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Ohio Lottery
Cardlnala
hanci ·Reds
s~3 defeat

Pick 3:

7+8
Pick 4:
4·5-8·8

BuckeyeS:
8·19-21·29-33

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VoL 41. NO. 111
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01tl7, Ohio v.H.r Pullllelllng cCwo 1
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~meroy-Middleport,

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21o:M&amp;ia,12hgee.ll-·
A ca.w.a Co. HeWiptlpll'

Ohio, Friday, June 'ZT, 1997

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·Me.igs :Local Board OKs ...---An event for hounds--$15M in ·appropriations _...

The Meigs Local Board of Edu- son as·flag corps il!slriictor and hired
cation, ·meeting in. regular sesi'ion . Pat O'Brien 11$:reserve boys basket·
Thunday night, approved appropria- ball coach. Scolt Brinker and David
Longswonh were hired as vocationtions for the upcoming fiscal yeir.
The board approved appropria- al electronics instrUctors.
tions for the 1996-971iscal year in the ·
In Qther business, the. board:
• Granted the remaining assistant
amount of $1S.036,836.47, arid also
band director's supplemental salary to
a~ved ·the temporary appropriations for the 1997-98 fiscal year in the Toney .Dingess for the 1996-97
amount of $1S,22LS33.03.
school year. ·
·
Superintendent Bill Buckley said , • Renewed membership in the
the figure for ·the temporary appro- Coalition of Rural and AppaiH£hian
priations is lower than the approved Schools and Educational Technology
appropriations because it does not Services and approved an. agreement
include grant money.
· with Ohio University to provide an
In personnel rriatten, the board athletic trainer for the upComing
accepted the resignation of Carroll school year for $7 ,2S I plu~ mileage.
JOhnson as a substitute custodian for
• Approved bidding out for ·ftieJ
health reasons, effective immediate- and trash hauling 'service.
ly.
• Approved a lie14 trip to the Ohio
The board employe4 Sarah Ander- Stale Fair for the ',future F~rs of

America on July 31 and Aug: I.
• Approved pay ina invo.ices in the
amount of $7 .7S8.43 for balld materials as requested by 'the band d~tor.
·
• Appointed board meml!cr Scott
Walton as delegate to the Nov. 10
· Ohio School Board Association.meetilig.
• Met in executive session to con·
sider the )liring of personnel and
negotiations.
Present were Buckley. Treasurer
·Cindy Rhonerilus. Board President
John Hood and board members Walton, Larry Rupe, Roser Abbott and
Randy Humphreys.
· The board's next meeting will be
July 8, 7 p.m. at the district's central
office in tlie Pomeroy ~unjcipal
Building.
fJ .

Off the list
OlD SO
IH.CAI

.....

414'5
IOCIIOOSI

Commission opts
to. sehd ~idwest
nuclear waste out
of six-state region
By JOHN SEEWEA

AIIOCIIted Pre11 Writer

raccoon, bear, boar
and large cats - but

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COLUMBUS- Six Midwestern
states hope that' landfills in South
~ . . _,.Ca(jl!J~~fi
__,!J~~I!e- ;ol!IU9 .~
bola 1.11 o their low-level(lldoo'a'Cil've
waste.
· ~ stata..,-: Ohio, ,Indiana, t~a.
Mfoines'oia, Missouri and Wiscon~in­
- Yo~ Thursday to end develdpment of the proposed dump in Ohio.
The·Midwest Interstate Low-LevOUT OF CO,.SlOEAATIQN - 0 , . L.rlon, executlri dl*. el Radioactive Wa5te Commission ·
tor·or the Mldwelt lntenta- ~t.MI . Aidloectlve wu• eomagreed ihat ihe out-of-state dumps
mlulcm, tpOke during • meeting or the commllllon In Columcould handle lnuch of ihe current
bu• Thunday, where It 1nn0\lnced It Would c.JI off ltle _.;ell for
waste, and' that less. is being produced
e
nuclear wa• 1torege ilte In Ohio. (AP)
now ·anyw~y.
·.
·
·Commission director Gregg Lar'
son said costs 'were also a factor. The nuclear activists have fought devci- son said.
Representatives from Centerior
commission has spent $3.2 million.so · opment of the regional dump out of
far, but costs could have gone as high rear that the wastes w~uld endanger Energy Corp. of Independence and
peopl~'s health and O~io's water; air • Union Electric Co. in St. Louis crit·
as $216 million.
·,
'
icized the decision as being short· "We· have . not spent a, . large and soU:
amount so far," Larson jljd, "But1he
The YOte was S-0. Ohio suppilrt- sighted. ·
Ted Myers, . a Centerior
cost of disposal in our region would ed the vote but abstained because it
be very high."
. '
did not want to appear to he bi-eak· spokesman, said there is no guaranThe'states will continue to explore ing its agreement tQ be-the hOst, said tee that the dump in Barnwell, S.C.,
ways to dispose of the wastes pro· 'Mike Dawson, spokesman for Gov. will remain open. In 1995, it was
reopened to waste from outside the
duced by power plants, hospit,als and Ge9rae Voinovich• ·
research ~enters, ·said Teresa Hay,
The storase complex was to open Southeast.
.
"There have been no serious eval'Iowa's representative and chair of the in 200S. A site in Ohio had not been
picked.
··
uations undertaken \o su~ these
commission.
· ·
Most of the viaste now is sent' to contentions, no impact evaluations
"Essentially, it's a clean slate,"
she said.
·
dumps in South Carolina and Utah. perfonne~ on the pros 'and 'ons,"
The commission was created iri The commission arid states involved · Myers sa1d.
The Midwest consortium origi·
1984 to develop a si.te to bindle pro- agreed that another site probably will
·
· nally included seven states. Michitective clothing, sheets, test tu!&gt;cs arid be needed evenl...lly; · ·
"lt doesn't mean Ohio alld.these gan, which was to be the lint dump
other milterials that caine into cantact
other .states won't have to fin.i an host, was ousted in 1991 because of
with radioactive substa.nces.
Environmentalists and · anti- alternative site ill the future," Daw- · delays in finding a site,

'

Rutland _.'f irms up plans·for Fourth
of_July celebr~tion $.et next Friday
,,

"Volunteers • We Keep America
Goins" .will be the theme of the Rutlalld
of July Parade sponsored
by the Rutlarld Volunteer Fire De)JII!tment.
Une up will be at9 a.m. at Depot
and Brick streets, with the parade
$tariing at 9:30a.m.
·
First- arid second-plai:e winpers
will be' announced in the following
qtep:ies; floats (Rliaious and 1101!·
religious), fire trucks, antique cars,
marching units, semis, ball teams and ·
bil:yeles.

.,ourth

.t . \

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now.the word seems
to be everywhere,
ftom signs welcomIng NatiQn.I ,Piqtt ,
Hound Association

events were held at
the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Thursday during the t#ISO·
elation's Plott Days,
host«&lt; this ys•r
the Shade River .·
Coonhunter Associa·
tion. In addition to
events such as the
treeipg contest, dash
race and barrel roll, a
bench contest was ·
held and participants
had the opportunity ·
to tlllce part In pointsonly night hunts. A
Plott hound gets air
during a dash race, In
bottom photo. The
dOg Is attempting to
re~~eh a raccoon tan~
tllllzlngly suspendtld
In a cage overhNd. '
Activities will continue through Saturday
night. (Sentinel ph~
tos by Jim Freeman)

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'For more information, coqlact • In addition, lots of games for chil·
Ray Willford, 74~~ 103; Kent·Eads, · dren will be going throughOut the L---.:...---~------------....;;;...
742•2257; Kip~. 742-2935; or day,lncludinll• dunkins booth oper·
Danny. Davis, 742•2372. ·
ated by~ Rutland Youth League.
Parade winneri will be announced
The barld Renegade will perform
.
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.
.
at noon.
county and light rock music at 6:30 .
· Big lime wrestling mlill:bes will be .l!:m-1 followed by fireworks atl0:30
held at I p.m. at Fireillans Park, with p.m.
.·- ·
·
the Bloodwar· Wrestling Alliance.
· The Rutland Fourdt July celeBinao will also start at I p.m.
. bration has long been known IS the
Karaoke 'with ~BS recording Rll\l'-1 Ox Rout, so plenty of rOut . "Celebratina 200 Years" is the
Awards will be presented for the Sound will follow the panide in the ·
anist Jeff North and Slar Bound beef sandwiches will be on hind with appnipriate .theme for Middleport's best entries in the parade atthe patk, park area.
~
Entertainment will &lt;begin at 2 p.m., Olher i~ms includint hot dogs, slop- Fourth of July celebration, which will beainning at7 p.m. Trophies will go
The variety show is under the ' ·
running thrOuJh 5:30p.m.
py jpes, C:Otton candy and ice
incorporate the village's bjcentenni- to the best theme, the most patriolic, direction of Sharon Hawley, Rae :.
l
·
al.
best marching unit. best bicycle, best Gwiazdowsky and Tom Dooley. Spe. .

on

Bl·centennial theme do-minates
Middleport ·July 4 celebration

or

cream.

s..

o_urc.e say. · incre~."i._
sef in ta.xes li_
kei.Y..
to. Implement SChOOl undtng ·formula
s.

