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                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday.August24,1995

--------------Community calsndar - - - - - - - - - - - - The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wllblng to
announce meeting and special
ennis. Tbe calendar II not
designed to promote salu or
fund raisers of any type. ltenu
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a

specific number or daya.
THURSDAY
POMEROY Alcoholics
Anonymous and AJ-Anon meetings
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Cbun:b in Pomeroy.
RACINE- The Racille Ameri·

••

can Legion Auxiliary will host a
picnic at 6 p.m. Thursday at Star
Mill Park. Bring table service and a
covered dish.
MIDDLEPORT - . Meigs
County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship will meet at
Bradford Church of Christ at 7:30

p.m. Thursday.

urged 10 anend. Refresbments.

POMEROY - Orientation for
new students and freshman at
Meigs High School Thursday, 7
p.m. in !be high school cafeteria.
Program wiD include a general dis·
cussion period, a tour and a queslion-and-answer period. Parents

TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VeteraDs of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post home.
POMEROY - Albeimers and
related disorders support group

meeting Thursday, l-3 p.m. at !be
Meigs County Multipwpose Ceuter. Dr. James E. Althof gueu
speaker.

.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School "Meet the Team" will lle
held Thursday, 6:30 p.m. a1 the
high school.

Ohio Lottery

Cards
sting Reds
again 6-5

Pick 3:
812
Pick 4:
5068
Buckeye 5:
6-11-15-25-37

Page4

cs.

'
s ·PRESENT
-

~

Vol. 46, N0.'84
Copyright 199~

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Racine and Rutland mayors will
run uncontested this fall after
Thursday's filing deadline yielded
no adversaries for their respective
1
1
offices.
In Racine, Mayor Jeff Thornton
will be unopposed on Nov. 7 in his
bid for reelection while Alma Ruth
Johnson will challenge incumbent
Karen S. Lyons f\)r the village
clerk seat. Running for two council
terms expiring this year are inc\)III·
bents Julian Scott Hill and Henry

AS IE BOIOUIIISTARf Ol OUR
-gs l!OOL BAr IURDJIDY
PIOUDLYBBG118 Tm81'0RD101T

-·•

'

BOIUDG IEIOV!lDUIDBR
OOIIMIDVrrDI PRrui:T.
ft llml TilE OOIIIlTY ro STOP BY
AID SBAB II mrs PRJC Till IITII

US AID BJOYmrB Ill

r-----

. OUR HmORY......

W. Bentz, and George E . Cum- Mary Snowden-Eskew.
from write-in candidate Virgil
·mins.
In Syracuse, Minter V. Fryar Jr. Phillips, according to tbe Meigs
Unopposed for reelection 1o tbe and George G. Connolly have filed County Board of Elections.
Racine Board of Public Affairs are for the expiring term of Mayor
Running for Middlepon council
Douglas C. Rees and Bobbie E. James Pape. Clerk Janice Lawson seats are incumbent Betb Stivers,
Roy.
Zwilling will face challenger . George A. Hoffman, Barbara Ann
Rutland Mayor Jo Ann Eads, Sharon S. Cottrill.
Hudson and Linda Ann Gilkey.
wbo is completing the mayoral
No petitions were filed for the Dennis L. Hockman is unopposed
term of tbe late Eddie Martin, will expiring council terms of Bill for village clerk.
·
be unchallenged this fall. locum- Roush and Dennis Wolfe. Laurence
In Pomeroy, Republican Frank
bent Clerk Sandra K. Smith will · Ebersbach filed for reelection to A. Vaughan will go uncontested for
face Kathy I. Stewart. Running for the board of public affairs.
mayor while incumbeht Scott Diltwo expiring village council seats
In Middleport, Mayor Dewey lon and Geri Walton will run
are incumbents Steven E. Jenkins M. Horton will be unopposed on unchallenged for two expiring
and Richard L. Fetty and Rose tbe ballot but faces competition . council seats. Clerk Kathy Hysell is

Watermelon cutting ----. Governor

~ .,

•

• •&lt;If

Reg .. SALE PRICE Less Bonus FINAL CO ST

SERTA PREMIER COMFORT
Twin, Ea. Pc.
$119
Full. Ea. Pc.
199
Queen, 2 Pc. Set 599
•
King, 3 Pc. Set
699

$8~

132
332
432

$9
23
33
• 43

BACK-TO-SCHOOL SAVI NCS
STOREWIDE SALE!

$13
18

%

Twin. Ea. Pc.
$199 . $132
Full, Ea. Pc.
299
187
Queen, 2 Pc. Set 799
443
King, 3 Pc. Set
999
554

44
55

SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER FIRM
Twin, Ea. Pc. - _ $299
Full, Ea. Pc.
369
Queen, 2 Pc. Set 899
King , 3 Pc. Set
1099

$154
198
527
688

SAVE

PRICES GOOD THRU AUGUST 26TH
$15
19
48
69

·~

- '

~ EIIIIIll

\II ~ ~ \

' \\

I

0

SERTA PERFECT SlEEPER PLUSH
Ea. Pc.
$319 $166
379 . 221
Full, Ea. Pc.
Queen, 2 Pc. Set 949
553
King, 3 Pc. Set
1199
754

OFF

$17
22
54
75

-...

N

In a 5
County Area

Ring Binders • Filler Paper • Indexes
Calculators • Index Cards • Glue
Glue Sticks • School Boxes
Book Bags • Rulers • Meter Sticks
Yard Sticks •
Largest Selection of Pens, Pencils and
Markers in the Area.
Construction Paper • Tri-Folds Stencils
Press Out Letters • Viny Letters
Scissors • Drafting Supplies • Lettering
Guides • Eraser Shields • Protractors •
Compasses • Curves • Triangles
Lead Pointers '

IF WE DON'T HAVE IT, WE WILL ORDER
9 IT IN FOR YOU. NO LONG WAIT ON

5
.
189
STARTING AT
THE FABRIC SHOP

106 E. Main Street· Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-3671
Hours: Tues.-Sat. 9:30-5:00 • Mon .. 9:30-8:00

BACK TO SCHOOL WITH

-·

--

ANDERSON'S FURNITU RE
lBIIIlil

.

-

......... ~

SELECT FROM
OUR MANY
STYLES OF
SINGER
SEWING
MACHINES.

YOUR BACK· TO·SCHOOL
HEADQ~ARTERS WITH
REDUCED PRICES EVERYDAY!

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-2284
Open 9to 5 Monday thru Saturday

FICE SERVICE AND SUPPLY
112.WEST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

.Back- To-~School Savings
AT

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
Our Prices Are
Unbelievable!
Short~ From s2.25 &amp; up

SUMMER CLOTHING
12mos. &amp; up
50% OF-F

Tops from sl.25 &amp; up
Large Selectioni for
Buy One Hair Bow
Back·to•School
&amp; Get 2nd One ·
Buy NowY2 Off!
Time's Running
(11!1111 or L11nr Val•l

ourm

SHORT SETS

SUNDRESSES!

$400

$375. $sso

&amp; Up

New Fall Price.s Arri11ine Dail~!!!
1

CHAPMAN SHOE·S
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
100 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OH.
992·5177

\

"1\{ei:g&lt; High School cheerleaders cut watermel- ·
on (or
foolbull team Thursday arternoon .
From lert were: Cynthia Sandy, Cindi Stewart,
Shannon Jenkins, Jennifer Ervin, Lori Russell
and Teresa Simpson. Powell's, Kroger's and

-----'
C:::J#

...••
0'

Vaughan's grocery stores donated the 22 watermelons. Residen.ts can meet' the football team,
cheerleaders and band al 7:30p.m. Friday at the
high school. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Officials seek Philip Morris papers
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
Philip Morris Co . settled its $10
billion libel suit against ABC-TV
this week, it got to put back in the
company vaults thousands of internal documents about nicotine in its
.cigarettes that ABC bad planned to .
unveil in court.
" Thursday, a congressman and
attorneys for a massive class-action
lawsuit moved separately 1o release
those documents to the public,
arguing !bey could prove whether
the world's largest tobacco compa-.
ny manipulates nicotine specifical- .
ly 10 hook smokers.
''There is no question more
important than tbe motive question," Rep. Henry Waxman wrote
Philip Morris Chairman Geoffrey
Bibhi Thursday.
Tbe papers are under seal by

order of a Richmond, Va., judge.
Court arguments by ABC and
Philip Morris lawyers indicate the
thousands of ~ocuments not only
detail how Philip Morris controls
nicotine in cigarettes, but why.
Waxman cballcngcd tbe compa·
ny to release the documents 1o the
public immediately. "If our goal is
the pursuit of the truth, tbere can be
no justification for withholding
such critical documents from congressional and pubUc scrutiny." be
said.
Philip Morris declined immediate comment.
Under the settlement, ABC
apologized Monday nigbt for
reporting tHat Philip Morris
"spikes" its cigarettes with large
amounts of nicotine from outside
sources. The network also must

Sale. of existing homes
increase 5 percent in July

MINUET , .

$59!~~
.

'

INTREPID

S!4. '1!1: J 70
'-

2-3 WEEK DELIVERY
PLUS FREE CUSTOM FEATURES
COMPARE AT $50
OFFER ENOS DECEMSEA 5, 199,.SOME RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sales of previously owned homes shot
up 5 percent in July to- the highest level in more tban a year as low
mortgage rates kept bousillg costs wilbin reac~ of many buyers.
The National Association of Realtors satd today that sales of
existing single-family homes 10taled a seasonally adjusted annual
'rate of 3.99 million, up from 3.80 million in June and the highest
since a 4.01 million rate in June 1994.
It was the third straight monthly advance. Sales rose in every
region except for the Midwest.
"The steady month-to·montb rise in sales indicates the housing
market bas benefited from lower mortgage rates, making houses
more affordable for all buyers," said Edmund G. Woods Jr., the
association president. .
··
.
. Thirty-year, fixed-rate mongages averaged 7.61 percent m July,
up from 7.53 percent in June but well below the 9.19 percent average as recenUy as last December.
Tbe monthly payment on a $100,000 mongage with a 7.5 percent interest rnte is $699, while the payment on tbe same loan wilb a
9 percent rnte is $805.
The median price of an existing home was $115,900, down from
$116,200 in June but up from $112,400 a year earlier. The median
is the midpoint, meaning half of the homes cost more and balf cost
less.
Sales jumped 14.5 percent in the West, to a 870,000 annual, rate.
The median price was $I 48,300.
•
'

return the documents to Philip
Morris,
But ABC officials were served
subpoenas Thursday ordering them
to tum over the docwnents for use
in lbe Castano federal lawsuit, said
Washington attorney John P.
Coale. The Castano case, filed in
New Orleans on behalf of every
smoker and former smoker, accuses tobacco companies of manipulating nicotine to book them.
The subpoenas give ABC officials 10 days 1o comply.
In full-page ads in the nation's
largest newspapers Thursday,
Philip Morris touted ABC's apology and said it was "ready to
accept" apologies from other peo·
pie who have made similar allegations.
.

John C. Rice and M. Rick Sanders.
Board. president S. Ray Karr and
board member Ron Eastman did
not ftle for reelel:tion.
In the Meigs Local District,
incumbents John P. Hood, Norman
R. Humphreys Jr. and Roger A.
Abbott will go uncontested in their
reelection bids as will Meigs County Educational Service Center (formerly known as the Meigs Cotmty
Board of Education) incumbents
Jeffrey C. Harris apd Ira 0.
McCoy. ·
·
.
Continued on page 3

Therapy addition-I

..

DURAPEDIC

I

uncontested for reelection.
School boards
In local school board races, no
candidates bave filed for the expiring Southern Local School Board
of Education terms occupied by
Don Smith and Joseph "Pete"
Thoren Jr. who did not me pelitions.
In the Eastern Local School District, voters will have a choice of
five candidates for three expiring
school board seats. Candidates
inClude incumbent Mike Martin,
Dave Weeks, Ralph G. Coleman;

signs 8 bills
into law

~...

0

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 25, 1995

Candidates riamed for township, village seats

SERTA
JTRESS SALE

•

Highs In middle !lOs •.

;o~ -.!~, fCil d'~~" oo·~·~

POMEROY MERC

0

Low tonight In 60., partly
cloudy. Saturday, parlly sunny.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A decla·
ration of independence for tbe Ohio
Election Commission was among
eight bills signed into law by Gov.
George Voinovich.
·
The law creates an independent,
seven-member commission to
investigate charges of illegal campaign practices. It will replace. the
current five-member commiSSion,
which operates under the secretary
of state's office; beginning Jan. !.
Also signed Thursday by
Voinovicb were bills that:
- Exempt minors working as
performers in films, radio and television from the state's child labor
Jaws.
.
·- Authorize the state to issue
bonds to pay for loan&gt; 1o stull~nL~
attending colleges and umversrues.
- Replace references to "consumer credit counseling service" to
"budget and debt counseling service" in state law.
_:_ Increase lbe penalty for illegal trafficking in food stamps.
-' Eliminate the requirement
that banks have a Columbus office
to be eligible to take deposits of
state money.
- Create a State UnemployPomeroy Nursing and RehabiUtation Center bas completed its
ment Benefit Reserve Fund and
3,500
square-foot therapy addition, director Jim Lindeman said.
make other changes to the state
In
wheel
chair is Linda Catena. Shawn Ra~burn Is on right. (Senunemployment compensation laws.
tinel
photo
by George Abate)
...:. Modify the rules gov~rning
contracting, architecture and construction and building permits.
The election law was a pet issue
for Secretary of State Bob Taft.
"I have long maintained that the
Elections Commission needed to be
a·truly independent body, not under
the control of any state department
or elected officilll," Taft said in a
By GEORGE ABATE
Ycstcrday, area health profesSentinel News,Staff
sionals including doctors, theranews release.
"I
pleased that Ohio will
A 3,500 square-foot addition pists and social workers had a
now have an elections commission
will help a local rehabilitation sneak peck of lbe new facility at
center expand its services, offi- . this Rocksprings Road establish·
that is free of political bickering."
mcnt
cials said Thursday.
The new commission will be
Pomeroy Nursing and Reha"There's a whole atmosphere
made up of six members appointed
bilitation Center will change its change. (for residents). lbey realby the governor from a list com· name to Rocksprings Rehabilita- ize when lbcy're leaving the nurspiled by the Legislature. The sevtion Center during a grand open- ing home and they 're getting
enth wiU be appointed by the other
ing Sept. 17, dircclor Jim Linde- • training," Lindeman said. "This is
members and cannot be affiliated
man said.
lbe American way so people can
with either political party.
The new name represents a keep their freedom."
The law also creates "probable
shift toward more inpatient and
The center wiD be used by rescause" panels !bat will hear certain
outpatient lberapy services, Lin- idents, but increasingly will be
charges of election law violations
and malce recommendations to lbe
deman said. Within the next available for outpatient services,
week, the addition will be operat- Lindema!) added.
full commission. Tbe goal is to
ing at full capacity.
speed up rulings on charges made
Continued on page 3
just·before elections.

lt?n-habilitation center
expands services

am

Revived economy seen by Fall; some fear recession
nesses for new capital goods such
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
as
computers and machinery.
economy, after grinding to a near
Strength
in this category has been a
standstill, will be revived this fall
driving
force
liebind the current
by a resurgence in consumer spendexpansion.
ing on big-ticket items such as
"This report may very well
houses and furniture.
mark the beginning of the end of
That's the bope, at least, of ecothe expansion !bat began in March
nomic forecasters . But tbey con1991," Platt said. He said the econ·
cede tbat the risk of a recession is
omy would probably .be ill a downstill very real if, for some reason,
turn by this time next year, certainconsumer confidence begins to
ly an unappealing prospect for a
wobble.
The moat pessimistic forecasters
president facing re-election.
But other economists insisted
are contending that a glut of unsold
that tbey' see no recession storm
products will force m~re cutbacks
in factory production and virtually
clouds on the horizon yet and foreguarantee a recession next year.
cast that the economy, which
The pessimists ·got suppon for
slowed to an anemic 0.5 percent
their views on Thursday, when tbe
growlb rnte in lbe April-June quargoverrunent reported that orders 10 . ter. will rebound to a more
factories for big-ticket durable
respectable 2.5 percent average in
goods skidded 1.7 percent in July,
the second balf.
the fifth decline this year.
"While the jury is still out on
Elliott Platt, chief economist at
bow strong the rebound will be, I
Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette
see no real recession si,ns out
Securities in New York, saw omithere," said Allen Sin at, chief
nous signs in the factory orders
economist at Lehman Brothers
report, particularly in the compoGlobal Economics in New Yark.
nent tbat measures orders by busi- -~ Here is a sector-by-sector look

at bow many lllllllysts see the ecoo·
omy shaping up:
- CONSUMER SPENDING.
Since consumers account for twothirds of the total economy, how
they behave is always critical.
Many forecasters believe that a
modest rebound is already under
way as consumers boost purchases
of homes and related items such as
furnitqre in response to declining
mortgage rates. Construction of
new homes bas been up for four
consecutive months.
Auto sales, however, arc still
lackluster. down 2.7 percent so far
this year from 1994 levels. The
good news for consumers is that
they can expect bigger rebat'l:s as
dealers try to get rid of a backlog of
unsold cars:
-BUSINESS INVESTMENT.
This sector bas been the standout
performer for the current recovery,
climbing at doub)e-digit rates since
!993. While Platt 3r1d Others worry
that Ibis boom 'is starting to cool
off, otber analysts said lbe debut

,,J

· this week of the Microsoft Windows 95 operating system for personal .computers will encourage
even more sales of computers and
computer programs to small comf'lllies.
-TRADE . A widening trade
deficit ha.~ been a drag on the economy through most of this recovery
and analysts see no chance that will .
turn around this year. With the
economy still reeling in Mexico,
which had been America's third
largest export market, most analysts are predicting the United ·.
States is headed to its worst mer- .
chandise trade deficit in history, a
gap of possibly $188 biUion.
-GOVERNMENT. The government seclor also bas been a drag
on overall growth for tbe past three
years, reflecting the big cutbacks in
defense spending. With the Republican-controlled Congress intent on
shrinking domestic programs to
achieve a balanced budget in seven
years, analysts believe this trend
will continue.

�Friday, August 25, 1995

I

Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

MU.TNEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LElTERS OF OPINION arc welcome. They should be le&gt;S than 300
words long . All -lcucrs arc subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publi shed. leiters
should be in good taste , addressing ISSues. no1 personalities

Presidential foottiall
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
. ,
.
WASHlNGTON - Reforming college football doesn I sound like a
topic for presidential intervention. It was one, !hough, for Theodore Roosevelt when be was in the White House, and [&lt;Y Woodrow Wilson, who
would be.
•'In tbei! styles of promoting football reform, bolb Roosevelt and Wilson showed approaches lhat coincided with their strategies for political
change while serving in the presidency," according to JohnS. Watterson
Jll, adjunct professor of history at James Madison University and the University of Virginia.
With \bat bandoff to link lhe spon and lhe substantive, be writes in tbe
scholarly journal "Presidential Studies Quarterly" of football summit
talks in Roosevelt' s -time, and of Wilson's intercession when there was
pressure to ban the game as 100 violent
As Watterson notes, ·coUege football isn't essential for a pn;sidential
resume. But it appe;u:s in a bail-dozen, semetimes with portents of the
style that would apply in office.
·
Ronald Reagan' s, for ex3111ple. He played right guard on his Eureka
CoUege team, no all-star by lhe account of his own coach, who said so
after be got famous. But be was said to have been a guy who got the team
.loose, talked it up. joking and urging on tbe rest of lhe squad. A son of
locker room great communicator, by later accounts.
Or the dogged Richard Nixon. who wrote in his memoirs that be made
the freshman team at Whittier College because there were only II eligible
players. He warmed the varsity bench, playing only in lhe final minutes of
·games that were already won or lost.
.
·
Gerald R. Ford was the most successful of presidential players,
linebacker and center ori University of Michigan championship teams,
and their most valuable player in 1934. When Ford was House Republican leader, Lyndon B. Johnson was said to have sniped that "be played
football too long without a helmet''
Dwight D. Eisenhower was billed as one of the most promising backs
in lhe East when be played at West Poin~ but a knee injury worsened in a
cavalry drill forced him to quit the game.
Herbert Hoover was team business manager at Stanford University,
type-casting for the managerial_style tbal_kept him involved in reorganizing,tbe government long after hiS Detlresslon-tnmcated presidency.
John F. Kennedy tried football at Harvard, but his trademark was touch
football, the family sport that no Kennedy liked to lose.
• Neither Roosevelt at Harvard nor Wilson at Princeton played college
football, but both were dedicated to lhe game, by Watterson's account It
bad been played with few.officials and few enforced rules, s0 violently as
to prompt recurrent moves to ban it. Walter Camp of Yale, their contern·
porary, engineered the rules that shaped the modem game.
.
With Harvard' s president and faculty bent on suspending football,
Roos®elt asked representatives ofbis -school, Yale and Princeton to tile
White House on Oct 9, 1905. Six football experts, Can!p among them, sat
wilh lhe president at the White House dining room table wbile Roosevelt
talked about the problems of tbe game and lhe unfair practices tbal per·
sisted.
·
They didn't all concur, Wanerson writes, but Roosevelt got them to
draft a statement pledging their school teams to fair, sportsmanlike play. .
"Roosevelt in football as it\ social and economic reforms preferred to
allow those entrusted wilh power, in Ibis case th~ football esta)&gt;lisbnien~
to operate .without interference as long as tbe excesses were held in
check," according to Watterson.
But tbey weren't. The violence continued, reaching crisis with the
death of 25 players in eastern coUege football. Roosevelt met and corresponded with coaches and officials in lhe movem\'"1 that led to sweeping
rules changes, among them tbe forward P:\SS- . .
That stiU didn't do it; !here were more deaths and more &lt;lemands for
abolition. Wilson, tben president of Princeton, joined other university
presidents in another effon at rules reform. "":few rules are doing much to
bring football to a high level as a sport, for Its brutal features are ~mg
done away with and better elements retained," Wilson, then governor·
elect of New Jerse y, told the Princeton tcarn on Nov. 10, 1910.
But. those aren't lhe only elements retained, even now.
·
Watterson cited an investigative series of the em tbal showed improper
recruiting, cheating on entrance exams, special financial aid, and payments to star players.
EDITOJl'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- ·
nisi for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politi&lt;s for more than 30 years.

