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.

.

- 7 ·g

I • 1'1la DliPIY SuiPinl? 11187 Fo:Aiifill Prlllil•

Patriots
expect to have hands fun with rivals in AFC East
,.
.

Sipitiant loSSes - DB Jeroiile
Hendmon, G &amp;II Knich, CB Otis
Ill*
Smith.
: New Eaglllld represented the
Slrellgtbs - Quartetback Drew
:NC ill Supa- Bowl XXXI - some B~. ... Wide receivers Terry
llad 10 - but bardl' 111yone is Glenn llld Shawn Jefferson. ...
i!iCDrllkl'llliolstomau:hlastsea-- Running back Curtis Martin....
..... MICCCIS u8der depated OOIICh Third-down weapon Dave Meggen.
~ l'lrcdls.
... Offensive left tad.le Bruce
AFC Elst has oo super leam Annstrong .... Tight end Ben Coales.
:11!f aho has 110 pushovers. Miami ... I'm protection. ... Lineback=
..nil · continue to improve under Todd Collins, -oms Slade and Ted
~y Johnson. Defense should Johnson. ... Placekjcker Adam
~ the Bulfalo Bills competitive. Vinatieri . ... Punter Torn Tupa.
hopes to be healthier
Weaknesses/questions llllllts ~·
.
. Run-blocking ... Depth at wide
,.,. 'l1le New Yorlc 1e1s were l -IS last receiver.... Defensive line.... Depth
iilloa under Rich Kocite, and the at linebacker. ... Revamped sec4ftnl ofPin:ells should be wortlul ' ondary_must improve last season's
, ,_.._ four or five tniR wins.
28th r1111king. ... Tough schedule
• •New F 11 wl hiQols--: Coacli (NFL-higb nine gameo vs. 1996
l!ile Carroll: 11 -S last sea5011; playoffleamS).
fil• •Ned opponents by lOS points
Stalistics and facts- Coming off
:tJll-313); beat Pittsburgh and first 'AFC East title since 1986. ...
Wcboaville in AFC playoffs, loSI Nfl.-most 339 first downs .... Slarled
'l5-2t to Green Bay in Super Bowl 0·2, tben ave~ed Nfl.-most 27
DxJ; 7th in overall offense and points per game in an 11-3 finish. ...
· ~ in overall defense; 34 take- Defense struggled early but allowed
:~PYs. 27 pveaways (plus-7); 33 only 73 points in the seven games
aad 30 sacks againSt (plus- prior to.the Super Bowl.
Don't be surprised if - The
_ j;.ut year's team went to the Patriots miss Parcells in the playoffs
_ . - Bowl despite 1101 running the and lose in the first round.
'Jill. well and having no defensive Predicted 1997 n:conl-:- 10-6.
~- Some players are deterMiami Dolphins ·Coach
. . . . to prove thai ParCells was nor Jimmy Johnson; 8.8 last season:
:l'tfllior factor in the team's sucoess. ~ .opponents by 14 points
• : ~y additions - OT Zefross (339-325); 14th in offense and 17th
~ DT Hemy Thomas, LB Jeff in defense; 36 .t.Keaway_s, 24 give,
~iiims.
·
aways (plus-12); 37 sacks by and 36
, ::1.: •
sacks againSI (plus- I).
., ·
Central...
The big question is ho~ much
-·-· .
quarterback Dan Manno will have
· :;·: (Continued fram Page IS).
Jell w~ the rest of the team is ready
-!• . ·
to senously contend for a Super
~ gun~; ...:Left side of defense. Bowl berth. Injuries already have
..... Need -lnore pass rush from John tajten a heavy toll for this season..
~- ... Very tough early schedule ' Key additions - WR Lawrence
::lfint seven games include Green Dawsey, S Corey Harris, CB Clayton
...eay twice, Dallas and New Holmes, PK Ohndo Mare. TE Walter
~wl).
'
Reeves, S George Teague.
: . .:sumucs and facts _ Offense Significant losses - CB RobeR
~from 392 points in 1995 to Bailey. CB J.D. Brown, WR Randal
~3 I8SI - - ... Lost 144 man- Hill, QB Bernie Kosar, PK Joe
•piMr pmes to injuries.... 31-IS in Nedney, S Louis Oliver, LB Chris
~in )8S( 10 years .... Have Smgleton.
:i9if lUI Nfl.-rec:onl 18 consefl'tive Str:engths - Johnson's winning
:,itpl..--season ruad games in expene~ ..... Manno when ~thy.
Olocember. __ 3S-17 at home jn divi- ... Expenenced wade receavers OJ.
. i;ion si~~ee 1980. ... 19-2 under McDuffie and Fred Barnen._ ... Tight
::wuntledt with a plus tumolrer ratio end,Troy Drayton.... Runmng back
&gt;ud S-2S with a minus ratio. ... Karim A:~ul-Ja_bbar. ... Left sade of
· :WU.,11 u is 33·3l in . his /our sea- the offenstve line . ... Potential of
:lou (illcludin&amp; 1-7 vs. Green Bay). defensave -tackles Daryl _Ganl~ner
• Don't be swprised i£- Kramer is and nm Bowens.... Middle h!le: &amp;tauag quao1Crbllck by midseason. backer Zach Thomas.... Punter John
:; J'nodicrd.1997rec:onl- 4-12.
Kidd.
MATTHEWS
D I a 181

.:, n.

t••ttpOlis

.

:!i!ets,.
:F

we

*

WWnesseslqueslions IJIIIb Mmno turns 36 ill Seplauba and is
growing brittle.... ?..act of speed at
wide receiver {rootie deep threat
Yatil Grecll 0111 for the season with a
knee injury). ... Rigla side of lllC
offensive line . ... Rest of the liaebackers. ... New sec:ondary. ...
Placekicker. ... Punt coverage. ...
Long injury liSI alreldy (Green,,kick
i'etwner Kirlly Dar Dar and special
teams ace Larry Izm out for the sea5011).

Stalistics and facts - OIJense had
seven one-m games last~- ...
Abdul-Jibbar the team's first 1.000yard rusher since 1918.... Tops in
NfL in TDs in red lDtle (62 pen:ent;
31 -for-50) . ... Marioo holds NFL
career records wid! S 1,636 yards
passing; 4.134 completions; and
6,903Stempts .... Haven't been shut
out since 1987.
Don' t be surprised if - The
quicker defensive !lllit improves significandy but the offense is 81 least
mildly disappointing.
Predicted. l997 record- 9-7.
Buffalo Bills - Coach Marv
Levy; 10-6 last season; OUISCtRd
opponents by 53 points (319-26(\);
lost to Jacksonville in AFC playoffs;
I 7th in offense and 9th in defense: 28
takeaways, 37 giveaways (minus-9):
48 sacks by and 48 sacks against.
The experts picking the Bills to
finilih last in the division are underestimating the defensive unit and
perhaps overestimating the Joss of
quarterback Sim Kelly, who was a
shadow of his prime self last season.
Key additions - KR/WR Jimmy
Cunningham, QB Billy Joe Hobert,
NT Esera Tuaolo.
Significant losses- WR Russell
Copeland, C Kent Hull, QB Jim
Kelly, LB Mark Maddox.
. Strengths - Solid defense at
every position.... Rush defense. ...
Pass-rushing ends Bruce Smith and
Phil Hansen. ... Run-stuffing nose
tackle
Ted
Washington.
Linebackers
featuring
Chris
Spielman and Bryce Paup. .. .
Secondary with Henry Jones,
Thomas Smith and Jeff Bwris. ...
Running backs Antowain Smith and
Thwman Thomas. ... Wide receivers
Andre Reed, Quinn Early and Eric
Moolds . ... Offensive linemen John
Fina and Ruben Brown. ... NFL's
top-rated special teams last season.
... Placeki_cker Steve Christie. ...
. PunterCh!'s Molx".... IGck coverage.
... .Coachang staff, mcludmg new
offensive coordinator Dan Henning.
Weaknesses/questions muks -

How mucb will Kdly's laldcnbip
and savvy be miucd'! Qwltlt.:b
Todd Co??ins llld Bill, Joe Hobert
have much 10 prove. ... Clli rookie
Smith lean! with Thomas 10 piv&gt;'ide
the ground-Meated l..tl-coatrol
11118ck - llemlins is looking fur? ...
. ng?a end l.onllie .lolulson must do
more. ... Cemer aad rigla side of
offensive line.... Pw pi'OO!Ciioa....
Can Jones mum c:omplerely from a
broken leg? ... Need IIIOR tateaways.
Statistics and facts - AlloMd
~low 3.4 ytll'ds per carry.... i.ed
Nf1.. with five bloc:bd fldd go11s
(three by Smith) .... Were 9~ in p?ayoffs at Rich Stadium before !bockin&amp;
loss 10 Jacksonville. ... 1ietl with
Kansas City for AR:'s best home
n:cord in the 1990s (44-12)....
Thomas and BaiTy Slllders- the
only running t.cks ever with eiJht
consecutive 1,000-yanl rushing seasons. ... Levy's 148 wins are ·the
lith-most in Nf1. hiSIOI'y.
Don ' t be surprised if ,..- The
defense canies the Bills to a wildcard playoff berth.
Predicted 1997 record- 8-8.
ladl•••polis Colts - CoKh
Lindy Infante; 9· 7 ·last season;
outscored by 17 points (317-344);
loSI to Pittsburgh in AFC ptayoffs;
25th in offense and 22nd in defense;
23 takeaways, 24 giveaways (minusI); 29 sacks by and 43 sa:ts againsL
Last season's Colts made the
playoffs hl"liiCk-to-bick years for the
first time since 19,76-n despite a
long injury list. Eighteen starters
missed a combined f/j' starts, every
defensive starter missed at least one
game, and a league-high 41 different
players made Slarts.
'
Management made few significant personnel moves during the offseason and is convinced a healthier
roster is all the team needs.
·
Key additions - DB Robert
Blackmon. DE Albert Fonten01. DE
Dan Footman, CB Carhoo Gray.
Significant losses - LB Trev
Alberts, OL Troy Auzenne, CB Ray
Buchanan, LB .Jeff Herrod, DT Tony
Siragusa, S David Tale.
Strengths - Quarterback Jim
Halbaugh .... Wide I!Ceivers Marvin
Harrison and Sean Dawkins.... Tight
end Ken Dilger. ... Running back
Marshall · Faulk.. ... Fullbacli: Zack.
.Crocken. ... Linebackers Quentin
Coryatt and Steve Grant.
Placekicker Cary Blanchard. ...
Punter Qlris Ganloeki.
Wealmesseslquestioos marks Running game must improve {4.1

yank per cmy ill 199S 10 3.0 last
- ).... How adt C8D rookies
1irik GleM IIIII Ada.i Ucr :lows
hdp the SIISp'l" olfeesive line? ...
How ..U will the defaisive unit
miss leaders Siracusa, Herrod and
Buct.a? ... Need -!Keaways
(23) llid SKks (29).... bah schedule (will face 8CVCii playolf teams).
St.tistics llid flcu - Olfensive
tine allowed 43 sa:ts IIIII the rbshins
'llllcli: ranted 2lllh ... - - ·NFL-fewesl 76 penalties for 61S
yards. ... BIIIIChlrd led the Nf1. in
field..pl __,., (36-for~) and .
had 16 IUs from -40 yards or longer.
... I J-33-ia September 1984 d.-ougll
199S bul ~ in 19116. ... Open in
Miami, then seve~~ of the next 10
gliDeS II the RCA Dome.
Don't be swprised if,.... The Colts
have rewa- injuries than I8SI season

Sa?.y cap after
1996 spe'ldi•J-spree.
Srorislics IIIII tau - Loll six
pmes ,. five points or less last season.... Blew sii l..tllime le*h- ...
Outgaincd opponents in seven of the
first ll pmes: ... Olrebet led the
NR.. with 31 finl-4on Cllcltes. ...
NFI.-- 468i-WI)'S.... 3-21 in
the last tlfte pmes of the I8SI ei!ht

OOVCQI'C· ...

•MEIGS

MARAUDERS

•EASTERN
EAGLES

.D.m

'll.w

MEIGS
MOTEL

Wilmington
Q•r•• nt
Sept. 6 .................Umana-1 :30 p.m.
Sept. 13.. ............. Wabaoh-1 :30 p.m.
Sept. 20.01 Tho~ More-l :30 p.m.
Sept. 27 ......Susquehanna-? :30 p,m,
Oct. I L .....at Wittenbelz-7:30 p.m.
Oct.· J8 ...............Earlham- 1:30 p.m.
Oct. 25 ..............at Maryville-2 p.m .
Nov. I ................Bluffton-! :30 p.m.
Nov. 8 .......... :..... Bethany-1 :30 p.m.
Nov. 15 .al Mt. Sr. Joseph- I :30 p.m.

Dllt .

.

Bluffton
Dlk

o,

..•

•WAHAMA
WIDTE FALCONS

'

.HERALD'S QUALITY HOMES
1 1/2 miles South of Tuppers Plains

614-667-3899

State Route 7
·Pomeroy
992-5531

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL
HIGH SCHOOLS

m'

Sept 6
w; .__ 7
, ...........:.31 . allen~ ..- p.m.
Sept. IL..Oiuo No,:them-1:30 p.m.
Sept 20 ·
· ..._, 1 t·30
Sept: 20:::::;;.-·M·~~';!-:1;30~:::
Oct. 4 ........ Thomas More-1 :30 p.m.
Oct. 11 .........Sue Bennelt-1 :30 p.m.
Oct. 18.......81 Grove Caty-1.30 p.m.
Oct. 25 .....Mt. St. Joseph-1 :30 p.m.
No 1
at Wil · gton 1·30
v. .......
.I man
: : p.m.
Nov. 8 .......... .at Defiance 1.30 p.m.

APPLE
TREE ESTATES
.
.
•

t

Aug. 28 ,........Slippery Rock-7 p.m.
Sept ,6........................... Kc111-7 p.m.
Sept. 20 .......... ,.at Bostoa U.-7 p.m. ·
Sept. 20 .......... ,.... ..... HofSirD-7 p.m.
Oct. 4 .............. at Indiana St.-3 p.m.
Oct. I ! ...................... Bullalo-1 p.m.
Oct 18 .at Northern lowa-2:30 p.m.
Nov. I .................. llliiiOis SL-1 p.m.
Nov. 8 ......... .at S. IlliiiOis-1 :30 p.m.
Nov. 15 ............sw Missouri- I p.m.
Nov. 22 .......Western Illinois- I p.m.

Smith.

•SOUTHERN
TORNADOES

Sports on Page 4

•

Clear and cool tonight
with some patchy fog ,
lows In the upper 50s.
Saturday, mostly clear.
Highs In the lower BOa,

•

en tine

.Don 't be -aurpriled if- The.Jets
puU off a few upsers bul continue 10
be the only Nf1. team {excllldiDJ the
thiril-y- expansion teams) since the
1970 NFI.JAFL merger not to win a
divisional tide.
Predicted 1997 recant - S-11.

BEST WISHES TO ALL AREA .TEAMS
.'

Pick 3:
5-6-2
Pick 4:
4-4-9-2
Buckeye 5:
2-3-1 G-25-37

-·

=:~oJ~~ C.O:.:t·Bill Youngstown State

SignifiCIIIt losses - 01. Harry
Boatswain, lB Kyle Clifton, G
Hany Galbreath, LB Bobby
Houston. DT Erik Howard, S Gary
Jones, PK Nick Lowery, QB Frank
Reich, DT M...: Spindler, DE
Marvin WashinJion, S Lonnie
Young.
Sr.engths .,... Parcells and his
staff. ... Talenl81 offensive skill posilions.... Qualtlba:k Neil O'Donnell
throwing to Keyshawn .Johnson. Jeff
Gnham, .Wayne &lt;llrebet, Alex Van
Dyke and Kyle Bl'ldy.... Olfensive
lefl tackle Jumbo Elliott (when
health ) and guard M O'Owy
Y ted
. lll!_ __t
da-: ...
Undem
runnang ..... A nan
MuiTCII.... Defe~sive e.ftd , Hugh
Douglas.
. Lanebackers. .
=.~ks. ... Punter Bnan
Weaknesses/
.
marts
"--O'DonnellqueshealbOnsth
'-""
stay
Y(sepallll·
ed slioulder ad torn calf muscle lasr

Buckeyes
win 1st game
of season

- ) ? ... Cu w...,. MCI PM:dls
JCI along? ... ltaa of the oer-ive
line . ... Rest of the clef ·¥e tile. ...
Plardci&lt;*rr. ... Kictotr rmns IIIII

but fall short of . management's - - - - - - - - - - expeciMions.

Pan:ells; l-IS last season; outscored
by m poinll (219-454); 12th in
offense and 27th in defense: 26 takeaways, 46 giveaways (l'ftinus-20); 28
sacks by and 41 sacks against
(minus-13).
Last season·~ Jets mipt have
been the most taletUed ~win team
in Nf1. history. and Parcells is a g!Xl'l
bet for I 997 Nf1. C.O.:h of the Year.
Key additions - DT Ronnie
Dixon, LB Dwayne Gordon. PK
John Hall, DB Jerome llenderSon.
LB Pepper Johnson, DE Emie
Logan, DE Rict [¥1e, FB l..Oienzo
Neal. G William Roberts. CB Otis

Ohio Lottery

Vol. 41,

!.

NO. 85

2 Sectiona, 12 Pagel, 35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 29, 1997

Cl1997, Ohla valley Pubtlahlng ComJ*'Y

A Gannen Co. Newspaper

Board seeks updated information from voters
Reminder serves as means
of boosting turnout at .polls
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
. Registered voters who haven't gone to the polls in recent years will be
hearing from the Board of Elections in the next two weeks, by way of a notace
asking for updated infonnation.
·
Staff at the board office are now in the process of mailing confinnation
notices to voters who have registered to vote, but haven't done so since before
· the 1996 presidential general election.
,.
.
The notice gives registered voters the opportunity to noufy the board of

'We.'re
gonna
get 'em'

..

permanent address changes either within the county or outside of the coun- are expected to be in the mail by the end of next week, according to Smith.
ty, or to notif' the board that they are still a1 the address the board shows as
"We want to remind lhose who haven't voted for a while that they are regtheir legal residence.
·
,
istered and that they should go to the polls on election day," Smith said. "This
Even if voters went to the polls during the 1996 partisan primary elec- is p~n of an ongoing process to increase voter awareness and panicipation."
tion, but did not vote in the general election. they will receive .a card and
"The Secretary of State's office and the local board of elections is increasshould return it to update the board's records, according to Director Rita ing efforts to get out the vote, and thiS reminder is one way to encourage
Smith.
those who are registered to vote to do so," she said.
The notices include a postage-paid reply card which allows the voter 10
Voters will have until Oct. 6 to return the poslage-paid reply card to lhc
update the board's record. If the card is not returned, the voter may be asked board office.
to verify their address at the polls if and when they show up to vote, and
For those who have nol registered to vole, 1he deadline for registering in
their registration could he purged from the board's records after the year 2000. order to vote in the November general election is Oct. 6, according to the
. The board is sending out over 3,400 of the cards, and paying over $1 ,500 board of elections.
in postage, including the return mail cost. The process is prescribed by the ·
This fall's ballot will include school board members. village and.townoffice of the Secretary of Suite in order to increase voter turnout. The cards ship officials and several tax levy issues. ·

New Athens VA
clinic cuts travel
for Meig~s clients

Voinovich signs
bill strengthening
ability to track
support collection.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Local veterans are being urged to take advanlage of a new Veterans Admin-istration medical clinic that opened recently in Athens. '
The communi-ty -based outpatient clinic, located at 510 W. Union St. ncar
the Athens County Fairgrounds, offacially opened its doors on Aug. II :
The clinic is an~
· itiative of the VA Hcalthcare System of Ohio, designedto enhance ease 2f ess to outpatient services for patients residing in rural, medically undeu ved regions of Ohio.
·
Offered there arc preventative care, health screening, episodic care, triage,
prc-admissiqn work-up and post-discharge follow-up, and the managemenl
of chronic illnesses. ,
In addition, primary mental health services will .also be offered, including medication management, brief therapy and substance abuse aftercare
counseling.
Physician coverage will be provided lh~ough ~ ~harin~ ogrecmcn.t ~ith
the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Mcdacmc with 01hcr chmcal,
administrative and clerical support provided by the medical center and din- ,
ic hours arc 8-4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, except holidays.
Meigs County Veterans Service Officer Max Calc is hoping local velcrans usc tbc new facility.
.
"This gives the veterans Jhc opportunity Jo go tuAthcns instead of Chillicothe or Hunlington, W.Va.," said Calc.
The biggest benefit of using the Athens dinic is thcrcduchon in travel
time. Making the 35-mile tnp to Athens cuts travel time m hall compared to
going t(\ Chillicothe or Huntington . Calc said.
,. ·
..
Not all veterans' conditions will allow them 10 utlh7.c the new dmac, but
Calc estimates ahoul 50 percent of Meigs County's veterans will he able to ·
take advantage of the A\llens clinic.
"It's too early In know at this point," he said.
.
Veterans who have an appointment afid need transportataon can contact
the_Meigs County Vc1erans Service Office al 992·2820.
Calc said the office makes I0 to 12 such trips a month.
The clinic was officially dedicated Aug. 22.

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Deadbeat parents, take note: the governor says the
Ohio Department of Human Services
now has the tools to track you down .
"We're gonna get 'em.'' Gov.
George Voinovich said Thursday
after signing a bill 'aUthorizipg the usc
of computers, genetic testing and other methods to find parents who owe
their children money.
·
"Sooner or later, we're going to
find you."
The bill sponsored by Rep. Cheryl
Winkler, R-Cincinnati , will make
child-support collection a one-stop
service and will help authorities colCincinnati, wha sponsored the action.
AFTER THE SIGNING - Gov. George
Volnovlch's signing put the bill Into effect as
lect from deadbear parents.
Volnovlch, right, after signing House Bill 352
law Thursday. (AP)
It creates one central office to colthat Improves child support, apoke with Raps.
Jim Meson, A-Bexley, and Charyl Winkler, R·
lect and distribute support payments.
Those duties previously were spread
out among welfare agencies in Ohio's
''I'm no1 real happy it's taken as lion in the budget year that ended cots featured have been found .
88 counties.
·
long as this to get this system in June 30.
Also on Thursday, Rep. Patrick,
It also allows the state to deduct place," he said. "We had to junk it,
Winkler's bill also brings Ohio in Tiberi, R-Columbus, introduced a bill
payments from · unemployment scrap it and start from scratch."
line with the Uniform Interstate Child that would prohibit people who are
checks, lottery winnings and other
Human· Services Director Arnold Support Act. which sets guidelines behind in child support paymcms.
income sources.
Tompkins played down the deadline, for obtaining payments from parents workers compensation premiums and
In addition. the new law estab- saying he didn't thi.nk the federal - who live outside a child's home . other court-ordered paymenls from
lishes a "palemily registry " to follow government would stop payments slate.
conducti_ng state business.
.
parents and allows use of genetic test- after Oct. I.
Voinovich and Tompkins also preUnder Tiberi's bill, vendors subing 10 determine paternity.
"You would have to primarily put sen ted the state's newest "most want, milling bids on state contracts would
Voinovich said a computer track- a stop to.child collection services in cd" poster of deadbeat parents who . be required to file a slatemcnt saying
ing system will have all 88 countirs America," he said .
cannot be found . The nin~ parents they were not behind in such payWASHINGTON (AP) - Most
on"line by O~: t. I. The state faces a · Voinovich said child support col· owe nearly $300.000 in support pay- ments. If the statement·were found to
Americans
believe the proposed
possible loss of S 127 million in fed- leclions have jumped 68 percent in ments.
·
be untrue, the vendor would be
tobacco
deal
won' t rai se cigarette
eral money if the system is not com- six years, inc reasin~ from $844 mil·
Since the "most wanaed" program barred from obtaining slate business
prices
nearly
enough to meet its
lion in 1991 toaneslimmed$1.4bil- was staRed in 1992. 53 ofthe 78
for two years.
pleted by that time .
prime objective - cutting teen-age
smoking, according to an Associated
Press poll.
Two-thirds of those surveyed

Poll indicates minimal
faith in tobacco deal

Protests greets dawn
()f the anti-affirmative
~ction ·era in California

By JEAN H. LEE
Associated -Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - Etna
Goshay of Moreno Valley remembers
watching her lelcvision raptly as
Martin Luther King Jr. gave his " I
Have a Dream" speech on his vision
of racial equality.
Exactly 34 years later. on the eve
of California's post·affinnative action
era, she climhed on a midnight bus to
attend a march Thursday in San
Francisco to prolest Proposition 209.
''r feel like back then we were
he ginning to accomplish something,"
said Goshay, 56. of Riverside County. "Bul now I feel like we're regressing. This march will hopefully make
a change."
After nearly a year of legal wrangling, California's affinnative action
ban - Proposition 209 - became
law Thursday, making it the first state
to elimina1e race and gender considerations in decisions from public jobs
to education.
lmmediale effects are unclear.
The state's two largest cities - Los
Angeles and San Francisco - had no
plans to immediately implement the
law, while state rules backing affirmative action are still on the books. ·
Demonstrators by the thousands
streamed over lhe Golden Gate
Bridge in protest, marching four and
five abreasl on the span 's sidewalk,

•

expect tobacco companieS to sell a."i ·

~'Our

Congress is not Lax-

many cigarcucs as ever. More lhan inclined," said I he AM A's Dr: Ranhalf say the deal is not worth givin~•
d lph Smoak . "That may he a sticky
up the key concessiOn that cagarctlc iss c."
makers demand - hanning &gt;las. ·
The poll prcsenls a dilemma for
acuon lawsuus.
. .
deal supporters: how to toughen

chanting and singing "We Shall
Overcome."· Motorists sped past
· honking their horns and waving.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson urged
people 10 keep fighting so that ·the
barriers separating Americans might

. And 70 percent sa~d cagarcttc
pnccs must nsc more t_han $1 a p_ack

some provi sions without scaring
away tobacco companies and without

to deter young people Irom smokmg.
That mcludes 61 percent of the
smokers whose wallets would be hit.

the public distrusl play ing into opponcnts' hands.
"This rcllccts a .huge amount of

lauons of lcadmg tobacco cconomasts
and help set the stage lor more con·
· tcntion as Congress and President
Chn10~ return next ?'!&gt;nth to began
detcrmmmg the deal s late.
"The _po!l appears l ~ he in ~.cco.r ·
dance with the best cvadcncc, saad
Massachusetts Institute ofTcchnology economist Jeffrey Harris, who
provided the White House wilh c.al culations showing only price increases of $1.15 to $1.50 a pack could cut
tccn smoking by the deal 's target of ·
30 percent. Currently, the cost of a
pack averages $1. 74.
But Harris cautioned that public
perceptions are a little 100 cynical.
Every 10 percent increase in price
would lower the numher of cigarettes
sold by 4 percent, hi s calculations
_indicate. Half of that drop comes
from people who kick the habit, the ·
rest from people who just smoke less.
In olher words, raising prices by
62 cents - the deal's expected
increase - would lower U.S. cigarette consumption from 24 billion
packs a year to about 20.8 billion
,packs. The overall number of smok-

co," said Massachusetts Attorney
General Scott Harshbarge r. " If it is
left to the currcnl, polari •ing dchatc
... this is goingw be a major problem.
We will miss an opportunity lh&lt;~t may
n&lt;;l com~ again, and tohaccOwins."
··
·
Crilics seized on the skepti cism .
"The American people have il
right: They 're not against a settlcmcnt, they' re againsl a bad -settle·
mcnt ,'' Sen. Frank Lautcnberg, DN.J., said in a statement. " It 's exactly lhis kind of public opposition Jo the
deal that's going to force Congress to
make significanl changes ."

