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Thursday, September 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

'llllil

Ohio Lottery

Indians
clinch tie for
division title

Pick 3:
479

Pick 4:

5560
Buckeye 5:

Page4

Low t011lght In SO., cloudy.
Saturday, cloudy. Highs In the
70..

19-21-24-29-35

10 DAY~ ONlY!
OPEN ALLDAY
SATURDAY
9 A.M.·5 P.M.

•

Vol. 46, NO. 93

Water, sewer
change eyed
List
Price

Sale

Ann1vor~ry

Price

p, 1ce

12 MONTHS.
..

5 pc. Pine .......... ·: .................. '349 ..... '229 .... '198
Cha~&lt;s

36" x 48" Trestle Table . 4 Padded Seat

5 pc. Oak ............. .................. 1479 ..... 1349 ..... '289

42~

Tile top pedestal table , 4 white/natural chairs

7 pc. Green/Cherry ... .. ... ....... '799 ... ..'649 .... .'549
•

6 Bow back chairs, 36" x 60" Table

Wood Edge table, 6 elt'tra heavy chairs

7 pc. Light Pine .... .. :............ '1299 .... '999 .... .'749
7 pc. Nostalgic Solid Oak ... '1399 .. .'1 099 ....'899
Claw foot, pressed back chairs

•

..

SAME AS CASH!

BUY NOW - NO INTEREST
CHARGES TO PAY

Gibson s8.6cu. rt. Futt'oJoss. lin """"" .. .. ...... '899 ....... '799 ...... .'649

Westinghouse

Frigidaire

•

cu. n. tJetuxe . ...,. ...,...,. .... '899 .. .. .. . '749 .......'629

19.9 cu.

n. ·Gall"".,.,,."'"" ....'1199 ...... '999 .......'839 .

Premier 36" ou Rongo

D;oiiat c""' .... .. .. ...

'529; ...... '499 .......'459

w"'' Oriv .... : ........ '369 ....... '329 ...... .'299

Tappan

30" o.. R""l'•

Gibson

30" e1oc. Self/C-. IIi"" .......... .....

'579 ....... '519 .......' 469

Gibson 30" e~oc .•,.. WNte, o•01•- ......... '539 ... .... '489 .. .....'449
.

;·

.

Tappan 30" Etoc. Clock, •·•·12.e· """""· ....... .. '479 .. .. ... '429 ...... .'379
Gl bson

Olthwaahor . ... ""'" bulll.tn ........... '369 .. .. :.. '289 ..... ..'2 39

Maytag Auto WaohorLNge Tub .... ...... . .. . ... '539 ........ '499 .......'459 .

9 pc. Oak Dining Room Suite .... '1799 ... '1399 ..'1 088
Oval table, padded chairs, hutch/buffet

18

Gibson 1u cu. n. sxs. c"'"'"""' Sllel""' ... .... '1179 ...... '979 ..... ..'799

We Appreeiate Your BusinessWe'll Treat You Right!

42' x 72' Drawer table, Heavy padded seat ch.Ors

Prrcc

"

SHOP EARLY FOR THE BEST
SELECTIONS.

7 pc. Oak ................. .. .... .. ..... '1299 .. .. '899 ..... '699

Price

Gibson 20.6 cu.lt. Canti~er shelve~ .... '899 .. .. .. :'749 ..... ..' 629

FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE!

42" x 66" Table. 6 Stylish Chairs

Annwer .c;rvy

Glbsolf 15.4 cu.lt. Frostlree, rollers .. .... '649.... .... '549 .... ...'499

•FURNITURE ONLY

7 pc. Country Oak .. .............. '999 .... . '699 ..... '56 9

Sale

Gibson 1a cu. n. •"""" Ice - " ... ........... . '799 ...... .'699 ..... .. '579

36" Table with leaf and 4 all wood chairs.

5 pc. White ...... .. .................... '899 ..... '699 .... .'499

List
PfiC:e

APPLIANCES

LIVING ROOM SUITES

IJst

Sate

Price

Prtce •

AnnHtersa ry
Prtce

Traditional 2 pc .'.. . : ........ .. ..... 1799 ..... 1 599 .....1349

Kelvinator Etec. Dryor ""'..,.,, ""· ......... '389 ....... '349 .......'299

Green/mauve floral

CURIOS &amp; GUN
CABINETS

Ust
Price

Sale
Price

Armwersary
Pr •ce

RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS

Beige multi color print

Recliner 2-oo """"""'" ................... '229 ....... '179 .......'139
Catnapper "i"l '"""""'·..."""""" ....... ...... '539 ..... .. '429 .......'339
Fhtxsteel """"""·w.. "' """'"'·c... ""'"' ..... '528 ....... '369 .. .....'299
Catnap per w•• '"'"""'·1""" . ........ ,ouch...... '679 .... .. . '549 .......'469.

Colonial2 pc .......... .. ...... .. .... 1899 ..... 1 699 .....1529

lighted, tempered glass

Blue print

Cherry Curio .... .. ......... .. ............ '359 ...... '269 ...... !229

Contemporary 2 pc .. ........... '999 .. .. .1799 .. ...1599

Arched Top, Etcned glass

Corner Curio ............. ... ............. '389 ...... '299 ...... ~259

Black/mauve/blue. black trim

Light oak, hghied

Sectional ........ .. .. .. ............... 12699 ... 12199 ..' 1799

Solid Oak Corner Curio ... ........ '529 ... :.. '419 ..... .!339
2

doo~s

Medium Oak Curio ...... .. ... ........ '399 ...... '299 ...... !249
. Side Entry

Corner Table with stereo/sleeper/recliner

Sectional .... .. ................... .. . :•1799 ... 11299 ....'899
Reclining e~s. oak,lbrass trim, multi print

Dark Pine ........ .' .. ... ... ...... ... .......... '529 ...... '399 ......~3 39

Double .Recliner Sofa ......... 11346 .... 1999 .....'749

6 guns, lighted, door locks

Flexsteel, Blue stripe

Oak .................. ... ....................... '699 .... .. '569 ...... !479
12 gun , deer glass, pistol rack , locks

Contemporary .3 pc . .... ....... 11799 ... 1 1399 ....'949
~

Black "FiaJC leather" overstuffed

TELEVISIONS

List

Sate

Ann&lt;versarv

Price

Price

Pun~

Zenith 13" Color .......... .. .... ............ '299 .. .... . '269 .. ..... ~ 199
Cablt! Tune•

.

Zenith 19" Color .. ... .... ...... ....... .. .... '369 ...., .. '299 ....... ~249
Cable Ready. charcoal cebinet

,

Zenith 19" Remote Co.lor ....... ....... '399 ....... '339 ... .. .. ~27 9
Ctosed Ca~ton

Zenith 25" Remote Color ............. '579 ....... '489 ... .... '399

Country Sofa/Love ......... ........ . 1 1799 ... 1 1399 ....'999
Oak trim, green print

Traditional3 pc ................... 1 1499 ... 1 1088 ....'799
Contemporary 3 pc ... .. ....... 1 1999 ... '1499 ....'999
Early American 3 pc ...... ..... 1 1599 ... 1 1199 .. ,..'899

Table model. !tollS stereo

Zenith 25" Remote Console ..... .... '639 ... .... '579 ....... ~~~9
L

Oil"- 01 P•l"l@. SEQ Stereo

Zenith 27" Remote Console ..... :... '699 ....... '639 ...... J599
Pine F1n1sh Unoversal Remote

Zenith 27" Remote Console ... ...... '799 ..... .. '719 .... l.~679
SYS l

Zenith

35' Table mode&lt; &amp; •s·rso· Pr0jec11on

mode~

.............. REDUCED

..

'

List
5ale
Anhtversary
ENTERTAINMENT
Price
Price
Pr1co
CENTERS &amp; DESKS
Maple Finish Desk ........ ... .. ...... .... .. '199 ....... '149 .........~99
Studltnt oesk, large dr awt~~ 5

IRc•lltlliP desk/Drawer Unit.. .... .. ..... '379 ....... '269 .......!199

I Cl1er1-y Entertainment.. .... ........ .. ... '639 ....... '499 .......~399 ·
154' r•'·""""'·· slideout

I Plr1e Entertainment ... .... ~ .........:.. ... '549 ....... '399 .......!329

Sale
Price

Annr~~ersary
Prrce

,

·

l.ile Oak, shelllleadboa"d

4 pc. Ashley ................ ..................... '799 ....... '599 .. .... .1399
tops, &amp;:IOOf pleee•

•

Traditional 3 pc .. .... .... .. ....... 1 1599 ... 11199 ....'899

4 pc Lehigh ....................................'839 ....... '679 .. .... .!549

Beige/Green Floral, Pillows

5 pc. Slnger ...................... ............. '1199 ....... '899 .. .... .!599

Dark pine. Door DrMSM, !Itched glass tnm

Country 3 pc; ........ .. .. .... .. ... .1 1999 ... 1 1499. ~1 088
Black muiti print, bun leg, pillows

Contemporary 3 pc . .. ......... 11899 .. .1 1399 ... :'999
Blue/Aqua Pattern. oak trim, overstuffed

Traditional Sofa ................... 1599 ..... 1499 .... ~399
GrecnM'ine Stri e, Pillow back

SOFA SLEEPERS

List

Sale

Price ·

Price

Annrversary
Pr1ce

.

Contemporary Oueen .. .. ... .. .... ......... '739 .. .... . '599 .. .. ... !399

Beige with

' noral strype
mauve

Traditional Queen .. ............. .... .......'999 .. ..... '749 .......!549

.,

Blue multi prinl

•

ute pine, hutch mirror, hMd llo loot

4 pc. Bassett ............ .. ............. .. .... '1299 ... .'.. '999 ....... !749
6 pc. Slnger .... ..........~ .................... '2299 .... . '1799 ... .!1399
"Soutlwwestern" Pine, n1gh1 stand
'
6 pc. Webb ........... ... ,..................... '2499 ..... '1999 .... ,1599
Oak,

swing mirror. poster bed

BEDDING

Traditional Queen ...... ........ .. ..........'699 ........ '549 ...... .!399
Bll.lll!MatMl Pattern. \11tow ptliows

,

Cherry, pediment bed, lice size O'aWMl

Traditional Queen .. ............. ......... .. .. '899 ... .... '699 ....... !499
I&lt;8"Wide., "Protective Tops'

Ust
Price

4 pc. Vaughan/Basse~'·\ ............. .. .... . '699 ...... . '549 ....... 1449 ·
Qek with blade

Blue/Beige Pnnt, pillows

Pine Roll lop Desk ....... ..... .. ........... '499 ....... '369 ....... !299

P11ce

4 pc. Ashley ................................... '899 .. ..... '699 ....... 1499
W•hed o¥ or black door piece&amp;

Beige swirl panern, throw pillows

Anntversary

Price

Flexsteel..;,.,.,. ""''""' """ """"'· •·- ·....... '735 ....... '519 .... .. ~429
Kirby """'"'""'"""·"""""''""'c ................ '469 .... :.. '379 .......' 259
Flexsteel ·m......,.· """" ,.'"'""··"""'"- .. '824 ....... '639 .......'525
England wan '"''""'wt'" cl18lse. M"""' ........... '549 ....:... '429 .. .....'349
la·Z·boy eNloe'""""'""''""'· choice ot cole....... '569 ....... '449 . ..... ~379
La·z-boy '""""'''"''""· .......................... '599 ...... :'4 79 ...... ~329
La-z•boy -·•!"''""'·""'""""' """· .......... :.'539 ....... '419 .. .... 1349
Glider Rocker....,......... "'""'"'""'"''"· '289 .. :.... '229 .......'179
Oak Glider Rocker ........."'"' ......... '429 ..... .. '339 ...... ~289
Athens
Swivel Rockerm ............... '379 ....... '289 ...... .. 229
.
.
Charisma w""'"' "'·"""'"""............... .... '419 .. ... ,. '269 ...... 1199
BEDROOM SUITES

Layered back, oak/brass trim/blue

Blue/Mauve Antron Floral

Zenith 27" Remote Color ..... ... ...... '629 ....... '539 ....... ~439

Sale

Contemporary 2 pc ... ... ....... 1 999 ..... ~699 .....1499

Light Oak Curio ........................ '319 ...... '229 ., .... !1 98
..

List
Price

.

.
Camel Back Queen ................. .......'999 ..... .. '799 .... ... !629
FleKsteel, Btue Check Pflnt

Contemporary Queen .. ................ '1079 .. :... '839 ...... .!699
;;;;;p;:;;;;;piiiiiillal•

·

Sale
Price

Price

An nlversa'Y
Pnce

TWIN SIZE
·'
Miss match firm u.pc .. .... .... .. .. ..... '139 ........ '99 .... ..... !78
Day sleeperf!rm 0Lpc .......... . .. .. ... '149 ....... '119 .. ... :.. !88
Serta Gentle touch "· pc...... .. ..... ..'179 .. :.... '129 ........ !99
Serta Pedic Firm ••. pc.. ............. , ..'229 .. ..... '179 ...... 1129
FULL SIZE
Miss match firm •. pc.. . .... .. .'.... .. ... '179 .... .... '119 ........ !89
Serta Premier H.pc. .... : .. .. ....... ...... '199 ..... .. '149 .. .... 1129
Seita Rest Ill u . pc.. ........ . .. .. .. .. .. ... '279 ....... '199 ......!169
Serta Perfect Sleeper ••. pc ...... .... '399 ....... '329 ..... ·'249
QUEEN SIZE
Fleetwood firm sot ..... .. ..... .. ..... .... '399 ....... '319 .. ... .1249
Bed of Roses nt ............ ..... .. ....... '439 ...... . '369 .. ....!299
Serta Rest Ill nt . ...... .. ..... : .. .. .. ... ... '529 ....... '449 ......1369
Serta Perfect Sleeper nt . .. ... : .. .... '799 ....... '689. :... .1549

..j;;;;iiipiiil;;;

Stern wheeler rises again--.·Welfare

reform·
Senate passage
prospects appear
to be improving

Special ordinance suggested at
Syracuse Village Council meeting

HURRY IN WHILE SELECTIONS ARE GREAT! ... LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ... 12 MONTHS TO PAY!
DINING ROOM SUITES

1 Section , 10 Pages 35 cents
A Multlmedlolne. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 8, 1995

Copyrlght1995

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
· Discussions on which alleys, to
leave open or to close, water line
problems at London Pool, and pro·
posed changes to the water and
sewer ordinance highlighted a
meeting of Syracuse Village Council Thursday night.
Meeting with council was Jack
Williams, a member of the Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewer Distric~ who proposed that warer and
sewer be coupled by a special ordi'
nance.
Williams explained the sewer
operation to council. He said that
the purpose of bis proposal to book
up waler with sewer is to create a
more effective operation. The matter was iabled until the next meeting to allow time for council to discuss the issue with I. Carson Crow.
village solicitor.
Also meeting wil,b council were
Mary and Don Hendricks. and Jim
Titus, about closing Oak Alley .
The matrer will be resolved after all
propeny owners arc informed and
signatures obtained. it was decided.
Also meeting with council was
Butch Lisle about leaving· an alley
open which runs past his propeny
on Founb Street. This malter was
also tabled for further discussion
with the village solicitor and resi -

denls involved.
· A motion mad e by Kathryn
Crow to close Asb Alley was alsO
tabled until Mayor James Pape
looks over the area and talks to residen!S. This issue will also be con'
sidered f!lflher at the next meeting
of counc'il.
Pape informed council that
repair of the slip on Rustic Hills
will cost approximately $30,000
for piling, backfill and asphalt .
This information will be given to
Bob Winget~ gran!S adminisuator,
who will apply for an emergency
grant to pay for the cost of the
.
repair.
The mayor also reported that
there .are major problems at London Pool in regard to recycling of
water. ·
He indicated that there is a broken or collapsed line creating some
problems. Someone will be secured
to test the lines. Eber Pickens Jr. is
in charge of banding the pool problem.
Complaints had been lodged
earlier about closing the poo1 when
season ticket bolders were swimming. The closing occurred, it was
reponed, wben there were at least
IS season ticket holders in the pool
and during regular hours of opera(Continued on Page 3)

· The Jean Mary, a $1.3 million sternwheeler that sank
across the river rrom Pomeroy

last year, was spotted 'wheeling
its way past the village Thursday, presumably on its way to
the Ohio River Stemwheel Festival in Marietta. The 87-foot
luxury vessel sank In the river
on Sept. 14, 1994, following last
year's Marietta festival after It
st~uck the Pomeroy launch
ramp, according to owner
George Douglass. Local stern·
wheelers said the boat will
return to Pomeroy for the Big
Bend Sternwheel Festival on
Oct. S-7. Shown above is the
Jean Mary as It appeared
Thursday ... and as It appeared
last September, right. i

-

'

'I

·' l

..

Newspaper asks "for DEP files .gag~ order to be lifted
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) applications last week . Gazelle
- The Charleston Gazette asked a lawyers Suzanne M. Weise and
Kanawha County judge to open Pauick C. McGinley asked Circuit
state Division of Environmental Judge Herman Canady to unseal
Protection files on a proposed S1.1 the documen!S. ·
"For the DEP to block public
billion pulp mill. in Mason County.
"Blocking public access to per· access to its application files at a
mit application files ... deprives the . time when a controversial permit
public of irs right to meaningfully decision is about to be made is
participate in the environmental clearly violative of the ci-tizens'
decision making process," the rigbt to be informed about the
activities of government," Weise
request filed Thursday said . .
and
McGinley wrore.
•
Tbe division sealed the files on
Th
e
newspaper
asked
for
the
the project's environmental permit

injunction against the DEP file sealing at tbe same time they
agreed to allow the environmental
agency to intervene in the
Gazette's lawsuit against the W~st
Virginia Development Office.
The Gazette sued the Develop·
ment Office in May, seeking documen!S that might reveal what kinds
of government loans, tax breaks
and other incentives the company
could receive for building the mill
in West Virginia.
DEP lawyer Bill Adams last

week asked Canady to allow his
agency to intervene in that case to
seek clarification of a July 12 order
Canady issued in U1e Development
Office case.
Canady ordered th e Development Office to provide the Gazelle
a list of tllC wilhheld documents
and appointed Charleston attorney
Tom Hayes .as a special master to
review the records land recommend
which ones should be released.
Written Gazette freedom of information act (FOIA) requests

were denied Wednesday and
Thursday for three documents in
the air permit file, even thougb
they are not on the Development
Office lisl of withheld documents.
In a Thursday )cllcr to the
Gazette, its renewed request, filed
Aug . 30 for access to all of the air
pennit files was not addressed. Previously the Gazette was allowed to
regularly review the air pennit files
under a FO IA request filed in
February .

Packwood dodges expulsion
vote flap by resignilng his seat
By JILL LAWRENCE
day night on CNN's Larry King . ~rly asking J)COPl~ with legisla~vb
Associated Press Writer
Live program, estimated Packwood snterests to bore hiS estranged wtfe;
wASHINGTON - Sen. Bob would remain 30 to 60 days. Du~· and obstructed the commtttee probe
P:!ckwood said after he announced . ing that time Packwood migM ue by alten~g hiS d1anes.
he would resign that "an immense up loose ends, stay on as nom mal
The diane~ matrer was forward weight has been lifted." He might chair~an of th';, Senate Finance ed lo the J~suce De.panmcnt. Comhave been speaking for the entire Commmee. and ~.enamly vote to muree Chainnan M1tch McConnell,
Senate, spared tbe agony of an re[&gt;resent hts stale.
R-Ky., satd the. changes Packwood
expulsion vote and now free to
Glum, red-eyed colleagues made ~she anuctpate&lt;). a subpoena
concenuate on the crush of legisla- praised Packwopd on 1bursday for were cl~arly Illegal and could
tiwe business at hand.
bis loyalty, integrity and legislative cany a pnson sentence..
, The grave sexual and official skills, and some questioned the
Pack~ood bad dented that. he
misconduct allegations against the s~ver,i!Y ?f .tbe judgment ag~inst altered h1s ongmal taped d1arses .
Oregon Republican, festering for ~•m;, 'Il!•s IS a moment for .gnev· He ~cmowledged he altered cop1es
nearly three years. came to rcsolu- m~. satd Sen. John McCam, R- . ofb!s d1ary '!~pes af';"r he gave the
Lion within 24 hours. ·Packwood Aiiz.
..
ongmals to his law7.crs. He sasd the
delivered his tearful resignation
The war'!! noor tnbut.es fr.om ta~~ contamed p~rso.nally.or
address less than a day after vow· Packwood tnttmates, .mcluds?g ]:!Oh,t!cally embarrassmg mforma" ing to fight a unanimous ethics Dole. contrasted dnunaltcall~ w~th uon and he feared they would be
•, panel recommendation that he be the Senate Ethtcs Commtttee bh~· leaked.
. .
expelled.
·
tcring assessment of the senator s . P~ckwood, 62, ~hose m hts resognauon speech to tgnor~ the recent
Just when Packwood would behavior.
actually leave, however, was uncer·
The committee concluded that unpleasantness and d1scuss the
lain.
. he made unwelcome advances hsghhghts o,f, hts 27-ye~ career. He
Senate Majority Leader Bob t~war.d 17 wo~en ;. tned to reduce . talked of fnendshtp s beyond
Dole, R-Kan., interviewed Tburs· hss alunony obhgatsons by omprop- count."

Officials identify teen shooting suspect
Officials now say they know
from .other youths, Ross made up
more about the even!S leading up
tales of his involvement in other
the shooting of a 16-year·old Midcriminal acrs - including one in
dlepon boy last weekend.
which be claimed to have sbot a
Chad Wise was allegedly shol
man in tbe knees, Prosecuting
by another Middleport boy wbo
Attorney John R. Lentes said.
authorities now identify as Thomas
The other boys did not believe
James Ro$S liT, 16, also of Middle·
the stories, prompting Ross to take
other action, he alleged.
port.
Wise was allegedly shot by
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
Ross once in tl1e abdomen witb a . backed up Lentes' interpretation of
.38-caliber handgun. Ross bas sioce
the event.
been charged wilh felonious assault
The shooting wa&lt; not gang- or
in the Meigs County Juvenile
drug·related, Soulsby said . In addition it does not appear to have
Coun.
In an attempt to gain respecl
resulted from a dispute over a girl,

'

as some ~tave speculated, he said.
Lentes claims Ross was
engrossed with movies and music
that glamorize violence.
Another youngster wbo was
allegedly with Ross before the
shooting said .he drank some beer
and watched Menace II Sociery, a
film portraying gang culture, to
motivate himself for the shooting,
Lentes said.
Ross w'as arrested by Meigs
sherifrs deputies shortly afler the
incident
This week, Lenles and Soulsby
(Continued on Page 3)

''

By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Conservative Republicans are claiming a
breakthrough in their drive to
rewrite the pany' s welfare bill to
deny higher benefits to mothers on
welfare who have more children,
improving i!S prospects for passing
the Senate.
The deal was struck Thursday in
a closed-door meeting of Senate
Republicans, whose differences
over illegitimate binbs helped stall
debate earlier this summer on the
pany's welfare overhaul, its marquee social issue.
Sen. Phil Granun, R-Texas, and
other conservatives had pushed
hard for a family cap - a policy to
end the automatic increases in cash
benefits that mothers on welfare in
most states receive when they .&amp;ive
birth to another child. ,
Gramm said Senate Majority
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., his rival
for the GOP presidential nomin~­
tion, had agreed that single mothers
should be denied "more ·and more
cash ... for having more and more
children on welfare."
Under the compromise, states
would be allowed to decide
whether:to give these families inkind benclirs, such. as voucher.. for
diapers and formula, to care for·
their youngest children. Gramm
said.
Anli-abonion forces bad sought
the vouchers, based on their fears
that ending suppon would encour·
age more abonions.
.•
Gramm· said the bill would
reward states that reduce rates or'
out·of· wcdlock births without
increasing the number of abonions.
. He said the legislation seeks to dis\ mantle the federal welfare bureau ..
cmcy as il shifts programs for the
poor to the sL11es in lump sum paymen!S known a&lt; block ~ranL&lt; :
• Dole was not nearly as specilic,
telling the Senate only, "I think
most of the differences have been
resolved on our side because we' ve
tried to base our bill on three principles: creating a real work requirement, returning authority to the
states and restraining welfare
spending.
"We think these are the princi·
pies that are necessary if we're
going to provide the dramatic
rcfonn, to provide hope and opportunity to the Americans in need."
Gramm said the agreement
improves chances the Senate will
pass welfare reform, possibly by
next Wednesday.
"This is a major breakthrough,"
he said in an interview. Hif we can

bold these provisions on the noor
and prevent amendmenrs that sim·
ply commit us to more welfare, I
think .we' re going to have a very
important bill. ... I think we're
going to pass this bill."

LEAVING SENATE- Oregon Sen. Bob Packwood, left,
appeared Thursday with Senate .Majority Leader B11b Dole at a
fund -raiser In Portland, Ore, after Packwood announced he would
resign his seat in the wake of the Senate Ethics Committee's recommendation that Packwood be expelled. (AP)

Pipe·firm's suit against
commissioners dropped
I

A U.S. Disuict Counjudge Thursday dismissed a lawsuit against
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
Welding Inc. of Charleston, W.Va., filed suit against the board
on Aug. 18, alleging that specifications for a water storage tank for
a Leading Creek Conservancy District project unfairly excluded
their product
"Leading Creek wanted a glass·lined water tank." said Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes, who represented the commission.
."They thought their steel tank wl!Sjust as hi gh in quality."
Judge Sandra Beckwith of the U.S. District Court. Southern District, Columbus, dismissed the suit following a relcphone conference Tuesday. Lenles had filed a motion 10 dismi ss.