.Letters to the editor
Confidentiality law is vague

Page2
Friday, August 25, 1995

·•

It's the same old same old
WASHINGTON - The selling
of House Speaker Newt Gingrich's
book, "To Renew America," is ·
renewing questions about how
Republicans have sold lhemselves
to lhe American people.
· As Gingric h barn storms the
country on a 25-city book tour, he
is protected by a phalanx of Capitol
Police officers - whose care and
feeding will reponedly cost taxpayers more lhan $100,000.
Despi te Gi ngr ich 's pious
promises to reject lhe trdPpings pf
office- including large protective
details - be has become lhe most
imperial speaker in history. And his
GOP colleagues, who captured
control of Congress last year by
inciting voter anger against "professional politi cians" and their
perks, have joined lhe club.
. The Gingrich book tour is but
. one example of business-as-usual
for lhe " Republican revolutionaries." Forget tbe crowin&amp; about lhe
"Contract Wilh America." There
Is a let-them-eat-calce arrogance
corrupting tbe Republican revolution. Tbe latest evidence comes in a
report by the Congressional
Accountability Project, which
shows how members of Congress
have voted for proposed cuts in a
wide swatch of social programs for
ordinary Americans, but have
rejected efforts to make commen-

•

on Capitol Hill·

present and future mental health for
. Dear editor,
consumers
and their families,
What you say to a mental bealtb
friends
and
significant
others, conprofessional may not be confidentact
your
counselor,
psychologist,
tial in West Virginia.
1 filed a civil suit for physical psychiatrist or social wor~er.
injuries and surgery from an Request that your therapist or doecassault. A judge issued a telephonic tor call their professional organiza' oourt order requiring my thempist tions about tbe barbaric situation In
II wasn't that Ted didn ' t believe
to copy and release my West Virginia. Ask that tbe U.S. in heaven . He did . That's wbat
anxiety/depression records. The Supreme Court bear tbe appeal and bother~d bim. He knew l;le was
judge did not examine· the records expressly define what intimate going !here, but be wasn't sure be
beforehand. Even the names of records are sacred.
be happy.
Don't wait until your friends are would
individuals I mentioned in lhe priTo bear the churches tell it,
vacy of tbe session were not de let- embarrassed or offended by the heaven is for singers. With. his
release of sensitive conversations.
ed.
voice, Ted felt there would be no
The litigation helped destroy a place for him in the heavenly choThus, many unacted upon feelings, thoughts and urges some 20 once-in-a-lifetime singing in tbe rus. Anyway, be didn'tlike to sing.
years old were determined relevant rain, kiss on top lhe Empire State
And all tbat peace in heaven that
for discussion in open court. Building romance, Although I'm a people were always talking abou~
Bi:cause of these inflammatory writer, life dicates a "words and . that wasn't Ted's idea of bow to
stieculations, tbe victim bas been music" combination. What's a spend eternity. Ted was a doer.
ordered to pay the expenses of the musical comedy without lyrics or a Give him lhe active life.
dance without a band? My ''music"
man wbo beat him up!
To put it in a word, it seemed til
. · · West Virginia is the only state bas been gone 100 long; I'm nearly Ted that beaven was going to he
in the nation without a psycbother· out of words! Words lack tbe spiri· boring with nothing to do. But
apist/patient privilege. The con~­ tual percussion and lovingly soulful. maybe be bad been talking to tbe
dentiality law is vague, leavmg pn· strings.
people. Ted should have
Hence, if you are currently see- wrong
vate life in the bands of attorneys
talked to Sherwood Eddy for one.
and judges without a least intrusive ing a therapist, or have seen one
An orthodox Christian, Eddy
balancing test. Only West Virginia p(\lviously, inquire what happens 10 spent 13 years near the end of his
Sopreme Court Justice Franklin tbe notes and records of your con- life investigating psychic evidence
Cleckley voted to bear my ap~l. versations. Be careful of what they for survival after death. In his autoHe wrote a 1990 West V1rgm1a write and what you say. If it's very biogmpby he related a conversation
sensitive, request they put their with his falher who bad "passed
L~w Review article urging the
pencil or pen down.
enactment of a ''privilege" statute.
over."
Tony. E. Rutherford,
The U.S. Supreme Court bas
In Eddy ' s words, "When I
Huntington, W. Va. asked bim about bis work over
docketed tbe case.
•
· For further protection of past,
there, be said, 'I 'always was an

one's pulse pounding. Lowell these problems can be soived, but
Weicker recently identified himself . not an of them. And ooce tbe canwith Ted Kennedy's views, which didate is well and truly on all 50
ballots, lots more money will be
ought to dispose of bim.
Of tbe six, only Colin Powell needed to wage a winning camwould look goo&lt;! on horseback, paign against the Republican and .
William A. Rusher either
literally or figuratively, and Democratic candidates, each of
even be is attractive largely wbom will start with $40 million
to oust Bill Clinton if they are
because we can all project our provided by the federal govern·
given a reasonable alternative, but wish-fantasies onto him, fondly ment. That will make everybody
aren't all that impressed by any of imagining that be agrees with us else lhlnk twice except Ross· Perot.
the declared contenders for bis job. personally on everything. .
So we can, I believe, expect a
That's enough to malce ll good
Then too (if I may get disagree- . gradual thinning-out of the ranks of
many public personalities gaze in ably technical for a moment), it's potential independent candidates as
their shaving _mirrors and wonder if one thing to declare your indepen- 1996 draws nearer and the obstathey see a president smiling back at dent candidacy for president, and cles become more apparent There
them.
quite another to get on the ballot in may be some Lochinvar out there
But, to be frank, most of the all 50 states. Each state's require- who can sweep the American vot·
undeclared possible independent ments are unique, and some .or ers off their feet (and out or their
candidates aren't much more them are fiendish. Twenty years party affiliations), but 1 don't see
charismatic lhan the declared seek· ago, wlien I last researched the sub- him yet
ers of lhe two parties' nominations. ject, the filing deadlines varied
WIUiam A: Rusher Is a Dlstlri·
Jesse Jackson essentially represents from February to October; some gulsbed Fellow of tbe Claremont
just a threat to withhold a portion states demanded tbe creation and Institute for the Study or Stales·
of tbe black vote from Mr. Clinton registration of a new party; others · mansblp and Political P"biloso·
if be strays too far from his base. insisted upon a ticket naming can- phy.
(For lnrormatlon on bow to
Ross Perot peaked at 19 percent in'" didates for both president and vice
1992, and bas no reason to expect president; and practically all communicate electronically with
be would do better (or even as required nominating petitions Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1well) this time. Bill Bradley and signed by huge numbers of voters.
Steve Forbes are both thoughtful
800-817-6364,
exL 8J 17.)
With lots of money, some of
and respected men, but neither sets

organizer and I am organizing ovc:r
ben:, working for others. Mother IS
as dr,namic and aggressive as
ever. "

George R. Plagenz
Rev. Arthur Ford, a Disciples or
Christ clergyman on earth who
gave what was purported to be an
eyewimess account of heaven in a
series of spirit communications
with journalist Ruth Montgomery
after his death, told of talking to
scientists in the "next wodd" who
were continuing to do research in
!heir new location.
He met a truck driver who bad
round his enjoyment on earth in
"beer, bowling and sex." When be
got to beaven and found be bad to
loolc elsewhere for things to do, be
!bought back to a time when be bad
dreamed of becoming a doctor.
In heaven be bad lhe opportunity of studying with the best medical
minds in history. By implanting the
knowledge be acquired in heaven
into the subconscious minds of
doctors on earth, tbe truck driver,
said Ford, made an invaluable con-

tribution to human .Welfare.
Ford also said be met Clark
Gable · in bea~en. "He is as
admired here as be was there," be
said. "He works with out-of-work
actors on earth to belp them find
work.''

Unlike Ted, many on earth can't
wait to get to heaven. Daniel Pol·
ing, longtime editor of the Christian Herald, said, "The gr(latest
day or my life will be the day after
!hey say I'm dead."
·
For tbe poet Robert Browning,
heaven was going to be an opportu:
nity to carry on wilh more satisfaction the human work which bad
fallen short of its goal. In "Old
Pictures in Florence," the failures
do not envy the painters who bav~
won fame on earth. They say, "We
are faulty, why not? We have time
in store. Things learned on earth
we sball practice in heaven."
To Browning, earlh' s special
glory lay in tbe struggle and the
chase, "the almost but not quite
getting it and the bmve adventure
of trying to get it again." So when
be asked himself bow be conceived
of heaven, be said, ''Let it but

•

resemble earth myself have .
knovm.' '
. Rudyard Kipling was another
who. felt that daily work in heaven
will be satisfying beyond measure.
"No one shall work for money,
and no one Shall work for fame.
But each for lhe joy of working,"
said Kipling with the poet's rare
insight.
·
I csus was not one of those wbo
bave thought that heaven will be
devoid of all earthly pleasures like eating and drinking with our
friends. At the Last Supper with bis
friends, Jesus said, "I will not
drink henceforth or tbe fruit of the
vine until I drink it new with you ill
my Falher's kingdom."
While these conceptions of
heaven differ in their particulars,
they all succeed in picturing the
next world as a lively place.
Georll" Plagenz Is a syndical·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.
(For Information on how to :
&lt;ommunlcate electronically wltb :
Ibis columnist and others, con- ·
ta&lt;l America OnUne by caiUng 1·
800-817-6364, exL 8317.)

A boil order for Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District customers
in Salisbury and Sut ton townships bas been lifted, according to
TPCWD manager Donald C. Poole.
Tbe order affected tbe area from state Route 7 at Five Points to
Forest Run Road, Forest Run Road east to Block Plant Road, Block
Plant Road, Johnson Road, Rockhouse Road, WiU Hill Road and
the subdivision between state Route 7, Hartinger Road and Flatwoods Road.

the 80s.
The high pressure system will
shirt to lhe east Smuruay. Mean -

By Tbe Associated Press
Skies will he a bit brighter on
Saturday, especially over eastern
Ohio. llighs will reach tbe mid to
upper 80s statewide, the Natio.nal
Weather Service said.
Looking ahead into next week,
there will be a chance for showers
or thunderstorms from Saturday
night through at least Tuesday.
High temperatures will remain in

while. th e remains of T ropiCal

Stonn Jerry will push slowly nort)Jward.
Record bigh tempcnuure 99 in
1959, record low 46m IRR7 .
Sunrise Saturday at 6:53 a.ni ..
sunset at 8:14 p.m.
·

Pomeroy probes wrecks

W.VA .

The Pomeroy Police Department investigated two accidents ·
Thursday evening, records show.
·.
At 6:27 p.m. Thursday, Damn K. Puckett. 28, Bidwell, was ci ted
for failure to main tain assured clear distance, records show. Puckett
pulled forward at a light at the intersection of East Main and
Sycamore streets after tbe vehicle. in front of him stopped.
Puckett's 1994 Thunderbird bad tight damage to lhe front end.
Rtcbard D. Blessing, 45, Reedsville, bad light damage 10 the
back of his 1989 Ford pickup truck, records show.
At 7:17p.m. Thursday, David M. Jeffers, 32, Huntington,
W.Va., lost control of his motorcycle on Union Avenue. His 1987
Honda Hurricane had light damage. He and Steven Jeffers, 17, were
not injured, records show.

'·

School breakfast policies clarified
ShoWflfS T-storms Rain

..
Fluffies

leo

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
C 1995 Accu·Weath er, Inc.

Today's .weather forecast
Oblo forecast .

Tonigbt...Partly cloudy. Lows
from the middle 50s extreme oortbeast to the middle 60s south.
Saturday ... A mix of clouds and
sun. Highs 85 to 90.
Enended rore&lt;ast
Saturday night .. .A chance of
showers or thunderstOrms. Lows 65

to 70.
Sunday ... A chance of showers
or thunderstorms, Highs from tbe
lower 80s north to the upper 80s

Although all Meigs Local School District students will be able to
get free. breakfas ts, students attending Southern and Eastern schools
must sbll pay 65 cents for breakfast, according to local superintendents.
'
Children whose families qualify for free brealcfasts can gel free
breakfasts at Eastern and Soulhern.
Applications for free and reduced price meals will be sent home
with the two districts' students lhe first week of school.

Rehabl"ll"tatl"on• Continued
from page1
• •·----------

sou~~~ay and Tuesday .. . A . Betsy Willy, physical therapy
chance of showers or thunder- ., d1rector, srud lhe s~te-~f-tbe·art
storms both days. Lows in lhe 60s serv1ces reflect sbtfts m bealtb
· tbe 80s
·
care
and b1'gh 10
s
·
"The best way to cut costs· is
to get people borne," Willy said
of insurance companies ' new
.
emphasis. "This is a proactive,
aggressive approach to getting
lhem borne."
This addition allows for a
complete continuum of care from
bospitallhrougb lhempy to outpaDonald Thomas Matlack. 75, of Lake Worth, Fla., died Monday, Aug . tient services, along with follow
14, 1995, at his home.
up care for the homebound, Willy
Born March I, 1920, in Long Bottom, the son of the late Isaac and said.
·
Mary Metcalf Matlack, be retired from tbe grocery business in the P.ark·
In the future, tbe majority of
ersburg, W.Va., and south Aorida areas.
,
· the admissions for inpatient resiHe is survived by his wife of 55 years, Mildred Christy Matlack, for· dents will require restomtive ser·
merly of Chester; daughter, Donna Wtiytek of Columbus, N.J.; brother, vices with the possibility of
WU!iam Matlack of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
.
returning home, she added.
Graveside services will be held at II a.m. Monday at the Sand HiU
During the last year, tbe rehab
Cemetery in Long Bottom. Ewing Funeral Home wm handle the arrange- center bas quadrupled its lhempy
ments.
staff, WiUy said.
Tbe new facility integrates
therapy into daily activities, she
said . Tbe addition bas a fullyequipped kitchen , bathroom.
handicap-accessible bathroom
and bedroom.
Hubert D. Stanley, 86, Rt. 2 Box 124, Ravenswood, W.Va. died Thursday, August24, 19951n Jackson General Hospital ill Ripley, W.Va.
·
Born Iuly 19, 1909, son of tbe late George F. SlliOiey and Laura
' Alexander, be retired as a pipe-finer at Dravo in 197!. He was also a
• member of the Flood of Faith Ministries; Plumbers and Pipefi1Ji:111 Local Guthrie/Story reunion
1681n Marietta and the Brooks Bird Club.
'
" · The Guthrie/Story reunion will
. He is survived by bls wife, Virginia Beymer Stanley, Ravenswood,
be held Saturday, Sept. 2 at the
W.Va.; three sons, Richard D. Stanley, Ravenswood; Dale H, Stanley,
Athens County Fairgrounds 4-H
Williamstown, W.Va. and Douglas K. Stanley, Williamstown; eight building with a covered dish dinner
.
grandcbildren and 10 great-grandchildren.
at noon. Bring covered dish and
Besides his parents be is preceded in death by one grandchild.
table service.
Senices will be held Saturday, August 26 at I p.m. at Straight, Tucker
and Roush Funeral Home in Ravenswood by Pastor James Catron. He LCCD Board to meet
will be buried at Sunset Memory Gardens in PalkerSburg, W.Va.
The month! y board meeting for
.Visiting bours WiU be today from 24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis. home.
·
trict will be Thursday at 5 p.m.

----- A rea death s
Donald Matlack

. Hubert _Stanley

The subacute and specialized
services include: inpatient and
outpatient physical, occupational,
speech and respiratory therapy; .
fall assessment and balance tralning; home assessment; pulmonary
rehabilitation; wound assessment
and therapy; treatment of swatlowing disorders through a specia! x-ray ; wheelchair fitting;
infusion therapy; general ortbopcdie rehabilitation; and meal
preparation and home management training.
Pediatric therapy and rebabili·
tation for . all ages will also be
offered, including aml;lutees and
quadriplegics, Willy said.
Several area doctors have lieen
contacted about offering in-bouse
clinics, such as podiatrists, Linde·
lman said.
Also, this center does oot have
to rush patients to get them bome, ·
since !hey continue to operate as
a nursing home, Willy said.
"ijealth care is changing and
this is an answer to some of the
problems," Willy said.

Meigs.announcements

much remains to be done, it is far
too early to say lhat the GOP bas
· blown the chance.
More likely the voters are ready

For those who wonder about heaven

Boil order lifted

-!)- IMansfield 183' I•

Why so many independent candidates?
Any American who bas recently
said, or even though~ that be's sick
and tired of both parties and
wouldn't mind voting for an independent presidential candidate
must feel a little like tbe farmer
standing in his flooded field, who
looked up at the sky and _said,
"Dear Lord, I know I prayed for
min, but Ibis is ridiculous." ·
You wanted an independent
presidential candidate? Have six of
tbem: Bill Bradley, Steve Forbes,
Jesse Jackson, Ross Perot, Colin
PoweU and. Lowell Weicker. None
of tbem bas officially thrown his
bat into tbe ring ye~ but all of tbem
have let tbe media spread the
impression·that !hey might be interested in making lhe race.
Why this sudden plethora of
independent candidates? The conventional .wisdom, in Washington
anyway, is that the voters are even more than usual - "fed up"
with both parties, and ripe for aUtIle old-fashioned rebellion. Yet the
voters went to tbe polls just last
November, and on that occasion
tbey certainly seemed ready to give
tbe Republicans a chance to sbow
what they could do, And while

Saturday, Aug. 26

grich bas taken lhe speaker's gavel
be's also shamelessly using the
expense account, and be doesn' t
have to disclose bow be's spending
that money .
While Gin grich wants. to cut
Medicare, be .bas not called for
ending tbe free outpatient bealtb
care available to · members of
Congress at Belhesda Naval Hospital and Walter Reed Nrny Medical
Center. Nor does be plan to cut tax·
payer-subsidized health insurance
for Congress, wbicb bas rejected
health care reform proposals for the
pubUc.
·
Gingrich and his cohortS labeled
the CliniOD health care reform plan

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Local ·briefs--- Showers in Ohio forecast

OHIO Weather
Accu-Weather" forecast for daylime conditions and

technicians and 13 nurses.
"For a mere $275 annual fee for
House members and $520 for Sen·
ators, members receive benefits
such as unlimited office visits, lab·
oratory work, X-rays, electrocardiograms, and routine examinations,'' says the Congressional
By Jack Anderson
Accountability Project report.
and
"E ven if every member of
Congress paid lhe Anending PhysiMichael Binstein
cian' s fee , those fees would only
cover a stnall ponion of tbe money
appropriated for tbe (office)... "
tbe lard out of Congress first In many respects, Gingrich and
that ineans cutting congressional
lhe
RepubUcans are protecting the
pay and perts,'' thunders consumer
Imperial
Congress after waging a
activist Ralph Nader, wbo heads
campaigt\
last year to dismantle it
tbe accountability proje;:t. " MemHere
are
some
more ex3J1!ples:
bers or Congress should genemte ' 'socialized medicine,' ' but someMembers
of Congress, who
some leadership by example. Tiley bow tbey can overlook the Federal
are
paid
$133,600
per year, have
should s'top sponging off tbe .tax- Employees Health Benefits Plan,
voted
tliemselves
$77,453
ln. salary
which provides a variety of taXpaypayers." ·
increases
above
il)flation
since
We propose that a new award be er-subsidized health insurance
19.
5
5
(in
constant
1995
dollars).
inaugurated - "The Biggest options to federal employees. That
Sponge of the·Year Award" - for may have something to do with tbe Meanwhile, across tbe country,
the politician who soaks up free - fact that there are now a lot more there bas been no growth in median
bies while preaching frugality for GOP congressional staffers taking family income since 1969.
- The average retired member
lhe masses. Gingrich is our unaili- advantage of these Cadillac-style
of
Congress receives a pension of
mous choice for the award this health care plans.
about
$45,000 per year. Only balf
Gingrich endorses Health Mainyear. After fomenting a revolution
of
full-time
American workers in
against perks and privileges, he is tenanoe Organizations for the poor
lhe
public
and
private sectors enjoy
and middle class, but be hasn't
busy protecting lhe status quo.
When be was among the minori· shown any interest in closing down an employer sponsored pension
ty, Gingrich railed against the spe· the Capitol's OffICC of the Attend- plan. But these average citizens
cial $25,000 " expense ' account" ing Physician, wbicb is basically an stiU are forced to subsidize the conenjoyed by Democratic House on-site clinic for Congress. It is gressional retirement system.
- Congress wants to cut more
Speaker Tom Foley. Now thai Gin- . staffed by three doctors, 10 medical .
than a billion dollars from and
sewage and safe drinking water
facmties. What they don· t tell you
is.they use their office expense
accounts to purchase massive
amounts of bottled spring water for
their congressional offices.
- Eacb Senate office with a
fireplace is entitled to free firewQOd. But for millions of poor people, tbis winter could ,be colder
than usual because the LOw Income
Home Energy Assistance program
may be slashed by $319 million.
- Food stamps and aid to poor
women and children are ·on the
chopping block. But the budget
hawks who call Ibis necessary belt·
tightening are not pushing to end
free meals and vaCations from lobbyists, or the use of leadership
expense allowances for food and
bevemges.
- Republicans want to phase-.
out opemting subsidies for Amtrak
and mass transit to the tune of $3 .8.
billion. Meanwhile, members of the
,House jealously guard their right to
use _their taxpayer-paid frequent
flier miles for personal use, and
~ntinue to enjoy free parkil)g at
Washington, D.C.-area ~. Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

surate cuts in congressional perts.
" Before cutting Medicare ,
Speaker Gingrich and Majority
Leader (Robert) Dole should cut

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.:- Long Island fires
· said worst in years

•

EASTPORT,.N.Y. (AP) -A
furious brush fire roared through
thousands of acres of rain-starVed
woodland near lhe Hamptons beach
•. resort towns, destroying one bouse
and damaging seven others. IC was
still out of control today as-some
250 evacuees began a se;:ond day
out of !heir homes.
"There bas probably ·not been a
:, rue of Ibis magnitude in N~!' York
. state in 5.0 or 60 years, Gov.
• George Pataki said at a news conference.
·
,
Sources familiar with th~ fire
-- operation told Tbe Associated
;'"' Press tbal arson was suspected. .
:: Among the evacuees were res~­
.' dents of a nursing borne. No resl·
. dents were burt; ~~t 20 firefighl·
ers suffered minor IDJuries.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-960)
Published every af~moon, Monday through

Fridlly. Ill Court Sl., Ponw:roy, Ohio. ,bY d~

Obi&lt;~

V.lley Publlahina CompnnyiMulumedJa

lac., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Ph . 992·~ 1 ~6 .
Second clan postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohto.

Mftll~: The A~socia!cd P~n. ond the Ohio
Newspaper AsMK:iotion.

POSTMASTER: Send oddre ~5 co rn:c tio n ~ to
The Daily Sentinel, I l l Court St., Po ~ roy.

Qh;o 4,1~69.

SUBSCAII'TION RATES
By C.rrltr or Motor Route

E~;t.:: :::- .:.:.::. ___ :_: : i!i:~
SINGL• COPY PRIC.
[)lllly ..... :............"............. ..................... 3!i Ce nts
Sub~eriben

nol desiring to pa y the c.nnier j1l0Y

rt:mit in advan ce direct to Tile Dllil)' Se'!finel
on a three. 'ix or 12 monlh basis. Cmtit wall be

J.ivtn carrier each week.
No subaeript.ion by moi l permlned in o.reas
where home cmia ~mice is availilblc.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnsklt Mllp Caunty

HE: :::::·:::·::: · :···:·:·:::·::•::.-~-~
btts O.Uide Mclp County
~~ :::::::::::::::·: : : ::::::·:: : : : lli .~
S2W..b...............
.. .................. $96.20

A lumber yard and a train station also were destroyed. Suffolk
County Aiqlort was shut down, lhe
Sunrise Highway leading to the
Hamptons was closed, and train
service was halted in sections or
eastern Long Island . Pataki
declared a state of emergency.
"We looked out our windows
and we could see fire coming from ·
two sides. We could smell the
smoke. II was pretty bad," said
Laura Seglio, who fled her Eastport
house along with her borse. She
joined about 100 others at Eastport
High School.

EMS logs 3 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical ServiCe logged
three calls for assistance Thursday.
Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
1:55 a.m ., North Second ·
Avenue, Mike Bums, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
·3:34 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Randall Jones, Holzer Medical Center;
9:52 p.m., Meigs Mine 31, Timothy Roush, VMH.

WUdwood Garden Club meeting

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - oone.
Thursday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 24 - Jason
Bevins, Virgil Parsons, Paul Porter,
Mrs. Garland Saxton and son,
Terry Lloyd, James Nelson, Linda
Wheeler, Mrs . George Wires and
daughter, Mary Hamm, Judy
Waugh.
(Published with permission)

Correction
An article in Wednesday's Daily
Sentinel about SAR good citizenship honorees was not entirely correct, according to one or the two
residents recognized.
. Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
was commended for obtaining fed·
era! gmnts for the viUa~e park 3!ld
working to restore a histone m1ll.
Thornton said be has not obtained
grants ror tbe park and added that
credit for improving the park
should go to viUage residents Date
Hart and Carroll Teaford.
Thornton is currepll y working to
obtain a grant to restore the old
Meigs County Courthouse in
Chester.

Annual Block Yard Sale
Wildwood Estates
Frank Road - Pomeroy .
2.1 Mile From Five Points on
Flatwoods Road
Stuff and more stuff ·
9:00 til we quit
Saturday 26th

TURNPIKE FAT AUTY • Firefighters from at least five siB-.
lions responded to an explosion stemming from an accident ca used
'!'hen two tractor-trailers collided on 1-77, trapping a car b&lt;lween_
theDL The crash killed the driver of the car Wednesday nenr Reckley W. Va. Firefighter Jam&lt;s Shtnettt, shown receiving • llentlonrro'm his colleagues, was transporl£d to Raleigh Generallluspital
for treatment of smoke inhalation. (AI')
I

Truck driver held
following deadly eras~
on W. Va. Turnpike
BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) - A tile Soulhem Regional Jai l in DeckBeckley trucker told police he was Icy on $1 5,000 txmd.
. .
high on a potent amphetamine
lie could race up to .I 0 years in
when be drove northbound in the prison and a $3,000 line, Neil said.
southbound lanes of the West Vir·
Robinson entered Interstate 77ginia Turnpike, leading to a fiery, 64 in Deckley driving north in the
fatal crash. ·
·
soutllbound lanes Wednesday afterAfter· Lionel Robinson, 33, ran noon , Trooper J.E. II roo ks said.
from his burning rig and was L1Ck· Poli ce were called and eventually
led by troopers in Jlle median, he chased Robinson as his truck
said he had L1ken crystal metham· weaved across trafli c an d lllC medi phetamine, Assistant Ralei gh an in both direc tions, forcing other
County Proscutor Mark Neil said vehicles off.the road, II rooks said;
Thursday.
Aft er six mile s, Ro binson's
"It' s a drug that makes speed truck bo un ced off a guardrail and
look kind of wimpy," Neil said.
crashed head-on into another tracRobin son , who was charged tor-trailer. The trucks rolled over
· with driving under the influ ence onto a car and all th ree burst into
causing death, was bein g held in llames. Brooks said.

