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·Page-12-Tiie Dally Sentinel

· ~A

Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

.

.

Thursday, July 1s; 1993

supplemental security -Names
in the news,
income (SSI) ''primer" .

B)' Ed Petenon
for you and/or· anr of your depenSodal Security maaager in
dents and any S.ocial Security numAtheas
ber(s) on which you and/or your
·
dependents receive (or received)
If you are 6S· 0r older, or blind: Social Security checks; proof of
or have a disability and don't have age; a birth certificate or b!!pli$!!131
a lot of income or own much, you record; income and resources; payshould know about SSI. Slippie- roll slips, bank books, insurance
mental Security Income (SSI) can policies, car registration, burial
provide money to help you meet fund records and other information
your needs. This program, adminis- ·about y"our' income and as~ets;
tere4 .bY ~he Social Security . mortgage papers or lease and landAdmmlstrauon, also pays benefits lord's ·name or other mfonnation
to chjldren who have se~ous J?~ysi- about !.he residence. in which you
cal, mental •. o~ sensory disab11iues.
live; impairment and treatment for
To l1e ehg1ble for SSI, you must a disability· any medical reports in
eilher be 65 or ~Ide~•. have a physi- types of tr'eatments or tests, and
cal or mental d,IS8blhty.lhat keeps dates of medical visits; a descripyou from worlcing an.d ts expected lion of what the,impairment is,
to last at least a year or to result in when it staned how it keeps you .
death; or be !~tally blind or have from working ~nd how it affects
very poor eyeSJghL
your daily activities; name, address
Whether you can get SSI also (including zip code), and pho~e
depends on ho~ much you own numbers of all doctors, hospitals,
and how much mcome you have. or other medical facilities where
(Income is the money you have you have been trCated or tested;
cominj! in such as wages, S,ocial and patient numbers for hospital or
Secunty checks, and pens10ns. clinic accounts, claims numbers
Income also
from Medicaid, Department of Vetincludes the value of non-cash erans Affairs, or any other agencies
Hems you rece1ve !lOch as food, where care was received--or has
clothing, or shelter.) The income been applied for- disability or
limii:S vary depen4ing o~ several other benefits.
factors, so check w1th Soc~ ~ecuDon't put off filing your claim
nty to find out 1f you qual1fy · The even if you don't have all of this
value of !.he thmgs you own cannot information. (Parents or guardians
excee(l $2,000- or $3,000 If should apply for children under age
you're married. We don't count tile 18.) Social Security staff will assist
value of your home and usually we you in obtaining necessary inferdon't count your car.
·
.
mation. You may qualify for SSI
If you apply for SSI benefus, benefits even if you're receiving
, . you should bring the. followi~g Social Security benefits.
•
mformauon to tile social secunty
To learn more about the SSI
. office Social Security Number's) program contact your local Social

CONYERS, Ga. (AP) mother, six New York Post
Howard Rollins, a detective on reporters and otllers. lbe Post artiCBS' "In the Heat of lhe Night," cles attributed the information
says his n:al-life run-ins with the mostly to police and unidentified
law have made him a better actor.
sources. The lawsuit seeks unspeciHe spent about .a monlh in jail fied damages:
for drivmg under the inflUence and
Trump called the lawsuit ridicureckless driving. He was released lous and said Jones is "just trying
June 16.
to get a few buck$."
·
He told the Rotary Club on
"Chuck needs some. serious
Wednesday he used drugs and psychological help,'' Trump said.
alcohol "to level out the highs and
Neilher Maples nor the newspalows" in his life.
per was named as a defendant.
"I nqw have found other ways
to try to make
situation worlc,"
he said. "I don t regret anything
NEW YORK (AP) - Glenn
I've done in my life because
Close
spent some time at a New
they've brought me here and I've
York
tabloid
to prepare for her
become a better actor based on
upcoming
l!lOVie
role as ... head of
those things."
a New York tabloid.
What'd she learn?
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Chuck
For
one
thing,
editors
who
Jones, Marla Maples' former publicist, has slapped Donald Trump decide what stories to run apparentwith a lawsuit accusing him of ly aren't much different from TV
helping feed the press with false producers.
"It's a little like 'Saturday_
stories about Jones stealing
Night
Live,"' said Close, . who
Maples' shoes, u~derwear, nude
studied
the Daily News. "You've
photos and diary.
Jones, 50, has been charged got a whole list ·of things, and some
with offenses including burglary make it, some don'L"
As~ed at a news conference
and possession of stolen property.
Trump was named in the lawsuit Wednesday to describe her characWednesday along with Maples' ter, managmg editor of the fictional
New York Sun, Close said she
WO\Jld be a "good newswoman.
Security office and request the You can't be the managing editor
booklet "SSI." If you have addi- of a newspaper without being
tional questions, or wish to make good."
an appointment to file a claim, conThe audience, filled with
tact your nearest Social Security reporters who knew . better,
office or call the Social Security groaned.
toll-free number, 1-800·712-1213,
Also set to star in "The Paper,"
business days between 7 a.m. and 7 directed by Ron Howard, are
p.m. The Athens Social Security Randy Quaid, Michael Keaton,
office is located at 221 1/2 N Roben Duvall, Marisa Tomei and
Columbus Rd. and phone number Catherine O'Hara.
is 592-4448.

.

4 Dr. oodan, whlll wired

t•othor

4 11o9f - · · V" onglne, lllctory
air cond., auto. trana.• PS, PB,
p-rwl-o, _,_~tr door locko, dll •-lng - • ·

.. . Int., front whttl drlvt, Y-1 eng.,
': ·. lllctory air cond., oulo. lr.-, PS,
,, ·-'· PI, PW, P. HI\ P. door locko, UH
:;]::~ ttMr.

wh••l, crulae contra!,
:· i AUIFM rodlo allroo tapo, lladlol

crula• control, AIIIFM radio

:: :· .: tire I, relr wlndaw defogger.

:; "&lt;

dolagger,

WAS$S5,000

NOW$26,995

COUGARS

1993 FORD
TAURUS

Fully loaded.

Fully loaded.

OR

$289 Down
$289 Mo:

... ;tJ.,}tJ.
"

37
per Ql.

L1m11 12

Mollll1
8ylthetlc

10W30

Motor Oil

1993 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
.' 2 Door, whlll wlbluo lnL,

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69

97
SIO Off

TIIIIICO Clrllttrelarl

PriCe good witl'l e,u:hange

90 m WARRANTY

I1103141

FilM

5~~~

::·:.

•

449

.... llllllb...
lll...
ll
Ev...,.diiV \.O'tlf P$1

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store Howe: 1!1:30 a.m. to a p.m. Monday through Friday,
8:30 1.m. to 7. p.m. S.turday, 1nd 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunctay

GALLIPOLIS

~

Prlcet

209 Upper River Road
446-3807
W.cfrMIICiay ,

21, 1tu.

1993 FORD
MUSTANG
CONVERTIBLE
2 Dr., f•ct. 11r c:ond., •ula. tr•na.,
PS, PB, PW, P. ooo~ P. door locko,
cruiH control, AMIFM etereo
llpe, only 11,000 miiH.

WAS S2d,OOO

.
.s
1992 Ford Ranger XLL_._____ 8,800
1992 ford F1 SO .•_..__.___.._,sl2,995
1992 Pontiac FirebirdAuto,•r....___,sa,99S
1991 Chevy Corsica Auto., air----s7, 99 S
1990 Ford Taurus Aulo.,loodod--·--55,49 s
1990 Geo PriZ11Auto,olr------s6,99$
1989 Dodge Pickup v.a.~u~o. ••.ooo ""·-56, 99 S
• 1-989 Pontiac Formula V-8, auto. Hopo __ 57995
1988 Olds CutlaSSAuto.,air....... _.. __,5649S
1988 Ford F150·-------~·-..S6,99S

SUSAN OUVER
· STATE REP. MARK MALONE
JACKIE ffiLI)EBRANPT
LEVY KICKOFF - The Meigs County
which would be geaerated l'rom thJ levy, serCouncll on Aging hosted a breakfast Thursday
vices at tbe Mel1s Senior Center sucb·as center
to officially announce the one mill levy wbicb
activities, congreJiale and home delivered meak,
wiD be placed on tbe ballot in November. Sever,chore·and home services, respite care,,case man·
al speakers expressed the need and support ror
agement and other supportive services would be
the levy which would cost lhe average tax panr
reduced or discontinued.
·
only rour cents a day. Without the support

Breakfast launches
MCCoA's levy campaign
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Starr
A breakfast was held Thursday
· morning at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center to officially
announce the Meigs County Council oo'Aging's (MCCoA) one mill
levy whieh will be placed on the
ballot in November.
Based on a home valued at
$40,000 this levy would 111ean four
cents a ·day for the average taxpayer. Information provided at the
breakfast stated that'the 8S plus age
group is the fasting growing population in the United States and the
65 plus population of Meigs County increased 13 percent during the
last decade. That information also
stated 20 percent of the county's
population is over !.he age of 60.
Susan Oliver, E~ecutive Director of the MCCaA, states the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center provided one or more services to 1,910
older adults in 1992.- There were

36,000 meals delivered to home- to be of service to his or her combound older adults. Senior Center munity.
velticles drove 134,000 miles and
Mrs. Oliver stated the center
18,000 hours of in-home assistance provides in-ho~e services w~i~h
was provided to frail older adults.
allows older reSidents to remam 10
Mrs. Oliver states the center their homes rather than being
does not have the local funds·nec- "Diaced-ilnostly nursing homes.
essarfto keep the current programs --Without thll' support of the levy
going. She says !.his is due to the ' these serviCes would suffer severe·
fact that it takes more money to ly.
·
operate a l'll(al agency lhan it does
Brian Reed, a member of the
an urban agency. More time is MCCoA's board of b'UStees, states
s~ent on the road deliverin$ ser- that everyone knows someone who
v1ces to the clients and this 1s not has rece1ved services through !.he
taken into consideration at the state agency such as center activities,
level where decisions regarding congregate meals, home delivered
funding are made.
meals or just companionship.
The main goals of the MCCoA
Reed stated "Without the
are: to identify the needs and spe- income that would be generated
cific interests of the aging; ·to gain through this levy, those servic~s
interest in and support for senior will be seriously threatened. It 1s
citizens residing in the county; and not an idle threat on the pan of the
to provide programs which will agency. It is the stark reality of a
assist older adults in maintaining world faced with budget cuts from
his or her dignity aqd self-respect government rill all levels. It is !.hat
and penn it individuals to conunue
Continued on page 3

The United States Department worked together and requested fed- great headway. Sen. Long and I do
not plan to stop now."
of Agricultlire, in a meeting Thurs• eral assistance.
Long added, "There is plenty
The USDA's repon now must
day, recommended that Meigs
County be designated as an agricul- be approved by the Secretary of left to do, but I am heartened by the
tural disaster area due to damage Agriculture and the crops must be quick response by the Extension
inflicted by hail stonns that swept harvested before low interest loans office, Sen. Glenn, Malone and the
will become available. Loans will USDA. I'm glad we're able to get
the Letan Falls area Sunday.
The Meigs County Agricultural be based ppon harvest acreage and the ball rolling in the right direction.''
Extension Services office investi- yield.
"I just hope the farmers don't
Regarding the recommendation,
gated the crop damage and found
extensive damage to the area's Malone said, "You can see what have to go through this again,"
tomato and bell pepper crops , type of quick response we can get Long added.
Sen. Glenn's offlCC has indicataccording to State Senator Jan if we just work to$ether. This issue
Michael Long (D-Circleville) and isn't over, but With the farmer's, . ed !.hat the Secretary of Agricul- .
State Representative Mark Malone !.he E~tension office's and Senator ture's Office will act on the report
(D-South Point). Area legislative John Glenn's and Long's efforts, as soon as they are able, given the
leaders and the e~tension office we have been able to make some recent flooding of agricultural land
in the Midwest

Fugitive was seeking driver's
license when recaptur~d ·
By The Associated Press
Aulhorities for !.he second time
captured the fugitive airman
accused of killing his estranged
wife at Myrtle Beach Au Force
Base.
Senior Airman Jeromy "J.J."
Willis, 23, formerly of Ironton,
Ohio, . was seeking a driver's
ll·cense and a new t'dentity in Fon
Worih, Texas, when authorities
caught onto him Wednesday night
Civilian aulhorities arrested him
on forgery charges about' 4 p.m.
Wednesday near the .Fort Worth
Public Safety Office.
·
had
ped fr
The amnan
esca
om a
Navy brig in early June. He was
fleeing from capital murder and
th e Jan. 4
other charges fil1ed after ..
shooting of Mary Ann W1llis, 30, at
the M nle Beach Air Force Base
I a! ~fi Sh had turned from
Re~od~ lfsiani ·to pr~ess abuse
charges against h1m.
'

Willis disappeared after th. e
d
shooting and was capture 10
Browcsville, Texas, 15 days later.
He escaped from th~ Char!~ston
Navy bng June 6 while awalhng a
court-martial. The Navy said Willis
was left alone in a televisio.n room
while a guard went on a Cigarette
break.
Willis was captured Wednesday
•
after he presented a dead person s
Louisiana birt~ certificate at a
T~xas,m~tor veh1cle office to ge~ a
driver. s license, ron Worlh pohce
LL ChffCook wd.
Sgt. G.W. Steele of the Fo.rt
Worth Police Department sa1d
. . .
ed fled the
Wl!hs,. who was unarm •
.
bu1ldmg on foot when a public
· ~
fficer tried to question him
sa ety 0 1 ..
•
about !.he birth certificate.
.
Officers caught h1m outs1de
after a struggle Steele said. One
suffered cuts and' scrapes but Willis
· · ed
was not IDJur ·

WilliS was taken to the Tarrant
County, Texas, jail, Steele said.
Military officials planned to
regain custody of Willis from civilian .authorities and transport him
back 10 the Charleston Naval brig,
said Petty Officer lst Class Jerry
Falanga, a Navy spokesman.
Agents from the Air Force's
Off' 0 f s · 11
· ·
ICe
pec•a nvesugauons
traveled to Dallas to talk to Willis,
said LL Tim MacGregor with Shaw
A'r Force Base in Sumter MacGre~r said he was unsure wheth&amp; the
~gents would take the airman back
South Carolina.
10
Th
· d
Sh
e case was move to aw
· because tile Myrtle Beach base has
closed since the shootin MacGre.d
A
g. . .
gor sa1 an ugus 1 pre 11m mary
hearing still was scheduled in
w·tr
.
1 IS case.
. .
Horry County,. S.C., Solicitor
Rbalph WfiWls~nll'sald he wtould dfeet I
etter 1 1 IS was re urne o
civilian authorities.

Doctors, unions .seek changes
in reform-budget package
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Spokesmen for Ohio's medical professions and a labor union requested changes in a workers' compensation budget-reform package that
stands in the way of the Legislalure's summer adjournment.
·
John E. VanDoorn of the Ohio
Stale 'Medical Association and
Robert Kopp, speakin$ for the
United Auto Workers umon, testified Thursday before a committee
· !.hat hopes to have a bill ready for a
vote Tuesday.
· However, union and employer
·representatives - asked earlier to

work out a compromise among
themselves - indicated little
progress in their talks behind the
scenes as the comminee adjourned
until Monday.
The Bureau of Workers' Compensation and Ohio Industrial
Commission, which play dual roles
in the administration of Ohio's
injured worker insurance program,
are operating on interim budgets
that e~pire Tuesday.
The Legislature recessed July I,
after winding up other business and
passing the state budget, to allow
the major players in the workers'

Local briefs----.

Bedford VFD benefit slated

A benefit for the Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Depanment
·Committee wiU be held Saturday from 2 to 8 p.m. at the Ohio Valley Christian Campgrounds (Old Bedford School) on Rocksprings
Road near Darwin.
•
Featured entertainers include Middlebranch Bluegrass, the Born
Ag~in Believers, Stony Creek and Out of the Blue. Olher events
include a car show, refreshments and bake sale.
Proceeds from the benefit will go toward establishing a volunteer
fire department for Bedford Township. A $2 donation is requested
with children 12 and. under admiued free if accompanied by an
adult.

.Levee breaks north~of St. Louis .
By Associated Press
· The Missouri River broke .
ihrough a levee today and converged wilh the Mississippi River

\
•

1 Section. 10 Pageo sa centa
A MuiUmoclalnc• .._paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 16, 1993

A woman charged with forgery faces sentenc~ng Tuesday at 9
a.m. after pleading guilty to the charge in the Me1gs C~nty Court ·
of Common Pleas. Rhonda Curtis faces a maximum poss1ble penalty of five years confmement, a $~.500 fine~ or bot!t·
·
In addition, a-Long Bottom man faces sentencmg August 23 at I
. p.m. after pleading guilty to a felony charge of receiving ~tolen
propeny. Brandon Shuler may face a maximum possible penalty of
18 monlhs confinement, a ~2.500 fine, or both.
Shuler is currently being held in the Meigs County Jail.

fiDII .

1•1
........

,,

,•· - .

·.
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Guilty pleas entered

1 - ~:~~•.......... ...

WEAI:CEPT
usm IlL

e cyl.

::i eng., lacL llr cond., •uto. tr•n•.,
locko, tilt
' ' · ·. PS, PI, PW, P. ;i 1\Hr., AMIFM r1dlo alereo tape,
: Rodlal
lroo,
roar window
. '; defro•ter.

,.

Low tonight In 60s, partly
cloudy.Saturday, blgb In mid80s.

'

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2-5-7-31-36

·Vol. 44, NO. 56
· Multlmocla Inc.

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Letart Falls.. farmers
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·-

op a. narro~ peninsula norlh of St.
L~u1s. Officials were sending in
m1htary trucks to rescue people
who had defied evacuation orders.
·r- ....

,. ..,.

compensation dispute more time to
negotiate.
Both houses are to reconvene
Tuesday.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce and others groups are pushing for reforms to cut costs of the
employer-financed program ~~ile
the umons want to protect e~tsbng
benefits.
Both sides say efficient measures are needed and they have
agreed on some, including healthcare cost containments that might ·
include managed care.
Under managed care, patients go
to s~ecified doctors . and other
prov1ders whose fees are negotiated. The concept is said to be a key
component of a national plan being
formulated by the Clinton administration.
VanDoorn, speaking only to the
Ohio workers' compensation issue,
asked !.he committee for legislation
to involve physicians, podiatrists
and chiropractors in the operation
of any managed care plan.

A CHANGED SCENE - II took only 18
months for Middleport Village to tear down tbe
old Betsy Ross buildings on the lol between Fifth
and Sixth Streets at Williama and Palmer and
construct eight new three-bedroom bomes ror
low-income families. Cost or the lot purchase
and demolition was taken care or with a
$150,000 grant from the Ohio Department or
Development. The homes were built by· Valley

Lumber and Supply using local contractors.
-They have all been sold and now all but one is
occupied. Cost to the village for the entire project was less than $25,000 with m"uch or lbat
amount being provided..in in-kind services
including village labor and supplies. The top
photo was taken 18 months ago. Picture below
was taken earlier this week. (Photos by Charlene Hoenich)

"We recognize that managed
care is coming," VanDoorn said. ·
He said the groups for whom he
was spealcing would like to include .
medical professionals on a
statewide panel that would make
cost-containment recommendations
to the bureau.
"The board could reject or
accept (the recomD¥ndations). The
thln¥ we are interested in" is
provider inpu~" he said.
Kopp recommended that the
commmee include a proposal that
would let the bureau's board of
directors negotiate fees directly
wilh all providers;·including hospitals.
He said the bureau could save
$30 million a year if allowed to
negotiate such fees.
---~·--··-- &gt;-

-- 'j.,_

�'

. Friday, July 18, 1993

·Commentary

S.tunllty, Jaly 17
Accu·Wea!her• forecut for

------------~--------------------------------r--------------~----------~--------------------~--------------------------------------------------

"

The Daily Sentinel

••

•

,,
-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS 011' 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

"'

.11AJMC4A.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

.,..
•

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LI)TI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhaD 300
words. All letters ""' subject to editing and must be signed with name, .
address and telephone number. No unsigned le~·will be published. Letters
should be In goo\1 taste, addressing issueo, not personalities.

:Expect some horse .trading
; on ·deficit-reduction bill
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON -By the book and by custom, the task of congressional negotiators is to compromise on old provisions rathe.- than wrile
new ones to settle differences between the House and Senate. There 'U be
some of both as the Democnus draft final terms of the budget bill.
They' ve got bargaining room, and they'U need it
The House-Senale conference committee on the budget and deficit
conb'Ol plan fU'St must bridge differing tax and spending provisions of the
biUs that bare! y gained majority voles to pass in the fir~ place.
And the conferees will need ample leeway to reshape the bill, particularly on an energy tax.
The White House has said repeatedly that President Clinton is committed to a broad-based energy tax as part of a pl$n to reduce defiCit spending
- which wiU continue nonetheless - by $500 billion over the next five

'
:
:
~

..

years.

•

' .
aboard the luxurious, but foreignflagged, Crown Monarch. The
Monarch holds more than SOO pas·
scngers and features such amemties

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

mediary between Dole and the
owner of the crUise liner, told us
that he dido 't think this law apP.lied
because Dole's guests were 'just
boarding the ship for the function '~
il)stead of taking a full cruise and
were not staying "in rooms. " But
Dole offered a "special overnight
package." In e)&lt;change for _a
$5,000 donation to his personal'
political action committee, Campaign America, a couple could stay
overnight in one of the ship's
deluxe suites.
Otherwise, the PAC charged
$1,500 a person for just cocktails,
dinner, Broadway-show entenainment and the chance to mingle with
Dole and other members of the
Republican leadership. Campaign
America collects contributions and
then distributes them to various
Republican ca11didates across the
country. It's a time-honored way of
winning friends and laying the
groundwork for perhaps another
Dole run for the White House in

as slot machines and whirlpools.
· But the Passenger Vessel Act
states that " no foreign vessel shall
transpon passengers between ports
or places in the United States,
either direcdy or by way of a foreign port." The fine is $200 per
passenger, and more than 250 people were invited.
The law specifies that the vessel
must be U.S.•flagged, U.S.-owned
and U .S.-buil!. The Crown
Mo_narch, meanwhile, is registered
in Panama, is owned by a Swedish.
Finnish company and was built in 1996.
For
Dole,
the
fund-raiser
does
Spain. .
.
Ed Didion, who was the inter- not cilme a moment 100 soon. The
Senale recently passed a campaign-

... REfbRTING LIVE FROM ToKYo. .
THE SITt OF Tlll5 YEAR~ ECoNoMIC
SUMMIT WIT~ THE G·7 LEADE~.

.

The administration proposed a tax based on the heat conlent of almost
all fuels and the House accepted that The Senate replaced it with a 4.3,. cent-a-gallon increase in the gasoline tax, which would raise just over ·
• one-third as much revenue. As an offset, the Senate voled for spending
cuts that angered liberal Democnus in the House.
''There are a lot of interacting parts to both of these packJ!ges and they .
have to be considered in total," Rep. Richard Gephardt, the House majority leader, said Wednesday after House Democrats met privalely to ta1Jc
about the budget bill. "You just can't take one piece out, ta1Jc about it and
make a decision on it, because it has an effect on five or six other things.''
:·· Democratic leaders say the two bills agree on .about 90 percent of
what's to be done, includipg defiCit curbs, spending limits and new taxes
: : on upper bracket taxpayers and on corporations.
The bills differ on the energy tax, and on other points, i~luding _social
~ spending, Medicare spending curbs, tax credits for the poor and develop, ment incentives for deJ?I'CSSCd city neighborhoods.
Conference commlltees work out final versions of virtually every
~ major bill Congress passes. On this one, the reconciliation bill dqling
' wilh both spending and taxes, the sheer numbers point to the complexity
of the taslc. There are 53 senators and more than 100 House members on
- the conference, allhough after today's opening briefings, the negotiations
will be handled by' small groups, not mass meetings. The number reflects
the programs the bill covers and the 26 legislative committees that deal
' ., with them all.
·
The tax negotiations are central, and the settlement there could include
a tax on electric utility bills and home heating oil, which isn't in the Sen... ale bill, thought hidden as pan of the "Btu tax" on fuels in the House. passed version.
: Generally, conference committees bargain within the terms of bills
passed by the two chambers, without drafting new provisions. Compro~· mise is the custom. When the question is bow much to spend, they often
"' meet in the middle.
It's noi that easy on a massive measure like reconciliation biUs.
There is ample precedent for conference committee decisions that go
beyond what either branch approved. One exllfllple: the doubling, to
$100,000, of a 1980 Senate increase in federal deposit insurance. That
passed Congress and prefaced the savings and bin fJBSCO.
Looking toward this round of bargaining, a Republican senator said
there's really no way to limit the conference to the terms of the original
budget bills. "In theory, we are bound by the outer limits," Sen. Bob
Packwood, R-Ore., said. "As a practicality, the conference can do anything that lhe majority want to adopt."
Provisions that go outside lhe bills already passed can be subject to
challenge on the floor, especially in the House. But Democratic leaders
there also can have the measure considered under aspecial rule to insulate
it against challenges. There probably will be such a rule when this one
comes up for final action.
.: There may be another trap in the Senale, which has a rule won by and
named for Sen. Roben Byrd, D-W.Va., providing that reconciliation bill
items that do not serve to reduce deficits lake 60 votes to pass.
For all the complexities, the Democrats say they will settle and pass
the program within the month. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, chainnan
of the Finance Committee, said failure is inconceivable . Inaction,
Gephardt said, would cripple the economic recovery.
Along with the Democrats and the new president.

