, ahow or go, $10,500,

1171 a-. 4 - · 30H75-1802.

4 Thin coal ing
5 Put down

made a living from cards . But you

614-256-1252.

74

3 Auto part

As yo u know . I he re use d t o be
Miss issi ppi r iverboat gam blers who

$6,500, 014·245~122.

caravan

24 Blac k tea
26Caring
30Foray

veh 1c le

1985 Suzuki 250 4 Whaolar,
11,000, OBO, 614·388-8337.
19117 Honey Dovldson, FLTC,
25,000 actual miles , excellent'

Clonnon 8hlphonl B - Uno
Woo Uood By Mllml PoUco. a

B•r

TH' DADBURN

lruck, orlalnal palnl, no rust , ,

Dodge

Walesa

2 or aircraft

Perlman

By Phillip i\ldl'r

1989 Dodgo Ram Von 60,000
1111•, $4.0'00; Can Be Soen At:
orchianl 01lllpollt
D1lly Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 614446-2342.

Transportal ion

2 AKC Roglotarwd Moll Ootdon
Rotrfovon, I Woolul Old, 1110,

ue ees1.

.

DID
OL' BULLET
BITE HIM

"'

1988

Sq-.- 11.25 to 12.00 por

aoftwtre,

614·1112·l065.
Concroto 1 Pllotlc Soptlc
Tanlul1 300 Thrv 2,000 Gollono
Ron ~••n• Enlorprfooo, Jock·
son, OH 1.aoo.437.0528.

WE GOT TO TIE UP
OL' BULLET NEXT TIME
TH' MAILMAN
COMES

Alii. Hoy, ..... a- AutomstiC, O.llva'l Van, No
Wol, $2.10 A Bolo, Coli AI• 8 Wlndowa, S2,700. 14-256-1618,

-

P.ll •

dl.e

good
condltlonj
owlmmlng pool, 111132x4' doop,
very nlc!1 1ote of extra featu,..i

BARNEY

SA, AC, Pfl, new tires &amp; whee ls.
2 Smoll Ouo~•-. 1 Smoll 304-t75-1564.
Oiled Pllnl Golding, 114-4484110.
111117 Ford Full Slzo Van Com- ·
plotoly Whool Chair Accessible

64

1 Poland·s -

22Actress -

Vulne ra ble : Both
D e al e r: South

73 Vans •· 4 WD's

And Drlvtable,

Pats for Sale

DOWN

40Smalllumps
41 Pull ha•d

tH

1ffi Jotp CJ-5, 304 llandarn :
63
Livestock
tronoml~&amp;lon, $2500, 614-992.
5532.
13 Now Homlllhl,. Rod - . 1 1885 Nl••n King-cab 4WD ,

&gt;II

=-.

wfflreplace,
car 11•,.,
ln·ground pool, 3.tllc, A~l con-

POSTAL JOBS
Star1 $11 .41 /Hr. For Exam And

Supplies

614

to47.
Good Uood Pottoblo Or Porm.
Dlahwaohor, 614 388 8682.
JVC Homo Sloroo RCA 25"
Cclnoolo T.V., RCA Vldoo Dloc
Ployor, W 121 llovln. Choll 01
Drawe,.~ c.tll10. DP Enrcloo
Blko1 • 1raodmlll, Nonoloctrlo.
614"'146-4044 Mono ln.,.
Monraao I oprfng ..... king
145,1u1141MI38. 30U75-2260.
Lorao 2br., pal'lly fumlohod, AC, Ulnl bllndo ond dra- 8' patio
HUD opproved, Pt. Plo1Nnl. door, I ' wlndcM btocll, IM-11112·
304.e711-77B3.
6137.

Wanted: Individual or company
to bury CATV Hrvlce drope,

614-446-

Building

55

GroOm ond SUPIIIY Shoo-Pol
G,_,lng. Julio Wobb. 114-441-

Croftamon Sow And JoltW WHh
Fumllhad 3 Roorno I Both, Extn Blldoo CoiiiM-448-1838.
Cloon, No Potil1 Roloronco &amp;
0opoo11 "-'!ui,...,IM-4411-1518. Dry wolnut tumbor,IIG conll por
looc. 304-a:!·M'I2.
Nicety Fumllhad Aportmont,
1br, noll to Ubrory, portdng, Evom Jonnlngo Hoi -~~
control hoot, olr1 _~forenco ,._ Chlldo Whoot Choir Novor Uood,
qulred. 614-448-(1&gt;:111.
$500, 614-2411-11122.
Fumlohocl Elflcloncy, Conlrol Gardon llumo: Yollow, WhRo,
Hoot /Air Condhlonlng, Prlvoto Orango And Pullllo. Toylor'o

36

4926.

Week,

t-===========-~~=~~=::::;::::=1

49 Bank

52 Vale student
9 Holshol (abbr.) 53 Foolish
12 Wide s h oe size 54 Zilch
13 Home-run king 55 Kind of curv e
56 Coins
14NOW goal
57 Salon purchase
tool

350oze out
36 Dancer Fred 39Soft drinks

olo Q R l

PackaQa, N:., 19,000 Highway

FINE ANTIQUES - Amerlc•n srt,
china, ar1
allvar, fumhure,

dltiOillrl, 1 Yar Okl, Undlr

·~

~

lllloo, lM-2411-5053, $20,000 .

56

6629.
2 Amono WlndcM Air Ccn-

•QIU ~fi54

SOl iTH
4 A QJ 4 Z
• A K J 8

11113 Toyoll 4 WO X~ab SR5 V8 Cyil~b 5 Spaod, C•vls o1
PowW
ge, Sunroof, Sport

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:

Fumllhad Aplrl11111nt 1 Bod· drlvo
room, 131 Second Avenue, Gil·

Groonbrfor Elllloo, OIIIM loyor,
3br., 2 112 both, llrgo lhfngroom
&amp;
dlnlngroom
llmloyrwm

A;~terence s

6
Days
Requ!rad,

FrM O.Uvery.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olive St., Gallipolis. Naw &amp; Used
tumlture, haatera, Wutem &amp;

Commodort

Som9fm&amp;

Pars~~ To Live-In HouHwork &amp;
Cooking,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

18 R . Flat Dump Btd S'l4a256-

• R6

lll4J 7fl.'", •QJ 43

1180 Nlooon pickup truck, AIC,
whh 1 c:op $3500, 614·1112·2082
..onlngo, Roymond eonarlll.
11112 Nlloon king-cab SE, V6,
: :· olr, crul10, lin. 304-675-,

Complela home tumlshlnga.
Hou,.: Yon-Sat, ~5 . 614.446.
0322, 3 miiM out Bulavllle Rd.

back fill btodo, oxcollont conlfl·
lion, ready to work, 12500, 614Fumlohocl Aponmonl 2 Bod· 992.05114.
rooms, $215JMo., Utllltle1 P1ld, Commodore 128 computar wl•ll
701 Founh Avo.'pGolllpolla, 614- accononoo, $275. 304-676-1464.
448-4418 Aftor 7 .II.
llpollo, S200/Mo. Utllhllo Pold,

191!6, PIIC, 12x50; 2br. 304-1175-

800-4~:149i .