Candidafes.~~ntinued !rom paga'

The Wildwood Garden Club
Townships
will meet Thursday, I p.in. at the
The following petitions were
Country Kitchen restaurant in
submitted for expiring township
Racine.
, trustee and clerk seats:
Bedford - Elmer F. Bailey,
Hayman reunion set
incumbent, and David Michael
The 23rd H.A. Fred and Garnet
Rosier for trustee. Incumbent BarF. Polk Hayman reunion will be
bara J. Grueser, Linda William s
held Sunday, Sept. 24 at the bome · Schoeppner and Angela I. Driddcs
of C.E. Hayman Sr. in Antiq~ity
for clerk.
beginning at 10 a.m. and conbnuCbester - Incumbent Elmer C.
ing throughout the day. Dmner at Newell, G. Alfred Wolfe and
'noon. Games. Friends and relati;;es
Robert A. Bailey for trustee .
invited.
'Incumbent Karen R. Smith, Charles
~~r:artels and Janet R. Life for

.LiVeStOCk report

incumben~ for trustee. Conni e Kay
Chapman for clerk .
Sulton - Delbcrl A . Smith,
incumbent , for trustee. i&gt;aul S:
Moore, incumben~ for cleric.
Levies
Voters will decide 13 tax levi·es
when they go to the polls on Nov.
7.
Tax levies on the ballot include:
Lebanon Township, one mU-1
renewal for maintaining and operating cem eterie s ror {ive years;
Symcuse Village, one· T,ill renewal
for fire protection for fiv e years;
Symcuse Village, 1.8 mills for current expenses for li ve years; Rqt:
land Township, one mill renewal
for fiCC protection for li ve years;
~ Pom e roy Village. one mill
repl acement for current expense$
for fi ve years; Pomeroy Village,
two mills renewal for lire proteCtion for five years; Columbia
· Township, one mill renewal for fire
protection for five years; Racine
Village , three mill s renewal for
current e xpenses for live years;
Suuon Township, .5 mill renewal for maintaining and operating
cemeteries for five years; Rutland
Village, additional 2. mills for ~or­
rent expenses ror five yearl ;
Chester Township , one miil
replacement for maintaining and
opemting cemeteries for five years;
Middl eport Village, one mill
renewal for current expenses for
five years; Olive Town ship, 1.5
mill renewal for fire protecti on rot
five years.
·

.
· ColUmbia - Gay F. Johnson ,
. ~O~UMBUS (AP) - lndtana- incumbent, and Marco R. Jeff~rs
Ob10 drrect hog pnces at selected ,- for trustee. Incumbent Gloria Hutbuying points Friday by the U.S. ton and Amy Daugherty for clerk.
Lebanon - Lawrence Hayman,
Department of Agnculture Market
News:
.
incumbent, Corbet 0 . Cleek and
_Barr~ws and gilts: ~teady to 50 Ronald L. Dailey for tru ste e.
cents h1gher; demand light to mod- Incumbent Dorothy A. Roseberry
crate.
for clerk.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
Letart - lncumbeut Chri sto·
points 49 .50-51.00, few 49 .00; pher T. Wolfe, Michael Roush and
plants 51.00-52.50.
Jarred Hill for trustee. Joy ce
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country . White, incumbeit~ and Diane Kay
points 44.50-51 .00.
:
Hill for clerk.
. Sows: un_der 50() lbs. steady to
Olive _ Randall Boston.
50 cents htgber ; over 500 lhs . incumbent, for trustee. Martha A.
steady to 1.00 b1gher. ·
Durst. incumbent. and Charles E.
Dailey for clerk.
Omnge- Everett T. Calaway,
James Eugene Watson, Lyle I .
Swain and Jack R. Rankin for
Am Ele Power ........................34 1/8 tru s te~t. Patricia L. Calaway ,
Ak.zo .•......•••...........•...• ,........ ...• 60
and Sandy Shee ts
Ashland Olt ........................... .J111l incumbent,
Wrikeman
for
clerk.
AT&amp;T .....................................54111
Rutland
Joe Bolin, incum Bank One ................................31 J/4
bent,
and
Kent
E. Eads for trustee.
Bob Evono ...... ......................... ll 518
Opal
L.
Dyer,
incumbent.
for clerk.
Champion Ind........................:0 114
Charming Shop ....................... 5114
Salem - Clarence Might,
COLONY THEATRE
City Holdlng .........:.................16114 incumbent, Robert Keith Hypes.
Federal Mogut.. ..................... .ll J/4 Richard L. Lambert and H. Dannie
FRIDAY THRU THURS
Goodyeor T&amp;R ......................39 Ill Lamben for trustee. Bonnie Gene
'DANNY GLOV ER. RAY LIOTTA
K-mart ........ ............................ t4 114
IN
Lands End ..............................,..... 17 Scou for derk.
OPERATION
DU
MBO DROP
Salisbury
Paul
Dill
and
Larry
Llmlled lnc............................. IB 718
P.G.
Multimedia Inc.................... ..4llll R. Tbomas -for tru stee. Ri chard
·People'• ............................ ,.....21 tn Bailey, incumbent. for clerk.
ONE EVENtN G SHOW 7 :30
Ohio VaHey Bank ............ .............JS
Scipio - Randy Butcher,
446-0923
One Valley ..............................30 Ill
Rockwell .......................... ......4J 114
RobbiDS &amp; Myers ............ ...... .l7 114
Mti HIIII Pfllllt ~
Roya»Dulcb .......................... ll9 1/8

Stocks

t ... ..

Shoney'olnc . ................................ t I
Slar Bank ...............................51518

Wendy lnt'l............................19 518
Worlhlngloo lnd ... ,................ 19 J/4

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quotu provided by Adveal o
Stock reporll

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IN
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AND
DANIEL STERN IN
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�•

Sports

The. Daily ~~~~!~.~l

Friday, August 25, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page4

Cardinals get past Reds 6-5

-.·:·..•'..
~

•

CAUGIIT STEALING- St. Louis third baseman Scott CI_)Oper puts the !Jig on the Cbtclnnatl
Reds' Reggie Sanders to snuff a steal attempt In

the fourth Inning of Thursday's National League
game in St. Louis, where the Cardinals won 6-5.

(AP}

By R.B. F ALLSTROM
ST. LOUIS (AP) - It figures
that Donovan Osborne missed out
on the St. Louis Cardinals' best
bomesland of the year.
Osborne blew a five-run lead
and further extended a marathon
run of futility before the Cardinals
pulled out a 6-5 victory over the
Cincinnati .Reds on Thursday. He's
0-5 this year and hasn't won since
Aug. 18, 199-3.
"I don't know wbatto tell you
anymore," said Osborne, who
missed all of last season after
undergoing shoulder surgery. "I'm
going a little crazy."
Osborne bas come up empty in
several good starts recently, but
this wasn't one of them. The Cardinals, who have the worst .rccord in
the National League, wound up a
5·2 bomestand in spite of him.
They also worked around his
start .last Saturday, when be
allowed four runs in three innings.
On Thursday, Osborne lasted five
innings and gave up five runs, four
earned, on five bits.
Ron Gant bit Ills 27th borne run

in a three-run fourth that was .took three-of-four from the NL
helped by two throwing errors by Central-leading Reds.
It's all the more surprising conrookie second baseman David Bell.
Gant then hit his 28th an estimated sidering the Cardinals preceded the
438-feet to straightaway center homestand with a 1·8 trip. Manager
the longest home run at Busch Sta- Mike Jorgensen isn't sure what
dium this year- with a man on in caused the turnaround, but pointed
the fifth to tie it.
out that the Cardinals are a decent
It was Gant' s fourth two-homer team at home at 29-28 while
game of the year. ·
·
they're a sorry 16-37 on the road.
"He's big, he's strong, you j~st
Lankford's RBI single came
try to contain him," Osborne S31d. after reliever Hector Carrasco (2-5}
"He crushed it."
walked two in the sixth. He also
Gant also ciushed Osborne, if bad a run-scoring double in the
only tempor.trily. Osborne won II flfSl
and 10 games his only previous
Rich DeLucia (6-6} allowed a
seasons in the majors, and he hit in two innings. He leads the
remained optimistic.
team in victories, one more than
"Maybe next year I'll win 25, Mark Petkovsek and Allen Watson.
who knows?" Osborne said. "It
Tom Henke allowed a leadoff
ain't going my way, but we won double to pinch hitter Thomas
the game."
Holilard in the ninth, but finished
The Cardinals, who snapped the . for his 27th save and 302nd of his
tie on Ray Lankford's sixth-inning career. Henke struck out Jeff Bransingle, won a lot more games than son and pinch . bitter Eddie
anyone could have expected on the Taubensee, then got a Hale luck as
homestand considering they were Bell, trying to bold Howard close
facing the league's top two teams. at second, was in perfect positioo
First they took two- of-three from to snare BI!JlY Larkin' s game-endNL East-leading Atlanta, then they ing liner.

In NFL exhibition action,

dtdn' t.

Anderson kicked three field
goals despite missing twice and the
Philadelphia Eagles, his new team,
beat the Pinsburgb Steelers, his old
one, 16-6 to complete their first
unbeaten pre-season in 34 years.
Wbil~ a standing ovation and a
few "Welcome Back, Gary" signs
in Three Rivers Stadium were
. meaningful to Anderson, be insist-

do~n

Ray Rhodes lias found winning just and confusion get off to a running
as easy in Philadelphia as be did start.
with the Super Bowl champion San
· "We have depth - and good
Francisco 49ers, whom be served . coaching," said Randall Cunningas defensive coordinator.
barn, wbo feuded openly late last
"One of the imfortant things season with Kotite, now co;tcb of
be's trying to instil is winning," the New York Jets. "Now that we
Anderson said. "Some teams, know we have good backups and
that's not important in the pre-sea- we can play together, it makes a
son, but he's making a point of us big difference. The offense doesn't
winning, to see if we can carry that lean on Randall Cunningham any
more.••
on into the season."
However, the games don't count
One backup, Charlie Garner, ran
son."
until Sept. 3, and the opposition's for 94 yards and the game's only
Regardl~ss, new Eagles coach best players will be on the field in
touchdown, a 5-yarder in the third
the fourth quarter, not just the ftrSt quarter, as the Eagles completed
or second. And the Eagles still their first unbeaten pre-season "'
resemble the team that lost its fmal sincel961.
seven regular season games in
"We've worked· a lot on our
1994 more than they do Rhodes' running game Ibis pre-season, and
dad. and all his accomplishments," old49ers.
tbe passing game is s.oing to click
"We're still trying to put it naturally, because we're going to
Joey Unitas said this week. "But if
I try to say that I want to try to be together," Rhodes said. "We have do a lot of different things that we
as good as him, that's a ridiculous to crawl before we can walk.''
llaven't done yet," Cunningham
In the·only other game Thursday said.
statement. He's known as one of
night, Indianapolis beat Chicago
Steelers quarterback Neil
the greatest."
Tbe younger Unitas said be 29-7.
O'Donnell, only 3-for-10 with two
· Tonight, it' s Cleveland at Ari- interceptions, also expects a differwould try his best.
''I can put pressure on myself to zona, Denver at Jacksonville, ent offense when the starters begin
succeed, but any pressure put on by Atlanta at Buffalo, the New York playing more than a quarter. Of
people on the outside .wbo say, Jets at Cincinnati, Washington at course, it can only get better for the
'Why aren't you as good as your Green Bay, Detroit at New Steelei'S, who are a combined 2-6
dad?' , that's totally unfair," be Orleans; Miami vs. Tampa Bay at over the last two pre-seasons.
Barn Morris 'fan off 52 yards In
said. "He'~,Jobnny Unitas. I'm Orlando, Fla.; New England vs,
Oakland
at
Stanford,
Calif.,
and
St.
the
first quarter, for example, but
Joey Umtas.
.
.
,
didn't
play again as the Steelers'
Louis
at
San
Diego.
The younger Unnas satd be s
only
offense
carne from new kicker
On
Saturday,
it's
Kansas
City
at
stiU learning h_is craf~ ·.
.
Also, Demck Hambnck, a for- Minnesota: the New York Giants at Norm Johnson, Anderson's heir
mer Aorida nickleback, .will join Carolina, Dallas vs. Houston at San apparent. He made both of his
the Gamecocks. Hambnck, who Antonio and Seattle at San Francis·' field-goal anempts, from 27 and 34
yards, after signing only three days
was kicked off the Gators after co.
fighting with a teammate before
1
Rhodes' players, many of whom before.
Hello,
Norm
Johnson, And,
last year' s Sugar Bowl, will be red· were unhappy under former coach .
shirted this season. He will be a Rich Kotite, are pleased to see a most likely, goodbye Dean Biasucjunior next year.
team that'ended 1994 in disarray ci, who was 0-for-4 Saturday in the
ed the pre-season ·- even a perfect
one for the Eagles (4·0} - really
meant nothing.
The Steelers, w·bo scored only
13 points in their final two exbibi- ·
tions, certainly hope it doesn't.
They finished 1-3 and still haven't
bad a winning pre-season since
1988.
.
"It's fun. It's exciting," Ander·
son said Thursday. "But you've
got to be careful not to make too
much of it. it's only the pre-sea·

UnitaS joins South Carolina
camp as walk-on quarterback
. ·.·COLUMBIA. S.C. (AP)- The

::wfi of Hall of Fame quarterback

: Jubnny Unitas bas joined Sout.b
: Caroliila's football team as a walk. on and will take snaps with the
: team this week as one of its quarterbacks.
Although Joey Unitas is a long
shot to e3f!l playing time, be is ·eligible to play this season after trans·
. ferring from Ohio Wesleyan, a
Division Ill school in Delaware,
. Ohio. He will have three years of ·
; eligibility left.
·
. Steve Taneyhill, who led theGamecocks to their first-ever bowl
victory la~t year, wiU be the start, }ng quarterback coach Brad Scott
; ~id.
'
! :·: Johnny Unitas, quarterback for
' }li~ Baltimore Colts from 1956-72;
; pllssed for 40 239 career NFL yards
and 290 to~chdowns before be
: retired.

. . "I'm defmitely real proud of my

.••

·

r

i
I

r

Bears 29-7

iii
lS . ~

18
21
22.5

Central DIYialon
CLEVELANP .......73 35 .676
. , ·• MilwauUe ............. 55 54 .505
• • KaD&amp;al City ........... 52 55 .486
· • crucaao ..................46 61 :430
· Minneaota .............. ~9 69 .361

IU
20.5
26.5
34

CaliCoro.la ............... 67

44

Seanle .................... S5
Oal.land ................. 53

8.5
11.5
14.5

.521

.500

59

.473

Tbursday•s scores
Seattle 9, New Yocl7
Ka1111M City .5, TelUtl 3
Milw11ukee !li, Minneaota 3
Boston I 3, Oakland 6
California 6, Baltimore o4

•
\

Tonight's game1
Texas (Ro1era 12-5) at Ka01u Cily
• ~O ubi_cza 8-11 ), 8:0.S p.m.
•

1

.'

Football

.~ 14

13.~

.47.3
.439
.431

18

39

54

58
60
62

.639

21 . ~

Tbumlay'•...,....
Philadelphia 16, PittJburah 6

22 . ~

1DdlaltopO!i129, Cbic:oao 7

Ct-nlra.l Dt•Won

CINCINNATI
Housto11
Chicaao ·
PittsbW"gh

St. LouiJ

.,,67 41

......... 51 52
.......... 55 54
......... 47 62
......... .45 6S

.62Q,
.523
.505
.431
.409

Tonight'• gam eo

10.5
12.5
20.S
23

Wutern DI,..I.Wn
52 .532
52 .S21
55 .495
59 .464

· Loa Angeles ....... 59
Colorado
......... sa
San DieiiO
........ 54
Saa Fraoci&amp;CO ......Sl

.~

4

1.5

DCDver at Jacbonville, 7 p.m.
AUIUIIa II BWI'alo, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Jell atCINCINNAn 7:30p.m.

Wuhia,Wa MGreeD Bay, I p.m.
Detroit 11. New OrleaDJ, I ·p.m.
Miami va. Tarq.. Bay at Orlaodo, Fla.,
I p.m.
I

New Ea&amp;Jud VI. Oatlud Ill StaDford.
Calif., 9p.m
Sl Louilal Saa Diego,l0:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND a Arimoa, 10:30 p.m.

Mmneaou (Trombley 2-7} at Milwaukee (l&lt;arl +2). 8:05p.m.
Detro it (NitlowJid 0-2) at ClEVE-

• : LAND (llill 1-0). I &gt;Ol p.m.
•
Olicaio (Bm S· ll) at Toroo1D (Hent•. aen 9-10), 8:05 p.m.
: · New Yorl ·(Pettitte 6-7) at SCIII:tle (Bo.
aio 1-6}, I I :OS p.m.
. · Bolton (Co rmier 6·1} at Oallaad&gt;
·:(Johns 1-0). II :OS p.m.
- . Baltimore (Eticklon 8·10) at Califcr. , ala (Langston ll·2),11 :05 p.m

Saturday's games'
Detroit (Moore .S-13) at CLEVELAND
• (Naay 10-5). I :05 p.m.
• • Cbica&amp;o (Fernandez 8-1) at Toronto
. (Hurtado 5·2), 1.35 p.m
: • Bol ton (undecided) at Oakland (Stot·
• •tJemyre l l·.S ), 4:05p.m.
• ' Tcl&amp;l (Tewbbury 7-4) at KaDJal City
·(Appier 1). 7), 8:05 p.m.
: Min11eaola (KlinaenbccJ 2·4) 11 Mil • .waukee (Sparb 7-7},8:05 p.m.
• ~ New Yor k (Hitchcod; 6·1) at Seattle
: '(JohnJon 12·2), 10:0.5 p.m.
• Baltimore (Brown 5-8) at Callforn la
{D.Andenoo 6-S), lO:O!li p.m.

Sunday'1 games
Detroit at CLEVELAND, I :0.5 p.m.
Clliea.go Bl Toronto, 1:35 p.m.
Miooeaota at Milwaukee, 2:1l5 p.m.
Tes:u a1: Kansu City, 2:3.5 p.m.
BoJtoo aJ Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Cali CorDia. 4:0!1 p.m.
New York at Scatde, 4:3!1 p.m.

Saturday'• games

Olicaao 6, Florid11 2
Colorado I, PiaaburJh 6

Sao Frao&lt;:ila» 5, Montreal 3
NN YorlS, San Dh~JO 4
Phi ladelphia 7,l.ol AAsela 6 (ll)

Kauu City MMiaDCSOta, 1:30 p.m
N.Y. Gi.aDIIII CaroliDI.. 4 p.m.
Dallaa va. Howtoa at SIUI Allloaio, 8
p.m.
Seattle Ill San Frmcilco, I p.m

Today's games

Alla11ta (Smolti ~ - 5) at Chicaao
(Castillo 8-6), 3:20p.m.
Houston (ReYnold• 8-1) at Florida .
(Burkett 10·11 ), 8:05p.m.
San Frv~ciaco (VanLandio&amp;ham 4-2 )
l.t MQntreal (MBttinu 11 -8), 8:0S p.m.
San Diego (Blair· 6-2) at New Yll'"k (Ia; - '
ringhausen 3·2), 1:0.5 p.m..
Loa ADgelel (Nomo J0-4) 11 Phlladel'phia (Juden 1-1), 8:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Portuaal 7-1) ao Pitll·
butgh (Parris 6-4), I:O.S

p.m.

St. Loui• (Moraao 4-7 ) at Colorado
(Retat 3-1), 8:05p.m.

Saturday'• gameo
AtlutJ (MadduJ: 13-2) 11 Chleaao

(I'IIIChlel5·9). 2:20 p.m.

Hou1t0D (Swindell 7·8) at Fl orida
(BaotJ o.4), 7:05p.m.
CNCNNATI (Sm.lley 11 -2 ) at Pin. butah (E;IctJ 3-6),7&gt;05 p.m.
Lo• Anaeles (Vaklea 11 -7) 11 Philadelphia (fernaade~4·1). 7:0.5 p.m. ,
SaD Dieao (Ashby 9-7) at New Yorl
(PUb;pher 4-6), 7&gt;10J&gt;·n1
. Sao Francisco {Brewlnatoa 3-1) It
Montreal (Aivare&amp; 0-1}, 7:3!1 p.m.
St. Loui1 {Petkovaek S-4) It Colondo
(...... 'lea6-6),1&gt;05 p.IIL

Sunday'• games
San Prucilco • Montrcal.1 :3S p.m.
CINCINNATI II PiltlbWJb. 1&gt;3S p.m.
San Dicao• New York. £:40 p.m.
AUut.ll Chicaao. 2:20p.m.
SL I.Aiilll Cokndo, 3:0$ p.m.
Hou.toD It Fkrida,·6:0S p.m.
·
Lo1 Anp" Alllodclphla.I &gt;05 p.m.

JACKS'ONVILLE JAGUARS &gt;Ac·
quired Crala Keith, tiJht cod, from the
Pittaburih Sleclera ror Ill uadiaclond
1996 dtaf1 choice.

NFL exhibition action

St. Loui&amp;6,C'INCINNATIS

.60-4

5.5

.Iii!

Thursday's scores

Wettern DIYilkMa

Tex• ..................... 58 52

.!!! L &amp;I.

AUaota
.......... 69
Philadelphia ........ S7
Mo11lfeal
.. ...... 52
Aorida
........... 47
New Yorl
....... 47

~

:•
tuterli''"ro·&amp;&amp;.
• • 801ton ............... ,.... 69 41 .627
• . New Yl:l"k: .............. S) 56 .486
• Baltimore ............... ~ I ~9 .464
Toro.oto .......... ::...... 47 61 .435
· Detroit .................... 46 63 .422

FINANONG

Gallia Academy·'s golf team
defeated visiting Meigs 174-185
. Tuesday at Cliffside Golf Course,
according to a report released
Thursday.
Aaron Epling's 41 and Aaron
Bickle's 42 led the way for the
Blue Devils. Behind them were
teammates Drew Dunkle (45),
Ryan Canaday (46}, A.J. Johnson

Transactions
BosebaU
·
Amerlu• Leape
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Acquired I
Mib Aldlete, outrieldu-ftr&amp;t bueman,
from the Oaklaod Athletica for DemoDd
Smith. oulliel• .
OAKLAND ATHLE'IlCS: Acti'fatcd
Stc~ Olllivava. pitcher, rrom me 15-day
diabiDd lilt Placed Ariel Prieto, pit.cher,
on lbe U-d.ly diubled lilt. Recalled Joh.D
Wudio, pitcher, from Edmootou oC the
Pacific Coast 1.eape.
Nalloalll Leape .
NL: Upheld the umpire~~' deciJloa to
forfeit the Aua. 10 llnM betweea St.
Lollilud l.ol Aqela 10 the Cln:lina.IJ.
NEW YORK METS: Ac:ti,..ated Bl•
Miaor, pi~h« . from the U-day ddabled
llst

•

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ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS&gt;
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or playtr denlopmeJJt for lhe Domlaica.o
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Steelers' 20-71oss to Tampa Bay.
day, but, yeah, it will be turned on
But while the Steelers may have next week," Rod Woodson said.
found a kicker, getting their offense "Barry Sanders and the Detroit
back might not come a~ easily. Lions will make it easy for us to
They threw three interceptions and, get ready. The pre-season means
just as they frequendr did last sea- nothing. That s the way we
son, especially 10 thett AFC cham- approached it. But we'll be ready
pionsbip game upset loss to San -believe me, we'U be ready."
Diego, they self-destructed inside
Colts 29, Bears 7
the 20-yard line.
At Indiananapolis, all' tbree
"There are no more warmup quarterbacks - starter Craig Erick·
2ames," tackle Leon Searcy said. son and backups Jim Harbaugh and
Y:we don't bave that luxury, We've Paul Justin- threw a touchdown
got to be doubly effective, because pass.
·
every defensive front is going to try
Erickson, who came in a trade
to stop the Steelers running game.
with Tampa Bay during the offseaWe've got to take it up a noo:b, and son, hit Floyd Turner on a 53I know we will."
yarder. Former' Bears QB HarTbe defense, which should
baugb drove the Colts 81 yards in
regain All-Pro outside linebacker
II plays, including a 25-yarder to
Kevin Greene (broken right band}
rookie Ben Bronson for a touchnext week, appears ready. The down . Justin passed 21 yards to
ROnald Humphrey for a touchdown
Eagles outgained Pittsburgh 332174, but most of the damage came
as the third period ended .
against the Steelers' second-liners.
"To be honest with you, that's
Deon Figures, for example,
kind of expected," Erickson said of
played extensively at cornerback
the balance among all three quar·
despite a gunshot wound in his left
terbacks. "Jim's a veteran player
knee that initially 'was expected to
who's been in a lot of situations.
sideline him until October.
Paul is as talented as any guy I've
"We can't just turn it on in one • ~:th~~=~~..~re's a lot or

'

Baseball

.•

\.

·Eagles hand Steelers 16-6 loss; Colts
' B! ALAN ROBINSON .
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'1he Pitts burgh Steelers offense

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Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 25, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Sna--....:..-=---.comeback for insensitive comments on pregnancy
Ann
Landers

Dear ADD Lucien: I am prcgrwn
with my second child, and it never
ceases to amue me how insmsitive
people can be. Is lhcre a book thai
lddr mpregnancyetiqucue? Uno~
there should be. Here are some
e111111ples of what I have had to listen
10 in rcct:nt weeks:
• Are you having twins? You sure
do loolc like iL"
"I have a friend who is due the

same time you are, and she is flO( half
as big as you.·
"How much weight have you
gained ?"
.
"You still have that much longer .
10 go?"
i
"My wife never lost !he weight she
put on after her second child.·
"I wore my regular jeans home
from the hospital -- they were size
5..
"
"Are you still pregnant?'"
Any advice on how to reSpond to
these asinine comments? ·· NINE
MONTHS AND COUNTING IN
BOISE
DEAR BOISE: No response is
necessary. Simply look the clods

straight in the eye and say, "I can't
believe I heard you correctly:"
DearAaa Llmden: Motor Ydticle
crashes Jcill 40,000 people and cause
5 million injuries in the United States
each year. The cost to society is $137
billion annually. One higbway fatality
occurs every 13 minutes.
Traffic crashes are the leading
cause of death for youths ages 16 to
20. In 1993,5,905 y0110gpeople were
"killed in traffic ~ -- an average
of one every hour on weekends and
one every two hours during the week.
Twice as many males were killed as
females.
Of those who died, 75 percent were
not wearing safety belts. If they had

'

Onhopaedic Surgeons, P.O. ·Box
1998, Des Plaines, Jll. 60017. "
Wlll.IAM I !PION, M.D., EXECUTIVE VICEPRESIDENT,AAOS
DEAR DR. IIPION: Thank you
for taking the time 10 do the research
that should hit home. I've seen the
brochure,and it is superb. I hope you
get a zillion calls.
Is lhat An11 Laltthu column you
clipped ~ars ago yt/low wilh age?
For a cupy of her most frtquently
requested poems and essays, und a
st/f-addresstd, long, busi~ttss-size
tnvtlope and a c~ck or mo~ttyolfltr
for $5.2S (lhis includes postage and
handling) ro: Gems, c/o Ann Landers.
1'.0. Box JJ S62. Chicago,/11. 6()61/0562. (In CIJIIJ1da, send $6.25.)

for having the most children
attending and Julee Yong, of Sioux
City, Iowa for traveling the farthest.
Yvonne Griffith was the only
person attending with her entire
family, inlcuding her husband Don,
SOD David, daughter·in"laW, Sherry
and three grandchildren, Darin,
Linda and Tyler.
Representing the George Curtis
family .were Inzy Newell; John,
Mary and Misty Newell; Dennis
Marcinco and Sheila Long.
De~ndents of Artie Curtis Jobson
were unable to attend.
Representing the Katie Curtis
Rose family were Brian Bradford,
Clarence Bradford; Dick, Gail and
Elaine Roberts; Wendy Sparks,
Emily Sparks and Kenny and Betty
Duke. Descendants of Damon Curtis were unable to attend.
Attending from the Sonoma

Curtis Osborn were June Ashley,
Harold DeWolf and Keith, Emily,
Rachel, Whitney and Emily Ashley. Descendant of Filura Curtis
Palmer were unable to attend.
Attending the Alban Curtis
famly were Maijorie Brewer, Perry
and Sylvia Curtis, Charles Curtis,
Chris Curtis; Doug, Carolyn, Tim
and Matt Bissell; Royce, Stacy and
Lakin BisseU; Jessica Carr; Sandy,
Tom, Sylvia and George Curtis
MacDonald, Marilyn Pooler; Julee,
Christina and Amanda Yong and
Jenny Reynold.
From the Chloe Curtis Anderson
family were Kermit and Anne
Anderson. Representing the Mollie
Curtis Swank family were Dora
Crispin, Don and Yvonne Griffith,
Ruby Sarbaugh, Pauia Ann Kerns.
Joe and Patty Bowman and David.
Sherry, Darin, Linda and Tyler
Griffith.

