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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

ittsburgh

........

psets Miami

Pick 3:
1·5·2
Pick 4:

SltN

I

Partly cloudy tonight,
lowe In the mid 60s .
Saturday, ehowers and
thunderstorms likely .

Buckeye 5:
1-2-1 Q-12-13

AFIII

·

0•8•2.0

·1-5

•

en tine
1998

lobi .... NO. 108
CUI87, Ohio V.lley Publlahlng Comp~~ny

TOYOTA

RUCK'S
All, IM/FM I_UI_O

lOW .$

ALL
HAVE
DUAL

AIR

BAGS

, IS

Deal nears to debate r--Construction continues-campaign finan~e bill
M

1997TOYOTA

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WASHINGTON (AP)- Amid a
flurry of negotiations. Sen. John
McCain says agreement may be near
with Republican leaders for the Senate to debate a modified bill to over. haul campaign finance laws.
"I believe that we can probably
get the agreement tomorrow morning,·· McCairi told reponers Thursday
evening. But the Arizona Republican.
a chief sponsor of campaign finance
legislation. added that ·the decision
was up to Senate Majority Leader
Trent Loll, R-Miss.
Lou acknowledged that talks were
under way and said. "We have modifications we'•e working on." But he
said proposals still have to be cleared
with "a herd of people." He said
nothing about a decision being immi-

•·

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nent.

'

Participants from both sides
speaking on condition of anonymity
said if the bill does reach the Senate
floor. it would probably be around
mid-October. Some discussion also
involved . findillg a way to schedule
debate during a break the Senate
Governmental Affairs Commillee
Would take in its .public hearings on
alleged campaign finance abuses in
the Ias! e lcction.
McCain and Sen. Russell Fein. gold, D-Wis .. arc the chief sponsors
of a bill revamping campaign-finance
lawsthlll is
. backed-by
.
. President Clin-

ONE IN

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IT'S
ClASS

... IS .
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•

ton and many congressional Democ- rc·election.
The current McCain-Feingold bill
With the Governmental Affairs would ban soft money, the unreCommiuee hearings focusing on stricted contributions going to polit·
alleged money-raising abuses by the ical parties. and offer other incentives
Clinton White House during the for politicians to curb their campaign
I 996 campaign, Democrats are eager spending.
to shift public auemion froni those
McCain said a new version under
hearings to legislation that would discussion with GOP leaders would
change a system dominated by politi, also Jet union members demand a
· cians chasing millions in contribu- refund of the portion of their dues
tions.
j
•
used for political activitY. a provision
Last week Democrats applied Lou .has insisted on.
pressure on Lou, circulating a Jeuer
In an effon to restrict help for
· signed by all 45 Democratic senators wealthy candidates, it also would limexpressing support for the McCain· it aid from political parties to Senate
Feingold bill. Two other Senate hopefuls who spend more than
Republicans besides McCain $50,000 of their own money on their
Scns. Susan Collins of Maine and campaigns.
Fred Thompson of Tennessee In a hint of the activity going on
have expressed support for the bill, behind the scenes, McCain and Fein· leaving backers at least two shon of gold scheduled a news conference to
a majority.
announce a breakthr.ough, but then
Loll and other GOP leaders have abruptly canceled it without explabeen insisting that any consideration n~tion . Feingold's office also issued
of fund-raising reform should wait a new's rel~ase saying Feingold.
until after the Governmental Affairs McCain and Loll w.ould soon discuss
Commiuec completes its hearings, the topic on the Senate floor- only
though Lon softened that stance last to have Lou's office deny that such
week.
comments were planned.
Privately, many incumbents of . "They jumped the gun, " Lou
both panics like the currant system said of McCain and Feingold.
because historically the preponderIn the House, where GOP leaders
ance of contributions by political also oppose immediate action on
action committees and individuals fund-raising overhaul, Democrats are
usually"g«es tcrnfflteholders seekinc also
in protest.

UV4

IS
UtW
IS

TOYOTA

·HAWK
•

IS
LOW
IS

.

DLEXUS

W.VA.'S
. LARGEST TOYOTA
DEALERSHIP IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD 'RELIABLE SALES
JPIOPLE• EXPERIENCE ·NOT
. PLEASE APPLY
IN
TOYOTA SHOWROOM.

Wcirk continues on U.S. 33, where a $1.3 million paving project is underway. The Shelly Co.
of Thornville is the contractor on the work, which involves paving of seven mllee of four-lane
highway from Darwin to Pomeroy. The project Is to be completed no later than July 1998,

Curtain raises on two-day 'Expo
·'97' on Saturday at fairgro!u gds
At noon Saturday. judging in contests to determine the largest pump·
kin, sunflower. car of corn and stalk ·
of corn will be t,cld in the senior fair
building.
A kiddie tractor pull will take
place on the pull track at I p.m., fol lowed ~y an antique tractor pull at 2
p.m . From 2:30 to 4 p.m.. the canine
obedience program will he presented
hy Jennifer Krawsct.yn .

A stage has llecn placed ncar the
senior fair building for cntcnainmcnt
which on Saturday will include Lin·
. da and Matihcw King singing Chris·
tian M.Jsic at 10:15 a.m.; .the Swinging Seniors at I I a.m.; Sheila Arnold
doing' gospel music at noon; the
Belles and Beaus Square Dance Club
performing at I p.m.: Debbie Powell
doing gospel music at 2 p.m .: Kelley

CINCINNATI (AP)- A federal
Ohio Attorney' General Betty
judge will decide whether inmate vic· Montgomery is trying to heir countims of the 1993 riot at the Southern ty pn&gt;seculnr".'! and Crime vil'tims g~t
Ohio Correctional Facility will get their hands on the money.
the $2.7 million Ohio agreed to pay
lnmutcs ' nllorncys·. led hy
them.
Alphonse A. Gcrhardstcin. wanl .to

1

At issue is whether the money will

~top

the rrosct:utors and victims.
go to the pri'soners or to pay for their They rt..,.kcd that an order he issued
p~sccutions and reimburse lhCir vic- againsl Montgomery ·s efforts and
lipls .
m:cusl.'d her of violating scll lcment
U.S. District Judge S. Arthur confidentiality and prisoners ' dul'
Spiegel was lo conducl a hearing nn process rights.

IMPORT
DWEI

IN THE

the matlcr today.

STAn

in the 11 -day riot at the maximum- .allorncy general ''undcnn inc!&lt;i the
~ccurity prison ncar lucasvill e.
remedial pU'lJOSC .. of the federal law
Ohio agreed to pay hundreds of Jc~igncd to punish public agencies
inmates who were injured or had per- whose employees illegally violate

Gcrhardstcin said that by going

One guard and' nine inmates' died .after l:ompcnsatory damages, the

NEW CLINIC TOURED - While the ribbon·
cutting and grand opening ceremonies for the
Holzer Meigs Clinic didn't take place untlllhls
morning, ell!ployeea of the Middleport Holzer
Clinic and Veterans Memorial Hospital were
given a preview Thursday "lght. Tours were
conductad and refreshments served. Here,
Becky Thomas Depoy, emp,loyee of Meigs

IS

LOW
IS

Grucscr and Cynthia Collcrill, a
musical medley at3 p.m .: and Rohin
4'Han presenting country music at 4
p.m.
.
The traditional town and country
church service with Eugene Underwood, speaker, will be at .I 0 a.m.
Sunday, 'followed by an old fashioned
gospel sing-a-long at II am.
The Big licnd Cloglcrs will perform at I p.m.; Bill Crane and
"Dusk" with a musical medley at 2
p.m.; the Trinity Church Bell Choir
at 3 p.m.: and B.J . Smith doing a
medley at 4 p.m .
At 1:30 ncar the old lug cabin,
antique lraclor games and test· your·

skills contests .will take place. while .
at 4 p.m. an "Expo '97 " carving to be
made during the :-:aw

sculpluri~g

demonstrations will he auctioned off.

Inmate victims of Lucasville riot
await judge's ruling on awards

•PIKIIIGwaJOtill
qur01
.

LOV·ETOYOTA

•

. ·u:.;.. ..

Ribbon-culling ceremonies for the
second annual Town and Country
Expo '97 will be 10 a.m. Saturday at
the !)'lain ~ate of the Roc~ Springs
Fairgrounds.
All day on both days of the Expo,
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., displays and
dcmonstralions, as well as various
other activities, will occur on the fair'
·
grounds.
There will be new cars and trucks
from four dealerships, antique cars
and tractors, Jive and dried flowers ,
weaving demonstrations, a pc"tting
zoo with fann and exotic animals, a
working forge, and wood sculpturing .
The "Cyclone." a monster truck
and a steam engine pulling wagons.
will be on the grounds. as will ponies
and horses , offering Expo gocrs rides
both days.

NEW

TOYOTAUV4

'

rats .

ALL

MUST
SEE
HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

2 Sectlona, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspap11r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 19, 1997

Health Services, and Rhonda Daile 1, R.N.,
director of nurses 111 Veterans Memor .al Hos·
pltal, are shown some of the equipmetlt In the
physical therapy department by Joan Ander·
son, PT, manager af rehabilitation clin eel services at the new facility, and Kathy Bowen, R.N.
manager, plcturacl left to right. (Photo by
Charlene Hoeflich)

~nnal

properly de stnrycd in the riot

and occupation of a cell block.
The payments were meant to
resolve a ICdcml civil rights su it
hrought hy inmalcs .

t: ivil rights.
Gcrhan.lstcin sai d the prisoners

earned the money by pulling up with
Jhusc from other prisoners and
gu~mJ!-.. dcfusin~ rumors and kccpmg

inmates informed of .what was going
on .

Montgomery said Spiegel lacks
.jurisdiction hccause he approved the
settlement earlier this year, though
with a promise to resolve the payment QUC!-.tion later.

In a recently filed memo. she suid
she had authority to rursuc the money on hchalf or victims and "to con-

sult with and advise other government ollicials of statutory rights they
may poliscss" in ~o nncdion with
~:os t s of prosecution .
"I nnwtcs who arc ahle to .do sn
shnuld satisfy any ohligations owed
to the government and victims,' ' the
memo said.

Shortly oftcr Spiegel approved the
settlement. Montgomery contar..:tcd
Ohi o's XX county prosecutors and
COUI1 cJcrk!.,,

Ex-Christian Coalition leader aligns himself with Cremeans camp
AND

MOTORS. LEXUS
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA

By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service
.
COLUMBUS - As form~r Congressman Frank Cremeans begins his run
to recapture the Sixth Congressional District scat, he has in his camp one of
America's foremost religious conservatives: former Chnsttan Coahtton head
Ralph Reed.
· . .
.. .
The boyish-looking Reed, who built the Chmttan Coalmon mtoa po~­
erful national force in Republican politics duri~g his ~ight years as chtef, w1ll
be helping Cremeans auemptto win back a seat he lost narrowly to Rep. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucusville, in I 996.
·
Exactly what role Reed, who recently stepped down as Christian Co~li­
tion head to start a political consulting business called Century Strategtes,
will play in Cremeans' campaign has yet to be determined.
.
"I don't know for sure 'what we're going to do .. .i t's all just part ol a
process of gearing up for 1998," said Cremeans, a Galiapolis businessman .

'

'Tve known Ralph for quite some tiinc ... we talk on the phone from time Akron ·~ Blis!'. In stitulc , a nonparti!&gt;ian political research institute.
.;
to' time and occasionally gel together and have a cup of coffee, so it 's not
" I think in many ways the Hollistcr-Crcmcans race docs represent the modunusual for me to talk politics with him."
c rat c-con~c rvativc split in the Republican Party,' ' he said. " It's the classic
But Reed, who could not be reached for comment. seemed a linle more pocket hook economic iss ue s of Republicanism matched against the social
definite about his involvement with Cremeans camp, even joking in a recent issues of Republicanism ... .
New York Times profile thai he would slip into the Sixth District "under the
In primary and potenti al general election run s for Cremeans that arc .
cover of night" because he did not want to upstage the candidate.
c:q:let:lcd to be close, Recifs star ~ower could turn out religious conscrvaWith Strickland cooling his heels apparently without primary opposition . , ti vcs in Jro ves. Green said.
Cremeans and Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, a Marieua native, are gearing up
. "Can Reed motivate the religious conservatives to tum out and vote at
foria tough May 5 primary fray in the sprawling Sixth District. Other declared the polls '! Yes. it's clear he .can," he said. " So to the extent having Ralph
candidates in the GOP field include Washing1on State Communily College Reed in your column helps get that group to the polls he will help Cremeans."
teacher Tom' Sharpe and Washington County insurance agent Mike Azingcr.
In the Sixth District _GOP primary, Green estimated that religious COO·
Reed's involvement in the Cremeans campaign, while more moderate servatives could account for "as high as 25 to 30perccnt" oft he voting bloc .
Sixth District Republican county chairs~~port Hollister, symbolizes a rift
That voting bloc was instrumental in gelling Cremeans elected to Conoccurring within GOP ranks, said John 'Sen, director of the University of gress in 1994.
t~

•

•

�'

Friday, September 19, 1997

Co1nmentarr_

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Pege 2

OHIO Weather
Aa:uWeathe,e foiUast for

ByJackADderaad Ju MoHer
'E.stiJDfiskl in 1948
BOSNIA - The municipal elections held here last week were a pub111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
lic relations gambit that will have
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157
little effect on the political future of
this volatile region.
Organized and monitored by the
U.S. military, NATO and the Organization for Security and Cooperation
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
' in Europe, the elections were a
ROBERT L WINGETT
' stage-managed affair whose results
cannot be enforced.
Publleller
Our reporter Michael Viner
' watched up close as heavily armed
soldiers bused ethnic minorities into
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
their former home towns just long
o-l'llllotaneger .
Controller
enough to vote before retur,ning
them to the shelters they
now
J i l t - • rico-- t o . , . - - - on • , _ _
forced call home.
--01~,.,._. 7l'ltrd._
While taking a break from the
1
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, I » - , _ , -_,.
...,..._ - .
. m
. a SaraJevo
.
hote,I med'1a
...,...,..,.,...,._
• .,..• toopm10wacuon
or- - IP: " - rc N - . Tile ........_ m COurt St., _ . . , , ONo
members heard the sound of.a bomb
L..:u:mt;;::~"";:·.:;FAll'::,,:•:.:•::•:•:•::~~·~~-;....-----::--:---~---...1 · exploding in a nearby.. election
office, serving as a potent reminder
than any election results win likely
be challenged by force.
Some of the candidates last
·
weekend will end up winning their
races. but they will be hollow victoByTOMRAUM
ries. In most cases. the winners
Aaaoclallld Pre.. Wrilllr
WASHINGTON -Rep. Dan Bunon, a brashly panisan Indiana Repub- could never return to claim their
lican and fierce critic of President Clinton. can't seem to get his inquiry into seats without full-time and substancampaign fund-raising abuses going, no matter how hard he tries.
tial troop deployment. By some estiInstead of causing double headaches for the White House this week with mates, it would take a force of at
simullllneous hearings on both sides of the Capitol, as Democrats had feared, least 250,000 .troops to enforce the
election results.
the Bunon probe has only meant double trouble for Republicans.
"Peace is hanging by a thread,"
So far, the House inquiry has born no apparent fruit And repeated major
glitches have subjected GOP leaders to new criticism.
.
.
was the .candid assessment of one
As chairman of the House Government Reform and Overstght Commit- military officer on the ground who
tee, Burton is conducting an investigation parallelling the one by the Senate declined to be identified.
Governmental Affairs Committee, chaired by Sen. Fred Thompson, R-Tenn.
Many others echoed his same
But l!urton's public hearings have yet to begin, more than three mon~ sentiments. The week after forces
after Thompson gaveled his into session.
pull out, most predict, the ethnic
From having his chief counsel q\(il, to finding !!is own fund-raising tar- warfare will resume as if the occugeted by the Justice Department, to seeing some of his panel's subpoenas pation had never happened.
Interviews with Bosnian Musserved on the wrong individuals, Burton has endured one embarrassment
after another.
lims confirm what. many State
Department officials have been sayThe latest carne Tuesday, on the eve of the scheduled kickoff session . .
The three leadoff witnesses - the sister of Democratic fund-raiser Yah ing for months: Peace is not possible
Lin "Charlie" Trie and two others- refused at the lith hourto testify with- without the surrender and imprisonout immunity from prosecution,
ment of . Bosnian Serb leader
Radovan Karadzic and Serbian PresThe new delay brought fresh jeers from Democrats.
'
"I don't see why they're wasting millions of dollars in the House on an ident Slobodan Milose.vic.
For the time being, Karadzie is
investigation that is stumbling along so badly;" said Rep. Henry Waxman,
holed up in the mountain city of Pale
D-Calif., the pa~l's senior Democrat.
The snags have-embarrassed House Republican leaders, GOP aides said and has created a mafia-like network
of cronies that he uses to control
~w·
Some top Republicans didn't want to entrust the inquiry to Bunon in the what remains of the Serb economy.
The international community, espefirst place, concerned that he might not be perceived as a fair interrogator.
Burton, 59, took to the House floor in July 1994 to suggest that White cially the United States, would love
House aide Vincent Foster was murdered, not a suicide as investigators had to capture Karadzic and bring him to
concluded - and mortified some colleagues by saying he staged a mock trial in The Hague. But that would
require a commando-style raid
reenactment of the shooting at his home using a rifle and a watennclon.
"I will not go on any wil'ch hunts," Burton promised when he took over which could produce massive bloodthe inquiry. "I'm not going to be warm and fuzzy, but I'm going to be fair."
But his inquiry was thrown into turmoil July I With the abrupt resignation of John P. Rowley as chief counsel. Rowley said he wasn't given the
authority to run a "professional, credible investigation."
It took more than a month to finll ~rnew. chief counsel, Richard D. Ben- By George R. Plagenz
nell, a former Maryland prosecutor.
·
•
·
We arc not much for promises in
Bunon's panel issued a shon statement Tuesday announcing the new our modern society. A promise
delay and saying he and Waxman were "engaging in constructive 'discus- implies a commitment, and we don't
sions on granting immunity to witnesses."
·
like to be tied down by something
But Waxman said that "before I make that decision. I need to know what we may have said once. We know
the Justice Depanment thinks about it. ... I don't sec any great rush to have how hard it is to.get out of a promise
·made IO a child.
these people testify."
.
.
. .
Bunon himself is under Just1cc Department mvcsllgatJOn after a former
Many of us can't remember the
lobbyist for the Pakistan government sai~ the law~akcr pressured him to laSI time we made a promise. "I'll
raise at least $5,000 from Pakistani-Amcncans for h1&lt; rc-clecuon effort.
sec what I can do'' is as far as we
Burton denies the accusation and called tbe probe "a retaliatory move by will go. We quickly add. "But I
the Justice Department, because I am pushing preuy hard in my investiga· can't mak&lt;! you any. promises.'"
tion."
Lately. however. we have been
hearing a lot more about promises
and how they can bring out the best

--poo-..-.-..

01..,....

