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                  <text>Pa,. 12 • na Daly 11 ntlnal

Readers make plea to suicidal reader to
Ann

_
-Landers

''"· .... ... c..
,_._.

Allll 1 aeden: 'Ibis is ·for
"BiD in Orccon," wbo il conlell)-

plllia&amp; 111icide. 1 Wlllll to Jive him
two leiiODI wby he lhouJd not conaider Ibis lllemalive.
.
Pint of all, 1 tried it. 1swallowed
100 tleepina pills, drove my Clll'
while c:omplctely 0111 of it anc1 aot
U!esle!t for drivi111 under the. influ• ence. I cooild have killed someone. I
live with thiJ thought every day.
Secondly, my husband's ex-wife

Tbundly, ..... 20, 1

Pomi!Of •lllddlapoi'"., Ohio

(they -lllllried 20 )'elll) tecelll·
Delr Aaul IA"'hn: 'Ibis is for
ly mmmjned ·lllicido. It r. beea a "Bill Ill O!ep." who is t0111ider- .
liviJII Pi&amp;l• we. Eva,._ il apy, iDJ suicide.
bilter, pill)' llld belplcu. )'011 c:mMy brodler cnmmittod suicide
not imqiae lbe .,.. onjcicle CM'Tfl six weeks .,0. after a loaJ NllJe
to frieada and fMPily.
witl11k:ohol. He - 30. My molher
Bill, you may 1101 care lbout is illcouolable. She Clll't 111 or
yourself, but otben c.-e allout you • siMp lid 1111' ill alllllr days II tile
-a lot You will Jut lbem terribly. CtiiW!tely. My UMen ancll are devThinp DO cet bet!«. Set small 111 , d. 1118 blame and ,Wit are
'p is for younelf. Live hour by hour lremendoua. Why couldn't we help
or minu1e by minllle. After my sui- him?
cide lllempl, I checked into a hotpiDealb it so final. 1118.children in
tal and am now on modicllion. Life 011r family II'C scared and confused,
is aoocl &amp;~lin. 1ban1t Ood I failed. I · and have niahtmiii'Cs wonderina
am- Alive ancl Well in SICI'IIIICIIIO who will be nexi.lf Bill believes
Dear Sacnmento: Your leatimo- deatll is the answer to his problems,
ny carries more weiaftt lhan any- he's mistaken. Death is the beginthins I !lliahl say. Thank you for· it. ning of everyone else's problems.
Keep Jeldiftl:
1118 pill and sadness never ao

reali~e

away. - l..oaJ bland
Dear AM Landen: I jlllt hid 10
wrile in reapoaw to "Bill ia OreJon," who ~~~ llllicide. I, too, ha"' e~:
the
clellre. It .... .... 10 ,....
since I almoat made tbll• bouible

*'

The feelin&amp; ofhopelestntll it tbe
wont of all. ~who have never
been where Bill ia cannot pollibly
understand how overpowerina
depression can be. I would like to
!ell Bill to han&amp; on. There IS life
·after depression. I know he feels
very much alone in this fi&amp;ht. but
then: - many of 115 wbo have been
where be is now, ancl we truly understand. I wish I could say then: is a
magic ewe, but there isn't. Only

Reds hand
Meta 5-3 loss
on the road

thif1QS get better ·

' del&amp;• feetiM and plol•ee'nftal
time,
help (1ft do it.
l • 10 lhllltlal I clidll't ~
myldf 10 ye~n taO· I have a derful wife and two lOIII whom I
love clelrly. I have el!loYed - .
my older son pt llllrried llld my
yo1111Jer son pow up. I COIIId have
milled all dlil.
I bow !here .-e deys whea Bill
l"eels ~ Clll't JO on, but if be doeln't w111t to continue for himself, he
should do it for his family. They
need him ..It really is worth it. and it
will Jet better. -- Been There in Iowa
De11r Iowa: Thank you on behalf
of all the Bills out then: whose lives
may have been saved bec111se you
lOOk tbe time and ttouble to shale

The. JICin of ,all' I 17?1'
capaftd ia the last four wotdl wiD pt ......." I bopc tWIY penM •
'
~-rq 1sttal-·

•

your life.

a1

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•

Seiad qat ada• to AM Ia• de~;
CnaiOI'II Syeclkate, 5777 W. ~
11n17 Blvd., s.Jte 700, Lol Aq!J511,
Calli. 9G045
.•.

Vol. 47, NO. 40
1 Section, {O Plgee

I •\

Report alleges POWs ---Getting personal-used in drug t«:!sting

BY MIKE SNIDER
But if icons mustliCtas role modUSA TODAY
els, he says, "then MadoMa is no
Baggy shons. The shayed head. icon at Ill or a dysfunctional·icon." .
The wagging tongue. The smile.
Gettina paid millions for movies
Michael Jordan's mannerisms an1 Jim Caney, Arnold Schwarzeneghave become almost as much a part ger and Tom Hanks (who tops tile
of pop culture as Elvis' sneer.
marketing industry's Q rating for
As spans columnists debate tile likeability and n:cognizeability). But
champion Oticap Bulls• standing in · IIIey aren 'I role models like Jordan,
NBA history, pop culture gurus can whose rating compares to Hanks' and
measure Jordan, 33, against such · is No. I among athletes.
timeless icons as Elvis, Babe Ru!h.
Jordan's charisma, character 111d
James Dean and Marilyn Monroe.
aura rival those of Bill Cosby, Robin
'.'There's no question Jordan is a Williams .and Magic Johnson, says
pop icon," says Jack Christ, profes- Henry Schafer ofMarketina Evaluasor of pop culture 11 Ripon (Wis.) lions, tile Manhattan finn that fiiUI'Cs
. College. "I think he is comparable to Q ratinas. "He's biager than just Jl
the Beatles and Elvis."
baskelblll . star. He lransccnds all
F81111 "worship Michael Jordan groups."
with much the same intensity as they
Jordan also lranscends race. Like
worship religious fisures." says Rad- John F. Kenneily and Mlll'tin Luther
ford Univenity spilns sociologist King Jr., "Jordan to me is an icon of
Steve Lerch.
·
reconciliation and aood will every
Pop icons are annointed for what which way," avis! says. "Everythey represent. John Wayne stands for body likes him and nobody seems to
patriotism, and "Mirilyn· Monroe is notice any racial implic&amp;\ions to IllYboth ~~ex 11oddess and earth mother," thins ~ does:"
. ·
.
says lrv Rein, professor of commuUnhke Ah at the heaaht of his
nication studies at Northwesteril Uni- • career. Jordan is non-tlln:atening to
versity.
·
the masses. Unlike Madonna, his
Elvis and the Beatles represented character is beyond reproach (few
youth,; rebelling againsl their elden. fans even cared when the media
Lerch calls Jordan "the perfect made a fuss about his gambling on
embodiment" of mon: conservative aolf.) Media coveraae has added to
values: competitiveness, hard work his legend, but Jordan "has worked
and discipline.
hard to aet where he is," Lerch says.
The icon mantle doesn't fit
Comparing personalities from difMichael Jackson and Madonna, says . fen:nt eras is subjective. "What
Douglas Brinkley, ·author of "The would the Beatles or Elvis have
Majic Bus," 1993's Americana trav- been like if then: had been MTV at
elogue, in which he called Jordan "a the peak of their popularity?" Lerch
black Elvis with wings."
··
ponders. "While Babe Ruth had
"They don't capture the entire endorsements; the limitations of the
country in the way that Elvis andJor- electronic mediaofhisday made him
dan do, .. he says.
much less visible than Jordan ...
Says Christ, "It's no accident that · And dot everyone thinkS Jordan's
Madonna calls herself 'Madonna' and icon status is a slam dunk, Pop icons
hit big with a song about being 'like themselves have become a phenoma virgin' ... She has conseioiiSly tried enon as mlll'ketcrs use them to sell
to build a career out of popular products, says Mark Gottdiener,
iconoaraphy. It has worked to some chainnan of the sociolpgy deptulment
extent: She is rich and famous."
II the University of Buffalo and
author of The Theming of America

the honor roll for the final nine-Wcdri
pading period have been annoonc+t:
Listed on the honor roll wen: Sill.·
dents who made all A's, those whO.
achieved listing on the overall hoftot'
roll by make a arade,of.B or abo~
in all subjects, and those who m .
the academic honor roll ,by gettin••
arade pf B or above in all academic·
Sllbjcc:ts and a grade of no lower lhli·
a C in art, hanclwriting, miiSic aha ·
physical ed~~eation.
:, ;

.

w-··

Velwli118 lltmorlil Hoiplllll Aclmlnlibilw

Scolt LUCII pt lllnlid 3,000 hour MI'VIce plni
to two nilnlbel• ot the holpbl'•
Aux·
lflirr'l\lttlli~ lftliiiOCHI, ~eceJvlng the - a
- · from the r.rt, Abbie Sbilton, cu~ JII'M-

lciMd, llld VInal .... 1Wo allier memblrl . . .
al10 now illglble for ..me. n•cli. ~ lli'li
F.m Grimm, 1 50ofloul' JlllCh llld a 1GO-hour
pin, and SyM• Cook, • SOohour J)ltch.

eachers hear about health
care
'
..

Scott Lucas, administrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital, talked
about heallh care when he addressed
the Meias County Retired Teachers
Association at a luncheon meeting
held recently 11 Trinity Church.
lnlrodiiCed by Maxine Whitehead,
program chairnian, Lucas talked
about the every chanaina pace of the
healtll Clll'e industry. He colllliiCiited
on legislative IICtion, insurance '

issues, the impact of drug companies, property adjacent to the local hospiand the effects on doctors, all creat- tal.
I
ing a necessity for hospital reorganiLucas also disciiSsed home health
zation. He said that the llliance with care and itsc role in the hol!lital's work
the Holzer Medical Center was nec- and the helicopter service which is
essary to maintain a viable local insti- available to Velerans Memorial for
tution.
lransfeirina patients.
Lucas noted that Dr. James WithHe was presented a gift by Whiteerell and Dr. Wilma Mansfield are head on behalf of the group. Twenaffiliates of Holzer. He also disciiSsed ty-two retired teachers were present
plans by the Holzer Medical Cenler for the meeting. Next session will be
to construct a doctors' building on in September.

Endangered sea.turtle returns .to nest

...

.

·

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I Oth Grade: all A'i, Kejli Bailer
Michelle Caldwell, Bi!lee Pool4t""
Joe Weeks; overall, Sleph~i Bellfli;i.':
Chris Buchanan, Brandon Buckley..,.
Jennie Conklin, Jamie Drake, Jetimiah Kehl. Rachael Seth, Jo$1f:
Starcher.
· ,.

-

of turtles were released.
egss i~ kical sand to incubate. Hatch"lt's pn:malllre to say the program lings swim briefly off the island • 9th Grade: all A's, Stephan'...
"""• _
is
finally
bearina
fruit."
before
they
were
captured
and
raised
An endange~ Kemp's Ridley sea
Evans; overall, Jessica Burch ""
The experiment began in 1978.. a yar in .buckets.
.
tunle, raised in captivity and released
Valerie 'Karr, Jessica Marcum, Healli:
Meariwhile, recovery efforts Proffitt, Mike Sobieski, Jennife •
attracting a worldwide audience that .
to the wild in 1987 near Padn: Island
. lllrned to a high seas battle.
National Seashore, Texas, haS sur- included a host of doubters.
"!:
In 1947 there were an estimated ·
Aftci' federal reports said SS,OOO Starcher, Ann Wiggins.
prised skeptics and come home to
160,000 Ke!llp's Ridley sea. turtles turtles 11year died in fishing nets,
nest.
8th Grade: all A's, Jessica Pore::':
worldwide.
But habitat destruction, Con~ passed a law thll! forced
The lllrtle was discovered after
overall,
Matt Bissell, Matt BoyleJi;:
layina 88 ens on Padre Island fishing net deaths, and harvests of sluim~)s to install tllrtle-exclllder Matt Caldwell, Maureen Heines ~
n:cendy.lt bore a 1a1 identifyina it as eggs (used as aphrodisiacs) and tur- devices '(TEDs) on fishing Dets.
Chasatie Hollon, Scott NCeds, Cassk;:
cJ
one released April 21, 1987, as part" ties (for meat and leather) from the
ShriJRI!ers balked. They cl&amp;iin the Rose, Leah Sanders, Josh Will; IIC~
of a 17-ye~r, controvenial experi- nesting sile·ll Playa de Rancho Nuevo, 'Jimulipas, Mexico, drove num- . SSO to· $200 trap-door devices to demic, Josh Broderick, Brooii• •
ment to save the imperiled species.
release · turtles from nets also let Nichols, Andrew Rolfins, Stev&amp;:
"It's exciting for tbe .project bers down to fewer than 1,000.
.-;:
U.S. and Mexican scientists decid- val~ Shrimp out, costinJ them an Weeks, Heather Westfall.
because this is the fll1t doc:umenled
•••
"'
n:lllrMC from 011r effons," says biol- ed to establish a second nesting avera,e $40,000 per vessel yearly.
7th Grade: all A's, Jllli Bailey, JOIIJ,'
colony
in
Texas.
Reseiii'Chers
took
oJist Donna Shaver of tile Niltional
"TBDs are one method of culling Kehl; overall, Amber Baker, J~
Bioloaical Service. "But I'm quite 2,000 turtle eggs a year - 22,S07
between 1978 and 1988- from the · doWII OD accidental (dcl!lhi)•.BIII by Brown, Kristen Chevalier, Cin · .
CllltiOIIS. We need to find mon:."
Ccnler for Marine Conservation's newly protected Rancho Nuevo site. . itself, 'ftl will never save the l\lflle," · Clifford, John Cooke, .Wes Crof!Z
To "imprint" Padn: Island as the :says Deyaun Boudreallxof the Texas Tiffany Hollon,'Joe Taylor; aced~
Tim Eichenbiq says that thousands
ic, Josh Clark. ·
·
· •••
turtles • new home, scientists packed ·shrimp ~iation.
·
.
'

By LINDA KANAMINE
USA TODAY

-

-

three-fOIIrtlls leaspoon ground all- onion
,
I and one-half teaspoon n:plar
spice and one-half teaspoon pepper.
CHERRY SAUCE: In small or reduced sodium chicken-flavoiW
S811CCpan, combine twO-thirds cup bouillon gnnules
cherry jelly, one tablespoon dry
one-half teaspoon dried rosesherry and one teaspoon n:pl11r or mary, aushed
· reduced sodium chicken-flavored
one-fourth cup low fat maraarine
bouillon IJllnules. Cook and stir
In small skillel, cook onion,
until jelly melts. Cool sliahtly, bouillon and rosemary in m~rgarine
Makes about lhree-fOIIrtlls cup.
until onion is tender. Pour over hot
Nutritional analysis per serving: an:en beans. Garnish as desired.
241.0 calories; 8.2 griuns total fat; Refriaerate leftovers.
.
(2.0 anuns saturated (at); 19.3 grams . M_~ lix servin~s.
protein; 21.S grams carbohydralea; Nutrtuona! analysrs per servma;
49 millianuns cholesterol; 305 mil- I 92.7 calorres; 7.7 grams total fat;
ligrama sodium.
( 1.3 gr8ms salllrated fat); 1.5 lralnS
SEASONED GREEN BEANS
proccin; S.B arams carbohydrates; 0
1 pound fresh an:en beans, cooked milliJIAIIII cholesterol (based on
tender-crisp
'
lowfat maraarine ·use); 126 mil. one-fOIIrlh cup finely chopped . ligrams sodium.

McCoy named
outstanding
graduate at OU

I

·The Jlllries of Eastetn Junior
Senior Hiah School students m~11' ·

! f ... '

HeartIand.. -C~cwllln;,;;;.;;UICI~from.;.;;..:;PIIII;.;;;.;...:..8

MICHELLE McCOY

..

!(

12th Grade: all A's, Melis~f
Dempsey, Rebecca .Evans, Jessie&amp;
Karr,llobert Murphy, Nicole Nelson,
Brandi Reeves, Crystal · Summef...
field, Heather Well; overall, Beib '
Arnott, Michael Blll'nell, Beth Bay;·
Gina Blackburn, Jeanie Cline, Debrj
Dillon, Jessica Frederick, Mikf'
LauaJJery, Candy Mays, Jennif~
Mora, Ginger Nuuer, Kyle Ord, Mit ·
ah Otto, Noelle Pickens, Connie';
Pooler, J110n Sheets, Amy Smitil;':
Kelly Spencer, Michelle Vance, Amy~
Yates.
;:!;~:
lith Grade; all A's, Meredi!lt
Crow, Mari~t Fn:cker, Martie Holteit',
Teresa McGnlh, Tnll:i Heines; over.;
all, James Adams 1 Patsy Aeikm·
David Baker, Candace Bllllling, Sher• :
ry Burke, Eric DiUard, Bill Francis;"
Christi Grossnickle, Adam McDaniel;
Amanda Milhoan, Christina MooC
Daniel Otto, .I:.cslie Plll'ker, Mi~
Sll!llpsqni Erin Sexton, Lisa Stethelfl.._
Tracy White.
, .
: -:

35AGonnett Ca,.N•• rprpu

P.omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 21, 1996
•

.,.

Michael Jordan as pop icon

•

•

....,

''

Buckeye 5:

· O.• of the Day (Orillti
llllalowa): 1118 best way to live ia 10
appreciate e8dl Qlintde 11 an ~
pe10ble miracle. Wort II your wodr
IIIII play PI your play. Shed !f111!";
tem. Enjoy your l1111hler. Don t ~
to bonow from tile fulllre. Ace 1ft
the fact that now is the best time I){

'

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1·3-0-2

2-9-27-3G-34

»

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. Pick 4:

~

,

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8-C).(I

spoit. ~ Page 4

:jKitchen refurbishing
-------Pmsawarded~----~ Eastern
"
• ~igt) . h~&gt;nor~:
planned by church groups
' •
• rolls ·po~te~

Plans to refurbish the kitchen of donation of teddy bean wen: delivered to the sberifrs office for their use
Church following another flash flood ancl the use of the emeiJCIICY medical
in ~ay wen: discussed at il recent service.
. meeting of the United Methodist
Membm wen: reminded of kits to
be OJ1)IIe for the festival of Shlring
.Women.
·, Rita Radford, president, had in Sepleinber, and of the need to have
prayer and n:ad the purpose. Then: tuberculosis tests if IIIey are aoina to .
was group' singing and officers' assist II the Meias County Fair fruit
n:pilrts. Pandora CoUins n:polted on stand.
The annual picnic will be held at
cards went during May, Prayer
requests were made and Sharon the home of Frances GoeiJein 11
nooa on July 9. It will be a carry-in
Folmer pve prayer.
dinner
with those atlendina to like
· ABC quilts for sick blbies have
been sent in, it was reponed and a their lawn chairs.

Plck3: '·

who COl 1 shins suicide will aiJ.

YOIIF 1101')'.

the ' Rock Springs United Melllodist

Ohio Lottery .

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri:cans taken prisoner in the Korean
·war may have been used as "labora-·
.tory specimens" in drug tests run by
Soviet and Czech doctors and then
'executed, according to a fonnerly
secret U.S. government report.
T)le number of Americans
·involved was described as "up to several dozen." The report was not
more precise aboot the victims except
to say they were soldiers and pilots.
The dnig experiments allegedly
were done at a Czech-built hospital
in North Korea durin$ the 1950-53
war in which the fonner Soviet
Union ·was a central backer of North
Korea against South Korea and its
U.S. and U.N. allies.
Thousands of U.S. servicemen are
still unaccounted for·from the war.
The report dated ApJil 27, 1992,
. s~id Air Force Intelligence officials
: first learned of the alleged drug-test. ing program . in Sept~mber 199o
. while questioning an · un~entified
U.S. source about Soviet techniques
in interrogating POWs.
"During the Korean War a Sovi• et and Czech drug testing program
utilized American and other ·united
Nations POWs as laboratory specimens." the report said.
''At the conclusion of the testing
program a number of American
.POW.:s wet;e executed / ' ~said . "The
.' . ....
•

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'

individuals were executedJo preclude intelligence report could seriously
public exposure of the irlfonnation." impact ongoing foreign policy activCopies of the report were made ities of the United States governpublic Thursday by Rep. Bob Dor- ment."
'
nan, R-Calif.. at a hearing that
Clapper described the source of
focused on other· issues ipvolving the infonnation as reliable.
Korean War POWs and M!As.
'.'The source was well placed in
In a note attached to the report, Lt. that he personally saw progress
Gen. James R. Clapper .Jr.. then repons on the work in North Korea
director .of the Pentagon's Defense that were forwarded to top leadership .
Intelligence Agency, wrote ihat his in the Czech Central Committee and
agency had extensively investigated Ministry of Defente," he wrote, sugthe information provided by the gesting that the source was Czech.
unidentified source.
· "He remains a very sensitive
/
"lnfonnation uncovered by DIA source," Clapper. wrote. The report
I
indicates that up to 'several dozen' said the source had been a reliable
unwilling participants in this program U.S. agent fo.. more thail20 years and
may have been executed upon its . when he was given a lie detector test
conciiiSion in North Korea," Clal'r'r on the essential elements of his stowrote. ·
.
ry, there was "no deception indicat"The purpose of this program was ed."
to develop comprehensive interrogaSometime in 1991, the DIA's Spetion lechniques involving medical, cial Office for Prisoners of War and
psychological ·. and drug·induced · Missina.in Action was infonned of
behavior mpdificatjon:: he wrote.
what the Air Force had learned about
Clapper's note suggested that the .the drug testing. The DIA called on .
information may not have been the CIA and other intelligence agenshared with Congress.
cies for help in verifying it.
.. lie wrote that while i11.telligence
The fonner Czech. Intelligence
repons concerning American POWs Service provided a report on the mat·
·
normally are distributed to the State ter in March 1992 which did not corPaulette Harrison, Pomeroy, wae the llrat penon to uae the Ohio Bureau of Motor VehlciH ·
Deparmient and other government roborale the specifics of the' drug
new "Gat Persolllll" tlrmllllll at the Melgs _County Llcenae Bureau this - " - The public teragencies and 10 congressional panels, experiments and executions but conmllllll allows motorists to check the IVallablllty of vanity plates and order new Vtlnlty plates
he had shared this orie only with the . finned key elements of the story, such
from the State Motor Vehicle data base. Thll! new program, available at all deputy reglstuat olftcel
top ,two pfficials of the Defense as the existence and location of the
. In the etate, h.. made vanity plltl purchases more convenient, according to Meigs COI!Ijty
Department beca~~ScC ·~the .attached Czeeh and Soviet faciljtieun Nortli""" ,.~Deputy_Reglstrer Sue Jl4alson. The new systi!ER reduces the VVII~ on receiving new plates~
·: -~·-:~·--·· Ko!l'tl
ln1Hff~•.f-8~katoju,a~10·1~,da!t~-; ." , . ·
·
•... , ~"" ., ,- ~·.:

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As.s isted suicide adv.Gcate
present at Ohioan's
death
.

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.Six:Mei·g s residents set to compete
this weekend in ·Spec.ial Olympics .

'

COLUMBUS (AP) -A woman
who became at least the 31st person
to die in tbe presence of Jack
Kevorkian was reclusive and "kind
of difficult to get along with,'' probably because 'of her painful disease,
a neighbor said.
Bette Lou Hamilton, 67, had
syringomyelia, a progressive neurological disease of the spinal cord,
Kevorkian's attorney, Geoffrey
Fieger, said early today.
'Her body ·was taken to Pontiac
Osteopathic Hospital in Pontiac. ·
Mich., arlO: IS p.m. Thursday by ·her ·
friend, Jeanne Bogen, Fieger said.

.

Donn ·Mauger, ·a neighbor .of
Hamilton's in the suburb of Upper
Arlington, said he had known her
since he moved into rhe neighborhood seven or eight years ago.
"We · were not really friel)ds,"
Mauger said. "She was kind of a
recluse, kind of difficult to get along
with .. We never really associated that
mucll,.with her."
'
Haiitilton had ®en consulting ·
with the retired Michigan doctor for
sev~n months, Fieger said. He said
Bogen, Kevorkian and other doctors poisoning, which she administered
herself somewhere in Michigan ,"
were present when Hamilton died.
Fieger
told The Detroit News.
"She died of carbo.n monoxide

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newt .Staff

Beha of Meigs County Special
Olympics.·
Six Meigs County residents will
. Beha noted that all the athletes
be among the more than 3,000 ath· ' will be competing in track and field
letes competing at this weekend's events.
. ;
27th annual Ohio Special Olympics
Michelle Snyder, who capiUred a
State Summer Games at Ohio State silver medal in the long jump at the·
Ultiversity.
'
1995 International Special Olympic
Mary · Jane Curry Of Pomeroy, Games in New Haven. Conn .. is makDavid Kim of Long Bollom, Lisa ing a return trip to the state games.
Montgomery of Racine, Tara Nonnan Meigs coaches Beuy Smith and
of Racine, Marion.Snyder of Racine, Chuck Kinnan will join the athletes
and Michelle Snyder of R'acine will at Ohio State this weekend, accordbe representing Meigs County in the ing to Beha.
field ·o f nearly 3,200 athletes at rhis
The state games will feature comweekend's games. according to Steve

pcthion in 13 spans. More than
16,000 athletes statewide compete in
Special Olympics programs, consisting of 23 sanctioned spans. More
than 70 Meigs athletes compete in
Special Olympics programs each
year, according to Beha.
The athletes competing iii the
state games ar'¥ontinuing a great tradition for Meigs County Special•.
Olympics. The county unified bas-:
ketball squad, composed of vollin- ,
leers and Special Olympians, ca~~;,
turcd the state championship i~
Cleveland this past spring.

'

·Supreme Co1.i'rt upholds waste .distr.i ct separation agreement
'llte Ohio S~me Cowt, in aruling released on Wednesday, ended a legal
baule spanning more than two ytars by the c0unty commissioners of Athens
and Hocking counties against the board of directors of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs-Vinton Solid Waste Management District.
·
The legal dispute, the first of its kind in Ohio courts, centered around the
separation and distribution of funds when Athens and Hocking counties chose
to separate from th original six-county solid waste distric.t th11! included
Athens, Hocking, I allia, Jackson, Meig!l.and Vinton counties.
· Ohio law allowed a "one,time" separalion clause for niember counlies.
In taking this one-tim~ separation option, Athens and Hocking commissioners

a

signed separation agreement that they would receive no more than $SO,OOO
from the G•J-M-V dfstrict. ·
After seeking the contract, Athens and Hocking commissioners later opted to combat the agreement. Upon hearing the case inAprill995, the Founh
District Court of Appeals upheld the June 1993 agreement that Athens/Hocking would receive separation fees not to exceed $50,000.
In an attempt to get the decision overturned, Athens/Hocking officials then
appealed to the Ohio Supreme.Court. In reaching a decision, each of the seven Supreme Coun ~ustices agreed with the Fourth Dirct Court of Appeals,

and the original contract for SSO,OOO will stand.
Lance Wilson, executive director of the G-J-M-V district said "It's nice
to sec such a frivolous lawsuit come 10 an end.
Wilson went on to commenllhatthe G-J-M-V districr currently has a claim
pending in the Jackson County Common Pleas Coun to recover funds expend- .
cd, and other damages, during the legal proceedings in defense against the .
Athens/Hocking commissioners.
·
The G-J-M-V distriCl was represented by Jackson auomeys Bill Cole ·
Richard Lewis and Joe Kirby, with Bill Cole as lead counsel.
'

Planning -· ~nderway
for battle re-creation·

Two arrested
as DNR probe .
targets region :

Plans 8l'e underway for the annual re-enactment of the Betti¢ of Buffington Island, -sponsored by the :
Meigs County Historical Society, set
for July 26-28 in Poniand.
.
The Civil War encampment will
open to the public the morning of Sat-·
urday. July 27 and demonstrations
present~d that Saturday and
Sunday.
The event commemorates the Battle of Buffington Island which took
place on July 19, 1863.ln that battle,
the only Civil War engagement
foughl on Ohio soil, ConJederate
raider den. John Hunt Morgan and
his 2,000 troOps were , r011ted by a
Union force· consispng of approxi:
mately 8,000 soldilli'S and l'ln boats.
Re~nactors are expected to begin
se«ina up camp on July 26, but no.
demonstrutions or programs are
planned for tllat day. .
·The Fain: .Winds, ·period strolling
musicians, will pn:Sent a proanun

ZANESVILLE (AP) - A 15- :
month undercover investigation into :
illegal hunting has turned up more •
than 300 violations and resulted in at :
least two arrests, the Ohio Division of :
Wildlife said.
:
Wildlife officers on thursday :
served arrest 8!\d search warrants •
throughout the state, mainly in southeast Ohio.
·
1lte division said it had docu'
mcnted that more than I00 wild ;
turkeys. between 60 and 75 white- ;
tailed deer and an unspecified num- l
ber of hawks were poached, mostly :
m Morgan and Muskingum counti~s
and in West Virginia. ·
:
During the serving of the war- •
rants, wil~life officers sei~ guns, a '
motor veh1cle and an all-terrain vehi-. •
cle believed to have been used by the . ;
"leged poachers.
:
Search warrants wen: served PI ~
five
residences
in
the ;
McConnelsville-Malta IIU. I wd ~
(Continued on Pagi 3)
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will

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Saturday at 12:30 p.m., followed by
a children's program at 2:30 p.m.
Dignitaries will be introduced at I
p.m. with a special lecturer planned
at I :30 p.m. . ·
The Saxton's Gamet Band, considered one of the most authentic
Civil War-era bands in the ll.S., will
be providing music for the weekend
event, including music for the Ci vii
War . re-enactors ball Saturday
evenmg.
The. Saxton's Cornet Band is made
up of.professional musicians and provided authentic Confederate music
for the movie "Gettysburg." Special
concerts by the band will be held at
3 p.m. Saturday anll at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday, with mini-concens thrOII&amp;hout both days.
Special events and de~~Jonstra­
tions will be taking place both days
in tile replica of "Old Ponland" busi~s. schools arid stores n:minis(Conttnued on Pigl3) ·

.