l)ntll recently, tnllny
Meigs count/an' may
have never hestd of
Plott hounds - used
primarily for hunting ·

~~~e~:::c::~·~:~~~~ :~~strian
foutth, bqinning :with the parade at

6 p~

p1r1111e wm form on Ash
·
·
,
StreCC. and will !Me in Beech Str&amp;et,
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's lined the proposal Thunday· durin1 ·.lion for~~ the fint yqi.
Qenenl Hil'linpr Plll'kway and Sec~·
1a1ea iu Would increaae by 20 per· priYIIe meelinp ,..Jth House and
Q The plaol also would it~C~eUe the Oild Avenue. ending at Dave Diles.
r cea.t and eiprelle tax• · would Senile members. · ·
.,.., 24-cen_ll-a-J*k ~iaueae ru Plrk.
iiiQ u by SO JIOIOIIIt to help litisA IOUI'Iie l'amilillf ,with the .,._, to 36011111, nalinaiiiCJIIaSIOOmilLibby Kin1o 1 1997 p-ac~uate of
fylhoOhioS¥....,.Co\at'trui\11J who ~poke OD the co~lion
lion.-Jy.
Meias.:=~·wiUbehonored
. IIIII 1M-.., lpolld 110111 O.ICiloola, · 11111,milY.told The A-t 1 1"- · The Jllupetly tu raiiiMick for . • M"
· 'I "Celelnted Clti-.
• IIIBM llicl.
dill VOiell would be llllbd 10 iiiCII••
Would 10 flam 12.5 JIOI· lin. • Libby it a CIIScen~lllt of latne1
· S.. &amp;t..tpt DiaiCtlW CJrqo~y Ohio's S JIOICCDC ..._ tu 10 6 per· cent to 15 pen:eat llld ilic:r 11 the Smith, MlildlepOn's lint aeuler.
,B..,....,, 11111 fOIIll dlli11..,., out· Clllll. Thlt would lli1nboutSI.I biJ. lmmrnul~

or

homeow•••
•

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~~alp::~:~~~:~r::.':!t~O::~

unit and best walking
Children are encouraged to deco- · Zurcher, BJ. Smith and Marlane ·:

:.:~!n~ic~:S.~:!;i:o~; ::: s~ring the festi;ities. the u.s.~

pmde route are asked to fly their . Post Office staff from Middleport •
naas. in keeping wjth the patriotic will make availlble aspecial bicen- ;
111iute ·of the event. . : ·
tennial postmark, designed especial••
- ·Bob Gilmore is in charge of the . I~ for the'celebnliC?R, •
·
and can be reached at 992Cclncm'on IJIIICCI•uvailltble • ·
6128.Noretillrllionisinvol'fed..
aeostcifSIO,ude.nberetlhWbr
Bliter1linment including the Du- callina Nuey Cale • 992·5431.
&amp;Iiiii· Dolls, S~ll'"'' Seliion, BiJ
A dis'*y of ftreWorb \Vii
Bend Clogen and Sweet Moun11in up the Founh of July Biica~· prop'llll, bepnnina at 9:30,...

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�Commentaty .
.The.-Daily .Sentinel

•

.Friday, June 27,1117

...

aenen.M.- I

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.::".:.':-:,:-.:'.,:.
....,...

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Medicare is no
longer a sacred cow

reviews from the media.
Stdlice it to 11y, this ia not a crusade that Gore hu taken with him to

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
\

the White House. In four-plus yean
~ president, Gore b8$ been
silent on the issue. Calls to his olf"ICC
for an explanation of Gore's current
position on the issue 'wert not
returned.
Although observers say the Clinton administration has clone a slightly better job·than its predec:euors in
appointinJ capable atnbassadors, the
practice of reserving the best jobs for
polilical supporters continues Unabat·
eel, yet with a Clintonian twist. ·
The administration is lagging far
behind its recent predecessors in
appointing 11111bassadors, wbo tradi.tionally serve three-year terms before
moving on to another post or coming
home. In 1993, it took Clinton nearly a full year before most appointments were made. Consequently, the

as

w..

are

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INQ.

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By o-ge R. Plllgenz

Berry's World

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NlA. ...

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ANOTHER KIND OF CONTINENTAL

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DRIFT

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Or. Richard Cabot, a famous
physician a1 Massachusetts General
Hospital in Boston, once said that if
more ministers knew how to pray fOr
the people in their congregations wbo
came to them for help, 60 percent to
70 perceni of those wbo fill doctors'
waiting rooms wouldn't have to be
there.
'
. Is it true that ministers, wbo oughl
to be e1pert1 in ~yin" don't·know
hOw· 10 pray? Li$1en 111' what one
woman 'hal to say about her own pulor.
"ReCently," she writes, "I went to
speak to the senior miniller of IllY
church to tell him olmy.maritaJ problems. He wu ·very concerned and
encouraging, and when I -leaving.
· promised to think.about me every
day.
'
"I wanted to tell him that all my
unbelievinB friends were thinklna
about me. What I neeiled wu •
prayer warrior. I am uddenecl thai I.
muat 10 to another group in my city
to nqucit prayer for me llld my husbud.
"I h&amp;~ lou of people lhinkin1 of .
me. What I need are people who can
addreas God on my bAalf and u.are
me I will be remembered in prayer."
This~ woman is not alone in hw
seardl for "~ warrion~· over

..

· • p1easan
·
t wee"'en d
promiSe

will

June L Grl·tt.·n·

Meigs announcements
.

· •den.t may t ake
.'osu·'s prASI
top·· job at Brown University

mont

"''I'

Albert.M, Voll

l'lrblblred
ailerri&lt;lon. M...,.y ,_,.. ·I
Friday. Ill Coon 51.. ·l'onroroy. Olrlo. by

Olio VaUey P\lbli~na Con.puy}O...,.c Co.•
......,.,, Olllo 45769. Ph. 992:21!6. Socood
, .... poid .. Pomero;. Ohio.

· .Memorial services for Albert Marion Voll, 66, of~ who died Thurs_day, June 26. 1997, will~ 4 p.m. Sunday at the ~Ia Chapel of the Cawley &amp; Peoples Funeral Home, 408 Front St., Manetta. ·

' '
I ~nolro~: The ilnoc:lated .....,.,
and lire Olllo
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~APodMkro.

POSTMA-BI'IR: Send address corrections to
The Qllly 'Senill!el. Ill Coun 5&lt;.. ,....,.,,
Otlio 45769.
.
8..-:tUPTION RATIS
., Ceniol-ti'Melor .....

·

4th &amp; Sywmore Stntts
G t1als, Ohio 45631

s..twiOir!OOI-!IIOP'l' ... .. .y
retn11 In IllY- diNcl 10 11re Dolly 5oo!doel
0111 ttwe, all or 12,1WOIIItlbala. Ctetlt wtnt.e
,... _ _ "i""'

The Wish List .·

No
-ripdoo
101111 I
permilllll
_...,.
_by_
s _lo
. na
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A Simple Solution in Helpiras
Your Wuhes Come 7h&amp;e
Stop iJ1 for DetaiU

-'ctm•

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s·:."r·,

RahaWIIalloll

SINGLB COPY Pllicrt

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Open 91ouse for 91olzer Cltnlc
ChtroprtJcflc &amp; oporfs 9'tlediclne

0cc.,••~oaa~.....,.

Delly .....................;''"i"'l"":::":'"'""":35 ~ .

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Hospital news

Satanlay, JIM 21, I H7 .
10:00 a.IL• 12:00 p&amp;

0. w.t...... -... N'""''"'""""'''''""'"'"'""$l,OQ
0. Moadt ................................................SI;'IO
0. v.......................'........................... SI04.00

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.Meigs E""S runs

Wilma J. Sayre

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"- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
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' T~y s Bartl)days.. Capwn ~~aroo, Bob Keesha!l,as 70..BIIIIMu
· execuu~ Rosa .Perot 11 61, ~ra stnaer Anna Mo,ft'o is 6~. Tho Chairman
. :of the J0111 Chiefs of Staff, Anny Oell. John Shaltkllhvlli, ia 61.1J111rior
.~ ~Bruce Babhiu.is 59. Si~l'lllfician Bruce Jvb~&amp;lllll (The :lea
: Boys) 1s ,3. Actm&amp; lulta Duff)'. Is 46.
babel'- M;anlla 42. Coun' try linpr Lorri4! Morpta it 38.
·
,
· 1'floulht for Thday: "A man;after he has brulhed olf the dult ..t chipl
of his life, will have ltft ~ly the hard, dean question; Wu It J00C1 or it evil? flave I tione.well- or ill~'~ John S181nhack, All•icllt...,
(1902-196&amp;).
.

Noah Christopher Kinnaird

.:court issues marriage

.

~;etery,Long~Bouom.

sh IfIey 'N an ' Herman

William A. Rusher

'Ma..llltCnal'snovel, '"lbe MM
Who Sold Prayers," te.ll• ~a cler·
, IYIMD wbo succeeded 111 dotlll that.
Rev. St. Olire Gwynne (known u
"Saintly") wrote custom-mille
prayers for people and 10011 found he
wu paina IIICire requesu than he
could flU.
Did the madpolo-order p&amp;I)'CR
wort? If by that we mean "Did the
people all ptwhatthey ~ytd for?"
the..,wer II no, Btitln anothersenie

Today's livestock report

Sun and decreased humidity

'Japanese-Americans to cash repara- ·
But why must the United Stata do · tions.)
·
·
.
all the apologizing? Shouldn't other
Widening our focus a bit, ·isn't it
countries admit their derelictions clear that women II$ a whole deserve
too? Shouldn't Britain apologiie to an apology from men as a whole for
India and Pakistan for exploiting the . imposing on them the patrian:hal
.whole subcontinent for 300 years? domination of which our feminists
ed !hat it owes them a living.
For that matter, ~OIIIdn 'I it be nicdf complain?
·
But if we're goina to apologize to the Brilish House of Commons apolThough, if it comes to that, aren't
our black fellow-citizens for the his- ogized to the ,I~ states that comprised all men enlitled to an apoloBY from
toric wrong of slavery, be assured that their American colonie~ for trying to all women for Eve's havin1 persuadit won't (B!Id in fairness shouldn't) ~~ them in subjection against their ed Adam to eat that apple?
·
stop there.
The
point
of
this
whole
e~ercise,
If there was ever a group of
. Similarly, Japan certainly ooght to or course, is to illustrate the absurdiAmericans that deserves an apoiOBY apologize to Americans for Pearl ty of trying to right historical wrongs
from the rest of us, surely it is the · Harbor, not to mention apoldgizing to by apologizing for them. As Qibbon
Indians. We whites simply landed and the Chinese for the Rape of Nanking. remarked, history is "little more
took over their territory, and com- Germany should apologize to the than the register of the crimes, follies,
pounded our aggression by breaking Russians for invading them as well as and misfortunes of mankind." There .
.practically every · treaty we subse- to the Jews for trying to annihilate would be no end to any serious effort
quently signed with them.
them. Turkey ought to apologize to to apologize for all of tllem, and it
And Lord knows Hispanic Amer- Armenia for all the. Armenians it would eventually wind tip conferring
icans(or at least ihose from Mexico) . slaughtered, and South Africa's victimhood on everyone. (Though, .
are entitled to an apology for the huge whites owe an apology to its blacks
h"
come to I mk of it, that might be a
swaths of territory we wrested from for the .long years of apartheid. scilutionof
sorts!)
·
·
Mexico in the 19th century. As a mat- (Please note, by the way, that all of
William A. RU.her 1s a
ter of fact, wouldn't common decen- those listed in this paragraph ' as DlatinJidshed Fellow of die Clarecy suggest that we ought to return deserving ari· apology arc still repreInstitute for llle .Study ol
most of the southwestern United sented by living people, who.thus are Stateamanshlp and Political Pili·
Stites, from Te~as to California. to as eniitled as the aforenieittioned losopby.

George R. Plagenz_

Ferrel W" Day .
resi~Dec.

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velous!' or 'You're simply divine.' !t
gets very depressing hi:aring all those
. !-wants and Give-mes." . .
· . Perhaps we are looking too hard
forthe answers to our prayers. There
is one prayer.thatalways works and
· answers all our needs.
· Happiness, as we all kRQW. is not
a matter of gettins everything we·
want. It is tm&amp;tter of be in• with
someone .we love wbo loves us in
return. Love is oftcin all it takes to lift
whatever burden we Ire CIIT)'ing.
So the prayer that puts us in liltich
with Gnd as the beloved friend and
companion· of our lives mey be the
only prayer we need.
. , If someone offers to sell you that
pra~r. buy it.
.
Georp Pt.a- 11 a l)illlleaW
A~rll!' Nn ; .par 1 1 apaiae
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2S, 1943 i" Gallia County, son of the late Vii'Jil 0. Day, and
Mary Myers Day of Rutland, he WI$ an electrician at the Southem Ohio Coal
Co.
·
Prlca frolll Pltilbrecn LiveCOLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaA U.S. Anny veteran, he wu also a member of the United Mine Work- Ohio direct bog prices at selected ltoc:k A-ad.....,
en.
Hog market trend for Friday:
buying points Friday as provided by
.
the U.S. Department of Agriculture steady.
Da;':r~~:.:::e~dition to his mother are his wife, Mary Kathleen Moore Market
s-ry of1'hundla)l'n 11ioa
News:
1,
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the King's Chapel Church, with the Rev.
Barrows and gilts: mo5tly steady; atBue~:
Hogs: steady.
Therum Durham officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery. Friends demand moderate on lisht to moderBut~her hogs: SI.2S-S9.00.
. By The Altocleted .Prest ·
S:.r.::~~t the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, frolll6-9 p.m. ate movement
Cattle:
steady to ·SO cents low«.
. U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
A high preu11re system catrenched over tbe Greil Lakes promises lo proThe body will lie in sllte in the church an hour prior to services on Sun- points 58.00.59.00; few S1.SO .and
SJaughter steers: c~ 60.00vide Ohio with.a pictu~·perfec! w~kend. h d'
d
. the day. ·
·
59.SO; plants S8.S6-60.00, few 60.SO. 66.SO; select 55.00:60.00.
. Satap:day will be mostly sun,ny with low umi tty an temperatu':"' tn .
A military Oag presentation
be i:onducted at the graveside by VFW
Slaughter heifen: choice 60.00- ..
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 52.SO- .
m1d- to up~-80s.
• .
.
. .
Post4464 and American Legion Lafayette •Post 27.
66.00;
select S5.00.60.00. ·
S7:SO; 210-230 lbs. 48.00.S2.50.
There wtll be a chance of ram tn western Ohto on Sunday but f11r skies
·
·
Cows:
2.00 to 3.00 lower; all cows
Sows: steady.
·. will prevail elsewhere, the National Weather Service said.
U.S. 1-3 300-SOO lbs. 42.00-4S.OO, 44.00 and down.
The record-high temperature .for this date a1 the Columbus weather sta- · .
•
Bulls: steady; all bulls 58.00 a,nd
S00.600 lbs. 45.00.48.00, few over
. tion was 101 degrees in 1944 while the record low wu 45. in 1981. Sunset
Jun~ L. Griffin, 75, of Long Bottom, died Wednesday, June 2S, 1997 at 600 lbs. 48.00-49.00.
down.
tomght w1ll be at 9:04p.m. and sunnse Saturda~ at 6:05a.m.
the Veterans Memorial. Extended Care in Pomeroy.
·
Sheep and lambs: 5.00 tower;
Boan: 38.00-41.00.
choice
wools 70.00.80.00; choidl
. . ~oat;Jter forecast: , ·
.
Born Oct. 8, 1921 in Long Bottom, daughter of the late J8$per and Lulu
· ..
Estimated receipts: 28,000.
Tomghi,-..Ciear until m1dn1~ht, then fog developtng. Lows from the upper Congrove Newlun, she wu a homemaker, and a member of the Lona BotFor the week: barrows and silts clips 60.00. 7S.OO; feecli:r Jambs 79.00.
SOs to the lower (;Os. Calm wa~d. .
.
tom United Methodist Church.
1.00 to l.SO higher; sows SO cents to and down; aged shi:ep 40.00 ani! ;
Saturday... ¥o.stly sunny. Highs an th~ mtd 80s.
.
She is survived by her husband, Ernest Griffin; two soti&amp; and daughters- 1.00 higher.
.down.
Saturday mght...Mostly clear. Lows tn the lower to mad (;Os.
in-law, Larry and Grace Griffin of Racine, and Errol and Connie Griffin of
.
Extended forecut:
.
.
Indianapolis, Ind.; one son, Roger Griffin of Lons Bottom; two daughters
. Sun~y,.. Mostly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms dul'tnJ ,thc.~~· Htchs and sons-in-law, Pam and Jim Stettler ofTuppers Plains, and Debbie and Joe
'
· to the mtd ~Os. . . ,
. .
·· ·
. . · · Null of Belpre; and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren,
Mlulouarlea
featured
· invites public. '
Monday and Thesday.:.Partly cloudy. A chance .of t~derstorms m tbe
She was preceded in death by a son, Phillip Griffin; one grimddaughter,
The
Middleport·
Wesleyan
Holiafternoon. Lows m the mid 60s and h1ghs m the mid 80S.
Regina Griffin; and by five sisters and four brothers.
ness Clilm:h will have missionaries to Pr.cliee to IIePa
.
Services wer'e conducted at 10 a.m. today, Friday, June 27, 1997 in the Alaska, Pam and David Ferrell as
Summer practice .flir the Meigs,
White Funeral Home in Coolville, with burial foiiQwing in the Sand .Hill special speakers Wednesday, 7:30 ·sand will begiri Monday. 9 a.m. to ·
VisitationwasconductedatthefuneralhomeThurs- p.m. The Rev. John Neville, pastor, noon. All members of the 1997-98
band are required to be in attendance.
Questions concernjng pnactices may .
a .
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)- tworeasons.Oneisthatthedecision
UnitsoftheMeigsCounlyEmer- be directed to Toney DinBCSS; direc· ·
tor, 992-7l41 or992-SOI8.
• Ohio Stale Univc;rsity Presic!ent Gor- has yet to be m~e and secondly
Shirley "Nan" Herman, 52, Middleport, died on Thursday, June 26, 1~7 gency Medical Service recorded five
don Gee likely will ~Ollie the new because they have not formally
• II
.
calls fpr assistance Thursday. Units 'l'rusteM to _ .
.
C
.
president of Brown University, an offered me the job," he said. .
at Ho1zet Midical enter, •O . owing an extended illness.
responding inclUded: ..
The
Rutland
Townsbip
Thls!CCs
Ohio State spokesman said today. .
Telephone messages were ·left
She was. boi'n on Oct. 20, 1945 in Middlepor:t. She was a member of tbe
CENTRAL DISPATCH
.wilt meet Tuesday,~ p.m. at the Rut·
'.'1 can't guarantee that he's the today for Gee.~t,Ji$)1ome and office. Ash Street Freewill Baptist c;:hurch.
F
pcrsiin'btit t~nly·believe he'11," ·'· ' Btown, fOWIIIct. lill7~.-is enJvy · • • ~fle b. S'!fYjV.e4, ~Y h'IJ:,.mQ.!l-;!&gt; ~arl~, ~nslf Qll!}d\nJ ~tf,f~JV¥;.1!"0 , Mi:;::c:t,;;.::"Da~: ¢c':~~~ 1.1111d Fire Station T)lt;,bul:laot he!uing
will be .held at 6 p.m.
League school where more than daughterS and sons-an-law, F11di and Thomas Roach' Of Middleport, anil TraMalcolm Baroway Sat'd.
·
•
Ri
hard
r •d'
DaJ
H
Memorial
Hospital;
·
f
d
J
Pa
R
Brown spokesman Mark Nickel 7,000 undergraduate and graduate cyan ames tterson o acme; •OUr sons: c
, ........ce, an
e er.told WTVN radt'o 1·n Colum
· bus that' students are enrolled.
' man, all of Pomeroy, mit Rief Herman of Middl~it;'filurflrothers 'lnd sis2:18p.m., Mill Street, Middleport, Reunion to 1M held
· 1 B0 bb J
d H 1D dd'10
d 0 hn and Marth Dudd'
Walter Greene, Holzer Medical CeoThe 281li annual Teaford reu'nion .
•
Gee would attend a news conference
Nickel said 165 candidates were ters-m- a~:
Y oe an aze . u 1 a~
a
ang, ter;
will
be Saturday a1 Star Mill Park.
. later today at Brown for the- considered for the presidency. l:le . ~I ofRactne, Gene and R~by Duddms of~yna, and ~oger and Karen LetT5OS
M lbe
A
There
will be a basket dinner at noon.
announcement of the university's would not confirm whel)ll:i Gee was mgwell of Columbus; a ~•ster and brother~ to-law, Doris~ Jerrold R~f of . Pom~ro/G~~d ~ne:::HM'C:nue,
replacement flir Varian Gregorian.
Columbus; a .st~ter•. Juantta Thomas of Mtddleport;and eaght grandchildren
Hud
S
M'd
10 be appointed.
8 04
cancelled
Brown's board was to meet this
"Gee has confi.rmed that he; is a a¢ several nieces anc! ~hews. .
.
.
.
dl~. ~;;ry Wh:~ v=~· 1 • Meet1n1
The
auxiliary
of the Fraternal
morning.•Ohio State also scheduled candidate, but the university, by pol~he .w:U prece&lt;;Jed tn death by a saster, Ruby Jarvts; and two brothers-InMIDDLEPORT
Order
of
Eagles
~171 will not meet
a news conference later today.
icy, never does that," Nickel said. law, Wt!ham J.arvas and Paul Thorn~.
.
.
.
2 34
W M. S
Gee told The Coiumbus (Ohio) "Can~·tes are free to do so."
Servaces wt~l ~ I p.m. Monda~ an the.Mtddle~rt.Chapel ~f I~ Fts~r
; p.m., est am treet, next week due to remodeling taking
. D' t h on Th rsday that be had not
' Gee as been 11 Ohio State since Fuileral Home, with the' Rev. Leslte Haymu offic:aatlng. Bunal wtll be an Pomeroy, Harold Patterso!l. HMC; place in the hall.
' adaspa cde · · u ho tth 'ob ·
1990 In June t99S be accepted the the Riverview.Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 10 a.m. Pomeroy squad assisted.
. m e a ciS!on a u CJ .
·
•
.
M d
·
''I'm not in a position to say presidency at the University of Cali- to I p.m. on ay.
· whether I'm going to take it or not ror fornia but backed out a day before he
was to have been confirmed .
Vetenms Me&amp;IIOI1al
·
Thursday
admissions - France.s
Noah Christopher KhinJird, in flint' son of Christopher and MiriJUJ ZemU~enses
L.
Davis,
MiddleP\)rt;
Betty Morbry Kinnairil. cl,ied Wednesday June 2S,I997 in the Qlarleston (W.Va.} Area
.
risey,
Pomeroy.
, .The following couples were land;
Medical Center. ·
Thursday discharges - Chester
issued marriage licenses recently in
Jimmy Christopher Wolfe, 29.
Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothers. Jonathan ScOtt Crews
Hutton.
: the Meigs County Probate Court of and Theresa Michelle Bing, 29, both and Brady Quinn Kinnaird, both of the bome; patemalsrandparcnts; Ferrell
Holzer Medical Center
of Racine; ·
,
. Judge Robert Bilek:
. and Nancy Pearson Kinnaird of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; maternal grandJnu 26 - Mrs.
Dlscharpa
Michaeiii!J!ine ~rry. 49, ColumJeremy Curtiss 1\llman, 20, Sy,ra~ mother, Marilyn Re~jpp Lee of Gallipolis; paternal great-grandfather, WorCharles
Jacks
and
son, Ruth Stans. ' bus, and 1\!'ai)Cy Marie Perry, . 46, cuse; and Amy Beth Johnson, 16, thy Pearson of Gallipolis Ferry; maternal great·~t:andfather, HilT)' Reapp or
berry,
'Penny
Christian,
Mrs. Gary
;, Grayso~. Ky.; .
Pomeory;
Gallipolis; and several aunts and uncles. ' · ·
.·
·
.Jon Christopher. Burlce, 33; and
Chester Allen RC!$5, 28, and Misty
He was preceded in death by a maternal grandfather, John Lewis Zem- Curtis and son. Mrs. Brian Birchftcld
and son, Hazel Walburn, Alfred
· bry in 1982; arid by several great-grandparents, . ·
~Linda ~y, GrindshiiT, 49, both of Jean Pierce, 18, both Df Rtltland;
Thornton, Raymond Thornton,
,Reeds~,ue: ..
•
Anthony Wayne Morris, 38,
Graveside services will 'be "I p.m. Saturday in the .Centenary Cemetery, Gwinnie
White. ·
,: Rol)!ert Steven Cenithen; 23, and Pomeroy, and Deborah Jeanne Hat- with Pastor Bill Staten officiating.
(Published
wttb pel'lllluion) .
·
Oaniell9 ·R4e Gray, 21.·both of Mid- field. 3S, Rutland; , .
Arrangements are by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wctherholt Chapel.
.dleport;
. Brian Anthoqy Rousll, 23, Letart, Gallipolis.
.
.
Ryan D. Pollitt, ·19, Georgetown, W.Va .. and Kimberly Lee Pauley, 28,
In lieij of flowers, memorial contributions may be .made to the Noah
and Carrie D. KnaJ!p, 20, Long Bot- Middleport;
-•· . , Christopher Kinnai!d Mcmorjal Fund•.P.O. Box S36, Gallipolis, O'"o 4S631. ·
.lom;
.~.
. . _,. · , ,~ · ' ·l'ot;rest .Raym Teafof'll Jr., 19,
Gregory 0 . Bailey, 24, and Kath- Portland, and Staey Ly1i'n Bumpus,
leen A. Kandiko, 24, both of Port- 20, Racine;·
Edward Dwayne Winters Jr., 32,
Memorial services for Wilma J. Sayre, 6S, of Columbus, who died Jan.
and P4111Cl• Dl!wR DeJiussey, 20, U), 1997, will be held Saturday, June 28, 1997 at2 p.m . .in the Letart Falls
The Daily Sentinel Ra\rensw()(l\1, W.Va.;
Cemetery.
CUIIPII at~

Me~ico 7

optimists ("I'm sure everything will they did work. ·
be · ftnc"~ or positive think~rs
Take the woman who asked Saint("You've gor 'to look on the bright ly to .write a prayer to help her win
side").
~~e lotte~. .•s~ said afterward,
.
.
, ~n ldtdn t Wtn, J,was. roally~isappointed. But I got used to saymg
the praye( the ~~rend w"!teJor me
Of llOUI'SC, this wciman could have and ,I ~t 118Ytng 11. !'low I ve found
done her own praying; In fact, she !he spamual fortu,~ he wrote about
probably had. But most of us, when 10 .that prayer and 11 s ~Iter than an.ydealins with a crisis, would feel bet- 1)11ng money can buy. . .
ter if we know orhen will reinforce
..But !here w!l' a· down .•~de' fQr