L.------------------------....1
!
•

Gramm said his dispute witb
Dole on welfare .. is now ovJr"
although one sticking point ·
remains: whether teen-agers who
have children out of wedlock
should be given their own welfare
check, as some conservatives have
demanded.
The negotialions over the family
cap marked the Senate' s second
day of debate on the GOP legislation, which would trim spending on
food stamps and other welfare pro- .
grams by $70 billion over the next
seven years and give states vast
new powers to design and operate ·
their own programs for the poor.
In the forst· vote since the debate
began, th,e Senare rejecled a Demo·
cratic alternative, 54 to 45 , almost
along straight party lines . One
Democrat. Sen . Max Baucu s of
Monlana, rejected his party's bill,
while one Republican, Sen. Frank
Murkowski of Alaska, did not vote .
Even as their own plan was
defeated, Senate Dcmocrars were
united in their attacks on the GOP
legislation.

�./ ...,.

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

f)MULTIMEDIA.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
LETI'ERS OF OPINION

are

welcome. They should be le ss than 300

words long. All letters arc subjeCt to cd1ting and must be signed with name.
address and telephonl! number. No unsigned letters will be published Leiters

should be in good taste, addressing issues. not person;.tlities.

:secure summer
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- It's been a secure summer in the capital.
No intruder has scaled tbe White House fence in months. That light
airplane crash on the South Lawn was nearly a year ago. Out the front
door, Pennsylvania Avenue is a paved park; no traffic allowed in more
th:m three months.
No hassles at the Capitol itself, either, where streets and driveways
close by Senate and HQuse omce buildings also have been closed. The
plaza closest to the building was put off limits to all ,bul official traffic
long ago.
There is a priee for security against the kinds of risks that explode periodically in Washington. It all has been heightened since the deadly bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City on April 19, but pressure for
tightened security is not new business.
It has been generally accepted, although the city did balk when five
federal agencies and couns wanted parking bans near their buildings.
But a Republican senator thinks they've gone too far at the CapitoL
"With every new fence we put up and every anned officer w~ stalion
in front of i~ we jeopardize a little bit more of the freedom symbolized by
this great building, " Sen. Rod Grams of MinnesoL1 said in a Senate
• speech prior to the summer recess or Congress.
The shutdown of Pennsylvania Avenue for two long blocks in front of
the White House was onlered by President Clinton on May 20; it had been
under study, and urged by the Secret Service, for months. Clinton said he
acted reluctantly, but that it would have been irresponsible to ignore security advice.
He said that for most Americans, the decision wouldn't change very
much except the traffic panems in Washington. The city bas adapted; rush
hour traffic may have slowed on adjacent streets, btit the massive tie-ups
that bad been forecast dido' t happen.
But security does change things. There is a tradeoff between openness
and the contrOls that bave been implemented gradually, most visibly over
the past two decades. The bomb that exploded in a Capitol men's room
early on March I, 1971, wasn't the first - one was, for example, planted
by a German sympathizer·before World War I. But it marked the beginning of intensified security in that building, once freely accessible to anyone, with hardly a glance from a Capitol cop. .
It led to reinforcement or the Capitol police force and. three years later,
to the installation of electrOnic security equipment and X-ray gates like
thOSe used at airports.
· Even so. a terrorist bomb blew a hole in a wall outside ihe Senate
chamber on Nov. 7, 1983, doing Sl million in damage.
No one was hun in either episode.
· Grams said his staff surveyed CapiJol security early in August, trying
to see it as do the 15 million tourists who corne there annually.
He said they found 27 police on patrol of the grounds, 33 retractable
traffic barriCIS, 26 concrete barricades, racks, ropes and yellow tape limiting access between sections of the Capitol grounds.
They counted nine plainclothes and 58 uniformed police guarding
entrances to the House and Senate lloors and galleiies, Gr.uns said.
He said those and other security measun:s tightened since Oklahoma
City amount to a barricade of Capitol Hill. "I am afnlid that we are perhaps using the horror of the Oklahoma City bombing as an excuse to further restrict the access of average Americans to tlieir government,''
Grams said, "and if we arc, well, that is wrong."
The eoumer argument is that in a violent age, when Ierrorists can slrike
anywhere, protection is only prudent.
White House security, always more stringent than at the Capitol, could
not avoid an improbable series of incidents over the past I I monlbs; the
airplane on the lawn, the man who fired 29 rounds at the While House last
October, a man who scaled a gate in May carrying a handgun that turned
out not to be loaded.
That was three days after Pennsylvania Avenue, a thoroughfare after
four presidential assassinations and wars since 1812, was closed. The
head of the Secret Service said closing it had been inevitable, that the only
question was whether the decision would come before or after an explosion.
In these times, the erring is on the side of security.

-J -

'

Bosnian Serb leaders who have
presided over the worst atrocities
committed on European soil since
the Nazi Holocaust.
Both Radovan Karadzic, the
leader or Bosnia's Serbs, and Gen.
By Jack Anderson
Ratko Mladic, commander or the
Bosnian Serb army, have been
and
charged with war crimes by a U.N.
tribunal set up to investigate atrociMifhael Binstein
ties in the Balkans. 1)le Clinton
administration
says it won't supYugoslavia has been couned by the
port
amnesty
in exchan~e for
Clinton administration in recent
peace.
And
well
it shouldn t. For
months ~ and recent events have
Karadzic
and
Mladic
have rung up
made that back channel bear fruit.
a
record
of
inhumanity
that deserve
But while Milosevic may be
nothing
less
than
full
public
cooing like a dove now, U.S. intelaccountability.
ligence analysts worry that be will
As ' the war was beginning,
fail to deliver his compatriot Serbs
Bosnian
Serbs swept into Muslim
in Bosnia- or will break any deal
and
Croat
villages in the republic
when it suits his purposes. So far,
of
Bosnia
and
engaged in slaughter
these analysts note, it's been Miloand
depredation
. Identification of
scvic's pattern to slretch out negomany
of
the
"ethqically
impure"
tiations until the Bosnian Serbs are
men was simple - they were
re'!'ly to strike back.
stripped naked to check for circumThe good cop-bad cop approach
cision. The lucky ones left alive
has worked with peace negotiators
were shipped off in crowded,
10 the past, Western diplomats
locked railway cars as expelled
refugees to Austria, Hungary and
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - , elsewhere. The unlucky ones were
rounded up and interned in dozens
of concentration camps in Bosnia. _
Camp life was horrendous.
Cruel games ,were played by the
Serbian guards, like spraying insecticide on meager rations out of
si_ght of prisoners, only to watch
them vomii out their empty stom'
achs. Word of mass executions
swept through Europe like a whirl ~
wind . Much of the physical evic
dence - the bodies - were dispatched in at least 151 mass graves,
tossed in the rivers or cremated io
an animal fat-rendering plant.
As the pressure grows in the
coming weeks to ink a peace agree;menl with the Bosnian Serbs, so
will the pressure to grant amnesty
to Mladic and Karadzic. If it
appears that the amnesty issue ii
the only remaining barrier to peace,
it would be a difficult proposi/idn
to pass upc
The NATO leaders should reject
this option and remember who
they're dealing with. Otherwise';
any agreement they reach might a&amp;
· well be signed in blood - for it
will merely represent another
chance for the Serbs to reload.
Jack Anderson and Michaei
Blnstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.,
Clinton administration officials
believe, lies with Serbian President
Slobodan Milosevie. The man who
staned the civil war in the former

noted to our associa'\e Dale Van
Atta. From a secure seat in Belgrade, Milosevic plays the reasonable interlocutor - while the
Bosnian Serbs, whom he arms and
supports, play the bad guys who
come up with the tough demands.
The Bosnian Serbs have learned
from experience that the West is
unlikely to follow through on their
threats. If the current round of
bombings follow the familiar pattern, the West will bluster, do some
bombing, and then walk away for a
while. This would allow the Bosnian Serbs time to regroup, rearm
and pursue more territorial expansion. Both Srebrenica and apa fell
to their forces this year, and the
U.N. bas been unable to get these
"safe areas" back.
But perhaps the single biggest
reason to distrust any pledges of
peace from the Bosnian Serbs is the
threat of post-war retribution. If the
war ended tomorrow, it would simply mean the beginning or a long
and public legal battle for the

• .1Columbusl73" I

~.

~

One of the most striking and
ingenious recent proposals of death
penalty opponents is that execulions be televised and broadcast.
Their crafty assumption is that the
roughly 80 percent or the public
that favors the death penalty would
blanch and change its mind under
the impact of such undeniably grim
and gripping scenes.
Whether this is Jrue is !1ebatable.
A few might change their minds,
but many others cenainly wouldn't.
A more likely result would be that
death penalty foes who have never
actually witnessed an execution
would be confirmed in their opposition - a desirable result, to be
sure, from the standpoint of opponents.
It is interesting to contrast this
staunch readiness to confronl the
ghastliest aspects lor capital punishment with the e.tremc reluctance
of abortion advocates to permit a

·

In 1900, Galves!On, TexaS, was sJruck by a hurricane that killed about
6,000 people.
In 1921. Mar~aret Gorman or W$hingtoo D.C. was cro..wned the farst
"Miss America' in Atlantic City, NJ .
\
In I 934, I 34 people lost their lives in a fire aboard the liner Morro
.castle off the New Jersey coast.
In 1943, during World War II, Gen. Dwight E. Eisenhower publicly
announced 'ltaly's suirender, a decision denounced by Nazi Germany as a
cowardly act ·
In 1945, 50 years ago, Bess Myerson or New York was crowned Miss
America in Atlantic City, NJ ., becoming the firSt Jewish contestant to
win the title.
.
·
In 1951, a peace treaty with Japan was signed by 48 otber nations in
San francisco.
In 1974, President Ford granted an unconditional pardon to former
President Nixon.
In 1975, Boston's public schools began their court-ordered cit~wide
busing program amid scattered incidents of violence.
Ten years ago: Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds lied Ty Cobb's career
record r~ hils, singling for hit number 4,].9 I during a game against the
Cubs in Chicago. Ivan Lend! defeated Jofln McEnroe to win the men's
singles championshp at the U.S. Open.

'

Last month's 50th anniversary but probably through an invasion
or the atomic bombing of Hiroshi- that would have cost tens of thouma prompted a new round of dis- sands of American lives and possicussions. Five decades after the bly millions of Japanese lives."
first atom bomb was exploded over
Hiroshima, the question still haunts
America: Did we need to drop it? George R. Plagenz
Did Truman's fateful decision end
The morality issues are even
the war sooner and save countless
harder to son ouL Many Americans
American lives -or not?
. Sometimes the question is given agree with the decision to drop the
an ethical spin: Was dropping the bomb. But many others are troubomb immoral even considering bled. A letter-writer to The New
the lives of Americans it may have York Times says, "By dropping
two nuclear bombs on Japanese
saved?
cities,
killing more women and
. The authors of two new books
children
in less time than anyone
take opposing sides on the military
else
in
history,
Truman destroyed
question. In "The Decision to Use
the
conscience
of
the nation."
the Atomic Bomb," Gar AlperFrom
even
such
an unlikely
ovitz says, "A recently discovered
source
as
Adm.
William
Leahy,
top-secret War Department study is
chaitman
of
the
Joint
Chiefs
of
unequivocal: Japan almost cenainStaff
in
World
Wai:
II,
come
these
Jy would have surrendered when
the Soviets made their planned words: "In being the first to use
attack in August I 945." This the atom bomb, we adopted an ethmeans that, even without use of the ical standard common to the barbomb, the war would not have barians of the Dark Ages.''
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower said it
gone on any longer than it did.
Not so, say the authors of anoth- was not necessary "to hit them
er book timed to coincide with lbe with that awful thing.·'
But many of us do not.fcel eon50tb anniversary of the Hiroshima
bombing . The co-authors or science-stricken. We think 'o f
I !iroshima not in tenns of the gross
"Code-Name Downfall," Norman
Polmar and Thomas Allen. write,
suffering we inflicted but in terms
"There can be little doubt that, of the American lives we saved. ·
even without the atomic bomb, the
Nevertheless, saving human
U.S. would have won the ,war lives (even our own) is not enough

Below• normal temps Set
'to Stay through next week
·

'

Home,Middlepon.

1951. Sunset tonight will be at 7:52 '
p.m. and suurise Saturday at 7:06
0
a.m.
Thomas Richard Roush, 72, of Middlepon, died Thursday. Sept. 7.
Weather forecast:
· 1995 at Pleasant Valley Hospital .in Point Pleasant. W. Va
Tonight...Cloudy with a chance
Born on Jan. 26, 1923 in Mason County, W. Va.. he was the son of the
of rain or drizzle. Low in the 50s.
late Arbin and Lucie Stewan Roush. He was aU. S. Army veteran and a
Saturday ... Variable cloudiness. lifetime member of the DAY post in Pomeroy. lie attended the Wesleyan
Highs in the upper 60s nonh to the Bible Holiness Church of Middleport.
·
low to mid 70s south.
Mr. Roush is survived by bis wife, Dorothy (Roach) Roush; five
Extended forecast:
daughters and sons-in-law, Connie and Roger Manley, Sharon and Fred
Sunday .. .A chance of showers Older, Jeanie and Mark Burson, Dottie Sizemore, and Judy Laudermilt;
nonheast. Dry elsewhere. Lows in two sons and daughters-in-law, Tom and Connie Roush and !obn and
the 40s with highs in the 60s.
Betty Roush; 21 grandchildren, II great-grandch!l~n; three sos~n; and
Monday and Tuesday ... Dry . brothers-in-law, Betty and Wmfield VanMeter, Bollie Irene and J101 Hall,
Lows in the 40s with highs in the Clara Margaret Hall, a brother and sister-in-law, Harry and Edna Roush.
60s.
Besides bjs parents, be was preceded in death by infant sons, David
Lee Rousb, •and Arbin .Richard Roush; br~thers, Chester Ray Roush,
Arbin Roush, Jr., and Frankhn Roush.
Funeral services will ·be held ar. 2 p.m. Sunday at the Victory Baptist
Church in Middleport with the Rev. James Keesee and the Rev. ~eter
Trembley officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery. Fnends
Easement,
Barbara
Florez·
to
may call at the funeral home Saturday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at FishThe following land transfers
Valley
Lumber
&amp;
Supply,
Middle·
were recorded recently in the office
er Funeral Home in Middlepon.
.
pf Meigs Cotu1ty Recorder Emma- port easement; .
Deed, Mildred L. Shumway to
gene Hamilton:
.
David
L. and Mary Christine Hur·
Deed. William, Bradley and
ley,
Bedford
tracts;
Junetta Maynard to Barbara Lou
Deed,
Kenneth
and Virginia
Hopkins, Racine lots;
Michael
·to
Paul
D.
and Linda
Deed, George Douglas and
Michael,
Salisbury/Rutland
c\pril Lowther, Gary E. and Kathy
L. Spencer to Gary E . and Kathy L. parcels;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - O.J. eight months of being sequestered,
Deed, Herben J., Nancy Lee and
Spencer;
Simpson's defense lawyers wanted they have repeatedly sent notes to
Deed. James E. Lucas to Jay Patsy S. White, Ravle Dee Warf to
to rest without putting him on the Judge Lance Ito to tell him they
John and Linda Emi Conway, Bed- MeigsCounty Public Library, Sutstand, S!lying his testimony was aren't "happy ·campers."
ton parcels.
While the jurors sat and stewed,
forti, 54.826 acres;
unnecessary to answer a state case
in "shambles." The prosecution lawyers dedicated large portions of
the day to standing and stewing.
'
would not let them.
Keeping jurors waiting in a And the jud~e was stewing back.
hotel they want desperately to Attorneys retired to Ito's c)lambers
(Continued from Page 1)
treasiJfllr,
were . general,
leave ; prosecutors derailed the for the second day in a row to
defense's
last day in Simpson's exchange heated words.
$34,459.05; street construction,
'lion.
A whole host of developments
$19,471.33;
highway,
murder
trial.
$7,306.09;
They promised to file
The third reading of an ordi:
unfolded.
The most significant was
fire,
$6,679.66;
water,
$3,178
.14;
an emergency appeal today Q,f a
,nance was given to the closing of
the
defense's
announcement that
ruling that jurors would be told that
pool, $1,767.09: guaranty meter,
Bean, Peach and Cherry alleys.
would
not be called to the
Simpson
Detective
Mark
Fuhrman
would
be
The police report from Tim $3,317.05; and cemetery: $89 .21.
stand.
Attel)ding were Pape and ZwiU"unavailable" to tcstify.
Gillilan showed that be issued 18
The defense says Simpson's tesWhen the judge summoned
citations, and investigated three ing, and Pickens, Kathryn Crow,
timony
is not needed given the
complaints. The mayor's report Donna Peterson, Dennis Wolfe, jurors into the counroom Thursday
damage
to the prosecution's case
Bill Roush and Larry Lavender, after they spent the 4ay in a hold;
showed receipts or $1,037.
from
Fuhnnan'.s
taped comments
ing room, be broke the news that
Balances in the various funds as council members.
about
racism
and
police misconthey probably wouldn't be back
reported by Janice Zwilling, clerkduct.
Fuhrman
on
Wednesday
until Monday. Some clenched their
invoked
his
Fifth
Amendment
right
jaws. Some frowned or were grimagainst
self-incrimination.
.
faced.
the
(prosecution)
case
in
"With
Today's agenda called for a noshambles, this just wasn't necesfrills procedural bearing.
The last time the I 2 jurors and sary," defense lawyer F. Lee BaiWASHINGTON (AP) - As over the past decade.
two alternates beard testimony was ley told The Associated Press.
Congress gets into the nitty gritty
The farmers were identified by just after lunch Wednesday~ter
of developing a new farm policy, a town and ZIP code only, because
lobbying group is trying to put a names were deleted from the
spotlight on farm subsidy money database to protect their privacy.
In Ohio, the top recipient was a
and where it goes.
Crawford
County farm partnership · Racine meetlnp sel
In a study released Thursday,
Junior Girl Scout meeting
that
received
subsidies totalling
The Junior Girl Scout Troop
the EnvirOnmental Working Group ·
The Racine Village Council will
said Agriculture Department $1.5 million from 1985-94, Jhe meet in regular session, Mmiday, 130l will meet Monday, Sept. II,
records show that the average Ohio study said.
Sept. II, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park. 4-5~10 p.m., at Sacred Heart
Tbe repon's release was timed Also, the Racine Board of Public Catholic Church in Pomeroy. Any
subsidy recipient gets $4,700 a year
from USDA, but the top 2 percent to draw attention to deliberations in Affairs will meet Monday Sept. II , interested fourth, fifth, and sixth
grade girl at Pomeroy Elementary
of Ohio fanners get an average of Congress over the 1995 farm bill, 10 a.m. at the annex. ·
which will determine basic farm
is invited to the meeting. Parents
$31,000.
are welcome as well. For more
"Never have so many given so policy into the next century, and a Clown Ministry
much to so few," said Clark meeting next week to try to find
"No Compromise" will be pre- information, call992-3357.
Williams, a principal author of the ways to cut $13 .4 billion from agri- sented by the Porterfield Baptist
study, which provided a list of the culture programs.
Church at the Reorganized Oiurch Sacred Heart class to begin
The Sacred Heart Church of
Rep. Pat Robens, R-Kan., chair- of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
largest recipients of farm subsidies
Pomeroy
will begin its Inquiry
man of tbe House Agriculture Saints, Portland-Racine Branch
Committee, has proposed cutting (located on Lovell Rd., just off Co. Class on Wednesday, Sept. 13, in
.The Daily Sentinel , commodity programs on a gradual Rd. 35). on Sunday, Sept. 17, at 6 the rectory. For more information,
.1
schedule.
p.m . Fellowship will follow. call 992-5898.
!USPS 113-'IIW&gt;)
Everyone is invited to au: oo . .

Simpson jurors say they
aren't happy campers

:

•
••'
••
•

Today's Birthdays: Actress Hillary Brooke is 81. Comedian Sid CaeSar '~
is 73. Former Housing Secretary Samuel R. Pierce Junior is 73 . Sen. :
Wendell Ford, D-Ky., is 71. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., is 57. Author Ann •
Beattie is 48.
·
:
Thou~ht for Today: "We shall seek the Jruth and endure the conse- ~
quences. ' - Charles Seymour, American educator and historian (1884- l
1963).
.
·'

Water,

sewer~ change ...

Group says handful of
farmers get large subsidies

Meigs announcements

l

Published ever~ afternoon. Monday through
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomrroy, Oh1o, by the •
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Inc., Pomeroy. Ohio 4.!1769, Ph. 992·2156.
Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio
Mtmbt~: The Anoc•ated Press. and the Ohio
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POSTMASTER: ~nd

ndd~u

Tht: Daily Sentinel, I l l Court

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Stocks

Am Elel'ower ....................... .34 1/8
Akzo ........................................58 1/8
Ashland OU ........................... .31 718
AT&amp;T ....................................54 3/4
Bank One ................................. .34 18
Bob Evans ............................... l7 3/4
Champion Ind ..............................ll
Charming ~bop ........................4 3/4
City Hokllng ................................ .lS
Federal Mogul ........................l3 114

Officials identify
(Continued from Page

1)

visited Meigs High School, which
both youths attend, to answer questions and to resolve any potential
problems stemming from the incident.
Lentes said he should by next
week know how his office will
Goodyeor T&amp;R ............................40
K·ma•t .................................... U S/8 . handle the incident.
Landa End .........,_.,.............. 18 7/8
Lentes said if he is not conLimited 1no:. ............................19 1/8
vinced the juvenile system will
Mulllmedlo Inc......................41 718
adequately punish the youth that be
People'• ................................. .13 114
may attempt to have bim bound
Oblo VaUO)' Bank ........................ .JS
over to the adult cowt syslem.
One Valley ....... - ................... .31 S/8.
Wise is now in fair condition at
Rook weD ................................45 314
Robbllll &amp; Myen ...................l7 Ill
Ohio State University Medical
Royal Dulcb .........................~ ..... llO
Center.
Shoney'• Inc- .......................... 11 718
Star Bank .............................. .51 S/8
Wendy lnl'l................ _ ......... 19 S/8
Kanauga Drive-In
Wortbloglon 1nd ..........................l0

Closed F.or The Sepson

Stock reporll ore the 10:30 a.m.
quoin provided by Advut of
Galllpolll.

Thanks and see
you next year.

-•-•-

A 63-year-old man on the run from Alabama authorities since
1990 was apprehended by Meigs County Sheriff's Department ·
deputies last night at Veterans Memaialllospital in Pomeroy.
Roben R. Albright was arresled on an outstanding warrant from
Montgomery, Ala., charging him wilb escape, Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. said. He was originally serving time for a second-degree
murder conviction, be added.
Albright apparently went to the hospital for bean problems. Hospital employees contacted the sherifr s deparunent after Albright
gave them different names and Social Security numbers. according
to Soulsby.
•
Alabama authorities have said they will exuadite Albright back
to Alabama, Soulsby said. lie is currently being held in the Meigs
County Jail.
&lt;

No injuries in Pomeroy accident
No citations were issued in a minor Thursday afternoon accident
in Pomeroy.
The accident occurred at 2:30 p.m. on the Big Bend Foodland
parking Jot, West Main Street.
Melvin Drake, 67, Long Bottom, was opening the driver's side
door of his 1994 Ford truck, when Angela R. Fields, 24, Racine was
pulling into the parking spot next to Drake.
Fields struck Drake's door with her 1986 Buick Century, causing
light damage to both vehicles.

Cause of death determined ·
A Racine man found dead in Myrtle Beach, S.C. over the weck&amp;J!d died of a apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound, Myrtle

"''feacb authorities have determined, according Jo Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Kevin L. Grady, 21, was round dead in a motel room Monday,
officials reponed.

· A two-vehicle accident on Chester Township Road 359 (Sorden)
Wednesday sent two drivers to Veterans Memorial Hospital with
minor injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reponed.
.
Debra F. Morarity, 40, 4922 I State Route I24, Racine, and Benton T. Dunfee, 44, 49537 SR 681, Reedsville, were transported
from the scene by the Meigs EMS. Both were later treated and
released, a VMH spokesperson said.
.
The patrol said Morarity was nonbbound and Dunfee southbound, nine-tenths of a mile north of County Road 32 (Eagle
Ridge), at 12:05 p.m. when both vehicles met on a hillcres~ braked,
and slid into each other head-on.
Damage to the Morarity car and to Dunfee's pickup, owned by
the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dostrict; was moderate.

Eastern schools to hold meeting.
The Eastern Local School District will hold the nrst in a series of
community meetings Tuesday, Sept. 12, to discuss the proposals for
the new building levy. The discussion session will be held during
the first two hours .or its regular scheduled Board or Education
meeting, 6:30 p.m.. Tuesday in the high school cafeteria.
-"-The architectural firm representing the district, and a representa· ·
live fmm the state Department of Education will be on hand to discuss proposals and answer questions. The Board encourages input
from concerned community citizens . Any citizen interested in
expressing their opinions or having their questions on the building
proposals answered should attend this meeting.
for additional infonnation, eohtact Superintendent Ron Minard
at 985-4292.

