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                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Po'meroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 12, 1995

Success of organ donation \depends on eoucation, communication
family has discussed Lhe subject in
advance. If 1101, relalives often cannot
bring themselves 10 make the choice.
If it has been discussed, they are
.. ,995 ' Lea Angeles
much more likely to give their
l1mes Syndicate and
approval. The importance of saying
Creii!Of!ll Syndicale·
"yes" is clear-- eightpeopledieevery
day
in this country because an o~an
Dear Ann Landers: I am the
is
not
available in time. The decision
father of Nicholas Green, Lhe boy
we
made
is now giving seven people
who was shot by car bandits in 'Italy
the
chance
10 lead a full life.
last year. We donated Nicholas'
We
miss
Nicholas' radiance more
organs 10 seven recipients, most of
than
words
can express, but the joy
them young.
we
have
seen
in these families has
My wife, Maggie , and I were
given
real
meaning
to what otherwise
struck by the difference between the
would
have
been
just a senseless
good intentions of those who
waste.
-REG
GREEN,
CALIFcompleted donor cards and the
ORNIA
dramatically low level of donations.
DEAR REG GREEN: What a
The key appears 1.0 be whether the

Ann
Landers

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

..

splendid way to honor Nicholas'
memory. And thank you for a
beautiful let&amp;er. Thanks, also, for
providing me with yet another
opponuni!y 10 inform my readers that
the family ohhe donor is not chruged
for any expenses relating to the
donation of the OlgiiiiS.
The next letter contains more
valuable information:
Dear Ann Landers: Your response
10 the doctor in Pennsylvania who
suppons a law requiring mandatory
organ and tissue donation was right
on targeL The decision 10 malce a gift
of lifo should.be thoroughly dlocussed
with family, friends and clergy.
In Illinois, we broke a national
record for OQlan donation last year

by educating people about the
miracles that can happen when a
desperately ill person receives a
ttansplant operation. We ask all those
applying for a driver's license iflhey
are willing 10 be listed in the central
registry for organ donation.
Our "Life Goes On" &amp;elevision
campaign told the stories of two
young transplant recipients. In the
month after those commClCials aired,
the number of driver's license
applicants who signed up 10 be op
donors jumped by 50 percent and
has been increasing ever since.
Rtght now, we have 2.1 million
people in our OJgan and tissue donor
registry.
I believe the success of this

Rams edge
Falcons for
fifth victory

program shows that further education you for adding your voice 10 mine in
effons, not intrusive laws, are Lhe key urging my readers to become o~gan
to ending the waiting line for
transplant operations. Anyone who
has seen how a transplant can
transform a life -- especially that of a
child -- would have to have a bean
of Slone 10 say no 10 01g1111 donation.
More than 41,800 people in our
counby need Olgllllllansplants -- 12
percent more than last yeat Eight
people die every day without a
chance at a lifesaving operation.
Ann, donating an 01p1110 someone
in need can be a lasting memorial. It
must never be mandatory. -GEORGE H. RYAN, ILLINOIS
SECRETARY OJ:! STATE
DEAR MR. SECRE'IARY: Thank

donon.
And now, those who want more
infonnation on becoming an OJg811
donor, please wri&amp;e 10 The Living
Bank, P.O. Box 672S, Houston, Texas
77265. (A dollar or two 10 help defray
costs would be gn:ally apprecillled.)
Is that AM Landers collUM yo11
clip~d ~ars ago yellow with age?
For a copy of her most ftrqMently
requested poems and essays, send a
self-addressed, long, b~~Siness-size
tnvelopt and a check or money ol!kr
for $5.25 (this inc/lilies postage and
handling) to: Gems, cloA1111 Landers,
P.O. Box ll562, Chicago,/11. 6061/0562. (In Canada, send $6.25.)

.' yons Club

Ohio Lottery
Pick· 3:
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Pick 4:

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SHOWERS
Luw tnni~ht in 60s, shcmers .
Saturday, sh~nrers. High" in tht
llmt'r 70~.

•

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 118

Copyright 1995

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 13, 1995

A Multimedia Inc.

Newspaper

Officials explain position on infirmary issue

: contributes to
:. eyeglasses
I

Commissioners discuss sale
with staff, residents Thursday

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

TOY RUN - Several hundred motorcyclists
participated In the annual Meigs County Bikers
Association Toy Run Saturday, held this year In
conjunction with the Big Bend Sternwheel Festi-

val. Santa Claus (Arnold Priddy .of Pomeroy)
and Randy Starcher head the motorcycle procession. The toy run Is held to help buy toys for
poor kids In Meigs County.
·

FRIDAY
POMEROY Marriage
Enrichment Seminar, Friday and
Saturday, First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy Pike. Additional
information may be obtained by
calling 992-6779.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Almost two weeks after
announcing the impending sale of
the Meigs County Infirmary. the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners Thursday asked for assistance in preparing infirmary residents for a move Lhat now seems
inevitable.
Commission president Fred
Hoffman asked infirmary director
Sharon Bailey to help residents
adjustiO the sale and eventual closing of the county-owned facility.
Bailey agreed, painfully, to
assist in the closing of the building
- which also serves as her borne.
The infirmary building, located
next to Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, will be sold 10 tbe
highest bidder on Nov.10 at 9 a.m.
on the courthouse steps.
Hoffman provided two reasons
why the board is closing the building:
"We need to provide space for a
new medical complex ... we're try-

ing to save (Veterans Memorial
Hospital)," be said.
"It's no secret Lhat the hospital
bas lost money," be said. "We're in
danger of losing it."
"This would retain or create new
jobs," he said.
Second, Lhe county can hardly
afford to operate the infirmary
when other Sll!le or federal agencies can take care' of the residents'
needs, he explained.
"We ought to leave it to the professionals ... the county is not in a
position 10 provide the assistance,"
he added.
Hoffman added Lhat the commission, Bailey and the residents
"should all work together to provide the best solution."
Bailey said her main concern is
that a good borne be found for Lhc
infirmary residents.
"I don't want to see these people
misueated," sbe said. "This is my
family."
"I will work with you ... but I
don't like it," she said. "They're

Ohio school districts
wfflconHnuetoshrink

my family. This is killing me."
"That's why we've gotiO work
as hard as we can to get (the residents) located in a place Lhey want
to be," commented commi~ion
vice-president Janet Howard.
Commissioner Robert Hartenbacb agreed wit.b Bailey when she
said infirmary residents receive
good care.
Long-time infirmary resident
Betty Wills said she would like to
spend one more holiday season at
Lhe infirmary to wbicb the board
resjlonded that tbe building would
not likely be closed before the end
of the year.
"There is no set day for closing.
It won't be closed until everyone is
in place," Hoffman said.
At least one infltDilll)' employee
disagreed wit.b Lhe decision.
"It's just not right," she said.
"What if the hospital still goes
down. The county needs Lhe county
home."
In otber business. the board:
Continued on page 3

•

'II·

E~P~AIN POSITION - Meigs County
CommtssJOners Thursday explained to Meigs
County Inr.rmary residents and employees their
decision to sell the county-owned building. Commissioners Janet Howard, Robert Harten bac;h.
and Fred Hoffman, seated facing from left,

explain their position to Infirmary matron
Sharon Bailey and resident Belly Wills. Clerk
GIoria Kloes is seated at right. Bailey agreed to
help commissioners prepare residents for their
move from the inr.rmary.

OU to assist in Route 33 Corridor committee

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Ohio University bas thrown its
State chief sees consolidation ahead
bat in the ring in a bid for compleCOLUMBUS (AP) - School lion debt, even with $60 million a tion of the U.S. 33 Corridor Prodisll:j.cts can expecta lesson In sub- year In extra stale aid as a result of ject.
At a meeting or the Route 33
tracllon. Tbere are 611 spread over court-ordered desegregation.
committee
of the Sout.beast Ohio
the state at present. State School
- He would not oppose a legRegional
Commission
in Athens
Superintendent John Goff sees con~ _islative panel's recommendation 10
solidation ahead, but does not require bigb school students pass Thursday af&amp;emoon, Alan Geiger of
know bow much.
the 12th-grade proficiency test in • Lhe OU president's office said the
"I think the difficulty Is bow order to attend four-year state uni- university wants to give Lhe project
you go about the magic word, con- versities. ''We would need 10 revis- a nudge.
"We need to look at different
solidation . That is a very, very it that test and redesign ·it ...
touchy issue in disUicts," Goff said because it is not a college entrance strategies." be said. "Be creative."
"The common purpose is to
at a news conference Thursday.
exam.''
Goff said the state would no
- The State Board of Educa- open up for traffic from Columbus
longer have 611 districts a decade tion had not taken a position on a
from now, but offered no predic- legislative proposal 10 deny drivers
tion about the number that might licenses 10 students who fail to pass
remain.
the 9th grade proficiency test. "I
''Given economic realities I guess I'd rather try ot.ber approachWASHINGTON (AP) - The
think it's something we're going 10 es before we come in with more 47 million recipients of Social
have to really look at." he said. "I punitive approaches."
Security and Supplemental Securi!y
know there are some very small
Goff also said some changes Income benefits will get a 2.6 perdistricts out there struggling lilre were needed in a state law that pro- cent cost-of-living increase in
crazy, financially and otherwise, 10 tects proper!)' owners from unvot- 1996, second smallest in 21 years.
offer those youngsters a good sys- ed, inflationary increases in real
Social Security Commissioner
tern."
estate taxes.
He said legislators had supponHe said schools should receive
·ed incentives for county education some reasonable amount of natural
offices 10 merge, and suggested the revenue growth so long as inflation
possibility of districts merging high was not excessive.
schools while retaining separate
"I don't have a percentage for
CLEVELAND (AP) - A federelementary schools.
you. but I do think tbat bas to be · al judge will decide whether Blue
"Let's be honest. The difficulty Lhere," he said.
Cross &amp; Blue Shield of Ohio must
in consolidation is the football
His stmd in favor of sucb a revi- make refunds 10 reflect se.cret disteam a~~ the b~ketball team and sion placed bim at odds with Gov. counts negotiated wit.b hospitals.
all Lhat, Goff srud.
.
George Voinovicb.
Because Blue Cross won't make
. Goff was asked about conS?hdlJVoinovicb bas consistently such refunds voluntarily and the
uon and other matters durmg a opposed any change in the law that state hasn't ordered them, it's up ·to
ne.ws conference m wbteb he also was passed in response to bigb U.S. DisUict Judge James Carr to
S8ld:
. .
inflation rates that resulted in doudecide the issue, said Dennis Mur- There was no end m stgbtto ble-~ligit percentage increases in
ray Sr., a lawyer for two men wbo
state co~tr~l of..'he Cleveland taxes.
sued Ohio's largest medical insurer
school dtstnct. Cleyeland bas
But Voinovich supports Goff and won.
some.. very, very senous pro~- despite the difference of opinion,
"It's either Judge Carr or no
lems. Among them: a $129 uul- said Michael Dawson
one," Murray said.
Carr. already bas ruled in favor
of Jeffrey McConocba and Larry
Engel. They bad complained that
they overpaid for medical expens.es.
Pending now is t.be question of
SAN FR,o\NCISCO (AP) In a school bulletin that lcicked whether the case should be expandNine-year-old ghosts won't be off the furor, Faillace wrote, "The . ed to cover everyone in a similar
haunting the balls of Los Altos board bas to acknowledge Hal- · situation. Carr was to meet in Toleschools th.is Halloween, and that loween's roots in Druid ceremonies do today with Murray and Blue
bas parents frightened that political and in a Celtic festival for Cross' law)'_ers for an update on Lhe
correcbless bas gone too far.
Samhain, the Celts' god of the
Halloween parades and symbols dead."
- including paper witches pasted
Tbe policy means no Halloween
windows -have been banned in parties on school time and no Halthe schools because of objections loween parade, W)lich usually reaCOLUMBUS (AP) - Political
by Christian fundamentalists wbo lures youngsters in their scariest appointments to fill vacancies in
complain the holiday celebrates the costumes.
•
the Legislature will be abolished if
devil.
Teachers can band out coloring two Republican lawmakers have
. "What's next - banning papers with jack-o'-lanterns on their way.
Christmas?'' said one exasperated them - but only if students also
Reps. Rex Damscbroder of Freparent, PaUick: Ferrell.
are offered a nonsatanic alternative. mont and Ron Hood of Canfield
That's been done already, along
That's too much for Marie Eucb- are co-sponsoring a resolution for a ·
with Hanuldcab and Easter, Super- ner, whose three sons attend the constitutional amendment to end
in,tendent Marge Gratiot said.
Bullis-Purissima Elementary tbe practice of party caucuses
. "We haven't for years celebrat- School, as well liS the F'trst.Baptist selecting successors to departing
ed any of the religious holidays," Church.
legislators.
slfe said.
"Halloween was a fun time H approved by both houses, the
. School Board President Phil you can 'I take that away from amendment would be put on the
F&lt;!illace, wbo wrote the new policy, ; kids," be said. ''If someone bas a statewide balloL
isn't baclcing down despite parent : . problem with that. they can blaybe
Damscbroder and Hood said the
protests. "We're restoring values , leach their lcids better at borne."
apjlointment procedure distorts
IQ Lhe schools,'' be insisted.

1.0 1-77 as a route

sout.b," be added.
The U.S. 33 Corridor includes,
among its projects, completion of
Lhe U.S. 33/1-77 Connector Road,
the four-lane from Darwin to
Athens and the Nelsonville Bypass.
Route 33 co-chairman Steve
Story, a Pomeroy attorney, said
having OU on board would be of
great assistance to the committee
due to Lhe resources and clout Lhat
can be wielded by a major universi!y.
In addition, Story introduced
Holly Mitchell from the Ohio
Department of Transportation, tbe
committee's new transportation

corridor administrator.
Story also discussed a recent
meeting with Ohio House Speaker
Jo Ann Davidson.
Davidson visited Meigs County
in August which included a trip to
the U.S. 33/1-77 Connector Road
construction site.
She suggested we fmd someone
in the Ohio Department of Transportation to talk to on a monthly
basis, Story said.
State Senator Jan Michael Long
(D-Circleville) recommended the
group meet with Governor George
V. Voinovicb following the election to seck a commiunent on the

U.S. 33 Corridor project.
In other business, co-chairman
David Lieser discussed the new
formula used by ODOT to determine which highway projects
receive funding.
The group also voted to ask
SEORC to consider endorsing an
additional gasoline tax, or user fee,
wbtcb could be used exclusively
for funding highway construction
projects.
Currently, ODOT receives only
.7 cent of tbe 22 cents-per-gallon
gasoline tax for funding road projects, according to Story.

Social Security recipients to get 2.6 pay hike

••t•lanf. Fall Pan!liies Now
Fm· Ut~mdirul Em·ly S1n·ing Beds~~
Over• 40 vm•iefies to clmose from

89.95

Comfort You

Also:

Take To The
KIARA TAYLOR

Judge mulls class-action
status for insurance lawsuit

Parents upset after school
bans Halloween activities

First birthday
celebrated
Kiara Elaine,Taylor. daughter of
Mike and Angie Taylor, Columbus,
was honored recently on her first
birthday with a party at the home
of her grandparents, Jean and Bill
Osborne, Reedsville.
Refreshments were served with
a cake decorated wit.b the Looney
Tunes theme.
Attending besides Lhe honoree,
ber parents, and grandparents were
Theodore Pullins, Freda Carsey,
Mattie Pullins, Doug, Terri and
Justin Browning, Chuck and Donna
Pullins, Susan, Zack and Emily
Ash, Tom, Stacie, Audrionna and
Kirk Pullins. Denise Laughery.
Roger Barnett, Robyn Hawk, lla
and Jack Westfall, and Bob and
Nancy Cronin.
Others sending birthday wishes
were Beckie Pullins, Mike and
Michelle Laughery, Gary and Vicki
Cline and family and Chris
Spencer.

fl a.•

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•llalllng Efflclenc.. Onr 110"/, AFUEI
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.•,

Shirley S. Cbater announced today
that monthly Social Security
checks will average $720 in 1996,
up from $702 this year. The maximum SSI payment will rise from
$458 10 $470 for an individual, and
from $687to $705 for a couple.

case.
Carr has delayed his decision on
damages for McConocha and Engel
until the class-action issue is
resolved. It's not clear when be
might rule on that.
Critics say Cleveland-based
Blue Cross fails to pass the savings
it negotia~ on to patients.
Because most insurance policies
require patients to pay a percentage
of their medical bills - known as a
co-payment - such secret discounts may cause patients to pay
much more than the co-payment
shown on the policy.
For instance, if a prdl:'edurc usually costs $1,000, a patient's 20
percent co-payment would be
$200. But if the hospital only
charges the insurance company
$650, and the insurance company
keeps the discount a secret, a $200
co·payment actually is nearly 31
percent of the bill.

The increase matches the 2.6
percent inflation-adjustment in
1994, which was the smallest since
benefits rose 1.3 percent in 1987.
Benefits rose 2.8 percent this year.
Increases have been moderate in
recent years as inflation remained
in che&lt;:k.
The Social Security inflation

adjusunent is based on increases in
the Consumer Price Index from the
third quarter of one year through
the corresponding period of the
next. It goes into effect the following January.
The 1996 increase was
announced today after tbe Labor
Continued on page 3

ACCIDENT VICfiM TRANSPORTED- The Racine Volunteer Fire Department and Med Flight transported Christy Dill to
Grant Hospital, Columbus, from Southern High Schoo~ following
a Thursday evening accidenl The acddent occured around 7 p.m.
on Ross Road in Racine, and is still being investigated by the Ohio
State Highway Patrol. DiU was listed In stable condition this morning, according to a Grant Hospital spokesman. (Photo Courtesy of
Racine Vl' D)

Political appointments may be on their way out
democracy and feeds the fire of in the state Senate and House also
are more likely to select "lap
partisan patronage.
"The problem I see is, the peo- dogs" who will vote Lhe way Lhe
ple bave a rigbtiO elect Lheir repre- political leadership wants. at the
sentatives," Damschroder said. He exclusion of free thinkers who may
said the current system removes the have innovative approaches to
concepl of a free, fair election pro- solving legislative problems.
cess.
The proposal also would give
Hood called tbe appointment 'i local jurisdictions the freedom to
procedure ''a really sleazy pro- choose whether they want 10 concess," adding that when the Legis- tinue with political appointments or
lature makes an appointment opt for special elections to fill
"everyone gets a vote on the suc- vacancies in local elected positions.
cessor except those who live in the
The bill bas been assigned to Lhe
disUict whom the successor will House State Government CommitrepresenL"
tee and is due for bearings next
He said the political leadership mont.b.
Damscbroder and Hood both

said they were optimistic about the
bill's chances in the House, but
doubtful about its survival in the
Senate.
Meanwhile, Wood County
Commissioner Bob Latta, who was
passed over for a recent state Senate appointment, said be plans to
bypass the Legislature and begin a
petition drive to put the issue on the
ballot.
Latta actnowltidged that holding
special elections to fill every
vacancy could be an expensive
propositien, but said that it is a cost
worth bearing. "I think what
you're getting is !Setter government," be said.

I

•

�.Friday, October 13, .1995

.

.

:commentar
The Daily Sentinel

Page2
Friday, October 13, 1995

Pomeroy, Ohio

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon is conducting a top-secret
: review of future nuclear threats to
the United States, and has reached
the preliminary conclusion thal the
most vilal national security issue is
the possibility of some "loose
ROBERT L. WINGETI
nukes" from Russia "falling into
Publisher
the wrong hands."
As they think the unthinkable,
l'l:ntagon
officials are increasingly
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
alarmed
by·lhe
specter of a lerrorist
General Manager
Controller
group detonating a nuclear device
without issuing prior demands or
warning,
and with no claim of
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
credit
afterwards.
words long. All letters are sub]ecliO editing and must be signed with n8111e,
One government nuclear expen
address and telephone number. No unsogned letters will be published. Letters 1
told
us that an "unanributed"
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.
allaet would present some paralyzing problems. "How fast could you
go figure out whose that was, or
could you?" our source asked.
"It's not clear we can- yet."
U the culprits behind the explosion couldn't be detennined. everyone would be suspect. It's more
than a revenge issue because U.S.
,officials
would have to detennine if
Tbe Dally Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the NoY. 7 general
election. However, In the Interest of fairness, no election letters wDI be
accepted after 1l noon on Wednesday, Nov.1.
IDdlvlduals should address Issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates wW not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. AD letters
are subject to editing and and must be signed with name, address
and telephone nwnber. Telephone nwnbers wiD not be published. No
unsigned letters wDJ be published. Letters should be In good taste.

the perpetrators bad another bomb
at tbcir disposal - and if they
planned to use it. Malcing nuclear
explosions somehow identifiable

·~NC.

By Jack Anderson
, and
Michael Binstein
by "original owner" is just one of
several high-stakes nuclear issues
that government scientists are
studying across the country.
With so much on the line, the
recent decision by President Clioton to preserve the government's
nuclear weapons research laboratories is a prudent one. AI first
glance, the idea of any killd of U.S.
nuclear weapons research in a
world without a Cold War seems
ill-advised, especially at a time
when the rest of the federal budget
faces draconi811 cuts.
But over the past year, knowledgeable sources at the Pentagon,

.

Deadline for publication
of election letters Nov. 1

tbe Energy Department and the
labs themselves have laid out for us
tbe case for keeping nuclear
research lab funding at its cuJTCnl
level.
The three labs under scrutiny,
all operated by the Deparunent of
Energy, are Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory in California,
and Los Alamos and Sandia
National Laboratories in New Mexico. In the past, their key responsibility has been to design, develop
and test America's nuclear
weapons. But arms agreements
with the former Soviet Union
beg811 to cut back the need for that
task.
President Clinton has commilled
the Uniled States 10 a nuclear test
ban moratoriwn, which me811s that
these labs have to frnd an efficient
811d reliable way to conduct compuler-driven tests without actually
detonating the weapons. Few scientists have been arguing for actual
.lesting - a wise idea, considering
the outrage over France's resump-

iOO Slldt'l:iHT

Letters to the editor
I

I

Earlier this year, a special commission recommended consolidating dlosl of the three facilities'
nuclear functions at Los Alamos and closing down Livermore,
where hundreds of Californians
earn their living.
But the Clinton administration
conducled its own separale review,
released recenU y, which found thal
all three labs "provide essential
services to lhe nation in fundamental science, national security, covironmenlal prolection and cle811up,
and industrial competitiveness."
I Our sources now believe the
administration's argument could be
persuasive to the GOP Congress,
which is more concerned about
budget cutting than bomb-building.
But even though the labs won't be
consolidated. chances are good that
some cuts will be made.
Even the director of the Los
Alamos lab, Siegfried Heeter, conceded the need for cuts in an interview last year. "We, as large laboratories, have suffered the same
problems that corporate America
sufrered." Hecker said. "We got
large: we got stiff; we got bureaucratic. So we needed to retool, reexamine, re-engineer, to say that
wbal the world now needs is much
greater flexibility."
In some sense, what is going on
is the reverse of the nuclear arms
race. Scientists are now competing
to neutralize nukes. The ultrasecret competition between the labs
• over the last four decades bas bad
the benefit of keeping America first
in the nuclear race, witb a huge
leChnological edge over the fonner
Soviet Union.
While the labs helped win the
Cold War, the question now is
whether we can afford a Manhattan
Project-like efron to secure peace.
Warned one government expert:
"If theSe nuclear (labs) are seriously cut as we're coordinating the
control of Russia's nuclear
weapons and sending out teams 10
would-be nuclear countries, there'll
be bell to pay in the future."
Jack Anderson and Michael
. Blnstein are writers for United

Dear Editor, .
I am a palient of Dr. Westmoreland. He has treated me during
office hours and emergen-cies
regardless of the hour. He is a caring, sentimental, old-fashioned
country docta.