10

shed.
Karadzic still commands the loyalty of great swaths of the Setb population. despite incontrovertible evi·
dcnce of war crimes. But
a split has occurred in
recent months that pits
Karadzic against his former second-in-command,
Biljana Plavsic. Most analysts believe Plavsic, an
ardent Serb nationalist,
would bareIy be an
improvement
over Moller l
Karadzic. Plavsie, a former biology professor. has shown
more willingness to negotiate with
Westem officials, yet she has given
no indication that she's ready to roll
out the welcome wagon for Bosnian
Muslim refugees who remain homeless.
While Karadzic is the highest
profile criminal still on the loose,
high-ranking Serbian and Croatian
mililary officers told us that no general in either army would escape
war-crimes charges -- under the
United Nations definition of such
crimes -- if their a~tions during the
war were scrutinized.
But as long as Karadzic is free
and wields influence, the majority of

are

·· · ·- 'S f un d-raiSing
• ·•
'
BUrton
Probe ·effort seems J"l"nxed

America's attention will be focused
on restoring normalcy in neighboring CroatiL Giving aid to Bosnian
Serbs is as good as throwing it away,
since it would merely .
line the already flush
pockets of Serb war
criminals.
But in Croatia. the
American forces· have
been
warmly
received.
.In the city of
An-.ort Zagreb, peace reigns
supreme. The sixth
McDonald's restaurant recently
opened, and business is booming.
The dollars brought in by foreign
journalists alone arc helping to bring
this war-tom ci1y back to prosperity.
They even have· a brand-new Hard
Rock Cafe.
·
Meanwhile, just across lhe mountains. residents are still
stuck between a rock and a hard
place.
UNDER THE DOME -- Several
prominent Republicans are hqping
that their erstwhile colleague, Rep.
Dan Burton, R-Ind., gets shackled
by Janet Reno.
Burton's government reform and
oversight committee began hearings

Dr. R.D. Thomas

this week into the campaign fundnisin&amp; misdeeds of the 1996 elections, jockeying for the media spotlight with Sen. Fred Thompson, RTcnn., whose committee has been
hearing testimony since July.
For months, Republicans have
freued that Bunon' s reputation for
spinning wacky conspiracy theories
would compromise the credibility of
the hearings. Those fears escalated
amid media repons that Burton
threatened to have a lobbyist fired if
he didn't raise at least $5,000 for his
re-election campaign.
The day before hearings began, a
top GOP strategist echoed the feelings of many conservatives. "There
are a lot of Republicans up here who
are just praying that Reno appoints
an independent counsel."
Reno might be forced to do just
that, now that evidence has emerged .
that some of the money raised by
Vice Prcsiilcnt AI Gore went' directly to " hard, money" accounts. If
such a counsel is named, it would
quickly take !he sling out of Burton's hearings -- and avoid a potential embarrassment for Republicans.
J..,k Andenon IUICI Jan MoDer
are writers ror United Feature
Syndlcale, Inc.

')

Learning to make and keep promises

in us. This is due to a new cvangch·

Barry's World

Promise Keepers was started by
Bill McCanney. a University of Colorado fooiball coach. He and a
' friend were on !heir way to a Fellowship of Christian Athletes banquet in 1990 when McCartney
. 1 dynarmc
. ..
remarkcd that a ,. spec1a
exists when men come to•ether
to
•
honor Jesus Christ.
Later thai year, 72 men gathered

,,,,,

.· • IColumbus !78'

L ___________________:______..J

Letter to the editor
Better late than never
Dear ·editor
·
.
A month has already passed since the Meigs County Fa1r, but I don't feel
it is too late to give praise 10 all of the cast of "Made in Amenca," presented at the grandstand.
.
.
Paulette Harrison. as director. p\11 this great evemng of entertammenl
together, and she and all of the cast deserve recognition and applause for all
their effort.
·
h
··
Meigs County has· a lot of talented people, and those w o participated
provided themselves wei!. The show w~ well attended and well received
since and was clean (family-type) entertamment
1 hope there are OChers who enjoyed it as much as I.
Thanks. Meigs County Fair Board, for your efforts, also.
Ann Lambert
Pomeroy

-

to· lay the foundations for Promise ences. There arc no women, for one championship in 1990. He is now
Keepers. In 1991 the group's first thing. Someone has called the CEO of Promi'"' Keeper&lt;.
event was held at the University of Promise Keepers rallies "'Amazing
Promise Keepers pledge to ohey
Colorado's baskethall arena. It was Grace' with no sopranos."
Christ, 'form supportive relationattended by 4.200 men. Since then,
The Washington Post described ships with "a few other men,'" he
more than 2 million men
the meetings .as "cmo- · morally upright huild stmng famihavc attended Promise
tional gatherings, tears · lies, support 1he church. practice
Keepers events in stadiums
mingling with· public racial reconciliation and inOuencc
across the country.
commitments and male the world through their faith.
On Saturday, Oct. 4,
bonding."
Arc there problems! Yes. Critics
Promise Keepers will sponLike the Graham charge that Promise Keepers teach
sor the . biggest even! in its
Crusades, the Promise
that husbands arc lo exercise authorbrief history -- a mass rally
Keepers meetings are ily over their wives. Feminisl groups
on the Mall in Washington.
based on a litentl intcr- have picketed the group's. events.
D.C. Comparisons with the
prctation of the Bible: They sec Promise Keepers as
Million Man March in 1995
"We believe the Bible is "rolling back women's progress
· -- a gathering of AfricanPltlgllllz
verbally inspired ... and over lhc last 30 years ...
American men in the capital
without error in the origiThe National 'Organization for
convcned by Louis Farrakhan -- lire nal manuscripts." .
.
Women (NOW) says, ··we arc talkinevitable.
Who arc the Promise Keepers, ing again here about male superioriLeaders of the Promise · Keepers and what arc they pledging to keep? ty."
rally say-there is no political agenda The median age of those auending
· for the Oct. 4 event; Washington was the rallie&gt; is 38; eighty-eight percent
But the women of lhc Promi'"'
chosen a&lt; the site only because it is arc married (21 percent have been Keepers tell a dilfercnt story: "I sent
the "emotional center of the coun- divorced), 84 percent arc white and a frog to Promise Keepers and gol
try." .
back a prince." Another exclaims:
34 percent arc Baptist.
h
· K
"I don't know what happened to my
W at is a PromiSe ccper.1 meetMcCartney, 57, raised a Roman husband, but I don't want the old
ing like? It dis a· program
Catholic, became "born again" in one b•ek."
· of worship,
1
•
prayer an •nstrucllon. t may 1974, and retired from coaching in
· d some of a B'll
Geo..
... a .yn
• d"teated
remm
• YGrah am cru- 1994 after 13 years at Colorado
-.,e Pla•enz
"
·
bl
ffi
ri••
N
·
sade, bulthcre arc no11cea e di cr- where his team won the national w ...r oor ewspaper "... n1erpnse
Association.

By William A. Rusher
The Academic Personnel Manual
of the University of California warns
professors against "unauthorized
usc of University resources or facilities on a significant scale for personal. commercial, political, or rcli - .
gious purposes."
This seems reasonable enough,
but
certain
recent
of the univc.rsity
suggest
thatactions
itSresources
and

facilities (all of whic.h , of course, are
paid for by the taxpayers) are freely
available to any professor who
wants to grind a political ax of
which the university's administrators happen to approve.
One of these axes is the current
drive against smoking. Perhaps I
should say "smoking tobacco,"'
because the people of California, on
the basis of their. general behavior
and recent voting record, are, if anything, rather in favor of smoking
marijuana; it is only smoking tobacco !hat stirs their rage. We are only a
few steps away from a statute authorizing citizens to gun down on sight
anyone ·caught smoking within the
borders of the state. No doubt that is
why the university has gotten inexc~sably loose in its expenditure
practices where anti-smoking efforts

Ice

•

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

l/lo-18Cf-~

Wet weather e~pected
through area Saturday
By The Associated Pre••

.
.
.
.
Showers and thunderstorms will move mto Oh1o tomght and hnger through
_ most of Saturday, the National Weather Sef'ice said.
Lows tonight will be in the 60s.
. .
Temperatures will be cooler on Saturday with the mercucy staymg m the
60s. Some areas .;,ay e.ven see afternoon readings in the 50s.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 97 degrees in 1895 while the record low was 40 '" 190 I. Sunset
tonight will be at 7:33p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:17 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s. Light south wind. .
Saturday ...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Hi ghs in the low to m1d 80s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
· Saturday night...Mostly cloudy wilh a chance of showers and thunderslorms. Lows in the mid 505.
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Partly cloudy and cooler. Highs in the mid 60s:
Monday ... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s and h1ghs m the lower 60s.
Tuesday ...Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 40s and h1ghs '" the upper 60s.

JERUSALEM (AP) - Israeli
security forces patrolled near Muslim
holy sites today to prevent Palestin·
ian rioting over a decision to allow a
Jewish presence in an Arab neighborhood of. disputed eastern
Jerusalem.
Hundreds of officers, some on
horseback, sealed off streets, barring
motorists from reaching the walled
Old· City. As a helicopter hovered
above, troops at roadblocks checked
the identity cards of Palestinians
making their way to noon prayers al
the AI Aqsa Mosque compound in the
Old City.
"We've got forces from all over
the country, mostly to deter those
who are even thinking of rioting."
said Yair Yitzhaki. the Jerusalem
police commander.
The latest .tension in Jerusalem
wa.&lt; sparked by II Jewish settlers
who moved Sunday into two buildings in lhe Ra&lt; ai-Amud neighbor·
hood in cast Jerusalem. 'the sec10r
claimed by the Palestinians as u
fulurc capital.
They nl&lt;wed out Thursday
evening. in line wil)l an agreement
hcLwccn Lhc"" government and their

palron. M1ami millionaire Irving
Moskowilz.
Several of their supporters
remained at the site. part of the deal
thai allowed 10 Jewish seminary
students to stay on as security guards
and renovation workers.
Prime
Minister
Benjamin
Nctanyahu had hoped the deal would
satisfy both Palcslinians and righlwing mcmhers·of his par,liamentary
coalition who had threatened 10 bnng
down his government if the sctllcrs
were c.pelled forcihly.

are concerned.

anti-smoking actiVISts all over the
country, and used to support funher
citywide bans on smoki~g in restaurants .
Enter the National Smokers
Alliance, which commissioned Professor Michael
K. Evans, clinical professor
of economics at the Kellogg
School of Northwestern

was unbiased and equitable."'
Unfazed by all the flak , the University of California is standing by
i'ts man. In fact , not long ago he got
an award from the chancellor of the
univer.~ity for his actions.
So now Californians for Scientif·
ic Integrity has hauled the university
and various other defendants into
coun to compel them to reimburse
the state, enjoin them from funher
waste of public funds and resources,
and make them stop shredding relcvanl documents.
Don 'I be misled into lhinking the
issue here is whether you arc for or
against smoking. In the words of a
1976 decision of the · California
Supreme Court, "the usc of the public trca•ury lo mount an election
campaign which auempts to influence the resolution of issues which
our Con•titution leaves to the 'free
election' of the people ... prcscnt(s) a
serious threat to the integrity of lhc
elector'!~ process."' And that ought to
be everybody's concern.

Professor Stanton A. Glantz is an
associate professor of medicine at
the university's San Francisco campus, and a longtime antismoking activist, both in ·
California and nationally.
He is a past president of
Americans for Nonsmokers'
Rights, among other similar
groups. For 15 years he has
Univcrsily,
to review
used his university affiliaGlantz's study. Dr. Evans
tion in aid of his political
found its . conclusions
activism, pre-empting uniunwarranted -· becaUse,
versity office facilities.
among other things, of the
Rue her
communication· equipment,
15 cities studied for their
and secretarial and staff suppon for "tqtal smoking bans," only one, in
his projects, which chiefly involved fact, had such a total ban.
lobbying state and local legislatures
Now nearly 3,000 California taxto limit or ban smoking in restau- payers have founded Californians
rants and similar establishments.
for Scientific Integrity, to analyze
Astonishingly, a few years ago the Glantz study and determine
tne university approved the award to whether public funds have been misthis scarcely unbiased man of a huge used. But that will be hard to detergrant to study thl' economic effects mine, because it transpires that the
of banning smoking . in restaurants. university has.a policy of shredding
To no one's surprise, Professor certain documentS relating to such
Glantz's siudy concluded that, on grants 60 days after the peer review
the basis of an investigation of IS process is complete. The California
WOllam A. Rusher Is a Distlncities that had "total smoking bans," state auditor has sharply criticized culshed Fellow of the Claremont
ordinances banning smoking in this policy as making it impossible Institute ror the Study of States- ·
restaurants had no effect on restau- to conclude whether "the decision to manship and Political PbUo5opby.
rant sales. The study was hailed by fund or not to fund an application

•

Or. Robert David Thomas, 84, Gallipolis, died Thursday, Sept. 18, 1997
at his residence.
Born Aug. 16, 1913 in Pittsburgh, Pa., son of the late Abraham "Bay" and
Bertha Leslie Thomas, he was an optometrist.
He established his practice in Gallipolis in 1937and served the area for
55 years.
·
.
.
· He was a member of the following groups: Grace Unned MethodiSt Church
of Gallipolis;' a 50-year member ofMorning Dawn 7 Lodge F &amp; AM of Gallipolis; a 50-year member of Gallipolis York Rite Bodies; a 50-year member of the Aladdin Shrine of Columbus ; a member and past president of the
Gallipolis Shrine Club; a member of the Gallipolis I;lks Lodge 107; and the
· Gallia County Gun Club.
He w'as a 1933 graduate of Centerville High School, and a 1933 graduate of the Sputhern College of Optometry.He was a former Gallipolis city
commissioner, serving two terms from 1961 -69, and he was also a past zone
governor of the Ohio Optometric Association. ·
'
. .
Surviving are his wife, Mary Frances Thomas; a son, Dr. Wilham B.
Thomas of Gallipolis; two daughters, Jane (Richard) DeSmza of Folsom.
Calif., andAnnelle (Raben) Ppole of Shamong, N.J.; a stepson, William Lloyd
(Re nae) Hopkins Jr. of Nonh Carolina;_ and eight grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by h1s first w1fe, Hamel Haller Thomas,
on Dec. 9, 1987; and a daughter, Roanna Leslie Thomas. on April I 0, 1942.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Grace United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Leland Brehm officiating. Bu~ial will he in the Tyn
Rhos Cemetery. Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home ofrom 6-9 p.m.
Sunday.
,
· .
.
.
· · The body will be taken to the church one hour pnor to the serVJces on
Monday.
. .
. .
·
In lieu of flowers , the family requests contrtbuuons 10 the Galhpohs Shrine
Club Cripple and Burned Children's Fund. P.O. Box 82, Gall1pohs, Oh1o
45631.

Meigs Democrats endorse
levy, take stand on lss~e II
·The original Senate bill was
The Meigs County Democratic
Party has taken a position against passed along party lines, with almost
State Issue II, and endorsed the pro- every Repubhcan in the Senate and
posed half-mill levy for op&lt;!ra\ion of House vqting .for the bill, and all
Democrats voting· against it:
the Meigs County Home.
"The Meigs younty Democratic
Meeting in regular session on
Thursday night, the pany's executive Party opposes Senate Bill 45, which
committee passed a resolution oppos- reduces benefits (or Ohio's workers;''
ing Issue II, which proposes changes the resolution reads, in part. "We urge
within the state's workers compensa- the voters of Meigs County to vote
'no' on the issue ."
tion system.
The committee also unanimously '
Earlier this year, Senate Bill 45
endorsed
the proposed half-m•lllcvy
was signed into law by Gov. George
for
operating
expenses at the Meigs
Voinovich. In July, a coalition of
County
Home.
The half-mill levy will
labor organizations, trial lawyers and
.
raise
an
estimated
$110,000 for the
workers organizations filed petitions
facility,
which
houses
indigent resiwith the secretary of state, asking that
the issue be placed on the November . dents' of the county.
ballot.

An accident Thursday· morning resulted in the citation of a Pomeroy
woman to mayor's court.
According to the Pomeroy Police Depanmeni. Connie Halley, 42, was .
cited for failure to yield right of way afler she struck a car driven by Vernon Hendricks, 21, Pomeroy.
Halley was pulling onto We st Main Street from Ebenezer Street and
struck Hicks' vehicle, which was southbound on West Main.
Light damage to both vehicles was reponed .

Deputies cite driver in accident
An I 8-year-old Racine man has been cited to Meigs County Court fol lowing an auto accident on Sept. I) .
.
Clayton Shain was Clled for hit/skip after he allegedly struck a vehicle driven by Janice Salser at the intersection of State Route 124 and
Bashan Road .
·
According to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department. Shmn was passing Salser as s(]e turned onto Bashan Road .
·

Vehicle Impounded following chase
A vehicle has been impounded and charges are pending against the driver following a chase ncar Pomeroy.
,.
. According to the Meigs County Sheriffs ticpanment. a deputy anempted, a traffic stop for failure to dim lighiS and loud exhaust on Thursday
morning. A chase ensued before the vehicle went into a ditch on Amberger Road.
According to the department's report, two males jumped out and ran
into a cornfield and the vehicle. without a driver. continued to travel some

I00 feet in the di1ch.
· Charges are pendmg against the dr.iver, who has not been located, and
the 1982 Plymouth Reliant has been ~~unded . The name of lhe vehicle's .owner is being withheld by the ~m e nt

Charges filed on two area men
Charges of receiving stolen propeny will be filed against two Meigs
County men following the recovery of a Slolen motorcycle, which w~s
reportedly 1aken in Ravenswood, W.Va .. on Sept. 2.
The motorcycle was recovered on Wednesday in weeds near the Sutton Church Cemetery.
Accordmg to Sheriff James M. Soulshy, Ralph 0 . Rose Jr. and Donny Tillis face the charges after being questioned and they gave statements
conc~rning the stolen 1995 Honda. Charges against Rose arc also e&lt;pected in Jackson County, W.Va.
. Soulsby said that the prosecutor's office will exam1ne the case to deter·
mine if charges will be filed against a third party.
Rose is be in~ held in the Middleport Jail on -unrelated charges.

Crash injures Athens teenager ·
An Athens County youth was injured when the car she drove left lhe
road. went into a barn and struck a piece of farm equipment Thursday at
1he intersection of state routes 681 and 692, the Gallia-Me1gs Post of the
State H1ghway Patrol reported .
.
Ami L. Burks, 16, Athens, refused treatmenl at the sce ne. troopers sa1d.
Burks was westbound on 681' in Scipio Township at 5:45 a.m. when
she failed to stop for a stop sign and.thc_n failed to navigate a curve, lhc
patrol reported.
.
.
. .
' The car she drove went off the left s1de of the road . struck a dnch, continued on into the bam and struck a hay baler, according to the report.
-The car was severely damaged, and Bu,rks was cited for failure lo control.

Army's top enlisted man could face court-martial

Netanyahu promised the deal
would not lead 10 the establishment ·
of larger Jewish enclave, saying in a
statement: ··This is not the time to By DONALD M. ROTHBERG .
scnle families in Ras ai-Amud, or Associllted Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Sgt. Maj. of
build a new . neighborhood in the
the
Army Gene McKinney should
area."
face
court mania( on 22 charges of
But Palestinians and members of
sexual
misconduct, a military hearing
Israel's peace camp condemned the
officer
has recommended after
arrongement as ! capitulation ihat i1•
reviewing
allegations by six women
effect sanctione'il' a new Jewish set- .
who
said
he
niade improper advances
t1ement in eastern Jerusalem, the sectoward
them.
tor · claimed by Palestinians as a
In the report he ~ubmitled to the
future capital.
Army
on Wednesday. Col. Raben
"This is a trick, not more than
Jarvis
rejected
a request by the chief
that ," Palestinian leader Yasser ·
to
·add
rape to the list of
prosecutor
Arafat. Israeli opposition Labor Parch~~rges
against
McKinney.
ty leader Ehud Barak said it was "a
Two sources familiar with the case
dangerous precedent and a ·surrender
told
The Associated Press today that .
by Ihe government."
Jarvis
recommended McKinney be
The Palestinians angry reaclion
court-manialed
on 22 counts of indemade it increasingly unlikely for
peace talks 10 resume anytime ·soon·.
The crisis came at a time when Israel
and the Palcslinians were making ten- Board to meet
tative steps. at the urging of Secrct:tl)
The Southern Local School Board
nf S.latc Madeleine Alhright. lc of Education will meet Monday at the
rebuild trust and resume security high school.
·
ClHlpcralinn,
Even though 160.000 Jews Dinner planned
already live in parts of c~~t
Racine Post 602. American
Jerusalem. wh1ch Israel captured Legion, will serve a public steak dinfrom Jordan in 1967. most reside in
ncr Sunday with serving to begi·n at
a ring of uullying new neighborhoods II :30 a.m. Dinners will be served at
- not in· A.rah-populatcd ncighhor- the hall , or may be ordered for carhoods and villages.
ry-out.
Moskowitz owns 3-112 acres in
Ras ai -Amud and wants to build a Conferences set
larger Jewish neighborhood of 50-70
The Eastern Local School District
apartments there. a plan that has hecn · will have parent/teacher conferences
hlockcd by Ihe government.
on Scpl. 25. from 4-7 p.m., district
After the II senlers left. their sup- wide. Parents should call the respecporters opened the doors of the com- tive school building starting Monday
pound to reporters for the first time to schedule appointments.
since Sunday. About I0 people
remained behind - in line with the . Meeting set
The Eastern Local Board of Edudeal .
catior\ will meet 1n special session on
Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. in the high
school library.