Today's livestock report
COI~UMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Ohio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Friday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Miil1cet
News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50
cents higher; demand moderate to
good.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 Jbs., country
points 47.00-48.50, few 49 .00;
plants 48.00-49.75.
.
. U.S. 2·3, 230-26() lbs., country
points 42.00-47.00.
·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - Hollie
Green, Pomeroy; Norma Curtis,
Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - James
Koli~ Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 7 - Mrs,
David Mershon and daughter,
Susan Jon~s. Hilda Harris, Mrs.
David McDaniel and daughttr, Jef·
frey Allen, William Musser,
Richard Whittington, Dorothy
Dixon, Patricia Radcliff, Carol
Folmer.
Birth -Mr. and Mrs . John
Andrews, daughter, Oak Hill.
(Puhllshed with permission)

FRI. THRU THURS
WALT DISNEY'S
POCAHONTAS G

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

446-0923

Sows: steady to 50 cents higher.·
U.S . 1-3 300-500 l.bs. 29.0032.00; 500~550 lbs. 32.00-35 .00;
550-650 lbs. 33.00-36.50.
'
Boars: 28.00-31.00
Estimaled receipts 39,000.
For the week: barrows and gilts'
firm to 50 cents higher; sows weak
to 50 cents lower.
Prices rrom The Producers.
Livestock Association:
Cattle: 3.00 to 3.50 higher.

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered nine calls for assistance
Thursday including four transfer
calls. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:14 a.m .. Riverside Apartments, Connie Scholdcrer, Veterans Memorial Hospital; .
10:25 a.m .. Village Manor
Apartments, Larry Caner, VMH . .

POMEROY .
,
· 5:44a.m ., West Main Street ·
Hollie Green, VM II.
'
RACINE
·10:18 p.m., Tackcrville Road
Audrey Nice, VMH.
'
RUTLAND
· 2:03 p.m ., slate Route 143 ·
William Polley, Holzer Medicai
Center.

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Hospital news

'·

,

Two injured in accident

Meigs land transfers posted

(For information on how to :
communicate electronically with 1
this columnist and others, con· :
tact Ameriea Online by calling 1· :
800-827-6364, ext 8317.)
:

'

Betty A. Hutchison, 63, or Rutland died Thursday. Sept. 7, 1995 at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
She was born Aug. 20, 1932, in Kenna, W.Va to the late Thornton and
Leona Hatcher. Sbe was a retired school teacher and substitute teacher
with the Meigs Local School District, a member of HyseU Run Holiness"'
Church and belonged to the retired teachers association.
She is survived by her husband, Milo Bernard Hutchison of Rutland;
four daughters and sons-in-law: Cheryl and Larry Lemley of Rutland,
Julia and Andrew Vaughn of Rutland, Jayne and Jack Humphreys of Rutland, and' Joyce and Many Seelig of Pataskala; seven grandchildren, one
great-grandchild, two sisters, and one brother.
Services wiD be held at 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 10 at Hysell Run Holiness Oiurch, with the Rev. Amos Tillis and Rev. Bob Manley officiating.
BurialwillfollowinMeigsMemoryGardens.
Friends may call Saturday, Sept. 9 from 6-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral

T h 0 mas R0 us h

By The Associated Press
Cool Canadian air began pour·
ing into Ohio behind a cold front
that produced some early morning
.rain and drizzle in tbe nonhero pan
of the state.
Forecasters said the rain won't
stay around long but the cooler
temperatures will. By Sunday,
highs wiD be in the 60s.
The below-normal temperatures
,should extend into next week, the
National Weather Service said.
The reconl-high temperature b
ibis date at the Columbus weather
,station was 100 degrees in 1939
.while the record low was 39 in

brutal and vulgar. Modem architecture - ·at least. much of it - is
angular and graceless . Modern,
painting is violent and distoned." •
This numbing of the human:
spirit since Hiroshima may extend:
even to eating. A book reviewer:
cites public apathy - numbing by:
another name - as one of tbe rea-•
sons for the deeline in farming. Our~
palates, dulled by fast foods, no:
longer appreciate the subtle tastes:·
of home-grown fruits and vegeta- •
bles, the reviewer says.
:
Did Hiroshima change not only :
the face of Japan but the face of~
America as well?
•·
George Plage02 is a syndical· :
ed writer for Newspaper Enter- :
prise Association.

·

.---.-~;.,;,;;;;;;...;,.;;;;;-...;o;,;;_.J;;;ce....-;;;S;;;un;;;n'"y~Pt~
. Ciioloioiu_.dy~C~J-oud-.,r
v.. Assoc.a/ed P,essGn.phocsNel
1:! 1995Acc,wealh•'·'"

public ·Jook at the at least equally could concentrate on lhird'ghastly aspects of that procedure.
trimester "terminations," in which
In the last congressional elec- the fetus' skull was crushed and
tions, a pro-life candidate whose drained while still in the birth canal
TV commercials including graphic (to keep it from being murder). ·
scenes of abortions in progress was
If both sides cooperated in sup.refused permission to air them. An porting this project, the idea would
abortion roe who wanted to con- have a lot of clout. Just think":
front candidate Clinton with an Amnesty International and th~
aborted fetus in a sidewalk ·. ACLU in a coalition with Operaencounter in New York City during tion Rescue ·and Right to Life!
the 1992 Democratic convention Would any politician dare to
was summarily sent to jaiL Jlow Qppose it?
·
' often have you seen a photograph
Yes . A lot of them would b~
of an aboned fetus? Do you think between a rock and a bard place,
it's because they're rare? There are because of course the ''proJess than a hundred executions a choice" forces would oppose the
year in the United States. There are whole idea tooth and claw. They
·mmions or abortions.
are rightly afraid of letting the
I have a proposal. Let's urge squeamish look at the physical cvideath penalty opponents and abor- dence of their policy . But if the
tion foes to reach an agreement to death penalty opponents can bring
televise both events regularly. We them around, it's a deal.
pro-life types won't even insist on
William A. Rusher Is a Dlstln· .
a ratio proportional to the number gulshed Fellow of the Claremont
of events actually occurring.
Institute for the .Study of States·
Each side would be· able to manshlp and Political PhilosO·
choose lhe' events it wished to phy.
broadcast. The death penalty foes
(For information on how to
could pick executions which for communicate electronically with
some reason didn't go smoothly, this columnist and others, concausing the prisoner to die in visi- tact America Online by calling 1•
ble diseomfon. The pro-life people 800-827-6364, exL 11317.1
.

unless we remain hu mane in the
process. In our cffons. •&gt;win a war,
we must be on guatd II ·11 W&lt;' do not
destroy in ourselves th~. quality of
humanity without which human life
is of little or no value.
Is it only coincidence that in the
years since Hiroshima we have
become a nation numb to inhumanity and suffering? We bave experi·
enced an erosion of compassion
and generosity af spirit. We are
desensitized to all fonns of violence in the street or on TV.
What may be just as sad, we
have become numb not only to the
evil things of life but to the good
things, like beauty and esthetics.
This is what one social commentator says of the present state of
American culture:
"Modem music is on the whole
discordant and hard to listen to.
Modem poetry is harsh. The lines
are gnarled. l;bey seldom sing.
Nothing sings. Modem theater is

dlfii.
-·"·''·'·'W·

Local briefs

Escapee nabbed in Pomeroy

Betty A. Hutchinson

A modest proposal _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.:.
William A. Rusher

Hollie Grady
Hollie W. Grady, 76, of Wellsville died Thursday, Sept. 7, 1995 at a
nursing home there.
Born on Dec. 28, 1919 at Spencer, W. Va. he was the son of the late
Onie A. and Estie E. Walls Grady. He was reared in the Racine area,
served in the Civilian Conservation Corps and was a veteran of World
War 2 having served in the European theattr.
He is survived by two step sons, Butch and Kennetb Powell, and two
step daughters, Doroiby and Mary Wbillen. Also surviving are a sister,
Frances Parsons, Paducak, Ky., and two brothers, Raymond of Racine.
and Delmar of Reedsville, along with several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by bis second wife and
four sisters and four brothers.
Funeral services and burial will be held in Wellsville.

IND.

nE MARK FUHRIMN SENTEOCE •..

the defendant to a new life of service to God. etc., etc.), until even
some of their clients grow weary
and beg to be allowed to die.

conditions and hi~h temperatures

r----

l.t!CH

Is America numb to inhu.manity?_ _ _ __

By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Sept 8,the 251st day of 1995. There are 114 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. Sixty years ago, on Sept 8, 1935, Sen. 'Huey P. Long, ''The Kingrish"
of Louisiana politics, was shot and mortally woWlded; be died two days
later.
.
On this date:
In 1565, a Spanish expedition established the farst permanent European
settlement in North America at present-day St Augw;tioe, Fla.
In 1664, the Dutch surrendered New Amsttrdam tO the British, wbo
renamed it New York.
In 1892, an early version of The Pledge of AUegiance appeared in The
Youth's Companion.

Accu-Weather" forecast for

Bombs keep the Bosnian Serbs negotiating

Scarcely a week goes by, now,
without the papers reporting that
there has been another execution
somewhere in the country. Often
the state is Texas, l]ut not always:
Florida, Alabama, Oklahoma and
several other states - even
(improbably) Washington and California - have made news of this
son in recent months or years.
Whether this has anything to do
with the recent reported downturn
in the national murder rate is hard
to say, but I cenainly don't consider it out of the question. Certitude ·
of punishmen~ it has been demonstrated statistically, is a far greater
deterrent than the drastic nature of
some penalty threatened but seldom, if ever, actually imposed.
But the battle for capital punishment is far from over, and probably
never wiU be over unless its opponents win it. They will keep on
fighting - stalling on every conceivable ground, inventing ever
more ingenious arguments (fetal
. alcohol syndrome, abuse as a child,
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and colummental incapaci[y, incompetent
nist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
prior counsel, newly discovered
national politics for more than 30 years.
evidence, sudden recantations or
abrupt new confessions by ihird
parties, born-again conversion by

Today in history

Saturday, Sept. 9

-

WASHINGTON - When the
NATO bombs eventually stop
falling on the Bosnian Serb forces
who surround Sarajevo, Western
leaders will face an agonizing
question: y./illthe Serb leaders live
up to any negotiated peace agreement as long as they ' re under
indictment by a United Nations war
crimes tribunal? ,
A recent series of setbacks in
their war against the Bosnians and
the Croats have left the Bosnian
Serbs more willing to negotiate a
peaceful end to the 4-year-old civil
war. Yet despite the pounding from
NATO air strikes, there are still no
signs that the Bosnian Serbs are
ready to capitulate - · or even
return any or their large territorial
gains.
Western analysts arc viewing
the latest Serb ov~nures with skepticism. {f the last four years are any
indication. they argue, the Serbs
will only compromise as long as it
suits their interest
The key to a peace agreement,

--Area deaths-

OHIO Weat~er

'
Page
Friday, September 8, 1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 8, 1995

t

\

\\ ' '

~

J

J

I

Fit Together
AEROBICS
NEW 9 WEEK SESSION
To Begin

Sept. 11
Mon.- lues &amp; Thurs
7-8 pm

Royal Oak Resort
For more informatio[l or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992-6893
·-

�'
Friday, September 8, 1995

·Sports

The Daily Sentinel

now is to go into the rtayoffs with innings.
Alan Embree and J ~lian Tavarez
some momentum,' said Jim
Thome, whose bases-loalled double combine&lt;! 10 pitch a scoreless
in the first inning produced Cleve- eighth, and Jose Mesa - who had
land's first two runs. "Let's face i~
blown his previous two save oppor!his team has played well all year, tunities - worked a perfect ninth
and we haven' 1 had to look over for his 39th save in 41 chances.
our shoulder."
Bosio yielded four runs and
Charles Nagy won his third con- eight hits in seven innings. walking
sccutive start, and Carlos Baerga one and striking out five .
homered for the Indians, winners of
"I love coming here to play
II straight home games and 13 of these guys," Bosio said. "They
!heir last 15 overall. Their 85 wins have an awesome lineup, and so do
arc their most in any season since we . It's a good matchup. In fact .
they won 86 in 1968.
I'd love to come back here next
The Mariners fell six games month against these guys and take
behind first-place California in the our chances (in the playoffs) . Now
AL West and one game behind it's time to go home to Seattle and
Kansas City in the wild-card race . do something about making our
·
The Royals play three games at way back here."
SeatUe beginning lonight.
The Mariners got a scare in the
Thome's two-run doubi110J1Ut third inning when Ken Griffey Jr.
Cleveland ahead in the firslfbut · screamed and dropped his bat as he
Seattle closed to 2-1 on Jay Buhn- checked his swing. Griffey , who
er's home run in the fourth, his underwent surgery for a broken left
career-high 28th. Baerga answered wrist in May, flexed his hand and
with a two-run shot off Chris Bosio walked around the plate before
(9-8) in the fifth, Bacrga's 15th of resuming the at-bat.
He struck out that time up but
the year but his first since Aug. 5.
lined
a single up the middle in !he
Nagy (13-5) gave up one run
sixth
inni~.
and five bits in seven innings,
"When Junior checked his
walking three .and striking ·o ut
swing
on his second at-bat, it got a
seven. In his last three starts, he has
scary,"
manager Lou Piniella
liule
struck out 26 batters in 20 2/3

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sport&amp; W rl.t or
Kent coach fun Corrigall, pan
dri '!:§.'!rgeant and part father-figure, talks like a coach from 30
years ago.
That's because he still remembers what football Saturdays were
like around Kent back in the tate
· 1960s. And he still believes that the
. values of those days can be brought
: back- and the school's recent
· failures in football can be reversed
&gt;-with hard work and discipline.
"When I took the job I said we
· have to do things different and bet: ter than our competition," Corrigall said. "Whatever they've done
· here in the past 20 years, it dido 't
work.''
There are signs that the Golden
Flashes who could have
changed their nickname to Doormats n9t so long ago - are
responding to CorTi gall and his oldfashioned approach.

said. "Dut he said it didn't bother
him the rest of the game, so that's

good news.''
The Mariners and Indians were
playing a one-game "series" that
was added to the schedule because
of the players' strike.
In the only other AL action
Thursday night, Texas beat Chicago 2-0.
Rangers 2, White Sox 0
At Arlington, Roger Pa.vlik
threw a three-hitter for his ttrsr-career shutout as Texas baited
Chicago's eight-game winning
streak.
Pavlik (8-9) had lost three of his
previous four decisions, but he 'was
in command against a hot-hitting
White Sox lineup that was haUing
.342 with a ·.558 slugging percentage over the eight-game streak,
Chicago's longest since 1991. The
complete game was Pavlik's first
of the season and fourth of his
career.
Pavlik struck out five and
walked four in outdueling Wilson
Alvarez (7 -8 ), who is 0-7 on . the
road this season.
Texas ended a four-game losing
streak and moved within two
games i&gt;f idle Kansas City in the
AL wild-card raoe.

In the U.S. Open,

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - They
'fought this one with bludgeons
·shaped like tennis rackets . Toe to
· toe. Mano a mano.
. · And when the men's quarterti. nals were finally completed, when
· Thursday had disappeared just as
had so many players in the U.S.
· Open, two of the biggest sluggers
· in the game were left standing,
Teady to rumble for another round.
. Pete Sampras and Jim Courier
·revved up their power games,
. solved the gusty wind sweeping
through Louis Arrnsrrong Stadium
. ·a nd blasted their opponents off the
court in straight sets.
: It was far from easy. Sampras,
:Seeking to add this crown to his
Wimbledon title, knocked off
:.mseeded Byron Black of Zimbab\ve 7-6 (7-3), 6-4, 6-0. Courier.
:.bowing the form that took him to
:three Grand Slam titles earlier in
1tis career, outfought fifth-seeded
;Michael Chang 7-6 (7-5), 7-6 (7-3).

:7-5.
· Today. !he women's semifinals
pit top-seeded Steffi Graf against
:No. 9 Gabriela Sabatini, followed
'by No. 2 Monica Seles against No.
4 Conchita Martinez.
The men· s semifinals - Sampras against Courier and .No. I
Andre Agassi against No. 4 Boris
:Decker- and the women's title
match are scheduled Saturday. with
ihe men's ch3111pionship set for
·sunday.
·
·
· "I think it turned, quite honest.Jy on a few points here and there,"
Chang said of his 3-hour, 7-minul~
match with Courier. For Chang.
most of the points went "there."
He served for each of !he three
sets. Each time, Courier broke
Chang's serve, eventually forcing
.tiebreakers in !he first two sets.
. "I had set points in the ftrst and
second sets," Chang said. "At the
. U.S. Open, you hope those things
· just don't happen."
: Whenever .Courier needed 'a

~

'

..

GREETS WELL-WISHERS -The Baltimore Orioles' Cal Ripken Jr. leans over the railing of tho noat to gnet well-wishers at a
parade held in his honor Thursday In Baltimon. The pnvlous night
saw him play in his 2,131st consecutive game to break Lou Gehrig's
long-standing stnak. (AP)
"My whole game just revolves
around my serve. If I am serving
well, !hat kind oflets the rest of my
game be a lot more confident ·and I
can hit my groundies a lit~e cleaner. ·•
Black, for one, was impressed.
"I was prcuy much overpowered out there," Black said. "I
haven't played in that sort of
swirling wind before, and I think
Pete was used to that. And he
serves a lot beuer !han I do. I was
really stritggling every time on my

along. Today, be really .blew me off
the court. I really didn't have a
weapon that could hun him."
Black was the only player in the
men's quarterfinals who bas never
won a singles title and, in fact, ha.'
never reached a final in singles on
the A TP Tour. His upsets of
Enqvist and Stich, then, made this
the best tournament or his career.
"It's nice to be able to beat a
couple of top 10 players, to know
that you can dO' that, !hat's the main
thing," he said.
Matt Lucena of Chico, Calif.,
and Meredith McGrath of Midland,
Mich., captured the ftrst Iitle of the
tournament

serve.
"You know, in the other matches I felt really confident and I waS
buildi_ng confidence as I went

Scoreboard
Baseball
Major leagues
AMERICAN LF:AGUJ;
Ea."tm Di•l.,\on

Iuul •

.ll: L

1'&lt;1.

BoJ.IOn............... 16
New York. ..
... 61
Bahunorl!.
. .... 57

45
61
65

.52 8
SOO
.467

Toronto
Detroit..

7I
71

.418
413

.. 51

... so

Dlvl-'lon '
CLEVELAND ... 85 J7 .697
""'nsasC1ty ....... . 62 59 .Sl2
Milwaukf'~ ...... ..... 59 63
4114
Chicago ............... 56 65 .463
Miooesota .......... :... 46 74 3!13

!LB.
15.5
19.5
25 .5

26

c~ntral

22.5
26
28 .5
38

Wutc-rn Oivi.!on
CalifornJa...
..68 55 .55)

Seaule ................ 62 61

.50-4

6

Texas .

.496
.4HO

7
9

Dak:land

61
, .. .:S9

62
64

Thursday's scores
CLEVELAJ'oo'D 4, Seatlle l

Texas 2 ;0tica ~o 0

Tontghl's games
Texas (Witt 2- 1) at Mitwaut.r.e (Boni!S
3-10), 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Brown 7-8) 01 CLEVELAND (Hcnhim 12-6), 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Lil'3 9-9) at Toronro (Ware 0·

I), I :OS p.m.
Boston (Wakefield 15-3 ) at New York
(Cone 14-7), 8:05p
Kanilll Cily (Jacome 4-l) at Seallle
(Johnwn 13·2), 11 :05 p.m
Chi~ago (Andujar 0-0) ar Oakland
(Van Poppe!J-5), l J:OS p.m.
Minnesota (Parra 1-2} at California
(Lanpton 13-4), II :OS p.m.

Saturday's gaines
Balli more (Krlvda 2-3) at CLEVE-

,,05

(Finley 13-10), JO:OS p.m.

Sunday's&amp;amn:
BaiUmote at CLEVELAND, 1:05 p.m.
Ottroit at Toroata, 1:35 p.m.

Texas Ill. Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m
Oiicago a1 Oakland, 4:0S p.m.
Minoe~alol at CalirCfnia, 4:05p.m.
Kan&amp;u City at Seattle. 4:3S p.m.
Bolton at New York, I :OS p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eucern DlvliiOft
ItJm
I
.ll: I. 1'&lt;1.
AtlBDta .................78 45 .634
Philadelphia ........... 62 61 .504
Montreal ................ 59 63 .484

Florida ...................56 65
New York .... ,......... 53 68

!LB.
16
18.5

.463

21

.438

24

Crntral Dlvilion
CINCINNATI... ..... 75 46 .620
Houston ................. 62 60 .508
crucaao ....... ........... 61

60

.504

14

Pitllburih .............. 51
St. Louis .. ............ 51

70
72

.421
.415

24
25

Wdtnn Dl...-lslon
Col0rado ................ 63 58 .521
Los Al1Flea ........... 64 59 .520
San Dieao .............. 60 62 .-492
Sift Francisco ........ .58 64 .475

San Fmn~isco (Valde~~ 2-3) at Chicago ,
(Navarro 13-5), 3:20p.m.
All ant a (Mercker 7-8) at Flori da
{1-hunmund 7-S). 8:05p.m.
New York (Jones 7-8) at Molltreal
(Reut~:r 2·2), 8:05p.m.
Jlnuston (Hampton 8-6) at Philadelphill (Green 8-8), 8:05p.m.
Los Angeles {R. Marllne:z 14-7) at
Pitta:bwgh (Loaiza B-7), 8:05p.m.
San rnego (Hamilton 6-7) at St Louis
10t&gt;borne 0-6), 8:05p.m.
CINCINNATI (Schoorek 15-7) at Colorado (Bailey 7-S), 8:0~ p.m.