To put your trusl .ln a doctor is \
putting your life in his bands, 811d J.
do. This country would benefit if'
we bad more dociDrs like bim.
Jobnna Swain .
Bidwell

Dear Editor,
I think it's a shame that in a
small canmunity like ours, we are
subject to the whims of vindictive
government officials and private
citizens who can ruin a mao's reputation through gossip, rumor 811d
outright lies.
Dr. Westmoreland has treated
and supporled my family fiX years,
especially during the five years that

my husband was disabled and
unemployed due 10 a mining illjlll)'.
He did what be could for us, with
no thought of gain to himself.
He is a dedicated doctor to all
his patients 811d we object to the .
way in which his life and career
have been damaged.
Sleven and Betty Kalinowski 1----------------------------~-------.J Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Bidwell

Dear Editors,
To the Meigs County Commissioners: How would you like to be
told you wouldn't have a hometomorrow? Where .would you go?
What would you do?
. No money in your pockets, no
friends or relatives. You have a
home 811d family for many yean
oi&gt;w and we always thought there
would\ be a home for any who
ni:eded 1. Keep this family together

please.

_ .

. Mr. C mm!ss1o~ers, you con~ned th ch!ldren s home. What
did you do 1th tl? Made apartments for those supposed to be
needy. You also built low-income
homes for young people.
Where are they going to get
$5,000 for a down payment?
We paid tax levies to get the
county home.
Dear Editor,
Selling the county inftmlary is
not the best thing for the residcots
and lhe county.
I feel Meigs County has lost
, 4:!101Jgh ill lhe past We should not
• Jose the infirmary. This building
: belongs to the county.
; . · Why DOl put this before lhe VOl: ers. Let them mate the decision,
· DOl three or four people.
I know one lady has been there
· for over 35 years. This is her home.
: Alllhe residents are special peo: pie to us. They do DOl want to give
· up their home. Can you. blame
'

them?
Anyone who has ever been there
can see how clean 811d how the
people who work there love the
older people, so do l
I have been there a lot and bad
parties for them, always pizza. We
sing 811d just enjoy what life we
have lefl They love compaoy, parties, singers and lhe ministers who
come to see them.
Have a heart commissioners and
let the residents keep their home
and livelihood.
Flossie Dill
LoogBOIIOm

Berry's World
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their minds" is that there is all that · window of her apartment in the probably do more kitchen counselcoJTCspoodence on his desk await- Bronx and call out across the coun- ing than we realize- maybe not in
ing a reply, phone calls to mate yard lo tbe adjoining apartment, the ldtchen but at the office, on the
phone or elsewhere. A magazine
("32 yesterday"), commitlees to "Yoo-hoo, Mrs. Bloom."
You can save your voice today. article, "10 Ways to Help a
Bloom doesn'tlive there any- Friend." has some suggestions for
George R. Plagenz Mrs.
more. It's not only Mrs. Bloom. us:
- Avoid platitudes like "Don't
oversee and meetings to auend Tbe whole neighborhood bas
"Try to look on the bright
worry,"
("an average of 46 a month"), a moved away. There is no one 10 tell
side"
or
"You've got to snap out
sermon to prepare, visits to hospi· our troubles to. If we were all a£
·
of
it."
lucky as Mollie Goldberg and bad a
tals and nursing homes.
- Offer your band. When
The list of things that must be good neighbor like Mrs. Bloom,
feels grief, pain or fear,
someone
our
country's
mental
health
might
done is endless.
the warm touch of another person
"What you fail to realize," he · be much better.
said, "is that the day-to-day tasks
"lbere was nothing more effec- can be more consoling than cheerof lhe clergyperson are very similar tive lhao lhe old-fashioned 'kitchen ful words.
- The best way to help someto those of anyone managing a counseling,"' says a Lutheran pasone
in need is not with' words of
small nonprofit organization." lor I know. "My mother had no
~pllow
comfort but by saying,
(There's thai word again.)
training in counseling, but the numCome
on
over. I've just bought a
As a former parish minisler, I ber of troubled and anxious people
pol
roast.
Bob
and I would love to
know thai all this pastor says is who trekked into her kitchen to 1a1t
see
you.
We
won't
talce no for 811
true. Yet somebody is going to and went away feeling beuer is
answer.''
have 10 mate lime for the growing legion.
II' s what our grandmothers
number of people who feel tbe
The big kitchens of our grandneed to lalt to some~ynow or to mothers' day, with their smells of would have done.
George Plagenz Is a syndical·
cry on somebody's sboulder now, scmething baking in the oven, were
ed
writer for Newspaper Enternot after getting 811 appointment. warm 811d reassuring. Professional
prise
Association.
This wasn't a problem a generation counselors today who see people in
(For
Information on bow to
their offices by appointment only
ortwoago.
,
communicate
electronically with
When Mollie Goldberg - the are at a distinct disadvantage.
this
columnist
and otbers, con·
"Yoo-hoo, Mrs. Bloom" and
beloved radio character of the
tact
America
Online
by caiUng 11930s and '40s- needed to lalt to kitchen counseling may belong to a
800-827-6364,
exL
8317.)
bygone
day. Nevertheless, we all
somebody, she would throw up the

Americans have lost faith in
org811ized religion. - CNN News
Poll
Could it be thal the trouble with
org811ized religion is that it is 100
organized? Thai it is run 100 much
lite a business - 811d DOl enough
like your graodmolher' s kitchen?
Is it possible thalthe retired parson who spends his mornings walkillg through the malls "striking up
conversations with people in need
of prayer and direction in their
lives" is doing more of lhe Lord's
work than the ''Organization
Man'·' with a D.D. afler his name
who is senior pastor of Old First
Church downtown?
When I wrote recently that ministers should be more available for
people who want to drop into the
church without an appointment and
have a chat with their clergyman
. (or womao), one pastor wro1e back
that I was out of touch with the
reality of modem church life.
Rev . David Seymour of St.
John's United Church of Christ ill
Orwigsburg, Pa, said the reason he
doesn't encollfilge his church members to stop in unexpected! y 811d
"while away a half hour or so lalting about whatever might be on

How to

bri~ge

Tbe naliolllU ilgitation over lhe
OJ. Simpson acquiual calls for
· leadership from Washington both wools and action - but as yet
there's been practically none.
Top Republic811s have ducked
tbe issue almost entirely, 811d President CliniOD has limiled his commenu to saying that under the
American system lhe jlll)''s verclict
needs to be respected.
It's probably better for politicians to say nothing than to say
something in811e or counter-productive, but preuy soon President
Clinton and his would-be successors need to step forward and be
judged on how well they can handle probably lhe most difficult single problem afflicting tbe American poptlation: our racial division.
Beyond wools, though, there is
·one action lhalthe OJ. case cries
out for: passage of a new crime bill
lhal will enh!M!N': lhe professtonaJism of the nation's urban police
depanments.
AI the moment, neither President CliDIOD's prized 1994 "commuaity policing" bill nor the
Republican replacement t1oes anything to upgrade police perfor1118DCC.

And both tbe administralion and

Conpess have given sbort shrift to
possibir the best Idea around for
tmprovmg lhe quality and educa-

the racial divide._
. _ _....:....-.,;.._..,.._

lion of police - the ROTC-style
·Police Corps, which was left
unfunded by .th~ House and granled
only $10 m1lhon by the Senate,

Morton Kondracke
enough to ttain about 500 volunleers of the 20,000 once authorized
by Congress.
Beller 811d fairer policing obviously won't cure all the nation's
racial woes, but it will help. The
difference between the judgments
of blacks and whiles about OJ.
Simpson's guilt was based ill large
part on the differing experiences
that blacks and whiles have with
the police.
To most whites, the racist attitudes and claimed abuses of Los
Angeles cop Mark Fuhrmao seem a
wild aberration from the norm of
police conduct, and therefore
appear not so serious as to cloud a
jury's judgment about hard evidence pointing toward Simpson's
guilt
r
But to most blaclts, police abuse
- including false arrest. beatings.
and planled evidence - is an all. too-common experience. 1bc L.A.
jury'S eJtperieDCC apparently Jed ft
to _discount virtually all police evl. dence, bellevin4 it was fabricatecL
. Under 'those circumstances, the
jurors' claims that they had gen~

uine •'reasonable doubt'' seem
entirely believable.
Black America has no interest in
Jelling violent criminals go free.
- Blacks are Yastly more often viclimized ~Y. crime th811 ar_e whites.
The houucule rate for wh1te males
for instance, is 9 per 100,000 per:
!sons. But for black females, it's
!13.5, and forlllack: males, 69.2.
I Even though "jury nullifica.lion" based on race - the refusal
of black juries to convict black
defendants - is a rising phenomenon, it's still not common
practice.
In Washington, where 95 percent of defendants and 70 percent
of juries are black: •. only 28.7 percent of felony defendants were
acquilled last year, according to
The Wall SlnlCIJouroal. In Detroit,
30 percent were acquitted, and In
New Y!R, 47 percent.
The latest report of lhe Scnteocing Project, showing that nearly
one-third of blact males aged 2029areinprisa_loronprobationor
parole, may spur nullification,
though presumably it wouldn't if
juries felllhalthe police and the
courts represented their illteresls.
While hlacb represent 12 percent of the populaliQD. SS percent
of all lhe identified bomlclde perpetraton in the country are black
. and SO percent of all armed robbers

•

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r.J 1!}95 Accu Wealtler. Inc.

Middleport will host
concert in park Sunday
The Middlepori Community
Association will sponsor "Concen
in tbe Park", Sunday afternoon
starting at 1 p.m. at Dave Diles
Park on the Obio River.
The day, also being termed as
Middleport River Festival reflections, is a rescheduled day of
entertainment that was originally
booked for the 1995 River Festival.
The festival was pOstponed by raiD
on Sept. 16.
According to Dennis Hockman
of tbe Middleport Community
Association, Sunday's events will
occur rain or shine.
Sunday's activities stan at I :00
p.m. with the presentation of the
1995 River Festival Queen, Ctystal
Holsinger.
'
Seven 1eenagers competing for
. the title of River Festival queen
were judged by out-of-town "judges
on poise 811d personality. Crystal
Holsinger was named the 1995
River Festival queen.
Holsinger, a junior cosmetology
student at Meigs High School, succeeded Eastern Higb School senior
Melissa Dempsey as queen.

are black. Drug orfenders, represen ling the biggest increase in
prison populations, are also heavily'
Mrican-American.
What the data- and the spectacle in LA - suggest is that the
police departments 811d courts need
to be improved ID protect the entire
population efficiently and fairly.
That calls fa more cops to ease
th~ crushing burdens of increasing
cnme rales 811d beller training ill
COIII)JIUnity policing, especially ill
urban areas: The average police
officer today has 10 haodlc 10 limes ·
the nwnber of violent crimes a cop ·
did in 1960.
1
President Clinton's 1994 crime ·
bill called for putting 100,000 more :
cops on the nation's slreels - a 20 ·
percent increase - but the funding :
Ilevels be asked for will actually :
.pay for far fewer and they are ·
spread out across the country in :
.small towns and rural areas as well :
as ill high-aime cities.
ADd the CliiiiDn crime bill con- '
taios no funds for training in -:
"community policing." Officials
who helped write the bill say that ;
the measure's grealesl impact wW :
~ to allow police departments to :
hue younger officers who tend to j
be better-educated •
"
.
I
1
(Morloa Kollodraclte II Uec.- .~
dn editor or Roll Call, ~ • ' paper of Capitol HID.)

Department released the index for
September, the end of the current
third quaner.
· B~nefits bad jumped 14.3 per-cent m 1980 and 11.2 percent in
1981, when inflation was raging.
Despite the smaller advances in
recent years, government officials
are discussing ways to trim the
adjustments further_
Many economists contend the
CPI, which also is used to ca!.u;aic
other cost-of-living adjustments

Holsinger, 16, is the daughter of
Daphne Young, of Chester.
The day of entertainment will
kick ofr with an exhibition from the
Dazzling Dolls baton corps at 1:15
p.m. Roger and Mary Gilmore with
Sweet Mountain Sound will perfonn at I :30 p.m.
Kid's activities begin at 2:30
p.m., when the Mark Wood Magic
and Fun Show will talce the stage.
The Old Timer's Band from
Mason, W.Va. will perform at 4
p.Jll., and the band White Raven
will conclude the day's events with
lheir blend of classic rock 811d contemporary rock-n-roll at 5 p.m.
Sound is being provided by
Aardvark Sound of Rock Springs,
and the emcee for the day's events
will be Chuck Kitchen.
"Unfonunately the bad weather
hampered the River Festival this
year. We still wanled to do something for the
residents, 811d we
hope that everyone will come out
Sunday 10 enjoy the great entertainment at Dave Diles Park." added
Hockman.

area

•

such as military and civili811 pen-·
sions, overstales inflation.
Sen. Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.,
senior Democrat on the Senate
·Finance Commiuee, bas recom mended culling the CPI by a percentage point to save the governmenl $634 billion over the next
decade, mostly from Social Securi-

ty.

'

The savings would keep Social
Security from going broke until the
middle of the next century.

Meigs EMS answers 10 calls
Ten calls for assistance were
answered by units of tbe Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Thursday. Units responding
were:
MIDDLEPORT
1:38 a.m. 181 Beech Street, Ray
Garlinger, Veteraos Memorial Hospital.
10:57 a.m. Holzer Medical Ceoler Clinic, Beuy Wllliams, Holzer
Medical Cenler.
12:13 p.m. The Maples, Louise
Heines. Ve1eraos Memorial Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:52a.m., Stale Route 7, Kevin
Greene, and Keith Petrie, refused
treatment.
SYRACUSE
I 0:03 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Clara Follrod,
Vc1eraos Memorial Hospilal.
12:37 p.m., State Route 124,

1
1

Jury convicts Gallipolis man

Paul D. Anderson, 68, State Roule 684, Harrisonville, died Friday,
Oct 13, 1995 in Holzer Medical Cenler.
Born Oct 24, 1926 at Dunbar, W.Va., son of lale Clyde and Ella
Wilson Anderson, he was a farmer and retired custodi811 from Ohio
University.
Surviving by two brothers and sislers-io-law, Gifford and ·Deloris
Anderson of Vienna, W.Va., and Douald 811d Ada Anderson of
Greenville, S.C.; two sisters, Dorothy From of Pomeroy, and Ada Lee
Croson of Belle, W.Va; and several nieces, nephews, and cousins.
He was also preceded in death by three brothers, Curtis Anderson.
Clyde Anderson Jr., and Cbarles Anderson; and a sister, Frances
Sampson.
.
Services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday in the Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland, with the Rev. Joy Clark officiating. Burial wiU be in
the Riggs Cemetery, Harrisonville. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 5-8 p.m. Saturday.

Social Security..~ontlnued from page1

Mrs.·Bloom doesn't live here anymore

I don't think it belongs to tbe
commissioners . We the people
think it belongs to all the Meigs
. County people.
One who lives there, always
cheerful, let me sing the wondrous
story:
I am blind, I cannot see. I don't
see the sun rise in lhe morning or
the beautiful sunsets. I feel to find
my chair. I cannot see the peas on
my plale or lhe com on the cob. Let
me keep my home and the soogs ill
my heart
We stay atlhe county home. We
have friends there, what a friendship we have with each other! I
don't eat alone or spend lhe days
alone. Don't send me where you
won't stay yourself. Can you bear
lhe birds singing ill the trees.
Richard and Jessie Grueser
Rullaod

Paul D. Anderson

lion of nuclear lesting in the South

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

Infirmary supporters

Saturday, Oct. 14

IPacific.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area Deaths-- r - - - - Local briefs..;..______,...,

OHIO Weather

Now is no time to slash nuke labs' funds

111 Court Street

Patients support Dr. Westmoreland

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Kenny Bater, Velerans Memorial.
RUI'LAND
12:59 p.m. Meigs Mine 2. Paul
Barrows, 0' Bleness.
RACINE
6:27 p.m. Carmel Road, David
Deem, Veterans Memorial Hospital .
7:22 p.m. Ross Road, Christy
Dill, taken at 8:31 p.m. by Medflighl Ill to Grant Hospilal, Columbus.
POMEROY
.11:30 p.m. Anne Street, Hattie
Hysell, Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Larry E. Nelson, 43, of Valley Station, Ky., formerly of Middlepon.
died Tuesday, Oct 10, 1995, at the Southwest Hospital in Louisville, Ky .
He was a veleran of the U.S. Army.
Surviving are his wife, Dolly Carroll Nelson, formerly of Pomeroy;
three sons, Chris Jentry, Tony Tucker, and Tony Nelson; three daughters,
Cberi Jentry, Mary Atkins, and Kelly Nelson; his mother, Mae Nelson;
three brothers, Roger, Carroll and Jobn Nelson; two sislers, Cberyl Smith
and Brenda Johnson; and 12 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at I p.m. at the Hardy Valley
Funeral Home, 10907 Dixie Highway, Louisville, Ky. Burial will be in
Bethany Cemelery in Louisville.

Today~s

livestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaU.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
. Ohio direct hog prices at selected points 40.00-44.50.
Sows: unevenly sleady.
buying points •Friday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Markel
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 32.0036.00: 450-500 lbs. 36.00-40.00;
News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 500-650 lbs. 38.00-43.50, rcw over
cents, some 1.00 lower; plants 75 650 lbs. 44.00.
Boars: 32.00-34.00
cents lo 1.50 lower. Demand light
Estimated receipts 38,000.
tomodemle.
For lhe week; barrows and gilts
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 45.00-46.50, few 44.50 and unevenly steady: sows mostly 1.00
to 1.50 higher.
46.75; plants 45.50-47.00.

Meigs announcements
Classes beginning
Riverbend Arts Council classes
in Tai Chi 811d beginning art will
begin soon. The Tai Chi classes
under the direction of Eric Chambers will be held on Oct. 16,. 23,
and 30 at 8 p.m. 811d the beginning
art classes. taught by Carol Tannehill will be held Oct. 21, 28,
Nov. 4 811d II, from I to 3 p.m. at
Council headquarters in Middleport. Further information may be
obtained by calling Nancy Cale
992-5428.
•
Dance Saturday
The Belles &amp; Beaus Weslern

Style Square Dance Club will
sponsor an open dance at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
Saturday evening, from 8 to II
p.m. Caller will be Keith RippeiO.
All western style square dancers
are cordially invited. Refreshments
will be served.
Meeting announced
The Middleport Literary Club
will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. David Bowen.
Sister Fidelis Bell wil rev(ew "The
Chamber" by John Grisham.

Middleport Court news
The following cases were heard
recently in the Middlepon Municipal Coon of Mayor Dewey Horton.
Bonds Forfeited : Shannon
Scholderer, Middleport, $250,
resisting arrest, $150 underage consumption, $150 disorderly by
intoxication; Seth Waring,
Pomeroy. $60, failure to display
license plale·s; Paul A. Smith,
Pomeroy, $60, fictitious tags.
Fines and Costs: Roger R.
Butcher, Pomeroy, $200 and cost,
resisting arrest, $100, disorderly
manner, $100, possession of
m'll'ijuana; Don M. King, Shade, .
$100 and cost. disorderly after
warning, $200, resisting arresl;
Phyllis Grey, Shade, $100 and cost.
disorderly after warning, $200,
resisting arrest; Patrick S. Cl~land,

Pomeroy, $100 and cost, disorderly
after warning; Ricky A. Metheney,
Vinion. $100 and cost, underage
consumption, $100, disorderly by
intoxication; Ricky Lee Ross,
Lesage, W.Va .. $200 and cost.
driving under suspension; Jerry L.
Armstrong, Middlepon, $100 811d
cost. disorderly arter warning,
$100, open container; David A.
Smith, Racine, $115 and cost.
failure to display front license
plates; Melissa R. Amos, Cheshire,
$15 and cost, speeding; Peggy
Caruthers, Middleport, $100 and
cost, disorderly man11er, $100,
underage consumption; Sherry
Butcher, Pomeroy, .$100 and cost,
disorderly manner by fighting ,
$100, disorderly after warning.

'

THE
GRAVELY
SYSTEM ·

Possible case of arson probed.
Middlepon Police and the Meigs County Prosecut~X' s Office are
investigating a possible arson atlempt ill Middlepon, according 10
Prosecuting Auomey John Lentcs.
According to police reports, the incident occurred Tuesday
morning around I a.m. on Oliver Streel. Barney Hiles, Middleport.
was apparently attempting to stan a fire at a house trailer owned by
Bronson Laudermill, Middlepon Laudermill said be noticed Hiles
auempting to set the ftre, approached Hiles and struck him. Landermilt held Hiles at the scene until police officials arrived, it was
reponed.
No charges have been filed , and the incident remains under
investigation.

Pomeroy police investigate wreck

Pomeroy Police investigated a Thursday afternoon fender bender :
on Main Street, according to police chief Gerald Rought.
The accident occurred at 4:36 p.m. when Pauline Cunningham,
77 of Mason, W.Va pulled from Crow's Steak House parldng Io~
striking a stopped car driven by Joan HolTman, 47, of Middleport,
according 10 police reports.
Damage to Hoffman ' s 1993 Ford, and Cunningham's 1983
Chevy was light.
,
No citations were issued.

Fugitive caught in Vinton County
James E. Bryant, 47, formerly Red Hill Road was apprehended
by Vinton and Athens County authorities Tuesday evening at the
Sweet 'N Easy Campground, Route 50, in Vinton County, according to Meigs County Sheriff James Soulsby.
Btyanl entered a voluntary guilty plea to two counts of breatillg
and entering in connection with thefts at S&amp;W Gun Shop and the
Watering Hole last spring. He was released May 10 lo assist
authorities in Logan County, W.Va. in a homicide case investiga·
lion. Bryant escaped rrom the Logan CounLy W.Va,jail in June, and
was on the run from authorities until he was apprehended Tuesday,
according to Soulsby.
Meigs County authorities booked Bryant Tuesday, and held him
in the Meigs County Jail until Wednesday morning. Federal aulhori·
ties then transported Bryant to the Franklin County Jail, Columbus,
where a detention hearing for Bryant was scheduled this morning,
according 10 Soulsby .
The Meigs County Sheriffs Deparunenl bas issued a bolder on
Bryant for his railure to appear at a July 31 sentencing hearing, and
West Virginia authorities have warrants for escape charges on
Bryant, Soulsby stated.

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1: 10 ,9: 00 DAILll
MA'!'IN!i!!S SA'I'/SUN

and cost, speed: Michael B.:rns,
Middlepon, $213 811d cost, as:;aull,
10 days in jail ; !lronson
Laudermill, Middleport. $213 811d
cost, assault, 10 days in jail; Pauy
Laudermilt, Pomcmy, $63 and
cos1, no operators license, failure to
control; Phillip Oldaker, Hartford,
W.Va. $375 811d cost, DUI. 3 days
in jail, 90 day license suspension;
Randy Whiled, New Haven,
W.Va., $375 and cost, DUI, 3 days
in jail, 90 day license suspension;
Michael LiJefoot, Racine; $43 and
cost, assuring clear distance;
Joshua Dickens, Pomeroy, $63 and.
cost, trafric light violation; Terri
Vansickle, Cheshire, $48 811d
speed; Vicky Peckhal]) . Racine.
$46 and cost, speed.

