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Thu...clay, Mly 4, 1185

Poinetoy-Middleport, Ohio

. Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Family

Meigs girls
captureTVC
softball title

Medicine

Sports, Page 5

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

·Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
9-6-0
Pick 4:
7-8-4-5
Buckeye 5:
2-4-16-17-28

I

,.

I

I

.

antibiotics; and
.
- ibuprofen and some other
anti-inflammatory medications.
Perhaps your rasb ocCIIIl'OO tJecanse
you have been using. one Of these
products and then went out in the
sun.
Tbe chemicals in sunsaeens can
also cause photosensitivity reactions. Aminobenzoic acid and the
chemically similar compound,
para-amino~nzoic acid (PABA)
along witb benzopbonones are
notOrious offenders and are no
lon~er used in most sunsaeen for·
mulas. Avobenzone, cinnamates,
homosalate and methyl antranelale
are now more common, but they
stiU occasionally cause photosensitivity.
.
It is also possible that your rash
is actually an allergic reaction to
·one or more of the chemicals in
your sunscreen product. The easiest
way to de~ if you are allergic.
to the sunscreen is to apply a small
amount of it to an area that will not
have sun exposure, sucb as the
inside of the upper arm. Leave it on
for 24 to 36 hours. A rasb will
appear in this time if you are allergic to any of the components of the
product.
.
If tbat doesn't give you tbe
answer, try applying sunscreen to a
small area that will receive sun
exposllfe, sucb as the back of one

arm,

before spending time in the sun. If
a rasb develops only in Ibis area,
your photosensitivity is caused by
one of the chemicals jn the sunscreen.
''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O .,
Ohio Oniversity College of Osteopathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

·choir entertains at Delta
.Kappa Gamma meeting
· Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma, met at Salisbury
School recently with Pam Crow,
hostess cogunittee chairman, giving the invocation before the turkey
dinner; served by the Salisbury Parent-Teacbers Organization.
Mrs. Crow introduced her
daughter, Carrie, ·wbo sang "Angels
Among Us." Sbe then gave1ll'ayer,
mentioning the Oldaboma City disaster specifically. "Angel on My
Shoulder" place cards, stickpins
and candles were favors. Tables .
were dec~nted in a ·spring motif.
The Meigs Higb Scbool Choir,
directed by Jennifer Edwards, sang
"Moon River:· "Now and Forever"
and selections from ''Grease."
President Fern Grimm presided
over the business meeting. Secretary Nellie Parker read a thank-you
note from Serenity House. Tbe
society signed a get-well card for
Viola Gettles, who is recovering
from surgery. Grimm led the society in "Pledge to lbe Founders."

Necrology committee cbalnnan:
Saundra Tillis led tbe necrology
program.
.
Dorothy Woodard read Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. Mrs. Tillis talked about
Nan Moore's life as a young, widowed mother, and tben a teacher
tor 35 years. Rosalie Story read "I
Wonder." Becky Zurcher, Twila
Childs and Carolyn Snowden read
"Wbat is Death?" Mrs. Tillis read
."A Hundred Yearn from Now" and
presented a wbite.memorial rose to
Donna Jenkins wbo accepted it on
behalf of Mrs. Moore's daughter,
Elizabetb Hawley. Service closed
with prayer.
· Attending were Twila Childs,
Pam Crow, Fern Grimm, Jo Ann
Hays, Pauline Horton, Donna Jenkins, Nellie Parker, Gay Perrin, Carolyn Snowden, · Rosalie Story,
Jeanette Thomas, Saundra Tillis,
Dorothy Woodard and Becky
Zurcher.
.
The next meeting will be beld
Sept. 25 at Lake Hope Lodge.

14 K Ear.rings
.

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mo.

YOU HAVE TO SEE OUR PATIO SELECTION
TO BELIEVE IT!

. Plant with
FR EE every

A Munlmedie Inc. Newspaper

County
official
pay hike
urged

ombing death toll stands
a 67 as workers qu(t site

,:ruL Pwr seat.

Financing Available
90 Days Same As Cash

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 5, 1995

·S earch ends

llio.

- -·--- Next to Powell's Supermarket

Ret.ail

2 Sections, 12 Pageo 35 cents

Vol. 46, NO. 5

Copyrlght111115

THE BIRTHING
FAITH CHAPEL OPEN BIBLE CHURCH
· THURSDAY 7 P.M. &amp; I 0 P.M.
APRIL 23·30 ·MAY 7, 14, 21, 28
PASTOR, MIKE PANGIO
200 W. SECOND ST., POMEROY, OHIO

--~·~~ 0 o/lJ -off

' '

TO PRESENT CONCERT -The Pathtloden Quw~et of eo.J
Grove will presmt a concert SUDday at 7 p.m. at the Flnt Solatllem Baptist Church, Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy. lbe .Rev. La-r
O'Bryantlnvltes the public to attend. A love ofterlnl! wiD be talon.

1993FORD
ESCORT LX

$384 · *
mo.

$389 mo.*
'

'Payments quOted are a! monlh Red Carpet Lease -1lle Pla/1' paymenls are based on $2,000 down
payment al time
· lncl\$d. Stale taxes not ilcluded.

By TED ANTHONY
Associated Press Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY - · After 16 days of gruesome, dangerous, heartbreaking work, searchers walked out of the federal building for the last
time today after retrieving the final seJ Qf remains they coqld eltttact. from
the rubble.
·Tbe bombing killed 167 people, including 19 children and two adults
wbo remain missing, said Assistant Fire Chief Jon Hansen.
· "Now we can put an end to i~" said Sgt Harold Thompson, a city flre'fighter wbo helped pull the last body from chest·bi~b debris.
· "You take your worst nightmare, it's like you re waking up. But it's
still there,'' he said.
The last body was removed at 10:30 p.m. Thursday. At 11:50 p.m., an ·
end was called to tbe search of the nine-story building that was torn apart
April 19 by a 4,800-pound truck bomb.
Among tbe about 20 bodies uncovered .on the last day of the search
were those of tbree infants wbo bad been in a day-care center on the
building's second floor.
"The biggest sigb of relief went up wben we found the last baby."
said Gibbs Hammond, a chaplain with the Knoxville, Tenn., f~re depart·
ment. "l1ley wanted to find those three babies worse than anything."
Detennined_to finish by today, firefighters worked into the darkness on
one last pile of rubble in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. They
ignored the 6 p.m. curfew established earlier this week when the building
was determined to be dangerously unstable.
"To the best of oilr ability, we bave tried to turn over every stone we
possibly could tbat tbe structure would allow us to tum over," Hansen
said. ''We don't know at this point.wbat happened to those (missing) peo. pie.''
.
Lt Fonnie Kemp was ·among the 30 Oldaboma City fuefigbters wbo
finished the search and then beld an impromptu service at the site. He
winced when asked about the last body.
.
" You're looking but you're not looking," a weary KemP. said. " I
can't remember if it was a man or a woman. Maybe tomorrow I II remember."
Rescue workers planned another memorial service this afternoon, Fam·
ilies of tbe victims will gather for a private remembrance, possibly over
the weekend.
The FBI, which bas been ~mbing the debris by the bandful for evi~dence, exrfucl§ to finJsbJ.(! s~b soon, spo_I:esmap Dan Vogel said.
Before e searcli eoncluHoo, Hansen srull worlrei's-Iilii'l reilm:ett once~-~
towering rubble piles to nearly eye level, and bad umneled to the Social
Security office on tbe first floor.
Using floor plans. workers mapped wbere people were sitting at their
desks and bow the buildilig feU. •'We liad some people that were driven
through cinder block walls by the bias~'' Hansen said.
. Now the federal General Services Administration in Washington must
decide whether to rebuild the structure. Sentiment is strong iii Oklaboma
City to raze the site and erect a memorial to the victims.
"II could be ldnd of like the Unknown Soldier, except this one is tbe
grave of the missing," said Mayor Ron Norick.

Long .slated,
as speaker
at banquet

COLUMBUS (AP) - Giving
lawmakers .raises along with some
,county workers will help ensure
legislative approval of the proposal, a task force member said.
•
Lawmakers' inclusion "was the
only ·way we thought we could get
it passed,'' sa id ' Rep . Robert
Corbin, R-Dayton, chainnan of the
Counly Elected Officials Compensation Task Force. ·
Tbe group will recommend to
the Legislature ·a 3.5 percent raise
PRAYER DAY - Melp County observed the National Day of Prayer in Pomeroy Thursday
for county commissioners, sheriffs,
afternoon. Above, Joe Humphrey led a prayer on the steps of tbe Meigs Couhty Courthouse. The
prosecutors, auditors, treasurers,
90-mlnute·long ceremony featured singing, Bible reading an4 prayers. Later, the howd released
tow nship tru stee s, clerks and
balloons a !the Pomeroy levee. (Sentinel photo)
.
judges.
County co mmrss ioners and
auditors bad their last increase, at 5
percent, in January 1994. AJI other
elected coumy officials got their
last increase in 1992.
The proposal also included 3.5
(l\:rcent raises for Ohio House and
Senate members. Their base pay is
$42,427 a year.
·
.BY GEORGE ABATE
Dignitaries, including State
srudCnts.
Legislators received their last
Sentinel News Staff
Rep. Jobn Carey, R-Wellston,
Frank Vaughan, representing
increase in January 1992 as part of
Meigs residents knelt in
addressed the crowd of more
area veterans, asked for strength
a four-year, 5 percent annual
prayer for the nation's leaders
than 150 people wbile the skies
for tbe members of the military
increase approved in 1988, accordThursday afternoon outside of·
cleared from rain .
and their families who may be.
ing to the Legislative. Budget
the Meigs County Courthouse as
Carey s;tid he relies on God
separated or constantly moving.
Office.
part of the county's observance
to make difficult decisions tbat
"We thank you for all the
The recommended raises, wbicb
of the Nalional Day of Prayer.
affect his cpnstituents in the
blessings you've besiOwed on
would take effect this year and run · ·
Officials and local residents
94th Ohio House District.
us," Vaughan said. "We thank
through 2002, will go to the caucus
. shared pmyers and concerns for
. "If o·ur country would tum
you for tbe opportunity to
· of each party for discussion before
·~- ooun tcy ' s d"treetion •.em pb
h•~kjQ P~fl!Y"-·
~r ~'J!
h• .lLbl.J; .JL
I . ~-~
serve"
.. WC'
. a· --- ·"""""
.. -""
~-·-·
_ _.. . .. ,_ legislation is draf!Ald.- ·sizing redirecting the nation
solve our problems, Carey srud. '
Emalene Pratt expressed her
The task force, funned to study
toward following God.
.
The event paralleled witb ' gratitude (or tbe privileges and
the pay of county elected employPeople should not fear sbout·
national and state 'observatipns.
values inherent in this nation.
ees, also will recommend forming
inll about and sbaring their faith,
Ohio's motto this year remains:
"Many hav e turned away
an 11 -membcr commission to
srud Steve Beha, coordinator of
"With God) all things are possifrom God . We bave turned to
review salary issues, including
tbe county observation. Resible."
violence and crime," Pratt said.
future raise requests.
dents rieed to set their priorities
About 20 residents pfC§Cnted
"We know you are th e same
The commission would be made
to be in line with God's.
public prnyers. They askoo God
God today, tomorrow and forcv up of people appointed by the gov,
"lt's been a wonderful day of
to guide legislators, law enforceer."
ernor, legislative leaders. the
refresbin§ prayer for us to sbare
ment, businesses, county chamDavid Spencer asked for proSupreme Court chief justice, and
together, Beba said.
ber of commerce, teachers and
(Continued on Page 3)
one each by a county official and
township trus lee association .

Ius

.~Day of prayer prompts
local plea tor guidanc~

Syracuse Council gives nod to construction ·

State Sen . Jan Michael Long,
assistant miliorily wbip, will be tbe ·
keynote speaker at the Meig s
Cqunty Dctnocratic Party's Annual
Jefferson/Jackson Dinner Saturday
at the Meigs Senior Center.
Long, D-Circlevllle, is a native
of Middleport and was re-elected to
JAN MICHAEL LONG
a third four-year term in the Senate
last November.
lion and retirement. He also serves
He was recently elected assis.
on
several subcommillees as well
tant minority whip by bis Demoas
four
conunittees on tbe Natioual
erotic peers, placing hitn in one of
Conference
of State Legislatures.
four leadership positions In the
Prior
to
his election to Ohio
Senate's Democratic ranks.
Sepate,
be
served
as an administra·
As ass istant minority whip,
tive
assistant
for
U.S . Rep . and
Long will play a role in tbe policy
State
Sen.
Douglas
Applegate, as
and decision-making process for
an
assistant
prosecuting
attorney in
· the Democrats iii tbe upper house.
Pick~way
County
and
as village
He is also responsible for assisting
.solicitor
for
Commercial
Point .and
Senate Democrats in candidate
South Bloomfield.
recruitment.
.
He and his wife, Susie, bave two
In addition to his new leadership
sons, Justin and Jason, and live in
respensibilities, be serve~ on t!te
Circleville.
following standing commillees:
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
finance, judiciary, agriculture •
following a social htiur at 5 p.l)l.
(ranking minority member), educa-

Bailey noted thai water and
By KATHRYN CROW
covenant with buyers.
sewage
lines have already been laid
Sentinel Correspondent
Tbe homes will range in price
Tbe go-abead was given to build from $70,000 to $85 ,000. Each res- thrOugh the area.
Also meeting with council were
approximately· IS new homes on ·idence will be 1,100 sq uare feet,
Bob
Crow and Michael Warner of
the former Norman Grueser proper· and wiD be built I 0 feet from each
ty when Syracuse Village COuncil properly line. The covenant will Brogan-Warner Insurance, and Bill
met Thursday night.
exclude mobile homes, apartments Quickel of Davis-Quickcl Insurance, 011 insurance bids for the vilMeeting with co uncil on the and businesses.
construction were John Lentes,
· Council bad earlier consulted lage.
The Brogan-Warner bid was
attorney, and Greg Bailey, contrac- with Solicitor I. Carson Crow about ·
tor. According to Lentes· and Bai- tbe construction and restric tions. $3,606, while the Quickel bid was
$3,995. Following a lengthy dis·
ley, there will be a restrictive He also auended the meeting.

HUNTI NGTON, W.Va. (AP) which Rep ; Cass Ballenger, R:
- A North Carolina congress- N.C., plans to introduce later this
1
man's plan to elimi nate the federal montb,
"Mr. Ballenger isn't convinced
mine safety agency is a threat to ·
there
is any longer a. need for two
the entire mining industry, an assisseparate
agencies," said Palrick
tant labor secretary said.
Murphy,
Ballenger's
chief of staff.
"The mining industry is a vital
pl
ans
to
discuss the
McAteer
industry, but it's also a very small
.proposal
in
a
meeting
today in
one, ·aDd people often don't recogCharleston
with
members
of tbe
nize its importance - or its hazWest
Viiginia
Coal
Association.
ards," satd J. Davitt McAteer:
McAteer said a number of coal
assistant U.S. Secretary of Labor
operators
alread~ bave sent letters
f6r Mine Safety.
to
Congress
s~pporting tbe Mine
McAteer said tbe Clinton
administration will oppo~ the biU,

COLUMBUS (AP) - A State would consume 20 or 25 beers on
Higbway Patrol repoi't said ·the lat- Friday nights and also drink
est candidate for s_tate inspector ibrough the week- a situation sbe
general regularly drinks several said contributed to their breakup in
beers on Friday evenings, Tbe 1991.
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported
"I don't think bis drinking ever
today.
affe~ted his job," Day said. "He
But a spokesman for Gov. doesn't think lje bas a 'problem... ,
George Voinovicb, who nominated He has always maintained conRoss County Prosecutor Richard G. . trol."
Ward for the post, sai.d Thursday
. Ward, 53, who bas been prosethe gov~rn()r is not concerned color since 1976, said Thursday he
aboutthepatrol'sreport.
· doesn ' t have an alcohol problem
And Ward played down the and couldn't possibly drink as
information in the report.·
·
much as his fonner wife told the

declared the weekend tbe close of
business,'' Ward said. ''These .
kinds of jobs can be kind of stress·
ful."
·
Voinovich spokesman Michael
Dawson said Voinovich considered
the drinking issue before selecting
Ward for the job as tbe state's top
watchdog .
" We are satisfied that it is not a
problem," Dawson said.
Ward - like Voinovicb, a
Rej)ublican - said politics would
not play a role in who, bow or
wben be investigates allegations of ·

In particular, Democrats want to
!&lt;now whether Ward will be an
invesligator or a mediator, said
Sen . I!cn Espy, D-Columbus.
"On paper, be looks very well
qualifted," Espy said. "I think be
can expect the same types of questions as we asked Mr. Cox."

Safety and l:lcaltb Administration
as an independenl agency.
Mine operators. union leaders
and agency officials took part in a
March 30 celebralion at agency
headquarters in Arlington. Va., to
mark the 25th anniversary of· the
law that created the federal agency.
"We believe that an organiza·
tion like MSHA is absolutely
required," said Richard Lawson.
president of the National Mining
Association. a. trade assoCiation
representing mine operators.

to cigbt beers
them on Friday
evenings but rarely imbibes on
weekdays.
But his ex-wife, Patricia Day of
Akron, told investigaton that when
she and Ward were married, he

colleges and
Ward will start the $89,000-ayear job May 30, subject to Senale
coofmnation.
Senate Democrats said they
want to know more.

vote.
said be was unwilling to
endure constant questioning of his
qualifications and doubts over
whether he would be independent
of Voinovicb. ·

.

.

"MSHA is the means by which
we keep tbe playing field level."
Lawson said. ''It is crucial that we
all meet the same standards.''
Ballenger's proposal would
merge the Mine Safety aild Health
Administration with tbe Occupational Safety and Health Administralion.
Both agencies are now part of
Uoe Labor Dcpartmenl.
Merging the agencies " would
be fine 1f mines were stag·nant
places. But lhey're alive and
changing," McAteer said.

•

Jobless rate offers
proof of slowdown
. WASHINGTON (AP)- Tbe
nation's jobless rate soared to 5.8
percent in April , the highest rate in
seven months, as the number of
new jobs fell for the first time in
mOte than two years.
In a major surprise. the Labor
Department said today that the
number of payroll jobs slipped by
9,000 last month - the first
decline since a 52,000 decrease in
Marcb 1993.
.Many analysts predicted in
advance &lt;If the
that~\~~~...:....7.

Former Gallia County Judge
Donald Cox was Voinovich's first
choice to replace former Inspector
GcneraiDavid Stun~. who bad
beld thqob smcc,ot was created in
1988. Cox abruptly resigned in

OI~Cij~k;~·~~;l~~·~~in~tb~e~:~ti~p~~~s~~M~mc~b~,~lc~s~sfth;an~t~w~o~m~o~n~th~s~~·~1I -~-~~1rn~~~:~~~~~Hw~~~~-~~~~~turn
-trt tll&lt;l Utat:!Would
cxpl~'
be said.
Ward acknowledged meeting
Friday nights with friends and colleagues at a tavern near his office
in Chillicothe.
·
"!' m tbe first to admit I've

cuss ion, the Quickel · bid was
accepted 3-1 , with two council
members abstaining. Bill Roush
voted no, Kathryn Crow and Donna
Peterson, abstained, and Larry
Lavender, Dennis ·Wolfe and Eber
Pickens voted yes. According to
Quickel, his bid offered more cov·
erage.
Council. and water board members Larry Ebcrsbach and Gordon
(Continued on Page 3)

Clinton to fight mine safety agency closure

yoinovich names new IG.., in spite of report

.

1.- taal&amp;ht .. 40f, ..UJ

cleer. Saturday, sany. Hlpa
• near 78.

••

'
I

Questiou: Afll:r being out in the
sun, I developed a bumpy itcblng
rasb only ou the pans of my body
that were exposed to the sun. My
mother thinks it is a reaction from
tbe sunsaeen I used. I don't tblnk
it is. How can I tell if I'm sensitive
to the sunscreen without getting a
rasb again?
Answer: Your question is an
important and timely one since
spring sunshine is again drawing
those of us in northern latirudes out
into the sun. Your use of sunscreen ·
indicates lbat you are aware of the
risks of sun exposure. As you prob- ·
ably know, the greatest health risk
produced by sun exposure Is an
mcrease in the chance of developing skin cancer. The risk Increases
as tbe amount of sun exposure
increases, and this is particularly
uue for individuals with !!If skin.
Those with skin that bums eastly
instead of tanning are at the great·
est risk.
·
The rasb you descrilied sounds
like wbat we doctors call "photosensitivity dermatitis... wben we are
using our professional vernacular.
This is a fancy way of saying that a ·
rash is' the direct consll(luence of
sun exposure. Some medications,
classified as "psoralens," are actually designed to cause photosensitivity. Tbis is useful In the treatment of psoriasis and other skin
conditions. More frequently, bowever, photosensitivity is an undesirable consequence of the use of a
medicatioo. Tbere are a number of
· drugs that can produce this kind of
rash . Here are the most common
examples:
- tricyclic antidepressants;
- .specific antihistamines;
- some bigb blood pressure
medications;
- tetracycline, and certain other ·

.

APPOINTED - Ross County and t_be
tal~ would ·
Prosecutor Richard G. Ward, In remam at 5.5
Tbe mcrease
an undated file photo, bas been ..,i~ the jobless rate was the largest
appointed the state Inspector smce January and pushed uncmgeneral, the governor's office ployment back to where it was last
announced Thursday. (AP)
September.
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�·· COmmen

Pomeroy-lllddleport, OhiO
Frtday, May 5, 1995

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Oourt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT
L. WlNGETT
'
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Publisher
'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
. Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less ihan 300
words long. All leUers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addre.ssing issues,' not .personalilies.

