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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Alabama
defeats
Vanderbilt

P'ck 3:

0-6-1

Pick 4:
0·2·1.0
. Buckeye 5:
14·21-22-24-37

Sports on Page 4

entine

\

Vol .... NO. 104

1998
TOYOTA

lEW 1998 TOYOTA 414
Ill, AMIFM RADIO

IS

$

-

LOW

TRUCK'S
ALL
HAVE
DUAL
AIR
BAGS

· A Gonnolt Co.

Newapaper

NEW· 997 TOYOTA
IS
LIW
IS

IS

.,

N!:W VEHICLE.- A new "hot shot" ven for
. the purpose of delivering hot meals to real'
denta In rural Meigs County is n - on the road.
. Stocking the truck .for Tl)ursday'a run were
Alice Wamsley, the Meigs County Council on

BRAID NEW TOYOTA COROLLA .

00 AMONTH

lEW 1991- 14 DT. CAB

ONE IN
IT'S

cws

IS
LOW
IS

$
,f

By BRIAN J. REED
An additional "hot shot" vehicle is
now bringi'ng hot meals to elderly citizens throughout the county, making
it possible, for the first time, for all
clients to receive a hot meal every
day.
Susan Oliver, executive director at
the Meigs County Council on Aging,
said the new vehicle arrived at the
senior center two weeks ago.

At a total cost of $33,000, the
truck was paid for with funds through
the Community Development Block
Grant program administered by the
Meigs County Commissioners, .and
through donations and funds ge'ner·
atcd through the MCCoA's local
·levy.
Those local funds are especially
important to the nutrition program.
Oliver said. Over half of the meals
served through the center arc made
possible by local doll;~rs and by
donations from recipients and local
organizations.

ALL

NEW

RAV4
MUST

NEW TOYOTA RAV 4
IS

SEE
HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

NEW TOY,OTA ·TER(Et

HAWK

LOW

LOW

IS

IS

LOVE TOYOTA AND LEXUS ·
.W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
PIS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PE_
OPLE. EXPERIENCE NOt'
. NECESSARY. PLEASE APPLY
IN
TOYOTA SHOWROOM.
.

'

'

~..:..

NODUIIIS

INCWDE

AND

FIRE SCHOOL- Sh-n here are representatives from the follol'ling fire departments that
attended the 1997 Hocking Valley Regional Fire School at Meigs High School last Sunday: Vinton, Rio Grande, Amesville, Wilkesville, Columbia, Mason, W.Va., Gallipolis, Racine, Scipio, Syracuse, Starr, Middleport, Rutland, Coalton, Richland Area, McArthur, Chester, Guyan, Wellston,
The Plains, Pomeroy, Jackson, New Haven, W.Va., Marietta and Barlow. (Photo courtesy of the
Pomeroy VFD)
,
·

cxpecled to make a donation to

defray costs, although donations are
not required.
·
The 1997 specially-equipped
Dodge truck was purchased through
Delivery Concep1s of Elkhart, Ind.,
virtually the only company which
manufactures the vehicles. The vehi·
cle is the center's third; and will make
it possible. for the first time. for the
agency to deliver hot ameals to all
clients who qualify.
Oliver said health regulations
require meals to be delivered at a
serving temperature of 140 degrees
Fahrenheit. whiCh was imoossible
-witho4,t the third vehicle. The distance of the county's outlying communities from the agency's facilities
made it impossible to d.eliver meals
·at the appropriate temperature to
everyone, Oliver said. Frozen meals
were provided to many residents,
who can now be served hot meals
every day.
,
Two of the agency's three trucks
are on the road six hours a day,
according to Oliver, and the agency's

first "hot-shot van" has racked up
over 100.000 miles.
Frozen meals are still delivered to
clients for weekend consumption,
Oliver said. The meals arc delivered
by paid staff whose positions are
funded through the federal Title V
nutrition program and local funds .
"These vehicles have been a godsend for our clients," Oliver said. "It's
very .important that people eat welL
If they don't. we know what happens.
h affects one's health an~ wellbeing."
The drivers of these vehicles do
more than just deliver meals, Oliver
said.
"These drivers are the only social
contact \hat some of these people
have," Oliver said. "Sometimes
they're asked to bring in the mail , and
do other things as welL and sometimes, they just check on the client."
Senior citizens needing home
delivered meals arc asked to contact .
Alice Wamsley or Sharon Smith at
992-2161. According to Oliver, an
assessment process is required to
deiermine eligibility.

.Father charged in infant's death
lipolis City Police, officers were Virginia medical examiner's oflicc in
called to assist the Gallia County South Charleston Thursday fro deterEMS at 5:50p.m. after it was report- · mination of the caU...e of death.
Ga\lia County Prosecuting Attored an infant at a Second Avenue and ·
ney Brent Saunders said an Aug . 6
Spruce Street apartment was nol
amendment to the Ohio Revised
breathing.
Code
notes if the juvenile court finds
Following rescue efforts and
probable
cause that the juvenile comrcsus~.:itation attempts. the child was
mitted
the
offense. and that the
taken to Holt.cr Medical Center. He
charge
is
u
Caiegory
I offense against
was later transferred to Cabell Hunta
child
that
is
at
least
16 years of age.
· ington Hospital. Huntington. W Va .,
the
case
is
automatically
bound over ·
where he died at 10:20 p.m.
TI1c body was taken to the West to the grand jury and the juvenile is
tried as an adult. ·

Area's firefighters gather
locally for updated training
'•

equipmen! were Scipio Townshtp,
Rudand. The Plains, Middleport,
Syracuse, Richland Area (Athens
County), Chester, Athens County
Firefighters Association. Ra~ine
and Pomeroy. Ohio instructors
were from Wooster. Barlow,
Logan, New Lexington. Dayton.

Pomeroy plays
host to annual
one-day session
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department last Sunday hosted
200 firefighters representing 25 fire
departmeRts at the 37th annual
Hockin~ Valley Regional Fire
School held at Meigs High School.

Nelsonville . and Jackson. Other
instructors wcrc'from Ono. W.Va.,
and Bardstown, Ky.
The 1998 fire school wi II he ·
held in Athens County and will be
co-hosted hy the Richland Area
and The Plains lire departments.

The one-day school featured the
following classes : rural water

movement. ground latters, extinguishment, L'P gas fires , auto
extraction. incident command ,

pump maintenance. emergency
vehicle driving and positive pressure vcnti lation.
The school is an annual event
drawing together fire departments

from Meigs. Gallia, Jackson , Vinton, Athens and Hocking counties
each September. The school Is
held on a rotating basis, with the
counties 'taking turns holding the
event.

' The Pomeroy VFD volunteered
to host the school in 1997 to coin-

cide with its I50th anniversary. The
co mmittee hcgan planning the
school in Jonuary and.held a meet·
ing each month leading up to the

HOUSE TORCHED- This vacant house on Rocksprings Road
near Pomeroy was torched as part the extinguishment class at
the 37th annual Hocking Valley Regional Fire School last weekend, sponsored by 1he Pomeroy Volunteer Fi~ Department. (Photo courtesy of the Pomeroy VFD)

school . Chainnan of the committee

was jeff Shank, with Chris Shank
handling secretary/treasurer duties.
Fire departments suppl~mg

Hundreds line up for final
glimpse of Mother Teresa

1

By RANJAt&lt;l ROY .

Opens Nlrmal Hrldar,r ('Pure Heart'), a
hOme for the dying, ollowed soon after
by her first orphanage.
·

Associated Press Writer

IMPORT
DULER
IN THE

STATE
IS
LOW .
-

..

.'

.

. ""

Persuades Israelis and
. Palestinians to cease fire in
order to rescue 37 retarded
children from a hospital in
besieged Beirut

Is re·elected superior general of her order despite '

.her.wish to step down.

CALCUTIA, India - For many, today was the last day to be close to
Suffers trom pneumonia in Tijuana.
Mother Teresa, to touch a nower to the glass coffin or to gaze at the peaceMexico, which leads to congestive
ful face of a woman who had reached out to the powerful and to the poor.
heart
failure, and hospitalization tn
During sict&lt;ness, Mother Teresa
La Jolla, Calif.
Hundreds lined up despi.le morning showers to sec her lying in state at
receives a calling from Jesus 'to senre
Awarded Medal of
Wins the Padma Shri award
St. Thomas' Church. Saturday, she will be buried after a state funeral attendhim among the poorest of the poor.·
Freedom, the highest
for "distinguished servlce. •
ed by presidents, prime ministers and cardinals, as well as the poor and sick
U.S. civilian award.
Nov. t 6, granted March t3,
She uses the money from
J~na Sisters of Loretto, a
for whom she worked.
.
honorary U.S. steps dow
such prizes to tound dozens
miuionary order of nuns in
citizenship.
Mother Teresa's closest relative, niece Agi Bojaxhiu. and Italian Presias nead 01
of new homes.
Agnes
Gonxha
India.
Takes the nama
Has a
her order.
dent Oscar Luigi Scalfaro were among those visiting St. Thomas' today.
Suffers a
Bojaxhiu born
Sister Teresa ..
second and
Undergoes
Sept. 5,
heart attack nearly !alai
Bojaxhiu, wh.o grew up in Italy, said Thursday she first met Mother Tere- Aug. 2'7in SI&lt;C~~je,
Atrivet&gt;in Catculla to
surgery
lo
dies
of
while
in
sa, her late father 's sister, when she was 20- 30 years ago.
heart
attack.
(now Macedonta},
leach at Sl. Mary's High
Founds the
Wine Nobel
clear
blocked
heart
attac
Rome
•
"The first meeting was very moving, " Bojaxhiu told Calcutta's The Tcle· youngest of three . SchOol.
Missionaries
Peace Prize. vls~ing Pope Doctors
blood vessel
at age 87.
Implant
graph newspaper. ''I never guessed at the time that she would he revered by children.
. li.akes ftnal
in Calcutta. ,
o!Charily
John Paul II. pacemaker.
the whole world one day. To me, she was just my aunt."
.
vowsasanun. Tens of thousands of peoplc 'havc filed past Mother Teresa's body since
j. i i"/.
i.t was brought to St. Thomas' on Sunday. two days after her death from a
I
heart attack at 87. This morning. a nun from her Missionaries of Charity order
19961997
1989 19901991 1993
•
1979
1982
1983
1985
1962
1937 ' 1946 1947 1950 1952
1928 1929
1910
'
litied a small boy over the barrier keeping crowds from comi ng close to the
body, and allowed him to touch the platform on wh'ich Mother Teresa rest· -- -·
"I' m lighting this candle just to say goodbye to Mother Teresa and to hope
ed in her blue-trimmed white sari.
The first step in her state tribute began Thursday morning, wheri soldiers
The public response has been so strong that organizers decided Thursday draped her body in the Indian flag . Since lhen ,'high-ranking officers have that I will have more bread in my home," said 60-year-old Remzi FaJa, a ,
to lengthen the route that Mother Teresa's funeral cortege will take through : formed an honor guard in the church. They will remain until escorting Moth· beggar with a child in his arms.
·
Mother Teresa 's adopted country is paying her its greatest honor with a
er Teresa's body in a closed coffin from St. Thomas' to the sports stadium,
Calcutta to allow more people to sec her.
Organizers said they were um;ertain exactly how long the final route will and then to her Missionaries of Charity headquarters for burial.
stale funeral usually reserved for heads of government .
be, however.
She will be carried on the same gun carriage that served in the funerals
Workers at the charity made final prepar~tions today in a former dining
Only 12,000 people will be given passes to the funeral service in an indoor hall that will be Mother Teresa's tomb. A rectangular cementliox in which of independc11ce leader Mohandas Gandhi in 1948 and India's first Prime
..sports sta.dium, and the burial at Missionaries of Charity headquarters 'is pri- her coffin will be sealed was to be covered with white marble. The room walls Minister Jawaharlal Nehru In 1964, Col. Sinha Roy said.
.
India's F'orcig n Ministry said 23 countries will be represented at Mother
l'ate. Thousands are expected to line the streets to watch the procession.
and cement floors were bare.
Mourners in the cortege- iooluding Mother Teresa's niece. nine of the
Mother 'Teresa was born an elhnic Albanian in what is now Macedonia, Teresa's funeraL First lady Hillary Rodham ·Clinton will lead the U.S. delewomen who helped found her forst charity, and a group of the handicapped, but 'became an Indian citizen in the ·1940s.
gation.
Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican 's secretary of state, will lead her '
sick and orphaned from Missionaries of Charity homes - will ride in vehi- · On Thursday, Albania began three days of official mourning, lowering
funeral Mass as the pope 's personal representative.
cles so they can cover the longer distance, said the Rev. Joseph Longford: a fl~gs to half-staff. Dozens of people lit candles in a square named for Mothspokesman for Mother Teresa's charity.
er Teresa in the capital, Tirana.

l

AS

.

'

Those who receive meals are

GALLIPOLIS - A probable
cause hearing Monday before Gallia
County Juvenile Court Judge Thomas
S. Moulton will determine if the juvenile father of 6-week old Charles
Buckley will be tried as an adult in
the. infant's death on Wednesday.
Aggravated murder charges were
filed on Thursday against 17-year-o\d
Carl Buckley and he was transported to a juvenile detenlion center in
Marion.
According to ·reports from Gal -

IS

Aging's nutrition and activities coordinator, and
Paul Johnson and Frank Imboden, who work
in the nutrition department through the Title V
Nutrition Program.

Third ·'hot shot' truck rolls
to deliver meals to seniors
Sentinel News Staff

'"\

'

2 Seetlona. 12 Pogea, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 12, 1997

C1117, Ohio Volley Publllhlng Company

I

•I ·

I 1111. 1!!.

~ ~~ ~ ~'~·

l

•

~·

•

~

�Friday, September 12, 1997

Co1nmentary

Page2

Meigs announcements

OHIO Weather

Friday, September 12, 1197

Saturday, SepL 13 ·
Ac:cu Weather" forecast for

Bill pours millions into carding program

The Daily-Sentinel

By Jack Anderaon
and.JuMoller

'Est4Dfis/id in 1948
111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-912-2156 ·Fax 192·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publltlller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

a-nt Men-oer

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

__ ,_..,_.,,..,y,..
_____btTJH,..,.
_,__
"'_,-lito--.,,...

, . s.tiMi R JF INC ,.,..,. to thf edlf« from ,....,. 011 a
of lopla.
- - ptltlpob'illlod. '""",_

I,.-..-

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w - · - lo: 1 . - . 1o 1111 E-, n.jMtl/MI. 111 Court Sl., PM•I&gt;), ONo

- . or. F,fJl " ' ,. . . .4151.

-No short~ge of advice
as both parties look ahead

.•·

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Republican consultant Frank Luntz realized that
everybody wasn't taking his advice seriously when, five minutes after he
hand-delivered a copy of hts GOP strategy memo to a lawmaker, 11 was
found abandoned in a lavatory.
"Another member found it and returned it to me," Luntz said.
Bill Luntz believes his 222-page tome - in which he seeks to teach
Republicans how to communicate better - contains vital advice for the
party.
.
"You have suffered through communication disaster after communtcation disaster, and nothing ever seems to change. LinguiStically, you are out
of touch with the American people," Luntz wrote . .
Some of his pointers: Be more friendly, talk in short sound bites and stop
refening publicly to House Speaker Newt Gingrich by his first name.
The advice from Luntz, who helped draft the 1994 GOP "Contract With
America" campaign manifesto, ts just pan of a banage of advice coming
unsolicited as both panics struggle for a post-budget-deal agenda.
"Don't put all yo4r eggs tn the Clinton scandal basket," recommends
Ralph Reed, the fanner Christian Coalition leader who is now an Atlantabased consullant.
Reed circulated his seven-page memo on GOP tactics this week to key
Republicans. It cites the "lack of a coherent Republican agenda" heading
into the 1998 elections.
"Vitriolic calls for a special prosecutor only make (Republicans) look
mean and partisan," he wrote.
.
'
Michael Reagan, son of the fanner president, even weighed in with his
own views on what Republicans must do to shape up .
Maicing the rounds promoting his new book, "City on a Hill," the
younger Reagan asserts that "today's Republican pany is rudderless, leaderless and in full retreat from the conservative values and vision of Ronald
Reagan."
He said Republican leaders "need to stand up for the people who stood
up for the Republican Pany all these years." .
· .
· And it's not only Repubhcans offertng adVIce to other Republicans.
Democra~ are getting buffeted too, panicularly over the issue that is currently dividing them the most- President Clinton's "fast track" trade legislation.
·
It would g1ve him expanded trade authority, allowing an expansion of the
North American Free Trade Agreeru.ent to Chile .and, eventually, to other
.
countries in South America.
The expanded authority is strongly opposed by House Minority Leader .
Dick Gephardt, D-Mo, a prospective 2000 presidential contender, by labor
unions and some environmental groups.
· ·
But the moderate Democratic. Leadership Council, which Cl~nton helped
foim a decade ago, favors the legislation, and has sent Democratic lawmakers a "talking points" kit to prep them for speaking in its favor.

Barry's World

California survey revealed that cut- ment to discontinue any marketing
ting sales of cigarettes to minors did advertisement that appeals to the
As the Senate Agriculture Com- not decrease the number of smokers underaged .
mittee began debating the proposed in the.critical12 to 17 age group.
The industry's silence didn't
tobacco selllement this week, anothAn official at the Campaign for escape the notice of Sen. Thad
er unsellling question hung in the Tobacco-Free Kids, an
Cochran, R-Miss .,
organization that lobbied
who took to the Senair:
How much difference will the Congress hard for the
ate floor recently to
recently approved $34 million youth funding, acknowledges
ask why Congress is
the recent crackdown on
anti-smoking bill make'
allocating tax money ·
Both houses of Congress have tobacco sales to minors
to pay for programs
allocated the money to enforce in California didn't affect
that the tobacco
industry
"carding" policies at stores that sell the youth smoking rate.
has
" The kids obviously
cigarelles.
promised to fund on
But the tobacco industry has know where to buy cigaits own. "Has 11
already agreed to coug~ up $368 bil- rettes or who will buy Moller end Anderson occuncd to anybody
lion, which would bci used by the them for them," the offithat the states arc
slates to offset the costs of tobacco- cial told our associate Kathryn Wal- bringing lawsuits and collecting
related diseases and anti-smoking lace.
from the tobacco companies money
Apparently dismissing Joe Camel to do this very thing?" Cochran
programs.
Supporters of the Clinton admin- from tobacco advertising does n01 asked .
istration bill consider it another seri- strip away the allure of smoking to
Despite Cochran's objections, the
ous defeat for the tobacco industry. the 4.1 million kids who consider expenSive price tag and the lack of
But the bill's •opponents think the themselves &gt;makers.
strong enforcement provisiOns. the
expensiye measure's goals are nothCigarette companies. meanwhile, bill glided through the Senate with
ing but a pipe dream.
have been silent on this proposal. In case.
The bill concentrates not on the past. the Industry . has issued
Most of the money will go to the
tobacco products or the industry but strong denials that marketing has FDA,' wuh the largest portion of it
on the employees and owners of been targeted to minors .
heing used to fund sting operations.
stores that sell cigarettes. As a result.
And it now declares its commitSo who could possibly be against
.the Food and Drug Administration,
which is already overburdened with
I
tt's responsibilities to approve and
~ACK To
regulate new drugs, will soon be
taske\1 with deputizing thousands of
Cigarette police across the nation.
These underage undercover agents
READING
will be dispatched to make sure that
'I&lt;ITIN6&amp;
every cigarette buyer who appears to
1
RITHMETIC
be under the age of 27 is asked for
identification to prove they are at
least 18 years old.
And even as Congress gives the
notoriously wasteful FDA a brandnew tub of money to wallow in, the
legislature has yet to act on a pending FDA reform proposal that would
streamline the expensive, convoluted, bureaucratic operation of the
ager.cy.
The sponsors of the cigarette proposal,. Sens. Tom Harkin, D-lowa,
and John H. Chafee, R-R.I., say that
cutting down the availability or cigarettes will decrease the ever-growing numbers of children who regularly use tobacco.
But early studies conducted on
this point are far from conclusive. A

•

RELAX

ReVIVE&amp;

RECUPERATE

Julia Helen Barton

IMansfield l75' I•
INO.

(f
•I Columbus 178' I

W.VA.