$234,443.'18 c:onsisling of 217
entnes.
The board held its weekly meeting Thursday instead of Friday
afternoon due to scheduling conflicts.
Present were Hoffman, Howard,
Hanenbach and Clerk of Commission Gloria Klocs.

'

Remember Bo~s' Day
October 16th

II

OpoR Hoaso
OctobaP 14-23
Save 20% on everything in the
store (except Tom Stahl artwork
and Dept 56 merchandise.)
Register lor door prizes to be given
away October 22 at 500 p.m.
Special warehouse clearance sale on
all discontinued, overstocked and
damaged merchandise-50%-70% off
original prices.
In the garden center, Roses are now
buy two and get one free.
·

8&amp;8111'&amp; GIIPI&amp;tiRa&amp;
Sllop

Send one of our Coffee Break or
Snack Attack Baskets or Fresh Flowers
ALLURING SCENTS
271 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Route I, Box 221
Little Hotlclng, Oh ·

•

ours: Mon-Frl 8-6
Sat 8-5, Sun 1-5

(614) 992-4548
1-800-446-11856

614-989-2271

•
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\

·

BIGGIUN

\•

"

.

Y-r•

Commissioners 1xplain...

Cloaed Monday

A..p~el discussion on "What ~ankers I,.oot for in a Business
Plan w11l be featured at a meeung of tt!c Women's Business •,
Resource Program of Southeast Ohio h~ld :o conjunction with the
Meigs County Economic Developmerot Office.
The discuss_ion will take place on Tuesday, Oct. 24, from 6 to 9
p.m. at the Me1gs_Coun.1y office, 238 West Main St., Pomeroy.
The program IS des1g~ed to of~er the budding entrepreneur the
sug~esuons, recomendauons and IDlprovements necessary in presenu~g a successful business plan to potential funders . The panel
w1U rnclude representatives from Peoples Bank, Farmers Bank. and
Bank One, Athens. NA.
To attend the rrce business plan critique session. residents may •:
call _the Me1~s County Economic Development Ortice at 992-5005.
Reg1strauon ts required by Friday, Oct 20.

1 :10, 1: 00

Hospital news

204 Condor St. Pomeroy, OH.
FALL
. &amp; WINTER HOURS.
Open Tueaday-Frlday II:D0-5:00
Saturday II:G0-3:00

Resource program Oct. 24

Pomeroy Court news

The following caseS were beard
recently In the Pomeroy Municipal
CounofMayorJohn Blar.!!nar.
Bonds Forfeited: Jo!m Custer,
Middleport; $65, speed; Gregory
Knapp, Mi4dleport, $67, speed;
Brenda Brewer, Crillet:den, Ky,
$65, speed; Shirley Cole, Athens,
$65, speed; Sherrie Hart, Vinton,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
$65, speed; Joyce Hill, Pomero)'.
Thursday admissions - none.
$67, speed; Herman Dillon, GalThursday discharges - none.
. lipolis, $65, speed; Chc1yl l'isher,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Middlepon, $70, no insurance; DoD
Discharges Ott. 11- Am811da Hall, Rutland, :;!O!! :llld ;.•age
Russell, Leala Holcomb, Marion consumption ; J am~s 1\;:-.v!IIan
Ohlinger, Molly Skaggs, Mrs. Middleport, $108 , undc.-age
Daniel Stapleton and son, Minella consumption.
Davis, Be'uy Lodermille 811d Mrs.
Fines: Troy Yankins, Pamccoy,
Stacy Fosler 811d son.
$88 and qost, open container;
Discharges OcL U - George Melanie Adams, G'1l1i1'e!!s. $4)
Gardner, Mary Mahan, Diana
Downard, Mary Hudson, John Ord,
Carl Reynolds, Ace Kerns, Stanley
Montgomery, Frankie Hammond.
Continued from page 1
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Russ
Moore, son, Gallipolis.
-.- Approved a $500 transfer
(Published with permission)
within
the coun of common pleas;
.
I
- Accepted cbanges to road
names approved by county Engineer Rob :rt Eason;
- Met witb Clerk of Courts
Larry Spencer regarding upgrades
to the title oftice;
.
Paid weekly bills of

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

A Gallipolis man, who is currently serving a sentence in Ohio for
murder, was convicted in a Mason County jury trial this week
according 10 Prosecuting Auomey Damon Morgan.
'
Johnny While was found guilty of the malicious assault of Donald White Wednesday. Tbe incident occurred at the Shamrock Inn
in Henderson in December 1994. He was not found guilty on the
charges of burglary or the Marcus Rice home in Southside and
a!templed aggravated robbety of Rice.
White was indicted on the three charges in Mason County in January, according to Morg811. Circuit Judge O.C. "Hobby" Spaulding
set November 28 for arguments on post-trial motions.

I

�Friday, October 13, 1995

The Dally Sentiq~!

Sports
fourth Tri· Valley Conference vol·
leyball championship since 1990

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders won their

omo DIVISION CHAMPS -The Meigs varsity volleyball team won its fourth TVC championship In the 1990s by defeating Belpre Thursday
night. The Marauders tied With Belpre with 10-4
records, but swept the Eagles in the season series.

by defeating Belpre 15-6 and 17-15
Thursday evening at Meigs High

In front are (L-R) Valerie CundiiT, Jessica McEI·
roy, Emily Fackler and Jenny Cli!Tord. Behido
them are Carissa Ash, Tonya Miller, Tracy Coffey, Cynthia CotterlU and Stephanie Stewart. Not
pictured is coach Rick Ash.

~

Meigs reserves downWellston 38-12
Meigs outscored Wellston 24-0
in tbe second half to pull away
from a 14-12 halftime lad and post
a 38-12 win over the Golden Rockets in reserve football action on
Monday.
WellsiOn drew ftrSt blood when
Derek Wallace booked up with
Chad Bowman on a 41-yard touchdown pass at tbe 2:07 mark of tbe
flnt period.
Meigs lied tbe game on tbe fust
play of tbe second period on a 28yard run by Jeremiah Bentley witb
10 minutes remaining in tbe half.
Wellston came back and went
on top 12-6 when Wallace booked
up witb Lee Larnben from 20 yards ...

Church ·Directory.

Friday, October 13, 1995

rMeet the Marauders

Meigs volleyball team wins TVC crown

out with 4:51 lcfl in the half.
Meigs took a two point lead in
to the half when A.J . Vaughan
scored from five yards out. Brad
Davenport hit Malt Ault for the
extra points to give Meigs a 14-12
lead at the half.
Meigs made it a 22-12 game
with 4:02 lefl in the third period
when Davenpon bit a diving Ault
in tbe end zone from eight yards
out. Bentley added tbe extra points
make it a 10 point game.
Vaughan added his second
touchdown of the game with 5:47
left in tbe game on a five-yard run .
Bentley added the extra points 10
.give Meigs a 3G-12 advantage.

School.

Three plays later, Adam Thomas
carne up witb a big defensive play,
tackling Matt Hatten for a five -yard
loss and a safety.
After tbe free Ieick, Meigs ended
tbe scoring with 10 seconds left on
a one-yard keeper by freshman. J.T.
Humphreys.
Vaughan led Meigs witb 15 carries for 91 yards. Bentley added 11
for 64. Ryan RamsbtD'g carried five
tim es for 25 yards, and Chad Hanson bad four for 23.
Davenport was one for four in
the air for eight yards, including
the touchdown pass
Ault, Hanson and D.J. Blanks
all bad interceptions for Meigs.

Apostolic
Church of Jesus C hri st Apostolil'
VanZandt and Wa rd Rd .
Pa stor. hmcs Miller

Sunday School · 10-30 a m .
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30 p.m.

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of C od

P.O. Box 467, Duddmg Lane
Ma son, W.Va .
Pastor Net! Tennan t
S und~t y

Baptist
Hope llaptist Chur(:h (So uth ern )
570 Grant SL, MttiJIL:pun
Sunday school · 9.45 am
Worship · II a.m. ttnJ 7 p.m.
Wedn esday Scrvtcc · 1 p.m .

CHAD B.URTON

CLINTON STEWART

Free Will Baptist Church
• 1\ &lt;; h St n:ct. Middleport
Pastor Lc s II ~yrnan
Sunday Scmcc - 7 .10 p rn
Sund ay School · I () a m
Wednesda y Scrv tcc -7 30 p m

Clinton Stewart and Chad Burton are members of the 1!195 Meigs
Marauder football team. Stewart is a li-foot-1, 180-pound senior end.
Burton is a 5-foot-11, 11i0·pound wingback and cornerback.

Rullaiul First lbpli "l C hunh

Rams outlast Falcons 21-19
ST . LOUIS (AP) - Rich
Brooks never met a trick play he
didn't like.
The St. Louis rookie coach's
gambling approach paid off again
Thursday night in tbe Rams' 21-19
win over Atlanta.
After the Falcons· Kevin Ross
ran 83 yards witb a blocked field
goal to tum a would-be rout into a
close game, Brooks called for a
risky trick play on a punt return. It
worked, setting up a touchdown
and giving tbe momentum back to
St. Louis.
Todd Kinchen fielded a punt
near tbe left sideline at mid£ield
with just over a minute to go in the
first half, took a step forward and
tben tbrew the ball tbe widtb of tbe
field to Isaac Bruce.

S unJ,.y Schoo l · 9.30 a.m

Worshtp - l0 :45am
l'omcruy First B.tptbt
P a~w r Paul Stut~nn
Ea~ t Mam St
Su nday Schoo l . 1) W am
Worshtp · 10·30 a rn .

Bruce, standing near the baseball infield, snatched a short bop
tbat skidded off the AstroTurf, then
ran 51 yards to the Falcons· nineyard line to set up his nine-yard
touchdown catch tbat put St Louis
·abead 21-7 .
The play was one of many highlights for Bruce. who caught 10
passes for 191 yards and two
touchdowns. It was his third I()().
yard game in tbe past four, and bad
teammates comparing him to the
San Francisco 49ers' Jerry Rice. ·
Bruce and Rice will be on tbe
same field when the Rams play
host to San Francisco on Oct. 22.
For now, the Rams (5-1) are alone
in fust place in tbe NFC West after
an unlikely batUe for tbe lead with
tbc Falcons {4-2).

1-'irst Suulh t rn Haplisl

4 1M72 Pomeroy Ptkc

Karr was bit and fumbled inlO 'tbe
end zone, and an alert Zach Meadows pounced on tbe loose ball for
tbe score.
Meigs scored its fmal points of
tbe game witb 3:43 left in tbe tbird
period when Roush picked off a
Nelsonville pass and returned it 53
yards for tbe score. Roush added
the extra points to make it a 26-0
contest.
The Buckeyes scored tbeir only
points of tbe contest on a five-yard
pass witb eight seconds left in tbe
game.
Roush led the Little Marauder
ground attack with 88 yards in
seven carries. Leach added five
carries for 41 yards. Abbott was
three of four through tbe air for 38
yards. Karr caught two for 27.
yards, and Meadows had one for II
yards.
Meigs intercepted tbree passes,
witb Aaron Vanlnwagen. Meadows
and Roush getting up one.
Greenfield jumped out lOa 14-0
lead at tbe half against the Marauders. The Marauders swred on tbeir
first possession of the third period

Silver Run Haplisl
Pa ~t or ll1l l L1ttl e
Sunday School · IOa .m.
Worshtp · l la 111., 7 .30 p.nl
Wedn esda y Services-7 :30pm

MI. Union U:ipli 'it
Pa slu r . Joe ~ . Su)·rc
Sunday Schml ·9 45 a m
Evc mn g . fdO p.m
W cdn c~d. 1 y Scrvttc' · (J 10p m.
ltclhlch cm n:~,lli .. l

Rul: nH.: ,OJI
Pastor Daniel Herd me
Worsh1p · 9 ·30 a.m Sunday
U1blc Study · 7:00p.m Wednes day
Old Ucthcl Free Will Haptisl C hurch
2K()()t Sl I&lt;L 7. M1ddlcpon
Su nday School · 10 un .

Evening · 7:30p.m
Hillside llapli sl C hurch
St. Rt 143 JII St off Rt 7
Pastor· Rev . J:nncs H. 1\crcc, Sr
Sunda y School · 10 a .m
· Wurship · !!a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m

Sport Coupe, auto, PW; PL, cruise,
tilt, Bose stereo, dual air bags, ABS

'.•

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106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

_____

.__

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203 ........
h
,

II

Save 20% off... Pet supplies excluding cat &amp; dog food
Save 20% off... Reg. prtce of aquarium set-ups
Save 20% off... BeHs &amp; buckles, billfolds, knives

I

Fur{'S( Nun B:~pli"l ·
!'asto r . /\nus l lun
Sunda&gt; SdoJI · 10 :un
Wors hip · II a m

9 30 .1 m
4:'i .1111

,\nliliUit) Haplhl

SuthLI) Sdh1111 · 11 .ltl a 111
Wur,Jup 10 4;:; .1 111
llwr,, l,l) ScrVit'C' 7 10 p m .

Sunroof, CD player, leather,
much much morel

1

NOW 28,500

'l

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'

Minnetonka moccasins
off... Bird houses &amp; feeders

Rutland Fnc \\ 'illll:lpti.' il
S. I)Cill St
Pa ~ tu r . Rev l'aul l a)'lor
Sunday Sehoul · 10 1t.m.

S;ll"n&gt;d· Hc:trl C athulil' C hun:tl
161 ML1Ihcrry Avc.,l'nm eroy, 992 -~X!)~
Pa ~ uw

l{cv. w.•ltl:r C l lcmt.

Sund,1ySchool - 10 30a.m
P&lt;Htor-Jclfrcy Wallace
Jq and 3rJ Sumhy

Be:t rwalhm Nidl!l' CtHJn.h uf Ctlrist
l'a\lur· hl"k c~, l q;nwc
SunJay S ~.: houl -9 ·30 a m
\Vor-.h• r . 10·10 :tm . f. 10 p m

y

\Vc dm:,d .• S~rviCC~ . fdO

r 111

Ziun Ch urd1 ul" C hrist
1•\nm:roy, ll..rn ,onvi ll c l{d (Kt 14])

I'.H tor Roger W:tt ~on
Sund.1y S&lt;:hool · l) 30 a rn
Wor sh1p · 10 10 am , 7·fXl p .m
Wedn e~ d : • y

ScrvlCC'i . 7 rIll

TUIJIH~r~

Plai11 Ctwnh ol Christ
l1a,1!1r : Sl.111h:y .\111H.k'
Sund-t)' Sr.: houl -9.1 rn
W\1r'ih 1r . 9 4"i 1un .
W c Jm:~ d .i ) · 7 p .m .

"

Yuu1h \11cl·tmg · 1·111 p m
l ·: vu t lll~
Wcd ne~ d ay ,

Scrvil:C . 1 rIll .
llthh.: Stud)' · 7 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h ui" Chrisl
Pt~ &gt;~ tur Eugene E. Ln dcrwooJ

SwHiav School · 9:30am
Wor~h•P · lOJO a.m, 7 p.m.
Ur :ulfurd C hun h ut· Christ
Co mer ol Si. Rt 124 &amp; Bradhu ry ]{d.
l :van gcli ~ t : Kctth Coope r
Youth Yllllt 'i\Cr. \11 ic hacl Tc&lt;~g arJ en
Swu l :-t ~' S~.:hol)] · 1) 30 .1 rn .
Worshtp . X{)(I a 111 . , 10.30 a 111 ., 7:0.) p.m.
\\- c1lnc,d:ty Scrv 1u&gt; · 7·CXI p.m.
Hit:kurl Hilh ( ' hurdl ufChrisl
11a•a .m· .lmcrh B l lo"k ~~~ ~
SuuJa y S'-huo l · 1) a 1~1 .

W\H"hlp · lfl a Ill, 1 p.m
· 7 p.m

Wcdllo.: ~ J :t ~' Sci"V I \.C~

l.iherll' Chri slhm Churl·h
. D ~.:xlc l
]',1, tur Wuo1l y C 1ll
Sund,,y l.v!.:l)ill~ · 0 ·3(1 p.m.
Thur ~ d .~y Scrv •n · ti 10 fl m .
Llll~"'" illc C hristian

Chunh

Sunday S~.: hoo l · 9 10 ;un
Wur.;htp · 1010.1 m , 7·30 p.m
Wcdn c, d&lt;~y Scr'w'u.:c 7. 10 r m

Hl'ltii•Kk Cru\l' ( 'hun·h
I',L,to t (icuc Z\1'1'
Sund:ty 't: hool · 10 : 0 a 111
Wor,h•p · •)JO am ., 7 p m .
N ccd .~ \· ill c Chun:h

uf Chris!
lla stur: Phihp Stu.nn
Sttnday St:h1x11: 9 :30 11 .m.
Worsh1p Servl t:C' 10:30 u.m.
Bihle SuuJy, Wcdnc~day, 6 :30pm.

Christian Union
llartford, W.Va.
Pasto r. Rev . David McMan is

Sunday School - 11 am.

Wor;hip · 9:30a.m., 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Mnrlah Church of God
Haci nc
Pastor· Rev. James Satterfield
Sun21~t y School · 9 :45 a.m.

Evcnmg · 7_p.m.
Services · 7 p.m .

Wcdnc~day

Rull:1nd Chun·h ufC:nct
PIIShlr: Gregory L. Sc~tn
Su nda ~' School · 10 a.m.
Worsh ip · II a. m ., 6 p.m.
Wcdncsduy Scrvtccs · 7 p.m.
Syr:u..·usu Flrsl Church of God
/\pplc &lt;Jnd Second Sts .
l'a slm : ]{cv. Duv1d Russe ll
Sund~y Sc hoo l wu.l Wors h1p· 10 am .
J·.vcmng Scrvtccs· 7:30p.m.
\V cdnc -.day Scrvtc:es- 7:30p.m
( 'hun:h of" (~iid ttl"Prol)hl'«.'Y
O.J. Wht lc RJ uf r St lh 160
Pa ~ t ur :

P.J . Chapman
· 10 a.m .
Worshtp · II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m
Sunday

S~.:hool

l l:trrt,om'lll c Road
l'ttqur · Rev V1l:tor Rou~h
Sunday Sr.:hooi9 JO u m.
Wof'•htp · II a.m., 7·30pm
WeJ n(.!'ILI)' Scrv 11.:e · 7 JO p.m
Kn!il' uf Sharon Hnllucss C hur('h
Lcadmg Creek Rd ., RullanJ
Pa ~ tur : Hcv Dewey K•ng
Suntb y sc:hiXll - 9:30a.m.
Sund ,J)' wl){~h •p ·7 p.m

. Wedne sda y rraye rmcctmg · 7 r .m
Hullnl'~S Church
ofl ]~ I 325

l n..mi le
]',,, IPr Rev . 0 '1 )..:11 M.mley
Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9 :30 a m
Wlu~ht p . JO JO.un ., 7J Opm

\\l(.:tlflcMI.I )' Scrv •: c .· 7.JO

r-Ill

\\'L•sll•\'an IUhle l~ulinc"s Chun:tl
75 P~· .trl St., \1ithll cpon
l'.t ,hH l{l:v John \'cv tllc
SunJa y ~c h uo l . 9:30 &lt;J.m
Wor~h1p · 10 30 a.m, 7 30pm
Wc d ne\ltty Serv1tc · 7.]0 p.m.

Hulincso; C llun:h
· 1':1stor : Roher\ \rlan ley
Sunday Sr.:hool · 9 30 a;m.
W11 r ~h 1p · 10 :45 a.m , 7 p m .
"lhuNby Scrvltc: . 1 30 r m .

l .au nl &lt;:litl"Frce \1cthc1dist Church
]':~ 'tor ·

l'ctcr "1rcmhlay
Sunday Schllol · () 30 a .lll .
Wor ship · 10:3() iUTI. anJ 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sci"\IJ(:C ·7:00p.m .
Hulliind Cu1n1nunlty Church
Jl.t\\1\r ' l ~cv R oy McCany
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Su nday Evening · 7 p.m
Wednesday Scrv•ce) • 7 p .m.

Latter-Day Saints
Kcorg:.ani1.l'&lt;l Church of .lcsus Christ
or Latter Day S:.alnts
Portland -Racine Rd .
J•astor: Janice Danner
Sunday S chool · 9:30a.m.
Wor ship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Sen.oices · 7 30 p m

The C hurch uf .Jesu.~
Christ of l.altcr-I&gt;ay S:~ i11ts
S1: R1 100, 446·6247 or 446·741i0
SundaySchoo11 0·20- 11 a m
Relief Soc1ctyNricsthooJ 11 .0 5 - 12 :00 noon
. Sac rament Scrv1tc 9-10: I:" a.m
Homemakmg mcclJng, ISl Thurs . 7 pIll

Sccund &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: l(cv. Ruland Wildman
sc hool and worship 10:25 ~

Pnnwruy Churdt ul" lite 1'\uucnc
Pa stof; Kcv . Thoma~ \1 cC iung

Sunday School 9 .30 a rn .
Wur ~ h1p · 10:30 a .m and() p.m.
Wednesday ScrvK·c s · 1 p.m
ChL"&gt;ll' r Chur«."h urI he ~azaren«.•
!,aqm Rev ll crhcrt Gralc.
Sumby Sehoul · 1) ·)0 i:l m
Wor ~h •p

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Pastor: J?awn_Spalding
Wonh1p · 9.00 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:00 a m.
Our Snlour Lutheran Chun·h
Walnul and Henry Su.., Ravemwood, W.Va.
lntrim paslors . George C. Wcinck
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worsh•p · II a.m.
St. Paul Lulhcran Churrh
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St , J•omcro)•
])astor: Dawn Spald1ng
Sunday School - 9:45am
Worship · II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. (t s&lt; &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3td &amp; 41h Sun)
Wednesday Serv ice· 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Unitt'&lt;f Melhodlsl
Off 1241x:hind Wtlkcsvillc
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Sp1rcs
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10.30 !l.m ., 7 p.m
Thursday Scl"\liccs · 7 p.m
M&lt;!l~s

CiM)pcnuhc Parish
Norlhcast Clusl~r
Alrn:d
· l1aslor : Sharon Huusmun
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Kutland Church of lhc \anrcnc
Jlaqor S.unuc l B:~ ~yc

Sund dy S..:hnu l · 9·)() am .
Wur,h•p 10 10 ;, m . h 10 p m

jupp11
rastor: Bob Randolph
Worshtp - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10.3Cla.m.

Sunday School · 9 ·30 am

Worship · 10.30 11.111 .
Wednesday Servt(;es · 7:30p.m.
Reedsville
l,.aslor Rev . Charles M11sh
Wonh1p • 9:30 un.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m .
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

s~·rvlt C~ .

W u \nc-. d.l y
Furcsl Nun
Pa~ tur : Deron 1'\cwman

Sunday Sc hool · 1(1a Ill
Worsh1p . I) a.m
Thursday Scr'o'1r.:cs · ti 311 p rn

Wnr~tl tp 6 30 p m
Wednesday ServKt:'\ · 7 p.m

Sunday &amp;houl · 9:30a.m.
Wonh ip · 10:30 am, 7 p.m
Wcdn esd:ty Sei"\IKCs -7 p.m.

.\"lincrs'·illl'
Dcrun \cw num
Sumi:Jy S~.:h&lt;xll . I) u.m
Worship · 10 a Ill .

Other Churches
Chrhlian Fl'llu\l,.hip Cl•fll{'r
S.d cm S\ , lhilland

Cha]u.•l

l't~\lor

S und .1y Sctlo,,l · 9 &lt;1 . 11\ .
w\lnhtp . 10 a.IT\
Jlumeruy

HuhSlllt ( " hri ~ ltan Ft'llowship Churth
Rc' ClyJ c l le nd c r ~o n
Sund.1) ~crv 1~.:c, IO·Otla .m , 7:30p.m.
youth 1 -'c l low ~ hlp :Sumlay, 7.00 p m
WcJne~Jay 'crv1u, 7:1 0p.m.