·Letters to the editor
Believes measure will cost money
vide prenatal care to a low-income
Dear Editor,
On June 30, Congress renewed a · woman at a rate four times the cost
restrictive measure which damages of early abonion.
Proponents of the Hyde Amend.
the well-being of the nine percent
ment
voted to hold poor women to
of American women who depend
a
different
standard than the rest of
on Medicaid for their medical care.
us
who
are
economically better oii.
In a punitive vote Congress upheld
They
deny
Medicaid recipients the
the Hyde Amendment which pro-equal
right
to
make decisions about
hibits the use of Medicaid funds for
their
reproductive
lives.
abortion for poor women. Congress
It
is
unfonunate
that so many in
"' is telling Medicaid recipients Congress
felt
secure
in voting
because you do not have $300 in
against
a
poor
women's
right to
cash you have no right to a medichoose.
I
hope
supponers
of
choice
cally safe, legal abortion.
will
take
this
vote
as
a
warning:
the
. The facts are that the Medicaid
eligible woman waits longer than right to choose for all of us is still
other women to have the abortion in jeopardy. As the vote for the
because of the time it takes to find FREEDOM OF CHOICE ACT
- the money. The later the procedure, approaches in Congress, we must
,urge members to vole to establish
: the greater lhe medicalorisks.
·by
law the simple right of a woman
~
The cost in dollars is also
in
America
to c~oose. The attitude
• grealer. The Medicaid woman is
of
Congress
on the Hyde Amend:: forced to skimp on basic needs like
ment
threatens
not just the poor
, food, clothes and sheller in order to
whose
voices
they so easily
:: pay cash for an abortion.
ignored,
but
all
·of
us. When Con·
This has a negative affect on the
gressman
Ted
Strickland
voted
• family's welfare but then, so does
against
the
Hyde
Amendment,
he
:: an unwanled and ill-timed birth.
one
of
only;
five
Ohio
was,
• Choice is a benefit to a penon's
· coping ability. When choice is Congress persons to support the
~ denied as witk the Hyde Amend- equal right to choOse.
Many others from Ohio voted
~ ment, coping and life.management
for
the Amendment, but also claim
~ skills are diminished for any
to
support
choice. Its time to ask
woman.
them
why
didn't they vote for a
~ If the pwpose of t!Jis vOte is to
woman's
right
to chOOse, and wben
~ impose lhe moral viewpoint of the
will
they
vote
"yes"
for 'cboice7
:;; anti-abonion movement on poor
Sincerely,
• women, Congress should be awjiJC
]udith Zudak,
~ that the Hyde restriction will cost
money. Medicaid will pay to proAthens, Ohio
"

WASHINGTON- Sen . Bob
Dole, R-Kan., who has spent
months trying to IOipedo the Clinton administration, was recently
forced to abandon ship himself.
Dole had beeg planning to set
sail down the Potomac River for a
fund-raiser aboard a luxury cruise
liner. He even toOk a jab at President Clinton by christening his
floating fund-raiser "The Kansas
Boat House Cruise!" - an allusiorf to a joke that backfired on
Clinton ·and emboldened Dole earlier this year.
. But this is one case in their
high-profile feud in which Clinton
may enjoy the last laugh.
We called Dole fast week to
inform him that his cruise was on
the verge of violating two federal
laws. Within 24 hours, he abandoned ship. Dole is still having the
July 30 fund -raiser, but it will be
aboard the American-flagged
Dandy, a dinner boat that holds just
200 passengers.
. Dole's original plan eaUed for a
cruise from scenic Mount Vernon,
Va., to Old Town Alexandria, Va.,

·l

·

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Residential property , disclosure law
With the passal!e of Senate Bill

304, sellers of reSidential propeny
in Ohio will be acquired to disclose, to the purchaser, various
aspects of their propeny's physical
condition. As of July I, 1993, sellers of propeny have been required
to complete a Residential Propeny
Disclosure Form.
The disclosure form is applicable to purchase contracts entered
on or after July I, 1993. If an existing contract was enlered into prior
to July I, 1993 and it is subsequently amended, the disclosure
form would not be required, unless
a new contract is ,negotiated
between the parties on or after the
effective date of the new law.
Details of the residential property disclosure are set out in the Ohio
Revised Code Section 5302.30. It
is this section that sets forth three
points. I) The ·types of residential

!transactions in which the disclosure form would apply. 2) The pro-'
cedure for the use of form 3) The
implications if the form is n!'t used.

Sen.]an M. Long
The seller disclosure law will
require the disclosure form be
given by sellers to purchasers of
residential property only. Each
individual who win be transferring
an ownership interest win need to
sign the disclosure form . Legal
consequences to both the seDer and
the purchaser can exist if the disclosure form is not delivered and
acknow Iedged by a purchaser prior
to the partie§ entering into a purchase contract
In a case when the disclosure
form or an amended disclosure
form Is not provided until afler a

IMansfield !e:JO I•
INO.

•I Columbuslas• I

"·

_ ........'"'::-----Weather-------

south-ce~at Ohio
Tonight, variably cloudy. Low

I

I

purchase contract is entered into, duplicate ihe form for distribution
the purchaser may repeal the con· · to consumers.
tract within three business days • This new law is beneficial to
after receipt of the form by giving property buyers because the aspects
written notice to the seller or the· of lhe propeny's physical condition
agent of the seller. The right of the will ~e brought to the buyer's
purchaSer to repeal, however, only attention bc:fore the property is purexists for 30 days after the pur- chased, glVmg the buyer the benefichase contract is entered into or cial knowledge about the propeny
until the closing, whicl!ever comes that they need.
fU'St.
Tbe text of the residential propResidential propeny disclosure
erty disclosure form consists of forms can be acquired through your
various categories. Some of the cat- local realtors, the Ohio Deparunent
egories covered include water sup- of Commerce, or by contacting my
ply, sewer system, roof, basement, office.
structural components, mechanical
syslems, wood boring insects, presAs always, if you have comence of hazardous materials, and ments or questions about this or
drainage.
any other issue, please feel free 10
Though the format and the text contact my off1ce: Senator Ian
of the residential propeny disclo- · Michael Long, Ohio Senate, Statesure form cannot be altered or oth- house, Columbus, OH 43266 0604
erwise amended, entities may (614f!:66-8156.

requesting care at a hospital emergency room. If treatment is needed,
it must be provided." The .chief
reason the uninsured get less medi-

which could then be spent by indiMorton Kondracke wrote that .
viduals on precisely the quantity "Why Washin~ton doesn't adopt
and type of medical coverage they the Heritage model is a mystery."
need.
But c 'mon, Mort, you know Wash·
The Heritage plan has won kind ington better than that! How are the
words from some of America's Democrats going to gel their vitanoisiest liberals. Michael Kinsley mins without tens of thousands of
of The New Republic has called it new jobs to hand out, and tens of
cal care per capita than average is. "the simplest, most promising, and biUions of new dollars 10 spend, in
that they are, overwhelmingly, in an important way, most progres- administerin_g a vast new health
younger than average and therefore sive idea for health care reform." care bureaucracy? What are you
need less.
Columnist Clarence Page points trying to do - spoil the game for
But the socialized medicine out lhat "there's no reason for lib- everybody?
fanatics have the bit in their teeth, erals to feel obligated to shy away
William Rusher is a syndical·
and the American people are going from a progrhm just because it · ed writer ror-Newspaper Enter- ·' •
to get a uni versa I federal healtb encourages oocr people to think for prise Association.
care program whethe{they need or themselves.'' ·
· ..
want one or noL The.2nly question
left is what kind.
Fortunately there is one alternative that has been widely and successfully tested , that wouldn't
require a huge new bureaucracy to
administer it, that wouldn't cost a
cent in new taxes, and that would
guarantee every American 'quality
health care by physicians of his or
her choice.
0
Proposed by the Heritage Foundation, it is based on the Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program, which· already covers 9 mil·
fion federal employees 8ftd ~ .
Q
and the.ir dependents, including
BiU, Hillary and Chelsea.
· FEHBP allows ~ covered to
choose among different health
plans, with different preiniums and
senlices tailored to their specific
needs. Competition among the
providers keepS a downward pressure on cos&amp;s. Heritage proposes to
apply the same principle nation.
wide, by converung the tax bfeQk
employen now receive for proVid·
ing health care benefits into an
individual "medical tax credit,"

in the mid-60s. Light east winds.
, Chance of rain 20 percent. Saturday, panly sunny with a chance of
showe~ 'and thunderstorms. High
in the 'mid-80s. Chance of rain 40
percent.

~\it~1toN:

il'\t fOllOWING

rROGRJ\h\ CNTA\NS
VIOL~NC.E

"•

,

'"•

Extended ForeCBSI
Sunday tbrougb Tuesday
Sunday, a chance of showers
and thunderslllnns. Lows 65 to 70.
Highs 85 to 90. Monday and Tuesday, a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows 65 to 70. Highs 80
to 85.

--Area deaths-Marvin Bennett

Donald Deskins

.

Marvin E. "Buct" Bennett, Jr.,
Donald R. Deskins, 51, of the
53, of Charleston, fOIIIItlly of' Point Harrisonville area, died Thursday,
Pleasant, died Thursday, July 15, July 15, 1993, at the Hiclrory Creek
1993, fQIIowing a long iUness at the · Nursing Home at The Plains.
,Stonewall Jackson Hospilal in WesBorn in Williamson, W.Va., he
ton.
was the son of Carson Dellkins of
Born Aug. 3I, 1939, in Point Langsville, and the late Oma ElizaPieasant, he was a son of the latt beth Maynard Deskins. He was a
Marvin E. Bennett, Sr. and Wilma construction worlte.-, carpenter and
(Smith) Bennett.
auto mechanics. He was a member
A ri~erboal pilot, he was retired or the ML Union Baptist Church, .
from construction work as a weiHe is survived by bis wife,
der, and was a vcterail of the U.S. Katherine Althouse Deskins, three
Navy.
sons, Johnny and James, both or
Surviving are six children, Columbus, and Chad, at home; four
names and addresses unknown; daughterS, Patty Phillips of Albany,
four siSiers, Sondra Lavigne, and Valerie Richmond, Kimbley
Ripley, Ruth Sturgeon, Nib'O, Willford, and V~ George, all of
Ehzabeth Hall, Logan, Patricia Rutland; one brother, Eugene
Wchrung, Pomeroy, Ohio; three Deskins, o( Vero Beach, Fla.; four
brothers, Samuel of Henderson, sisters, Berenice Williamson and
Richard or Bi!lwell, Ohio, and Rose K. Moye.-, both of Chiefland,
Robbie of Patriot, OhioFla., Joan Scarberry of CQJumbus,
The funeral
be Saturday, I and Delmarvia Kirlc of Langsville;
p.m.,. at the Wilcoxen· Funeral several nieces and nephews.
Home with the Rev..Herman Jordan
Graveside services will be held
officiating. Buriill will be in · the at noon Saturday at the White Oak
Eve'J"":nCernclay, Letart.
Cemetery ncar Harrisonville.
Fnends may call at the funeral Friends may call at the Bigony-Jorhome Saturday, 10 am. uritil sec- dan Funeral home in Albany, Frivice time.
•
day (tonight), 7 to 9 p.m. The Rev.
J?C Sayre will officiate at the ser-

Correction

In Thursday's'newspaper, Emergency Medical Service runs from
the previous day w(lre inadvertantly
republished. Following are the
omitted Wednesday and Thursday
morning runs:
Wednesday- 11:08 a.m. Rutland to Meigs Mine 31 for Gilbcn
McMania who was transported to
Holzer Medical Center; 7:16 p.m.
,Middleport to Page Street for
Ralph Frank who was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Thursday - 2:43 a.m. Pomeroy
to Pomeroy Police Department for
Ladonna Mintz who was taken to
VMH; 3:08 a.m. Pomeroy to Johnson Road for David Beegle who
was transponed 10 VMH; 3:55 a.m.
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Dick
Neutzling who was transported to
VMH.

Lottery numbers
Pick 3 Numbers
3-2-1
(three, two, one)
Pick 4 Numbers
8-7-8-4
(eight, seven, eight, four)
Buckeye 5
2-5-7-31-36

William A. Rusher

Berry•s World

Sunset~ 8:58 p.m.

crucial levee.
Record high tempefllure I00 in
Clouds also hung over most of
1988; recprd low S2 in 1957.
the DOJlhern border stale&amp; from the
Around the aatlon ·
Great Lakes to the west coast, and
The drenched Midwest came in in northern New England where
fo~ more of the same today, with strong wind was expe~;ted. Rain ·
ram forecast f&lt;ir much of the flood also was forecast for parts of Tenr~vaged MisS?uri and Mississippi nessee, Kentucky and New Mexi·
co.
nver flood phuns.
Rain was expected across Iowa :
Severe thunderstorms Thursday
and in pans of Missouri, Illinois, drenched parts ' of Montana,
Nebraska, Kansa,wnd South Dako- Wyoming and North DakQta,
ta, where downpours have pushed
the rivers to record levels at some
points.
Residents of a peninsula at the · The following couples recently
Missouri and Mississippi rivers' received marriage licenses in the
juncture, just nonh of St. Louis, Meigs County Probate Court of
Mo., were warned to get out as the Judge Roben Buck:
still-rising rivers threalened to lOP-a
Kenneth Randell Riddle, 25,
Smithville, W.Va., and Melissa

dropped liaU in Soulh DeJrora, and
damaged trees with strong wincl in
North Carolina and Arkansas•
Heavier rainfall during the six
hours ending at 8 p.m. EDT Thtnday included alm!)SI1.81 inches at
Bismarck, N.D.; 1.47 inches at
Houston; 1.37 inches at Jackson,
Ky.; 1.3 inches at Minot, N.D.: and
just over an inch at Melbourne and
Tallahassee, Aa.; BriStol, Tenn.;
Leesville, La.; Bluefield, W.Va.: •

Couples granted marriage licenses
An'n Scarbrough, 26, Coolville;
Michael Curtis Kennedy, 27,
Pomeroy, and Carrie Ann Harris,
25, New Haven, W.Va.; Chad Neil
Sinclair, 22, Pomeroy, and Krista
Lynn Sellers, 24, Portland.

Forty-two fined in Meigs County Court

will

Health care: the obvious solution
Ms. Rodham Clinton and her
500 little elves are still hard at
work, secretly devising tile health
care plan that the Clinton administration intends to impose on the
American people.
We are not being allowed to
watch the procesS, presumably for
the same reason that Bismarck
warned Sausage-lovers against
watching the mapufacture of
sausage. But the Presidential Partner and various othe~ in the know
have said enough to make it clear
that a huge new federal bureaucracy will be required to administer
the program, and it will have Iii be
paid for with upwards of $90 billion in new taxes - over and
above the quarter of a trillion the
Democratic Congress is already
preparing to impose on us .at Mr.
Clinton's behest. In the unimprovable words of P.J. O'Rourlce, "If
you think health care is expensive
now, wait till you see what it costs
when it's free."
All this is necessary (allegedly)
because of the oft-repealed assertion that "37 million Americans"
(out of 250 million) "have no
health
insurance."
When
declaimed with a dying faU on the
last word, that Slate!Dent is easy to
confuse with the vezy different and totally false - proposition that
37 million Amencans have no
health care.
_As Fred Barnes-pointed out in
The Am~can SpectatOr recently,
"Everybody geu health care in this
country -'- lhe poor' the uninsured,
everyoi!C.... " Th06e without health
insUlllilce are treated free of charge
by hospital emergency 1'001!15. Federal la)oY; Barnes $Des on, requires
"medical screenmg of everyone

•

ITOledo !83" I

finance reform biU that would ban
such PACs, so the cruise down the
Potomac may be one of Campaigl!
AmeriCil'S last hurrahs.
The second law the cruise
would have violallil!, the Passenger
Notification Act, states that "all
promotional literature ... through
any mediwn of communication in
the United States offering passage
or soliciting passen,ers for oce8n
voyages anywhere m the world"
has to mention which country the
vessel is regislered in. Dole's PAC
failed to make this disclo~ure.
JoAnne Coe, executive director
of Campaign America, told our
associate Ed Henry that the PAC
would have made a clarification in
its follow-up correspondence for
the evenL "Neither Sen. Dole nor
his guests would (participate) in
any event that would not comply
fully with the appropriate federal
regulations, so that's why I pulled
the plug on the Crown Monarch,"
said Coe after our inquiry.
Coe said the PAC had been misinformed about whether cr not the
fund-raiser violated the law. "We
are demanding full refunds on all
our deposits and other expenses
incurred - which have been substantial," Coe Said. She added that
the PAC had paid out a $25,000
deposit, which was half of what the
cruise was suppposed 10 cost.
After months of taking the
offensive against Democrats, Dole
finds himself in the unusual situation of doing damage control and it's ironic that it should be over
the "boat bouse."
In May, after Dole branded
Clinton's $16 billion stimulus
package as pork-barrel ' spending,
Clinton accused Dole of seeking
$23 million in federal funds 10 conven a Kansas senior citiZen center
into a boat house. But Dole swiflly
proved Clinton wrong; prompting
presidential apologies.
As a chastened Coe explained:
"It was just a little pun. We were
just makmg a joke Oil! of it President Clinton apologized to Sen.
Dole for it because Clinton was
misinformed, as we all occassionally are ... as I'm learning right

now."

By Tile "-ialed Press
Loot for plerlty of' sunshine Saturday, with daytime highs in the·
801 throughout the state. There's
8110 a chance of thunderstorms in
the southwest
At dawn, readings spanned nearly 20 desrees IClOSS the state with
temperatures ncar the 50 degree·
mark in the nMiieast to near 70 in
the southwesL
Skies were partly to mostly
cloudy in the southwestan counties
overnight but were clear over the
rest of the state.
These mostly clear skies, combined with the drier air from the
north, allowed the mercury to fall
into the 50s in many areas
overnight.
'
Sunrise Saturday at 6:17 a.m.

MICH.

Repu_blican cruise-doesn't leave the dock

'The o.Jiy Sentlnei-PIIgl 3

Sunny weather forecasf for Ohio S~turday

OHIO Weather

P1g1 2-i'he DallY Sentinel
Pomaroy-Middlepbrt, Ohio
Frlct.y, July 18, 1993.

r

1•1 •·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

(IJSPS liJ-Ht)

Publilhed ev«y atlentooa, Moaday lhro\iah
Friday, Ill Court St., Ponwoy, Ohio by tbe
Ohio Valioy l'llblioltiq eo._y/Multi~~
Joe., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769, Ph. 992-2156.
Secood cllu poltateplid at PollllfOy, Cllio.

Mtmber: 1be Allo&lt;i...., Preoa, Md die Ohio
N.WIJIIP'f ~IIIJoa, Notio11i Ach•1Jolq
Representative, BrMiham Newtpip« Salell:

733 Third Aveaue, New York\ New Ytlt
10017.
'

POSTMASTBR: Sead .:klre~~ diUiet to The
Daily SenUael, Ill Cold St, Potn«oy, Ohio

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.$118~

Forty-two were fined and four
others forfeiled bond Wednesday in
the Meigs County Coun of Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Fined were: Brenda Venoy,
Racine, speed, $21 plus costs;
David Dillard, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$25 plus costs; Virginia E. Ramsey,
Pomeroy, ICathelt, $25 plus costs;
D~las W. Beaver, Pomeroy,
s
, $20 plus costs; Daniel A.
Pollard, Sanford, N.C., failure to
control, $20 plus costs; .David R.
McClelland, Mumy City, speed,
$20 plus costs; Ralph E. Steinmetz,
Pomeroy, speed, $22 plus costs;
Mark E. Riggs1 Shaker Heights,
speed, $22 plus cos&amp;s;
Terry A. Greene, Cleveland,
speed, $20 plus costs; Philip J.

Christ, Gahanna, speed, $21 plus
costs; Samuel Williams, Racine,
seatbelt, $25 plus costs; Samuel
Smith, Bidwell, driving under the
influence {DUI) $350 plus costs, 10
days jail suspended to three, operator's license (OL) suspended for 90
days, one year probation, $150 of
the fine and jail to be refunded
upon completion of RTP school;
seatbelt, $25 plus costs;
Kelly W. Sparks, Columbus,
speed, $22 plus costs; Richard L.
Wells, Ewington, failure 10 conb'Ol,
$20 plus costs; Jason E. Zimmerman; Grant, Mich., speed, $25 plus
costs; Robert L. Sawyers Jr.,
Shade, speed, $20 plus costs; Eric
R. Mitchell, Rutland, seatbelt, $25
plus costs; Chris K. Becker, Middle!K&gt;rt, seatbelt, .$25 plus costs;
Wilma K. Williamson, Rio Grande, .
speed, $22 plus com; Tim L.
Smith, .Chester, speed, $21 plus
costs; Duane E. Allen, Marietta,
speed, $23 plus costs; Kevin N.

Buckley, I.cing Bottom, seatbelt, !ration, costs; Travis Barnes, Lao. caster, driving under suspension,
$15 plus costs;
Gregory D. Carmichael, $250 plus costs, six months jail
Suspended to 10 days, one year proLouisville, Ky., speed, -$26 plus
costs; Scott A. Greene, New bation; speeding, $25 plus costs;
Haven, W.Va., speed, $23 plus Brian Stewart, Coolville, disorderly
conduct, $20 plus costs; Da_vid R.
costs; John McBride, Stewan, seatbelt, $25 plus costs; Judy Ander- Lott, Belpre, speed, $22 plus costs;
son, Belpre, fishing without a
Penny Scarberry, Washington,
license, costs; ' Wendi Young, Pa., speed, $22 plus costs; Edward
Mason, W.Va., speeding, $22 plus S. Bosworth, Gallipolis, speed, $22
costs; Robin Foley, Middleport, plus costs; Michele N. Carpenter,
recltless operation, $25 plus costs; Marietta, speed, $22 plus costs;
Denise Qualls, Middleport, left of Steph~n B. Shuler Jr., Syracuse,
center, $20 and cQsts; seatbelt, $25 speed, $22 plus costs; Roben H.
plus costs; Scott Ours, Racine, seat- Hampton, Murphy, N.C., assured
belt, $15 plus costs; Shelby Pick- clear .d istance, $15 plus costs;
ens, Racine, assured clear distance, James Smith, Racine, passing on a
$40 plus costs; seatbell, $25 plus solid yellow line, $10 plus costs;
costs;
James A. Abbott, Parkersburg,
Carol A. McCarty, Cheshire, speed, $20 plus costs.
leaving the scene of an accident,
Forreiung bonds were: Alan
$100 plus costs, one year proba- McGiasber, Stewan, seatbclt, $43;
tion, 30 days jail suspended, resti- Philip Christ, Gahanna, expired
wtion; assured clear distance, $50 registration, $45; Rol,!ert Sawyers
plus costs; failure to transfer regis·. Jr., Shade, seatbclt, $43; Tim
Smith, Chester, sealbclt, $43.

