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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classmates meet
The Ageless Classmates held
their monthly meeting and picnic
dinn.e r on July II at the Mason
Park. Prayer was given by Sy lvia
Sayre. Gifts were exchanged for
secret pals, birthdays and annivcr·
saTICS.

Afterward, a short business
meeting was held by Peggy Ed.
wards. The group agreed to meet

August 8 at 6 p.m. at the Chinese
Restaurant in Ripley.
Those attending lhe picnic were
Shirley Tucker, Geraldine Roush,
Carol Workman , Carol Roush,
Connie Smith, Sylvia Sayre, Peggy
Edwards, Jenny Wiggins, Hazel
Smith, Mary Jewell, Pauy Allensworth and guests, Ja' Nae
Smith and Michelle Croy.

MADD presents program
for Women's Fellowship

\\ ood
FUN SIIOW AT LIBRARY- Mark Wood, the veteran entertainer who performed "Marko the Magic Clown " for 20 years, will
be doing a show at the Meigs County Library, Pomeroy, Saturday,
at ! p.m. IIi' new show is called the Mark Wood Fun Show and
features comedy, magic, juggling, music, rope tricks,and audience
par ticipation.

Act1v1tics of the local chapter of
Mothers Against Drunk Driving
were detailed at a recent meeting of
the Meigs County Women 's Fellow ship he ld at th e Pomeroy
Church of Chrisl
The MADD re pre se ntative s
talked about their role in trying to
reduce drunk driving, the programs
they carry out during prom season,
and how they spend fund s which
arc contributed to the organization.
Announced at the meting was a
com roast to be held at the Brad-

bury Church on Aug . 14 at which
time a video concerning Catherine
Russell' s work at the Mexico Children' s Home will be shown. Also
announced was a hymn sing to be
held at the Rutland Church on July

Senate refuses to kill space station
lly ROBERT NAYLOR JR.

As.,ociated Pres.' Writer
WASH INGTON (AP) - The
Senate today spared the space station even though opponents asserted that Russ ian participation may
incrca&gt;e the program's cost rather
than st~vc money .

The vote was 64 -36 against an
amendment by Sen. Dale Bumpers,
D·Ark ., to delete funding for the
multi-billion dollar project.

Se n. Phil Gramm, R-Texas,
whose state would be one of the
biggest beneficiaries, plcatlcd for
se nat ors to defeat the Bumpers
amendment " by such overwhelm ing numbers that we don't have this
dcha te next year."
The vo te came as the Senate
debated a bill that includes $14.4
billion in funding for the National
Aeronautics and Space Adrninistrn-

lion next year.
Opponents of the space station
said the money would be beuer
spent on other scientific research,
soctal programs or reducing the
federal budget deficit. But Gramm
said the "last thing we need to be
doing is killing the space station to
fund another social program." He
said the money would not go to
deficit reduction.

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Store Hours: 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday,
8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday
Prien good through Wtdneldly, Augult 10, 1994.

209 Upper River Road
446·3807

sunn y. lli ghs In the upper 70s.

1 Section, 10

Page~ 35 • ., ..
A Multimedia Inc. N-apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 5, 1994

Council member Donald Shaffer said culvert installation along State
Route 124 and Worchcster Street has been completed except for a catch
basm on Wore hester. Shaffer also reponed that the cost for a cul vert to be
placed from Second Street past the. pool to the creek IS approximately
$9,000. Council agree to go ahead wtth the proJCCl.
. The mayor a~ked counCil to mspecl the rental property owned by the
village to sec what IS needed to get1t rC&lt;~dy to rent, anti to beg m accepting
rental appheauons.
.
.
The mayor al so noted that he wants the fire departmen t to hcg 1n act1on
on tcanng down or bummg condemned property.
.
.
.
Council member Eber Pickens Jr., on behalf of h1 s fath er, r~rc ChJCf
Eber Pickens Sr., asked for counctlto cons1der lctung the fire department
purchase dlvmg equipment at a cost of S2,400, and the cascade system at
a cost of $2,500.
.
.
.
However, due to lack of fmancc s m the fire department , the village
agreed only to purchase the cascade system and tabled the d1ving equip-

·Racine will seek renewal
levy for fire protection
Racine Village Council agreed
. to place a 0.7-miU renewal levy for

: fire protection on the November
ballot at its regular meeting Monday.
Meigs County Prosecutor John
Lentes wrote to the council suggesting that the district sewer board
seck other ways to collect delinquent accounts than shutting off
their water.
Council also requested another
estimate on replacing the gutter and
downspout on the squad building.
When the job is completed, the
. contractor should not damage the
old guuer since it can be used at the
water building.
Council would like another estimate for the fire haU roof replacemenL One contractor has suggested
removing the roofing, painting the
steel where needed, replacing the
hardboard sheetinj!. placing a layer
of felt and then mstalling rubber
sheeting on the roof. The roof
would then be covered with silver
paint to reflect heat.
In other action, council:
• discussed one of the two cemetery certificates of deposit at Home
National Bank that has been

renewed for two years. Discussion
on cemetery finances ensued, with
RACO's Kathryn Hart and Jane
Cleland participating. No solution
was agreed on.
• received $898 from the state
for snow removal reimbursement
during the January blizzard.
• learned the Meigs County
Commissioners will open sidewalk
bids about Aug. 12.
• signed an casement or variance
for the usc of the sidewalk on Pearl
Street at the branch library
entrance.
• discussed a drainage problem
on Third Street, since a properly
owner put gravel over the area and
drains were hampered afterward.
• tabled a request by Mayor Jeff
Thornton to go to several schools
in September.
• will consider a request by
Thornton IJJ increase the marshal to
a full-time position. Previously, the
position was made part-time
because of general fund problems.
• spent $225 IJJ replace the metal
door, frame and paint on the
kitchen annex.
• heard from Councilman Dale
Hart, who said RACO intends to

use the annex and kitchen for its
next meeting. The fire department
will use the annex to make Labor
Day ice cream and the fire department will get preference on usc of
the annex.
• will buy a 1991 Ford police
cruiser at the state surplus vehicle
office in Columbus to replace the
worn 1987 Chevrolet cruiser.
• will buy an electric typewriter
for the cJerk to type and copy the
minutes of the meeting.
• reported Jean Trussell, administrator of the Housing Rehabilitation Grant, will post notices about
one month before accepting applications for house rehabilitations.
,, announced the next meeting
will be Aug. IS.
Attending the meeting were
councilmen Roben Beegle, Henry
Bentz, Hart, Scott Hill, Henry
Lyons and Larry Wolfe; Thornton;
Clerk Karen Lyons; Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer; Fire Chief
John Holman; Marshal Bill
Gilmore; and Allen Wilson, Crdlon
Wolfe, David Ncigler, Brian Holman, Wayne Lyons, Kathryn Han
and Jane Cleland.

Inmon was particularly rankled
when Voinovich this week claimed
never to have had confidence in the
Willard businessman's management ability.
"He was telling me all along,
'Billy you're doing a great job.'
Now he's going back and saying,
'You never had the ability,' "
Inmon said at a news conference at
the Statehouse lawn bench that has
become his campaign central.
Inmon, a fund-raiser for
Voinovich in the 1990 campaign,
was hired during the governor's
first term IJJ run the fair.
He was fired after the 1992
exposition because of a series of
management conflicts and a budget
deficit.
Inmon said Thursday he was
blamed for trying to implement

changes the governor's office
wanted in fair operations.
"When it didn't turn out right,
folks, and we rufOed some feathers, you know who got to be the
goat? Billy Inmon," he said.
Inmon released a packet of
laudatory letters Voinovich wrote
before and after the fair job.
In a letter dated Dec. 21, 1990,
then Gov.-clect Voinovich said he
had no question Inmon was tough
enough to handle either the departments of administrntive services or
development.
"I am very impressed with you,
your enthusiasm, loyally, and honesty and know that if you bcaune a
member of our team, you would
serve with distinction and make me
very proud," the Icucr said.

ment for later considemtion.
Bnan Diehl of Syracuse agreed to paint the exterior and the roof of the
muni cipal building at a cost of $800, which includes the material needed
for the job. Council agreed IJJ the work if Diehl 1s covered by workmen's
compensation or other insumncc.
Two of the lifeguards met with co uncil regarding salary increases.
Council den1ed the ra1sc, but d1d inform them that if the pool breaks even
or makes money, they will give bonscs at the end of the season.
Shaffer is to make a list of where street signs arc needed. The sign for
Dusky Alley has hcen ordered.
The mayor's report showed receipts for July of $776.
Aticnding were Papc and council members Shaffer, Pickens, Dennis
Wolfe , Bill Roush , Larry Lavender and Kathryn Crow: Janice Lawson.
clerk-treasurer: Ryan Hall , police offi cer; and Tom Lowery, pool manag·
cr.

Downed line disrupts traffic

IIIII III
IIIIIIII

'\

~ P?wer l.ine knocked down by a railing tree caus.d no injuries but did interupt traffic on
Mam Street m Pomeroy around 8 a.m_ today. Here, Ohio Power Co. workers prepare to restore
power to the 158 households affected by the downed power line, while Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rou~hl assists with traffic.

Panel raps ex-Clinton counsel
Voinovich comments draw fire for Whitewater probe actions

1993 FORD
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1994 MERCURY
SABLE

5

199

Tonight, clearing and cooler .
Low In 50s. Su turd&lt;iy, partly

en tine
By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
For the second time in as many months, the poor quality of cable
reception within the village of Syracuse was aired Thursday night at the
regular meeung of Syracuse Village Council.
Mayor James Pape infonned council that he has contacted the cable
· company on several occasions about the poor serv ice. He said he was
informed at. the time of his last contact that fiber optic cable is being put
m place wh1ch, according IJJ cable officials, will improve reception.
However, Syracuse has not as yet been switched to the new system.
Pape also noted that the 20 res1dents at the new apartment complex
. have no cable scrvtce. He srud he wa~ told by the company that service
. will .be available there within a week, and attributed the delay IJJ an engi· neenng problem.
The mayor asked for support from the viilage in aiding Middleport in
: opening its pool.

1992 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

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Syracuse Council mulls cable complaints

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A report was given on aprons
made by the group for the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly women.
It was noted that more help is need
for the fair booth.
Ruth Underwood led in group
singing and Janet Venoy had the
offeratory prayer. Devotions were
by Bonnie Arnold of Zion and were
entitled " Be a Good Eg~"· She
talked about different kinds of
eggs, and noted that we should all
be sunny side up, brightening up
the world around us for God.
Pomeroy women had a special
presentation, and Linda Bates conducted the church roll call for the
20 members auending. Kathryn
Johnson had Bible questions.
Charldine Alkire had the closing
prayer and refreshments were
served.

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovich on Billy Inmon,
1990: "I am very impressed with
you." Voinovich on Inmon, 1994:
"I was surprised that he was
appointed."
Inmon, the ex-Ohio State Fair
manager running as an independent
against Voinovich in the Nov. 8
election, marked the fourth day of a
hunger strike Thursday with an
altemptto make Voinovich eat his
words.
Inmon is staging a fast outside
the Statehouse in an attempt to
force Voinovich IJJ debate him.
·voinovich has dismissed Inmon
as a disgruntled former employee,
and will debate only the Democratic candidate, state Sen. Rob Burch
of Dover.

Shell workers
extinguish fire
at Belpre plant
BELPRE (AP) - Equipment
failure is believed to have
caused a fire at Shell Chemical
Co .. a little more than two
months after an explosion at the
Ohio River plant killed three
people.
No one was injured when a
· mechanical seal failed and
: caused the fire Tuesday, said
· Arnie Ditmar, plant manager.
He said employees discovered the fire immediately and
put it out in 20 minutes. Dam age was contained to an elcctri.cal motor in an area where Shell
produces a rubber substance.
The plant resumed some
operations June 24 following a
May 27 explosion and fll'e that
killed three employees and
forced the evacuation of residents in Ohio and West Virginia
The explosion was believed
to have been caused by an
improper chemical mixture.
· The plant makes rubber for
automotive parts,
wire,
footwear, adhesives and cable
coverings.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Senators jolted a plodding Whitewater
hearing, accusing ex-presidential
counsel Bernard Nussbaum of pressuring President Clinton's friend to
stay in charge of a probe tied to the
first family.
"You crossed the line" by persuadmg Roger C. Altman to remain
on the case, Senate Banking Commit tee Chainnan Donald W. Riegle
Jr . thundered in a hearing that
ended after I :30 a.m . EDT today.
"You crossed it in a case that
involved the president."
The House Whitewater hearing
will be hard-pressed IJJ capture the
same drama when its inquiry
resumes today, with federal regulators on the witness stand. House
Republicans will try to get the reg-

ulators to refute the Clinton admi"istration's claims that nobody interfered with the probe of an S&amp;L
related to President Clinton's former land venture.
The Senate attack was led by the
committee's top Democrat, rather
than by Republicans - who have
been accusing the administration of
pressuring Altman to stay on to
protect the president and Mrs. Clinton in the investigation.
Telling Nussbaum that Altman
had all but decided to disqualify
himself when the counsel questioned the decision at a Feb. 2
White House meeting, Riegle, DMich. , said: "When you inject
yourself in that process it injects
pressure whether you intend it or
-110l There was an interference with

Inmate's attitude irks
slain guard's parents
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - The
inmate accused of leading the
Lucasville riot and murdering
guard Robert Vallandingham in last
year's 11 -day riot exchanged looks
with Vallandingham's mother at
his arraignment.
His grin was returned with an
icy glare.
Carlos Sanders was taken to his
arraignment Thursday at the Scioto
County Courthouse under heavy
guard. He shook hands with his
lawyers, then turned and smiled at
Homer and Wanda Vallandingham.
Sanders, wearing a Muslim
prayer cap and clutching prayer
beads, waived the reading of the
charges against him and entered a
plea of innocent to ~vated murder in Vallandingham s death.
Sanders, 31, of Cuyahoga County, also pleaded innocent to charges
of kidnapping Vallandingham and
aggravated murder in the death of
an inmate.
He is the fJJ'Sl of five inmates to
be arraigned on aJWIIvated murder
charges in Vallandingham's death,
and is scheduled to stand trial Oct.

•

25 in Columbus.
Vallandingham, 40, and nine
inmates died during the April 1993
riot at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, about 90 miles
south of Columbus.
Mrs. Vallandingham, who sat
through three arraignments Thursday, cringed or sighed at every
mention of her son's name. She
called it, "a preUy shaky day."
She said the hardest part was
speaking to Sanders· defense
lawyer.
Charles Boss approached the
Vallandinghams after the arraignment IJJ offer his condolences.
"I'm so sorry," Boss, of
Maumee, said. "This is a terrible
situation, and I'm sorry you have to
go through this."
Homer Vallandingham did not
respond, but his wife told Boss she
was upset by Sanders' behavior
and because Sanders' indictments
were not read.
"You come into court. and yO\IJ'
son's (alleged) murderer is sitting
there and you don't even get to
hear the charges read against him,"

that rccusal decision.
"That was one time when you
should have bit your tongue if you
had to bite it in half," Riegle said.
Altman, the deputy Treasury
secretary. has become the scapegoat of the Senate hearings, mainly
because he gave the banking committee misleading testimony last
Feb. 24 that he said was unintentional.
The heat became so intense after
the Feb. 24 hearing, on White
House-Treasury Department contacts on Whitewater, that Altman
did step down afterward as acting
head of the Resolution Trust Corp.
-: the agency investigating the
fatled Madtson Guaranty Savings
and Loan and its tics to Whitewater.

Police dog's
slayer given
jail sentence

AT ARRAIGNMENT- Carlos Sanders, right, and bis attorney Richard Kerger appeared in tbe Sdolo County Courthouse in
Portsmouth Thursday to enter Sanders' innocent plea to charges
be killed prison guard Robert Vallandingham during the 1993 riot
at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility. (AP)
she said. "Then he pleads not
guilty and just sits up there smirking."
Kenneth Law, 29, of Mahoning
County, and James Were, 37, of

'

Lucas County, pleaded innocent to
aggravated murder and kidnapping
charges involvinl! Vallandingham.
Were also den1ed a charge of
aggravated murder in the death of
and inmate.

PORTSMOUTJqAP) - A
man convicted of shooting Speck
the police dog been sentenced to
two years in prison for vandalism
in the death of the animal.
Bruce Turner, 19, of Lucasville
also was sentenced to seven to J5
years for aggravated robbery and
three years for using a gun in a
theft shortly before the dog's death.
The sentences were ordered to run
concurrently.
· Turner was convicted Thursday
in the killing of the 3-year-old
malinois, which is a shorthaired
version of a Belgium sheepdog.
Spock was shot in the head on Feb.
15 after chasing two robbery suspects.
"This had been a very hard time
for me,·· said Deputy Alan L.
~ewts, who was Spock's handler.
I had a lo~ of personal feelings
wrapped up tn thts. I thmk the jury
had no other choice. The evidence
clearly showed he was guilty."
Chris Fraley, 19, also of
Lucasville, .Pleaded guilty May 19
to commtttmg aggravated robbery
With a fircann.

'

/

�•
Friday, August 5 1 1994

;Commentary

--Area deaths-- Gallia fair schedule

Accu·Weathcr• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Lowell M. Guthrie
Lowell Matthew Guthrie, 22,
Guysville, died Thursday morning
at St Joseph's Hospital in Parkers·
burg, W.Va., from injuries sus·
rained in a motorcycle accident.
Bam March 16, 1972 in Park·
ersb urg, son of Lowell E. and
Marge Hefner Guthrie of
Guysville, he was employed by the
Steve Russell Construction Co. of
Coolville. In addition, he was 1990
gmduate of Fedeml Hocking High
School and a member of the
Coolville Lions Club.
In addition to his parents, he is
survived by ~b roth e r . Steven

MICH

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE lNTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WIN&lt;;ETT
Publish&lt;r
MAH&lt;;ARI::T LEffEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The AssoCi ated Pre ss . Inl and Dail y Pn.: &lt;.,&lt;, Associati on and
the American Newspaper Pu bhsher Assoct atlon

LETTERS OF OPIN ION are welcome . They &gt;hould be less than 300
words long . AJI letters are subject to editing and mus t he stgned with name.
address an~ te lephone numOer No un signed kw.:rs wtl l he pu hli shed . Leuers
should be m good ta"- te . addre ssing t'\s ues. not perso nallttes

The game plan
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Corre!;pondent
WASHINGTON - This wasn't tn the game plan, this deadline drive
to overhaul health care during the last I00 days before the voters choose a
new Congress. Not on President Clinwn's signature proposal, the one he
planned to put on congressional desks m his first 100 days.
It took nine months mstead, and now, aflcr nine more, Clinton 's own
bill, dmftcd under his wife's supervision, is gone, supplanted by differing
House and Senale proposals.
"The plan I originally proposed has been changed and much of it for
the better," Clinton sat d Wed nesday ntghL "The proposals before
Congress are less bureaucrauc. They're more fl ex ible.'·
They're also more limited, particularly th e btil drawn up for Sen.
George Mi«:hcll, the majority leader, aimed at getting 95 percent of the
American people covered by health insurance by the year 2000.- " This is
the best I can do," Mi«:hell srud.
And Clinton said it's good enough for him . He brandished a velD pen
at Congres.~ early this year, saying he would reject a health care bill pro·
viding less than universal coverage. He said the Mitchell bill meets his
objective, "and I would sign it. "
Mi«:hell didn't claim that hi s bill was for universal coverage, calling it
a milestone on the way. House Democrats have a version of their own, to
get w universal coverage in 1999, a year later than the original Clinton
bill. The president wouldn't choose between them, saying he wouldn't try
to be a legislator. " My job is ID try to keep the American people's eye on
the ball and to try to keep the members of Congress working together, "
he sa1d.
That might have been more producti ve sooner. The health care task
force Hillary Rodham Clinton ran was superimposed on a drafting process
that was gomg to wmd up at the Capitol anyhow .
In a way .. the tortuou.s path on health care reform fits the pattern of the
Cltnton prcstdency so far, as docs Mttcheli' s observation on his embattled
proposal:
"No one ever said it would be easy."
Clinton has had a succession of mini -campaigns and strategies in the
quest for health care reform . In one way, it worked. "I think the president
deserves enormous credit for having put health care reform at the top of
the national agenda" said House Speaker Thomas S. Foley. " It wouldn't
have happened without him.'' Even Republicans who oppose the Democratic version of reform agree on that point
The prcs1dent sa1d there is now a consensus in the country for universal health care. The _idea is widely supported in public opinion polls, as
were other Chnton rums . But those same polls showed majorities opposed
when the qucsuon was yes or no on the Clinton bilL
Clinton began his prime time news conference Wednesday by boasting
0f the econom1c uptum, _the new)obs, lower deficits, trade expansion and
other ac~1cvemcnts of hts admm1strat1on . At the White House, they don't
thmk he s gctung proper credit for what's going right, and wasn\ even
before the current congressional hearings on Whitewater became a rrou·
bling distraction .
The president's job approval ratings have been slumping; asked why,
he S31d he wasn ' t the best judge. "Maybe I'm just not as good a talker as
you folks thought I was when I gal elected president," he said. "Maybe
there's so much going on it's hard for anything specific to get through .
Mayben's partly a function of the times in which we live."
But there's no maybe about the problem, heading into the campaign
ror the Nov. 8 congressional elections. when health care will be an issue
Democrats try w cut the losses that arc almost inevitable for the president's party.
There was a touch of the campaign to come as Clinton said Republicans ought w be answering the health care questions now, because they
l!FI! the ones balking at bipartisan action.
· Clinton said the House and Senate should pass the health care bill they
can best explam back home as a solution to a national problem.
"We listened 10 the American people, ali of us dul," Clinton said in
concedmg two weeks ago that his original plan was a goner.
But what people want done depends on who is describing it. "I don't
think the American people will tOlerate inordinale delay and irresponsible
legislative gymnastics," Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said when
Republicans said the Senate should take its time on health care.
. " No bill is better than a bad bill," said Sen. Bob Dole, the GOP leader. "I think that's where the American people arc."

as

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Berry's World
I'LL TAKE
•

'1~\VIAL\ZA\\0~ OF

..•

"t\T\- SOCIAL 6EI-\P\\Jr;;l \Of( ON lP-.LK
~ SHO'NS A~D
S\\COMS fOR

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l"E:N, PL.EASE
\

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C 11J94 Oy NE.A. Inc

•
IToledo !?ff' J

Money falls from a star to Idaho candidate
Actor
WASHINGTON Dustm Hoffman may be the "Rain
Man," but Sen . Bill Bradley , DN.J. , recently starred a' the "Rammaker. "
Hoffman, who won an Academy
Award for his part in " Rain Man."
is playin g a cam eo rol e tn thi s
year 's Idaho governor 's race. Hoffman recentl y donated 550 ,000 to
Democrat Larry Echohawk, who 's
trying to become the nation's first
American Ind1an governor.
But Hoffman was just following
a sc ript produced by Bradley.
Bmd lcy spokesman Eric Hauser
acknowledged that tn a phone conver sat ion Bradley "s uggested"
th at Hoffman make the contribu·
tion to Echohawlc " They talk on a
fairly regular basis," Hauser told
us. " During the course of a conversation this came up.··
Hauser says it was routine contact be tween long-ttme friends and
inSISts that Bradley never broached
a dollar ftgure with Hoffman. But
one sou rce familiar with
Ec hohawk's fund-raising told us
tha t Bradley's conversa tion with
Ho ffm an was pan of a " resc ue
mission" to redeem a dismal
Washin~ton fund-raiser .

Bralley joined sev eral Demo cratic luminaries - including Pres id ent Clinton and Sen. Daniel
Inouye , D-Hawaii - at the April

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
28 fund -rai ser for Ec hohawk,
which was umed with a major tnb·
al l eader ~· conference at the White
House . Tribe s have shown tepid
support for Ec hohawk because he's
pro-life and is against casino-sty le
gammg on Indian rcsc rvauons.
One knowledgeable source said
Ino uye, who is chairman of th e
Sena te Commi tt ee on Indi an
Affairs . has had trouble inducing
tribes to contribule to Echohawk 's
campa ign - and somethin g was
required to keep th e Washington
event from " embarrassing" Democratic leaders. On May 7, a person al note from Hoffman arrived at
Ec hohawk' s headquarters wtth a
$50,000 ch&lt;Xk - roughly 10 perce nt of Ec hohawk 's e ntire war
chest.

Hau se r denie s any connection
between the di sappointing fund·
ratser and the Hoffman chec k. But
he failed to ex pla in why Bradley
would be shakin g the Hollywood
money tree for an obscure Idaho
Democrat.
Bradley has refrained from fund
ratstng for mos t Democrats because
"he doesn't involve himself in pri·
mary battles," said Hau ser , who
seemed surpn sed when informed
lhat Echohawk was in the midst of
a primary battle at the time of the
Hoffman co ntribu tion.
Hoffman, who did not return our
phone cal ls, has previously said he
was tmpressed with Echohawk 's
credential s. Hi s contribution was
legal because Idaho has no limit on
indi vidua l contribution s to state
races. But th e Brad ley -Hoffman
con nectio n drama ti zes why
Congress can 't come to a conscn·
sus on campaign finance reform :
Thanks to th eir star appeal, senators like Bradley don't need politi cal action committees to the same
extent as their House counterparts.
Senators can count on six -figure
fund -rai sers in Hollywood, which
os why th ey ca n tolerate PAC
restrictions.