Announcements

cent assault. adultery and obstruction
of justice.
· ..
The Army refused to confir-m the
substance or the · conclusions ,qf
Jarvis' report. Details first appeared
m today 's cd1tion of The Washington
Times.
Army Chief of Staff Gen. Dennis Reimer, asked ahout the report, said
he was not aware of the · content of
Jarvis' recommendation. "!absolutely do not know whal it was." saio the
four-star general.
.
McKinney did not testify during
the two-month hearing that ended late
last month at Fort McNair. But in
sworn statements suhmittcd to Jarvis.
McKinney denied all the allegations
and said he believed the case against
him was racially motivated.
McKmncy, 46, is the first black to
serve as the highest ranking enlisted
man in ·the Army. His Pentagon
office is adjacent to that of the chief
.
of staff of the Army.
Jarvis' recommendation was sent
to Col : Owen Powell. the next ranking officer in the chain of command.
Powell is not bpund by Jarvis' recommendations and has no deadline
for completing his review, the Army
has said.
·
The final decision on--whether
McKinney should be court-manialcd
would rest with Maj. Gen. Robert F.
Foley, commander of the Milftary
District of Washington.
Charles Gittens, McKinney 's
civilian lawyer, wid the newspaper.
"We're reviewing the investigative
report and we ' ll have a COmment in
the ncar future."
Jarvis, after a " thorough and

impartial investigation. " rccom-·
mended retaining I 9 of the 22 origi-

his closing statement at the hearing.
the government prosecutor said tes-

nal co1mts and adding three perjury
charges sought by the government. ·
HIS report was based on more than
n.OOO pages of testimony and
exhibits.
Jarvi s· recommended dropping a
charge !hal McKinney maltreated
.Brenda Hoster. a now-retired sergeant
major who was McKinney 's public
affairs adviSer and the first of the
women to accuse him. Hosler testified.that during a 1996trip to Hawaii,
McKinney came to her hotel room,
l1 fled her up and kissed her.
After HoSler told her story in public, the other accusers ~,;arne forward .
Sgt. Chrislinc Roy was the only
one to allege that McKinney had sex
with her. She said she reluctantly
gave in on Oct. 30, 1996, when she
was almoSI eight months pregnant. In

timony about the alleged incident justified adding rape to the charges.. ·
But Jarvis denied that request.
The lwo other charges that Jarvis
recommended be dropped were a
maltreatment count. involving StaiT
Sgt. Christine Fetrow. and one of
Jhrcc ohstruclion of justice charges.
McKinney who has ser1vcd in the
Army for nearly 30 years, has asked
to be allowed 10 retire with full benefits. His wife 'attended most of the
Fon McNair sessions, including all of
thos~ at ~hich McKinney 's accusers
testified.

5PRING VAlLEY CINEMA
446·4524
: ..

7

•

PL1blished cYery aflcrooon, Monday ltlro•gh
f"fl(lav. 111 Coun S1 .. Pomt!ro,. Ohio. by lhe
Ohio ·vl'llh:y Putl11shintt CompenyiGtnnc:ll C'o..

Stocks

Pomeroy. Ohm 4~ 7Ml, Ph. 992-:!156. Se(:ond
class f)()' Iage patd :ti' Pomcrny, Ohio.

Am Ele Power ..........,........... 46).

13Wct.ks ........................................... $27JI I

AmrTech ............................... 65'.1
Ashland 011 ...... :.................... 53'.1
AT&amp;T ..................................... 43:.1
Bank One ..............................54J.
Bob Evans......................... :... 18'.1
Borg-Warner .........................56'.1
Champion .............................18'1.
Charm Shps ......................... 6"1a
City Holding .......................... 42'1.
Federal Mogul ......................34'1•
Gannett ............................... 104'1.
Goodyear ..............................6~'1.
Kmart ..••.-............................... 141.
Landa End ............................28~.
Ltd...........................................25
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 19l.
ova .......................................35'1.
One Valley .............................36'4
Peoples .................................36'1.
Pram Flnl ......;......................19"t.
Rockwell ...............................61'1.
RD·Shell ................................54'h
Shoney's ................................. 5'h
Star Bank .............................. 45'1.
Wendy's ..... :.......................... 22'1.
Worthington ........................ 19"·

zti Weeks ............................................ SSJ./12
~2 Weeks ... ..... .................................. $105.56
Ratti O•ltldt Mtip Cou•t)'

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest

Merwbtr: l'h Assot:t:\tcd Prus. and thl- Ohio
N~W~f"'per

1\s!Kll:ir.tion.

PO~TMASTER : Send Mldress corrections to
· The D~ilv Sen! incl. Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Oh)(l 4~7f,IJ:

SUBSCRIYrtON RAlU
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On~ Wel!k ........ · .... ·
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Suha:ribcrs not desiring to pay the camer m11~
remil tn adunce dtrect to The Daily Sentitlrl
on a three , six or 12 month biiSis. Credit will be
11vr:n carrier each week
No nbscription hy ma.il permitted in llfCIII
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I

Akzo ......................................82'1.

Publishtr reaerv~s tht ri~~tto 1djust rain dur·
in1 thc subScription pcrtod. Subsc:riplt~n r:ue
changn may be i mpl ~m.cnted by dlansm&amp; the
duration of the sublc:npl•on.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Iaside Meigs County

~ :::~:::::::::::·::::::·:·:::: :::::: ... :::::.:::::::::;;::~ ·

52 Wceks......................... ......................$109.72

-·-·-

of Gallipolis.

·Meigs EMS runs
Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered six calls for assistance
on Thursday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :02 a.m ., Brad~ury Road, Bernicc Jeffers. refused trc:nmcnt;
I :3 1 a.m.. Overbrook Center. Jack
Stivers. Holzer Medical Center;
8:09 a.m .. II 00 Powell St., Luella Qriggs. Veterans Memorial Hospi- .
1al ;
II :49 a.m .. The Maples, Mary
Lyons, treated at scene; .
.
8:30 p.m.. Painter R•dgc, Dav1d
Johnson, Veterans Memorial.
RUTLAND
5:53 a.m., Route 681 and Route
692, Ami Burks, treated at scene.

I

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 18 -Imogene
Murray. Mrs. Joe Sizemore and son,
Susan Burgess, Amanda Denham.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Maxwell, daughter, Ewington.
(PUblished with penoission)

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

$

I
1

~

The Daily Sentinel

(,

•

I

W.VA.

Do the laws apply to anti-smokers?
·r feel like fhe Mir space sralion.•

IMansfield 179' I•

Jewish presence upsets
Palestinian neighborhood

.

cal Christian organizalion for men
only (and therein lies· the rub, as we
shall see shortly) named "Promise
Keepers.··

•

' ' ' '·'

''

-

Pomeroy accident results in ticket

Bosnian elections little more than a sham

The Daily Sentinel

•

7

Local News in -Brief:

Satunlay, ~pL 20

••

00

* Up to 83 United inches
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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports
.

·

Page4
Friday, September 19, 1997

-

Winless
Eastern to head east and face Wirt County tonight
.
Tonight, the Eastern Eagles, 0-3,
in quest of their first football win of
1997 meet the Win County Tagers (21), a perie~nial West Virginia State
power.
Two years ago in Elizabeth. W.Va.
the Tigers defeated the Eagles 17.;4
on a last second field goal.
Last year the headlines read,
"Katie ·bat the door!" That was the
battle cry heard echoing through
. East Shade Stadium last year as the
Eastern Eagles crashed through the
flood gates and washed away perennial West Virginia State power Win
County. 20-0, in a non-league foot·
ball contest. ·
Eastern, 1·3 at that time, came
through in a big way, while Win
County. 1-3, and also in a rebuilding
year headed back home to the drawing board.
Eastern's Adam McDaniel. senior
running back, led the charge with 18
carries for 170 yards and a touch-

Twcnty-si• players make up coa.:h
Mike Lucas's club, which runs' primarily out of an "!" formation and
runs the speed option. Win has experience and consistency in 1997, and
hasshown much improvement over
last year. Four seniors ar:e on the ros~
·ter
·
and the bulk of the line-up consists of
some ,112 juniors. The
Eastern
Eagles played a very good game
again~! the Wahama White Falcons
last week, but Will face an opponent.
on the road at Win County that is just
·as formidable this Friday ·night. Win
County is 2-1 and is coming off a 3420 win over Gilmer County, which is
also 2-1, including a 57-7 route of
Hannan. W.Va. in the first week of the
season.
Eastern's offense is still struggling,
each week getting a glimmer of hope .
from a different runner. Josh Hager
was the big man in the Symnies Valley game with 68 , yards, but was ·

down~~fl!~ially.

Pittsburgh upsets
No. 22 Miami 21-17
By JEFFREY BAIR

Pitt Stadium.
PITTSBURGH (AP) ~Quarter­
"It's been frustrating. yes," Gonback Pete Gonzalez started the sea- zalez said. "This just means so much
son as a fifth-year senior with little to not just for me, but also for the senior
show for his experience and doubtful class and all the seniors who have
prospects of ever playing in a big ~n with me this far ...
Pittsburgh became only the fifth
game for Pittsburgh.
. Three weeks into his last year, he unranked team to beat Miami of its
has already bounced an opponent out last I04 unranked opponents. Ariwna
of the Top 25 and led the Panthers (3- State won 23-12 in Miami last week.
1) to their best start in six years.
Another Panthers senior, John
Gonzalez compl~ted 19 of 33 Je~kins, had a game-saving interpasses for 187 yands and two touch- ception of Ryan Clement at the Pittsdowns and ran for another score burgh 24 with I : 12 left and also
Thursday as Pittsburgh upset No. 22 scooped up Dyrnl McMillan's fumMiami 21-17. prompting fans to tear ble, caused by Ernest Coakley in the
down the goalposts at the east end of !hard quarter.

keyed upon last week and limited to
just 12 yards. Senior Steve Durst was
the big dog last week with a 65 yard
romp on 12 carries. Adam Sanders
was 6-21 yards last week, and Matt
Bissell had some good runs nullified .
by several sacks.
Ever the optimist, an upbeat coach
Casey offey said, "You .don't change
boats in the middle of the stream. You ·
stay your course and continue to do
the things you set out to do. We've
really improved over the past three
weeks. Right now, our offense has to
catch up with out defense so that we
have more of a balance, but we made
a great showing against a veteran

Wahama club."
"At times you wish you could
speed up the learning process, but
that takes time. We just hope to play
continued good defense and hopefully we can get our offensive chemistry together.,We'll just continue to
do what we believe in ." ·
Coffey continued, "Our fan support Friday was outstanding. We're a
young 0-3 team. but our fans were
right there to the end. We thank them
for the tremendous support. and
encourage_a good following to come
to Win County."
Last week. Eastern wouldn't have
one the prize at the local gunshOOI.

Jenny Browning and Anette Jones for straight.
Brannon had a kill, Bailey a kill,
a 3-3 tie.
and
Michelle Caldwell two dinks.in
• Juli Bailey seemed to regain her
the
run.
confidence and played like a pro with
Mayle served up game-point for
several great _spike. and front line
the 15-6 win.
kills .
Eastern lost its first reserve match
Kim Mayle made many great
saves, including numerous diving of the year in three sets. 14-16. 15-9,
stops that kept the EHS volleys alive. and 12-15.
Julie Bailey sparked "Eastern to the
Brannon delivered a hard kill to
regain the serve for Eastern and Bai· win in the first game with five great
Icy added four points. including two, serves and two aces. a hot-streak she
straight aces to give EHS a 8-3 extended into the varsity match.
advantage.
Caldwell added four points and
two aces and Evans ended the drive
and game points with three straight.
~outhern coach "Howie Caldwell
Eastern weqt on to the 15-5 win.
reported the statistics pf his reserve
Brannon started the second game ·
volleyball club, which lost to Eastern.
off .with three aces in a four point dri- but defeated Waterford 15-12 and 15ve.
1 Wednesday night.
Jones tied it at 4-4 with ·an ace,
Against Waterford. Emily Stivers
then like clockwork it was Val Karr- led with nine points. Am her Maynard
Val Kill--Val Block--Val Kill; a suing
and Dena Sayre had six points each.
that gave Eastern 7-4 lift.
Tammy Fryar, Heather Dailey, and
Britany Merckle gave Miller a
Macyn Ervin each 'had two. and Falbosst to cut the deficit to 7·-6. then lon Roush three.
Kim Mayle launched a string of eight
Eastern defeated Southern 15-6

An~r:lcs

San Fr;Lncm:u {Darw in 0-2) at Snn Dicj!.tl
(Hamilton 10-6). l U :O~ p.m.

., ,..

Eadtrit Ol"lsloo

r::~:·_~: : :_:_: ·: -: : : : : : ·: : :·: :~~ ~~

Saturday's games

(&amp;I

.l!:L f&lt;l.

........................... · ·
N(\V Yuck ....... :..................... !Ui fM

y-B:~IniTKlft

17'~

.467

IM'··
l2

.547
.491

:

.&lt;90

N.Y.

.... K2 6M

OU:c:ago .....................
.75 77
M.ilwauk« ...........................74 76

KDnw Cit)l .................... ... 61 89
MinM'IO(a ............................ 01 90

. 4Q~

TcW .................................. 72 81
Oaktolkl ............................... 62 91

-

.~56

.:'il6
.411

-

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-~

rtn t-season btnh

Thursday's scores
Oaklitnd 7. A.nn~ t m ~ •
Brnllon J. Torontll 2
Ottroit9. N.Y. Yw1U-es 7
Baltimore 4. Milwnulec J
CLEVELANI&gt; " · Mlnlli::SI.lla I
Clticngn White Scu; 'l. K&lt;~M&lt;L!l Cicy 2
Se-.rllk 6. Tuns 3

Sunday's games

a1 A_tlanua. 1: ltl r..-.•.
St. Lclut~ :11 Prusbur111t. I:. .'i Jl.m.
Hou1km tt~CINONNATI . 2 : 1 ~ Jl.tll.
Phil:tth:lrflit~ lll (lltc:al!ll Cub,. 2:2o·1•-m.
San Fr.uli:iscn 011 S:m DicJII. -l:O.'i p.m.
N.Y. Mecs ;s~ florida. -U~ p.m.
Colomdo at I.Au An~tcl.:s ..~ : O.'i p.m.
Montrt~l

Oakland (l·bynl:$ .1-4).

Dctm'l (Salkkn 6-12) 31 B;thimore ( K~vtJn 41), 1:1!1 p.m.
Ton.IRt(• (Carpcntcl :!-7) at,N.Y: Y:mkl'l&gt;J (Wells
1-1-IOJ. I :.U p.m
,
.
Scllllk: (01ivnn..'!l 6· 10) at ():tklmll.l j(:k{u•sl J.b ).
~:o~ p.m.

ChiL:atto Whil~ Sox {N:warru 9-!.l ) :11

s'

o~1on

{Snberhntten0· l ). 5:05p.rw.t' ·
.
Milwaukee (Ehlrcd IJ -IJJ :H Mtnn~JoW
( Huwkim; ~-II) . M :O~ p.m.
,
CLEVELAND (Smll~y 4· D nt K:tn J.as Cny
I RuH4'h .'i-Y). M
:05 r .m
.
'
Anahdm (Sprin~ttr K-9) Ill Tea:u: (Hclhn~ 2·-&gt;.
lt.l:'i p.m.

lnd 1:mnp•oli~ :n Buffah!. J JUil.

New Yurk Gi:mls al S1. L.mtb. -lp.m
San Dit:tto :u St";mlc. J (Uil
Mi11mi ;II T:ullf':c Buy. Kp.lll
Opl!n 11:111!: Arlwna. 0 :•11:1 ~. flhi l;uldJliH;l .

talent?
Sign up
with

With a tinge of
sadness ,
I
watched
three

-Meigs Community CalendarThe.Communiiy Calendar is published as il free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting ·
and special events. The calendar is
nol designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num·
her ~f days.

TOMACELLI'S ENTERTAINMENT CLU
202' N 2nd Ave

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Garden Clubs
asked to have representative at Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Friday from 5
to 9 p.m. to hetp setup booths for
Town and Country Expo.

Middleport, Oh
992~14"

Monday'~

::..

~

---

NL standings
l!.&amp;dtun Divhdoo

l!:Ll!d.

..... IJ."i

~7

.c,~s

........... 1111

6.\

. ~tin

... 112 7J
.......7!i 77
.......•.!.. ... 62 IJI

.!iJb
- ~q-'
-'0~

Crnlrlll Oll'llion
Hlllli\!I)A ........ ... ......... ..

. ..• ?1

7~
7~

CINCINNATI .................... 70 M2
·St. L.ou i~o .............................. 70 M2
· ChiCAJU ...................... ..

. 6~ · HH

. ~07

.m

.....
.....

A2.'i

J.l'•
:!0
'·".
_,..

7
1
11'

Looking for a Pet?
Shop
the

on placing
ads 10 sell for you.
DAJLY TIUBUNE
825Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4S63i

614-446-2342

Wtllrrn Dlvlsioo

w f.r:UII.'IIL'O
""~~·-·········;·'·······-·--·:!
...................... .
Cql......,..........................1M
~IIJI

5 ..~
~ .549

7l
Satt Dk!Jto .......: .................... 7.' HO

..\10

m

• MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB

II

Thur.d•y••.eom

Oi~·u;n Cuht 4. St Louis J
SM Fmnt,:ilk:O 6. l..ol _,-.ngelcl -~ ~I!)

Aorida a. Philndelph1a 2
Silll Dii'Jo 7. Colof&lt;ldo 6
Pill:dNtJh 12. HUIIJIOn J,
Cin~oinrnui 6. Monrn:al J
AIIBIUIIII , N.Y. Me11-l

Tonight's games . ·

Phihult:IJ?hi a (Qn:ent·4) al Ch•~·upo Cubs
tCiwt&lt; 13·7),.l 'l0p.m
N.Y. Mets (MiictJ 8-11) Dl Aorida (Liller 9·
9). 7 :0~ p.m.
,..

Sr. ~.oo;, tAylw 2-41 ,. p;n"""!h !Cool&lt; ~
141. 7,05 p.m.

Hous1on (Holt J.IO) Ill CINCINNATI (Butba
9-101. 7 :.\~ p.m.

..

