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                  <text>Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 22, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,

WVU grid
team loses
by 34-6 score

Pick 3:
142
Pick 4:
3244
Super Lotto:
10-18-24-35-37

Page4
..

_

Low IOnlghtln 50s, p&gt;rtty
cloudy.

Saturd&lt;.~~' 1 r&lt;.~in. Hi~h

In

mid-70s .

_._._.,._,.._

•

I

en tine

YOU SEE THE FACTORY INVOICE
NOT ALIMITED OFFER IN STOCK OR
FACTORY ORDER

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
Invoice on Most
•
Models.

I

Vol. 45, NO. 100
Copyright 11194

Ex-investigator indicted
Wolfe faces
abduction,
aggravated
menacing
charges
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A fonner Meigs County deputy
who was also a special investigator
for the Meigs County Prosecutor's
office was indicted Thursday on
two felony and two misdemeanor
counts.
Gary J. Wolfe, Racine, was
indicted on two charges each of
abduction and agwavated menac-

()

ing by a Meigs County grand Jury
summoned by special prosecutor
Rocky Coss.
According to lite Ohio Rev ise d
Code, abduc tion is defin ed as
removing anot.h cr from where he is

found. or res training anoU1cr of hi s
liberty. under circumstances whi ch
crC&lt;lte a risk of physical hann to the
vi ctim , or place him in fear, by
force or threat.
The indi ctm ent s stem from a
Jan . 22 in cident during which
Wolfe allegedly pointed a handgun
at his form er wife, Sonya Wolfe,
and Harry Lyons Jr. , both of
Racine.
The mcident allegedly occurred
in Sonya's Kountry Kitch en in
Racine while the restaurant was
closed for storm-rela ted rcpa~rs.
The Wolfes were both part-owners
in the restaurant, which is now
under different ownership.

'

0~
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By ,nM FREEMAN
SentiDetNews Staff
With the automobile being an
everyday part of American life, it is
hardly surprising that many Amencans choose to drive to their vaca-

tion destinations instead of nying
or Ulk.ing a bus.
However, unlike most Americans, Erwin Anderegg of Fredericksburg, Texas, and his companion, Wilbur Hubner of Dallas,
chose 10 drive a pair of 1924 Model
T Fords, from Texas to Meigs
County.
Anderegg and Hubner and their
wives, Bobby and Cubby, respectiv ely, paused in Meigs Co un ty
Thursday to visit Anderegg's sister,
Vera Crow, who lives in Pomeroy.
Anderegg said a trip of such
length would have been very diffi-

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TEXAS T -Erwin Anderegg, shown here with his sister, Vera
Crow of Pomeroy, drove this 1924 Model T Ford from Texas to
Meigs County. Anderegg's father, Dan, purchased the car new in
1924. Accompanying Anderegg is wire, Bobby, lcrt, and Wilbur
and Cubby Hubner of Dallas, not shown.

nations benefit junior high

cult to complete in 1924.
Flats would have been a problem, he said. "The tires and tubes
were bad and the road s were
rough."

A bad starter was the only
mishap this trip, said Anderegg. A
ca ll to a local Model T club
resolved the problem.
"I have a lot of confidence in the
cars," he said. "We drive safely."
Turn signals and stop lights
were added to th e old cars as a
safety measure, he said. The cars
also carry CB radios for communication.
Other additions to Anderegg' s
car include a 12-volt electrical system with an alternator instead of
the original generator and an
upgraded ignition system.
Anderegg's vehicle, a 1924
Ford Model T Touring purchased
by his father, Dan, in 1924, has a
24-horsepower four-cylinder
engine, a two-speed transmission
and an optional Ruckstul two-speed
rear end. The whole vehicle sits
a10p skinny, 30-by-3-1/2-inch tires.
Anderegg said his car got about
20 miles-per-gallon at an average
speed around 38-40 miles-per-hour.
The two cars will stay in Meigs
County while the group continues
its trip up into Canada, Niagara
Falls, across the St. Lawrence
River into Maine and down the east
coast Picking up the Model Ts on
the way home, they plan on driving
along the Blue Ridge Parkway.
"Most people are nice," he said
as far as sharing the road with
modern vehicles is concerned .
"Especially the uuckers. People in
cars don 't want to share tile road ."

Meigs Junior High School
recently received donations
from Pepsi and Vaughan 's
Cardinal. Above, Pepsi donated two scoreboards for the
junior high. From left arc
Henry Thrapp of Pepsi, eighth
grade football coach Don
Dixon, junior high basketball
coach Ron Drexler and teachers Christine Blaellnar and
.Jesse Vail. Vail and Blaettnar
teach the Occupational Work
Adjustment classes. About a
dozen students will be respon sible ror keeping the vending
machines stocked, while learning about work and responsibility. At right, Don Vaughan
of Vaughan's Ca rdinal and
math teacher Linda Lear pose
in front or computers and calculators the supermarket
donated. The computers will
likely be used in the library
for word processing purposes.
(Sentinel photos by Dave Harris)

DEP reopens comment period
for pulp mill in Mason County
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The state Division of Environmental Protection is reopening for
30 days the public comment period
on a proposed pulp mill beside the
Ohio River in Mason County.
Director David Ca llaghan said
Thursday he decided to accept
additional comment after the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
complained about changes made in
the final version of tile miWs water

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Voinovich,
Hollister plan
stops in area
Gov. George Voinovich, his
running mate, Nancy Hollister,
and their spouses will be making several stops in the area on
Saturday, the Voinovich campaign organization announced.
The governor and his
entourage are to be at the
Pomeroy Gun Club at 12:30
p.m. to meet with members of
the Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council and discuss area transponation issues.
The group will travel 10 the
Gen. James M. Gavin power
plant in Cheshire for a tour at
I :45 p.m., followed by a trip
downriver to Gallipolis on the
towboat J.S. Lewis.
The group will arrive at the
Gallipolis landing at approximately 4:30 p.m. and tour the
Our House Museum, 434 First
Ave. Voinovich and Hollister
will then present brief remarks
to a Republican dinner and rally
at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds around 6 p.m. The
group is scheduled 10 leave for
the Jackson Apple Festival at
6:30 p.nl.

AMultimedia Inc. N-opaper

Wolfe was at the tim e emp loyed
by Meigs Cou nt y Prosec utin g
Atlo rn ey John R. Lcntcs as an
investigaiOr, and he was also a special deputy for Meigs Sheriff Jmnes
M. Sou lsby. He was earlier di smi ssed by the prosecutor's offi ce
and resigned hi s deputy's comm ission Thursday before the indictment.
Abduction, an aggravated felony
of the third degree, is punishable
by a maximum prison tenn of five
to 10 years. Aggravated menacing
is a fust-degrcc misdemeanor punIShable by a six-month jail tenn. In
addition, Wolfe may face an ,additional three yea rs co nfinement
since the indicuncnt states a handgun was used in the alleged offenses.
An arraignment has been set for
10 a.m. Tu es day in the Me igs
County Court of Common Pleas.

Texas couples make stop
in area
thanks to Model T
Henry Ford's
popular car
can still make
lengthy trips

1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 conb

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 23, 1994

pollution perm it
Peter Kostmayer, director of the
EPA regio nal office in Philadel phia, co mplained la st week that
Callaghan's agency increased with out public comment the amount of
dioxin the mill would be allowed to
di scharge into the Ohio.
Dioxin is a toxic byproduct of
paper biC&lt;lching. The draft version
of the permit called for a discharge
limi t of one pound every 100,000

years, but that was changed to one
pound eve ry I0,000 years in the

final version.

Kostmayer said making that
chan ge without public comment
co uld Invalidate the permit. But
Callaghan sa id his agency will simpl y take co mm ent and dec id e
whether to mc&gt;dify the pcm1it.
The $ 1.1 billion mill at Apple
Grove would be bullt by a subsidi ary of Parsons &amp; Whillemorc
Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y.

National program brings
homeless back to polls
cities included Canton, Columbus,
Steubenville and Toledo.
"The campaign is about giving
homeless people a sense of their
citizenship ... by giving them a
voice in policy issues," said Fred
Kamas Jr .. executive director of the
coalition.
In Cincinnati, deputy registrars
up tables at several soup
set
ends meet.''
kitchens
and shelters in addition to
She had never even bothered to
Wasliington
Parle. .
register to vote, until advocates for
About
45
people had registered
the homeless made it easy.
All she had to do on Thursday to vote in Cincinnati by midday
was walk across the street from the Thursday, said Katy Heins, execushelter where she is staying to tive director of the Contact Center,
Washington Parle, a half-mile north an advocacy group that helped
of downtown. 'There, a deputy reg- organize the local voter drive.
Some homeless people don't
istrar passed out voter registration
vote
because they think politicians
cards as part of National Homeless
don't
care about them, said Lynn
Voter Registration Day.
Dinnen,
a deputy registrar who
The nationwide, nonpartisan
worked
a
table in Washington Park.
campaign is sponsored by the
a
lot of the homeless indi"But
National Coalition for the Homeviduals
feel
like they don't have the
less, based in Washington. It has
right
to
vote."
she said.
been held each year since 1992.
Kamas
said
no states bar homeFifty-three cities, including Los
less
people
from
voting, but there
Angeles, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh
is
a
lot
of
misunderstanding
about
and Louisville, .K.y ., were to hold
the
requirements
for
registration.
A
homeless voter registration drives
Thursday. Other participating Ohio common misconception is that you
By SONJA BARISIC
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI Barbara
Thurnquist is 47 years old and
never has voted.
"I really didn ' t think it was
important," said Thumquist, who
is homeless. "I was out there all
day busting my butt, trying to make

have to have a home to vote.
In Ohio , people registering to
vote do not have to list a trnditional
residence, such as a house or apartment, said Maureen Brown,
spokeswoman for Secretary of
State Bob Taft.
''A mission or shelter or even a
park bench will suffice," she said.
Those who registered in Cincinnati were given food such as
brownies or coupons for a free pint
of ice cream. The ftrst 20 to register received a certificate for $35
worth of food donated by St.
John's Social Service Agency.
Ohio law prohibits offering
"something of value" in return for
registering to vote, Brown said.
She dec lined to comment on
whether the registration program
violated the law.
'
Karnas said his group encourages local sponsors of the drive to
give out such incentives.
He did not know exactly how
many homeless people nationwide
registered to vote through the program last year but said the number
was "in the thousands."

'.

. T~KI~G P~!tT- Mary Burke, co-chair of the Greater
Cmc_mnah Coalition ~or the H~meless, registered Robert Norman
outs1de the St. FranciS soup k•tcheo Thursday. Firty-tbree cities
across the country were slated for homeless voter registration
Thursday. (A·P)

}

'

•

...

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

.MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G•neral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'Ibey should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, llddressing issues, not personalities

Doomsday delayed
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - It's not to say it won't come, but doomsday seems to
run into one delay after another, followed by more conferences at which
additional doomsdays are predicted.
The delays make relatively uninteresting reading, and so do not get
nearly the publicity as the doomsday forecasts. A forecast of the world's
end makes news , a forecast of its continuation doesn 'L
The most recent doomsday forecasts came from the just· finis~ed population conference in Cairo, which said that overbreeding of humans threatens a devastating world crisis.
A perfectly sound premise, one to be studied and considered, says
Thomas Lambert, a critic of the fmding . What bothered him was that of
152 newspapers articles he reviewed, only six challenged the ''population
bomb" assumption.
A fellow at Washington University's Center for the Study of American
Business, Lambert is among scores o' academics who challenge the
assumption that too many humans arc devouring life's resources lil&lt;e
swarms of locusts.
There is reason to question the assumption made at Cairo, he says, noting among other things that resources today are more available than ever
before and that per-capita food production is rising around the world.
Scores of other academics have made similar points, sometimes pointing to earlier doomsday conferences that made similar forecasts and were
shown to be wrong within the time period of their forecasts.
Such forecasts have been around since man learn to communicate, but
'they seem in recent years to have found more ready acceptance.
: From the Club of Rome in 1972 we heard that that population growth
'would qui&lt;.kly lead to famines and sevEre shortages of energy, minerals,
,trees and other precious resources.
Rome was followed in 1980 by apocalyptic views conlained in the
'Carter Administration's Global2000 reprt, which forecast environmental
.disaster by the year 2000 unless drastic measures were taken.
• From the Rio de Janerro Earth Summit in 1982 came a package of
'warnings that include global warming, ozone depletion, species extinc:tion, over-population, pollution, deforeslation, food shortages, resource
:depletion.
· In every inslance, brilliant researchers presented their theses, some so
:profound they could be ignored only a~ great risk. But critics point out
~that overall conclusions are another matter, and that's where they take

:aim.

' To begin with, they say, it is rather unscientifiC to reach conclusions
:before the evidence is fully presented, and it is equally unscientific not to
:include aU the evidence.
' Lambert, for example, observes that less than one-half of one percent
;of the planet's ice-free land area is used for human settlements. And that
where markets are free, prices fall and population growth actually creates
~ealth.
: Is it 100 much to consider, he asks, that when people are wealthier they
might also be more concerned about the environment, and that population
growth therefore might lead to enhanced environmental protection?
In a 1992 report by the Institute for Policy Innovation, an economic
think tank based in Lewisville, Texas, :conomist Stephen Moore made
these discoveries about U.S. price behav·.or from 1980 to 1990:
-Of 38 natural resources e~amined, 34 experienced real (inflation
adjusted) price declines and two hadno change. Only_two, manganese and
zinc had higher prices in 1990. Pnces do not decline as resources are
exhausted.
-The most stunning gains were in agriculture. On average, food
prices declined by more than 40 percent •o an all-time low.
-Despite warnings in the 1970s that by the year 2000 the world's oil
reserves would have nearly vanished, i;;flation-adjusted oil prices, taxes
e~cluded, were lower at the pwnp in 1990 than before the 1973 embargo.
-Natural resources in the United States were about 20 percent less
e~pensive in 1990 as in 1980. They were only half as costly as in 1950.
They were only one-fifth as costly as in 1900.
.
.
No critic questions that the world must be cauuous and heed warnmgs,
but as Lambert points out, there's lots of opposing research out there waiting to be heard.

Berry's World

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, September 23, 1994

Friday, September 23, 1994

OHIO Weather
Friday, Sept. 23
Accu-Weathe.- forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

Clinton has his own albatross
WASHINGTON - Jimmy
Carter had the Shah of Iran, Ronald
Reagan had Deng Xiaoping and
George Bush had Saddam Hussein.
Now Bill Cli nton will have Jean
Bertrand Aristide.
It's been the curse of every
recent president to bet on at least
one bad horse. From Carter's
unwavering support of the Shah, to·
Reagan's break with Taiwan in
favor of Deng Xiaoping and Bush's
support of Saddam in his war
against Iran, each of Clinton's
recent predecessors has risked the
presti.ge of the United States on a
leader in a Faustian bargain. Aristide could be Clinton's albatross.
Only time will tell if Aristide
keeps hi s promise to step down
aflcr his term ends next year. And
only time will decide 1f democracy
in Haiti continues after American
troops leave. Yet the past history of
Haiti, and questions abcul Aristide
himself, sugges t the new Haitian
government will be no easier for
the United Slates to influence than
the leaders of Iran, Iraq or China
proved to be.

We have detailed why Aristide
may be more demagogue than
democrat in a series of columns
over the past three years. While the

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
Clinton administration and
Democrats in Congress insist that
Aristide has reformed, or can be
reined in, there remain several disturbing questions about his character:
- Information from public and
private sources depicts a president
who is vengeful, paranoid and not
afraid to use unruly mobs to get
what he wants. During his seve nmonth presidency, Aristide sometimes showed a tendency to incite
mob violence and even rejoice in it.
Though some aspects of the
Central Intelligence Agency profile
on Aristide have been discredited,
it remains proven that some of

S'.aD NeWs, DeaR.
OJR SON l-Ias M~RGeD
WiTH TiMe/WaRNeR/
TCi/Dr$NeY/WacoM.

Aristide's rivals were killed by
"necklacing" - the practice of
hanging a gasoline-soaked tire
around a victim's ned and lighting
il
While Republicans in
Congress have gone too far in
depicting Aristide as a Communist,
the record of Aristide's brief presidential tenure shows someone
whose commitment to de.mocracy
may be based more in theory than
in practice.
Before his ouster in September
1991, Aristide demonstrated a penchant for associating with unsavory
characters. He made entrees to
Cuba's Fidel Castro and Libya's
Muammar Qaddafi. His own minister of planninl( even new to Libya
in April 1991, to attend the fifth
annual America-bashing ceremony
in memory of the U.S. raid on
Libya.
- As president of Haiti, Aristide also steered $2 million in foreign aid to an orphanage run by a
close friend, who was then arrested
months later in a cocaine bust.
Aristide's response was to order

-----~--

the police to release his friend. The
U.S. ambassador at the time, Alvin
Adams, protested, but Aristide
wouldn't back down.
- As an ugly parting shot,
Aristide allegedly ordered the murder of a jailed political opponent
moments before being unseated in
th e military coup. As we have
reported, a polygraph test secretly
administered by the FBI in Port-auPrince on the former head of
Haiti's national penitentiary corroborated accounts of the killing
already given to American officials
by others.
None of the disparaging facts
about Aristide can take away his
leg itimate claim to the Haitian
presidency. He is the democratically elected leader of his country and
d~serves to fmi sh his term. Yet the
C'inton administration should not
expect the honeymoon in Haiti to
last very long. Aristide's record
i~dicates he will be a marked
ir.1provement over the military
regime, but he hardly deserves the .
plaudits he's been receiving from
the president and the Congressional
Black Caucus.
AJR CLINTON - When President Clinton signed the Crime Bill
on the South Lawn of the White
House last week, spectators at the
ceremony found themselves gazing
toward the heavens- but it wasn't
for divine inspiration. Many were
abuzz about the single-engine airplane that crash-landed in the same
location the previous day.
"(The wreckage) was all
cl~aned up, but I must say that
w.1enever there was a plane or heliccpter nying overhead, the spectatcrs were all looking up and kind of
ducking a little bit," said Rep. Bill
R•chardson, D-N.M., who attended
t~e ceremony. "The president
didn't talk about it, but it was
scmething that was very much on
e"cryone's mind."
A senior White House official
confirmed the report, adding that
some prominent guests took to
making simulated crash noises each
time an airplane new nearby. Yet
he was quick to add: ''This was
before the president got out there,
of course."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, lqc.

•

Ice

humamtarian mission of pacihcation. But within a matter of months
thousands of Somalis had developed a bitter hatred of the U.S.

William A. Rusher
forces, and American soldiers (as
well as U.N . personnel) began
dying in ambushes, in helicopters
shot down by gun fire from the
ground, and by land mines buried
in the roads. Eventually President
Clinton, who had recklessly escalated the mission from one of
humanitarian aid 10 one of "nation
building," despaired of achieving
success and withdrew our forces.
The Battle of Haiti, then, is just
beginning.
What will be the domestic political fallout, both of developments
to date and those that may ensue in ·
the coming months? The question
is all the more appropriate because
Mr. ClinLon's whole obsession with
Haiti grew out of a political blunder: the imprudent pledge (to
restore Aristide to power) that he
made to the Congressional Black

Caucus to win its crucial support
for his budget, which passed by
one vote.
In his battle of wills with Raoul
Cedras, they will argue, it was
Cedras who blinked. The polls
probably report a rise in public
approval of Mr. Clinton's handling
of foreign policy. We will not be
reminded that Bill Clinton is
known as "The Comeback Kid."
But the American people have
noted, and are not likely 10 forget,
that Mr. Clinton came within millimeters of risking thousands of
American lives for no better reason
than 10 preserve his own precarious
credibility. Without the slightest
hint of vital American interest
being at stake, he talked himself
iniO a comer from which no escape
seemed possible, save war.
Even then, he was rescued from
folly only by the diplomacy of his
Democratic predecessor in the
White House, Jimmy Carter. Bear
in mind that this is the second time
in four months (the first was the
North Korean crisis) when Mr.
Carter has snatched Mr. Clinton's

when he tried to intercede in a
street robbery outside a movie theater in Queens.
"In our family," said Mrs. Vaccarino after her second son was
killed, "whether you know a person or not, you help them out when
they are in trouble."
Our world being what it is, we
may
not be prepared to go that far.
her children to be kind and to help ·
people in need. When her 35-year- But what about simple acts of kindold son, Glenn, was knifed 'to death ness where the cost doesn't get that
last month trying to stop a robbery steep and where there is no danger
in a bagel shop in New York City, of getting mugged? Even there we
he was the second of Mrs. Vaccari- don't get high marks for kindness.
How many of us, for example,
no's sons to die while being a good
have
ever done what that woman in
Samaritan. In 1983 Edward VacSan
Francisco
did, or anything like
carino, 23, was fatally stabbed
it? Driving up to the tollbooth in
her red Honda, she told the attendant, "I'm paying for myself and
the ne~t si~ cars behind me." She
revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Pomt 10 the British.
In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to SL Louis from the handed over seven commuter tickets and sped off.
Pacific Northwest.
If kindness is rare in the 1990s,
In 1846, the planet Neptune was discovered by Gennan astronomer
niceness (its first cousin) may be
Johann GoUfried Galle,
In 1912, Mack Sennett's fllSt Keystone short subject, a "split-reel" of even rarer. But The New Yorker
magazine claims to see a shift in
two comedies starring Mabel Nonnand and Ford Sterling, was released.
In 1939, Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, died in Lon- the direction of the wind.
don.
''The current mood in HollyIn 1952, Republican vice presidential candidate Richard M. Nixon wood is, on the whole, Nice," says
went on television 10 deliver what carne to be known as the "Checkers" the magazine. "The summer's big
speech as he refuted allegations of improper campaign fmancing.
hits - 'The Lion Kin~' and 'ForIn 1957, rtine black students who had entered Little Rock Central High rest Gump' - are dec1dedly Nice.
School in Arkansas were forced to wit!K:raw because of a white mob out- In fact, 'Forrest Gump' is about
side.
Nice.
Thought for Today:
"It says you don't have to be
• 'I saw old Autwnn in the misty morr
glamorous or smart or all of those
Stand shadowless like silence, listerti1 g
other things which make people
To silence."
you see on TV so daunting. All you
- Thomas Hood, English author ( 17&lt;;9-1845).
have to be is Nice, and love and

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Friday, Sept ~3. the 266th day of 1994. There are 99 days
left in the year. Autumn amves at 2:19a.m. EDT.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
.
On Sept. 23rd, 1779, during the Rt voluuonary War, the Amenc~
warship Bon Homme Richard defeated t'le HMS Seropls after the Amencan commander, John Paul Jones, is said to have declared: "I have not yet
begun to fight!"
On this date:
.
In 63 B.C., Caesar Augustus was bon• m Rome.
.
In 1780, British spy John Andre "ds C~P.turc:ct _along_w1th papers

.