Slllidll) Sc hu11l · (J 15 :t m.
Wor'hl(l · I OJO il.m
H1hl e Study I uc~day · 10 illll
Rud\ Sprin~-t"

l':t ,l ur Kcnh l{ .nll: l
St~ nd:-t) S~.:ho(•l · 9 : 1:'i :un
\\',J r, h•p · 10 am

F:~ith

Full c;uspl'l Chun-h
Lon~ Bt&gt;llnm
l'a , lm · S t ~..:vc J{ecd
Sund .1y Sdo1.1l · 1) ·10 &lt;Jill
W11r-.h1p LJ )() ltlll &lt;llld 1 fl m.
WetltlC\d,ty · 7 p 111 .
)·rHLi )' · (c iJll\~'hl[l 'ervlt:~; 1 f' m

Youth h:lhl\\"'\h lp, Sumhy · 0 p.m.

Rutland
Sunday SdliTol . I) 10 :1 m.
Wnr,htp · 10 30 a.m
ThunJ:l)' Scrvii.:CS . 7 r m
i.

P:t \to r Hon hcn.:c
Stmday S&lt;:hool · 9 l."'i un .
Wor"hip 101 5a m.

Roher\ 1: \t1u~s c r

Sw11L1y Sctl m1l . IO a.m
Wor' h1p · 11 1) a 111 , 7 p m.
Wed nc, day Scrvt&lt;.:C · 7 p m

Kubcrt E R11huho11

S:II('IO Cc111l•r

South Ucthcl New Testatnelll
Sdver Rtdgc ·
] •&lt;~s lu r.

The lh'!ie1'ers' 1-'elltmshil} Ministry
'cv. L1rnc Rd ., Rutland
J',J\Hlr Rev. \1 arg&lt;HCI J l{ uhmson
Sen-· t ee~ Wclln e, Jo~y, 7JO p .m .
Sum],,y, 2JO p m .

· tJ a.m.
Worsh •p · 10 a.m , 7r.m
W cdnc~day

Huri~tiii Y ille

Ul'lham

W c dn c~ day

l':t, hlr" J.\cllllCih B.,l. c r
Sum i:J) Sr.:ho,•l · 10 u.m
\V11r~h1p

· IJ ::t.lll .
W cdm·,d,J) S~.:0dtl: ' · J() 11111
l ·;mnl'l
Pa ~ 111r Kcrlllc th B,tk cl
Stmi.1av Sr.:hool · 1).10 ~ 111 .
Wor~h•p · Ill -'5 ,1111 (~nd ...\:4 th Sun)
\111r!1in~

Sl:.r
•
l'.1'\lor 1\ ctm cth B tk c t
Sund :1y Schuul · 1J.4:" am
Wor,h1p lll ·JO :1 m
l"hur'\tlll )' St:l"\ l(e' . 711l

r.m.

p,,,h,r Kc11nc 1h B.~~ ~· r
Sund.l )' Sr.: huol · 1) 10 .1 111

W\H,tup

10.45

~1 . 111

( hi &amp; lrJ Sun)

1-:a!&lt;t l.etarl
l•;,, lm . Bn llll ll &lt;~ r~n c~'
Sunday S(:hoo l · HI a.m.
Worship · Q a.m .
Wednesday · 1 p 111 .
R:~liOl'

Pastm: Hn an IIark ne ss
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worshtp · II a.m.
Couh' ille Lllilt•d Mcthudlst l1arish
]J~ ~ t Dr : IIden Kline
Cnuhlllt• Chun·h
\1 ;ml &amp; hlth S1.
SunJay Sdou l · 10 :1 111 .
Wunh1p · 9 .1 111 .
" lu c~ t! :t ~ ~tl'\' l l:C' · 7 p m
Ut'llh•l ChurL·h
"lown, htp Ktl, 40MC
Swill a)' S~.:hool · 9 a.m.

Wursh1p · 10 a.m
Wcdnc'ii.I:J)' Sc !'w'I(;CS · Ill a .m.
Hnt killl!llurl (hun·h
(lr.md Street

Sunday Sdool · Jtl a.m.
Wor ~ h1p . 11 am
WcdJlCid, l) Scrvi &lt;.:C' . Kr m
Tun-h Chun:h
c11 . Rd fl1

SunJ.1y Sdmul · IJ J O il .m.
Wm\htp · 10:10 :tIll.

Radne First (: hur«."h 1ir thl' :'\:11.:1rcne
Pa~tor ·

Sr.:ou Rose
Sunday S&lt;:h1x)l · ~ :30 a.m.
W orship · 10:30 a.m .. fl p.m.
Wednc$&lt;.lay Scrvtccs · 1 &amp;.m.
Middll'purt (:hun·h 11f the !'\a;o.annc

Pa stor Gregory A. C1111d1fr
Sund:t)' S~.: h t kll · 9:30 tun.
Worship . 10:10 a.m .. fJ 30 p m
Wcdnc •day S~..:rvll:c' · 1 p.m.
M.l'l'(f!i\'ille Fcllmvshi]J

Chun-h ul"thl' \:run·nc
]',l•tor J~ • hll W Dou~ l , 1 ,
Sumlil)' Slhuu l · 11 )tllt lll
w~1rship . I 0.4:" .1.m , 1 p 111
WeJnc~d ,t ) ~crv1u.: .' · 1 pu1

p

111

lnlcrdcnuminati••n al Churd1
Kmgshury Ru.td
Pastor· Jdf Sm1 th
Sunday School - 9 .30 :till .
Worship Scrvl(:e 10:30 a .m.
,
Worsh1p Service - 1st :.~nd 3rt! Sund :ey, 1 p rn • .
No Wednesday Evc nmg Scrv1u
::
Fr{'('dom Cuspcl Mission
B&lt;~IJ Knuh,un Co . Rd 3 1
Jla&lt;aor Kcv Roger W11lford
Sunday Sctloo l - 1).30 a 111 .
Wor ~ h i p - I0:45a .m, 1 Jl.tn
WcJnc sJay Scrv1cc · 1 r m

While's Ctlupcl Wcsll'V:tn
Cnolvdk Rllad .
11&lt;tst ur. Rev . Ph illip R1d cmHH
Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wonh1p . 10 30:. m
W cd n c~ Ja)' St:fV\(.e . 7 r m
F:Jirvi('w Hihll• Chun:tl
Lc tan. W Va Ht I

Pa stor . Rank1n Ru.1c:h
Sund&lt;~y Sd1ool

1010 ~ . m

Worshtp · IJ 30 am ., 7 .00 p.m
Wednesda y Scrv1cc · 1 (n p m .
Fllilh h•lluwshlp Crusa1h• t"ur Chrisl
Pa stm Re v Frankl HI nl c k cn ~
Sl:rv lce· l:rl(la y, 7 p.tn
('ah-nry IJihk ( ' hurdl
l 1iJI11 CIIIY l'Lkc, c l ) Rd
l'&lt;~s 1 ol l{cv BL1 l kv. l ~1d
Sumlii ) S~h~~,1 'J 30 :1 11 1.
Wor~h1p 10 ) ll ,Jm , 71 0 p m
WcJn c~ Ja y Scrv~r.:c 7·10 r m

Slh«.'rSYill&lt;' Word ut 1-"ailh
l'astur. D:tvld Da 1lcy
Sundi!~' Sc hoo] I) JO a m
l·.vcn mg . 7 r m
Rrjtlicin~ Ufc Chun-h
SflO \: J nd Ave ., M,ddlc pon
1'&lt;1 ~ \UI Lawrence h~r et ll.ll l
Su nday School · I() a m
Wed nesday Serv 1 ce~ 1 p.m

Churrh of Jesus Chrlsl,
Apostolic 1-'ailh
1/4 lllllc pa\ t hHt \1 c: tis nn \"cw l.itllJ Rd ·
Pa stor Wdllam V~n \olc1cr
.
Sund ay -7:UO p.m.
W c Jne ~ day "7 : 00

p rn

Fnd&lt;t)' ·7 ·00 p.nt

Cmnmunity Churl'h

P.t-.tor. "llll: rtln Durlw.n
"-" Sumby · 9·10 a.m and 7 p.m.

Scrv1u: ·

C:.~ rlclHn

Sm•w,illc
Sund &lt;~y S c houl - ]()am
Wor~h1p · 1) :1111 .

Hob.!n Barber

~unday S~.:h0(1l

\'cw Hon•cn Chun:h ollht• N~z;~rc nl'
l'&lt;~ ., tor : (Jiendntl Stroud

l'a~ tlH"

Pa~tor ·

7 p 111

Purll.llld First Chun.:h uflhl• 'a1.:1rcn t•
l'a ,tu r. Jl1lm W Duugld'
Sund&lt;~y Slhlkl ] · HI()() H m

Hc01lh (Middlcpurt)
l'asiiH: Vcntagayc SulltV&lt;IIl
Sun.!:•y Sr.:tlool · 1) · )() am
Wuoh1p · l tl .]Oa.lll

Nazarene

ChC!iih~r

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sund•y School - 10 a.m.
'lltursda y Services · 7 p.m.

· 11 am ,6pm
7r m

W cdnc ~ da y ~Crvi CC\ .

nllltwoods
Pastor: Ke1th Rad er
Sunday School · I (l am
Worsh1p · II am

SUIIUII

Lung UoUom

Cnngregatlnnul Trinity Church

Cluslcr

Enlerprlse
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 am .
Worship . 9 a.m .

Lutheran

l,a slor: Rev Charb ~h~h

Sun. \1 ,h 'i · I))() a Ill
Da dcy M..,.~ · ~ 30.1 rn

Chun·h ul" Uu: \azan·nc
l',,,111r B 1ll St1fl''
Sund.1y Sch1l,,] 9:10,1 m
Worsh1p · I030a m,6pm .
Wednesday Sc rv 1ees · 1 p.m

llsbury (Syra&lt;usc)
Pastor: Dcron Newman
Sunday School · 9 4 5 il .lll .
Worship · II a.m
Wednesday Scrv tccs . 7:30 p.m.

Pe ;~rl

&lt;:hcslcr Chun·h uf Goc1

Wonhip · 6 P.m .;
Wcdnes d1.1y , 1 p.m. Fam1_ly Trammg Hour

Ccnlr~l

S~ran1s~·

J•ine t;run· Ulhle

S. R. 24X &amp; Riche! Road, Chester
P:tslor: Rev W11liam () Ihnds
Sund&lt;~y Schoo l · 9:30am

C liftun Tahcrn:u:lc Church
Clifton, W Va

· 7 p.m.

Endlitnl' Huu"c ut l'nycr
(at Bu rlm r.hum chu rd uiT Route 33)

Sunday Sc hoo l · I 0 a m
Worsh1p 7 p m
I hursday Scrv1cc · 1 rm

l)asll&gt;r: Rllhen Vanlc
Sumlay wor"h!p · If) a m
Wednc~d.ty SCI'w' ICC . 6 ·30 r m

Pentecostal

II~

Thl' S :1h:lliu11 Army
lh1t1 c mut /\vc, 1•mncruy .
SaturdJ y · 10 a Ill
"l tluNI:.y 7 pm
Sum.l:ty · 7 p m

l'cnlewsl al As.wmhl1
St Rt 124, Ra(·uw .
l'd stm Wdltam ll oh.1ck
S und i1) Sd1uo l I 0 ,, 111
l:vcn1n~ · 7 p m
Wcdne ~ day s~"I"V I ll:~ .

\litldh·purl Cummunily Churl'h
575 !'earl SL, Mtddle r.urt
Jl . l ~ h,r ' S.1111 J\ndt:r'~o n
Sund.J) S~.: hool !0 il m
h cnmg - 7·30 r m
W cdn c~ d .t y Scrv1cc · 7:30p.m

Faith T :thl•rn :.u.:ll' Chun·h
1l.uky l~un Ro11d
l'a'\tu r Rev l·.mmell K~w,.on
Sund.i)' Schoo l · 10 00 a m.
Ev ctm t._: 7 p m.
l" huNI:t y St:~ll:l: . 1 p m .
Syr;~l·use

7 pIll

MiddlciHiftl•l'llll'l'll~lal

"lht rd /\vc

Pa stor Rev Clar~ 1\&lt;Jkcr
Sunda y Sctll.Xl l . 10 am .
Evcnmg · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvtces · 7 :()() p.m.

Presbyterian

(I

. '·
., .
. ~'

Svr.llUW F inl Lnill'd Jlrc,.h\ h·r i;~n
. P:t sto r l~ l:~ Krt- :111.1 Ruhu~'llfl
Sti11d:•y Sthuul Ill a m
Wohh1p II ,1111

I

•

Missiun

141 1 Bndg eman St, SyractJse
Pa'\lor. Ruy (VI ike) Thompson
Sun(by S~.:ho\l l · 10 a.m.
Evcntng · fl p.m.
Wed11esday Scrv11.:C · 7-p m.
Hatel Cmmnunily Chun·h
orr R&lt;. 124
l,a-. tor Ed ~ clllan
Sunday .School · 9 .30 a.rn
Wor ~h 1 r · 10 )()a .m .. 1:30 p.m
D)eS\"illc Cummunlly Chun·h
Sumb y S~.:huol ·9:10a .m
Wor, hlp · 111.1 0

il. nl . ,

\tfid1llqlttrl l'rl'Sh)h'ri .m
Sund:t) Schuo l · i) am .
\Vur,h1p · ]II li.IH

Seventh-Day Adventist
s,·wnlh-U:ty 1\d\'l'nthl
\11ulherry ]It , J&lt;d ., Pnmero)
l'a\Jur : Ht~)' l.&lt;l"imk y
Sa lurd ,t)' Serv~r.:c s ·

7 p. m .

\1tii" Sl' Chapel Chun·h
I arry htw , Supt.:nnt cndcnt
Sumby ~t hnol · 10 a rn
Wurstl•p · 7 p m
W c tln e~\ L1) ServKc 1 r m

Failh (;uspcl Chunh
Long BOltom
Sunday Sr.:hoo l · 9:30a.m.
Wursh•p · 10:45 am .. 7:30 p.m
Wednesda y 7.30 p m

Mt. Olive Community Chun·h
Pas tor · Lawrence Uu,h
Sunda)' School · 9 30 o.m.
Evcnmg · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Scn.o icc . 1 p.m.

United Failh Churl·h

.,,

Harri,.on\' ilil' l'nsh) h•rt;m ( 'hunh
\\or'h'r · 9 :1rn
Swular Sdwol · !) 45 .1m

Sahh:1th Sr.:hool · ~ p.m
Wnr\tllp · 3 p 111.

United Brethren
i\11. Hl•rrnun L'nill'll Hrdhnn
in ( ' hri "l ('tlurt·h
"In," Cu mmunn y ott CJ&lt; ~C
1'.1 'to r l{ uhc n 'i.w d c r ~
S1tnd.1) Sd,., .. J . l) 10 .1 111
\V Iif\ hq~

Wcdm " I· ~

II ) ,,l.J Ill . 7 'II pIll
"iLf\' I LL"' · 7 111 p Ill

Eden Lnifl'il 1\n·lhrt•n iu ( 'hri 't
2 If"!. 1111lc~ 11ur1h ul l~ c ~:d~vfl l c

.,,

,.

-"il.llC ](UIIl C 124
]';1\1\lr l&lt; cv. Ruhc n \ll;nl. lq
Sunda y Sth~&gt;ul I (J .1m
Wm-: h1p · 7 lOp 111
Wcdnt·,d:l}' 'icrv1n'' 7 1tl r 111
1111

Rt. 7 on Jlomeroy lly - Pa s~
Paswr: Rev . Kobcn I ~. Smi th , S r
Sunday School . I) ·Jll a m.

.. ,,,,

Worsh1p - IO JO u.m., 7 p.m
Wednesday Service· 1 p.m
Full Gospel L.lghlhuuse
33045 Hiland Roud, Jlomcroy
Pa stor : Roy lluntcr
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Evenmg 7JO p.m.
Tucsd&lt;~y &amp; Thursday · 7:30 fl m

..•'
~

•

~

!,
't

.

Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

M11l Wo1k

.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Att rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not
included.

OPEN
SUNDAYS 1·5

•;

RAWLINGS -COATS
c~bwet M~k·n~

Symuse
992 3978

212 E. Main Street
992-3785 Pomeroy

VtANTADS

I

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken' I

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Middleport

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

01\\.\i.-t

CHURfHBIBLES

&lt;.\\\;(1 S•rur Q3..,~,
83 Mill Stree1
Mlfildl..~ort, Ohio 467110

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975

1-BOD-861·9392

,.

"

992-5432

Brog.-n-Warner

P. J.

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

AGENT

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

j
j

Crow's Family Restaurant

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.

.

Caho~ry Pil~o:rhu Ch:~pd

Tu,ppt.'l"s J•lains Sl. P.au I
Pn1or: Sharon Hausman
Sund11y School · 9 a m.
Won h1p - 10. m.
Tuesday Scrvn:cs · 7 30 p.m

.

,REGAL 76,000 lilies, V6, auto, air, 2 ·~----~--·-·"·-.... 3,~00
QtEVJ CORSICA 4 dr, auto,.tir, stereo __,,_..._.. ,_~·--·-.._,..._. . . . . . . . . . ~,800· '
OLDS DELTA 88 auto, air, 4 dr, stereo, llkt

Save 20%
Save 20% off... Livestock==;!!~~~

Holiness
l&gt;:ul\'ille Holiness Church
31057 Sta te Koute 325, l..angsvlle
Pa stnr : Rev Kick Mal oycd
Sund11y 10r.:hool · 9:30a.m
Su nd :~y wor ship 10 35 am &amp; 7 p.m.
Children ·~ churr.: h ' I 0:15a.m You th 6 p.m .
Wcdnc,da y prayer ~CI"\I I CC · 7 p m

H\~elll~un

Sa t Con 4 41 -5: 15pm ., \1a._,. 5 .:\0p.m
Sun Cl)n - K · 4 ~ - IJ · I ."ia l tL,

1

•

.,

Catholic

5

42994 S.. 12:4 Pomeroy, Oh 45769
euoo-PN&gt;ne: 6!4-992 ... 2!6

lw. Tad CUckler

~

'

Kl•ntl Churl'h tlf. Christ
Wor,hlp - 9 30 ~ m.

.

Cuckler Consulting Inc.
REAL ESTATE
APPRAISAL
~

»I'

' ,1:

,

-

NOW 18,350

Evcnmg · 7 p.m.
Wcdnc~day Services· 1 p.m.

Game I.

PQMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

7 ru n.

Failh Haplisl Church
R.udroad St., Mason
Sund!t)' St:hool · 10 a.m
Worship · II a.m., 6 r m
W ednesday Serv1ccs 1 p.1n

5

WAGON 1 owner, extra dean, loadedM_.._ 13,400
;1991 CHEVY LUMINA EURO auto, V6, air, lfereo...........................,.$1 0,700
988CHEVY S-10 BLAZER 4X4.2 dr, V6, Hurry...........................57,99S·
1995 PONliA~ GRAND AM auto, air, PW, Pl, tdl, cruise, casseHe, M•-•M..512,900
$ '
·1995 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVAauto,air,cass,cnlise,tlt-................ · - 11,900
$
•
1995 .~UICK SKYLARKS weD equipped, several to dtoose frill!' ..... ... ..... 11 1900
.' . · .,.. ·, .
·
Starting at
1995 .OLDS CUTLASS SUPREMES V6, auto, air, can, PW, Pi.; tit, auise- s13,900
1994 GEO METRO
2 dr, auto, air, cass, several to ch~se from 1.149 down__s149 _.
' .
.1992 ·BUIC.K:RQADMASTER VB, auto, ci', ~tereo, Low milts-".
_S12,800 .

Wonhtp· S. IS, 10.30 a.m, 7 p 111
W ci.ln c~ dily ScrvtfC\ - 7 r 111

Chrlstl:tn Union

S\nHiil)' S..:hm\ 1
W \ 11 ~ h1p 10

NOW 13,995

\1idf11t•llurt Ctlun·h o1 Christ
Sth .md VLtlll
1'.1:1\or Al l Lt n ~un
Youth \.1ml'ilCr Bill hai'.ICT
Sund.ty SdlO&lt;)l - C) )() a.m

Hurlfnrd Church ttf Christ In

MI . Mnriah lbplisl

5

Sdwul · 11 a m .
\\'qr,hrp · 10.1rn , tJ p.m.
Wcdnt ,rl.r ) Sl:f\' ILC' · 7 p m

525 N. 2nd St. Mtdt!l cpor1
Pastor: James E. Kec.,ce
Worship · lOam, 1 p.m

Founh &amp;. Ma.m St , M1ddlcpo11
Pa stor · Rev. Gi lhcrt Crai g, Jr.

quad 4, auto, air, PW, PL, dual air bags,
ABS, stereo

Sun~l ay

Vidory llupllst lndcpcndanl

Wedtlc .~ J ay .Sc rVICCS-

~f,-t'1995 BUICK RIVIERA

1995 OLDS
~jiitiii~SL COUPE

NEW YORK (AP) - Ratings
for the second night of the baseball
playoffs were down 4 percent from
"Say Love With
.Flowers From'"

auto, air, stereo, dual air bags, 3800 V6,
rear defog, aluminum wheels, all power

New
95's

5 16,800

Pnm cru y \Vcslsid~.· C hurdt uf Christ
Di26 CIH IJn:n ~ lluml.! I( d.

Wor.; hlf"l · 10 }0 :.1 .111 .

Wednesday Scrv1ccs · 7 00 p.m.

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

Sunday School - 9·30 arm .
WtHsh•p- 10:30 a.m , 7 p.m
Wedne sday Scrvu.:c~ · 7 p.m.

Worshtp · 10:45 am, 7 00 p m
Wednesday Services 7·00 p.m

Racint! First U:•pli"l
l'a~ tm : Rev Larry I lak y
Youth Jlastor: /\amn Youn g
Su nday Schoo l - 9:30 .a.rn .
Worship · 10:40 am ., 7 00 p 111

Save Like Never Before on Remaining '95' Models!

NOW

Gr:tcc Epllicopal Church
326 1:. Mam St., Pomeroy
!{ector: Rev D. /\ . du Pl an tier
ll oly Euchari( t and
Sund:~y School I 0·30 a.m.
Coffoc hour follnwmg

Ur:ulhun ( "lturrh ut Chri'il
S unday .Sr.:hool · 'J 10 .un .

Thursda~ Scf\l tCes · 7 :30

on Roush's five-yard run. That
touchdown was set up by Leach,
who bad a 32· yard run in the drive.
Meigs threatened late in the
game driving to tbe McClain 31ya rd line on a 37-yard run by
Roush, but Roush was burt on tbe
play. Meigs fumbled two play later
and McClain ran out tbe clock.
Roush led Meigs with 14 carries
for 79 yards. Leach added five for
43 yards.
Against Warren, tbe Marauders
jumped out on lOp 24,0 at tbe half
and coasted to the win. Roush
scored on runs of 52, 51 and 24
yards and added a 53-yard interception return. Meigs had four
touchdowns called back by penallies.
Roush had 10 carries for 183
yards. all in tbe firSt half, 10 lead
Meigs. Leach added seven carries
for 56 yards and caught a pass from
Vanlnwagen for 20 yards.
Meigs intercepted four passes
one each by Roush, Meadows,
Vanlnwagen and John Hill. Jimmy
Yeauger and Leach also had good
games on defense for Meigs.