_Those con:crns m1rror the cal~u-

come down.

"In this country 1here are those
who are dreamers and those who are
dream-busters. The dreamers need to
outlast the dream-busters," he said .
"We must pursue the dream of an
inclusive soCiety."
.
But Republican Gov. Pete Wilson,
who fought for the law, defended it
and warned that public entities that
don 't follow it can he -sued .
"(Proposition) 209 did the right
thing. 209 does not eliminate vigorous enforcement against discrimination," Wilson said in an appearance
Thursday night on ABC's "Nighlline." "Preferences ... are a cop-out."
Ever since 54 percent of California voters approved Proposition 209
in November, the measure has heen
tied up in courts.
.
The American Civil Liberties
Union and other opponents have
tried to strike dowrl Proposition 209,
but the 9th U.S. Circuit CouR of
Appeals on Tuesday refused to block
implementation while it was appealed
to the U.S. Supreme Court.
As marchers gathered by the busload - students and retired people.

crs would fall by as many as 4 million. Harris said.
The American Medical Association, a chief lobbying force hehind thc deal , has called for a $1 a pack
increase, but cautions even that much
would be a slrugglc. ·

HAI,LTtrtl.i FOR EQUALITY- The Rev. Jesse Jackson shook
handa with proteatera at a rally In San Francisco Thursday
proteltlng the antl·afflrmatlve action proposltlan that took effect
In CaiHomle Thursday. (AP).
union workers and families pushing held years ago, when Southern bigbaby strollers, it was evident from the ots were doing the same thing," he
"Save the dream" buttons that King's said.
famous speech in 1963 was on many
In Los Angeles County's affinnapeople's minds.
tive action office, Dennis Tafoya said
.. 1 d ,1 th . k ,
d
th county officials " won 't be changang
m we ve un · one
. amlnedaatcly.
.
·
1 th'an k we
. on
.. .e anythmg
negalave effects of slavery, s~ad w 1 10 be very sure about what we
Jean Mont-Eton, 68, o£ San Francts- · d anh ..
o ere.
. ·d
co, who as ked her daug hter for a ay
Governments and institutions'that
o~ from baby-sattmg he~ two grand- deal with public hiring, public conchildren so she ~ch. I stall thmk
b.
admission 10 public eduwe need ffi
t'
u· "
trac ng or
a mn_a ave ac on.
. . cational institutions must comply
San Francasco M~yor Walhe with the law, Lisa Kalustian, Wilson's
Brown echoed that sentament.
spokeswoman, told the San Francis"This same kind of march was co Examiner.
0

cynicism and s kcptic i ~m about tohm:-

No Sentinel
on Monday
The DaUy Sentinel wUI not
publish on Monday so that its
employees may observe the
Labor Day holiday.
Regular publication and business hours resume Thesday.

�I

Friday, August 29, 1997

~ommentary

Pige 2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Local News in Brief:

OHIO Wcatt1er

Frlclly, Augull 21, 1117

Satunlay, Aug. 38
AttuWeatberl foreeut

Section of SR 248 closes Tuesday
Swe Route 248 will be closed, beginning Thesday around 9 a.m., so
worhn can replace a culvert located approximately one mile of the junction of SR 124 at Long Bottom.
The closuno is expected to last about two weeks, according to Ohio
Depanment of Transportation District 10 spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
Once the culvert is repaired, workers will replace another culvert about
one half mile west of Long Bottom.
The entire proj~t should be done by Nov. IS and the official detours
during the closure are state routes 7 and 681, she said. Contractor for the
$262,845.84 project is Diaz Construction of Piketon.

The Daily Sentinel Lax security leaves Pentagon facing· risk
'Estllbfiski ba 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-1192-2156 • FIIIC 11112-2157

.,2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

IIIARGARET LEHEW
Couboller

Qfnenll Manager

,.,.ol.

JbeSeatinel aJFr c'*....,.eo.,...,._._,,...,. on•.,_,
IW&gt;od _ _ ,. • • • _ .. _ , . _ _ _ _ • _ _
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. . . . . Mil . . . . . ,.,..,......,., Sf»t::fY• ............ ,. . . . . . . ,..

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Pdmlla,, Olrfo417fe;cw, FAXtoff~U.

l'llo Sentinel, 111 Cowt St.

Even in golf, Clinton's
got credibility problems
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP SpeCial COI'I"Mf)OI1Cien
WASHINGTON - President Ointon can't seem to avoid hassles and
haggling over his reJl'lrted golf scores, at least the good ones, like 79. Thai's
the score he announced and wound up defending against skeptics who
• doubted he'd played by all the rules.
Clinton said his playing companions in Martha's Vmeyard on the day of
the noted 79 would vouch for his scoring, and of coune one of them did.
Nobody in his foursome was going to argue with his numbers, or say he'd
bent rules.
·
OK, so he does take mulligans, the golfem' term for a substitute shot
when the fimt one goes awry. And it is reasonable to assume that his golfing
companions concede him longer putts than he'd get if his address weren't
the White House.
He's got company. There aren't many golfem who haven't hit an extra
drive, or picked up a close but testy putt for par. And fewer presidents.
. Harmless enough. These are not tournament scores. When Dwight D.
Eisenhowel was presiden~ the caddies at his club were said to make bets
among themselves on his matches. It is told that when one of Eisenhower's
opponents conceded him a long putt, the caddy wh.o stood to lose his bet
IIJ!ainst the president complained that it was too far ftom the hole to be
given.
· Too late. Presidential putts often are a given.
Nobody argued about Eisenhower's golf scores, although Democrats
~lied to make an issue of the time he spent at the game, one accusing him of
)!Oveming on "green fairways of indifference."
, Presidents usually have kept their numbers to themselves. Some even
lcept their games to themselves. "John F. Kennedy probably was the best of
golfing presidents, but played off camera. Just before his 1960 campaign, he
slipped away to Cypress Point in California and almost made a hote·in one.
As the ball rolled toward the bole, his partner shouted for it to go in, and
Kennedy urged it to stay out. It did. Kennedy said that if it hadn't, his political career would have been dented by word that another golfer was trying
to get into the White House.
• Gerald R. Ford was a solid player, although his best-remembered shots
were the ones that bit spectators at touml!fllents. He played in one with
George Bush and Clinton in Palm Springs in 1995, and both Republicans hit
people in the galleries. Clinton didn't, but did spray an errant shot into somebody's back yard. His announced score that day was 93, which was not disputed despite assorted mulligans and pick-up putts.
Nor were there questions about the .s6 h~ reported at Martha's Vineyard
the day after his good round.
· He might do better to play his game and keep the numbers to himself and
his foursome. Ford usually did, and so did Bush after the high-speed golf he
used to play.
But as any average golfer knows, it is hard to keep quiet about breaking
80. Even if wasn't quite by the book.
So he boasted playing 18 holes at7 over par, at the Farm Neck Golf Club
jn Martha's Vineyard, on Aug. 18. He'd hit three balls off the fimt tee, a
drive followed by two mulligans, and wound up in a sand bunker anyhow.
Clinton said it was his third round under 80. He said he •d hit the extra tee
shots for lack of warmup time on the driving range, and that his partners
would attest to his score.
"Yeah, I witne~d ilo" said Vernon Jordan, a Washington lawyer who
often golfs with Clinton. Just as another golfing friend affirmed the 39 Clinton reported for nine holes at the same coume on an earlier vacation.
Leave it to skeptical, and bored, reportem, or to Republicans, to raise
questions about how many limes he actually hit the ball.
After Clinton said he had scored 83 during a 1996 campaign respite in
Albuquerque, N.M., Gov. Gary Johnson said he doubted it. That led Bob
Dole, the Republican presidential nominee, to raise it as a credibility matter
in a campaign speech there.
"I don't know whether he shot an 83 or a 283 or a 483," Dole said.
"You'll never really know."
(Wetter R. Meara, vice pi'1Hiklenl and columnist for The Aeaocllled
Preu, hila reported on Wuhlng1on and national polltlc:s for more than
30 yeara. He shot 77 recently - really.)

Today in history
By The Aeloc:lated Preae
Today is Friday, Aug 29, the 24\st day of 1997. There are 124 days left
in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
.
On Aug. 29, 1944, 15,000 American troops marched down the Champs
Elysees in Paris as the French capital continued to celebrate its liberation
from the Nazis.
On this date:
In 1533, the last lncan King of Peru, Atahualpa, was murdered on orders
from Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro.
In !632, English philosopher John Locke was born in Somerset
In 1877, the second president of the Mormon Church, Brigham Young,
died in Salt Lake City, Utah.
In 1896, the Chinese-American dish chop suey was invented in New York
City by the chef to visiting Chinese Ambassado~ Li Hu~g-chang.
.In 1943, responding to a clampdown by Naz1 occup1ers, Denmark managed to scuttle most of its naval ships.
,
In 1957, South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond (then a Democrat) ended
a filibuster against a civil rights bill after talking for more than 24 hours.
In 1965, Gemini 5, carrying ast,ronauts Gordon Cooper and Charles
("Pete") Conrad, splashed down in the Atlantic after eight days in space.
In 1966, the Beatles concluded their fourth American tour with their last
public concert, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco.
In 1975, Irish statesman Eamon de Valera died near Dublin at age 92.
In 1981, broadcaster and world traveler Lowell Thomas died in Pawling,
N.Y., at age 89.
Ten yeafl! ago: Academy Award-winning actor Lee Marvin died in Theson, Ariz., at age 63.
Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council agreed to send 3,000 more
relief troops to Somalia to guard food shipments. About 13,000 people
staged an anti-extremist rally in Rostoclc, Germany, even as right-wingers
continued attackS on foreigners.
.
One year ago: In _a rousing climax to the Democratic &lt;:&lt;"'v~.ntion ~
Chicago President Chnton appealed for a second term, declanng, Hope IS
back in America." The convention also nominated AI Gore for a second term
as vice president. Earlier in the day, President Clinton's chief political strate,
gist, Dick Morris, resigned atnid a scandal over his relationship with a prostitute.

..

•

By JACK ANDERSON
questions by a security California-baed Wortplace V10leoce Reseatcll
end JAN IIOLlER
guard, and then asked to lllstitute, recommended that "(safety) llaining
There's growiag -concern that tbe Pentagon
pass through a metal wmmeo~ immediately and that basic proc:edum
may be SuSceptible to a terroriat lllack. Two iuctdetcdor. Reporters are be implemented before layoffs begin in late
dents in recent months revealed a scary vulneraesconed around the spring."
bility in the Defense Department's security strucbuilding by press
" There is no coordinated system for reporting
ture.
agents.
and tracking of incidents," the report states.
Several months ago, a producer from a local
. But a child could get " However, altnost every site has anecdotally
television station in Washington was able \O drive
to the front door and reported leas-than-lethal violent incidents, 'near
a van through two security gates and gain access
step inside. A terrorist misses,' harassment, intimidation, threats,
to the Pentagon through the cargo area. The proon a · suicide mission assaults, employees with guns in the workplace,
ducer had no identification, and was never ques- could easily wreak havoc. There's also a com- bomb threats and other occurrences."
tioned by securitY guardf.
·
muter bus station adjacent to the Pentagon. TrafiTraficant has warned that morale among the
When the local station, WJIA-1V, broadcast a cant is not the first to observe that "a bomb 220 officem of the Defense Protective Service,
video tape of the incident, it caught the attention placed in one of those buses could do severe dam- which guards the Pentagon, is dan..rotiSiy low.
of Rep. Jim Traficant, D-Ohio, a former sheriff age to the Pentagon building."
Employees there have complaiiled 1n the past of
who bas made a habit of needling the administraWblle Pentagon security remains lax, other racial discrimination, which has belped create a
tion on issues large and small Traficant soon federal buildings are beginning tp resemble high rate of employee turnover.
fired off a letter to Secretary of Defense William armed fortresses. At the Federal Deposit lnsurNobody bas ever said it's easy to guard a
Cohen demanding an explanation.
ance Corp., new security measures have been building where millions of national security
"Had the producer been a terrorist," Traficant added in response to the Oklahoma City bombing. secrets are kept. Adding too much security could
wrote, "he would have been able to drive the van
The security concerns were also motivated in create pointless hassles for the 23,000 people who
directly into the cargo area and flee, on foot, to pan by a confidential report on workplace vio- use the Pentagon each day. We sincerely hope that
the Metro train station. He also would have been lenco, which found that downsizing at the agency the Pentagon finds a happy medium before it's too
able to walk directly into the Pentagon office "has created an environment with a high potential late.
complex with a weapon.
for workplace violence."
(Jack Andelwn and .llln Molt. . . colum"lf a television producer can drive a van right
The February 1996 study, conducted by the nlets fOr Unltad Feldure Syndicate.)
into the Pentagon and wander around the r------=:--:--------:------:::-:--::-::--:---------:------,
building unchallenged by security, I can
~
only imagine the type of destruction a
determined terrorist could cause to the
Pentagon and the people who work
there." ·.
W11r:N
Cohen quickly responded, acknowledging that the producer's easy access
" raised important issues" and promising
1'1~ ~
that an " investigation" and "security
review" were underway. "We will take
prompt aCtion to implement any changes
necessary to ensure that the military and
civilian personnel who work in the Pentagon can do so in a safe and secure
environment, .. Cohen wrote.
But just last month a l!lan with a
loaded pistol and 130 rounds of ammunition walked right through the front
door at tbe Pentagon. He was quickly
wrestled to the ground by a security officer, who took the intruder's weapon
away. There were only two security officers stationed at the entrance, only one
of whom was armed.
How did an armed man get anywhere
near the Pentagon building, let alone
walk through the front door? Our per- ~~~==~~==~
sonal experience suggests that getting 1;
inside the Pentagon is much easier than
one might imagine. The parking lot and
stairs leading to the entrance are virtually unguarded. After entering the front
doors, a visitor is asked a series of short

iND.

Deputies probe vandalism to loader
•IColumbuslae•

Christopher Simms, Carpenter Hill Road, reponed to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department shortly after midmght Thursday morning that his
1977 postal Jeep had just been taken, according to Meigs Co~nty Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
I'
Soon after, a caller notified the office that an old ma1l Jeep was lying
on 1ts top in Dyesville, he said.
When Deputy Dan Leonard arrived on the scene, the Jeep was still running, Soulsby noted. The vehicle was impou_nded.

Driver escapes injury in accident

Mostly pleasant conditions
set to prevail this weekend
By The Aesoc:lated Pre••
The long wee~end will begtn With abundant sunshine and warm temperatures on Saturday, but rain may fall on Labor Day act1vities, forecasters said
Highs on Saturday will be around 80 degrees.
Clouds will build with the approach of a warm front on Sunday and the
chances of showers and thunderstorms will mcrease, the NatiOnal Weather
Service said.
Intermittent rain also is likely on Monday and Tuesday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stalion was 98 degrees in 1953 while the record low was 39 in 1965. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:09p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:57a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Ciear and cool wtth some patchy fog. Lows tn the lower 50s
Calm wind.
Saturday... Becoming mostly sunny. Highs 80 to 85.
Saturday night. ..Mostly clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mostly clear. H1gbs in the lower 80s.
Labor Day and Tuesday...Partly cloudy. Lows m the mid 60s and highs
in the mtd 80s.

MT lWKIJ£! UIIIAT
kiND OF
rt.. AeatKm;;?

\

.

Beef scare won't deter
many from grilling out
By SCOn BAUER
Aseoc:llted Preaa Writer

L-----------------------------~------------------J

Daily ministry takes huge toll on family life
By GEORGE R. PLAGENZ
As he nears the end of his earthly
ministry, Billy Graham has only one
regret. He dido 't spend enough time
with his family, especially his wife
Ruth.
In a review of his best -selling
autobiography, "Just as I Am"
(Harper/Zondervan, 1997), the New
York limes Book Review mentions
Graham's sorrow that "in his peripatetic evangelism be was often too
far away from his wife" and "at one
point was so removed from his famil~ that he failed to recognize his
own son and daughter."
The reviewer remarks, "This
underlying regret propels the book
with a sadness that is strangely
haunting."
.
Many other Protestant clergy

know the feeling that is tearing at
Graham. Their ministries have disrupted their family life to the point
where the number of clergy divorces
is now on a par with the divorce rate
in the rest of the population.
Stories of clergy infidelities have
become commonplace. Surveys
indicate t~at up to one-third of all
Protestant ministers have committed
adultery.
A Roman Catholic bishop once
said to me, "We Catholics are fortunate to have a celibate ministry. A lot
of Protestants wish they bad it."
He pointed to the time-consuming demands of the ministry and to
the broken marriages among the
Protestant clergy.
Is the bishop right? Would
Protestant ministers be more effec1

Many ministers -like many priestswork 12 to 15 hours a day. Is this fair to
their wives and children? Then there is
the problem a minister's wife has of living up to the expectations of the congregation her husband serves.

tive if they were that will only be of limited help to
unmarried?
him in dealing with the variety of
Many
marriage problems which come to
ministers - like him.
many priests There is a good deal of doubt,
work 12 to 15 actually, about how helpful the clerhours a day. Is gy are as marriage counselors.
tbis fair to their
"For some reason," says the bead
wives and chil- · of a marriage clinic, "clergymen
dren? Then there and doctors are woefully naive
is the problem a · about sex problems whether they are
minister's wife has of living up to married or single themselves."
the expectations of the congregation
It might be instructive to add as
her husband serves.
an aside here that while marriage
Those expectations are not what · counselom agree that a happy sex
they used to be ("Did you notice life goes with a happy married life,
that Rev. Palmer's wife wasn 't wear- there are counselom who feel that
ing stockings?") but in some parish- too much sex can spoil a marriage.
es, even today, a clergy wife is the
"You may not read this in Cossubject of gossip about how she rais- mopolitan magazine," says one mares her children and a thousand and riage counselor, "but when couples
one other things.
rely roo much on sex to express their
All this adds to the tensions in the love, they neglect other ways which
parsonage and cannot help but dis- can bring a new depth of happiness
tract from a pastor's effectiveness.
to their marriage."
Those who defend a married clerAs for the virtues of a celibate
gy contend that someone who is ministry over a married clergy, the
married is better able to counsel Protestant churches probably will
people with marital problems, but I never adopt a single lifestyle for
wonder how strong that argument is. their pastors. The question now conBeing married gives a person cer- fronting them is: What will they do
tain insights into the married state about the problems a married clergy
that he or she wouldn't otherwise is burdening them with? Not eveo
have. On the other hand, as one Billy Graham bas the answer to that.
priest pointed out to me, the minis(George R. Plaganz Ia a columter's marital experience is confined nlat for Newapaper Entlll'prlu
to one marriage (or maybe two!) and Aeaoclatlon-)

people who are born to
Not to suggest a conspiracy or anything, but it
brood. The more esoteric the
does seem a little more than coincidentM-tllal1he
subject the better. Normal
great beef scare of I ¥'J7 arrived just in time to
People might have had fleetspoil a few million Labor Day cookouts and faming concerns during the past
ily outings at the loe&lt; I burger joint.
few months about the escalating price of coffee or what
The Hudson Food; Co., which distributes patleague their baseball team
ties to such national :hains as Burger King, Waiwill be in after realignment.
Mart, Boston Marke , Sam's Club and Safeway,
SWs brooded about whether
-reCalled 25 million p:mnds of meat that could be
there is too much sex in the
tainted with a deadly strain of E. coli bacteria. At
military, or whether the air
about the same time, the news broke that a man in
-conditioners in their cam harAlabama had sued McDonald's after allegedly
bor pathogenic fungi.
fmding a conoom in his Big Mac.
Until the meat mess came along, SWs were
Of coune, the food police seized on the generporing
over three potential top priorities: What is
al uproar to warn us that scurvy httle bugs might "
the
chance
of a collision with a Near-Earth
be hiding in chicken and fruits and vegetables and
Object?
How
seriously will El Nino disturb
eggs and even cookie batter.
weather
patterns?
And will the microchips in
You may recall that -last year's Thanksgiving
home
appliances
be
able to handle the Year 2000
festivities were marred by stories about the critglitch?
Thes~
items
now
move to the B list, along
ters that might be lurking in poultry stuffing. And
Christmas got doused by warnings that excessive with a number of other dillies.
Is spring sprouting S&lt;!OOer? Are we suffering
tippling could lead to severe heart disorders.
Conspiracy or no, the fact is the meat scare from information overload? How much will it
occurred just in time to kick off the 1997-98 wor- cost us to pay · hospitals not to train doctors? Is
rying season. All summer, while Normal People identity theft/keyboard crime lhe next growth
were playing and picnicking, Serious Worriers industry? Does the decline in video rentals spell
were worrying about what they would worry disaster for Blockbuster? Are car phones increasabout come Labor Day. Then, out of nowhere, ing accident risk? Will home shopping networks,
came the meat industry with a platter of foul food. electronic retailing and catalogs result in a free
fall for the mall?
Ah, Nirvana.
Has " Crossfire" become too respectable? Was
Serious Worriers, or SWs to cognoscenti, are
I

•

..

Said .

Sheriff James M. Soulsby said his d~partment had to call the phone
company twice before a repair crew would remove the cable from the road.

Sheriff reports car-deer collision
A Pomeroy man's car sustained light damage in a deer-car collision
Thursday afternoon on Flatwoods Road in Chesler Township.
Davtd B. Johnson was westbound wben he struck a deer that ran out
of a cornfield and into the path of his 1987 Oldsmobile. The deer was
knocked down but eventually got up and ran off, the report said.