Strickland
to be
honored
Democrats endorse M·CCoA levy

Congress-man Ted Strickland
The Mei~s County Democratic~
(0-Lucasville) will be honored at a
Executive
Committee became the
picnic Saturday night at the Bedfirst
organization
to endorse the
ford Township home of Jane
one-mill
Senior
Citizens
Levy at its
Frymyer.
Frymycr and Brian Reed who regular monthly meeting on Thursserved as Strickland's campaign day.
Committee member Brian Reed,
coordinators for Meigs County, are
co-hosts for the event on behalf of who also serves on the Board of
the Meigs County Democratic Trustees of the Meigs County
Party.
' . th
. Council on Aging, explained. that .
Tagged "an _everung m e coun- the levy wiU cost the average proptry with Congressman Strickland" eny owner in Meigs County four
the picnic is open to the public. It cents per day. The funds generaled
will be held from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. by the levy will' be used to continue
and a $-15 donation for singles and center and in-home services to
$25 for couples will be received. senior citizens in Meigs County,
Donations will not be taken for and will supplement cuts in state
and redel;al funding.
children under 16.
Roger and Mary Gilmore of
Party Chairman Sue Maison
Pomeroy will perform authentic issued an open invitation to a picAppalachian music during the nic in honor of Congressman Ted
evening.
Stricltland, co-hosted by Reec;t and
"Congressman Strickland !tas Jane Frymyer. The picnic will be
~rown to love Meigs County and
held on Saturday from 6:30 to 9:30
VIces.
1ts people," Pany Chairman Sue p.m. at Frymyer's home on Gilkey
Maison said. "He also sees this Ridge Road in Bedford Township.
area
as an important part of the Maison said she expected a large
David Frost
Sixth
District He sees the poleDtial crowd fer the event, including sevDavid A. Frost, 60, of SuffiCld,
for
economic
growth and under- eral groups from surrounding counformerly of Meigs County, died
stands
that"
our
people are our ties. The event is open to the pubSunday, July 11, 1993 at his home
grealest
asset"
lic.
following an extended illness.
In his six months in office he
Gary Phillips, coordinator for
Born on July 7 in Aora, he was
has
visited
Meigs
County
five
State
Senator Jan Michael Long
the son of K. Hall and Fannie
LuciUe Frost He served in the U.S. till)es. "I think that alone speaks for reported that a fundraiser for the
Navy during the Korean conflict his commitment to Meigs County Senator is being planned for early
September at the Hunter residence.
and held a bachelor of ans in busi- and our future," said.Maison.
Maison said that. one purpose of Jeff Thorton, president of the
ness administration from the University of Akron. He was founder the picnic will be to allow Meigs Meigs County chapter of the Ohio
and president of D.A. Frost Indus- Countians of all political persua- Young Democnus of America also
sions and economic backgrounds to· plans an event for later in the sumtries of Ravenna.
have
the opportunity to meet mer.
Mr. Frost was a member of the
Strickland.
Suffield United Church of Christ
County Sheriff ]ames M. SoulsDress for the event will casuand active in Fitness Kcr\t at Kent
by
and Prosecuting Attorney John
State University. He was involved al and those attending should bring Lentes were commended for the
in numerous hobbies, including their lawn chairs. Frymyer's home cooperation exhibited between their
civil war history, photography , is located on Gilkey R1dge Road, agencies during the recent search
wine making, ftshing, and collect- just orr State Route 681 near Dar- and seizure of the Roben Fife pawn
win.
ing cribbage boards.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Betty
Jean Hawk.
He is survived by his wife of 35
Picnic slated
Eagles to meet
years, Ethel, of SuffiCld; a daughCongressman
Ted Sirickland
No.
2171
Auxiliary
will
FOE
ler, Dr. Linda A. Frost of Wilkes
will
be
honored
with
a pienic at the
meet
Tuesday
at
7:30p.m.
Barre, Pa.; a daughter and son-inBedford
Township
home
of Jane
law, Jennifer and Jeffrey Wilson;
Frymyer
ori
Saturday
from
6:30Re••iall
pla•aed
grandchildren, Ian and Hannah, all
9:30
p.m.
Cost
is
$15
single
or
$25
The descendants of Tommy
of Novelty; a brother-in-law, Paul
percouple.
·
Hawk of Cheste.-, sisters and broth- Gilkey and Milda Jane Hudnall will
Group to m·eet
ers-in-law, Jackie and Chuck We.~ bold their annual~e~~nion July 25 at
The Alzheimer's Disease Sup- ·
of Bradenton, Fla; Shirley and Dr. the roadside park on Route 33
· R. Linda of Trotwood, Ruth and south of o.win. A potluck dinner · port Group will meet Wednesday
from 1-3 p.m. at the Senior CitiGeorge Paulsen of Ashllllid, Ohio, will be served 8l noon. Bring table
service
and
folding
chairs.
.
zens
Center. Jackie Starche.-, dietiand Helen and Jim Heaton of Floritian,
will be guest speaker. Everyda; stepmother, Margaret Frost of
to
meet
A•tiqae
cbth
Ashland, Ohio; stepbrother, Harley
one 1,Ye~me.
The Big Bend Farm Antique
Saylor of California; and step-sisCouncil meets
Club will meet Monday at 7:30
ler, Wanda Paulsen of Texas.
Racine Village Council will
Memorial services were held p.m. at Southern High School.
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Star MiU
Wednesday at the Suiiield United
Park.
VBSset
Church of Christ
Vacation Bible School will be
VBS set
held July 26-30 at St. Paul United
Vacation Bible School will be
Methodist· Church · in Tuppers Monday through July 23 from
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Plains from 6:30-8:30 p.m. "Cele- 6:30-9 p.m. at Rejo1cing Life
Thursday admissions - Victor bration. Parle" is the theme. Every- Church in Middleport for ages 3Neutzlin.g, Pomeroy, and Alma one welcome.
18. Public inviled.
Newton, MiddleporL
Thursday diScharges - Elsie
Youth nlly
Prices raised
Crouser, Rutland, and Mary Cleelc,
A Jesus revival and youth rally
The trustees or the Sand Hill
Racine.
will be Sunday 8l 1:30 p.m. at the Cemetery in Long Bouom at a
Stivcrsville Community Word of recent ineeting raised the prices of
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Faith Church with Jeff Cottrill, grave lots to $75 each effective
July ·ts dischilrJes-:Jennifer speaker.. David Dailey, pastor,
August I. _
Crabtree; Mrs. Terry Porter and inVites the public. .
daughter, Shelby ~cal, Mrs. Randy
Danee planned
Guestspeaker
Werry and son, Emil Bynon, Emil)'
There Will be a dance at London
Rev. Eddie Buffmgton, GallipoCamp, Norbert Bonfield, Robena
Pool in .Syracuse on July 23 from
Adkins and Margaret Dickens.
· lis, will be ,guest speaker at the
8:30 p.m. to midnight with music
July 15 hlrtlls- Mr. and Mrs. l'llomi Baptist Church on Sunday
by H&amp;K Sounds. Admission is
Todd Rothgeb, sori, Langsvill~.
at 10:45 a.m. Public invited.
$250 per per'son.

oo

-Meigs announcements--

shop in Middleport_ County Com- visited witli truck larmers in the
missioner Janet Howard was also Letart area who had experienced
complimented fat' her accomplish- crop damage due to recent hail
• storms.
·
ments to date.
Discussion was held regarding
It was noted that State Reprethe party's booth at th~; Meigs
sentative Mark Malone had spent
the day Thursday visiting elected County Fajr and the committee
moved l(j'_cancel its August meeting
and economic· development officials in Mei~s Coll{ltY. Malone also ·in lhat it was set for the week of the

fair.

Breakfast... Continued'trom pase 1
reality that has motivaled this agency to seek-funding in this manner."
Reed continued. "For rour cents
a day, we can continue to provide
cenler activities, congregate and
home delivered meals, chore and
home services, respite care, case
management and other supportive
services. Without these funds,
many or all of these activities will
be rediiCed or discontinued."
Reed also read a letter from
Congressman Ted Strickland in
which he stressed his support of the
center and its activities. He also
congratulated the center on its 20th
anniversary.
· ·
·
Lloyd Blackwood, president of
the MCCoA' s board of trustees,
said the people of Meigs County
respond when the need is there and
the time is right. He urged all residents of the county to support the
levy which provides so many necessary semces to the ,elderly of
Meigs County.
.
Crnthia McManis, Community
Semces Coordinator for Buckeye
Hills Area Agency on Aging, representing Cindy Farson, Director of
that agency, stated without the services of the center, many seniors
wouhl be forced into nursing
homes. She said similar levies have
passed in cities like Cincinnati and
Columbus. She stated Meigs County is lucky to have progressive
leaders' who are wiUing to wort to
pass this levy.
Meigs County Commissioner
Manning Roush stated "the commissioners have always supported
the senior citizens and we're ~oing
to help you pass this levy. He
urged levy workers to "see people,
see people, see people." He con- .
eluded by saying "We'll supjlon
you 100 percent."
State Representative Marie Malone said he is supportive of all
elderly issues and that the more
that can be done to continue the
senior services the bCner. He urged
everyone to stick to$ether and
work hard to pass the cntically necessary .levy.

Jackie' Hildebrandt, a Meigs
County resident who receives services from the cenler, said "You
don.'t realize what these services
"!ean to us.~ We need !lJem every
smgle day. She cautiOned resi·
dents who may think they don't
need the services of the center by
saying "You each have a tum coming." She concluded by saying, "I
hope when you grow old you have
someone to help you. Do I need to
say anymore?"

Dissolutions
and divorces
The following actions involving
divorces and dissolutions were
filed recently in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court o{ Judge
Fred W. Crow III: .
Dissolutions nted - Victoria
S. Rood, Tuppers Plains, and Iack
B. Rood, Middleport; Sherry S.
Chapma(\, Pomeroy, and Craig T.
Chapman, Rutland; Melodie Dawn
Forbes, Pomeroy, and Randal
Wayne Forbes, Pomeroy; Bobby
W. Vance, Pomeroy, and Yvonne
E. Vance, Pomeroy.
Divorces filed - Clara L.
Robie, Pomeroy, from Roben E.
Robie, Syracuse; Rita Michael ,'
Racine, from Terry Michael, Mid'
dleport; Patricia Kay Hawley,
Pomeroy, from James Joseph Hawley, Pomeror.
- Dissolution granted - Helen
Shain and Harry Shain.
Divorces dismissed -Betty A.
Johnson from Gay F. Johnson;
Rebecca M. Perry from Paul E.
Perry.
·
Pop Quiz

Popcorn pops from an internal explosion caused by the ex pansion
under press ure of moi sture in it ,
which turns to steam when the kernel
is heated. Corn vari eties that pop fea ture harder kernel walls than ordinary
fi eld corn ; that rigidity forc es the
entire kernel to ex plode.

IAMiAIN MAn . .IS SAT. I SUN.
.AJIGAIN NIGKI TUESDAY

Hospital news .

,,

.

' CI" Cb'TIPICA'I'IB AVAfLA8Lil

II).,..

SllEPLUi IN SUmE
'»£"·
!PGt

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•

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.

·The Daily Sentinel

s

.

·

Hubbard LL tourney ends ..._(_con-'-tin_ued_from--"--P-age_4&gt;_ __

Friday, July 16, 1993

home tbe champions, 10.5.
Syracuse scored ftrst .on a. long
~run by Adam Cummgs m the

Page-4

By beating Hubbards's-Greenhouse 10-5,

Pomeroy Dodgers claim Bill
Hubbard Memorial LL crown ·
By SCOTI·WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Despite a late Syracuse rally, the
Pomeroy Dodgers defeated the
Hubbard's Greenhouse team 10-5
to claim the championship game in
the annual Bill Hubbard Memorial
Liule League Tournament at King
Field in Syracuse Thursday
evening.
.
After Nelsonville dropped out of
the tournament due to other commiumems, Racine finished third,
forcing a play-off for fo\lflh place,
where Chester came home a 9-8

winner over the Gallipolis Yan kees.
Gallipolis earned the Sportsmanship Award as each of the reamaining five teams placed or
earned special honors.
Individual honors went to Eric
Smith of Chester, the tournament's
Most Valuable Player; Tim Siders
of the Gallipblis White Sox, Best
Defensive Player; and Jeremy Ball
of the Gallipolis Yankees, Best
Offensive Player.
Smith hit .667 overall, and
while pitching fanned 22 and had

four put outs without an error.
Siders·. in eight innings of work,
struck out 16 batters and had three
put outs without an error. Ball led
all hitters in lhe tournament w1th an
8·for-IO stint, an .800 average.
Championship game
The Pomeroy Dodgers and
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
played great ball throughout the
early stages of the ·tournament, but
Thursday everyone knew a champion had to be crowned. Of the two
good teams, the Dodgers came
(See TOURNEY on Page S) ·

man, Jason Mora and Josh Will. In the back
row are Joey Dillon, Wes Crow, Eric Smith,
Adam Sanders, Josh Broderick and coach Tiui
Dillon. Absent were ¥att King and Matt
Edwards.
'

CHESTER FOURTH - Placing rourtb in
the Bill Hubbard Meniorial.Little League Tou~­
nament at Syracuse after a dramatic 9-11 win
over Gallipolis, were the Chester Raiders. Pic·
lured are team members
L-R) Bfau
Bailey, Jason Arix, Brad
Huff-

first inning. Pomeroy threatened
inthe rust oo two walks, Mike Bing
and Jeremiah Bently and a single
by Humphreys, but left the bases
loaded.
Bently struck out the side in the
second inning, a feat that picked up
the Pomeroy offense in ·the following frame. Se~ Powell started a
one-out rally w1th a double, John
Hill singled, and with two out Ryan
Ramsburg walked. Humphreys
delivered his second hit of the night
to score two runs as Pomeroy took
a 3-llead.
Bently fann~ two of .the !)tree
batters he faced m the· third, while
his club went to wmt scoring two
more in the bottom of the frame.
John Hill had the big blow, an RBI
single while Jonathan Wyau's 6-3
groundout brought home another
run as Pomeroy led 5-1.
.
Pomeroy added two runs m the
fourth to lead 7-1, then added three
more in the fifth.
Syracuse staged a late game
rally, scoring four runs in the fifth .
After two strikeouts by Bentley,
Jeff Michaels walked, Erron
Aldridge walked and Cumings sin.

DOD GE RS WIN TITLE- T he Pomeroy
Dodgers were crowne.d the 1993 Bill Hubbard
Memorial Little League Tournament champions
after downi ng Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
10-5 in the li nale. Pictured are (front row, L·R)
Jona than Wya tt, Ryan Dill, Mike Bing, Jobn
Hill and Sean Powell. In the second row are

The Dally Sentinel-Pap! 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

-

. ·-

.

'

gled. Jason Allen lllen smacked a
three-run hC?fDe run to tighten the
score at 7-5. ·
The three runs yielded by the
Syracuse club in the fifth were
costly, however, two of the three
,batters in the last tally were strikeout victims.
Ramsburg had two singles for
·the winners and reached base all
four times, Bing had a single,
Humphreys two singles, Bently a
single, Roush a single, HiD two singles and Powell a double.
Allen had a home run, while
Cumings homered and singled, and
, Aldridge and Buskirk each singled.
Bently was the winner, fanning
five and walking three . Nease,
Smith and Buskirk took turns on
the mound for Syracuse.
Consolation game
An Adam Sanders single in the
bottom of the sixth inning drove
home· Dustin Huffman with the
winning run as Chester !,lefeated
the Gallipolis Yankees 9-8 in the
tournament's consolation game,
which was played for fourth place.
Racine had earlier nailed down
third after Nelsonville dropped out
of the tournament.
Gallipolis took a 1-0 lead in the
top of the ftrst when with two out

Ryan Ramsburg, Jeremiah Bentley, J.T.
Humphreys, Justin Roush and Grant Abbott. In
the back row are Roger Abbott, Brad Scbwentk,
Brett Wyatt, Frank Seth and Randy
Humphreys. Not pictured Is injured player
Clayton Ohlinger.

JaSOit Ball walked and tilDe home
on a Ron Haynes double. The
Yanks widened their lead to 3.{) 00
a wallc to Jcfi'Qd Ball and single to
Jason Johnson. Jason Ball then
deliveted a run-scoring single.
Che$1er blasted the Yanks in a
seven-run third inning to take a 7-3
lead. Three errors, two walks and
·singles by Beau Bailey .00 Sanclm
accoutlled for the rally.
In the fifth, Gallipolis added
three runs, the big blow being a
three-run home run by Haynes with
Lane and Ball aboard.
Chester added a single run in the
fifth as two errors and walk
allowed Sanders to score.
Trailing 8.6, Gallipolis tied the
scor.e 8-8 in. the sixth, when tY(O
errors and two walks resulted in
runs. Kolcun and Rodgers came
home with the runs.
'.
· Thai set the stage for the dra·
matic sixth inning and Chester's
win.

Sports medicine
·clinic is slated
A thre~ hour sports medicine
clinic will be held on July 21st at 5
. p.m. at Meigs High School.
The clinic will be presented by
Gran( Hospital's Sports Medicine
staff and meet requirements for
school coaches and advisorS for the
Ohio Department of Education. ,
For more infonnation call Rick
Edwards. Meigs High School Athletic Director at 992-2158 or 9926174.

Benefit golf tourney
slated for July 24

GREENHOUSE SECOND- Pictured Is tbe
Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse team that
earned a spot in the finals or the Bill Hubbard
Memorial Little League Tournament only to ran
to Pomeroy 10-5. PiCtured are (kneeling, L·R)
Jon11than Smith, Jamie Buskirk, Jeff Michael,

A mixed golf scramble to benefit Joe Hill will be held on Saturday, July 24 at the Meigs County
Golf Course.
Hill, the 14-year-old son of former Meigs County businessman
Pat· and Nancy ijill of Pomeroy, is
suffering from a very rare fonn of
cancer. The tournament will be a
mixed scramble with a blind draw.
Price is $45 per golfer, not $40 as
reported earlier. That includes cart,
steak dinner and beverages.
For more information oc to sign
up call the Meigs County Golf
Course at 992-6312. Tee off will be
at 9 a.m. The entry fee can be paid
anytime at the Meigs County Golf
Course.

Chad Hubbard, Joshua Davis, Adam Cumings,
Erron Aldridge and Jerrod Clay. Standing players are Michael Nance, Jerrod Mills, Ryan
Nease, Jason Allen are Russell Reiber. Behind
thern· are coaches Rex Cumings, Dana Aldridge
and Ray Proffitt.

COLONY TH EATRE

ROCKIES THIRD - The Raci ne Rockies
brou~ ht home third in the Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament Thursday. Pictured are (front row, L-R) Garrett Kizer, David
i ~ance , Jason Laudermilt, Joshua Ervin, Benji
Manuel. Steven Boso and Richard Co~ar. In the

second ·row are Tyler Little, Tony Hupp, Ty
Johnson, Jesse Little, Jeremiah Johnson, Phinip
Harris, Adam Williams and coach John Manuel.
In the back row are coaches Doug Little, Chuck
Williams and Roy Johnson. ·

--

SPORTSMANSHIP WINNERS - The Gal·
. lipolis Yankees, who placed fifth in the Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament,
earned the tournament's Sportsmanship Award.
. Pictured are (front row, L•R) Robby Kuhn,

We're
Celebratin
Our

LAND (CWI&lt;4-J), 7,o5 p.m.
Odland (Do'!"ns 2·3) al New York
(Key 11&gt;2), 7,30 p.m.
Seattle .(Hanaon 7-6) it Boston
. (Clcmena 7-6), 7:35p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaattm DMifon
............. W L PeL
Philodelphio ........... l7 33 .633
SL LooiJ .................52 36 .591

GB
4

41

.539

a.s

Mitlf1C10ll. (Da.hliel 9-6) at Baltimore
(Muuina 10-4),7:3S p.m.
Kanaaa City (Haney 5·2) at Toronto

Chicago. .................42 45
Piuabursh ... ,..........42 47

,483
.472

13.5
14..5

(Molrill·9), l,Jl pm.
Ch.icaso (Alvarez 8-5) at MiJw•ukcc
(Eldred 10-8), 1:05 p.m.

