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                  <text>Friday

Page 12. The Dally Sentinel

.....,_

Thursday, September 24, 1988

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather
Today: Cloudy

A lollll of $10,(XIl wa&lt; ccmmilkd
conlinue the ~ Ohio project
when the Boanl of Tru--. of the
Ohio Valley Ami Ubraries held il.~
rqular meeting r=ndy in Wellsloo.
The board appRMd a m;olution
liom the Ubr.lrians' AIMoy Commiaee regarding lhal proja:t. !:lim:tor
Eric S. Anderson reviewed the
propess of the oommillce ~ng lhal
the group has made considerable
J!IO&amp;it&lt;S on the Boob By Mail and
10

Conliooing fdncalion services.
Kay Whir. who .avcd a.&lt; the flllil
rqwesetllalive of the Oak Hill Public
Ubrnry on the OVAL Board. was recognized.. along wilh ronner employees. Kalltken Chaffin and Raman
Davis.
On JIIOiion of Roxie Underwood
represating the Jrto;on City Lilnry.
the Boanl approved an alliliale member.ihip conlr.ll:l wilh the l'orumoulh
City Schools. This increa&lt;es the number of affiliare memb:IS to 12. it was

lleudldl-.1
'ill
The anooalllltdi"l! of the Sheller:
ing Anns lbpital ~ Inc.
will be held Tue&lt;lay. at 1 p.m. The
foundalion is the corpcralion lhat operates O' Bienes.• Mea-ial Hospital.
The meeting will be held in lhe mnfer,
ence room atlhe hospital.
The tenn of John W. Knable. D.O.•
expires atlhe meeting bul he is eligible
ftr re..:leaion to a second flU-year
tenn as aiiUSicc and has belen pblccd in
nomination by lhe nornina&amp;ing com-

rqutcd.
Founded in 1973. OVAL is Ohio's
oldesl chan=d regional librnry syslem. In cooper.llion wilh noembea pub-

lic lihrarie&lt;. OVAL provides~
sharing. libr.uy development and
boob by mail servas lo more lhan
260.1XXJ residenl• in Athens. Jack.'iOO.
Ulwreoce. Meigs. Pike. Ross. Sciolo
and Vinton counties.

Wanda Eblin sertc~ on lhe OVAL
Boanl and is a ~vc of Meig.•
County Dislrict Pllblic Ubrar

miocc,of lhe bowtl of bU.'illle.&lt;. He is a
n::li~ u~embti of the o· B~enos.• Hospital medical slalf and is Profcs.-.or
~ of internal medicine and
chainri:!n of lhe [)q&gt;arlmenl of Specialty Medicine atlhe Ohio Univmity
College of Osleopalhic Medicine.
-n..lllltding is open 10 lhe public as
well as the voling members of lhe
foundation.

. . . . . ¥•

u ... rum. . . . . .

The Episcopal · Church Women

Hlgh:80s; Low: 50s

Guild have finalized plans for its fall
rummage sale.
The sale will be !leld in lhe Parish
Hall behind lhe GrJCe Episcopal
Chun:h in Pomeroy. Oct. 2 and 3., 9

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s

Why Clinton ought be impeached, Page 2
Yankees notch 111 th victory, Page 4
Simple faith of children, Page 6

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Doing better?

New smog
rules rattle
regional
industry
£1St 1111 n.
, . . . . .4

POIDOY
·837·1014
l.. ..

earane

Year·I

1998 Bukk Regal LS

'·.,

1998 Pontiac Sunfire GT

3800 V6, all power, auto.. air. Santa Fe

1998 Chevy S·l 0 Pickup

2 Dr. auto .. air, tilt. cruise. black.
MSRP

red.
IISRP

V6, auto., air, cruise,
PW, PL, cassette.
MSRP $\~.&amp;95 .

LS, air, 5 speed,
cassette.
MSRP $14,081

$17,570

llw

New Only S11

79

1997 Chevy 5·1 0 Pickup
1999 hick LeSabre lilitetl

Brand New! 5 speed,
apple red.
MSRP $11,682

1997 GMC Sonoma 414

V6, auto .. air. plalinum beige.

V6, SLS. 5 speed, air. BRAND NEW!

llw O•lr

$2o,3CMI

•••

4X4, auto., air, tilt,
cruise,
MSRP $24,011

5 speed, air. aluminum wheels, black.

V6, auto., air, Emerald green.

v,a.

IISRP
$15,070

NewOnly

1998 GMC Sierra 414
Loaded, platinum beige, lealher.

VB. auto .. air, locking diff., white.
IISRP

2] 950

llew O•lf 5

1999 Buick Century Custom

1999 GMC Sierra 414 Ext. Cab

VS. auto., air, platinum gray.

NewO•Ir

VS, auto .. all power, pewter metallic.
MSRP
$29,857

SJ8,940

1998 Buick

New Only

1997 GMC Safari AWD Van

V6, auto .. air, Bordeaux red.

V-6. loaded, cherry ice.

S2J,300

1998 Chevy KISOO Ext. Cab

00

$27,271

s25, 990

1998 Chevy Tracker

S

S

V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, PW ...........

Auto., air, stereo, white ....................

stereo .......

auto,

PB ..................

$

Auto., air, PS, PB, stereo .................

$

6500 or 148 Per Mo.

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo LS

Now Only 517,950

llew Only 518,875

......

Auto., air, stereo . .............................

1994 Pontiac Sunbird

375

New Only

~~~:s=~~e!.~~. ~i~~~ise 9500 or S197Per Mo.
!~~~ !~~!. ~i:~~.~!. . . . . ,. . . . .59200 or 5189 PerMo:''
~~~a~hs~!!o~~~~~~~...................56SOO or s135 PerMo:·
0
!~!~ !~=::~. . . . . . . . . . .58500., 5175 Per._
V6, auto., air, tilt, cruise, PW ...........

Auto., air, spoiler, white . ..................

3.8 V6, auto., air, leather, Torch red
MSRP $22,933

V6, auto. ,air, TorCh red,
keyless entrY.
MSRP $20,155

Auto .• air, tilt, cruise,

White,

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo
Z-34

5

799 Sor 16SPer Mo.
1994 Buick Century
S
S
6800 or 155 Per Mo.
1997 Olcls Achieva
s
s
9800 or 187 Per Mo.
1997 Bukk Skylark
s
s
cass ................ 9800 or 187Per Mo.
1994 Pontiac Grand Prix
1997 Chevy Cavalier
s
s
9900 or 189 Per Mo. 9
~!. a!~-~:~u~-~r~ise,
1997 Pontiac Grand Am
s · s
cass. ,
AJC .................... J0,500 or J99 Per Mo.
!~:~:!!o~~~~
1997 Pontiac Sunfire
s
s
J0,500 or 199 Por Mo.
66
Several to choose from! ..................

SJ6,589

1999 Chevy Monte tarlo LS

Conv. 4X4.
Air, cassette.
MSRP $17,298

New Only 513,942

1995 Chevy Corsica

97 • 8. 75% APR •
months
96 • 8. 75% APR , 60 months
95 • 8.89&amp; APR • 60 months
94 • 9.24% APR • 54 months

•-

V6, automatic, CD,
tilt, cruise.
MSRP $20,243

4X4, VB, Silverado,
auto. Loaded!
MSRP $29,374

Now Only

SJ7,250

1998 Chevy Camaro

llew Only

1998 Chevy K1 500 Pickup

1998 GMC Sono~~a

1999 Buick LeSabre Custom

New Only

V6, aijto., air, CD,
tilt, cruise.
MSRP $19,632

New Only 59790

II!IRP

1999 Chevy Malibu

f

'

SSSOO or 5194Per MD..

s8500 or s194 Per Mo.
$7SOO or 5144 Ptr~.
All R1blt11 to dMier, tax a title
not lncluclld. All PIYJIIInla
aubjeet to crldh epprovel.
PIYJIIIilbi ftgurld on 00
plyllllllbi It 0.1% APR.

1999 Olds Cutlass GLS
V-6, automatic, air, CD,
leather, cassette ..
MSRP $20,450

New Only

SJ8,850

1998 Olds Cutlass GL
V,6, automatic, air, CD,
cassette, leather.
MSRP $20,150

New Only 517,550

1998 Olds Cutlass GLS
V-6, auto., air, CD &amp; cass.,
PL, PW, white .
MSRP $19,505

New Only

SJ7,2SO

1998 Olds Intrigue
V-6, automatic.
Loaded! Silver.
MSRP $21,609

Now Only 519,400

1998 Olds Silhouette

GLS Van
V,6, loaded, leather, CD
MS.R P $28,370

Plckup ....................... $17,900
92 Olds Cutlatls International ............... $8,500
96 Mercury Marquls ............................. $12,900
97 Buick LeSabre ................................. $16,900
91 Chevy Caprlce ................................... $6,800
98 Olds 88 ............................................. $18,995
96 Buick Rlvlera ................................... $16,400
98 GMC Jimmy Maroon , 15,000 miles ..•• $22,500
97 Chevy 5·10 Ext. Cab ....................... $12,500
97 Chevy K1500Z·71 ............................ $22,500
96 Chevy 5·10 Ext. Cab .............. : ........ $10,900
95 Chevy K1500 4X4 ....... ..................... $14,900
98 Buick LeSabre ................................. $19,900
96 Honda Accord .................................. $14,500
97 Honda Accord LX ........... ................. $16:000
Olda Cutlass Conv. ........................... $8,900
95 Cadillac Sevllle ................................ $21,900
Mazda B400Q 4X4 ............................ $10,500
98 GMC Jimmy 10.000 miles .................. $23,500
90 GMC Safari,Van ................................. $6,900
GMC Sierra SLE .............................. $22,900
95 Olds 88 ............................................. $11,900
Tbyoti4X4 Plckup ............................ $8,800
93 Old a 88 LS ......................................... $8,800
95 Chevy Camaro Conv. Black ............. $12,500

Results from
annual Little
Brown Jug
Pages

•

a.m. to 4 p.m.
i
Anyone who would like to donale
furniture. drapes. curtains. clothinj.
espeo.ially ror c-hildren and men. or
olher items. may bring them to the
Parish hall by 0..1. 2. For pickup of
items. residents may call 992-2958
or 992-2622.
Volume 49, Number 106

•

Sports

Sept. 25, 1998

.
I

!

WASHINGTON CAP)- Tougher
federal a1i' pollution requirements
were welcomed today across the
Northea.-1. but in the Ohio Valley.
where power plants likely will bear
much of the cost. the response was
anything but favorable.
On Thul'day. the Environmental
Protection Agency for the first time
entered the long-standing dispute
between Midwest and Northea~t
states over drifting inlerstate air pollution.
The EPA directed 22 states from
Missouri to Massachusells to cut
smog-causing nitrogen oxide &lt;missions by 1. 1 million tons by 2003. an
action primarily aimed at scores or
large coal-burning power plants that
dol the landscape from Illinois to
West Virginia.
Many of the plants have smokestacks as high a• a 100-siOI)' skyscraper and send smog-causing
chemicals high into the air where
wind currents carry the pollution for
hundreds or miles.
The EPA action. while aimed primarily at reduciQg the long-distance
flow or pollution from the Midwest
into the Northeast. also will prO&lt;.Iuce
cleaner air in the Midwest and help
communities meet new air quality
standanls announced last year. EPA
otlicials said.
Nilrogen oxide is a component or
ozone. an essential part of smog during the summer months. Smog causes respirator)' illnesses and exacrrbates childhood asthma.
EPA Administrator Carol Browner. estimating the annual health benefits at $3.4 billion. said 138 million
people "will breathe cleaner air"
because of the additional pollution
controls."
But 1he tougher requirements.
estimated by the EPA to cost $17 billion over 10 years. brought immediate criticism from state officials and
utilities in the Midwest and Ohio Valley.
"The federal EPA has once again
chosen a heavy-handed. punitive
approach over sound science and
responsible regulation." complained
Ohio Gov. George Voinovich. Ohio
would have to cut nitrogen oxide
emissions by nearly 133.000 tons. or
36 percent.
· Ohio, Wesl Virginia and several
other slates faced wilh steep pollution
reductions by its utilities had proposed more modest cuts, arguing
lheir plan also would resolve the
long-range pollution concerns bul be
cheaper.
These slates' proposal was rejected by the EPA. "II was no! a sign if·
icant step forward... Browner said
Thursday.
Voinovich. as well as oflicials of
Ohio-based American Electric Power. one of the country's biggest utililies. lefl open the possibility of a
court challenge to the EPA's action .

Jackson finds some improvement
as tour criss-crosses Appalachia
Appalachian Regional Commission.
The agency. a partnership between
the federal government and the 13
Appalachian states. has spent $7.2
billion since it began in I%5. including $4.5 billion on roads.
The result Per capila income is
up. infant mortality is down and there
are more high school graduates and
jobs. the commission said.
"Over the years. that's made a
tremendous difference ... Speer said or
!he ARC's work.
Even Jackson admits progress has
been made.
"Where 1here ha.&lt;been investment
The images were so slriking for
Jackson thai he !old the people of and opportunily. people have taken
southeast Ohio that he would return advantage... he told reporters last
in the fall for a rally to bring nation- week .
But no! enough has been done.
al auention to the plight of
Appalachia. The rally will be Sunday Students still go to sc hool in trailers
in Nelsonville. a town more than an and many residents remain poor and
hour's drive southeast of Columbus. lack access to adequate housing.
But 1he picture of poorly educat- health care and good-paying jobs. he
ed people with linle or no access lo said,
.. Progress has been made, except
adequate jobs. housing and health
care is not lhe true picture of we slopped the Great Society before
we had a great society." he said of the
Appalachia anymore. experts say.
"There is a long-standing stereo- anti -poverty programs started by
type of Appalachia as a culture or President Johnson .
poverty. !hal people here are impovSpeer agrees.
erished.'' said Jean Speer. director of
"Some places an: prelly appalling.
the Cemer for Appalachian Studies al Nobody wants to look over !hat." she
Ea:-.t Tennessee State Universi·ty in said.
Johnson City. Tenn. "In facl. it 's a
In lac!, ARC records show !hal. as
place where a lol of people want lo of April 1997. 97 of !he 399 counties
come and live ...
in Appalachia were considered dis"Some parts of Appalachia are nol tressed because or high unemployonly doing well . but maybe beuer ment and poverty rates and per capithan the national average" in income. ta incomes below national averages.
educalion and other factors. said Most or the counties were in Ohio.
Randy Hunt. director of the Gover· West Virginia and eastern Kentucky.
nor's Office uf Appalachia. This is
" It's a very spony situation." said
especially !rue of !he areas of Jack Frech. director of the Athens
Appalachia near big cities. he sa1d.
Counly Department of Human SerMore than 22 million people hve vices. "Some places seem lobe sluck
in the region thai extends rrom south· in an economic rut things just aren't
em New York 10 northern MISSISSip- happening . Other pockets have
pi . Appalachia includes 29counties in improved quile a bit. ..
eastern and southeast Oh1o.
In Athens County. for example.
The construction or roads 10 make Ohio Umversity and a major highway
the mountainous region more acces- that extends through southeast Ohio
sible, job training progmms. con- have helped the local economy. he

By MARK WILLIAMS
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The images
were powerful : sewage llowing
through yards. rusting appliances silting on fronl porches and the weal)'
faces of poverty.
They were !he kind of images thai
the Rev. Jesse Jackson wanted !he
reporters following him on that pleasant April day to see or Appalachia. a
region he contends has been left
behind during the economic good
times that the res1 or the coumry bas
experienced.

VISITS MINES - The Rev. Jesse Jackaon,
right, Ia - n with United Mine Worke111 of
Amerlcalntemlllonal President Cecil Roberbi,
center, Ed Fire, president of the l.ntematlonal
Brotherhood of Electrical Worl(era. left, and

Southam Ohio Coal Co. miner Cecil Dillon of
Albany, behind Roberta. Jackson visited the
Meigs Minea as part of hll tour of Appalachl,
an mining communltiea.

Jackson explores issues .,,.
during tour of Meigs Min·es
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
'This is an area of rich soil and
poor people."
In keeping with the theme of his
visil to Appalachian communities
and Sunday's March for App~lachia
at Hocking College in Nelsonville.
the Rev. Jesse Jackson addressed
issues pertaining to coal miners and
mining communities during his visit
to the Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s
Meigs Mine 31 on Thursday.
Jackson was joined by Cecil
Roberts. president of the United
Mine Workers of America International . and several members of his
Rainbow PUSH Coalition. based in
Chicago. The group took an underground lour or the mining operation
and met with local labor leaders and
mine management.

Jackson was in Gallipolis last
weekend ror the city's Emancipation
Celebration. and has toured other
Appalachian communilies. induding Marietta. Portsmouth and several mining towns in eastern Kentucky.
His visit to !he area will conclude
with Sunday's rally. beginning at
noon.
During Thursday's visit to the
Meigs Mines. Jackson and Roberts
emphasized the va'l differences in the
non-union mining operations in Kentucky compared lo the union operation here .
Jackson said he was especially
touched by his conversations with
miners in Kentucky who suffer from
black lung. and noted the relationship
between safe mine operations and
comprehensive health care.
Jackson commended the UMW~

and management or the Meigs Mines
for their working relationship.
'To find managemenl and labor
who have worked together for com_.
mon ground is an enlightening experience," Jackson said.
Especially im(IOrta~! to Jackson.
he said. was a campaign or universal heallh coverage for all Americans.
a program that he said is especially
needed in Appalachian communities.
"If workers in tHe coal mines of
Russia and Eastern Europe can have
the advantage of health insurance
which is subsidized by lhe U.S. government. then !he working people or
America should expect no less."
Jackson said. "There must be the
same resources available to American
workers as there are in the countries
whose operations we subsidize."
(Continued on Page 3)

struction of water and sewer systems

said.

and other social development efforts
have helped cut the 1965 poverty rate
in half by 1990. according to the

"Ten miles outside of !own. !railers are falling apart and people don't
have any water... he said.

Farm Bureau
urges defeat
for Issue 1

Florida keys feel fury
of Hurricane Georges

KEY WEST, Fla. (APJ - Hurricane Georges lashed !he Florida Keys
today as the core of the menacing storm moved closer. The I00 mph winds
sent waves cra~hing onto streets and knocked out power.
Shelters and hotels from Miami to Orlando lilled up after more than I
million people from Key West to Tampa were urged or even ordered to leave
coastal and low-lying areas and mobile homes.
"The wmer has been sucked oul of the bay. There's a boat high and dry
that's gollen loose and in the Oats... said Marion Sargeant. who lives with
her cousin in Key Largo on Florida Bay between the island chain and Ever·
glades National Park. "There's nonnally 4 feet of water where !he boa! is
silting - and that's now in inches."
A hail of leaves. branches and palm fronds blew across the Overseas Highway in Marathon. in the middle Keys. and 76 mph gusts lifted rainwater oiT
roofs. In Miami. where the smell of seawater spread 10 miles inland, bands
of slanting rain repeatedly shot ashore.
"A big old tree fell on my house, crashed right down by my head so I
fi gured I mighl as wdlcome outside." Marc Hightowersa1d a.s he stood outDale Heydlauff. AEP's vice pres· side a converted icehouse. "You're nol any safer in an old wooden house."
idenl for environmental aiTairs. said
The eye of the sprawling storm was expected to pass west of Key West
the utility would "encourage... states
by
II a.m .
o
10 continue to develop 1he1r own.
The
slight
shift
meant a milder storm for lhe slate's densely populated
more modeS:l emission reduction
Atlantic coast. but " is probably the worst possible thing" for Key West. said
plans despite the EPA directive.
Jerry Jarrell, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami: The storm's
harshest allack has been on the eastern edge.
The eye or a hurricane often brings a storm surge. and a surge of 7 feet
was forecasl for the Keys. Key West's top elevation is only 14 reel. and some
other islands lop out al 7 feet.
" We are as ready as we can be. and we pray that the human and maleri·
al cost will be limited ... Presidenl Clinton said in Washington.
Today's
" It looks like Noah's ark in here." Vince Taporowski said this morning
2 Sections - 12 Pages
as he watched the roiling water from his home on Big Pine Key. north of
Key West. "Noah had a good idea - bring two of everything. So are we ."
Among those staying in his home were his two grown children ·and their
Calendar
6
spouses. two grandchildren and two pel ferrets.
Classifteds
8-10
Comics
11
Editorials
2
Local
3
The resolution was approved al
The Southeastern 0hio Regional
Council's board of directors pa~sed u the board's quarterly meeting TuesSoorts
4&amp; S
resolution to support the Ohio day.
_]W!!eawlll!!lear~-----'3z... .. _ ..
Crawfonl said ODOT presented a
Department of Transportation's
proposal to some southern Ohio comSouthern Ohio Highway Proposal.
Lotteries
The resolution was passed to sup- munity leaders on Aug. 20. The proport etlorts to complete live of the posal's projects included u.s/ 50
seven main corridor projects in south- from Athens 10 Coolville. 1he U.S.
Pkk 3: 0-6-2; Pick 4: 4-4-3-1
em Ohio. acconling to Sam Craw· 3311-77 Connector Road in Meigs
Buckeye 5: 7-29-~34-37
County. U.S. 33 from Athens to Darford. SEORC executive director.
win in Meigs County. the Chesapeake
goal
of
the
council
for
many
The
lY.YA.
Daily 3: 1:6-8; Daily 4: 5·5-8-1
years ha.• been to have !he major Bypass in Lawrence County. U.S. 35
0 1998 Oflto Valley Publilhina, Co
highway corridors start and end at nn at Richmondale in Ross County and
the Portsmouth Bypass.
interstate highway.

The Ohio Fann Bureau announced
earlier this week that it "strongly

opposes" state ballo!lssue I. an effort
to ban mourning dove hunting in
Ohio.
"Once again. animal rights
extremists are allempting to force
their philosophies on all Ohioans.
The activisls' latesl anack on personal rights is lheir effort to ban dove
hunting in Ohio. an effon that the
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation is
opposing." !he group announced.
The slate's largest farm organization is urging a "no" vole ori ballot
Issue I. This issue seeks to change
existing law and remove mourning
doves from Ohio's gamebird list.
"In typical fashion . animal rights

,

•,
'•

organizers have hidden their anti -

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

WAITING FOR GEORGES_ Robert Myers and Marie Johnson
embraced on the Whl.t e Street Pier In Key West, Fla., today as they
watched the 1pproech of Hurricane Georges, which has left at
IIIII 250 dead In Ita wake In the Caribbean. (AP)

Regional highway proposal gets SEORC's nod

o.um

SEORC is also supporting the
completion of the Nelsonville and
Lancaster bypa~ses on U.S. 33 and
U.S. 35 from Gallipolis to
Charleslon, W.Va.
"SEORC will continue to wor~
with local leaders. slate and federal
ullicials to 'line tune' the proposal."
Cmwli&gt;nl said.
"Our la•k is 1hree-fold : lhe lir.;t

p4ntation Re view Advis(lry Commit-

lee (TRAC) and the lhinl is 10 see
whal can he done to gel the
Appalachian Regional Commi,.,sion
(ARC I highway miles redesignated at
the federal level,"· he added .
"ODOT's proposal does not give
us everything we would like lo have."
Cmwfonl said. "h will bring over
SJH million highway construction
task is lo se-e what we can do to dollar.; In soul hem Ohin ($19H.3
address local concerns. the second is million from the state: $120 million
to' see whal we can do to get a favor- rrom the ARC and $15 million from
(Continued on Page 3)
ahle ruling from the state's Trans-

meal campaign behind a well-crafted
message !hat hides !heir true agenda."
according 10 Keith Stimpert. vice
president of government arrairs ror
OFBF
"This isn't about doves. The ani·
mal rights fanatics think thai if they .
are successfu l a1 banning !he hunting
of mourning doves. they will have
taken another slep Inwards !heir uhi male goal of a meal·less society.
"If they're successful. what's next'&gt;
Do they !hen wan! to stop hunting of
other animals. stop the prO&lt;.Iuction of
livestock. the use of animals in medical research '' Are zoos and circuses
outlawed'' Do we have to give up
owning pets?"

The Ohio Fann Bureau ha.' joined
Ohioans for Wildlife Conservation. a
1.:nalition of citizens and organizations
oppnsed In Issue I. OWC has mised
more than $2 million to campaign
against lhe issue .
"Fanners have always led the
charge to protect the rights of the
individual." Stimpert said. "All of us
in this coalition recognize this proposal for what il is: an auack on our
(Contlnu~ on Page 3)

�Friday, September 25, 1998

Commentary

Page2
Friday, September 25, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio weather

Beat of the Bend .. .