Meigs announcements
chicken, r1bs, homemade 1ce cll!am
Barbecue planned
The Olive Township Volunteer and other items. Parade starts a1 I
Fire Department will hold a chicken p.m. at Chester Elementary School.
barbecue at the firehouse in People wantmg to partiCipate should
Reedsville on Saturday, beginning at call Bruce Myers at 985-3826.
II a.m. Children's games, firetruck
rides and other activities are planned. Middleport Lodge
Middleport Lodge 363 F &amp; AM
will
meet in regular session Tuesday.
Revival slated
7:30
p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
Hillside Baptist Church on State
Refreshments
wtll be served
Roule 143, Pomeroy, will have a
revival Sept. 11 -14 with Dr. Carl
Hatch from McKinney. Texas. Ser- Pomona Grange
Me1gs County Pomona Grange 46
vices will be Thursday-Saturday at 7
w1ll
meet Sept. 5 at the Hemlock
p.m. and Sunday at II a.m. and 6
Grange
Hall with a potluck supper at
p m. Special sing1ng will be held
6:30
p.m.
followed by a regular
nightly. Dr. James R. Acree, pastor,
,
meeting
at
7.30 p.m. All contests
invites all.
including women's activities,. art.
Bedfont Trustees
photography and state will be judged.
The Bedford Townsh1p Board of Lawrence County Pomona will visit.
Trustees will meet in special session \II members urged to attend.
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the township hall
to consider bids.
StarGranae
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
BBQ/parade
Grange 878 will meet in regular sesThe Chester Volunteer F~rc sion Sept. 6 at 8 p.m. with a potluck
Department will have a chicken bar- supper at 6:30 p.m. _4,11 members
becue Monday, II :30 a.m. w1th urged to attend.

has been shut for a week and 25 mtl·
lion pounds of beef was recalled
Labor Day is prime time for beef
"Most people see this as an iso- and that won't change this year lated mcident," said A. Dwayne Ball,
despile a poss1bly deadly bacteria that a marketing professor at the Umvercaused the natiOn's largest-ever meat sity of Nebraska-Lincoln who specializes in consumer research.
recaU.
, ,..
.. It hasn't scared me.'~ said groThat's the case for Robert
cery shopper Jack Holland of Atlanta. DeBuck. an electncal contractor from
"I haven't made a big change in my Edgewood, N.M., who was having
buying habits. As a matter of fact. I'm lunch Thursday at a Blake's Lota
going m to buy somethmg to grill out BUrger in.Aibuquerque.
for the weekend "
"1 would be more concerned
Amencans traditionally consume about being struck by hghtning. I
57.5 million pounds per day, or near- 1hink more people die from hghtnmg
ly a quarter-pound for every pe1son and bumble-bee stings than from eat·
in lhe country, over the Labor Day mg a bad ~amburg:er," said DeBuck.
weekend. That's 20 percen1 more chomping into his burger.
In New Orleans, Ira Hayes
beef than the average daily consumption of 46 million pounds.
•tacked up for lhe weekend at a local
Beef sales in stores across the grocery.
"I've given •orne thought to 11 but
country have remained strong in
sp1te of the E. coh outbreak that sick- r vc got to eat meat."" Hayes sa1d
ened more than a dozen people this .... vc got to have II. r II JUSt make
Units of the Meigs County Emermonth in Colorado, sa~d Timothy sure it's well done and hope for the gency Medical Service recorded 10
Hammonds. prcs1dent of Food Mar· best.' '
calls for assiStance Thursday. Umts
ketmg Institute, an associat1on of
Hammonds said the recall has responding included:
15.000 supermarkets.
made consumers more aware abou1
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Retailers all! not cutting prices on how to safely cook meat.
2.06 a.m., West Shade Road,
"I think people do understand thai Chester, Benha Smith, Holzer Medbeef any more than a usual hohday
weekend. Hammonds said. Prices for ground beef needs to be properly ICal Center;
beef products have remained about cooked and tf it is properly cooked it
9.0 I a.m., State Route 124.
lhc same as last year, according to the kills the E. coh bactena. ·· he said. Racmc, Shawnna Bobo, HMC,
Nat tonal Cattlemen's Beef Associ a· Food safety experts recommend Racine sq~ad as~1sted;
cooking ground beef to 160 dcgll!es
tion.
12:41 a.m ., Richards Road,
The E. coh contamination was to kill the bactena.
Racine, Pam Richards, Ve1erans
Burger King, whtch saw sales Memorial HQsp1tal, Racine squad
traced to a Hudson Foods Inc. plan!
drop
after the scare. is heading into asSISted;
at Columbus, Ncb., where the U.S.
tbe
Labor
Day weekend hoping meat
Department of Agriculture IS now
2:47p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Tabitha
lovers
will
go for the new Big King Ohler. VMH;
investigating:. The contaminated meat
is believed to have come from an out- sandwich 11 mtroduced Thursday. It
3:25 p.m . County H1ghway
ha• 75 pell!ent more beef than the Btg Garage, Timothy Browning, VMH;
side supplier.
Whtle there have been no deaths Mac.
4:33p.m., Nonh Second Avenue,
Last week, Burger King pulled all Middleport, K.C. Bahr, HMC,
or serious illness reported, !~~- p!ant
the hamburger meat supphed by
Hudson Foods from its stores and
The
Sentinel said
it would no longer buy beef from
(USPSJI:J.!Iilll
1he Arkansas-based company.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Doctors at
Children's
Hospital are warning parPublished every afternoon, Monday lhrouah
ents that the oil in those small decoFnday, ill Court St., Pomeroy, OIUo, by the
Ohio Valley P\ibhshtng Compny!Ganneu Co.
rative lamps can cause lung damage
Pomeroy. Oh10 4S?ti9. Ph. 992·2156 Sca~nd
and
even death to youngsters.
class poJlliiJ:e patd at Pomeroy, Ohto.
Am Ele PoWer .......................43~
Less than a fifth of a seaspoon of
Akzo •.•.•••..••.•...••••...••.•.•.•...•••. 78'1.
Mcmbtr: The A.S$(J(JIIed Press. arad the ohio
AmrTech .............................. 61 "r. lamp oil in a child's lung can cause
New'flper AIIOCIIIton.
Aahland 011 .............:.•.•......•.. 50'.1 respiratory failure, Dr. Philip D WatPOSTMASTER; Send address correc:Uonato
ATIT ....................................3B,-..
Tile Dally Sentmel, Ill Co•rt Sl., Pomeroy,
Bank One .............................53,. son, chief of pharmacology and toxOh10 45769
'
Bob Evens .........................•.. 17),
Borg-Warner ........................52'1.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES '
Champion ............................. 18'1.
8) Curitr or Mo•or Ro•l•
One Week ............. ,................ , ........ .$2.1ll
Charm Shpa ..............................6
Results of Wednesday's sales at
One Month ........ . .......... SM 70
CIIY Hokllng ..........................38'1. the Gallipolis Producers Livestock
One Year ..' ..... .... ........... ...... SIIM.OO
Filcleral Mogul .........................36
Gannett .................................951.1 Assoc1ation:
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Feeder catlle - $2-$3 higher;
Goodyur ..............................60~
Datly . . .. ..... ........... .. . ......... J5 Ctata.
200-300-pound
steers, $85-$108;
Kmert ...................................13'Subsctilx:ra ltDI lk11nna 10 pay the earner may
Landa
End
.............................
26\
heifers.
$79-$91;
300-400-pound
rerntt m advance dtreCI to The O.tly ScDI.u.el
ltd
.......................................
.22
"'.
steers,
$82-$89;
heifers,
$73-$86;
on a three, lilt or 12 n'IOiuh battl. Credit wtlt be
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 20~ 500-650-pound steers, $67-$81;
g•ven canter uc::h week.
ova .......................................3&amp;~ heifers. $63-$78; 650-800-pound
No subscrtpuon by mail perm1t1ed in areaa
Or~e Velfey .............................42'11
where home carrier acrvu is available.
Peoplea ................................ .37\ steers, $63-$74; heifers, $60-$71.
Fed caule second Wednesday of
Prem
Flnl ...............................20\
PubhsMr reserves the nJhlto adju11 nACI lhlr·
Rockwaii ...............................&amp;O~ the month.
ma the subscription p!riod. SubscnptJon rate
ch.. naleJ may be implemented by cltan&amp;Jn&amp; the
FID.Shell ..............................50'CuD cows - steady, well-musduration of the 1ubscriptlon
Shoney•a ..........................
S\ cled/tleshed, thtnllight, $30-$34;
Star Bink.............~ ...............44-,.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Wandy'a ...............................23"1o bulls, $40-$68.
lltkle Mtlp Cet~ut1J
Back to the fann - Cow/calf
Worthlngton ...........................18\
n W..ko . . . . . .
. - .... .. SZ7.l0
pairs, $385-$635; bred cows, $5()().
26 Weeks .... ......................... ........... SS1.K2
Sl W..ko ............... . . .................. ...$1115..!6
Stock reporta are the 10:30 $885; baby calves, $25-$102; goats,
R.•ea O.bldt Mdp c....,.
a.m.
quotea provided by Adveat $19-$38.
.
13 Wccko .................. ................ ............$Z9.l5 ~·
of
Galllpoll1.
•
Upc:omlnc
l!*lalsHome and
lh Wccko••.......•.••••.. ··························- . $56.68
sz w..ko ... •...........•... ......... Slll9.n
tack sale, Satorday, Sept. 6, 11 a.m.

by Bob Hoeflich
I hope you know thai) would never deliberately mislead you.
That's why I want to further mention aspects of Monday's VISil by the
Delta Queen in Pomeroy.
I believe that I have preVIously
ind1cated that tours would be offered
for lhose wishmg to v1sit on the boat.
As it turns out, and 11 appears to be a
bit confustng, that isn't exactly true.
According to the contact that I
made in regard to the tours. the number of people who will be perm1tted
to go aboard the Delta Queen is up 10
the discrelion of the boat caplain on
Mlin~ay. The number could be 100,
11 could be none or u could be thai the
number boarding won't be limited at
all.
As near as I have been able to
determine, lhe bus mess people of lhc
1own are tentatively figurmg thai
about 100 will be permmed. RegiS·
trauons will be taken at the tent on the
parkmg: lot and names drawn from
those signing up if, mdeed. 1he number IS hm1tcd.
I am told that there Will be no
charge for sigmng up and gettmg mlo
the drawing as activities planned for
the day arc fll!e of ch~rgc However, I'm also advised that possibly lhere
w1ll be a mmtmal charge for those
who all! selected to go aboard 10 be
pa1d as they get on the boat I have
no assurance of that either, but I
wanled to warn you and tell you whal
I have been able to ascertam so that
you will know you could e•pect
I'm Impressed with the way some

Stocks

GPLA results

I

j ......

-·-·-

2 p.m. and a calliope concen will pie- ·
cede that aclivity.
:
If you're going to visit Pomeroy :
during the day, e•tra parking w11l be
available on the village parlung lot
near the Pomeroy Fire Department
headquarters, and at the Roberts :
Field in the area of the former ·
Pomeroy Jun10r H1gh School.
·
The day should be d11Terent and :
fun, but I did want to advise you the
besl I can of problems you might
encounter. The lasl thing in the world
I would want 10 do IS m1slead you
It's been a pleasant summer for :
Clara and Marv m Krider of Syracuse, :
wnh company from away popping in
now and again.

Their larcst gucs1s were Vernon ·
and Avis Hamson of Zephyr H11ls,
Fla., and Arlene Wallace of Columbus, who ISAvis's sis1cr, came down
for a day durmg the week long visit.
The Kriders held a cookout, so popular these days. and Jommg the group
lor that event were Margaret (Ma•·
me) Bealmere and doughier, Pegg¥
Freeman. John Kndcr and Carol
Smuh pf Syracuse.

Ashlec Teaford IS a third grader at
the Syracuse Elcmcnlary School th1s
year afler havmg attended the Branch
Elementary School at the Edwards
Air Force Base in Califorrua last year.
At that school. she received the Prcstdenttal Award forcducatJOnal excellence.
res1denls have worked as volunteers
Ashlee " the daughter of Leslce
to clean and hcaut1fy the town for the Warner, hvmg m California, and
upeommg visu by the Delta Queen. Sieve Teaford. and IS the grandThey've done a good job and cer- daughler of Bob and Hazel Dudding
tainly arc to be commended for lheir of Racine and the late Moms and
efforts. If the VISit bnngs nothmg else, Teaford of Racme
at least it dtd help to get the town in
apple p1e order
Better keep the cool summer
All or the activitieS planned for the clothes handy for a wh1le. It doc•
day arc on "go" and I'm adv1sed that seem to be warrmng up. Folks will
the boat's band wtll present about an also warm up to ya il'n you keep
hour-long concert on the levee about sm1hng:.

Terry W. Nichols
Terry Wayne Nichols, 51, Gallipohs, d1ed Thursday. Aug. 28, 1997 in
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A former plant worker and Army velcran. he was born April?, 1946 in
Pomeroy, son of Kathryn Will Butcher of Calvin, W.Va., and the late Roger
W. Ntchols He was a member of the Bap11st Church.
Survivmg in addition 10 his mother arc a brother, Bill Nichol• of Jackson, Miss.; stepsister, Jean Rachinski of Columbia. Mo. ; a son, David
Nichols of Medtna; a daughter, D1ana t'flchols of Mcdma; and two grandchildren.
He was also preceded m death by his stepfather, Raymond Butcher.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Beech Grove Cemetery
m Pomeroy, wilh Pastor Leslie Hayman offic1atmg Friends may call one hour
prior to I he servtccs at the Ewmg: Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

a

Today's livestock report

COLUMBUS (AP) - lndiana·j
Butcher hogs: 40.00-51.25
Ohio d~rect hog pr~ces at selected, Cattle: sharply lower.
8:42 p.m., Overbrook Numng buymg points Fnday as provided byj Slaughter steers· choice 59.00.
Center, Mtddlepon, Mabel Skaggs. the U.S. Department of Ag:nculture 1 66.00; select 55.00-59.00
Market News.
Slaughter heifers: choice 58.00.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Barrows
and
g11ts·
50
cents
low·
63.05;
select 54.00-5H.OO
RACINE
er;
demand
light
with
n
light
moveI :30 p.m., volunteer fire depanmcnt and squad lo SR 124, hrush fire, ment.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. counlry
Brad Maynatd owner.
p01nts
49 00.50.00, few 50 50; plants
RUTLAND
49.50-51.00
4:55 P-111 ·· VFD ,and squad to
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.00Amold Road, m01or vehicle acc1dcn1,
Ardella Herdman. HMC. Sc1p1o VFD 49.00; 210..230 lhs. 40 00-45.00.
Sows· not established.
assisted.
Boars: 36.00-38 00.
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
Est1mated
rc•eipts 29,000
2:31 p.m., fallen power line on
For
lhe
week
harrows and g11ts
Goose Creek· Road, Ray Wellman
4
00
lower;
sows
as
compared to earproperty, no injuries reported, Rutly
in
the
week,
moslly
2.00 lo 3.00
land VFD and squad assisted.
lower
TUPPERS PLAINS
Prices from Produrers Live. · 3:14 p.m., Keller Street, Mar~
stock
Association:
Offun. treated at the scene.
Hog market lrcnd for Friday. 50

Doctors warn against lamp oil

Daily

Queen Victoria an illegitimate child? Will the digital vematile disk make my new CD player obsolete? Is grunge disappearing? Has the moderate :
Baptist become an extinct species? Are affiuent
students abandoning private colleges?
And these humdingers:
• Your grandchildren may not have enough
room for a decent burial. It's true- cemeteries :
are running out of space. This will lead to an ·
increase in cremation and such funerary oddities
as the inclusion of human ashes in jewelry and art
objects. A Japanese firm is exploring the develop- ·
ment of lunar plots.
• Advances in digital technology may mean :
that movie stars \Yill never die. Celebrities will be :
recreated by computer to play roles and advertise :
commercial products, in perpetuity.
·
• Generation Xers are feeling bereft of grand :
causes. Their great grandparents had the Depres- :
sion, their grandparents had a world war, .their ·
parents had anti-Vtetnam protests, civil righl5 and :
Richard Nixon, and they've got ... the Gulf War. :
• Licking your golf balls can he a serious :
health threat. Most duffers carry towels to clean •
their orbs, but some give them a tongue bath. :
Thanks to the pesticides and weedkillers used by :
:
greenskeepers, this can cause toxic reactions.
As a general rule,- you shouldn't lick your ·
clubs either.
:
(Jollph Spear II I columnist for NIWij»' :
per Enterprtee Alloclltlon.)
'
:

An 18-year-old Racine woman escaped serious injury in a one-car accident on Bashan Road around 5:30p.m.
Kristy D. Greenlee was southbound, driving a 1995 Saturn when she
lost control of the car on the rain-slick roadway near the Paul Ervm res·
idence, according to a Me1gs County Sheriffs Department report. The car
spun around and went off the right side or the roadway, striking and break·
ing off a ullhty pole. The accident totalled the car and dropped a cable
onto the road, according to the report.
Greenlee sustained bru1ses and minor cuts from the wreck, the repon

Beat of the Bend ...

EMS units answer 10 calls

Serious Worriers working hard at their craft
By JOSEPH SPEAR

The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is investigating the vandalism done to the couilty highway department loader at the gravel pit in
Letart Township.
The loader, used to load dump trueks, was shot numerous times by a
person or persons using shotgun slugs, according to a report. The incident happened either Monday night or early Thesday.

I

Theft of Jeep under investigation

at.l UAlt lT

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

cents lower

Summary of Thursday's auction
at Bucyrus:
Hogs 5 00 lower.

icology. said on Thursday.
"It is so damaging: to the lungs,"
Watson said. "A very small amount
can kill a chtld."
Veterans Memorial
Children's has seen four cases in
adm1sstons - Paul
Thursday
the last two weeks. Doctors there are
warning parents to keep the lamps Cline, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - none
away from chtldren.
If swallowed, lamp oil can find Its
way to the lungs through a number of
paths, Watson sa1d, mcludtng fumes
from the stomach
Once in the lungs, damage comes
quickly.
:
"11 causes chemical pneumoma," 1
he said "And that can lead to respiratory fa1lure. It makes 11 impossible
for the lungs to exchange oxygen."
While many chtldren who swal·
, low or tnhale lamp 01! can be treated
with simple poison control methods,
the four recent cases at Children's
required respirators.

Hospital news

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.

-

.I

Page4

Eastern spikers beat Federal Hocking twice

Frld!y,Aupuat29,1997

By SCOTT WOLFE

No.9 Qhio State beats Wyoming 24-10
By RUSTY . . I ' "

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Thanks to a stout effort. from the
defense, ninth-ranked Ohio State
earned a 24-10 victory over four·
touchdown underdos Wyoming in
the Eddie RobiiiJOII Football Classic.
But the Buckeyes didn't earn
much respect.
" I felt we were better conditioned
and a more physical team than' Ohio
State. I felt we controlled both lines
of scrimmage," Wyoming coach
Dana Dime! said after the game
Thursday night. "If you go back aod
watch the films, !don't think the~e's
- a lot of difference between the two

teams."
Ohio State outgained the Cowboys 500-323, held the ball for 10
minutes longer, got the game's only
· three turnovers and we~en't seril'IISIy threatened after· Michael Wiley
aod Dee Miller scored third-quarter
touchdowns.
Wiley, who rushed for 121 yards
on 10 carries, scored on a 32-yard
run and Miller caught a 45-yard
PUSHY BEHAVIOR wuju.t what Ohio State running bKk Matt touchdown pass from Stanley Jack·
Keller (23) showed to-ard Wyoming defender Je'Ney Jsckson dur· son. .
lng this aec:oncl-quarlllr run In Thul'l!dlly night's Eddie Robinson
But even Ohio State coach John
Footbell Cluslc In Columbus, where the Bucla!yes won 24-10. (AP) Cooper recognized that his team didn't play good, or particularly
inspi~ed, football.
.
. "We were lUI sloppy," Cooper
· said of his team's offensive execution. "We were wallowing around
and we weren't blocking." ·

Ohio downs Kent
31-7 in opener
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Riz
Buckman rushed for a career-high
135 yards and a touchdown and the
defense occounted for two scores as
Ohio beat Kent 31-7 Thursday night
in a season-opening Mid-American
Conference game.
Ohio put thci game away on Its
.first possession of the second half.
:Buckman carried five times for 57
·yards on the eight-play, 78-yard dri\e that culminated in Kareem Wil:son's 10-yard touchdown run for a
'21-7 lead.
The Bobcats increased the lead to
:23·7 when Rahim Slaise blocked a
:Kent punt out of the eod zone for a
;safety with 9:20 remaining in the
· third.

.

Ohio's first score came on Tevell
Jones' 66-yard fumble ~eturn with
5:29 left in the first quarter and
Buckman added a twl}oyard run with
28 seconds left in the quaner to make
it 14-0. .
Todd'Goebbel scored Kent's only
touchdown on a twl}oyard run with
II: 19 left in the half.
John Cosgrove scored Ohio's
final touchdown on a 53-yard run off
an option pitch ~: 17 into the founh
quarter.
·
Bui:kman led an Ohio ground
game that gained 389 yards and kept
the Golden Flashes' potent passing
attack on the sideline. Goebbcl completed 13-of-27 passes for 188 yards,
but only 23 yards in the second half.

Tennis
NEWPOIIT. R.I. (AP) - Jimm,y
;connors heads the list' of of nomi:nees for selection next year into the
.Hall. Also on the ballot, which is vot·
·ed on by members of the intema:tiona! tennis media, ar~ Francoise
-Durr of France. Ken McGregor of·Australia and American Nancy
·Richey.
: Herman David is included on the
International Masters Panel ballot,
·:which honOrs individuals for out:standing contributions.

ButBostonwasnaggedforpush- ·
i.ng off, disallowing the play.
·

r---G-a_lli_a c-a-de..._m_y_v-:-s.-M-ei-gs_:____,
A
.
-

Sampras· H·ngi•S
I
and Davenport win
.

'

ByN~~y~~~E~~l - No. I is a
big lllrget.
fill:
. Sw:r
Pete Sampras and Martina
Hingis, both ranked No. I in th.e
1967 ........................................................... .... .. o... .. .... . .. Meigs 8, GAHS 6
1968 .......................... ..................................................Meigs 14, GAHS 0
. world and seeded No. I in the U.S.
1969 ........ .................. ...... .................................... ..........Meigs 8, GAHS 6
Open. knpw their. opponents, espe1970,............................... ... ......................................... GAHS 12, Meigs 6
cially in the early rounds, can be dan197l ......................................................................... Meigs 14. GAHS 12
gerous. After ail, they have gone
1972 ........ .................................... ...... ...........................GAHS 10, Meigs 6
through the same thing.
1973 .. ............... ...................... ..................................... Meigs 14, GAHS 7
"I remember when I played Mats
1974 ........ .............. ...................................... ................. GAHS 44, Meigs K
Wilander here in '88 or '89, I had ·
1975 .................... ........................ ................................GAHS 19, Meigs 0
nothing to lose," Sampras said. "He
1976 .................................................... .................:........GAHS 8. Meigs 6
wli.&lt; the defending champion, he wa&lt;
1977 ..............................................................................Meigs 7, GAHS 6 · still ranked pretty high at the time. I
1978 .............................., ................................ .:........... Meigs 27. GAHS 9
remember I had nothing to lose ... .
1979 .................................. ...... .........:... ................. :................ ...... no game
"Thcn once you kind of get into
1980 .. :.......................................... ..................... :........ Mcigs 12, GAHS 0
the
match, he had all the pressure. I
198l .................. :....................................................... GAHS 24, Meigs 13
ended
up winning the match. That
1982 ......................,... .. .................. .............................. GAHS 29, Meigs 0
match
always stands out as, you
1983-87 ......................................;........................ ................ ....... no games
know,
kind
of an underdog coming
1988 ............................. ......................... ...................... GAHS 55, Meigs 9
through.
nothing
to lose."
1989 :.................................................... ,...................... GAHS 26, f&gt;!eigs 3
Sampras
has
something
to lose
1990 .................................................................. .. ...... GAHS 48, Meigs 32
now- his U.S. Open crown. So he
199l .................................................. ........................ GAHS 35, Meigs 14
wasn't really surprised at Patrick
1992 ................ ,..... ............................................ .......... GAHS 21. Meigs 0
Baur's game.
'
1993 ......................................................... ................... GAHS 40, Meigs 0
"He was serving huge," Sampras,
1994 ............. ............. ........................................ :., .... GAHS 42. Meigs1
seeking his third straight and fifth
1995 .... ...... ................... .................. ....................... ,..... ...0AHS 6 Meigs 0
career U.S. Open title, said of his
1996 .........................,................................................. GAHS 16 Meigs I~
German opponent. "He came out
..
with nothing to lose. He served real

Football
CORAL CABLES, Fla. (AP) The University of Miami will riot
have to forfeit last year's Carquest
-Bowl victory or the $750.000 it
earned for pla~in~ .in the game
desp1te usmg an mehg1ble player. the
- NCAA said.
· Miami's program could still face
penalties, though, if it is determined
that athletic department offic1als
knew Yatil Green took the money
and allowed him to play without
informing the NCAA.

(&amp;lei 17-4), 4:M p.m
Philadelphia (Beech 2- K) :~t [M roit
(Sunders 4-11 ). 7:0:'i 11.111.
·
Houtton (H:uTf llon 11 -!1) al Chicagu
Wh i i~'Soa (B~ 2-()). 7:0!'i p.m.
O~klond (Haynes 2-1) at Culmado
(ClaSidlo 10-11 1. 8!0!'i run.
Pillsbl.lrgh (Ueber 8-121111 MiiWliUkL'f
(Men:elks 6-7). R : ~ p.m.
CINCINNATI {MOI'!I.IIII ~ - 10) :11 Minnt.'JOiu (Hnwkim; 4-9). K:O!i p.m.
St. Lm• i~ (Afbar 0-J) at Kmas:11 City
(Bdd~r. ll - 12 ). 1t0!1 p.m
Te~11 s \Oark I-6J at S:tn Dicr,11 IA ~hh)'
6-IO). IO:O!'ipm.

Baseball
AL standings
I.-

&amp;ul•mDi.-INon

.ll' L

Ballii'PlM'e ............... M4
New y,xk .............. 7H
Boston ................ ... fJ7
Torunto .......... ........ h5
Delroit ............... _.,.61

r.L

46 .6ot6
~.1 .595
"67 .:\00
67 .492
71 .462

Central Df,-Won
CLEVELAND ....... 61l 61 .521
Milw:wt«- ............. M 66 .:\00
Chic:i!Jn .................. M Mt .41N
KWM City ...........~ 76 .41 5
MinnciMittt .............. ~ 71 .41 2
Wntem Dhillon
S\'llllk• ... ~ ........... ... 74 60 .!'i:'i 2
Anal~un ................ 72 . 62 X47
TCILIU .................. M 70 . -l7~
Oakl:mLI .. ,..... ,...... .S~ Kl .. J'HI

lill
f! '·: •
19

20
2-l

~~t.moved

well. especially at the
Sampras, however, had the
answers, defeating Baur 7-5, 6-4. 63 on Thursday night to advance into
the third round of the year's final
Grand Slam tournament. It was the
second straight qualifier he has beaten !his week- Baur is ranked 338th
in the world - but that didn 'I st6p
Sampras from letting loose a rare
show of emotion.
·
He caught Baur leaning one way
and ripped a backhand pass in the
·Other direction to close out the sec··
ood set. He then punched the air sevcral times and roared his approval.
"There's always a time and a
place for that," Sampras said. ~ 'This
is the time and !his is the place to
show some emotion. Once I knew I
won that point. that was pretty much
the match."
Hingis had little problem knocking off Dcnisu Chladkova of the
Czech Rcpuhlic 6-1. 6-2. hut admit- .
ted she was a little taken hack at the
start of lhc mulch.
,
"In the first set; she played rcully well the first two games," Hingis
(See U.S. OPEN on PageS)

(10me AL vs. NL)

(ALn. NL)

Fluridu ................... 17

Philmklphia (Gr~en J-21 011 Dc rm_il
(Biolir 1.1-6), 7:05p.m.
ChknJO Cubs (Gonzalez 10-6 ) at
CLEVELAND (H ~ uh il u 12 . .'i ). 7 : 0~
Montrtai(Pftn 11 ·.10) :11 N.Y.
kl,&gt;a (Gooden 7-4). 7 : .1~ p.m.

(ALVLNL)
Arlnta {Millwood 2·3) 11 Bo11on
(Wolldleld 9-14), I :05 p.m.

IKrivda 2.0), I:Ol p.m.

Flarida(A.-16-91e&lt;Toron!o

(~ 1-51. 4,1)l P·ll\

Selnle (Wolooft S.l) at l.ol Anacle•
(R.W...I,.. 7-J).4,1}l p.m
AuMim (Sprinpr 1-6) at S~ Frr.n·

** ~
*
**
** .
:

*
*
:

CltiCliJo.Cubl (Tap.vli ~-~)at C~EVELAND (S.. Icy 2· )), ' '~p. m .
N.'i'. Mr11 (8ohAOOn l -J) at Bolrimorc

Y..._ (Well• 14-7), I,35 p.m.