MontrW ............... .48

A0rida ................... 37 .51

.420

19

NcwYork ..............'J:l 61

.307

29

1993
DELTA 88

$16,995

1992 LUMINA
EURO

$10,995

9.

~~~.:::::::::::~ :~ :~~

CINCINNATI........46 4l
San Diego .............. 34 56
Colorodo ............... .33 ll

:~

.lOl
.378

14.5
26
26

.m

Thursday's scores

San Diego 5, Phlladelphil 2
San Francisco 8, New Yodt I
ClNONNA11 7, Florida 4
Allant• 4, Pitaburah 0
Chieaao 1, Coiondo 0
St. Loui14, HOUMn l
LM•Anadcs 3, Monltell2

Today's games

Florida (Rapp 0.1 ) at CINCINNATI
(Rijo6-S), 7:3S p.m.
Phuburgh (Cooke .5 -4) at Atlanta
(Middux 3-8), 7:40p.m.
llou.ll\on (Klle 10-1) at St. Louis (Ma·
grane 8-7), 8:35p.m.

s1 0,988
-:"0 TUlP MiZNT MIVI's -- These three playIJ~sl or tile best in the Bill Hubbard
0.e•·1mid
Uttl~
Lear,ue Tourna ment. Pidured
1
n ,-,
,l) c:;mmy Siders of Ihe Gallipolis White
So:r., w,,(, ~an; c&lt;l.1hc !lest De fens ive MVP
,, wm·d, fr.;;.&gt;inr, 16 and throwing out three with-

ers ·were the

a.

out an error; Eric Smilh, .the overall tournament
Most "aluable Player, struck out 22, hit .667
and had four putouts en route to being named
offensive MVP; and Jeremy BaU or the Gallipolis Yankees, who wasB-ror-10 at the plate•.
l

P~~------------------~
Olympics
WASHINGTON (AP)-

.
Law~

makers urged Cqngress to formally
oppose China's bid for the 2000
Oly mpics, while the head of the
U.S Olympic Committe.e warned
that the act ion could hurt Salt Lake
Ci1{s cimnccs for the 2002 Wimer
GamcfJ.
'"n•i.; notion of granting China,
th is dcsoicablc reg ime, the glory
and the honor of holding the
Olympics in the year 2000 is liter- .
ally unthmkable," said Rep. Tom
Lantos, D~Calif., a sponsor of a.
Hllusc resohnion urging rejection
of Beijing's candidacy because of
the Chinese government's human
rights record.
Leroy T. Walker, head of the
USOC warn ed that even a nonbindin g resol ution "c~uld . eas!ly
trigger serious repercussiOns wh1ch
wou ld ul tima tely damag·e" the
USOC and American athletes.

SEE US FOR A COMPLETE
·LINE OF

•Bailer and Binder Twine
•Garden Dust and. Spray
•Grass Seed
•Weed and Brush Killer
•Copper Sulfate for your pond ,

SUGAR RUN MILLS
•

180 MULBERRY AVE.

992·2ll5

POMEROY

s7,777

s7 995

Dieao (Whitehunt 3--S), 10:05 p.m.
Monuul (Rueu:r t-0) at Loa Anselca
(lk.n.hder7-8), 10:35 p.m.
New York (Gooden 8-9} at San Fran·
cilco (Rickersoo 3·1), 10:3S p.m.

·

Satur~ay's

games

.

Houaton (Williams 2-2) n St. Lou11

(l!&lt;wubury 9·7). 1,os p.m.
Colorado (Rcynoao 7~) at Chicaao
(lbriey·6--3). 4:05p.m.
New fYodl. (fanana 4-1) at San Fr&amp;ncisco(Burkett 13-3). 4:05p.m.
Aorida (Armatrona 6-9) at CINCINNATI (Browning 64), HlS p.m.
f"itt•burJh (Waancr 4-6) &amp;t Athnta

1993.CADILLAC
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1984 Chevy ~10 Pickupeuto.,topper, great wot1t trud!. 12990 ~ 1991 Buick Cenlury auto., IIIIo., o~. 4door, ~•eo ....3777
1987 Chevy (-I 0Pickup outo,·air, nim........_._..__ ,15990 1.98 5GMC Conversion Van Loaded................- ....16450
1990 Oldsmo~1e Calais auto., air. d«eo, 4door ....... 1685~ 1987 Oldsmobile 881oadtd, ~~wry...-.• -.•..,.........1 ~99
1990 Ford Esoorlw~o, '*· d«eo,low . -... ·-·--·- .. 15995 1988 Oldsmobile Toro .,.&amp;WY &amp;style......... - ........,16799
IN JUST 2 SHORT YEARS OVR SALES AND SERVICE HAVE DOUBLED!
STOP BY AND SEE WHYI - Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 am-11 pm, Sat. 9am-4 pm, Sun: 1,Pm-5 pm
Tu &amp; Title lite• nnt Included.

DON TATE CBft.·OLDI•.CAD.-GiiiiiiO-

(Smohz 8-7), 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Mulholland 9-6) at S1n
Dieao (Banea9-6), 10:05 p.m.
Montrcll (HiU 6-2) at Loa Anaelcl
(Grou 7-7), 10,3l p.m.

Sunday's games

NaUonal lla&amp;llttblll Aaoclii'GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS: Trt.d·
ed Tyrooc Hill, rorward, w the Cleveland
CaYal.icn fm a 1994 rust-round draft. pick.
LOS ANGELES LAKER$: Si&amp;ned
Arit.onio Huvcy, cmtcr.
NEW YORK KNICKS : Re-ai&amp;ned
HCJb Williams. ccnLCr, to a mc-)'car con-

~and (B . Witl 1-6) at New YoD. (1.
Abboo S-8), Hll pm.
K~JU~a City (Appier 10-4) at Toronto
(SwnlemyreS-7},1 :05 p.m.
Seanlc (Boaio l-4) 11 BoaUJn (Darwin
11-1), I :OS p.m.
Califo~ (Sprinacr 1-3} 11 CLEVE:
LAND (Mutu 1·2}, 1:35 p.m.
Mimellou. (Tapani l-11) ll Baltimore
(Muaina 10-4), 7:05 p.m.
Oticaao (McDoweJJ 13:-6) at Milwaukee (Navarro !5·6). &amp;:OS p.m.
Detroit (Gullicklon S-4) at Tcua
(Pavlik S-4), 8:35p.m.

t.rlct.

Football
Nalloul Foolblll Leaaue
BUFFALO BILLS : Siancd Thomas
Smith, comcrblc:k. Agreed lO tcnna wid\

Chris lhle, COI'Ilttback.
~
CLEVELAND BROWNS : Siancd
SICYC E\'Uin, ceruer, to a Wee-ycu conInCl.

DETROIT LIONS : Siancd T)' Hal-

K,,.., City al Toronto, 1:3!i p.m.
MimCIOLI at Baltimo~. 1:35 p.m.
ChiClJO at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.

lock, linebacker.

JNDIANAPO LIS COLTS : Sianed
Carta. Etheftdge, tight end; Lance LewU,
runnins back; and Marquise Thoma1,
lincbfckcr.

Detroit at Teu1, 1:05 p.m.

OUland at New Yod::, &amp;:OS p.m.

- • Transactions • Baseball
Amerkan Luauc
BOSTON RED SOX: Activ•t.ed Roser
Clement, pitcher, from lhe 15-da)' disabled lilt. Plaoed Iv111 Calderon, outfielder, m the lS-d1y diU.bled Wt, rdroi.Cti\IC
lO July 11.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS ' Roc oiled
Enrique Bursa~. pi~~· from ~ha of

MIAMI OOLPIDNS: SiFcd Ne&lt;l Dol·

• cu 111d David Mmitt.linehadten.
NEW ORLEANS: SiFod Willie Roaf,
offcnli.ve taek.le. wa five-yeucont.mct.
PIDLADELPmA EAGLES: Aareed
lO tcnns with Michael Carter, noac tac.klc,
and Mike Sch•d; ofreniiwe 1inernin, on
oo&amp;oyeu contncll, and Derria. Fru:ler,

ccxnerback, on a tW~fe:l! contn.CL
PmSBURGH STEELERS' Sianed
Jerry Olaavaky,lincbaci:cr. Aarcod to

ltmna with Marc Woodard, lineb1cker,
'&gt; and Jeff Zgonin&amp;, dd'enllve lineman .

the American Auociabon.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS: An·
nounccd Ut• reWwncnt rL Mike Roddick·
er, pitcher. Placed Dickie~· inf'~or,
on the 15-d•y di~ablcd htt. Recalled
Willia.m Suero, infiddcr, from New Orluna d the AmeliCitl A..oci.aliM.
SEATnE MARINERS: Named Eul

B,ocy""""'

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor SL

TEXAS RANGERS: Activated Jeff
Huaon, infielder, from the 15-dly dinbted
lia. Optioned Jon ShaYc, infielder, 1.0 Ok·
tahoma Cit)' of 1hc American Auoci&amp;tion.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS ' Announced

lhcy hiVe e&amp;lled ~Nick ~yv1, Syracuac
Chicfa manager, to replaOC Rich Hacker,

Pilllburgh •t Atllnll, 1:10 p.m.
Houston 1t St. Louis, 2:15p.m.

third

floridlat ONCINNATI, 2:15p.m.
Colorado at Chicaao. 2:20 p.m.
· Monttealat l...ol Angele., 4:05p.m.
Philadelp~a at San Pie~o, 4':05 p.m.
New Yoli. at S•n Francuco, 4:05 p.m.

hi•• coach.

1NatkNIII Luaue

Pomeroy, OH.

SPRING AND SUMMER

lOURS

Mon.•Frl. 9:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

CHICAGO CUBS : Placed Dwi&amp;hL

Smhb. cwficldc:r, m the ~J::~blcd

Jill. NW~cl.ive 10 July I.
Kevin
=::aC::~~~ from Iowa of the

The Meigs County Fair Ia~· Is Coming
August 13, 1993.
·
Advertising Deadline Is
Aug~ 5~, 1993.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eult:rn Dhillon
....... ...... W
Toronto ................. .SO
Baltimcn;..............48
Dcuob.....................48

L
40
41

41
New yort ............ ..41 41
Boatm ................... .-45 , 43
CLF.YELAND ..... ..41 48
Milwaukee ............. 37 SO

Pel
.556
.!539
:5:19
.S3l
..5) 1
.461

.425

Watern OltiaJon

~:!:~~::::::::::::::::::~ :~ :~~

SUNDAY SPECIAL

GB

1.5
1.5
2
4
8.5
ll .S

1
~

K.onw City ....:...... 44 43
S..ttle .. ... ,.............4l 44

.l06
.l06

J

Cali!omia .. .............43 44
Oallind ........... :..... 39 46
"'"""""" "-·"·"""36 lO

.494
.459
.419

6
9.l

. SUNDAY, JULY 18,1993

HOMECOOKED ROAST BEEF DINNER
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Peas
Hot Buttered Roll
Small Drink or Coffee

Tonll!bt'•aames

CaWomia cflnloy 10-6) at CLEVE·

•

• ~.f

$4.95

'

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

TRY OUT HOMEMADE PIES
NEW HOURS:
P.M.

·, Thursday's scores
CLEVELAND 7, California 3
Oakland 8, New York 3
TOI'CIIto 7, Kanau aty 2
Baltimore 5, Minnesot~ 3
.~.an\n :t Rrwn.nn 2.
OaiciJP 6, Wwaukee 4
T..,. 12. Dotmit7

SHOWllMES

FRI. &amp; SAT., 7:30 &amp; 8:30
SUN .. THRU THURS.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50- ~23

Basketball

· Saturday's games

Plliladelphia (Greene 11- 2) a~ San

1993 CHEVROLET 1992 CHEVROLET 1992 CHEVROLET
CORSICA
CORSICA
CAVALIER

~

IN

SUPER ~ARlO BROTHERS PG

THE 1993

liat. ReeaUed Tlm Coato, Ur.fiel41er-out·
fielder, hom lndianopaliJ of lhe American
Asaociuion.
LOS ANGELES OOOOERS: Activated Jody Reed, second &amp;uernan, and Todd
Wcncll, pUchcr. &amp;an !he IS-doy diaabled
Wt. Optioned Tam Goodwin, ouLflddct,
to Albu6:~C or the Pacific Cout
l.eogue.
. ted Rod N;.t.ob, pilchcr,
for au:ianment.

Sunday's pmes

·

SMITH ON THE ffiLL - Chester hurlel' Eric Smitb got overall
MVP honors in the Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tourna- .
ment, wbicb concluded Thursday night in Syracuse. Smith, shown
on the bill, helped his Raiders to become one...of the tournament's
final four with his hitting and pitching. (Sentinel photo by Scott
Wolfe)

CINCINNATI REDS ' Pl....t Bobby

Se&amp;ttle a1. Bolton, 1:tlS p.m.
Califomi&amp; at (]...EVELAND, 1:3!5 p.m.

Colondo (l...c:ahni&lt;: 1·1) at Chica go
(Guzman 7·7), 3:20p.m.

FRL lHRU lHURS.
BOB HOSKINS, DENNIS HOPPE!'!

Kelly, ootfi.elde:r, m the IS·da)' diubled

Detroit (Wells 9-4) at To•• (Rosen

6·6&gt;. s ,3s p.m.
~·

Walern Divlllon
San Fnnciaco ........60 30 .667
A~omo ...................ll 39 .l67

308 E. MAIN·ST. - POMEROY, OHIO
IT'S WORTH HQUR DRIVE!

$13,995

Scoreboard

- * Baseball *-

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
1993 CUTLASS
SUPREME

Cody Lane, Milie Rodgers, Jerrod Ball .a nd
Jason Johnson. In the second row are· Micah
Kolcun, AJ. Johnson, Joslin Jones, R011 Haynes
and Jeremy Ball. Third row are Jerry Adams
""
and Dick Kuhn.

~1(cc6aupli ~'(~(('lie.&lt; fer
RESTAURANT
ROUTE 7
WL ti!VL SLNIUII Clll/1
' I

w;

0

CHESTER
ID'

lli~Collril

,..

992~2155

•

•

�Sentinel
.•

To place an ad

Call992-2156
Flal

Church of Chr1s1
p

--lllW. MaOoSL

~ Sdlool - 9:30aa.

EpiSCOJ)iJI

Soliday School • to a.m.
Wonhip·9LIL
Thonday s.mce. •6:30p.m.

r ..., " -Clolll'dl "'Ctortll
33226 O..liw!s Home lt.l.
So.af School · II a..m.

H..a.(Mid..,_.)

Wonbip-10a.m.,6p.a
Wediaydii)'Senricet · 7pa.

Jtey. Ul\'ll4 ...,...

Sunday- . 9:45
Wonhip • II Lm. •17 p.m.
W - y SoMce • 7 p.m.

K_,CIIoordloiCiortol

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sundty School · 10:30 a.m.

Fr;...w:!,~f:":"

-Mark Monow
SIWid.oy Service • 710 p.m.
Sundoy School· 10 ......
Wonbip · II a.m.,

~ lll41• Cloolrdl fiiCiortol
. Pastor: Jock Cdo&amp;rove
Sunday School ·900 a.m.

W~yScnoice-7:30p.m.

Wonbip · 10:30'a.m., 6:30p.m.
WMu 'ys.mcc.-6:30pa.

Rlllud
BopdJI CloSunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:45 a.m.

Puiliti~-~i't;LI43)
. Rotor WiiiiCJII

"I'll

Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-IO::!Oa.m., 7:00p.m.
W-.day Servi001 • 7 p.m.

G) Flnl BopiJol
But
Main Sl.
Sunday Schoal- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Flnl Soullon Bopllll
41m PwiCIOY Pike .
Pulor: H. Lomar O'BI)'IIII
Slmday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wodnaday SeMcea · 7:00p.m.
·-

·'

BndhrJ Clowdl., Cllrlst
Paator : Tom Runyon
SancloY Sdlool· 9:30 un.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.

Tiippen ..... Clolll'dloiCIIrlst

r.-:s;nwm..

Sunday School· 9 un.
Wanhip • 9:4S o.m., 6:30p.m.

FlniBopliiiCiollrdl ·
.6111 ond l'ltmor SL
Pulor: lte¥.1_, A.' Seddon
s-loy School· 9:15 a.m.

Clo- IIIOrlot
Puor: arioSiewart
SulldO)I Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m.
w.... doy Servi&lt;ZJ· 7 p.m.
-

Wonhip • 10:15 LIL, 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.

l.onl'• ~Ill Sunday ol.....,. monlh.

Wediiesday Somce· 7:00p.m.

llullud Clnmh oi·Orlll

·~
PUU&gt;r: Flnl
SlowBopllol
FUlkr

Paol&lt;ir: Hal""' B. UJoda wood
Sund.oy School-9:30a.m.
W""\!· 10:30a.m·., 7p.m.

Youoh PUior Rid&lt; Harris
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip· 10:40a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodnaday Service~· 7:00p.m.
Sll•• Roa B11pdll
Put«: Bill Liale
Sund.oy School · IOa.m.

Wonhip · llun., 7:30p.m.
W-.dioy s.m.... 7:30p.m.

v- BojMiol
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
ML

Sunday Sc:llool-9:45 un.
Bvenina ·6:30p.m.
Wodnolday Service~ - 6:30p.m.

.Old - e l Free Wta Bapllsta..rch
l860 I SL Rt. 7, !,liddleport

Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
. Evenin&amp; · 7:30p.m.
Thunday Seivices · 7:30

Lo•IP•• Chrtotl• CloSund.oy School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Pauor. O.arleo Oomipn
Sundavschonl- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
ll......UieCh- oiCIIrllt
Pastor: l'hilip S...nn
Suaday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Smdy, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

VkiGrJ Bopllst llldopondant
m N. 2nc1 s.. Middleport
Pastor: Jne1 E. Keesee
W&lt;&gt;nbip · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;ZJ · 7 p.m.

Chnst1an Un1on
H..._ Clolll'dl Ill Clortollo

....

c:.rtst~.v

-

Falllo lloptlot Churdl
Railroad St.. Ma10n

Thoron Duihom

Ew:nina· 7 p.m.
Wedl "day Services · 7 p.m.
Harlford Chlll'dl ol Chrllll•

.. u....

.

~

FOftJIRo18aplill

Honfood,W.Va.
Putor: Rev. David MeMIIIil
Sunday School · Ifun.
Wonbip ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
We+ odty SaW:es ·7:30p.m.

Pallor : ArM11 flun
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wophip - lla.m,

ML Morilh B11pllol

Fourth .t. Main 51., Middleport

Pa-. Flooonce Smllh
Sunday Sc:hocl · 9 a.m.
Worlhip • 10 a.m.

M-·

Ch- Ill Cool
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Sauerfteld
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
lilt.

Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.

. A•tlqiiiiJ Bopllst
Pastor: Kcmeoh Smith
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Servi001 · 7:30p.m.

liw:nina · 7 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvicea • 7 p.m.
RoU.IId Chlll'dl , Ged

Pastor: Jom F. Coroo&lt;an
S~ School- 10 a.m.
Worship . II o.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7 p.m.

a.tlon&lt;l Frto Wta Bapllol
Salem SL

Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Ew:nina · 1 p.m.
Wedneedey Setvica · 1p.m.

Catholic
IIMnd Helot Ca- Clollrdl
161 l\lobny A..., Pomeroy, 99'2-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
S., Con. 4:45-S:iSp.m.; Mm- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9:15 am.,
Sun. Mill · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Maa · 8:30a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL
Ll
..•- ~ '..' ·'.:
w
·

Syracuse
992 3978

4

s,_ChoidufGod
Apple and Seoond Sll.
PasiOr: Rev. David R111..U
Sundoy School and Wonhip- 9:30 a.m.
E•enina Services· 7 p.m.
Wedneii&lt;IO)I Servicea • 7 p.m.

Churdl Ill God ol Proplleq
0.1. While Rd. Iii 5I. RL 160
"-:Pit"'"-'

...,..,..,o •.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS ·

i'·l
212 E. M•in St1eel
992-3785. Pomeroy

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

....,

J. M• CUI Fullz
Ph. lft-2101

SALES

· CHURCH
&amp; BIBLES

(\\\iff

5trnf !Booht
93 MHI SlrHI
Mldohport. Ohio 4i710
882·

I ,

r..tCiotpet

p

PuiOr. Artlur Cnbtnoo
Sladay School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Semceo • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Salrlts

"'J- c11r111

s_c...,

Pulor: Ron Fion:c
Sunday School- 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip ·tO:IS a.m.

.. ~ Daj Stlllll

Pcnlond-Racine Rd.
Putor: lerl)' Collin•
Sunday Sdlooi- 9:30 Lm.
Wonllip • 111-.lO a.m.
WI odoySoniooa·7:30pa.

'

204 Condor St.
Pome~oy, OH.
992-2975
•'

s-.•

Putcr. Flonnce Smith
SW~day Sdlool • to a.m.
Wonllp. 9a.m.

Lutheran

lletllaoj

SL J... Laa1raa CIMndl
PineO.....
Putor: Oooop Weiridt

Putor: Kenneth Baker

Sund.oy Sdlool - 10 ......

Wonllp · 9a.m.
w-..y Servicet . to a.m.

Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sundty School· 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worlhip • II a.m.

.. a.-

p....., Geo!p Woiricl&lt;
Sunday Scbod . 9:45 a.m.

Ctnoll

Pulor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t. 4th Sun)

MontocSttr ·
Putor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Serviceo · 7:30p.m.
Suttoa

PaiOr. Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m. (Ill A 3nl Sim)

Vlonhip • II a.m.

United Methodist
en... U•ltoll- n t

EutLetnrt
Pamr: Roaer Grace
Sunday SchoOl'&gt;. 10 a.m.

Wonhip. 9:30 LDL (lot .t. 2lld Sun),
7!30 p.m. (3nlol .... Son)
w-..y SeMce . 7:30p.m.

Wonhip · 9 Lm.
Radllo
Pamr: a.,.., Groce
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip ·II Lm.
t..nf &lt;M'Fne Men «r Cll..a
Pu10r: PNo Tftllllblay ·
Sunday Sohoal • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servi.., • 7 p.m.

~~~--=w~:!."::•
· Putor: awlei Joneo
Suoday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thundoy Senoiceo • 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10:40 a.m.; 7 p.m.
Wednaday s.m... . 7 p.m.
Pulor:O._Sln&gt;ad

~y Schoal- 9:30 L.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. 7 p.m.
WodaoldaySenoiceo•7p.m.

~

lllelpC.........dYcPlrtoh
N-Cto-

Rallaadllble M Pulor: Rev. Ivan l\lyen
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
E...un,-7p.m.
Wedneii&lt;IO)I S.rviceo . 7 p.m.'

AI"red

Pai10r. Sharon HtUirllUI
Slmday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship · I I a.m. 6:30p.m.
Cloeola'
PallOr. Shlron Haunn111
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Suoday Sdiool - 10 a.m.
Thunday SeMce.o • 7 p.m.

CoolwUie V•lted illelllodllt Parilh
""stor: lfei&lt;D Kline
. CeahlloCioerdl

Main .t. Fifth Sl.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
W~ - 9o.m.

Joppt

Pa-: Brenda Weller
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdiool- 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday Services · 7:30p.m.

Tueod,ay Scrviceo . 7 p.m.

~.ana-

Pa-. Rev. Seldon Iamson
Sundty School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 1030 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

a......u~e

Pa-. Rev. Seldon,.......
Worship . 9:30a.m.
ht .t. 3nl Sunday-7:30p.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviceo . 7:30p.m.

&lt;•

Po-= Rol&gt;en v._

· The SaiYadoa AIMJ
115 Buaemut Ave., Poroera, .
Sunday School- 10:30 .....
Worlhip · 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

'

FaiiiiTabtnodo~urdl

Bailey Run Rood

Putor: Rev. Emmell RawOM
s...day School · 10:00 a.m.

ore a.m flltlle NUM'tlle
Pulor: Gqory A. Cundiff
SundO)I School· 9:30 a.m.

MJd•ep

P.-: Deroo N.wman
Suoday Sc:hool • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhi~- II a.lll.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Wonhip • I0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

~

ReedavllleFelowlhl,
Chordl of 111e Nour•e
Pwor: Iom w. Dou&amp;W
SundO)I Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servicea • 7 p.IL

Puoor: Keith Roder
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wonhip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueoday Servicea -7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pen-.!A-biJ
SL RL ll4, Racine
Pa•or: Willi. . Hohad&lt;
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evonina · 7 p.m.

Hazel c-munK) Ch•ch
'
OffRL 124
Putor: Bdsel Hart
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.

c-•..

DJ-tae
IIJ Chorcll
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mldclleport Pen-1

'!bird Ave.
PallOr: a... Cladt Baker
Suoday School· 10 a.m.
B•onina· 6 p.m.
·
Wedneoday Serviceo -7:00p.QI.

Clorlotlu Feltowllllp c..t...
Salem 51., Radand

Paooor: Robell B. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · I 1:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
WednesdO)I Servioe -7 p.m.

Fal,. GGIIp&lt;l Chura
LonaBoaan

Sunday Sc:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Fol Goopel Llpthoiooe
33045 Hit_. Rood, Pmneroy
Pastor: Roy Hunlar
Sunday School· to a.m.
Evenina7:30 p.m.
Tucoday A: Thunday. 7:30p.m.

N- Seltlaneot Churdl
Sunday Wonhip · 2:30p.m.;
Thun140)1 aervicu - 7:30p.m.

c-.t~
~(SJ,..._)

Church
Cifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip ~ 7 p.m.
Thunday service • 7 p.m.

s1r ...•MIIIIon
1411 BJidseman St., Syncuse
Paotor: Roy (Mike) Thompoon
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
E•onins · 6 p.m. .
WednesdO)I Service · 7 p.m.

Putor.: MWMruon
Suoday sc:hool- 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wedneii&lt;IO)I Service · 7 p.m.

-BetlleiNewT-ent
Silvtr Riels•

Paaoc Duane Sydenolricter
Sunday Sdlool. • 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecmeaday Service . 7 p.m .

T--

Presbyterian
Harrtoonvtae Preobyhrlan Chwdl
Wonhip · 9 o.m.
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Prabyterlan
Sunday School • 9 a.m. ·
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (lod &amp;4th Sun.)
Syracu.. Flnt Vnlled PreobJtoriao
Sunday Sdloot. 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.• 4 p.m. (hi .t. 3nl Sun.)

Fatten yoll W*t

United Brethren
IIIL H -.. Unl...i llntlr,.
I•

Ctortot c•-

Texu Conununity olf CR 82
Paotor. Robert Sanden
·Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m
:onhip . 10:30 o.m., 7:30pm
..mesday Service• • 7:30 p:..:
Eoleo Ualtod Bretllrealn cWt,
2 Ill miles -u, &lt;i Reedaville
'"' Slloe Route 124
Pa-.: a... Roben Marlcley

Sunday Sehool . 10 ....
Wonrllip · 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Services . 7:30p.m.

with awart~

992-5141
2nd

'Middltperl

Brogan-Warner

Crow's Family Restaurant
"Fe•turlng K•nruclty Fried Chlclr1111"
228 W. Matn

St., Pomeroy

992-5432

INSURANCE
~ SERVICES

I I! E. horlol Dr .
'"·1104

ol Columbu\, 0 .
104 w . Matn

. . lAsT MAll

"2·11 II Pomeroy

m.ns•

/,

Pomero.y

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Nationwide Ins . Co.

211 North
he end

r procurement contract• to

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
MemoricJI Hospital

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

" tDaterlala ancll or aervlce1,

Ohio

~-3'!