our prayers by rememberins us by S11ntly an all thts ~yer-wntang. As
name ia their prayers.
·
he looked a1 the pales of requests
_What bothcn.'mmy of us ~~ stacked hiJit on his desk -- one pile
prayers we ,hear m church or lind tn · for people wbo wanted ~to 1be healthy,
a· prayer book is that they are too . •. pile for those who Willted to be
impenoul to be helpful. .One size nch. another fOC:~ wbo WB!Jted to
prayer is mado to lit all. We want change someth!ng (ltke the weather
prayers that speak personally to our orihe JIOV~)- he grew uneasy.
candonditi~.:.,~ meOocln'!'"' our .name . S ,'"They alusedl~.~wn to ordenl-want,"
our.-.snamean·the
111111y m . . .. ,...,. one
a
111M prayer. . .
' prayer that I!IYS. 'God, how m..,....

1

W.VA.

Getting personal with your prayers

.

~

' have the
and would very probably
unintended side effect of'encouraging
some blacks to conclude that the
United l&gt;!ates has officially conced-

.

ltuth Arnold, 89, Wddleport., died Th!nday, June 26, 1997 at the Overbrook Nunin1 ~in Micldleport.
·
She - bom 011 Mardi I, 1908 in Addison, d•nptcr of the late Asa and tion of National's new biiiU., ..-.ent.
Llunt Powell BrdMy. She pi led &amp;o,n M~ Jiia!! School in 1926,
lllended tba Middlepon ~ Cburcb and wu a member of the forNo injuri~ were reported followillga one-car accident at Royal ()ale a.ott
1¥1' Middleport Garden Oub.
.
near Pomeroy Wednesday eveninc. ·
.
She is IIUlvived by a dqllter,ludy Arnold ofMiddlep!lrt; a son and dallshAccorc!inl to a Meip County Sheriffs Department report, Randall D.
ter-in-law, lames and Olorla Arnold of CinciMili: two granddauJhters; a · Tucker, Racine, was eastbound on Royal Oak Road, a alton dillllllee' tian
great·Jrandson and three llepgreat-pandchildren.
Pine Grove Road, and went off the riJhl edge of the pavement, ~ ill
She wu prilcc lied in cleath by her husband, JanieJArnold. in 1980: a broth- light damage to his 1989 Buick.
·
·
·
er. Cecil Bra4bury; ,and by a sister, Esther Oreer.
Graveside services will be 3 p.m. Saturday inlhe Gravel Hill Cemetery
in Cheshire. with the Rev. Krilln~ Robinson ofticiatin1. No visitation will
No citations were iuued followinJ an accident on Old Main Saeet . _
be observed. AmnpiiiCIII$ are by the Middleport Outpel of the Fisher Home. the Pomeroy-Mason Bridae 01! Thursday.
·
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made 10 the Ruth Arnold MemoThe Pomeroy Police DepMbiNDt reported thai Bill)' Pollill. 42. 'WIIImole.
riel Fund, 62S Olestntit St., Middleport, Ohio 45760. or to the Middleport Ky.. wu artemptlna to back a 1991 International semi-truck tian the
Presbyterim Church, 165 N. Fourth St., Middleport, Ohio 4S760.
approaeh of Old Main Street, which leads under the bridJI; when he IlNCk
a 1994 Ford driven by Frances Skidmore of Bidwell.
No injuries were reported. Liahl damqe wu reported to Pollitt's truc:k.
and heavy danuige io Skidmore's car, which was lOWed from tho scene.
. Ferrel Wayne Day, S3, Cheshire, died Wednesday, June 2S, 1997 at his

Crash under bridge Investigated

.Apology .would be just. the ;ti.p of the iceberg
I

Nltional 0u .t: Oil Corp. will hold I pllbl~ -un, for ita bci• s,n.
cuse and Rutland CUIIomen a. 'lbunday, July 10, 7 p.a • the Jtaci11 Pft
Department Annex. Them IIIII- nll!-.cilly Rleine Ma)'GI' Scoa HID
to discuss increases in ps COil reaultinc from clereiUIMioa and • ellpl••

Deputies report crash near Pomeroy· . ·

c

• •

Natlon.l Ga• plan•.local meeting

·. Ruth Arnold

. qA~~

LOOK

.;_Local News in Brief-.

AcQIYi~ I~ fot~ far

her embassy. Nevertbelea, the
extension of Kenaed)•.smith's term
tho t:mlplip
in full IWin•.
Clinton knew bellcr than to nom- should sit well with her brother, Sen.
inate anybody before the 'CBIIIpMJII Edward Kennedy, [).Mass.
Another- well-connected siblina,
wu ·finished. So the 1111bass8dors
waited. Not uplil mid-winter did Thomas Dodd, will also receive
WJtite House personnel director Bob another posting after servins three
Nuh set ~ro~~pd . to sending out tl!e years asambauldorto Uruguay. This
traditional "~N!tbassador" letter, no doubt comes as welcome news to
wh~h informs diplomats that their his. bt:other, Sen. Chris Dodd, Dterms are up.
Conn., wbo helped ,raise millions of
That wu six months ago. Yet the .dollars for Clinton's re-election u coMlminisiration still hun't sent any .chairman of the Democl'lllic Nationnominations to the Senate. As of al Committee daring the last ele~.'tion
March 31, there were only I S official cycle.
vacincies - including such key spots
But money and inDucncc doesn't
u FI'BIICC, Jajlan, Germany and Rus- always help. One senior Sllte Departsia. But an official at the American ment official was surprised, for
Foreian Service Association -- the exalllple, to receive in the mail a
Stale Departineni's labor union -- glossy brochure touting the atnbll$- ·
tells us IIIII approximately 100 jobs sadorial accomplishments of milare wliting to be filled.
·
lionaire heiress Swanee Hunt, who's
In some cues, ambassadOrs \18ve now J!IICking up after a three-year
already received official permission stint in Austria. Hunt ·was clearly
to extend their terms. The well-con- angling for an upgrade -- Paris; 'pernected Jean Kennedy-Smith, for · haps?-- but she isn't in t.he adminisexatnple, will remain in Ireland until tration's plans.
after that country holds elections this
Of the so-called "political"
year. This .cjespite the fact that she ambassadors, which comprise about
received an official reprimand from one-third of the total, one sour\:e
former Secietary of' State Warren speculates that the competence level
. Christopher for managerial problems breaks down like this:
-- One-third are highly qualified
and do a wonderful job.
·-- One-third come to the job lack·
ing in qualifications, but learn quickly on the job and end up performing
well.
~Giii'Aitl~ IM97
-- One-third arrive as imbeciles
' J•ahler55~aol C(ll"'''
and leave the same way.
Not very long ago, it didn't matter if a few dim bulbs slipped through
the confirmation process. These people were usually sent to tiny nations
like Grenada or the Baham&amp;$, where
they could do no harm.
· But the world has changed, and so
has diplomacy. The sleepy outposts
·cif yesteryear now represent the front
lines in the war against drug ·smug. gling and inoney laundering. Places
like the Cayman Islands and the tiny
nation of Belize now serve as financial havens or drug transshipment
points. for the criminal cliiSII. It's no .
longer st~fficient to send an ambll$sador whose chief qualifi~ion is
having raised a few million bucks for
the president'~ catnpaign.
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

a aood idea that won him favonble !Nw-)'C!Ir IGmJ expired last fall, u

Pomeroy • Mlddlaport, Ohio

OHIO We.tliH''
Satlll'daJ, JaM 21

Political am_
bas_
sadorshlps still flourish

ByJeakAnlllrMn
.... JenUallt
.
~in1.948.
Au U.S. 1e11110r in 1989, AI Oore
· cmne up with a heretical idea: to c:ut
111 Court Sblel, Pomeroy, Ohio
the number of "political" ambu814-112-21118 • Fex 882·2157
sadonhips in half
One of the most prized petb of
presidential
power is the ability 10
•
appoint unbusadon. Most of tbesc
jobs go 10 career s~ Department
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
folks, !llCII and women wbo speak
multiple lanpgcs, spon impressive
AOBI!RT L WINGETT
depees and have worked their way
Pub.....
up through the.diplomatic ranks.
But for decades, it's been the norm
.
.
in
Wuhinplll to leave about oneIIARGARI!T LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
third or the ambassadorships for
ContniiW
"political" appointees. A more llf:CU·
rate term miJitt be "fat cats."
Jilt_.
_ , . , . _ . . . , ; _ . , . • ...,.....,..,..,..,
The political postings are usually
'£."::::::,=":_a:::.;;,~~'::; reserved for people wbo raised or
,._-.~·-•-u•••-'"•J&amp;=&gt;
·contributed big bucks to the presi,.- 111: . . - 10 'ji;""Ht..,, ·Jilt . ...,., 111 c.ur a. "" 111 ..,~ ~
dent's campaian. or wbo are other.• :•::;~;:.:::"'::.·- - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - _ . wise owed a favor~ the adminisL..:•:::••:.:"'::•.:;:MX:::,:IO::,I1::;
IJ'Ition. And the jobs reserved for
them are usually atnong the binest
plums in government"- Great Britain,
France and Austria. for example.
Gore wanted to chanBC all that.
Not eliminate political ambassador·
ships. mind you •• just cut the number
in half, to about IS percent. It WI$
By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Special Correlpondent
WASHINGTON -Like Social Security, itlllay be a political third rail,
but Senate majorities ate risking a ride there.·They voted for the most dras.tic changes in Medicare since it was enacted 32 years ago, challenging the
powerhouse senior citizens lobby in a signal of political change.
The Senate wrote the Medicare measures into itS version of the massive
WHAT
budget paclcage Congress passed Wednesday. They are not part of the House
I FOUfll..
bill, and President Clinton doe$n't favor them being in the current legislaMYCHILDt®
tion.
~·SHIRT!
So they may·not survive in the final budget bill. But the wide, bipartisan Senate support for gradually raising the Medicare age from 65 to 67 in
2027, and for increasing premiums paid by upper-income seniors, breaks
barriers that withstood earlier warnings thai the system is running out of man.
ey.
.
.
Based on current projections, it would·go broke in 2001.
Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., who has waged a lonely campaign for entitlement reform, said the need for change overtook the oppositio~ to it. "The
facts are very compelling," he said in a telephone interview. "These kinds
of choices are the choices ·you have to make."
·
He headed a commission on entitlement reform that warned 2 112 years
ago that costs would soar and Medicare would go bankrupt without changes.
But the panel couldn 'I agree on what to do about the future funding of
Medicare and Social Security, so it sent President Clinton and Congress a
letter saying that "tough action is needed sooner rather than later."
There was none until Thesday and Wednesday when, abruptly, the Sen·
ate voted overwhelmingly, and with substantial Democratic as-well as Republican support, for income-based premium increases called means testing, setting a course liberals and seniors fear could be a precedent.
They wary of attempts at such changes in other entitlement programs
that pay benefits to individuals, including Social Security, which faces an
in~rell$ing strain on its finances as retirement rolls sOar.
The Social Security age already has been·raised, to reach 67 in 202S.
Advocates of the Medicare premium increase at upper incomes.said it
would'affect only o,ne person in 20. They said that should take the poli~l
sting out of it.
·
But Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., said she believes it is ·~just a ruse to By William A. Auaher •
create the principle of means testing, to get what I call the slippery slope
The proposal, by a bipartisan
done."
- group of.a dozen congressmen, that .
"It just lays the groundwork for additional means testing," she~ befm: Congress pass a resolution apologizdie Senate voted 70-30 to do it. The vote to increase theMedicilre age WI$ ing to our bl~~tk fellow citizens. for
62-38. And to require a $5 co-payment for hOIIIC care visits, it WI$ S9-41. · America's history of slavery is just
. "Every senior will know about that," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- the tip of the iceberg.
Mass., who opposed all three steps~
. · In the first place, u Clarence
The Senate votes surprised even some supporters of the changes.
("Eleanor is right") Page pointed out
"We are probably going to lose," Sen.. Dan Coats, R-Ind., had said. ··t
on ABC's "This Week." it isn't
don't think we have the political will to do it."
enough. Already cenain black
Kerrey said ill debaJe that the Senate should "resist the political tempspokesmen have begun suggesting
~ tiu.ion to casun easy vote·~ 10 leave Medicare unchanged for now.
.
that only "reparations"-- i.e., cub. ·; He .said afterward that the need to act for solvency overtook the resis- · • will ease the pain of the presepiBCn.tllnl:e.ind led to approval of the steps the Senate Finance Co!llmittee advo- eration of black Americans.
.. cated.
· .
'
.There is, after all, the precedent of
"This sort of grew up within the Finance Committee," said Sen. John· the reparations paid by the governD. Rockefeller IV, D-W.Va.; who wanted to wait for a new commission study.
ment not Ions . ago to still-living
' "It got its ow!l momentum, and the Finance Committee WI$ acling apart
Japanese-Americans who were
_from the rest of the Senate and apart from the rest of America."
interned-in camps, without the slight, . Perhaps so, but the margins were striking. A final Democratic attempt to
est juslificalion, after Pearl Harbor,
· erase the Medicare changes before the budset passed was rejected Wednes. But a( lell$t in that caie the people
~ day, 7S-2S.
.
·
•
.
. being compensated were the ones
~
Not that the political risk is gone. It was evident in the vote on raising
who had sufl'ei'ed the internment. In
~ Medic~' J!,:emiurrls; four of the six Republicans who voted no are running
the case of slavery, the apoloBY is to
:11 for new terms in 1998. And only four of the 2 I Democrats who voted for
be made, on behalf of people who
thallllCBSUre are going to be candiljates in 1998.
.
have never enslaved anybody, to
· Kerrey 5aid be doesn't think it will hurt supporters.in the next campaign · other people who have never been
. 11tcause the steps are to make Medicare sound and solvent. "That's plenty
enslaved. It would simply be a spec·
:;: of cover," he said.
.
tacul• example of "feel-goodism,"
~
.
.
.
.
~ . EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice pralcleat and colum·
~· nist ror The Alaoclated Press, llu reported on Wuhlqtoa aiiCI aatioa·
~ al po11t1a for more than 30 yean.
·

..2, ·

.

.

. J

.

...-

8 oln us

t1X!Ico.me ·
CZJr. CXelly &lt;;RouSh, Chlroprtxlor
Cf'or more lnformDHon ctJil
446-5244
DS t1X!

�•

.

n-•~...
.
(~-Atace 42,

. whell he piS iato I 1ame. That
lllicht lie Cbe 111ain INIOn he's I'CIIc:h·
heiPa ll I ti111e when most
pildlen hlv!l wound down.
Bcbnley l!Jok OYertecond place
0!1 the lave&amp; lilt Thursday
mlht by Pl'lllhllll the SL Louis
C~nals.' S-3 victory over the
Cinc1nnab Reds. He retired Deion
. Sanden on a fly to move one ahead
oUeff Reardon with his 368th save:
"He's aot the heart of a warrior,
When you get in your 40s, somelimes you start losinJ that little
edp. "lll.a&amp;JCr Tony r.. Russa said.
"His heart is still bcalina strong. I
: lllmire that about him as much as
anylhing."
· Eckersley considers his competitiYeness a gi¥eD.
·
"I can't imagine not having that,"
he said. "~n you're pi«:hina the
ninth, if you can't have that juice
flowing, you're dead." .
Only Montreal's Lee Smith has
been more prolific, with 478 saves.

1..

Eckersley made sure he sot the !*I
after left fielder Ron Gant cauaht
Sanden' fly to end the pane.
, "I don't know how I'm going to
get another one," he said. "I don't
know how I'm goina to pass Lee.
"It means something to me. It
took me a long time to get here. Jeff
Reardon had a hell of a: career. Just
· to be in that company is big."
Eckersley got his first save with
Cleveland in 1975, when he was primarily a starter. LaRussa turned him
into a reliever with Oa:kland in 1987,
when he had I00 complete games
but only three saves to his credit.
"I couldn't have done it without
Tony." Eckersley said. ."He's had
confidence in me. There were times·
over the years when l've struggled.
and my confidence was down, .but I
never had to look over my shoulder.
That was the key for me."
Eckersley continues to repay the
confidence. He has converted IS of
. 17 save opportunities this season. On
Thursday, he held the lead so starter
T~ Stottlemyre (6-5) couid get the

"It's safe to say I ne- r.ke him
for pled," La Russa said.
La Russa hill to rely on his
bullpen Thursday becllllSC the Cardi!Ws couldn't break tbmuah apinst
a strugsling Dave Burba (4-8), who
is 0-4 since his Iast victory on May
. 18.
St. Louis wound up winlling the
game·o!' three sacrifice flies, two by
Defino DeShields. The Cardinals
also scored wben Burba threw a wild
piu:h and hit Dmitri Youna with an
0-2 piu:h and the bases lolllled.
Burba is the enigma of the Reds'
rotation. He has given up at least four
runs in each of his last five srans and
has a 6.75 earned run average in the
six starts since his last win;
Manager Ray Knight thinks Burba needs to rely more on his fastball
and told him so on the mound
Thursday.
· "Burba has struggled a lot lately,
biat he's got a great fastball," Kn.ight
said. "II really was good tonight, but
he didn't use it in clutch Situations.
He's got to get back to it."

WID .

&lt;'

,,

Barbi dillpees.

. "I used the Futbdl the whoie
pme, but you can't throw one piu:h
the whole pme. Nobody can," he
said. "It's jUit that when 't hinp go
bill, they tend to snow"-11."
N-1 There was a lllft ·in the ·
Reds clubhouse Thursday recal.lina
that La Russa guaranteed another
division tide ,last winter. KniJht said
he had nothlng to ~o with jt. A similar sign w11 posted in the clubhouse'
during sprill'&amp; training. ·... Cardinals
shortstop Royce Clayton twisted his
left knee during a rundoWIJ in the
second innins and was examined u
he sat on the faeld. He s"yed in the
game. ... Two Reds had magnetic
resonan~ imaging testJ, Thursday.
Pitcher Pete Scbourek is expected to
mjss another I0-14 days wi!h .ten·
dinitis in his left arm. Second baseman Bret'Boone has a bruised bone .
in his right hand and is day-to-day.
... Reds third baseman Terry Pendleton was reinstated from the disabled
list Thursday by the National
League. Aaron Boone was optioned
to Triple-A Indianapolis. '

RAIN, RAIN! - Ruultm lllnnla ,..., Alina Koumlkove (ieft) II
"cOi'llld to the Wimbledon grounc11 by tm umblell clnf'.ai -

rlty ltd ~- Thunclly. Rain hill ~g~ln dllrupled plly for the
third dlly out of four In the two - k tourntmlll'lt. (AP)
. ·

Wimbledon action delayed

·Rain ·may force
second two-day
~washout in hlstory·

Perez helps Rockies get past Giants 7-6
me

By The Auoclettlcl Pren

Colorado, which 'pulled within 3 majors. went 1-for-3 to drop his
fifth inning.
Neili Perez did his ¥st to shed I/2 games of the NL West-leading average to .408. Barry Bonds had · . Neagle (I 1-1) allowed three runs
his "shoostojl of the future" label in Giants, took a 7-4 lead with a four- three singles for the Giants. extend- and seven hits in eight innings as
his farst Coors Field appearance of '!, run sixth.
ing his hitting streak to I0 games.
Atlanta sentthe Phillies to their U th
the season.
John Vander Wai doubled off KeiIn other NL games Thursday loss in I 2 games. Mark Wohlers finPerez, outspoken earlier this th Foulke (1-2). and Perez followed night, it was San Diego 9, Los Ange- ished for his I6th save in 17 chances.
111011th about his extended time in with an RBI single to make it 4-4. les 7; Atlanta • 5, Philadelphia 4; ' With the score. 2-2. Graffanino
Colondo's farm system, had two With two outs, Eric Young reached Houston 7, Chicago 6, in to innings; connected off Matt Beech (0-3) for
hits. drove in a run tan.sl scored from on a bunt single, and Perez scored and Montreal S, Aorida 2.
his second homer of the year. Darren
second on an infieldllit as the Rock· from second on Ellis Burks' infield
Padres !1, Dodprs 7
Daulton homered for Philllllelphia.
ies beat San Francisco 7-6 Thursday single. ·
At Los Angeles, Tony Gwynn
Astral 7, Culls 6
night. ,
.
"Gena never stopped me," Perez btoke a seventh-inning tie with the
At Chicago, Jeff Bas\vcll had a
"Neifi was shining tonight," said of third-base coach Gene oJynn. major league's first inside-the-plark bases-loaded RBI single in the lOth
Rockies manager Don Baylor said. "The piu:her never looked back, so grand slam in six .years.
·
inning,as Houston beat Chicago for
"He was impressive. He turned dou- that's when · I decided to go for
Brett Butler, making his first start the fourth straight time.
ble plays when we needed tho;m. He home."
in left field since I983, made a futile
Chica80 tied it in the ninth ori
didn't back off. He was aggressive
Giants reliever Rich Rodriguez dive for the ball, straining his right Mark Grace's RBI double off Billy
on the bases, even when they tried to then walked Larry Walker and shoulder and neck. Butler remained Wagner (4-3). Bias Minor pitched
pick him off.
Andres Galarraga, forcing in a run. face down and motionless as Gwynn the lOth for his first save, while Ter"You can tell he has unliin~led Julian Tavarez's wild pitch scored , circled the bases.
ry Adams (1,4) toek the loss. Craig
ability. There's no question ·about another.
Steve Finley hit his 12th homer Biggio had a two-run homer and
that. He plays with a flair that stanils
Reliever Mike DeJean (3-0) for San Diego, which has won eight Brad Ausmus added a solo .shot for
·out....
piu:hed two innings for the victory, straight against Los Angeles. Mike · the Astros.
Perez, who helped turn five dou- and Curtis Leskanic got five ou.ts for Piazza hit a two-run homer in the
E'i&lt;pos S, M•ll• :z
ble plays, joined the Rockies last ' his first save since April 23, 1996. ninth off Trevor Hoffman, who got
At Miami, Montreal's Jeff Jilden
week on the West Coast after hitting Leskanic a.' lowed Rich Aurilia's soia · five outs for his 14th save.
pitched a four-hitter, had two hits and
.363 with eight homers and 46 RB!s homer in the ninth:
Sean Bergman (2-2) was the win- drove in two runs to Ileal Aorida for ·
for 'Triple-A Colorado Springs.
· San Francisco took a 4-2 lead in ·ner and Mark Guthrie (I· 2) took the the second time in a week.
"After the bad game I had last the fourth on homers by J.T. Snow loss.
Juden (9-2). who didn't allow a hit
night- no hits, one error - there's and Hamilton off Bryan Rekar.
Braves S, Pblllles 4
until Oary Sheffield's fifth-inning
nothing I could do but make contact Perez's triple and pinch-hitter Jeff
At Atlanta, Denny Neagle beat homer, is 3-0 with a 3.00 ERA
with the ball lind make plays," said Reed's single made it 4-3 in the bot· Philadelphia, for the first time in IS against Florida the last. two sellllons.
~erez. a ~4-year-old I&gt;?minican_who
tom of the inning. •
,
tries against the Phillies, and Tony Aorida's Pat,Rapp (4-5) allowed live
s1gned w1th the expans1on Rockies m _
Walker, the top hitter ·in the Graffanino hit a go-ahead homer in r.uns and nine hits in five-plus
1992 as a non-drafted free agent.
· •
·
•
.

~ockers beat Starzz. 74-63 to win first game
CLEVELAND (AP) - Isabelle
:: Fijalkowski scored 21 points and
:· Janice Braxton ldded I4 rebounds to
.. lead the Cleveland Roo;kers to a 74~ 63 vietorY 9• ~ Utah Startz in
-: WNBA actiiln Thursday niaht.
•, The ICOie w" ~ 33-33 at half·

.

time, but the Rockers o~tscored the
Starzz 41-30 in the second half.
Cleveland controlled the boards,
holding a 41'-32 rebounding average.
including a 21 · 10 margin in the second half:
·
The Starzz took a 37-35 lead ear-

•,

..

MilwaUkee ar K1111su City, 2:0~ p.m.·

Bnse ball

:1
,' .

--

. Annhrim at Scank, 4 : J~ p.m.

j- ' . NowY«t
t=... :..............
..,""' 4J~

'.

.j

' •

.,

'.

..
•'

•

2~ .~

J2 .m
Tara.to .............~ .... 34 39 .466
- ................... ,J~ ., .461
Dmuii ...........;....... J~ ., .446

i

ElilfemDI.won ·

:ra.. ....................t9.w

li.ll

· 11
u~
16
17

CLEVEI.AND ...... JI
Clolcoop ................. JS
tt.M Cloy .......... Jl
· Mllw ' ............ J~
MiltMlota ......•...... J4

JJ

~7

'

.m