SA,TURDAY
LONG BOTIOM - Special services. Mt. Olive Community

__ ._ ______ =-,_ __ _

POMEROY - Homecoming at
Church, Long Bottom. .Wednesday
through Saturday, 7 p.m. Elder the Mt. Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Church, Sunday. Sunday
Charles Bush to speak.
school. 9:30; ·worship. 10:30 a.m.;
MIDDLEPORT - Songfest, Old carry-in dinner at noon in the felBethel Free Will Baptist Church, 7 lowship hall; afternoon service. I :30
with Earthen Vessels and ~she p.m. featuring the Builders Quartet
Allen. Revival starts Sund.ay and of Ripley, W. Va.
continues through Sept. 27. 7 p:m.
RACINE - Homecoming at the
each evening. Dave Johnson, speakMt.
Moriah Church of God Sunday
er; special singing.
with morning services at9:45. Dinner at noon with afternoon services
SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming ser- beginning 1-1":30. Special singing.
vices to be held at the Mt. Moriah Pa&gt;tor James Satterfield welcomes
Church of God. Mile Hill Road. the public.
Racine . Sunday with morning serRACINE - Annual homecomvices at 9:45 a.m. Dinner on the
ing.
Morse Chapel Church.
grounds at noon. special singing by
the Gloryland Believers. Point Racine/Portland Road. Sunday, services at 10 a.m. , dinner at n~on ;
"J&gt;Ieasant, I to I:30 p.m.
afternoon service,. I to 4 p.m. with
RUTI.AND - Reunion of fami - local si ngers.
lies of Charles Reed and Oscar
POMEROY - Big Bend SternHysell. Sunday. Rutland Firemen's
wheel Festival meeting. 2 p.m. SunPark. dinner at I p.m.
·
. day. at the Carpenter's !-!all.

Will Starts Its Fall Quarter
for Begianers, Starting
Tues., Sept. 23 at
6:00 PM at Carleton
Sdtoolll Syracuse.
For M•elllfo.
Cal992·6839 .

---

..•'&lt;

I

'

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tNew 18 month United States Cellular se~Jct 1greem.nt required. Offer valid only on cettain calling ptans.
Roaming chlrgts, taxn. tolls and network surdllrCJfs may appt,. Unlimited IOQI Wftllerd ends DKember ]1,
1997. Other -r estrkdont and chlf9ft fN)' 1ppl~. Subje&lt;t to credit apptDYII. Not v1lid with any other offer. s~
stofe ior det1ils. Offer ends September 30, 1997 .

-

•

••

CELLUlAR.

••

•
••

'"'Y kem advenistd.

everyone you· ve ever met to furnish
your new apartment and help you set
up housekeeping. -- Practical in
Minnesota
Dear Minnesota: You have written a letter that expresses some lofty
views. I agree wholeheartedly with
what you have said, and I hope some
brides-to-be will pay attention. but
I'm not optimistic. Old traditions die
hard. People are going to continue to
go into hb&lt;k to carry them out, comehell . high .water and the bill collec·
tors .
Send questions to Ann Landers. Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700,Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

the Ohio River and its tributaries.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment for the new office will remain the
Other participating agencies • Services (OBES) office at 244 West same . Job-seeking customers and
include the Illinois EPA, Kentucky State Street will be moving to 180 employers saiarching for qualified
Natural Resources and Environmen· West Union Street next week . The people to fill jobs may contact the
tal Protection Cabinet. Ohio Depart- new office will be fully operational Athens One-Stop Employment and
Training Center by calling (614)
ment of Natural Resources. Ohio on Thursday.
"As we move toward a network 593-7444 or by fa•ing "(614) 592EPA, Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Pennsylva- of One-Stop Employment and Train- 4732.
OBES' One -Stop Employment
nia Department of Environmental ing Centers, we believe this move _in .
Protection. West Virginia Make It Athens will enhance the service we and Training Centers arc open from
Shine Program and the Kentucky provide to area employers and work- 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Mondays, TuesRiver Authority. Voluntary contribu- ers," said Debra R. Bowland, OBES . days, Thursdays and Fridays. and
from 8 a.m. to noon on Wednesdays.
tions from industries provide major Administrator.
Customers may continue to file Customers may visit. call or fax any
funding for the Sweep.
For further information about the applications for unemployment'· OBES Employment and Training
Ohio River Sweep Poster Contest, or compensation and job search assis- Center for information about how
for the contest rules and regulations. tance at the West State Street the Ohio Jol_l Service can support
contact Jeanne J. Ison ~t 1-800-359- address through noon on Wednes- their work-related needs.
day, September 24. Phone numbers
3977.

·Pooor• Pooor Lod&lt;s
•AM/fMCasSO
•CIUI!eConlnll

•lit Slaert'l!
• 4 Gaptans Clla~
• Rear Sola
•Rterps Ruining

Boants
•LDU!d!

wards.
The 'hummers' provide great
entertainment throughout the summer, and I have rescued quivering,
stunned victims lying on their hacks
on the deck. They recover and ny
away after a few minutes.
Now it's. time to take away their
sweet nectar to encourage the little
birds to fly to Mexico for the winter
so they will have adequate food and
won' t freeze in our blasts of cold
winter air. I' II miss their antics so
much! The feisty· males scarcely three
incl\es from tip to beak to tail. and
normally weighing one-eight of an

..

Bible, King David pondered the
wonders of God in Psalm 129:9-10
(NIV), "If I rise on the wings of the
dawn, ifl settle on the far side of the
sea, even there your hand will guide
me, your right hand will hold me
fast."
I agree with David in verse 6:
"Such knowledge is too wonderful
for me. too lofty for me to attain."
Father, thank You for giving so
much pleasure through one of Your

ounce, put on substantial quantities
of fat to make the long 2,000 mile
journey which includes 500 nonstop
miles across the Gulf of Mexico.
They leave as much as two weeks
before !he females and younger
birds.
With brains half the size of an
aspirin, how do they store the· data
that tells them to return to the Shiveley home each year"/ Or to hover in
the same spot before I hang up the
feeder'' When migrating back to
Ohio. they take a different route.
Why? How do they know to do that'
Only the Creator of these mysterious beauties knows for sure. In the

most beautiful creations.

· Since you guide and hold the
hummingbird in your hand-! know
You will direct our ways and pro~ect
us. too. Amen.

lllfDfff Cab 414 Plr~lp

• 4 -Anti-Lode

lltalaas
• Dual Allllags

• Power Sleeling
• Powar lhkes
• Custom Cloth nterior

• Swing{Jut Quarter

l'tl-

•AutJmatlc

• Air Corl~lion
• Removable Tallgata , ~ • Power Windows
• T24SI75A 16' Stael
• Power Locks
8fii!Kt llras
• Power Mirrors
• Wol ~
•oua Allbags

·~--ns....-IRI'ft'IOI-.1101 iiiCMIId.

• 4 Wheel AnHodl
Brakes
• AM/fM Stereo

• r~ Sanlng
• Styled .,....,
• Loaded!

OPEN HOUSE
•••

The employees of AEP's
General James M. Gavin Plant
invite you to a special Open House,
Saturday, September 20,
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Please come and see firsthand
how we use Ohio coal to produce.
the electricity you use in your
homes
. and businesses.
There will be plant tours,
informative displays, refreshments,
and fun for all.
•••
.

Sameardealmttflf 'SIJilCIII ~ b
ll'&lt;llt-but&lt;Wy a hi09J!d""" Tool
"l!'C Frcoll Star\Finaadll(l8goodon ""'1'
ar. tori~.,. on the 111- new~ used. and there's......,. anlnllalellpn:dl' Fl'ISISIIIt~ OJII HIICH!ZI~n !.Odaiandast ltl'wt
II'Cilftlah Slarll'bandllg~ ~vlsll TOm PlldenOIWVY tntlai ILIIII&amp;I&gt;'e)ala (rellll-on Ute rood IDa beiUr ~

UNITED STA1U

Ptices applf at panidpatingllattio5hadt lltm and dealers. r.dependent Radio5had dea~~ and hanchliees ma1 not be panicipatin!j in tlli1 ad or stod&lt; or special-Cider

less closing line , "Date to get the
things you want."
Couples in love and committed to
a life together don't need to shake
down friends, relatives and casual
acquaintances to celebrate their
love.
T)Jey should not put their parents
or themselves in debt for horse·
drawn carriages, an outrageously
expensive dinner. fancy dresses. a
photographer and two videographers. 'flowers, fountains and all the
other trappings.
I'm not anti-wedding, Ann, but I
do believe weddings should be
small, intimate affairs for close
friends and family. They should not
be events at which you repay your
social obligations or a chance to get

im.

'

game

Cluolnedo••• your at
.:10111e tthopplnf eenler.
llnd p-eal buy• on pell,
pel •cceuorieo, and
eervleeo.
C1U ror complete llelalls

An:lht-im at TL'xas . .\:05 j'l.m.
S.:alll\!: at l~:akl:md . ~ :0~ p.m

PIUI'burJit .......... ~ ................ H

POMEROY - Arthritis support
group. Friday. 10:30.to II :30 a.m. at
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center.
PQmeroy. Dr. Douglas Hunter to be
the speaker. ·

r---------------------------.------.

-- -- ...-..

a county that participates an the and uncashed checks.
River Sweep.
All trash collected is either recy ~
This includes all counties along cled or placed in approved landfills.
the Ohio River in Ohio. West Vir- The 10 Annual River Sweep will be
ginia, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky held Saturday, June 20, 1998.
and Pennsylvania (including WestThe poster contest is being held
moreland and Fayette Counties in to create an awareness of the probPennsylvania, Ripley County in lems of litter.
Indiana and counties along the KenPoster·themes should reflect this
tucky River).
·
awareness and focus on encouraging
The River Sweep is a one-day volunteer participation. Deadline for
cleanup project for the Ohao River ·the Ohio River .Sweep poster contest
and its tributaries that covers nearly is Nov. 24.
The Ohio River Sweep is spon3,000 miles of shoreline from Pittsburgh, PA to Cairo, IL
sored by the Ohio River Valley
The sweep averages more than Water Sanitation Commission
20,000 volunteers a year. And, trash (ORSANCO) in p_artncrship with
collected over the years includes Ashland Inc. ORSANCO is the
cars. tires. furniture. toys. a piano. water pollution control' agency for

tiny ruby-throated hummingbirds · ty times a second-they challenged
outs 1e the dining room window. each other.
Their green iridescent heads flashed
After an acrobatic flight , one
in the bright · sunshine as each . perched on a small branch of a potdefended the feeder filled with red ted orange tree while waiting for the
· next battle.
sugar water.
Spirited and competitive, they fly
At -top speed-about twenty-six
miles per hour, wings beating seven- side ways. upside down. and back-

BY
BONNIE
SHIVELEY

Saturday _
Night 8:00·11,:30 p

Tomacelll's

PageS

Friday, September .19, 1997

more committed and a lot more prin- gratulations. I am happy for you and
cipled than we were when we were wish you all the best. I'm sure your
their age. I am confident that they wedding will be beautiful, but I will
will do at least as well as we did, if have to limit · my involvement to
not a whole lot better:
being just a guest. I can't take on any
Dear Ann Landers: This is for more." Real friends will understand.
· "No Name, No State," who com- And when you're invited to a wedplained about how broke she· is ding or a shower for people you
because of what it cost her to be a 'barely know or the children of casubridesmaid in several weddings. You al acquaintances. simply RSVP your
have said in your column, "No one regrets.
can take advantage of you without
Weddings have become a crownyour permission."
ing example of consumerism, greed
People need to stop complaining and the sense of entitlement that has
about how out-of-control weddings become like a plague in this country.
have become and just stan saying I cringe every time I hear a TV com"no."
mercia) for a national department
If you can't afford to be a brides- store chain advertising its bridal regmaid, be up-front and admit it. There istry. It encourages couples to panicis nothing wrong with saying, "Con- ipate with the outrageously shame-.

Pituhur!!h ;at b c l'lllllVilll'. 9 p.m .

. Sunday's aames

CkkaJ,O Whit~ Solul Boston. I·O!i p.m.
Turnnfll lll N.Y. Yanb."'Cs, I : ~!i Jl.m.
Pl.'! roil a.t Baltimore. I :J.'i p.m.
Milwau~ 111 Mii'l~a. 2 :0~ p.m.
·
CLEVELAND :11 Knn!(.,~ Ci1y. 2:M p.m.

Pltil :~lplua .

Do you have

J

Sermonette

Sunda}' '~~;~n

8;.dtimore: ut Tt:nncs!\C.-t. I p.m.
Otkngo at Nl!w Enp:l:md. I p.m.
Detroit at N!"w Orit!ml~ . I Jllll.
Kunsa~ City Ul C;tmlina. I !l.ll\.
Minnew111 m GA!Cll Bay. I ll.lll.
O:tkL11kl ill N~w York Jcl~. I Jl.lll
Allanw at San Fr:uadu•t•. 4 Jl.m
CINCINNATI 011 lknVt.-r. -t p.m.

·

y_-1\l.l:tlll:t ...
l·kll'lda ......
Nt:\11 York .
M;Jnln.·al ....

Eastern was led by Amber Baker
with ·10 and an ac~ . Tiffany Hollon
with six. Cinda Clijlurd three, Sarali
Cliflord. three plus an ace. Becky
Daivis three, Kristen Chevalier four,
and Danielle Spencer three and an
ace.

w..shi nF:1on

Saturday's games

Iual

lwu.

"Dance" Live D.J.

Lu~ An~C'IL"s

(Vnldes 9-11).4:0Srun.
Sc . Louis (8.-ln;m 1-1 ) al Plmburl!h l l..t•iaz;l
10..\Q), 7:05 J•.m.
MontrcuiiMilrtillt'z 17-71 a~ Atlt1111&lt;1 J{ilm·irr
L'·71.7: 10p.1ll.

a

and 15:'1. Southern was led by Emily Slavers wi1h three. Amber Maynard
with four. Dena Sayre one. Fallon
Roush three. and Laraine Lawson

NFL's Week 4 slate

DH: CLEVELAND (Ctllon ~ - 6 ttnd Arn.lerr.&amp;ln
J-1) ut Kunsas Pty {Beidler ·12-12 and Bnfll!~ J-6).
6'0l p.m
·
Ctli~:ag.o Whitt So. ~ (Sirotka 2-01 ;11 Bmcon
(Henry 1.:n . 7:lr.i p.m.
.1
Toomto tDaalt &lt;l) ut N.Y. Y:mkee5 (GOO&lt;kn ~·H. 7 : J~ p.m.
.
Octroi! (81nir"l6-7l :.tl Bnlcimorc (Kamienie:da
9-6), 7:J:'i p.m.
Milwaukee {Meru:dl:s 6-10) :11 Minn6otu (~'faCini 2.0,. l4:05 ·P.·m.
.
Aa¥1...-im (H1111- 121 :.c Teli:~J (Will 11 -111. A:U
a1

(Fcmun--

Football

Tonight's games

p.mSen11 k: (Moyd lb-4)
IO::l!li P:m.

Florid;~

Colorado (Wri{!:hl 7-111 oll

21 ·~

Wnltm Oivlsilm,

SellCIIe ....... ......... .. ..
.RS 6K
Anllhelm .. .............................79 74

(Bohanon 5-4) at

detl1-11),1 :15p.m.
Philadelphia (Beech 4-9) lit Chicago Cubs
(Gorw•lcz 11-K), 4:~ r'-mSIIn Frands~o {Estes 18-4 ) nt San Die~HI
{Smilh 6-$1. 4 :0~ r .m.

'H

.407
.404

M~s

Students in primary and secondary school~ (public and private,
K-12) are invited to design a poster
to represent the lOth Annual Ohio
River Sweep in a contest sponsored
by the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission.
,
Fifteen prizes will be awarded
• including the grand prize of a $1,000
US Savings Bond. The grand prjze
-winner's school will also be awarded
a prize.
The first runner-up will receive
$500 US Savings Bond. There will
be . 1.3 $100 US Savings Bonds
awarded, one at each grade level.
The poster contest is open to students living or attending schools in
. counties bordering the Ohio River or

"SPLIT DECISION" 9:00·1 0:30

(Tomtn 11-6). I :0~ p.m.

!'i

519

.49.\

.

Meigs students invited to take part in contest

Heavy Metal Rockers

•

Houston (Hampton L'-101 m CINCINNATI

612

Ctntral Dlddun

CLEVELAND .... ,.......

y-~:lin~.fled

11-9)ut Lm;

(Norno 1.\-11 I. IO:OS p m.

AL standings

x- .

(A~tacio

Combined she had nine points on
the night.
.
. Cinda Clifford had a great overall
night. with a good floor game and 14
points.
· Jessica Barringer had nine. TiO"any
Hollon three. Kristen three. and
Amber Baker four. Kim McConnick
had 12 for Miller. Paula Stanley had
. nine , and Ca.&lt;Sie Leckrone nine .
Eastern is Il - l and Miller is 7-4.
Eastern goes lo Ale&lt;andcr Mooday In an intcr-divsional game.

IC -ro IG

Monlretd (C.~rez 12-11) at Atlomt;L CSmollz.
14· 12}, 7:4Qp.m.

Colur udo

teens who don't want to be remembered as the screwed-up. crazy and
stupid Class of 2000.
Ann, I have seen talk shows, read
articles and heard reports of some of
the antics of the Class 'Of 2000, and
· instead o[ feeling proud, I feel
Dear Ann LIUiders: I koow lots ashamed.
Thanks to the few teenage ubiof teens read your column for advice
bitionists
who go on trashy TV talk
and they roally do take it. Many of
shows that shamelessly e•ploit ignothem. like me. ate members of the
·class of 2000. I would like to rant people, we ate being remem·
remind them that as a class, we are . bored not as the future of the millen nium, but as the screw-ups who will
receiving a lot of attention. j'd like
some day govern our world. Please,
to warn those who ate lucky ~nough
to be on TV or quoted in the news- adults. don't lose faith in us .-- M.R..
Albany, N.Y.
paper 10 please stop and think before
Dear Albany: I receive a lot of
you speak. You are representing not
mail from teenagers, and in my
only yourself but thousands of other
opinion. they are more intelligent,

Ann
Landers

Southern reserve spikers lose
to Eastern and beat Waterford

Scoreboard
Baseball

They shot themselve~ in the feet too {.ucas is a passing threat as well as a
many times. Five turnovers led to a threat to run the option. Basically, run
White Falcon feasting . Eastern fum· oriented, Wirt Coumy obviously
bled twice and threw three intercep- depends upon Femte for its bread and
tions.
butter attack.
.
Defensively, Wirt plays a base 40Coffey attributed s9me of those
miscues to an outstanding. Big Bend D defense against the run and often
crew,but also said, "if you're going to stunts its inside linebackers to the
win, you _have io put points on the strong side of the field . Eastern
board", calling for his young charges blockers must pick up the stunting
to expand their focus on the task at linebackers to get their offense
hand.
rolling.
We'll see what a yctar's difference
Eastern will have to watch for
tailback Zack Perote, who last ,;,eek can make. Any takers on the Eagles
gained 215 yards a tremendous rush- first win'! ..
Game time is 7:30 at Wirt Couning effort.
Additionally, quarterback Steve ty.

Eastern varsity volleyball crew beat$ Miller
The Eastern Eagles lifted their
record to Il - l and captured frrst place
in the Tri-Valley Conferenc Hocking
Division Thursday night by defeating
Miller 15-5 and 15-6.
Miller drops to 8-3 after losing
Monday to Trimble, and dropping a
game last week to Waterford.
Waterford 'is now second in the
league at 10-2.
Eastern had many outstanding
•
performances.
Seniors Michelle Caldwell and
Kim Mayle paced the Eastern attack
with nine points each.
Juniors Stephanie Evans. Jessica
Brannon and freshman Juli Bailey
each added four points on the night.
Caldwell and Brannon had three
aces each, while Bailey added two.
Miller seemed to set the tempo
early in the firs~ game when Christy
Halasz slammed· a booming spike to
capture the Falcons first serve. Jesica Duffy added the first point tor
MHS. then Caldwell delivered an ace
to tic and another to give EHS the goahead. Evans swapped serves around

The Daily Sentinel

c ·lass of 2000 member·a-sks-others to be role models

.