Nellie E. Borgan
Ice

~~~R.

~ GIIICIIIWI Mr.tWZ
JtCII'IIediSt!aol corn

before Pearl Harbor, a diligent Cold overwhelming. We dispatched 2.500 depths of the Cold War. sent fewer
Warrior. an·advocate of our
troops on a disastrous than a thousand Marines to Lcbano,r
involvements in both
expedition to Somalia, (and then w1scly withdrew them).
Korea and Vietnam, and a
risked the lives of and approved one atr raid on Gad25,000 more on "Oper- hafi's headquarters in Libya in retalsupporter of President
Bush 's Gulf War. But I
ation Restore Democra- iation for proven tcnorist acts. Pericannot for the hfe of me
cy" in Haiti (which dis- • od.
,
understand why we have
mally failed to restore
. Bosma is an histone tragedy: the
democracy), and arc age-old battleground of the Croats,
committed American fighting men and women to
now gambling 25.000 Serbs and Muslims, all of whom
Bosnia.
more in Bosnia in sup- across the ccinurics have been guilty
The test for putting
port of our v1ta~ interest · of unforgivahlc atrm:ities against
American Jives nt risk 1s, or
in ... what?
each other lt, ts argued that the Unitat least used to be. and still
Rusher
President Clinton ed States must take the lead m sortought to he: Is a vital Jl,mcrobtained
Congres&gt; · ing out their disputes and enforcing
ican interest involved? The Stan- grudging acquiescence in this last peace because our European allies
dard's editors apparently know this. venture hy solemnly pledging to have demonstrated their unwillingfor at one point ihcy assert that "it'" wtthdraw our troops by June 1998. ness to do so. Is 11 po~sihlc that they
vital that America stay the course in Now, of course, the early maneuvers· know something we don 'I'!
Bosnia. even if it means casualties." arc under way to welsh on that comCreate " a sustainahle system of
That astonishing statement is left, mitment. but it is sad to sec a pro- inter-ethnic cooperation in Bosnia''?
however. completely unsupported fessedly conservative and Rcpuhli- How prettily that trips off the
by any evidence or
'
can journal pro- tongue! And JUSt how many Amcri·
explanation what- r--T.-1J_e_S_t_a_n_d_a_r_d-'s_e_d_i-to_r_s-. VIdmg cover for can hves arc the cdttor&gt; of the Stanever
them .'
dard ready to commit to that lofty
Since the end of. apparently know this, for fit
"The
goaP ·
the Cold War. and one point they assert that pany of Ronald
Let's hope the Rcpuhlican Conthe demonstration "it's vital that America stay Reagan ... , When gress pulls Amcnca back from this
of American mili- the course ill Bosnia, eve11 if and where did hottomlcss pit hcl«&gt;rc u's too late.
tary prowess in the' it means casualties."
Ronald Reagan
William A. Rusher is a Distinnsk American guished Fellow of the Claremont
Gulf War, a lot of
Amcncans, includ- '------------_,..J hvcs m s11uat1ons Institute for the Study of Statesing: many lihcral!i who were .devout not mvolving a v1lal American inter- manship and Political Philosophy.
"dovcs" in the Cold War. have est'! He committed 10.000 troops to
apparently found the temptation to the invaston of Grenada -- a forward
throw Uncle Sam's weight around Soviet ha.'c in the Carihbcan -- 1n the

You spell 'potato,' I spell 'potatoe'
htm out Ol school when he was 15 raphy, he would take ene bite of the
stolen pears and throw them away.
An American engineer travchng and put him to work on a farm.
The teacher of Henry Ward He had, in fact , a pear tree in his own
in Italy with hJS wife was gazing up
hack yard. His 'only
at the Leaning Tower of Pisa. In a Beecher wrote this on his
few moments the wistful' look on his report card: "Henry is a
explanation was that he
poor writer and miserable
stole simply hecausc he
face changed to one of e~citement.
"Emma," he said with eyes flash- speller. He has a thtck
knew it was wrong.
speech and is so shy he
ThiS IS the hoy
ing, ." I think I could straighten it. "
By The A.SOCiated Press
who grew up to become
· Today is Friday. Sept. 12, the 255th day of 1997. There arc 110 days left - -Yes -- and 1n th~ _Jlrocess. spoil seems actually stupid."
·-Beecher went on to
one of thc.wor!d's most
one of the wonders or the world.
in the year. ·
In getting their children to con· become one of America's
famous Christians and
,
.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
liainls.
On Sept. 12. 1609. English explorer Henry Hudson satled mto the r~ver fonn to the world's expectations, great preachers.
Darw1n did so poorly in
I always hkc to
that now bears 1lfs name.
• parents are often m danger of makschool
that
his
father
once
tell
stones
ltkc these to
mg
the
same
mJStake
They
drag
Oa this date:
reassure mothers who
them from counselor to ·psychologtst . told him he would grow up
In 1880. author and journalist H.L. Menckcn was born in Baltimore ..
Plegenz
may be concerned about
In 1918, during World War I, U.S. forces led by Gen. John J. Pershmg to psychiatrist in an effort to a "disgrace to' the Darwin
the mtsdemcanors of their wayward
launched an attack on the Gennan-occupied St. Mihiel salient north of Ver- straighten them out and make them family "
The parents of the boy Augustine offspring. Usually they discover
dun. France.
. as well-adJusted as other chtldren.
Luckily, some famous men's par- must have wondered whether their there was no cause for alarm.
In 1938, in a speech in Nure~berg, Adolf Hlller demanded self-detennlEven those youthful noncon ents didn't do this. As youngsters, son was turning into a JUVenile
nation for the Sudeten Gennans m Czechoslovakia.
delinqucnt.
He
formists
who
Napoleon
,
Isaac
Newton
,
Henry
In 1943, German paratroopers · took Benito Mussolini from the hotel
would
steal
pears,
r------.,-------,
grow
up
to
Wand Beecher and Charles Darwin
where he was being l)cld by the Italian government.
for
eKample,
not
Napoltoll
graduated
4211d
i11
a
become
bona
fide
In 1944, during World War II, U.S. Anny troops entered Germany for the were nonconformists and underbecause he could- c/im of 43. Wt/1, you say, Napoleon eccentrics often
achievers.
first time, near Trier.
.
.
. .
n't
resist bilin@ "'6 J a military gtll(us; ht WQSII'I do Well in hfc. In
Napoleon graduated 42nd in a
In I977, South African black student leader Steven B1ko d1ed whtle m
into
the luscious cut out for Gretk a11d rhetoric. Yes, their
book
class of 43. Well, you say, Napoleon
·.
.
police custody, triggering an international outcry.
fruit
which
butllris
was
a
military
school!
''Eccentrics
''
In 1986, Joseph Cicippio, the actmg comptroller at the Amertcan Umver- was a military genius; he wasn't cut
(Villard. 1995 ),
sity in Beirut, was kidnapped; he was·reJeased m December 1991. .
. · out for Greek and rhetoric . Yes, but would be understandablc and maybe forgivable -- David Weeks and Jamie James relate
In 1988, Hunicane Gilbert slammed into Jam~tca w1th tonenual rams this ~as a military school'
Listen to the stories of the others: but just 'for the kick he got out of the eccentricities of !50 people,
and winds of 145 mph, killing 45 people and causmg damage estimated at
including Davy Crockett, Abraham
As a youth, Isaac Newton showed stealing.
up to $1 billion.
Actually,
he
says
in
his
autobiogLtncoln, Albert Etnstem, Charlie
so little promise that his parents took

By George R. Plagenz

.Today in history

t

•

&lt;'

Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

Chance of rain vanishes
throughout the weekend

Nelhe E. Borgan, 86, Athens, fonnerly of Harrisonville, died Friday, Sept.
12, 1997 in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany.

Ronald L. Dailey

Ronald Leo Dailey, 44, Middleport, died Thursday, Sept. II, 1997at his
residence.
The rain should end across Ohio tomght and sunny skies arc m the fore- ·
Born May 18, 1953 at East Liverpool, son of Doris Pack Dailey Haynes
: cast for Saturday, the National Weather Service said.
of Middleport, and the late Leo Dailey, he was a concrete finisher with the
Some patchy fog may develop where sktes are clear overnight as the mer- Guy F. Atkinson Construction Co., and a member of Local 1085, Laborers
cury dips to around 50 degrees.
·
lnternatwnal Umon, Parkersburg, w.v-d.
Highs on Saturday will be around 75, forecasters said.
He· was a member of the Suversville Word of Fatth Church.
A warming trend will continue into Sunday wtth highs 75:80. Lows again
In addition to .his mother, h'e IS survived by his stepfather, Basil Haynes
will be in the 50s.
of Middleport; a daughter, Melanie Jean Dailey of Lake Placid. N.Y.: and
The record-htgh temperature for thJS date at the Columbus weather sta- two sons, Ronald Scott Dailey of Middleport, and Jeremy Keith Dailey of
tion was 96 degrees in 1897 whtlc the record low was 42 in 1940. Sunset New Haven, W.Va.; sisters and brothers-tn-law, Kathy and Jerry Stnckland
tonight will be at 7:45p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7: II a.m,
of Mtddleport. Chnsty and Kev1n Dixon of Apple Grove. W.Va., and Carol
Weather forecast:
Hubbard of Rutland; a special friend , Harry Yarbrough of Rutland ; and sevTonight ... Clear. Areas of dense fog after midnight . Lows 50 to 55. Calm eral nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.
wind
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine,
Saturday.. Areas of dense fog until mid-morning, then sunny Highs in the with the Rev. David Dailey and the Rev. Leslie Hayman officiating. Burial
upper 70s.
wtll be in the StiverSVJIIe Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
. Saturday night... Clear. Lows .in the mid 50s.
from 7-9 tonight. and 2-4 and 7-9 p m. Saturday.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Panty cloudy. Highs 1n the upper 70s
Monday .. Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunder&lt;torms. Lows
. in the mid 50s and highs in the mid 70s.
Roland Eugene "Gene" King, 57. Middleport. died Thursday, Sept. 11,
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers . Lows tn the mid 50s
1997 at the Charleston r';v.Va.) Area Medical Center.
and highs in the mtd 70s.
Born Jan. 8, 1940 in Hob'son, son of Luc11le Manley King of Pomeroy.
and the late Clarence K1ng, he was a U.S. Army veteran, a machine operator for the Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven, W.Va., and a member of the
United Brethren Church in Mason, W.Va.
He .is survived by a son and daughter-in-Jaw, Randy and Christy King qf
Belpre; a daughter and son-in-law, Lisa and John Robinson of Gallipolis; four
A cook-out preceded the business
• Increase the donation to the Star erandchildren: two brothers. Jtm King of Beverly, and Arland King of
meeting when the Racine Area Com- Mill Park Board to $550 to upgrade Pomeroy , three siSters, Nancy Neutzllng of Syracuse, Barbara Payne of Midmunity Orgamzation held its Aug. 26 the electncal system;
dleport, and Cathy Ehas of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
• Purchase four' new domes for
meettng at Star Mill Park.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Gravel' Hill Cemetery in
. Libby Fisher gave the blesstng trash containers at the park:
Cheshire. with the Rev. Jimniy Lewis officiating. Friends may call at the
• Donated $150 to the Racine Fall White Funeral Home, Coolville, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Saturday.
. before the meal, attended by 21
members and one guest. President Festival Committee for cntcnain·
Military graveside rites will be conducted by the Tuppers Plains Veter-'Kathryn Han called the meetmg to ment.
ans of Foreign Wars Post 9053,
order, and the secretary's report by - The F.all Festival wtll he held Sept
'
Lillian Weese and the treasurer's 13 at the park and the group will have
• ·report by Ann Zirkle were read 'and a food booth there.
The RACO Fall Yard Sale was
.approved.
Umts of the Meigs County Emer4 17 p.m .. Hudson Street, Mid. RACO will present plaques to two scheduled for Oct. 2-3 at the park, gency Medical Service recorded 13
dler
'"· Mac Scarborough. PVH:
new businesses within the village. begtnntng at 9 a.m .
calls for assistance Thursday. Umts
8:38 p.m., Race Street. MiddleIt was noted that donattons are responding included:
IJurgundy and Brass and the Racine
port. Thomas Wilson Sr.• VMH:
appreciated
and that people wanting
Barber Shop.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II :49 p.m .. Fourth Street, Syra. The group wtll also present to donate should call Frank and
12 43 a.m., General Hartmger cuse, Pat Eicher, VMH.
plaques to Wendy's of Pomeroy' and Dclo(CS Cleland at 949-2071, Dale Parkway, Middleport, Ronald Dailey,
MIDDLEPORT
Medical Claims Service of and Kathryn Hart at 949-2656 or refused trcatmen.t;
9:50 a.m.. South Founh Avenue.
Ravenswood, W.Va .. m apprcclalJon David and Ann Zir~ at 949-203 1.
I :53 a.m., South Founh Avenue. Vera Bollinger. VMH;
of thc1r support Appreciation was Pickup is available and proceeds
8:26p.m., Broadway Street, Kyle
Middleport, Vera Bollinger. refused
expressed to Jean Alkire and Jeanette from the yard sale will he.applied to
McBane, Holzer Medical Center;
treatment:
Lawrence for the donation of two the scholarship fund for Southern
I0:30 p.ni., South Second Avenue,
5:3 1 a.m., General Hartinger Park.Jarge c&lt;\olcrs for use in the food High School scmors.
way, Ronald Dailey, dead on arrival, Tara Wolf, HMG:.
booth.
David Z~rkle led the· Pledge of Mtddlcport squad assisted;
RUTLAND
Ad1scussJon was held on mannmg Allegiance to adjourn the nicct~ng.
4:06 p.m., Main Street, Harold
9:29 a.m .. John Street. Syracuse.
the ttckct gates at the 19'18 Meigs The next meeting will he Sept. 23 at Patrick Snyder, Pleasant Valley Hos- Hysell, treated at the scene :
·county Fair.
· the park .
5:58 p m. , Nohle Summit Road.
pital, Syracuse squad assisted:
The group voted to.
II '42 a.m .. Pomeroy Ptkc, Tanya Bob Moodispaugh, PVH.
Dill. Veterans Memonal Hospital:
COLUMBUS (AP) - Negotia_.
tors for the Ohio Education Association and two staff unions have been
'summoned back to the bargaining
table on Monday, two weeks allcr the
workers struck the state's largest
teachers· union.
· Federal mediator Cliff Suggs
scheduled a resumption of talks with

Chaplin and Howard Hughes.
Ecccntncs have more immumty
to stress. the authors point out,
because they "don't even consider"
confonning to society. Free of stress,
they arc often healthier: "The intellectual excitement that the creative
eccentric experiences tends to trigger the same growth honnoncs as
sex and exercise do." This helps
keep_the eccentric younger.
Here is the authors' checklist for
identifying an eccentric. Bcstdcs
being a nonconfornust, an eccentriC
is: "tdcalistic (wanting to make lh~
world .a better place), intelligent,
opmionatcd. outspoken, convinced
of bcmg right, noncompetitive (noi
in need of reassurance from the rc!{t
or SOCICt)'), not partiCUlarly interest•
cd in the opinions of others, usually
the eldest or an only child, a had
speller."
· If this reminds you of a buddini
nonconformtsl at your home, you
may be entertaining a young AbC
Lincoln, Isaac Newton or Dan
Quayle unawares.
·
George Plagenz is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enteryrise
Association.

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS lll-960)
Pubhshed every arternoon, M\lnda)' lhrough
Friday. 111 Court S1 . Pomeroy Ohro, hy lhr
Ohio Va11cv l'uhhshmg C'ompilny/Ganncll Co.
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class fX1St~g~ p~tld at Pmqcro)'. O~in.
Mentbtr: The Assocrated Press. and
J*wspaper 1\sK~Cilnion .

th~o:

Oh1o

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2fi Week~ .
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52 Weeks ................................... SIUS.56
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13 Wetks . .. ........................... .S29 2.5
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'

.

the Ohio Associate Staff Umon for II
a.m. on Monday and wtth the ProfessiOnal Staff Union. for I p.m:
The striking unions held a joint
membership meeting Thursday night
and
PSU
President
Chuck
Leberkntght said they declared thcJr
detcrmmat10n not to give m to OEA
demands.
Lehcrkntght soys the OEA ts
demanding takc-hucks m the ~ucas of
pensiOns, msurance. sen1or1ty. evaluatiOn and JOb sccunty.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... 44'~•
Akzo ...................................... 77~.
AmrTech .............................. 62"i.
Ashland Oil .........................51"1•

AT&amp;T ..................................... 42~.

Bank One .............................. 52'1•
Bob Evans ............................ 18'&gt;
Borg-Warner ...........................56
Champion ............................. 18!'·
Charm Shps ......................... 6'),.
City Holding ............................ 42
Federal Mogul ..................... 33"1•
Gannett ................................. 94 '&gt;
Goodyear ................................ 62
Kmart .................................... 141.

Lands End ............................27~•

Ltd ......................................... 24'/o
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19~.
OVB ... , .....................................37
One Valley ............................. 41'io
Peoples ................................... 38
Prem Flnl ............................... 20'1.
Rockwell ............................... 59'•
RD-Shel1 ............................... 51 '1.
Shoney's ................................. 5'!.
Star Bank ........................... ..45~.
Wendy's ............................... 21 "1.
Worthlngton .......................... 19'io

-·--Stock reports are the 10:30

a.m. quotes provided by Adveat
.
of Gallipolis.

AND

GEORGE OF THE
JUNGLE'"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
448-0923

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA
446-4524

"" " " !
....
.......
""""

7

The Po11eroy Fire Department
Would Like To Thank The Following
For Making The 37th Annual
Hocking Valley Regional Fire School,
Held Septe11ber 7, 1997, ASuccess:
Meigs &amp; Mason Motel
Whaley'a
All American Fire
Equipment, Inc.
Arthur Treacher's
Ferrell gas
Dill's Fire and Safety
Tuppers.Plains ·Chester
Water district
Sacred Heart Church
Pomeroy Methodist
Church
Pomeroy Police Dept.
PDK
Frank Vaughan
Mark Morrow
John Edwards
Fenton Taylor
Meigs High School
Meigs Athletic Boosters
Meigs EMS
David Bumgardner
Roger Abbott
Hershel McClure
Bernard Fultz
ODOT
Scipio Twp. FD
Rutland FD
The Plains FD (Athens
Co.)
Middleport FD
Syracuse FD ·
Richland Area FD (Athens
Co.)
ChesterFD
Athens County
Firefighters Assoc.
Racine FD
Lloyds Electronics, Inc.
The Daily Sentinel
Karl Kebler Ill, C.P.A.
Valley Lumber
Jeff's Carryout
Tony's Carry Out
Wendy's
Mlck's Barber Shop
J's Service Center .
Cleland Realty .
R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply
Kawasaki Motorsports
Canter
McDonald's
Farmers Bank
Ingels Furniture &amp;
Electronics

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio dtrect hog prices at selected
buying pomts Friday as provided by
the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady; demand
moderate w1th moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
pomts 4R 50-49 50, few 50.00; plants
49.00-50.50.
U.S . 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 44.5048.50, 210-230 lbs. 40.00-44.50.
Sows. steady
Boars: 35.00-36.00.
Esttmatcd receipts: 29.500.
For the week: hanows and gtlts
1.50 lower. sows steady to 1.00 lowcr.
Prices from Producers Livestock Association:
Hog ·market trend f{)f- Friday:
steady.

HERCULESG

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department investigated a
rcpon of a hit/skip accident Thursday
near Racine, according to Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
Janice K. Salser, Racme. was
eaStbound on State Route 124 around
5.15 p.m. when she attempted to tum
left onto Bashan Road. An older
black Ford Mustang passed her at a
htgh rate of'specd, clipped the leftfront bumper of her 1994 Lincoln,
and continued cas. ·.
Soulsby urged anyone with information on the inc1dcnt to call the
sheriffs offtcc

EMS units answer 13 calls

.Talks to resume in OEA walkout

FOR THE
OF ONE
WAlT DISNEY'S

Accident reported .

RACO plans appreciation
presentation to businesses

··~

•

SunnY

Retired Teachers
The Meigs Rcured Teacher&gt; Asso·
ciat1on IS rccogmzing the 50th
anniversary of the Oht o Retired
Teachers Association on ~pt. 20 at
noon at the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. All retired teachers and
administrators receiving STRS rcurcmen1 checks arc invited to attend and
join the group for its meeting and luncheon. Reservations may be made by
calhng Etleen Buck at 247-2723,
Dorothy Woodard at 742-2141 or
Nellie Parker at 985-3580.

Roland E. 'Gene' King

Why is the United States in Bosnia?
Whatever else thiS country's
involvement in Bosnia has done or
failed·to do, it has made a royal hash
out of the conventional political
alignments. Any controversy that
finds Abe Rosenthal and me allied
against Margaret Thatcher and
Noam Chomsky qualific~. to put it
mildly. as unusual.
That explains why I am writing
this column to cnttcizc a recent editorial in the Weekly Stan~ard. a
Washington-based journal of conscrvillive opinion with whic~ I generally (not always, but generally)
agn;e. In its Sept. 8 issue , the Standard comes out strongly for extending "the artificial 'deadline ' of June
1998" for the withdrawal of America's 25.000 troops from Bosnia. It
defines our purpose there as
"smashing · Karadzic's power once
and for all and then creating a sustainable system of inter-ethnic cooperation in Bosnia," and denounces
the "nco-isolationist" impulse that
has allegedly led so many Rcpubli·
cans to oppose Mr. Clinton's policy
there. It calls upon the Rcpubl ican
Congress to become agam "the
pany of Ronald Reagan' '
Where to begin·&gt; Let's stan by
dismissing that "nco-isolationist"
nonsense. To use myself as an exam·
pic. I was an "interventionist" long

MICH.

Hunter edu&lt;ation
Roush reunion
A free I 0-hour Ohio Hunter EduDescendants of Gtdcon and
cation Class will be held Sept. 29. 30 · Anemesia Roush wdl meet Sept 21.
and Oct. I from 6-9 p.m., and Oct. 4 I p.m. at Star Mtll Par~ in Racine.
from 9 a m. to noon at the Pomeroy Bring covered diSh . All 'fnends and
Julia HOlen Banon, 84, Syracuse, fonnerly of Mason, W.Va., died Tues- Gun Club, with the Sept. 30 class to relatives welcome .
be held at the Meigs High School
day, Sept. 9, 1997 in University Hospilal, Columbus.
Born July 23, 1913 in Nelson, Brotish Columbia, Canada, daughter of the library. Class size is limited and pre- Trustees to meet
The Letart ToY.nship Board of '
. late Charles G. and Julia H. Powell Stoffel. she was a homemaker, and a mem- registration is required. To register,
Trustees
will meet in regular session
ber of the Mason Untted Methodist Church, Sunshine Class, and Mason call Jim Freeman at The Datly SenMonday.
6 p.m. at the tuwn&gt;h ip
tinel at 992-2 155. extension 102.
Senior Citizens. ·
budding
in
Letan Falls.
She was also preceded 'in death by her husband, Russell H. Banon Sr.; a Completion of the class is necessary
for firsHime hunters wanting to purgrandson , William Bruce Banon Jr.; and three brothers and a sister.
Gilmore reunion
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law. Russell H. Jr. and Mary Beth chase an Ohio hunlmg license.
The annual reunion of the fatllll)
Banon of Colijmbus, William B. Sr. and Trecia L. Banon of Vienna, W.Va.;
of
Walter 'Squibb' and Edna Otlcr
three daughters and sons-in-law, Elizabeth J. and Fredenck G. Ricketts of RACO yard sale
Gilmore
will be held Saturday at the
The Racine Area Commumty
&lt;;arinichael, Calif., Patricia M. and Harold C. Lepro of Greensburg, Pa., and
upper
U.S.
33 Roadside Park llnng
Julia H. and David C. Aagg of Medina; a sister, Jean Skilkun of Littleton, Organization Yard Sale wtll be held
covered
dish
and tnblc service.
Colo.; a brother, the Rev. Ernest Stoffel of Burlington, N.C.; q grandchil-- Oct. 2 and 3 at Star Mill Park, with
dren, 17 great-grandchildren and two stepgrandchildren, and several 'meces proceeds to benefit the RACO Scholarship Fund for Southern High
and nephews.
School seniors . Donations are apprc~
A memorial service will be held at I :30 p.m Saturday in the Mason Unitciated.
Call Frank Cleland at 949ed Methodist Church, with the Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial wtll
2071,
Dale
Hart at 949-2656 or
be in the Mingo Cemetery. Finleyvtlle, Pa. There will be no visitation.
David
Zirkle
at 949-2031 for more
In lieu of flowers, the family requests contnbuuons to the Mason Unued
mfonnat10n
or
for p1ck·up.
Methodist Church BuildinE Fund.

: By The Associated Press

scm ...

By William A. Rusher

conditions and high

a federal effort to keep kids from
buying cigarettes? Even one that
may not be as effective as its boosters say?
. Nobody, as long as that effort
contains some real enforcement.
Under the current plan, however,
first-time viOlators who get caught
in the FDA's sling operations will
only be faied with a warning letter.
Subsequent violations will result in
·a fine of no more than $250. There IS
no possibility of stiff fines or license
revocation, which are often levied
on liquor or beer retailers who sell
their wares to the underaged.
Nearly one-third of the new program's funds will- be spent so the
government can produce pamphlets
advising retailers of the "strict" new
FDA policies.
Perhaps the whole point of this
bill is for lawmakers to be able to go
home feeltng good about · themselves, knowing they've applied a
$34 rriiJlion band-aid to a problem
they have little tdea of how to solve.
Jack An'clerson and Jan MoDer
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Summary of Thursday's auction
at Bucyrus:
Hogs: ~0. cents lower.
Butcher hogs· 40.00-50.35
Cattle: I 00 to 1.25 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.00·
69.00: select 57 00-62.00.
Slaughter hetli:rs: chmcc 61 .0067.1 0; select 56 00·61.00

FRI, SAT, SUN

JUUA ROBERTS, IIEL GIBSON
IN '

CONSPIRACY
THEORY"
AND
SHAQUILLE O'NEAL,
JUDO NELSON IN

STEEL,.,

Fit Together
AEROBICS.
·Now 9 Week Session
September 15th

Mon. &amp; Thurs.
7-8 p.m.

ROYAl, OAK RESORT
For more information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen, 992-6893
'

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Ken's Appliance
~on Tate Motors
· Pomeroy Flower Shop
Powell's
Pomeroy Thrift Shop
Denise L. Bunce,
Attorney
Bargain Shoppe
Acquisitions
Crow &amp; Crow
Vaughan's
Lambert Insurance
Western Auto
Snouffer's Fire &amp; ~afety
King Hardware
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner
Brogan-Warer Ins.
J.D. Auto Sales
H&amp;H Block
O'Dell's
Adolph's
Ritchie Auto Sales
Foreman &amp; Abbott
Middleport Trophies &amp;
Tees
Mill End Fabrics
Your Neighborhood
Lender
Triplett Engineering
Services
The Parish Shop
The Ohio River Bear Co,
Buttons &amp; Bows
Williams &amp; Associates
Ins.
Clark's Jewelry Store ·
Home Entertainment
Center
Fisher Funeral Home
Charles H. Knight,
Attorney
Larry D. Kennedy, DDS &amp;
Staff
AEP Southern; Ohio Coal
The Fabric Shop &amp;
Anderson's
Jukebox Pizza
Sugar Run Flour Mills
A. Jackson Bailes, O.D.
Legar Monument Co.
frhe Quality Print Shop
H.D. Brown, DDS &amp; Staff
Sweet Greetings

'

�Sports

The .Daily Sentinel
·

Friday, September 12, 1997

5 112 games. Chicago trails Cleve-

CHICAGO (AP) - Mathematically they still have a chance. Realistically they don't have a prayer of
catching the Clevelimd Indians. The
Chicago White Sox aren't worried
'either way.
"We just have to keep going,"
Robin Ventura said Thursday night
after lhe White Sox beat the Indians
7-5 behind liis two-run single in the
seventh.
It was the opener of a four-game
series between the teams and a long
· 15-game road swing for the Indians.
"It's nice to stan with a win . It
was kind of a must win. There is
some pressure. You're in a hole and
to catch them you've got to beat
them," Ven(ura said.
"And we're not supposed t.o catch
them, so we' lltry to h.ave fun."
Barring a repeat of 1964 properlions when the Philadelphia Phillies
.collapsed in the final two weeks and
blew a 6 1/2-game lead and a penriant,the Indians are in a comfortable
position, despite 12 days on the
road.
They swept three from the White
Sox last weekend in Cleveland and
still lead sec1nd-place Milwaukee by

land by 6 112 but is nine games back
in the loss column with 16 to play.
The Brewers, seven back in the
loss column, have 18 games to go
and the Indians 21.
One big plus for the Indians their Jlllentcd lineup features veterans
with down-the-stretch experience.
·
"Those aniund in 1964 remember
Philadelphia," Indians general manager John Han said. "You always
look at those things, if somebody got
hot and you stumble .... But we have
a lot of players who h~ve been in this
situation before. These guys know
what to do."
White Sox DH Frank Thomas
understands his team's situation.
"The Indians are a very strong
team. ,They swept us last weekend
and we'd like to do the 'same thing,"
he said. "We'll work toward winning, but 6 1/2 back with 16 games
left is a little tough. But you never
know."
With the game tied 4-4 and one
out in the seventh, Thomas walked
and Albert Belle- hitless his' pre vious 13 at-bats against his former team
- lined a double that finished
Charles Nagy ( 14-1 0).

aurdette gets top-20 finish for Meigs in junior girls' race
•

: In Tuesday's Gallipolis Cross
Country Invitational on the Univer·
si)y of Rio Grande campus, the
f1eigs Marauders' Andrea Burdette
r~orded a 20th-place finish in the
junior high girls' race.
11 was the highest-place finish
Meigs had in the invitational's five,

Alvin Morman relieved Nagy,
and Ventura hit the first pitch for a
two-run single to put the Sox ahead
6-4. After an intentional walk to Mike
Cameron, Jorge Fabregas followed
with a run-scoring single.

July 20 - Pennsylvania · 500,
The 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup Long Pond, Pa. (Dale Jarrett).
Aug. 2 - Brickyard 400, lndistock car racing schedule, with winners in parentheses and driver point anapolis. (Ricky Rudd).
Aug. I0 - Bud at the Glen,
standings:
· Feb. 16- Daytona 500, Daytona, Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Jeff Gordon).
Fla. (Jeff Gordon).
Aug. 17- ITW DeVilbiss 400,
Feb. 23 - Good wrench Service Brooklyn, Mich. (Mark Manin).
400, Rockingham, N.C. (Jeff GorAug. 23 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Dale
don).
March 2 - Pontiac Excitement Jarrell).
400, Richmond, Va . . (Rusty WalAug. 31 -Mountain Dew Southlace).
ern 500, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff GarMarch 9- Primestar 500, Hump- don).
ton. Ga. (Dale Jarrell).
Sept. 6 - Winston Cup 400,
March 23- TranSouth Financial Richmond ..Va. (Dale Jarrell).
400, Darlington, S.C. (Dale.Jarrell).Sept. 14 _:_New Hampshire 300,
April6- Interstate Baueries 500,. Loudon, N.H.
Fort Worth, Texas. (Jeff Burton).
Sept. 21 - MBNA 500, Dover,
April 13- Food City 500, Bris- Dei:
tol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
Sept. 28 - Hanes 500, MarApril 20 - Goody's Headache tinsville, Va.
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va. (Jeff
Oct. 5- UAW-GM Quality 500,
Gordon).
Concord, N.C.
May 4 - Save Mart SuperrnarOct: 12- Sears Diehard 500, Talkets 300, Sonoma, Calif. (Mark Mar- ladega, Ala.
tin).
Oct. 26 - AC Delco 400, RockMay 10- Winston 500, Tallade- ingham, N.C.
ga, Ala. (Mark Martin).
·
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube 500,
May 17 - x-The Winston, Con- Phoenix.
cord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
Nov. 1.6 - NAPA 500, Hampton,
May 25 - Coca-Cola 600, Con- Ga.
cord, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
x-non-points ~ace
June I -Mi ller 500, Dover. Del.
(Ricky Rudd). ·
Driver standfngs
June 8 - Pocono 500, Long
I. Jell Gordon, 3,602.
Pond, Pa. (Jetf Gordon).
2. Murk Martin. 3,505.
June 15 - Miller 400, Brooklyn.
3. Oalc Jarrcn.'3.449.
Mich. (Ernie Irvan).
4. Jeff Bunon. 3.334.
June 22 - California 500,
5. Terry Labonte, 3,292 ..
· Fontana, Calif. (Jeff Gordon).
6. Dale Earnhardt, 3,056.
July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
. 7. Bobby Labonte, 2,972.
Beach, Fla. (John Andrclli).
8. Bill Ellioll, 2.839.
July 13 - Jiffy Lube 300,
9. Ted Musgrave. 2,816.
Loudon .. N.H. (Jeff Burton).
\
I0. Ricky Rudd. 2.768.

: All runners will be listed in order
. or finish and identified by school
(AD-Adena, AT-Athens, CH-Chesapeake, CM-Cabell Midland, F-Fairland, G-Gallia Academy, J-Jackson,
L,-Logan, MA-Manchester, MEMeigs, MN-Minford, MT-Miami
Trace, PK-Piketon, PO-Portsmouth,
RH-Rock Hill, RV-River Valley, SPSouth Point, SW-South Webster, UNUnioto, VC-Vinton ·County, WEWell$ton, WH· Wheelersburg, WLWarren Local and WU-West Union).
Vanity boys' race
(5,000 meten)
Team scores - Cabell Midland
49, Wheelersburg 116, Gallia Academy 117, Piketon 133, Logan 192,
Chesapeake 21)2, Warren Local 230,

"We wanted to pitch to Ventura
with a left-bander and it didn'.t work.
It worked last weekend in Cleveland," Indians manager Mike Har·
grove said.
· Jim Thome hit his 38th homer off
Keith Foulke (2-0) in the eighth to
make it 7-5. Foulke pitched two
innings, allowing one run on three
hits.
After Foulke allowed two one-out
singles in the ninth, Matt Karchner
got the final .two outs for his 14th
save.
James Baldwin gave ,up four runs
on six hits in 6 1/3 innings for Chicago.
Nagy also laste~ 6 1/3 innings,
yielding eight hits and six runs with
five walks.
Brian Giles had three,hits, including his 17th homer and a two-run single, and Pat Borders also homered for
the Indians.

,.
"'',

ll' L &amp;!.

Bahin10re .. ..... ............. .... KIJ

N.!w Yurk ....

......

. .......11

Boston ....................
Toronm ..................

..,

......... ~2 •2
..... 70
......... 70

Cemral Dlvbion
CLEVaAND .......... ... ....... 76
Milwaukt..-e ............. .-.............. 72 72
Chi~il):JI .......
.. 72 7~
............... .'~1)
K:mm~~ City .
Min~so1:1

.622

J69

7' :

.4tlb

I'l l

.4t!J

20

.-179

20'·:

.!iW
.~

.41)J

~· .410
.................. ..... 59 8l
Wt'SII!m Dh-l~kln
.............. ltl

••

Scalllt ............
................... 75 71
Anaheim .
........................ bit 1H
TcuL ..
Oaklr•nd
............. bO til

!ill

AI.\

.

...
-"'':

_..,

40~

K:05 p.m.

CLEVEL~ND jWri~lu

Minncs(lt:l (Milll'r O-J) :u TCJII:l5 (Burkel! 7-111,

M:J5 p.m.
K:ms:L~

12' :

21

City (RO!it~OO 9- 12) :~1

All&lt;~~m (Wnhon

.11 -10).10:05 p.m.
Turnnlll jCil'IL\1!11 ~ 21-51 :11 Staule (Oiivurcs 610). 10.05 p.m
,
Do.-1wi1 JKcu~lc 1--'1:II Oakl:uld (Lut.lwitk 1-1),
UU~ Jl.m.

"

5':

6-J) ;u Chkapo Whitt!

So-' (Ombek 10-10). K:05 p.m.

~~· ..

- ~~I

.51-i

· t~-!i J.

SaturdaY's games
N. Y Yo1nkn·.\ t Ru~ers b-61 a1 Bal!imurt:
(M ussi na l.l-7). I :tiS r .m.
Kan~a.~ Ci1y (l'ill.,lr::y .f-7) ,., Amlheim ([)ickson
IJ -7). 4 : 11~ 11,111
, l&gt;clwir (8l;1ir 16-fil :11 OaklamJ (.Ri~by 1 -~) .

O:akbnd M, Torolllo 7
N.Y Ytmkcc~ H. B11himurc::!
Chic:1;t.n Whilt! Sm. 7. CLEVELAND :'i

'
CLEVELAND (Hruhiscr IJ.~I a1 Chic:L!lO
Wtulc Su-' (Stmlkll l-0), 7:0.'i fUll.
Bt1s1t1n (Wakt.!lieltl 10-151 a! Milwuuket: (Kurl
1 0-II).M : O~ Jl.lll.
Minncsu1:1 (l'l"to'k~hury 6·! I) a1 Tc,as (Oli ver

Tl!.\as 7. MinllCSolaO

11 - ll ).lt : .l~p . m

Thursday's scons

·-t:O~p . m .

p.m.

$9900* Installed

Scanlc (Joh11sun 17·-'1.

Bo~ton

a! Milwaukt:t. 2:05 I'·'"·
CLEVELAND at Chil'ap.o White: So){, 2 : 0~ 1•.m.
Minnesorn,.m Tt.:a.~ . J :OS p.m.
llciruil :11 O:akhmt.l. 4 :0~ fl-11!KallSUS Cuy &lt;~1 Anaheim, 4:0!i p.m.
Torumo at Senti~. 4:]!i p.m.
N.Y. Yunkect nl Baltimore. 8 :0~ p.m.

NL standings
Ellltern

Di~ilrioo

fum

ll' L tEL

!ill

~K.l

tt',

- ~5
- ~OJ

12

Al l:mta ....
.................. .. ,.. 91
Florit.Lt ...
.. . X-' 60
New Y1.1rk .........
.79
Mm,Jn•'al .. . ..... ... ...• .. .. 7.\ 72
Phil:ult:lf'hia .
..............'ill

~·

""
"'

Cenlral Division
Hnu!ilml ..
.......... 7J 72
Pitlsbmgh, ........... ........ : ...... 70
Sl . Loui~ ... ,:., .................. h7

CINCINNATI .....

..M

atit.:ugo ..... ,... .................. ... 61

,.,.

-- ..... Hl

.62H

.406

.-171)
.462

79

.4~1

.4111

.,
·~

"
.12

..'iO.l