..

that it can be dangerous to be kind
in our society. You could get yourself killed.
Christine Vaccarino brought up

George R. Plagenz

Autumn arrived this morning
but Ohio isn't lilcely to see any fall
weather until next week sometime,
forecasters said.
Meanwhile, showers will spread
across the slate on Saturday and
they rainy weather will continue
off and on until at least Tuesday.
Lows tonight will be in the
upper 50s to low 60s. Highs on Salurday will be in the 70s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 91 degrees in 1945
while the record low was 34 in
1974. Sunset tonight will be at 7:27
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:21
a.m.

•

•

Weather forecast: .
Today .. .Increasmg cloud~ness
southwest w1th a chance of ram by
late afternoon. Partly sunny elsewhere . H1ghs from the lower 70s
southwest to the upper 70s northeast. .
. .
Tomght. .. Ram likely sou_thwesl
Cloudy w1th a chance of ram elsewhere. Lows 55 10 60.
Saturday ... Ram hkely west and
ce.ntral. Cloudy w1th a chance of
ram east. H1ghs 70 to 75.
Extended forecast:
. Sunday ... A chance of ram. Lows
m the upper 50s to around 60 and
highs 70 to 75.
Monday and Tuesday ... A
chance of rain. Lows in the 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.

Fall festival, soup supper
top RACO meeting agenda
The annual fall festival and a
soup supper for the Greenwood
Cemetery mowing fund were
among the items discussed at the
most recent meeting of the Racine
Area Community Organization
(RACO).
The meeting followed a cookout
with the Rev. Ken Molter giving
the blessing. The meal was attended by 16 members of the organiza- .
tion.
President Kathryn Hart called
the meeting to order and Vice President Mel Weese read the minutes .
of the July meeting in the absence
of secretary Lillian Weese. Tonya
Hunter gave the u:easurer:s repo~

chestnuts from the frre. We can be
sure that Washington will soon be
abuzz with wisecracks about ''the
second Carter administration" jibes that will throw in10 high relief
Mr. Clinton's own haplessness in
the field of foreign policy.
The acid test will come in the
remaining weeks of the congressional election campaign. Will
Democratic candidates point with
pride to the Haitian senlemen~ and
declare it a feather in Bill Clinton's
cap? Or will they avow their own
opposition to the invasion that our
commander in chief came so agonizingly close to ordering?
And how will they respond if an
American soldier is killed from
ambush by a sniper? Or five soldiers? Or 10?
William Rusher is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
(For information on bow to
co:nmunicate electronically witb
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, exL 8317.)

riches will rain down like manna."
Maybe. But even people who
like to be considered kind don't
necessarily lil&lt;e to be thought of as
nice. "She's a nice person" won't
turn many heads. Nice is
Dullsville.
Play this little parlor game
s&lt; metime. Players are asked to
think of their favorite color and
then to write down three adjectives •
describing that color.
In the game I was playing, peo- '
pic gave you answers like warm,
vibrant, exciting, sexy and fashionable. Your answers, you are told
later, indicate qualities you think
other people see in you.
Then players are asked to list
three adjectives describing their
ideal peL In my game there were
answers like cuddly, friendly,
frisky, playful, intelligent and
responsive. This is said to show
how you see yourself.
N1ce didn't show up on anybody's lists, leading to the cohclusion that nice isn't how we see oursci ves or hGw we want others to

see us.
That's toO bad for niceness- a
of Forrest Gumps may be •
our best hope of saving ourselves.
George Plagenz is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this colull!nist a~d others, cqn- ,
tact Amer•ca Online by calling 1800-827-6364, exL 8317.)
~~&lt;orld

The following land transfers
were recorded recently in the office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene Hamilton:
Right of way, Kelly Stewart and
Marlene Chaffee to Leading Creek
Conservancy District, Rutland;
Right of way, Kenneth L. and
Sheila A. Carsey to LCCD, Salisbury·
Right of way, Jerry L and Patricia Ann Marcum to LCCD, Salem;
Right of way, Ross Jr. and
Gertrude M. Stewart to LCCD,
Rutland;
Right of way, Russell and Alice
Priddy and Edith Clark to LCCD,
Rutland;
Deed, Gregory M. Stewart to
Dinah M. Stewart, Rutland;
Deed, Teresa Courtney, Charles
and Rose D. Carr to James E. and
Deborah J. Watson, Orange;
Judge entry, Sherry Lee Deeter
to Ricky Lee Deeter, Lebanon
parcels;
Deed, Albarcon Inc. 10 John E.
Blake, Middleport, .106 acre;
Right of way, Joseph D. and
Cora A. Loftis to Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, Scipio;
Right of way, Mary HamiliOn to

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-!Nt)

••«Y

N&gt;tillted
oft«oooa, Mollday llvoulb
Pridoy, Ill c .... St., Po,_.y, Oblo, by lbe
Qlllo Yllloy Publllblq Co-yiMullJIIIOCIIo
ID&lt;., ,...,...,,, Ohio 45769, l'b. 11111-1156.
s-··-~•Ponro~Obio.

-.ne •,..;•I"" -·ODd
NCWIIJII* .Y1cclildoa.

lbe 0111o

P081'MAST1111 Seld lddrell Cl01'111Ctiou to
Tbe Daily Seatiael, Ill Court St.,
Pomoroy,(llllo 45769.

w

Local News in Brief.

White House plans
Haitian aid package
WASHINGTON {AP) - The
Clinton administration is moving
ahead with more than $100 million
in recovery assislance for Haiti,
although a U.N. embargo remains
in force against the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation.
Technical help, humanitarian
a1d and econom ic grants are intended to help Haitians rebuild their
em bargo-starved economy and
hold a new round of democratic
elections.
The U.S. military agreed Thursday to speed the delivery of fuel
and a backlog of other humanitarian supplies for ~Jrivate aid groups
working in Haiu, according to an
official from the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
U.S. officials have said that
UN. sanctions blocking trade and
all but humanitarian aid to Haiti
will be lifted only after the coun try's military rulers step down and
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
returns to office.
Thus, government-to-government aid will not occur before
Aristide's return - ensuring the
military gets no credit for helping
the people.
But recovery programs now are
taking shape. Agreements signed
with the United States and Aristide
will allow rapid assistance to
Haitians, who even before the
September 1991 coup that ousted
Aristide, were among the world's
poorest people.
As more than 10,000 U.S.
troops have moved onshore, AID
has continued to feed up to I million people a day and provide medical assistance and a JObs program
for 25,000 people.
AID assislance of $75 million
for this fiscal year is budge1ed to
increase to $104 million, said AID
Assistant Administrator Mark
Schneider.
In addition, the administration is

EMS logs 3 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
three calls for assistance Thursday.
Units responding included:
POMEROY
3:50 p.m ., West Main Street,
Jamie Allen, Veterans Memorial
Hos')Jital.
4:36 p.m., Breezy Heights,
Jewel Curtis, VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
5:29 a.m., Sycamore, Daisy
Saunders, VMH.

Discussion l'o cused on tne
group's fall festival food booth and
the Sept I and 2 yard sale. It was
noted the group will continue to
sell refreshments at auctions as a
money-making project.
In addition, it was decided to
hold a soup supper to raise money
for mowing the Greenwood Cemetery.
Other items included restoration
of the sidewalk in front 'of the
Racine Elementary School for historical purposes and the design for
VETERANS MEMORIAL
the "Welcome to Racine" banners.
Thursday
admission- Betty
.
The ne~t meeting will be TuesTriplett,
Syracuse.
day at the Star Mill Park. New
Thursday discharge - Harry
members are urged 10 join and parS
to
bart, Racine.
ticipate.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 22 - Mrs.
Bart Tidrow and son. Richard
Wine, Mary Canter, Violet Kraut TPCWD, Scipio, 20 acres;
Deed, Howard E. Frank to Gene ter, Isaac Sheets, Alice Shipman.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Roy and Beverly I. Lawrence, SutGardner, daughter, Point Pleasant
ton parcel;
Deed, Pauline Rose, deceased, W.Va.
(Published with permission)
and Paul K. Rose to Ralph Rose,

TP-C district lifts boil order
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Di strict ended the bcil order
for Chester Township's Baum Addition Road, Warehouse Road and
Wood Road area today. The order was lifted also for Pomeroy Pike
from Epple Road to three-quarters of a m1le east of Wood Road,
said Don Poole, general manager of the water district.
The results of Wednesday's tests proved safe, Poole said.

working on a balance of payments
agreement with Aristide to gel
Haiti's government running again.
It would provide temporary funds
to pay government salaries and
bring in oil and other commodities
until tax-collecting can start and
A car struck a deer near Meigs High School Thursday night, but
money becomes available from
the driver es&lt;;aped injury, according to Meigs County Sheriff's
international lending bodies.
Department repons .
Haiti will need about $45 mil Pamela Theiss , Syracuse, was driving north on State Route 7 on
lion for government operations in
the four -lane section when a dee r ran in front of her car and
the f1rst three months, according lu
smashed against her windshield al 11 :35 p.m. Thursday, records
Schneider. The United States
show. The doc died.
intends to contribute a share of
Theiss' 1988 Nissa n had modcnnc damage to lhe front end,
that, but officials have not di sreports slated.
closed how much.
A top priority is to clear Haiti's
$80 million in overdue debt pay ment~ to international lending insti Gallta-Mcigs Community Action Agen cy now has 1995 vendor
tutions so that assistance that was
rcgtstration forms available for those imcreslcd in being fuel ventargeted earlier can be released.
dors with the Emergency HEAP program this winter.
Forms are available m the agency 's main office on State Route 7,
The United States is prepared to
Cheshire. In order to be placed on the vendor list a registration form
contribute $25 miUion for that purmust be completed. For informat ion vendors may ca ll lhe central
pose.
office at 367· 7341 in Gallia County, or 992-6629 Meigs County.
President Clinton promised
Aristide in March 1993 tha i his
administration would help coordinate $1 billion in multilateral aid
over the next five years. Meantime,
AID is worktng on shorter term
noon, and an afternoon service at
Racine Councillo meet
help.
I : 15 p.m. Music will be by the
A special meeting of Racine
For instance, 1hc agency will
Reflections
Trio, Narrow Way, and
Council
has
been
called
for
7
p.m.
help organize local ami parliamenMcDaniel
Trio.
Rev. Keith Eblin
Monday
at
Star
Mill
Park.
Item
s
to
tary elections sc hed ul ed for
w1ll speak.
be
discussed
in
clud
e
ca
pilal
December and assist in reform ing
Hay mans set reunion
the JUdiciary, which IS considered improvements, recreational grant.
ARC
funds
for
water
projects,
and
Descendants of the late H.A.
dy sfunctional at best.
Fred Hayman and Gamet F. Polk
payment
for
engineering
and
sideAID plans to double - to
Hayman will have their 22nd
50,000 - its jobs program through walks.
reunion Sunday at the home of
Syracuse
homecoming
public works programs and sanitaHomecoming will be held at the their eldest son, C.E. Hayman , Sr .
tion and road repair. In addition,
First Church of God, Oct of Antiquity , beginning at 10 a.m.
Syracuse
the agency plans to help rebuild
9. The worship services will be at There will be a chicken dinner at
schools and assist small farmers.
Aristide's advisers have mapped 10:30 a.m., dinner at I p.m and noon and games in the afternoon.
Buckley reunion
afternoon services will follow thai.
a social and economic reconstrucHobson
homecoming
The 58th annual Buckley
tion plan in hopes of attracting
will
be
held
at
the
Homecoming
reunion
wiU be held Sunday at the
international financial support.
Hobson
Church
Sunday,
with
Sunshelter
at
the Belleville Darn Park
They presented it to I 0 donor
day
school
at
10
a.m.,
dinner
at
Reedsville.
Covered dish dinner ai
nations at a World Bank-sponsored
I p.m.
1t ceting in Paris last month.

Deer/car accident reported

Vendor registration forms at CAA

Meigs announcements

SATURDAY NIGHT
SPECIAL
BAR·B·QUED BABY BACK RIBS
CHOICE OF POTATOES, SALAD AND ROLL

$795

Hospital news

Meigs land transfers filed

..

t

Pt Clou:ly Cloudy

Rainfall won't make fall's
arrival feel very seasonal

Is kindness still a valued trait?
Seventy years ago a distin guished European visiting our
shores said that if he were to look
into the heart of somebody and not
see kindness there, he would know
that person was not an American.
Would he say the same thing
today?
In some ways we are still a kind
people. We respond generously in
limes of disaster. It is in our per·
sonal encounters in the work place,
on our streets, in our homes and on
our highways (especially on our
highways) that we have become
unspeakably rude and boorish.
There are those who will
respond, with some justification,

s..,nr

C1994 Accu-Wvather, Inc.

The Battle of Haiti begins_ _ __
The first reaction of every
American to the announcement of
the agreement with the Haitian military junta must be one of relief. At
least our forces will not be going
ashore in the teeth of resislance
inspired and led by the de facto
rulers of Haiti, with the near certainty that some of our fighting
men and women would lose their
lives in the process. But it certainly
docs not follow that there will be
no American deaths.
Thousands of American troops
are being introduced into an
impoverished T!tird World nation
racked by internal political controversies that fall little short of civil
war. An unknown number of
Haitians, many of them bitter enemies of the restored president,
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, have
weapons, and some of them will
seek to use those weapons against
American invaders.
The situation, in fact, uncom fortably resembles that which
developed in Somalia. There too,
American soldiers were put ashore
on what was described as a purely

PA .

W.VA.

By The Associated Press

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SutiOn parcels;
Right of way,Randall G. and
Cindy L. Brownmg to M1d-Con
Petroleum Company, Olive, 20

acres:

Right of way. Gerald R. and
Evelyn L. Barnnger to Mid-Con
Petroleum Company, Meigs, 3

acres;

Deed, Dorotha, Dorotba L.
Neutzling to Randall S. and Cynthia L. RuS$ell, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, Ross and Gertrude Stewart to Kevin Stewan. Rutland, .974
acres;
Deed Ross and Gertrude Stewart to s'teve L. and Kelly Leigh
Stewart, Rutland/Salisbury tracts;
Deed, Gladys B. Hill to Terry
Hill, Olive;
.·
Deed, Allen R. and Henneua
Jacks to Robert L. and Teresa K.
Birchfield, Rutland;
Deed, Linda L. Stewart and
Linda L. Adkins to Roger K. Stewart, Salisbury parcels_

Debate set Sunday
The fust in a series of debates
between U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
D-Lucasville, and his Republican
opponent, Frank A. Cremeans of
Gallipolis, wi\l&lt;l!e Sunday from 7-9
p.m. at tbe Lafayette Hotel in Mari-

eua.

GROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
228 WEST MAIN

992·5432

Stocks
Am Ele Power ,,,,, ___ ,,,.30 Ill
Akzo ..................,..................58 518
Asbland OU ......... - .....................35
AT&amp;T ................. _,.,_, .......54 1/4
Bank One ·--·---···-.........31 114
Bob Evans ..... ---·---·-.. -·.-20 Ill
Champion lud. ,,_,_,,,,,,.,_,23
Charming Shop ........ _....... _.. ...8 318
City Holdlng .......... , __ ,,,....31314
Federal MoguL------·--·.23 112
Goodyear
T&amp;R
·--.31
K-mart .,,_,
__---·--..
, __, __
, ___S/8
!7
' Lands End ,_,_,,,__, __ .20 114
Limited Inc.----..--..--.18 718
Multimedia Inc, ·-··--..--.31114
Point Bancorp ,__ ,_,,, __,_,Ill
Reliance Electric _, __ ,,,,,.25 118
Robbins &amp; Myers..........--.18 11l
Sboney'sluc....--..--..~·13 314
Star Bank,_, __, __ ,,,_, ___ 4z
Wendy lut'L , ____ ..., ... _....... 14 3/4
Worlblnaton lnd ....--..-.21314
Stock reports are the 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Advest of
GaiUpolls.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
JOHN CANDY
IN

WAGONS EAST PG-u

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ONE EYa.G IHOW 7:30
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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Friday, September 23, 1!J9&lt;!
Page-4

Colorado, Michigan. clash in top college game Saturday
Ill Thr Associated Press
· UCLA and Southern Cal have
som~thing to lear n about making
sc hedule s if this is their idea of

f1ve is No. 7 Colorado, which routed No. 16 Wi sconsin la st week,
callmg on No.4 Michi gan. Also
No. 13 North Carolina is at defendbrL~~u..hers.
ing national champion and thirdComi ng off games against ranked Florida State, Washington
nation ally ranked Tenne ssee and is at No. 6 Mianni and No. 25 lndi t\c•hraska, No. IR UCLA probably ana is at Wisconsin.
would like to have an easy one for
The rest of the Top Ten features
tt s Pac- 10 opener. So who do the No. 2 Nebraska at home to lightly
Br uin s mvitc into the Rose Bowl regarded Pac1fic. Rutgers at Penn
thiS weekend? Washington State, State, No. 8 Arizona at Stanford,
wh1ch IS 2-0 and ranked 22nd.
Purdue at No. 9 Notre Dame and
Across town, No. 19 USC, com- East Tennessee at No. I 0 Auburn.
tng off tough outings against No.
In other gannes involving ranked
17 WashingtOn and No. 5 Penn teanns, Tulane is at No. II AlabaS"lle, did only a bit better than ma, Southern Mississippi is at No.
L;C LA. The TroJans opened the 12 Texas A&amp;M , No. 15 Tc•as is at
door to Baylor, which is unranked TCU, Houston is at No. 20 Ohio
State, No. 23 Tennessee is at Misd~ s pitc starting 3-0.
The UCLA-Washington State sissippi State and Wes tern Carolina
ga me is one of five matching is at No. 24 North Carolina State.
No. I Florida, fresh from a 31-0
ranked teams. The showcase of the