~s
'{ovC'lN
Se.e . eacH TiMe
a FRaGMewroF

ALaN GReeN:&gt;PaN
HiT$ .-·

Few have benefited more from
Hollywood largess than Bradley .
An analy sis by th e Los Angeles
Times found that Bradley raised
$500,090 from contri butors in Los
Angeles (primari ly Hollywood) in
the I990 election cycle, the highest
among o ut -of-s tate politic ian s.
Meanwhi le, Bradley is stumping
for public financing of campaigns
to " bring real change to Washington and clean up the political pro·

Will Big Government ever go away?
One of the complaints fore ver
bemg heard m conserv~~ve co~~Ies
os that Ronald Reagan failed to
turn B1g Go~ernment around .
Sometim es II s satd cnltcall~ .
sfmetlmes sad!!· but the potnt os
a ways the_same. Look at h~w huge
and tntrustve governm~nt tS today,
af~r Reagan
and 11 s sun grow·
mg.
.
l In '{;e Ju~eFissuc of Comten;ryhle t"v 1 rum, one. 0 . our
~~sts s~oun~o~c;~ve j?ur-

ex~erpted ~r~m ~is forth~~m~~

book. "Dead Right" He correctly
identifies the fundamental problem:
the deterioration of the old Arnerican virtues (prudence thrift hard
work self discipline ~tc) in 'a libera! ~elfare state: ' ·
"Why be thrifty any longer
when your old age and health care
are provided for, no matter how
profligate you may be in your
youth? Why be prudent when the
state insures your bank deposits,
replaces your noodcd-out house
buys all the wheat you can ow?
Why be diligent when haifrour
earnings arc taken from you and
given to the idle?"
·

Foreseeing a backlash and the
collapse of the welfare stale under
the ever-growing burden of its
bcnefacuons, Frum counsels con -

.u'//l'am A. Rusher
rr'1

1

servative intellectuals (he knows
better than to tell politicians) to
''(discard) all consideration of
what the public at the moment
wants to hear, and {try) to prepare
its mind to respond intelligently to
the crisis ahead .... Copyrightonservativc intellectuals will have to
care less about the immediate eiec·
tara! prospects of the Republican
party and more about telling
unpalatable truths - in the hope of
making those truths prevail to the
point of becoming the conventional
political wisdom of the future."
In a nutshell, Frum believes that
lhc public still "rather likes" the
liberal social programs, but that if
they arc told the grim truth about
them they will, over time, turn
against Big Government. With all
due respect, I disagree on both
scores. .
.
I beheve that the Amencan pub-

lie understands full well the baieful seems to me, it is the job of conserconsequences of liberal wclfarism. vative intellectuals to 1ell them.
I think mo st voters would vote,
But be (I will use the word once
today, to jettison the whole she- more) practicaL We must and can
bang and return, as a nation, to the find ways to cut welfare without
old Amcncan v1rtues if they could.
precipitating mass starvation. But
But there's the rub. As a practi· Big Government (compared to
cal matter llts 1mposs1blc to run McKinley, or even FOR) is here to
modem Amcnca the way It was run stay. Even an administration formly
(say) a century ago.
grounded in the old American valIn Chronicles, the lively journal ucs will find, as Mr. Reagan found
of the "paleoconservatives," one that there arc many things govern:
can read every month long dithyrd· ment wday must do: in the world at
mbs to the America of the 1890s, large, and in defense of law and
or even to remote regions of the order here at home.
.
West wday. As exercoses m nostaJ.
But the welfare state ts doomed.
g1a these essays are commendable, Many volers,natUr.Jiiy want to postbut as practical prescriptions for pone the harsh medicine as long as
the nation's future they are about as they can, but the moment of crisis
useful as liver pills.
1s fast approaching. When it
America today is a nation of arnves, conservatives will be surupwards of a quarter of a billion pnsed to doscover how many
people of wtdely varymg ethmc Amer!~ns are woth ~m.
.
and cultural backgrounds, stagger·
Wt!ham Rusher ts a syndtcat·
mg under the burde~ of a govern- ed_ wrtter r~r.Newspaper Entermem whose leaders only depend- pnse A~talton.
able ompulse IS to pole more straws
(For mrormation on how to
on the camel's back. The public is co?'municat! electronically with
not suffenng from a reluctance to thts colu":lmst a~d others,, conchange thmgs,but from a bew1I. tact Amertea Onhne by calltng !dered and total 1gnorance of how to 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
get from here to there And that it

Creative real estate
NEW YORK - When interest
rates rise just about everything in
the housing market slows: The
number of new permits issued,
housin.~ starts, sales. employment
and maybe even prices.
It is a very old and often sad
story, and an almost totally predictable one. In every penod of
high or rising interest rates since
World War II the housing markets
have been among the ftrSt to show
the impact.
It could be happening again.
The Commerce Department
repons that new-home sales fell in
June to an annual rate of 591,000
units, the lowest in two years, from
a May figure of 688,000. Housing
starts were down too. So were sales
of existing homes.
That said, interest rates aren't
everything. Home prices arc affected by dozens of specific factors,
some within the control of those
who live in them, those who seek
to sell them and those who still
wantiD buy.
You can't do much about the
fust of these - for example, a permanent body of water within 300
feet. Either it's there or it isn't. But
you can change some factors- for
example, adding a third bathroom
- and probably raise the price
17.5 percenL
The National Association of
Home Builders makes that estimate
from its own and Census Bureau

data, as applied to a 1,900 squarefoot house with three bedrooms,
two baths, three other rooms, a
basement and a garage.

John Cunniff
Unlike the construction of a
body of water, which would add
27.8 percent to the price of a house
if it were possible to so cbange the
landscape, an added bath is generally feas1bie and capable of raising
the market value 17.5 percent
Add a fireplace, says the
NAHD, and you might expect to
add 10.8 percent to the market
value, or around $13,500 if you use
as a base the median new -home
price of about $125,000. (Caution:
National medians seldom apply
specifically.)
Other price-enhancing additions
may be less likely to pay for themselves.
A 500-square-foot expansion of
fl90r space might add 9.4 percent
to the price, a room addition other
than bath or bedroom might add
5.9 percent and a fourth bedroom
could push up the selling price 5.2

percent.
In making any of these alterations, of course, the overall
appearance has to improve. An
amateur carpentry or plumbing job
or an aw~ward extension may
reveal not JUSt Itself but alen a critical eye to Olhcr defects.

IMa nsfield Ino I•

~
• IColumbus 176' I

~,~,~~~~~-·
Pt
Showers T-s!orms Rain

Flurries

Snow

Cloudy

Clearing skies to bring
cooler temps to state
cast with a slight chance of showers. Decreasing cloudiness by aflernoon west. Highs from the upper
60s northeast to the lower 70s
south.
Tonight...Partly cloudy north·
east. .. Mostly clear elsewhere. Very
cool with ncar rocord lows from the
mid 40s to around 50.
Saturday ... Mostly sunny. Highs
in the 70s.
Extended rorecast:
Sunday ... Fair. Lows from the
upper 40s to lower 50s. Highs 80 to
85.
1\londay ...Fair. Lows 55 to 65.
Highs in the 80s.
Tuesday ...Fair. Lows in the mid
60s. Highs in the mid to upper 80s.

By The Associated Press
Tonight will bring clearing skies
across Ohio. This will help drop
lows to ncar record levels with
m id-40s to ncar 50 expected
statewide. Quiet conditions will the
continue into the weekend. Saturday should be sunny, except near
Lake Eric, where clouds will persist. Highs will climb into the
lower and mid· 70s.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 103 in 1918. The
record low 46 in 1951.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:42.
Sunrise Saturday will be at 6:34
a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Today ... Considcrable cloudiness

Grand jury venire posted
'•

POMEROY
Lisa K. Hooten, Harold F. Jef.
fers, Aldena M. Welsh, Keith Alan
Romine, Donald H. Weaver,
Michelle Louise Withrow, Bryan
K. Swann, Fred L. Young, Melinda
Dee Riggs, Louise Harrison, LeeS.
Powell and Roger W. Lance.
RACINE
Ronny L. Roush, Kenneth Stan·
ley Brown Jr. and Don Kenneth
Grucscr.
REEDSVILLE
Susan Pauline Brewer and Joan
L. Brown.
SHADE
Tanya Sue Huffman.

The following people were
selected as potential jurors for the
Septcm ber term of the Meigs
County Grand Jury:
CHESTER
Russell Holsinger.
COOLVILLE
John H. Mitchell.
LONGBOTIOM
Dorsel Eugene Larkins, Owen
Alvin Miller and Earl Ritchie.
MIDDLEPORT
Walter E. Green Sr. and Carl B.
Hcil.

Public Notice
STATEMENTS
Combln•d Financial Report
ol the Board ol Education
lor th• Flocal Year Ended
June 30, 1884
Source Deocrlptlon
Governmental Fundo
RectJipte: Revenue Recelpte
Texoe .................. 794,653.57
Tultlon ....................... 446.32
Eornlnge on lnvt~tmenta ...

Announcements
Church to have homecoming
The Faith Fellowship Crusade
for Christ Church will be holding
its homecoming Saturday begin·
ning at II a.m. Attending will be
singers including the United
Gospel Singers, Believers Fellowship Singers, and others. Potluck
refreshments. PasiDr Franklin Dick·
ens invites the public.

.............................. 30,209.84

Food Servlctl Salea.... o.oo
Elllracurrlcular Actlvltlea
.............................. 49,512.30

Clau Materlala &amp; Feea .......
.........•.............•......12,489.85
Mtac. Recelpta ......... 188.07

Smorgasbord planned
A smorgasbord will be held
Sunday at the Lottridge Communi·
ty Center. Adults, $5.50 and chi!·
dren, $2.50. The CeniCr is located
on Athens County Road 53.

Granloln Aid
State Sourcea.2,446,334.94
Federal Sourcea .................

' ............................ 195,472.85

Total
Rocelpte
(Operating) .......3,529,307.54
Dlaburaemento:
Expenditure Dlaburaemonta
lnotructlon ..... 1,989,654.51
Supporting Services......... ..
.........................1,418,565.12

Stocks

Community Servlcea ..........

................................ 5,425.24

EJC!racurricular Actlvltee ...

Am Ele Power ·-·······---·-·.30 718
Akm .-------·-.. ·-··--·- -61 112
Ashland OU ---·-··-·-···-··.36 5116
AT&amp;T ·----·--···-..·-··.54 114
Bank On•·-··--·······-·--·-·.32 3/4
Bob Evans--................-... -.20 liZ
Champion lnd·-·-·············-·.22 114
Charming Shop ....................8 3/4
City Holcllng ...............................JZ
Fedenl M011u1 .......................26 114
Goodyear TileR ..................... .33 518
K·mart----,. ... _ ............... 163/8
Lands End ----·······..···--·18 114
Limited lnc·-···-·..·····--·18 7/8
Multimedia Inc. ·-·-···-·...283/4
Point Bancorp ·-··..-·-···-···--17
Rellan&lt;t Electric ...... ..... -----20
RobbiDS &amp; Myers·-···-----··20
Sboney's Inc. ·---·-···--·143/4
Star Bank.-----·------..39 58
Wendy IDt'L ---------·15 1/8
WortbiDgton lnd .. - ·-· ·······-·--21
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of

............................ 203,203.00
Debt Servlct1 ......26,930.70

By The Associated Press
. Today is Friday, Aug. 5, the 217th day of 1994. There are 148 days left
tn the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On August 5: 1963. the United States, Britain and the Soviet Union
stgned a treaty m Moscow banning nuclear tests in the abnosphere in
space and underwater. (The treaty took effect the following October) '
Oil thiS date;
.
In 1861, the ~ederal govennnnent levied an income tax for the fust time.
. In 1864, dtJ!lng the Ctvtl War, Umon Admiral David G. F
t is
S31d to,have gtven hos famous order, ."Damn the torpedoes, f~peed
ahead! as he led his fleetiDward Mobile Bay, Ala.
In 1_884, the cornerstone for the Statue of Liberty was laid on Bedloc's
Island m New York Harbor.
In 1914, the forst electric traffic lights were installed in Cleveland
Ohoo.
•
•

Cloudy

C 1Q9.4 Accu· Weather, Inc

Facllttlea Acqulaltlon ..........

Today in history

Sunny

Via Associatt~d Press GraphicsNet

.............................. 85,48t.12

values. Abandoned buildin~s cut ·
prices 30.7 percent, trash tn the
neighborbood 14.5 percent and bad
roads nearby, 6.5 percent
The NAHB's list stops there,
but obviously there's more to it
than that Other studies, some by
the NAHD, show that the quality of
schools; houses of worship, and the
level of taxes have sizeable impacts
on market prices. ,
While all factors aren't within
the control of individuals, some
are, so it's worth remembering:
Rising interest rates needn't ruin
prices and plans. There's a lot you
can do to offset them.
John Cunniff is an Associated
Press business analyst.

Ice

Employee• Solarlea &amp;
Wllgea .............................. o.oo
Employeeo Retirement
(ConUnued oo Pag~ 7)_

The D8ily Sentinel
ttJSPS 213-961)
Publiahod every allernooo, Monday throuah
friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley PublilhiDI CompuyiMultimedia
Int., Pomeroy, Ohio 4n69, Ptl. 992·2 156.
Second clall pollaae paid II: F't:S!DMly, Ob.lo.

Member: The A&amp;&amp;ociated Preas, and the Ohio
Newapaper Alloeillion, National Advertisina
Repre.tentllive, Braablm Ne'Wiptpet Salea,
733 Third A¥enue, New York, New York
10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addte&amp;&amp; cbanse&amp; to The
Dally Sentinel, Ill Coutt St., PomcrGy, Ohio

4S169.

GaWpolls.

St!IISCRIPTION RATES
IJ Canler • Motor Raule

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

PRICE

Dllty......................................... --35 CeaO.
Sut.criben not deliriDI to J'IY tile Cltfier may
remit illdvuoe direct to The Daily Seltillel
on a tlwo, ail or 12 monlh bllia. Qoe«Ut will be
pvca anicr OI&lt;Cil week.
No tubiUiptJou by mail permitted ln ft.8l
wtxre home Cll'rier IC'I\'ic.c iJ availlble.
.
MoiiS.lNa .......

-Melpt-IJ
t 3 Weetu. .............................................. .$11.14
26 Weeb ................................................ .$43.16
.S2 Weeb ... _................................ - ......... .S84.76
o.utd• Melp C.O.IJ

1!S2:·:·.:::::·.:::::::·:::::::::·::::::..::
:::m::z
w-.........................................$88.40
I

204 Condor St.
·

. The following Meig s Co unt y
couzens were recenily selected as
potential petit jurors for the
September term of the Meigs
County Court of Common Picas:
ALBANY
Christina Ann Prcast, Mark
Alien Abens, Rodney Aldrcn How·
ery, George W. Stout, Kenneth
John Cocn, Albert Eugene Hess,
Jason Eric Jordan , Christopher
Charles Casto, Lucanis Mark
Brooks . John Russell Stout and
Thomas Eugene Fauber.
CHESHIRE
Everett D. Sec, Kirk D. Chevalier and William T. Gillilan.
COOLVILLE
Doris S. Avis, Sheila J. Spencer,
Floyd T. Av1s and Deborah Marie
Brooks.
DEXTER
Mildred Jeffers and Claren ce
McDonald.
LANGSVILLE
Dorothy Irene Woodard, Mar·
garet F. Rhodes, Kimberly Sue
Bailey and Michael Wayne Dailey.
LONGBOTIOM
Sharon L. Louks, Charles T .
Fick, Larry E. Baker, Paul Leonard
Whaley, Melissa Ann Collins,
Christopher K. Morris , Diana S.
Taylor and Monid L. Good.
MIDDLEPORT
Roy R. McCarly Jr., Thomas
Glen Cooper, Sherry Ann Kinnan,
Howard Ellsworth Minard , Orsie
Marie Norris, Norbert P. Ncutzling,
Ted Riley Jr., Claire W. Might,
Karen Elaine Wills, Kitty Sue
Darst, Alice A. Kitchen, Carla M.
DeWeese, Jan D. Andrew and Riva
N. Beach.
POMEROY
Dudley W. Meadows, Gerald T.
Wildermuth. Charles Eugene Carsoli Jr ., Evelyn Carol Strauss,
Shirley G. Day, Susan R. Jenkins,
Evelyn Clark, James E. Large, Jeffrey Alien DeLong, Tressic I. Hendricks, Mae Young, William R.
Haptonstall, Den Roger Coppick,
Elizabeth A. Cutler, Martha
Ohlinger Vennari, Joseph L. Wilson, Robert W. Workman, Bobby
Lee Young,
Elizabeth Mae Davis, Roben C.
Roush, Rosetta Lee Redovian,
Howard Lewis English, Virginia
Delle Michael, Earie L. Wood,
Edward Ramsburg, Lilah Irene

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reponed seven calls for assistance
between Thursday and Friday
mornings. Units responding includ·
ed:
MIDDLEPORT
6:41 p.m. Thursday, High
Street, Paul Clark, treated at the
scene:
8:34 p.m. Thursday, High
Street, Paul Clark, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
POMEROY
5:59 p.m. Thursday, frre department and ~uads, U.S. 33, two-car
accident, Losa Carpenter, Holzer
Medical Center: Larry Taylor and
Rhonda Koehler, treated at the
scene.
RACINE
7:50p.m Thursday, YeUowbush
Road, Thelma Woodland resi ·
dence, lightning strike.
TUPPERS PLAINS

Hospital news
VETERAN~ MEMORIAL
Thursday a~missions - Neil
Graves, Pome~oy: Mina Smith,
Clifton, W.Va. \
Thursday discharges - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. S - Clarence
Walton, William Morris, Wilma
Elliott
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Shawn
Carroll, son, Gallipolis.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

Pomeroy, OH.

GPEED

---··

SPRING liD
SUMMER HOURS

AND

MON.-FRI. &amp;:OG-5:00
SAT. I:OG-12:00

NOQTH

~, a.:SV:..,
SYSTIM

441-1011

HIIIHY, AI'&lt;;I'ST
7: :W p .m .
H:OO p .m .
111:110 I' ·"' ·

:&gt;. I'I'H

l'ttlllltg Trat·k

OSTPA Sanl'tiont·d Tn..wlt~r l'ull

.\'lil iu Staj!,t'
\1airl S tagt•

Tiny \\',·Jiman
Ti ll } Wt · llnwn

SAlTIIIHY, A('(;! 'ST h . I'J'H- .. l'outh fun lluy "
IO :IJO a m .

Kiddit· Cauw:-.

10:00 a .m .
10 :00 a .m .
l :llllp .rn .

Pon y Pull

l:OOp . m .
l .:w p .m.
2:00p .m .

2&lt;W p .m.
:HIO p .m .

Front. Lot
Tr·at·k

!'ullin~

Farm Burt·au Talt·nt
Pull

~how

To B,• Annuunn·d

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Fnxkcr, Frederick Werry, Denni s
Dwight Boothe, Harold C. Russell,
Bryan S. Shank, Robert E. Barton,
Charles Lee Kiser, Helen A. RightThe following people were
house, Charles E. Pauley, James A.
selected
as potential jurors for the
Mo ller Sr. and Anna K. Wiles.
Meigs
Coun
ty County Court term
PORTLAND
for
Seplember:
Lynda J. Adkins. Vincent Dale
Sandra L. Bowen, Tup pers
Gray, Nonna Jean Evans. Naomi E.
Plains;
Raymond L. Cant er,
Wil son and Kenneth Howard Rizer
Racine;
Wtlliam
Leon Thornton .
Jr.
Ray Powell,
Langsville;
Bradley
RACINE
Reedsville;
Heather
Lynn
Ce ravoLynn Lee Mallory , John A.
lo,
Albany;
Sheryl
Lynn
Rous h,
Doucet Jr., Denise Lynn Coffman
S.
Web
er,
Syrac
use;
Brenda
Joyce E. Manuel, Harry B:
Pomeroy; Selby Ann Manley. Mid Greathouse , Roberta Irene Jeffers. dleport; Ben Henry Ewing,
Robert Sammy Shain, William R. Pomeroy; Gordon Proffitt, Pon Kinkenbinder, Clifton Wade Con - lantl ; Gail R. St. Clair, Middleport;
nolly , Robin Lynn Savage, Pauline l'crrcll Vannoy, Tuppers Plain s;
Marie Hill, Be ulah Anherson
Shirl ey Ann Smith, Pomeroy;
Karyn D. Davis. Charles Wiliia~ Charles Wesley Moore, Reedsville;
Bush, Stanl ey William Holter
John Roger Reynolds, MiddlcpOtt;
Linda K. Mon tgomery, Linda K:
Harol d Ed mond Cars on, Middle·
Teaford,
pan; VI rginia Ann Fisher, Racine;
Charles W. Cornell Jr., Krista
Mary C. Van Meier, Rutland; Leslie
M. Smith, Letha L. Proffitt, Sharon Elaine Fisher, Racine; Sarah E.
Loui se Wick ers ham, Kevin 1. Spencer, Long Bottom; Benjamin
White, Cec il Maynard Sr. and H. Skinner, Pomeroy; Virginia D.
Richard J. Gilbride.
Nelson, Dexter; Darlene I. Buck·
REEDSVILLE
Icy, Pomeroy; Leta Lynn Goodwin ,
Jerry M. St. Clair, Le la Ann Pomeroy;
Cremean s, Mary Ann Kibbl e,
Alice L. Mill s, Middl epo rt ;
Michael Todd Gibbs, Teresa Anne
Mary Ann Dillard, Pomeroy;
West, Homer F. Lipps, Rick Em t · Angela I. Brickles, Shade; Brenda
Barton. Ethel M. Mundry , Patricia L. Blackston, Pom e roy; Greg
M. Hetzer and Ja me s Donald Bryan Carpenter. Langsville;
En yon .
Melody Rose Ran1sburg, Pomeroy;
RUTLAND
Courtney C. Midkiff, Pomeroy;
Paul A. Musser, Gary David Donna M. Davidson, Middleport;
Hamon , Barbara A Young, Mary John Robert Buckner, Pomeroy;
Katherine Morris, Phyiiis S. Pierce
Kathryn Anne Hoffman, Pomeroy ;
Virginia Irene Kennedy, Donald F: Joan Heinzman, Shade; Philip F.
Morman , Rena R. Long stre th , Burgess, Syracuse; Meli ssa Gail
Bcrtma Mozingo, Donald R.
Jones, Racine; Paul Card, Racine;
Spencer, Sharon A. Thomas and
Wilbur W. Warner, Tuppers Plains:
Jacklyn B. Searls.
William J. Eblin, Rutland; Michael
SHADE
Alan Parker. Pomeroy : Dixie I.
Floyd L. Bricklcs.
McDaniel, Rutland; Billy Clyde
SYRACUSE
Hill Sr., Racine; Brian C. Jacobs,
Ernest E. Imboden, Randi Lee
Rutland; Elizabeth Esther Walsh,
Hill, Mi Iton E. Roush, J o Ellen
Albany; Janinc Gheen , Long BotRoush, Charles F. Chancey, Paula
tom; Harold Lansing Adams, Long
R. Mullen, Barbara Ann Chapman
Bottom; Lucy Faye Donahue,
and Cathy Jean Moore.
Racme;
TUPPERS PLAINS
Mildred L. Shumway, Coolville;
Mary Jane Talbott, Nettie Leona
Zelia N. Laudcrmilt, Portland; Osic
Young, Kenneth Alien Bolt, Crys·
1\1. Follrod, Pomeroy ; Lewis R.
tal Renee Sayre, Otis W. James and
Hudson, Racine ; Roger Eugene
Carolyn Ann Bissell.
Leifheit, Pomeroy; Russell E.
VINTON
Strahler, Pomeroy; Michael
Eva Rcgenc Durn em and Rick
William Mayer, Pomeroy; Brinley
A. Metheney.
F. Seth, Pomeroy; Betty Jane Man icy, Middleport; Patrecia Anne
Arnold, Middleport; Nancy Louise
10:27 a.m. Thursday, State Johnson, Reedsville ; Rita Jane
!\lees, Portland; Richard M.
Route 124, Kim French, Veterans
Memorial Hospital pending transfer to HMC at I:30 p.m.;
7:51 p.m. Thursday, four-wheel·
er accident, Carl Sinclair, VMH;
I :44 a.m. Friday, Blake Road ,
Chester Gorrell, St. Joseph's Hos·
pita!.

Bldf!; .

1Ji .~trict

County court juror list set

EMS units log seven runs

FRI., SAT., SUN.

g=~=~.: :.:.:::::::::::::::;::::::::_::::::::::ji .
SINGLE COPY

Michael Guthrie of the home; a sister and brother-in-law, Theresa and
Charles Kinnaird Jr. of Gallipolis;
paternal grandparents, George and
Rachel Guthro e of Guysville;
maternal grandparents, Marjorie
and Erwin Cecil Hefner Jr. of Belpre; a nephew and two aunts.
Also survivi ng is a fiance,
Rebecca Eskcy of Amcsviiic.
Services wiii be Sunday at 2:30
p.m . in th e White Funeral Home
Coolville, with burial following i~
Coolvi lle Cemetery . Friends may
call at the funeral home tonight
from 6-9 and Saturday from noon-9
p.m ., with family hours sct for 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Saturday .

Potential petit juror
list posted by court

W.VA.

· ·

What a house lacks has a similar
impacl on market value.
The lack of a second bathroom
lowers the price 18.5 percent and
the absence of a garage 14.6 percent. If there is no central air condi·
tioning the price is likely to be low·
ered by 12.8 percent. No basement
deducts 3. I percent
Clearly, any attempt to add a
basement isn't likely to be costeffective, b~t adding a garage, bath
or central aor m1ght be, depending
upon factors specific to the house
and to costs in the geographical
area.
Three other factors, all requiring
commumty rather than individual
effort, were found to lower market

~

lND.