.

By
The
Bend
..

Tom Peden
Country
Moaday • Fddtly: 10 1111 " 9 Jill" Sattmlay: 9 !IIi • 9 P•
Satlay: 1110 • 8 Jill
,111 1 11, 11 I ;,lllt.:_'.'ltll,

.,~~:.11

Gavin Plant
1_''11,-,,,

e7

-

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

irst birthday is
·marked by Ellis
Ariel Elizabeth Ellis, daughter of
Bobby Ellis and Candace Miller of
Middleport, celebrated her first
birthday with a party at the roadside
rest on Route 33, Aug. 30.
A Lion King theme was canied
out with cake, ice cream, beverages
and chips being served. Each child
was presented a treat bag.
Attending were Peggy Ellis, Pam
and Derek Miller, Reva Vaughan,
Jane Huffman and Stacy Stewart,
Middleport; Frank Vaughan and
Ethel Shank, Tracy, Cotton and Gra-

Friday,SepbHnber1~1997

Friday, September 19, 1997

,.Aft

cie Hall, Jedca Clark, Judy Musser.
Cindy and Courtney Kimes, Billy
Smith, Marcia Robinson, and Kelton
McCloud. and Laura Blankenship,
all of Pomeroy; and Vick.i and Angie
Williams of Athens.
Sending gifts were Stephanie
Burton and Amy Clonch of Middleport; Paula Hall, Jessica Wright and
Melissa Ramsburg, Pomeroy; Dale
and Margie Ellis of Rutland; Robert
Murphy of Racine, Megan and Scott
Roush of Wellston, and Pat Vaughan, Gallipolis.

R
y

New officers installed

THE TENT IS UPI
WE'RE DEALI·NCI
"rl!wt~t~ALL REMAINING '97'
MUST 001

V6, auto, air, PS, PB, PW, stereo, tiH,
cruise

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
10:00 a.m. Ribbon Cuttl[1g
.. Ceremony
10:00-5:00 p.m. All Day
Demonstrations/Activities•
10:15 a.m. Unda &amp; Matthew
King - Chtlstlan .Music
"11 :oo a.m. Swinging Seniors
12:00 Noon Largest Pumpkin,
Sunflower, Ear of Corn and
Stalk of Corn Judging
Contest (Senior Fair
Building)
12:00 p.m. Belles &amp; Beaus
Square Dancing
1 :00 p.m. Kiddie Tractor Pull •
Pull Track
2:00p.m. Antique Tractor Pull
2:00 p.m. Debbie Powell •
Gospel Music
2:30-4:00 p.m. Canine
Obedience Information
3:00 p.m. Kelley Grueaer and
Cynthia Cotterill • Musical
Medley
4:00 p.m.-Robin d'Hart •
Country Music

PS, V6, auto, air, stereo, alum wheels, CD &amp;
cass

taEYI 1997 CADILLAC DEVILLE

.

The Lewis: Manley Auxiliary o.(
Unit 263, American Legion, met
recently at the home of Edith Ross,
Point Pleasant.
Lorenc Goggins. president. conducted the opening ceremonies. The
new bulletin was read from the
Eighth District President Betty Harris of Somerset in which it was
reported that Aorence Richards. a
past district president has been place
on the advisory committee for the

'

. Department of Ohio president's spe- National Cemetery.
cial 'Project.
A contribution was made to the
A report was also given on the
Child Welfare Foundation. Lula American Legion's national convenHampton gave a report from· the tion held at Orlando, Aa. in late ,
Dispatch, an American Legion pub· A:ugust and attended by Eighth Dislication, stating that the dedication trict Commander Mickey Williams,
of the memorial for women in mili· Pomeroy. ·
tary service is planned for Oct. 18.
It will tell the history of women
A dinner was served by the hostin service and is being built at the ess. Richards will host the Septem·
ceremonial entrance to Arlington bcr meeting.

l~ded,

Eiy STEVE STERNBERG
end DOUG LEVY
USA TODAY
Public health experts. ,alarmed at
m epidemic of leaky hean valves
;pawned· by two diet drugs. called
Wedncsday 'for creation of a Center.
for Drug Surveillance to investigate
drug safety crises.
Raymond Woosley. chairman of
phannacology at Georgetown Univeniity Medical Center. Washington.
D.C .. and four other prominent acadcmics say the government's current
early warning system is inadequate
to monitor the nation's $60 billion
prescription drug industry and the
3.000 drugs it now markets.
The agency receives ·appro ximately 150.000 complaints of
adverse drug reactions each year,
officials say.
.
Such complaints prompted the
Food and Drug Administration .
Monday to seek withdrawal of
Redux (dexfenfluramine) and
Pondimin (fennuramine, half of the

Now

· Onl31

$34I 513

Call -614-992-6681

~

.

I

'

'

·~

-.....

q

.Meigs County.Fairgrounds
Intersection of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Nonhwest Comer)
.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
10:00 a.m. Town &amp; Country
Church Service
11:00-5:00 a.m. All Cay
· Demonstrations/Activities*
11:00 a.m. Gospel Sing-a-Long
12:00 p.m. Robin d'Hart •
. Country Music
1 :00 p.m. Big Bend Cloggers
1:30 p.m. Antique Tractor
Games • Test your Skills (By
the Log Cabin)
2:00p.m. Bill Cane &amp; "Dusk" •
Paulette Harrison, Debbie
Grueser, Sally Radford Ingels
&amp; Michele Hupp • Musical
Medley
3:00 p.m. Trinity Church Bell
Choir
4:00p.m. B.J . Smith· Musical
Medley
•
1
4:00p.m. Auction Off Carving 1
I

\

"New Cars &amp; Truclea, Oulltl, Flowers, Petting
zoo, Working Forge, Wnvlng, Creating Dried
Flower Arrangement, Antique Cars, "Monl1tr
Truck" , Stlhl Chalneaw Carving and Pony

September 20th &amp; 21st
.

10-~p.m.
.

Rides.

&amp; Sunday
10-5 p.m.
.

Featuring:
*New Car &amp; Truck Display ~
*Antique Cars &amp; Motorcycles ~
·*Antique Farm Equipment
*Horses
*Exotic Animals
*Flea Market
*Antique Tractor Pull .

PICKUP ·

$11,068

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

Plu Your c:Jiofee $1zso ·

FREE ADMISSION

Plu Your Choie• $750 R•hte
or 6.~ PIMncfq

·

FREE ADMISSION

For More lnfonnation Call:
Co-Chairman. Kenny Bu~.:kley, 992-5293
·
.
· 992 6435
Co-Chllinnan/Demo/Special Events/EntertQi/'1111011 • Hal Kneen, Work 992-6696, Home
·
Becky Baer, Work 992-6696, Home 992-5860 ·
Indoor Space - Adt.lalou Lewis, 992-2924
.·
.
OuJ.door Space &amp; Con{:essions ·Jim Wats~m, 985-4372
.
Antique Tractor &amp; Equipment/New Car Duplay ·Dallas Weber, 742-3020

1996 CHEVY MONTE CARL~ l•te, V6, •lr, tit, cr•IH••- ......_,,_ 113,995
1996 PONTIAC BONNEYIUE SE 4 door, Y6, ••to, •lr, storet~, 25000 ·

WARNER
HEATING &amp; COOLING

..... -·-·-·- ·······-·--·-······· ._.......- ......- •.·-· •14,995
1996 CHEVY CORSICA l•to, stereo, ..r, 4·door._.._,.__..___ 17995
1996 CHEVY BEREnA 2 door, Y6, ••to, •lr, cn~IH, tilt, PW, stereo-'9999
1995 CHEVY 11500 PIU 4a4, •lr, PS, PI, -•·--..·--......- ..'14,99$

985·4222
OAK HILL ROAD

•llo•-·-·......-......_..

1994 GEO lUClER 4a4, PS, "· 37,000
~.'7995
1994 CHEVY 5-10 PIU lilt Ccit, uto, •lr, PS~ " ......- ............... '11,879
1993 GEO METRO 4 door, ru•speat, gootlwork c•r.-.................... 13995

1·800·767·4223
CHESTER, OHIO

SEE US AT EXPO '97!

Meigs County
· Health Department

W®TI(]

tl(]~

GET READY fOR COLD WEATHER, · FOR OUR RENEWAL LEVY%
DON'T WAIT TILL IT'S 100 L~TEI
SEE YOU AT TIIE 'EXPO

'

Tnla.........,.

(Toys, Quilts, Pumpkin Contest, Dog Show;t't..~

Sundtly Morning Worship Service

:..-;; $26,830

TIX l Title NOI AD ... OwiidMI C.,. 811111'raeb lold with A
Uadtetl . . . . .
Enept Wilen
Included. All
FMI:Jr'J ~ AppU... Aak Ua Allout Oar
RtbatooTo
Wide • ...,. el Ewtelidtd In wbs Ploaa.
Dnler
L-------lAD linen I'll opdouiUIIIed to GIIAC &amp;Jilllo'al

*Good Food
*Live Entertainment
*Crafts
*Herbs &amp; Dried Flowers
*Commercial Exhibits of all kinds
*Demonstrations, Shows &amp; Displays

AND MORE- SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE/ .

· All wheel drive, SLT decor, all power, locking
diff, rear heater, more, WAS $29,259

SALE PRICE

combination called fen-phen). Many experimental drugs and monitoring
patient&gt; suffered . damaged heart those on the market.
.
valves.
The FDA now has just four peaWoosley and his colleagues say pic and a budget of $140,000 annuan agency similar to the indcpen· ally to implore doctors to report dandent, federally funded National gcrous drug side effects.
Transportation Safety Board. which - ·(')nce the reports""1:ome in, 48
investigates transportation mis,haps, more members of the FDA's Modcould track reports of adverse drug Watch staff screen and enter them
problems and respond quickly.
into FDA computers for further
Woosley says a new center could investigation.
.
.
be established for about $100 mil·
Woodcock ·says that the agency 's
lion. which amounts to half a penny new-drug-evaluation experts also
per prescription.
take part in investigations, because
"You can't expect people who they "feel responsible for the safety
approve drugs to find their mis- · or those drugs after they 're market·
takes." Woosley sa~s . "You can't cd."
.
.
expect drug compantes to be objet·
Meanwhile, lawyers sumg the
tive either."
diet-drug manufacturers say their
·Companies must repon danger- phones are lighting up with calls
ous drug reactions; doctors' cooper- from people who want to join in the
ation is voluntary.
lawsuits.
Janet Woodcock, director of the
Attorney William Hirsch says
FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation hundreds of people have called his
and Re5earch, ~ounters that the pro- office since the diet drugs were
posal would fragment the limited · pulled:
resources available . for testing

112 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

M.l. Inc. serving people and providing services to industry!
A program of lhe Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Adult Services
Center offering training and employment opportunities.
Helping industry with ' commercial cleaning services,
assembly bench work, stapling, counting, labeling,
packaging, drop shipments, quality control rework and
. '
more.

WAS $39,814 #3988

5 spd, PS, PB, More

.Fen-phen danger prompts
call for new drug monitor .

ftli-.

MEIGS COUNTY
COUNCIL ON AGING, INC.

·

taEV4 1997 CHEVY S·1 0

SewnlliloCIIoose ......

Ploinl. OH

SEE YOU AT EXPO 1997!
MEIGS INDUSTRIES INC.

992·5829

\

~

birthday
party
enjoyed by Robinson family

CAMERON ROBINSON

CALL IN ORDERS

.

1ffi;

f~

bl 4!M1-3lbl

Member F.D.I.C.

&lt;~

Saturday
VB, Northstar, leather,

Plu Your Cfloia $1500
Re.at.or.a.~ ftMncfnt

,.~

With Ad.

ADMISSION

13979

$14,792

.........

6141'992-2136

'*New C.ra 6 Truckl, Qullta, Flowera. Penlng
lao, Working Farge, Weaving, Creating Dried
Flower Arrangement. Antique Carl, "Monater

.Fourth

The fourth birthday of Cameron
Attending besides his grandpar- .
Ivory Kendall Robinson. son of Si:r- cnts and mother wer:c his brother. B. ·
eoo Robinson, was observed with a J.. Harold. Jeff. Sonia. Jay. Tyler and
pany in early August at the home of Christa Circle and Seth C~rleton .
his grandparents. Grover and Elsie
Dan. Sheila. Kin. Daniellc and
White, Lon~ Bottom. · .
Tiffany Spencer; Jamie. Cody,
A monster truck theme was car- Kailin Rockhold, Woodrow Fenney
ried out for the party.
and Thelma Walton.
A wiener ro;..t was held and cake
Thonda, Nicole and Raymond
and icc cream were served.
Grant; and Alex and Phillip Sisson.
• The children enjoyed swimming
and riding bikes.

Porn&amp;rov. OH

FREE MID. DRINK

FREE

-··

.

FB Farmers
Bank ·
&amp; Savings Company

Programs a11d Services for Older Adults
For more information,
calll614) 992·2161

Truck'", Stihl ChiiRIIW Carvlr\g end Pony

2 Dr, stereo, 5 spd, air, more

~~97

Your BankPt4f?...

SPECI

IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE
THE INSTALLMENT OF WORD
PROCESSING IN ALL
THREE UNCHES - POMEROY,
RACINE AND MIDDLEPORT.

•

NEW OFFICERS- Offlcer8 for the next ynr were elected and Installed when the Women's Auxiliary
of Veteran• Mernorltll Hoapttal met In the hoapltal conference room. The group lncludea, atandlng, I to
r, Abbie Stnltton, prealdent; Mildred Fry, vice prealdent; Grace Warner, corrnpondlng sacratary; front,
I to r, Fern Grimm, truaurer, and Libby Fllher, gift ahop officer. Mildred Wells was named recording
sacratary, and Mirabel Frecker will aulst with the corresponding aecretary's duties.

Edith Ross entertains Auxiliary Unit

EXPO

LIBRARY

SEE YOU AT
EXPO !J97

$20,963
1997 PONTiAC
GUNDAMSE

NNNNf/llt#lf!WNN

A FEE. OF 10C PER COPY IS CHARGED FOR
PRINTING PURPOSES.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE
CALL 992·5813 (Pomeroy),
949·8200 (Racine) or
992·5713 lMiddleport)

taEV4 1998 BUICK REGAL U

1997 PONTIAC
TUNSPORT VAN

HEAI.FHY lUNCH!

MEIGS COUNTY

~~
a

The Dally Sentinel • Page 1

SFOPIII fOR A

THE
1\
A

ARIEL ELUS

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

EXPO 1 97 IS HEREI
SEE US FIRSTI

~}
llll &gt;\' 11 1:
Plynwulh

Dodge
J £'r&gt;n IEaqle

NORRIS ·NORTHUP
DODGE, INC.
252 UPPER RIVER RD.
446·0842

GALLIPOLIS

[AYLOR MOTORS
ST. RT.13 AT 33 &amp; 550
ATHENS, OH.

~1:\~Cou.n t.P
t/~

461 SOUTH THIRD

PHONE 992 · 2196

/lttiOOtEPORT, 0~

SEE US FOR THE BEST
DEALS AT EXPO '97

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
308 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

. IS PROUD TO BE A PART
Of EXPO '91!
CAlL lOR THE NICE PRICE.
614·594~3528

~

-..r·

NISSAN

Mon.·Thurs. 8·8; Fri. 8·6, Sat. 8·5

COME TO EXPO '97 FOR THE BEST OF
THE BEST BUYS ARE AT 992•6614

�•
Pllge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •lllddteport, Ohio

F~,S1~11,1111

Friday,Sepbunbef19,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

80

Dailey- · 8:30 Loa.

0)

EpiS LOpdl

CIH1 ~ t

C h urcl1 at
p

S1.....
Putor: Slwoa Hauomaa

,..,_ Plol.

SUnday School - 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10 a.m.
...._y Scivicca • 7:30p.m.

Cl!lrdo .. Qllot

212 W. Main SL
Putor: Neill'lvudrool
SondaJ School - 9:30a.m.

,. . . , w-

Wednesday Scrvicca • 7 p.m.

DurlleH-Cioarcb

31057 State Roote 325, LlnJSvlle
, Putor: Dr. J.D. YOIUig
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday,wonbip • 10:30 a.m. A 7 p.m.

Sundar School - 11 a.m.
Woralup • !O..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvicca • 7 p.m.

Mldcl'epolt Cl!lrdo ofCIIrill
Sthand Main
Pallor.AIy ooth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonllip- 8:!S,l0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednefjlay Servicca • 7 p.m.

Zlool a..n:la of Cllrlot

Worship . 10:45 a.m.

- y Flnl Blpliol

FlntSoootloen ~

Bntdbary Cllarcb of Cllrill

Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Mark Morrow

O.rdt ofCIIrill
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
-

6tlland Palmer St., Micldlepon
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship-10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedi)Oiday Service· 7:00p.m.

. BndiVnl Cllurdo of Cllrlal
Corner of St. Rt.124 A Bradbury Rd.
Minister. Doug Shamblin

Flnt Blpllat
Putor:- Rev. Lawm&gt;a:
T. Haley
Yooth Pastor: Aaron Youq
Swlday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicca • 7:00p.m.

·

Sunday School -9:30 Lm. .
Wor&gt;hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.
Pastor: Gene lDpp

Sunday school· 10::!0 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Old lktbol Fne WID Blpliol Cllardl

Hillside Boplbt Curd!
St. Rt. 143 jull off Rt. 7
Pulor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sonday Sc:llool · 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • ua.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

Railroad St., Mason
10 a.m.
Wor&gt;h • II o.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Services - 7 p.m.
: Arius Hun

Gnbam U•llcd Methodlll

Pastor: Randy Ban
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday services • 7 p.m.

•
A1hl
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6:30p.m .

Syncut&lt; Flnt Cburdl of God
Apple'lnd Second SIS.

Woj~hip • 10:45 a.m.
Funday Evenlna • 6:00p.m.

JlldiQ~ Fne Will Baptill

Salem 51.

P&amp;Sior: P.J. C~apman

Sonday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

ca.-...,

Uallcd Foldo Cloordo
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus

Phone: 614: 992-2406 ·
110

HelpWanted

Work

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E.

Calltinet Milking

Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

- RAWLINGS-COATS

Send response to:
Dally Sentinel-.
P.Q. Box 72&amp;;51
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

S.lurday Services:

Wor&gt;hip • 3 p.m.

Ulltlccl Brethren

264

South 2nd

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE

SERVICES~

214E.Main
~
992-5130 Pomeroy

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!

98~

992·2955

Pomeroy

ill a hurry... TRY

614-992-7643

Veterans

Memorial
115

E.

Hoapltal
Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

EWING FUNERAL HOME
'Dignity and s.rvtcs Always'
Established 1913

992~2121

Approximately 1.4 mllea e11t ot .Route 32,
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384-6212

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

2/12/tWn

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

''Fi\l:TORY
DIRE«::T
PRI«::ES"
Quality Window Systems
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-291·5600

DUMP TRUCK

•Re-cores • New Radiators

. FftEE
4 P.M. to Closing

Pomeroy Location Only

Open

TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?

Clean out your IHI•ment or
sttlc with the /lelp of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

~i'~;!l'd

Dirt • Sand

Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Painting

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

FREE ESTIMATES

. 985-4422
Chester, Ohio

338, Letart Falls,

FLORIST

fASJ lWN fiiiiiiO't; OltiO 45769

r.....

ww.

.'

SNOUFFER
FIRE I SAFETY

SALES I

SERVICE

992-7075
172 North Second Ave.

Wanlad To Buy Used Mobile

min. Must be 18yra, Sarv· U·
(1111)815 Bl:lol.

40

Home. CaU 814·446-0175 or 304-

S7S.591!5

Giveaway · .