Realty.
2 Bedroom Upatalre Ap~rtment; $70, 22 Inch MW"rsy- tl20, Call
300 Fourth AYtm•, GtlllpoUe, Aher 6 P.M. 814-4.722\
8'14-448-1637.
425 Gallon Plaatlc W8ttr Tank

114 4t8 4415 Aftw7 P.U .

for Sale

812..2570.

to P rev1ous Puule

48 Fleur -de- -

1 Fall behmd
4 Woodworker 'S

19River in Europe
21 Misdemeanor

olo A K.JIII764
EAST

HQI.IJ CNJ W E MWIA
D:.FUJD VlcJ..£1X£ OJ lV
WITH THt FiRST AMOJ)o~1EAJT 1

50 310

8uto., •xc. cond., 1 ownor.

ra ng01. ~kogga AppllanCH 111
Vlno SlrMI, Coii614-446·73M, 1·

sorted Slzea, 1114-446-6308.

2bdnn.

Spacloue mkHntry home, RoiJ.
lng Acr• Subdlvlalon, epprox.
2400 sq.ft., 3-4br., 2 112 bath,
flmllr. room, maintenance frN
oxtor or, IIYII lot w/pnmory
fence, 80'1. Wal.on Ruby

Washerwt.. dryers, rafrlgeretore,

f175 :

Automatic::

Answer

45 Turned

18 Terrible

K !I 7 :) :;

•.,

condllon, 614-992·7316.
1989 Cllovy S-10 pick-up, 5spd.,
70,000mt, arc. cond., $5000.
304-11711-'1981.
1180 Ford plck-&lt;op, VB XLT,

APPUANCES

54 Miscellaneous
polo, 614-992-2216.
Merchandise
1br. apartment, Ballame•d Addl.
lion, nowly mnoclolod, no polo.
150,000 BlU Ga1 Fumact,
304.e7S-1386.
80,000 BTU Gaa Fumsce, 1
1br. duplox. 2br. &amp; 1b•. affo•· Uood 3 Ton Poclulgo Air Ccndable rent, eome utlllt 1as In· dhlono!, 1 UMd Eloct~c Fur·
eluded. 304-875-4100 or 675- nace, Melli Door Fram•, .._
2 Bedroom Garage Apartment,

A

bed wlflbarglass topper:
72.000 miJH, loaded, excellent

fumlahld
and
unfurnished,
ucurhy deposit r.qulred, no

2063.

S..10

42 Haggard

ACROSS

EEK&amp; MEEK

8'

a•····
McCoy RoMvllll, ole. COLLEC.

GUZ AND UMPII

ANYTIME SOON?

~ 15 Sneakiest
r- - - - - ;w,;rr:;;---iil'"'ll
H 15 !H
17 Heavy weight

1111• 14,500, 614-448.0924. '
1988 Ford F-150 XLT Svpa• Cab

1 811d 2 bedroom •partments,

61...37V-2240.

Mlnut• From A1ccoon Psrk.

1N7

Nlco 2 Bedroom Trollor, City
School Dlol•lct, Nlco Yard, 29 TIBLE'"S· prlnll, pot1erw, loolo,
Pereh StrNt, K1naug~ , 614-446- pottery, crocka, boXn, )In bot·
u... boolul, toya, ole. ALWAYS
11173.
BUYING ARROWHEADS. Top
dollar ~ld . Ona plect or one
44
Apartment
hund•od. APPRAISALS, 40
yNre experience. Buy or sell.
for Rent
PI Mit c.ll 6\4-62--2822.

Rural Water, Prl'o'1te, $58,000,

Now Houoo For Sail 3 Bodroome, In Country, On 3Acru, 5

4400.
INOTICEI
OHIO V#oLLEY PUBUSHING CO. 111011, MIIIIO mobil homo, aood
recommend• that you do bue-.
ohlpa, oxtl'll Included, 11500.
n~n with peopft you know, 1nd
NOT lo oond monoy lhrouah tho 304.e75-6043.
m111 until you have lnYntfgatld 11172 14x70 trailer; 7T' round
tho offorlnp.
abov• ground .wlnwnlng pool,
lncludtdi f14-M3Boat High Lumbor Coli. Stool evet')'thrng
Building Doolo,.hlp Oppor· 53SO.
tunl1y. Will Sotoct Quallflod
~rl'!l Z Bodroom For
Bulldor /Ooolor In Somo Opon 11172
Sale, 0
1400.
Aroao. Potontlot Big Prollto
From S1ln And Coriatructlon. 1987 Schuh 14'x70' wnh Ex·
pondo toodod whh ...,..,
(&gt;03) 758-4135, Ext. 1800.
rwtrlg.,..tor
move, wiiMr,
Busln... For Saa.; BNuty central olr. Sol up In Quoll C,.lll
S.lon I Tanning Bwlnaa Pl. on comor lot. Will not ull on
Ploaoont, fully otockod, ,.oily to lind con1ract. 116,500.00 114opon doon, 4 ototlono, 2 tan- 245-6013
ning bed1. Send lttter of lnt•r·
est: Box R-11, cJo Pt. Pleaunt 1088 14x70 Roy•l Cove, 2 br,
Pleaaant, WV 25550.

5158.

2 Roome l Bllh, No KHchan,
S20Mio. All U111HIIo lncludod,
114-4411-7733, -oon 9:30
-a:oo.

32 Mobile Homes
Business
Opportunity

Nice 2 6 3 bedroom mobile
homoo In Mlddlopo~. 614-1192·

SEEING

PHILLIP
ALDER

1m Ford F-150 V-II Aulo 54 ooo
111111, 14,500, 614-3711-2~. .

1'110

BE

SPRE." -' TW WOflt)!

IIP.M.

Molloh.ln Carpets.

USED

NEA Crossword Puzzle ·

SAY, TAAT ~MINDS ME! WILL YOl.J

Automatic Transmission, Full"'"" 4 WD, 614-388-~ Ano,

Household
Goods

GOOD

WELL . I_i;OTT.. GfT

GOIN '! T~ ·s

NATIONAL TR161JTE
D~V AN' I'VE GOT TO

1m GMC 4x4 Short Bod 35ll y.

Merchandise
51

15 words

!

614-«6-403&lt;4.