•

TIE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

and

James E. Wither~ll, M.D.
Meigs Health Services will be operating
as Meigs Health Services of Holzer
Clinic. Drs. Witherell and Mansfield will
continue :to practice from the 507
Mulqerry Heights location in Pomeroy.
Together with Holzer Clinic of Meigs
County in Middlepon, we will continue to
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Cuckler Consulting I
Retirement
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I.Ur

By WILL LESTER
Then the skies ojlened.
MIAMI (AP) - The Atlanta
The Marlins took a 3-0 lead on
Draves took just 21 minutes to KO an RBI triple by_ Andre Dawson
the Florida Marlins in the first and RBis by moktes Charles Johngame of a very strange doublehead- son and Quilvio Veras. .
.
er. Florida won the nightcap with
In the nt~htcap, the Marh~s
its own brand of power baseball.
played the _kmd of baseball that s
The same pi!Chers, Pat Rapp of marked thetr second half- strong.
the Marlins and Steve Avery of the startmg pttchmg and clutch htltmg.
Rapp (10-7). who ':"on his fiflh
Draves, staned bpth games -of the
time-warped twinbill that started strrught dCCISton, was JUbtlant after
the second game.
May 4 only to be suspended by rain
in the ninth inning.
"That's probably the best conThe game was resumed in a trol I've bad in my life," Rapp
drizzle Thursday night with a said. "I bad all three .pitches (fast
Braves runner on third, no.body out ball, change and curve) going all
night."
and the game tied at 3. .
Luis Polonia, who was playing
Fred McGriff broke up Rapp's
for the New York Yankees when no-hitter in the seventh with a towthe game began, doubled in the enng home run to center, his 24th.
libreaking run, and Marquis GrisRapp allowed one ru·n on four
som added a two 2 run homer as hits. He struck out five and walked
Atlanta won 6-3.
two.
The Marlins got 6 1/3 innings of
Cardinals 5, Padres 2
no-hit pi!Ching from Rapp and long
Ray
Lankford drove in four runs
home runs from Gary Sheffield and
with
a
double,
rriple and sacrifice
Jeff Conine for a 5-l victory in the
fly
and
Allen
Watson
pitched six
nightcap, slowing the Braves' rush
shutout
innings
as
St. Louis
to clinch the National League East.
·
snapped
a
five-game
losing
streak.
The Braves, who a live-game win
Lankford, who matched a career
streak snapped in the nightcap,
higlt1 for RB!s in a game, also
have a magic number of six.
Robb Nen, (0-5) who pitched in stretched his hitting streak to nine
trouble in May and again Thursday games.
Watson (6-7) allowed four hits,
night, took the first-game loss for
!he Marlins. Bmd Woodall got the struck out two, walked two and hit
victory, his first in the majors, a batter in 6 1/3 innings. H.c lost his
although he pitches for Class AAA shutout and was lifted when Marc
Richmond. Greg · McMichael Newfield and Eddie Williams hit
consecutive doubles with one out
earned a save, his first this season .
"All kinds of goofy things hap- in the seventh. Padres st.1r1er Glenn
pened,'' Marlins mana~er Rene Dishman (4-7) continued a pitching
Lachemann said. "We're playing slump, allowing four runs in ·rive
decent at home now, but at that innings. He has an 8.10 ERA over
time it was very rough. It was my his la't eight starL,.
birthday, and we hadn't won a
.
home game."
The Braves had rallied for three
GRAVELY TRACTOR
runs in the ninth inning of !he May
4 game before it was suspended
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The Marlins were ahead 3-0 when
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Pinch-hitter Dwigltt Smith doubled
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Ball Slate and Eastern are each
1-0 in feague play, with the Cardinals beating Miami 17-15 and Eastern topping Akron 49-29.
·
Cenrral Michigan's Dick Flynn
was an easy choice as the MidAmerican Conference's coach of
the year, turning a 5-6 team into a
9-3 league champion in his first
year .
But Corrigall's first year as
Kent's bead coach, alt.hough nm

only once since 1975.
In other games involving conference teams Saturday, Ball State
(1-0) hosts Western Illinois, Bowling Green (0-1) is at Missouri,
Weber State at Central Michigan.
Eastern Michigan (1 -0) at Pittsburgh, Illinois Stare at Ohio (0-1),
East Tennessee Slate at Toledo and
Western Michigan (1-0) is at Indiana of the Dig Ten. The MAC is
15-65-2 against Big Ten schools.

nearly as striking in terms ell
record, might have been just a~
impressive.
He inherited a dreadful program
with the nation 's longest losing
skid (16 games). Dut the Golden
Flashes broke that in the season's
second game, a 32-16 victory over
rival Akron . They later beat OU
20-0. And they gave Western
Michigan, Eastern Michigan,
Youngstown S~11e, Dowling Green
,, 1

.•

ByDAVEHARRIS
Eastern (229) and Miller (233) .
infamous par four 12t.h hole. con- Jason Lawrence's 51.
Sentinel Correspondent
Clay Crow fired a 41, !he secEastern scores included Hawsidered by many as one of the
Meigs leads Southern by a one- ond lowest score in the match
toughest par 4s in Ohio.
ley's 51, Harris' 53. Reed's 54.
point margin in the Tri- Valley behind Trimble's Kyle Pauon, who
Last week Southern posted a Faulk's 61 and King's 64.
Conference golf race after three was medalist with a 39 . Other TVC win at Forest Hills at Durr
- Patton and _Federal Hocking's
matcbes.
Meigs scores included Dave Oak State Park. Southern. which Jason Ball were match medalists
Meigs leads with 28 points, Anderson's 44, 45s from Steve won with a 158 , was follow ed by with even par 35s.
while Southern has 27.
McCullough and Joe Hill, S'ean Meigs (162), Belpre and Trimble
In a match on Tuesday played 0' Brier 's 47 and Mick Barr's 48.
(165), Wellston (171) , Federal
TVC standings
on the back nine at Oxbow in BelSouthern's scores included
(after three matches)
Hocking (175), Alexander (184),
pre, the Trimble Tomcats won the Jason Shuler's 42. Ryan Norris' 45,
Nelsonville-York (188), Vinton I. Meigs-28
match with a team total of 172, Man Bradford's 46, Chris Ball's County (189) , Miller (214) and 2. Southern-27
three strokes ahead of Meigs, 48, Kevin Fields' 49 and Travis . Eastern (219).
3. Delpre-23
which finished with a 175. South- 'Lisle's 53.
Anderson fired a 37 to lead · 4. Trimblc-22
ern. Belpre and Federal Hocking
Eastern scores included Matt Meigs . Crow and McCullough 5. Wellston-IS
finished with a 181 with Southeqt King's 48, Ryan Hawley's 51,
added 41s, while O'Brien had a 43. 6. Federal Hocking-15
winning the tie breaker. Wellston Andy Reed's 64, Radley Faulk's 66
8. Vinton County-8
Hill had a 44 and Darr had a 45 .
finished with a 189, followed by and Roben Harris' 72.
Southern's scores i·ncluded 9. Nelsonville-York-?
Alexander (192), Vinton County ·
The back nine at Oxbow is a
Shuler's and Norris' 37s, Orad - . 10. Miller-2
(199), Nelsonville-York (210), very tough layout, featuring the
ford's 41, Dati's 43. Fields' 47 and II. Eastern- I

Woods was a two-sport standout
at Bellaire who went on to enjoy a
outstanding football career ai Marshall University where he lettered
four times and played on the
NCAA Division II-A national
championship team in 1992 after
the Thundering Herd settled for
national runner-up honors to
Youngstown Slate in 1991.
While· at Bellaire, Woods was
In the Stock Medium feature, despite suffering mid-season
Dennis Adkins, Tmvis Adams,
recipient of the Tom Stark Award
Rick Miller of Racine led flag to engine woes, returned to his winJohn Garrett, Rick Miller, Phil
for overall athletic and acadeqtic LaComb and· Jason Sabin were
flag with Pap Paw Smith and Rick ning form of the early season.
achievement and was twice rccog' among the llltest winners in the
In the two-cycle feature, Phillip
Smith running hard for second. On
nized by the Upper Ohio Valley Meigs Competition Kl!fting Assothe lith lap, Jim Gibbs passed both LaComb led all the w.ay to defeat
Dapper Dan Club. He was a three- ciation's mces at the Meigs County
Smith for second, with Rick Smith Mike
Hayman
and
Rick
year letterman in football and
Williamson.
Hayman
and
the
elder
Smith
fourth.
third
and
. .
.
earned various all-star honors, Fairgrounds.
In the rookie diviSton, Denms "' Miller's #7 was really flying, and Williamson tussled for most of the
incloding aU state. He lettered four Adkins was able to hold off Tyler
times in baseball and eamed vari- French for the first six laps, but
ous all star honors and helped the . French slipped by on the seventh ---Eastern's 1995 volleyball roster __
Dig Red to OV AC titles in 1985 lap. Frendt's chain broke to end his
7-Iieather Naylor .. ...................... Fr.
{Varsity)
and 1988.
fine drive. Adkins again took com10-Valerie Karr ........................... Fr.
No.-player
XL
Woods will be honored Satur- mand until Josh Hayman slipped
11-Srephanie Evans ......... :........... rr.
10-Valerie
Karr
...........................
Fr.
day ai the induction ceremonies by and led until lap II, when
11-Patsy Aeiker ......... ,................ .Jr. 12-Kclli Bailey ........................... So.
from 9:30 until II a.m. in the Adkins retokk the lead. Cody Faulk
12-Billee Pooler •. ,........... ,........... So. 13-Michelle Buckley ................. .. Pr.
school's gymnasium. This will be was third and Kelby Abels was
13-Martie Holter ............ ......... .... .Jr. 14-Amanda Duchanan ................ So.
followed by a luncheon in the fourth.
Sampson ..................... .Jr _ 15-Kim Mayle ....... ..................... So.
14-Mindy
school's cafeteria. At noon the hon- ·
Marvin Day challenged Travis
15-Kim
Mayle
............................ So. 16-Juli IIayman .................... ....... rr.
orees will be take by bus to Nelson Adams the entire race, but it was ·
21-Rebecca
Evans
....................... Sr. 21-Angie Taylor .......................... Fr.
Field, where they will be seared in ·Adams who led every lap to take
22-Jessica
Kair
............................
Sr. 22-Meredith Cmw ...................... .Jr.
a special section and inrroduced at the win in the junior division.
Sr. 24-Sari Putman ............... ............. Fr.
23-Brandi
Reeves
........................
halftime. ·
Radley Faulk was third ahead of 24-Michelle Caldwell ............ .. ... So. 25-Jessica Brannon ..................... Fr.
Woods is in his third year a.' ·a Chris McGrath.
25-Jessica Brannon ..................... Fr . 32-Jessica Grindstaff... ................ Fr.
teacher in the Meigs Local School
In the Stock Light division, John
District. He is a social studies and Garrett led all the way, but it
V arsily head coach - Don
(Reserves)
history teacher at Meigs. Hi.gh wasn't easy with Marc French on
Jackson
·
fi.
No.-player
School and is entering hts thtrd his tail. French came home second
AssMants
~Paul
Drannon
&amp;
Tony
4-Angie
Wolfe
............................
Fr.
year as a assistant coach for the ahead of Alva Clark and Kriss
5-Lisa Stethem ............................ Fr. Deem
Meigs Marauders.
Meeks.

Adams, Adkins and Garrett among MCKA winners·

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Onoonent
Sept. 12 .............. at River Valley vs.
........., .. host.' &amp; OVCS-5:30 p.m.
Sept. 13 ....... River Valley-5:30p.m;
Sept. 14 ..............................Sou!hcm
Sept. 19 ....................... ·....... Wellston
Sept. 21 .............................. at Miller
Sept 25 ................ Nelsonville-York
Sept. 26 ............. ....Federal Hocking
Sept. .28 ................ at Vinton County
Oct. 2 ..................................Trimble
Oct. 3 .............................. .Alexander
Oct. Sat Southern vs. hosts &amp; Meigs
Oct. 10 ............ , ..................... .Miller
Oct. 12 ...............at Federal Hocking

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race with Williamson coming out
in second and Hayman taking third.
Claude Cornelious came through
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and Miami all they could handle
before losing ,
The 2-9 mark, Corrigall said,
was misleading.
"Nobody measured the work
ethic, nobody measured the change
in self-image. nobody measured the
deep desire these men had within
them,." he said.
Corrigall. a Hall of Farner in the
Canadian Football League, has
instituted. a tough, all-business
approach to the spon.

Meigs owns one-point lead over Southern in TVC race

'

Wilma A. Mansfield, M.D.

pro{f:11icmnlUm

5.5

Atlanta 6, Flor'ida 3 (comp. of susp.
game); Flcrida 5, Atlaota 1
St. Louis 5, San Dleao 2 ·

.,

Welcomes

New York (Mlicki 7-6) at Montreal
(Passero 13-11 ), 1:35 p.m
San Diego (Blair 6- 3} at St . Louis
(Morgan 6-7)ol: 15 p.m
San Francisco (Mulholland 4· 10) at
Chicago (CIIIIillu 9-8}, 2:20 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Well&amp; 4.2) at Colorodo
(Swifl6-2), 3:05p.m.
A!lanta (Smolt:z L0-6) at Aorida (Burkelt I 3--ll), 1:05 p.m.
Houston (Reynolds 9·10} at Philadel·

3.5

Thursday's scores

HE'S OUT! -Seattle catcher Dan Wilson lays. the leather on the
Cleveland Indians' .Tony Pena for the out as Pena tries to score on
Omar Vizquel's groundout to first base in the firth Inning of.Thursday rdght's game in Cleveland, where the Indians won 4-1. Pena was
doubled up on first sacker Tlno Martinez's throw to the plate. (AP) .

HOLZER CLINIC

Saturday's games

w. Tad Cuckter

•

phia (Quantrill 10.9), 7:05p.m
Los Anaelea (fapani 2-2) at Pittsburgh
(White 1-1), 7:0.5 p.m

Today's games

AJdnu.•ii•K,..

13.5

; . _ -·- ----- -

Braves, Marlins &amp;
.· .· . ~ ~ Cardinals get wins

do."

LAND (Lopez 0-0), I '05 p.m.
Detroit (Bergman 6·8) at Toronlo
(llr.DI:~D.I0.11).1 : 3Sp.m, -..., /
Bolton (Smith 7-7) at New Ybfi (Pctlille 8-8). I :IS p.m.
Oiialgo (Bere 7-11) at oa~and (Ontivero~ll-5), 4:05p.m.
.
Tnaa (0rou7-14) at Milwaukte
(Kull-4).
p.m.
Kans• Cit)' (Gubicxa 10.12) at Seattle
(Benu 3-1), !O:M p.m.
Minocaota (Radke 10.12) al California

__

---.:-:.....

~~'\

point, be got it. Not so with Chang.
When he needed it, Courier
came up with a huge forehand or a
pin-point accurate backhand, the
latte.r usually down !he line.
When Chang needed a key
point, he usually rushed and ended
up burying the ball in !he bottom of
the net.
.
"It was an mteres4ng match for
me because normally I'm the one
ahead and be's the one coming
from behind," Courier said.
"You've got to try and exploit the
opening, and that's what I tried to
It took just over an botir to complete each set. The points and the
games were long, and both players
had trouble putting their first serves
in play, Courier finishing witli 63
percent and Chang a dismal 42 percent.
"It was a little bit breezy
·tonight," Courier said. "The conditions were not ideal."
Both players have had success
in Grand Slam tournaments, Chang
winning the French Open in 1989
and Courier in 1991 and '92.
Courier also captured the Australian Open in 1992 and '93.
Ranked No. I in the world in
1992, Courier.has bad sporadic
results and dropped to No. 14, a
ranking !hat will rise afler this tour- .
nament.
"I feel like I am hitting !he ball
well right now," Courier said. "I
am going to try and continue to
keep playing like this through the
end of the year."
Sampras, who won the U.S.
Open in 1990 and '93 and has captured Wimbledon the last three
years, had very litUe problem with
Black, who won the NCAA doubles in 1989 while at Souihern Cal.
After Black forced Sampras to a
first-set tiebreaker, the former No . .
1 player rolled into the semifinals
· behind 22 aces and 59 winners.
"If I am playing well, I am pretty tough to beat," Sampras said.

· Meigs High Scbool teacher and
assistant football coach Pete (P J,)
Woods wiU be inducted in the Bellaire Hall cif Fame on Saturday
prior to the Big Red's game with
Beaver Local.
Woods wiU be joined in the Hall
of Fame by former Big Red teammate Joey Galloway. Galloway
was an all-American at Ohio State
last year and was the eighth pick in
this year's NFL draft by the Seatde
Seahawks. They will be honored
along with seven former athletes
and seven teams that will be
inducted ·in Bellaire's Wall of
Fame. Woods was inducted in the
Wall of Fame la.'t

In the NL,

Sampras and Courier
advance to semifinals

Exhibit A is last week's stunning 17-14 victory over NCAA
Division 1-AA powerhouse
Youngstown State.
In some outposts, a close game
against a I-AA opponent might be
akin to a loss. But at Kent the victory is just another sign of !he second-year coach's impact.
Corrigan, however, isn't taken
in.
"You don't look beyond
today." said the former standout
·defensive lineman at Kent --'- the
first player to . bavebis number
retired at the school. "We have so
much we have to get accomplished
today and that's it. Whatever' s
done from yesterday, that's gone.
The future. I$can' t worry about
that. Our focus is: Prepare Today."
This week, the Flashes hope to
start the MAC season on the right
cleat when they host Miami of
Ohio.
Ken! has won its first two games

Woods' induction Saturday

- - ...•.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Kent to s art MAC play as Miami's host;oOU to face Illinois State

Page4
Friday, September 8, 1995 '

·Indians have AL. Central title in reach;
-Rangers hand White Sox 2-0 setback
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - It 1las
seemed inevitable for weeks, and
the Cleveland Indians are rreating it
that way.
Forty-one years after their last
pennam, the Indians clinched a tie
for the AL Central championship
Thursday night, beating !he Seattle
Mariners 4-1.
One more win or one more
Kansas City loss will give ·me Indians the divi sion title outright .
They've already guaranteed them·
selves at least a wild-card hcrth in
the playoffs, !heir lirs1 post-season
appearance since the New York
Giants swept them in. the 1'154
World Series.
'
~·For fans. it'.s very cxciling ~
41 years of frustration put to rest,"
general manager John Hart said .
"Ultimately, Ute players have Uteir
sights set on something beyond
clinching !he pennant."
There was no celebrating in !he
Cleveland clubhouse after the
game, no suggestion !hat !he playoff bcnh or even the pending division title represented any.thing
. more !han another obstacle over.1:ome.
. " We're just trying to stay
focused. Really, our only goal right

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�Friday, September 8, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 8, 1995

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

••

••
••

:·.·

••

::••

••

••
•
•
•
••

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

lloly Eucharilt and
Sunday Seilooll0:30 a.m.
Coif.. how lollowlnc

Wednesday Servi~ZI -7 p.m.

Apostolic

Pomtra7 W~Je Churdl or Cbrllt

33226 Childron'o llome Rd.

,

Sunday School- 11 un.
Wonhip . IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 1 p.m.

,.

Mldd!Cporl Church of ChriS!
5th and Main
Panor: A111ansoo
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. Yl.
Worship-- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p;tfi:""'v"
Wednesday Scrvioes · 7 p.m.

CaiYarJ Pilgrim Chapel

,·.

Bearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor. Jack Colr:grove
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 6:30p.m.

Wonhip • It a.m. and 1 p.m .
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Fr.. V\111 Baptist Chur&lt;:h

Ash Slm:l, Middleport

Pastor. Les Hayman
Saaurday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Service-1:30 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Porneroy, llarriu:nville Rd. (RL 143)
Pasii)r: Roger Watsoo
Sunday S&lt;;hool ·9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m. ,

Rutland F1nt Baptist Church

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

....

.'.

•

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

:·

41872 P&lt;&gt;meroy Piko

. Pastor: E. Lamar 0' Bryant

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m·.
Flrst Baptist Church
6dt and Palmer SL, Middleport

A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.

.• Lord'a Supper 1st Sun~ay of every month.
•
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Ralland Communiij Churdl
Pa-. Rev. Roy McCany

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenina - 7 p.m.

Uradfur d Ct\ol.ln.:h of Christ
Com er o l St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

SIIYcr Run Baptist
Pastor. Bill Little
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship - It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~day SerYiceJ· 7:30p.m. ·

LlbcrtJ Chrlstlan Church
o~~r

ML 'Unlon Baptist
Pas10r: Joe N. Sa)'~

Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.

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

L.i.ngsvllle Christian Church

Swoday School · 9:30am.

Belhlehem Bapllst

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:10p.m.
Wcdncsda'j Servi~ 7:30p.m.

Racine, OH
PasLor : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. Sunday

Hemlock Grove Church

Bible Sludy- 7:00p.m. WodllCiday

Pastor. Gene Zopp
Sunda'j school- lO:jO a.m.

Old Belhel Free Will Bapll.t Church
28601 s._ Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church &lt;1: Chrlsl

Evening,-1:30p.m.
Thunday Service• - 1:30

Hillside Bapllsl Chur&lt;h
St RL 143 just off RL 7

.

Wednesday Service• ·7:30p.m.

·

Wcdnc1day Servictl · 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius llurt

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip-11a.m .

'

MI. Moriah Baollsl
Founh .l Main s._, Middlepon
Paunr: Rev. Gilbert Csaia. Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:45 Lm.
Anllqully Bapllsl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. ·
Wonhip ·10:45 Lm.
Thunday Services · 7:30p.m.

Rutland Free Will !lllpiiSI
Sal.... Sl_

Wcdnelday Sei'Vioa 1 p.m.

Rutland Church ~Cod
Pastor: G~aory L Sean
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

ML Olive United MeihodiSI.
·011 12A behind Wilkcoville
Puur. Rev. Ralph Spin:o
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
WO!ihip-10:30Lm., 7p.m.
Thursday Servica -7 p.m.

Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.
Srracuse First Church cl God
Apple anrJ Seoond Sta.

Panar: Rev. David RuneU
Sunday School and Wonhip-10a.m.
Evening Service~- 7:30p.m.

Wedneoday Servicoo ·7:30p.m.
Church or God or Prophecy
O.J. Whi11: Rd. of! Sl. Rt 160

Worship-9:30a.m.
Swoday School· 10:30 a.m.

Panor: Rev. WaU.er E. Heinz

Worship· 6 p.m.;
Thun. Family Training Hoor 7 p.m.

Loogllollooo

Pomeroy Church or Chr!J.i
212 W. Main St
PaslOr: Andn:w Milc1
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Paneroy
Pastor. Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Episcopal
Grace Eplstopal Church
326 E. Main SL, P001e11&gt;y

Wedneaday Ser.ice• - 8 p.m.

Tordt Ca.urC'h
Co. Rd.63

Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Sun. Man ·9:30a.m.
Dailey Mall · 8;30 Lm .

Hotldngporl Church
GrandS!,...
Somday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.

Swoday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. ·

Pulor: Edael Hut

Joppa
PuU&gt;r: Bob Randolph

Pastor. Rev. Olarlcs Muh

Sunday Schod ·9:30a.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7:30p.m.

Reedsville

Worship· 9:30a.m.

UMYF SWlday 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Saturday Services:

Se~enth-Day

Worship· II :IS Lm., 7 p.m.

Adwe_nllst

Worship- 3 p.m.

United Brethren

Wednesday Servia:- 7 p.m.

Fallh &lt;:Mpel Church

In Chrlsl Chun:h ·
Texu Communily off CR 112

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wosship -10:45 a.m .•7:30p.m.
Wcdnesdoy 7:30p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wosship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Long ba~uxn

Wednesday Services -1:30 p.m.

ML Olive CommuniiJ Church

Eden Unlled Brflhren In Christ
2 1/'2 miles nonh ofRccdiville

·

on Slate Rome 124

Eveninc - 1 p.m.

Pa,..,r: Rev. Robert Marl&lt;ley
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7:30p.m.

Unlled Fallh Church

Wednesday Service• • 7:30p.m.:

Pastor. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Full Gospel LlghlhoUH
3304S lliland Road, Pomeroy

R-Ule FeDoonldp
Chur&lt;:h oflhe Nuarene

Pastor: Roy Hunu:r
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tue1day k Thursday · 7:30p.m.
Nease Sclllcmcnt Church
Sunday Y/onhip ·2:30p.m.;
Thunday serYicea · 7:30p.m.

.

.'

Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCe -7 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdneaday SeMcea - 7 p.m.

..
.
'
;

.,
&gt;

" .

•

Church anno••neements n~
Q\\irt s.w Q).,.,r.,
sponsore.d by these area
93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 992-6657 - (996-ooks)
· merehants.
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp;BIBLES
RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
Walker Alley, Racine, Ohio
992·2804

CLASSIFIEDS
A
Bright Idea!

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7075 .
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

264 South 2nd . Middleport

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-666n
BILL QUICKEL •

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

P~ARMACVI
We !=ill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

RAWLINGS- COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
. 992-5141

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Natiqnwide Ins. Co. ·
of Columbus, Oh.
804 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

AddrwuUJK o: ci..-"P'6 MtOrld Mlith
prof••.Jor~pU,/1 ftlld

inl•_
wrllr•

Cuckler Consulting Inc.
42984 SR 124
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Bus. Phone 614·992-4216 or
1-800-861-9392
W. TAD Cuckler President

..

•

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelite Saws •

1

Crow'$ Family
Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fritd Chiclcen"
228 W. Malo St., Pomeroy
992-5432
EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"

Established 1913
992·2121
106 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy

'

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

fMjj

--\5'

Veterans
Memorial Hospital _,

115 E. Memorial Dr.
992-2104

"

Pomeroy

'•
.'

..

&amp;
EXCAVATION

· ~ .-:: . a:

_ ___

We will install carpel

:1

Salurday
,
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

:

- --· ·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

HAY
FOR SALE
BAILED

.614-742·2138

To

ten permisa1on. Previous permils

I

canc~ed.

Ohlie Smith

40

Giveaway

3 Month Old Puppies, 61-4 -367 -

0539.
8/7/lln

.

Tony's Portable
Welding

ROBERT BISSELL ,
CONSTRUCTION .
•New Homes
i
• Garages
• Complete
i
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare I
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

VERTICAL CONCRETE WALLS, INC.
."iJII'I'itt/i::;iug In:

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Racores Available

4 K1ttens To G1veaway, 61&lt;4·446·

.

1151 St.

111011 mo.

..

Rt.

141, Gallipolis,

Ohio

polls, 614 ·446· 1651, 614-446- ··
4136.

Part Terrier, parr Chihuahua dog,

housebroken. 304-675-8029.

Save U• Ftom The Pound\ 4
Seven Week Old Outside Watch
Dog Type Puppies. leave Name
And Phone Number On Machine :

Office : 614-446-0666
Residence: 614-446-2516

742-3212
• TUrn on Depot Sl. In
· RuUond 1.2 miles.

House To Be Torn Down &amp; Removed : 837 Th1rd Avenue, Galli·

Lovable , spayed, ll uer trained,
Calico ld!len to good home, 6114 992-2537 aher 5pm .

Basement And Retaining
Wall Construction

Call for Low Prices

614· 446-3769.

45631

Shih-Tzu, chAmpagne color, netJ·
tored, shots, to best home with no
children . 304 -67'5· 4650 or 304 -

675-4302 .

J.D. Drilling Company

RACINE

"' 110\\ .\Bil
E\C .\\ \TI~(;

GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

Bulldozing, Bnckhoe,
Services.
I'
Hom~ Sites, Land '
Clearing, Septic .
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone, .
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

P.O. Box 587

Wednesday Nile

5:30p.m.
Welcome B/4/lfn

Lost and Found

Found: 2 Black !White Kittens.

~

For Free estimate call 949-2512
REASONABLE HAlES
""""

Everyone
•

60

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.

Every

Spring Valle)' Drive Area, 61·4·
446·2693.
Fo und : Brown !White Male Young
Dog, Cora MHI Road, 61-4-245 5:166

Found : Small Pekingnese Oog
Brown &amp; Wh 1te On Court Slreet,
614·446 -4642.