214 E. Mai~
992· 5130 Pomeroy

t

~~~~! !~~
Pre ~ cr1pf10n ,.

, , 1'11

''Dignir .\ · ap,d $&lt;:rric''' ,Hrra~· " "

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Established 1913

S"LES &amp; SERVICE

992-2121

992-7075

10. M... rry ''"·

Pollioroy

then file I bond for the
amount cil the contrac~ and
lh• check or L..tter of Credit
will then be raturnitd to tho
IUCCIIIfUI
· and
unouccoaalul blddero when
; ·the contract lo execultd.
or
2) A Bond lor tho lull
amount ol thlo bid. Tho
owner will retain lho bond of
the tucconful blcldcor but
tho owner will return the
bond ol ooch unouccetolul
blddtr after • contract hu
beenuecuteci
Blddero I,I'D requlrtd to
comply with the Minority
Bualneta Enterprloo (MBE)
requlr,omonta oel forth In
Section t64.07 of tho Ohio
Revlotd Code, ond Rule
1641·32 of the Ohio
Admlnlatratlve· Codt. In
part, thlt m•n• thot •ny
blddor, to the extent lhat It
aubcontrocll work, tholl
aword oubcontrocto lo
Certlfttd Mlnodty Bualnetl
:Enterprl- In on •gg1egalll
ilollar value of no loll Chon
five porcont (5%) of tho
,. :prime .contract. Bidder
~ procurement actlvltltl, to
, tho extent th•t It proourot

992-6669
Mlol~part,

_(M; \

ADVERTISEMENT
FORBIDS
ISSUE 2 PROJECT .
Sooltd bldt will be
recelvod bY tha ' VIllage of
Middleport at tho office of
- ·the Mayor, 237 Re~ StrMl
.. .-Miclille~rt, Ohio 45760 until
• _3:00 o clock p.m. Monday,
July 26, IH3 and then ot
tho office of the Moyor the
bldo will be publicly opened
and rood oloud for tho
following:
Park Street Rood
tmprovomonL Tho project
tncludet pavement plonlng
•• nec••••ry, widening of
the otrHI t 8 lnchn on
each oklo, and the laying of
3 lnchN of 30t aopholt an
the wl~Mntd portion ond 2
112 lnchu of 404 aaphalt
,, . on thti total now width ol thtJ
·: · •lr•t from lho lnllirteclion
' ol Bro-oy St. Mil to the
intenoctlon of Gon.
Hartinger
Pkwy .
Englnotrlng Eotlmate:
521,280
A bid guaranty, at
' requlrtd by Section 153.54
of the Rovlted Coda of Ohio
oholl accompany each
propotol aubmltted, oa
lallowo:
1) A Certified Chock,
CMhiM'• Check, or Lener
. .,.or Crldlt oquaf to 10 .,.cent
,.· of tho bid. A L-r ol Credit
• may be revocable only by
the owner. Upon ontorlng
Into a contract with tho
owner lh• contractor muat

RAWUNGS.COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Public Notice

,
.

172 North Stcond Avo.
Ohio

} oholl rtoull In lha oword ol

r

C:.rtiftllf Minorlly Bualnete
• Enterpoiau In on aggregate

!

doRM value ol no leal than

• . tWo percent (2%) of the
~ prime contract
•
All contracton and
oubcontroctoro Involved
with tht prolocl wiH, to the
exiHI proctlcoble, utt Ohio
producto,
riutorlalo,
liervlcto, and lobar In the
• lmplomontatlon of .their
: p r o I• at. . Addltionolly,
•. ··contractor compll111ao with
, tho Equal Employment
;. Opportunity ·raqulromonll
• ,of Ohio Atfmlnlalrlllln Code
• !;hoptM 123, the Gonrnor'o
: E:~ecuUve Order ol 1172,
~

and Governor"• ExecuUv•

• Order

•

. lrllf.

14·8

oholl

be

~. ~romuotcomplywllh
\l

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

IMUUNG: Llmee!one,
Dirt, GriiVIII end Coal

Gutters

the pr..atllng w... rat. on
publla lmprovemonto In
Molgo County, Ohio, ao
dotermlnod by Tho Olil·o
Deportment of lndualriinl
Rafatlona.
No bidder may wllhdr•w
lllo bid within olxty (60)
tlliJII after thoiiClualtllita of
opening thoreol.
All bldo ohall be properly
olgntd . by on •uthorlzod
rep......,tatlvo .of
thtJ blddor.
All bl... .h • II · -~- oeolod
onil pl•lnly morkod "P•rk
StrHI Road lmprovament
Pro(ect, llld,.oport, Ohio.
The owner ro_.... tho
rlghUo ~ect ony 01 oil bldo
tu b mItt • ond waive any
lrrogulliritfM.
Mayor

4S8

'.eo.•

247-Loluo FaDa

882-N- Bawea

949"'"'lacla•

895-l..tioort
937-B..trolo

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)
·667·6628

Public Notice
The property appralud
for Sf ,168.00 and cannot be
!!Old far I••• than

1/,

(7) 1,16, 23; 3TC

:.:.,.,;_P.,;_b..;I~I-N--1--U C ot ce
IN THE COMMON PLEAS

COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
Plllntiff
VS
CARLA SMITH, etol.,
Clle No.
~~~~~
•~
· 93
m.oTICE BY .PUBUCATION
TO: lliE UNKNOWN Holra,
Next of Kin, Devla. .,
Legatan, Admlnlolratoro,
Executoro, Peroonal
Repreoentatlvet, ond
Aotlgna or Dottle L Smith,
Dddtceaoed, n11111tn°0 and
0 y.rett arohun bown.
ou are ere y not111111
that you have bHn named
~-ntI in • I"'I af oc lio n
Defen wa
enlillod Bank One, AthMia,
NA, vo. Carlo Smith, et ol.
Thlo •ell on hoo boon
o11lgnetl c- No. el·CV·
14&amp; and Io pondlng In lhe
Common Pleao Court of
Melga County, Ohio, Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Tho objoct of the
Complaint It judgment
agalnot tho Defendant• In
tho aum or $8,760.&amp;5, wilh
lnteroot thereon at • r•t• of
53.34 per d'r i, from Mey 10,
t 993, and coata of thlo
action; Chat the Mortgage be
loreclooed and that the
Ilene ondlor lntoretta In or
on aald property, II any, be
marohollod and the real
ettalo quieted and ..ld
property oold In tho
foreclooure •ction and oil
amounto duo Plolntiff be
paid from the procolllo of
the aale, cOlla and ouch
other relief aa may be
necesoary .,d proper.
You ora hereby roqulrecl
to antwor the Complaint
within twenly·olght (28)
dayo after tho lot
publlcotlon of lhla notice
which will be publlohad
once a week for alx (6)
IUCCetiiVe WHkl. Tho IIJot
publication wm be made oil
tho t 6th day of July, 1883,
ond the twenty-eight (21)
daye lot •nowarhig will
commonce on that date. In
caoo ol your folluro to
anower or otherwl ..
r••r:nd aa roquirod by the
Oh o Rul.. at Civil
Procodure; judgment by
def•ult will be rendered
ogalnat you for the rollof
d_..,dod In the Complaint
Dated .thla 7th day of
June, 11193.
•.' ,
IMry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Court
Melgo County, Ohio
(8) 11,18, 25;
(7) 2, 8, 18, llc

..

·
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nn.d RESU'ENTIAL
FREE ESTlMATES

614·992·7643
lllo Svntlay Calls!

•H. 614·992·5591

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
·WORK

21121921tfrt

SIC!ewalks

992·7878

1&amp;9

(former Mason Lanes).
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV

(304) 773-5585
'SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5·10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

FOREVEI
BRONZE

UPHOLSTERY

TRIM and
REMOVAL

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES .
'

CARPENTER UDV14
Addition•
Work
and Plumbing

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Exlllrlor
Pointing
tFREE ESTIMATES)

CHESTER • Texaa Rood- The~e' s mo~e lo ~ that a drive by
won't tell· Inside the house the,. are 3 bedrooms, 2 bath1,
suna, family room, fi~eplace, skylight, and Mexican clay·tile in
the kitchen. Oulslde is a Gazebo bar, inground pool, and
privacy lance which would be graat for entertaining guasl.
PRICED AT $78,000

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6,215
Pomttoy, Ohio

POM):ROY PIKE· Approx. I milo from ·Slala Route 7· A 2
ASKING $8,000

POMEROY· Bunernut Avenu• A 3 atoJY building with 6
large rooms and lwo haW baths. Would make a graat meeting
hall or could ba converted Into aparbnanla.
ASKING $28,000
MIDDLEPORT· North Second· Nico hardwood
beautiful firaplaca With leaded glaso book.catll on each
Huge living room, clnihg room, and kitchen en fi.-t floor
lull baaamanl Thraa bedrooms and bath cn lha - d floor.
Big 90 X 120 lot and a flont porch.
ONLY $38,500
DOT11E 1\JRNER, Broker .................._ ................ M-56112
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................... III24056
DARLINE STEWART ............................................. 1112-t385
SANDY BUTCHER ..................;....:.........................III2-1371
JERRY
112-34111

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698·3290
or

614-698-6500
7n/lfn

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
. GUVEL &amp; COAL
·Reaso•a.ble
Rates
JOE N.SIYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138
3·4·93· 1 mo.

.JAltMR
Quality
Stone Co.

Public Notice

Court, C••• No. 27184,

118nnlng Kloeo, 2111 Rutland
8trMt, Middleport, Ohio
45710, W81 appolntod
Executor of the •tate of
Rhoda A. H..l, tlocMIIICI,
late of 131 8. locond,
llld,.oport, Ohio 45710. •
RoiMr1 E. Buclc,
ProiNttaJudge
LAno K. NMotillrl*f, Clerk
(7) 8, 11, 23; 3TC

,.,

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
WHILE THEY LAST!
These Sizes Only!

8x7 ........... $17
9x7 .......... ;.$189
16x7 ......... $296

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
Life • Medicare ~ Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident .• Annuity, IRA • Mortgage
Rocky R~ Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

Box 189
·Middleport, Ohio 45760
14) 843·5264
I

S.hade Ri~er Saddle. Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chester,

Oh~

45720
31811fn

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
c••••ire, OH.

J&amp;THOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Fro• Foundation to

Roof

ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT REPLACEMENT TIRES
205-75A15" Tlgw Paw XTM RWL
205-75A14"1Tger Paw XTM RWL
215-75RI5" Flr•tone OWL
23S.75R15" Flr•tono OWL
- CALL FOR PRICING 'EXHAUST SALE NOW IN PROGRESS' 6128113

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533
ASK FOR CHRIS

IMicle anti Out
Free Ea11mltlea,

RIVER VALLEY
CONTUCTORS

Low Collla.
Work i;uaranteed

614·949·2911 or
614-593·5010

FREE ESTIMATES
All work guaranteed.
Low Cost
Inside, Outside, Top
to Bottom

5-24-1 mo.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONRRUCTION
•11ewHo•e•

PH. 742·2217

•Gara..l

6-30.1 mo' pel

•Co•plete
Re•otleling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMlTES
915-4473

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC
WALKER ALlEY

Palls and Service
Mowers • Chain Saws
WHdeaters
Authorized: Brlggo &amp;
StraHan MTD, Ryan,
tD.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 96· M·F 9-3 Sat.
Clooecl Sundey

949·2104

Bl
EVERY THURSDAY

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Eotata of Rhoda R. Hall,
0...-cl
Cue No. 271114, .Docket
N/13, p... 4111442
NOTICE !)F APPOINT1oiENT
OF FIDUCIARY
R.vllllf Coda, S.C. 2113.01
"On July 7, 1113, In tho
llel91 Counc;- Probata

DO IT YOURSELF - WAYrH
OAllON
&amp;CONTUCTOR

985·3406

9-1

MIDDLEPORT· S 5th· Has 8·9 rooms, 4 bedroom1, and 2
full baths. Look at tho extras-has maintenancefret aiding,
heat pump, jancad backyard, open stairway, fonnal dining,
room wilh bay windows, lull batemlint, and ~ is clote to thco
schools.
$48,500
acre home or mobile home site with water and electric
available. A groat locaticn ai.d a gr~~at lxilding lila.

Truck1ng

12·»92·111 i L,._ _ _.._..;2-;.;7..;·112;;.~;;;rnJ

YOUNG'S

WAYNE
DALTON

SPECIAL

Porches,
Patios,

7n/1JIIQ.

thlrdo) ol the appraloed
value.
;
Termo ot Sale: tO% caah
or certified check, day ol
tale and balance on
delivery ot dea!f,
Jeffrey L Slmmonol
N. Robert Grillo ,
AHorneyo lor Plaintiff
VInton County National
Bank
Jamet M. Soutoby,
Melga County Sheriff
(61 t8, 25; 17) 2, 9, t6, 3lc

PUBUC NOTICE
The VInton County
· PubliC Notice
National Bank,
Plaintiff
vo.
Probate Court of Melgo
Dennla R. Glllettt, et at.,
County, Ohio
Defentllinll
Ettoto of JornH Arnold
Cote No. 92 CV 272
Anderaon, O.O..ted
Purouonl Co an Order of
Cott No. 2N88,
Sale f!om the Melga County
Docket 13, Page 441.
,
loA
.
Cammon Plan Court, 1 wlfl
Notloe of A.f:jlntmenl ol
fl'6ot Elltlmatea
offer . for oalo at public
.vlatd Code,
Replacement
ouctlon at tho front olept of
2113.08
the Courthouoo of Molgo
Window•
County, Pomeroy, .Ohio on
VInyl Siding
tho 23rd day of July, 1H3,
Roofing
at tO:OO A.M. the following
Call,. for
deacrlbed real eo tate:
Special Prlc• on
Situate In the Townohlp of
Columblo, County of Melgo
Anderoon, deceeoed,
Siding end Wlndowe
and Stall of Ohio:
ol 227l8.Buclttown Rd.,
992·2772
Beginning for relerence at Racine, Ohio 45771."
the interoectlon ol the
.
Robert E. Buck,
Jemeo Keeaee, owner
canter of State Roull No.
·•'
Probate Judge
61201113
t43 ond Road No. s: being . 'Lana K. f'IHtelrood, Clerk 1.______..:;;:;:;.::~.
the Northweat corner of a (7) 16, lTC
.75 aero tract owned by
Laura P. ·Krobo, being Parcel
PubliC Notice
UNLIMITED ONE
Thret (31 detcrlbed In Detd
MONTH TANNING
Book 2t1; Page 251; thence
PUBUC NOTICE
South 59" deg. IS' eoot
On Juno I, 1813, ot
$25.00
ab!IUI 266.5 .feet along the approxlmotely 1:00 A.M.,
WOLFE BED/
center of State Route No. tho M/V A.A. V•lll
FACE
TANNER
143 t o a otee 1 p1n; ' lhonce accidentally dlochor•
....
an
..So th 33 d
W t 126 5 unknown quontlty· or
u
eg. ••
·
number 2 dleoel fuel at mllli
lo alinhedge
lanceaid
on the
11'Iouth
1 lho
75 poot237.5 of tho Ohio Rlvor.
•
t" 1 0' d
tho affecttd areao lncludo
1 acet 10
Tacktrwlllt Rd.
r
a 1 ee r ; milo 237.5 to mile 242..5 of
llhence North
65
dog.
Wett
Racl•e
along the hedge tho Ohio River; Campbell
Ifer•ce to the Clllller of Rood Trantportotlon Comp•ny,
949~2826
5; lhence North 32 dog. Inc. lo thtJ ow- ollhe M1V
8,17·113-1 mo.
.153. feel' along the A.A. Vet tal, which lo the
1ce1nter of Road No. 5, to dealgnoted o011rce of the
ace of beginning, tplll purou•nl to the 011
conl'llnlng .53 acroa, mora Pollution Act or 1810.
or leaa, after excepting all Clalmo arlolng out of thlo
legal rlghta-of-way and nplll moy be oubmlttod to
eaoemento of record.
C•mpbell Tronop«tatlon
Thlt real estate be.ing tho Comp111y, Inc., P. 0. Box
oame real eotate that wao 124, Chorlerol, Pa. 15022,
excepted from the deed Atln.: Don Grimm or by
conveyed by Lauro P. Krobt calling Campbell Trono·
to Lillie Rupa by deed dated portatlon Company at (412)
October 31, t969 and 483-6556 lro111 8:00 AM to
UCINE, 01110
uHelplng You To
recorded in Vol. 240, Pogo 4:30 PM, Monday through
1029, on the Delli Recorda, Friday.
Reeover Your
Malgo County, Ohio, of
If for any reaoon
lnv~•tl..ent"
which reference lo hereby Campbell Tr~nap-tion
614-742·2996
made
Company, Inc. lalla to act on
Ex~epllng all coal and your clolm within 10 doya;
other mineral reoervatton1 then you may tubmltlt to:
and all leaoeo, If •ny, on Unllod Stelet Cooat Guord
In the Recorder'a National Pollution Fundt
Melga County, Ohio.
Center, 4200 Wllaon Blvd.,
prior conveyance: Sullo 1000, Arlington, VA
327, Poge 63, Molga 22203-tao,t.
CGun~ Deed Racordo.
(7) 5 ~ 7 8
12 13 14
• 8,21 22
• 23
, 26
•
Sal real eolato located t 5 16•...,1ft •20,
S
R
•
'
"•
•
•
•
'
at: 2953 9 I. t. 14 3, 27, 28, 28, 30; (8) 2, 3, 4,
•LIGHT HAULIN~ ,
Albany, Ohio 457tO.
5, 6, I, 10, 11, 12, 13, 3otc
-"-----R--1-E...;..:..,.;...;...;....;....;....;._;,_ _
•FIREWOOD
ea state Genei'JII

.

BISS.LL BUILDERS, INC.

LICENIIf;D ond IIONDEO·

(two~

°

Vlla.!!:"
...':.tr::"ri
.-r-

IUUDOZING

67~PLPI-

516-Apple c .....
713-11-

742-R;,;daad
667-Cool..ute

3· t 6-113-lfn

J&amp;L IN.su• ··:riON

ApoolollcFth~

Clllon

NEW-REPAJR

PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
i· UHES
,BlsEMENTS &amp;
(HOME SITES

949·2168

985 ,, ••,
1143-Po.....d

Public Notice

.

Public Notice

Po....,

PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• Budget of Letart
Townohlp lo ovalllibto for
public lnapecllon at tho
home of clerk, Joyce White,
23238 Hill Rd., Racine, Ohio
45771.
Joyce While
23238 Hill Rotd
llaclno, Ohio 4577.1
(814) 247·3125
(7) 18; lTC

J

1/4 mile past Fort Mei&amp;• on New Lima Rd.
Pu10r: Willioin Van Mel&lt;r
Sunday·7:00p.m.
Wecmesd.,-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

~Service · 7 p.m.

Mwact.~Ch•rdl

,

992-MJ.Idleport/

3674 ,."8
388-Viatoa
24$-llloG.......
256-Go.,oa l'Jist.
643-.4Hblo Dlsl.
379-'l'all•t

PubliC NotiCj!

EMPIRE FURNITURE
WILL CLOSE AT 5 PM FRIDAY
JULY 16TH ALLDAY
SATURDAY JULY 17TH
MITCH IS GETIING MARRIED
RE-OPEN MONDAY 8 AM

I

Church .r J - C1Hist,

Evenina7 p.m.

1

U.ltod Faith Chwdl
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pa11
Paaoor: Rev. Robert B. Smith, Sr.
Sundty Sehocl- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecmeii&lt;IO)I Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 a.m.
Tucoday1Semces ·7:30p.m.

ReJoldftii.Me Chordl
500 N. lod Ave., Middtcport
Putor: Lo,.,..,.,. Foro:man
Suoday School- 10 a.m.
Wedneodoy Service• • 7 p.m.

c--•!

Hedd.,..n CIIGrllldSl'"'"

To....,. Plalno St. PMI
Plstor: Shan::m HIUim.lft

Stlwernltte Wanl Ill Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Sc:hool9:30 a.m.
livonina • 7 p.m.

·

lleaMI Clillrdl
Townohip Rd., 46&amp;C
Sunday Sdlool- 9 a.m.
WosohiP · IOa.m.
Wedoesday S'ervices : 10 a.m.

ChOI'dl
63

SundO)I School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip . II "-!"··7:30p.m. • .
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m. ;

Pastor. lte¥. Roland Wlldman
O.urdt ·9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m.

..

0:

Pastor: Rev. Victor Rou1h

Trtoliy ConvtJMI..,at C1J.a

B() . \RD

YARD SALE
Friday and Saturday
8:30 a.m.· 5 p.m.
Lyons Add~ ion in Mason
•(t/4 mile below bridge)
Watch for Signs

.·

CalvarJ PIJcrill Chapel
Harri""'ville Road

SWiday wonhip · 10 a.m.
Wednesday servi~ . 6:30 p.m.

Mldd'-'l
Ctoerdl
S7S Pead SL, l\lidd!eport .
PallOr. Sam Andenon
Sunday Sc:hool 10 a.m.
Evenina • 7:30p.m.
WednadayService· 7:30p.m.

:·
c...... f• Chrlll.

Pasuw: Rev. Frantdill Dickens
Service: Friday ,7 p.m.

l!M-H-ofPnJer
Borllnah- c:llurdl alf Route 33)

ML Ottwe C-• •IIJ Church
Pa-: Lovmnce B•h
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday School- )()a.m.
Wonhip · It a.m.
Wedneii&lt;IO)I Servia" . 8 p.m.

Fallll FllloWahlp

446-Golllpolla

I

· BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Cal•ll'l' Bible Chardl
Paneroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pas10r: Rev. Blackwood
Suoday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneaday Service-7:30p.m. '·

New liP• ~ eltlle N•zsnne

Other Churches

BllLLETIN

R&amp;C IICA¥11111

G.Wa County Melp Co1111t)r M11011 Co., WV
Area Code 614 An!a Code 614 Area Code 304

oleo.,,_.

Fll"'- Bible Chlll'di
Letall, W.Va. RL I
Pa-: Jameole...U
Sunday School · I I a.m.
Wonhip . 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Portb•d Flnl Clo- Ill 111e Nao.....
Putcr. Willi.. Jualio
Sooday School· 9:30a.m.

orlhip . 10 a.m.
W.......yServices - 6p.m.

Wonl!ip · t0;4S ...,,, 7 p.m.
Thonday SeMoo. 7:30.p.m.

sc. .... Lre

Clo....., otthe N...,..
Pulor: s_. Buye
Sunday Schoal ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip · I0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodnosday Service• . 7 p.m.

Putor:Keidl Rader

w..,..

Coalville Rood
PUIOr. a... Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wecmesday Service -1 p.m.

a.._..

~~·9I ISa.m.

Riotlttd

Wlllla'a Cllapol

Wodneo&lt;fay Services . 7 p.m.

Roell~

H)IOI R• H••Cio-.
Putor: RobeltM..toy
Sunday School· 9:30 LIIL

a........,, c..,....

Po-= Rov. """'"" Gnle
Sunday School - 9:30 ......
Wonhip • II un., 6p.m. -

lrtJ

Putor: Euohoe (Groce) Koe
Sooday School· 9,15 a.m.
WosJhip - 10::10Lm.,6p.m.
Wednesday SeMcea . 7:30p.m.

w•yu!IIMe"' 11
Cloordl
7S Peut Sl., &gt;4lddtepM.
Pu1or: a...Ja Nevlllo
Sundty oc:hool ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30a..m., 7:30p.m.
w-..a., SorvKe • 7:30p.m.

264 South

BILL QUICKEL
992·6677

Wonhip -IOa.m.

Wonhip · 10:30 un., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeMoo · 7:30p.m.

Church of God

P1aor: Rev. Gilbert Cnia.Jr.
SundO)I School · 9:30a.m.

' '

PIMGrMe ..... HoM_Cio_
112 mjle alf RL 325
Paotor: a... O'Del Mtnley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30 .....

Sunday.s.,.:hool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wecmeaday Service• · 7 p.m.

Mill Wo1 k
Cah!llel Makinp,

Pulor: Dellla N - .
Sundty School· 9 Lm.

Comer Src- A·Second Sa., p.._roy'

H•todt Gro•e Cllerdl

HMiolde Bopllst Clolll'dl
5I. RL 143 just aft RL 7
Pasoor: Rev. James R. Acroc, Sr.
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • tla.m., 6 p.m.
,Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Ml-•wt•

Po-= .... llo"91tiq
Sunday """""" 9:30 .....
Sunday -ship .7 p&amp;
Wedneoday pnyer IJIOOCinl· 7 p.m.

Hldlaa. Hill Chordl oiCiortol
Putor: Joocph B. HOII&lt;ins
Solldoy School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service! • 7 p.m.

Pamr: Woody CoD
Sundty Ew:nina · 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service • 6:30 p.m.

Sunday Schoal · 10;30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Thunday Services· 7:30p.m.

a-111--R
In a-dl
Nee Lima Rotd, a.llilld.

O.r Sal'lwr L•..aru O.rd
Wain• and Henry Sll., Ravenowood, W.Va.
Co-pu~&lt;~n: a..o. Ridwd .t.
Palricia llonds·Kiva

Dex~&lt;r

--Bapllol
Putor : Rov. liul Shuler

Sunday School • 9:30 ......
Wanhip · I030o.m.
Wednaday Service~ · 6p.m.

HoiiJless

I

•"""'.,ad

HoROo~WINtiGIIesel
DownaJiouts

Clauified pose• c011er dee
follmDins telephone e:cchOli/Jel ...

• Fno,Y,, Gi-way.ooodfo...!adouder15wordowlllbo
... 3 olaya .............
r... .u cap11a11auon;. dool.lo priM .r ... - ·
• 1 pob! llao type • .., uod
• Seat.iaelil DOl n~polllillii»Je (l)r erron afler fntMy '(eheek
for CrTOn r..... oloy ad ..... Ia paper). CoD t.elon 2:011 , •• •
day sfter puh1ieatiOD tG .,._ correeliDa
• Ada tMt••t 1M paid ia ad¥..C.'an:
CoN of 'J'IIulu · Happy Ads
.
Ia M-oria•
Yard Sal..
• A cl-lfoed . . . . _ . . , pla.ooolm 11oo G.uipollo Doily
Trib•.O (..•opt Clauifoed llioplay, B.a.- Can! or Lap1
Nolle•) will
ia doo Poiat Plouut Rop1or a.nd
the Doily S.aliaol, naehi,. .,..18,000 bo·

Gaoptl
MIBald Kaub,
On Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Rater Willford
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-10:45' a.m., 7 p.m . .
w ....esday Service • 7 p.m.

c....,..;a.rc~~.rt~~~N.-..•

Paour. Frnnk Smllh

Br-dC.. rdlei'Ciortol
5I. RL ll4a: Co. Rd. S
P~ Des Slump
Somday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SaW:es . 7:30p.m.

UberiJ'Ciir~lll Chordl

OJ Cllwdll tldle N..,.e
Puur. Rev. 'l1lomu l\lc:Ciuna
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wcdlip • 10:30 a.m • ..ld 6 p.m.
Wednescloy Services • 7 p.m.

SAT.S-12
·

• a-.. dioeoual for ado ptld ia ..... _.

Putor: CIY&lt;Ia W. Hendenm
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
· B...... ·7p.m.
w.......y Service . 7 p.m.

P

-

• AU outaMie lhe eouty your ad naa~ au.t be prepeW

Ctrlotoo lotor••,....._tiChurch
Kinpbury Rood
'

.... Rid&lt; Soorp1l
Sunday School · 9::10 ......
Woolhip . ,10:30 a.m., 6 p.a.
Wednelday Serviceo • 7 p.m.

F-ll••
, _ , DeraiiN.wman

W....... IO.lO ue., 7 p&amp;

Mlddl ri'rtCil..atiCklll'
5thoodMiin
Pastor: Alllartl&lt;lo
YOUih Minister: Bin Frvier
Sund.oy School- 9:30 .....
Wonlllp- 1:15, 10:30un., 7 p.m.
w...,esday s.mc:ca - 7 p.m.

s,_Cto.... fltiiiN...,...