~~~ .

Wntrm Dl~l'iion
Los Angclc.~ ............... .......... HI
S:m Fmnd!iL"U ...

PRIMESI til·

ill

Sunday's games

N.Y. Yunkt..-es (Mtndor.ol 5-6) ;II R:thirnurc: (Erit.:kson 16 -~1. 7J!i p.m.
nu~1nn !Supft:ln 6-21 :11 Milw:mkcc (0'1\mh:o

Ea!&gt;ltrn Ohb;ion

Derroh

9 : 0~

Tonight's games

AL standings
Iwn

Tnronl\l (Onul 0·0)

lA'! roii), St:nlllt: I
Km1so1s Cily -1. 1\nnho:im 2

Baseball

II . Jeremy Mayfield, 2,759.
. 12. Johnny Benson, 2,699.
13. Ken Schrader, 2,635.
14. Rusty Wallace, 2,633.
15. Michael Waltrip, 2,509.
16. Ern1e lrvan, 2,498.
17. Jimmy ·spencer, 2,425.
18. Darrell Waltrip, 2.419.
19. Kyle Petty, 2,394.
20. Bobby Hamilton, 2,287.
2 L Ricky Craven 2,273.
22. Sterling Marlin, 2,268.
23. John Andretti, 2,263.
24. Steve Grissom, 2;250.
25. Ward Burton, 2.238.
26. Geoff Bodine, 2,226.
27. Brett Bodine, 2,181.
28. Derrike Cope. 2.137.
29. Mike Skinner, 2,099.
30. Rick Mast, I, 930.
31. Joe Nemechek, 1,882.
32. Dick Trickle, 1,852.
33. Hut Siricklin, 1,843.
34. Kenny Wallace, I ,80 L
35. Lake Speed, 1,718.
36. Morgan Shepherd, 1,596.
37. David Green, 1,461.
38. Chad Little, 1,414.
39. Robby. Gordon. 1.340. ·
40. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 1,140.
4 L Dave Marcis, 1, 119.
42. Jeff Green; 1,056.
43. Gary Bradberry, 61 L
· 44. Greg Sacks, 581.
45. Robert Pressley, 545.
46. Mike Wallace, 54 L
47. Bobby Hillin Jr. 511.
48. Lance Hooper. 402.
49. Billy Standridge, 329.
50. Jerry Nadeau, 287.
5 L Ed Berrier, 255.
52. Todd Bodine, 225 .
53. Rick Wilson: 200.
54. Kenny Irwin Jr., 147.
55. Loy Allen, 119.

J~ :

b
7' :
l:! 'l

..'i~~

Visiting Eastern staned strong
and finished strong after suffering a
buge letdown in the middle frames,
however, a late same rally just short
of a heavenly boost gave the undefeated Eagles (8-0) a tremendous
come from behind win in the nightcap to give Eastern the match over
Waterford Thursday night
Eastern rallied from a 13-3 deficit
in the third and final game to win 1614. Eastern had won the first game
easily 15-6, then suffered the middle
·game blues, dropping a 15-5 contest.
Waterford is now 7-2 on the year
and had been Eastern's bigge.•l challenger lor the 1997 Hocking Division
crown in the Tri-Valley Conference . .
· First game highlights included
two aces by Michelle Caldwell that
gave EHS a 3-1 lead, then Stephanie
Evan• added three points for a 6-2
score. Michelle Caldwell then added
two late game points off Angie Wolfe ·
spikes.
Jess Brannon served the last
two points of the game off thunder- ·
ing kills by Valerie Karr in a 15-6

-

"""
~ '""'
...
during Thursday night's SEC game in Nashville, · .
Ter1n., where the visiting Crimson Tide won 2D- . :
0. (AP)

TAKEN DOWN - Alabama wide receiver
Shamarl Buchanan (left) is pulled down for a sev·
en-yard lose by .Vanderbilt defender Fred VInson

Alabama beats Vanderbilt 20-0 ··
By TERESA M. WALKER .
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- The
way Mike DuBose took the blame fot
how Alabama's off-,nse struggled
against Vanderbilt, you'd think his
Crimson Tide lost to the Southeastern Conference's worst team.
"I don't know if we were overconfident.( don'tthink so," DuBose
said after his 15th-ranked Crimson
Tide beat Vanderbilt 20-0 Thursday
night.
DuBose took responsibility for his
team's tentative play, saying he
warned his players too much about
the variety of defenses and blitzes
Vandy ( 1-1, 0-1) would use under
new coach Woody Widenhofer.
"I think we may have uvertalked
and overcoached that they were
going to do some things that we hadn't seen, and I think our players were
just never real comfonable with what
we were trying to do, and that's my
fault," he said.
As Vandy's defensive coordinator
the past two seasons, Widenhofer
guided the unit to the 28th-bcstranking in the nation last year. He also
won rour Super Bowl rings coaching
defense with the NFL's Pittsburgh
Steelers.
Vandy held Alabama (2-0, 1-0) to
120 yards orfensc through three quarters. The Crimson Tide punted eight
times and didn't drive more than 22
yards tor·points until the fourth quar-

State, No. 20 •Kansas State vs. Ohio

U., No. 21 Michigan State v.&lt;. Memphis, No. 22 Virginia Tech vs. Syracuse, No .' 23 Southern Cal vs. Washington State, No. 25 Colorado State
at Utah State. ·
The victory was Alahamu's lirst
shutout of Vandy since a 41-0 victory in 1980 in Tuscaloosa. It also
extended Alahama's winning streak

rinplmuscn2·1J.4 · !CIJ'-M
··
,.
C h u:a):tl Culls ('I ra..:hsd f!-11) :II lu t~burgh
tCtll'dtl\'a J().7). 7:0.'i ]UH
l'olor;~ln {llllilL')' I.J.lJ) :11 1\ll:tf\1:1 (No.=:i!(lt! 20-.1),
7· 10 jllll.
.
Ln~ l\ng4.'1c.\ (Caudln!ll 10-.\ lm Huu~lnn (K •lc

Cuhll"allll ...................... ..
San Oh:~u ..... .

Thursday's ~ores
S:m Fnml'in·u ~ - Phil:klclphia J
N.Y. Mch 9, Monlrcul .IIi
Today's games

ter, when it ne~rly doublcJ its output
with 11 8 yards.
"Our defense did. a great job,"
Alabama wilback Dennis Riddle said.
"If it wasn't for the defense, We
wouldn't have won the game. We
need to play .the whole game the way
l"e played in the lounh quarter."
Alabama's victory kicked off
another weekend of Top 25 aciion.
Saturday will feature 19 games
involving rank.cd teams, including'
top-ranked Penn State playing host to
Temple.
Elsewhere, it's No.3 Washington
vs. San Diego State, No. 5 Florida
·State vs. Maryland, No. 6 Nebraska
vs. ,Central Florida, No .. 7 North Carolina vs. No. 17 Stanlord, No.8 Col orado at No . 14 Michigan, No. 9
Ohio State vs. Bowling Green, No.
fO LSU at Mississippi State, No. 12
Texas vs. UCLA, No. II Notre Dame
at Purdue, No. 13 Miami vs. No. 24
Arizona State, No. 16 Auhurn vs.
Mis~issippi, No. 18 Iowa vs. Tulsa.
No. 19 Clemson at North Carolina

IJ .(J), K · (~ jllll

. Sunday's games

.1

Cult•wt.luiiiAI Itml&lt;~ . l

DH : CINCINNATI (Rcmlin~cr 0-H :unl
S..:htltltck 5-1) al PhllaJJdphia (Stcp_l~nstm 6·5 111111
lcitl'r IJ. I ~~ - 5 :0~ p.111
Sm1 Fmncisco (Ruclcr 11-0);LI FlnrtdtL (Hcrnlln·

dcz 9-0). 7 :0~ p.m
Cbic:ago Cubs {8:uisca 0-.'1 at Plll ~ hur):h
(St.:hmith K·7). 7:05p.m.
Mtlnlrtal (V:~Ide~ 4-41 :t1 N.Y. Mcb (Junes 1-'·
K)._7.40 Jl.lll.
Culurodtl !Thomson 7-H) al Allnnla {M:uJt.lu-'
IK-41. NO p m.
.
•
· S.10 Oic~o (Ashby H-I OJ ill St. Umis (Murris 'J .
Kl.KWJl.m.

101•111

CINCINNATI :11 l•h ~ l :ttldplu ;t I .l~ 11.111
Culls 011 Plll~hur~ h . I :.l:'i p.m

Chit.:: t ~u

Mmnrcal :11 NY Mel'. 1-.UI p.m
S:m D1t.:~n :11 S1 . l.tllll,, . ::!: I ~ p m
Lt. I~ An!!dt~ ;d HouSIPtl. 2 l'i p 111
S:m Fr:ull:l ~~~~ al Flurida. -Ll\ 1"'-111-

Auto ra(iDJ::

H-!i) :11 N.Y. Mcls tis·

Amtril!un LraM_ut
•
IMLTIMORJ; ORIOLI:S: Cfou11tct.l (' l'll:~•hl·
Grct:tli! 411'1 w:II\ICf -' l'rollllhc Ncw·Ynrl.:. Mt:b .
Tmnsfcm·U RHP' Hudy &lt;.'!1J1pi1L~l'l lr(un Iill· I -~ 0