Los!' 1 t /2 Vear Male Black W1th
Some Wh1te Around Pine Stree1,
In Gall1polis. 61 4·446-7685.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUal ON

3 Family: First Sale In 15 Vears l
Wedding Dreu, SiZe 12 (Orig .
Cost $1,000), Loll Of Name
Brand Clothes: Womens Sizes 3·
11, Large Womens Clothing, Fur ·
nilure , Crafu, 2 -8 Ft Pressure
Trea ted Picnic Tables, Small Re frigerator , Floo r Model, Stereo
Console.' Used Carpet, Too 'Man~
More Items To Mention , Sept
11th, 12th, 19 Mtll Creek Dn'ole, g.
5, Bott1 Da~s .

Free Estimates

All Yard Sale• Must Be Patd In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00p.m . 1
rna da~ Defore tt1e ad is to run .
Sunday edition · 2.00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10.00 a.m. Sat ·

urday.

Scuba Classes Now Forming

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

·Open Water
• Mvanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
• Assistan tlnslructor
• Specially Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instructor
614·992·3314

House Repair &amp;
Remodl!llng
Kitchen &amp; Ejalh
Remodeling

Room Additions
Siding, Roolin9, Patios
Reiaonable
InSures -Experienced

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405

PSYCHICS
know

ALL
CALL
1-900-820-6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
811(){1 mo.

Imperial Tire
Service
· Mason W.V.
304·773-5533
-September SpecialWith the purchase of
a set of struts or

shocks get FREE
installation.

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!
. 1-900-388-0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.

Sun. Sept. 10th

Must Be 18 yrs.

12 noon
$5.00 meal

PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420
8/811 mo.

Fn 81h, Sat 9tt1, 9- 5, 14101 SA
554, BidwelL

Frl, Sat, 1037 StAt 2.18, lnhrm
Thru Womens LQ ~ X-lg, To(s.

Mosc
Fn, Sal, 9·5. 1074 Addison Ptke 1
M1le From Addtson Babtes, Ch1id·
rena, lacties, Maternity, Toys .

G~rage Sale : lst.Time Thta Vea rt
QIIO Ml. South On At 218, Sep1.
7th, 8th, 9th, g.?
Se pt 7th. Bth, 9t,h, 10·4, 53 Yihe
Street , K1ds IAdull Clothes , Toja,
lots Uorel

r----~---------------, ·Thurs -Sat, 9·6, Ingalls: Road Off

MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS

216, Lo11 01
Shine

JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTIERS
Aggressive grocery· wholesaler seeking experlanced
meat dapt. ·managers and Journeyman meal cutters to
manage and merchandise meal departmenls In their
corporale stores localed In Southeastern Ohio
Competlllve salaries and excellent benefits.
opportunities, send your res!Jme and salary history to:
Director

P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 45723
E.O.E.

ISI1QI1

mo.

Ba•gains,

Rain 1

Pomeroy, ·
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
320 MechaniC Street, Pomeroy,
Friday and Sarurday, 9arn-3pm. •
A.ll

II you are energellc and looking for rewarding

'l'arct

~a tea

Must Be Paid 1n

Advance . Doadlme : 1 ;OOpm tt'\e
day bef~re the ad is 10 run, sW, . .
day &amp;dillOn - 1:OOpm Friday Mon .
day edition 10:00a.m. Saturdliy. •
Four family- Peach Fork Fld. Sef:St
8· 9, 9am-Spm . l.ten'a jeani ·

clothing, home de corator llem 1'
·

Follow signs from SA 33.

- ---··

t.toward L. Wrltesel

BISSELL BQILDERS, INC.

ROOFING

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garage_s • Replacement Windows
· Room Additions • Roofing

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2.168
;

·

Fn. 6·8 P.M. Sat 9-3, Turn R1ght
St Rt850 , At Rodney Oil 0 1d 35

i»di)l"

..

American
Legion
Post 602
Racine
Steak Dinner

and co-tJwned by me without writ-

4944 .

---·· ·-·

4/13195 t

30 Announcements

No hunllng, trapping, fishing or

Oil Change ...................... : .......... $17.95
Front End AlignmEhit... .............. $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

For Free Estimates

Sept. 17 917ntn

Roreld llflley.

!fespasslng on propeny ownad

949-2512

843-5124
992-2984

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning

dobts other than my own.

"Your Parts or Ours"

Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chaney

Easy Payment
Auto Insurance

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

I w111 not be respon11bl&amp; for an~

949·2882
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr.

Check Oul Our Tire Prices

All Ohio

~11 &amp;/ll n

3RD ST.

YOUR NEEDS

. • Rooting
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Additions &amp;
Garages
• Eleclrical &amp;Plumbing

Best Rates
(614) 992-7040
Pomeroy

30 Announcements

AB&amp;TAUTO

AND MIXED

•

.

-

·-- ~-

,I

' · Limes.tone &amp; G~~ ·
' Septk Syslems, Tr..er &amp;.
House. Sites.
Reasonable Rates
'
Joe N. Sa~N ·
SAYRE TRU J&lt;ING
. ·-·------

_,.._,

ALFALFA

•

Also Concrete Work

DUI- SR-22
DISCOUNTS

WAYNE'S PLACE

•

.HAULING
.

Plum~lng

Accidents/
Violations

MASON FLEA MARKET
New Hours: Open Thursday,
Friday·&amp; Saturday Only
10 AM lo 7:30PM
Fall &amp; Winter clo!hing
Now In Stock

Middleport, Ohio
Now Open 7 Days A Week
Mon. thru Sal. '
11 :00 am till 2:00 pm
FOOTBALL .
Sun . Open al 12:30 (Seer Only)
KARAOKE
Every Mon. 9:30 pni till 1:30am
LADIES NIGHT
With D.J. Brady Huffman
Every Tues. Night 9:00 till12:00
FRIDAY NIGHTS
Dance with D.J. Frank Huffman
SATURDAY NIGHTS
Live Bands
This Sat. Come Party With
"ARROW"
9:30 pm till 1:30 am

•

· - -=

8121mn

DEFICIT
DISORDER
SUPPORT GROUP
MEETING
FRIDAY, SEPT. 8 ·
AT7 P.M.
FRENCH 500
ROOM,
HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER

Pastor: Robed Sanden

.

.

(FREE ESTIMATESI
V.C. YOUNG Ill .
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.

ATIENTION

ML Hennon United Brethren

1

-

..

Painting

&gt;

Sunday school- 10 a.m.
W011hip - 7 p.m.

I

•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior

VIDEO MOVIE SALE
GALLIA COUNTY
FAIRGROUNDS FLEA
MARKET SEPT. 8-9-10
ALL MOVIES $5.00

Sabbath School -2 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church

Lany Faw, Superintendcnl

B~.ah

•Electrical &amp;

•

Mulbeny 11!1. Rd., Pomeroy

:t; :,,, - ,

•Room Additions
•New Garages

Wonhip -10 a.m.

Pastor: Robert H. Mu11er
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.

Wect.esday Seavices -7 p.m.

Rec10r: Rev. D. A. duPlantier

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School- 9 Lm.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 .Lm., 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday SeMcea • 7 p.m.

Sunday.School - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Christian Fell.,.shlp Cenla'
Salem St, Bulland

Wedneday Service -7 p.m.

. Puler: Jolu! w. n..,.la.

Pastor:.Rev. 0Jarlc1 Mash

•

...

Buzz's Cal]let
Installing, fnc.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

'

CARPEn'ER .
SERVICE

.

AMVETS DANCE
SATURDAY, SEPT. 9
BAND OLD MILWAUKEE .
KANAUGA, OHIO
HAS BEEN CANCELED

Worship- 9 a.m.

Dyesvllle c ... munlly Church
Sunday Sehool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Racine Flrst Church or the Nazarene
Pastor. Scott Rose

Middleport Church of the Nuaraae
~astor: G~gory A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

.

Harrlsoavllle Presbyterian Churell

School -9:30 a.m.
Worship -I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

· Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m.,6p.m.

Sunday Schooi-IOa.m.
Worship - II a.m.

!I

7122194

YOUNG'$·

1 QI21JM/tln

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

8:30am to

91811mo

(Spaclatlze In
driveway spreading)
Litnestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Hours

Starting
September 1Oth

Pastor: Rev. Kriuna Robinsm.

Sunday

Pastor: lawrence

Nazarene

Wonhip • 9 a.m.

S7Hcuse First Unlled l'rd!jlerlaa

orr RL 124

Wonhif · 9a.m.
Tuesday Serv&amp;ces • 7 p.m.

Wcdneaday Services- 10 a.m.

Presbyterian

Hazel Communlly Church

Coolville Chun:h
Main .&amp; Hftli Sl.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Sunday School -9:30 o.m.

Pastor: Rev. William D. Hind•

1411
PaoU&gt;r. Boy (Mike).Thcxnpaon
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sema: -7 p.m.

Pa1tor. Helen Kline

ChurC'h

Evening • 6 p.m.

Wednesday Servicea -7:00p.m.

Syrac.use Mission
Bridaeman Sl-, Syraeu10

Codvllle Unllod Melhudlsl Parbll

Beth~

Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.

Evening 1 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

y •7 p.m. .

Townohip Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker

HAULING

614-992-3379.
18 Years Experience.

Every Sunday

$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50%' pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by·adult.

.. . WICKS
..

and floor coverings.
Give us a call at

. Complete
Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8 :00-5:00
Open Saturday
9:00-3:00

11:30 am

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

MODERN SANITATION

Forked Run
Sportsman's Club ·

FRENCH 500 ROOM
HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
SUNDAY, SEPT. 10
2TO 4 P.M.
SPEAKER:
DR. ROD STOUT,
ENDOCRINOLOGIST,
HOLZER CLINIC

Middleport Penleeoslll
Thinl Aw.

Sunday·Sehoul- 10:00 a.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Suriday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m.

Alrresa

Sacred Heart Catholic Church

New Lire Church ol Cod

Wedn

DIABETES
SUPPORT
GROUP

•

DAYS
CAR WASH

539 BRVAII PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
· Otrlce'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.
Free Estimates

614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work
_., Welcome

Doug Crites
614/667 -6825

41960 Kayl~r Road
Reeds.·ille, OH 45772

(llmsroae low ltlfll

Complete Auto Body Repair

Chuck Stotts

Replacemenl

3·Dst~~~ERY

Kanauga, Ohio - lnlo Call446·6188

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Dnveways, Patios, Slabs, Parking lois, Curb s &amp;
Gu11crs Sidewalks. Porches, Tear-out and

304-773-5960

Sto~

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Commercial and Residential

· Bdl Slack
992·2269 or

J&amp;L INSULATION

One

Abiding Concrete
Construction

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

111Wn

Everyone Welcome·

Pastor: William Hob&amp;clt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawaon

w~l-9am.

Pastor: Sharm Hausman

S.R. 248 &amp; Riebel Rood, Chesll:r

Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road

Sunday School-10 a.m.

Northeast Cluster

Catholic

Morning Star
Putor: Kenneth Baker

PUior: Ken Moku

Meigs Coop&lt;nUve Parlab

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

Wcdncoday Service- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 a.m. (hi &amp; 3nl S'"')
East Ltllrl

4

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service• - 7 p.m.

Church of Christ

-.

Wednesday Servicca · 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m. (2nd .t: 4111 s..,)

992·2155

AMVETS LINE DANCE
LESSONS
STARTING FRI . SEPT. 8 .
New Hours: 7:30 lo t0:30
lnst , Bill Gillene

Pentecostal
Pen-IA..,blr
Sl_ RL 124, Racino

Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening -1:30 p.m.

Sulton
Pulor. Kcm.elh Baker

Momms w...~, II Lm.
Evcruns Worship: 7 p.m.

Swu.lay School • 10 a.m.
Woflhip · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 1 p.m.

SaL Con. 4:45-5: 15p.m.; Man- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Coo. ·8:45·9: I5 a.m ..

:

Bible Chrlstl10 Church
•• Old Deller
Sunday School: 10 a.m.

Pastor: PJ . Otapman

161 Mulberry A¥e., Paneroy, 992-5898

"'

Church of God
ML ,M..-Iah Churth &lt;1: God
Racine
Pula': Rov. llllleo S•lerf..W
Sunday School -9:4S a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

C1nnel

Pastor: Sam Andenon

Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.
Wosship -10:30 a.m.
Thursday Service• • 7:30p.m.

United Methodist
Graham Unlled Melbodlsl
·Wonhip- 9:30 Lm. (lil.t: lpd·Sun),
7:Jo p.m. (Jnl &amp; 4th Som)
Wedn~y Service-7:30p.m.

Chester
PallOr. Shan:~~ Hauanan

Pastor. Rev; Paul Taylor

'

Our Saviour Lutheran Church

Christian Union
Harlford Chur&lt;:h or l;hrlslln
Hanford, W.Va.
Pu10r. Rev. David McMIIlia
Sm~day School - II a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: James I;. Keesee
Wonhip- lOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Wonhip - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - I0:00 a.m.

SL Paul Lulhena Ch.-.:b
Comer SYQ111010 &amp; Sooond SL, P"""'"'''
Pu1or: Dawn Spaidini
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.

Christian Union

Vktory Baptlsl lndependonl
525 N. 2nd St Middlepon

Pine Grove

Pastor. Da\vn Spaldin&amp; ·

• CALL OUR OFFICE AT

CifWn,W.VL
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7 p.m.
. Thu:sday Service -7 p.m.

Wedneoday Service• • 10 a.m.
Putor: Kenneth Baker

Pastor: Philip Srunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonbip Service: 10:30 Lm.

Pastor: Rev. Jamea R. Acree, Sr.
Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ -7 p.m.

·

CIIIIIMI Tablrllaole Chun:b

Middleport Community Cburdl
S?S Pead Sl-, Middlepon

Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Lutheran
SL John Lulheru Cburtb

Wednesday servia:- 6:30p.m.

Thunday -7 pm.
Sunday -7 p.m. ·

Sunday Sthool - 10 a.m.

•

WalnUl ond llenry.SU., RIM:nawood, W.VL
hurim puU&gt;n: Geooxo C. Woincls
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.

Bible Swdy, Wedneoday, 6:30p.m..

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Rclicf Soci&lt;ly/Pricllhoed II :Qj-12:00 noon
Sacnmenl Service 9-10:15 a.m.
HClll!all&amp;lsinaiiHlCiin&amp;. In ThurL - 7 p.m.

Enddme House of Prayer
(al Burlingh.. church off ROUie 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance

Chun:b of Jeau1 Chr\11,
Apoolollc Faltb
1/4 mile pan Fon Meip on Mew Lima Rd.
PuU&gt;r. William VIR Meier
Sunday-7 :00 p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

The Salutlon Anny
ItS Buuemut Ave., Pomeroy.
Saturday - 10 Lm.

BethanJ
Putor: Kcmclh·Baker

6 column inch weekdays
5800 column inch Sunday

Wedneoday SeMcea • 7 p.m.

Sunday wonhip - 10 a.m.

Wonhip- 9 a.m.

1 00

Pula': Law....,. Foranan
Sunday School· I0 a.m.

Wo:dnc:sday • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

BULLETIN BOARD

~ 1'1. 2nd A~. Middleport

Harrisonville Communlly Claurcb
Putor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Pastor: Florence Smith

The Churdl of J asn.t &lt;1: Lalllr-Da7 Salnll
Sl- RL UoO, 446-62Al or 446-7486

M....,., J. Robinson

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

...

Relolclnl ure Cilurcb

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

Snowville

Wonhip • 1()-.30 un.

Wednesday Servicea -7:30p.m.
•

The Bellnen1 Fellowship Mlnlsti'J
Mew Lime Rd., Rullmd

School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip -10:15 a.m.

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel

SUvermlle Word ofFallh
Putor. David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
E•eninl • 7 p.m.

Friday • feUowahip aervicc 7 p.m.

Sm~day

Sho Classifieds

•'

Calvlll')' Bible Clsurell
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
PallOr: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm .. 7:30 pill.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Wodnesday- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron P'~erce

Ponland-Racino Rd.
Puler: Janic:e Donner
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Hkkory Hills Church orChrlst
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskin•
Sunday SchOQl - 9 a.m.
Worship · lO a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service1- 7 p.m.

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.
Eatab. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation
:104-882·2996 ONI mo

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

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

Salem Center

.

.

Pastor: Rev. Fnnklin Dick111a

Sunday Schod ·9:30a.m. .

PasU&gt;r. Rev.

304-882·2996
Comparable Prices
·&amp; Sizes w• mo.

Fallh Fello-lp Cruoade for Chrlsl

LongBouom
Pa1tor: Stev~ Reed

RuUand

Latter-Day Saints
Keoraanlud Clsurcll &lt;1: .._., C~rllt
of Latlll' Da7 Salnll

Fairview Bible Churth
Lew., W.Va. RL I
Pu10t: Rankin Ro&lt;ch
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneoday Service· 7:00p.m.

Fallb Full Gospel Churd!

Pu10r. Arlhuo Crab!Re
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm.
Thursday Servicoo • 7 p.m.

Wedneoday SeMcea. 7 p.m.

Wednesday Sema: - 7 p.m.

Wcdnuda:y acrvi&lt;:e, ~:30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9: I' a.m.
Wonhi~ - 10 ur.:
Youlb Fellowship, Sunday . 6 p.m.

STO·A·WAY
STORAGE

Warship- 10:10 a.m.

Sunday ICIYice,7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Keilb Rader

Wednesday Service ·1:00 p.m.

• CoolviUeRoad
Puur. Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Other Churches
H-.. Christian Fello•lblp Churclo
Rev. Woody Call, Speaker

s..,day School · 9: IS a.m.
Worship • I0:30 un.
· Bible Study Tuesday· 10 a.m.
Rock Springs

Swoday School- 9:30 a.m. .
Worship . 10:30 a.m. ond 7 p.m.

Whlte'l Chapel Wesle:~an

Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Servicea- 7 p.m.

Pastor. Robert E. Rabinton

LAurel ClifT Free Melhodlsl Church

Sunday Sehool -9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semce -7 p.m.

Pulor: Glendon SU'IIUd
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Pomeroy

Thursday Service-7:30p.m. ·

Paator: Rev. Roser Willford

N... Havea Chur~'!flbe N....--

PurtChapel
PUIOr. FloRIICC Smilb
Sunday School· 9 a.m• .
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Wo~p-10:4Sa.m. ,7p.m.

Freedcon Gospel MIS&gt;Ion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Piunr: Jcim w. Douatu
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Worship-6:30p.m.
'wedneoday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Min emilie
Pa-. Demn Newman
Sunday ScOOol - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.

Ev::~ ngcl l s t t-:. cJth Cooper
Youth ~hn 1q c r ~1t t: h ac 1 1(:ag;anl c!1
Sund ay S.:huu l · 'J. JO a rn
Worshtp . 8 .00 dnl . , \0 :31J .1m , 7:1:0 p .m
Wednesda y Scrv1LC \ 71 ~ ) p m .

Racine flrst Baptlst
Putor. Rev. l.ai'T)' Haley
Youth PastQr: Aaron Young

.•

Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servil;o- 7:30p.m.

No Wednesday Evening ScrYICC

Por11aad First Church &lt;1: the Nazarene

H•lh (Middleport)
Panor. Vernaaaye Sullivoa
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip -ID-.30 LDL

Pastor: Peter Tn:mb~)'

Wonbip -lO:lS a.m ., 7:00p.m.

"

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Churdl
1/'2 rnlk: off RL 325
Paotor: Rev. O'Doll Manley

Hysell Run Holiness Churc;:h
Pastor. Robert Manley ·

Rulland Churth or Christ
Pastor: Eugr.:nc E. Underwood
Sund11y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:I5 a.m.

Fallh Baptist Church
Railroad SL, Masoo
Sunday School - tO a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.

Panor. Demn Newman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip -9 a.m.
Thunday SeM&lt;u - 6:30p.m.

Sunday wonhip •7 p.m.
WeclneJday prayer meelina~ 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Jlndhun Church nf Christ
Sunday:")chool · 9 :30a.m .
W o r ~ h1p \O:JO a.ITJ.
Y nuth M ~:c tmg · 5:30p.m . .
Evcntng Service· 7 p.m .
Wednesda y, Rihlc Stud y · 7 p .rn .

First SoutheJ"n Ba~tlst

F..-... K ..

·

Sunday School · 9:30 Lm.
WonhipService 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service- hi and 3nl Sunday, 7 p.m.

llulland Chureh &lt;1: the Nazarene
Puler: ~amuel Buyc
. Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SeM&lt;u -7 p.m.

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

Rose or Sharon HollntSS Church
Loadina C=k Rd., Rutland
Pastor. Rev. Dewey Kin1
Sunday achool- 9:30 a.m1

Kingsbwy Road
Pa110r. JclfSmith

--

~

SMITH'S
LINDA'S
CONSTRUCTION
;AINTING &amp; CO.
Cuslom Building &amp; Remodeli ng
Interior &amp;
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
Exterior
•
NEW
GARAGES
Take
tho
pain OUI of
..
•REMODELING
palnllng. Let ua do It for ·
you. Very reasona~le.
•SIDING
Free Estimates
•ROOFING
' Befor~
6 p.m. leave
•PAINTING
message.
FREE ESTIMATES
.
AHer6p.m.
(614) 992-5535
•
.614-985-4180 3124/M
(614) 992-2753
.
- .. . . .. - ) .. . . .. . .
-

y Service- 7 p.m.

Carltlon lnlerdenomlnatlonal Churdl

Chaltr Chur&lt;b oflhe MazarPuiOr. Rev. He!bcn Gille
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II un., 6 p.m.
Wcdnaday Servicea · 7 p.m.

PUIOr. Keilh Rader

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

\Yonhip- tO:lO a.m.

••

Wonliip- 10:30 Lm. and 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Flatwoods

· Pastor. Rev. John Neville
Sunday school - 9:30 Lm.

Wcdncodoy • 7 p.m.

Sunday Schod . 9:4S a.m.

W~e1

Pulcr: Rev. Tbomu M&lt;Clunc
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

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

Hani.Janville Road
Pastor: Rev. Vid.or Rouah

Wesleyan Bible Hollnest Chur&lt;h
'
?S Pearl Sl-, Middlepon.

Tuppers Plain Church ol Chrlliil
Pastor: Smnley Mincb
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship-9:45a.m.

Pomero1 nrst Baptist
Pastor. Paul Sainsoo
Eut Main St.

l'olnereJ Clsorcb oflbe N....--

Putoi: Ke11h Rader

Wo:dnc:oday Service· 7:30p.m.

Pastor-Jdfrey Wallace
1st and 3rd SWlday

· Ctnlral ClUtier
Albui'J (Srncuoe)

Enle'1'r1te

.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhi:f.
' • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wedneoday Semca -7 p.m.

Wedneoday Service•- 7:30p.m.

OUI.drc:n'• churcla • 10:35 a.m. Youth 6p.m.
Wednuday p111yer service · 1 p.m.

Sou Ill Belhel New Tealameal
Sil¥er R.idae
Pastor. Duane Sydcrulriclr.er

-

Sunday Sd&gt;ool • 9:30 ....
Wonhip - ID-.30 Lm., 6 p.DL

Wonhip ~ 11 a.m.

Wonhip • II Lm., 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.

s,....... Clsurdl atlllo II·
,._,Rev.- SluoJill

Pas10r: Sharon Hauaman
Sunday School- 9 Lm.

Putor: Deron Newman

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

Wonhip · 9:30a.m. ·

Plaint St. Paul

Tlopptn

Wonhip • 10 a.m .
TUesday Seivic:a · 7:30p.m.

Holiness
Danville HoUnoa Church
31057 Stale Roule 325, U.pvllc
Putoc Rev. Riclt Maloyed
Sunday lchool •9:30a.m.
Sunday irorship - IO::IS Lm . .t: 7 p.m.

Keno Church orChrlst

Baptist Church (Soulhern)
S70 Gnn1 Sl-, Middlepon
Pas1or: Rev. David Bryon
Sunday ochool· 9:4S a.m.

•

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·1~
I

( No

Sunday

Friday, 8th- Saturday, 9th. No ear, ly birds, 9&amp;rf!·4pm . .Main Stree1,
1 Rutland, Dav1d ·Hysa tl residence.
lots ot boys clothes. sizes newborn - 4T, k1tchen table and
cha1rs, loveseat and cha1r, dish, es, knu::k knacks. Ram eancels.
:1 Fr1(1ay, Saturda y- lOam-? 742 tl2
1' East Ua1n Street, Pomeroy, Oh10.

, Clothes. lurn1ture , toys and lot s
m1sc.

Garage_sale, Sept 8, ~n. Sept 9,
Sal, Wtpple Ad , 5 Points, Pomer; oy, rauvantne.