6'M...256-6089.
china cablnel, $1500 080. Xf4..
2 Bedroom Toal .... $2SMio. 614- 675-2484.
446
~52 Sporting Goods
2 s.drooon., AC, No Polo, j.:.:_,.:.::..:;_.,;.._:::...:_.:_:.,;..;__
Oopooll
And
Roto ... ncoo, Romlng1on Sportom.on 48, 12
S40Mio., Wuhtt, Dryer; 2 Bad- gauge aemHuto. llhotgun,
room ~. Fumlahed, No $250. CVA Frontier 50cal. muz..
"""· $35011o. Oopooll, 614·7117· zoloodor w/ac:cnsorloo, 1175.
4345.
614-245-5633 ohor 7pm.
2 Bod....,...., All Electric,
~- 1114-367-11102.
53
Antiques

bam, 5.887ac., $13,500, terme
"Kick Mo Whllo I'm Down"l avallobto. 304-882-3503.
Ownar Must Sell Nowl .. L11'1
Talk Buolnou"l Booutllul, Largo UMITED OFFERI Now Mx80
Two Story On Cornor Lot 816 only me.k l 2 ptyme,.a, no
Main St. Pt. PINunt. ThrM payment• •ller 4 YN,. .,..
Bedroom•, Two Full Bath,, dollvory &amp; 101 up, ownor llnonoKllchon, Dining, Living, FamiiV lng IVIIIIblo. 304-~-651!6.
Roome, Largo 1JIItl1y Room. Arr Mobile Homo: z BodCondhlonecf. SH,fOo.OO. 014- Both, O..bulllllngo,
On
440·2205.
1.51 01 ~. $20,000, ~~
1 112 Slory, Full B._,.nl , _ 1711,Laav•••uoa
alble 5 Bedrooms, 2 Aere1,
NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 llftl
FurniShed
Llfoltmo VInyl Siding, Skyllgl1to, Ntvtr
lived In, ltlll hu MW
Tllt Wlndowo Somo lnlorlor homo warronly, tno clollvwy 1
Rooms
Flnlahlng,
l&gt;ocii, Building!
Strum, "2 Doclul, -olo, ldoo 101 up, owno&lt; ftnonclng ..... 11-::=~=-=~~~==
Roomo lor 10111 • wook or month.
For Chlldran, $55,000, 11~3'18- obll. 304-7511-71111.
81or11ng II t120Jmo. OoUII Hotot.
2666.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
114 . . . . .0.
2 Or 3 Bod- I Mltoo From
$20,000 114-3U7U14 SIOoplng Roomo 111 Per Doy.
Golllpollo, Country Sonlng, ~ LMve .... ••111•
eon.tructlon Wortwr. We~cotne.
L1rgo K11chon, 81W.,._Z343.
Efllcloncy
Kllchon,
Freo
3 Bedroom Ronoh I 112 Mlloo
For
lllolorG door
- I wild
of ~
lll.ounclrJ~~~·~·~M~U~1:!17:1~21~~·
-7:"round
_ _,, 1;
No~h On 1~1 Vory Nloo - · 14-117·3711 olll oorty morning "--na wtlh OGOidna.
Good Conclluon, $15,000, 014-o
or lllo ovonlng.
trillor
011 ~Yit Q
440-41811.
3 bedroom, •II e11otr1c home, Wonlod to ""r· lwo or maro ~c:'~=~~ p.m,
Spring
A..,ua,Pomoroy, ocroo, oullobto to build 011 ll1d 1~::-;.~;,;..;,;:,;;;;::;:;;,.:;.:;___
$30.000, IM-IItl2-a13 or 614- c._ 1o • btocktop rood, IM- 46 Space for Renl
141-2411.
192-7304.

musl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

72 Trucks for Sale

Or larger Houaa To
Rant. Muat Be GOod Condlllon,

cho ro w mouvo cus ono,

Stove, Refrlger~~tor, No P111,
$250/llo. f!OO DopooH, Pluo
Mason, 30+773-5885.
UIIIHIM, 614-4411-1171.
3br. ranch w/deck, fenced yard, 2 bedroom Hud approved, no
movt In cond., owner •nxloua polo, 1 yoor 11110, Volloy Apl,
to aoiiJ.. $56,000, Mlnon Rd., llloon, WV. Appllcollono oval~
Camp \;Onley. lntarastad p1.rty •ble, E.R.A. 1own &amp; Country
coli cotlocl 216-lltl4-12211.
For Sale Or laa11: 4 Bedroom
Brick Home, In Rio Granda, 614-

KIT 'N' .CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Rlwr, In Kan.auoa- O.posJt,
Ref'lnnc:M Requir.d . Fost11 '1
~ .. Hc:ma Par\, ~ 1 602. Woril boola. 614-446-3155.
14160 2 Br. 1 mlla South of IV::o.::~:.::.:n::lc::o.:::.oa.:.k.:::.d::ln..:,l.::
np,.:::.lo::b,_,o-,t 1
Eurab., on St Rt .7. No pets,
1
h
1

,..~.

---'-'------

Elizabeth Chapel Church; off
218. 614-441·1467

lfTirr " -'lll' o Openi ngs Available
f -;,r :::: .• r1ilied Nurs. Aides. Compe1 h vu Wagas, DI Herent al With
F 'P"' ·•enfe, Sign On Bonus
Ava ;'ab'tt, Equal Opportunity
EmJ.-,.yo r.; Contact Ttwa Assls, .. nt
Di rector
Of Nursing,

Bedrooms. 4~ . CaW. Av1ll·

oblo, ~lng Tho otolo

Dat .L{IISI l up pay 19 and older,
1:o 1.udil y. JJ4-6/S.S~~Ta mmy.
AIDorE Is LookPmr ~ •o:;tn·n
C.:~rART
o Con!
lng r Jr A Dwtary Aide. Duties
ln&lt; :,,d o !:l•eJkl ast , Dossort, And

Rat.rw~•.

Unt\.wnlshed 2 b«iroom house,
&amp; d .. n. no pals,
daposlt a ,..,.~ requl.-.d,

fWO"J S$ S ALES
1 o lko ol:l o~ i $ ~ .'0 $2 .000 Monthly.
F a'~ ' JSI.c D•s co untst Benefits!
F•IHihlo Hours Tarr ltory Op-

9.00
13.00
1
1.30/day
1

· ---,- Ca•pol $5.00 Up VInyl $4.49 To
$6.50 In Slock, 614-446-11144,

Ramoct.~lno

-'~0.'

~-

1994

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 per wd.
$.05/day

1

B~room

Nb 2 ot ' ~ houM nNr

l•r. e ••·-&gt;~

LI ' V•"&lt;;

1

Responsible
ProfMslonal
Couple Looking For Vory Nice 3

C.mp con .. y, :J bedroom, 2
b.llht, S300. plut dapostt, 1 yr
IN M, 30~75-lBtl.

.,..l-l8k In Pt Pl&amp;aian1 , New Haven

rc_.,J

IUich.n ap-

pliances, blllamM~t , nice yard.
304-882·2~7 or 88.2 -2405.

Sor.ticCI&amp; Conto r, Hun-

1• ··-llon seo~ing l••divldual to
w ur k u ppr olirnataly
hra par
J' lliJ

CA,

Wanted to Rent

6.00

15 words or less
15 words or less
15 words or less
15 wnrds or less

Mont~ly

47

Houses for Rent

4br. horrMi,

~Jol'

Monday,

ALLEYOOP

..