flurd1a ~cU

•

•

~~~~~.~., ",!~~2~ ..~~.. ~~·...'.~,~~.~! ,~
l~tic Thursday

night with a 15-10, 1513 win over Trimble in girls' high
school volleyball action.
Kara King led Southern in serving
points with 30, including eight in the
Ilrs t round. Stacy Lyons had five.
Jenny Friend had four, and 1hrec each
came from Cynthia Caldwell and
Kati Cummins. Kim Sayre had two.
Southern trailed 5-2 in the firsl
game after Trimble's Sara Kdth
ta.:ed up live puinl', but Kara Kmg
jli.tched two l(&gt;r Southern and Sayre
~ded nne for a 5-5 tic. Trim hie led

..
Southern suffered a dismal loss to
.Wellston Tuesday in high school
volleyball action, as Wellston won
15-8, 12-15, 12-15.
The win was reponed as one uf
only eight Wellston wins in the
Ii.l90s, the !irs! ever over. a Southern

~ 1

('

1hc nm·
1r:~r 1 11t' RHV l&gt;aviiJ Wc:tlhcrs frum llnlf:tlll 1~ 1 1hc

team.

Southern was led by Stacy Lyons'
16 points. Cynthia Caldwell's seven.
Kim Sayre's four, Jenny Friend's

•

Natiun11l tlut:kl'J l,l'IIJ:Ut'
BOSTON BKUINS S i~lll'tl (' J,~el l'qno,· w ;1

CH IC AGO lli.ACKHt\WK~ : Si!!llctl (.' S1d~

Duhmsky hi n nne-year cuniTHt.:l .

FI.Oki\)J\ 1'/\NTHUtS : Si!!llt.'t.II&lt;W Scuu._
Mcll;mhy h 1" h•ur-yc;ll' .:untra..:l
•
NEW YORK ~J\N(iEKS : S li!f!ct.l I·' T1~
SWt..'Cill.!)'.

LANE
ACTION

.
...

STOP Ill fOR A HEALTHY IUNCHI
SPECIAL TBII WEEK ONLY

PEEL TO EAT SHRIMP
15 pc. shrimp served on a bed of lettuc'
w/cocktall sauce on the side.

ONLY

8

.HEALTHY MEALS
GRILLED MAHI DINNER
1 piece Mahi served over Rice, Baked
Potato, Salad with tat tree Dressing

Calories
425

GRILLED SALMON DINNER
1 piece Salmon served over Rice. Baked
Potato, Sai.ad with 1at1ree Dressing

. '.!

Fat
1
.

265

1.5

,
..

~

GRILLED TUNA DINNER
1 piece Tuna served over Rice, Baked
'Potato, Salad with tat tree Dressing

285

"~.

GRILLED CHICKEN DINNER
Chicken Breast served aver Rice, Baked
Potato, Salad w~h tat tree Dressing

286

5

/

...'
·'

three, Jennifer Ycagucr 's lwo and
Kali Cummins' one.

Wellston was led by Faith Henry's nine, Rachel Henneman's eight,

April Higgintham's six, Casey Tanncr's six, Candy Robinette's tl1ur and
two-point cfl&lt;trts from Alicia Man in
and Punky Buchanan.
Southern won the lirst game 15-X
taking '' 11 -0· lead on nine. straight
serves by Lyons: · Southern let down

I

'

. . The Meigs golf team kept its per- were ·Dave Anderson's 37, Josh
·l'c4:t TVC record this past Wednesday Price's 41 and Jared Warner's 4l
by winning a Ohio Divisio~ mmch at
the Meigs County Gall Course.
~igs (42-0 in the TVC) is 60-14
overall.
:Meigs posted a learn score of 141
to' win the match. Behind the
MJiraudcrs were Alexander with a
1~5. Wellston (159), Belpre (165),
Vinton County (174) and NclS0/1Villc-York ( 194).
•Corey Smith of Wellston was
mat~h medalist with a one under par
33. Clay Crow led Meigs with an
even par 34. Mick Barr and Steve
McCullough added 35's. Other scores

B~lpre

Vinton County
Nelsonville· York

Thoma's five, Fallon Roush's three,
Dena Sayre\ two, Sarah Bmucr's
two and Laraine Law~on's one.

308 E~ MAIII ST.

[H;;DLET PO!tAC.

IO::aTi:lt:lle

SOMER
I SELLDOWN
CONTINUES
1997 BUICK LESABRE

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I

·•

1997 GMC SIERU PICKUP

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SALE PRICE

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1997 CHEVY CAVALIER

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SHARP!.

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1995 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP •••.••• _
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.

1994 CHEVY 5·10 EXT. CAB.................;...................................$11,200
Auto., air, aluminum wheels. more.

.'

1994 MAZDA B4000 PICKUP 4X4.............................................$11,BOO
5 speed, air, like new. ·

· .

.

1995 CHEVY C1500 PICKUP EXT. CAB ................................... $15,600

va. air, 32,000 miles.

1995 TOYOTA TACOMA 4X4 .... ;............................................... $14,900

5 speed, air

.

1994 GMC SIERRA ••••..•...•.......................•....•.........•.... ~ .....•...•... $14,900

va. auto., air, cass., sport side .

1996 CHEVY S-10 ...•....•...•...•....•....•....•... ~ ...... ~ .............•.....•...•... $10,400

Auto .. air, cassette, 22,000 miles .

1994 CHEVY S-10 BLAZER TAHOE 4 DR ................................$17,900
V6, auto., air, PW, PL, cruise.

&amp;
e•gs
Alexander
WellsJon

nine, Heather Darley's eight , Autumn

'A'E

5 speed, air, slereo, 8,900 miles.

(after six matches)
l'J.!tmM
.

in the second game 12-15 as a wellr&lt;mndcd Wellston effort coupled hy
Southern mistakes lcJ to the Tornadoes' demise .
Despite eight points from Ctldwell in the last game, Southern fell
12-15.'
Sayre was 29-32 setting with
eight kills. Caldwell haJ six kills and
two aces, Maynard was 28-29 se lling
with two aces, anJ Lyons hail three
blocks, and five k1lls; while Friend
had live kills.
Southern won the reserve contest
15-9, 15-5, lcJ h~ Stacy· Wilson 's

(52); McClure (ME) 16:20.5 (54):
Burke (G) 16:30 (5H); Myers (G)
16:42.9 (60); Miller (G) 16:51.3
(61); Woodyard (GJ 16:56.9 (62):
Miller (G) 16:57.5 (63 ).
Number of runners: 75
Junior high girls' race
(3,200 meters)
Team scores - Logan 49,
Wheelersburg 64, Cabell Midland 6H ,
Gallia Academy 80, Athens. 93.
Portsmouth 143. No team scores !'or
Ch!'sapeake, Meigs , Miami Trace,
Minford , Unioto and Warren Loco!.
Runners- First 10: Swisher (G)
14:04.9; Boone (CM) 14:21; Detty
(UN) l4:40.3: Howe (WH) 14:42.6:
Gehring '(L) 15:06.3: Klaibcr '(WHI
15:08.5; Burns (WL) 15: 11.3; Shrm
(L) 15:18.1; Wray . (PO) 15:34.6:
Beegle (G) 15 41.8 .
Other locals: Burdette (ME)
16:39.6 (20): Stroop (G) 16:42.9
(21); Purnell (G) 17:24 4{32); Burke
(G) 18:00.5 (35); Hogan (G) 18:02.9
(36); Walker (G) 18:04.5 (37); Fox
(G) 20:05.H (44); Davis (ME) 20:26.8
(45)
Number of runners: 54

Hi96 CHEVY S-10 EXT. CAB LS PKG...................................... $12,400

Ohio Division
s'andings

2

..,

game p01nts.
Trirnblerolledtoa I0-9advantagc · Southern won the reserve game
then Kara King toppedoffthe scor- 16-14 and I5-9 led by A~ber Mayi.ng with six straight, including game- nard's 12, ~cather Dmley s "'"~·Pal­
point to give Southern the w1n.
Ion Roush s SIX, Em1ly St1vers two, .
The night cap was equally com- and one each by Dena Sayre and
petitivc, as Southern got into its bum- Autumn Thomas.
.
.
set-spike routine. Trimble went ahead
Sayre was 42-51 sellmg Wllh an
10-7 on Sara Guinther serves, after ace, Caldwell had nme ktlls and three
King had tallied a striog or live ac.cs; Lyons three kills. three blocks;
including two aces.
· K1m !hie three kills, Jenny Fnend
Jenny Friend tied the score at 13- two k1lls and an ace; Kall Cummms
13 with four straight points. After two kills and a block; and Kmg three
Lyons added a single and after a cou- aces.

Mefgs .golfel"s win Ohio
Division home match ·

~

IWU·)'l'llf ClllllfoiC L

7.

·w ellston spikers tally first-ever
victory over Southern Tornadoes

Aml'rh:;,n i\ssul' i;•liuiJ . 1-Jt.:.,i)t nalcd W.HI' . 1
Molll~umcry fur : 1 &gt;~1): 11 1\lCIIt.
·n -:Xi\S RANOEitS Rclll'Wl'd 11u.: l'~lntrat:l.'
Dlo,J; llu~ll\:111 . II IIChlll~ Cl~ll:li , Jludy !k-111. hcnd1
l'llill.:h. Lmry Honlly. hull1t~:n L'l~ll:h . ltmly Jar:u ml-"
lu. hHIIIIlj!' n1ach. l:ll N:ljllllcun. fir~! h:t\t.: ~w•~'l.l!
olltd Jerry No•nun. lhml ha\c r llill'll. fnr lhl' I 'Jl~
~c:mlll . Namct.IIJun Kl'ynult.h n•YI!IJ: 11\Jilur - lc : J~Uc
luniu ~ m'lml'lur. llu1d1 WyJiL'f!itr r:Jh:liill}! in•uur1nr. a11d Juhu Crnt. llol~l'numm~ ami hunllll)t 111·
)/flit..lur fur lhl' llJIJK \1.':1\1111
1,

H11&lt;k&lt;y

volleys. Julie Bailey slipped in a coupic points. Angi Wolfe added anothe\, and Waterford seemed to slump
into a hibernation.
Karr served an ace plus another
good serve, then a Brannon spike on:
a Waterford defender added a tally
for Kim Mayle, who had her string of
four lift East~rn to 13-12. Caldwell
had three spikes in the drive .
Brannon added two off Karr
spikes, one a kill, and a Evans-Karr
block combination spumed another
Waterford little out at 14-14.
Caldwell added the last two
points. gaining the 15th off a killer
kill by Karr, then dropped in the 16th
for the EHS victory.
Caldwell had eight points, Brannun six, Evans five, and Mayle live.
Caldwell was 12-15 serving, 7-11
selling with three aces, two dinks and
three kills. Brannon was 10-P serving with two ace_s,_ a din_k. and scv~n
kills. ~arr had nme k1lls and SIX
blocks with three aces. Hayman was
24-30 selling with three for kills and
Evans was 26-33 setting with four fur
kills and an ace.
·

Southern volleyball team tallies

Skyline Speedway in Skwa(t ·
switches to SaturJay night this week
for its season L:h&lt;unpinship nlccs in all ,
divisions-Super Sprint&lt;, Pure Stoc~s,'
and Four tCylindcrs. Season Cball)pions Will he l.:rowncd.
·
Skyline will .run each of the next
four Saturdays, culminating with the:.
$4,000 to win Harycst 40 l(,r Supc'r: ·
Sprints on September 27. anJ the
Street Stock Nutional:o; tJn Ot:t&lt;lhcr 4. ;·
Warm-ups 'arc at 6:JO p.m. and
racing is·m K p.m.

Sq!tl~•l

t

Eastern lumbered through the second game, losing the intensity that
lcd them to an easy first game win.
Waterford took a 4-0 lead on D.
Arnold serves·. Katrina Greene laced
four points in a row for the cats
before Eastern called time out. Only
a Br~nnon tally kept Eastern from a
shutout at this pointS-!.
Tammi Huck ripped three hard
kills going down the stretch as Waterford skillfully worked the ball away
from Eastern frontliner Val Karr. This
same attack allowed WHS to get hard
spikes across the net and into the
EHS backrow, a part of the EHS
defense that did not respond well
until late in the second game.
Eastern fell 15-5.
In the last game, Waterford was
near-perfect, serving and spiking
with pinpoint accuracy. Eastern was
slow' and lethargic. Greene served
nine points straight, spanning a time
that saw Eastern call two time.outs as
the score pushed to 13-3.
An Evans-to-Caldwell set-spike
combination seemed to liven up the
Eagles and sparked several heated

-.

OH I.AN f)(l MACilt'. Sl)!llt.'d ( ' Um1 SdJotyt.·~ - ,, \
SM.'KAMFNTO KINCiS . Sij.!lh.'tl (' Slat.·t.•y
Km)!.. r MH.:hal'l ~ll'W:Ir) OI!UI !-' lk rt.-l Cirimmlll o
on..:-y..:ar t.'UIIIr;u:l'
1
WASHINCiTON Wli'.i\IWS -~'!!lll'd Ci Ci1nf

Transactions

ti:Jy IHihl' (l().J;iy Lli~ : lhlco.J li\1.
CLEVEI.ANU INDIANS :

Eastern win .

Skyline switches . J
racing to Saturday ~

CI.EV I·: LAND t'AVAI.II:H.S :

S..turday'• gomes

-CINC INNATI tlhuba K-IUJ 111 Plulnt.ldJ!hi;l

first quarter. lnstcnd, Vanderbilt ..
wound up punting. and Warren Fous1.1
. blocked it.

S!J:JWIICIIC Sl'llll

Bas• ball

(Gr.lt:C ].0). ! : J:'i p .IIL
Muntr~;~l (Hl'Wl:JfUun

ond first down on third-and- I in the ·

llasketball

HOUS H RAUN(i . Si~w.:t.l Wm~llfll Cui' tlmu
Juhuny lkumn lu a mull1yt.:;u ~lllllr:I L' I

S.m l· r:u1d~u {GuNner 12-HJ al l·londa (Drnwn

Widcnhofcr wa!- trying to bcl:um~;

only the second Vandy coach to win
his first two games since World War
1!.
·'
But Vanderbilt crossed midlici~
only four times and killed itse lf wit"
six penalties for 50 yards and sever:
'II dropped passes. The worst pcnah.
ty came with 12 men on the ficiJ as
Jimmy Williams picked up their sec-

N~llui\:11 K:~o;kt•lhall A..~IOU(iaiMtn

Lm An~dcs W11rk n-61 &lt;II Hnus1unl~~·y n11hl.~
6- IOJ,K:Ofi p.m.
Silll Di..i~to (Hitchcud: 10-V) ill Sl Luu1s
tAn. IJcuc~ 10-?J. I :O~JI.Ol

to 13 straight over Vanderbilt. ·a
school that hasn 't had a winning
record in 14 years. The Crimson Tide.
has dominated the series 36-2 since·
1960.

~

ST. RT. 7
POMEROY, OHIO
992·5829

Minford 236, Miami Trace 240,
Number of runners: 128
(16); Godwin (RV) 24:04.2 (36); (G) 26:24.1 (36).
South Webster 249, Athens 250,
Notes: Unioto finished ahead of Davison (G) 24:20.1 (42); ShoeNumber of runnel'&gt;: 41
Meigs 265, Manchester 316, River Vinton County by vinue of its sec- maker (G) 25:08 (54); Mollohan (G)
Junior high boys' race
Valley 385, Fairland 387, Unioto 388, ond, third and fourth runners finish- 27:07.9 (79); Connett (G) 28:36.3
(3,200 meters)
Vinton County 388, South Point 439, ing ahead of their Vinton County (92): Morgan ,(ME) 29:38.6 (96);
Team
scores
- Cabell Midland
RockHill490
counterparts.
Arrowood (RV) 32:30.7 (108); Bur- 15, Gallia Academy 51 , South WebRu~~~~ers- First 10: Swisher (G)
Varsity girls' race
delle (ME) 33:27.8 (II 0).
ster 93, Ponsmouth 96. No team
17:09.2; Swann (CM) 17:25.3; Ham(5,000 meters)
Number of runners : 112
scores for Athens, J.ackson, Logan,
mond (PK) 17:3 1.3; Smith (L)
Team scores - Galli.a Academy
Junior varsity boys' ra&lt;e
Meigs. Miami Trace, Minford, St.
17:41.2; D.O. (WE) 17:42.5; Mont- 37, Cabell Midland 64, Logan 88,
(5,000 meter.i)
John's, Unioto, Warren Local and
gomery (MN) 17:47 .5; Pearson (CM) ,Wheelersburg 146, Athens 149, West
Team scores- Cabell Midland Wellston.
17:52.1; Burchell (MN) 17:55.8; Day Onion 169, Unioto 17I,MiamiTrace · 16, Piketon 48, Athens 72. No team
Runners - First 10: Bennell
(PK)-17:59.3; Batey (CM) 18:00.3.
232; Vinton County 240, Jackson scores for Adena, Fairland, Gallia (CM) 12:02.9; Reed (CM) 12:04.3:
Other locals: Davison (G) 18: 12.5 250, Manchester 266, Adena 290. No Academy, Meigs, Portsmouth\ South
Rogers (CM) 12:05.7; Crowell {AT)
(18); Baker (G) 18:19.2 ( 19); Walk- team scores for Fairland, Meigs, Point and Wheelershurg.
12:22.4: White '(UN) 12 :22.8; Tuck·
er (G) 19:01 (41); Sims (G) 19:04.9 Piketon, Ponsmouth, River Valley,
Runners- First 10: Hess (CM) er (L) 12:28.2; Foreman (CM)
(42); Stanley (ME) 19:19.3 (46); Tay- Rock Hill, South Webster, Warren . 18:53.7; Perry (CM) 19:07.9;Bailey
12:3 116; Pauley (CM) 12:32.1; Deck
lor (RV) 19:19.9 (47); Adam Joseph Local and Wellston.
(CM) 19:24.9; Wheeler (CM) (\YE) 12:36; Sull'ridge (WL) 12:44.
Thomas (ME) 19:23 (48); Beha (ME)
Runners - First 10: Hitchon 19:26.9; MacCrae (PK) 19:42.3;
Locals: Hogan (G) 12:46.1 (II);
19:23 .5 (49); Parsons (G) 19:30.8 (MT) 19:24.7; Nchus (G) 20:02.3; Rupen (CM) 19:55.9; Shepherd (PK) Mollohan (G) 13:04.8 (14): Camp·
(55); Roush (ME) 19:32.5 (56); Well Mace ·(L) 21:07.8: Henson (G) 20:12.7; Stowassen (CM) 20:13.1; bell (G) 13: 19.3 (15): Roush (G)
(ME) 20:07.6 (72); Holcomb (RV) 21 :33.8; Maddox (CM) (CM) 21 :37; Batey (CM) 20: 13.4; Bentley (WH)
13:46 ( 19); Wheeler (G) 13;53.4
20:10.1 (74); Newberry (RV) 20:13.3 Balding (AT) 2 i :37.6; Butcher (WL) 20:16.
.
(23); Viall (G) 13:57.3 (24); Boone
(76); Smiddie (ME) 20:32 (86); Fow- 22:06.4; Enderle (L) 22:09.1; H.H.
Locals: Finney (G) 21-:44.9 (16); (G) 14:2 1 (25); Brandeberry (G)
ble (RV) 21:05.4 (97); Earley (G) .(WE) 22: 13.4; Rogers (CM) 22: 13.4; Stacy (ME) 22:00.6' ( 19); McCain
14:26.8 (27); Banks (G) 15:10.7
21:05.9 (98); Stout (RV) 22:02.7
Other locals: Smith (G) 22: 14.1 (G) 22:13.1 (20); McCall (ME) (37); Gilmore {ME) 15:00.6 (38);
(109); Rice (RV) 22:15.9 (Ill); (II); Vernon (G) 22:15.8 ( 12); Fisco 22:14.6 (21); Johnson (ME) 22:29.1
Schoonover (GJ 16:01.7 (47); ConCrane (ME) 22:28,2 (I 12).
(G) 22:31.5 (15); Tackett (G) 22:35.6 (24); Miller (G) 23:06.6. (26); nell (G) 16:03.3 (48): Matura (G)
Williamson (ME) 23:38.5 (29); Kuhn
16:09.1 (49); Patterson (G) 16:17.7

Eastern varsity sextet rallies
to top Waterford in three games

I J-ltl. I : IS 11.111.

..IIi~~

'

races.

Winston Cup slate and standings
By The Associated Press

The Dally SeRtiR&amp;I &amp;Page 5

Coaches l&gt;ost Gallipolis Invitational results

Page4
1997

White ·sox defeat Indians 7-5
By RICK GANO

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

30
22
20
II

7
0

&amp; Title Not
Included. All
Rebates to
Dealer.

�•
k

~

.

•
••
~

.,

ByTJ,e Bend

Friday, 8eptember 12, 1997

.

tr:

Friday, September 12, 1~...: .

is divorced? Better check the paper worki

,......,....,....,....,,_---. --,

her siblings and her mother and tell
I immediately contacted a lawyer.
Ann
them how they could reach her. .
He told me if I couldn 't find the
The first call I made was to my divorce papers, my 13-year marriage
LanderS
husband's ex-wife. Before Frank might indeed ,be. invalid. I also
""' ...., '"""' n~•
and_ I were married, .I had _met her learned tha_t the_law seldom pursu_es
syrnlictll" 1nd .Crcamn
-~ bigarmsts. Atter
&lt;
''"'"'"
bnefly on only two occaSions and report,u
muc h dIShadn't spoken to . her since. My cussion (mostly unpleasant), Frank
opening sentence was"! am Frank's finally got his divorce, and we were
Dear Ann ·Landers: Here is one wife."
.
legally married soon after. I considfor your "Would you believe it?" .
Before I could go any further, she er myself lucky that his ex-wife did·
file. I hope you will print it. There's said, " You are mistaken about that , n' t make things difficult.
a lesson here. .
honey. Frank and I are still married.
Please, Ann, tell your readers that
A few weeks ago, I picked up the If you don't believe me. ask him." I when they begin to get serious with
telephone and heard the voice of my did just that immediately. His a person who claims to be divorced ,.;
husband 's long-lost daughter. She response was a~ other stunner. He ask him or her to produce the decree.
had been out of touch with the fam· said, "She could be right. There If I hadn ' t made that call to Frank's
ily for years and had finally decided were a lot of papers to be signed al wife, I wollJd not have suspected a
it was time to let everyone know that time, and I didn 't pay much thing. If Frank had been killed in an
how she was doing and where she attention to them ."
accident, his wife could have turned
was living. She asked me to contact

A pos tolt c

up and laid claim to everything he that he loved me and promised thal strong, get sm;m, and get out. Don·· t:
owned, and I would have been a he would never hurt me again -- and waste those years like I did. -· ·
"nobody."-- Faux Wife in Tulsa
again, and again .
Moved on in Arkansas
"':
Dear Thlsa: Thanks for the eye."Average Girl" had .beller wi~
Dear Ark.: Bravo, sister! Wome¢
opener. You e_ducated a lot of people up, or she will be in· the same boat. wh_o tolera.te gelling knocked arountoday. Includmg me. I have learned Regardless of how sorry your man is , will contmue to get more of thC
plenty from my readers.
or how many times he says he "was- same. I'm glad your life is so muciC
Dear Ann Landen: The leiter n:t responsible" because he was better and that! helped. ·
from "Average Girl in Every City, drunk, it doesn ' t mean a thing. I
. :::
U.S.A." really hit a raw nerve. Her have been there, and let me tell you,
Gem of the· Day (Credit LOO:.::
boyfriend was abusive, yet she it nev'er gets better. In fact, it usually Holtz, Notre Dame): If you want tG::
claimed she loved him and wouldn't gets worse. I finally took your know something, don't ask the mon· :
give him up.
advice, Ann, and' threw the bum out. key. Go to the orJ!an grinder.
:.:
Let me tell you how it was to live
I am now married to a great guy
--. .,
with an abusive drunk who said, who really loves me and treats me Send questions to Ann Landers, Crc~::
"I'm sorry," for nine years. After we like a queen. ! cannot believe I lived ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenlury ::
manried , it got worse. I had black with that brute for nine years. My Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles. Calif,:;
eyes, bruises and a broken arm, message to all women who arc in
:-:
thanks to that animal who insisted abusive relationships is this -- · be 90045
:::
_~

•

Ritchie honored · by
Daughters of America
JoAnn Ritchie was honored at a
recent meting.ofthe Chester Council
323 Daughters of America held at
the hall.
She was escorted by the tlagbear· ers to the altar and was presented a
hardy mum. Erma Cleland read her a
poem and thank~d her for taking the
position of district deputy.
Jean Welsh reported on the state
session where she served as representativc for Chester Council.
Plans were made for obs'trving
quarterly birthdays at the next meeting. Announced was the celebration
of the 60th anniversary of Ella and
Ronald Osborne on Sept. 15.
Doris

ducted the meetmg which opened
with pledges to the !lag. scripture
readings, the l-ord's Prayer.· and
singing of the National Anthem .
Reported ill were Elizabeth
Hayes , Margaret Amberger and
Zcda Ri!ehic .
Anending were Gary Holter,
Marcia Keller, Erma Cleland: Ella
Osborne, Mary Jo ·. Barrmgcr,
Kathryn Baum. Dons Grucser.
Deloris Wolfe. Jean Wcls_h, Joann
Ritchie. Julie Cursit, Charlotte
Grant. Everett Grant. Opal Hollon,
Mary Holter, Thelma White: Sandy
While. Laura Nice. and Goldtc Fredcrick.

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

Patty Dyer was reelected Master
of Star Grange 778 when members
met recently at the Grange Hall.
Other officers elected were Larry
Montgomery, overseer; Vicki Smith.
lecturer; Bob Felly, steward; Ricky
Macomber, assistant steward; Maxine Dyer, lady assistant steward ;
, Janis Macomber. chaplain: Waid
Nicholson , treasurer, Opal Dyer,
secretary ; Kenny Bolin, gatekeeper;
Janet Morris, Ceres; Charlotte
Erie wine , Pomona: Martha Bartley.
Flora; and Carl Monri s, Executive
Committee.
In other business in the meeting,
conducted by Master Pally Dyer.
plans were made for displayi~g at
the Meigs County Fair, and Dyer
reported that Star Grange received
tenth place for the display at the
Ohio State Fair.
Jani s Macomber, community ser·
vice chairman, asked members to
get their information to her for the.
community service report. which is
due . the first of September.
Macomber said "Just Listen" for the
Deaf Committee Report.
,
.
Janet Monris, Women's Aclivities

St., Middleport
Sunday school -9:30a.m.

Worship - 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Free Will Baotht Chun:h
Aa.h Street, Middlcporf

Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service-7:00 p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:QO p.m.
Rutland Flnt ~pilot Church
Suriday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:4S a.m.
Po....-oy Fintlllpdst
East Main SL

be •
•

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Pomona Grange meeting will
September 5 at Hemlock Grange :
Hall with a potluck supper begin- :
ning at 6:30p.m.. followed by meet- :
ing at 7:30 p.m. Lawrence County :
Pomona Grunge will visit and it will :
he judging of all craft. sewing. art :
and (lhotography contests.
·:
The next meeting for Star Grange""
will be September 6 with a potluck~
supper at 6:30p.m. followed hy the:
meeting at K p.m.
.;
There ·were 41 members. junior'&gt;!;
and visitors in allcndan&lt;e.
!
'

Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southon B•f.dst
41872 Pomeroy Ptke
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
W911hip · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Fint Bopdsl Chun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer S1., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Service- 7:00 p.m.
•.

7-Up to rework soft drink's recipe to challenge Sprite.·

By KATIE FAIRBANK
AP Business Writer
DALLAS (AP) - - The maker of
7-Up is changing its flavor to make
it crisper and less sweet - thai is,
more like market leader Sprite.
Marketed in the late '60s as "the
Uncola," 7-Up rocketed in sales:
But in the past decade, 7-Up has
been losing market share to CocaCola Co.-owned Sprite and now
holds only 40 percent of the lemonlime drink category.

Dr Pepper/Seven Up will
announce the flavor change next
Monday at meeting of its bottlers
in San Antonio. a source close the
company. said Tuesday. The plans
were first ·reported by The Wall
Street Joul'l)al on Tuesday.

a

Mike Martin, a spokesman for Dr
Pepper/Seven Up in Dallas, said the
company had no comment.
Reformulating soft drinks can be
risky. Coca-Cola fooled with Coke
in 1985 and protests quickly forced

it to bring back the old flavor unde;
lhc name Coca·Coca Classic.
:
•
7-Up has been around for nearly.;
70 years, starting out in 1929 in St ~
Louis as . the Bib-Lahel Lithiate&lt;f.
Lcmon-Ltme Soda.
',-,,
Its · maker, the Howdy Co,.P"::.
soon shortened the name to 7UP.
Lithiated Lemon S.oda.

Silver Run Bapdsl
Pastor: Bill LiiUe
Sunday School· IOI.m.
Wo~thip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

.

ML Union Bapllst
Pastor : Joe N. Sll)'rc
. Sunday School-9:4~ a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SerVices ~ 6:30p.m.
Bellltehem Bapdst Church
Great Bend, Ro11te 124, Racine:, OH
Pasaor : Daniel Berdine:
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worshie- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Btble Study ·6:00p.m.

'

Howdy changed its name to ThO:
Seven-Up Co. in 1936, and by the
late 1940s 7-Up had become the:
world 's third best-selling soft drink-:

Sariah Brinker has first

Old Bethel F...., WID Bapdsl Cbureb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening~ 7:30p.m.

birthday celebration
Sariah Lee Ann Brinker, daughter
of Amanda Brinker of Pomeroy. celebrated her first birthday recently at
'her home.
A Pocohontas theme was carried
oul with cake, ice ~ream, punch. coffee and chip being served to those
attending.
At the party were Butch and
Penny Brinker maternal grandparents. Mildred Hubbard , maternal
great grandmother: Pat McGuire,
Rob. Audi and Wade Harrison ,
Donna Frank and Terresa Brinker.
Frank, Tammy and Daniel Brinker.
Mary Michellc Roush. Mary and
·Donna Bowen.
Briannc Proffitt, Amy Harri son,
Amanda Wells, Mark and Dustin
Salser. Scott and Mindy Brinker,
Latisha Price, Misti , Trenton and
Tyler Brewer; Virgil Dill. Doug,
Jenny, Drew. Daniel and Grcggy
Jenkins. Ann Jenkins, and Chelsie
Amns, Billy, Missy, Josh, Alex Morris, Laura, Carol Ann Stewart,
Amoretta Salser, Shirley Debhie ·
Tiffany, and T.J. Willis.
·
Sending gifts were Terry, Tina
McGuire, Roger, Diane Coates.
Kelly, Charlie, Ashley, Witney Wed·
die. Ronnie, Brenda and Zach Arms.
Bill. Kim, Amber Jordan Smerk, D.
J.. Lois. J. D. ad Daylon Jenkins.
Terry, Jodi Fields, Chuck. Vanessa ,
Odessa and C. J. Jacks, Patty !mhoden, Sally and Roger Holman.

Rodne Flnt Bapllst
Paslor: Rev. Lawrera T. Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo"hip · 10:40 a.m.,.7:00 p.m.
Wednc5day Services • 7:00 p.m.

Thursday Services • 7:30

TUPPERS ·PLAINS
DEPT.
Will '"II HAVING A
FUND DRIVE SATURDAY THE
13TH OF SEPTEMBER
STARTING-AT 9 A.M.

Hlllolde Bapdol Chon:h
St Rt 143 jusi off Ri. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship -1la.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory Boptlollridependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- IOI.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Follll Baptist Cbureh
Railroad St., Mason
Sundar School ·10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

FIRE PERSONNEL WILL BE
GOING DOOR TO DOOR,
AS ALWAYS.

Fohst Run Bopdst
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday SchooJ • 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m.
ML Morioh Bopllsl
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Re11. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.D'!.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR

Anllqalty Bapdst
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Sunday.Evening- 6:00p.m.

SUPPORT.

SARIAH LEE ANN
BRINKER

Rutland Free WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Catholic
Stcred Hean Catholic Cbun:h
161 !.(uiberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sal. Con . 4:4S-5:15p.m.; Mass· S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass - 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mass· 8:30a.m.

Church of Clmst

''The A1tion Tracie''
THIS SATURDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 13~~~
THE UNITED APPEAL ~",\
C
ONSHIP
w

u

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nrwy
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lllrnrf £1. h4 Plr~u,

• 4l'l1leel AAII·lock 8 , Ouol Ailblgs .
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Country
Moadlty- FrldltJ:. lG ....t pm • S.turdlty: 9 am·7 pm
Clolod Suadlty

/I I/ I I I\ II I

::; Ill .:_'_',, ,, , :,_ ' .'::I I 1.'.' /1 ,-,/,

Congregational
Trinity Chun:h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:2!5

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

Holiness
Danville Holiness Chun:h
31057- State Route 325, l..angsvlle
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.

Nazarene

Chesl&lt;r

.•

Pa~tor : Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servlc~s - 7 p.m.

Reedsville
l)stor: Re.v. Charles Mash
Worsh1p · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
First Sunday of Mon1h- 7:30p.m. service

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene ·
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Tupper! Pllins St. Paul'
Pastor: Sharon Hausman ·
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
~uesday Services - 7:.30 p.m.

ChestqChurch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate ·
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Centnl Cluster
AJbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School -9:45a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

. ..,
""', _; ,''.
··"
• ,;

..

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry His. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbaih School - 2 p.m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

United Br ethren
ML Hermon Uolled Brethren
In Christ Chun:b
Texas Community off CR 82
Pascoe: Raben Sanders
Sunday School-9:30 a.m:
Worship~ 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethren in Cbrill
2 1/2 miles nonh of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev . Robert MLU'Id~y
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Sunday Worshtp - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

While's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road·
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service: - 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
L.etar1, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible St 'dy · 7:00p.m.

Hanest Outnach Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDani'cl

crow s Fami.Iy

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Seventh-Day Adventist

E'reedom Gospel Minion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willfortl
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

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

Mlddlepoi1Pmbyterion
Sunday ~hool - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road
Paslor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30' a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Portland First Chun:h of the Nazarene
Pastor: Mark Malson
Y{ors hip- 10:30 p.m.
S'unday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

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

Presbyterian

South Beth~l New Tedarnf:nt
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Rober1 Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m. , 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

SyrKUsc Church ottbe Nazarene
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

''

Middleport Pente«:ostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev . Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Full Gospel Ughthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pa.~tor : Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday· 7:30p.m.

Reedsville Fetlowsblp

long Bollom

; ·,

United Foith Church
Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robcr1 E.'Smith, Sr.
Sunday School- ~ : 30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a:m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Church or tbe NIDn!Be

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

Past~r: Lawrence Bush .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service -7 p.m.

w

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

,.m.

Mt. OUn Community C.bun::h

Mlddlepol1 Chun:h of tbe Nuon:ne
Pastor: G,.gory A. CUridiff
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesd&amp;.y Services- 7 p.m.

Assembly
S1. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eve ning - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p .~.

Horrisonville Pmbyteriau Chorch
Worship- 9 a.m.
Suriday School · 9:45a.m.

Faltll. Go!pel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonthip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

f

Pentecostal
Pent~ostal

S)'ra£ust Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening- '6 p.m.
Wed nesday Service - 7 p.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
WedneSday Service • 7 p.m.

Ton:h Chun:h
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m.

Melp Coopentl"'e Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

RuUand Chur&lt;h or God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6
Wednesday Services- p.m.

Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
· Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

HockiDKPOI1 Cburch
Grand Street
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 11 a.m.
Wednesday ServiCes - 8 p.m.

New Life Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wed nesday· 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Syncuse First United PresbYterian
P:istor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday Scllool- 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Dyesvllte Communliy Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Deibel Chur&lt;b
Township Rd, 468C
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship~ 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Cllnon Tabem•cle Church
Clifton, W.Va .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
. Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Faith Valley Tabemacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt 124
Pa!itor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor.;hip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parioh
Paslor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chun:b
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday Schqol - 10 a.m.
·,
Worship · 9 a.m.
TuesdaY Services - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. .Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Mt. Mo'rtab Chiln:h of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday Scnool· 9:45a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts- 7 p.m.

Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. offSt Rt 160

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wors~ip - 11 a.m.

Groham United Mtlloodltt
Worship · 9:30a.m. (1st&amp;. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Church of God

Syracuse Flnl Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev, David Russell
Sunday Sf:!hool and Worshif' • 10 a.m. ·
Evening Services- 6:3 p.m.
WednesdaY Services-6:30p.m.

East Letart

United Methodist

Hanford, W.Va .
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School- 1l a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Mlddlepol1 Community Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollOa.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wed.nesday Service. 7:30 p . ~.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lulheron Church
Comer Sycamore&amp;: Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship~ 11 a.m.

c•rlatian Unloa

Endllme House of Pnt)'~r
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: J{obcrt Vance
. Sunday worship- 10 a.m:
Wednesday service - 6:30p.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Dewaylie Stutler
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsnip · 10:45 a.m. (lsi &amp; 3rd Sun)

- ·Our Sniour Lutllerao Church
Walnut and Henry Sts.• Ravenswood, W.Va.
1
lntrim pastors: Rev. Raben Hupp
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worship -11 a.m.

Chr;s tr an Unron

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

MornlnK Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School~ ll'a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Lutheran

Hanford Cburch of Christ IIi

Harri10n~ille

Carmel
.
Pastor: Dewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo • 9:30 a.m.
Wo(Ship . 10:4~ a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

SL John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Reedsville Ckureh of Christ
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

New Lime RLI., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Apostolic Flilh
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Mete·r
Sund.ay-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday· 7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

TIME FOR
CLEANING?

I

Restaural"!t

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken·

228

w. Main St., Pomeroy

--------~

·

Clean out your basement or
attic with the help of the

WJJH AWANT AD
992-5432
CLASSIFIED SECTION!
~~----~-.----------~~~~~-+-----------+--~~~---4--~RACINE MOWER
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
~
Veterans
:Francis FLORIST
Devla-Qulckel Agency Inc.
INSURANCE .
.
CLINIC
PHARMACY
Memorial
Meyp Coun!y; Oldes! Floris!
... .,d,_

• C.SI:im Ctoll • Aktmiun Wheels
•lllodod!

"'*
[IQIIIIllllrtm UIC road IDa bella' lm....,.-

Uberty Christian Chun:h
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service· 6:30p.m.

The Belleven'·Fellowshlp Mlnislry

Bethany
Pastor! Dc:waync: Stutler
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

The Church of Jesus
Christ of taller-Day Soials
St Rt. IM, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.
'

Hickory Hlllo Chun:h of Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Church announcements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

• ~· Slaeilng

·
· TPC Fresll Start Flnaocln~
.
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c:ar.lnlt II',.. m lllll kj- ..,. ... IIIOd.MI um·o nmr an ldlafldprta: b' l"nSSSian tlnantlllll CIIIII-8»8Z2j)tl7 tOOa) Ml ror 1111
11'C !mihSian l'llllllq~ll' Yl8k 'llloil'&lt;deiOiintylllda)Ld 111po I"" I

Pomeroy Cbun:h ofCbrilt
212 w. Main Si.
Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School~ 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Brodfonl Chun:b or Chrisl
Comer of Si. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister:"Bill Amberger
. Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesdak' Services -7:00 p.m.

Churc:h or je!IIUI Christ.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship -· 9:30a.m: and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship se rvia 7 p.m.

Snowville
Sunday SchOol- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Reorp•lzed Church of Jesus Christ
or Latter Day Slinls
Portland-Racine Rd.
Branch President - Michael Duhl
Sunday Sc:hoot · 9&lt;30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

RtJol&lt;in&amp; Ufe Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian Fellowlihip Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fe llowship Sunday, 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Rutland
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce ,
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:15 ~.m .

Latter-Day Saints

Rulhmd Chun:h of Christ
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

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

Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -11: 15 a.m., 7 p.m,
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Roc:k Spri.P
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
• Worship • 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

Rutland Commulllty Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday Sctlool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Bnulbury Church of Chriol
PMtor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:){) a.m.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Christian Fellowship Ctnter

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesdcl'j- 10 a.m.

. Laurel CUir F... Methodist Church
Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday School-9:30a.m.Worship· 10:30 s.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Tuppers Plain Chur&lt;h or Christ
lnstrumetilal
Pilitor: Scot Brown
Worship Servict- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:1S a.m.

Hemlock Gron Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday 8Chciol • 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

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

HyHII RUn HoUaes~ Cltun:b
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor: ~ev. Fr:ankHn Dicke"f
Servtct: Fnday, 7 p.m.

Faith Chapel Open Bible Church
9~ S. Third St., Middleport
S:emor Pastor Michael Pangia
Res•dent Pastor Richard Vermillion
Sunday serviCe, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

MlnenviUt

Wesleyan Bible Holiaeu Churc•
15 Pearl Sl., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service • 10 a.m.
Worship-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

F•lth Fellowship Cn&amp;udt for Cbrist

Appe Ufe Centrr
•full-Gospel Church ~
Pastors John &amp; Pall )! Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773·5017
Service time : Sunday 6:00p.m.

Pastor. Charles Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Pine Gn&gt;Ve Bible Hollnen Cborch
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Zion Church of Cbritt
Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd. (Rt.l4l)
Pastor: Roger Wat5on
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
. Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts ~ 7 p.m.

Sunday Services: tOa.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wedne!iday Services • 7 p.m. ·

Heoth (Middlepol1)
Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rose of Sharon Hollneu Church
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

llnrwoltow Rldae Church or Chrill
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

l.anpvllle Christian Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

FDI'Ht Run
Pastor. Charles Neville
Sunday School- 10·a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Thursd;ly Services -6:30 p.m.

Clival']' PIJ&amp;rtm Clllpd
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship · l1 a.m.; 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Keeo Clturth of Christ .
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday SchoOl· 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

...

Chairperson reported on judging Class G, quilted pillow, Rose Barresults from the contest judging held row, first place. Bernice Midkiff,
in July as follows: Class A Afghans. second place, and Opal Dyer, third
Maxine Dyer, first place, Pauline place: stuffed toys. class B. Rose
Rife. second place. and Rose Bar· Barrows. first place and Martha
rows, third place. Class B plastic Barlley, second place; vest, Rose
canvas , Rose Barrows, first place. Barrows, lirst place; wood craft.
Opal Dyer. second place, and Max- Bernice Midkiff, first place;dccoral·
in c Dyer. third place; Class C cd sweatshirt. Bernice Midkiff. first
embroidery, Rose Barrows, first place, Janis Macoinbcr, second
place, Janet Morris, second place; place; young adult ·married decoratClass D. something to wear, Rose ed straw hat .and wooden center·
Barrows, first place; Class F, craft piece, Janis Macomber, lirst place.
project, Eldon Barrows, first place;
Dyer announced that the next
·

"-roy Wtolllde Cordi ofCiuill
33226 Olilclreo's Home Rd.
:;wtda~ Scbool • It a.m.
Worsbtp- 10&amp;.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~ices . 7 p.m.
Mlddltport Cban:h of Christ
5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hartson
YOlllh Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WorshiP' 8: t~, t0:30 a.m., 7 p,.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Military News Dyer elected to Grange postl
and comm itment, and what the
Kevin T. Napier
Navy Lt. Kevin T. Napier. a 1985 words mean in guiding personal and
graduate of Kyger Creek High professional conduct.
Jones and fe llow recruits ended
School. was recently meritoriously
the
training phase with The Crupromoted to his present rank while
cible,
a 54-hour team effort, problem
serving at Nayal Hospi tal in Cherry
solving
evolution which culminated
Point. N.C.
.
with
an
emotional ceremony in
He joined the Navy in April,
which
the
recruits were presented
1994. Napier is a 1989 graduate of
the
Marine
Corps
emblem , and were
the University of Georgia in Atlanta,
with a B.S. degree, a.nd a 1994 grad- addressed as "Marines" for the first
uate of the Medical College of Geor- time since boot camp began.
Jones joins 41.000 men and
gia, Augusta, with an M.D.
women who will enter the Marine
Corps this year from all over the
Eric P. Jones
Marine Private Eric P. Jones, son country.
He is a 1995 graduate of Southof Rhonda G. McGrath of Long Botem
High School.
tom, recently completed basic training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Parris Island , S.C.
Jeffrey R. Martin
Jones successfully completed 12
Marine Pfc. Jeffrey R. Martin,
weeks of training designed to chal- son of Thomas and Myra Martin of
lenge new Marine recruits both Racine, recently reported for duty
physically and mentally.
with 2nd Battalion. lOth Marines,
Jones and fellow recrui.!_s began 2nd Marine Division, Camp Lejctheir training at 5 a.m., by runnmg une, N.C.
'
.
three miles and performing calisMartin's new as.&lt;ignment is an
thenics. In addition to the physical example of how Navy and Marine
program, Jones spent numerous Corps men and women are assigned
hours in classroom and field asstgn - to ships, squadrons and shore comnients, which -included leamjng first mands around the world. Whether
aid, uniform regulations, combat serving in the Persian Gulf near Iraq
water survival, marksmanship, · or in the Adriatic Sea ncar Bosnia,
hand-to-hand combat and assorted peopie like Martin arc making a difw~apons training. They perl'ormed ference as they work to improve
close order dtilk and operated as a their knowledge and skill as part of
small infantry unit during field _train· the most highly technical naval
·
force in history.
me.
· "Jones and other recruits also
The )996 graduate of Meigs High
received instruction on the Marine School joined the Corps in February,
Corps' core· values:· ho~or, coura!JC _ 199_7.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

The Daily Sentinel
Page&amp;i:
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hge a • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Drug-defying TB spreads .to 42
states; total U.S. cases down slightly
reselm:hers.
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
" All states must be prepaRd to
AP Medical Writer
deal with drug-resistant TB," said
CHICAGO (AP) - A highly Dr. Marisa Moore, lead author of the
drug-resistant tuberculosis found in CDC report published in Wednesonly 13 states six years ago has day's issue of the Journal of the
spread to 42 states, although the American Medical Association. ·
total number of the hard-to-treat TB
Tuberculosis, which often strikes
cases nationwide has declined, fed- the lungs and is curable, experienced
era! researchers say.
a resurgence 12 years ago after the
More than 21,000 people got United States rela.ed its TB prevensome type of TB last year in the tion efforts. Although TB has since
United States and more than ·t,400 fallen off, slowing efforts to stamp it
died of it in 1994, the latest year for out would be a mistake, say
which mortality figures are avail- researchers.
·able, according to the Centers for .
"This is really a war we're in ...
Disease Control and Prevention.
and now is not the time to abandon
But in the past few years. a form the- battle," said Dr. Lee B. Reichof TB that resists the two drugs nor- man. executive director of the New
mally used to cure the bacterial Jersey Medical School National
infection has spread throughout the Tuberculosis Center.
country.
Reichman did not participate in
·From 1993 through 1996, a total the CDC study, but did write an ediof 1,457 multi-drug resistant TB. torial accompanying it.
cases were recorded, which is about
Because TB is curable, many
2.2 percent of the roughly 66,000 doctors support forcing treatment on
TB cases that appeared in the United . people who resist help and are conStates during the same period.
· sidered public health threats. Mos_t
However, the number is on the of the uncooperative TB patients in
decline: There were 488 cases of the United States are among the
multi-drug resistant TB in 1993, but homeless and mentally ill, and twoonly 237 cases in 1996. Still, the thirds are said to be past or present
numbers could climb back up, warn abusers of alcohol or drugs.

Wednesday's edition of the Journal also inclUded the results of two
state efforts at treating uncooperative TB patients.
California 'found that jailing
uncooperative TB patients to ensure
they finish therapy resulted in 84
percent of them completing treatment.
However, Massachusetts reported it was able to get 98 percent of
such patients to complete treatment
through a special program of voluntary as well as involuntary hospitalization.
Forced treatment might be unnecessary if sufficient community services were available for substance
abusers, the homeless and the mentally ill, suggested Reichman, who is
based at the University of Medicine
and Dentistry of New Jersey in
Newark.
Until then, the approach used by
Massachusens "seems more effective and certainly more compassionate but, at least in the short term,
.clearly more costly,'' he wrote in his
editorial.
Tuberculosis kills more people
worldwide than any other infection.
About 3 million people' die each
year from TB.

Meigs Communify Calendar
The Community Calendar is pub- Grange, bowling and pizza Party,
lished as a free service to non-profit Sat.urday, 2:30 p.m. at he Skyline
groups wishing to announce meeting Bowling Lanes in Gallipolis.
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
pOMEROY -- Return Jonathan
fund raisers of any type. Items are Meigs Chapter, DAR. Saturday,
printed as space permits and cannot Meigs County Public Library,
be guaranteed to run a specific num- Pomeroy, 10 a.m. Following busiber of days.
·
ness meeting, the members will go
FRIDAY
to the courthouse where Nancy
MIDDLEPORT -- Women's con- Campbell will talk on tax dollars
ference will be held Friday and Sat- and how they are spent. This will be
urday, 7 p.m. at the Ash Street the beginning of the DAR, recognizFreewill Baptist Church. Pastor Les ing the 208th celebration of the signHayman will speak on loneliness, ing of the constitution of the U.S.A.
depression and unsaved spouses.
Constitution Week is S~pt. 17-23.
CLIFION -- Hymn sing at the
Clifton Tabernacle 7 p.m Friday.
Singers to include Junior and Rita
White. The Clarke Family, and Dennie Sergent.
LONG BOTIOM -- Hymn sing
Friday, 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel .Church, Long Bottom. The
Peacemakers to sing.

SUNDAY
RUTI.AND -- Rutland Church of
God homecoming, Sunday. Morning
service will feature Jim Satterfield
as guest speaker. Dinner will be at
12:15 p.m. and the afternoon program featuring gospel singing by
"The Murphy Family" of Marietta
and "The Spiritual Life Singers" of
Idaho will begin at 2 p.m. Randy
Barr, pastor.

SATURDAY
.
LONG BOTTOM -- Mt. Olive
Community Church. Long Bottom,
7 p.m. Saturday. Builders.Quartet ot
Ripley, W.Va. to sing. Public invited.

ROCK SPRINGS -- Songfcst.
Sunday at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church, 2 p.m. Revival
·services will he held a.t the Rock .
Springs Church Monday. Tuesday
and Wednesday at 7 p.ni. Joe Rader.
SALEM CENTER -- Star Junior speaker.
'

P&amp;G to offer upstate New
Yorkers coupons in settlement
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
Associated Press Writer
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)- Proc)er
&amp; Gamble Co. and nine other companics agreed to provide $4.2 million in coupons to settle charges that .
they acted in unison to deprive consumers in western New York of
coupons la.&lt;t ·year.
The coupons. good for $2 each,
will . be printed in Sunday newspapers in the Rochester. Syr:tcusc and
Buffalo areas. They will be good for
any of the companies' products
except alcohol and tobacco, Attorney General Dennis Vacco said.
The companies do not admit any
wrongdoing.
Vacco launched an antitrust
investigation following P&amp;G's nocoupon experiment in western New
York last year. .in which the company said it would lower prices instead
of providing coupons. The company

calls coupons inefficient. saying
only 2 percent of the millions it distributes are ever redeemed.
The experiment was meant to last
18 months but was cut short al'ter 14.
Vacco accused other companies of ·
cooperating with P&amp;G's experiment, in violation of antitrust law, by
reducing or eliminating their own
coupons.
Vacco said the manufacturers
"must be held accountable for the
injury done to consumers while they
unlawfully withheld coupons. "
Cincinnati-based P&amp;G. which
has worldwide sales of $35 billion a
year, makes such products as Folgers coffee, Tide detergent, Crest
toothpaste, and Pampers disposable
diapers. ·
Other companies joining P&amp;G
include Clorox Co.: Colgate-Palmolive Co.; Lcvc1· Brothers Co.; DowBrands; Fort .James Corp.: S.C.

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

: ill®OO @JlJ[U][[lf~ :
: THE CHESTER NAZARENE CHURCH :
**
*
The "Sunshine Singers"
Wellst~n,
*
*
IS PROUD TO PRESENT
from

:

Ohio

Sunday, September 14 atl:30
:
C:O.... ,.,.. Join Us for Tllb Spcdllllwnt ·• -

Public Notice
~r·at Intent
with
mutt bo •nt to:
reapect to the leeuance, quoott
Hoorlng
Cieri&lt;, Ohio Envidantot, etc. of o permit, ronmental
llcenH, order, etc. Inter- Ag1ncy, P.O. Protection
1041,
. - peraont mor tultmlt Colutllbut, OhioBox
&gt;13215-UMI
written comment• or (T'olophono: 11'-M4-2121J.
requ111 o pubic mMtlng "Fintl Actlono" oro octlont
regarding draft actlono. of
tho Director which oro
Commenta or public etrectJve
IIIUIII'ICe or I
milling roqu11te muol bo otolod upon
olfoctlvo dolo.
aubmlttocl within 30 d•r• ol Purouent to Ohio Rovlatd
notice of the droll action.
Socllon 3745.04, a
"Propoood Acllone• oro Codt
llnol
action
mer bo apwritten otatomonto ol tho pealed to tho EnvlronmOI'IIII
DINC!or'o Intent with Rovlow
Apptolo Commlo·
reapec1 ' to the leeuance, tlon (ERAC)
formerly
donlol, modification, ravo- known
••
the
Environcetlon, or renew11 of a mental Boord ol Aovlow)
by
permit, IIHIIH, or variance. 1 peroon who hoo o party to
Written commontt and o procttdlng before lht
requ ..to for 1 public dlroctor by !fling "" tppool
mooting regarding a' within
doyl of notleo or
propotod ..lion mar bo tho ftnol30action.
Purauont to
aubmlttod within 30 doye ol Ohio RoviHCI Codo
notice of tho propoood 3745.07, • flnol Section
·ocllon
action. An odludlcollon ltoutng, dtnylng, modifyhoorlng may be hold on o Ing, revoking, or renewing a
propoood action Wo hoorlng
roqutat or obJection to =~~~.,~~~~~';;~~;!Jt~~c:
rocolvod by tho OEPA within propoood action, may be
30 doyo of ltouonco of tho oppoolod to lht ER~C by
propo.aod action. Wrllton filing on appeal within 30
comment•, raqu11l1 for doyo oltuuonct olthtlfnel
public moatlnga, and octlon. ERAC oppetlo muot
. odludlcotlon hotrlng rt· bo flltd with: Envlronrnontol Rovlow Appeals
Commloolon, 238 Eut Town
Street,
Room 300,
Columbuo, Ohio 43215. A
copy of tho oppeol mull be

BINGO
RUTLAND
POST 467
.
6:30P.M• .
STAR BURST
.

POMEROY -- Homecoming
Sunday at the Zion Church of Christ,
Harrisonville Road. Roger Watson,
pastor. Services, Sunday school at
9:30a.m.; morning worship at 10:30

$1500.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

a.m.;. carry·in dinner at noon, and

BEECH GROVE
.ROAD

afternoon program at2 p.m.

CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
453, F&amp;AM. and Pomeroy OES
186, annual picnic, Roger and Paula ';:==H=a=pp=y=A=d=
Gaul farm, 4 p.m. Sunday, Take '
covered dish and lawn chair.
Happy Birthday
CHESTER -- Homecoming, Sunday at the Chester NaZarene Church.
The Sunshine Singers of Wellston ;
will sing at the afternoon service at .
I :30 p.m. The public is invited.

Friday, September 12, 1117·

ft'rop.

Remodeling

&amp;J

11·22·97

7-18-97

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators ·
Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Uncle U Aunt_,., U _5 JNila
. Borton, Couifn r.r. Nicole u

o....,-c..................... Wlllt.ms
. 110

Pomeroy,OH

~4

12,1tc
In Memory
In Loving M81T10fy of
Charles Asa Bradbury
on his 75th birthday .
September 12, 1997 ·
Sadly
by his

m-

SuzaMe, Aaa,

Help Wanted

81 today.

l.itllt fllinJrs
.,., Worl/1 Alol

Love Alwuys,
Your Family

in

lht Ct.ssi{itd Stet ion!

HtlpWinted

LL BUILDERS
· I INC
,

C'.)~

COUNTY: MEIGS

§
t:;;::.
:::S:

~
~
~

~

·U

""'
::""'!

t:d

U

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho following oppllctllono
oncl/or verified cornplelnta
were received and · the

following droll, propooad,
or lfnol octiDno _,. luuod
by the Ohio Environmental
Protoctlon Agency COEPA)
loat-k. "Actlono: lnelude
tho adoption, modlllcollon,
or repeel of ordera (other

than trntrgency orderot;
the

IIIUIDCI,

denial,

modlflcetlon or revocation

. of llcenHa, permhs, \leena,

verlancea, or certlflcatea;

and tho approval' or
dloopproval of plant and
apeclllootlona. "Dr oft
Acllono": oro written alate·
manto of tlie Director of
Environmental Protec-tiDn't

____ _ __
,_

The family at Phyllo
Morris would like to
express our thanks to
all our family, frlenda
and rtelghbou for
their prayers, klndneaa, flowere and
food.

Special thanks to Dr.
Vallee, the Hotplce
nursea, the nuraea
aids, .Johanna Imboden, Mr. Amoa Tlllla
and the pellbearers.
Thanka to the
Pomeroy Fisher Funeral Home and their
lblfl.

Walter &amp; Nancy Morrie
Roland Morrla
Janet Manual

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614~992-7643

Card of Thanks
The Racine
: Firemen's Auxiliary
• would like to thank
everyone for their
· support In making
our Chicken·
Bar-B-Que and
•. Ice Cream Sales a
huge success.
We appreciate your
patronage.

Gallia-Meigs CAA. is accepting. applications for temporary employment as Flood Clean Up Laborers. Work will involve clean up of
creeks and streams, repair of public facilities, and other related
duties. Wage rate is $6.55 per hour plus benefits, employment is
expected to last until December 31,1997. All persons employed
receive First Aid and Chain Saw Operation training plus required
safety equipment.

W. Lou. You V..-,
Muef!
Remembering all the yoolerdayo, the opeclal growing
years
·
·
Spent with family, frtoncll end thorad with amllea and
teara,
Remembering oil the yeoterdoyo and, knowing 11 I do,
The love In thoao owHI memorlea It oil wrapped up In
you.
On thla opeclol 30th birthday, we love you very much.
Sadly mlooed, mother "Ruth" Carpenter, "Dad"

859 Third Avenue 331 OS Hiland Road
Gallipolis
Pomeroy
614-446-1018
614-992·2222

*Cheshire, Ohio
*
*
*
*
*
*
·*
*

.

:
*

The Senior CommunitY Service Employment program in *
conjunction with the Gallia/Meigs Community Action has *
openings for a Transportation Drlv_e r and e Clerical *
Alde.lf you are at least 55 years of age or older, and *
meet the income eligibility guidelines you could be *
working 20 hours a week making $5.15 per hour. *
Contact Donna Dodds-Aife at COAD~ Title V by calling *
1-614-594·8499 Ext. 231.
.
*

*

* Trtle V is a project of Corporation for Ohio Appalachian *
* Development of Athens, OH and is an Equal Oportunity
* Employer
.
*

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

''F'•CTORY
t1l.
DIRECT
PRICES''
·
d
S
Quality Win OW ystems

110 Court St.
992-4119

.

985-4473
7/22/lln

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881

113 W. 2ND ST.

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

I

'

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

3127/TFN

Pomeroy,
Middleport

949•2168

. 511Mfn

• Top. Trim • RemovaI
, Stump Grinding
20 vrs. Exp .• Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

24 Hr. Emergency

.

&amp; VIcinity
AU Yard SaiH lluat Be Pelllln

oleverylhingl Saturday, D/131Q7
and S..ndar, D/1 ~7.

~=======~ Sepl
131h, 9am, Ivan Powell ro~dance acro11 atreet from Wagn-

R L HOLLON
•

TRUCKING

ef'a Hardware In Racine, very
l•ge sale.

Yard oala, S.p1: 121h-?, 9:00-?,

lang Bottom, 2nd house on lah
behinCiposloff108.

DUMP TRUCK

PI&amp;. yPielcaslnityant

SERVICE ·
Ume&amp;tOne Gr&amp;Ve I
0

Dirt • S Ind .

985-4422

' 2e05 JollellOn Avanut, 8·2 5al·
. urdar. Children, won, adull clotl&gt;: lng, exercise bike, bathroom
' ~ric,·rnilc.

Chaster, Ohio
BO
Auction
L::;:::;::::=;r~lll2:;""""";;:::l
and
Flea Market
r

Opening 9·1·97

L&amp;J
SWAP•SH Op