Eblin family joins for family reunion
LONG BOTTOM METHODIST CHURCH
the niiddle of the windows causing
In 1988, a lighted outdoor bulmore painting , ptlpering etc. with a letin board was donated which is
cost of $600. Many individuals not only used for announcements
have given gifts to the church but also "words of wisdom.'~ The
which are noted throughout the · board is located in direct view day
church by plaques on the walls in and night for motorists as they
their memory/honor. Many pause at the stop sign at SR 248.
improvements have been made
The present congregation is
over the years such as restrooms in striving to preserve and maintain
1974 and more recently padded God's House .as a "lighthouse on
pews and air-conditioning. ·
tbe corner'' for another 100 years.

The 28th annual Samuel Allen
·Eblin reunion was held recently at
the Star Mill Park in Racine. Prayer
was given by Adria Eblin before a
social hour and potluck meal. ·.
Gifts were presented to Barb
Colmer, John Eblin, Paulette Farley, art Eblin, Kimberly Johnson,
Steve Eblin.
Kenneth Eblin was elected president · and Donna Eblin,
secretary/treasurer. It was also
decided to bold tbe reunion at the
same place for the years of 1996

POMEROY -The next meeting of the Meigs County Local
Corrections Plannmg Board will be
-at noon at lhe Senior Citizens Ceoter.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church will host gueSt pastor Dean Snyder on Friday at 7
p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS.- Family and
friends of the late Walter (Squib)
and Edna Oiler Gilmore will gather
for their reunion at 1 p.m. at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds at the
Grange Hall. Bring a covered dish
and table service.
RACINE - Free music at Star
Mill Park Saturday. 7 p.m. Bring
lawn chairs.

and 1997.

Those born in 1995 were Jacob
Smart, Tyler Eblin and Tanner
Leach.
Attending were Randy and Jan
Snider, Cheshire; Tammy, Scot~
Jeremey, Kimberly and Megan
Johnson; Bob and Hyllia Eblin, .
Middlepon; Rev. John Neville and
family, Middleport; Kenneth,
Donna and Lois Eblin, Rutland;
John Eblin and Kay Morris,
Racine; Amber Blackwell, Mamie
Stephenson, Jerry and Barb

Coliner, Lawarence Eblin; Steve,
Wanda and Becky Eblin; Kay
Clark, Greg, Janet, J uley and Ashley Eblin, Pomeroy; Roger, Karen
and Justin Eblin; James Eblin,
Columbus; Artie and Hope Eblin,
Syracuse; Art, Adria Eblin,
Pomeroy; Tabitha Arik Horner,
Reedsville; Jim, Rauleue and Rick
Farley, Marietta; Dave, Penny and
Jacob Smart; Jarrod and Joshua
Clark, Long Bottom and Jeff
DeLong, Pomeroy.

A packed grandstand and huge
field of karts highlighted an exciting afternoon of go-kart racing at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds in
Rock Springs during the final night
of the county fair. According to
Meigs Competition Karting Association correspondent Radley
Faulk, a record number of karts
were on band .for the inaugural
event, which brought in kans from
as far away as Maryland to vie for
the $2,000 top prize. Racing got
underway at 3:30 with seven classes each running two heats and a

feature. ~ing lasted continuously
until 8:30p.m.
In the rookie fealure event, Dennis Adkins. Syracuse Jed all tbe
way to claim tbe win. On lap five.
Josh Hayman of Reedsville passed
Charlie Young of Chester for second. Jesse Megenhardt of Baltimore, Maryland was able to pass
Cacy Faullc of Chester to take tbe
third spot ahead of Faulk. The payoff went $80, $60, $40, $20 ftrst
place tbru fourth in tbc rookie and
junior features.

Stephanie Young of Chester
passed early leader Travis Adams
of Racine to claim tbe junior feature. As Adams experienced diffi·
culties Marvin Day and Waylon
Collins were left to battle for second spot, finishing ' in !hat order
with Radley Faullc able to hold otT
Rober! Hart for fourth.
In tile stock light feature, TOdd
Brumfield of Apple Grove bad ftrSt
place until lap II when he was
overpowered by James Yost of
Huntington, W.Va. Yost led the

.--------Rotary social----. Brewer family
reunion held
•

POMEROY - Belles and
Beaus Western Style Square Dance
Club Sponsoring an open dance at
the Senior Citizens Center Saturday, 8-11 p.m.·Dave Stuthard. All
western style dancers invited.
Refreshments. Casual dress.

RACINE - Southern High
SUNDAY
School will be playing a scrimROCKSPRINGS
The
mage againsJ Franklin Furnace descendent of the late Alben and
Green at 7 p.m.
Rosa Pritty Jeffers will have their

'

I

Rutland High School class of '60 reunites
The Rutland High School Class
of 1960 celebrated their 35th
reunion at the American Legion in
Rutland recently.
Those attending were treated to
food, fellowsbip and reminiscing
while 50's and 60's music played.
The hall was decorated with balloons and memorabilia from days
at RHS.
· Each class member gave a brief
talk. Two favorite teachers, Martha
and Jim Vennari also spoke to the
class.
Members of the class consider
themselves very fonunate as all 43
graduates are still living.
Class members and guests
attending were, Roma and Jean
Cremeans, Rutland; John Br;pgan
and Wilda Brogan, Rutland; Linda
Russell, St. Albans; Ben Nease,

Hurricane, W.Va.; Teresa and Lex
Barker, Scott Depot, W.Va.; John
Brogan, Stephanie and Michelle,
Kelly Roe, Lancaster; Linda
Boyles and Heather, Middleport;
Wayne Roush, Houston, Texas;
Tom and Pat Moore, Marion;
Louise and Jerry Eads, Rutland;
Ralph and Patty Clark, New
Haven, W.Va.; Randall Tackett,
Vinton; Wanda Smith, Alderson,
W.Va.; Bob and Jody German, Jessica and Lissie, Newark; Stewart
Brewer, Phoenix, Ariz.; Ted Brewer; Clara Mae Hysell, Albany;
Linda Haley, Middleport; David
Tiemeyer, · Syracuse; Irene
Kennedy, Rutland; Fred Stewart.
Sanford, Fl.; Charlie Barrett. Lana
Barrett, Rutland; Jinuny and Linda
Keesee, Middleport; Esta and
Robert Gressene, Tifton, Ga.; Mar-

remainder of the race to take lhe
win ahead of James Holmes of
Charleston, Craig Cristian, and
Shawn Rhodes of Ripley. The payoff was $125, $80, $65 and $45.
In the stock medium class, Ron
Wooten of Huntington was the
dominant driver, leading flag to
!lag. Darren Robinette of Athens
was right on his bumper at tbe finish to place second. Rick Smith of
Cheshire was third ahead of Shelly
Hensley of Proctorville.
Public Notice

The Brewer family reunion held
recently at the Long Bottom Community Cuilding with a potluck
dinner.
Prayer was said by David A.
Brewer and Christa Blower led tbe
games played by tbe children.
Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Roben Schott, New Washington; Bobby, Jane and Brandon
Fitch, Long Bottom; Harold and
Ruby Brewer, Long Bottom;
Davide A. Brewer, Portland;
Clyde, Florence and Eric Shull.
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Mrs. Leora
Kribes , Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
Marilyn Beall, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Close, Waterford; Ronnie and Leanna Beegle, Racine;
Mark Beall, Columbus; Rodney,
Patriece and Ryan Beegle, Portland; Eric, Kathey, Nick, Kaylin
Donn, Newburgh, Ind . and Rev.
.Jason, Carol, Jade and Jasmine,
Point Pleasap~ W.Va.

Tbe Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club hosted a social at the
Betty and Harold Newell borne in Chester recently. Tbe Point
,_. Pleasant Club were tbe guests. Randy Hays and John Anderson
were chefs. Mary and Roger Gilmore performed their Sweet
Mountain Sourid. From left are: Lloyd Blackwood, Middleport
president; Cecil Menton, Point Pleasant president; Betty Newell,
hostess; and Harold Newell, host. (Sentinel photo)

calendar· -----------

RlJILAND - Tile descendants
of James and Bertha Cremeans will
bold their annual fainily reunion at
the Rutland Civic Center. Bring a
picnic lunch .at noon. All friends
and relatives are welcome.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Record number compete in Meigs County Fair go-kart racing

.

~

The d.escendants of the nine
children of Hoit William Curtis and
Mary Foster Curtis held their 88th
annual reunion recently at tl)e Long
BottOm Community Building.
Hosted by the family of Mollie
Curtis Swank, five family members
and guests enjoyed a potluck dinner after the prayer by Ruby Sarbaugh. Th~ter, a brief business
meeting was Jed by president
Charles Curtis. Those who had died
since the last reunion were remembered.
Small gifts of recognition were
presented by Yvonne Griffith.
· Three-month-old Lakin Bissell was
honored as the Curtis descendant
attending for the ftrSt time. ·
Gifts were also presented to
Tyler Griffith fOr being the
youngest boy attendiqg, Christina
Yong for being the youngest girl
attending, Kermit anders for being ·
the oldest attendant, Perry Curtis

-------~---Community
Tbe Co"'"'unlty Calendar is
published as a .free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce "'eetlng and spociatevents. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
rutld raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

Don't drive if you've had even one
drink. Alcohol slows reaction, blurs
and distcrts the vision and impairs the
concept of distance.
The American Academy of
onhopaedic Surgeons, in )lllltnersbip
with the NationifHighway Traffic
Safety Adminisll"lllion, has launched
a nationwide public education
campaign called "Drive It Safe."
Teens can do several things to
reduce their risk of dying in a Crash
and lessen injury if an accident
&lt;Uurs. Best of aU, many accidents
can be prevented. The~ "Drive It
Safe" brochure is available by calling
1-800-824-BONES or writing Drive
It Safe, American Academy of

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Curtis family holds 88th.reunion

Church
marks
:·1DOth year
The church "on tbe comer," that
is, the United Methodist Church
.located at the junction of State
Routes 124 and 248 in Long Bottom, is celebrating its I OOth
anniversary Ibis year.
The celebration will be held
SepL 8 through 10. Special services
will be held the ftrst two nights at
7:30 with guest speaker Rev. NorUlan Butler of Vienna W.Va.
. .Sunday services will begin at
9:30 followed by a worship service
at 10:30. A carry-in dinner will be
at noon and a special program at ;1.
will conclude the week-end celebration. All members, former members and· friends are invited io
atrend Ibis special occassion.
Most of the history of the
ch\lfCh is based on tbe recollection
of tbe Swan family and compiled
by the late Leona Swan Hensley.
~ original Methodist Church was
a small frame building located at
tbe west entrance of the Sand Hill
Cemetery. The present building
was built and dedicated in November 1895.
. · During the flood of 1913, tbe
building was so badly damaged
that new windows had to be
installed, walls replastered and
j,aj,ered. It was raised and a basement of concrete block was put
under it at a cost of $2100.
· Again, in 1937 a flQOd reached

been buckled up, 45 percent would
have survived...
Although "16-to-20-year-old
drivers accounted for only 6.7 percent
of the total driving population in
1993, they represented 13.5 percent
of the drivers involved in l"a1al crashes
and 12 percent of the drivers in11.0lved
in fatal crashes who had been
drinking.
In 1993; of all fatal crashes
involving 16-ro-20-year-olds, 1,081
of the youth drivers were legally
drunk. The establishment of a
minimum drinking age of 21 has
reduced traffic fatalities involving 18to-20-year-olds by 13 percent and has
saved 14,8161ives since 1975.

Friday, August 25, 1995

jorie and" Ronnie Rife, Mitch Taylor, Dexter; Dottie Turner, Middleport; Alka Marble, New Haven,
W.Va.; Harold and Minnie McKenzie. League City. Texas; Bill and
Barbara Romine, Columbus; James
and Susie Cheadle, Columbus;
Mary and Terry Felton, Holland,
N.Y.; Tom and Ann Buck, Leah
and Missy, Harrisburg; Mr. and
Mrs. James Vennari, Pomeroy;
Rose and Bill Sellers, Hillsboro,
Mo.; Norma and Charles Stanley,
Mason, W.Va.; Alberta and Bill
Brewer, Columbus; Bonnie Coy,
The Plains; Joan King, Rutland;
Pauline Lehman, Grovepo11; Eloise
Carson, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Deidre
Oeder, Morrow; Judy McDonald,
Rutland; Robert Romine, Columbus.
·

In the stock heavy feature
Randy Crosten of Little Hocking
was in command all lhe way, collecting a nice little prize of S125
away from second place Greg
Koontz of Charleston. Ron Wooten
was third ahead of Shelly Hensley.
In tbe four-cycle open class feature race. Darrell Blankenship of
Huntington. led flag to flag collecting the S125 prize. Todd Brumfield
was second . TI1e real battle of the
night involved Ron Wilson of

Public Notice

Racine and Jeff Hoggseu of 1-funtington. Wilson passed for third
place, but Hoggsctt came back to
claim U1ird at the finish ahead of
Wilson in fourlh .
Phillip La Comb of Reedsville
was the winner in the two cycle
open class. leading all 12 laps 1o
defeat Barry Ramsay of Cambridge. Ramsay passed Chester~s
Troy Guthrie for second, while
Steve Milhoan of Tuppe rs Plains
finished fourth.
Public Notice

Public Notice

on projects of similar size
LEGAL NOTICE
and
complexity. The Owner
Sealed proposals will be
received at the .office of the intends and requires that
Mayor, Pomeroy Municipal this project be comp,leted
Building , 320 East Main no later than December 31 ,
Street, P.O . Box 666, 1995.
This project is a Minority
Pomeroy, .Ohio 45769 until
Business Enterprise (MBE)
11:30 a.m. local time on
Set~Aside Project.
Each
September 18, 1995 lor
bidder
must
submi t
furnlahln.g all
labor,
materials and equipment evidence that it is a Minority
Business Enterprise as
nec;:essary to complete the
certified by the State Equal
project known as VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, WEST MAIN Employment Opportun ity
STREET
WATERLINE Coordlnatpr.
Bidders are required to
REPLACEMENT PROJECT
comply
with the Minor ity
PHASE 2. and at said time
Business
Enterprise (MBE)
and place, publicly opened
requirements
set f ort h in
and read aloud.
The proposed work section 164.07 of the Ohio
Includes installation of 1286 Revised Code , and Rule
feet of 8" PVC water main. 164-1-32 of the Ohio
The engineer 's estimate for Administrative Code. In
construction of the project part, this means that any
bidder, to the extent that it
is $65,158.00.
Copies of Drawings and subcontracts work , shall
Contract documents may be award subr.ontracts to std te
obtained or examined at the certified Minority Business
Office of the Mayor , Enterprises in an aggregate
Pomeroy
Municipal dollar value of no less than
Building, Pomeroy, Ohio. A five percent (5%) of the
Bidder
non-refundable fee of prime contract.
procurement
activities,
to
$40.00 witt be required for
. each set of Drawings and the extent that the
purchases
Contract documents taken contractor
from the above office. materials and/or services,
shall result in the award of
Checks shalt be made
procurements
contracts to
payable to The Vittage of
state certified Minorily
Pomeroy. Proposals must Business Enterprises in
be SJibmitted on the aggregate dollar value no
propoSBI forms contained in less than two percent (2"/o)
the Contract documents.
of the prime con1ract . The
Each bidder Is required to
bid specifications provide
furnish with Its proposal. a
further details on these
Bid Guarantee and Contract
Bond in accorllance with requirements.
All contractors and
Section 153.54 of the Ohio subcontractors Involved
Revised Code. Bid security
with the project witt, to the
furnished In bond form, extent practicable use Ohio
shalt be lssued "by a Surety
Products,
materials ,
Company or Corporation services and labor Ill the
licensed in the State of Ohio impleme·ntation of their
to provide said surety. project.
Additionally,
Each proposal must Contain contractor compliance with
the full name of the party or
the equal emplOyments
parties submitting the opportunity requirements of
propos•t · and all persons the Ohio Administrative
Interested therein . Each Code Chapter 123 , the
bidder
must
submit Governor 's Executive Order
evidence of Its experiences of 1973 and Governor 's

Ex~cutive Order 84·9 shall
be required. Bidders must
comply with the prevailing
wage
on
Public:::
Improvements in Me igs
County and the Village of
Pomeroy,
Ohio
as
determined by the Ohio
Department of Industrial
Relations. The Owner, The
Village
of
Pomeroy ,
reserves the right to waive
any
informalitie·s or
irregularities and to reje ct .
any or all bids.
John A. Anderson
Village Administrator

(8)18,25 2TC

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF '
COMMON PLEAS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
IN THE MATIER OF THE
ESTATE OF
SANFORD SHAHAN, SR.
CASE NO 290~8
DOCKET 0 PAGE 29
NOTICE PF PUBLICATION
Notice is hereby . given
that on the 7th day of
August , 1995 , Sanford
Shahan, Jr., Executor of the
Estat.e of Sanford Shahan,
Sr., late of Harrison County,
West Virginia, filed in this
Court under Docket 0, Case
29038 an authenticated
copy
of
Letters
of
~ Administration iss ued to
him by the County
Commission of Harrison
County in the State of West
Virginia. Notiee is further
given that all creditors of
said estate who desire to
assert their liens on the· real
est3te of said descendent
locatr!d in thiS state shall
prese nt their Claims, duly
"sworn to, to this ~ourt
wit hin three months a1ter
lhe filing of said letters in
this Court, or their said
l iens shaU ·forever be
deemed
barred
and
canceled .
Robert E. Buck, Judge
{B) 18, 25 {9) 1 3TC

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
BID FOR TRUCK
The Tupptrl Plain-aCheater Water Dlatrlct . Ia
Inviting oeolod bids fQr a
1995 Pick-Up Truck with the
following apeclflcations:
Small Truck-long Bed
3.9 L.lter 6·cyl. engine or
better
Power Brakes
Power Steering
Rubber-Vinyl Floor Mota
Rear Step Bumper
Automatic Tranamlaalon
Heavy Duty
1
Heavy Duty VInyl Sella
(Red)
Exterior ahould be red In
color
Mud and Snow Tlrea
Dome Light
AM-FM Radio
Cigarette Lighter
Rear Sliding Window
T'No bida are requested.
The second bid shou1d
Include an extended cab
with a short bod.
Tho bldo muot h
accompanied by a 100% tild
bond and performance
bond to the full amount .of
each propoaal.
Bids will be oponod
September 7th, 1995 :Ot
12:00 Noon at the District
office at 39561 Bar 30 Road
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. The
District'• main office ·ta
located three mllea 1outh:of
Tuppers Plains, Ohio on SR
7.
•
The Tuppera Plaine
Chealer Water Dlatrtct
reaervea the right to wetYe
any lnformallllea and to
relect any and all bids. .
TUPPERS PLAINS
CHESTER WATER
DISTRt!:T
By: Harold Blackaton,
President of the Bo~rd
(8) 25, 27, 31 (9) 3; 4TC
l hh.tgs are buuln' mthe

WANT ADS

....,.~lllllllllllllll. . . .

annual reunion at Meigs County
Fairgrounds at 1 p.m. in the -Grange
Hall. Bnng a covered dish and
table service.
POINT~ PLEASANT - The
annual Weaver reunion will oo held
at 12:30 at tbe West Virginia State
Farm Museum on Route 62. Family
and friends are invited to the picnic
lunch.

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

Meigs County recorder posts land transfers
Right of w.ay, Roger and Elsie M. Culley to CSP, Olive;
Right of way, Dennis and JuaniYvonne Young to TPCWD. Scipio,
I06 and 2.5 acres;
ta Bryant 10 CSP. Scipio;
Right of way, Larry N. and
Deed, Cecil M. and Mildred
Patricia Circle to TPCWD, Sutton, · Duckworth, George H. Schneider
to Marvin W. to Eleanor K. McK86.03 acres;
Right of way, Kenneth and elvey, Syracuse lot;
Deed, William F. Harris to
Kililberly Wilt to Columbus SouthRebecca J. Smith, Sutton, 1.4547
em Power, Scipio, 20.89 acres;
Right of way, Wallace H. and

acres;

Right of way, John Easterday to
Rebecca J. Smith, Sutton lot;
Deed, Jay Jr. and Lillian Marlene Hall to Middleport Pentecostal
Church, Middlepon Jots;
Deed. Norman 0. and Vera A.
Weber to Harlan E. and Karen M.
West; Orange, 3.925 acres.

MAl(£ lW&gt; F{(lt,..;£ A Jl(fl(;
r.HOP ~OA HIM N T,. ClASSf(DS

Chester Council Daughters of America meet
Chester Council no. 323,
Daughters of America met at the
Hall with Jean Welsh, Councilor,
presiding.
The Lord's Prayer and pledges
to the Christian and Americn flags
were given in unison.
Laura Mae Nice, J.P.C. Protem, .
read four verses from John 10,
chapter 16.
It was reported that Kathryn

Baum fell and broke her left arm
and Virginia Lee has a new granddaughter.
Several members were attending
tbe State Session in Miamisburg at
the time of Ibis meeting.
Jo Ann Baum was installed
Wednesday, August 16 as State
Councilor of Ohio in tbe Daughters
of America.
Mrs. Baum is a member of
Chester Council no 323. District 13

is really proud and wish her the ·
best A reception in her honor will
be held on September 9 at I p.m. at
the Nazarene Church between
Long Bottom and Reedsville.
Refreshements were served by
Faye Kirkhart and Mary K. Holter,
protem. Those winning door prizes
were Etllel Ort, Ella Osborne and
Laura Mae Nice. Also present
besides those already named was
Goldie Frederick.

ISave $6000 I

~ ~

ISave $6000 I

I
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RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

•

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• Otcver Side Air Bag
• Anlt·Lock Bra~es
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• AutomaltC Ovetdnve
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• Power Steering

• Power Brakes

• Power Windows
• Power Locks
·Ttl! Stee1cng
• CruiSe Control

• AMIFM Cassene
• 4 Captam Chatrs

• lndtrec1ltghting

·Color TV
• Onver SICie A1r Bag
• Ant1-Lock Brakes

• Premium Wood Pkg.
·Full Corwerscon
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• All Cond1h011

Boards
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• AutomatK; Overdnve
• V1s'ta ~~ Wtndows
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• Cru1se Control
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I

RICK AND BOBBI DII.LON

Saunders-Dillon
Bobbi Jo Saunders and G. Rick
Dillon Jr. were united in marriage
May 27 at St. Louis Catholic
Church.
"The. bride is the daughter or'
Doyle and Sharon Saunders of Bidwell, and the groom is tbe son of
Jenny Dillon Gallipolis and Rich
Dillon of Sconown.
Mgsr. William Myers performed
the double ring ceremony following a program of music selections
by Barb White, pianist and Sheri
Ho.llingshead, vocalist and cousin
ot the bride.
. The bride was escorled by her
either. She carried a cascading bou- ·
q11i:t of white and fuchsia roses
ac«nted by baby's breath. Katby
Ha_ger was the maid of honor.
' Wendi · Saunders, Elizabeth
EdJDonds, Angie Saunders and
Michelle Wellman were bride's
maids. They wore matching "ruchsia
salln gowns.
Flower girl was Tori Dillon,
dati&amp;bter of the couple. She wore a
ful$sla and white gown and carried
a white satin basket filled with

fuchsia rose petals.
Shawn Charles was the best
man. D.J. Saunders, Paul David
Dillon, Jamie Kerns and Chad
Barnes were groom's men. Dylan ·
Saunders, nephew of -the bride. was
tbe"ring bearer.
.
Valerie Jarrell, sister of the
groom, registered the guest.
A reception was held at Rhodes
Hall at the University of Rio
Grande. The fuchsia and white
theme was carried out at the reception. Betty Hollingshead, Mary .
Edmonds, Amy Vinson and Linda
Midkiff were the hostesses for lhe
reception.
The couple spent their honeymoon at Virginia Beach, Va.
Bobbi is a 1992 graduate of
North Gallia High School and is a
student at the University of Rio
Grande majoring in nursing. Rick
is a 1993 graduate of Symmes Valley High School and is employed
by Mountain Enterprises, Inc.
The couple resides with their
daughter, Tori, in Patriot.

Aspenites get chuckle out of fabricated story
ASPEN. Colo. (AP) - "Aspen
police are involved in a statewide
womanhunt for an unidentified
'wild child' who rampaged through
local singles bars Wednesday
night, leaving a string of wasted
males in her wake."
That was the lead on a frontpage story in Thursday's Aspen
Daily News. The prob~em was It

named a local woffian, "no less
wasn't true.
News Editor Curtis Robinson · than ·37 men aged 13 to 78 were
said a reporter typed it. up as a taken to local hospitals. Their.
prank for his girlfriend, but put the injuries included everything from
story in tbe wrong computer folder. severe bleeding due from hickies
Somehow, tbe story made its way on their necks to sexual exhaustion.''
onto tbe front page.
Some readers called the newspaRobinson would not say if the
per
and even came 10 its offices to
reponer would be disciplined.
buy
extra copies.
According to the story. wbich
'.'People are asking us to run
this once a week," Robinson said.
"It was a practical joke that 'Was
more successful than the originator
ever dreamed.'·
news articles in tbe society section
must be submitted within 30 days
. of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of tbe
occurence.
Cuckler Consulting Inc.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editting.

News policy - - - - - In an effon 10 provide our readership with current news, tbe Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event.