1.1.

1994

romanticall y perfect for windbags
you . Mail $2 lo Ma tc hmake r. c/o this AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Co- worknewspaper. P.O . BoK 4465 , New York, ers migh t be more di sagreeable than
NY 10163
usual loday Yet il you seek ways to
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Be ophmtslic compliment Ihe m. tal her than correct
today regarding your hopes and ellpecta- them, you may produce smiles instead of
tion s. Condilions are good , but t hey frowns.
might not be optimal. Don't lei small set- PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Try not to
be demanding of friends loday. even pals
backs disappotnt you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) There's a pos· j who are indebted to you for past favors.
s ibthty you mtghl Jack ie some lype 011 Remtnders could generate resentment.
endeavor today thai turns oul to be ! ARIES (March 21 -Aprll19) Success is a
Iaugher than you 1ntltally suspected. This : strong probability loday in a s1tuat1on
may cause you to quit in the middte of 1 where you are unselfishly motivated .
your task.
~ Conversely, failure or setbacks are poSSI ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Try to ble where you are loo sell-involved .
involve yourself today with persons who TAURUS (Apo:jl 20-May 20) Don't wag
are supponive rather than those who are your tongue today belore your brain is
always critical. Encouragement inspires; engaged. Blurting out provocative comments could end up producing bOth hard
discouragement disheanens.
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23--Dec. 21) When feelings and an argument
managing your own resources loday . GEMINI (May 21'June 20) If a friend
you're likely to do a commendable job. wants lo bOrrow somelhtng you lreasure
However: if you allempl lo handle lhe today, make 11 clear lhat you expect 1110
affairs of others, it could be a very differ- retum in the same condition in which it
entslory.
was loaned.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Just CANCER (June 21-July 22) There is a
because someone is loud and forcelul possibilily thai both you and your mate
Cloesn'l mean lhis person is a wise deci· mighl not make ~n effort loday to show
stan-maker. In lac!, the opposite may be one another the same consideralion both
true, so•don'l be unduly impressed by of you shower on outstders .

Pnmenews iCC)

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monda~August15,1994

Motocross
action at
Meigs Fair

Flower shows will highlight Meigs County's 175th anniversary
By BETTY DEA N
Meigs County Fair
Flower Show Chairman

fea tured. A creati vc mass design
(Barn Raising) is a large grouping
of lots of plant material in a creative conta1n er to form a large
closed Silhouette. Open spaces will
create a mass effec t, and the design
will be a large m:ss enclosed with-

and an unusual container or no con- of plant materials and other anicles
tainer at all . Plant material is used by which a story can be told, more
in an unnatural fonn , such as a root by the obJe cts than the flower
as lin e material and not a root. arrangement. Objects must be true
PO MEROY - The two flower
Thin gs can be a freak of nature . to size (not miniatures) and funcshows at the Me1gs County Fair to
curled by wind or water, disease or tional . The objects are more imporbe staged Monday and Thursday in
spray ing, enlarged o r stunted by tant than the flower arrangement. A
the sen ior fair bui fd ing wi ll high- in a free- fonn area.
nature. They can be altered by clip- still life is usually staged on a base
lig ht Meigs Co unt y's 175 th
Group small fl owers to make pin g, cutting, stripping, be nd ing, with objects, flowers, fruit or vegAnnive rsary.
large areas of co lor. Large leaves folding or painting of dried materi - etables etc. placed in groupings to
So Je t's d1g out ou r anu ques or Oowers could be used m another al.
tcII a story.
an d make th e an n1 vcrsa ry co me area. There may be more than one
Unu sual placing, upside down ,
A Sat ellite Design (Doubl e
alive.
The firs t show focal area and more than one point sideways, hanging or moving. To Wedding Ring) is a design with a
will fea tu re th ings our anceswrs of emerge nce. The des ign is not abstract is to change from the natu- smaller design of the same color,
di d in the ou t-of-doors. The second abstract.
ral to a new line, shape or form . form or texture , placed nea r it s
show wi ll fea ture thmgs which arc
Abstr ac t des igns (Outd oo r The eye should dart from one area base, having a connective line that
done around the home.
Plumbin g) are des igns with no · to another in the design.
beco mes a vital part of the wh ole
Some sr cc ia l des igns will be foc al points, no radial placement
A Still Life Design is a grouping · des ign. The arrangement should he

in a tall container with the plant
material rising from the top. A connective line of plant or man-made
material rn ust be placed in or near
the top and extend down in a Curving line to the small des ign. The
sam e material should be used m
both parts. It has been said that you
could compare the des ign to th e
moon with a small pi ece broken
off.
The entire show should take vou
back 175 years to wagon wheels,
flatboats, outdoor toil ets, Ind ian s
and little red school houses. Reli gious interpretations arc a fa vorite
of the public. Ma ss des igns and
flow ers and fmits and v e ~ela bl es

()hiH

are typical of the county frur. Can di es, baskets, wood and horse
shoes lake us back in time.
Juniors are a 'big part of our fair
and they will tell us about pitching
horse shoes, jumping rope , school
days and their morning prayers .
Two new vari eties of annual s
will be featured. An yone grow ing
(Lady Lavender) or Sunrise or Sun set sunnowcrs are being urged to
enter them .
Shade Valley Club will have a
display of handmade rock contain ers on display. These were made of
sand, concrete and peat moss by
th e club and pl anted with plants
suitabl e for Ute size of the con tain -

Lotterv
L

Pick 3:
991
Pick 4:
8129
Buckeye 5:

PageS

2-7-11 -32-36

Low tonight in 60o,;, clear.
T uesd ::~y,

partl y doudy, h i~ h in
the m id 80s.

•

ent1ne

ers.

Singaporean author 200 take part in car show; winners announced
calls U. S. teen's
punishment 'torture'
SING APO RE (AP ) - The home in Kettering, Ohio, on June
author or a new book on the flog- 22 after spendin g 83 days in jail.
gin g of Ohi o tee n Mi chael Fay He maintains hi s innocence.
likencs Si ngapore's caning Jaw to
Abo ut I ,000 people are caned
"state-sponsored torture."
each year in Singapore. In addition
'' The book is very much my bit to vandalism, lashing is mandatory
towards the abolition of th1s law," for such crim es as robb ery,
Gopal Bhara uun told a news con - attempted murder and rape.
ference today.
Women, men over 50 and those
" The Caning of Michael Fay" sentenced a:&gt; death are exempt from
is unusually bold in criticizing Ute flogging.
auth oritarian government for curbBharatam , a well-known neurolllg civil libenies. It hit the stands surg eon and fi ction writer, said
Saturday along with anoUter book even the caners he interviewed for
on the Fay affair by Asad Latif, a his book told him they opposed !he
JOUrnalist with the state-controlled punishment.
Straits Times newspaper.
" It IS state-sponsored tonure,"
Latif' s book, " The Flogging of he said.
Singapore: The Michael Fay
His book note~ that the caning
Affair, " chronicles how Singapore Jaw was expanded to include vanresisted pressure from !he United dalism in 1966 as a way of controlStates , which condemned Fay's ling left-wing opposition panics
caning.
who campaigned by writing antiFay, 19, received four strokes government slogans on public
with a rattan cane on May 5 for walls.
allegedly vandalizing cars. He was
The People's Action Party has
originally sentenced to si x lashes ruled Singapore for 29 years. The
but !he sentence was reduced after years have brought economic prosPresident Clinton appealed to the perity, but often at the price of civil
Singapore government.
rights abuses, Bharatam said.
Fay returned to hi s father' s