EMPLOYMENT

2 Beagles, 1 male, 1 lemale.

SERVICES

. 304-87H757.
2 Chlckena I 2 rooatora. 30•·
8~52.

110

914111

ohor 5pm. 304-7n53ol0.
tered, Oeclawed, Uller Trained,

All Equipment Got&amp; With Him,
81 ..388-tB2A.

E1p. Nee. Call Capt T29816 24
Houn IOoy 1-«JJ.444-1870.
•Part-Time" Secretary Needed,
Nights, And SaiUrdaya. Eaplfl·
ence Necessary. Reaume I Rel-

304-875-5073.

Free kittens to a good home,
etenCOI Requirllli. 814-441-1570,
. . . --.814-343-5288.
Full Sizo TIUCk Toppar Noe~a AVON I All Areoa I Shirley
Wlncbn, 014-2.5-51184.
Spoor~ 30+67§.1.2!1.
.ICTION'IQUlH CARE, INC.
1 Child and Family
Therapist for the Mason County
area. Applicant mull be a Mal·
tert level Social worker, Coun·

prefera alder people. 304·875·

5/letttn

n

live Within 15 lilies Of GalllpoiiL
Work Your Own Daytime Hou,.,
Na Weekends. Car Needed, No

lnalda cat '-"'· boon ap8roct.

949-2168

s.n

Ia seeking

25550 or
E.QE.

Furnaces

'28

00

amonth

,

3800 a month

Heat Pumps Installed 1

(9)17, 18, 11 3 TC

614-44&amp;-9416
1391 Safford Scnool Rd., II
OH

EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

(Ume StoneLow Rll\es)

Sentinel
Classified&amp;

992-2156

House &amp; Trailer
Sites
Driveways, Utllltlea,
land cle1ring,
eepllc systems,
Hauling Umeatone
Free Estimates

HAULING
Limestone,
·Gravel, Sand,
Top

AT 1 P.M.

SAYRE

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

.

Dirt

614-992·3470

....-nmo.pd,

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT
SUNDAY,
SEPT. 21, 1997

Soil, Fill

TRUCKING
'

985-4473
7/22/tfn

AVON SaLS IISELII
A..,.ga $8-Slllnv. -tal
Wotllplaco-lturil)'- -

11• folie OUt Bul- PiM, Gueao

Openin19·1·97

on his 71 st birthday
God saw you
gelling tired,
When a cure was
not to be.
So He closed His arms
around you
And whispered,
"Come to Me"
You didn't deserve what
you went through
So He gave you ... rest.
God 's garden must be
beautiful,
He only takes the best.
And when I saw you
sleeping, So peaceful...
Free from pain,
1could not wish you back,
to suffer th~t again. .
All our love,
Wlle&amp;Chlldren
Grandchlldran

LJ

SWAP·SHOP
We Buy, Sell
and Trade
New and
Used Items
202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh .
,
614-992-9086
8/27197 1 mo. pd.

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!
1-900·329-0611
Ext. 1881
$2.99 per min.
Must be i8 yrs.
Sen~-U (614) 645-8434

FloJii.

ble ho,.ol No w-.toryii1-8QO..

7.2..738. (181'"-)

"arta, Sapl1gf\ 2011:1 2111. 11-5.

Camput" Users Needed. Work

1 Family: Thuracley 11th To Sat·
Jrday' 201h, Corner 01 Green Tree
Road I llulavillo PiM. 12' Boat 87

81)1).3o18.71811 11508.

lola Of Iliaci

ence1 And Reliable Tranaporta·

a/20th, 8-3. 11303 Stall

own nourt. S20k to S5Dklyr 1·

Ro~1a r.~P~ft~h~~~~a~~~ns":u'!

180, Right Before N.G. Hrgh .
School. Gltla Clothing 3T And lion To Fil CUI Aw- 1.00 Eoslllm
DoWn, Household Item&amp; And

M~llwol

BoPoldlnAdvanct.
DEADI.INE• 2:00,....

tho doJ bolorolha ld
· II to run. BundoJ

IIIIIUon • Z:OII p.m.
Frlcloy.llondoy ldHioro
. 10:00 a.m. Saturdey.

Orivaway Sale Friday, 7--i. Tools,

Reasonable Rates

Saourdar fll21lth, 8-? 1052 Sao·
ond Avenue, Boya 1·10, Potlto'a,

614·742·2138

l•mrie's Custom
~tkes

992-6194
Reopening for full
time business

Specializing in
wedding, anniversary
and birthday cakes.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnlerlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Atoo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Experienced beautician wanted:

full or part time. 304-87S.30-IO .,
3D4-G7S.2711S.·
FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AD·
Y.lNCEMENT POTENTIAL?
GLASS CEIUNG?
H)'OU are employod and loel you
we k1 a no gain liwalion, you owe

yourse lf to consider joinirtg
Burlile Oil Co. St RL 7 I At 35, IIlhetoLoewen
Group. Thit Ia a high
SallrdaJ, Sat&gt;L 2011, 1-1 P.ll.
Income prote11lon, rapid ad·

Clorhing, Formals, CraltiOuilllng

Joe . N . Sayre

Ave., Galllpalls, OH, 814·448·

~ ~~~~·~·~~--~----~

AU. Yonl 9afoo llull

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

In Memory
In Memory of
CHARLES
"MICK"

.

ESTIMATOR WANTED • llust
Cnryllor CB Baao Station, lion~ Be
Experienced In All Phases Of
· Bof' Womona Plua Sizo Cfothea, Reafctentlal Remodeling. Refer·

WICKS

992·3838

.

Daddy, Mama .~:::~;I

11011-827~ lncl'~ll'!8p.

Avon Chrl&amp;tmal $8 ·S1I /Hr, No
Doo• ·To .Qoor, Quieti Caah, Fun
/Rollllno, 1-800-738:0168 lndl

1-M)use Gooda, UIIC. 73 Duster I

.'

ISWIIMliR BROOK
KNIGHT
We love and adore
you more and
nWre at 4.

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV

1-1100-1172-15987

AVON • $8 -$11 ~ No Coo: To
Door. Quid&lt; Caahl Bonuaea 1·

all'rop.

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
Ciolhlng, Kitchen Ware, Tires,

MUG RAGE

61

111111 8 CODLIII

for further lnlorm.tlon,

-Randy' 8111112·2138-

Yard Slit

70

ranttn given.

304-G 75-132•.

Putnam countloa. Soli mou...
lion, dopondlbillor. mechanical
abiUty, I gonorallarm lrnow!adgo
niCIIIifllll. 304-1137-3&lt;35.

Loot Germon Shophonl Pup Will ,
Purplo Color Anawora To Shobl
Belonga To Famllr 01 2 Small
Children PIHII Call,' No OUOI·
tiona Aailld, 114 • 411 0.05.

Public Notice
expre•• or Implied war•

can

Alliltanl Fatm Uanaoet need.O
on I llreo grain latm In lla10n I

Loar. 2 Ropll&lt;llll Willie l'onioronlana. Boll Have Colllra. VIcini·
ty: &lt;loafvoo ~ Flollll, - 1
81..-2&lt;83.

- Easy Bank Financing -

BEECHGROVE
ROAD

Oh .

Help Wanted

"PART TIME" Depanment Store
Merchandisers Needed . Mull

telor, or Psychologist eligible 10
be licensed. AI lea1t one year
ea:perlenca In Individual and
family therapy. Plea~e respond
to: Action Youth Care, 211 lth
Street, Point Pleasant, WV

'PER GAME
).''

· Racine American Legion
Post 602 Steak Dinne
With Trimmings
Sept. 21, 11 :30 a .m.
Eat-in or Carry Out $5.00
'
1 Welcome

992•5583

$1500.00
$50.00 OR MORE

EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest lnv~ed

6141992·2644
614/992-6298

800·288·1077 OIL 2•01. $2.011/

614-949-3060

Appearing Friday 8 :00-12:00
POMEROY

M•iB• Counry ~ Olde11 Flo..Ur

Accetl Regulator Repair

'llr.!5/00/IIn

PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
SR

a.9-30t5.

your 1pclel eotnMnl nowlll 1·

Blue ucUonal couch, fair cond.

State Certified Welder

STAR BURST

;

.,

FOR SALE
MUMS (Assorted Colors)
$2.00 each

J &amp; D's Auto Paris. Buying sal·
vega vehicles. ~ling patti. SO.·

A Booudtul I Year Old Cit Neu-

Limestone • Gravel

Oxy •

6:30·P.M.

1

11 A.M.

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1000 East·

ern Averw.Ht, Gai~Ua.

Personals
773-5033.
.
Don't Juat Talk, Find A Dote! 1· Nan-Wor·klng Wuher, Dryers,
1101l-28S.II035, $2.00 lllln., 18 + Stoves, Relrlgefatora. Freezart,
Sei'I.IJ (6111) M~ .
Air Conditio nell, CQICU T. V.'s,
VCR' ~ Also Junk Caro, 8 "·2541·
Shoron,
Thla lo II. Pid&lt; Up An Envelope 1238.
AtTht Shop. 0... Nico.
Standing tintltf or pulp wood lor
Lonoly'l Unhappy'/ You oan llad clear cu t, contact Greg at ,1114·

ROOFING,
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

RUTLAND
POST 467

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

Howard L Wrlteael

RADIATOR REPAIR
Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive

Buy One, Get One

· Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
WecNsday Youlh Service. 7:30p.m.

Ruu Moore ownar, 6U·882·
2528.

005

'

TRUCKING

Ede8 Ualled - I a Clorill

2 112 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor. Rev. Robcn Markley
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Suoday Woohrp • 10:00 a.m . .t 7:00 p.m.

Antiques, top ptlces paid, River·
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohi o,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

~

9112-4119

Pick up dlocarded
appllancn, batt1rlee,
many metals &amp;.
motor blocka.
614-992-4025 8 am-8 m

Clean Late Model Cars Or
1090 Modets Or Newer,

.
SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

·.
wv 1023477

SleriU'lQ, EIC. Ac:quililiona J91i1Mtlty

• II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Saoond
Avonuo, GafliPDIII. 8, ..."" 211-12.

True:~• .

'Hour•:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00p.m. Monday thru Friday

110 Court St.

Yer And Geld Coin s ~ P roof11t1 ,
Dlamonda, Antique J11111elry, Gold
Rings, Pr1-1g30 U.SJ Currency,

BWaok old pan SWMao kittona,
1 oray/WIIito, 3 bll-hite. Call

R. L. HOLLON

BINGO

Middleport, Oh

I

FREE ESTIMATES .

CROSSOVER

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

St.. Pomeroy

992"·5432 .

St. Rt. 248, Cheater, Oh.

Middleport

Main

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

TUESDAY NIGHT
FAMILY NIGHT

Evcnin&amp; 7:30p.m.

228 w.

Room Additions • Roofing

MLH.,...Ualled lrelltreil
"' Cbrlll Cllotrdo
Tew Commuaity off CR 82
Pallor: Robcn Sanders
Sonday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Tuesday .t Thuriday • 7:30p.m.

"FfiBturlng KBriiucky Fried Chlclcen·

STATE ROUTE 124

(614) 949·2804 .

Public Notice
PUBUC N011CE
NOTICE 11 herltly glvtn
that
on
Saturday, ·
September 20, 111117, 11
10:00 a.m., a public ule Will
be held 11211 WH! a-nd
SlrH!, Pomeroy, Ohio to
Hll lor ceeh lhe fol-ng
collllllral:
11188 MERCURY TOPAZ
IMEPM33S5JKI!09722
Tho Fermora Bank and
. Saving•
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio reHrveethe
rigM to bid allhll 111e and
. to Withdraw the obove co~
loteral prior lo 111e• .
Further, The Fannere Bank
and Savlngo Company
, . _ the right lo reject
any or 111 bldo aubmltted.
Furlhel, the IIbov• collet·
erol will be oold In lhe cohdltlon II 11 In, wHh no

l!lassUieds!

Full GCIIpol
3304! Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sonday School· 10 a.m.

. Crow'a Family Restaurant

State Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

Abaoluto Top Dollar: All U.S. 511·

FREE

Free Estimates

Call

·these area merchants

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Outdoor Power Eqtipment Assodltlt!t: Certillttl 2Cydt

John Willlama, Owner
Ucensed Electrician
Work Guaranteed
Free Ellttmates
Providing Quality
Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emergency
Service

· New Store Hours

PLANING MILL

1
•Mowera •Chain S.we •Weedeatera ·AUthorized
Dealer For:
•Brigge &amp;Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobi •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
.
lrlggs &amp;StrattDft! Master SerYkt T...._

Single-Ply and Shingles
Local Work

Starting Oct.

Ch-in-ch announcements _sponsored

Parts snd Service!!