.. Philadrlphio ........... 2~ ~2

,479
.479
. 4~;.

6

W-'miiN•Wen
....................45 J2 .184
~ ................ 40 l6 .526
Tna~ ....... .............. 17 31 .419J
~ ................ J2 47 .~

4~

7
14

1'llw ,,,.,. . . . .

. Housron ................. 3·9 39
St. Louis ................ )6
Pi1t1bur~ ............. J!i
CINCI NATI ...... ,J2
Chitqo................... 29

1
l'1

-~

OarkMre ..................0 . J

.000

1

2
3
6

~- 4-4) ao lloooon COordoto
7:05 p.oo,
CLEVELAND-- 7-Jl ~N. Y .
Y - tlloodoo 2-0l. B .1 p...:
S-6~

Toronto (Penon 2·') 11 Balri111ore
.. 1 (K • • H6-J), 7:JS p.a
.
•
OKato ~.. ScM (N.,vano ,..6} at
~
M....... (fewbtJurrU).I~p. m.
K~MU

A••liehn ·(Finley , _,, at Scaule
IO,O,p.m.

, . _ · - $-6). Ooklanll (0qtoill
1·:1), llt~l p.m.

9~

Sa!.'romcalo .............. :z

1. .667

Phocni1L .................. I
Utnh ......................... !
Los Anples ............. l

I
2
2

'

· ~ OPEIIl . THE BIBBEE MOTOR

Tonlaht's pme
Sacruncneo Dll.ol An,eb, 9 p.m.

s.turdily'a pmn ·
51. , Louis (Valen&amp;uela 2-10) at
CINCINNATI !Smiley 5-9~ I'IS p.m,
Howstoa (Oarcia 3-5) a1 Chicaao
Coobt CGonlalez 3-2~ l&lt;ll p.m.
s&lt;~-21 .. t.o. Ao. pia (Nomo 7-6), 4'0:1 p.m.
M0111real (I•IH.r ~-6) at Floridt

cw,. cc-

Pill.,.

...... Ct.oolu l-4~ 7:05p.m,
JIWI f \' ·a (SdtUiina U. il AI~

&lt;s-.-n 7,10p.m.

. Sail "'-ilco (Gardner 8-J) "' Col·
, ..... lllioi l ·7). 1:05 p,m

.

,,li,.....,

Rt~
Bnlll
llaol&lt;l. T Jctr ,_,.., K Ou
INDIANAPOliS CULTS: Si&amp;..~
WRN... I '. . ·
.
NEW ~ JETS: Sip&lt;il DB Ray·
.mo.ii,AUII;n'fo'; IWOo-~t

New Yon. 62. Hou110n 60 COT)
SIICI'Dmento 78, Omrlottt 70

II

S.Jlday'lpmn .

Plliladolpliaal A~ I:IOp,m,
N.Y,Mon•""'-· I'!! p.m. · ·
St. Looib a1 CINCINiiATI, l:IS p.m.
- . Clllclo&lt;tCool&gt;a, l:20 p...:
Son"-~"" al Colondo. l:05 j&gt;,m,

.· ~
~

Saturday's pmes

l'hornil. Iii nEVELAND. 4 p.m.
Hou11on at Uulh. ~ p.m.

Sullday's pmes

Today'•c-

5 - l)~ at

Footlld ..
Nil_,
.............n ' ,
OEllt.orr uONS:.

CLEVELAND 74, UooMJ

6

Hou••on (Ha.npton l ·6) ~~ Chic:iao
Cub• (fotler 1-:'1), 3:20·p.m.
M......a !Hermanson J-41ar Florida
CBrowa7-4), Hll ~.m ,
I'I.Y. Meb CMiicki 4-l)'" Pinll&gt;llqh
CSdlmido 2-4), 7'Jl p.m.
So. t.uio CAlBetwo H) '" CINCINNATI(TomtoJ, I), H~p. m.
.Pfliladolphia (So.,.,.,.,.. 2-~) "' AI·
IMIII (Maddlill9-3j, 1:40p.m.
.
San Frlncisco (Rulltr .f..2) 111 Colonodo t11oomooa ~-4), 9'0l p.m. .
S.. Dioao (liamihon HI" Lo! A..
pleo CP•H-4), lctll:l p.m.

N.-Y. Mc11 (ReyDOto

-'

.~
. )3~
. ll~

-&amp;AN fRANCISCO QIAJo!I'S, Pla-..1
RHP Olvatdo Fcnw.ltdez oa 1~ I~-day
dioabled liQ, R=lled RHP 0.0 lart...,
from PhotrMil of the PCL

Thunday's SCGres

3~

Aolanla l, Philadelphla4
Hoo.u01l7, ChkaaoCubs 6 «10)
Colondo 7. San Franci~eo 6
San Dirao 9, Lot Aqela 1

Clldti• :1-4~ 7:05p.m.

1.00
.667

· Wtt~~m Coftrtftftft

S1. loui1 5, CINCINNA113

Teaipt'apmes

'

.~

New VorL .............. ~
Hou51un ...... ............. 2
CLEVELAND ........ .!

25

40 .474
41 .460
44 .421
48 .)17

0
I
I

1i11

Thunday's scores

-

~7-~1 ,

.'!111

loo,.,

Eutem CanteNRCtn

.W L fcL

Mon1.W ~ . Aorida 2

-Qoy4.MI--.J
~0 Wllill Soa II, Minaaota I
OrlltJ.d 6. Te. . ~

k

Irui

• :'1 ~ .

Colorado ................ 41 37 .526
Los Anaclc1 ........... l8 39 .49oa
San Dlq,o ..............33 44 .429

llohuil 10....... 6
TonNIIo 3, Ball more 0

Mllw
(Me:~ 6-4) •
Cily ( - S-l), 1:05 p.m.

3~

· ~ :~

Wrsttm DiwW.
San Franciaw ........44 33 .571

-le6. A..... 3

,,

1

. Are n~w taking orders to have family
plc&amp;uret taken for $g.g1 you will receive a
oanvilla mounted 1Ox 13 family portrait.
Additional portraits miiJ be purchased wllen .
'
.
pctl'tralte are shown.
Plcm.res will be taken .lu... 28th a 30th at
The Pomeroy .Fire Dept.. Butternut lve. In
· Pomeroy. We will contact you regarding your
photopaphy appointment time.
If any queetlona colitaota
..
Steve Hafitenbach 882·7741
...
or
8co~ Walton 882·3314

:fOuS'I'ON

WNBA standings

lill

28 .6.l 6
Aoridu ...................-15 31 ..t\92
Monbr;~l ................4;\ 33 - ~
Ntw Yort ............. :4~ H .!166

CtnfniDi•W...

.~

2
4
4 .

J8
JB
41

I. l&lt;l.

Alluu;~

I

Phoenix Ill New York. 4p.m.
.CLEVELAND ao a..,loae. 7:JO p.m.

Tr&lt;Jns;Jcllons

·-

AMERICAN lEAGUE: An-need
..._._&lt;la...lood-MIIe
· Har1roYc tlld Tea11 Nanaair Johnny
• Oaoii aod New YO&lt;t -a...raio Can!Onal, Willit ltaidolph, Mel Stottlemyre
and Don Zimmer as c:oKhts for the
Amerte~i ·LttJH AII-S1ar ltam; Jim
Wao1'teld of CIMioodoodl!ict Smioh &lt;I
Aalhlim .......,.. •

J

-y.

Corratn: ·

s....

'

..

""'*' .......a..

An kwi.IWISA$ CrTY ROYJ.l.s, .........
RHP Ricky 1 - rn.m Mliw10... ror

--

'·

.

.

'

JUNE 27th .4 JUNE 28th
9-6
'
GRAND OPENING SERVICE SPEC~

Complete .15 mfnpte IDe, oil ehanp wHnter ONLY

_._

f}9 •9 5

614-667-3350

CINCINNATI REel' ~~- ~8
~A.~Iol,
; •• -~· .
~
Dll.

.I

"

;,

I

(}

,,

•

~

(AP) - lntr_odl!!;ing BriM HiD as the

"man to ta1te us into the next millei
•" the Vancouver Grizzlies are
· ~ing the former Orlando Magic
c h a,second chance in the NBA.
RANCHO MIRAOE, Calif. (AP)
\ Citing Hill's experience in help- Don Hutson, generally credited
ing develop the M11ie and diswith devisins pass patterns as the
counting
the player revolt that Jed to
greatest receiver of the early days of
his
dismissal
last February, Stu Jack- .
the NFI,., is !lead. He was 84.
son
called
Hill
his oniy serious canHutson, indue\ed into the Pro
didate for the job.
Football HaJJ of Fame in 1963. died
"PhilosophicaUy, I really feel
Thursday. He wu ill for several
Brian
and I are on the same wave
weeks, was hospitalized June, 17
length,
and personally I like the f~t
with an undiscl.-1 illness, then disthlt
he
is tenacious about the way
charged to a nursing home.
that
he
attacks
his work," said lackHutson's body was transrerred
son, the Grizzlies' president~ aen·
from a nursing home to the W'aefcls
era!
manager.
.t. Son funeral home in Palin Springs
"He's
proven he can win in this
soon after his death, but Milton
league,
and
certainly has gone
Johnson, an employee of the funer' DON' HUTSON
through
the
transition
or the expanal home; did not know the cause of · was earning $IS,OOO a year.
sion experience," he added. "All
death.
In I994, Hutson returned to those qualities, I truly feel, bodes
Nor were any funeral arrange- Green Bay to dedicate the Packers •
well for our franchise."
·
ments known.
,
new indoor practice facility that was
·
HiU,
49,
wiU
be
the
franchise's
"I speak for the entire Oreen Bay named in his honor.
second coach after the Grizzlies ·
Packers organization wben I say thai
"I feel fortunate 10 have had to fired Brian Winters IIIII January.
we are extremeiy saddened to hear of · opponunity to meet him and shake
. Terms of Hill's contract were not
Don Hutson's passing," Packers his hand," Wolf said. "We cannot released.
seneral manager Ron Waif said thank him enough for everythin1 he.
Entering his U th year in the
Thursday night. " He most certainly gave th1s fillnchise, first as a player,
was the greatest player in the histo- then as an assistant coach and later NBA. Hill takes over a team that has
gone an NBA-worst 29- 13S in its
ry of this fnJ~~Chise.
as a member of our board or direc. first two years of existence.
. .
" In the era be piayed in, he was tors.
THE dominant player in tjte game,
not just as a receiver, but as a kick-'
er and witll his ability to play
derense." Wolf added.
"To me, he. mille the passing
game what it is tOday and I don't
think anybody can argue with that."
added Tony Canlllleo, a teammate of
Hutson's wi!h the· Packers. "Pass
paltem~ and routes we ran were
modeled after him."
Named to the NFL's All-SO Year
Team in 1970 and then to the
league's 75th anniversary team in
1994, Hutson aiso piayed safety and
was a kicker for the Packers from
1935-45.
A half-century after his retire.ment, Hutson still held · U NA...
records. He scored 99 career touchdowns, a mark that stood ·until Steve
Largent broke it in 1989. Largent
.C--,f,=eeh:ua•~
brokl' many of · Hutson's marks;
~
which since have been surpassed by
ierry Rice. '
·
One opposing coach, Greasy
Neale of tile Philadelphia Eagles,
said, "Hutsoll is the only man I ever
saw who could 'feint in three different directions at thC same time."
Hutson, who once scored 29
pOintS rn ·a quarter, led the 'Packers to
NFL championships in 1936, '39 and
'44. He was the league's MVP in
I941 and ' 42, when· he cauglit a
then-unheard-of 74 passes for I,211
yards and I7 touchdowns. He Jed the
NA... in receiving eight times.
After an AII-Americ.a
.
\ . career at
Alabama, where Hutson became
known as the "AiabamaAnteloJie,"
As
he signed with two pro football
telllils. the Packers and the Brooklyn
Dodgers. The Packers' contract
· anived at the Ieague offices in New .
York the following morning and lhe
Dodgers' contract got there in the
Program Car
Program Car
afternoon. So NFL president Joe
Carr ruled Hutson would piay in
Green Bay. · ·
. When Hutson retired in 1945; he

~

....

.....

1996 CHEVY
CORSICA ·

5

8,999

1996 OlDS
DElTA88 .

1

....

Excited about the challen1es ·and
opportunities that come with ihe
Griu lies, Hill said he'1 put the
recent past behind hiin. ·
"I don't concern myselr with
that," Hill said; rererring to his firing by the Magic IJIIII Feb. 18. "This
is a new team. it's a different situation. I'm gping to be coaching '12
different players out there.
"It's Iike any situation in Iife. You
learn from it and move on." ·
Hill was unceremoniously tired
by the Magic after the players voted
against him. '
In .3 In. seasons as head .coach or
the Magic, Hill compile!~ a 191·1 04
record and took the team to ill only
NBA Finals berth ill 199~ .
.
Hill said he sees no reiaon discussing with the Grizzlies players
what lu!ppened in Ori.OOo. ,

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.
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~-

'

:" . CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) : Don Nehlen and Boo Pruett know
;'the West Virginia-Marshall rootball
"same will be one of the biJgest
~James ever played in West Virginia.
They 54id Thursda)' it.should be
~ an annual·one.
'
l: "There's more football being
:U.ked about in' the sblte Of West Vir. =•inia this early iii the summer than
&gt;ver before. We s}aould play every
' em-rea-_ ...a-. of the outcome
.
,.. ·-"'
Ill!.""'
~t,. Manha!J's heiJII COICh.
• Nehlen, heiJII COIICh Ill West Vir·
· ;;nia, aped Thundly when the
coecbn oxchar~Jed pleuantries at a
~Die~ by Mdunkin Carp.
~ the Charleiton Alley Cats minor
Chque banballllalll.
. ·
~ "We - fill the llildium playina
MlnhaiL Why +mid we lie ~ina
•otblr '( Mid-AIIIwbn Cor.fotbltoe)
~
or to 11e •
1with yau, Bill

t:.ali•r'lWII••
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VANCOUVER, !lritilh

By STEPHEN WILSOf't
inspiring day ~ I have spent at
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Wimbledon," t.{illssaid. "The pea-It was still raining at Wimbledon pic and the atmosphere were just
today. ,
.
electric and I dtouJht it was a great
With heavy showers continuing success."
'
and no letup in sight. Wimbledon
Bui Mills noteil that the weather
appeared .headed to only the second forecast was g~ on that day in
consecutive washout in its 121-year · 1991, while the forecasi for this Sun. history.
day is not.
·. The only time two straight days
. "It would be a little ~illy ofus if
. were rliined out completely was dn , we, knowins the weather forecast;
~·· 1909. also.on the Th~rsday and fri..
open up everything and we spend a
day of the first week:.
,
.day' Jike_today," he·said. ·
Almady racing a backlog of 120MiUs said playing on Sunday
. 130 mau:hes after the first four. posed various logistical problems
days, Wimbledon officials were c:on- all!! the club would need aulhQrizasidering scheduling play orl the mid-' ti~ local council. police
~ die.Sunday for only the second time
and others.
· in history. ·
If the rain le~ up. today, Pete
But the forecast called for more Sampras, Ooran lvanisevic, Richard
' rain through the weekend, and offi- Krajicek and Boris Becker were
cials said they would' wait until Sat- among the men scheduled to play
urday before deciding on Sunday second round matches. · On the
. piay.
women's side, M!artina Hingis was.
,
"It will be a tough caU whether. due to play a second-rounder, while
,. we· will play .on this coming' Sun- Winiams was .scuo..make her lon1·
day," An England Club chief exec- · delayed Wimbledon debut.
" utive Christopher Gorringe said.
AI! the wet weather brought up,
.. "We have got to look at all the once more, the question of why
' options and that's what we are doing - Wimbledon doesn't put a retractable
" at the moment, with .cenainly no roof on at least Olle of its two n'lain
, decision being made for another.24 courts. Essentially, Wimbledon's
:. hours at least."
response is that no matter ho»: much
The tournament can aiso be it rains. the club is no1 going to put
extended inlo a third week, as it Wllli up a roor..
last year wl!en the women's doubles
"It would be nice if we could
•· semifinals and final were played on erect some sort of dome over the
· the third Monday.
whole or the grounds, but it's just not
,, Referee Alan Mills said it would 1 practical," AU England Club official
be possible to finish the tournament Tim Phillips said.
on the third Tuesday if necessary.
"The i"ue is. if you have one
MiHs has already decided to roof on one coun, on what is basi. reduce men's doubles matches from eaUy an ·outdoor tournament, how
::' best-of-five to best-or-three sets until material is tlie benefit?"
the quarterfinals. Mills said he could
Mills claimed that at the Ausi even do the same for men's singles tralian Open the "players are not
l mau:hes.
happy with just one court with the
;
After Thursday's washout, only roof."
·
·
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'
~ 94 matches had been .completed.
Phillips said the decision not to Meigs volleyball
: 1\venty-six women, including Miry ' place a' roof on · ~ new Court I was
•,. Joe Fernandez and Venus·
based
on a ranse,.of con.siderations coaches schedule
' WiHiams,
. .
.
• hadn't even hit a ball yet.
- financial, eqgineering, alld a camp for July 7
:
Thursday's rainout was th.e first desire to keep C~ittre Court as the
: since I992, the fourth in I0 years premier venue.
·
A volleyball camp will be held
i and the 28th in Wimbledon history:
"We have looked at it, coosiderejl from Monday, July 7 until Friday,
: The only lime there has beeq play ii from every single agle. and the . July II at Meigs High §l:hool for all
~ on the middle Sunday w~ in, 1991, view .at the moment is where- we
area girls enterinr:s 7-9 this
: when oniy 52 mau:hes were finished are," he said. ' h .
• ...,. ' ). · fall.
.. ·
~ in the first four days.
But inany ofthl!.29,296 fans who
The camp will n from 9:30 until
! The sacrosanCt ilay Qff turned into waited aU day Thufsday without see- ' II a.m. daily. The cost is $25. Each
: .the mQJt festive ip Wimbledoll's ing a sinJie poinl'fe~t diffef'Cl'tly. · ' camper will receive aT-shirt.
•
: 127-year history. "People's Sun"It's reaUy surpns1n11 they spent ' Send S2S and shirt size \0 Meigs
~ day" became ahuge 'hit with {ans, so much· time and money 011 No. I ', High School varsity·coach Rick Ash
"'' who transformed the ·usually slaid Courtbuldidn«.put·onaretractable · at P.O. Box 126, Syracuse, Ohio
. · AU England Club into a combinalion roof," Julian Leech. 32. said. "It 4S179, Campers can also register on
Eof Woodstock and Wemb"'y. · seems so ob,vious Jiven the British the first day or camp.
'
"I pi!rsO!Wiy ~~silt the middle wealhl!r. They s!tould listen to ,the
siand8yln '91 was prObably tlje-most fans." '
,' '
. :.

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and
·
· The Pomeroy Fire Dept•

COlOI,\'00 ROCKIES : 'Opoioncd
RHP ~ Rdow oo' Colon•I..Sf'iiOJ• of
1he P.ociDc Cout taaue. ~ tM
contra101RHPTimSCaa htnCokndo
Spi
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ASTROS: llp!ioa&lt;d RHP ,
0..WW: WIIIIO New 0r1ea1t1 c( the An,,
iton Anocilnion. Pun:lllltd lhe COIIIrtk't
of RHP Tommy Orec.: .from NeW Or-

Bask etb all

NL standings

CnoniiM-

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ttif,

to his right leg while running out a
first-inning RBI double against Oak- .
land, might even be able to pinch-hit
this weekend.
He pulled up lame, hopping to
keep his weight off his right leg as
he reached second base after dou. bling to center field.
Griffey, who has a long history of
injuries since he broke into the
majors in 1989, \vas examined
Thursday by Dr. Mitchel Storey, a
team physician.
"There is a small area in his ·hamstring that's tender, but this is very
encouraging," trainer Rick Griffin
said. "It looks like it'll be shorter
rather than longer."
Griffey took batting practice
.. before Thursday night's game with
Anaheim, and Rob Ducey replaced
him 'in the starting lineup. Griffey hit
several shots into the Kingdome's
right-field third . deck, and walked
without a limp.
Piniella said he wouldn 'I use
9riffey as a designated hitter.
"lfyou're not able to run, you can
hurt. yourself running the bases as
well as running the outfield," he
said.
(See GRIFFEY on Pa1e S)

The Po.-.eroy Emergency Squad

S:ln lMJn Dl lot Anaeaet. 4:0!i p.m.
Montreal Dl Aorida, 4:3' p.m.

·

Teus at OakJand. 8:0S p.m.

AL staDdlltgs ,

~j

points ·wi!h 2: I2 left in the game.
Nemkova added I3 points and
Lynette Woodard had 12 points for
Rockers.
·
Wendy Palmer led scoring for the
Starzz with IS points. ·Baranova
added 12. '

Scoreboard

,.·'

•

ly in Jhe second half on a layup by
Elena Baranova. The Rockers ·took
t~ lead for good with 17:36 remaining in the game on' back-to-back
three-pointers by Eva Nemcova.
giving the Rockers a 41-37 lead.
Cleveland led by as many as l S

ByJIMCOUR·
SEA'i1'LE (AP) - Ken Griffey
Jr. has no broken boneS'Ihis time.
only a mild strain or his right hamstring.
'
It's an injury' that will keep the
center fielder · out of the Seattle
Mariners' starti~g lineup for four or
five days, but won't cause him to
miss the AU-Star game July 8.
·
lie hill to sit out the past two All·
Star games because of injuries. This
year wilt mark the eighth time he has
·been voted to the AII"Stnr team.
"My hamstring is a lillie tender,
but I'm fine. "'Griffey said ThurSday
before :Seattle lbi:al Anaheim 6-3
without him.
"The news was good tod~y."
manager Lou Piniella said .
Griffey, 27, won't have to go on
the disabled list this Jimc - as he did
with a broken bOne in his wrist last
season or with a fractured wrist in
1995.
Still, Wednesday night.'s injury
had an eerie sameness to it: for the
third year.in a row. Griffey was cha.•ing Roger Maris' home run record
and enjoying an All-Star season.
Then, another injury.
Griffey.' who sustained the. injury·

The' Dally Sentinel • ·PIIgl 5

Hall
of Famer
Hutson
dies at 84

June%7 1117

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Pomeroy •lllcldlepor;t. Ohio

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~ardinals get 5-3 victory.over Reds
IJ • llcbnley IUU Jets a rush
....

1917

The Dally Sentinel
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Fr~Uy, June a-7,

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·Sports.
llr.-KAY

----

Gritfey •• ,

~

, . (Continuedfrom Page 4) ·
' At first, · it was feared Griffey
might miss 2-3 three weeks, forcing .
him to min the AJJ-Star game and ·
jeopardizing his run at Maris· record
· West Vii'Jinia hluplit its IIIII two of61 home runs.
salllfl 'ltith But ~tina. narrOwly · - Oritfey leads the m~Qors with 29
winning J0-9 last year at home. ·
home runs and the American League
. Manhall and West Vii'Jinia are in RBia with 79.. He is batting .3I6.
scheduled to meet Aug. 30atMounHe tr.Ctured·hialeft wrist crashtaineer Fi~ld for 1he tint time since inJ'into the Kingdome watt in May
WVUpounded-~Thu~nJHertl 1995 and was sidelined for 73
81..0 in 1923. No,futllft! gamea have games. He broke a bone in his riaht
been acheduled.
wrist while batting in June 19, I996,
\\Wt Yii'Jinia.has plafed a Mid- · and missed 20 games.
American Cotlference tum every ·
In 1994, he was leading the
year since I917 bill JICIII!' MVC sold , my,cs with 40 homen when playout 63,500-seat MOUDIIIneer field. crs struck on Aug. I2, ending the
Welt Vqinia hatn't191d 011( I sea- season.
·
aon-opener ainco 1991 .pinst Pitt. .
Piniella said he oKpOCIJ All-Star ·
AI~ Weal VirJin~ witt be · sho111topAicx Rodri~ to be back
the favonte over ~·P,Malo!' I-A In the lineup toniJht apinst the
member Mlnball, I'HIIliBn said he Anaeta. Rodriguez has been on the
expects .a IOUJh Jame &amp;om the , ·, 15-day disabled ,list sin&lt;:C June r2
'I'huaKierilll Herd.
with a bruised chest sustained in a
"MinMII ia .- hick of a~ '--pille cotiision with Toronto'•
lilld we beaer lie llldy for thorn,
Ropr Ciemens.
Neltien llltid.
ur•m leidy to go," Rodriguez
llitl.
'

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1996 GEO·METRO Auto., air, cau., PS, P8 .......................·.................................................... $8,895
1994 GEO PAIZII Air, auto., casa., tilt, crulae .....................:..................................................$8,995
1996 CHEVY CAVAUER, one owner. 2door. auto, air. 15,000 mllea.......................,..........$10,727
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.Friday, June 2r, 1897

'

By The Bend

.Clean plate always a compliment to ·the cook :
Arm
Landers

·----- .....

- . . - . . Oo-

.·

lly ANN LAti)IRs
: Dear Ann 1....-t.: When I was
yowia • .it . was c:ontidered proper
manaen to leave a few biles of food
011 yow: plate when you htd finished
a meal. Now, people IOiin to think
it's OK to ea1 everything when dining out or at the home · of fricnciS ..
Please comment.
H.B., Canon
City, Colo.

always a compliment to the cook. In
fine restaurants, the chef,pays attention to what comes back .uneaten. If
a certain food comes back frequently, he will change the recipe or talce
it off the menu.
Dear Ann Landers: Please print
this letter. It might prevent SOJIIl:One
else from making the same mistake.
We have all heard the expression,
"Be careful what you wish for. .You
might get it." When I was a little girl,
my &amp;!Jnt was expecting her fifth
child and was extremely large. As she
and my uncle were about to leave-the
house, my mother asked, "What are
you going to do if it's twins?" I overheard my aunt say jokingly, "I would

was really quite .anef-slricken over
the death ofhet child. But u a twin,
I am. appalled by lhe comment she ·
made. Our mother made us feel
bles~ed to 'have one another and
reminded us often of-!low luck}' we
werel What a wise wolnan she was.
Dear Ann Landers: I have a prot).
Iem that has been bugging me for
years. I am cold all the 'time. Iexercise and eat properly and talce Itoed- ·
ication for an underactive thyroid,
which helps, but not enough. .
My husband is hot all the time.
There is no compromising. As soon
as the weather warms up, he turns on
the air con.ditioning in the house, and
I am miserable. I also freeze in
restaur.ants, grocery stores and even
when I visit relatives in their homes.

My aunt gave birth to identical
twin boys, and you guessed it, one of
diem was born dead. just as sli had
"wisite~J." My , aunt never showed
any emotion or expressed any soJTOw
about this boy she lost.
My surviving cousin grew up to
be a handsome. wonderful .young
man. He often talked about the twin
brother who died and how much he
wished the boy. had lived. 'Moin
made us promise never to tell him
that his mother had said she hoped
only one child would survive. We
kept that promise, but we rlever felt
close to my aunt after that -- Amar·