J. r.L

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. ~K J

4'·

51
55

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CHil'AGO WHI'Il : SOX. l"urdl;t.'IC\1 ,
lhc ~uutr;-.: 1 t•f OF IYhl~j:. l iu OrUuncl frum
N;!Jh.,jllc nr tl-.! A•ncri~; m As.ou ~ei ;tt Hm .
DETRUIT TIGF.kS: Ortiuncd RHP ·
l!.dllic G:UIIuul 111 TulcJu nf the httcnlit·
tmnaJ I.A:a~u..: . l&lt;c~.; ;tllcil &lt;W ll11hh:~ Tmntma:ll hum l'nlcJn
OAKLAND A:THI.ETil'S : Sch.och:ll ·.
c nnlratl uf RHI' l: ric Lutlwid frum
HumiiiLMt ul"ll.: Pm: il'i ~· Cu:'ls ll.cltl!,llC.
·
Nllli•nllll.t'llflllt

LOS ANGEU:S J)(JI.XiERS : Si~lll."d
l.HP Ni:al Hu~II.'S .

AIMrkln LnJ_.

rrr-r

By

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-

Inventory Clearance! Extended Sale Hours!
2.8°/a APR ·u p 'OJ BD Months!**

**
*
**
*
**
**
*

She is 10 years old and answers to the name of
"Mica." I have had her for 10 years and I truly
miss her. If anyone knows of someone that
acquired a small, older, Boston Terrier, around :
that time or have seen my dog, please call me at
(614} 986-5585 after 4:30 or 986-4565 and leave
a message. I am offering a reward for the location
of my dog. NO QUESTIONS ASKED!

pr.r HI f.INJ) HI RCJG j l :

I MIH 8' 10 HVCII!

u.s. Open•.. ..

~­ 7
Fall
I
I Q?

c'

8

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***********************

. SJ ,950*

Brll• Nrw 117 c•ny K-1500

Br~•• Nrw ~~~mn y

Exlra•r• m414 Pltkl'

Fall Slzr cmrrs111 Vat
.r• Sl!Oring
·Automalc

•Ar Cordtion
• """" WIIOJws

• 4Wheel AnH.odl Brakes
• Dual Ailbags
• Power Steering

• 4 ~ns Chails
• Rear Soil

-

·~ladol

•Akmnll1l Amng

·.IIM\!Calsette
•Cruiot CoMtj

• loaded!

• Power Brlll&lt;es
• c.staTI Clott1 nlefic)l
•Swin9-W Ot.wter

Wi~
·~Tailgalfl

• T2675R IIi' Steel
BeltodTns
• Well EcPIJpedl

SJ7,950*
Dr••• Nrw 1!~1

Plllllt Cr11• Prix SUII
•AIJomalic
-Ar Conditia1

-~·~la:Q
•Pcwert.tmn
• Dual Arbags

• 4 Wheel AntJ.L.ock

Brakes ·
•Af.WM Stereo
• Sljled Wheels

TPC Fresh Start F!nandng

Tom Peden
4

Country
.

.

t'liday: 10 a11 • 18 pm • Satanlay: 9 am • llllmi81JL
Sllldlly: IIJII· 8pm· ClA'Im MOJ\DAY

....... -~ ............... ,.. .................... -c...,..~a.---. .... o.t........... J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......

In 1977, jockey Steve Cauthen,
still in his teens, won 23 races in a
single week.

Thanks to
.EASTMAN'S
FOOD LAND
for purchasing my ·
Reserve Market
Hog and to the
MEIGS COUHn
BAR ASSOCIATION
for purchasing my
Gilt Market Hog.
B.eth Farley .

Tite A1tion Tra1k''
FRIDAY NIGHT RACING SEPT. ST~
~~'? SEASON CHAMPIONSHIP 7/-{
~ ·· ~ ~\-.
ALL CLASSES
~~'?
11

A

.

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A

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LIVE
AND

IDS
!

·

·loadal!

. ......... ~ ... !hrldD~~-ird.odlt

ibt.,....,..

' comes
·GEmNG IT ACROSS - Eastern's Valerie Ksrr (far left)
down after putting the volleyball across the net as tsamiTIIIH
Stephanie Evans (10) and Angie Taylor (23) and Federal Hocking's
Celah Gliders (25) watch during Thursday night's Hocking Division
metch at Meigs High School, where the Eagles won, in two !lames.

t\E~'.N AUGUST 29th and 30ih - 8:00 TILL 11 :30

•THteering

SllnrCllr -..ll!n' '!(llllalllloll1qi- flrprulilom modi .. but llll1a frw 1l:l1'd""" TCIIII'nlm'•11•; I'""" ~ l-1ntf ~!\lUI 111 r\ery
""· tnUcw vanoodit lui.. _ .. Uilllland Ultl't'SIII'frOO IIIIUOO pJ11! fir l'n'mS!on lloaia1or. Ililt lllllll!lll)ln tudaJllllllitll. I,.. WI
ll'CI'mill
~-,.. •1!111 Tomi~U:a Coulltll' k11111J IL1WI!I\t ~"a f""" :1111 &lt;lithe I'Wilto a lll'ltfr 1,.1..,.!"'

The Southern Tornadoes dropped
their first volleyball. match of the
year and now stand at 1- 1 in the TriValley Conference rankings after
falling, 12, 15, 15-7 . 14-1~ to the
BLOCKED - New York 1ront·llner Rebecca Lobo (50) blocks the
Miller Falcons in Racine.
shot ot Phoenix's Marlles Aslcamp In the first hall of Thursday night's
Kim Sayre and Stacy Lyons led
WNBA samlflnal playoff gsme In Phoenix, where the Liberty won 59the way In scoring with' nine each
41. (AP)
while Cynthia Caldwell added seven, Kam King seven. Amber Maynard six and three from Jenny
Friend. .
For Miller l,f sse Duffy had 15,
Ann~tta Jones had five, Kelly
Humphrey, Angie Lucas and Darcy
Cook each had four, Theresa
McCreevy three and Jenn Browing
.
'
three.
,
Behind a strong showing from
Stacy Lyons (five kills and six
points), Sayre. Caldwell and Ashli
Davis on the front line, Southern
But
New
York
took
a
23-18
halfhandily won the first game 15-7 .
. PHOENIX (AP) - the New
time
lead,
and
Lobo
hit
a
17-footer
Southern took it to the wire in the
York. Liberty nod P.hoenix Mercury
to
Start
the
second
half,
seiling
off
a
second
game, as scoring started out
n~ver figured their WNBA semifinal
slow
with
several great volleys and
would end like this.
17-8 run in which the Liberty hit
The Liberty expected a tight con- eight of their first nine shots.
saves by both teams. Once tied _at 3test, while the Mercury certainly didMichele Timms cut the score to
n't anticipate such a dreadful shoot- 42-34 with a bank shot in !]le lane
with 8:31 to play, and was fouled by
ing performance. :
.
(Continued from Page 4).
Kisha Ford. But Timms. 1-for- 11
New York's Rebecca Lobo and
Kym Hampton were in top form, but from the field and 3-of-5 from the said. I was like really surprised. she
Phoenix put up brick after brick a.• line, missed the foul shot, and Trina started hitting really hard.
"Later on, when she, was making
Trice had a three-point play al the
the Liberty heat the Mercury 59-41
so
many
errors, I w.S like, 'OK, just
other end 25 seconds Iuter.
on Thursday night.
he
mo~e
aggressive, play my own
Comets 70, Sting 54
:~
" In the first half, I don't think
game."
At Houston·, Houston Comets
:"Jhey shot avery high percentage,..
coach Van Chancellor smiled at last.
:;J~id Lobo, who had 16 points, nine
looking at the scoreboard. ·
In a day that saw the stan of play
~'re bounds and three blocks.· "We
"I don't think there is a 16-point delayed five hours because of' rain.
: thought that would·change and they
play so I guess we've won this only one seeded player fell. Olga
• would come out on fire, so we had
thing," he shouted as the final scc- Barabanschikova, a ·17-year-old
: to be ready for them and pick it up
.onds ticked down on a 70-54 victo- . from Belarus, registered her biggest
l :lefensively, and we did. "
:. Hampton, who .played at Arizona ry over the .Charlotte Sting on Thurs- victory by knocking off the fastest
: State, had 14 points and a season- day night that launched the Comets server in the women's game, No. 13
: high 14 ~ebounds. She had her only
into the first WNBA championship Brenda S.:hultz-McCarthy, 6,3, 6-3.
• other double-doubles of the season m game.
Also advancing were No. 3 lana
Cynthia Cooper, the league MVP Novotna. No. 6 Lindsay Davenport,
: two of the four games between the
and leading scorer, led Houston No. 7 Conchita .Martinez, No. 10
: Liberty and Mercury.
·down
the stretch as the Comets ral- Araotxa Sanchez Vicario, No. 12
.: "It was kind of a surprise to me,"
lied
after
teammate Wanda Guyton M'ary Joe Fernandez and No. 16
htampton said. "I feel like I had a
was hospitalized following a scary Kimberly Po. .
; medicore season. I felt like il was
fall with 8: 171eft with the score tied
• time to change that, and there is no
~better time to change that than ·in the at 48:
In the men's side, No. 6Aiex CorThe Comets won the Eastern
• 11layoffs."
·
retja, No. 9 Gustavo Kucrten , No. 12
Conference title and beat the Sting Felix Mantilla and No. 16 Petr Kor: ' New York's Vickie Johnson
three of four times they played this da joined Sampras in the third round.
r ~orcd four of her II points overthc
season, but the game was in doubt
: nnal 1:15.
Thirty-six marches were played
f The Liberty plays at Houston, a ~ntil Guyton took a nasty fall after - 31 of ihem were singles - while
colliding with teammate Tina there were 30 matches postponed : 70.54 winner o.ver Charlotte, in the
• WNBA championship game Satur- Thompson.
all doubles gr mixed doubles. The
" We were very concerned rain also caused a number of match: day. The Comets had the league's
: besl record at 18- 10, and edged the because Wanda is our catalyst,'' es to be moved to different courts.
Cooper said. "She·~ really tough on
Liberty by a game for t.he Ea&lt;tern
·the
boards and really works hard o~
• Conference title.
defense.
That really motivated us to
~
The Mercury (16-13) got the
step
it
up
and work harder. "
(
weekend off after shooting 18.9 perGuyton was taken from the coul'l
cent (7-for-37) in the lirst half and
; 22.4 percent ( 15-for-67) in the sec- on a stretcher and hospitalized.
where she wai&lt; diagnosed with a con' ond.
• Jennifer Gillam had nine points cussion and sore neck. Team physi' and seven rebounds, and Marlics cian Bruce Moseley said Guyton 's
, ..,skump, her backup at cenlcr, also condition would he evaluated again
today.
~ had nine points.
Concern over Guyton tinully gave
• Oillom hit the first three Phoenix
: baskets, going 3-for-7 in the lirsl the Comets the push they needed to
: 6:10 of the game with the Mercury's break away from the underdog Sting.
It earned them a spotagainslthe
: only three-pointer. Bur she tried
New York Liberty in the WNBA
~ only four more shots and made one.
• " I was hoping someone would championship game Saturday in The
~ st;art lighting il up for us," she said . Summit. The Liberty, who fin ished
one game behind the Comets in lhc
; •1l didn 't know I was the only one
' Sl;Oring. After a while, it just seemed Eastern Conference, beat Phoenix
:like nothing would go in for any- 59-41 in the other semifinal.
The Comets followed a familiar
:11pdy."
.
,. .
pattern.
in beating the Sting. They
: Askamp stared, unbe tevmg. at
trailed
Charlotte
by 13 point in the
·: tltc box score with 1-for-11 on
first half of their final meeting on
;. P~oenix's three-point auempts. .
Aug. 19 befo!e rallying to a victory.
• "Nine percent. How can you wm
They needed the same kind of
:1!\ihen you shoot like that?'' she
comeback
to get into lhe Iitle game,
:a&amp;ked.
:' The Liheny won their first seven 'after trailing the Sting 33-29 at half202 N. 2ND AVE.
time.
·games in the league's inaugural sea·
After Guyton's injury, the Comets
:son and were 15-4 after heating the
:t4ercury in New York on Aug. 2. went on a 10.0 run to take command.
:;n.en they lost seven of their last nine They outscored the Sting 22~ over
and came in wi!h a five-game losmg the rest of the g~me.
streak on the road.

Liberty &amp; Comets-.
win to earn berths
in title contest

Colaf7l?
~ rril1[". •l
r,-~r ~ ·rM'r;'~~
l\'1J~ . '-' Ll'- LLLLLl_l_l'l' l'

My small hyperactive Boston Terrier was stolen at
the Lucasville Swap Meet in June. After extensive :
searching I feel she is in Meigs County.

P' BASI

J :JO

Baseball

Thursday's

:ttELPII
'
EW•RDHELPt:
.
* .e $ $
A
$-$
*

:

Saturday's games

MontreAl ( P. Marti~tez l."i·6) at N.Y.

2'-:
II
13

***********************

Y..n-,.

N.Y. Met! (Miicki 6-IOJ nt B nlt i mm-...~
(Kamieniet.:ki 9-!'i ). 7:.\5 p.m.
Florida (A. ~itc:r "-91 :II Tamnlo (Pt!raon ~-9), 7 :.'\~ p.m.
Pi111burf;h (Lo:Uw 10-8) 111 MUwaokL'I!
(KIU'19-10). 8:0!'i l'.m.
Houston (Garfin 5-!J) 111 Chk ngo
While So.t (Ey~ 2-2). 8:0!1 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Tomko 8-!i) at Min ·
ne10111 (Rodrig~ 2-4). lto!i p.m.
St. Louis (Stonll!myll' 12·9) ar Kanm•
City (Pius~y J-7). 8:D.'Ip.m.
Scaule !Cloud.: 1-2) at Coloradt)
(WriJhl6--10). 9:0:'i p.m
Oakland (Haynes 2&lt;H nt LA&gt;s Angcle~
{Vst.&amp;dtl 9-10), IO:O."i p.m.
A111•hcim (Hill 6-11) at Snn Oieao
(Smllll ~) . 10: 0~ p.m
·.
Tcus (Hcllina J. l) 11 Sa• Frunci ~eu
(OudM ll-7~ 100~ p.m

,

»:

All:ttlHI .... ..... ........ !12

12- IOJ. 7{J~r. m

WNBA playoffs

Ari7.tann a1 CINCINNATI. I p.nt.'
All:vJIII U1 Dcuuit. I p.m.
. Oilllas ld Pi111burgh; I p.m
IJWianupulis Ul Mi1uni. I p.m.
Minnewra 111 Buffalo. I p.nt .
New Urll=nn.1 at St. Louis, J r .m
Oaldand at Tmneliite, I p.m
Philadelphia ut N.Y. Gianla, I p.m.
San OieJo lll New Entland, I p.m.
Jacksonville 111 B:lltimon:. 4 p.m.
Kllftsllll Cit}' a1Oenwer. 4_p.m.
N.Y. Jrts ul Seattle, 4 p.m.

r.m.

Hll ll ~ 11111 .

Transactions

Sunday's
seuon openen:

Eadrm Dimkln

luilll

Saturday's final
New Ynrli 111
INBCI

Basketball

9
II
16\

NFL slate

NL standings

Atlunfa {S~N~hz 12-IOl at Boston ($(11:

J'~

.

At hlnl;l lli'BOIIOR. ttO."i

Tonight's games

Mondoy's&amp;ame

Football

CINCINNATI a1 Miml!sura . 2:0."i ft.it!.
St. L11ui s at Kun5a5 C1ty . 2 : 0~ 11.111
(l:lkluml :11 Colorado . .l O."i p.m.
Scalllc at Lt11 An~clts, 4:05 p.m.
TCltllll at Snn Dirtt•'· .&amp; :05 I'''L
Anaheim :u San Fram·•m:n, ·f:O."i 11.111.

.

semifinal scores
Huu ~ h'llt 7fl. OliV'InHt: ~.­
New Yufk ~LJ . Plm•~ttll4 1

Chicnao '" GJern Bity, IJ p.n1

Chicago CtJbil 4, Flori\1.'1 .l ( 10)
Allunla 4. Hou~on 2
Sl . Loui~ II . M rmu~:tl ~

N.Y. Me11 t1l Buhimrn, U!'ip.m
Pittsburgh at Milwnukc!\!, 2:05p.m.
Houslon tal Chiugu Whitt" Soa.. 2:05
Jl.lll,

JI

Thursday's....,...

Olil:ago Cubs ill CLEVEL.AND. I :0!1
11.m
Monlrtallll N.Y. Yank~! . I :J."i )'l.m.

•

16 '~

Wfllrm Dl\'tllon
An,.ck5... ."......7ft !19 . ~J
S:tn Fnmci111..~ .. ..... n 61 .~:'i
ColoraOO ................M 70 .481
Sun DiCJO ..............fiJ 71 .467

Aotid., ~• Toronto, I:O:'i p.m.
Philadrlphiu illllklroil. 1:0!1 p.m.

10
21

Snn Fnmcisco at T:~~ B:~y, 4 fl·"'·.
Wnshinstun at CamliRil. Krun.

10~

Southern took a 7-3 lead on
Amber Maynard serves. She had six
points In that game, but a string of
Jesse Duffy scores made it I 0-7 and
iller rolled on to the win with a pair
of Cook safeties scheduled around a
Southern time out.
Southern went up 3-0 in the last
game on Kim Sayre safeties, but
Miller came back 3-2 and later took
a 6-4 lead on Kelly Humphrey
serves. The event was then a see-saw
affair capped by a pair of Jesse Duffy
scores, 15-12.
Sayre had two aces, three kills
and a 34-36 setting night. Caldwell
had four kills, Maynard was 38-41
.setting, Lyons had th~ee aces, six
blocks and eight kills, Kim lhle four
kilis, Nicole Benson four kills, Kati
Cummins two kills and two blocks
and Kara King an ace.
Southern won the reserve games
15-6. II- 15 and 15- II. Sarah Brauer
led the way with II points, Laraine
Lawson had eight, Maynard and
Dena sayre six each, four apiece
from Fallon Roush and Stacy Wilson
and two from Heather Dailey.

VVNBA playoffs begin

-

Lus

(AL&gt;S. NL)

j

1..&amp;' ·
1l

Tomnt11 J. Chic&lt;lll-t'i White S1~11. 2 (II I
Klln.'WCiry~ . B:tllill"'IO! 1
San Dit-J:O 9. Ano1hrim 1
Colorudo 9, &amp;:nuk ~
l01 An,elrll 7. Oakland I
TclUll II , Sttn fT:~n~· i!ICII :'i

Centrlll DMsloft
Houston ................. 70 6J .!126
PiusburJ.h ..... ....... 67 67 .~
Sl. Looia ................ ttl 12 .459
CINCINNATI... ... ..'iH '71 .443 .
Chic"J(l .................. S4 80 .403

Sunday's gam&lt;s

J',

Thursday's St.'ores

p.m.

New Yori ..... -. ..... 71 61 - ~38
Mon1real ................&amp;~ 67, .492
Phibklphi:t ........... 49 80 .JRO

r.:i ~eu

:i,

By SCOTT WOLFE

Sentinel Correspondent

Scoreboard

on every ball that came at us. In the
second game, everybody saw some
action and we played Vinton's caliber
of ball , instead of ours."

SHS varsity spikers
drop opener to Miller

pen

the fOOtball SerieS

'------Sports brlefs.-----

ting night with six sets for kills and en and Jessica Barringer nine.
Juli Bailey one point. Juli Hsyman
Jackson said, "They made us
The Eastern Eagles made a clean had 16-22 sets with seven sets for look good in the second game. The
sweep Thursday night at Meigs High kills. while Angi Wolfe had a dink first game we hustled and got a hand
School where they defeated Federal and two kills.
At one point, Federal had actual Hocking 15-0 and 15·8 to remain
undefeated in two league games. ly taken a 2-0 lead and held tough at
Eastern also swept the reserve match 3-3. A familiar combination in East15-4 aod 15-12.
em's success was !he spiking of
In the fi rst game Jessica Brannon Evans followe by a Karr spike which
led off the, game with a nice serve ·. accounted for ·seven scores. Angie
and scored on a Val Karr spike, a Taylor also made a great save toward
combination that was very SlJCCCSS· the end of the 15-8 win .
ful throughout the night. Karr had six
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
kills on the night.
"Everyone gotto'play. It was one of
Brannon went · on for three those games where we carne out and
straight points, then Karr had two
set the early tempo, then played their
aces and three points in a 6-0 lead. style of ball, but its a good win."
Eastern led 10.0 by the time BranIn the reserve game Jessica Bar·
non's next wn came around and
ringer had five points and Kristen
Michelle Caldwell came alive with . Chevalier had six for Eastern.
two kills in the IS-O route. BiannoJl's
Tuesday at Vinton County. Branlast serve was an ace to win the non had two aces and nine points (9·
game.
10), Angie Wolfe five points and an
Angi Wolfe had a key spike in the ace (5-6),Kim Mayle .six, Leah
drive to win the game.
Sanders three, Caldwell two, Karr
In the more highly contested sec- two with an ace, Taylor three. aod
ond game. Caldwell had three kills Stephanie Evans one.
and an ace, while Brannon added
Karr had a 5-5 spiking night with
two aces .
four kills and three blocks, Wolfe 5Brannon had 16 points. three 6 with three kills, Brannon two
aces and two kills ; Caldwell six kills, Caldwell 2-2 and Mayle 2-2
pomts, 8-8 serving with seven kills; wilh a kill.
Kim Mayle five, Karr three with an
Eastern's ~eserves won 15-7, 12ace. Evans one poin~ and a 17-25 set·
15 and 15-2. Sarah Clifford had sev-

Sentinel Correepondent

Ohio State's 35-aame strealk of
That proved to be an omen. The · ball, the Buckeyes made it 24-3 on
sellouts ended on the . third night Buckeyes fumbled three times, had a six-play, 85-yard drive capped by
game in Ohio Stadium history. A nine penalties for 80 yards, aod gave Jackson'• play-action bullet to
crowd of89,122 - 719 undercapoK:- up five sacks and II taekles for lost Miller.
·ity - watched the Buckeyes win yardage.
Dime! said Wyoming had nothing
their 19th straight home opener.
Jackson completed 6-of-I 0 pass·
to lose, aod proved that on its only
Despite teams that each averaged es for 1·12 yards and carried I I times touchdown drive.
·
almost 40 points a game a year ago, for 75 yarda. Joe Germaine, the MVP
On fourth-and-four at the
defense dominated. Ohio State, com- of Ohio State's 2().17 Rose Bowl Wyoming 13, punter Aron Langley
ing off an 11-1 record and No. 2 .victory over Arizona State, hit9-of- raced 25 yards: On the next play,
ranking in · l996, limited the Cow- 13 passes for 98 yards.
backup tailback Mike Jenkins broke
boys to 323 yards. Wyoming, 10.2
"We killed ourselves with penal- free from a taelde at the line aod
and a Western Athletic Conference ties, fumbled snaps and mistalkes,"
gained 37 yards before being tackled
by Antoine Winfield.
divisonal winner, frustrated the Jackson said.
Jackson scored on a wild 41-yard
The Cowboys went for it on
Buckeyes' inistalke- and penaltyscramble
on
Ohio
Slate's
second
fourth-and -bne at the Ohio State 17,
prone offense again and again.
"We beat a scrappy football team, possession, with Wyoming coming with Jeremy Silcox bOO~egging left ·
give them all the credit in the right back on Cory Wedel 's 38-yard but he fumbled when he was hit by
·
linebacker Andy Katzcnmoyer.
world," Cooper said. "They we~e field soal.
After Dan Stultz converted a 40. Wyoming guard Jeff Smith fell on
probably a little better than most pel}o
ple ~ealize. We made a lot of mis- yard field goal for a 10-3 first-quar- the loose ball, however, and on the
next p!ay Jenkins bounced up the
takes and were our own worst ene- ter lead, the Buckeyes went flat.
Wyoming had one of the nation's middle for an 11 -yard touchdown to
my."
Cooper was ·most troubled by most porous defenses a year ago, close the scoring.
"We didn 't come in here to play
injuries to starting defensive end giving up 439 yards a game. Yet
John Day and backup wide receiver Ohio State had minus-five yards of this game close," said Dime!, ·a
native of suburban Columbus.
Jimmy Redmond. Day suffered a Iota! offense in the second quarter.
The Buckeyes broke it open in the "We're just as disappointed as if we
knee injury and Redmond broke a
b9ne in his leg. Cooper said it was third quarter. On consecutive carries, would have lost by 40 points."
Cooper said he couldn't underunlikely that either would play again Pepe Pearson slanted off left tackle
for 25 yards aod Wiley broke outside stand why his team wasn't motivatthis season.
ed.
Ohio State's high-octane offense for a 32-yard touchdown.
·:·I don't think we really got into
The next time they louched the
of a year ago appeared to be ready to
ii mentally," he said.
roll from the outset when Jackson
completed a 38-yard pass to David U
Q
t•
Boston on the Buckeyes' first snap.
• •
COn .lnUeS

S

The Dally Sentinel • Pagt~~S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

tA;~~~ SPLIT DECISION
~tl~,.,"E
AND DIM
$400 ENTRY
~\..~~E~s
. _ONLY AT...
$700 PERcouPLE
!1@[filffi~ [3 ~~0 a0 .ENTERTAINMENT~~(!)
1

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
992·4514

�••

••

Peat 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •,Middleport, Ohio

August 29, 1997

Friday, August 29, 1997

..

POMEROY
PROUDLY PRESENTS
The Historic

Apo stoli c

Hope lloptlst Church (Southern)
Pastor: Richard Oliver
570 Grant St., Middlepon

.

'

Free Will Baptist Churcb

AStl Street, Middleport
Pastor : Les Hayman
Sunday Service ·- 7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Rutland Flnt Baptist Chon:h
· Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptlll
East Main St.
Sunday School·· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1I 1997
9 AM· 4 PM

Flnt Southern Baf.tlst
41812 Pomeroy P1ke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant ·
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -10:4.5 a.m., ~: 00 p.m.
Wednesday ~rviccs -1:00 p.m .
flnt Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
.Won;hip- 10:15 a.tn., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

ACTIVITIES WILL INCLUDE

9:30-3:30
9:30-5 PM
10:00 AM-3:30

. DOCKING • CAPTAIN SHOEMAKER
1():00 AM TO 3:30
SWEET GREETINGS OPEN FOR COFFEE AND SWEETS
GREETING CEREMONY ·AMPHITHEATER
OHIO RIVER BEAR COMPANY TOURS
. CRAFT SHOW • UPPER PARKING LOT
MEIGS CO. MUSEUM OPEN • BUTTERNUT AVENUE
HOUY HIU INN TOURS/REFRESHMENTS
MERCHANTS SIDEWALK SALES • PERIOD WINDOW DISPLAYS
THE SCULPTURES OF CHARLES DELAY
11 :00 AM·2:00
ANTIQUE TOURS • EVERY 30 MINUTES (SIGN ~pAT INFORMATION TEtlT}
ANTIQUE SHOW • COURT STREET
11:30 AM-3:30
CLASSIC CAR SHOW • PEOPLES BANK DRIVE THRU
1:00 PM-1:30
ART IN THE PARK ·15 LOCAL ARTISTS (MINIPARK ON COURT STREET}
FLOWER SHOW· FARMERS BANK LOBBY
•
..2:00 PM-3:00
. .
QUILT SHOW· PEOPLES BANK LOBBY ·ANDERSON'S FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCES)
3:00 PM-3:30
THE FABRIC SHOP

-.