BATTLEFIELD REMEMBRANCE ...:. Thi
.,nUll Biltlt of Bulllngllin lilind oba~
will bi July 21-21 at Poitland and lnc:ludti .,.n.
od mualc, dilnonabidkMi ll1d 1 battle .... .

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~

-ctment. David Gloeckner of Portllnd,
above, dlecuued the bittle with lfiKII!lora
prior to lalt year'&amp; everit. (Sentlnll file ()!lolo)

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!Commentary

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Page2

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F~.~-2~,1111

UHIO W'c.ttllr:r
Saturday, June 22

The Daily Sentinel . FDIC muzzles Katsanos for his testimony

•

bued on his c'onversalions wjth which he temponrily tel\ in 1989 to spcc!Kle ofrelegaling this sil-figtUe,
anclllohlll...,...ln
fl:pcdal).': .
handle the preu fieniy surroundinc senior c~~cer executive -- who fteldthe SelL t.ilout. After six yean of ed up to 300 press calls a day 11 the
WASHINGTON
-Some
aowmK••
101
added:
"~Kinder)
111 Court St, Pomerqy, Ohio
..
so
iiiSIM:Ied
me
to
cat1
Lisa
Capu10
soning through the debacle of the KTC -- has rankled agency veterans,
ment
officials
may
face
leJal
trouble
614-982·2156 • Fu: 9112·2157
1980s, the KTC closed its doors last It's unprecedented for the No. 2 comfor allegedly lying about Whitewater.
. But Steve Katsanos' problem appears • By Jack Anderson year, which forctd the FDIC to munications official 10 he muzzled
absoril more than 2,300 former and DWJinalized.
· to be that he told the truth.
K•tSBNl" learned of his fate front
Katsanos had a cameo role in the
employees.
snd
•
FDIC
Chairman
Ricki
Helfer
Leslie
Woolley, one of Helfer's top
'
Whitewater
investi~
as
the
forA Gannett Co. Newspaper
made it known through a top deputy deputies who oversees communicamer chief spokesman for the Resoluthat
Katsanos' splashy Whitewater tions. Woolley· invited Katsanos to
tion
Trust
Corp.
The
spotlight
was
ROBERT L. WINGm
thrown on this career civil servant (Mrs. Clinton's pres511ecretary) at the testimony would be a cosdy career her office for a get-acquainted chat
Publisher
when he testified in August 1994 White House to discuss (Washington, move. Although he cams $122,000 as· late last year.
•
about Clinton administration effons Post reponer) Sue Schmidf's interest deputy director of the FDJC's office
After some cordial sm~l talk.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
to undermine the independence of the in Hillary Clinton. She gave me of corporate communications -- and
according
10 sources, Woolley laid
Controller
General Manager
RTC, which was probing Madison Caputo's phone number and said it over the . last decade has received down the law. ·
Guaranty Savings &amp; Loan. The would be good to keep her numerous citations and cash awards
"It's going to be better for you if
Arkansas thrift was owned by Jim infonncd."
·
-- Katsanos was given Orders not to 'your . name doesn't appear in the
.and Susan McDougal, recently conKatsanos, whose veracity was talk to the press abou{ FDIC bosincss, . newspaper and if you lay tow,'.' she
victed former business panners of never question~. not only complied and if necessary, to refer calls to a told Katsi10os. "Every time (Helfer)
Bill and Hillary Clinton.
but later confessed to fearing reJ?risals junior member ofhis office. He'was . sees your name, it reminds her that
'JYpical of Katsanos' testimony if he didn 'I. When the Senate Bank- also stripPed of Jtis staff and super- you wete invotyed in the whole
was his recollection of an October ing .Committee began investigating visory functions.
. ,
Whitewater ma11er." She •.offered
In the meantime, a new White soine advice: "Stay out of sight, keep
1993 call from Treasury's assistant Madison's collapse in 1994, Sen.
secretary for public affairs, Joan Raben Bennett, R-Utah, began by Hou~-approved spokesman was giv- your head down and te.l her get used
Logue-Kiflder, who "wanted a 'heads telling Katsanos: 'Tm going to make en the job of communicatipns direc- to you being around."
tor. ·
·
.
up' on reponers' queries c\)nceming , you the star for a little while." ·
That may never happen. Whitethe
Rose
Law
Finn
and
Hillary
Clin·
Nearly
two
yean
later,
Katsanos
is
Katsanos
has
been
assigned
most- water was apparently a personal trauwasn't letter read at mee!ing?
ly menial work. including walking ma for Helfer. Her nominatilm· to
ton, but suggested they not be iden- less a star than a•niarked man.
He is back at his old job at the press releases down to. the reading head the FDIC was held hostage to .
· ' I recendy submitted a teuer of res- installed. I was promised. over and tified in the Early Bird (a daily sumignation as downtown beautification over they.would be put in the ground. mary of stories Katsanos anticipated Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., room and staning a cllf&gt; file . The Whitewa,ter politics for some' I I
- l!oordinator for Pomeroy's revitaliza- AI the last meeting on the parking lot,
mcn.ths by Sens. Alfonse D' Amato,
• lion program to 1tte pomeroy Mer- John Musser was there and he even
R-N.Y., and Lauch Faircloth, R' 'chants Association requesting that it told the person the village had all the
N.C., because of her friendship with
· ·be re&amp;4 at the meeting.
wire, pipe, cl)nduit, etc. ready. I was
the Clintons. They argued that she
· · · Why wasn't il?
told they would be put in that day, but
was too close to the Clintons" to
.. To the president, I can only say • I checked for weeks and nothing.
objectively handle any FDIC inves- shame on yoil for not reading my
I was given no funding fo~ the
tigation of Madison. Helfer relucHAT~ED ARE~
letter at the meeting.
,
project and I asked for nothin·g in
tantly recusell herself from maners
· ' · In my opinion it only served to return.
involving the first family.
prove a point about what.! conceive,
I just sincerely wanted to sec the
That recusal has forced Helfer to
as a town click. Sweep it under the town look beautiful. Not just for me.
. avoid all contact with the White
, tug iike everything else. You know for you, for the w~ole community, I
· House. And that lack of interaciion
'sometime~ it's better to shake the rug ' would have thought the people who
has caused her to feel a "big loss,"
out and start with a clean one. I told gave me the position would have
Woolley told Katsanos.
the situation jn the leiter exactly like said, "O.K. here's a·large project, this
'
Woolley denies ever raising·
.
it is and I can give you a list ofa hun- lady says she will do and complete
Whitewater in that conversation. She
dred people who feel the same way I · and we know she will, so let's gel on .
said her aim was to draw a distinction
. , do.
with the other things that need.to~
between the FDIC and the political: .. ' I'm not a h.ot head who's jusltry- done.
1
ly tarnished RI'C, with which Katsanos had become associated in the
. ing to stir things up. 1just want it told ow'n dhoonm't bbeu.1iev~_ inwbtocwouin gd hayovuer [
1
,tlke it is. 1 wish I had· written down
"''
media. She said Katsanos is allowed
' the names of talented people who made a huge difference that everyone ·
let take press calls on leftover RTC
have wanied to contribute 10 the com- could have ~n proud of.
business.
'
muility, only to be knocked off their
One thing I stated in the leuer to
Katsano~ told us· he :•prefers to
. .. t'eet, told "no, you can't do that, it the Merchants Association, and I
avoid reflecting on my ·current
won't work." No wonder everyone want to state it again, - the saddest
duties." . · ·
· "gives up. ' ,
·
thing of all is that many of you do not
Jack Anderson and Michael
'I cenainly did not like the state- even know you are the way you
Binstein are writers for United
ment to tHe effect that the position I Why is it so hard for you to let go and
· Feature Syndicate, IDe.
·
had was dropped · for now because ·tet others do what they can do for tl!e
1!.f0gress is not at a point where beau- community?
rification can be done. PleaSe give me
I would like to thank Harry Lef'
a. break. The whole beautification tle, Bob's .Market, Larry Circle, Jeff
· f!roject I've worked hard on for Thornton, Dave Bumgardner, Fenton
· months could already be done if there Taylor, teacher, Mr. Eblin and the
had been more cooperation.
welding class at Meigs High School
• . I had already gathered all the sup- _who were willing to help o,ut, the By WIIUam A. Ru.her
ofllln .
But the Chinese government, having be under the control of top Chinese
. plies I needed for the project and my Rev. Roland Wildman, Kevin Joseph
What could the Chinese CommuEarly
in
the
administration
Secretlouted American law, proceeded io political officials, and Polytechnolo, husband, John, volunteered to pay for of Pinsburgh, Pil. and . Jo Ann
· d d
tha
: having the rest done, also paying for VanKirk of Charleston, W. Va. for ntsts 0 • 0 you suppose, 1 Presi-. tary ·of State. Christopher made an insult'our intelligence by asserting it .gies, a smaller outfit run by Deng
·
dent (;:tintop would recognizo.as an official trip to Beijing to discuss var- "didn't know" about the sale. Mr. Xiaoping's son-in~law.
the eight foot cement walkways and cash donations. I used the money for insult? Shon of the Chinese ambasChristopher pronounced himself
Did the United States protest? Did
all the treated lumber needed for the red geraniums, vines and din in sador barging into the Oval · Office .
greatly relieved.
Mr. Clinton warn sternly that such
and hitlt'ng ht'm over the head V!t.lh a · William A.
overhead trellis, @lid getting the brick the large stone planter.
The
piracy
of
Americans'
"intelconduct
by powerful figures in the
A special thanks for all the cards, baseball bat, I can't think of (Uiything.
f planters bui II. ·
l~tual propeny"-- videotapes, com- .regime would not be tolerated? Are
; The hold up was the two trenches leuers and phone calls from all the . •Although Mr. Clinton gave Pres- ious problems with the Communist puter software and the like -- has ;you kidding? Slate Department
; fn front and behind the trees for the people who believed in me and my · ident Bush unshined hell during .the besses there. At the time Beijing was reached such a crescendo in China spokesman Nic'hotas Bums dismissed
! underground electric and water ideas. Believe me you weren't.any- 1992 aunpaign for gran!ing the Peo- · particularly ann!!yed at Washington . that eftimates put the tOial take at $2 the whole affair as "a law enforce; hookups. All we asked for was stakes more disappointed than I am.
pte's Republic . of China Most about S\)mething or other, and· the, billion. The Clinton administration, ment matter, a judicial mauer. I don't
Sincerely Favored Nation trading status despite regime.tooli'it out on Mr. Christopher.. unable to. ignore this, has been · see," he said sootfiingly, "why this
: put in the ground showing point to
~ppinl where they Wl!nted them
SIU'Ilh Fisher its appalling record on human rights, The matter was hushed up, and the . protesting noisily to Beijing. But needs to complicate U.S.-China relaand pledged ·that he would "link" exact nature of the humiliations when the CIA quiedy told ad~nis- ti.ons at all." '
MFN status to improvements in Chi-_ inflicted on him has never been tration offi~ials that companies conThe Oriental obsession with
na's human rights ·record if elected, revealed, or their existence even trolled by the children o.f cenain high "face" is notorious. A personal
Mr. CliniOn did no such thing. Instead admitted. But you can dniw your own' Chinese 'Officials . were deepJy humiliation is taken far more senhe yielded to the business interests conclusions from the f~t that Mr. involved in. the thefts, Mr. Clinton ously in the Far East than events with
that were .hungry for trade, and -- Christopher; who recendy celebrated and his t!ides simply ignored the far greater consequences in the real
after much biting of his lower lip -- his 20th vlsillo Damascus to negoti- information, rather than risk humili- world. What, then, must the bosses in
granted China MFN status even. ate with Hafez Assad, and is always ating the-parents. .
Beijing think of Bill Clinton and War!bough itS human rights performance off on some overseas mission or othNo wonder, then, that Beijing . ren Christop~r? And how do you
had, if anything,.actually worsened. er, ~never again set 'foot in China. remained ..calm when the Justice suppose they are planning to handle
That was l!PJ!arently taken by
i
More tecendy, the CIA reported Deparunent last month arrested sev- , them in the future? We·Will pay dearElf WALTER R. MEARS
.
Beijing "'i one early clue (there have that a company owned by the· Chi· era! Chinese for smuggling 2,000 · ty for these blunders.
/ AP Special Corresponden1
.
· since been pl~ncy of others) that Mr.
.nese government had sold equipment automatic weapons iniO the United · . William A. Rusher Is a Dlsdn·
• WASHINGTON-As a presidential campaign;s.sue, tobacco and smokClinton's bark bears no noticeable relating to nuclear weapons ' to Pak- States. A San Francisco grand jury guisbed Fellow of the .Claremoat
ing may warrant a warning label like the ones required on cigarette pack~lation to his bite. As a result, they
istan-- an action wbich, under U.S. specifically laid .the operation at the IIIStitute for the Study ol Statesages for the past three decades.
.
have
made
it
a
practice
to
insult
him
non-prOliferation law, requires the door of China Nonh Industries Corp. manshlp 1111d Political PbDosopby.
·, It could caution that both Democrats and Republicans receive political
whenever
they
feel
like
it,
.
which
is
imposition of .economic penalties. · (Norinco), huge company known 10,
contributions from the IObaccoindustry, and that neither cait avoid the strains
.' .
tllet go with theo habit. · ·
•
Even with President Clinton challenging the industry in,his drive against
smoking by young Americans, there have been assurances from the ndmin~
iktration that tighter regulation In this country wouldn't hamper tbbi;cco
exports.
There have been divided messages from the federal government through . By George R. Ptagenz'·:
of the growing seasons than to the · paper in one of the, books~·The can- adul.ts live. Everybody, includiqg the
the years since the first surgeon general's repon that cigarette smoking was
If youare Amish, you .will eat stress-producing demands of the didatewbopicksthatbookisthenew teen-agers,helpscarefortherelativ'es
a health risk, issued in I964. While one ann of the government warned
heany.
clock.
mil)ister. Some will say this probably when th.ey become ·infirm, They
"'!ainst the habit, another helped tobacco fanllers.
Sue Bender, writing of her expeWhile spending more tin~e in the . works.as well a5 our more time-con- don't go to nursing homes. , , t ·
Indeed, the House voted a week ago, by a two-vote margin, against endrience of living with two Amish famsuming methods. _
.
Explaining hilw the Amisli econipg government-subsidized crop insurance and technical assistance for tobac- ilies, tells of sitting down to breakfast ·
Dismissed once as quaint anacluo-· orny can withstand recessions, !he
&lt;;1 growers. Almost as many Democrats as Republicans voted to continue
one morning.
·
nisms in-a stientifte age -- literally ·. · Journal quotes one creditman'ageras
~~
.
"To my horror,'' she says in her g~n may help auunQ. us to the throwbacks to the horse-and-buggy saying, "They .ride any ·ups 'and
:; "Tobacco has always had a special place in the politics. of America," Rep. ~k: "Plaln and Simple,'' "~ast unhurried earth rhythms and get us to :days -- the Amish are now getting downs because they don't overextend
Richard Durbin, D-111., conceded, as his effon to block that$25 million item
COI!sisted of sugared cereal with a slow our pace,. it is doubtful we will : favorable notices from the Pl!tside themselves and their cost of living is
was rejected.
·dollop of honey (and a few teaspoons · give op our modem conveniences no world.
ais·Jow as it can geL They are·not run· •. II has. and docs. So when Republican Bob Dole s.aid at a tobacco counof sugar added for good measure), mailer what the benetits to our WellA recent froni-page srory ill the ning off every·nighlto buy pilZ.II."
tir campaign stop that smoking is not necessarily iddictive, and that he does store-bought
white bread, sweet being. Still, we might be able to put Walt Street Journal praised the refusal
And don't overlook the role a
$«think the Food and Drug Administration has authority to .resutate tobachomemade jam and Sanka in which to use one idea of the Amish. II is of the Amish to take government sman business sense plays in the s.uc.
c~ Clinton and Vice President AI Gore were quickly oit his case ..
everyone put four or live teaspoons about selecting a new minister for our handouts in the form of such thing) cess of the Amish way of life, we are
· Dole, in Louisville tas.t Thursday, said he did not quarrel with such steps
of ~UJar."
.
churches.
' as farm subsidies and M~d pay- told. "You have some men in the
as closing vending machines to put cigarettes out of the reach of children;
, When the ladies of the neighbor- :--, When the average congregation ments.
Amish community who could rilo
he did not mention the advertising restrictions the president' wants as well.
hood stopped one ~11100,!1 for. a loses a pastor, it can take up to two
"ll!cir cborch is their HMO," said AT&amp;T," says a banker.
'
"But I think.lhe more serious question is whether or nOIIhe FDA has
Ev~rything considered, it mak~
snack, one ordered fried musl! wtth years to lind a new qne. In the inter- the .Jow:nat anicle in .~bins ~w
jurisdiction," he s.aid. The attempt to assen it is not.yet teSo,l:ved.' "To SQJhc
maple \ yrup, another selected slices · ·im the programs of the church may the :&lt;mtsh hav~ an alms fund to you wonder why, in our se.-ch for a
people smoking is addictive," Dole said, "to others, they can ~e it or leave
of app~. boysen~ and c~Jerry pie, • langwsh. The spCedy ~method help out faJI!tltes overwhelmed ·by bener life, .we don't all become
it."
,.
and a third chOse stuffiAg with Jlllvy. avoids such drawbacks. - ·
medical costs. ·
.
Amish.
.' •
Clinton countered in a Saturday ridio talk that "when political 'leaders , . We' might be able to tc:Kh the " Ac~ng to 'Sue Bender's book,
The story also wrote approvingly
· But hold fhe sugar .. and the hoyparrot the tobacco company line" they cater to powerful interests; not 10
Amish a few lessons in healthful ea\· when an Amish church llfieds a min- of the .way the Amish care for their senberry pie.
American families.
~OJ. B~ they cou!&lt;- .each uS~ liv- .ister, all the membr(s pthcr ~some- elderly in their own bomes. Many
Georae Plqenz Ia a sJIICibtecf
The Dole.campaign then issued a statement wrongly quoling Gore.as havtng wtihou! tens.~.
:
. one's. house. They walk single file build a "grandparents' house" adjoin- wdter for Nefr8pliper Enfeloprlle
ing questioned the link between smoking and lung cancer in 1992, when hC'd
. The~ clurunate ~ ~ thetr past a deacon and whisper the name ing the house in which the young Aao,clalion.
•
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actually s.aid that was the tobacco industry position. A partial quortmade it
ltves pnnctpal!y by ~mg wtthout ~f someone they think is qualified.
I
sound otherwise. Dole issued a guarded apology, nolihg that he hadn't made
such modem conventences as the Anyone who gets two votes is a can.
.
'
the s.tatemenl himself.
·
automobile, the telephone· and ltle- didate.
·
Today's.B\fthdan: Cartoonist AI Hirschfeld is 93. Actress Jane Russell,~
vision
and
l:iy
living
close
"!,the
soil.
If
there
are,
say,
five
cllldidates,
EDITOR'S NOTE.,.... Wilber R.-Mean, 1'lct pmhleat iDd ~
is,75. Actress M~urecn ~tapleton_is7.t. ~CI!JI' Bernie Kopett is .63. A¢tor )
The agrarian-based Amish way of five•hymnals are placed on a table. Monte M.-kham ts 6t. Stnger O.C. fllllth ts 60. Actor Ron Ely is 58. ActreS$ !
for'l'lle.U.OCilded ...._, bMa,eported oa WMhlnafw ucludoul pol·
·life is ~ more to the slow pace The deacon hides a blank piece of Mariette ~e)' is 56. Cortiedlan Joe Flahcny is 56. ·, . ,
.· ~
ilie~ ror lllllftlllu JO yean.
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Wehcr 10 11'RSD;
.
forec:.t f01 daytime conditionlllld
Right of way, Vera IIIII Norman
MICH.
,
Weber to TPRSD;
Ri&amp;lll of way, Mae IIIII l'lutine
Donato TPRSD;
•
Carl L.•"Mickey" Cameron, M, 29 Edgemont Drive, Gallipolis ,
Ript of way, Mary L. Scarberry Wednesday, June 19, 1996 in the Estes Park (Colo.) Mcdi&lt;:al Center.
to TPRSD;
Bom May 7, I 93 I in Massilon, son Qt the late Harry and Hazel Jenl[ip
RiJht of way, Charles L. and Lois Cameron,
he relired.in 1986 after 35 years of service as a radiolotY teeiiiJ·
J. Muange to TPR.SD;
cian at Gallipolis Developmental Center.
~ . 83 acres;
Rilht of way, Charles L. and Lois
He was an active member of the First Presbyterian Church of Gal.lipcllt,
•
Deed,
Orland
L.
and
F.
Diana
J.
Muange
to TPRSD;
' IHO.
and a Boy Scout leader, where he was active with Troop 200 f01 more
Slallf to same, Lebanon parcels;
Right of way, Donald E. and two decades. He was a member of the Gallia County Historical Soci.et:y.
Deed, Beulah M. anil Rufus Cline Charles F. Kim to TPRSD;
Surviving are his wife, Kathryn J. Morris Cameron, whom he married
to Raymond and Teresa Cline,
. Right of way. Alan G. and Joan J.
s, 19S4 at Kingston; three sons, Scott Cameron of Logan, le~:~~i:~:'~t
Orange, 4,189 IICICil; ·
Brown to TPRSD;
' .
of Dover, and Marc (Janet) Cameron of Madison. Wis.; and six
Deed, Kenneth and Lois 0. MeEtRight of way, Barney and Betty
dren.
hinny to same, Middlepon lot;
Maynard to TPRSD;
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the First Presbyterian
Deed. James W. and Margie M.
Right of way, Arthur H. Jr. and the Rev. Frank Hayes officiating. Burial wilt he in the Mound Hill
Bartee to Phillip R. Inc! Ann M. Cathy J. Kibble to TPRSD;
tery. Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Cliapel. Gallipolis, from
Lacomb, Olive;
·
Righi of way, Randy H. and Leslie 4 and 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
,
Deed, F. Hannon and Henrietta R. Kidder to TPRSD;
In lieu of tlowers, memorial contributions may be made to. the First~­
O'Brien to Raben Paul and Iris R.
Right of way, William and Vicky byterian Church, 51 State St., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . or Boy Scout TrOfp
W. VA.
Baker, Syracuse, .006 acre;
S. Brookover to TPRSD;
200, in care of Steven P. Theiss,
3752 State Route I 41, Gallipolis, Ohio 456ll .
.
Deed, David D. Coss to Keith and
Right of way, Roger J. and .Rita
Marjorie Collins, Reedsville;
Fonney to TPRSD;
'
, Deed, Thelma Dalton to Curtis
Right of way. Vernon and Helen
Kathy. Dalton, Scipio;
Mitlhone to TPRSD;
••
Deed. Jane A. Rupe to Larry L.
Right of way, Merle and Pamela
Rachel Wilson, 79, of Middlepon, died Thursday June 20, 1996 in PI~·
and Joyce A. Taylor, Rutland tracts; G. Parsons to TPRSD;
ant Valley Hospital.
.
. •'
Deed, James E. and Barbara J.
Risht of way, Roger Barnett and
Born Sept. 29, 1917 in Buffalo, W.Va., she was the daughter of thci l•te
Grueser to Raben D. and Patricia . ·C. Roger Barron to TPRSD;
David Lewis and Cora Jane Steele Runyon. She was a former employe~·of
Williams, Rutland parcels;
Right of way, Elsie G., James E. Imperial Elec.tric in Middlepon, and auended the Laurel Cliff Free
Right of way; Douglas M. and and Mary Oliver to TPRSD;
Methodist Church.
.
Carolyn A. Bissell to Tuppers Plains
· Right of way, Clarence and Carol ..
She is surviv.ed by three sons and daughters- in-law, Carl and. Betty WilRegional Sewer District; .
Bameu to TPRSD;
son of Middleport, Paul and Missie Wilson of Harrisonville, and Charles and
Right of way, Faye Walton to
Right of way, Methel L. Bowen to Yvonne Wilson of Middleport; three daughters and two sons-in-law, Cor11 and
TPRSD;
TPRSD;
.
Larry Lee of Harrisonville, Ida and Frank Martin of Mjddlepon, and Rachel
By The Auoclated Pntu
sunrise Saturday at 6:03 a.m.
Rightofway,BemiceandDanaE.
Right of way, Lawrence and Craig of Hornbeck, La.; one sister, Elsie Bush of Buffalo; 26 grandchildren.
Warm and muggy conditions were
• , Weather forecast:
Hoffman Jr. to TPRSD;
Shirley Balser to TPRSD;
48 great grandchildren and one great-great- granddaughter; and several nieces,
forecast for Ohio tonight. The merTonight...Panly cloudy. Scattered
Right o~ way, Pamela A. Douthitt
Right of way, Lindsey and Eliza- nephews, and cousins.
cury wasn' t expected to get out of the showers and thunderstorms ·north to TPRSD; '
beth Lyon to TPRSD;
She was also preceded in death by her husband. Howard Wilson. in 1983;
60s.
and central. Lows 65 to '70.
Right of way, Beulah Zumbach to
Right of way, Michael E. and one daughter, Benha Louise Soltesz; an infant son, Shirley Lewis Wilson ;
And thunderstorms were possible
Saturday... Panly cloudy. Scattered
Marcia R. Guess to TPRSD;
and two brothers, .Boyd Runyon and Shirley Lewis Runyon.
,
for the nonhem two-thirds of the thunderstorms · north and central. TPRSD;
Right
of
way,
Betty
Lou
Chevalier
Right
of
way,
Phillip
N.
and
Services
will
be
2
p.m.
Sunday
in
the
Fisher
Funeral
Home,
Middleport,·
state, the National Weather Service Highs from.the mid 80s nonhwesUo
to TPRSD;
Sharon M. Boyles to TPRSD;
with the Rev. Pete Trembly officiating. Burial will follow in the Meigs Mejpsaid.
the lower 90s extreme south.
Right of way, Mary Jane Talbott to
Right of way, George A. Hensley ory Gardens, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 '!I'd
It will be hot again on Saturday
Extended forecast:
TPRSD;
to
TPRSD;
7•9 p.m. Saturday.
·
Sunday... Dry. Lows 65 to 70 and
with highs in the 80s and 90s under
Rightof
way,
John
and
Barbara
S.
Right
of
way,
Frank
W.
and
Eliz·
sunny skies. Thunderstorms are pos- highs 85 to 90.
abeth M. Lowd to TPRSD;
. sible in nonhcm Ohio.
Monday ...A cbance of thunder- . Hensley to TPRSD;
Right
of
way,
Florence
Goff
to
Right of way, Roben A. Jr. and
The record-high temperature for storms. Lows 65 to 70 and highs 85
Birchfield reunion
·
:
TPRSD;
·
Virginia
Hunter Maison to TPRSD; Clothing bank ended ·
· this date at .the ·Columbus weather to 90.
The
descendants
of
Sam
a'nd
Right
of
way,
George
and
Louise
Right
of
way,
Jennifer
L.B.
JackEffective immediatefy,the GalliaTuesday...Cooler with a chance of
station was 98 deps in 1988 while
Meigs
Community Action Agency. Melvinia Birchfield will be held. at
Staats
to
TPRSD;
son
to
TPRSD;
the record low was 46 in 1992. Sun- showers ·or thunderstorms. Lows 55
Right of way, Pauline Barr and
Right of way, Jeff and Tabitha wilt no longer operate the free cloth- the Henderson Community Center,
set tonight will .be at 9:04 p.m. and to 65 and highs 65 to 75.
Norma Blake to TPRSD;
Homer to TPRSD; .
.
ing hank in Cheshire. Persons ·wish- June 30. A b~sket dinner will be hc,ld
'
Right of way, Ronald E. Dillon Sr.
Right of way, Ina M. VanMeter to · ing to donate clothing should sel~ct at noon.
•
another ~haritable organization, said Special service ,
toTPRSD;
TPRSD; ·
The Stiversville Word of F~ith
. Right of way, Larry 0 . and Nellie
Right of way, Esther C. Salser to Sid Edwards, executive director.
Church will have Tom Jeffrey as speTPRSD;
The foitowing cases were resolved. Sillis, Cincinnati, speed, costs only; L. Young to TPRSD;
cial speaker at the 7:30 Sundjly
Gloria
Ross,
·Portland,
possession,
Right
of
way,
Forrest
Ward
to
Right
of
way,
Lola
J.
Craft
to
Sinaen coming
last week in the Meigs County ~ourt
$40 plus costs; Lgretta J. McQuaid; TPRSD;
·
TPJtSD;
The Singing Sigrist Family will be evening scrv1cc.
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Right of way, St. Paul Methodist
Right of way, Homer E. and Nan- at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Fined were : Woodrow Hall, Wilkesville, no f~ont license plate,
costs
only;
Travis
A.
Lipscomb,
Church
to
TPRSD;
cy
R. Cole to TPRSD;
Church, Saturday, 7 p.m. The singers
Racine, deception to obtain a danPomeroy,
no
front
license
plate,
costs
Right
of
way,
George
E.
and
Judy
Right
of
way.
Farmers
Bank
&amp;
record and travel around the country
gerous drug, costs, six months jail
Savings Co. to TPRSD;
sharing the gospel.
. suspended, two years probation; Bil- only; Shannon R.·Roush, Middlepon. A. Homer to TPRSD;
left
of
center,
$20
plus
costs;
ChristoRight
of
way,
Virginia
Meeker
to
Right
of
way,
Phillip
W.
and
DebSyracuse water customers are
ly J. VanCooney, Pontand, assault,
pher
Brown,
Gallipolis,
driving
under
TPRSD;
orah
G.
Wiggins
to
TPRSD;
Workshop
asked
to conse..Ve water over tie
costs, six months jail suspended to 30
The
M~igs
County
Genealogi,
c
al
the
intluen~e
'fter
~nderage
con.
,
Right
of
way,
Mary
Jane
T;Jbollto
Right
of
way,
Guy
A.
and
Nora
E.
weekend because of a pump failure
days, five yean probation, restraining ·
·"
· - ·S(l'encer to TPRSD;
Society )Yill hold a wprkshop for on the system.
.J
' ~;order issued: aggravated men'llcing, sumption, $300 (ilus costs, ene year -· ~TPRSD; · ·
Right of way, Norman 0 . and Vera .
Right of way, James R. and Eloise beginning genealogy researchers
Larry Ebcrsbach, president of the .
costs, six months jail suspended to 30 probation, 10 days jail and $300 susTuesday at 7 p.m at the Meigs Coun- Syracuse Board of Public Affah!&lt;,
Smith to TPRSD;
. days, five years probation; obstruct- pended upon completion of residen- . A. Weber to TPRSD;
ty Museum. 4-H members. scouts, requested that consumers cooperate
tiat·
treatment
program;
Right
of
way
•
.
Audrey
Clark
.to
Easement,
Charles,
Maxene,
ing offtcial business, costs, five years
Lois
E.
Shields,
Albany,
speed,
.
TPRSD;
Avery,
Helen
Gocglein,
Patty
Ann
doing
genealogical projects, and any' by not watering lawns or washirtg
probation, three months jail susRight of way, John and Conni~ and Ray R. Pickens to Ohio Power one having questions · regarding cars, or doing other things which ~ne
. pended to 30 days; resisting artest, -$21 plus costs; ¥Oat belt, $25 plus
research are welcome to attend.
,costs;
Gay
a
D.
Tuttle,
Racine,
failure
Rankin
to TPRSD;
.Co., Rutland;
large quantities of water.
',
. costs, three months jail suspen!led to
to
display
valid
registration,
$20
Right
of
way,
Theodore
and
MarEasement,
Anna
bell
and
James
A
.
. 30 days, five years probation;
'
Thomas to OPC, Rutland;
Charles Ritchie Jr.. Racine, reck- plus costs; Donata K. Stewan, Well- jorie Connolly to TPRSD;
Right of way, James C. Triplett
Easement, Walter W. and Sheryl
. tess operation, $250 plus costs; left of ston, speed, $30 plus costs; John A.
L. Roush to OPC, Sutton; ·
center, $100 concurrent. costs; Nels Gillespie, Pomeroy. seat belt, $25 and Stella L. Chevalier to TPRSD;
plus
costs;
Theodore
V.
Coppick.
Right
of
way,
C.
and
Hazel
BamEasement, Joseph Jeffrey and
Pickens, Racine, disorderly, $100
.
v
Portland,
failure
to
display
registrahill
to
TPRSD;
Beth
Brown to OPC, Sutton;
suspended to $25 plus costs, one year
Obituaries are paid announcements arran~ by local lunerat homeo. •.!
Right of way, Caryl K. Reed to
Easement, Charles E. and MarObftuartuerepubHahed • requested to eccommodatethosadellrlng more ,
probation; Candy S. Calaway, tion, $20 plus cosi,S; Michelle Gills
lnformallan thin Ia provided In the iccompanylng Death Notices.
''
Dayton,
speed,
$30
plus
costs;
MarTPRSD;
garet
M.
Yost
to
OPC,.Sutton;
Raci~e. domestic violence, $50 plus
Right ·of way, Lamar and Shirley
Easement, Patrick V. and Jill Johncosts, five days jail suspended, one garet Ratliff, Cheshire, seat hell, $25
plus
costs;
Sarah
Cpokley,
Harrison,
Lyons
to
TPRSD;
son
to OPC, Sulton\
;.
·year probation, restraining order
seat
helt,
$15
plus
costs;
Robert
ColyRight
of
way,
John
and
Connie
Easement;
George
B.
and
Marvel
. issued; Rodney A. Grueser, Racine,
·'·'
D. Anderson to OPC, Sutton;
insecure load, $5 plus costs; Royden er, Burnham, Pa ., . ~d. $30 plus Rankin to TPRSD;
George F. Curry Jr., 41, of Gallipolis, died Tuesd~y.lune 18, 1996 in GalRight of way, Ethel M. Arbaugh to
Easement, Fern D. and Dorothy L.
A. Hawkins, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 costs; John W. Brumson, Minnora,
lia
County.
'1
W.Va.,
speed,
$30
plus
costs.
TPRSD;
Norris
to
OPC,
Sutton;
plus costs; underal!:e consumption,
Born
December
28,
1954
in
Delaware,
Ohio,
son
of
the
late
George•~.
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Eileen
M.
Right
of
way,
Kenneth
R.
and
Easement,
Joseph
A.
Swain
to
costs, three days jail suspended, proCurry Sr., and Yvonne Dennis of Pomeroy, he was a union boilermaker for
OPC, Sutton;
bation, .40 hours community service; Weidner, Cincinnati 1 speed, $100'; Merle C. Griffith to TPRSD;
Right of way, Dora May Calaway
Easement, William and Becky the NTL Local.
,
Van S. Counts, Syracuse, speed, Johnny G. Little, Middlepon. disorA
1973
graduate
of
Kyger
Creek
High
School.
he
attended
Glenville
(W~l
derly
conducl,'$125.
to
TPRSD;
Amberger
toOPC,
Sutton;
$23 plus costs; Doy R. Nitz II, Syra- ·
Right of way, James R. and Joan
Easement, David W. and Mary A. Virginia) State College. He was the President of the Sponsmans Gun Club
cuse,.speed, $23 plus costs; Paul M.
G. Smith to TPRSD;
Findley to OPC, Sutton.
. in Addison, and a memher of the National Ritle Association and the Nll•
Union Boilermakers.
:•
Right of way, Vera and Norman
Surviving are his mother artd stepfather, Yvonne and John Denni s of
Pomeroy; a former wife, Barbara Curry of Gallipolis; a daughter, Tia Leal\il
Curry of Gallipolis; sisters an,d brothers-in-law, Cheryl and Dwight Swi!;)r(Continued from Page 1)
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- plants 52.50-54.00, few $2.00.
er, Dorothy and Thomas Brooks, Freeda Chandler and Carla Deweese, all
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3 1 230-260 lbs. 44.00Units of the Meigs County Emer- Dick Scott, executive adminislrlitor of Cheshire; and several aunts, uncles, nieces·and nephe\\'S.
".
buying points Thursday by the U.S. 51.00:
gency Medical Service recorded 7 of law enforcement for the division.
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by a brother, DanA)'
Sows: fully 50 cents.
Depanmenl of Agriculture Market
calls for assistance Thursday, includDanny
Clemens
of Chapman.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 43.50- ing two transfer calls. Units re~pond- McConnelsville was arrested on I 0
News:
Services will be I p.m. Saturday, June 22, 1996 in the Gravel Hill Ccm.._
Barrows and gilts: fully I .00 tow- 46.00; 500..650 lbs. 45.50:.50.50, few ing included:
'
charges, most of which involve tak- tery in Cheshire, with George's uncle, Carl Swisher, officiating. Burial will
er; demand light io very light on a 51.00. /
POMEROY
ing or attempting to .take deer in a follow. Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home from 6.-9 p.m. Friday,
Boars: 35.00-39.00.
moderate movement.
5:12 p.m:,.Ebenezer.Street, Myr- closed season, Scou said. He has June 2lt 1996.
For the week: barrqw .and gilts tie Colburn, Holzer Medical Center; been released on his own rccog~
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. · 51.50Pallbearers are Victor Vansickie, Tom Brooks, Dean JiViden , Gene Cana53.QO, few 51.00 and 53:50 early; 2.50 and 3.50 lower; sows 2.50 to
9:28 p.m., Union Avenue, Josh nizance.
day, Dave Drummond and Greg George.
3.00 higher.
·
·
Black, Veteran Memorial Hospital.
Donald L. . Lilly, 30, of
Honorary pallbearers will be Larry Johnson, Danny "Panama" Darst, Mark.
MIDDLEPORT
McConnelsville, was arrested on 60 "Short" Curnutte, Dave "Fud" Jividen and Gary Burns.
The
Sentinel
6: 18 p.m., Riverside Apanments, misdemeanor charges of illegal huniShawna Armstrong, VMH;
ing of wild turkey and deer. He was
(USPS 21J.960)
10:47
p.m.,
Overbrook
Center,
released on his own recognizance.
FRI., SAT., SUN.
Publi1hed nery aflmtOOn, Monday through
Am Ele Power ................:......40}.
Aim~ Goodnite, HMC;
Other arrest warran~ are pending,
Pridoy, It I Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
THE
PHANTOM""'" ·
Ohio Vallr:f Publilhina C0f11HU1yf0anneu Co..
Altzo ,....................................... 59
I I :57 p.m., Park Street, Wanda Scoll said.
AND
Pomeroy..Qhio 45769, f'b. 992·21~. Second
Alhllnd 011 ...........................39\
Pauerson, treated at the scene.
He said 2 I people have been
class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
DENNIS QUAID,
The followiJIIIand transfen were
recorded recently in the office of
Mcip CoUnty Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
• .
Deed, Richard W. and Ruby ·
V•Jhan 10 Ruby Rentals Inc.,
Pomaoy ~I;
Dood, JOICph and COra Loftis 10
John .Mil Crystal Hood, .Salisbury,