Saturday, Sept. 26
AccuWeathere forecast for

The Daily Sentinel

Morality in short supply in Washington
By Jack Anderson

and Jan Molter
It s gettmg hard to tell the preachers from the politiCians m Wa,hmg
111 Court Strnt, Pomeroy, Ohio
ton
614-992·2156 • Fax 992-2157
The second sess1on of the I05th
Congress 1s Winding down havmg
accomplished v1nually nothmg of
consequence Thus. most of the talk
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
on Capttol H1ll these days ts about
morahty The prestdent s morality of
ROBERT L WINGETT
course
Publisher
But Bill Clinton s sordtd atfmr
and subsequent cover-up &amp;sn 'I the
only moraluy play takmg place tn
wa.,hmgton Three others come to
OIANEHIU
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
mmd
Controller
Generel Manager
.. In JUSt over a year 1t' II be 11me
once agam 10 account for each and
The .SC.tiltd • •lcCMN• ,.,.,.. to 1M edlttN from rfiiMlera on • btoad ,.,.. ol tDpla
every Amencan v1a the decenmal
Sllotl- (3110 "'leu) ,..,. , . ,.., Tn»d ,.,.
census It's an enonnous and enor
,.,. .,. , . _ - .,,.,.Y 1M 1&lt;111«1 Eoch ahould- • ~. ...
mously 1mponant .. task Populauon
- .,.._ , _ . - SpecHy. daltl If lllara ............. ,..,.,... tK 1D ~...... 10 IN Editor, 1"'- s.ntiMI Ill Coot! St. l'omaroy, Ohio
figures play a maJor role tn deter4S1W; or, FAX to 114-N2·2151
mmtng how federJI dollars are diVId·
ed among states and locallues
They also detenmne how the 435
seats m the House of Representallves
wd I be reappon10ned at the stan of
the next century .. wh1ch " why
there's now open pollt1cal warfare
ByTOMRAUM
over
a plan to Improve the census
Associated Press Writer
It's
been w1dely reponed that the
WASHINGTON- If there s one thon~ Pres1de01 Clinton's conservatiVe
cntlcs enJOY as much on the mtemat1onal front a.s denouncong hiS conduct of
fore1gn and defense pohcy. tt s ba.shong the Untted Nattons If the two tar·
gets can be comboned so much the better
That s one rea.o;on Scon Ruter has become a star Witness for Republicans
on Cap1tol H1ll And a pubhc relations mghtmare for Secretary of State
Madeleme Albnght and her Democraltc allies m Congress
He s the clean-cut Amencan weapons mspector who quu a U N mont·
tonng commiSSion on Aug 26. condemmng 1he Umted States and the U N
Securny Cnunc1l for fa1llng to take a tougher stand on Iraq
Rlller has been repeattng the accusations ever smce most recently tn a
stnn~ of appearJnces before congressional heanngs
W1th h1s stratght-arrow demeanor and plarnspoken dehvery. the former
Manne who served 10 the Gull War clearly ha.s captivated GOP lawmaken;
as he makes hiS rounds
I have to Jell you I thonk he s an Amencan hero • enthu.sed Sen Sam
Brownbad. R Kan . chatnnan of a Senate Fore1gn Relat1ons subcommlltee
Thank you for your courage You have crystalhzed the debate· Rep
Cun Weldon R Pa • told Rllter
If R111er s accounts are uue House Speaker Newt Gmgnch wrote Clln
ton the) Ulullate that your adnuniStratwn s tough rhetonc on Iraq has been
a decepnon ma,kmg a real pohcy ot weakne" and concesswn ·
Although mild mannered Rotter IS tar from a shnnkmg vrolet
A seven-year veteran of the U N mspecllon team. Rmer qull the U N
Spec1al CommJSMon w1th a S&lt;:athmg letter that accused the Secunty Coun
ol of makm~; a mockery of mspectwns and the Untted States and U N Sec
retary-{Jeneral Kofi Annan of surrendenng to Baghdad s demands
Teo;ufymg to the House Nat1onal Securoty Commottee a lew days ago Ru
ler declared The message IS the same let s cui a deal wolh Iraq
Rrtter sard the U S pohcy had become one ot pretend mspecttons Iraq By William A. Rusher
I had dmner recently wllh two
frozt all cooperauon With mspectors on Aug 5
Rlller has a colorful background He qutl the Mannes as a captam and fnends .. both Republicans but wtth
mtelhgence officer m 1991 As a weapons mspector he clashed on several w1dely dtllenng v1ews on what to do
pre-.ous occaSions wllh US onlellrgence otl1cers He was accused by Iraq about PreSident Clmton
One " a gnzzled veteran of the
of espoonage. an assenum demed by Rttter and U S othc1als
Albrighl and Sen Joseph Boden ot Delaware the sen1or Democrat on the pan. san wars now 10 hiS m1d-7(},;
Sen•te Fore1gn Relattons Comm1ttee have both felt the stmg nf takmg h1m He strongly opposes 1mpeachment
Why he wanted to know do the
on
Albright -.ugges1ed la'&gt;l week thai-Ritter m1gh1 be a great Amencan bul Democrats such a favor' Why mstall
Gore tn the Wh1te Hou&gt;e for two
one who -doon t have a clue about whal our overall pohcy ha.s been
B1den tokl Rotter at a Senate heann~ that dec1s10ns on how In confront years, wnhoul even requrnng h1m to
Iraq were ~ ~ft to thoo;e who · have responSJblltlles slightly above your be elected lirst' Let Clmton remam
10 office. perhaps after some severe
pa) gmde'That , why tbey get pa1d the b1g bucks B1den smd 'That s why they congresSional repnmand diSgraced
and fatally weakened Let h•m hang
get the hmos and you lion 1
there loke a npe poece of L1mburger
as a condtgn remmder lhal character
lloes matter after all
Our dtnncr compamon was a
young Texas entrepreneur m hts late
20s now resident tn San FranciSCO
He strongly favors Impeachment
Dear &amp;lolor and Cotozens ot Meogs County
and not by a long shot because he IS
We are wnung you lhiS letter to mform you that we believe an mno
a bluenose He os very much a part
cent man has been conv1cted of a cnme that he d1dn I comm•t ThiS man of hiS generatiOn and cuts a wtde
ts Kelly Thomas Mr Thomas was convicted by a JUry when there w,JS swath among the young women of
no phystcal evodence of ch1ld molestation We are very concerned about the clly , But thanks to hts parents
thiS lmle g1rl bemg used as a wol tn an adult feud ThiS alleged cnme netlher has he lost touch Wtlh the
was only reported to aulhontoes afler the ch1ld s mother and Mr country s moral and legal founda
Thomas s tamoly had a diSpute
II&lt;&gt;Rs He thmks Mr Clln1on has traWe questiOn how a JUry can convict a man ot charges mvolvmg rectal duced both and believes that only
mtercourse -..uh no phystcal ev1dence' Not only was there no phystcal hts tmpeachmenl and removal from
ev1dence but there was no evtdence for DNA testing Submllled lor olfice can ellecllvely reaffirm them
forensiC tesung specimen number 02279R by Shentf James Snulsby I
Hllherto I have leaned toward the
Brown pap.:r ba~ wntaomng unduwear and a ntghtgown ot the chold and tormer vtew But on retlecllon I
another brown paper bag conlaonmg a second patrol the childs under- thmk our young tnend from Texas
wear The findmgs were as lollows ( BCI laboratory report 98 I0720) has the better argument I do not
No evtdence of semen was found on the ntghtgown or e1ther patr ot look lorward to two years of PreSJ
underwear Exammauon ot the debns lrom the dothmg la1led to reveal dent Gore let alone the posSibdlly
the presence ot any puhtc hatr samples for cumpamon
ol more But to let B•ll Clmton
The JUry and the cnmmunny weren t allowed to hear a lol of Important f.tcts that surround thos case due to leg.rl techmcah11es As the paper
staled thiS ts the second molestatmn convtcllon Without physical evt·
dence m two years m Metgs County We are alarmed thai someone can
bear false Witness agatnsl Mr Thomas and he has no recourse under the By George R. Plagenz
law, It "our understandong lhal Mr and Mrs Thomas along wtth thetr
When a Boston newspaper
IWO young choldren were prcsenl on lhf home for lhe enure lime nt thos columnist was !Ired recently atler
alleged •nc1den1 and yet apparently the or sworn 1es11mony was diSregard- bemg act:useU ol plag1an~m
ed
many people tell the puntshmenl
We tear that any one ot us or any clltzen ol the commun1ty could be ht the cnme
falsely accused lned ,tnd convtcted tl th1s ts our present standard ol JUdg·
They may he surprtsell In learn
ment 10 thiS communlly
that clergymen otten use bor
We are concerned ahnul Ihe chold s welt.tre We want Jusllce for Mr rowed lll.llen.tl tn thetr sermons
Thomas us well at the ,tlleged voc um We urge the cnmmumty to learn thai Ihey P•'" oft as 1he1r own
more .tbout thiS sotuat10n and to demand JUstice lor all
Even reputable relt~10us pub
We beheve lhe Jury was honestly trymg to send a message to moles- hsh1ng houses publiSh books of
len; and waK seekmg to save a true Vlcl•m But we tear they have made a "hom1leucal helps dtrected at
grave m1stake .. a miStake that Will destroy Mr Thomas s hfe and also the clergy trade
that of hiS wtfe and two young choldren
These books and penodiCals
Please come together woth us and others of the communny and seek contam not only 1llustrat10ns and
JUs lice Contact your local prosecutors office Mr Charles Kmght Mr anecdotes but also sample ser
John Lente~. along w1th the Attorney General s off1ce and vo1ce your mons and outltnes
concerns about the Me1gs County lud1c1al System Our effon 10 the comYou may be hearong them
munity conunues to grow as we suppon Mr Thomas tn h1s effort to clear somet1me soon from your local
church pulpit
h1s name
The relepllone numbers are John Lentes, 9920 6371. Charles Kmght,
There IS the story of a mmJSter
992-2090 State Attorney Geneml s Office 446-4320 and lames Boulger who preached one of Harry Emer
defense atromey 740-664-1625
son Fosdick's sermons verbatim
It IS our op1nron that there has been a hornble mtstake for both the hi· from hts pulpit one Sunday w1th
tie glrl•nd Mr Kelly What kmd of world would thiS be 1f everyone sa1d out giVIng the famous mtn1ster
"I don't want 10 get mvolved " If an mnocent man and a lmle g1rl's future any credit for 11
are at IIJnd, we tlnnk we must get mvolved
After the serv1ce he was com
Wetzel T. Bailey, Jr. phmented by a pansh10ner 1n the
Laapvllle congregauon who told the pastor
(Mr. Jalle7'• ume wu the nrst of 55 namea oa the letter which "That was a fine sermon It ought
.. IIYallable for review In the oftlce of The Dilly Sentinel.) to be published"

'Esta6fulid 111 1948

of,.,,..,._

Former U.N. inspector
becomes GOP favorite

1990 census suffered from the
greatest • undercount m hiStory
About one m I0
Amencans wasn't
accurately count·
ed A dJSpropor·
110nate number of
the m1&lt;song mtl
hons were mmonMolter &amp;
ues.
espec1ally Anderson
mner-c1ty reSidents
The Census Bureau ha• proposed
usong stallstrcal samplrng method• 10
count those who fmled to respond to
the regular questionnaires Nearly
every promment statistiCian m the
country thmks th1s w1ll help 1mprove
the accura~:y of the census
But Republicans are womed that
an accumte populatoon count could
cost them seats m the House InnerCity reSidents especmlly blacks. tend
to vote for Democmts lt. say the
actual population ot Hnu.,ton turns
out to be greater than lhc nld census
figures suggest 11 moght cost the
GOP a reliably consel'\attve seat m
the suburbs
OpponenLs of samphng g1ve a
bogus argument thai the Consntutlon

calls for an actual enumerauon" of
the population But sarnpllng would
not replace the survey method. only
enhance 11 and make 11 more accurate
What s so moral about opposmg a
plan to count every Amencan ..
mcludrng the poorest •• for the sake
of pohtocal gam'
· The Depanment of Health and
Human Serv1ces recently proposed a
change m the rules govemmg organ
donations Under the old rules local
commumtles got first dtbs when an
organ became available The new
rule would grant preference to the
most cntlcally Ill patlenLs. regardless
of where they live
The old rule made sense m the
early days ot organ tr~nsplants when
a hean or hver could only surv1ve for
a few mmutes after extractiOn But
modem technology has 1mproved
that umefmme so that a llvmg organ
can now survtve transport to pract1·
cally any area of the cnuntry
Yet some members of Congress,
notably Rep Bob LIVIngston R-La
chmrman nt the House Appmpn;t·
ttons Commlltee and Sen Ruben
Tomcelll. D-N J are trymg to k1ll
the plan They're geumg help from a

group called the Umted Network for
Organ Shanng. wh1ch ha.s lobboed
extenSively agamst the plan
UNOS says 11 IS trymg to protect
pat1ents by keepmg organ donatiOns
under local control But some say
thai the group " really tryong to protect liS chenls - small transplant cen
ters that moght be forced to close
theu doors under the new rules
Smce the Sickest pat1enL' tend to
congregate tn the b1ggest and best
known tr~nsplant cen1ers. smaller
hospolals m1ght lose out
Wh1ch leads to the obvrous question Is 11 moml for members of Con
gress to deny llfe-savmg organ tmns
plant. to the pauents who need them
most for the sake ot busmess'
And finally the bankrng mdus
try rs lobbymg hard for a financoal
modem1zal1on bill wh1ch " a dream
come true for the b•g national banks
The b1ll wdI tear down regulatory
bamers by allowmg banks secuntles

Letters to the editor
Question's jury's decision

· and they would have been tonh
com10g abundantly
But Btll Clloton ha' hed all hiS
messa2.e
Hl
lite. and gnnen away With tl hnl·
the A;:.,encan hantly and the hahn was ton
people and the mgraoned So he commuted perjury
world that we 10 hiS deposttum m the Paula Jones
Simply cannot case and tned to mduce Momca
Lewmsky and hiS secretary B~ny
attord
II IS Rill Curne 10 do likewiSe and msp1r~d
JUst
about cltnns to lind Ms Lewmsky a com
lonable Jnh out ot town and to
sex
If
It
wen~
Rusher
only that anll tl retneve and conceal vartous preMr Cltnton when first asked about sents he had g1ven her And then he
11 under oath hao told the truth. the went betore a Washmgton grand
suuullon would be very d1fterent He JUry htmsell and commmed perJury

can pe11ple But for a telltale stam on
one ol Ms Lewtnsky\ dresses he
would be lymg to us still
ThiS " we like to thmk a nauon
nf laws But hnw hereafter can we
enlon.:e the

vat~tl

law'

ag~11nst

per

JUry .md subornauon ot pequry and
obstruclton of JUsUce 11 the nauon s
ch1et law enforcement olllcer can
v10late 1hem at wtll and get away
wuh JUsl a slap on the wnsl ot thai •
II Is .orgued thai h1s cromes are
less culpable because they were
comm111ed m an attempt to conceal
only sexual m1sconducl But there
are no degrees of perjury II a leg111
mate question 1s asked nl a Witness
under oath m ,l legal proceedang he

It is argued that his crimes are less culpable because
they were committed in an attempt to conceal only sex·
ual misconduct. But there are no degrees of perjury. If
a legitimate question is asked of a witness under oath
in a legal proceeding, he has only two legal options: to
answer truthfully, or to plead that a truthful answer
would tend to incriminate him. Mr. Clinton did nei·
I her.
could then have gone to the Amen
can people admuted that he had
long had a senous sexual problem
and atlirmed that he would now seek
both spontual and medocal help on
overcommg 11

all mer agatn
E1ery one of those acts was a
telony as he. beulg a lawyer well
knew And to 10p 1hem ott he
looked lormly mto the televiSion
camera dunng an Oval Ottice con
terence tn January wagged hts tin
ger for emphasts slowed hts speech
to d1ctat•on speed· and !ted h1mselt
blue m the lace to the ent1re Amen

has only two legal opltons tn
answer truthfully or to plead thai a
lruthlul .mswer would tend to
tncnmmate h1m Mr Clinton d1d
ne1ther
To make sexual miSconduct a
duty-free zone exempt trom the
rules that apply to all other konds ol
behavmr would be to adopt us
Amema s moral code the sexual
llbenmtsm ot the I%0s every
body does ol
· everybody ltes
.thout 11
ot s nnne ot our atla1r II
such mtscnnduct were to be .1ccord
ed tmmuntly tnrm the ordtnary laws
ol perjury subomaltnn and obstruc
lion that would tell me somethmg
aboulthe Amerocan p.:uple I d rather
not know
William A. Rusher 1s a Oistm·
gui~hed Fellow of the Claremont
ln~1itute for the Study of States·
mansh1p and Political Philosophy

.
Jesus was always a g~eat storyteller _

I

•

That would have been the
moment lor the for~tveness and
compassiOn thai Mr Chnton s apol
ogtsts and alhes are now demandtng

II
been
multster

HAS
sa1d the

'

Some people

sympathize wolh
the miniSter who
crohs hiS sermun
malenal tnrm
outSide sources
The
noted
leclurer Chan
nmg Pollock once
Plagenz
sa1d th.rt wh1le
he gave I00 speeches a year. he
d1dn I gtve a dtfferenl speech on
each of those 100 occasoons
H1s repertoore he saod conSist
ed ol two lectures wh1ch took htm
four to SIX weeks to prepare
These lectures were repeated
for vanous aud1ences
'If I were Dtmosthenes or
Immanuel Kant," Pollock sa1d, "I
couldn't deliver 100 d1fferent and
vllal addresses each year to the
same aud1ence. pan•cularly 1f that
was only one of my dulles .. as 11
1&lt; w1th most mmJSters "
ThiS " sermon overload" that
faces m1n1sters Pollock sa1d, "
respons1ble for the fact that the
average sermon IS eloquent only

ol superilctal thtnk1ng llmlled
experoence and p1ous plallludes
The tendency to want In tell a
good story leads many wrllcrs to

let the truth lall where 11 may on
thetr storytellmg
It was ,, tallmg of wruers 1n
b1bllcalttmes
Old Testament scholars s.ty
thai the tel low who !IN told the
slory ol the crossmg nl 1he Red
Sea related how an east wtnd
hlew dry1ng up the swamp that
was standmg 10 the way ol the
Israelites trymg to escape the•r
Egypuan pursuers
That may have been how ot
was. but the story lacked somethmg
Thai was taken care of Iuter by
a reporter who stated that Moses
stretched out hiS hand over the sea
and turned the water mto dry land
That was belter .. bul sull not
good enough for an even later
chrontclcr who captivated hts
readers w1th the story of how.
after Moses lifted hiS hands, the
water "stood up like walls" on
e1ther stde
Jesus was a great storyteller ..
and he d1dn't always make 11 clear

that he was m.lkmg up h1s stones
A certatn man hall two sons
os the way the story nl the Prnd1
g.tl Son begtns
·A certat n man went down
!null Jerusalem to Jenchn anll
lell .tmong thieves . so hegtns
the story ot the Good S.tmantan
The events 1n these stones may
not have actually happened hut
Jesus d1dn't we.1ken the ompact ol
the stones by beg10nmg Let's
say for the sake ol example, !hal
a certam man
If Jesus told about 10Ctdents
that were m tact non-tnctdents os
11 so much worse tor a preacher to
say. 'A certain man I know had
two sons" or A certa10 man 1
know went from San FranCISCO to
Los Angeles • 10 10troduc10g what
IS actually a parJble rather than a
true story'
Jesus appeared to be
101erested 10 the lesson he
trymg to get across than
whether h1s stones were literally
true
George Plagenz Is a syndical·
ed ' wr1ter for Newspape¥
Enteprlse Assoelation.

Burdell Black w1ll be markmg h1s 97th b1nhday annoversary on Monday
Sepl 28
Burdell has amazed everyone With hiS energy Even as late a' lh~&gt; sum
mer he would work several hours at a urne cutung gra.ss However more
recently a httle problem d1d develop and Burdell had to have a pacemaker
put m He s recupemtmg now and domg great
He loves getttng cards and you can send them to h1m at 37933 State Route
124. Moddlepon Ohro 45760
Perhaps you ve heard but at any rate the federal government launched a
new $20 bllllhts week
I thought you would apprec1ate 11 more 1f I menuoned 1hat the govern
mem '' spendmg e1gh1 mil loon dollan; of your lax money to publocoze 1he
ossue ol Ihe new twentres so that you won I be shocked by the new versiOn
Nenher the new ones nor the old ones shock me I d JUSt hke to have a few
ol enher

redest~ned

I m sure many of you wtll want to JOIO me on wJShong the best for Jam~s
'lugger" Johnson lr. of M1ddlepon
"lugger' 1s a pat1ent at the Anhur lames Cancer Center 10 Columbus He
would probably apprec1ate a show of suppon aboul now
Cards w1ll reach h1m at the Anhur James Cancer Center Room I038. 100
West lOth Ave. Columbus. Oh10 43210

INO

Wntmg and the pursutt of 11 seems to come ea.'y for the chtldren of Ray
and Patty P1ckens of near Pomeroy
Thetr daughter. Noelle. IS currently servmg on the staff of Ch1mes, the
Cap1tal Uo1vers•ty newspaper Noelle ha.s a by hne story deahng wolh an an
exh1b11 of the work of Oscar Howe bemg at the unoversuy m the September
ed111on of the college paper

()

0

KY

&lt;C 1998 AccuWealher

Sumy 1'1 Cloody

W VA.

If gu1tanst Chet Atktns has a more devoted fan than Kenny Kmg. I can 1
1magme who 11 can be
Kenny has followed the career of Chet over the years and ha.~ sent along
a tape of some of Chel s latest recordmgs Now 74. Chet has been havmg
some health problems mcludmg surgery to remove a tumor on hos bratn and
while recupemung he fell and broke a h1p Kenoy repons Chet ha' rece1ved
14 Grammy awards
The new tape IS great, Kenny Thanks for shanng 11 w1th me

Inc

Cloody

Tstonns

-

AU&lt;

Fkinies

Snow

Ice

linn' and msumm.:e l:ompanu:~ to

wmbme theor operallons and gel
even b1gger
Included 1n thiS sweethean pm
pnsal was a measure called has1c
hankmg · It would requtre all banks
tu make ava1lable mm1mum-lee
basu.:: &lt;.:heckmg ac.:&lt;::ounts to theu cus
tomers thus reducmg some ol the
onerous lees that hanks charge to
customers who don 1 keep a large
mm1murn balance on deposu R1gh1
now 48 mollrnn Amerocan house
holds keep less than $1 (XX} on 1he1r
checkmg accounts and pay a com·
bmed total ol $9 b1lllon rn fees for
that pnv1lege accordmg to a study
by pubhc mterest group US PIRG
The ba\IC bankmg pruv!Soon was
mcluded rn a House versoon of the
b1ll But the Senate Bankrng Com
mmee qmetly ehmmated the clause
when approvmg 1ts own vers~on ear
Iter thiS month Wh1le the b1g banks
get thetr WISh-lis! then customers
get screwed ag.un
What s so moml about thll '
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wr1ters for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Why Clinton must be impeached
remam 10 the
Wh1te House
would send a

By Bob Hoefltch

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

I thonk I m destoned lo have muSIC everywhere I go - and thai am 1 bad
Ann Ztrkle act1ve member olthe Raune Area Commumly Orgamzatton
sent me a lape recently and tl s all about btg band s You re n ~ ht Ann I d1d
n t have that lape and the btg band erd " b1g wllh me
Thank you I m enjoymg the tape but most ot alii apprectale your though•
tulne~ s

Can there be a beater compliment that havmg someone thmk of you 1

So we saw the hN day of fall come m early Wednesllay mornm~ and of
you re hke me you re apprec1a11ng the coohng off btl
Just let me say to you
Oh the summer wa.s a ball
But when leaves begm to fall.
MoSI ot all
Don 1forgel me
I m conltdent that you won I After all I m the one conslantly remmdmg
you to keep smthng

Warmth, chance of rain Clinton's lawyers explore settlement with Paula Jones
on tap for this weekend
By The Associated Preu
The summer weather 1sn't over yet for Oh1oans
The forecast for the weekend IS warm temperatures. With h•ghs of 8(}-85.
and a chance of showen; or thunderstorms
Cloudy sk1es tomght w1ll hold tempemtures mostly m the 60s
Cooler temperatures should return by Monday. the Nauonal W~ather Ser
vtce satd Its extended forecast calls for that day of around 70 degrees
Weather forecast:
Tomght Mostly clear Lows from the upper 50s to the lower 60s L1ght
and vanable w10d
Saturday Mostly sunny H1ghs 10 the upper 80s
Saturday mght Mostly clear Lows 60 to 65
Extended forecast·
Sunday Panly cloudy Achance of showen; and thunderstorms dunng the
mght H1ghs 10 the m•d 80s
Monday A chance of showers and thunden;torms dunng the day. otherWISe panly cloudy Lows around 60 and h1ghs m the upper 70s
Tuesday Partly cloudy Lows 10 the lower 50s and h1ghs m the m1d 70s

Middleport mayor's court
opemtors hcense, N1cholas M1lls.
M1ddlepon. $17 and costs, speed.
Mary D Moreland, Pomeroy, $12
and costs speed and $25 for dnv10g
Without seat belt, Jared Flesher, New
Haven, W Va • $15 and costs speed.
lenmfer Carol Carson Mason, W Va •
$13 and costs. speed
R1chard L Grady. M1ddlepon
two charges of d1sorderly by mtOXI·
catJon. $100 and costs on one and
$100 the other. and reSistmg arrest.
$200. Tam Block. Pomeroy, $100 and
costs. underage consumption. Dame I
l Kuhn, M1ddlepon, $100 and costs.
.possessiOn of manJuana
Amanda M1racle M1ddleport
$100 and cosl~. underage consump·
uon. Jared A Manktn, New Haven.
$465 and costs, dnvmg alter under
age consumptton $25 tor havrng no
headhghts on, and $100 for underage
consumpllon. Sabnna Boyles $25
and costs. fa1lure to diSplay two light·
ed headlights

Th1neen forfeited bond' and II
others were tined m the coun of Mayor Dewey Honon thiS week
Forfe1tong bonds on speed10g were
Jenmfer Mane G1bbs. Leon. W Va.
$48 V1ctor C Young. II. Pomeroy.
$48 Marvm L Fnend, Pomeroy.
~7 Sandy K Napper. M1&lt;)dlepon.
$47, Mary L Woods, Mtddlepon.
$49 Jean R Reynolds, Mtddlepon,
$4 7 Vtctona J Imboden. M1ddlepon.
$47
Others forfe1ttng bonds were Stacy Bowles, Potnl Pleasant, W Va,
$60. exptred tags, W1lma D Sargent.
Moddlepon. $250, leavmg the scene
of an acc1dent and $60 on Improper
backmg. Clarence E M1ght, Vmton.
$60 runnmg a stop SJgn, Lenme E
Haptonstall Mtddlepon. $60 on fml urc to control James M H1ckel New
Haven W Va $60 la1lure 10 control
Phyllts l Howenon M1ddlepon
$60 runnmg a stop Sign
Fmed were Cynthia Ann Ba1ley
Middleport $25 and costs. exptred

Regional highway proposal
would have to approve the redeSJg
nation of h1ghway m1les
We have a lot of work to do.
Cmwford satd We need to contm·
ue to work w1th local, slate and fed·
eral offic1als to put together a hoghway program thai w1ll be funded

(Continued from Page 1)
tederal demonslrulton funds)
There are a couple of b1g hurdles
to get over The TRAC would have
to approve the proposal and the ARC

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Ul-960)
Commun•ty Newsp~per Holdlnp.lac

; Farm Bureau

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Fnday II t Ccurt St Pomeroy Ohto by the
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Reader Services
CorreCtion Polley
Our mala concern In oiiiiOria os to be

fn.l

accurate Ir you lmow of aa error In •
stpry, call the newsroom at (740)
ll55 We wiD dreck JOUr lafarmoand m•ke • C'Oift'Ctaon If warraated

News Depanmenta

Stocks
Am Ele Power. ... .
46'11
Akzo . . .. . .. .. .. . ... 37~.
AmrTech ... ... ................49\
Ashland 011 ............... .......48.,.
AT&amp;T ................................58\
Bank One.. ... . ..... • • .44
Bob Evans ......................... 19"·
Borg-Warner ......................39"•
Broughton............................18'1.
Champion ..........................10'1.
Charm Shps ........................ 4"t.
CIIY Holding .......................... 39
Federal Mogul........ . . ..so~.
Gannett ............................ 57\
Goodyear .. ...... .. .... . .........54
Kmart........... . .... .
13,.
Kroger
.......... 48'1.
Landa End ......... .,.... .... 16'~
Umlted ......................... ... 23'.1.
Oek Hill Flnl .................. 16'·

ova ..................................