All club meetings and other

Retirement
Planning

rhe Sentinel News Hotline
·

992-2156

To offer story suggestions,
report late-brea~ing news
and offer news ttps

I.I

""

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Buslnest Phone 614-99'1-4216

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• Pow" Steenng
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• Powe~ Door locl&lt;s
• Powe~ Wroows
• Al.t/FM Casset1e
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�Page

8 • The

Dally Sentinel

Friday, August

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

25, 1

Giveaway

40

8 Wook Old Krtle n. Grey &amp; While
Playlul. 614 44 6·0580 Call Almr
3 . ~RM

E1ght pupptes s. J rrale a nd two
tamale . mother rs rutl b looded
Golden Retrrevet. 61 4 742 ·2S54

wOOhiP:T0:30 .:...--:;?"p_;;._
Wedneoday Servioco • 7 p.m.

Apostolic
Cburdl of Jauo Clorbt Apoololic
Vanlando .... Wanl Jl.d.

Holy Eucharill and
Sunday Schooll0:30 ......

Weltslde Churda oiCbrllt
33226 Olild='ollomc Rd.
Sunday School · II ...,._
Wonhip • IOLm., 6 p.m.

Weckle&amp;day Services ~ 7 pm.

Middleport Church &lt;#Christ
5th and Main
Pattor: Al Hattsoo
Youth Mini1ter: Bill Fru.ic:r

S'"'day School · 9:30 un.
Wonhip- 8:1S,I0:30a.rn., 7 p.m.

Holiness
Dan rille Hollnea Churcb
310S7 Stale Rouoe 32S, Langovlle
Pao10r. Rev. Ridt Moloyod
Sunday odlool -9:30 Lm.
Sunday wonhip - 10:35 a.m. • 7 p.m.
OU.Idren'a church - 10:35 a.m. Youlh 6 p.m.

Pu10r. Rev. --·- ·e·
Sunday od&gt;ooi -

Wedneaday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Sunday Sohool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S Lm.
Pomeroy First Bapllsl

Tappen Pllln Church ol Cbrha
PallOr: Stanley Minda
Sunday School - 9 1.m.
Wonhip - 9:45a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Paul Stinson

Eu&amp;Main S&amp;.
Sunday Sohool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Bradbur7 Church cl Chrla

FlrstSouthtrD Baetlst
41872 Pcmuoy Pike
Putor. E. LamarO'Brym&amp;
Sunday _School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S Lm., 7:00p.m.

Youth Mcaing - 5:30 p.m.
Evenin&amp; Service - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m. ·

We4ncsday, Bible Swdy - 7 p.m.

First Baptist Churdl
6th and Polmer SL, Middlepolt
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip -IO:IS Lm., 7:00p.m. :
A.B.Y.- S:30 p.m.
!.oro's Supper I" Sunday of every month.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Racine First BoptiJt
Putor. Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor. AarmY wn&amp;

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:40 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wodneaday Service• - 7:00p.m.

Rutland Church c#ChriJI
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
. Sund•y School • 9:30 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bradford Chu"'h or ChriJI
Olmer of SL RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evsn4elist: Derek Stump
Yooth Mini.ner. Michael Teaganlal
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 8:00 a.m.,I0:30 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service•. ·7:00p.m.
HlckorJ Hills ChUrch of Christ
PasLor. Joseph B. Hoskin•
SWtday Xhool • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• ·1 p.m.

Silver Run BaptiJt
Putor. Bill Liule

Sunday School - IO..m,
Worohip. lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sctvic&lt;:o- 7:30p.m.

LlbertJ Christian Church

Dext.er
PasLor. W&lt;X?dY Call
Swulay Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 6:30 p.m.

ML Union Baptlsl
· Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

SIDlday Sohooi-9:4S a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wodncsday Service• · 6:30p.m.

Langsville Chrlstlan Churc::h

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Bethlehem BapUst
Racine, OH
Pao10r : Dani&lt;l Benline
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study - 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Worship~

Old Bethel Free Will Bapllsl Cbu"'h
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middltpott
Sunday Sd&gt;ool- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; -7:30p.m.
Thunday Servic&lt;:o - 7:30

Wedn

Pattor. Jamet E. Keesee

Wedncsdly Service&amp; - 7 p.m.

Fallh Bapllst Church
Railroad S&amp;., Mum
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wedneoday ~ceo· 7 p.m.
Forest Ru• Baptist
Pastor: Arius Hurt

PallOr: Greaory L Sean
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 Lm., 6 p.m.

-

• Main S&amp;., MiddlqlM
PUIOr. Rev. Gilbett Cnia.Ir.

Wedneod.ay Servicco -7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:45 LID.

Evmina Services· 7:30p.m.
Wedncaday Servij;eo- 7:30 p:m.

SIDtday School • 9:30a.m.

Wcdnttday Service· 7:30p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: il;.enneth Baker

Faith Tabernacle Church

Pastor: Ken

Pall«: Dawn Soaldina
Sunday School- 9:4S A.m.
Wonhip -II a.m.

Molter

Sunday School-·10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Radne ·

United Methodist
Cnbam United MethodiJI
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (ht &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp; 4th Sun) ·
Wedneoday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor: Brian. Harkness
Swtday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

c.otvllle United MothodiJI Parillo
Plator: Helen Kline

Old O..ter Bible Christian Cburch
Sunday School: 10 a.m.
Momina Wen~: II a.m.
n...un,wonhip:7f""·
Wedneaday Service- p.m.

Cool.-tlle Churcb
Main &amp; Ftfth S&amp;.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Semces ~ 7 p.m.
Bclhel Church
Township Rd., 46SC

ML Olive Ualted Mahodl•
Off 124 behind Wilkctville

Melp Cuop,..tJve Pariah
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
,

1 Evenin1 ··1 p.m..
Wedneday Service -7 p.m.

Pas10r Rev. Robert Maoldey

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 6 p.m.
Wcdncsd1y Services- 7 n.m.

United Folth ChurcbRL 7 on Pomeroy By-Pau

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Won hi'P · 10:30
· o.m.

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
WcdncadaySe-'-• -7nm,
•· - n-

Keeds.-!_11~ M
Pa110r. Rev. ~oanel uh
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

ReedmlleFeD-Ip '
Churdl or lhe NuarODO
Pulor:Johc W. 0&lt;..'11••
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip · 10:4S Lm., 7 p.m.
Wcdncaday Servicco -7 p.m.

ScaJnd &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Episcopal
Croce Episcopal Cburdl
326 E. Main SL, Pomeroy

"

t

n~

P.

Q\\~(( 51rW !&amp;.,r.,

J.

E. Smilh, Sr.
· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:l0 a.m., 7 p.m.
~edneaday ScMQ: · 7 p.m.
Fu G
'
II ospel Llghthwse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

'

J

,J
&lt;

Pastor: Roy Hun.Lcr

/

/

Neue SeiUemenl Chun:h
SUnday Wonhip. 2:30p.m.:

,,

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Pomeroy OH
•

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th 2 d

Mlddl

&amp;

/1

LOHSE

PHARMACY
·
We Fill Doctors'
Prescrl.pli'ons
992-2955

~

Pomeroy

~ Add~u""'" '''"""""-""""•
~

992-5141
264 s

SWISHER

,
.ll

rt

profo,.wna/u..,noodlnt&lt;.,Uy.

POMEROY, OHIO .. 992-666n

....

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelile Saws

Crow's Family

-:

Restaurant -

•

"Ftaruring Ktntucky Fritd Chicken"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

214 E. Mal·n
992--5130
Pomeroy

.,

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Veterans

"Dignity and Service-A/ways"
Memorial Hospital
Cuckler Consulting Inc.
Established
1913
42994 SR 124
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Bus. Phone 614-992-4216 or
992--2121
•nn "61 9392
115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
1"""""
·
106 Mulberry Ave.
p
____J___________________o_m_e_r_o_yJL________

L-----------------------'------------------------L------o-u--~n________a_p~o--l---~w~·~Ted~C:u:c:kl:er~,~P:~:'':de:n:t

·-

·,

~9~92~-~2~1~0~4~------J - ~

CHICKEN BARBECUE
MIDDLEPORT
FIRE DEPT.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 26
SERVING STARTS AT 11 AM

REWARD
I

.

.

Lost Cat in the vicinity of
Mulberry &amp; Union,
Pomeroy. Grayish/black,
bob tail, fluffy.
Answers to Clevis.
992-3471 or 992-5181
Ask for Beth

'

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

NEFF REMODELING

H&amp;H SAWMILL

SERVICE

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

House Repair &amp; .

Remodeling
Kitchen ll ~lh
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios

Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

Reasonable

Insures - Experienced
Call Wayne Nell 992-4405
For Free Estimates

70

Yard Sale

5/ll:l/9.4. TFN

Gall ipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1st Trme Th rs YPtlr I C o r .=~, Mrll
Road. Sout h. R ro \.r and c, 3 ?5
25th, 26th, 9 5, Lots l"vurythtng '

All Yard Sa te s Mu!&gt; t Be Pa 1d 111
Ad¥ance OEAf) liNI 2 00 p m
I he day bctor n II1C ad IS 10 ru n
Sunda.y edrt1on ? 00 p 111 Fr1oay
Monday odrho n 10 00 a rn Sat
urday
01g Yard Sa~ t'&lt;lth. t'Sth, 2fith, JB
Srnrther s Ave nue. 9 ? Something
For beryono, r eYV AntiQues

614-742-2193
812/1 mo.

4113195 I

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Advance Dcadl t ni~ 1 OOpm l ho
My before 1t1 o ad 15 to run, su n

day edrt1on 1.00pm l rr da)', Mo n
day edt liOn 10 00;1 m Sa!urday.

August 28 thru SCJ&gt;I 4 38400 Sll

12 4 we st, ono mrla ot t sri 7 on
nght 'Now noms of C. n 1lts, clothes.
rewelry and glasswa1 e

.

It you are energetic and looking tor rewarding
opportunltlea, send your resume and salary history to:
Director
P.O. Box 464, CQolvllle, Ohio 45723
E.O.E.
81t011 mo.
'

r n . &amp; Sat, 3GO Pearl St, Mrddle·
port, 9am-5pm, wedd 1ng band sot.

Saturday Hrland Ad . Pomeroy.
lots ol items, evor,-thrng must go.
9am ?

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
.

VERTICAL CONCRETE WALLS, INC.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Movrng

limaslone &amp; Gr.anl,

Basement And Retaining
Wall Construction

Septic Systems, Trailer &amp;

614-446-0666
Residence: 614--446--2516
1151 St. Rt. 141, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Joe N. Say!'l

House.Sites.
Reasonable Roles

Office:

905

Sale,
ThU1 -rr1 -Sar

'

."'il't'l'illli:iug /11:

V1and St,

9·2,

Yard Sa le 1002 M..r 1r1 St. Satur

da,y, 9· 2 "fcens '

c lo th1ng, some
lurntture, toys, mrsc

80

Public Sate
and Auction

"

AucTio n s evei~ I rrrlay -Satur ·day,
7pm . Mt AH o Auct ron , Rt 2 ·33
MCrossroads' New rno rchandrse,
gro cerres 8 lots rno1e Ed Fra1rer

SAYRE TRUCKING

,614--742--2138

930
Rick Pearson Au c t1on Company,

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

UCINE
GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

Interior &amp;
Exterior

Take tho pain out or
pelntjng. Lot us do It lor
Free Estimates
Befor?! 6 p.m. leave
message.
After&amp; p.m.
.614-985-4180 "'""'

' -

J&amp;L INSULATION
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.

AB&amp;TAU,.O
3RD ST.

5:30p.m.

TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Check Out Our 'l'lre Prices
Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney

'"llf"

.

CALL
. 1·900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
811011 mo.

(602) 954-7420

mo:

• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
·Assistant Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuoa Instructor
614-992-3314

CONSTRUCTION
• Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling .
• New Additions &amp;
Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Free Estimates

i»~i)l'
YOUNG~$

CARPEitBR
SERIICE
110

Help Wanted

WANTED: COMMUNITY .
SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
position available to
teach communl1y and
personal skills to adulta
with learning llmllatlons
In Melge County. Hours:
18 hrii/Wk: 11 am·7 pm,
Sat!Sun.; 2-hour weekly
11at1 meeting; or as
otherwise scheduled.
High school &lt;18gree, valid
driver's license, good
driving record, t.hree
yeare licensed driving
experience and adequlle
automobile lnaurance

coverage required.
Training provided.
Salary: $5.00/hr., to start.
Send raeume lo: P.O.
Box 604, Jackeon OH
45640; ATTN: Cecilia.
Deadline tor applicants:
8129195.
Equal Opporlunlty ·
Employer

buy1ng w retcks , JUnk. au tos &amp;
tru c ks . Al so, pans fo r sale. 304 -

773-5343 or 773 5033

Junk carS or wrll p1clr. up grveaway
cars, 61&lt;1-992·6069 ;llly t1 me.
Top' Pr rces Paro Old US Corns,
Silver, Gol d. 01 un1on d s. A I: Ol d
Collec trblo s, P a porwPrgh t s, Err;;
M T S Com St-.op 15 1 Socond
Ave nu e. Ge lhpolrll . fl 11\ &lt;1-16·?8&lt;12

Wantea to b uy a,t1quo tHld used
lurm turo. '10 tent too tn rgo or roo
small Wrl! buy o nu P•HCe or com
plete estates. Os t1y M.H t1n, 614 992 7441
Wanted l o Buy Junk Autos Wnh
Or Wllhout Mot ors C all Lany
l r¥ely 6t4·388 -9303

WILLIAMS
TRENCHING

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•Septic Tanks
•Plumbing
•Water Lines- etc.
•Concrete Work
•Gravel.Hauling
•Welding/Fabrication
Certified
Licensed/Bonded

::.-::P ' Advanced Open Waler

25 Years Experience .

614-992-2834
9112-7821 712111 mo.

8·11·1 mo pel

A pt

Help Wanted
M tuntenan~.v

I'P so n noo n
Knowlorlg1! ot f. &lt;ll~.ttwtry
pr:ltnTifiQ . Oloctr tcRI" n n(1 plumbrng
helpful App ly at II/ NOI!h 4t ~
Avo , Apt 1. M rdd iC '-' 0'1. O H.
Sat morn1ng 9nm \ta rn
ed

r,

AV O N l All Area s
Spears, 304 675 14 ?9

I

Shnl 11 ~

AVON SELLS AT WOfiK Hb ME
No Inventory Or Dam Ia Door
l ndlruD 1·800 74 ? -1 1:3a

MODERN SANITATT N

- - -

__

$$.$ c~t home a t
w all~ All arer~ s :~0 &lt;1 tlll ?·?fi 45, 1
600 992 6356 IN Dill I l'
AVON

r AHN

Dental A&lt;lsr s t.J r'·l

__,

I )p(Hrenrfl

help l ut M ost H"T1 fJ OI t:u ll rt!qUifO
ments \/Or~ ~O C. r l rVIl all rludo Wll

•Interior &amp;. Exterior

Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Oh.

11 0

AverAge $6 $15111 r Bfl nnll!sl

•Room Additions
•NewOereges
•Eiectrlcslll Plumbing
•Rooflng
Also Concre1e Work

Decorated stoneware , wall le le phOnos. "ol d lamps, old lhermometers. old c lo c~s. ant1quo lurnrtura.
Rn1 enne Antrques Russ M oa ro .
own er 614 ·992 -25::'6 We buy
estates

J &amp; D's Auto Pam and Sal vage,

Bill Slack
992·2269 or
304-773-5960

SIGMAN'S

843-5124
992-2984

Sm1 th Durc~ Pontmc. 1900 ERst
ern Avenue. Gallipolis

Misc. Jobs.

PROCALLCO.

Cnr s Or

M odel

Trucks, 1987 M odol s Or N ew er.

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

1-90D-388-0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.

Wanted to Buy

Clean Late

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!

8/811

90

ALL

"Your Parts or Ours"
011 Change ................. ~ ............... $17.95
Front End Alignment ................. $19.95

8/4/lln

aul:tlo neur. c. omplete
auc tton
serv1cJ
lrcon:;vd
#S6 ,0h10 &amp; W ost V1r grn1a . 304 773:5785 Or 30tl ·ll3 S4Al

know

949-2882
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00' hr.

Every
Wednesday Nile
Everyone
Welcome
'

full 11mu

PSYCHICS

· ·Open Water

'

-Lost and Found

All Yard Sa les Mu !&gt;t fle Patd In

Scuba Classes Now Forming

•

60

ESTIMATES

1f1Wn

f

614-368·808&lt;1

Competitive salaries and excelienl benefits.

:

Gravel, Sand, ·

Free Estimates

ATTE;NTION
WOMEN BOWLERS
A Trio League is now
forming at Mason Bowling
Center, Tuesday, Aug.29th,
12 noon. Come bring a .
friend &amp; enjoy the fun.
More info call
1-614-992--5551
992-2400

'

u

Get Your Message Across . With A Dally Sentinel

Wonhip -7:30p.m.

1
----~==~~:J~Ji··--,--:~::~~~~::::~lt~CH;.U~R~C~H~SU~P~P~L~IE~S~&amp;;B~I~B~LE;S~-sNV~~~i&amp;~()!~~--t-~r;~B~I=LL~_ ;Q~U~IC~K~E;L~~--1-::~-=-=~-=----==~~ -:
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804 W. Main
992·2318 Pomeroy

IF'S COMING
ANNUAL BLOCK
YARD SALE
WILDWOOD
ESTATES

W&amp;lnesday Service• - 7:30p.m.

w~y School

PAULEY, AGENT

30 Announcements

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

PaaiOr: Rev. Robert
s---~-

SundaySchooi-IOa.m.
• Evening 7:30p.m. '
Tucoday &amp; Thunday- 7:30p.m.

-

BULLETIN BOARD
.'6110 column Inch weekdays
1800 column Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

2 112 miles north or Reedsville
on State Route )24

rr--~::------~=-------~--~_;R:CCIO:;r.~Rcv~-~D~-~A~.®~R=M~U~-«~---r-:::~------------~-----r~~~~~::~~~~=----,----~~1b::un:d:•~:•:e:~:i~:·~-~7~:3:0~p~.m~----y----.-~~::::::~~~1___,

Church ~.~nou.ncements
Spo.ftSOred
, by these area
.'
-eLhau•'"" .
. . . ~-,.,;;U!te

-

Sunday Sehdol - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneoday Scrvicco - 7:30p.m.

Rac:lne First Churc::h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Scott Rotc

Pastor: Gregory A. Cundilf
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Help Wanted

9 A.M.

Tens Community off CR 82
Pastor: Rol;lert Sandcrt

Pastor: Lawrence Bwb

Lona BoUom
Pastor: Rev. Curle• Muh

949-2512

Won:hip • 3 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.

Wonhip • 6 p.m.:
Thun. Family Tninina Hour 7 p.m.

985--4473

Sabbath School - 2 p.m.

Nazarene

r

BAILED TO

AUGUST 26

Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Church

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)
Limestone,

FOR SALE

FLATWOODS RD.

United Brethren

HAULING

HAY

Pupp tes Mothe r 111b. Fa the t
Shepherd , 4 males 2 rematcs

FREE

MEAT OEPT. MANAGERS
JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTTERS
Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meal dept. managers and journeyman meat cutters to
manage and merchandise meat departments In their
c·orporate stores located In Southeastern Ohio

WICKS

AND MIXED

YOUR NEEDS

PaslOT: Ray Lawinsky
Saturday Service&amp;:

Eden Unlled Brethren In Christ

Mkldleport Church or the Nazarene

ALFALFA

5:00 Leave Message

-

(Umestae Low Rates)

you.Veryreasonab~.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh·Dat Adventlsl
Mulberry H11. Rd., Pomeruy

ML Olive ComtnunltJ Churdl

Chester

•

Sunday School- 9 Lm.
WOnhlp ~ 10 a.rn.

Ol. Rd.63
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Ohio

10t"211M'tfn

WANTED: Part--time
INSTRUCTOR needed
to teach community
and.personal skills to
an adult with learning
limitations In Meigs
County. Hours: 8 am
Sat. thru 8 am Mon.;
must be able to stay
overnights. High
school degree, valid
driver's license, good
driving record, three
licensed years driving
experience, and
adequate automobile
Insurance coverage
required. If Interested,
contact Cecilia at 18D0-531--2302. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Middleport PresbJierlan

Faith Cospa Churcb
Lona'-llot!Om
Sunday sdiool- 9:30 i.m.
Wonhip -10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedncoday 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev, William D. Hinds
SlDiday School-9:30a.m.

Putor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday odlool and wonhip 10:2S

Dyeavllle COftlmunltJ Churdl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- 10:30 im., 7 p.m.

Darwin,

Ma l e
&amp; f er"',l·• ' KePsh o nd
Sh e p h e rd M •t•r. I· .. ~I)H"!S Out ·
s tde Dogs , 61&lt;~ 1\&lt;lt; 3/09 A! ter

ALL--BRITE
CLEANING SERVICES
Tile Floor Strip,
Wax, &amp; Maintenance.
Carpet Cleaning,
Complete Facility
Cleaning, Periodic
or one time
Free Sstimates
Call 992-7272 or
1--800--990-7272

614-992-6223

FREE ESTIMATES

110

Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.

Wonhlp - 7 p.m.
Wedn01day Scrvioc - 7 p.m.

Torch Church

t

·

State Rt. 33

•Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Harrisonville Presbyterian Churdl
Worship· 9 Lm.

Mono Cha~el Church

Pastor:

Trinity Church

Worship - 11 a.m.

Lany Few, Superi.ntenderu
Sund•y achool - I0 a.m.

Joppo
Pu!Or: Bob Randolph
W nhip 9 30
o
· : a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

•

Sunday School- 10 • ..,,

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Gru1d Street
Sunday School· JO a.m.
WOI"$h.ip • J l1.m.
Wednctday Scrvicca - 8 p.m.

New Life Cburch &lt;# God
S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chcoter

PaslOr: Rev. Krinna Rohin~m.

'Wo11hip · II :IS Lm., 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church

Sharm Haunn•
Wonhip · 9a.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Syracuae First Unltod Presl&gt;ytertao

Evenina- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Thunday Sc:rviccs • 7 p.m.

Puaor: PJ. Cluqnnan
Sund1y School·'lO a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
WedncldiY ServiCe~ • 1 p.m.

Presbyterian

Pa1tor: Robert E. Muucr

Sunday School -9 a.m.
Worship- 10 1.m.
Wed11esday Servic.ca - 10 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

1411 Brid&amp;cman St.. Syracuse
Pauor. Roy (Mike) Thnmpoon
Sunday School • I0 a.m.

Christian Fdlowslllp Cenlfr '
Salem 'SL, Rulland

Putor. Rev. Ralph Spi,.s
Sunday School -9:3!1 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Putor: Sharon Haunnan

SJriCUit Mission

Hazei-CommunltJ Churda
· OffRL 124
Putor: F..dael Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday -7 p.m.

11

''"""

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

RbBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
··New Homes

In Loving Memory Q1
HOWARDM.
SWINDELL
(September 4, 1912' AugusU5, 1994)
,One year ago today,
we sat and held
·your hand,
We kissed you softly
on your cheek,
and whispered,
"Dad, we love you
'
very much
But If you must go, we
will understand.
We loved you then, we
love yqu today.
But you did not go
•lone, a part of us
went with you,
the day you were
called home.
Loved anti sadly
missed by your
children and thilr
(amllles.

. PasiOr: Rev. Clllk Baker
Sunday !M:hool. -10 a.m.
·
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wcdnttday Services -7:00p.m.

Thu11day Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. ·
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m. (lot&amp; 3nl Sun)
East Letart

18 Years Experience.
Hours
Monday lhru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4 :00 p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. lo 12:00 p.m.

·

949--2.,168

One Stop Comple.te Auto Body Repair
Chuck Stotts

Housebfoker,61t. -3t -!./821

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2512

REASONABLE RATES

2/1219"""

, __

Thiid Ave.

Evcnina 7 p.m.

Sutton
PUior: Kenneth B1ker

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992--4081
Week Day B:Oo-S:J)O
Open Saturday
9:0o-3:00 111/lt,

In Memory

Middleport Pentec::ostal

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

For Free estimate call

( No Sunday Calls)

7122194

' St. RL J24, Racine'
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson

614-992-7643

•

Kll ten , Fre e To I\ Goo d H o me

NEW-REPAIR

614-992-3379-

Fill Dirt

Pentecostal
Penl.......ul"-blr

Bailey Run Road

St:rviee.a · 7:30p.m.

and floor coverings.
Give us a call at

BulldMing, Backhoe,
Services:
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Limestone,

Cllllon Tabernacle Cbu"'h
Cliftoo, W.Va... ,
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Scrvio:e - 7 p.m.

Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.

SWlday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

'

SL Paul Lulheran Cburdl

Church or Cod or Proph..,
0.1. Whi,. Rd. off Sl. RL 160

Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Cannel

Paitor: Sun Andenon

COMMERClAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

We wit! install carpet

F\1\\\TI\1;

Church or J..,. Chrllt,
ApoltoUe Faith
1/4 mile pall Fort Meigo on New Uma Rd. ·
Pu10r William Van -lokter
:
Sunday-7:00p.m·.
Wedncoday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Wodnelday - 7 p.m.

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

Room Additions • Roofing

Buzz'sCal])et
Installing, rnc.

110\\\111)

ReJoicing Ure Churdt
500 N'. 2nd A.... Mid4lcpott
l'ulor. UwmlCe Fomnan
Sunday School- 10 Lm.
Wednesday Servicco -7 p.m.

HarrlsonvUie Communltr Cl\urdl
Pastor. Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Garages • Replacement Windows

logo 304882·?5t9

ROOFING

P.O. Box 587

--·- .

Sllvenvtlle W..-d of Faith
Paotor: David Dailey
S10&gt;day Sohool9:30 a.m.
' Evenina - 7 p.m.