illo, Tex115 .
Dear Amarillo: I suspect your aunt

BAND TO PERFORM • T11e 1-1 bMcl Renegade wll open for
the Bell•my Brolhlrl tonight. 7:30-8:30 It the. Point Pleuant
Rtglttll. Conalltlng of SWVe W.rlner, Nlrk Cheanut, Shelby
Lynn, Arron Tippin, Ricky Lynn ar.gg, Kitty Weill, Connie Smith,
John Conlee, l'clrW Wagner, Johnny RuaNiland Dave and Sug.ar. Renegade wlllelao htadll~ It the Rut..nd Fourth of July cal·
tbrltlon. Bind membtrl are: front, Harley Neal, guhar and
voctla; Chuck Petrie, dNma; atancllng, Mike Turner, lttd guHar;
Ja.on Llale, ball; Van Johnaon, key~rd, guitar and VOCIIla.

~

Pauli~e Ridenour and Rex Bailey for
sunshm~ plant~ last month. .
.

s '·.
n~

'

Hope Baptilt Chrareb (Southem) .
Putor: Richard Oliver
S70 Grant S.t., Middleport
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·llLm..and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 P·m· ..·
'

Free .WIB Baptlat Church
. Ash Streel. Mid!l~port
•
·', • Pastor: U:s Hayman . , . " ·•
Sunday Service ·· 7:00p.m. ' · · ·
Sunday School- 10 a.m. ·
W&lt;!Ines&lt;(aySe,!vice-7:00p.m: 1

&lt;

"

The Region II spnng meeting was ·:
held at Chester United Methodist :
. Church, with Maureen Wooten, ;
Regional Director, in. charge .. Mrs. ;
Miller and Mrs. 'Deah attended.
;
Hint of the month was spray for •
roses: three tal!lespoons of baking :
soda to one gallon of water. .Roses •
must be pruned, water, mulched; :
cultivated, dusted, fed, pickejl and :
·enjoyed.
. . ·
:
The next meeting will be about :
folk remedies on July 2 at the home :
·of Clarice Krautter.

...,..

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..M!lsl Ylhides 'has a 3yr~ 45,000 rnde power lrlln wamtnly available. ·

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SL Joha Lulbenn Churdl
· Pine Grove
Rev. George Wtlrlclt ·
Worship· 9:00 a.m.
Sunday Schpo1 • 10:00 a.m..

Hemlock Grove Church ·
P~i~·
qtn~PI'c.
• . l
Sunday sc
~·nr.30· ll.m.
.
Worship . 9:3 ~.in.. 7 p.m.

J

'

Reedsville Chureb or Christ
PasiOr: PhUip Srulin · ,
" SUn~y Sch~)r,9:30 a.m.
.
Worship Semce: 10::!!1 a.m.
Bible Study, Wed!'fi!day, 6:30p.m.

'·

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Christia n Un1on
'"

'Hartflil1! Chon·~~or Ciii111 Ia
Chrlallan UnloJI
. Hanfordi W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. D~VId McManis
Sun.day Sch'l!!r II a,m. ·
Worsh1p - 9:30a.m., 7:30 Rm.
Wedoeiday Serv~s - 7:30 p.m.

.,

CtHJr ch of God
Ml; Morlaii'Cburch ol God

P~lor.~..V~ Satterfield

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Pomeroy

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992-3490

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IAIDJ,lloltom
Sunday'School • 9:30a.m.
· Worship - 10:30 a.m.

·• ,,....
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II

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. . . Illlli Lidia

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&gt;

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S J - Cllureh oftbo NIIII'Onl
Paslor: Bill Slires .
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor.ohlp - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
·Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

•

' . Juppon
SL·Paul
. Paslor: Si!Jron Hausn-. o
.. Suaday School • 9 a.m.
' , ·. Worship- '10 a.m.
Tueoday Scrvlto • ?:30 p.m.

I

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St Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
'98$·3308

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· St. Rl. 124,.Racine
. Paalor: William Hoback
Sunday School : 10 a.m.
Evening .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicoo - 7 -p.m.

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Syn.- Flnt Volled Prelbyterioli.
Putor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Suaday School - 10 a.m .
Worship - 11 a.m.
Hanlooii•Uio Proabyterla Chuttb
Worship - 9 a.m.
Suml,oy School-9:45a.m.
Middleport Pnabyterlaa
Sundoy School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 4.m.

Untied Brethren
. ML Htn10r1ll- Bretlnu
. Ill Clubt Clnrn:h

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo10hip- 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
· Wednesday 7;30 p.m.
~·
·.
ML Otl•e Community Churc!l
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Texas Communily off CR 82
Pistor: Robert Sanders .·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Womhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p:m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m. .
Ed.. Vnlled Bnih,.... Ia Chrill
2 1/2 miles nortli of Reedsville
on Slale Roulc 124
Pl51or. Rev. Robert Markley
.
Sunday School - lla.m.
" .
Sundoy Worsh1p - 10:00 a.m. .t 7:00p.m. • ·
Wednesday .Services-7:30p.m.
,
Wednesday Youlh Service - 7:30p.m. '

Evening ~ 7 p.m.
Wedneday Se~ice • 7 p.m.

Vnlled Faith Church

.

Paslor: Rev. Robert B. Smilh, Sr.
Sundsy School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m .
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.
'

"

')

Seveatb•Day Adventllt
Mulbeny HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Pasror: Roy 4winsky
.Saturday Services:
. Sabbalb School - 2 p.m.
' · Worship": 3 p.m.

LongBoltOm

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass

'
'•

Seventh-Day Adventist

'

Full G&lt;Jspei'Uptbouse ,
33045 Hila.nd Rood, Pomeroy
, Pastor: Roy Hunter
, Sunday School • 10 a.m.
·Bvening7:30 p.m.
Tuesday .t Th~rsday- 7:30p.m.

We Filt Doctors' · '
Prescriptions
.

. !

. Pomeroy

992·2955

•.

"

"Featuring Kentucky Fried 911icken•

·228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432 .

OHIO

Clean out your basement or
attic with the help of the ·

ED SECTION!

Veterans
Memorial ·
Hospital

Meigs Countyll Oldest FL&gt;I-~1 ·

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO .45769

614/992-2644
614/992.· 6298 .

115 E, Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

"Dignity anci Service Alwsys• '
Established 1913
·
608EAST

FOR SPRING
CLEANING?

. Crow's Family Restaurant

'

Jl
' /,I

.

EWING FUNERAL HOM!;

'

SAVEf(ME '
:. ; ., , .WITH A . ·
~ : cLASSIFl I:&gt;Aol

.

.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

.992-2259

.

''

. Suutb Bethel New Teotameul
Silver Ridge:

RAWLINGS-COATS

992-3785

&lt;

To.mPe&lt;t.ell

tda of~lldlll wltll

~· Pomeroy

.'

f.
I .SUUII.CI

.c...,.
......
Job...._ of 40.000 employe11 fro!n
\1

Plat••

j \

264 South 2nd

aervlceiiDduck:

H ABJI rt11ce for letraiJiin&amp;.

·212 E. Main Street

Cabinet·Making•:
Syracuse ·

. •3!10;H . . .
•41

K&amp;C JEWELERS

.'

DAVIS-QUICKEL '"
AG.~t{CY INC. .

a•'"'•or.,..idlqlldll.

..

Episc.• pal

RACINE PLANING MILL

~~---inclUde GO 11- tor

.. . '

ii '': .~ '\,

~I

PentHcJal All oMy

' Fallh G&lt;lspel Church

.

Reednllle FeDowablp
Cbun:h·ortbe NIIIR•
Pas!Or: Mark A. Dupler ·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.'
Wo10hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Scrvi~ - 7 p.m.

RoodUIUe
Pailor: (,Wv. Charles Mash
Worship· 9:at&gt; a.m.
. SundafSci!OQI - 10:30 Lm. · ·
, : UMYF Slindly 6:30p.m.
Flnl Sunday of Monlh -7:30 p,m. service

:,.. .
... _.,

Pentecostill

Worship -· 11 a.m.

. Miotdte,ort Cllurch or the Nazanne
Pastor: o..gory A. Cundiff
Sunday Scfiool • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m;
Wednesday Services_- 7 p.m.

Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Simday Scliool - 10:_30 a.m.

•·

· NewlJfeVidGey~r . · ::.
3773 Georges Creek Road, GaiHpolia, OW
'
·
Pastor: Bill Statell
~
Sunday Se{Viais - 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. '
Wednesday , 7 p.m . .t Youlb .7 p.m. • .

Wednesday Service -7 p;m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m. ·
Wonliip,- 10:l0 a.m., 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

~..;;,;, ~':.adolph

-;

I

Mono Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m.

Nazarene
Jt.dae nrst Churdo of tile ·NailrHe
· ·Pulor: Scott Rose

.Pastor: Law_renci ~relllllt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servioos -7 p.m.

CUfton Tabenade ClrMrdl
. . Clifton, w .va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wolohip • 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 1 p.m.

Dyes•llle Communlty.Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:3o a.m. ·
· Worship - 10:30 a:m., 7 p.m. .

Torch Church
·eo.Rd.63 ·
SUDday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

All'nd
Paslor: ShllloJrHausman
~unday School'. 9:30a.m. .
Wor1hlp • lla.!D., 6:.30 p.m.

.,,.:,. '

Orand Street ·

Sunday School · tO a.pl .
Worship - 11 a.m. ·
·
Wednesday Services • 8 p.m.

. f&lt;f....,...Ciuter

.;·

..

llazel Community Chari:h
OffRI. 124
P1510r: Edsel Hart
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- t0;30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

HD&lt;klngport Churdl

M!llill Coopenti.. l'lrlth

~olcln11J~ Cbareh

•·

syrocase Mtutoa
1411 Bridgeman SL, Syracuse
sunday School- to a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

,,

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you. ,

"

Bethel Church
Townabip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Wednesday SaiVices - 10 a.m.
•

..

•

.t hese·
area ~erchants
.

l'ree 111
· wt of ;rour dd!llto
belp you ~ wltat job is riJbt for_

•

Worship-9:30a.m. (ljt.t 2nd Sun),
7:30'-p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4\h Sun)
Wednesday S.rvi~ - 7:311 p.m.
'
ML Oll•e Valteol Methodllt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rtv. Ralph Spirea
Sunday School • 9:30 a.rii, ·
Wonhlp - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .
. Thursday Services - 7 p.m. .

.

PISIOt: Rev, Waket B. Hel~
Sal. Con. 4:45-S:ISp.m.; ~5:30p.m.
.
Suru (i:on. -8:45-9:1S a.m,,
SUn: Mass · 9:30a.m .

.The GaUia-Meip .TTPA .·-.
gro,-am can help you!

jution.

.

United Methodi st
Gnham Q~lled MeibooUat

'

..Siend Heert &lt;lltholl&lt; Cloardl·
161 Mill~ l\~.; POJI!eft!)', '992'5,898

Job? .

· · SUNDAY
'. NELSONVILLE •• Descendants
of Issac and Lydia Mercer' Midkiff, .
·: reunion. Su~day. home of Ross and
1'1111 Flowlll, I9 II Shafer ROid,
Nelsonville. Call664-3807 for .infor'

'

'

.

of.Jaai Cluiot, •
.
·~Faltli
~·
.
1/4 mile pasl FOrt Melp oa New Uma Rd;'
Paolor. Wlllt..., Van Meier
, ,llul)llay-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7;00 p.m.
.

Fallh Valley Tabemacle Ch•rch
Bailey Run Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson Sunday Bvenina 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m. ·

'
Cooi.Uie Vnlte4 Methodlat l'lrish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cootrllle Clnlrdl
Main .t Fifth Sl.
Sunday School ; 10 a.m. ·
· Worsh'l' - 9 a.m.
Tucsdoy Scrv1ces- 7 p.m.

Chester ..
Pulor: SharoD Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Rlido... Free Will f!lptlot , .· ·
· · SalemSt: -1"' ' ·t,t:..... ,_ ,..
Oj
,., ·•c·..-• "'
Pastor: Rev. P&amp;lJITay or "'~ .,.~h
Sunday Scloooi-IO,O:UI. , ., • ,
•
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Are you 55 or
·older and· ·
Looking.for a
.

.

' Sunday Sch"'l.~' 9:45a.m .
Evening .Q p.m.
Wednes&lt;lay.Servlces - 7 p.m.

(

· Badne

Pastor:·Brian HarkneSS·
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
•·

.
SL l'lullAIIHna Cllurdo .
Comer Sycamore .t S..:Ond ,SI.,,fomeroy
. . Rev. Oeoo:p Weirick
.
Sunday School• 9:45 a.m.
Worship - !!a.m.

. •.

Middleport Community Chureh
S75.Pearl S\., Middleport ·
PaSior: Sam Anderson
, ,
· Sunday SchOoi!Oa.in. ... , • · ,.
Bvenina · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Paa\or: Brian HarkneM
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
w':~- h.m. .,
Wed · y - 7p.m.

.

'

'

.

'· '

Eutl-ellrt

•

Churc~

· Endtlme Hooue orPnyer
(Ill Burlingham church off Roule 33)
·
Pas1or: Roben Vance
·
Sunday Worship· 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:4.5 a.m. (lsl.t 3rd Sun)

'
Our S~Jviour lAltbe~ Cliurch
·
Walnuland•Henry-SIIi; Raveliawooct W.Va.
ln1rim pastors: Rev. RoblortHupp •
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip - I ta.m.
· .

'

Harrlso••llle Communi!)' Church
Paslor: Theron Dtu~arn
Sunday - 9:3p a.in. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

. liooltoa
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

..

SUO N. 2nd Ave., Mldilleport ;.

The ~lnen' Fellowship Ministry
New Uiqe Rd., Rolland
P~tor! 1\ev. Marpret J. RobinSon
Services: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30.p.m.

Morning Star .
Pas\Or: Kenoelh Baker
· Sunda~hool ' 9:4S a.m. ··
\'fclighip -10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services- 7;30 p.m.

LuttwrJn

-

Stlvenvllle .Word or Fa1tb ·
·.
PISIOr: David Dailey·. ,..
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

· Faith Full Goapol Church
. Long ilollom
.
Paslor: Sleye Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9;30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
. Wednesday -·1 p-~ ·
Frida~- feltow•hlp semce 7 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday SchoOl· 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t 41h Sun)

ThO Cburdl of J..ua

J

CJti1C IIC

'

Branch President - Michael Dubl
Sunday School .· 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m. .

''

Call'ory lll!l1e Cburdo
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Putor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:3o·a.m.
Worship·10:30i.m.,7:30p,m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30 p.m.

Hobaoa Chrislla• FeDowohlp Chun:h
SUnday service, 10:00 a.m. ; 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sun~ay, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00 p.m.

Beilrony
Pas.or: Kenneth Baker
Swtday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 t.IJI.
Wedilesday Services - 10 a·.m.

~ortiand-Racine Rd.

Llapvllle Chrlitllia Chqn:li
Sun~ay -Schooh· 9:30 a.m.
Woloh1p- 10:30 j,m, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.in:

.

Salem

Reorpalzod Churdo or J_, Chriat
. or Latter lily Salats

ML Moriah Baptiol
.
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middleport " 1,
raslor: R,ev. Oilben Craig, Jr: ~ .'~ !
Sundoy School -9:30a.m. ' '
W_orship- 1Q~~S •;J!I· . .,.~ ~ ., _,.
....
'
'
Antlq!IIIJ Baptht
, •
Sunday School-9:30a.m. , ; .
Worship- 10:45 o.m. . .
Th¥~ar Serv,ii:os - 7_
:90 p.mj ,.

.

\~ ·-- ..

'

•'\

. Mill Work
.

HBNDERSON •• Descendlnts of
Sam ltiCI Melvina Bin:hfield will
· '-'"a mmioil Sunday, bukel diener

Uberty Ch.... t:tl..,.h
.,
DeXter
. PISIOr: Wdoiiy Call .
·· Sunday' Bveni1111· 6:30p.m.
Thursday ·Scrvi~ • 6:30p.m.

'

Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce .
Sundoy School· 9;15 a.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m.
Saowville
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Chriat of Latter-Day Sai~IJ
St. Rl. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
. Sunday School10:20-lla.m. .
Relief SocielyfPlieslhood U:05-12:00 .noo~
·
Socramenl Service 9-t0:15 a.m .
Homemaldna meetliiJ. lsi Thurs. - 7 p.m.

w' c1n esday ....
£-~w·
1
. •CO!! · p.m:·

, •·

SUnday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship -.10:30 a.m.
Thursday Service• - 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

F..,...t Run Baptiol '' ·
Pastor: AriUs'Hurt ., .. ,.,
Slllldly Scl\oot- 101.111. ,
Worship • Jl a.m.

,

. GUYSVILLJ3 -- Camp meeting,
"Evangelizing for Jesus", Guysville,
· Sunday through July 5, I p.m. daily,
preaching and singing. Pastors Don
and Dee Miller.,.
·

.

.

RIVERSIDE MOTORS·
280 West Main

y Servl!:&lt;s-.7:;!0 p.m.

! '

Worship - lfri\)11., 7 p.m.

I·· ., .
•

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Faith Bapdot Chlll'th
Railroad St., Mason
Sunda1,School , ,10 a.m..
Worsh1p - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedn~sday Services · 7 p.m.

A/(, -~..........................................1

~

.1!1 . •."• ·' :. ~ · ' . . .

VIctory Boptl51 ladependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pl51or:.lariles B, _ ~see .
Worship - !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services-. 7 p.m.

. ...~.•.....~.....~..........................................................................................SJ995

~

. SundaySchoo1~9~m.

•

90 FORD IRONCO II, ¥6, AUTO, LOADED; 414...................................... 6500
91 FORD UNGER XLT PI, AIL............. ,.......:..................... ONLY 14995
91 FORD F150 XLT lARIAT· Lauded Ytilh alexttas, SIKrp, 74,000

_Community calendar

Rutllnd Ch•rch of Cllrllt
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship. !0:30a.m, 7 p.m.
·
B,..df~ ct+h orO.rtsl
cOmer o!.St Rl. 1~ .t Bradbury Rd.
Mlnisler: Doug Shamblin
' ' Youlh Minisler: Bill Amberger
Sunil:;!'. School - 9:30 a. in.
am 7·00'p m
0" h'1P •· 8: . a.rn " 10·30
·
· ·• ·
· •
,
WednesdaJ Se~ ·- 7:00 p.m: .
. Hkkory Hllo Churcl.-of
Bvangellslloseph B. Hoskins"

Faltb Fellowahlp Cl'llllde li&gt;r Cllriat
Pastor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickem
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Chrlltlan Fellowahlp Cenler
Salein Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Raben E. Musser
· Sunday schl:iol - 10 a.m.
.Worship -11;15 a.m., 7 p.m.
-.Wednesday.Se.yico · 7 p.m .

a&amp;

•

Falnlew Bible Cll•rch
'Lelall, W.Va. l!t I ·
PasiOr: John Hart
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
·
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Sludy . 7:00 p.m.

Faltb Chopel Open Bible Church
923 S. Third SL., Middlepon
Senior Pastor Michael Pangio
Residenl Pas1cir Rlchud Vermillion
Sunday strviCe, tO a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

RockSprinp
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School· 9;1S a.m. .
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youlh Fellowship, ~unday . 6 p.m.

Rutlud Com•uolty Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany ·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday BvoninJ - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Se.Via:s - 7 p.m.

a.rl.c .

Hlllolde Boptlat Church
St. Rl. 143 ju51 off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree., Sr.. , ,·,
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship -11a.m., 6p.m•.
Wednesday Servi&lt;;es -7 p.m.

5

'

Bndbuey Cbun:h of Chriot
· Sunday School - 9:30 a,m.
· Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Wblle'o Clulpel Waltyaa
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
SUnday School - 9:30 o:m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Appe ure Cenlet
"Full-Gospel Cburcll"
Pas1ors John .t Pai\Y Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
173-5017
. Service lime: Sunday 6:00 p.m.

Pomeroy
PasiOr: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible SIUdy Tuesday- 10 a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
Thursda~ Service - 7:30p.m.
Lourel Clift Fm M..-lst Church
· Pastor: Pelor Tremblay
Sunday Scllriol- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m:
·Wednel!day Service - 7:00p.m.

.

Other Churches

· Peort Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m .

Hy..U RU llolla• Cliurdl

.

· Pastor: ScorB'ruwn
. Worship Service • 9 a.m.
, ·P,mmwlion • 10 a.m.
. SundJy School- 10:1S a.m.

Old Belllel Free Will Baplllt Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday Schciol - 10 a.m.. .
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
· Thursdoy Services - 7:30

911UICI LESAIIE 4 DR SEDAN, well equipped.................................15995
91 OlD5 CUTLASS SUPRIMI4 DR-¥6, auto, A/~ all J10W1r eqtip, 5uper

'1;

Jnslruihenlal

· Bethlehem Bapllot Church
Oreal Bend, Route 124, Racine; OH
Paslor : Daniel Berdine
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
su~~Wo"'!hiP.- 10:30 a.m. .t 6 p,m....
Weifnesday 'J11ble Study • 6:00 p.m..
·

951WCJ( PARK·AVE-lealher- aU power, beaUtiful car.~;.....
H OtD5 11ftpYAl4 DR SEDAN, 3800 ¥6, IIIIo, loatW Ytilh .al ~ .

.

TIJpJitn Plain Church of Cbrllt.

Mt. Valon Biopdot ·
Pastor: loe N. Say..
.
SUnday Scl)oql-9:~ a.m.
.
Evening-6:30p.m.
.
Wedneeday Services - 6:30p.m.

SAVE · BIG $$$
'

.

'. \ '

Plslor: Rtv. Ro&amp;cr Willford
Sunday School- 9:30,a.m.
Wolohip- 7 p,m.

Harv..t Outroac:h Mlalatrles
. 47439 Reibel. Rd., CheSler
Paslor: Rev: Mary Mc))aniel
Sunday.Sc.Vicn;· 10 a.m. .t 6 p.m.
Wed.lesday Services ~ .1 p .m.

Mlnenvl11e
Pastor: Charles Neville .
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a:m. ·

/

Waltraa Bible Hollaeu Cllorrdl
75 Pearl SL, Middleport.
Pastor: Rtv.lohn Neville
Children 1s servic.-e ~ 10 a.m.
Wonhlp - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servic;e , 7:30p.m.

•

w

u. We· .. ~·t' -~
Sunday·Scboot ·- toa.m·. '•
wei:~ Hil.m. 7:30 p.m),.

Wedn

t\ i''

Zkia Ch•~h'of Cllrlat

,
:·. ···t-~
·;;, ,,., "~
-·".i.,'. i·~-~- .!., -·:·~'.

~-lutor.

.

Pcxneroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt143)
Paslor: Roger Wi\150n ·
Sunday Schoql - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. 7:00p.m.
Wedn&lt;oc!ay Setvices • 7 p.m.

pu •·-'

J S!Im

witt! extras. This.. local
one owned beauty just traded to us. Show room clean. Remainder
of Facloly warranty.

.

~

Pastor: ~v. Law~.T.l11Uey
. YoUih Past!&gt;li mll Youna
. SWiday Scbool ' 9:,30 a.m.
· . Wolohlp - I0;40"a.m;,;7:0Q p,.m.
WedOf sdaY Se~;VICCS ~· 7:00
P·lll· · •
1
.,. ..._.

1/2 mile off RL 325
··
Pulor: Rtv: 0'1lell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wors!&gt;ip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesdjly Service · 7:30 p_.m.

. Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3t

Portllod Flnt Clourcb or lhe N.......,.
Putor: Mark M111son
Worship - 10:30 p.m.
SUnday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Hutb (Middltport)
Pastor: Vemagayc Sullivan.
Sunday Scllool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

l'lllt Grove Bible Holt- Cllorrdo

• · llelrwallo,. Rldp·t:lhareh of Clarlat
Pastor: Jaolo,&lt;;oltoarove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:~. m., 6:;10 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv~s - 6:30p.m.
"'

Rritland Flnt'Biplllt Church ·
Sunday ~ool - ,9:30 a.m,
Wonhip - t0:4S a.m.
...._,. Flnt Baplill
''
l!asl Main St • • ,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wolohlp - 10:30 a.m.
First Soutbem BaP.Iiot
4,1872 Pomeroy Pike ·
P~l~: E. Lamu O'Bryant
. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wolohlp- 10:45 a.m., 7:00J&gt;.m.
Wednesday _Servloos - 7:00 p.m.
First BaptlstChurch
Paslor: Mark Morrow
6th ond P•lmerSI.&gt; Middlepon
SUndax School - 9:15a.m. ·
Worlhip •'10:lS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.
FlntJiol~'at
·

a......

Leadinr Creek Rd., Rutland
Paslor: Rev. Dewey Kina •
Sunday ochool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeling- 7 p.m.

Worship ;·9:30 llm.'
Sunday Schoot. 10:30 a.m.
Paslor-Jef!Jf.y·Wajlace
.lsi and 3ril Sunday

\

''

Frmto.~Miuloa

Rutllnd Church ofiM N__,
Pastor: Samuel Basye
·
· Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Wolohip - 10:30 a.m.,.6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servicei • 7 p.m. .

. FonotRKn
Pastor: 0\a:rlcs Neville
Sunday School •·10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m,
Thursday ServiCOJ • 6:30p.m.

itoae or Slllroa Hollaeu Cllurdl

K- Chur&lt;h of Cluiat

BaptiSt

~

!

Sunday School · 9:30a.m. ·
.' Wonllip - lla.m., 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

. Flatwooda

Horrisonville Rood
· ·Paslor. Rtv. Vk:lor RoUah
Sunday School9:30 a.m. .
Wo:'l' 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed
y Se.VIce - 7:30p.m.

Kinpbu Road
Pastor: Je'lt Smith
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
Worship Servict 10:30 a.m.
: No Sunday or Wednesday Nigh! Services

l'lslor: Rtv. Herbel! Orale