40

One Valley ......................... 33'•
Peoples .............................. 26'1.
Pram Flnl
. . • . . 1!1'1.
ROCkwell ..........................39~·
RD!Shell ..............................48'-

S•ra ....................................~

The mala number Ia Hl-1155. Deport·
meat exteaslou 1re:

Gtnenl Maaager.r..........................Est. 1101
NtWl
Est. IIOZ
or Est.II06

(Continued from Page 1)
freedom of ch01ce '
Farm Bureau members were
encouraged to spread the word
among netghbors and lnends. he
added
We can not allow these exlrem
ISis to gam a foothold tn Oh1o Say no
10 the am mal nghusts and vote no on
Issue I

I

I

WASHINGTON (AP) -At the
same tome 1mpeachmen1 proceedtngs
are movmg lorward m Congress. an
etlon IS under way to rev1ve settlement talks m the Paula Jones sexual
h.uassmentlawsu•t agamst PreSident
Clinton. accordong to source&gt; fam•l·
mr w1th the effon
One source s.ud Mrs Jones
lawyers have sent at least one letter
to Clmton s legal team explonng the
posSJblhty. and that the preSident was
conSJdenng the tdea
A second source confirmed there
was some form of conlact explonng
posSible settlement talks but declined
to be more spec1fic The sources
spoke only on condtt1on of anonymity
Mrs Jones' sexual harassment
case drsmtssed by a JUdge earlier lhl&lt;
year IS bemg conSidered by the 8th
Orcutt Coun of Appeals wh1ch IS
scheduled to hear oral arguments nex•
month m Mmnesotn The lawsuu was
summanly diSmiSsed m Apnl by
U S DJStnct Judge Susan Webber
Wnght who ruled that even 1f the
facts alleged by Mn; Jones were uue
she had not shown proof of any pro
tess10nal harm The preSident has
dented the tncodenl ever took place
One ot the sources fam1llar woth
Clmton's defense sa1d Mrs Jones a
former low-level Arkansas state
employee otlered to settle the ca.se 1f
the prestdent would pay her legal fees
- aboul $800 000 The source saod
Mrs Junes \\ho da~med Cllnlun
made a crude sexual pass at her wh1le
he was Arkansas governor - and

thus her employer - no longer was
requonng a slalemenl of apology
trom Cl10ton
Another source however put the
hgure at a non negollable $1 m1lhnn
Clmton s attorneys responded to a let
ter two wt:eks ago fmm Mrs Jones

attorneys thos source saod bul made
no commllments
ThiS th1rd source provtded no
detatls, say10g only that there have
been recent contacts
The prestdent os constdenng the
offer. sa1d the source tam1har woth
Clmton s ca.o;c add10g that the pres
1dent's lawyers had not responded to
the Jones otter
But a story 10 today s edmon ot
The New York Tomes cued one ot
Mrs Jones auorneys a' sayong Cion
ton s lawyer Roben Bennett reJect
ed an 1mtml offer before telephomng
Mrs Jones lawyers Wednesday to
ask tl they would conSider $500 000
Benneu and Mrs• Jones auorneys
could not be reached for comment
Benneu was quoted as saymg 10
today s Washmgton Post I m not
gomg to comment on that And I
don 1 know who on Eanh would be
saymg 1ha1 because they don 1know
what they re talkmg about
In Los Angeles Mrs Jones hus
band smd she s sttll seek10g an apol
ogy trom Chnton lor hts alleged 1991
sexual advances m a L11tle Rock hotel
room
Boll Chnton needs In lake
responstblhty for hiS acllons Steven
Jones sa1d He needs to grow up
He s 50 years old and he s acllng

Meigs announcements
IKES meeting
Me1gs County IKES regular meetmg Monday 7 p m at the IKES tarm
on Scout Camp Road With electton of otficen; Tmpshoot at 6 p m All mem
hers urged to attend
Speaker planned
Heather Sabne outreach and educauon specwltst for the Ohoo Consumers
Counsel woll speak at II am on Oct I at the Me1gs Counly Multtpurp&lt;&gt;se
Senoor Cenler She w1ll prov1de an over.oew olthe Columbta Gas Customer
CHOICE progmm and a general overvtew ot her agency She w1ll.tlso gtve
an update on electnc res1ruc1unng tn Ohto The pubhc IS InVIted

hke a school boy I mean hos hor Apnl 8 1998 however Jane Doe 5
mones are hke (lhose) of a 16 year slated to mvesllgators that thl"' atti
davll was talse There was no elab
old
In an mterv1ew hroadca'l Wednes oratiOn
Jane Doe 5 IS an Arkansas woman
day on Hard Copy Jones sa1d that
m loght ol Clinton s admtssH&gt;n ol an tden11fied last Mart:h tn coun papers
tnappmpnate rdatonnshop woth tor 10 wh1ch Mrs Jones auorneys satd
mer Wh1te House mtern Monu•.:a they had gathered ev odence suggesl
Lewmsky hiS wtte !eels somewhat mg Cltnton may have sexually
vmdtcatell bec.tUse she ts now lound assaulted her tn lhe late 1970s wh1le
he was slate auorney general The
more cred1ble
In adO:htton to bemg a matn focus court filing tncluded a 19'12 leuer m
of the cungre~s1unal unJ&gt;'!a~.;hn~nt whoch Phollop Davod Yoakum ot
cons1dera11on Clinton ' .u.hnt .. siOn Fayettevolle Ark an acquamtance ot
lha, he mtsled Mrs Jones lawyers the woman wrote to her about how
about hiS relatwnshtp wnh Ms she had supposedly conloded to htm
Lewmsky has re energtzed the1r ahoutthe •nc1den1
At the ttme Whtte House
appeal
The Jones case dogs Clinton m ~poke,man Jun Kc:nnc:dy "a1d the
other ways

Ac~.:on..hng

to documents

released Monday hy the House Jud1
uary Commtltee wh~eh "constder
mg an Impeachment mqutry another
woman bestdes Montca Lewmsky
has told lhe Otloce ol Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr that she It led
a false aft odav11 on Mrs Jones sexu
al harassment case
A summary ot the Jones case pre
pared by the prosecutors states that
on Jan 2 Jane Doe 5 Signed an alii
davot (wolh Mrs Jones attorneys} on
whoch she demed thai the preSident
made ·unwelcome sewal advances
toward me m the late sevent1es The
summ.try goes on to say that ' On

Boil order lifted
ATuppers Plams-Chester Water D1s1nc1 botl adviSory tmplemented Tuesday tor Mommg S1ar Mllchell R1eter Salser and Bowman s Run roads and
S1a1e Route 124 trom Maplewood Lake Road to Rae me tn Suuon Townshop
has been It !ted

EMS units record 7 calls
lilly AI

lah Col her treated at the scene Cen·
tral DISpatch squad .1ss1sted

2:10,6:00,
7:10,8:60

TUPPERS PLAINS
3 19 p m Arbaugh Lane Ruby
Kelly Camden-Clark Memonal Hos
pual,
4 35 p m Mam Street. Danny
Cnshp, St Josephs Hospital

lilly AI

2:10, 6:80,
7:10,8:60

Hospital news

(Publillled with permlllloa)

gallon ,m .Ill ol desperation .mU s.ud

the woman hall denocd tl und~r oath
Kennedy on Thur'd ty m,;ht rekrred
a repotter h.tl:k tu the -. tatl!ment I rum

M.orch
R1ll Wtiter' .o lowver lor the
wom.m ....uU

I don 1 want to make:

a cnmmenl one way or Ihe other We
have never admllled or dcmed .tny
thong She would love love love lo
be lell alone
There have heen severJI prcvtous
unsunesslul .lllt:mpts to negotl.tle a

seulemenltn Mrs

Jon~s

sutl

son Jackson satd We musl keep
(Contmued from Page 1)
I he taxpayers 01 JniS country pay that dream altve
for the health care coverage ot Newt
Gtngnch and Trent Lou Jackson
THRU
saod relerron~ 10 the leaders ol lhe
TOM HANKS IN
U S House and Senale Why should
SAVING
the taxpayers pay lor msurunce that s
PRIVATE
RYAN A
beuer th.tn that available to many ol
SPECIAL
SHOWTIME
7 00
them'
NO ONE UNDER 17
Jackson .llso urged polntcal
PERMITIED WITHOUT A PARENT
rnvnlvement on the part of
446-0923
Appalachia s workmg poor urgmg
lhem to vote tor c.tnlltdal~s Wtth the
mterests ot Appalachtans tn mmd
We tre keepmg uhve 1he dreams
of Dr Ktng Robert Kennedy John
Kennedy and Lyndon B.unes John

Rutland Garden Club
The Rutland Garden Club woll hold tis regular meetmg Monday I p m
at the home ot Paultne Atkms With Belly Lower) as hostess

Veterans Memorial
Thursday adm1ss•ons - Joseph
Bowland, Middleport
Thursday d1scharges - none
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept Z4 - Bobby
Crews, Earl McHenry, Larry
M1tchell. Jessie Jeffers
Birth - Mr and Mrs. Steve
McGhee. daughter. Oalltpolts.

l:harge Irom

Jackson explores issues

Casmo night
The Meogs Coun1y Chamber of Commerce woll hold CaSino Noght atlhe
Rtvertront Saloon on Oct I from 7-11 30 p m at the Pomeroy F1rehouse
AdmiSSIOn $15 For more 10format1on call the chamber of commerce at 9925005

Umts olthe Me1gs County Emer
gency Medtcal Servtce recorded sev
en calls for asststunce Thursday
Umts respondtng tncluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9 21 am South Founh Avenue
M1ddlepon Joe Bowland. Veterans
Memonal Hospttal Middleport
squad ass1s1ed,
II 47 am L1mburger Rodge.
R~dsv1lle. &amp;lith 0 Dell. VMH Tuppers Plams squad asststeO.
MIDDLEPORT
5 21 p m South Th1rd Avenue
Kathenoe Moore. VMH
RACINE
II 27 p m. State Route 124 L•l·
he McGee treated at the scene
RUTLAND
8 53~ m • McCumber Road. Beu-

t l:.~ls~

alleged rap! w ts

a poht1cal opponent ol the prestllenl
And Chnton s la"yer callell the aile

** • • • *• • • * • * • * •

.

c~.~.f.:

•

�Sports
"I
I

The· Daily Sentinel_
Page4 ;.
Friday, September 25, 1998 ·

Associated Preu Writer

: Miami of Ohio, which hasn't given up more than 13 point. in a game
this season, could see that streak
come to an end quickly Saturday
The RedHawks, one of two
unbeaten teams in the Mid-American
Conference, play their league and
home opener Saturday when Toledo
visit.&lt; Oxford
The Rockets feature a high-powered offense led by quarterback Chris
Wallace and two 1.000-yard rushers
in Wasean Tail and Dwayne Hanis .
. The good news for Miami eoach
Randy Walker is he finally ha&lt; current videotape of an upcoming oppo·
nenl.
Miam1 opened the season at North
Carolina, which was playmg its first
game under new coach Carl Torbush
Any footage from the Tar Heels'

Eckersley t1ed Hoyt Wilhelm for
most career appearances by a pucher at 1.070 when he relieved '" the
e•ghth. Boston's Mo Vaughn went 3for-5 to mch ahead of New York's
Bern1e W1lliams in the battmg race.
.3344 to .3340.
Yankees S, Devil Rays 2
At New York, Spencer hu htS fifth
homer 10 hiS last 17 at-bats for the
Yankees.
The ~6-year-old rook1e has II hits
and 15 RBis durmg that stretch,
10cluding hiS fi rst career grand slam
last Fnday at Baltimore.
The Yankees mo"ed 63 games
O\'er 500 for the first time since the
end of the 1927 season and beat the
expan siOn De1•il Rays for the e1ghth
SAFE AT SECOND - The Minnesota TWins' Oils
Nixon Is safe at second base as Cleveland shortstop Omar Vlzquel gets the late throw from fl1'11t after
walks.

Matt Lawton's groundout In the f11'11t Inning of Thursday night's American League game In Minneapolis,
where the TWins won 2-0. (AP)

his first of the season. as the Angels
scored fi"e in the first. T1m Salmon
had an RBI double and Troy Glaus
added an RBI s10gle 10 the inning
DiSarcina, wHo entered the game
10 an 0-for-10 drought, went 5-for-5
with three s10gles and a pair of RBI

Angels 10, Athletics 6
At Oakland, Gary DiSarcina had
five hits and two RBis. and Darin
Erstad added three run-scoring
groundouts for Ana~eim
Todd Greene hit a two-run homer.

doubles.
Royals 6, White Sox 4
Dean Palmer tied George Brett for
the second-best RBI total in Kansas
City history as the Royals ended ·
Ch1cago's 11-game winning streak at
Kauffman Stadium.

Giants' 6-2 win closes gap in NL wild card race to one game
By ROB GLOSTER

SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Minutes after the San Frdnc1sco Gmnts
completed a four-game sweep of the
Pittsburgh Ptrat,•s. stadium workers
began dismantling the outfield fences
to prepare for a 49ers football game
this weekend.
The Giants hope those fences will
have to be put back up next week.
The 6-2 wm Thursday pulled San
FranCISCO within one game of 1dle
New York and Chicago tn the NL
wild-card chase. increastng the
chances the Giants w1ll play agam at
home thts year.
Barry Bonds and three teammates
hit solo homers as the resurgent
Gtants, playing their la.'t scheduled
home game of the season. set up a
w1ld weekend tn the r.u:c for the final
playoff spot
San FranciSCO. the Mets and the
Cubs all fimsh w1th three games on
the road. The Giants visit Colorado
(76-83) beginmng tomght. wh1le the
Mets play at East champion Atlant.!!

( 103-56) and the Cubs play at Cen- burgh smce July 1985
tral champion Houston (100.59)
When the G1ants returned home a
" I couldn't pick two finer cities week ago after losmg two of three at
for them to play in. Hopefully, lowly Anzona. they were demoralAtlanta and Houston will play well." ized and five games back in the loss
Giants manager Dusty Baker said. column in the w1ld-card race
"We're one step closer Hopefully.
"Everyone wrote us off Those
we can take that final step in Col- were crucml los&lt;es in Anzona. But
orado."
nobody wanted to go out as a loser."
The Gmnts moved within one Aunha said " We're happy w1th the
game of the Wild-card lead for the way we're play10g right now, and
first lime s10ce Sept. 8
we ' re happy wuh our position headBonds hll his 37th homer and Joe mg mto the weekend."
Carter, R1ch Aur~ha and p1tcher Russ
Bond~ homered in the first AurilOniz also connected for solo home la htt his ntnlh and On1z hit his first
runs
maJor league homer in the second,
"Thts is what baseball " all about and Carter led off the mth with his
This ts the tun part," said Carter. who 17th homer of the sea.o;on
Carter had a sacrifice Oy and J T
" ret~r~ng at the end of the season
"We stili have three games lett. and Snow had an RBI single as the
we're lookmg for somethtngexcitmg Giants added two runs in the se•enth
Oniz (4-4) allowed one run on
to happen It's gmng to come down
to the very last Jay. I guarantee 11." four hits before leaving the game
The Gianls won for the seventh after five innings because of lower
11me in eight games. They got their back tightness.
first four-game sweep of the sea.~on
Tony Womack had a sacrifice Oy
and their f1rst-at horne against Pins- 10 the fifth and Doug Str.mge had a

run-sconng groundout 10 the eighth
for the Pirates. who have lost five
straight and eight of nine. Pittsburgh
has lost 22 of 27 game&lt; s10ce a ninegame wmnmg streak in late August.
Elmer Dessens (2-6) allowed four
runs on seven h1ts 10 5 213 inn10gs.
He ts 0-4 as a starter thiS season, and
0-6 in e1ght maJor league stans in the
la~t three seasons.
" Dessens JUst wasn't very crisp,"
P1rates manager Gene Lamont said.
"He needs to have control and he
d1dn 't have it today "
Pittsburgh lost us 90th game, the
forst 11me the P~rates have lost that
many since going 64-91! in 1986.
Lamont said the Giants are playing the best olthe three teams vying
lor the w1ld-card spot. but adJed they
st1ll face a dauntmg task
"If there wa• only one team ahead
of them. their chances would be better." he said. "With two teams ahead
of them. it's tough."
In other games. St Louis beat
Montreal 6-3 and Los Angeles defeat-

ed Milwaukee 4-1. The game at M1a·
mi between Philadelphia and Flonda
was postponed because of Hurncane
Georges
Cardinals 6, Expos 3
Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa
are all even - 11ed at 65 home runs
with three games left
McGw1re went 1-for-3 with a
walk, leaving him 2-for-10 - both
singles - m his last three games
McGw1re finiShes w1th the weekend
at home against Montreal wh1le Sosa
and the Cubs v1sit Houston.
Ray Lankford had four h1ts,
10cluding hiS 31 sr homer, and drove
10 lour runs Brian Jordan also homered as St. LoUis won for the seventh
time to eight games.
Expos manager Fehpe Alou
pledged that hiS p1tchers would challenge McGwire. Javier Vazquez (5·
IS) looked a bit skllt1Sh in the li"'t
10ning when he walked McGw1re on
four pitches. but the rook1e struck out
the slugger in h1s next at-bal.

Dodgers 4, Brewers I
Milwaukee's Steve Wwdard took
a perfect game btd 1010 the seventh
10ning before Roger Cedeno homered. and Los Angeles won at Dodger
Stad1um.
Woodard. 1-7 10 hts previous moe
stans, look sh.1rp 10 retiring the first
II! bailers. Cedeno h1t hts tirst home
run since Aug 16. 1997.
Woodard allowed nne hll m seven inntngs. Chad Fox (1 .4) reheved
to stan the e1ghth and Los Angeles
took at.lvantage of first haseman

Mark Loretta's two etTors to s.:ure
three runs
Phillles-Marlins postponed
With
Hurncane
Georges
approaching Flonda, the game
between the Marhns and Philadelphia
was postpuned and rescheduled as
pan of a doubleheader Saturday.
If tonight's game is also post-·
poned. the teams Will try to lintsh the
"eason With con secu11vt doubleheade"'.

Sosa puts Cubs' quest for NL wild-card berth ahead of homer chase
I

By NANCY ARMOUR
MILWAUKEE (AP) - One
weekend. Three games.
After 65 home run hops, countless
chest thumps and kisses to his moth·
er. Sammy Sosa 's spectacular season
has come down to 72 hours. It 's wmner take ali, in both the home run
chao;e and the NL wtld-card race. and
Sosa ts ready.
"We need to go to Houston nnd
remember only one thing: The last
three days we' re going to find out if
we're gomg ro make it. yes or no."
he said.
Sosa broke out of hts worst slump

of the season Wednesday by h1Umg
two solo home runs to lle Mark MeGwire at65 . McGwtre usually answers
nghl back, but he was homerless
Wednesday and Thursday.
The St. Louis Cardinals have
three games remaming. all at Busch
Stadium, where McGw1re has hit 33
home runs. The Cubs play thetr three
games at the Houston Astros, who
gave up three homers to Sosa in a
seven-day span last month. Jose
L1ma. who gave up two of the home
runs, is scheduled to pitch today.
Let McGwire swing for the
fences. Sosa said. He's chas10g some-

thmg even more tmponant than the
home run tttle.
"When you're trying to go to the
playoffs. you· re never thinkmg ahout
home runs." he said.
The Cubs and New York Mets are
lied for the lead in the NL w1ld-card
mce, but San Fmnc1sco won again
Thursday and is now just a game
back. The Mets are at Atlanta thts
weekend. wh•le the Gtants VISit Colorado
Chicago had a chance to add to us
lead Wednesday, but the Cubs blew
a 7-0 lead and M•lwaukee scored
three runs when Brant Brown

dropped what w,,._.;j have been the
linal out for an H-7 victory
" Everybody that plays this game
doesn't want to make a mtstake, but
as a human being, as a person,
nobody 's perfect." Sosa said "(That
game) is over for us. so we'•e got to
go to Houston and try to play much
better"
At least Sosa doesn't have to worry about hts slump anymore. After
h1rting a gmnd slam for No. 63 on
Sept 16. he went 0-for-21 and said he
hadn 't fell so bad at the plate all sea-

gorng well. Sosa tried everything On make much bener contact."
Sosa has tended to go on home run·
Tuesday night he switched bats three
times in hopes of changing hiS kar- binges thts season. and he and hiS
teammates are hoping the two against
ma. Nothmg
On Wednesday. he found a lucky Milwaukee were the stan of another
bat. After walking twice. he hit home frenzy.
" We want to be playmg in Octo·
runs in the fifth and sixth innings
That ga•e htm 12 agamst the Mil- ber. and Sammy's helping us ro get to
waukee Brewers. his most against that point" Cubs manager J1m Rigany team.
gleman said. " It's a tremendous thmg
"The two home runs that 1 hit, 11 that he's doing. "
IS a good Sign. I feel great." he sa•ll.
Sosa IS well aware 1&gt;f how much
"I had great concentration at the is at stake this weekend. H11 a few
home plate and I wa~ being really out. get some help from the rest of the
palient. When I'm hke that. I have Cubs and he could end up on hiS way
more opportunity, more chances to to the playoffs as the Home Run

son .

Superstitious even when thmgs are

Scoreboard
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16

Baseball

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Transactions

Thursday'• scores

Bntnd
1998 Chevy
Aatro Convention Van

Brand New 1998
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• VIall Bay WlndOWI
• 4 Clptlln Clltllrs

• 4300 Voii'IC V-t Power

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men and neophytes scra!ching their

DELAWARE. Ohio (API - Mike
Lachance sa1d it wasn't a bad dect·
SIOn - it was JUSt wrong.
Lachance dumped Triple Crown
candidate Shady Character to dn ve
another horse 1n the final of the Lit·
rle Brown Jug Thursday and it cost
him dearly when Ron Pierce drove
Shady Character ro victory.
For the second time m three years.
Lachance had hiS cho1ce of two of the
top horses in a Little Brown Jug final
- and again came away with a nag.
Shady Character led w1re to w1re
to collect hiS second of pacmg 's
Triple Crown events The Delaware
County-born three-year-old needs a
•icrory Oct 16 at the Messenger
Stakes at The Meadows to become
pacing's ninth Triple Crown winner
and collect a $250,000 bonus.
Lachance chose to drive Artiscape
- who d1dn 't even win his elimination - in the final instead of going
with favored Shady Character. It
was a deciston that left •eteran horse·

"It was JUSt my decision 11nd it's
not a bad one," Lachance said. "I JUst
thought that neither one of the horses was going to win the second heat
anyway. I thought Browmng Blue
Chip was going to be the best horse.
And I was wrong."
Shady Charncter, startmg from the
No. 2 post position. opened fast with
a time of 25.8 second.' in the first
quarter-mile. He held off Cam Knows
Best and Day In A Life to win by a
head in I :52.6.
"I didn't think he could go 11 tough
quaner hke that and cut the mile and
sttll win the race." said Lachance.
who finished founh by a length with
Aniscape.
The victory gave trainer Brett
Pelhng a sweep of ali four Jug rooes
before 52.K02 at the Delaw11re County Fatrgrounds.
.
The victory- Shady Character's
ntnlh in 16 stans this sea'on- paid
$224.933 to owners Sanford and

head~.

Corinne Goldfarb of Old Westbury.
N.Y., and pullhe horse over $1 million in earnings this sea.&lt;;On.
"That's the greatest day tn rdctng
in my life," Sanford Goldfarb satd.
Two years ago. Lachance won
eliminations behind Ftrm Behef and
Arrnbro Operdtive, then wa.~ con·
tractually obligated by Bnuany
Fanns to stay with Firm Belief in the
final.
That proved to be a mistake, with
Firm Belief fading to ninth whtle
Jack Moiseyev JUmped in the sulky
late to drive Armbro Operative to the
victory.
This time, Lachance was not tied
to either horse.
In the heat format utilized by the
Jug. the winner is the horse that wins
the final- if it also has won an eltminlltion. If not, winners of the three
eliminations and the final come back
in a raceoff. with the winner taking
the Jug.
By selecting Aniscape, he needed
to win the final and a mceoff. He also

would have 10 defeat Cam Knows
Best - who already had beaten
Artiscape in the third elimrnationtwice tn the span of an hour.
II was akin to the Chicago Bulls
forfeitinJ! three games in the NBA
Finals because they thought they had
a beuer chance ol winning the title in
Gnme7.
''It's like I'm dreaming," Pterce
satd.
He was set to drive lnaugurdl Ball
in the final . But then Pelling came up
and offered Shady Chamcter.

Ari1.os11 fB Andrt·

shall.
Kent 10-3. 0-0) travels to Central
Michigan (1 -1. 0-1 ).
Golden Fla.~hes ' recetver Eugene
Baker caught 12 passes for 227 yards
and two touchdowns Saturday to a
38-24 loss at Navy. Baker now has
211 career recepuons and is closing
10 on the NCAA record of 266 held
by Pac•lic's Aaron Turner. who set
the mark from 1989-92
Central M1ch1gan was 1dle last
week.
Bowhng Green (0·2, 0-0) is the
only MAC team not playmg a league
game Saturday. The Falcons play a
home game agamst Central Florida
and Hei sman Trophy contender
Daunte Culpepper
Culpepper ha., thrown for 1.144
yards and eight touchdowns in three
games thiS season

NBA executives, players' union
wait to see who will move next

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP)- Exhibition
games are bein~ canceled and tmining ramp' have been postponed
10delimtely Today. 1t's up to the
un1on to decide if the NBA owners
are serums about JUmp-stanmg collerli\'e hargaining talks
"We're waiting to hear had from
them on whetherthere'sany point to
ha•ing another meetmg." deputy
ten Chevalier 2-2 with one.
commissioner Russ Granil said
In spiking, Brannon also had a Thursday after the league canceled 24
great night with an 11-15 effon and presem~on games.
six kills. while sophomore Bailey
Granik. commissioner David
pounded 10-14 across for five ktlls. Stern. umon d.rector B1lly Hunter
Karr was 8-9 w1th four ktlls and stx and umon prestdent Patrick Ewmg of
blocks and Ang1e Wolfe 8·9 wllh two the New York Knicks met Wednesktlls. Alison Rose wa.' 2·2 With a k11i. day for one hour. their first sit-down
Kurr, Brannon and Batley each m seven &lt;~·eeks
had five digs. Michelle Buckley
Both s1de' have agreed to keep the
three. Sande"' srx and Wolfe six
substance of that discussion a secret.
Hayman had another great noor But since the owners walked out of
(28-37 wuh seven assists and one the last formal session. the onus
dtnk) as the Hayman-E•ans tandem would seem to be on them to put
agam recorded some great stats. something new on the table.
Evans was 21 -26 settrng wuh five
The union. wh1ch i1o1S refused to
assists and two dinks. Krtsten Cheva- hsten to any proposal including ,,
lier was Il-lS wrth four, asststs and "hard" salary cap. spent Thursday
two drnks
diScussing its options. They must
Eastern won the reserve game IS· dec1de if the owners are going to
8 and IS-4 to go 9-0 on the year
show some movement. or if it would
Eastern coach Don Jackson satd. be more beneficial tn await the out·
" We played a very long second game come of the guaranteed contracts
and got out of posttion at t,t mes. but rnevance heanng before arbitr.ttor
handled 11 very well . We pulled John Feenck.
through a very tough week "
If the union helieves progress can

Eastern volleyball teams record
doubleheader sweep against Miller
Eastern's varsity volleyball team.
mnked 15th in the state tn this week's
coach's poll. defeated Miller 15- 12
and 15-10 Thursday night to remain
undefeated in nine games. Eastern ts
9,.0 and Miller is 4-7 on the season.
On Monday, Sept. 28, Eastern will
play Alexander. which is tied with
Meigs for the Ohio Dtvision crown at
7-lleague and 9-3 overall.

Eastern was led by JesSica Brannon who hammered an 18-21 serving
mght into a four ace, 14-point performance Juli Hayman was 9-11
with four pomts. Valerie Karr was 88 w1th four points. Stephanie Evans
6· 7 with an ace and three points, Juli
Bailey 7-9 with an ace and two
points. Angi Wolfe 4-5 with one,
Leah Sanders 2-2 with one and Kris-

Waterford spikers bea~
Southern in three games

"Right then, I knew I had a pret- who would dnve Shady Character 10
ty good chan.:e to wm my fiN Jug," the Messenger.
he said.
Shady Character won the lirst
Lachance remams one behtnd Bil- ehmma11on 10 I:53 2. com10g off the
l¥ Haughton's record of five Jug vtc · rdllto take the lead near the quaner
tories.
pole and wmmng by four lengths
The Jug completed a two-day
Browmng Blue Ch1p, w1th John
sweep for Pelling. On Wednesday, hiS Campbell in the b1ke. won the second
horses won both elimmat1ons aod the elimmation. wuh Cam Knows Best
final of the Jugeue for three-year-old outdueling favored An1scape down
the stretch to the third ehmmauon.
filly pacers.
" It's not the end of the world."
"It's an unbehevable feelmg,"
Lachance said. "You' ve got to be
Pelling said.
In the wake of Lachance's dect· able to tum the page 10 anyth10g you
sion. Pelling said he was uncenam do 10 l1fe."

League cancels exhibliton games, suspends training camps

Southern dropped two very tough er game. Fallon Roush had eight kills,
games 10 Waterford Thursday night Kat1 Cummins had five and and Kim
as the Tornadoes dropped thetr &lt;ec- lhle seven.
ond tough game thiS w~ek. The three
Southern's reserves won 15·6 and
game match went 15-3 Southern, 15-1 after dropping !he first game 2then 16-14 and 15-10 Waterford.
15. Emily Stivers led with 12,
Coach Howie Caldwell said, "The Rachel Allen seven, Tammy Fryer
la.'t two games, thiS is the worst I've six, Macyn Ervin four and Stacy
had any team play smce Wellston of M11is four.
last year. I'm very disappointed."
K1m Sayre led Southern wuh II
Waterford edges Southern golfers in Hocking match
points. Kara Kmg had eight Stacy
Lyons live, Kat1 Cummins eight. Kim
Eastern scores were Enc Smith's
At Arrowhead golf course near strong 38 on the par 36 course to
lhle two and Sarah Brauer one.
38. Aamn Wtll's 42. King\ 45, Nel·
Waterford. the Southern Tornado push Waterford to a strong lead .
. . Tonya Neill led Waterlord with Golf team finished second in its best
Southern scores were Chris Ran- son\ 46, Josh Will's 47 and John
12. Wainwright had eight, T. Forshey outing of the year. droppm~ the con- dolph's 41 , Bill Coe's 43. Kyle Nor- W1il's 54.
~ve, J. King five and R. Hicke,.on
ns' and Mttchell Walker's 44s. Bentest to league leadmg Waterford.
f®r.
W;aterford claimed the match with jl Manuel's 47 andTmy Hoback's 49.
: ; Sayre wa' H8-89 setting, gomg 35- .1 163 overall. Southern was second
Eastern scores were Man King's
~ in one game and 39-39 in anoth·
w1th a In. Trimble third With 173. 40. Aaron Will's 44, Justin Brewer's
Eastern fourth at 177, M1ller filth at 45. Chad Nelson\ and Eric Smith's
177 and Federul Hockmg mth w1th 4Ks and Bradley Brannon's 59.
Waterford wins
In the prev10us match, Southern
a 190.
For
the
year.'
Waterford
lead
the
tim
shed third w1th a ISS to Water·
interdivision Hockmg Dtvision of the Tn-Valley lord's
146. Tnmble's 153 and EastConf~rence w1th 44 pomts. followed
ern 's 171.
~olf tournament
by Tnmble. 35, Southern. 28: EastSouthern scores were Hoback's
. Hock1ng D.-iSion champnm ern. 12: M11ier, 10: and Federal 36. Manuel's 37, Walker's 39, Randolph's 44, Joe Comell's43 and NorWaterlord won the fi"'t annual TVC Hocking. 6.
Casey Lang of Waterford shot a ns's 45.
interd1visi110al Golf Tournament
Wednesd,ay at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason. W.Va.
· The tournament featured the top
three teams of the Ohio Division. und
putlhem up against the top teams of
ihe Hocking Division. The bottom
ihree teams of the two divisions
played at Oxbow Golf dub nenr Belpre Results of that tournament were
unavailable.
Waterford won the tournament
with a score of 31 S. followed by
!VIetgs w1th a 327. Ohio Division
Champion Wellston was close behind
with a 328. followed by Trimble
(348).Aiexander (352) and Southern

be made. formal collerlll'e hargaiOing talks could resume next week
"We're ready to meet tomght. 1f
we can. to resume bargammg."
Gramk satd
The league on Thursdqy
announced an mdelinote postpone ment of tr.uning camps and canceled

(367).