Racine First lhpUat
PastOr: Rev. Lawrence T. Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday Sc::hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

DEMONSTRATIONS:
QUILTERS ·ANDERSON'S FURNITURE
BASKET WEAVER • SHIRLEY HUSTON • HARTWELL HOUSE
SPINNER • MARY FROENDT • BICHMAN BUILDING
SPENCERIAN WRmNG • SABRA ASH • HARTWELL HOUSE
WOOD SCULPTURING • JACK SLAIN • MINIPARK
WATERCOLOR PAINTING • DENNIS VAN SICKLE, ARTIST
CRAFT DESIGNER • RABBITS • MARILYN KARR •
HARTWELL HOUSE
CHICKEN BAR-B-QUE • BUTIERNUT POMEROY FIRE DEPARTMENT
ICE CREAM SOCIAL· LYNN STREET· TRINITY CHURCH
CALUOPE CONCERT
DELTA QUEEN BAND CONCERT· AMPHITHEATER
BIG BEND CLOGGERS • VIVIAN MAY, DIRECTOR .

Silver, Rua Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School· 1Da.m.
Worship-lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m ..
ML Union BaptJal
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sund~y School-9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Qaniel Berdine
Sunday School- 9:30 a.ni.
Sunday WorshiP.· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study· 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel r ... Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening -7:30 p.m.
. Thursday Services -7:30

APPEARING THROUGHOUT THE DOWNTOWN DURING THE DAY:
THE BARBERSHOP QUARTET- CIVIL WAR SOlDIERS ..;'VICTORIAN LADIES
BEVERAGE AND FOOD WAGONS:
MEIGS LOCAL BAND BOOSTERS - EASTERN LOCAL BAND BOOSTERS

"'' -

H.llllkle B~ptJst Chun:h
St. Rt 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: R~v. James R. Acree,.Sr.
Sundaf School • 10 a.m. '
. Worsh1p- 11a.m., 6 p.m.
•
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship · Joa.m.. 7 p.m.
W~dnesday Services· 7 p.m.

. BY ~·FARMERS BANK.

ANDERSONS
QUILTS ON DISPLAY
ON DELTA QUEEN DAY 1-

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE

DOWNING CHILDS·
MULLEN MUSSER INSURANC
992•2342

FA

ERS BANK
GALLIPOLIS
446·2265

CROW &amp; CROW

POMEROY

992·2432

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992·2155 '
POMEROY

992·2104

FISHER FUNERAL HOME
MIDDLEPORT

OPEN lABOR DAY

..

POMEROY

POMEROY

ARTHUR TREACHERS

For De•ls As Good b tioldl

QUILTS ON DISPLAY ON DELTA QUEEN DAYI

WELCOMES T3E DELTA QUEEN

SERVICE &amp; SUPPLY
COURT ST. BAR &amp; GRIL OFFICE
leletmta na Dtllt Guttn To Downtewn Pomeroy
Ctmt en~ Sey Hi te Bennie &amp; Big John ·
992·9985

OPEN MONDAY 9-4- STOP IN AND SEE US.
992·6376
}

&gt;

992·2284 TRY OUR "GRILlED" MENU

'

HARTWELL HOUSE
loltllle Karr,

Rutland free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
·
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Co n. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Moss· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30 a.m ..

Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

I

.

llurwollow Rldv Church of Christ
Putor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Zlo• Chun:h of Christ

PomerOy, Harri100ville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger·Watson ,
Sunday School- 9:30 f .m.
WorJhip • 10:30 a.m .• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services·- 7 p.m.

HyRII Run Holl•011 Chun:h
Sunday SchoOl· 9:30a.m.
Wornoip. 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Tuppen Pllin Cburch of Christ
lnstrumentaJ
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
Communion- tO a.m.
Sunday School~ 10;15 a.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
· Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
RuUand Churt- of Christ
Sunday Scllool· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
'Comer of St. Rt.124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini!itcr: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00.p.m.

992·769~

fornt Rua
Pastor: Otarles Neville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Hanlon! Chun:h of Cbmt In
Cbrhdaa Uaioo
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
·
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Morloh Church of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School~ 9:45a .m.
Evening -7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Church of God of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunda)' School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wtdnesday Services - 7 p.m.

Second &amp;
Pastor: Rev.
Sunday school and worship 10:2.5

Episcopal

Rutlud CommuaiiJ Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Suilday Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Grace Episcopal Church
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour following

Holiness
Danville Hollne11 Church
31057 State Repute 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D . Young
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

C

Faith Valley Tabemacle Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Re\'. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.m .

East Lelln
Pastor: Brian Harkness
!funday School - 10 a.m.
Wo1"5hip - 9 a.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mlt!!lon
1411 Bridgem,an St., SyracUse
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Evening · 6. p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.n:~.
Hazel Commu•lty Chun:h
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m.,7:30p.m.
D)oeavllle Communi!)' Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
.Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School ~ 9 a.m .
Worship • 1.0 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;: 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Mone Chapel Church
Sunday schoOl· 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

HOddoeport Church
Grand Street
Sunday Scllool-10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive Ualted Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m:, 1 p.m.
Thursday-Services- 7 p.m.

-Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom

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

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Melp Coopendn1'11rlsh
NnnhustCI-r
All'rod
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor!hip • 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

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

Nazarene

Ch01ter
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of the NIWIRDe
Pastor: Oregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
.Wednesday ~rvices · 7 p.m.

Uolted Folth Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Scllool· 9:30a.m.
Wo rsh ip ~ 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Renlovllle feUowahlp
Chpn:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Mart A. Dupler
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Woisb ip • '10:4S a.m., 7 p.m:
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Full Gospel LIKJithowe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

SyracuSe Chur-ch Of the Nazarene
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

South Bethel New Tatament

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
LoaKBottom
· Sundly Scllool· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
RHdsvllle
P'astor: Rev. Charles Mash
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month ~7:30 p.m. service

Pastor: sanlUel Basye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

R~oldnK Ule Church
.500 N. 2nd Ave., Middltport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Church or Jesus Christ.

Apostolic faith
1/4 mile past Fon Meigs on~ew Uma Rd.
. Pastor: William Van Mecer
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wedncsday-7:00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.
Clifton Tabem.Cie Church

Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship -7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.
New Ufe VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services -10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
WedneWy- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Auembly
St Rl. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
S_unday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracuse Flnt United Presbyterlu
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m:
Harrisonville Prabyttrian Chun:b
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
Middleport l'retbJlerlon
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Ad\'eatlst
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School· 2 p.m.
Wor1hip • 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermoa United Bretbrea
Ia Cbrlot Cbun:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Eden Ualttd Bretbren In Cb'rtst
2 1/2 n\iles nonh of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School-11 a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
. Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
·
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m.

Whlte's·Chapel Wesleyan

Portlaad Flnt Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Malson
Worship. 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

47439 Reibel Rd ., Chester
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel

StlnnvUie Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Miliioo
Bald Knob, on Cq. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship-7 p.m.

Rutland Church of lhe Nazarene

Other Churches

Cahary Bible Churth
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wornoip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SerVice~ 7:30p.m.

Carleton Interdenominational Chun:h
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Cheater ChUrch of the Naurene
Pastor: Rev . Herbert Gralt
. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hanest Outruch Mlalstrlet

F•lth Fellow•hlp Crvude for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.·

Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
. Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednuday Servi~s- 7 p.m.

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keitll Rader
." Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

WIJH AWANT AD

575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School JO a.m.
E\'ening- 7:30p.m.
, Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Coolville Ualted Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cool•llle Church
M8in &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

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

·• .

Middleport Community Church

Radne

United Method1 st

.·'

Endtlme House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday ·service ·6:30p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

SL Paul Luthena Cbw:ch
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

~

HarrisOaville Community &lt;;bun:h
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

Sutton
Pastor; Dewarne Stutler
.
Sunday Schoo • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)

Our S.vlour\.utbena Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
· Worship - 11 a.m.

~

The BeUevks• Fellowship Ministry
New Ume Rd., Rutland
Pastor: ReV . Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ·
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Momlna.SUr
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School ~ 11 a.m.
worship. 10 a.m.

St. Joha Lathena Chan:h
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick
Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

•.:,. . .·

. Long Bottom
Pastor: Ste\'e Reed
Sunday School- 9:30 11-m-.
Worship-9:30a. m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Friday· fellowship service 7 p.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Dewarne Stutler
1
Sunday Schoo -9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

.

_·,

Faith Full Gospel Chun:b

\

The Ch•rch of Jauo
CbrlstofLitter-Doy Sllats

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

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m.,-7:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School • !0 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 10 a.m.

Reorpalzed Chur&lt;:h of Java Chrilt
of Litter Doy Soints
Portland· Racine Rd.
Branch P~esident - Michael Duhl
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship~ 10:30·a.m.
Wed~ay Services-7:30p.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Cbristlan Fellowship Ceater
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.ni.
Worship· I 1:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

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

Latter-Day Saints

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syneuse)
· Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a. m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Resident Pastor Richard Vermillion
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Rutlaad
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
~~rsday Services- 7 p.m.
S.ltm Ccnttr
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunda)' School · 9:15a.m.
Worship -10:15 a.m.

Llum Clllr Free Metbodlst Church
Pastor: David DeWitt
Sundly School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Tuppen Plain1 SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

Senior Pastor Michael Pangio

Worshi~-lOa. m .

Lutheran

Christian Umon

92) S. Third St. , Middlepon

Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worst-lip· 10 a.m.

Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Uberty Christian Church
Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening-6:30p.m.
Thursday Service • 6:30p.m.

Renls•llle Cbun:h of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Faith Cha~l Oprn Blble Church

Mlnen~JIIe

Pomeroy
Pastor: ,Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m ...
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.
. Roek Sprlnp
Putor: Keuh Rader
Sunday School -9:15a.m.

· St. Ri. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486.
Sunday Scllooll0:20.11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:~-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Hemlock Grove Chun:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship- 9:30 a.ni., 7 p.m.

Agape ure CAntu
"Full-Gospel Church•
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017 .
Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

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

Hlekory Hills Church of Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedn·esday Services· 7 p.m.

Langsville Christian Church ·
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvice 7:30p.m.

Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

WesltYIID Bible HoiiOIII Cbun:h

· 15 Pearl St., Middlepor1.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service· 10 a.m.
Worship-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Church
allllouncements
...
.
sponsored by these area
merchants •.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Re\'. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
PasJo : John Hart
Sundav School· 9:30a.m.
WOrship · 7:00p.m .
·
Wednesday Bible Study· 7:00p. m.

Crow's Family

TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?

Restaural'lt

Clean out your basement or
. attiC with the help Of the

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken"

21.4 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

992-5432

228 w. Main St.. Pomeroy

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
1-----_:_:_--,--------l-=:::!!!.!!.=~~:__-+-:-SW:-:-::-::IS-:-:H::E::R:-&amp;:-:-LO=:-:H=SE:-t--~-::::::;;.;;.;;;'--'-..:..;.:...--r--;Jfrancis FLORIST
Davla-QulckeiAgencylnc. ·
RACINE MOWER.
RIDENOUR
~
( Ml...J
Veterans
Meigs County&gt; Olde&gt;t F!orO.t
INSURANCE
CLINIC
PHARMACY ·
Memorial
EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769
::::=.•.= · Briggs &amp; Stratton
We Fill Doctors'
Hospital
6141992. 2644
-.:'GENe";;Inc.
Master Service Technician
St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
Prescriptions
115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
6141992_6298

.L

Bill Qu,ckel 992-66n

Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art
102 E. MAIN, POMEROY

,.

(

SyncWie flnt Church of God
. Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday SeJVices- 6:30p.m.

Church of Christ

THE FABRIC SHOP

992·PAWN POMEROY.

Pine Gro..-e Bible Hollaeu Cltun:h
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:.30 a.m.
'Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:3.0 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Mt. Moriah Bapdst
Fourth &amp; Main St., Jp!iddleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.'
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-.5898

NEIGHBORHOOD LENDER
115 W. 2ND ST., POMEROY

Kuoo Church of Christ
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
ht and 3rd Sunday

Forest Ru·o Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Catholic

LEO'S
CRUISE AND
TRAVEL
,,

992·4233

R.,. of Sharv11 Holl- Church
Leadins Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetina- 7 p.m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church

POMEROY

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
992·2955

FRANCIS FLORIST

POMEROY
992·5444

992·5144

992·2121

VETERANS MEMORIAL
·HOSPITAL

POMEROY

Middleport Chun:h of Cbrlst
!5th and Main
Pastor: A1 Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

R•tland €h•rch o.f God
Pa.\tor: Randy Barr
Sunday ScOOol • 10 a.m. ,
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesda)' Services · 7 p.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· !0:45a.m:
Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.

EWING
FUNERAL .HOME

K&amp;C JEWELERS
992·3785
POMEROY

TUPPERS PLAINS
985·3161

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

The Delta Queen's Arrhtalls Truly AProud
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Moment In History For Pomeroy
992·6059
POMEROY 992·2556

(ROW'S FAMILY
RESTAURANT

Faith Boptlot Charib
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School- 10 a.m. ·
Worsh1p- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

"Your BanJr For l.ife"
POMEROY
992·2136

Cllvary Pllpl• Cbpel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor ltcKish
Sundly School 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hlp. 111.m.. 7:30p.m.
We&lt;lnesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Miller

Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

8:00AM
·a:OOAM
9:00AM
9:00 AM·NOON
9AM-4PM
9AM-4PM

33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worshtp -10a.m., 6 p.m.
,Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

l'omoroJ Weollldel;loucb ofCilrllt

Church of J11N Cbrbt Apootolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.