Ilarge Yard

Calls)

Sale, Sept. 8, 9, SueRd langbonom, Oh clothing
: &amp; miac . items.
'
cats

~~~--~-~...-.'. ..~~~~~~T~F;JN ~------------------------~~~~,-------------------2112/92/tfn

�Friday, September 8, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•• ALLEYOOP

•

-r:._he Da1ly Sentmel • Page 9

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
~ ·:1o

Yard Sale

~~ ·

.'

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

•••
:

' , f·~~~~~~~-;~~~

r; . ~Mov ng garage &amp; yard Sale 237
"-'•.South Sth St M d dlepon !urn
tl.l re b aby 1tems assorte-d ttems
i
Sept 7 8- 9

f;

't.
• '"Saturday

919 Elm Street bes de
Rae ne Method ist Church lo ts ol
baby clothes rnsc 9am ?

...

:

Satu rday Sept ember 9 43905
es t R un Ad Rae ne Oh o
Ch tdren s clo thes adult clothes
and m se 9am 3pm

,Fo

Sepl 7 6 turn I rst road lett !r om
Mtddlepon H1 11 f fth house

..
w

r,

Sept 7 9 behtnd Maso n c Lodge
n Rac1ne Men women g1rls -pl us
s ze c loth ng Ho me In tenor
a quar um ste reo eo~ erc se b I.e
~p t rail lenc ng r res etescope
13 color TV Joy S ots of mtSC II
a ns nga age
Thursdaw and Fr dav Stewart Rd
of! Bradbu y 5 M ddlepc t A a n
wdt canca 9am 5pm

Va rd/ bak e sale Mo nday 8 30 .,
..- SR 7 nea1 Ease n H S Beneht
• t-lob so n C hr stan Fe! o wsh p
Church ra nlshme

.

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

'

4 Famtly Yard Sate Next to Craw
fords Henderson Wed Sat 9am
., Clothes toys &amp; m sc

Public Sale
and Auction

80

R ck Pear so n Auctton Companv
lu i t me auct onee c omplet e
au c t on
serv ce
L c ensed
•66 Oh o &amp; West V rg n a 304
773 5785 Or 304 773 544 7

wanted to Buy

90

Clflan Late Model Cars 0
Trucks 1987 Models Or Newer
Sm th Bu1ck Po nt ac 1900 East
em Avenue Gall pol s
Qe(;orated stoneware wal te le
phones old lamps old the mome
ters old clocks ant que tu n ture
A vertne Antiques Ru ss Moore
owner 614 99 2 25 26 We buy
estates
Oon t Junk Itt Se I Us You r Non
Work ng Ref gerators F eezer s
Wa s hers Orye s M cro wav es
Co or T V s VCR s A. r Co nd t on
e rs Computers 011 cc Ma ch nes
Etc 6 -4 256 1238
J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts and Salvage
buy ng wrec ~s
unk au os &amp;
uuc~s: Also par s lo sale 304
773 5343 or 773 5033
Junk cars or wtll p ck up g1veaway
cars 614-992 6069 anyume
Land Sacre s o more 304 56 2

110

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Help Wanted

De very Or v1:H $ Wanted Cuh
Comm1s1cns Pa d N ph tly 15e
Per Del very Plus S4 35 IHr Um
forms Provided Full Or Part T me
Must Be R ei ab le W th Goo d
Drv tng Record 18 Vears 0 0 der
W th Vali d Drtv&amp;r s L cense &amp; In
su ed Veh t i e Apply In Person
At L nle Caesars: Ga ll pel s OhiO
Earn $, OOOs w&amp;ekty siUIJ ng en
ve opes at nome Be your bOss
Stan now No er p free supples
mlo no obi gat on Send S A SE
to P es t ge Un 1 Jtl P 0 Bo •
Wn e
Sp ngs Fl
195609
327 19
FT nc ome PT wor k Earn th ou
sand s SASE T Can Enterpr ses
P 0 Bo .. 1506 Spots ylva n a VA
2255:1
Full t me p os 1 on s at MOCiures
Restaurant App y at Pomeroy or
M ddleport Mu st be aole to wor~
day s eve nm gs and weekend s
Apply n perso n be twee-n 9 30am
10 OOam Mond ay through Sa tur

&lt;lay
No E xpe nence Necessary! $500
To $900 Week i ~ IPo tenuat Pro
cess ng Mortgage Refunds Own
Hours. Call ~909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 Hours)
Roofe s wanted 614 992 5041 al
ter 6pm
Wanted Optome tr c Assistant
Optometr c &amp; othce management
exper e nc e preferred Reply to
Box 729 12 n care ol the Sent
n~ Pomeroy Oh 45769

180 Wanted To Do
Ace Tree Servtee Complete tree
care 20yr! up &amp; msured free
e st mat e s 614 44 1 11~1 or 1
800 508 8887
Ell per anced care provtder w II
care lor elderly 1n the r home
304 675 7262 1eave message
General Ma ntenance Pa nr ng
Yard Wo r k W ndows Washed
Guitars Cleaned L1gh t Hau l ng
CDmmencal Res dent1al Steve
614 446 8861
Georges Po rtable Sawm I don 1
haul your togs to the mll JUSt ca ll
304 675 1957
G ve A Party For Chr stmas Gtfts
&amp; Oecorattons Free G1ftsl For
Hostesses That Quality 614
446 3769 leave Na me And
Numbe
Rub &amp; Scru b Clean ng Serv1ce
dust ng mopp ng w1ndows and
more Complete serv•ce or touch
ups Relerences on reques-1 cal
TeHy at 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451
Sun Valley Nursery School
Ch ldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young Schoot Age Our ng
Summer 3 Days per Week M nt
mum 6 t 4 446 3657

4198

3 Bedrooms State Route 14 1 10
M tes Out Gatlt po hs 24x32 Ga

rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnac e
In Ground Poo New Satel l te
D1sh Ga Ita County Loca l School
D str ct 614 3 79 24t 0 Alter 5
p l.A
~::-:--:::-:::-:-:--:--:- 1
4bedroom 2 112bath larg e
room o n 1 acre 1m beh nd
lord 304 88 2 3326
Sa cres 3bedroom house garage
c ry wa ter Somef\llle Rea lty 304
675 Xl30 or 304-6 75 343 1
Home l or sa l e by owne r three
bedroom three bath l u 1 base
ment, 2700 sq f1: 'Mih I'M) ca r ga
rage n basement appro~ 26 x60
conc rete block ga age and shop
bu ild ng Approx 2 112 acre s w th
lrea gas Must see p lea se call
6 \t'4 985 3333 or 614 985 41 5
Lo ca1ed on SA 7 near Chester

Used lu n tu e an t qu es one
p ece or complete estate s Osby
Martn 614992 7441
Wanted To Buv Junk Auto s W th
Or Wnhout Motors Call Larry
Uvely 614 388-9303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

W clean small shops or offices
aM hOfTW!S Have expenence m
st er t 1eod cleamn-g Call lor es
1mate fi 14-843 5327

'Ho use For Sale B~ Owner 1 8
Acres W th House And Anached
Ga rage Separ ate 14x30 Worll
shop 29 H Utop Drrve OH Ne1gh
borhood Road 3 Bedrooms LA
DR 1 BR With laundry Area Gas
Furnace W tth Heat Pump New
Water Tank Large Fro nt Porc h
C ty Water Cheap Ut tl&amp;s l Green
Townsh p Call 614 446 6302
From6 To 11 PM
located HedgemonJ Dnve Fur
n shad Basement 1 112 Bath s
F rep lace CA Ga age Carpo fl
tmmed ate Possess on $ 72 000
614 4463117
Modern 5 room house on ng
area bath 314 acre garage ut Ury
bu dmg Nelson Rd Rutland
$39 500 614 742 2873
Ou et c ountr~ nom e two bed
rooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace satellite d1sh 38
acres call 14 98&amp;-4243

e

Spl t level house tor sale •n Syra
cuse tully equ pped k tchen w th
d n ng area one both two bed
rooms up two large rooms down
oil eel ut I ty room a ea sunporch
two car garage fe nced n bac~
ya d Located n ntce ne ghbor
hood near schoo l total e tectr c
614 992 6970
Th ee bedroom home n country
Wh res H1ll Ad Ru t and one bath
1n-oround pool 614 992 506 7
Three bedroom home on daub e
lot n M ddlepotl ask ng $27 500
cat 614 992 4539
Three bedroom home r'l!ce negh
borhood c ose to town S21 500
Contact Brenda Dolt e Turner
Reali)' 614 992 3056
Th ree bedroom house n S~ra
cuse on Th d Street S30 000
614 949 2499

320 Mobile Homes
for sate

1~80

W ndsor 14x70 Excellent
Condit on 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Large K1tct1en large Lrv ng Roorr
10x12 U!thry Bu ~dtng $12 000 Ne
got1able 614 245 9431
1964 Fa rmont total electrtc cen
tra.l a r 2bedroom bath &amp; hal!
very n ce 304 675 3448

W U do babvstllmg m my home
reasonable rates l\e~1ble hours
close to schOol 304 67&amp;-2784

1986 14:00 Fatrmcnl two bed
roo(T'I two lull baths $10 500
Must be moved 614 74 2 2250

W II Do Bab~smmg In My Home
Mon Thru Fr Have Exper ence
614 446 6758

1994 14x60 2 Bedrooms Unlur
n shed Commodore Never L.ved
In 614 388 9803
2 bedroom Baron mob le home
12•65 nstde remodeled aU new
WllldOWS $1 500 614 992 5216

Help Wanted

FINANCIAL

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES

210

Business
Opportunity

L m1ted Ot!ert New 14•80 No pay
ments alter 4yrs On l y make 2
payments &amp; move n 304 755
5566

AVO N EARN $$$ at home at
wor k All areas 304 882 2645 1
800 99 2 6356 INOIREP
Oabysllt e r Needed Mormngs
Monday Fr day Call After 5 P:M
614 446 1406
New Bank Repos Only 4 left 3:)4
755-7191

DATA SYST EMS COORDINA
TO R For 8 eg onal Behav oral
Heal t hcar e Adm n stra ! ve Au
thor ~ The Coordmator Col ects
Organ zes Analyzes And Pres
ent s Serv ces Date To Ass1st
Ptann ng Program De"Wclopmcnt
And Rt:! source Management
Mu st Be Able To Work W th
Ma cOS Mac Network ng And
Ma JOr Macmtosh Appl ca t ons
Mu st Have Data base Exper ence
And Ab l ty To Adm n ste r A
Management Info mat on Sy stem
Exper ence Ma 11 ta n ng e matl
Sys1ems A P us
Bachelor s Deg ee In Co mputer
Sc ence Or Relate d Degree Re
qu ed Sala ry Range $ 18 000
S22 00 0 Pu s E ~ ce e nt F nge
Ben e I t s Po st on Ava able lm
med ta t~y

Send Resume And l elle r 01 In
terest By Sep1ember 18th Tc D
recto r 01 Ope at ons Athen s
Heck ng V n on 31 7 Bo a d P O
Box 130 Ath ens Oh o 45 "' 0 1

EOE

Prtce Bustert New 14X70 2 or
3br Only $995 down S 951momh
Free del very &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 304
75&amp;-5685
All real estate advert1s ng In
th1s newspaper s SUbject to
the Federal Far Houstng Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes 1 illegal
to adverttse any preference
limitation or dlscr1m1nah0n
based on race color rehglon
sex famfltal status or nat100a1
origin or any mtenlton tc
make any such preference
llmllat1on or discrimination •
Th1s newspaper will not
knowllngl~ accept
advertiSements for real estate
which Is 1n v alai on oil he law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised m this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportumty basis

REAL ESTATE
1 Have Emphasema Look n~ For
A Lady To ltVe In For Her Board
6t4 446 3419

LABORER POSITION AVILABLE
Rooftng Exper4ence Or W !ling
To Learn References Transpor
ta t on &amp; Hand Tools A Must Call
614 446 4514 From 8 AM To 5
P:M Men Fn
MGR Tra nee$ Wanted No Ex
penence Necossary Career
Growth Poten t a Excellent Ad
vancement &amp;. Pay Based On Per
lormanc e Ne t T me In We Oller
Pa d Tra n ng Flex ble Schedule s
Fo r A 401K Pa n Med cal In
surance Apply In Person At Gal
ltpo l s L1n1e Caesars Or Send Re
sume To PO Box 10 Barbours
v e vw 25504

2bed room tra ler Releren ce s &amp;
depos t No pets A.tso Ita ler lot
Rt 62 N Locus t Rd P Pl ea sant
304 675- 1076
TW'D Bedroom S2501Mo Plus Uttl

11 es Oepos 1 Re ferences Re
qu1red At 218 At1er 6 PM 614
983-4607
Two bed room pa rtly lurn shed
go od clean cond tl on po rc h
~a rd pnvate lot above New Ha
ven $275 With wa le and sewe
304 682 2466 anv t me

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lur
n1s.hed and unfurnished sec un t~
deposn req utred no pe ts 614
992 2218
1 Bedroom Fu n shed Apartment
Ne•t To l b ary Gall pols 614
486 8004
1 Bedroom New Extra Ntce Atr
Co ndflloned Near Holzer's S2591
~o + Uti t1es Depo s r Requ red
614 446-2957
1bedroom apartmen t downtown
Pt Pleasan t 304 675 6492
2 Bedroom Apanment $250 De
pos 1 211 Spr nJ:l Avenue PI:! mer
o~ Stop l'rt A.h:er 4 00 PM
2 Bedroom Apanment Trash
Water Sewage Patd $295/ Mo +
Deposit 614 446 2481

2 Bedrooms Stove flefugerato r
Furn shed $275/Mo S275 De
pos I Renter Pays Ut f! os Trash
&amp; Vard Care 614 446 4491 614
446 3888
2bdrm apts total etectr c ap
pi ances !urn shed laundry room
lac Illes close to school 1n town
Apphcat ens ava table at V'1llage
Green Apts 149 or call 614 992

3711 EOH
2Rooms Plus Bath lafayette
Ma I No K1tchen1 A I UUIIII&amp;S pa1d
$17500 Month Detx~sfl Requ red
614 446-7133
Apartment &amp; Trailer Ut ht es Pad
304 675-2579

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT-S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Ome
from S226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Call 614 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Opportun ty
Beech St Middtepo 1 1 &amp; 2bed
room !urn sl'fed apts Utll ties pad
References &amp; depos t 304 882
2566
Furn shed Apartmer~t 3 Rooms &amp;
Bath All U11 ttes Pad Downsta rs
$250/Mo 919 Second Avenue
Galli pol a 614 446-3945
Gractous I vmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apa tment&amp;o. at V1Uage Manor and
R vers de "partments tn Middle
po t From $232 $355 Call 6 t 4
992 5859 Equal Hous ng Oppor
tunmes
N 4th Ave Middleport 2bedroom
turn1shed apartment Depos t &amp;
references requ red 304 882
2566
Nice One BR Unlurn shed Apart
ment Range &amp; Relffg Provided
Water &amp; Garbage Pa1d Deposn
Requ ed Ca I 614 446 4345 Alter
6 PM

Tw n Rwets Tower nQw accept ng
appl cat ons lor 1b HUD sub std
l ed apt lor elder y and hand
capped EOH 304 675-6679

I Sh rley

Ea n$8 S15 1H AtWcrk Home
D scountsl No Inventory Or Door
D oor lnd !Rep I 800 742 4738

2 BeC1oom Mob le Home On Bob
M&lt;:Co rmck Road Galt pols 6t 4
446...Q 669

One bedroom lurn shed apart
menr tn Mtddlepo t very clean
61 4 446 309 1/614 992 5304 be
fore lOam or alter 6pm

Appl ance De tvery &amp; lnstallauon
( Person) E~penence Help fu
Fren ch Cfl y Martag 1704 Eas t
em Avenue Ga hpol s
/\VON I All Areas
Spears 304 6 75--1429

part all y furn1 she d 2bed
1 112baths m &lt;:oumry City
$3251mo Re fer ences re
No pets 304 773 5165

Ono

1968 12•50 Star mcble Marne n
Ltltldteport $2500 cash can 6t4
992 3457 alter 3pm
W II Clean Houses Or 011 ces
Weekly 0 One T me ReJerences
Ava able 614 441 0870

14x70
roo ms
wa ter
qi.J red

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
10 acres overlook ng P ne Grove
road near Rt 124 ntce bu ldmg
s1te 614 992 3595 alter 7pm

9/ 10ac lot At 2 above Galhpohs
Ferry close to town beauuful rv
er v ew 304 675-724 1

REMOTE beaut lui r dge top
and 3 m1les sou h ol Carpenter
Oh o Mt Unton Ad One 9 acre
parcel S834 7 7 acre s lor S7086
Owne I nancmg Call lor good
map, 614 593 8545
Seen c Va ey Apple Grove
beautiful 2ac lots publ c water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

310 Homes for Sale
14K70 2 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths
Some App ances New Hoi Water
Heater Dec~ Underptnr'ung On y
$5000 614 256 6725
2 bedroom Hartmger &amp; 4th M d
deport S25 000 seen by appomt
mentonly 614 992 3-136

3 Bedroom 2 Baths lg K !chen
LA DR Ut R 2 Car Gar Eltc
Heat P ump W B F P W th Inser t
1 2 A On 3 58 AC All Level Ctty
Schools 6 14 379 2835
3 Bedrooms 405 Spr ng A11enue
Po meroy OH All Newt Ins de
Outs del Owner W U Help Ftnance
Down Payment304 583 7503

RENTALS
41 0 Houses for Rent
3bedroom $300/mo Camp Con
ley area 304 675 3812
House on Mu lberry He ghts Po
meroy $330rmo plus depos t aMd
rete ences no pets 304 882

2945
Newly Remodeled Sma ll 4 Room
Collage No Pets Por te r Area
6t4 388-1100 614 388-0000
Small 2 Bedroom $200 Depo s 1
$300 / Mo Ut Itt es Refere nc es
Requt ed 614 446 4069 II No
Ans Leave Message

fur n hue h ea ters Western &amp;
Work boots 814-4-46 3159

VrRA FURNITURE
6 14 446-3158
Qual ty Household Futi"IDJte And
Appl ances Great Deals On
CaSh And Carryl RENT2 C'1NN
And laraway Also Ava lable
Free 091Nety Wlll"t n 25M les

Rem ngton 11A 12 Gauge 28
Mod tied 614 446-3476
Rem1ngton 7400 30 06 sem auto
w/S mmons wh teta1! scope never
used. $400 304 675-5529
Start re I J Cross Bow W th Outver
E xcellent Cond1t10n S150 Ftrm
614 446 3945

Antiques

530

450

Furnished
Rooms

Crete Motel
614 446 2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable A r
Phone Lowest Rates In Ga! pols
Da ly Weekly Monthly
Rooms lor ren
wee~ or month
Starung at $,20 tmo Gall a Hotel
614 446 9580

AntiQue Glass Co llectiOn 1940
To Date 300 P ece Cartoon
Characters Peps1 Coke Jelly
614 256-686 7
Buy or se I R venl'le Ant tques
1124 E Man Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M 1 W 10 00
am t0600pm Sunday100to
6 00 pm 61+-992 2526

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Trader lot on Braod Run Rd New
Haven 160/mo 304 773 5881

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

Recond t oned
Appl ances
Washers Dryers Ranges Ref
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
F ench C t~ Maytag 614 446
7795

1 Hussman LBF 4 Honzontal Dts
play Freezer 1 Masterbtll Step In
Coo er 5 x4 1 Taylor 339 Soft
Serve Water Cooled Mach1ne AI
ter 5 00 614 245 9033 Before
5006 4 441114 1

Dtnette tab e w th s r cha s and
bullet portable GE d shwasher
call 614 gas 4265 leave mes

sage
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers drye s refrtg e rators
Skagga Appl ances 76
Ca I 614 446 7398

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home turn1sh nga
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 6141 446
0322 3 mtles out Bulav lie Ptke
Free DeiiYef'l
New full stze mamess &amp; box
sprmgs country blutv couch 304
675 6937
Stove Freezer Wuher Dr~er
Relrgerator 6,4 256 1238

RC A Ret &amp;lver Reg Sle ted Boxer
P u ps 9 Week s Wormed T1 111
Docked 2 Ma les 1 Female 614

256.8128

Sate lrte System Tosh•ba Rece 11
er Mesn 0 sh New Lt.IB 2 Mod
utes
$1 250
614 446-7 9 28
Evenngs

1

Sept c Tank Je t A.erahon Motors
New &amp; Rebuilt /lnsta led Oa t
Johns John 614 4-46 4782
Sharp Carousel II m crowave
oven 20gal tank wlf luorescent
hood &amp; cabmet stand Ktng wood
&amp; coal sw:we 304-87&amp;-1780
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upr1ght Ron Evans Enterpt~ses
Jackson Oh10 1 800 537 9528
Wanted nformat on ol Robert
SA Jr Adams Fam11~ Buned n
Adams Cemetery Mason C1ty S
Adams 5930 Sycamo e Ba tleu
TN 38134

550

1918 4x4 Full Sle Chevy Bazer

A so Front Rear Dnve Shah Che
'~Y 1/2 Ton 4x4 200 Gal on Fuel
Otl Tank On Sland Hospt al Bed
Wheetcha r Antique Bamboo
Furn ture Bab~ Stroller Dress1ng
Tabl e Baby Clothes 614 367-

7705
1982 Cub Cadet nd ng mower
12hp $800 IOOamp mam fuse
box $30 Gtrl s 15· btcyc le S20
304 675 3581
1990 Grand Am loaded $5 900
256- 1489
Small
Ut tl ty Tra1ler $200

Building
Supplies

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Per Grooming Fee
turmg Hydro Bath Jul e Webb
Cal 614 446 0231
7wk old lull blooded Boston Terr
er pupp &amp;s not Reg stered fe
male $75 304 458 1086
AKC Reg Beagle Pups $60 Each
Steve Stapleton Work 614 446
4172 0rAn.,!lme614256 1619
AKC Reg stared Boxer Pu ps
Fawn Wtth Whtte Marktngs Vet
Checked
Ta s Docked
0

6t4I· :C~I~awed~~61~4~4~4~6~7~16~6~~!~
Cocker Spamel

24 round above ground pool
sand hlter and ladder $495 614
949 2644

Females S100
Pomera
Black 1
614-446 9742

27

Zentlh TV Works I Floor
del 4 Years Old 814 4.(6
6970

AKC Regtstered Dachshunds
shols &amp; wormed 3J4-675-2193

4 Pc Secttonal Sofa J C Penny s
Fu I Stze Truck Topper Black
Front Gas Range

AKC Regtstered Dalmattan pup
pes shots &amp; wormed w1 I be
ready 8128195 $200 304 675

Fo r Sa le 42 Inch Btg Screen
Stereo TV W1th Surroundmg
Sound Capabl l ty L ke New Or
Trade For Farm Tractor 4•4
Ptck LlP 4 Wheeler Wllh PTO
(614 ) 256 61 14 Anynme
75gal aquar um wlwhtsper 5 !titer
a r pump stand and accessones
$350 304 675 5529
8 Prece Sectional Sofa $100 S1e
g er Fuel 01! Heat ng Stove Wtlh
Blower S 125 Wheelchairs $50
Electr c Cook Stoves $50 614
379- 2720 After 6 PM
97 Winchester shotgun 12
gauge lu ll choke $500 Whee l
horse wheel we ghts $80 6 14
241 3125

Alder Ro1a1 210 C Co~er

$550

Recondf!loned New Drum And
Developer 614 448 451.4 Mon
Fn BAM To5PM
AM/FM Cassette Player From
Hl89 Dynasty $125 30 Day
Gaurantee L&amp;l Body Shop 614

379 2726
Atlanta wood/ coal stove exc
cond approx 3 loads ol wood Wlll
sell all br $300 304 895 3813

Beauty sa l on equ tpment 3 hy
drauhc cha1rs 5 dryer chaffs w/
d yer hoods Day phone 304 675
632ti Of' even ngs 614 245 5344

55!&gt;3
AKC Reg stored Dalmatian pups
S100ea 3J4 675-3738 alter 4pm

Chest type !reeler 20 1 cu II by
Southern States good cond sell
tng no longer need $250 304
458 1066

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septu;; Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH
1 800 537 9528
Elect rtc Wheelcha rs / Scooters
New /Used Scooter /Wheelcha r
L1fts Sta.Frway Elevators L ft
Cha~rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

H Effec ency L P Or Natura Gas
92•4 Furnaces (!:0ci:':e'8~. ,B~T;;u
St 250 Instal ed 1
614 446 6308 Duct Systems
ArCond1t10ners. -ree Esnmates

6

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa red New &amp; RebUit In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528
K ng Coal Or Woodburner $200
614 367 7113
Marcy Home Fttness Center
Brand New Pad $700 Asktng
$550 614 367 7851

MTN STATE l.tYSTERY TRAIN
Fall Fohage Tratn Tnps See
WV s New Rver Gorge Nallonal
Aver Oct6 61315 20 &amp;22
1 800-347 1231
Munay 11 HP Mower Needs
Deck Runs Good $150 6t4

256-6867

Joe Russ Farm Equ pment &amp; Fer
ulzer Lo cated B M tes Sou th Of
Jackson On Sta tQ Route U9
IU 286 273 1 JD 64 00 Cab &amp;
A1r JO 7200 MF 1105 Cab &amp; Atr
JO 4430 Cab &amp; A r Fo rd 4630
FWA W th loader IH 888 Cab &amp;
A r Othe r Tractor s JD 4400
Comb1ne N H 335 Gr nder M xer
(l ke New) Cor n Ptc!o.er s &amp; S1
leage Equ1pment
John Deere 14T Baler J ohn
Deere 305 PTO Dnven Rake
614 446-2518

New Idea 706

O~asel

UNI System

Wn h Combine New Idea 2 Row
Corn Picke Corn Planter Fert hz
er Spreader Sprayer 6 14 245

5515
New Idea Unt Svstem 706 power
un 1 717 combme 73 7 huskmg
bed 4 rcw narrow rrM corn head
15 gran table 304. 675 4308

W II 0 g Your Potatoes Or Rent
The Plow Reasonable 614 245
9449

630

Livestock

Baby plgs lor sale $25 614 949
2908 or 614 949 2011

640

Hay &amp; Grain

1963 Rei ant K Stat1on Wagon 4
Door Good Body Good lntenor
Needs M ISUbiSht Engtne S 150
Cash Or Trade ~or Guns 1983
Ford Escort 2 Doors Good En
gtne Good lntenor Runs &amp;
Ortves Good Needs Body Parts
All Parts Ava1lable $325 Cash Or
Trade For Guns 614 388 - 9181
Leave Message

LOG I!

CFA Reg sterad Htmalayan Per
stan K1ttens 1st Shots Wormed
L Iter Tra ned No Checks 6 t 4
367 7705
CFA Registered Himalayan t&lt;tt
tens
Vet Checked
Shots
Wormed 614 446~253

car $1 500 080 :xl4 882 2221
1988 Olds Cutlass Clerla Very

Pure Bred German Shepherd
Pupptes Had Shots ! Wormed
1100 614 38ll876&lt;

&amp;d A 1 cond111on 63 OOOm1 304

Ron We ler Pupp es $150 Each
Parents Can Be Seen 614 441

570

Musical
Instruments

2 Bundy C lartnets Good Cond
ton $250 Each 614 446 3063
Artl ey clar net S150 614 667

3126
Bundy II Alto Sax Very Good
Condmon 61-4 24S S820 Alter 5
PM Days 614 446 4612 E•t

247
Geme nhard t flute used 3mos
e•ce lent condition new cost
$479 w II sell lor S300 304 675

3097

$175080 304-675-3779

1991 Red w1th ~ack top Mercury
Caprt XLT converttb!e ex&lt;:eUent
shape low m11eage lookS new
Call ~4-675-4683
~ 994

Flreblrd loaded New Con
d1110n Pnce $13 200 614 446
0219 614 ·U&amp;-3117
1994 Honda C1v1c EX Coupe
Auto Atr loaded 17 500 Mttes
Cam Red Askng S,36SO 614
446 8910
For sale or trade 1984 Ford
Crown V1ctor~a $2 000 or trade
for p.+ck up truck 614 992-(i154

720 Trucks for Sale

SAVINGS

A'-GOUNTS

1t worked'

~

Even though 11 had only about a one
1n four

I,

.,

'

SERVICES

B£ll11r.&gt;~
f\E'5 SO~~' IF l-IE

1-\W.D ~E£H10.~
W~A.T 00 YOO ':AY
OOT FCf!.
A. folmlf.. N'TER
DINNER 7 __.-•F:J'i .

\

RIGHT

HEi'E 1

Uncond1ttona lllet me guarantee
lcocal references lurmshed Call
(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237
0488 Rogers Waterp oofmg Es
tab! shed 1~75
\

I FRIDAY

Apphance Parts And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
per~ence All Work Guaranteed
Frenc h cnY t.layrag 614 446
7795
I

1 Gu~S /T~O()TOF

B II Or tck s Home Improvements
addtttons remade ng root ng