· Jon McDOnald of Wellston fired a
ooe o•er par 71 to take home medllli"'t honor over the 18 hole Riverside

I I It I

I I ' I I I ' ' II I ' ' '

I '

:

II

•

'

'. '

II

I' '

I

' '

' '

.

'

:• •

Nick Dettwiller. who led Meigs
with a 79, was followed by Zilch
Meadows' 81. Jared Woods' 82.
Tammy Roush's 85. Carson Midlcltrs 94 and Thad Bumgardner's 96.
. For Southern. Kyle Norris had a
gQOCI round of 88 to lead the way.
Ot~ Tornado scores were Troy
HOback's 91 , Joe Cornell's 93, Chris
Rindolph 's 95. Mitchell Walker's 99
and Benji Manuel's 101.

......... .

'

hold ,,hbrel'latcd camps .llld get ready
lnr

~• ~easnn

The league unposed the lndnut
July I .liter the Sllb l.nled th wme
tn term' on a new collective hargammg

.tgrecm~nt

The owncP\ h.td

the nghttn rt•open the dc.11111he percentage ol h.tsketb.tll -relatcd mwme
l't1ur t.l~t)''\ • worth tlf e'lhlhttmn game' de1 ntcd to pl;tyer ,,,lane' cxccetkll
51 X percent
Oct ll-16
Owner' '·'Y th.tl pcn.·cnt.tgc h.t ...
Among the ~4 games were neu·
traJ-,ite contests 10 Syr:•cu,c. N Y . "'en .1hmc 57 percent
.. The owner' ,1rc all nn thl' o,;;unc
Albany. NY : Winston-Salem. N C.:
page."
Gr;uHk s;ud. diSnH ssmg 1.1lk
Green Bay. W" : Honolulu: Ruflaln
th.ll
then~
ts .1 core ol at ICil\l ceght
N Y ·Huntsville. Ala . and Balt•mnre
If the thsputc lasts p.ISI the first nwne" who would p1de1 to 1111" the
week ol Octnher. 11 seems certatn the enltfl' I'NX-l)t) \C,t\011 "The .tgrce- ·
le.1gue w11i he lorceu tn cancel regu- ment h,,, to he 'omcthmg thai mat..~ ,
lar srason games hec:mse of a work

lollg ·tcrm

stoppage lor the first time 10 its hiS·

""Nohlllly 11 ants to Ill I" the whole
st:a"'4-m. hul there arc ~ lJ 0\'1. ncr' tiM!
~trl' wJIIcng to do 'n 11' thl'y h,,, c to:·
Gr;uuk ,,,Ill

tory

The regular season Is scheduled to
begin No\'. 3. and teams Will need
about four weeks to &lt;~gn players.

C:COIHHlliC 'il'll'C ..

-----Sports briefs-----Golf
COLOGNE, Germ.my tAP) Cohn Montgomene. V.10 Ph1lPp'
and PGA champ1on V•Jay Slllgh 'hot
7-under-p;ir 65s to share the lirst ·
rountl lead at. the Genn.m M."lers.
Lee Westwmd. Sven Strue\ er.
R•ch,lfd Box all . l,m G.~rhull .md ),If·
mn Samlchn were ont: strok!.! b.u.:k .11

t\-untler-66 Darren Cl,~rke was lmn
hark at 69. ,,long w1th ddendmg
c h~1mp1nn Rc:rniMrd Lmger
Tennis
TOKYO f API - Tnp-,ecucd
Arant;(" S.uu:het- Vu.·.trw ht..·.11 Elcn.1
Likhovts&lt;\'a 6-0, 6-4 to .101 ancc to
the quartcrhn.•ls of the Tnyot.l

SATURDAY, OCT. 3
Registration 9 A.M.
HELD AT DON TATE CHEVROLET LOT

~-

Tonlaht'• pmes

Ph 1 l:ade l~ua cSch1lhni

last-second field goal from Billy
Malashevich to gel pa&lt;t the Gamecocks.
Oh1o quarterback Kareem Wtlson
and running back Steve Hookfin
could both become the school's allttme leadmg rusher when the Bobcats
(0-3, 0-0) visit Western Michigan ( J.
I, 1-2) on Saturday.
Wilson needs just 74 yards and
Hookfin ha.~ 85 to go to break the
Ohio record of 2.929 yard~ held by
lim Cun1s. who played for the Bobcats from 199C-93.
Western had won stx consecuuve
MAC games before losing to Toledo.
Ball State (0-3. 0-1) ts another
team looking for tts first wm. The
Cardinals, commg otT a 38-0 shutout
at Iowa .&gt;tate. play at Akron ( 1- 1. 01) Saturday ntght.
Akron's only loss was to defending Eastern Dmsion champton Mar-

. Fantasy Photo will

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f'IJIII~U:'ipm

NL standings

ftl()

(Cont IIJ..7 t. .f~05

S,1n

C'll VELAND ~ • Mmno:'&gt;~lta ~ i ~ p m
Anahl'-1111 ar 0.1kl,md 4 U\ fl m
Tr .u ~ a1 Srartlr -l l'i p m

By RUSTY MILLER

rvc

lllarn11d1 ll · 71 I I 'I f'llll

K alt unutl~

scorn

!kutllt '\

Saturday's games

Sunday's regular-soason finales

"He's a really special player,"
games under former coach Mack
Armour, a senior linebacker, leads
Brown wasn't going to do Walker Walker said. "He is as dangerous the team with 24 tackles. including 16
with the unonhodox a.~·he is with the solo, and was the MAC defensive
much good.
Next up for Miami was Army. conventional. He makes 11101 of plays player of the week after the North
Carolina game.
which was playing its season open- on the move, out of the pocket."
er. Once again, no video.
"JoJuan Armour is the best defenThe Rockets are averaging 194.3
Now it's Toledo. the defending passing yards per game. Take away sive player in this league. We're
MAC Western Division Champion !he Ohio State game - a 49-0 loss going to see him play on Sundays
picked by many to repeat and win the in which Wallace completed just next year," Toledo coach Gary Pinkel
conference. The Rockets are 2-1 three passes for ju.~t seven yards and satd. "He's a great athlete w1th phewith the only loss coming at No. I had five passes intercepted- and the nomenal quickness. I'll be glad to see
him graduate."
Ohio State.
average JUmps to 288 yards.
Marshall (3~ overall, I~ MAC),
Toledo is also a threat to run the
"Now we have seen Toledo on
tape and have a preuy good idea of ball. Tail, who rushed for a MAC· corning off a 24-21 win at South Carwhat they are going to do." Walker record 1.905 yards in 1995 befo~ sit- olina. is the MAC's other unbeaten
tmg out nearly all the 1996 season team. The Thundering Herd travels to
said.
That would be pass the ball - a and la~t year with a knee injury, is Eastern Michtgan. which lost to
lot.
bllck. So is Hanis. who rushed for defending national champinn Michigan on Saturday 59-20 despite outWallace tied his own school more than 1,000 yards last sea.wn.
record with five touchdown pas.o;es in
Miami. led by last year's MAC gaining the Wolverines 424-41 H.
a 35-7 win over Western Michigan defensive player of tlie year JoJuan Walt Church completed 32 of 42
last week. He wa.~ 17 pf 30 for 284 Annour. is giving up just217 .5 total pmes for 343 yards for the Eagles.
The Thundering Herd needed a
yards per game and 11 .5 pomts.
yards .

STERNWHEEL REGATTA CAR &amp; MOTORCYCLE SHOW

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AL standings
• ·Nc\1. Yn.t
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Turnnln

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.11

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Shady Character wins Little Brown Jug; Lachance gets nag

t1me m nme games.

Rangers 9, Mariners 3
At Seattle, Te.as pounded 15 hits,
including eight for extra bases, and
took advantage of nine walks ISsued
by Manners pitchers.
Royce Clayton went 3-for-4 w1th
two RBis for Texas.
Sele ( 19-11) allowed three runs
and e1ght hits in stx innmgs. Seattle's
Mac Suzuk1 (1-2) lasted only 2 1/3
innings 10 his fifth major league stan,
allowing five run.s on SIX hits and four

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Miami to host Toledo in MAC football headliner Saturday
By DOUG ALDEN

Yankees beat Devil Rays 5-2,
erase record of 1927 club
Eckersley tied the record for most
By The Associated Press
h wa&lt;a noleworthy noght for three career appearances by a p1tcher as
Boston earned lis first playoff berth
of the AL's top teams
The Boston Red Sox clinched the tn three years .
w1ld card, the Texas Rangers clinched
" h 's a small step. We understand
a lte for the West title and the New that," Garc1aparra said. "There's st1ll
York Yankees !ted the league record a postseason to play."
Ivan Rodriguez h1t his career-h1gh
for v1ctones 1n a season.
Rookie Shane Spencer h1t a grand 21 &lt;1 homer and Aaron Sele won hts
slam a&lt;New York beat Tampa Bay 5- 19th game as Texas chnched a 11e for
2 Thursday night for its lllth win, the AL West IItie by beating Seattle
mntchtng the AL mark set by the 9-3
1954 Cleveland Indians and breaking
The Rangers. coming off a threethe team record estabhshed by the game sweep of Anaheim, lead the
1927 Yankees.
Ang&lt;ls by three games with three
"To me. the Yankees record " remainmg Anaheim stayed alive
more important than the American w1th a I0-6 victory over Oakland earLeague record." sa1d manager Joe her 1n the noght
"It doesn 't matter how 11 happens
Torre. whose team ha.&lt; three games
left agamst Tampa Bay to set the AL a&lt; long as we do 11," sa1d Rangers
record. "We' ve made our place in manager Johnny Oates
In other AL games, Kansas City
hiStory. The '27 club is the standard
beat Ch1cago 6-4 and Minnesota
everyone goes by."
While the Yankees chnched a defeated Cleveland 2-0
Red Sox 9, Orioll" 6
playoff spot on Aug. 29, the Red Sox
At Boston. Pedro Martinez (19-7)
didn't secure their postseason berth
unttl Thursday night's 9-6 v1ctory won for the first t1me '" live starts
despite givmg up three homers.
over Baltimore.
Gordon p1tched a perfect ninth to
Nomar Garciaparra homered
set
the record for consecutive saves.
tw1ce and scored four runs. Tom GorHe
had
shared the mark of 4 l straight
don set a maJor league record with his
42nd consecutive save and Dennis w1th Rod Beck and Trevor Hoffman

Friday, September 25, 1998

~.

taking pictures

Cup S:.mchci -Yil.lrtn Will
~ Ann.1 Kounuko\ .1, \\ ho
beat W.m~ Sh1·tung (&gt;-11. 6-4 In oth er m.lllhl'"i . Olg.a B;.~J-.ahan,Lht"(lV &lt;J
be.1t No -1 [)onumque V.m R""' "\ ,
6. 6-.1. 7-5. ;1nu No 7 Anke Huber
chmmatcd L1 f'.mg 7-5. 6-3
Pnlll' C\'i

l.1t:c No

�By The Bend

The, Daily Sentinel
Page&amp;
Friday, September 25, 1998

·Ann and reader battle over effect of husband's unfaithfulness on children
because one of lhe partner.; (usually
lhe husband) had committed adulAnn
lery. The emorional loll il takes on
the children is agonizing. In the besl
Landers
!'N7, (.,., Ant:-:loo Tilllrlo
cases. the full recovery of rhe mariSy n..l1~·-"~ ~n.J Crt"ai•'"
tal relationship lakes lwo years. and
Syno.l!O;;UC
in that time. lhe children are neglected. confused. hurt and afraid. If
Dear Ann Landers: I have been there is a si ngle incident of adultery
reading your column for 23 years. and not a long-lerm affair. recovery
and most of the time. I view your is more likely. Repetitive affairs or a
advice as sound and balanced. I did lenglhy extramarital relationship nol
not agree with you, however, when only destroys the self-respect of the
you said a man could be "a lousy wife but. far worse, will almosl
husband and a great father." I speak guarantee the same behavior in the
from the perspective of a son, hus- children when they marry.
band, mini ster and father of 23
I agree with "L.D. from Housyears.
ton," who said if the adultery will
As a minister, I have counseled nol stop, throw him out. The woman
many couples who were suffering who finds the courage to tell her

children that "!here are some lhings
that are absolutely wrong and will
not be tolerated" will find the necessary slrength and means to survive
without him .
If a man cannol love the mother
of his children, how great a father
can he be 0 Sorry. Ann. you need 10
rethink your advice on lhi s one. -Pa~tor Paul in Buffalo, Texas
Dear Pastor Paul: My pastor
friends point our thai human beings,
by nature. are complex and
inscrutable. Of course, adultery is
poisonous to any marriage. whether
il leads to divorce or nol. Children.
however. slill can receive lhe nurturing care they need and deserve from
parents in a nawed marriage. so
don ' I counl out I hose parents

because of the sins of lhe falher or
mother.
Dear Ann Landers: I just read
on the Interne! about a new law that
affects all veterans. The law says
that if a veteran has nol registered at
a Veterans Affairs office or hospilal
since Oct. I. 1996, he or she will
lose all medical benefils for life as of
Oct. I, 1998. The information also
said thai VA cannot notify veterans
about it directly and vets have to
hear about it word of mouth.
This could really be a problem
for a lor of veterans. Ann. Please
check it oul and rell me if it is true . -·
- Tim in Orlando, Fla.
Dear Tim: This is a warning to
all my readers. Do not believe
everything you read on lhe Internet.

avai lable funding . Those veterans
who have received health-care services since Oct. I, 1996, will automatically have enrollment applicarions processed on their behalf.
Vererans Affairs is encouraging
all velerans lo apply for enrollment
by calling. writing or visiting !heir
neare•l VA heallh-care facility. To
find the nearest facility. call the VA
Regional Office at 1-800-827 -I000.
Gem of the Day: One of the best
tests of religion is when you lind
you rse lf in church with nothing
smaller 1han a $20 bill.

The "problem" you cited for "a lot
of veterans" does not exist. We
called the Departmenl of Veterans
Affairs and got the correct informalion:
The new law requires Veterans
Affairs lo eslablish an enrollmenl
system for health-care services by
Ocl. I of this year. Velerans musl be
enrolled in the new system in order
to receive heallh-care .-ervices. but
!hey do NOT have to do this by Oct.
I. Veterans can apply for enrollment
anytime.
VA is now processing applications. Acceptance letters are going to
veterans in lhe order of the priorities
eslablished by Congress. VA will
make a decision every year on how
many veterans it can enroll based on

Apostolrc

Church of Chrrst

Churdlof Jesus Cbrlll Apootolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Evening - 7_:30 p.m.
Serv1ces-

Pomeroy Chur&lt;h of Clorlst
212 W. Main St.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Westside Chur&lt;h of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.

Holiness

Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

3 1057 State Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Or. J.D. Young

Middleport Church of Chrill

Sundoy school ·9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- !0:30a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

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

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services. 10:00 a . ~ . and 7 p.m. •

Simple Faith of Children
By Bonnie Shiveley
Devotional Writer

Uncle Wayne and Aunt Bonnie like to spend time with our
"children" who live in Columbus. We have "adopted" them in
heart and mind. not legally. Lauryn, 9. Bethany. 7. and Jonathan,
4, visit often. We Jove to hike. One one of those excursions, we
filled a huge bottle with ice water, packed some snacks, and
picked up the sturdy sassafras walking sticks that Uncle Wayne
has made for us.
We headed for Indian Mound Reserve Park between Xenia
and Cedarville. Naturally. we took Native American names and
became an imaginary family as we explored the woods and
climbed the 62 steps to the top of a dirt mound. "Were the bodies of ancient Indians buried here." we wondered.
Next, we crossed a wooden bridge and tramped along the top
of a late 19th-century paper mill levee. Uncle Wayne boosted the
little ones up a steep hill. On we marched, crossing a small
bridge over a ravine. To add a little drama, Aunt Bonnie slipped
on a rock and nearly slid over a high cliff overlooking the creek.
The energy-filled siblings hopped and skipped through the
woods until we discovered a long narrow bridge with a great
view of a high watet:fall.
This family of "Indians" scampered downhill to the lower
trail along the creek until we came to a big log. Resting our
weary legs. we wondered about the huge concrete blocks at the
edge of the water. The children decided that the Indians didn't
make them.
We peered at the huge rock hanging over our heads and
eKamined the wall that supported it. Would those tiny rectangular rocks that appeared to be stacked, really hold up that big
rock? Bethany. wide-eyed and with great expression, declared,
"Yes, they will hold that big rock, because God made those
rocks." She added emphalically, "And God can do more than
that!''
The rest of the way back, I mused over a seven year-old's
trust in God. Indeed. he can do more than that, Bethany. He
formed the foundations of the world, and supporting that massive rock wa~ not a problem for him.
Jesus encouraged young children, "Let the children come to
me, and do not hinder them. for the kingdom of God belongs to
such as these. I tell you the truth. anyone who will not receive
the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it." (Luke
18: 16-17 NIV).
Father. thank You for fun and experiencing the simple faith of
children. May we never hinder their belief in Jesus. Amen .

POINT PLEASANT - Revival
services, Lifeline Apostolic Church,
Point Plea.&lt;ant, 7:30 p.m. Friday.
Saturday and Sunday. E•angelist
Aaron Bounds.

Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m. Monday, Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

Pastor: Lcs Hayman
Sunday Service . 7:00p.m.

RACINE - Southern Local
School District Board of Education.
7:30 p.m. Monday at the the high
school.

POMEROY - Public hearing on
Meigs County DHS Meigs County
Community Plan , I p.m.. Meigs
County Commissioners' office.
Review copies available at Meigs
County Public
in Pomeroy
and at the
' office.

RACINE - Racine Village
Council. special session. Monday. 7
p.m. to discuss financial matter and
municipal building roof.

CHESTER - National Hunting
and Fishing Day observance Saturday. 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m. at the IKES
Farm on Scout Camp Road near
Chester. The event will include
instruction and demon strations
hunter safety and ethics, ny tying
and fishing. canoeing, fish filleting.
turkey calling. shotshell reloading.
lrap shooting, .22 rine shooting.
muzzleloader shooting. coon dogs,
trapping and archery. All activities
are free and lunch will be provided.

Pine Gron Bible Holiness Church
In mite off Rl. 325

Zion Chur&lt;h or Christ

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Mantey
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson

Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
First Baptut Chur&lt;h

Youth- 5:30pm Sunday

Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Thursday Service· 7:30p.m.

Worship . 10: IS •. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Bradford Church of Christ
Corner of St . Rt. 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip -8:00a.m., 10:30 a. m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.

ML Union Baptist

18,900

Evangelisl Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Outer
Pastm: WoOOy Call
Sunday Evening . 6:30p.m.

Wednesday B1ble Study · 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

a lum inum, wheels , Premium

MSRP $20,245

20,350

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18,900

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SL loll• LalbopiB Chur&lt;b

Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene lapp

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Wo!Ship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Our Saviour Lulheraa Chur&lt;h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.

Reedsville Chun:h of Christ

Pastor: David Russell

Pastor: Philip Sturm

Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Railroad" St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Hartford Church or Christ In

Forest Run Baptl!lt
Pastor : Arius Hurt

Worship . 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Hartford, W.V~.

United Methodist

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School • 11 a.m.

Church of God

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main Sr., Middleport

Reduted To

11 900

8

SALE

10,900

Sunday Wo!Ship - 10 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Flnt Church of Gnd
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru ssell

Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Catholic

Church ol God of Prophecy
0.1. While Rd. off St. Rl. 160

Sacffi!·Heart Catholic Chun:h
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898

Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Re\1 . Walter E. Heinz

Sat. Con. 4:45·5:!Sp.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9: IS a.m.,

AUTHORIZED DEALER

Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Sun. Ma ss - 9:30a.m.

Congregational

s.

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Meigs Coopenth'e Parish
NortheaJI Cluster

•

Alfffil

Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Minenville
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastors John&amp;. Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

K&amp;C JEWELERS

0
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212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Master Service Technician
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

949-2804

SAVE TIME
WITH A~

Lon&amp; Bonom

Sunday School -9:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Reedsvilte
Worship -9:30a.m.
Sunday School· tO:JO a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month-7:30p.m. service

Jlfie~er

Jlfunml Jmne ~nc-

264 South Second Ave. oMtclclleport. OH 45760
740-99.2-6141
Bruce R. Fisher • Oireclo&lt;
590 East Main Street • Pomaroy, OH 45769
740-99.2-5444
James R. Acree. Jr. - Director

Faith Chapel Open Bible Church
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 1 p.m.

Stinnvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.
Rutland

Christi•n Fellowship Centu
Salem S1., Rut land
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II : 15 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.
Hobson Christian fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serv ice, 7:00p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - IU:JU a.m.
Thursday Services- 1 p.m.
Salem Ceoter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9: 15 a.m.
Worship- 10:15 ~. m .

Faith Full G&lt;JSpd Chun:h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 1 p. m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m.
Friday · fellowship serv ice 7 p.m.

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

The Belienn' Fellowship Minbtry
New Lime Rd ., Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Su nday, 2:30p.m.

Pastor: Oewayne Stutler
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m .
Wednesday Services· IOa.m.
Carmel-Sutton

Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor : Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Endtime House or Prayer
(aq Burlingham church off RoUie 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday service· 6:30p.m.

Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
MorningStar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · ll a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Middleport. Community Church

East Letart

575 Peart Sl., Middleport

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School tO a.m
Eve ning · 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p. m.

Wednesday. 7 p. m.
Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Coolvilte United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Filth Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 1 p.m .

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bai ley Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunda y Evening 7 p. m.
Thursday Serv ice- 1 p.m .
Syrawse Mission
1411 Bridgeman S1., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson, Pastor

Bethel Church
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship. tO a. m.

Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- ll a. m.
Wednesday SeJ\'ices · 8 p.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
985-3308

992-2121

CLAS~I~IEDf-Dl ·•os Mul~ Ave.

~y

Third Ave.
Paslor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday Sc h ~?D I - 10 il.m.
Worship - II a.m.

United Brethren

Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

In Christ Chun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Paslor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.

Wedneday Servict · 7 p.m .

Worship · !0:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30 p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt . 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev . Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship . l0:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Eden United Brethren in Christ
2 1!2 miles nort h of Reedsvi lle
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev . Robert Markley
Sunday Schoo l - ll a.m.

Sunday Worship. 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy

Wednesday Serv ices· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service. 7:30p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant Time to clean house?
"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken' Clean out your basement
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy or attic with the help of the

992-5432

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
~rancis FLORIST
Me~• County

in the

992-7075

Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh ·

172 North

s Olde•l Floris!

BflltMP II),._
740-992-2~ •

CLASSIFIEDS!

Searching for a Fl::~u:;:r,
local churctl? "' ~LEs • SERVICE
Checlc the Sentinel
every Friday/

Middleport Pentecostal

Mt. Hermon United Brethren

Prescriptions
Pomeroy

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pa.!itor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Even ing· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Seventh·Day AdventiJt
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy L.awinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

214 E. Main

·

New Lift Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Dill Staten
Sunday Strvices- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Worship · 10 a.m.

Sentinel

992-2955

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Cli fton, W.Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 1 p.m

Seventh-Day Adventist

Worship · 10:45 a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Friday-7:00p.m .

Mone Chapel Chur&lt;h

Middleport Chur&lt;h or the Nazarene

Syracuse Church of the Na11rene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Radio Ministry- Ravenswod Station

ApostoHc Faith
J/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sllnday-7:00 p.m .
Wednesda y-7:00p. m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday Schoo!- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a. m., 1 p.m.
WednesdJy Services- 7 p.m.

Church of Jesus Christ,

Oyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Faith Gospel Church

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

Pa.!itor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Harrisonville Presbyterian Chun:h
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.

Nazarene
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff

Rejoicing Ufe Church

500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport

Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. , 7:30p.m.

Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Ton:h Church
Co. Rd. 63

Evening · 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Church or the Li"ing Savior
338 Antiquity, Racine, OH
Pastor: Jessie Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris &amp; Rick Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30 p.m.

orr Rr. t24

Township Rd ., 468C

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesda.y Service · 7 p.m.
Hazel Community Church

Sundoy School · 10 a.m.

We Fill Doctors'

Established 1913

Fainitw Biblt Church
Lc:lar1, W.Va. Rl. I
Pa.stor: John Han
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Connie Fiares

Buy, Sell or Trade

Dignity~ Service Alway$

Coolville Road
PasiOJ: Rev . Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Worship · 10 a.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

EWING FUNERAL HOME

White's Chopel Wesleyan

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Past01: Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Ser.'icc · 7:30p.m.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
992-5130 Pomeroy

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

773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Pur1 Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Joppa
PaSior: Bob Randolph
Worship ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

South Bdhrl New Testameat
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Ca rleton lntt rdenomlnadoaal Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School· 9:30 il.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Faith l&lt;~ellowship Cruude for ChriJt
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Appe Ufe Center
"Full-Gospel Church"

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

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

Worship- It a.m.

Dailey Mass . 8:30a.m.

AUTO BUYING PROGRAM

Heath (Middleport)

Hockingport Chur&lt;h

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

ABSOLUTELY
SHOWROOM CONDITION!
4 W.O .. leather,. rear NC, CD player &amp;
cassette, SLT Premium Pkg.
ONLY 9,000 MILES!

Other Churches
Honest Outracb Mlals1rla
47439 Reibel Rd., Ole~~er
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: tO a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Pastor: Rev . Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Trinity Church

1998 YUKON 4 DOOR

Worship · I) a.m.
Thursday Services ·6:30p.m.

Racine
Pastor : Rev . James Satterfield
Sunday School . 9:45a.m.
Eve ning- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Heath

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse
992-3987

Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Rutland Chun:h of God

Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Portland Fint Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Matson
Worship . .10:30 p.m

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunda y School - 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p. m.

Pasmr : Rev . Roger Willford
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

MI. Ott.. United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville

!#'

Chtstf'r Church of the NazaRDt
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices· 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
W01ship · 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.

..., .MI. Moriah Chur&lt;h or God

Sunday School · !0 a.m.

8

7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)

Wednesday SeJ\'ice · 7:30p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m.

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

WAS $13,900

Graham United Methodist
Worship-9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Rutland Free Will Baptist

One owner, cast aluminum wheels, power
seat, extra clean.

Worship - 11 a.m .

Christian Union

Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.

2 Dr. , 3800 V6 engine, leather, power seat,
very sharp &amp; sporty!

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

Christian Union

Faith Baptist Church

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4j a.m.

94 Regal Grand Sport

St. Paul Lutheran Cbun:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Secand St., Pomeroy

Worship - 10:45 a.m.

95 LeSabre Custom

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service : 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

with a Hot Rod or Custom
Motorcycle

\

Pine Grove

Worship · 9:30a.m., 1 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.

992-2161.

'\

Lutheran

Sunday school - 1030 a. m.

Victory Baptlstlndependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport

Power seat,
Package.

Sacramenl Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 1 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne!H4y Service 7:30p.m.

Worship · t !a. m., 6 p.m.

.New 98 Century Custom

Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pa~tor : Rev . Lloyd D. Grimm,Jr.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday ServlctS · 7 p.m.

Rutl1nd Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev . Samuel W. Basye

Bethany

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Langsville Christian Church

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

LAST ONE/

Ponland· Racine Rd .
Pastor: Jerry Singer

Relief Society/Priesthood It :05·12:00 noon

Thursday Service· 630 p.m.

Old lkthel Free Witt Baptist Chur&lt;h
28601 Sr. Rt . 7. Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. James R. ACree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

3800 V6, cast wheels, power seat, CD player.
MSRP .............................................. $22,435.00
Smith Discount ................................ -1,335.00
Rebate ..................................... ............. -750.00

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganiz&lt;d Church of Jesu• Christ
of Latter Day Saints

The Chur&lt;h of Jesw
Christ of Latter-Day Sainll
Sl. Rl. !6!1,446·6247 or 446-7486

Uberty Christian Church

'
Htttside
Baptist Chun:h

New 98 Grand Prix GT Sedan

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servtcc:J - 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
· Sunday WorshiP. . 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7 p.m.

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7

SALEM CENTER - Meigs
County Youth Grange meeting Saturday with a potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. at the Star Grange Hall. All
Meigs County Grange Youth are
encouraged to attend. Plans for the
upcoming year will be made .