P.O. Box 467,
Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-.::g

SUPPlY

KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

949-2804

985·3308

992-2955

~~~-------r~~~~------r--~~-----T--~
in a hurry...
~i•!Jrr ~ untral ~omt ,lno.
TIME FOR SPRING

CLEANING?
,C/eln out your bas11ment or
ante with the help of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

2-&amp;t &amp;lllh kxn:l , .,
Ml(kHpOn. 0H U7al
., ...... 141

. HOEaiM..-.StrMI
l'omlloJ'. OH 45181
114·111112·&amp;444
IWol fl. fllhel'. ~
~R . AcniJf. · ~

Pomeroy

TRY

992-21 04

Send Your Thoughu Wirh Special Care"

EWING FUNERA~ HOME

CLASSIFIEDS

"Dignity and Service Always"
· Established 1913

REAL TIHE
SAVERS.••

992-2121
106 Mulber

Ave.

Pomero

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
"992·7075
172 North Seeond Ave.
Middleport, Oh

�'

Friday, Augu.. 29, 1997

By ,The Bend

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

The Daily .Sentinel

Giveaway
Part Shtpherd &amp; Colllt ·lllud
PuJIIIItt, 114-n.

Pages.
Friday, ~ugu8t29, 1997

•

Ann
Landers
1991, U.

Aatdca

Ttma

S)'lldlt11t llld Cfelt\ld
SyndiCI~.

Dear Ann Landers: Last year,
you printed a column about the
·imponance of the PSA test in diagnosing prostate cancer. Would you
please run it again' It may come in
handy for men of a cenain age. -Faithful Reader in Kansas City
Dear Faithful Reader: Thanlc
you for asking. Here it is:
Dear Ann Landers: I've been a
longtime reader of your column and
now find I have something that may
be of interest to you and your read-

ultrasound 'and biopsied the five suspicious areas. All were malignant,
and !he following week, I had a
complete prostate n;moval. When I
asked the urologist why the digital.
exam showed nothing, he said it was
accurate only .50 percent of the time.
A college friend of mine contacted me after learning of, my surgery,
and I told him what had happened.
He had gone 10 his doctor some
years before with !he same com·
plaint and received the same an~wer
-- old age. After I told him about my
experience, he went to a urologist
and found that he, too, had malignancies. Unfortunately, he had wait·
ed too long, and the removal of his
prostate and surrounding lymph
glands did not stop the cancer. I just
learned that he is terminal, cannot

ment.

The urologist gave me a PSA test

along with a digital exam. The PSA
showed. that !here might be a problem, so !he urologist gave me an

walk and is in severe pain.
How many thousands of men die
each year from prostate cancer
because they trust an ordinary doc·
to • reliance on !he conventional
digital am, not realizing that it is
only 50 rcent accurate? Please,
Ann, tell our readers if a man ·is
having uri ary problems, panicularly if he i over 60, he should go
immediate! to a urologist and find
out for ce ·n. -- No Name, No
State
Dear . .: I have dealt with this
proble in the column before and
rec · ed ari astonishing number of
ters from men (and their wives)
relating similar experiences. While a
competent general practitioner
should be able to diagnose the problem, I agree tl)at one who specializes

The Shade River Masonic Lodge
453 hosted a community builders
award dinner ·recently at the lodge
hall in Chester.
"
A ham dinner was served with
J?omeroy Order of the Eastern Star
186 assisting and furnishing the
dessen.
·
. Awards were presented to Roy
and Maurita Miller, John and Karen
Ridenour, Delmar and Kathryn
Baulli, and Tim and Marty Baum.
Presenting the awards were
Elmer Newell, master of the Shade
River Lodge, Joaan Kautz, wonhy
matron of Pomeroy OES, David
Fox, Mason's district deputy, and
Kathryn Windon, deputy grand
matron of District 25.
Attending were: Roger and Paula
Gaul, Pat and Tom Morrisey, D.A.

Harris, Roger and ,---------~---,
Rosemary · Keller,
Patrick
Wood,
Nial and Virginia
Salser, Tom and
Sheila
Theiss,
Mike, Angie and
Vinson Marrin,
Sharon Hausman,
Debbie, Adam and
Abbie Chevalier,
. David and Ruth
Ann Fo.x, Roy. and COMMUNITY BUILDERS - Delmar and Kathryn Baum, Roy and Maurita Miller
Maunta . Mtller, were among those recognized as "community builders• at a recent dinner anhe
Delmar ·
and Shade River Masonic Lodge 453 in Chester. Shown here are, from left: Roger Gaul,
Kathryn Baum, Vir- worthy patron of Pomeroy OES 186; Joann Kautz, worthy matron of Pomeroy OES
gil and Kathryn 186; Kathryn Baum; Delmar Baum; Maurita Miller; Roy Miller; Dave Fox, Mason
Windon. . Joann district deputy; Kathryn Windon, district deputy grend matron; Elmer Newell, mas·
Kautz, Elmer and ter Shade River Lodge 453.
Darlene Newell,
Hysell, John and_ Mary Newell,
Mary K. Yost, Jean Frederick, Bar- David Koblentz, Harold and Jeannie An and Edna Slusher, Inzy Newell,
bara Sat:gent, Homer and ·Pauline Nonon, Ziba ·and Sylvia Midkiff, Hubert Wolfe and Jim Huff.

Sermonette
By: Bonnie
Shively
Praying Scrip:ture is a beautiful way to
stait · the day. Psalm 143:1,8-12
(NIV) asks the Lord to bestow His
lovingkindness on us.
"0 LORD, hear my prayer, listen
to my cry for mercy ... l-et the mom-.
ing bring me word of your unfailing
love, for I have put my trust in you.
Show me the way !·should go, for to
you I lift up my soul. Rescue me
from my enemies, 0 LORD, for I
hide myself in you . Teach me to do
your will, for you are my God; may
your good Spirit lead me on level
ground. For your name's sake, 0
LORD, preserve my life." Amen

What are your needs today? Out
of the hundreds of people who read
this anicie, there are hundreds of
aching hearts -- all kinds of problems. Would you like to share yours
if only someone would listen' Lift
up your bean 'to Him. He will hear
your cry. Trust Him.
In lovingkindness the Lord
extends to you His tender mercies.
He delights to give you the fullness
of His affection. He cherishes and
loves you fervently. This He proved
when He sent His Son, Jesus, to .die
for all our sins. We deserve nothing.
He graciously invites us to come to
Him for all our needs. His love is
unfailing. Ask Him.

tool' aafls, onllquel, 1of1, otocl'lcll oppiOncoL llln&gt;4pm.
Gigandc ward Ull· AYOUII 21·

30 (Fridoy· Saturdar), hrn-4pm.
Slate Roul8 7 acrou ltom under·

~

to meet the requirement of the Ohio
Supreme Coun in funding schools.
Keith Ashley, legislative chairman,
said that the legislature failed to
agree with the Governor's proposal
a~d that the Democrats are pushing
for the one-cent increase in the sales
ta&gt;&lt;.
Racine Grange gave a second
reading to three changes in by-laws.
· One will raise dues $2 a year. The
second will change the monthly
meeting to the first Thursday of the
month at 7:30 p.m. The third will
change from an annual election or
officers to a biennial election of offi.
cers. These will be voted on at the
Sept~mberH meeting.

to send their entries to the Pomona
Grange judging on Sept. 5. The
. meeting will be held at Star Grange'
and will be a Potluck dinner hosting
Lawrence County Pomona Grange.
The chaner was draped in memo·
ry of AI Smith. Geraldine Cross was
reponed as ill.
Chuck Yost, master, announced
three awards received by Racine
Grange from the Ohio State Grange.
lean Alkire was awarded the distinguished secretary's award.
The Grange received a communi·
1ty service award for its work and a
·eit~tion for membership increase.
.1 A request for donation by the
Meigs County Cooperative Parish
· was received. The Grange voted to

Mar)' activities
Virginia
Easterday,
women's
chairman,
rcpon-

sendadonatton.
. as
Rachel Ashley was rccogntzed

Granger to have been elected to the
Ohio State Grange Youth Committee. She was also recognized as the
newly crowned Meigs County
Grange Princess for the second suecessive Year.
The Grange received a third' place ribbon for its display booth at
the Meigs County Fair,
The county Junior Grange parry
has been changed. The new date for
it will be announced when set.
Installation of officers was
announced for the Sept. 18 meeting.
The annual COI)lmunity Thanksgiv- ·
ing dinner and auction was set for
Nov. 15.
A raffle was Planned for the
Racine Fall Festival. Racine Grange
officers'
meeting
was set
for Sept. plamiing
19, at 7 p.m.
All activities

OF
MER
LABOR DAY BLOWOU7
ECKRIDGE

HEALTHY CHOICE

CHOPPED HAM TURKEY

8 11

1

4

8 11 LB.

HOTDOGS

8

2/ 1
LB.

( '. \1 ,1, .\111·: \U I ·'OU

24 PACK

BUDWEISER
IND '

BUD LIGHT

'n:

· Sour Cream &amp; Butler

ggc

Loaded •1.59
\ '1' 'I'll.\

\ ·s

MILLER LITE

. '1211

24 PICK

OLD ·

••

Quality Marathon
Gas Products

Officers elected for the 1997-98
year were : Chuck Yost, master;
Mary K: Yost, overseer; Emma Ashley, lecturer; Baroara Dugan, steward; Keith Ashley, a.Ssistant steward;
Whitney Ashley, lady assistant steward; Mary Virginia Easterday, chaplain; Jean Alkire, secretary-treasurer; Helen Pickens, gatekeeper; Whit·
ney Ashley; Ceres: Ruth . Frank,
Pomona; Anita Yost, flora; and Mary
Virginia Easterd.ay, executive commiuee. Geraldine Cross and Anita
Yost are still serving on the executive committee.

.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

~. ~ ...

&amp;

TAZ'S MARATHON' &amp; DRIVE THRU
STATE ROUTE 7 AT FIVE POINTS

USB OtTB CONV.BNDNT DJUVB.TBRIT

1Vft

.t1U.. ..,

..

**

·
AND

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ES'tiMATES

(No Sunday Calls)

EICIYITING
&amp; TRUCKING

·DAZZLING
DOLLS

ft:Z-3838

Bat• Carps now
acceplllg •w
students ages 3·12
Call N• Swartz
·at 992·3796

Houu &amp; Trailer
Sh81
Drlvewaya, uUIItlet,
land clnrlng,
Hptlc •yatama.
Hauling Umeetone
FrH Ettlmatet

TOO'i

7

ASHL~"

Public Notice
PUBUC NOllCE
opened ond reid aloud II
By: Muon County Public 2:10 :P.M. on Mondoy,
Service Dlatrlct, tOt Septombor· 15, 1987 lor
Camden Avenue, Point work aa loll-.
Ptea11nt, WV, 25650
For.paint atrlplng varloua
For: Water Cuotomers on county roiKio n dllalgnlled
the Llkln Syatem, which In the ROP.
lneludea the araao ol Weal
·Bid apoclllcatlone IIIIIY be
Columblo, Brood Run, picked ~P 11 tho Molga
Snulrao and Union
County Englnaer'a Office or
tn · compliance with tho Office of tha Malga
Federal and Stata CountyCommloalonara.
regulotlona, tho M11on
Thl Board of Molge
County Public Sorvlca County Commlulonara
Dlatrlct hereby notlfloo Ita may acotptlllt loweat bid,
cuotomers tho! nitrate or Hlact 'lllt IIHI bid lor the
concentrlllona In Ita Lakin Intended purpoaa, and
.wellflald have excoadld thl I'IHfVII lila right to accept
ollowoblo contaminant and/Or rajaclany or 111 bkla
lovolo of 10.0 mllllgramo per and/Or ony pert thereof and
lltar (mg/IJ. The current wllloward a conbact to thai
reading ol 11.3 mg/1 juot bidder which Ia In the baa!
borely oxcuda tho lntitraatoiMelgaCounty.
contaminant Ioval, but
. Gloiit ICJoH, Clerk
nonetholeoa poua • huHII
Board of Malp County
rlak to children alx monthl
CommiHIOIIIfl
and younger.
(8J 29, (9J 5 2 tc
Exceulvo· amounta of 1 - - - - - - - - nitrate can cauae lnlant •methomogloblntma, I.e., 1--!:P~u~b:!!ll=c.!N~o:.!t!!lc::e:.,__
"blue baby". Thla Ia an
PUBUC NOTICE
aculo dlalaao, In that
The VIllage ol Rutlond Ia
aymptomo con develop now aeeoptlng Propoaala
rapidly. tn moat caaoa, for Grant Admlnl-or.
health detorloratea over a Muot hove llCperlonco With
period of doya. Symptoma Federal Granta. Accounting
tnctudo ohortneao ol b-th and Real Eotato. MUll hive
and btueneao ol akin. omce houro 11 loaat thraa
Cteorly, expert midlcol days a wHk at tho Rutland
odvlee ahould be aought Civic Cantor.
Sand
lmmodlalely II thou propo.-lund
oymptoma occur.
tho VIllage of Rutland, P.O.
Parent• and rooponalble Box 114, Main St., Rutland,
porrleo ore encouraged to Ohio 45n5.
provide Infanta wllh an (8) 26, 27, 28,211, 31; 5TC
oHemote oource of drlnktnq
woter
unlit thelnroblem
to I-"'""'P:::.;U:;b::l:::lc:...:.:N::o::!tl::ce:__
raaotved.
· "\
The PSD Ia working wHh
Ita engineer, tha &amp;tala
PUBUC NOllCE
Hllllh Depanment and the
Projact : Racine Volu-r
landownera aurroundlng Flra Dept.· Flra Station
the wellfleld to determine
Ducrlptlon :
Bid
'the aourca of conlllmlnatlon Solcllallan lor Contractoro.
and corract the problem 81 Tho Vlllogo of Roalno
aeon 11 poaalblo. wlohea to conotruC! • now
cuatomoro will bo kept llro alation botwaan the
lnlormod ol the progrooa. montha of Auguat ond
mode. Quaatlon1 may be Docombar 1etl7. Bllfo tho II
dlractld to our office In Pt. not be beNd on provaHJng
• ·wop. Contractora may bid
PI IIUnt 1t 67...........
on any portion of the
(8) 26, 27, 28,211, 3t; 5TC
proIact or on th1 antl ra
proiiCI. Plana are IVIIIable
Pu bllc NotIca
ancl ahall bo uood •• the
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL baa II lor bidding II
NoacetoControctora:
deacrtbod by lhau
In accordance with opaclltcallona.
NCIIon 307.86 of tho Ohio
GENERAL CONDITIONS
Revloed Code, aoaled blda
1. Work Houro: 7 a.m. to 5
will be rocelvod by tho p.m. Mon·Frl. Addraaa
Boord ol Melgo County vorlancoa with project
Commlaalonera, Court eng"-.
Houu, Pomoroy, Ohio
2. Ulllltlaa: Controctora
45788, until 8:00 A.M. on ara raoponalblo lor water,
Uondoy, September 15, aawago, powar, tr11h
1tlll7. The biola will than be removal
lor
tholr

~A

tnglnaar will , provide.
OUCCONiul bldctara With a
prograaalvo •chadula
before -lloglna.
4. lnauranco: Contractor
muat provide coplao ot
tlabtllty (1 mtltlon dotlaraJ
and Worltllllln'a Comp.
lnauranoa providing tun
coverage before -•rcllng

992·9200
NEW FALL HOURS
Effective 8·27-97
Sun.-Thur. 4 p.m.-10 p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 4 p.m.-1 p.m.

**

bid.
.
I. C-.cfllr lllltl eonault
With lila project ....._ , ..

raqulrad and ahatl get
approval before leaving lila
jOb ab upon com)llelloll•
1. Payment Torma: Upon

Including Dnly 11M
braakoro and aupply
wlrlng/condutt tor tho
atorememlonod ctn:utta.
2. Labor to lnalall utd
Homo per National Electric
Coda, OBBC, NFPA, ole. lnd
oblatn n-oaary approval .
by tho IIIIo lnapactor. All ·
work aholt' be completed

-.2-

BINGO

RUTLAND
'
Controc1or ohall obtatnPOST
467
.-Nury approVII by lila
otall lnapector. All work
6:30P.M.
ottall be
-In 2
waako ol the ochoclulod
ollrt-.
STAR BURST
Bid 11om 12 EtoctrlcaI
lnallllllfon:
$1500.00
Cantraetoro ahall Include
11M lol-ng In their bid:
1' All alactrleal aqulpmont
$50.00 OR MORE
and ouppll.. - u r y to

250 Condor s\reet

·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
ofloom AdciiUona
•Haw Garogaa

com~

111811U truck boy perllllllar
wall outlala, HPI high bey
lighting, awllchao, wiring
110. AIIO all aqulpmonl tor'
the building Hrvlca Iller

•

•

PER GAME

BEECH GROVl
ROAD

•a.ctrlcal 1r Plumbing
•Roofing
•Intorlor 1r Ext..-Jor
· Painting
Alao Conerata Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio ,,

will have

ROOFING
NEW· REPAIR

H01!18 Improvements

3351 Hoppy HoHow ROIId
Mtcldleport, Ohio 45718
New Homn, Acldltlone,

Gutters

Roofing, Siding,

Pole Bema,
Decki,'PIIntlng

814:7~;~~

..

~

Band

"PANAMA ROSE"

3 Family: 30th, 31at, 111, 3 112
M6l111 Out775.
.

.C\~····
·.

~ ~~S'·.
2ndAnn'"'l

.~~ · EXPO '97

I~

flii
~

tat81 3td HOUII Righi, Children'&amp;

AO:.::,oN

'·,'f~

~..!.. .

I) .

e-•.

.

~
· ~\
Meigs PJunty Fairgrounds

Mabla lama Furnaces
and Beat Pumps

,.,JIB.

Furnaces '2800 a month
Heat Pumps Installed '38110 8 mo"th

985 4422
. Chester, Ohio

Joe N. Sayre

.-.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

CUSTOM

•Exhaust•

BRYAN PLACE ·
MIDDLEPORT

537

Brakes • Shocks

•Replacement Windows
•l.lti.Ganges

LEWIS TIRE

•StonnDoars&amp;
W"tndows
•Room Atldillons

742·2792
8(1197 pd.

Opening 9·1·97

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

l&amp;J

SWAP~SHOP

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
ESTIMATEES

We Buy, Sell
and Trade
New and
Used Items
202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh,
614-992·9086
8127/97' 1 mo. pd.

985-4473

L.....--.le!.!!!:!.

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV

t-100-172-ae7

$2,000 IEWIR~II

Pick up dlacarded
appllaneoa, battarlal,•
many metala &amp;
motor blocka.
114-992-4025 8 am.a om

CORPORAL ELEORIC
Dally Rd., Recine
614-949-3060
John Wllllama, Owner
Ucenaed EIIIC!rlclat\
Work Guaranteed
FreeEetlmllle•
Providing Quality
. Ruldentl•l Service.
24 Hr. Emerr~MCY

$8~1-. od.

.

For Information
leading to the
arrest and
conviction of
anyone Involved
stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,
Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller!
Contact:
Ron L Miller
992-4025

Stnmtar garage aaie- two lomtlr,
5 mll•• nor&amp;h Ql Aavenawood
lirldgo an S. R 124, Farttond. houae on 1111. 1 lot ol _,umg,
children and adultt. Auguat 3Qih,

llam-tlpm.
Sayra'l, brick homo. A-• Rd..

letart Falls, 1· ?, Aug. 30th thru
Sept. 111, 111 IIZII &amp; plu&amp; alr:e,

household goodl, 111:., 10rriUGH.
pepper., hot peppera, cabbage,
61H4H322 or 81H47·280!1.

Pt. Pleasant
,&amp; VIcinity
Y&amp;ud Sale-301 Henderson Sl. .
Hender~on WV. FriiSal Auguat

29!11 ·30th. TueiiWIII Stpl 2nd3rd. 1oam~pm dally. Glassware,
(llatles, clothing, c:ollectlblea, r

wrlnoer waahtt, Singer tiWing

Yard Salo·Frl. &amp; Sat. 15&lt;1 White
Rd.GaiUpola,Oftlo.
Yard Solo-Thur. Fri. &amp; Sal Rt. 2
N. 8 mllea. Anaquea, loll ol ov•

rytl1lng.

Auction

80

and Flea Market
Rick Pearson Auction CompaRJ.
lull tim• auctioneer, c:omplet•
ltrvic:t. llcenlld
auction
16G,Ohlo &amp; Weal Virginia. 30'•

713-5785 Or 304·713-S..7.

.

90 Wanted tp Buy
August 2S.21a·30 844 Filet Ave. Ab10luto Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sl~
ver And Gold Colnt, Proofa~ell.
IO:IItlam. .
'
Dlamorcla, Antiquo J-ry. Gold
Auguat2gth1,30th, 311~ 8 Till? Rings. Prt·1830 U.S. Curr.ncy,
488 Gaorgol Creak Road, Child- Storling, Etc. Acquillllanl ~
rani, .llnlora, Plus SIZOI.
• ~t.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Children Cjothal Weight Banch, Av...... Galllpoi~ 6t~21M2. .

Family Sale: ·Downsizing: FridBy

An1iqu11, turnl~re, glaaa, china,

coina, 1011, lampa. ouna. 10011,
esunes; alao appraiula, Osbr
Martin, 81"'11112-74-41 .

t·--.-U.ondar 911 (9 To 5), Sun·
To 51. Adull Clothea.
Ho1uselhoid

1391 Safford School

An!iquea, ' top pdcn paid. Rivet·
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, •
llama, Eutrciae Ru11 Moore owner, 814·8i2·
And Yuch Yore. 2526.
•j
•

t2 1/2 MI. E 01

N-.

Clean late Model Care Or
:::.::!:._______,I.True'•·
1goo Modafa Or
FRSTniiE EVERit
Smith Buick A&gt;ntlac, 1goo Eaat' i F.-..LY SALE
•n A,...,o, Gallipotia.
Sorurday. Augull30fl. ·

Mondoy, Stp-111

3668 Ntigltl&gt;orltclod Road
2nd Houoo On lefl From At 218

J &amp; D'a

Auto Porta. Buying oal·
vago vllllcto~ Stttlng parto, 304713-5033.

IWIIICI11~ SIQnol
Non-Working Wuhor: Dryera,
Babr Clolhea, Olhaf Babr !101111, Sto..a, Rofrigo,.tora, Fteerera...

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
20 vro. e.p. . Ins. - . Johneon
·

Free Etlinwleo

SOLID VINYL
. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

women' a Weight Set. Nordic Air Condlllonera, Color T. V.'a,
VCR't, Al10 Junk Car-. 814-25812311.

Track Sider. Career Clolhlng,
~lnes, Mioc.

Friday, Saturday, 2gth, :Hllh, Wonted: Smatllltrret Lithe, Or
IA.M. ·5 P.M. Al114 Kerr Road,

Off ti!O look Foo Signa. 2 Whoal
Trailer, - Lawn Mowara, Color

T. V.'l, Toola. Chain a, Something
Fill' e....,.,..t
Garag1 Sale: 30th August, 31-4
While Road. Galipoi~

Hand Screw Machine, Contact: ·
Don Yoder, 373 Wotl Run Road,
Pallial. OH 45051.

EJ,1PL OYr.1ErJT
SE RVICES

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

"FAt;TORY
DIREt;T
PRJ(;FS''
Quality Window Systems
110 Court St.
992-4119

.
WV1023477

custoltl.

·~

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291·5600

ro place an ad, call
992·2156
ANNOUNCEMENTS

Exporlonclll Heir Strllll Nlldlll ..
Fat Buay New Salon, 114-441· •

!1110, 814·2511-113311.

Novelties
Special Designs
Wearable Advertising
P.O. Box 215
330M SR 33, Pomeroy, OH

(1114) 11112-4279

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!
1-900-329-0611

FREE .

&amp;l,YIIIISa!HIIull
lloPald-.Ad.......
DEAQUNE: 2:110 p.m.
1111 day boloNllllld

hema, BulavUie About 112 Mile
Pall Booler'l Clir1c
.

. 892·2772
8:110 o.m.-3:30 p.m.

Struts • Tune·ups

~~-

Men-Womena clothll, Mlac.

BilliG I COOLIIG

Rainor'a gvago aalt, Sept 4111.
5111. Tackervllo Rd.', Raclna, IIIII
prou, 10" 111&gt;11 - · joinlar, !loylag
- · dryer, guiiOl, aholgUII,
furniture, andqutt. mile.
'

,\'omens Clothea Avon What machine, Iron blbw bed, loll of
niac ltaml.
Noll, TO)'a &amp; Etc.

ldldon • 2.-oa., .....
Frldly.llondoy ldltloft ·
• 10:00 a.m. Salurdoy.

- Easy Bank Financing -

DUMP TRUCK
Umestona • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

7 Family ; 1P39 Chatham Slleet.
August :rlth, Sel)l 1st, 2nd, FurniWrt, Dllhoo Children lien &amp;

lito non. SUndly

R. Le HOLLON
TRUCKING
SERVICE

Fabric.

lntarsectlon of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Northwest Corner)
. ' September 20th &amp; 21St
, · 8 Family Ya•d Sale: All Size
'Clothing, Dishea, Toya, 5~4 Jay
Saturday 10.5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10·5 p.m.
· · tlrlvo, v... Frl, Sal
For .More Jnlormatlon Call: .992-6696 992-5293 742·3020
8130th, Saturday, g.? 2 1/2Yila~
CM 218 Dn RighllOII 01 Wintor
Babr ltoma, (0·12 Mil) Womon,

1/11/lfn

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umastone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reaeonable Ratee

31 Smithers Street 30-31 -1, I ·•
COmic Booki-Non SportCdo.

4 Family Sale: Saturda't. August
30th,
23 Nell Avenue,
Clothe&amp;, Antiques, Crall Items,

949-2168

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Siturdiy, Aug. 30th, 9

Clo&lt;/\11, 51&lt;1 Equiprron~ Mioc.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

M

Fa~ily :

A.M. · 5 P.M . Addison, Tara Ea-

Downspouts

614-742-2138
MOOSE LODGE 731
FRI. &amp;SAT. NITES
9 TIL 1:00 A.M.

3

Howard L. Wrltesel

814-742·3090
814-742-3324

The

Mana. Toys, Misc., Fri., Sat gA•P. 84&lt;0 Socorcl Aw.

Free EtUmates

KINGS'

Salas.

3 Famil";' Infant- Toddler Clolhli,
Car Seat, Jeans, Ladlet and

(Parm- based on approved etedlli

IIOUfllll - 1 be tormocl and

poured per lila plan dtllll

POIJMiroy, Ohio 45789

A DivisiOn on NichOls Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
· Fax: 304-n3·5861

$9.99

Racine Fire Dept. is
having a Chicken B·B·O
Sunday, Aug. 31.
Serving begins at 11 :00.

......Plana tor the projact are ·

completion of work and 11M .., . location on Sept.
auboaquant anqlneer'a 15, 1.7, 114 p.m. 'llldl will .
approve! tho contractor be aworded the lollowtng
ahatl pnaant· hla· bill lor
II not rwJac1ed by 11M
- k aa bkl, Including any waet,
village
counctJ. QuoaUona
pra-epplowd- work, to
bo anawered by tho
tha projacl angtn..r. A con
project anglnaor 1111~
chack of poy.,.nt wHI be 0051,
8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
laaued within 14 doyo lor
R.G.~,OP£4Mn2
10% of tho totol bill. A (IJ 22, 211; (8J S; 3TC
check lor lha 10%·...U.Inago
will bo taouad within· eo 1
Public Notice
dlys of 11M flrat chack If no . NOTICE
OF VOWNTARY
problema dovolop with tho
DISSOW110N
~·a
work. Tho TO WHOII
IT MAY
retalnago check will bo CONCERN·
laouod wHhln 14 doyo ol NOUce io hereby glvtn
problom correction, par lhll on the "?,:II 27 1 ~
- 1 of 11M eng-r.
• ..,,
liiii'"D£scRIPTtONS ARE Ataxandar
ompotltlon
AS FOLLOWS·
Rtdara Incorporated, an
not·lor·prollt
•
Ohio
Bid llam 11 Floor and corporation Iliad a
Aprona:
certlllcata of dluolutlon In
Contractora· ahatl lncluda tho olllca of the Sacrau.
1111 fol-ng In their bid:
of Illata of Ohio, purauant ~
1. Concrota, r.amaah, 1 roaolutlon of 11M IIIOtllbaiW
vapor barrlar,
and of tho corporation to
exponalon lor till building dlaoolve and wind up lila
floor and aprona.
COI'pOrlt. allalra
2'. Lobor to placa and ~ ill !ItS ~2 ate: .• ______
llnlah the concreto aloba
par the plano lnd provide a· 30· Announcements
po- trowelled llnloh With
1111 proper aiOpoa ond no
poaka or vallay mora thon
t/4.. AbroOm flnllh 11 to be
provldod on tha aprona
anly. lnaura proper rough
plumbing llo-ln. The drain

Big Btncl Fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

Call Us l'or A l'ree Es~matrl

of ochedulod

avotlablo at the Roclno
Municipal Building. during
1111 houra of 8 o.m. to 4 p.m. ·
Monday through Friday.
There Ia a charge of $1 Jill'
drawing. Bldo will be due II

Complete Mllchlne Shop Service F•brlcation
Steel Sales, Weldlq Supplies, Industrial Gu
Radiator Repair &amp; Replaftmtnt
Monday-Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p.m.
Saturday , 8:00a.m.· 12 noon

Time 2 Family: 275leGrande

Ea~r

20 Yrs. EKp. ~ Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

614 949-2804

18"·0NE ITEM PIZZA

DAN'S LOCK &amp; KEY
Wishes to Thank Past
. Patronage, But Am
Closing Business Effective
September 1, 1997

tit

Blvd.. Saruc&lt;lay Aug. 30th. 8·? No

lrlfts·&amp;Stranott: Muter Ser.vkt Ttdtttldta
at Assodatlttr. Certlftatl2 &lt;rdo

State Route 338 • At VIne • R•clne, Ohio

BliCk Molal Bunk

-$300, Rain /SI'i...

o.t.._ Pawer (quip t

614-992·3470

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS .

Winler Clolhn,

•Mowerw •Chain s- •WaeciNterw •Authorized
Daalar For:
•Brlgge &amp; Stmton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •RyOIII •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!

· Umestone,
Gravel, Sand, .
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

*•
·*
*•

1D1 Grttn Ttrrat:e Top 01 The
Hill Saturdar Augual 30th, 8·4,

Parts 11nd Servlce/1

HAULING

1111 -

wtthln

Mawa CLIIIC

WICKS

c

"""'-·
3. Schedule: Tile project

IACIII

(Ume StoneLow Ratte) •

:

**
*
L&amp;U
. YOU,
*
**
**.
G
MA,
*
*
r=========:-r---·
COACH BAJUl, TOO *:
***********************

,...,_to

Open til Midnight
·Every Night

1.-r

HI. large preuure cooker,
mlcrowavt, coliN tabl1, dl~
....
.,....
.....joona.
HIOII, IOVIo
ci'HIM,
_loll
_af.....
fast

***********************
*
*
*• T"SO-,.y..JO.-J'
Al ,..,.... Al
I
J....
1...
*•
*•
•.o· SBUA..

l arge lhrH famllr garage nle,
Fridar &amp; Sawrdar. 2g-:aa. Monday, Stptamber 1. Roin Of llline.
Formerly Jo'a Gift Shop, Srra·
CUlt, Ohio. Olk tllco new brHII·

1888 Martin Street

614-992·7643

:
.
:
·

-

trou• (appro~ ono rrile ~

ol Chester). Furninn. IOta, dty11,
range, reldgeratar, Iota or misc.

"Bun.t Tour Dr••m"

~::i~:,~~~~:.~~~:M~:s:~.~=~~.~~~:~~~~-~~~n $·GOOD
·
LU~IU
$
•*..
I'm Proud Of yon!
*•

rece~t proposal by Gov. Voinovich

&amp; VICinity

Community rtrd oat.. Willow
CrMll Rd.(---~
Seplombor 1·3, ..............
" from btbf 1o tdoh. lufnllllre,

in urology is a safer bet.
beautiful Capital city of Boston. I
Dear Ann Landen: Can you could not resist pointing out that our
stand one .more letter on the igno- capital was Washington, D.C. "Oh,"
rance of people who know nothing she said in Spanish, with a perfectly
about other countries? Such igno- straight face. "When did they move '.
rance is not restricted to citizens of it?" •• Been There, Heard Tha~ in
!he United States.
S.C.
.
Iii ved in Buenos Aires, ArgentiDe11r Been There: In fact, the
na, in the early 1970s. A locai capital of the United States was
woman complained to me about the PhiladelPhia until 1800, when it was
ignorance of North 'Americans when moved to Washington, D.C. It seems
it came to her country and about to me that the capitals of other counSouth America in general. She said tries have been moved as well. EduU.S. citizens thought Buenos Aires cate me, please.
was in Brazil and Rio de Janeiro was
in Argentina and had no idea which Send questions to Ann Landers. Cre·
country spoke Portuguese and which · ators Syndicate, S777 W. CenturY
spoke Spanish.
Blvd.. Suite 7()(), Los Angeles, Calif.
She then said that in spite of all
this, she looked forward to visiting 90045
the United States. panicularly our

Shade River Masonic Lodge hosts awards dinner

Pomeroy,
MlddltpOI't

Twg Males Ui1ed 1nd One Fe·
mole Ootdoft R o - caM anybe tl14)388 '7'

Male readers urged to have PSA test for prostate cancer- it could save their lives
ers. It may $ave lives.
About five years ago, I was hav·
ing urinary problems. I went to !he
family doctor, who gave me !he routine digital rectal exam and said
there was nothing wrong ·- it was
merely my age.
After several months, the problem was getting worse, so I went to
see the doctor again. He gave me
another rectal exam and said nothing
was, wrong. I asked if I should see a
'urologist, but the. doctor said it
would be a waste of time and
money. I insisted that he recommend
one anyway and made an appoint·

70

Ext. 1881
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (614) 645-8434

50% OFF
All Carpel-Upholstery
Oeaning

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
Carpet·Upholatery

614·992·0077
Middleport, OH

005

Personals

•

�Pege 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

The

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHIU.IP

ALDER

ACROSS
1 Tal1a-.. -

- or two

-1 CIIPJAt

YoaaUoaat: Practh::al Nura ln~
lnotructar (Eiplfloncod B.S.N.J
Fot Awlomi: And Clinic Tooch·
il1g (lloullr Paollanl.
Coollal: Gollla .Jock10n ·Yin•n
JVSD At 114-245-5334, Eld. 208
ForApphlan~

u.o.

-

Grubb'o PI_. tuning I ropalrL
Proltltmo? Ntld Tuntd? CoA tho
plano Dr.11 .......52S

FINANCIAL

210

Holp Your thlld l.Hrn To Rood:
Hooked on . Phonlca Sllla
$2115.85; Or Mlno $110, 114·

Business ·

OpportunHy

: 815117.

Palitlan Available: Asalatant
Houumanager For Rttldantlal
Salling S.rwlng Woman And
Childr.n. HoUrs Include EvenIngs, Nights, And Weekend&amp;.
Hid&gt; Dlplona Or God Ill-

quOd. Apj&gt;llcanll Should Bo ....
Dirt, RoiiOIH, And Able To Work
With lllnlmum Suporvlolon. Du·
tlaa Include Monitoring The

Facllliy,

Providing Go...,.l
HouMk.Mplng Dutil&amp;, MaJn•ln·
lng Dolly Log And Anoworlng
PhOnt. lnttrlltod Appllcanto
Should ~= ~ Plfsomol, P.O.
Box 4&amp;1,
OH 49131.
Pootol Jobo No E•perlenco llac·
11oary, For AppllcaUon &amp; lnlor·
rnadon Coli Sunday Thr11 Frldoy
At t.aoo-842-501 Ell. gull.
Pro.. llional
T... matk111ra
Noodad For Pollee &amp; Flra Programo Raload·Fundo Fot Child·
rena Programs, Call 112-443;
1405.

Rou• Salol: Snack Focd llanu·
lacturer Htedl Hard Working
Commlllloned SaiH Repraaentoll,. To Call On I E1loing

-114.ai!IHI150.

IALES-

recommends lhat ~au do bUll·
nett with peopte you know, and
NOT to send mone, through 0.
mall until you hl.va lnvealfptld

"'~

13g2 NeighborhOod
127,0011, 81-185.

Businen Sp8tl For Rent: 1000
Sq. FL Few Ollica Or ~ St. RL
33, Now Havon, W.VA.,I14211t3.

1881 Clarion 14170, 3br, tbo,

Ccwnm~tctol

BulklnQ Few Sale Or
Ltall, 4000 Sq. FL, SL RL 33.
Now Hovon, WVA. 114·891·
21113.

1193, Century BrljVO U170, S
BodtoonL 2 Fui Ballt, Ctnnl Nt,
Fully Furnished, New furniture,
lluo1Soll(lt4)24~

Convenience Slore Far lease,
lncludoo AI Equl- St. R1. 33,

-111311.

230

1997 doublowldo 11445 down,
1220/mo. Frta dellvtrr • oatup.
t-aoo-aa1 .. m.

Two bedroom houH In Rutllind,
1250 I*: m«~th,
and

Wanlod To Ront 2 Or 3 Bod·
rooms. Clou To Gallipolis, .Call
Cl'il18t4-471-43111.
·

HARTS IIASONARY • Block,

r••• experience, r•aorw.ble ratea. 304·

Its. Comnanaicatlon $111111,

uka New. (614~1112-54211

8VS.35gt a111r l:liapm. no Job to
amalor.,BIG. WU2120e

2 Bedroom lloblle Memo 121110
,, ,1100, 114·448-1172, Or 114·
258-6251.

llvlngtton'a baaemtnt waler-

DoubloWida r•po ,..., llvod ln.

prooling , all basement repairs

~~.':..ns.~~ offer re-

done, lree eatlmaltl, liletimt
guarantee. 10rn on jOb experl·
ence.304-875-2145.

For Sale JRenl: Mobile Home, 2
Bedrooms Wilh EJlPI"do, Below
Eureka Nice Pfiwa6e lol. 11._...._
16t0.

.Largo oelacdon ol uoad homo. 2
or 3 bedrccmo. Slorlil1g at $3485.
Quick delivery. Call 1·800·837·
3238.

All real estate advertising in

Baalc

Dr--v..opa,inc.

1--IJU

Scou.n Ollio Aroa: Yard Work,
And General Maintenance Full,
· Part-Tinoa, llln. Wogo, 304-833IIID4L-...._.

-oavtllo USA Hltlng For Con-

cta-'on And floor Guartt. Must
Be 11 Or Older, Clttn, Neat,
Grell Pllbllc Rai&gt;POr; Taam Play·
"'· Pick Up Appncadon At Rlnlo
ll·f 11:00 To 5:00 llull Have
Own~

Trudlllt'"' NMdod. Clan A lJ..
_ . . WKh Tonlotr Encloroement
SorM E.,.ltiiOO.I14-24H557.
WANliO llllo!EOIATELY:

Certified nuralng Ullstanll

ror

131 bad lnlermodllto focillly.
Contact Sandr1 Reltmjre, RN,
DON. Lakin Ncopltol, Lololn, WV.
304·175-0180 OJL 124 llo,..Frl
t:110011&gt;4:Gaplll. Doadllno lor applying lo s.p.nblf 5. 1007. Lo·
loiio loan EEO orl'jlloyar.

WANTED: Pall· Time Pool·
llon(34hrolwkl Avalloblo AI A
Coroonoolnlly
acno With
Houra: 3
11p.m. Fri:
p.m.,
Wookly Stoff llttllng:
AI
OlhlnoiiO Schodulod. Hi9h
Sdoool Oiploml /OED, Valid Dtov·
er'a License, Good Driving
Reaord And Three YeatS li·
c•nsltd Driving Exp~tience Re·
Sotory: 15.50 IHr, To StlrL
lain ng P1011ldod. Send Rooumo
To: P.O. Bo• 804, Jockaon, OH
45840; AnN : Cocllla. Doadllno
FOf Appllcan•: 1112!117. Equal Opporun\' Erooptoyor. .

=

WANTED: ParUIIma LPN'o for
138 bod lilltrmodilll c01o lacili·
ty. Sllarr commensurate wllh
exporionca. Contoot Sandra Roil·
mlro, AN, DON, Lakin Hoapilal,
Lakin, WV. 304-675·0880 ext.
,-24 llon·Frl 1:00am-4:00pm.
Ondlino lor app~lng 1o Soptomblr S. 111117. Lakin lo an EEO amploylr.

150

sChools

Instruction

----------1
•

Now 1997 14X70 illrN - ·
l"'ludet I monlho FREE lot ront
Only St81 .11 por month with
StOSO down. Call 1·8GO·I37·
3238.

lhis ~ subject to
tloo Fndanol FOlk Housing Act

llana-t Sloillo; WOrk WHio
Unouporvload And Tho Ooolro To
Be A Leaeler, Then Call For, A
Conlldtndll lnttrVIow. Four Yur
UarUtlng Or Bush,..ll Degree
Plolli1ad, But llol Roquload.

.:..:...,=...,.,=-=-~-=~ I

Cor~llod

child care, axporlancod,
caring and allordabll, space
availol&gt;lo, cd814-9411-2142.

E-lono:ad carpentry and nomodellno. Inside and OLIItlde,
doCIII. vinyl aiding, add·on addl·
d091, cabinet refaclng or nawly

liR.

, brick &amp; aUMJ work. 30

I

oift.Oopflllinlr\g

r-"

dlpoail,lf4-MI-2411D-Ipm.

Two BldiOOft\ Upper rt. 7, S3SO
llonlh, Depaoli Aeqolrod
ll14)245-!1124,f8141~5-5151

814 ....

!! WHAT ARE
1

001N OUT OF

SCHOOL?

TH TEACHER
1

condillon,

UP II

Upolllro 2 Rooma Fumlahad. Ell·
clency AparlmonL Udl~loo Paid,
Cloan, No Pato, Raflrtncao, 0..
pool!~ 814-4411-1518.

.

Wt&gt;-Y ~y·~ ~tmNU '100,

....

ll.E.'U. DO I'I'DfCf. (:,OOD OUT ilu:£1

'

I

14' john boat and trailer wilh 8.8 . ~

8512·3&amp;00.

-

.J

18 Ft. Astrogl811 flb~rgla1'1fl
Ban Boat /Trailer No MoiDf-11,000, 614-448-3801 Anytlma.
,
AKC Cream Color Pomeranian
llalo 1g llonlho Old Very Woll
·Bohavod, Good Walch Dog, tuta Oodgo Splrll High llil••·
Great Wllh Children, Proven Runt, Now Tna. tQOO 000. 814Brooder, Up To Dale On Shoto, 448-4W4.
Housebroken, 1150, BU·••I· UIQi1 Buick Century 100.000
3!H.
lllloo PW. SL AC, Vooy Good
AKC Dalmallon 12 Wooloo Ft· Condition. S3.150, Bi4-387-04tt .
malo, Sholl, Wormed S85, 114- 1181 Chevy Lumina, 3.1 Euro
258~

760 Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

AKC Rogllltrtd Whitt Gorman
Shephard Pupplll, StGO, 080
B14·38fl.8104.

73.000 mileo, $5500 080. 114·
11-411-2844.

350 Turbo ChivY, l'ondac, Olda.
Buick transmluiona, over·
hauled. 304..75-4llll7.

AKC Registered Yorkshire Tenl·
en, Blue &amp; Gold, 111 Sholl &amp;

Plymouth Sundance 4
Ooora, Rear Spoiler, Automatjc,
Air, 85,500 llileo, S3,350 080,

American bulldog pupplea for

81.,258-6340, Bt•·25e-&amp;&amp;87.
11lto4 Talon ES, Whitt IRed lnL ,
loaded, Survoof, New Tite~t, Bod)'

Budget Price Tranamlll i ona,~
U1ed 1Rabyll1, All TJpes, ov., •
10,0DO Transmluiont, Accase ·-

===·: .-----Wormad, 8to1-317- 7105.

1811, like Chance in Homeward

. - . IWD door coupe, air, er~~iaoo,
amlfm cassene, automatic, blue,

1881

Bound, 814-8a8-G70B.
In Perfect Condition I 71.000
Male and female miniature colllea Mllll, Transfer ~arrant~. Must
(Sheldesl, lull grown, 1400, 814· .Soli 614-388-0311.
742·~50. •
1Dt5 Monte Carlo LS, Molt Op·
One Male Pug 11 Months Old, tlont, Ercellent Condition, VarJ
ono Female Pog 12 lien tho, All Cloon. Now Tire~ $12.500. 814·
Regisllred, 614·388-8224, Arf1 · 448_.., AlltfSP.M.
time.
' 1"gs Mustang, 5 op., V·8, lallr
•
Reg. Australian Shepherds. red, 25,000 miles, 1 owner, like
110081. 304-882·261 .
new Condition, ntnr been
:;,:.:.:..:;:.::;.:..:;:..:::.:;~-:-:-:-::-1 omoliad In, aolllng tit ,800, 814·
Schnauzera, mlnlaturaa, AKC. ;,:742::;·.:3.:::1,42.:::.-'----,hampfon bloodline, thots, 1885 SatLirn SC2, Autunatic. Air,
wcumed, groomed; also Toy PDa·
Fll
•
diet, black, 1110 white: 814 .e 87• Crulll, A11 I
CalltUI, .runk
Roleoo88, lt2,000 Cal Ahcw 5 P.ll.
3404
·
(Serious Inquiries OniJU 81.t·
Weimaraner i!tups Have All Shots .:
446~-&lt;0-'-1.:.5_
. - - - -- &amp;Wormed. 814-3111·2143.
87 Ford Tloundorblrd, V-8, $1,000,
61-4·-9$_
2·_59_90.
570
Musical
;;,
_ _ _ _~

Instruments

A Need A coi? No Credit, Bod
C1odi ~ Bankruplcy? Wo Can Help
Allo saxophone, aood condillon, Re-Establish Credill Musl Make
B14·llll2·7413.
$150 Week Take Home 1 15%
Oown On Cash Or Trade To
Kawai plono. conlomporary alylo, OualltJ
For This Bank Financing.
exctllenl condition, rattiJ used, No Credit Turn Oowntl814-ot41 ·
CCIII 120011, .... •Ita StOOD, 0607.
81 ..9411-231111 or8t4-742·2211 .

BIG NATE
I

I

1967 18ft. Sao Imp. tBOhp lit!··~ , /
crulur wllraller, 2 lile jackets, 4 1
bufflNJt'l. 814-448-381..

-

Tit1E OUT.
NEE.t&gt; TO

TAL~

TO THE

'PITCHE.It.

,J

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
Trolling Mo.,r. 150 XP Evinrudo
Oulboard, ...800. 614-11!12·2770.

3•

36

Pass

••

fir

8 Relmbul'lld
7 Type of curve
as-to
9 Bullelo (al.)

10 o.c. holiday
11 Emenkllola
Ill Words an a
oole"om
21Charlona 22 Allel (ebbr.)
23CIOMrelaUVI
24 Foolbooll pier
2 5 - - - ma
-..toaiHp

·=
28

Pus

All pass

ln-IH--1

Grattlng

21

bulldng

28 Florida

county

Analyze, don't
speculate

30 -' Uaa

By Phillip Alder

30

32 Tltllll*~
35 Snorlad
3tl Ditty

31Yoko-

care.-

41 Anoint

As you know only too well, bridge
~~~1:"...,
is a game for thinkers. Rodin could
44C'ndllhave been an expert. However, I'm
less optimistic about Jerome Bruner.
46 Actor
Gulnneaa
who believed that "the shrewd guess,
46 Flratofale
the fertile hypothesis, the coura(2 wda.l
geous leap to a tentative -conclusion
47 loluoical
work
··these are the most valuable coin of
41Barrela
the thinker at work."
51 Mn. Paron
·
This deal is simple for any West
52 iowa Iva.
who does a lillie counting.
West led off wilh his three top
CELEBRITY CIPHER
clubs, East playing first the 10, then
by Luis Campot
CMI!bfity Ctphet ~are mated hom quolationl ~ !arnout ~. !)Ill and prtiM't
the three, to show a doubleton. At
Each llittei 1'1 fie c4pt1er ~lands for anollrtt. Toc»y'l cW: V llqUIII C
trick three. he discarded the heart
three. Promptly, West switched to the
cszp .
CAU
IPSUVt:IPM
' H WPL P U
diamond four. Declarer won in hand,
drew trumps by finessing success·
HO
SWII
CSZATI
QAUW
R' S I
H
full.y through West, and claimed.
"Why didn't you discard !he dia- ' IIHMW ' D
IIPYY.'
ZP
I PULP
mond six?" asked West immediately.
·
~
.... What was East 's reply7
JPOPU
CAWMS.
~T W~ TI-\E.~~
North's cue-bid showed a good
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ·convicts are the best audiences I ever played for :
~IS~ 1'1\EM I
hand. He was wondering if, despite
- Johnny Cash.
the known 5-4 spade fit, three no·
"Lefs ban applause!" - Glenn Gould.
trump was a better contract, However, when South could only rebid his
WOlD
tAMI
suit, North raised,
·East answered, "Leaving aside
that if I had the diamond king, I
would have discarded a high· diamond. why didn't you count the high·
card points? You have 13 and !here·
are 14 in the dummy. Thai leaves 13
unaccounted for. Yet Soulh opened
the bidding . .How cou.ld I have the
diamond king?
BL E E R
"Since you know we have taken
all the side-suil tricks we can. you
· should have led a fourth club. When
I ruff with lhe nine, il ellects an
uppercut, giving you a trump trick to
1--r-U-rC_T-r:-H-rH--ll
Twa friends had lost heavily
defeat the contract."
at
the track. One turned and
1
"Sorry, partner."
~=:;~;:;;~~~;.,.,sighed, "A sure thing about
To do well at bridge, think, don' t
.- T U Q A N 1 Iluck is that it will surely - - • • • • !"
guess. however shrewdly.