ROOFERS IEEDED

~~~~ School- 2 p.m.

u....-

BRIMBI MINING

MOWII CLIIIC

Dally Rd., Racine

~o.,~ ·

.

IAclll

2016.

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

~ Yrs . E&gt;ep. • Ina. Owner: Ronnie Jones

9/171171 mo. pd.

Buy

ma;oy, hard 10P road with rural
water, e14·742-2033 Of 81 4--742·

CORPORAL ELEORIC

Mulberry 1111. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy l.awinaky

Sonday School· 9:30a.m.
Worlllip • 10:30 a.m. 7 p.m.
Wcdnc:sday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

Fax: 304-nl-5861

Sevcnth-DJy Advent 1st

Pas1or: Rc:v. Robert E. Smith, Sr.

Syneuae Cllan:la of tile Nuaowe

Firsl Sunday of Month· 7:30p.m. service

Ml~·lfMII1 Pe11teca1t.1

250 Condor Street ·
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
,
A Division on· NichOls Metal, INc.

Clorordt

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Tables, Misc. Items

Athens, Ohio

(614) 592-5025

Wanted to

2·4 acr11 In Meigs local School
Oiltrlct, 5 10 10 rrinu . . from Po-

TOsorpr.e.wiU.IHir

SERVICE

Sunday School- y a.m.
Worsllip • 10 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m. ·
.
Ewnina - 7 p.m.
Wcd-y Service • 7 p.m.

Cloarcb or 111e N Paator: Mart A. Dupler
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvlcea • 7 p.m.

Monday-Friday • 8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m.· 12 noon

M'.f" ;JrtPa ...tllilll

~-

-.we Follcnoalllp

Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sonday 6:30p.m.

AIR8Ibl)'

H-•lle .............. CIIotrcb
Worslaip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.

Sunday
I ·9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

RecdJwllle

Trinity Cb11rdl
Second A lynn, Pomeroy
· P"'tor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday sc:nooland worship 10:25

'el

Sl. Rl. 124, Racine
Putor. William Hoback
Soaday School- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.
Wednaday Servicca. 7 p.m.

. Flllll GCIIpol CMrdl

MloUI!poot Cburcb of tile N - .
Pallor: GreiOfY A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servicca • 7 p.m.

Worship • 10:30 a.m.

CongregatiOnal

NewiJI'e V1ciGrJ Cftter

u-

ML OIIYI C...llllll)' Cit-

. lARa lloUooo
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m:
Wor&gt;hlp • 7 p.m.
Thwaday Service • 7 p.m.

M - Cloapol Clnon:ll
Soliday sc:hool • 10 a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m.
~edncaday Service • 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Wor&gt;hip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Clifton, W.Va.

,...

Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, ~trial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacemept

Big Bend Fa~rication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

~T&amp;blneclea.rdl

Syreauel'lnl
PreabJtertaa
Pallor. Rev. Krisana Robinoon
Sonday School • 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 11 a.m.

Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worahip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m . .

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m.

ThuTiday Services . 7 p.m. ·

Cburcb of God or 1'1 opbe&lt;y
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Dyeswlle

Tnrdl Cltardt
Co. Rd. 63

Chaler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wor&gt;hip- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pa5tor. Rev. David Russell
. Sonday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wedoesday Services-6:30p.m.

.

Rd.,

NOI1Jooul c.....

1/4 mile put Fort Mcip on New Uma Rd.
Pallor: WiUiam Van MOler
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wed~y-7:00 p.m.
Friday·7:00 p.m.

90

Attorney At Law

(No Sunday Calls)

Complete Macblne Shop Seni.e Fabrication

Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark llakcr
·10a.m.

""'*'

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Warship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 o.m.
Hocld_,t Cllercb
Grand Strut
Sundly School- 10 a.m .
Wor&gt;hip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servicca ·. 8 p.m.

Melp Coopend~e l'llrtall

"J-

C1ortll,
Apoltek Fallll

lluol Ca 1
Cl!lrdo
OlfRt. 124
Pulon Edoel Han
Sanday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

-..a.-466C
Tawnaltip

ML Olive Uallcd M-.at
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Postor: Rev. Ralph Spirea
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuriday Services- 7 p.m.

Clorordt

Evenina .. 6 p.m.

Projects
Swings, Bendlts,

Wednesday Servtoes • 7 p.m.

Sunday Evcniioa 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Maio A F'otth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip .;. 9 a.m.
Tuesday Service&amp;· 7 p.m.

Worsllip ·9:30a.m. (1st A 2nd Son),
7:30p.m. (3rd 44th Son)
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

614-992-5479

Pastor: Lawrence Foremu
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Emmett RaWIOO

Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

POMEROY, OH.

fH,Ohlo I WHI Vlrglnio, 3047n57850r30H73-5-w7,

tlanikrafttcl Wood

Attorney William Safranek

Garages • Replacement Windows

113 W. 2ND ST.

FallbV~TaberudeCiorrdl

Pallor: llelen Kline
CoaMIIe Clturdo

Intersection of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Nortllwest Comer)
Sept8111ber 20th &amp; 21st
Saturday 10·5 p.m. &amp;.Sunday 10-5 p.m,
For More lnfonnatlon Call: 992-6696 992·5293 742-3020

llf:lai&lt;Da Ule Cloan:la

Pentecostal

CooiYille Uoltad Metllodlltl'ullll

~
\~
Meigs County Fairgrounds

' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

- - H-orrr.,er
(at Burlingham chun:bofflloule 33)
Putor: Robcn Viroce ·
=worohip - 10a.m.
W
y aervicc • 6:30p.m.

· sy-1411 Bridpman Sl., Synaue
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

\

360" Communications

3773 Oeorp~ Crock Road, Gallipolio, OH
Plllor: BIIIStalen
Sunday Scrvicca- 10 a.m. A 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m. A Yooth 7 p.m.

.I

MY PLRCE

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Ha-vllle C..-llf Cllen:ll
Putor Theron Durlllm
Sunday • 9:30 a.m: lind 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

......

1 .)

Sonday Schoo19:30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.

Barley Run Road

PallOr: Brian Harkncsl
Sonday School • 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • II a.m.

~...!. .

.

S00 N. 2nd AV&lt;., Middleport

Sunday SchooiiO a.m.
Evcninc - 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Service • 7:30p.m.

Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Untied Methocl1st

or God

-9l30Lm.

EXPO '97

-. . . ,'fi-_

l ull dmt aucdonHr, com~Hete
au ction
Mrvice.
l lc. ~tna.-d

34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4198

CELLULAR PHONES BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

I

SdnnYIIIe Word ofFaldl
Poolor: David llailly

.Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Rev. GcorJe.Weirick
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Wonllip- II a.m.

. Hartford Cllurdo of Cbrtll "'
Chriltiaa Ulliooo
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sonday School • 11 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednefllay Scrvicca • 7:30p.m.

Rutload a.arc~~

ML Mortab Baptlll
Fqunh A Main St., Middlepon
Jlastor: 1"". Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sundall School • 9:30 a.m.
Wotlhip • 10:45 a.m.

s..!'lr4t.'!.~l::a.m

Christ1an Unton

Pasror: Rev. James Salterfield
Sonday School • 9:4S a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerYicel • 7 p.m.

Sundar School· 10 a.m.
Wcjnloip • II a.m.

C~urcb

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

MLJd' 4Ft c=
'tz 01m:11
m Peart St, Middlcpon
Paslor: Sam Andcnon

Worahip • 10:45 a.m. (lstA 3rd Son)
Eutl..elart
Pastor: Brian llarknaa
Sonday School • 10 a.m.

Sl, Prout Latloena Cllurdt
,...omer Sycamore &amp;. Seoond SL, Pomeroy

Racine

Foopl Rua Bapdll

Putor: Dewayne Studer

.lntrim pas10r&gt;: Rev. Robcn Hupp
Sunday Scbool • 10:00 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 11 a.m.

Putor: Phi6p Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip Sclilice: 10.30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

ML M - Clourdo of God

Su=Scl!ool .

Luther an
SL J - LlriMiu a..n:la

Sonday School • lla.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10 a.m.
Soaoa
Pallor: ~·roc Stutler

IAr.......,
Walnut and Henry SIS., RaV&lt;nawood, W.Va.

Church of God

. . . . .plill Cllurdl

carmel

PallOr: Pcwaync Sluder
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
WoiShip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t 4111 Sun)
Mor.hlaSiar

£.nda1

~/
~

Falllll'ellowaWpc.-rorCiorlat
Pallor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickens

Servicca: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Chriol of Lolter-Da1 Solall
St..Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7416
Sunday Scbooi!O:lll-lla.m.
RclicfSociety/Pricslllood ll:OS-12:00noon
Slmmcnt Scrvico 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meetioa. 1st Thun. - 7 p.m.

Dar Savloorr

-.me Cllurdt orCIIrtll

- •

Putor: Pcwaync Sluder
Sonday Scbool- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Service• • 10 a.m.

Pine Grove
Rev. Oeorp Wciri&lt;k
Worahip ·,9:00a.m.
Sunday Scllool- 10:00 a.m.

HMiock G.... CUrd!

I~

Sunday SQooi . 9:30 a.m.
Wallllip • 7:00p.m.
Wednesday BIMe Study ·7:00p.m.

Clorilllu relnallip CeMr
Salem St. Rutland
' Puror: Roben E. Muucr
Sanday School • 10 a.m.
. Worahip • 11:" a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 P'IQ·

JoeWIIaon
(614) 992-4277

2ndAnnual

·L "'. · .

Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednaday Scrvico • 7 p.m.

Cllnl')' Bille a.rdl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Poolor: Rev. lllackwoud
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

\;)~"

Pallor: Rev.' Phillip Ridenour
Sonday Sdlool • 9'.30 a.m.

Tile llelle-rcn' ,....,... Mlolllr)&gt;
New time Rd., Rutland
Pallo~ Rev. Margaret J. Robinaon

lletlwly

The Cbum or J..,

LupYIJie CloJil1lu a.....

Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Postor : Daniel Berdine
.
Sonday Sc:llool • 9:30a.m.
Sunday WonhiP. • 10:30 a.m. A 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 6:00p.m. .

--

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

"Bullll Your DNana"

IAD=ONt..~~-. IAD=ONI

wwie•a CloaiMI Wlllefa
Coolville Road

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsllip ·9:30a.m. lind 7 p.m.
Wednesday·7p.m.
Fridly • fcllowahrp aervioo 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:IS a.m.

Worship. 10:30 a.m.

.Putor: a... Ropr WIUford
Sanday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

·

Putor:
Worahit;, 1~30 p.m.
- 6p.m.
y Servicca, 7 p.m.

FaiiiiFd ~ Chrdl
Lona Bottotn
Paslor: SteV&lt; Reed

SaleiDC..ter
P-astor: Ron F'tera:

Wednesday Scrvicca - 7:30p.m.

Mart=

dl'lnta.rdlet... N- -

H - CloJil1lu FeliowUIJI Cllwdl
Sunday ,...icc, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Youth FellowahlpSonday, 7:00p.m.
Wcdneaday &amp;el\'icc, 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servicca • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:l0 a.m.

Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sonday Evening • 6:30p.m.
Thuriday Service • 6:30p.m.

-BipdatCiwdl

._

Bl'lr!cl! Pmidcat • Michaellluhl

I
Bald Knob, ... Co. Rd. 31

Pallll Clulloel Otellllllle Qoordt
923 tbird St. Middleport
Senior Pallor Michael Panpo
Resident Putor Ridwd Vcnnilllon
Suaday ~rvic:e, 10 a.m.
Wednesday IC~b, 7 p.m.

-~

Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday. School- 9:15a.m.
Wonbtp -10 a.m.
Youoh Fcllowslnp, Sonday • 6 p.m,

Sabia

c;..,ol.,....

r.

s.

· Prw! 0)

""y
Ponland-Racine Rd.

s.n,,.,
Sunday Sdool· 9:;10 a.m.

Wanlup SeMCC 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wcdacsday Nipt Servicca

Putor: JekSmi111

SondaT ~1- 9:30 a.m.

can relieve a debtor of financial
and arrange a fair distribution
Debtors In bankruptcy may keep
' exempr property for their personal use. This
may include a car. a house, clothes, and
household goods.
.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Road

Killpbu

AlaP&lt;UIIc-

Putor: Robcn.E. Robinaon
Sunday School • 9:1S a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy Tuesday • 10 a.m.

Latter -Day Saints
IIMrpllbed a..n:1a or J - Cbrlll
of LaUu

Ubefty Cbli111u Cloarcb

ML Ulliooo Blpllol
p...,. : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Sc:llool-9:45 a.m.
Evening. 6!30 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp;· 6:30p.m.

.

'

Evongclist Joseph B. Hookins
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip -!Oa.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Postor: Bill tittle
Sunday Sc:llool · IOI.m.
Wor&gt;hip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 p.m.

Pas~r

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worahip • 6:00a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

111c1uJrJ Hl1lo Cllordt ofCJorlol

Sll,..rRu ·~

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sonday Sc:llool· 10 a.m.
EV&lt;ning . 7:30p.m. ·
Thuriday Services • 7:30

Yoolb Minisltr: Bill AmbcfFr

c.teea.• 1 hu h t!aKI Cltwc:ll

"FuU-Golpel Clu.rdl.
1'-.. JoluiAI'IIIy Wade
603 Secvnd A... Muon
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

...... Cloapel

Putor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sonday SciiOOI· 9:l0 a.m.
Sunday EV&lt;nin&amp;· 7 p.m.
Wcdncoday Scrvicea- 7 p.m.

II

, _ llbltCiorordt
Letart, W.Va. Itt. 1
Putor: Jobn Han

Sanday School-9a.m.
• Worship • 10 a.m.

lbodud ~y Clturdl

-

Otl1cr Churches

MiJoemolle
P111or: Chad Emric:k
Sunday Sc:llool- 9 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10 1.m.

Wonbip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuriday Service · 7:30p.m.
·.
·la•nl CllfFne Melhodlll Clllarcb
PallOr. llavi~ DeWid
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
Worllllp • 10:30 a.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioo • 7:00 p.m.

-~~

Sullliay School• 9'.30 LDL
. Wanillp • lla.m, 6 p.•.
Wedncadir Scrvicca • 7 p.m.

w

H- (Mh'atpM)
Pastor: Vemapye Sullivan
Sanday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

HyaeiiRuo H.._ Cllan:la
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Sunday Scbool· 10:15 a.m.

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. lAmar O'Bryont
Sunday Sc1!oo1 • 9:30a.m. .
Worship-10:4Sa.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scl\'iceo • 7:00 p,m.
Flnt llaplllt Cb•n:la

Pw•'

Remodeling

Sunday •- 10 a.m.,
· 97.....
Wonbip
p.m.
Wodllcaday Service - 7 p.m.

Wonblp - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
We4naday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

F-llu
Putor: Orad Emrlct
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m. . ·
Thwaday Scrvicca • 6:30 p.m.

Bible IIGiiHu Chard!
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pallor: Rev. Jobn Neville
Oilldlon's aervicc - 10 a.m.
Worahip • 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.
'

Ttoppen Plalll Clo- of Clutll
lnsUumcntal
Pallor. Sect Brown
Worship Service -9 a.m.
CommUnion • 10 Lm.

· Eall Main St.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m.

JllatwPutor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 11 a.m.

w..,..

Putor: Jlo&amp;er w.....

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicca - 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Calv.., Pl1piJI Clllpel

Pille G""'e Bible H - Clturcb
112 mile off Itt.- 325
Putor: Rev. O'llc:ll Manley
Sonday School • 9:30 l .rn.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pomcroy,llaniroaviBc Rd. (Kt.143)

Rllllud Flntllaplist Cllurdo

Worsllip • 9a.m.

Sunday wor&gt;hip -7 p.m.
Wcdacsday prayer meetiq- 7 p.m.

................. CloudoofCbrill
Putor: Jack ColetpO'"
Sunday Sc:hool-9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicca • 6:30p.m.

s=

Wednadly pnyer service • 7 p.m.

- o r - - C..rdt
Leading Crock Rd., Rutland ·
Pastor: a... Dewey King
Sonday sdlool· 9:30 1.m:

Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m. .
Pastor-Jclltcy Wallace
!Stlnd Jni SUnday

Free Will Blpliol Cbarcb
Ash Suect, Middlepon
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Scrvic&lt; ·7:00p.m.
School · 10 a.m.
Wed
y Service-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc:llool • 10 a.m.

Cuetom Homea

.....,._ New'J&lt;rorn-•

llllllutCioudlolllle"an •
Putor:
Bam

Elite~

Harrisonville Road
Pastor. Rev. Viet"' Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonbip . II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30.P·ll)·

x- Cllan:la of Clortol

Putor: Rev. Herben 0..

J&gt;utor. Orad Emrict
Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
We4nada~ Scrvicca • 7:30 p.m.

Holtness

Cl!lrdo IICbrlll
33226 Ollldm'l Home Rd.

St., Middlepon
school · 9:30 a.m.
Worsliip • II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

a.--CI!Irdo ot... N

Caln1 ClooAar

' AuciiOII
anct Fila-Market

Rlcll Poaraon AuCUDtl Co_,,

a....

OJ
ir1111 PI
holor: .... , . _ NcCiooaa

SUnday School · 9:30a.m.
. Wonbip • 111'.30 a.m. aod 6 P·"'W - y Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

Aa1MorJ (S,._)

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

" " r.nnl

P

9

Materials. Frunitura &amp;Sega . 17
Neil ~·

Friday 191h, SaiUrday 20th, 1899
Shoestring Ridge, Electric Stove,
New ClarlnoL
·

vancement potential, and 181f·
aatisfacllon ha!ping families. For
V"OUr last job interview, call John

Salemo at 614-S$2-7440. ·

Greenhouse worker (main·
tenance man) wanted, must have
references I valid drivers II·
cenae, part· time, could develop
into tuiHimt. apply in person at
Hubbard' s Greenhouse, Syra·

3/4 &amp; r.tl, lata Of Iliaci

CU&amp;a

SePl201h. 22nd, 23rd, 55 Garfiekt

Grill cOok wanted· apply In per·

Avenue, Rain Can&lt;alled, 8 A-11 . • I·'"-"'.:.....Cr&lt;N(
__o_Res
__m_uran
__L_____
?
HOllE HEALTH AGENCY HIR·
------..---------- lNG CNA'a I HHA'a, Full I Po"

Pomeroy,

Time Posi tions Available, Great

· Middleport
Hours! E'"'ellonl Salary Pluo 11tH&gt;
ofill, Agency Well Trained, But
• VIc In II Y
llust Have Hrgh School Diploma.
==:-:::~=:-~~~~~ GED, Or SOme E.,..,.... Caring

All Yud Saln Mus;t ~· Paid In For The Elderly, .Send Resume
ldwance. Deadlln•. 1.DOpm the To : CLA 426 cJo Gallipotil Daily
dey before U11 ad Ia to run, Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, GaiJi.

Sunday I

Monday edition· poU,Oti45631. EOE.

1:OOpm Frfcloy.

·

.
lovers lane off Rockapnng1 or
flatwoods. friday~ S&amp;lurday, Sun·
d!ly. ~ompu1er, k•tchan table and
~ ch11r1, corner lhelf, rug &amp;ham·
pooer, hobby' horse, collec:dblea.
books, ~oy1, tools, ouldoor furnt·

Home Health Agency Hiring

CNA'I And HHA's StarUng At
sa.oa Per Hr. FuU·Time And Part·
Time Positions Awailable. Send

Resume To : Health Uanagemenl

Nursing Servlcea, Inc. P.O. Boa
1165 Gallinolia OH 45631 Or
warnen .net
'
~'~'
~
'
plul size clothing vuck topper: Stop Br Our Olflce, A~ 7132 Sec·
running boards ieather coat•' o~ Avenue, Gallip~lll,_ OH, To
much m«eiD lilt, ... must go.
' ~~~~isA~a~~~.uon. No

ture chiklren'a.

men.

Pl. Pleasant.
licensed CosmocalogiSI Needed
&amp; VIcinity
Fot Loc:at Salon. st ...&lt;&amp;-2710.
"'ta"'a....,H,...ow-o-rd..,...,.St-ro_;et:.....,H.,.a-vo- n Non-Smcking Housekeeper- Child
Heights, New Havtn. Fri. 1 SIL Care Prov ider, Two 6th Grade
Antiques. craltl, houu molding, Ch~dren, light Cooking Required,
miK..
Aas lal With Transporting To Ex-:----:--:-:-:-:::-:-:~:-:-:~ tracurricu lar Activities, Hours ~

Garage Slle-1107 2711 St Fri. 8·4
Sat 8·12. llattrnlty, boyl 0-7,
gltfa o-21 clohl, tor~ niao.
Polio Salo Sat. 20th. 118 PIMa·

Day And Early Evening, Throe •
Four Days Per ~ek, Oocaaional·
Weellond Montnlr. Uve Within 15
lllnuteo 01 Hospital. Send A

Cover L111ter Wilh Experience, 1
ant St Women• cloll1el, tho.., References To: Virgin ia Evans,
mona, lhOOI, j-.y, kidt wln•r
F1
c

coats, aholl, ciothll, lamps I 128 a rfitld hurtb Road, Galliwilli roll.
"
• :po..;~_;
. ,_;Ohio_
.__
.563
__t_
. -------

•
l
'

.

�Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Friday,SephHnber19,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally SenUnel • Page 11

AUEYOOP
BalDOI:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHTIJ,JP
ALDER

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31 Ending lor till

~

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coat-54Propltet
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24 Muabl
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Dealer: NorUt

Soulb

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North
2•

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2•
4•
Pass

SCRATCH MY
DADBURN NOSE II

.' '

P.aas
Paas
Pass

3•

&amp;•

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26 Naught
27 l'jpe ollelt

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Pass
PillS

28 ::ylo-Suon
. 30 Trimming

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32 ~~~~- •'one'o
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34S.ntrlea

Opening lead: • 3

3t Btack·and-

whtte ontm.l
40 - - a milton

No choice,
not courage
By Phillip Alder
FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.

A,t YOU SU~E- YOlJ I&gt;IPN'T·
ANYTHI~G

tMVf

TO PO WITtl
PE-S16N1~6

. ...

T!olt "Mill"?

., ..

'

t

t

I

•

THE BORN LOSER
tS88 ford TaUrus ltadonwegon,

maroon, cruise, tilt. amlfm allreo

Clllen,, lharp, euellenr condl·
lion Inside and out 121195, 814·

IIDl!-1824.

L£r~~ ... IS

li'~ Fl~~y

IT 555·1217 7
NO, Tl-1"-T~ .
FN£~ ...

f-IN'f'E.t'-IE:D., .
[ Nef.t&gt; "- ~E
Dl ~101':.'{
.JJ~T

Fat "'-Y

owt-~~1

,
1989 Olda Cu11111 Supreme

Wake Good814-245-5493.
School Car, Ex&lt;AIIIont 1995 Sea- •-·o SPX "" •"'
Condilion,
......
,.......
Ill hp., $ol500, 81+992-ll130.
t990 Camaro; Now Pain~ Hopa, B9 Wulm Boot Cud&lt;lly Cabinet
PW, Autq. 58K Miles; Han SUlr· Inboard. lhrcrulter Curiea In-

craft Pop-Up, steeps 8, Furna~e. gina. Exc. Candlron. '81C)·2•5Relrlgerator, Sink. Stove, Good 5325
· ·
::ondilion, 814-«8 8BU.
I;::::::__ _ _ _ _ _ __
For Sale Of Trlde: 1Q89 Ravtn 1
· 1990 Dodge Daytona ES Aulo, Cuddy Cab Boar 4.3 liter V-8, IJ · o
PS, PB. $1,850 Phone: 614-258· 0, New Tops, New Cover, t.lual ·
1380.
See! Good Condldon, And Ci.. n,
11119, Buick Regal Custom V-6, Blue, Wtito. Good Tfllilor $8,800,
Good Condition, Front Wheel 8U 448"a62
Drive, Air, AWFt.l Tilt I Cruiaa, TX17 112 Bass Tracker 70 HP
Aqua Tread Tires, 11114-441- Uercury 50 Power Thrash Troll45110.

Ing Wo!O&lt;, 61+245-9227.
1992 Chevy Corolca. V·8 au- 760 Auto Parts &amp;
Gemlintwdt lull, tn oad condl- IDmallc, wi'Nta, tilt, .cruiM. excea..
Accessories
::*&gt;n.::::.:cd=30+::..:.:.;=..:..:s=.J07.:____ 1tn, condllion, 14!100 OBO, 814·
1
Snore Drum Sel, lncludoa: Mulk: 1185-:1504.
Slrod. &amp;CU.,II14-44&amp;-73&lt;&amp;
1992 Chevy Lumina, 3.1 llullport

not absence of lear~ "

PEANUTS

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

YES, MA'AM. I KNOW THE
ANSWER, SOT I THINK I'LL

itereo caaaelta, automatic, 4
doar, new tires. extra clean in and

KEEP IT TO MVSEL.F ...

OUL $4995, 814-G82·6B24.

I DON'T WANTTO HUMILIATE
EVERI{ONE ELSE 81{ MAI&lt;IN6
TIIEM FEEL STUPID.. I'M SORT
OF

Condition (614)446.,&amp;92

Tunnel Ram (Baao And Top)

I FRIDAY .

And

Accel Dual Point Oistribulor for
Smol

Block Ch..rloot $100, 61+

~~~====~==~==~~~ New Box17~~~~trn~iti&lt;~~~~
~
York, NY
by a close friend today. He or she
CARS FOR 11001 Truc~t. boat~

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Holatoln Holror Catvoa ..5 &amp; Up, 81 ,..742-2887·
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Rog. Pinto maro 11yro. old.,., uea Chevy S·tC low mllu,
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tor pennlno,
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~ood cond. 304·773·St155 afllr
Hotpolnt Ch..t FrHror, 1175; .Nico Oak Hutch; 3 v..r Old IH
lfll.re ~ra
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pllancoa. 1e Vine Slloat, Galllpo- Chalrl, 814-37t-2720, AFTER I
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Grave llonlimant Bualnoao And
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Cllltbrily Cipher e;ryptogranllare CIMted from qii!Miiona ~ fatiiOI.IS ~ .