J,omcroy Church of' Christ

]•a sto r· E. Lamar O' Bryant
S und .•y School · 9:30am .

Firsl HaJ&gt;Iisl C hurch
!)astor: Mark Morrow
6th and P:1lrnc r St , M1ddlepon
Sun dtty School · 9 15 a m
Worship - IU:J5 &lt;Lm., ·1:00 p.m.
Wednesd ay Se rvi cc- 7:{Xl p m

Eighth-grade Marauders get three wins
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent .
The Meigs eighth-grade football
team is off to a .4-1 stan tbis season. The Little Marauders dropped
a 14-6 contest to Greenfield
McClain, then blitzed Warren
Local 32-8 and Nelsonville-York
26-6. Meigs bas also picked up a
12-0 win over Gallipolis.
In tbe latest game against Nelsonville· York, tbe Little Marauders
jumped out to a 18-0 lead at the
half and rolled lO tbe win.
Against Nelsonville. the
Marauders carne out of the blocks
fast and scored on tbe game's third
play oftbe game. Justin Roush carried three limes for seven. 38 and
the final 20 yards for the touchdown to give Meigs a 6-0 lead.
After holding the Buckeyes on
downs. Meigs put togetber a fourplay, 57-yard drive for the score
with Shane, Leach picking up the
final 13 yards for the score with
3:28 left in tbe firSt period.
Meigs scored again at tbe 6:40
mart. of the fust half when Grant,
Abbott bit Odie Karr with a pass.

Services- I 0:00 a m li nd 7 p m

Thursday Prayer Mcctmg - 7 p.m .

GOING, GOING, GONE •••

1!1

Episcopal

l'a ~ tur . Andrew Mi les

Gea DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

I0

Church of Christ
212 W. Mam Sl

The Marauders tied Belpre witb

identical records in tbe Ohio Divi·
sion, but Meigs defeated Belpre in
both games that the two teams
played this season. Meigs is now
14-7 overall and own a 10-4 mark
in the TVC. Meigs .also won TVC
crowns in 1990. 1991 and 1993.
It was supposed 10 be a rebuild·
ing year for coach Rick. Ash's
crew. as be fielded a team with two
freshmen. two sophomores. four
juniors and one senior.
The firSt half of tbe season saw
the Marauders go 3-3. but as tbey
got more experience, tbey put
together a 7-I mark in tbe second
half of the season. Meigs also went
8-0 in tbe Ohio Division.
On Sept. 25, the Marauders
were four matches out of first
place. but Meigs received help
from Trimble and Soutbem, botb of
whom defeated Belpre. The
Marauders also picked up tbeir two
wins over Belpre 10 claim tbe title.
Leading Meigs on Thursday was
Cynthia Cotterill witb II points
and 13 for 13 s~rving with four
kills. Such serving ran her streak to
429 consecutive serves.
Emily Fackler added six points
and six of 10 serving with six
assists, Stephanie Stewart was four
for five serving with seven kills
and tbree points, Jessica McElroy
bad five points and eight assists.
Jenny Clifford had tbrcc points and
was four for four serving, Carissa
Ash scored tbree points witb six for
seven serving, Valerie Cundiff
scored one point witb three for
three serving, Tracy Coffey' had
three kills and Tanya Miller bad
one kill and one block.
Meigs was seeded second in the
Division II sectional tournament,
set for Saturday, Oct. 21 at the Uni·
versity of Rio Grande. The
Marauders wiU face Gallia Academy.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r1

~~ ~

T:~

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Service Always"
Established 1913

992.:2121
1011 Mulberry Ave.

'

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors·
Prescriptions
992-2955SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES l SERVICE
992·7075

172 North Second Ave.
Pomeroy

Middleport, Oh

'
!'
...
..,'
J

/

I

•;

Pomeroy

.;

•••
••
•

::j....
.

.

. ·'

�Page

6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, October 13, 1995 '

Ohio

· Friday, October 13, 1995

Call

Public Notice

Using tht Classifitds
Jsas Easy as .. .

Classlfteds!
992-2156

.
.

-

.

1-::========r:========t=======;::=T==:==;::::=.==::'j
•

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

In

accordance

39.85 feet,
with

Resolution No. J20P218,
ldopted September 28,
County

Commissioners,

The above description

North 23 degrees SO
minutes 26 seconds West
31.45 leet,

1995 by the Board of

was made in accordance
with an actual survey
conducted by Eugene
Triplett P.S. 6766 on June 29
and July 14, 1'995. Bearings
are assumed and are

North 22 degrees 19

O:"County
ln.llrmary
Property", shall be sold to
the highest bidder at public
.auction. The subject real
eetale is described below:

The following described
real estate situated in the

·. Village of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, In the State of Ohio,
In Fraction 25, Township 2,
Range 13, of the Ohio
Company Purchase, and
being a parcel created out

of

the Meigs County

Commissioners'

properly.

(Volume 148, Page 356
Meigs County Deed

angular measurement.

50.96feet,

Said public auction will

North 52 degrees 59
minutes 51 seconds West

take place on Friday,
November 10, 1995, at 9:00

42.28 teet,
North 71 degrees 25

a.m., on the front steps of
the
Melgo
County

minutes 04 seconds West

Courthouse, Second Street,

41.221eet,
North 76 degrees 12

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
TERMS OF SALE: . A

minutes 01 seconds West
99.71 feet,

deposit ol 10 percent of the
total purchase price will be

North 75 degrees 53

due on the day of sale In

minutes 59 seconds West

cash or certified check only.

136.36 feet to a railroad
spike set by this survey in

Balance will be due in 10
days pending the

the center

ol

of Highland (sic)

degrees

a

quit--claim deed

from the southwest corner
of Fraction 25, thence along
the center of Mulberry

degrees 28 minutes 01
seconds East 159.75 feet to
the polr&gt;t ol beginning,

minutes 20

11 0

seconds West

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED
Tire Mechanic
Exp. only.
Please provide
references. Call
675-3331 before
8:30 a.m. 6756165 after 5:30
p.m. Ask for Lon.

For Further Information,
contact Mike Kloes ·at 992·
2136. ,
(10)11, 12, 13; 3TC

Public Notice

Candldotea
Haii,Aiblny, Ohio.
muat have a
1995 memberahlp ticket lor
PUBLIC NOTICE
the Albany Independent
NOTICE
Ia hereby given
Agriculture Society, be a
on Saturday, October
resident of the Alexander that
14th, 1995 at 10;00 a.m., a
Local school dlatrlct, 18 public
sale will be held at
years of age &amp; over.
211
West
Second, Pomeroy,
Petltlona can be obtained
to sell tor cash the
from Secretary Doris H. Ohio,
Mace, 2081 Reynolds Ave., following collateral :
l:lyundal E•cel GL
Albany, Ohio 45710 and Nt1989
KMHLD21J1KU313439
must be flied with Secretary
The Farmers Bank and
at least 7 days before
Savings
Company,
election.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
There are 4 to be eiected lor th~ right to bid at reserves
this sale,

readvertlse said property
until the property Is sold.

Love,
Mom&amp;Dad

Further,

the

tomorrow
When someone we
love Is gone,
And it's harder still
to reelize
That our life will still
goon.
But memory has a
magic way of
keeping a loved one
near,
Ever close in mind
and heart
Is the one we hold
most dear.
We never lost the
one we love,
For, even though
she's gone,
Within the hearts of
those who care,
Her memory lingers
on.
Barbara &amp; Lawrence
Eblin,
Darlene, Penny,
Tabitha

above

collateral will be.sotd In the

Bu5in e55 5erv ices

warranUes given.

---------

When your boat needs serviced •••
Come See The Boat Professionals!

Get'Your Message Across

With A Dally Sentinel

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additionsremodelingroofing - siding plumbing, etc.
·Insured,
call Bill Orrick
614-992-5183

Check with us lor details.

BULLETIN BOARD .
17° 0 column Inch weekdays
1900 column inch Sunday

Me1c 1 ul~..r_: t

WI ERe
SUWIC[ IS
E1JE ~ (Tf 11'~ 1 l

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

hlvo

1

PNil l

()~.l l.

INE SERVICES

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

MIDDLEPORT PRESENTS
"COUNTRY ROADS"
Sat., Oct. 14, 9:30pm
$2 cover

Interior &amp;
Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. Let us do it lor
you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates
Before I! p.m. leave
message.
Alter 6 p.m.
614-9B5-4t80

. FALL HARDY MUMS
ALL COLORS
5FOR$10.00

Immediate possession, 6 rooms, sunporch, 1•;,
baths. Large lot in good neighborhood. Dry, lull
size basement, forced air gas furnace, central
air. under counter dishwasher, garbage disposal.
Beautiful built-in china cupboards, mini blinds
and draperies. Close to schools, churches, bank,
post office and stores.

Guess Who
This Is!
Happy
Sweet 16th

any or all bids submitted.

Real Estate General

bid lor any reoson, and may

Card of Thanks

and Savings Company

reserves the right to reject

·a nd to .w ithdraw the above

Price drastically reduced.

• minutes 01 seconds West

North 27 degrees 41

The Albany Independent
AgrlcuHure Society
Doria H. Mace, Secretary
(10) 13,20 2TC

County, Ohio reserves the
right to refuse or reject any

1,.:::.:::.::.:.:::.:::.=::~~=.:.....-{

The family of Thomas
Richard Roush would
like to thank ail their
friends, co-workers,
neighbors and church
families lor their love,
prayers and support
during the illness and
loss of their loved one.
A special thanks to
Pleasant Valley Hos·
pilaf, their stall, and
especially Dr. Hawkins,
and the Meigs County
EMS. May the Lord
Richly bless you ali.
Sadly missed by his
wile, children,
grandchildren and his
great-grandchildren.

condition II Is In, · With no
npress or Implied

SUNDAY, OCT. 15 &amp; 22
1:00·4:00 P.M.

survey; thence North 57

t6.581eet,
North 31 degrees 45

collateral prior to sate.
3 year term • 1996, 1997, Further,
The Farmers Bank
1998.

OPEN BOUSE

as

Avenue and Highland (sic) containing 3.3105 acre.
Road the following :
Subject to all legal
North 34 degrees 53 easements.

~5. 091eet,

In Loving Memory
of
PATRICIA EBLIN
PHILLIPS

28 minutes 01

seconds East 249.751eet. to
an iron pin set by this

minutes 37 seconds West

In Memory

to said real estate.
The Board of County
Commissioners of Meigs

seconds East 75.88 feet to

. point being north 57
degrees 20 minutes 58
seconds East 2586.92 feet

·

Commissioners of Meigs

minutes 68 seconds West

Beginning at the an iron pin set by this
Intersection of Mulberry Ave survey; thence North 57
and Hospital Drive, said

title of property.
Boord ol County

minutes 30 seconds West

Road; thence South 01
degrees 03 minutes 52
Records) and the Meigs seconds West 517.071eet to
County property (Volume an iron pin set by this .
55, Page 312 Meigs Counly survey; thence South 88
.. Deed Records) bounded degrees 31 minutes 13
and described as follows:

No
warranties
are
expressed or Implied as to

County, Ohio
Gloria Kloes, Clerk
lritended only to ••press (10)6, 13, 20; 3TC

Meigs County, Ohio, the 47.53 feel,
following real estate,
North 32 degrees 05
:·commonly known as the

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
The annual election of
Directors of the ,Albany
Independent Agriculture
Society • "Albany Fair" ·will
be held November 4, 1995
between 3:00 P.M. and 7:00
P.M. at the Albany Grange

Hubbards Greenhouse
SYRACUSE
992-5776

. 3124194

~15 Lincoln St., Middleport, Ohio

rpv

The water treatment company cordia lly invites you to
participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

Racine Volunteer Fire
Dept. will have a
, Chicken BBQ Oct 15 at
the fire house. The
will sell dessert.

304·882-2996
Comparable Prices
&amp; Sizes ""' mo.

J&amp;L INSULATION

SAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill

Sept. 17

ROMANCE

Companionship
1-900-255·1515
Ext. 8583
$ 2.91

,., min. Must be 18
yn. T o~~~:tHone phon. req.
s.....u (&amp;19) 645-8414

Imperial nre
Service

Orie Stop Complete Aute Body Repair

mo.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts

Mason, W.V.
304-773-5533
-September Special-

614-992-6223

Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, OhiO-

With tM purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

·

DAYS
CAR WASH

THE REC ROOM
PIZZA • ARCADE

Complete
Detailing

138 N. 2nd, Middleport
(Acr0111 from Johnson's VIdeo)

HOCKINGPORT

MOBILE
HOME PARK
Mobile home
sites for rent
614-667-3630
10111195 1mo. od.

PEPPERONI
Only

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 3/4 TON
RAISED ROOF CONVERSION VAN
• Dnver Sde t.r Bag
· Anti·Lock Brakes
· Air Condrtron

• Power WindOws

• lndrrsct Llghllng
• Plemrum Wood Pl&lt;g.

ForDnty
24 Months

9r'2211 mo.

AftENftOI
BOWBUITUS

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.

ALL YOUR BOW
HUNTING NEEDS.

•Bows •Arrows
•Deer scents
•Deer calls

.Clothing and much more
JOE'S
SPORTING GOODS
WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
Antiquity, Oh.
614·949-2906 101511 010

Call
614-949-2512

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY G·20 3/4 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN

30,000 m~es. 10¢ per mi~ .

• Does not include license and title lees, sa~use tax. 1nsurance or personal property tax.
•• vares by vehide mOOel, usage and length of lease. Lease is Stlbject to approval by
GMAC. Leassee is responsible lor excess wear ana use and has an option lo purchase the

' Does not include license and title lees, sales/use tcu., i'lsurance or personal property tax.
" Varies by vellde modo. usage and length ol tease. Lease is sullject to approval by,
GMAC. Leassee 1s regponstble lor excess wear and use and has an option to purchase the

• Automate Overdrrve

• V•sta Bay Wrndows
• Power Steerrng
• Power Brakes

• Cruise Control

· AWFM Cassette
• 4 Captarn Chairs
•Sola!Bed

• Full Conve1sion
• AllJminum Runn1ng Boaros

·Loaded!

Num~ ol months 24. Monthlv lease payment $348.88 •. Refu~ security depoSit $350.
Total cash due al beginning of lease. 5798.88' . Total oJ monthly payments $8,373.12'.
Purchase q:&gt;tion price $15,30425'•. Total mileage allowed 30,000. Mileage charge over

vehde at k!ase end.

·

Computer
repair/Service, Setups,
Installations,
Upgrades.
Will write programs
and databases.
Kevin 614·541·1630
Local most area.

BRAND NEW '96 BUICK RIVIERA
SUPERCIIARGED 3800 V-6 EIIGINE

350 V-II POWEB.t!UII Ul &amp; IIAT

• Dnver ~ide Air Bag
•Power Brakes
• Vacuum Cleaner
• Indirect Ughbng
· Anti·Lock Brakes
· Power Wrndows
· Air ConditiOn
• Power Locks
• Premium Wood Pl&lt;g.
• 35ll V-8 Power
•Tih Steenng
• Full Conversion
· Rear Arr/Heat
· Cruise Control
· Frberglass Running Boards
· Automatrc OverdrNe •AM'FM Cassette
·Loaded!
· Vista Bay W~ndows
•4 Captarn Chairs
• Power Steenng
·Sola/Bed
Nurrber ol months 24. Monthlr tease paymenl $378.88' . Relundat;e security dei)Os! $400.
Total cash due at beginnmg o lease. $778.88'. Total of monthly payments $9,093.12'.
Purdlase opt•on pnce $16,528.20··. Total mrleagealbwed 30,000. M•teage cllalge over
30,000 miles, 10¢ per mile.

• Power Locks
· Till Steerng

lfiili~lll"

• A1r Condition

• Dual Arrbags
• 4 Wh~ Antr·Lock Brakes
• Supercharged 3800 V-6
• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
• Power Doof Locks

• Power Wmdows
• Power Mirrors
• Power Oriver/Pas.senger Seats
•AM'FM Cassette &amp; CD Plaver

•Tih
•Crurse Control
· Rear Delogger

.

·leather lntenor

• A~mrnum Wheels
• Traction Control
• Uni~tersal Transmttter

• Secun~ Package
• Prestige Package
· Loaded'

WtC/95 2 mo. pd.

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT

Number ol months 24. Monthlr lease payment $588.88' . Refundable securily deposit $600.
Total cash due at beginning o lease. $1188.88'. Total ol mont~ ly payments St4, 133.12 •.

Purchase option price $21,817.62". Total mrleage allowed 30,000. Mrleage charge over
30,000 mikls. 10¢ per mikl.

Forked Run
Sport1man'• Clu•

• Does not indude licoose and title fees, salesJuse tax, inslJrance or pa-sonal propert)' tax.

"Vanes by vehc~ model. usage and klnglh oltease. Lease rs sutl;ecl toapproval by
GMAC. leassee is ·responSible 101 excess wear and use and has an option 1o purchase
vehicle at ~ase end.

vehickl at lease end.

the

..

I

Every Sunday

Starting
SeptemNr lOth
8:30am to

TOU FREE 1·BDII·B2Z~IJ417 • 372·2844
344~5947 .,422·0756
r

"'

SPORTS
POINT
SPREADS
AND MOREll!
1·900.884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Musl be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645·8434

!

11:30am
$7 sign up, children

t
•

Morrllay - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm

9&amp; under$4.

L
l

Sunday: Noon - 6

~

• TEUes. Tags. Tille Fees Ptra. Rebate included in sale price ol new Ytlhicle ~ste:l where awlicable. On approved credit. Nol resp:wl$i:lle lor typogr~ emn.

..
.,

50% pay .back.
Chlldren..muat be
accompanied by adult.
1111/t mo

I
,.,

DAN'S WATER
REFINING ltiC.

All Ohio

Esllib. Over 25 Years
Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation

Easy Payment
Auto Insurance

304-882-2996

Commercial and Residential
Driveways. Patios. Slabs, Parking lot s. Curh~; &amp; Gutters

ONE CAU. DOES lT ALL

YOUIIG'S
CARPEIITER SERVICE
• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rootrng
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

MODERN SANITATION

12 Guage
Factory Choke Only
Bashan Building
9127195 tfn

(Lime ,Slone Low Rates)

WICKS

...... ; : ......

Light Hauling,

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septic Systems,
Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING .
614-742-2138

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

You Can Find
Your Special
Someone Now!!!

614-992-7643

II

ROOFING

NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

female cals.
~Wtped.

~

Ho malayan, 1 "ttg·
t&gt;olh spayed 304-6 751

2 Pupptes To Good Homes . Wtll
Ma ke Good Rabbtl Do gs, 614
361· 7300

5 Kotlerts . 7 Weeks Old . 614 ~6

11S6
Al l Wlltle Wttn Beau111u1 Eyes

Ktnen. 614-446-3292
Beaut1lul Wh1te Es~umo Spitz.

614 -446 ·0924 .

•

Black 0 white stub tad kt !len 304

773 ·5810

949·2512

Cheaper Rates

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

Sports Connect
NHL·NBA·NFL

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
I32.00lHR.

Ext. ,3140
$2.99/minute
18 or older
Touch-tone phone
required
Serv·U (619) 654-8434

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
(614)949-3013 Phone
(614) 949·2018 FAX
(614)594-2008 NIGHT

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer; Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

systems, lay lines, underground bores.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

Elkhounct, m1xed. around

•

351b~ . ?

112yr old , to good llome. very
genlle 304 ·675·4650

F1rewood 614 -446 -1055

ye.

Free Regwar Sti€' Pure Bred
male Coll1e Dog , Requtres Fqrm
Or large Fenced Area. loves
Clltl&lt;ten. 614 ·446 ·1058
~

Hall Bassett. hall Reagle. to geod
home only. 304-773·9163.
:

J.D. Drilling Company

For Free estimate call 949·2512
8/3/tln
REASONABLE BATES

Lafge E1ght Track Stereo
so:e. 614· 446 ·0924

C~n
•

Lopp eared rabbiT mui11 ·CDiorea .
w1cage. water boule &amp; food . :(04

.

~82){)12

M1xea Cocker Spantel . Olacil. &amp;
whtte. 1yr old. 10 good nome. g!!od
w!chlldren 304 -675 4650
:

Part Lab &amp; Par: Chow Blac~ To
Good Home, 614 ·245 5625
Pupptes. pan Roi!Wetler. part

~atJ

3males. 3females . 304-6 75 -7, 20
alter Spm

Puppres: Beag les. Male &amp; Fellilflle
614 ·446- 2660
•
Storm wtndows, sllutter, must fakg
all . Call lor SIZes 30&lt;~ ·675· 3454 . ~
To a counlry llome. wlltte. sp;:wea
remale. Sp1tZ dog 10 good t'tc1me
only. has shots 304 675-6165 :
Workmg Older Model Lilt CQatr

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

614 ·245·5964
~-

Call your date now
1-900-255-15 15

Ext. 1471

985-4473
7/22194

2.99/min.

be 18

yrs.

Welding

phone required

Up-To-Date
Soap Results
CAll NOW!!r
•
1-900-3 78-1800
Ext. 6H5

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

Serv-U

Call for Low Prices

742-3212
Turn on Depot 51. In
Rutland 1.2 miles.
BJt0/1 mo

KP's CLEANING
Will Clean Small
Shops or Offices
·and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614·843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10·1 0-95

DUI- SR-22
DISCOUNTS

GIRLS! 1·900-378·

2500 Ext. 6557

1-900-255-1515

$3.99 per min.

Ext. 1064

Best Rates

must be 18 yrs.

(614) 992· 7040

Touch-tone ·Phone

2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older

Pomeroy

Required Serv-U

Touch-tone phone
required. Serv-U

(619) 645·8434

(619) .645-8434

Talk to beautiful

Giveaway

4 Female llapsa Apsa And Collte
Mt~ed Puppn~s To G1vea~y .
Cule AM Greal Wt1h K1dSI 6.:14 ·
367 -0187

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, .INC.

HOROSCOPE

Live 24 Hours/Day

40

Black Walnuts. 614 -367 -0274

5/16194 TFN

Cuetom Building I Reltodtllng
• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESnMATES
(614) 992·5535
l614i 992·2753

'

Mrddleport. Ohro 45760
992·4548

Touch-tone

&lt;)&lt;)•)
')0')0
--.)(),)()

No Hu nttng or Trespassong on
Hodge's Properly ' on
Sandh;ll Road

G~ r ald

2 Stx Week Old K111en:::. To Good
Home Only• 614· ~-1 793

7resn - Si[l( 7fowers
[jift 'BasK.!tsfor a{{ occasions
Stu.Jfit-'Ba[foons :Hot Jl.ir 'Ba(foons
Singing 'Tef£grams
7ree Loca[ rfefz'very
Satisfaction guaranteed

Howard L. Writesel

ARE YOU
READY FOR
ROMANCE

,,

Alluring Scents

•

ALZHEIMEAS PATIENTS carea
lor tn prt\4ate llome . Experienced
Call304-762-2544

7693 .

271 North Second Avenue

Tony's Portable

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
CleariJ~g, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limestone,
' Top Soil, Fill Dirt

30 Announcements ;

er
2112192/trn

DAILY

110\\ \IW
E\C: \\ \TI\&lt;;

wv 21150

2

( No Sunday Calls)

Must

$2.99 p•r min. Must h 18
yn. Touc:h-tone phGn. req.
s.,.;u (&amp;19) &amp;u."J~

Papa Bear tn soarch of M a ma
Be ar WWM, 5&lt;\. hnancoatly Se cure tn searcll ot SWF ltnanc ,ally
secure or work1ng ~ge no1 a tac
tor Send pocture &amp; pllone number
10 13ox G-7, %Pt Pteasant R~g
tSier, 200 Mam St . Pt Pteas&lt;Hl \

614 · 742 · 1068

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

992·2269

W2611mo.