Youngstown

l:CSS. ''

In i 990, Bradley spent nearly 12
times more than hi s opponent ($9.5
m iili on to $ROI ,000), but bare! y
eked out victory. Bradley spent
nearly $I 3 per vote in that race
against now -Governor Chr is tine
Todd Whitman, after refusing to
debate Whitman on ca mp aign
finance rcfonn or limit spending on
th e ra ce to $3 milli on. Wh e n
Bradley introduced his rcfonn bill
last year, he said that voters want
" a guarantee that politicians are
work ing for all of us and not just
fo r privale interests, the few inter·
ests that can give money for campaigns."
Hau ser told us that Bradley's
co mm ents were " in reference to
the federal system." not the system
of any particular state. The implica'tion is instructive: Innueneing stale
elections is somehow more acceptable than innucncing federal elec·
Lions.
"Several of us sort of fell off
our chairs when we heard (Hoffman) was doing this ," Echohawk
campaign manager Stan Kress told
our associate Ed Henry _ "There
was even talk amongst ourselves
that it might be improper to take it
But it was made clear to us it was a
gift of tloe heart with absoiulely no
stnngs attached . And since it's
legal, it'd be foolish not to take it."
"Everyone thought it was real
neat that someone so famous gave
to an Idaho candidate," says Pat
Herman, who handles campaign
finance reports in the Idaho Secretary of State 's office. "Even
though there's no limit on contributions , it 's mre for anyone to give
that much money. Even the largest
potato manufacturer will give no
more than $20,000 to $30,000."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Page-3

Saturday, Aug. 6

OHIO Weather
Page--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, August 5, 1994

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Yo un g, Pomeroy ; Joyce Diane'
Foreman. Portland; Martha L;
Ktng, Pomeroy; Edward F. Wigal;
Tuppers Plams; Larry David Barr,
Langsville : Sabra Jean Ash,
Pomeroy: Douglas G. Raines, Long
Botto m; Mary Mora Kautz,
Pomeroy; Amy Beth Haning, Dcx·
ter; Rachel Eli zabe th Well
Pomeroy; Rod ney E. Frecker:
Pomeroy ; Rosanna R. Ca rso n,
Long Bottom:
Cindy Lou Thomas, Long Bot·
tom; Jan Ann Knapp, Langsville;
Donald Ray Hobbs, Dex ter; Caryl
W. Tyler, De xter: Marguerite
Lu cJi e Ca lvin , Vi nt on; Derek
Mauhcw Miller, Rutland; Anthony
Gai l Bradford, Racine; Ronald D.
Roberts, Portland ; Lawrence E.
Klein, Pomeroy; Robert F. Moore,
Shade; Brenda Sue Hill. Syracuse;
Alvoc Buck Partlow . Po meroy ;
Steve Paul Coffman, Racine; Kath·
lccn A. Manicke, Reedsville· Jacob
Eric Heck , Pomeroy; Wayne
Lyons, Racmc; Harold E. Thomas,
Mtddleport ; Alan K . Partlow
Pomeroy; Kim be rly Kaye Noel '
Middleport ; Hober t F. Cr ump:
Pomeroy; Doyle w . Knapp,
Langsv1llc; Marvm Cordell Walke r, Tuppers Plains; Harry R.
Thomas, Pomeroy; Barbara Lynn
Chapman , Racine;
Goldie R. Heiney, Racine;
Arthur E. Hood , Middleport; Julie
Ann Baily, Pomeroy; Tanya Sue
Holter, Racine; Joseph lies Struble,
Pomeroy; Brenda G. Warth
Pomeroy; Brian Eric Durham, Rut:
land; Martha Greenaway, Pomeroy;
Roy R. Chusty, Che ste r; Rilla
Charlene Smith, Pomeroy; James
E. Carleton, Pomeroy; Bruce Caid·
well Jr., Albany ; Joyc e Elliott,
M1ddlcport; R1ck Allan Karns
Pomeroy ; Ronald William Carpcn:
ter, Racmc; Anna Florena Lemley
Pomeroy; Melis sa A. Combs'
Racine; Kila A. Frank, Syracuse;
Deborah L. Babbiu, Racine: Carol
S. Brewer, Middleport ;· Richard
Eldon Gaul, Chester; Michael
Shawn Jacks, Lan~sville; Edna
Gray Parsons, Ractnc; Linda A.
Turley, Racine;
. Celia Rose McCoy, Pomeroy;
D1ana F. Cowdery, Middleport;
Gladys V. Weddle, Penland; Phyi!Js E. Baker, Racine; Deborah J.
Toundas. Pomeroy.

Scnrz.....,

TruiMies
,.,,.. .,, oo_,,.,.,,
tR)

7:00,9:1S DAILY

llA'!' IIff!f!S SAT • SUN
1 :oo
~

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

II II

LION KING
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ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

ADMISSION S2.00
4~3

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.. ""'i~ 7J'i ~ .....
7:01},~ : 10

OAILY

MAT I NEES SAT I S UN
1 : 00 J : JO

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tGI

7:10,9:00 DAII.Y
MATI"f!ES SAT • S U~

1 : 10 l : 00

-

7 :10,9:10 DAlLY

MATI"R ~S

SAT 1 SUM

1 : 10 ] : 10

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports
Indians shut out Tigers 5~0;
Rangers beat White Sox 4•1
·CLEVE LAND (AP ) _ The
Cleve land lnd1ans have packed up
and lclt Jacobs Field unsure when,
or 1f. they will return again this season.
At least , Ke nn y Lofton sa id,
they left on a positi ve note.
" We left with a win. Last year,
we left the old stadium with a Joss,
and that put a damper on the situation," Lofton said Thursday night
after the Indian s beat the Detroit
Tigers 5-0 in their last home game
before the strike date .
Lofton's sensational catch of
Dan Bautista 's ny to the fence in
left ce nter leading off the fifth
helped preserv e the shutout for
roo ki e Alb ie Lopez ( 1- 1), wh o
struc k ou t a career-high 11 and
pitched a fiv e- hitter for hi s fir st
career complete game.
"M y biggest thrill when I make
a catch like that is, I look at the
pit cher' s fac e," Lofton said . " I
want th e pitcher to know the
defense is behind him _"
The Indians, who arc headed for
road series at Bqston and Toronto,
aren 't sc heduled for another home
gam e until Aug . 12, the day the
players ar c threatening to go on
strike unless they negotiate a new
basic agreement with owners.
Despite the uncenainty, manager Mike Hargrove said his players
have been able to keep their attcnlion on the task at hand- seriously pursuing a pennant for the first
ume since the 1950s. The victory
moved them within a half game of
the first-place Chicago White Sox
in the AL Central.
''They're well aware of where
they are, who we're trying to catch,
who's trying to catch us," Hargrove said. "They do a very good
JOb of doing their jobs and staying
focused."
Lopez was making his third stan
since he was recalled from Class
AAA Charlotte on July 25 to
replace Mark Clark, the Indians'
winningest pitcher, whose right
wrist was broken by a line drive.
Lopez was unimpressive in the
previous two appearances, but an
adjustment suggested by pitching
coach Phil Regan got him back on
track.
"I was dropping my arm down
to make the ball move," Lopez
said. "He told me to ~Cl on top of
the ball. 1 can't see 11 move that
way but t/rey all tell me it's still

/n 'the NL,

mov ing. I JUSt have to trust them."
Seven of hi s strikeout VICtim s
went down sw inging, and fouroth crs were ca ll ed oul Lopez s.a1d he
d1d it by mi • mg fastball s, curves
and change ups.
" He changed speeds real well
an d kep t th e ball in the strik e
w ne," said Detroit 's Mickey Tc ttleton, who struck out twic e. " He
had good velocity and a nice break in g bal l. w e gave up three runs in
th e first inning. and there's soli a
Jot of game to play. We JUSt never
mounted any threats against him ."
The Tigers had runners m scarin g pos iti on in three differe nt
innings.withthe only serious threat
coming when they loaded the bases
in the six th . Tettl eton ni ed out to
end that one.
Th e shutout surpri sed the 22year-old Lopez as much as anyone.
" I figured if I gave up a couple
home runs, I'd still be OK. I just
wanted to keep people off base, "
he said . " I think I prov ed I can
pitch up here now . I think I can
stay.· ·
The Indians scored three in the
first against Scan Bergman (l -1).
Lofton was hit by a pill:h, stole second and scored on Wayne Kirby's
single before Carlos Bacrga hit his
17th home run .
Since returning from a sprained
ankle that forced him to miss 10
games, Baerga has three hits - all
home runs - in 27 at bats.
"I'm feeling OK. The ball just
doesn't want to drop in yet," Baerga s.aid. "You go through that."
Sandy Alomar singled home a
run in the second, then doubled and
scored on Omar Vizquel's single in
the sixth, finishing Bergman.
"I walked three guys and left
the ball up where you can't leave
it," Bergman said . "So I'm not
satisfied with my performance .
When I kept the ball down, I didn 't
get hun. When 1 got the ball up, I
got hurt"
In other games Thursday. Texas
beat Chicago 4-1, New York beat
Minnesota 9-2, Kansas City beat
Oakland 5-2, Seattle beat California 4-2, Milwaukee beat Balomore
5-3 and Toronto beat Boston 5-2.
Rangers 4, White Sox 1
At Arlington, Texas, Brian
Bohanon had his best start of the
season and Rusty Greer went2-for4 with a two -run homer in the
eighth inning as Texas streu:hed its
lead in the AL West to 4 1/2

games.
Jeff Frye and Juan Go nta lcz
added RBI s1ng les to he lp the
Range rs move within four game s
of .500.
Bohanon (2- 1) all owed seve n
hits wi th five stri keout s in 6 1/3
innin gs- his longest ou ting of the
season.
Royal&gt; 5, Athletics 2
At Kan sas Ci ty, Fehx Jose had
three three hi ts and KeVIn Appi cr
(7-6), with onl y one dec ision in his
eight prev ious start s, pit ched a
four-hitter.
The victory put the Royals, who
were nin e ga mes out before the1r
streak started. JUSt two ga mes
be hind the Wh 1l£ Sox.
Carlos Reyes (0-3) took the loss
as th e Athl etics lost th eir Six th
straight.
Yankees 9, Tl•·ins 2
At Minn eapoli s, the Yank ees
won th eir seven th str a1ght and
opened a 10-gamc lead in the AL
East.
Jim Abbott (9-7 j allow ed sn
hits in 5 2(3 innings to win for onl y
the third time since May 30. Bernie
Will iam s had th ree do ubl es and
Lui s Po loni a, Wade Bog gs and
Paul O'Ne ill also had thr ee hils
each as the Y\vlkces tied their season-high with 19 hi ts.
Scott Eri ckson (8- 11 ) had another bad night , all ow mg 10 hi ts in 4
2/3 innings.
Mariners 4, Angels 2
At Anaheim, Calif. Goose Gossage (3- 0) got th e victory 10 hi s
l,OOOth career appearance and Eric
Anthony hit a tw o- run, pinch homer in the eighth inning.
Only Hoyt Wilhelm (1 ,070) and
Kent Tekulve (1,050) have pill:hed
in more major leag ue games than
Gossage.
Mark Leiter (4-5), who entered
the game in the eighth protecting a
2-1 lead, gave up three runs in the
inning.
Drewers 5, Orioles 3
At Baltimore, Jose Valenon hit
a two-run homer and John Jaha had
a pair of RBI doubles as Milwaukee snapped its three-gam e losing
streak.
Cal Eld•ert r 11 -10) won his second strrughL s.une, allowing seven
hits in 6 1/3 inning s. Mike Fetters
pitched the ninth for his 17th save.
Mark Williamson (3- 1) took the
loss, giving up nine hits and four
runs.
(See AL on Page 5)

•

burning," the rookie right-hander
s.aid. "I just tried to stay calm and
not let the heat bother me."
Lieber allowed just three hits
and a run in 7 1/3 innings. He was
replaced by Ravelo Manzanillo in
the eighth after allowing a walk
and a long ny out to pinch-hitter
Tony Longmire.
"Lieber pitched very well. He
had very good movement on his
pitches," Pirates manager Jim Ley-

iand said. " He got a iiule tired at
the end and I think the heat was
gening to him. When Longmire
almost hit the ball out of the park, I
thought it was time to get him out
of there."
The Phillies didn't remove
Schilling (1-8) soon enough. The
Phillies' staner gave up five runs
and II hits in 6 1/3 innings_
"I just couldn't get the ball
down today," said Schilling, who

""

.":.

Baseball

ll Karuas City , 2: 35p.m.
Ouc.go tl C.lifomiil , 4:05 p.m

Teua at Oakland, 4:()5 p.m.

NL standings

Ttam

By JOSEPH WHITE
ST . PETERSBURG , Russia
(AP) - At last, St. Petersburg had
something to cheer abouL
People from this shllggling city,
maligned for the series of gaffes
that has beset the Goodwill Garnes,
clapped and cheered Thursday
night as three of their own took the
lead on the first day of the delayed
figure skating competition.
"It feel s great here. It feels like
a vacation,'' said Tamara Moskv ina, who coaches pairs leaders and
1992 Olympic champions Artur
Dm1tr1ev and Natalia Mishkuuenok
on the same Yubileiny Ice Palace
rink where the event is being held.
Another local , reigning Olympic
c~pion, Ale.x_ei Urmanov, led the
mens compebhon after the techn1 cal program.
Wh1le the crowd, one of the best
so far at these games, was eheenng
theu hometown heroes, one of

25
•

Eadem Dhllion
Tum
W L PtL
Monuul .............6&amp; l9 .636
Atlanu. .................63 44 5&amp;9
New Ymk
... ..52 54 .491
l'l!Wddpluo ........C52 56 .411
. Florida ....
.. ...... .415 60 .444

GB
5

47
S6
59
59

...'18
.. ..48

Chicaao....
Sl Lwu: ..

~-5

l

.56-9
.477

ll

.449
.449

16
16

4n

San Die&amp;o ............43

.4 59
.3117

68

2.5
4.5
12.5

I

J
FAREWELL CHEERS?- Fans at Jacobs
Stadium in Cleveland chee.r Jim Thome and
Candy Maldonado (22) on their way to the dugout
after the Indians beat the Tigers S-0 Thursday

ni~ht in what may be the final game or the season
at the new stadium - if next Friday's strike goes
on as scheduled. (AP)

now ~as more losses this season
than all of 1993, when he went 167 and was MVP of the NL playoffs.
"I just didn't pitch very well. In
the first inning, I had two outs and
two strikes with nobody on and
ended up giving up a run. I just
couldn't hit my spots today."
Schilling was malcing his third
stan since coming off the disabled
list July 25 following surgery on
his right ell&gt;ow.

Chicaao

Montteal (Maru.nct 9-S) at Philadel -

pi&gt;U (0/ ... 4-i). 7 35 p.~
SL Loua (Wataon 6-5) at Pinsburgh
(Nca&amp;Je 9-1), 7:3S p.m.
Atlanta (Giuinc 12·8) at CINCIN NATI (Smiley 11 ·9), 7:35 p.m.
florida (Weathc:n I -to) 11 New Yod
(Sabclh•aen IHJ, NO p.m.
San Franciaco (Portuaall 0-7) a1 How ton (Swindell7-1),1:05 p.m.
l..ol Anaela (Muti.ne'.t 10-7) at Co londo (Lca.tr..nic 1-0}, 9:05p.m.

Saturday's games
San Dieao (lhmiltan 1--5) at O.icaso
(Cutillo 1-f), UlS p.m.
florida (Rapp 6-7) at New Yod. (Jacome 4-2), 8:0S p.m.
MooU'CIJ (Hatry 8-2) n Philaddphil
(Volc:ruucb 2· 1) . 1~ p.m.

PiltaOurgh.

(SnUth 9-i~

Allentt (Mad4ul 14-6) at CINCIN·
NA11 (Rijo 9-4),1&lt;l5 p.m.
San fi"VIciaoo (Vanl...alldingham 7-1}
.. (llornUdl 7-5~ l&lt;l5 p.m.

Sunday's gamos
Moouc.alac Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
SL IAu.ilat PiuabwJh, 1:35 p.m.
f\olida 11 New Yolk, 1:40 p.m.
A11mU otCINCINNAn 2:1l p.m.
San Dicao 1t Oili::IJO, 2:20p.m.
t..o. AnseJe~ •t Colondo. s:OS p.m.
Se.n Fnnciaoo 11 Hcu.toa,I:OS p.m.

•

.481
481

Deuoit ................ 49

59

.454

20

Crnlnl Dlvbilon

Chicago ........ --· .6J 44
CLEVELAND .......62 44

589
.5 85

Kan11a City .......... 62

47

.569

Milwukce ............51

57

.472

2
12.5

Miruaw ..... ...... ..4&amp;

59

.449

IS

Western Divblon
Te.&amp;• ................... .52 S6 481
OU.Jand ............. ..47 60 .439
62
65

.410
.404

.5

4.5
7.5
8.5

Thursday's scores
Kawu Ci1y 5, Oakland 2
Torcnto 5, Dostm 2

Basketball
National Uukelball A..aodalkan

Robcn Parish, ccnta, to a multiyear con-

Transactions

l!a c t.

INDIANA PACERS : Re-signed Byron
Sc ott, guud, to a mu.ltt)'e.Jr ronU1cl

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZER S'

BaS&lt; ball
Amtriun lHKut
BOSTON RED SOX: Purchncd lhe
contncta of Todd Frohwlrth and Rictr.y
T rliW. pi1chen, from Pawtude1 of the
lnt e rn a t t onal l e ag ue . Optioned Tim
VanEsmond and N11e Minchey, pitchen,
to PawlUckc:t. Placed Mile Greenwell,
ou lfielder, oo t.he 15-da y diu bled list. A.ctivaled Andre Dawson, deaign.ucd llitlt:r,
fran the 1S-day disabled list.
CHI CAG O WHIT E SOX : Si gned
Shane Turner, tnficlder, and auigned him
to Dinnin ,.tam of the SQ..Ithem League.
MINNESOTA TWINS : Announced
Kent Hrbck, 1liSt bucman, Wlll reure at
the end ol the 1994 seuon.
National Lueue
J-LORIDA MARUNS : Claimed Jerry
S pudlin, pi tcher, off w1iven from the:

Cincimali Reds and optioned him to Edmonton of the Pacific- Cout Le.lgue.

Na med Ric k Carl isle a ui atant eoach .
Named Matk Warkenlien

JCOUL

Football
Na llonai FOO(ball

Lua:ut

CINCI NN AT I B E ~ G ALS : Claimed
Ste.,.e Lofton, tome rba ek , off waiven
from the Aru.oru CardiJlals.
K.A.'\SA S CTrY CHIEFS : Terminated
lhe conuact of Tony Cuillu. ddcnJivc

· tactr.l e, for h11in g to report to tr1irtina

camp.
T AMI, A EA Y BUCCANEERS :
Waivod llu.~.eh Hadnot., wide rec:clYcr, and

Corey Wuren, wide ro;civc::r.

Hockey
Nallonalllockty Luaue
llARTFORD WHALERS : Announced
ln affiliation with the Richmond Renegil dcs of !he East C0111 Hodcy Lcaaue.

PITTSBURGH PENGUINS : Signed
Tomu S&amp;nd&amp;tnm,righl wing.

"I don't think Curt Schilling
had his best stuff today," Phillies
manager Jim Fregosi said. "It's
probably natural since he hasn't
had very many starts. Give some
credit to Lieber. He's pill:hed some
good games against us. He has a
real good young arm."
The only run Lieber allowed
came in the fourth when on Pete
Incaviglia 's sacrifice ny .
Jim Eisenrcich had two of the
Philadelphia's three hits, and is
now 6-for-9 against Lieber.
"(Eisenreich)'s just a real good
hitter," Lieber said. "He puts the
ball in play and it almost seem s
like he knows which pitch is com ing.''
The Pirates took a 3-1 lead in
the fifth on Carlos Garcia's RBl
single and Dave Clark's run -scoring double. Jeff King hit hi s si•th
homer in the sixth, and Clark had
an RBI single in the seventh.
"Saying it was hot out th ere
today is a complete under statement," Clark said.
Clark s.aid he hasn't had much
success in previou s vi sit s to
Philadelphia.
"I think this was the first ume I
ever had more than one hit in a
~arne here," he said "Fonuna~el y,
11 came at the right time. "
In other games, Houslo n bea t
Colorado 6-2, Florida beat Chicago
5-I, Los Angele s blank ed San

Diego 1-0 and St. Louis slammed
Montr.:al7-3.
Astros 6, Rockies 2
Don Baylor thought his Col orado Rockies were about to erupt
Darryl Kile was feeling the heat.
The Houston Astros' playoff hopes
were in danger.
False alarm.
After a single and a double put
two Rockies in scoring position
with nobody out and the meat of
the order coming up, Kile turned
the heat into smoke that blew by
Dante Bichette and Charlie Hayes.
"That's the inning we've been
looking for for a while, runners on
second and third with nOOody out,"
(See NL on PageS)
FOR LIFE

IN SURA NCE

CALL:

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE

NRIOUWIDE

INSURAHc£

West 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 614·992·5479
1·800-742-3868

Tonight's games

11

ll

56

Sc.anlc4, C alifcmi. 2

Today's games

St. Louil {OliviJ'CI 2--4)
UJS p.m

17
17

Toronto ........... .... 52

Milwaukoc: 5. Baltimore 3
New Yori 9. Min11 eto~a 2

5, Chicaa:o I
Loo AnJeleo I, S.. Di&lt;go 0
Sl Louu 7, Moottell 3
HOUIIoo 6. O&gt;londo 2
San Die_Jo (Sandetl 3·1)
(Bonlu 1-10), 3,21) ~Jn.

10

a.EVELAND 5, Deuai1 0
Te_.ua 4, Otic-I_JO I

Aodd•

\

.547

Calilomil .. ...........44

Thursday's =res

Pi"'bwJh 5, I'IUUdclph~

Baltimore ............58 48
801t.on.....
.... .....52 S6

Seattle ................ 43

Waurn Division
Lot Anaelca .......... 54 S4 500

San Fnnc-00:1 .. ..... S2 57
Colondo .... . .. .. 51 60

Pel
.642

IU
16.l

Cenlnl Dhlsk»t
CtNCINNATI .......64 0
.598
Houlton ................62
Piluburah ............. .51

L
li

CLEVELAND (Martinet 10-6) at
Bottut (Na~olz l-4). 7:05p.m.

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Detroit (WcUa 4-6) at Toronto (Guzman 11 -10), 7:3S p.m .
Scaulc (Convene 0-4) 11 K.anau City
(Gonion 10-6), UlS p.m.
Baltimore (McDonald 12-7) at Milwaukee (BCIIca 10-7). I~ p.m .
New York (Key 16-3) u Minnesot.a
(Dahaiea S-11), 8:0S p.m.
Chic aao (Alvarez 12-6) at Califomi.a
(Finley 8- 10), 10:05 p.m.

Tuu (8rt~wn 7·9)

1-ivCJU 6-3), 10:05

p.m.

11

Oat.land (On -

Saturday's games
CLEVELAND (Grimalcy 4 - l) n
801\Ql {Sde 7·7), I :05 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Osea 0-0) at 801ton

(Finnvold 0-4), I :OS p.m.
Detroit (Moore I 0-10) at Toronto
(llmlp 13-7), ~~ p.m.
Seaule (Oevia 1-2) u K•naa 1 Ci ty
(O.I&gt;tu 7-1), I;)S p.~
BlhimoR (Rhode. 2-5) at Milwaukee
&amp;-4), 8~5 p.m.

(01""''"

New York (Peru 9· 3) at Minncaota

(Molmt.. l-l), ·~p.m . .
Ch1eaao (Ben 11-2) at California
(Lanino 0-2~ II~ p.m.
Teua (Ropn II ~7) at O&amp;klud (Dvlinjj I 0-1 0), I Lo:i pm.

Sunday's games

a..EVElAND II BOltOn. 1~p.m.
.DctcUa at T onno, I :35 p.m.
Baltimore II Milwa~~toe. 2:05 p.m.
New Yoc:k II Mim~. 2:05 p.m.

5th and 6th grade boys and girls

HOME BAKED

HAM DINNER
Scalloped Potatoes
Com
Hot Buttered Roll .
Coffu, or small drink

our matchup will consist of two
conferen ce champions or two
team s ranked in the top 10 in the
nation.' '
" Our prayers were an swered
and the hard work of thousands of
people in the Fiesta Bowl family
has paid off," Junker said.
Each of the three games will be
played on different dates - Dec.
31 , Jan. I and Jan. 2. The Fies ta
reportedl y bid $ 118 million, the
Orange S104 million and the Sugar
S98 million to get Tier I designati ons. The money co mes fr om
sponsorships and telev is ion con tracLI.
The average payoff for each of
the three games will be $8.5 million per team .
" It's a major deal. ... We fell
going into this that we had to put
our best foot forward ," said Donald Kubit. preside nt -el ect of the
Orange Bowl Comm iuee. " It was
do or die with respect to preserving
the rich tradition of th e Oran ge
Bowl and havin g champi onship

college football in our commum ty."