Pastor: Rev . Ruy McCarty
Sunday School . 9:30a. m.
Su nday Even ing- 7 p.m.

Hi&lt;lwr} Hllb Chun:h of Christ

Thursday Services- 7:30

SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778 work session and
potluck supper Saturday beginning
with a work session at I p.m. followed by supper at 6:30 p.m. All
member.; urged to ·attend.

Rutland Community Chur&lt;h

Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

8

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rutl..d Church of Christ
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wor5hip • lla.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

SALE

Pastor: David DeWitt

Worship · 10:30 a. m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc hool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - Q a.m.

Rock Springs

Laurel Clilr Free Methnrltst Chun:h

Bndbury Chur&lt;h ol Cbrist

Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - II a. m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

Hysell Rua Holiness Chur&lt;h

Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepor1
Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School - !Oa.m.

:

Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.

Sliver Run Baptist

No. 380
Power seat, casl wheels, America's favorite
full -size sedan

Worship· 7:30p.m.

Sunday School- tO: IS a.m.

Rlclae Firat Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

98 LeSabre

Wesleyan Bible Hollnru Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev . John Neville
Children's service · 10 a.m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.

Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant

98 Regal

Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

BearwaHow Ridge Church or ChriJt
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday Sc hool -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m .
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

No. 859
Leather interior, custom wheels, 3800 V6
eng ., CD player &amp; cass., steering wheel radio
controls, traction control, power seat. Very
Sharp!

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland

Tuppen Plala Church of Christ

Ctntnl Cluster

Asbury (Sy&lt;acuse)

Forest Run
Pastor: Chad Emrick

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Flnt Southern Baptist

SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 F&amp;AM. Saturday, to host Scottish Rite Players
Club of Columbus. Masonic Temple. Dinner at 6 p.m.: play at 7 p.m.
Dinner is free, open to public.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev . Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

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

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

STIVERSVILLE - Stiversville
Community Church. hymn sing. Friday. 7:30 p.m. at church located on
County Road 31. The Crusaders will
be the featured singers.

SUNDAY
RACINE - Eagle Ridge Community Church homecoming. Sunday. Ba&lt;ket dinner at noon: singing
at I :30 p.m. featuring the Bissell
Brother.; and Harvest Time.
POMEROY - Revival services
dogs and refreshments provided by·
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel. State
at
Kroger.
Route
143, to continue through SunThe event is conducted in memory
day.
Rev.
V. 0. Agan, evangelist.
of Jack Slavin and Ben Petrel and in
MONDAY
honor of Ida Diehl. All walkers will be
given back patches to wear to desigPOMEROY - Meigs County
nate their own honored survivor or
victim of heart disease.
The event occurs rain or shine so
walkers are reminded to be prepared
for weather condilions. For more
information residents may contact
Scott Dillon at Meigs Senior Center.

SENIOR PICTl)RES

East Main St.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

41872 Ponieroy Pike

American Heart Walk scheduled
The sixth annual Al)lerican heart
walk will be held in Pomeroy Tuesday.
Individual walkers and teams are to
meet at Krogers for the walk which is
sponsored by Fanners Bank. Holzer
Meigs Clinic. Home National Bank,
and Rose's Excavating. Registration
will begin al 5 p.m. with the walk to
slart at 5:30p.m. Walkers working late
may arrive a.~ late as 6:30p.m. and still
participate. it wa~ reported.
All walkers will receive a goody
bag with sponsor items along with hot

Rutland First Baptist Chur&lt;h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Bapllsl

Worship - IO:JU a.m., tl p.m.
Wednesday Service:; - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ· 1 p.m.

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Tut:sday Services- 7:30p.m.

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Calvary Pltarlm Cloapel

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lsi and Jrd Sunday

Free Will Baptist Chon:h
Ash Slreel, Middleport

Public invited.

Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Keno Chur&lt;h or Christ

Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees. special meeting. Friday. township garage on Joppa
Road, 7:30p.m.

Danville Holiaess Chun:h

5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister: BiiJ Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

lim Ditty
St., Middleport
school - 9:30a.m.
Wo~;; •.;~ . II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Calif. 90045

Graco Eplsropal Chur&lt;h

Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School _,9:30a.m.

Uberty Asxmbly or God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane

Send questions to Ann Landers,
C.-,ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,

Episcopal
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev . James Bernacki, Rev . Katharin· Foster
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School II :00 a.m.
www .frognet.net/-deanery

Sunday School . 10 a.m.

Sermonette

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 25, 1998

I

740-992-6298
Le1 Ut S.nd Your

T~

W&amp;th Special Co,..

Advertise your
business each week
In this space
and support local

churches

,.

... ··- --- ·-"

--· ---.. - ··-·-- - ----·~..-~ -------· -- ---· --

·I ---·-- .. -.-- -

-·

�The

Page a• The Dally Sentinel

40

Researchers: Pill makes a bout of flu shorter and less miserable
''This will get people back on
their feet more quickly,'' said Dr.
Frederick G.. Hayden of the University of Virginia, one of the
researcher.;.
Hayden said the medicine's pill
form makes it easy to t.ake. He said
this could give it an edge over a
chemically similar competitor.
called. zanamivir, which is a nasal
spray.
Since neither drug is on the market yet and they have not been compared head to head. no one knows
which will be more effective.
However, the two drugs attack
the cold virus the same way: in the
test tube. they appear to be of similar potency.
The drugs already on the market
are Symmetrel, known generically
as amantadine, and Flumadine.
known generically as rimant.adine.
Both are effective against
influenza A, which causes about
two-thirds of the estimated 20 million flu cases in the United States
each year. But they are useless
against influenza B. the viral strain
that causes the rest.
In studies financed by the drug's
developers. doctor.; tested GS41 04
on 629 patients in the United States.
All w~re seen within I In days of
the start of symptoms and were randomly given the medicine or

By DANIEL Q. RANEY
lt.P Medical Editor
SAN DIEGO (AP) -An ex peri·
mental new pill appears to reduce a
rypical four-day bout of the flu by
about a day and a half while making
you feel better. too.
It is one of two clo.c:ly related
drugs in development - one given
as a pill. the other as a nasal spray that could offer imponant new
weapons against the ubiquitous wintenime misery.
Two other flu medicines are
already on the market. but they are
ineffective against one of the two
major varieties of the flu virus. The
two medicines in development
appear to work against both kinds.
If they eventually win approval
from the U.S . Food and Drug
Administration, they could serve as
a kind of backup to the flu vaccine.
which will remain the most impor·
tanl defense against the disease.
Researcher.; were to outline the
result~ today of the first large-scale
human testing of a medicine code
named GS41 04. being developed by
Gilead Sciences Inc. and HotTmanLaRoche.
The studies suggest that if taken
within a day or so after symptoms
start. GS4104 reduces flu's severity
by 40 percent and its duration by 33
percent.

will probably be submilled to the
FDA for approval next year. No

Charles Alfaro. a Hoffmandummy pills.
GS41 04 appeared to reduce the LaRocbe spokesman, said GS4104
du11.tion of symptoms from an average of 4.3 days to 2.9 days while
also making people feel less miserable.
·
"It's an exciting step forward."
said Dr. John J. Treanor of the University of Rochester. another
researcher involved in the study.
Besides cutting short a bout of
flu. the researcher.; also found that a
once-a-day dose could keep people
from catching the illness at all.
In a separate study on about
1,600 volunteer.;, they showed that
only I percent of people taking the
pills came down with' the flu. compared with nearly 5 percent in an
untreated comparison group.
The doctors emphasized that the
pills would be not be a substitute for
a flu shot.
Instead, they might be useful for
warding off the flu in those who fail
to get the shot and for those who fail
to respond proper! y to the shot.
They also could be helpful in
years when flu shots aren't highly
eiTective against whatever strain of
nu is circulating.
"These data are relatively
impressive," said Dr. William Craig
of the Univer.;ity of Wisconsin, who
headed the meeting's program committee.

Our COuntry end U.S.A. Unl-

forml
Thi~ is a great country we live in

And we've got to have respect for it
So OUiny things have gone wrong
We have so many in U.S.A. unifonns
Sotne of them are so far away
1 am sure most would like to be
home to stay
Most of them have moms and dads
And would like to be home with
them

Some have families of their own
And they would like to be at home

Some of their children are so young
And their life has just begun

-

It's not so easy to be so far away
from home
And have to wonder if you will ever

return

It's so sad what they go through
And when they jliCI home there's no

The jobs have been talen by them
back home
They all have to work to get along
Most all will hang on until they retire
Some are in debt so very far
I sure know what it's all about
That's the way it was when my husband came out
He looked for a job six months or
more
He finally found one near by a grocery store
Most people want to live above their
means
And not thinking what it might bring
A lot of them wi II lose what they
gain
This country of ours is gonna make
a chang~
Mn. BII"'Od Teaford

Middleport

3 White Klnens, 3 Black Kittens
Plut Mother, o4 WHkl Old, 740·

Dollar Tree Storts, The Naliont

Expanding Organ iz811on . Com·
pellttve Salary And Excellent

BeneltiS Including 401K anc:l Prl)lit
Shanng. De ntal &amp; Hea lth Sand
Re~umeTo·

EOE WI'
Killen gray &amp; white , long haired

:custom Homes

Remodeling

: 1998 Martin Street
: Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1,150

--8C326AI

:m·

(t) 2!

lTC

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sealed propotala lor the
"Vlltagt ol Ruland Hazard
Mitigation
Proltct Demolition ol Properties"
wlll be received at tho
Vlltage of Rutland Ha1 ard
Mlllgallon Project oHica,
P.d. Box 420, 337 Main
street, Rutland, Ohlo 45775,
Alln: Boyd A. Ruth, until
10:30 e.m. Friday, October
18, 1998 upon which time
bide will bo oponod and
read aloud.
Speclllcatlona and bid
forma may be aecurld from
tho above otllce. A aile
ohowtng lor thlt work lo
lchedulod for 10:30 a.m.
Frklty, Ootobor 9, 1998 at
the tbOVI office. (740) 7420704.
Etch bld muat be
occompanlld by either 1 bid
bond In tho amount of 1CI'Kt •
ol tht bid amount wlth 1
1urety aallolactory to
olot4lllld VIllage ol Rutland
or by certllltd chock,
caahlorl check, or letter of
credit upon 1 aolvant blnk
. In the amount of not illl
then 111% of the bid amount
In the ltvor of the aforetald
VIllage 01 Rutland. bid
b0 0 d 1
b1
1 hall
accomptnled by Proof of
Authority ol tho offlcltl or
111••t llgnl111Jihe bonCII.
(9) 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27

An ordlnenc. to lllablloh to tho solo by calling 740-

a curlew .end prohibit
tolttrlng. No peraon under
the • of tlghtatn y..a or
1111 thlll lolttr upon tht
ttrHII, tldewalka, perking
11'111, buelnna propentoa,
or the property ol tho
V1ll1111 ol Mtddtopon after
duak, un1111 accomp1nlld
by 1 p1rtnt or legal
guardian. The curfew will
btgln et duok and ond at
8:00a.m. the following day.
EXcopttona wllt be made In
lht Clio ol organ lull on
(church, acoute, achoola,
etc.) aponeored evonta with
prior approv1l ol the
loll d d lt porI
Po II c e
Dtpertmtnt.
Ordlnence 11-1111
An ordinance prohlblllng
the operation ol 1 tound
ampttllcllton ayattm !rom
within t vahlclt 10 lhll the
tounclla plainly audible at 1
clltiJince ol fitly or more IHI
from the ""lcll.
·

A copy ol th111
ordlnancet ,,. on ftla 111111
Vllltge of lllddloport
Cllrlc/TrtiiUrtr'l and are
lvtllablt lor public
lneptCtlon.
Bryen Swam
Cllrlc/Trttlurer
(8)~

(10)2
2TC

71C

Public Notice
Tilt following ordlnanotl
were recently enaetlcl by
lht lllddleport Vlllagl
Council:

Public NOtice
On Seturday, October 10.
11MN1at 10:00 e.m.lhe Home
Natlontl aenk will olfor lor
ull tt pubic auction on lht
blnk perking lot the
following Ylhleltt:
1. . Pontiac GrlnCII A~tt­
VIN 1G2NE14UOJCeeaue
1110 NINin PllhftnclltrVIN JN8H017Y2LW234108
1tt1 Chtvrollt SllvlrldoVIN 1QCDC14Z3ME214142
The ttrme of tale tre

Ordlnlnce 1332olll
An amtncllmtnt to tht
Vltitgt of lllcldltport
Codllled Ordtnanoet
Blctlon 3&amp;1.113, lltellnglhat
• nne of nve dollart will 11t
luued lor IIIII perking Ol t
w111c1e hieing In t clrec;Uon
other thin the direction ol
trtvtl on that tide of the cull.
11'"'Tha Homt NltloMI Bank
Qnllnarlce 7-te
I'IMI'YII the rllll!t to rt)lol
An ordinance to IPIIfOW, nv or ~ ~· or to remov.
lldopt, IIICII tnact the 11111 any unit lroin the lite tt
reptanment , .... ol the enyllnlt.
=~ltport
..... ·to lfMIItOI ..., Of ' lilt
IINM 1111111111 Ylhlcltl prior
Onii-HI

'""""""'"' ..., "'

•Bobcat Service
•Concre1e
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Reslderitlal

•Room Additions
•New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-e215
Pomeroy, Ohio

SAYRE

Howard L Wrlteael

ROOFING

TRUCKING

NEW·REPAIR

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
, Joe N. Sayre

(614) 992-3838

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

614-742-2138

12/111/1/n

·30 Announcements

51211/1111

R. L. HOLLON

Happy Ad

TRUCKING

BINGO

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Graval
Dirt • Sand

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$1,200.00
$50.00 OR MORE

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10125196mn

~ARPET

Tear Gown 2 story house lor the
lumber. 304·895·3707 or 304·927·

2936.

Lordy,Lordy
Look Who~

"Your Computer :shop"

Custom Built Compultrs, Ntlwork! Modems, Hard
Drhes, Printers. Upgrade Your PC To a Pentium CPU
and MB Today. Pre-Owned Computers.
740-992-IIJS For A Price Quote!
Frognetlnlernet Sign-up point for
·-~
Meigs and Mason Counties
f\ - · 114 Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

or

A

740-698-7231

L..ocatd In lhr ln)"Uraocr Plus Buildlog
ICrols rrnm lhe Court JIOU!if.

''

f{11/llttn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

WATERSCAPES PLUS
740-992-4427

Take the pain out of
painting, and le1 me
do it for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
~ ree Estimales

33933 Flatwoods Rd.

Racine, OH 45771 (5 Points)

(Stock Items Only!)
Sale Ends 10·17-98
Mon.·Sal. 11:00A.M.-5:00 P.M.
Call for Appointments- Closed Wed. &amp; Sun.

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

'-..

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

3127fTFN

40!

BEECH GROVE

.shop at home... .

American legion

from the C

128

s

Doer Prize (lsi),... S1,000
Door Prize 2nd .... SIOO.OO
Per Ga~~t .............. $99.00
CoveroH ................ $1,000

-~t~.

!;:,0;
BOARD ' . '
17" colum•.-lnch weekdays
.'

~·M,

&gt;

'9"'

•

, ,• ,

'

,

,.

.

'

With 145 to 1so people
present.

.

11 0

Hf!ltVt!ll}
l'tl lilw '" vuil willa
Dml!.,.lny

Ravenswood

Local Satellite
Prpvider
Best Electric Pomeroy

Health Center
CNA &amp; LPN positions
available. Full time &amp;
part-time. Must be
available to work any
shift If in1erested you
may contact:
Donette Dugan
I RN, DON
at (304) 273-9385 or
apply In person at
200 S. Ritch! Ave.,
Ravenwood, WV

PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
Letart Fails, Ohio
$2.00 each

If" ""''

leuve ru
Wlter1 "'" nil lovetl

740-247-2012

!W tlt'Ur.

......... ,.

But Dtul, you 'n, 1101
forl{oll""
N "' will yo11 ever

be,
Beetlu .•., we sure do ·
mill.• you
Ami love you ""•
ola, so tlmar.
We UJi.!a llwl you
UJere slill willa us
Bu/ "'" know you
l...d Ia go
Bflclluse Gad fel(
He neetletl you
·
Mare 1/um ras below.
We k11oU! llartl ..,e·
wUl seP. yon
.

Ag,.;,. before lao
I mag
Bu/ we know 1/wt
we 1/iU love you
And wlolo dull you
~~&gt;ere laere
And miu you mor!'
·willa '""" P""i"B.
year.
.
l.o¥ed lf!d IIIIIHCI bY

GNC
50% Off Sale
' .

100's of items.
OHIO RIVER PLAZA

· .. :_',, ~~~i~,~O~H~~4~4~1~
- 9~84~9~:

WANTED
NEW MEMBERS
Meigs Co. Bikers
accepting new members.
Call742-4000

26164
EOE

30 Announcements

Meigs Co. Bikers
13th Annual Toy Run
Sat., Sept. 26, 1998
Pomeroy Parking Lot
Meet at noon, leave at 1:00
p.m. Follow traditonal route.
Ends at "Good times"
(formerly the Watering Hole).
Plasse help us support area
kids for Christmas!

\'

30 scents available

• Condit mGking su,plies
• Refills
• V01itly of Gift

'!4!!:/!!!

Tues-Fri 10·6
Sat 10-4
Rl. 124 t.litteBville, OH
740.992-4559

"Ensy

Lost - set of car keys, At 7 &amp;
Union Ave . vicinity, 740 · 992·

6351 .
LOST: Black &amp; 1an hound. childs
: pel. Call 3(14-&lt;;75-2260.

I

'---------------70
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
I st House On The lei! Below
Bow11ng Alley, Kanauga . 8·4, Sat·

urday 26111 .

AIJ, VIlli S.IIH Mull
Be Plld In MY.....

Bnrrk Firrnrrcirtg'

138 a month

*Free 5 Parts Warranty
*Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

Roofing • Repairs
•Coalings
•Sidings

Moving. Must Sell! 21 Henkle
Ave . Sal 26th Only ! 9:00· ? .
Kilchen, Ctotnes. CB Radio ,

WICKS

Joseph Jacks

HAULING

740-992-2068

dey before the ad 11 to run,
Sunday &amp; Nond1y edition·
1:OOpm Frldly.
Moving 1111- Saturday &amp; Sun ·

day. Seplember

~lh

&amp; 271h, 2470

Weter Street, Syrecuae . Ohio .
Furnilure . new and used clothing.
misc. ltems, tour 1Ei' Chevy truck
rims with rings &amp; caps, 7 galvanIzed 15 ' boat trailer rims.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

.

Limestone,

MOBILE HOME
" PARTS

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•NawHomes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Dltcount Prlc.,

Bennett Supply
741).448 8418 .
1381 SlffOid

ScbooiRd. ·
Qalllpolla, OH

90

985 4473

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil ver And Gold Coins, Proolsets ,
Diamonds, AntiQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S . Currency,
Sterling, Etc . Acquisitions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GallipoliS, 7-40-446·2842.

-To You Thr1ft Shoppt
9 West Stimson, Athens

740-592·1842

Ouallly CIOihlng IM

hOUIIhOid
1111 every

lltma. $1 .00 Deg
Thursday. Monday thru SaiUrdal

9:0().5:30.

ULTRASOUND TECH -- Re -·
quirement s: Registered Olagnos-·
tic Med1caJ Sonography Certification . AMA Approved ·Radfological
Technology Trai nmg, And Ability
To Operate Ultrasound E1;1uip ·
msnt.

MAl TECH •• Requirements :
ARAT Certlflcalion In Radiology ·
AM MAl , AMA Approved Ra diolog ica l Technology Training ,
Abd ily To Operate MAl EQuip ment
Only Oualilied Applicants Need
App ly To Holzer Clini c; Human
Relations Department : 90 Jack·
son P1ke ; Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·,
1562 ; Fax To 740-446-5532 ; Or
Call 740-446-5189. Equal Oppor-·
tunity Employer.

HELP Need Employeeal
Domino'• of Point Ple..ant
Now Hiring-All Posftion~t
Drivers &amp; Management

304-e75-5858.
Home Health Agency Offering
Part·Time &amp; Temporary Part-Time'
Posillons. May Be Perm anent To
CNA ' s &amp; HHA's . Many Ext ra s
With Full-Time Employment , Only,
E~perlenced Person s Ne ed Apply. MUST Be Avatlable For
Weekends &amp; Hol iday Hours, May
Pick -Up Application At 762 Second Avenue , Gallipolis , OH Monday Thru Friday From 6 -5 P.M .
MeiQS County Call 740·992-7900,
Healt h Mana gement Nurs ing
.
Services tnc. EOE

and Salaty 614·267·5354

Buying Hardwood Timber on
Shares : Also Pine Saw Timber.
Small Acreages ok, 740·255·

Hunt mgton 08 -GYN Olltce IS
need ing eiCper ie nced reg1 sterect
Ultrasound So nographer lo r lull·
lime or part-t1me POSI I•on. Week·'
days only. no call. no holu1a.vs
Send resume to P 0 Bo• 3064
H unt ing ton, WV 25702 or Ia• .

wracked or salvaged vehicles

:104· nl-5033.
Wanted To Buy : Sante Day
Dresses Call Tina After 5 P.M.

condition. :104-882·2•36.

30 Announcements

Benelll Package

992·6576.

I ·On· 1 U1111. 1·900·329·0859 Ext.

WHAT WILL THE
FUTURE BRING?
LOVE. MONEV, TRAVEL?
CALL NOW! IT'S FUN,
IT'S EASY
1·900·740·6500 Exl3595
$3.i9 Per Min. 18•
Sen&lt;·U 61H-15-843ol.

Competitive Salary And
Exceptional Ringe

Housekeeper "Live In · l or Pra c·
Using Columbus Allor ney Gener-·
al Household Dulles Plus Some
Care, Some Onvmg Room. Board'

Share Your Thoughls Wllh Girls

800-ROM.A.NCE, extension 9015.

FULL-TIME POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Antiques &amp; clean used lurnilure.
will buy one pie ce o r complete
househOld. Osby Marlin , 740-

Small artificial electric llreplace.
preferably from bend area .
doesn't have to be in worJ~ng

Start daling ton/ghll Have tun
playing thA Ohio Dating Game. t-

•

2526.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

Con&lt;ltion, 740~9853 .
Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes Call 740·••e-017S . 304-

675-5965.

304-525·3400
Immedia te opemngs 101 4 people
to do testing '" the sur rou nd ing·
area, Full tr a1m ng pr ov1ded lor
outgotng enthuslaSitc men &amp;
women. Excelle nt earmngs $36K54K . Mana geme nt POSIIIOnS
a~Jailable . don't dtsqualify yourself
For more information on this career opp ortunny, call IJetween 1oam·2pm lor personal rnrerview. t -

888·992 ·598 7

or

740 ·9 92 ·44 72

Ask lo r Mr. Bro wn , de pendable
auto reqwred .
Overbrook Center . 333 Page
Street. Middleport has lull lime
STNA pos 1lions available lor all
shill s. Anyone i nterested please
stop by and I1H oul an application.
Par! time Materials Handler

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

ACTION YOUTH CARE. INC . is

lOOking a Child and Faml~ Ther·
ap!SI lor our Mason CounJy IF'oinl

Pleasant) office. Applicant must
level Social Worker. Counselor or P1ychologlst
ellgtble to bt ll~naed . At least
one ~tar of tJCptrlenet in Indi-

be a Master&amp;

vidual and llmily lherapy. Sallty
range Ia $28 to $28,000. Cloolng
dall II S191. 30. For more lnlormeUon, write AcUon Youth Cere,

lro:. 217 Slllh Sl. Polnl PINHnl,

WV 25401 or cell 304·875·1324
or 111 rtlume ro 304·875· 1:126

EOE.

I

Wanted to Buy

74o-1169-6&lt;03.

3957. $3.99 Pe1 Min. Must Be 18
Yrs., Serv·U 619-645-~ .

Dete ctive • Prt Ya te lnvesligator
Tratnees . Good Wages. 614-523·

9490

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts . Buy ing

Personals

74()-446-7267 .

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Vlrd Solll Mull Be Plld In
Advonce. Ou~llne: 1:00pm the

"Wiaere Qucrlity Doe3rr 't Cost More"

005

Acc&amp;ssonat Pay)
*Home Weekends
"Run From OH To The South
And Southwest
•Permits Provided At No Charge
*Toll£ Paid
•Fuel Card Available
Requirement s: Age 23 . Class A
COL And Good D riving Record . ·
Please Call Toll Free t-888 -7900008, Ask For Garnet

Cosmetologist Wanted . Full &amp;
Part -T1me. Hourly Versus COmmiSSIOn, Pai€1 vacations. Other
Benelils Ollered. Filntaslic Sam's,,

BENNEn's HEATING &amp; COOLING

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

•Personalized Dispatch

'Up To $1 .00 !Mi. (Including

• 10:00 1.m. Soturdoy.

11 to run. Sunct.y
edition - 2:00 p.m.
Frldly.lllondoy ldlllon

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks . 1990 MOdels Or Newer.
Smith Buick ?onUac. 1900 Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ADDITIONAL OWNER OPERA·
TORS NEEOED IMMEDIATELY
'Local Family Owned Company

Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hrs. S20K ·$75K IYr t ·800·
349 -7186 En 1173. www .amp -.
lnc .com

6172

740-446-9416. 1-800-872-5967

Free Estimates

•Root Coalinga
"Vinyl Skirting
"Water Heater•
•Door/Wlndowa
•Electric/Plumbing
Suppllll
•Fibtrglall &amp; Wood
Stepa

OJ•cr tire P/rorrc

Heat Pumps As Low As

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction

"Huge lntnlery"

I

CONVENTIONALS
Requirements : Age 23 . Class A
COL And Good OriYmg Record .
Please Call Toll Free 1·888·790·
0008.

p.m.
the dly bolore the od
DEADLINE: 2:00

Antiques , lop prices paid , Riverine An tiq ues . Pomeroy. Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740 · 992 -·

Air Conditioners ~~Low As 128 a month

parties·

Business Is Boo11lng

OIMII Vlllty H - . Inc.
31021 L8ka Logan Ad.
L.ogm, OH 0131

./

Residential &amp;Mobile Home ·
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat Pumps

COUNTRY ClNDll SHOP

New Positions now open
lor mobile home service
technicians and drivers.
Baslc knowledge of construction and plumbing a
plus. Must be hard wort&lt;lng,
honest, and care ·about lhe
customer. No
Sunday
- k. Starting pay range
$9-$12 per hour. Banefits
Include vacation, lnsur·
ance, and 401 K. 11 thiS
aounds like ·you then
please apply at or send a

resume to

Ol'llnclchlldren.
··~·
)

-

Rl7 S&lt;Mh. Call 740-25H176.

Wedemeyer's Aucllon Service.
Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379-2720.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

SOUTHWEST
•40 tK
*Late Model Ffeight~ner

Found! Pair ol Tennis shoes on

n:J-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

"Ask about our candle

Village

Br~t Dml :. "" '""If'''
/o

Help Wanted

lnSllranc8: Dental Insurance
*HOME Weekends
*Run OH To The SOUTH And

Rick Pearson A-uction Company,
lull lima auci!Oneer. complete
aucllon
service .
licensed
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia . 304 -

992·6320

Middleport

Owned Company

While Shephard &amp; Collie milled .
male pup. 8·10Wkl old . 304-8822211 .

Auction- variety of new items
each Thursday. October t lhru
December 17 except Thanksgiv ·
lng. Concessions. Hartlord Com ·
munlly Building . Auctioneer
11.220. Fred Sullivan.

Call

ADDITIONAL DRIVERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY ARE YOU
READY FOR WINTER ORIVINO?
'LOCAL FAMILY
"PERSONALIZED Oispaleh
'PAID Efllllnvee Heljjlh A Ule

cneap!

J&amp;LSIOING &amp;
INSULATION
·Vinyl Siding •Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamleas Gutter
•Roofing
•Replacement
Wlndowa
·Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decka
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995
740-992-2772

AcQuisiti on s Fine Jewelry of 91
Mill Street , Middleport. part time/
full time help. Jewelry eKperlence
preferred but not re1;1ulre d . Ac cepting applicat ions Monday
through Friday. 1 Oam -2pm . No
phone calls please.

4658.

10% Off Flexible &amp; Preformed Pond Liners
20% Off Fountains
25% Off Birdbaths &amp; Concrete Planters

7124/041mo. pd.

AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley
Spears . 304-675-1429

60 Lost and Found

Computtr Performance Upqr_adeo

ELEURIC OR
SATELLITE
SERVICE

·BINGO
EVERY
·SATURDAY
NIGHT

To loving home, female chocolate Lab . Syrs . old. 304·674·

..... a.~-

740-698-9114

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISSIISSII$1

740-245-5597.

30 Announcements

PER GAME

' ~ '.

lnMemoryOI
CHARLES (Mick)
MUG RAGE
on hla birthday
9-27-98
(Dtmr Dtullr~

.

Small Chihuahua Like Female
OoiJ , 3 Years Old Approx . 5 lbl,

WATCH fOR Df1AILS 9/18/M 1 mo.

Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948
8125198 2 mo. pd.

Okl :J04.882·3477.

OCTOBER 2ND &amp; 3RD

2112112nfn

PLUS

Frer E•tlmate~

Small black mixed breed dog .
&amp;payed . has hlld au &amp;hOts , tyr .

REGISTER NOW $5.00

(No Sunday Calls)

P/B Contractors, Inc.

Rabbit Dog. 10 Weeks Old, Male.
Cal Anytime 740-446-3101 .

Stanurst ............... 1350

In Memory

Irina

MIDDLEPORT

614·992·7643

5TC

I• ere~
H" luul

Room Additions • Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES

CARPENTER SERVICE

Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

949-2210.
(8) 25,211
(10) 2,8,9

YARD SALE

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

YOUNG'S

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

1

Garages • Replacement Windows

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740-985-4422

YELLOW FLAG

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

"Build Your Dream"

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

304-675-!5043.

BISSELL BUILDERS; INC.

MBJ

9,151

PUBUC NOTICE
Due to lht length ol ttmt
Involved In lht brd proceu,
to the county can repltce
the brldgll tn our townthlp,
evoryone uetng lht
lotlowtnt roadt In OliYI
Townahtp, lhould lit IWirt
tho following bridget ere
IIIII out:
Numbor 8 betw11n
SUCCIII Road and Blatt
Routll81,
Number 8 .,.., Uckakltlel,
Ucktklltll Road,
Hutton Road botwten
Ulllt FOfMI end t..ko ROIId
and tht road thru Boaton
Hollow It ellll ,.,.....
Thank You lor your htlp.
• 1111'1111 Dum
740-3l'H1411

·

Dollar Tree Stores. Inc
Ann: VP Of Human Resources
Huntington Mall
P.O. BoK 4063
Bart&gt;oursviHe. WV 25504

1

Public Notice

lo

or Hardgood /A etai l Exp And ·
· Thrjve In A. Fast Paced . Rapidly

...

1

""IIAIIAGEUENT

OPPORTUNmES-

4-46-ono.

-

(9)~

,.,,,,,,,,,

For The GaNipotla Area . Excet._,t
Opponunlty For Can&lt;lldatea Who
Possess Supervloory Skill&amp; &amp; Prl· ·

Twila Brooks Powers of New
Port Richie. Fla.. visited her
114 Ottll CI*IIIIIIMI
1994 Bu1t:k centuiY CUIIottl
l b l l - Aiib.\.
Slodl tbnbor eti1UA
nephew, Lloyd Brooks, in August.
Lavinia Brannon was her aunt.
•- - · l.clb •l.Oidodl
She visited relatives and old
classmates whom 'he hadn't seen in
over 40 years. She visited Esther
~
Landon. her sister-in-law, Mildred
Brocksner. nephew and wife, Roger
and Captalia Brooks. Coolville. Gerald and Bonnie Brooks of Lowell
hosted a family dinner for her. She
1112 Chivy Altro Edltldtld
had dinner with her niece 'Jo Ann
•'lnk!ll Corwenloll•loldad!
Francis and family. and visited her
cousin Roy Hannum and wife of
Long Bottom and cousins. Marilyn
VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com
Robinson and Janet Connally.
Lloyd and his wife, Ruth, took
Twila to visit her aunt Eillen
475 SooUl Omrell Stmlt •Ripley. WV l·lroll22-0417 · 2844
Leonard in Columbus, her cousin
Fr*J 8 • ·II fll • 8IIIMQ II• · Mldlllllll· SIMtiJ I fll · 8 (IIi Esther Fathlesuckner in Delaware
and nephews, Kevin and Bob
Brooks. In Columbus they visited
Ruth's sister. Marie aqd Joe Arick.
.............. - .... -Oood-2!1h11lloolflll-2llh.No0.......-l« _ _ _
:md brother, Charles Carsey.
On Sept. 5. Lloyd's cousin Joni
Will of Fresno. Calif.. visited him
and other relatives.
r-=:::;~;=~~===l==;:;:;:::::;;=.;:==T=~::::;;::;::::;:===-r:========
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice

job to go to

~75-7878 .

Help Wanted

Lar!!ftl 11 Price Point Relallor

Alfred News

Poet's Corner

.............,..

110

Currenlly Seeki ng MANAGERS

Heather Friend of Middleport. a
victim of cystic fibrosis. is a surgical
patient at Children's Hospital,
Columbus. She ha&lt; been confined
there for two weeks. Cards may be
sent to her at the hospital. Room
5003. Wednesday Ruby Marshall
and Mary Manin of the Meigs
County Salon, Eight and Fony. visited with the youngster who is an
eighth grader. She is the daughter of
Dawn Friend of Middlepon.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNtY, OHIO
In The llatter of S111111111nt
of Accountt, Probett CoUrt
Melgo County, Ohio
Account• end vouchor1
ol the following n1m1d
fiduciary hu been Iliad In
the Probate Court, Melg1
CoUnty, Ohio, lor approv•t
ancllltllement:
ESTATE NO.
26938Eighth end Ftnat Account ol
Jtnnller L. Shlllt,
Guardltn ol the peraon end
eatate of Lelllt Young, en
alleged lncompetont.
Unleaa excepllont are
filed thertlo, aald account
will be lor hearing btloro
seld Courl on the 26th day
ol October, 1998, at which
time · said account will be
contldered end continued
from day to day untllflnally
dtepoolcl of.
Any ptroon lntereeted
m•y flto wrlllon axc:epUon to
nld account or to rnatttrl
pertaining to lhl execution
of lht trutt, not 1111 than
ftvt dayt prior to the date
til lor he1rtng.
Robert Buck
Judgt
Common Pleaa Court,
Probett Olvltlon
Moljjt County, Ohlo

Glveawey

2 Small puppitl. mixed brtd.

decision has been made about how
much it will cost.

----Society Scrapbook---Break with God", scripture. and
To spot150r conference
The Ash Street Free Will Baptist singing of "What A Friend." MadeChurch in Middlepon will sponsor a line Painter read a poem on kinderChristian Women's Conference. Oct. garten.
Sunshine gifts for September
16-17. at7 p.m.
Guest speakers will include were given to Betty and Terry
Denies Bonecutter. Barbara Zuspan. McGuire and Tammy Hysell. BrenJoanne Council, and Pastor L.es da Bolin will handle communion for
Hayman. There will be special . October. Pantry supplies being colmusic each evening. Door prizes lected for September include soap.
will be awarded and refreshments and for October it will be toilet tissue and paper towels. Needed for the
will be served.
kitchen are napkins and furniture
DoiA members observe birthdays polish.
Thank you notes were received
Quarterly
birthdays
were from Jackie Reed. Janel! Spencer,
observed when Chester Council323, and Ed Baer.
The Women's fellowship meeting
Daughters of America met recently
was
announced for Thursday with
at the hall.
Observing binhdays were Julie the program to feature creative picCurtis, Doris Grucser, !.:lura Nice, ture albums.
October hostesses will be Tina
Margaret Amberger and Mary
McGuire
and Kalhy Oyer. RefreshHolter.
Ella Osborne presided at the met- ments were served by Diane Bing.
ing which opened in ritualistic fonn Becky Amberger and Madeline
with pledges to the flag, the Lord's Painter to those named and Kathy
Prayer. and singing of the National and Megan Dyer. Sherry Smith.
Sherry Shamblin. Suzie Will. CharAnthem.
Reported ill were Faye Kimes lotte Hanning. and Nancy Morris.
and Zelda Weaver. and hospitalized,
Scottie Smith and Barbara Surgent.
The ways and means committee
Support and screening clinics
held a silent auction. October meet- at O'Bieness announced
ing will be held at 7 p.m. it wali_ _ Several suppon groups and
reponed.
screening. clinics have been schedRefreshmcnts were served by ulcd at 0 Bleness Memonal HospiBeuy Young and Erma Cleland to tal. Athens.
Gary Holter, Kathryn Baum. MarThey include an ~t. 7 blood
garet Amherger. Shirley Beegle. pressure chmc at the fac1hty from 10
Laura Nice, Opal Hollon. Goldoe a.m. to noon and 2 to 4 p.m. VolunFrederick. Erma Cleland. Marcia teers J'rom O'Bieness and the AmerKellcr. Mary Holter. Opal Eichinger. ican Cancer Society will also be disThelma White. Julie Curtis. Ella tributin~ at that time free colon rccOsbome, Mary Barringer. Everett tal cancer screening test ~its .
.
On Oct. 8 from 7 to 9:30p.m. on
Grant. Charlotte Grant. Deloris
Wolfe. Betty Young. and Doris the hospital conference room . a
Grueser. Door prizes were won by companion class for expectant parGrant, White. Hollon and Keller.
ents wi II be held. The class prepares
a coach or companion person to
accompany a maternity patient to
the delivery room and to provide
Cbun:h activities announced
Several fall activities were reassurance to her during birth. The
announced during a recent meeting class which is offered free of charge
of the B.radford Church of Christ also includes information on what to
expect during labor. delivery. and
Lydia Council held at the church.
Revival services will be hdd the hours after delivery.
The hospital is also offering on
Sunday through Wednesday. 7 p.m.
at the church. Guest speaker will be Oct. 7 from 10:30 to II :30 a.m. a
Larry Veach with special music each breastfeeding support group in conjunction with the lactation program
evening.
Also announced was a church offered by O'Bieness Perinalal Unit.
On Oct. 13 at 2 p.m. the Athens
hayride to be held on Oct. 3 with the
Parkinson's
Disease support group
wagons to leave the church at 5:45
will
be
hdd
in
the basement conferp.m. A wiener roast will be held and
ence
room.
soup served following hayride .
Paula Pickens. president. had the
opening prayer. oflicers' reports
were given. and dcvouons presented
by Becky Amberger titled "Culf~ Hospitalized

Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Friday, September 25, 1~:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Responsibillhes include (and are
not tim1ted to ) unloadmg freight
trucks . ver~fyir.g materi al s re catved. stock ing ol mater ia ls, re·
ordering . picking and Issuing ma terials and preparation ol paper work associated with these tunc lions. Computer ~nowledge ts required . Must be available on
short notice and be available to
work different shift! ano wee kend&amp; . Loca tion ot warenouses
are near Wilkesville and A.lbany,

Ohio.
An Equal ()pportunlly Employer

Send resume to;
Soulhern Oltlo Coal Corrc&gt;ony
Human RtiOUrCII 0epar1rnent
P.O. Box 490
Alhona. Ohio 45701

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

~_rlday, September 25r

.

•...

1998

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

0

AUEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11
?

.

0

'

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

LPN'I To Work PAN Plea'fl Call

$~00

Oown on any 14x70 In
stOCk, limited number, lree dlltv·

Medl Home Hoalth Agoncy. 740.
441·1m.
NHd Drlvlf &amp; Loader For Local
Service. Must Have COL's &amp;
WllngTOWori. 7&lt;0--..-.

ory.ca• •·-•-lim
AM real estate advertistng in
!his newspaper is subject to
lhe Federal Fat Houoong Act

Now Accepting ApplieaUona For
STNA Cllllll. Tran1portaUon

of f968 whicll ma.koa ~ nlegal

Provided To And From Training

to advertise ·any preference,

Slta. lunch Pr..idtd Dally. Earn
Poy While Attending Clall. Inter·
Hied Appllcanll Apply In Person
Monday -Friday 8:00A.M. ·4:30
P.M. Contact Tommy PriCe, LPN
Or Mary S-11. AN At 740·44871!1(1.
Plrt llmt AN needed In Pomeroy
area for Home Heal•h . Day shift

houll with only occasional wee·
kend work . CompeiiUve wages .
Apply in poraon only at 1400 Co-

legala Orlva. Marlena on Monday,
Septembar 28th between the
hours ol b-3pm or Wedn..day,
Septornl&gt;er 30th hours of
9on&gt;Jpm. EOE

lim~tion

Hx tamttlal status or national
origin, or a~ !mention to
make any such prefetenCe,

limitation Of discrim Inalion.·

This newspaper will nol
knowingly accopl
ac:tvertiSements for real estate
whk:h is in violation of the
.taw. Our readers are hereby

onlormad !hal all dweiUngs

" -· Gallpolil.

f

advertised in this oswspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

REAL ESTATE

Part·Time Apply In Parson AI A&amp;
A Auto DetaUing Shop, 220
-

or clscrlmlnatlon

baSed on race, color. religion.

-- - - - - -

310 Home• for Sale

Part-Time Retail Sales. Experl·

"A little Country In Town·· large

ence Preferred But Not Necea·

restored VIctorian home alluated
on 12 acres. Village ol Middle-

llry, Appllcatlonl Accoptad I ().4
Dally, Apply Tope's Furniture Co ..
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,

No Phono Colo -

-

Parson 10 work In ottlca, mull be
able to uae comput.,. answer
phono, bOOicllaof)lng and work with
publiC. lmrnadlata pollltlon. $8.501
hour to start. Call 888-eto-9909
or7~898

o.oo.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is cur -

rently accepting rasum11 lor a

Social Worker. Bacholora degree
In Social Work or a Jour year de·
grH In Health Care Administra tion. A minimum of two years exper61nce In an acute care setting.
Mull be able to transfer patient
from acute care into the most
medically epproprlato and cost
efficient selling. Must have
knowteclge of medical terminology end charl re\lltw. Send resume to Personnel at Pleasant
Valley Hoapltal, 2520 Valley Or.,
Pt. Pleasant WV 4!15550. or tax to
304-675-2447. MIEOE.
PRODUCTION

COORDINATOR
We ~re A Highly Reapected International Olslrlbutlon IManufac·
turing Company, Located In Tlta
Columbul, Ohio Area . The Per·
10n We Seek Muat Po11111 The
Following: 4/5 Yaara Producllon
Planning. PC Skills Both Excoll
And Excell Spreadaheet. This
Person Also Must Be Very Analytical Come With A Dlltrll&gt;ullon I
Manufacturing Background And
Slrong People Skills.
We Pro\llde Excellent Benefits
Can You Meet Or Exceed Our
Noada? RESUMES WHEN SUB·
II ITT ED TO ADDRESS BELOW
IIUST INCLUDE SALARY AE·
QUIREIIEHTS TO: CLA 4~4 c/o
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Awnua, Galllpoila. OH 45831 .
SUPERYtSOR
We Are A Highly Roapaclod In·
tarnallonal Manufacturing /Oiatrlbutton Company, Located In The
Columbul, Ohio Area . Tho Poll·
tlon Wa Have Open 11 For A
Production Supervisor. The Person Selected Will Po&amp;sell The
FoloWI"9:
STRONG LEADERSHIP
4.15 YEARS DISTRIBUTION
/MANUFACTURING
BACKGROUND
AS A SUPEIMSOR
EXCELLENT COMPUTER
SKILLS
ABIUTl TO SET PRIORmES
MUST BE FLEXIBLE TO
CHANGE
WE PROVIDE EKCELLENT
BENEFITS. CAN YOU IIEET
OR EKCEED OUR NEEDS?
RESUMES WHEN SUBMITTED
TO ADDRESS BELOW MUST
INCLUDE SALARY REQUIRE·
MENTS TO: CLA 4~3. c/o Galli·
polls Dally Tribune. 82~ Third
A....... GeiHpolls, OH 4:1631 .
wanted· someone to work in
adult group nome. dayll or nighta,
7.0.982-5023.
W~NTEO : Fork lift operator lor
log yard. 304·675·5159.

wanted: Personal Cant Aides.
No Exper~ence Neceuary, Will
Train Call Medl Privata Care, At
74().441 ·1877
. 140

Bualneta
Training

Southeastern Business College,
Spring Valley PIIZI , 7·0-446·
4Je7 , 1-800·214·0452, Accrodll ·
ed Mombtr. ACICS Reg 090·05·
12748

port. Secluded and private, cloae
to schOOta and cnurches. Prtvata
brick circular drive, brick pallo,

modern kitchen, family room wl
fireplace. 3·4 bedroom&amp;, two
baths. large formal LR and OR,

large Ioyer. lour original stained
glass windows. 30 minutes fro~
Athens. 15--20 minutes tram Gaftl·
polis . For appointment call 740-

992·5696.
2 Bedroom House And 2 Apartments, Both Rented. 13 Pine
Sireel. Gallipolis, Call 740·448·
4999, Or 7.0.594-3033.
2906 Maple A\le . 3br ranch all
brick , covered deck. fenced back
yard. central -air. garage . exc.
cond. 304-883-0038.
2br. appro• 3 acres . Wyoma
Ridge. 304-875-707f .
3 Bedroom Home Ntw Roof, New
Carpet, l&lt;elley Drive, PMno: 304·
67~·4230. 740·36Ht72, Aller 6
P.M.
3 Be&lt;lroom, 2 Dath, 11011 pump, 2
car garage on 1 acre In letart,
WV. 304-882·35t6.
3br, living room, dining room .
family room, 1 bath. central air.
newer carpet &amp; roof, replacement
windowa, family neighborhood,
privacy fenced yare . 2411. abOve
ground pool, many upgradu,
move in cond . Priced In 70'8.
304-875-2924.
3br, 2·bath home. new roo! , vinyl
aiding &amp; shudders, solid oak
kllchen newly remodeled. dish·
washer, vented-microwave, large
ramlly -room . wood·stove, living
room w/lire·place, central/air,
large fenced lot·. Must Stet
$77,000. 304-875-6258.
4bt house. fenced yard, 1 block
from schools. new furnace &amp;
centre! air, recently replaced roof.
new 200amp breaker box, recently remodeled bathroom , lull
baiOment 304-87~5320.
6yr. 2·3 bedrooms. loll, tongue/
groove, pellet stove, HPICA. ap·
pliancH, garage, spa, acre. Bula·
ville Pike. 74().387.()286.
Charming Farm House, 15
Minutes From Gallipolis! Bright,
Open Throughoul. 3 Badrooms, 2
112 Baths, Newly Remodeled
Kitchen -White Cabinets. Nice
Donlng Room . Fireplace. Gas
Hall. New Corpol, FlOOring. Steel
Rock, Ceiling Fans, Panlry.
SoulhwoSiorn School, Appolnl·
moms. 740.379·9997
Great Location Close To Gallipolis . Nice 3 Bedroom Home Approll . 1600 Sq. Feet , New Siding,
New Central Air. Fireplace. 2 Car
Garage, Large Dock. And All Ap·
pl!ancas Stay. Call For More Into.
74().446-966-4
In Middleport· newly remodeled,
aiding, roof, windows. kl!chen ,
electric heat pump, fenced In
yard, three bedroom . bath and
nan. $~9.000 negollable. 740·992·
3465.
Neat one floor plan house. Living
room. dining room, kitchen. two
bedrooms w1th bath nestled bet·
ween. All rooms are good s1ze
and interior has nice style. Vinyl
siding, hardwood floors. closell.
Stove and refrigerator go with
nouse. interior walls need rapafnl·
lng . Nice back yard . located at
205 Spri~ Ave .. Pomeroy, a good
buy 11. $14 . ~00 , call 740·992·
5292.

Newly Remodled Country Home.
Oilers quiet country living on a
private 2 112 acre lot with loca l
180 wanted To Do
schools and downtown shopping
less tnan 10 minutes away. Fami·
Furniture repair, reflnlah and res· ly pleasing amenities Including
toration. also custom ordera. Ohio new kitchen . Hardwood floors, 2
Valley Refinishing Shop. La~ry fireplaces, family/home ontce
PhHIIpt. 740-992-6576.
apace . 3-4 bedrooms , 2 1/2
Georges Porlable sawmill, don't bath! , many extras! $98.000.00
call 740 ·446·9762 or 740·446·
haul your logo to !he mil lual call
4514
304-875-t957.
Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Homo Cart Of Elderly Or Handl·
capped, 74().441-1!538.
Quellly care lor your loYad onaa,
certifltd home health aide. references available. call Kathy. 7-40·
902· ~185.

Will Sabyalt In my Home , Any
Hours. Bidwell School District ,
Cl1740-388-9889.
Will do babyaitllng In my homo
Monday 1hru Friday, 740·698·
2113.
Will 11au11unk or traah away. S:W
p1Ci1141-- 304-87!1-!1(135.
Will Work Fot 14.00 /Hou1, 740·
3ST.0140.

210

Bualnna
Opportunity

IIIOT1CI1
OHIO VALLEY f"UBI.ISHING CO.

PAillE
LOCATION
414 Third Avenue
Gallipois
Beaufiful New Two Story Colonial
3 Bedroom, 2 1/2 BalhJ, tR. FR.
Dining Room With Hardwood
Floors. Oak Trim Freplaco . 1 112
Car Garage . Appra isal Greater
Than Aalolng Price 01:

$111.600
TAXES $308 /YR.
1·:104-273-2140
RED BRICK ' RANCH Siyla
House. Exceuenl Condition. Par·
tially Finished Sa~tment . 2 Car
Garage, Serious lnqulrloa Onlyll
74().448-3385.
320

Mobile Homet
for Sale

Abandoned Home Take Ower
Paymanll, Or Make Offer. t ·800·

383-6882.
12x80 trallel, can bt uaad lor of·
Ilea llailar, 13,000 without air con·
dllloner, $4,000 with, 740-949·
2217.
14 x70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
Sf79 por mo. Froo ei' &amp; lrao skirt·
rog. 1-1188-928-3428.
14x80 38R. make fat &amp; last pay·
rnon1 &amp; move ln. 304· 755-5!168.
1871 Hillcrest. 12x60, two bed·
rooms, washer. dryer. stove &amp; re·
lrlgerator. air, underpinning,
$4500, 740-992·!1(139.
t 989 Clayton 14x70 lurnlshad on
private rented lot. Che11nut
Ridge, MI. Allo area. $17,000.
304-895-38t4.

2 bedroom house, atove , refrlg·
erator. wuhtr and dryer fur·
nlsi!Od, 1300 /montll with a 1200
aacurlly dlpOiil, aV.i,_ OCtoo., 11t, 7-40-742·29!&gt;4.
2 BadtOOma, RouiO 7 s. f3 m11ea
below Galllpolia. Deposit Re·
qulrad. 740·441-1917. Leave
Maaaagt.

1 ·6 BEDROOM HOIIE8 FROII
14,000 Local Gov't. &amp; Bank
Rapo's Call 1 · 600 · ~22·2730, K
1709.
Clean two bl&lt;lroom hOull In Pomeloy, $350 plus dtpo1it, HUO
accepted . will consider contract
lor purchaaa, no pats. 740·698·
7244.
Economical &amp; nice 2br, deposit
required, no poll. 304-875-5162.
Farm House For Rent: 3 Bed rooms, 2 Baths, CA. Large Yard,
Large Garage Barn. With Water,
4 Horao Sial~. Tack Room. Bring
YotJr Ooga Or Horses Welcome,
At: 1667 Clayllck Road, Patriot,
$6!0/Mo.. Plus $6!1(1 SocuriiY De·
pollit, 740-448-3545.

Vindale 70'x14' With Expando 2
Br., 20' living Room. Large Mal·
ter Br .. Excellent Condition! On
Aenled Lot, Really To MO'Ve lnlo,
74Q.446.14092To6P.M

Female Roommate Wanted: 1
Block From Rio Grande Campua.
740·24:HII33.

Buy In Sepl. No Payment Until
11199. Col f-8()().948-5678.
Huge 28x80 3BA. 1 112 bath.
Slarllng al ONLY S39.999. Many
options available . 1·888·928·
342ti.
Large s~ecllon of uaed homes. 2
or 3 bedroom&amp;. Slarti~ a1 $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740-385·
9621 .
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 monlhs FREE lot rent
Includes s~i rt l ng . deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187.08 per
month with $1075 down. Call 1·
800-837·3238.
New 1998 3 Bedroom . 2 bath,
$998/Down. $189 per month. In·
eludes Delivery &amp; Sei·Up. Call 1·
6()().948-5676.

New Houae For Rant Near Rio
Grande, 2 Bedroom•. Gas Elec·
lrlc Heat, I Year lease. $3!0/Mo.
740-UZ-1032, Cellular.
Two bedroom, tree gas and water.
full basement. air, 3 miles out of
Portland. $400, 74o-843-5t28.
420

12x80 Mobile Home, $300/Mo.,
Dopollit Requwad. Referencas. No
Poll. 740-448-0885.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homea. air
condllloned, $260·$300, aawer.
water and trash lnctudtd. 740·
992·2f67.
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile Home·s.
CA. Stove, Refrigerator, Water &amp;
Trash Included . No Pets. Must
Have References . S300/Mo .. &amp;
$350/Mo., Plus Deposit . Near
N.G.H.S. 740-38&amp;-98811,
2 Bedroom Mobile Home. No
PelS, S225/Mo .. Includes Water.
S100 Dopoall. Releronce At ·
qulred, 74().448..3617.

Special 16x80 3BR. 2 bath .
$1,32~ Down. $205 Mo. Free air
&amp; frao skortlnQ. 1·800-69f-6m.

2· Bedroom Trailer On ~ddison
Pike, $220/Mo., Includes water
$100 Deposit, No Pets, 740-4461637, 740-446-3437.

House trailer on Broad Run Rd. 2
Mile&amp; lrom Sporn Plant 3br, 1-1/2
baths. 2 added on rooms. tot, ga·
rage , 2 A/C's, household Items .
$17.000. 304-882·3428
We Finance Land &amp; Home With
As Lillie As $500 Down . 1-606·
928-3425.
Make 2 Payment&amp;, Move In, No
Payment&amp; After -4 Years! 304·
738·7295.
330

Farms for Sale

~0

Acre Farm . Half.lenced . 3
Year Old 2 Story House, 3 Bed·
rooms. 2 Full Baths, lR. Kitchen ,
I·L;aundrv Room. Waite in Closet .
Full Fronl Porcn. Capo Cod Look,
sw1mm"'g
~ p0o1 Bl k li
o ·
' ac op rrveway, 250M Ring lor Horses /Cat 110 . 32FTX 60FTBarn $210,000.00
740·387·0219.
~:.;::::....::;:;__ _ _ __
340 Bualneas and
Buildings
Commerctai·Oiflce or Retail, 87
Mill St. Middleport. 1,450 St~ Ft.
$400 mo. Corner Building. 740·
992· 6250 Acquisitions (next
door).

350 Lota

&amp; Acreage

112 Acre corner lot in Camp Con·
ley area . good location. 304·675·
3734.
10 Acres Mineral Rights, Utlllies,
Little Kyger Road, 304·523-2450.
BRUNER LAND
74().441-1412
Gallla Co.: Gallipolis , Neighbor·
hood Rd .. Nice tO Acre Building
Site $19 ,000 Or 22 AcfeS With
Pond $21 ,500 Cash Price .
Friendly Ridge, 8.5 Acres $7,500,
Public Water. Back On The Mar·
ket 10 Acres , Teens Run Rd ..
Sl2.000.
r,telgl Co.: We Have Land
Available All Over The County!
Just 011 SR 7 Above Che&amp;ter.
Koebaugh Rd .. 5 Acre LoiS
S14 ,000 Ea. NE Meigs Co .. Dyoo·
ville. Very Remote 11 + Acres
$10,500. Rulland. Whlloa Hll Rd.,
Just 011 New Llma, 16 Acres
$14,000 Or 9 Acres $12.000 .
OIIIYIIIe, Briar Ridge + Goff Rda ., ·
7 Acres Wilh Nice Pond St2,000
Or 8 Acres $13,000, Or On SA
325. Nice Wooded 17 Acres
$18,000, CiiY Water.
Call For Free Maps + Owner Fi·
nanclng Info. Take 10% Off Listed
Prices On Cash Purchases!
lo! for sale· Gallipolis, 90•172,
nice neighborhood , quiet , HO·
448..722.
Scanlc Valley al Apple Grove .
WV. Building lots, single wldes
accepted, ptJblic water. 20
minutes from new Buffalo Bridge
on Jerry's Run Ad . Clyde Bowen
Jr. 304-~76-2338 .
FOR RENT: Trailer Lot. Locust
Road , Point Pleasant. On Right.
304-875·1078. Raltrencos.