Ohio prepares for
new area codes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - As
if Ohio ' s four area codes aren't
enough, more could be on the way .
The 216 area code in northeastem Ohio and the 513 area code in
the southwestern part of the state
are becoming overloaded because
of fax machines, cellular phones
and computers.
The 216 area, which includes
Cleveland, is expected to reach its
capacity by 1998. It likely will be
followed in 2002 by the 513 area,
which includes Dayton and Cincinnati.
An area code hits capacity at 7.8
million telephone numbers.
The prediction is made by Bellcore, a Livingston, N.J., organization established in 1983 to administer the 4 7-year-old North American
Numbering Plan.
The problem is that there are no
new area codes, said Bellcore
spokesman Ken Branson. They
used up alI 144 mathematical possibilities envisioned in 1947 when
the numbering plan was created.
All existing area codes have
either a I or a 0 as the middle number. But the last number of that vintage, 610, was given to the
Philadelphia area in January.
Bellcore, which works with
I ,600 telephone companies in the
United States, Canada, Bermuda
and 15 Caribbean countries, has
come up with 640 area codes utilizing middle numbers ranging from 2
to 9.

Branson said he cannot predict
what the new Ohio area codes will
be or exactly when they will be put
in place.
Ameritech Ohio, fonnerly O.hio
Bell, first signaled a logjam in telephone numbers in May when it
announced that as of Oct. I, callers
in the 216 area wiU have to use !he
· area code first when dialing longdistance numbers within the area.
Callers currently can dial I and the
number.
Long-distance calls within the
other three area codes will have to
include the area code beginning
Jan. I.
Ameritech spokesman David
Kandel said the company has more
than 3.5 million access lines in
Ohio - 270,000 or 8 percent more
than four years ago. That does not
include the boom in cellular
phones.
"It's certainly an indication of
the explosion of telecommunica. lions, such as fax machines, cellular telephones and computers,"
Kandel said. "That trend is going
to continue, probably at a greater
clip."
Bellcore has assigned six of !he
new area codes to take effect next
year and in 1996. They are: 630 in
Chicago, 334 in Alabama, 360 in
Washington (except Seattle), 520
in Ariwna (except Phoenix), 540 in
Virginia and 562 in southern California.

Names in the news
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - David
Cassidy's autobiography is sparking a Partridge Family feud .
Cassidy, who played heartthrob
Keith on the ' 70s TV show,
explains why he didn't pursue costar Susan Dey: " She lacked the
slutty aspec t of a fema le that I
always found so attractiv e," he
says in "C'mon Get Happy."
Dey didn't.
"I found it to be a tremendous,
terrible violation. And tacky. Real
tacky, " Dey says in the Aug. 20
JSsue of TV Guide. "My ftrst reac tion was, 'That poor, desperate
soul,' because I was asked to write
a book like that years ago and I
said, 'No, that's not what I .;.ant to
do." '
Dey said Cassidy's book won't
affect their relationship. "There is
no relationship."
MYRTLE BEACH, S C. (AP)
Billy "Crash" Craddock
blames poor publicity for wreclcing
a steady gig at the Myrtle Beach
Opry.

Opry co-owner Jack Gregory
says it's Craddock's fault for never
selling out a single show during
almost a dozen performances in
May.
"We made a major blunder
bringing in an anist who hasn't had
a hit in 20 years," Gregory said.
"He's a has-been that did not
draw."

Craddock's career peaked in the
1970s with a string of hits that
included "Knock Three Times,"
"Ruby Baby" and "Easy As Pie."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Alan Jackson might just have found
a cure for the summertime blues.
He's expecled to receive multiple nominations from the Country
Music Association Tuesday,
including single of the year for
"Summenime Blues."
Other possibilities: entertainer
of the year, best male vocalist and
album of the year for • 'Who I
Am.''
"Ev~body kept telling me last
year, 'Tins is your year,' so maybe
this is my year," Jackson said.
"But I'm always happy to be a pan
of them, and not sad if !lose ... I've
learned to swallow any way it

"If Billy Gnaham came to Myrtle Beach and no one knew about it
people wouldn't come to see him •;
said Craddock, who is suing the
opry's owners for canceling 103 of
his shows, which were scheduled to . comes.''
~
run through October. He's seeking,
The awards will be broadcast
$120,000 plus punitive damages.
Oct. 5 on CBS.

•

Ex actly 200 automobiles were
on display Satunday at the Gallipoli s parkront for the annual old car
show spon sored by the Gallipoli s
Ole Car Club Inc., and the Gallipoli s Retail Merchants Assocmtion.
Ole Car Club show offi cials said
185 cars were entered for judging,
while an additional 15 were shown
by members of the local club.
Award winners were:
Trophy winners
Antique Cars, Non -Ford, Open
and Closed Through 192 9 Harold Gremer, 1928 Reo, fir st;
Julian Hensley , 1929 Franklin, second.
Model T Ford, Open and Closed
Through 1927 - None entered.
Mod el A Ford, Op en and
Closed, 1928-31 - Rick Akers,
1930 Ford, ftrst.
All Classic, CCA or AACA
Through 1948 - Peggy VanCuren,
1933 Auburn, first
Production, Open and Closed
1930-36 - James Burdette, 1932
PI ymouth, first; Keith and Madeline Stanean, 1932 Ford, second.
Production, Open and Closed
1937-42 - Ken Dean , 1941
Chevrolet, first; Curt and Irene
Fouse, 1942 Chevrolet, second.
All Orphans, 1945 -up Howard Castle, 1953 Packard, ftrst;
Mack Scaggs, 1952 Hudson, sec ond.
All Foreign Through 1978 None entered.
Production, Open and Closed
1946-51 - Oscar Bragg , 194 7
Buick, first ; Tom Morgan, I 950
Pontiac, second.
Chevrolet, Open and Closed