Presumed innocent

WASHINGTON - As the
Repabllcao , governor of New
Hampshire in 1991, Judd Gregg
helped devise an ingenious - and
pain-free -'-way to balance his
state's budgeL
By exploiting a loophole in
Medicaid rules, New Hampshire
reaped more than $400 million in
' federal matching funds on top of Its
regular sllpend. The extra casb
wasn't used to belp the poor or the
elderly; it helped New Hampshire
close a widening budget deficit
without tax bikes or major spend·
ing cuts.
·
Four years after legally billdng
Washington to balance the budget
as governor, Sen. Gregg now leads
a group of lawmakers who ate
planning an unptecedented assault
on .Medicare and Medicaid. The
GOP has said it plans to cut Medicare by as much as $300 bUlion to
help balance the budget by 2002.
Medicaid, which provides health
care for the poor, would be lcut by
$1 I S billion by ~nding the pro-

who 1111011g us &amp;ell to choose. "If
you thought (Republicans) were
fi_gbtins for rboice for evayooe, be
informed that it's just not the
•

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
case," an official of the Ainerican
Association oLRetired Persons told
our associate Jan Moller. "This is
choice if you can pay for it." ·
A Gregg spokeswoman says it's
ludicrous to suggest that his plan
would curtail choice. Under
Gregg's "Choice Care" plan,
seniors would be offered a range of
health Insurance plans simiiar ·to
wbat federal employees now enjoy.
Gregg predicts it could save up to
$45 billion over five years, while
J:)emocrats say it will merely allow
y·

gram back to !be states in the fonn
of block .rants.
Gregg s flip-flop on health care
-from gaming the .system as a
governor to gutting it as a senator
- is typical of a transformation
among Republicans: One year after
they torpedoed the Clinton admio·
istratioo's health Care reforms, in
part by denying the existence of a
health care alsis. Gresg and others ·
are issuing dire warnings about the
future of Medicare. And one year
after championing a patient's
unlimired right to c)loose their doctor, Republicans are devising plans
that would steer millions of senim
into managed care plans. that limit
doctor choice as a means of cost
containment.
"Gregg's evolution (on health
care) bas been astounding," says
one Democratic activist in New
Hampsbire. "He's just such an
opportunist."
If choice was the buzzword in
last year's health care debate, then
this year's debate is likely to defme

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PREPARATION

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OPEN

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COME IN

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Berry's World

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"So, Boris ~

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As the health care war of 1995
gets underway, Greggis singing a
new tune.
·
LIDDY'S LUNACY- Radio
talk shpw host G. Gordon Liddy, .
who owes his fame to the felonies
committed during Watergate, is
under fire for suggesting that
agents from the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms be shot in
the head.
.
But Liddy's lunacy appears to
be a pre-existing colidition. In Jan- ·
uary 1971, for example, Liddy
invired several associates to watch
a Nazi propaganda film, fealuring
Adolf Hitler, at the National
Archives. Liddy became so excited
over Hitler's strutting, .witnesses
told us at the time, that be rattled
off a few impulsive remarks in
German.
In his liome neighborhood,
Liddy once hid on a garage roof
waiting for some loud youths· and
then leaped down on them like Bat- . ·
man. While casing Sen. George
McGovern's campaign headquar·
ters for a possible burglary in the
early 1970s, Lidd}' whipped out a .
pistol and shot out a street light.
Perhaps it's time for the G-Man
to check bis grounding.
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for Uniled
· Feature Syndicate, Inc. ' ·

Or (to go further back, and Joof\
further ahead) bow will the surviv·
.ing liberals 35 years hence explain
. to the public that Social Security
was alway~ just a Ponzi game, and .
that the working Americans of that
grim day must choose between
betmying their parents' generation"
· or bankrupting their country and
themselves?
·
·
·
I have wasted too many years
teUiog myself and my readers that
at least the liberals' intentions were
. good. The fact is th"at they have
known the truih about both AFDC
and Social Security for decades;
and haven't lifted a finger 10 avert
either disaster. ·
Abjuring hatred, precisely wbar·
is the appropriate reaction to that
performance? We. lire in the pres·
ence ,of crimes without a name unless the name is genocide.
William Rusher Is a Disllngulshed ~ellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of Statesmansbip and Political Pbllosophy.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling I·
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Snake-handling religion bites back

Luther Jlc1orrow is still a legend hall, boxes of snakes would be news.
•
in the mountain country around brought in and placed on a table in
It's back again . A new book,
Gmsshopper, Tenn.
the front of the church.
"Salvation on Sand Mountain," is.
Back in the 1930s Luther was
Here is how one author the story of the Church of Jesus
bitten by a big rattlesnake be was
With Signs Following in Scottsfondling during a service at the
boro, Ala., a snake-handling
Holiness Church or God. Refusing George R. P/agenz church. Author Dennis Covington
any medical aid, Luther returned to
came upon the story while covering
- ,· - .his..accustpmed tasks w.il:bouLan y___.
_.. .
thUJ'ial of the .fhurcl)'s preacher
ill effects. But the snake died!
describes the 'Scene:· ''Whlle' ibe accused ortrymg to murder his
Snake-handling as a religion had shouting, hand-clapping and wife with rattlesnakes.
·
its origins in the Pine Mountain ·singing wa5 at its height, some of
In the course of his three-year
section of Kentucky more than 60 the people pushed forward and research Covington found some
years ago when a self-ordained began"to pick up the snakes.
goocj things to say about this
pteacher named K.D . Browning
"Boys an !I girls, men . and church of poor white Southerners.
began teaching that those with suf- women wound the snakes around "Christianity without passion, dan·
ficient faith could pick up serpents lbeir necks, thrust them tbrougb ger and mystery," be write$, "may
and not be hurt.
their hair and into their bosoms. not be Christianity at all."
Browning was basing this faith They tossed them to each other,
Surprisingly, there are few falalon a p~ssage in Mark 16 that then dropped them on the ground ities among tbe snake-handling
quotes Jesus as saying, "They shall and walked through them. Some of worshipers . But maybe we
lake up serpents; and if they drink the people took o(ftheir shoes and shouldn't be· surprised . Doctors
_ _'""an"'y;....d!:~ thing, it shall not burt tread on the snakes barefooted.''
point out that
·
- --ir
lllem, · ~
-~-TH-mske-hamlltng ~Hil ·&amp;Jll'eielllllll--'i'~r..a,ll~Hn-tmly 1
·The hill folk would come from Kentucky to Virginia, Ten- whether those
are members
trekkmg to Browning's churcb nessee, North Carolina, Georgia of the cults or not, RaUiesnake
across 10 to 15 miles of mountain and West Virginia - with brief bites are fatal 1n only 5 percent of
passes carrying large baskets of forays into Ohio, Indiana and th
food fdr meetings that would last Michigan. Picture magazines like
e~clld Jesus ever tell his Colinto the night
Life devoted big spreads to tbe Jowers they could pick up snakes
How 's the sale of your nukes going?"
At ope point In the service that cults in the 1940s, but tben the witb impunity or drink poison
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took place in an abandoned pool exotic movement dropped from the without harm to themselves?

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We must all learn to love Big Brother

Today in history

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private insurers to skim off tb"t!"
healthiest Medicare beneficiaries,
leaving the government to pay for
the sickest and poorest.
While Gregg and the GOP may
be opportunists to some, their path
is also fraught with political peril.
When Medicare cuts were first discussed In the GOP, congressional
leaders worked closely with
seniors' groups to find 1a plan ibat
would dmw their suppon - or at
least keep tJ:lem neuual. Those
hopes have apparently faded. At a
recent briefmg to Republican press ~
secretaries, House leadership
staffers urged the faithful to launch.
pre-emplive slrikes against theAARP and other seniors groups by
portraying them as enemies of
reform and progress.
Last fall, in tbe beat of the .
health care debate, Gregg laid out '
his chief complaints about the Clio· .
ton plan. "Choice is .being lakenaway from ordinary citizens and
given to buteaucmts in Washington.
who will decide what will be in
their benefits packllge, how much i~o- .. ·
will cost. who they can seek trealment from and what kinds of trealments tbey will be eligible to
receive."

11M

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Greg_g alters his course on health care

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special CorTtspondent
.
WASHINGTON',..... Welcome to 1M clul!, Ol!e senmorsaltl, rolling Dr.
Heruy Fosrer tba1 it mPSt be mystifying to hear his career replayed in bits
.
and pieces lhaJ: would malre his own resume hard to recognize.
·
Anolber said Fosrer was entitled to "the presumption of innocence,"
as if be were up for trial, mther· than for conftrmation to become surgeon
general.
·
Observations like those, from skeptics as well as supporters, came
again and again during two days of bearings on the Foster nomination.
Whatever the out.come for him, the confumation process is at issue too.
1
It can, and often bas, become an ordeal for the men and. women a president nominates 10 serve in administration ppsts or for federal judgeships.
It also can become a barrier, prompting prospective nominees to say no.
The answer to that always has been that bete are plenty of other quali·
tied candidates ready to lake the jobs involved. That may not always 1lold
true, given the torturous track awaiting a nominee who stirs controversy.
1
Foster has been on his tmck for three months, with weeks more to go.
There is the prospect that eventually it will bit a dead end, clouded, as he
said himself, by abortion and "the issue of my credibility, which has
.
never ever been questioned before.''
It is being challenged now, by Republican opponents, in· a campaign
thai will intensify should the nomination be sent from the Senate Labor
and Human Resources Commjnee to the. full Senate. Democmts contend
that the aedlbility questions are cover for opposition really based on the
abortion issue.
On that, Foster and the White House worsened "!heir own problems
with Initial misstatem~nts on the 1111mber of abonions be performed. He
now puts 'it at. 38. Foster, an obstetrician-gynecologist from Nashville,
said he'd relied on memory at first without checkiog the records, and that
1·
wasam~~.
.
"Bijt it was an honest mhlake," Foster said. "I am a doctor. I had
''
never experienced anything like the media scrutiny that I attmcled foilowing my nomination. In my desire to provide instant answers ... I spoke
without having all of the facts."
At that poinl, he wasn't getting much help from the White House aides
who do know the system, in part beeause of the assumption there thar a
black.physician with a pioneering 38-year career, honored by a Republi·
can president and pmised by his friend and fellow physician, GOP Sen.
BiD Frist, would he a no-problem nominee. ·That led to unasked questions,
unchecked records and to the controversy that persists.
·
Foster ~eightened it himself with his slip of the. tongue complaint about
wnite=ngfil Wing extremlsts;-mr&lt;l b1s coifimcnr lllai ll!l!l'e Wl!S -rometJrlnrfishy about the way black nominees have been treated.
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"Race
has no part in this," be told the committee.
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'· . GOP presidential nomination. Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas threatened a fili'· .'
buster to block Foster. Sen. Bob Dole, front-runner for the nomination,
said be may usc his power as majority leader to prevent a vote in any
No one who understands our ing that bis smear would injure as congressman Charles Schumer, D·
even~ insisting that the issue is trulhfulncss, not abortion.
·
liberal
and media ooubt· many people as possible. But it was N.Y., now introduce a bill requirSen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who made the "presumption of ed for politicians
a moment that they would obvious - as his horrified aides ing registration of all purchasen; of
innocence'' comment, said he fe.ars that what Foster encountered ''would seize the opportunity provided by implicitly admitted when they fertilizer or fu~l oil? Or will he
diseoumge other good people in any administration when asked to step the unspeakable tragedy in Ok.laadmit that ~·Explosives don't kill
forward and serve their country.~'
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homa City to make a little political
William A. Rusher people- people do''?
hay
for
themselves.
Some
ot
these
. But the chief bope of Uie liberals
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president ancl colum.
people
would
pass
out
propaganda
fanned
out
all
over
10wn to deny it
IS that the Oklithoma City bombing
nlst for The Asslil:ill.le.d Pren, .bas reported on Wi!~hington aud
leaflets at funerals if they thought - that his chief target was Rush ~3!1. smm:how be used to improve
national politics for more than 30 years.
there were any votes in it.
Limbaugh, whom Mr. Clinton the image of Big Brolher. As it was
Usually, though, the dirty work attacked by name in an interview put by the knee-jerk liberals wl.to
dominate the news pages of the
is left to second· or third-level last June.
operatives. So I was surprised
The lame suggestion that Mr. Wall Street Journal, "At a miniwhen President Clinton, after Clinton was really referring to vari- mum, the horrific pictures of
feigning statesmanlike emotions . ous cmckpots on short-wave mdio destruction in America's heartland
·•
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for several days, yielded to his is preposterous; be couldn't have seem likely to reduce public IOier·-•. . By The A'ssoclated Press
Today is Friday, May 5, the !25th day of 1995. There are 240 days left instinct to kick his foes in the groin nam~ a single one of them if his . ance for advocates of anti-governthe year.
and stepped doWI) into the mud-pit life depended on it. No, his target ment philosophies."
'' inToday's
Highlight in History:
himself. ' ·
was Limbaugh, about whom not
1 doubt it very much. 11 certainly
Fifty years ago, on May 5,. 1945, in the only fatal au.ack of its kind dur''We hear,'' Mr. Clinton oneofMr. Ciinton'scarefullycbo- wo'uldn't if photographs could
ing World War II, a Japanese balloon bomb exploded on Gearhart Moun- declared, "so many loud and angry sen and deliberately damaging show all the human misery caused
tain in Oregon, killing Elsie Mitchell, t.be pregnant wife of a minister, and voices in America today whose words was true.
by the destruction of millions of
five children who were on a picnic.
sole
goal
seems
to
be
to
try
to
keep
The
Oklahoma
City
bombing
black families by liberalism's dead·.
On this date:
some people as paranoid as possi- gave liberals their biggest high liest invention, Aid to Families
In 1494, during his second voyage 10 the Western Hemisphere,
ble.... They spread hate. They leave since those beady hours on Nov. With Dependent Children. By pay•
1
•
Christopher
Columbus
first
sighted
Jamaica
the
impression, ·by their .very 22, 1963, wben tbey briefly ing teen-agers to have illegitinlate
•
Jn 1818, political philosopher Karl Marx was born in Pru~sia .
words, that violence is accept- believed John Kennedy's a~assi11 cbildre.n and then insisting that they
In 1821, Napoleon Bonaparte died in exile on the island of St. Helena.
able." He indicated that these were was a "right-wing extremist," be raiseq in single-parent houseIn 1862, Mexican forces loyal to Benito Juarez defeated French troops
"things that are regularly said over rather than the Marxist traitor he holds, AFDC all but foreordained
sent by Napoleon JII in the Battle of Puebla.
·
the airwaves in America today."
turned out to be.
. lhe· stoned youngsters. teen-age
In 1891, Carnegie Hall (then nan\ed Music Hall) had il5 opening night
Now whom do you suppose Mr.
It will be interesting to see how gangs, savage criminals and crackin New York City.
Clinton was talking about? He they try to harness this tragic event addicted mothers who now infest
In 1892, Congress passed the Geary Chinese Exclusion Act, which
carefully didn't say, thereby insur- to the cause of gun control. Will our inner-city ghettos.
required Chinese in ihe United Slates to be registered, or face deportation.

...

Fltday, lily 5, 181111

Page ~ The Dally Sentinel

Most scholars doubt Jesus ever
said these words attributed to him
in Mark's gospel. They say ihe passage was insened by a late first·
ceniury writer 10 assure persecut£d
Cbrisuans of this period thai their
faith would make them immune
from all harm.
·
.-Ew:thennon: •.anyJlll!Lwb.o rould
dominate·a dCII)onic creature like a
snake - in t.be name of Jesus would be bouod to attract followen;
for the new religion .
Witb the snake -handlers of
today, the serpent is a devil to be
overcome. The snake-handling rituals are "warmups" for the day
when they will have to meet the
' 'big devil.''
As one snake-handier says
"How are you going to overcome ~
devil if
can't overcome a
a

ed writer for
Enter·
prise Association:
(For· Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and otb~rs, con·
tad America Online by tailing J.
81J0..8l7-ti364, exL 8317.)