Tloe Believers' Fellow.tilp MlniJiry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pao10r. Rev. Marpn:ll Robin100
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
• PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

R • mnklin Didta11

.., Bible Cbum
oy Pike, Co. Rd.
Putor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip IQ-.30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

fellowship service 7 p.m.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Complete
DetaHing

:Friday, 7 p.m.

Sawnlay - Io Lm.
Thunday - 7 p.m.
Sunday • 7 p.m.

SIDlday School - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.

.

F~ay -

Middleport CommunltJ Churdl
575 PearlS&amp;., Middleport

Thu~y

JS
IOr.

Wodnelday • 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Kermeth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.
Pulor: Kenneth B1kcr

~c C. Wcindt

Sunday Scbool- 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. '

Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.

Sunday Sohool • 10 un.
· Evening - 7 p.m.
Wcdncoday Service.~ -7 p.m.

Pastor: ADJrew Milca

lnlrim pu10r1:

PallOr: Rev. David Rutacll

SalcmSL

212 W. Main SL

Homcmakin1 meetina. Ill Thun. • 7 p.m.

Fallh Fello-lp Crusade ror ChriJI

'The SaiYallon Army
llS Buuernut Ave., Pomeroy.

Wonhip ·9J.m.

·, ~- ·4'

Fairview Bible Chur&lt;b
Letart, W.Va. RL I
Pao10r. Rankin R001ch
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Wednelday service · 6:30p.m.

Pastor:. Florence Smith

Sunday Schooll0:20-ll Lm.
Relief Socicly/Prieathood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacnmcnt Service 9-IO:IS a.m.

Sunday School -9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

SWlday wonhip ~ 10 un.

Sunday SchooL- 10 a.m.

T1oo Cburdt or J01111
CloHit &lt;#Latter-Dar Salnll
S&amp;. RL 160,446-6247 or-446-74116

SJracu.e Firs&amp; Church&lt;# Cod
Apple and Sccood Sls.

Rudand Free Will Baptist

Pomero7 Chur~ of ChriJt

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:.30 a.m.
Wodneoday Servic&lt;:o -7:30p.m.

PUS«: Rev. Phillip Rid""""

EodUme House or Pnyer
(at Burlingham church off R...e 33)
Pa110r. Robert Vance

Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip · 10:15Lm.
. Sno~llle

Pastor. Dawn Spaldina
Wonhip ·9:00a.m.Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

Rulland Church &lt;#Cod

MI. Mortab ButiJI

Church of Christ

Salem Center
Pa1tor: Ron Fierce

"-x: Janioe Danner

Pine Gro¥e

-

,

Bible Swdy 'rue!"ay • 10 a.m.
· Rock Sprtngt
Pancr.Keilh Rader
Sunday School- 9: IS a.m.
, Wonhip • 10 o.m.
Youth FeUowlhip, Sunday- 6 pm.
RuUand
Pastor: Arthur Crabtree
Sunday Sd&gt;ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm. ,
Thursday Servicco • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
RIOI'Julzed Cburdl &lt;# J_, C~rllt
fll Lall&lt;r Dar Sa loll
l'onllnd-Racine Rd.

Coolville Ruad

Cuslom Building &amp; Remodeling

Free pupp .c s, p~n lll•aQio Roady

Howard L. Writesel

J.D. Drilling Company

--~~--~--~~~--------------------~~~

DAYS
CAR WASH

Wbltt'l Chapel Wesleran

Worship . 9:30-a.m. and 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday Service· 7:00p.m.
Rullalld c-uoltY Cburdl
"-x: Rev. Roy McCarly
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Bv...... • 7 p.m.
Wcdnaday Scrvil:ea -7 p.m.

Hemlock Grove Churc::h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sund1y achool - 10:30 a.m.

PomeroJ

Faith Full Gospel Chur&lt;b
Long Bouom
Pastor. Sieve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Pu10r. Robert E. Robinl&lt;ln
Sunday School- 9: 15 a.m.

Pastor: Peler Tremblay

Lutheran
SL Joba Lutheran Cburcb

Church of God
ML Moriah Chur&lt;b ·or Cod
Racine
Puur. Rev. Jarnco Sat,.Jjield
Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wodneoday Servicea -7 p.m.

WoJJhip - II un., 6 p.m.

Sun. Ma11 ~ 9:30am.
Dailey Muo - 8:30 Lm.

Sunday Sohool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - I0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service-7:30pm.
Laurel ClilfFree Methodist Church

10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

SWlday acrviQ:, 7:30p.m.
Wcdnc:aday acrvicc. 7:30p.m.

Wonhip • 10 Lm.

Comer Sy&lt;amon~ &amp; Socx&gt;od SL, Pomeroy

y Scmceo -7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart Calhollc Church
16{ Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-S898
l'ulor: Rev. Waller lL llemz
SaL Con. 4:45-5:1Sp.m.: Man- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Coo. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,

Peart Cbapd
Pastor: Flormce Smilh
SWlday Sohool - 9 a.m.

111CW1 mo.

Sunday Sohool -9:30 Lm:
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servio:e - 7 p.m.

Other Churches
Hobion Christian Fellowship Churdl
Rev. Woody Call, Speaker

Wonhip - 10 o.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Churdl or ChriJIIo
Christian Unloa
Hartford, W.VL
Pallor. Rev. Da\'id McManil
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wonhip -9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
\\!edncaday Servicea - 7:30p.m.

Wonhip · IOLm., 7 p.m.

·

Pastor: Rev. John Neville

Our Saviour Lulheran Church
Wain~&amp; and Henry Sla., R.aw:nowood, W.Va.

·--

AnUqullr Baptist
Sunday Sd&gt;ool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S Lm.
Thursday Scrviooa · 7:30p.m.

Mlnernlllt
Pu10r. Deroo Newman
Sund.y School • 9 a.m.

CONSTRUCtiON

Pa1tor:: Rev. Roger WilUord

Paotor: Glendon SlrOUd
Sundoy School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.

Sunday achool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnclday ScJVicc: -7:30p.m.

Wednesday Servicet · 1 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Ol. Rd. 31

New Haren Cllurda oltht Nuarae

Pu10r. Vemaaaye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Wesler an Bible Holln ... Church
75 PearlS&amp;., Middleport.

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

'

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo11h.ip- 11 a.m.

Heolh (Mkldlepurt)

PallOr. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesd1y Scrvlce ·7:30p.m. ·

Chester Chunh ot the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grale

Wonhip Service-1st and 3rd SID1day, 7 p.m.
NoW cdnesday Evcnin&amp; Servlce

PorUand First Churdl &lt;#the Nazar"'e
PuiOr.lohn w. Doualu
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Wonhip - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Sunday SchoOl - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -9 Lm.
Thursday Semooa - 6:30p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Durell
1/2 mile olf RL 32S

Pastor: Jel£ Smith

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip Service 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicoa - 7 p.m.

Forat Ru
Putor. Deron Newman

Reedsville Churdl &lt;# Cbrllt
Pu10r. Philip Slunu
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

VldorJ BaptiJI lndependant
S25 N. 2udSL Middleport

.

Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm.

Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sund•y worah.ip -7 p.m.
Wednesd•y pnyermeetin&amp;- 7 p.m.

Kingsbury Road

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm. and 6 p.m.
· W~y Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

RuUand Churdl cl the Nazarme
Putor. Samuel Buyc

P.u:wr: Keilh Rader

Paster: Rev. Dewey Kina

Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
SL RL 143 jull off RL 7

Flatwoods

leadina Cn:cl&lt; Rd., Rutland

Carleton lnterdenomlnallooal Church

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Worship· 9J.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Churcll
Pastor: Robert Manley

Pastor: Kcilh Cooper
Sunday School - 9:30 un.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.

Ke11h Rader

Sund1y School - 10 a.m.

Rase of Shlron HoiiiiHI Cburc:ll

Pastor: Roger Wauoo
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

RuUand Flnt Baptl.t Cbun::h

Pu10r: Rev. JamCI R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Sd&gt;ool· 10 a.m.
Wo~~l·llLm.,6p.m.

~

Zion Church &lt;#Christ
PQmet&lt;&gt;y, Harrisooville Rd. (RL 143)

Saaunlay Semce - 7::10 p.m.
Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 10 a.m.
Wodneoday Service-7:30p.m.

Ent!'1'rt..

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Wcdneoday Scrvicco ·6:30p.m.

Pastor: 4;1 Hayman

Wcdneaday Services-7:30p.m.

Wonhip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Free Will Bapllsl Clw"'h
Ash Succi, Mlddlepo1t

Worship - 11 a.m.

Sunday School 9:30 Lm.

Be:arwallow Ridge Church of ChrlJt
Pastor: Jack Colearovc
Sun!hy School -9:30 a.m.

Wonhip - II Lm.
Wodneoday Service -7 p.m.

Suuday School - 9:4S a.m.

Harrisonville Road
P;tsur. Rev. Viacw Roush

Keno Churdl or Christ
Wonhip- 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School • 10:30 Lm.
Pasaor-Jerfrey Wallace
Jst and 3 rd Sunday

Pastor. Ocron Newman

. Pastor.

Wednesday Service · 1 p.m.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

SMITH'S

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recoree Available
c.J/ for Low Prices
742-3212
Turn on Depot Sl. In
Rulllnd 1.2 miles.

Wonhip- 10 Lm., 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churda or lbe Nuareoe
Pastor. Rev. Thoma• MtCiuna

Central Ouster

CalvarJ Pilgrim Chapel

P11tor. Duane Sydamric:ker
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Wcdnaday Scrvicea -7 p.m.

As!Jllry (Syncuse)

Wodneaday prayer tcrvice • 7 p.m.

Wednelday Services ~ 7 p.m.

-.Rev. Ridt SluJ)ill
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:.30 LJD., 6 p.m.

Sunday Sd&gt;ool - 9 Lm.
Wonhip - lOam.
Tuesday Services -7:30p.m.

Tony's Portable
Welding

s ... th Belhel NewTealamHI
Silver Rid&amp;o

sr ....... Clwrdl .,..,. N__,

PuiOr. Sharm Haunnan

eotr....... ,.........

Pomoro7

Pall«: ,..,.. Miller

Tupy..-. Plalat S&amp;. Paul

-·

- ·; :

... .. .. ..
·. -

~

~

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~

------------I

992-3%4
Emergency Phone 985-3418

005

-~

Personals

=-----------------Please

help. lovmg ~amtly wan11ng
to adopt a baby, t all anyt•mo, col-

lect •I needed, 61 4 81\3 53BS

Abiding Concrete
Construction
Conunercinl nrul Rc~hientiul
Dri veways, Patios, Slabs. Parking lois. Curbs &amp;
Gutters Sidewalks, Porches, Tear-oul and
Replacement

For

MTN ST~TE MV S IERV IRAIN
Fall· Folrago lroun lr rps Seo
WY 's New Rrll'er Gorge N at rona!
Rrver, Oct 6, 8 . t3. 1 S. ?0 . .\ ??

•

-

wv 25&gt;50

•

DHIV~

H IMANAC;f f~

Ambt110n, Sell SttlltCr . Nf.ledc o To'
M anage A New lr lln!:.p ortahor\
locat ron In Gall rpol ~ Ar ea Muu
t h:we Vat rd Drrve r&lt;; t IUmse , Able
Tp W ork. Lo n g H our~ l o S tart
New loclltron [ xper r('llt u Wrth
Start Up l. ocatmn lt ol pl ul, Sfllary
Plus , Sond 11er.vrnfl l o Ma nager.

P 0 Box 164?0J Cc,tlmhus OH
43 228 .
D· r rver
·' s,

.

nr!l p &lt;H C tH.! r ~

.

Ne e ded

_,._so_o_J&lt;_7_,_~_31_ _ _~- , Fref1 t hCrryTax r, 6 11\ 1\d (, 83&lt;~t •
No Hunung No Frshmg No lres

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville'; OH 45772

l1ngnos s 10 lcur n. OJI qor ng ' per
6011&lt;.11 11 ~ . strong Sl'lt '. t' of rftspon
s rbilrly, rnr!l&lt;lt rvl) , ltt,~ r h ilr ty . and &lt;le. ,
s rro Ill lwlp p eo pl n P lo a s o 1n;
cludo at leas t orw png e 1 ellm~
about your soli, rnctudmg Work rei-.
oretlces and why you would be a
qualrf)ed applrcant flospond w
Box A 24 . r.1o Pi P leasa nt Hog·
rstcr . 200 Marn St . Pt Pt~t~ s an 1 '

Doug Crites

614/667-6825

Shop Classifieds

pass rng, on my larm on ·co unt v
Road 14 orr SandhrU Road
Rebecta (Becky) Rano01~
AU VIOl ators will be prosecuted to
the tulles! extent of the law.

Ear n $1000s Wl~f')(l y \tutlmg f!f'
¥Oi ope'j at homo At• y our im'l•,
Stan now No oxp, lrL•e su pplr eo;
rn fo . no otll rgatron Sl.!nd S· A S 1
to Pre s 11gc U nrt lt l P 0 · llu,
195609 . Wrn tc r flprmqs. 1 1

Young. SIWIM, 5' 10". 190 lbs , Ofl 327\9
hr .. bllaye8, 1nteltrgent and aurec Local Compa ny NUN!&lt;; Drrv er
t•ve. ISO matu r e 1nd1¥tdual lor
fnendsh•p and more, Jtmmre
G reen, PO 4 5699· 2610 81 , Lu -

C8SVIJie, Onio 45699·0001

Loader, For G ar h &lt;o~ g e !t uc k. Mu ~ l
Ha¥e COL ' s , Send n usume fo
PO Box 11/, S.ctwOII,Oi l.-tfJIJ\4

'

�•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
•

•

•

-: Friday, August 25, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

;ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

420
Onver With Class A COL wan~d
• We haul Within a 1 to 8 state area
No Nonheasr loads Home11me
• pa1d vaca11on &amp; holidays Call ~
598 6790
~

In 19 Acres, Sowards R 1dge
Road , Crown City $3S.01Mo 614
256-1559

f'4eed

BabySII!er In My Home Ad
• d1son Area 614 367 0325 Call

2 Bedrooms Fur ntshed 113 Acre
lot At 7 Soulh References Re ·
q..ured No Pets, 614·256 1304

: -.her 4 PM
Nurse A1de Tram1ng ProgramPomerow Nu rsmg &amp; Rehabil ltauon

NIGe JNO bedroom mobile home In
Middleport. 614-992

sesa

Cente r Wil l be ollenng tr ammg
'lasses 1n me month of October
Appl1cat1Dns are now t&gt;e1ng ac·
cepted at 36759 Rocksprings Ad
Pomeroy Class Sll&amp; IS 1tm11ed
Three (3) reference papers are

Two bedroom par! ly furn1shed
good el ean condttton porch
yard prtvate 101 aboYe New Ha
ven $275 wnh water aTld 58W8f
304 882 2466 anytime

req01r&amp;d w1tt1 appl1cat on Apply 1n

430 Farms for Rent

person berween lOam 3pm M F
ShHlents thai success fully com
plete the TCE class wt ll be &amp;IIQ!ble
lor employment Absolutely No

Prone Calls EOE
Oak H tll Ohro Based Trucktng
Company Look1ng For OTR Drrv
ers Stngle Or Teen Orrvers Must
Be Over 25 Years Old Wtth Ex
penance Good MVR All Equtp
ment Is late Model Conventtonal
Tractors w lh Fla!bed Call 614
682-7773 Or After 5 PM 61-'·
245 1304
Owner Operators Needed Top
pe rcentage pa1d haulln..,• wnhin a
7 to 6 sra1a area No Northeast
loads Call I alO 598-6790

440
.. tt

"ThiS Is not our def1n1t1on of carry-on
luggage flHing under a seat..

F\&gt;m~:troy Nurstng &amp; R&amp;hab Center

1s acceptmg applicaltOns lor Cer
tdled Nurs1n g ASS IStants Apply
at 36759 Rc ck spr tn gs Ad Po
meroy No Phone Calls EOE
Pos,t•on aYallable D1etar~ A1de/
Cook pan 11me Yanable shills
Potnt Pleasant Nursing &amp; Rehabil
1tat•on Center (lc rmerly Careha
ven) State Route 62 Route ~ . Box
326 Po1nt Pleasant WV 25550
304 67!;..3005
Secunt ~

guards must 10 able 10
work any shift mcludmg most
w ee~ends must have clean po
hce record good wor~ htstory, relia ble transpor tal on dnvers !1
cense and home phone Pay
starts at $4 75 per hour, 32 40
hours per week, call 614 669
2874 Mo n Fnday 8am 1pm for
appo1ntment

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR PoSitton AY&amp;•Iable
To Teach Community And Per
so na l Sktlls To Adults With
Learnmg l tmt tattons In Metgs
Count~ Hours 18 Hrs ! Wk 11
A M 7 P Lt Sat /S un 2 ·Hour
Weekly Stalf Meetmg Or As
Otherwtse
Sche du l ed
Htgh
School Degree Valtd Onver s ll
cense Good Or1v1ng Record.
Three Years L~eensed DrtYtng
Expertence And Adequate Auto·
mob le Ins urance CoYeraQe Re·
qu red Tra tn1ng ProYtded Salary
$5 00 /Hr' To Stan Sond Resume
To P 0 So~ 604 Jackson OH
45640 ATTN Cecd1a Deadline
For Appl tca nts 8/ 28 /95 Equal
Opportunity Emplo~er
WANTED Part 11me INSTRUC
TOR Needed To Teach Commun
1ty And Personal Sktlls To An
Adult W1th Learntng LtmttaltOnS
In Metgs Count~ Hours 8 AM
Sat Thru 8 A M Mon Must Be
Able To Stay 0Yerntghts Htgh
School Degree Vahd Dnver s l1
cense Good Onvtng Record,
Three l1censed Years DrtYing
Expenence And Adequale Auto
mobtle Insurance CoYer age Re·
qwed II Interested Contact Ce·
ctl a At 1 800 531 2302 Equal
Opportunity Employer
Wanted Truck Ortver Wtth Clean
MVR E~~:pene n ced Wtlh Dump
Trader A Mus il Call Ltsa Alter
5 30 PM 614 266-4951
Warehouseman Entry level post·
\ton for an energellc self molJYBt·
ed personable rndiv1dual seeking
a career 1n cable televtston Com
puler e:Q)enence a plus as IS pn·
or technteal or warehouse expen·
et;tce Valid dr~ver's ltcense and
good dnvmg record a must Sal
ary commensurale Wllh exper1
ence Excellent benefits Sue.
cesstul applicant Wtll be requtred
to submtl to druQ screemng test
Please send resume to Box R 22
c/ o Pt Pleasant Regrster 200
Mam St Pt Pleasant. WV 25550
EOE Drug Free Worllplace

180 Wanted To Do
Ace Tree Servtce Complete lree
care 20yrs exp &amp; tnsured free
estimates 614:441 1 t9t or 1
BOO 508 6887

Certtf1ed child care prov tder has
opentnQS lor days and evemngs
for chtldren of au ages Nutr~!lous
meals and snacks acltvtlles and
plen ty of TLC T 20 accepted 24
hours At 7 top of Eastorn hlll 61 4 985 4308

Wtll Do Babysitting In M~ Home
Mercerville Area. 614 256 1006,
6,4 256·9301
Wtll Do lntenor Exter~or Patntlng
Reasonable Rates Expenenced
References For Free EsTimates.
Call 514·24S-5755

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl
ness w•th people you know and
NOT to send money through !he
mail un111 you haye mYeS!tgaled
the otfertng
M ust Sell Local ladles Health
Club And Tanntng Sal on Full
Equipped W•tn Esrabltshed Cus
tamers Awa•tmg Re Opentng
Senous lnqUines Only 514 245

5903
TRAVEl AGENCY Own your
own traYel agency have a great
.nco me travel free 1 800 860
4492

.. /
~·

Wtll Do Babvsllttng In My Ho me
Spnng Valley Ar ea Cert1f1ed
CPR Hot Meals, 614-446 8340

for Sale
1988 1400 Clayton Honz.on, Gbr,
2 bath CA 304-937 2669

For Salem Glenwood tac land,
t 990 3br 2 bath mob1le home
c.ty water $28 500 With $4500
down Owner fmancmg 304 562
5840
Ltmued Oflerl 1996 doublewtde
3br 2bath $1695 down $259/
monlh Free deltYer~ &amp; se(up
Only at Oak.wood Homes, N•tro
304-755-5885

wv

New

1996 14J7o, mcludes sklrl
1ng steps blocks one year
homeowners tnst~rance and Sill
months FREE lot rent 0~ $1025
down and S207 17 per month Call
1 800.837 6238
Pnoe Busler! New 141170 2 or
3br Only $995 down, $195/month
Free dehyery &amp; setup On l ~ at
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304
755-5885

330 Farms for Sale
84ac , Mason Co black top road
partially wOOded po&amp;Sib!41 bi.Hidmg
sites w/road frontage McCarthy
Real Estate Connt&amp; Hunt GAl
Res 614· 423·9035 or Bus 61-4
423·7200
Appro• 480ac 250ac woods
150ac riVer bonom rrver lrontage
Homeslead Realty Broker 304
6 75 5540 or 304..88,2 2221

All real estale adverttslng 1n
thls'hewspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fatr Houstng Act
of 1968 whtch makes 11 tllegal
to adverltse · any preference
limttauon or dtscnminauon
based on race, color, re11g1on
sex fam1hal status or na110na1
ongln or any mtent1on to
make any sucn preference
llmltalton or discriminatiOn •
This newspaper W111 not
knowllngtv accept
advertisements for real estate
whtch IS 1n vtolalton of the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised tn this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportuntty baSIS

340

Business and
Buildings

For sale rent or lease 1200 sq
It commerc1al blHidmg, 112 mtle
outstde Pomeroy on SA 33 614992 7316

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
9!10ac lot, At 2 above Galhpohs
Ferry, close 10 town beaut1lul nv
er v•ew 304--675-724 1
Camp S1te t 1 38 Acres
Count~ Salem Townshtp
24 1124 Basement Complete,
Good Hunt1ng Good Bu11d1ng Stte,
$13,0"00 Cash, Ed Brown, 614
388·9973
Four lots near Raclfle approx 1
112 acres each start ng at $5000,
call614 949-2025
1 614 775-9173

REAL ESTATE

Soli d maple dresser wlhutch whJ
gold French Prov lnc1al desk , sot
of watnut end rabies 131 eouch wl
matchmg love sea t matching
dresser &amp; chest drawers all like
new 6 14 98S..3595

1987 Ton Toyota. P1ck Up, Elil
cellent Cond•hon 614 367 74-41

NORTH

1989 Chevy S 10, low Mtleage,
37000 $2500 61 ... ~

S!ove, Freezer Washe r Dryer
Retngera1or. 614 256·1238

H; WAS

1990 Ford F150 XLT 4x4, VB ,
AT, AC, 76 OOOmt loaded, nada
loan $9500, sell $9800 304·675
52«

Sunray Qas cookstoYe avaeadtl
color S150 304 773--9192

~TARD

OVER 1500 ACRES FOR SALE

3bedroom 2bath, Rancn sechon
al. ltreplace 12116 deck 1 11
21ots, Pme Ave Meadowbrook
304 675-1294
3br , 2 full bath, basement,
I
In porchJbreezeway'
\~"'"'""''1· double garage/work·
1995, 10 14ac
5 Rooms Bath, Basement Decks
Pool 1 1110 Miles From Gallipolis
Rt t-41 ~14 446 1026
Fer sale by owner three bedroom
house wtth three outbUIIdtngs ap
prox one acre pnme commer c•al
land a1 Ftve Po1n1s owner mow1g
must sell, ca\1614 992·6300

SCIOTO COUNTY lucasv1lle
Area 5 Wooded Acres, Good
For Hunung $-t,OOO Owner Ft·
nancmg Only $500 Down And
$88 87 Per Month 4 Vears 10%
Interest

Bedrooms 2 Baths 2 ..hies
North Of Vtnton $300rMo + S300
Depos11 -+ Electnctty, No P'ets
Avatlable 8116/QS. 614 388-9080
Extra Ntce 2 BR Unlurrw!hed Ga·
rage Apt CA In Galllpol s $3001
Lto No Pets! 614 446 2300 614
446-6787
2bdrm apts, tota l elec tnc , ap ~
pltances furntshed Jaund r ~ room
lactlmes close to schOol tn town
Apphcattons avail able at Vtllage
Green Apts J49 or ca\1614 992
3711 EOH
2bedroom apartment furnished,
ullh!les tncluded ac 304 773

9009
2Rooms Plus Bath latayeue
Mall No Kllchenl All Ultht1es paid
$175 00 Month Oepos11 Requtred
614 44&amp; 7133
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve
lfom $226 to $291 Walk 10 shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614 446·2568
E(Jial Hou11ng Oppor1un1ty
Execut1Yt apt, 1br. lull kitchen,
dtshwasher washer/dryer cent(al
atr &amp; heat water furmshed pr1
Yate entrance releq1nce s de
posrt 304-675 5733

We Gtve 10% D1scount For Cash
And All 10 Year Conlracts Have
A 4 Year Balloon
Lot For Sale, 901172 On Kusu
DriVe 614 4-46 0418
Scen1c Valley App le Grove,
beauttlul 2ac lots publ c water,
Clyde Bowen Jr. 304 576 2336

RENTALS
410 Houses for Ren1

191' 7 PM
GraCIOUS hvtng 1 and 2 b&amp;droom
apartments at \1 1llage Manor and
Rtvers1de Apartments n Mtddle
~rt From $232 $355 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Housmg Opper
lunttles

m

Stonewood Apartments now ac
cepung appl1cattons lor apart
ments, all electnc lor elderly and
d sabtllty FmHA substdtzed EOH
614 992 3055

House For Sale By Owner 1 8
4cres Wtlh House And Attached
Garage Separate 141130 Work
shop, 29 Htlltop Orrve, OH Netgh
borhood Road, 3 Bedrooms, LR,
DR 1 BR With Laundry Area Gas
Furnace Wtlh Heal Pump New
Water Tank Large Front Porch
Ctry Water, Cheap Utdttl8sl Green
Township Call 614 446 6302
Frcm6To 11 P.M

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
14)(56 2 Bedrooms, Clayton
l9ll3 Skn!lng, Ste ps, Blocks,
Porch 1 Beth 614 38&amp;9900

Very clean one bedroom fur
n1shed apartment m M1ddlepon
614·4-t6 3091 or 614 992·5304

Furnished
Rooms

C1rcle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town• Da1 1y Week ly Monthly
61-4 -446 2501
Rooms lor rent week or month
Starting at S120/rno Gall1a Hotel
614-446·9580
Sleep tng rooms wtth cook tn g
Also tra il er space on flYer All
hook·ups Cal l after 2 00 p m
304·773-5651 MasonWV.