1952-57 - Le on Shafer. 1956
Chevrolet, first; Denver Jobe, 1954
Chevrolet, second.
Production , Open and Clo sed
1952-57 - Darrell Massie, 1954
Oldsmobile, first; Hubert Castle,
1956 Mercury, second.
Musc le Cars Through 1978 Doug Ford, I%7 Shelby, ftrst; Bob
Jarrell , I968 Chevrolet, second.
Camaros and Firebirds Through
19 78 - Karen Tillis, 1969
Camara, first; Jim Blazer, 1967
Camara, second.
Mustangs Throu gh 1978 John Kirby, 1967 Mustang, first;
Wayne and Carolyn Jackson, 1966
Mustang , and Lowell Carrico, 1969
Mustang, tic for second.
Corv ettes Through 1978 Wanda Cross, 1967 Corvette, ftrst;
Roger Trusty, 1974 Corvette, scc·
ond.
Thunderbirds Through 1978 Leo Davis, 1957 Thunderbird, ftrs~
Lucille Bums, 1961 Thunderbird,
and Pat Akers, 1956 Thunderbird,
tie for second.
Convertibles 1958-78 - Gary
Tillis, 1961 Chevrolet, and Russell
Huffman, 1972 Oldsmobile, tie for
first; Lee Boyce, 1970 CheveUe.
All Production 1958 -6 I Randy Spahn, 1958 Ford, first;
Jack Vance, 1959 Rambler, second.
All Production I%2-66 - Bob
Lightle, 1962 Impala. and Don
Ringwald, 1965 Caprice, lie for
first; Gale Blattner, 1964 Falcon,
and Mike and Donna Moore, 1965
Falcon, tic for second.
All Produ ction 1967-71 Bobby B. Smtth, 1970 Monte
Carlo, fir st; Ralph Fultz, 1971

Cadillac, second .
All Production 1972-78 - Dave
Allen , 1972 Cougar, fir st; Ro y
Meredith , 1972 Oldsmobile, se cond.
Utility Through 1956 - Dal e
Hamilton, 1951 Ford, ftrst; ).l urlile
Oil Co., 1939 Chevrolet, second.
Utilit y 1957-78 - Dick and
Jackie Cayot, 1967 International,
ftrst; John Shafer, 1973 Chevrolet.
Bikes/Sc ooters/Motorc yc les
Through 1978 - Rick Akers, 1958
Cushman , fir st; Pat Akers, 1948
Cushman, second.
Lead Sled - Gaylen Cisco,
1950 Mercury, first; Tom Nelson,
1954 Ford, second.
Street Rod Coupe - Bob and
Bonnie Miller, 1934 Ford, first.
Street Rod Sedan - Gaylcn
Cisco, 1933 Cadillac, first; Angela
Payne, 1948 Lincoln, second.
Street Rod Open - Mike and
Marie Johnson, 1931 Ford, first;
Raleigh Robinson, 1923 Ford,
Mike Lcgg , 1932 Ford, Keith Powers, 1934 Ford, and Pat Powers,
1932 Ford, all tied for second.
Street Rod Commercial Linda Aliff, 1929 Ford, first; Bill
Holcomb, 1930 Ford, second.
Street Machines Top 10 ~
Ro£er Stover, 1952 Chevrolet; Jim
Payne, 1955 Chevrolet; Mark and
Becky Robinette, 1972 Chevrolet;
Leon Aliff, 1955 Chevrolet; Tim
and Su5an Wilson, 1972 Chevrolet:
Gene Cherry, 1966 Dodge; Teresa
Gleason, 1969 Corvette; Rick Holley, 1969 Chevrolet; Gary and
Linda Hoover, I 950 Chevrolet;
Zeke Cofer, 1986 Chevrolet.
Mini-Trucks and Two-Wheel

Vol. 45, NO. 73
Copyrl~ht 1994

Drives - Oscar Hill , I99 I GMC ,
fir st; Ri chard Chil de rs, 198 9
Chevrolet, second.
Four -Wh ee l Drive - Ancil
Cross, I 977 Chevrolet 4x4, flfSt;
Brian Hill , 1979 Ford 4x4, second.
Competition - Tim and Diane
Julian , 1967 Chevrolet, first.
All Production 1979-K6 Terry Ross , 1984 Chevrolet, ftrst;
Jeffrey Leming, 1984 Chevrolet,
second.
All Production 1987-94 - Jerry
and Dec Fran z, 1992 Chevrolet,
llrst; Ray Redman, 1989 Che..rolet,
second .
All Tractors Through 1947 None entered .
All Tractors 1948-64 - Cross
&amp; Sons Farm Equtpment, 1952
Ford, first; Henry Myers , 195 I
Oliver, second.
Mod el Car - Scott MacClinchy, 1967 AMC, first; Eddie
Barnette, 1994 Chevrolet, second.
Pedal Cars - Gene Moore,
1961 Pedalcar, ftrsl
Special awards
Merchants Choice - Tom and
Evelyn Shea, 1955 Studebalcer.
Jud~ e s Choice (Antiques
Through 197!!) - Burlile Oil Co.,
1939 Chevrolet.
Judges Choice (Modified, nonstock) - Mike and Marie Johnson,
1931 Ford.
Judg es Choice (showroom
stock) - Terry Ross, 1984
Chevrolet.
Judges Choice (Antique Tractors) - Cross &amp; Sons Famn Equipment, 1952 Ford.
Car Club Most Represented Lancaster Old Car Club.

REDA names executive director

director.
"And , we think we have the per. son to do the job," Jackson County
businessman Jim Kessinger said of
vet eran economi c planner R.V.
"Buddy" Graham.
lly LARRY EWING
Graham, formerly vice prcs1dent
OVP Managing Editor
of boU1the Huntington Area Devcl·
RIO GRANDE - "All REDA opmcnt Council and th e Hunting wants to do is stimulate everyone ton Regional Chamber or Com to pull in the same direction ," the merce, will formally assume the
pres ident of the Regional Econom- po sition as REDA 's exe cuti ve
ic Development Association said director on Sept I .
Monday at the University of Rio
Announcement of the appoint ·
Grande in announcing the employ- mcnt carne during a public meeting
ment of the group's ftrst executive d csi~ned to outline the organiza.

Development
veteran to aid
counties' efforts

But it wasn 't aU peace and love
in this instant city of 350,000.
Some who bought the $135 tickets never got in, stranded in parking
lots miles from the site when shuttle bus service unraveled. As many
as 150,000 people gol in free as
security slackened.
Others fled bad vibes.
Gail Tosh, 26, of Baltimore
arrived Saturday morning and left
just a few hours later without seeing any of the bands.
"It's violent, it's scary," she
said by telephone from her mother's house in Syracuse. ·'There
were no signs telling you where to
go and what to do . People are

falling down on the ground, and
people are closing in on top of
them. There was no form of crowd
conlrol. And it was a nasty crowd,
not a nice crowd. ' '
Finally, Woodstock '94 was
about the music. Counting the allnight dance raves and small bands
that played till dawn, it was essentially non-stop rock 'n ' roll for
almost 72 hour.&gt;.
Most of the 40-odd acts put on
memorable shows, from Joe Cocker's reprise of his classic performance at the 1969 Woodstock to
Salt 'n ' Pepa's slinky stage histrionics.
Peter Gabriel closed lhe show

early today with "Biko," his trib·
ute to the martyred South African
activist, Stephen Biko.
With people ankle-deep in mud
and awash in a kaleidoscope of tiedye, !his Woodstock resembled the
original on Max Yasgur' s farm in
Bethel, 55 miles southwest. But
there were obvious differences .
"It's Yuppie Woodstock. It's
high tech," said Rob Meager of
Baltimore, who won four tickets to
the festival from a radio station. "I
used a cellular phone this morning
to call my mom and tell her I was
fine."