~~~~~::
.~~·=141h. Cuh Onl)r Pleaae.
AUCTION Fri. I Sal. 7pm. Ill.
Alia Auellon Rl. 2 1 33 "Cross·
raacls• E~ary week from now_Iii
Chrlslrnas. DIHtrenl dealer tach
nlghl. JeH Dyke Sal S.pl 131h.
Fri. GroG,eries, new 1 used mer--~ Ed Fraz18f' ......,.
w--oa.
·-·
llolnla Bolita
Frtnc:h500FieaUarkM
Gallla Coun~r Jurlor Faq-ounds
Sopt131h and t41h
lnftOGr~-ild&lt;H Food'Boolh
~ 'i1G
BoonloBobl•

We Buy, Sell
and Tirade
· an d
NeW
Used Items
202 E. Main St
Pomeroy, Oh.
• 992_9086
61 ...
8127/t7 1 mo. pd.

~.

•

~-----_
- -_-~-~c.~~ ~~-~~--~
-

I!!IL.I-LI.L..

...

--

Cleaning

(HEVALIER I$
TUESDAY NIGHT
FAMILY NIGHT

.

·614•992•0077
Middleport, OH

Buy One, Get One

=-~&amp;.......
· ·--__,-

FREE
4 P.M. to Closing

KINGS'

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Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
New Homes, Additions,
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Ppmeroy Location Only
Starting Oct. 1
New Store Hours
Open 11 A.M.

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614-742-3324
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BAKED STEAK DINNER
VFW POST 9053
.
· TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
SUN., SEPT. 14, 12 NOON
Adults $5.00
Children Under 12, $2.50

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CROSSOVER
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY
EAGLES CL,UB
Members and Guest Invited

fNew _11 mOnth Unittod Statts .Ce-ltular service agreement required. Offer valid onlv on certain calllnt plans.

R01mi09 chargft, tAKeS, tolls and network surcharges may apply. Unlimited local .weekend ends D.ctmber )1,
J9t1. Othtr renrictions and charges fNY ~Y- Subject to cl'fliit approve!. Not valid with ariy other offer. Stt
store far ctet.ils. Off~tr ends S.ptember 30, 1997.

UNITEDSTATEI

FOR SALE
MUMS (Assorted Colors)
$2.00 each
.
PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
SR 338, Letart Falls, O,h. ·
614-247-2012

.

CELLUlAR.
.

Pria!s apply at parti~ling RadioShad: llcxes and dealers.lndeptndtnt RadioShadc deale" and franchisees may no1 be participating rn ihis ad or llock 01 spteial·ordO( ""~nom advertised.

I

.

1

I

Limestone,

Grave·1' San d•
."'1 0p S0 II I Fill Dirt
614·992·3470

C1'8wford'l Flea Uarkel. Henderaon. WV. Everydar U·&amp;. Crarta:

'Service

Don't Jusl Talk,
A Datal I· full time auctioneer, 'complete
000·285-0035. S2.98 /Min., 18 + aucllon · service.
licensed
::Serv:=;.U::.;(:::_61;:gl~&amp;4:;5~8::4=34::..
I
Or 3CM-m-w

House &amp; Trailer

Sites

DrIveways, u lll ltl e 8 ,
land clearing,
septic systems.
Hau 11 ng Umestone
Ff'fHI Estimates

...,.,..,..

CA

YOUNG
RPENTER SERVICE

•Room Additions

•New Garages
I I I &amp; PI
bl
um ng

• E' ec rca

•Roollng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Palntlng

Alao Concrete Work
·

(FREE ESTIMATES!
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
- Pomeroy, Ohio

0700 '"· 21162. sue·per min. 90

Uuat be18yrs. S.rv·U 81·0-845.

!

Urle S Us Om

CakeS

992-6194

Wanted to Buy

:&amp;4::34::·-~~-:--::::::--:::-::- I Abaolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
Sharo Your Tnoughtt With Girls
1 On I Llvtlll H00- 255· 0700
Eu 2963 $3.W Uin, 18+, Sefv-U
8111-&amp;4!&gt;8434.
Lono1J7Unhappy7You COl1 flnd
your 1pecial eomeone nowlll1·
800·288-1077 oxl 24g7. S2.991

'-----=~:::ot:::;, min. Mutt be 18yfl.

..--------...
r--------,
'S
La • c t

Home Improvements

PIZZA
'"'

STEAM (LEANING
Carpet-Upholstery

1

Nokia phone with car lighter !ldapter

HAULING

(81&amp;)845-&amp;434.

40
10wk

old,

112

ver And Gold Coins,

Proolaels,

Diamonds. Anuque Jewalry, Gold
Rings, Prl'1930 U.S. Currencr.
Sfefllng, E". Aequililiona Jawe .. y
• II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue,Galllpois.614--446-2842.
Antiques, lurnilure, glau, china,
coins, lays, lamps, 9uno, lools,

Serv-U- estales; also apprals&amp;ll, Osby
Martin, 614-992-7441.

Glveaway

:25=211:;;._ _

.....,.,-,--~-,---=-

Clean Late Model Carl Or
old Slb~tlan Husky, red wt Truck•. 1990 Models Or Newer,
1 •paYed• 304• Smhh Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastue eyes, 1emae,

/J.'

:;175-::,:544:.::;,;2·-------1 ern Avenue. GallipoiL
J &amp; 0., Aula Pam. Burlng 111.
2 IIIII'* kililnl. 304-675-511112.
h" 1 s 1r
304 •
time business
2 Puppltl, ewka old, G,erman vage vs •c es. 8 mg parts.
5033
7
ShepharciiMIJed, to good home. 73:'
·
Specializing in
81•·446·3302 or 814·446-8077 Non-Working Washer, Dryers,
!llar:::.,:flpm.:::,:_ _ _ _ _--:-t Sloves, Relrigeralors, Freezers,
Wedding, anniV9r58ty 4. e Week Old Kinono To Give To Air Condllionera, Color T.V.'s,
and birthday cakes.
Good Homo. 814 ,.. 1.Q382.
VCR'o, Aloo junk care. 614-256·
=:..:.::::::::..:;...:..::..:..::=--1,.1236_._ _ _ _ _ _ _
4-7 month old killens, all fe. ·
mal••· 2 calico. 1 Gray, 1 solid Wanted To Buy Uaed MotHie
Home. Call 814-448-01~5 or 304..... ,
...
875-5965 "
::-~-~.:-::!.::lovl=~~-~::.:.4-8=95-.::~:.:l:..:7._
1
o4yr oli:J Elkhouncl, male. 304-875·
Uoed
Pick up dlecerded
.2443::::
·
l
'!!~n~!!d T._o !u~_ ,G. ood
. appliances, batteries,
"~ 61 3 r.vv
1 Month old . klttana, 2 atlort
many metalo &amp;
holred, 1 long holred. 304-675motor blocke.
EMPLOYMENT
4
614-992-4025 8 am.a m 047 .
SERVICES
.Bid ~ 81~7-77-43.
Reopening for full

FREE

.,

'

MobUe Home Furaaces
aad Heat Pump•~~

INIMflfiiM. • '

~

- Easy Bank Financing 00 a month
Furnaces

S28

Heat P·umps Installed

S38

00 a month

· Free Estimates
&lt;Pavments based

o~"j'P[iPirov~eid~criodiit)ifliiiJ~HjiO~MfiEn

BilliG 8 COOLING

...