The Rose Bowl c.
mess up
any champwnsh1p game mall:hup if
the top-ranked or No.2 team in the
nation is from the Big Ten or Pac ific -10. That, however, always has
been the case.
The arrangement is for six years,
with an escape clause after three
years for th e conferences. After
either the Orange, Sugar or Fiesta
selects the top two teams. the other
two bowls will be fi lled by alternating selections.
The bowl choices were made by
a group of Divis1on 1-A conference
commissioners. Their dcc iSJon left
the Cotton Bowl in a tough situation.
" I've seen beller day s," said
Scovell . " Have you every been in a
winner's locker room and felt sorry
for the guy s in the loser' s room1
It ' s an unfortunate decis1on. The
Couon Bowl is not a good loser.
But we can be good spans."

those heroes wa s praising the
miraculous last-minute recovery
that allowed the event to take place
at the original venue.
"A few days ago I said I didn ' t
think they could do it," Dmitriev
said, "but they did iL"
The man who did it was a local
chemi stry professor named Germain Sergeyevitch Potehin, who
carne up with a unique way to get
the ice rink to freeze. He sprayed a
mi•ture of liquid nitrogen and mygen on the rink through a fire hose,
creating a cushion of cold air which
allowed the ice to freeze faster.
"This had never been used on
an ice rink ... but it worked,'' said
Goodwill Games president Jack
Kelly .
The decision to skate at
Yubileiny wasn't made until late
Thursday morning, about nine
hours before the start of compelition . The skating had already been

put off one day because the ice
wasn :t ready at Yubilciny, and
orgamzers_had made contingency
plans to sh1ft to the nearby SKA ice
hockey hall.
:'It's been a waiting game, wondenng where we're going to com pe_te , what day and what time ,"
sa1d U.S. skater Todd Eldredge,
who was second behind Urrnanov
"It's finally good to get going." ·
Once 11 d1d get going, Russians
excelled and the Americans with
the exception of Eldredge, flopped .
Urmanov, skating to music from
Verdi, dazzled the crowd with a
program that included a triple axel
combmat1on, earning 5.Rs and 5.9s
for the required elements and all
5.9s for presentation.
Eldredge, the former two-time
U.S. champion, unveiled his new
livelier image to make a surprising:
ly strong showing. He nailed his
tr1ple axel-double toe loop combi-

nation, but his breezy performance
lacked the elegance of Urrnanov's .
"We tr1 ed to bring a different
personality on the ice, and I think
this follows suit. It's not so serious
as before,'' said Eldredge, who will
skate as Charlie Chaplin in Friday 's
night fr ee dan ce. " It' s sort of
happy-go-lucky."
Mi chael Weiss of the United
States, the world junior champion ,
was fifth , just ahead of countryman
Aren Nielsen.
Mishkutienok and Dmitriev took
the lead over the current world
champions, Evgenia Shishkova and
Vadim Naumov, in the pairs' technical program. Another Russian
pair, Marina Eltsova and Andrei
Bushkov, was third.
Americans Stefanic Stiegler and
Lance Travis were fifth and Calla
Urbanski and Rocky Marva!, who
recently reunited after skating with
different
last in the

PARISH MOVE S SOUTH - Rob ert Par is h, a fi xture of t'h c
Doston Ccltics' front -line corps since their champiomhip days of the
19XOs, sign ed a multi -year contract with the Cha rl111t e Hornets
Thursday. Parish, who at 41 is the NBA's oldest player, was with the
Celtics for 14 of his IS NBA seasons. (AP)
seven-pair field .
In the danc e compul sori cs,
worth 20 percent of the total score,
lnna Romanov a and Igo r
Yaroshenko of Ukraine led a weak
field. American s Tamara Kuchiki
and Neale Smull were si•th and
last.
In other evenLs Thursday:
- Yachting events were wiped
out for the second
·
due to

lac k of wmd on the Gull of Finland.

Go-kart club's first race Saturday

CHARLOTTE HORNETS : Signed

r.o

W

New Yon ........... 6&amp;

choo se from 9 ~ Divi sion 1-A
team s. The three bowls plus the
Rose Bowl will eliminate only
eight team s."
Several Dall as city officials said
before the alliance announcement
that fa ilure to be included mig ht
lead to th e de mi se of the Cotton
BowL
The Oran ~e. Fiesta and Sugar
bowls will alternate each year as
the site of a matchup between the
top two tea ms avail able to th e
alli anc e. Champi ons from th e
Atla nti c Coas t, Bi g Ea st, Bi g
Tw elve (formerl y Big E1ght) and
Southeastern conferences will be
involved, along with two at-large
teams.
For the 199 5 season on Iy, the
Southwest Conference winner will
be one of the at-large teams.
" This vinually guarantees that
th e Fi esta Bowl will have th e
national championship game once
m the years 1996. 1997 or 1998 "
Fiesta Bowl e • ecutiv e direc t~r
John Junker sa id. " The other vears

Russians lead figure skating competition

Seaule

Eutem Division

Page-5

At the Goodwill Games,

Scoreboard
AL standings

By BARRY WILNER
AP Foot ball Writer
The Orange, Fies ta and Sugar
bowls are breathing easier, whil e
the Co tt on Bowl mi ght not be
breathing for long.
The Bo wl Allian ce chose the
Orange Bo wl in Miam i the Fiesta
in Tempe, Ariz., and the Sugar in
New Orleans as Tier I games and
sites for a possible national championship game, beginning after the
1995 seaso n. The Rose Bo wl
which features th e champions of
the B1g Ten and Pacific- ! 0, is not
part of th e all iance, which will
replace the current bowl coalit1on
setup.
That left the Cotton Bowl on the
outside and with critics wondenng
1f 11 should continue as a secondlevel game.
" If you' re here for a funeral
march, then you can leave," said
John Scovell , who led the Couon
Bowl's pursuit of an alliance berth .
"The sun is still shining on the
Cotton Bowl. We ' ll still be able to

.

Pirates down Phils; Astr~s beat Rockies to gain on Reds
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jon
Lieber kept his cool and the
Philadelphia Phillies willed.
Lieber pitched seven-plus strong
innings Thursday and the Pittsburgh Pirates pounded Curt
Schilling and the Phillies in a 5-1
victory .
Lieber evened his record (6-6)
while hauling hot (89 degrees) and
humid weather.
"It was so hot, my feet were

The Dally Se ntinel

Middleport, Ohio

Three bowls chosen as Tier 1 games

Page ~

"

Pomeroy

As stages for possible national title,

Friday, August 5, 1994

In the AL,

ll v CIIUC K MEL YIN

Friday, August 5, 1994

SIGN UP
Aug. 2 and 4, 6 to 8 p.m.
Aug. 6, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
at
Big iend Health and Fitness
17. Mill Street, Middleport
Questions
Call David Jenkins, 992·6534 or
Lisa Roush, 992·3486

I
I

The go kart track at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds will be alive
with action Saturday night as members of the newly-formed Meigs
Karling Association Kan Club hold
the first of the group's planned kan
races.
Local event promoter Chuck
Clark said races will be held at the
fairground s every Saturday at 8
p.m. with hot laps starting at 7 p.m.
Also races will be held at the
Meig s County Fair on Saturday,

Aug. 20 at 3 p.m.
Races organized by an outside
promoter had been held at the track
earlier this summer. The races now
will be organized by local club
members.
Racers can be boys, girls, men
or women aged six to 60 and up, he
added .
Racing will be held in six fourcycle classes: Yard Kan - run for
fun, all ages; Rookie - eight to 12
years old. 235 pounds minimum

(Continued from Page 4)
NL acti.On... ----=----Baylor said Thursday night. "Six
pill:hcs later, we're out of it.''
And Kile was into it. He retired
13 in a row after the two hits, scattered eight hits over 6 2/3 innings
and pitched the Astros to their third
straight victory over their leastfavorite opponent
"I was just hoping to get out of
that first inning with one run," said
Kile (8-6). "For us tonight, getting
out of it was a big lift."
Even with the win, the Astros
have a sorry 7- 17 (.292) record
against the second-year franchise.
They're 140-107 (.545) against the
rest of the NL.
More importantly. with the
anticipated strike now only a week
away. the Astros moved within
three games of idle Cincinnati in
the NL Central division and within
two of Atlanta in the NL's wild
card chase.
. "It's a big win for us. We only
picked up a half-game, but it's a
half-game,'' Astros manager Terry
Collins said. "If we're going to
win, our pitchers arc going to have
to do it for us."
Craig Biggio hit a two-run triple
to cap a three-run second against
Kevin Ritz (4-6) and Scott Serva1s
also drove in two runs for Houston.
Kilc, 0-2 with a 7.16 .ERA in
three prior stans against Colorado,
said a reliable curveball made all
the difference . The right-hander,
who entered the game leading the
NL with 82 wallcs, did not issue a
free pass all night.
Cardinals 7, Expos 3
Bob Tewlcsbury's five-hit pitching and Todd Zeile's third career
grand slam helped St. Louis send
visiting Montreal to just it1 second
loss in 16 games.
Tewksbury (12-10) retired 10
straight to stan the game.
Kirk Rueter (6-3) allowed two
runs in six innings.
Zelle's 17th homer broke open a

AL games...
(Continued from Page 4)
Dlue Jays 5, Red Sox 2
At Boston, Joe Caner reached
100 RBis for the sixth straight season and John Olerud knocked in
two runs with a groundouL
Todd StoUlemyre (6-7) allowed
. two runs on seven hits in seven
· innings. He struck out five, fanning
· the side in the sixth.
: Roger Clemens (9: 7) lost his
: fifth straight decision against the
- Blue Jays .

3-1 game in the ninth against Mel
Rojas, and Mark Whiten also hit
his 13th homer.
Larry Walker hit a solo homer
in the seventh and a two-run shot in
the ninth to account for all the
Expos runs.
Dodgers 1, Padres 0
Mike Piazza's 24th homer provided the only run as Kevin Gross
and Todd Worrell combined on a
six-hitter for Los Angeles against
visiting San Diego.
Gross (9-7) retired 14 straight
but failed to get his first shutout
since a no-hitter against the Giants
on Aug. 17, 1992. WorreU got his
ninth s.ave.
Piazza's founh-inning homerhis first against Andy Benes (6-13)
- marked the 14th time he'd
homered to either tie the g.J.Jlle or
put the Dodgers in front.
Marlins 5, Cubs 1
Mark Gardner held Chicago to
five hits in 7 213 innings as Florida
won its third straight at Wrigley
Field.
Gardner (4-4) struck out four in
outpitching Steve Trachsel (9-7).
Gary Sheffield hit his 24th
homer and drove in three runs,
Benito Santiago hit his II th homer
and Jerry Browne had a RBI single
for the Marlins.

weight for kart and rider; Junior12-15 years old, 280 pound minimum weight; Adult World Karting
Association legal stock, 320-360
pounds minimum weight; Adult
Stock Appearing (daim) - 330
pounds; Adult Open Modified 345 pounds.
Clark said the club is currently
trying to promote a two-cycle event
with classes including Mac, Yamaha stock, Piston Port, Reed Rotary
and 1OOcc Open.
Racers must have proper safety
equipment including a full coverage helmet, neck brace. driving
gloves, a jacket of leather, vinyl or
abrasion resistant nylon and fulllength pants or driving suits, Clark
said. In addition, karts must have
front and rear bumpers and double
ncrf bars.
Admission is $5 for spectators
with pit passes selling for $8, Clark
said. Youths 12 and under are
admitted free.
A kan club meeting will be held
Saturday before the races, Clark
said. All interested people are invited to attend.

Chiefs, Vikin~s
in NFL exhibition
contest in Japan
Kansas City Chiefs will tangle
with Minnesota on ESPN Saturday
at 10 p.m. from Tokyo, Japan.
Pomeroy native Mike Banrum
staned at tight end last week in the
pre-season opener against Houston
and played more than half of the
game on offense and special teams.
The Chiefs, who left for Japan
on Tuesday, signed their regular
tight end Keith Cash this past
week. Bartrum is listed second to
Cash on the two deep-chan.

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�Page-&amp;-The Dally Sentinel

Frida~ August 5, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.....

...,

.

Apostolic

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Churcb of J esus Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd
!'astor James Mtller
Sunday School I 0:30 1 m

Pomeroy Chu rch of Christ

Grace E plscopal ChPrdi
326 E. Main SL, P&lt;meroy
Rector: Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Euchans11nd Sunday Scllooll la. m.
Coffee lKI.u (ollowin&amp;

Everung - 7 30 p.m
Wednesday Servtct:s · 7·)0 p.m.

Assembly of God
Ub&lt;rly Assembly ul God
P 0 BW&lt; 467, Duddmg U..e
Mason, W . Va.

Pasl.Or· Gregory A. Jchnsoo
Sunday School 10·00 a. m
Childn:n's Chu n:h · II 11. m.
Wonh• p · II 1m &amp; 6 p.m.
1bunday 81ble Study · 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hope lb ptlst Churc h (Southern)
570 Grllnt St., Middleport
Pastor· RC'\' . DaVId Bryan
Sllnday school - 9.45 a.m
Won:h1p - I ILm. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se.mce - 7 p.m.

tr .. Will BapiiSl Chu rch
A s~

Street, hl;ddlepon

rasto r· Lc.s !layman
Saturday Se rvtce - 1:30 p m.
Sunday School - lOam.
Wun tti p - 11 a.m.,
Wedneiday Servtce -7·30 p m.

Rulland Fl rR Ba ptist C hurch

Sunday School - 9·30 a.m
Wontup - 10.45 a.m.

Pum eruy Fl ~1 Baptist

212 W. Mam SL
Pa stor· Andrew Mile•
Sunday Sch~l - 9:30a.m.
Wo rship- 10·30 am .. 7 p.m.
Wednes day Se rvu::u - 7 p.m

Pomeroy Westsid e C hurch of C hrist

Holiness

33226 O. il d~&lt;n's Home Rd.
SWlday School - I I a.m.

D1nville Holin ess C hurch

31057 S1a1e Rout&lt; 325, langiVlle

Worship· l Oa.m, 6 p m

PaJIOr. Rev. Rick Maloyed

Wedn esday ScM CCI - 7 p m

Sunday scllool · 9.30 a.m.

Middleport C hurch at Ch rist

Sunday wonh1p - 10.35 a.m . &amp;. 1 p.m
Children'• church · 10.35 1.m. Youlh 6 p m.
Wednesday pnyer aerv1ce - 7 p.m.

5lh IUld Mam
Pastor. Alllart!Cil
Youlh Muuslcr: Bill Frauer

Sun day Scllool · 10.30 a.m.

P\nt G rowe Blblt Hollnm Cllurth
I/2 mile off RL 325

Bea r wa llow Ridge C hurch of C hrist
Pas tor · Jack Colegrove
SWlday School -9 .3 0 a.m.

Pastor· Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7.30 p.m.
Wednesday Sem ce - 7:30p.m.

Wonh1p - 10:30 a.m., 6·30 p.m.

Pomeroy , Ham sonville Rd . (Rt.l 43)
Pastor: Roger Wauoo
Sunday School - 9· 30 a.m
Wonh1p - 10:30 am ., 7.00 p m .
Wednesday SeiVICC I - 7 p.m
T uppers Plain Church at Christ

First Southern Ba ptist
41872 Pumeo-oy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O 'Bryant

Bradbury C hurch fA Christ
Paslor: Tom Runyon
SWlday School - 9·30 a m
Wonh1p - 10:30 Lm.

Wednesday Se rvtces - 7:00 pm.

Flrst Baptist Churdi
6lh and Palmer SL, Middleport

Sunday School - 9:15 a.m
Worsh1p - 10 IS L m ,7:00 pm

A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Lord's Suwer 1st Sunday of every month.
Wednesday Servlce- 7:00 p.m

Racine Flrst Baptist
Youlh Pallor. Aarm Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p . 10:40 a. m., 7:00p.m
W ednc!lday Serv1ccs - 1:00 p.m.
Sliver Run BaptJst

Pu1or: Bill l..iule
SliJl day School - 10a.m
Worsllip · lla.m., 7:30 pm.

Wednesday Serviccs- 7:30 p m

Ml Unloo Bapllst
PaslOr : Joe N. Sa yre

S1111day School-9:45 a m.
Evcnin&amp; · 6.30 p m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Pastor : Re~ . Earl Shuler

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30am .
Thursday Services- 7:00p.m.
Old Beiltel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Kt. 7, M;ddleport
Sunday Sehool · I0 a m
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thunday &amp; rvices - 7:30

Hillside Baptist Church
St RL 143 JUri off Rt 7
PaJtor Rev. Junes R. Acree, Sr.

Sunday School · 10 am.
Wonhip - l la.m.,6p.m.
. Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Victory Baptist lndependanl
m N. 2nd St. M;ddleport ·
Pastor: James E. Keesee

Wonhip - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Rulroad St , Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Won hip - II a.m ., 6 p.m.
WcOleaday Services - 7 p.m.

W&lt;nhip - 11 am.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pa5tor: Rc~ . Gilbert Craag, Jr.

SWlday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonh1p - 10:45 a.m.

AnUqulty Baptist
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7·30 p.m.
Rutland tree Will Baptist
Salem St.

Puwr: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Evaung - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Scmcet - 7 pm.
Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Church

161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992 -~898
Pastor. Rev. Walter E. l--lem.z

Sa1. Con. 4.45-5 15p.m ; Mm- ~ J Op . m.
SWl Con -8:45-9.15 a.m,
Sun. Man - 9:30a.m.
O..iley Mu1 - 8.30 a.m.

Evemng Service - 7 p.m

Wed nesday, Btble Study -7 p.m.
Rutland C hurch ol C hrist

Bradford C hurch or Chrlst

Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist Derek Stump
Youth Mmnt cr. Mark Nouer
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wordup - 8:00a.m, 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Thund1y Services - 7 p.m.

PaJlor: Rev. Roy McC.any
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Salem Center

Liber-ty Christian Chu..-ch

DCJ.ler
Pastor. Woody C. ll

Christian Union
Hartford Chur&lt;h or Christ In
ChrlsUan Unloa
Hanford, W.Va.
Pu10r. Rev. David McManit
SIPiday School - 11 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30pm.
Wedneaday Servicea - 7:30p.m.

DyesvUie c... munlly Churcb
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo..hip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Pu-1111
Pastor. Helm Kline
Coolville Church
Main A F"iflh St.
Sunday School - lD a.m.
Wonhi~ - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Semces - 7 p.m.

Christian Fellowlhlp Cenl&lt;r
Salem SL, Rulland
Putor. Roben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SciVIce - 7 p.m.

Beillel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - lOa.m.
Wednesday Service• - 10 a.m.
Gnnd Sln:et

Wednesday Service~ - 8 p.m.

Ton:h Church
Co.Rd.63

Chater

Racine Flrst Chur&lt;h or ill&lt; Nazarene
Putor: Mm Skaaa•
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.,6pm.
Wednesday Service•- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Paotor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- !0:30am.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hvcnins Scrvioca· 7 p.m.

Wedneaday Serviceo • 7 p.m.

Reedsville

Church of God or Propbeq
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pu1or: Pll llemoa
S101day School · !Oa.m.
Wonhip - ll am.
Wedneaday S.rvioa - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Clades Mash

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Tuppers Plains Sl. Paul
Pastor. Sharoo HauiiiWI
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m.
Tueaday Serviceo - 7:30p.m.

New Life Church or God
Olester
Puaor: G•ry Hinet
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 6 p.m.

Central Cluster
Asbury (SynCUIO)

Q)..,f.l

~.

..

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2975

UWUNGS-COATS

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFEn
SAllS &amp; SEIIYICE

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

992-7075

992-5141

2U

South

2nd

Middleport

'

Full Gospel Ughthouse
33045 llibnd Road. Pumeroy
PallOr. Roy Hunler
Sunday School- 10 am.
Evening 7-30 p.m.
Tueaday A Thunday · 7:30 p.m.

Reedavllle Fello-lp
Church or ille Nazartne
Paotor: John W. Douglas
SIPiday School · 9:30am.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church ol the Nazarme

- ~ ... Ill_

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

if.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
- ~~
We F ,u Doctors'
·~

Prescnptioni

BILL QUICKEL

(row's

GALLIA COUNTY
FAIR SPECIALS AT
EMPIRE FURNITURE

Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., M;ddlepon
Pas10r: lawrence f oreman

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m

New Shipment of Living

Church or Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
114 mile past Fort Me1gs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Vlll Meur
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Rooms

11

FLORIS'

c....,.\ ow... ,,.,,.,.

of

Prior Years

Expend ........ .. ..... ...........-28.50
Refund

of

Pri or Years

SALES REP

nnrl S~· rl'in• lflu •a,.....
Established 1913

992-2121
106 Mulllorry ht.

Molivated person to call
on Commercial,
Industrial, and
Agricunural accounts in
!he POINT PLEASANT
area. Excellent
Commissions and
Bonuses. Training
provided.
HYDROTEX
1-800-999-4712
E.O.E.

Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Middleport PenlecoslJII
Third Ave.
Panor. Rev. Qark Baker
• 10 a.m.

On A.ugu&amp;t 7th
You 'U Be "65 "
You're Feisty &amp;
Pastor: Rev. Kriuna Robinsm

Sunday School · 10 1.m .
Worsh1p - ll 1.m.
Harrison ville Presbyterian Church
Worship - 9 a.m.

Bonus Program High
Commissions
POINT PLEASANT
Monthly Performance
Bonuses

problerru, too.
Maxine Fergu&amp;on

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Mlddlepot"t Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Insurance Available
Caii1-BOQ-999-4712

Happy Birthday
To You!

E.O.E.
Public Notice

Public Notice

Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Setvices:

Sabballl School -2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

(Continued from Page 3)

Community Services ......... .

Beneflts ........ ................... o.oo

ji",d;~~~~~~~j~~A~ii~ii~~-~

~-~r~~~~~..S.~~~~~~-~~--~'ii.'oo

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon United Brethren

In Christ Church
Texas Commumty off CR 82
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10·30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

'f--

Eden United Brethren In Christ
2 1/2 mile1 nonh ol Reedsville
on Stile Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Ma.Uey
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
Wednc:sd•y Scrvices·7:30 p.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homthte Saw\ ·

I

;Mj;~:-R';;ij;i;::~:::::: R:=~~rrlcular ActlvHiat

Granta In Aid
state sourctt ...............o.oo
:Federal Sourcto ........ .........

C7"

Veterans
Memorial Ho..tal

115 (. Mamosiol Dr.

"'192-2104

~·~·~;;

.F...... ......A.........I...I.t.l........o.oo
Supplies &amp; Materlala ..........
ac ues cqu • on ......... .
0 00
.................................. .....0.00
(:'~'j;jj~j·()~jj~y..'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' o:oo ~Debt Servlcns .. i"'"i"' O. ~
Other Obiecto .......... .....o.oo
P oyoaa a ar eo
Total Dloburtomonls •
ageo ........ ............. 61,885.i7
Employees Retirement
(Oper) .............. .. J,r09•277 ·69 B 11
68 229 57
Exc. Rcpla . Ovor/(Underi J one Is........ .......... • ·
Dlsb .................... (tr9 ,970.t 5
Purchased Services ......... ..
Other Financing Sources
................. ........... 523,372.96
Supplies &amp; Materials ..........
(Uses)
Conlrlbutlons &amp; Donation•
.............. ................ 96,784.54
tO
Capital Oullay ....... 5,878.35
............................. ' 322.33
Oth Obj ta
442 65
Proc. Fm. Sale &amp; looo ot
Tot:~ Dl:~u;·~·~;;;~nll.•
Assets ...................... 2,81 0 ·10 (0 )
756 594 04
Proceeds from Sale of
per...................
• ·
Exc. Rcpto . Overi(Under)
Notes .................... 2t7, 700.00 Dlsb ...................... (33,205.11)
Stale Sourceo ............... o.oo
Non-Operating Rocelptt
Federal Sourcet ...... ..... O.OO (Dieburaementa)
Operating Tranofero-ln.......
Conlrlbullona &amp; Donation•
............ .................. 16,823.4t
650 00
R I d ot Prior Yoora
............................... ...
·
Ex:e~~..................... 4,129.75 Proc. Fm. Sala &amp; Loo~~
0 orating Tranalero·Out.... Aaoets........................... .. ·
...~ ...... ............. l.. (4t,OOO.OO) NP roceeda from Sole ~
0 1es ...............................0 ·
Refund J11 __ , rlor Yoaro
State Sourceo ........ 9,116.21
Recelpto .............:,:.:f5;t84.09)
Total Other Fin. ' &amp;'burceo
Ftdertl Sourcto118,351.23
Operallng Trantfero·ln .... .. .
{Uaes) ................... 204,821.50
..............................30,000.00
Exceoa Rocolpls/Sourceo
Ovor/(Under)
Refund of Prior Yearo
Dlaburaemtnlt &amp; Other Expond ..................... 4,381 .00
Operallng Tranafera..()ut .. ..
Uaei/Ntt... ..............24,951 .35
' Beginning Fund Caoh
............................. (5,823.411
Balanco ................ 493,725.62
Refund of Prior Y11n
'Ending Fund Caoh Rectlplo ................... .......o.oo
Balance ................ 518,676.97
Total Other Fin. Sourcat
'Rea e r v o d
1 or (Uaeo) ................... 158,675.03
Exceao Recelpla/Sourcao
Bncumbranceo .... t!12,545.59
'Unretorved Fund Balance. Over/(Undar)
............................ 326,\M.38 Dlaburoemtnlt &amp; Other
$ourct Deacrlpllon
~
Uoii/Ntt ...............123,4611.82
llroprletary Fundt
Beginning Fund Cub
Jlecolptt: Revenue Recelpto Balance ................ 124,816.15
·Taxea ............................. O.OO
Ending Fund Cuh
'TuHlon ........... .............. .. O.OO Balance ................ 248,286.07
R• • • rv• d
for
'Earnlnga on lnveotmontt...
;...................................... 0.00 Encumbrtncet ........ 6,888.28
·Food Servlctt Salaa...........
Unreotrvtd Fund Balance.
;. "." ........" ... " ...... ". 79,216.49
................" ..........241,397.79
•Ex1rocurrlcular Actlvltltt
SOurce Dttcrlptlon
;...... .......................... 4,580.73 Agoncy Funda
tl
0 pare ng
·Cieaa Materitlo &amp; F..a....... Racelpta:

1

Pastor: Robert Sanden

214 E . Main
992 · 51 JO - Pomeroy

Unique Sales
OPPORTUNITY
Offering Fast Slar1

Kickin ' and have
&amp;uroived the kid&amp;,
the hmbandl,
and health

Syracust First United Pr..t&gt;yterlu

EWING FUNERAl HOME
··n;~,;,,

Help Wanted

'omoroy

Total Other Fin . Sources
Excee s Receipt s/Sources

Ovar/(Under)
Disbursem ents

.............................. 25,598.01
To tel
Recelpta
(Operotlng) ............ 25,598.01

';:~·i-;i........;;·;~-~-ip·i·;··o.oo ~~':::::'.:n~r~buroornanto

(Pporotlng) ..........723,318.93
EIIIPloyeat Solorlto &amp;
Oiaburtementa: Oparllllng Wagto ......... ....:............ ll24.12
Qlabu,..mtnta
Employ••• Retirement
· ~notructlon ................... 0.00 Bentfltl ....................... 172.113
:;supporting servlceo...........
Purcholld S.rvlctt ......... ..
... ... ........... ......................0.00
..............................15,329.13

In Atha ns, Hocking, Meigs,
Monr oe, Morg an, Noble,
P arry,
and
Washington
Cou nties. Older Americ ana

&amp;

Oth e r

Uoeo/Net ....... ......... (2,735.28)
Beginning Fund Caoh
Balance .................. 16,505.62
Ending Fund Cash
Balance ...... ............ 13,770.54
Reserved
fo r
Encumbrances ........ 2,201 .06
Unreserved Fund Balance .