By .lllokAndlrnn

.2r

Michael.Blnsteln .·

Condit,ions right for hot
forecast through weekend

HE'S BUSV PUTTQI7 OOT

ETHNIC

Meigs announcements :

.

11 0 1 1

Cou. nty court cases e.nd ed

are.

Residents urged::
to limit water use
•

Can the c ·h inese ins.u lt us forever? _ _~

Daily

George R. ·Plagenz,

Stocks

-

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

'

.

..

..

.

-·

.

'

.

.

.

.

,.

.

.

..
"~--.

...

.

Meigs EMS runs

Doth~ Amish ·know more-' a.bout -l.ife?_,;...__

l

•

.
TWo arrested

Today's livestock repf!rf

a

,

•

George F. Curry Jr.

get burned by
:~m·oking . issue

.

•

-Obituaries~

~oth parties could

.

0

..

Rusher

I,

Rachel Wilson

and

-

'

.

..

.

·Why

.

Carl 'Mickey' Cameron

.

Letter to .the editor

ll.

th

Land transfers recorded·

AT&amp;T .....................................62'1.

Member: The AtsociGred Pres-. and the Ohio
New!lplptf AJSOC::iDiion.

POSTMASTE8: Send Dddre:l1 cor'ft!CtionR to
The Daily Sentinel. Ill (:ourt St .. Pomeror.
Ohio45769.

SUIISCRIPriON RATES

a, Carrier or Motel' Reuelt
0.. -

............................:..................... $2.00

O..lolonth.......,........................................ SS.70
0.. v................................................. $104.00

. SINGLE COPY PIIICI!
Dally ........................................... .........35 C.nU
Sublcriben nol dcslrlftl to poy d1e carrier may
tm11 in lld¥ancc dir«l to The Dlily Seetinel
on a three. six or 12 month bui1. Credil wiD be

'&amp;I...

eorri&lt;r- -k.

,!

:

'

•

No aublcriplion by mail permined in mu
where home carrier acrvice i• a..-au~ae.
MAILSUISCRimONS
tnoldeMelpc-Kr
13 ...........,. ......................................SlT.lO
:16 ............, ................................;$S3.Sl
5 2 -.....................................: ........$105.!6

..'' I
t

-~Miflt~

·.

13 ........................:......................t!9.:15
:16 ....................:............................... $56.61 '
52 'lloob...................: ...................... $10P.1l

.

.

i

Bank One ....:.........................34\
Bob Evans ............................14}.
Borg-Warner .........................40}.
Champion Ind.........................19
""'
charm Ing Shop ..................... ""
City Holtllng ..........................23't.
Federal Mogul ......................19 !4
Gannllt .................................70'1.
Goodyear TAR ......................48\
K-mart ......................:............1 ~
Landa End .............................23'"
Limited Inc........................:...21\
Paoplaa Ban!)orp, .................. 2~
Ohio Valley Bank., ................32n
One Vallay........................,..... .34
Rockwell ...:..........""""'"'"';..57
Pram Ftnl ......... "'""'""""'"~'" 14
Royal Dutch1Shell ..............152~
Shoney'• Inc.....................:.....11
Star Bttnk ...........................:..ae'l.
Wandy lnt'1 .........................,,.19't.
Worthington Ind..........." ....Ll11\
a k -~·- tht 10·.MIII
~ toe rapo 1 • •
.=11
a.m.~
provltlld by Atltlll
11
ot ·QaUipolla.- .
~ ·
·
·

. "' . ..

·~· '"'

M. 8rrl·age' ll"censes

The following marriage licenses
. h M .
, ed
were issu recent1y m I e etgs .
County Probate Court of Judge
Roben Buck:
Michael Willis Nolan, 45, Silerman, Teus, and Denise Lynn Shiflet,
43, Vienna, W.Va.; Shaun ·~ichael
the N'cole Farl
Savoy,~. and Hca r 1
ey,
20, both of Long Bouom; Thby Joe
Curtis, 23, Long Bottom, and .Carolyn Sue Webb, 38, JB;Ckson;
. Doyle David Garnes, 4 I. and
Elizabeth Ann Massie, 2S, both of
.
De
Methe
Mtddtepon; Jeremy wayne
l)y, 19, and El)ca Louise Fitzwater,
16,.both of ViniOn; Johii E. Haning,
35, and Debra Ann Rohrig, 38, both
of Carpenter.
Thomas Mtchael Theta, 47, and
She'lt a.Ann LonI· 39, both CJ fD-'
....,.,!'C;
Olenn Bdwardl, 46, Uti Edwtna
Stanley, 34, bolh ofCliiiiOII, W.VL
, , ..,.,

· 'il

..

' .. .

issued summonses so far.

SEAN CONNERY IN

UnderCover wildlife officers staned gathering evidence after turkey

DRAGON HEART ...,
446-1088

hunters and landowners reponed sus· · 1hat poac hing .was occumng,
·
p1ctons
Scott said.
·

underway

Pl~nnirlig

(Continued from Page 1)
,
cent of i 863. ·
. Sunday lll!lming worship services
will be held at "l I on the park lawn,
immediately following ,the Sulon's
Cornel Band conccn. The public is
.-~ atiend
invited and en~•- to
.
The.banle re-cniiCtment will take
place ,Sunday !ll I :30 p.m. and plans
are still in popess for 1 possible cava1ry ride to pocoed lbo -tment.
. Par tnon: infOI'IIIIIion COIIt.ctlbo
"'---'cal ~.._ ...... at
Meip ~ ......,.,
1
P.O.IIoJ 145,1'ullwroy Oblo 4'7~.
or 11 992·3810.
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.The Daily Sentif!_~I

:Spol!ts

Friday, June 21, 1996

·Reds beat Mets 5-3;
·Astros top Dodgers
his fifth of the season, gave the Reds
a 1-0 lead. New York tied it in the
third when losing pitcher Bobby
Jones (6-4) walked and later scored
· when Jose Vizcaino hit into a double
play.
After Cincinnati loaded the bases
in the fourth on a walk, an error by
Mcts shortstop Rey Ordonez and an
intentional walk, Jones then walked
Burba, forcing in a run and putting
the Reds in front for good 2-1.
Greene led off the fif(h with his
. sixth home run, and Cincinnati
scored another run with the help of
Ordonez's second error of the night.
The Mets closed to 4-3 with sin~lc runs in the firth and sixth, the latter coming on Andy Tomberlin's
leadoff homer, before Cincinnati
added its final run in the 'seventh
when Sanders singled, stole sec1md
and score&lt;! on Taubensee's ·single. ·
In other National League games,
Montreal defeated St. Louis 8-3. .
Chicago edged 5an Diego 3-2 and
Houston downell Los Angeles 4-2.
Astros 4, Dodgers 2
Unbeaten Donne Wall outdueled
Hideo Nomo through six innings and
Jeff Bagwell slql(Jo:ed a tiebreak.in~
solo homer in Houston 's victory at
Los Angeles.
Wall (5-0)" allowed two runs on
seven hits and· two walks. Fellow
rookie Billy Wagner worked 2 2/3
innings, striking out seven, before
Todd Jones got the final out for his
15th save.
• ·The Astros, ti~ with St. Louis ror
first. place in the NL Central, have
.won all eight games Wall has start:
.ed this season.
Bagwell 's 21st homer, in lhe
sixth, ·gave Houston a 3-2 lead and
increased his league-leading RBI
total to 71 . Craig Biggio chased
Nomo (8-6) with a le3jloff lriple in
the eighth, then scored on Derek
Bell's sacrifice fly.
Eric' Karros homered for the ·
Dodgers.
··

~Garner

i:

.:··:
I

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'II I

CONGRATULATED - Cincinnati's Bret Boone (right) get1 congratulated by third base coach Marc Bombard lifter the form~r;• 1olo
homer off Bobby Jone1 In the aeeond lniiiJ19 of Thursday iilght'l
National League contest against the host New York Mets, who lost
5-3.,(AP)
Expos 8, Cardinals 3
Henry Rodriguez hit hls 23rd
ho'me, run and Moises Alou and Darrio Fletcher also homered as host
Montreal snapped St. Louis' five- •
game winning streak.
Alou's three-run shot off '!'odd
Slottlemyre (6-5) in a four-run first
inning keyed the E~pos' seventh win
in nine games:
.
Fletcher hit a solo homer in the
fourth, his si~th of the season but
firsl since May II, to give Montreal
a 5- 1 lead, and Rodriguez hila tworun shot in,the fifth for a 7-1 advantage, leaving him one behirid Chicago's Sal)lmy Sosa for the National
League .lead.
·
Kirk Rueter (4-4) allowed three
runs on seven hils in 5.V3 innings to

LOOKING TO GET TWO - As
looks to throw to
to
nail Botton's Mo Vaughn and complete the double play, Cleveland
shortstop Omar Vlzquelleaps to avoiding the sliding John Valentin
win his second straight stjlfl.
after
forcing him out at second base In the first Inning of Thursday
Cubs 3, Padres 2
American League game In Cleveland, where the Indians WOil
night's
Sosa hit his 24th homer, ·a two- .
5-4.
(AP)
run, sixth:inning shot off the seconddeck facade, and Leo Gomez lllso · In AL action,
connected as Chicago handed San
Diego its 16th loss in IS games.
Sosa nearly became the 13th
player to homer into the second deck
at Jack Murphy Stadium.
Gomez hit his 12th homer leading
off the fifth inning to start the Cubs'
scoring. Jaime Navarro (5-7) jlOtthe
Indians in last year's playoffs,
By TOM WITHERS
win.
appeared on their way to ending
AP Sports Writer
Bloop, b~nt and bloop isn't Cleveland's dominance.
'
Both homers were off San
usual
tack
to
victory.
But
It
used
to
be
very
different
fOI'
·
Cleveland's
Diego's Tim Worrell (5-2) as the
against
tho
Boston
Red
Sox
,
everyClemens
againsi'
the
Indians.
He
Padres' losiog streak ~ now five
thing works for the Indian's.
began his career 18-2 against Clevegames - dropped them into last
Kenny Lofton dropped a bloop land, but is now 0-4 ii1 his last nine
place in the NL West.
single into center field in the ninth starts against the Tribe.
•
inning Thursday night, scoring
"Cleveland's a great hitting
said. "They can . ~it
pinch-runner Jeromy Bumitz from team,"
third as tlie Indians dereated the Red
Sox for lhe 13th straight time, 5-4.
Typically, the Indians used the
'protecting himself. What's he suplong
ball to·gel back into the game.
posed to do when a pitch comes
behind his head? Get back in there Trailing 4-3 ·in the eighth, Jim
and give the guy another chance to . Thome hit a game-tying hOmer orr
, Rog~;r Clemens. Then in the ninth,
take his head ofl1"
the Indians used a little finesse to
wi~ their fifth game this season in
their final at-bat.
Paul Silas of Creighton pulled
"It's nice to be able to win a game
trana., Cold air · cond.,
down 1,751 rebounds during his
like that," Cleveland manager Mike
stereo caaa., long bed with Hner,
three-year career.
Hargrove said.
·
sharp.
ONLv•9995
. Tony Pena oper
, ninth with
Jay Hanchan of Washington and
90 GEO STORM 5 .apcl., air cond.,
a bloop double dv
.ne right-field
Lee tried 71 field goals in a. 1951
auMoof, exe. cond...~.......... $5995
line, and pinch-runner Burnitz
game and made 30.
90 FORD FESTIVA 4 cyl., 5 ap.,
· moved to third on Omar Vizquel's
air cond., new tlrn.... Only $2995
sacrifice. Lofton then hit a floater to
.
91 FORD RANGER Long bed,
· In a 1989 baskelball game, Okla- center off Mike Stanton (3'2) that
XLT Pkg., air cond., bed liner.
homa scored 97 points in the first
dropped in front of a diving Lee
atiarp
.................................... $5495
half against U.S. International.
Tinsley.
· Many Cll'l • Trucks • 4x4'a .
"I can.'t even describe the feeling
Vanalo choose from!
When 'Loyola. of California and the pain that I have,'' Boston
defeated U.S. International, 124- manager Kevin .Kennedy" said after
Your Loot Slop Cor Shop
121, in 1989 there were 245 field
his team dropped to 0-10 vs. Clevegoal attempts.
land this season.
Until Thome's homer. the Red
Sox, swept in three games by the

·Tribe gets by Red
Sox; Rangers lose ·

anything to do with it at that poi ln." ·
Gamer said.
"I don't think Mike would have
gone out there if it wasn't for Betle's
action. Mike's being penaliied For
Mark Breland, the well-known
profession;ll fighter, was the
Olympic gold medal winner in rhe
welterweight class in 1984.
The United States won the team
gold medal in Olympic gymnastics
in 1984.
)ack Kelly, father of Grace Kelly, won three Olympic gold medals
in rowing in 1920 - one in single
sculls and 1wo in doubles.
In I899 a committee was formed
to study modifications of bas.ketball
for women.

RIVERSIDE

\

(Mimnda J-4~ 8:05p.m.
8o110n (Eshelman 2-2) al
(Pavlik 9-1), 8 : 1~ p.m.

E11sttm Dh·ision

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Gil

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Thu~w'• scores

Ballimore J, . '"' 2

CLEVELAN

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0· 1) Ul

CUr• )-7),1.0l P~
·
. Kansas Cily (
y 4-l) "
(C, nger 2.0), : . p.m.
ollfornia (A
1-10) 111: MilwiMikee
(M DoMid 6.)~
.m. ' .
r·
fhitolo
1-4). 8: P·lll·
01100 ( inc'hltQ-0) a~ IT.:xu (Hi117~). :.1l p.m.
1 oronlo, (Qup~.llrlll J.J.) n1 Oakland

Bolt.,...
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Satpt·!j~i'
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Tran sa ctions

p.m.

lasltm Dlwlslon
ll: &amp;. teL

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Amukan Ltaauc
the su1pen1ion of
Cleveland Indians OF Alberi Belle from
lhfce glllllts to two. nrkl 1~ 5u~pcn.~ion nr
Milwnukee Brcwen C Mike Malhcny
from five Jr,amtl to lhrcc.

lcs(R. Manincz5·1),10:05p .m.

AL:

Chicngo (Campbell 2-0l ill Son Diegc
p.m

San Francisco oat Atlanta. I:10 p.m.
S1.. Louis til Momreal, I:l Ci p.m.