,._

I

Childs wheel choir, opoclal •IcySAYRE
~~~~-wlporalyzodlogs. 110 HelpWanted
:Fomallcatto
;,: .: .; .: ;.: . : .,.glvo-y.
_____
1 AVON I All Areao I Shlrler
calll14304-675-t-429.
TRUCK IHG
or 114-9112·5275.

.---=~=-==--,

Spollrs,

N~-7513

Hauling, Excavating
&amp;Trenching
&amp; Gravel
imestone
L
Septic Syatama
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RIIB.on.b/8 Rltel
Joe N. Sayre

Detective - Prlva~
liwesigator, Will Train.
Good Wages 614-523-9372.

EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
PAY I

Aasamble Producm At Home.
CaU Toll Free

lNG CNA'a ' I:!HA't, Full &amp; Part

Time Positions Available, Great

Hoursl Excellent Salar"t Plus Be~
elits. Agency Well Trained, But
Muse HaOJe High School Diploma,
GEO. Of Some E1petkince C~ing
For The Elclerl~. Send Resume
To : CLA 426 c/o Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Galli·
poti• OH 45631 . EOE.

Piclc Up An Application. No
Pt-Qnu Calls Plea5e. EOE.

LEGAL SECRETARY, computer

skills required, good communi·
cation skills, typing 60wpm, rer-·
erenees required. Send resume
to Box CW- 11, %Pt Pleasant
Register, 200 Main St, Pt Pleas·
ant WJ 25550.

LIGHT DELIVER\'
.
Cash paid waok,r. nood oman
car &amp; lcnow area wall. Call @
304-575-5167.
,•

Monagomont
· Opportunillll Abound

Caesartl All Lovolo

At

l_lllla

01 Exp.
Needed. Great Growth Potential.

Flex Schedules, Bonuo Plan
401K,
Send Reoume To: P.O.
Box 10,Eu:l
Barbouavilkl, wv 2500..

Mature responsible fomalo u: ba·
by sit In my home 2-4 nights per ·

-~ 304-882-3488.

Our Rocepllonlot Has Beon Promoted To Another Poslllon At
Sooric Hillsl We Are I.Jioklng For
Anolhor Friendly ,.eopla Peflon•
AI A Front Oasl!: Rec:ept 1onlat. ·
Uuu Be Focuted And
OrganIred, White Baing Able ••• Hancll•
'lluRI!&gt;e Taoks AI ono Time. Prior
Receptionist Experience Or
Working·Wllh Tha Public A·Plus.
Experience In Word Perlecl.
Windows, Lotus,
Or Olhor Word
Processing
Program•
~·•enliel.
Uust Have Experience And A
Working Knowleclgl Of CUIIomet'
Service Techniques At Well As
A Professional Approach. A Typ-

lng Test
Computer
Test
MarAaBoWell
GlvonAIToA All
Ap!&gt;lcanto. Porlfotioa 01 Originallr
created oocumanll or Wrlllng

Encouraged .. If Interested, Apply
Penon At Scenic Hills Nursing

In

Cenlor, 311 Bucluidgo Rd., Bidwoll. OH.

PARALEGAL. experience pre·

!erred, good communicalion
sl&lt;llls, computer ak.illa required,
rarerances required. send relllmo 10 Box GM·I1, %1'1 Plea•·

ant RogiSler, 200 Main St, PI
PSeasant wv 25550_.
Pasliion
Openlng:·Pari-Timo
RN
For Midnighl
SNit. 9hltt 'Diffooon·
tlal Off•rtd. Progreaailie Com-

prohensive care Facilily Wilh Ex-

cellenr Repulatlon For Alzhalmer's Care And Rehab. Apply In
Peraon At Scenic Hills Nuralng

Anaques, lop prices paid, River- Cenler, 311 Buckrldge Rd., Bid·

ina Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Auatralian Russ Moore owner, 61•·992·

=-~12 Colia pup, female.

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own·Hrs., S20K To $50K /Yr. 1·
B00-34&amp;. 7186 X 1t 13.

,Arlvanca. Doadllno: 1:oopm lllo
da7 befo,. the ad 11 ta run,
.Sundoy &amp; llonday odlllon·
t:GOpm Friday.
Home Health Agency Hiring
CNA's And HHA's Starting At
Big yard oato- Pagevilla rown loV $8.09
Par Hr. FuU-Timo And PariFire Oeparlment Follow signs
from ·~3 to Harrisonville, 881 10 Time Positions Available. Send
Pagovllla. Saturday, Stpltmbel Resume To : Health Management
Services. Inc . P.O. Box
t3. Rain cancata. Good clothes, Nursing
1 165, Gallipol is, OH 45631, Or
a-p..aloiZII.
Stop By Our Office, At 762 SecOn Rt B2 In Clifton, WV. Uldo bil ond Avenue, Galhpolis, OH , To

anliques, ttading cardl, furniture,

·- - ~--- - -~::..-

.

Downspout S
GUtt.er ClB a n lng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Computer l.,lsers Needed. Work
own hours. S20k to SSOklyr ~ 000-346-7186x1508•

1.fl00-&lt;167-5566 EXT. 12170
Neighborhood Yard s.1e: s.tur=:nl:d;;~~~:,no Rae- HOllE HEALTH AOENCY HIR·

~========:
·
"'fl. varlely 304-675-5404.
~~~~~~::::::;~========~
005
Personals
·
(Lime Slone·
EXCIYATING
Rick Paoraon Auction Compani.
·
Find
50 0%
0 OFF
Rates)
&amp; TRUCKING
h1
WICKS
:-:::-::::-I tBS,Ohio Well VIrginia,
3047.
All Carpet·Up slery
992·3838
uvo Glrllt call Howl t-ao0-255- m- 5785

Equal Opportunity Employer

'"""'~-

You've BOt questioaa. We'w got anawelll.!'

Gutters

(ORPORAL ELEORI(
Dally Rd., flaclne
614-94"'-3060
r
J Dh n Willi ama., OwnBr
Licensed Electrician
W kG
or uarant ead
Free Estimates
Providi ng Quality
Residential Service. ·

Community AnfJ Personal Skllla
To Two Teenagera With Mental
Retardation In An Informal Sat·
tlng: Requirements: High Scho~l
Diploma JGEO Valid Drivsr'&amp; L1·
cenu Three Veara licensed
DrivinG E1perienca Good Ortving
Record And Adequate Automobile Insurance Cover11ge. Starling
Salary: $5.50 !Hour. Training Provided. Send Resuma To :· P.O. BolC
104, Jackson, OH 45640; ATIN :
Cecma Deadl ine For Applicants;
9119/97. Equal Oppotlunity Employer.

Friday, Salurday, Grandfather
t;lock,
Uolorcycle, Avon, Car
And Loll Of Other llemo, Evorrthing Uu11 Gol3154 Kriner Road,
! orr 219,11..-..11.
' tnoldo a out 1699 McCormick
Road, Gallpollo, T.V.'o, Clothes,
Olahas, swoop•"· Whal Noll,
Llnla Big Everr~ingl Sepl 12th,
t:w:.:30 •? 112 uue From o.-11

ROOFIN G
NEW• REPAIR

SPORTS! ·
SCORES!
SPREADS! ·

0

@ RadioShack.

· to:oo a.m. Sa1Urday.
Eloclrlc Sowing Machine, Loll

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-aoo.291 .seoo

wv 1023477

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

Free Esai.nwte•

•

(With actNation. Sl09.99 without.)

F,:r~~~=!d"ton

25 YEARS IN BVSINESS

LOW

.

''i.~,:~s':~:!,act

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEM. ENT WINDOWS

ROBERT BISSELL
CONnRUCTION

"Brother" "Son" &amp;

Cheshire
614-367·7342
' 614-992-6629

B• Paid tn AdYMc:o.
DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.

Howard L. Wrltesel

Interested applicants can obtain an applicatiQn by calling or visiting
the following GMCAA locations:

7

.w., vant Soln uu11

Houra:
. 7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday

•

a •.., ••......,.~

1-Laid off. or terminated from a job due to a business closing or
cutback.
2-Receive or exhausted unemployment benefits.
.
3-Unlikely to' return to the same or similar occupation or industry
due to limited opportunities.
·

8010 North State Route

D/12111, 13111, 0-5, Rodoev Grange,
WlntiH' Clothe1, Toys, ~urnlture,
Baby l~ema. M«K''I Wear, Oishe1,
Giftl.

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

In Memory

Daulhhl',

..

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday-Friday· 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m. - 12 noon

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT
SUNDAY,
SEPT. 14, 19:9!
AT 1 P.M.
In Memory Of
~NNAJO
SHOEMAKER
Born Sept. 12, 1967Diec:l March 21, 1993

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

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

State Route 338 • AI Vine • Racine, OHio

250 Condor Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
.
·
IN
A Division on Nichols Metal, c.
Phone: 614:992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-586t

(No

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

:

Briggs &amp; Stratton: Master Servile Techaidatt
Outdoor Power £qlliptMat Association: Certllletl 2 Cyde

P.U., 11-F; (4110 Hrs IWk: 5 Hro
Each On Sal &amp; Sun (Fie1ible) ;
Reaponaibililiea lndude Teaching

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miles ea•t of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384-6212

.

d b
B··g Be·n Fa rication"
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

Room Additions • Roofing

HELP.WANTED

Applicants must be residents of Gallia or Meigs County and must
meet the qualifications for the · JTPA Title Ill Dislocated Worker
Program. Dislocated workers are primarily individuals who meet the
following qualifications:

0

N ew H Omes • VitnyI Siding NeW
Garages • Replacement Windows

Card of Thanks
Public Notice ·

•Mowers •Chain Saws •Weecteatera •AuthOrized
· Dealer For:
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough

:500::::;pm.;;:__ _ _ _ ____
BUCKEYE
COMMUNITY

SERVICES Has Eapande d Itt
Servlcet In Meigs County And
Hu The Fallowi ng Position•
loat: amall l'lousedoo, 818ch ·Availabfe: (1) -40 Hra /Wk.: 4 P.U.
Grove Rd., black wllh tan mark· Uon Thru 8 A.U. Sat; Sleep •
inga. blue eollll, -nto•, 814-7~2- Ow11 Required; Da~ ti me Houri
3174, 114-142·331g.
Olf: Competitive Fringe Benelila;
(2) 32 Hrs /Wk: 8 A.M. Sal Thtu 8
70
Yard Sale
A.M. Uon; Sleep -Ovar Required;
(3) 20 Hrs /Wk: 7 -8 A.M. &amp; 4 ·7

BUMRI MINING

Parts and Servfce!!

Babyalnlng service needed, cal4
1514·002·5995 between SI :OOsm-

I; ::::;::d~~~~~====~~ =====:(:6:1:4):94::9:·2:8:04=====~ 1; ====~~~:;:!~~~~!f!~==;;;;~ loloral
131h,·Partly
141h. 151h,
11)!;6 Socond """"'
In Houu.

"Mom"!

We Love Yoii.
· Can't believe
Thelma is

lost- Collco co~ Pl:&gt;mofoy vicinity,
u..., cal814-142·306&amp;

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

·Echo ·Ryab~:~~;~~~~~ ·Hydro Gear

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES has expanded its services in Meigs County and has
the following positions available: .
.
(1) 40 hrslwk: 4 pm Mon. thru ·a am Sat; sleepover required; daytime hours off; competitive
fringe benefits;
(2) 32 hrs/wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon.; sleepover required;
(3) 20 hrs/wk: 7-8 am &amp; 4-7 pm, M-F;
(4) · 10 hrs/wk: 5 hrs each on Sat. &amp; Sun .
(flexible);
Responsiibilities include teaching community
and personal skills to two teenager with mental
retardation in an informal setting. Requirements:
High school diploma/GED, valid driver's license,
three years licensed driving eKperience, good
driving record and adequate automobile
insurance coverage. S~rting salary: $5.50/hour.
Training provided. Send resume to: P.O. B.o x
604, Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for app-licants: 9/19/97. Equal Opportunity
Employer. ·
·

Application No.(a) OB..Q6.

Found: Sunday, young maJ• dog,
willt blackopo~ Rockopringo I&lt;M.
no co&amp;., 114-8824332.

• DECKS
• ROOFING
• SIDING

992·5535

RADIATOR REPAIR

"WE .LOVE YOU GUYS",,

lndiNCI Dlocharge Ptrmlt
Approved permlooiQn for
Open Burning OAC Chapter
3745-18
Mr. Chrlo Shonk
3701t Rockapnngo Rood

110

JOSHUA EUC3ENEI
AMNAH

60 Lost and Fouod ·

"Stop putting off those much needed
home improveme!lts." CaU Today!

~998 Martin Street
..omeroy, Ohio 45769

KEVIN EDWARD
AMNAH

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•REMODEUNG
.
"
•GARAGES

"Bui141 Your Dream"

.·

aerved on the director
within 3 dayo titer filing tho
lptMol With tho ERAC.
Propottd Revocation 01

(9)

II- Calico Cat I 2 KI"*W, 1 Avon Clvlotmao S8 -$11/Hr, No
Malo 1 1 F-la. To GIVIIIWilY, I Door -To -Ooor, tluldl Calh, Fun
11.._.,1012.
IRoluing, 1·&amp;00·734·0188 lndl

Happy' Ad

Asslstanl Farm Manager nuded
Froo Klnons liner Trained, 2 on
0 largo grain larl(tln llaaon 1
Long Haired, 2 Collc:o, 1 Brown Putnam counlles. Setl mollva·
61
Strlpad. 4-WI-e780.
tlon, dopondabllilr. mochanlcol

abPiJr, &amp; Qer'leral farm knowleclga

Free to good home only- long

· haired black and while ~non~ 11"' ..ilod, 0 !4-8-43-~
Gloso jarsto glvMW81. 114-9827!l!7.

~rwq;;:u;:;;lroct.::..::...304-~G..;3~7--:343:-5.-:-:--:-:-:

Anonuon Styli on Fl11111 Hair And
Tanning Salon Of Jackoon, Ohio
ts Now Hlrlng_Prolelllonal Stylist
''oo Hiring ,Bonus Conlact Tim

·!;ng~s~o!u!th!;!e•:_•_t•_'"_:OH~!.&amp;!!wv~:!:~~~&amp;~1~4-446-~
1118
1· :~94~~1H6:!J L-. ~,&amp;~_1:.;4-~7.;;4::2:.·.:2:.:1.;:3;;;8;..._. :~::in::e·n_•_t_•_e_'v_•a_w_•_Y·_'_1_4·_ev_21-8110-872·5967
1391 Safford School
r·.r;:to:;;~.:.~::::a_::•.:.9~:..:r.:.u_._"_'_nto_r_ma_u_on
L,!;s!erv~~
1

wei. OH.

soulhern Ohio Correctional Facl~

lly I• Seeking To Contract An
Ohio licensed Physician. Contrael
Period IsTo10101197
61301
~~. Subject
Mutual ToAgree~~
'od
Co
oc1
B
mEW~t. ,,,.. n111
ver
y ~,,..,

Enaulng Conuacl Mar Be E•landed For (21 Two Addlllonal

Years. Qualified Medical Ooctora
May Calt The Institution Buainesa
Offioo Al614-259·5544 E"""sion

3214 To Rec.,ve Bid Forms And
lnslruction• lleforo 12:00 Noon,
,:. :Fr:. :i2d•r-:..:Sep=le:..:mber::..::.:. :19::.·:..:19_9~_.__
1The Aizheimar's Unit At Scenic
F
LPN F
Hills Is Looking or An
' ull
Or Pan-Time
To Work \Vilh Resl·
dents
Requiring Extra Care And
Attention. The Ideal Candidate
Should Be Sincere, Compassionate And Flelible. Apply In Perton '
At Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
311 Buckridgo Rd., Bidwell, OH.
Traveling Patienl Ser'llcea As aiatanl For Family Planning Setv·
ic11 Based 111 Jackson, OH. 30
Hour Week. Potition With Benv·
fits. Uedical Olllce Experience
Required. Flexible Schedule To
Include Saturday 'Morning And
Evening Hourt. Responsible Person Who Is Sensitive To Birth
Conrrol And Reproductive HeaJih
Needs Of Clients. Must Be Organized, Accu rate With Figures
And Documentation. Must Be
Willing To Work AI Part Of A
Tea~r~ And Handle A Varying
Work Schedule. Travel Reimbursement Included With Monthly Salary. Send Reaume And
Three Employment Raferencea
To Planned Parenlhood Of Soun.
east Ohio, 396 Richlahd Avenue,

Alheno, OH 45701. EOEAOSP. .J

�J

Ptlge 10 e The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

FJidaY, September 12, 1917

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel e Page 1.1

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

ANY 000 JOBS: Elrtarlor plllnl· 1888 l.lodul11 2br, 2 belli, latge
den, clo11 10 town, extras, nice
lot $4,000. 31W-1175-5522.
7112.
2 Story, 8 room hoou on double

lng, ahruba &amp; weeds ulm.mtd,
landscaping, aldewalks edged,
an Cite. tiC. Croll Bill 304-875-

Artlll Will Paint Characltrl Or
Of 'lbur Chcice On WIIIL
GrM.I FOr Children's Bedrooms.
Nu""ltl, Sundly School Clan.., Etc.114-"*'207.
M,t_ HoUle, An~

,.,e1....a-

lot In Bellemtade. Full alze
be..,..., fllllt carpelad, ,_ vinyl oiOOg. 30&lt;-&lt;175-1s:w.

By Owner : Mount v.,non Avenue, ~t Plellllll 1 11101111, 2 or
3 bedroom, 1 belh, Iorge ~!dren,
basement, vinyl aiding, leneed