......... .............. .......11,569.48
TOTALS
Rtcelpta: Revenue Receipts
Taxes ............. .....794 ,653.57
Tulllon ....................... 446.32
Earnings on Investments ...
...... ........................ 30,209.64
Food Services Sales ......... ..
...... ........................ 79,216.49
Extracurricular Actlvllloo
" ............................ 79,691 .04
Closa Materials &amp; Fees .......
...... .. .................... .27,472.18
Mlac. Recelpta .. 624,797.45
Granta In Aid
Stela Sourcoa.2,446,334.94
Federal Sources .. .............. .
................. ........... 195,472.85
Total
Rocalpla
(Operating) ....... 4,278,294.48
Expenditure Disbursements
lnalrucllon ..... 1,989,654.51
Supporting Services ......... ..
.........................1,418,565.12
Community Services ...... ....
"" " .... "" .... "" """ .... 5 ,425.24

Medical health ocreanlng
tor ch ol esterol, dlabetea,

c ancar,

and/o r

hearing

where thla It not pretently
available al no or low c oat
to se nio rs; Alzheimer 's
dlseaee o r related dlsordera
educ ation ; mental he alth
edu cation ; nut rition rlak
au easment using Level II
s cree n ;
or
health

promotion .
Compl e ted

propo sa l s

Buck eye Hills of11ces on or
before September 6, 1994.
Contracts fo r eervlce will
be f or the period 1/1/95 to

26 Yean Experience
Roofing, Vinyl S iding,
Porc hes, Vinyl
Replacement
Windowo
For Free Est imate
Call 742·2303

614-992 -2176

SR 7 - Five

Po ints

712011 mo. pd.

8 113/ttn

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

LINDA'S
-PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp; Exterior
Take !he pain ou t of
painling. Le t uo do it
lor you. Ve ry reasonable.
Fre e Eslima les
Be lore 6 p.rn . lea ve
· mess age.
Alter 6 p .m.

Specific amounts of funds

Backhoe Service

(8) 5 ; 1TC

ENTERPRISES

43266-0573 .

Tho

sched"led at a Ialor data .
For purposes of hearing,
this case le being
consolidated with National's

Gutters

Service

Downspouts

Complete House &amp;
Tr~iler Sites

992·4103
MORRISON'S
HEATING &amp; COOliNG
RSES

45769.
All Interested members ol
the public will be given an
opportunity to be hold at tho
public hearing . Further
Information

may

be

obtained by contacting tho

&amp;

Fill Dirt, Top Soil
Reasonable Rates
Eslimates

949· 2168

992·3838

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

Service

GRAVEL

Reasonabl e Rates

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

Do ceratin
Sal" 11N1

lall..atloll

Call Westen Auto
992-5515

Delivered

locally

Free Eslimales
Residential, Commercial
and lndustnal

992·3838
sq /1 rn o.

rTD

of crass
Custom Wind'cw Coverings
Shop At
Home
Service
Day Or
Night

Porches

Announcements

It's nol just a way to
cover a window
ll's a way to
lighl up a room

Buutlful Glria, Exchlng, P••
aionatelll Talk to 'tm live, 1-800484-11000, .... 1904, $3.99. 18
plus, Procall Co., 602·854-

992· 5311

-Day DIM Pllan . Lo.1 Exc••
lbo F0&lt; Good. I lost 20 lbt. In
5 Wb. Eating Righi Without
Dltllng. 3 llln. Rocordod uuge. Itt! /Min. Muet Be 18 To
Cali. 1-1100-255-5533.

1-IIOQ-BLIND-11

Sidewalks
Driveways

Announcements

3

Blinds • Verticals • Shades

INDUSTRIES

614-992 -2176

7-

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Jl 'Toucli

Residential
Concrete
and Masonry Work

SR

314193 1 MO

...

Free estimates.

MARTECH

N. Sayre

Joe

Ftndng &lt;'IIi•
Uli·Wood

S-t. t

992-7434

&amp; COAL

212311 mo. DCI.

985·4473

Installation

LIMESTONE,

985-4111

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

&amp;

--.

HAULING

.Carpentry
•Palnling
•Power Waohlng •
cloant all exterlort
with high prenure
oprayer
•Reaoonable Ratea
•20 Yearo Exper1enca
•Free Eatlmatoa

Remodeling

Certified Sales,

JIJMin

-

• Complete

EPA

rre.

Jit:ZO.

IIID YEAR RESOWTION
7

Vtraallle bind •vallable tor
part._, dine• and nightclub
work. All types ol musfc 614--

Five Points
8/13/tfn

Commission .

The Public Ullllllos
Commission ol Ohio
By: Gary E. Vlgorllo,
Proceeds from Sale of
Secretary
Notes .................... 217,700.00
State Sourcoo ........ 9,116.21 (8)5; 1TC
Federal Sourceott8,351 .23
Operating Tranoforo-ln .......
Public Notice
..... ........... .............. 46,823.41
Refund of Prior Yoaro IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Expend ..................... 8,539.25 COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Operating Tranoforo·Out ....
.. ......................... (46,823.41) In the metier ol oottlemonl
Refund of Prior Yeara of accounta, Probate Court,
Melga County, Ohio
Rtcelpta ................. (5,983.19)
Accounts and vouchers
Total Other Fin. Sourcea
(Uooo) .. ................. 364,877.88 or tho lollowlng named
Excau Racelpts/Sourceo flduclarlea have been flied
In the Probata Court, Melga
Overi(Uncler)
Dlaburtemonta &amp; Other County, Ohio, tor approval
Uott/Ntt ............... 145,885.89 and settlement:
ESTATE NO. 26906 • Final
Beginning Fund C11h
Balance ................ 635,047.59 and Dlatrlbullve Account or
Ending Fund Cuh Linda R. W1rner, Executor
Balance ................ 780,733.58 ol the Eotata of Marion F.
Reterved
for Ebersbach, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 27830 • Final
Encumbrance• .... 201,634.93
and
Dlatrlbullve Accoun,l or
Unr11erved Fund Balance.
.................. ..........579,098.65 Marvin L. Kelly, Executor of
Caoh In Banko (Net) ........... . the Estate of Burnalano M.
.. ........ " "' ." ....... '" 780,733.58 Kelly, Daceated.
ESTATE NO. 27915 • Final
Total Fund Btlance ........... .
.. " ...... " ...... ." .......780,733.58 and Dlotrlbullve Accounl of
Loll Jean Mugroge ,
Memorande Deta
Aottosed Valuation .......... .. Execulrlx of the Estate of
A. Barnhart ,
.. ..................... 34,896,833.00 Harold
Deceased.
Proparty Tax Levloo
ESTATE NO. 26884 • Final
lnaldt!O Mlll ............ 4.0000
and
Dlatrlbullve Account ol
OuloldotO Mlll ....... 21 .2000
ADM .......................... 793.00 Richard G. Shaddeau,
Number of Non-Cart . Executor of the Ettote of
Employoeo .................. .. 35:00 Leora Strom, Deceaood.
ESTATE NO. 28177 - Firat
Number
of
Corl .
Employoeo .................... sa.oo Partial Account of L. Alan
Goldabtrry, Executor of tht
SUMMARY
Eotalo ol Clara Wllllomo,
INDEBTEDNESS
Doceaoad.
BONDS
ESTATE NO. 28184 • Final
Balance Beginning of
Ptrlod ......... ............ 40,000.00 and Distributive Account or
Now luuao-Durlng Flocol Edna B. Kouns, Executrix ol
Perlod ......... ..................... o.oo the Estate of Kathleen J .
Redeemed-During Flocal McNickle, Dtceoaed.
ESTATE NO. 21079 - Flrot
Period .. ........................... 0.00
Balance 6-30-94 .. 40,000.00 Partial Account or Laura
SUMMARY INDEBTEDNESS Hual Cozart, Admlnltlralrlx
of tho Eolate of Edwin
NOTES
Stanley Cozart, tko Stanley
LONG &amp; SHORT TERM
Balonce Beginning of Edwin Cozart, Decoaoad.
Unltll exctpllono ore
Period ................... 217,760.00
Redtemad·Durlng Flocal flied lhtrelo, oold accounta
Period ....................... 7,682.16 will be for htarlng before
Balance WCH4.210,067.84 aald Court on tho 7th day of
I certify the following September, 11194, al which
report to be correct and time tald account• will bo
true, to tho boot of my conoldtred and continued
from doy to doy until flnolly
knowledge:
Traotureroflht dltpooed of.
Any ptrton lnttrtolad
Boord ot Educllllon
may ftlt written oxcepllont
(8) 5; lTC
to oald occounlo or to
mottara partolnlng to the
Public Notice
execution of tht trutl, not
lata thon live doyo prior to
LEGAL NOTICE
Buckeye Hllla·Hocklng tho dlllt 1111 for htorlng.
Robert Buck, Judge
llllley
Rtglonol
Common Pita Court,
Dtvtlopmant Dlatrlct, Routt
Problllt Dlvlolon
1, Box 28110, Merletta, Ohio
Mtlgo County, Ohio
lo raqutltlng propoaolt lor
Preventive Heallh Strvlcea (8) 5; lTC

FREE ES TIMATES

• Garages

Universal

Cue No. 94·221-GA·GCR.
Coploo of National Gao &amp;
011 Company'o
1994

West Main, Pomeroy, Ohio

Driveways, Septic
Systems. Water &amp; Sewer
Lines , Land Clearing
Trucking: limestone &amp;

Painting

• New Homes

gas cost recovery case,

county public library:
Pomeroy Public Library, 216

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

Gutter Cleaning

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

Commlselon , 180 East
Broad Street , Columbus,

Ohio

Something New for
Meigs County
Tueo. thru Sat 1~
Name Brand Tools,'
Toya, Fenton.
Come and aee.
One milo out RL 143
from Rl 7

992-6215
Pomeroy, q_~~..-""

to review the 19941ong-term

period . Tho hearing will
begin at 9:00 a.m., Aug"al
29, 1994 altho offices oltho

OPENING AUG. 2

·Room Additions
· New garagea
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
· Rooting
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Palnling also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

GRACE

Publlc Notice

prices, and sources of
supply over the forecast

Excavating· Co.

ROORNG

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

a proposal packet, please

lorocasl report flied by tho
Nallonal Gas &amp; 011
Company. Tho lorecaat
report contains lnformallon
on the utility's prolectlon ol
anticipated supply, supply

Howard

Writesel

7ta/1 mo.

Water hauling

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Ullllllos
Commloalon ol Ohio hao
scheduled a public hearing
In Case No. 94· 121 -GA-FOR

L.

3125194

In each county are available
In the bid packet.
For turther Information or
contact Michael Morad 1614)
374-9436.

Howard

NEW- REPAIR

614-905·4180

12/31 /95.

Purcha1ad Services ....... ... . forecast report may be
............................ 538,702.09 reviewed by any member of
Suppliet &amp; Malarial a .......... the public at tho following

.. .................... ...... 109,674.75
Capital Outlay ....... 6,501.35
Other Objoclo ........ 2,117.90
Total Disbursement• •
(Opor) ..... ........... 4,497.486.37
Exc. Rcpts. Over/(Under)
Dlob. .... .............. . (219,191 .89)
Other Financing Sourcso
(Utoo)
Contrlbullona &amp; Donallons
............................. 14,344.28
Proc. Fm . Sale &amp; Loss ot
Aneta .................... .. 2,81 0.10

Bac khoe Wo rk and
Ge ne ra l Ha u ltng
Ltm e stone - Ftll D•rt
Gra vel · Sand
Leach Be d
Insta lla tio n a nd Sept1c
Syste ms

tl~

the following aervlces:

Extracurricular Actlvltea ... evidentiary hearing will be

.............. ................65,499.12
Facllltles Acquisition ..........
......................... ...203,203.00
Debt Servlces .... .. 26,930.70
Employee• Salaries &amp;
Wegeo ................ .....62,810.09
Employoet Rotlramenl
Benetlto .. ........ ........ 68 ,402.50

IN POIIERrJY
6:45p.m.
Spacial Eerly B lrd
$100 Pavoff
Thla Ml good tor 1
FREE c are!.
Lie. No. 0051 -342

Price
Construction
Co.

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

Act Fund a are available lor

musl be received ol tho

Dlaburaements:

Pentecostal
Penleamal A!liembly
SL Rt 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Evening - 7 p.m.

Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

Sale

Wonh1p · 7 p.m.
Thunday Service -7p .m.

Family Restaurant

228 W.

All On

CllRon Tabernacle Church
Clif10n, W.Va .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

"llllutilll 1&lt;111u~lv F1l1d Chid1n"

Pomeroy

m•

Pu tor: David Dailey

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Servia: · 7 p.m.

n

112-H44or~

SUver.rvllle Word of Falill

Sunday S&lt;hool - 9 o.m.
Wonhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

p; J. PAULEY, AGtNT"'i . T,JW~L
Nationwide Ins. Co.
.llf...~

POIEROY, OHIO

SIPiday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · It a.m., 7 .30J'.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:3 p.m.

P•stor. Duane Sydcnnri.cker

Pomen.r Churcb ofllae N . Putcr: Rev. 'l1lomu McCluna
Sunday School - 9:30 .....

352 EAST liiAJN

Harrisooville Road
P1stor: Rev . Victor Roush

Soulll Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge

Pastor. Rev. Rick Stu&lt;JiU
SID!day School - 9:30am.
WoniUp · !0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 7 p.m.

~i4,.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel

Neue S.tlltment Church
Sunday Won!Up · 2:30pm.;
Thunday oervice1 -7:30p.m.

Wednesdl)l Services - 7 p.m.

of Columbus, 0
104 W. Main
991 2118 Pomeroy

MASON BOWLING LANES

Service: friday, 7 p.m

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh -Day Advenllst
Mulbeny Hts. Rd., Pomeroy

United Fallll Church
Rt. 7 011 Pcmc:roy By-Pass
PasiOr. Rev. Roben B. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service- 7 pm.

Middleport Church or the Nazarene
ParlOr. G10gory A. Cundiff
SIPiday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.

L011gBouom
Pastor: Rev. O.del Muh

Pastor: Rc..,. Blackwood

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

•

(Oper) . .................... 31,614.64
Exc. Rcpt s. Over/(Underl
Dlsb .... .... ................ (6,016.63)
Non Operating Recolpll
(Dioburoemenlo)
Contributions &amp; Donallons
......... .............. ........ 3,371 .95
Refund

Worship - 1 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.

MI. 011.. Co•munllr Churdi
Paotor: La.......,. Bwh
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wodneday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor. ShaiUl Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.

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

Calvary Bible Chu rch
Pumeroy Pike, Co Rd

Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Falill Goopet Chorch
Loogllouom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II am.

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

Wtdnesday Service - 7·30 p m

Morse Chapel Church

Larry Faw, Superintendent
Sunday ochool • I0 a.m.

Hoddngport Church

Alfml
Pastor: ShaiUl Hausman

Syntwre Church or God
Apple and Seoond SU.
Pas10r. Rev. David Rwoell
Sunday School and Wonhip- 9:30a.m.

•

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Racine

Melp Cooperative Parish
Norlbeut Cluster

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

Haul Community Church
Off RL 124
Puior: Edsel Han

Pulor: Ken Molter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

1 72 North Second Ar L
Middl-rt, Ohio

Srn(uae Mla&amp;o.

14ll Bndgemon St. , Syncuae
PaoiOr. Roy (Mike) Thompoon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
WedneJ&lt;iay Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9 am.
Wedncaday - 7 p.m.

ML Olive United Melhodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkeoville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spims
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wor~hip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

RuUand Chur&lt;h or God
P11110r. Gregory L. Scan
SIPiday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m., 6 pm.

CLASSIAm ADS
asuper market
for everythingp

Thursday StMce - 1 p.m.

East Letart

Old Daltr Bible ChrlsUan Osurch
Sunday School: 10 a.m.
Morning Wonhip: lla.m.
Evening Wonhip: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic;e - 7 p.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah Churcb or God
Rac:ine
Pastor. Rev. Jamea: Satterfield
SIPiday School - 9:4S a.m.
Evcnina - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Scrviceo - 7 p.m.

Sll!lday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.

Pastor. Ken Moller

United Methodist
Gnham United Meillodist
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm. (lilA 2nd s... ).
7:30p.m. (3nlA 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

HtlbiOD Cbrllllao Unlea
Middleport. Ohio
Sunday School, 10 am.
Sunday evcnin&amp;. 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday, 7:30p.m.

Putor: Re" . Emmett Raw1011

Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 am. (ht &amp; Jrd Sun)

WoniUp - 9:30a.m., 7 pm.
Reedsville Church or Christ
Paator. Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Falill Tabernacle Churdl
Bailey Run Road

Thunday Services-7:30p.m.

PasiOr. Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - ~:45 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 am.

Sunday school - 10:10 1.m.

W odnesday Se rvice - 7:30 p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor. Kennelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

S Wlday School · II a.m.

Ol a bu na mants

(Uoeo)................ .... .. 3,281 .35

Middleport Community Chur&lt;h
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor. Sam Andenon
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evening -7:30p.m.

Pastor: KeMelh Baker

Pu tor: James Lcwts

Total

FRIDAY NITE AT 7 :30
LAS T WEEK'S WINNERS
CHUCK BURTON
KIP GRUESER
ROXANN RUSSELL
ARLENE EVANS
Forming Me n's Fall League for
Thursdays at 9 :00p.m.
Caii773· 5300After 5 :00p.m .

SIPiday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9 30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2od &amp; 4lh SIDI)

C OMPLETE
SPAGH ETII DINNER
All You Ca n Eatl Eat In or
carry out. $3.00 per person.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 7th
RACINE POST 602

Suppiloa &amp; Malaria Ia ..........
.............. ....... ...... ... 12,690.21
Capital Outlay .. ........ 623.00
Other Objocla ........ 1,675.25

Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ
PasiOr. Rev. Fmtklin Dickens

The Sah•tJon Annr
115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

Cannel

Falnlew Bible Churdi
Leuut, W.Va . RL I

ACADEMY
TUP PERS PLAINS
Basic obedience .
law enl orcemenl,
pers onal protection,
kenne l aervK:e, pups &amp;
yo ung dogs for sale .
Ronweiler &amp; S hephe rd
Stud Service
By appt. only
6 14-667 P ETS

Public Notice

Wednesdt y - 1 p.m.
Friday - fellowship aervicz: 7 p.m.

Trinity Coogrqadooal Church
Pastor. R"" . RoUnd Wildman
Cllun:h - 9:15a.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m.

SIPiday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 1.m.

Comer Sycamore&amp;. Scoood SL, Pcmeroy

Wednesday Service - 7 p. m.

EVERY THURSrllY
EAGLES
CLUB

Public Notic e

NO· TAP IDURNAMENT

Sunday wonhip · 10 a.m.
Wednesday service - 6:30p.m.

Bethany

St. Paul Luilleran Ch..-ch

Worship - 10·30 am .

TAI· STAU ~-9

1·800·796-6321

""' m

Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

(ll Burlinghun chun:lt elf Route 33)
Pastor. Robert Vance

Pu tor: KenrJ elh Bt ker

Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

BINGO

G uaranteed
Na tura l Herbal Tablets

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhiv - 10:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.

Endtlme House of Pnrer

SIPiday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Chu..-ch

S OUTHFORK INN
S HOWBAR
Bache lor and Birthday Parties
Welcome. No Cover Charge.
(304) 675-5955
GIRLS - GIRLS - GIRLS

LoH Wtlfit lie "Crazy"
lose Pou nd s and In ches

Receipts ................ .... (119.10)

Pastor: Flormce Smilh

Walnlll and Henry SU., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Co-puson: Revo. Ridtard &amp;
Patricia Bmda-Krug
Sunday School - 9:30 a rn.

Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor. Gene Zopp

Pastor: Rev. Phillip R1denour

Harr lsonvllle Commually Churdl
Putor. Theron Dwttam
Sunday · 9:30a.m. 111d 1 p.m.
Wedneod•y - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Pierce

Lutheran
St. John Luilleran Chun:h
Pine Grove
Pastor. Dawn Spalding
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Langsville Chrlsllan Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Rutland Community Church

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worahip · !0:30a.m.
Wedneaday Service~ - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Portland First Church()( ill&lt; Nazarene
Pastor. John W. Dooglas
Sunday School -1 0:00 a.m
Wonhip · 6:30p.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhiv - 10.30 a. m.

Putor. lania: Danner

Worship · I 0 a.m., 7 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleya n

Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Anhur Cr~~btmc

Snowville

Pastor. Jcceph B. Hoskins

Wednwlty Services - 1 p.m.

PasiOr. Rev. Marpm J. Robinaon

Rutland

Latter-Day Saints
Reo111anlr.ed Church of Jesuo Christ
or Lalla' Day Salnb
Ponland-Racine Rd.

Hickory Hills Church or Christ

Wednesday ScMce - 7 p.m.

The Believers' Fellowship Ministry
327 Medtanic St., Pumeroy

Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.

Wedneoday Servicea - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Serviu:s - 7:30p.m.

Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Panor: ROOcrt E. ROOuuon

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

SWlday School · 9.30 a m.

Wonhtp - IOJ Oa.m., 7 p.m

Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.,6:30p.m.

PaslOr. Steve Reed

Rock Sprlngo
Paswr.Ke1tb Rader
S1.11day School - 9:15 a.m.
Worshi~ . 10 a.m
Youlh Fellowship, Sundoy - 6 pm.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

A
Bright Idea!

Pea rl Chapel
Putor. Florence Snulh
Sund• y School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Sunday Evening - 1 p.m.

Puwr: Eugene E. Underwood

Worsh1p- 10:45 1.m., 7 p.m.

Other Churches
Falill Full Guspd Church
Long Booom

Bible Swdy Tuesday - 10 a.m.

()\\if( S,rttl
93 Mill Str"t
MldcAeport, Ohio 46760
Jl141992 -6867 - (99B -OOKSl
CHURCH SUPPLIES 6 BIBLES

CLASS IFIEDS---

P1s10r: Dc:ron Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WorJhip · 10 a.m.

Pastor· Robert Manley

~fl\\a

992 ·2259

MJnersvllle

Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Yomll Mecung - 5·30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Putor. Samuel Buye

Paii&lt;Y: Glendoo Suood
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Wo111Up - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday Scitool- 9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yoera Exporlenct
9112-4447 or 742-2360

FreedOIIl Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Rutland C hurc• ollhe Nazarene

New Haven C hurch ol the Nazarene

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hap - 10 45 a .m , 7 p m .

Pulor: Deroo Newman

POMIIOY, OHIO

Healll (Middleport)

Panor. Peter Tremblay

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

Wednesday Sem ces • 7 p.m.

Pastor. Vem&amp;&amp; tye Sullivan

Laurel ClifT Free Methodist Church

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

601 EAST MAIN

Thundty Serv~cea - 6·30 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7.30 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Anus Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

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

Hysell Hun Holiness Chore-

Jlastor. Uill Wmes
Sunda y School - 9 a m .
Worsh1p · 9:45 a m , 6.30 p.rn .

Thunday Service · 6:30p.m.

Bethleliem BapdSl
R.aCUle, OH

Putor: Deroo Newman

Wednesday Servace - 7:30 p.m.

Kingsbury Koad
Sunday School - 9:30am
Evenmg - 7 p.m.

CooiVlUe Road

Forest Run

Wonh1p · 10.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Carleto n ln terdenomln •tlonal Ch urch

Paswr: Rev. RogerW1llford

Sunday School · 10 am.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Wesleyan Bible HoUnaa C hurch
75 Pearl St. , Muldlepon.
Jlastor· Rev John Neville
Sunday •chool - 9.30 a. m

Zion Church ul Christ

Wcdneaday Service• - 7 p.m.

FlatwoodJ
Pu tor: Keith Rider

Wednesday Serv1ces - 6:30p.m

Pastor: Paul Stimcn
East Mam St.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m

Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10.45 a. m , 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
WoniUp - 9 a.m.

S unday wors hip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeung- 7 p m.

Keno Church or C hrist
Wonhip - 9.30 a.m.

Ch...,. Church of ille Nazarue
Pastor: Rev. Helbert Gme
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 a.m.
WoniUp - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.

Putor: Keath Rader

Lc.din&amp; Cn:ek Rd , Rulland
Paswr: Rev Dewey King
SLmday school- 9.30 1.m.

Wednesday Se iVIces - 7 p.m

Wcdnesdty Services - 7 p.m.

Ente'1'rlse

ROS4! of Sharon Hollnes!il Church

Sunday School - 9:30am.
Worshi p- 8 15, 10:30 am , 7 p m

WoniUp - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

~School - 9:45 a.m.
on hip - I I 1.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce1 - 7:30p.m.

367-o302.

4

•

Giveaway

2 Young Femalt, Australian Blue

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Haalor, 1114-256-6510.

8

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

old

mother

pupJMos,

7 Angora

khttns, to

homeoi only, 304-675-4650.

N£W &amp; USED NITS FOI

good

Kli1ona, To Good Homo • 614-~
2585.
• ••

All lUllS &amp; MOORS
992-7013 01
992-555.1 01
TOU ran 1-100-148-0070
DARWIN. OHIO

Malt RabbHo, S WMka Old

Ea.t.- Time, 614-446-0675.

Raglotorod Border Collie

2
Old, Papera Furnish~·
Bilek Chow 8 Montha Old 6~
3a8..335.
I

v..,.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

7/31.1WlFN

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

KINGS'

Room Additions • Roofing

Home
lmprowemeats

wk

Slborlan Huakay, 304-675-5800,

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found: I Sill 01 Kayo On St. Rt.
141 WHh Namo Chari, BP
Horizon Taga On M. 814-446-6128.
Found: hlmalt Bugle, opayod-

.tlll

hu

etllchea,

vicinity, 614-985-4355.

SR

248

LOST In Arbuckle - Leon er...

33151 Hippy Hollow Rd.

81k, gray atrlppod Tom Cat wiC
WhHt foal. 304-4511-1953.