Pro football picks
DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
The Minnesota Vikings have allowctl th e fewest points in the
NFL, 33 in three games. The Miami Dolph10s have scored the third
most, 91.
So we have a doubleheader in the Mctrodomc tl1 is weekend: an
" Irresistible Force-Immovable Object" game and ...
A second- level "Super Bowl Preview' "
As usual, Miami has injury problems - the Dolphins arc down
to a fourth -stringer at one comer. At usual, injury problems don't
faze Don Shula (unless they get overwhelming, as they did in the
final weeks of last season.)
One reason for the success of the Minnesota defense may be the
opposition - Green Bay, Detroit and Chicago are NOT offensive
powers. But they did hold Barry Sanders to 16 yards, or 178 fewer
than Dallas was able to do.
So the Vikings are favored by 3 1/2 points, three for the HomeDome and the other half ... maybe for bc10g in the NFC. hccptthat
except for the very top, the AFC may be just as good this season if
not bcller.
So give the Vikings' defense an edge and give Warren Moon an
edge on that weak Miami corner. Plus, his receivers are staning to
catch the ball.
VIKINGS, 24-20
New England (plus 3 1/2) at Detroit
A trap for the Lions, who played the dreaded Monday night road
game and now have the dreaded short week to get ready for New
England. Worse, there's the dreaded celebration factor after beating
the Super Bowl champs.
That wouldn't be bad if their coach were Joe Gibbs, Dan Reeves,
Jimmy Johnson or Bill Parcells, who can deflate their teams in a
second .
Unfortunately, Parcells coaches the other guys.
PATRIOTS, 38-37
Denver (plus 7) at BuiTalo (Monday night)
The "Wade Must Go" chants are beginning. This week, Wade
goes to Buffalo, where his defense should perk up the Bills' somewhat dormant offense.
BILLS, 34-20
San Diego (plus 3 112) at Raiders
This is one of those gannes they seem to play every week.
Two things going for the Raiders.
I , They woke up in Denver.
.
2, The Chargers aren't quite good enough to be 4-0.
RAIDERS, 22-17
Pittsburgh (pick 'em) at Seattle
These odds are a mark of how far the Seahawks have come, last
week's loss notwithstanding. If Chris Warren were healthy, maybe.
But ...
STEELERS, 20-17
New Orleans (plus 16) at San Francisco
How times have changed ... for the Saints.
49ERS,41-19
Chicago (plus 7 1/2) at Jets
The Jets play better on the road, so this spread's a little big.
JETS, 17-11
Rams (plus 14 1/2) at Kansas City
The biggest controversy anyone can drum up in Kansas City is
whether to rest Joe with a 20-point lead.
Maybe this week.
CHIEFS, 24 -3
Tampa Bay (plus 7) at Green Bay
Green Bay can't run. Tampa Bay can't win.
PACKERS, 13-7
Cleveland (minus 1) at Indianapolis
If Vinny Testaverde manages to keep tile ball in the hands of his
own receivers ...
BROWNS, 20-10
Atlanta (pick 'em) at Washington
The Falcons are 0-- I0 at RFK and c; ~ 't stop anyone. The Redskins arc 10-0 against the Falcons at RFK and can't stop anyone.
REDSKJNS, 40--38.
Cincinnati (plus 8 112) at Houston
The Oilers' defense is fighting witll the offense. The Bengals arc
si mply fighting for a win.
David Klingler comes home.
BENGALS 9-6.
Last week 7-6-1 (spread); 9-5 (straight up)
Last week 20-20-2 (spread); 25- I 7 {straight up)
lly

"I'd like to sec our offense with
all its parts. I can't wait until that
happens ," said Cook, who is 60for-95 for 716 yards and three
touchdown s with four interce ption s.
Wash ington Stnte coac h Mike
Price agrees with that.
" It' s been awhile since we've
given one up. We're working real
hard to keep the slate clean. UCLA
will be a real challenge," Price
saut.
But the Cougars aren't
pu shovers, UCLA coach Terry
Donahue warns.
''They have tremendously
improved the speed of their defensive team over the past three or
four years through their recruit ing," he said . " They real ly are athlct ic and very fa st. They 're very
_good."

thra shing of Tennessee at
Knox ville, and No. 21 Oklahoma
arc idle.
Last season, UCLA knocked out
Washington State, which knocked
out Bruins quarterba ck Wayne
Cook, to no avail.
''I' m looking forward to playing
a full game against them ," said
Cook, who went out in the first
quarter of a 40-27 victory because
of a bruised kidney .
"Somebody said they were
going to knock me out of the ganne
and they ended up doing it. I don't
think it was anything dirty."
A very large part of the arsena l
return s thi s week for the Bruins.
J.J . Stokes, who caught two TD
passes against Wa shington Stale
la st year, ha s been out with a
bruised left thigh . He' s expec ted to
see limited action .

· Baylor coach Chuck Reedy isn't
about to ballyhoo the Bears for
national honors just for bca t1ng
Louisiana Tech, San Jose Sw tc&lt;md
Oklahoma State. USC likely will
tell him where his team rea ll y
stands.
"Obviously they 're th e most
talented team we've played thi s
year, without question," Reedy
said. "I doubt there 's anybody bettcr we'll play all year.
But after last week's 38-14 lo ss
to Penn State, in which Rob 1o1mson was sacked six tim es, US C is
taking nothing for granted.
"They're a good team," coac h
John Robinson said. "It's hard to
tell much on their first two games,
but in the last game ( 14 -10 over
Oklahoma State), they did so me
thin gs. Their defense looks very
_good.

"You're going to be surprise d
when you sec them. They have a
physi ca l presence that _sort of
remi nds me of North Carolma."
Speaking of NortJ1 Carolina, _tJ1 c
Tar Heels arc up agamst 11 fa c•ng
FIDrida State, which has yet to lose
a league game since joining th e
A~lantic Coast Con ference three
season ago. The Seminoles, 3-0 in
the ACC already thi s year, could
tak e a stranglehold on a third
straight league title by makmg
North Carolina league victim No.
20.
"It could be the championship,
but I thtnk th ere arc too many
teams who haven't declared them selves out of it yet," Florida State
coach Bobby Bowden said. " I
would say whoever wins this ball game, their odds arc going io JUmp
way up."

Ry KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
NEW YORK - Suddenly , the
NHL is on a time clock.
It 's ticking toward opening day
on Oct. I . when commiss ioner
Gary Bcttman threatens a lockout if
a labor contract is not worked out
by then .
"I don't know if the season is at
risk," &amp;1id Bob Goodenow, executive director of the NHL Players
Association. ''But I can tell you
that pan of the season is at risk.''
Thursday, Bcttman said the
NHL would not sta rt its season
without a collective bargaining
agreement. He said it was "essential to the long-term health or the
league."
"This is very difficult, but the
absence of a collective bargaining
agreement leaves us no choice,"
Bettman said. "We...want a season
without distraction, without interruption. The best thing would be to
put some pressure on both parties
to get a deal going."
Bettman sa id the reason he
made the de&lt;:ision was because he
feared the players would have the
upper hand once the season started.
"There's no secret the players'
leverage increases as the season
goes on," he said. "All we have to
do is look at baseball. Or what happened two years ago.''
Bettman, speaking on a conference call, referred to the cancellation of the baseball season follow-

mg a players' strike and to a 10day strike by NHL players, also
over a new contract.
According to Goodenow,
Bellman had nothing to fear in
terms of a strike.
"We have not made a decision
to strike," Goodenow said. "The
real focus now is that the owners
have stopped hockey.' '
On Monday, negotiators from
the NHL and union are to resume
bargaining in Toronto.
"If we work hard, there's
enough time to make a deal by Oct.
I," Bettman said. "It's not impossible, but as time slips away, it's
harder and harder. It will be diffi cult and arduous."
Goodenow agreed.
Among the major issues, owners
are looking for a system that links
salaries to revenue. Players want a
free market and more liberalized
free agency, among other things.
Both sides have submitted complicated tax proposals to help
small-market teams. This has been
a major stumbling block in the
negotiations.
If the season doesn't begin on
time, it would be the second interruption in the NHL since the 199192 regular season ended a week
early when players went on strike
April 1 over a number of issues,
including free agency and sharing
of non-hockey revenues. The issues
were settled and the postseason
was played.

lrvan says he will race again
CHARLOTTE (AP) - For a
man just a couple of weeks out of a
coma, Ernie lrvan made a bold prediction.
"I really believe I will be at
Daytona (in February)," the Winston Cup driver said in his first
public appearance since he was
critically injured in a wreck last
month in Michigan.
lrvan' s stride was a bit off and a
black patch covered his left eye,
but his smile and humor gave him
away when he walked into a news
conference in Charlotte on Thursday.
"I guess I got this aJI started by
calling John Boy and Billy," lrvan
said of the popular local disc jockeys.
Irvan called WRFX-FM from
his hospitad room Thursday morning. Soon, his racing team was
besieged by calls 'from the media

This week
in H.S. football

requesting interviews. So a news
conference was called at the Charlotte Institute of Rehabilitation,
where levan has been undergoing
treatment since last week.
"I'm feeling pretty good. I'm
just tired," lrvan said after walking
in slowly with his wife, Kim, and
members of his ra&lt;:ing team. ''They
have me doing a lot of exercises
and it's consuming. But I feel pretty good.
''God saved me so maybe I can
race again," the 35-year-old driver
said. "Yes, I wantiO race again. It
might take a little while. It could
take three months or it could take a
year:·
At that point, Dr. James
McDeavitt interrupted.
"You look better than the car,"
he said.
Irvan received severe head and
lung injuries when his car slammed
into a concrete wall during practice
session at the Brooklyn race track
on Aug. 20. He was unconscious
for seven days after the accident.

Tonight
River Valley at Athens
Marietta at Jackson
Logan at Otillicothe
Eastern at Miller
Meigs at Wahama
Southern at Hannan
Trimble at Belpre
downs. Andre Ware, winner of the
Vinton County at Greenfield
1989 Heisman Trophy, had four
McClain
games that year in which he threw
Federal Hocking at Wellston
at least six touchdown passes.
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Now both are in the pros and the
Fairland
at Coal Grove
man filling their position, Chuck
Dayton
Colonel
White at Miami
Clements, has been running for his
Trace
life behind a porous line. He has
Day10n Belmont at Portsmouth
lleen sacked eight times this year
Saturday
while the Cougars don't have a
Gallipolis at Warren Local

By JOE KAY
of season that doesn't come around
CINCINNATI (AP) - Davey very often when the players' strike
Johnson resurrected his career. Jim crippled it and the owners finally
Bowden salvaged his reputation. pulled the plug on it.
They were in first place in tile
And the Cincinnati Reds were a
fir.a-place team again.
NL Central for ·an hut II days.
Perhaps that's why the summer They were the major leagues' best
of '94 will be remembered with so comeback team and the National
much angst in Cincinnati. So many League's most exciting offensive
good things happened une•pected- team. They started winning back
ly that everyone is left wondering fans turned off by the a brutal '93
what might have followed.
season.
All they' II get from it is first
Instead, it'll go down as just
another year of record-book aster- place with an asterisk as big as one
of Schouzie's dog biscuits.
isks and Marge Schott's antics "It's heartbreaking," catcher
snubbing opening day, offending
Eddie
Taubenscc said.
ear ring wearers, smoking in her
It was engrossing as Johnson,
seat.
Bowden and their team went from
Too bad.
"How often do you have a team outcasts to candidates for post-seathat leads the league in just about son honors and Schott once again
everything?" pitcher Jose Rijo took honors as baseball's most
bothersome owner.
wondered.
When the season started, JohnThe Reds were having the kind

son was under tremendous IRSSure
from Schott to do well or get fued.
Johnson, who was in exile for three
years before the Reds hired him,
proved he can still manage by
keeping Cincinnati in first place
despite injuries and Schott's
sideshow.
The Reds had the third-best
record in the National League even
though it missed its closer (Rob
Dibble), starting catcher (Joe Oliver) and starting pitchers Tom
Browning and Tim Pugh for much
of the season.
Tony Fernandez pouted, Kevin
Mitchell got whacked in the eye bx
a beer mug, and the pitching staff
wound up relying on the likes of
Pete Schourek, John Roper, Kevin
Jarvis, Tim Fortugno and Hector
Carrasco.
.
Somehow, Johnson made it
work and proved he still has the

Virginia Tech wallops
West Virginia 34-6
BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) Virginia Tech linebacker George
DeiRicco sat in a corner of the
locker room, smiling as he listened
to his teammates being grilled
about what's wrong with the Hokies' offense.
"I really think you guys are
making too much .out of this," DeiRicco said after the 14th-ranked
Hokies rolled to a 34-6 victory over
West Virginia.
Indeed, Thursday night's game
showed that no mauer what's bothering Virginia Tech's offense, the
Hokies' defense seems to be capable of making up for it.
While senior quarterback Maurice DeShazo struggled, the Virginia Tech defense put the clamps
on the slumping Mounwinecrs.
Virginia Tech sacked West Virginia's quarterbacks eight times,
hurried them six other times and
intercepted two passes. The Hokies
also dropped Mountaineer ball carriers for losses eight times.
"Our quarterbacks had to run

for their lives so many times, it's
hard to get anything going," West
Virginia coach Don Nehlen said.
Virginia Tech (2-0 in the Big
East) moved to a 4-0 start for the
first time in 13 seasons.
"This is starting to get exciting," said coach Frank Beamer,
whose current ranking tics their
highest ever. "The best part of this
is that right now we 'rc not as good
as we're gonna be. I can assure you
of that."
West Virginia (1--4, 0-2) lost iiS
third consecutive game and is off to
its worst start since 1978, when the
Mountaineers also began 1--4 on the
way to a 2-9 mark.
The latest loss, which put the
Mountaineers alone in the Big East
basement, left Nehlen trying to
measure progress in small increments.
''Our kids played the most
physical game they have all year,"
he said. "I thought I saw more
fight out of them than I had."

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Pomeroy

using rncial slurs, took all the heat
fm· firing manager Tony Perez, and
put together one of the NL's most
entertaining clubs this season.
Bowden is helping S~hott negotiate with the city on a new stadium
and has represented her at owners'
meetings.
"He's involved in just about
everything," the employee said.
Johnson isn't as much of an
irsider. Although Schott has spoken well of Bowden in public , she
h?s never had much good to say
about the man he chose to replace
Perez last year.
Consider this exchange between
Sr.hott and an AP reporter before
t~e final game Aug. 11, shortly
at !er Johnson told reporters that the
o· mer wanted to address the players:
Reporter: ''Are you going to
talk to the players at noon?"

managing touch . The question
now: How long will he have work
with the Reds?
Johnson's contract is up, but
Schott is following her standard
practic~'of letting 'big decisions
drag on - ask Lou Piniella about
that. She also has to decide her
general manager's future.
Docs she break with her track
record and retain Bowden, her
fourth GM in 10 years? Does she
bdng Johnson back even though
she's not very fond of him? Or
does she start all over once again?
"You're asking the wrong person," Bowden said.
One front-office employee,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said most people in the organizhtion would be shocked if she
fued Bowden. He ran the team last
year while she was suspended for

Schou: ''Who 10ld you that?"
Reporter: "Davey."
Schott: "Who?"
Reporter: "Davey "Johnson .
Your manager."
Schott smirked and replied
angrily: "Big mouth."
.
If Bowden and Johnson sumve,
and if major-league baseball fmally
gets its act together, the Reds
would have their nucleus intact for
ntxt year: same front office, same
ctst of stars in the lineup. Some
ti.tkering will be involved to get the
p;.yroll down, but there's enough
talent to keep them a contender.
"I think you're going to sec
L~sically the same team that thi s
y"ar was on pace to win 94
g:&lt;mes," Bowden said.
For now, next year seems too far
off to even consider. And in
c;ncinnati, this year is still too
fresh to forget

Falcons travel to EMU
Saturday; OU Bobcats
to play at Ball State

Little Brown Jug in Delaware, Ohio Thursday.
LaChance won in 1:52 3/5. (AP)

Magical Mike wins 49th
running of Little Brown Jug

Your Full Maintenance Repair Shop
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SWISS STEAK DINNER

'

'Heartbreaking' essence of Reds' 'could-have-been' season

,JUG WINNER - Harness racing driver
Michael LaChance hands out roses to spectators
after he drove Magical Mike to victory in the

RREAKS TACKLE - Virginia Tech fullback llrian Edmonds
(32) breaks a tackle for a tnuchdo"n with the hdp of _teammate
Damien McMahon (54) during Thursday night's actmn of the
West Virginia-vs. Virginia Tech college rootball game at Lane Stadium in Blacksburg, Va. Virginia Tech won, 34-6. (AP)

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bettman says settle
dispute, or NHL season
will not open Oct. 1

Buckeyes to host Houston
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Just two years ago, the University
of Houston went 4-7 but won by
scores of 61-34, 49-46, 63-7 and
31-13.
These days, the Cougars need a
search party to find the end zone.
Heading into Saturday's game
against 20th-ranked Ohio State,
Houston has scored all of 14 points
in three losses - and has yet to
score in the first, second or third
quarters.
"Offensively, right now we're
struggling," said second-year
Houston head coach Kim Helton.
Helton touches on a number of
reasons: youth, inexperience, the
line, injuries, mistakes, and superior opponents. He also inherited a
stadium full of problems, and not
too many quality players, from the
troubled John Jenkins regime. It
may take years for the Cougars 10 .
recover.
•'The Heisman Trophy winner
• don't work here any more. The
No.I draft pick doesn't worlc here
-anymore," Helton said.
In a game against Arizona State
less than four years ago, Dav1d
Klingler passed for seven touch-

Friday, September 23, 1994

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
.
DELAWARE
M1ke
Haughton cried as he stood m the
winner's circle where h1s father
had and where his brother m1ght
have.
.
.
Magical M1ke, tratned by
Haughton and driven by M1chel
Lachance, held off fast-clostng

Marauders lead
TVC golf race
by seven points
By Dave Harris
Meigs leads the TVC Golf race
by seven points with only two
matches remaining, the Marauders
arc trying for their fifth straight
TVC golf crown.
In this week's first match at
Franklin County Alexander won
the match with a 152, followed by
Belpre with a 153. Meigs finished
in third place with a !58, followed
by Trimble (159), Southern (I67),
Wellston ( 172), Federal Hocki ng
(187), Nelsonville-York (202),
Vinton County (231) and Eastern
(233).
Three time TVC Most Valuable
golfer Adam Krawsczyn took
medalist honors wtth a one over par
35. It was the seventh time in
Krawsezyn' s career that he nailed
down TVC medalist honors. Other
Marauder scores include Dave
Anderson with a 40, Re~gie Pratt a
41, Ben Ewing a 42, Mike Franckowiak a 43 and Clay Crow a 44.
For Southern Ryan Norris carded a 39, Jason Shuler a41, Brian
Anderson a 43, Mason F1sher a 44,
Matt Bradford a 46 and Ryan
Williams a 47 . Eastern scores
included Andy Reed a 57, Robert
Harris a 58, Ryan Hawley a 58
and Travis Lodwick a 60.
In a match Wednesday evening
at the Meigs Golf Course, the
Marauders posted a I 46 to take
home top honors. Ale•ander finished in second with a 151, followed by Belpre (155), Wellston
(156), Trimble ( 159&amp;-. Southern
(161), Nelsonville-tork (194),
Vinton County (195) and Federal
Hocking ( 195). Eastern did not post
a team score.
Co-medalist were teammates
Pratt and Krawsczyn witll an even
par 34. Freshman Dave Anderson
had an outstanding round of 38,
Ben Ewing added a 40, Sean
O'Brien a 41 and Clay Crow a46.
Southern scores included Jason
Shuler a 38, Ryan Williams a 40,
Mason Fisher a 41, Ryan Norris a
42, Brian Anderson a 43, and Chris
Ball a 49. For Eastern Ryan Hawley carded a 49, Robert Harris and
Andy Reed a 53.
Meigs owns an overall record of
81 wins and 331osses.
TVC GOLF STANDINGS TeamPts
Meigs 56
Alexander 49
Belpre 47
Soutllern40
wellswil 39
-Trimble 36
Nelsonville-York 18
Federal Hocking 12
ViniOn County 7
Eastem2

,,.

"

Island Glow to steal the spotlight
on a day of upsets and surprises
Thursday at the 49th Little Brown
Jug.
Haughton, asked to speak about
what the victory meant to him,
couldn't get out the words._ His
brother Peter, a talented dnver,
died in a car accident in 1980; he
would have been 39 years old on
Thursday. Mike's father Billy, who

trained and drove five Little Brown
Jug winners, died after an accident
on the track in 1986.
But Magical Mike was able to
speak volumes for everyone. With
Cam's Card Shark a surprising
scratch in the first division, Magical Mike blew away No.2 favorite
Falcons Future in the home stretch
of the second division and then
raced a gutty fmal.

Grand Opening

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Bowling Green coach Gary
Blaclwey paints the picture that he
is just a guy who fell into a great
situation.
To hear him tell it, each summer
he unlocks the door to Doyt Perry
Stadium and a lot of tadented players and knowledgeable coaches
find their way in off the street.
"To have any kind of a good
program, you have to have good
athletes and good coaches," Blackney said. "The only thing I would
take credit for is hiring some good
coaches .... They're doing th e
coaching and the kids are doing the
playing, so it's not anything I'm
doing. "
Others don't believe it. Bowling
Green is 29-7-2 since he came to
just over three years ago. In the
three seasons before he arrived, the

Falcons were 10-19-3.
Once again, keep your eyes on
Bowling Green .
The Falcons have mauled their
last two opponents by a combined
score of 106-2 1. Heading into Saturday's game at Eastern Michigan,
Bowling Green is lookin g more
and more like the best team in the
Mid-American Conference.
"Right now our offense is playing with a lot of confidence,"
Blackney said. "It's a combination
of some good players, good preparation by our assistant coaches and
the kids playing with confidence the kids believing in themselves."
In other MAC games Saturday,
Akron is at Western Michigan ,
Kent travels to Central Michigan
and Ball State hosts Ohio U. Mianni
of Ohio goes out of the conference
to play Michigan State.
Western (3-0, 1-0 MAC), Bowl-

ing Green and Central (both 2-1, Ill) and Kent ( 1-1, 1-0) share the

early lead in the conference. Toledo (2- 1), Ball State (0-2) and Ohio
U. (0-2) have yet to open leagu e
play. Next come Miami (0-2, 0-1)
and Eas tern (0-3, 0-1), with Akron
(0-3, 0-2) bringing up the rear.
We stern was the pre seaso n
choice of the media to win th e
MAC title with Bowling Green the
second pick.
The Broncos have lived up to
their billing, winning close games
against Miami of Ohio (28 -25) and
Iowa State (23-19) sandwiched
around a 43-7 blowout of NCAA
Division 1-AA Western Illinois.
Bowling Green opened with a
20-15 setback at North Carolina
Sta te, but ha s been gangbu stcrs
s in ce. The Falco ns blud geoned
Akron 45-0 and then la st week
pounded Navy 59-21.