, _ , Koilll Roder
SaodaySdlooi·IOOJD.
Wonbip • II LDL, 6 PJD.
Thariday SeMcea • T p.m.

., o.nllofOrlll

Wr&amp; day~'* . 7 P•·

h

MoN. thru FRI. 8A .M,-5P. M.
CLosED SUNDAY
POLICIES

DAY IIERlltl! PUBLICATICN
1:00 p.m. S.turciJiiy
1:00 p.m. Motldoy
1:00 p.m. tu..c1oy
1:00 p.m. Wednadoy
IOOp.m. Thunday
I :011 p.m. Prlday

COPY DI!ADUNE
Monday Paper
T. - y Paper
Wellnetday P~ .
ThUJiday Paper
Frtdoy Paper
Sunday Paper

. EAGLES.

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
Md TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEP.TlC SYSTEMS;
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING, .
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

• IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
•100 Payoff
Thle eel good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

FREE ESTIMATES
50734 Bigley Rlolgo Rd.
Long Botlom, Oh. 45743

985·4181

· 6/are'l/t

6-9-93-lfn

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Ball Run Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

\ 992-3470

I

5/1019

GENERAL
HAULING

CIIP.Diil

Limestone
Dirt

Remodeii"IJand Rojllllr
Painting, Eltplrlanced

Gravel

Will

614-44&amp;-as&amp;a

ENTERPRISES
•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
.
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing

OWN I A: JoH Wldtar ..all

CLUB

Fret EaUmtillt

COLLINS

HOWARD

r"'

992-7878

mnmo:

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
n~~~~lng

;a~
31904 .....,••
Creek Road

Middleport, o•io

614·992·7144
. 4/29/93 ...

-,

'

�·.

•

'

..

....

..

- o.'''r~~=~:--:----:---~--;::=:::~~~~~~~~o~h~lo~==r-----:----~-~....:.-,~~~Ju~•~'~J1~993~
Page- -a-The
Af11lOUI1CPinents
----

~

32 Mobile Homes

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Apanment
lor Rent

for Sale .

71

Autoa for Sale

1171 Co

2 - - 1 1 1 1 0 - Wldl, Fumlohod Aport-, 1b&lt; s bedroom., 1112 blths, manr lo
Ubrory, porldng, - r o l - .
oJJiroo, prlood on l.._iori, llr, ........,
114 44t 0331
304 112 :1317.
Blloro 7p.m.
'
Fumlohod oftlcloncy, .,,_.,
1120 Fourth An., Oolllpoll-.

CALL YOUR DATE NOWI 1 :111-41:1211 ul. - · $2.11 per
"''"·· rnuet be ,. yra. old,
PROCALL-11.

-.
.........................

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

~ovJ A~l IF /0/frJ(T 1iMEO
I (&gt;ltilll"t 1o, S'RAT&lt;.Hfl\/4

foSI

~

Utlllll• peld, 8,. Ul U11 1"1r

0

. . . . .,.....

ACROSS

........,..

- · 011 -HIMI
or
'

PHILLIP

.

ALDER

Wllh 1llrbO !!Mino Ylnyt TOll .trine, 'lliry C1oao1

7pm.

::::...:r:: ~...~.
Caii •• "

""'

DIJIF 1 'all

441-1117.

NORTH

I

:

.J8 76S42

-hdottl--or.4.

+86

-.-. .... *--·
1.. Oldomulolto 0o1t1

+QB

,"J :''

8!.~~~~~~~'~' IM- ·,'
441'4121,AIIorl .M.

WEST
JI072

•Qs

AK10754

+932

SOUTH '
.AJ8

lllf Partlllo lonno~L..!...
cond. 104-8714m1 or.,...,.
, . ••
'A~&amp;~

c

'"-'11.1~

1M3 by NEA. Inc.

,.

• AK3
tAK943

Int-. M,IOO.

low - . nd ·,

30U711o·
.
:
FOld Probe. aood ..... ;

w/groy
~1

+J6

Vulnerable: Both
.Dealer: South

1_:========:;;;====::===::!..~ lion,
air, til,-- 814-448-3101. '
I"
- Font ~ 1/oJC, 4 CJt~n.
dlr, I Spoed, ExCOIIonl e53
Antiques
Buy or 111. Rlvorlno llntiquoo,
1124 E. Moln SlrMI, on Rt. 124
- . . , . Houn: M.T.W. 10:00
o.m. lo 1:00 p.m., Su,.y 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. l14-1112·252e.

54 Miscellaneous

Giveaway

Trimming. Fr• E.lllmate•l 6"'-

Rick Parson Auction Company,

full 111M auctlonMr, complete
auction
aarvlca.
Ucanud
l&amp;&amp;,rJhJf) I W•t Vlrglnlt, 304-

7n-5785.

367-79STAfter 4p.m.

G....,.l Molntononco, Pointing,
Yord Work Windon Woohoo
Gunal'll Cleaned Light Hauling,

Commlrical, R.ldlntlal, Stawa:
614-446-1658.

G.arg• Pottablt S.wmlll, don't
haul your loge to ·the mill ju.t

coii30U75·1957.

JohnHn'a lrM Service, 1,-lmmlng &amp; 1'8mOVII, lf'MI:, lhNbs,

2 White Shephardl To Ght11way

I Chow Puppy, 614-357.0344.

BNutlful Long·HIIred Gr8y And Buy Stondl~ Timbor, Plno,
WhHo Fomolo Col. Hu a- Paperwood, &amp; Saw Timber 614Spayed, To Good Homo! 614- 682-7318.
446-8390.
Decorated ..oneware, oil lamps,
Fr. PuppiM, Pairt Pomeranian antique furniture, m111 pouch

P1rt Manchnter, 3 Females

Loft,
Phono:
Anytime.

614-446-4713

Kltttnt, 614-446-o45'14.
MaftrMI &amp; Box Springe, 614-

245-15855.
Six mixed Betglt

pup~tti

good homo, 614-1185-3136.

to

1

.

thermomec ...., gener11 anti·
qu... Riverine Anllquea, Ruu
Moora. owntr. We do ap.
pralsals, 614-992-2526.

Don't Junk It! Sill Us Your Nona
WorKing
Major Applianc. .,
Color
TV'•,
Refrigerators,
FrHzars, VCA's, Microwaves,
Air Conditlonen, Guitar Ampa,

Etc. 614-256-1238.

To a good home, German
Shepard. puppiH, very cuta,

61Uooi3-542t

J &amp; D'1 Auto Part• and Salvage,

also buying Junk carl &amp; truc~a.

Loot: Dog (Bol Block &amp; Whlto,
Lorge DOG With Red Col!or,
Family Pef, Vicinity: Charollla
lake, PINII C.ll _lt Found: 6*
446-7435.

:-:::::::::-:-:-:"':===--•AVON• ALL AREASI Shire your
time with us. You'll low. tha

compony. 1-800.992-6356.

Llundry

O«Yicoo:

lng,lronlng end mending, ,,._.
446-8602, Ilk tor Mary M.

Houck.

Mlaa Paula'e Day ea,. Canter 1
Block Wem Of HMC On Jackson
Plko M-F 8 A.M. -$;30 P.M. H

OuoiHy And Exportonco lo Tho
•1 Concem For Your Chlld'o
C.rt. C.ll Ue For A Vlah. lnt.nt
froddler1 614 U6 622l p,_..
choolerw !School Age 6"14-446-

8224.

~bYtlt In my home,
prwt.rably days, know fl1'11aid &amp;

child CPR. 304•773-5481.

Financial

Melga!Athlna
.8116·1317 Of 614-513-11469.

7

Yard Sale

,_ople To Grow Whh Ua. We
Are Now Looking Fer lnetallera

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1 112 Ulle Out 141, Friday
·Saturday t-3, Couch, Chair,
Truck Top.-r, Toya, Dlai'Mis,
Kld1, Men Ore. . Clothll.

And Service Technlciane. Mutt
Have 3 Years Expa~enoa And
Do Quality Wcrk. Plene Call
614-441-0114 To Make Appolnta
ment For An lnlervlew.
Easy Werle.! Excellent

PaY!

A ...

Hmb" Producta At Homa. Call

114 MUe OUt Georgn Creak
RDid, Oft Bulavtlla ROad, Saturday July 171h g..? Ol1h11, Plc-tul'l Fram111. Curio Cabln.C,
New eo.t, Mouaehold tlema,
Curtains, &amp; Roell, T.V.1 Wicker
Ch1ir, Utility Lights &amp; M11C.

Toll Froo, 1-1100-467-5566, EJJI.
313.
Elderly woman n•da aomeone

3 Family: July 16th &amp; 11111. 8-4,
Hou11hold,
Mlec. Clothing,
Boya 6 To 12, 2 T.V.'a Desk, E•·
ercia Bike, Weight Bench, 2
Boats, 1 MUn Oft 160 Kimper

Must Have AICint Experience In
All Aapeeta Of PhleboComy.
·Geriatric Expt~rlenc. 11 'A Plue.

Hollow.
ALL Yon! Slloo Mull S. Paid In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

the day before thl ad 11 to run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
. .

to ttay trom 7pm~7am, 7 nlghta
per w•k, &amp;14-N$--4282, Mery.
Expe~•nced

Phlebotomlll,

Eoriy Morning Houro; Company

Car; Approx . ""20 H,. /Week M4='.

Thil Ia Not A Job For Recent
Gn~duatH Or I!J9Inntn~ . We
Are Looking For SOm.ana Who
11 Reliable And Can Work
WlthoU1
SUpervision.
Send
Anume To: P.O. Box 33, Gallloplls, Oh&amp;o 45631.

Full Or Part-Tim1 SIIH

Moving Sale: 417 Main Street,

VInton. Antlquts , Teys, Baseball
Clrdl:, Furntture, Dlahn, Crans,
Piano, Misc. 10A.M. -6P.M.
Friday, s.turd1y, July 16th, 17th.

-

Slturdly, July 171h, 9:00 A.M.
a2:00 P.M. 111 Garfield Avanue,
Beaide 01 Ch~rch.

Or.portunhy In Exploding Aecy·
cl ng lndu.try1 Excellent OoportunHy To BuUd A S1e1dy fllslng
Commitslon Income With Our
Consumable Computer Industry
Product. ll'llnlng Provkled For

Motlvoted, Poopi..Orlonted In·

Thurlday 6 Friday, 6 MIIH

Call
Echo En•
terprian, lnc:. 614-934--2332.

North 01 Holzer HoepUal State
Aoute 7 On 160.

H1ndlcapped Man NMda Heme
Dome Care, No Heavy Lifting.

dlvldUIII.

NOT to oond money through IM
moll until you hovo lovllllgotod
tho offorlng.
Vending Routo: For Solo.
Strong, Solid Cl.ah Butlnnl.
High iraHic, Local Loca.tlon1.

New Equipment.1-I00-284-8383.

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subJed: to
the Federal Fair Housing ACJ.
o1 1968 wnk:h makes It Illegal
to advertise •any prelerence,
Umllatlon or discrlmlnallon
based on race, color, reBglon,
sex lamiUal stalus or n&lt;itlonal
origin, Gr any lntenllon to

make any such prelerence,
llmilalion or discrimiriauon .•
Thl s newspaper wl11 not
knowingly accept
advenlsemont s for real estate
which Is In vio lation olthe
law. our readers are hereby
Informed thai all d\WIIIIngs
actvertls8d In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunily basis.

31 Homes for Sale
2 bedroom home with 2 acr11 In

Maullful w_.d Mtllng, 304675-!0SV.
3 bedroom, 1 112 blthilottoched
garogo, 183 MIHon d, Comp
Conley,

appllancn

Included.

304-1175-1638. .
3.46 acr.., 44x24, 3bdrm., 2 1f2
bathe, tull buement, whh slid·

lng gl11e ololttlde entrance, para
tially tumlahed, tront porch,

July 11th, • 18th.

No EXperience! $500 To $900

Burdette Addttlon. ·Call for 1p.

3 Mlill Bol- Galllpollo On SR

Tate, HouMhold hema, Mlec.

WNkly IPetantlal Proc...lng
FHA Mortgage Aetund8. Own

Hours. 1·501-646-0503 Ext.213.

24 Hourt.

RN, 18 to :ZO hour• per w"k, lo
pt, Pleasant
make home vlalte In Ma.on
County, must hne own cer. clo
&amp; VIcinity
Point P"aaant Reglatar, Box A~
125 S. Port&lt; Dr., Sot July 17, 131.200 Main St., Point Pleasant,
prom dreas, lh1 .. girt'• clctt.e, Wv 25550,
ploy pon, mloc.
Tho Clly or Cillllpollo, Populo·
2304 MI. Vornon, Sit. July 17, lion 5,000, II SNklng A
Quolllled Ponoon For Tho Pool·
8 :00.??, No llfl)' ..,•.
tlon Of Chl•f Of Pollee. T'tM
SuccMahU ~ canCIIdlte Mu..

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
I VICinity
All Yord S.loo Muol S. Pold In
Advonco. Ooocllno: 1:00pm the
day bllfor. the ad le to run,
Sundoy edlllon· 1:00pm Frldoy,
Mondoy
edHion
10:00o.m.
So.:.t.:.ur,:di;:,:Y::,
·
-''-----,--,-.:.
)'ord Soleo July 1..17, Larklno
rwoldonco, Plno TrH Drlvo, Tupo
porw Plllnt, Som- 3pm. Toyo
i:hlldrwno
-·
diiMI,
ctolhlll, muD: ..,.•.

,

Hovo Tho Necnll'l' p...,.
ontcor'o. Trolnlng Along Wllh AI
L1111 Fin Yooro 01 Eoportonco
In Pollet Wort&lt;. Thlo Poolllon
Will S. Undor T!. Suporvlolon
or Tho Cny Monogor. Solo'l'
Rongo$25,000·$30,000Dopond· .

Bank,

Aaclne,

Ohio

Bedding ·Twin MIN Sot $81, Fuli
SilO Sit OuMn $141 Bot; 4
Drowor Chill $44.115; Cor Eild'oil

Poet• Bedl. Fu
Uno or Soulhwol1om V...
2 bildroom furnlahed mObile S1anl~ At $20.00; lnclana Many
Shope o &amp; Slz• Stoning A1
homo, 304-e75-8S12.
$5.00. 2 l.ocatlono ·Booldl Jluto
2 bedroom trailer, At. 588, Gala Auction Or 4 Millo Out 141.
llpolll, Ohio. 304-875-57011.
Opon I A.M. To B P.M. Mon -Sot.
2br, mobil home, completely Chrome Glue Dinette Set, Whh
lumlohed, $300/mo. 304-875- 4 Ruot Colo...r Ovor SluHod
Chalra, bcallent CondtUon,
6335 or 675-40'75 aftor 5pm.
$175, 614-441·1824.
C.ntanary 4 mll11 from G11~
USED APPU14HCES
lipolla, 2 bedroom1, water fura OOOD
nlshed, $240 Mo. No polo, AC, wa•rw, dry~r~, retrlgeratorJ,
rongH. Skoggo Applloneao 71
614 4461038.
VI no SlrootLpoll 814-441·73iill, 1·
Nice mobile homa Iota for up to 800-4911-34...
16x80 homes between Athens A
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Pomeroy, $85/mon., 614-892-2167.
Compl11o
homo . luml~~~~:·
Nice ·one bedroom mobUe Houro: Mo~l1.
11-5. 1
home, air, gn hut, privata 0322, 3 mil• out Butovllil Rd.
parking, yarcfln city, muat have FrM DaUv1ry.
,.t.rencee
446-4159. '"' de.,o.ht 614- Living Room Suhe, z Piece,
Novor Uood, S275; E.Z Bo•
Recontly romodolod 2 bodroom Roell- Rocker, $11115, 614-1186trall•r nNr Racine for Nnt
63TJ.
$260/mo.; 114-843-5286.
'
Motlohon Corpoto, Rt. 7
Aentala, 114-446a2515.
~y~~: ~v~. - ....~.
44
Apartment
New O.k Fumhure: Tablel &amp;
Cholro, Hulchoo, Curved Gl1111
for Rent
China Cablnlte, Book C..a,
Bunk Bed'e,

1 A 2 bedroom apart manta, 614-

1bdrm. tuml1hld apertment for
rent, very · clAn, $235/mo., can

&amp;14-992·15225.

2bdrm. aptl., total electric, appllanc.. fumlahed,
laundi'y
room flcllhl• ciOH to tchool
ln town. Applk:;tlona avallabltl
.. : Vlllaga Green Apta. 141 or

olorogo buUcl'-,
$311, · dlttvory I lllup, tlf,
Olhor onlloblt. Bldoro E·

JIIat.

Bltalum Browning, • - • 11,
Vonl111111d Rib, Sfiot Z Tlmoo,
Lib Now $750; 114-3711-21167.

$200/Mo. 701 Fourth, Gaillpollo,
814 441 4418 Aftor 7P.M.
Apartment

LoBiron 52,111; 1 - ~)odie
$1,1116; litre. T - .
........ 1117 CheW. Za:M cab
12.1181; 1 - l!c!dgo Coli SIN 414 ~N; ' 11111 T·Binf
$1,1181; . . . lliMflle Arlll; ' " '
N - :ZOO.SX $1,1116; 11111
f?ocltl! .,.,...,.. $1,511; .. D
Auto-. Hwy.IIO N. 114-4466181.
111t1 .l!odvo .B hl- Con-·

3117.
Emonoon 24,00 blu olr cond,
304-e7541211ollor 8:00.
Flborglolo Trucll T - . Uko
Now, Sliding Gil• Front . I

_ ..iloi33,000milll,
•• ,_ ......
010, ·~·21001,

.

CARL SAGAN SA'I'S TllERE AREA
~lJND~ED 61LLION STARS IN OUR
6ALAXV, AND Til ERE ARE A
.1-lVNDRED BILLIOt.! GALAXIES,
At.ID EACH GALA~V CONTAINS
A llVNDRED 6tLLION STARS !
SORT OF PUTS ni1N55 IN
PERSPECTIVE, DOESN'T 1
r
CllARLIE 6ROWN?

Nutrition Producto
INturlng Amino Acid Body
Building, wolaltt end fit
bumor ............, ,.,.,llllblo u·
oluolvoly 11 Rill l4ld Plwnlloy.
The 1110 WIY lo cllol.
·
GoH Ctube With Bag Full Sol
$10; 12 Spoed llonio Blcyoil
hOG; O.E. 4.2 a: ~J'IIor
$100; lloch Trumpol
; Now
11._ Sowing lhohlno $250; I"
BW" T.V. 130; Smith Corono
Tv-or 836, Sony Boom Bo•
S20;· 1168 • . Pto_.rboyo; Noct.,
Sony Cor AIIIFII Co..tlo
Sl-, S200; Clorlon EquoNur
8-tr $100 AI O.B.O. Aftlr 8
P.M. &amp;14-387-7H4.
Hl11orlc Col1 Iron, Both TUb
F""" 0.0. MclnoyN ~~~~In Oonloollo, Edro Ho&lt;iVI' CloWo
foal, Dated Morch 11108 S30D
080, 114""*'1122Afllr Dirk.

Condlllon: Jonn Air
Double Ovon Hot·
oolnt Dlthwlhor &amp; Rolrlgorotor,
!lloiniloo Sloot Stnk, fM-44111631.
Oood

Cooktll!l I

Kllll Ftoull luy Entoroor F111
Klners tor pete, home &amp; prd..
Oultlllloed -lvoll Avolllblo
Point Plllllnt Co-Gp, 11111
Kanawha st.

He.lon

Round

Baler,

Flotd Roody $1,800, 814-38Jio7V47.
10 John Ooorw sao, &amp;14-38Jio7V4l
Nydroutlc olll14.10 bucllol ot 10
!Ill $1Zii. Skloro Equl-.
M.llllii'Hir, wv. 3Q4..8~iU'I.

lntomollonol 300 Troctor With
cuntvotor; corn Pllnt• 52,310;
8414 lnt'"""tlonll With l.ciodlr
12~~ - lntornotlontl .....- .

11-Hw 1'22 -

2282.

or a......-. '

CB710, ". c. OO!"!J •
mlloo, 2 , _ •
hllmoto, other utroo, $1200, :

11111 II,ZII6 -

3044TW114:

1110

nd

.

o.-. .

Horloy

polntmont 304-1175-1486.

wotor,$12,000. 304·773-5163.

5 bedroom brick home, 1 112
bath, alectrlc hut and air,
family rqom wHh fireplace, nice

lovollot. 814-445·9387.

HouR for Nl• 148,500. 2618
Uncoln Avo, Pt Pll. 304-882·

=386=3·-:::--::-c:-""",.....,.--

-::
Hou" For S.te: 2 B.drOOiftl,
F.aml!y Room, Full BaMment .

Wllh Aropllco, 614-446-16911:
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

"Hold It right there, Henry! .. .. You ain't plannln' on
takln' that wrinkled horse Into town, are· you?" ·

/,

Off#C.f . •

.

@) 111a, NEWSPAPER ENTERPAiiE ASSN.

Spr-,

::-63==L~I~v:-:e"!'st:-.o.,.c.,.k_~­

Today is the J97th
day of 1993 and the l'"l'....,
26th day of summer.

for Sale

-311L-

bull, ~ on lnepectlon. :JD4.

'1113-11681.--

.

....

1110 l.2ll T·Topo, Lllthlr Int.,.
lor, - . , Robullt 4'00 lmiH
Block, llow Tlroo, EKShocko, Morol8-7107.
•
11tt Chev. Coolrlco Ctuolc Sl..
·tlon ~.High Mltoogo, Oood
~bit Work Clir, $800,
814-317·7V47.

•-....;"1,,...,..,, _.......

-a.-

•

W~ILST

ort'nodont i5t.

.

I

~UR'i

S1&gt;\~ , Wf\A\ 1\RI: .

t.lt' TREASURE ,

!ILL 11-IESE. l\1"\'LE.

1 WI\NiYE T'

6REI:.N TA9LES?

VR!&gt;.W ME 1&gt;1
Nlf&gt;&lt;l' so l

--+-+-+--t!

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ETRPYG
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I want lo do plays and movies and TV movlea, ·
and I'd like 10 work In every single medium." - Mario Thomu.

.-...

- - - -·-

'

'::~:t;~'· S@ll4llA-~"Etfs·

WOlD

lAIII

- - - - - - 141to4 ~r CLI4Y I. 'OUAN - - - - - -

0 four
Rearrange ~tters • of
Kromblod word!

the

be·

low to form four words.

I

I

MURBEP

s 0 G.0 E

I~

4
3 ,:....:.1,...:...;I1;;....=,
1:lr-1

~

'

~
1
I I I

I'll never borrow money from
a friend or rela.l ive. Granny at·
ways told me thatthe best way .

s

.

.

.

.

.

, :r ==~=~==~==~==~=~to
wipe
L 0 RHE D
1......
onout
it. a friendship was lo

1 I I .· I I e

Complete _the cl'luclde I'UOted
by fdl1 ng •n the m1S$1ng words
L-....L-.L--L~..__._.J yOu develop from step No . 3 below.

1

~

~

•

6

.

.

.

•

.

~

PRINT NUMBEREO LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tEllERS
TO GET ANSWER

.·I I I I I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS .

Shrimp • Inlet • Sadly • Helium • SELL HIM
Farmer to veterinarian, "t have a horse that acts 1funny
·Sometimes he walks normally and other times he·
.timps." The vel answared, "The next time he l,oatks
normally SELL HIM!"

THE'/
IN91CI&gt;.i!O
PICNIC.
I&gt;.RE/&gt;,S.

C:.IIN fiN\)

IT 1\~IN .

ASTRO-GRAPH

----;

::s

••••

45 Jumping
lniiiCI
47 MlliCIII
f--+--i--1 .
lhrub
48 Remtrklblt
'lllr"t-+-+-ti
pere~n (II.)
st a-Doll
piiYII Mel 52 Range of
knowledgl

ROBOTMAN11

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Dovlo ........ IIOchlM AM
1181 Monte Corio, lhlrp - PI
llopolr, ,,..
PB.V-8, $1:1110, call8~ Plcll-UD And Dlttftni,
Gl Dl . .
or 14-MI-a1tl.
.
Crook Rood, 114-14f.01114.
1112 0tc1t Cut- arwot Condi- Ron'o TV - . p I
tion~~ Automolla, $2,21115, 114211
.

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1989, Apollo 11, the first manned space
flight to the moon, was launched.
TO.DAY'S BIRTHDAYS : Joshua
Reynolds ()723 ·1792), English-painter;
Mary Baker Eddy 0821-1910), reli·
gious leader; Roald Amundsen 0872·
1'928), polar explorer; Barbara
Stanwyck ()907-19901, actress; Ginger
Rogers (1911 ·1, dancer-actress, is .82;
Margaret Smith Court 0942·1, tennis
star, is 51; Barry Sanders ()968·1 , foot·
ball player, is 25.