Redu~cd

1989 BliCK SKYlARK 4c¢., auto., air-""""""~~ ~495'
11986 CHEVY NOVA 4cyl., 5speed, air.._ ..___, ..,5895
1985 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 cyl., 5speed .........................51295:
51895:
1984 CADILLAC
SEVIW Nice...."-""""""____
.
.
1983 OLDS DElTA 88 ROYALE 305. Loaded!..........~--}1095"
1982 OLD$ CUTlASS 305 auto....- -.......... ~ ..........- .... 5695

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Westem D:lvlllon
34 .S34
Colonodo ................ '\6 JJ .m
San fnlncisco ...... .J6 :n .~22
San Dteao .............. 37 36 .S07

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foronro II•~11.Jt 4·2l'at O~kl1•4..
c P11'•ord Oi2J.4:Jlll r.m. ·
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H011110n 4, Lo1 AnJCies 2

T•y•sgames

Pllllbwrah (Darwin 5·6) a1 Florida
{Brown ,_S). 7:05p.m.
St. Louil (Alan Benes 6.4) ot Montreal (Corrruer ]-4), 7:~S p.m.
Colorado (ReynoJO 4-6) Ill Phi llldclpbio (Wilti~~m~ l·l). 7:)5 p.m.
San FranciJcO (Watson 6-7) 1011 AI -

IMIO (Avery 6.6~ 7;40 r..m.
CINCINNATI (So lceld )· I) 01 New
York (Horai~eh 4-4), 7:40p.m.
· Hooaon &lt;Drobek 2-$) at Loo Anaeles
(Candioai H~ 10:05 p.m.
Clri&lt;uo (Catilo Z-9) 01 Son Dic:l•

.

.

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1979 FORD F•l so umD 30's 460., auto......................... 53995
I

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ND'JIIASONAII.I Ollll

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(V...

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FORD RANGER 4cyl., 5speed. NICe..- -...." _ 1495
. .
.
.
)99
1985
FORD.RANGER.414 V-6, sspeed ................""""""' 5 . 51
•
.
.
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CHEVY S10BlAZER 414 V-6, auto........................~.. 2495
DATSUN.4cyl., s~~~............................... ~ 5 1 095
981 CHEVY BWER 305, auto., Silve~oo.......... ... ..........,~995

Thursday's scores
ChiCIOIO J, Sao Dic:'o 2
'
Mon~reaJ 8, S1. LouiJ 3
CINCINNATI l. New Yodt)

'

-

up berore Bunon grounded out to
score Hoover.
After Athens (2-7 &amp; 0-3) scored
its two runs in the fifth. Meiss closed
out the scoring in the ninth. George
led ofT with a bunt sinale, stole second and third and scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Hoover.
Scon George went the distance
for Meigs scattering five hits, striking out seven and walking five. Cleland led Meigs with a double and a
single. Martin and Stailley added two
singles each. George, Wamsley, Burton, Deemer and Merkle each added
a single. Merkle and Hoover each
drove in two runs. ·

.

Bryce Lonas was the sUifler and
loser for Athens pitchinJ only the
first inn ina. Jack Parltins pitched the
final eia:ht innings.

Hoover's single. Joey Mayes led
Mason soina thiee for four ~ith
three RBis. Lane Young was two for
three with a solo home run in the
fifth.
.
Matt Ault was the starter and loser for Meigs with relief help rrom
Jason Mullen and Joe Kirby.
In the nightcap that lasted well
into the night, Meigs scored an
unearned run in the bottom of the
lOth inning to post a 11-10 win. Josh
Merkle hit a bases loaded pop-up
that was dropped by the Mason
pitcher to allow Fred Boggess lo
·score the winning run.
Scott Yonker led Mason with
three hils including a home run and

I=t•&amp;a&amp;lll
Meigs ........... l50-010-002=9-11-3
Athens ............000-020-000=2· 7-2
WP-George
LP-Lonas
In action earlier in the week
Meigs 'and Mason split a double
header. Mason won the first game
behind Chad Ord, who fired a one- ·
hitter to defeat Meigs I5-1.
Ord struck out II and walked
three.
The only Meigs hit came on

a double. Lane Young added uriple
and two singles. David MitChell had
a single and a double.
George led Meigs witn a double
and a single. Deemer had threo sinales and two RB!s. Bouess added
two singles. Joe Kirby had a double.
.Jason King was the losing pitch~r for Mason. pitching the last three ·
innings. Josh Merkle went rhe distance for Meigs. walking seven,
striking out seven and giving up I 0
hits.
Meigs will travel to \Ycllston
Saturday and then to Gallipolis on
Sunday. Both do~bleheaders will
start at I :00.

AL

'

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~

....

.

best season in NBA history.
"As we shook hands around the
room last night," he said at Thurs- ·
day's news conference, "we said,
'Now Chicago can e~hale and enjoy
the championship. When Michael
and Dennis get sign~. we can again
exhale and enjoy what comes up
next year."'
· Jackson refused to say if his contract contains language stipulating
thal the team re-sign Jordan and
Rodman. But the coach did say he
spoke recently with Jordan "for ·
some duration about his intent to

regular-season victories, the ,playoff
triumphs over Miami, New York and
Orlando and the six-game conquest
of Seattle in the NBA Finals.
"I thought it was going to be the
farewell tour this year because·it was
my seventh," said Jackson, a proponent of Zen philosophy who thinks
life cycles last seven years. "But this
team carne together in such a way
that it was impossible to walk
away."

Jackson, 50, has a 414-160 regular-season record. He is 8 l,31, in the
playorrs. His Bulls also won titles in
come back."
·
~
1991, 1992 and 1993.
Both Jordan and Rodman had
His base salary was a middle-ofsaid they wouldn't return unless the-pack $866,000 for the just-comJackson did. Unlike Jackson, they pleted season, but he 'll become the
both have expressed interest in' mul- league's third-highest paid coach in
1996-97. Miami's Pat Riley and
. t.iyear contracts. .
Jackson's one-yeal deal, repon- . New Jersey's John Calipari will
edly for about $2.5 million, "is make $3 million; both also act as
exactly what I wanted." He didn't . their teams' GMs .
"I just hope what I've done is
want· to make a commitment past
raise
the bar for all coaches," Calinext year, when twin sons Ben and
pari said Thursday. ;'I've always said
Charlie graduate from high school.
Besides, he said, " I've always until the coaches are paid like the
said there's a certain amount of time third- or rounh-highest paid player
a coach has to work with this game on the team, it's hard to coach."
Bulls players were excited that
and the stress factor."
Jackson, in fact, thought the sea- Jackson is returning.
"It's great for Phil and it's great
son just ended would be his last. But
for
Chicago," center Bill Wenningthat was before the league-record 72

ton said. "I'm very relieved. I love unique personalities, it's not that
playing for Phil. He makes the game easy. Phil is the best coach in the
fun and he knows how to get the world."
most out of his players.' ~
Jackson and Bulls owner Jerry
Added gbard Ron Harper: "He's Reinsdorf had been elusive in recent
a1 very good coach and a very good
weeks, leading to speculation that the
friend."
coach might not return. During the
Jordan wasn't available for comNBA Finals. Jackson said he'd take
ment Thursday, but last week called a year off if he didn 'tlike the team's
Jackson the Bulls' most valuable · orfer. And as recently· as Thursday
morning, Reinsdorf said he wasn't
asset.
"Phil has been able to mesh all sure what would happen .
But Jackson on Thursday said he
the different personalities and experiment io where we've been success- and Reinsdorf had "agreed to agree"
last month. And Krause said the deal
ful,'' Jordan said.' "People think this
is an easy team to coach. But with a was struck after a very short meetguy like Dennis, who as we all know
ing Wednesday night.
"We sat down, talked for 45 minis very dirferent, and other guys with

J1CIIJ1~~.}~_on-tl· n_ue_d_rr_o_m_P_a_ge_4_)________________________________

utes and left," Krause said . "It was
a relatively easy thing to get done.''

Meigs AHA
to hold llnkfest
on June 27
The Meigs County Division of
the American Heart Association wi II
be holding its annual golf tournament on Thursday, June 27 at the
Meigs County Golf Course.
Golfers are asked to sign up allhc
course or call 992-6312 to register.
Day ofevenl check-in will be held
rrom II a.m. until noon. Lunch will
be provided. A calcutta run by Bill
Nelson will be held from noon until
I p.m. A shotgun start at I p.m. will
stan the blind draw tournament.
Dinner, door prizes and tournament awards for the top three teams
and contests will be held immediately after play. ·
Don Tate Motors, Inc i! the spon-sor · for three hole-in-one prizes
which includes a truck, $10,000
cash and a vacation for two. Kroger
of Pomeroy as the sponsor for the
lunches and dinners provided 10 all
:golfers. In addition various. door
prizes and special10umament prizes
will be awarded tp participants.
For more information, call Becky
Triplett at 992-5485 or ·Sandy
lannarelli at 992-7039.

.the ball hard. Then, they hit it soft Minnesota 7, Detroit 3; Seattle 8, season, and first at home since April
like that and beat you."
Chicago 5; Califof!lia !0, Milwaukee . 28, produced a 3-~ tie in the sixth.
Clemens stnick out eight, includ- - 3; and Toronto .1 , Oakland 0.
But the Tigers couldn't get an out
GRAVELY TRACTOR
· ing Albert Belle ·three times. Selle
on Roberto Kelly 's two-out, basesOrioles 3, Rangers 2
: was scheduled to serve his two-game
Al Baltimore, Bl'ady Anderson loaded grounder in the seventh,
SALES &amp; SERVICE
: ~uspension today as the Indians play moved into a tie for the major-league allowing Paul Molitor to score.
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy; OH.
: 0 . day"nighl ndoubleheader against
The Twins added two runs in the
lead with his 25th home run, and
SPRING 6 SUMMER HOURS
: NewYor~.
David Wells (4-6) earned his first eighth on Ron Coomer's lwo-run
Open Monday-Friday 9:00.5:00
• : Paul Shuey ( 1-1) got his first win in a month.
single and a bases,-loaded walk.
AHA LINKI"EST PRIZE -Some luck golfer can drive away in thh!
: major league "ictory, allowing one
Saturday 9:110-3:00
. Bobby Higginson, batting leadoff
Rafael Palmeiro also homered for
brand
new
truck
In
the
American
Gall
Ass~la.lon
Golf
Tournament,
: hit in two innings of relief.
· the Or-ioles, who defeated Texas for for the first time in his career, homewhich Ia scheduled for Thursday, June 27 at the Meigs County Golf
' : Elsewhere in the American only the second time in J0 games red twice for Detroit. .
Course. Don Tate Motors is sponsoring three hol~in.-one prizes-a
: League, il was Baltimore 3, Texas 2; this season. Anderson and Palmeiro
Frank Rodriguez (6-7) went sev.
new truck, $10,000 or a vacation for two. From left to right are Mike
hit solo shots in the third inning to en innings for the Twins, allowing
Anderaon ot Don Tate, Lol" Profitt ot Kroger and Saul McGuire of
three runs and eight hits. Omar Oligive Baltimore a 3-2 lead.
Don Tate. Kroger is the sponsor tor lunches and the dinners for the
Anderson's homer tied him with vares (3-3) was the loser.
golfers.
Mariners 8, White Sox 5
Cleveland's Albert Belle. He also
Paul Sorrento and Joey Cora
made a key play defensively by
throwing out the potential tying run drove in two tuns apiece and Seattle, playing without Ken Grifrey Jr.
at the plate- in the eighth inning.
The Eastern High School Girls
Wells gave up six hits in 7 113 for only lhe second time this season,
· Jlasketball Camp, ror those entering innings to pick up his first victory .in handed Chicago its sixth straight
; 'grades 7-12 this fall , will "'" from seven starts since May 20. Randy loss.
Sorrento had three hits, including
Monday, June 24 10 Thursday, June Myers worked the ninth ror his 14th
his 12th homer, and COra had three
27 from I to 4 p.m. at Eastern High save.
hits for the visiting Mariners.·
School.
Kevin Oross (7-5) took the loss.
Griffey, injured during WednesThe cost of the camp is $35. Each
Twins 7, Tigers 3
camper will receive a camp T-shin.
Cecil Fielder's first Tiger Stadium day night's game against Toronto
certificate and camp basketball. All homer in I IJ.z months wasn't while fouling off a pitch, had hand
area athletes are welcome to attend. enough to prevent Detroit from los- surgery Thursday. He will be sidelined about a month.
For those anending the EHS ing its fifth straight game.
: camp and also going to North CarFielder's 17th horne run of ·the
: ~I ina, a portiOJI of the $35 camp fee
·' I will
be applied to the UNC-Wilm•
•· mgton camp.
:: ' Deposits should be made out to
·: Eastern's Athletic Boosters and
·· mailed to Joe Bailey at 45690
Ryan Davis; a 1991 gradpate of the NCCAA II championship. In
::Pomeroy Pike; Box 395, Chester,
1996, Davis was named the Most
:-Ohio 45720 or register at the door Alexander High School and a May
graduate of Kentucky Christian Col- Valuable Player of the NCCAA II
.;:before 12:45 p.m. Monday.
' All Eastern girls wishing to par- lege, will spend his summer spread· Natio~al Tournament where the
:· ticipate in next year's program are ing the Christian message playing Knights captured their second
::asked to anend. Many individual basketball with the Sports Ambas- ··~traight national title, dereating Cen::competitions and team play will · sadors, a group of Christian players . tral Bible College of Georgia 86-76.
The Knights finished the season
founded in 1952 to · help spread
-;highlight the camp. ·
The · Baby Sentinel is a Special Section rilled with photographs of
29-6
overall and Davis averaged
:· For further information, please Christianity to other countries.
Davis is the son of Fred and Mary 22.3 points per game and 8.2
::call 949-2045. ·
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
(Woods)
Davis and grandson of rebounds, while again bejng select.•
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 19th issue of The tlaily
Meigs Countians Keith and Dolly ed as a)l-region and all-American
and
rating
among
the
top
10
in
the
Woods.
Sentinal.
Davis, a 6-root-5 senior center, nation in scoring.
Fans who come to watch the
has earned numerous honors
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete the
Spons
Ambassadors,
for
whom
throughout his sports career, receivform below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a $6.00
ing the. Pete Maravich Award for Davis is now a member, are given
•'
·brochures that contain scripture pascharge for each photograph. '(Enclose payment with picture). ·
• Cliffside Golf Course's ·teams Division II. The award is presented sages and the personal testimonies of
to the nations best player in each of
•took second in the super senior divithe athletes. Audience members are
several NCAA divisions.
: sion, rourth in the senior division and
given
the opportun.ity to receive a
Davis also received honors as the
:fifth in the regular division at the
team's Most Valuable for KCC by visit from le&lt;\al missionaries and
;72nd Southeastern Ohio. &lt;lolrers'
scoring
the most points and grabbing study the Bible through a free corIPARENTS'NAME---------1
•Association Tournament .last weekrespondence course.
the
most
rebounds.
Other
accom:end at Fait:greens Country' Club in
The Sports Ambassadors will be
plishments include beif)g named to
,Jackson.
CITY &amp; STATE
in Oklahoma City, Okla. on July 14.
, Marietta's teams won the three tbe 1995 all-region team, 1995 hon- After three days oftraining and play•
orable-mention all-American and
.
·
division till~ .
ing as a team, they will depart for
:CHILD'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE
:
: The super senior division saw 1996 team co-captain.
.
Costa
Rica to play national and pro·
He
led
his
club
to the Division II
:Cliffside's Art Whitman win medalfessional club teams.
;ist honors with a 158. He did it by national championship and was
Davis ellrned degrees in various
selected
as
·the
tournament's
MVP.
:shooting 79s on both days. His club
He also rccevied various Qther subject majors and earning a Bible
Submlu.cl B Y - - - - - - - - - - 1
~umed in a 500, compared with
NCCAA honors as well as scoring degree with atleasi 30 hours of Bible
;Marietta) 493.
his 1,OOOth point at the school. The· doctrine courses. He also earned a
' Cliffside's senior division club
!(nights defeated Asbury College 89- degree in education and can teach
SEND TO:
it~rned in a 622, compared with Fair- 68 this night to improve their record · middle school social studies and
Mreens' 616, Pickaway's 615 'and to 11-5 on Davis's 28-point perforThe Dally Sentinel
maih.
)1arieua's 609.
.
Donations can be mille to Davis'
.
P,O. Box 719 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769• Cliffside's regular division turned . m1111ce.
Davis was the only two-year trip a1 6006 Enlow .Road, Athens,..
in a 937, .compare&lt;i wiih HIJCking siarter and only returning staJter Ohio.
.· BABY Senthiel
)fills' 935, Fairgreens' 914.• Athens'
from ·last year's club which claimed
906 and Marietta's 895.

.

!II
GRIIILY

.

SYSTII

:EHS girls' cage
:camp slated
·to start Monday

.

1

THE DEADLINE HAS BEEN
EXTENDED FOR

Davis to play basketball
with Spotts Ambassadors

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 12

a-ball

l.o• Anaele1 ........ ... 39

..

CLEVEI.ANP(~I· Il. IHl r .o&gt;.
~
New Yock (
1~') at ll-aVEt..IND ITovfim •.\~ 7:05o~m.
J MinneJo~p (AJMJ!rpl lot i) nt Ptfroil

""f;· ~nit: (W;IIIi f1 "

Pinsburgh at Aorida, 4:J ~ p.m.

Houslon (Reynolds 1'1·4) at los Ange·
10 :~

p.m.

CINCINNATI nl New York . R:O!'i

Sunday's games

StLouis ................ 3S ~5 - ~
Cbicngo................. 34 38 .472
Pintbur&amp;h .............. J3 J8 .4M
CINCINNATI ...... .. 29 36 .446

Toron1o I, 0'*~ p

~'tAJ~fu i n,er

{Ashby 7-2).

7 : ~:'1

1 :~~

Hooslon ut Los Angtleli, 4:0S p.m.
Chicoao m SWJ Dic&amp;o, 4:05 p.m,

Ctntrtl Dhislan

Minnesola 7,_ "'~ ~
&amp;an lc H. Chicgp ~
Calirorni•• 10. ~U,.ouket J

Nl!:w Yqrk

BMIOn nl_TckiiS. 1:0:'1 p.m.

Huuslon ................. 37

4

Tod~r'U"'¥"

(Urbinu 4-0).

Atlanlu ................... 44 26 .629
Monuul ....,...........41 30 .577
FloridA .................. JJ ~8 .46.~
New York ............. J I 40 .4~7
Philudelrflim ........... 29 40 .420

. H~

Coloi'Ddo nt Philalphi&gt;~.

Saturday'• games ·
Colorado (Rilz ·S-4) at Philalklphia
{Mulholland ~-6). 4:05p.m.
Piusburgh (Ncngle 8-JJ at Aorida (A.
Lti1cr 8-6), 7 : 0~ p.m.
San Francisco (Gard ner 7- 1) 'til AI·
lamu (Maddu~ 6-S), 7:10 p.m.
CIN CINNAT I (Jarvis 1- 1) :11 Nllw
Y01k (Clark 6-6), 7:10 r.m
St. Lou is (Morgun 1·1) ul Montreal

KanAaS Cily ai Baltimore. 1:3S p.m.
Seattle a1 Chicaao. 2:0~ p.m.
Californi11111 Milwmukec, 2:05p.m.
Toronto at O:lkland. 4:0:'1 p.m.

Iralll

.606

C~ lifornia .. ..

Sunday's games
New York' al CLEVELAND, I : 0~ p.m.
MinneJ0ta11 Detroit, I : I :'I p.m

NL standings

W&lt;tlfrnO"IMon

..................... 43 2S

Se~nlc:

Tun~

••

DEERFIELD, Ill.' (AP) - It's a
one-year plan for Phil Jackson and ror the Chicago Bulls.
· "Long· term is something lhat
right now' I don't wanl to discuss,
because one year is about what I
have to give," Jackson said Thursday
after signirig a contract to remain
"Chicago's coach for the 1996-97 season. "And it's quite obvious thatthis
team has a limitation of age."
Two of the oldest Bulls are
Michael Jordan, 33, and Dennis
·Rodman, 35. They also might be the
·two main reasons Chicagojust won
~ts rourth JI!BA championship in six
years.
.
: So now that Jackson's deal. i"s
done, it's time for the Bulls to focus
on keeping those free-agents-to-be in
w~ite ~nd red uniforms.
"We intend to work very hard to
sign Michael and Dennis, and keep
tliis team intact," general manager
Jerry ·Krause said;"Our goal is to get
~nother championship and let the
future take care or itself."
Jackson, the NBA's .coach of the
year in 1995-96 and holder of league
winning-percentage records ror both
the regular season (.721) and play-.
pffs (.72~). said his contract provid, ed a wonderful ending to perbaps the

1

...
"''L standings

.

'
'By MIKE NADEL

Sc.ank (8. Wells 7-1) at Chicago (A.

f'em3Ddoz 6.)), 4 c~ p.m.
California (Bolide 7-2) al Milwaukee

baclc inf~eld sinales. A bunt single by·
Kevin Deemer IOIIded the bases, Josh
Merkle followed. with a single to
score two nins. George then reached
on 1 Athens error to once again load
the bases.
· Ryan Martin then singled to score
Deemer. Rick Hoover walked with ·
the bases loade4 to score another run.
Cass Cleland then grounded out for
the inning's second out and score the
fifth run of the inning for Meigs and
give the local team a 6-0 lead. ,
Meigs increased the lead to 7-0 in
the fifth. Hoover walked before Cle- ·
land foilowed with a single. Wamsley sacrificed to move both rurinert

:\J ackson and Bulls agree to stay together ·one more year .

Scoreboard
Baseball

.M eigs spUts DH with Mason before beating Athens 9-2

.

unhappy with
lengt.h of Matheny's suspension
.

"I'm sure they're going to do that
: By ARNIE STAPLETON
; . MILWAUKEE (AP)- Milwau- for Mike, aren't they," he asked sar,. kee manager Phil Garner is angry castically.
Garner said Matheny - and
· that Albert Belle will miss fewer
Vina,
for that mauer - deserved lhe
; games than Brewers catcher Mike
-same consideration by the union that
:· Matheny.
· Matheny began serving a th{ee- a superstar such as Belle was gelling.
Last wee~. Vina said he was
: game suspension on Thursday for
miffed
that Gene Orza, the union 's
:· charging Cleveland reliever Julian
· Tavarez on May 31, the night Belle No. 2 official, "called me up and
· decked second baseman Fernando tried to get me to change my story
' Vina.
.
.. and say that Albert didn't hit me in
· • Belle, Matheny and Tavarez, who the face."
Vina, who went to the hospital
~ flipped umpire Joe Brinkman during
rhat night because he thought his
~ the ensuing melee, were all handed
nose was broken. was flabbergasted
~ five-game suspensions, but all were
t: reduced to three games this week. by what he described as Orza's tryThen, American League president ing to pit him agaiilSl Belle.
"He's supposed to be on my side,
:• Gene Budig, facing a possible law:: suit by Belle ir be didn't settle the too isn 'I he?" Vipa said:
Garner ~aid i.t wasn't fair for
• case, agreed late Thursday to a deal
~ proposed by the players association: Matheny to sit out three games .
while Belle misses justlwo.
~ reducing Belle's penalty to two
:'Belle told Tavarez to throw at
:: games and a ~25,000 fine.
the
next bauer. Mike didn't have
,•: · G'lfner w.S furious.

The o.lly Sudnel• Pllge 5

~n Amerlt:sn Legion bllseball,

''

.

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

;----~------~--------------------------------------------~~--------~~----~--~--------~~--~------------------------~-------------

By DAVE HARRIS
S1ntlnel Cotrupo...,..tt
Meias scomHi ve runs in the second,inning and went on to post a 92 Wtn over Athens in an Eighth Disu:ict ~lion Leaaue 11ame Thunday
evemna at Rannow Filed in Athens.
: : · Meiss (3-7 overall &amp; 2-4 the
• : Eighth District) took a 1-0 lead in the
: :first inning when Scott George was
: · hit by a pitch and advanced to see: : ond and third base on two wild pitch. : es. lfe then scored on a Gary Stan: :ley single.
·
.
: · Meigs blew the game open in the
"'·:second inning. Andy Wamsley and
,Chad Burton led off with back-to-

In NL action,

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports WrHer
Every time Dave Burba wa.'
good, he lost. When he pitched his
worst game of the season, he finally came up a winner.
" It was getting to me. " the
Cincinnati Reds right-hander said of
·his nine-game losing streak stretching back to last season. "I gave the
team a chance to win in every one of
my starts and I was starting to wonder if it was my fault."
Cincinnati manager Ray Knight
knew what the problem was.
''He 's been a victim of shoddy
play and no ofl"e.nsc. and he h;Kl us
in every game in which he pitched ...
Knight said.
Then came Thursday night"s
game against the New York Mets.
"Tonight was his worst game of
the season, when it carne to location.
and he didn't have his best stuff. "
Knight said of the 29-year-old Burba.
It was good enough.
Bret Boone and Willie Greene. hit
solo horne runs, Reggie Sanders
·went 4-for-4 and Burba himself
•gave the visiting Reds the lead for
-good with his first RBI of the season
as Cincin"'nati won its third straight
game, 5-3.
•
"There's ·no way that I want
something like this to start all over
again," Burba said. ''I'm a battler;
· and that's what I did tonight."
· Burba (1-8) surrendered all three
Mets runs in his six.-inniilg stint,
allowing six hits. It was his first vi~­
tor'y si nce he defeated the Philadelphia Phillies on Sept. 22, 1995.
Jeff Shaw pitched two innings of
··hitless relief for his' second save.
" I seemed. to be pretty .sharp at
· the start of tonight's game," Burba
·said. "Then all of a sudden I didn't
have my curve, I didn't have a fastball, and even my split-finger was" 't working."
.
Boone's second-inning homer.

f',..Y, June 21, 111111

-.

'

'

:cliffside golfers ·
~ play in SEOGA
:tournament

r------~----------,

I

I

I

I

I
I

I

L-----~-----~-----~

,.

'

•,,

- r• · ' ··• • .. ..... "

........ .

~"' · ~ ·~ · ·

··- .

... . . . ;..... .:. ~· ·

�•

.

•• .

-

••

nrc

,., .
.. 1.

Chlllctl of Clu1st
r- ., CloordulCiortll

212 W. Maio St.
PIIUlr: lieil PTcoldfoot
Sunday School • 9:30 a....
Wonllip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Scrvlcot - 7 p.m.

Apostol1c

l" • '

OU'dl ol JeM~ Cktll ~

111r

VonZindUnd Ward d.
Putor: James Miller
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Evenina • 7:30

... ' ,

., w - Cloorft ot Clortll

p

33226 Qildi.n'a Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.
WOIIIIip • IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvlcot • 1 p.m.

Strvica

Mkkll1pat Qudl Dl 0ui1c

5th o.ncl Main
P..,or: AI Huuon
Youth Minister: Bill Fruier
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wcdnesdoy Scrvlcot • 1 p.m.

.

•'

..... .

:,

KtAG Clotm:k ol Clorill
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Pu tor-Jeffrey Wall~ ·
I 01 and 3rd Sunday

n..,.S70Bapcill
•·~~J;~ral
Grant St., i
Sunday school · 9:45
.
Won.hip - 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Scrvict • 7 p.m.

' "·

c

1

'

. .
')

Fret WID Baptlll Cbllf&lt;b
· Ash Stout, Middleporl
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service · 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvice-7:30 p.m.
RotJ..d Flnt llapiJst Cburcb
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pomomy Flnt Bapcill
Putor: Paul Stimon

...

Eur Main St

Jloarwallew RldJe Ckm:k of Clomt
Pas1or: Jack Colegove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WMhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 6:30p.m.
Zloa n - otaomt

Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
PUlor: Roger Warson
Sunday SChool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Tlapptn PlolD

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Sel'\lice • 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.

Flnt Sott..... BaP."R

0

41812 Pomeroy Pike '·
PISior: E. l.omar O'Bryanl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scl'llices · 7:00p.m.
Flntllitpllsl Clo..-cb
Mart Morrow
6th o.ncl Palmer St., Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Bndbury Cburcb of Cbrlsl
Pastor: Rick Snyder ·
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.

p,_,

.'

'·

:..r

·"··

..

Rollud Clo•rclt ol Ckrtlt
Putoc Eusene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Bndford Cburcb ol Grill
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
YOuth Minisler: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m.,10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.

Silver Raa Baptist
Pallor: Bill Little
Sunday School • 10a.m.
Worahip • I !a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m..

Hkkory HUis Ckun:b ol Cbrisl
Evanselist Joaeph B. Hoskins
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Worship· 10 o.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sci'\/ ices· 7 p.in.

Rldtie Flnt Bapllsl
Putor: Rev. Larry Haley

,.