460 Space lor Ren1
Have vacancy m my home tor el
detly 304 675-7541
Tra1l81' lot on Braod RUn Ad New
Haven, $60/rro 304· 773 5881

3 Bedrooms Full Basement 7
Mtles North 160 From Holzer
Hosp1tat Ava•lallle 9115/95 Can
Show 915!95 Oepost! Reterence
Requ red 614 446...0595
House For Renl In Country 2
Bedrooms Garage Gas Heal
$300/Mo. Oepos11 References
614 426 6926
N1ce three bed room house 1n
M i ddleport, no pets, 614 992
5658
Ntce clea~ 1br Clifton, double
lo! $275/mo $200 depost t no
pets 304 773 9192
Small House Near I&lt; Marl Unfur
ntshed S300rMo • Gas, Electnc
See A.l 10 Btrch lane, Galhpol•s
614 446 1822, Keep Trytng
Three or lour bedroom house.
107 Pleasant A1dge PQmeroy,
HUD approved, $300 plus utlhbes
6 14-698·6002 eo.oefllngs
Two bedroom house, carpeted,
stove, no refrtQeralor, clean no
pets deposu and relerences re
qwed, 614 992 3090

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
12x65 2bedroom 1 bath, on At 2
Crab Creek, 2 HorseUck ~d
$300/mo DepOSit &amp; references
304 369 6447
t -4170 Mobile Home 3 Bedrooms
Clos e To Green Sc1'1001 $350/Mo
61.-446 2056

Household
Goods

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers. Ranges, Refn
graton 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cit~ Maytag, 614 · 446
7795
•
Country Furnrture Furmture lor
Every Room 6rq , RL 2 North, Pt
Pleasant 304-67s.6820
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers relrtgerators
ranges S~aQg&amp; Appliance&amp;, 76
Vme Street, Call 6H 446 7398
1·800·499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home furntshtngs
Hours Mon Sat, 9 5 614 446
0322. 3 mtles out Bu!avllle P1ke

Free Oeliv8fY
ltvtngroom lurmture 304 ·875

1264
Refrtgerator Avacodo Green
Frost Free, $195, G E Refr~gera
tor , .New Compressor 1 Year
Wart•ntt~ like New, $350 Retng
erator Harvest Gold Frost Free,
S150 Kenmore Wash or $95
Whtr!poo l Washer 3 To Choose
From S150 Whtrlpool Washer,
Heavy Out~. Like New, 1 Year
Warranty $205 t.Aa1ch1ng Dryer,
$205 1 Year Warramy Whirlpool
Dryer Avacotla Green $95 Ken
more Gas Dryer Heayy Duty
$150 Electnc Range 30 Inch
HaMill Gold, $95, EleclrlC Range
Whtrlpool $125 MaQIC Chef Gas
Range S1SO Skaggs Appliances,
76 V ine Street, Galltpolls, 614 ·
446 7398, 1 SQ0..-490 3499

3.

9 7

DOWN

36 Chaw

1 Hellldllner

37
39
41
42

2 Of aircraft
3 Strokes gently

Rat·-·Retailed
Uncle
Lizard

4 Polson
S Over (poe\ )

6 Colorado ekl
resort
7 Ancient chariot
8 Status-

9 Lacking In

Vulne~able

By Phillip Alder

Block bnck sewer pipes w1nd
ows, lintels etc Glaude Wtnters
R1o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

540 Mlsce llaneous
Merchandise
1 Ratnbow sweeper wllh attach
ments 3(]4--675-1726
1 200 Golf Clubs Golf Bags S1
And Up 93 Pine Streel, Gallipolis
OrCall6144460417
1993 bown East Hot Tub Ewcel
lent Condtllon l Holds 5 People
Exeellenl Quality Cedar Wood
Wtth Cove r Wooden Sw1ng &amp;
Trellts 1 Wo~den Well House
Both ~m tsh Made Both W11h Ce
dar ROofs 61-4 446-1098
386 SX Laser Computer Wmd
ows 3 1 IBM Comp Includes
Prtn!81' $600 614-446 9278
3ft door &amp; storm door 304 675
7666
-4 Suncrest cemetery
$100ea 614-4-46·0465

lots

4 wrought ~ton posts, 1983 Cadtl
lac El Dorado, all tn yery QOOd
condtDon 614 992 3244
42 Inch Btg ~creen S!ereo T \1
With Surrour,U.ng Sound Capabil
tly, Ltke Ne'w Trade For Farm
Tractor, 414 Ptck-Up, 4 Wheeler
Wtth PTO, 614 256 6114 Any
ttme

8 Ft Truck Topper Ftbergl ass
Slfd1ng Wmdows $275 61-4 388
9780
Baby bed stroller, carseat
walker 304-675-4548
'
Chest Freezer $100 3 Pc Ktng
S1ze Bedroom Suite~ S200 An
ttque Dresser Vantty Wtlh Mirror
$80, 2 Swtvel Chaus With Sofa
$125 Office Desks $15 &amp; Up T1H
er $45,614 379- 2720
Chctce corn fed beef lor the
lreezer, $t per lb hang1ng wetghl
614·985-3805

Elecltlt Wheelcha~rs ISc.ooters
New / Used Scooter /Wheelcha~r
Lt lts, Sta lf way Elevators lth
Chatrs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
H t·Eflec1enc~ l P Or Na1urat Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1 250 Installed 1 800 287·6308
614 446 6306 Duct Systems And
Att ConditiOners Froe Esornates

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Rebulll In Stock
Call Ron EYans 1 000·537 9528
Kenmore stde b~ Side relngerator
With 1ce and water d spenser one
year old 614 985 9813
l&lt;tng s12e water bed with 6 draw·
ers bookcase headboard, two
padded covered ra tls, waveless
mauress heater and emas 286
MulbiWY Avenue Pomero~ 614
992 6535

560

5 Bla ck Lab pups AI&lt;C Regts
tared 304 67!Hi359
8 Week Old Beagle Pups 2 Bea
gle Dogs Runnmg 614 256. 1902
AI&lt;C Aktta female puppy 6wks
old pick of the litter, sabletwh te
wtblack mask, shots, wormed, &amp;
pOOIJ'OU ~4 6 75-6253
A.t&lt;C Bassett pupptes 5 &amp; 6
weeks old read~ to go $100
614-667·3856
AKC Regtstered Chow Chow
Pupp1es Shots Wo rmed A l so
Pupptes 112 Chow S35 Each
614·388-8-436
A.I&lt;C regtstered Dalmatt~n pup
pes 1 wks female $75 male
$125, ttrst shOts a11d checked
614 985 4401
AKC Aeg•stered male Pomera
ntan wh tte 614 992 3085 after
4pm
AKC Regtsterea Ger man Short
hatred Pomter Pupp1es $75 00
614 245 5697
Full blooded male Sh1ht2u St 50
lull blooded tamale Sh1ht2u $100
614 992 6456
Full Blooded Mal e S1'1 1h t2u For
Stud 614 446 2153
Jac~

Russell terr ers pupptes lor
sale $250 each 1 O• lull grown
614 742 2050
Pupp tes mtmature Schnauzers
salt &amp; pepper also Toy Poodles
AKC , shots aM wormed 614
667 3404
Tennessee Mounta tn t&lt;err pup
ptes read~ to go 304 675 7911

570

Musical
Instruments

2 Year Ol d WW Ktmba!l Prano
L1ght Oak, E1cellent Condrt1on
614 448 4989
For Sale Console Ptano Wanted
r&amp;SJ'Onatble party to make low
monthly payments on ptano See
locally Calli 800 268-6218
Selmer Bundy llute w/case &amp; car
rytng case. exe cond 304 675
1501
Snare Drum !Case Flute /Case
614 388 8711
Trumpet Bacn TR 300 W th Me
nel Valves Used 1 Year, New
$645 Sell For $300 614 245
5670

Sola lbveseal, cha~r, 2 112yrs old
Clayton Jewel tone Platd 304
675-4516
STORAGE TANKS 3 ,000 Gallon
Uprtght, Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Oho, 1·800·537 9528
Sunlight Pop Up Tr uck Camper
For 8 Ft Bed, As~ung $1,500
J M Truck Bench Soat Wtth Oak
Drmk Hold•ng Arm REist $400
614-245-9109
Super Smgle Waterbed $150
Bundy Alto Saxophone $350
614-446 2192
Wanted mformattoh ol Rober!,
SR, th, Adama Famtly Buned. tn
Adams Cemetery Mason Ctty S
Adams , 5930 Sycamore Bartlen,
TN 38134
We W•ll Be SelhnQ The Timber
On Th1s 100 Acre Farm ln Vmton
County 16w A.nd Up At The
Stump, 6t4-685-Xl64 •

630

Livestock

AMHA a M1n1ature Uare, 37"
show qualtr~. 2 yrs old &amp;Kcenent
reftned conformatton $700 614
992 5188
Crossbred Cht Angus Matne
Angus Cht Mame Cows 22 Pas
ture Bred Hatters Appru 1000
lb Shoulij Call In Feb March
Trade Feeder Calves 614 388

EJ~tra N1ce Yearly Patnt Ftlly, 5f,i
245 5087 304 675 4693

1990 Vamana Waver unner LX
650 $2800 304--67!;..6352

Pheasant &amp; Ouatl 6t4 446 7410

1995 Kawasaki 750 ZXI Jet Ski
w•th cover lour year extended
warranty and tratler asktng
$595() 614 992 8026

Hay &amp; GraIn

Hay rolls $20 Deltvery storage
a11atlabte Morgan's Farm Rt 35
:xl4 937·2018
SqUare bales $1 $2 Round bales
S1Sea Taktng ord~:trs tor 2nd cui
bng unb! Sept 1 304 675·3960

TRANSPORTATION
710 Autos lor Sale
'65 Mustang sharp $4500 or
trade lor 4WO 614 992 5532
1971 Plymouth Roadrunner Or1g1
nal 340 Engtne Good Condttlon
$2 000 614 388 8863
1978 Cougar XR7 gs 200m• 507
Parttsh AYe Pt Pleasanl

760

!985 BUIC~ le Sabre ltmtted Edt
tton runs &amp; loo~s good Truck
topper lull SIZe Xl4 675-5106

block ISOea

For Sale
or Trade

Budget Transmtsstons, Used &amp;
Reburll AU Types Accesstble To
0v8f 10 000 Transmtsston Also
Parts Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614·379 2935
New gas lanks one ton truck
wheels radtators lloor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto Rtpley W\l 304 372
3933 or t 800 273 9329
Topper tor 85 '92 Ford Ranger
good condition 1100 814·
965 3S4B
ver~

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

~1-;:98:::9:-::P-on-1-:-la-c"'F"',-e-b-,d-E-,-,.-,-,.-n·ll

2 stlage wagons New Halla nd 1
row 11eld chopper Gall blower
304-675 1858

1990 Lumtna Sedan, \16 looks &amp;
runs excellent. S4,000 1986 Pon
toon boat $5 sao 304·882·3266

•AugustTraclor Sale
Agco All•s tra ctors w11h world
famous a1r cooled d1esel engmes
41 &amp; 52h~ all come standard wt
r'd tat t res Hyd spool valve
ropes &amp; canopy 4yr or 4 OOOhr
dr1ve tra1n warranty warranty best
tn lhe industry
4650 2wd c1 np $13 900
4660 2'.vd 52hp $15 900
4650 4wd 41 hp $17 900
4660 4w0 52hp $20 500
Ftnanctng for 3. 4 or S~rs at 4 9%
or take cash re bate Keefer s
SerYICe Center, St Rt 87 Pt
Pleasant &amp; Rtpley Ad 304·895
387•

1991 Chrysler Lebaron QOod
condttlcn ei.lt 614-992 3314

Red 1986 Trans Am Good Condt
t1on 1983 New Yorker 814·441
0534 614 446·1514 Leave Mea

Farmall Cub Wtth Culttvator. No
Sunday Calls, 614 256·1139

720 Trucks for Sale

John Deere 730 Otesel John
Deere 50 Gas 614-379 9381

1978 Ford F150 Super Cab, 35t,
auto tool box anvfm, ale power
cOOYerter $2 950, 614 949·2249

Massey Ferguson, 165 Tractor
$5,350, New Holland Mowtng f.Aa
chrne, $895, VBfme&amp;r Round Bal·
er $2 500, T020 Ferguson Wtlh
Bush Hog &amp; Blade $2 550, 614

28e-6522

1992 Ford Escort LX Wagon PS
PB, crutse 1111 exc cond · 42k
mtles 304-675--7951
1992 Plymouth laser 41 ,000
m11es BICellent condition, grea1
gas mtleage, $8600 6 t 4 992
6725
1995 Gran Prix low mtleage, exc
cond 304..fJ75 406A

&amp;age

1981 Ford F 150 $800 814· 446-

6956
1984 Chevy S 10 4x4, 4 Speed
New Clulch Brakes. 2 Tires. 614
367 7279

"IJI.\ C££., r WNOO .I 6lJE:&gt;~"l
!TtL W€.16.4 'OOJT A FOOND
OR SOl

'"rc uKE. "'

i

I"£DDUI'\

PE.Pf€i!()Nl

PIZZI\
talveyED
TO 210€U.\
5W££T 1

If West has the club kmg, you can
take a wmmng finesse and hope to rna
neuver an endplay But 1f West had the
club king, surely he would have ra1sed
spades
So, after wmnmg the second trump m
the dummy, lead a low club toward the
JOCk If East wms with the kmg, you
have two discards on dummy 's are
queen of clubs for your diamond losers
If East ducks, you wm w1th the JOCk,
play a club to the ace, ruff a club to
bnng down the king and discard one di·
amond on the club queen
The book IS avmlable for $16 00 from
The Bridge World, 39 West 94th Street,
New York, NY 10025·7124.

'

at Bridge," 1s available, auto·
f[raphed upon request, for $14 95

STRIKE A&amp;ON N M WIR ON
HIGH PR.CE!: ~HOP Tl-£ CU.SSF£DS.

IFRIDAY
TIIAT'$' A

Gc(f} lpGA,.
UM.
SI',.E'. UMM. ,

tor&gt;

ASTRO·CfRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

'blr

Freeman's Heattng And Coollr;~g
lnstallatton A.nd Servtce EPA
Cernhed Residential Commerctal
614 2561611

servtce or repa~rs Master Lt·
censed elecutctan Ridenour
Electncal W\/000306 304·675·

1786

'Birthday

Froday, Aug 25 t995

~estder111al or commercial wtnng,

new

your Astra -Graph prediCti ons today by

ma11&lt;ng $2 and SASE lo Aslro Graph c/o

Aootmg and gutters commerctal
and resldenlla l mtnor repatrs 35
years expenence B&amp;B ROOF·
lNG. 61-4 992 5041

wv

N C

In the year ahead don I tgnore or d1s
count opportuntt1es otfered to you by
close fnends What works t or them
should work for you

as

well

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapt 22) Cond1110ns
w111 be unsleady \oday Th1ngs that usual·
ly go smoolhly m1ght unexpectedly m1s

ttre

If you lose your cool tt could make

bad developments worse Get a tump on
Ide by understanding the tntluences that
govern you tn the year ahead Send for

th 1s newspaper P 0 Bo~ 4465 , New
York, NY 10163 Make sure to state your

1nchned to help others today 1f tl s your
own tdea U someone requests a1d before
you thJnk. of It however you mtght want
to refus~

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Analyze any
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0tt 23) Try no\ ·10 gel 1nvestment proposals offertng p1e m the
too 1nvolved today w1th a fnend who has sky poss•brltttes wtth a Jaund iced eye
a reputation tor free loadtng Thts person today Proceed cautiously or you may get
mtght have devtous reasons lor wanttng burned
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) lmpulsove
you 1n a spectal place
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) lJQ not lake dec1s1ons could cause senous compllca·
foolish unnecessary challenges today JUSt ttons today Do not render JUdgments tn
to prove a pornt Nothtng Will be gamed by has\e regardless of how severe lhe pres·
zod tac s1gn

pithng

yourself agatnst unfa1r odds

DNNSOUN

RLSVEHL

HLP

UDOOLI

Z LDS

K

P L Z

0

uos

S K N 0
SEIPLS.
KPNLSKCS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The lnal ol a case os a th,ee·legged stool and two advocates~ - Ch1et Just1ce Warren E Burger
""'

a judge

/

THAT DAllY d.~

wo•o

~\!ja

PUZZLII

-

OAMI

0

R:eorronge lett.,rs of tho
four scrambled words bo
low to form four words

UTSAGU

II I
HY T U0

I' I I I
-:N.,-:;A-'1 ~

r ---;0:--::N-c:-Y

I

f

1urn 1ng f1fty was a tough t1me

for my hu sban d
H1s
I 1 I I"
Grandma told h1m "You 'll
never be as old as you are
r -::-::-::-::-.,----. thiS m1nule and you II never
f---,r,..,.,_:&lt;,_1-,-T--,IJr D
- .--l be as • - - · · e1ther '
s
l
1 romp lcte the dwlkle quoted
3

I I I I I

0

P~INI NUMB£~£0 LEIIERS IN
THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE IEIIEAS
TO GET ANSWER

THEW, OWC.E "' WEEK,
WE "'L\. GET TOC.ETHER
~D T,t\LK .-.eoUT WAAT
WE'VE READ' 115 A
LOT OF FUN'

Ron s TV Servtce, spectallzrng m
Zenith also serYicmg most other
brands House calls, t 800·'797·
001 5 WV 304· 576 2398

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pum~s A1r Condlltonmg, t1
You Don't Call Us We Bolh Loaal
Free Estimates, 1 BOO 287 6308
614 446·6308,
002945

by Luis Campos
Celebrity C1pher cryplograms are crealed hom q\.'Olaboos bw famous peopkl pat1 and preMf'll
Each leHer In the crpher stands l or aiXllher Todsy s clue V equals F

.
•
.
•
•
.
by f !I ng '" the m11Stng word1
1--l-..L-.L_JI-...J._.J you -deve lop from srcp No J below

.BIG NATE

Earl s Home Mamtetfandt vtnyl
stdmg roolmg, ewlenor patnllng
power wash tng Free Estimates
6t4 992 4451 or 614·992 4232

0

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

General Home "aln'·
..,
tenence Patnllng, vmyl stdtng,
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mobile home repa~r and more For
tree estimate call Chat 614·992·
6323

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

58- Canals
59 City &lt;n Ill

8

SA~

820

mansion
50 Hat debit
52 Long garment
54 s w. Indiana
55 Oriental
beverage
56 Omen

Ph1Uip Alder's book, "Get Smarter
{rOm P 0 Box 169, Roslyn Hts , NY
ll577 ·0169

l:tome
Improvements

C&amp;C

Condtllon 61~ 367 7t92

, BORN LOSER

aklllo
10 Unuaod
11 Lyric
17 Rip
19 North of Ky
23 Table
aupporta
25 TemP. unit
26 Man a party
27 Tardy
28 Paoolng
(of law)
29 beolgnar
Chrlollan31 Appoint
32 Yllo·thaped
jug
35 A large
number
38 Boxing·
victory abbr
40 Deer hide
43 Hop kiln
45 Dakota Indian
47 Mora
dlotrooolng
49 O'Hara

m1ssmg trump How do you continue?

SERVICES

1986 Pt~mouth, runs goad looks
good, 8mllm cassette good mten·
$1200, 614 992 5456

610 Farm Equipment

le

PAY YOUil BIL'-.

30 Globe Star Camper, &amp; Lol
Holiday Hills Excellent Condttlon
Electnc Water Atr Heat SeW
age, 17 500 614 894 3 101

Btl! Omcks Home Improvement~·
add111ons remodeling roof1ng
Sldtng, plumbtng, etc Insured call
BtUOrr1ck, 61 ~ 992 5f83

1988 Oldsmobile Tornado
average condl!lon, loaded' $4
not, 614 247·2500

IS Tt4AT I
vJON'T
AlrL.~
TO AFfO,l&gt; TO

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1986 Olds Ca l ats Runs Good
$t,600 Call Alte r 5 00 614 446
1543

01,

'

'

~4-576-3145

Appliance Paris And Servtce AI!
Name Brands 0v8f 25 Years Ex
per1ence All Wo rk Guara nteed.
French Ctty Ma~ ta g, 614 446·
7795

590

s-11&gt;~ !!:Ff'ecrs oF
Tt-l~ Mfl&gt;I(ATIOf'l

Tt4e

327 heads, 1 350 block, 1 327

1993 22Ft Dutchman AC IHT
Sleeps 7, Rei !Freezer, Bunkbuds
Full Bath, Excellent Cond11ton
614·446·9278, S8 900

1964 N ssan 50th Anmversary
300ZX Turbo
T Top
Ntce
$4 000 OBO 61-4 367 Ot38

[]]

AF,AIP T~AT ON~ Of'

5532

1981 BW Rabbtt $1 300 614-446
0156

1983 OkJs Cutlass Supreme,
Body Excellent Runs Good
$1 200, OBO 614 441 1434

x·~

1994 Ford Ranger long bed cargo
cover fiberglass. black 614·9g2

790

1983 Olds Custom Crwser $500,
614 992 2271

·FRANK &amp; ERNFST

Au1o Parts &amp;
Accessories

1978 Fattmont 6 Cyltnder Auto,
Runs Great Good Clesn Cart
$1 000 6 14 441 1687

t98t Cttatton, Runs Good $700
614 643-0012

WELL, 11M NOT SURE I
CAN HELP IT.. IT'S ME ..

17 open bow Inboard, 140 hp,
$4000 call 614·992 4004 lor
more tn lormauan

8306

640

Wi-1'1' ARE '(OU ALWA'1'5
'(ELLING AT ME?

14 Ft Bass Boat W1tli 9 8 HP
Mercury And Foot Operated
Trolltng Motor, 61-4 -446·1759

1977 Starcraft 16 wtth top, Mer
cury 90hp wtth power tr1m and
tratler :J:l4 773-5707 after 4pm

.Ten black whtte laced calves
ltghtwe~ghts, 61-4 69S..7244

.PEANUTS

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

1985 Mustang GT Automauc T
Top $3 400 614 441 1587 leave
Message
1966 GraM Am Auto PS PB
Cru1se Jilt 109 000 Mtles $2 000
F1rm 614 256-6543

Royal Oaks Resoft Membership
lor sell $1800 or trade lor any
! htng of equal value 304 343
0451

Septtc Tank Jet Aeratton Motors,
New &amp; Rebuilt ! Ins talled Ca ll
Johns John 614·446 4782

New 3 potato plow $80 3 pt 6
brush hog $485 614 843 5216

1995 Yamaha Wamor four wheel·
er 350cc 6 speed w1th reverse,
excellent condition $3800 080,
614 992 6977,

Red Raspberrtes , Taylors Berry
Patch 614--245-904 7

Lt ttle g1rl s clolhes s•ze 4T 4
Carseat 304 675 7169

Royal Oak membershtp Admuat's
Club 304 675--3238

With saddle compartment 61:4
985·9813

1981 1100 Honda Interstate
$2,500 614 448-9543

1985 Ford Escort $800, 1984
Ford Escort Stanon Wagon $600,
614 44&amp;-6958

Far sale or trade Ro~a l Oa~
membership 614 992 3314

Relngerators, SloYes Washers
And Dr~ers All Recondlttoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
Will DeliVer 614-669 644 t

New 16 bumper pull horse tratler

1979 1000 Suzuki motorcycle tor
sale lot of new part, runs excel·
lent 6 t 4 992 6069 call anyume

Canmng tomatoes tor sale brtnQ
contamers p1c~ ~our own or al
ready piCked, 614 247 2061

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Kmg S1ze Waterber:l Headboard
With Small M1rror Header &amp; New
Manress $150 614 446 99-45

Now available at Pamt Plus for
~our log home cedar Sldtng,
or outdoor furmture A.KZO NO
BEL SIKKENS COATINGS 304
675 4084

Otscountlarm tractor fans lor
Massey Ford IH &amp; otherst
Stder s Equtpment Co, Hender
son W\l 304·675 7421 Of' 1 800
277•3917

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF t!G
,
Unconditional hlet•me guarantee
local references furnished Call
{614) 446 0870 Or (6141 237•
0488 Rogers Waterproof ing Es·
tabhshod t975.

580

Do you have trouble countmg and
bUildmg up a p1cture of the closed
hands? Vantage Press has published a ·
book, "O ne Tnck Short" by P S N
' Sarma, that will help you to analyze the
clues, especmlly from the auction
The deal~ first appeared m the au
thor's newspaper column m Madras,
lnd1a They are at an mtenned1ate, or
shghtly h1gher, level Be adVJsed that
some explanations are abbreviated
Also even though &lt;t 1sn'I that senous,
the auctions often follow the Prec1s10n
Club, wtth the author assummg \he
reader knows 1ts mtncacies For exam·
pie, when he uses asking b1ds, he never
explams them
ThiS deal will gtve you a good tdea or
what to expect from the book Playmg
m four hearts, you rece1ve the spade·
two lead Jack, ace, four East returns a
spade to dummy's king You continue
with the heart queen, East wmnmg
with th e ace and returmng the last

1973 Honda 350 motorcycle,
good condttton S500 OBO 304
675·7350

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groomtng Fea
lunng Hydro Bath Juhe Webb
Call 614·44&amp;-0231

Db!
Pass
All pass
Pass 4 •
Opemng lead •2
Pass

Read the cards

TIME!!