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Pomeroy-lllddlepon, Ohio

Syracuse Council

OHIO Weather

(Coutlnued tram Pap 1)
Winebrenner, requested residenll
to install check valves on water
·
lines
goina into their homes for ·
MICH.
lalth and safety reasons.
• The cbec:k valves prevent~­
bold
contamination from belna
Toledo 68"
siphoned into :vilia&amp;e lines. Penons
with questions are asked to ccntact
water board members or council.
In other business, council hired
Keith Eubanks as .manager of the
London Pool. Eubanks, a substitute'
IND.
school teacbet, will assume duties
the last of May.
It was noted tbal council is cur·
rently
taking applications from life
•lcolumbusl71•
guards: Applications can be sent to
Syracuse Village at Box ·266.
Council again discussed dogs
and cats running loose in the village, and it was again emphasized
thai the village has an oolinance in
EASTERN PROM - Eastern mgh School
Points; Annie King, .daughter ol John and Breaplace which requires that dogs be will bold It. prom aboard the Blennerbassetl
da King ol Reedsville; and Heidi Nelson, daugll·
W.VA.
confined to an owner's property: Sternwbeeler from ~:30-11 p.m. Saturday. Stuler of William and Rebecca Bark·e r of
The ordinance will be enforced, dent. should con!ene at 8 p.m. Saturday at
Reedsville. Back row - Ryan Hollon, V..J, Van·
cooncil decided.
1
Point Park In Parliersburg, W.Va. Prom queen
Meter, Frankie Elliot, Jason Carlton and Matt
Bowen. Absent were Julie Brown, daughter of
Council adopted a resolution and king candidates Include: (front row) Janet
proclaiming May 16 as Senior Citi- , . McDonald, daughter of Gary and Betty McDonAllen and Luann Brown of Tuppers Plains and
zens Day, in response to a request aid of Tuppers Plains; Jessica RBdford, daugbMichelle Schultz, daughter of Bill and Linda
Schultz, along wltb Jeremy Jackson. (Sentinel
from Gov. George Voinovich.
ter of Charles and Jeanette Radford or Five
_photo by George Abate)
'
Tbe mayor's report of $1,154
was accepted. 1
·
011105Acc:u--. Inc.
· Clerk-Treasurer Janice Zwilling
reported balances in the funds as
Tbe following land transfers
follows: ~eneral, $27, 752.98; street were recorded recently in the office ·
construcUon, $12,797.29; highway, of Meigs County Recorder Emmo$8,010.03; fire $4,521.99; water,
gene Hamilton:
· Meigs County jurors Wednesday found a Middleport woman
$395.69; pool, $2,571.16; guamnty
Deed, Phyllis L . Young to
guilty of stealing credit cards.
By The Associated Press
, Weather forecast:
Finally; it's going to seem more
Tonight1.Mostly clear. Lows 40 meter, $3,017.05; cemetery, Michael D. and Debra L. Coup,
: . Rebecca Davidson Reed, 29, stole a wallet belonging to a recep$89.21. Mayor James Pape presid- Middleport parcel;
· like May this weekend and early to 45.
·
.
tlomst at the office of Dr. Keith Riggs, a Middleport dentist, on Jan.
Deed, Hilda and George E.
next week, the National Weather
Saturday.-..Sunny. Partly cloudy ·ed at the meeting.
28. She then used credit cards found ,io the wallet lo charge more
Service said.
extreme east and northeast. Highs
than $800 in items at stores in the Grand Central Mall in Vienna,
~~~r'fot~iana Lynn Barber,
._ Sunny skies and temperatureS in from near 60 far northeast to near
W.Va .. said Assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia.
(Continued from Page I)
Deed, Pauline Wolfe to Kevin
Five witnesses, including two juveniles and the victim, testified
tbe 60s and 70s are forecast for 70 far south.
tection and wisdom.
Randall Wolfe and Beatrix ·Helen
Saturday and Sunday. The mercury ·
Extended forecast:
at the trial in the Common Pleas Coun of Judge Fred W. Crow ill.
"Please save our country
Shain, Letan parcel;
Tbe jury's fmding followed a 20-minute delibemtion and Reed will
could climb into the 80s on MonSunday... Sunny. Lows 40 10 45.
from
the
devil's
whip,"
Spencer
Deed,
Jeffrey
E.
Basham
to
be sentenced Monday at noon.
day, although min may return.
Highs in ihe lower 60s northeast to
said.
"I
thank
you
for
this
James
W.
and
Karen
Gibbs,
Mid·
Theft of credit cards is a felony of the fourth degree punishable
Readings at night will be 45-SO.
the lower 70s south.
nation, because we truly are one
dlepon parcels;
by a minimum sentence of 18 mont.bs.
The record-high temperature for
Monday ...Windy and warm .with
nation under God."
Deed, Larry E. and Janet R. Life
"We are very pleao;ed with the outcome," said Tenoglia. ''We
this date at the Columbus weather a chance of thunderstorms. Lows
thought the jury performed its function very well."
·
Dodger
Vaughan
asked
for
to
Mt. Hermon Churcb 1 Chester,
station was 92 degrees in 1952 45 to 55. Highs mid 70s to lower
guidance for students ·since
one acre;
Reed was represented by public defcn!lcr William H. Safranek.
wbile tb~ record low was 32 in 80s.
many studentS in olher areas are
Deed, Steve and Christina
1979. Sunset tonight will be at8:29
Tuesday... A chance of thunder·
not allowed to form Christian
Mather to David A. and Penny M.
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:26 storms. Lows in the 50s. Highs in
groups at the schools. •
Smart, Chester, I 1.16 acres;
a.m.
the 70s.
Two motor-vehicle accidents were investigated Thursday by
. .'
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At the end of the event, resiDeed, Edwin Stanley Cozart,
deputies
of the Meigs County Sberifr~ Department, Sheriff James
dents, from toddlers to seniors,
deceased, Laura Hazel Cozart to
M.
Soulsby
reponed.
.
----walked to the Pomeroy levee to
Raymond L. and Kay M. Rowe,
The
ftrst
accident
happened
at
4:25
a.m. on State Route 124 in
release white balloons.
Racine parcels;
Salem
TownJhip.
Joyce
L.
Jack,
age
unreponed,
Middl~port, was
Deed, Teresa L. and Ed Diddle
westbound
iti
her
1992
Geo
Tracker,
lost
control
in
a curve and slid
to Marvin Keith and Margaret A
off
the
right
-side
of
the
road
into
a
fence.
Damage
to the vehicle
Ru6y A. Burke, 81, Alfred, died Thursday, May 4, 1995 at ber resi..
Wisecup, Rolland, ,98022 acres;
was
listed
as
modemte.
-'
d
Deed, Pearl Haning, Ralph B.
1 Units of the Meigs County
Williams, Frances M. Williams,
ence.
Rena R. Longstreth·, age unreponed. Rutland, was southbound m\
Sbe was born in Delaware, Ohio, the daughter of the late Charles and Emergency Medical Serv. ice J h M H ·
B
,
New
Lima Road at8: 15 p.m. when $he struck and killed a deer that
'-A~ nc
· k B bcock Sh
o n . anmg, arbara J. rlan·
Alma F......
a
. e was a homemaker, an av•'d qu Uter, crafter responded 10 10 calls for assistance ing,
ran
into
!he path of her 1990 Plymouth. Damage was listed as light
Jean L. Robinson, Steven M.
· and gard.ener.
Thursday
t'ncludt'ng
two
transfer
to
the
from
of her vehicle.
· are two sons, W'll'
Robinson,. Loretta Williams to
Survtvmg
1 1am Burke o f Cambn'dge, and M'tchae1 calls. Units responding included:
Burke of Alfred; a daughter, Dorothy Kelly of Alfred; two.sisters, Garnet .
MIDDLEPORT
James M and Tammy S. Petty,
Thomas of Arizona, and June Coleman of Fostoria; a brother, Emmitt
8:30 a.m.; Howell Street, Rosie Bedford tracts;
Pete Babcock of Wayne; and 22 grandchildren, 31 great-grandchildren McDade, Holzer Medical Center;
Right of .way, Charles and Maxine Goeglein, Patty Ann Pickens,
and five Stepgmndcbl.ldren ·
1 I ·.46 a.m., volnnteer fire Ray R. Pickens, Avery• Goeglein,
• death bY ber bus hand • Thomas Bucke, 10
· 1973 ; department
She wasP receded 10
and squad to State
two.so_ns, !Cenneth_!J~r!&lt;e ~~d. Ronald ' Burke; a da~ghter,Alma Jane Route 554 in Cheshire Township, Helene Goegiein to Columbus
Pullins, a broth~, Carl BaBfOCk, lliltt a sls!er, Viuletlpll.
.... structure flee 31 Amy Sbrlvenesi- . _soR~;:: ~w!r~;a~~~"M--anu
Servtces wtll be 1 p.m. Saturday m the White Funeral Home, dence Pomeroy VFD assisted
Renee. Turley 10 CSP, SutJOn·,
Coolville, with the Rev. Thilmas Kelly offic1ating. Burial will follow in
'
RACINE
·
.the Kee~ugb Cemetery, Tuppers Plains. Friends may call at the funeral
of way, Jeannie. and Fen3._11 a.m., Fourth Street, Flo· tonRigllt
h
t
ht fro 7 9
Taylor to CSP, RuUand;
ome orug
m • ·
renceSmith,deadonanival;
· Right of way, Jeffrey 0. and
6:)2 p.m., Racine Fire Station. Teresa L. Patterson to CSP. Rut·
-~ •
.'· I ···~,_..,_
•
Opal Cmrimins, Pleasant Valley land.
. The Rev.'&gt; Aorence Louise Manges Derouin Smith, 78, RaCine, died . Hospital.
Thursday, May 4, 1995 a1 the home of her daughter, Dorothy Johnson.
RUTLAND
........ , .., ..-u,. ··COLONY THEATRE
1 PC · \ ll
Born Oct I I. 1916 in Franklin, Pa., the daughter of the late Harold and
3:58a.m., State Route 684, Pan!
·7: 10, ':1 :10 OAILJ
Irene Donahue ·Manges, she was a min.ister at the Snowville and Pearl Steinmcrz: VMH;
.
FRI. THRU THURS
l'\ATlNl:£5 SAT/5UI'I
1 :~ 0,}: \0.
Chapel churches. She was a member of the Grange. the Meigs Ministerial
3:05 p.m .. State Route 684, Paul
CHRIS FARLEY
IN
Association, a former treasurer of the Meigs Coopemtive Parish, a charter Steinmcrz, YMH.
. P r: nnFY MOU IE
)
~:00 U.f!.V "AT~ '""T/~ 1 :flO. J:!JO ll: J
•
TOMMY BOY PG-13
member gf the Parish, and was involved in r~dio ministry.
TUPPERS PLAINS
·
ROB
ROV
ONE EVEJI!!NG SHOW 7:30
Surv.iving are her brother, Carl Manges of Saxonburgb, Pa.; daughters.
9:40 a.m .. Mud Sock Road,
.
' :!Y.J flo! CWJLJ , l'tJ M 'I'IM.l!;,
446-0923
Dorothy and Jerry Johnson of Racine, and Car!Jl and Jim Freeman of Ruby Burke, dead upon arrival;
Gin CEIHIFICATES AVA IL ABlE'
Romeo, Mich.; sons, Martin and Jan Derouin of Las Vegas, Nev., and
10:2-3 p.m., State Route 124,
Joseph and Sue Derouin of Millville, Pa.; stepsons, Roben and Joann Wanda Randolph, Camdcn-C!ar)&lt; ·
Smith of Butler, Pa., and William and Maryann Smith of Millville; sand Memorial Hospital.
,-----------------------------------•
13 grandchildren, six step-grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and nine
step-great-grandchildren. ·
·
She was preceded in death by her husbands, Edgar Derouin and Robert
Smith; and children, Edgar Frank and Lillian Irene.
Am Jlle Power ....................... .JZJ/8
Akw ........................................57 3/4
Services will be I p.m . Saturday in the Ewing Funeral Home,
.
'~
Ashland Oil ........................... .37 518 .
Pomeroy, with the Revs. James Waugh and Kenny Baker officia.ting.
AT&amp;T .....................................5! 318
Burial will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Bank
One ............................... .30 3/4·
'
funeral borne today from 2-4 and 6·8 p.m. .
1 -"'
Bob Jlvans .............................. .20 318
I&gt;
Champion Ind.....,................. .20 3/4
Charming Shop ........................S 118
City Holding .................................16
Federal Mogut.,...................... l7 Sill
The following couples received
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .3, 118
The Syracuse Post Office will
K·mari .................................... IJ Ill
marriage licenses recently in the bave an open house Thursday from
Land&amp; Jlnd .............................. 15 318
Meigs County Probate Court of I to 2:30 p.m. The lobby was
Limited Inc..................:......... .20 3/4
Judge Robert Buck:
recently renovated and all .new Post
Multimedia
Inc. .................... .36 318
Edward Morris Siek Jr., 32, and Office boxes have been installed.
People's .~ ................................ .22 Ill
Casaodm Jean· Bennell, 24, both of
Oblo Valley ...................................44
Reedsville; Micbael Ray Davidson,
One VaUey ........................:.... .30 118
KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
28, and Brenda Kay Hudson, 28,
Rockwell ................................44718
both of Pomeroy. ·
RobblllS &amp; Myer......................... .l4
FRI., SAT., SUN•
Royal Dutch.......................... J26 3/4
TOM HANKS
Shoney's lnc........................... IIJ/8
IN
Slar Bank ............................:..41 314
FORREST GUMP PG-13
Wendy lnt'l.........:, ................. 16 314
The
Daily
Sentinel
.
AND
.
•
Worthington lnd .........:......... J9 l[ol
JIM CARREY, JEFF DANIELS .
IN
.
Stock reports are lbe 10:30. a.m.
Publ1shed every nfternoon. Monday throush
quotes pro•ided by Adveot o
DUMB AND DUMBER PG-13
Fridn)', 1 11 Co urt St. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
446-t088 .
G•IUpolls.
Ohio Vnlley Publishing Company/Mu,timedia

••

I I

I

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Land transfers

More sun~ higher tem.ps
will make it seem like May

Local News in Brief:
Woman found guilty in theft ·

Day of prayer

Deputies probe accidents ·

Area. .dea.thS.

. A • .8 u rke .
RUby

Meigs EMS runs.

. "1th··
Rev: Florence Sm

•u"Rr nur~

~ A~

· Stocks

Marriage licenses Open house set

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Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769, Pb. 992-2 1.56.
Second d us postage paid nl Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Pll!SS. and the OhiO

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Ohio 4Si69.
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~~~
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Come and see a place
where JESUS reins supreme.
Where the HOLY GHOST
works through the people, in love and truth,
Where miracles still take place
and the GLORY of GOD fills the
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people.
Where the WORD is preached in
truth and love,and singing and
praise fill the air.
Where isthis place ...

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH

pOSTMASTER: Send addre!!s correCiion' to
Tho Daily Senti ne l. Ill Court St .. Po meroy •

onr Week ................................................. SI .7~

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$595

ST. RT. 124, LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

MON., MAY .STH-SAT., MAY 13TH AT
7:00P.M.
EVANGELIST: REV. CHARLES HALL
PASTOR: .STEVE REED

wht:re home ClliTier service

MAIL S UBSC RIPTIONS
ln!lldt: Meigl County
13 Weeks ............................................. $23.92
•

26 Weeks ......................... . ........... ... $47.06
52 Weeks ........................................ , .. $92.56
lUtes Outside Mtlp c...u\ty
13 Weeb ............................................. Sl5.6 1

26 We&lt;ks .. ::............... ....................... $49.66
J2 Wecks ........ ,........................................ $96.20

•

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SERVICES:
SUN. MORNING 9:30/EVENING 7:00 P.M.
\JED. 7:00 P.M., FRI 7:00 P.r.t

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·sports

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Friday, May 5, , .

-

.,_ Deily Sentinel PICII II

The Daily Sentinel

.

Frtday, May 5, 1 -

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~~

Eastern beats Southern 2-0' to win D-Ill sectional softball
title
scare
By SCOIT WOLFE
Sentinel Cottapondent
A good, old-fashioned, "take- ,
me-out-to-the ball same" atmosphere settled over Southern Stadium, where Eastern's softhaiJ team
scored early and played errorless
ball to claim a 2-0 Division Ill sectional championship win Thursday

over die arcbrival Southern Torna-

does.

Soutbem (I().7), tbe top seed .in
die tournament, is still a conteodet
.in tbe Tri-Valley Cooferenre Hocking Division title race, as are the
Eagles.
Eastern (11-S) will move on to
die district tournament on Tburs-

day, May· ll against a yet undeterAfter giving up a single 10 Iead- tbe two hurlers, bt,lt Eastern added
!llined opponent from the South off bitter J onna Manuel, Evans a big run in tbe fourth to add fue to
Sectional.
·
·
·struck out the next two Southern tbe great pitcblng battle. Wilh one
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt batters before Radford ftred a strike out Jessica .I&lt;:arr singled and stole
said, ''This was a big win for us to ·'second to geLManuel stealing · seamd, then Evans ripped ail RBI
single over short stop. Tracy White
tonight I thought Rebecca (Evans) second.
pik:hed her best game ever and tbe
Eastern threatened in the second . singled and Radford wallred to load
defense was super. We bac;lrW up when.Mindy Sampson walked, but the bases, but Moore handcuffed
oiu- lead with some great defensive was sti-anded at third after stealing Nelson into. a pop-up to second to
·
plays. Over the past couple seasons two bases. Evans then· fanned the . avert a potential big inning.
Amber Thomas bit a lead-off fly ·
these girls bave really matured. We next two baiters for here fourth in a
bad some timely bitting tonight. ~
row, finally getting Renee Turley, baU to ri&amp;bt field. wbicb fell in for
Junior hurler Rebecca Evans who broke the string of strike outs, an error. With no outs and the heart
of the Southern order coming up,
went the distance to pick up the to pop up to ftrsJ.
victory . Sbe struck out 11 and
With the score still 1-0, Eastern this made for a potentially big play.
walked two while hurling a one- . got Mayle to first on a two-out Perhaps lbe play of the game, bowwalk, but a pop-up ended the ever, came on the next pitcb when
hitter. Evans also bad two singles.
The win was the second time inning. Southern advanced to its Jess Codner roped a hard shot into
the hole at shortstop. Eastern's Nelthis year that Eastern defeated farthest point, when Brandy koush
son
gobbled up the nasty grounder,
Southern on its home field.
walked and advanced to second on
got
the force at second. and comEastern led off the game with a a stolen base in the third. Evans
pleted
tbe 6-3 double play unassistwalk to senior Cjllcber Jessica Rad- then regrouped to strikeout tbe
ed.
Evans
then fanned the next batford, who advanced on a 1-3 sacti- side, leaving no doubt who was in
to
end
the
inning. ·
.
ter
flee by Nicole Nelson, who scored charge at this point.
Eastern
threatened
in 'the fifth,
. on freshman Kim Mayle's single.
Southern's Andrea Moore also
loading
the
bases
on
two
walks and
pitc:bed well and was the faster of
an Evans single to short left, but no
!1!ns scQred : Eastem ~ain loaded
the bases in the seventh and got a

•

wbcn EvaDS was drilled 011
die foot by a sharp Moore fasCball.
Southern Went down in die seventh on a 6-3 ground out by
1'hoaw in a bang-bang, bead-overheels tumble at first base, then
Codner flew out on die fint piiDb,
Sisson walked and Jennifer
Lawrence (lew out to right to end
die game.
.
Moore fanned nine, walked six
and hit one.EHS halter.
Easrern hitters were Evans with
two singles and singles by Patsy
Aeiker, Mayle and White. Southem's lone bit was a Manuel single
to lead off lbe game.
Eastern still bas a shot at the
division crown as does Southern
and Miller. Eastern and Miller are
tied, while Southern and Alexander
are one game down.
Eastern will go to Trimble on
Monday, May 8.
In~~~ totals

.-- .., .,.

OHIO DIVISION CHAMPIONS -The Meigs Marauders
cllnciled lbelr third straight Tri-Valley Conrerence Obio Division
softball crown Thursday with a 14-6 win over Trimbte: In front are
(L-R) Jessica McElroy. Amber Blackwell, Emily Fackler, Bobbie

utbern
WP-_Evan~

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.,,

...

.... ""'- .
~-

,._

'

-.
"•
.....

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DESIRING CONTACT- Southern's Samml Sisson prepares to
put the bat In motion in expectation of a Rebecca Evans pltcb during
Thursday's Division ID sectional softball tourn11ment game against
Eastern In Racine, where lbe Eagles won loG. (Scott Wotre photo)

·--1··.,."•
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.. ,. ....

...

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.J"\1111"~'''"""'"' ;....,

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·
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HOMEWARD BOUND - Eastern hurler Rebecca Evans fires a
pitch to the plate during Tbunday's tournament contest against the
host Southern Tornadoes, who feU 2-0 in part because of her two-hit,
11-strlkeout effort. (Scott Wolfe photo)
·

now? -~

-Who will coach the Wolverines next?

Major leagues
AMERICAN LJ&gt;AGUE
Ium

EHitmiH!~

»:

-,-.,:N,;:.:r:.w York ................ 6
. omnto .................... S
. 801tuo ...................... 4

· Ba!Umor~ ................. 3

• lkltOil. ..................... l

1. Ed.

llll

..500

1
2
3

2
3
4

.1SO.
.625

S .313
5 .375

Central Dtvillon
Milwauke.e ...............6
2 .750
, CLEVELAND .........4
3 .~71
• Kanaaa City .............. 4 3 .571
Miuno~ot. ........... _,...J___ .5. .31.1.
OllcaJO ..... .'............. .t
6 .1.43

3

I.S
-1.5
-~-

( ,S

We1tern Di•IRon
, Stattle ......................6

1

.IS7

• Callfornia ...... ........... 4
• Oo!kland ................... 3

4 .SOO
5 .313

• Teaas ....................... 2

6 .250

2.5
3.5
4.5

Thursday's scores
Baltimore S, Milwaukee 2
Kauas Cit)' 6, Min.ne&amp;e~taO
· Detroit 4, CLEVELAND 3
N'ew YorkS, Boslon 3
Oakland 9. CaJifornia 6
Minnewta (Erickson 0·2) at CLEVELAND (Nan Q-0), 7;0S p.m.
Boaton (f. Rodrlauez 0-1) It DetrOit
(M~rc 2..0), 7:05p.m.
Toronto '( Leiter 1-0) at Baltimore
(Drown 1-0), 7:35p.m
Milwaukee (Wegman 0·1) at New
Yorll: (Kamienieck.l 0·1), 7:3S p.m
Kanau City (Linton 0-0 at Chicaao
(D~ooreO..I), 8:05p.m.
Teus (Tewksbury 0·0) at Oakland
·
(On1lvtros 1..0), 10: 05 p.m.
.
Seattle (Fleming 1-0) at Califor ni a
(An&lt;knoo 0-0), 10:05 p.m.

Saturday's games
Minnuota (Radke 0-0 ) at CLEVELAND (Black 0-0), 1:05 p.m.
Ooato n (Sele 1-0) at Delrult (Dersman
0-1), 1:15 p.m.
Toronto (DI!Win 0-0) at Baltimore
(Rhodes 1-0). DS p.m.
Milwaut.cc (Bone• 1-0) at New York
(Key 1-0), 1:35 p.m.

Tnaa (Oubicza 1-1) at OakJand (A I·
"arez 0-1 ), 4:0S p.m.
Kanua City (Rogers 0-2) at Chicaio
(llari&lt;A&gt;y 0-0),?,os p.m.
Seattle (Da\'ia 1-0) at Caliroroia
(Boskie 1-0), 10:05 p.m. ·

Sunday's games
Minnesota at CLEVFLAM&gt;, I :05 p.m.
·BostoD at Delroit, 1:15 p.m.
Toronto •I Baltimore. I :35 p.m.
Milwaukee at New York, I:J.S p.m.
KansllS Cily Ill Chlcago;2:0!i p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 4:0.5 p.m.
Seattle: at Callfomia, S:O.Sp m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E..t~m Di1-lsioft

.l:!: L

Atl11nta .................... 6
MoBlreal ....... ~ ........ .5

Philadelphia.. ........... 4
Ntw York.. .............. 3
Aorida .................... !

I

JW57
..

3 .62-'
3 ~S11" •
S 37.5
6 .143

llll
1.5
2
3.5

S

C•ntral 1,)1.-l.lun
Howton ...................5 3 .625
Chicago ....................4 3 ..571
St. Louia .................. 4 5 .4«
PIHibutl:h ............... 2 S .. 216
CINCINN ATI ......... I ? .125

..S
15
2.5
4 ·

,
We-Run Dh·bion
Colorado
......7 1 .175
San Francuco .......... .s. 4 ..SS6
l.o1 Ano~~d«
4
4 .500
San D1ego .... .. .... 4 · 5 .444

2 .S
3
35

• Following a drunken outburst
last week that embarrassed the uni- .
versity and startled his colleagues,
Moeller resigned ThllfS:(Ia'y.
"It's a devastating kind of a
thing," athletic director Joe Roberson said. "I'm sure it's part of
what Gary considered as be bad to
make a decision."
The incident left the university
with an unseemly matter on its
hands that extends far beyond the
athletic department. It also left
Continued on Page 5)

Thursday•s scores

TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
OH.

SPRING &amp; SUMMER HOURS
· Op~n Mon.-Fri. 9:0o-7:00·
$aturday 9:D0-3:00

mi

THE

GRAVELY

. SYS~M

NHL plaroffs

Baseball
A.mtrlc:an Lelll'lt

Conference quarternnat.

BOSTON RED SOX: Placed Keith

(But.-of'-~e.-cn)

Shepherd, p!tcher~ on lhe ~~~ diub!ed ·
list, retr01etivc to May 1.
led Bnan
Looney, pitcher, from Pawtucket of lhe
International League. Sent Stan Belinda,
pitcher, to Sarasota of the Florida Stale
Lca&amp;ue on an injury rehabilita.tion assian-

S'.aurc1.11
N.Y. Raoaen 11 Quebec , 7:30p.m.
(ESPN)

Washloaton at Pittaburah. 7:30p.m.
(ESPN2)
.

mcnt.

Sundly,Mq7
.Buf(alo It PhihwJelphia, 3 p.m (FOX)
New Jmey at Bolton, 3 p.m (FOX)
Dallu It Detroit. 3 p.m. (fOX)
Vancouver at St. LoW.. 3 p.m: (FOX)
Toronto 11 Chicaao. 7:30 p.m.

~PNll'

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CA.UFORNlA ANGELS : Re·li&amp;ned
Chili DawU, deaign•ted hitter. to a threeyear contract.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Releaaed Cad
Wlll!a, pilcher. Placed Kevin Mau, rll'lt
.,_ . ~1!. OJ!· the 15·d.a;cdiaablcd liat. Re·
·called Bcrn1rdo Bntt:r, O'iilrte:ltter;-and
Scott Stahoviak. infielder. from Salt late
of the P3cific Cout Lt.ague.
OAKLAND ATHLBTICS ' Ao nounced the retirement of Brian Harper,
catcher. Readied Eric Helfand, catcher,
fr om Edmonton of the Pacific Coast
League.
SEATILE MARINERS: Announced
the retirement of [)awe G~ybill, pitcher,
from Tacoma of the Pacif.c Coast LeaJue.

-

San J01e1t Calgary, 7:30p.m
Q

MondaJ, ~•1 B
It Quebec, 7:30p .m.

N.Y. Raoa.eu
(ESPN)

Buffalo at Philldelphia, 7:30 p.m.
(llSPNl)
Wuhin110D at PiUJburgh, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Bolton, 7:30p .m.

Tutllby, May'

Dallu at Detroit. '7:30 p.m. (ESPN)
V1acouver at St. Lou ia, 8:30p.m.

Ptliladelphll ll Atlanta, IdO p.m.
F1orict. at Montreal, I :35 p.m.
Chicaao at Pittlibwsh, 1:3S p.m.
·..
New York at pNCINNATI,l:l.S p.m.
HoUlton at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m.
l.ol AnaeLea at Colorado, 3:05p.m
Su Francisco at San DieiJo. 4:05 p.m.

Basketball

Nalionai Lucue
ATLANTA BRAVES : Placed Ryan
Kluko, left fielder. on the IS-day di5·
abled Jiat. Recalled Mike Sh~aon, infielder, from Richroond of the lnternation·
al l..eai~.~C.·
·.
ST . LOUIS CARDINALS ' Placed

(ESPN2)

Toronto at Chicaao. 1:30 p.m.
Sao Jose at Calaary, 9:30 p.m.
WeclneiidaJ, Ma7 1t
Quebec at N.Y. Raneen, 7:30p .m.
(ESPN2)
Philadelphia at Butralo, 7:30p.m.
Pirubutllh 11 Wuhinaton, 7:30p.m.
Boato_n at New Jersey. 7 :30p.m.

College '
DUQUESNE: Named Nikita John.aoo
and David Henley men'a wi&amp;laDt bastelball coachea.
MJCIJI.OAN: Announced the rulan•·
tioo or Gary Moeller, fOOlbali,COKh.
UNLV: Named Jim Gemma interim
&amp;porta: iaforrnalion director.
WEST VIRGINIA: Named Jerry
llol111e1 Je((lndary coach.

ic Cout Leaeue on an injury rehabilltl-

lion aul~~:omenl. Optioned Tim Hyers, Infielder, to Lu Vegu. Renlled Doug
Bocl;ltler, pitd:ler, from Las Veps.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS: Aa lliDed Raul Marval. infielder, and Pete
Pralcr, pitcher, to San Jose of the California League.

Ba•ketball

GENESIS

National B..kt:lhall A..oc:lalion
MIAMI HEAT: Fired Alvin Geotry.

coach.

BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Football

-~

Eveiy 'Sunaa}Nv1omirig
10am- 11 am

Nallon.l Football Le11ue
ARIZONA CARDINALS ; Slaned
Bryan Reeve&amp;, wide receiver, to a one·
year contract.

CIUCAGO BEARS : Terminated the
contract of Tim Worley, running back.
Wai\'ed Mitch Beri,er, punter.
CLEVELAND BROWNS : Signed
Larry Web5ter, defen5ivc tack.le, aod Marquise Thomas, linebact.er.
DENVER BRONCOS : Aareed (o
term• with Tyrooc Braxtun, defen,ive ·
back.

Hockey
Nallonaiii&lt;Kby Leque
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Sent Yannic
Ptrreault, center, and Kevin Brown, rig.hl

NBA playoffs
Thursday's scores
New York 93, CLEVELAND 10: New
York wiDiaeriea3- l
•
. Chi CliO as. Charlotte 114; Chicago
wiDI seriu 3-1
L.A. l.Uen 114, SeaUle t 10; Loa; Angelfll Willlla'ICI 3-l

TOnight's games
Orlando at BOlton, 7 p.m. (TNT)
Utah at HoUlton, 9:30p.m. (TNT) .

Sunday'&amp; games
8011011 at Orlando, TBA. If nec:eswy
llour.ton at UtAh, TBA, if neceuary

(ES PN2)

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc •