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

LIVE GIRL S' CALL NOW r
1·900·378·2500 Ext 6325
S3.991Mm Mu sl Be 18 Yrs ·
Serv -U (619) 645-8434

6pm begtnners. 7pm advanced .
8pm couples . more tnfo rmatoon

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Bill Slack

1·900-378-1800

614-446-2~1

Country line danctng every Wed ·
nesaay ntgllt a1 Pomeroy Eagles.

Misc. Jobs.

{Specilize in driveway
spreading)
Limestone,

614-992·3470

.

and Removed

Scores!! I Spreads!!!

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

lease&lt;l Tapes,

•·~..:'",t::•:

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Shrubs Shaped

HAULING
Gravel, Sand,

Has Recerved 300 Adult New Re·

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

Exl. 7969
'2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-lone Phone
Required
Serv·U (619) 645-84 34

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

Personals

Pr1ncess Vrdeo. Gallipolis, Oh10

1-900-255-8585

HIOO
650-1234

614166 7-6825

005

112/tln

FREE
ESTIMATES

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Doug Crites

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsvr llc. OH 45772

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Accidents/
Violations

·'

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

Sidewa lks. Porches. Tear-out and Replacement

.Pressure
•Plumbing .
•Tile
•Carpentry
•Carpet
Cleaning
•Roofing
•Painting
•Drywall
•Gutters
•Cabinets
•Masonry
•Decks
•Electrical
•Siding
We Have Emergency Services
7 Days A Week, 24 Hours A Day.
35 Years experience, all work guaranteed.
"Fall Specials" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
away. Most yards $49.00
Gutters cleaned and screened,
most 1 story homes, $49.00.
OHIO- WEST VIRGINIA -KENTUCKY 1 015/t mo.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

) ,' h ! 1PI

156

Abiding Concrete Construction

(614) 992·5041
Residential • Commercial • Industrial

Trailer &amp;House Sites.

Computer Service

For Only
24 Montlts

$6.99

992-6344
Dine-In or Carry-out

Betzing's
For Only
24 Months

pi~~~..~~, ~~"~'~"~~.!,!~:~

15.n lARGE

128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992·4081
Week Day 8:0Q-5:00
Open Saturday
9:0().3:00

mM PEDEN SMARREASE IS THE WAY m GOI

To

181 ROOnrtl and
COIS7RUCTIOI

9/7ntn

••••••
DATES

Lose Weight for
Christmas!!!
TOPS of Syracuse #1895
Come join us on Thursday .
evenings at Carleton School
in 5:15.
·

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742·2193
w1211

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call Ruirr!Jofl at 992·4472 or HID0-606·3313
to set u our free water analysis. 1"""'"

Rock Springs UMW is
having a Bake Sale at
Pamida on Saturday,
Oct. 14 at 10 a.m.

H&amp;H

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

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

DL•tributetl lry

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

Or Call 949-2905

STO-A·WAY
STORAGE

UCINE GUN
CLUB GUN SHOOT

Water
~~/:- Treatment
Equipment

Country Line Dance Lessons
Sunday Evening 7:30
Mechanic St. Warehouse, Pomeroy
Call 992-3671 lor info.
Jim &amp; Carla Ryder, Instructors
$4.00 fee

The Dail~ Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Public Notl~

Public Notice

(619) 645-8434

RACINE
GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.

FoLJncl · 11111 e fuzzy brow n pu,py,
Horner Hill area. wrth pm~ cotlar .
614 · 742-2028
•

Everyone
Welcome

los1 large Jan MCll e HusW'y 1
Cllow M1x, Wearrng Alue Co!lar
Wttll,·Tags . las1 Seen 1012i95
BulaVtlle Area Call Snyder"s 5o14 ·

8/Wn

60

Lost and Found:

Found : 3 Male Dog s, Cot),er
Spanrel, Brown Black &amp; Whtle .
Wtth SpoTs. SR 218.
1337

614-~6 -

367·0661

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
House Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 992·
4405
For Free Estimates

Young Female Dog, Bull COoler.
Black Face. 614 ·446 ·4680
•

70

•

.
•

Yard Sale

Forked Run
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Starting Sept.

I

17

p .m.

Factory Choke
guns only.
Will shoot through
March '96

4/13195

3 Famtly Basement Sale Pas t
Ho lzer Off 160 . 1 Mt l ~ Kemper
Hollow. Tllursday. Frrd&lt;:~y, 9 To' 5.
Compound Bow. Gu ns, Cotenlan

Sieve . Men . Women . Kw::ls
CIOihes . Toys . Morel Prr ces
Cheapt
'
3 Fam il y Garage tRemodelrrg
Sale Frtday. Salurday, Sunoay,
623 Buckeye Hrll Road Compu~er.
Calertng Supplte ; . Clollles, Car,
Baby Everytllong, Stove, Lawn
Mach1nery , Plus Much MuCh
More•

·

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

3 Family : Pumpktns. ~ums. tnd1Qn
Corn, 1 ~de West Rodney, F,r...

Solid Vinyl
Replacement
Windows

Thurs -Sat 9 T rll 6 . lots Mtst
llemst

We have the
best window
and the best
price

Sat, Sun
4 Fam111y · Ingalls Hoad OH 2f8

4 Famdy · Baby, Chtldrens. Adutt
CIOihes. Home 1me11or. MLlC~
Morel Frt. Sat. 9 -3. Wllotesal~
Meats Parktng lol Across From

Hazier Chntc , Sycamore Branch . •

Mov1ng Sale 2 Stereos. Eme;,.
tatnment Center. Mtsc Recltnel ,
Oct 131h , 14tll. 430 HomewooD

Drive, Btdwell.

•

Mov1ng 10114th. 15th . 9-5. Rt. ~
North Across Frank Cremeana
Olf1ce, Relrtgeralor, Washer tOr.,-.

er. l 1v1ngroom /Bedroom. Furni\

ture. Etc.

•

~ummage Sale ·Bake Sale : Foi
CLlb Scours Pack 205 , Sa1urdAy
9:00, R1o M1m Marl. Rto Grande

�•

Page 8 • The Oally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Octqber 13, 1995

Friday, October 13, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ALLEYOOP '

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

BRIDhE

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
Due To Tremendous G owth We
Are Cu renlly Seek ng To Pa mer

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

W!h

111... l Ya d Sa es Musr Be Pad Jr
flO'.' an e DE AD LINE 2 00 p m
tQe cay be o e
'Sunday ea on

Monoar ed ro n
u

day

&lt;5 OUAUTV
OWNER OPERATORS
CONSISTE NCY GOOD I
$&lt;000 SIGN ON BONUS
We W II Ba In The A ~a

HIR
NG ) The Wee k 01 0 16 95 Or
Stop By Our Open House On 101
t9t95

CHEM CAL LEAMAN
CHARLESTON WVTERMINAL
I 800 258 5872 TERMINAL
11034
OR 304 272 2264
AV ON I:.A~ N SU at home at
we 11 All areas 304 882 2645

800 992 6356 ND REP

&lt;, c
S. n~

W

304 675 7873

All real estate advertlstng m
this newspaper 1s subject to
the Federal Fatr Houstng Ad
ot 1968 whiCh makes iltllegal
to advert se ~any preference
hm tat on or dlscrimtnaDon
based on race color religion
sex lamtllal status or naJ onal
origm or BIIY mtentlon to
make any such preference
hffiltatlon or discrimination •
Th s newspaper will not
knowllngty accept
adwrtlsements lor real estate
wtllch Is in viOlation ol the taw
Our readers are hereby

Ea rn $ 1000s weekly stu II ng en
velopes at home Be your boss
Start now No exp tree supples
nfo no oo gat on Send SASE
o Pr es t ge Un 1 #l PO Box
95609 W nte Sp ngs Fl

on

lnlolllled lhalall dwellings
acNerttsed n this newspaper
are al/allable on an eQual

opportunlly basis

Ea n money 1r ps pr zes wl lady
Rem n gton Jew elr y No 1nves1
ment no del very 1 600 726
3324 ex 210t Ms Tuner

Ea n up 10$1000 weeky stulfng
envP. opes at home Stan now no
expe ence I ee supples ntor
ma on no oo ga on Send sell
add essed sta mped envelope to
Exp ess Dep t 36 100 E Wh 1e
stone Blvd Su te 148 345 Cedar
Pa k. TX 78613

m e 01..

E xper ence d Travel Agent Per
sons W th Po st ve At tude And
EJ Cellenr Work Elh cs AD I ty To
Apply Sales &amp; Serv ce Te chn
n ques Te ephon~~ puler
Sk lls Are Des red ~ Be Able
To Work We ll W th
ents One
On One Send Resu e To CLA.
360 Gall pols Datly T bune 825
Th rd Avenue Gal pols Oh o
45631
Help needed for deer processtng
C awfo d s Groce y 304 675
5404
McArtnu Pol ce Depa tment Now
H ng Rese ve Po l ce Ofl cers
Qua I cat on Is The Oh o Pea ce
Ofl cer s Tr an ng Counsel Ac
cept ng Appl ca t ons At McArthur
Pot ce Oeparrmen 124 w Man
Street MeA tllu Oh o 45651
Avon

Va d Sa te 2907 Maple M eado w

o ook upper Pt Pleasam ou1
Sandhii Rd Ocl13&amp; 14 830?
Yard Sale 216 M dway Or N ew

lam SaJurday Oct

14!h

Sat &amp; Man

9 4 6

W Horton St Mason Beds
to ceO a r gas furnace &amp; m sc
Sat 6m

Norrh on At 2 Lots lor everybody
se~~eral ant ques

80
Absolute Au c t on

R p ey

Sun Oct 15th 11 am l oca eel a
A p ey Flea Market on Rt 33
across I om 8 &amp; B Ma t Owner

8 11 Lucas s mo\1 ng neeos to sell

a pub! c auct on Every th ng n
co ner lor even the bu ld ng ap
p OK 40 x40 to be moved 1979

Dodge bel 1 uck. I 2 camper 12
ule Lot s &amp; ots ot used mer
chand se too s auto pa ts Too
numerous 10 Is Ed F az er 930
A u~; !

ons eve y F day Satu rday
7pm Mt Al to Auct on Rr 2 33
Cross cads New me chand se
g ocer es &amp; ots o e Ed Frazer

930
A cK Pea son Auctor Co mpany
lul l r me au c o ne e camp ere
aucl on
se v ce
l censed
#66 On o &amp; We s 11 g n a 304
773 5765 Or 304 773 544 7

C ean late Mod el Ca s 0
Tru cks 98 7 Models Or Newe
Sm Th Buck Pont ac 1900 East
ern Avenue Gal pol 5

3 Bedroom Br ck In Ga I po s
Laundr~ Room Full Basement
Carport Sto age Room Co ner
lol In Ou e1 Ne ghbo hood lm
med ate Possess on 614 446
9523 614 446 1443 614 446
171 614 446-4305

No E ~pe r ence Necessa ry $500
To $900 Weekly /Potent al Pro
cess ng Mortgage Refunds Own
Hou s Call {909) 715 2300 E~t
1351 (24 Hours)
No E Jper ence Necessa ry I $500
To $900 Weekly 1Po1en1 al Pro
ce ss ng Mortg age Relunds Own
Hou s Call {909) 715 2300 Ext
782 (24 1-iours)
Pan t me tax preparers needed
lor busy tax oil ce Pomeroy loca
1on We w II Ira n Send restJme
to The Daly Sent nel PO Box
729 13 Pomeroy Oho 45769

J &amp; 0 s Auto Pa IS Buy ng sal
vage veh ctes Se ng pa ts 304

7735033

Sac es 3bedroom camp e e
k tchen ul I ty room &amp; ga age
Call Somerv lie Rea lty 304 675
3030 or 304 675 3131
9 room house 4 b new ly emo
deled k chen &amp; ba h new carpel
ng &amp; vmyl on large corner lot
$28000 614 992 6173 al te r 5

Wa nted To Buy Junk Au os Any
Cond ton 614 388 9062 614

446 PART
Wa nted To Buy Junk Autos W Th
Or W thout Motor s Ca ll La rry
L vely 614 388 9303
Wanted To Buy L tile T ~es Toys

6 4 24;-5887
Wanted To Buy Used Mob le
Home 614 446 01 75

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sun Va lley Nurser y School
Ch ldcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
2 K Yo ung School A.g€ Our ng
Summer 3 Day s per Week M n
mum 614 446 3657

Help Wanted

AVO N
AI Areas
Spears 304 675- 1429

AVON HOLIDAY SALES

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1 Acre 2 Bedroom Tra ler Deck &amp;
Porch See To App 304 5 76

3288 Appi"'Jrov• WVA
1969 Clean 2 Bedroom A Con
dtonng $3000 614 446 8036
1972 14x64 new carpel AJC gas
heat very good co nd 1on $3900
l~rm 614 g92 6332
HH6 12x60 house Ira ler all new
nsde all etecmc 304-675 1429
304

1980 W nctsor 1h 70 2 Bed
rooms 1 Bath Large K tchen
large L v ng Room Refr gerator
Stove Washer Dryer Wall A r
Condtoner 10~12 Ut lty Bulding
E xcelrent Cond1 on $10 500 614

Counselor !Therap st
An Ou!pa enr Chem cal Depend
ency Agency Is Seek ng A.

CCDC liSW LSW Or O!her
Qua fed Perso n To Pro v de A
co hoi And Other Drug Cou ns el
ng Knowledge And Exper~en ce
Requ red Ba chelors Degree M n
mufTI Masters Preferred Send
Resume By Oclober 8 199S To

FAC TS 1770 Jackson P ke B d
well OH 45614 EOE MIFIH

Ci:ln p S te 1 1 36 Acre s 24 K24
Block Basemen! Comp e e y F n
shed Good Hunt ng $1 3 000 Ed
Bro wn 614 388 99 73 Me gs
County

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

NOTICE I
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISHING CO
reco mmends that you do bust
ness wnh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma I unHI you have •nvest gated

lheoNenng

Retail Space Ava /able

Man 513-922 0294

3 Bedroom 2 Story Crown C Ty
Area $275/Mo Plus Depos 614
256 6403

Four lots near Ractne appro x 1
1 2 acres each start ng at $5000
call 614 949 2025
Scentc Va ll ey Apple Grove
beaut lu 2ac lots pvbl c wa ter
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

360

Real Estate
wanted

410 Houses lor Rent
2 BedrOllm Basement Gall pot s
C ly l1m IS $375/Month Depos 1
&amp; References No Pets 614 446
0 796 leave Message
2 Bedroom s Attach ed Garage
$395/ ~o Reference &amp; Deposit
No Pets 614 446 1358
2 Bedrooms Porch Yard 5 Mnes
South Rout e 218 S2751Mo In
eludes Water Relerence Depos

L614-256!337

6,. 985-4375

Car Stereo Equtpmem Alp ne CO
Player 2 12 MTX Road Thunder
P os lnstde A Box W th Tweet
ers Puncn 40 Ampll er MTX
Thunder 280 Amphf1er {3 Month s
Old) 614 446 8778

Reg sterad 3 Year Old l •mous n

D sney Area 5 Days /4 Ho tel
N ghts Use Any! me Pad $310
Sell $100 614 470 1577

Rent Lea se Warehou .. e Sp&amp;lce
Also Boat Or Veh cle Storage In
Ga pols 304 675 3414 Aller 6

PM

MERCHANDISE
510

Household
Goods

Appl ances
Recond oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aelr
graters 90 Day Guarantee'
Fr ench C ly May tag 614 446

&amp; Up 60 Pale ns Of K !chen Car
pet In Sloe~ Over 35 Pa11erns
V nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446 744.0:
G E Washe 10 yer Wh te Both
Heavy Duly Good Cond ton
$300 Ken more Can1s1er Vac
cuum Cleaner $75 Entertanmenl
Cen ter 50 W X 6 0 X68~ H
Holds Up To 25 TV Da k Wood
$50 Can Be Seen Alter 1 PM At
57 Buhl Morton Road Apartment
fl202 Gallpols 6144411762

USED

APPLIANCES

Wasller s dryers relr gerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V ne S re el Call 6 4 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Comp eta home I urn sh ngs
Hou s Mo n Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m les out Bulav le P1ke
Free Del very
Two Mob le Hom es Each Have
Two Bedroom s App l ances In
eluded l oca ted lower ~o u te 7
6 4 446 1058

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroon apartments fur
n shed and unfu n shed s.ecur ty
depos 1 requ red no pets 614
992 2218
1 bedroom apartment down sta r
ut i ! es pad $360 /mo pl us $75
depos t 3rd St Rae ne Oh 614

247 4292

1br duplex 2br duplex Four 1br
apts One 2b apt Reaso nable
rent 304 675 2053 or 304 675
4t00

SWAIN
AUCT ION &amp; FURNITURE 62
0 ve St Gall pol s New &amp; Used
turn ture heaters Wesrern &amp;
Work boots 614-446 3159

Oual ly Household Furn ture And
App ances G eat Deal s On
Cash And Carryt RENT2 OWN
And layaway Also Avatlable
Free Del very W th n 25 M tes
Wh rlpool Washer $95 Match ng
Dry e $95 Wh rlpool Wash e
New er Model $150 Wh rlpool
Wa sher $205 1 Yea Warran!y
F os Free Refr gerato $150
F os Free Re tr gerator $165
Harves t Gold Electnc R~ng e 30
Inch $95 Elec!nc Range Fr g
~ ~.; .;~~5 Woodburner Good
L
$150 Po rtable Washer
I $9 5 Por tabl e 0 yer

0 11

.Y"I,.riiJOoi 195 Skaggs Appilanc

Buy or sell R1venne Ant ques
11 24 E Man Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hour s M T W 10 00
am o 600 pm Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 614 992 2526

245 5992
2Rooms Plus Bath La layelte
Mall No K chenl All U1 It es pad
$ 75 00 Mon h Oepos r Requ red
614 446 7733
3 And 4 Bed oom Apanme nrs
For Rent 91 Cedar Street Gal
pols NO PETS 614 388 1100

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Weslwood Dr ve
I on $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Call 6 14 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Oppor un ty
Beech Sr M dd epon
&amp; 2bed
rooms ul It es pad Oepos t &amp;
rete ences 304 882 2566
Brooks de Apa rtmen ts Wa sher
0 ye Hook up 1 Bed oom
Equ pped W th Aelr ge a tor &amp;
Stove $257 Mo + Deposr 614
446 2959
Fur n shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downsta rs Uri 1es Furn shed
Clean No Pels Refere nce De
postRequred 614446-1519

Grac1ous l1v ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmenls at V llage Manor and
R vers de Apartments n M ddle
port Ftom $232$355 Call 614
992 5064 Equa l Housmg Oppor
1un nes
NTh rd Ave Mtddteport 1bed
room lurmshed Oepos 1 &amp; refer

ences 304 882 2566

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
2 Halloween costumes 304 6 75

1484

3 metal ofl ce desks 304 675

2722

Bundy Ctar net $175 Boy s Cloth
mg S ze 14 16 Both Items In EJC
cellent Cond ton I Pr ces Negot
able 614 245 0237
Color T me Console S179 9S G E
VCR $6-4 95 Montgomery Ward

VCR $59 95 RCA VCR $89 95
Realt st c VCR $7g 95 Sha rp 19
$79 95 Panasonc Pnnter $74 95
J&amp;B Tec hnotog~ 372 State Route
160 Gall pols
Com moQo e 64 compuler d sk
dr \19 and games 304 6 75 4392

Queen S ze Ware bed M ror
Cab nets Wavel es s Mall ess
Sold Wood F arne $225 614
446 0727

5304

Cookware
Reltred Otnner Party Lady Has
Some Beau!llul 17 Pc 7 Ply Sur
g ca l Slamless Waterless Sets

Not $1 200 00
Only

$399 ()()
Suppl es ltmlted
Call Anne 1800 7668110
Crystal 27pcs Patd $15 $ 18 a
glass sel all lor $150 Call 304
6 75 6523 after 5~
Early Amer can Bassett sola
steeper brown and gold color Wllh
wood t tm e~cellem condmon
w th wo end tables $125 lour
15 I ve lug turb1ne alum1num
nms $120 Call 614 949 2490 at
ler3qn
Electr c Whee lcha rs / Scooters
New tUsed Scooter /Wheetc hatr
l1l!s Sta rway Elevators l ft
Cha rs Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283

$12S 614

Square Bales Ot Hay Sorgh::~m
M II &amp; Floor Model Stereo AM
FM 8 Track 614 245 5622

Hay &amp; Grain
large ba es $ Oea 304

675

UpHghr Ron Evans Enterpr ses
Jackson Oh o 1 800 537 9528

Used K !Chen Cab nets W 111
D shwasne &amp; Range Etc $1
Bath oom Var;t ty W th Marble
Top$ 50 614 367 0451

ooo

550

BUilding
Supplies

560

Pets lor Sale

Gtoom Shop Pe Groom ng Fea
tu ng Hydro Bath Jul e Webb
Ca 1614 446 0231

2 male AKC Ba sse n pupp es

1
weeks old all shots &amp; wormed
spec al pr ce $100 614 667
3856
3 Pu ps 95% Rot Wet! er Paren1s
On Premes s $100 Each 614
441 0538

A.t&lt;C Pomeran an Pupp es Sho ts
Wormed 6 14 446 625 3 CFA
H malayan K uen Shots Wo med
614 446 9780

Twm Rtvers Tower now accepting
applcatons for 1br HUD substd
zed apt lor elderly and handt

Now open Daves Swap Shop
Tuesday Wednesday F tday
Saturday I 6 Tools guns and

IOJS

1976 Cu!lass New T es S350
1986 Yugo Runs $400 Bot h Need
Some Work 614 446 2119 614
245 9060

1979 0 ds Cutlass Body In Good
Yam a~a 80
Good Cond 11on $400 614 245

9239
1980 Chevrloer Capr ce Loaded

h ra N ce Good Fam ly Or Work
Ca $1 400 OBO 6 4 446 6661
1982 Suburban D esel Good
Shape 198 7 Ford Ae o Sta t
XLT 988 Hy unda 614 441
1151 614 2455592 Af!erS PM

t984 Pont ac Bonne\ltlle LE v 8
AC PB PS PW low M eage In
A 1 Cond ton 61 4 446 9287
t98ti Camaro l 28 Low M1les
614 38S-9082
1967 Chrysle 5th Avenue V 8
Automattc Full Power Extra N ce
Condition 614 2 56~867
1987 Ch yster LeBaron G T S 4
Door Aut oma t c Loaded 614
446 4924 614 446 7992

&lt;987 DOdge omn 5 Speed $700
1987 Ford Crown V c $2 500
1984 Palom no Tr avel Trat le r
$400 614 36 7 0106

1988 Serena Automat c TIt AC
Crutse 73 000 M les $3 800 Hu
mdfler S40 614 446 0924

1988

a, ck

Regal $2 995 1991

Ponttac Lem ans S2 395 1989
Olds Cutlass $2 4g5 1987 Pont
Ftreb rd $1 995 1986 Pont F era

1968 Cavalter Z 24 Sspd a1r
loaded extra clean 304 675
1226 or 304 6 75 1660 leave
message
1988 Ford Escort Lo-aded EXP
Askmg $1 595 1987 Plymouth
Carav lie Ask ng $595 1982
Olds 98 Regency Negot able
614 379 2935 614 245 5677

N ce la r steer black and wh te
we tgh t 600 tbs broke to lea d

$700 OBO 614 667 6329

Reg stered She land Sheepdog
(Sheltte) pups sa ble &amp; wn te
$250 each No Checks 614 992
2607

570
low re~

Musical
Instruments
Electnc Organ W tn Stool

$150 614 379 2720 AFTER 6
PM
Ludw g Snare Drum Wuh Ever ~
th n9 Needed l nclud ng Books
$175 614 36 70 187

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Turn ps Kae &amp; Mu stard Charles
Mct&lt;ean Farm 556 Cerena y
Road Gal pols 614 446 9442

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
1990 M tsub sht model MT 210D
2 1hp d esel 4 wheel dr ve low
hou s Ou ck detach loader w11
lever con!rol Backhoe w 13~
bucke t hyd angle 6 blade lor
loader or g nal cos1 S20 500 sell
to $13 900 Keeler s Serv ce
Center Sl Rt87 304 895 3874
D1scount tarm trac or parts lor
Ma ssey Fo d IH &amp; others
S der s Equ pment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 742t or 1 800

277 3917

Ford 800 tra ctor wtth oader and
T scraper bladp excellent cond1
oon $3800 firm 61 ~ e332
JO 450 C Doze r ROP W1nch 6
Way &amp; 1976 lnt Tactor &amp; Cole
man EA 5000 Watt Generator
1969 Ton 112 Fo d To lor 25 000
Pounds lowboy 614 446 8044

Wanted Small Mtl~ Cooler Tank
Under 150 Gallons Must Be In
Good Condltton 6U 965-1922

ti14 965-1266

630

Livestock

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

WEST
aK B7 4

Sales 4 M les N 01 Hol ze Hwy
160 614 446 6865

1988 PI~ mouth Rei ance for parts
or whole car 304 675 4108 or

304 773 5064
1969 Plymouth Acclatm Auto Ar
T II Crutse AMIFM Cas sene

• 9 6 2

•J I 0 4 3

SOUTH
•Q " ! 2
• A 9 a2
t A
4

1993 Ford Splash P ck Up Tr uck
loaded l 1ll.e New low M les

258-6753

Excellent Condtt1on $9 000 080
614 446-6587

Vulnerable North
Dealer West
West 1\orth
South
Pass 1 •
1•
Pass 3 •
t •
Pass Pass

3228

BARNEY

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1978 Dodge Ram Charger 4X4
318 a~Jto ps pb I mHed sl p axle
sk1d
plates
reese
h lch
65 OOOac1 m l r 304 89$.3410
1979

4~4

Blaze

$1 200 614

1989 Ford Bronco u I s ze 4spd
4K4 ac exc cond $7 000 30 11

1990 Ch evy As I o Conve rs on
Van 126 000 M les A 1 In &amp; Ou1
A 1 Meeha n cal $6 200 6 14
367-{)111

~OW ABOUT THAT SIR' WHEN

!