P...Or. Keilh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Coim, . . . . Clilpel

Mlddloport Claarch of C1uiat
• ;slit and Main ·
· PISIQr: AI .Hartson
Youlh l!flnislfr: ~ill Fnzicr
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 1();30 a.m., 1 p.m.'
Wodaesday ServJcoa- 7 p.m.

'

w.

~ tiOierdeooomlutloaal et.rd!

·de.lor Clorlrdl oltM N . - -

l!lllerprlae
I Paslor: Kellh Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wolohip - 9 a.m.

...

·'' Sunday scliool · 9:30a.m.
' SWiday worship • 10:30 ~.m. .t 1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer~ - 1 p.m. ·

sunday Scl10dl - n a.in. .
·
Wcxibip- lO.;m., 6 p.m.
·Wednelday ~f"'oos • 7 p.nt ·

OnlY 24,600 actual mllaa, auto, AJC,

Chester Alumni gather

.

1 Q

Laapvlte
l'ulbr: Dr. J.D. YOUIIJ

,

'-"'1
Wall~ Clttordi otCbrll!
. 33226 a.ud.. Home Rd.
·

AM SE 4 DR

Society scrapbook

REEDSvn.LE .. Hollon reunion,
Forked Run Park, Saturday, I p;m.;
busineas meeting,. 3 p.m.; potluck S
p.m.

3~0S7 Sllllt IIAJule

Apostol1c

Eleanor Kmght and !Jebble M1ller
were thanked for plant,1ng the urns at
Chester Cemetery for Memorial Day.
Red, white and blue petunias were
used. ·
··
Dorothy Karr and Edna Woods
decorated the tables ·for CheJter
Alumni Banquet. Betty Dean did the
speaker's .table with roses, which
were given to .recognized alumni.
·Since last meeting was the greenhouse tour, no meeiing was held. It
was announced that Mrs. Miller, p.;;;;;.;;;;;;.;:,;;;;....;.______..;.;..;;;;;;.;,~;,;;;~;;;.------1
Lula Tohan l!nd Mrs. Dean attended
the spring meeting at McArthur in
April. Mrs. Dean won a blue .ribbon
and two red ribbons in the Region II
Flower Show, held at the regional
meeting.
·
Mrs. Bunger and Mrs. Dean
attended the Bob Thomas workshop.
in Marietta. Bunger received a lener
from the chairman, welcoming her
into the group.
·
·
A thank-you letter was received
from Chester Elementary School,

About 180 alumni and guests led by Maxine Whitehead, and
· attende(i the annual 'Chester High accompanied by George Hall.
A steak dinner was serVed by the
School alumni banquet on May 31, at
which was coordinated by Kathy the Chester school.
Honors go to Witherell
PTO~ cooks and Pioneer · ~H Club,
·
Jason Witherell of Pomeroy Farr. Ribbons were presented to winAlumnus George Hall provided ·assisted by the Chester teachers. ·
earned high dea~'s honors for spring ners in each event.
Names of deceased alumni for
organ' music for dinner and dancing.
semester at Marietta College.
The gym ·was extensively decorated 1996"anill997 and a tioom dedicat. The high dean's list is the highest
in blue and white false ceiling, bal- , ed to their niemoiy were read. It has
academic honor at Marietta. With- PuWns persoail
loons and Chester·pennants. Tables been 40'years since anyone graduaterell, son of James and Jeanie With- _ _ Theodore and Becky Pullins' sev- ·were deeorated 'in blue and white ed from Chester High School, and
erell of Pomeroy, will be a senior this eral ('a!her's Day visitor were Church flower arrangements by Chester Gar- there are now 423 living members
fall with a major in computer sti- . Pullins; Tom, Stacie, .Kirk and den Club.
and 276.deceased. ·
'
enc~. ·
Audironna Pullins; Denise Laughery;
The Dale Kautz Family ScholarThe welcome was given by ChairTerri, Doug and Justin Browning; man Maxine Whitehead, with invo- ship was given to Amanda Milhoan,
Jean and Bill Oshome. .
cation by Nellie . Parker. Group daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. William
Mrs. Pullins attended the gradua- singing of ''God Bless America" was
. Field Day Wd ·
·Continued on 'p qe 7
tion
of
her
granddaughter,
Michelle
· Mt. Moriah Church of God in
Racine recently held its annual field Laughery, which was celebrated with
day event. Several age groups par- dinner hosted by Mr. and Mrs.
ticipated in the evening's activities. A Osborne. Visitors were Mike, Angie
Jessica . Elizabeth Alexander, Alexander of Vinion, celebrated her
. picnic supper concluded the event, and Kiara Taylor of Columbus.
. daughter of Bradley and Stephanie founh binhday on April 29 at her
'
.
home, with a Rugrats themed dinner
.party and a Winnie-the-Pooh cake.
Attending, in addition to her par.. '.··
. .
ents, were her siblil]gs, Katie, Carol
and Nick Alexander; VictOr Casto
·The C0111munlty Calendar Ill
REEDSVILLE- Whaley family
and Annabelle; Steve Houchins; Mr.
pullll..ed • a free service to non- reunion will be held at lhe Forked
and
Mrs. Jim Ale~ander; Judy
· . prullt..,...... wilbi!lg to an-nee Run State Park, Reedsville, Sunday,
Alexander
and Stacie; Krista Eason
weiiDI and ~p«lal events. The .· June 29. Farnilies.to take two covered
and Amanda; Trhonda Casto,
c I 'srilnatdslped.topr'onlote dishes.
Jonathan and Austin.
..... or lund raisers of any. type.
Sending gifts were Mr..and Mrs.
ltenu are printed·Mlpa~ permits
EAST LETARr- Meigs CooperEd
Perkins, Mr. an4 Mrs. Huey
and cannot be p8f11nteed to run a alive Parish fifth Sunday hymn sing,
Eason, Robbie Eason .3\ld Tim Casilpedllc number of.days. ·
East l,.etart United Methodist Church,
to.
Rowe Road. Sunday, 7 p.m. Special
music. Rev. Brian Harkness, pastor.
FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER •• Meigs
· County Pomona Grange, Friday, Star , MONDAY
Oranae hall, 7:30p.m. Degree·work
POMEROY·· Meigs County Vet·
will be exemplifiCd in full form for enos Servi~e Commission, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Veterans Service
inspection.
·
Office, Mulberry Ave., pomeroy.
· sATURDAY

·U..... H I

wo:::r..

.

.

•

r.or: Roben Barber
Sunday School - 9a.m.
10 Lm., 7 p.m. ·
Wed
y Service - 7 p.m.

I I 0) Clatardt tldlle N
, _ , Rev. 11lamu NcoC:Itula
Sllnday Sdlool- 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wodnooday Servlcei - 7 p.m.

P

Charles Neville
oay School - 9:45 a.m.
.
Worship - 11a.m.
Wednesday Servii'Os - 7:30,p.m.

nulfil

signed ey 23 · children, expressina
, thanks t'or a metal punching workshop. The children made pictures of
.flowers. Pat Holter was assisted by
Kathryn Mora, .Mrs. Knight and Kay
Holter. 'Members rumished refresh·
meilts.
' It was announced by Betty Dean,
publiCity chairman, "that the club's
publicity book received a grade of94
112.
,
··
Twila Buckley was in charge of
the Eastern High School junior/senior
this
'

C..tnla.ter
AIIIDI}' (Sy,.._)

de.,..

Garden Club hears about fair flower show .
An outline of plans for the Meigs
County Fair flower show was given
by Pat Holter, chairman, following
the Chester Garden Club's annual picnic:
Holter discussed the' classes and
announced that new backgrounds
will be purchased. The Chester Club
is in charge of the show this year, it
was noted.
.It was noted' that at the. spring ·
county meeting of the Meigs County Garden Clubs, attended by Pat
Holter, Judy B11nger, Betty Dean.
Kathryn Mora,. Maurita Miller and
Lula Toban_.Bunger, Holter and Dean
demonstrated the modern designs in
the fair flower show schedule.
Attending the picnic were I0
members, their husbands and a guest,
Mary Mora. After dinner, Roy Miller,
acting as auctioneer, held an auction
of donated items for the club's project
fund.
The f1!eeting was called' to order
the president, Mrs. Miller. Devol ns on "Time" were given by Maye
. . ra . .
hank-yous were given ·by

llliley Malo - ·30 a.m.

The ,c;old air bi~WJ on my lllllld and !his obseasive air coadidolilll. Why :
neck, and it ~- ri&amp;blto the bone. does i.t t.ve to be 5~
illlide?
People· who are hat all the lime Do you have any IU~?- No
can tum on the iir conditioner, and Name in S1C1'11111CntO, ·Calif. ·.
-~
everyone ihinq dlat's fine, If you're
Dear Sacranlento: .When wu ~
too cold, hOwever, people just say, last time you had a complete'pbysi{
"Put a sweater 1111." It jusi doesn't cat. cbeckup.? Also, have you ever
work .that w,y. I often get summer ·tallr.ed to yO,urck!ctor aboUt thit~
colds bec:"•se of that frigid air blow- lem? You
be anelllic. .
.'"
iD8-0IIIJ;IY. head. The~~ is that
I hope you will not think hoi:
no one, and I mean· no one, cares. unsympathetic, but it·is ·much easier':;
Why Clll)'t we tum on the air condi- ·• for a person who is "coljl .all -~
tinning at a ~nable level so the · time" to warm up with an ex
hot-blooded ones can cool off, .and swcltor !han for lhe pei'I;Qn \Vho is ~
die 19ofus ean:still be comfortable? · "too warm" to cool off.
-;:
I love hot weather and like to wear ·
•
Slllrullef clothes, but this is never posSellclqtlelu- to ADo I ,odel'l, :
sible for me. At work, I have to bun-. Craton S:fl!dlcate, 5777 W. Ce11-!
die up !IS if it were winter. Our beau- · Jury BIYCL, Sldte 700, 1M Allgelrt, ~
tiful summen are being destroyed by c.IIf. 90045
~

•
•·•'

\

~hurch Director

•

Frktiay, June 27, 1117 ,

hope one of them dies."

The Deily S1ntl,_. • .Page 7

PomerOy- • Middleport, Ohio

I

bear Canon City: A clean plate is

.

992•2121

..

,,

'

Send Yoor Tho~h" lfich

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES ·&amp; SERVICE

992-7075 ...

172 NOrth Second Ave.

, .

Oh

'V. .

••'

'•

�•
•

Ponw;oy •lllddllpCM't, Ohio

Travolta asks judge to dismiss breach of contract. lawsuit

·
m ciiNc:tor of
' '·
II'...... Ill.__
7, : Roctcy
of Nelaonv ,., PAll hWG
,...._.,
p...lkllnt ot the SIMide River Coonhuntlr Alloclllllon, wttll · , ; $1,000 In hunllng bootl 8lld other merchMdiH to help lupporl
, • the Plait Dlya. went currently underWiy Ill the fllrarounda In
; : ROCk Sprlng1. 111e boot. •nd other merchlndlle will be g1wn
.. . IWIY during the event.
.

LOS ANOELBS (AP) - "Tbe
Double" cgntjenea to brinJ trouble
for Jolm Travolta.
Tbe ICIOr ubd ajudae to dinniu
a IJruch of C:OOIIUI:tlaWIIIit brouJhl
by two movie comp~~~ies whea be.
dlopped out of lhe Ro- Polanski
film "'J11c Double." Superior Court
JudJe Kurt Lewin didll't immedimc.
ly rule·Thursday, but left little doubt
how he would rule.
''This trial, as far as I'm con·
c:emed. is going f01Ward on July 14
and lhe chips will fall where lhey
may," Lewin said at a hearing.
Travolta had replaced Anthony
Hopkins in lhe starring role last year.
Liteoffer Ltd. and Mandalay
Entertainm.ent sued Travolta, claim-

vicliml outside the Oki.Jiolna City
fecllonl buildiq 81111 stepped over
bodia It a Rwuclu refuJec wnp.
ROANOKE, Va. (AP) - M
But whit chobd ber up Thunday
Americaa Red Croa president, Eliz·
deia lbiaj a Iliff member's visabed! Dote hu stood with bombina it with a Cllnbodian WOIIIID who 1011

w•

~ !.p in

a 181111 ..U.. explolioll.
"Fclr IS ,....., tbia woman hid
llpln pullina henelf alona with just
her -s." Mn. &lt;Dole said. "When
she Ill in thal wheeldlllr, lhe told ua,
'For die first lime, I can see my chil·

""· OMk Oulll

...

..

ltf
IUicl COOfirrY 'SINIOII CEHIU

-I!FOiri' '

I'UIIUC NOTICI
C h nle r
TOICMIIIIt•lll'llpiiD
TrutiiMe will.helcl I Budget

BING.o·

...... July .. 11117, 7:30
p.m. II 1111 Cheat.. T-

110

.limit II. ur., Cieri!
. RO. ... ~
Chnur, ott 41720

(I) ll7; tTC

30

·

Help 'WIIIted

6
Chester
Alumni
case
..
~-hm&amp;NtP
··.

COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR WANTED:
------~---___;...
UYI-In lnatructor (WIIk.:cllya) lllldld to tuch
· Milhoan. The Chester Alumni Schol~ Arthur Quivey, Donald and Wilma Eichinger, '43; Eslher Frecker, '36; community and peraonal aldlla to adultl w1tt1
. arship was ' given to Tracy White, Marks. Class of 1957, BettY Camp- Richard Fick, '41; Phyllis Lawrence ltlmlng llmltlllonlt In llelg1 County. HOURS: 3-1 .
daughter ·of Mr. and Mrs. Tony · bell, spokesperson, Helen Wilson, Glasco, '49; J.M. and Mildred Gaul,
pm, Sun.; 8:30-8:30 1111/3-1 pm, T·Th.; 8:30-8:30 1111 ·
White. Their grandparents . were Belly Myers, Don VanMeter, Lela '40 and '41 ; Nara Wolfe H~. '54; · Fri.; 1111p over rtqUirtd; dlytlma houra orr. High
·;· thester alumni.
Windon;
. .
Marie Hauck, '3S;Charles and Vivian
achool degl'll, valid drlver'a.llcenH, good driving
~;: Roses were presented to lhe foJ-·
Out of town alumni attending Humphrey, '42 and '43; Harry Holter,
rKord, thl'll ylara llclnlld driving txptrllnct, ,
I•· towing: Sybil Durst Barr, oldest were Curtis Bailey, '30, Alhens;·Bet· '¥; Opal Singer Hollon, '42; Elsie. and.ldtquatt lllltomobllllnd covt..-gal'lqulrtd.
~ ~~~woman; Earl Knight, oldest man; ty Carr Campbel~, '57, Hyattsville, Woode Heines, '34; Thelma Biddle
Training provided. Excellant ·lnauranct and
&lt;w8elly Myers, youngest graduate; Bob Md.; Jack Clark, 47, Alhens; Kath- Hayes, '30. ·
· vacatiOn btntfttl. S111ry: $!1.50Jhr., to .tart. It
'"' ,Meredith alumni who traveled lhe leen Prince Dean, '42, Columbus;
Delores Epple Holter, ~47; Harold
lnter11tad contact Cecilia It 1"11»-531-2302 no
·"'·farthest (Anzona); Kathryn Wilder- Kathryn Williams DietZ. '36. Belpre; and Geraldine ·Hawk, '42 and '49;
IIIII' thin 713/W. Equal Opportunity Employer.
· ··mulh, first lime attending; and Goldie Mary Spencer DeGroot, '52, Faun- Dorothy Hawk, '41 ; Dale Kautz, '44;
~ Wolfe family 100 percent · atten· tain, Colo.; Thelma Eddy, '36, Kill- Mary Mora Kautz, '36; Roger and
110 Htlp Wentld
·• dance.
'
buck; Doris Barnett Fict, '47, Colum- Rosemary Keller, 'SS and 'S6;
.. . . Virgil Windon, Howard Knight bus; Helen Bissell Garnick, 'S2, Lex- Howard Knight, '25; Earl Knight, '23;
and Starling Massar have never ington; Joan Hawley Haas, '45, Port Ruth Wolf Karr, '43; Horace and
... .missed a banquet.
·
Ricbey, Fla.; Helen Marcinko HeiVY, Dorothy Karr, '46 and '47; Howard
•· - P.S. Express .of Eastern High '40, lancaster; Charles King, '49, l..arkins,'5l;StarlingMassar,'S2; Bill
·::,school designed the programs with a Moundsville, W.Va.; Eileeq Ritchie . Matlack, '34; Woodrow and Kathryn
Applicants C•ll Qr ·
·;;:picture of tl!e school and a history Ku~n. '46, Louisville; John and Mora, '47 an~ 'Sl; Pauline Mora
·•• 'wrillen by Nellie Parker.
· Elotse Lodw1ck, '41, West Jefferson. Myers, '33; Kathleen Torrent e Mor·
Send Resume To:
'='· New officers for 1997· 1998 are
Donald .and Wilma Marks, '52, ris, '48 ; Donald VanMeter, '57;
Rhonda Dalley, Director of Nursing
Harry Holter; President; Starling . Belpre; Bob Meredith, '47, Phoenix, Samuel Michael, '35; Harold and Bet·
Massar, Vice · President; · Delores Ariz.; Maria Meredith Mwphy, '43, . ty Newell, '52 and '5 I; Harold
·
115 East Memorial Drive
·'
Holter, Second Vice President; Belly Sandusky; Bill and Gladys Meredith, Osborne, '41 ; Ronald Osborne, '35; ·.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Dean, secretary; and Mary Rose, '40 and '41, Beverly; Betty Frost · HowaRt Parker, '41; Homer Parker,
, Treasurer.
·
Myers, '57, Ashville; Roben Powell, '41 ; Nellie Michael Parker, '31 ; LiJ..
E;o.E.
~· ·A roll call of classes with reunions '53, Columbus; Arthur Quivey, '52, Han Williams Pickens, '34; Irene
, .'was lteld.
. ·sarasota. Aa.; Charles Pickens, '46, Summerfield Parker '31; Leland
·•· · Class of 1937, Alfred Wolfe and Williams!Own, W.Va.; ~ster Spona- Parker, '52; , Frona Bissell, '54;
· . Lester Sponagle; Class· of 1942, gle, '37, Crown City; Marlene Wolfe Josephine Ritchie, '34.
' ·Vivian Humphrey, as spokesperson, Thompson, '45, Newark; Donna
James Ridenour, '53; Pauline
'.;·,with six present: Harold Hawk. Hen· Wolfe ·VanMeter, '49, Granville; Wiclcham Ridenour, '31; Gene Riggs,
ry Bahr, Opal Hollon, Kathleen Dean Lloyd Wolfe, '42, Akron; Howard '56; Muy 1\tttle Rose, '47; Dayton
J(
;jmd Lloyd Wolfe. Class of 1«147, SO. Wolfe,'48, Belpre; Bill Williarns,'43, Spencer, '47; Jack Sorden, '39; Bill
.HOME
"·year class, Mary Rose, spokesperson, Meggett, S.C.; Lila Bahr Winters, '40, Sorden, '47; Jean Pooler Sexson, .
Handicapped
• Dorothy Karr, . Bill Sorden, Jack Parkersburg, W.Va.
'49; Oeo Weber Smith, '47i Rex ·
Uc. wv 011030
a
Eldarly.
' Clark, Delores Epple. Holter, Bob
Local alumni attending were: Paul Summerfield, '39; Jim Stout, '52;
Roofing, Plllntlng
·"Meredith, Bob Woods, Dayton Baer, '41; Victor Bahr, '38; Wilma · Raph Trussell, 'SS; Maxine 'WhiieGUIII'IIntHd '
..Dilly • 'WHkly •
,-Spencer, Doris Fick, Ruth Ann · Ballard, '40; Sybill Smith Dorst Barr, head, '46; Donald VanMeter, '57; Vir·
..__,...._
Contract ·
.,- Balderson, Cleo Smith, Woodrow '29; Harry Lee Bailey, '35; Henry and gil Windon, 'S3; Bob Woods, '47;
•-,
F1mlly Atmolphtre
. Mora. Class of 19!12, Betty Newell, Eileen Bahr, '42 and '43; Ruth Ann · Alfred Wolfe, '37;.Kathryn Dill Wil. 11Mw• _ ..,.
209 s. 4th Streit
' spokesperson, only class with no Williams Balderson, '47; Mildred dermuth, '49; Helen Hoffman Wilson,
Fret ~matts
Middleport
···deceased members. Leland Parker, Summerfield Caldwell, '35; B.elly '57; Lela Windon, '!12; Junior White,
992-8057 or
992-5042
- }im Stout, Helen Gavemick, Martha Dean Chevalier, '46; Betty Gen· . '48; and Jeaneue Thomas Koenig, '54.
:Lee, Mary Degroot, Starling Massar, heimer Dean. '44; Opal VanMeter
992-1056
.
.,...
' .
'
'
' "' ..
' ''

Announcement~

.

.GUN SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Sunday, ·
June 29
All P.M.

Rutland,OH

...,

llouiut Fli1ln clll

•Small Jobs
•Large Jobs

Ex1. 8781

319 s . 2nd Ave.

Middleport

· Salea Sarvlce
·ln8talldon

CORPORAL E...CTRIC

•

F,or

· . Atlomey!AII.aw
(614) 592·5025
.

INNOVATIONS
Photography Studio

CARE

271 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
.614-992-0028

Servkl

. -· _. _.._._. _
Sinke

r-_.~----~·r~
· ----~~
···~-·~··-~
· ·~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONRRUCTIOII

a:

•Garages _ .
•Complete
'Remodeling .

ntl ab · · ·
, Big Be
F, rlca~n,
Machi~. &amp;~elclfng. Shop

"
~

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohto 4571!9
A Division on Nl(:hola Metal, INc.

.7f22/llri

' Phone: 814: 992·2406

a Exterior

IIIIN.Fft&gt;m

.

.

Pomttoy,
Mlddllporl
a VIcinity .

· .
4 ~-

JuiJ 1-3, .....?. "... mlo .

pall Parllond Potlr on ·SR 124 .,.
word Long Bollom, Oh; Plorc•
rolldtnCI, dlnello Ill, dhrhll,
H.,. fllrlrior, cook booko, lort,
bottlll, clothes, TuppOIWiro,

- -...-

.

(No Sunday Calls)

EIC.

UIO 110, Ewi~OH !Ai~Pn~L

AIIO COinoiCinellolli Wark
·(FRI!E ESTIMA~) ·
V.C. YOUNG Ill
. IIM215 •.
Poniii'Oy, Ohio

614-992·7643 .

All Yold ..... Mull lo Paid In
· ONdfloo:
t:oo,no 1111
..,-litre
1~1 ld II to rue,
lvndoy · I llondoJ tdBioo·

. 111-

,.,..,,..

CELLULAR PHONES

Baofl porcll oolo· 71 s Short

Fowf\ Midci...Cift

Ga11111 oor. Frldar and 811Ur·

dor, O:OIIIm·4:DDpm. 2210 ~orr

36QO Communications

• - S,IH\IM,

•

·

stop =i;:pare ·l
ESTIMATEES .
985-4473

..

Homo-·

•Ill biCIIIA Plumbllill
olloollng

I oPIInllng

111-

Borurdoy, 8-S, Lo11 Of Name
Brond Clolhlng, Longaborger
Boolloto, Tor•. Blbr ....,.,
HOUHIIold t11m1, Hondo S
Whooler, MhM:, 11480 .... Rlf.

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

Complete Macbb1e Sbop
Fabrication
Steet Sales. WeldJni supplies, Iaclusttlll c..
· Radiator Repllr Rept• ••·• •
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.· ·4:30p.m.
" Saturday· 8:00 a.m. : 12,noon · ·

·t"ew Homes

(Between Added TOUCh &amp;

·

'
Athens, OhiO

·----

ofliiWO......

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
.

Bankruptcy contact:

. Attor~~y . WIIIIam .Saf.-.nek

' h0til81 '

24 Hr

lnfor~ ~rdlng

(114~

....... Addlllonl

· 1 · , . , . 1cw

.

Juno 271h·? 8·S, 7 Mll11 Frqm
Portor, I Mlloo From Cholhlll

YOUIIG'S
;.(ARPDmlt SERYKE

BI$SELL BUILDERS, INC~

financial obligations and arrange 1 fair
distribution of aaseta. DebtorS In bankruptcy may
New Homea • VInyl ~ldlng New
keep "exQ!Tipt" property for their personal use.·
. ·Garages • Replacement Windows ·
Thle may .Include a cat, 1 hous!l, ciQthas, and .
Room Additions • Roofing
househplll goods.
·

Work Guaranteed.
Free Estlmatee Providing
Quality Resldenlllll' .
· Sirvlce New
conalruCtlon- :ro181 n ,
partial ~rea on old~ .

- ~ ---·--·

,

.of

r

(814) 1Mt2-7434

. •

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor

DaHay Ad· Racine
814 849 3080
Jolla Wlllllma- o,aer
UctnllldEieclriC!Iil

Ju.. 21'11, - · H. Raed.Qd;

· Fr11dom
Hut Pump

$2.99 per min.
l

Avenue, Jllne 27th, a 21th, Wo
Wll NOI 0pon Tl 1:00 A.M. And
Cloolng Al4:00 P.ll

. &amp;(OOUIIG

.

Must be 18 yra.
.

on~~

•
_ " - 'Ulo
- .....
Nelli

"r - - •

(114) 742-JIOO

UP-TO-DATE
SPORTS
FINANCE
STOCKS
AND MOREll

BEECHGROVE
ROAD

The "Convertible Blondes"
Back from a 3 month engagement

-1......,.1
11--. c--.·=

tllgenllc 0.,... ... "~

1-900-858-2700

9TIL 1 A.M.

..... Or

Experlenetd

.

PER GAME

MOOSE LODGE 11731
FRIDAY &amp; SAURDAY

~lAD...,
Milo
n..n.
Ftt.
Sat, N , Zlllt,.,
.....
1M lie
OffSI.ALIII.

. _.. ......

SeiV·U (819) 845-8434

Business Services
For

Doaalioll SUO forllleal
tJ'ublic~ invited.'

•

llelllf-.

..., ......... _
Mine, Mull H-

lllcCumlltr Rd.

FAMILY DENTlSTRY
304-n3-S822
Rt. 1, Box 44-C
. llllltn, wv
Un .. L ....,..., CDIMA

Sentaa rroiit 5:00 - 5:45

RUTLAND
POST 467
6:30P.M.
STARIURST
$1800.00
$50.00 OR MORE

Fulltl•• R.N. ·Is needed
for EMergency Roolft. ·

CONSTRUaiON

~ ...,..,..,D.D.S.

M:::~~:r~=

·-..zrn .

Public Nolle!

IEITlL .
'

EVENING MEAL
A1' IIIYM !~'~..Am

Hall.

-,..t••••
....,.··,'!Mit'='

Ohio. Somo lur·

....... draporiol, 1&amp;111.

JEF.FWARIER IIISUUNCE
•

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMI:ROY, OH.

,..

614a2-5479

Fax: 304-773-5881

Mitch's Produce)

Special Open House on
July 4, 1997 from 10-6.
Free gift lor first 25 guests.

$200 REWARD
Far w..r.a~~oa

"

lea. . to the arrtsl
. ... eiitlicllott tf....
pen•s who Inlet
Into the A-fr•e oH
681 In Reeclsvlle.
Call Meigs·Shat Hf

..••

...

J .:

..

'·

Solurdar ontr· e:ODorri- 5 Polnll
aroo, lollow signa Loll oillllliJ,

- - - hou-.~

'lllrd Hlo, Clonch'l, VCR PrtCI,
OldL-.gCrllkRd.,.lllr 1·2·:1.

·1o9

fiiJI

NOW OPEN

RT. 7 PIZZI
W~gnerl.ane .

Pomeroy
Dellwry or Dine Iii.
MOI'f tfr&amp;n /UIIt a
pizza place.

'·

K-9 Designs
• Decks .

ProfessiOnal Pet
Boarding - Training. $uppllea ·.

EXPRESS

c.

.. VIcinity

Book 'lllrd Selo·HIO Jofftroon
A.,.. Bohtnd Fruth'l Set. 1121.
a:oo.? Oocll111no lano, 1011 of
booflt.Goollbu!'IP'F•rorroot a
-··
~
..... cloflel
. ..
junior,1041
Supor
Nlnlondo
•r••m•
tapoo. Rogulat Nlnton'.... tapaa
4 Puppleo To GIVIIWIJ, Part Ga. .baJ·IIptl, Turt&gt;;, Grall, ·11
Lllua Apao, 3 Malo Kl11ono, 1-11 CO Rom Sr•••m·lapo,, knlcll·
Ap-.11 WHkl Old; 114-317- lnm1&amp;lola .....

992-3371

e.

PI.Pitalnt

WV. Fr" lpaco In
utalla. :104-175·

0117.

• Rooling

.

• Siding

"Werreoi yoqr bearfiV,.d Uke our '-rfrientl"
'

St. Rl. 681

Call hr 01r Spaelal•

~

~

,

Tuppera

Plllns. Ohio

992·9200
..,.,

Cultom HOmtt

• 13-hp engine
• 5-speed gear drive
• 30-inch mowing width

"

Easy Bank Finandng

.
Alr Canihaners l1.staW '2r a monlh · ~~
Heat Pumps.lnstafted '31" a monlh
(~-on _.,..d Clt'edlt!

Ltimt,.,.....,

.

.......

1~

1391 Sallord Sdtool

(Lime Stone-'
LowRIIII)

WICKS

OH

HAULING

,..
STX38 Gear 1.Gwn fnxl:or
• 13-~ engine
• 38-mch mowing width
• 15-inch llmling width

'

• l.f·~ m,int '
.
• 38· 11r .fa-inch mower deck
• TlcJu 20-Intl11vming 'i'adiKS

.

.
·'..
•

JZS UJu/n 11
• 17-hp eng;M

GTZ4Z lawn 11 Qardm Tnxtor

.

\

Ttaaor ·

LONG'S.
CONSTRUCTION

• 48- or 54-inch mower deCk
• Quik· Tarch ~M mOvnling '''~
.

.

.

.

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings

.

Decisions, decisions. They're easily made at your local John Deere Dealer, considering the incredible, affordable
financing ~ials through John Deere Credit until jtine 30, 1997. Make up your mind to take full advantage of Deere
Season savings today!

·

Nothing Runs
Like A·Deere•

/

''
'

I
CARMICHAEL'S FARM AND llAW·N
888 PINECREST DRIVE

614-44&amp;-2412
. '

'

.lndlng to the

arreet and
conviction of
anyn Involved

.

..-.ng.

. .ROOFING

PfOPIIW lint
fence at:
1127 Croll St,
AaoiM,Oh.

NEW-REPAIR .

4unirl

LD. Callirl
Conllct:
Ran 11111er
~~~~~·:·~=~~~~ ! ''---~