Frld•J'• Ma7 11
Quebec at N.Y. Rangera , 7:30p.m.

(ESPNJ

Surprise Mom with fl Quality.
Clean-Economical Pre-Owned
Car or Truck

Philadelphia at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
Pittsburgh Ill Washington. 7:30p.m.
Boiton at New Jer~,ey, 7:30p.m.

Salurdl)', MaJ IJ
Ot.icago at Toronto, 7:30p.m. (ESPN)
St . Lo uia 1t VIDCOU\'eT , 7:30p .m.
(ESPN2)
Calaary at San Jose, 10:30 p. m.

200 W. SECOND ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Next to Powell's Supermarket

TRACTOR AND TRUCK PUll
SATURDAY, MAY 6~ 1995

4:00P.M.

Mason,(ounty Fairgro.,nds

Spo,..aored By ·

~ason County Fair a'nciM&amp;W Sled Co.:

.

.

----~

~

DON TATE MOTORS, hie.

included.

rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

Among the most prominent
names immediately mentioned as a
possible successor were formcr
Colorado coach Bill McCartney,
Aubur.n coacb Ter,ry Bowden,

'

Was~(ngtpn R~dskins ~ssistant .

"'

•
......-.----,- _ _ _ ..., ___ ..,....._._.,_,
-

• All prices Include

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

WV

·
'·--~

c~1~~:~a:~an~44-13-3 overall record
I!'
including suceessive
8-4 seasons the past two years .

Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

..

__..,..,...,. 'f&lt;,..,., m...~...-~---

(Final results as of April 26)
League - Early Wednesday

ed.and allowing Whitlatch to score.
Meigs blew the game open in
the fifth with four runs. Cbad Burton and Cass Cleland singled to
l_ead off the inning. David Fetty
then laid down a sacrifice bunt and
reached on a Tomcat error. Another
Trimble error, a wild pitch and a
pair of groundouts produced the
Marauders' final runs .
Newsoine ended tbe contest in
strong form, striking out tbe final .
four batters. He bad at lea!i.one
strikeout in six o~ the seven
innings.
Meigs was led at the plaie by
Chad Burton with a pair of singles.
Slanley added a double, while Cle·
land and Whitlatch each chipped in
with a single.
Snyder was the slarling and losing pitcher for Trimble with relief
help from Bailey. They combined
10 give up five bits, walk four and
strike out five. Reynolds added a
single for the Tomcats' only other
l!it.___
~. .
\ . .
Meigs is scheduled to host Gal-•·
lia Academy today at4:30.
Inning totals
Meigs
010-140-0=6-5-0
Trimble
010-000-0=1-2-3
WP - Breu Newsome
LP -Snyder

'

Now OPEN
SPRING SEASON
• Pansy • Viola
- • Bedding Plants
• Herbs • Perennials

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3 1/2 miles past Southern
High School , St. Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio

614-949-2682

Come See Us this
Weekend!

man."

Under Moeller, the :Wolverines
won two
Ten
·

•5.00
5500' AND 6500 CLASSIC
..
' 60~0 ~ND 7500 FAftMER PULL
5800 AND 6200 STOCK 414 TRUCKS

~

'

Moeller was placed on an indefinite leave of absence, during
which be will continue receiving
his $130,000-a-year salary. Moeller
is entitled to a year with full pay,
but Roberson said it was uncertain
· if the leave wouid last that long.
Rob erson said the university
might offer Moeller some other
job, but he will never coach th e
Wolverines again.
Defensive ooordinator Lloyd
Carr bas been appointed interim
coach while Roberson · begins
searching for a replacement fDr
Moeller, the hand-picked successor
· to Bo Schembecbler in 1990.
"This is one of the saddeSt days
of my life." said Carr, whose son
)ason is a oackup quarterback for
the Wolverines. "A man I respect,
have the utmost admiration for, is
no longer hen;. I would not be bon-est if I say we are not wounded or
reel great pain,
"!can't tell you what a terrible
experience it was to see this proud
man defeated. But be's tough . He
will rebound."
,•

PASTOR, MIKE PANGIO

Rt. 62 North I. · ,• · · · Point

&lt;ContinuedfromPage4)

Moeller in the position of having to Cam Caineron, a Michigan assis" Mixed
insist be does not have a drinking tant from 1986 through 1993, Team standings -Meigs Golf
and even Scbcmbechler.
problem.
Course (83- 54), Tony's Carryout
· But Roberson said nobod y bad
·'I w.ant to make it clear that my
(76-60), Captain D's (75-61), Court
conduct last Friday is in no way been contacted and c&amp;)led the spec· I Street Grill (70-66), Thunder Alley
tndicative of an alcohol problem, ulation poin~CS$Cats (70-66), Cbainsaws &amp; Roses
and does not reflect any family difMcCartney said in Colorado be
(60-76), J&amp;L Insulation (60-76)
ficulty with my wife, Ann, and me hasn't been· contacted and be isn't ;md Banks Construction (44-92).
or any member of my family," interested. lie lefl coaching. to work
Team high series - Meigs
Moeller said in a statement. He has with Promise Keepers, a Christian Golf Course (1863)
·
)let to make. a public appearance men's organization.
Team high game - Meigs
Reaction to Moeller's resigna- .Golf Course (666)
since the incident.
Moeller, 54, a native of Lima. . lion was generally that or shock
Men
Ohio, and Ohio State University and sadness. He was not known as
Individual high series graduate, was arrested on misde- a drinker and the disturbance was Roger Carpenter (515) and Speed
meanor charges of disorderly con- considered completely out of char- Russell (496)
duct and assault and battery after acter.
.
Individual high game - Rus"Tbe players spoke proudly of sell (194) and Bill Slack (1 83)
an incident at a restaurant last Friday . According to the Southfield coach Moeller, and we shouh.l be
Women
police report, Moeller was intoxi- proud of thai ," sai.d university ' lndividual high series - Marcated and punched. a police Officer regent Deane Baker of Ann Arbor. lene Wilson (518) and June Mow" But on th e other band a coach, ery (485)
in the chest.
.
''He always preached you have just like a university president, has .
Individual bigh game - Wilto be able to handle things," senior to, like Caesar's wife, be above son (185) and Wilson and Rife
linebacker \Steve Morrison said. reproacb."
(183 tic)
"We all .respect him. We all love
bim. We spent five years with the

992-7410

FAITH CHAPEL OPEN BIBLE CHURCH SUNDAY, 10 ".M. &amp; THURS.; 7 P.M.
MAY 7,. 14, 21, 28

·•

Moeller

Teacher Les Hayman

Calg111y at.SID J01e, !0:30p.m.

WP- Billie Butcher
LP- Ma Coffman

·~1
''"'
£;,ort
Vlagoas
IJ.. a\1,cassette,

stat\1{\g at ......... .... ·..

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

Bowling- ·-·I
, ·
League resu ts

--~

Middleport, Ohio ·
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.

THE BIRTHING
OF A CHURCH

, .

-.

Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church

Thurld.,, May 11
Chlcaao at Tor:onto. 7:30p.m. (ESPN)
Douolt Jl Dallal, 8 p.m. (llSI!N2)
St. Louis at Vancounr , 10 :30 p.rn .

-

·Meigs baseball team ·
hands Trimble 6-1 loss

Wllla, to Phocoix or the loternation•l
Hockey League.

GeroniiTil Peaa, ICCOild' bueman, on the
U-day disabled list. Rr.called Teny -Bradahaw , outfielder, rrom Louinflle of the
Americag Auociation ..
,
SAN DIEOO PADRES : Sent Doaoie
Elliou, pitcher, to Las Vegas of the Pacif-

.

San Francuco S, San Dieao 4
New York S, Moouul l (10 ian.)
Atl anlii 3. 51orida 3 (top 9th, IWP ..
rain)
llo'.u~ton 6; St. LoU II o4
l'hila&amp;lphll 6, ClNCINNAn 4

St.

Saturday's games
Florida (Weathen 0-0) at Montreal
(lleredial·O), 1:3.5 p.m.
·
N•w York" (Miieki 1-·0)·•t-CI·NeiN- -· ---NATI CSmilll 0-0) l:ll p.m.
Los Anaeles (Candieilli 1·1 ) at Col·
orado (Acevedo 0.0), 3:05 p.rTL
Chicago (Navarro 1·0) at Pittlbur&amp;h
(Waantl' 0-2), 7:05 p.rn
Phillldeolphia (Mimb• 0-0) Ill Athmta
(Smoitz 1-0), 7:10 p.m. ·
Houst~ll (S windell 0- 0~ at Sl. Louii
(Hill 1-0), 11:05 p.m .
San FranciKo (Mulhollaild 1·1 ) at San
Die,o (Bene~ 0·1),10:05 p.m.

Sunday's games

Tonight's games

Ium

Florid• (Burkell 1-1) at Montre•l
(ll"cdi•l-0), 7,35 p.m
New York (1oaea 0·1) at. CINCINNATI (Sc.....k 0-1}, BS p.m.
Chicago (Foaler 1·0} •t Pittsburgh
(Loibet 0-1).7,3l ~.m .
Philade lphia (Green 0-1)_ ~~Atlanta
(Men::ker 0-0) 7:40p.m.
Houaton (HI!lllplon 0 · I) at St. Loui1
(llrbaal HI), I 'Ol p.m.
Loa Anaelet (Martinez 1·1) at Col·
orado (Olivares 1-0), 9:05p.m
Sn Fraaci~eo (Rouelli 0-0) It San
, Dieao (Valeuuela 0-0), 10:05 p.m.

Transactions

Hockey

Tonight's games

•·

By DAVE HARRIS
I Trimble scored three runs in the Inning totals
42().013-4=14-15-1
Sentinel Correspondent
third to pull to within 6-4. But Meigs
103.()11-0=6-8-3
Meigs jumped out to a 4-1 firSt- Meigs answered with a run in the Trimble
inning lead and rolled 10 a 14-6 win fifth to go up by a 7-4 score. Julie
over Trimble in Tri-Valley Confer- King walked and.Novak doubled 10
ence softball action Thursday produce. !he run.
Meigs plated three more runs in
evening at Trimble High School.
The win gave John Arnott's the sixth to pull away. Stewart sinMarauders their third straight TVC gled and Cotterill walked before
Senior ·Brett Newsome fired a
softball Iitle and their sixth overall McElroy singled two outs later.
.
King
then
doubled
to
put
Meigs
two-bitter
and struck out II in
in the conference.
leading th_e Meigs Marauders to a
The Marauders (15-2 overall &amp; abead.I0-4.
11-2 in the Ohio Division) have
After Trimble scored a run in . 6-1 win over Trimble in Tri-VaUey
one conference game lert. They are the bottom of the sixth, Meigs got Conference baseball action Tbursslated to play Belpre -. the clubs four more runs in the 's eventh. day at Glouster.
split their season series - in the Blackwell doubled llfld Stewart sinDivision II sectional final today at gled. One out later. Billie Butcher
· Meigs (13-6 overall &amp; 10-3 in
singled before twin sister Bobbie the Ohio Division) took a 1-0 lead
4:30p.m. at Meigs High School.
Meigs sent eight batters to the . Butcher tripled. The inning's final in the top of the second inning,
plate scoring the first four runners. run scored on a ground ou't.
Gary Stanley doubled, advanced on
Emily 'Fackler and Amber BlackBillie · Butcher scattered eight a Tomcat error and scored on a sacwell both reached on a walk to lead hits, fanned 10 and walked two for rifice fly. Trimble tiet! the g~e in
off the game. Stephanie Stewart the win. Stewart bad the big bat for the bottom of the inning oil
foUowed with a double before Cyn- Meigs going five for five at the Osborne's solo homer.
Meigs made it a 2-1 game in the
thia Cotterill added a single. The plate with three singles and a pair
Marauders' final run of the inning of doubles . King added a pair of fourth inning on an odd play . .
. doubles . Blackwell bad a double Bradlyy Whitlatch singled, the
carne on a ground out.
Waldeck hit a solo homer in the and single. Bobbie Butcher had a lrlmble pitcher tired to pick him
bottom of the first to make it a 4-l triple, and Fackler and Novak each off of first and threw the ball wild
contest, but Meigs answl ered that bad a double, while Cotterill, Billie and Wbi!latcb went all the way
run ·witb two more in the top of the Butcher and McElroy each bad a around to third base. The Tomcats
then failed to call a time-out . Their
single.
second.
Stacy Novak led off the inning
Coffman, Trimble's slarter, gave catcher then started walking to tbe
with a walk. Then Fackler doubled up 15 hits, walked 12 and struck mound. leaving the plate unprotectbefore )3lackwell singled to score a out one. · Teammates Trace.
,
ruih-Ste.wart.-followed with a dou- Wald~ck anq ·Hardy each had. twn._,. Mason
ble lllJd a ground out made it a 6-1 hits.
·
·
·
game,

Scoreboard
Baseball

·-

Meigs girls beat Trimble 14-6 to win TVC crown

Moeller steps down as
Michigan head·coach
'By HARRY ATKINS
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (,6.P) There were many questions and
few answers in the wake or Gary
Moeller's resignation as Michigan
football coach:
Among the questions:
-Wby did be do it?
-Did be deserve a second
chance?
~What will happen to him

4

~

LP· Moore

Butcher, Billie Butcher and Melissa Ramsburg. In the back row are
bead coach Jobn Arnott, Julie King, Ashley Jtoacb, Melissa Vance,
Stacy Novak, Cynthia Cotterlll, Stephanie Stewart and assistant
coach Randy Butcher.
·

Gar,'s ln A good
Mooda •.And Is
Running Speeials

.16" PEPPERONI PIZZA ••••••, ••••••••• $69~
- ~.
- _$29.5
DOZEN
HOT WINGS ••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••
MANICOTTI DINNER

•a•a••a•••••••••••••• . .•a

89 Ford Bronc·o II
AJicmJIIC, J'r. XlT. '1&lt; I

$9495

�. FrtcMy, M8y 5, 1995

The

z_

Daily Sentlne~age

.••

•

I

I

I

.sw.da,.~·- 9:30a.m.

'

MAY MENlJS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER
MONDAY

•

Buttered Carrots

WEDNESDAY '
..

I"Sloppy Joe on Bun

Cauliflower

Lyonnaise Potatoes
Perfection Salad

Peacb Crisp

with Cheese

Bread
15

Macaroni l Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
Buttered Peas
· Ro cky fto&amp;.d Pudding ·

10
Jloast Beel
Ma$hed Potatoes

11
Chicken t Noodles
Three Bean Salad

with Gravy
Buttered Corn

Ora.nge Juice
Vanilla Pudding

••

Oven Browned
Potatoes
Buttered Carrots
Brea.d
Fresh Gr~pes
29

16

Dressing •
Ma.shed Potatoes

.

w1 th Gravy
Corn - Muffin

CLOSED
HOLIDAY

Retired Senior Volunteers honored for their work at the senior Citizens Center include, left to
right, Eva Dessauer, Ora Carsey, Garnet Ervl~e, Lula ~·~pion a11d T~resa Byer. These ladies have
been volunteering for 22 years helping with vanous activtties at the Semor Center.

31 '-'

Fish Sa ndwi ch

w1 th Gravy

Carrots
'

J 'u ne 1
Hot Dog with Sauce
Baked Beans
Macaroni Salad

Oven Browned
Potatoes
Buttered Lima Beans

Creamy fryit

Bun

~a lad

Stra~~rry Dess~r t
•

In conjunction with National
Volunteer Month; a luncheon was
held in eariy April honoring the
eighty persons w.ho are currently
· volunteering in vario~s assignments
at the Senior Citizens Center. The

-

se nior ctt1zens
assist as
receptionists, working in the dining
room, delivering meals to
homebound elderly, assisting with
health clinics, and various craft
work and other fund raising
activities.

Audiologist provides hearing
protection for recreational activities

26
Tuna Noodle Caseero :
Mixed Vegetables
Bread
Strawberries on

Saturday Service -7:30p.m:
Sunday S.:hool- 10 a.m.
Wednciday Servict-7:30 p.m.

Cake

June 2

Rullaad Fint Bopllst Chun:b
Sunday S.:hool - 9:30 a.m.
.Worship - 10:45 a.m .
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Fint Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy'Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· '7:00 p.m.
Flnl Bapllsl Cbun:b
6th and Palmer St, Middleport
Sunday S.:hool· 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5,30 p.m.
Lord's Supper 1st Sunday of eve ry month.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Bread

Pineapple

TAWNEY JEWELERS .&amp; STUDIO
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO All
SENIOR CITIZENS
446•1615

Gallipolis, Ohio

llni4ue gifts for people
with hearinJproblems

A representative from the Athens
· Social Security Office will be at the
Center o·n Wednesday s, May I 0
and 24, from I0 to II a.m.
· Friday, May 5- Dance frpm 7:30
to 10:30 p.m. with George Hall at
the organ, playing music for
di1ncing ·a nd listening pleasure.
Admission is $5.00 per person, and
bring tinge~ food to share.
Thursday, May 25 - the monthly
Thursday, May II - dinner with birth&lt;lay party will be held , with
serving from 5 to 6 : 15, cost is seniors having birthd ays in the
$4.00 per person. Following dinner,
month honored . The. Ga ll ia County
music will be play ed by The Ole Time Chorus will entertain at ·
Classics, with a free will offering 11_:00, before the noon meaL
taken for the musician s.
Friday, May 19 - the Artliritis
Friday, May ' 12 - free c hol esterol Support Group wi ll meet from
screening from 9 to 12, sponsored
I O:JO 10 noon. Don Maurer and
by Maxwell 50 at Holzer Medical · Don Young will be leading the
Center. This will be a venous discu ss ion , using Dr. Art Ulene's
_punc ture test' and no . fasting is low-fat diet and exercise video.
required before 1hc testmg . Please
ca ll Diana Coates, 992-2 161. to
The.re are two mOtorcoache s
make an appointment.
chartered for a trip to the Oli)o
Amish Country on Tuesday, May
Tuesday, May 16 - Senior 23 . Cost is $42.00 which includes
Citizens Day 1hruughout the state 1ransportation, dinner . at Der
of Ohio. Th e re will he musical Duichman , and a train ride through
entertainment beginning at I I :00 the Amish countryside. Perso ns
and also following dinner with reservati ons nee&lt;! to have a
Represe ntaliv es from the Ohio. $20:oo deposit made by May 5 to
Department of Ag1ng and the hold a reservation . There are seats
Marietta Area Agency on Agmg available, contact Alice Wamsley.
992-2161, for further informatiOn
wi II be present.
1he on trips scheduled for 1995.
Wednesday. May I 7

-~.

~ervices

'tfother's /lqy is M")' 14th!

R~tlaod Cburt:h of Cbrlsl
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Uysell Run Holiness Chur&lt;b
Pastor: Roben Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service -7:30p.m.

Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School,· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service" 7:30p.m.

O.lblehem Baptist
Racine , OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Worship. 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study -7:00p.m. Wednesday

-~-

St. Rt 143 just oil Rt 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr. \
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship · I b.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

lltmlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
"'orship- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
R"dnlllt Chun:h o( Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
· -sulRifYS&lt;hoot: 9:30-r.m, Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union

Victory Baptist lndeptndant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport

Hartford Church of c•rislln
Christiaa Unioa
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday .School • 1I a.m.
Worsh ip-9:30a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Past~r : James E. Keesee
Worship· lOa .m.• 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servict:s -7 p.m.

..

\.

Lisa Koch , Licen se d Audiologist
435 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
Veterans Mem. Hospital, Pomeroy
770 E. Main ~1. , Jacks&lt;J.nc Ohio

~aplist Church
. Railroad St., Masou.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services .- 7 p.m.

Faith

Representing:
LIFE • AUTO • HOME' FARM ,•~
o " "' • •, Auto Owners Buckeye Union
BUSINESS • BOATS
A - Grange State Auto Mutual
MOTORCYCLES • BONDS ~
..LM.. :
Ohio Farmers
HOSPITALIZATION
' ••.,, ,,,' ~'
Westfield Insurance Co.

Fonst Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius· Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m .

P'T

Church

Support group meets--

'

will be served: All meetings arc
infonnal; you can come and go as
yo~r sc hedule allows. Questions?
Call Lenora Leifheit. R.N., at 992-

TRUST
It's your most important
consideration when seeking
hearing he/pi

Rutland Fret Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Eve ning · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lices- 1 p.m.

Mel Mock has been truste4 by
hundreds of people from Gallia,
Jackson, Mason and Meigs counties to help them hear
better! Call him today!

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev . Walter 6. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4S-5.:1lp.m.; Mass-l:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45~9: 15 a.m.,
Sun. M!(s- 9.30 a.m.
Daitey-lv\a., · 8;30 a.m.

Gallipolis caD 614-441-1971

Church of Christ

2161.

Pomeroy Church or Cbri5t
212 W. Main St.
Pastor: A"!drew Miles

HOME"Serving
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
Southern OhiO&gt; for over 17

Wednesday Services- 7 P· ~·
Ne;, Ufe Chur&lt;h of Gnd
S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chesler

PastQ.r: Rev. WilJi.@m D. Hinds
Sunday SCilool ·'9: 30a.m.
Wor~hip- 6 p.m.
Trinity Church
Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy
Paslor: Rev . -Roland Wildman
, SundAy school and worship 10:25

"

years'~

.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

'See The .New
95's Today At. ..

/

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Presbyteriilll
P&lt;~stor : Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship. II am.

Hazel Community Church
orr Rt. 124
l!aslor~ Edsel Hart
Sunday. School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

llarTisonville Presbyterian Church
Worship- 9 am.
Sunday School . 9: 45a.m.

D)'entlle Coritmunity Cburch

Sunday School · 9:30am
~ p.m.

Worship -10:30 am .,

·Middleport Prtsbyteriao

·,

Pastor : Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m. ·
Worshjp - 11:15 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

llotkJngport Church

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wor1hip- 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mweatb-Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Sarurday Servu..-es:

Morse Chapel Church
Larry Faw, Superintendl:nl
. Sunday school - 10 a m.
Worship- 1 p.m
Wednesday Serv1ce - 7 p.m.

Sabbalh School . 2 p.m
~orsh1p- 3

p.m.

Faith Gospel Cburrh

Long Bottom
Sunday School-9:30a.m
\Vorshlp - 10:45 am .. 7:30pm
Wednesday 7::30 p.m .

Torch Church
Co. ltd. 63
Sunday School - 9.-30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

United Brethren
Mt lle:nnon Unittd Bre1bn:n
In Cbrtst Cbun:b

Texas Commun1ty off CR 82
Pastor Robert Sanders
Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship· 10~30 a.m., 7JO p.m
Wednesday Serv1ccs . 7:30 p.m

Mt Olive Community Churth

Pastor : Lawrence Bush
Sum;lay Sc;hool - 9:30 a.m.
·
Evening - 7 p m
Wedneday ServiCe • 7 r m

.

IU·ciae First Chun:b of tbe Naurroe

Pastor: Scott Rose
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p~m .

Ede.n United Brethren in Christ'
'2 112 miles north of Reedsv 111e
on State Rmlfc 1:!4
Pa!&gt;tor Re-..· Robert Markley
Sunday School . 10 am.
Worshte - 730 p.m
Wednqday Sel'\ltces. 7:30p.m

United Faith CbuR'h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-PaS!

Pastor: Rev. Rober1 E. Sm1th, S1
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m
Wor!&gt;hlp · 10.}0 a.m., 7 p m
Wedne~day Scrv1ce · 7. p.m·

MiddlepoM. CHurtb nftb&lt;JSazattnr
Pastor: Gregory A . Cundiff
Sunday Sc!lool - 9::30 a.m.

J . PAULEY, AGENT

RIDENOUR ·
SUPPLY

"

.
-

:&lt;~

,f

" FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-666n

Home)ite Saws

BILL QUICKEL

&amp;

Don't Miss Out-

Sundav School'- 10 a.m.
EVenint;- 6 p.m.

Syracuse Missioo
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Pastor : Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

Nazarene

·sundaY SchOof· HJ,a. m. -·- ......._.........__
Evening- 7 p.m:
·
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Middleport PenteCostal
Third AVe .
Pastor: Rt\' . Clark Baker

. Christian Fellowship Ct:nter
Salem St., Rutla nd

Grand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

St. Rt. 124, Racine
pastor: William Hoback

Bailey Run ROad
Pastor : Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
_Thursday Service ; 7 p.m.

Coolvlllt Chun::h
Main &amp; Firth St.

Mtlgs Coopuative Parish

Pentecostal
Peolttostal AsHmbly·

faith Tabemarle Cburth

Unitr:d Methodist Parish

Nationwide Ins . Co.
of Columb.us. Oh.
'804 W. Main
992~231 B Pomeroy

Clinon Tabernacle Cburt:h
Clirton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.·
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Middleport Commuaity Chun:b
575 Pearl St. Middleport
Paslor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
EVening-7:30 p.m.
- - .W.e:dnelidD)' Sa.rv1ce ~ 7:30.p m_~

Pastor : Helen Klifte

P.

ChUrcb or Jesus Christ,
Apostolic hitb
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00pm.
Wednesday-7:00p.m. ·
Fnday. 7:00p.m.

...

Racine

Betbt:l Chu~h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 am:
Wednesday Sel'\lices- 10 a.m.

Chu..eh announcements u~~
Q\\;{( jlrul a3oor.l
sponsored by ihese area
· 93 Mill Street_:_
'
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(61
4) 992·6657 - (99B-ooks)
nlerehants.
CHURCH SUPPLIES BIBLES

Rtjoiting Ure Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pasto r: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m:
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Paster: Ken Molter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m. and 7 p.m.

Pastor : Rev. Charles Mash

Slinrnille Word or faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Sch0019:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Endtime House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
· SL:nday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - ~:30 p.m.

Cannel

··

Pas tor: Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedn sday ~rvice. 7·30 p.m.

The Sal~ation Anny
115 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.

Mt. Olive Uoited Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pas tor: R.ev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m , 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Long Boll()m

Faith Full Gospel Chunb
long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday -fellowship service 7 p.m.

Harrisonville Com,m uoity Cbun:b
Pastor : Theron Durham
Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Belhany
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
,
Worship . 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Joppa
"'--... . . . -.. Pastor: Bob Randolph
"'' Worship -9:30a .m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.in.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.

Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Snowville
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship~ 9 a.m.

Cbtster
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship· 11 a.m.

Wednesday service , 7:30p.m

~rvices :

Worship - 10:15a.m.

Allred

Faith f'ellowship Crusade ror Christ
Pastor: Re v. Franklin Dickens
Servace: Fnday , 7 p.m.

The Believers'' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd .. Rutland
Pastor : Rev. Margaret J. Rob inson

Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo~hip- 11 a.m., 6JO p.m.

F•irview Bible Churtb
Letan, W.Va. Rt 1
Pastor: Rankin Roach
Sunday S.:hool- 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:00-p.m.
Wednesday· Service -7:00 p.m.

Sunday service; 7:30p.m. .

Salem Center

Nor1heast Cluster

Cburtb of God of Fropbecy
0 .1. White Rd. oil St. Rt 160
Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School- 10 a.m .

Sacred Hurt Catholic Church

THE HEARING CENTER 548 White Road

'

Syracuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Catholic

llobsoo CbrisUia l'"elloWsbip Church
Rev. Woody Call, Speaker

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
St. John -Luthei'IID (;hunh : · - - :... •
..Sunday Sehool • 980-t. m~
Pine Grove
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Suil)
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Worship . 9:00a.m.
Morning Star
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School ~ 9:45a.m.
Our Sa~iour Lutberio ·church
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.
Walnut and H~nry Sts ., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Thursday Services· 7:30p.m:
lntrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Sutton
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Pastur: Kenneth Baker