PEDAL! -That's the secret ror success in the weeklong kiddie
tractor pull event. Here, Jacob Hunter or Racine gives the pint·
sized International Harvester his best shot. The kiddie tractor pull
will be held each day at 4 p.m., with the exception or Friday, when
the pull will be held at noon. The event culminates Saturday at 4
p.m .

Foreign nannies a nightmare for some families
CLEVELAND (AP) - Fearing
for their safety, Ben Wolozin and
Daniclle Murstein locked themselves and their two young daughters in a bedroom each night for
two weeks.
The Columbia, Md., couple was
afraid of their Austrian nanny.
The nanny became enraged
when the couple complained about
her frequent tantrums, inattention
and jealousy of the children, they
said.
Nightmare stories of child
abuse, emotional trauma and theft
plague programs that pair foreign
nannies with American families ,
The Plain Dealer reported Sunday.
Since 1986, American families
have hired more than 40,000 au
pairs to provide up to 45 hours a
week of live-in child care for up to
a year.
Au pair is French for "on par
with," meaning that au pairs are

treated as family members while
receiving room and board for help
around the house.
The number of matches that do
not work are not available because
the U.S. Information Agency,
which is responsible for monitoring
the programs, does not require
problems to be documented , the
newspaper reported.
The eight au pair sponsoring
organizations say their failure rates
arc small. They also cite the many
au pairs and American families
who have developed warm, longlasting friendships.
However, The Plain Dealer documented hundreds of host
family/au pair problems.
- In the Cleveland suburb of
Shaker Heights, Ann and Steven
Sords asked their English au pair to
leave in 1990 after she bounced
$2,000 in checks.
- In July 1993, Stefan Kahl,

26, a German au pair sponsored by
Au Pair in America, was deported
after he was convicted in Mas-

304·773-5333
Dr. Danny &amp; Kim Westmoreland

The Meigs County Board of
Education approved bus driver certificates for the upcoming school
year at its recent meeting Thursday.
Bus drivers approved were, by
district:
Eastern Local Elnora
Bernard, Flossie Dill, Gary Dill,
Glenn Easterling, Darlene Reed,
Carolyn Ritchie, Nita Jean Ritchie,
Archie Rose, Ron Thompson,
Robert White, Keitha Whitlatch,
George A. Wolfe and Edward
Holter;
Meigs Loca1 - Esther Black,

Debra Burns, Teresa Cremeans,
Evelyn Hobbs, Juanita Lambert,
Emily Faye Manley, Ida Martin,
Carrie Morris, Linda Morris,
Steven Morris, Donna Stacy.
Delores Surface, James Vanaman,
Charles Williamson, Ronnie Wood,
Wanda Jean Wood, Lois Wyant
and William Capehart;
Southern Local - Bobby Dudding, Wendell Ervin, Julian Scott
Hill, Roger Hill, Charles Lawrence,
James O'Brien, Don Smith, Larry
Smith and Faith Varney;
Carleton - Jerry Holley, Kath-

Ronna Reeves
Wednesday 8:00 p.m.

Moto Cross Racing
Tonight 7:00pm

Tuesday, August 16

Monday, August 15
4:00p.m.
Kiddie Trator PuU - Show Arena
5:00p.m.
Hillside SThge- God's Kidz
6:00p.m.
King and Queen Crowning - Hill Stage
7:00p.m.
Moto-Cross
12:00 Midnight Gates Close

4:00p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
I2:00 Midnight

Kiddie Trator Pull - Show ~na
Junior Fair Board Auction
Junior Fair Stea- Sbow An:na
Hill Stage- Joy
Hill Stage- River Valley Boys
Grandstand- Demolition Deri&gt;y
Gates Close

9:00a.m.
10:00 a.m.
II :00 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:00 noon
12:30 p.m.
2:00p.m.
4:00p.m.
4:,30 p.m.
5:00p.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
8:00p.m.
9:00p.m.
12:00 Midnight

Junior Fair Goar Show- Show Arena
Drart Horse Contest- Inf.eld
DazzlingDolll- Hill Stage
4-H Rower Sbow- Jwlior Pair Building
Guys and Gall Sheep Lead Clw- Sbow Arena
Hameu Racing
4-H Style Revue- Hill Stage
Kiddie Tractor Pull- Sbow Arena
Utdc MilS and Miller Contest- Hill Sta1JC
Kiddie Garnes- Show Arena
Junior Fair Swine Show- Show Arena
Open Clus Horse Show
Ronna Reeves- Grandstand
Hone Pull
Hill Stas•- Midoi&amp;bt Clogcers
Gatea Close

Wednesday, August 17

Tuesday, August 16
Junior Fait Rabbit Sbow- Sbow Arena
Open Oass Beef Show followed by Junior Fait Beef
Breeding • Show Arena
2:00p.m.
Out of tbc Blue- Hill Slage
4:00p.m.
Kidie Tractor PuU • Sbow Arena
5:00p.m.
Junior Fait Board Auctioo
6:00p.m.
Junior Fair Steer- Sbow Arena
6:00p.m.
Hill Stage- Joy
7:00p.m.
HiU Stage· River Valley Boys
7:00p.m.
Grandstand- Demolition Derby
12:00 Midnight Gates Close

industry and JObs.
REDA was fanned last September when a coalition of nearly two
dozen business and industrial leader;; from throughout southern Ohio
and northwes tern West Vir gini a
organized to form an assoc iati on

devoted to the expan sion of ec onomic development in the region .
Th e formal org anization of the
association (REDA) came foll owing a series of mee tings at the uni versity designed to explore the feasibility of promoting the area on a
regional basis.
"The bottom line of our success

... the questi on that should be used
in judgin g our effort s is. ' How
many JObs ca n we br ing to the
area?'," Graham said Monday.
" RE DA is trul y uniq 11c," he
sa id. "I t' s the onl y such gro up I
know of that crosses state borders
... and , that arrange ment o ffers
uni que opporttlllJttCI\."