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l'rouf-of-purcha.&lt;e lncludcsc your da"'d lnswlled sales reoelptspeclfytng an oil
change usln« qua lily Valvollnc product.'i.
I
RctJul.c
must be made on the special order rorm and may not be mechanically
I
reproduced. Only one rebale per envelope. orrer void where prohlllti.Cd, taxed. or
restricted by taw. Your rebate check must be cashed wttllln 90 da)ll of Issue.
I
l'lease allow 8 weeks for delivery of your Valvoltne Grand Opening Buyer's Check
Reba
I
Rebate request must be mailed wllllln 30 da)S of cash fCilswr receipt date.
I
Name jprlnt ctearly) - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - Address - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - I
Clly
Stott
1Jp - - - - - - I
What brand of mowr oil do you use most on.en (CHECK ONLY ONE.)
I
0 Mot&gt;tl•
0
0 Kendall•
0 Pcnnzoll• 0 Quaker Slatt•
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II
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any olller olfer.

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Custom Cloth lntenOI, Well Equ1pped 1

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Dual Aiibags, Automatic.Anb-Lock Brakes. Air
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992-2094

600 East Main Sl

rm ""'*'
#f DlrJ •.,.,. • IIi 111 filii•, "*
lilliE ,_,11-Hfl •llZ.ZHf • Hf ilfl• fzt-1111

IIUIJ ·lltiNIJ: Ill ·I ,.
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Pomeroy

.,

�J

Ohio

CHURCH
DIREC
Wednesd.1y Ser.ices · 1 pm.

Churcb ol Jesus Christ Apootollc

Wc:dn&lt;:t&lt;II~Sc~m~· ce,

-7 :30

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Church ur Christ
212 W. Main SL

Pa ~ tor:

Andrtw Milet

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

Pastor: Rev . David Bryan

Wedne sday Service · 7 p.m.

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Lc s !l ayman

Saturday Service - 7:30p.m.
Sun day Scllool - 10 a.m:
Wors hip - II a.m. ,
Wedm!l day Scrvicc-7:30 p.m.

Rutland J.lrst Baptist Church

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor. Paul Stimm

Ea:tt Main St.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Won hip - 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pa!lor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
wo .. hip - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sc rvice3 - 7:00p.m.
flrSI Baptist Church
6th and Palmer SL, Middlcpon
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wo11hip - 10:15 Lm., 7:00 p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30pm.
Lord's Supper I st Sun~ay or every month.
Wednesday Servtce- 7:00p.m.

Racine Flrsl Bapllst
YoUlll Pastor: Aaroo Young

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
wo.. hip . 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wedn es day Se rvices· 7:00p.m.
Slher Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School · IOa.m.
Worship· II a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
ML Union Baptist
Pas10r : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wedne1day Scrvi(;CI • 6:30pm.
Bethlehem Bafust
Racine, 0!
Pastor : Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m.
'lllu11day Services-7:00p.m.
Okl Bethel Free Will BapUst Church
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middkpon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
'lllunday Services · 7:30
Hlllstde Baptist Chorch
SL RL 143 ju1t off Rt. 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory BapUst lndependant
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - 1Oa.!"·• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semces • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad SL, Mum
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service1- 1 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Ariu1 Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

Middleport Church of Christ
5th and Mlin
Pastor: Al !-lansm
Youth Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~• - 7 p.m.
Keno Churdl ol Christ
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.
Beorwallow Rldgo Churcb of Clarlll
Putoc Jack Colegrove
SWlday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harris~ ville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pastor: Roger WaiJal
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wedn esday Services - 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plain Cburch ol' ChrlSI
l•aslor: Bill Wines
Sunday School · 9 1.m.
Worship-9:45 a. m., 6:30pm.
Bndbury Church rl Chrlll
Pastor. Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9, 30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Youth Meeting-5:30p.m.
Evcning Service · 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study- 1 p.m.

Rutland Church &lt;K Christ
Paslor: Eugene E. Underwood
SWlday Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30 a.m., 7 pm.
Bradford Church ofChrlSI
Comer of SL RL 124 .t Bradbury Rd.
Evangelill: Derek Snunp
Youth Minister: Mark Notl.er
Stmday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip . 8:00a.m., 10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicet - 7:30p.m.
Hickory Hills Churdl ofCbrlst
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvices- 1 p.m.
Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thunday Service - 6:30p.m.
Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 1:30pm.
Wednesday Service 7:30pm.
Hemlock Grove Churcb
PaslOr: Gene ZoPP
Sunday 1ehool · 10:10 am.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Chri'&lt;t
PallOr. Philip Stumn
Sunday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wcdneaday, 6:30p.m.

Christian Union
Hl1111'ord Church of Christ In
Chrilllan Unloo
Hanford, W.Va.
Paoor. Rev. David McManiJ
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship- 9:30 Lm., 7:30pm.
Wcdneaday Scrvi~ · 7:30p.m.
Hoi&gt;- Chrlllllln Union
Middlcpnn, Ohio
Sunday School, 10 a.m.
Sundoy cv~. 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday, 7:30p.m.

Church of God
ML Moria. Church of God
Racine
Putor:. Rev. June1 Saaterfteld
SID!day School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
RuUand Church ol' God
Polla: Gn:gory L. Scan
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Wedne1day Services · 7 p.m.

Catholic

Syracuso Chun:h of God
Apple and Sewnd Sta.
Pastor: Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday School and Wonhip-- 9:30 a.m.
EvcninJ Scrvicea- 1 p.m.
Wedneaday Servica - 7 p.m.

lle&lt;red Heort ~ C..rdl
161 Mulberry A.... l'&lt;lmeroy, 992-5898
Puwr: Rev. Walter 1!. Heinz
SoL Con U5-HSp.m.; Mw- BO p.m.
Sw. Con -io45-9:15 un.,

Churdl ol' God of Propheq
0.1. White Rd. off 51. RL 160
Putor: P11 Henaon
SIDlday School - 10 a.m.
Woohip- II a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL
M• ll

\'o iJ I~

r~ A fHIIP ' M a~ rrt p

Syrar.u·,-:

YY / J"l8

lI&gt;I..J
!.. •.'""'
. ' -: •• •\

Q\(j~J

hstor. Gal)' Hmes
Sunday Sd&gt;ool · 9,30 Lm.

. , K&amp;C JEWELERS

)t)
~
,

211 E. Ma10 Street
991 -3785. Pomeroy

Holiness
Putor: Rev . Rick Maloyed

Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip - 10:35 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
QUJdren's church . 10:35 a. m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednelday prayer 1ervlce- 7 p .m.

Leadina Cn:clt Rd., Rutland
Pattor: Rev . Dewey Kin&amp;
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -'1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Dcron Newman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Thunday Service• ·6:30p.m.

Pint Gro\le Bible Holiness Church
1{1. mile off RL 325
Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7JO p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sllllivan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · !0:30a.m.

Hysell Run Holln.._. Church
Putor: Robert Manley
SWlday School - 9:30am.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.

ln ...

Pomen&gt;y
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School · 9:15 am.
Worship - 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study Tucaday - 10 a.m.

Laurel Clltr Free Methodist Church
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Salem Conter
Sunday School - 9:15am.
Wonhip • 10:15 Lm.

Sl John Lutheran Church

Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Our Snlour Lutheran c•urth
Walnut and Henry Sta., Ravena wood, W.Va.
Co-put&lt;llll: Revs. Richard .t
Patricia Bonda-Krug
Sunday School • 9:30 am.
Wonhip - II am.

Sl. Paul Lutheran Churdl
Comer Sycamort: &amp; Second SL, Paneroy
Pastor. Dawn Spalding
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Graham United Methodist
Wo11hip - 9:30 o.m. (1st .t 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd .t 4th Sun)
Wedncaday Service-7:30p.m.
Old lle!ter Bible Chrilllon O.ar-&lt;11
Sunday School: 10 am.
Morning Wonhip: II a.m.
Evening Wor1hip: 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Coolville Unlled Mdhotl.. P Pastor. Helen Kline
Coolville Churdl
Mlin .t Fildt 51.
Sunday School· 10om.
Wonhif • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Sema:1 ~ 7 pm.

Mt. Olhe Unlled Methodlll
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo11h:r.
· - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thurs y Service1 - '1 p.m.

Bethel Church
Townahip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday S'ervic:es - 10 a.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
NortheiSt Cluster
Alfred

Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Hoddngport Cburcb
GrondStn:&lt;1
SWlday School- 10 o.m.
Wonthip • II am.
Wedneaday Services - 8 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharoo Hauunan

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 am.
Thonday Scrvicca - 7 p.m.

TordiO.urcb
Co.Rd. 63
SWlday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Joppo
Panor: Bob Randolph
WoT&gt;hip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Rodne Flrot Church of the N......,e
Paator. Scou Roae
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,6pm.
Wednesday Servioe1 - 7 p.m.

A ~[4.,

RAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

•

992· 297S

Hue! Colnmanlly Church
OffRt. 124
Putor: &amp;bel Hon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·I 0:30am., 7:30p.m.

Harrborn1Ue Pt..l&gt;ylerlu Chur-&lt;11
Wonhip - 9 Lm.
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Chrlldu Fellowship Center
Salem SL, Rwllnd
Putor. Robert H. Muaaer
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II :I~ Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventlll
Mulbcny Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor. Roy uwjnaty
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wmhip- 3 p.m.

Mono Chapd Church
Larry Faw, Superinlatdmt
Sunday school • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday Service - 7 p.m.

United Brethren

0
,

P.O. Box 272
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
(9) 23, 30, (10) 7, 14; 4TC

1

Eden United Bretlt-1• Cluia
2 1{1. milcs nonlui Rooclrtillo
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Marldoy
Sunday Schooi · IO a.m.
Wonhip ·1'-.30 p.m.
Wcdncaday SOrvicet. 7:30pm.

ML Olive Community Charm
Pa1tor: Lawrence Buah
School • 9:30 Lm.
-7 p.m.

Card of

Thanks

A word of thanks &amp;
appreciatJon
expressed through the
Illness &amp; death of my
Dad.
Thomas Clelland.
1b the following:
A special thanks to
my husband, David
Ballard for his love,
kindness and patlence
&amp; all he did to try to
make my dad
comfortable &amp; tO ease
my pain.
Thanks to my
stepmother Marie
Clelland for 1aking
such good care of my
Dad &amp; his knowing
you were by his side
&amp; that you would
have done anything to
make him better. It
has meant alot to me.

ML Hermon Unll&lt;d Br&lt;!Uen
In ChrlSI Churdl
Texu Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robcn Sanden
Sortday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicca - 7:30pm.