Worship- 11 a.m.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (lsi &amp; 3rd Sun)
St. Paul Lutheran Cbun:b
East Letart
Comer Sy£amore &amp; s~cond St., Pomeroy
.
Pastor: Ken Molter
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Rutland Chur&lt;b of Gnd ·
Pastor: Gregory L Sears
· Sunday SchoOl- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Aotiquily Baptist

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

Other Churches

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Old Dexter Bible Christian Church
Sunday School : 10 a.m.
· Morning Worship: II a.m.
Evening Wprship: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

~p.m .

Pastor: Glendon Stroud
. Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rullond
Pastor: Arthur Crabtree
Sunday School - 9,30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Cool~llle

Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

New llano Cburcb oftbt Naiareae

Roc:k Spria1s
Pastor: Keith Rader'
Sunday School- 9:15·a.m .
· Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

Graham Urillrd Methodist
Worship - 9:30 -a .m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wedilesday SerVia: - 7:~0 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesley•o
Coolville Road

Worship-6 :30 p.m.
Wednesday Services_-

Pomeroy
Pastor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday School- 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tucsda) , 10 ~. m .

Uniled Methodist

Pastor: Rev . Roger Willford
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic_e- 7 p.m.

Portl1ad First Cbun:h of the Naureae
Pastor:.J0hn W. Douglas
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.

Peari Chapel .
Pastor: Florence Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.

Lutheran

Fntdom Gospel Mlssloo
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31

Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday S.:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wor.hip · 10:30 a.m., 6'30 p.m.
Wednesday .Services - 7 p.m.

Worship- lOa.rrt.

Christ of Latler-Day S•lots
St ..Rl. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday SchOOl 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. -7 p.m.

Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship Servicf' 10:30 a.m.
Worship Service~ 1st and 3rd Sunday, 7 p~m .
No Wednesday Evening Serv1ce
.

Rutland Claurtb of tile Nazanae

Miaersvi.lle

Tb·e Cburcb of Jesu5

Carldooloterdt~~omloatlooal Cbur&lt;b

Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - l 1' a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Pastor: Deron Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

of Latter Day Salots
Portland-Racine Rd .
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

God

POIIHroy Cbuftlt or lite NazartDf
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10;30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
· wednesOay Services- 7 p.m.
Cbtster Cburc• of the NWI"'fnt

Htil6 (Middleport)
Paslor: Vemagaye Sullivan
.Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

South Bethel-New Tesl.tlmtnt
· Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane Sydenstricker
Sund~y School . 9.a.m.
Worsh1p- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 1 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Rick Sturgill
Sunday S.:hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · l0;30 a.m., ~6 p.m. .
Wednesday Services .. 7 p.m.

Forest Run

Reorganized Church of Jesw; Chrls1

NtiSe Seltltmtnt Cbun:h
Sunday Worship· 2:31'1 p m.;
Thursday ~mces -7:3f.l p.m.

SyncUJt Cburcb of Ole Nazartat

Pastor: Deron Newman
Sundt) S.:hool- 10 a.m.
Worsliip- 9 a.m.
Thursday Services· 6:30 P·{'\·

Rullaod Community Church
Pastor: Rev . Roy McCarty
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Ev~ning ~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapll!t
Fourth .&amp; Main.St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.
· Sunday School -9:30a.m
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

992·6687 or 992·2143
214 E. MAIN • POMEROY OH.

of

I

. F'loiWoods
Pastor; Keith Rader
Sunda) S.:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 1.m.

Lourol Cli« Fnt Melhndist Church
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School ·9:30a.m. ,,
Worship -10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedne~ay Service • 7:00p.m.

Libert) Cbristlan Cbur&lt;h
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m ..

Sunday School-9:45a .m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

=:;t:

INBEARING

Wtsltyan Bible Hollaeu Church
75 Peat! St. , Mid~ldport .
.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school· 9,30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Sunda) S.:hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

EilltrpriH
Pastor; Keith Rader
Sunda) S.:hool • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

R.., otSbo.,. H - Cbu..,.

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ .
Pastor: Tom Runyon ·
Sunday S.:hoot · 9:30a.m.
Worship o 10,30 •·!"·
Youth Meeting-5:30p.m :
Evening Service· 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study· 7 p.m.

IIHdlvllle Fo-olljp

Ctott'lll CIUIItr
Albury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Deroo Newman
Sunday S.:hool· 9:45a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30 p.m.

Calnry Pll.,tm Cbapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev . Victor Roush
· Sunday S.:hoot 9:30a.m.
·Worship -11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7,30 p.m. .

. Ploe Grove Bible Hollllus Cbur&lt;b
.. t/2 mil~ oil Rt. 32S
· Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley •
Sunda) S.:hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Hickory Hills Cbun:b of Chris!
Pastor: Joseph 8 , Hoskins
Sunday School- 9 8.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday ,Servia:s -7 p.m.

..........

lluvllle Holla. . CbU'Cb
3t0S7 Stale Route 32S, Langsvlle
Pastor: Re~. Rick Maloyed
Sunday school ·9:30a.m.
Sunda) worship ·10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p,m.
Children's c:hurch -10:3.5 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesda) pn)ct se.Vice .- 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plato Chu .... or Cbrlst
.. ,
Pas1or: S!anley Mincks
Sunda) School - 9 a.m .
Worship· 9:45a.m.
Wedne!day • 7 p.m.

Silver Run Bapllst
Pasta;: Bill Little \
Sunday SlhOOI · IOa.m.
Worship - I Ia.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~day Services- 7:30 P·':"·

- ----...........
Hillside Bapllsl Church

Holiness

F.. Goopol Lipl~oo"
3304S Hilutd Rood. Pomero)
Pastor: Roy Hunwr
Sunda) S&lt;hool - I 0 a.m.
Evcnms 7;3(} p.m,
Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7~3fJ p.m.

Cluardt of &amp;he Naurne
Paslor: John W. Douglas

Tloppen l'lol!!l St. Paul
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday S.:hoot • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m ..
Tuesday Se~ices- 7:30p.m.

Coffee hour following

U:ading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Pewey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting~ 7 p.m.

Racine Flrsl Bapllst
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunda) School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~hip - ltl:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday S~rvices · 7:00p.m.

Old O.thel F,., Will Baptist Chun:h
28601 St Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.~.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30

3l6 E. ain Sl., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunda) S&lt;hoot 10:30 a.m.

Zloo Chun:h or Cbrbl
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt143)
Pulor: Roger Watson
Sunda) School· 9:30 a,m.
Worship- 10:30'a,m.• 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvices- 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10,30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rttebvllle
Pastor: Rev. Charhit. Mash·
Worship· 9:30a.m.
SundayS.:hool · !0:30a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

'

G.-~11 opetCUo't•

O.arwallow Rldgt CbU'Cb or Cbrlll
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunda) S.:hool·9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10,30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces ·6:30p.m. ·

Ml. Union·Bapli.st
. PastOr :Joe N. Sayr~

For
L"t •

.•. Plus. much more .
To Jearn more about the best'
solution for your particular
needs, call our ALD exp!JriS.

Kerlo Cbun:h or Christ
Wonhip- 9;30 a.m.
Sunday S.:hool- 10,30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Walla«
lSI and 3rd Sunday

Bradford Chun:h of Christ
Comer of St. Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Derek Stump
Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden
·
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship. 8:00a.m., t0:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\ltces ·7:00p.m.

-·~

flelers·

lnsurla.nce

••. Box~.~~
Mason, W.Va.

Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister: Bill,Frazier
Sunday S.:hool· 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, t0:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Lc:s Hayman

Enjoy A Nutritious Meal\

422 2nd Ave.

Middleport Cbon:b otCbrllt

Fnt WUI Baptisl Chun:h
Ash Street, MiddleJXirt

While attending the Recreational
Lisa M. Koch, an 'Audiologist
with lnhearjng, recently attended · Audiology Workshop Lisa received
the Academy of Dispensing
Watche,s • Diamonds • Jewelry
first hand experience with many of
the various hearing protective
Audiologists
Recreational
devices available, from over-the·
Cameras • Photo Finishing • Old Photos Copied
Audiology Workshop in Palm
Springs. Lisa is now listed on the counter ear plu~s to custom-made,
e Iec tro n i c hearing protec Iors . '-..:.:.:::..::::.:..::.::.;:~_..:..::.;:~~..:.;;.._..:.;;;;.;..::;..;..;..;.:...;.._~
Registry
of
Recreational
Earmuffs are now available in both
Audiologists.
Noise can cause permanent electronic and non-electric models.
The type of hearjng protective
hearing loss. ~'When people think
device
recommended depends on
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will of nois~. they often think of jobrelated exposure rather than the the type of activity involved.
be held from 9:30 to II :00.
Wednesday, May 17 • the 'Recreational' noise in tHeir lives," Children, as well as adults, need to
protect their ears from noise
Alzheimer's Support Group will stated Mrs . Koch "Activities such
exposure
and permanent hearing
1 is sometimes impossible to
meet from 1 to 3 p.m. for the as hunting, car and motor cycle
Joss
.
Custom
ear
plugs
are
also
racing,
air
shows,
home
.,&lt;.nlv·A all hearing difficulties with
seco nd . tra10mg sessio n on
Understanding
'Alzheimer 's improvement projects usi ng power helpful for keeping water out of the
hearing aids alone. An assistive
Disease. Anyone interested in this tools, and even li stening to music, ears for those with. medical
listening device (ALD) is the
can all permanently damage your problems requiring that their ears
subject is invited to attend.
perfect gift to make hearing
Thursday, May 18 • Sharon hearing" continued Mrs . Ko_c h. be kept dry, such as a hole in the
even easier in special listening
Bowling, LP.N .• Peer Review "Noise exposure and heanng eardrum or tubes.
situations.
And, they're
If you have any questions
Systems, will speak at II :00. Ms. protection on the job is regulated
affordable .
Bowling will be discussing by OSHA, off the job noise concerning noise exposure and the
ALDs Improve quality of life
.·
Medic;ITc patients rights and other ex(1osure and hearing protection is appropriate hearing protective
There are many ALDs for many different uses. ALDs can help
health issues. a nd will be · left up to the individual," noted device, please contac.t Lisa M.
Koch
of
lnhearing
at
446-7619.
those
with hearing loss hear the phone or television better (so
distributing information about a Mrs . Koch.
volume. doesn't
which
can-............
bother others)
holj Ine~ru- discus,- 4 ue&lt;t i11n • and :.._ r-::~:::-:::-:-:;::::;;;;;;::--------\Aii:~if\t;i;r:ij;t-":""1
- ..,-- have
. -··-·-·to ...be extra loud
.
-...,.-- . .
complaints·- abou·t medica l care
~&amp;~
WE HONOR
W.ith ALDs, listening lri lectures ,
~
reimbursed by Medicare.
~
~
places of worship and theaters
. ~Hear
can be enjoyed again. They
Friday, May 19 " Margie Lawson,
·
212 EAST MAIN ST.
also can make life safer by
D.D.s:. will conduct a free dental
alerting users to the doorbell,
he
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS
screening. Call Diana Coates, 992POMEROY, OH .
9!12-3785
alarm, or smoke detector.
·
2161, to make an appointment.

May Activities at the
Senior Citizen Center
The Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center is open Monday through
Fri day from 8:00 to 4:30. Senior
ci tizens are invited to participate in
daily activities and special events.
Daily activities are quilting,
sewi ng, pool, Uno, games and
visiting with friends. Weekly
ac tivitie s are Tuesday, Chorus
practice from I :00 to I :45;
Wednesday, Knitting Circle from
10 to 12, and Physical Fitness on
Tuesday and Thursday at ll : 15.

•

Congregattonal

w.-

Assembly of God

570 Grant St., Middlepon
Pu1or: Rev. David Bryan
Sunday school· 9:4S a.m.
Worship- 1I a.m. and 7 p.m.
w.dnesday Service • 7 p.m.

Kam Loaf

'

r-roy
Cburdtorcbrill
33226 Chitdnm'l Homo Rd.
Sundaf S.:hool - 11un.
Worllup . 1Ua.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hope Bopdsl Cblll'&lt;b (Sotalll&lt;m)

Bread
Pineapple Chunks

Meat Loaf
Mashed Pot a toes
with Gravy
Buttered Lima Beans
Bread
Cake &amp; lee Cream

-

Volunteers are honored at Senior Center

19
Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes

It Pickle
Oven Roast Pota.toes Green Beans

BBQ Chicken Breast
Potato Wedges
Coleslaw
Oran1e Gelatin with
Mandarin Ora.n1~s

30

.Cookie

Ansel Food Cake

Coleslaw
J.!ixed Fruit

Eptscopal

Putor: Neil Tennant
Sunda) Services· 10:00 a:m. and 7 p.m. ·
Thursdl) Pra)er Meeling • 7 p.m.

Tossed Salad

Bun
25

Swiss Steak

Bread

Buttered Green Bea-n s'

Chee~e

c

Butte~ed

lleat Sauce

18
Hamburger wi'th

17
Vegetable Beef Soup
Ham Sal~d Sandwich
Cranberry Apple
Salad
Banana
24

Noodles
Brocco li with Chees
Waldorf Salad
Oatmeal Cookie
~nd

Mashed Potatoes

CENTER

12

Sunshine Bars

Turk6y Slice with

23
Beef

. ... .

Spaghett_i with

with Bananas

Pie
Oven Baked Fish

School - 10:30 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
7:30

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

Br-ead

.

Graham Crackers

VlnZondt utd Ward d.
Putor: Jamu Miller

TUESDAY

Chicken Patty

Apostolic
Clnlrr. ol JIAI Cllrill ~t FIJI£

·suilday S.:hool· 9:30.a.ln .
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Wonh1p- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednu•y Services · 7 p.m.

l

Craw's Family
Restaurant

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio

~~--c~~+-~ 1~4~

HOPPE'

, ClASSIFIEDS
A

Tull Frl'l'

Bright Jdea!

1-800-445-22()(,

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

992-7075

172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992·5141

'
Middleport

264 south 2nd

rM~ -"1 _,,
pro/•UimaaliMt •I'Wi w.,v,..

1GlJICki&lt;IJr Consu!!i!!aJ,nc.
1050

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Veterans

"D1gnity and Service Always".
Established 1913

Memorial Hospital

c.ner R&amp;wl, SMell. OH 435178

992·2121

~ Pnontl614 ....!400
MiJblttl~

111"lWt421i16. FAX: 614.-&amp;-1400

W.,Tad Cuckler, Plwakfent

'

•

'.!

Add,.......,.,.

RAWLINGS • COATS

106 Mulberry Ave .

Pomeroy

115 E. Memorial Dr.
. 992·2104

Pomeroy

.
-·--~

~-

•• ·..-.r • -

•

'.

,..,.. . . .,......,...,..~~~..-r"&gt;--·~-- - - -.

~

�.Friday, May 5,111!t'

.Peg~ 8 :tbt Dilly Sentinel

.• Frtdlly, a..y I, 1085

The Dilly SenUnei--Ptgl . I

s VICA-....,. Literary Club reviews yesteryear custom :.
Mrs.
trn.m
Customs of yeateryear. were biognlpby or Lincoln ill1860,
reviewed ill the DIOde! mcclillflof Parsons said, led to his appointthe Middleport Uterary Oub held ment as U.S. ll""as•edor to Venice
recenlly at the bome of Martha which fumisbed mala:ial for VeneHoover.
·
tlan Life published in 1866 and
President Je•nellc ~ read · eventually to the editorship of the
portions of an.old c:oostitutlon and prestiglou' Atlantic Mootbly. · ·
by-laws. Juanita Bachtel acted as
Howells was a prolific writer
official c:rilit to Betsy Parsons' (68 yeais of continuous aulhorsbip
study of "Tbe Rise of Silas of novels,plays, essays, travelLB(Iham"', Tbe reviewer chose Ibis ogues, literary ,and political comnovel, sbe staled, because .of the mentary appearing in 64 noted
Ohio connection of the author, periodicals), lbe reviewer said. The
William Dean Howells. He was Civil War along with other societal
born in Martins Fetty ill 1837. M ·changes caused the rise of realism
his father moved f~uently in his in lhe_arts in which William Dean
profcssion of pinlei and joumallsl, Howells was a leader. He f.rac·
William was tar.sely sell-edl!C3ted • ticed, Mrs. Parsons stated, a 'gen·
from the many literary expenences teet realism" based on local color

of his youth . Writing a campaign

I

I·

REGIONAL OFFICERS- Meigs VICA (Vocational Industrial
Clubs or America) members, Erica Robie and Chad McKinney
have been named re1lonal ofDcers for the organizaUon. Roble, who
is enrolled In the nuninl assistant provam, is relional secretary,
and McKinney, a weldlnl student at Me~Bs, is the regional parllap&gt;enlarlan•.

WIG enrollment open
Meigs County Women, Infants
and Children (WIC) Supplemental
Nutrition program will be conducting a,special open enrollment clinic .
for Meigs County residents from 8
a.m. to 6 p.m. June 1.
..
The special open enrollment
clinic will he held at the Meigs
County Health Department, 112
East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

Cuckler Consulting Inc.

College .
Education Planning
1050 Carter Aoad, Shade, OH
Business Phone: 614 ..696·'14001

1

Clearance Sale

5 days only May 8th tb 12th
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• All Wrapping Paper &amp; Cards. 70% off
Southwest Blankets ................ 50% off
T-Shirts ......................... :........ .40% off
Selected Gift ltems .............. :.. 40% 'off

moderate Income.

of the following nomed
A oecond public hearing
fiduciaries havo ' been flied will be held May 18, 1995 at
In 1he Probate Court, llolga 1
p . m.
In
t he
County, Ohio, for approval Commissioners: office at
endaottlemen1:
lha
Molg·o County
ESTATE NO. 28240 • Firat Courthouse to give clllzena
and Final Account of Robert on edequele opportunl1y to.
B. Bakor, Executor qf the review and commen1 on 1ho
Ea1ele of Glon 0 . Boker, County'o proposed CDBG
Daceuod.
Formulo Allocation Program
··ESTATE NO. 28081 • Final Application before tho
and Dlotrlbutlvo Account of County submits · Ita
Cheater Knlghl, Executor of Application lo 1he Ohio
the Eotato of Holen K. Will, Department
oI
Decoaood.
Dovolopmenl.
ESTATE NO. 27642 • Final
Citizens are encouraged
and Dlslrlbutlve Account of to attend thlo mee11ng on
R. Roger Hunter, Exacutor May 111, 1995 to expro ..
of the Eolote of VIrginia E. lhelr vlawa and comments
Hartley, Deceuod.
on the Counly'a proposed
J;STATE NO. 26435 • Final COBG Appllcollon.
and Dlolrlbu11ve Account of
Meigs County
Marguartlt Tignor, Executrix
Commissioners
of tho Eatato of Ellon C. (5) 5,12; 2TC
Conkel, Decioaaed.
ESTATE NO. 28241 • Final
PubliC Notice
and Dlatrlbu11ve Account of 1--'-...;..,.:.-.:......:.....:...__
Judy L. Davia, Execu1rlx o_l
PUBLIC NOTICE
the Ee1ata of Thelma
The VIllage of Pomeroy
VIneyard, Deceased.
dealres to receive ••aled

I---------

Unless exceptions are

filed thereto, eald accounts

will ba lor hoorlng before
said Court on 1ho 51h day of
June, 1995, at which time

10% OFF HAND CRAFTS
.

said accounts will be
·c onsidered and continued

Country Cubbards 'e Shadow Boxes .

bids for gasoline products

unleaded plus (89 octanol
and 12 diesel fuel for one
year period. All sealed bl!li
ohalt be received In the
Clerk'a office at 320 East
Main Stroe1, Pomeroy, Ohio
on or before 12:00 p.m. EST
May 22, 1995. Tho Pomeroy

from day to day until finally
dlopoood of.
Any person lntorootod Council reserves the right
may
file written exceptlono to accop1 or reject any or all
Now Open I&lt;'orT!le.Swm
l"lld ·. aeeeUnte--or- to bl~oc '
Bedding Plants
matters pertaining to lho
Kathy Hysell, Clerk
exteutlon
of the trust, nOt
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
VIllage of Pomeroy
laea than live daya prior to
e
e
320 East Main S1reet
Baskets, 4 in Geraniums,
the date set for hearing.
P.O. Box66&amp;
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose
Common Pleas Court, (51 5,12; 2TC,
Probata Division, Meigs
Bushes, Strawberry Plants
~ ?:!Itojean ?:Ze/!PctioJt.J
County, Ohio
Public Notice
Hubbards Greenhouse
(51 5; 1TC
NOfiCETO
Syracuse
992-5776
~ G1it Srtoppe 354 East Milnl Street
Public Notice .
CONTRACTORS
(614 ) 992 . 5790 Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
Sealed proposals lor the
PUBUC
NOTICE
construction
of a fire
Sunday 12 noon-5 pm
Melgo County lntenda 1o station bay In Scipio
apply Ia the Ohio Township wilt be received
by the Meigs County
Department
•-----------------....,......,..-....,..,..~~------, · lorfundingof Development
under - the Commisaloners office In tho
Community Developmen1 Molga County Court House,
Block Grant (COBG) Small Pomeroy, Oh io until 10:00 .
Cltlea Program, a federally a.m., May 12, 1995, end then
funded
program at t :00 p.m. at said office
admtnlolered by the State.
Metga Coun1y lo eligible lor
$174,700 of Flacat Year 1995 2
· In
CDBG Formula Alloeallon ===iiii::~===:,
Program funding, provided r
the
County · meats
In Memory .of Our Dad
epptlcablo
program
HARVEY
requirements. On March 28,
WHITLATCH
SR.
1995 Mtlga. County
On His Birthday May 5
conducted lis llro1 public
hearing to Inform citizens
about the CDBG program,
how 11 may bt used, what

_. . .!..Shehr.es __ _

,.. Tater..Bins _

Bread Boxes

Misc. Items

J

Custom Carpets

· "cal · .

--'-7n:-;;;;:;;:::;---

sale:r

Monday, May 1· Wednesday, May 31

activities are eligible, and

other Important program
requlreme"nta~

Baaed on bo1h cl11zon

SAVE an astounding (40%) on
choice Monsanto Wear Dated II Color
Center carpets during Ingels Carpets

In Memory Of
NEVA M. GRIMM
May 5th!

You'll be spellbound by the vast
assortment of shades in a range of
exciting textures that create magic in
any room. And you can be assured of
getting the performance level you need
with the "Mom Approved" carpet
rating system on an easy-to-read
scale. Come in this month for a magic
carpet Iide that's high on style but low
on pr:ic!)! Look at th~.

ELITE

Big Value Texture
5

18.99

years ago on this
sad day
The one we loved was
· called away.
God took her home, it
was His will
But In our hearts she
liveth still.
Days of sadness still
come over us,

Tears of silence often
flOw~- ·
Loved &amp; Missed By:
Children,
Grandchildren &amp;
Graat-Grandchlldren.

11

$19.99

\)'" -~

WEAR-DATED

. 614·992-7028
..

'

I

CARPET

TM

SIIITII'S

SEIIICI

CONSTRUCDOII

Houle Alpllr &amp;
fllmocllllng
Kllclten &amp;118111 Remocleting
Room Additions
Siding, Roollng, Plllol

CUllom Building I RII!IOdlllng

oNEWHOIIES
•ADDITIONS
•NEW GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PANTING

llulonable
Insured - Experilnced

Call w.,. Nell992-4405
For Free Ellimates
• .

check,. or letter of credit

upon a solvent bank In the
amoun1 of not less than
.10% of the bid amount In
favor of the aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioners. Bid
Bonds
shall
be
accompanied·, by Proof of
Authority of tho official or
agent algning the bond.
Bids shall be sealed and
marked as Bid lor Scipio
Township VFD and mailed
or delivered to: Melqa
County Commlaoloners 200
Eaat 2nd

Street Court

House Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
AttenUon of blddera Ia
called to all of the

the

requirement for

a

payment bond and
pelformance bond lor 100%
ol the contract plfi:e.
No bidder may withdraw
his bid wl,hln thirty (30)
days alter the actual date of
tho opening thereof. Meigs
County Com.,..lasloners
reserves the rlghl to waive
any Informalities or to reject

(6141992·5535
(614) 992·2753

•
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

'

· Our Specialty

1-800-MERIT-98
MB#0489

.

Ext. 1861

"•

$3:99 per min.

:.

·~~-

It's been 17 years
since you've gone.
But your memories
still remain In our
hearts. We wish you
were here for us to
tell you Happy
Birthday and
you a Big 'Bir1hdlay.j
Hug.
Loved and Sadly
Missed by All!
Wlfi! BeHle,
Harvey Jr., Daughters •
Barb, Belinda and
Opal And Your 7

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

. ··'

·Wanted

.
··
. :
•

"CROSSOVERS"
Benefit Dance - ·
Hazilee Riebel Family
ROYAL OAK'Ri;S()RT- - -

Must be willing to work all hours.

Pick-up applications in person

Vaughan's Cardinal
Corner of Clonerol Hor11ng., Pori&lt;Way

end Pearl St. Middleport.
--~---~

-

- '"'T'---

Brothers
Prodaee
Flowers &amp;

247·2015 daytime

·WICKS
HAULING
jSpecialize In
driveway spreading)

TURKEY &amp; HAM DINNER
SUN. MAY 7TH
AT
SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
Sponsored by Southern Jr. High
11 a .m.- 3 pm
·
Children - $3.50, Adults - $4.75

'

PUBLIC AUCTION
. EXCELSIOR
SALT WORKS

PSYCHICS
Advise on future
opportunity,
decision-making, love,
. success, money.
LIVE 24 HOURS

1·900·868·
3800/Ext. 4741.
$3.99 min. Must be 18 yrs.
Procatt Co.
(602) 954-7420

1/12r'lln

412G/1

•Factory Authorized Parts
&amp; Service

•All Makes •42 Years
•Fast .R eliable Service
•Washers - Dryers - Ranges

•Refrigerators •Freezert

•Dishwashers
•H.W. Heaters
•Microwaves •Disposals
•Thanks Meigs &amp;
Surrounding Areas

1-900·945-6200
Ext. 2579 ,
$2.99 per min.
.Must be 18 yrs,
Procatt Co.
(6021 954-7420

Donations appreciated.

mo.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Your
Sweetheart Is
As Close As
Your Phone

Contact Delores Cleland 949-2071
or Dave Zirkle 949-2031

(6141 985-3561 or
992·5335 t:tft-411fn

4/:i!Sirln

'

ATIENTION BUICK

GUYS!
We want to hear
from you !II We're

.MANLEY'S
HOME IMPROVEMENT

Roofing, Siding, Room
Addl11ons, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
614 388-9865 '

\

MITCHELL'S
CONSTRUCTION
Carpenter Work,,
Porches, Decks,
Reroofing, etc.
614·742·2165 or
304-882-3704

Ask for Mike

live and waiting !II .
1-900-388-7000
Ext. 9970
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs,

Procall Co.

S'I'O-A·WAY

(602) 954~7420

.,......

MINI STORAGE
NOW RENTING
Comparable Sizes &amp; Prices
New Haven, WV

992-5251

985-4473

Buy • Sell • Trade

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

MR. RIGGS

GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer Cleaning

FREE ESTIMATES

NEW&amp;USED
Household Collectible
9-ST-Sun.
1 mile from Pomeroy,

949-2168

992·7502 or 992-5805

Painting ·

.,.,,

5116194 TFN

H&amp;H SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill

MODERN SANITATION

-·

5

MILHOAN

Birtllda)l
Uncle Harlan
W•.l.ov•You!
'

:.....

.

32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
. Brickles
614·742·2193

264 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

4121/'tfn

Saturdly, lOy lth, 1:00 A.M. 214