360

Real Estate
Wanted

888-828-34211.
410 Houlll for

Rent

4 Room House 52 Olivo Strttt.
74().448-3945

Lirge 3br In Pl. Pleaunl. $275. 1987 Horizcn $800 . 1988 Blazer
Security deposit required, part 13,800. 13' Camper SBOO. Regia·
furnlahed . 304·87~· 7783 HUD ttred limo Bull·18mos. old.
Accopled.
18!1(1. 304-895-3742
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
7 -.

1996 Cub Cadet riding mower

North Third Ave. Mlddlaport, OH.
2br unfurnished apt, deposit &amp;
references. 304-882-2586.

Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repain .
Prollttma? Naad Tunad? &lt;;al tllo

Now Taking Applications- 35
Wilt 2 Bedroom Townhou11
Aparlmonts $295/Mo., 740·448·

JET

M1~ .

One bedroom aparlmont In Mid·
dleport, no pets, reference• and
dopolllt required, 7.0.992-!1633.
One badroom aparlment In Mid·
dleporl, all utllllloo paid. $100 do·
posit, $270 month, call 740-992·
7606 8arn-5pm.
APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twin Rivers Towar now accepting
appllcaUons lor 1br. HUO lub&amp;kS·
ized apt. lor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 304-875-667g.
450

2 Beclroom Trailers, In Small
Trailer Park. Deposit &amp; Reference• Required. No PelS 740·446·
1104.
2 Bedrooms W ·W Carpet Nafural Gas Heat, In Gallipolis, 740·
446-2003. 7.0.44&amp;·1409.
2BR Trailer. References &amp; De·
poll!. locust Road. Point Pleasant On Rig!lt. 304-87~·1076 .

440

Apartment•
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenls, lurnlahed and unfurnished, security
deposit required. no pets, 7-40·
992·22f8.
1 Bedroom Apanment Across
From Wai·Marl, $300/Mo .. $300
Oepo1lt, UtllllleiS Paid, 740·2-45·
5893

1~. $1;J50. 304-8t5-3013

plano 01'. 74().448-4525

AERATION MOTORS

Ropalred, New &amp; Rolrulll In Stock .
cal Ron Evana.1·800-537-9528.
Kimball Organ, Pedela On FIOOt,
Has Guitar, Drums Etc. Available,
Bought New At Brunlcardl's, Ek·
collonl snapo! 11 .200. 740·4489417.
lazy Boy (light green velvet)
men's lounge chair &amp; matching
hide-a-bad with queen size mat trill; lift cnalr (taupe) velvel ; au
In good condition. 740·992-1096
IYOnlnga .

Fumlahed
Room•

Circle Motel Lowest Aat11 In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Cinema•. Showtime &amp; Disney.
weekly Ratto, Or Monlhly Raila,
Construction Workers Welcome
740-441-5698. 74().441-5187.

460

Space for Rent

For Rent: Trailar Spaces On
George's Creek Road. Relerencoa Required, 74().448-f1o42.
Mobile home alta avallable betwean Athens and Pomeroy, ca ll
74().385... 387 .
Trailer apace In Mkfdleport, 740·
992·3194.

MERCHANDI SE

Mobile Homes
for Rent

NEW BANK, REPO'&amp;I
ONLY 3loll! 51~ under warramy.
Only AI
Dakwwod HornH Nltto, WV.
304-755-5855.

RENTALS

125.000
3()4.562·58o«l.

potU , No Pelt, 740·446·4313,
74().448.01179.

Price reduced · 1990 Spruce
Ridge 1•x10 mobile home. very
good condilion, 2 bedrooms, 1 &amp;
112 baths. washer &amp; dryer. stove.
refrigerator, central air, 8x8 out·
side building, Immediate posses·
lion, 740·992.-.

New Doubltwlde 3BA, 2 bath .
lt,325 Down &amp; 1205 por mo. 1·

man untH you have 1nveat19atod

tilt olltl1nf

$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde In stock. ft'H DeilY·
0/'f. Csl HI00·691-8m

We Buy Lond: 30 -~00 Acru,
WI Pay Ce&amp;h. 1·600·~13·836~.
Anlhony Land Co.

At 35 StaYt Branch Rd. Ffultr'a
Bottom, llol 156 E'IO&lt;g&lt;Hn Rd. 1
acre land &amp; mobile home.

1101' 10 tiiiCI IIICIIWY IIIIOUVh thl

2 Badroom HoUM. S350/M0., De·

New Bank Ropoa·Only 2 Loft,
Never Lived h). Clll 1-800·948·
5678.

,_mmetldt 1he1 yoy do b&lt;ral·
w1111 people you know. and

1 Bedroom Houn Acrou From
Campus 1300/Mo., Dapoalt Re·
Cll*od. 740-441-1005.

510

Houaehold

Good•
Appliances:
AecondUtoned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Retrigrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Clly Maylag, 740·446·
7795.

Exlnl Long Sola. Excellant Shapo,
Sl25, 740-448-2318.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers. refrigerators ,
rangoa . Skaggs Appliances . 78
Vine Slreel. Call 740·446· 7398,
1·888-818·0 128.
Polly'e Now I Uaad Fumlluro
Flag! &amp; Army Surpluolll
2101 Jetrerson Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mon·Sal.
304-675-SOFA (7632)
Washer S8~; Dryer $95; Relrlg·
erator $95; Refrigerator Frost
Free, $1!0: Uprighl Freezer $175;
Electric Range $7~ : Whirlpool
Washer $205, 1 Year Warranty;
Skaggs Appliances. · 76 Vine
Sirool, Gaiipolls, 740-448-7398.
520

Sporting

Goode
Complolt aot of men'a gall clubB
w/goll bag. $150. 304-675-1283.
530

Antiques

Buy or sell. Rlverln &lt;~~ Anllqu11,
112-4 E. Main Street, on Rt. 12-4.
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740 · 992 · 2~28 , Rua&amp;
Moore owner.
540

MlacBIIaneous
Merchandise

1 Bedroom Garage Apartment In · ---~~"WWAAR~MUU~Prl·:-:--:~·~
fturnace, Haat Pump(i., &amp; Air ConKanauga, Water Paid $270/Mo
Plus DeposH, 740·888-7t02
diliontng. Free Estimates I If You
Don'l Call Us . We Bolh Lose!
1 Bedroom Nicely Furnished. 140.446-6306,
1·800·29Hl096.
Cenlral Heal &amp; AC, All Ulllillos In·
cltJded , E•cept Electric, COnveni14 HP riding mower. good condient Location, 7-40-446-2602.
tion , 2 1/2 years old, $500, 740·
992·6633.
1 Bedroom Overlooks Gallipolis
Park &amp; River, $375/Mo., Utilities
3 Piect! Bedroom Suite Dresser,
Included. Deposit Required. 740·
Bookcase. Headboard, Standard
441-100~ .
Size Bod, Excellent Shape! 740·
446-1712 Aller~ 1 Bedroom. AIC. WID. Hook-Up.
Near Holzer, $279/Mo., + Uiilllles.
3 Pleco Secllonal. Collee Tabla,
Deposit &amp; Lease Aaqulred, 740End Tabla, Glass Tops, Good
446·2957.
Condllionl74o-446-8189.

McDonald's Beanie Babies. 96 &amp;
98. Unwrappad McDonald'l toya.
45·rpm recorda . Call 304·882·

3339-!lpm.
Prlmeetar· $49 lnatallallon. only
$25.99 per month, tree bonus.
8()().283-2840.

Sam Somerville's Original Army
Camouflage beakfe of Sandyville
Post Ollice . Fri·Sa1 &amp; Sun 12·
Noon-5pm. Other Oays-Hra. Call
304·273-5655.
SOfa and IOveaeat, south~eatern
co lors and designs, excellent
condition, $385, 7.0.985-3595.
Super Single Water Bed With
Bookcase Headboard, New Mat·
lress &amp; Heater. Comfort Sheela &amp;
Mattre11 Cover Included, 1150,
7.0.245-5n8
There Is A Collectors ClOSet The
Corner Third Avenue And Court
Slrtet, (Gallipolis) Anliques, Mod·
ern Ckrthes. Jewelry, Arts, Crafts,
Viall and Check Out The Bargalnal

Ford Now Holland Troc10r Ronlal
Unha lor lila. t •5030 82hp. 4wd,
2 pump Hydraull~a . 8x8 ayncho
lhutne trans, 129hrs. $24,500. 1•
5030 umo apeca 2~0hro .
123.~00 . 1• 4830 5~hp . 2wd
tame apec1 as above $11,500.
t-3130 -4Shp . 2wd ex2 1ran1. 1
valve , 230hn . lt4,900. l&lt;eelefa
Service Center St. Rt. 87 Point
Pleuanl &amp; Ripley Rd. 304·895·
3874.
T030 Ferguaon Tractor &amp; Equlpmonl. 7.0.25&amp;--66211.
Your area bush hog dealer for
part1. rotary cuttart. loaders. Ull·
ers. linlah mowers, ect. Car·
michaars Farm 6 Lawn midway
botwaon Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande.
Ohio on Jackson Pllul. 740·448·
2412 or 1·800-594-1111
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Raaldonllal And Commercial
Lawn Equipment. Compact Utility
Tracton From 20 To l9 HP. All
Slzoa Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors. Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Cheek
Wllh Ua Aboul Financing On
lawn Tractors And Low Rate Fl·
nancing On New And U11d
Equl~ment . Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Gallipolis , OH 740·446·
2-412 1·800-694-1111 '
630

2 Nice Black Angu1 Halters.
Weighing Approx. 400 lba. Eecn,
14!0 For Bolh, 740-448-4053.
French Alpine Goal, Doe, 2 Yoara
Old Mllkrog, 7.0.992·1779.
Salurday Soptombor 28, 1 P.M.
Selling t4 Llmoualn &amp; Charolaia
Crou-Bred Cows. AM Cows Have
Been Vaccinated , &amp; Are Bred To
A Black Bull, Clltta Acceplld Ai·
ter -4 P.M. Friday, Up To Sale
Time On Saturday. All Consign·
ments Welcome, Haulln.a Avail·
able, Athena livestock Sates,
740·592·2322, 740-698-3531 .
Trail Hor111 For Sate: 112 Ouar·
ter Horse, 1/2 Morgan Mare 10
Years Old. ' Arabian Horsea. 1
Tennessee Walking Horse, Call
Attar~ ~M . 74o-381HI358.

Tread Mill Brand Newt Eltctric,
S500 Now, Asking: $150. Reads:
Heart Rate Miles You Walk, 740·
448·7537.
Treadmill, Llfoalytor 8 Extended
Stride Like New Condillon $250
Firm; Weight Olatribullng Trailer
Hllch Wllh 1.000 !bs. Bara $100.
Cal Anytime 740.446-6786.
Upright Freezer. Earthenware
Potte~. Raised Toilet Seat. Walk·
er, Reflux Wedge, Booater Seat.
Nlghl Time Feeder. 740·448·

0639.
Usad railroad tiel,74o-992·7603.
Wanted- &amp;d\ltrtlalng collectibles.
Coke. Papal, etc .. Including old tin
algn&amp;. 740-992·5053.
Walorllne Spacial: 314 200 PSI
$21.9~ Per 100: -1' 200 PSI
$37 .00 Per 100; All Brass Com·
pra&amp;skJn Fittings In· Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio, 1-800·~37-9~28
We buy antiques and partial or
completa a&amp;lalta. baby iems, and
old Flestaware. Jean's Fu1nilura
&amp; Antiques . Tuesday through Fri·
day. t lam·4pm. 145 Norlh Sec·
Oncl, MiddlepOrt

550

Uvettock

Building
Supplies

Block. brick, sewer pipes. wind·
ows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·24~·
5121 .
Sleel buildings never put up.
40x3Q was $8,212 will sell tor
$3.497. 50x88 was S17 .690 will
sell S8,970 Chuck 1·800 -320·
2340
·
560 Peta for Sale
A Groom Shop · Ptt Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
740-446-()231.
For sa le or trade· baby hedgenags, male or female , call 7'0·
992-6073.

Two Reglalered A.l . Angus Bulla
3 Years Old &amp; 6 112 Montn Old
Excellent Bloodll.nes. 7-40·44 1·
1716.

640

Hay &amp;

Grain

Round bales of mixed hay, BOO lb.
balea , $12 each, 740·7.1J2·7405
day&amp; or 7.0.742·2088 .....nnga.

TRAN SPORTATION
110

Autos for Sale

·sa Thunderbird. sunroof. run5
good. $2000 080. 740-992·9190.
'92 Nlsaan Stanza. 4 door. 4 C&gt;/·
Iinder, 7.0.742·2803.
t9~4

Ford 4dr Sedan, good
shape . 304 ·675·2035 Leave
message.
1g80 ·UIIO HONDA CARS 1100
· UOO Pollee Impounds. All
Makes Awaltable , Call 1-800-522·
2730 Ext. 4420.
1982 Cuttass Supreme. 2 0. 260
V8. Good Co~dltlon, $1,500 .00
Firm 7.0.992...:168.
t982 Mercury Grand Marquis,
Runs. Drives And looks Greatl
S2.000 Neg .. 740--441·0439.
1982 Oldsmobile 96 Regency
runs &amp; tooka good. Asking $800
OBO. 304-882· 292~ .
1984 Chevy Seville. 4 New Tires,
V·6, Aulo, Rebulll Alternalor.
Brand New Alternator Belt, New
PS Belt , Auto, Run&amp; Excellenll
740.446·7537.
1966 Chevy Chevene $250. 304·
675·7112 Can be seen at 428
Cypress Ct. Point Pleasant.
1g87 Ford Tempo, Pwr. Windows,
Pwr. S1oarl"9. Pwr. Seats, Crulao.
Tilt, ~utom . , Grey, 63,000 miles.
AakH1g $950.00 740..256-1011 .
1988 Bonneville LE , maroon, 4dr,
new tires 6 brakes, good cond .
S3.200. 304·675-~792 ahar 5pm.

Jack Russell Terrter Pups, Tails
Docked, Dew Claws Removed.
$2!0, 740.44Hl88t. Aller 6 P.M

1988 Chevy Corsica 4 Do on,
Power Steering. Power Brakes, AI
C. Very Good Condition, Approx.
30 t,1P Gallon. Asking $1,495 ,

1br apt. In Mason, stove &amp; refrig·
erator &amp; ulllltles furnished, AJC,
laundry room, ceiling tans &amp; gar·
bage disposal , very nice, no
pels . 304·773·5352 or 304·882·
2827.

Large A~C Siberian Husky Pup·
pies, Blue Eyed Male &amp; Females,
Rare Colors, SI~O ·$200 , 740·

1988 Cutlass Catata, Runs &amp;
Drives Good, 7-40-441 -1 083.

2 Bedroom Apartments Fur nished . Air Conditioning. In Gallipolis, References &amp; Deposit Required . 740·441 · 1519 Leave
Message.

French Clly Pal Grooming by Ap·
polntment. •u1t,. W•eh S.thlng
Systom• 850 Second AYfl. Galli·
polls. 74().448-f528.

446·8627.

Male &amp; Female Adult Rat Tamers
7.0.245-5597.

2bdrm. apt&amp;., total electric, ap·
pliances furnished , laundry room
facilities. close to school In town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apls . 149 or call 740·992·
3711 .EOH.
BEAUTIFUt ;l.l'ARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 We!twood Orlva
lrom $279 10 $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 7-40·446·2568.
Equal Houol~ Opporlun~.
Beech Streel. Middleport, 2br,
furni&amp;hed . utilities paid , cleposil
&amp; rolerancoa. 304-882-2586.
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
(ShoWer), Downstairs, Single Bad,
Clean, No Pall, Rtltronces &amp; De·
posit Roqulrod, 740-448-1~f9.
Furnlahad Apt. Near Library, Em·
ploytd Person Share Apartment
With A Teacher Gotpel Singer,
740-448-4335, (8:DD-9:00 P.M.)
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
aportmtnls at VIllage Manor and
RlvOrsldl Apart!ntntl In Middle·
port. From $249·1173. Coil 740·
992·!1(184. Equal Hauling Oppor·

-

Grotrldlloor 1111 2br. wid hool&lt;-up,
rtlarencts 6 deposit, no ptto.
304-875-6182.

1988 Ford Aerostar, 6 Passenger
Mini Van, Good Condition, Good
Toes. 135,000 Milos, $2,000, 740·
44t-1407.

570
AC DC Arc Weldor Like New.
$275, 740-379-2831, Allar 6 PM.
Baby bed, swing, atroller. car
seal &amp; high ella•. 304-e75-4548.
BoY5 12&amp;pd bike &amp; Qlrl 's 1Ospd
bike, Hke now. $50ea.
Compitle Apple computer system Including color monitor &amp;
color printer. Also comp lete
home software library including
word proceuora , term peper
writer. greeting e~rd maker. edu cational &amp; tun gamea, to numerous to mention: $17S . 30-4 ·
875-f283.
Brand Newt Great Gift! CO/video
storage unit . Black and cherry.
Novar oul ol box. $125. Holda up
10 940 diSC&amp;, SilO holdl IIPtl.
Call 740·992·6836 allor 8 pm .
coa &amp; lapel not Included.

Mualcal
Instruments

Alto saxophone with case. good
.::cond:...::l.::llo:..n:..
. 7..:.40.::·.::992:.::.:·7-47.:.3.::
.

---I

~unoy

11 Allo Sax ~ veers Old
Good Condition! $400, 740-2 56·
5776. .

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

300
210

Agco-AHII ..,.....
Traclor 5670 63 PTO H.P. &lt;
wheel drlvt. world famous air·
cooled dlaoel engine. Goodyear
Brown, Eerly American couch Radial tlrtl an 4 whaell, lnaa·
17~ . Will deliver 11 needed. 304·
pandont 840 and 1000 PTO, Hy·
675-3440.
draullc wet disc brakas all 4
whaals; Dlllartnllal lock front &amp;
Church pews tor sale . 12 twelve r11r. dual hydraulic rtmotll ,
!ool, 4 len loot, $200 each, 740· ROPS and Canopy. 18116 Trans·
9411-2217.
mtulon fully aynchronlzed tor·
Complata Kllchen Cabinet Stt . ward &amp; revttaa shuttle. zinc
OOuDto Sink &amp; Cook Top lnclud· coated t haet mttel, 4 year or
•ooo hour drive tl'lln warranty.
ad, 1750, 74o-44t ·II51S.
Chock your JD, MF: FNH or CIH
Electric Scootera. Whlllchelrl, delltr and ate how long they
Now And U11d, Slllrway Eleva· warranty there drive train. KHf·
lors , Wheelchair And Scooter eft Sai'Yicl Cenler St. At 87 Pt.
Lifts, Bowrnan'o Homecara. 740· · P!taNm &amp; Ripley AG. Leon, WV
2~123 304-895-3874.
446-7213.

'-C-rod,;,;_ii_P_ro'-bl'-o'-m-a_?...:W_o_C:.:...an_H_•IR""~ L.

1989 Pontiac 8000 wJalr. auto,
8t ,000 mllaa, nice cor. 304-67~·
3324.
1990 Ford Tempo. PS. aulomallc,
no rual, vary good condition,
$f600, call74o-7o42·294o4.

1993 Extended Cab, DieHl. Turbo .. 4 Wheel Drive $16,900.00'.
74&lt;1-44&amp;-93! 7.
1997 Green 350 XLT 4 Ooors, 1
Ton, Power Stroke, $2,750. 7.,;,
38S-8679.
730

Van•

• •

THIS FELLER OLIVER
CLAIMS TO KNOW
YOU REAL
6000

I DON'T KNOW
NO OLIVEI II

SNUFFY II

HE SHORE KNOWS YOU II

HE SAYS YO'RE TH'

WORST CAIO
CHEAT

:=r
_.......
28Do .. - -

ao onctor
"-

31 Vend
'17 Com 1 die-nne

Joen-

31 VK811on apoC
41 Bend

43 From a

cbt8nce
44 Slipped on
Ice

Two classic
ducking plays

IN THr

41-and'-ly
47 Vepe
I1I8Chlne
41 Civil wrong
411 PNpoelllojl

50 Drlllllllc
conflict

::It' --

52
114 Aacv. formed
ln-1M1

10'!
The

- '"'f'C

..

THE BORN LOSER

,..

rvu::-&lt; ww...t'U. ~ KOfl'£ ~""

DO l O(.T

TP.ENEW

P~

t:n.l~l\ UP '\'1\P..'\'

PO~ITI0!-1,

LIMf.fC.I(.J(. l'fol..
WRITit-1£. ~'~WI

0\IE..F r

1998 Honda 300 EX 4 Wheeler,
6189.
750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

auction was strange. Nonh •s
one-club opening was aniticial,
dlowina 16-plus point.~. South's double of East" a debatable overcall indicalcd 7-9 poinL1. And Nonh"s illadvised three-dub rebid 1pass is
prefetuble) a.~ked South to bid three
oo-trump with !ICmething in clubs.
West led the club I 0, which
marked South with the jack. Declarer called for dummy's seven. Siuing
Ea.~t was one of Fr1111ce "s best playel'll. Michel Lebel. If South had 1he
club ace. it didn"t maner which curd
Lebel played. But if We~ I wa~ leadina from the ace-10-ninc. it madt a
big difTerencc.l...dlcl didn't put up lhe
queen at trick one •• he ducked 1
If able to sec through the backs of
the cunls. South would huve duck~d
also. By keeping West"s club suit out
of the game. declarer would have I11St
only four trick~ : one hean, one diu·
. mond and two clubs.
However. South wa~ humun. He
:won the first trick and played a diamond to dummy"s nine. Af1~r win. ning with his king. Lebel returned 1he
club queen. West ovenook with his
ace and ca.~hcd four more club tricks:
' two down.
Finally. note that if declarer plays
dummy"s club king at Irick one, East
must unblock the queen .

BIG NATE

Summers not overt Kawasaki
STS Jet lkl, still under warranty.
thrte IIIIer, S3 horllpower,
bough I new July ol '97 . three
matching Kawasaki ski vests lind
llailer all go with it. Priced to ieM.'
$4200, 740·949-2203 or 740·949·
2045 , will consider trade lor.a
good pon1oon boat
Auto Parte &amp;
AcceaaoriBI

351 Cleveland High Perlroman¢e ·
E~lne Parll. G.T. 390 High Par·
formance Engine Complete &amp;
Race Roady! 740-«e-3912.

-

PEANUTS

up

'EROUKT

I!ROP

IHFMPIP

AUYPIYS . '

VIIDBI!C
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A WOI1&lt; of art !hat contalna theol1et Ia like an objecl
on which the pl1ce tag hat been left." - Marcel Proual
·

'::!~~, S(C\\~lA-~£~s·
lAM I
141to4 to,. ClAY I. I'OI&amp;AN _,;.__ _ __
WOlD

ORt~~rronge

,..,.,, of lhe

four lcrambted -d• below lo form four llmpl4o worda.

I

E R8 NA R

B UC I

I I
I·r-------------..,·
l7 L I. .
.I _ _ L _
IQ.
I
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..-~...,.,...,....,._...,.....,......., pecially in your - - - - - - - - - .

$NOLES
1-....,...,__,.,,i,........,,9,._,.,---.,~
.

•

•

•

•

•

•

I'

V

PRINT NUMBftED
LETTERS
•

•

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

Home

A~TRO·ORAPH
Saturday, September

.

Electrical and
Refrigeration

R-nttal or commtrclal wlrloq.
""' wvtca or raptlrl., Mlltlf 1.1canlld electrician . Aldeno11r
Electrical, WV00030e, 304·8H•
1783.

by filling in the missing words
you develop lrom 11op No. 3 below.

I' I
I II

.

~hen

26.

1998

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21
) Take quick steps to resolve any
probl~ms that thn:aten • anylhing of

you think you have nothing

self-interest. You"re the only one

funher 10 gain. Lady Luck will come
to your aid in the coming year. Your
inv&lt;ilvement in ma~erial affairs may

qualified for the job.
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191
Be extremely alen today and
yoo "ll be the firsuo pick up on romething of signiticllllt value. This lind

be . uffect~d.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct.

23)

Due to your innate ability to size
things up und lind solutions. you will
be able to restore calm to a chaotic
situation. Trying t'l patch up
a broken romance'! The AstraGraph Matchmaker can help you
understand what to do to make the
. relaiionship work. Mail $2.75
...,..,...., · to Matchmaker. cJO this newspaP.O. BoK 1758. Murray Hill
StatiOII, New York. NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In .

~toreapfinancialbencfllstoday.
YoU. will have to be ready to act on

cut,'.for these opportUnities
lleetina n•ture
•

are of a

will be your good luck ch111111.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
A friend who gr-eally e51m11s you
will be ut the right place at the right
time todlly. Something you"ve been
hoping for will be materialized.
Lucky you!
PISCES (feb. 20-MDJ"Ch 20)
You"ve been holding yourself
ba~k and ~ailing for. the right
moment to slunc. Today 1s the day to
show the world what you·~ mude of.
ARIES (Mun:h 21-Apnll9)
Adyam:e your pm!Cnt plllllli
today wnll the
JII'OII'Mive

more

Kqlllintances. Team up with dtolt
who think in enterprllin1 tmns lltd
'

.

muybe you"lll~um som~thing.
. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Unusual circum~tunces will arise
tD~!!!Y where your lin1111~iul status will
be grelllly improved. 'Yiju"ll lind
youn;elf to be v~ry lucky.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
An uneKpected surprise will
develop into a wonderful venture.
Another per.;on will contribute to lhe
favorable outcome.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22
) Should a promising financial
opportunity full iniG your lup loday.
be smart 1111d act promplly. This
grcut deal will not last forever.
LEO (July 2}-AuJ. 22)
You will'scrvc u the life of the
party today. Adept in maklna any dull
situuti011 novel, you'll briJhten the
days of those who surround you.
VI ROO (AUJ. 23-Scpc. 22)
Your ail\ for
under
will come in hlildy !Oday.

World ol

Moe!IER(CC)

uc:cllina
C.:
.•
.
' . . to r- procl'lllinllia

· It'll

be eloael

.

to make a

fool

SEPTEMBER 25 I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
local relerancas furnished . Es."
tabl~had 197~ . Call 24 Hrs. (7401
446·0870, 1·600 · 287 · 0~76 . Roo·
ars Waterproofing.

840

Complolo tho chuckle quolad

IIIII

Improvement•

Proftlllonat. 20yra experience ·
wllh all maaonery, brick, bloclt &amp;
stone. Also room additions, gt- .
rag11 , ttc. Free ISIImatea. 3~ 173-9550.

youog man was retiring. He
found that thrift is a virtue es-

1

SERVICES

breaker boii8S, all. AIIO Chock·
lnQ hoaljng oyatoma. 304-874·
Ot28.

A

:N',

I FRIDAY

1982
Gas Furnace, Like
Call Before 4:00 PM 740-446· ·
8015 ·
·
1991 'th Wheel Dutchman Ctas!
"'· Like Newl 740·44e-•en ·.
Dty1; 74().448-8127, Nlgllta

Fulia&lt; Elaetrlc

XBI!KKB

Grower- Manna- Joist- Adroit- NOT DOING

t'iii82'Coi;,;~p;;;t;;:;;;,:

Houao wiring, Hghlllxluraa,

E

AI

AUJB;

W1sdom: When you have the means
of yourself and NOT DOING it.

Cainpera &amp;
Motor Homes

8323.

KilO

JMIP

AI

CF

EROMD

EK

OUVI

I ERA

V E PL.

FCOOUKT

KilO

SCIAM-UTS ANSWIIS

New gas lanka &amp; body peril. D &amp; •
R Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304· 372· '
3933 or 1-800-273-9329.
:

7795.

.........

42A-.ge

Good Condlllon! $2.000, 740.448·

810

ely~

241uppo11
2J L.8i:quarecl

By Phillip Alder
Let's end the week with two of the
most famous duck.~ in the history of
the gume. Fil'llt. we"ll visit Miami
Beach in October 191!6. where the
weather wa.1 w111111 and wonderful -not that the playen~ competing in the
world
championship!~
noticed.
because they were in the air-condi. tioncd Sheraton Bal Harbour Hotel.
How should the play go in three
oo-trump after West leads the club

1976 Harley Davidson Sportster ·
XLH-1000. Lots of chrome &amp;new :
pana. S3.800 080. 304-882·3661 ,
or 304-882·2524.

790

r.;ap1111

. ta •mil 1

Opealac lead: • 10

Motorcycle•

Chevy &amp; Ford truck bad1 from
down south, alao Iron! end lor .
1985 Chevy. 304·576·2835
_ ___;___;~.:.:.:._-,_..; •
New Auto Body Parts &amp; Accfti ~
sorles lor all types ol wthlcltl. :
Translormers Auto Part&amp;. 304 -.
675-3324.