Youth Pastor: Aaron Young

Mt. Ua ... Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Uberty OrlsiJu·Cbllr&lt;b
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday Evenina • 6:30 p.m.
Thorsday Service • 6:30p.m.

Evening-6:30p.m.

'Wtdnesday Services • 6:30p.m.
Detflle~em

'

)

aa:r••

Racine, 0
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Worship · 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study . 7:00p.m. Wednesday

0
Loap•llle Cllriatlaa CkU&lt;k
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.
Htllllo&lt;k Gro.. Ckttrclt
Pallor: Oene Z&lt;&gt;pp
Sunday achool· IO::lO a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Old Bttltelfroe WID Baptist Ckan:k
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.

,.
1·

Thunday Services • 7:30
H - . Bapllll Clourcb
St, Rl. 143 juat off Rt. 7
rastot: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship -·1la.rri., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 _p.m.

Vktarr Baptlstlrrrlepoaldul

...,.
-r..

•'
"

.
)

...
·'

''

&lt;

•

o ..... ol Ckrlol

Reecla•Uie Cklrcb of Ckrlsl.
PasiOr: Philip Sluno
Sunday *hool: 9:30 o.m.

WorShip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Htu11onl Cbon:b oiCbrlslla
Cllrlsllrla u ....
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McMariis
Sunday S&lt;hool · 11 a.m.
Worship· 9:30 o.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

515 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonhip·IO..m., 7.p.m.

Wednesday Servic:es- 7 p.m.

F•llb Baptbl Cbarch
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worsh1p - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Church of God

Worship - 11 a.m.

Mt. Moriab Ckun:b ol God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sundoy School · 9:45 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

MI. Morlab Bopllsl
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Oilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.

hllrlad Cbarcb ol God
· Putor: Oregory L: Scars
Sun&lt;\lySchooi - IOa.m.
Wonhip. 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.

FortiiR•aBapllat
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Syn..,. Flnl Cburcb of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. pavld Rirsstll
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.

Aaillqulty Boptlll
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30p.m.

Evening Servites- 7:30: p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Rutlrlod I'm. WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev . Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
· Evening ~

Cburcb of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday ·Schooi · IO a.m.
· Worship • II a.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.

7 p.m.

Wednesday $er.lices . 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sa&lt;red Hem C.tltollc Cloun:b

161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
• Sat. Con. 4:45-5:1lp.m.; MISS· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45·9: IS a.m.,
Sun. Mus • 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8:30 a.m.

c.

Cbesttr Clo..-cb or God
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Qestcr
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday S&lt;hool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 6 r..m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fanuly Training Hour

Co ng rcq .1 ; t r 111 dl

SWida~ :, 9:30a.m.
WOIIIIip • 10:30 a.a
a
3 ••
, _ , ..... Clutrlu Marah
Wonliip · 9:30a.m.
Surtdrty School · 10:30 o.m.
UM\'F~y 6:30p.m.
Flna ,._, of Mooilh • 7:30p.m. ~~~Vice

Ep1s cop.ol

~~·
326 E. aiD itola-lt
...._,

School • 9:3d a.m.
Wonbip . 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
W - y Sel"'cot ·1 p.m.

5 r - Cllllrcll ollbe N . _

Ho liness

P

I'OJCk-ollbeNa n ..
Putor: Rev. Thomarr Mo.&lt;:l""'
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • )0:30a.m. o.ncl6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvlcot • 1 p.m.

CnlniCJ-.

Ha••••

p~~:l..

Durillt
Chrdl
31057 State Route 325, Lonpvlle
P11tor: Rev. Ri&lt;:k Moloyed
Sunday adiool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday wOIIIIip • 10:35 a.m. -' 1 p.m.
Chikln:n's chur&lt;h • 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer aervice • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
WOIIIIip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Sc,.i&lt;:e, • 7:30p.m.
F.alti

0

IP!ill

P111or: Ketlh Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worsliip • 9 a.m.

CalYary Pllpt. CloapeJ
Harriaonville Road
PastOr: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
It a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Servi&lt;:e · 7:30p.m.
I

R-ofsu- llollaeMCiotm:k
Lcadin&amp; c...t Rd., Rutland
'Paator: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
We&lt;lnesday prayer meeli · 1 p.m.

Hea.. CMiddlepartl
PUior: Vemapye Sullivan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m.

1/2 mile off Rt. 325
PaiiDr: Rev. O'Dell Manley
· Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.'
Wednesday Sel'llice • 7:30p.m.

New 11..ea 0 - ., ... Nuore..
Putor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
WDBhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WediiOsday Scrvlcot • 7 p.m.

....__

Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.

Wnleyaa Bible H • • Cloon:b
75 Peul St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Flltlt Clolpel ()pea Bible Clolirdt
923 S: Third llt., Middleport ·
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sundly service, JO a.m.
Thu~ay aervice, 7 p.m.

PaoriCiutpel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 o.m.

,._...,.

RyoeU Rua HoiiMu Cban:b
Pastor: RobeR Manley
Sunday School • 9::l0 a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
.Thursday Service· 7::M) p.m.
l.ollftl Cliff Flft Mclltodbl Cloon:b
PlOior: Peter Trembloy
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:00p.m.

Cloristlao Ftllewaltlp Ceater

Pastor: Roben E. Rohinson
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
W~nhip · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday· 10 a.m.

Salem St., Rulland
Pastor: Robert E. Muaaer
Sunday School • 10 a.m. •
Worship • 11:1 Sa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m:

RockSprlap

PaiiDr: Keith Rader
Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Yolllh Fellowshrp. Sunday· 6 p.m.
· Rullaad
Sunday School ·9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

R.doad Commualty Ourcb
. . Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday SchDDI· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scl'llicea. 7 p.m.

.-

F•llb FoU Gospel Cbai&lt;b
l..ong Bottom
,._,Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · ?:30 a.m. and 7. p.m.
. Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Fnday . ·fellowshtp service 7 p.m.

Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

SalemC..ter
. Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
· . _ _ Cbllf&lt;b of J..., Cltrfsl
olLotter Day Salall
Portland·Racine Rd. ·
Pu1or: Janice Danner
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
·
Wednesday Scrviceo. 7:30p.m.

Soo,..llla
Sunday S&lt;hool • 10 •·Ill·
Wor1hip- 9 a.m.

Tlte Belltven' Fellow,..p Mlalstry
. New Lime Rd., Rulland
Pallor: Rev, Mirgud J. Rohi0100
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Belbuy
PBIIor: Kenneth Baker
SWiday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 o.m.
· Wednesday Services • 10 a.m.

Tile Cktm:• or J...,
Ortst or Lotter-Day Salata
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 ot 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-11a.m.
Relief Sociely/Prieslhood II :OS-12:00 noon
Sicramcnt Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking muting, lst Thun. • 7 p.m.

ao...:.•

H-otna e-mu~.,.
Pastor: Theron Durham ·
Sunday· 9:30a.m. o.ncl7 p.m.
Wednesday • 1 p.m.

c......1

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship • I 0:4S a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Ettdtimell- of l'ntyer
(ar Burlinsharn chun:h off Route 33)
PaiiDr: Robert VIUIC% .
Sunday wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday lel'llice ·6:30p.m.

MCII'IIIqStor

Paslor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Services • 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
SL Jon Lut..ru Cburcb
Pine Grove
Pastor: I?awn Spalding
Worsh1p • 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Our Savloar Lalberaa Cb11r&lt;i
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnlrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

EutLtllrt

-

St. Pa .. Lu...na Cburcb
Corner Sycamore &amp;. Second Sl., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Paslo,: Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Gnlutm United Metbodlal
Worllhip ·9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd .!c 4th Sun)
. Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.
ML Oll•e U..ted Metbodlal
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m .• 1 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.
Mtlp Cooperallve Plirfsb
Nor11tn11Chuter
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m. ·
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunda~l • 9:30a.m.

T-Ck11r&lt;b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School • 9:30a.m •
Wonhip-10:30 o.m . .

Chester

Pastor; Sharon Hausrqan
Worship - 9 a.m.
'Sunday SchDDI · 10 a.m.
ThurWay Services- 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10:45 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ~:30 p.m.

Na zarene
-

J-

Pastor: Bob Randolph
WOilihip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Mt. ou.. C.....-lly Cktlrck
PasiOr: l.owrencc Bush
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Suvice -7 p.m:

Flnt Clo- ollbe Naarue
PUI«:ScoiiRSunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

u..ted , .... Cburck
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pas

Pallor: Rev. Rohell E. Smith, Sr.

s

far ..... s

D

1

PUBUCNOTICE

Seturdly, June 28, 1.886.
at 10:00 o.m., the Home
Nl?lonil Blftk will oflet' fot
Nle 12 public auc?lon on tho
Bonk Parking Lot tha fol~

c..rc•
of J - Cltrfsl,
Apoat. . Flltlt

~owing:

114 mile paOI Fort Meip on New Lima ltd.
Pa11Dr. Williom Van Mel&lt;r
· Sunday.7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday. 7:00p.m.

·

• 18119 Chewotot 514 Pickup
. lltlrial

t10ccf14R3K2102354
lito temta of the Nle oro
cellh. Home Nl?lonal Bank
rooervH the right to bid at
the Nle and or to remove
an•• r all Htma from She
· ui.. lolony time. . .
(6) 1&amp;: 20, 21' 24, 26, 28 6tc

C?lftoa Tatberude Cb......
Clifton, W.Va.
.
· Sunday School-10 o.m.
Worship' 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 1 p:m.
NewWeVIdorJC.....,.
3173 Oeorpa Creek Road, Oallipolia. OH
Putor: Bill Ststen
Sunday Service&amp;. 101.111. ol 7 p.m.
Wedne~ • 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p:m.

ADVERTISEMENT FOR ,
BIDS
tl·ga.
County
ominl 0 elonera, llelge
~u·n!y
Court Houee,

"'

Pentecostal

r'-oy. Oltlo 4576ll

St. Rt. 124, Racine
PaiiDr: Willlom Hohaclt
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
·
Evenlns- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser\llcot • ?'p.m.

S.Pilralo -lrocl BIDS lor
She coMtructlon of PEACH
FO!IK (PHASE 2) WATER
MAIN
EXTENSION
PROJECT will be ruelvod
by She Molgti Countr
Comml. . lonere at the
Commlulonera Office
llelga ·c ounty Court Houea
POmeroy, Ohio until 1:00
' m. ~C!Olll Time on July I,
, ...,... nil ihen as .aold
FFICE wilt be publicly

Mlddlepoa1 , . . _
Third Avt..
Rev. Cluk Baker
School • 10 a.m.
·6 .

Un1ted Brethren

"'-'-·Ohio 45783 .

LIVE PSYHICS
. •••• to Htlp
Yo•ll

ROIIIT.IISSELL
. COIIAIUCTIOII

Let them tell you
about the future Ill ·
1-90()..868.41 00

•New Homes
•Garagea
oComplete
ftemodellng
Stop • Coinpare
FREE ESTIMATES

•

Ext. 2469
$3.H per min.

s.rv.u

98s-4473
7111101

,

~

•
I
;

Mill Wot•
Cahtnet Ma••n~

'

aponed anct Nlld aloud.

, 212 E. Main Street
992·3785 Pomeroy

Syracuse.

992 ·1978

You Don't Have To Look F!!r
To Spy the Best Buys In the
Classifieds.

264 Souttl 2nd ·.

Middleport

Crow'a Family Restaurant .
~nru~K~~F~dQI~Im"l

RlfiL nMI!

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432

'

UCINE MOWII CLINIC Brogan•Wimer
lrl.s&amp;SiniHH

••terSenkefecll..,_
IEIOSEIE HillEl IINII
949·21M ..

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

. . . JIMI
SfMRl

992·2975

INSURANCE
SERVICES

Veterans
Memorial Ho.pltal

214·E. Maln
992·5130 Pomeroy

115 E. M11111orlal Dr. Pomeroy
992·2104

P. J. PAUI.It AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Columbul, Oh.
804W. Maiil

992·2318 Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HO~E

r)

"Dipiry lllfll ~rviuA/woy$"
Bslrlblisbod 1913

.

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO
.992·2258

992·2121
llullllny AVfl•

SWISHER&amp;
PHARMACY
992·2955

Pomeroy

8NOUFFER
FIRE a, 8AFETY

&lt;

•

Howl~ L. Writeael

Gutters
Downspouts

Serv·u

___.....,....
____
Limestone,

Sand, '
Soli, Fill Dirt
&amp;l ,._ _
992 70

1111MM TFN

Ewerl•stl•t•
Thur..s.t. 10:5 .

Saturday. Roln !Stint, 4118 Uttlo
Butlakln Road Clfl Rr. 211 6 fa·

_,

Saturday, Rain Or Shine, 1:30 .
3:00 . 3110 Mile Out Georges
Creek From SR 7, Don Street,

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

Boys Clothing 3T-4T. Ten Speed

Bike, A¥i:ln Bontet, MiK.

H&amp;H
·Home
Remodeling

Need Dlrecllon?
I

Roofing &amp;
Block Work
Free Eatinuateo

992·2761or
992·3.274

Thurs. Fri. June 20th, 21st. 9

.Love
Business
Family Matters
Allow Your
·Personal Psychic to
AsalatYou
1·IJ00.988-8600
Ext. 1277

A.M. ·1 Loll OIMisc. 578 Jay
Drive, Gaiipolis.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepo"
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salea t.tu11 Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOprn the
day before the lid is to run, Sun·

doy adltlon- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon.
day adtion I O:ooa.m. Saturday.

S3.1111 Per lllnute

...., bl18yre,

Touch-Tone Required
~~erv... (819) 645 8434

.,,_

WllilO.

614-949·2096

TODD BISSELL
$5.00· per hour

......
--

Mornlna Houra

Summer Images
New Location
Mlcfdleport, Ohio

With 3 Beds to · ·
Serve You Better•

__ ,..

for Quahty Work
Bathl
Windows
Siding
Roofs
Add-ems

1-'st~WM·
,

Carpenter &amp;
Paint Work

&amp; VIcinity

Remodeling
Kltchtnl

Fri·Sit June 21·22, 4th Street &amp;

Decks
MOlt
Anything

aid gtau.

Birch Lane, Mason, WV. Lots ot
SaturdaJ, June 22 End ol lane in
Sandy Helghta. McDaniet'a. col-

fee table, clothes, books, antiques, dishes, pots 1 pans, jeWelry, bedapreads, canning jar1,
lola misc.

614·992·2979
.,...,.__,..

..,..., .........,
TUPSHOOT
5a30 P•••

GENERAL
CONIUCIORS

985·4198

1

•NiwHorMa

Skiing • VInyl
Aluminum • Roofing
New•Repelr

outte... a

~

· 11111111-

"
•

merchlndiaa. Ed FfiZilf 030.
Rick Pear10n Auction Compan~.

lull lima auctlonelr, complete
auction service. llcenttd

Wanted to Buy

em Aven.Je, Gallipolis.

ANrWUNCEf.1ENTS

J I D's Auto Parts . BuJing salvage vthictn. Selling paris. 304-

773-5033.

Personals ·

Slnglt wt)ltt female. 1881Ung alnglt white male. age 50·80, sehd
photo &amp; phone numb&lt;ir to ; BOX
CW-17 Cio I'Gint Pleasant Rog·
illtr 200 Main St

1?1. Pleasant

30 Amouncements

• •

22. 7:00pm

Air Conditionen, Color T. V:s~

VCR's,
1238.

~110

Paying

To~

Junk Cars, 61 4·2511·

Ooiior For JuM Cars,

DM,614-4-48-ll575.

PGIII .C htptl Comtrarr·TruatHI

Mttllng ~ Junt

Non-Working Wlilshers," Dryers,

Stoves, Rerrigeratort, Free.zera,

Trucks, &amp; Running Vehicles To

tt

Top dollar- antiquet, lurnilure,
gias~. china, cl~l. gold. silver,

P:ona Chaptl Church. 304·175-

coins, watches , l l l l t t l. Oaby
Marlin,ll•·9112·7&lt;41 .

40

Top 'Prieta Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Oiamonda, All Old

5752

Giveaway

houaepaL
1 'I! aid Terrltr mi1, lemolt, lfl'ld-

•

7pm. Evary Saturday 7pm AI 2·33
·crouroad•· . Grocerlaa, new

Truckl, Ht$10 Mod'ela Or Nlwer,
Smith Buicli Pontiac, tiOO East-

•New GII'IJIII
oRootlilg

Downspouts
FreeEatlmatu

Mt Allo Auclio·n. Every Friday .

90

1 Btaglt, male dog·8mo old,
blacjt/Wftltt, good with childr...

•R8S?IOdeltnt

and Auction

773-5785 Dr 300·m·S«7.

•Addlllol•

•lldfnt .

PubliC sa1e

166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304-

R•cl•lnCtn

WV. 25550 .

SMDI'S
COIIStiUCTION
CUIIDnl ..... , .,..,

MGM

Thurtd&amp;J·

Pt, Pleasant

Call
B. D. Construction

oos

TFN

sala· ·atarting

Clean lale MQ#el Cars Or

Phone 992·2489

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

Moving

?, variety at houlehotd items. new
. rypewriter,
sewing machines, cb,
1 dati kennel. Gold Ridga Rd., Thei·

12-$20.00 .
16-$25.00

,,,.,,

d!. ,,

Saturday, Julll! 22nd, 102 Dal&gt;bio
Drive, 8:00A.M. To 4:00P.M.

992·7573

'

Call

H&amp;H
SAWMill

\

-

c;.,.........
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomny,Ohto

949-2188

SUMMER
TUTORING

8am,8pm

8112-3807

..

Gutter Cleaning .
.
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

June 2111, 22nd, Rodney Across
From Faith Baptilt Chu(ch. ua .
ttrnily, Craftt, Furnilure, Mite.

rna Banks Harper.-.

. many metala.

1112-70711

Frl, Sat, Acro11 From UcCiures
On Rt. 35; Womena Chlldrona
Clolhtl.

.......
Sctllttl

NEW-REPA~R

1·900.988·8988
Ext. 7907
2.99I 11111 II+
T.T. Phoa R141.

Firtt Time Sale : Crib, Carseats, .
Kida N·•T. Fri·Sat. t Mile South
Flo Grande On 325.

FUGRANT
FIELDS

ROOFING

Pick-up dl-.ded

~~and Gueat· l~ad

'

.'

Meet your
match

22nd, 8-?

ata?lone, non-por1able
· - · large 11118,
hiking, flllhlng.
Rent "' - k ot month.
304412-seee ot
614-247-2120 .... -

..

41414 SS•rah Rd.
Pomaroy, OH. 4S7et

batterlea, eppllancee ·•

... u a. 8IJMCE
172 Not1h a-111Aw.
wt•hjtott.OII · ·

(814) 992:7587

I'REE

Pomeroy
Eagles Club

All Yord Saln Muat Bo Paid In
~dVaneo. DEADl.INE : 2:00 p.m.

. E - hook-up, dump

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Friday &amp; Saturday

Preacriptiona

Etc.

Chtlp 3 Family Sale: 4187 St At .
ISO, Bidwell, Juno 20th. 2111,

WICKS
HAULING

Appearing this

e Famljy : U83 WatsOn Road,
Thurs. Frl, Sat. "-n• IWarnena 1
Baby Cltohing Antiquea, Toy1 ,

Umeetone • 0?'1Yel

~

&amp; Swing Shift Band

W. Fill Doctors'

.... -d...t?IS

Bridge, 1 milo from
App.. Oro,., Oltto.

......
I ,......

MIKE
MORRISON .

Qalllpolli
· &amp; VIcinity

-51n0.S&amp;wii.IWS

On St. Rt. 338 w; amU•
from RaveniiWOOd

614-742-2193

SfiVQS

Yard Sale

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

(619) 645·8434

Pomeroy
Fumiture, curtains, TV,
misc. items.

70

.. ....Gat. .

985 4422
Cheater, Ohio

'I

Loot vicinity ol Dr. ar-.·a ollico.
tong gold _.. ... wun -;ng
ring ... · - · .. 4-11112-5145.

the dar 'before the ad ia to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

The
CONTR.ACT"
DOCUMENTS may be
•••mined. at the following
locatl'one:
·
The ••
. Commlttlonera Office or
I
Owner: Ronnie Jones
OIIOROE
A. .MARA
ENGINEERING, INC., 55
387-0268-1-800-950-3359
EAST SECOND STREE~
1 .
•'
LOGAN, OHIO 43138.
FrH Estimates
CopiH of She CONTRACT
(Ume StoneDOCUMENTS
Ud
Public Notice
Public Notice
Low Aalee)
SPECIFICATIONS . miy bt
obtained at the Office ol J-11,1886
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611. The
Ooorge
A.
llara Frrocl Hoffman,
exterior or all envolopoe ,
EnglnMrlng. Inc. located 12 ....... Melge County
conl8inlng blda ahould Ill
55 EAST SECOND STREET, (I) 21, ~. 30 3TC
cloerly rr111rlcecl u ''Tracnor
LOGAN, OHIO upon
Bid". The deadline for bid .
pormens of $40.00 for each
· Public Notice
au!lml
..lon •• Jut1 1, 1998
. .s. whloh will not be
at5:00 p.m.
relundtd.
PUBUC NOTICE
The tracsor may . be !
Gravel,
Tho Englneor'o oollmol8
The Board ol TowMhlp lntpecl8d by appoln?mens !
for the Projoc? It $41,000 00 Truat . .,
af Orange by contacting Tru- f Top
Townehlp will a ell, by Bonny Upson at (614) 985- .
,.
-lrocl bide, a u - tractor, 3340, Tru- Roger Rl?chle 1
.,..
-12IO·WIS:
a 1HO'a Cl8e, 12 (614) 667-31182, or Truatw , L...;.._._;.;...;..;.;.;....l
Modell30 br aealed blda as Jamaa Wonaon 12 (614) 885Ita regular meeslng on July 4372.
.
2, 199&amp;, at 7:30 p.m., os
:rhe tractor will be aold
which limo l!lda wilt be "u II" and no w•n•nllea
apened.
- •trprHMCI or Implied by
Soelrocl bide contolnlng ?hla advertletrnens or eale.
lite Board ol TOWMhlp
She propoaed ealllng price,
of
Orange
ond She buyer'• name, Truat . . e
oddre.. and Stlephone Townahlp ruerve ~ right
number llhoutd Ill lUlled or to rtfuu or reJect enr end
dell- In poraon no Osle all bide.
Oale Follrocl, Clark
Follrod, Clerk of Orange
Townehlp
at
41520
Orange Townahlp Tru•(6) 21, 24, 27 3TC
Keebaugh/Fonrod Road,

FLOOD SALE
9 A.M. TO 12 NOON
ONLY
SATURDAY,
JUNE 22

2 112 miles north of lteeda¥illc
,
oo Stale Route 124
Pillar. ~v. Rohcn Mukley
•
Sunday School • II a.m.
:
Sunday Wonlifp • IO:()Q a.m. ol 7:00p.m:;;
Wednearlay Servtce~ ·7:30p.m.
,
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.rrt.

MIDDLEPORT, OH •
614:192·2772
. 8:30 A.M.-3:30P.M.
..tpl•n•all WI ' ws

Dirt• Sand

f/IWI...,. pd

LOST: Mon'l- ID tncoltt at
Hot~ Holpl•l or Frulh'l' Ptietm·
oq. If IDund 0111 30•-175-111110 or
300.f75.5530. REWARDII

PONDEROSI
. PRIMmVE
·CAMPGROUND
OPENING SOON

614-992-4025

.

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

Hoadllnera • Cuatom Selll
Covere &amp; Corpe? •
· - Convrartlble Top• • Antiquo C.ro •
- Botti S.ol8 •
Over 20 Yoora Exparlonce

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Yean Etperience e Insured

Public Notice

Bob and Alice Russell
would like to thank everyone·
who sent cards, flowers
end gifts for their
'·
50th wedding anniversary.

•

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOUTERY

ow.

537 BRYAN PLACE

1-800-889-3943

:100-11!1-1780.

To Oood- Ki...,a. I WHI&lt;a
114-250-17113.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
. INSULATION

.,_._ R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
. JESS'

-JONES'·TREE SERVICE
Mlllt 11118 yre.
(81e) 845 8434

l.octllly owned &amp; opllndlid

Guaranieed resullll

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

742•3212

-daft.

UR Clilir, 814-317·7734.

-

FreeEetimat•

Roofing - Rubber - Shingles • Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Sldlng
35 YMIW EJtperiMce

(614) 992·2364

n,.,

Mixed Puppieo To Oood Hornta
114-441-1710.

949-3151
742-2246

Residential - Commercial

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Molt I " - Liller~ Mh·
•• 1 Cot;
10 Woe- Old

Reeldential SeMce

CONS'I'RUCTION

· :104.. 7!1-

eo-•

Comptet• Commen:iaiA

I

flOOd -

lOfiO•Nood, llcf.OJH BaegiH,
moiH and JomaiH,
Cot·
llrill,Ad., ~.
Ohio.
.

Racine, Ohio

B&amp;B ROOFING and

441 lUI

Industrial• Automotive
New Radiators • Fie-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

61~915 3113 or 114:667:64114
Ptastif Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 3~"
4" SclD • perf. • solid pipe '
4" &amp; 6'' Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sc:h 33 pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112" lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" j\1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru 1.000' roll's)
J!4".u.L. approved Conduit
· ;
8" Gravclcss Leach pipe
Gas ·p;pc .J"thru 2" · Fillings· Regulators- Risen
Fullas!()rlment ofP.V.C. &amp; Fie• fitting~ &amp; Water linings
Fullli.ric or Cistem. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks.

Public: Notice

*""

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

1·800,291,5600
~

•

.
Toll , _ 1olll0472 5117

t &amp; WPWYICS All SIPPLY
. SJ. fit. 7

lrt •••• l"»o&gt;.

m••••oe. wilt call rltftt

F rw-1144.

Pest Co•trol

• Welding ~pUe1 • lndullriel G.- • Mlldllne Shop
S.rvlcea • Steel Salea &amp;. Fabrication • Aepllir Wlkllng
• AlurnlnumiStainlele • Tootl!lrnalng • Ornamental
Steps ,stan. RaMings, Pallo Fumlture, Fl~
hills, Planter~. T,..._ &amp; loll ol o!Mr lllullll
"No Job Too ,_.,. 01' Too Smilll"
.
We will wotk wtlhln your budget .
Ph. 773-1173
FAX TINM1
108 Pomero Street
. Mason, WY

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
"""
,. ,_.. a -*• ..,
up
Sarvlftg S.E. Ohio a Wilt VIrginia

40657 Laurel Cliff Rd.,
RAWLINGS-COATS .

-· -

7

992-3838

Klllenl

11711.

Authortzeci AQA Dtslrtbulor

.

FtM

l"vt

Kltltlla to

!VtDU !leta&amp;

I

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

....... LIJtQ500 li. 2nd Ave., MlddlepDII
Putor: Lawrence Foreman
. Sunday Schooi-IOa.m.
Wednesday Scrvica - 7p.m.

Edell1llltedllniltrra .. Cbrlrtt

lnltl!lled

..,..._•...,E!IIIIIIIfr4 Hoiftlef

K1nd1 of forth Work

-. ..

and M•nutactured Housing

quote!

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Air Can IIIDnete, Helll ~
FUmaa11 Aleqt 'JF11nlln e6ock

pvfir' u , •

Utilltin

All

.

,_a

---SI!
,,,
Br.... ,_.c...

S.rvkll

•

'

window alzee tor a frH

StiYemtllf" WonloJFIIII~
PIIUlr: David Dalley
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.

ML H~ U•lted...._
laCUIIICitTexaa Community off CR 82
PUior: Robert Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneatlay Scrvioes • 7:30 •r m.

-·

.

Clill today with your

Mono Clutpel Cbiii'Ch
Sunday schDDI-10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m. ·
Wednesday Service· 7 P·!!'·
Flltlt ~arck

~-

.