614·992·7643

llldcltp011, Ohio 45760

NewHomee,
Addltiona, Siding,
Painting, Glragaa,

(No Sunday

Calls)
2112/IZttfn

Lost:
case
conlalnlng
microphone. old Dexter chureh

yard, &amp;M-742· 2553.

Pon:hee, Pole Barna
Call Ua Fer An Eallmat.
614-7 42-3090

304-77U545 .......

DOG
GROOMING
AUIREEDS

QUILift WlffDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made
o Solid vinyl
replacement

S1sa1 Gilmore

992·5316

Name: Palchaa:

Tags: DavlcfEiklna, Orange Co~
lar, 814-2CS-m5.
7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

windows

3 Family: saturday 1-4 St At
160, 2nd Rood On Righi, Al;u..;
Road, lolt 01 Ofrla Bab•

Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
o

by

Rew1rdl Loll. F.male 8 Yea,.

Wilker Doa

C&amp;othle,

I

,

818, Sl-5. ClothH 3T -AduHa
DlahM, Country Cr•tt•, a..
Bag, 141, Green T•rr•ce Tral18r

n

•vtSIT OUR SHOWROOM'
110 Court St. Pom9r.cJ', Ohio

"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tn1111 Owur 1·800..291-5600

Ptitl.
ALL Yanl SOita llluot Bt Paid In
Advanct. DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
lht day bt- the ad ill to IUD.
!kinday adHion - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. S.turdlly.
Antiquo Potato Grater, Coot iron

Real Estate General

HOUSE FOR SALE
PINE GROVE RD., RACINE, OHIO
5.62

STAR GUITAR
614-367-0302
Ampa, Gullln, Sblngs,

Kaybowda, Drum•,
Pl.,o &amp; Guitar Lae.ana.
CMIIltlre, Ohio

50x54 pole building and other
outbuildings. 3 BAs, DR, LA, bath, fully
Acres,

equipped kitchen, laundry area, sunporch,
new carpeting,

2

car carport, heat pump,

full basement, new roof, circle drive, board
fence, C . Tp. water.

$55,000.

949a2049

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY
1112-20118
550 Page Ill., Mid :lop ort

F-Ealltn....
71Z111fn

Ktltlt, Tripod Plant Hoid&amp;fo
Toole, Gardening, Nail!! saw

Bladea, Etc., F"enc:e, Tom.. o
Ca,PI!o_ Flowora, S Van SOIIIo, ell nrtt, Baby Crib Stroller,
Shop Vae, Small TabiH,j Knick·
Knaeke, a• Color T.V., uerciH
Bike, Cr1rt., Tree Sklrta, Wood

Yanl Dec..-atlont, Photo A~
burna, Qulh Rack&amp;, Wood
C!otheo, ...... Ladlaa,
large L.laiat, Toyo. Auguat 1111,
2nd; 3nl, Cth, lith, 8th. 1114 Statt
Routt 141, Golllpollt, Ohio,
Auaulll41h, lllh,lith, S.R. 160, 1rt

a.-,

Vlnlon, Clathta, Cr.fla.

Got"
Alll10.15
e-a,, Actoat

Big l Small, Wt
Family, SOtunlay

Fn&gt;m Plua Hut Naill To
laundryiRIII, Eaotllffl Avtnut,
Prac•a~l Oo To AtrlciMieakane

Fund.

I

�Friday,

The Dal

Senti

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
... S~E HAS A. VIIA.Y 0&gt;
CONVINCING PE'OPL£

TO 00 THINGS,
DON ' T WA.NT TO'

ALDER
BEATTIE BLVD. '" by Brurr Beattie

32

Clothing,

Babya,

Toys,

NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 toHI
Never lived In, still has now

Adulta,

Furniture,

homo warranty, fret delivery a
Mt up, owner financing avall-

Glassware, Slgn11.

Garage Sale: 3 Family, Saturday,

ablo. 304-755-7191.

35

lipolis.

$14,570.

In Centenary Friday August

111atoneblo rlltrlctlont. lntor·
matlon mailed on request. 304-

5.32 acree, $13,160. 8.14 acres,

5t_tl1

Saturday August 6th , Lola ur
Sct..ool Clothtsl
Ohio.

Sheet., Knick Knac~ Fuml·

lure,
Big Mane clothing,
Woman• Clothing, Klda Cloth·
lng, Exercise hema &amp; Much,

W.nlod to buy. two or moro

Much Morel Saturday August

IICfa, tulta~e

to build on and
doN to a blacktop road, 6149411-.2 481.

6th, 9-3 P.M.'
Large: 755 Buckeye Hilla Road,
Housewares, Tools, Tovs, Much

"No more walermelon before bed' I dreamed I was
ll1e l1 ttle Dutch boy wtlh hts lrnger 1n the dyke'·

Morel814, 8/ 5, &amp;'6, 9-5.

11

2 Yard S.les-1404 L.awla St.,
Trailer Coun, Frt-Sat., 9-Spm,
rain cancels.

Garage Sale, Aug 4,5,6. 8:D0-7
No early birds please. 2nd
house past Mason, Jackson
County line on Rt. 33 trom Mt.
Atto toward L.ttart.

Help Wanted

18

Go Mart, Pt. Plaisant Is now
taking apP'Icatlons. Apply In
person .

Wanted to Do

41

Will babystt In my home, any
hour~; New Haven .,..., e~~ll Pam

30H82·33115.
Ground Floor Saln Oppor.
tunl1y. Unlimited, Earning Pottn· Will bobyolt In my homo,
tlal, Must Ba Aggressive Sales, 7:30om.,:30pm. Jody, 304-47&amp;Helpful

Experlanca

But

Not

Necessary. Will Train. Caii1..SOO.

6318.

?.

41 112 S. Paint St, Sullo B, Chi~
llcotht, OH 45601.

Ing,

Yard Sal•11 Burdette Addition,
Sat. Aug, 6. Polted flowers,
tapas, clothu (larga/small),
tape player, 2 TV's, muc~ more.

LOOKING FOR CHILD CARE?
CCRN ~hltd Caro Rnourco

Yard Sale, lnt Jeftllrson Blvd.

Yard Sa l•1ml. Nor1h of Traffic
Circle, Rl. 62, Aug 0.10, 8am-?
Clothes, rototlller, bicycle, 4whpler, and more .

Yard Sa le-204 Main St., Sat.
Bam-? Misc. IIams, Home Interlor, chlldren·aduH clothing,
handmade quills, etc.

554-2001 For Interview Or Send
Resume To: Promotlona Ptu1,

Nelwork Ia A FrM Communl1y
Service Which Would Assl8t

You In Locating C.ro To Moot
Your NNda. Call 1-800-577-2276
Non--Smoker,

Uatuna

Child, 614-446-4619.

For

133 Butternut, Frklay, Seturday,
rollaWIIy, deak, otflce chair-.
••wing machine, exorcl..,.,
chest of drawtn, lamp8, 1ntJ.
quH, much morw.

3 !amity yard uto, Aug. 5th.eth
at Jean Stout residence, 7th St.
Syr~~cuse, Ohio.

All Yord Salll llull Bo Paid In
Advance. lleadtlne: 1:00pm tho
day blloro tho ad lo to nm,
Sunday odltion· 1:OOpm Frldoy,
Monday

edition

10:00a.m.

Saturday.
Aug. 4, 5, 6, 242 Booc:h St, Middleport, children clothaa, toya,
mlec. heme, ...a.onable prlcM.

Moving oal•34268 Umo
Rd., Aug. 5 &amp; B.
Thurodoy &amp; Fddoy, Flatwooda
Ad., watch fOf' algna, quality
girls clothing, mite. tteme, Greg
-~~~~~~

Boltoy.

family

Throe

yard

aalo,

oonlarnonto,

rider

~mram, time home. 1-«l~220-

RH1:aurant llgre.·hlgh hourly
r1111,
paid
vacatiOn,
ftM
unlfcrme, frM food, and mtny
other fringe blniflta, very
1111eonable
ha.pltallutlon
available,
management
••·
par1ence highly dnlrabMI but
not raqulrad. Let u1 be your
omploylf of 111 choice. PINM
Mnd letter of lnternt end
retume to Box R-29, clo Pt.
Pteaunt Ragleter, 200 llaln St.,
Pt. Plea•ant;wv 25550.

RN • WV llconoo for ochool

nuru, mutt have BSN or willing
to pursue, appro\led madle~~ld
provider. Two position• •

Hortlord &amp; Vocotional. Tond to

needs of apeclal etudanta,
echool
hcurw,
contracted.

Saturdoy, Aug,.t 6, from 8 A.M. Doadllno lor opplylng Aug 11.
to 4 P.M., 773 Grant Sl., Sand 1111• of lnloroll to tho
Middleport. Lola ot clothol and lloson Counly Board of Educa" ' - • block and whHI TV, 0111· tion, 307 81h Sl" Point Ploooont,
aiM bike, Bentwood rocker and WV Attn: Carol 01. lllltor.
m~~ny

other ltema.

8

Som10na wanted to taar down
old houH, Buffalo, WV. 304-9372725 or 304-68&amp;-1636.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Rick P.. ~n Auction Company,
full tim• auctlonHr, complete
auction
aervlco.
Ucensed
t66,0hlo I Wnt VIrginia, 3Q4..
~5115.

Auction- Col. Ooc:or E. Click,
Llctrnoa 1 754-84 • Bondod,
304-llll&amp;-3430.

9

Wanted to Buy

CINn Loll Modol C.rw Or

TrucU. 1987 Modele Or Newer,

Smith

Buick

Pontioc

1900

Ea.tem Avenue, Galllpolla.
Decorat.ci ..oniWII'81 Will tel•
ph~M~,

old Iampo, old thor·

momelers, old cloc:ka, antique
tumhwt. Riverine Antlquea.

Rua Moore, own•. e1..992·
2528. Wo bUy ollatoa.
J a D'l Auto Pan. and S.lvage,
oloo buying Junlt ..,. i truc~o.
304-1'73-5343.
Wonllo bUy approx. 112ac. land
"' lol tor trailer. 30W82-2865 «
304-J73.552t
Old clgarollo Ughtoro, milk bot·

Wanted: Par1-Time Bartender 15
·20 Hours A WMk, 614-446-1782
For Appointment.

21

Business

recommenda that you do bualnna wtth people you know and

NOT to oond rnonoy thrOUGh tho
moll until you hovo lnvoottga1od
lho ott.rlniJ.
Boat High Lumbor Coli. Stoat
Building Doalorohlp OpportunHy. Will Solocl QuaiHiod

Bulldw /Dealer In Some Opan
A,.u, Potantlal Big Profile
From Sal• And Con8tructlon.
(3031 7511-4135, Ext. 1600.

Dry Cloanor l Loundry In Golllpoll• ArN. UtebllthM Van
Route. Excellent Condhlonl
682·7302,

P.ll.

I*

814-&amp;82-3181 AHw 8

Through

Salory. Call Or Wr11o: Guiding
Hand School, P.O. Box 14",
Ch11hlro, Olllo 45620 614-3677371.

18 W ted t D
~......,-.-a_n....,._0~-0...,..-

':J

CO&amp;ne, Gold Ring~ Silver Coins,

Goorgn Porlablo Sawmill don1
haul yoW" loa• Ia tho mil just
call ~75·1~7.

H411dy

Employment Services

man,

IN.trlor/eJderlor

pointing, light houllng I carpentry. 7-ulo body -~~ &amp; pointIng. 304-i95-3&amp;311 0&lt; 30W7&amp;N5SJ,

11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Arou I Shldoy
Spoor8, ~n-14211.
AVONI All ar-. Noed ollro
money « wanl a eare.r, ehhlr
way---call Marilyn. 304-882-2645

"'t.a00-082-ll351.
AVONSSSALES
Potontlal 1200 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fantaatlc Dlecountal Beneftltl

' Floxlblo Houro. TorrHory Op1-L t.aoo-742-17111.

lllta Paula'• Day CaN Center
11-F I A.ll. -3:30 P.M. Ouollly
Lovtna can For All Cltlklron

OUr 11 Goal. Pari·Tlmo, FuiiTlmoL Fotl. - n c o Avolloblo.
Coli lnlonnolton Or Vloll.....
!toni ITodclw 814-448-t221 p,.
School,
Schoolaga,
NA
School,

-..zz,r.

46

Space lor Rent

814-44&amp;-2631 Or 814-4411-2512.

Appro• one acre trailer lot, blk
top r011d, all utllllle1 1vallabl1,
school bue to door, $75. month .

Merchandise

oblo, OVerlooking The Olllo
River, In Kanauga. Oeposh,
Aefarencee Required. Fo1tar'1

Mobllo Homo Pork, 614-44&amp;-1602.

10x50 Furnlthtd, 1 Mila From
Galllpoila Water, Traah In·
eluded, Reference• Required,

$215/Mo. $100 lleposh, 614-14&amp;0761.
14x60 2 Br, 1 milo South of
Eureka, on Sl R1.7. Nc peta,
ratwrencea.l14oo256-6089.
2 Bedroom Country Senlng,
$250/Mo, Fraa Water, Sewar, 614-

245.()9()4, 614-256-l!909.

2 bedroom mobile home loc:eted

51

61

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Homestead

Realty,

high ochool In Roclno, 614-949-

2r.lt.
2 bedroom tnllor In Raelnt, 614-

992-5039.
All real ..talo advortlotng In

lhls ...,_., Ia oubjod to
tho Federal Folr Houolng Ad
o1 1968 which maiiBs n11oga1

lo advortloe •any praleranc:e,
imltallon or dlscrWninollon
basad on race, color, relgk)n,
sex Iamlial alolua or notional
ortgln, or any Intention to
make ony IIUd1 preloronce,
imltallon or docrtnlnallon."
Thlo , . _ . wtl not
ltn0wt191' oocept

acMutlsamanlsfor real estllle
whloh Ia In violation ol the law.
01/r raodor&gt; oro horol&gt;y
Informed thll oil dwellngs
advertised In this newapaper
Bf8 avalabkl on an equal
opportunity baslo.

2 Bedroama, AC, No Pet•,
t;&gt;eposit
And
Atftrenc01,

$400/Mo.,

Woaho~

Dryor; 2 Bod·

room House, ~umlahed, No
Pots, SlSO/Mo. Dopoalt, 614-797-

4345.
2

Bedrooms,

All

$250/Mo. 614·367·7802.

Electric,

2br. mobil horne, all electric, AC,
watherldryer, In Maaon, no

poto. 304-1'73-5751.
2br. troller, $3000, 304-&amp;75-2093.

2br.,
AC,
furnished,
•••herldryar, $250/mo. plut
utllltin, rafar.nce, de~ll. 104-

&amp;75-48111.

44

Apartment
lor Rent

Household
Goods

5 Nint1ndc Tapes, 72 Compact
Disks New, Memorax Full Size
VHS Camcorder, 1n Harlequin
Romance Books, 614-446-7081.
Ca~t $5.00 Ut VInyl $·4.48 To

••
1n stoe , 614-44&amp;-11144,
...
Mollohan C.rpoto.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryoro, rolrtgorat~
rangn. Skaggs Appllanc•,

10

Vlno Stnoot, Call 614-448-7398, 1eoo-4911-3499.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home tumlahlnga.
Hour~: Mon-Sat, t-5. 614446-

0322, 3 mll11 out Bulavlllo Rd.
Froollellvory.

Annual Chalnaaw chain aala

Maoon County Fair Wook Ontyl
Sldoro Equipment. 3114~5-11121.

Nice Hutch $225; Nlco Air Condhlonor, $125; Sola'o $50; Entor- CaM Tractor With Cultl~ator
talnment C.ntll' I7Si Woodbur- And 2 Bottom Plow, 614·379nor $1DO; Antiquo Maytog Wrtn- 2261.
gor Wo~";o Buill In 11126 t!OO;
Choln Saw biro 6 cholno to lit
814-379Anor e P.ll.

elmo.t any aaw. Bnt prlcH In
VacuiWf'lm Cluner, 111 aroa. Sldoro Equipment, 304attachmonta.._llko nn, uoad 3 6n.ltl21 or 1-800-217-3917.
tim11bcoll 01300 now, oacrHictr

$600 BO. 30W75-3127.
Rolrtg_orolorw, Stwoa. Woohora
And Dryo,., All Racondlllonod
And Gaurontoodl $100 And Up,
Wlllllellvor. 111UBII-M41.

Font MaJoroon dl11ol lroclor,
$23110. 304-675-5288.

Font Supor llextor Oloool Uvo,
Powor Good Shape, $3,200, 614446.0327.

Sol Bunk Soda, s.- 1\orln lntematlonel 250 Dlaul Tractor
Bod, Dlneno Sot With 8 Cholro, &amp; Buoh Hog $2,850; 130 MF
Applo II E Comp_.or Print.. i Dloaol With Blodo $3,850; 5600
Ford 17 Hundred Houra, sg 850
Stand, 814-367-7111.
114-288-6522.
• •
Sohl, LOY....t. Plano, Ent.,..
telnment Center, End Tablee. 63
Livestock
Computer /Doak /Software, Air
Condltlonor, lleda, llorol 814- 2 yoar old R 1 1 d
441·1203.
og I oro quarter
horso goldlng, 614-667-6630.
Solid mopla dining ,_, aullo, 4 ahoolng, brooking and
cholro, Bl4-II411-Z387.
boarding. 304-ll75-18:11.
STORAGE TANKS 3•000 Gallon lo;::no---:-cow...:._,.-.-d:-y:..l:..o:..h:..a::.v_o_ca_l~-.1
Upright, Ron Ev.na t.nterprt..-, heltw due to hava calf; 1 hllfar

Jacaon, Ohio, l.aoo-531-11528. cal~ 1 Hortord Bull 2 yro. old·, 3
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch aoag 1o pupo 2 112 months; 1
200 PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI ~lo pup S monlho; 614·992·
$32.50; Ron Evant Eniii"Pft.el,
1~14-337·1913.
11~288--5930 JacUon, Ohio
Purebred Llmou.ln buU, 4 yre.
old, 614-742·2545.
55
Building
Small Quarter Horsea 3 Year Old

AUCTION &amp;SW~~NrTURE. 62
0tlvo Sl., Galtlpotlo. Now &amp; Uoed

SupplieS
llaro, Broke For Klda, 814·379Block, brick, oowor a&gt;lpoa, win- 2836·

furniture, heatef'l, Wntem &amp;

dowe, llnttll, etc. Cleude Wln-

Worlc boota. 614-44&amp;-3159.

Homes for Sale

1 and 2 bedroom apart mente,
tumlthtd and untumlshad,
aecurlty dtposlt required, no
1br. apartmant, Bellemead Adcil·
tlon, newty remoc:lelad, no pota.

3 Bodroorn Ronch, 1 Bath, Allochod
Ga,.go,
20130 304-ll75-1386.
Workohop, I 112 111111 OUt 1180, 1br. duplox. 2br. l 1br. oHor814-3811-08111.
3 -..om ranch, 2 balho LA,
llmlly room, kllchon widlnlng

dable rent, aomo utlllt 1.. In-

cludod.
2053.

~75-1100

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:

FINE ANTIQUES· American art,
china, art glass, silver, tumlture.
McCoy AoMvlllt, etc, COLLEC
TIBU"s. prlnte, post.,., toole,
ponery, crockl, boxn, Jar!1.bot·
lloo, booko, to~1 -~lc. ALwAYS
ARROW~EADS.

BUYING

Top

dollar paid. One place or one

hundrod.

APPRAISALS,

ole

yoara uporlance . Buy or ull.
PleaM call 614·iV2·2822.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

$1,100 Beltono Hoartng Aid,
Ch.. Medical Lift For Taking
Poop o Out Of Bod, 114-3118'

r.,

9376.

or

ln.

decJl.

Pamporod Poto by Sonya, dog
grooming, bllhlng, a1 btoodO.

7t

Point Pluo,

3960.

150,000

BTU

Gas

Furnace,

80,000 BTU Gu Fumoca, 1
Usod 3 Ton Pockaao Air Condllloner, 1 Uood £loctrlc Furnace, Metal Door FramM, Aa-

•

·

L-rda, R~::"tro~, :,0: I·,::972:::::-::M:-o-:-nt:-o-:C:-a-:rt-o,:-402=7b71g:-b:-l:-oc-:-k,
--...
-•
ahow car cond., asking $5000
;:,~.;i~~.!r=.:·,:~~~ nogotlobla. 304-ll75-t33B.
polo,
broedlng lloclt, $300 1978 Dodge Aspon, Slant 6 En1« bo or $200oa. 304-&amp;75-3121. gino, Rune Good, $600, 614-3792720 Aft or 6 P.ll.
AKC Garman Shepard llutl - - 1::=-=::-::-;:--:--:::--=-vice. 304-37H831.
1978 Z-28 body, robuln Borne
AKC Roglllorod Chow Chow Womor 4apd, 4-11 roorond, body
Puppy, 10 Wooko Old, Shola, &amp; lntorlor good, $800. · 304-675448
W.ormod By Vollna~an, 814-388- 1,'::-::::-·::---:.,..--::-----::-AKC
Roglotorod
Fomalo
Siberian Huoky Pup, BNutllul

Gr~~y &amp; White, 1175 OBO, 614- 1981 Eldun.do Cadillac $2,100,

446.aB27.

good ohopo, 304-ll75-llll86.

AKC Roglotorod Looo A- 1981 Plymouth TC3 $500, 614Pupplae, II Wetke Old 1 Wormed, 311·2847.

AKC

Sat • Orowlng Suppl1oo, &amp;14256~413.

3 2-llno Duo Fono ayslom,
memory, Intercom, hold.

31)4..

&amp;n-3100 oHk:o or 175-1801
home.

5x6 IIH·bod utility traitor. 304675-51114.

3 bod-,

1112 bltho 2
llrwpta- llrll baoomonl, hoii
pump wiCA, carpolod, patio,
garogo, 601200 lol, Horton 81,

388~

·

Upj 1985 Honda

ovanlngo allor b01 WHkonda.

AKC Roglllarotl
pupploo. 304-&amp;75-7JIIO.
1413.
Floh Tonk i Ptrt Shop, 2413 19B3 Oldomobllo Omogo 71,000
Jocto-J Ava. Point Ploallnl, IIIIN, $1,300, 1141H48-37114.
304-&amp;71-20113. .1814 Chovy C.lobrlly, 1 cyl,
Roglolorod Syborlan Huaky'o good lntorlor, runo gOod, $700.
Raro eotor Wllh Bluo Eyaa, 304-ll711-4530.
114 44 63818·
$150,
1911S Ford Eacorl Sllndord 814Roglllorotl Shoftla malo puppy 388.a685 $8110.
11- n a . $250; rogJotoiid 1811S lluotong LX, .. 600:, 814Porolon moll killen, gny, $160,
••
calll14.a112-2607.
· 4411-li91S8.
Wolmaranot pupo, AKC, cham- 1985 Pontloc Portalor11)o Stotlon
pion blood 11-. OICollant dlo- Wo(IOII, Aillo, Air, 137~00 Mlln,
Rune Oood, NHda l'llnt Job,
poohlon, allvllrlgroyy bl
4 1112 F, 814-9112·7:101: ue ayoa, $600. 114 448 B038.

ST

for ule, muat

C.mpor

Slzo

Col« T.V.,

Mlcrowt~ve,

Ro....._..,.

Apo~monl Slzo Eloctrlo.,.,..St.-o,,
1238.

114-2116-

ptl~~-o 1 '••lhor'ld~·, h.,ook~!'"f Canon Home PC-3 oOitler, _ . .
.,.
IICeUant, 1150. ~15-2100.
• Ple•tan ,

wlltorage, no pitt,

nforlnCIO
~SqUired, ~757.

Comp...

o•

ft

~

eom~-

..~.

835
1:,:-::,:.·--=--:--:-.,.-,,.--With P~nlor llodom, Dloll Drlvo

S:l

movo, $2!011, 114-0411-2862.

114,000 Mlloa, All Power. Supor

CINn, Will Taka Gune, B011t. Or
Wolmoranar Pool Toblo In Trodo. 814-258-

10T1, noanewer leevt meeaago.

3 Room Fumlohod Aparlmont,
11m. ehere condo tor Nla, WV ,.._ I I H11• •- Prl
p
old r~ __l_hlrd - k of ~n ,.
' w~j!
vato Irk·
1
Jonuory, •-•·7855.
lng, All Ulllltlao wnllhotl, Ex·
copl Eloctrlc, 814-148-21102.
32 Mobile Homes
Fumlohod EHiclancy tl50111o.
UIIIItln Paid, Shoro Bat ~
lor Sale
Second Avol. Golllpolla, 81 4
4418 Aftor 7 P.ll.
10tt55, $300 u Ia, you move.
King woodb\Wnor, noodo brick BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Mnlng, $35 u lo. 30pc. uoed BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
l::t"lng, ~. Electric hot wotor ESTA~:~ 538 Jockoon Plko
or, uoed 2moo., $100. from
lo $285. Walk lo ohop
Eloclnc buoboord holt-, l movloo. Call 114-446-2518.
$10oo.30W711-34t5.
EOH.
1m -.tv z Badroom For Nicely Fumlahod Apotlmonl,

UllrTED OFFERI Now 14xBO
only moko 2 poy. .nlo, no
P.Ormonto oftor • yoo,.il ""
tllllvory i Ill up, nonolng available. 304-755-1888.

(abbr .)

48 Large vehicle
51 Cavity in rock
Gardner
14fencer's sword 53 Chief artery
57 Rousing
15 - Angeles
160f brief stories 60 Hesitation
sounds
18Goose genus
20Snakelike fish 61 Son of Jacob

•

YOU OUGHT TO
SEE MY LITTLE

l
1

1917 Joop CJ5 All Flborglaao,
Body Now Son Top &amp; Blklril Top
Robuln, 304 Now Tlroo, 614-4411660 After 4:311 P.M.
1967 Toyolo 4x4, Ellra Cob, A.king $4,000, 614-446~956.

lr-=:::::-a--"1 r---~

1968 Dodgo Ram Van 60,000
lllloo, $4,croo; Con Be Soon At:
Galllpollo Dolly TribUne, 825
Third Avanue, Galllpollo, 614446·2342.