:·

County~ Oldeot flo...,

Crow's Family Restaurant

IT'S RAINING
~ARGAINS ...
m the
' CLASSIFIEDS

"Fufutlng K•ntuclry Fried Chicken"
228
Main St., Pomeroy

w.
992-5432

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

~~~~! l~~

Pomoroy

Pre\cnphon~

t

991

..Di,nil~· and Serl'in• .4/~t·n.v.•"
Established 1913

992-2121
106 Mulberry AYI.

Pomeroy

19~~

EWING FUNERAL HOME
'

--

Jane Fry, Trea•urer
320 E. Ualn Street,

Middleport Presbylerlon
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip · 10 am.

DyontUe Community Church
Sunday School· 9:30am.
Wonhip. 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

t 1 S (. Momorial Dr .

NahOnwide Ins. Co . ~

"1 llll Pom&lt;rov

Syracuso Fl.-.t United Pt..i&gt;ylerloa
Pastor: Rev. Kriuna RobiniOI"I
Sundoy School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

Memorial Hospital

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
w. M••n

1411 Bridscman St., Syncuae
PallOr. Roy (Mike) Thornpaon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bvcnins - 6 p.m.
Wcdnesdly Service - 1 p.m.

~::?" Veterans

214 E. Main
992 -5130 Pomeroy

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE OF
Nollce Is hereby given
EQUIPMENT
lhat the Boerd of Educallon
Notice Is hareby given
of the Meigs Local School
Olatrlct, 320 Eaot Main that the Board or Truotooa
Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio of Rutland Township will
45769, will offer lor oalo by offer lor sale 1, 1982
sealed bid al 12 :00 noon, lnternallonal 1700 aeries
EDT, October 17, 1994, the dump truck with snow p low
and spreader bo•.
lollowlng !lema:
Bids wlll be received by
Three (3) Planoo
One (1) Former Molal Rulland Townshl~ Trusteaa
until October 6, 1994 at 6:30
Building
All sealed anvolopeo p.m. and opened at regular
10 /6/ 94 .
containing bldo are to be meeting
marked clearly on the Appointment to Inspect may
be made by calling 614· 742·
outside.
Terms of sale will be caah 2955. Please write "TRUCK
or check wllh positive BID " on the oulalde of bid
envelope.
Identification.
Bids may be mailed to
Said Board reserve• the
Rulland
Township Trustees,
right to waive lnlormalllleo,
to accept or reject any and P.O. Box 326, Rulland, OH
all, or parts of any and all 45775.
Trusteas raaerve tho right
bids.
to reject any or all bids.
llalga local School Dlatrlct (9) 16, 23, 30; 3TC

W..lncadayServicea · I:OOb.m.

,. fM;\

Brogan-Warner

10•

FLOAIS"

POMEROY, OHIO 45711
1112-2144 or lt2.fl2tl

Middttport

Public Notice

1llankstoallmy

:SS2 EAST MAIN

992-S 141

1)1 Cotumbu\, 0 .

Melt&gt;

Ev~-6p.m.

Foltb Goopd Church
lool Boaan
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

LooaBoUom
Pa1tor: Rev. Charles Muh
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worahip · 10:30un.
Wedneaday Services -7:30p.m.

Middleport Pcnte&lt;oolrtl
Third Ave.
Pa1tor: Rev. Cb.rlc Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Syracu~eMJssloo

Sundoy School · 10 om.
Wonhip- II am . .,d 7 p.m.

Williams Farm
Pumpkins &amp; Com Stalks
for sale.
Saturday 2 pm - 6 pm
Sunday 2 pm-6 pm or call
992-3985 or 992-5866 1o order.

Pentecostal

Bailey Run Road
Pastor. Rev. Errunctt Rawaon
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 pm.

Racine
Putor: Ken Molter

on Rt. 62 s. Open Daily to 5.

Pent-! A.,.mbly
SL Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - lOam.
Evenina - 7 p.m
Wedneaday Service•- 7 p.m.

Faith T•bern•cle Churm

EutLellrt
Pulor: Ken Malter
SIDlday School- 10 am.
Wonhip ~ 9 a.m.
Wcdneaday - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

past Krodel Park,

CUDoo Tabernocle Church
Cliftoo, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Woohip - 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

CommunltJ Churcb
57S Purl SL, Middlcpnn
Pa1l0r: Sam Anderson
SID!day School 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7:30 p.m.
Wcdncsdoy Service · 7:30p.m.

FIRE

&amp; SAFETY

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075
' 172 North

Se&lt;ond

Avo.
Ohio

112 mi.
Pt. Pleasant

and Trading Post? 4

Church ol' Jesus Christ,
Apo!lollc Faith
1/4 mile paSl Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meier
Sunday-7 :00 p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Ml~

Sulton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
SWlday School • 9:30 am.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (Ill&amp; 3rd Sun)

Shawnee Indian Park Museum

Rejoicing Life Chorch
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlcpon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

Tho S.IYaUon Army
liS Buacmut Ave., Paneroy.
SIDlday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

M..-nlngStar
Putor: Kennedt Baker
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Wo,.hip • 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Service• -7:30p.m.

Why haven't you visited the

Stinrsvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Stmday School9:30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.

Trinlly Coogr'ladmal Church
Putor: R... Roland Wildman
O.urch - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 am.

Cannol
Pulor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:43 Lm. (2nd .t 4th Sun)

: SERVICES

%04 COII4or St.
P41111tr•r. OH.

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday acrvice - 6:30p.m.

Bethany
Putor: Kenneth Baker
SWlday School- 10 am.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wcdnesday Scrvicca • 10 a.m.

INSURANCE ___,...__

SAUS

Endtlme House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Routc33)

Snowville
Pastor: Aormoe Smith
Sunday School - 10 aJD.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Lutheran

Other Churches

Calnry Pilgrim Chapol
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.':"-·· 7:30p.m.
Wedncsday SciVIcc - 7'30 p.m.

Harrisonville Community Churcb
Putor. Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday - 7 p.m.

Putor: Ron Fierce

Reo'l•nlud O.urch d Jesu• Christ
of Latter Day Salnll
Portland-Racine Rd.
Putcr. Janice Danner
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worlhip- 10:30 a.m.
Wedne~day S.rvicea -7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30am.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday Services · 1 pm.

Fallh Followshlp Crusade for ChrlSI
Puwr. Rev. Fnmldin Dickem
Service: Fridoy, 7 p.m.

The Believers' Fellowship Mlnlllry
327 Mechanic St., Paneroy
Pa1tvr: Rev. Margarcl J. Robirmm
Services: Wcdneaday, 7:30p.m.
Sundoy, 2:30p.m.

RuUand
Pastor. Anhur Cnobtm:
SlD!day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Serviw - 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Panor: Re:v. Blackwood
Sunday School -9JO Lm.
Wosship 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Fllth Full Gospel Church
loog BotWrn
Pastor. Steve Reed
Sunday School -9:30am.
Won hip - I0:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday - fellow1hip acrvioe 7 p.m.

Rock SprlnK•
Pastor:Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Youth FeUowship, Sund.1y - 6 p.m.

RuUand Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wcdncaday Servicca - 7 pm.

Calvary Bible Chun:h

I

"Lose We~ht Like "Crazy•
Guaranteed
Loao Poundo and lncheo

Natural Herbal Tablets

446·3896

NOW STARTING

WHALEY'S AUJO

Forked Run
Sportsman
Gun Club
Gun Shoot

PARTS

Every Sunday
1:00 P.M.
12

Gauge

Reas..able Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

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

NEW &amp; US ED PARTS FOR
AlliiAKES &amp; MODElS
192-7013 OR
192·5553 OR
TOll FREE 1-800-148·0070

1112A/02 ttn

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
otnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

Seat Covera &amp; Carpet
Convertible Tapa,
Antique Care,

Boat Seata
Over 20 Yea" Experience
41464 Starcher Rei.
Pomeroy, Oh. 4576U
614·1192-7587
1121/lln

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Heating, Inc.

Pellet Stoves
386 State Rt. 160
w/Nationwlde Ina.
Gallipolis, Oh.
446-7400
800·757-PELLET
7355

Pr'1Q'1f2 ttn

Roofing, Siding,

•Complete

Concrete, Room

Remodeling

Additions, Etc.

&amp; Compare

FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7fW94

9

Announcements
4

Giveaway

Smfth

3 Seagle Dogs Call After 6 P.M.

614-379-2664.

3 calt, 6 monthe ofd, good

home only, 304~75-4650.

FtW Pupo: 8 Cuto 3 Montho Old
Pupa Part Sybor1on 6 Cock·

OH~S614

apoo, Need H"ome Immediately.
614·256-6996.

(614) 388-9865

ti-20131, 8-28131 wood window

sashes, 1 or all.

304-615-3454.

7 Collie &amp; lab Mixed Pup~••,

LINDA'S
PAINTING ·&amp; CO.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Interior &amp;
Exterior

GUN SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11, 94
1:00 P.M.

L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

12GAUGE

FREE ESTIMATES

Tab the pain out of
painting. lei uo do II lor
you. Very r-llllble.
Free Eatlmateo
Before&amp; p.m. leave
meaaage.
Affer6 p.m

614-985-4180.,..,..

FACTORY COKE
91711 mo.

Howard

949·2168

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Llgtlt Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mis. Jobs.

Bill Slack
992·2269

&amp;16'94 TFN

~, . z.,

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

ahape; bumper pool table, fair
s hape ; 614-667-3956.

Riverbend Travel
Adventures
701 Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio
45768

Phone: 992-6926

Delivered
locally

992·3838
8/.1/1 mo.

Puppies hall Beag le, 304-713-

Save us

AMENDED RESOLUTION
5.94
WHEREAS, The VIllage of
Pomeroy, wlahea the Clerk·
Treasurer to borrow from
the Farmers Bank for a loan

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

on a new pumper truck.

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2/t 2112/tfn

from the pound,7

or

Tear down house for malarial,
must lake all, 304·~5240 or

173-56()2.

Two non~worklng cosh ntglllera, 304-675-5404.

Wanted: Used Nordic: Track Exerel..r Call 614-441 -0914 Aft•r 5
P.M.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON

I

All arusl AVON Christmas Hll·
lng eterl s, aam blg S$$. Marilyn
l();t:-882-2645 or 1-000-992-6356 .

Washer &amp; Dryer, 614-388 -8734.

Whitt male duck lo glvetway.

COL WHh

614·992-6218 .

6

ment. 1 Year

Lost &amp; Found

Found : Small Pup Llghl
Colored, Eastam Avenue, Ga~
llpolls, 614-448-83011.
lost : Gold Wrist Watch, With
Gold Chain, 614-256· 5Mala Bilek Lab Puppy Wllh Col·
Woven
679

Yard

WMktnds. Applicant Must Have
Doubl81 Endorce-

Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
4667 State Route 850.J.. 21 Thru

24, o:oo nu ? Bldwoll, uH.
ALL Yard Salta Mutt Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lha day t&gt;.tore the td Ia to run.
Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Fr1doy. Monday odHion • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
Moving Salo: Soturdoy, St. Rt

Mobile Home Fumtce, Gat
Heat, Curtain•, Bede, Misc.
hams.

Care

In

AVON CHRISTMAS NOW!
Average $8 -$14 Hourly At Work
-1-iome. EnJoy Floxlble Hours,
Discounts, And Benaltta. Ttr-

rttory Opllonal. 1-IIOO-JI2-4738.
Avon Wanta Individual• lnte .....
tod In Earning S8 -$14 !Hr. No
DoorToOoor.1-800-699-5844.

B1byatnar My Home, Part-Time
Momlngs, 614-256-1481, 614-2561058.
Chrfalmas Around The Wot1d
Decor And Mort, O.monatttore
Needed. Ff"M S300 Ktt , Elm
Fu1J-11me Pay For Pan-Time
Work. Also, Book ing P11rtles,

614-245-5039.

Eaey Wor1ll Excellent Pay! As-

llmble Produc:ta At t-lorn~ . Call

ToU Froo,

Ert.

E.lptrilnced S.Crtta~ - RICOJ)tlonl8t Wanted, Old Eatabllehed
Co. Downtown Location. Lota Of

Rnpbnslbllltlea, Good Pay

&amp;

Future For Right Individual, All

Roplloa Strlclly Confldantlal,
CLA Box 332, clo Golllpollo
Dally Tribuna, 825 Third Avenut,

GaUlpoilo, OM 45631.

--

Memory

friends &amp; co-workers
for the cards, food &amp;
kindness &amp; support.
1b AlexaiKier
Presbytet:ian Church
Such kindness. love
shown from all of
you. And thank you
Lord! For giving me
peace In my heart &amp;
mind that my dad is
DOW OK &amp; with you.
Thanks to my Dad
who I miss &amp;. meant
so very much to me.
Kel~ Clelland Ballard
·
&amp;Family

•

1~-467-5566,

313 .

I

'

Ex·

Plan, 1-800-362-5685.

7TC

2

Ovar The A01d

ptrienee. Excellent Pay Health

~

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report Form ·
990PF lor the Kibble
Foundation, Bernard V.
Fultz, Trustee, Is available
lor public lnapecllon al
Bernard V. Fultz Law Offlca,
111 1/2 W. Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789,
during regular bualneas
hours lor a period of 150
days oubooquent to
publication of lhla notice.
(9) 20, 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27;

All Areas I Shlrtey

1 Driver Needad To Fill lrnmedlete Posi tion For T.. m Run
5 Oap A Wotk.
Homo

Road, Soma Fumltur., Elactrk:

eft:

Old clgar•tt• lightere, milk bottin, fountain pens, silverware,

Speare, 304-615-1429.

588, 112 Mile Past McCormick

QUILrrY WIIDOW SYSTEMS

- - --

J &amp; D'• Auto Parta and S.lvage,
alao buying Junk ears &amp; true ....
304-713-5343.

pupplos, Colle/Biue
Heelor, call after 5 pm, 614~75-

7

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

Decorated stoneware, wall tel•
phonea, old l1mps 1 old lhwmom.ten, old cloeu, entlque
tumhure. Rlverlrw Antl~uee.
Aula MOOfe, owner, 614·112·
2526. We buy utates.

adorable

lar, Neighborhood A01d Ar.•,
614446-'1420 .

Public Not ce

1VOO

5348.

5922.

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Pontiac

Free pupplee , htlf Cocktr Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.
Spaniel, 7 WNkl old, 61"*~ Colna, Gold Rings, Sltvar Colne,
3979.
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
Old upr ight plano, very good 151 Second Avonue, Gallipolis.

895-3429.

By GARY LARSON

Buick

Ea81em Avenue, Gal lipolis.

614-256-6439.
marbles, stoneware, magazlnea,
Beautiful blonde mele dog, 2yre. Star Wa~ and Star Trek bema;
old, medium alzed, part I O
_ ......:
oby_ll_a_rt_ln'-,61
_ 4_-ll_92
_ _-JI4
__:
1·_ _
Pomera nian, loves chll:~~~ Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoe
nHde to run &amp; play, to
Whh or Without Motors. Call
home only. 304-67$-6253.
Larry Lively. 614-386-9303 .

Scrape molal. 304--69$-3942

THE FAR SIDE

Wanted to Buy

Clean Late Model c.,.. Qr
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Nower,

P.O. Box 220 Biclwel~

1--:....::::.:....:_,;__ _

Public Notice

Aa

992-6215

I--------I

THEREFORE,
BE IT
RESOLVED thai the VIllage
of
Pomeroy
borrow
$128,000.00 for live (5)
years from Farmera Bank et
allred rate of 5.25%.
PASSED: September 19,
1994
John Blaettnar, Mayor
John Musser, Preeldent of
Council
Kathy Hysell, Clorlt.·Treasurer
(9) 23, 30; 2TG

Envuoflame :~~:~;::~. .

Pomeroy, Ohio

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

•Garages

9 1o 5 Weekday•
Eveningt By Appl

~

MANLEY'S

•New Homes

Stop

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

7131r'Q1 TFN

Headllnara, Custom

Bred for
Quality and
Temperament
Specializing in Part-colors
for show and companions.
Stud oervice &amp; puppies,
young adJlts for sale.
48750 Mila Hill Rd.
Recine, Oh
614-1148·2487

Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal

Frame Repair

DARWIN, OHIO

Cocker~~~~~~~

HAULING

Specializing In Custom

Factory Only

AMBERWOOD

EMPIRE'S
TRADE-IN
SALE
GOING ON

Letan, W.Va. RL I
Pasr.or: Jame:s l ~wis
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Service-7:30p.m.

N- u.... Church of lhe NUIII'ene
PallOr. Gleruloo Slroud

PuriChapd
Putor: Flormce Smidt
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Holzer Clinic Inc.,
90 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Falnlew Bible Church

PorUand Flrot Church of the Nuareoe
Pastor. John W. Douala•
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Wonhip - 6:30 p.m.
Wcdneaday Service• -1 p.m.

Pauor: Deron Newman
Sunday School • 9 am.
Wmhip • 10 a.m.

Wesle)an Bible Holiness Church
75 Purt SL, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Send resume lo:
Human Resources

While's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pulor: R!!Y. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10,30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h d tiH Nuarene
Putor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mlnernllle

needed in heallh care facility.
Good computer skills and
shorthand required. Excellent
fringe benefils.

Bald Knoll, oo Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .
Wunhip- IOA5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne1day Service· 1 p.m.

Cbelttr Church of lht Naurene
PallOr. Rev. Helbert Grate
Sunday School-9:30am.
Wmhip - II a.m., 6 pm.
Wedneaday Services- 7 p.m.

Wonhip - II a.m.

a... of Sbaron Hollneoo Church

Experienced Seocre1ary,ICietrk

Freedom Gospel Mission

Po....-oy Church of the Nuu-ene
Putor: Rev. Thomu McClung
Sunday School · 9:30am.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm. and 6 p.m.
Wodncaday Servicca- 7 p.m.

Flo !Woods

712111111

Kingsbury Road
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: - 1 p.m.

Sw1day Schoo! - 9:30a.m.
wo,.hip · 10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 pm.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · lO a.m.

Fr.. Eatim-

Carleton Interdenomlnallonal Church

Syracuse Church oftht N~rene
Jlaslor: Rev. Rick StufJ.tll

Enterprise
Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a. m.

Dan vUlt Holines:!l Chu.rch
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle

550 Page 8~. llldchport

South Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Duane; Syd01slricker
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worshi:r.
· · 10 a.m. , 7f.m.
Wednes y Servia: · p.m.

R«d,.Ulc Fellowship
Church ul the Nuarene

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracwe)
?astor: Deroo Newman
Sunday Sc~ool · 9:45 a.m.
,
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wedneaday Scrvice•-7:30 p.m.

Cortee hour following

U4 South 2nd

'~--

W.,nlup . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wai"lcsday ServiOCJ - 1 p.m.

Putor: John W. Douglas
SunJay School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedn ~1day Services · 7 p.m.

892'20G6

Nease SetUement Church
Sunday Wonhip · 2:30 p.m.;
Thur1day servi~s - 7:30 p.m.

SLu\JS)' ~hool - 9:30a.m.

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor Sharoo Hausman
Sunday School -9 Lm.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services ·7:30p.m.

Wonhip · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scmca · 1 pm .

Pomeroy Westside Ch urcb of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Su nd11y Schopl - II a. m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main SL, Middlcpon
Patwr. Rev. Gilben Craig. Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm.

Rutland Free Wll Bapllll
Salem SL
Putoc Rev. Paul Taylor
Sundoy School - 19 a.m.
Evcnins- 7 p.m.
W...tn.aday Scrvi~- 7 p.m.

ol Cod

Episcopal

Worship · 11 a.m.

Anllqulty Bopllll
Sunday School - 9:30 am.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm.
Thonday Scrvi~ · 7:30p.m.

(."h u.rdl

Mlddtopurl Cburch of the Nuarene
l'u1u•: lircaory A. Cundiff

Rev. 0\arttl Mash
Wonhip . 9:3 0a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
t.: MYF SWlday 6:30p.m.

Gnct Eplocopol Churcb
326 E. Main SL, Pomeroy
Rccwr. Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Euchllri!l and Sunday School I !a.m.

Wors hip · lOJ'.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday school · 9:45a.m.
Won hip · II a.m. end 7 p.m.

S tW t tft

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Tuesday&amp;. Thursday - 7:30p.m.

~star

W ednesday Scrvict:s - 7 p.m .

W cdnc sday Sc m ccs · 7 p.m.

Hope Baptist Church (S.uthern)
570 Grant SL, Middkpon

Full Gospel IJahl""33045 Hiland Road, Paneroy
Pa1tor. Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.

R...tsYtllc

SW1. Man · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mu1 - 8:30 Lm.
VanZAndt Uld Ward Rd.
Panor: Jamet Miller
Sunday School - I 0:30a.m.
E'o'erllng - 7:10p.m.

Un lt..t Flltll Clour-&lt;11
RL 7 on Pomeroy Dy-l'•u
Pastor: Rev. Robcn li. Stnilh, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshio - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneSday Servi~ · 7 p.m.

�1994
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September

The

Pomeroy-Mid leport, Ohio

Dally

ALLEYOOP

23, 1994

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

OON'T YO U 5EE &gt; SHE
. WA.S CAST I 'lG ~ 5PEL
· OVER. .. LLEY WITH
TH ..T liTTLE BAUBLE

SHE WEAfl..tj!

400ast

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 Liver fluid
5 Anger
8 Smart
12 Gravel ridges

47 Dollar bills
49 Free from

13Cross
14Academic

44

54

Apartment
for Rent

WIDGET INC-

NHCI Bartender tor print• club.
Mu.t have flexible houra, hourly
rata plua llpl. Send letter of
,...ume to: Box 3.2, Rutland,
Ohlo45775.

Nloe 2 br epte, In Pomeroy, all
utllhloo pold, 814-1192-68M.
Nlco 2br.,
WID
t.&gt;okup,

ratarence, dlpolllt, no peta. 304-

Need E.rlra Money? Its Fun &amp;
E.a.y Wlth Avon. Call O.bble For

6711-5162.

o.tllll, 614-256-1502.

~nt

Need man to Ml with !Nderly

And 0opoo1t R..,..lrod. 114-44&amp;0041 Ahor 8 P.ll.

Nlco 3 Bod.-n Aportmont, In

gentleman, references requlr.d.
)04 .agS- 3942 01 895-34~ .

Nice 3 br. opt. In Mlddlopofl,
614-11112-5858.

ledy or ratl.-.d
couple to atay wtth elderly
wom~~n. Room, boerd and $200
par WMk Nlary. Phon. 614-6~
2765 or tn4-.5Y&amp;-412i.
Need

older

Fumlohod

36

Real Estate

'

Home Repair Trad•, O.pen--

dlvldual thot - " • wotl under
JMWIUrl and mu.t be

Hrwttl\le

to tho . - of tho tow lnoomo.
Comput• ond bookkooplng ox·
porlonco requlrod. Muot typo 110
WPII. Experience wtth federal
programo tloolrod. Ability to
work wall with other• 1 mult.
Thla poehlon II a temporary
pilrt·llme,
for
1pprox.
&amp;
monthal40 ll&lt;&gt;ln por · - Min-

Imum .clue~tlon requl,.,..nl 11
hlah ochool groduoto. No modi·

cal beneltta with thll pothlon.
Apply at th1 O.llla~alge CAA

Control Ottlco1 8010 N. St. Rt. 7,
ChelhlreL ONo, no later than
Oct*r 5, 1094. For further ln.

folmltlon, call 014-367-7341 "'

614-11112-682V. Eqwl Opponunlty
Employer.

Trucking

Compony

Sooldng

OTR Drt\lara, All New Equipment. Mult HIVe COL'I And 3
Experle~ 814-286-6484

v.,.

From IA.M. .SP.II.

Woodmon Of Tho

Wo~d

lifo In·

IIUrance Socllty has curr~nt

oponlngo tor caroor JOp-HOntatlvae Tn Muon, Gallla &amp; M1lga
County are. . Full blnefitl: two

year trolnlng altowenco tor a

..,.,. .tart, piUI comprwhen.tve

education program. Coootonl
emphall for -totally profn..
lllooal appnNICh. We IN an •
quot oppoflunlty omployor. All
10plloo will bo olrtcUy conlltlon-

tlal. Sand yow personal ruume

to: Clay Ronoy, 2413 JackoOn
Ave., Pt. Ptauant, WV 25550 or
con 304-07!1-8019

13

~

this .. _ . . lo oubjod lo
tho Fedeml Fair Housing At:t
ot t 968 Which makes n llagal
to ~ertlse ·any pf9ference,
Imitation or ~ton
basad

on r~WA~ , color, religion.

sex famllal slal ua or naUonal
ongtn, or any tn:enuon to

make arry such pr.terence,
lmltallon or dlscr1m6naUon .•
This ,..,_.. wil oot
knowilngly """""
ad'lertiMm&amp;nl&amp; tor real estale
Which Is ilvlolallon of tho law.
Our readers are hereby

illormed lnat all dwollngs
advertised In this newspaper
are available oo an equal
oppOJiunlly baslo.

Wanted to Do

Chlldcaro, roglllorodlllnk, carol- rotH. 30H75-211flV.
Erpo-d Gultarlot Now
Giving L..nona In There Home.
For Mora Information, 814-441-

31 Homes for Sale
1983 Clayton S.ctlonal Home
24'x58' 3 B~rooma, 2 Batha,
Hal Pump, 6 Centf'lll Air. Excel--

lent Condition, 2 Car Garaa•
With Workshop · 6112 Double
Doa Kannll &amp; Ei..ciOMd 18'132'
Unaerground 9Wi1J1mlng Pool,
Lanscaped. Muet S.. To Ap-

Now 3 DR Homo. AU Etoctrlc,
Utllhy Room, Nlco Prlvato
Country Softlng on 3 Acroo.
Rural Water. Approxlmately10

houl~ loao to tho min tuot

Cllll

Good

Rotor..-, ~-3117-7U88.

Proloalonat Troo Service Topping l Trimming Hodao Trlmmlng Slump Romovot Froo E.
tlrnal•l ~-388-~, 114-3677010.
SUn Valley Nuroory School.
Chi~ 111-F lam-8:30pm Ag•
2-K, Young School Ago During
SUmmor. :J Daya por Wook MinImum ,_...31157.

KILLS FLEASI Buy ENFORCI'R

wv.

2535.

$85/mo., Just 10 mlnut.. trom

HouM In 1-tar1ford, 4 room•
nlee yard; In New Haven,

5

rooma, nice location, 614-99'2·
5212.

-

"-&lt;funlty.

-·100-t--

. _ , - . -od Junc11on of
Rt. 2 • e2, Pt. Ptoooont. 304-41711-

Mobil Home Iota tor rent, 304-

87&amp;-88114

Merchandise

HouM On Srldg1m1n StrMf,

51

Household
Goods

Depoah, Contacl Mayor Pape At

614-11112-3420.

7 wtndowa I bow window, tilt·
Nice 2br. hou•. Galllpotla In, new will Mil cheap, 301W175Forry. 304-875-1761 oftor 5pm.
4071i ovonlngo &amp; 1711-2310 doyo,
Nice 4 Room HouM In Ga..

or ean ... 2902 Pine Ave, PI PH.

llpoll•. LA, Kit., Dinette, Bath, GOOD

oU oloctrlc, .,.. corpot,
$175/mo., 1100 ctopoolt, ,.... poy
2br.

utllltloo.~.

3 Bedroom Noar NGHS.
McCiukoy
Rd.
Stovo,
Rolrtg-or, Wator, TrMh Paid
$275lllo Pluo Dapoolt, 114-3888111.
322 lhlrd Avonuo, No POlo, 1144484JII8, 114-2158-1803.

Nlco Kitchen Table With 4 Choir
Nlco CondHion, With 4 Choir
Cuohlono, $50, OBO, 114-4482334.
Norwolk Winged Backed 3
Cuohlonod BOiga Sola 1100,
Bolgo Rocllnor $58, Er~y
Amerk:ln Maple ClbiMt Enler·

for Sale
t4x50 t982 Oak Brook llobllo
Home. 2 Bedroom., Washer,
Dryer, Underplmlng, And 2
Doclto lneluctod. Alliumo Loan,
614-446-4504.

tm Now Moon, 44•12. 2 bod-

rooms, good condition, 814--,..2-

2658.
1181 14x58 Skyline 2 BMtroom.
0.. Heat, New Carpet, Elcatteni

1 and 2 bedroom opartmonto,
fumlshM

and

unlumWMd,

-wtlr dot&gt;Ooll raqu~od. no
polo, 1~2218.
1 Boctroom CioN To Unlv.-otty
Of Rio Gronde, 1200/llo. Pluo
Dlporalt, I'M 388 ID41.
2 Roomo l Both, No KHchon,

$200ollo. All UIIIHioo lndudod,

114-44&amp;-7733, Botwoon 8:30
-8:00.
"Two tog onlctoncy aportmonla,
tumtohlcl, utllnlaa pold, at+m8304 or 614-11112-11225.

33

Fanns for Sale

24.:.:.,unltnla,.d2br. log
-·
.
• , ...mont ' ooptlc ly.iotn,
county wato&lt; pond, born, out·
building, llf4l.jt Rood, $70,000.
304.f75-4278 or 67!1·71183.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

' Ott Adell_, Pike eo..
nor Of -um Trot And Btuor
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Got Rood, 114,000, tl441J.71111.
Rich ~K. WIN Got A St01dy
Lake- ono ocro 1o1 ... h
Cooll -.... Priced to Soli. 1· Ty._.
12xeo trall1&lt;, nil&lt;, -rtc and
ooptlc, 112,1100, 114-lll2-2157.

'WYpall

Utllflloo Pottl, ~
441-4411 Alor 7 P.M.

Cocker Spaniol pupllf•. $50, no
poporo, 114-992·283~.
Floh Tonk l

304-f~

Good robbll tloao, oood gun

tnme wll und•muth dr11w1ra.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Galllpolla. Now &amp; Uood
tumllure, hell.,., Wnt•m &amp;
Work - o . &amp;14-441-3158.
Tondy tOOOEX Compull&lt; With
Pt1ntor, Daolc And Sottwaro,
$850, 114-441-12113.
VI'RA FURNITURE
4Mitoe Out At. 141

114-446-31S8

QuaiHy Hot•ottotd Fumlafllnga
And Appllanol&amp;. llaftra• Solo •

tf!~:~
S2aa..:,~!
..,.

Ace- leo 11-,

&amp;14-4441-JIIlOI Doyo, 114 446 na
:.:A;;.;IIo;;.;r.;.5:;.;.00;_~;.;·11;;.;·~----

-

54

Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Transportation
71 Autos fOr Sale
~~~--~~~~

5585.