~~~~
Orlvo,
Blfllnd
Oomlno'l P1tfa, Uclliii SIZoo, 17-8 Clolhoo And N........,...
Miec. 114 116 0627.

... .. .
,., ..

1-800·486·1590
Bus. (614) 446·997 1
11!/ttn

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Conlor, 111 -

On

Mile

Slalo Route 7,

From

ThrM Fonllly: Frl • Sat llay 5111, .
llh, .,._ Prom O r - Clotblng, SmoU Apollo..-, Tu-ware, Booko, lllc:yele, a 112 Mil•
From Rio Grondo On Chorrj
RldgtROid.

Pomeroy, ·
Mlddlepor1
&amp; VIcinity
5 Fomlly Yard Sale, Saturday,
1:00 A.ll. llotln !Ill; Nlcie
Cloehlng, Dl-. P-. llloc.
Ac&gt;OM From Don Hill, I 112
MIIH South 01 Roclng ·On SA
338, LM•rt F•Ue.

We Have Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center

Sllurdly, Apt. 201 luollrldae
Apott-u, Fum10hod, UO.
Boys Silo I l 111 ctott..

Aero. From K•U•y Drive.

511 llulborry Hto., Pomeroy, 011.
Saturday I:OO.moo4:0Qpm.

Announcements

Y1rd Sal• llu .. Be Paid k\
- - - - - - - - Adva~. O..dllne: 1:00pm the

3 Announcements

dar b.for. the •d • to run,
1:oopm ffldoy,

sundoy ldhlon-

.;_..;..;.;.;.;;_;;.;.;__ __:_,..;.;:...._- Mondly
umHed ay-~~'a Of F.e Fr• S.turd.ay.

lldltlon

10:00Lm.

a•rag• .........y
\l~~ff:~7]~t~
Rd.. Racine. "'"1toOia, ehatgun..
4-6,

.
4Pt.. l14-aGiveaway

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

( No Sunday Calls)
2Nif921ltn _.

GRAY'S
Pl. Pleasant
&amp;~VIcinity

. Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-381'9

1M nrne Ever Y11rd S...l Okte.
12. baby produc1e, mllomhy
elothM, ..lllng tan, NfnlondO

tapee, booke, glrJI

2. 5th driveway on ..ft after a.p..

1181 Church (br F•lrgrounde! on

6

110\\ .\IW

Lonely? Call

EXL\\ATING

Tonight!
1-900-726-0033
Ext. 8878

Lo~&amp;

Rl 6l!N, Slgne. Rain or Shine

Found

EnterpriH aru., 114--882-4002.

Found-Siberian
Husky,
SyracuM , 992-:1965; 3 ma~ tlgtf
.triped, lh1..- ln~lnad khtena. to
give IWIIY, 614~g2·3752.

7

Garao-

-de.

2V23 M1pitl An.

Yard Sole.. 301-41h St., 111-i.

May f..4..6, Thu, Fr1, sat"'

Yon! Solo.

Lincoln

Yard Sale

s....

~ 4, 5, " I. Apptiwoo,
eurlllne, clothing,
loyo lloto of mlec.

Sal., llay I, t-? 2205
Ave.
aothl~,

ttou.ilhold lleme, toye, celllnj

ion.

$2.99 Per Min
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co

8

Gallipolis
&amp;VIcinity
1M Right Off Dullvili. ~

Women. Cloti'Jing, HouMI-

(602) 954-7420

IIema, Running Boarda_ Toye,

M.oret Saturday Only, t-a.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializ ing in Custom
Fraine Repair .
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
. 992-7013 OR

POOR BOYS TIRES

675-3331 - 675-333-1
Hcmkrson. WV
C'all Lon Nt:al For Th e Deal At The New Store

day, SR 7, Chu Ire, EnrclN E·
qulpmtnt, Clothing. GlauWIIrt
And Tromttonll.

·

3 Family: Saturday,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick PMr.on AucUon CompinJ,

full time •uct&amp;onar, complete
11uetk&gt;n
MrY5ce.
Uc:enwd
IGS,Ohlo I Wnt Vlralnll, _.,
Tn-$785 Or 300-773-~l

2 Fomlly Frldoy·h! Fomlly Sotur-

99~·5553

lunlar, fMftl

•roe, I ltnlckiMCU. Maw I, ..

• Found- a whitt tamalt c1t In I he

Open Mon.-Fri. @a .m.-5 p.m.
Weekends Call61 4-742-2772

Toyo.llltll:.

Three Famlty Y•rd Sale~ saturdoy, lilY 61~, W; Sunday Moy
7th 1,_,; Georgn C..k Road.

-...... -

4J25/t1n .

Everlaatlnga, Hanging
Baalcete, etc.
(Depot St.) Rutland to
Lending Creek, then to
Paulins Hill. Just 2 1/2
miles from Rutland or 4
1/2 miles from SR 7

May lth, GrMft Temce In ~
IINirJ,
Nice
Clolhlng,
Ho"tlhold lt•rN, RgurlnM.

ftllrtl

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need acar rental.

AueHon every Sa1'urd1y 7:00pm.

UPP« Alwr Rd besl. Burtlle
011. FIN Market IP'CM Thur,

Frl, Sot. 30H75-64G5.

a..a,

At 141
Briek HOUM Aero• From C....

11n11ry

Townho~o~M .

Hilde Drive, Gallipolis, Frl l
lOY llll, l 61h.
ALL Yord Saleo Must Bo Pold In 9
Wanted tO fJuy
Advonc:e. O£AOLIN~: 2:00 p.m. ,--.,.:._.;,;;.:,...:.:...:..:::!.._

-41

.Sa~

IN day befot"' the ad la to run.
Sunday tdltlon e 2 :00 p.m.

Friday. llondoy adhlon :

OR

TOLL FREE 1·800·848·007
DARWIN, OHIO

2:00

• Custom Made
• Solid llinyl

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

wlndewt ·
• Free Estimates

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

•

Cfiock-Stqtt~~

Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

I

11100

Bkl Yard Sale: Furnitur.. Ap-

Dlcorated ltoneware. wt-11 ,...
~. old lampe old thoro
momotoro, old eiOclco, onllqlie
lumhure. Alvtrl,. Anllq..._

F~. Sat Sun VCR Topoo, lott
Of Stunl Clol~o. Curtolno. Rain
tShlne, 513 Parton A~d.

'

Smhh . 8ulck Pontiac

- Eaua~om Av~~n1.11. Glllipdlt.

Fourth AV.r\UI.

QUALITY
WINDOW SYSTEMS
'

C... n Latt • Model Car~ Or
Truck&amp;, 1087 Modtola Or ~.

p.m. Saturdly._

pltineea, ,,... Toota, Clalhte,
And llloc. Slfurday, N, 541

~

'

~

614-992-7643

Berba, Perennlale,

lOr IIIII, IIIII. Friday, Soturclay,
ma South st. 111 . 1. 1121111e OUI

Kemper Hoi- Rood.

· Kenny's Auto.Rental

Auctioneer
35581 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
Certified Personal
Property Appraiser
Bonded (614)
·

Jlapp~

:.•

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

CaU for rate schedule
Min. $2 .00

Angle's
Greenhouse

tl.boft : cd AoecL .

1

Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

992-3838

~-:.·~-111M.
•
- -..
~ IIIII, lllh, 1-&lt;4, 3172 l :nn

Sllurdly, ..., 1111..._Ganoge • Allie: Solo, Some ~&lt;lOihoo, Misc.
Fumlt,.e, V..y Nleo Entortol""

POMEROY, OHIO .
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
weekly &amp; monthly rental rates. ·
&amp; Parties

'
re~laeement

304-882·2996

-

SA 33N

COMMERCIAL .and RESJDENTI.AL
FREE ESTIMATES

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sit.es, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways,
Truck,ing- Limestone,
Top Soil, fill Dirt

--

lloyltl'lllnlldi,U-OUI

WHATYAMACALLIT
SHOP

.

CALL 1-900·945-61 00
Ext. 8587
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

Gas Tank Repair
Radiator Service
and Welding
Butch Wilson.
St. At. 338, Letart . OH
614-247-3522

Howard L. Wrltesel

Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 . 992-6471
Mon - Fri
. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
p:m:-=s-p:m .
SuQ. by appt. only

NEVER
BE LONELY
AGAIN

Garage and Towing
• Service
Automotive and Truck

01 Gottlpotlo.

412&lt;W5

614-992-3470

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; EKterlor
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATESI
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

RACINE AREA COMMUNITY
ORGANIZATION YARD SALE
MAY 5·6, 9 A.M.
STAR MILL PARK. RACINE

Bill Slack
992·2269

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septit Systems; Trader &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre .
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

- -- sar.a

· (Umesiiine low Rates)

4/21/95

Call for all of your storage needs

... .

·--..,.,
.'1 ................,

~- - . !!"!"~'!!

B&amp;W

Repa~r

'

Open For Business

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

Letart Falls, Ohio

(614) 992-4279
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Light Hauling,
. Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Roger &amp; Tom Hill
49534 State Route 338

RJ!ntn
Limousine r,~
Weddings, Proms
and Spoolal
Oceaslon.!i

S. R. 7 Five Points

•Garages

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

$6.00

·Service ·

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Hanging Ba•k1115 :I;
&amp; Flats

.Lauref.Limo

FRIDAY, MAY 5, 8 pm-midnight
$5.00 Cover- BYOB. Public Welcome.

Owners: Pete &amp;
Diane Hendricks

Vegetable Plaot• ;t

Take 1he pain out of
paln11ng. Lei us do it lor
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave
message.
Altere p.m.
614-985·4180 31241114

,,.. tl- --1

ATTENTION SHOPPERS .
You don 't want to miss this
huge yard sale. At the corner
of Locust and Maple Streets in
Cheshire, Oh . May 4th , 5th,
6th. Levi &amp; Arizona jeans,
shirts, coats, beautiful
women's and children's
·clothes ..Housewar!!s,Jirapes,
microwave lots of window
blinds. Lots of misc.
· Phone 367•7350

16 for 25.00
12 for 20.00
Call 992-2487

Free Estimates

Interior &amp;
Exterior

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Don Carter, Bob Cook,
Brett Epling, lim Pierce or
Greg Smith at
SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC .

1111/tfn

LINDA'S
• PAINTING &amp; CO.

BULLETIN BOARD .
00
16 column fnch weekdays
18" column inch Sunday

OWNERS
Effective May 2nd
Buick Motor Division has
substantially increased
the incentives for
purchasi119 a new Buick
during our Qualidays
Promotion. Please check

Free Estimates

414195

Get Your Message Across
With A D•lly Sentinel .

ROCK'SPRINGS UMW
RUMMAGE SALE ·
w/FOt&gt;O ITEMS
MAY 6TH, 10 A.M.-?
In Church Basement

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

1-li00.~56·SOOO

·...:"'·

•'

J&amp;L INSULATION

LIVE
PSYCHICS
1 ON 1

-

....

• :• •I' t

SUMMER
IMAGES

CONSOUDATE

..
·..

Convenient Mini:.Storage Units

'""'-

- ~----------------------~
PURCHASE
REFINANCE

.

.

ROBERT BISSELL

·Buy·Sell·Trade

COMPANY

Want Jlljs

.

&lt;Craftsman. Tool•
•Toys
-Gia1sware
Loeds of Mlac.

Open 9:00-2:00
5:00-11:00

any or all bids.
(41 21, 28; (51 5; 3TC

.

Onemlleout

Tues.-Wed.-Fri.-Sat.
1-6

FA£! ~ST!MATtS

4ft3fH

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
143 from Rt. 7

MERIT

Sat., May 6, at 10A.M.

W·pad and norm.al
iiTStallation "

'INGELS CARPE~ t.NLY
800-407·2~34

V.

returns to the, ennoo.t homestead
where be and hiS famUy bad been
happy. Mn. Parsc?ns ~cnged ~.
group 10 consider' wbsch ~of h1s
life truly showed the "Rue" of
SUas l..aJ&gt;bal!l·
· .
Tbe meeun1 closed Wllh Martha
Hoover and her daughte.r, Laura
Totten presenting a musrcal program featuring a number ?f seleclions from Broadway m~sicals_. At
~e _e nd, the group jo1.ne~ rn a
smgmg "&lt;.lod Bless Amenca.

Want to be a part of a.·
• •
.· wmn_
mg team ?. ·
L.......o............__......J.l..--------Lttf- tCasfltiers,-earfv-out 8re"ft84·~-d4~.-1-1-~.....J;__...with..~details-~1 -,
W-pad and normal
installatl·on

t.hls

175 N-2nd Ave.

Nln~

AMERICAN MADE
Tight and Dense

'· · . . . IIPMIUII

Main Street, Pomeroy, Oh.

In Memory ·

2

Mom's Magical May Carpet Sale.

lt't'v.t·g0t ~j&lt;.W trick~

Aller flnanclallwdsblps strike,
SUas struggles 10 pay his debts and

carllfied check, cashlttra

•

Gdlpolll
&amp;VIcinity

Long Bottom news .notes _.- - - -

Account• and voucher•

t;h~e~O~b~io~H~c:lp~M~e~G~ro~w~C~a~m~-!!!!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:

__..

I apharils wbose fortune came
!llllll&lt;etiog an unusual type of~~
which covered the landscape 1\?th
advcrtisemcDts.

By MELODY ROBERTS
Jack and Mary Carroll have
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Theiss, W.Va., is here for a visit with her
Pearl Powell n:ccndy observed
moved
'back
to
their
Carroll's
Vinton,
were aftemoon guests of sister and brother, Georgia Mount
ber birthday.
Landing
lhe
Paul
Hauber
family.
and Emory WeelcJy.
Debbie Griffin Noll of Belpre
Brian
has
left
his
posiMrs
.
Leah
Clary,
Glenwood,
spent a recent afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Grif·
~==~F7~~~~~
fm.
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
Public Notice
PubliC NotiCe
Among lbe ill in the community
IN TilE COMMON PLEAS lnpul end local offiCIIIa' opened and read aloud.
requirements contained In
are June Griffm and Alta Ballllld.
lhlo bid packet, .partlcularly
Each bid must
Mr. and Mrs. Kennetb Riggs are COURT, PROBATE DIVISION IIIJIImont of the Coun1y'e
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
noedo, Mol go County lo accompanied by al1her •
to the Federal Labor
reponedly in the process of purIN THE' MATTER OF
p,ropoalng to undortokt 1ho bond In an amount of11VI'I&lt;. I Standarda Provisions and
chasing the Marie Swan lumre. ·
SETTLEMENT OF
Flocal 'liar 1895 -Formulli of tl'le bid aoiurunt wl1h a
vle-•Becon
Wages, ·
ACCOUNTS,
Allocation
Program
with
the
·various
Insurance
aatlalactory
to
the
surety
.4dtf,.u{rl6 II f'Jt(Ut,Vr. NlfH'Id
PROBATE COURT,
primary goal of benefl111ng aforesaid Melga County requirements, vairious equal
pr&lt;O/• uiouaU.m a11d U.I•Krily.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
persona of lo~ end Commissioners or by opportunity provisions, and

and proof or income ror the housebold. Questions concerning the
open enrollment or WIC seryices,
should be directed to the Meigs
County Health Depanment/WIC
Office at 992-6626 or 1-800-755GROW for more information.
WlC is operated by the Meigs
County Health Department in
Meigs Counly and is a partner in

WIC provides
free
nutrition
education,
health care
referral,
and · paign.
supplemental foods, such as, infant
formula, milk, eggs, juice. cheese,
cereal, and peli!!Ut butter or beans
to quallfyjng pregnant, breastfeeding, and postpartum women,
infaniS and children up to age live
who meet federal nutrition and
income requirements.
I
. WIC services may even be
available to working families,
Health Depanment officials report
e
since a family or two may earn up
10 $1,547 monthly, a family of
e
three may earn up to $1,941
e
monthly, and a family of four may
earn up to $2.336 monlhly and be
eligible 10 receive WIC services.
Those interested in attending lhe
special WIC open enrollment clinic, must bring proof of identificae
. lion for lhe person being enrolled,

without delving iniO the seamy side
of life. Accepted by the literary
g1anu of his day, Howells promotcd the literary careers of other
American authors like Mark: Twain
and Henry James being acclaimed
by the tum of the century as lhc
Dean of American Letters. ·
"The Rise of Silas Lapham"'
rellects tbe American experience as
lhe newly-rich Lapham forces his
way ioiO society, later faces finan·
cial ruin but s!ill maintains his persona1 integrity, it was pointed out.
The characters stand out in the tate
of two families: the Coreys, proper
Bostonians, living on stahls and a
~w~ng fortune and.lheir interac11011 w1th the more down-to-earlh

YnSIIt

1

Au• MOOf'fo,

OWMf.

2521. Wo buy Hlaloo.

•'14oft2-.

Donl Junk HI Soli Us Your Non-

· Rttrlgeratora.
Gorogo Sale: !181 Ko._ Hol- WortdnQ
F,.._., Wnhoro
Orywe,
low Rood, Golllpollo, . Ohio. Ml&lt;rowo..., Color T.V."o VCR'e,
Riding Mow•, Tools, Clothl.a,
Condhlonors, Comp&lt;.O ....
Mlao. "May 4th, 5th, 8th.
llachlnoo, EIC. 11+256Qorogo Sale: Boby Thlf191.
Womana
Ctottw.a.
Mise:.
Sh-trlng Ridge, W.teh For J • o·a A&amp;lto """" onc1 - l
Sign, Th•rw .Sot, ~S. 114-"1· buying •-bJunlt -

0125 Rain !ShiM.

tNOka. Ahlo1 pert• D ..... .,.:.

773-&amp;SU .. JT.J.WS..

.

Qorogo Sale: Friday l Saturday, Wa!Oad oo l&gt;uy. onllque onc1
Moy lllh, IIIII, 441 · L.oGroflomlt""!t!".' hom tao la'll"
Bivd. Out 141 To IAII.
or too omatl. ,.., buy - piKe

_,_ .,_

...~

�•

•

•
•'

Frld8y,May I, 118i

Pom...Oy....Uiddleport, Ohio

-MayS, 1995

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

..

ALDER

r

KIT 'N' CARL ¥1.~ by Larry Wrfabt

Vi\ otl. 1"~fi
fut•i'l ~&amp;&amp;I~"'
· - ~-~~--

: . 11

- --.

Help wanted

AVON I AI , _ . I 8hldo!l
ltpoora,IOW1$--

----- ·--·-~
.....

Of' &lt;;f~ Nil !

Employment Serv1ces

-

.......fumlltled.

~- lo IMiy • Ml,llo~lvli 1ft.
:~;:: J04112-2W ..

pt'tnctt

·-~

LAYNE'S RIRNITUIIE

""'

~

Complolo - homo lum'iil--.
......•
MouN: Mol S:ll, W. 114-oMIctl22, J mil• out Bulavlle Plu

..•·:.

Vffi'L.L. FOLl.O'N THE"'
"'T A SAFE DISTANCE!
PER~

Pol'ol

•

OPPO~NtTY ' WILL.

PII.E.SENT 11'5El.F!

.-,.
'.

·~

..

44 FonMrly
41 Slyly op!Wul
1 Hindu gennent 47 Inventor
5 Tlllk I&gt;Kk
·
T-to (II.)
50 MO'o clwt
t Adam ond- 51 ...., abbr.
12 Oec!Meo
52 LIYing on olher
13 Slippery
e,....uras
14 Wlra
57 Ad 15 Co.58 Flower
59 Pine&amp; , e.g.
- 17- and outs
18 Hockey's
60 Opp. ol NNW
Bobby61 Potter's
19 Main dinmaterial

--~-to­

- BARNEY

1100 21 OIUao- 10

uu -. • -

"'
••
••
....
-

AREN'T SOMETI-11NG YOlJ
BORROW LIKE A LAWN MOWIERI!
OR A CUP OF SUGAR

Plullc

·-

aon, OH l.aGG.a37-8128.

Couch, Chlolr'-Colloo Table &amp;
End Taolao $1uu, 304.e7W1111.
Cuotom 250woU ampUllar hud,
p1ara ~ - eu.om 11-15" WOI..,.
$300. 81.. gullw .lUll c.•

Electrtc
Whoolchal,. And
Scootere. New And U.ecl, · lndcoar And Qutdcoar Modola,
Bowm~n•e Homecare, 114-4487283.
For ..,.. Whool Horoo rtdlrig
$2250, 114oill2..z188.

•

For your loa homo ot dock, -

al Point Pluo, Slkkana Wood
Flnloh. 304.e75-4084.
Giavely tl'llctor, 40ft aluminum

ladder. 304.e7&amp;-4338.

Gravely walk·bohlnd, L modol
with 30"' mow• ana racary till
at•achrnent, dual whNI1, run.
oood, $800; aloo Saga Gonoolo
fapao; 614-11411-270V.

Appro•. 10011200, 21111 out
Sandhill Ad, Moodow · Hille.
$8,000 080. J04-m-it55 aftor
lpm.
Boono eo.. wv, opproK, 242,820

tMt ••nl(lng tlml»r
(Ooyte), near q..-rt ... G. 304-743-

board

tlOO ati• 5pm.