"Th iS rc g i n ~~&lt;~l cffon will succeed beca use of th e dcd1cati on, ~1 c
vision , and Ute hard work by a solid
team of com muni ty, education and
business leaders," Graham added.
"They arc not onl y be hind thi s nro(Conlinued un Pa~e 3)

R.V. 'IIUDDY'

COLUMBUS
(AP)
Youngstown, East Cleveland and
Lorain will receive the most money
set aside by state lawmakers to help
equalize per-pupil spending.
The State Controlling Board on
Monday approved an Ohio Departmcnt of Education request to distribute $75 million among 269 or 44 percent - of the staLe's 612
sc hool di stri cts.
The Con1rolling Board approved
the request 7-0.
Amounts ranged from $302 in
the Pa1rick Henry district of Henry
County to $3,030,512 in
Youngstown.
East Cleveland of Cuyahoga
County will receive the secondlargest amount, at $2,985,422, followed by Lorain of Lorain County .
at $1 ,593,166.
Other districts to receive more
than $1 million include:
• Canton, Stark County,
$1 ,404 ,251.
• Marion, Marion County ,
$1 ,374,703.
• Springfield, Clark County ,
$1,2 73,288.
• Lima, Allen County,
$1 ,242,234.
• East Liverpool, Columbiana,
$1,238,059.
• Western Brown, Brown County,$1,040,038.
State law requires the department to distribute the equity money
in August. Districts can use it
toward repairing or renovating old
buildings, new construction, textbook or equipment purchases, personnel costs or however they see

GRAtiA~ l

fit.
The amounts are determined
through a formula that tak es into
accoun t the worth of a di strict's
ta xable real estate and its student
enrollment.
State money for schools comes
from income, sales and other taxes.
Local districts produce most of
their revenue through real estate
taxes.
Inequalities occur because some
districts have more valuable property than others. and identical tax
rates generate different amounts of
money. Disparities among diStriCts
were behind a lawsuit that more
than 500 school districts filed in
Perry County to change the state' s
current school-funding system.
Common Pleas Judge Linton D.
Lewis Jr. ruled July I that the system was unconstitutional. Attorney
General Lee Fisl1cr filed a notice of
appeal Friday in New Lexington.
The Ohio Public Expenditure
Council, a nonpartisan tax study
group, said in its August newsletter
that per-pupil spending among
Ohio schools in the 1992-93 school
year ranged from $3,478 in Botkins
to $12,870 in Cuyahoga Heights.
The statewide average was $5,030.

ROYALTY NAMED - Christopher Harnm of flarinr, ri~ht ,
and Michele Guess of Tuppers Plains, center, were named Mei~.s
Junior Fair King and Queen in ceremonies held Monda)' nigl1l al
the l31st Meigs County Fair. First runner-up was K!'lle)' Jean
Grueser or Pomeroy, left. Michele, a 4-H member, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Guess. Christopher is the scm nf Mr. :md
Mrs. Torn Hamm and a Racine-Southern FFA member, and Kelley is the daughter of Danny and Debbie Grueser :md a 4-H mem ber.

day at the Meigs County Fair-...
/
f

Board approves driver certificates

Meigs County Fair

at 224 E. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio will be dosing. We
apologize for the Inconvenience to our patients. We have
found It Impractical to conUnue maintaining the Pomeroy
office due to harassments by a few local Individuals. We
will conUnue providing full service at the Mason, wv. office.
I also at this lime want to thank the persons who have so
aggressively rebuked the terr1ble and untrue statements
regarolng my practice, my. wife's selling of her phannacy
corporation to Rite-aid and the like. Again terribly untrue
and cn~el. We will look forward to the close relatlor)shlp as
always with our friends and patients. And again we
apologize for the Inconveniences.
All medical i'ecords will be forwarded to our Mason, wv.
office, located at
Westmoreland Family Care Center
Rt 1, Box 44-B
Mason, WV 25260

sachusetts of a felony count of sexually abusing his host parents' 8year-old son.

•

As of September 1, 1994 the Pomeroy Health Care located

lion' s goals, explain the need for
employin g a REDA director and
describe the Center for Economic
Development at Rio Grande.
The meeting was also driven by
the group's need to seck public and
private support from governm ent
and business throughout the region.
Kess inger stressed that the role
of REDA 's executiv e director
would be to "supplement, not
replace" development efforts in Ute
individua l counties. Graham will
work out of the Rio Grande center
to coordinate, supplement and
as sist regional efforts to attract

State controllers OK
equalization funding

Curtain falls on Woodstock's next generation
SAUGERTJJ:S, N Y (AP) Its energy spent. Lhc Wood stock
Nation of 1994 lumbered home
today from the sloppy festival
grounds like a column of walking
dead.
They died smiling.
For all the rain and mud , the
fi lthy toilets and lack of showers,
the delays and organizational
foulups, there were few regrets.
Tired, wet and hungry, people left
in a son of grwnbling bliss.
"It's been awesome. This is
going to go down in history," said
Joe Walsh of Richfield, Conn. ''I'll
remember it - how long will I
remember it? Forever, I guess."

1 Section, 12 Pageo 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. N-apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 16, 1994

8:00a.m.
I:OOp.m.

.I

See You At The
1994 Meigs County Fair

teen Morris and Patricia ?ape.
. In other business, the board
h1red Farah Jalali as a school psychologrst and Chen Bauman and
Frances Shrimplin as mulri-handicapped teacher and aide, respectively. In addition, Mary E. Roush
was accepted as a substitute teacher
for the ABLE program.
Present were board members
Raben Barton, Howard Caldwell,
Jeffrey Hams, 1.0. McCoy and
Jeanette _Thomas and Treasurer
Carole Gtlkey.

RepO(ted shock
injures area boy
Thaddeus Bumgardner, II, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bumgardner, was treated in the emergency
room at Veterans Memorial Hospital Monday evening after being
taken there by the Tuppers Plains
EMS unit from the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The youngster was kept at the
hospital for a couple of hours so
that he could be moni10red because
of prior heart problems.
He reportedly was shocked
while getting onto a ride. The ride
was shut down and an inspection
by !he Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
electrician found a minor electrical
problem which was immediately
corrected.
•
Monday, three ride inspectors
from the Ohio Department of Agri culture had inStJCI:ted the rides and
found everythmg in good condition.
"As can happen to any equipment; things can ha!IPCn," said Dan
Smith, fair board president, said.
"Bates is known for having safe
rides, they even have their own
electrician," said Smith.

The first day. or the Meigs
County Fair Monday saw the
Rock Springs rairgrounds
turn into a mini-city of aclivi·
ty. The miniature roller coaster was whirring aU day at the
rair (above). Weather cooperated and stayed cool through·
out the day. The ride was one
or several that include swings,
go-carts and carousels. Meanwhile, it was a little more hectic as Racine's Stacy Wilson,
12, chased a lamb around the
midway for about five minutes
(at right). The pesky lamb,
owned by Wilson's sister, had
jumped clear over a three·
root-high gate. To ensure the
animal did not go for another
joy jog, rair officials put a
wooden gate over tbe top of
the lamb's cage. (Sentinel pho·
tos by George Abate)

~ -

•'

•

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