&amp; Livestock

-·

Uood Sola &amp; Choir, 114 14C 3411. 2 - - com Ill-.
narrow - . uc CCirld, SCIU"III!1850.
Utility Trailer, 114-248-8773.
Wonn llomlng gao - · · 11100 Ford Tractor With Haovy
85,000 BTU, uold vory - . 814- Duty Buolt Hog M,W; 3020
_11112_·71142.:---'--::--~-:---=:- l $7,350,
John Doora. Super S..rp,
:::
101tnltmatfana113,111;
Wlahlr, Dryer, Color T.V., 116-281 " "
Microwave,

FrMZ•,

Stove,

Aolrtgorotor, llloo. 1114-2511-1238.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 3/4 1nc11
200 PSI $11.18; 1 Inch 200 PSI
:~ Enno
Enta...-_
814Jacltoon,
ONo .

$32-=
w_,. 111, 11110·,
do-l r _..._

114-"JU.L .... .,...tor,

55

1111

Chain
bora ' - ... to '"
-ony-.lootprlcMin
·
- 81ct0ro
Equipment, 1711-11121
... ,~

For- Fannoll SUper A, olcolllnt condnton, 111110, 114-11112·
lltOt.

$100,

Building
Supplies

pplf

nf1. ul

Wobb. &amp;14-448-

Pomporacl Pota by Sonyo, dog
~bothlng, oil ·
-882
·
AKC Boo- pupploo I -ke
old, roady to go, ltoo, F.A.

t A Q .\

...
l"orgt
.. M
ltog_l ,BlatiiiUIIO;

-.v

Forit.- llotcr I Potnf,
11,110; . 211 ......... • With
L.o.cW, sa,uo, ·~ 112:2

"::1i::~:r~amh),
,.tty to

lllnlabr,.
nNty
IWCOIIdM

_...11100.

R-

-r.

11 1121tp

1888 Oklo Dollo 8f 111,000 lllloo,
114-446-12M.
1888 ract Comora, auto1 1 ely,
ooldng 11500, llt4-1112·:st72 ..
114-441-1138.
11187 Covatlor, $1100. 3tJ.WH.
3142 or Ill 3421.
11187 Pontiac TranaAmL. black
•nlntod wlndowa, 1'1011001'
ramovabto CD ployor
w/1-att _...,., oharp, runo
~-~ muat - . prtcotl lo ooll.

Black, Short bed, 814-245-5311.

MAW'S OFF
VISITIN' HER
SISTER AN' I
WAS FIXIN'

YOU AN' TH' FELLERS ARE
WELCOME TO GOME EAT
WITH US,
SNUFFY

73

Vans

By Phillip Ald er

&amp; 4 WD's

-..a.

--14

!!!f-It

7

traction

421ngreas

'

45Guy
48 Actor s' org.

50 Brown kiwi

Runs Good, $1,600, 814-448-1508.

1980 Joop Chorokool lull o1zo

4WD, 4 apMd, I cyl nd1r, new

PEANUTS

u ... , runo groo~ good goo
mllooga, $2500 or might ,.ke
lato 70"o u~y 80'o 314 ton 4WD

OKM. MARCIE .. I'LL

BUT DON'T TI-IROW IT
60 DOWN THE FIELD, BEFORE I GET DOWN
AND 't'OV TI-IROW
OR 't'OV'LL l-IlT ME ON
ME THE BALL ..
TI-lE HEAD ..

aulomalle truck on lf'llde, 114sw.l-7687 af1er 6pm.

1885 S-10 4x4 V.., 4 Speed
$3,500. 8t4-440.f858.
'
1911 lauzu Amtgo EJc..., 4WD,

5opd., 4t,OOOmt.

'f- 1 J

SORR'l'. SIR. .. I
WAS PRACTI CIN6
M'f INTENTIONAL
GROUNDING ..

CELEBRITY CIPHER

304-0~1118.

1993 Aotro E.Jnontlotl
l.oadodl84-446-12114.

c ~to:.&gt;bury Co prl(!l cryp tog•a ms a•t neared l•om quorar.ons by lamou~ people 11a st and presenT
._
__E ac h rene• "' the c opl1o • s tan ds 101 ano th~H r oo11y "5 d ue A I:!(Jua/5 y

Von

74

wssv

Motorcycles

1982 V45 Honda 7110 llotoreyclo
15,258
Mlloo,
1114-1'12-245"1
Evonlngo.
IV82 Yamoho llo1lm W $1,000
OBO 1114-3811-9170.
•••
v
'·~
.omaha
n m _ ,,
S3,200, exc cond, 304.aQ1..3111.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Mt&gt;

,3. SMIT~. M~

~.

~vt.

Al-t. T~E OT~t'

EA,, f'IOSf

ANI&gt; Tti~OAT

12 Ft. Aluminum Bool &amp; Traitor
Mlnnkola Trolling Motor; 14 Ft.
Fiberglas• Bo.t, lllnnkota Trot._
lng MOtor 814-24$-54128.

JOf'leS,

uz c

C F 0 J W

cs

KSYWHC

S K

WYHGCJHMM

D M

C F H

C F H

D M

G

GUDIDCA

C YZ H

CS PHJ

HIUHYC

FZUUGYV
PREV IOUS SOLU T IO N· "' My m1ss ron IS to make my mu stc th e best Let others
d ec1de whe ther rl" s t11 ghbrow or lowbrow·· - John W1 ll1ams.

STUff
''

12,1UU, 114-37'1-2240.

\

I

1881 OtaiOporl 17ft. open -

tope;

Z.SL lnboordloutbGord, lull
llfalacltoll, Oqul_,., OIC.
cond., 15000. 304-«lli-sBts.
23"3"
Tlv.tndorblnl
Sport
Flohorman, cutty cobln, 2ICI
horN moe. cruloo, ohlp

BORN LOSER

....I~

t.m..'f..M~ VEE&amp;Eru"ltR

to-.
more utrae, 18600

I

~Mf.TOPICKUP
3:)N£~00

-2-4421.

76

LHLSYA

0

11178 GlooiJOn 11 Ft. Sha 8 .
Bluo/ White, 110 H~ llorcury Engl~1- ~ l ilu... Q,..tl

and kM
080,

YHC HJ C DNH

G

86 Ford F2SO, 414, 814-1182-7557.

00

3

THE WI\'{

Auto Parts &amp;

~

Accessories
a-y
rwchramod,; ~-1112-2658.

rrI I I
DENYE

I I I' I

I

"I'm a really bad bowler·
I
I
one cutie: sighed to her date.
.
.
.
Trying to cheer her the date
I. 1
. - - - - - - - - . , s a i d , "No you're not. A· really

rs

6

I
I1-- r,-T,-..,-:;-7-,,,........,..1---4 0

~

~

111115 u tltra 'U pono; ••m to buy minibike· 114-11122171.
I

VIREEG

--.R_E.,.,....P..,Pr--1.,--4/m:; ,'

.

lor porta; '57
btll1por,
-

"57 Chovy 4 -

NI K0 0 M

~

OL---~~~------~

bad bowler can 'I hear a •. Comp lete !he cnuckle quoted

.
.
.
.
.
_
by illl,n g 1n the m1ss.ng words
'-....1.--'---1-...1..-'--J vov dev e lop fr om step No. 3 below .

f}
gao ratlotoro,
tanke, ono- ''"' _.,
truc1t
whoolo,
oto. D &amp; AAuto, Rlptow, WV. 104S72-3t33or 1~.

79

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

Compton
24' Filii ..._
-·
,11110
_ nmlng,
mlc-.vo,
Ollrll, alcofllnt _,.,ftfon'
$7500, lncludoo Mch, 1~
3271.

111111 Dutchmen 30' cam1101 tutty
oqulppod, IXCOilont OOiidtiiori
11181 Ptytnoth Rotlant, 4dr., g,..t FkMtd• wlntw homl wlli
'
21100ml., $4500 firm. 304-8711- Hllv•, 114-161-3021.
4030 or 171-4211 oftor llpm.
:n Fl. Coachman Ctmpor, Good
11181 T-btnl, low mllaa, loaded, Condition, Fully eor.iotnoct
G-t Fe&lt; Door Hunto,. $2,150'
ohapo. S0W711-3018 altor 814-388-11888.
'
30W75-8240.

=

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN TH ESE SQUARES

f2

I

13

I

f4

I

Is I'
I I

l

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Switch · Capon - Yucca· Demise. SHADOW
My husband had been fighting the battle of the bul9e
and apparently had given up. One day I heard htm
mumble. "You can escape from almost everything but
your SHADOW t

ROBOTMAN

Travot trollar, Torry R - 22'
1Nt Ford Tompo all · - ool,._,.llnod, air, IMpa \ u!
d~v.. PW, PL. PO, ilrfcond, 304f171.48SIL
:.,_~~nlon, $1,1100, 11411111 Ponllac Lallano, 71,401
mU., lnUOOft, 4 aoor, Wlnnobago llote&lt; Norno, 114out-tic, tolr, . - , aoklng 24UII28:
$2100, 114-Mfl.aiiOO clayo or 614'
MI2144••*'1L
Serv1ces
1111 ~ 1-10 14,0111. 11111
Oodao Oati&lt;Jia v.. auto 11,488.
1ttel" Olcla Cotolo $4.41111. 11187
Home
Codattlc DoVItta IMf nlco $3,71&amp;. 81
11187 ··-r 414 loadod 14,01&amp;.
Improvements
11111 Doctgo 11,tte.
1.. 0 . ....... 111,11111. 11178
Chov truclt $1100. Bovorat under
11,000. lcotty'o Uood Cora, -

Havwt, wv. 30WII2~712.

ASTRO-GRAPH

.

1400. Aloo, ............

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

LivestOCk

Graph Matchmaker instantly reveals

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Today you

which s1gns are romantica lly perfect for
you . Mail $2 to Matchmaker, cJo this

might be so conce rn ed thai others do
what's expected of them that you fa •l to

newspaper. P.O. Box 4465, New York. · do what's expected of you Set an eramN y 10163.
pie instead of s tandards.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) You1 ideas .' TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Estab lis h
could be superior to your male's Ieday .. ob)ectrves loday and s lant your ellorls
but he/she may not be convinced of thiS if towards serving your personal interests;
your presentation lacks c larity . Present a this might be a day where you won't be

rJ!11t!1 tnm

logical case. not an emotional one.

able IO please others

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-De~ . 21)
There's a possibility today that the person
from whom you 're hoping to extract a

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Even though
you may wish to spend time on activities
ol your choosing today , this might not be
possible, because o f dutie s you'v e
neglected previously.

favor might also be looking for a favor
from you . It could result in a showdown .

t:.J•

~and

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

tll7ll GMC 314 Ton Truck, 4 WD,

......... _

~

7 Improvement

At the end,
one happy, one sad

SUPPER

hih,i'M:

w•

Vu lne ra bl e : Both
Deale r : South
Suuth
West North
2 "'
Pass 2 •
3 NT
Pass 1 •
4•
Pass
;, •
I) •
Pass
Pa ss
Opening lead •

BARNEY

- · ~-7-3851.

::::=·=
~ "C':.~:~
c =::' Ptor..$20:
flg:

of heredity
8 Used to be
9 Sarcaetlc
t 0 Thoroughfare
11 Coloredo park
t 6 Confederate
general
20 Played anew
23Mineral
25 Threaten
29Haloo
30 Fertilize
34Amounll
351nstlgale
(2 wda.)
36Cruel
person (al.)
3BOul·and-out
39Lao"a eon
40Frozen dew
41 Poetic con·

- - !
6 Slormed

1081 Chevy Ptck.Up, Low Rklor,

I aordon traotcr w/4'- bora
tit*, 11000. 30WJWOOO.

63

Wade 2 Abraham ·s
nation
J Actress
Pipe r 4 Before
5 How sweel

37 - Tech

080, 114-44&amp;-2334.

Farm Supplies

1 Baseballer

34 Select group

11188 Dodgo 100 4 o- Auto, '
CyllndlrL • n,.., Run•
Good, ~•lr Condtuon, 1800,

Vegetables

SIGNS: Ponablo changoabto
algn &amp; lottoro $28e. FIMIOitoro
arHI dallvory. Ptaotlc lottoro $55
box ( - d bo1 liM). AAA
Slvoo, 1-1100-633-3453 anytlmo.
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Up~gltl, Ron Evana EntoiPII•o,
JacUon, Ohio, t-BQ0.537..0528.

=:

$200. AU Ercot- Condition,

Agrtc.-turat fimo, ctotl- l
ltl1rMd. 304-182-2271 .. 8823318 ovonlngo.

n..... •

.c.'lon.=-------o,;;;;;;;;-;;;;r~;;;;i~ii;;;;;:p;
Whl~pOOI Hoovy Duty _ . .r grwm o!MIJ Sulo
ShooPot
1
Th

Seett &amp; Fertllzer

..nl

81.
•
$3711.00; Block, brick, _., Dl- ....,_
Rolrlgaratcn • Rangoo
tln1olo,
oto. OH
Cloudo
Waotiora /Drylra
two,·Rio
Orondo,
Colt -11424HI2t
Hou,. lion. • Sat. U Wed. 11-5;
Don, Forgot Our REPO. s- 56
Pets for Sale

~~· ~~Jf:h.

65

Cot-.

2 ,_ Ollvw plcter, t ,_ Cooo
ptcgr, grovHy bod .............
nlng gooro, W tug alumn
wloOoiB •"-11" u,..; · -

Sola &amp; clullr, $200. Wotorbod

8quoro botoo. S1.26 to $2.00 por
bolo, ollatfo, ctovor, e&lt;clulrd
graoo, 304.f75-3tll0.

Pot Shot&gt;, 2413

Jackoon Avo. Point Plhaom,

"Two Warm llomlng hooting
ltovea_ on. wood •nd OMI",
propono, both ....
blo\w,., e1cellent concltlon,
$2001ooch or $37!5/both, 114-11112·

eo Pattam• Kitchen C.rpet
In Stock. 30 Pottomo VInyl In
Stock, Mollohan Corpoto, At. n
N., 614-446-11144.

Hay &amp; Grain

DOWN

26 Hawaiian
wreath
27 Poinl· blank
28 UK mil . pilots
31 Container

32 Mongrel
33 Nahoor sheep

•A K

Chov &amp; Font Bodo, Chov Cobo,
Rongor Shortbod, 73 -110 Cltev
6" 614-44114140, &amp;14-2511-8018.

72 Vat""-gon lootlo, 614-182·
llaaglollar alo, 814-1112·2834.
MIMI.
=c:------,~--­
case and earphon•, book. .. Malo Pot Bolly pig, $50. 080 '57 Comora, V.f WHh Hope,
304-8711-7280.
'
outo.,
614-1411-21211.
king $150, 814-llt2·208t.
Pot
0-..lng- 18117 Chov. BotAir, 4dr. Sodon,
Nice Franklin Woodburn..- $150; llcl.ood'o
Nlco Hutch $150; Sotl"l $50; Poodloo g-..1, bothod ond .... - · -2-2770.
Nice Waterbed OUMn Size S150; dipped, 113; Cockor Sponlot, tNt Muotang, e cyt., auto., PS,
Olflco O.ok 135: Nice Coltoo sao;._aman C&lt;&gt;lllol. 125: largo OIC. ln1orfoi, $4lf00. 304-41711$30; ollro largo ctoga,
Tobjo I 2 End Tobloo, Block Rod
31180.
Iron Whh Glue Tope $7!5; All &amp;31; hou,. tam-lpm. ""No a.....
cloy
work,
coli
Coolville,
114-86"1Extra Nicer 814a371-2no.
11180 lluot.,a 4 CVtlndor, 4
31115.
Spood, $7110, ~5-2352.
R&amp;S Furnhure. W• buy, aell and
trade
1ntlqu1
new/uaed Aoglotorod Englloh Sottar pupo, 1881 Chavatte, 1uto, nNde
OICOPOn1
btoodll... motor, good body, $125, 814-1185hou.1hold tumla~lnge. Will buy FDSB,
any amount, large/email. 505 m1ny refarences, brM for thl 4238.
Second St., Maeon, WV. Ownet- IOOihuntor, $200, 614-6Vfl.2110.
11181 Malibu Ctuolc Station
Rocky j)earson. 304·77'3-5341.
Wop, 211 Englno, Clvod ConRol~gorotoro, Stov•, Wllohoro ST
Musical
dillOn,
S1.000:
Couch
'
And Dryoro, All Roconcttttonod
Instruments
l.avMoal, llolvln Hotloy, 814And Gaurantoodl $100 And Up, ;:--;-~~.:..:.;;,;.::..:.:.:.:..=­ 258-11101.
WUI 0.11\ler. 614.668-6441.
Bundy flute, exc.tlent condftlon,
11183 Buick Pork Avonuo/t &amp;0,000
$175, 814-11411-2001.
Restaurant equipment. 2 cull
UIIM, A·1 CondMion, 14-245raglste,.., tabl•• &amp; chair•, d11p Bundy trombone uood 112 111128.
fryers, too much to llel. 304-675- ochoct form, now b15, wilt ooll
11127.
$250. Aloo, clalmo~ StiiO. 304- 18831hllbu Wagon V-8 With Air,
Hlah lllloo, Wall llaln1olnod,
&amp;711-56111.
Sent Somorvlllo"o Army Surptua.
UOO; Yomoha 100 CC Roclna
F~day~ Sol, Sun. Noon • 6:00 PM HaH Stack Amp Maro .. n Hood Go eon 11,200; tm Chevy C-t~
only. ~y Sondyvlllo onleo, Lanoy 4x12 Coblnot $800, fM- Sllv..-.do, $3,800. 8~2788.
304-273-6655.
448-00'IV After e P.M.
1083 Mercury Coprl (Looke Uko
Stay Warm In Your Uoblle Home Klmboll Con- Plano, Ercof.. Uu81ang)4 c,t., Aueo, $1,315,
Whon Tho Etoct~c Goa Ott
Condhlon, $1,000, 614-441- 114 4411 0440, tl'f4..258-e018.
Thlo Wlntor Wllh An Emllfro 1203.
Mobllo Homo Wolf Fumllctl Tho!
1884 ~~~- 300D Turbo
u - No Eloctrlclty. CoU Bon- .....,.ry Gonia 114 orgon, aJCOI. Room CondHion, Low
lint
ohapo,
lapo
ptayor
nott'o Moblta Homo HTO &amp; CLG
1 lllloo,IM-2711-2218.
NrphonM,
microphone
ana
At 6t4-448-Mt8, Or 1-800-117211184 llonto Corio Auto, 350 En5!167 For Dotollo.
Whoota,
'"-ry bonch
boglnotond,
- muatc
--.
· gino, Now
Se1ra under cou,.• diU.. toea of octvonc:od muatc - . , Good Condtlon, $3,500, :J04..
1711-23112.
Walhor, $50. 080. 304-875-25111 aoklng $1000, 114-JII2.2Q81.
aHor 4:00PM.
t.o.ay Sym,._.. Holiday 11188 Chryolor Now Y.....,, 2.2l,
llcyl., 12,500nt1.1 aootl cond.,
Sectional couch &amp; NOidlc Trock. ..,.,_ Oraon, Uloo CGn304ji75-2157.
dHion, 1"14-4441-JI"lll Dayo 114- loaded. 304-875-z4!2.
, ... U112 Aft1&lt; &amp;:00 P.M. '
1888 Buick Grand Notional!
Sot of hoovy duty bunk bode
Loadodl Ercotlont CondHion
whh mattrnH•; room dlvld•li 58
Fruits&amp;
Low llltoo, 114-448-4111.
614-992·262\

100,000 BTU 0. Fu,_ tall.
Eftlclonoy, E111cloncy, 1·
AKC
RAogtatolod Amoflcan
IIIJO.U7-8301,1-Cockor ~nlol Pullllloo, Top
Booko 110;
Fumlahad
Ap.rt-, t3t 1V70 Ecltlon llootlhy, Prtvato t&lt;Onnot.
World v- Booko 1m .a S21;
Chlomllfon,
iiiid
Aw..... Oattlpotto, 1
I J own, IS/IIo, Ullllllel World - - Booll AnnuoJ II= aIIILW. a Llnira To atoo.
1172 To IZ $21; Or AU For 1100. Fram, Bont 11!12 &amp; 1/tii/IM, Tolto
Pold, f14..4ll.441ll Altar 7 P.IL
Cottao Tobie 2 End T - $15
IIEAUTIFUL APAII'TIIEHTI AT Each Or AI S For $40; 11ott Fan
IIUDGET PRICU AT I - Now Bot:Z~ etiMI
ESTATES, 1121 ~ Pike
----Avat
lnln
,._ 1222 to $211.
to ahoo
:mi.
I movlle. Cal 114 ' " 21M . CloiMo, " ' - . Puro., CIIMpl
EOH.
lllacotlanooua Knlck..f(nacko,
No Cotto llofonl t A.ll, 104-175Cllan ~:""· ,., a doD,... 2M4.
qulract, no
•~
30 Ool • . - - . Floh TMk With
Fumlohod S " - I Both, Oolo Stand, ""Wholo a.t.Up tnCllan, No ...... AoforotiOO '
CIIudld, 114 448 8342 Aft11 II P.M.
Dopoolt AoqulnMI. 114-446-tStt.
AKC Aoalotwod Ootcton Lab
Mala, 3 .,.... Old IZOO. otandard
olz.o, f ornatt one l'x4' Placo To Rill 114-a_, tMlhrlng. 1 and
2 _ ,apenll¥1111ao
'
,.,san•bh. 814o;Q41M.
' 2158-1313.
..._
ond
Aponmonto In lllcldloport. From Bundy ctarinot ~- Finn Rn AKC Aoalot- molo "S232435&amp; . CoN &amp;14-11112-6181.
~~-' ft ook ~lng $211. ~· 1" • - old, 814-fiZ.
EOH.
Avenue,

CFA Roglotoract Hlmatyan Kit·
lena, &amp;14-448-110,.