'

.t

Information

Ho•ll'd L Wtll111l

GALLIPOLIS

'

r)l. '

1888 M•rtln Strttt

l

.

0no 8 WHk Old Yollow I Whlll
l&lt;lllnt, Ull« T..rnoc( Good Wllh
Chlldron, NHdlng Good Homo,
11-1-11110.

'

.

,.,.,••

IIIVICI · ·

-rr.

Anllquol, flllnll!l.., ...... r:IIIM,

colno, tore. Iampo, 111100. tools,
1111111: 1110 oppraloalo, O•tor
Mlrlln,II4-18Z-7441.

to4-H&amp; IIA

Anllquoo;

123 PINIInt IIUdge
Pomtt'Oy, OH

Celll2 0045

Meigs
Refrlgetation
R11ldlntlttl Hilling

Alnii'ICLI •lllidl d,
.JaiilliiiiiiiiM.. I

Ceollllll..l9 I Ill.
11.1.11.1. C1 QRut-

AII Callll II
Donlllllll '
m14,111httwi!M '

1101Miad lrlllvldull Wllh Trlllna
FIMI!tl lnd Or!llniHU- Slllilt:
Ao Woll A• lolng AIH Til Work
-Tilt Pllllllc.

.... ......To:

P.O.IIa1472,
C!oll\:alo. DH otlat-11472 .
OPIIIA!OIII O..t*lng

c-

,_., """' lfral!llna Fllfd o,.
- F o r Fllllr ....... Ortdge,
Puropo. ............ Opanfna•.
111.110,. ......... ..., ......
., - - E1111afai• IIMIIII
P ' .... ,..... Raqulld. Food 1
lodglrig Paid .,
Valltl
Driwll LICinae llactulr . lluai
.. 21-0IAgaColfllt I

eo.::.·

• A.ll. .. P.ll To let .... - view. MltN,atl•n Etwlfolw;•-.t

s.mcos. Inc. 150M 11-. Drive

lno Anrlqull, Pomoror, Ohio,
Rooi Moore ownor, 114·082·
2!1211.

Hlllanl, OH ~21 1·100·110:
l'S71 Or Locolfr Call tl4·77t·

Buylno S1andln1 Plno, t Aero
r.... Or Urvo~... -.21110:11

Nll'f., _ POIInONI M'AIL•
AILI: OUl\Lin FAIIM AND
PUIT. Q*' I POt .. GH.

1811. E.o.E.

J I O'o Auto Pir11. BU,Ing 11~

TalUviToA
Rill Gifted
ttsydllc
• • .,.,min.
· · IIUIIIII11~
lar
U.(l11) 1411114
.
,

· tat lilian lrld
• . llrufoe

·Fio•r.re

•n.,....a&amp;pi:J

AulD.:~

.Cooflnl.

lOp pr~ paid, RIVW·

Clean Lilt Motlol Cart Or
Trucko, 18110 - · O r N -,
Smllh Buick I'Vndac. 1100 Eall'

912·2647

1·90H61-4900
bt.' lll7

.

wantec1 to Buy

11at

Houra. Till~ I'Vollloft, In An ArlO
Atmoophoro, Roqulroo A ltlf·

.

Abtolull Top Oolllt: All U.S. $1~
ver And Gold Colno, ProoiHII,
Til Good Home: 1 Black a Whlll
Antiquo
Gold
111non, Femole, a w..k, Old, Dlamondo,
Rl
p,. 1830 u.s. Curroncr,
1114411 ZIOIAIIIISP.M.
, E10. Acqulolta"' - ,
Coin Shop, 151 ._.,
Plolnll For 1 Aero, 114· Mnle,•o-ap
., 814 •• 2112.

-n.n..; •., ..,

.for Ill your
trlnllllllllon

90

:104-t71-11113.

21" .,,,.••,
............
. ..........
.....
,
.•,.,,..,,,...... .
lfiiii'IMIIyar~ .

Rid&lt; Pnroon Aucllon c........,,

lull lime IUCiiontet, comple11
eucUon 11rvJce. LlcenaH
IIIII, Ohio a Well VI rain-. :104·

77:1-5785 Or :104-77:1-&amp;447• .

81amoH cot cllampogno color,
m~lo, 1w111 old, 10 good horne.

Pomeroy, Ohio 41718

UY'S

r,

:ft

20 IHOUII A W..k

"BulldY..,..DNaM".

• .ROO(TI.Additions

Call 614-843·542&amp;

..

•

614-112-3410 -

Over.20 ye&amp;rf experience
.. Free Estimates

http://YrWw.ileere.com

•

Um•••one, ·
Gravel, Sind,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

011ot...., a

.

Old Pllno; 11---17.

742·2925

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Qlgllal .lliennostal

'

'

ltiCIIng Creek Rd.

.

HEATING A COOLING
Serving Soulhees1em OH a wv · .,

• •• •

•Small Englnea
•LawnMowe,.
•CiutlnSBM
•Weed Eetera
2 mi. ott Rt. 7

GXBS Riding MoweT

Remodeling

..

~-SollngporiL:I04-

Non·Worklnt Wullor, Oryora,
....., Rofr~teraiOII, Froo1111,
Air Condlllonors, Color T.V.'o,
YCR'o. AIIO Junll C.o. 114-2111-

1,.,

tnq•lro Whh llonaaollllnt For
FuiJalt'

%

..

'
'

Wllnlod 10 bur ultd Mo-111 RH • LPN- m CONI i11n1
llonlo, col 11-..G11101 304- Altlo·TIIIner) II. iMOII . . . II ·
11~-~M~
lent
- .......
lialllty.
Nllldull
_ HHII
...._ Pol
..

'f'CUIIConiMt A Part ....
I

.

.

=·

.•

,,.
... ""'

!fail~.~· I I L+-, ,._
. . . . .111....!~ ......

-.c.. .....

I ....... Mle 21'11. a., 1 . . .
CluiU.......
.

IMI.

I Fanolly Cia- lolo: Thura &amp;
Frl, Ill ,.,_ ..... Cllolllh,

CH-Or .....

l'otM!otJOIL-*

,._. 114 liNT•

'

II

\

,

'

�Pomeroy e Mkiclleport, Ohio.

PffiiJJP
ALDER

NEA Croanrord Pu••le
• n , a1

ACROII

2,..
..·~··· ..,rq
•o...'-WIIIIII

·Colli=~=...

::::::.
t:-.J..

• Un ........

320 liable 'ltoil. .
forS.Ie

-r~

tHS FJeaMoDd 14170 •aaunw 1 . ..ckoim unlurnlohed o\pMIpaymenla Ultimo. 304-451· "*11. Aqe. A:Ltsaaalli. llirlpD..
111, Gala.. provl...d. Wal....
...... .CJarloap Paid, Depaoli
and re.....,.n Required, 131
Flt11 M . RHr, Gollipotlo, 114·

-. · .
:104·

118APYPWIDII ·
. .wAll AM£
, ..... jllrlllme I'

• """"

TMrUia~
T-pll~ P.T.A.

1co1

OccupaUonal
and C.O.T.A.
......... 1 ......... fllll'kldlroc... ....~. far cllftdfen and

.............

~

AI I I I I I - -.gIn

lh6l naeuiPII*IIIUbtlet to
. . F - Fu HauilngA&lt;t
ol1888wl1icll- llllogll
lo -lllo "WWY poelltlia,

llmlla1lonor--.

... , _ color, niNulon.

-

... {lmlllol-. o r origin, or lily U•llloriiO
lllllke ony IUCh poolo,..nco,
Cl" dlllttlilftillllbi.·

...... liT...,

oiii•IOI R-*llo~p­
_...ll'lt.IR'II Pt....... lillY
Include CDm...-..olve benoffl
. ......... _
.... fOUow ...
-~--llv
.My ... llll7. S41bmll relumll
P,O.IIu~7
-~­
1310 &lt;:wiii1Dn-

......_.

S,..:UM. 0No 45771

-9'1-

Thil

news,....._. tMI noc

- -.. tor....,_
wl1icllllln-Oit110

iaw. O u r - . . hlnlll'
~ ltomlld that all ctueli Ql
aclverUied In thll t'lll IPIPI'

n avllllable on 1rt equal

-"'""Yboola.

WANTED: Corllfiod Nurolng A•

......., lui and porl·dmo pool•

IVIIIoblo; ollllhllll. c-ct
.....,,. Rollmlro, 'AN, o\CIInG
DON. Lakin Hoapllli, Lakin, WV.
~4-1711-01110 ElL 121 Mon·Fri.
lam-4prn. Lakin 11 an EEO -

310 Homes for Sale

1tl7 Fille-d 14152, 2 Bed·

• 3
• A

Hey" Grain

. . . . ., . . . - .

8oaa1ll

540 IIIICII!iiiiOUI
M•rchlndiM

YORe SICURITY
SY STII4 IS ALL SET,

Up, 1340/lloib· 2 Bedroomo, 2
Balhl, 'CA, W Hook-Up. t4101·
Mo., Dopooil Requlrod, ll:t-17425311
·.
Downtown Galllpcllo: llodorn 1
Bedroom, All EIIICirlc, Carpolod.
KII:Mn. Elocltlo Hoot I

ea...-.

""~"-···
~ 114-441-1111.

Futnllhod Efllcloncr e1gt11Mci.,
Udlllleo Paid, $han Bolh, eo7
Second A._e, GolllpoNo, e14ue ae u Arr. 7 P.U.
·
Booto By Rldwlng, Chippewa,
Rocky, Tonj Lamo. Guaran1.W
li::I""*-AIShooCIII, qoJ.

,

570

~~ ';)(),TIE~ Of 5lX&lt;f!61~

.' 00~1~~~ 1'::1
. - t&lt;Wc:lt-.16 ~
PEClFl£

----

Fornandea 4 Oiling ben g1111ar.
Par~ 112 bon amp. Fornondeo
hard caoo &amp; 110nd, like now,

It&amp;t

Above Ground Pool With Palla
With 2 Lovol Dock On Back.
Foncod In Bac- Yard, Apptlancol

to riH, 'lllu Pick. W. Pic*,

~oen,

Sgy, NiCe Neighborhood For

Clolod

Sullday'o,

1¥6r'o ...., Pall:h. K8rr ROad,

1411. olU"*"'m blu boa~ lrOIIInt
mo10r,
fl..._, llhp Evlnnu!•·

'

moro. SI,IOO. Coli bltwean 3::10·

«lh

114-JIIIIIM7.

Kido, 814·448-7307 o\ller 4:30
P.M. For Appoinlmenl

~..

1Dpm. 30M75o-4CDI.

1 1v! 'dOLf'

1171 Baja 18 Fl . 414 ChtvJ,
Allem~d.

210

riA ' •CI Al.

BullneU
Opporlunhy

,,

31111adaalblw
37...... . . . . .
• eomton

1 WWI2 -La Douce

42 ...._(Fr.l

4 CIMMt

a buya
,..., ....

...
te

36

Allpau

RENTALS

Cludad. Runa &amp; looka

;ra~t.

.,

1188 Rineer 373V 18' 12 -2•v
Trolling Motor, 110 XP Evlnrudo
Oull&gt;oanl, ••100, 114-9112·2710.:
1181 21' pontoon Panr Barta
With - •· 110 hp. Evlnn~de. 8114I
',
23' 1010 Cull)' Cabin. 15800, ~
boat caU14-IIII2·7410.
•

-·7GO

Auto Parts "

AccesaorleS

•

had
W:anled the pleasure of rUffing WCII's
heart exit and leading the diamond
queen from hand to pin East's nine.

:

l.

or, En10r101nmon1 Cenlllr, Cill
elol-441-.

LIOihor Low
IIIIHOO
Mull·
SH
ToSpcillr,
AppriCiato

whoolo &amp; rodiiiDro. D I R Aut9,
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3133 or l·

Plano, rolr...,.IOr, plcnle - ·

1111 SolUm SCI. o\u..,..lc, Air,
Clmperl &amp;
:
Crulu, AIIIFII Cllltllt, T'lbnk 790
Motor Hames '
AlliiN. tii.!IIO Cal- I P.ll.
'
(Sorlouo lnqulrloo Onlyl) 114·
1177 Cotclimon Cadel 20' L~ .
-11. '
'
.Bunk HouH lladollllcrow111t,
llt7 Do~t• Stralllo ES, With Mnlllt &amp; AJr, llaopa I, tUGII,
L.._, Filly Equlppld, Mull Sol Cllll4-311-1700
DuiiTo,l.._el_l-1720.
20 Fl. AriiC!IY, (By Air Slream)
1M Canloo.
n.ooo. T.T. Very Llghl, Pull Wllh Any

r.lHi C IIMI!li S f

510

Household

Goods

Moving Slit: lola, LD!relool,
ChUI,

Dir*le Room SullO,-

Phonl No.e14,2!11-1401.

2.0 CltovJ ,_, 114 . .

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
,_mmen~o

1hll1 you do buol·
.... pooplo ,ou k -.....
1101' 10 10n11 monor lhrough lho
!Mil undl )'OU hove lnvootlgalllll

Ouaioar Color .Tv floor ~!~Mol,
2lln. Ni!IW. 11110 Finn. • ·
collonl ~Call...,.,..
1711-IIIL ,.
.

:hoi-• for. ulo. Hordwarol
....dng GoodL 401 llh SL,
,flOW - · wv. :104·112·3544,
.. ... p•

OUNn.~--Rile.
Ekcollenl Conililion,
11210. 1 Ft.

...

...........

Solelllll Dloh e121, 114· •41·

1~.

2SO 'PIO...IIonll
SlrYicH

.

..
=. .··-tic,
... .. =

• crocill. ean11rv111CY? w. can
Ro·EIIIIIIIIII I:Ndll llull
t110 Wooli Ta~e Homo. · 1
Down On Cooh Or Trodo

- ._... ...... -.IIIOdol

- . . . -.tiiOO;an,rrdr Ouallly Far Thlo -

KAATS llo\SONo\RY . • Black,
.....,,_...._30,...1•1·

. 800-21MG211.

n.ooo .....
~~-A Mood A Cor? Nc Orodll,

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

••me

.

Firlandnt-

ND Crodll Tum 0_..1114·441 ·
01107.
•

-.IMI0:114-7Q·JIIK
0111 101 llaa&amp;le Halrlo Trac101 Co\RS FOR.11001 Truckl. bDall,
4-whooloro, inotor homn, fuml-

................

•••••oltore....._ .. ,... ..

, . ....... IIIII ............ -

""•· ............. G0-"'!1 Ole.

TIIIIIIO ......,_ ~i,~~' F,I. 11v Fll, IRS. DEA. -~~~~~ your
lllolor Poiot;. .GIC S,OO:
• " now. CaM 1·100· 511·43d
. _ , ~Pl. HIICIIIIIC EII.'P.Iilll
.
.• 100; Ill~
aon "'2~·•

. . . · · - VN021201
·~
·
IDn'l ..._.........
, oil be-•• ropolro
,dono, 1111 MIINIOI, llfoUme
::.=~':..tnjolo Olpllfi·

FL~IIaioe&lt;

1100; •
...,.
...
._.m'*""
.
- IIIII CliOOIIAIL ·

1- ~ llaltlla t

c,..., I

.,_.~Rulli
......, . . t1•1T

I ,

: '·
v
I

l'l'l*l'l'rl

UNSCI•WI• AIOVi! llriiiS
TO GET ANSWI!I
.

I

E...._

~Size

c.. Cliltpilllly""'

Sf

810

'1 v

d.! S

.......
Imp! VVIIIIIf'lll

-1

I

I·

I

JUNE27 .,

;

lwllllhod. 12.100;114'4!11-2157.

I I

JCIAM.UTS ANSWIU
Canary· Theme • Vying- Gauche - GARAGE
To.really appreciate the enormoua job of cleaning up
the environment, one should try to clean out one's GA-

New 011 tanka, 1 ton truCIIk

••:oo.

Hoillnd
•gen,
t4 IIIIa capaciiJ,
~
~
114

CMtlllitollo
••ltd.aoro,
Mon·Frl.. 7am-lpm, 114·t41·

FuH llrili or IUIO bodt panel•,

pain.. and oupplllll, oloa aln!.
lltlhl aa&amp;lmltly. 01y.. n and' aooIJiono 10n1&lt;1 lied and obiCIIanQOtl,
614-74.2-2712.
(

I

PIINT NUMifi!O LEmiS IN
. THI!Sl SQ!!AHS

I FRIDAY

Coou I Roar Endl, 014·24)!·
5171
'
'

18t!i Chrrlior CkNO. loidod. Y.
e. aulomouc, Nko now COndition,
el3,000 ar boll ollar, 114-841·
2452.
18g5 Monlo Co~o LS AI fll!oor,

..

RAGE.

Tranamialiona. A""' Trana~r

1888 12110 2 bodrocm, 1 bath, Small houoo, qulel, double 'lol,
goad canllldon. 12.100.. No UUol no ,..., •215/mo. $2110 HpoliL
:104-1175-511111 Anydmo. llull bo -771-V1112.

......

1

Bud9o1 Price · Tronomlular(l,
Sllrang at 111.00 and Up, Ulld I
Robulil, All TJPOI, Over 10,080

town'

lWo bedroom hauoo, nice and
1874 Holy Park, 12xe5 wllio ••· c1oan, no lnlldl poll, dopcoillrld
ponllo living room, •4500, 814· rolor•ncao required, l14·8g2.
!1112-3142.