KICKED THE BALL M'{ 6LA55ES
M'{ SOCK AND MI.{ SHOE ALL
~LEW OFF AND THE BALL CAME VUWIM .I
AND MIT ME ON
I

1990 Dodge Ra m Van B 250
72 000 M les $6 000 Can Be
Seen AI Gall pohs Oa y Tr bune
825 Th rd AvenUe Gall po l s

Oho

Motorcycles

86 Honda Aspen ca de lully
dressed factory CB mtercom and
casselle malch ng helme s lots
of ch rom e showb ke 614 992

3058

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1986 Honda 4 Wh ee le 250
looks &amp; Runs l ke New $2 500
Frm 614 446 t 758
1990 Yamaha V Max 1 200c~
Must sell \lery low pr ce S2 800
30• 882 3330

614 446 4829

4 Wheeler 1986 Honda Four! ax
250A Alms looks Good $2 200
614 446 9716 Aft&amp;f 3 30

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
1982 1411 John boat w 1 vewe l
3hp Ev nrude motor plus troll ng
mo1or 2 sw vel sea ts and moto r

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessones

Back wmdow ouvers I Is Datsun
280ZX $20 304 6 75 5019 leavlt
message 11 not home

1539
1991 GEO P tzm auto amllm
24 10 actual m1 es one owner
very good cond uon 614 949

40 Step--1
41 Sweet
potatooa
42 Colo hra
43 Sp11e
ornament

44 Table support
46 Victory
symbol

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetmty C phe:r cryptogram&amp;are c eated !tom quolaiiOOSDy famous people pasl and present
EBch let e n lhe cipher stands !Of anotfle Today sclue 0 equals r

s y y

GABW

s

su

BPHUPIIPI

zsw

UHVB

0 P S T 0 HC TY

HI

G A F P

SYRSEI

p
C T W WE
DBAZSI
OUARWP
PREVIOUS SOLUT ION Prolessoonally I have no age - Kalhleen Turner
"I m 1n pretly good shape fm the shape I m &lt;n • - M&lt;ckey Rooney

':~~:t:~' S©RJ1~-~£trs· IIAMI
Edtted by CLA~Y_!;~~~~!,::.;:::;;;;;;::::::::::::;:0
WOlD

Reorronge letters of the
four scramb led words be
low ro form four words

KRHANS

As a sates rep
made observations about people
Those who travel frequently Will
clemancl home atmosphere 1n
a hotel ancl hotel serv1ce -

LEGNET
, .
1-....:;.l....::...,l.:::.....:;lr.-5-=-1,..:-..,..16-1 O
.

.

•

•

•

.

L---''---'--'---'--.1-..-J

$

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

p

MUEMPW

I I' I I .

r~e

Co mple1e
chuckle quo1ed
by f 1l ng n the m ss ng words
you deve lop from !lep No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

HECK
NO' I

WRoTE

ONE Of
THfMI

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

SERVICES
810

12 Southwestern
Indiana
17 BritiSh Navy
abbr

38 -Fou

:=c:=N:o=K=K===I=o: ',

New gas ta nks on e ton !ru ck
wheels rad ators floor ma ts etc
D &amp; R Aulo A pley WV 304 372
3933 0( 1 800 273 9329

Invent Pants - Jelly Exempt EXPENSE
1n college was reluclant to start dat1ng
after break1ng up w1th h1s g1rl He cla1med that the real
deterrent to a new romance was the EXPENSE

My roommate

Home
Improvements

A BLOWN Tf£ W\R ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP TI-E CLASSfiEDS.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF ING

2630

Uncondt!tonaf hlehme guaran1ee
l oca l refe re nces turn shed Call

1992 Chrysler 5th Avenue Grey
W th Dark Grey Plush Inter or
PW PO M nt Cond! on 79 000
les Call Alter 5 PM 6 14 446

(6141 446 0870 Or (6 14 ) 237

¥

East
Pass
Pas s
Pass

Budget Tr ansm ss on s Used &amp;
Aet&gt;u 1l AI Types Access be To
Over 10 000 Transm ss.1on As ~
Pa ts C ut che., &amp; Pr ess ure
Plates 614 ~79 2935

19 73 Travalter camper 161! new
ltres spare very clean ns de &amp;
OUI $1 000 304 882 29 70

199 1 Dodge Day tona 2 5 5
Speed Ttl! Cruse AM FM Cas
se 1e A~r 46 000 Mtles Askmg
$5550 614 256 6340 or 256

BORN LOSER

9" de $500 304-675-4392

1990 Ponltac Grand Am PS PB
AC AM ! FM Stereo Casse ne 5

19 Leaahea
21 He hid an
Irish RoM
22 -go!
23 RaviN
~"'11!"--rir-!!l"""'l!!'"""' 24 New York 1 VIllage
25 Wayo of
!walking
26 Oliver a
requeat
27 By mouth
28 Actreao Gem
29 Twilled (the
body) In peln
33 Gaoh
35 Scottish
hillside
36 Soli drinks
37 Actress
Dunne

South

Pablo Pocasso claomed There are
paonters who trans!or!n the sun mto a
ye llow spot but there are others who
thanks to theor art and mtel hgence
transform a yellow spot onto the sun
How does that apply to bndge?
Today s deal was de sc rtbed by
Muhammed Aslam Shatkh m J ung the
largest corculat1on pubhcat10n on
Pakistan Thts 1s thought to be th e first
regular bndge column wntten on Urdu
North s three heart rebod wa s amb1
toous but I! his songleton ace had been
m one of h1s long su&lt;l s lhe bid would
have been acceptable However oppo
s1te a two heart ra ose South would have
made a two spade game try and four
hearts would have been reached
West led the club three SIX king two
Back came the spade Jack to dummy s
ace
The declarer Mazhar Alt Khan was
faced With four losers one heart one d1
amond and two clubs But callong on h1s
good club spots declarer ommedoately
led a low club from the dummy to hos
none After wonnong woth the JaCk. West
led another club but declarer played
low from the dummy and ruffed away
East s ace Now cam• a spade ruff on
the dummy and the club queen puttong
East on an awkward pos&lt;l!on Whether
East d&lt;scarded ruffed hogh or ruffed
low dec larer was home When Ea st
ruffed wtlh the heart queen South dos
carded hts d1amond loser and cross
ruffed to 10 tncks
There are players who waste tncks
not pa)1ng close enough atlenbon to
spot cards and there are others
thanks to the1r eyesight and mtelh
trans!onn spot cards 1nto tncks

PEANUTS

675 5984

16 tool Coachman 614 742 2277

Hindu mystics
Chocago airport
Road
Baby goat
Raw minerals
Socrates wile
Those holdong
oHice
8 Proper
9 Type of curve
10 Ponder
11 Mosl
suggestove

By Ph1lhp Alder

1988 ford Bronco XLT lull s ze
loaded auto 121 000 m les n ce
&amp; clean $7 000 304 773 5379

790

1
2
3
4
5
6
7

Don't waste
your assets

1982 Jeep J10 4 wheel dr vv
304 675 6531

760

DOWN

19 Borders
20 - and hearty
24 Horse
directives
25 ScoHed
26 Famous Iaione
29 Deer
30 The East
31 Most ready
32 Assesses
33 Mentton
34 Ardor
35 No lis and&amp;
or -

Openmglead •3

PAW II WHAR HAVE
YOU AN' TATER BEEN
ALL AFTERNOON

379 2720 AFTER 6 r M

740

realm

48 Claim as due
49 Securely fixed
50 Abstract being

A9 2

1993 S 10 Tahoe 5 Speed AC

59 000 Miles '1\skmg $3 300
614 256 6340 614 256 1539

speed s• 9oo 614 258 1489

EAST
aJ 10 9 o
¥Q I J
• QJ 8
.a.A K :&gt;

•J 3
1992 Ford F150 XLT 28 00 0
M les F berg lass To pper Exc el
lent Cond 1on $12 500 614 446

199 5 Kawasak 220 ltke New

446 8865

B g beau t lui AKC Chow pupp es
only one blue and one ba ck le
male left $200 614 992 7574

•Q B • 6

PU 1983 GMC PU B&amp;D A"lo

Male title
Value
Long ago
ActressMercourl
45 Avoided
47 Coin of lhe

SUHIX

•KI064
t K 10' 3

1978 Porche Resmrer 5 Dream
New Pa nr $1 750 614 256 6780

1988 Chry New Yorker $1 995
199 1 Cad B&amp;O Auto Sales 4
M les N 01 Hozler Hwy 160 614

Sato Tractor Brush Hog Grater
Blade Cul11vators 614 446 0325

Anyllme

Auto

$2 295 1989 Plv Accla m $1 995

Repa red New &amp; Reb~JIII In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 a&gt;o 537 9528

Movte Sale ~50 Vtdeo Movtes
Newer Releases Class1cs D s
ney &amp; Adults 614 367-0612

19 74 Mo n1e Carlo 305

$850 OBO 614 256 1368

614 24;-9171

JET

2426

Bpm

10 \ 3 95

•A

95 F150 10K $15 750 614 949

87 Serena tron1 end wrecked
$500 lrm call614 247 4793 alte

1987 Sunb rd SE Standard
Transm ss on 4 Cyltnder 80 000
M les Good T es Runs Good

AERATION MOTORS

LascH Turbo XT Computer W th
Keyboard Mon crome Mon !Of
Pnnter And Software 614 :ng

71 0 Autos lor Sale

"ns
Metal Roo I ng &amp; S d ng Geo Tex
t le Fabr c For Or veways &amp; Etc
Typar Fo Hou se Cover Or Tem
porary Storage Cove All zer
Fa rm Su pply 614 245 5193

NORTH

4484

STORAGE TANK S 3 000 Ga llon Shape $800 1983

late Model New Idea Corn P ck
er Good Cond11 on 614 3889747

Pt Pleasant Ell ency l bedroom
rurn shed an ublttte! patd parktng
depos 1 req~J r&amp;d 304 675 7783

capped EOH 304 675-e679

675 6574

1 800 537 Q528

N ce 2 or 3 bedroom apartment tn

One bedroom eff1c ency apan
ment 614 992 2178 or 614 992

Speed Oueen washer G bson e
lr gerato &amp; 14ft Johnboat 304

Concrete &amp; Plastic Seprtc Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH

2568

N ce 2 upsta1rs bedroom carpet
ed appl ances tncluded uUhl es
patd ac $375/mo Oepoan &amp; ref
erences r~.llfed 304-675 4302.

640

TRANSPORTATION

Antiques

New haven 1br lurntshed apt
deposll &amp; references 304 882

MddlepOII 614 992 5858

Reg stered Angu s bulls !rom 7 24
months old Rea so nab y pr ce d
upon nspecton 614 742 3033

1988 N1 ssa n Auto &amp; A.r 1988
Jee p PU 4x4 1988 Dodge Dako
ta 198 7 Dodge Dako a AuTo Atr
1988 Ford 4•4 PU 1987 C h e~J S
10 Bta zef 1983 Chev S 1o Blaz
er 198 7 Ford Bronco 11 198r
Ford Range 4~4 ge9 Chev S
10 PU 1990 M sub sh PU 1989
Ford lar at PU 1990 Ford Ranger

814

76 Vtne Street Gall polLs 614

2 Bedroom Up sta rs Apartment
$325/Mo Ul II es lncludl?d Refer
ences Requ red lnqu•re At 300
Founh Avenu e GalltpOI s 614
446 3437

2BA Apt AdJacent to A o Grande
Campus 614 245 5858 or 614

367 7760

1365

446 7398 1 BOO 499 3499

530

3711 EOH

Bull $500 Cow !Calf Pars 614

Hay

V RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158

2 Bedroom Apa tment Trash
Wa e Sewage Pa d $295 Mo +
Depos 1 614 446 2481

2bdrm apts Iota I electr c ap
pi ances turn shed laundry room
lac 1es close to school n 1own
Appl cat ons ava table at VI age
G een Apt s t149 or ca ll 614 992

Bull $750 18 Mon&lt;h 0 d Angus

Mob le names spaces w th Oh o
Rver access Ashton WV
$ 125 304 5 76 2683 be!ween
6pm 10pm

GOOD

Centenary Local on W lh Gas
Water EleCir c Sept c Idea For
Mobtle Harpe Or New Home
s1 1 sao 614 446 8038

RENTALS

Ea n $8 $ 15/Hr at Wo rk Ho me
D sco unts No lnvento y or Door
ooor lnd/Rep 1 800 742 4 736

614 371l--2720 AFTER 6 PM

Three bedroom home n country
Whites H 1 Ad Au !land one bath
n ground pool 614 992 5067

We Buy Farms And Acreage 20
Acres And larger No l m 1 614
775 9173

Sh rley

3 Bed oom House T a le For
Rent In R o Grande Rete ences
ReQu red S2751Mo + Oepos

446 6800

Georges Porlable Sawm 1 don 1 New t 996 1400 ncludes sk n
haul your logs to the m I JUS! cal
ng steps blocks one yea
304 675 1957
homeowne s nsu ance an d s x
momns FREE o1 rent Ony $t025
Housecleanng 614 441 0870
down and $20 7 17 per month Call
I 800 837 3238
Blown Insula! on
M chael Thacker &amp; Kev n Bled
soe B&amp;B Enterpr se blown nsu
la!lon Free est male on house
614 742 2503

992 4451

61 4 446 2003 614 446 409

Beaut fu 3 Year Old Log Home n
Ctla ola s lake l ake P ve eges
Mus t See Prce $16 9900 614

180 Wanted To Do

Rub &amp; Scrub Clean ng Se v ce
du st ng mopp ng w Mows and
more Complete serv ce or touch
ups J:lelerence s on request call
Te ry a 614 992 4232 or 61 4

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent
2 Bedroom wa n To wa 1 Carpet

614 992 20 15

Pos 1on Av a labte For Early In
e ven1 on Prel m nary Serv ces
Coord na1or Appl1can1s Should
Have A Ba chelor s And Creden
682 6667
als In Educa110n Spec1al Educa
on E a ly Ch ldhood Educat on
Nurs ng Soc al Work 0 Other 1983 l be ty t2x60 Refr gerator
Related F eld Ca I Gall a County Stove Deck And Sk rung Excel
Local Schoo s 614 446 7917 For tent Cond 1on $6 995 614 379
In o mat on App cat on Deadl ne 2286
October 18 1995
1986 14x70 Na shau ho use tra e
gas 2bed oom lar ge bath
RNs LPNs HHA
$1 3000 304675-1429
New concepts ol Care Inc a
Mar ena based Med care Cer11
1986 Hol ly Park 14172 2 Bed
!ted home health agency s seek
rooms Large Ba l h W D New
ng qual fled p&amp;fsonnellor home
Sk ung Excelent Cond to n Par
health ass gnments n the r new
1ally Furn shed 8y Appo ntm ent
oll ce n Athens Pomero~ and
614 367 0424
Nelsonv Ue We oller compeot!Ve
sa 1 g wage health lie d sabih
1988 2oedroom m nor remodeled
ry dental and pharmacy n
sell lor payolf 304 675 6978 be
sur&lt;~ nee pad malpract ce paid
lore 2pm
hOI days SICk leave bond ng un
lorms ltansportat on allowance
1994 Mot&gt;1le Home 14x60 2 Bed
and paid vacanon Caree mmded
rooms Total Elect c Unl ur
persons encouraged 10 apply
n shed CommOdore Never l ved
E 0 E Call1 800 201 1389 ask
In 614 388 9803
lo An ta or Cathy to arrange for
nterv f!'N

Pro less anal Tree Se v ce Com
plete T ee Care Bucke t Tr uck
Serv ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re
moval
Free Es t rna es
In
su ance 24 Hr Emefgenq Serv
ce Call And Savet No T ee Too
B g Or Too Small B dwell Onto
614 3889643 614 367 7010

Rodney 3 Bedroom s Gas Hea
Cen!ral A r $350 /Mo Oepos
Re erence Call At e 4 00 6 4
643 2916

can le serous nqutres please

245 5887

Square Oales $1 S2 Rou nd bales

Ca P• t &amp; V ny In Siock S5 00 Yd

1977 12x65 Federal 3b
675 1954 after Spm

Fodder Shocks $2 Each And ln
dan Corn F1\le For $1 00 614

da ry bus ness 27 head Holsten

$15ea 304 675 3960

7795

ExcelentConctton 1971121165
Elcon a Mob le Hom e W th 4JC6
Sl de Out AJC New G::~s Healer
Water Heater Carpet Washer
Dryer Inc luded 614 245 12 16
Aller 5 PM

11 0

N ce 3 bedroo m hOuse &amp; one
bedroom cottag e n P Peasant
6t4 992 5858

Body Sh op W th Fou Bay s
Fe nced lot Some Equ pment lo
cated Lowe Route 7 614 446
1058

REAL ESTATE

313

Yard Sale Thu r Fr

New ly enovated 2bed com
baseme nt ga age Rete ences &amp;
dePOS I No pets 304 675 5162

460 Space lor Rent

Due 10 hea th problems qutlltng

Refr gerators Stoves Washers
And ITryers All Reco nd 1 oned
And Gauran teed $100 And Up
W II Delver 614 669 644

Eas y Wok Excellent Pay I As
semb e Products At Home Call
To Free 1 BO O 467 5566 Ext

Haven Starts

If You A e loa~ ng Fo A Oual tr
Home La ge Hou se N ce 5 ze
Rooms Eat n K tch~ n Ref Ice &amp;
Wate In Doo Do uble Oven In
Stove N ce Cupooa os Laundr y
Ro on 0 R F R l R lots Of
Close s &amp; Storage Must See To
App ec ate 3 0 4 Bedrooms
Two Bathroom s 01 St ee t Pa k
ng Se ous lnqu es Pease
$600 Mo Depos &amp; Re fe e~'ces
Compet e y Insula ed C A 6 4
446 4559 No Pets

Rooms lor rent week or month
Slarung at $120tmo Gall•a Hotel
614 446 9580

327 9

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

oJy

3 Bedrooms 1 1 2 Ba hs CA. CH
All App l ances Furn shed New
Ca pe t No Pet s 1 Yea lease

1 Egg center
5 Zfnc10 Sweater
materiel
12 Distant planal
13 African land
14 Tlg~tena
15 Colt ~ lather
16 Bureau
18 Lan~uage

36
39
41
42

0488 Roger s Waterp ool ng Es
lablished 19 75

6754

1992 0
utlass C 91ra Melall c
Blue 4 Door AMIF M Stereo 1
Cass Crutse Auto lock $6 000
61" 985 4492leave Message

1993 Eagle VISIOn TSI 40 000
Mt les Loaded I $t 1 000 080
614 256-1618 614 256 1252
1993 Ford Mustang 4 ely auto
lots ol opllons dr ver s stde a r

bag 25 000 m11es vgc $8 000
614 9924 111 ewnngs
Pa k Avenue 1986 Rt.ms L1ke A
Top Good Condttton Ins de
Our 152 000 M las $1 600 614

379 2932

720 Trucks lor Sale
1971 Chevy short wheel base
350 auto lots o! new parts

$1 100 OBO 304 675 6755
1975 Chevrotel Truck AutomatiC
614 441 10Q!l
1976 Ford Turck F 700 Slandard
5 Speed 2 Wheel A•le Call
Even1ngs 614 379 2858 614

245 9165
1980 International Ton &amp; 112
Dump Truck Excellent Runn ng
Cond1t on 9 Ft Snow Plow &amp; Salt

Box 614 367-c612

C&amp;C General Hom e Man
tenence Pa nl n9 vtnyl s d ng,
carpentry doors w ndows oarhs
mobtle home repa r and mo e For
free es 11ma1e C&lt;JII Chel 614 992 1

6323

I

Ron s TV Se v1ce spec al z ng m
Zen lh atso se rv c flg most mile
brands House ca ll s 1 800 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

lNG 614 992 5041

820

Plumbing &amp;
He;~tlng

I

1983 Ford Ranger 2wd long bed
red good '!Wr~ uuck $1650 614
1986 Peterb•ll truck 425 Rebuilt

CAT eng 15 speed 40 rears aor
suspens1on etc no hood call
614 742 3129 eventngs or wee

kend!