• --MI8¥
10 EN or tluron

JNT

1994 -4x4 Suburban, excellent .
condition, loaded, 51,000 mlln •.
$20.~00. 740·742·7405 days. or
7.0.742-2088 evenings.

780

.

==~~~
,,_ ..,_ 21~=tor

1t Hold 041

DbL

1993 Ford Aerollar XL, 4.0 liter,
99,000 mllos. runs '""Y good. now
!ires, clean, 15500, 7.0.7&lt;2·1400.

t996 SEA· DOO Jel Ski SPI 80
HP Like New. A&amp;klng $2,995, 74(1- ·
446-11364.

Rulli-

.......

3982.

C&amp;C General Home Mitn:
tenence- Painting . vinyl sldlnt~. '
carpentry, doors. windows. blltts; :
mobile home repair ond moro. For
free tatlmate call Chet, 74C'-992·

tgn Trans AM V·8 Fully Load·
adl740 148 4548

BARNEY

1988 Toyota 4x4 4 Cylinder.
$2.700; Range Kino Pro Garden
Tractor t9 HP $1,800, 740·448·

1995 Kawasaki lakota 300 tour·
wheeler. $2,9~0 . 304·882·3330
Loavome&amp;aage .

....,,.._

z

• Q ••

1982 Ford 3/4 ton 400 angina,
4apd. many new porta. 13,301).
304-875-2219.

1990 Yamaha AT 180 Oirtblke. 2
Stroke Many New Parts . $700.
74o-441 ·17f8

•Q2

J Hone CIDc
I Compa1tlloll
7 Actl.a

• J I 4
Vulllenble: NeUber
Dealer: South

HOLLER

1968 Honda 200·SX 4·wheeiM.·
14ft. Flat·bottom boat w/swl\'el
seats &amp; trailer. Smail utility trail ~
er. 304-675·2484

• I I 4
• Q tIe I
• It 7

• 10 7 J 2

1980 · f890Trud&lt;a 1100 ·SWO
Pollca inlpouldl
AIIMaMIt -800-2110-2262, K 39tl1 .

740

.....

2 Dlulp I h!WI

a4 Tile
(Ut.l
Or-(ttn.l)

•AQJ

&amp; 4-WDa

1992 Nlsean Sentra 104,000
Miles, Low Rider, Custom Wheels
&amp; lnlarlor, High Spoiler, $8,000,
740-448-8854.

sso...

e J II

• A 11 t I II

199f Chovv Ctooyonne WT 1500 •
.Serlts. 6 cylinder automatic,
72,000 milea. good clean truck',
run1 excellent. $5SOO. 740·7•2·
1400.

Big River Polntl~ . Palnllng lnilrl·
or I Exterior, No Job Too Big Or
Smai1740-448-0670.
··

1897 Red Pontiac Sunflrt,· auto,
sun-rool. am-lm stereo, 35,000
milts. 2 Burgundy buckot suta
fill U17 Fora van , llka new.
304-875-3734.

...

s

1992 Mllsublshl Nice Car. $2,200,
OBO : 1987 Plymoulh Voyagar
Mini Van Nice Van $1 ,600. 080
740-441-1)584.

f997 Dodge Neon, 11,000 mllos,
-4 cytindlr, lutomtttc, Good Coo·
dlllon118.800.00. 74().441.Q337

• It 7

1883 Toyota new tires , balltry, . ·
brallla. rad, automatiC. 4cyl, io"'i · :
bad. 1,400. 304-874-DOD3.
.

1993 Chevy 4X4 Z 7f . Stopaldo.
loaded, 3~0 . ~ Spttd, Sharp;.
C.D. Changar,740 ·24~· 5474 , 74().
245-9099,ie8\lllmoaaage.
• •

...

_,_

t A 10 t I

1983 5·10 TahOe. V·6, auto, atr:
chrome diroctiOnll 11200,
74().247...292.
. .

Appliance Parts And Servlcb: All :
Name Brands Over 25 Veers Er- ·
perlence Ali Work Guaranteed,
Frencn Clly Maylag , 740· 448·

1894 Nluan Ahima w/alr, tuto,
pw, pi, sun·rool, radio w/caslttto.
vary good cond, 58k·mllos.
$8,700. 304-875· 1283.

• AKJ 4

720 Truckl for Sale

1991 GEO Tracker aolt·top, 2
wheel drive, Sspd, stereo, selling
lor pay-off S3,000. Call aner ~pm.
:;1)4.882·2997.

1994 Camoro Z·28 5.7l, IUIO,
whlta w/black t-topa. good ures,
new battery, well kept. $9,500
080. 304·832'3224.

• K 10 I

Easy Bank Financing For Uaed
Vehlclll, No Turn Downs , Call
VICide, 740-&lt;46-2897.

1986 Ford Tempo, $1100; 1989
CheYy 5-10, $850; 7.0.742·2351.

1988 Oldsmobile, 98 Regency,
like New, 69,000 miloa $2.895.00.
1989 Cavalier, 2 door, Autom ., AI
=;~;;;;Bo;;-$2!;0:'Ct;;;;;.;l c. 71a.OGO miles S2,t95.00 Cook
~
Motors 74().446-0103.

2 .bedroom downstars apartment.
$250 par month, plus uWIIy &amp; do·
posit, Third St., Racine, Oh, 740247·4292.
2 BR. 1 112 Baths, LA, OR, Central
Air. Fully Carpeted. 311 Third
Avenue . Gallipolis, 740·446·9364
After 5.

74().245-~597 .

90 Gao Siorm GSI, ground ef·
lectt, air, good condlllon, 13.000
080.740-992·5958(Arny).
.

·

II

•

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 25, 1998

Along

the River

Reporter pleads guilty to theft of Chiquita voice mail
. CINCINNATI &lt;AP) - A reporter fired by The Cincinllilli Enquirer on"'""
that he stole voice mail from the Chiquila b-~nana company pleaded
guthy Thur..Jay to two felony charges.
Michael Gallagher pleaded guilty to unlawful interception of communi·
cations and unauthoriud access to computer systems. He faces up to 2-112
yean in prison and a S7 .500 line when hc is sentenced March 19 in Hamilton County Common Plea.• Coon.
Gallagher. accompanied by his lawyer. madt no statement a.• he entered
the plea.• this morning before Judge Richard Niehaus. Special Prosecutor Perry Ancona wid the judge that Gallagher ha.• agreed to cooper.Jte with the ongomg grmd jury investigation of whether electronic communications and other proprietary materials were stolen from Cincinnati-ba.&lt;ed Chiquita Br.mds
International Inc.

Ancona declined to elaborate afterward 10 reponers.
Ancona i• investigating whether Gallagher used stolen voice-mail mes-

pt~ton

liages in articles published in May that questioned Chiquita's business prac·
rices in Cenlr.d America. In June. the newsp-Jper renounced the entire 18·
page series of anicles. !iaying Gallagher had deceived editors and may have
illegally oblaine&lt;fthe voice-mail messages.
The defense waived Gallagher\ indictment by a grand jury. He was
charged in a criminal information tiled by prosecutors.
Oliquita sued Gallagher on July 3 in federal coun. accusing him of
defamation and II other counL•. including stealing thousands of voice-mail
messages with the help of three current or former Chiquita employees.
OliquiLa sJ!UUsman Joseph Hagin said he does not know how Gallagher'•
criminal pleao will affect the company's civil lawsuit against Gallagher. But

Inside

$1-""

Mixing

II center for
the herbtlUst
movement

the company is plea..ro with his admission of guilt and the effon so far lly
criminal investigatOrs. Hagin said.
.
1
.. Thi• is an imponanl milestone r... all cilit.ens and organizmions who are
concerned about!~ privacy of their personal communications... Hagin said.
Harry M. Whipple, president and publisher of the Enquirer. did not immediately return a call for comment.
The Enquirer originally said its repone,-,. obtained copie• of !he voice mail
me•""s&lt;• from a high-ranking Chi~uiLa uflicial with aulhorily over tbe messaging system .
1"hc newspaper printed a front -page apology June 28 and •aid it had fired
Gallagher and was paying more !han SIO million to Chiquita lo ,.ule any
claims. Gallagher wa.• nc~ a pan y I&lt;&gt; !hal seulement.

musical

Details on
pageA2

cultu"'
...... CT .

• Fe.Wred on P9 C1

•

unba
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

HI: ....,go
Low: 80s

entintl

tmts

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • September 27, 1998

•

Vol. 33, No. 33

Battlefield supporters appeal mining permit
By Jill FREEMAH
n-Sentlnal
POMEROY - Legal efforta lo hall a planned gravel
mining operation near Portland moved into a local court ·
las! week, with an appeal filed in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas.
The Meigs County Historical Society and the Buffin·
gton Island Baulefield Preservation Foundation seek an
appeal from a Sept. 3 decision by the Ohio Division of
Mines and Reclamation granting Shelly Materials Inc. a
permit to operate an industrial matc:rials operation on a
486.4-acrc site in Lebanon Township.
The groups are opposed to a planned surface gravel
mine at !he site which is associated with the July 18,
1863, Battle of Buffington Island.
In that banle, the only Civil War conflict fought on
Ohio soil, a force of about 8,000 Union soldiers routed a
smaller contingct of Confederate: raider~ commanded by
General John Hunt Morgan. The running battle through
the Portland area ended Morgan's foray through Ken-

Staff

•

liSt 1111 St.

POlEROY

740112..14

Year·In
Taa
red.
MSRP
S22,957

1998 Pontiac Sunfire GT
2 Dr. auto., air. tilt, cruise, black.
MSRP

Now

1998 Chevy 5·1 0 Pickup

1999 Chevy Malibu

1999 Olds Cutlass GLS

LS, air, 5 speed,
cassette.

V6, auto., air, cruise,
PW, PL. cassette.

V-6, automatic, air, CD,
leather, cassette ..

Now Only

1999 Buick LeSabre Umited

1997 GMC Sonoma 4X4.

VB, auto .. air, platinum beige.

MSRP $18,695

~

1998 Buick Park Avenue

New Only S

' white.
V8. auto , air. locking diff.,

$27,271

1999 Buick Century Custom

New Only

$9790

Now Only

V6, aulo .. all power. pewter metallic.

$29,857

. 1997 GMC Safari AWD Van
V·6, loaded, cherry ice.

J

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo
Z-34

Now Only

$17,550

1998 Olds Cutlass GLS
V-6, auto., air,' CD &amp; cass.,
PL. PW, white.
MSRP $19,505

MSRP $22,933

Now Only

Now Only

$17,250

1998 Chevy Monte Carlo LS

1998 Olds Intrigue

4X4, VB, Silverado,

V6, automatic, CD,
tilt. cruise.

V-6, automatic.
Loadedl Silver.

MSRP $20,243

MSRP $29,374

s2 990

Now Only

MSRP $21,609

$17,950

1999 Chevy Monte Carlo LS

Conv. 4X4.
Air, cassette.

V6, auto. ,air, Torch red,
keyless entry.

MSRP $17,298

New Only

'

i:'

$21,300

1998 Chevy Tracker

New

$16,589 ,

1998 Chevy K1500 Ext. Cab

Now Only

MSRP

MSRP $20,150

3.8 V6, auto., air, leather, Torch red

auto. Loaded!

1999 GMC Sierra 4X4 Ext. Cab

V6. auto .. air, platinum gray.

MSRP $19,632

•

MSRP

New Only

V-6, automatic, air, CD,
cassette. leather.

Now Only

1998 GMC Sierra 4X4

Loaded. platinum beige. leather.

V6;auto., ai.r. CD,
tilt, cruise.

MSRP $24,011

$15,070

$1

Brand New! 5 speed ,
apple red.

cruise, V-8.

MSRP

Now Only

1998 Olds Cutlass GL

4X4, auto., air, tilt,

5 speed, air. aluminum wheels. black.

V6, auto .. air, Emerald green.

s17 250

1998 Chevy Camaro

1998 Chevy K1500 Pickup

1998 GMC Sonoma

MSRP $20,450

1997 Chevy S·1 0 Pickup

New Only

New

1999 Buick LeSabre Custom

Now Only

$

MSRP $11,682

V6, SLS. 5 speed. air, BRAND NEW!

~~.4Ajo~ ....

MSRP $20,155

$13,942

flow Only

Now Only

$19,400

1998 Olds Silhouette
GLS Vaa
V-6, loaded, leather, CD
MSRP $2B,370

Now

1995 Nissan 240 SXSE

1995 Chevy Corsica

S

7995 or S16S Per Mo.
1994 Buick Century
S
V6, auto., air. tilt, cruise, PW!.......... 6800 or S
1SS Per Mo.
1997 Olds Achieva
,
Auto., air, stereo, white ................. ...S9800 or S
187 Per Mo.
1997 Buick Skylark
Auto , air. tilt. cruise. cass ...............S9800 or $187 PerMo.
1997 Chevy Cavalier
S
5
Auto .. air. stereo .............................. 9900 or 189 Per Mo.
1997 Pontiac Grand Am
s ·
White. cass .. auto. AJC .................... 1
0,500 or 5199 Per Mo.
1997 Pontiac Sunfire
s
Auto., air, spoiler. white ................... 1
0,500 or 5199 Per Mo.
1994 Pontiac Sunbird
S
.
5
Auto., air, PS. PB, stereo ................. 6500 or 148 Per Mo.
Several to choose from! ..................

s9 SOO or S197 Per Mo.
1996 Buick Century
s
Auto., air, V6, beige ......................... 9200 or S189 Per Mo.
1996 Chevy Corsica
Auto, air, stereo ...............................S6SOO or $135 PerMo.
1996 Ford Contour
·
5 speed, air, cassette ......................S8SOO or S
175Per Mo.
1994 Pontiac Grand Prix S
V6 , auto .. air. tilt, cruise, PW.:......... 8SOO or S
194 Per Mo.
1994 Chevy S·l 0
V6, auto., air, tilt. cruise. stereo .......S8500 or$ 194 Per Mo.
1997 Chevy S·IO
s
5 speed, stereo, PS. PB .................. 7500 or $144 Per Mo.
CD, 5 speed, red, air, tilt, cruise ......

97 - 8. 75% APR - 66 months
96 - 8. 75% APR - 60 months
95- 8.99&amp; APR - 60 months
94 - 9.24% APR - 54 months

All Rabataa to dealer, tiX &amp; title
not Included. All payment•
aublect to credit approval.
Paymenta figured on 60
payments at 0.9% APR.

92 Olds
International ............... $8,500
96 Mercury Marquls ............................. $12,900
97 Buick LeSabre ................................. $16,900
91 Chevy Caprlce ................................. .. $6,800
98 Olds 88 ................ ............................. $18,995
Buick Riviera ................................... $16,400
98 GMC Jimmy Maroon , 15,000 miles .... $22,500
97 Chevy S-10 Ext. Cab ....................... $12,500
97 Chevy K1500Z-71 ............................ $22,500
96 Chevy S-10 Ext. Cab ........ ............... $10,900
95 Chevy K1500 4X4 ........... ...... ......... .. $14,900
98 Buick LeSabre ................................. $19,900
96 Honda Accord .................................. $14,500
97 Honda Accord LX ............................ $16,000
93 Olds Cutlass Conv. ........................... $8,900
95 Cadillac Sevllle ........ ............... ......... $21,900
94 Mazda B4000 4X4 ............................ $10,500
98 GMC Jimmy 10.000 miles .................. $23,500
90 GMC SafariVan ....... ........... ............... $6,900
98 GMC Sierra SLE ... ... .. ....... .............. . $22,900
95 Olds 88 ................ ............ ...... .. ......... $11,900
93 Toyota 4X4 Pickup ............................ $8,800
93 Olds 88 LS ......................... ...... .......... $8,800
95 Chevy Camaro Conv. Black ............. $12,500

RIO GRANDE - Sixth Dis·
trict congressional candidates Ted
Strickland and Nancy Hollister
will face off in a debate set for
Saturday, Oct. 3 from 6-7:30 p.m.
in the John W. Berry Fine and
Performing Arts · Center at the
University of Rio Grande.
Republican Hollister, Ohio's
lieutenant governor, is looking to
unseat incumbent U.S. Rep. Strick·
land, D· Lucasville, in the Nov. 3
election. The Rio Grande debate: is
one of 14 the two .havc S(~uled
for each county In the district.
The candidates will field questions from a panel of local media
representatives, moderated by
Dene Pellegrinon of Gallipolis.
The panel will consist of Jennifer
Driscol, editor of The Signals, Rio
Grande's student newspaper;
Larry Ewing, managing editor for
the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.;
and John Pelletier, general manager of WMGG/WJEH Radio,
Gallipolis.
Both candidates noted that
they look forward to the debate
.and hope for a large attendance.
"I am pleased that Mrs. Hollis·
&lt;er has accepted my challenge to
:debate in each of the district's 14
wunties," Strickland said. "Voters
wilt' have a great opportunity to to
:SCe the political process in action."
· : "The audience is the key to lhc
'success of every debate because
Jts members have an opportunity
ask questions, as well as listen
to the discussion," Hollistc:r said.
Provost Greg Sojka, Ph.D.,
said students are encouraged to
attend the debate.
He described the event as "an
opportunity for faculty, staff and
students to participate with Gallia
residenls in our democratic
p1occss of electing our represen·
!alive.
"Being an involved citizen is
an importanl part of the educa·
tional process at Rio Grande,"
Sojka added .
For more information, contact
Kathleen Gierhart in Rio
Grande's Universily Relations
Office at 245-7327.

lo

A repreaanlltlve ol the Ohio
Valley Publlahlng Co. will Mrva
aa a panellat during the Oct. 3
Holllater - Strickland debate.
Raedara are Invited to aubmlt
potential queatlona lor the can.dldatea by Hnallto:
galtrlbunl@lurtk~net.com

or
ltwlng@auraklntt.com
Queatlont may alao be aubmmecl by mall to:
Ohio Valley Publlahlng
825 Third Ave.
Galllpolla, Ohio 4M31

Good Mornin
Today'l ~blati-Jtatbul
I2 Sections - 138 Pqes

•

C4&amp;6
D3-7

.Calendan ·-··Clusllleds
Comics
Eclltodals
Aloga the Rim

A4
C1

QbltJWriH

AS

SgortJ

11:1

IDR[J

0 1998 Ohto V.llcy P\lbUihl"l Co.

,,

thing for Meigs County, • said Margaret Parker, presideD~
of the Meigs County Historical Society.
'There's nothing (in the discussion) for Meip Couaty, our sites have already been marked,' she said, referring to the fund to mark Morgan's route: ac:rou Ohio.
In addition, Parker expreued concerns thai lbe 40acre "bloody ground" site, where dead Confederate 101diers may be buried, is where the barge loading W:ility
will be located.
"We need to leave the burial site completely alone,• .
she said. "We need to look a little further for it. •
Sons of Union Veterans and Sons of Confederate Veterans have expressed concern over unmarked paves at
the battlefield that may be destroyed by the mining.
Battlefield supponers will hold a public meeting on
Oct. 13, 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Municipal Building with
the purpose: of gauging community interest in savi111
more of the battlefield. Manin and a represenlalive of
the historic preservation office will be on hand 10 answu
questions.

Abeacon for ·

Hollister, Strickland
to face off at
Rio next Saturday

ale

·MSRP $14,081

New

On-going talb between the Ohio Historic Preservation Office and lbe Shelly Company are underway in an
effort to save at least part of the battlefield.
Amos I..Dveday, state historic preservation officer,
and a spokesman for the Shelly Company earlier report·
ed to the Columbus Dispatch some of the options being
discussed including:
• Not mining a 40-acre central seclion of the battlefield known as the "bloody ground" where the heaviest
fighling took place;
• Establishing a fund 10 mark Morgan's route across
Ohio;
• Donating any battle anifacts discovered to a historic
prctervation group;
• Providing landscaping to shield the mining operation and reclaiming the mined land.
In addition, I..Dveday said he would like to see the fouracre park on.lbe battlefield, which is owned by the Ohio
Historical Society, improved 10 include a visitors' center.
"We don't need the whole thing, but we need some-

~ewsWatch

HOURS: FRIDAY 9A.M.-8 P.M., SATURDAY 9A.M.-4 P.M., SUNDAY I P.M. TO 5
3800 VB, all power. auto .. air, Santa Fe

lucky, Indiana and Ohio; and, cut off his escape into
western Virginia (now West Virginia).
The property owned by the company is largely
encompassed by state Route: 124, the battlefield monument and Bald Knob-Stivcr~ville Road. Some of !be
propeny is located between stare Rou!C 124 and lbe
Ohio River. The company announced its piau to mine
the area in I996.
On May 7, the Division of Mines and Reclamalion
approved a surface mining permit authorizing Shelly
Materials, Inc. to operate an industrial minerals mine in
Meigs County.
An additional hearing was scheduled 10 be held Oct.
20, butt he decision granting the permit cited a section of
the Ohio Revised Code stating the division is not
allowed to consider the historical or ardlcological significance of a proposed sire and that IlliCit iuuea arc outside the division's sphere of regulation.
The historical society and preservation foundation
are represented by Jackson attorney William C. Martin.

the community
~=:n~~~jtaff
CENTERVILLE -

For

'Fund-raising

e"ort seeks

almosllhrce dc~des, a ligh~ed
cross on Rock Hdl ovcrlookmg
III
Centerville and U.S. 35 has
•
served as a beacon for the communily, as well as for truck driI 1
~ers a~d othe~ motorists pass1ng by m the mght.
·1 1
Due to deteriorating equip·
menl, the cross has only been
visible by day for the last two
If 1 1 II
1\1
years, and numerous inquiries
•
have prompted the village.
Centerville Volunteer Fire
I If I I II
Depanmcnt and the Thurman
United Methodist Church to launch a fund-raising effort to light the cross
again.
The community hopes to rededicate the cross in December, in time for the
30th anniversary of its first appearance. but if the goal is not reached by
then, the ceremony will be held after the project is completed.
"People connect the cross with the community," explained Centerville
resident Hobart Daniels. "It hadn't been lit for some time because the exterior bulbs would blow when it rained, and it really needs to be changed to a
protected system."
The community looks to replace the bulbs surrounding the cross, now
mounted on a withered wooden post. The post will also be replaced with a
vinyl post to better withstand the weather.
Daniels said 98 lights have been ordered for the cross, each costing just
under $10, and new wiring will also be installed with money raised by the
campaign.
The cross was originally dedicated Dec. 15, I 968, after the Rev. Robert
H. Ball, then pastor of the Thurman United Methodist Church, and mcmbeiB
of his church advanced the idea of pulling up a lighted cross from discussion
to r~ality.
Using the basic pauern of a similar cross at Pomeroy, Ball and Okcy Coffee did the initial work on the cross and its base. The structure was cut at the
home of Roy Moses and it was then taken back to Coffee's residence, where
it was painted and readied for assembly.
The actual assembly occurred at
the Thurman Grange 1416 building
ncar the church, with the assistance
of Clyde Walker, Gilbert Boster and
Ted Pcrroud. American Electric
Power supplied the current and also
raised the cross on the hill, according
to a history of the event wrillen by
Ball, now a United Methodist district
supervisor in northwest Ohio.
Over the years, the cost of lighting
the cross at night ran about $4.80 per
month and the expense was shared
by church members and others,
according to Ball's account.
Truck drivers started taking note
of the cross, reflecting on its meaning
and even informing the church of the
condition of the bulbs. The village
council has also contributed money
to its upkeep .
Since the cross went dark, village
officials and residents have been
asked about its future.
"Our council used to get lcners
from truckers who apprecialed the
cross," noted village council member
Naomi Beman. "They would tell us
that when they saw the cross, they
were close to home. So evidently a
lot of them were from this area."
THE COMMUNITY hopei 10
"A lady heard some truckeiS talk- rededicate the croa In Deoeming about it, and she gave us a dona- ber, In tlmt for the 30th annlvertion toward its restoration," said ury of Ita ftrtt app11111nce, but
Daniels' wife Ann, also a member of If the goal II not ~ br
council. "That's what got it going, then, the certmony will be held
and we'll push it to get it started."
after the proJect Ia complltM.
Donations for the cross were
taken at Saturday's benefit chili supper and auction for the Centerville VFD,
and a contribution box has been put up at the A &amp; A Truck Stop seveRI miles
west of Centerville on 35.
Anyone interested in,making a donation can send it to the Thurman Unit·
cd Methodist Church Cross Fund, P.O. Box 40, Thurman, Ohio 4S68S .

to •ellght
the CW'.OSS
ou:e•'oo"l·ng
Cente"'l·"e

Clydesdales come to GalliPolis
THE CHEERS AND APPLAUSE lor the worldlamoua Clyd11dll11 were heard In Qelllpolla Frlday 11 they etrollad through the downtown. Hera,
a groomer pull a final touch on the lead anlmala
rigging prior 10 the team'• walk through the city.
The Clydeadalta pulled the tredltlonal reel, whitt

end gold wagon; end, made eeveral etopa
throughout Galllpolle during the lett llttmoon.
Sponeorld by the Gallla County Chamber of
Commerce, elghlaltre ware lllordad numerou1
photo oppoltunltlaa along the route and In the
Qalllpolla City Park.

Area foilage ·begins to reveal
first hint of fall's blaze of color
&gt; . .

By JILL WILUAMS
Drew Todd, slate urban
nme•Sentlnll Stall
forestry coorilinator, agreed that
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio's fall
the leaves of individual trees in
color season is jusl ,a week or two
cities and suburlls and in some .
away - that's the message being
pockets of woOded areas may
revealed by the first hint of red,
turn early.
yellow and orange,
The changing of colors in the
"Don't take our surrounding
slate moves from north to south,
countryside for granted because
with the best viewing in heavily
many people travel thousands of
forested southeastern Ohio.
miles just lo get a glimpse of fall
The Ohio Valley Visitors
color," said Raccoon Creek CounCenter in Gallipolis said the
ty Park Manager l1ebbie Elliott.
changing colors arc a good draw.
"We have such a diversity of
"We've had a lot of people
hardwood speciell;,,'psuhing in a
·call down here wanting to know
wide range of fall · colors."
the best time to view the leaves,"
In some parts of Ohio, I he colaccording to Stephanie Viars,
ors could peak by 1~ end of Sepoffice manager.
tember instead of 'mid-October,
A reported 22 percent of
Bob Butts, horticulturist for Five
leisure travel to Ohio last year
Rivers MctroParks Cox Arboreoccurred in October, November
tum in Dayton, said Wednesday.
and December.
"We ought to have pretty good
Jim Lynch, .spokesman for
fall colors," he said. "II will
the Ohio Department of Natural
probably be two weeks earlier.
Resources, said many tourists
But I think we should be pretty
visit slate parks, nature preserves
good on vivid colors."
and forests in the fall to enjoy the
According to Bill Schultz,
changing colors of the leaves.
spokesperson for the Ohio
He said Ohio i~ one ofthe best
Department
of
Natural
states in the Midwest to do that
Resources, recent weeks of dry
because the wide variety of trees
weather in many parts of central
produces a wide amy of colors.
and southern Ohio should not
EARLY AUTUMN Mllher playa e kay
Beginning earlier this week,
dramatically affect the fall cplor rote In detarmlnlng the brilliance of IIIII col- the department plans I~ pul phoforecast for those areas.
ora. A earlea of warm, aunny dlya with cool tographs of the changmg colors
"Trees In larger'forest stands nlghta brtnga out lhl ~ briHiant color on trees at state parks on its
should be unaffected by the dry dlaplay.
World Wide We~ page to help
conditions, but individual landtourists find the best spots for
scape trees or those in smaller urban stands may drop viewing. The site will be updated regularly through
their leaves before they have a chance to change colors," October. ODNR's fall color update can be found ll
Schultz said.
www.dnr.statc.oh.us/odnr/color
~~~~--~--~~~

Recommended route• for colgr 'tpydng' In aoutbaastarn Ohio
It's hard to make a wrong tum
when out for a fall color drive
through the scenic Meigs and Gallia
countryside. But, here are some
ODNR recommended routes:

•

• SR 1Z4, from Recine, east and west into Jackson County.
. .
north into Athens Cougty.
• SR 141, west from Galhpohs
• SR 338, from Racine, cast into Lawrence County.
throuah the Great Bend region.
• SR 233, from Route 141, near
• U.S. 35, from the Ohio River Cadmus, north into Jackson Co.

1

'

'

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