I ii-I ink we may be
a tlle -to wark out a.
fee-spl ittin9 c:leal.

Th~ owvterof this
carY~p iS avt

1

=

dlughter

.

Tilis i~ Mas y McNarf
wri+in' it:&gt; you from
SUt'llmet: CC1mp.

Clltlll

25 Stcriii&lt;Y''
nole
26 II In dlbllo
27 NIIIOf
r-l......,;+--1ll
pheaunle
...
28 Summer
drink
20 Church court
30 Bottom of
thlp
32 Troplcol nul
35 Brtld Of dog
36 RoiiUv. ..
38 Anger
38 Flllhtr tclrf
41 Ctlltlt
enclosure
42 Ltglncl
43 Eugane

44 C.thowa,

r

2, 3112 - · old Umootno colvoo, 14 Fl. Alum. 8ool • Trollor Uko:
1 . .11, 1 lom.olo, 3!50 - b l Nftr, 21 HP llllfw;:ury llolor,
IICh. :J04.e75-71101.
$1,4116,
1&amp;' 'Ill llul. MO hp fn.
AOHA SorNI More 4 Solo, Broke ~. For lloaln..,.. &amp; boardfout-.d, dual W....
Novecoo, 814-3arml.
1r11111r,
oomp&amp;ecety
r.concllllonod,
....
of
......
Cltl
lor
Roat tomo ayr old, Llmoolno -Info IIOW75-3415.

10 Llllor
curvr """
21
org.
23 Your I1ICI my
24 Groek
'

O'Ndl'a

.....,U::......:Pr:E-r.R...;N.;,--tl

Boltorw, Now Hollond R•'!'•,
SIO Hondo
Now Hotlond 241 Hoyblnd, """ ;;:::"'-' N~~hlwk,
7llo11181- oftor'·
Other Eoui_,. At - · ·
F""" illlchlnory, JICklon, Ohio,
114-2111-5144.
·
75 Boats 1 Motors

Home

4 room, 2 porehll, c*lar, atorm
door• &amp; windows, gaa &amp; chy

AT THf
PfAP LETTe,

~.D. 45 · Combine Lolo Modo! 1Hil Y-hl 200 B-.__4
lballonl Condfl....,.
Willi 234 Com Hoedo, lllllly ~""· 814o258 62111, 814Good CondMion, 814-245-1124.
Manura ·SprMdtr,
Fertaa.r
Ford Plow I Ditko, 1tb Ka• kj Kl121, .......
COm PJCklro, Sq•rw 1111)' oondlllon, •1400. 8M4124132.

l

Phono &amp;14-1411-2210.
4 room • bath, full bl:11ment, 11

NE-Vt/l TIJ,N UP

:BORN LOSER

uceltlnl oaftdltlon, tto,ooo,

t14112 5514.

11 SlnMr
WI._

oro •
7 Egoa'
counterpart•
8 Type of pay
(2 Wdl.)
9 An .Aotolre
10 Clutch

+K

amonds. Then be ruffed the diamond
three with dummy's heart jack to en·
sure that East couldn't overruff.
"Any heart but the two, please,
partner."
Schwartz won with the king and led
the diamond lour.
"Ruff with any heart but the two.
partner."
North, Dr~w Casen. bad got the
message. "Now may I play the heart
two?" he asked.
"That's the card I want," replied
Schwartz. He overtook the two with
three and cashed the diamond nine,
on whlcb he discarded dummy's spade
loser. The overtrick had been collect·
ed lor an excellent score on the board.

Tt-lt fNVELOPt,
SO THAT IT wii..L

- ·. ... ,.

'

Evolution onglno1 7,000 mlloo,

=-=-=.....,::-_,...,..,.-::,"!j t::

56 Pets lor Sale
a - ond au- lllop Pol
Oroomlng. All - - . . llyiH.
Julio Wotib. Coli Ill 4IS 0231.
2 Roallll...t Hlmoloyon KinF-lu, Roocfy To Ool &amp;14-4461032, 114-4.. -o1oo.
.
Adun I llobloo F~ 114-441·
0734.
AKC lloolon T - Puppy,
Fomail,tt4-211e-8Z51.
Mtnllture Pin- AKC, 4
moloo&amp;l-,blk&amp;ton,
szoo. - · 304-8111-2444.
14KC Roal- ...... Pupo,
Moil 180..,. Sholo, ' Silvo
Sloplllon ...yo: 114o445-4172,
Anytlmo: 114-256-1118.

PtJT AN
E-LIIIS !TAMP ON

omcs

'18 - l d ZL80D, IHidlr ,
1 . 0 0 0 - . - ond ..._
.
.t.rp. 114atl'2-1171

5 OUttUOn
6 Air tltfenu

Next, declarer ~ashed the AaK of di· · A G N T • '

~

POS'l'

C&lt;jftl-.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Plkl
from $206/mo. Walk to ehop &amp;
moviH. Coli 614-446-2568. EOH.

s.

u~

F-....

for rant In PI:.
614-892~5851
aher

PEANUTS

72 Trucks for Sale

Fann Equipment

5400

Pass
Pass

Shakespeare, in his play about Ju·
!ius Caesar, used the line "He shall not
live; look. with a spot I damn hlm.'
Howev.e r. one quality that distin·
guishes an expert from a less capable
player is ·the way in which he keeps
careful track of the spot-cards. In tol·d••v'• deal, from the Spring North
American Championships, the declar·
er was Richard Schwartz.
South's opening bid showed a bal·
anced 20· 22 points. North's {our-dia·
mond response was a transfer to four
hearts.
West cashed his two top clubs, Eas1
playing first the two. then the nine.
Reading the latter play as a suit·prel·
erence signal, West switched to the
spade king .
There were 10 easy tricks available,
but as this deal was. from a pair event.
it was important for South to try to
make an overtrick.
Schwartz won with the spade ace
and cashed the heart aeil. "Please play
the four, partner,'
.

FRANK AND ERNEST'

1-35 MF Troctor 83,11115, &amp;ii IIF
$3,110, 2111 MF $8.710. 2711 MF
$8,750,210 MF $1,710 814-28&amp;1522

Pass

••

=
--

By Pbillip Alder

llltl Partlloo ClroM PrbJ, -

--

East

1 Rellgn
5 Tobacco
chew
O.Govl. hou"'
lng org.
Iter
12 Soviet Union
45
k'l uu.
(obbr.)
45 Author u...
' 13 Govl: form
. , ogency
48- ond me
14 Atlgln'• eon 50 lncliln .weight
15 Not
52 Actren
OUIWirdly
llldlllne16 Simple
53 An tXPIOIIVI
17 Old age
54 Willow
16 Golfare' org.
55 Singer10 Building lot
Ad1m1 ·
20 Rtddlth .
56POIIIIIII
22 tnqullltive
· 57 And othero
24 ,Aviation
(2 wdl.)
•o•Y·
56 Approach
25 - oporandl
27 Telavlllon
DOWN •
' eyetam
31 Pitcher
1 Joke
32 Flying loy
2 llllltery ebbr.
33 Flth eoo•
3 Haw York
34 Mol dehockeyttom
35 Soli drink
4 Attempt

My kingdom
for a two

PAW

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

61

EVER'
,SUMMER,

MAIL?

eo-•
Pt.,.,l7,2110, 114-211-1111.

~

Nortb

3&amp;Kllalile37 Utile Ilona
30 Twofold
40 Brown kiWI
41 Kino42 lmpreollonlsl

HAPPENS

IT

DAD BURN

obit,-.. Automltlc,

v.y
"

Wesl
Pass
Pass

Opening lead :

WHAR'S TH'

Colt

311-14711.

Comploto Ill of World Book
Encycloplldlo, $150. 304-882·

••

BARNEY

--

8otono Lllm M-r, 14 HP, li4-

=-..,

Fumlthed 1 Bedroom Apartmenl, Share Bath, UUIItln Paid

2 NT

1111 ~ M-o $4,f!.ll!lj
1111 Choo. Colt RS 18,21115; , _
a..., SI,III&amp;U!B7 Cf!ry.

111111 - 11oto Buggy Partloon
Lorge Bubblt Q1uo Hulch, - - - - - ' - - - - - - wHh
50 H.P. EvlnMII -ot,
lnlor with . - . aood condl'
I~:· e Choln, • Lilt, 814-24&amp;- 64 Hay Grsln
lion, 114o182-2211 . . . lpm. '
5,000 oquo.. bello, $1.25 to
SIGNS: Port- Lighted Chon- $2.00
por boll, q•.-My d.._ 76 Auto Parts&amp;
gooblo Lonor Slgno, 1299. FIWI
•
dollvory.
Pllotla
lot·
Etc. River Valley Oak Fumhure,
- · 304-e71-31110.
Accnsorles
$85/bo• (IICOrld boo '-1· Slrww lor oolo: Jl.IO/bolo lold
3883 Georg• CrHk Road, Gal· ~':"~~ Slgno1-100o83W483.
lrom -gon In llold. 304-875- -goollnko,onotonlniall
llpollo, Ohio Phono: 614-4462017 or 1J71.2107.
4318.
- •.WV.lllll!j
Slicing
... - · 171. 11711
ole.
D &amp; R...........
14uto, RIDIOY
~
Cooc~mon 18ft. cami"!!J.$1800.
PICKENS FURNITURE
S7Z-31133or1~.
.
11111 Otdl, k&gt;ldocl, $13(1u. 304New/Used
Transportat ion
875-8813.
Ho-hold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
79 Campers&amp;
Jar~~ho Rd. Pl. PI•Nnt, WY,
Strdlor, bobf bod, walker, high
coil 30U75-1450.
Motor Homes
choir, ploy pon, ear - · owtng, 71 AUtos for Sale
drooling loblt. Booo ohort ..ro
SWAIN
'83 P-,c "'-11• i.J, ,_ 11181 Holldly homo, good
AUCTION • FURNITURE. 82 11- ZT, 3T, otT. 304-e7!1-4&amp;4a
lnoldl ond out, runo cond. 30447~-a~G.
Olivo St., Qolllpollo. N- &amp; Uood Thill P'- Moplt llodroom
1115 au- ••••
:;;;;:-;====~==
'
; ~--· ·
11181 I'&lt;IIHID C.mpor Storer..
fumhur, hu~'4'4't
&amp; SuHo For Solo, FUll /Quoon Ad·
Wort&lt; boolo. 81
H.
Bod,
ChHI
1 1 Ton 111711 Chovroiot, 3110, 4 Oood COndMion, 114 446 11600,
htltlnd, Now $400, &amp;14-446- Spoed, Wllh Stock Bod 114-446- ltUII 1:127.
·
W11lw Dry.,, ~tor,
~'rli.llot-441
.
o0837
~ony~I.,.Afllr
at
II.
ProWior
1171
.
llr
Color 'r.v. ·
Air eon.
cUtioner,
CamptM'
Size Trinity U.M. Church (Wootormon
12500 080. 114-44e-1783 oiler 7
Ratrlgerator, Mlcrow•v., 114- loiE-lPhorio:BJ4.311.
11173 Pont Yonturo 350, ,_ p.m.
256-1238.
1143 Or 114-381 M84.
point, tlroo, lnkoo, AC..._Iow
mu.., mint cond. 30447s.;nl1f. ........ 2J Fl. Cont)l.. Tllltor,
St~, ....... leW
52 Sponlng Goods
or, Air Condltlanln&amp;
11175 Ford LTD,AC, P8, P8, runo R
ood, 17!50. 304-87!1..,.. or
CoH Qold Cup 45 Collbor
Sl-,
Ful
..._,
• bcoltot!t
· 141111'
eon.11
75-1421.
Automotlc Pl11ol, V•'l' Good 55
Building
dMion, -Jio'!a7t.
Condition, $500, 614-448-3388.
11176 BUick LoSobro 14uto 310
Supplies
Engine, eu1n In CB AiiiFJi I
Serv1ces
Block, brllck, olpoo, win· T~f~l
CondMion, $450,
lonytlmo.
- · llntoiO, .... Cioudl Win- e
·-·
Rio ClrMdo, OH Coli 114241.et2t

IIV2-6333.

South

dMon, Coli 1-1-0532 Lllvt
'h nga,lt Noc Horne.
.

Vegetables
Biockbonloo lor uto, $3.50 por
qulpmont, Hondlo _,, 30U75- quort, col 814-9113-3244, toovo
... -

..

Pluaant,
5pm.

Pold;:,.':;

Rog. lrMing IIIII pupplot. :1043 Pc. 'IWin ~ llodroom 175-3312 or 773-1445.
SuHo, With 8oK 8 1ngo • IIIII·
t~.~.l
~57 ·
Musical
4 Fl. King Kull• BNIII !:fog
Instruments
hOG; Lorge Portablo IIIII Doji
CroiiS7S, 114-371-2218.
4po. drum Ill with 4 Zlldjon
4 aro- For Soil At: Ohio Yo~ ll)'mboll end lllndo, In ~Momory Gonlono, 814-446.
Ullld only 3 ~..... 114-1112-2381.
Full Sol Of Prornloro Dnomo,
4 p11oo mopto - - oulto, $700, &amp;14 448 1241.
· ~::=: :1:~~ good c.... 58
Fruits&amp;

a-11

45771.

t4on Hollypork 3 Bedroomo ·
Bllht,UtiiHy Room, Eltclrlc,Air2
lng On E•J*''-nce. ·
Condltlonln", 114 448 8607.,
•
Ploa11 111111 Or Bring lnqulriM 11711 Llborty . mobllo homo, 2
To Tho OffiCI Of Tho CHy bodroom, Ill oloctrlc, gordon
· Monogor, SIS SICond Avonuo, ' tub,l14-1411-2t41.
Oolllpollo, Ohio,of$~. EOE.
1110 Rodmon Donvlllo, 141172,
lnqulrlM Will Bo 14ccopted Until 2l&gt;r, 2 both, wahor, d'l'tr, dloh·
wuhor, CA, dock. 304-575-2452.
.8:00P.M., Fridoy, July 23, 11193.

37311.

lldlo, B14-37WIII.

ravlna1.1ron horse 150'z32' bullcf.
lng wnh cement floor. 10'x12'
utnh~ building, loclted McGroth

Caothal, L To XL Houaewar..,
Toole, Till•, T.V., Tabla &amp; Chalra,

1 Soturdoy July 11th, ClotMo,

Fuml.t.d,

largo rodwood deck ovoriooklng

Rd., uot on Sll33, 1 mille North
of omeroy, Home Nallonal

1 Much Morol Follow Tho Slgno,

Bedroom HouM

Locoled 735 Roar, Third Avonuo houaa, ln ciNn and good condiGolllpollo.
$150
DopooH; tion, pl'lfer private ... ung, 114-992·242$, If no •naw• ~NM
$1651Mo. 114-446-3870.
IMv• m111ege on machine.
2 llod1110m Ronch, 29 Evono
Holghto, $300/Mo. $300 Dopoolt,
114-446.ol87.
Merchandise
2 BR homo noor Bid·
wtll.$225month,reterence and
dlpoatt, 814-446a4824
51
Household
3 Bedroom HouH, Hannan
Goods
Tr- Dlotrict, Avllloblo Augult
20th, &amp;14-256-tno.
VI'RA FURNiTURE
614-446-3158 Or 814 148 4428
4 Bed_,. Brick, Counl'l'
'10 DAY SAMEAS CASH
Home, $425/Mo. leaH Dlpollt 1 OR .RENT·2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

coll614-iii2·:1'T11:-EOH:

$800/Mo. 814-446-3040.
Help Wanted: Duke Cleaners,
apply In pel'lon from 8:00..
3:00pm.

Two 111111 OUt Lincoln Pike,
Ladift Clothes, Small, Mena

1

Wonted To Ront Lot For ComPI&lt;
CION To OolllpoNo1~ Wllh
Eloctrtc I Wotor Hook-up, 814388-iM8.
.
Wonting lo rwrrt· 2 or 3 bodroom

racommanda lh.. you do buaJ..
,... with people you know, and

I All Areal I Shlrtey

Spuro, 304-675-1429.
Comfort Air Is GJO'Iilng Quickly
And We
N11d Experience

41 Houses for Rent

Wanted to Rent

· Business
Opportunity
!NOTICEI
OHIO VAL~EY PUBLISHING CO.

Real Estate

AVON

47

Rentals

21

/Bulnillt Pike,
Chlld'o Pit, 814-367.0505.
Lott: small white terri• with

tattooed ears.
line, reward, 614-

'

Aeterencw, 114-446~824.

Vlclnhy: Addison

head,

854~, Alh.na,OH.

wooh-

Lo81.: Mall Golden Retriever.
Big But Friendly.
'"Toby"

brown

a

hedgoo, ITM Hllmotn, 304-Sa6331tr or 1-1100-4ZH371.

Will

304·773-!5343. .
-;--:----=---=:-:Junk cart, any condition, 614Lost&amp; Found
6
992·7553.
..
FOUND 2 cloao, moil Shophonl Top PrlcH Pold; All Old U.S.
mil &amp; omoiT malo Bluo Tick Colno, Gold Rln¥'s Sllvor Colno,
Hound, 304..s82-2436.
Gold Col no. M.. . Col n Shop,
Loat: pair tfi..focal glauu, dark 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
valv.t cau. 304~75-569$1.
Wanted to buy: uHd mobile
Found: watch at A1cllll Locka. hotnlll. 114-446-0175
ldlnllly &amp; poy lor thll od. 304- '
882-2&amp;12.
Employment Services
Loot: Cit Yoll- &amp; WhMo,
Recently Bob-Tolled &amp; Spade.
VlclnHy: Dr. Bootor'o Yotmnory 11
Help Wanted
Clinic, ·Route
180,
NMda
Medicallon, 614-388-8559.

·

45

Furnished'
614-441-3438 for more Inform•
Rooms
lion. ·
Loti: &amp; ac:rwage tor home con- Nlco Furnlolood Bedroom, In
ltructlon · on Rayburn Ad, Gollipotlo,• UII Of Rolrtgorotor.
r. .aonable rw.trlctlorw, county T.V., Reference• • Depwh, 114-w.. w, lntonnlllon mailed on ,.. 446-4347.
quoot, 304475-5213, pilloo no Aoom1 for r1nt WH11. or month.
tilngil wldo trolloro.
S::~'.;l 'at $120/mo. 01111 Hotol.
11580.
SEVERAL 7. ACRE PARCELS: 6
Molal County, Solem '1\wf.·• BIMplng ._... wHh _....
$656/ acre. At mote, beaut( ul Alao tl'lller spaCe. All hook--upt~.
Iandi wood1, p..ture and hilll. C.N aft..- 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13.
Coil lor good mop. 1-814-5113- !5651, Maoon WV.
mlle OUI Neighborhood "oad.

E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trimming, Trea Removal, Hedge

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

4

Approxlmotolr 1 oc.. lolL 4/"10

Wanted to Do

Merchandise
111BD Ford Von &amp; 11111 11..,.
tlcorto, $100oa, ot $1400/both.
O.k dlnlngroom ouno, •••·
cond., _,., boH I claw table,
lido boonl, 12300 wiN tiki
$1100. 304-875-IIShfllr lpm.
2 L.ovonoto $1!50 loch; 1
Roell- Cluolr, $100; 1 Lorge
Mlr"" SID; 1 Uvlngroorn ChOir
~i .. htcrted Uving -Room
TIDtOO l4nd ~. 814-441.

_56-::-P_et;.;s;;,..;;fo;;.:r...:S:;;;a::;le:....._
o-.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jecklon Avo.
Point P-.-. 304-8711o20113,
lull Uno Tropical ~~":tl..blnlo,
1m11 anlr111ot. and 1
•
KK Pot Lind Now Oponod, "'"
lloaular . Anllllllo,
Exotic
Aninalo, Floh &amp; Roptlloo, 114·:187.o117.
Pooclll Cock• •-n1·11 · ft.o
'
..,.. h ...,.
motion,
Col.!.",
lliln
ONyhound,
""'
~lith
g:~~· Booton
Hlmoloyon Klnon_,_ Potbolly Pig.
114-441-0404 or 5,.2207.
l'uaDIII, mliod Chlhulhuo '
DaChlhund. lwkl okf. .......,.
7112oftor 7pm.

+Ql09542
•1o 9

Q

C::. -.

at:

EAST

K7 .

.... Ply-h Hortzon, 11110, air,
IIOW111-2317 "'&amp;75-

.... -

Hf.ll

+63

118f Old CIIIIIM Citro, -

18

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ado ,...,.,., PI, PI, AC,

-

-

'

•

~ e~
Saturday, July i7, 1993
In the year ahead you could be luc~y in
falher unusual ways. There may be a 1ew ·
times yciiJ"fe lompled to loss in the towel,
bul you"ll discover the calvary will arrive il ·
you just hold on a bit longer.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Today you
might. do something that could inconve nience anolher even though this person
n1lght not be directly involved in your deci·
s:jon making . Know whe're 10 look lor
romanee and you'll lind il. The Astro:Graph

MatChma~er instantly reveals which signs
are romant ically perfe ct for you . Ma11 $2
and a long, self·addressed. stamped enve-

for a partnership arrangement to succeed
parties musl have a single goal

loday. both

lope to Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper.

or purpose . A split decisio'\could spell tail ·
ure .
'

P.O.
4465. New York. NY 10163.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Using excessive

AOUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) You '1e
ralher gullible Ieday and lhere is a possibili·

flatlery to lry to win someone over to your
corner could have an opposi1e effect lo that
for which you hoped. You r recipient may be

ty you may, be inclined to believe every·

inttially flattered. then leal manipulated.
YIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept22) You tend lobe
s-omewhat wasteful w1th your resources
tod ay. Take care you don 't ne9dlessly
spend in order to make a big impression on

another.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) II you 'participate
in social activities today that have competitive · elements. dor'ft let being the w inner
become unduly-Important.

thing you hear. Someone else's elCaggera·

· ti01is could cause you to feel a trifle inferior.
i PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Lady Luck
' might treat you in a fickle manner loday. so
don 't d epend upon her loa heavily .
Unfortunately . however , your gambling
urges might incline you to do so .
ARIES (March 21' Aprll19) There's a pos·
Slbility you may experience severe disap·
poinlment today . because of your inclina·
tion s to expect more from otners·and situa·
1

tions

than you should.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be su1e to'
look ·at your problems today as lhey really
ate and not !hrough an optlmislic lens . It
could do you more h'a rm than good if you
try to kid yourself.
SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec . 21)
Business and pleasure mlghl nol make a
congenial mix today . Oon"t try to pitch ~

TAURUS (April 20· May 20) A behavior
pattern lhat comfortably lits a close friend
is not necessarily tailored to suit your
requi(ements . Live your life from your own
comfort' zone. ·
GEMINI (May 21-Juno '20) You're likely to
be ralh.er lhlilty today regarding lnsignili:
· cant expenditures , however, you'll also

business deal
to a prospect
who
Interested
in enjoying
him/herself
. is only
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22·Jan. 19) In Ofder

h&amp;IJB
a strong
extraiJagant
urge that could
blow your
budget
in one shot.
'

\I

'l]t~;J~~j~~;;;~~~~;~~~~~~:!~:===~~=::j
;

.. '

,.

•

�.