7f'UIIIIiOI.I'WI~
.

ow.•~~-

HouNSftnMd

Sunday

Limited Time Offer

O,ntlle Commallllr CloSI01day School • 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

HoddaJpDrt Cburcb
Grand Street
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Sel'llices • 8 p.m.

mo.

Trucklftt-

LkMIUne
IUtldozlng .net
IIStlc:ldlot

614-992-7643

•nit-In
-Double Hung
-Insulated

lluol Commualty Cb•rcb
OIIRt. 124
· Putor: Edael Hul
Sunday SChool-9:30a.m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

lletlttiCkTownship Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 o.m.
Worship· IO..m.
W.....aday Service• . 10 a.m.

(FREE ESllMATU)

S195

1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuae
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
'Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

CoaMIIe Ulllled Metliodlll Pllfab
Putor: Helen Kline
Coolrile Ciardi
Main &amp;t Fifth St.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
. Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Scryices. 7 p.m.

United Methodi st

AIM CDIICI ... w.t1

. . . •11

C)Wt-

UCIIIIYDUUUC RINII
&amp;
SlOP, INC.

011'1111 • RtpiiiC-.nent Wlnclowl
Room Additions • RoOfing
COII"RIEACIAL lnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

a. l!liiMor

00

s,....... Mllstota

Wonhip - II a.m.

"ne

REPLACEMENT
. WINDOWS

• Calvary Bible Qardi .
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd, r
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wouhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

FIUII Tlaberude Cloan:b
Bailey Run Road
Pallor: Rev. Emmen Rawiori
SI01day School- 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.r
Thursday Suvice. 1 p.m.

Putor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 i.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.
' Wednesday • 7 p.m.

.......

flaaflt ..

•lnlltrlar

J.l. DIM)! I

/tiM Hof!.tl• • Vlnyt Siding New

.

.

F•ldo l'........p CI'UIIId4! rot' Cbrlrtt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Scl'\lice: Friday, 7 p.m.

Middleport 'C omat••IIJ Cburdi
· 575 Pearl St., Middlepon
·
Pastor: Sam Ande...n
Sto~day S&lt;hool I 0 a.m.
Evenina • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

5•11011
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday SchDDI· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:4S ·a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

tQ1

Fa..... llbleCkU&lt;~
Leton, W.Va. RL 1
Pastor.: Rankin ftolch
Sunday School ·10:!0 o.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

,........,

•II mile~ lo 111u:

61MIJ.4110

Wltlle'a Clolpel Wnle)11o
' Coolville Road
Pallor: Rev. Phillip Rideii&lt;IW
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvicc • 1 p.m.

Clo- l'eUowA!pCiotm:k
Rev. Clyde Heodenon
Sunday service, 10:00 o.m .. 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serviee, 7:30 p.m.

" a ca...
•c= •
....

V.C. YOUNG Ill
-..a11
, _ _ , Ohio

......._Golpo!M-.
Bald Knob, i&gt;n Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Roser Willlooil
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

........d Flnt Cbtm:k ol ... N...ftlle
Pallor: Mark Malloo
Worahip • 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

PaiiDr: Oulealieville
Sunday School • I 0 o.m.
Worship - 9a.m.
Thunday Scl'\lic:ca • 6:30 p.m.

Plae GroYO Bible Hollana

err Cacirdlettllt N8111ae
P111or: Rev. Herbctt Grate
SI01day School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
WediiOsday Sc,.ices • 7 p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Scrvioei • 7 p.m.

J1ont1Ra

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

........ a.t . . . .

carJelottlocerclt.. totloul Q Kinpbu Road
p..,or.Jo'lr Smith
Sunda1 Sdtuol · 9:!0 ..... .
Wonhrp Service 10:30 a.m•
No Sunday ot Wedneaday NIJ)il Servlcot

llaitJud Q- ollbe Naiatl\:.c
Putor. Simuel Basye

lllatwoocll
Pallor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

FRO DTIIIATES

S.... lledoeiNow1W•
Silvera...,
Pu1or. Robert Barber
SI01day Sdlool · 9 Lm.
WOIIIIip • 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wed!letday Service • 7 p.m.

: BiiiStitu
Sunday Sdoool .·9:30 o.m.
WOIIIIip . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WedMsdly Sc..lcot • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m,
Wonlilp · IOa.m.
1\oeaday Sesvi«S · 7:30 p.m.

Coffee-

.

-Y

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

...........

IISSELL IUILDE___IS, IIIC.

CIIIIIIM BYICE ,

••••flltiliiW ·

hiHilaad
r..-.lt~"~*=:...
3304S
Rood, ........,
-.Roylfuoler
Soadly-. 10 a.M.
.
Evenill&amp; 7:!0 P·• ·
Tladay ol Thundoy ·.7:30 p....

'-:MrilttA.Duoler

Pu1or. Shuorl Hauaman

-

Soadly Sdlool • 9:30 ....
Wonllip • 10:30 o.m., 1 ,_..
Wedoeldoy $er.llco • 1 p.m. •

....... , . . I'&amp;
Clo.sol ... N
-

l'oflion ...... Sl. .....

Re&lt;lor: Rev. D. A. ... Pianlier
Hoi y Euobuirtt o.ncl
Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m.
followU.,

Wor~hip -

Wonlilp ·10:30 a.M., •:J\1 p.m.
W - y Scrviooa · 7 p.m.

UIDA'S
PIIIQIIG

Collectibles, Paperweighta. Elc.

od. ..

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Stconct
- · Galipolil. 814-44e-21o42.,
Wanted To Buy UHd Mobile
Hama~ C.i: 11-.0175
' .

Xiflllld- :100-17~.

W•nlld To Bu,: AYIO'a &amp; Truelta
~ c-llon. ,,. 3.1012, Or

""'Ia. 300-175-4850.
2 F - . COIL lltlk, llilk/Wiil; Mt·
.,..,.lnod,
'lxod", · $ clutd, ltM

.,........MI. '

:

�•

'·

Friday, June 21, 1996

Pomeroy •llldclleport, Ohio

..

.

•

'

-

--~--------~·
· --------------~~~----~~·
..ma&amp;
NE~ Cro••word Punle
!

!\LLEYOOP

P1JILLIP
ALDIR

110 ••c~

••
tJ

All Natural Fat Lou p,.duCL
loao Weight, Fool Beller, lnetHtad Entrgy 11 A Day 114...,_tZ!e.

IIM!Ilt wllo ne.d to fott
WIIQht &amp; , _ MOI'Itf, • "Y nw
•tltnted weight-ton product.
$4-m-aae:1241nfdoJ.

180 Wented To Do
Mr

INOIN I All ArNt I Shirley
~ SM-e75-1&lt;28.

odd )obL Palnling. ..,_.,,

. . . .. , _ -

7112.

4'Pulendal Loedera Seriouaiy ir&gt;ttrtsa.cl In lrweoalfng Few Hourt
vrttkly tn Part-Timo Bualneu.

· ele. :IIM-87S.

Bebytlt In My Home, Monday •
Friday, Bldwoff Area. 110 Ooy.
Sl~t23a.
Wondl, IU·318-gt·3 4 Afitr 5:30
P.M. Monday · Friday Anytfmt
,\Ole Avon RepreMntatlvea "NIIhl tdL
nkd.d. Earn moner lor Christ. . . billa 01
-'&lt;. 1 . _ Body - k on ctro &amp; TUc:kl, 882-11358 •• 304-812·2145, Ind. toNiblt rata1, ninor mechanical
Rep.
rtpairo. oil c:hangoo. coli 114-142·
211:15 Olk., Kip. Rutllnd.
AmoriCO'I Ltodlng Homo HM!Ih
Co. h11 an openlno for PER· Don't lawn Cart. Rtlidtntlal,
DIEM-PT Oppouunitlta also Churchaa, &amp; Ctmttarlta, Rta·
IYiilablt lor RN't, HHA' a. Ctlt Ra1HIIt4-318-2&amp;41. .
Mon-Fri 1·5. 304·528-G121. 1400
Commence Avt, Huntington WV. Gtntral Malnttflllnct, Painting,
25701 ..
Yard Work Windows Walhed

-t

Guntra Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commarical, Atsldtnlial, Sttve:

ATTN: WOllEN /liEN. Earn E•·
.. lnc:omo. Flellible Haur.t $200 • 814-388-04211.
ssoo Wookly. Coli 1 Dojt 407·
Goorgtl Poftoblo S.wmll, don't
815-2022 Ell 0521 H25. ·
haul your loaa Ia lho nil jull coli
.
ATTN : WOMEN/MEN. Eam tldll ~15-1857.
income. FlaJibla hour1l 1200·
City Sound
1500 weekly. Call 7 dayo (401) Having A ParNI Production•. The Righi OJ't For
875-2022 Ell. 05118 H 25.
Youl Raaaonablo RaiH, 014-4A'
AVON S8 ·1·15 IHr, No Minimum 0511 .
Order, No Ooqr To Door, No In-

ventory, t-800.131-0188 fnd/1111 Proloalionol Trot S.t'olice, Stump
Removal, Free Eatimate•l In·
rep.
lUll nco, Bldwtll, Oltio. et 4-318COL licen'sa 'd river with ranll;ar · 8t4-3e7·70t0.
.

endof'ument.

2Y"'' exPerience

required, lor ColurnbY1 area, call

Sun Valier- Nuraary School.

814-992-3220.

Chlldcaro II·F lam-5:30pm A9u

2·K, "foung School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per WMk Mini·

Camputar Usen Needed. Work

Own ·Ho0ra. 20K To SSOK /Yr. 1· mum 8 t4--3657.

800·348-1t86 X 1173.

Dental Hyglanitl tor astabliahed
pracllce Ill Alhen1, Ohio. Mull be
lriendh'. quality oriented and a
team ·pla,.er, Send r11umae to:

The Fronch City Child Core Center, .Hours: 8 A.M. -7 P.M. Mon-

day Thru Friday. Infants, Tad·
dlart, Pre-School, And School

Age Program. For Mora lnforma-

R.L. Spero, DDS. 715 W. Union rlon Contact liaa Coughenour,
sr-. Attwno, 0111o 45701 .
814-441·4481.
Oriveri Needed : New Contract
Starting Late June, For Pointt In
Eastern Hall Of U.S. ·Starbng Pa1 Will Core For The Elderly .There
Up To ·. 2Ge IMIIe Plus V.Carlan Home Or Live In Mine, 15 Year•
Pa,., Eic. Paid Ever,. Week -AI· Experlonct, Excellont Work And
.signed ConvenUonal Tractors ~ Part"o nat Referencet, Calt Kay
.
Home Weekendt. Wills Cargo, 114-318-21123.
Inc. SIOUIS~llla, Ohio 814-.f74· Will Mow t.-na In .Galli&amp; County,
1377.
8t4--2111 .
Easy Work! Excellent Pay! At- Will Provide Child Care In My
semble Products 81 Home. Call Home For Chikilon 2 &amp; Up, AuoToll Free 1-800-.467-5566 EXT. cillto ()ogroo In Early Childhood,

12170.

Vlntgn Atta, 81·4·311·1132 Ask
HOME TYPIST: PC uttrs netd· For Boolly Hou.
ad. $45,000 Income potential. Will Pro- Quality Chlldcaro In
ea.i 1.aoo-5ta-4343Ell. B-PS&amp;
My Home, ·Located NHr Holzer
If you are lool&lt;lng ror a career In Hoapftol, Call 8t4·448-8113, For
the heallhcare field, are hard lilaro irWrmallon. .
working,. caring and he,.. a dtti'o Work Wanted: Mowing, light
10 care .lor peo!&gt;t we will pnwldo Conttructlon ; . Painting, Yard
you with lhe education you nead Work, Etc. ·call Dave' At 614·258·
to be a STNA. CompotiliVo oalary, t3iltl.
.
benefits, health inturance •nd
tuition rtimbursemeru available
FINAN CIAL
tar full lime employeea. We encourage trained nursing aniatantt to apply as well. PIMte call
Business
Penny DelQng ar 81.4-667-3156 210
or apply In per.on at Arcadia
Opportunity
Nurei.nu Center, East Main Street,
CooiYillo, Oh~ 45723. E.O.E.
INOI'ICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
lmmf(lillt openings lor part time recommends that w-ou do buGI·
AN'S and LPN'S, all shlha. Com- nts• whh J:IIIOPII w-au know, and
pelhiva wages, diffaten~al with fiX· NOT 10 llond montty"llvough lho
perienc:e, equal opportunity em- mall until you have investigated
ployer. Contact ttle Oire&lt;:tor of fteollorlng.
Nursing, Pinecrest Care Center,
f 70 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
Ot;o, 45831 6t~1112..
FURNACE Ia Tho Moot Efficient
·And Lowett Emitliona Ouldoor
Immediate Openings For Part Wood F•rnace On Tho Morket.
Time RN'I And LPN'I, All Shiht. Control Boiler Is Currtt11t1 Look·
Competitive Wages, Dilf4rential lng Far A Quality Dealer In Thit
With E•ptrilnce, Equal Oppor- Immediate Araa. For Information
tunity Employer. Contact The 01-- On Becoming A Daaler Or For A
reciDr Of Nursing, Pintc:tell Care Free BrOchure Call 1·800~248·
Center, 170 Pineertst Orive, .Gal· 4881 Or 1·2111-182·2515
lipofis, OH45&amp;31,81........a-7112.

Need 6 Ladiea To Sell /\von, 814446·3358.

230

Profasslonal

Services

Needed Immediately: Repair Per· Johnson's Tree Servic:e: Trimson Needed Far Vaccum Cleaner ming &amp; removal of trH lhrubt &amp;
Company. Outlet Include Rapairt hodgoo.·t ·800·11g·0783 or 304·
On ·electric Motors. Some In 5118-1215.
Home Servic:e. Mutt Be Neat In
Appearance And Able To Work
Wolf Wllh Tho Pllbfic, Will Train
The Righi Person. Call8t4·441·
1975.

I•••••••••..

Needed: towbaat pilot, tteady
work, good pay, call 1·412·d43161.t.
Roolero, carpen.,. lnd brk:kloty·
ers, experts onlw- nHCI apptr.
EOE, 81+81l2-ZI84.
.
Stcratary-

For fmmedlllt Hire • Full Time
Se&lt;:rotory For Tho Community Improvement Corporation Of GaNia
County. Mutt Ha¥1 AdYanced
Compuler Skllla. lllcroaoft Olllco,
ACT Helplul. Should Bt Able To
Write Buslnnt Leneta, And
. Have G...,.l Command 01 Soc:rerarlal Slllllt. Muat Be Neal.
COutiOOUI With Ex-1 f'loople
Skill.Relortnctl
Send - To
·E
c-lMW
And
Ill·
rector, The Community tmprawemont Carporatlon 01 Galla County, P.O. llol&lt; 415. Gofflpollt, Oltlo.
4583t . Daadllno llonelar, June
24 , 1908. All Applicaliont Are

Stticlly Canlldtndol.
Someont To CIMn Hautt, - ·
encoa RoqUirtd, Send RaaponM
To : CLA 100 eJo Golllpolla Dolly
Tribune, 825 Third Avonuo, GoM·
. polio, OIU5e31.

s.n-. .. •tar Wllh _ ,

lody

AI f11Biealote advltUIIng In

lhls niwapoparls I1Ubjoollo
111e Fedelll Fair Houolllfl Aol
. o1 1968 which mal&lt;el HIllegal
1 0 - "any preference,
llmlllllon or cllcr1mlnalion
baaed on roce, color, religion.
sa• tamlalstatul or nalionll
orlgfr), or any lnlenllon to
mako any auc1t preiiiiiiCt,
-Uon or cllc(.mlnallon.•

11lle fiOWOI1IIPor wtl ml

Ia '"". 'llit accept
-lorreol-lt
whlclllti In vldalion ollho law.
o u r - ... hereby,
h11orfned that .. dWIII!DI
edver1iled In lhfs newspaper
ore ovaffablo on an eq~~~f

-"'""fllaiS.

REAL ESTAT E

for room. board ond tma11 O l l a r y . I - - - - - - - - Send resume and rftrencet Cia:
santlnol, p.o. a •• 128-25, Po· 310 Homes for Sale
"*"~'· Oli 451111.
,_...,.._ _,_,_.,...,,....,.1 tl2 ••,. 4 br., ''·· dr., ~.• bolt-

Taking Applications : Bartender J ment &amp; sun porch, $38,000, call

Wallllll. Full· Time. Apply In 114·882-4410.
Person At Carf't Tavern, 15e :..:..:..;:::..:.:.;:::...._ _ _ _ __
s-.1 Avorllo. Galipolia. .
2 - m Homo. Land ConlrlCt
:..:.::..:..:.c==...;=~;;.-.--1 To OUiNfitd Pat1on1. 111'11 Down
Tho Golllo ·Malgl Community e 14-251-1513 For Ajlpol
. Aclion A_g~r,cJ Is Sl•klng A
Houaing Rfl11lblllllll0n SpedaHII 2 Stary :i-,4 -ocim, t tl2 boim,
To Fill A Fltlition Wilh The bo..,....:•Cafl Somo~lo Roafty.
County ·CHIP Program. Tho C.n· 304-e15-3030 or 3114-875-3431 .
dldata Should Have Four (4)
Yelrt Experience In "Houaing 2~3 bedroom houH, 50&amp;100 lot.
Constr·tlo·n, Pref. .bly Houlh1g laqared In SWracuse, appliances
Rthabililalion With HUO Or 0t1ttr lncludtd, caH 114-882·5711ahor

Government Funded Program•; 4tm
supe;.;iorr Expe- In Hou•
lng Tradll And SonllliVo To The 2·3 bedroom•. brick, DR, now
HI
windows, carpel, complete new
NHdl Q' Low •Income Fam "· kitchen and bath, garage, full
SOillry Ia Battd On Tho Currenl belamoll, 8 t 4•882. , .,
Salary Schtdula. Sond R To : TOM PASQUALE. Oaflla • 3 BR 2 ~.. - - 2
" Vllfoy
··~··
car~.
lloigl Cn•A• 10 10 NOtlh SR 1' ~lng
..... clott
Holzer
Bo• 212. CIIHhlte, 0H 41120 No liD 0
lallr Then June 28, 11181. Far~V•It+4fl.,...,,
Fur..., tnformadon C.l 114-311~ Houle ,.... loll 7341 Or 114·882-8128. The Ga~ Zone In Pomeroy, •2100 080,
llo ·Molgo CAA lo An Equal ep. !814)811-Dll:l.

........... ~nll!fDII&lt;.

,_.,.
..... .... ••' oem home 1n PDmerar. ·

WIII tell on lend con4ract, 114·
11112·51181.

urr

251

'

Big Savlngo On Carpel &amp; Vinyl In
Stock, 18.00 Yd l Up. Mollohan
Cerpell. R7N.It4--7444.

·::.::\

ve t.
Bl-. S22,500, 814-I,,;;~~~~~:A~~P~~
t 743.

Tl1t1a bedroom home In coun~y.
WhiiiO Hilpod,
Rd.,lt4-llll2-5017.
Altland, ont bath,
"'11f0Und
T

·

0:::

SIO!Y And A HaN Hou10 With Ex245-e.l15.
tra lot In

AKC Lhaao ApiO Pupplot,
RNdyl Shot., Wormed, Private

2 8 1 OCWN ' aiiHie tit Of Jut,,
V.rd, •3801Uo. 114· 441-

"•d

h

420

R DR

Mobile U
A-....,,,..
for Rtnt

Coun1ry Furnilure. 3()4.875-8820.
Rt 2 N, lmlln, P1 Pleaaan~ WV.

.:_
TIIII-:.::.:..:;3oi::.;H:..::.·.::lkrl::.:..1:.:t:.:
·5.;:__ __
Gibaon rolrlgorator, good cond.
1100. 30U75-IIIIS.

kl':,.;'wi~o.:.,r::: ~II. r0. 14x10 3 Btdroomt, All Eloctric GOOD USED APPLIANCES
ForAnOrSIII,I14-311«l7'9.
Waaheft, dryers, refriQeratorl,
an
s•
• 11
7•
r gel. 1\agga ... pp ancet, u

modeled barh, laundr• room,
'
forced air furn•ce wirh AC, II·
..chad garage, Hpal&amp;te garage~

2Badluom Mobh HarM No Ft.ta,

worklhop, ll~o shod, Syra·
114-8822 Bedroom Troilor, 8 IIIIo• Routt
320 Mobil• ..,.·mres
n\111
218, $210/Uo t DeiXIIit, Referfor Sale
incaa, . e,.-•~ 1• 8112. " 4' 258·
1251
14x10 Nomolla 2 booci!OOII\ "'""rr
·
bath. totally remolded. Cafi304- 2 Bedroom Unturnit~ed, Mobile
175-«1111.
.
llomo, No Poll, I2251Mo.. l135
Dopotit 814-441-3017.
1870 Schultz t2x65 With t2•tl
Addirlon . Nany New Improve. 2 BedroOm. very 'clean, nice
manta. Priced To Sell! S2,000, porch andJard, California StrHI
114·448·3184, Sarloua lnqulrlol ~::;:r · 1225 month!,. 30 4•
Please.
3 Bedroom House Trailer Located
107814170 Freedom With 10x20 In Rio Grande,· Relerenc:es Re·
Vemc:o Add -Room, Very Good qulrtd, No Peti insldei-G 14 _37 g_
~=.· Elec~ic Hoot, CA 814· 2720 AmR 8 P.M.
1085 Redman 141170, 2 Bed· Trailer for ren1 in Gallipolis ares.
81.....,....8840
rooma, 2 Batht, Wa1her, Drr,er,
·
Stove , Refrigerator, .h celent Two and three bedroom mobile
Condition, tU .. ·Z-4~5628.
hamel'; lttrting at , 240 •1300 ,
-er water d t " I 1 d8d
1U8 CIIIW'fon ·1... 85 New Cerpet 1...... '
an raan nc u •
llull Soli Wu 175 Now 1151 61&lt;-9112·2167.
81.....,..83t0.
44 0 Apartments
tg81 Flootwood 14•72 3 Bod·
for Rent
,._.. 2 Balht, Utility Room. 21oit
Condltionert, 112,000. 304-875- 1 and 2 bedtOOm apartments, fur·
1180,814·"1 ·1183.
nilhed and unfurnished, securlt~
deposit requir.ed, no pets, 814·
1911 Cla11on 14•70, 3br, bath &amp; 882·22t8.
112, nawly rornodeled boi11 w/IS jet

Vine Streer, CaU 81 .. ·U8-7398,

~o.. 1135 Dottolit 114-4o4B-

OWner, Athena !Marietta, State

RouiOI!IO, 114-51it•212Z.
AI(C mini P - 1 , ..., 11moJoa.
t3CICI - · one mole, 1250. ratdr
June 15, accepting depotltt,
lt4-148-3021.

o...

·
~'KC ...,.,.,.,.d 8 olton Yoorroor

I&gt;UP!&gt;H, two malft, ono lemale,
ttady 10 go, coli 814·g48·2•85,
114-lll2·3752or&amp;14-lll2-3815.
AKC Registered Bo•er puppin.
30.e.e75-!015.
.

;1:.:-1101).=.:""::.;·34:.:.::88=·- - - - - - 1 AKC
Rogillortd
Gorman
L l1hapad coucl\, onoman. chair 1 Shopl1ord PII"J:Ieo. From Garman
tnd tablo. $300.304-875-1414.
~m ~1!-t~~2.11 lvoroitw Komtla,

QIIO,

1
v ...--v- -

530

Antiques
Antiqu• 801111 Show· Ju(tt 2a.
8am-3pm. 11.00 admlulon. 41h
and Main, Pt. Ptoaunt 814-882·
5018• 304-e7S. 41D 5·
Bu~ or ttll . Riverine AnHquet,
1124 E. lloln Stroot, on Rt 124,
.Pomeroy. Houra : M.tW. 10:00
.Lm. 10 I :OO p.m., SUndaJ 1:00 •
8:00p.m. 81~882-252e.

S40

Ml

sctllaRIOUS
Merchindlse

12 HP Crattaman riding lawn
mower; fully equipped computer:

'a-.-,.'·"t..;.llu_I.;.A..;.K;;.C_R_ot-,-w-.-~~.-,-P~u-pplea. 1 Wttk• Old. 4 Famaltt, 1
Male, Moving Mutt Sell! 112
l'rlt:ol8t4-318-2117.
81 H 1 p
1
uo "or upp "· 114·251·

_e_535.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Bulintll For Site: ~t ShOp. Ful·
"Equipped, &amp; Stocked, Groat Lo·
cation! Serious Inquiries Only,

8t4-441·0170, 814-446·7507.
Persian Kittens
1250 Malt and Fomtlt 814·251·
1 101
:F.,-tr-ro_I_I._B__
W_e_ek_t_0:-1-:
d. -,.-M-a-le-2

.CFA Regislered

YMriQd, 614-379·2882.

814·912-3014.

1885 Thunderbltd, rurba cou.-.
-Y good cond. lt ,SOO. 304-7735221.
111:1 Hondo 500 4
ttae Oldtmob•le Cutlatt Su· Good Condition, New Bantry,
promo Wlil1 AI: 11.100, 81 ...04· 1850, 114· 448·39• t ' 114· 251·
11111.
4110.

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750

CREATION

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By Phillip Alder

1-:..:.;:....:,;::..:.;~:.;_:::.:.~--: :1

41

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Ctua nana : :

42 Ani 1411

431"-

.44 ~-=--

·

41 At11nlano

ure boat on trade, (e14)

:8.:.:'54:..:.:...- - - - - - - -· •,
18119 21 FL Well Crah CC 2180 HP :;
Inboard Full• Loaded, Tamdo'!l ~
'
•
Axles, Eagle Drive On Trailer 1
SUrgo8rak8o, 81...48·2012. . : ·
o1990 Celebrity liD Boat. t8 IC.
130 HP Sharp! t1,500 8U·•46· .
2510, Evenings.
·•

__

,....,.....,.....:..:..:.:...:.....:.....:..

Budget Tt"lnsmissiont, Used

,.

.....
,.."
........
...

II

Organizer
and translator •

.

TELL HIM HOW. THE
FRENCH TOAST IS THE
WRON6 TIIICKNE55 ..

..

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•

New •gal tankt, one ton truc:k ~
""'"'' radiators, ftoor mats, et:. ~ ;t

D I R Auto, Ri!&gt;er, WV. 304·372' •:
31133 0&lt; 1-1101).213-9329.
•.
Wanred : radiator lor '78 For~
Mu1 ~ang II, v.a automatic, 3021
mokJr, call 81.4·247·2981 . ·
·'-

&amp;

_

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

CELEBRITY CIPHER

T.,.,... ._

IRe-;:

. .•

• m:::=:·!

The organizer of tbe bridge side of b..rl--1--+-my trip to Cairns was Helen
47 """"
.
Thompson. Yott might have seen her
~
name without having it register. One brt-i-8 'b lWI
of the best bridge books ever, !~til of! L-1-...L..wonderful but difficult deals, is
Ianni
"Bridge with the Blue Team" by Pietro
51,...... _
Forquet. II was translated from the
Italian by Helen.
. by Lult c.mpo.
.S he is also a good player, arguably
"
-Clphora..-,.IIOQI:••nt••
.. Ciftl6lcl hom qo 1 n • II¥.....,.~
..... ..,...
the best in northern Queensland. She
. Etld\ lliiltei In a.dpMr . . . . tof .......
W.... U
spotted the right line in this deal al·
most immediately. How would you
' EDZMFP
TDWJXFOMP. '
LJF
plan the play in four hearts after Woeat
has led the spade king'!
· JMUYLJS
XF J F .
Helen, sitting South, actually rebid
three no-trump, not four hearts. Well
·'
done! That contt:act has nine wp tricks.
And if the heart suit were a minor."we
'ELAMHX
EDZMFP
MP
T F 8 8 F J
would all rebid three ·no-trump. But
with a mllior we get nervous, especially
BVLH
UO"LHMHX
BDMOFBP. '
holding only two spades. However, I
forced her back to the four-heart ranch.
AOLWP
AMHPAM.
At first glance. It looks obvious to
use your one dummy entry take the
Club fmesse. Here, though, that finesse
fails and you lose four tricks : one ·
111At , ....,
spade, two diamonds and one club.
PUZILII
Helen realized that she had nine top
tricks, and the hunt was on for number
10. AI trick one, she saw that she had
Roarrango loHotl of
options. Sbe could withhold dummy's
four Krambled word1
low to form faur worda.
ace and play either her three or her
jack. What did West's lead indicate?
RighU The spade king and queen .
Harnessing the power of dummy's 10,
Helen ducke-d the first trick in the
dummy anjl unblocked ~e j.ttck from
her hand. Either now or later, depending on West's lead at trick two, she
planned to finesse dummy's spade 10
l
for ber loth trick. She won two spades,
seven hearts and l!lle club.