backyard. u•.ooo. 30•·875·

~~~~~~~~~=18310.
~
--:FOR=::'sA::"l.E::"::BY~OWNC=~II:~Chlklcate In Uy Horne 2 Open-

111 Vinton Court. In Gallipolla. 1

ktil For My Age, Mondaw Thnl Floor Plan, 3 Bedrooms, 1 Car
Fildar, Occulonal Weekends, Ganlgt, Lat eo.vo. C&amp;ll 014-37$-

11 M&lt;~e-a1a8, Eu1orn Avonuo,

Oelpall

2720 For AlpolniiMIIt Only

one car garage. locat.ct
on Bailey Run Road, 8111 houaa on

[lqlertoo!Cid carpentry ond nomodellng. tnalde and oullldo, loll. Priced al '$70,000, call 61•·
- . . vl~yl aiding, &lt;1dd-on add" 384-2097.

a.

lion ca~blnet . relac::lng or newly
rtbuiiL Retertnc11-Frt1 Estl·
n-.Jim5ta.ll3o+e:JS.1272.

Fumltu,. ,.air. refinish and res·
-

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Ohio

House on N. Park Drive. 2br,
family room. living room, new
carpet, naw roof, new windows,
new siding, fuH buement (unfan.
llhod). ~i'5-81161.

Roglo,.red Wolkt&lt; Coon-clog. 0

REPOS. SAVE BIG nS CAll
CREDIT U£ 1-Gl-251·11170.

ConcroiO I Ptoollc Sot&gt;llc Tanka
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon• Ron

330 Farms for Salt
20 Acres 1•h:70 Mobile Home
Wllh 13120 Add On Kldo Fori
Play Area, 20x30 Barn Oaod
Hunting Well Water On Township
Road 2 l.lil11 Off Roull 7 SOulh
Oul Big CrHk Road S23,000 01
land Contract, 114-258-1114,
81•·258-81,35.

350 Lots

a. Acreage

12 Acr11 For Sale, Rlpln OH SR
850, 81 ..245-5&amp;10 .....,_

Evant Entarprlaao, Jackocn, OH
1.-s37·11521.
D11k ISO. Tandy compulet w/
printer 8150. Antique vanity

$150, Dining "'"'" oull (I chain.
!able, 1 china cablnol)
Couch I cllair $.a0. Cal Brad II
~75-Nt• 01304-075-8130.

s•so.

Dining rocm chlndeil!l', 5 llghll,
tolln llldiltpor~ lUll· lllta - . able tar any lira, any hookupo, ·11. .-3401. _ , Cllll1inll )lrl:
cloae
10 - ·814oGfl2'2310.
and achool' rice
l1lftlllboolrt&gt;
· Dalla, Ooll1 And Wore Dollsl

BRUr£RLAND
114-771-t173

t•IPJl

cellar~

Galli• Co.: GaiUpollo, Neighbor·
hood Rd. , 22 Acral With Pond

$24,000 Or 10 ACrtl $18,000.
Frlenclly Ridge, 10 ....ooo.
8.5 Acre1 $7,500 Or 11 Acre1
$18,000. Juno Run Rd. (2) 10
Alrcol' $10.000 •. .
llolgo Co.: Near Rutland, OanVIIIa, Juot Oponod Nice Rolling
Trac11: 1g Acrea $17,000, 5 Act·

e• $Hs.ooo, Or 14 ACre• With

Drlvo And Pend $20,000. Oyoo·

r.1ERCHANDISE

510

Houlthold
Goods

. All-~ Gro-HIIrl, Old DoN'
Now Dollo, A Whclo Room Of
Dollo, l.luol Selll Unbollovablo
Price Of S25 EliCh, 11-HIOIII,
lltHouM On Ulllo Kyll'f Road.

011 Slove $SO, 8 "·441·

Appt1anc11:
w.-.,Dry,...
orator•. 10 Da,.
Fronch Clly llayllg,
778$.

Druot by Heri,.;o tlnlng room
...... ' 8 ....... Appflloed .....
11,200. Hulch ·$300. 30•-e75·

:1382- 3pm

lUning &amp; ,.,.,,..

1Ta)hold.(e1~)

570

Musical
Instruments

730 Vans

198fi Chevy Cam110 350 Cubic
Inch

Condlllol\ $250, ....215&amp;-10114.

Foncltr Slrlllcao!Dr alac~lc gu"
lOr, 3rt~ old, OIC. cond. 304-1171175115.
T"""*l100.814 411 3f37.

580

1865 Oldo IB 2dr, Royal 10'1 lo1orMI CO. liDO lnlornallonol :
Brougttam, clean, 01rage kept. Trudl8350. 30'-475-8717.

3CW.a75-5881.

Bunn Trumpet Brill, Exc1111n1

Auto ,

T·Top1,

$3.500, ....-.oos.

Asking

590

1884 Ranger " Wheel Drive,

1888 Ford Tauru1 atationwagon,
·
cruiM, 1111, AlWfm attteo
1188 Plymouth atallon waoon,' ca1MU1, lharp, excellent condi·
pa, pit, aulD, 4cy1, llCO. 304-SJ'tl. tion lnsido and ouL $2885, 814-

Rolli~~.

ri~~~E~::~~
priced 10 1111.

ville, L..r One, AEDUCEOI 5

Acraa $7,000 • Sl ,000 Down •
$127. Mo., IS Vtart. Between
Tuppers Plain• + Cheater, Beat 5

GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

610 Farm Equipment

: :11112::.-.: :•.; ·______
198g Caprloa

387-7171.

lent Condition, Call After I,

mllao, good

work car, new 11re1. 304·578·

114~

• 8 6 3 2
• 52

Wlle1 Auto, ••• · t•.300; 1881 •
Toyota Camara High Miltagt. :

1080 Ford Tempo new tires &amp;
clutch, tran1m1111on, braktl,
1olid mechanical cond. needs

$1,200, 080 81H.I-1318 Ah"8P.M.
i'...

coli•-

•·s.-

=====-

..-z. .

l:,;,'

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

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

advertised in this newspaper
are avaJab.le on an equal
opporlurity - ··

·- - -

··

REAL ESTATE

room, $1,055/down, $198/mo.

111111 From Galipoil On Bulavllla
P.,., On 1 1/2 Aae Flat l.ol, Cllf
•·--'o, $!09,000 Or Beol OWer,
..,_
61 I 146 03110.
Roomo, !12 Belht, lnground
1Pool. on 2_ Acret. Plul much
1 12
mort: ovorlooklng,. River. For
Ao&gt;P&gt;O•,-(e,.~258-li03

frH air, lree skirt, 1tlxBO 3 or 4

Brand' New· Apartment&amp; 2 Bad-

bedroom $1,350/down, 12811/mo.
Call-800-6111-&lt;1777,

room~

81H411'110.eAflor 5 P.M.
Baaublul wood-finloh mul~mtdia
oltelf, heido VIQ CDo; aloo vldiO

Relerenc•• Required, 111,·448·

lapel or ca1aet181. Brand new,
allembly required . Rllall price

large aelocllon ol uoed homo. 2
or 3 bodrao ... ·Siarllng "13&lt;95.
Oulck
32311 delivery. Call 1-800·837·
--·--------Now 191l8 ••x70 lllrea bedroom,
includu 8 months FREE lot rant

Only $181 .68 por monlh wilh
$1050 down . Call 1·800·137·
32311.

dad I -::---:-:--:-:--:--:--:--:--:-By Ownat: 2 Slory On· 3 W00
Now 28&gt;80 3 'or • bedroom.
Actel Buill In 11111•, 3 Bedroom'
1 Full Bolh, 2 Half Balhl, Fun· $39,g95. Free dollvory. 1·800·
B...ment, 2 Cual~m Wood r1 ·1111~1-&lt;1~777;,;.;...- - - - - - - - ' Flooro Throughoul, Cullom Now Bank Repo'ol Only 3 lefl,

I
i

21101 .
Convanlonl 10 PVH, 2bodroom,
kll&lt;:hen, belli, LR. No polL 13001
mo. $300 dopooit ~5-5788.

Modern 1 a8droam Apartment,

614-..S-03110.

Tara Townhouse Apartmltltl,
Very Spacloua, 2 Bedrooms. 2

3bf', 2balh, modern ~leh-

balh, llartlno 11 $180 par mo.
Csl HI00-&lt;181-f777.

new

home 11,000/down,

A G
roam

s•uop •p et Grooming.

Shtetl. 373 George• Crtek Rd.

81.....a-o231 .
AKC Garman Shephard pupplea,
$250/ea. _ , 75-611311,

3 yeara old; purebred Slmmenll.l
helfen; purebred Simmental bred
OIMI;I14-M-2822.

$2000, 814-2.7-42112.

Riding and-Buggy Horaoa 814·
-·110.

Ci~tch,

640

INT
2•

TATER II TODAY YO'RE GOIN' TO
HELP YORE MAW TIDY UP

.1980 AtrOitar XLT Trip Comp.~
Pflm. Sound, 4 Capt. Chalr1, ,
Good Condition, Asking S4.200, '
014-44&amp;-3402..
:

1980 Voyagar «yl, au1o. ts,ooo. :
:~~4-~5~76-~892=:'·~·--_________ :

FRANK IIi EARNEST

111113 Font Aerosw XLT, loaded,
PI, pb, p/wlndows, air, cruise~
lll'n-fm c:awne. 304-675-~5.
,
IDVS Jeep Wrangler Scfl roa

Low Mila&amp;, Excellent Condition.~

Mull Solll 814-25&amp;-UlN.
iol Chevy, Diesel, Turbo, as. •X. '

Sllndard, loaded, PayeR load!

over Paymen1s.

For mora

lmtrwllllonCal:(614)·258-171.

'·

Hay &amp; Grain

0101 .

Twin Rivera TOWII',

111 ~·•.&amp;8-

now accapUng

1ge3 Honda 13,000 miles, dre...
"

out exc: lhape. 30+675-1304.

Whear And .Wheat Srraw 3rd

TRANSPORTATION

-

1Q67 18fL Sea Imp, 160hp Mer·
cruiHt wlttaller, 2 lilt jacke11, 4
burq:HN~.61~1..
. .(

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 -24V :
. Trolling Uotor, 150 XP Evlnrudl''.

Oulboard, $8,1100, 614-992·2770.

~1
I

111115 Sel-cloo Spaoa SPX jatlkl,:
IIOhp., ..5011, 814-11112-&lt;1130.
,

,

,
I

Auto PartS a.
Accessories

760

Budget Price Tra'n 1million1, :
Used /Rebuilt, All Type1, Oven
10,000 Tranamlnlona, Accell 1
Remal'l.ltaciUred Main Shafts For :
Standard Tran1ml111on All ~

A5 5he said,"Goodbye"
and ran UJ'the steps,
t~e !&lt;new he woulg
never see her aqam.

He was
"Oh. ,well ,"he
heartbroken. thouqht." I
still have
my doq."

Full lin1 of auto bodr panela, :
palntl and Juppllea. 1110 gl111, t
light •••embly. Oxvgen and

1979 Fcrd Dump F-700 New
King Pinl, New Floor In

. '

Ripley, WV. aa&lt;-372·3833 or 1·
fiD0-273-113211.
'

Campers a.
Motor Homes

1898. Dutchman Arlo10cra1 21!
camper, lle•r,• 8, ul8d twice•

117,775. Ask ng $15,000. 304!
743-tll58.

Home
Improvements

19111 Dodge pick-up slant 8 en·
gine, nice truck. Asking· $2,400.

BASEMENT

304-·2669.

WATEIIPROOFINQ

1gag Dodge Spiri~ 90K, Ai.no, Air,
AU·FM . Great Car. $2000 Firm.

_ _ _..=::;.:::;.::.:;::.:;::: . (e
14 ~..a-2!1SI
:,_.;..
________
1880 Font XLT lalral F150, 1/C,

1

UnccnditJonalliletime guarantH.
Local ref11enc:ea furnished. Ellabllahod
1D75. Call (814)
WI·
0870
Or 1·1100.287·0571.
Rogora

Waterproofing.

bed liner, JiberQiall topper, pa,
pb, alldlng rear · window, new
tirn, 111 cyllndar autDmatJc:.
much mora. Gltlgt ktpl,

-;-:-;:---:--:--:--:-:--:-~

APpliance Parts And Strvlct: All ·
Name Brands Over 25 Year~ E•·
parlance All Work Guarantud ·

w•t. bid CllmiQid. 11,700. 304-

18111 Tt;»10II 2wd plck-up, run•

C&amp;C General Hom• W1ln·
llnenct• Painting~ vinyl 1ldlng,
Cllpen~y. door~ Wtndcwl, belli.,
moble home repair and more. For , ~
frH 11ama11 call Chat, 01 ._.eg 2• 1

875-7112.

1912 Ranger, grea1ahape, high
miOL ...QS 080, deyo 814-992·
3311&lt;, IVIIIIIngs &amp; weekends 1114-

8323.

·.

"·

840 Electrical and
v-a, 5
R~lrlgeratlon
whh ra~lo, jR;.;id;;;jjir;,~~~~;i;i;i;

7&lt;2-3020.
1DV3 Chevy 1.12 1on,

speed. 1500 Seri11,
sliding rear wfndow, bedliner, engjne ol cooler, RHH hileh. •
per, excellent condidon. &amp;14-QQ2-

7285.

Wirlng. •

new urvlcl or repaira. Mall8r u-

"

ctnitd ' 'liiMr~lln ." Wl'nour '
Eloc~lcal, WV000301 30•·175· '

1786.

'

Fleur--

20 Klng-

22 Recorded

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campoe
Celltdy Cipher Cl »~ n Cllillld tram quoWionl by IM!CU people, pall and JIIWM'I
&amp;ch ....... ~lheclrlhtt .... lotlftOtMr. TcDy~CU; M . . . . p

GP

P W T S X

.W. K X

TCHGXOUX

YKTWXNXL'P
RDC

GP

G

V K XL X
GP

MLGOWXH

LIBRA
23-0ct. 23) Your petent as you is sitting ·in the driver's
popularity is at a peak, so don 't be scat.
ASTRO-GRAPB
surprised if friends are more attenli ve
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your
to you than usual. 1bere .is something .high hopes can be realized today if
magnetic in your charisma.
you think about success instead of
BERNICE
SCOlU'IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your wofi'yi~g about the numbel"of ways
BEDE OSOL feelings of fortune · will be justified, you mighl fail.
even though outward indicators
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) It is
might not support them. Your luck is imperative thai you eslablish mean·
residing near the surface .
ingful objectives loday. Ifnol, you're
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. likely to feel unfulfilled and ready to
., 21) If you: have ideas or plans upon do somelhing else.
· Some interesting twisls could be which you would like to expand, this
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If
in the offing for you in the year is a favorable day for 1hinking big. you're detennined to influence puba~ead. You are lilc~ly to be the lucie- Do not be inlimidated.
lic opinion on an impressive scale,
ieft 'in places where you were rather
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I~ this is a good day to make your
u11fonunate previously.
Today you might experience strong' speech or presenlalion_
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Late· . feelings thai Lady Luck 1s with you
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) In
ly, 1he sun of opportunity has been where your material interests are con- commercial maners today, trusl your
hqvering about your career. Today cemed. Play upon it.
instincts. Along ;vith . your native
might be the ~ay when it finally
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) resourcefulness, lhey make for a
brfaks through the lingering cloud You might be in a position to enhance powerful combinalion that spells suc·
cover. Trying to patch up a broken llready large opportunities today. Be cess.
rorance? The Astra-Graph Match· grateful for your breaks and do what
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) An asso·
ml!kercan help_rou understand what you can to bUild upon them .
ciate whose clout exceeds yours will
to do to make t.lje relationship work.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You view you as a equal today. Do nol be
Mpil $2.75 to Malchmaker, c/o lhis might not have control over an surprised if he or she suggests fonnnewspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray important development today, but ' in2 an alliance ..
Hill Station, New York, NY 10156., don't fret. Someone eQually as com-

I G N X:

YTJGIR.

J II

T .ADCW

COGJMDLWTOW.'

I G I! T

JGOOXIIG.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "A verbal ail like poetry i~ roftectlve; ~ stops to lhink.
MU!iic is immediate , ~ goes on lo become.' - W.H. Auden.
·

r::~:~:~' Sl!:\\(l)A-l&amp;t.trs· ::::
----...:..-=

ldltod ~y CLAY l . ,OILAN _;:,_..:_~--

0 four
Rearrange letters of
JCrombled words

the

be·
low Ia lorm fC!'ur simple words.

I

PEMITU

I I

C I V E 0j6 1..An elderly aunl embroidered
I . . 15
. .
a pillow for me that read: "A
r - - - - - - - - , friend is worth all the hazards
-=,'

~

quoltd

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IFRIDAY

New gal tankl, 1 ton truck
wheet1 I radiators. 0 &amp; R Auca:

790

11

.
_
_
_
_
.
_
by f.l lmg in the missing words
L.......l.-.1-....1-..L-L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

Sovinrs In rho Closs!fied Section.

1g79 llodoe MolD&lt; Homo, 318 Eno'
gino, AJf. PIS, 33,000 ACiua/
1.1111.114-317-7773.

Dump Bod, $8,500 Firm, 61H.S·
7428.

By Phillip Alder
· To start, here is a British idiom.
What. do you think "dead chuffed"
means?
To give you a hint, after today 's
deal , one South was dead chuffed
while the other certainly wasn 'l.
How should lhe play go in four hearts
after West leads a diamond away
from the king?
The deal occurred during the Forbo international team loumament
held last February in The Hague. It
helped Italy claim first place.
For lhe United States, Bobby
Wolff put in dummy's diamond jaclc
and, when it held, imme~;ately ran
the heart jaclc. Howew r, Alfredo
Versace of Italy (West) won wilh the
queen and returned a trump. Wilh his
communications in a mess, Wolff
couldn 'I arrange lo take 1wo club
ruffs in the dummy and lead loward
the spade king, so he finished one
down.
·
At the other table, Norberto Bee·
chi· showed lhe correct line. After
winning Irick one in the dummy, he
took the club finesse. Wesl exited
with a low diamond. Declarer cashed
the club ace and ruffed a club with
dummy's heart nine, East discarded
a diamond, making it unlikely he had
the heart queen. Baclc to hand with a
lrump to the ace, Botchi ruffed his
lastclub wilh dummy's hean 10, East
discarding another diamond. Declarer lhen played a heart to his king.
Whe~ the queen dropped, Bocchi
drew East's last trump wilh his heart
eight and played a spade to dummy's
king for an overtrick.
When he found out that Wolff,
many times a world champion, hac
gone down, Bocchi felt dead chuffed:
very happy.

8e ACool Cot And ClrecHM ~

ace-::
lflone lanka fiUod ond exchanged, ,

614-742·2782.

Onaaala

II Froll
10 Comedllln
Sparka

Allpaaa .

Q.

25 Ft l&lt;&gt;ng, NoW ..,q,:
Saii·Conlllned, Air Condllioned,
Eacallenl Ccndl~on, Vary Cleln\
$2,1100, 81 .......11135.
'

.

2•
4.

Little did he know,
his doq had been
planninq to leave him.

1972 Travel Mate Fifth Wtleet

no rust, runs and looks good,

Pas&amp;
Pas&amp;

i

Tyf181, 81 ..2•5-5877

12 Tllelllergiler II
a hit rolhow
13 Wtllhman, e.g.

• 'IYcoon

-~,..:R.:... .;E,;....:;N,,..:I,_:..;MI"IO::..,.,ls....-11 Q~:.:.~.•:: ~h·~" c~ucklo

TXt7 112 Ba11 Tracker 70 HP
Mercury SO Power Thruh Troll·

lnglloiDr, 614-2.5-8227.

7Makrleven

East
Paaa
Paaa

Jon boat Bantam 3x. New ltOil~
. log mo10r. $300. Small ruck 10p-;
per, S125o 3114-773-5825.

Two bedrocm •nmontln Mid·
dloport, no pall, l1._.5861.
Unfunlahed Aperlmtrtt for renL
No POlL 1,.·258-11103,·Frorn g
A.M. .g P.M.

3:.;;;;;;~;;;~ii;;~Mr;;.l5070.
Bahom Houae, 1 Balli, Uvlng· ,-UN::-B::E::-L-IE::V::A':B-:-l-::E-:2-:-I,-:7::-I-4-:B::ed-:-·
Room, ICIIcllen. Sunroom, Leilia rooms, 2 Balha, ..8,085, Only AI
Bern, 7 Acral, Lind ConiiiCI, OAKWOOD HOliES Of BAR·
Tom IIUIIHd Jr., 11•-4ol8-2810 • BOURSVILLE, WV, 30•·738·
614-245-5541 :
34011.

BIG NATE

24 vc~ !rolling moiDr, axe. ohepe, •
$11,1100. 30ol-875-1178.
'

3 Bedroom 81-lovol In VInton,
Nolln Flood Areo. Fenced Yard.
11 .. 388-VI)ol2. 114 388 081l
3 bedroom houae plul B• acroo,
big living """"w1111 ftreplaca, n1ca
dining room 1 kilehon, nice river

450

"

18$8 Ban Track•• 18 11211., fl. ''

French Clly l.laylag, a•• ·••e: •
7795.
.

mont Until Dec. 1eg7 800·251·

T0~ 1

berglau. 150hp Johnson GT,. 1Z. :

than 30,000 mlloo. $g,80o.
31W-117S.&amp;o84 -15prn.

view. located at Syracull, Oh Take Deliver,. In S1p1 No Pay-

fl.~I/f.
T~tC&gt;

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

::,";.:f'-

f55,QOOOB0.30oi-275-H02.

OLV~

Ccnclloni&amp;IH&lt;B-1375. ·

appllcollono for tbr. HUD t&lt;:blldfor elderly and handl·
EOH:I04oi7HI711.

TAKE DELIVERY IN SEPT. NO
PAYMENT UNTIL DEC. liD7. 1·
11011-251·5070.
,;;,:..;;.;.;..;..;..;.;...._____

·'·

1993 Honda Shadow Moton:yc:lel
3,600 Miles; 1991 Honda CR1251
Motorcycle. Both In Exctlltnt.

1•0'1. CoU Scmorvlllo Roally nc j)tlymenll aflll 7 yearo. 30•·
3QoH7&amp;-3030 or 31W-1175-3ol31.
755-5568. ·

::-=-~-:-:=~~
Flopos • save Big $U$ Colt Cted. ~ LJ,. 8Q0-25HI0l0.

/1\Y

~IC.H

1990 Modal Honda Ninja ,.,OOflo
Ui111, 2 Cycle, New Condition,'
$750, 814-..t-131e Allot a P.M. :

810
Culling Alfalla SQuare Balao, 614-..:ll!AIIrt&lt;SP.I.I.

THE BORN T.O"F.R

1988 Honda GoldWing Aapen-f
cada Excellent Condllion. Low·'
Mileage, Loaded With Extras,;
81 o&amp;....w&amp;-8116(),
1

SERVICES

Bab1 Pool,

qulred, 814•4..e.:ua 1,

740 · · Motorcycles
1&amp;88 Honda 4 Wheeler 250 "4'
Trax Good l.Condilion, $1,700,
814·245-5687.
.,•

=~of
-lion

What does
that mean? .

.,

Of take

·=

TH' HOUSE?

1988 Chevy Astra van, · A-on~
must 1ell, 1114-8-43-t

1082 Chtwy Full Size Convl!'alon:'
Van, $1UOO, 81 ....... 7523.

Mil tan tria 54 Nourlat:tea
(Fr.)
.
18Expreu
DOWN
20 ....... _
I Farm,_,....
21Lounea
25 DMnlt,_
' 2 Gene Tierney
211 DomUN
rolo
27 Plrlalnlf19 to
3 Droll
4 E-ld 5 Wldoar-11ze
33 lltwkt..t lulcll 6 Fl,.,.,.. .
34 -ledotlve
( 2 -.)

. Opening lead: • 4

condition~

5288.

g::·

~;=::..

Vulnerable: Both

Dealer: East ·
Soulb Welt North

Camper,

lllge baleo of hay $t3/bole. 30481i-t385.

Floo11, CA, 1 112 Balli, Fully Cat·

P I S
$350" N Pa
II 0, Piuo
1111Securi!y
iMO,
0 ReII,
lease
Dopooll

Oakwood 28¥58 3 bedroom, 2

Pant For Salo: ... brolet 10 ride, '95 FISO .XLT 2WD, 814-882·
6 Week Old Border Cclllo'o $50 gonlle wllll kldo. 1375. 30•·675· .0511.
8353.
Each, 8,.·4•1· 0202, 8,.·••8·
1977 Chevy one ton , 350 4
812•.
Raglllared Slmmemal ~ack bull, speed,-willl 11181 na~, covaratt IDP.

IJ~;~~E:quai~:Ho:u:llng~~o~-:·

pttad. Adult Pool 1

755-71&amp;1.
c-,....,--~~~-:'"'-:'"'--

720 Trucks tor Sale

Small, Housebroken, 81•·258l932.

$300, alklng SISO. Colt ., .. g92_ FoaiUrlng Hydro Balli. Don

M3e afllr e pm.

Big Buck Woodburnlng Slovo,
Fireplace tnurl Polloi SIOV&lt;t Bclh
Furnished efficiency, wal8f &amp; ca- · Ulla filM. a14-8811-41 02.
ble Included. $t851mo. pluo
eleclric. 30.U75-2815.
Graclouo Uving. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparlmtlnll 01 VIllage Manor and
Riviortldo Aj)tlrtmonllln lllddl•
From .$238430.&amp;. Call 81"" .

IIO&lt;N, FuM ffonl Parch, Dedi. Ar·
chi lOCI Deol~r:,
31103:Appolnlmtnll
Onfr,8114 46

en. fotmal dining room, bal8menL garage, large lot, mid own a

I

Vory Roomy Allll:htd Ga·
rage, Near Rodney, Dapoall I

Wood Work Throughout The owner financing available. 30•-

2-~.

83A8
Beanie Babies, $12 Each, Call

Equal HootinG Opporurity.

tor Salt
bedroom, 2 belli, very nice, mo' 31 0 Homes
bile heme. 1 ocro land, Cllf WI·
4 Bo' oom Spllll.. ol Willi 5400 ,.,, accopl HUD. t•oOJmo. 30•·
Sq. FL including Full Baotmtnl 582-58.a 0&lt; 30oi-576-271B.
Whh 2 Car Gara;e, Gal Heat. 2

&amp; movln. Call e14-o&amp;48-2588.

Cal HIOO-&lt;Igl-&lt;1777.

Glenwood Rd. Ashton areaIChool bus goes by front door. 3

01'011'*

40 Aldtne lnlo

~

--

.......

37T-unH
:MI'I'rl!lblml

BARNEY

'

Hl88 Jeap Cherokee 73,000 ~

2101 .

""*

• Q 10 g 7
• 7 54

5:.._

11185 Chevy Blazer K5 Sllvoradc"f
••• Y-8, AuiOmalic, PW, Pl, AC, .'
AIIJFI.I Cauono, Towing Pack·
age, NN nrn ' Wheela. Excel-

hl~h

Eul

11185 ••4 S.tO Pick-Up 2.8 V-1;;:
AuiO, In Good Shapo, $2, 500C'_
et~0301 .
...

orltade

FARr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; liVESTOCK

• A J 9
• 10 7

Speed, S2,250: tee• • WhMior..,
300 ICT$2,250, 614-258-1050.
:

ac,

89,000 mlln $1 ,9&amp;5. 304·862·
3ZI8.

2817.

•x•.Ex·

Up, Shen Whaei-Baae,

ot-12·1'1

• K 8 53
• J 10 9 6

1IMI8 1f2 Ford Escort Auto. Run a Flalnl Jell. Now a50, va Engine, ·
Good, Eacollonl Condllfon, $1 ,500 $5,500.00 8 ..·.46·717t, .... '
080, 81"· 448·•738 Call After e -7375
P.M. Call Anytime Sundly.
1983 ... Dodgo Ram 0.50, ..50 •
1D81 !lodge Oynoll)' One OW!Iar, looka Good, Needa Work On
120.000 ~n••. V«"t Clean, au- llotot, lt..-25.

1886 Ford Eocoll EXP 5opd,

For Sale

a. 4·WDs

North

cellent Condition. Professional

-33811.

FruitS &amp;
Vegttlbles

.,

1171 Cl1rnOIII ScotldaJI Pick· ~

sunroof, 1porty, rnl good cond.

lnlarnallonal achool buo. $200.
30oi-&lt;175-M87.
J£T
AERATION MOTORS
Rapoi'ld, Now I Rebu l~ In Slock.
CatiRonEvano, 1-IIOQ.!i37-8528.

•• ?51

omall ropelr. Bill Oltrwl 304-17512' oiOck nilar, MWIIoor, heavy 7398.
Vllor
Larry
Wa1htr1, dryer•. refrlgeratora,
".:
dulf Ironto, dual UIH, good i-eo,
rangeo. Sklggo Appllanceo, 78
Geoige1 Portable Sawmill, don't
lllkilg $650, 814-892·~
IDH Ford Tempo, 1W0 dOor, IWO
haul you&lt; logo 10 1111 mil jull croll S.R 218, 5 l.llnL, From Golipol' Acres Building_ Slt11 On Kee· Vine Straa~ Caii81H48·73H, · Kenmore Waoher $100, Glbeon
uoo 101134D8.
. : Dryer $100: Belli Working: 275 11 Foot Tandem Dove Tall Trail- owners, lull •lzed •pare, bodF
~16-11167.
3 Bod100mo. D.R. Kltr:hon LR, 1.3 bough ·fol~od Ro., $14,000 EL
Gallon Fuel 011 Tank $85; IU· or, Aarnfll lncludad, FICIDry Bui~ good, 11rono anplno, &amp;rlcad to
Aaeo 187.500 81..._.2.05.
Uaed 0nca $! ·~ Col 81
lOll· $1000, Wllh C playt&lt;,
Pnlfolllanal TrM Serllce, Sounp
Call For Free Maps + Owner FI- Cctrw T.V., W111hlr, Dryar, Raforl· 37t-a720, AFTER I P.ll.
' ·-·
$1200, 614-Vo19-30118 ..... molRemoval, Free Eatlmateal In- Three bedroom house,: largt nancing lnh Take lOll. Olf llsled gorator, Frtezer, Air Compreoaor,
11.uance, Bktwlll, Ohio. 114-:JSB. buildifli, tllltnl building she, 1 .11 PriceaOnCUh Pun:ha!eol
11637.
- ..
5.aOpm.
114-256-1231.
Uvlng Room Su,., Counry Blue: 3 Block nWmiU w/2 rlplac:e bit
-8148.e14-317-7010.
acres, porch, ga,.ge. tl1o&amp;-a•9·
1
Living
Room
Suite
GrHn
I
~.:.:..;.;_;,~_;,...:;.____ 1 31270&lt;304-875-&lt;575.
Poltr'a - l UMII Fumllu,. Mauve Flowtra. $100 EICI!. 114- blades, now running on Buick 1988 ·oldl Cut1a11 Supreme
S.veral 2 acre loll, I mll11 aut
Wa ,_ , _ Armt Surpluolll
S&amp;M Water Hauling Sarvic11,
•eo angina. $1,500. Wood bUrn· =::': 1 =J~ Excelonl
258-1135.
:!Q4.17S.
-vlhtre Purity 11 Our Passion• Three btdroom, two bath, on Sandhill Rd.
2101Joflo&lt;1onAve.
lng lurnace. 1350. Wood burning
Give U1 A Call Toda1: 3o•..e75- large corner lot, located 33164 71M8befonlllpn.
Open 9:30 . 5:00 lion-Sat
Uving Room, Dining Room, Bed- 1tove. $75. Contact Man at 304· t91iU Buick ~egal Custom V-8,
1711.
New Lima Rd., Rudand, ,$35,000 Small lot in COUnry, Drilled Wll,
304-111S-SOFA (7832)
Good Condition, Front Wheel
roomo, Kllehon, U!HIIy All Now •sa-tm.
OBO, g., ·357· 285• ovenlngs
Concn!IO
Flado
(1
..
)
a-1734
Condition! $2.000 For All, .,.. Buah Hoo· Parte &amp; Equipment • Drive, Air, AM,FM. Tift 1 Cruise,
only.
Tutot
Sale On All Carpel &amp; Vinyl, Mol· 24H381. ·.
Rotary cutters • Rtar Biadel • Aqua Tread Tlrel, 814-4,46~IDGradeD
TOIII« lot' Counry lane 11- lohan Carptta. Ro1,1tt 7 North,
5110
lndudel: lla""'""'lk:o, Reading, 320 Mobile Homes
Horne Flark. Galllpoio Ferry. WV. 81......._7....
Nice Oak Huleh; 3 Year Old load~rs • Backhoes, Etc, Car· :-•:::-':·" 7:--:------Engtllh, Language, Alii, Sc~al
tor Sale
:104o175-5421.
Will,. Kll~hln Elec~k: Slove 30 mlcha*'• Farm I Lawn 81,...48· 19i1 Chevy Lumina, 3. 1 Euro
Sluditl, Science,- History. Ask
-~·
Inch, Nlco Kllchon Tobit 4 2412. HI00·5fl4.1111.
"
- · IWO door coupe, air, cruise,
Uoed
FumiiUro
SIDro,
130
Bula·
"'Clwk Cal304 flfl!5 30&lt;4
'71 Rebel; 12.i&lt;85. IWO bedroom,
RENTAlS
vile
Pilot, Good Uaed Bed' lola~ Cllalra, 114-37W7:il0, AFTER I H1111on Forage Harvllttr for amffm canene, auiOmatlc, blue,
cart. cenualalr, 16x10
tre1111, Oe1kl, T.V.I, Desk I P.ll.
aalt, good ohapo, $1000, 814- 73,000 mlltl, $5250 080, euWll hlul junk or tnoih away. $351 excaUent
112' lifelime awning. SU-378· '
i-18-~.
Table Um111, Dlnenao. Rocking Ook Tablo \111111 6 Cllalra, llaldl- 892·2823
::'::':-:-:-':'-:"'0"_ __
pickup- 304-075-5035.
82
Cha1rs,
Couchea,
Hide-A-Beds,
__"~·
1 4'0 Housea for Rent
H
I G
" hi