PltOIIASLV A TIRE
C~ OR SOMETJ.41N6

JIINK MAIL! ALL
WE EVER 6ET 15 .
JUNK MAJ.::.L:.;!-"1

'

~~~.

"~

~

1g17 20' Cllallan lnioulbD'ard
170hp.. ltalltr ~ accoooorloo '(n.
...100. 304-1711-4221 .

By Phillip Alder
Before starting this column, I
hunled for a quotation including the
word "combination." The Microsoft
•'
Bookshelf gave this by Sir Walter
Scott: "The heppy combinatiqn or ·
fortuitous circumstances." Also, there . 'Z 8 Y F
OPF
wv YRVLXS ~ NV . ZIY
was a footnote referring to Daniel
Webster, which produced: "Fe¢ul
... v . KN P U U· H D Y
TYPNZ K
KPR
concatenation of circumstances.'' ·
And there was another footnote refNvcv·u, CY VR ZHWY PRA IIRVO
erence, this one to Sydney Smith,
which gave a delighlful observation:
' PTT ZSY BV· MYN. ' APOHA
"Daniel Websier struck
much like
a steam.engine in .trousers."
RHOYP.
Todafs deal was . declared by
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The number of people who will not go 1o 1 111tow ~ .
do not want to see Ia unlimlled.' - Oacar Hammeralein,ll.
John Collings, who has been known '
to act like a steam engine in design·
ef trouse{S. An Englishman with an
incredible !alent for lhe game, he
always seems to .know where the
cards lie.
'
Collings' double was unusual;
two clubs would be the nonnal action
·of choice.
The play in"five clUbs be~ wilh
R A C YN A
a spade to East's jack (a harmless
.falsecard) and a trump to dummy's
king. Declarer ruffed a spade in
hand, drew the last lrump, cashed the ·
E H E MT
heart. ace, ruffed a heart in lhe dummy, ruffed a spade in hand, and ruffed
the heart jack in the dummy.
It was time to broach the dia..........
monds. Collings called for dummy's
...,.G::....;Y..,.:.Vsr-N::..;l--1 ~ To.r~ally appreciate the .
six: 5, 10, jack.
·
If West returns a heart now, declar·L~I....JIL.-.LI....Jf--J
~ enormous
job of cleaning up ' '
·
·
·
·
ttie
environment,
one should try
er le~ms that East staned with eight
, ,,
.-~-H-l!_A...__G_E_C_-. to clean out one's - • - •• -.
poin~S in. spades
and
five poinls in
b-&amp;,:..:.....:1;...:.:.,1,::..~~;....:::..,1,.....~ G Complolll tho chuckle qiiCIIed .,
have the dimnon~
. ~--,.1..
' ...,J.,-L,..J
~Y lUling In tho milling -dt .
L • ..Jl...,.
spade raise.
.
1
you dovolop lrom step No. 3 below.
retumed 'a

If II
·. .------

1884 Bandit illu Boot 50 HP
Morcurr Gorogo Kept, E1coii.W.1
Concftan. 13,000, Btllica•• 2 P.M.
To 5 P.M. ;104-875-5)31.
'•

INOI'ICII

,....

Con•l~r

1183 Rinker 1811. 4cyl 110, 11
prop, will pull wo1or lkltro, rljjlo
.,.... 14.100.--33111.

Shiro Wid! 1 ·2 Olhor Conolnlc·
homo, one bolh, good condition, tton~eu ue 1515.
$3000 OBO, 614-9112-0134.
Small Collage Cion To oawn·
12x60 Good Condition, U .ODO
a.-,..-...... 114·
Col Aller e P.M. 814-448-7321.
4411-1151.

-

t2,000,

Troclll, 814-441--

'*

I

:

Berkley Jol Drlvo. Engine Noodo

-am.

Tlkll care lor elderly paoplt or
t. Ill JID~.CIIII81•7-'2-7tl04..
Will ....,.111, lhrH mnlo wilh
.care. •c•rtm ..., 1n mr hame
.,,.....col81"'*'7147.
·

DOWN

qouw

·M-er'•

1

new ·•••••· uall•r. new lirll•.

• f\ Hf.1 ~1IJF 1 P l I f~:;

Located In Ua~on, 28170 Pilm

12x80 Haes two bedroom mobile

IIWII'd
II OVW -IIIII

me

OF~I~
13lr:.i~ ...

OtiiiiiH: •• lion, Wild. f.rl: Sol

'*'

wlliotlld. Handwman work, wood·

.

Yeael*e•

pet, 2 Car Anached Garage,

on oignl. ~1Ut2S Rick.

"' ,II(), 00, ND...'!'HE 5falf."t:

R ulli

Houot Far Solo By Owner, Roll·
10ro Wtlcomo o\i 4'11. Locollld On
LeGrande Boulovtrd, 3 Bldroom
Hou11, Wldo- Rool, New Cor·

·roafa palnlecl, lawns mo~td,

.

Friday, June rt, 1997 ·

Furnllhod :i Rooma &amp; Bllh, No

320 Mobile Homes
. for Sale

lime lltlng)
21 Rnlllll
30 l!llrd an a

BC,NEABRIDGE

...... All- ,\1111 Dopooll flo.

Harbor Modular Homo. 3br, 2 11!11
bllho, LAlOR camblnod, kltchan,
E-'"ncod child care provider llmily room wllireplaco, 1001100
and mo.,. aiiWO hoi 2 apo • • cornor ioCl!l128 varo... privacy
. biQinnlng Juno 30Dt. Locollld on flncl.
004-713-5241.
. .
Slf 7
Ellllom High School.
Plouo loavo moo11go 11 II 4· 111. Vernon Avo 2br, 168,000.
·1111-&lt;4114. Rolli•- Mloltlo.
Conlrol air &amp; holt full bo-nl.
EIILOrioncod AN' Will Do Privale 304-e 7!&gt;804eiher 4:30.
Duly Homo Hooldo, Hoopilal Or Newly remodolld lhrH
.....,.Homo,e14 1•11151. · ono and 112 boll home In M-.
Geargeo Ptrllblo Sawmill, don1 port, 81 "'11112-3-185 1 Spin.
1tou1 your 1Da1 10 1111 rnllljull coli Pomeroy, Flohor Sirool, 3 BR. 1
-75-1t!i,.
BA. ,_ corpo1. oomo - n g .
Mood o .brook lrpm rour elderly 113,000, call814·821-41150.
ono? I have ono vaconcy Remodtl8d Whitt Frame HOUII
lor on ol... rly parooil, wookly, Appra1. s Miieo Som or Gollpa·
.,......,, pormanonlly. ·304.. 75· 111, 3 Badroom1, t 112 Balhl,
tillS.
Baaemant, Catport. 1 Acre With
Addlllonol Lind Available, Phone
Pro-n•IT- Sorvlco. Slump IU
448 0035
- a l , Froo Elllmatool In·
......... Bldwoll, ()hio, 814·381- Two Story Houoo In Galllpollo,
1141, tlol-387·1010.
Clo11 Ta ShoppiRI!ISchoolo, 3 ·4
Bedrooml. 1.5 Balho, ArtplaCII,
...,.tr•H· window ••unanll LA,
DR, Kitchen, Panlry, Llundry
plua utraa..For all room a. ao:me Room.llid
~·.. 614-441-o852.
........... el+eii2·3Z20.

1111•• lllldorRolurbiohod. llalll

......

rectangles

All .... now wlndowo
a carpal 3 un111 availablo. 0no 3
811, ant 1· 2 BR and ono 1 BR.
Dlpooll and rolor-• roqulrod.
814-821-4111CJ.

add·••

cut down
22 Costa - lal

21

-Round and
round in

IIIOIIW 1 112 llalh, Co', WID -

-

ond ,_.
...lina. . lnoldo and 'ouloldo,
......., 'linrlliclng,
addl·
- · coblnol rofaclnQ or newly
roilltlll. Roforoncoo-Froo Ellf·
-.lmShul304-175-12n

NM'IIa

••

Caunityoldo Apor.....,.o: 2 llod-

llldlopar~

eupontry

Wett

Dbl.

MAW!!

Groclouollvlng. 1 and 2 bodroom
-tmonll 11 VIlla.. Manor and
Rlvorolclo ,\parlmllfltl In lllddlopcn. -From tZII-""4 • Coli 114·
112·1014. Equll Houolng Oppot·

E--

mrtr'wua

11 .._..,..
IIUflbr

· /

0ppo,.,,..,

0No45&amp;11.

14 laq uet

43 Slltglo4 " " ' - I """' Jdn

Dealer: Eut

lleaa&amp;lt

'Firll T1mo Buyorol E·Z Financing.
2 or 3 bedroom, UOOimo. FfH
doilvary &amp; ool up. 1·100·211 ·
15010.

1111 ...... ~ lnlormlllan
To: Holzer Clinic, Human Roll·
- ; 110 . - . . PIU; Qollipolll,
OH 41131-1112 Or Fu To e14•
441-5532. Equoi
e...

I

llllnctlon

11 - Anlflt
20 l!lghlh mo.

VUlnerable: North-South

1RO. Wl/.-1§-.

• 4:110 P.ll...:ao.P.ll. IIDndoy .Ff~
9y o\&lt;14 SoiVrdor 1:00 A.M. •
Naan. RooponolblliHoo lncludt
,..,...,..... RldloiOglc TochnoloIY Procoduroo, Dovoloprnon~ Of
Fllmo, Md Croii·Traln To Por·
form Othllr DuUoo Ao Aoolgnod
a, 1 1 -. Raqulr....ll: !lull
Have Complolod o\ 2 Year AI·
dlologlc Toc:t•llllom Trolnlng .Prooram o\1 o\n o\MA -Approved
sa-t W Be C~~tilllld /EIIglbll
&amp;,Tho MilT.

SI,G ,,

5. i'
.......
_

.... Q •• 6 5

So\VE .....

11-IIAY TICH To Work ParHimo:

BuolnHIII; Docko, Padoo, Tim,
&lt;114·211·8012, John el4·448·
i»s. 221e Eu- Avonue, Lot

,,t.,.j4.)

40 UtadiNiand

6i
• ... J.
e Q 10 2

Oakwood Homeo 11 1110 only
dNior In lht lrl·alalll arn lhll
builds and 111111 lholr own
honiol. Far .....,., dlrocl prohop Oo\KWOOD HOMES, Nl·

.....

C And c Prolouro CINnlna. s,..
c1111Zii10: Houlto. Mobile flomoo.

• 85
6JJ

6 10

i ll'llmll ..,.. E·Z Flnoilo:lng. 2

Or 3 Bedroomo o\ro,und $20'0 2bdrm. apll., 10101 olllcltlc, apllonfl Froo Oolvory &amp; Sol Up, I• pllancn _,,.._,,l.,ndry lllOIII
lodlilfoa. dolo .. acllool· In - llilo-251·!i9)0.
Appllcdont avollablo at Vlllaao
FAC'IORI' OIRECT.
o- ,\pia. .... Dr . . . 114-IIII~3711. EOH.
NO II DOl£ IINI.

6 A K J 10 2
• KQ I 5

•10tl7 2 '
t K J 4 3

14

24 Pro- (lor a. t71'111Wa1an

Eall

Wett
6185

room-. 1 Bath, W••Mr IDrrer, Z Bedroom Carpellld, Wllh Or
CA, 811,1100, 114·317·0111 Or Wllhoul o\ppllancM, llonlh 011·
pool! $1110, Ill Third Mnuo,
11118251.
. . .,

a1e

6 K7 U

-··
a

., . . .,. .,

•~ts-•• ~,.,,.,.,.A_,.,...

ABTRO,QRAPH

.

.

LEO (July 23·AUI. 2'2) Stand yoil today. with her intervention and
solidly behi!MI your decisions today· your 11111bition, you. are likely to
' ..
·if you believe theiri ,to 1111 ~,ght. !'lo acj:Dmpiisb something impressive. ·
. mat~er how diffict~lt they may be to
AQUARIUS (1811. 20-Feb. Ill)
execute,l..ildy
Luck,
w
iD
inlerve~
on
Your
attihlde is exlremely appealing
' BERNICE '
. y.our l!ulhalf, .
, · . ·
. to.ocbcn llldey. You wl!l_!now when
BEDEOSOL
VIROQ (Aug. 23-Sepl: 22) 1bday to be serioua and when to let your .
you could be able to lwvCII the fruill
of humor take charge. .
o~ your laban. If the pi\lkinp ~ .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
c~ceptionally cood: it't bec'•11 1C your Materiai trends 1r11 ·moving in your
hare! work is being acknowle!tged. favor today,· but lhil miaht not be
::,. In the year aJieltd a number ·of
LIBRA(SePt. l~-&lt;~t. 23)AU,ght readily apparent. ·The aains you' ll
, problerN could begin to dissiplle end and friericll~ plheriq, without lbeme, llllke ,could come from unexpecled ·
diaaolve themtelyes oftheinolition. · or ~~- c?Uld I~ · out .super . IQUICel. .
• .
-This willlllher in 811 exciting, event- today. Th11 JJ JUII lllo nahl kind of ··, ARIES (Mirth 21 -Aprill9) New
.: &amp;I periQd you lhould find pleuiiiJ. diversion you need to end the week. plaslind new faces could be yearn·. · ' CANCER (June 21•1uly 22)
SCORPIO' (Oct. p4--NQv. 22) A inaforyoutoday,yetyou!IJ.bemost
. lirie.ids and cowiJrbn· will be 811X, fan\ily projed lhll 11M !*11 I burr ·COZ'} in 11111111•mcilll with olll pals.
. ioul to ~ee you fulftU your purposea under your uddle 1:111 be brouaht to Play it cool and eombiiC both.
~ Even.wt1.a y011 1,.IIQI ;n need cloiure today. The end's iii siibt, 10
TAUR~ (April 20-~ey 20)
':Of ~ ·- - litllht .111 do IOIIIC exttnrodt to coiiclllde it, Coan~titive developmentl won ' I
',._. 10 help you ~~!)'MY· 'l'rylna to
,5AOI1TAIUUS (Nov. 23-D.I:. UIIIIIMI you tQday. You will feel
(1111:11 up 1 biobn romance? The 21)Thlsla,IJOOildlytoNCiploclle sec:uJeillyourlbilitieunilthcrewill
~ Marlnnu•·j;lll belp tor aoc1a1 ollliPim• you've' PI'· be julllflcalion for four reuoning.
;,ou ...... llll'lll w111t to do to llllb ..... duri!lalhliNik. Yoawllbeill
OEMINI(May21-1-20)Busidi. ~wOrk. Mail $2.75 tP •outaoiiiJ1 fun 11100!1- •P, ),0111'- lilA CCIIIIIctl who !lave been fOIIIh tq
'»•h .. . e1o !Ilk ........,.. Nlfl
. '
lelchcouldbemo•uccmibleiOday.
P.O, Io:il 17jl, M!llriJ HiU Slllion.
CAPRICORN &lt;I*· 22-1111· 19) Ia ~ thcy'l~ be quitewann and not .
~ Yodc. NY 10156. ·
· Dillie Fortune could be IIIIIUna on · • ,bbly to .,e,JCC;t you or Your offer.

sense

(CC)

rl :

\i
.

I

,,

�I

fdl•rltJ the R1vcr

Inside

51

ArboJIId

SOme movies just
rlglttfor drln·ins

6111/po~M ~,.

his Pial

.

Hollld

,

• Featured on PIISI• C1

HI: 80a

upfor32nd
•nnuaiRIWr
Rec,.ltlon
Cloudy Sundly,
'ohlnce ol .......

FNI#dl

of"MMnd

Low:eoa
Details on
pagaA2

• 8ai,OP'I , _ , ,..,_ ,..., •

'
'•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.,,

.

~ .

·.

~·'

•

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 29, 1997

Vol. 32 , No. 20

· :~~~:~~~~~:~i~~\~~

Gallia ·.su.·.·per: ·sc. ho.·o.ls shou.·_ld not.·.
·p·.ay h.epr.i._ce for. ut.ility·. de.··.r_e.gulation
.

· '

·

ilclliled studies on the i11ue by the
newly-formed re$earcb...entity, the'

·

t.

.
.
GAWPO~S - With ihe . ~allia County Local industry," he added. "Rather, it is ~ut (11'1!011118 plans
Schools standing to lose $~.7 million per year under a to deregula!e the industry at the envi~ of Ohio's
'" · ...
-.state eJectric u,.11y
.,..n;gu1atlo n proposa1, superintendent school districts."
·
Robert Lanning has ~lied on wra legislators to Oppose
GaUia County LoCal is one of 37 achool districts with
any m~ that does not "hold achools h~less." ·
. power plant facilities or with laiJC IDIOII\'Its of el~c.
· · . J1annmg ._.t · wee~ forwarded letters to State Rep. • value that rely ·heavily on peraonal property taxes paid
Jqhn Carey, R-Well~ton, an~ State Sen. Michael Sl!oe· , 'by clectn~ut~ities to fun~ ~hoot opora_tions;
.
maker, D-Boumevdle, .urging them to address .lost ' . Currently, a sp«iallegislative comliuttee IS consider·
school revenues under the deregulation proposal.
· · ing a .p roJiolil that wciuld reduce the tiSsessmeni rate on
. "The message to 9ur ·1egislators is simple: that · electric utility 'persOnal' pro~y . to ~ · percent, signifischools, ~1Jid n&lt;?t, p~y. the. pr~~ for . .~lectpc utUity ' cantly Cl(dUelll_g·the ill! b~ I~ those 3:7 achool.districts.
deregl!la~n In the·state of ~!no, Lanmng ~ul, · · . , . J:am!m~. ~that ~
IS !0 ensQre t1!11t ~ny. d~reg·:
-''This 11 n~ abOut opposmg plana to deregulate the. . ulapon priiposal ~
ly ' ~ . tlie ilslle of·

C

~~!~!:rii~e~::cyE:!;~~:~~~~

$&lt;:hoot djstricts, the media and the
school funding and "holds schools
public . on tjle potential effects :of
harmless;" He recently _became conchanges in tax poliCy on the state's
public
fiiiiiiCCS.
cerncd when members of the, special
ETPIschool
gathers
data, conducts•
committee indicsted that they may
research . and )lublishes studies
have moved forward with deregulaaddressing how proposed tax policy
lion without addressing impact on
modificstions impact qot only overall
achool revenues, tricking tbe education.segment to a sep- .school funding, but also indi¥idual school districts.
arate acbool funding debate.
ETPI membersbip currently includes 120 individu~
"Given that there is no clear consensus or timetable school districts, as well as several .state organizations,
for solving the complex issue of sclioolfunding, I am , including the Ohio School Boards Association, the
strongly opposed to.the coinmittee handling those issues Buckeye Association of Schoo!Admini~trators, the Ohio
, sePlll'll~ely;J' 4Jinlng sa.id. "If they niove forward with . Education As$ociation, the Sll!)t' Department of .EducB'
'ileregulatiOJI, acliOOls csnnlit ·and ~~not be the losers." . lion &amp;lid others.
; ., , . '.:J&gt;i"i ·.' •·

1

Ohio high court -~·
ruling has.,.major :
financi~l. . i·mpact.~
·on 1~:~81 agencie~
By BRIAN J. REeD

Saturdat~'s

. , }Yiajor Ceague
(J(Ueball results
.

. •Ptlge!lf•

.

where you'.re going;..
MARIE'ITA - This summer,
the Ohio Department of Transportation wants to know where
and wily you're traveling in Ohio;
ami they may stop you briefly to
ask.
·
.
. Like many large organizations
with millions of customers using
its products each year, ODOT
needs feedback from its customers
to make critics! long-\erm tranl,portation decisions and · invest
Ohio taxpayer dollars wisely. Th
obtain feedback, the department
will klcltoff a summer-long su~:Vey
effori to collect information.on the
travel pa,ttems of motorist in Ohio.
:The "Origin-Deslination" Sur•
veys will provide us with impottant data on traffic that will help us
better main.tain and :expand our
tr.nsportation system," ' said
OOOT Director Jerry Wray.
The effort is part of a threeyear, $~.6 million transportation
study ,to a8sisfODOT in. crelllin11·l
new col)lpuler models that
forecast traffic volume, and
improve project planning and air
quality.
·
·The department has been collecting simi!ar data sh1ce 1926. ,

.display •

• JJ 'ulfat•l
15 Sectloas • no.Pqes

,. Calndan

Cleee'Oid•

Comlq
Edllorlal•

Eotertatnmmt

luert

A4

CB

Bl-6 •

: .

rrian ·selling fireworks next·to fire site .

Good Morning
,Todev'e at••••

'

Tlme..S.ntlnet.Staff
.
.•
POMEROY ·A recent decision by the Ohio Supreme Court liaS
had a serious financ.ial.result .for loca.l governments and agencj~
. which receive leyY;fund!ng for their ppe~qns.
-~
The nx'as ;Eastern TMnsmission Corpor11ion, a naturat .~
pipeline transmission company, appealed a stale-mandateil methOd
of assessing val,ue on 'i!s transmi~on lines (or; tax year 1991, ana
the Supreme COurt concurred w1th the, comp~~~y's a~al- Thost
funds must now be refunded using 1996 ~ rates, according to .
Meigs County Auilitg~. Nancy Parker Campl!Cll. ·
. :.
As~ re.
.· pit, S9i;61_".43 .will be refunded •fulm&gt;l.'f.'M .&lt;
e~'tl(:~COW!ty: Mosti ffectcd by the:~•rOII ' ~u 1'1' prop.•
erty oWnert in ihe AlexanaettOCBI' School J:&gt;lltflct,. tiC~I dis;
trl~ tihich serves communities ·in far western.MilijtJCOunty. That
school'sysJem will lose $43,189:42.
·. . .
·
Other agencies affected by the refund are: Meigs l-ocal S~hool
District, $13,320.70; Tri-County Joint Vocational , School,
$4,229.23; Salem Township, $1,284.12; Columbia· Township,
$3,460.28; Meigs County Council on Aging, $1,814.42; Meigs
. County Tuberculosis Board, $907.20; University of Rio Grande,
$1,8}4.32; Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and Devel·
opmental Disabilities; .$5,987.56; Meigs County Health Department, $1,814.41; Meigs County Emergency . Medics! Services,
$5,443.24; Meigs County Commissioners, $7,801.98.
- ·
As with all court decisions, the decision on the Texas Eastern
esse will set a-precedent, which might haye serious financial9Qnsequences for local agencies, Campbell,said.
.
At the heart of the decision is the ruling that Texas Eastern may
use.a "unit-appraisal method" of determining valuation of lhe company's equipment, rather than a method set forth in the Ohio
Revised Code. Under the unit method, TET could determine a sys, teni-wide .valuation and allocste a value for components of the system in each.state.
.
.·
.
TET had used the unit method for every year until199l, when
the Ohio Depar!ment of Taxation applied a newly-enacted method
cs.lled "cost cspitalization," which de.termines true value using a
percentage factor.
·
. ·
. ·
·
·
Now, other · utility companies might also attempt to reclaim
taxes they. feel were paid using an unfair cslculation method,
· Campbell noted, if those companies had been eligible to use the
unit-appraisal method.
TET transports and stores natural gas from producing fields in
. Thxas, Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexi!!Q and transmits it to·cust6mers in the 'Northeast, through several states including Ohio and
West Virginia.
·
·

-A man selliaa ~laf · hi !his !!OUthern Ohio village.
·
. ·Office padlocked t~e ·building.
fiiewoiks next
site of July's fa~ .file· . He is a son of David Prui~t. IWbo operated '' ·' The Sllmmons OJders Pruitt to appear io
works store fire
11111 have the proper pel'll\iL the store '!'here nine s~oppers dii:d aiilll peo- ·Lawren&lt;:c County Municipal Court in Chesa·
· Charges of illtpl possession of exhil'i!or · pie ,.-ere injured July 3. ·
. .
peakc on MoJI!Iay.
fireworks and oAirating as a whol~eJ of ·. Tho State Fire MBI'Shal's office said he d~s
fruit! could ilot be reached Friday. 'There is
· firew~ks were "i'li.ed in Lawrence County not hive a permit'. "I can thl~.of n'ct .circum- no residential or business phone listing for him ·
against Allen Ray~Pruitt, county Prosecutor : stances where he ,.-ould be alloWed to sell fire- · in the SCQttown area.
·
,
'.J.B, Collier Jr. said,
.
'fOrb of uy type," . said Bill Teets,
The charges w~re drawn up becsuse of
. . Pruitt told reporters Thursday t~at ~o ia ~ fo~ the ollice. . ·,1
mCllia interviews Pruitt gave in which he said
selling Class B fir~
· rks (or ·the second year
. State 8IJd county investigators went to the be was in .business, aceording to affidavits.
in a row ·from a 'tc cinderblock 'buildiaa iitc Friday but C:olild not find Pruitt to serve i
Teets Sl!id the Fire Marshal's Office has visnext to.lhe (prmer lo River Fireworks store summons, 'Thets aaid. The Fire Marshal's ited the store several times and found no evi-

~qottQWn tries

t9 .put fatal ·fireworks fire ·behind it

By .K,)HN 11$CARTHY
.
Melody Sparks, postmaster in this village·of
A•eoclllM Prue Wltler
,
about ~0 ~le.
·
·
·
· SCOTI'OWN (AP) -The wooded hoiThe famlliea haven'~ forgotten. The
low '\\'here shoppers ~ streamed throup father of the man cliarged with setting 1the
the Ohio Fireworks Store now sits silent. deadly July l fire ·hasn't fcqotten. And the
Only the shell ofa burned outshop. rem&amp;!ns. law hasn't ftffgo~n.
.
.
But no one in this rural tpwn m Ohl(l'l
Rep. John Carey; a Wcillaton Republican
soutbcrnmOII county csn forget the carnage. whole dillrict includes Scottown; wu the
Nine holiday shoppers in the cramped only state lawmaker to' olm. legislation to
cinderblock store were conlfii1Ded by flames tighten fireworks safety laws. ~Is legislation
as explodiri&amp; fireworb set oft by a ciprette - to require rilore~Clllits, aecurity fiarda llld
spark swept through, the b.uilding. Eleven improve safety "'4:halng on flniworb for
people who managed to eacape were injured, . sale - was
provisions bdt:d iato
as fire and 101oke ,blocked one of the store's the state budp bit .
· ·
.two exits. .
.
.
~t the memories and the lmll of the
''I doJI't know .how you could ever foCJet • young, mentally disabled man whole clpsomething like that i( you werulive when it · relic alle&amp;edly started the fire are foNYer
liapjlened or (lid enough to remember," 1111id part of the tow.n'a ~·
·

amOhf.

·dence.of fireworks sales.
Pruitt, 25; said Thursday he Is selling IQw
explosives, which-are made fQr use in public
displays and cs~ be sold only to licensed buyers and exhibitors.
·_
He said he ha5 a permit from the Bureau .of
Alcohol, Tobacco &amp; Firearm.s. But Teets 5aid .
the ATF issues permits only for storage of such
fireworks, not sale.
~
He said he considered dropping the ~ra­
tion becsuse of last year's fire but said he has
no other income. .
·

"Nobody even mentiotls the word '.fire· before the Fourth of July. They tell cus- ·
woiks' .anymore," said Ervin Napier, who tomers to le.ave lighters and matches in their
owns the' D&amp;N Grocery in the center of cars.
Safety is also on shopPers' minds as tbey
town., "MOil people want to pui it in the ·
browse among the flashing fountains, climb-..
back of their mind."
· · Forty 'miles to tlie west, the owner of ing pandas, laser dragons and magic horse~y Coo's ·11u liken no chinces. As.it has shoes.
"'lbeiC are mostly for young children to ·
at moat Ollio fireworb retailers, the fire has
set off,'~ said Shirley Moore of Vanceburg,
lcfllti mark.
Owner ~cia Cooper spe_nt a re«nl
ContlfiUed on 1111118 A2
·
weeko'nd opening a new SI(ICC in Wheelers- .
bwJ. The 2,1100--square-foot store.is made ot
cinder blocks, wltb a metal roof and metal
shelves.
·
~ ·slo!'e ~~~ eight exits, floocll.ightl and
plenty of room betwec" the ailles. MI.
' Cooper hires aec:urlty guanla during the
atorc:a lri!a1 ICUQn,· !he lut few :~~

•

I ..

~

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