By The Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, july 16, 1993
Page-10

~·

Clark participates Love thy neighbor is
in leadership camp . •~y~~n:::J: ,...A-nn

al recreation activities.
During the camp, StQdents pay
ticipated in Ohio Close Up Day by
spending a day at the Ohio State·
house where a bill was debated in
the House of Representatives,
toured the Senate, had lunch on the
Stateh'!use lawn, VISited the orfices
of l~gulators! !Oured. the Sa~t.a
Maria and paructpated m an acUVI·
ty to uncover hidden history at the
Statehouse.
•
Ohio Close Up Day was spon·
1
sored in part through a.grant from
the Close Up Foundation.
As a urtique feature of the camp,
participants were guided through
the camp curriculum by specially
trained high school age counselors.
Each camper was also assigned a
personal counselor who served as a
leadership role model during lhe
camp._
.
. .·
JERICA CLARK
.Oh10 Leadership Tramm.g C~p
~tnves _to. develop leadership sld_lls
Jerica Clark. daughter of Nancy m Oh10 s you~~ people while
Clark of Pomeroy and Rick Clark str~s~mg good c111zensh1p ~harac·
of Indiana, was recently ho~ored tensucs. The camp also str1ves to
by the Ohio Leadership Institute accomplish the mission of the Institute, which is to promote the leadf~r completin~ participati~n in ~e
Institute's OhiO Leadershtp Tram· ership potential of Ohio's youth
ing camp held at Ohio Dominican through leadership development,
citizenship education and global
College in Columbus.
Jerica, who recently completed awareness.
the sevenl)l grade at Meigs Junior
At the closing of the camp, Jeri·
High School was joined by 150 ca was honored with a cenificate
other sixth, seventh and eighth and a neck medallion for complet·
graders representing 3~· counties ing participation in the leadership
from across Ohio at the four day building program. For more infor·
residential leadership camp. mation about this and other student
Campers spent four challenging leadership programs, contact the'
days attending leadership wor~­ Ohio Leadership Institute at P.O.
shops, participating in ciuzensh1p Box '12545, Columbus. Ohio
activities and joining iit interaction· 43212-2545.

this· house and spent our life's
savings l'elllodeling iL The problem
is our neighlxn.
The houses on this block are fairly
ANN LANDERS
close rogether. We don't know lilY
"1!193, LOt Ancel ..
of our neighbors, because my
Tim., Syndlc:ale
Cftalon Syndicate"
husband and I are very private
. people, and we keep 10 ourselves.
Among !he five houses that SUIIIlWid
..__
.
us, u""" are 14 ~g dop. We yard. Yesterday, I received an
contacted all our ne1ghbors, and anonymous letter telliPg me that my
most of them have laken care of the husband was ·~ng a young lady
behind my baclr.. • ·.
problem ..All ~tone. ,
. .
Aft« lislaliDs to this ne1ghbor's
Ann, I realize there is nothing you
four dogs bait live boors a day for can say that will stop this
seven mondls, we fmaUy toolc them harassment, but please tell me how
to court. The judge ruled in our I can relax in my own home and not
favor. They were filled $300 and worry about what these neighborS
instructed to keep the dogs in the are going to do next. We can'i
garage while they are at work. affoniiO move.
rmally, we have some peace and
If people can't Jive next door to
quiet
each other without trying 10 make
Now these lr neighbors want their neighborS miserable, bow can
vengtlBDCC. We've had paint balls we possibly have peace in the world7
and super glue thrown on10 our Please print my city and state, Ann,
driveway Last week the
·
.
•
~~ but not my name . .. TUCSON,
.
scmuned a stnn' of obscem~ at ARIZ. ·
DEAR ARIZONA: Paint balls?
me !IS I was getllllg out of my car.
Their teen-age boys have. thrown Super glue? Boulea over lhe fence?
cola bottles over lhe wall m10 our Obscenities? Anonymous letters?

Landers

The best of the best in the art of
quilt making will ·be featured at
Quilt National '93 at the Dairy
Bam Cultural Arts Center.
The international event taking
place in Athens, will display 84
being September 6. Among the
showcase will be the four award
winning quilts of the competition:
The Best of Show was awarded
to Jan Myers-Newbury of Pitts·
burgh, P'a. for Birch Eyes. Birch
Eyes is a machine pieced and quilt·

FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY · Vacation bible
school at Antiquity Baptist Church,
Thursday through Sunday from 9
a.m. to noon. Theme is The Great
Dinosaur Hunt Classes for ages six
t!Jrough high school. Call Terry
·Shain, 949-2864 for information.

CHRISTOPHER WEAVER

Two local students
receive scholarships
Two 1993 graduates of Southern
High School have been awarded
scholarships from the Rollin and
Harriette Ables Dill Scholarship
Fund.
Thjs is the first year for scholarships to be awarded from the fund
which is part of a bequeathal from
Rollin Dill , Pomeroy , in memory
of his his wife, Harriette. The fund
is administered by the Asbury
United Methodist Church, Syra-

cuse.
The recipienrs are Christopher
T. Weaver, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Weaver, Syracuse, and
Wendi Harmon, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hannon, RAaine.
The scholarships were awarded
during the July II worship service
at the Asbury Church. The Rev.
Deron Newman, pastor, presented
lhe awards on behalf of the scholar·
ship committee.

Pomeroy TOP·S meet
TOPS No . OH 570 Pome roy
Chapter met recently. The meetings
were opened in prayer led by
Peggy Vining and Sharon Matson.
The pledges were Jed by Wanda
Faulk.
11\e bcsl TOPS losers were
Peggy Vining with Angela Sharp
as runner up, Blondina Reiner with
Donna Jack s as runner up, and
Linda Grimm with Blondina Reiner
and Sharon Marson as runners up.
· The KOPS .plcdges were led by
Virginia· Smith , Linnie .Bell
Aleshire. The best KOPS losers
were Linnie Bell Aleshire witll
Julia Hysell as runner up, Bernie
Durst and Julia Hysell, and Julia
Hysell wilh Bernie Durst as runner
up.
The best monlhly loser for 1he
month of June .. was a tie between
Donna Jacks and Shirley Wolfe.
The contest for the monlh of June

was won by Ruth Ann DeLong,
wllo received a charm.
The gadget gifts were won by
Wanda Faulk, Blondina Reiner,
and Sharon Matson. The fntit baskets were won by Ola St. Clair,
Peggy Vining, and Bernice Durst.
The "Secret Pals" will be
revealed at the next meeting.
The following poems from the
TOPS News Magazine were read
by Donna Jacks titled "Between
Bites", and by Shirley Wolfe ti~ed
"My Wildest Dreams". Linnie Bell
Aleshire read a poem she wrote
regarding temptation.
"All We Eua" was sung by the
gainers and members played calorie baseball. The losers are to bring
something associated with dieting
in · the next two weeks and read 10
the members.
Members sang 10 the best losers
and the meeting was dismissed.

Nazarene
church celebrates
.
'

The Rutland Church of the
Nazarene recently held an o~
celebration . Darlene Vanamar!
dressed as Betsy Ross, served
refreshments from a red, white and
blue decorated table, accompanied
by Lyc!ia Smith.
A float decorated with a cross,
the American fl;~g. the Christian
flag, ·and flowers served as a stage
for Jhe celebration.
Keith Kennedy opened the program singing the Star Spangled
Banner. The scours of the clturch,
led by Brenda Neutzling, escorted
Jhe veterans of the church to the
stage arid led the pledges to the
flags. Reverend Sam Basage gave
the opening prayer.
I

As America was played, "Uncle
Sam"lCI! out the different occupations of the church with lhe "Statue
· of Liberty" leading the way. Tami
Taylor sang This Country Need A
Cross. Darlene Vanaman read a
variation of the Declaration of
Independence and Holly Williams
sang God Bless the U.S.A. The
church choir accompanied by Violet Grate sang My Country Tis of
Thee.
·
In closing, the scouts Jed the
audience into the church singing
· Onward Christian Soldiers.
.
Donna Grate, Marilyn Williams,
Darlene Vanaman, and Marlene
Carpenter were in charge of the
program.

Meanwhile, I suggest joint
counseling. Gina se&gt;unds very
immature, and so do you. you both
need professional guidance 10 help
you grow up.
Dear Ana: Recently, you printed
a Gem of the Day that caught my
eye. It went like this: "CiianJctet is
defille!d by what you are willing to
do when the spotlight has been
turned off, the applause has died
down, and no one is around 10 give
you crediL • It occurred 10 me that
the same could apply to 11 nighttime
burglar... TONY K. ·
DEAR TONY: Please don't mess
up a good Gem with your criminal
men.tality.
What can you give t~ perSIHI who
lias evt!rything? Ann lAnders' boo/clet, "Gems,"isidealforallightstand
or coffee table. "Gems" is a co/lec· lion of Ann Landers' most requested
poems and essays. Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envt!lope
and .a c~c/c or money order for
t$4.85 (this includes postage and
fuwlling) 10: Gems, cfo A"" fAnders, P.O. Bo:z/1562, Chicago,l/1.
60611-056~ . (In Canada, send
· $5.87.)

Inside

Showboats major river attraction
in early 1900s · .Sands • Page B-6 ·
Free immunizations are available
in Meigs County • Hoeflich-Page B-6

Page B-1

Along tbe river .............. 81-7
Business/Farm ...............D1-8
Classified ........................DJ-7
Entertainment _ ..............8·7
Deaths ..............................A-4
Editoral ............................. AS
Sports .•••.... _....................Cl-6
Weatber .............................A-2

MOilly cloudy. Hl1~ In mid 1101.
Chance rl rain, 50 pen:etiL

•
nnts
.

.

Vol. 28, No. 22

13 Secdon 114 Pilg•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, July 18, 1993

Copyrighted 1993

A Mulllmedla Inc.

.--per

'·•

..

~

. "'

,.

. --

Quilt Natiomil held ·at .Dairy Barn
ed study in black· and white. The
design is achieved by piecing fab·
ric which has been intncately fold·
ed and tied before being immersed
in a dye-bath. "Birch E}lCs celebrates the restraint and subtle elegance that can be achieved without
color," stated the jurors.
The Award of Excellence was
given 10 Merrill Mason of Jersey
City, N.J. for Scrap Thatch. Scrap
Thatch features photographic
images of piles of discarded alu-

Community Calendar

WENDI HARMON

Local
•
stngeron
the rise

old advice

Those folks sound potentially
dangerous. I suggest that you file a
report with the police.
Dear Ann ·Landers:. I've been
living with the girl of my t!reams
for 10 months. It was love at fii'St
sight. I was 26 years old and a
virgin until I met "Gina.•
She is now four'months pregnanL
· I've always had a feeling that there
was someone else in her life besides
me. A month ago, I finally got the
truth out of her. Gina has been eheat·
ing on me with a man at worlc.
She claims the llaby is mine, but
I'm not sure it is. I have a hard time
making love to her, because I keep
picturing her with that other guy. I
know Gina is laking advanfa8e of
me, Ann, but !love her with all my
hean and can't bring myself to
throw her out. I just don't trust
her anymore. By the way, she is 18
years old. Do you have any advice
for me? .. CONFUSED IN
' SACRAMENTO
DEAR SAC: Stuck is stuck, and
that's exactly where you are until
the baby is bom. The tests to
determine paternity are now
c:Q"emely8IXID'ate,soyoumustwait
and see if this child is yours.

_Major League baseball
results
C-1
.

be a hymn sing at the Hazel Com·
munity Church in Long Bottom on
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with Linda
Damewood. Etsel Hart, pastor,
invites the public. Everyone wei·
come.
MIDDLEPORT • Miracle Cru·
sade with Michael Vance, evan~e­
list, Saturday, 2 p.m., Meigs Jumor
High Auditorium. Call471-3036
for information.

CHESTER · there will be a
special meeting of Shade River
Lodge No. 453, F&amp;AM, Chester,
Friday at 7:~0 p.m. with work in
the fellow craft degree. Refresh·
TAR HOLLOW· Cundiff Famments. All fellow craft degrees ily reunion, Saturday. Tar Hollow
invited.
• State Park, 9 a.m. Call Charlie
Cundirf at 367-7001.
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and square dance Friday
·PUTNA~ COUNTY • Liberty
at the Tuppers Plains VFW Hall Mountaineers will perform Satur•
from 8-11:30 p.m. with music.by day at the Visco Campgrounds in
CJ am! ·the Country Gentlemen. Putnam County.
Melvin Cross wiU be the caller.
POMEROY • Meigs County
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full Retired Teachers meet Saturday
Gospel Church in Long · Bottom from 1-3:30 p.m. at Grace Episco·
will have preaching and singing pal Church. Edith Brown, past
Friday at 7 p.m. with Pastor Steve president, ORTA, and John Irvine, ·
Reed and local singers. Public legislative agent, guests.
invited. Fellowship will follow.

minum siding. The images are then
transferred to fabric and pieced
together much like the individual
blocks of a classic quilt. The artist
challenges the audience' s concept
of beauty by treating ugliness as
thouglt it were beautif~1.
·
Arturo Alonzo Sandoval of Lexington, Ky. received the award for
Most Innovative Use of the Medi·
urn for Lady Liberty/Babylon 11.
Sandoval's Lady Liberty/Babylon
II is a potitically provocative state·
ment about nuclear war, terrorism
and the ramifications of .govern·
ment corruptions. The artist com·
bines images of the Statute of Liberty with other materials that make
th e quilt look like it's drenched in
blood.
The Domini McCarthy Memorial Award was granted to Ellen
Oppenheimer of Oakland, Ca., for
Neon Maze. Oppenheimer's Neon
Maze is part of a series of maze
quilts that she has been working on
for several years. The mazes are
governed by random rules and
parameters. The labor-intensive
quilt is compelling and confusing.
The Domini McCarthy Memori·
al Award was established in 1983
,.in memory of the dau2hter of long·

time Athens residents. Shortiy
before her death, Domini
McCarthy had developed a strong
interest in quilts and quilt making.
A fifth award, the People's
Choice Award, will be determined
by ballots casl by the visitors to
Quilt National '93. Early results indicate a viewer preference for
several very interesting,quilts.
Jurors for the international competition were Elizabeth Busch of
Bangor, Maine, Michael Monroe of
Reston, Va., and Judi Warren of
Maumee.
Quilt National -~93 is sl'DnSIJred
by !he Fairfield Processing Corpo.
· ration, maker of Poly-fil fiber prod·
ucts; Friends of Fiber Art International, McDonald's of Athens, ~el­
sonviUe, Gallipolis and Henderson,
We.s t Virginia; the Ohio Arts
Council; the City of Athens; and
the Athens County Convention and
Visitors Bureau.
Gallery hours are Tuesday •
Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p~m., including
Labor Day. General admission is
$3, $2.50 for seniors and students
and Dairy Bam members and chil·
dren .under seven are admitted free .
For more information, please
call the Dairy Bam at 592-4981.

POMEROY • Trinity Church
senior choir, chicken and noodle
dinner, Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Hotdogs, chicken sandwiches, cole
slaw, desserts and beverages avail·
able, $2.50 per quart Proceeds go
toward the carillons for the church.
SYRACUSE • Holy Ghost Tent
Revival, Friday through July 22,
7:30p.m. between Syracuse and
Racine. Southern Gospel Music
with Gary Clum.

AT

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH

SATURDAY
RUTLAND · There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 9
p.m . to I a.m. with music by Pure
Country and Then Some. Public.,
invited. ·

JULY 18th· 21st- 7 P.M~
FEATURING THE FATHER AND SON EVANGELIST TEAM

AND DOUG McCOMAS

BEDFORD • The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Commiuee will host a benefit
Saturday from 2 to 8 p.m at the
Ohio Valley Christian Campgrounds. The public is invited 10
attend the fund raiser which will
feature bluegrass, country and
gospel music along with a car
show.
SALEM CENTER • The Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment will have an ice cream.social
Saturday from I I a.m. to 7 p.m.
There will be refreshments and Jive
entertainment including Sheila
DeLayn and m~. ·
,
LONG BOTTOM • There will

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

I

PAVING UNDERWAY- As a cost-cutting measure, tbe Meigs
Count)' Highway Department is serving as its own contractor for .
this year's Issue fi paving projet:ls. Although the projects are USU•
ally bid.out to contractors, tbe lack of an affordable contractor

.

1

'MUSSLE'-ING IN ON THE LOCKS AND DAM • Tiny zebra
mussels averaging about five to live and a half millimeters long
were U::entJy located about one and a half feet below the water's
sudace at the Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam. According to the
H11ntlngton District Corps of Engineen, the·populatlon density was
reported to be ooly ooe or two per square meter. Shown above are
similar mussles, held by Pat WIR'Iey, lockmaster.
·
.

~

.

Fll., BAT., SUN.
SYLVESTER STALlONE IN

CLIFFHANGER A
.
AND
ANDREW McCARTHY IN

WEEKEND AT BEANIES
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Meigs taxpayer.s_getting.mo're bang
for th-is year's paving project bucks
Robert Eason said
Meigs County Highway Depart· Spencer said.
·
ment
serves
as
its
own
primary
Spencer
said
the
project
was
The county was left with three
Tomes-Sentinei Staff
contractor
for
,this
year's
Issue
II
·
then
bid
as
a
Minority
Business
options,
according to Spencer:
POMEROY- Meigs Countypaving
projects.
Enterprise
project.
The
only
bid
R~bid,
accept
the bid and come up
taxpayers are gel;ling more ~g for
Last
December,
the
highway
received
for
consideration
was
for
with
the
extra
money. or proceed
their road pavmg bucks as the
c~eWtment requested $800,000 and
$618,927;85 for 11\e ~!!lire~ project 'With~~ pr.oj~t .by• force !lcc.ount
was gra:nted ' $500,000 ' toward - way over the estimated cost of wtth EaSon acting as contractor. ·
paving projects with an estimated $575,000.
The highway department decidcost of approximate1y $575,000,
"The came up with a bid we ed on the third option.
department spokesman Dave couldn't afford," County Engineer
Continued on A-2

8l JIM FREEMAN

Mussel discovery could The process
·lead to problems at dam of paving
By AMY J, LEACH
OVP News Stalf
APPLE GROVE • Forty·
seven small 'juvenile' zebra
mussels were found recently at
lhe Robert C. Byrd LoCks and
:Dam, according to Pat Worley,
loclr.master.
"The proble111 with these
mussels is that eventually they
could clog water intakes IJ!Id
stick 10 metal, boats and pumps.
These were found on our trash
screens," said Worley as he held
a small bot~e of these per·
petrators 10 the sunlight.
The tiny mussels avera~e
about fi\le 10 five and a hal( millimeters lorig. They were located
about one and a half feet below
the water's surface.
According to the HuntingiOn
District Corps of Engineers, the
population density was reported
to be only one or two per square

meter. (that equates io finding
about 20 of them in a room that
measures 10' x 12').
.
The mussels are hard to detect
at an early stage because they
begin as microscopic organi~ms.
· Dom Chianesi, chief of
naviagtion · upper section, says
that zebra mussels are not a
problem at this density, but they
will reproduce, eventually cloggin!! water inlet valves. After a
while, no water wi)l be able to
pass through the pipe system,
such as the ones used by the
water and sewer companies.
·At the present time, there is
no infonnation that can foretell
the reproduction rate of zebra
mussels.
"We do know that they (zebra
mussels) can't stand water over
85 degrees and chlorine will kill
them, but right now no steps are
being taken to rid the locks and
dam of them," informed Worley.

Solid waste board approves
sufficient disposal document
JACKSON - The issue of ade· as PDC was made concrete with
quate solid waste disposal in Gallia the installment of a Policy Com·
and surrounding counties was mittee. Chairman Dale Neil
resolvea at the Gallia-Jackson- appointed four members to the
Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste Board committee: Kenneth Farmer, Gal·
of Directors meeting Thursday lia· Ken Willing, chairman, Jack·
so~; John Jacobs, Meigs; and
night.
·
. Representatives from the four Lawrence McWarter, Vinton.
The Policy Committee wi!l
· counties approved the Preliminary
Demonstration of Capacity (PDC) work in conjunction with members
for the Ohio Environmental Protec- at large elected by board members
tion Agency . The document , of each county. The members at
ensures that the district has provid· large installed at the meeting are
ed a backup disposal site for the Stuan Lentz, Gallia; Bill Martin,
Jackson; Roger Manley, Meigs;
GaUia solid waste center.
Support for future policies such and Shirley Ward, Vinton.

Normal operations will
continue at area Big :Wheel
The- McComas-team has · won acclaim from other evangelists-such as: Dr. ·;Jerry
Falwell, Dr. Bruce D. Cummons, Dr. John W. Rawlings, Dr. Tom Malone Sr., and Dr.
B. R. Lakin! Bring your whole family to hear the Good Newall

allowed the department to proceed with the project on its own.
Here, the paving crew works on a ~lion of Texas Rnad in Chester
Township. (Times-Sentiqel photo by Jim Freeman)

POMEROY - The question of made, the locations will be
whether Fishers Big_Wheel sto~e announced.
Fishers Big Wheel filed for prolocate4 on Laurel Clirf Road w1ll
.
tection
unde.t Chapter I I of the
be one of the 55 s10res of that dis·
Federal
bankruptcy laws lVith the
count chain to remain open or one
U.
S.
Bankruptcy
Court for the Dis·
of the 10 to be closed in the comtrict
of
Delaware
earlier
this month.
pan(s bankruptcy reorganization
At
that
time
it
was
announced
JS sun unanswered.
: Hilde Giannone of Fishers Big that the.company will be closing 10
Wheel headquarters in New Castle, of its 65 stores which employs
Pa. said Fri¢1y afternoon that ~e 3,000.
According to a press release
decision on stores to be closed 1s
·
announcing
the banlr.iuptcy action,
slill under consideration by the
plans
have
been made by Big
com;any. She also said that all
Wheel
to
continue
to operate its
store ~losings must ~ave court
businesses
and
manage
its properapproval. Giannone Sllld th_at once
firm decisions on store closmgs are
Continued on A-4
I'
J "

·~

POMEROY - As the old
saying goes, Rome wasn't made
in a day. Likewi~~C the decision
to pave a road is not made over·
nisht, as Meigs. County Highway Department Superintendent
Ted Warner explained.
In fact, the paving process
begins years before the paving
machine rolls.
The first step toward paving
·a road is instiring proper drainage, Warner said. ,
If new culverts or bridges
are needed, they are usually
replaced or added at this point,
he said. Occasionally, a road may
also need wideried.
Next comes a five to six·
year process of pCjlparing the
road for paving: a layer of chip
and tar followed by several lay·
ers of cold mix.
.
Cold mix is prepared by the
highway department, placed on
the road, . graded and rolled,
Warner explained. Over the
years, a solid four-inch to sixinch base is formed.
"When it gets to where it
doesn't break down, hot mix is
used," he said.
The hot mix, like the cold
.mix, is prepared by the highway
department and hauled in dump
trucks to the paving site.
Once at the paving site, the
truck is backed inlil the paving
machine and locked in place.
Thepavingmachinethenspreads
the hot mix on10 the road while
simultaneously unlooding and
pushing the truck ahead of it.
When the tnlck is empty, the
process is repeated with a new
lood.
While still hot, the fresh sur·
face is then rolled. Later, pavement markings and lines are
added resulting in a neat, paved
road.

Area man arrested
on fugitive warrant
I

POINT PLEASANT • A New
Haven, W. Va .. man was arrested
Friday on a fugitive from justice
warrant out of Meigs County;
according to a spakesman for the
Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
menL .
Timothy 1.:. Kin¥, 24, of New
Haven, is lodged m .the Mason
County Jail awaiting extradition on
the fugitive warrant for three
felony "counts of forgery.

AWAITS TRANSPLANT- Six-month-old
Randall Lee Witherspoon or Front Royal, Va.,
waits for a heart donor in a Charlottesville

intensive care unit. The in rant, who has relatives
in Gallipolis, was born with a deformed heart.

Infant grandson of Gallipolis
couple awaits donation of heart
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Starr
FRONT ROYAI., Va. - AJ.
though only six weeks old, Randall
Witherspoon of Front Royal, Va.,
has proven himselfiO be a fighter.
The second son of Mark and
Kim Witherspoon, Randall was
born with a heart deformity which
requites a transplant for the baby to
live. The family has been waiting
for a donor's heart to becomeavail·
able.
"He's doing good for all he's
been through " said Shirley Smith
of Strasburg' Va. Randall's rna·
tetn~ ~oth.;.., "God~s keep~
ing hun strong. We hope and pray
every.day that a heart will comefor
him very soon."
Randall is the great-grandson
ofEdwardandFredaSmithandthe
nephew of Shirley and Joe Planti,
all of Gallipolis.
Randall's parenrs, Mark and
Kim Witherspoon, appealed pub-

licly for a donor recently during a
press conference at the Rivenon
United Methodist Church in Front
Royal.
"Even though something like this
happens to someone else, you think
it's not going to happen to Y.ou," an
article in the Warren (County) Senti·
nel quoted Mr. Wi~erspoon .."It has
.made us loo~ at thmgs m a d1fferent
perspecuve.
• At theage of foil! wee~s. Ran·
dall was th11d on a nauonal hst of Bpositive blood type children needing
new hearts. Smith sai~ Friday he is
now at the top of the hst.
·
. "Every day is just critical for
_him," she_said. "W~·~ just waiting
for a heart to ~ome ~~- . •
Smtih sa1d the mfant s doctor
told the family ababy can normally
survive four to six weeks with a de·
fective ~eart. But some have been
known 10 hold on for up to three
months, he added.
T~ Warren Sentinel re~rted
that at the press conference, W1ther-

spoon said he and his wife wanted
to tell people about Randall in an
auempt to emphasize how important it is for famities to donate organs from their deceased loved
ones.
"We want to bringiOthe community an awareness about the
need for donors of all organs, not
just hearts," he said. "People don't
realize the necessity for organ
donors.
"I understand that donating
an organ from a child or adult
would be a difficult thing io do. I
would definitely donate an organ
now that I've been placed in this
situation."
Smith said going public with
their plight was a difficult thing
for the Witherspoons to do. She
said they hoped the press conference would give some family the
courage to donate a heart.
.
·"We hope that they will see it
Continued on A-2

,.·

...'

lu
)

••

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