s d ng plumbtng etc Insured cal
Bll Orrick 614 992 5183
C&amp;C General Home Mam
tenenc;e Pa nt ng vtnyl s drng
carpentry doors w ndows baths
mobile home repatr and more For
free est mate call Chet 614 99 2

DfiYWALL

A:STRO-GRAPH

T he Astro Graph Matchmaker can
y ou understand what to do to make the

$pread to cover both

relat1 o n s htp work
Mall $2 75 to
Matchmaker cto lh1s newspaper P 0
Box 1758 Murray Hill Statton New York

tng up w11h a person who alw ay s rese nts
and oppose s your way o f d ong !htng s
Thts per s on rn1ght try to re s tratn your
efforts once agam today

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Avood 1eam

ARIES (March 21·Apr11 19) Try to rema•n

chance you m1ght be saddled wtth more
respon s tb11tt1e s than you can manage
today I you m1ngle w;th dependent per
sons who can !lend lor themselves

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) Do no1

TAURUS (April 20 May 20) You could

make tmanc1a l demands today upon a
person who once helped you to a small
way Tht s t~d vtdual wtll resent you tor

feel severe re m o r s e later 11 y o u over
tndulge a lrtend today who truly doesn I
deserve 11 Try to be thoughtful but not

us1ng unfa1r leverage

stupid

SAGITIAAIUS (Nov 23 Dec 21) Today

GEMINI (May 21.June 20)In compelot1ve

you m1ght operate along the line of least
resistance and allow a relahve or 1n law
to p re s sure you tnl o domg s omelhtng

developments today bank more heavtly
upon your c omm on sense than on
chan c e The best th a i lady Lu c k mtghl

you d rather not do

have to offer ts second place

CAPAtCOAN (Ooc 22·Jan 19) You

CANCEA (June 21 July 22) A person

m 1ght be Judged more severely than
usual for your m stakes today In order to
avotd an embarrass1ng ex~nence thtnk

you are peeved at m tght have some good

your actiOns through carefully

tnterests

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fob 19) It could

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Unless you are

prove wtse to clear up ok:l obltgaltons at
thts tune before assumtng any new ones
You may not have enough ftnanctal

eKtremely prudent and ftrm tn a jo1nt ven

Discount !arm tractor parts for
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
S der s Equ pment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
2773917

1990 Dodge 0 50 au to a r tool
boJI h gh m leage S2 500 304

882 3522
t994 Chevy 4x4 V6 aulo all
power
custom zed
runn ng
boards lots of extras 304 6 75

3818

SKGOIGVWGI

XCtSEBOGCSI
NV OTIS

Nl

XCIXYG

SKGO

XZ

K NY

X

J EGA S

allrtck

(JTOATIGE)

N E V CXGVIGC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION They say Woody Allen ~ot something lrom the Marx

J

Brolhers He dtdn t He s an ongtnal The funmes1 - Groucho Marx

~~:~;~;~' S©\t~N\.-~£!fs·
POllAN
O

WOlD
lAM I

Edlttd by CLAY R

Reorronge len~Ht of the
four scrambled words be
low to form lour words

l

ENDAME

.

-,D..,.-E..,..,..E_G..-W-.---il:. :; : to be
My husband and I seemed
workmg longer hours to
5
6
1 1 I I
. keep our head ab&lt;ilve water

1

I!

BASEI.tENT
WATERPROOFING

realtsi!C today about tssues that d trectly
affect your 1nle rests Serou s m a tter s Will
not re c t1fy th e m se lves you m us t ta~e

AC combine w/corn head &amp; table
Two gravtty beds Also suaw tor
sale 304--675 5086

SKG

C omp l ete the t:huckle quoted
by I II ng rn I he m ssmg words
you develo p lrorn slep No 3 below

Orcllld Begot Stark Jackal COLOR
II s a facl of l1fe my fnend s1ghed When I fmd
lhe shoe thai f1ls 1t s usually th e wrong COLOR•

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) There IS a

1988 Toyota ptck up 4wd 80 000
flllles 4 cyl e•lended cab auto
excellent condt t on $7250 6 14
992 3564

SKETBLK

It seems that these days

t'l:lliTH AT ONC.E

~94

1987 Toyota P ck Up Excellent
Cond1110n 614 367 7441

S K XC P

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

NY 10150

Parts. $2 500

X

' -N~A-5-5-0 -E----. people run m Circles to make

r Cf!AMMED FOUl'.
TWII'IICIES INTo MY
1

1979 Ford 4WD S1500 614 949

2 9N s 1 Runntng 1
614 379--2742

QUOU111005 by l arnouti people pal l And p.-oaent
roaarl clue ~ eqU4IIs P

Each fener ll'l the Cipher s ands lo another

~ TttE FINAL DAY
OF .SCJ10QL lA'IT '(EAR

Trumpet lor sale $250 614 742

1986 S 10 piCkup Sspd V6 aft
exc ccnd 304 372 3896

by Luis Campos
Celflbr ll'f' C pOO cryp~ ogrnms a o croa 00 I om

BIG NATE
HI'&gt;P?ENED

Home
Improvements

810

Hang ltn sh repatr
Ce hngs textured plaster repa1r
Ca I Tom 304 675-4186 20 ~ears
expertence

1986 N ssen P ck Up 4 Cylinder
5 Speed Very Good CondttiDn
$2 495 614-256-6867

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I I_ j1__8.J. 0
IL -..l.-...1..
17 I-..l.-...1..

1978 GMC 4 wheel dr '18 $2 800
OBO 304-675 5085

1992 4 Star horse Ira ler 3 horse
slant road, all alurnnum alum num
wheels &amp; lugs In shed 1 v ng
quarters used very lmle $15000
304 675-1950 between 9 4pm

sandra-

so King-

1-1

N-liNFOIA&amp;IN...I

Snare drum case books good
!or beg nner $150 :Kl4 6 75-4439

610 Farm Equipment

succeed

)WE'I&lt;?E.I\ TV .~fl(D

~ (:f)

SPDT' lT

1976 Ford E•plorer 302 w th cam
4 speed good t res dUal exhust
runmng boards runs good $975
614 247 4292

1g94 S 10 Chevy Blazer 4x4

to

West did produce the queen South won
With dummy s king played a d1amond
to h1s ace and followed With a finesse of
dummy s club mne When 11 held de
clarer diScarded one of hiS spade losers
on the club ace and conceded thre e
tncks

"'

~

HERE ~TttE

6323

$2 500 OBO 304-675 3581

37 Type ol point
38 Careen
40 Northam
European
43 Car
44 MIX
45 Slippery
48 Actrell

cover w1th the queen However when

- BORN LOSER

'

chance

three South led the club jack from h1s
hand planmng to run 1l 1f West d1dn t

Sf)are Drum 614 256-1651

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

coatuma
33 Grapegrowing a'"
34 Left out
36 Actreaa-

F... tsenhower s press secre

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1971 Chev One Ton Long
Wheeler Base Good Condition
614 256 6574

1982 Ford EXP Hatchbac~ 4 Cyl
4 Spd New Tffes Battery I
Brakes Runs Good Sunroof
$ 1 200 OBO 614 446-9315

Tracy

to make h1s contract he went for Jt and

1978 Chevy 350 automatiC lots
of new parts 814 992 5011

3508

27 Mro Olck

IN THlS vER'( SE'AT,

1991 Ponttac F1reb1rd fully load
6753476aher6pm

~

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1975 26 Foot Holiday Vacatton
Camper Good Shape Everyth ng
Workst 614 446 1400

25 Kind ol pow.
28 Oance

almost m desp a1r a hand fell on my
shoulder and a vmce sa•d reassunngly
Cheer up thmgs could gel worse So l
cheered up and sure enough lhmgs
got worse
Now South wa s m an apparently
hopeless contract However luckily he
d1dn t throw m the towel South could
see a hghl at the end of the tunnel - or
1f you prefer a s1lver hnmg to the dark
cloud He spotted one famt poss1b1hty

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1967 18 deep V runabout, 160hp
10 excellent sMape lor year 6U
992 3595 after 7pm

1990 Escort very mce S1 500
Also 1983 Chevy Maltbu " door
new pa1nt 304 6 75 2352 after
19Q1 Cut ass Supreme Loaded
AlterS Xl4 675-7523

Prestdent

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

PM 814-441.0021

F1ve Cockate Is and two chmch1 l
as lor sale 614 742 2525

Pass
Pass

tary who sa1d One day I sat thmking

Kawask1 KZ400 $475 OBO 614
441 1199

Good CondttiOn Betwar:t 8 A M 9

4om

l-IE'S wAITING FOR '(OU

3253

790

East

South won Lhe first tnck WILh the spade
ace and cash ed the heart ace HIS plan
to cla1m was put on mdefm•t e hold
when West discarded the d1amond two
Suddenly seemg four losers slanng h•m
m the face ttwo spades and two heartsI
declarer f elt like James Hagerty

THE BiCK PORCH l Tl-liNK

1995 Yamaha 350 banshee 4
wheeler ridden approx 8hrs st n
under warranty $3900 304 895

1986 Ford Taurus g:fOooml a 1
power a&lt;: cru1se V6 3 0 S1 500
or trade for 4 wheeler 304 576
2904

North

3•
Pass

Thmkmg the contract wa s ea sy

'(OlJR 006 IS SITTIN6 ON

1995 Honda 4 whee er 4WD
rode very hllle 1 ke new $4 700
K1ng wood stove very good con
dmon S250 304 576 2871

AKC Reg stared Cocker Spamet
Puppes $150 614 379 2728

1--'---------1987 BUick Somerset exc work

PEANUTS

1994 Yamaha T mber wolf runs
Ike new S2 600 3J4 576 2400

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels radiators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto Rtpley WV 304 372
3933 Of t 800 273 9329

West

Pass
Pass

the second deal of the rubber
North s thr ee h earts wa s a l1m1t
raiSe shoWing at least four trumps and
about 11 support pomls for hearts

1992 Harley Dav1dson 883 Sport
ster Deluxe lots ol chrome 614
992 5011

1986 Chev~ S 10 V 6 Auto
Good Cond I on Runs Great!
49 000 Or g nal M es $2 500
614 379 2854

10 Inherent
11 aeau11 Outflow
20NOM
Inflammation
23 Flower

looked as sound as Fort Knox Th1s was

6548

AKC Registered Wh te Pomera
nan Pups Small Males Females
6 Weeks Old Read~ To Go 614
446 9742

(2 wdo)

8 tHt
9 Regretful

The declarer m today s deal had JUSt
gon e down m a contract th at had

YOU LL GIT
SPLINTERS
IN YORE
BOTTOM II

1989 Suzuki AM 80 excellent
cond t10n never raced 614 992

Budget Transm1ss ons Used &amp;
Rebu11! All Types Accesstble To
Over 10 000 TransmiSSIOn Also
Parts C lu tches &amp; Pressure
Ptatas 614 379 2935

6 Aun

Lauer

6063

t985 Dodge Daytona Runs Good
/Looks Good $1 200 060 6 4
446 7252 After 4 00

(obbrl

5 - -anne
7 Flrot..ahl

Bv Phillip Alder

1958 Harley Dav1son ng d frame
spr nger New 1 res &amp; pant exc
cond S9 000 OBO 304 773

AKC Reg stared Sh h Tzu pup
pes 7wks old 1 female , male
Wormed &amp; shots 304 675 7499
after 5pm

Beaut fu AKC Reg stered Blonde
Mae Cocke r Span el loves All
A~es Has Shots $200 Includes
Bed Etc 614 441 1417

ON THAT

Motorcycles

350 Chev 2 Bo r Short Block
614-245..()611

3 Chant
4 Turn the page

From worse
to better

SET OOWN

Of11o

1985 Corvene Loaded 614 682
7512

AKC Reg s1ered male Dalmat on
3yrs old good wlchtldren 1200
304 576 2984

Indian

19 Bury
52 Sesame plant
21 Obese
S3 Secondhand
22 Ranch workers 54 Jekylls
24 Terre opposite
26 Bak1ng
55 Jazz player
mgredient
Kld 28 Name
56TofTV
29 Color
30 Numero DOWN
l1 - Vegas
1 Gospel
32 Comed1an
2 A"atrlp
Conway

Opemng lead • Q

DON'T
YOU DARE

Seen At Gallipolis Dally Ttfbune
825 Thtrd Avenue Ga ll pols

1987 Yamaha FZ700 New T res
And Battery Good Condu1on
Runs Great! 14 000 Utles $1 300
614 379 2854

1983 Olds Mega Runs And
Looks Good Ins de l Outs de
t979 Chevy P ck Up Truck Runs
Good Body Far Stra1g1'1t 6 Cyhn
der 614 367 7346 Aller 4 30

4•

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250

Shelle4l corn lor sale alfalfa hay
614 992 6466

1983 Camara new ro!ors brakes
&amp; battery no rust 65 OOOm les
$2 500 304 675 3097

BARNEY

72 000 Miles $6 000 Can Be

1979 ,000 Suzuk motorcycle for
sale lot of new part runs excel
lent 614 992 6069 call anyttme

1982 Camara 34K 1987 Monte
Car o Ae ro Coupe 198~ Astra
Converston Van 1988 Beretta
t982 EXP Cook Motors AI Cen
tenary 614 446 010!)

South
I •

304 773-6063

Prem urn allalla hay rolls $25
Morgan Farms At 35 304 937

18 Tea for -

Anawer Ia PrevkH.ts PuUte

Vuln erable Ne1ther
D eal er South

1989 Ford Aerostar XLT tully
loade&lt;l exc cond $6 700 080

2~867

I0 '

• 9 7
4A 7 f, 2

SOUTH
4A 7 3
• A 8 54~
• A K Q
•J 3

1984 Fo rd C onvers on Va n
72 000 U1le9 Rased Roof 4 Sw
val Seats Couch Folds Into Bed
Bu It In Closet Good T res Run
n ng Boards $4 500 614 -446
0703 Alter 5 P.M

2201

•Q J

•Q I 0 5 4

1983 CJS Jeep red/black $2 500
I r m D Greene call 304 458
1554 leave message dunng day

740

6 K 'I 4

••t08 432

1983 Chevy S 10 Blazer 5spd
6cyl 4 wheel dt1ve $2 800 304
67&amp;:2949

9R"

t:As r

WEST
•Q J 10 8

1981 Jeep Cherokee 4 Whee l
Dnve In Good Cond1110n Ru ns
Good $1 500 614-388-1122

1974 Honda Tra11 90 2 000 Miles
Very Good Condttlon $450 614

71 o Autos for Sale

• 6 s 2
• K 7 6 3
• J fi 5
• A K 9

Owner II 500 61&lt; &lt;&lt;411 3277

700 lb round bales of hay tor
sale 614 843 5350 or 614 949

TRANSPORTATION

NORTH

19 78 GMC ·J tfT'Imy· •h4 Auto
Trans PB PS PW. 350 Cu In
Motor Wuh 4 Barrel Carb Bodv
Rough Actual Miles 59 000 One

760

Snare drum w/case accessor es
$200 Bass gu tar Peavey amp
For Sale 6 Pc Bedroom Su te
S500 4 Pc Dtnetle Set S250 2
Pc Lfvtng Room Su1te $400 Bunk
Beds And Maness $250 AI L ke
Newl614 446 1681

Heavy duty lowboy dual wheels &amp;
ramps 6 14-992 8035

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1965 Black lroc l Camara 305
IPI $2 000 304 675 1449

0538
Brown L1v1ng Room Su1te Far
Condnon $200 614 388 9671

Gr ave ly Acc esso r es Roto tll er
And Roto ttll et P lo w E• cell ent
Condillon 614 4_..6 2021

2018

560

Free 0 snev Tlc~et!Cvpress Is
land T1c~ets Comes W th 3 Hotel
Ntght Stay Use Anyt me Pa1d
$380 Sell S99 614 470 t577
Country Furn lure Furnr ture fo r
Every Room 6m At 2 North Pt
P easam 304 675 6820

New rel r gerator almond med um
$1Ze $125 cal 6 14-949 2561

Washet etectnc stove d neue
table and chairs 614 949 2908.

Commodore computer men rer
pr nter d1sk dnve software S200
304 67S 4612

460 Space for Rent

New C omfort Re st q ueen stze
mattress &amp; bOx sprmg s $125/set
new Broyh• ll co ltee ta ble 6 14
992 5158

Refrlgeraron Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recond Honed
And Gauran teed! $100 And Up
Will Deliver 814-669 8441

Sporting
Goods

520

BabY bed stroll~r carseat sw ng
walkw 304-675-4548

26 acres w th barn located n
Mason S35 000 304 773 5081
5 Acres For $ 2 000 Located
Between V nton &amp; R o Grande
Sa lor Road 614 388 9737

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITUfiE 62
Oltve St Gal l pohs New &amp; Used

33 Blood vessels
35 Useful
1 Journey
38 Spring bloomer
5 Aetroas Hogen 39 tmage1
8 Math oubjecl
41 Prefix tor corn
12 Smallest pup
or form
13 Opposite of
42 Amolloratal
con
46 Labor org
14 Norse poem
47 - Foxx
15 Do - others
49 lnd1an
16 Charged atom 50 Duration
17 Longings
51 American

Eart s Home Ma ntenance v nyl
s1d1ng roof ng ex ter or parntmg
power washtng Free Est mates
614 992 4451 Of 614 992 4232

Roof ng and gutters ccmmerctal
and restdent al m nor repa1rs 35
years expenen ce B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Freeman s Hea 1ng And Cool ng
lnstalla t on And Serv ce EPA
Cer!fl1ed Res denn\ Commerc.al
614 256 1611

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISI'S
Heat Pumps Atr Cond1t1onmg lf
Ycu Don 1 Can Us We Both lose I
Free Esttmates 1 BOO 267 6308
614 446 6308 WV002945
Res dental or commercial w r ng
new serv ce or repa rs Master LJ
censed e ecu c a n R denour
E tec tr cal WV000306 304 675

Saturday Sepl 9 1995
Larger than usual perso nal rew ard s may
come to yo u to the year ahead through
your creative efforts When a bnght tdea
tnsptres you don t wasle any I me do ng
somettung construchve about 1t

VIAGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) You m•ght
have dtfftcutty maktng ma1o r dec iSIOn s
today due to an 1nc hnatton to overe mpha
stze both the pro s and the c ons Th s
habtt could leave you dead tn th e water
1ryrng to patch up a broken romance?

1786

•
r

a chon

1&lt;1eas today lhat you II flatly re1ect If you

do

thts tt wtll work aga1nst your own best

ture 1oday the larger shce of out of pock
el expenses mtght fall on yov

j

SEPTEMBER 8 I

�•
Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 8, 1995

Along the River

License to practice·medicine isn't right sleep with patients
Ann
Landers
.. ,995, lotNIQele&amp;
Times ~ndcate ana
C1&amp;ator1 SyndiCI.t•·

Dear Ann Landers: This is for the
·woman from Southern California
who is having an affair with hor
married physician.
·. Just because this man has a license
"to plliCticc medicine doesn't mean he
has the right to sleep with his patienlS.
whether he's single or married. If he
thought nothing of having an affair
with her, Ill bet he has broken the
code of ethics with other female

patiems as well.
I succumbed to the channs of my
physician a few yeani ago and have
been ashamed of myself ever since.
"Dr. Smooth" told me he needed the
emotional and physical attention he
didn 't get at home and I was the
perfect person to provide it. When I
regained my senses, I reported this
physician to the state medical board.
He had to move to another state to
practice medicine.
I am happy to say my marriage
survived this sordid affair. I have
learned a lot about why I let this
happen to me and what I need to do
to keep my marriage strong. I am also
proud of myself for having had the
courage to blow the whistle on this

_
Hayman reunion held
The annual reunion of the lale
George and Vera Mac (Crawford)
Hayman family wa.' held Aug. 19th
at Star Mill Park in Racine .
Dinner was served, wilh the
blessing given by Dan Hayman. An
auction was held, with Waid Hay·

and Shawn Edwards, Leslie and
Patricia "Hayman, · Waid Haynian ,
Ruby, Beryl, Rhonda, Kindra, Jennifer, Lewie, Lissa. Jerrod and
Jonathon Wolfe and guest Mandy
Smith, Marge and Bill Packman,
Eric and Bruce Richardson, Doris
man serving as auctioneer.
anc.l Buck Rogers, Bryce, Bethany,
Attending were Facie, Don, Julie, David, Dan, Donna, Danny
Donna, Ted, Keith and Shane Hay- and Dena Sayre, Dan, Faith and
man, Lillie, Rob, Brice, Marci, Tamara HaYman and guest Chris
Kyle and Kelsey Hart, Beth and Zerkle and Howard and Emma
Mark Casto, Phyllis Young, Ruth, Robinson, Clara Mae Sargent and
Virgil, Delorsc, Mike, Eileen, Matt Ann Cale.
Next year's reunion will be held
and Sam Ours, Teresa, Bill, Ben .
Star
Mill Park on Aug. 17th.
at
and Katelyn Lawver, Ginny and
Bill Huffman, Isabel, Tom, Kim

Long Bottom news Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hunnell of
Columhus, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bowles of Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs . David Ross of Middleport
have called on Lela Hawk and
Robbie.
Georgia Mount and· brother
Emory Weekley have been called
on hy Mr. and Mrs. Larry Derry,
and Leah Clary of Glenwood,
W.Va. ·

Ruby Brewer was a recent din ner guest of Pearl Powell.
Mr. and Mrs . Ernie Griffin
r~cenUy called on the Paul Hauber
family .
' The Long Bollom Community
Association will hold a smorgasbord dinner Saturday, Sept. 161h,
beginning at 5 p.m. at the Long
Bottom community building .
Everyone is invited to auend.

Bible school completed
The Reorganized Church of Tabitha Jones, Tasha Jones, Nicole
Jesus Christ of Latter Day SainlS, Jones, Cody Neal, Aitgel PridePortland/Racine Branch, finished more, Angel Pridemore, Anneue
out the summer vacalion with a Pridemore, Stephanie .Pridemore,
week of Bible Schpol, August 21- Deana Pullins, Nicole Reizel, Jor25.
dan Taylor, Andrea Tedford,
Twenty-three children, aged two Matthew Tedford, Adann Warden,
to eleven years, enjoyed a week of Christopher Warden and Raquel
music, games, crafts, stories, Wolfe.
refreshments and lessons on faith .
Teachers and helpers were
The week concluded with an Nancy Campbell, Janitc Danner,
evening of gaines and a wiener · Sandy ·Oemoss; Pam Diddle, Tom
roast following· the graduation pro- Diddle, Linda Evans, Karen
gram on Friday.
Inherst, Donette Jones, Joy Neal,
Those enrolled were Rachelle Eula Proffitt, Joanne Proffiu, Golda
Boso, Brian Brown , Ashley _ Radcliffe, Bill Roush, Becky TayDemoss, Autumn Demoss, Bradley lor, J..;ucy Taylor, Juanita Wells and
George, Tara Harris, Krista hlhersl, Sherry Wolfe.

On my way to my car. I grabbed
the mail and tossed it onto the
passenger seat and then ran some
errands . When 1 arrived home, there
was a strange-looking man waiting
for me in front of the garage. I
decided to usc the car phone to call
the police.
It seems the man had been in the
pariUng lot of the grocery store where
I had shopped earlier in the day. He
said he "liked my looks" and
proceeded to check out my car,
which I had locked. He saw the
mail addressed to me on the front
seat and decided to come to my
house.
When the police came, the man
clai med he meant no hann and left.

man despite the embarrassment it
caused me.
I hope my letter will appear in
prinL It could give other women the
strength they need to get out of these
crippling relationships. ··LES SON
LEARNED IN TOLEDO, OHIO
DEAR TQLEDO: You are noble to
want to accept part of the blame for
the affair, but the onus is on the
doctor. It is the responsibility of the
professiOnal to keep hands off the
patient. He (o• she) is in the position
of power and shou ld never take
advantage of a patient's vulnerability.
Dear Ann Landers: Several days
ago, my carelessness could have cost
me my life. I want to pass on a
warning to your readers.

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

r
This incident ended peacefully, but I
shudder to think what might have
happened. How simple it would have
been to put the mail in my purse, out
of view, but I jilst didn't think about
it Please warn others ... SAFE IN
THESI1BURBS
DEAR SAFE: You did .. and I
thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: I thought you
might get a kick out of this old
invitation. Clarence was my uncle.
.. SHAKOPEE, MINN.
You are cordially invited to attend
A Wedding Dance
given in honor of
Ilene K. and Clarence S.
Tuesday EvCQing, July 11, 1939
At 8 o'clock at the

Zephyr Inn, Vine Hill
On the back oftl\e invitation, in the
bride's handwriting, was this
message:
"Please do not bring a present Just ·
put some money in an envelope with
your nljll1e on it and hand it to the
bride."
"'A Collecti&lt;Jn ofMy Favorite Gemr
of the Day" is the perfect litrle gift
for that special someone who is
impossible to buy for. Send a self·
addressed, long. business-size
envelope and a check or money older
for $5 .25 (this inc/udLs postage and
handling) to: Collection, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box /1562, Chicago,
Ill . 60611-0562 (in Canada, $625).

'

a
long time his old friends recall that a
between September and May but area man played major league
some of us better face the fact now baseball some years ago. Pete says
thai there is a problem with contin- that about everyone is in agreement
uing t.be annual reunions of the that his last name was "Roush."
Middlep_ort High School Alumni However, no one can come up with
Association.
a forst name and some think he was
Although the next reunion isn't from Syracuse \\lhile others think
scheduled until May. the faucet of he was from Hartford, W.Va.
leadership apparently has run dry
Any answer fot Pete from you
in gelling somebody to head the sports fans? If so, let me know and
association and the staging of the I' II be glad to pass on the informa·event.
tion to Pete and his friendS:
For the past couple of years, the
class of 1950 has handled all of the
Three cheers and a big salute tO
details most of which were primari· the Pomeroy business people who
ly in the. laps of Mary Brewer and have been meeting evenings to pcrJean Craig. Well- the two are fonn various chores to help beauti·
weary of the task and unless some- fy the business section. It can't
gne comes t.brough as a volunteer have been easy in the heat but they