1WI Mazda MDL 82a, olclr, 5apd,
Colloclablto, EIC. SlOp By And intl CHno Hutr:h au 41111131111. ·
'FAIILY DREAM HOUSE'
uaqvarna · reen "''c ne ale, clc, amffm casaene. ss. 4as.
FINANCIAL
Hugo •br, 2 balh home, feaiUring 2br heu10 In Harlford, $250/mo, ChiCk OUr Prlcoo, 614-...a-4782 Solorttax Wlleg BuQOrfty Altlch- triiTI'ntrl &amp; brush cuhtt on 1811 31J4.875-eso 7.
·
all new •e• through fireplace, $100 dlpolk. 304-882-2011 afllr l.l.f H11, IQ-4.
monll $550; Sello Alpine Track· .-. Sldlfo Equ,_nt :104o175210
Business
SIJIO of !he arl ucurl!y oyllem. l5prn.
·
1D82 Chevy lumlno. 3.1 l.lultiport
er Ski Machine, Computer •75 7421.
Opportunity
520
Sporting
Nlct Chrlltmao Prtlonlli .,.. JD 2 55 JD
V-e engine, air, tilt. cruise, arnnm
·~~n. 1348·54 per month. " Bedroom•. Grdn Township,
7 •
2555, JO 4020, JD atereo c:111ette, automatic. 4
2A5-5146.
Goods
$425/l.lo., Allor 4:30 P.M. 114·
!NOTICEI
3020, Kubola 70 HP • WD, door,,_ dreo, """clean In and
OHIO VAll.EY PUBLISHING CO.
0U1, . .11115. 81 4-11112-.
Romlng~r&gt;n Rile l.lctfal 7.00 BDL Special Fall Fleder Calf Sale: I.IF285, Ford 800, NH 250 Skid
OaltwoodHtN1111
recommend• that you do busl autcimadc CAL 270 1wlacope. Sopllmber 181h, AI 7 P.M. 70 Sl- 250 Hro., Yanmar 22 HP •
NHro,
WV
Nice
2
"'
3
bedroom
houaa
In
Pcflftl with people ~ou know, and
Heod or v..r~~ng st..,. a Halter WD Willi ""-&lt;. Rhino 10 Ft 011- 1D83 Mazda ·828LX 5 Speed,
304-755-588!.
mercy. nice lot with trMI. l.tOO $385.
NOT to aend money lllrough !he
Champagne Color, • Cylncltr, All
Marlin
Rile
l.lcdol
33e
~ Ac· CcnafQMitlllll For Thlo Sale, Cal· tel Rolaly Culler 2 yrL Old,
1 TIME ONLYI
per monlll plut Clepoll~ no inlldl lion CAL35 lltocope, 1180,
maY unlil wou tlave invtltigaled
do Will Be Accaplld Siarllng AI ol Woodo 10 fl. Cuntr YG Cond, PO-. 86,000 Kl.llleo, Mull Sell,
8-l·D-W.O.U-TI
-lloHII8-724&lt;.
"" ofloring.
Ruger Rwotver Model-Vaquero P. lot. Wadnooday, &amp; All Oay New Round Bale Tran1por11 Got Company Car, 19,300, 614·
11o11111 Down on selecllingla secSmaU Collage Cloae To Gr-y 1112• barrel CAL 45 long colt. Thursd1y, All Conalgnmenra $1,850.00 NH 718 Sllaga Wagon 411~8~8~30oi~.·-::-----­
Gt1v. Uonumeru Bu1inat1 And
Welcome,· Hauling Available; VG Cond., U11d Loader, Uatd -:lion. $999 Down on aelacl 0111ti1 Dow-n Galllpolla, Re-· 82•5. 31W-1175-1731 .
Equipment For Sale. Call Won •
111Do1 Dodge Shadow: 18e0 Pend·
A~en1 llv11tock Sale1, 8·1 •· 0.11~ PlaniBII. Round Balorl, Etc.
seclions.
2:3
cw
•
Bod-oom
fTI&gt;d.
eo
&amp;
0tpoo11,
114-«6-1151.
Fri. Hra. 10· 4 For An AppointW~ Make Parker Hydfuallc HOI· ac Bonneville; 1Q88 Plymouth
5112·2322,
11ol-8lf8.3531
.
als
available.Ookwood
Holllll
530
Antiques
1111111,11._....782.
e1, Carmichael'• farm &amp; Lawn Voyager, Call 1114·448·2155. Or
Ni&gt;o. WV. 30ol-7555885.
Two bedroom houae wllfl aiOvo
WARII
UP:
High
Eltlclency
NaiU·
614--2412.1-IIOQ.!iiM-1111.
814-245-5677.
and
retng
.
.
tor,
dlpotll
requHd,
Buy
or
sell.
Riverine
Antique•,
WORK AT.IfOIIE
=-::---:----,.-t2a50 2 bedroom mobile home, 3 no i.-poll, 11~.3QIIO.
112• E.llain Streel, on Rt12•, ral And LP Gal Furnacea, Uf•
ANILCPlEm
largo
Selecllon
Of
JO
Compacl
1DV511onll Carlo LS, Moll Opfurnace, new water .htaler,
Po meroy. Houro: "M.T.W. 10 :00 dmo Wa,.nly On _ , Exc:hlngEarn Soli&amp; To $1,.8&amp; PIT. 11,505 yr. old
I
420
Mobile
.._,
Tractors
And
Anachmena
20
~30 tlon1, Excellent Condition, Ver,.
h
d
I
d
•·
"If
You
Don'!
Call
Uo
We
Bcih
&amp;
ryer, a r con It oner,
""''..
a.m. ID e:oo p.m., SUnday 1:00 10
To $3,332 FIT. Paid Vacallo", was er
for Rent
8'00 p.m. e ... vU-2528, Run Looer Frae Elllmalltl Add·On HorHpowtf 2 Yr. Warrant)' 7.1% Clean, N~ Tltft, $12,5000 814Bonu111. CaU For free lnforma· ..5011. 61ol-ll92-51188.
Hell Pum111 Only Sllghlf Hlt;rot. Financlng With JD Crodli Apl"o· - - · Allor 5 P.M.
,..,..,..,....,__.;.,..,-...;._I -:,_1.1="""'::::.::,.,.:::.::"":::.·_,;..._ __;, Call
.... ~ 1-100-204-l'IMI.
14¥70 Mobile Home Total Elec- 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
Uo Today. 1gg7 lo Tho val Carmlchael'a Farm &amp; Lawn,
1885 Sa11rm SC2. Au!Dmaoc, Air,
ulc, Oulllde Flartill~ Reoltled In·
540
MI•-1••-A
Twenty Sevenlh Year In The 81..._.2.,2. 1-IOO·!iiM-1111.
230 Professional
Cruise, AM!FM Cas•eue, Truhk
aldo Excollonl Con~lllon, Mull IZB0·$300, aewer,
.
"""' _...,us
Healing 1 Coolilg Buoneul 814- lluaay Forguacn 265 Oleoel
Releaae. $1:1,000 Cal Aflor 5 P.M.
l.lovel 17,500 Fwm, Call 614-387· tralh I11:1Uded. a14-V02'2187.
Merc:htndiM
Services
ue 83011, 1-IIOQ.2111-ooa
cellent
Condition "''·"''0' 1 (Serious Inquiries Onlyl) 814 1028 OIIU-Hl227.
2bedroom, 501100 IOI $275/n\o. 1SIU Model Magnavo• Big
-",.,e.,..•o...,1.:.s._ _ _ _ __
Livlngtton'a ba11ment water· ;
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon (8,.)418-2358
1g61 Kanlucklan · IOIB• Throt No poll. Shedy Cove llobllo Sc:retn T.V. ~1 Inch Color Pip. Uprlghl, Ron Evano Enlorprile'
proofing. 111 Hllmtnt repairs
l.llllublshl 02050 30 HP. • Cylln- 1986 Mercury Tracer: 28,000
!"'rk, H1rlford. 30•·112· Surround Sound, All Oppooltion ~ Olllo. 1-800-537·11521.
dane, fret attimatea, llfttlmt 1 Bedroom N8111y Now Window Aif
der, Diesel Tractor, 680 Hours, 15 mUea. $7,995. 8,000 miles leh on
Pofd 11,800, Will Talet $750, 814guarantH. 1Oyr1 on Job experl- . 10x.O Aluminum Awning Under·
Tall T.V. Sllnd, Wllh Shllv01 On l.llnlueo From Galllpollo, Aoklng Wanamyl(8,.f·258-11913
004-475-2145.
I plnnlng Disconnect Bo• 01her · 3 Bedroom Trailer. In Village Of .. 1-1318 Allor I P.l.l,
... 5011, 6t ..3N-2601.
E•uasll.lull
Be
l.lovedl
$2,000,
Rl
G
....
N
~
·~··
,o
• n
0
ra,_, 0 ~11, ,_.,.o., 2·12ln. Jl·Audlo oub wolloro, 1 Bclh Sldeo. t•oo: Coudl &amp; Cclloo
18 Mtrcu;y Monlerty, 67,000
C.1814-24-501.
Plus Qep011t. Reference• Re· PPI amplillar 15011. 1 Alpine Table 180; ColfH Tibia I 2 End New Holland Model 782 SiieaO. original mile•. inlerior ;, new,
Colt For Appolntmonl
Tabf11 Willi Dooro, Plaid II ,000
Chopper With A Two Row Varl· needs right lront fend.-~. drivable,
1D71 12170 Cambridga8,.·258· qulrod, 614-3711-2720, AFTER I --304-075-8713.
Sall:$500, 611 418 3437.
able Width Corn Head, &amp; Two $1,200 OBO: eo Buick' Eic. 225,
1318.
PJL
w.G......,,.,f
22 Cubic fool Saara fratzer Trampoline, brand new, $150. Hay Heads, 814-:188-DB75.
runs groa~ hlndiH groa1 $1,200
llludful Rivet VI. . In Kanauga, (Chell !ype) lnlorlor light; llaah :JOol-&lt;112-3477.
080; 77 Chevy van, 1 IDn, heavy
.
K
•
9
d
1 71 irkwoo 12x80 2,300, 2 Bedrooms, Unfufnl1hed, Air
llon.-911.
Shennlu Tractor For Sale, 014· dDty. ntecls motor, SSOO; aufroot. a04·B75·18a5 oiler Spm.
614.-388-9188, D 614~9747.
Conditioned, .No Pe~. Oepoalt,
$200.
.
Tnompollnl, uoed .vary Uala: Sing- - -.
742-®40, 81'-742-2734..
1977 Bendix 1•x70 3 Bedrooms, Raferenctl, folter"l Mobile
., •ewing machine cabinet that
1-112 Balli&amp;, New Windows. 3Ton Homof'li1&lt;,81H&lt;Hl181.
· 3 Pc. Uving Room SullO, a Guno, accommodatea a 111ger 814· Uoed 3210 DIICh Wll&lt;:h Trencher 79 Pcntiac Trans Am, $800, 6"·
Heat Pump, $8,985, 8,.·388·
;:';.~ul Sneaker Plow, 11•· ::-99::-2-:·588~5.,...: - : - - : - - - - - Gun Cablntl, CaH Afllr 5 P.M. 1148-2202.
440 Apartments
8058.
81~N-21127.
92 Oldo 88, loaded, AC, ABS,
Warerline
Special:
31•
2oo
PSI
for Rent
87K miles, excellent condition,
Livestock
1892 Cle)'IDn Northridge ,.,70 3
7 Pc. Douglao Dlnllll Set Brown 121.gs ·Par 100: 1" 200 PSI 630
.... I Tan, Coli AllOr • P.M. 814-2•5- $37.00 Per 100: All Bra11 Com- 3 and • Jf1 old Black Slm. Bulla, $85011, 1114-IM3-52711.
Bedraoma. 2 Fu~ Bathl. Jacuul 1 ond 2 lleCtroom priuion Flttingo In SIDell
nlahed
and
unlurnlahed,
MCUriiY
. Tub In Wa11ec,.Batti, 1011112 Solid
11372.
Bull Calve•. (GU)· ~2 Pontiac Flreblrd, V-8, T-top1,
1
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES Cow11nd
Wood Ot.1tbulldlng, 10110 Deek. depoalt required, no pete, 114·
2.58-8402 01'(614)-448-1 158
automatic, leal. power IY&amp;rylhjng,
All real estate a~no tn
JlckaOn,
Ohio,
1-1100'537-95211
8' HborQloll lnlck IDpptr, ~ldlng
Elcallel\1 Condidon. $18,500, 814- 892·2218.
85,000 miles, excellent condition.
I!U .-peper ~ subjeCt 10 ! 2AS.5012. Allor 5:30P.M.
glaaa WlndoWI Willi ... . _ Ilk·
8. Hollleln Sprlhger Halter&amp; $83CIO, 1114-247-3901 afl8t 5:00.
1 Bedroom Near Holzer Exira ll1g $200,81411112-54311.
550
Building
the Fedo&lt;al Fair Housing Act
Walghlng gso P&lt;IL, ApproalmaleNice, Central Air, 1288/Mo., +
1993,
~.
e
nlury
Bravo
Ux70,
3
ly Eacf18t......_4053.
CARS FOR $1001 Trucke, boa"
ol1968 which makes ~ 11~1
SuppiiBS
Bedrooms, 2 Full Balha, Cenb'lll Ullll~oo. Depooll Req. No P.ll, Art wou buying new turnllure?
4·wheelerl, motor hom81, turnl·
to advertise •any prefeft!nce.
61
.......
2115~.
Sail
you&lt;
uaed
lumllin
1D
lho
PcAir, Pay Off Only, $17,800 814Block, brick, ooor pipet, wind· Blntama tor aalt, Red Pyle, Old
, electronics, compu1er1 ate.
1-llo!l or dlscrimlnallo!l
rnaray
Thrlf1
Shop.
Jhlre
Ia
I
,..,
2As-a8
IRS, DEA. Avlilablo your
Furnlahed Elflcloney Shl,. Balli, need tar btukfut and dining owa, llnlell, ate. Claude Wlnlera, Englloh, While Plymoulll Rock, by
booed on race, oolot, religion,
Rio Grande,. OH Call 6,.· 2•5· call 814·1411-3028 leave mea - area now. CaU 1·800-5t3-43~3
$1
&amp;5/llo.,
Ulilillll
Paid,
807
$8018M tamlllal status or national
111 Time Buyaro E·Z Financing 2
room aeta. Wt a110 buy t11by 5121 .
11111En s-0368
·
013 Bedrooms Around .$200 Par ond Allonuo, Grolllpollo, 114-o441- illml, good uoed IDyl. Mull ba ln.
origin, Dt' any intenUon to
384ol, Aflor7 P.M.
llo., fiD0-251·5070.
excellenl eondltion. Good enougn SIOal BuUdlngo Now, Engineered Club calf for 19Q8 mor~ll lleer
11l80 · tiiiiO Cara For$100111
make any such preference.
tar Chrio,..o gllll. Cafi614-VI2· .OxBOxt2 Woo 115,500 Balance lhaw.• Plac;e In top 10 at Ma1on
Seized~ Sold"
limitatiOn or discrtmlnation.·
Beech
St,
lllddlopoll,
2bedroom
1ST TIME BUYERSI E·Z Fl·
3725
Tuoeday
lllru
Fridly,
1Qam.
Coun1y
Filr.
Approa
5001bo.
Locally
Thisl.lomir.
H,980,
SOa10011a
Wao
$2a,200
NANCING. 2 or 3 bedrooms, at· furnished &amp; unfurnill'lad. uiiUdtl •prn al 220 Elll llaln SUMI, Pc- Balanco S17,g31, 60•150111 ..75. 304-1175-1353.
Trucl&lt;a, .,..,, Etc.
This newspaper' wltnot
paid. Oepooll &amp; raterenceL 30&lt;· moroy.
ound $200/mo. 1-800-251·5070.
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ACROSS

Tragic· Ditto - Idyll· Venous , STARTED
"You won't miss your train if you run ," my neighbor
said. 1 replied "I shouldn't have to . run. I should have
STARTED sooner 1"

SEPTEMBER 12 I

�Along the

Inside

A1ver

Popularit, of

WE FINISHED 1996 AS IHE #I TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DULER IN THE WORLD!
WE 'CAN'T IMPROVE ON THAtr BUT NOW WE HAVE TO ·STAY
HELP. HELP!
!
.

flea markets

continues to grow
• Featured on

P.a• A7

NOTICE: C&amp; 0 MOTORS CHEVROlET &amp; OlDSMOIIll SERVICE DEPT. HIS DOUBlED IN SIZE TO AC(OMMODAn THE HIGH VOlUME SAlES DEPT.
NOW TAKING APPOINTMEm 727-2921. ASK FOR THE SERVICE DEPARTMENT.
.

LOVE

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LOW
AS

$'

•Page A8 •

'

HI: Mid-80s
Low: 60s

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Details on
pageA2

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·

Vol. 32 No. 31
'

Middleport man visits London
to pay last respects to Diana

1M7TOYOTA,

AIR
BAGS

• Page C8 •

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • September 14, 1997,;;.; ,.,.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

TOYOTA

All, AM/FM IADIO

World bids
farewell to
Mother Teresa

tmts

1998

1998 TOYOTA 414

'Billy Bob
loves
Charlene'

•

LEXUS LOVETOYOTA--.....

TRUCK'S
ALL
HAVE
DUAL

$l oo

IS
LOW
IS

By BRIAN J. REED
and saw the hearse which transport- don, he went directly to St. James
llme•Banllnel Stefl
ed Diana's casket from the abbey to Palace, where Diana's body lay in
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Coun- her burial place outside of London. state, and where barricades were
ty was represented at the funeral . Fisher also caught a glimpse of going up and spectators had already
procession of Princess Diana by Queen Elizabeth II. ·
·begun to set up "camps," so that they
Middleport's Bruce Fisher.
.·., According to Fisher, who oper- could spend the night .and save their
; Fisher returned Wednesday from ates the Fisher Funeral Homes in places along the procession's route.
~ spur-of-the-moment trip to LonPomeroy and Middleport, his deciWhen Fisher arrived at the
don, where he watched the cortege sion to make the trip to London was palace, he noticed that the crowd
pass through the streets of London, made in a flash, and he's glad that he was·quickly increasing in size.
watched the funeral service from went.
"I sensed something was happen·
~Westminster Abbey at Hyde Park,
He flew to London from Pitts• ing, and so I decided to sley close,"
burgh on September 3, arriving on Fisher said. "Then, someon·e .told me
the afternoon of September 5; Lon- that some important people might be
don time. Upon his arrival in Lon- on their way."

Fisher said that in about an hour,
Queen Elizabeth appeared at .the
palace, where she paid -her respects
to Princess Diana, and then conducted what has become known as a
"walk-about," -where she walked
along the crowds, shaking hands.
The Queen's appearanCG was just
before she went on television to
address the nation.
Arising at 3 a.m. on Saturday
morning, Fisher went to a preselected place along the procession route.
"The air was solid," Fisher said.
Continued .on page A2

HER MAJESTY • Bruce F18htr . Middleport took thl1 11111plhot ol
Qunn Elizabeth •• ahe lett St. Jamea Palece, 8hortly belote her
eddre.. to the nation. Also pictured In the limousine Is the quMn's husband, Prince Philip.

'You just hav~ to do the job Holzer Meigs
TOYOTA COROLLA

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results

ALL

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Autopsy does not
determine cause
of girl's death

UV4
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TOYOTAUV4
AS
LOW
AS

LOVE TOYOTA

SEE

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

IRONTON (AP)- More tests
will be done on the body of a girl
found in a southern Obio back
yard after a preliminary autopsy
did not determine a cause of death.
"There was no · evidence of
trauma, no knife wounds, no bullet holes or anything like that,"
Lawrence County Prosecutor J.B.
Collier Jr. told The Daily Independent of Ashland, Ky.
"It · may" be, because of the
decomposed state of the body, that.
we won't find a definite answer."
Collier said the autopsy performed this week in Columbus did
not rule out suffoCation or poisoning as the cause of death. He said
more testing will be done, but
results couldhle several weeks.
The body w.S found Sunday in
.the back yard of Jack and Mona
Volgares. Police believe the dead
girl was Mrs. Volgares' 8-year-old
-daughter, Seleana, but are awaiting DNA test results to confirm
the identity.

NEW TOYOTA TEICE~,... .WHIR HAWK
IS
LOW
IS

DLEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DULERSHIP IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT.
NECESSARY. PLWE APPLY
IN THE lOYOlA SHOWROOM.
"IODM'IIS
ALL PRICES tNCWDE

AND

NUMBER
1
IMPORT
DULER
Ill THE
STATE

Good Mornin
Today'• ~ban-Jiadbial

10 Sections • 124 Pages

IS
LOW
IS

Calendars
Classifted5
Comics
Edi!orlals
Along the River
Obituaries

C3&amp;S
DJ-7

A6

Soorts

B1·8

Insert
A4

C1

C 1997 Ohio Valley Publishina Co.

Carey's

MOTORS LEXus·
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA

.•

~

••
•

filet""-

em:•

a

l~gislation

.

offers rural fire departments $500,000 in state loans

.
ovation of -fire department
J"ust passed so that is where we'll
"!, thlnk tt'a·en·ou·nh
stan," said Carey. "I ihink it's
•
buildings and the purchase of
enough to get the ball rolling until , to get the bll/1 roll/llfl
major equipment for fire fightwe can hopefully get more money
fu
ing, ambulance, emergency
(for the program) in the future."
until we can hO(Jf lly
medical or rescue services. The
The bill establishes the Small get mOtW money (for
program will be administered by
the State Fire Marshal.
Government Fire Department the program) In the
Services Revolving Loan Pro·
Testimony for the bill in
gram, under which loans can be future."
committee this week came from
made to certain municipal corState Fire Marshal James
porations and townships.
McNamee and the Ohio Fire Chiefs Association.
The loans must be to expedite the construction or reo"As equipment costs continue to rise, and annual test-

~

t

POMEROY -The new Holzer Meigs Clinic in
Pomeroy will open its doors on Sept. 22, 1997, after
ground was broken on AprillO for the facility, billed
as the first. cooperative health care facility of its kind
in southeastern Ohio.
Holzer Clinic and Consolidated Health Systems,
Inc. combined forces to meet the health eare needs of
Meigs_ County and. ~ur• The 10,200·
roundtng commumtles, · Bg~re-fool atnlc·
jointly .c?nstructin~ the 'tiJre ~·
ne--: ~cthty, accordtn&amp; to ex'-ilnd Hofztr Cl/n• cbmc press release.
lc
In llelg•
Consolidate~, a riot· County: the Holzer
for·p'?fit~ hospttal-based Cilnlc oJ ltlelg•
organtzatt.on ~nd the par- County In ltllddleent orga~1zauon of Holz- port •nd ltlelga
er Med1cai Ce~ter and Hulth ~ In
\l:terans Memonal Hos- Pomeroy. .rtto. IWO
p1tal, as well ~s other t.clltu. will perm•·
southea~t~':l Ohto health nently cloft attar
facilities, and ~o.lzer buatn... on Thura·
Chmc, a phys1c1_an- day to prepare for ,
owne~ group ~ract1ce, rhl move.
combmed
ftnances,
resources, and medicai experience to build the new
clinic providing a state-of-the-art, outpatient medical
facility.
The ·t0,200-square-foot structure replaces the
existing Holzer Clinic facilities in Meigs County: the
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County in Middleport and
Meigs Health Services in Pomeroy. Those two facil·
ities will permanently close after business on Thursday to prepare for the move.
During the temporary closing, health issues
should be referred to Holzer Clinic's Urgent Care
Center in Gallipolis or the Veterans Memorial Hospital Emergency Room in Pomeroy, according to
Holzer Meigs Clinic manager Kathy Bowen R.N.
Although the ,two health facilities are merging
into one, Holzer has no intention of reducing staff,
according to the clinic release.
Holzer Clinic Director of Branch Operations
Stephen Elberfeld indicated the Holzer Meigs Clinic
will "have new and expanded services, possibly
requiring increased staffing in the future."
Holzer intends to provide the current level of
staffing in the com.bined facilities and anticipates
expanded staffing as patient needs indicate, the
release stated.
In addition to existing Holzer." services in Meigs
County, the new facility will provide obstetricS and
gynecology, ophthalmology, orthopedics and
surgery. Physical therapy will be added to .the' ancil·
lary services as well. A full-service laboratory and
diagnostics department (X-ray and mammography)
will complement the range of health care ser,vices
available.
To introduce the medical arfs eenter to the community, a grand opening and open house have been
set for Friday at 9 a.m.
The ceremonies are open to the public and will
include a ribbon cutting ceremony and dedication,
refreshments, and facility tours conducted by Holzer ·
Meigs Clinic staff.
·
Keynote speaches will be given by State Senator
Michael Shoemaker and State Representative John
Continued on page A2

By JfLL WlLUAMS
Tlmes·Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The job
demands lots of hours, hard
work, stressful working conditions and can result in fatigue.
The pay isn't that great either.
J;l.u! t.he personal satisfaction a
volunteer firefighter Jcc.eives
each time he makes a run is
undescribable. ·
·· Webster's Dictionary defines
a volunteer .as "one who offers
himself for a service of his own
free will." But by providing this
service, they miss out on family
events - they miss meals and·
they miss sleep.
Locally, on average, the Gal·
lipolis Volunteer Fire Department, with manpower 36 strong,
receives dozens of calls a week.
Outside of false alarms, they
respond to any calls in which
firefighters assistance is needed.
They are often called to the scene
of vehicle accidents which
involve entrapments, and they C-.~iTij~Ui~=1~~; a,Biij901~Yoiliin.
provide mutual aid to area fire taer firelighter 11m Mills helpa one of hla comdepartments - to include, Mid·
dleport, Pomeroy and Point Pleasant, W.Va.
calm, so that the firefighters can perform their duties. He often has
"If they need help they call us, if we need help we call them," to try to help the families With the proper way to vent their frus·
said Tim Mills, Assistant Chief of the GVFD. "However, the home trations during the traumatic experience.
district takes precedence over mutual aid calls."
His role is io act as sounding board for firefighters who may
"Our job is to keep the people safe
need his assistance following a critical inciin whatever ·position we're in," Mills
dent.
·
said. "We're responsible for the pro"It's not easy to leave the scene of a fataltection of lives and property."
ity and then go back home and sit down to
"A firefighter needs to be in good
dinner or fall asleep," Hood said. .
shape, level-headed and able to take
While the firefighters endure up 36 state
orders," Scott Adkins, who has been a
required training hours lind the Gallipolis sta·
volunteer since 1995, explained.
lion requires up to at least 12 hours training
"It takes a lot of bravery," he added.
each year, no amount of experience could
"You can't question the how or why,
prepare them for certain situations.
you just have to do. the job."
"You're not going to get over a stressful
situation in one or two hours," Hood stated.
Adkins said that, in addition to the
self-worth he gains as a volunteer, that
"It takes days, weeks, months.''
he has a better perspective on fire safe"ll~s important to have a debriefing sesty for protection of his own home and
sion to get the firefis/lter to talk about the sitfamily.
uation," he added. "Ea.ch fireman is a differ. "It makes you more conscious
ent person and· theit streSs levels are also difwhen it comes to overloading outlets
ferent."
·
and noticing bad wiring," he stated.
Hood also explaihs'that a firefighters job
Fully dr~sse~ in uniforms, called
is· not over when the' fire is out. Back at the
bunkers, and equipment that includes
station, hoses need to be cleaned and put up,
face m~sks · and oxygen tanks, firemen
air tanks need to be refilled and equipment
take on an extra·60-70 pounds.
:Ll!;,:,;.~~!.....J:UJillol!;!jl needs to be put away.
.
"it's really important not to have
HEAVY LOAD- Fully dreseed In unllorma,
A couple of department members will
any exposed skin," stated 23 year vet- celled bunkers, end equipment that Include&amp; remain at the fire scene to watch for hot spots
eran firefighter Mike Null. "Uncov· Ieee masks end oxygen tankl, firemen take and in a way "babysit" the fire's remains ..
ered skin will result in a bad bum."
on an extra 60-70 poundt.
"That way if they do see something that
As the department's chaplain, Bob
.
gets out of hand, they can get a hold of the
Hood assists the families struck by tragedy. He also works with rest of us immediately," Null added.
the firefighters to relieve stress.
.
In addition to the long hours spent on fire runs, the department's
At the scene of a fire, he is responsible for keeping the victims
Continued on page A2

By AARON MARSHALl,.
Tlme.S.ntlnel Columbua Burnu
COLUMBUS -A total of $500,000 in no interest
loans would be made available to small, rural fire
departments under legislation, sponsor,ed·by State Rep.
John Carey, recently approved by the Ohio House
Finance Committee.
The legislation, which must still be approved on the
House floor and clear the Ohio Senate's hearing.process,
originally was slated to offer rural fire departments $5
nlillion in loans.
•
"We were able to get $500,000 put into the budget that
'

I

Clinic set to
open Sept. ·22

Volunteer
fi·refighters
alWays on call

,::

•

ing of hoses, aerial and ground ladders and air masks
strain the budgets of volunteer fire departments, the need
for financial assistance is at an all time high," he said.
Townships qualify for the program if they have a
population under 5,000 or if it is located in.a county that
has under 100,000 people. A municipal corporation
qualifies for a loan under the program if it has a populolion of under 7,500.
Loans are no interest and have a maximum term of 20
years. Anyone requesting a loan is required to provide
local matching funds ·at least equal to 5 percent of the
loan amount.

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