Campsha 50x100 $3,500 090,

304-3-82·2462, 8 To 8.
GALLIA COUNTY: Juot Eost or

Stata At. 117. 30 Min"'" Soulh
Of Galllpolla, 25 Woodld krM

Real Estate

Ovartooki~

$22,000, Orily $2,000 Down Ano
$264.30 ~r Month, 10 YNra,

31 Homes lor Sate
HouH And Lal Ulw Down
Poymonl, Eaoy ~onno, 3 Bado
room1, 1 Bath, Located NHr
VInton /BicfWtll ArM. Call 1..aG0448-8808 Aak For Matthew. ·
2-atory

Haven

garage, beatcte New
SUJ»rmarklt, bottom

floor comp111t1ly ,.modeled, 2.
baya: (lront boy -.,"K28', roar

bay

:l2'l23'),

100'x40'

lha Ohio Rlvar1

lot,

10% lnl...st, 114·n5-tt73.
GALLIA COUNTY: Juot Eaot or

Stale At.

11. 30

Mlnut• SorAh

or Galllpollo, W
Woodod
Acrwr, Divided In 18 Trac11
Ranging From IS To 34 Acrite
Each, All Fot Sole On Laod eon.

,tract Whh 10&amp;

Down And 10%

Int-I For tO Yoaro1 Same or

Tha Price• -Are: 21 Acrea
$14,000.~ Acr"!J $1!1,000, And 'I

,.,_ ..,800, e...TI5-Im.
SConlc
Valley, Apple O.ovo,
2-.tory howa. 2 e~~r gaNge, 4
beautiful
2ac 10ta3J:"~IIc wator,
ou1bulldlng1, 2 wii•J~-~ppro_r:

$18,500. 304-182-~.

Smallllrm -~uallllod logll
MCNIAry 1o
onn g.neral 314aera. Rf 33 Letart ""; VIew
oltlce diAlN.
,..ume to ol Ohio Rlv•,
rep~rlra..
BoK cU, % Pt. PleiOOnl Rag .. $18,000. 304-18!1-3513 or 304ter, 200 Main SL, PI Ploa...nt. 8115-3382.
WVZ5050.
3 Bod"""" Homo, E.loollonl

,.;.d.

Condl11oft,

ConvenJent

Rio

Grando Locoljon, Now Khchon,

Clyde BOWlin Jr.,

School,

Roome for renl • week or monah.
~=~1::1' ol $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
I
11580.
-

Ton -.lh old AKC malo a...
hound ":2$1~ hao had on
- . . $100, ·~
WWKC Nf1. Ronwaltor pupoloa,
e wu. Old, vory boaUIIIutly
11111rked, hu had lim worming
l oholo, 2 mo1o1 41omoloo, $350

•·72..,,

... ,114-378-e:JM.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

46 Space for Rent

Direct From Owner. Seve 5

O.pod:

'

1112

Hogg Sl.
- . . . required.

S27!lmo. 304482-2221.

g.-.

lOpm.
TMm w1ntad, muat have Clau
A COL w/haz. INti ., be willing to
... .... 11-Jw~~y : .32'1. ol
WMidy groao.
7H710 bel·

By Ownor: 3 Bodrooma, Futl
BaMmenl,

l,.dleon

Avenue.

Gatlloolle, With .wllhoul .., Fl.
..... &amp;14-3711-:1881•

For Solo 3 llfm. ho..., Planlz
lklbcllvlolon. Call 114-44U'lll4
Wenled: ltOI'I'Ieot .. wtlh tractor anyllme • 8~11581 bolo
lo bNoh hC&gt;fl - r t y In Nor· w-7 a.m. a I p.m.
lhup arM. Cill 814--32017 a~
tar7pm.
.
WMn 1•10ptn.

12ll80, 2 Bodr-:.:-Clark
Chapol Road, 814-4
VI Allor
SP.U.
2br trailer. Roloronooo •
O.poe• No pel .. Alao tr1l._r loll.

Rt 82N, Looust Rd on rlghl, PI
Pl-nl. 304-67!1-1011.

oM 1m

Ona OptlmUii amp (170 wlt1e);
on• Opllmua apeak•r· two Op-

Merchandise
HousehOld
Goods

• We buy, ..u and
naw/uaad

Will ~01
Rocky

Rod Motal Bunk Bodo Twin On
Top Full On Bonom~ With Mal·
11'HIH.J

lncludel Ulllk._ Whh

Booliofioll ~Ana · Choat or
Draworw, Asking $400 080, t14367-04g3,
Aafrlgerltorl, Stovee, Washara
And Dryera, All RacondiUoned

l..ovMoal Lounge Cholt, T.V., And GouranlMdl $100 And Up,
Mlctowllftt DNk, Chllr 114- Will Dollvor. 11-ll-i44l.

256-1281, CaK +ftor 7 P.M. '

42 Mobile Homes
for-Rent •-

J __

Y•ry R1uonabty Prictd,

UMd 25KW EhtctrM: Fumarce,
Central Air Condllloner, ft'M E,.,.
tlmattl, 1-600·287-6308 Or 114446-6308.

I

41 Houses for Rent
2bodroom,

a.. Fumaca New Heal Pumpe,

Ortando.'Oieney. 4 hotail nlghta.
-· 1001).1500-oq.
II. .-dod.
Roopond
In writing u.. anytlm•. Paid &amp;300, Hll
lo P.O. Box 724, Athena, ott . SIMI. 304-35:l-t106.

Buy

$55,1100, 114-44HI58.

650watt microwave 150. 3Q4.
875-4861.

Looking tor blda on ofllco llmuo (tubo typo~ oubWooloro;
· Muat
bo ground
lloof, $400, call 6'M-i92·7Dt5 altar
hondlcop
aeoooolblo,
4-1 ollie.. 5pm.
with Neapllon ar• and 001!

51

JohnHn

horae

traiLer,

good condition, 614-742·2025.
30 Lop Eor Aobbho Bilek MarUno l Dwarf, Roaoonoble U l
Up, 1 Or All, 814-245'061&amp;.

April ltl92 AOHA Pl-ure Galdo
lng, Fobruary 1884 Blg Paint

Haner Fill~, 1D83 182 Hand•

Hun! Sast AQHA Mara, 1884 Bla

Choolnul AOHA Filly 814-28c:
1622.

BUichorlng hoga, 240-2!501, 114-

1411-2017.

Chorolalo Bull, roglst. .d, polloci, -- ~ - 112Yro old, approx.
18001....1100. 304-185-3580 .~
tor lpn\.
Llmoual" bull, 1l montha old,

Pwebrad, mu• ... to .,.
pnclata, S800, ....... 085 3540

Aoglotorod Llrnouoln Bulla, Rod

And Black. 12 ·18 Momha Old,
Evonlngo~i1441,.'1t00.

Rd. Pt.
colt 304.el'!l-14!50, Solollllo oyotom $300. Pon:h
ownlrig, 8•24• wlpooto $200.
Dryor $25. 3~18lll ahor
IWAIN

RIRNIT\IRE. t:1
Olhra St., Galli polio. Now a UMc1
_tumllure. hMtll"', w.-:am a
Wotkboo4o.l~58.

18110 Buick Skylark, 4 Cyllndor,
Eltcelle.. Condhlon, Loadod Caba, Doora: flndlrl • More. t
With Optlone, P.SOO. 114-3711- Mltoo South bi Gotllpolla At Juotlon AI. 7 &amp; Rt. 218, .... . . _ . 27118.
Trlinalnloolono. Uood, nbuln, aH
11110 T..,ola Ton:ol, I ~!,Cd lnopedod,
g~Mrwntood. 30M75AMIFM . - . , .WIJ
7034. Ablolo-kw
_
__
condition, aoldng $311110; 11188
claiModa.
Nloaan ,C&lt;=:,.UI.i 5 OIIMII. AC,
AMIFM . a, aoldng $21100,
Truck - · Chlov, Fotd, Doclgo,
114-'1112-2'121 or 114-'JI12·28412.
and 8-10, ohorl • long. 304.e751286.

Offl,tS

.,.-

•• "II

LO~
SER

72 Trucks for Sale

18lll Cho¥y ~~ I Cytlndar, 4
Speed, Vory 10011&lt;1 Body $1,600,
OBO, 114-44e.eoot.

K..Tl!Nl..Y, l'Vf. e££1.1
E£1\lflDBN::~ R:Kll£
PfDT FIVE: Yfl.f5

TANKS 3.000 Gollon
E'fiM lnt•IIN1ua.
1-.631-0521.

Soii-Conlalnod,
Troll•, $2,100, 114-

1870 28 1'1· Cltv Qurnp Trallar,
$',000, ·~3; .

11177 Col-do 10 112' campar, aoll-contalnod, AJC,

mkrOWIVI, lm/tm ca...eta. U•

AIC, $1,160 Finn, 114
. '
11177 BIIDr 3110 With Holley 600

J

.

woddlng
v-n.
..
~lgh neck;
low ~boo
!IOOda

---·'*" -.....- .
~.

OWXMKOT

SXJC

GVO'XZ ,

DVM

S ABC

NDOASVMCSL
· KAXOC

GNL

G N J C 0 . '

X M.

KAM
MTCL
MTC
-

0 X

W

DCCZTNG .

MTAGNO

P,REVIOUS SOLUTION : "Hungry people cannol be good al
learntng or producing anythtng . except perhaps violence ." -

Pearl Ba iley.

·

THAT DAILY d.Jill
PUZlLII ~~

·

Edllod by

Q Rearrange

letters of
four ~erombled word'
low to form fOur words

LALE

I' -I
I:~:

.

u·

?

~

SHE ' S .JUST
JEALOUS SHE

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0

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTfRS

.

I'

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ch , dl• quoled

by f•lltng 1n t.he mrssmg WOfds
vou develop from step No. ~ below.

I I I I I lro l I I I I

l&gt;tDN'T THtNt&lt;.
OF tT FiRST.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Scanty· Gauge - Dirty · Nestle - GLARING
People hate television so much these days. In fact my
Dad hates 11 so much he spends hours every clay just
GLARING at it

.
•

•.

-··

STRI&lt;£ A8WN IN Tl-£ v.M ON

~

HIGH PRICES. SHOP TH£ CLASSFIEDS.

1

••
••

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•"'
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0318.

1882 Fonl E.lp.1 runo good, 81
$550. 304-6'16-2811.
1884 lludo~ Camper Top,.

Home
Improvements

BASE!4ENT
WATERPROOFING
~~JJ:-· Ca~ Anytime, 814- Uncondh'- lllollme guanoIN. Local rel.,.nc• fumle.had.
1185 Fotd F-180 Rod • WhRo Call 1~00.287-0571 Or l\4-237o
Good Condhlon Now Whooto I, 0488 R - Walorproollng. &amp;Tlroo, Brakoo, S:l,iiOci, OBO, 814-- ta~llohoc[ 1VI5.
247-2032.
Barn.tt'e Home knpornmenla:
111111 Fonl Ra- 4 Cyllndo&lt; 5 Roorn ·Addhlo1111 .O.Cko, And
S-d, $1,11001 18 HP IR'D LaWn Porchaa, E.lpo~oncecl, FrM e.
•........ 114-446-85et.
Tractor hSO, o14-28l.e434.
cac Gonorol Homo
1187 Chovy 8-10 club cab, rod
wlrM lmorior, 2.1, y.e, PW, PB, llolntona,_ and Mobllo Homo
AM/F.. c - . ooo Nnor &amp; Ropolr. For 1rao aotlrnato coli
• - · Durango poo~ , _ Chill, 114-11112-Q23.
whlta lonor· tlraa voiy good
Aulomatk:, Huna And

condHion, A850

11831.-

-

--

Looke

.

ro mance and you'll fm'd 1t The A stra · regr oup and keep try1ng

"

Grap h Matchmaker 1nstantly reveals SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov . 22) You m1ght

NY 10163.
lhe latter
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Condillons SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec . 21~ Be
wtll ba tnterastmg today due_jo surpnse 1og1g_~ ..t~ur f1nan_c~al ~. ~(JI)~gs~. but also

__.__BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Dokolb . .d com. DK881
DK683, DK838, DK814, Dk~
DK!III. 30M7B-1501.

FrMmon'a Hoallng And Cooling.
lnotallallon And Sorvlco. EPA

tw1sts . A S1tua11on th a t appears t o be gtve credence to your 1nh.11!10nl0day
g01n'9 nowhere mtght suddenly take oti they w1ll make a powertut combination lor
like gang busters.
.your good

CANCER (June 21 · July 22~ Show
-pat1ence today wrth a fnen(l who 15 very
fond of you . but who .1s also quue posses sl~e He/she can be managed w1th tact

c.rtJUed. Relldantill. Commwcllll. 114-25&amp;o-111 t.
·

84

'-Your

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19~ Where

and understandmg

1mpor1ant deCIStons are concerned today .
don't abd1care your fiQht lo render tudgments Your assessments w111 be at !east
as good as your assoctates·

down toOay m a development where
boldness is reqw red In actuahty your
oppostt1on IS lar more ttmtd about th1ngs

not wtse to let your emottons govern your
thought processes , but today ~1 be an
exceptiOn Th1nk w1th boO'\ your head and

LEO (July 23 · Aug . 22~ Do not bac&lt; AOUARIUS (Jan. 20·feb. 19)Usuallyii'S

CBirthday

••
.-

have .to make ·a chorce today between

you. Ma il $2 75 to Matchmake r. c/o th1s tak1ng a short Cui odo!low1ng a slower.
newspaper, P.O . BoX 4465 . Ne w Y:orlo: but proven route . Your best bet Would be

•,

080, 1-:1•.

wh 10h signs are roman1 1cally perfect for

ASTRO·GRAPH

•

Saturday. May 6. 1995
In the year ahead. your hopes Stnd

thanyouare

• yourheart

·

Hulc:t'l

Fr1st Acund Game •• leams to

~~j]~~j~~""'[[~=j~;Lli~~~;&lt;~i'[~=~~~]!;;:-::ji~=t£L:=ro:;y;;;::-L___
_.

-~~-~affl~viRGo~ug.23·~~~uuiii.,~~~~~M~M~~~-~~1~~~~~~;~~~E~~~~~~~~~~5~~~~~~~~i~~i~3~~~~~~
Perquestion the value of someone·s compa·
ny today , but once you adJust to thts
son's personality , you wtllleel much more

fnend who always .seems to teach you
somethth9 tntercstmg w1ll be a good com·
pan1on today . Be sure 10 let h1m fhrr do

TAURUS (Apr!! 20·May 20) Someth1ng
m1ghl develop today lhat puts you 1n an

comfortabl.e
most ol the talking
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23~ Desuable ARIESiMarch 21-l~prll19) An omportant

choose

obJeCitves can be ach'1eved today , but obJective can be achteved toda.,. , but you
prObably not on yout first try If you fa1 l.' m 1ght "'ave to use an 1nd 1rect route
regroup and tr y agatn If you ta11 then . Adapt to any c hanges and feel free to

awkward pos11ion of hav1ng to

ThiW prom dr..._, .tae 7, one

'MTC

I Miau,c s,/ ,~ I 1·-o -c~:~~:.:. r:~

·•

1ic than they 've been 1n lhe past Thts
·' new oullook could SIQnlftcant!y enhance
' your chances tor success

'·

TOday s clue L equars Y

-rl--1

.'

,

FL

=!::J.

by Luis Campos

"You could save more lime
if you drove on the freeway ," a
f--il'=·s-,1-::-G-rl-·
colleague told his paL "Yes,"
L-...J.L.-...J.-..L.-J...~
his pal laughed, "but I would
.--------~only lose that time looking for a

to,OOOrril. $1,000. ~MI.
28

11 Otherwise
16 Elms and yews

Celebnty Ctph!!r cryplograms are created !rom quotaltOf'IS by famous
people , past and present Eacttlener tn the Ctpher ~lands lor anomar

0 R B VA

large ganuator, 20" 1wnlng,.

Hay &amp; Grain

Transporlalion

PI6T 'IV£ y~!

11174 'E1' Titan molorhomo, luiiJ
..af.oontalned1
cloubll doar
nlrlgarat:or, m.erowava, roof Ur,
1VI5

(lilrllna~

7 Rain ond hail
I Melrose Piece

CELEBRITY CIPHER

nins it w~~~-~:S;:;,"~:;;;~~ ·~~~~~:~~.~~~
Thi s assured the
ai~~~~~~~,;~~
distributions . After East d
Wold played a club to dummy's ace, led
a diamond .back to his ace , ruffed out
the club king and conceded just one dial-m1Jnd trick:

.

-

milk, 1114-1'42-301~

Whe..chalr IScootM' Uft1 ~tor
Cora, Now And Uoad, -ftl01la
Hom•Gera, a14-446-7283.

5tXIt:TY

BI•R\T.N~ R:R 1\-'E .

e£fJ.I P-.

•

War&lt;od to buy. huH~y nowbom 1188 ·Ford Ronger, 4 c:ytlndar, 1
boo! Of dairY bool, hollor call, ..,...., am/'fm Dlulltte, lii,OOO
mull hlva hid rnothar"• . n~w~ mllaa, 814·1'f2..2317.

64

OCBT

•

lpm.

Saorw aloclriC hoi walor hoot.-,
atlll In box, eost $300, ooll lor
$2.50, 514-885 3540.
Stairway
£laval~
And

a-\ ... 50·

"WI-\,I.,T c:E5\TO .~IE.TY?
.
IV£ ~

Motor Homes ·

18113 Fotd F·100 Slop Side Now
Motar,............,..737.

11175 GMC Truck ~=i :~ PS

•. _flOW THOI,MR.TI&lt;'.CIJP. WHP.T
I"Ct&gt;ITIOO~ 1--\P.VE. YOJ ~ Ft:lR
OC F!IOT FIVE. Y~?

r'

'q

Natural systems work most of the
time . But occasionally, especially al the
slam level, a little science can go a long
way. A good mixture of natural and scienlific is the Romex system . It was devised by Dr . George Rosenkranz ,
Mexico 's best play__er for many years
and, inter alia, part of the group lhat developed the contraceptive pill.
A key feature of Romex is the
Dynamic No -trump opening , which
shows either a balanced 19·20 points or
an unbalanced 18-2 I. It was used in today's deal by Eddie Wold of Houston .
Rosenkranz 's two-diamond response
promised at least six high -card points.
but usually denied three top honor cards. Aller the heart fit came to light,
four clubs was an asking bid in clubs .
North's reply showed the ace.
West , not wishing to risk conceding a
trick with a side-suit lead, attacked wilh
his trump. Wold won in hand and drew
the trumps. As West had led an unusual
and dangerous singleton trump,
felt sure he had honors in I he other
suits .,So, instead of playing the ace and
another club, which would have led to
defeat here, Wold finessed the club
queen s uccessfully, West nol covering
with the king. •
Now care was needed . Accurately,
Wold continued with the club nine, run·

campers&amp;

collonl DDndHion, 82500, 114tl92-2388.
1888 Goorvlo Boy -or homo
CFM 4 Spaod, Locke&gt;Ul Hubo, 4" Wl«~t
'.!,IIOOm~ loaded,
un JJ" Muddoro, Enalno a llu now.dolly,
30W~2815.
TNnaler CU. Exc.n.ni, N.w
Eahauot, llynaluno Hoadoro 19a4 lnnebruc::k caml*. ,.fullr
4 Brad Sowo &amp; 1 Opon Sow Fot N- Roar.,.._ • Lin.., iollded, lola at 11tru, lakl ovar
$1,000, lnquiN: 210 Rlvw, l.ol 5, financing. 304.e76.ell03.
Solo, 114-388-803:1 Ahor 8 P.M.
K8nauga.
•
4 Chorolalo Umouoln Craoood
11171
Ram
Charger
3110 Auto
Hollora, Wolghlng AppooL 3!50
Services
Aabull Trana, New llr•, Man;
Po~o~ncla Eacfl, $250 ·Each, a14o
N- Pallo, 12,000 A,, 114-24544e-4053.
.

chutnul.

AUCTION l

::~~ R~;;:rp~WV~

1g111 E.lcort l1f l.oadadl BlaCk, 79
CultiYllllna · Troclor For Solo, 114-246-1201.
M•- 'llarrlaon Complotty

RobuiH $1,800, &amp;14-441-3880.
O.urz 1800 Tnc1or Sharp,
$8,550,j 110-., AC Dlnol $3,1195;

ton 1ruok

m-383:1 or 1
m-.....
SoUihwoot Plck.Up Porto lloclo;

61 Farm Equipment

Mobile homo tor ront In
cguntry. prblge, ..-., and
wat• (nciUded, cab .. avail•~.
$85/mo., Juot 10 mlnulM ln&gt;m
New ldN flail 7' mo.,., can- ·
Athono, 814-H2·2167.
dltloner, S400i electric recliner 3yr. old Raglllarwd Umoualn
bull, rod dOublo pollod. 304-8!15llh chair, $75; 614-885-4401.
:JSn aftor 5pm.

47 warned to Rent

1181 Chovrolot Z·24 Cavanor

conv.rtlbla, nd. toacltd. auto,
" · - - 304-875-e875.

Now gao tanko, -

Kina Sin Watarbed Full W.ve
Matf,.aa Including H..l., UNd
I Montho, $175, 81'1-245.eo26.

Largo choot lroozor ,!50, 1.5

~PITO,IA'

"

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Slooplng roomo whh cooking. Lawn Chlol 12 138 Rld!ng Lawn - T020 •orguoon $1,tl95;· 7 Fl. Hay
Bind $1,tl95; 614·286-4522.
Aleo traller apec:e on river. All Mower, SUO, a~388 0401.
hook-upa. Clll after 2:00 p.m.,
304·7'Do58Sl, Mooon WV.
Now 100,000 BTU HI Efficiency 63 .
'L ivestock

Rentals

3 Bodroomo, 2 Batha, Well

Malnt1ln1d, Gre1n

Fumlshed
Room$

ll~CO~D$

•
.~;,-.-.BOR!'j

AERATION IICJI'ORS
Ropolrod, Now l Robulll In
Slock. Call . Ron Evana, 1.1101).
531-11528.
-

71-2331.

SEVERAL 7-ACRE PARCEJ..S.
romota, boaulllul~ ~dgOiop land;
Molgo County, COlumbia 1\wp.,
Mount Union Rd. (Twp. Rd, 14),
l:~:f:54~1t tor good ...p. j;

Haw Root, Chy . Schoal1, 314
Acre, $55,POO, 114-245-alt.

45

JOOIC
Of INOilLl&gt;

•

JET

This neWspaper will not
knowlinglv accept
advertisements tor real estate
which is in violation of ths law.
Our reader s are herQby
infom,ed that all dwellings
advertised rn thrs newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

6VINNE~5

•

S150. 304·77.1'5304.

mowtr, 42"' cut, aama u new

.,,

lnboanl,
· burpndJ
and
Whl,.,-.
114-112o8804.

Sopllc

character
9 l&amp;lem ruler
10 Climbing plant

By Ph imp Alder

I lOLD 1-tiM Tl-lAT D065

&amp;

1 Oralt agcy.
2 I get itt
3 Grain
. 4 He who
heaitetes-5 Ptophel
6 - Lingua

Science
.
in the sunshine

'

Tanka. JOO Thru 2,000 GalloM
Ron Evane EnttrDriHa. J.ak..

DOWN

lead: •2

=·
....
•.

11VI Cllatlon ald. boot, 130 hp.

62 Small insecl

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
South - West North East
Pass
Pass
Pass
1 NT
Pass 2 o
2•
Pass 3 " • Pass
Pass
4•
Pass 4 •
Pass
6•
Pass Pass

FETCH ME
AN EXTRY CHAIR,
OL' BULLET!!

&gt;

.~f

eor-o

•a

¥AKJ107
tA K 8
•Q J 9 8 4

....

52 Sponlng Goods
Old,

course

21 Shut
24 Coolt slowly
'25 Rigorous
27 RedS..
country
31AciNoaMerkel
32 Shirt
34 Raolodge
35 Long,story
37 Junctura
39 Recent
: 40 Build
. 42 Noloy siMpers

SOUTH

.,
lnla.n.
VIa.. ,_"...or
ooiii1U1W711.1011.

v...
-.