'

'-'

!

~~~~ ! .-w~~~~~~~~
PEANUTS

Motorcycles

BUT IT DIDN'T
DISCOLIRAGE HIM ..
HE KEPT RIGHT
ON WORKING ..

BEETHOVEN HAD AN
UNFORTUNATE LOVE
AFFAIR TOO, CHARLIE
BROWN,....
.. .........L:'&lt;;

11185 V65 Magne 1100 CC Rune

Groatl Supor Cloanl 2 Motchlng

STRIKE THIS
GU'( OUT, AND

YOU WOJoi'T FEEL
SO

.

fOW!
_::::-.

DEPRESSED ..

BEETJ.\OVEN
PROSA6LY J.lAD

A BETTER
CURVE BALL ..

Full Fece Halmett, Neon Ughte,
Much Morel $3,000, 814-441·

0835.

1988 Honde Helix ecooter, auto,
digital, u:cellent condition,
4,800 mil.., $2400, 614--885-4418.
1988 Honda ZSOX must ... to

opprocloto, 81MtZ-2452 doys
or 114-H2-4321tlflnlnp.

19112 Ytmaha Warrior, EJ:celllfll
Condition, $3,000, 114--245-0801,

FRANK &amp; ERNF.ST

'-OOl&gt; Nt:.t. ,,_, au, .... AM"' A'"
ur
tt;I'V7
,..
""
"
ltl
Tt4f
ANtiUAL
llfPO,T!
---..
~, o
t4~ SAID
l6, .,,~
TO 't..l~(,~
~
P
;\
UN
I&gt;E
/l
1
"I,. I ArUf,.IT lfS '' /

Honda XR60 $726; Honda XR100

a100i 1.,. Buick Apollo, 48,000
ectual mil•, 5800, 61~948·2249.

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

18 Ft. Thunderbird Faet But,

Chryolor 48 Mot« &amp;Trollor With
Extiu, 114-379-2288.

,.

16' Opon Bow Walk ThN
Wlndohlold 115 HP More. OB,

C

.___I
0

Power ·Trim, 8~-061'7. 614441..o148 Extra•l

·"

j

8

the four.
It is a method that has its triumphs,
3_
but also its disasters- as in today's
~ deaL
cr
South's sequence showed a bal·
® anced hand with 23 or 24 points .
!2
As West, you or I would lead the dia·
n
mond seven, after which we should
@ defeat the contract. But playing alti·
~

-

BORN LOSER

Boat $1,500, Negotiable, 614-250-- . ,
11315.

SlookCroft lit boat, vory good

H£U.O, WJ )(.It 7

I« Horley cw poealbly AopanCldl. 30of.l75-3127.

AAV£ '(OJ HEARD
Tf\E. LO-.Tf.ST 7

cond., too faat for my wife, frade

,

TJ.\E SWifT£:)\ F~ OF
COAAl*ICfo..\JOt-.1·.

King Whitney. Jr, the former
President of Personnel Laboratory
Inc., once said, "Change has considerable psychological impact on the hu ·
man mind . To the fearful it is threalenmg, because tt means that things
may gel worse. To the hopeful it is encouraging, because things may get
better To the confident it is inspiring,
because the cha ll enge extsts to make
things better"
There has. of co urse. been change
in bridge, usually for the better. but
sometimes for the worse. In some ar·
eas, players donl lead fourth -highest
from their longest and strongest
against no-trump contracts . Instead,
they use Attitude Leads, which don't
give count. In principle. the lower the
card ted, the stronger their holding in
the suit. It docs depend on the strengh
of the rest of their hand, but in gener·
al from, say. J 7-6·4, they lead the six
or seven. But from K-J -6-4, they lead

~

l=l=======J..:;;.=~~~~~~~~~~:::~W~§§~ r;;,~':)"('):,;:.:::-'::-:.:?_.1'~~,: ~" : " ~':':,:,~:':,:;·~: :_Jf

20ft. Wellcraft ZOO Claatlc, axe.
cond. 304-~9141.
Gtoodron 15 Ft. B5 HP Good Ski

lEI..EkiAffi,

TE.l.E.PJ.\ONE, \a..£VI~OtL.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

35Rockets' org.

1 Constellation

36Bus passenger
37Food writerClaiborne

2 Vast period
of time
3 Hardy heroine
4 Discovering
5 Flower holder

39By way of
41Two peas- -

6 Merriment
7 Withdraw

8 Zodiac sign
9 Capable of
(2 wds .)

10 Exploit
11 Touched
17 Unclaimed
mail dept.
19 Eternally
23Recede
25 Yale graduate
26Georgla27 Courageous

person

28Two·1oed
sloth
29Waah
31 Norse war god
32Rocklllh
33 Sea in Asia

36Ragea
J8Anger
40Aulhor Levin
43 Swim suits

tude leads,
west selected
the the
diamond
three.
Dummy's
four won
first

trick' The declarer, benefiting from
the extra dummy entry, took a win ·
ning spade finesse. South continued
with two top clubs When West discarded on the second, declarer played
a diamond to dummy's ace, repealed
the spade finesse and claimed nine
tricks: three spades, two hearts, two
diamonds and two clubs.

44 African native

46- Gola
Secret
48Singer
Jerry-

49 Filled with
reverence
~+--+-~150 Hub

'AHANDFUL
OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

Pl-nl.
5 Goodyoor llroo P 215-75R14
on Cutla"• rime, 1\ka new, $121,
814-1411-2437.
BudaM Priced Tranemlulona.
Uood' I ral&gt;uiH, oil typoo, llo~­

BIG NATE

lng at $68; ownor 814-2411-5177,
814-37li-Z931, 814-(iN-2203.

He.'~

'"D
I'".

gu lonko, ono ton truck
Whllla r8dlliOro, I I - mala,
lie. D AR Auto, Ripley, WV. 304372-3833 or 1-800-273-11321.

,. r t

t" Dl'!l' I

/

\,L .J.II \.IV'-,

L d41e Ltaque. Ph ~ · cial'\

e.""~ !I '
)e !I

to t~e. r~e_

doctor-

for a L,Hie. Le.il""'~
'- bi\t&gt;.bill te4"'~ 1 /

Lodgorwood
Cooch
(C.mPIII. 22 -1'1. Fully Soii-Con1971

taln.d, 12,000, 080, 114-388--

11482.
1977 Skylarlt, 18 112 ft1 _good
condlllon, phona aftor a:w, IIM114Ih'IOB7.

Non•

M;avrttO'I

J6oolo,1

1m

Stan:raft, 25ft., Hlf cgn..
lalnod, _.,. I, good cond.

-·

304-7T.J-a244.

r\O

•lw;}.t1 l.l~ryted

t'v~

*

l.,
-1

-+

~

II

,..

..,..

r~~~

......__
M~a~;c~,

ch11.11~'1ae' The

1

ou kno.....,, t./vr,e,

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

a

r+·~

'

tl-,e broke .....

/

II """ b.:&gt;

=I

' '\,
•

b l-ack
bloody

n

',. I
T

s

ROBOTMAN

"....
'

~

•

••

ota

wheel

52- Lollobrlgida
54 Zooms
~+--lf----l
(engine)
55 Small group
--'--1---' 56 A - - apple
58 Relalives
59 Fiber duater

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebmy C1pher c ryptog1arn:; are crea ted lrom quotaiiOOS b~ famous p&amp;Ople pasl a11d present
Eacll letter 1n tile C1pt1er stand s lor anotO,er Today·s cluB F 9quB!s 8

' HWOZD'A
MEZVA,

HE E

TS

L YJ G

y

X E MD Z

UZ DYH
V E J

G E C

ES

WTHKW

H

H W D L

T J

HEUDHWDZ

FTRRTJUA
IE A W
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Long. ltat expanses ol proless,onal1sm bother me. I'd
rather have a band that could explode at any ttme."- Neil Young
01994 by NEA . Inc

5

'::~:~;~' S© ttJl1A- ~f. frf6•
_ _ _ _ __;__ ldllod by CLAY I.

WOU
GAlli

~OLLAN

0 four

leners of the
scrambled words below to form four words
Rearrange

I s I c E NI

~5 I 1 r
r. I I' I. I I

:--TS,-H.....,E_C.,-;-S.,--11
:":
.
.

"How dtd
become
so
wealthy?"
the you
fellow
asked his
6
idol. "I must confess," the idol
L--'-....1...__.__....
_ __.'"
laughed, "I'm lazy, so I found
, . . . - - - - - - - - , the easiest way to achieve · -r:

350 or 400 turbo tranemletlona.
UHd or overhauled, guarantoad
6 • 30 days. ~76-4890, 1'1

79

contraction

By Phillip Alder

j

19B2 Honda FT 1100 Excollonl
Condlllon, 11,000 lllloo, $1,000,
OBO, 814-148-0643.

76

DOWN

34 Poetic

Is change
for the best?

TATER!!

304~5-&amp;216.

75

64 Paradise
22 Compass pt.
65 Drains
24 Female deer
261ncense burner 66 OHspring
30 Tree snake

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South
South
West North East
Pass
Pass 2 •
2•
2 NT
Pass 3 NT
All pass
Opening lead: • 3'

;

Chevrolet, Ford, Dodg• pickup
bedt. Short or long. No ru.t.

74

62 Joint
63Roman 7

21 Baseball's
Mel -

-iQr-A.-Y_Ur-E-rS--,--il 0

c:mptete the chuck le quoted
by fdl.ng in the moS$mg words
L.....l-..l.~.L.,....JL....L-J you develop from step No. 3 below.

8

6

PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

I

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

8 - '+ '9 '+
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Oriole- Sulky- Waltz- Donkey - DAY'S WORK

A motivational speaker appeared before a group of
civic mmded tndtvtduals "If having faith helps us move
mountains," the man told the group, "JuSt lhink what a
hard DAY'S WORK will do.t"

1181 YllloWatone C.mpar, 35ft.,

wl2-4ft. expandoa, exc. concl.
304-taa-2247 Of 882-2061.

Services
81

Home
Improvements

.

0

Yoor
old
Bold
Python 1986 Chov. Covollor Z-24,
w/aquodum, holt rock, - and 115,000ml., good ahapa, $1700.
wolor bowl, vory lame. 304-a75- 304-ll711-l127f or 304-671-2861.

1 .
2br. opl., $3711/- lncludoa now
Now Homo Few Sola B• Bulldor: apptionceo ond on _.IIHioo,
•~
'
nowly rodocoratod. 304-&amp;75-0116
3 Bod,_., -·lng On 3 A&lt;rwo, or 1700 JoHorson Avo.
Rurol Water, 5 lllnutoo F""" 1=...:.:.:.:..::.:::==.:.:.::::...,,_.~Roccoon Park, 118,000, ,,.._. 2b
111 floor kit h

- · wv. 304-lllll-4024.•

healing
47 Police alert

maneuver

(poet.)

6958.

S~adow Before

roglllorotl Sohlppolko 6:00P.M. 814·245-9555.
~0 ' ~ mal":;~:.r;::e I,':8-:-B2:-'-0I:::':da'-mo..:..::b,cl:..lo=88.::..,R::-og~,,-nc-y,

Musical
Instruments

3br. 2 both, ... 120tt50 lol Hon-

outo, $&amp;,000, 814-11411-2048.

2 Dnftlng Tabln, 1 Wood, 1
Stool, Willi Lot Droworw 1 Loroy

Avonuo,Pomoroy,
S3Q.OOO, 814-1112~3 « 8141192-7304.

8ole,8~1400.

350

Shola~ Molao, $150 Each, 814- 18B2 Bronco; 1980 D-60 Plck-

3 bedroom, all aloctrk;: home,

ReducM to 11310001 2br. houet
L-----~ In ~u.
-~~- .. ,
nwW n.wn,
c._io ochool. -.aa24583.

1981 Corvette1 ellv• on allver,
fully aqulped, mirrored t11 tops,

1985 S.10, Gravely, rKJiner, 1981
Ford 4x4. 304-675-at&amp;:t.

•r•nad porch, U.ilhy room,

2240.

Autos for Sale

304.a82-~.
~~~~~~~--~~
1989 Mustang, Ocyl., auto., PS,
10tt10tt8 d~ $119.81. oxc. lntodor, $4200. 304-Sn.

8436.

aorted Slzaa, 614-t48-6308.

polo, 614·192·221B.

Mobile horne

Fann Equipment

Tr~tar

Marhart Rental 6 Slor11g1 Unhs,

00 Pine Streo4, Galllpolle, 2 Bedroomt, Untumlahed, Carpeted,
Gu Fumace. 614--446-4491.

•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

54

3 Room Office Suite With
Privata Toilet In Modern Ara
Proof Bldg. Call Morrie Hasklnl

Inc

3

Yard WOflt Wlndowo Walhod
Gullo,. Cloonod Light Hauling,
Commorlcol, Rnldanllal, Slovo:

Gold Colno. N.T.01. Coin Shop,
151 Socond Avonuo, Golllpollo.

0 199-4 by

toro, Rio Gronda, OH Call BM- 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Brckor. :IOWn-5540 or 304- Whlrtpool Eloctrlc: Slove In ,.2:_4;:5~-41;:2:;1.:..________ Square bales. $t25 to $2.00 per
882-2405.
~~ Condition, $75, &amp;14-448- 56 Pets lor Sale
~~-- ~~~s- ~·"'· orchard
2 bodroom llobllo homo In
Racine aroo, 614-11112-5858.
53
Antiques
Transportation

Wanlod To Buy: Junk Autos
With 0r Without Motoro. Colt
1..o~ Llvoly. 814.,'1811-11303.

614-446-4148.

304·773-5651,11uon WV.

5x101 10110, 10x15, 10x.2ll, 10130.
304 .. 75-2460.

pluo dopooM. 304·'773-5934.

dtpoeh,

8abwe.lnln1, In
Homo, M11on, 304-7n-5885.
'·
I=:-:..:.::..:.:::-:-~:,::.:=.:..,.~-Cheshire ru, 114-3 ·7141.
3br. ranch, Galllpolll Ferry, call
G1n1ral Ml1ntiOIIOC8, pI 1nl 1ng, lor dalallo. :IOWn-3328.

.. '

W~Ul\'1

3br. houH, Mason, $32!/mo.

2 bedroom traitor acroat from

er•, eolar hoi water,

' 5

+
•QJ1097
SOUTH
•A Q J
+Qi0852
•A K 4

Chevy 112 Ton, $2,600, 614-448-

1,4~1

•K 10 9 5

.. Q 9 8 4

.s

1967 Rongor, STX $3,200, 1iB5

304-ll95-3568 or 895-3433.

In Camp Conloy. $275. ptuo

Real Estate

31

614-985-4418.

• B 6 2

• J I0 5
+KJ9763

•A K

1985 Ford F 150, auto, XLT
lariat, 1hort bed, good condj.
tlon, 128,000 mllea, $3500 firm

Furnished
Rooms

EAST

WEST

00 A.60UT GUZ AN'

UMPA? nEY'IU
BACK, Y'KNOW .'

Loaded, Very Clean 1 oMner

60,000 111111, 614-446:1134.

:1 2

• r, 5 3 2

WHATCHA GONNA

1977 Ford Pick-Up, 8 Cylinder
Automatic, $700, 614-367-n3o. '
19114 Dodgo Plck.tJp, 2 we 311

Paid, 814.,'1811-8000.

814-448-3824.

2 Bedrocmt, Air, Cable Avail·

Spring

Accoptod

32x40 llolol Building For Ront,

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Wanted: Subtthutn: TMChere
And Bue Drtvara, COmpetitive

Bo

Application•

882-2406.

Opportunity

August 12, 164.

Will

bperlanc:a.

Broker. 304-175-5540 or 304-

42

new roof, 3 car gang• wlapt.
above, ttoragt bulldlng 1 conwr
~~1 June StrHt, Syrecu•, 114-..-••7735.

ing

bedroom houu, ut.Jn
kllchon, doe~ 1 carpo~r $400.
ptuo dopooh . ...,.,ostoao Rulty,

3

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Wanted: nllabla babyeltter,
hoUI'I veriable, . Pomeroy a,.a,
In my home during school yHr •
other UmM flexible. Send brief
reHume to Deily Sentinel, PO

Box nf.M, Pomeroy, Ohio
457111.
Wontod: Sohool Cook (Poaolble
Oponlngo) Proparo Broakllll
And Lunch Dally For 15 .au lndlvldualo. Proporo llonu!1 Ordor
Food, Complolo DaHy /Monthly
Ropo~o. Call Or Wrllo: Guiding
Hand School, P.O. Box 14",
Choshlro, OH 45820 814-3&amp;17371. Apptlcanlo Muol Havo High
School Diploma And Prior CoOk·

2 Bedroom Flr.t Avenue, Gal-

New condition, 3 badrooma, rat,
dap, no pots 1 304-875-8162.

''-· fountain pens, tllverware,
.,.arblet, .tonowar11, mag.zlnes,
Star Wal"' and Star Tl"'li hems;
Ooby llo~ln, 814.012·11141.

Top Pricft Pold: All Old U.S.

3 Rooms, Bath, V1 Cedar Str•t,
Var( Clean, $300/Mo. Water

HouH tor rent 304-675.6720.

Financial

1

Owner/Operators
Cardinal Frtlght Carrltrs It
hiring txpertenetd OTR'a to run
flatbed, urn percentage ct
groas revenue pulling company
traltars or pulllng own trailer,
heahh lnsuran~ w/dental &amp; vi·
alon available, base platu
available, bob-tall Insurance
evellable, fuel card eyt1tm,

wHkly

Rates,

ReloroncMl Expononcod, Fr11
Eallmalll, oM-388-11240.
Will Iteam ctaan carpatt cheap
lo flnloh my poymonll on
c&amp;.. ner, 8U-Ii12...W.

Nood Babyahtor In My Homo,

loaoo on. Call Boyd, 1-800-2202421.

Garage ule, treadmill, crafts,
luggage, whMI covers, plcturee,
clothn, etc.,on Sat. Aug. I tit
1309 Bridgeman St, Syracuae,
Oh, 8-1, rain or ahlne.

Reuonabte

To S.. How We Can Halp.

New Terminal
Cardinal Frelgh1 carriers Inc. II
a~eparlancacl
Yard Slll-915 Viand St., S.t. g. hiring
for
the
2pm. Bsby, men, women, owner/oper~tora
· vanl11atb.c:t dlvlalon, profitable
children clothing, blk••·
pay program, accurate wMkly
Mttlaments, medical Ina. aval~
Pomeroy,
1bl1, rider program and time
home, no up front money to
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

Unfurnished Ups1alrs Apartment

jj

B 5 94

+A 4

set ur. For Moblo Homo &amp; Flft~ ..,.
Wheo , Sloe per $1,500, 614-441- • &lt;'
0835.
.

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Also tralier space on rtvar. All
hook-yps. Call aher 2:00 p.m.,

llpolla, ' Stova, Rotrtgorator,
Roloronco, llepooH, No Poto,
$2115/llo. 614-2.58-1528.

• 7

8 ·5

1976 Chavrolette C65, 2 112 Ton • ·
2 Axles, 5 &amp; 2 sr.·· 427 Goo PS •.;, ·

614-4411'9560.

Houses for Rent

• 7 4 3

1970 Chavy Tandum Truck, 361
Gas Enghw, Air, Brakae Low
Mileage, "Phona: 614.-146-9631

S1onvwood Apartment• are now
accepting applications and rent·
lng aparfmente tor elderly and

45

NORTH

PW

72 Trucks for Sale

$100 doposh, 614·1149·2217.

Roome for rant- week or month.
Startl ng at $120fmo. Gallla Hotel.

Rentals

Will do bockhoo work, 114-99251158 or ti14-IHI2-3173.
Will Do Houoo l Troller Point-

Frl &amp; Sat, Aug 5 &amp; 6. 6:00 All tilt

Rd,

1990 Chrysler LeBaron, 2 Ooort,
V-6, Air tend., Crulsa Control,

Sunroof, 70,000 Mllao
$4,Soo, OBO. 614·256-8169.
•

Vary Nice 3 Bedrooms S.Cond
Ntc. Building LoC Or Trailer Lot
c{ty Park,
1 Overlooking
On Pavod Rood, 1.694 Acroo, 7 Floor
Tontho Of A IIIIo Pall Galllpollo $300/Mo. No Poto, llepooh &amp;
Clty Umho, Neighborhood RaterencH Required. 814-4464425 Evenlnga.
Rood, S1 \500, 814-441.0564.

Bedspreads,

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

Rayburn

6~53.

large Yard Sale: 404 Slate Sl,
Thurman,

Lots &amp; Acreage

t Large tub
4 Ora$•
8 Sailtng
13- Stanley

dlsabllty,
614·992·3055,
Slonowood Apto., lllddlopo~.
Ohio. EOH.

8-S, No Ear1y Blrda, Clothes,
Fumllure,
Collacla~es,
Kltchenwa,., FrMzer, Awning•,
T.V., 1195 Contonary Rd., Gal-

43 Depot
45 Goddess of

1 2 Wide shoe size

1972 Elcono 12&gt;60 With 1974
Roomette 12x28 Must
Be One bedroom apartment In MidMoved, $8,000, Firm. 814-388- dleport, water &amp; trash plck~p
Included In rent, you pay
8821.
electric &amp; gas, $160 per morfh,

Charity : August 181 -5th. 8-6, 48

St.,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
lor Rent

lor Sale

4 Famlll": Lota ot hems,
Saturday, August 15th, 9-5, 3
Mil .. St. Rt 7.
Spruce

44

Mobile Homes

Answer to Previous Puzzle

42Time

PHILLIP
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

pod

ACROSS

EVE"'-J IF" THEY

And Ealrul$400, •-·1312.
Concrolo i
P-Ic: Soptlc
Tonko 300 Thru 2,000 Gal..,.
Ron *vano Enloi'JH'Iooo, Jacii-

UU--

I:aon::=.:;•OH:.::..;...,_.:;::;37-:.::~::11:1128=·.,....-­

Gol Rortdy For Wlnlar:
Natural Oaa F......,. ""'.ood
STU u-_,
• ~. Typo noo. 1M-!312.
Have a FrlondiJ.11onte PliiW cw
tako ordo.._ Eim 3011. In hi
111 •-~- - · ·

Slar

OUhlr·

ampe,

guH1ra,

llrtnga, koyboortlol druma. Aloo
plano and guHar -no, 114387-0302, C~oohlro,
Tnrrnl'll wlcau. ~75-7851
aftor 5pm.

58

FruHs &amp;
Vegetables

Conning Tornot- ta luohol.
Pick Your OWnl ldng Own Conlalnor. Don H II Farmo, 41518
Slota ROUII 338, l..olatl Filla, QH
814-241-2832.

l:m-:-:-"':-·~--=;::::..::-:.;;·7'IMSIIL.:.:.=:=....­

w-.

Holpolnl Auto,
Dtyw,
"""' Duly, Lorao CuoCIIv,
~
LA. Chair, Ouooii

1Y-,·

1br, next to Ubrary, perking,
central hll1, air1 _!_1'flrtnce ,...

~N'!r~Volwl,

Gracltllltl ll~lng. 1 and z bodroom apotlmonlo 11 Vlllago
Manor
and
Rlv-..o
Apa~monto In lllddlepoll. Frcm
H32EOH.-t351 . Call 814-ti2-5B58.

Bride'• -·8.

qulrod.l14-441t\0"""·

Soupliona &amp; clartnot, oxc.
cond. ~n-3100 oHlco «
875-5501 homo.

!'!~l!,ttra:

.... 12 ·11,
1M 441 3801 11M-

II'Cinv~i8iij;;iiajj~ii;j~;;o;:
King alzo odl•"'aillo bod, durticonlrlll,
eonvartolo a

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltveslo ck

-gor.

lwlnbotlo,x-.,~

Nlctr 3 bt. opl. In Mlddlaport, - Glrletillllnch Huffy 1111ro, 10
c:.•14:.:..:.1112=·1181=1·:.._____ 8pootl, A. .1.114&lt;141-G~n

I' Rolo Tlllor For t Pl. Hitch,

u.. N.., fiA 814&lt;141·1112.

BASEMENT
'•.
WATERPROOFING
U-lllonal Ut.llmo gua,.,..
too. Local rer.r.ncoo lumlohod.
1918 Ford M'::-1' 2•3 L. PS, Call 1-217-omt Or 814-23J.
auto .., tloor.
&amp;-1BOO.
0481 R - Wal-ling. Ea1986 H..,da Accord, $4200, 304- lobl-1971.
875-3100 oHk:o or 87&amp;-5501 C&amp;C
Ganorat
Honte · ·-·
homo.
1111--. wallpopor, olonn
.
_
roofing
and
complolo
1986 Oldo CUIIIU Sup. Nlca
ropalr, comploto w1r1t1ow
Will Trado For llobla Homo 01 homo
ropolr, ..,._,. waohl~ and
Equal Yaluo, &amp;14-388-11482.
mOblltt home ropolr. For n.1867 Buick Lolobn, now llrM, tlmato call Cltll, 114--41323. ~.
good condltlon1 hl!lh mlill, Cutllo Homo ...
No
$3200, 114-1411-2•37.
Job Too lltl Or Bmoll, Yoa,. Ex· ~
1867 C.moro Rod 1125 Mlln On portonce 'On Older IN- .
RobuiH Engine &amp; Trano., s-, . _ Adtllllona, F-..lona,
Roofing,
KMchono
IBolho,
lloro! 114-11112-3851 Allor I.
Roplocomont
lnaurotl,
18B8 EXP, 1.11 ft.1 5 op., good FrM Eollmat-. fM487.GSI8.
condlll..,, $1700, oM-'1112-2418.
Ron'a 'I'V lonrloo, -'"!lzlna
18B8 Uncoln Town Car, $4500. In Z'MIIh oloo -Ina ntotil ... ,
18Btl Ford EKorl, lootlod,
bnnda. cana, $2300. 1085 CodiHao Eldorado, alhor
_ , appliance ropalro. WV
$2100. 304o871-2440.
304-al'l4311 Ohio 114-4411-2454.
111811 Chov Conla LTZ $4,2111.
1890 Ford Floola .,5115. 1890 82
Plumbing &amp;
I
Lumlno Eurc U,HS. 18117 Grand
Heating
Am $2,185. 1188 Ford Rongor
$2.8118. 1891 Chevy 8-10 $4,2!0. FrMman'a Hilling And Cool[ng.
llal Chny Blozor loodod lrlolallallon And Sorvlco. EPA
$4 4118. 11182 Chryator conYltl~ Cortlllotl.
Rooltlontlo~ Comrnorabl.i, , _ top, uc ahopo $1,1100. clal.~1811.
Now - k Volley Sloctc
Traitor. Undor Now Managornonl
Electrical &amp;
Po.. Ohllnr.•· Scolly'a ~ 84
Can, New IYtn, WV". 3Q4.882.
Refrigeration
S752.
11001 Ptrmpa, Air Condlllonora,
" " - llollor Eloclrfclan
114 . . . . . . 1-100-287-6308.. '
-danllol or conunan:lal
Of iapaln.
18Btl Oltlo Caiola SL, Quad 4, wlrtng, ,_ U.:...Hd oloctriclon.
Point, ·-~,,!15.000 lllloo, llaatar
R - . Eloclrloal, WV000308
54,1100, 1'14-441-o-.
304-17J..1111.
I
'.