1990 Chevy S1lverodo h1gh moles

Spec1al Fall Feeder Calf Sale Sal
Urday October 21sr At 1 PM
Cattl e Accepted Starttng Ar 4
PM Fnday Also Haul•ng Ava11

$5 700 614 992 4111 evemng•

able 614 592 2322 614 6&amp;6
3531

tomattc low m•les clean 6 14

lots of options good condtrton

1990 Dodgo Dakola V 8 au
985 4222
5:00pm

be&lt;ween

8 OOam

BERNICE
BEDE OSoL·

Root ng and guners comme cal
and res dent a m nor repa rs 35
years experaence B&amp;B ROOF

Any~me

8435453

ASTRO·GRAPH

Earls Home Ma ntenance v nyl
s d n9 oof n9 exte o pa n1 ng
power wa sh ng F ee Es ma tes
614 992 445

Salurclay Del 14 1995

840

Electncal and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
lAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A r Condtllon 1ng 11
You Don t Call Us We Bo1h lo se!
Free Esumates 1 BOO 287 8308

~~1~4~4~~-ro~o~~w~v~o=o2~9=4?~--- ·
Res1denttal or commerc ial Wifing
new serv1ce or repa15 Mas ter ll
censed electric an R1denour

ElecUJCal WVOOQ306 30 4 675
1786

On6 of your greatest assels &lt;n the year
ahead ts the fact that others woll trust and
confide on you What you learn could pro
vode beneftts and opportunnoes that com
peiHOIS Will be denoed
UBAA (Sept 23-0ct 23) It wont bQde
wall wHh your listeners today d you boast
about feats you have yet to accomplish
Let your deeds speak for themselves,
Trying lo patch up a broken romance?
The Astra Graph Matchmaker can help

you understand whal to do lo make lhe
relatoonsh&lt;p work Ma&lt; l $2 75 to
Matchmaker c/o thos newspaper P 0
Box 1758 Murray H&lt;ll Station New York
NY 10t50
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221 Refraon
from all types of pretenses today espe
c1ally pretendtng to be knowledgeable
about a 6UbJecl or Issue thai actually
eludes you
SAGinARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) You
moght encounter someone today who wtll
1udge you by whal you have not b)i what
you are Do not supplY thos &lt;nd&lt;v&lt;dual w1th
&lt;nformatlon to use agaonst you
CAPRICORN (Dec 22.Jan 19) \hought·
less behav&lt;or could Jarnosh your omage
today tf you re not careful It won t be the
btg th&lt;ngs with wh&lt;ch your companions
woll f~nd faun It &lt;S hkel~ 10 be the tr&lt;v&lt;al
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 10) ff you
don t have anythong noce to say about ooworkers today avood sayong anyth&lt;ng at
all Your cnt&lt;cisms will be repeated and
dlslorted
PISCES (Fib 20-MII'CII 20) Avpld giVIng
fHends advoce on ways to make money
today If the schemes 1all through these
pels might hold you acco..,lable and aslc

you lo pay for part of lhe&lt;r losl mvestment
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Prom&lt;ses woll
be easy 10 make loday but later lhey
could become dtfl&lt;cull lo keep Bear lh&lt;s
1n mtnd before makmg any senous com
m1tments
TAURUS (April 2o-May 20) lnslead ol
unexpectedly dropp&lt;ng 1n on a froend
today call torsi lo make certatn thai your
pal doe~n t have other 1nvolvemen1s
GEMINI (May 21 ·Juna 20) con11nue to
mon&lt;tor. your spend&lt;ng palterns today
Remember buyong lots of hltle good&lt;es
could cost as much as a Sizable purchase
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You can
manage bog problems w&lt;th relat•ve ease
today but monor ompos&lt;l!ons could pul
you m a t&lt;zzy Try to keep your sttuatton
•n proper perspecl&lt;ve
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) It could prove
UI1WIS&amp; today to let your onlu&lt;tton super
sede your lOgiC To be on the sate Side
deal only wrth the facts
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) SeH-doscophne
W111 prove a must on the management of
you1 resources loday Your budget could
get knocked lor a loop ~ you leal rt os nee
essary to gratify your malenal urges

I

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

-Society scrapbook-

Middleport Literary Club
members hear memoirs
of Barbara Bush
Faye Wallace reviewed "Barbara Bush A Memoir," a book
which was donated to the Middleport Library in memory of Emogene Fisher when the Middleport
Literary Club opened it first meeting in the IOlst year.
The meeting was held at the
home of Mrs . Eileen Buick with
Jeanette Thomas, president, welcoming the members.
The reviewer opened her presentation by showing a picture of
Mrs. Bush with the phra§e which is
said to characterize her, "What you
see is what you get."
Writing simply but effectively,
she began by describing her meeting with the young George Bush
when she was 16. Mrs. Wallace
detailed how the war bad affected
the couple's early relationship and
the way in which transitions bad
dominated their whole life because
of her husband's political appointments from Texas to Washington,
United Nations in New York, as
ambassador to China, as head of
the CIA, then vice president and
finally president.
During all the se, the reviewer
stated, the"Silver Fox" as George
lovingly called her, maintained a
disposition of "candor. compas·sion, and devotion" to her family.
What piques her most, Mrs.
Bush admits, was the tendency of
the media to pick up details and
exaggerate. if not actually to misrepresent them; that and the efforts

Friday, October 13, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

of some associates to make her
appear more "sophisticated" then
she wanted to be.
Some of the highlights of Mrs.
Bush's life, as Mrs. Wallace
recounted them, included her huge
contribution to literacy, her life in
China. her rappon with Raisa when
the Gorhachev's visited Washington and when they visited Russia,
and spending Thanksgiving with
the troops during Desert Storm.
Mrs. Bush described herself as a
very active campaigner, disappointed at her husband's defeat for the
presidency, happy to return to
Houston, and assured in her feelings that "there is life after politics," concluded Mrs. Wallaoe.
During the business meeting a
letter of resignation was read from
Mrs. Bernard Fultz who bas moved
to Columbus to be nearer her doctor . Program director, Martha
Hoover, shared a note and contribution from Sibley Slack. Betsy
Pars:ms sent small gifts for the
members.
Next meting will be held at 2
p.m., Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. David Bowen with Sister
Fidelis Bell to review "The Chamber" by John Grisham.

TAl em CLASSES
Classes in Tai Chi and beginning art will begin soon. The Tai
Chi classes under the di~ction of
Eric Chambers wiU be held on Oct.
16, 23, and 30 at 8 p.m. and the
beginning art classes taught by
Carol Tannehill will be held Oct.
21, 28, Nov. 4 and 11, from I to 3
p.m. at the Riverbend Arts Council.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Nancy Calc,
992-5428.

'BECKY CROCKER' OF THE YEAR- Lennie Haptonstall,
right, of Middleport was recently recognized by the Middleport
Post Office with the ''Betty Crocker of the Year'' award. Hapton·
stall bas been bringing the post office employees cookles, cakes and
other goodies for several years. She was presented the
by
postal employee Ernest Imboden of the Middleport Post Office.

•-rd

ELl'.CTIONS SET
The Meigs County Farm Servioe
Agency will conduct elections for
1995 using a new process.
There will not be a county convention, instead the election will be
done entirely by mail.
Eligible voters may nominate
themselves or someone else to

Hemlock Grange holds meeting
"Hodge Podge" was the theme
for the program presented by Helen
Quivey when Hemlock Grange
2049 met recently at the ball.
Readings included "Do You Just
Belong" by Margaret Haning; "I'm
Just a Steering Wheel" by Sara
Cullums; "The Wrong Size" by
George White; "The Farmer Feeds
Them All" by Rosalie Story;
"Confused" by Nancy Wells; "In
Between" By Linda Schmppner

and "In His Footsteps" by Ziba
Midkiff.
There was a skit by Muriel and
Wallace Bradford and George
White, and a contest on "Mane the
Cakes" with Ann Lambert and Eva
Robson as the winners.
'
Rosalie
Story,
master.
conducted the meeting which
opened with the song, "Bless Our
Lives" followed by the pledge to
the nag and singing of" America."

. Jocus on
the fragrance:
To boost spirit,
change mood

serve on the county FSA committee. Nomination petitions are available at the local FSA office. All
petitions must be returned t?. the
county offioe by Oct. 30. Additional information may be obtamed by
calling 992-6646.
EXPANDED LmRARY HOURS
: ne Itb•a;y ~:Coolville will
now he optn Satu~days from 9 am .
tG noon in addition to the regular
ho~se, Mor.d1ys and Wednesdays.
noon to 6 p.m.
Tammy Bragg bas been hired tc1
help at the library where reference
materials are available to belp area
sludents with reports and extra
credit work.
New books are reportedly arriving regularly, the pre-school story
hour is continuing on the first
Wednesday at 12:45 p.m., fax and
copy machines are available and
library staff is present to assist
patrons.

A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

FREAK PUMPKIN- Little Michelle Lynn Alley, two
year old daughter of Carl and
Stella Alley of Apple Grove,
claimed this two-for-one
pumpkin for her Halloween
jack·o·lanlern. The pumpklns
were grown on the Perry HUI farm.

Using Tri-SiimrMThe Naturally
Formulated Dietary Food
Supplement and Behavior
Modification Weight Loss
Program Available Without
Prescription At:

RIO GRANDE - A call for "reconci liation" by the
management and board of the Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative was met with resolutions for change including the removal of the·cu . re nt board of directorsby a contingent of coop members here Friday night.
"Since our meeting last year. ·many things concerning
the operation of the cooperati ve and the concerns of the
members came to the attention of the board of directors
;,hich were previously unknown," Gene Nance, BREC's
president of the board of directors. told an audience of
about 350 during the coop's annual members' meeting.
''For some time it see med that each week brought a new .

FRUTH PHARMACY
766 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport

Community
calendar

POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society, Saturday at
tO a.m. at the Meigs Museum. New
members are welcome.
POMEROY - Reruro Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, Saturday, 10
a.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library . Slide presentation on
quilts displayed at the National
Society of the DAR Museum, and
display of the chapter's quilt.
Members are also asked to take a
treasured quilt.
SUNDAY
POMEROY The Rev.
William Ward wiU be guest speaker Sunday at 10 :45 a.m. at the
Naomi Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
The public is invited.
:MIDDLEPORT - Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church, special singing by Delores Turley,
7:30p.m.
RAClNE - Homecoming Sunday at the Morning Star United
Methodist Church Sunday with a
carry-in dinner at 12:15 and a
singspiration at 1:30 p.m.
ALFRED- Autumn Bu~sey,
speaker on Bolivia, 7 p.m. Sunday
ar Alfred United Methodist Church.

HOTDOGS
&amp;PEPSI

NEW 14'x70's ON DISPLAY STARTING AT

$'13,995

NEW HOME PAYMENTS
Starting At
~!.~

$144

180 Mos.- 9.99% APR -10% Down

* PRICING ON ALL HOM

"Large

Selection of
14' and
16' Wide
Homes."

SATURDAY
DARWIN - Burlingham Modem Woodmen Halloween meeting
Saturday, 6:30p.m. at the Wood·
men ball. The camp will furnish
refreshments and desert. Bring
friends.

r
I

r
I

r
I

I

At the 515 Ellt Rt. 33
11etw11R Logan &amp; Nelsonville

385 4367 or 1·----7671

,lfr··

COMFORT ASSURED.

The Electric Heat
Pump With All
Our.Models

It heats, it cools, it saves.

come to the attention of the board."

Na nce smd audits are also hein~
uJnJucted by the Rural Utilities SerlllC and the inspector General's Of.
1..1ce. a branch of the Justice Depart·
k~ nt.

"Th?results of these audits have not
bt:en fully report ed to us and will not
be unti l all aspects of them have heen
invesli gated," he said .

"Reconciliation"

Truitt as the coop's general manager.
Nance further reported that several BREC managemen t
positions had been eliminated. including: Eddy Reece.
Operations Manager: Wayne King. Member Relations/
Industrial Development: and. Dewan VanCura. Executive Assistant to the General Manager.
"With all these changes also came the need for an
internal audit."' Nance sa id.

~ESc
sAL
·
I

**~ro**
•HridayTIII9ID**
*

*Sa!Ufday TIII9:00 * *
C10911 5IJ'Gi

.

'

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'

.

~s.

"Th·e questwn I pose 1on1ght is simply thi s: What do you
Continued o.n page A2

•

By TOM HUNTER •
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - Work is expected to begin soon on
the tirst phase of a two phase $142.800 project to improve
and expand boating facilities at the Middleport levee,
according to village grants coordinator Jean Trussell.
The project. when compl ete. will feature a tloating
dock . wider ramp access. and a new boater parking lot,
Trussell said. The project is being funded through the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Division of Waterways. and wi th
the toea! share of • Donors from across
fundin g from the the county helped save
village.countyand the project by raising
In Fehruary. do- nearly $6,500 in matching
nors from across monies required for state
the county helped funding.
save the project by _ ___;:::__ _ _ _ _ __
raising nearly $6.500 in matching monies required for
slate funding. The Meigs County Com missioners also
pledged an additional $10.000 to the $26,800 they had
originally com mitted to the project.
The vr llage ofM1ddleport will be able to reach its match
on the project. including iq-kmd labor performed by the
village. reducing project cosls greatl y. according to
Middleport Mayor Dewey Hunon.
Between eight and I 0 parking spaces for boaters will he
added between Walnut and Rutland streets on Front
Street. on property that the v1llage is acquiring. That
property. located along Front Street. includes an open lot,
a tra iler. a sma ll one-story home and a tw o-s tory home,
Trussell stated.
"We only have one lot left to acquire. and that lot is
currently vacan t. We hope to have the acquisition com·
pkle ID a co uple of weeks."' said Trussell .
Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton is currently accept·
in g fee proposals for demolition of the two homes purchased by the vrll age. according to Trussell.
Continued on page A3

tliU......!!!!Uihu~
:... . . . .

I&lt;

"Has thi' cooperative made mi swkes in the past''." he
asked rhetorically. "You bet it did. and I apoh&gt;gile for the
problems you have experienced. Have the members , truslees and employees learned from them1 Emphatically.

pnvate citi zens.

....

.. . I

'

In hi s report to the members. General Man&lt;.~gt!r Weaver. who assumed
the post on Aug. 7. struck a th eme of "reconciliation." ·

Work expected
to begin soon
on Middleport
dock project

Jones demonstrates
hla craft by bending sll·
ver Into a hoop earring.
, At bottom rltiJ!,.Eugene

' WASHINGTON lAP)- It wasonceanunthinkablenotion - aDemocratic
pcesident signing on to Social Security cuts. But White House advisers are
~eeping the option open as a possible way to break the budget logjam with the
Republican-run Congress.
...
- The Clinton administration is closely watching the public 's reaction to
~ports that key Democrats and Republicans want to adjust the Consumer Price
Index downward.
.
The action would
slice cost-of-living inSocial Security Increases
creases for 43 million
• ' The P1J8I cost-&lt;lf.Nng ineraaaM lhlt Socia ~ benllftdariel havt
• rtCtiYid trice the ty1t1m w~alinQd to ltte c.on.um.r Price tndlx In 1975.
Americans. most of
..1.... r
. them elderly, anger·
- ~.Jim""'
·~
ing a potent political
. '
force that s upported
President Clinton in
the 1992 election.
White House bud~
i
lll l .
..
' get hawks. particu~
larly chief of staff
Leon Panetta. are iry·
ing to push politics
aside and telling re·
Qftllil.
porters that many
•
..,... •·.,._ economists feel the
c.i'I overstates consumer inflation and needs adjustment.
•These aides argue that the money raised by lowering the CPI may be needed.
to bridge the gap between GOP and Democratic budget philosophies, sort of
a high-stakes hole card that Clinton can play at the negotiation's eleventh hour.
· "TheCPI will very likely figure in the equation,'· said a senior White House
official. speaking on condition of anonymity. The money. aides said, could
protect education, environment and other social programs from dire GOP cuts.
.; But Clinton political aides devoted to the re-election effort worry that
tampering with Social Security could spell troullie in 1996, particularly in
Florida- a leading retirement state whose electoral votes the president hopes
[O take back from Republicans in 1996.

,.,,

ZJu/

~
ZJ

Buekeye Rural mem·
bers Kinsley Meyer,
right, and Wayne King,
a former. BREC ·em·
ployee, offered a set of
of eight prop·o se(l
amendments to·ttre co..
op's Code. ot. flijlula·
tlons~
·..
·

activities the 25th Annual
Evans
such as sheep
right, attracted large
JUI Kr!Sty, Reynoldiburg. enjoys a
rlclli. While
·
·
. '·
below, Pewter David

White House views SociaiSecurity
as means to break budget logjam

IF

RIVERDALE
HOMES
on

.'

Clinton•s hole card:

--·- -

TRADE·IIS WELCOME. We'll take mobile homes,
cars, trucks, boats, jet skis, motorcycles or
anything that doesn't eat for this promotion!
HOMEBUYERS PROGRAM
Bring your cash, checkbook, piggy bank or
NEW HOMES STARTING AT
trade-in title! This is the sale you have been
$750.00 TOTAL DOWN
waiting for!! There will never be a better time to
180 MIII1HS ·11.25'/. $163.73 PER IUIIII
buy!!! ·
IICIIIIES: APPUAIICES Alii DEUYERY TO YUI LOT.

1&lt; • '·

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. -One
of West Virginia's chief economic
developers praised the state divi sion
of environmental protection Friday
for helping bring new jobs to the stale
and defended the proposed Apple
Grove Pulp and Paper Mill. according
to a story Saturday in the Charleston
Gazette.
During a panel discussion al the
West Virginia Conference on the En·
vironment, Rolland Phillips, senior
manager for busi ness retention and
expansion with the West Virginia
Development Office. called t:te DEP
"an integral pan of the economic development team ."
·Phillipsalsodefended the proposed
mill against questions from Robin
Godfrey. a Charles attorney and activist. Phillips said he does not be·
lieve the project is a hazardous one,
and added the mill should be wel comed in West Virginia.
Godfrey said he feels the Capterton
administration is spending too much
time on a controversial project that is
not environmentally sound ..
As part of the two-day environ mentalconference. Phillips served on
a panel that focused on ways to im·
prove deci sions on where to locate
industrial projects.
On Thursday. DEP Director Eli
McCoy told those attending that enviwnmentalists need to become more
involved in the early stages of projects.
Phillips stated the Development Office relies on its meetings with DEP
:tJtd companies seeking to locate instate to judge where projects will be
e_!tvironmentally acceptable.

FREE

HOMES

SPECTACULAR

-~ "

'

At left,
·
.

PRICE FALL-A-THON

FRIDAY
POMEROY
Marriage
Enrichment Seminar, Friday and
Saturday, First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy Pike. Additional
information may be obtained by
calling 992-6 779.

•'

· ' While

IVERDALE

The board rreside nt Said an independent audiling tlrm. Reynolds &amp;
Cumpanv. was employed to do "a n
in·dcplh se arch of matters which had

Developer
lauds DEP, Down on the farm ••.
Saturday'a·ralns clampened
at
Bob
defends
Farm·Featlvai,'Frlday actlvmcl.,
~~hearing,
c:rOwc1a.
top.
hn
pulp mill

- -~~ .

The Community Calendar is
published as a rre'e service to
non-prorit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
nents. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.

problem or at least new information regarding old problems," l~ance said.
Controversy has surrounded BREC operat1ons since
earl y this year, when member frustrations erupted over the
implementation of a new bi lling procedure. While that
procedure was dropped. a cloud of questions over BREC's
finances led to the dismissal of then-general manage r
Walter V. Truitt Jr.
And. a group ·- Buckeye Rural Mell'bers for Change emerged and began an effort to unsea t the board.
During his report to the members Friday. Nance outlined the process of hiring James J. Weaver to replace

Vol. 30, No. 36

Seeking change ...

Contingent of members seeks change

a'

FREE

Mtddleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- October 15, 1995

'BREC board calls
for 'reconciliation'

OetoiJer I2th, I3th til I4th
FOR

on Page

tmts -

DON'T MISS TIIB D
RESISTER

Rain, drizzle
overnight

•

•

~CD

I

•81

Annuai ·GS&amp; WCD meeting . Page 01

Featured on f»gll C-1.

LOSE UPTO
10LBS
IN 3 DAYS!

The women's activity chairman,
Helen Quivey, gave a report. Pl:ms
were announced for a potluck
dinner in November-. The h1l! will
be cleaned in November hy
Wallaoe Bradford.
Reported ill were Leota Smith,
Vada Hazelton, Etta Cull urns. and
Bemioe Hawk.
Donuts and cider were served
following the meeting.

High school f~otball results

,I

.• _.... ........,. ,.,.,.,.8I;UII,.........

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Siders free on bond after
arrest on drug charges

Report: ESI chief failed
to disclose company link

POINT PLEASANT. V.Va. - A
Gallipolis Ferry man is free on $15,000
bond after being arrested in Putnam County
Thursday. according to officials.
Worthy G. Siders. Jr. , SO. of Gallipolis
Ferry. was taken into custody afterhealleg·
edly sold 32 pain pills to an undercover
officer in Putnam County. He was arraigned
Thursday by Putnam Magistrate June Sovine
on charges of possession and possession
with intent to deliver.
Siders spent the night in the Southcemral
Regional Jail in lieu of $10,000 bond.
On Friday. the Mason County Sheriffs Department filed an arrest
warrant for Siders on the charge of possession with intent to deliver.
Siders was arraigned before Putnam Magistrate Jack Gribbon.
Bond was set at $5,000 on the Mason County charge.
Millie Bonecutter posted the $15,000 bond for Siders Friday
afternoon.
Siders was arrested by members of the midwestern Drug and
Violent Crime Task Force and the metro Drug Unit ,
Authorities obtained a search warrant for Siders" home . While
executing the warrant, they found marijuana plants. pills and a
shopping bag full of pill bottles.

COOLVILLE, Ohio I AP)- A report by
the Ohio attorney general's office accuses
the president of Environmental Services
Incorporated of failin g to disclose his former
ties to a co mpany that may have been linked
to .organized crime .
WTAP-TV in Parke.rsburg. W.Va .. said
Friday the report alleges Don Wallace failed
to disclose that he was once president of a
New England company he later left. Wal l ~ce
sa id he left the company because its owner
was putting investors' money into personal
accounts.

Wallace is now president of ESI. a firm
that wants to put a medical waste incinerator near this southeastern Ohio village.
The Ohio Environmental Protecti on
Agency has denied the firm's application
for a permit to build the incinerator. The
company is working to appeal that ruling.
WT AP also said the report alleges ESI is
already in violation of Ohio code for failing
to maintain a · ·registered agent.', and for

not filing corporate franchise taxes.

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections- 192 Pages

Business
Calendars
Clas.if!eds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
C3&amp;4
03-7
Insert
A4
A3
A6
Bl-8
Cl
A2

Columns
Jack Anderson
Bob HoeRich
Ann Landers
Jim Sands
c '"s,Ohlo v. 1tc, Publt.hinaco.

L..-...;.;~,;;;;;;.;;;;;;;,;,;;:;:;;:;;::.;::.,_J

Municipal court takes new stand on Child Safety Restraint law violations
GAL !POLIS - The Gallipolis Municipal Court will take a new stand
on fines regarding violators of the Child Safety Restraint Law, effective
November I. 1995.
P. first time violation will result .in a fine of $50, plus court costs. The
second offense will result a mandatory court appearance .
The Child Safety Restrain! Law requires a child who is less than four years
o.f age and weighs less than 40 pounds to be restrained in a properly used
child safety seat that meets federal molar vehicle standards. The law also

'

applies to handicapped and medically fragile children.
The law applies to all drivers (including relatives, friends and neighbors,
and day care center and kindergarten employees) who must have a child
properly restrained in a child safety seat when transporting tbem.
Out-of-state residents transporting children and ci ted for a child restraint
violation would have to prove they were in accordaryce with their home state· s
law. Additionally. the court will no longer waive fines for a child safety seat
violation if the person proves purchase of a child safety seat.

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