. I I I• I ...~'

..

~-..,-r.,5~r,-r.,6,-rl--l

i

him

I

Full line of auto body panels,':
paints and supplies. also gins. ,
light assembly. Oxygen and ac•
tylene tanks ~led and exchanged,
614-742·2192.

I

home~ Olaf

left alone.

I

!
I

1!o A Cool Co! Aood Clood Oul tho

I

SoMnts .. tho Cltnslfi&lt;d Section.

I

Sot Of American Rocln(l Whaola.· •- •
1 Voar Old, 5 Lug Now $BOO Alii'

790

·-..

THEM 1"

AUGUST29I

•. I

"'u'"'7~2-:T~ra-v-.ei-:M~a-:l-:1-:f-.lll~h-:W~h-:o-.11 "' :
CamPif, 25 FL Lorg. Now ltltmng, · o
Self..Conlalned, Air Conditioned, .• '
EJcolient Condl~on, Very Clean,
$2.800. 814--1835.'

!

1g77 18' Coachmen campor, hanf
top, aood condition, new tires,
~tcfoon cornpiole, both, 1DIIe1, 114142·'1271.

1
!
t
I

:

1877 Ford Molor Home, 2• Ft.~
Ful~ Stif Contained. Nice Shopo, ""

$5.500, 080,614-441~ .

:

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Ulllime guarantM.
local reference• furnlahed. E•
tolollohad 1875. Clll (81~
0870 Or 1-1100·287·0518.
A
Wotorproo~

Appllonco PorIa And Sorvlco: All
Na.me Brandl OV11t 25 Years Ex~~r, 11
perlence AU Work Guar1nt11d, . .
Fren'h Cit- WaJiag, tl14·441· '. ,,• .
7785.

,;,,

Fl\f1~1

SUP PI IE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

°

Fll'll1 Equipment

11-N FOld- Wl5lt. brllah hog.
$2,200. Economy Jim Oancfy
gordon tractor 14hP: l&lt;olhar on•
glnt, 4n. mowar dock. $1,100.
Both In good cond. 304.· 171·
:312:::;•·- - - - - - - -

1

1 1 1 1 1 j

Hectic . Macaw- Berth • Nought · WITH THEM
"My kids should get everything I never could afford,·
the famous comic laughed, "then I can move tn WITH

I FRIDAY

.•••

~

Campara&amp; .
Motor Homes

."..

rI

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I

New gas lanka, 1 ton truck
wlooolo I radiators. D I R AulD,
Rlploy, WV. 3Q4-372·3!133 or 1·
80Q.273-113211.

I' I* I' I. I'

6 u~~R~~N~~E lETTERS 1

was

I
I

------:-:---....:,..
810
Home
..,

61

lETTERS IN

'

SERVICES

OuNn Slzo Wa1erbed E1callont
Conclldon, BatoiRit, Clltttpl114-

e PR~~~s~U::~~s

When the little
cauqht Andy and,;oo•11.1

RomanulaciUred llllin Shako Fot,, '
Slandsrd Transmi11ion All i
Typoo. 814·245-5877
•:0

il1g $300. 114 44119361.

f t Compleie lno chuckle quoted

.
lflil by filling in the missing words
1L...l-L....L-L....L~
you develop from step No. 3 beiO'!W.

28' Midas Cla11 A Motor Home · J
45ot Chll'l)'. 30,000 Milas, Excel~ ;..-;i
lont COndl~on, SI,SOD, 000. It 4'
446-11210.

Pool table lyra. old, hontycomb
top. oxc. cond. 1100 080. 304·
575-:101g,

KIIChan Corett 11.50 Saloon ol
room olzo corpoll, Mollohan Car·
poto (114)o141-7ofoU

l1'o(

.'

Mera.nJ, ,ICectric start. 1800, 814- ..,.

Oaio Table Wilt I Chah, lloll:l&gt;
lng China Hutch Roll Top Oook
Chotly Wood, Ill Ul ' 7

Konmoro Wnh" $100, Glboon
Dryor 1100; loth Working; 275
Gallon Fuil1·011 Tonk 115: eu,
1!1-2720, AFIIR 1 P.ll.

TI1€.00mQI;&gt;.

.

~

14' alymlnum V-bonom boat with
railer, e.s Evinrude motor, StoO,
B1•-oas.c2e3.

t4e exrt

446-111011.

e hp. Johnson motor,

IN

,.

814-002-3250.

Matching Couch, Lovt Soot
Sr-. With Bluo I llolgo,
Wood Trion, Good C«dllon, 114-