4x8 Factory Tra1ler W tth Dump
Bed
Four 3 1 xtoxso Wh tte
Ratsed laredo Ttres MountEtd On
4 New While Spoke Rtms Call
Anyt•me Alter 5 PM 614 3677927

FurntshM Ethc1ency Share Bath,
$195/Mo UltlttteS Pa1d 607 Sec
and Galltpohs 614 446 4416 AI

.. '?

J 10

I 4

Pass

TH' LAST

Furmshed Apartment All Ultlmes
Pa1d Downsta~rs S1851Mo 919
Second AYertue 614 44&amp;3945

51 0

t K

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

NOT ME!! I GOT
CLOBBERED

4865X Ptonex Computer Wttl'l
Mon ttor And Mouse And Soft
ware Excellent Fo~ Student. $700,
614-44HI210Mer5PM

MERCHANDISE

For Sale by owner 3br 2 story
104llberty St 304-675-4677

• 9 7 5 4
.. , 8 6 2

.. 5 4
•K76543
+A 6 2
•J 5

BARNEY

Furntshed 2 Bedr.oom Apa rtment
Across From Park GallipOliS AI
C, No Pets References Oepos1t
Requ1~ed
$350/Mo 614 446
0577

450

., A 2

SOUTH

2 Bedroom Apartment, Trash
Water, Sewage Patd, S2951Uo +
DejJOSII, 614-446·2481

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Heat Pump

3 Bedrooms Bath &amp; 112 liYmg
Room Fam tl y Room , Ftntsl'1ed
Basemem CA In Ground Pool
614 446 4895 Please leave
Message

4AI0763

.,g

Majors
21 Stoep slaga
22 Zaro
24 School of
modern art
26 Slid on onow
30 French queen
33 Light brown
34 Protection

Answ.r to Prevlou1 Puute

Both
Dealer East
West North East
South

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jackson, OH
1 800.537·9528

Gas Furnace 1 Acre Garage
Adchon Area Pnce Reduced To
$57 000 61 4·367 7267

aQ 9 8 2

~

2

EAST

WEST

lngred~nt

20 Actor -

• Q8 3
•A Q 4 3

t903 Chevy hall TWT truck
leer topper. Ssp, rear positive
tractton 2,,000 mtles, excellent
condlllon 614·949·2681

4-46-2957.

Ntce two bedroom apartmen t
Pomeroy 614 992 5858

f.lo1sr

8Y~E£.S£".S

1 Weaken
4 Smolllnlot
, 8 Jetl
• 12 Earl Gray, e g
13 Cheers
14 Take apart
15 Crall
16 Greek
philosopher
18 Varnish

8·24 95

•K J
•Q J 10 8

" EEK&amp;MEEK

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur
ntshed and unlurmshed secumy
depoSit requtred. no pets 6U
992·2218

31 0 Homes for Sale

Lo&lt;;au&gt;o On Edgemont DriVe, 3
Bedrooms, Ftmshed Basement
Ftreplace, CA, DIShwasher 1 t /2
Baths Garage &amp; Carport, lmme
dune Possess1on. $72 000 614
GeorQes Portable Sawm1ll , don 1 446-3117
haul ~Dur logs to the m1U JUSt call Mtddleport close 10 store &amp;
304 675 1957
school, 2 slory t 112 bath 3 10 5
Pro!esstonal Tree Ser11tce, Com· bedrooms, 3 lou lanced yard,
pl ete Tree Care Bucket Truck 614 992 7423
Servtce 50 Ft R~:tac h Stump Re.
Prtce Reduced S t 25 000 , 4 Br
moval
Free Es11mates1 In
Brtck, 2 Balhs Ftn tahed Base
surance 24 Hr Em ~rgenc )l Serv
tce Call And Sa11e1 No Tree Too men t 2 Car Garage lngr ouna
81g Or Too Small I Btd well Ot11o Pool W1th Deck, StoraQe Butldtng
Acre"s 3616 Stale Route 141
614 3889643 614 367 7010
lit
614 446 1025

Wo ul d Ltke To Babys tt 1 Cht ld
Infan t Or Toddler In M~ Home
References, 614-245 5887

446 3342

Bedroom N&amp;w, Extra Ntce. Atr

Gene•al Matntenance Pamtmg
Vard Work Wtndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned Li ght Haul1nQ
Commenca! Res 1dent1al St&amp;\le
61 4 446 8861

Wel dtng Wtll come to ~ou tl
needed 304 6 75 6269

~14

1987 S 10 Runs Great, Has Cos·
metiC Damage, Great Work
Truck, 614·367..0321

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St Galhpol t!l New &amp; Used
lurmture heaters Western &amp;
Wo11t. boots 614-«6 3159

Apartments
lor Rent

1984 S tO 4x.t Blazer 121K Ea
cellent Condtll on, $3,450 080,

-=-~~-=---,-,--

Some one needed to mtlk cows ,
hourly wage patd vacatton Send
nam e pho ne number &amp; expert
ence P 0 BDI 312, Henderson
wv 25106

Any Age Da~s Or
Evenmgs Mercervtlle Area, Call
Anyt1me 614-256-6865

Sleeper couch loveaeal, large
cnau, anttque vanity ~olor TV,
glasa end tables small entertain
ment C8f11er. bed 304.e75-2895

~DW -~~~~ C!ti/GMAN. ~pT Ttl~
S/'1~-TooiHIOb T1~ER AT Sit'/:

t::;;=:::========lr"=::=::::=======1'
180 Wanted To Do
320 Mobile Homes
~~nd;~~~~~~~~.~··~~·~~. 'i;!'

Pan Ttme Medtcal Social Worker
Speech Theraptst PhySitcal Thor
ap1SI Needed For Contract In
Home Eva luat ons And Vrstts
CN A s And Certified Home Health
A1des Needed
P rogress 1Ye
Home Hea lth Care Agency Serv
tng WV And Ohto Phone 61-t
44 1 1779

Bab~sttltng

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 Bedraom Home Wtth fireplace,

•soo

PHILLIP
ALDER

44 Arrange
differently
46 Frog 'a COUtln
48 Tiny
49 Actor CruiN
51 Family
nickname
53 Children'•
author Dr 57 Filled with
wonder
6C Mal (cocktall)
61 blvorce copltal
62 01 9rldtl ,., 2
63 MD 1 chart
64 Concerning
(2 wda)
65 Des\roy
66 Go astray

sure becomes

GEMINI (May 21.Juna 20) If you expecl
perfectiOn
m co workers today, axamrne
presstng thtngs that annoy you tOday cou ld
cause your anger to explode later Get your own behavtoral paHerns frrst They
SAG ITTARtUS (Nov 23·Doc. 21) Ae·

gnevances off your chest more senstbly

wtll follow the example you e.stabhsh

CAPRICORN 1(Dec. 22.Jan. 19) II could
prove w1se today not to pull fnends 1nto
an •arrangement that you aren t too sure
ol yourse~ You won'\ want 10 be blamed
llllzzles
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fab 19) Try to be as
sett-sufttctent as posstble today 10 career
related 51tuatrons You aren t hkely to ge;t

CANCER (June 21.July 22) If you have
money burnmg a hole m your pocket
today, don't ask a freewheeltng pal how
\p spend 11 You m1ghl be encouraged lo

n

buy someth1ng you'll never use

any substantia l support from assoc1ates

LEO (July .23-Aug 22) Foss up 10 your
mtstakes today mstead of lookmg for
scapegoats Unfortunately, you mtghl fmd
th1s tact1c espectally tempttng to use on

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) You will feel

family members

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Deftly- Crumb · Canto · Cnspy · YOUR MIND
A teacher of Amencan Government started a lectu re by say1ng , "Wh1le llvmg 1n a democracy you can
say what ever you think Without us1ng YOUR MIND "

AUGUST 251

�Page 12 • Th!! Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Friday, August 25, 1995

Pre-season
••
prev1ews . Page c1

•
compan1ons

for
independence

i ,.

.I

Featured on

8-1

MARATHON

•

Details
on Page
1..-..::::..:.:~...J

•

®

tmts

We're proud of the purchases our people made at the 1995 Meigs County
·
Fair 4-H/FFA Junior Livestock Sale.
Besides buying the Grand C.hampion Poultry, the Reserve Champion Lamb,
the Reserve Champion Rabbits and other animals, our representatives paid a
record-setting price of $12.700 for Anita Calaway's Grand Champion steer.
We salute Lisa Mitchell, member of the City Ice &amp; Fuel Co. management ·
team; Kathy Hall, manager of Riverside Food Mart in Pomeroy and Tina Lee,
manager of Marathon Food Center in Albany, for representing us so well at the
sale.
·,,
Additionally, we congratulate the ·sellers of the champions, all the youth of
Meigs County who sold animals in the very successful . event and the many
peqple responsible for another outstanding Meigs County Fair. From our
perspective, everyone involved was a WINNER.

A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- August 27, 1995

•

•
County schools seek building location
for proposed centralized high school
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gall ia County Local School
District has a bond issue for a new high school on the Nov.
7 ballot, but is still looking for a site fo rthe school if the
issue is approved.

Superintendent Robert
Lanning said the board
of education currentl y has
· several properties to conskier but wants to add

more sites to its li st before making a decision.

"The board wants to

discuss it more fully and we will put together a visilation
schedule for board members to review the property."
Lanning said . ..We have several sites to consider, and if

Vol. 30, No. 29

'
Gall/a County Local
Schools Superintendent Robert Lanning·
confirmed thtJt the sites
are In the "general vi·
clnlty" of the RodneyBidwell area, the site
parentsandcltlzens told
the board was the best
location for a new centralized high school
during a series of public participation
meetings earlier this year.

someone was possibly interested in selling and contacted
us, we would have another one to look at."
Lanning confirmed·
that the sites are in the "gen• In July, the Gallia County Local School era l vicinity" of the tion meetings earlier this year.
In July, the hoard approved placing a 3.9-mill. 2'i-year
District's Board of Education approved Rodney-Bidwell area. the
bond issue before voters. in addition 10 a 3-mill. five-year
placing a 3.9-mill, 25-year bond issue be· site parents and citizens operating
levy. Earlier. the board retained Gallip,&gt;lis realtor
told the board was the best
fore voters, in addition to a 3-m ill, five-year location for a new central- Virginia Smith to assist in the site search.
Lanning has since delivered a letterto 1heGallia County
ized high school during a.
operating levy.
Commiss
ioners asking them if Ihe land hehind t.he'"cotJ~li Y
series of public panicipa-

Children\ Home when~ the district 's central ofTicL· i~
located would bl! a\·ailabl!.! as a possible ~chool ..,rtc.
Lanning said he hasn't received a n:spon..;l.! yet, and
Commbsion Pre .. . !dcnt Harold Montgomery -.aid he
couldn ' t respond to the request "until I' vc haJ th c oppoc-

tunlly tO speak with Mr. Lanning."
The county owns around I00 acres in the area off State
. Rout~: 160 and.alluWcd the district to move its office~ there

in 1987.
/
The ~ount)' ha,., the respons~bility to provide assist&lt;~IK'C /
to a c~nty bourd of educinion. Montgomery explairlt'd,
including localing office space. The co mmissioner\ annu- ·

ally apprnf&gt;ri ale ~~.IIllO to help the county board wilh
utililies, he added .
1.
"I haven 't heard ~ my thing abnut a de(ision ," Lunr1rng
said. ··aut you have to understand. even if the si te w;~..;
available. the board has not decided on it.lt'sju-.t one of
the pos'iihlc sill"'·

"If ot 's not available. so be il - we' djus lli ke 10 know."
He said th e bo ard feels it has time to carefu lly consider~~

site bdpre a campaign for the bond i-,sue gets und~rw:..~y .
..Site ~dcc t i on is a pivot;ll part or the campuign:' h~
said. add in:; th;1t onct it 's chmcn. the architec t will havl!
to tlu '\ome rc... e;m.:h on tht: land . suc h a., soi l ~he~..:ki ng. to
J~ terminc if it.s an approPriate p\;Ke fnr constrtl(tion."

Correction officials Ohio Vietnam Memorial to visit area CAA seeks houses·
for rehab work in
study rule changes
By GEORGE ABATE
Bidwell-Porter area:
Times-Sentinel Staff
· POMEROY - Moigs County corrections officials disPORTER -.Wanted : hou o;i ng in Bidwell and Porter in

cu.-.ed how they will respond to changes in state sentencing laws at a quarterly meeting Friday .
New state law will take effect next July I, said Barbara
Kaminski. continuum coordinator for Ohio Department of
Corrections Bureav off om·
munity Sanctions.
·
Kamin ski previously

need of major re habi litatio n work.
·
That's Ihe call bci n11 put nul by Ihe Communit y Housing
Improvement Progra m ortcratecl by Gallia-Mcigs Community Ac tion Agency :1~ it looks for ways to spend a
$500.000 ... tate grqnt to improve housing conditions for
low -ineomc resident s in th ose rommunitics.
,
"We have more money lhan we know what to do with
rig ht now." explained Dotty Hill. hou!'tin g, r~h abil n ation

served as a jail inspCctor in

32 Southern Ohio counties
for four years.
"We can't afford to keep
building prisons," Kaminski

specialiS~ wi th CAA. "If we don' I find people who qualify.
w~ ' lllose it."

to repair re "'l dcnccs in Bidwell that low-to-moderate income people either owned or were planning to buy.
Since tht;n. 22 rehuh jnb~ :md 15. e mergency project ..,
were comp leted in Bidwe ll und the prognim was expanded
thi s year ro ~over Porter. I-I ill said.
But the program ha~ t)nly lwo projects on l:.lp and is
looking fn r more appliranl ..,, she adc.Jcc.J.

said.

GRAND CHAMPION STEER - City Ice &amp; Fuel bought the grand champion
1,270 pound steer for $10 per pound from Anita Calaway. From left to right:
Jeff Rose, fair king; Noelle Pickens, fair queen; NJatthew King, beef prince;
Jamie Drake, beef princess; Anita Calaway; Tina Lee, Marathon Food Center
in Albany; Lisa Mitchell, City Ice &amp; Fuel; Kathy Hall, Riverside Food Mart.

The largest changes in the
law involve adding a fifth
degree felony tier and allowing the fourth and fifth tiers
was
to be sentenced on a local,
to house not state level, Kaminski
We said. ,__-·
have twice that
The liro.it for petty theft
many."
was raised from $300 to
Sen. Jan Mkheel
$500.
•we are trying to get a
halfw ay house into this area," Kaminski ~aid.
Meigs and Gallia counties eac h will gel $10.000 to
develop a,plan for responding to the new law and increase
invol vement in lhe local correclions board, she added.
"You will be better prepared to handle it because you· ve
already planned for it," Kaminski said to.the Meigs board.
"You guys are a leader because you have a program
already."

GRAND CHAMPION POULTRY - City Ice &amp; Fuel bought the grand
champion poultry for $900 from Sarah Dailey at Friday's Meigs County
Fair livestock sale. From left are: (front row) Lisa Mitchell, City Ice &amp; Fuel;
Kathy Hall, Riverside Food Mart; Rebekah Karr, Poultry princess; Sarah
Dailey; Tim Lee, Marathon Food Center:. of Albany; Jeff Rose, fair king; and
Noelle Pickens, fair queen; (back row) Matt Kirk, poultry prince.

From 1ho.1 year' s grant. $100.000 is avai lahlc 10 ""isl
homes tn .be incl1udcd in lhc upcuming Bidwcll-Poncr
sewer proJee L.
That sec tion of the improvement program is lle signed
to spare homes wi lhout indoor plumbing or water taps

THE MOBILE OHIO VIETNAM MEMORIAL, containing the names of Ohioans killed or missing In action during
the VIetnam War, will be displayed on Labor Day weekend at the Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds.

from being condemned and to enable Ihem to hook inlo 1he
syslem when il's in ~ lall ed. Hill said.

Unit at Gallia fairgrounds over Labor Day weekend

from lheend of Parler Road loAm~y Lane. and on SR 554

GALLIPOLIS-, The Vietnam War may ha ve ended
lon g ago , but it has not been forgotten.
To heighten local awareness about the confl ict and its
impact on the nation . the Vietnam Veterans of America
Paul Gerard. local corrections board chairman, com- Chapter 709 will host the Ohio Vietnam Memorial at the
mended Sen. Jan Michael Long. D-Circleville,' for his Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds over the Labor Day
weekend,
efforts.
"We're trying to find new answers to old problems,"
The memo•ial can be seen from 10 a.m. until midnight
Gerard said. "Sen. Long has been very good with getting · Saturday, Sept. 2. and from noon unti1 5 p.m. on Sunday.
us le gislative information . We've got a lot to learn and a said Larry Marr, president of the local VV A chapter.
lot to do. We don't need to th ink about it as an obstacle but
A candleli ght serv ice will be s1aged at the memorial on
as an opportunity."
· .
Saturday at 8 p.m. and will include a re adi:ng oft he names
All officials would li ke to see enough money avai lable of Gallia County servi cemen killed or missing in ac110n ,
10 build a new Meigs County jail. Gerard added.
during the war. Marr said.
"But. commun ity correc tions may help in the shan
The memor,ial, built by Barb and Clyde Wright of
tenn," Gerard said. Hi s office will survey the types of Sunbury. ca rries. ~he names of Ohiquns killed in action or
still missing in Vietnam. as· well as memorabilia from
Continued on page A2

I

I'

Meigs commissioners advised
insurance fee increase needed

RESERVE CHAMPION RABBITS - City Ice &amp; Fuel
boughUhe res.erve champion rabbits for $675 from
Cassidy Coffey. From left are: Lisa Mitchell, City Ice
&amp; Fuel; Tina Lee, Marathon Food Center in Albany;
Coffey; Amy S'm ith, bull.n y ·princess; Noelle Pickens,
fair queen; Jeff Rose, fair king.

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB
City Ice &amp; Fuel bought the reserve
champion lamb for $14.50 per pound from Kristina Kennedy. From left are:
Lisa Mitchell, City Ice &amp; Fuel; Tina Lee, Marathon Food Center in Albany;
Billee Pooler, wo.o l princess; Kristina Kennedy; Noelle Pickens, fair queen;
and Jeff Rose, fair king.

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL COMPANY
•

RIVERSIDE FOOD MART

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Meigs County g11vemmental offices and departments, and
perhaps !heir em ployees, need to pay more for health msurance.
That was the recommendation of insurance actuary David Rubadue. of
Employee Benefits Specialists, Worthington. who met with Me igs County
Commissioners during the board's regular meeting Friday afternoon. ·
Rubadue made his annual report to the commissiOQ concerning the wellbeino of the county's se lf-funded insurance program and said the i'Qmmission
neech to rai se the leve l of funding fori he insurance program - paid by county
offices and their employees- by al least 14 percent.
This follows in.the wake of an 18 percent increase in departmental insurance

'

MARATHON FOOD CENTER

•

"user fees" commissioners e nacted on Aug . 4 in additi on to a 27 percenl
inL.:rease retroactive to Jan. I:
Commissioners said the increases were needed to increase the county

insur:tnce fund, from which medical claims are paid. after th e board approved
entering into a third year of self-funded health insurance by renewin g a
contraCI with Medical Claims Service to administer the plan.
So far commiss ioners have resisted passing the costs along to county
employees, preferring 10 increase only the share paid by county offices.
However, commissioners said that may have
continue 10 increase.

to

·

The r.:: hah work lhc),!.all in 1994 when CAA ~as funded

change as medical costs

Currently, monthly premiums for courthouse em ployees covered under the
family pl an $200. Premiums for singles total $30.
·
Rubadue said his figures , compiled before the recent user fee increase;
showed the insurance fund with adeftcil of$61 ,777. 16. He explained the fund
had a $104.500 liability with $42.722 .84 in assets as of July 31.
"It's like a checki ng account," he said. "If you have $50,000 in the bank and
wrile $100.000 in checks. il will come due at &lt;ome time."
Furthermore, he eslimated the cost of health care for county employees at
$720.000 between Jul y 31 of lhis year aild Aug. I of next year. He added that
the $720.000 figure was very conservative. explaining that it's "betterto have
too much money in the fund than not enough."
.
Commissioners have been exploring the possibility of getting out of the
health insurance business by purchasing a managed-care program and may use
Rubadue's report to justify the move.
Commission President Fred Hoffman said he is concerned that county
Continued .on page A2

friends and families.
The memorial was built for display in two parades. bul
has sin cc '. bcen enlarged and ma(le poriable sn 11 can be
seen arou nd lhe sta te. Marr explained . .
The names of Vietnam veterans who have died since the
war's end, whet her se rvice-relntcd or not. can be added to
th e memori al. he said.
"It has made-numerous stops all over the state and h&lt;.~s
never had negative comment from the people who came
to ~ee it," M::.rr said. "The memorial is a tribute to those
boys and girls who went to war and came hack a!'. men and
women.''
·
. During the memorial's slop in Gullia County, the VVA
is cneouraging area resitlents lo &lt;Jdd to .thc memorial th.c
names of fami ly members or friends who died in the wur.

The memorial is pri valely funded and nhl connec ted·to

The program operates in a turgeJ area of State Roulc 160

from the r&lt;~i lroad tracks in Bidwell across 160 to Porter.
Onl y people living wit hin th ose are;:ts are e li gib le to

apply folr rchabilitati on or emergency repair work, Hill
ex plained.
.
Potential applicant s mu sl again either own I he residence
or plan to buy one . Hill ..;aid. This move protC(..'IS CAA
from paying for a housing upgr:H.ic and then see ing the
owner se ll the house. Applicants mu st also meet l ow~to­
moderatc income guiddincs set hy CAA .

When lhe applicalinn is upprovcd, Hill inspecls lhc
res idence . determines what needs repaired. ge ts bids from
con t ractor~ and give:-. the go- ahead on the work. While th e
work j, underwuy, Hill al"'o oversees the project .
Th e average rehab joh cm t.' around $1 fi.!KJO and ·in·
e lude., improvcrnenl..., In c lcl:trical sy~ tems . plumbing.
roofs and flooring. (f nccde&lt;.l. the work al so ex. tends to
furnace s and p;1int!n~ as wd l as necc s.-..ary improvcml!nt s.

.

any t.;pecific veterans' group, Marr sa id .

Contonued on page A2

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Schools net largest share
of Gallia
. tax distribution

Inside today•••

GALLIPOLIS - ·Galli a Coumx's 1wo school dis:

trict s came out with th e largest share of revenue !'or
their respeclivC general funds in the recent distribution

of second half real estate taxes, Auditor Ronald K.
Canaday said.
•
The Gallia Coun1y Local Schoo ls re ceived
$3,350,4' 12.(!9 and 1he Gallipolis rity Schooh were
awarded $1.083,924.05. according to informallon pro·
vided by Canaday.
Crinaduy ..,a itlthc gro..,.., tli .li tribution total out of tax

revenue was $6.930.203 .01. Each of the taxing til&lt;·
trict s received

Racine school passes into history

reimburseme nt for a redu ction in

taxes due 10 a I0 percent rollback in the homc&gt;~ e ad
exemption and an additional 2- 1/2 percent rollback .
School di stri cts e~ lending into Gulli a County shared
in 1he general fund di&gt;~ribution . They included Fairland
Local. $15,099.58 :· Symmes Val ley Local. $4.5 17. 12:
and Vinton County Local. $1 3 1.18.
Th e Gallia-Jackson- Vinton ioi nt Vocational Sc hool
Doslrict received $413,008.88 in Ihe diSiribuloon . The
Lawrence County Vocalional School re ceived
$2.039 .69.
Note: Related story on page A3

For the flrat tlmeln 82 yeara, doors to the Racine Elemen -

tary School building will
8nother school year.

s ~at e

nol open lo admit studenta lor yet

The Southern Local Board ol Education on Ma,rch 8 agreed
to close the building as part or a spending reducrlon plan,

specifically targeting lhe beloved elementary due to its age
and need for a new roof.

Thwchool was dedicated on 0&lt;:1. 3, 1911 .
On :July 10, thlo year, the board voted to sell the building to
the village ol Racine lor one dollar.
.
In today'a edition (Page A3) , Tlmes-Senllnel staff writer

Jim Freeman examines the hlatory of the school and Its

Impact on the communlly It ..,ad,

· Today's Times-Sentinel
l R Sodions - 176 Pages

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03-7

C
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m~ic~·~~--~--~l~nsert
Editorials
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~ long the River
Weather

A4
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A2

Columns
Jack Anderson
Bob Hoenich
Jim Sands
Bruce Williams

Charges filed against grandson in shotgun slaying of Mason County man
POINT PL EASANT, W.Va. - Charges have been illed agai nst the
grandson of a man found dead Friday morning at his Redmond Ridge home.
The Mason Counly Sheriffs Department i' 'earching for Zenie J. Myers
Ill in connection with the death of his grandfalher. :Zenie E. Myers, 8ii.
His body was taken to Pleasant Valley HospitaL where he was pronounced
dead by an emergency room doclor, Deputy John McCoy reported. Counly
Coroner Dr. Breton. Morgan conducted the initial autopsy before the body
was sent .to the State Medical Examiner'' office in Charleston. McCoy 'aid
.

th e medical ex aminer' "' report indicated Mycr~ · wound c:..11_ne from a 'iinglc.:"hot ~hotgun at J range of approximately five f~et

Sheriff Wattcr&gt;on 'aid the departmcnl re sponded 10 a shootin g call al lhe
home of Robert Ru we ll on Redmond Ridge at 2:07 a.in. Friday . The depulie'
arroved In lind Ihe pcrpclralor, Zcnie J. Myer&lt; Ill , I R, had left ihe rt\idence .
He allegedly had fired two round, from a \hOigun al his 'lep-falher Robert
Ru"ell. The elder Myel\ wa' found after Ru "el l had "'ked lhc dcpulic' to
c he c ~

Mycr' · well heing

ne~t. door .

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