"'

8'10 Electrical and ·
RefrJneratlon
Ii'iUi;;;;-;;•m;;~~~~

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Saturday, Sept. 20, 1997
There will be a market for your
splendid imagination. in · the year
ahead. Your ideas · wtll have good
potential, but they must be followed
·through in detail to a destred conclu·

sion.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepr. 22) You
have a manner and ambiance about
you today that members of ~e opposite sex will find very appeahng. The
secret is to just be yourself. Trying to
patch up a broken romance?. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help
you understand what to ~ to make
the relationship work. Matl $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper,

LIBRA (Sept
23) Situations wliere family members are in
harmony regarding common objeclives sHould work out to everyone's
. liking today. There is strength in unity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Decisions you make today should not
be predicated solely upon material
aspects. All other factors should be
taken into consideration as well.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If the ways and means aren't
available today to ·advance your
chances of getting something you
strongly desire, they should be soon.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You will not have an absence of leadership qualities today, but they are
likely to be more evident to others
than to yourself.,
AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) In
·
endeavors that are of a sensitive or
secretive nature, restrict information
regarding these developments to peo- .
pie directly involved.
·
PISCES (Feb. 2~March 20) Con·

might leave il up to you as to whether
others should be informed.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Conditiens-~ontinue to favor ~nu where
material interests are concerned. If
inspiration urges you to move in a
specific way, yield to the inclination.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Suecess is more likely today if you
adhere to your standards, regardless
of what others may say or do . You
will know the path you should trod.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Adhere to your inclinations today to
step in and manage something that
another is mishandling. Everyone
will benefit from your incursion.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
charisma is very strong today when
dealing with people on a one-to-one
basis. For best results, use this for- ·
mula in all involvements.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be goaloriented today and know you can
achieve objectives to which you set
your mind. The heights can be scaled
if you're inspired to do so .

p11st .,a present

Each lltteJ r1 . . ~ slllndl b ......... Todlly. ~: H ~ 8

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have to wake to IWe." ~" (Composer) Ca~ Nielsen..

.

'::~:::~'. ~~'\\~lA~~t.~s·
Ullotl loy ClAY I. fiCIUAN
lettar1 of the
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low to form lour limplt -dt.

FEFCIO

Two kids were discussing
their moms. "I think,· one com·
mented, "I've reached the age
where my parents become
'more------··."

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A
V

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'

How would you define courage?
Many people have tried, but I will
· give Mark Twain's opinion at the end
of the column.
Today 's deal was used by Andrew
Kambites in a competition in English
Bridge magazine. , At the table, it
would take courage to find the winning line because you would feel sure
that you were just going two down
when you cpuld cash out for one
down. However, when entering a
competition, you know the cards will
be distributed so that you can succeed, however unlikely that distribution might be. Also, at the table, the
difference between an extra undertrick is microscopic compared to a
lost slam bonus if you could have.
made the contract. Courage, partenaire! should be your motto.
,
You reach six spades, which East
doubles. This is a Lightner double,
asking for dummy's frrst-bid suit and
usually indicating a void in that suit.
So, when West leads a .tow diamond,
you finesse dummy 's eight. As
expected, East ruffs. Then he switch·
es to a club. How would you continue?
Things look grim: If you draw
trumps, you ~ill be stranded in the
dummy, unable to catch West's dia·
mond king. As unlikely as it seems,
you must courageously assume East
ruffed with a singleton trump. At trick
three, play a diamond to dummy's
nine. East discards -- whew! Cash the
spade ace and diamond ace, ruff a
diamond in hand, play a spade to
dummy's jack, draw West's final
trump and claim, dummy's diamonds
being high.
Mark Twain wrote, "Coura~e is
resistance to fear, maslery of fear -

41 Olllclat

I'

UNSCRAMBLE. FORI
ANSWER

you develop from It~ No. 3

below.

II I I I I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Paddle • April - Width • Godson • HOPE to DO
The young let you know what they are doing the old
what they have done, and the rest what they HOPE to
DO

SEPTEMBER 191

�•

Along the River

WE FINISHED 1996 AS THE #1 TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DWER IN THE WORLD!
·WE CAN'T IMPROVE ON
BUT NOW WE HAVE TO '
STAY
THERE.
•
HELP!
HELP!
NOna: C&amp; 0 MOTORS CHEYIOI.n &amp; OLDSMOIIU SERVIa DEPr. W DOUIUD IN SID TO ACCOMMODATE l11111GH VOLUME SALIS DEPr.
.

Inside

$1

Dreams come;-F.~~ii

College
football
results

Kin~ergarten:
.411 day, everJ day
• Feeturtd on page C1

true with
'Make A Wish' •L.J._

Sunny/cooler

• PIIQe 81 •

NOW TAKING APPOINTMENTS 727-2921. ASI FOITHI SERVICE DEPARTMifll'.

.

LOVE

LEXUS
.

.LOVE
.

TOYOTA-

•

· xmes

1998

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

__j

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HI: 60$
Low: 50s
Details on
pageA2

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mltttt
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Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • September 21, 1997

.

Vol. 32, No. 32

TOYOTA

NEW 1998 TOYOTA 414
LOW

$

BAGS

Court rejects challenge to Wai-Mart building permit

NEW 1997

DYE
DUAL
AIR ·

All, AM!FM RADIO
AS

TRUCK'S
ALL

..

GAUJPOUS - An administrative appeal agabist .build the retail operation on March 2S following meet· tics will be harmed by increased traffic on Eastern
the Gallipolis Planning Commission's approval of aper· ings where Jenkins and others protested the effect the Avenue," Ward wrote. " .. .Increased traffic, standing
mit to build a Wal-Mart on·EastcmAvenuc has ~en dis- project could have on traffic and the environment sur- alone, does not constitute grounds for standing."
missed;
rounding the store site. ·
Tl:stimony offered by appraiser Robert Garvin that
Athens County Common Pleas Judge Michi\CI Ward
Jenkins also voiced objections to the application pro- more traffic will negatively impact business in the area
' found that former city solicitor R. William Jenkins "has cedure used by JDN and argued that granting a condi- was "speculative in nature," Ward found, and was connot proven he will be uniquely and detrimentally affect· tional usc pe1111it in the area violated the city's zoning tradicted by the opinion of another appraiser, John
ed by the planning commission•s·onler,. "
codi:. He filed his appeal in May.
Garvin, "that increased traffic will not be unique to
Ward, assigned to the case in Gallia County Common
During the summer, attorneys for JDN and the city Jenkins but will affect all commercial properties on
Pleas Court, based his findings on various motions and filed motions for dismissal, challenging Jenkins' claim Eastern'Avenue."
a Sept. 4 hearing to determine Jenkins' standing ·as a he was, an affected property owner in the area. Jenkins
Ward also rejected Jenkins' contention that the planproperty Owner affected by the Wal-Mart development. responded that he was part-owner of property in the the ning commission waived its ability to challenge his
The planning commission approved a conditional use vicinity of the projected Wal-Mart.
standing to file a lawsuit "because of their failure to
permit for JON Development Co. Inc., Atlanta, Ga., to
"Jenkins' entire basis for standing is that his proper· object to his speaking" before the commission.

IS
LOW
IS

AS

:News W~t~;ltl

lUND NEW TOYOTA COROLLA

00 A

--------------~------------------------~--.

Joint task force
leads to federal
Indictments for
pot cultivation

ONE IN

BRAND lEW 1

IT'S

cws

AS
LOW
AS

414EXI.CAB

$

Ward found the case law supponing Jenkins' claim
did not apply since Jenkins was not the applicant for the·
permit at the commission hearings, but ''spoke merely as
a member of the interested public.
h' h
"Planning Commission meetings arc those at w 1c
members of the general public can speak," Ward said. "It
is not the Planning Commission's responsibility to determine which speakers, other than the applicants before it,
will have standing in a subsequent case if one is filed."
Ward's decision is open to appeal.
Work on the Wai-Mart site started a month after Jenkins filed the appeal. Crews have since raised the site out
of the flOodplain, and the store is tentatively scheduled
for a 1998 opening.

.Gallia elections board
redraws voting precincts
in Gallipolis, Green,
·Springfield townships

By KEVIN KELLY
GALIJPOUS.-Ajoint federTlmea-SenUnel
Stefl
.
al; state and local task force invesGALUPOUS
Voters
In
Gallipolis,
and
Green
and
Springfield
towntigation into marijuana cultivation
ships,
will
have
new
locations
to
cast
their
ballots
in
.the
Nov.
4
elcct!on
fol·
' in the Wayne National Forest has
lowing
the
Gallia
County
Board
o(
ElecllOns'tedrawJDg
of
precmcts
m
those
.
resulted in indictments against four
areas.
.
. .
southeastern Ohio men.
Cards
have
been
submitted
to
regisSharon J. Zealey, U.'S. attorney
tered
voters
in
the
affected
areas
·informfor southern Ohio, announced Friinti them where new polling sites are
day that two indictments were
located,
Elections Director Jeff Halley
returned by a federal grand'jury.
said
..
Joining Zealey in the announce- '
The redrawing of boundaries was
ment were Johnathon Marsh of the I•
prompted
by state law, directing that each
U.S. Department of Agriculture
precinct
not
contain more than 1,000 vot·
. Forest Service, state Attorney Genera,
Halley
explained.
·
eral Betty Montgomery, Athens
Because
Green's
four
precincts
and
County Sheriff David E. Rcdecker
RACES"'PLANNED-Aracebetw..nete~nwttael 1117 lllg Bend lllmll!lleel •n""tMktn'a Sllm- Springfield's two were each approaching
and Gallia County Sheriff James
CIJI!IInl, Ilk• .thll one IMt yeer, II plenntcl for the wlletl Ftltlvll. The IMtlvel will begin on October 2.
or exceeding the total, the board launched
D. 'Illylor.
·
·.
a lengthy review that resulted in the creNamed in the first indictment
ation of two more precincts in eacll of the ·
were Herman L. Tiller, 49, and
townships.
Jason H. Baker, 34, both of Jack·
By BRIAN J, REED
flag corps and Dazzling Polls Baton Corps. .
But due to shrinking population in
son. Tiller and Baker were charged
In keeping with the theme, Amherst Towing ComTlme..S.ntlnel Stiff
Gallipolis, the city's nine predncts have 111 County Electlone Dlnli:tclt'
witli 1:0nspinq to manufacture in
POMEROY - In less than two weeks, Pomeroy's pany of Charleston, W.Va. will sponsor a line-throwing
. be~n reduced to five and renamed, Halley Jeff Hilley IXIImlnee . mep1
excess of 100 marijuana plants.
riverfront will be lined with the bright colora and tall contest, the second year for such an event.
satd.
.
.
dttelllng 1111 loclllon of new
They were arrested Aug. 24
stacks of sternwheelers, as the Big Bend Sternwbeel
TWo parades arc planned -one on Main Strecl and
''Hopefully, this wtll cut down on hnes preclnellln Qr"n end Spring•
after agents from the state Bureau
Association hosts its annual Stcmwhcel Festival.
one on the Ohicl River. The parade will be held on Sat·
at the polling places," he said. "In the field town1hlp1. Population
of Criminal Identification and
This year's event will begin on oi:tober 2, and will urday morning, and the boat parade on Saturday aftercity,
we had precincts of less than 200 ahlftl hive prompted tile ereInvestigation, using helicopter surrun through Saturday, October 4. A highlight of this· noon. Boat races will follow the parade.
voters.
As a cost-efficiency measure, if ltlon of eddHional preclncllln
veillance, spotted more than 2SO
year's event will be the return of the commercial stemReturning this year arc a' chili cook-off, sponsored
we
nee&lt;jed
to create some precincts in the the two townahlpe end the
plants growJDg in lhe Gallia Counwheeler the P.A Denny, which will offer paid cruises by the Mason, W.Va. ·VFW, a casino night at the
county,
we
decided to use some of the reduction of othll'l In Gelllpoon Thursday, Friday and _,_ _ _...;._ _ _ _..,;._ _.....,
. - - - Pomeroy fire house, spon·
ty section of the forest.
cquipment
from
the precincts we have Ill.
Agents and sheriff's deputies
Saturday afternoons. The
Two parad.. are planr:~ed ·- one sorcd by the Chamber of combined in the city."
·
seized the plants
P.A. Denny will also host on Main Street and one on the Ohio Commerce, and kiddie tractor .
In Gallipolis, the former 1-A and l·B precincts are now GA-l, and votand made the
Rl ' Th
· de Ill be h8 ld
pulls, sponsored by the
a moonlight cruise spaners will cast ballots at St. Peter's Episcopal rhurch. The former ·2-A and 3sored as a fund raiser for
ver. ·e para W
·
on National Kiddie Tractor Pull A
arrests. Tiller and
are now GA-2 with voting at Grace United Methodist Omrch; 2-B and 4the Meigs County ChamSaturday morning, and the boat · Association.
,
Baker are cunentA have ·been me;ged into GA-3 and votes are to be cast at the First Churcll
ly free on bond. If
ber of ·Commerce on par,ade on $1turc:lay afternoon. Bolt
That event will allow chilof the . Nazarene; 3-B and 4-C have become GA-4, also voting at the
the
convicted,
Thursday evening.
races wm·follow the parade.
dren the opportunity to comNazarene Church; and 4-B bas been renamed GA-5, with voting continuing
pair would face a
A total of 18 boats
pete for a spot in state and
at the Gallipolis water plant.
·
·
minimum . fivehave committed to visiting Pomeroy for the festival, national-level competitions.
The
new
Green
1
and
3
precincts
will
vote
at
the
Rodney
Community
year and a maxiand according to Jean Van Meter of the AssociatioJI, as
The Pomeroy Men:hants Association wiU again orgaBuilding;
Green
2
at
the
C.H.
McKenzie
Agricultural
Center;
Green
4 at the
Teylor . mum
40-year
many as 26 may show up.
nize a "Rubber Ducky Race," offering prizes to winners,
Gallipolis Christian Church; and Green 5 and 6 at Green Elementary School.
prison term, in addition to a fine of
Weather permitting, this year's entertainment wUI · and will spomor a Halloween Masquerade' contest.
The fonner Green Township precinct has been merged into Green 5, Halley
up to $2 million.
center around PG~Deroy's new riverfront amphitheater,
Fireworks will close the festival on Friday night,
said.
The second indictment charges
according to Mary Donna Davis of the Association.
and the P.A Denny will offer one final cruise during
Under the new setup, Springfield 1 voters go to the townhouse at EverRichard O'Nail, 26, and John KimThree-year Ohio State Champion Fiddler Lisa Wag- the ,display.
·
green; Springfield 2 at the Rodney Church of God; and Springfield 3 and
mey, 29, both of Nelsonville, with
oncr will perform on Thursday evening; Karaoke by
Boating enthusiasts need not own a sternwhecler to
Bidwell Pr~nct voters cast ballots at the new .Btdweii-Porter Elementary
conspiracy tlf manufacture in
Jeff North's ·Starbound Entertainment highlights Fri· jojn the captains on the riverfront.
School. .
.
· ·
excess of SO marijuana plants.
day's bill, and on Saturday, Mike Monison and the
This year, for the first time, accommodations will
With new precincts, the level of voters in each has been brought below
Helicopter surveillance by BCI
Swing Shift Band will perform.
be made for owners of runabouts, pontoon boats, and
the state-mandated total, Halley said. Green 1 has the highest at 678 and
spOtted 65 plants growing in the
All entertainment this year is sponsored by Bud· hou~boats.
.Green 5 the smallest with 450. Springfield 3 has the lowest amount in the
national forest. O'Nail and Kimweiser.
Davis said .that plans have been completed for 80 · township with 200. ·
.
mey are charged in connectio~
Local entertainment will also take place throughout · feet along a floating dock to accommo~ate smaller
Halley reported an additional polling place cha~ge starting .with this
with the manufacturing operation.
the festival, including the Meigs High School band and 'crafts.
Continued on pege A2
Conspiracy to t,nanufacture more
than ~ marijuana plants canies a
penalty of up io 20 years' imprison·
ment and a fine of up to $1 million.
The defendants will be arraigned
.
.
before 1 federal judge at a later date. By JIM FREEMAN
The next speaker
"The task force has developed Tlmaa-Bentlnel Stiff
remarked on a year which
into an effective team whicll has
POMEROY- The Holzer Meigs Clinic was officially ded- has witnessed construction
the cooperative spirit required to icated Friday morning during a ribbon cutting ceremony at the of the new clinic, progress
combat marijuana cultivation in the new building located near Veterans Memorial Hospital in on the . Tuppers Plains
Wayne National Forest," Zealey Pomeroy.
•
·
industrial site and discussaid. "Public lands such as the .
Approximately ·Jlo. attended the fog-shrouded ceremony, sion on establishing a
Wayne National Forest s,h&lt;mld be not including memllfra of the Meigs High School Band which Meigs County Branch. of
carefully protected,"
·
played several musi~l selections before the event. Friday was the University of Rio
The task force also includes the al~ ,moving~ay f~. doctors and others working in the ?ew Grande.
·
state Department of Natural · fac1hty.
Paul Reed, presidc,nt of
(
!-.\
Resources Division of Wildlife,
The clinic comb~s the services of Holzer Clinic of Mid- the Meigs County Comand the sheriff's departments from dleport and Meigs'i·Health Services of Holzer Clinic of . munity Improvement CorJackson, Lawrence, Scioto, Hock· Pomeroy which were no longer in operation effective Thurs- poratiQ~;,said, "Today is l-1-,_;..
ing and Peny counties.
truly a &amp;Rli.l day for Meigs
day.J. Craig .Strafford,
.
. I nc.,
M.D, pres1'dent of .Ho' lzer Cl'tmc,
· County."
I.
He
said
the
new
clinic
,o'#!('fiiJ'
introduced
several
guest
speakers
including
the
Rev.
Robert
E.
Good Mornin
Robinson of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church who gave provides another tool for L~:2l~l!t;~
the invocation following the presentation of colors by the Drew economic development in
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS- Ohio lawmekera Sl8te Senator Michael Shoemaker, standing, end
Tod•y'l
Webster Post 39 of the American Legion, Pomeroy.
·
the
co~nty
a~d
thanked
Sllta
RepreHnlltlvi John carey, ""ed at right, were tile keynot• IJHIIkere at Frlday'a dedi·
10 Sections • 124 Pqes .
The ftrst to speak was Fred Hoffman, vice-president of tbe ~n~ltdatcd ~nd Hol~r eatlon of lila Holzer Malge Clinic. Aleo ahown 11 Holzer Clinic Preeldent J. Crelg Strafford, M.D.,
Meigs County Board of Com'."issionera, "!ho said the. structure Chntc for _the11 commtt· ...ted center.
Ca!cnclm
C3&amp;4
will
help provide needed seonces to the people of Metgs Coun· ment to Metgs CounS)&gt;•.
C!mlftec!•
oo-7
''We're very ,blessed to have the high quality physicians we
~
.·.
.
.
"Wonderful things'lrc going to happen," he said.
Coptlq
Igeert
have
to staff this facility," he said.
Thomas E. Tope', chairman of Consolidated Health Systems,
"This is a day we have looked forward to for the past severEdl!orllb
A4
State
Senator Michael Shoemaker (D·Hillsboro) remarked
Inc. commented that the goals of the venture were to help keep
al years," Holiman said.
AloDC the River Cl
on
the
changing
nature of health care .
He urged residents to patronize the new facility and also health care costs down and keep medical decisions local.
Obltuadu
A6
"Doctors
no
longer
make house calls," he said. ' Let me
commended Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentcs for his assisHe commended Holzer Clinic for its Cooperation and
Spprtl
Ql..J!
compliment
you
fo•
moving
ahead," he added.
tance in the transfer of county-owned property on which the th~nked the Meigs County Board of Commissioners for makC 1997 Ohio Valley Publiahin&amp; Co.
Continued
on page A2
clinic was.constructed to Consolidated Health Systems Inc,
ing land available for the new building.
·
1

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.' .

Sternwheel celebration begins Oct. 2

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HURRY

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LOVE TOYOTA

DLEXUS

•

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DEALERSHIP IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
NECESSARY. PLEASE APPLY
IN THE TOYOTA

AND

I

IMPORT
DEALER
IN THE

New Holzer Meigs cn·nic .officially dedicated

STAn
AS
LOW
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MOTORS LEXUS
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA

.Rt"60 MacCORKLE AVENUE- ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
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