T-. now toecoptlng
~~~P~~c~•ona lor 1111. HUD auboldlzad apt. far oldtr,!l.:'d hindi·
_.s. EOH 304-t
78.

2.

4 tlndWiah
5 Hlg=tothe

211 Slep--1

exceUent condllion, $800 080,

Cha~,

Twin -

I'M PUTTI~ ~IW

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
12' oluninum V bonom boa~ Qoocl ·

lypiWrilll, 125;111411411 322'

Ver1 Spacious; 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floora. CA. 1 112 BotfL Fuly Car·
polad, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Stort t3501llo. Nv Pall,
LHII PI.UI Bacurliy Dopolil Raqulrtd, 11•·441·3411, 114-441atot .

16

=:

Opening lead; • A

NEVER SHOWED

RORNLOSER

Vomaha PW50· Good Shapo _
1100, 114-245-0151 Ahlf8P.II.

Lovesut, new condiHon, •75:
ltoriC With .,..,..,.. $45; poulbll ~ado for oldO&lt; blka; olecttic

RENT/\l.S

BARNEY

MIIOnOUI
48 One or mcn
50 ......._••
. a IJI'OIIP
tool
17 OltNtge
53 Mayday!
11 TlbeUtn gazalle 54 '01r-vl .
11 Glum
Knlevel
20 O..elopod
55 Uke 1 bug In a
·22 Own (Scot.I
rug
23 Maelw genua 56 Exploalve
24 Selecta
(abbr.)
27 - · · -lm 57 FraahWeter 11ah
31 lnlar- (among 56
. others)
32 Pula""
33 Vtor (Sp.)
DOWN
34 -Paulo
1 WorlcHke - 35 SmMI vahk:to
2 EI-, Taxea
3tl Tonnla , . ,
3 Mill Kaltof
( 2 -.)
the comlca
37 thtaaurua

----

-..-...--

Tara Townhouae Apartments,

6 10 3

·Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
So•lla Weit North East

atll.

---..

w•

•AKQ98

• KS

D,_. _,.

--·

• J $ 4

6 9
¥t08763
• 10 g 8 7 6

=-) .

On ....
45-peat
45 All right, ID_,
42

--.

==::..:.:~:;_----1 Color T.V. - ·
2 Btdraom. Watet and Traah, geraw, FfMzar, AW Comprauar,
Furnl-. oao;.JOI Craek Road, 114-2511-1231.
·
N- Book Ropo'ol OnlY 3 left. t2115111o. Pluo Dopo~l And Raf·
tlmitaUon cx dilcrimlnatiOn
Polly'a-1 Uaad Fuml1olrw
owner financing awallable. 304· -(114)4411-4316.
loasod on oace. color. oatlgion.
2101-lole.
755-71g1.
sax familial slatuS or national
2 Ill trolltr, lllddltport S275 por
· Opon 1:30 . 5:00 Mon-Sat.
month, U75 dlpoolt, 114-gn.
304-e7f&gt;SCFA (7832J
origin. or any lntor«ioniO
NotlcloiSalo
1
1873 Cameron mobile home, ·31114.
make any sUCh Pf8!erence,
12ll85, 3bodroomL Avalloltlt lor
Hmhatlon or cHICI'imina110r')."
ohOwlng Auguot 25, 1007, 111m. Boaullul Rlvor View In Kanauga.
Contacl Saln Mauger, Teaya z'Bedraama, Unrurnlahecl, Air
This newspaper wlllnol
· Salucenter, Rainbow HDrMI, Condldonad, No Poto, Oopool~
knowinglyInc. 304-757-3188. Homo -1111 Rettrtncel. Fotttr'a Mobile
advo!~ISemento lor reat
Lion, wv (Bro~viMo). Tormo: Homol'lri&lt;,814-441-Gtl.t .
whiC!lls In vtolallon of tho
cooh or appnovad financlnt 11
Glenwood Ad. 2 112 mlloo ~om La,.... Oir)oftoo, Rocltlno Chalra,
taw. O u r - aoe hef8bV
*'tool purchut.
AohOin Rd. 3 bedrooma, 2 bolt, Couchao, HJdo.A-Bodo, Colaca·
lntorme&lt;l that alldwellinQO
adYerttsed In INs ner.'lpap&amp;r
Own a new home 11 ,000/down. 14170 mobile home, cltw waltr•. 1o1eo, EIC. Stop By And Qoooc:k Our
accopt HUO. t•so pluo dopooiL Prlcoa. 614-448·4782, ll·f Hro.
are available on an equal .
~:"'ll a..., 7 ,..,., 304· 3()1.582-5840.
10.4.
DPilD!Iunit'; balls.
Wobil1 Home For Rent an Cora 520
Sporting
I..!!!!'!!!!~--- 330 · Farms for Sale
IIMI Road, Off 325, No Pato, 0..
Goods
40 Acre Farm. Mobile HarM, poalland Reference Required,
REAL ESTATE
With Orilld Wol~ Tobacco ..... (114)245-$822
Smllh I Weaion Rwolver, 357
~-:-~-~-'::""~-1 Stondlrog Tlwobtr, lll'lO'II ·Righll Tloowo bedroom mcbllo homo far llag. ..CO 090, 614-448-0211,
310 Homes 101
152.11011614 251. 32
l1oH41-47871~
Farm houoo 1 appfOxlrnatolr 85
530
Antiques
Apartmems ·
1 112 Slory 8aoamowot Emo l.ougo ocroo In llolgo Couniy, Ohio, 11 440
lor, 1 Bath, JGa1 Furnace, Point minutn lmm Ahnl or PcunlfDW'
tor
Ren~
Buy or 1111. Riverine Anliquea,
Plouant 114· 44.1-1828, 304· 001 us 33, 3 b1ftom. 1 baf\ 1111&gt;
1124 E. Main Sveet, on RL 12-4,
875-5127.
lly room,,_ born 1 ou11oulld- 1 and 2 bootoom .,.,..._.. lur· Pomeroy.
HoutS: W.T.W. 10:~
nilhld
lnd
unfurnishtd,
ucurlty
iogt,to-lotlnlng,
....
a.m.
10 1:00 p.m.. Sundar • .10
1811e llodulot 2br, 2 bath, Iorge 1ng
conoldor , _- - Wilt
daposlr required, no pelt, 8 14· .1:00 p.m. l14·1g2· 25211, Ruoo
den, clo1110 town, txtraa. nlct hou ... ,II,OOO. call 814· 812· 11!12·2211.
lot 148.000. 30«75-5622.
5345.
1 Bedroom apt-8 1• Viand St. 540 · MiscellaneOUs
2 Storr, • room houoa on doultlt 350 Lots &amp; .a ........
1350/mo. u•ndeo paid. 304·175lol In Bollomatido. Full olzo
~ ._t
Men:hanciiSI
oOan ew 304-458-1728.
bailment, fully Cllpeted. new Wi· 3 112 acres ovedooklng ll:ocked
nyl ttldi1g. 304.. 75-1534.
pond, Gtoon Yaloy Drive, GaMI· , loadrooom loornlohod apor.,_ In 12 · 14 Elvia Stampa For Sale,
Bo11011er,l14388 ga10.
.
3 Bedroom Brlclo Rench, 1 112 polio. -lc1oocl, 114-1102-1440 or ~~~ 114-002·2178.
Baths, Heat Pump, 2 Car AI· 1 1"'882·7158.
, Btdroom Furnilhld, 458 Sec:· tS'x42' Pool, Now Uftlf, 112 HP
tachOd Ga11go. t4X24 Storage 48 Acroollloro Or~ Sault 01 ond Avar~.~e, $235/Mo., Deposit, Pump: Solar Blriol. Doiy IWIBuilding, Front &amp; Rear Parchtl, eureka. Gr111 Hun&amp;lnQI With Rellrei"'CH, Phone Ber.een 5 4i Cove,., Vacuum 1300 Fitm, 81 ..
.
lot• Ol \Niee Tre11, On 2 112 4,000 MDf'e Or ·lns Square Foot P.ll.814-441-2581. .
251-o381.
Aetet. 8 Mlles' Soulh 01 Gallipolit Shop, And 14x70 Mabile Home
On Rou10 7, Upper S&amp;o·o, 614· Wilh Additional llobllo Homo 1br, 811 udllllesr..ld except eltc:· 1g84 Nl11an 4&gt;4 Wrocload Gocd
·tric, Gallipolis err• area. $2501 For Parts $300; Baseball Carda
2-282.
Hook-Up,lt ..~.
mo. +'deposit. 304~75-1371 or $400 ; 15"' Speaker• And A~p
4 Bedroom Splitli'Yel With 5400 57 Acres on WiDitone Ad. 904· 304-875-3812.
$125, 114-245·5580.
Sq. Fl. Including Fotl Basornanl 518-2088.
With 2 C,ar Garage, Gaa Heal, 2
Furniohod Ellio:loncy Share Bath, 35hp. •ctuton• stump grinder,
Miles Ftom Gal~poia On Bulaville 8 A. 11/l, Nice Bulldlng Lo~ Port $1115/llo, Ulllideo Pllld, 107 Sec- pull along, excellent condilion.
Pill. On 1 112 At;re Flal Lot. City In Cliy, Pori 1~ Galllpollo Town- ond Avenue, Galllpollo, 814-4411- SI,OOII limo. Col304-5711·21158.
3844, Aftor7P.M.
Schools, $115,000 Or Boll oner, o1o1p, 120.000. 11~7581.
Are J'OU buJing new furnltufl?
114-448-03110.
Applo Grovo·Sconlc Volley. Aporlnitnl Fot Rani Hivon. Sel yaur ulld fLimitureto h PQ.
Nice 5 Bedrooms. 2·112 Baths, BeauU..,I 2aae lott. public WIW. WVA. Ono Boofroom, Phono 114·. meror Tlwlk Shop. Thlfa loa reol
nead for ' breakfast and dining
Cape Cod, Extra Large lpt. Fruit C. Bowen Jr. 304·678·2S31 or 8118-21113.
TrHI, Cily Schoolo, 814·25~ WadgtRIIIty304-t7S.2122.
room llll. We 1110 buy baby
Apartment For Rant On Firsl itema. good ulld IOWL llull bt In
t987
BRUNER LAND
excellent condlllon. Good enou;h
Avonuo. 814-ol48-8221.
tor Christmas gifta. Call 014·882·
FOR SALE BY OWNER:
114-771-1173
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 3725 Tullday IIYu Frldoy. fOam11 t Vln.,n Court. In Galllpolio. 1
Floor Plan, 3 Sodroomo, t Cor .Gall Ia Co.: GaHipolio, Ntlgllbor· BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON cpm at 220 Eut Main SUHJ. PoGarage, Lo1110x90, Colllto-370· hood Rd., Lnt Two I 22 Acroo ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drlvo fTI&amp;rOJ'.
2720 For Aj&gt;polnlmtllt Only AI- 124,000 Or 10 'Acral tti,OGO. from 1280 "' $334. Walk 10 ohop
Iori ~...
Frlondly Ridge, 10 Acrool$14,0011, I , mo'liat. Call 114·448·2518. Boats BJ Redwln~. Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
=.:..::::·=----:---:.._-11.5 Acr11 t7,500 Or 18 Acroo Equol Hoooooing OpporDinlty.
Lowest Prk;es AI Shoe Cata, GatHomo For Sale (Former
$1d,ooo. Taoni Run Ad. (21 10
Convenient to PVH, 2bedroom, tpotis.
hlmal Boaulllul, Ito Tho Typo
Aao Plrcolo, 110,1110 •·
1t1tctoon, bait, LFL No poto. S30()(
Home YOu Will Lo~t. Must Sell
Buying opor1s o:ardol
AI t Can Not Do Justice To Car· llelga Co.: ~ar Rutland. Dan· moo. t300 dapo~L 304.a75-57118.
1 will buy any Eitel or new Ola·
ing For lt. Due Tc Driving Into A ville, Juat Opened Nice RaUing
mond Kings. II you ha,. cards to
Large StrHt Pot Hole Approx- T,.Cll; tU Acraa $17,000, 5 Acr· Graciouo living. 1 and 2 bodrccm
.en, 1.11 m• know. Call 814·848·
lmately 11• Deep, Over 8 Ft. e• $te·.ooo, Or 1• Acres Wllh -anonto 11 Village llanor and
Wide. II Was Satd It Was The Drive And Pand t20,000. OJel· Rlvorolda Apartmonla In lllddlo· 3098.
Hardall Rain 0t Tho Hillary Of villo, Loll Orwl Chtaptr Than Lol port From 12311-1304 . CoU 114· Concrete &amp; Pl11dc Sepl5c: Tanka,
GaHipolla. Woshad Out Tho Sotiof, Ronl • 5 acroo 17,500 • $1,000 882·5014. Equal Houoln(l Opper· 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Apporondy Fly Aoh l Woo Sok &amp; Down + tt38. Mo., Youra In 5 liirOitlol.
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
Flulfy Tho Day Bolo&lt;e Tho Wotor YearL Botwoon Tu_. Plolno + Modern 2 I 3 bedroom apart· H00·537·9528.
WU llocldr &amp; No R-n To a. Chester, Boll 5 Acroo Building mM~II in Middleport, lie.
llovo Such A L.ougo Holoo Exialld. Sileo On Keebough -FollrOd Rd. equipped
ldtc:hen1 reterenc11 &amp; Diohwashcw. Side Br Sido, Double
We Were Just Moving Into The St4,000 EL
deposits required, phone $14· Ovan Range Allin Goad Condi·
Reslda,..,l. N..., Gol To Unpack
lion. LookS Good. 814-370·2607. .
11112-7833- 8pm.
Due To lnjurlea Which Became Call For Fret Maps • Owner FloProgrtllinl• Worse. (No War· nandng lniD. Taka 10% 01 Ullld Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment, Dog kennel tOxtoxs t2U .95.
~int Plus 3l41-675-4084.
ning Signa 01 Danger) Wo Art .Pr;;;lcll=":..::
On~C::a=oh~PII-=.;r&lt;:~hl::oao.:=-1_ _ 114 448 0390
Hoping To Move To Arizona For LAND
Fiberglass topper for tf bed, 'ex·
Tho Dry Worm Weatl)er I Loovo
,.._._ Soon
cotlont condiilon, $125. 114-992·
Tho Buulllul Rlvor And Scenery.
- · · ov
6597.
Will Tako Offoro Wllh Righi To Gallla County Noor Olio Hll, 20 ·
•-In
814'448Min.
From
GalllpoHL
5
AcrH
And
F
Firewood For Sale: Seatonea
: . L or ""':" lnitnt
Up, Country Building LOti, l:'all
Hidcory &amp; Aoh, $35 Picl&lt; Up Load,
Now 1&lt;100·2.13-83115.
814"46-1759.

:aa

Eut

• K 8 7
• 54

6542

Household
Goods

882·2488&amp;ny.....

-•-11111r?Givamoa~

Will o. ~~Uya~~llnt In lly Homo
Gr-. lchool Dlo~ """' Rof.
-Colll.-.741.

510

Wett

Soulla
~ Q J 10 4 2
lr A K 2

foolrol-.

Houtecleanlng Or Babw-aiuing,
Experienced, HIVe Referencea,
111- 8170.

"Willie Purliy Ia OUr Paoolon"
G1w Uo A Cd Today: 30H7S.
171&amp;.

St.OO doz. cll~nt Condlllon. Proleaaktnal""

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
NOTICE
t2eG·UOO. oawar. water and Pro·OWnod Wuhora &amp; Oryera.
..oh ln&lt;loorlooof, 114-11112-2117.
90 Dayo Ful Wonanty.
Frondo City IIO¥tag
2 badroom,
canftl olr,
t 704 E - A'"""'
all _,., largo !Old. good · Galpolil
condition, 1240 P1f month, 304·
Phono:et....,..7195.

Georg~~ Portoble SawmUI, don't
haul JOiir logs ., l&gt;o mllljull cal
304-e75-1gs?.

1111 Wattr Hauling Sorvlcoo,

Brown eQOI lor 1111&gt;,

1871 Chavrolol Scolodalo Pldt·
Up, Shon --Bau, 4X4. E"'. ~

4ao

4

,.,........., TrN Sarvlco. SIIIIIIP
Remo¥11, Frta Eotlmotool In·
lllchnoll, Oh!o: 114-381...,.,,14-aHDIG.

·

1.1ER CHAtlDI SE

ol1968 which makes K iltegal
toaolvo!rllse "any preteioroce.

I

•J76

Appliances:
Recondilioned·
Waohlro, Dryaro, Rongn. Rofrl·
grators. 80 Dar Guarantee!
Moble Homes
French Clly llaytog, 114-441·
for Rent
7705.
1 Trailer, t Aparanont, AI Slut GDOO USED APPLIANCES
Fountain Motet, P$ea11 Cad Bet- Washers. dr1er1, relfigaralOra,
- 3 I lll.f,l14-448-4241.
rangeo. Sltaggo AppllancGI, 78
t4l70 thrH badroom, I3DO Plf Vlnt Slltat Call114-:441·7301,
moon1lt. 11._ 742-271 ._
HIOQ.4gg.341111.

rebuilt. Aeferences Free Elli ·
..... Jim 51111 31M.a75-1272

rm loelttd on 881 1n Datwln.
bebrlit any ahiiL Reoocnablo
ra&amp;ea ud rererences. Call and
·- . - g o MI14-M-211113.

wamed to Rent

21113.

11g 7 FlooiWood. 14X52. 2

Now 1to1anc1 wtnolarlmlxor,
ooc. -.1. 3114-273415.

-L

------1

Nlca fllritlthod, Few Conotruc11on Mobile Homo Spaca Stota Rou10
War1taro Or Short Twm Rwo10r1, 141 &amp; Rou• 775 Atwoo. Goaon Leo-.
9yThoW..,114-441-21115.
coiSd&gt;ool Olarlo:t114-441HD53.

470

· Services

Livestock
.,.._21117.
2D ltoung Holotoin Ill ~-rog 73o VIlli &amp; 4-WDI

304.a75-41112.
JoiP, 350, VI Englno."
'Holollln Boby Holllro, -Call· $1100.00 (1141·441·1171 ~
hood Yacclnatlon, Sorrio Odhor (lt4)-441-7371
~
;Col.~(:;;.81~4::)2:.::41:...:.&amp;1=8:.1
I
IllS
Joop
Wogcnotr
Llmllad,t
Julloooo Erving Plale Higloooll.llid:~
dor,
Corda, Cal You~~· aoar. 1 Glto. 12100.114-1112-3317.
114-311-11110. 1 A.II. -3 P.ll.
Aho odor Plgo, 114-216·1610.
1g15 T070ta 4wd pick-up, 4CYf,ro
Sapd, 3t• litea. whitt apoke·
1
TR/\ tJSPOR TA TION
IUIIIIER IALE: C.nlral Air
WhHII. no tUil, IIC. COnd. ,
$3,0011. 304-aer.3237.
~Fui5Y_w....,..
iy. "H You Don't Cal Uo Wo Bolt
1188 ChiY1 Converalon Van, '
Loot I" Frtt Eotimllnl Add-on
350 V·l, Loaded, l4,goo 080,
Hoot Pumpa Only Sllllhtr Hlahtr.
114·448·1210 Altar 5 P.ll. 114Call Uo Todoy. Ull7 lo "rho
*441·11151.
Twenty Savenlh Year In The
Hodrog I Cooing .,_1114ttB " "··1oi00-2Jt-4011.
Sprouoo Window, Like New
3g&gt;41, e7&amp;; llarblo Sink, Gocd
Bhapol 22x41.. ~25; Crooobow,
Hor10n, Uoad uny 1 Ytarll100,

llobllo hOmo 1111 available bll·
Nlco 2btdroom, no poto. Ralor· woon Alhano and PorQtrD7, call
. . _ , ....... _75-5112.
:1~14;.:9115-.:=-4311.:=-7:.;.._ _ __ , _

8mall tbr hou•. 14to LIWia st.
1250/mo. + S100/dopooll. 114·

Professional

• A 6 53
• Q J 9
• A Q!

Ba--

Nliw·t997 U Wldo-1 ball, 101181
down, 1138/mo, whh approved
c:rodiL CaJ1~t ..m .

New Haven W.VA., 1114·8D8·

Du·a To Our Growth, We Art 11-llliiiliiiilili•lllillliiiliiii
Few Clltar Salol
Ropro-tivta, To Suppcwl Tho ,
Nation•• 11 Raltd Office Ut·
chlnto, Locally. If You Havo
Salet E11perlence And Want A
Pil'
1111 CIIIMrWflh:

And Yuu HIVe Good Work Hab·

.

Norllt

Coi Ron [VIiil, t.aa0-537·8528.

heat pump, 1•1.0 front porc:h,

loolllng

~

AERATION IIOltJRS

630

12 Chavy 81111. 112 10n, 2 H. 17 .
1.2 - . ~ pa, air, $22DO;..
111 CooL Efd., 1.0 L. m~ 111,aao... .... all poof., - e l l , illtha! ..
lrol., t1100; aiiL olzo 11" drH,'

Aollolrod. Now I Ralouilt In Stodt.

Road,

good cond., •• uoa. 304·175·
3000 lrom 11-5.

8"2"

JET

t882 1•x10 Wlndaon 2 Bed·
rooma, 2 Full Bllth1 112 Ac:tt,

AVA••'LE

--Cor--

ue

1078 VIctorian: 14X7G llobllo
Homo ...I!GO.aa. ell: (114~1817

IHOllCEI
01110 VAU.CY PUBLISHING CO.

Huoqvarno • Gr- llachlno
111....,. I lorualo euDora wo ._. Sidofo Equ'-' SM-e75742t.

• L.Wr'• tool
12 Cooriputar
Input
13 E m i l - I
light
14 Roman 2,1)01
15 Exclualon from

anlry

31 lllchalangelo
mutt place
40 lllgd¥11
41 - UngUI

I

Saturday, Aug. 30, 1997
Your prospects for the year ahea~
. look encouraging. prov1dcd you don t
attempt several ventures simuhaneously. Do your homework first and
care.fully weed out lhe money
wasters.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Avoid
talking too freely about a confidential mauer to a friend who cannot
keep a secret. You migltr end up i,~ a
lead story in a gossip column. Trymg
!o patch up a broken romance? The
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker can help
you understal)d what 10 do to make
the relationship work. Mail $2.75 lo
Mall:hmaker, . c/o this newspaper,

. Box
~.·tatton,
New York, NY 10156.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today
you mighl be too easily pul upon by
friends. Help where you can, but
don' t assume inordinalc rcsponsibil·
ilies for'lhem.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Be
cognizant of your behavior today so
that you don'l conducl yourself in a
manner which can ali~nate suppon·
ers and friends.
·
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) You mighl nol persevere as much
as you should today .regarding your
plans. Do nol toss in the towel if a
few impediments impede your path·
way.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
Be wary in commercial involve·
menls ioday if you're offered some· .
thing on the side. This type of sugarcoaling could tum sour.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) Do
not defy your beller jud~ment !od_ay,
especially in career matters. lgnonng
your fOmmon sense could be asking
for problems.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) A

its
will be equally as Iough
for the new guy. Do not demand perfection from this person.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) Shop
wisely 1oday and subdue-making
impulsive purchases. What a merchandiser represents as a bargain
might have hidden, negative factors.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
realistic about objectives you establish for yourself and your mate today. ·
You could be fruslrQted by aiming for
unreachable targets.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Avoid ·
companions today who tty to involve
you in a game of one-upmanship. If
subdued by your compe1i1ion, you
may nol handle defeat graciously.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Manage your resources with as much prudence as you can muster today. Deal
only with aclualities thai are in your
hand and not in your mind.
. • LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There is a
possibility you might not take as finn
a position as you should on a critical
issue today. This could generate addi·
lional complications.

(Uvel (CC)

,,

�•

Along the River

Inside

$1 oo

for Pomeroy

Testament
to a family's
enduring faith

Benefit planned
for young liver
transplant survivor

• Fntured on .-ge A2

• P~~ge C1 •

• P~~ge C7 •

Delta Queen visits
gaiUpolis, heads

HI: Mkl-808
Low: 60s
lloltly lUnny,
chlnct of rain

Details on
pageAB

•

tmes
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • August 31, 1997 .

Strike seems certain
SERB calls hearing with school board, unions
to discuss allegations of unfair labor practices
By KEVIN KELLY

The aSsociations have charged the board with state·
ments that the leadership claims 'are clearly an effort ...
GALLIPOUS -The Gallia County Local Schools' · to intimidate and threaten employees.•
· two employee unions and management will meet again
Union representatives said the board violated the
Tuesday - but not to renew talks to end the strike that state's collective bargaining law when it told the Gal,
begins that day.
lipolis Daily Tribune it .planned to make its 'last and
'Representatives of the Oallia County Local Educa- final" contract offer on Aug. 20 prior to informing the
tion Association, the Oallia County Local Support Staff assoclations.
Association and the Board of Education have been
Additionally, the board sent "threatening memoran·
requested to attend a 2 p.m. hearing at the State Employ- dums" to employees on at least two occasions. The
ee Relations Board in Columbus on the associations' memo ·promised "in specific language 'disciplinary 1
allegations of unfair labor practices against the board.
action up to and including termination' for strike activiTlnln-Sentlnel Staff

}Jo Hypel9t reallfl was·
btickgard
brawl
·Piww.!lt·

a

Section of SR 850
closes Tuesday for
bridge replacement
BIDWELL - - The Ohio.
Department of Transportation
will close State Route 850 on
Tuesday, approximately a half·
mile north of the intersection of
u.s. 35.
The closure is necessary for a
bridge replacement project and is
expected to last for 90 days,
ODOT District 10 s]iokesperson
Nancy Pedigo said.
The $LOS million ODOT project is under contract to the Shelly
Co., Thornville. Three separate
locations are included in the same
project, and the work entails
replacing box culverts and
installing large drainage pipes,
Pedigo said:·
During tbe closure, . drivers
will detour via SR 160 and U.S.
35.
Pedigo said the completion
date for the entire project, includ·
ing all three locations, is June 30,
1998.
.

Good Mornin
Ca!eadan
Clusiftecls
Comics
Eclitorta!s
A)on1 the River
Obituaries

Sports

Insert
M

C1

A6
Bl-8

0 1991 Ohio Valley Publi•hina Co,

.

.\

Vol. 32, No. 29

"Such threats and efforts by the Board of Education
will not be taken lightly by either association," Green·
leaf and Montgomery said in the statement.
Dissatisfied with the progress of negotiations for new
contracts. that have been underway since May, the associa·
tions submitted an intent to strike notice on Aug. 13.
Subsequent bargaining failed to produce an agree·
ment, and the board's last offer was rejected by the associations on Aug. 22. Talks broke off last week and both
associations will strike Tuesday.
,
Both sides· remain willing to return to the table, but
no additional talks have yet been scheduled. The board
and its attorney informed union representatives they bad
family-related plans for the Labor Day weekend, Greenleaf and Montgomery said.
"It seems to us that a settlement is far more important
ties,• according ·to a joint statement from the unions' for our community and our students," they responded,
presidents, Cathy Greenleaf of the GCLEA and Frances adding that association members did·not make plans for
Montgomery of the &gt;Support Staff Association.
the weekend in the hope a settlement could be reached.
' The board's memo ended by saying, in part, 'I wani
The associations' members have scheduled a preto be sure that each of you fully understands the paten· strike meeting for S p.m. Monday at their headquarters·
tial consequences of your actions and your decisions,"' in Gallipolis, and are planning a candlelight rally at 7:30
p.m. in the City Park.
according to the statement.

Strike preparations

·Beyond the cookouts:
A Labor Day tribute
to those who work

'i,.

f~..:..lfJ

By CATHERINE BRALEY
Tlma..Sanllnel Stell
OALUPOUS -It is often said that the meanIng behind the holidays we celebrate has been lost.
The same might be said for Labor Day. While the
weekend is widely viewed 8~ the last holiday of
summer and a time for one final cookout and sea·
son~ celebration, Labor Day stands for far more.
True to its name, the holiday was designed to
fll&lt;lOgnize thoaa who work ..:. lholinon-and wotne11
who have labored.to build their lives and our sbci·
ety.
For the past eight years Jan Bergdoll has been
a dynamic fixture at Bernadine's Clothing Store •
but don't think of her as merely aa sal~person. On
any given day she might be persbnally delivering
· an order, or helping an elderly customer select a
special gift to be sent to California.
·
. She not. only picks out numerous articles for
lhe lady to view, she'll write a letter to be
enclosed in gift, and mail it for her loyal client.
Jan Bergdoll always goes the extra length tO make
sure she gives good service.
She ·credits her parents with giving bet' good •
work values. "I most definitely have 8 very strong
work ethic. I don't want to sound harsh, and say
my parents demanded it, but each of us had a job
do to. Things weren't as easy then as they' arc
today ... we had no choice other than to work ...
and we were taught to do it well."
Her first jQbs taught her that she needed to
work around people. She is a high energy person
JAN BERGDOLL, left, from Bemadlne'a, Ia ahown with ·fellow
who knows the likes and dislikes of her clients • emp!oyH, Stacy Sl~~glll, preparing for the fall clothing line at the
and makes no excuses for taking care of their atore. Bergdoll credlta her parenta whh giving her a atrong work
needs.
ethic.
"Today you betier try different, but we have
old but has been a Gallipolis Daily Tribune paper carrier for three
one thing other people don't have and that is good service. It's years. He started working because he needed money for teenage
number one with us."
necessities.
,
Working with older
In March his life was altered when he and a friend were rough
customers is a special housing and he fell backwards and broke his back. After a month
mission with Bergdoll. in the hospital, he began lhe long process of recovery. He gave up
After she lost her own his route for four months • but returned.
mother, she · realil:ed
Hatten credits his parents with his work ethic, "I learned
what her working min· responsibility from my parents, and to take care of things. I don't
istry would be.
mind working, it gets me out of the house, and I need the money."
"Every morning I
Nancy Tawney, Gallipolis, has had a wide-ranging work his·
pray that Ood will give tory • nurse technician, photographer, professional golfer, and
me the love and the now herbalist. "When people tell me they can't find a job, it's
strength to be good to hard for me to understand. There is so much work out there. I
older people. They don't worry about myself because I can always do something."
need the special atten· · Tawney sees herself as a work pioneer in the world of golf.
tion. Everybody is spe- Playing in two U.S. Opens, she still remembers when women
cial, and I firmly weren't allowed on golf courses at prime playing times.
believe that we're here
She credits her parents for making her a worker. "When I
to help people."
wanted a new bicycle I had .to go get a paper route and work for
Her personal philos· it ~ We're meant to be profitable. You just have to surround yourophy is, "Uve life ·to self with positive thoughts."
the fullest, do some·
Being a worker for the Ohio Department of Transportation can
thing good for someone mean taking a lot of criti.Ssm and ribbing.
everyday, because God , Roger Stout of Vinton and Gene Hall of CenterVille know the
B.J. HATTEN of Bidwell, II onl~ is the one. who give me jokes and the perception. Hall says, "The only time the public
likes us is when it snows ·other times they don't. They are in a
17 yeere old, but he hal been 1 everyday."
Gall/pol/a Dally Tribune paper .car·
B.J. Hatten of Bid· hurry an,d we slow them down. I just have to laugh and go on."
rler tor three yeara.
well, is only 17 years
Continued on page A2

SchooiNet part
of Eastern's
.improvements
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme..Santlnal Staff
TUPP.ERS &gt;PlAINS - Students in,the 'Eastern Local
School District will be moving on to the Information
Superhighway at about the same time that they move into
brand new school facilities.
Almost $700,000 in computer equipment and wiring
for the SchooiNet program will be installed during and
immediately after the completion ·of constructi.on of the
new Eastern Ele·
montary • Scl!Olll
and the renovation
of Eastern High
fli'ame .
School,
both
scheduled for com· ,dUifln«&lt;
pletion in a year.
}Iring
SchooiNet and telecom- ··\&lt;·
SchooiNet Plus are
state-funded pro· · munl~
grams designed to t/Qne.
bring telecommunications and com·
. puter technology ' roog,
into local classrooms. Students will have access to the internet as well as
other computer applications relating directly to school'
curricula and the general learning process.
Statewide, the SchooiNet program is a $95 million
expenditure of state funds, including $50 million for
wiring and $45 million for workstations, or hardware.
The Eastern Local School District, iu:cording to the
district's technology coordinator Nancr. J,.arkins, will be
required t~ spend $100,000 of local money for the instal·
lation of infrastructure: wiring, switches and other equip·
ment necessary lo connect the computers. She estimates
that the total cost for the Eastern system will be $700,000,
to be funded through local ·funds, as well as state and federal monies,
Because it ranks as a low wealth district, Eastern Local
qualified for free workstations, and fuqds available
through the Federal Communications Commission could
discount the expenditures due from the local school board
for the installation of fiber optic telephone line and other
infrastructure material.
According to Mrs. Larkins, the state will provide fund·
ing for 42 workstations in the district, which, with the
new campus, will amount to one computer per classroom
in the new high school, and with the · combination of
SchooiNet and SchooiNet Plus, which targets grades K
through four, one workstation for every- four students iii
the early elementary grades.
Mrs. Larkins noted that the school district will be
responsible for costs involved in the operation and maintenance of the SchooiNet system, specifically the ·month·
ly cost involved in using the fiber optic lines, as well as
maintenance on computers not covered by wananty. She
estimates that the computers have a five-year life, and the
infrastructure 15 years.
Among the advantages of the new system, parts of
.which are already in place, is a computer program from
the Computer Curriculum Corporation, which allows stu·
dents to use the workstations for intervention work for the
Ohio Proficiency Tests.
·
According to Mrs. Larkins, marked improvement has
already been realized by some students who used the
Continued on page A2

to
.

l

November general election will be costly endeavor for Meigs officials
By BRIAN J. REED
Tlme ..SanUnal Stell
POMEROY - The November general. election will
be.a costly endeavor for local elections officials; and, in
Meigs County, the expense will aggravate an existing
budget shortfall.
.
·
A county-wide· special election in May has left the
Meigs County Boar&lt;! of Elections in the red before con·
sidering the cost of holding the general election in
November.
·
The special election, which was held for the consid·
eration of a levy for the Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, cost the
county $10 998.18,1he cost of which is to be reimburse!!
to the cou~ty general fund, according to Rita Smith,
Director of tbe Meigs County Board of ·Elections.

Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes said
Friday that the county commissioners bear
the responsibility of paying the cost for the
MR!DD levy, and that the county. has used
the calculation of indirect cost for services,
such as attorney services, auditor's services
and so forth, to offset the cost of the election.
· Lentes said that the MR!D D board will be
billed for those indirect costs, which will
then be used to reimburse the general fund
for the cdst of. the election.
That election cost included expenses involv~d in
renting polling places, paying jonitors, office help and
poll workers, and purchasing card stock, ballot printing
services and precinct supply kits.
For the upcoming general eh;ction, the Meigs Coun-

ty Board of Elections anticipates a cost of
over $8,000 for poll workers alone, according to Smith. That cost will reflect an
increase in the minimum wage from $4.75
per hour to $5.15 per hour, which goes into
effect in October.
Smith said that she anticipates that the
reimbursement for last spring's special clec·
tion will at least help to absorb the cost of
conducting November's general election.
Adding to the expense of this year's gener·
al election are two.state issues, which must be advertised
through the newspaper. The Gallia and Meigs County
boards of elections have opted to share the cost of inse rting the ballot language in the Sunday Times-Sentinel in
order to avoid duplicating advertising costs. Smith said

that the prelimi~ary estimate for printing and inserting
the language is .~.000. to be shared by the two counties.
The State of Ohio will reimburse the counties for the
costs involved in advertising and printing ballots for the
state issues, but that reimbursement is not expected to
come in to the county boards until 1998.
Costs to local agencies who have placed tax issues on
the November ballot will be shared between the agen·
ci~s, Smith said. For instance, the county commissioners
. wtll be responsible for bearing the cosi of placing the
half-mill levy for the county home on the ballot, the
MR!DD board will be responsible, again, for putting its
levy on the ?allot, and townships will pay for placing
cemetery lev1es and other tax issues on the ballot in their
respective communities.

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