•9 8 6 4
•Q 9 8 3
e5 3
•A 52
EAJ!T
•KJI053
¥8 54
•J 10 9 4

....

••

F-Doll..ry.

-

ACROSS

"*''""'

•I

BEATilE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

J

Onlo

.

'

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..

' between Supporhng an old fnend or a

·• more presiiQIOU~ new one Slick w1th
&lt;-- ,__ prnve" pals 4 Know wh_ere. 10 look lor

.

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chan9e your path
'

�The Community C•leadar Ill
published •• • free nnice to
non-profit groups wllllilll to
announce meetina and 1peclal
event.. The calend•r Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund railers of any type. Items
are printed u 11f*C permits and
cannot be 11uaranteed to run •
specUk: number of days.
FRIDAY
SALEM CEN(fER - . Meigs
County Pomona Gtange 46, Friday,
7:30 p.m at Star Gtange Hall pear
Salem Center. Jackson County
Pomona Grange to visit; potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. co...ty baldng
contest to be held.
REEDSVILLE- Weekend
revival, Soulh Deibel New Testa·
ment Church, Silver Ridge, Friday
tbrougb Sunday, 7 p.m .. each
evening. Rev . Gilbert Spencer,
Chicago, speaker; special singing.
Public invired.

candidate~ Include, {rom left: Robert Baker, son
of Dave allll ·susan Baker, Middleport; Adam
Krawsczyn, son of John Krawsczyn, Cella
Mc:Coy and Bette Hoffman of Pomeroy; Adam
Wyatt, son of Brenda Pballn and Terry Wyatt,
Mlddlepoct; Benny Ewing, son of Ben and Doris
Ewing, Pomeroy and Jerod Cook, son of Drenda
COok, Pomeroy. The 'p rom wlll be l!ekl Saturday
at the high school wltb parent visitation from 5
to 7 p.m. After that lime the prom will be dosed
to the public•.

MHS PROM COURT .._ The· following
Meip Wgh Scllool seniors repre&amp;ent the 1995
MRS prom courL Queen eandldates are, from
left: Amber Blackwell, daughter of Shari and
Steve Blackwell of Pomeroy; Jadyn Swartz,
daughter of Marlene and Roger Swartz of
Pomeroy; Tan Erwin. daughter of Sauy Erwin ·
and Greg Erwin, both of PomerQy; Sarah
Anderson, daughter of Don and Bernie Ander·
son of Pomeroy and Cryslal Vaughan, daughter
of R.oy and Unda VaiiJ!han of LanpvUie. Klll(l

POMEROY
Weekend
revival, 7 p.m. Friday, Saturday
and Sunday, Endtime House of
Prayer, Burlingham Cburcb,
Dempsey Montgomery, evangelisl

TOPS recogni~es biggest losers .·
reoog· Those
. losing weight
· · were ro
·

PS
mzed at recent meeungs of
2H 57~fme:~ conducted by
ani6Ps bee~, I er.
L .
Aleshire an~ B~~~~ew~r:rst e!~:~
J li H 11
bil th
uOaPS ybse tasirunner-up, w Je e
T
es osers were can

· Vtrgtma
. . . Dean with
Thomas and
Maggie Biggs and Tina Geary as
runner-ups. It was noted that the
best loser for April was Virginia
Dean.
.
Members enJoyed a party for
those having birthdays in April. A
·

barn yard animals
..
game was played.
Juanita Humphreys )VOn lhe gadget
gift and Shirley Wolfe won the
fruit basket. Members participated
in~~ A~ pennyttharcbE.
·
e wmner o
e aster egg
contest was Bernice Durst wiib 10
pounds lost.

Meigs 175th anniversary time capsule
to be buried on Heritage Weekend
ibe same family since Meigs CounCounty time capsule will be buried · ty was organized. Refreshments
on lhe cciunbouse lawn Heritage wiU be served. •
' On display ibat day will be the
Weekend, ll:30 a.m., June 10.
heritage
quilt wilh lhe names of
·The burial ceremonial will begin
373
residents
from across the copnwith a call to celebration by local
ty.
The
quilt,
being completed by
band members doing a patriotic
Rosalie
Story,
will bang in the
selection. Plans call for it to be·
Museum.
It
was
a fund raiser for
unearthed when lhe county celeexpenses
of
the
!75th
Anniversary
brates its 2001h birthday.
·
Committee.
, The welcome will be given by
Plans
for
lhc
event
to
conclude
Margaret Parker, Anniversary
activities
of
tbi:
year
of
observance
Commitlee chairman, who will also
recognize another family wbo were made at a committee meeting
resides on a farm wbicb
been in this week at the M&lt;;tJU Co1unt~
The 1751h anniversary of Meigs

Museum.
'

Several of lhe commemorative
coverlets are still available at $50
each, it was reponed.
The Rev. William Middleswarlh
reported that about $6,200 remains
in the treasury, A committee will
make recommendations for its use.
A microreader bas already . been
purchased for lhe museum. Suggestions for spending the money
include buying more equipment ·or
furniture for the museum and
m8(ldng county buildings.

Halling a
'Hillbilly
Heritage'

Beat of the Bend ..
by Bob

Hoefli~h

on
Hey! The Pomeroy Higb Scbool
Class of 1955 needs a little help.
Local members of lbe class lire
maldng plans for lheir 401h class
reunion on Saturday, May 27, and
some members of the class includ·
ing JanicCStory Locbary, will .be
returning to·"reunion" for lhe fmt
'lime since graduating from PHS.
Tom and April Smith will be host·
ing a class get-together at tbeir
home on Lincoln Heights and plans
are also underway for lhe.class
members and lheir guests to party
on lhe sternwbeeler of Mary Donna
and Jim Davis.
Everything's going to be pinned
down any day now. In lhe mean. time, eight members of lhe class
have "disappeared." If you know
lhe addresses of any of those would
you please contact April Smilh at
992-3483? The . eight include
Ramona Blankenship, Ernest
Brown, Marlene Brown Hemsley,
Hester Carulhers, Gilben English,
Eva Flora Hayes, ·David Clayton
Still and Sharlee ~. Neuman Wbitlle.
·

RU'ILAND- Revival, Rose of
The annual carnation sale of the
Sharon Holiness Cburcb, located
off Depot Street on Leading Creek · Meigs Division of lhe American
Road, ~utland, 7 p.m. Friday Hearl Association is underway and
through May 14, Rev. Archie lhose taking orders will be absoAtwell, evangelist, wilh the Atwell lutely delighted to bear from you.
The sale is one of ibe annual
family singers.
fund-raisers of lhe group. Delivery
of your order to the location of
SATURDAY
. HARRISONVILLE - Har- your choice will be made on May
risonville Lodge 411, OES, Satur- 24 and 25. You can place your
day, 7:30p.m at 7:30 p.m. at lhe orders with Denver and Nora Rice,
Masonic Temple. Work in the 992-3759; Ida Diehl, 992-2573;
Betsy Parsons, 992-2429, or Donna
M.M. Degree. Refreshments.
Carr, 992-3222, after 5 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Star
The newly formed Gallia CounGrange 778 and Junior Grange 878,
ty
Chapter
of lhe Society for lhe
Saturday at lhe grange ball, near
and
Encouragement of
Promotion
Salem Center. Junior Grange will
Barbershop
Quartet
Singing in
have its annual inspection. Potluck
America
will
be
making
its debut
refreshments will be served.
on June 24 at the Aerie! Thearer in
.
RUTLAND - Rutland Church Gallipolis.
The performance stans at 8 p.m.
of God Ladies Ministry, sponsoring
a ladies fellowship revival, evange- I undersland there will be a welllist Ruby .Smith, Friday, 7 p.m. and established barbershop chorus
coming in from Huntington, W.
Saturday afrernoon at 2 p.m.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - A tea will be
beld to celebrate National Herb
Week Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the. Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy. Herbal food and rea samwill be featured.

News Hotline
'

992-2156

Va., to participate in lhe
u
well as several professional quar·
tets who do lhe barbersb3!=
singing. The Gallia County
·
wbicb bas been named lhe French
City Chapter will be _kn~wn as
''The Treble Makers" and ts composed of some 30 males from Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Mason
Counties.
•
Participants from Meigs County
include John VanReelh, Mike Wil·
fong, Gerald Kelly and Denver
Rice. Kelly bas bad a lot of experience wiib such groups from previ•
ous work in barbershop in Aorida
over a number of years.
Tickets for the June 24 show are
$10 for seats in ibe auditorium at
ibe Aerie! and $7 .SO for lhe bal-.
cony and by tbe .way, seating is
limited and the tickets are going
fast. If you're interested in tickets
you might want to give Kelly or
Rice a call soon-:-real soon.

A Multimedia Inc · NCI'ISP ''t!1er

.~OP

leaders predict House
passage of fiscal package

WASHINGTON (AP)- Tup House Republicans pre- the bi II next Wednesday.
.
_dicl passage oT ii plan to balance !he budget by1002.but
"The support for passing a llaianced builge! the week
.GOP lawmakers remain at odds over precisely what after next is overwhelming," Gingrich told reporters.
savings their package will contain.
But . participants in. the retreat, several speaking on
Republican House members ended a three-day strategy · condttton of anonym•ty, said there were disputes over
retreat in nearby Leesburg, Va.• on Friday, where leaders precisely which programs should be cut, and by how
presented a blueprint for eliminating the deficit in seven much. Some of the toughest sticking points included
years. It included savings from Medicare and Medicaid, Medicare, agriculture and civil servants, they said.
elimination of three Cabinet departments and the closing
"Some real fierce battles between Republicans and
Republicans have already erupted," said Rep. Wayne
.of numerous tax loopholes.
Afterward. Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and other Gilchrest, R-Md.
leaders said the GOP-run House would approve the meaBudget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio,
sure in two weeks. The House Budget Commitlee debates and others said &lt;!etails of the GOP plan could change

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• Elltended Chassts
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• Power Steering

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TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
344·5947. 422·0156

Monday • Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

GOP balancect
budget plan •••
Hou• Majority t tdar
Dick Arrrw( ot Ttut holda
onlo HouM Budgtt Commltlte Chairman A. Jotui
Kaalch of Ohio dUring a
captlot Hill news . confw·
Friday to dlecuulhe
Rtpubllcen balanced bud. . I!I'D p altl The II . . . refultd to. diiC:UIII cfe.
IIIII ot the pl4!n, which It txpectld to can for iJMP
aula
tptndlng. ,

In,..,..

Connector
project
on schedule . Building ~ecomes tomb for two women

MITCH 'S

No Ooc Foos. Oeilv~e~f

vo1. 30 ,

·
Mrddleport
-Porneroy-Gitlltpo lt s·Pt. Pleasan l - May 7, 1995

·s ;g buctget cuts:

lt seems lhat less lhan 25 per.
cent of lhe eligible voters turned
out to cast votes in Pomeroy's primary election Tuesday. Don' t seem
quite fittin' to me. Ob well, do
keep smiling.

No Doc Fees. De~Mn~~· .

The •Run for the Roses• ·Pagec1

tm:es ·--

1

$18,388

o.t.lll
on PageA2

•

Meigs County Superinrendent of
Schools John Riebel, Sr., and.lhe
staff at the Meigs County -soaM of
Education Office staged a most
successful banquet at lhe Meigs
High School Tuesday night' honoring students with outstanding
scholastic accomplishments from
all ibree local school districts. It
was !be lllh annual such event and
they seem to get better each year.
It's a nice tradition and cenainly
scholastic excellent should be honored as well as otber student
accomplishments.

$17,888

CtJmmunlty development grants -Page A3

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
· POMEROY - The recent rainy
weather has notconsiderably slowed
the construction of the U.S. 33/ln·
terstate 77 connector in Meigs
· County, said Nancy Yoacham, Ohio
Department of Transportation
spokeswoman.
·
"It's on schedule as far as ODOT
is concerned," Yoacham said.
KokosingConstructionCo. broke
ground on the $12.3 million project
in March. The 2.25-mile section of
four-lane highway marks the first
. b 'I ' M''
. h
new.htg way proJect ut t ui etgs
County for more than 25 years:"
May I to Nov. 30 marks the official construcfiim season, Yoacfiam
.said,
· "We gotquilea bit done in April,"
Yoacham. said. "(Kokosing) has a
prettyaggressiveconstructionschedule, but they feel it 's behind about a
wee~ because of the rajn,"
·. Workwasnotcompletedbetween
'{uesday and Friday while 2.25
inches of rain fell, ~aid Charlie
Brown, ODOT office manager for
the project. .
Up to May 1. 206.41.6cubic yards
of dirt were move&lt;! on the proiect.
'
Brown added. This repre~ents about
8.5 percent of the 2.4 million cubic
. yards of dirt thai will be moved.
Half the din used for the project
'lib
d'
Wt ecompacte .or road embankment, while the rest will be waste, he
said.
·
Since the project has so much
waste din the proiecl will not be
markedly slowed. 'Crews can continue to move I he dirt in less than
perfect conditions, Brown said.
·

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)- Shanered and ugly, the bombed-out federal building will stand
fora wh1le as a monu~nt t~ the two women whose bodies could not be removed from the rubble.
· Chnstt Rosas and Vtrgtnta Thompson were the newest employees of a credit union oil the third
floor of the Alfred P. Murrah building. Of the 29 people working in the office the day of the
bombmg, 18 - all of them women- did not survive.
·
'
"'J:"cy found·au of my girls buttwo," said Florence Rogers, theirbossatthe Federal Employees
Credtt Umon.
I·
·
Rogers herself barely survivedtheAprii 19bla.st. When
she regained consciousness,
she found herself on an I 8inch ledge. all that remained
THE SCENE: Relcue workera ..,. of her office, .The seven emturned one last time to the bomb-rav· ployees who had gathered for
aged leclerlll building where a wrealh a meeting were gone. All were
waplllCedbelorajl)eentrancedurtng l•t-#ouihd.. d
~ ~· "
uea .
1 service. Gov. Frank KeallfJII prayed
that"lhelnaonaoflllehlettWoWMka
The final death toll from the
never be lorgottiln.'' Hlo wne, Cathy, .worst terrorist acton U.S. soil
.he!ped..CMJ:V buciAQ !IIIIIILwtUt red is qlmosL'Certai!LI()be.J67,
ro- to hand to the reacua crawe . including a nurse killed in th.e
whose
work wao flnlahed.
Atthealartof
o-7-"TT....,
iescue. Nineteen children are
Friday's aer·
among th'e dead.
vice, Oklahoma
Meanwhile, the FBI pressed
1
~rctJel.~ :~:.
on with its frustrating hunt
mellon In Iron!
forthesuspectknownasJohn
of the building,
Doe 2. Federal officials told
then stood at
· The Dallas Morning News in
=~~~:;!::r~~~
loday's editions thai Terry
four drummers
Nichols, an Anny buddy of
played "Amazing Grace" ond a trum· bo,mbing suspect Timothy
peter sounded tapa.
McVeigh, w.ould soon b.e
INVESTIGATION: Tha FBI praalled charged with complicity in
Jill. wllb !ta lryatrattng hunt lor Uta
h
N' h
suspect known as John Doe 2. Federal t ecase. tc o1• is being held
olflclalaloldTheDallaa.MomingNewa without bond in Kansas. ·
In today'&amp; edltlone Ural Terry Nichola,
Federal sources, speaking
an Army buddy ol bombing suspect on condition of anonymity, .
. t
Timothy McVeigh, would soon be
· 'd ·
b .
charged wllh complicity In the case. sat . mves 1•ga ors e 1teve
Nichols Is being held without bond tn Nichols and McVeigh drove
,,
Kansas aa a malerlal wttness In the separate vehicles to Oklacase.
homa City the weekend be- ·
CLINTON:
In
a
commencement
a~
c
d
~ •ore the bom b'mg. then re - MEMORIAL -- All op; ale ddy hear with a ·note, "You Will
ress
at
Michigan
Slate
Unlverelty,
President Clinton lashed out 81 lhe turned 10 Kansas together. Never Be Forgotlen," rests near the Alfred P. Murrah Federal
extremlsl"mllltla" movement, calling They believe that would have Building as workers placed memorial items at the scene of the
those who advocate violence agalnsl enabledMcVeightoleavethe Aprill9 truck-bombing. Above, a soldier holds a rose during a

No 13

unemploy~; increasing velerans ' costs for health- benefits; phastng 0~1 atd to Amtrak; trimmmg assistance 10
lhe fo~er Sovtel repubhcs and other foreign aid; and
ehmtnatmg funds for the Goals 2000 education retorm
program.
' Gingrich and other GOP leaders said savings from
Medi~are, tfre health insurance program for the elderfy
and dtsabled, w~uld be a key part of their plan for eliminattng the defictt. Medicare has become the center of the
bu~get battleground, with Republicans _argui ng they are
trymg to save a. program that will otherwise go broke. and
Democrats saymg Republ icans want to cut it to pay fortax
cuts.
..
.
· GOP leaders said tbey would pr~p(&gt;se a specific amount
to be saved from !he program- which others said would
be ~bout $280 bill_ion over seven years - and several
opuons. for achtevmg those savings. But Gingrich said
Repubhcans would make no final decisions on precisely
where lhe Medicare reductions would come from until
.later lhts year.
·'We· re ~ommined to fight forthe interests of America's
wor~in g families .and in particular committed to frght
Med1care cuts made for the purpose of giving a tax cut for
a pnvrleged few," said Minority Leader Dick Gephardt,
D-Mo.

B-P sewer
project now
$500,000 from
·ne~ded $5·.4M
GALLIPOLIS- The Bidwell·Poner sewer project is
$500,000 away fr()m being a reality.
The Galli a County Board ofCommissioners announced
Thursday thai the project has obtained $4.9 million of the
$5.4 million needed for construetion of the gravity/pressure colleclion system and lagoon. ·
Last month, the county submitfed a grant applt·-·,·on- ""
. ~ """'~ ·~ •v """'-""o
Department of Development to '
secure_the remaining $500.000 of
funding. The grant will be awarded
July I.
.- - - Coll)mission President Harold
MonlgomerysaidFridaythecounry
has a good chance of ·getting the
ODOD grant.
l~~;;!!i~
"We're hopeful lo receive that
grant," he said.
The county applied for the grant last year, but was
turned down because other 7unding had not yet been
secured and the project was not ready lo proceed, Montgomery satd.
•
ODOD invited them IO reapply this year, ~owever ..
Construcuon. on the system, which will serve 350
households n t II h ld be ·
t tla Y. s ou
gm in about one year and
be-completed by July 1997. · · •
·
With the exception of time and effort by county em-.
ployees, no county funds .have been committed to the
pro•ect.
·
'
Operation and management expe nses and payment of
a low- Interes t loan will be handled through a user's fee
for Bidwell and Porterresiqenl,. The fee, based on usage
wt' ll average $32 pe r house ho ld ·
'
The co un tYWI·ncon f mue
' to pursueot her grants as they
become ava•lable, Montgomery satd. Any which are
awarded should help reduce the user's fee.
·

~;~~;d~~;;:A~ydrO•~~~ede~~~::l~~;;~e~~~~~~n~~A~~~e==C~"·;~~::;;:!jg~e~ta~w;~:YW:c:ar:;=~=in:~:'P=S=U=;~e:rv:~:ce:~:or=re:sc:u:e:w:o:r:k:ers=Fr=id:a:y·=========~-~ln~p-re~p-a-ra~r~o:~:n~f~:~ ~ :e~p0:~:je~:a:t~ ~ ~ ~c2~om=m~is~·s~io~n~h:as~a:ls:o
..

GOOD MORNING

near end of easement process
By GEORGE ABATE
Times-sentinel Staff
BELLEVILLE. W.Va. :...... Belleville hydroelectric -project officials have
acquired easements for about 80 percent of the land for the Meigs County
power line route, officials report.
By the end of May. easement negotiations will end between property owners,
and American Municipal Power of Ohio, said E. Leon Daggett, executive vice
president of AMP-Ohio.
The remaining property settlements will need to be resolved through the
courts, Daggett said.
Currently, 135 of the 165 parCels have easement agreemenls.
"Most of the on~s we've gotten are substantial," ~e said, adding the
remaining plots are less than three acres.
In April, federal environmental officials licensed the final draft assessment
for the 25 miles of power lines between Reedsville and a Rutland supstation.
. _Federal of~_cials ha~to ~hoosfbel~een five potential routes, incl~ding three
m West Vlrgm•a and two m Obto, satd Celeste Mtller;a spoke&gt;'W(mlan for tlre'Feoeml Energy Regulatory Commission.
.
--Officials broke.. ground .on the'
$153. million project April 20.
• By the end of May, ease- The hydroelectric plant will cost
ment negotiations will end be- more than $73.8 million and will
tween property owners and provide power for 42 Ohio com"merlcan Municipal Power of munities.
On June I, excavation will beOhio, said E. Leon Daggett, gin on lhe plant site, Daggett
executive vice president of said. Construction crews will dig
AMP-ohio. The remaining prop- a hole in the river bottom to build
erty aettlementswlll need to be a coffer dan1. -made
•
from
hold back water while construction of the plant occurs. The dam consists of two cylinders that will anchor onto
the existing dam, Daggett said.
Later, the space left between the coffer dam and the existing dam will have
equipment placed in it. he said.
Guy F.Aikinson Construction .Co.- based in San Bruno, Calif.- placed
the lowest bid this Februury atid began preparing the site in March.
Th• 4:1,-megawatt power plant will employ about 225. wor~ers durins the
construction phase and abouu dozen pennanent employees when operational .

--

•

Ohio unemployment rate
up to 4.5 percent in April

percent. Over
the year. the
number of
Ohioans
working in••
Seasonally adjusted
·
creased
by
1
ru
85,000 from
5 . 1 million .
E
The number
unemployed
'decreased
by
I= =
94 ,000 from
344.000.
~
1Last month,
the number of
c M.J J AS Q N D-·J F- MA Ohioans with
job' was· 5.2
1994
1995
million. down
AP 56.000 from
SoorGtJ. U.S, Otpt,4 Labor - - March. The
number of
workers unemployed was 250.000. up from 208.000.
The civilian labor force included 5.51 million workers in April, compared with 5.53 million in March. The
share of the working-age population in the labor force
was 65.4 percent last month, compared with 65.6 per-

[}Ohio
unemployme nt

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The state's unemployment rate increased' for the first time in a year. to 4.5
percent in April, the government said Friday.
The rate in March was 3.8 percent.
·
Ohio's joble&gt;S rate had dropped every month since
May 1994. when it was 6.5 percent.
·The stale Mill ranks the lowest among the II largest
industrial stales, followed by North Carolina at 4.7
percent. California leads the list at7.9 percent.
The nation's jobless rate increased 10 5.8 percent in
April, the highest in seven months, as the number Of new
jgbs fell for the firsttime in more than two ye,ars. The rate
in Marro WlB 5'.~~etlt.
·
The increase in the Ohio rate may not be as great as il
appear1tin the estimates, said D10bra R~Bo.wlandr'!dmin ·.
istrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that a quirk in
the seasonal adjustment factor used this monlh may have
artificially inflafed the estimates, she said ..
''This would be in line with our data whkh shows low
lexels of unemployment claims and no indication·of any
major increase in joblessness in Ohio." Bowland said.
The slate's unemployment rate in April 1994 was 6.2 cent in March.

'

up

'

Today's Times-Se~tinel
16

Sections· 148 Pag•s

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics ·
Editorials
l,.ocal .
Obituaries
Sports
Along., the River
.Weather c.

Dl
B7 .
03-7
Insert
A4
A3
A6
Cl-8

•

Bl
Al

Columns
Jack Anderson
fred Crow
Bob HoeOich
Jim Sands

Nuclear Regulatory Commission has rejected an application for
initial certification of two uranium enrichment. plants because the agency
said itcannotdetennine whether the plants are complying with regulations.
The rejection is not a determination that the Paducah (Ky.) Gaseous
Diffusion Plant and the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant near Piketon.
62 miles south of Columbus, are unsafe, the agency said in a news release
Friday.
The plants mu~t be certified annually under regulations on safety. safe. ._,
.. , .
.

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

f
'
........ -~-~---.............~- :;._.,._...._.
·--.,.,,~,-·--~-~·-~-

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