ASTRO-GRAPH

...,_ria. +

you. Marl $2 10 Matchmaker, c/o lh1s
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465. New York,
N.Y 10163.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Guard
against inclinat•ons today to oversell.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

WI..._

not be able lo lull1ll al a taler date.
However. you will be held accountable
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) II you do
not believe in yourself or your abi lities.
don't e~tpect others to believe in you .
Persons with whom you'll be mvolved
today will perceive you as you perceive

You're pretty good al convinc1ng people,
but if you talk too much, you could undo
yoursell.
whal you already sold.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Sometimes we ARIES (March 21-April 19) An arrange·

can get a better deal from strangers than ment you're presently contemplating with
we can lrom lriends. This could be one of some friends might not be as rosy as it
lhose days, so be careful il doing busi· appears on the surface_ Before you
plunge in, take more soundings on the
ness with pals.

Saturday. Aug. 6, 1994
In the year ahead you might be lotlunale
in establishing fnendships wllh influential
individuals who could prove very helpful
lo you commercially.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) This is not a
good day tor you 10 make last minute
changes in something lhal is already
moving along a prescribed course. Don't
derail the endeavor. Know where to look
lor romance and you'll lind it. The Astro·
Graph Matchmaker instantly reveals
which signs are romantically perfect for

,.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Today you depth of the water.
might be 100 indeCiSive about your objec· TAURUS (April 211-May 20) II possible,
lives. This could severely lessen your forgo d&amp;ciston making untrl another dey.
chances to achieve anything lor which Because of inclinations to expedite matters. you might do something counterproyou're aiming.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) II you ductive.
are not selective and discerning today, GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It might take
there is a posstbilily you might share con· more sell-discipline than you're able lo
fidences with a person who cannot -be muster today in order 10 complete some
tedious assignments. Disinterest destroys
trusted.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1t) productivity.
Disappotntmenl is likely today it the price CANCER (June 21-July 22) Lady Luck
tag you put on merchandise or service Is your palloday, but only up to a point . II
you have to offer iS excessive. I'm afraid you start laking loolish risks, she might
abandon you in favor of someone whc
you won't find many satisfied takers.
AQUARIUS (Jan. »Feb. 19) For expe· isn'ltrying to beallhe odds.
4ll994 NEWSPAPER ENTEIIPRISE ASSN.
dilious purposes you might make some
promises or comm~menls today you mav

I

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, August 5, 1994

Pomeroy--¥1ddleport, Ohio

_____________ Community CC!!~ndat------------~FRIDAY
EAST MEIG~ - Eastern Alh·
lctic Boosters w01k session at fairgrounds Friday, 7 p.m. in preparation for fair.
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Trustees, Friday, 7:30p.m.
Shade River Forest office.

p.m. at the fare station.
HA~RISONVILLE

- Har risonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple.
Work in MM degree. Refreshments.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Marco, the
CARPE NTER -Co lumbia . Magic Clown, 2 p.m . Saturday at
Township Trustees, Friday, 7:30 the Meigs Library, Children of all
-

~--·.-

T

l. ..

ages invited.
DEXTER- Songfest, Saturday
at Old Dexter Bible Christian
Church featuring the "Prayer
Chapel Bunch".
DORCAS - Ice cream social, 6
p.m. Saturday at Bethany Church
m Dorcas. Sponsdred by Southern
Cluster Parsonage Committee.
RACINE 27th annHI.
Samuel A. Eblen reunion, Saturday. Star Mill Pad:, Racine, 6 p.m.
COOL VILLE - Cool ville
Founders Day progrnm with pru:ade
at 10 a.m., antique tr~tor show,
garden and kiddie tractor pulls, fiddle and b,apjo contests, arts and
crafts.

OUTDOOR HYMN SING _: Tbe ninth annual outdoor bymn
sing will be held Saturday at 7 p.m. at tbe Carl Gorby farm, two
miles west of Langsville on State Route 325 just off Route 124. Featured singers will be New Hope of Rutland, pictured here, The
Revelators of Allensville, and Ginny Cadle of Leon, W. Va. Those
attending are asked to take lawn chairs. The Pomeroy 4·H Club
will have a concession stand.

ing Dou$1as Circle, 80, and Florenee Circle, 90 , on birthdays .
Meat, dessert and beverage furnished by Circle children. Public
invited.

sLate Route 124 . Basket dmner at
12:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Disabled American Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary
will have a picnic at the Route 33
east roadside park, Sunday at 6

MIDDLEPORT - 76th annual
Davis reunion, descendants of
Orlando and Katherine Sheline
Davis, Sunday, old Legion hall,
South Fourth St., Middleport. Basket dinner at noon.

p.m.

POMER~YONDt~ord Township Trustees. Monday, 7 p.m.
township hall.

LAUREL CLIFF - Bible
School, Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist
Church, Sunday
through Wednesday, I 0 a.m. to
.noon, pre-school through grand six.
Everyone invited. More information, call Pastor Peter Tremblay,
992-5236.

SYRACUSE - Bible school,
Syracuse Nazarene Church, Mon-

Gallia fair 94:
1

day through Friday, 9:30a.m. to
noon. Theme "VIP Club".
MIDDLEPORT _Silver Run
Bapta'st Church, Bible school, 6-S

The week

p.m. Monday through Saturday.

·Featured on page 81

that was

RACINE - Southern Volleyball informational meeting, Man day, grades 7-12, at high school, 6
p.m.
POMEROY ---' Community
vacation Bible scboollhrough Aug.
12 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at SL Paul
Lutheran Chuch.

Dav~Dites

TUPPERS PLAINS - Annual
Parker reunion Sunday at elementary school. Basket dinner at noon.

SUNDAY
CARMEL - Potluck dinner,
12:30 Carmel UM Church, honor-

POMEROY - Reunion of fam- ' '
ilies of the late Flo'ld and Gamet
Dunfee at home o Betty Biggs,

Pulp mill gets_ permits

'

By Rev. ODELL MANLEY
Pinegrove Bible
Holiness Church
I would like to write on a subject that is hardly ever written or
spoken on&lt; "The Anchor,"
Hebrews 6:19, "Which hope we
have as an anchor of the soul, both
sure and steadfast, and which
entereth into that willlin lllc veil."
Will your anchor hold? First,
"anchor" is mentioned four times.
"Anchor" is mentioned three times
in Acts 27:29, 30 and 40. Let us see
what an anchor is.
First, an anchor is a hook, a
heavy object, an iron weight, lowered into the water to keep the ship
from drifting. It's a device that
holds something secure; it means
security and stability. Job was
anchored, according to Job 19:25,
"For I know that my redeemer
liveth."
Paul was anchored. He said in 2
Tim 1:12 "For I know whom I have
believed." Paul also tells us, 2 Tim
4:6-7 "For I am now ready to be
offered, and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a
good fight, I have finished my
course, I have kept the faith."

From AP, OVP Staff Reports
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. - A proposed Masnn Cnunty
pulp mill has been grantelkW;o of three cnvtronmcnlal
permils under review by the stale.
The state Division of Environmental Proleclion issued
permits Friday fur wastewatt:r Uisch&lt;:ugc and an inLiustrial
landfill to Apple Grove Pulp and Paper Co., said Director
David Callaghan .
A third permit covering air pollutton is still under
review, Callaghan said.
He said the permit severely restricts di sc harges of
dioxin, a chemical product of paper produclion that some
scientists believe causes cancer. Callaghan sa td dioxin
discharges would be so small the most sophisticated lests
could not delcct them .

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
(!!)

All 94 CARS AND
TRUCKS MUST GO!
iGeal

~

GMC:TRUC::K.

~\'f.

'

1#2863

$11 995

again."
The stock reminds us of sanctification, because 2 Thes. 4:3 tells
us, "For this is the will of God,
even your sanclilication." Hebrews
12:14 tells us, "Without holiness,
no man shall sec the Lord."
The gravity band is all around
llle anchor and reminds us of steadfastness and security. Hebrews
3: 14 "For we arc made partakers of
Christ, if we hold the beginning of
our confidence steadfast unto the
end;" I Cor 15:58 "Therefore, my
beloved brethren, be ye steadfast,
unmovable, always abounding in
the work of the Lord .. ."
The crown reminds us of the
cross. Without the cross there
would be no crown; there would be
no hope of salvation, because on
llle cross llle great plan of salvation
was finished. Jesus said, "It is fin-

~\il
~M/FM

CIM~

cruiM, tilt.

1!7 9

5
~\il

#2699

1994 OLDS
SILHOUETTE

$19,995
~~

WAS $24,252

USED TRUCKS

1993 Nissan 4X4 Pickup ••••••••• 513,995
Extended Cab

1982 ford f-150 ...................... 51,995
1992 Chevy S-10 •••••••••••••••••••510,495
Extended Cab

$21 49S

,-,$,

USED CARS
1991 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME ...................... $8995

4 Dr., auto., air, more.
1991 OLDS CALAIS Auto., air, stereo ................ $6995
1986 BUICK LASABRE ....................................... $3995
1992 BUICK REGAL ............................................ $8995
Auto., air, stereo, all power
1984 CUTLASS SUPREME 60,000 mlles ........... $3495
1991 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD ------------------------•14,995

I

Open

Sundays

Hourt:
Mon.-Fn.

DON TATE MOTORS IN(. :.r~:

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

614·992·6'!J4, 1·800·837·1094

From AP, OVP Staff Reports
WASHINGTON- Ohio' s shaping up to be a top travel destinalion this
summer, as congressional leaders pull out all stops to influence light. races.
· House Democralic Leader Richard Gephardt and Republican Whip Newt
Gingrich are among the high-profile po. liticos slarring al evenls to raise money
· for Ohio congressmen or lhe people
trying to unseat them.
With so many campaigns in so many
states, the leaders have to target their
time. And both parties have decided the
· sp{awling 6th Congressional District
needs their attention. .
Conservalive groups arc trying lo help If
businessman Frank Cremeans, R. Gallipolis, unseat Democratic freshman
, Ted Strickland, Lucasville, who repreI
: sents the 6th.
Gephardt traveled to Portsmouth lasl
weekend to appear at a fund-raiser for
Strickland. He used the opportunity to
urge lbe Democratic. party faithful to
-·support Strickland's bid for re-election,
and to help ensure passage of adminisSTUMP - House Demotration-backed legislation such as heallh cratic Leader Richard Gephardt camcare and welfare reform.
paigns for Incumbent congressman
For his pari, Strickland said a Ted Strickland, D·Lucasville, at a July
Cremeans victory would guarantee noth- 30 fund-raiser.
ing more than " ... anolher vole for Newl
Gingrich and negativism."
.. . . .
..
.
.
Strickland said money would play a sigmficanl pari m the upcommg
election. "And, my opponent has lots of il."
Figures available al the Federal Election Commis_sion show Cremeans has
spent the second highest amount among all38 candidates seokmg election to
Ohio's 19 congressional districts this year. As of July I, lhe Cremeans
campaign had spent $365,152. StrieklaDI! had spent $67,465.
Continued on ~age A2

.

/,
Rebates to Dealer

proposed facillly would utilize the latesl and best technology approved and and recommcndedby the U.S. Environ mental Protection Agency ."
The company hassaid its $1 bill ton plant would produce
0.02 ounces of dioxin every 100 yc.rs. But environmen talists in Wesl Virginia and Ohio have said they fear any
amount of dioxin could he deadly to humans or foul
nearby wetlands.
The company. an affiliate of Parsons and Whtllemore
Group. has proposed construction of a pulp mi ll and deinking plant near Apple Grove. Estimalcs of direcl JObs at
the facilily range to as hi gh as ROO.

Parties bring out big names
for Ohio political campaigns

1994 PONTIAC 1994 OLDS CIERA
BONNEVILLE STATION WAGON
NOW

permits

issued foi the waler quality nflhe Ohtn Rtver," Callaghan said. "The \ 1-Qwing a thorough

1echn1cal reVIew of
the company's pru- a...:.P_Ia..;n..;t,;,.

--------------------.....1

lXJsal and a n.::v icw
of public comments rcn::Jvl:d by the agency C;llbghan
sa id.
Conce rn ~ rai~cd Ju rin g the comme nt period included
the potential di scha rge of J ioxi n by the plant. Dioxin 1s a
hy -product of manufacturin g processes that usc chlonnc .
""fhe pcrmit1s &lt;lhout 10 times more stHngcnt in terms of

dioxin limit s th;m I hose conlam ed'" the IJS FPA gUI&lt;k lines," Ca llaghan said.
"Any dioxin discharges under these pnmtt wnditions

·- ·-

I

•

allowed are not detectablc using the
musl suphis11cated
analylical mel hods
currentl y avai lable.
No rm Stccn str a,
lobbyist fort he We&gt;t
Virginia En vi runmental Council.
c ri 1i c izc d
1he
decision ·s tim, ng
and vownl to bnng

n;1tional pressure on state nffiu;ds tn n.:vn~t: cou r\c .
Stcc nstra sa id th~~ division timed the announcement to
appear over the wcckt·nd. when few er people pay attcnti lHJ to news repo rt\ .
Telephone ca ll s to the division's office went unan~ \\l'fl'll Fnda~' n1ght
Stccnstra ~ a id cnvnonmrnl.:thsts would organize an
mtcrndtional campaign to force state officials to require
~linx111 - frcc tl'chnlllogy at the plant.

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A lon g-standing dispute surruuading court costs for Meigs
l'uunty chtld su pport cases was apparently resolved Friday afternoon when
Meigs commissioners signed a contract providing for court filing costs.

Under the contract, the clerk uf courts' office will bill the Meigs Coumy
Child Support Enforcement Agency (CSEA)cach month at the rate of$! OX per
case, CSEA wtllthcn report the bills to the stale for reimbursement. Once
retmbursed althc current rate uf 66 percent, CSEA will forward the money ,
about $71 per ca,e, to I he clerk of courts' offtce.
Although some questions remamed ahuut who shou ld bear the remaining 33
pcrccntliahility. all recognized that the co ntract

WOUld place addil!OIIa(
money into the cuunly's
coffer wlnlc 1101 deplet ing the CSEA fund .
Based on &lt;In estimated

"We've got to think of the kids
and stop bickering ... It needs
to be taken care of ... we can
fine tune it (the contract) later."

350 CSEA cases pe r
year. figure s conlained
Commission Vice President
within the contra c t
Janet Howard Tackett
speculate that approximately $25.000 of stale money will be pumped into the counly general fundmoney the county does not currently receive, said Prosecuting Allorncy John
R. Lentcs.
Lentes said the contrac t " nut a moneymakmg scheme for the counly: "The
money goes lo rctmbursc (Clerk of Courts L&lt;~rry Spencer) for work actually
done."
"ThiS wtll be new money lo the county. Money we were nut getting last
year," he noted.
Before lhe contract was signed, CSEA did not pay any cosls prompting
Common Pleas Co uri Judge Fred W. Crow Ill to fi le an entry on July X halting
lhe fi ling of new CSEA cases un ltl costs were paid.
The entry apparently hastened negotiations un the court cost dilemma .
"It has to be resolved, " sa id Lcnles. "When mothers can't be sure lhcy will
get child support. we ·ve g01 problems."
"We've gutlu thtnk of the kids and stop bickering," sa id Commisston Vice
President Jane t Howard Tackcll. " It needs to be taken care of... we can fine lune
il (the contract) later."
Lcntes said the contract was one of several discussed between htmself
Spencer and lhe Department of Human Services, whtch oversees CSEA. Th~
conlract was a rcsull of negoliations between Lcntes - representing the
commission, Spencer and DHS Director Michael Swisher who had already
approved and signed the conlract before il was presented to the com miss ton .
Allhough the contract calls for $108 per case . Figures as low as $53 to as high
Continued on page A2

News capsules
Four inmates plead
innocent to prison
riot-related charges

are only theoretical
the quantities

!\ Jn CC

Meigs officials reach
accord on child
support case costs

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Junior Fair officials
were optimislic thai gate receipts from Friday and
Salurday - lhe last two days of the fair's 45th edilion
-would make up for atlendance losses suffered when
thunderstorms swamped the fairground s Thursday
night.
Thursday is tradilionally the fair 's best-atlended
day, particularly al night when a major cntertaine' is
featured, fair board member Tim Massie explained.
A rough estimate of atlendance for Thursday, based
on paid admissions, was 8,500, Massie said. Friday 's
atlendance was sel al 8, 750, he added.
Gate receipl~ accounl for half of lhe fair 's budget,
Massie said.
"This is my 141h year with the fair as a member of the
fair board, and in all of thai time, we've probably had
one bad nighllhat put a dent in our atlendance,'' Massie
said. "But lhis year, it hi I on our big night."
SIOrms on Tuesday night struck when gate allendance was low, Massie continued. But through Wednesday, he added, ctaylime gate receipts had been up over
A DAY AT THE FAIR- Activity at the Gallia County Junior Fair reached its climax
1993. Allendance averaged between 7,000 and 8,000 Friday, but still offered diversion for all, as a young visitor to the Activities Building checked
daily through Wednesday, Massie said.
out the 4-H aquatic science display (top). Meanwhile, other fairgoers coped with muddy
Thursday's featured performer was Tracy Byrd, who parking conditions (bottom) left in the wake of Thursday's thunderstorms. The fair closed
gave a show in spite of lhe rain and lightning.
doors for another year Saturday night.
"He made lhe comment to the audience. 'if you're
$276,767.82, more than $50,000 over than 1993's sale total of $225,407.12,
going to see me in I he rain, I'm going to sing for you,"' Massie said.
Attendance was expected to be htgh Fnda y because of the Iiveslock sales, 4-H Extension Agenl Fred Dee I sa id .
the tractor pull and lwo shows by another country artist , Tiny Wellman. The
Beef sales accounted for most of lhe money. bringing in $12Y.724.37 for
112 sleers. Salesof239 hogs broughl in $105,756.60 and 124lambs wen I for
fair closed Saturday nighl wilh a teen dance.
. Massie felllhat despile the weather. the fair went smoolhly lhis year.
$38,136.85. The top 10 lobacco projects sold for $3,150 .
"Things here ran quile well," he said. "We made some changes in lhe hog
For comparison, Dee I said lhal in Ihe 1993 sale I OS steers sold for
projects lhat were an improvement and made things so much safer for lhe $124.623 .77, 193 hogs for $68,585.40, 99 lambs for $29,472.95 and the
kids. I know lhere was concern over these changes, but we felt we had lo lry lohacco projecls for $2,725.
The eslimated market value of all projects, had they been sold outside I he
them."
a climax to the fair's activities, yielded
The livestock sales,
Continued on
A2

1994 CHEVY
BERETTA

350, V-8, air,

The
wert:

Gallia officials hope weekend
gate will make up losses
suffered during thunderstorms

(KJV)

Joseph was anchored when
Potiphar's wife said, "Live with
me"; in shorter terms, "go to bed
willl me." But Joseph was anchored
to the rock and did not yield.
There were some in the Bible
that were not anchored, just as
many arc not anchored today.
David was not anchored and killed
Uriah and committed adultery.
Solomon was not anchored when
his wives turned his heart from
God. Judas was not anchored when
he betrayed Jesus. Peter was not
anchored when he denied Jesus
three ti mcs. There arc many olhcrs
we could mention.
An anchor has seven pans to it,
a perfect Bible number. First it has
a ring, a stock, a gravity band, a
shank, a stabilizer, a crown, an arm
and a fluke.
There arc also seven dispensations of time. First, innocency, conscience, human government,
promise, law, grace and the kmgdom. "Anchor" has six letters in it
which reminds us that in this dispensation of grace we need an
anchor.
The anchor ring reminds us of
repentance. Repentance is a must,
according to John 3:3. You say,
"Why?" Because Jesus s~id to
Nicodemus, "Ye must be born-

"We arc confiden t that the discharge limits and waste
load allocations in these pe rmits will ass ure and protect

The Weal VIrginia Division of Environmental Protection Issued
two permits covering waste-water discharges and an Industrial
landfill at a propos.ed Mason County pulp mill late Friday. Environmentalists attacked tha decision, saying the agency:
•Ignored existing river dloxtn levels.
•"Rubber stamped" the permits because they were endorsed by
Gov. Gaston Caperton.
•Announced the decision late Friday to avoid questions from the
media and angry citizens.
Environmentalists say they will organize an International campalgn to force state officials to require dioxin-free technology atthe

•g4 fair in review:

SUMMER SALE
DOWN

y

.~--~-- ~

Environmentalists attack issuance of permit

Two of three environmental permits for the proposed
Mason Co. pulp mill plant have been issued by W.Va.

POMEROY, OHIO

Are you anchored?

----·-·

---r · - .

lmts

Sponsored by The VIllage Qf Middleport
Refreshments by Mlddfeport Arts
Council and Sweet Greetings
Admission $2.00
Proceeds to Middleport Business
Appreciation Dinner

iGeal

on Page A2

Park

Contest • Prizes

LANGSVILLE - Annual outdoor hymn sing, Carl ~Olby Fann,
2 miles west of Langsvtlle, on State
Route 325, 7 p.m. Featured singers,
The Revelators, Ginny Cadle, and
New Hope. Take lawn chairs.

Baseball•s WOrk stoppage• . page c1

•

Mlddleport.-Sat. Aug. 6th 8-11 pm

POPLAR RIDGE - Taylor
reunion Sunday at church there.
Dinner at noon.

Hi: 80s
Low: 50s

1

OL'D ITS 'DJI9.{CE

•

Gallia livestock sales ·page 01

: GOOD MORNING

Ohio's jobless rate up slightly to 5.8 percent

Today's Times-Sentinel

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The state's jobless rete Increased 0.3
percentage point to 5.8 percent In July, the government said Friday.
"The upward adjustment In the July unemployment rate was IX·
peeled," said Debra Bowland, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
She said the auto lnduatry's aniUial, temporary layoffll occurred In
the first two weeks of July.
Ohio's unemployment rate in June wee 5.5 percent.
The national Jobless rste rose slightly to 6.1 percent In July,the U.S.
Departme11t of Labor said. The rate was 6 percent In May and June.
The Bureau of Employment Services said 5.15 million Ohloana had
lobs In July, down 87,000 from June. The number of unemployed
residents was 319,000, compared with 306,000 In June.
The monthly ligures are seasonally adlusted.
The alate unemployment rate in July 1993 waa 6.7 percent Over the
year, the number of Ohioans working has lncreaaed by 27,000 from
5.12 million.

16 Sections - 14H Pages

PORTSMOUTH. Ohio(AP)Four inmates have pleaded innocenl t" kidnapping and aggravated
murder charges related to an 11 day riot at the state's maximum
security prison.
A guard and nine inmates were
killed during the Aprill993 uprising at I he Southern Ohio Correctional Facilily in Lucasville, 90
miles south of Columbus.
Three of lhe inmales arraigned
Friday - George Skatzes, Jason
Robb and Stanley Cummings were charged in the death of guard
Robert Vallandingham.
The guard's mother, Wanda, cried during lhe arraignments.
"It's hard to watch," she said.
A woman who idenlified herself only as Skalzcs' sisler sat nexl to Mrs.
Vallandingham during his arraignment and cried. She w~uld not comment lo
reporters.
.
Lawyers for the inmates entered pleas at four separate arraagnments before
retired Jackson County Judge Thomas Mitchell in Scioto County Common
Pleas Court:
Inmates Carlos Sanders, Kenneth Law and James Were pleaded innocent
Thursday to aggravaled murder and kidnapping charges involving
Vallandingham's death.
Sanders, 31, of Cuyahoga County, and Were, 37, of Lucas Counly, also
pleaded innocent to aggravaled murder in the death of inmate Bruce Harris.
Prosecu)ors have said Sanders was lhc ringleader of the riot.
Law, 29, is from Mahoning County.
A total of 48 inmales have been indicted on charges related to the riot.
Eleven either have pleaded guilty or have been convicted.

'

Six.th Street Bridge
slated for destruction

Business
Calendars
Classi6eds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

08
B2&amp;3
DJ-7
Insert
A4
A3

A6
CI-8
Bl

A2

Columns
Fred Crow
Bob HoeOich
.ljm Sands
Chuck Stone

HUNTINGTON, W.Va (AP)- A
popular bridge linking Wesl Virginia
and Ohio is coming down.
Despile the efforts of a citizens'
group, the 6th Street Bridge is scheduled to close Monday . An Ohio contractor has been hired to dismanlle the 68-year-old structure within a few
months.
Members of the 6th Street Bridge Preservalion Society are still hopeful
someone will slop lhc bridge's destruclion . The society wants to turn the
bridge into a pedestrian mall and tourisl attraction.
The sociely wanls officials to sludy whelher the bridge can be saved.
Members said such a study would cost aboul $20,000.
Highway engineers said lhe.study would be a waste of money because lhe
bridge has been a lop larget for replacement for nearly 10 years.

.

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