Ov~r

44

Apartment
for Rent

$500. 614-367-lli23.
Molal dotoctor· Flohor VLF555D, good condition, haa carrying

$400, 814o:J88.VT70.

61 Fann Equipment

448~301.

Solo And Lov-~ En1ortolnmenl Centw, Butch 8~k labial,
Computor Daolc, 114-441·1203.

Aero Farm For Ront, &amp;14-251111145.

Sto\11, Only UNCI Ont Winter,

"

,._
..-·~ ~...lloochComotary,e
-.

304-875-11153 oftor 5pm.

Fanns for Rent

Avallablo ot: R&amp;G FEED AND
O'DELL LUMBER.
Klndlewood
Woodbumlng

°

64

• 9 7 42
tJ 10 9
•Jt0 8 1 32

9 A K J ti

Pick-Up Parte From Southweat

56 Pets for Sale
_ _ __;_;_;;.::::.:__ _
AK.C A ttwell p -~- $300
Erch, 614-446--834V.up,....,
Blehon Frloo tO llonlho Old,
Whlto Fomalo Spoclo1 ..
Houool&gt;n&gt;lton, Good wnh Kldo,

person (sl .l
54Zesl
55 Still
56 LL.B .

22 Catch
24 Foes

•

SOUTH
AA J i 4

Shortwlda,
110-81
Font
Longwldo, 814-148-0440, 114258-8018.

talnmon1 Conlor $350, OBO 814-

1fT

t

1l3oc 2br. kllal oloctrlc gorogo
opt• .;INI...-ga under, :1 mo&amp;ll

At,.,., 114-1192·2117.

One bedroom, vinyl aided on 112

llobllo Homo 18110 Rodman
14170 2 Bodn&gt;01118, 2 llottw,.
plianceo, 014-25UCIM Attar
5:00 P.ll. 614~51-1028.

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAWY PUBLISHING CO.
NC a,.,.,..ndllhat you do ~
, _ . . h poopto you k.-1 ond
NOT to ooild money tltrougn tho
maN Uri~ rou .... lnvootlgatod
tho oiiWfnD.

•

43

442~

Business
Opportunity

Large trallar &amp;ot at Santa'•
ForNI ~~111111, water &amp;

Ohio 45831, $400/llo., Dapoolt, Eloctrtc, &amp;14-367-JII38.
614-383-0581 Evonlngo.
lllol&gt;lto homo lor JOnt In
5 rooma, basement, ready Oct coun1ry· gorbogo, ond
11t, need ,.tarencn, 3~75- water included, cable available,

·-I.._

21

3 A-.. Otlice Sulta With
Prlvato Tofllt In - . . Rro
Prool Bkltl. Coli llonto Hultlno
614-446-:ztl!lt Or 814-446-2512.

MWII".

Serln "The BNutlf\.11 Hummlngblrda'" $700, 81....,.1-GCI02.

Flu Klllera tor peta, home &amp;
yard . GUARANTEED eftectlvel

Space for Rent

3 Btdroom, Country Uvlng, 1
A,c,., 4352 Cora Mill, Galllpolla, lloblta Homo Lot For Rent, Total

Conctnlon, $7,8110, 6t4-441-G175.
2brlnn. opta., lolol oloclrfc, aptV82 Challongor 14170 Hoe lWo pllancoo tumlohocl, laundry
1 Bedroom A"po~monto. Undor- room tadlll'-e ciOM: to Khool
Trlbu,. Pholot~raphor Anltabto t&gt;lnnlng, 2 Pon:hoo~-~;~ Dr In •-n. Appllc;tlono avaltabto
tor Weddillal ·l Otltor Evonto lilaholil Bid By - · Al&gt;- at: Vltllae Q,... ADio. flt or
CoH K8vln 114-446-11518 Aft1&lt; 5 ooluto Salol Don, llloo Outl 114call fi14.GII2-371 t EOII.
~312.
p.m.
35 Woat Apl. 2br, 1 bath, polio,
IBM OlkWOOtiJ..~·· 2 lUll both,
t:.,r..,_ry
exc. cond., PI,OOO. 3Q4.875- 11153.
plng c
::J...wator, - • · noh
provldod, ...5/mo. Eqwt 2 Bodroomo With hpondlo WID, lng Opporlunny, 114-441-11108.
Will bobysft In my homo. 304- AC, Stovo/Rolfta-t~&lt; Portlolly Fumlohod Elftcloncy 1150/llo
Fumlohod, 614-~itll.
175-4381.
Utltltlao Polcl, Shora lath eoj
Aw,_ Goltlp , 11a e14..Mi: ·
Wilt Cloan - . E.Jcollont Large comar lot with a 11M Rot•, ~-311l44M II No mo611o homo, 2 bocfroom, ,_ -Aft., 7 "·11·
'
32132 garage •1111 vlft of tho
-.rl.llo.. ll-go.
'
rlvor, uklng 145,000, 114-11112· Fumlahad Efllc:loncy, 701 Fcurth

Financial

46

Bock Porch. $58,000. OBO 814379·2240/ 614-3711-2566

15-1l57'.

Looking For l.IIIMI To Tlmbor.
Coli Ui, Wo"ll Do You Rlghtl

Houses for Rent

mi. from Galllpolle. Bkl Deck &amp;

32 Mobile Homes

Evenings.

A'-o triUer epace on river. All
hook...po. Coli allor 2:00 p.m.,
304·~, lhMKl

Fumlohocl 2 Bodroomo - .
Traoh Paid, Tocat EIICirlc No
Poll, Porll&lt; Aroa, 114 318 iOoO.

114-446-4148.

Whlto Bedroom Sullo,
Ooubto Bod Matt'"' Bo1
Sprlngo Choot D.... or, With
Mirror, $500; TNI GrMn
Rocllnor $150, 614-446-7928

Hummingbird FlaurlnM And Entire S.t Of Dracltord Exchange

Heti

Com Hollow Rd., Rutland, 3-4
bedroom, modern kJtchen, 01k
cabinets, Jenn AI,. coo~
12124 oak deck on front,
water, road fronta~ on two
sldu, quiet country living, t-5+
acrn, 614-9al-6572 after Spm.
wMkdays.

Gl~•

•QtOBJ

I

52 Fish appendage
53 Remarkable

190rganic
compound
21 Born

EAST

.. 7 6

Pick-Up Parte From SouthwMt
Chov &amp; Ford Bodo, Chov Cobo,
R1nger Shortbed, 73-80 CheY

traozor,

18Bony fish

WEST
.. Q 8 J

19114 Ford F-250 6.1 Autornotlc
Wlth ONE 20% Ov~rdrlve, M ooQ
Mil .., 114-446-1010.

. s

tK 7 6 2

exc. cond. 3Q4..&amp;82-3ieoftl.

GUARANTEED! Avollobto ot:
VALLEY LUMBER AND AlO
FEED.
Frigldalr chi• tyr.
17c:u. ft. 3Q4.675-285' •

1882 Joop J.tO l.llrado &amp; Hoi
Point ElectriG Ranp, After I
P.M. 614-24HU4.

1990 Font Rongor XLT, 4 Cylinder, ·Automltlc, Aikin;: $4,800.
614-448-8958.
1992 Silverado pickup, black
wfallver bonom Pll~ topp.r,

FLEAS? ENFORCER DVERNITE
FLEA TRAP controto ttou

Rentals

2 Bedroom Houoo 48 Chllllcolho
RoedL Full BoOOnton1, Carpotod,
Gu •umoco, No Poto, 114-44&amp;01158.
2-3 Bedroom LA, DR, 11oMmont, Galllpoda Chy Schoct ot.
trlct, Avoltablo Oct tot, $325/lolo.
304-7117·1013.

0
0

Gat floor furnace, Mil or trade,

USED APPUANCES
l.llrgo Bodroom, Waohor Dryor w..hera. dry.,., ralrlgeralon,
Hoo\-IJp, Good Neighborhood, rang•. !lkoggo Appllo._ lli
Porch, Yord Parking, No Poto, Vlno St-. Colt ~-·73N, I·
P'*'Iato, On SA 850, Bidwell. 6t4-441-G161.
800-4-VV.
OH $49,000 6t4-388-ll824.
Nice coHage In Pt. PJeaunt,
Kenmore
0\ny Washer
3 bedroom, all IMactrk: home, 614-992-58511.
$a5; Whirl
w
..har $95;
Spring
Avonuo,Pomoroy,
K.,mora
"
$75;
G.E. 36
$30,000, 614-992-21113 or 814- 42 Mobile Homes
Inch Etact
Rango $7!1:
992·7304.
Frldgldolro 30 lncfi Whho
for Rent
Rongo" $125; G.E. Rolrlgorator
3 Bod100mo, 2 Botha, Hoot
Pump, Gn Furtwco 1 Aero, 141152 2br., $260/mo, $150 Frool ,.,. $125; Upright FrallAJr
Garage. Will Conoidor Slnglo -wtly dopoolt, truh paid. Like No• $t7~i. Up~ght FrollAlr
Wide On Down Payment, Act. 14170 3br., $360/_mo., $200 Frool F!!!J. 10 Cu. Fl $1110;
dlson Aru, $62,000, 814-367II 000 "' u Air Conditioner
- l d y " - " · trail paid. .,• . lldoly- Ha..- Q;;id
7267.
304~ 111~ .. 1711- ~or IN; Skagga Ap3br., t 112 both, torgo toe, lllnon 8277 ofter 8pm.
pllancoo, lli VIne Strool, Go~
Rd, camp Conley, vory rtlco. 141l10 2 Bod_,, $250/llo. 1110111 114-4411-73118 Or 1-«JJ..
3br. b~ck, 2 112 bot'!, 2148 Da_. $380, You Poy Etoctrlc. 41111-3489.
Meadowbrook Dr. 304-87..183&amp;. Big Y1rd, 814 411 8318 cai
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
4 Year Old Home, 3 Bldroom1, 2 Anytlmo.
Comploto . _ , luml~l~.
Baths, Large Kitchen, Full 2 Bodroom llobllo Homo, Hou,.: lion-Sat, t-5. 8
Basement, large O.Ck, t5r30 $250/llo. Pluo DapooH, 814-36"1- 0322, 3 mil• o .. Butavllto Rd.
Abo\le Ground "Pool, Approx. 1 7802.
FrMDollv.ry.

0138.
aero, low utMin gao hoot,
G01l0f111 llalntonanco, Polnl!ng 1 polio, otoraga building, utllhy
Y•rd Work Window. Wasnea room, near WMPO radki 111tlori,
Guftora Qoonod Light Houllng, $23,800, 614-Ha-6553 oftor 5pm.
Commorlcal, Rooldontlol, Slovo:
Goorgoo Portobto S.wmlll don'

41

0

15 Exhausting
17 Classify

•Q 9 5

"Ii30.

mistakes

51 Portico

subjecls

• K .J 0 9 6 5 2
• 8 1 J

1V82 Chovy C-10 lhortbod
82,000 actuol mlloo, PS, PB, AC;
AIM'II .. _,,, $2100. 30W7!1-

1VII4 Chovy 70 8orloe 2 Ton
Dump Truck, 10 Fl. Dump, Elcotlont Condition, 614--.s.

without lnuc:tk:ldle, 1nd It's

Entctoncy
Khchon,
FLaundry, 814-3811-117211.
Slooptng ,_,. wHh cooking.

Ownod By Vlllogo Of Syracuoo
At Munlclpol Park Property.
$300/Mo. Plus Utllttl.. 6 $300

Mile From Rio Grande, 6't4.2450601 Evenlngs.

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DISCOUNTS
LIFE &amp; HEALTH
304-1588-4257

18

AJ real estate adVel"ttlilg

',OM€

6t4-e49-30tt.

Roome for rent - week or month.
couple looking for S~:~~~ II $120/mo. Gallla Hotel.
proper1)' In Middleport arN to 6
9580.
purchurl on land contract,
Slooplng
Roonio $15 Por Doy.
l'lfwencea IYalllble, 614-WZ·
Conatruc::tlon Wortlen Wek;orTMI,
2753.

Ac&lt;:optod Until Oct- 7, t89•.
Applfcon1o Should Have E.J.
perienee In Operating PDWIIr
Tools, A Ganonl Knowledge Ot

It• Clfltrtl otilce In Chaehlre.
Thte poelllon requlrw an I~

Real Estate

Furnished
Rooms

Young

The Gellis ..UIIg. Communhy
Action Agency tl Currtntty
Soeki!'Q An lndhtldual To Fill
The Po.hlon Of Wut.,tzaUon
l.llbo,.... Appllcatlona Will So

tlon Coli 614-367-7341 Dr 614992-8629. Tho Gallla -Malgo
CAA 18 An Equal OpporlunRy
Employor.
Tho Gaiii•Molga CommunHy
Action Aganc_y·a Homo Enorgy
Aaalltance Program hu an
lmmadl1te opanlng for
a
ROCO&lt;da CtortVIntakO WOfbr ot

45

Wanted

45631.

Chall'llre. For Further Inform•

Upotalra, Wator Paid, No Poto.
111 Coctor 1114 388 8000.

II

f ti'J'&gt; .

Compound bow, slghts and
qulvor, $110; 122 Cub Codot,
$1150; 8hp Cub Codot, $750: 614892·2063.

Unturnlohocl 3 Boctroom Aport·

Unturnllhld 3 Room• l Bath,

&gt;-'"~

8711-1883.

2 o.-.1 blower, brick llnod,
used one winter, 814..W2-5251.

87!1-44118.

~ y./11&gt; ~t AI.-·~

~ &lt;:-""fft.C,tl f*'D

Chlld'e car watarbed, $100. 304-

Englander wood and co.l etove,

Ov• Holzer Clinic, Jacbon
Avenue, Point PlNHnt, 304-

I·~ ~ "'~"F:"­
"~.-1"'"~.-L--'1 SEEN ONE I
~v1" I"{ ~~EM&gt; lo Me IF

Soaoonod Flrawood Nowl 614367-7088.
Collor 10 bo1, 14 momory, brand
MW, $43.05, 114-m-6164.

&amp;

=~··
d•pod
2..:2566.

rnent, Located On Second Floor,

"" The megabu cks and s tock opll on s are nt c e . but
Ch1s tS whal ltna ll y conv1nc ed me 10 work here ··

Buy Your Winter Supply Of

NOf1h 4th Avo., llkklloport, Oh,

2br.
fum~,
NtllllnCM.

loton St, P.O. Bo1 307, Syncuoo,
Ohio 45178 EOE.

72 Trucks for Sale

Concrato &amp; Pilotte Septic
Tonlto 300 Thru 2,000 Gallono
Ron Evans Ent•rnrl••. Jack.
oon, OH t-i00-837-9528.

Pota. Call Botore 7 P.M. 114'44&amp;-

wtvalldatlon In Adaptive PE.
Send ... umo by S.pl. 26, t9e4
to C.rt.ton Sc~ 1310 Car·

-Molgo CAA Contnol Office In

Houoo,

11338.

Dopanmonl of Education Ph)'OI·
cal
Education
Cortlllcato

dabll Tnmsportatlon, And A
Valid Drlvtr"l L.JconM. Solary Ia
Booed 0.. The Curt'11nl Solary
Schodulo. Apply AI The Gallla

Small

$275/mo. + UtiiHioo, Porklng. No

Part Um• opening tor an Adapllve
Physical
Educallon
Speclalllt at Carleton School.
M"uet hne or be willing &amp;
eligible to obl:aln valld Ohio

Antaurant Seeking PtMHnf
Work.•,. Day Or E\lanlng Shifts
Available Write To: CLA 330, clo
GaiiiP.9III O.lly Tribune, 825
Thlrtr Ann~, Galllpolla, OH

Pleasant, WV, Aatarenee

9·23·9-4

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Answer to Previous Puzzle

41 Uncanny
43 Cleaning cloth
44 Performing area
46 Actor Silver

/

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Soctal CANCER (June 21 ·Juty 22) Today you
evenls may hold a strong appeal tor YO\.. might be inclined to champion unpopular
today, yet large groups of people could • causes. Others won"t object to the post·
unnerve you . Share your time with inti· lion you take, provided you don't anempl

Saturday, Sept. 24. 1994
Some condilrons that have impeded your
progress over the past year will be diminished in the year ahead . This could open
new vistas tor you where success beck·

mate friends .

ons.

I LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today . don 't
put yourself in a position where you might
be held responsible tor a friend's obliga·
lion. This could happen rather easily it
you' re oblivious to whal"s going on
around you . Know where to look tor
romance and you'll lind 11. The Astro-

1

1

to 1mpose It on them .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 1 9) II you I LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might set
wanlto do something constructive today, rather lolly objeclives lor yourself today.
that's great. However, don't get down on 1 and this is a~mirable . However, yo~ may
your family just because the project . la'l!&lt; the lorl1tude necessary to gralily .
doesn"l arouse lheir enthusiasm .
them. Oon't toss in the towel prematurely.
PISCES (Feb. 20.11ercfl 20) Someone VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In mailers
might have some informatiOn tor .you that pertain lo your work or career, il's ·
today that could serve your besl inter- besl not lo express your intentions pre- ·
esls. Don't reject it just because of lhe maturely. A cunning co-worl&lt;er mighltake
source.
your good 1deas and run wrth them.

\
/

..

�Page-10 The Dally Sentinel

Friday, September 23, 1994

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Britons show sense of hunl.or when naming children
Ann
Landers
994 Los Angeles
l 1mft~ Syndrcate and
C reA tors Synarcate'

Dear Ann Landers: I have
business in London and travel there
frequently. One of my greatest
pleasures is reading the London
Times.
Last weelc, I clipped an item to
share with my wife because I thought
it was pretty funny. She roored when
she read it and said, "Why don't you
send this to Ann Landers? 111 bel
she prints tL"

So, Ann, hece it is. I say, "11uee
cheers for the Brits." -- LONGTIME
LONG ISLAND NEWSDA Y
READER
DEAR L.T L.l. READER: I loved
iL Thanks so much for sending it
on. You bet 111 print iL Here it is:
"Britain has become a nation of
jokers when it comes to naming
children. One of the country's
busiest registrars has witnessed such
unforgeuable moments as a Mr. and
Mrs. Jordan calling their son River
and the child of a family named Beer
being registered with the name
Bottled.
"Maureen Price, superintendent
registrar of Stafford, has collected a
long list of strange names over 14

· · ~u~ri}iJ.t.ed ~~~Rl~.\;9Y ·,

- Meig~ C9unty \ij'iliji~ter~;