...,....+-+--

built, All Types, Acceaslblo To ,
Over 10.000 Tranamiasioi"l, Als0 1''
Ovemotf Kit.. 114-245-5117
::

790

.w..
32eto.

&amp; Motors

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.,,
':\

.~

21

..

lor Sale
~=.,---:---,-=-.,..- •'
1Q77 Starcrafl16',. 1878 trailer, ;.
1078 M&amp;rcury 80 HP with power ~
till. 12too. 3114·173-5707.

760

t·

21 Willi·
M MDIII

_ .......,....,_

Opening lead: e ~

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.194.

VfF..Y WElL, WMT
•

1978 Small Selt·Containad , 14'
Camp11 With Toilel, Gil Stove,;
Relrigerator, Furnace, ExceUenr
Condition, S1 ,350, 81 ._.08·3334

7

16
I

1!114-~4198.

81l

304·458·1121.

SERVICE S

8

'I'ES. IT HI'5o! THE
·wHOLE SCHOOL 'THINK$
~ WROTE THAT 5Tllf'ID .
I'OE'M t EVERYONE'S
L... UGHING AT ME! .
EVER'&lt;GIE:S · STARING
...T 11E!

-·-

____

..;..;..:;___

C)
Tlte Treasure
Sov1n1s You'll Find In rile
...Chrsslfltd Se&lt;IIGII.

I FRIDAY

.

.1.

7. •

1. 1.

'I

...

I

PRINT NUMBfREO
LETT£RS
UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

I'

.,

...

FORr

I' I' I
IIIIIII I I

~

.•.•

SCRIJMETS ANSWERS

JUNE 21

, i'"W

,.

'

Jumper · Gross· Weave · Wallet · GET to SLEEP
• .A comedian cracked up the audience when she said,
Ltfe 1s somethtng to do when you can't GET to SLEEP.·
.'

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''

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'
'

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Uain1ena~ce~ vi~yl {

alcli"'!, rooling, ext8r~ ~ lnltri·

...

..

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~

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'

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br,ands. House calla, 1 · 800~ 797·- ,
IXI15, WV 30.. 578-2398.
·

ASTRO·ORAPB

Roofing &amp; guners compla18 home
remodeling decks &amp; tiding, 35...
Y.Mrl eJiperience, 8 &amp;. S ·Roofing

.·• .

and CoJJstrucrion, 814 -992·238•
or t.aoo·889-31143.
li

. BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Plumbing &amp;

Heating
Freeman's Heating And Cooling.
,Installation And Service. EPA
Ctttified. Residential, Commerclal.814-251·1811 .

0~
.

Electrical and
Relrlgaritlon

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumpa, Air Condldonfng, If
You Don' Call U1 WI Bolh Lotti
FrM E'stlm.tes, 1-800.291·0098' ...
81 ....... -1301, wv 002948. .
""

,...j.
R-.tidanlial or commerclai wiring.
new HfVfc:e or repalra. Matllr' U· 11 1

canted electrician. Ridenour '\4.
Eietlrlcal. WV000308, 304-815-no
17111.
.
o;l
Or Commorcitti ·Wir-1'~
lng, Now Sorvic:o Or fltlteiro. lf. ;;&gt;I
canttd Eloctrfcilln. Wel~h Efac· JoJ •
trio 11 4·4•8·8850 Galllpollt,
Ohio.
', ~ ;'
':I'"'

••

,._'
.'
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•••

1,

or pa1nt1ng, power wastllng, room ••
additions. Free Estimates, 814 ~..,,
992-4.232.
•
....
::--:-:::-:~--..,....'"""'Ron's tv·Servic:e, speclitliziftg in .. ~
Zenith also servi&lt;:in~ molt other,}.

840

. ,,

"She just told me the most
uselessthingintheworld," one
nosy neighbor grumbled about
her friend. "She told me gossip
not worth ·-- • • •• • ·!'

~

DRYWALL
,;
~· fmistl, repair.
·,.
Ceihn~s textured, pl*llet re · 'r: ~~
Call Tom 304·675·4188 ..~J rs ·•,

820

..

15

C&amp;C General Home Main -~
tenence- Painting , yinyl tiding,~
carpenlly, doors. windows, baths \•
mobile home repair and more. FeW.• •
free eslimate c:all Chet, 61 ..·992-loj
632:3.
·,:

Earl's Home

·~

Complete the chuckf•· quotoc1
.-.J.-..J...
_.1.
_.J.L--1..
'
by filling In the milling , words
1
you develop from !dep NO,. 3 below.

rebuilt, awning &amp; antenna.

· (

Q

EKEERp
~-r~:....;;,lerTil9;..-.:.;.l..:....rl-l Q

~Ida-in truck camper,

experience.

.~

I RKCITI

~:::;=IR:.:::D:G;::I;::~,;
..~,
..
·

1986 Rockwood camper,
8, stove, lcebo•. good ccirocliticin,

~tutday.

.

Jun, 22. 1996

Several secret ambilions may be realized
In the year ahead, but nol necessarily In
lhe way In which you perceived lheae
go.a ll lnmally . The8e modfllcallon' will
olter glllt!ter berielit..
.
CANCEII (J..,. 21.July 22) Your lnftial
aeHumenf or a altuatlon tpday ·might
on the darker lkte. Ho\u1u1r, if you
llllca •• hard. MCOnd 10011, you'l - ·
n ,_
Trying 10 pft:h up

roa..

DPPonunltlle.

a broken ·romance? The· Astro-Graph CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan. 191 Early in
Matchmaker can help you understand the day you may discovlir that being 100
whallo do to.f11ake lhe refaliqnship work. forcelul wilh others is not productive.
Mail $2.75 lo Malchmaker, o/o this news· FQrtunalefy. your good judgment will gel
paper ; l!.d_. Box 1758, Murray Hill you back on track.
Station. New York, N'l' 10156.
' AOUfi.!'IIUS (Jan. ZO.Fob. 191 You might
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Financial trends nol gel everything you walll in a commer·
will work In your lavor, bul you should 1ry cial arrangemen1 lotlay, bu! don'l toss In
to use this gotlfllortune to satisfy eldrav· lhe towel right away . Everything will work
agenl whims.
.
001 in lhe end.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Siipl 221 A silualion PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Some eldra
might arise today that ccutd enable tjou domestic pressures are probable in lhe
to !•k~ adva~1agt of someone, ~ul • tb early part of lhe day, bu1 if you maintain .
your credit, you will .ditcar&lt;l lhis id8a·.
your sense of humor, you will brighten
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Do not let a &lt;!feryone's sjlirlts.
dorplneering indivlcrual force his or her ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) If you help
ld~s on you today. The pl&amp;n or action someone today , throw in something
you designed lor yourseff wMI be better: ·
extra. GOOd intentions count lor a lot and
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Enjoy your· wil yield larger·than-usuar rewards.
self In social si1uationsloday, 'flut don1 lry TAURUS (April 20·May 20) In most
to mix business wllh pleasure. Make all Intangible areas or your file, ~ou could
of one lhing 011 al ollhe other.
•• have good luck today. Y.ou will ":'I be as
Sl\GITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0oc. 211 You ·. luckywilhranglblethlng&amp;,IOUI8CBution.
wMI cOI)Iiriu~ 10 have good lucie In your GE- (lillr 21.....,. 20) Goad fOrtune
llnani:jal aUairs . HDwever, you muot · wilt
you lodliy Wyou 1t11 ewnlll
make 141ro to do al ;or. can to tinaura run 111etr eotne. lmjlllmeutil~g chlngel
moneli!y auccela.
lmpuilliwlly Cot*~ 0. ~- ·

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BARNEY
MY NEW

Q

Yulnerable: Both
.Dealer: South
88!1111 West Noftll

'

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

36o

o._,

•

500 Ninja,

Boats

lily,.....
.......,,._

SMIIII
• J 3
aAit .QJI7J
• 65

t988 Ford Tofllpo GLS 2 Door, 5 18g5 Polaris Jet Ski SLT 150 3 '
Speed, AMIFM c....u •• AC, Seater Like New, ss.eoo oao: I
Now Tlroa. Rtol Shorpl SUOO, 81.. 251-8743.
•'
ceo. &amp;14-318-21845.
1985 Yamaha Timberwolf .tr4
1988 llorcurr Cougor LS. 1 own- 13,500, 814-379·8384.
er, law miles, axe. cond. $.(,500.
304-e75-7185.
200 'lllhama 4· Moto. Call 304·
4511-154taltar 8:00pm.
•.

1988 Buick loSabro, oxcallont
running condition, V-e, PB. PS.
AI:, powor windowa, $3100, et4·
9411-2045 or 11•-8411-2302.
1980 Buick Re"al, white,
...,.
•
-.ooomt. dHn. $5,500. Cal 304675-3582 lion- Fri. g:Q0-4:30.

s2

" 3 z
• A K J 10
•JtOt

• t. 7
e KI 7I

•

player, American
181111 4Cyl,
outo. air, tinled
racing-..
304-713-50111.

..

• 7 8 54

' " 10 II

till E-1 4dr, .,10, 80,000ml. 18g2 Suzuki GSXR IOOW Low '
11,700. 3114-882·2030.
lllloo. Good Condition, E.. t'tl :
3114-875-t182 L - lltuage.
•
till Ford Tempo 2.3L Enaina,
. ·•
Air, Automdc, PDL: t812 V.W. t884 'lltmaha 350 4 Whooler Ex· ,
Dlottlloit, Good CQdilon, collont Condition, U,800 080,
Ell111Ciean,I814-25H0tst.
814-388-8425.
• •

r.•

·-I

West
a KQ9I

ffool•,

wlndawa, CO

2

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• 5•

good,-• ;

sa.ooo.

.-lrtd.

" 5 •

1918 Honde 200u, n.w tlret, •
new reer fenc:let, runa
1881 Ford Tompo 4dr, ..... run1 ttlll tilt rdor - l t d 2JJIS
- L 304-e75-4411.
lng &amp;lido roll. 304--3085.
:r

For Sale Or Trade: AKC R&amp;gll·
1g95 Craltomon Aldin~ Lawn ltred ChoW Pllppiea. Flrll Sholl,
Wormed, WitM Papeis, 114-245Mower, 20 HP, 52" Cut, oohler 8l2l.
.
t98g Old• Cullau Clera Bodr
Magnum Engine, E~~t:ellont Cond·
·Damage, Runt Good, 1850, 814lion. 114·251-1224. ,
Full Bioodod collie Pupploa, No UB-1815, After Sir 814 •446 •
• Pioc:o Living Room Suite, Wood Paparo. sso, Poront On Promolio. 12&lt;14.
Wli11 Cuahions, Like Now, $295; 2 81.,..•1-1083.
R ,.
S
a
- - - - - - - - - - t989 Sundance RS Crulae, Til~
ec mert 25 oth, 814 · 258 · Full-Blooded Golden Rerrievtr AC, PDL, Auto, 2 Doors, AIIIFM
1332 Ahtr&amp;P.M.
Puppies, All Males S75, May caasene, 12,050, 080, 81 ,._2 581119.
Blue Ridge Spe with cover, r&amp;d· LHVO Mooaege, 814·949·2•08.
'
od 1
1 1
1 ·
l'k
whirlpool tub, 111,000. 304· 576- 1 Bedraom, Super Nice, 1286/ wo
rame 1 eps, Jets, 1 • Jack Rutlell terrier puppjet, 10 1112 Cemaro Convertible, RS
31110or:J04.511·2984.
Mo ., Plua Utilities, Uouall, ~99~':-:i :.'ln~li»~~ llll. lul grown, all colo'l, 12~oa.: 25th Ann~ttoary Safloa V·8, Au·
Something Available! Sun Valley 12200 8
two Shellie mif'liarure Colliet, tom'atic trantmittion, Only
1991 14180 Fairmont, lhree bed- APIII'I'I8nf1, 614·44~2957.
' '.t-892-.0.U.
nWH. St25faa. ;814-742·2D50.
18,000mlot, Ont ••• kind. llriqhl
red, Betge_t('p, Beige leather m·
rooms, two batht, all electric,
Boolt By Redw;ng, ChippltWI., ·
40'110' deck inctuded, e• houae 2bdrm, apts., total eiKitic, ep- Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowest Male AKC Rtglttered ·Pomefa- lerior, loaded, a real collector't
WIIIIt. cal61 .. -802·8134.
pliancea furniah!fd, laundry room Pricet At Shoe Cafe. GaiNpolls.
nian Pu~. Champion LN, 1250; · car. Gt.e confirms that thit is a
tacilititl,. &lt;:lose to 1chool in 10wn.
Border Collie Puppy, Nat Reg II· rare car. Must 18e ro apperlcate
1981 Schull Mobile Home 3 Bed· AppliCII!IIons available at: Village l)ox Spring• &amp; Uaureu Set New, ltred, Female Husky, $75, 81-t~ like new. Atking 114,500 Cali
rooms, 2 Baths, Kitchen, DininG Green lprs. ••9 or call814·992· Not Uted, 10 Year warranrr. I-F448~-882~;;7.j;:;M;;;;:s;;;
. ;;;,;;;, 304-875-t88t thor SPM ,
L.R., Hutch, Hoat Pump, AC, _37_t_1._E_O_H_.- - - - - - - I 1195; Living Room Sulloo From
Porch; 112 Acre, H!lllop Drive,
s275: Bunk Bed s280 Comptete:
Palace tcennelt, Boardlng, 1082 Chevy Lumina Eurotport
Golllpolla, 125,000 Coah Or BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Rt. 1 Baal do Giovanni's. Pizza,
Puppltl, Grooming, Mint Condlllon, Maintenance
130.000, 0Wno&lt; Flnanctd II% Int. BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON PrcciDrville •t 4 88IS •• 73
&amp; Trade, All Brood a. Kopt, Fully Load6d, · Aaklng
Wrth 15,000 OcMn, B14-4ot8-4455.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Oriflle
' u ·
~ ·
Payments Welcome, 814 · 381·
614-245-511t2.
1998 Belmont Mobile Homo, 3 lrom $244 to $315. Walk to shop Carpel Olf White Plush Nap Ap· 0429.
1993 Chryalor LeBaron GTC Low
&amp; movies . Call 6U · C41l.· 2588. - • 10•12. .,. 2••s1Bt
AKC Bassett Hound Male 1 112 Miles, Ercellent Conditlan
Opportunity.·
• bedroom, 2 bolh, lot 85X1 05. Call ~~~~~~~~~~;;;. ~- · " • • · ~
·
SOmer le Realty. 304·875·3030
. Concrete &amp; Plaatlc Septic Tanka, Years Old, Female 2 Years Old, $1o.nu. 304·875·1782 Leave
Message.
or
'875-3431.
Rooma l Bath, Up· 300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron $100 Bolh, 614·251·8785.
I Furnished, Clean, Event Enterpritea: Jackton, OH
Regislered Weimaraner pupp.1es. 1993 Plymouth Sundance, Au ·
limited
Offeri19D6
daublewide,~~;~;~~~
.Da~po:•:ii~R~• 1..aoo..537·8528.
3br,
2balh,
SHag down,
$2751
304-875-7740.
tomatic:, Air, Rear Spoiler, 48,000
month. Froo deliver, &amp; aetup.
Couni!J Styia Red Chllclcad Solti
Miles, Asking 15,300 080, 6t4·
Only at Oakwood Homat, Nitro Furnished Apartment, Upslalra, 1 S125; Antique Oak Bed $800, Schnauzer puppies, AKC, ult &amp; 251-11340,614-251-14117.
pepper, tholt &amp; warmed, chamWV. 3114·755-5815.
Bedroom, No Poll, Stcond ~... 814--g251.
pion bloodline, 114-887·5404.
1903 Red Ford Mustang,' LX,
nua Galllpofia, All Utilitiol Paid,
loaded, 50,000 llileo, U ,OOO.
limited Offer. Only 1500 down on Qepoair, 614-446.Q523.
·
Elaclric
' SCOOIIfl
And
Musical
814·882·5486.
any new single wide in stock.
Wheelchalra, New IUaed, Van f 570
Free delivery &amp; tetup. Only at Furnished Effieciency Apartmenl, Car Llh lnttalfed, Stairglides, lift
lnstrulnents
O.kwood Homes. Nitro, WV 30•· Central Heat &amp; Air Conditioning, Chairt, CaM For Brochure, 614:
Piano lessons: lucy Jane Bulm755-5885.
All Utilitiel Furnished, Prltiale 44·7283.
• : Horlklrd. Caii304-1182-2311S.
Now .Bank Flepos. Only 3 loll. Still
Hand Ouited Ouiha, Hand Quilted
In wamanly. 304-755-7191.
· Gracious livino. 1 and 2 bedroom Pillows, Homa ·Woven Rugs, 61•· Small Lowrer organ, 1250, excel·
lonl COndition, Do111 Wooda. 8t4Price Buster. 1Dsas 3btdroom. apanmentl 11 Vllfage Manor and 258-8061 .
882·3312.
"'
F
Rivartide
Apartman11
In
Mlddl•
1825 down, • t 5 ~mo. ree_deliv· porl From 1232·1355. Call114JET
er~ I setup. Onl~ at Oakwood
AERATION MarORS
580
Fruhs &amp;
Homto. Nl.. wv 304-755-S885.
g92·5014. Equal Houalng 0 - · Repai~. I RebuHI In SIDdt.
1996 Metro Geo, at, air, aba, amVegetables
CoM Ron E"""'· 1·8DQ.531-9528.
frn
cassette. Paid $13,000 sell br
330 farms for Sale
lllddlopon: 41h A.. 2 Bedroom,
Cabbog&amp;cut 30o head, Jim $10,500. C~l304·882-3413.
Tobacco allotment ol 1200 lbs., furnished apt, deposit &amp; refer- Kenmore washer &amp; dryer, good Hil Farm, etort Falla. Ot;o, 814MO. 304-1112·25ee.
77 Oldsmobile 98, 74k, v.g..
Maiga CO., call 614-1192·5533.
c:onditlon, waaher needt new 247-3042 or 814-247-2842.
$1750;
'85 Dodgt 100, 114k. v.g..
cluld1.
175/bolh,
614-843-5453.
New Haven: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom lur·
Strawberries Tlylar't B4trry $1350; 614·949·3228.
340 Business and
nl~ apta. Dapoolt 1 reloroncKing · tiza waterbed w/mlrror Patch, OfN!n lion, Wed, Frl, 11-8;
t l 304-8112-25118.
Buildings
sat Noon, 814-245-11047.
Auto Loano. Dtalor will arrange It
~eadboard, 12 drawers undernanclng evan if you have ·been
neath.
S150.
Couch,
rocker,
c:ofNice
two
btdroom
apartment
In
Profauionall8usinets building for
lUrned dawn tlsewtlere. Upton
loe l end table. ISO. 30~ · 815·
sublease. Located at 509 S. Third Pamoroy,'no Pt"- 614-882-sese.
FARM SUPPLIE S
Equipment Uatd Cars. 304·458·
7815
S...t MiddloporL Ohio. E~~&lt;:ellenl
10119.
.
Now
a&lt;:ceptlng
applications
tor
&amp;
LI
VESTOCK
for pt¥aician oUiee or real estate
Largo
China
Cabinet,
good
cond.
one
bedroom
apArtments.
Appll·
space . Ample street parking .
Drag Raco Cara: t959 Anglio Ill·
can be picked up at Po· 304-875-881ie.
Available immadiatelw-. Contact caliont
nus Engine; 1979 Monza Round
meroy
Cliff
Apertmentt
Oltlca,
R.L Kunz, 8t4-58a-3375 colect
Tu~ 4 Link Challit; 1870 Nova
lawn trac:toi, MTO lawnflite, 11 610 Farm Equipment
61H8Hm.
Baclc Hall Cer All Now; t 11811 • 3118
HP, 38" cut, 5 tpeed,· elec:tric
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
bedroom apartment In Mid- start, QOOd condition, $375, 814· Ford 4000 wf8' dltc, 2 bottom Engine, 814-842-:1031.
plow, runs good, goad condition,
all
paid, S2701mo. Ml-2249.
SS.200. 8t4·992-2122.
720 Tl'ucks for Sale
Call ist4,882·
New Gaa Furnac:aa, New GatvanSpring
Clearance
on
Homelite
&amp;
'8.4 Niasan Kino Cab, ... 4, runt
izod Duct Work, Now Hood Fano.
Green Machine trimmers. Sidlfs good, S1000; '81 Toyoto Corolla,
25 Acres, Hannan Trace School Twin Rivera Tower, now accepUng 8t4-3111·27ZI AFTER 8 P.M.
Equlpnwn CO. 304-875-1421 .
runt-L 1400:114-11112-21179.
Oittri&lt;:t. Small Tobac:c:o Allotment. appllc:odona lar tbt. HUD aubald· -RCA 18 Inch Sotllllll Diah,
lzed
apt.
ror
elderly
and
handl·
Mineral Rights, 814-251·1811 .
'89 F-250, automatic, tllding wind620 wanted to Buy
CompleiO, 1450, 8t4-2&lt;15-9137.
capped. EOH 304-875-M111.
ow in back, 300 8 cyl., excellent
BRUNER LAND
Valley View Apartment•. Rio Ont Giblon lroll ~.. rofriQorator, GRADE LOG WANTED : Doliv· conditiOn, great work. truck, flttt
. 814-775-9t13
olmond, 5 yro. old, 18.8 cubic loot 8fed or Will pic:k·U~ contact: Harry 13409 080, 114-D411·23t I days.
Grandt.
freezer; one Kenmore, gold, troat Goldabarry/Paul Mercer Sawmill,
Meigs Countr : Minutes To
tree, 1D.2 cubic four. $250 nch, In&lt;: . 2808 US Rt35 Souttl aide 1918 Cho¥)' 112 Ton Pick· Up
Athens, Near Albany, 5 A&lt;:ret Now ac:cepting applications lor 6t4-882·5533.
Wv, 25187. Phone 304-875·1598 Truck 350 Motor, 1800 Neg.. 814·
two
bedroom
apartments.
·
Apan$6,5110, 11+ Acre• • 18,500,
448·051U.
or 304-875-7882.
ments
have
air
conditioning,
Many Good .Hunlihg LollPuah lawn Nower $50 : Weekirchen appliance•. fenced In deater
$75; Call Before 9 P.M. 630
LivestoCk
. Galtia County: Gallipolis, 2 Milet playground, laundry laclffty, on 814-448--t636.
Out Neighborhood Rd.- Nic:e 22 olio managomentlnd '"""'· 2 Haflini•r Gelding• Broke To
Acm $28,000, g Acrtllt•,soo ... lnd tralh palcl "' ........ For Quean Size Orthopedic Manren Oriv1 &amp; Ride, 8 Years Old, 614moro
lnlormation
.,laoo
call
(814)
Or 10 Acr11 117,000. Towards
Sot And F,.me. N - Uttd Stiff 2&lt;15-9232.
1980 Chtvl 1 Ton Gpod Shape,
Huntington, 3 Miles Out Teens 245-9t 70, llonday·Thurtday from In Plilllc Colt 1100. Sell $250,
Slmmenlal Cows, Calves, Built, Now Tirri. St,400, 814-441•21&lt;4
Run I Chambers Rds. to Acrer Noon 10 3pm. EQUAL HOUSING . 6t4-775-2380.
814-245-5585.
After 8 P.M.
ltO,OOO, 5 Acrot $t2,000, 7+ OPI'ORTUNITY l RURAL ECO·
Acres Whh Pand 112,000, Nice NOMIC AND COMMUNITY DE· Ralnbaw M8lptf w1 anachmenlt.
Two ihrtt monlh old male Pygmy 1810 Ford Ranger Nteda Motor
3114-815- t 725.
level 8 Acres Wllh Sueam VELOPMENT.
goalS, $100 080, (6t41 992- Work, Bodr 11 Ptrltctl S300
I11JOO.
Vary nice clean one btdtoom tur- Relrigeratorl, Stoves. Was~ert 2122.
080, 8U388 9135.
nfthed -lmenl In lllddlitpor~ And Dryoro, All Reconditioned
Call For Mapa a Owner Finane· 8t4·882·2t11.
1188 GMC good condition. 30•·
And Gaurantoedl StOO And Up, 640
Hay &amp; Grain
ing •lnfo. 10-. OFF Cash Pur ·
875-5112.
Wi flellvor. 614-118-8441 .
450
Furnished
Slorage delivery
Standing timber for ule, masUy
Farm Rt 35, 1987 Ford F250 314 Ton, 351
Rooms
Building Loll For Sale; Midway
Windtof' 2 wheel Drive, 81,..446·
pine,
call
114-7•2·2141.
Orlve, New Haven, Citw- Wlller &amp;
2145 or 304-875-2305
Roomt
rar
rani
week
or
mand'l.
Sower, tOOx177, Phono 304·713·
Slotting II S120/mo. Golllo Hotll. STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
TRAN SPORTATI ON
. SQ.III. Prlcadi!Soil.
t880 Ford XL Loriel, 53,000
Uprlghl, Ron Evsns Enterpriaal,
814-448-85110.
lliiOI, S-rd. 5 Spaod, Eleel·
Jad&lt;aon,
Ot;o, 1-1101).537·9528.
Loti far rant: Now taking appUealentCordtlonl 814-2&lt;15-5828.
rooms with c:ooking.
tiono. Countr1 Lana Mobie Home Sleepinq
Autos for Sale
Also
1r11ler
space on river. All Used sweepers, all kinds. 304· 71
Park. Golllpollt Forr, WV. 304·
1U2 ftuzu pickup, 4 crt. 5
hook· upa. Call aflar 2:00 p.m.• 675-1726.
'8.4 Ford Tempo, • door automat- .,....,, n1ct, 10;000 niloo. S5500,
675-5421 .
304· 713-5151, Mooon WV.
Ic, left rear rail light damage, may contldaf partial trade for a
WATER WELLS DRILLED
River Frontage, 1.3 Acre 10 Min
Fast Reasonable Service 814· 91,000 mlloo, 1400 OBO. 114· 4X4 or pontoon boat, 814·llg2.
From Gallipolis, Serious Calls
848·2311 days or 814·948-2844 25114 ahor lpm
888-1311
Only, 614-4011-0053.
Mtingl.
Weed Wac:ker Sean Creftman
t883 Chevr 5-10, 5 Speed, Ex·
Sceni&lt;: Valley, Apple Grove, ~~·o~~·r:r,~.,~:::.1 house ID rant Good Shape, $50; Now Gold '89 Farmula, law miles, extra ltndtd Cab, V-8. 31,000 Mllto
beautiful 21c 1011, publi&lt;: Wiler,
wife employed ShoWer Door, Fill 21 To 28 Inch cieen,l7500. (814) 882-5t38.
18,000, Daya: 814· 448-4423,
Clydt BcMenJr., 30•578·2336.
by VMH, willing to do moderale Opening, Paid S 150 Will Take
Nighto: 814-44t-Q417.
repain , 61.4· 902-6030, please 1120,814·24~134.
'89 Thundo&lt;bird SC. two door, 3.8
Secluded 5.5 ·Acraa, Leu Than Ieiwe messag&amp;.
litre, V·6, elire model turbo, PS, ttu:l Ford .Ranger SPLASH,411ter,
Mile From Holzer Hospital
Woman's bridal set l·dlamond, PB, AC, 5 speed, power 11a11 auto, air, cauene. 38,000mi.
$12,500, Financing Available
Man't wadding bend IHiiamond, and locks , ·Greal Car: $5200 While In COlor. S10,800. Call 304·
MERCHANDI SE
814-311-110112, 814-446-7215.
bought lot t800 will atlllor S300. neg.. 814·882-7478 or 8t4·g49· 175-1102.
21111.
304-713-9589.
Real Estate
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDS
.510
Household
1115 Lincoln 41,000 Actuol
550
Building
Wanted
Milot, A-1, Whlto, llanoon f,..,i. 1984 Chevy Cullomized Van,
Goods
SUpplies
or, Price Roducad. 13,goo, Seo Dl-. E~etlltnt Condlfon, et•·
Sertous buJir hat cath lor IMd, Air Conditlonera, Walhlf, DrJ•r.
3111-:1!1112.
B:l~o-c:-k,"'bt-,:-.cl&lt;,.:,:.;t::t::wo::.r;;p.:;l.:;pes_,-w.,.in'""d· Tom Kauol 814-44-m1.
an~ condidon, 30 acres or more.
Refrigerator, frMzer, S10ve, Mi1·100·24START, loavo mouaea craweva,
lintels,
etc.
Claude"
Winters,
Color T.V., VCR, 114·
1878 Malibu, lookl good, run• IIIII cha¥v Full Slzo c..-alon
bCharloo.
Rio G;ande, OH. Call 81..4-2.. 5· ar•t 1100. 814 ~ 3t81.
258·1231.
Vtn EKcolitnl Condition, Low
5t21.
1880 Oidamoblfa Cutluo, lour llllooogo, 81 .....,_111 21l
RE NTALS
Appffancea:
Racondlllonod
Walhora, Dryotl, Fleng11, Flelri· lltlll Roofing l Siding llaiYan· door, 12,000 mlfot on body, 814- 1811 Ford Ranaor 414 Excellent
gra1ort, 80 Day GuarantHI i.ztd, Golvalumo, and Palnttd. AI· 882olt34.
Condition, RtdWiih All Tho Ex ·
French City Maytag, 814·448· li.zor Farm SUppfiH 814-245-5183
410 HouHI for Rent
" ' ' - Palnr. 814-2511-8224.
1860 Pontiac Trant -Am Au· 1·':':':-::~-~_;;.;;..;;;;;~71115.
.
- llldo Spi: 30'll4!ri&lt;V', 1 ·15'xl' tamarlc, ~Doors, ·Sunroal 455,
Uttd FumiiUta 130 llulovlh Pit., Sliding boor, t ·3' Man Door, Good Shope, l """'Cor. lt,500
Lampo, Dtek' Chalro, Btda. Et~- Palnttd SIHl Siding, Galvalumo 304-e75-4141 AFTIAIP.M.
1arrainrTienl Canrer1, Tabf11. Slool Roof: 11.444 erocttd: Iron
1-1101).362-1045.
1883 BontHIVIIIe (Broughaml Will
Chetlt,
Trpewrlr•ra, 814-44d·
Nice 2 bedroom, batemllnt, ga·
Stlf Chllpfl14441 3833
raga, nict yard, rtfertnctt, dt· 4712.
560 ~ta lor Sale
1881 Chtvy 4•4 Extandad Cab,
poti~ no pelt. 3114-815-51112.
1813 Olda Cutlau Cllfa, runa two tone calor, with to,per,
Vf'RA FU!IjfTIH
Groom Shop ·I'll Groamlra. FH· oood wei! nwltlllllntd. _., 114-44W151
.13,100, 814-8011-2121
Nlca 2 or 3 btdooom llouM In f'l1.
Ouaity Hou-FwnfU.And turing Hydro Bolh. Don Shatto. .......11111. :IIM-4S.1CIIIi.
-.nopall,814-882·5851.
1M5 Clttylior Town And CtMintr)'
Ar&gt;llll• ..... ar..t Otolt On
Cll18t4-448.0231 .
•
1g15
Dodge
lancer,
lour
door
lllnl
...... LHIIlor S..tt, Lottdod
Unfurnl1htd 2 bedroom hau11,
Cah And Cwrriii:NT-2-0WN
8 Wttk Old ChoW Puppitl, ISO
Only 22.000 IIIIN. *22.500, 814·
±.
a,ooo
mlia
Dfl
rnDIDr,
nice a claon, no fntfdl peiJ, deAnd l.ayowoj Alaa MIB!t.
· Eoc11, e' 4-448-~172.
'
'
,'
' - Dtllvtry Wllhln 25 1Ht1. . I.;;;;;;;:..;,;.;..;.;:.;::.:..;;:.___ _ 114-Uil:l-8134.
I&gt;Ooil
I14·882-30DCI.