to head next spring's reunion, . are a determined, hard-working
chances are that it just won't lake group making the town a little bet·
place.
tcr for the rest of us .
ll's not such a .bad position to
Too bad they can't get rid of
get involved with. Through various some of the dilapidated structures
fund raisers, the associalion has in the community." It seems that we
over $6,000 in ils treasury. ")'he hardly ever tear anything down .
addresses of members of all of the We jusl let it rot down .and that
many classes over the past years takes a long time during which the
have been updated . All someone structure more and more becomes
has to do is step in and arrange for an eyesore In the community. You
getting ·~etters out of alumni mem- know when you thirrk of i~ zoning
bers, g'cttifig a band and perhaps, really docs have some good points.
adding a bit of their own originality
to staging t.be event. A group will
Did you know that September is
he needed to serve the dinner and National Chicken Month? That's
the new leader will also handle that probably good if you're a chick·
detail.
en-or is it? Do keep smiling.
Anyone up to taking on the job?
If so call 992-7761 or 992-2343 as
soon as possible so that the annual
reunion will live on.

HOMECOMING
CHESTER CHURCH
OF.THE NAZARENE
SUNDAY, SEPT. 10
AFTERNOON SERVICE
1:30 P.M.
SINGERS: ATRIO FROM
RUTLAND NAZARENE CHURCH
I

EVERYONE WELCOME!

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Pete Shields, a resident of the
Extended Care Facility at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, has posed a
question lhat perhaps, you can

6sl

~$ $ I

,J'I

t/

cannot be guaranteed lo run a

spec inc number of days.
FRIDAY
POMEROY -Meigs County
Board of Eleetions, closed Friday
so that employees may attend dis·
trict meeting.

Sunday school at 9:30, worship at
109:30 with Jamie Sprague, speaker. Carry-in dinner at 9oon; pro·
gram at 2 p.m. with spectal music.

!?". ,J'I ,J'I

answer.

ll seems that Pete and some of

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Manley family
reunion will be held Saturday at 5
p.m. at Roy Oak Resort. Those
attending to take a covered dish.
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen dinner at
McDonald's in Pomeroy, Saturday,
6 to 8 p.m. Those of camp and·
guests to register at restaurant to $2
certificate toward dinner.

A retirement party was held Friday for Harold Boston at the home
of Jean and Bill Osborne the Olive
Township Trustees hosting the
party.
A plaque was presented to
Boston for his 22 years of service
to Olive Township as an equipment

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Ollice of the Meigs
County Commlsslo'ners is
preparing a Round #7
Community Housing and
Improvement appllca1lon tor
submission lo the Ohio

Department
of
Oe"ttelopmenl·, Orflce of
housing and Community
Partnerships. This project
will Involve housing
rehabllllatlon as a primary
activity and as such, the
Commlaaloners will accept
'tee proposals from quallried
professionals for consulting
services nec_essary In the

.

rehablll~tlon

of

a·ppproxl ately
24
subalendard homes In the
target area of the village of

Middleport.
'

The acope of •ervlces for

thlo project will Include:
Inspection ol subject

houaea, development of
specifications and cost

operator.
Refreshments were served to
Bill and Martha Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Boston and· family, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernie Barringer, Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Barringer and fainily,
Jack and lla Westfall and Mr. and
Mrs. Boston.

Assislance in the bidding
process
as needed;

pre·bld

conferences; Assistance 1n

reviewing

bids

and

contractor

recommendation; Conduct
conshucllon Inspections
both Interim ond final;

Review

and

~

Auto., air, stereo,
rear defog.
Remainder of
Factory Warranty

BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Every Sunday Morning
10 am·ll am

.

I

G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered
Teacher, Les Hayman

'

approve

appropriate contractor pay
requests. The CHIP program
will require approximately
18 months to complete.
Those providing proposals
must detail past experience

In housing rehabilllatlon

.

activities. References tnay
be requested .
Written fee proposals will
be accepted until 10;00
a.m., September 21, 1995
and may be submitted to
the office of the Meigs
County Commissioners,
Meigs County Courthouse,
Seco~d Street, Pomeroy, OH

Public Notice
45769.
(9) 1, 5, 8; 3TC
Public Notice

$30,000.00

(Thlrly·

.

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 9.95
BE IT RESOLVED by the
Council of lhe Village of
Pomeroy, all members
thereto concurring:
Thai the Clerk/Treasurer

Fire Fund by the sum or
Deem this
resolullon an emergency
becauae of the debt service

$3,000.00.

Thousand Dollars) from the
General Fund lo lhe Slreet
Fund for the operallon of
current expenses. Thio
resolution
deemed
emergency for operation of
current expenaee.

on the new fire truck needs

PASSED Aug. 21, 1995
Kathy Hyaell,

(9) 1, 8; 2TC

Clerk!Treasuer
John Musser, President of

(911, e: 2TC

Council

REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSED!

10 in stock. Perfect for work
car or back-to-school. Be
first for the Best Selection!

PRE·OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

RESOLUTION 10.95
BE IT RESOLVED by the of the VIllage of Pomeroy
Council of the VIllage of increase the app!oprlallon
Pomeroy, all members !"n I he Fire Truck by
lhereto concurring:
$3,000.00 and decreRa the

That the Clerk/Treasurer
of the VIllage of Pomeroy,
transfer the sum of

MUST GO. NO

s149 Down s149 PerMo.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·7410

ALL 1995'S

$6999

Ash Street
...
Freew1ll
Baptist Church

'

WE NEED ROOM
fOR THE 1996
MODELS.

1994 GEO METRO

.

Public Notice
estimates
lor snme;
In

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 1-992·6614 • 1·800-837-1094

GENESIS

,/

e

....

SUNDAY
RACINE -Tile annual Harvest
Festival will be held Sunday at the
St. John Lutheran Church, Pine
Grove Road, Racine. Worship will
be at II am. ·followed by a potluck
dinner at noon, and an afternoon at
1:30 p.m. The 25th anniversary
ordination of women will he held.

.

Ass isla nee

Gee

RACINE - Racine Fall Festi·
val Satunlay, 10-8 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

LONG BOTTOM IOOth
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Anniversary of the Long Bottom
Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
United Methodist Church this
·
American
Revolution, 10 a.m. Sat·
weekend. Service, 7:30 Friday and
urday,
Episcopal
parish house .
Saturday, Rev. Norman Butler,
Linda
Warner,
speaker.
Noon lunVienna, W. Va., guest speaker;

Retirement party held for
Olive Township trustee

(,I}

cheon.

paid.
PASSED Aug. 21,1995
Kathy Hysell,
Clerk!Treasuer
John Musser, President ol
Council

1DU'LL 1M IICltiEY

II TilE ClAIIHDI
Alii TliiT1111 Mll

1993 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX .2dr. coupe, auto., air, stereo, PW, PL, V6 ..............$8,995
1989 CADILLAC BROUGHAM V·8,1eather,44,000 miles ............................. $10,995
1991 CADILLAC BROUGHAM V·8,1oaded,63,000 miles, I o~ner .........;....... $14,995
1994 CHEVY Y2 TON PICKUP Auto. Cheyenne 4X4, 2tone paint.................. MUST SEE
1995 CHEVY lf2 TON PICKUP Auto., air, stereo, SWB ...,.............................. $17,995
1988 CHtVY 5·1 0BLAZER Y-6t auto., air, 4X4, Sharp! ................................. $8,995
1988 CHEVY Y2 TON_PICKUP Auto., stereo ................................................ $3,995
All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included .
All payments subject to credit approval

• All prices include
rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

included.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

.•

(

S 1.00

H.S. football results

of hope
on two
wheels

'

High: 70s
Low: 50s

•C-section

'Farm/City Day' schedule . Page 01

Fe11tured on fJ119e 8·1

Mild
north winds

Details
on PageA2

•
tmts ·A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolts-Pt. Pleasant . September 10, 1995

'One-stop' service:

---Community calendar_____,__
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non•profit groups wishing to
· a11nounce meeting and special
j&gt;vents. The calendar is nol
designed to promote sales or
tund raisers of any type. Items
pre printed ,as space permits and

C]ourn.ey

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

·

$217.000. was

ment and training services will allow information to be

shared with other agencies that help the unemployed seek
work.
The referral information is lransmiued by computer and
the software is already in place Jll the Gallipolis and
Jackson offices of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. explained Mike McPherson. Transitions coordina·
lor al Buckeye Hills Career Center. ·

to a partnership of L,ucas and
·

l

•

The local amount is half of lhe $898,000 originally
sough t by all seven counties. McPherson said, but the
consortium will

u s~

it to meet the needs of the other

counti.es involved.· which ·itic lude Athens. Hocking,
Lawrence, Perry and Vinton.
"'We we recut about 50 percenl of what we requested, So

McPherson is a member of the Linkage and Coordina- ·
lion Team of Galli a, Jackson and Vinton counties, which
conceived the idea of relaying information 10 multiple
sites in each county in 1991.
The money granted in late Augu st will allow the software and service delivery to ~expanded to other agencies. McPherson added.
Currently, the information is made available to human .
services departments. adult basic literacy programs, BHCC,
the Job Training Partnership Act, Green Thumb and the
University of Rio Grande.
In the future, job·seekers can continue (o slop at those
or more than a dozen additional sites to access infonnation. McPherson said.
"We can take referral information at one site, put it .on

Pomeroy native
makes history
with surgical .
implant

pre~ellled

Wood counties.

$448,000 ·grant designed to enhance job ·
placement opportunities in southern Ohio
By KEVIN KELLY
Times;Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Employment serv ice professionals
hope lhal a grant will improve opportunities for jobseekers in the southern part of the state.
The awarding of$448,000 to a compact of seven counties, including Gallia and Meigs, for ""one-slop" employ-

Vol. 30. No . 31

in this p:irticular project, we have to turn several proposals
into or'te," he said

~~iN(~'tij~~ -

Mike McPherson of
Buckeye Hills Career Center checks software at
the Gallipolis OBES office designed to help job·
seekers access referral Information.
to
or .
rather than have a client go from office to office," he
explained.
The local funding, part of$2.4 million given to the state
by the u,s. Labor Department. was given to consortiums
of employment and training l&gt;roviders . The s-outhern Ohio
consortium received the biggest share and the s m~lllt: sl,

To be eligible for the funding. Ihe local consortium had
to serve a population Iota I of 200.000, McPherson said:
""We don 't have all nf our population in two city blocks;""
he adued.
The Gallipolis and Jackson OBES offices arc to cloSe
and merge inloa customer servicecenler in Rio Grande tiy
1997. The one·stop sy•lern will also make the mov~ . .
Gallipolis OBES Ofllce Manager Tom White said.
Wh at one-stop will do. White explained. is exparid
options for job-hunters.
.
•" We''re ·a~t1.1ali. Y tryin g to serve p!!ople who come in and

say th ey neeu help by providing t~em with the tools they
need to find a job." he said. ""The days of filling out an
application and waiting for a call are long gone. You· ~e
got to work alit.""

Chief Justice ·cites local judge_
·for outreach to community

· GALLIPOLIS - A lo, cal judge was praised .last
week by the Chief Justice
of the Ohio Supreme Court
lor his efforts to "remind
citizens that a court is not a
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
remote inslitution but a
POMEROY - Pomeroy native Franklin M. Rizer, M.
place for peaceful resoluD. of the Warren Otologic Group, continues to make
tion of disputes."
history in multi-channel cochlear implants .
·
During his "Stale of the
He performed Ohio· s first multichanAel cochlear imJudiciary Speech" Thursplant in 1985 and lhe first pediatric multi-channel proceday, Chief Justice Thomas
dure in 1987, bolh at St. Joseph Riverside Hospital in
Moyer cited a recent surWarren.
vey
conducteu
by
His latest accomplishment was to become the first
Gallipolis Municipal Judge
surgeon in the nation to implant a Clarion cochlear imWilliam S. Medley as an ·
plant in a·child. That procedure took place .last spring at St.
example thai "'judges care
Joseph on a two and a half year old Youngstown bOy and
about p'ublic perceptions of
. signaled the start of national clinical studies on Ihe use of
courts."
this new generation. multi-strategy &lt;l_evice in children.
;rJ&gt;e survey noted by the
The Warren Otologic Group and St. Joseph Hospital is
Chief Justice was designed
serving as one of only 20 clinical study participants across
primarily to gauge Gallia
the country .
countians' feelings about
A cochlear implant is an electronic device which crecommunity service for
ates the sensation of sound for profoundly deaf indivicjuPlc:turw prvwlchd by St. Joieph Rlvtrlldt Holpltll
first -lime offenders.
FIRST IN NATION - Franklin M. Rizer, M.D. of the
'
als, bypassing the damaged parts of the inner ear and
The survey also covered
electronically stimulating the auditory nerve fibers in the Warren Otologic Group was the first surgeon In the treatment of DUI offendcochlea. Part of the device is surgically implanted, and nation to implant a Clarion cochlear Implant devl.c e In ers, dome slic - violence
a child. He performed the operation at St. Joseph. ca~es and overall attitudes
part is worn externally like a beeper.
.
Riverside Hospital In Warren last spring.
The surgery is typically done under general anesthesia
about the court's perforand iakes about two hours. Usually, lhe patienl is dis- impairinenl is the single most prevalent chronic physical mance.
INITIATIVE DRAWS PRAISE· Gallipolis Municipal Judge WilliamS. Medley, seated,
charged the day following surgery. Once the implant site .disability In the United States. affecting more than 28
Resulls indicaled thal90 and sunimer assistant Aaron Seamon review the results .of a recent survey on . ·
has healed, the patient returns to the Warren Otologic million Americans. Eighty percent of lhe hearing im- percenl of respondents · attitudes toward the court. The survey, designed primarily to gauge the public's
Group offices where an audiologisl begins lhe process of paired suffer from inner ear deafness. also called nerve want firsl·time offenders opinion on sentencing, was praised on Thursday by Ohio Chief Justice Thomas
deafness.
programming and fine-tuning the device .
10 work off their sentences. Moyer !luring his "Stale of the Judiciary" address.
Cochlear·implants are designed to treat both children Respondents also indicated
Although success rates vary, so me previously pro""Business consullants call thai approach 'low lech, high
foundly deaf cochlear implant patients, who had been and adults suffering from a severe to profound inner ear lhey fell the courts should be tougher on offenders.
The survey was conducted in door-to-door interview o.;, touch"." the Chief Ju.&lt;lice added. ""I cull il common sense
unable 10 hear with even the ,~lrongest of hearing aid~. have hearing loss.
Dr. Rizer is the son or Wanda Rizer, Pomeroy, and the direct polling at the county fair and senior resource center. and creativity."
done so well with the devices they are not only able to
late
Franklin Rizer. He graduated from Meigs High School ·anct" through a published questionnaire.
The overall theme of the Chief Juslice\ address was
follow normal conversation. bu1 can imeractivcly use a
· in 1971. attended the Air Force Academy in Colorado
It was funded by a $2,084technical assistant gran I from that judges must "convince Ohioan&gt; to look beyonu the
telephone.
The Warren Otologic Group and S( Joseph Riverside Springs for two years and then entered a pre-med program the Ohio Supreme Court.
showmanship and mi spcrccptions to the true substance or
·'
"The pr~ject demonstrates that listening and comrnuni - our courls."
Hospital have been active in the placement of cochlear al Ohio Slate University. Aftercompleling medical school
"And we will tlo this not " 0 much with speeches lhat
implants .and participated as a clinical Site for the Clarion at the University of Cincinnati, he studied al the U~iver ~ caling direclly with the public does not need to entail
sity of Washington in Seattle and the House Ear Institute levels of bureaucracy." Moyer told the mee1ing of judges will bring them to their feet ao.; with continued hotrd work
a:dull sludy which began in 1991.
·
and commilmentthat will bring them to reality," he said.
According to statistics provided by the hospital, hearing of Los Angeles, before joining the Warren Otologic Group. from across Ihe ~(ate .

--

Racine mayor1lirs.housing News capsules
project complaints before ·
Inmate convicted
Meigs County Commission of
prison riot slaying
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Some Racine homeowners participating in the village's
Community Housing Improvement Program aren't satisfied, Racine Mayor
Jeff Thornton tA!the Meigs County Board of Commissioners Friday after·
noon .

Thornlon said some homeowners feel inspectors are missing ilems which
need repaired prior lo the work being contracted.
.
· ·
The .program is designed to help low·to-moderate mcome homeowners
renovate their hou ses.
The village was awarded the CHIP grant last year with work beginning 1n
June this year. Homeowners meeting grant guidelines can receive money .for
needed repairs which may iuclude roof replacement. new windows. furnaces,
painling and other items:
·
Thornton said he and commissioner Janel Tackett looked at some of the
·houses last week. Tackett agreed some of the houses could still use additional
work.
Commiss ion president Fred Hoffman encouraged Thornton to go through
the proper complaint procedure outlined in tbe grant.
.
Technically, Thornton is not in the project's chain of command. The proJect
is administered lhrough the village of Middleport by grant coordinat?r Jean
Trussell .
However. Thornton has been closely following the project's progress .
"I arn the mayor and people expect me to try to help them," he explained. "I
care about my vi llage."
·
Thornton and commissioners proposed having Trussell and inspector Mike
Stroth meet with homeowners to investigate the complaints.
In olher matters. the board instituted a drug-free workplace policy for all
county-owned work places.
Hoffman said the board was obligated to institute the policy, which is
designed to discourage the dan gers of drugs in the workplace and to advise
employees of available sources of counseling, rehabilitation and assistance.
""I did not know (the policy) was not already in place," Hoffman s~id.
In addilion. the board:
• Proclaimed Ftiday, Sept. 22 to be Tuppers Plains Elementary School Day
Continued on page A2

·'·

CINCINNATI (AP) - An inmate was
convicted Friday of aggravaled· murder in
the beat'ing of another prisoner during Ihe
1993 riot al the Southern Ohio Correc·
tional Facility.
A Hamilton Counly jury deliberated
·seven hours before convicting Derek Cafl·
non , 35, ·in the slaying of Darrell Depina.
Prosecutors said Depina was killed with
bats, barbells and shanks early in the II·
day riot al the max.imum-security pri son

near Lucasville. Nine inmates and a guard
died in the uprising.
Cannon

wa.~

sentenced to life in pri son,

with parole eligibility afler 14 years.
Common Plea.s Judge Donald Co&lt; ordered C":lnnon to serve the sentence consecutive to the six- lo 25-year tenn he is

serving for an aggravated robbery conviction from Cuyahoga County.
·
Cannon was among inmates who entered a cellblock lo kill prisoners who were
thought lo have been supplying inforniation to authorities about other inmates.

•

GOOD MORNING

State releases
disaster funds

Ohio to study
insurance charges

Today's Tir,~es-Sentinel
t8 Sections : t82 Pages

CLEVELAND ( AP) - State
Business
COLUMBUS (AP) - Nearly insurance regulators are targcling
' $1.3 million In·tederaland slate Blue Cross and Blue Shield of . Calendars
disaster rellsl has been dla· Ohio in the wake of a fedcrall aw- Clas.•ifieds
trlbuted to about 400 Ohioans su·ir and numerous c usturne rto m ~
Comics
who registered far asslatance plalnts.
after last month's iltorms.
Blue Cross, · the slate' &lt; largest Editorials
The federal and state Emer· mc=dical in surer, will undergo a
Local
gency Management Agency "markel conduct "exam," Said
said Friday that 1,040 people
Obituaries
have llled applications since Terri Leist, a spokeswoman for
Sport•
late Iaat month, when Presi- the Ohio Department of Insurance.
The company lo't a federal law· _Along the River
dent Bill Clinton declared a dl·
sasler area In 10 counties that suit la ~ t month that accused it of
Weather
had been hard hit by flooding not passing sav ings on to i" 1.6
and storms beb""en Aug. 7 and million customers.
18.
Blue Cross is Fequired lo noti fy
Columns
In the last two weeks, its customer~ when it receive s di"i$1,268,161 has been paid to counts from hospitals to comply
391 people who aought hous·
.Jack Anderson
with an order issued by the depart·
lng assistance.
Fred Crow
The ten atlacted eountlesln · ment last year. II mu st ah.o te ll
·
customers
·
whether
their
Bob
HoeOich
the slate are: Champaign, Erie,
Ucklng, Logan, Lorain, Marion, copayment -'- typically 20 perJim Sands
Mercer, Miami, Scioto and cent- is based on the di scou nled
Shelby.
rate or on the original charge.

Dl
B4&amp;S
D3-7
Insert

A4
A3
A6
Ct-8

Bl
Al

Non-teaching employees in Trimble school district end strike
GLOUSTER, Ohio (AP) - Non-teaching employees in the Trimble
school district ended a three-day strike on Saturday. officials said.
Bob Turner, a local representative for the AmeriCan Federation of Stale.
County and Municipal Employees. said workers unanimously approved the
.
contract.
Employees in the I, 100-pupil dislricl in soulheaslern Ohio would return
to work Monday, he said.
Turner said the agreement must recel'\oe school board.approvart,.,fore any

details will be released.
The uni on had ;ought a 75-cenl per hour increase in hourly wages for bus
drivers, custodians, cooks and olher non-classroom employees. Workers
had been on strike IInce W~Jnesday . .
Garry Hunter, the d~&lt;l!ICt ' law yer, satd the board was expected to ratify
the contract Monday.
.
.
He satd the cont ract also must be approved by the slate hoard of
education's divi&gt;ion of school finance.

l

•

•

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