Br Pi\SOTR PETFil TREMBlAY
Someone 11:" desc ribed the cr:1
WL' li\' L: tn ~tnd an.:: moving dc q1cr

tn\(1 "'"lite lnfonnation Age".
:-Jcvcr before has so much inform;~tion been availnhle . A problem
\\·tth thi s age is tltc danger of
" information overl nad: ". So man y
heeds arc placed before us fr om
around the world. so many gadgeiS
arc being marketed lO us. and so
many ideas arc b~ ing prescntc·d lo
us. it' s easy to sh ut-down just l'rum
the shear volume of inform &lt;t tton
ancl become apathetic. It's c:1sy for
us to get an "I don't care" J!tiLudc,
because we canno t pr nrt's s Sll
much inform:Hion.
When it comes to the clam1s of
Jesus Chnst, I believe man y penpl~
arc n ' t Iistcni ng bccau s,· , 'f m·,- rload. But when it com e·, 1u the
question of eternity, we dare nn1 he
apathetic. Almost everytl:l y I ttJar·
vel at how quickly my c hildr en
have grown. I remember hold ing
them in the hospital room as if il
were yesterday. Now my so n is
thirteen and my dau ghter is ten.
Ltfc is just a moment in tim e and
then it is over. The question of life
after death and it's nature is a pri ority we ignore at our peril. The
Word of God makes tillS promise to
us.
Jere. 2:13 And ye shall seck me.
and find me, when yc shall search
for me wit h all your hcan. (KJV)
God promises you will lind Him
when you search for Him wtth
"ALL YOUR HEART". Fir st we
under stand that it 's primarily a
search conducted by the heart. No,
God doesn't want us to be mindless. Often the Bible tells us to usc
reason. to think things through . All
it takes to avoid the
irrational cult qroups around us is a
little reason. But faith requires that
we engage the heart as well as the
mind.
The claims of Jesus Christ. His
earthly life, His Words, His character. 1 guarantee you, will engage
your heart as no other. If you will
only take the time to search it out.
If you will only take the ~me to put
your whole heart into it. I quaran-

iee you. if you will search for God,
with all your heart in the person of
Jesus , you will find the God that
exceeds all your expec tations.
Many culture s worship sta tues
that represe nt their idea of god. The
problem wil11 an id ol is this, an idol
is mad e in the image of man. It's
cha ra ct er can he no greater. In
Roma n mylholoqy, the gods were
no bigger than the humans that
wo rs h1petl them. Ze us often
deceived. co mmitted adultery, murderee!, and ac ted in the heat of pas·
sion . The Roman gods were no big·
ger than those who invented them .
They displayed nothing to engage
the heart of the seeker. But in Jesus
we find something greater than any
man cou ld destgn. We find mercy
and love that forgi vcs a prostitute,
heal s th e sick. tak es ch ildren on
Hi s lap . In Jc.,us we find a justice
1h;1t knuw s no re gard for rank or
po st li o n. Wh il e forgiv in g and
rC':Kh ing oul 10 l11c poor and helplc&gt;S , He holds the religiou s rulers
accountable for their hypocri sy.
In Jesus we fi nd a God that so
love s Hi s err ing chtlclren Hers
wil lin g to pay the ir penalty on a
crue l Roman cross of tortu~c. He
speaks from that cross concerning
those that kill His body. "Father,
forgive them they know not what
they do".
In Je sus we find a call to selfsac rifice . mercy, forgiveness. and
love. He calls us higher. He reveals
somet hin g greater th an the frai lties
of mortal men. He enga ges the
heart. When we seck for God with
all our heart we wiII find Hts glory
and love in Je sus clearly displayed.
Do you know that mercy and
love? Do you have faith in Jesus
today Won't you give your life to
Jesus? Won't you pray? "Father
forgive me because of Jesus. Make
me your child. I give my life to
you. I trust you are the only way to
Heaven. Change me and give me
eternal life. I believe Jesus died for
me and rose from the dead. Amen".
I hope you prayed that prayer
and placed Jesus on the throne of
your life where He belongs. If you
dtd . write to us at Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church, Laurel Cliff Rd.
Pnmeroy. Ohio 45769.

y~. She is sympalhetic to the odd
choices. 'We are dealing with people
who are oflen very emotional and
happy with a newborn child, so it is
important we understand their needs
and help them as moch as we can,'
she said.
"'There's nothing to say people
cannot call children whatever they
like. Only if names -are really
objectionable would we need to get
special clearance or warn the
parents that the name could be
embarrassing in later life. Evro thro,
we can nO! stop them.'
"Her list of the weirdest names
includes Mr. and Mrs. Wall, who
named their boy Stone; Mr. and Mrs.
Waters, whose daughter was called

include them when we have family
get-togethers. The boy's table
manners are atrocious. His head is
in the plate, and he eats everything
with his hand~. The girl's constant
chattering disruptS the entire meal

Mineral; and Mr. and Mrs. Castle,
who named their son Windsa.
"There was also a Mr. and Mrs. ·
Belcher. who called their son Prince
Charles, a Mr. and Mrs. Pitt, who
called their son Frankenstein, a girl
registered as Rheumatism, another
called Daft and one child known
officially as Fatso."
Dear Ann Landers: My
daughter has two children, a boy,
age 6, and a girl, 2. The girl totally
dominates the household, and she
always has. Their family activities
are often restricted because of this
child's obnoxious behavior. There
are many places they dare not Ullce
her.
I no longer have any desire to

and makes conversation impossible.
I am aware that this behavioc is not
the children's fault but the parents'.
Please leU me, how does one !:roach
this sensitive subject? · -CONCERNED GRANDMOtHER
'
CHARLESTON, S.C.
DEAR CONCERNED GRANDMOTHER: If you admonish the
parents, you will surely end up in a
four-door family fight and
accomplish nothing. Go to work 011
the children.
Be patient with the little girl. She's

Community
calendar

in the middle of the "terrible twos"
and will eventually outgrow them.
You could perfonn a truly valuable
service by correcting your
grandchildren in a loving way and
teaching them some manners. To cut
them out c.f your life at this early
age would be a big mistake. You
would sureI y regret it.
Do you have questW/lS abo111 sa.
bill no one to tallc to? AM l..andus'
l&gt;ookltt, "Sa aM tM Tttm-Agu,"
is frank IJIId to the poillt. Send a
self-addressed, long, busi~ttss-siu
envelope IJIId a check or money order for $3.65 (this includes postage
and handling) to: Ttti!S, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 606/J -0562. (In CIJflllda, send
$4.45.)

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, Golf
scramble, Saturday, 9 am. at the
Me1gs Cou nty Golf Course.

VICe.

MIDDLEPORT - Herb Fest,
Dave Diles Park, Middleport, 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
CHESTER - National Hunting
and Fishtng Day observation at
Izaak Walton Farm on Boy Scout
Cam p Road from 9-3 p.m. for
youths ages 8 to 18. Parents welcome. Lunch provided free.
SUNDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Presbyterian Church will
hold I OOth anniversary service at
II a.m. Sunday at the church, basket dinner at noon , program of
singing and speaking at I: 15 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 will host an all-youcan-eat chicken barbecue at the
grange hall on county Road I,
north of Salem Center, II a.m. to 2
p.m. Sunday. Local clogging group
to entertain.

··~

~,..,.

11

'1;

'

HERB FEST SATURDAY - Sharon Tuttle,
Karen Showalter, Karen Werry, Denise Arnold
and Connie Hill of the River Valley Herbalists,
from the left around the table, discuss plans for
the Fifth Annual Herb FeStto be stagrd at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Culinary and decorative herbs will be
featured at the fest. At 11 a.m. Connie Hill will
give a demonstration on making \Heaths, at
11 :30 Hal Knccn will talk on "Herbs Found in

the Park Gardens." There will be entertainment
by Sharon Yench on the dulcimer at noon and at
2 p.m . Middlebranch will perform. Other
demonstrations will feature Jan Gerhold with
pressed nower art and Sheila Curtis with dried
arrangements. Herbal food samples will be
available along with potpourris and everlastings
in a variety of arrangemerlls. Refreshments will
be served by the Middleport Arts Council.
(Photo by Charlene Hoenich)

____,-----In the service-----Timothy P. Blankenship
Navy Airman Apprentice Timothy P. Blankenship, a 1993 River
Valley High School graduate,
recently graduated from basic
avionics technician course in
Millington, Tenn.
Blankenship joined the Navy in

September 1993.
Daniel R. Midkiff
Marine Master Sgt. Daniel R.
Midkiff, a 1972 Meigs High School
graduate, ha s earned th e Nary
Commendation Medal.
Midkiff was cited for meritori ous service as administrative chief

with the training and ed ucation
divisiOn of the Marine Corps Combat Development Comma nd in
Quantico, Va.
He is assigned with the head quarters and s upport battalion
based in Camp Lejeune, N.C. He
joined tJre Marines in 1973.

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Edward and Anna Dill reunion
Sunday at Star Mill Park. Potluck
at I p.m. Bring covered dish and
table service.

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CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Baptist Church revival, located off
State Route 143 hear Carpenter,
Rev . Jesse Tipton, speaker; special
sineine.

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Regents want $500 million more for higher ed
By JOHN CHALFANT
1l1e regents proposed a $1.7 billion budge\ for fiscal
Associated Press Writer
year 1996, whichslarts July I. That would amount loa 9.R
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Stale spending for hi gher percent increase over cu rrent spending.
educati on would increase almost I0 percent in each of the
A budget of$1.8 billion was recommended in FY 1997 .
It also would repre se nt a I).S
nexttwobudgctyearsiftheLegislature goes alongwilh an Ohto
percent boost from I he previ Board of Regents recommendaIIA resolution the board adopted Friday pro- ous year.
lion .
posed $3.5 billion In state aid during the next State aid now is dJslrtbutetl
Andforthcfirstlime,colleges two-yeargovemmentbudgetcycle. That com- almost solely on enrollment.
and universities would receive pares with Just over $3 bllllon In the current The re gents proposed a sys tem
some of the money - although two-year budget.
I hal would conunuc to renee\
notmuch comparedwiththe$3.5
numbers of st udents but also
billion total - based on their
reward colleges for working
performance in working toward state and local goals .
toward goals and demonstrating qua lity and innovation.
A resolution the board adopted Friday proposed $3.5
Amounts of money proposed for performance stan billion in stale aid during the next two-year government dards and innovation were compara tively sma ll :
budget cycle. Thai compares with just over $3 bi ll ion tn
• For FY 1996, the regents want $1.3 billion for subsithe current two-year budget.
dies based on enrollment; $3 mi llion for performance

POMEROY - Meigs Cou nty
Retired Teachers Association, Trintty Church, noon luncheon Saturday, J unc Newberry, district director, speaker.

POMEROY - Revival serv ices
Believers Fellowship Ministry,
Thursday through Sunday, Rev.
Doug Willis, speaker, 7:30 p.m.
each night, 2:30 p.m. on Sunday.
The Oatley Family Saturday ser-

·Featured on page B-1

Hi: 70s
Low: 60s

Some college aid would be based on performance

SATURDAY
ANTIQUITY - Faith Fellowship Crusade for Chri st Church,
songfcst, Saturday, 7:30p.m. Endtime Singers and others to attend.
Public invited.

DEXTER - The Old Dexter
Church Homecoming, Saturday
noon. Take covered dish. Afternoon sing.

On the
right track

White House staff reshuffling - Page A7

funding ; and $27 mtl lt on fur quality
and innovation .
• For FY 141!7. I he panel proposed
$1.4 billion for cnrullmcm subst dies ;
$:16 mi llion for pcrfurmancc; and $43
mtlltun for qualtly and on novation .
Matthew Filiptc.' a regents vice chanccl lnr, said lhe hulk of stale aid probahly always will be hased on enroll ·
ment.
··Eve n '"""" 1ry Ill focus on pcrfur·
mancl' and n u h.:o m ~.:s, it will remain
the case thai whal will Jrive campus
budgets murc than anyth tn g el se is I he
number of s\ udcnb \he y have lo teach
and lhc pwgrams I hal lh ey offer and
the lcve lsof lhose program s." Ft lt prcsaid in an interview.
" That' s I he log tc of I he inst ructtonal subsidy. It will

Contract Engineer reports to county commission
talks at Meigs highway department
impasse closes Bashan Rd. bridge
Union representatives
'optimistic' accord will
be reached with district
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- The two unions
representing Gallia County Local
Schools employees are presently at
impasse in negotiations with the
board of education for new contracts, but spokespersons for both
organizations are optimisttc that accord will be reached soon.
Di{ferences with the board center
on economic and job security issues,
Gary Phillips of the Gallia Local
Education Association and Carol
Smith of the Gallia Local Support
Staff Association said. Phillips and
Smith are chief negotiators for the

unions .
The unions have been at impasse
with the board since mid-summer,
they said. The support staff's threeyear contract expired in June and the
teachers· association's two-year pact
ended on Aug. 31.
In each of the old contracts, the
teachers and staff had worked without pay raises and reductions in insurance. The duration of the new
contracts is also one of the items
under negotiation, Ph ill ips and Smith
said.
Smith, president of the support
staff group, confirmed that insurance is one of the points under negotiation. The board is presently considering a proposal from Blue Cross/
Blue Shield of Ohio through Toler &amp;
Toler lnsura·nce Services of
Continued on page A2

POMEROY- Motorists using Bashan Road in eastern Meigs County may soon have to find another route.
The Meigs County Highway Department closed the
Keno Bridge over Shade River to all traffic effective
Friday afternoon. Last week, the bridge was closed to
truck and bus traffic after inspectors discovered a broken
crossmember underneath the bridge deck.
Meanwhile , Engineer Robert Eason is attempting to
find emergency funding to replace the aging, one-lane
bridge with a new, two· lane structure. If successful in
Columbus Monday, Eason said the bridge may be replaced this fall.
Gravel will be dumped at both ends of the hridge and
barricades set up to keep vehicles off the bridge, said
highway department office manager Dave Spencer.
One 'rGason for the closing: attempts to keep trucks alii\
other large vehicles off the bridge have been largely
unsuccess ful.
Bashan Road serves as a connector between Ohio
Route 7 and U.S. 33 carries a lot of traffic, said Spencer.
In addition, the road connects Racine and surrounding
areas to Belpre, Marienaand Parkersburg, W.Va.
Spencer said the speed with which the bridge is replaced may depend on what the state considers an
emergency.
"We absolutely consider it an emergency," said Spencer, adding that the highway department has received
letters from Eastern Local Schools, Carleton School and
the Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Service concern·
ing the bridge closing.
Spencer recommended motorists use state Route 248,
state Route 7 and Eagle Ridge Road as a detour.
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners met with
Eason Friday afternoon to discuss the at-that-time proposed bridge closing, agreeing I hat it may be better to be
safe than sorry.
In other highway department developments, Spencer
said paving should begin on Yost Road in Sutton Township on Monday and may begin on Hiland Road Tuesday.
In other business, commissioners:
•Met with representatives of the Ohio Department of
Industrial Relations concerning new prevailing wage

Some Haitians hope, some
plot; Marines in the middle
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)- At the end of an extraordinary week,
millions in this oppressed, desperately poor land now dare to hope for peaceful
change, others scheme to hang on to old ways, and U.S. troops are right in the
middle.
Eleven thousand American soldiers occupied Haiti this week to pave the
way for the restoration of the elected president ousted three years ago. They
quickly settled in Haiti's two main cities, dismantled the army's heavy
weapons and curtailed police violence.
Grateful citizens who have lived under a reign of military terror for the past
three years have welcomed the Americans
as heroes in the streets
they patrol.
Troops were scheduled to enter the cities
ofGonaivesandJacmel
today, while the chairman of the U.S. joint
chiefs of staff, Gen.
John Shalikashvili, is
to arrive in Port-auPrince, the capital, to
review the mission.
The top three army
commanders who run
the count:y are to yield
power by Oct. 15 and
military rule is to come
FOOT PATROLS· A U.S. MariDe Corps pa· to an end. Some in
trot lrles to make Its way through a aowd of Haiti's armed forces
HalllanswbllewalkiDgbrdowotowoCap-Haltlen. chafe at their sudden
U.S. troops began tllelr llrst foot patrols through loss of privilege. Civilians love it.
Haiti's second lai'pst city Friday.
After night fell Friday, thousands in the capital slowly walked streets near t.b~ U.S ..troops at the
airpQn and dock, waving tree branches in the air in a traditional stgn of. peace.
- Until very rec:cntly, most Haitiana were home by dark, fearful of pohce and
paramilitary attacks that often broke up such gatherings.
.
In Cap-Haitien on the north coast, Haiti's second-largestcrty, spontaneous
Continued on Jilt• A2

Jlwa y.., be th l.' case

,_

Tim••-S•ntln•l photo by Georgt Abate

KENO CLOSED- The 80-year-old Keno bridge
was closed Friday because the noor support bar that
attaches totbe truss has failed, Meigs County Engineer
Bob Eason said. Here, Randy Pyles points to the
weakened structural support. The bridge had to be
closed to all vehicles because the larger trucks that
initially were ordered to slay off the bridge would not,
Eason said,
guidelines for state projects.
•Paid weekly bills of $146,623.75 consisting of 95
entries.
•Granted an easement on county property between
Hiland Road and Union Terrace in Pomeroy to the village
of Pomeroy for construction of a public roadway and for
Continued on page A2

I hat Ohto
lh&lt;~n

Co lumbu s

Sl&lt;lh.: hccausc it has

mnrc ~tudents and
1ha1 \hey are en rolled in more advanced level s.' ' he
said .
At the same time,

" What we are engaged tn
poten ti al 10 expand,·' he said

tS

Filipic """ lhe
money reque sted
forpcfformancc anJ
qualit y tS enough lo
encourage ca m·
puses to parli cipalc
and foster change.
a process \hal has 1he

OAPSE director urges
members to •turn back'
effort to privatize schools
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Voters must work to~t;,p the nch from turning public
schools into private industry, the executive .lor of I he Ohio Association of
Public School Employees said Sat urday.
"'Thai 's the door our present govern ment is try ing to ope n - one which will
allow the private indu stry to step in and
take over," said Joe Rugola at the 55th
District OAPSE mccling at Washington
Elementary. He urged union members to
"turn back the tide that is trying to take
back what working men and women
have worked hard to gain in this coun·
try. "
Rugola said some government officials are purposely trying 10 make the
current educalional system fail so 1ha1 it
could be replaced with one which will
benefit only 10 percent of the state 's
populalion.
The wealthy would receive subsrdies
to send their children lo private schools whi le the children of working class
parents would attend sub -standard public schools, he satd.
Ohio ranks first in the nation in the diScrepancy between rich and poorschool
districts, Rugola said. Poor districts average $3,000 per pupil in state funds
while rich districts receive $15,000 to $17,000.
"No other state even comes close," he said. The discrepancy is one of the
reasons OAPSE is cooperating with the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy
in its suit against the educational funding system in Ohio.
In June, a Perry County judge ruled the state's system was uncon stilutiona l.
Gov. George Voinovich is appealing the dec is ron.
"We knew we had to make this fight or we were never going to see an end
to the problems you are all too aware of in this part of the state, " Rugola said.
Another battle the union is helping lo fight is the priva tizal ion of public
schools
There have been three dozen attempts to privatize and sub -co ntract services
such as bus, custodial and maintenance services, Rugola said . In some cases,
private companies are out to buy the entire schools system, he added.
OAPSE is assisting with a lawsuit in S~ringfield, where the school .&gt; ystcm
contracted out transporJation services to a private company. All of the district's
bus drivers were let go and replaced with the contractor's personnel. Rugola
said.
The union is helping prepare an argument for the Supreme Court, asking 10
Continued on page A2

News capsules
IRS developing new,
simplified tax form

Stale wi ll

need mnn: mone y

GOOD MORNING
NLRB orders union election at SEOEMS
GALLIPOLIS • The National Labor Relations
Board haa ruled that employeea of the Southeastern Ohio Emergency Medical Services have
the right to vote tor union repreaentallon, ac·
cording to a statement relueed Friday by the
UnHed Mine Workers of America.
SEOEMS argued against employee rights to
unionization at a- Aug. 25 helrlng In Jackson.
The NLRB also ruled that dlapatchars will vote
with all full•tlma and regular part•tlme (working
at least 9 hours per month) EMTa and paramedlca.
The parties ars nnallzlng tha details ot tha
alecUon, which the NLRB will conduct the week
of Oct. 17.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The IRS is developing a new, easier-to-fill-out tax form that residents
of four states will see in 1996 and the rest of the
country in 1997.
Right now it's called 104(Tf, for test. It features
bigger type, more space between the lines and a
box for every numeral.
It will replace the !040A form, for individual
taxpayers who don't itemize deductions. But many
taxpayers who now use the long form, I 040, will
be able to use the 10401', the Internal Revenue
Service said Friday.
The four-page form has space for the most
popular itemized deductions, including state taxes,
mortgage interest, charitable donations and medical expenses.
It also has space for three other functions that 'ii'ow require a separate
attachment: claiming the credit for child and dependent care, filing for the
earned income credit for low-income people and listing dividend and
interest income.
"We believe the form is a much-improved design over the current I 040
and it will enhance the ability of taxpayers to comfllete the form correctly,''
said Sheldon D. Schwanz, IRS director of tax forms and publications.
The new form also should cut down on IRS errors. It will be readable by
machines, eliminating the need to keypunch the information into the IRS
computers.
"To the extent that we can process the form more accurately and more
efficiently we expect it to liave an impact on the timeliness of refunds,''
Schwanz said.
..
The 10401' will be tested in 1996 in Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and
Texas. And then, if all goes well, it will be used nationwide in 1997.
Last year, the IRS received 60 minion 1040 forms on paper and 19 million
1040As. After the switch, the IRS anticipates 45 percent of taxpayers will
use the 10401'.
The simplest tax form of all, the 1040EZ, already is machine scannable
and is not involved in the redesign.

Poll: Voinovich leads
Burch, Inmon in race

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections- 158 Pages

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

Dl
B2&amp;5
D3-7
Insert
A4

A3
A6
Cl-8
Bl
A2

Columns
Fred Crow
Jjm Sapds
Chuck Stope
EdYollbom

CINCINNATI (AP)- Sixty-four
percent of the respondents in a state·
wide poll said they would re-el~t.:
Gov. George Voinovich.
·
His Democratic challenger, state
Sen. Rob Burch of Dover, was favored by 22 perce~t of the respondents t? the Ohio Poll released Friday.
Three percent sa1d they would vote for mdependent candidate Billy Inmon
of Willard.
The University of Cincinnati's Institute for Public Policy Research conducted the poll, which the university and The Cincinnati Post sponsored.
From Sept. 12 through Tuesda~, the institute interviewed by telephone a
random statew1de sample of 767 hkely voters. The margin of error was plus
or minus 3.5 percentage points.
"We think this is a renection of George Voinovoich's hardball fund
raising,'' Burch spokesman lim Bleilcamp said Friday. "It's also a function
of Voinovich's name recognition after four years as governor."

L------------1

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