"''""·

a A 10

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'Page 10 • The Dilly S1ntlnel

..

:How much
will
.
it
take
tor
woman
to
~ealize
she's
being
duped?
.
Ann

Landers

By ANN LANDERS .
Dear Ann Landen;: 1' ve begun to
suspect that my husband is seeing
my friend, "Irene." When I got up
the courase to ask her what was
.going on with "Joe," she said, "It's
notlliJig sexual.''
I found out that Joe loaned her
•mone~ when she first moved here.
· He helped arrange for her teen-age

dauihler·to let toutlleting when the
girl had a serious drug problem. He
also helped the daughter buy a used
car. I wasn't told about these things
when t.hty happened. but word gets
around in a small town.
Joe is a quiet man. I never would
have suspected anything until he
started to become quite chatty, using
words and expressions that sounded
a lot like Irene. When I asked him
flat out if he had been getting together with her, he repl ied, "Irene is not
a pan or my life.''
· That's not the way itlooks'to me,
Ann. He says my imagination is
working ovenime. What do you
say? ·· Agonizing in Arizona
Dear Arizona: A man wh9 lodlls a

woman money behind his wife 's
back, IUTaiiJeS for the woman'S
daugllter to buy a c.r, helps her eet
counseling. and out or the blue picks
up the woman's speech patterns
looks guilty 10 me. Wake up- and
smell the coffee, dear.
Dear Ann Landen;: I'm writing to
suppon your position that all adoption records should remain scaled
except for medical information . And
with good reason.
My fin; I husband and I were in
the process of divorcing when I discovered I was pregnant We already
had a 3-year-old daughter, "Karen."
. My husband demanded that I abort
the baby. I refused. · ,
My parents oao,y-~at

I worktid. ~~- when die blby was pleased. Several times, X.fl,invit·
boln. I bad no choice but to put her eel Mary 10 go shopping, but she
in foster ure. I hoped 'it would be a always refused. When. I invited
temporary situation, but it was not ..I Mary to come to our home for din- ·I
was unable 10 provide for two chil- ner, her response was negative. She
dren and siped adoption papen was hostile and anpy. One da¥· she
when the blby was 7 months old.
lashed oui at me and screamed,
Ten years ago, I renwried. Last "You could have found a way to
June, Karen and I decided to sean:h keep me if you really wanted to! "
for her sister, who had just turned She resented Karen because she was
22. Karen had been told about not "aiven up...
"Mary" early on and wanted to
It became evident that our
meet her. ·
attempt~ 10 have a loving relationThe entire experience turned out ship with Mary were getting
,to be a disaster. Nothing we did nowhere. She was so abusive. both
pleased · Mary." For the. welcoming emotionally and verbally, that we
party in her honor, · we rented a decided irwould be best to sever aiJ
restaurant and invited her adoptive ties.
parents. She didn't seem at all
One never knows how the pen;on
. '

'
«

STUDENTS RECOGNIZED-:- Awards were presented to theae Intermediate students at Carleton
~ School by the staff members plc:tured. Left to right, they are front, Andy Lambert, Jennifer Gray, Del·
~ dra carleton, back, Ed Co;rart, personal care assistant, Justin Boyd, Sherry McCleary, Instructor,
~ Betty Smith, Instructional assletant, Billy Reesl!, Amy Davis, Jeaslca Simpkins, Trlcia Beer, reader
·:~

guide.

.

~ Carleton
~ students
~ recognized
Carleton School of Syracuse
·: reccndy held an awards ceremony 'cor
: students in the school age classe.s.
. The students were recognized for
: achievement in speech, physical ther: apy, adaptive physical education, and
: Q!"er special accomplishments.
· · Primary student receiving awards
:were Mark Bogard. most cheerful;
:Chris Edwards. class hot rod; Luke
: Lowery, hard worker; Mitchel Pow·cll, most kind; Ashley Roades, good
memory; Derrick Trimmer, creative
kid; and Nicki Wilson, superb readipg skills.
Intermediate students recognized
were Justin Boyd, niost cordial; Deidra Carleton, calendar skills and
attendance officer; Amy Jo Davis,
cyping and reading; Jennifer Gray.
using her liberator and best driver of
motorized wheelchair; Andy Lambert, best listener and most patient;
Bill Reese, math; and Jessica Simpkins, writing and classroom helper.
Transition .students receiving
awards were Mike Bissell, great
helper; Chris Lee, most cheerful;
Lonnie Roush, communication;
Allam Crouso, gaining independence;
Mike ,Bissell, reading; and Angel
~y. writing.

meetina 1111d special e.veots. The

calendar is not d riped "' pi"OipOte

sales or tund raisers or any type.
Items a"' printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
PRIMARY ACHIEVERS - These primary students were fee:.
ognlzed in an awards program at Carleton School. They are left
to right, front, Mark · Boggard and Chris Edwllrda, and back,
Mitchell Powell; Luke Lowery, and Nicki Wllaon :with Diana Ash,
Instructional aaslstant, left, and Kathy Stamm, Instructor.

TRANSinON CLASS ACHIEVERS - Recognized . aild presented awards during a recent awards assembly at carleton
School, Syracuse, were front, students, Angel Day and Aam
Crouao, back center, Chris Lee and Mike Blasell, with June
RadCliff,' left, ln.iltructor, and Pat Carson, Instructional assis·.
tent.

The Sentinel News .Hotline

992-2156

---01

D

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips

EXCLUSIVE EVENT
INVITATION!

· Notice Is hereby given that Communications
Buying Group, Inc. (CBG) has filed an
.application (Case No. 96-431-TP-ACE) ·with
·the Public Utilities Commisskm of Ohio for a
. certificate of public convenience and
nec~ssity to provide local and long distance
telecommunications services. CBG proposes to offer services throughout Ohio.
Any interested person, firm, corporation, or
entity wishing to ·intervene should fjle with
.· the Commission and serve on the applicant
a motion for intervention and .an
. accompanying memorandum in support on
or before July 8, 1996. Unl&amp;ss the
Commission receives a written motion to
. that effect and an accompanying request for
· ~n oral hearing In this matter, the case may
. be decided on the basis of the information
contained In the application and the
·affidavits submitted by the applicant. Further
Information may be obtained by contacting
the Public utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
Ea•t Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 432153793•.

D '

purchase

whh CHERISHED

Clierislid tfetftfifS&amp; Cefebration
~ Saturday, ju1_1e 22ntf

.

astronaut. A former Buckeye Boys
The keynote speaker for this year
State representative, he was inducted was Randall Gardner, represe"tative
into the Boys State Hall of Fame. to the General Assembly. The com."
Other spe8ker5 included Gov. George mencement address was given by U.
Voinovich and Secretary of State'
Congressman Michael Oxley, also
a former Boy Staters.
RobenTaft.

s.

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Don,. Tate Motors. Inc.

.

308 East Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Anniversary

19960LDS
CUTLASS
CIERA

SALE!
1995·
PONTIAC
GRANDAM

$13,995 $11,499
1995
APVOR
PONTIAC
TRANSPORT

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN

DEVILLE ·

$

$29,995

1994
CADILLAC
ELDORADO

1995
CHEVROLET
BERETTA

$22,995 $10,995

40% OFF BASKETS

25%oFF
.

IN ENnRE 81FT DEPARTMENT
Many Indoor Una,:lvertised Specials
· Refreshments • Door Prizes

All UNci C.. &amp; Truob Muat Qq.
,_.eaandtllo!Mnot-.
Mpa,..- IIAijoclto Cl8dlllllfliOYII.

786N. 2nd

Middleport

. 992-6491

DOI"TITIIIOTOIS, I.C. ·
IrS tNOR1H YOUR DRIVE/

cea

'.·,

' ,,

...

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

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t:O:P

Carleton College scholarships .P-.A3

Detalle on
pegeA2

Low: 60a

•

tmts
Galltpolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • PI Pleasant • June 23, 1996

By KEVIN KELLY
•
Tlrnee-Seritlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The · independent candidacy of
Glenn.A. Smith has been put back into the hands of the
Gallia _!::ounty Board of Elections by Secretary of State
Robcn A. •Taft Jr.
~· The board, which deadlocked 2-2 on May 24 over
~ccepting Smith's petition to oppQse Democratic incum: bent County Engineer Joseph L. Leach this fall, has been
advised. by Taft to resolve its differences and schedule
another vote. ·
"Secretary Taft hilS stated repeatedly that tie votes are
appropriate when there is a legitimate question concerning the interpretation of election Jaws or when the law is
unclear," John F. Bender, Taft's chief elections counsel,
said in a letter that Elections Director . Jeff Halley
received Friday.
· :'However, when there is no legitimate legal question

Vol. 31, No. 20

Nonhups' contention, noting that
Smith had been a Republican voter
for many years and was ineligible to
run as an independent.
GOP members Connie Hemphill
and George Pope disagreed in their
vote to approve the petition, an!l
charged Jenkins and Rouse with
bias
toward Smith.
.
"While I respect the personalo
views of board memben; Rouse and!
and the law is clear, board members have a duty to put argument.
Sec:. of State Tefl Jenkins, there is no genuine issue in;
aside partisanship and follow the law, even if the law
He also detailed a 1980 court decision in another controven;y·with respect to, and no basis in law to deny~
• conflicts with their pen;onal views," Bender added.
elections dispute· that affinned an independent candidaTaft and Bender also upheld Smith's eligibility to run cy "does not mean that one is not a member of lt'politi: Mr. Smit!l's independent candidacy1" Bender said,•
"Therefore, at the direction of Secretary Taft, I am;
as an independent.
cal party.... Un(ler Ohio Jaw. any person, regardless of returning this tie vote 10 the ... board of elections for,
In local .elections board ties, the secretary of state party affiliation, may become an independent for elec- reconsideration in accordance with the guidance provid~
casts the deciding vote. Material relating to the vote. tion to office by timely filing the requisite nominating ed in this letter.,.
:
including explanations by the board members, were sub- petition ... " .
·
. The deadlock is the first in recent memory for Halley~
mitted to Taft on June 5.
Smith's independent c~ndidacy had been questioned who served •eight years as a board member before:
B~nder said the language of Ohio Revised Code Sec- in April by Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis, who
becoming director in January, and Deputy Director
tion 3513.04 that governs candidate eligibility is clear had originally challenged his filing for the primary.
•Charlotte Seamon. who has worked for the board sincC:
. and does not prohibit Smith, who had previously filed in .
The Northups contended that Section 3513.04, com·
the; Marcil 19 Republican priitlary · for engineer and monly known as the "sore loser statute," prohibits a can- ·~~
"We're back to square one," Halley said. "The bo~
whose candidacy was invalidated by the board, from didate who had filed in the primary for running for office will have to meet again and take into considemtion wha!
running as' an independent.
·
the same year as an independent.
the secretary has advised them."
:
Bendet cited the Sweet vs. Hancock County Board of
After researching,the matter. Democratic board memHalley was contacting board members Friday and.
Elections decision of I 993 from the Third District Coun bers R. William Jenkins and Elaine B. Rouse voted · said another meeting would "hopefully" be set by thi~
of Appeals that dealt with a similar case to support his against accepting Smith's petition, agreeing with the week.

.

:

'Save the
battlefield'

SUNDAY Notebook

.

·May jobleas rates mixed In .sou!heastern Ohl()
GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment rates throughout southeastern Ohio
. counties registered a combination of modest increases and ·decreases in
May, according to figures released Friday by the Ohio Bureau of
·Employ~nt Services. ·
.· ·
·
· The jo~less rate in Gallia County -fell by 0.6 percen\ -.,~m 8.9 to
8.3 percent·- between April and May. According 10 the OBI:&gt;Ij, I ,200 of
. the cOiinty 's estimated workforce of 14,1 QO were ]~;~;
· ,, U~nt in.Meigs.Co.uaty j ncreased by

tlistorical society looks to public for _:
11e.lp ,in preserving 1{3uffington Island _:

&lt;I9.4 ..,....,.. :"'f~nl• ~ .,.fiodti(&gt;BES:figures
ty'~ ~.gptf!ft~lnbe~ ~qrkforce as ]!&gt;bless m May. .

• .. .
. Otfie.r regiol)~l f-lay Ufl.employ!Jlent rates (Aprtl percentages tn 'pat:entllesis)· 'were; Athens, 5.S (5.3) percent; Ja~~on, 7.1 (7.3) percent;
L&amp;Wt'enee. 6.1 (6.1).peicent; Scioto, 9.4 (9.2 ) percent; and, Vinton, 10.2
--·
·
•
~
(10.4) percent.
The counl)' and city rates jlre unadjusted, meaning they do. ~ot tal\e
·
"into account seasonal adjustmenis in employment.
The siatewide adjusted rate
for May was. 4.9 percent. The
U.S . adjusted rate was 5.6 percent.
..
Today'• ta...-Jieulht•'
Ohio Jobleu rate uJ) In May
14 Seetiolll· 144 hges
COLUMBUS (AP) -feople
C2
'
Calud&amp;n
_...,fHI...,'"----&gt;&lt;""---1 · whose jobs ended with the
Q•gUICds
school year . contributed· to a
DJ.B
slight
increase "in the state'~
. . .d
Cornia
unemployment
rate last month,
A4
EclltoriM!l!
the ()hio Bureau of Employment
Objtpariea
AS
Services said. •
Bl-8
SPOrts
The state's .qnemployment
increased to ·4.9 percent in
rate
A2
Weatber
May, up from 4.6 percent in
April, the bureau said Friday.
Columns
The nation ·s unemployment
rate last month was 5.6 percent.
_'_.,olllauc011
k"'Ap
11111d,.egUlloun_~Aa;14___ 1 . compared with 5.4 percent in
C1
April.
Bob Hpeflkh
TOUR HITS GALUPOUS - Meinbare of the Tour of Ohio profes"Ohio's
labor
market
slo""l bicycle group.IWipt through lha J!treets of downtown Gallipolis
Vilma pjhkg!a
C4
remained _relatively stable in
Satutday afternoon as part of the Holzer Clinic/Magic 101 Crlt(!rlum, the
JimSan!ls
Cl
May with very little change ip
annual, locally-sponsored cycling event. The Tour of Ohio, consisting
. B6
the number of working • of pro and Olymplcs·level cyclists, added Gallipolis this. year to Ita list
.SamWUson
Ohioans," ~id Debm Bowland, . of 12 cities where It competes In street races. The criterium Included
Ohio Valley Publisbina Co.
several other races for youths and cycling enthusiasts, In addition to a
OBES administrator.
62-mlle."racraitlon
. ride" through Gsllls County.

Good Morning

·TI IJ.e
l:ni'J'ronm
·
enf•
Suddenly a pivotal.
I
v
· election-year issue
(;I

1

1

1

Editor's Note: This 11 thl twelfth In a
_.ilea of Gannett News Service, Sunday
Times-sentinel articles entitled "Report
Card on An~Jrlcl," looking a crucial elec·
lion l11uea of thll election year.
·
GALLIPOLIS - When vote!§ handed the
coAgressi(?nal key~ to Republicans in 1994,
they issued a stem set of demands: Cut fed-,
eral·spending, cut taxes, balance the but;lget;
clean up your act, and get to work
on the nation's business without
all this
and petty

voters were
about the
environment; they certainly
didn't cast ballots based on
environmental concerns. lbe issue was not
pan of ihe Republican "Contract •With
America."
'
It didn't take long for newly empowered
Republicans to design a sweeping agenda to
ovetbaul many of the very environmental
laws that, polls show, Americans 'still accept
as being good, practical and successful.
Among the miscues: A Clean Water Act
that would destroy wedands; attempis to
~ripple the Environmental Protection
Ag~;ncy through budget cuts and policy,"riden;" that would have lied EPA's himds; ·an
unc:on,cer~ned

•
,·

..

10 Jt.M.-4 P.M.

•
'

reception on the Lacosse field for .
MBA graduates and their guests and
a cocktai I party at the Hong Kong
Club in downtown Boston ' was
included in activities.

.

LEGAL NOTICE

. . .. . . ...

STEVE MUSSER

POMEROY •.' Meigs County VetRACINE ' - 27th •nnual Teaford erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
family reunion Saturday at Star Mill . Monday at the Veterans Service
Park in Racine. Dinner will served at Office: Mulbeiry Avenue. Pomeroy.
noon. Family members are to bring
articles for an auction and door
RUTLAND ·• Rutland Garden
prizes.
Club regular meeting Monday, I
p.m. at the home .of Margatei Bei~F
Weber.
· · "'
MONDAY

th

~onpi~eC1

HI: ..... to

Returns tie.-vote to local 'lection board with advisory to comply with law

Meig~ students attend
Bpys Stat~.
.
Three Meigs County juniors were
among 1400 at Bowling Green University last week for the 59th annual
American Legion Buckeye Boys
State.
· They were Terry S. Davis, son of
Terri and Larry HayiJFS, and Darrick
St. Clair, son of Gail and Mynle St.
Clair, both of Middlepon; Bill
frances, son of Bill and JoAnn Francis, Reedsville. Davis and St. Clair
will be senioos at Meigs High S.chool
this fall, while Frances will be a
senior at Eastern High School.
Buckeye Boys State is a workshop
in democracy where the studepts
campaign for offices, ·conduct an
·election, and function in the office to
which they are elected.
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer administered the oath
of office to all state elected officials
during the inauguration ceremony.
Heading the list of outstanding
speakers was Lt. Col. Carl Waltz, an

Rent·• camp

Gall/a criterium
results :. pageB~
.
.

Taft's office finds 'no genuine issue.'
:w ith ·sm~th's independent candi.d acy

SATURDAY

.

Weekend
•
get-atitlaf1:

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

sity with a·degree in accounting and
manufac!Uring engineering . ~~ OU,
he was a Copeland Scholar, Corpo- ·
rate Leadership Fellow; President of
the Student Alumni Board, treasurer
of Beta Alpha Psi, member of the
Dean of Students' Council of Presidents and Was selected as the OUF
standing senior in his College and
was presented the Executive Master
of Business Administration AllRound Excellence A.ward.
Musser WjiS one of over 6,000
candidate~ who applied for the 800
MBA positions at Harvard:
Speakers at commencements
included Thomas S. Murphy, Harvard
MBAgradu~te, class of 1949, retired
CEO, Capital Citie5/ABC, Inc. A

s1

ln&lt;.,HJP

Send questlo111to Ann Landen.
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 )N. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, loll Angelos,
Calif. 90045

--Community calendar--The Community Caleodar is
published u a free service to nOll·
profit"groupa wlshlna 1o announce

Along the Rtver

who is " fO\Ind " is going to ~PQ!Id.
I rearet that we Died il The posilion
you've been takiq all these 'y..a,
Ann; is the correct one. •• Leanied
the turd Way
Dear Learned: Thanks for U,
validation. ! have taken a good many
4umps for my position on adoption
recoqls. It was .Justice Louis D.
Brandeis of the U.S. SuprelJIO Coun
whO said that the right most valued
by civilized men is the right to be let
alone.

Musser graduates from
Harvei(d University
Steven Alan Musser. son of John
and ·Dottie Musser, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, graduated from
Harvard University June 6 with a
Master of Business Administration
Degree·.
The two-day program marking ·
the 345th commencement program
included over 6,000 students from the
various colleges of the University.
Approximately 25.000 people attended. Mr. and Mrs. Musser and Dottie .
Sheets went from here.
.While at Harvard, Musser served
,as resident of the Student Christian
Fellowship, and was a member of the
Manufacturing-and Technology Club
and the Euf!!pean Business Club.
He is a graduate of Ohio Univer-

•

Frldlly, June 21, 1111

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

·

•

Endangered Species· Act that critics said. ed $44,725 from the "n11tion's worst polwould consign suites of SJtCCies to elitinc- luters and the PACs friendly 'to them." The
tip~t; and flirtations wiill the National Park group claim&lt;;!~. the money was donated to
Service and speculation of a national park gain suppon for legislation changing the
fire sale,.
·
existing S.uperFund law.
The SuperFund is a federally-funded pro~ Tpday, after one of the most glari!lg miscalCulations by Republicans ,.in their 18 gram to j:JIIy for cleaning and reclaiming
nionths atthe'helm, the environment is huge, areas polluted by toxic waste.
a wedge issue that starkly separates scores of
"Instead of paying to clean up the lethal
oongressional candidates - including those · hazards they've created, the campanies
seelcing to represent Ohio's Sixth Congres- behind these PACs are putting their money
into campaign contributions in the hope that
sional District.
The League of Conservation Voters . Congress will let them off the hook and force
charged in a report released in March that taxpayers to bai I them out," said Citizen
Rep. Frflllk Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, has one Action spokesman Jim ·Lowe.
of "worsi environmental voting records" and
After such withering assaults by environgayc him a "zero" mting, the-groups lowest. mentalists, the Republican leadership admits
.
The Athens-~ Buckeye Forest Cou,n- they are severely mispositioned on an issue
cil has been higllly critical of C~means' that voten; took a5 an article of faith for a
,arnendmen' to the bill to fund the U.S. -~lor­ quarter of a century.
·est Service, which bars ·the Wayne National
Democ!'lltic and .Rep@lican polls. show
Fo~l from buying more land in thiee Ohio voten; fiJ'C now very interested in the envicounties. CrerfiC&amp;II~ claims fedQrallabd buys ronm~nt. A majority believe Republicans
have eroded the tax base that supports the want to undermine environmental and health ·
laws and maybe even start pawning national
counties' schools.
Another · consumer and environmetal parks. For the first time, many wiU cast their
adv'ocacy group, Citizen Action, has ballots based on environmental positions.
attacked Cremettns' acceptance of PAC
The first ominous sign for Republicans
money from "contributors linked to toxic came. in February when Rep. Ron Wyden
waste polluters."
· ·
became Oregon's first Democratic senator in
Citizen Action Charged Cremeans ac~eptContlni!H on paoe'A2 ·

.BY CHARLEI'f£ HOEFLICH
Tlmea·Sendnel Staff •
• '· . .• ·,
., ,
POMEROY - . WheJhcr Ohio's only Ci'vil War battle(teld is preserved or
loses its iniegrit~ through inappropriate development could bing~ on public
support for the Buffington Island site in eastern Meigs County.
That's the opinion of Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County His-'
· torical Society. the group spear- · · '''" ... ...,,•.,....,.... "
•· ·
• . heading a "~ve the battlefield" letTo get involved ...
ter Writing cdlnpaign tO the llhon I
Historical Preservation Office and
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
While there has always 'been
concern about preserving the site
and celebrating its location, the
matter gained prominence recently
when it was learned that a·sand and
gravel company was considering a
portion of the area for mining
operations. .
As explained by Parker, the bat·
,,, .
tlefield involves the entire Portland area. from Groundhog Creek to above :
Wells Run because it was a "running battle" with Union forces not only on::
land but in the river. She said that about 2,000 Confederate cavalrymen and; ·
8,000 Union soldiers, either on the river in gunboats or on foot as infantry-;:
men, participated.
Because Buffington Island was a running battle, Parker explained that ii
is very difficult to define a specific location where the main battle occurred
or to establish a small area to be preserved.
Carlos R. Rivera, a military e~pert with the "Ohio Historical Society, who
was in Meigs County on M~y 31 for a meeting about preserving the battle
· site, said at that tinie that it would be very difficult to detennine where the'.
main battle occurred, although he said a proposed archaeological study
should uncover the "hot spots ."
.:
At that May meeting representatives of The Shelly Company and
Richards and Son, Inc., which owns over 600 acres and has additionaL
Continued an page A2
·

.
\
&lt;

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